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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-04-12 - Orange Coast Pilotl ._ ' I • ' ~eUiPD.rt Pul!s. Mas~ A~ ~s·t • • • , , ·. ' I . / / / . / , '!:. / .. • - • Sto~k Sale .. Coast· Colleges~ . " h d ~ 00 ~· Chaitnel· 50 ·Clash " .. . , . DAILY Pll.DT Staff PlleN Bossmoor C·leatU Vp World . . Urane Jilts unidentified fiber.glass country back into place on giant globe just oil Avenida de la Carlbltlr in Lagun~ IDlls. A symbol for Rossmoor Corporation's Leisore World retirement commuruty, the globe was recently sal\if.bl.Sted in a regular cleaning operation. The countries were remov~d and cleaned in a gentler manner. A foun- tain, palm trees and other laildlcaping will soon be added in this world's domain. . · • • • ~lie ·Charges Rescue Canceled" CHICAGO. (AP) -U.S. olficlals canceled Without explanation l88t nionlh 1 pi~niied 11tempt to rescue nine .u.s. ci!lz!ons \Vho broke out of a· prilOll com- pound. in contral-i-, the 'chairman oC • the Remember tbe Pueblo .Coouniltee ,' charges. The Rev. Paul D. UDdltrom ailO $Bid W-y that In a separate lnctdent Ame~lcan offici•ls decided aoinst trying • to reacue two American millimarles ~plured in Laos In OCtObCr 1972. U.S. officials discounted Lindstrom's claims. A StAle Department spoktsman did several eUorta were made, including the USC Of Laotian t-. to rrce the missiooarles. The s~ also denied that • an 'iiuempt to rescue the nln< Amerjcans was cancele.d . • • •• ·-. ·Brought • 101 Foeus .,_ I IO· om ' ure· , Neweort Mass · Arrest Beauty Keeps It in Family ls 'Bal Week' A,live-Cal State Full<rion adverusing major Terry Olden must really know how to m.1rket a pretty package, or. else her parents just . put out superior products. And Early on Coast? The Pete Oldens watched proudly a1 Miss Olden, 19, was crowned Miss Anaheim 1973, at the Con· vention Center in glittering ceremonies, one of a kind in a city of 183,571 persons. By L. PETER KRIEG Of lllr'D911Y """ .,.,, Bal Week is apparenUy alive and well -and getting off to _an early start in Newport Beach this· year. The annual 'Easter vacation blowout got off to an atypical if premature start this morning as Newport Beach police arrested 17 Riverside youths crnmmed into a second story duplex apartm~t in West Newport. -- Police used a paddy wagon to transport the youths, all boys, to police bead- QUo!lrters after fmding a-cooler full of beer, a lid of marijuana, and a bottle of • Foundation Says lrvin,e Stock Sale 'Falsehood' By GEORGE LEIDAL .. Of "" •Oeltf' pt ... ''-" Moniin,g OOWJ accounts suggesting ~ Jail)~ Irvine Foundlt!on woWd begln selling its stock in the Irvine Company'as early as June were termed "a fa lsehOocr' today by the foundatk>n's attorney. ~ Howard J. Privett, Los Angeles ·at- torney tor the Irvine Foundation and its spokesman during recent hearings in Washington D.C .. denied he had indicated the foundation would as soon as "this sµmmer" begin selling shares or Irvine Company stock. "The Board of Directors of the James Irvine Foundation has initiated stud.Jes and plannitlg to realize ihe full market value of its holdings in the Irvine Com- pany," Privett confirmed. However, those studies,. and the planning, ihe emphuized, •ay result in a decision to sell Irvlne,Compaoy hotdlng1 .i llllY Ullle wilhln tlie next six y{an. ' · •'There has been no dflclslon by the boanl of the foundation to begin selling stoct this summer. Ally report lhat such a dtdslon has been made is "a falsehood," Privett declar.ed. l!e •dded lhat the foundation has until 1179 undtr terms o1 the Tax Reform Act or 19611 to reduce its holding• in the Irvine Company from the pr.,.nt 54.5 peroott level to the 20 ptrcent required by the federal law. · Additionally, he explained, there .,,, court actions ~~ing In tallfornia which (Ste DENIAL, P•1• %} I I \ ~· I pills in the apartment at '3308 \V. Ocean Front. Officer John Furrow said he came across the youths a(Y!r. picking up a juvenile wearing a backpack and walking on Balboa Boulevard riear 42nd -itreet about 9 a.m. Furrow said he stopped the youth because he appeared to be a runaway. .. He told us where he was staying and we , went to the Ocean Front address to verify it/' Furrow said. He said there he came upon the other youths "sleeping all over the place" on mattresses and sleeping bags. He· said the marijuana and narcotics paraphernalia were lying around along with other contraband. Furrow said charges had not been filed against any of the youths, including the only adult, Clayton W. Nettleton. 18. He said there was an "obvious viola- tion of the housing codes" and it ap- . peered there was no adult supervision so charges . may include lack. of parental control. · Furrow said he did not , know im· mediately who owned the duplex or :which of the youths bad rented it for :the .week. :: '. "They were just starting Easter vaca- . tion," Furrow noted, pointing out that ·Riverside schools let'Out a week earlier · (than most others. 1 Newport Beach police said today they are still counting oo anothe~ relatively quiCt Bal Week. which is the way It has ·been in the past several years in sharp (See BAL WEEK, Page %) Nude S'wi1n1ni1ig Con victio1i Nixed . Terey was crowned 6y ~iss Anaheim, 1972, her v9,unger sister, Karen. , r:_, .. Row Apparently Eases in College T elevisidn Tiff' ' . By RUDI NIEDZIEU!KI DI ttt. D911Y Pli.t lllff Controversy over the role playe<t by .Channel 50 in the education of Golden West and Orange Coast College students appears somewhat calmect today after promises Wednesday night by both fifculty an$I ~liege officials to imp~ve &mrriuoications between them. · Teachers rrom both campuses ap- peared partially satisfied when Coast · Community College District trustees told 'Vlem they wouJd become involved to a greater degree Jn the rormulation of policy for the new educatlolial station. Faculty members, angered · o v er allegedly being kept in the dark about the academic function and financial picture of KOCE-TV, packed the board room more than 100 strong to demand answers to 74 pointed questions they had about the station. Several of these were answered by Chancellor Norman E. Wat.son who furnished them with a draft of a goal~ and objectives statement which stresses the board participation of experts, in· eluding faculty members, in the develop- ment of courses. The other· questions and possible sotu· AUSTIN/ Tex,.(IJPJll"1'!!oHcei~ilatg'!i' . ~ons will be ,It~ up~ 3:30 p.m. today Rogtt Dean~ 8oone:'2t:· wllh · iiisoiderly when' llr/Wown meelll with the racully conduct and !Jned him $t60 for a senate or both campuses In the telecom· • moonlight swim he and his girlfriend munlcatioos building at Golden West. Among,· these are questkil.! about the took here July 12, 1971. budgeting or KOCE , the aelection ol The coup!~ attracted eight men who , personnel, · ~ statio~ managemtnl, stood on the shore or Lake Tajrler and equipment. and fundlha:. watched. But there were no fights or . · DiscusalOn over these concrete con· assaults. and Boone appealed his coo-ccms of the teachers however was avoid· victlon. ed by board members who told facultv The Texas Court ol Crlmln•l Apptals representatives had not gone throug~ tho reversed the Judgment Wedne.9day, proper adminlstratl\le channels. 1 saying the couple's swimm ing naked may · Trustee Worth Keene said the teachers hA\.'t created 90m<! ension,,..but did not shouJd bring their grievance~ over the "tend to cause or provoke a station to the administration ii nd inVolve di•turbancc." IS.. PROMISES, Page %} t Executive's Family Targets • HARTFORD, Conn. (APJ-state police are holding a Massachusetts man in an alleged extortion and kianaping plot in- volving a plan to hold the family of a Hartford man ... hostage with a radlo-coD.. trolled t>omb taped to his daug hter. Police-Wednesday identified the man has John H._ Moan, 34, ol Erult .Otis, Mass. He is being held on $50,000 bond on charges of conspiracy to commit larceny by extortion and conspiracy to commit kidnaping. He was taken into custody Friday, authorities said. The object or the alleged plot, detec- tives said, was Harvy L. Lipman of Bloomfield , his wife. daughter and two elderly persons who reside with the Lip- mans. The daughter was not identified . Lipman is a vice president and the son or the owner of Lipman Motors or Hartford. a large automobile sales agen-cy. Waterbury authorities said an official of a local motorcycle club told police last 1veek that he had been contacted by a nian who uffered the club money to !See EXTORTION, P1ge %} • Orange Coast Weather llazy sunshine on Friduy. fol· lowing early morning fog and low clouds along the coast. llighs of 76 are expected in inland a r .e a s. Beach te mperatures of 68 are fore- cast. Overnight lows in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY Cathy Afurpl1y has aii tinusual dog. 1'lossie, lier 2•year-old Bos· ton bulldog, can d-0 backfli1>1. skate. fetch aiid, uh, talk. That's right. And if VDU dan'i believe she can, it'! j11st the Boston a~ ,ce1it co11fusirtg you. See stOTJI 011 Page 15. l.,M, •t't'll I C1Ultt11I• S Clat,llff'lll »_.. Clfl'llcl U CrM1-ll tt Dtattl H•tk" 1 r ir•l,.'111 ,... • lflltf"ltllll'lltM 1+21 ,,,..II(. .n..ff ,., Tiit llC.... 11 .....__ ti """ l_..... 21 ' • \ I .1 ' . , I -.... r J .t2 DAILV rrLOT • s TIWrsd.11. April 11, 197' • . Ni~on, Aid_es Meet on _5\s ian Tensions ~I- Protesters HadReaso,n W~SHINGTON (UPI) -p,.,idenl NixOn called in his top mllita'J', 4Jp!omatic and intelligence advisers to. day \~!. copsultallons on the worsening situation ~ cambodla. Continued U.S. bombing there has caused growing con- gressional objections. .lfhc President made an early mom.Ing helicopter night fr"nm Camp David, in the "·estcm Maryland n1ountains where an seasonal spring freeze occurred during .! overnight visit. to the White I-louse to his personal emissary to Cambodia meet \\'iUl tbc National 5ecurlty -AlexMder M. Haig. Who made a Niay on·the-scene Inspection for the ident In cambodla as well aa visiting ·Seri.hes other key capitals in Southeast A!lla , ar· rive<( b.ick In Washington several boors before dawn and was on hand at the White House when Nixon returned. liaig kept Nl100 posted on his findings l~gbout his visit, via ca b I e d Q'less&ges, but lM President wanted to hear quic~ry the newly elevated four-star general'.s .• personal evaluation of the situation. A Spokesman for the Viet Coog ~id in Paris, "\Ve have received ,.repOrt!'-~hat, backed by· the United ~I.ales, Saigon is preparlnk its · troops f<fr an invasion or cambodia." ' The spok~man. Ly Van Sau. added: "If Saigqn carrite out an o~o invasion of Cambodia to musacre and pill1ge again U)e cambodlan PoPulaUons, it will create 'Taking ' . , Sides'-Agnew WASHINGTON (AP) -Vice President s.>lro T. Agnew today struck out at .)Oumaiists who take ·sides in news atoriea, saying the nati~'s news media .eem to feel more and more they should I control public reaction ralher than repo rt what happened. Agnew's commenb: were contained In lbe text ol a speech. relea.ed he,., iD acl- f vance of delivery at the "April Freedom 1 Forum" of the National F..ducatioaal - ' • • " ;"(Vewport~an Seeks Pardon In Perjury Newport Beach attorney Arthur V. Jones is seeking a pardon from a perjury conviction for which he served one year in state prison, it was learned today. ··-Jones, disbarred following his con· 'viction in Dec. 1967, has been granted 4 new license to practice law by the state "Bar or California. He inow operates from ·2414 University Drive, Newport Beach. The fj9..year-old attorney has been .ordered to appear before Superior Court Judge James Tur~er May 9 for a hearing into his petition for pardon and .rehabilitation. Jones was sentenced to one to 14 years • In state prison by Judge Ronald Crookshank Dec. 15, 1967, after being suc- cessfully prosecuted on charges that he induced t\1/0 Corona dtl Mar re al estate men to commit perjury. Jones and the two witnesses OA·ere in- dicted by the Grand Jury after it was alleged that false testimony in a 196.1 civil trial led to an $11,000 settlement 1n their favor . 'I Bolh rea l estate men -Donald Franklin, 54. or 3317 Ocean Blvd., Newport Beach, and llobert Sisco, 40, of <t56 Morning Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. -were later acquitled. · Jones was convicted on two counts or perjury and unsuccessfully appealed the verdict to the California Supreme Court. The action successfully taken against 'him involved a deal in which Franklin and Sisco supervised .~ proposed land trade in Fallbrook. That land v.·as owned by Santa Ana real esate man William Kachig and in· volved the home of Lawrence Boothe, 2525 Ocean Drive, Corona de! Mar. Boothe and Franklin sued Ka chig for allegedly backing oul of the deal. Program at ~ding College, Searcy, Ark. , The speech was critical of so-called ''advocacy reporting," a school of journalism in which a reporter takes sides on an issue. "Once journalists believed that their job was to report as much as poeaible what happened. Today, the view m. creasing1y seems to be that the media should cootrol the public reaction to what happened," Agnew said. AdvocacJJ9Jlranlists, he said, act more as. lawyen qe.veloping briefa, I.ban; as reporters. / "They ferret out and publicize prin· cipally those facts which support their own points of view -points of view which are considered by them to be revealed truth and the only ones that should be presented to the Amerlcanrpetr pie," he said. • "It is advocacy journalism more than any other factor that has caused the CUl"- rent ill feeling between government of· ficials and ·the opinion-making media," Agnew said. He identified opinion-making media as the television networks, wire services and "the large newspapers a n d magulnes which cover the nation and world with their own Jltt8(IOIJel." Saying the "idea of interference with the free Dow of information td 1the Amertcan people, by government or anyone else, is repugnant to me," Agnew claimed th# Nixon a~lpistration wants lo be lair wiih fhe pre,s. H• said ulen! i< rtghl and Wl'Cll1i on both sides in the controversy between the media and the Admlnistrauan, and1called for "reasoned debate and commurllcation ·betv.·een the parties" to reach a solution "or even an improvement." But he said the staffs of oplnion-mak- ing news media have come to "think of themselves as representatives of the peo- ple and just as routinely lo view the federal government as the enemJes of the people. "Now .something seems very out of' joint about thls.-Does a man who works for CBS represent the people? Or does he primarily represent CBS? Dr. Slocum Sued In Childhirtl1 Death of Woman an extremely grave violation of nam peace accords." In a Senate s~ s morning, Democratic .Lead Ml.kc -Mansfield warDed abouk-nfiliors that South Viet- namese ttoop$ might be used on one ' flank.,i:nil Thailand troops on the other in elfofu to relieve the pressure on -Jeaguered Cambodian forces. "This would be a moat dangerous pro-- cedure and could have the possible effect of once again involving thi s country in a quagmire because the • support - logistical and otherwise -would come from the United States," Mansfield sa1d. The While Hou,. sougl>l fo indicate ihe meeting of the Security Colmcll -com· pored or ihe highest Pentagon, Stale Department, Central l!'IA!lllgence Agency Museum to Get Picll$SO Gih officials as well as White lJouse aidts - was not a crisis meeting, saying it· had bten long·$Cheduttd. · llowever, in Phnom Penh, a crisis at- _mo~phere prevalled as more than 50 v.·estem diplomats or thelr famJUes, in· eluding American.s1 left the Cambodian tapital in anticipation of an allout attack .on the city by Communlst foroe!I. Despite more than five-eeks of dally . bombing or Communist CJDCentrations by American B52s and other warplanes, the Patbet Lao, allegedly with support from North Vietnam, has blockaded the city. Meanwhile, fierce fJghting · w a s TCported lhe lenglh and breadih of SOulh Vietnam today, even though the official I C)'ase-fire waa halfway throuih !ta 1111\ week .. * *-:-R I ' No American POWs Left, • Aide Feels PARIS · (UPI) -The heirs of Pablo PlcaS90 have donated the painter's vast aod price!~ col· Jection of art by other modem anists to _the Louvre museum in Paris, Picasso's a t t o r n e y an· nouneed today. 'Mle gift of p aintings by Modigliani, Braque, 14 a_t j s s e, Renoir, Cezanne and oTher major names of modem art is in accord with Picasso's wishes, attorney Roland Dumas said. WASHINGTON (UPI) -'!be Pentagon said today there are probably no ,more American prisoners alive anywhere in -. Indochina . Dumas said the family bas not decided what to do with works by Picasso himself, which the artist kept in his villa at Mougins in southern France. Some Swjl}ers t ~ ,_ 'Can't Tell' Beer Brands Two college researchers said In Anqbeim beer drinkers can 1t tell the di£- rertiice between brands -or at least 20 students can't at California Polytechnic University ofrPomona. Prof. Frederick .Meeker and student researcher Ralph Bettencourt reported the resUlls of lheit beer preference tests al llie 53rd annual meetf!g or the Western Psychological 'A s s ~ c I a I Ion Wednesday. ' They said they choose 10 "serious" be~ drJnkers wt>o prided themselves as connoimun 4nd to dtlfrer.s who said they could not, i.eU OOj-~ from another. "Not a single person who said befOrehand that he liked this beer or that " he disliked that one coold tell \Yhich was lvhich when their labels were removed," the researchers said. They said .some volunteers in the test had been upset. "Some of the men even feared that not to be able to discriminate might be con- sidered a reflection on their masculini· ty," they said. From.Pagel DENIAL •.• would in effect be necessarily complete before any stock held by the foundation could be sold. A oourt sllit filed by the foundation to change the trust instrument drawn by Jame9 Jrvine is necessary. Privett said, before the stock may be sold even though Dr. Roger Shields~ head ()f ~e Pen- tagon's prisoner of war task force, added there is no evidence that any POWI bad been executed in captivity, with three ex· ceptions. Those three were executed early ip the war in retaliation for Saigon execution of caplure1l.¥iet CO!lg guerrillas, according tq.._a Viet Cong aJlllOOllCement ·al ihe time. The Pathet Lao in Laos and the in· surgenl forces in cambodla will bop$11y provide more information about the fate of the Americans missing in those coun· tries, Shields said, but "we have no in- dication at this moment that there are any Americans a1Ne in Indochina.'' Rumors that there life hundred.1 of U.S. servicemen still held in Laotian prison camps "do the !arnllles of the missing a disservice," he said. Tiie Pathet Lao and the Khmer Rouge, Unlike the Viet Cong and the North Viet· namese, have not provided a list of men who died in captivity. ''We do not consider there has been a complete accounting," Shleki'I said. Jn Laos, 317 men were listed 81 ~ ing and 10 POWs have been returned. Almost all were airmen shot down. Many others were plucked Crom the ground by rescue helicopters before they could be captured, he sa.Jd. . UCI Coed Taken From Shopping Center, ttacked A UC Irvine studen wiS ', raped \Yednesday night by an wn assailant who grabbed her as she urn- ed to her car froni shopping in the Tus · area. Orange County Sherifrs deputies said today. The 21-year-old victim, a Santa Ana resident who works part time for a cater· ing company, told deputies her attacker held a revolver to her bead as she en· tered the car and then forced her to drive to a remote area. She told deputies she was then raped and forced to participate in acts of se1- ual perversion. before being compelled to drive her assailant back to their sarting point. Radio Hanoi said today Viet Cong troops have warned peac!-keeping teams t1> stay clear oi certain areas to avoid '"heart-breaking accidents" such as the one Saturday in-which nine men were killed when their helicopter was shot down In northernmost South Vietnam. Soutb Vietnam said 139 Communist mortar !hells from dawn to midday to- day hil In and ar<lllnd1he Sooih Viet- namese ranger camp at Tong Le Chan, 50 miles north of Saigon. The spokesman said there w·ere no casualties. Fighting has been heavy there for six weeks. ---. The spokesman said Communist lroops Wedqesday attacked Saigon infantry llnd ranger troops Jn Quang Ngai province, 300 mlles north of Saigon. Front Pqe I PROMISES . ; • the board only when an arbitrator is re- quired to resolve the differences. U K'yaw Win, chairman of the OCC faculty senate; however, said the qu.es· lions were sent to the board becau~e the answers were not available thropgh otber 1 · channels. Peggy Staggs, Golden West's. faculty senate chairman, said after the meeting that the teachers are not so much con- cemed with a potential threat to their jobs but because a majority oi thenf see some TV inst~tlon as dehumanizing." l<Qf course there are some people in any profession who feel threatened by change," she conceded. But the real con· ~m •. in her opinion, is that TV i.s a one- way medium whlch allo.ws no interaction between student and teachers. The teachers earlier had Implied television had been given a favorite status ey both administration and ·the .Boa;d of Trustees and that cutbacks~ were made Jn some areas while capital ouUay for !he sta9on continued. During Wednesday night'$ meeting this c:9nctm did not receive as much dlSCUSSk>n as did policy, procedure, and - wbo deteJ:m.ines the quality Of KOCE pro- grams. Dr. Matt Duncan, an OCC teacher, sug- gested to the board "there are problems at KOCE" and queslJo\led lbe educa- tional value of appearances by John Wayne, a jiaseball player, and a pollli· clan's wile wil<l talked about her art classes. Dr. Wll{son reminded the faculty tlurt programming at KOCE was new and that manr programs were speeded into pro- duction lo get the station on the air. The chanceUOr also said that the in· terest of the faculty in television pro- gramming . "is most appropriate and it's high Ume the faculty became iilvolved ." · Citing previous invitations to the faculty to become involved, Dr. Watson said the administration always has kept the door to faculty·participation open. I To Gripe Uy JOUN V ALTERZA 01 Hit o.ur '"" ,,.,. Four do~en demonstrators from f.e f;. ner city of Los Angeles anived at the gates of ·the Westcm White House \Vednesda.y, but thelr protest ·or poverty program cutbacks took a ~k seat to in· lernal .squabbles. In f1ct. the demonstration which had bttn prepared never really got off the ground. Most of lbe demcwlrators ll?Wlled their dlsapr.;intment 1t the area where demonstrat ons take place Jn San Clemente. Oihen began arguing wlih their leaders ·because ooly one newsman show· ed up. ~ Shortly· after leaving their buseJ at about 1:30 p.m. several of the delegates pounced on Public. safety Director Clifford Murray and demanded lo speak lo a White House representaUves . "There isn't anybody there who CQUld accommodate you," Murray said. "What do you mean?" asked one woman. · "J mean there isn't anybody home. They're all in Washington. all we have here today is a few guards,'' 1he chief said . 1 "Well we want a tour, then," said another wom_an. "l can't help you there, either," Mur· ray replied~ "They don't give tours or !he place." At that ·point the demonstrators who had brought along placards urging Pres!· . dent Nixon to "rebuild oty cities, not H.anoi" began piling the pickets into a station wagon. The prim& . .motivation for the ap- pearance in San Clemente was the threat by the Nixon Administration to dismantle the Office of Economic Opportunity. That agency has administered the mode1-clUes program which would have meant about 5,000 jobs i n the Los Angeles gheJtos, spokesmen said. Earlier in ·the day the demoMtrators had marched in downtown Los Angeles, near the offices of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. "Now that was a demonstration," sald one delegate in San Clemente. Eyeing the_ , thoroughbred race horses pastured near ihe western whir. )l>u$e he added : "There ain't nothing here but honel and' a coapl~ of cops." ·~·re les'.vin'..'' Franoo-N. Viet Ties PARIS (AP) -France ancHlorth Viet- nam agreed today "to lull dlplomalic reJa. tion1 , with an exchange of ambwadors. Since ihe JIM Indochina peace •llR&- ment, France aod North Vietnam have maintained commercial mi.salons or general ·illplomaUc delegations in the other country's capJtal. •Throat~ Lewd NY Movie Theater Fined $100,000 ' . i NEW YORK (AP)-A midtown movie theater was fined $100,000 toda fo r showing the movie "Deep Throat," which has been ruled obscen . Cri I Court Judge Joel Tyler said tbe fine, levied against ?t:lature Ente · es, Inc., was "not excessive" and was 11well within the means of · ndants to pay and would accomplish tbe intent" of the state's obsc ·1y statute. The theater said it would appeal. The 62-minute f which opened at the New World Theater June 12, was described 1 '.J')'ler's March 1 rulin~ as a "nadir of dee· adence." Tyler, who heard . e case without a 1ury fo und the film to be "indisputably obscene by legal measurement." · · A forged letter whi(!'h sparked the ac· tion against Jones was introduced at his trial and was offered as evidence that Boothe had actually agreed to the land swap. A widower who claims that Dr. \Vesley Garner Slocum was negligent in lhe treatment of his pregnant wife sued the fonner Costa A1esa physician \Vednesday for $200.001 in damages. • the federal law has ordered the sale. Deputies said she described her at· tacker as being 24 to 25 years old, 175 pounds, and with short dark hair cut In a 1'tU1ttary fashi on. Officers said the victim did not require medical treatment. The film has grossed nation · e more than $3.2 million. It was confiscated by city police last Augu · but the theater was allowed to 'continue showing it during appeal proceedings. It netted $152,924 here. Boothe later went befOre the Grand Jury to testify lhat'he did not write the letter. • OUNlll COAST l DAILY PILOT Tl\1 On1no1 Coul DA.ILY P ILOT, wtl!I -1e11 la (9mbl"" the Ne..,...,_rn1, Is outllltned trl' ... Or1nc11 ~ .. SI PUOl!slrirt9 COf!\Hny. S..IH· Nt. ldlllo111 ••I Pllblii-. MIWIOty Ill""""' ,r'INy, lor COi!I M"", N-rt 8ffCft, Ff~llnglO!I lllKlllF-tllll VtlltV, l•t- l•dl, lrvlM/5adclltbol(k 11111 $Ion Clf.....,11/ ~~ J111n C.plltr1no. A 1liiolt ...,1111111 lldlTloll " pullllsh«I kt\lf'd•Y1 Ind 5llllCl•I"· flll prlnclPlll puOJltlllnO Plllll t~ It lJll WHI l•Y $1r .. I, Colli M11t. Ct!llOmlt. ,,.,. lobtrf N, W11d ,,...llHll, .... l"ultlltl'I .. J1ck R. Curley Viet '°""lcltftl 1l'ld Gtntrtl ~~r Tliom11 K11"'il EOl!Of Tho111., A, Murplil11e · M•n1e1,, l!'Ollw C~e~•• H. L..o1 ltie-herd I'. N•U ~ #e1111ir. &lltoo ,_ C»&Y M .. l DI Wfll lay S1rttl ...._, IMdl1 .ml .,..wport tOllll\'t111 L......-. leedl; m ,._, ,,,_ .............. IMcfl: ,.,.,; tMdl '°"'9•at• lell CllillWl11: JIS ......... t:I (lomlnt 11111 • 'hlif•ara tnfl MJ..Cl21 Cl "PW ......... '42•1671 ,,.. CMilMI ~ .... ., "--·--4fl.+411 ,._ ............ C»wlfy c:.nw.1ti.. -•Uf '-"""*'' '"' °"""' C..tr """"""" ~' Ne -1 ..... Jfl. llh/tlrJ I .. , "'"''"'' ·,,.... -~ ---y .. ~elf Wll')Wt ..-111 -Mii .. llf ~I ....,...,-, lleeNI dt• ,.... ... ,..11 •I CNt.t MfM, C•"~ ...,...,.... 1¥ wrilf IUI .........,, "" tN4 U.11 ......,,.., lftffhr'r *9111111._ SIM .......,. • Arnulfo Salaiza of CUdahy blames Slocum, 49, of Santa Ana, for the death on Oct . l, 1972, of Mrs ... Estelle Salalza. The Orange County Superior Court action states that Mrs. Salaiz.a died after delivering a stillborn child. Salaiza, v.·ho names his two smaJJ children as co-plaintiffs, alleges that Slocum failed to transfer Mrs. Salalia to hospital at a time when he knew that his patient was in a critical condition. Slccum , lvho "''as cleared t"'o years ago of charges that he killed his Infant daughter, currently faces SuperiOr C.Ourt criminal acfion on allegations that he defrauded lhe state's Medi-C.I systenf~ at lea st $5,000. · His arraignment has been set for April 24. From Page I -EXT ORTION • • • panieipate in the alleged kldnaping. The club official told ~lice he was in· structed by a woman teleptKine caller to go to a service station telepbooo booth ln Waterbury. There, he received a second call letting him he would find further In- structions taped beneatll a toilet tan~ in a local restaurant rest room. otnteA said they were told. Police said the club official found lhe letter and, after reading its contents, turned It ove r to aulhorltles. The teller reporledly outlln<d lhe piol lo hold the Bloomfield Iamlly ho!Iage •i ih • radiO<:<ltlll'Ollod bomb taped lo tM chest of the man's daughter. Wnierbury aulhorlUcs said slate police and Dioomlk!ld poUco pos..r as member$ or the motorcycle club and acetpled !he ollcr lo participate in the plol. Police declined to reJease other details. "The U.S. O>nstltution protects such indentures of trust.'' he explained. "Congress cannot violate the terms of a private contract." James Jrvine JI,·who died in 1947, se t up the foundation and gave it controlling interest in the Irvine Company. Despite the Tu Reform Act, Privett said, "Congress can't come along 30 years later and apply-retroactively a law which was not lh effect when the trust in· strument was drawn by ~tr. Irvine. "It will take a court decision to do that," Privett said . The foundation's suit filed in December of 1971 will be given a pretrial hearing ti.fay 9 in Los Angeles Superior Court , Privett said . If hea rd in June or July RS expected, the foundation might be free of present trust restrictions which prohibit "piecemeal" sales of the stock. From Page 1 BAL WEEK. •• contrast to a detade ago when youths streamed lo Balboa by lhe thousands rrom all over the country. "Bui things have been picking up," observed Lt. Ed Cibba,.lli, adjutant to Police Chief B. James Glavas. Cibbarelll saM the department still In· lends lo malnlain nonnal shill! begin· ning Friday. "But If we can't handle it we have plans ,.ady to beef ihings up," Clbbarelli conceded. \Vhlle the number of arresls and com· piainl! •bool carousing youtha still rise 1n11rkedly during Eester week, poljcc hnve managed to keep a compnraUvel_y light lid on the city lhe past four years and have nor had to call out eslra of. ficers except far spccl!lc incld~ts . FREEZE FOOD PRICES With This COMPACT 206 lb. Chest FREEZER •MiltdaWaT11M;111Mi .c.....,.ts*• ..... I kll·A4i1nli_nt ln11tt lW 1 C111ntt1 Htitfll.0911 J8".n. 159'1 FOOD cosrsr MEET RISING - .... ., .. , ... tJr111:•..-..,._ ---., .. ,, .... [_, . ......_ .......... .......... ---........ " ....... ............. 90 DAY CASH - . 1 ,. ( l ' r - ' . I . ' ~-----·----• r--~ s DAIL V PILOT 3 ., ~ On-ly O~e Sadd)eha~k Area Conte~ted ' ' ' ·-1be campaign for the April 17 election f.1arshall of LagWUl llills. Daniel Conp , Korean ..\Var, is a studen1 at saddteback or sa~dleback Col.lege trustees in three said be is no Jooger inte~fn the College majoring iu sociology. He said he areas 1s a contest in only one area . 1 ,,.,,,.., has talked to a f~w people Md hdpes to The . responses to q~estions about pos · . . . L;,--. , stop at shopping centers bt!fore the elec- educallon that appear on tJiis page, along ~ conte!t ~in a~ea rour • wbere Jn-ti on to talk wl1h voterii. ... with the candidates, pictures were made cumbent .a rick Backus of Dana Point is Minc!er is the son·in·law of Conran, who available to t~ DAILY PILOT by the bdng chaheggi:d by two Sad.dleback originally \li'IS running in area five League of \\1omen Vo(ers. ./ 6illege stude'iltli, Ronald ~1incer of' against appaintcd incumbent M I. In area two, Incumbent Hans Vcigel-""of 'Capistrano Beach and Thomas Lewis or 1 Cpnran said 'he lost interts Santa Ana is unopposed. Jn arttfive, the San Juan capistrano. ;;. tcsL. however, and hal only opposition to: incurnberif Dr. James A1incer, a paralyzed veteran or the ... paignlng. ,,....,. Dean's Li,st ~ 1 At College Forty-nine Saddleback College students ac.hieved perfect 4.o·standings {all A's) during the winter quarter, Superin- tendent Freel H. Bremer announced. All students with 3.0 (all B's) standings. or better, a total of 384 students for the quarter were named to the Dean's Honor List for academic achievel'!}en~. ! Students with 4.0 standings, by com- munities, are as follows : ,_ 1 Capistrano Beach -Roy ['. Hamm and Laura L. Lamberg. Dana Point -Marie C. Armstrong and Robert H. Woller. El Toro -Marianne J. Berg. frvine -Tim I. Merti and Rad.ha R. JAMES MARSHALL Area Five HANS VOGEL Area Two Thomas "Lcwts Is also a student.at-Sad- dleback and at age !() is the younge;t candidatt. Lewis became interested in the cam- paign when the board discussed recom- mending to the state that community col· leges begin charging tqition. lie is ~ posed to such a move. , _,,... _ Bac.kus. vice principal and'counselor at \Vilshire El~mentary. School In Fullerton. said he has been '«Soing tht normql / PATRICK BACKUS AN.-F~ thing," ln campaigning, mainly (aJk.ing to people. · ..- He said hr ~eels enlarging Saddleback 's extension .prOgran\S into arell--high schools is an impOrtant ]ob bef'Ore the S8ddleback board. f{e said he also hoped lo see more sharing or recreational r-actlllies bet'''een the college and com· munily. Dr. James ?-.·1nrshall of Lttl;una 1-lills. running as nn incumbent In area five . THOMAS LEWIS Area Four has been hospltnlizcef for two operationt during the co.mpa\gn, and has not been able to meet the public But he suil:l be had '"a world of [rieods ~~:n~~;~ taken over for"" him." lo c~t ~le said he feel s the most impottan.t lJrlorlly racing the college is progressing with lhc acaden1lc program and con- tinuing to institute COW'SC!J for aJI tho eitizens of the srea. • ' RONALD MINCER Are1 Four •· Nayar. Laguna Beach -Van R: Auburn, Carolyn L. Hellreicll, Donovan D. Hively, Robert L. Mc Kown, Gary E. Metzger, Yvette M. Morris, Sharon L. Plumley J ~IJ!~ Marshall ' Land Investor' Hans Vogel Board Member '\Patrick Backus Veteran Trttstee Tliomas Lewis Studen,t Hopeful Ronald Mincer Paralyzed Vet 1 and Claudia Welborn. JAMES W. MARSHA,LL, 140-A Avenida Laguna Hills -Margaret L. Erickson, Majorca, Lag!Jlla Hills; lecturer and land Jaines E. Locke, Maxine C. Piauese, investments; B. · A. Texas Christian and James M. Woytowich. University, Master of Religious Educa- Laguna Niguel -Barbara A. Cud.zik _ tion, Southwestern Seminary, Ft. Worth, and Patricia A. Dena. Tex. Mission Viejo -Gay Chisbot.11, Debora R. Davis, Jeanne Y. Dubberly, James D. Gray, Carolyn J. Lark, Gisela L. Mathisen, William R. Nodell and Geraldine L. Theel ' San Clemente -Margaret-A. Delaney, Charles O. Diliberto, Alexandra Fraser, Gerald A. Gahan and David B. Keller .. San Juan capistrano -Bruce R. Best, ·Earl W. Larson, Sandra K. Silka and Shru:on L. Young. .1 1 , S8nta Ana -George T. Ciorbin, Barbar; a J. John.son, Melodee L. Orton, Ronald ·t. Roberson, Bette B. Streeter and Patricia'. J. Thompson. South Laguna -Marc L. Bernstein and Charles E.-Joyce. Tustin -Jane Gray, Thomas W. Hall, Jr., and M;y L. M;er.. -t; J What unique capabilities do you have to offer the commualty as ·a trustee? A1y education and experience in junior and senior college administration and in counseling hundreds of ~dergraduate · and graduate studenti will be helpful. I have had years of association with in- ternational .educational institutions and with foreign students. I have time to dedicate to the school .and the com- rnun~. . · 1 What espansion or cbaliges would you like to., see in the currfculull! ,.Qt Sad- dlfDack! ' I ,._..j 1 -CCO.Mnued expansion or occupational career (vocational-technical) courses. -Remedial ~ all areas for disadvantaged s den ' . -Expansion o community offerings for the benelit of the community at large -artist lecture series and forums. -Introduction of multicultural courses in order lo show students how the various cultures of the United States have enhanced our society. Increase Noted For Sadclleback What should be the role of tbe federal ~ and state governments in funding com- ~wdty colleges? Sotpe 3,878 students registered for the sprmg quarter at Saddleback College, an increase of about 12 percent over last spring qu arter. I Registration is down about 100 students from the winter quarter, 'following a usual attrition trend from the winter to spring quartet1, said Superintendent Fred Bremer. Of those registered, 1,525 are rull-time students -or those taking 12 credit hours or more, and 2,353 are part·time. Classes for the summer session will begin July 5 with regi stration July 2-3. Hostage Son's Father 'Sane' \ TULSA, Okla. (UPI) Nichola.. Arevalos, whose 2G-year-old son was held in a family kitchen without a bath or Change of clothes for three yean, Is not psychotic, a sanity conunl!sion baa rul- ed. Assistant District Attorney Ron Shaffer said Wednesday he wouJd review possible child abuse charges against Arevalos. The charges were withheld· pending the outcome of the commission rullftg. The son. Nicky, and his moth'cr, Pauline Are\taJos, were confined for men- tal observation at Eastern Slate Hospital. I am not opposed to federal aid if money is sent first to t,Jie state for distribution to communities for local con- trol. Hisiorically, when money is shared by the federal government and the local communities, there is more economical and responsible administration. Do you favor charging tuition fees to stude,nts? t Th~ community Qlllege puts education within reach of all. Mandated tuition will close the door to some and require assistance for lhe needy. 'C loud of Pot' Jail" 21 Y outlis CINCINNATI (UPI ) -Twenty .. ne youths were arrested here when a policeman noticed marijuana smoke "hanging over the neighborhood like a cloud" and followed his nose to a house where a party was in progress. "They were ~king it f r e e I y throughout the house ," Patrolman Paul Hannes, said Wednesday. "There was marijuana fudge in the oven. They were boiling marijuana. on the stove in tea bags and they bad som~ bliming. in the fireplace. "It was going up the chimney and we could smell It all over the neighborhood .·· Harmes said. HANS VOGEL, IG461 Cowan Heights Dr., Santa Ana : school administrator ; B.A. USC, M.A. Cha~man College. \Vhat unique capabilities do you ba\'e t"' offer the commttnity as a trustee! Past and proven experience as board · member and educator. What expansion or changes would you ·like· to see in the curriculum at Sad- illeback? Constant improvement in quality; ex- pansion of the vocational occupation of· ferings. What sboold be the role of the federal and state governments ~ the funding of commuility colleges! · It i•·~he .reswnsibility of ,the state to educate its constituents -this includes funding:-·Federal funding via state ad· ministration is proper. Do you favor cbarciag tulUoa rees,to stu"'Di' ' j J I ' Nof. •iJl,~ er. 'i&;AP board 'w I~ not make this decision, the state Board of Governors will. Sex' Poll Rattles Italian School. , Creates Issue MILl\N,.ltaly (AP) -A sex poll which showed many girls approve of abortion, masturbation and homosexuality has become an issue between pupils and teachers in a Milan high school. The poll was conducted iJy an un- derground publication ''Bread and Roses-" among the pupils aged 14-18 or the all·female St : Catherine School. A total of 128 girls answered the ques· tionnaire. Of these, 46 favored abortion : 54 approved of masturbation: 2Q allo·,r homosexuality and eight admitted to hav· ing lx.ien attracted by other girls. ·~, When the issue of "Bread and Roses" carrying the answers was put on sale in the 'school , the dean seiied it. Teachers argued that the poll )Yas a threat to the good name or the school. Students smeared the school walls with protest slogans. Cemetery Strike Ends OAKLAt/D (AP) - A wildcat walkout by grbundskeepers and custodians at four· East ·San Francisco Bay cemeteri~s ha s been settled with the signl!lg _ Wednesday of a t~o-year contract. The agreement, which covers the four struc~ cemeteries and 12 others, includes a p::i y raise o( SO cents an hour retroactive to March t and another hourly increase of 40 cents next March L Doctors said Arevalos was not psychotic. but appeared loo weak to sland up to his wife. American Party Rlanning V acatio1iland Show Toniglit Doors open at 7:311 tonight at Newport Harbor High Sc h o o I Audittlrlum. 600 Irvine St, Newport Beach, for the 1973 edition of Vaca· lionland BMtlsh Columbia. \Vhatevcr ticket& remain for me four-movie film festival will be handed out al thal time . The free show, co-sponsored by lhe Orange Coast Evening College and the DA.ILY PILOT, feattm!s. program produced by Jhe British Columbia Department of Travel Industry and Western A~lioe>. It's free. ' Full-California Campaign 1 I LA JOLLA (AP)· -The American Independent party has narTowed its a:~ peal to "an upper-income, country cluO, John Birch Society-oriented audience" in 1972 but can rebuild, ao organlter soys. Jt will field a full slate of candidates in C.lilomla In 1974, the official said here Wednesd•y. William K. She'arer, a state com4 mli!eeman who Wa! the party's Orst California chainnan, uid the ¥¥-Orkln.s man was neglected by his party. wll.ich 1s called the American party naUonally but the American Jndependent party In Calif oral~. The appeal of lls tm presidential nominee. John B. Schmitz or Newport -I Beach, was described by Shearer as too narrow. ' Alabama Gov. George Wallace as the earlier noml.net "saw people coming from every direction and walk of life - worken coming out of the ractotles and textile mills, farmers coming ou\ of the fields and jumping of( of flatbed cotton trucks, young people, little business .men,'' he.said. • "When Schmitz closed his eyes and saw a vision or his audience," said Shearer. "he saw an upper.Income coun- t ry .. club, John Blrch .. Mented uudiencc, and you just cannot win elections if your appeal is limited to this very narrow aegt· men!." PATRICK J. BACI\.US. 33382 Bremerton. Dana Point: sc hool ·ad· ministrator: M.A. Stanford University. What unique capabilities do you have to offer the community as a trustee? My six years as a trustee has enabled me lo gain insight into the needs or the Saddleback Co1nmunity College District: wise planning, financial responsibility, and an open milld for a curriculum that meets the needs of ijle community in academic and technical subjects. \\'bat .expansion or changes •·ould you like to S$e in the. curriculum at Sad- dleback? As Saddleback College grows, an of· fering or extended day classes in various areas of the dJstrict alloWing mOie peo- ple the opportunity to pursue a course .of study without eo1,ning to the, main cam- pu~, ',,-""' Wllal 1llo1ilcl be tlie nla of tbe lederal a.pd ...ltate govemments ,,n t~ hi~& of coi\imu1tltyotCONeges? A communily &liege Is rio different than any other financial e n ti t y . Therefore, it is necessary that both federal and state grants provide funds that will allow community colleges to provide students ample opportu!llty to pursue educational desires without any undue burden. Do you -favor charging tuition fees to students? · I have beef! and always will be opposed to charging tuition-<M"Hbe coD1irumity col· lege level. . ' POW Tax Bill Signed SACRAMENTO (AP) -'.State-income and inheritance·tax benefits were set up for former prisoners of war in Vietnam and the families of servicemen missing in action by legislation sianed into la\v Wednesda y by Gov. Ronald Reagan . ·L J THOMAS B. LEWIS, 34356 Calle Naranja. Capistrano Beach; Student: graduated San Bernardino-High School. Sa'ddleback Community College. What unique capabilities do you have to Offer the community as a trustee? Graduated with . honors from high school. Active in Sports: played varsity bas~ball. _Two years photographer for high school paper; honor student Sad· dleback College, 1972·73. Will transfer to Fullerton State next fall. Plan to attend use law school. First cousin member of State Assembly; worked two years for electrical contractors. Wb~t expansion or changes would you Hke .. to sec in U.e curriculum at Sad· "dl~clr;? 1 I • There shoul,d be closer communication witb Other . coll~ges and universities in on.fer to HaV~ ·better _5f>hn~ling for 1tudi!dts. 1 More1 1 t \!die n t tation Oii the board is Qeeded. should be .the role.ol the federal an4 state gov~~ments In the funding of commupUy colleges? At this time; the federal government should have no~r.ale in the fWldlng of .community or, state colleges. Do you favor charging lultlon fees lo studeots?- Resident studen ts -sbo!Hd not be charg- ed tuition fees as this would make it im- possible for lD08t of them to continue further education which ls Important. Writers Picketing LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Striking writers began picketing tht l{ollywood studios of the three major television networks today. The Writers Guild of America .west, which tia~ bfen picketing major movie studios since a writers strike began March 6, said the piCket lines \Vere formed because negotiations \\'ilh the TV networks broke down. I RONALD DEAN MINCER. 34522 cane . Portola. Capistrano Beach, studeot, paralyicd vekran. three years college.• ' What unique capabilities do you have to offer the community as a trustee? , I am a paralyzed vet. so I will ha6,t adequa te lime to apply myself to the jo6. I have \\'Orked in business.. management i and I am now a student. I feel I am familiar to the problems of both student., ' and the business of running a college. Wbtd expansion or changes would you 1 like to see In the curriculum at I Sllddleback? -· I would ~~e.to,.. more <1-off..,G that eollcem every day Jivlng. ~I belle'{! more vocational courses should be of· fered71 Wo¥ld also like to see moJ:e cour!tes using l~ral llf•egilnll"t printed boob. Thtly are cheaper for ~ tttudtitl and ire n\Ore. than adequate. What sboald be the role of tbe ledual and 1tate &ovemments iri funding com· muoity colie1ea! I believe the federal and state governments are doing enough to fin~ce now . . • Do you favor tuition feta to studtn11? l~ievc a $10 tuition charge should ~e ma or $1 per unlt, wttichever is l•s. This II cover enrollment costs. Body Found on Base SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The body of a man found strangled in bushes on the Presidio Army Base has been identified as ·that of Hillsborough insutft'nce ex- ecutiVe John A. Steel, 59, the FBI says. The body, found Wednesday ' morning near lookout Point, had been stripped or all identification and was not identified for se.veral hours. said Charles Bates, rer agent in charge. RIP VAN WINKLE mattress by Handcrafted • ~l tt<le 1t11tlrely liy a111I. • ll:i n1l-11tit•ht!d tlf'\\'till" t!111t w1ll ,.J1 • er illl.g or l1 1•ca k ti<.1!-'n. • !:!' .. 111\)rt· ll~•·ahfi· IU'l'M or ~1c~ping i;urr:11•1·. • l,;ph11J,.le"•1I \\"i t h ~fr.,.,, 1uy1·r>: or fluf fy Liat•r(l11 l1y J 111 Pont. • ll1•ll:tnd .\lai,f 11111 •·r- ~1•r111i: rui' l(l"l•ILti"r 11t11 • hility 11111! cnn1fo r1 . ' ~-\1·11y hH lltl l i+'<J l1t)'( :i.11ri1l{!"-\1i1• f•!\\"V Hf I h~ 1111h1l'ltty. . • Full :!f/•yt·ar ~11an1n l•'C -nht 11rn•ra1.~1. - TWIN SIZE ............. . ...... per set 219.5 0 229:50 319.50 419.50 FULL SIZE . ~ . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . per set QUEEN SIZE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . per set KING SIZE . . . ' . . . . . . ' . ' ' . ' . . . . . ... per set H.J. GAR~ElT f U .RNIT~l ~~RBOR BLVD. PROFESSIONAL , COSTA MESA , CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Moo,, Thurs. l "'I, hes. Mb-0275 j I · I I ,( .. I ' \ - i, DA!lY l'llOf e Far Away? MISTS IN 111E MORNING: Driving f ~~ work this moming, there ailed a ce.-iain grayness covering the ange amt sky. Sort of a wet feeling the air. A strong' smell of Pacific an. What could all thb mean? The early d~y weather seemed 'iliar. Wl).ile there was truS preya1ent ayness,' you got the strong feeling, sn.if· g the air, that thiirwas a bu y. is was not the dull, Jeaden atmosphere t we have viewed ·ror weeks just past. kind that was most likely to dump on ' in great gobs of wetness. No, hr-golly, this was different. This as the'rolling kind ol mists in the mom- g Iha~ with the lord's good graces, oold . viliilll wilh the heat of mi<k!ay and reveal to all thi.5 best of all sible coasts. So what does it mean? SCAN '11fE NEWS of the day for other ues. A certain coastal craziness seems fill the inked pages. A fl ying couple om Alaska floated their seaplane in on e blue waters of Hwitington Harbour. guring they wc~e in San Diego. Another poor chap drove his boat up to the beach near lluntington's Edison eam plant, fi guring he was headed into fie harbOr at Redondo Beach. i A couple of apparent gross errors in 1avigatlon; one by air and one by sea. ·-_MEANWHILE DOWNCOAST al Laguna Beach. a pretty young miss drew a large crowa to the sho reline whilst sun· b;llh.ing with nothing more than a birthmark to protect her from the sun '?Y'· The mists or the morning. The bum.off sky. The· craziness by la nd, seashore and *·What can it all mean? . ih. rmally' your mind grinds into gear it all comes into focus. Check the ndar .• Indeed,. we· apProach that od of time known a.s spring vacation . used to call it Bal Week in these Parts. A Ume just ahead of summer's lazy days with the youth of our land gets kicked I°'""' from classroomi and books and go wherever they cao tp practice the rites of spring. YEARS AGO, 'MIEY used to descend upon our coastline like hordes or ·Hun in· vaders . They filled rental units. TbeY over-filled them, as a malter of fact\ Du ring those sprin~ vacation da ys, they turned our beacties into one great sea of flopped-out bodies. The boys look· ed at the girls. The girls looked back. Fun and hi·jinks were the orde rs of the -day . At night il w~ youth on the move. Al\\·ays moving. From Balboa's old Rendezvous Ballroom and Fun Zone1 to ihe str eets of downtown Laguna bacK to Marine Avenue on Balboa. Island. "And in all the moving, flopping -sun· driving , high·Jinksing, you could e plenty ol zany thingl would happen lY keep things lively in the springtime ~-orig thls best or all possible coasts. lN RECENT YEARS, Ille youth influx of spring hasn '1 measured up to " steryear. The law h<is been more tirlllt dlords no longer will rcot a one+ro6m gaJow to 50 students. Balboa's deZvous burned. is gone. but no t ~otten. • f Meanwhile. vacationing students have · red other spots Ii¥ the desert or tain.s in practicirfr'ihe rites of g. You suspect Bal Week is just a ol (he past . t spring. is with us. ~ou can tell by the mists of the morn· ing. ~ .. ....~.· ---' • • • t Indications Point to' Ww",,,""" ·ng lnquir,;, Uf'I T ........ Tower · Deaths WASHING10N (UPI) A federal grand _jury's Interview of sev81l key- White House aidet indicates it ,ir ex- panding its iovettigatlon of t h e Watergate bugging bue to other polit espionage and sabotage durio 972 presidential campaign. related stoi:y, Page 10) Dwight n, Presillenl.)lilOD'• ap- poin '...mary at the time of the ....-·~·e 17 bugging, testified Wednesday fur 90 mlnutea and Donald H. Segrettl, the Califontia lawy~ he hired fur illeged sabotage ig&inSt-Democratic carxtidatea, testified. for 45 minutes. , Chapin and Segrettl have nOI been In- volved in the Watergate investigation dir<ctly but have ~· mentioned in reports ol other alkged polillcal Un- dercover activity. GORDON STRACHAN, a polittcal aide to White Holise Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman, and Robert Reisner, {crmer aide to 1972 deputy canlpaign manager Jeb Stuart Magruder, ·also appeared before the grand jury Wednesday. The grand jury was to _meet again to- day, although it was not certain whom it would be interviewing. The Los Angeles Times and tbe Washington Poat rei>orted that James W. McCord Jr., convicted Watergate cm-- splrator and security chief for the Com· mittee to Re.Elec( the Presidenl at the time he was arrested,_ told the grand jury that fellow conspiralol' G. Gordon Lidey said transcripts of tbe ·bugging of Ole Four wOrkmen 'vere killed \Vednesday when flash fire shot throiigh an elevator shaft they were cleaning in ·sears Tower in Chicago. Ar· row indicates ap proximate death seene between 33rd and 35th fl oors. Buil ding will be 110 stories, hi&hest in world. One Federal Judge _Rules Breakup {l,f OEO Illegal WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal judge says .the Nixon Administration is acting illegally in ils plan to disperse rapidly the programs and peopl e of the Office Of Econoiriic Opportunity. U.S. District COt.irt Judge William B. Jones.:.~~·. broadly worded order Wednesday enjoining Howard Phillips, acting OEO director, from proceeding furtheF with ~be a~aUon plan to ' p~ the•anUpovertf'ageoey. , Jones' .. 1.i ~ adnlintstrauoo "'"'1d not unilaterally terminate OEO programs establistted"by Congress as long as funds are appropriated for them. His deClsion came on . suits Wed by a union I0ca1 ~nting gover_nment ,-orkers and a Mimuri r u r a 1 redevelopment cor· por.atlon. IN CBICAGO, HOWEVER U.S. Dislricl Court ·J~ James B. Parsons-refused to Rights w Booze 'Not Guaranteed By Constitution' PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -A three- judge federal panel has ruled that ·th e right to buy alcohol is not a. "fun- damental right'" guaranteed by the U.S. Constituti on. · The decision came in a suit filed by a group of college students contesting the state's power to ~t the drinking . age at 21. The students. members or t be Republican Coll ege C o u n c i I 0£ P e nnsy l vania, argued that Pennsylvania's drinking Jaws de.oled them equal protection under the laws and infringed on their freedom of association and right to privacy. halt the administration's act i o ns . Parsons said suits filed in Chicago were premature since "OEO Y.'ili continue as provided by law unless Congress acts lo discontinue it or fails to act to cause its continuance and tfiat Community; Action Agencies will be funde4 fo.r. their , programs at least through 1973. ''. The Chicago action also was filed by a ... ~on·. '"" local that represents OEO employes. nie-white House "and ·the OEO sai ' they would ~vt na-cotrmlent on the tW '' declSioos linlll i g<iYemmeol; atlOrney'il studied tberii;' ' • · ' .' . -' ' PIULUP ~ KETE, president of the• government union local in \Vashington, told an overllow crowd of about 100 in the lobby ol OEO headquart~rs after ,o Jones issued his decision: "We are proud to have· fought, and happy to bav·e beaten. thii attempt to v.iolate the laws of the United Stat~." • He urged P{'esident Nixon to reJ)l&ce · what he called. "Hpwie "Phillips aild bi&, wrecklng crew" witb managers w60 wi}l carry~OUt' the Economic Opportunity 'Act as, be-,.said, tht.1.Uli9n•membets Will. The crowd cheered. ·· · ' DAILY' PILOT. DELIVERY SERVICE-, Otlivrry of the Dally Pilo \ i1 guarantttd Mtndlr·Frltley: II row dt ~ot llavt ro11r ~,., •Y J:)f a.m.. (.ii and .,~,,.; .(''' will H lort11flll 19 • rt11. Ctlll ,,. IA111n 1111111 1:• P·"'- S1h1rdt'1' Ind Slll'MllY: II ~· delnet rctflvl Yt\tr CtP'I' .. f I .Ill. Sttll'lllY, W I l .m. 51111d1y, (Ill and • <•PY wlN ... """""' r. Y••· Ctllf lrt ll klft 11•lil It I .Ill. Ttlephones Miit! Or1119C C.w111y Art it ••••••• 1(].lJU ' . Ntt111Wttl H•lllirltlff a11d1 ~ '#••Im.inti tr .. .. ., .... Mt-U• S.11 C"-"lt. Ctpftlrt M at.ell, s.11 J111t1 Cf:ahtr1111, 01111 ...i.t, St111t1 Llllltlll• ltt,.,.t Nit\141 .... eJ.4C1I ., -H'e.t colll Hu.gc'dtp05its of. natural gasluve bctil. 4~ettd in places like Al~ska, NoniiWest - Canada ind the Can.adim Atctic lslinds. Wc un brinl_IOli)e of it here in tankers. Som&: through a pipt"line. And wt!vi b«n involved io extensivt...Aiaic . 1escarch to ilnd out the ~t way to bujld tMi pipclinC Without • rhumin1 lbeenviron.mc:nt.·,, ' "\:') I ' . ' THE GRAND JURY had been !Jlking testimony from lhe \fatergate defeod- anta, who were given bnmunity from further prooecutioo. Bui as ii mewed to- ward investigating other act., the prose- cution -lllbt lhe ahrouds ol oeour-ity. and-aecrecy and aoutthl ID keep re- porierl from kMwlDg What WU going 00. ' A.NTI-SFlX BILL IN BIG TROUBDE . ' HARRISBURG, Pa. .(AP) -Gov. Milton J. Sbapp says if leglalalloo mak- ing adultery am fomiqtloo a crime ever reaches his desk he'll veto It. • 0 1 do not ·think you can legislate ,morals,'' Shapp told· a news conference Wednesday. "Perhaps we should give a lie detector test to legislators and ooly let those who pass vote on it," he quipped. State Rep. Martin Mullen, who's been pressing tbe bill and who says be will run for gow:mor on a monlity p!atfonnJ countered: "That's his trouble. lie makes light or everyti!log. 11lat's why I'm running for fOVernol'." r . .. ·~ . It has been widely reported that Chap- In'bired SegretU as an undercover agent last yea r, and FBI reports .sa1d that at Chapin's orders, Nixon's perSOCUll at· tomey, Herbert Kalmbach, of Ne"lJOrt Beach, paid Segretti more thpn ..,0,090. .IT ALSO WAS. Alleged that Reisner probably would have known about a reported secret meeting in February, 1972, in which Mitchell, then the cam· paign" manager; Magr.uder, his deputy: White· Hou~ counsel John W. Dean III:-... and Watergate cocfs·pirator G. COrdon Liddy, anotber rorm9'--Wlille JJousc aide and re-electioO campaign fi nance counsel at the time, diScussed plans 'for the Watergate bugging, The campaign committee denied today that any meeting had been held by Mitchell, Magruder and Dean for the pur.pOSe of discussing Watergate bugging plllns. - The Pos t · also quoted 11feliable in· vestigative ;;o urces" as saying Mitc~ell itchell and forme r Commerce Seretary· and former Cqmmerce Secretary Maur· ice N. Stans, '"Nixon's campaign fund · raiser, testified before a federal grand jury in New York this month '8bout· a $200,000 campaign coritribution by Robert L. Vesco. Vesco is cen tral figure in a Securities and Excbange comm ission suit all eging tha1-m\.estors were swin· died out of $24 million. ' \. Stonac: We store gas in under· ground SlOragc fields in tM JYmmcr so you'll batt enough for the win'Cf:-· -- Sub5titutc gas from natural resources; Coal gi1silic.a1ion 1~ )imply the reaction of ~I with oxygen and hydr~n from sttam 1n a suitable reac1or. The 1c~ult, a meth•ne gas, is then purified to produce clean-burning ,. substitute gas. G.as from coal. ' \Vith all the propcruci.of '·' natural gas •• • Fr~st Nips East, South ~·Gro·wers Assess Da.1nage w Crops Due to Cold Niglits ...... ,. I,~ .~J~HOW r7T'7l ....... ~·llOWf l~ •.,.; llOW • d•v 111e1 ~lnttMe cold c a 1,11 f d wldelOl'ttd d1mtc1• 10 orc.lllrd1 and tnnoer lltld cr0111 trom. SOUll'ltrn 1111~11 IO Arll1n111 tnd Al1btrM. A Vnlvtrtlll' ot Ml 1 1ourl llorllc1111urll1, lltud~ l u, ow t 1 t f , Prtol(tlld th.It (old damaot "°"I' C~\IMI '°'"' fruit CH"ICli lo SN• n montM •'!t.'41· Art"ar1511'1 lom1!0 crop may ~ 10 to 1S 111rc1111 Clettroved, oflic.lals u111. CrOll IOl.M& In Southern llllnols, •lrtsd't' 1tvtrt from lloodlno, _,.. lurtllll' dim~ b'I' 1111 ltlllrt COid. Ont H K!'! 11ro_.. stld lib croo w11 11 !GO Pftttflt loss -"Wt c1n'I find -11 .... bud." A l/gllt mt.tuft! 01 rtln •nd snow lclld ,,...., Detwffn lht Gr''' Ltkes trid tht Ohio RFwr. IWI lht •CC\/11"1\lllllon WIS .tltht, vsu•ll'I' 1111 fllan 111 ll'ldl. llttln mo\'lld over !ht Ore!IOll eo11t. Tiit 1111 llllY d1"111) _,-111ot11 '' southwts"'"' Color.OO were cornp111H 11'1 an effort to !Md ctttlt slrlnd«I 11'1 hHVV Sl'IOW. As '""'"''turn "10¥.el Into the 60s, blr<Vlna c1"11 klltlld by stvert -•!tier btc1m1 1 too orlorltv. Olfnl'OI; lillJllllU lo Cltllt! ,_..!ft "'II ntw ClllVli rallOed 1111 lo $1J l'l'IHllon In Colorado •'-• As mMY ti htll tht 4 .000 c.iws born ii.tort the 1lorm 1rt f1'l"UIP.I to l\llvt 11ltc1. In Ntw Maxlco, r1r>ehtr1 !Mt .r1 H llma!td 11,,.. iwrn:1111t of lllllr c11trt>o> i nd """'"' Mlf It'll tall crop, a Ion o1 Mt1'lllOJ DI m!lli<in. Coastal Weather Partly cll!UdY lod•Y· light v1rl1blt1 wlncll nlt~I Ind l'l\Of"ftlni:I llour1 bl- comlnt we1tet'ly lf to 11 11.llDll In lflfl"l'IOOIU IOd&Y 11\d Fr1111y. High lod•'I' 111 tht low 601. Coes111 11moer1h1rt11 ranot l!"Ol'l'I 51 to 65. l11!1nd t.mper1111r11 • r'ltnOt from 80 lo ... Wat.r 11,,,perttllrtff, TMUll:$0AY ss;~:'~~;, 'Tid;fl .. 1 Fll:IOAY F ltil hlOll •:lt 1.1'1'1 ... , Fl"I ·low .•. . lf:J• t .m, 1.0 Second 1'11911 .• . . . . •• 1:03 p.rn. J.I Cas from lndont5i111: This proi«t 1;ould bring up to one.billion cub11; feet pt"r day of natural sas fin liquid form) to 1hc West Co.ast of the United Sta ta. LNC fromAuttralia: In the Palm Valley fitld ol Centra l Aw;traH.t, there may be as m uch u 10 uil\ion cubic fea of natural sat. If the gu proves 10 ht thetc:, and I.he Ausualiln ind U.S. Coffmmcnts approve, tbil supply c:oold be convenrd 10 liquid form and shipped home 'ria specially tonstnJCtcd 11blb~. ... Cas from Ccnual ind South ~ Amcrica: Although somewhat ta, far along than other ~urctt, L11in Ameriun R•s is 51jlJ a very real pouibility. Our plans call for drilhng IC!;t wdls in Panam• and Co.lombia liOOft, ' This country is faci.ftg An energy shonagc. And it includes Whichever, it's obviously going to cost more. But we natural gas. think you'll Agree that it., a lot bettCr than no gas. Espe· Does that mean the Gas Company is running out? cially since it1ll still be your most m>nomical ener1y source. Not exactly. But we'll have to go to the ends of the earth And one of the cleanest. in order to keep those home fires burning. A5 far t s your immediate needs iire concerned , we'll'bc Ip fact, in• few years, the gas that supplies the flame able to supply all our ••firm" custon1crs, such as that supplies the heat that cOok.s your roast may come 6 homes •nd businesses. Bl.it until \VI! hnv' those new from Alaska. Or Indonesia.Or Australia. It'll be supplies coming in, we will have lo inti.:rrupt dcliv· n•tural gas that we miuct t0 a liquid and ship home cries more often to ow industrial customers who are in tankers. i1rH::l. equipped to switch to other fuels whenever "firm'' Or maybe it'll be substitute 1as produced fl1)m ooal. ~ cusiomcrs' ncciJsrcqulr c. ....... Ctlf •GllC ;11; . wrte......._.ln11•11• ' • Allbllt'll I OUC:ll (.._ tutl ... td ~,,,..,. d•l'l'laot from the c:otll •• 1tmoer1tvrt1 •I l lrml1111lwlm lollthtd 7• 11rlv WldMllll't'. Stcond low . !?ill p,l'I\. 0.0 Svn •lstf 5:H 1.m. 1111. •:n p,111, MOM lltfttl t :SI D.l'l'I. Sehl f;~l 1,11'1.1----...'..---------------'---------------------------....:_- ) ' \ ' 1 ' '.. · .. I I --t' •• ( r DAILY PILOT $ Reading ,~ Soores Pape~s "_.· ·. ge.d . E]Jsherg·'~ hilosophy J I~ • • ,. ' (. ' ' ~ow:·ap LOS ANGELES l1P1f-wilneU sland, ElbbsJ delail· P{"vlous ~ and made me muniits." ' -would ask lbe !armers what ''There was an increasmc The ground!Slfrwas laMi . ta;:. ed WiedneadlJ t.ow ht worked feel 1 wu wrong when 1 work· "I began to di-ive the roads the cmdltlona were, to com• divergence between reality a1 d8y f!JJ>atilel Ellsberg to tell neat the highest te"1s ot_the ed for.the govemmtnt.n ·of Vietnam around Saigon and pare what I could ~ylth my And heard it wifh hJs own .e~ ....-;;·a def..,.. COllOUltant w -and participated in~ ~ -•· the hamlelS end vll!agcs. I report•.-hi~\ up," EU.berg teslifi tM1'entagan. Papen trial~ government during ~ early .. '!:'Ills""-aloog w i t h the Mekong Delta and to vlslt own eyes with / orfJcial and what was belng report ---once "wanted to win this w tQ send · Marine combat trQOps Anlhony Ru9Bo Jr., IS charged ,p;;;;!i--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;i;;;;OiiiOiii;;;;;;i;;;;--~.;--;;;;;;---;;;;;-;;;;;;--Oiii-~ >-SACRAMENTO 1AP ) -' 'lbe1e is a l!l'll•lng "readiJ)g gap~' between normal pu.pils and educationally hlindicaPi>ed" cbjldren In lbe first .three grades ol scbool,_,a report 1o • the.Stale Board' of Educalloo sald_toda"f. end be8t the Communi!ts" into Vietnlm in early lt65. with espl~ge, theft and con-/ came to ~k c I ass i fled He said he spmt the dec~de spiracy f9r'their actionS Jn the ' 25th· documents. between ltD and 1919 as a na· release o( fue, papers...,.. · • flonal se<11rity analyst because Ellsberg iestilied be had . The rePort ftom the state Department of Education's Of· rice of Program Evaluation and ResearCh was based on CALIFORNIA ElJ.SllERq SAID be hoped he wanted "lo protect and de-writlen speedleo end· prepared to make clear to the jury to-fend .the United States of E for fJlCh top._ govem- day "how the Pen i ago n America." t-olticJals•ln the Kennedy , Papers changed me, an.ct how I and · Nil:oo a d • ;,children Of Pic~sso • hoped they would help the UE TOLD newsmen latei;-)llinistratJOns QS,. Robert <;ongress." that tne Pent88on Papers, '111cNamar~. Henry Kissi nger, ( ) Appearing tense and drawn which he ~ped te compile, \Valier Rostow and Nicholas on his $econd day on the ''Jed me to <luestion my whole Katzenbach and had been cal- BRIEFS ' Jed in as a COMUltant on reading scores given in the spring of 1972. It w a s presented as the board went through the fll'St da)r of a two- day meeting 1n Sacramento. Nixed EntrJ rando's Ex-wile • ' . : LA JOLLA (AP)"-Pablo Picasso's two children by his .mistress, Francoise G I I o t , haVe been barred from: en- tering the bOme or their late father, says Dr. Jonas Salk, now Miss Gilot's husband. . -· F.ducators define an educa- tionally handica~ped child as one Hwho cannot benefit from regular educational programs because of markJ<I leemlng or behavior disord&a, and who consequently requin!S special educational programs." Sues for 6oy, 14 0 THE REASON for the LOS ANGELES (UPI) Anna Kashfi, formec wlfe .of Marlon ~' ftled,. suit Wednesday for custody of their 14-year-old son, saying Brando's X-rated perfonneace in "Last, Tango in Paris" and social activism were em- barrassing the boy and ruining his morals. absence of any comment or e Pilot Blamed reflection by Francoise .. Gilot •. WASHINGTON (AP) _ The on t~ death of Pie""° is a Natlo.nal Transportation Safe-continued refusalto allow her ty Board said Wednesday the children, Claude and Paloma, probable cause of the jet crash who are now in the south of jnto an ice cream parlor at mE SUIT said Brando left Sacramento, killing 22 persons France, to enter their f.QUier's for Tahiti this week with their last SeptemQer was "inade-home at this momerlt of son, Christian, to escape the quate pilot proficiency in the grief," Salk said Wednesday. jurisdiction of the court and aircraft," a n d misleading · His statement ap~red in avoid a May 6 custody hear- visual cues. today\s. edition of , i.pe San ink· . ·. The safety board recom~ Diego Uqion. The suit said that in Bran: ---•-• '-"'""" m· do's.latest movie role he "ex-.. ~ ma,.......,.,., -., regalationa governing · · .. "AL'J1!0YQH THEY ~re .~ibits .. himself in. various certlfieallo,n .of experimental been kept from seeing their stages of nucjily and Simulated aircraft aDJI in the control of father for more than 10 years, ~ acts. •. utters obscene, foul, pllotS Who Oy them. this inte[!llctioo after his shockiDK and d i s ta s t e f u I . .. death. is · not befitting the _ obscenities" and "as a result, e W'lfe G11Ut11 greatness of the ~son· who my son bas been subjecled lo SAN DIEco (AP) -Donna has contributed so P,.,fouiidly · ,rfdicul~' aiid embarras=enl .. Eve' Wood 35 was sentenced. in changing man's perception His (Brando's) immoral and Wednesdaf ~ one to five and vision Of himself," Salk unconventional conduct" has years tn state prison after said. cr~ated an atmospber~ \48-t pleading guilty lo soliciting htr husband's mW'der. The husband, Navy PO J.C. Charles Delmar Wood, stood beside1 his wife during the trial. She pleaded gui]Iy Jan. 3 to trying lo hire two men lo kill him for $\D,llOO. ~. E•fln~le LONG BEACH (AP) -; , Charles 5tewart1 f o t m e r ,_a1 manager o1 SallJ'm ' ~ ~ is~accuod%l'i'iili'i :• bnzllog $1I,il7 .fNm 'thO .c;ar sales finn In a llk»lint OOID· ·p\aln\ ffied in Municipal OJurl here. Stewart, 39, was accused Wednesday of taking amounts ranging from 11,000 to $5,200 over an eight-month period. Inv~trgators said he a~ pareotly lost the money in pobr iilvestrnents in the sto.ck .market. Yarh'rough Eluding fil.'s· Office SAN RAFAEL (AP) - Singer Glen Yarbrough is run- ning a foot race w i th authorities who have ' been trying to serve him with. a bench warrant, alleging be failed to pay child support during the past year. . Yarbrough, 43, is charged in the warrant signed last week by Municipal Court Judge Robert Smallman with being $12,000 in arrears in.payments to his ex-wife Margaret Jones of Inverness, Calif., for supoor) of their two children, Glen Shean, 14,' and Stephany, 12 .• 'M1e couple was divorced in Colorado in 1961. Marin Counly Deputy Disl. Ally. Wilton Hyama aakl ' Wednesday that server! have tried to catch Yarbrough sevenP times during the pa~t Week at locations throughout ealifornia -including con- certs at which the singer fail- ed to .appear. Actress S uei1 For Estate ., "defeteriously ·aJfected. the boy's emotional s"tabllJty· and moral standards," she alleged. SHE AU!O . referred lo Brando's refusal of th e Academy Award for best actor he won for playing "'Mte God- father." Brando sent an Indian woman to the ceremony to say he was turning it down as a protest against portrayal of lndians in .American movies. She said he was going: to join the militants at Wounded Knee, S.D. He never appeared pqblicly there and no confinned repoct of Brando's whereabouts a~ peared until the. Superior Court suit charged· .bee had gone to Tahiti. 1 • ' BRANDO ANP MJss Kashi hav~ .been involved if.. 'a series of bitter legal battles over custody of the boy. .. -~ - defeme matters. JN ~UGUST, "· ho said, he volwiteered to go to Viet· nam with a ·state Department team because "I warited to see what we could do to win this wai and to beat the Com- KROQ Fu11,d Retur1ied? f:.<is·ANGELES !AP ) -The city PoliCe Commission has voted to 'give Burbank radio station KROQ back its $50.000 bond despite massive arrests at the rock concert i t sponsored last Nov. 25 at the 'Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The 3-0 vote Wednesday came d e s p i t e recOrri- mendations from the police department and the com· mission hearing e~(lminer, who wanted to keep about $30,000 as reimbursement for costs of some 323 arrests and policing efforts at the concert. Arguing· for the return of the bond, Commission President Michael Kohn stated "it's money that doesn't belong to us." LOS ANGELES (UPI) Actress Sherry J a c k 1 o n , fonner child star on the Dan· ny Thomas teJevlsion series, Wednesday sued the estate of sportsman Fletcher Jones for more than .$1 million, saying ....,.,be bad lived 11lth Jones for five years. Since 1852 the name Wells Fargo Bank has been synonymous with lhe Wes1-and lhe Weit, with ~rowtb. ll's not surprising, then, tha1 Ibis w.eek marks the opening ol Wells Fargo's 300th banking office. Our offices serve Californians in 47 counlies from San piego to Del Norte. · and business banking 'requirements. Our nelwork of convenien1ly located Offices assures personal, near-home service throughout Over a million families in lhe Golden S1a1e have chosen Wells Fargo as !heir full-service banking partner. And California indus tries, ranching to aerospace, count on us too. One of lhc JargC$t banks in lhe U.S., our $9 billion in asseis and world-wide capa· bili1ies enable us 10 professionally serve Californians' individual lhe Stale. - Bu~ our SfOWlh is no1 limilcd Io dollars·and'-ccnlS alone. Well s Fargo with more than L0,000 employees in over 175 communi· ties, is actively working to improve our State through nun1crt:ius programs where money alone cannot accomplish the job. f Wells Fargo Bank is proud to have played so importanl a role in California's past Our 3001b office rcpresenls our co nlinuing commi1ment to maintain our role in its futur e. \. ..... NOW IN PROGRESS • ·O 'Brien's designers end suppliers are ewei-d.in9 four, $I 00 werdrob.es dur- in9 the month of April. • You will receive one additional cou- pon' for every $25 worth Of'merChen· dise you purchase durin9 April .. Drop in today and fill out your ~E coupon. WE CARRY SIZE 6 TO 20 ot MecArft• llwl., CweM del M• 673-2990 Wherever yo&J.tirc in California, rc1nembcr: \Velis Fargo de· livers and always has. Our 300th Banking Office is it lhe co rn er or Wilshire and Flower in downtown Los An gele$. The nl!xt ti111e you1rc in the area. we invite you 10 view the pern1ancnt collection o( Wells Fargo and California memorabilia. including 'a com- pletely restored Concord stagcco;lch. Or ..:omi: to our opening fcsiiv11ies April 12·27. Wc'JJ be happy 10 introduce you to the oldest ban'k. in the West at the newest of our 00 locations. Jones, 31 wa s killed in a plane crash last November. Attorneys for Miss Jackson, 32, said he hall promised lo provide at leas! $25,000 a year for her support for lhe rest of her Ille, and hosed their de- mand oo the esllmatlon, from Insurance tables, lhal she 11ill 11 ve. another 41 years. The de<eased Jones b nol the well known Southern Calllorola aulomobUe d<alee> WeUs Fatgo Bank baa ~ 290 offices throughOYI CaU1omla. Costa Mesa Office: 462 East 17th Street, 92627 / Assels over $8 billion / Metnller F. 0 .1. C. ( • • • ~ '· ' • • ' ; .. / • . DAD ,Y P ILO'J; . .EDITojtiµ, PAGE f J in .. Actioll -commi ~sion ,. J ----. -: Procedural changes approved by the SblfAI CouUI Zone Conoervatlon Commission at a recent meeting in Newport Beach oeem to have brightem>d the picture for the South Coaat Regional Zone Commlssi-On, which Implements Propooltion 20, the· Coastal Conservation Act, In Loa Angeles and Orange Counties. For ~time. the Soutb._Coast body appeared in danger of going down for the third time 'in a sea of paperwork llDd an ever·mountlng backlog of exemption and per- mit applications. . . · Last Monday, for the !!rat time, the commlssjon had waded through an entire agenda by midnight. Previous- ly, .the post·midnlght adjournments had left a raft of UD· finished business to be carried over. · , · A spokesman for the regio~l!l grouy..ail'OdJts woes at tbe state commission meeting and tiad no trouble at all convin¢ng.that body that the South Coasters have by m .the blggeat burdep. of tfte otate's five regional c<>m· millionl. It certainly was not dllllcult to persuade· the .Ute chairman, who had bad the dOubtfUI privilege of • oi.Wng through one of the regional group's marathon 9 a.m. to put midnight'se5'ions that week. · .. One procedural obange j>ermils the commission to vote on an llA!m Immediately after a public bearing, In· lllead of waiting until its next meeting. Another re- q\.lires the vote of three commUsioners to remove an Item fl,'Om the consent calendar. This was sparked by the .ction of one commlssi'l'er "110 had requested In· dlvldual hearings on no less than 20 items on one con· IODl calendar. The items otherwise would have been in· eluded in a single vote of approval. The state officials also authorized the local group to hire lix clerical staff workers, sorely needed to proc- ... requests. So far the regional commlsiion bas been virtually without staff, except for the,.paid executive • director. Its planners still are OJ\ loan from other plan· n!ng entities. ~ • Coast proJecta from §ea1 Beach to San Clemente, were· handled. Most '"'° i:eqlHl!lla lnl'Ohlng homes, duplexea and small and large ~ bW,ldlDp, but tb6 items · did Include two laige concklmllll11111 projects In Cap!· otrano Beach and Laguna Niguel. At least llllf a dooen 1ppeoij '\re scheduled to be heenl on the regloiiai commlislon'I actions, but at lout !he' macblnery _. to be 111ovtng into • somewhat higher gear so smaller, llODCOlltJwersial projects will n« be subjected to lntmnlnalJie deli~. CHP Has ·a Heart The California lfighway Patrol normally takes a dim view of motorista 'Who r1UJ out of gas -especially on freeways, where ,the mistake is good for a dtatjon. But the CHP bas decided tliat special consideration Is due drivers on the new alignment of Interstate 4-0 be· tween B~ and"N<redles,· where service staUons are 100 miles apart.· · Two stations are due .tO. gq .. up within a year, but In the interim CHP cars ·i>atniillng the lonely stretch will be equipped with special lit.tie pumps that will en· able them to share the gas in their' own tanks with stranded m<>torists. • . Standard Oil Will prnvide -for free -the extra gas for the experimental program. Which just goes to show that oil companies and traffic officers aren't all that bad. · U !he experiment works, it might well be exfAlnded to the freeway system to disrourage drivers from risk· Ing their lives trying to reach gas stations on foot. A squirt <Jl free ~as wOUld sort of take !he sting out of the citation -w1uch still could aerve as a slap oJYihe wrist to drivers who carelessly board the freeways with near· - • . '· • :, '" ·.~!.-~ • In the speeded·up action Monday, about 25 Orange 11 I A~~EE. WE'RE TOO VA\.UA~LE TO t>IE." 1] empty gas W!ks. ' · · ~ . • Dear Gloomy Gus Leftists in l' endetta Against ll .s. Disputes Threatening OAS Since President Nixon Ji(ted the barn· boo curtain. the ancient Chinese art of acupuncture has spread to America. Aftady, t~nds of Americ.aru have submitted to this s~e needle therapy, wbidl is said to ease pain and help cure varied ills. . . In China, it takes l!i• yean of training lo be allowed lo pract1ce acupunture. Yet here In America traveling roadabow1 tour the nation. ~ tlree days at a atop, purporting lo teoch the Oriental bea!Jng art. . • SEIZING the opportunity for fast pro- fit, aorne doct«s: have become self...-.;~ claimed lnNnt experls. Even penons with Oriental Jut names have suddenly found a way to exploit their heritage by becoming acupuncturlsll. nie.. people ply tl>elr new-found prac- tice on t.bo6e who are hopelessly lll or who seek respite from constant pain. The • overnight experts may actually succeed . in giving temporary relief, but they can hurt people and cau.se dreadful skte ef· feels. Hints have come mt of the American Medical ~OD thol It should be respoo8Jble for ~~ts. Bui the medical pn>feaion knows little more about ""1Jllil!:IUR :lban doea the average 'laynlm;L "' " . -. THE PROILDI limply Is that !ft In this oountry know -b aboUt the techniques to regulate it.I practice. 'lhe usual medical profession safeguards against fraucb are of llWe QR, for oNy a , The problems of the world would have been solved long ago if Noah had seen the trend ahead and ush· ered them onto the ark, two by two, pairing off male and male, fema le and 'female, IUCb as we have today. ,-J.C.V. ........, ... CUiftMUI\ aN ......... W ,....,. ..... "" _,.., ,.,.. ... "'"" .. ... -..... ..... .,... Hf ........ .. •llilflW .... D.ttr ...... . genuine expert can distinguish the real McCoy from quackery. · · As a drugless medical treatment, acupuncture may bring some dramatic .health Clll'eS and relief from suffering. But Qt _ America, It Is still an unknown quantfty. 'Sp take care. Y o u r acupuncturist could be a quackupuncturist. WASHING TON -That little-noticed meeting here of the Organization of American States (OAS ) warrants far· more attention and public concern than· it's gelling. OAS ls in difficult straits -wracked (ROBERT S.ALLEN) on one hand by dis-with unblemished ands at is factory ruptive internal con-. records. One of these staff men had un- vul!dons, and on the covered some unauthorized "borroWing" other by deep-seated from the employees' pension fund and e:rtemal disputes forced return of the money . and dlfierences that -Three other discharged staffers, literally seriously Latin nationals, ha~ grievance cases jeopardize the future against Plaza. of the %!-nation body. -Among the largest bloc of OAS One possible out-employ<es are CUbons -although CUbo _ come of the 12-day now is not an OAS member: it was ex- porley Is splitting OAS, with one bead-pelled after Castro established a Com· quarters rernain~g in Wa~hington .and munist regime. The Cuban staffers are an<>!her set up m a Lahn American refugees and exercise far-reaching inner capital. influence on personnel management and Principal backstage ruckus revolves pallcies. ' Piet Hein's Gentle .Wit and Wisdom around a sudden move by secre~~ Ringleader of the undercover scheme general Ga1o Pia~ Lasso to purge / to split OAS is Panama -ruled by dic- number of longtime employes - tator Gen . Omar TorrijQ.s, w h o re~arkably high proportion of them U.S. engineered the recent week-long meeting nationals. of the UN Security CouncU in Panama ,Maybe 20 years ago I wrote a column of. 400 words or so, enunciating the pro- pooitioo that the people we really dillike are ~t those who are different from us, ' but those who resemble us in a way we find grotesque ; whose faulta: and defi· clencies eeem to be almost a caricature of ours. · Pie! Hein has just lllid it in 11 words: '"lbe errors hardest to o:odone in other people are one's own." You don't ..., know Piel Hein? Well, It's your lo.u, and you ahould rectify It Immediately by pickintl up a copy of his new little book, 'Prooka I," which II ooly $1.l5 in paper· back. _· ~f MIL BEIN has been one of my favorite authon, ttarting with "Grooks 1" not so many years ago. He is a Danish mathematician, physicist, phUosopher, and creator ol. games. His 0 Grooks" - phenomenon, the "Frustrated Young 11DS COUNTRY put.. up 66 per<ent of Man": "No wonder the fellow Is fast the approxiinately $50 mill ion OAS turning mad with gloom and frustratioo budget. But one-third ol the staff people and doobl. It must be IDlbearable being axed by Plar.a are U.S. nationals. so sad wtlh ndtbing to be It about..'·' Avowed reason for the wholesale firing Another neat paradox I once took was cutting expenses. brief verse with drawings -are among several hundred words to explicate is Some weeks ago, Plaza stunned the the moot witty, civlll7.ed, incisive and dispatched by Mr. Hein in a couple of OAS staff by announcing an across-the- movtng reflections of our time. lines of "The Mirror": "Mirrors have board cut of 69 )om to effect a $1.6 By a tiny, delicate, artbtic twist, his one limitation: You can't either by hook million saving in expenses. nus was statements just miss being platitudes, or by crook use them to see how you look necessary, maintained the Ecuadorean like his "Globel Grook": "ll we want when you aren't looking to see how you who bas been ~general for five peace, tbe things we must accomplilh to look." years, to "stabilize the budget.'' preServe it are, fmt to win each other's -. , In the en.suing internal furor, it truat and, lleCUld, to deserve it." How ~NDER <:?. ~s deft and loyeir 'The developed that a slash of that depth many of U9 have ever given thought to Social Round · ~ smart mVJtations would cost about $600,000 in tennination "deserving" the trust we want to win ~ar:8!d~!n!,u!!fl~~ ~=a~ and other charges: Crom our adversaries? those who are bored by-tbemseltes to Whereupon, Plaz~ quickly backtracked. EVEN , HIS ~lonal sarcasm is come and be bored by each other." Instead of ellrrunat~ employees, humane .rather than scolding and Well, enough of &hl!:Cree simple. lC you ,_ the number was reduc 1 · ·superior; consider his "Good·Nelghbor have~ friend taking a little trip, or in the THOSE FIRED were presumably tag- Grook": "We pereeive that we must do hospital, or about to get a tooth pulled, or ged by an employee's committee set up our bit on the score ol comml.lllty labor!; . whatever, "Grooks 4" is the nicest, by Plaza. What criteria, if any, were us- so we each sweep the dust trom in front neatest little book gilt I can lma~to detennlne selection are unknown. of our door to Jn fron~f our nelghbbr's." And ·then think of all the-fun your friend ButSignlficantly, of the 18 dropped : And how neatly he deflates the will have going back to Groob 1, 2 and 3. -:-Six are U.S. nationals -two of them Weltscbmen of a cont em po r a r y Wish I hadn't read them already. with more than 10 years' service and all ' ' . City. He and his two main Marxist .... 'Your boycott'$ working. I j ullt got laid off· from th11 stockyards.' · henchmen, foreign minlsler Juan Tack and UN ambassador Aquilino Boyd. strenuously sought to put through a virulently anli-U.S. resolution. THIS explosive maneuver w~ blocked by a veto by U.S. Ambassador John Scali -only the third cast by the U.S. in the Security Council. • The Torrijos-Tack-Boyd trio, con.:, . tinuing their vendetta against the U.S. and its control of the Panama CsnaJ . 'vhlch they are after, will attempt to use the OAS meeting for their ends. Backing them will be Peru and Ecuador -the fonn er ruled . by a ''revolutionary" military dictatorship, the latter by_an ultra-nationalist regime. Both countries have strong anti-U.S. bias over fishing rights . They claim sovereignty over waters 200 miles from their shores, vigorously disputed by the U.S. Both Peru and Ecuador have seized a number of U.S. fishing vessels and.- assessed fines totaling milli6ns of dollars. Also planned by Panama-Peru-Ecuador is a demand for th e re.&dmJSSion or Com· I munist Cuba to the OAS. On that they are confidently counting on the backing of other Latin countries. PANAMA has already established rela· lions \Vlth Libya , Bulgaria and Alger ia, ' and negotiations are underway to do the same with Russia, China and East Gennany. , While the U.S. puts up two-thlrd.s of the approximately $50 million OAS budget. it is defmitely on the defensive at this session of the General Assembly. Privately, State Department authorities admit the following are entirely possible: (I) Tu'O OAS headquarters will be created -one in Washington to deal with political and international matters, another in a Latin capital concerned with. economic and social affairs. _(2) Communist·ruled Cuba will be re-admifiOd to the OAS. · It's possible secretary general Galo Plaza may be replaced . The Ecuadorean wants to hold on to the job -with good reason. It pays $40,000 a year with a furnished hoose, chauffeured Jimousine and other juicy perquisites and allowances. .l....._, Broa.dcasting's Capitulation to Government Censorship WASHINGTON -Commercial broad· casting's resistance lo government censorship u'as so weak, and its capitula· lion so quick, the event evoked little conuntnt. The sequence of happenings was crudely simple. On. Mirch rr, the Federal Communi· catkm Commission announced it would conduct a cloocd· d o o t investigation to 1'4m tr any broad- caster pr cablecaster had peddled any "of>. acene, indecent or · profane m1terlal.11 Tbat same afternoon !he board ol the National Assoctalloo ol Broadcaster& unanlmousty published a ststemont alklng a)J Its mmiben to "ex- amine their prosraming pollcl., in order to comply with decent and good taste ,.. qulremmtl.'' The nat day FOC Chairman Dean Burch, the old Goldwater guy who bas h<ntolore been~ good friend oNho First Ammdment, told a convention or the same broodcasling usoclatloo !hot their PfOCnuJl content would either con[orm to Wlio' s to Decide Which Top ics Should Co ncern the Public? the government's ideas of what is fit to be seen and heard or be compelled to do ' so. ( VON ~~FFMAN J industry which already has enough major dirncuJues In the area of govenupent relations. we prtfer to be responsive." "WHAT I AM talking about." he told them, "is the prurient trash that is the stock-ln·trade of lhe sex-oriented radio t1llk show. I am talking a_!P.Jt three, four, five hours ol titillating chit-chat, &ehed· uled during daytime .houn, on s u c h eleYfttlng topics of urgent JX,lbliC concern 1 as the number and frequency of ALSO preferring to be responsive was org.asms, of the endless varieties of oral • Sounderllng Broadca.rllf!g, which said it sex. or a baker's dozen other tum~. too would ltlm the cootmt of Its topless 1um-off3 and !um-downs . . . Do oot, radio programs lo conform lo lbe ladies and gentlemen, please do not governmen&'1 Diktat. Jn all ol America pennlt the gamesmen and lhe ochlock only one broadcaster, William !lernstsdt, operators to ca!I down on all your heads lheownerolKVVU-TV, LuV.;.l, pmn- the opeMnded and unpredictable con-lied a Supreme Co u rt Opt ll sequenct.1 ol their perverse folty." ' -.ary. Hemstadt had tried nm Ing The very next day Ptter Stottr, ex-x .... ted rums on bis otallnn, Md for that ecuUve vice pmident of Storer Br1>od-the FCC Is tallting about poalble casting, announced tbat tba Bill Ballance crlmlzlal pnlleCUtion. Other than be. Feminine Forum, originating on KOBS, thouih, there was no one lo apeal< out Loo Angeles, and syndicated lo 21 other with the recent retirement of CBS vice stations, V.'Ollid be spayed. When asked U chairman Frank Stanton. who for years Burch's • lvords were, tn er rec t, has been the courteous but ptsy voice or censorsblp, Storer r.plled, "Whot else broadcasting lnd<pendcnce. • •'Ould you call It?" bu! he also said thal. H's orten argued that the First Amend- "rather than 11dd to the problems or an ment doesn't protect filth or lt•hat " government censor Burch thinks are not "elevating to~cs of urgent public C<Jn· cem." But the theory behind free speech is that in the long run people will turn oway from trash without guidance from the authorities. Tbat happened to Hernotadt and hi.I X-rated movies. He had oo many complaints from the com- munity he serves that he atopped sbow- ln1 !hem. , • BUT topleM radio Uluatrates that .whot some regard 11 trash others prize. If s.r,,b finds It prurlen~ It Js nevcrthelesa Ver)' popular "1lb IDIJcnoWn thousands or women who pi.m, \be,. hlgh·ratrd abom. Beyond tllat, sex lsn 't an apolitical subjlct, leest of all with thb admlniatntion with tu 1950ish ways of conductlnl public prayer on Sundays and winking at motel room 1dullery no Mon· days. No area ol l~e b more political than the natioi\a! struQie between the permisalves and the represalves,Jn ma~ ters sexua l. Burch Is using the power of bis omce to prop ur. a morality that half the coun- try doesn t practlcc and despises. The politics of ca1v1n1sm· aside. vart .. ty, the newspaper of showbiJ, remarks .that, "never has the executive branch of government been more directly involved in alt the crucial elements of broad· casting -from news to advertising to techoological thre ats to network reruns to the prime time access rule." AND it's true. Advert ising on the American air is as heavily regula ted as political comment on the Russian air ; Clay T. Whitehead, the director of Nix- • on's ominously named Of£lcc of Telecom- mun1cations Poticy, has abandoned all ihought or allowing a free markct - economy in_tbe Industry and Is trylru( to tell the networks how many reruns tliey should show.; the FCC Is at wwk tryllll to draw up • set or rules for children's programs. and on and on and on. Matters bave gotten •o tight that Roll· btl St ... magaxine reports that NBC cut a line from a ..,..1sea Papa John Creach '°"' which said, "Look at the shape the President's got us In." Tbat Is nothing, ho"'-ever, corril)attd to the new obscenity Ja w the Adminlstralion hos asked Cohgresa to poss. Its language J.! so loosely drawn !hat ArlstQPhanes and Mollcr!l:ould be banlshcd from our stqe and Chaucer and Homer from our bookshelves. - But then as Burch . would say, they aren't authors of urgent public concern either. ' I ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. \Vttd, PubLi.shtr Thomas Ketl)il, Editor Rarbora Krtl!>fch Editorial Pagt Editor The editorial 1•~c of 1M Diiiy Piiot .seeks to Inform and atlmu· late te1dcrs by pre.cntln; thl& newapaptr's oplnklna and com· mental')' nn t11pics of ln1emt and •l(CTllflcan~ b)' lll'l,vldlna: a forum for the 4tXPrHllon nf our M!&der.• 01ilnlon1, and by f)rttcnUng thu divtflt' vltv.1>0int1 of Informed ob. ~f'Vt'" and 1pok~mcn on 1011\cs of the day, Thursday, April 12, 197J\ ' I --~ ~ .. . . .. . • ') .. :v D. ' . 1sar1n.1;ng · Higlwr Jobkss B f: ·· 'u· d Efforts . . r ene l~ ; rge ' ' J ' -· .. · . · . . · Continy.e· ~ • WASllIN~N (UPI) '-' tberolore he now lo asking for / • Pn!sldent Nixon •.• te,d· ~amendment 16;,lh• law to . PINERJDG~. S.D. (UPJ)- Congre# !Oday to .. 1 fedtral add .a provlslQjt lhat every Government negotiators standsrd! f.,: •tales to pay eligible Insured worker, when the Indians occupy in unemployment compensalioo uaemplon<f;'must bo paid a ed Knee !Oday to keep of at .I. J~st half of a worker's · f>ene#lt equal to at. least 50 alive di ions aimed at weektl"'P"Y. ~ and, to ex· percent ol his average weekly d' ni( the in1urgents and · tend Ute coverage to about ~e, up to a state mailm the 4 4 -d a y coo- • qti,000 hired 1ann hand•. which Shall bo · at lea o frontation to a peacefUI end. Nixon, Jn a message ·to thirds of 'the av weekly The government said no c ·ongress , also · urged wap 9f ,workers in formal talks were bel.d lawmakers to amend the the Wednesday at ·Wounded knee, federal unemployment T Act to prohibit pa of unemployment · u r a n c e benefits rikers and 4he e said estirn/iites indicated that the nf!'f!) requirement would result in an average in- crease of 15 percent in costs to (IN SHORT .. -.) P!: of denying benefits to onstrikerS. • -.... Nixon had previously pro- pooled state unemployment in-but further negot iations could surance funds. This in turn take place at any time. po.sed ~creasing paymen4; by, states m a 1969 .messagi'· 'to Congress. A year later, most of the proposals were enacted but the criteria · were not ex- tended to all sta'tes. He bad asked the states voluntarily to accept the. standards but· only would affect the cost or Stanley Pottinger, an assis- employers whose taxes suy ta'nt U.S. attorney general and port the jobless 'payment.,..Fo-the . govemryient's chief pegohator, said a government gram. · • ·-."di scussion paper" was sent But Ni.Jon said this ·was into' tHe .village late Wed- ju.stified because suCh benefits nesday to clitrify procedural were the le'ast cootly to questions raised in the pro- e.mployers, a~nting for less posed disarmament plan of- than a penny or each payroll fered by the Indians Monday. dollar. four did. A lllOHT EA.STD MENU IDIA FIOM HtCKOIY MIMS z-ES-TILINE SMOKED SAUSAGE .. 'qte Traditional Easter Sausage For many families everywhere, breakfast . or brunch on Easter mOminO 'ls a hC?PPY event. The traditional food treat Is z.·stilfnk· smoked tau· 1age. Zestilink can be fried or baked. Serve it with eggs, hoih brown p(ijatoes or pancokes. Your Easter breakfast or brunch will be delight- ful and long-remembered with· distinctive Zest· ilink smoked sausoge . , . o traditional food that's up to-the-minute in ev~ry way! ZESTIUNK SMOKED SAUSAGE AVAlLAllE OM.T AT • • • • 1.:-. , " flctlc"7 , t4t~r. OUR J CONYINllNT LOCATIONS WESTCLIFF PLAZA · Open: Mon.-Fr~. 'til 9-Sat. 'til 6-Sun. 'til S 17th & IRVINE-NEWPORT BEACH TOWN Ir COUNTRY SHOWING CIN'RR-QRANGE ACROSS FROM SANTA ANA FASHION SQUARE 62 FASHION S9UAll-LA HA.IRA A ... rko's Lffcllllt C-... Storn e POW Bill ·· AUsTIN, Tex. (UPI) -The Texas House approved a resolution Wednesday calling on people who · questioned torture stories of returning U.S. POWs to apologize public· ly in letters to the Texas ,_ -• Legislature and to t b e .... prisoners. "During the past few weeks when our POWs were return- ing, there was an ear-catching minority who sc re amed , 'Their tales of torture \re fic- tion," said the resolution, written by Rep. R. B . McAlister or Lubbock. "I ask lhat this resolution bo passed by way o! reply. to those who would offer up soliP. box hogwash in pl8ee ol com- passion for their f e l l b w Americans," McAlister said. e Wag..-Won't NEW . YORK (QJ'll - ·Former May0< Robort F. Wagner announced Wednesday .he would nOl seek another tenn as cblef executive of the nation's lsrgellt city. Wagner, mayor of New York from 1954 to 19!8, had lhe Liberal Party nomination, and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller also arm-twisted clty Republican leaders ·mut--m- dorsing the 63-year-old Democrat. There had been the possibilitf !hat Wagner would run in the Democratic priifiary. Disneyland, in celebration of Walt Disney Productions' 50th Anniversary; is happy to announce the opening of 'The Walt Disney Story' on Main Street, U.S.A The new attraction . , "features entertaining highlights of the liv~ and accomplish- ments of Walt and Roy Disney, beginning With their Mid· western boyhood and continuing through the founding of Walt ' Disney Productions, the creation of Mickey Mouse, and the )lQp~. dreams and developmen,t of Disneyland and Walt Disney W>rld. A tribute to the master storyteller of the ~ world, "The Walt Disney Story" includes a 28-mi nute mo- tion 'picture featuring rare film footage and photographs from family archives with Walt himself narrating the story in his own words. -· • "Tht W;llt Disnty Sior(' Is hr ID 1D sue:sts. Don't n'Usl this distinguished ;utraruon fl!!. your next v1slL NOW OPEN. Disneyland • • ~ • ·~ .... Thursday, April 12, 1973 • > · · American Hunted in Jewish Raid a i f • ,• .. ·' " ' , BEIRUT, l.ebanon (AP) r-''Other Al Fatah leaders were I • , ed ' in a statement Wednesday ": Tbe·PaJestlnian guerrilla com-1 as51ss1nai . ' : .,,,.i, mand ~ re1l9'ted searching I In Wasilingtotf, ~tary of for an,.Amerlcan •they believe State W.illlam p_ .Hogen said ol&ht th8t Palestinian allega· tlons about U.S. involvement--" was involved in the Israeli raid on Beirut. They launched a hunt Wednesday for persons w1'p aided in lhe attack, and reliable Informants said a . ,Frenchman was ·captured;- The ·Lebanese government said holden ol B r i t/I s h , German and Belgian pauports rented the six cars the Israelis used in the raid. Tht; govern· mei;:tt said the Europeans bad not left the country Jhrough its airport. or border posts "so it is presumed the y left with the , Israeli commandos." / ...- But Yasir Arjlfat...-of the A.\ Fatah guerrillas said : "There is .evidence that s o m e in the raids were "a plain lie." ' ' LOOK for our 8 pacje _tabloid soon ! We are celebrati119 our • • • 26th Birthday S.rving . ...Of'ange tCounty Since 1947 ~Glm! FREE DOOR PRIZES! -FREE MICROWAVE OVEN! _....-elements are still in Beirut. They did not lea •e with the at· EL TORO tacking force. They stayed behind, probably to pl!!Jl'otlfer Saddleback Valley attacks." _ · El Tore Id. tit ,,. •• ., 411 I. S.wellifaaalll St. Arafat accuse.d the U.S. · l11•J1t to s ..... 011) Central Intelligence agency of Daity!::';1 !:'~ 94 ~: l~t; Set. 1CM helping the Jsraelis in their at· u-r ~ 831-383~ tack Tuesday in which three • Uf'I Tti.p/Mt. \, LIVE BUNNIES 1 and the E1st1r Bunny too -Caroutel Coyrt· \ • ' ' • • ' • • ' .. • .. .. ,, ' 1 · I; I ' 1. I I· ,, .. ; . l • • .. --- • DAILY PILOT I ' - ,....._ . ·Male Mo squito , Sings S_«;>prano ~ Now -about feet: From the day of birth to age 4, a baby's foot will double in length. But it takes eight years · If)< that fool ID doullle the lencth It WU at six moalhs. And among boyt in particular, it's 11 yean befcn the foot be- comes twice as long as it was when the yoong1ter .was one year six monthl <>;Id. Two out of every five handsaws marketed natklnwide -·...:..... .. ~., :.'""' t\~ ,' '1 -j ... are bOOght by women •... Gleanest big city in the country is said to be san Antonio • . • Fewer than one--tn every four nlarried couples eat break· fut together, research. reveals . . . Written Chinese calls for no ptmctua· Uon marks:, air ..• And among mos- quitoes, lt's the voice of the female that's baritone, the voice of the male that's soprano. ~ cm~ tht a~erage married girl is ca· pable ol '!Wng no more than 12 basic meals, even though she may throw In an oddball experiment now and then. Could tbls be true? QUEIUEl-Q. "What's a 'Jone1 man'?" A. Tbat'• Detroit slang for heroin pusher. Q. "Im't the geranium the most , popular Dowering plant now.?" .. A. It's No. 2. No. 1 is the African viqlet. N o. ·3, the chrysanthemum. Q. "Which was invented first, basketball or ice bock· ey?" A. Ice hockey. By about a do7.en years. Hockey's ruJe! originated in 1879, basketball's in 1891. Listen, please, to that wise lady 'known as Lucille Ball : "No matter how much ybu disa gree with som~. be " careful of your words. People forget what an argwnent was all about, but they remember the words." ABOlIT BEARDS -When most fol k now mlddleaged \Vere youngsters, the typical villain sported either a beard or a mustache or both. But Ii generation or so previously, the bearded character was usually the hero. Most of the fictionah.scaundrels in Charles Dickens' worb, for exam· pie, were clean-shaven, while the fine fellows with wann hearts and great integrity generally wore some sort of fa· cial foliage. Therft grows a belief now that bare-faced men soon again may be regarded as affected. The bearded lads will be considered naturally honest. Contends a humorous banker with lengthy experience in the lending game: "I can tell you the credit ra ting of just about any family in town by looking at the magazines, the tin cans and the empty whiskey bottles in that house- hold's garbage." · l t's said that American woman who receives the most matrimonial proposals every year ls the fict ional female known as Betty Crocker. Nobody in Siberia, nobody ever scrambles an. egg. Note it claimed by color enginee rs that certain ~s. such as browns and yellows, induce seasickness. They say others, such as blues and greelfs, avert it. Having sailed the blue-green Atlantic in the windy spring, I doubt that contention, oh miserable memory! Address mail to L. ~f. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1815, Nno- port Beoch, Cali/. 92660. RE· ELECT WILLIAM . THOMAS Ill Laguna Beach School Board PLEASE V_OTE APRIL 17 t ... . e Mor ducetion-Less Fril ls • Stre en the Role of the THcner -Wher: the f ction isl e ~. efficient use of tax dollar • KHp the public informed on eccompJlthments- / Both positive and negative e WDl'k for higher stondudt of thldentl roiponsl- blllty \ • Member of Lout Bu1inen Community I ,. ... ,If ,, Cltll"'' Cfn'tr!llt'" ,., 1111 TIIMlll lkUnl Jlllr11111t Ste, ut Cliff Dr., a,.,.... IMdl Kids Like To Ask And I ' .., . • • ... ' . ' save 70.00 btst 3 d ays frlday..S.turday nnday 1• .. ' -. " -'-, . \ . • • on this. 8 foot look~ 1 •· lea-ther -~ofa 259.95 , • ' \ • • • ·- '· . save 20.00 on mediterranean tables in froitwood finish . • • • ' ·79_95 eaeh Reg. 99.95 eoch. T obles with • Mediterroneo n in.fl uence. Eoch hos sim uloted corved doors with gold velvet inloys behind distinctive hordwore. Moke you r choice from lruitwood finish cocktoi l toble, sq uore commode or hexogonol commode. Tops ore mor-resi st~nt so spills mop right up. You'll sove 20.00 on eoch one, why not get oil three! • --I ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINGTON IEACH ORANGE, MALL OF Oll:A NC9E 444 N. Ewc.litl 17141 5l5·1121 ~7 Ft•kion ltltnd 1714 1 M4-~2 12 7777 Ed i111•r 1'•11" 17141 192.llll 2100 N. T1uti11 Str"t 171 41 991-1111 ... P.M. SHOii 10 A.M,.'to 9:10 P.M. MONDAY TH'R.OUGH YIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 .NOON tol5 , • ~ J • '1 ., , I . I . I . ·1 1 • •I ' 160-041 1 .- - !!" ... 1 Ii u 8 ~ 0 ( i ( ·C t t ~ • I i I . r I ( i I I f ( I ( I I t 1 ( 1 I • • 1 I ,- - 1 il"l'here is a cooipelllng need '4i make the ent,lre Santa ~ra Channel area safe . ~. oil drilling mishaps," ~l (D-Van Nuys) said In r=-c::~ ~r'ying 1'!' I ~ oU spill fl'O!D an offshore ' drilling rig ln early 1969 spew- ! ed lhousanda of gallon! of r"" · l!OltOleum on the sweeping 1 beaches of Santa Barbara, 'Cleating a m0qth's-)ong clean- ~ job. •'Creep' Dall!Jer 1CONCORD (AP)·· -Selsnllc movement c a I I e d "creep" threatens to cause "gradual ud continuing _damage to public utllltlel, residential and office buUdlnp" -!de the ~ earthqlllle fa u It . pologists say. • • 1The fault runs through this COntra O*a' .• COuMy city, ·qoasing ..,..., reslcbitlal ~ and. ltJld"tramlt lines 1'fore " -Ing ·n. or tb ' ~~·lbtAvm • oil rellneri.o, 'Benicia· "ferdluult" lfartinez blghw!ll' !Ridge and by (NUUlll8llle mtosouthemSoliiloCounty. . • .. ,.9 99 ~A report fll 1an active 14-~ • mile 11e11T1oilt-oflhe hull wu · -· -.. · itleased by lbO u. s . Reg. 332.90. Feotures automatic turntable, Qeological ~-• dustc,0ver, AM/FM r~iver, built-in cos- ~~e~~~.,., seteo reco~r with outo 'l'Overse, separate Great LUeo. Pro!>eriles, Inc. peake~. m•c· . • . I.I ~ ·dlat Los Angelea Stereos ' RoCiios · 88 · • L.. __ ,, . Thund11, Apru-12, 1973 DAILY PILOT 9 , ~t 3 days .. ' . "' '.~~·y--day . ·~ ' .. , ·~ talleNd h•ete paaehl ·~ savbag11 2/5.00 -Reg. 4.00. 40x8 I". Dl'lss up ony window you choose with these ?re•t .favorites. Toil- ored boucle of 100 % royon fill, polyester warp. White, eggshell, gold, moss. Curto ins, I 0 da•lsll 11tyle . ..._..,arefer8 29.99 Handsome pottery-thrown shopes . and . natural ironmor~s highlight· ''Helsinki" stone· wore, with bonded border. Complete 45:, piece set. I; Chi"•· 11 • • ' I --• • .. / me&llterranean styli! S•pe. set janlor dining set . . 349.95 #0.00 value . Frultwood finish 42" round tob le, 2-12 " fills, 3 spindle bock side, I arm chair. Ext ra side chrs. 45.00; armchairs, 55.001 motch ing 38 " Chi no cabinet 279.95. Furniture, '12 Q>wrty be forced to award ' ' ttie ram .a building pennlt:l-...... .,. ...... .,. ........................ ~t"' ............ :;::;::~-------------:;t:"'" ............ .-,~{.i;jii;;ii" ......... "'ir-...... .., ... """.::;:'.;;t:-~'::::'. ............ -!Or 1-lbree-story apartment/ I OOmplµ on the Palos Verdes l1eninSula coostllne. : A clvlJ suit filed ln Superior · ~urt·.saya Great Lakei was · rormeaby County Engineer arvey T. Brandt March 30 liut1~u;: ~ ,:,~ . \ 'a special b01ldlng • rpm the Sciull> CoiJt • . 20,' .the 'eoastal 1.ori'e .. • t. •. I. .. ' §Ji°'!lj~t'~ :.- nJerVation Act, and controtS elopment with 1,000 yards • ~the meah high tide lll)e. Bill Baekelll · SACRAMENTO (AP) -A "°°'000 appropriation bUI for E on of a replacement am on the Eel River · ared the Senate Na-I ~ and Wildllfe Com· 'ttee on an 8-1 vote. 'The only dissenting· vote ame from state Sen. H.L. 'chardson, (R-Arcadia). The bill, by Sen. Randolph llie~, (0..Yreka), would ·'". \ . • ,j[nler the removal of the tep designer ptisent . dam and !ts replace-tle eolleetlon ment With a seasonal dam for I ...... _. 99 . . aezue llWNtei'. '.,· 13.99 recreational purposes. •DD"'•• .. -0 · $3 • 50. F '· k t k t 7.99 J e e•-eoruer· .. bUI went to the rig. ..,, . amous ma er on ops l a ,... . fam-•aker . kalt •ldrtll 1.99 Senate Finance Committee, $4-7.40 values. Da shing nedwear from and swim t~nks. Assorted styles, 4-7. Reg. $12-$14. Cri~R!Y imp"licoble knits in Great weor-with-oll sweater jackets in which Collier cbalra. names you'll recognize in • ronge of great Little Boys' Weor, 74 assorted patterns. Short sl.:Ove. Stock up machine wosji~le "o .. crylic. Assorted . colors es ..... ,.,r•ow fb' I d. d SAN DIEGO (AP) _ A • rics. co ors, eStgns. now on save! · in sizes 36 "to 42. study or attitudes In one larg Men's Fuminshings , 7 Men's Sportswear, 50 Misses' SP<>'rtsweor, 49 .. _· Calilomtacltylndlcateaur:f>an.,_.,...,...,...,.. ........................................ ~ ................... ~~ ........ .,;,.,...,...,...,..-!-.,...,...,...,...,...,..""!"'.,...,....;..,...,...,...,...,..~.,.. ................................................ ... t!prawl"lea... many peraons1· undi8ttlrbed, e spe~c t a J I·y suburbanites. Dr. Robert A:Levlne, dJreo. tor of uriJan. Pouw ' analysit for the Rand 0.,,: ol Santa Monica, told a civic luncheon of his study for se.veral yeara of growth, -and decision-makln( In San Jote, population IGO,GllO. 'Die city has bad rapid -.th for IO • years. .. · l .. ~ · 11We found that many residents were m o r e In- terested In their 0 'I' n neigbltorhoocts than In Iha city as a whole/' said Levine, former chief of research and plam for the U.S. Offtce of Economic Opportunity. "They thought the racts were con· venlent and co rtable, and -they didn't mind wl. •: eF .. lat Volll BERfELEY. ( -11A continued aJl.oot •" wUI be waged to save th e Stanislaus Riv · until the ~federal Bureau o Reclamallon agreea to comply with state , ,, · restrictloos on the volume of _,__., -. • ., . ' ' ··~ -- • • ' ) . ... • -·l .. . ' the '91.2 million New Melonea _ • ~, , earelree-tlre•M . .-·. Dam Project,• the slldlllerteg•I-··--. ". Env!mllnental Defense Fund 8.99 warns. , .. The atate Water Resources Polyester/cotton. Long gown, prints. pastels. Control Boord ruled recently h Sh 5 99 Bo h ' P • that Jlot more than u mlllion Not s own: ort gown, . . t 1n -;,- acre-feet ol water could be M-L. stored behind the m.1oot dim F h' SI with 1 1.. m1llloooacre-foot os ion eepweor, 24 capacity. . ANAHEIM 13.99 . . W •rm-weather coolers in • great group of · prints end solid colors. MiSWI, half sizes. Plozo Dresses. 73 ·4.99 Glossy vinyr w.th the look of leath er •.. adjustable strop converts from shoulder to swagger. ·• Hondbogs; 3 7 . era-r- leadter ... ul 18.99 Cross-strop sandal ploys jt cool ..• while, navy, blue , from • large selection of sondols. Foshion Shoes, 8 NEW?O«T HUNT!~ TON UACH . · ORAN6E, MALL OF ORAN6E • CERR,TOS The Envllltnmental Defense Fund, whlcll 11 trying to block constructlon tbrouch • """ ding Ith U.S. Circuit Court or Appeala suit1 aCClllld tho reclamation bureau of re!Ut- ing comment on whether Jt 'llOUld comply with the state ~··terms and condlllons. 4"" N. Evclitl (7 I 5J5·111:1 4f ft.hr• ltl•-' 1714) 644-1212 m7 h1httff Aw111te (71 41 lt2°llll 2100 N .. f11,ti11 St...+ (7141 ttl-llll .500 Lot C.rritot Ma ll 121]) lto·041f SHoP 10 A.M. to •:10 P.M. MONDAY THltOU6H FltlOAY. SATUltOAY 10 A.M. to • P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5 , •. M .. • ' ' , • I ' I I ' ' • • , I• DAILY •ILDT ThursdilJ, April 12, 1~73 ' I QUEENIE ... , dw,~er Hits ... --v r . ~1111111111111111i1i1 ·1111n11111111111111111111111l11111111111i11111111111111111111111111111111111t111ui11nl§ -• ~~_.J = ---------· -= = = "' . .. . . ater,gat~-~e :, . . .. By Ualled P-lllltnlottoul'' expr.iSed concern on how · sqch adverse publlcity~migbt Many fteP.Jblican Pa Tt Y affect the American . public's =----SWIM TRUNKS . =-·--·. . • ~. 'Set at Night' S,anta Ana Blaze leaders arou'nd tbe eount'ry faith in politics, particularly have · backed Sen. Barry M. state organizations and the GoJdwater11 Call for President Republican party in general. Nixon to deal qolckly wilh lhe Walergate bugging CB!ij!, but OTHERS DENIED that the tended to dtsoount his fears Watergate case,,.was a serious that the party's eongressi~ political threat. ,and eipressed ' and 1171 presidential hopes · co.nfiderlce in Nixon's ability to would be badly ·damaged. clear it up. · Th'e At(zona senator said In Sacounento, Gov. Ronald Wednesday the GOP coold be -j{eagan said be did . not agree serlously hurt in next year's with Goldwater that t h e congressional ;. elections and Waterga_te ease could serious- coilld looe the White House in ly hljrl Republlc>ns in the next 1978 if tM cstroversy is not election. dealt with. \ · 1 REAGAN SAID, however, "l RE ADDED: he might not think we all w8nt it cleared support Nixon' if it turns out up" so tl~e people will "know the President knew about the where to assign or assess the bu I guilt." gg ng. ---------------------------------------------------- • ' " Very 5pecial group of see- ·worthy swim trunks In a water wise . -l;>ltnd of cotton and polyester; nylon . lined. Your choice of navy, green, tan, blue,l or gold. Get a · pair of pairs for what you usually pay for or;ae.! • e Bl ----= = ---------· = = -= ----= ---= ----=--\ ' · Arson--Officinls "The Watergate · , . . the Senate Republican leader Hugh Scott alSQ disagreed with Watergate. It's beginning to. Goldwater. ··He said the smell like the Teapat Dome," Watergate ease was "not a Goldwater said. "[ mean there's 8 smell to it. Let's get 11!-atif:r of great . co~cern in ·d f the smell Sioux Falls or Springfield, any r1 o · . Springfield." --------------= --= -- • ' A $175,000 .blaz.e which night," says the report. devastated f o u r downtown The Dares originated-in the Sant~a businesses April 2 'Four:t~ Street Gymnasiumi ...... and reouired three hours to upstairs over I~ ~I Cas.Ullo . · \ . -Casa del Pl-1ar1ach1 MeJ:1can control ~ a definite ar9on restaurant and quickly spread. · ~case, investigators ti a v e ' reported. \.\. ..,., • 111E GYM 3nct cafe, plus a .. -sport.swear shop housed in the .. FIVE MEN 'have been pro-old brick and stone structures, bing ruins of the ~edawn were .destroYe<f. !or miles. and Spureon streets, in a set> blaze which sent amo~isible The fire occurred at Fourth "All ·indications are th ire ti on of Santa Ana already was set by 50.meone during he destined for urban renewal. "All of UI whQ suppart NIX· --"=======I on are going to be on the line in the 1974 e le ctio n.,'' Goldwater said. "WHEN THEY say 'are you still supporting the President?' I'd say, •yes, I'm still supporting the President.' And I'd say that even if ... no, I won't say that. I might not support him if it turns out he knew all about this and kept his mouth shut. Bqt I don't think he knows about ii." Maqy GOP state chairmen Fast, Thorough, Guoronfel.'d Real Estate ' oles and or Broker LicC'nse TRAINING Ph one for free Folder a ANTHONY SCHOOLS HAllOI CINTll nee H1l'llff e.n11r Cost1 Mna, C.llft"'ll .... 17141 f7f.J313 1n1 S. ll'Wlt ... nl SI. Allallelm, C.I. nM4 "· 17141 776·5100, ------------------= ------'COSTA MESA ANAHEIM ORANGE HUNTINGTON IEACH = llll Bri~~ SL «7 lortl LNrJ 2114 I. OrJlll 1111 n llHli'llit Cntlr : -Saulll Cmt PIJZ• Aolki• Cuter .,II ol Dr•1• 1aci & lji1111 = 17141 &IJ-1711 17141 774-12!1 17141 991-llit ·.. . (7141 "1·l374 . = 5i 1111111111111111111111ii11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111IIIIIIU11111II111111111 lllllffi ---------- . .. ' . • ·Put it ·all together. EasterS ·coming . 95.20 ., Reg. S119 , •. ' Solbke-~ • rlrig, 14 car~!-, 4K gold. , ~ ; • • . ' ' • l -GWl'M N1U1 ltxl CNt1¥1di SL Put it all together. Easter's comi~g. .~15.99 Gingham and eyelet in crispy polyester and colton. Yellow, pink or blue dashed with white. 7 to 15. r- 6.98 Crinkle vinyl walkin9 pump. Red, navy, white, bone, black. Not all colors at all stores. s~1os.1oa .98 ' 'l(hite patent nda~ sling baCk. n'ssizes. •. , 2001~ off Vietorian lamps -. 99cea ' Sale19.99 ·Reg.24.88 Tiffany-style table lamp, gold tone molded base. 31" high • ·Sale 17.99 - . Reg.-22.97 Tiffany-style swag lamp, gold- tone chain. 18" diameter. Sale,_12.99 Reg.16.97 Cylinder swag lamp with gold to Re chain, 23 " deep. . All three styles in choiCJI of red, gold or green velvet6hades. U.LUsted: . 2.99 ea. Flockell prints, filigree plastic frames 16 x 18" '' Shadowboxwood - framed prints 7'h x 1s• -· · the ,.m 11r.~~§~[Y llYlllml:S»T~ SAfllfAANA No.alfou111eo.ntP111• TOlt=IWIC=:.1,..=•=•:::•:;H;:M;;:D::.::---:~:::Mlt::_:=c.r...;=:::;~;-: .. :;;:,,::,....,.:::::::,.,:.!..:=..,;;UICM::;:;..,:::..,:°""::.::l:: .. ::::...,:.... __ _J OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30·SUNDAY10 to'7 .... ' I .. • I " . .. • , lllESE OUJ\UlY PAIRl'S ARE . ' . Gbl\RARTEED 'ff) COVER At.'f COLOR I . ~1·COATI SEM1-ctoss ENAMEL e INTERIOR e EXTREMELY DURABLE • EX:rERIOR • FOR WOOD, PLASTER, -e SATIN FINISH OR PRIMED METAL ~ En.t»rtel.izeJ. HOUSE & T1UM • FLOWS EASH. v-• COLOR FAST PAllT e NON.C~L"l~ e RETAINS GLOSS •-EXTERIOR IW'fcite LATEX HOU• PAINT r . • CLEAN.UP WITH WATER "IASl'S 12 YEARSI e SELF.PRIMING e INTERIOR·E-XTERIOR WHITE&. DECORATOR COLORS • • 1. · IATEX ACR'f bC EXTERIOR SlUCCO~MASONRY . PAINt · CAN Al:SO'BE USED FDR AN EXTREMELY DURAB~E ,INTERiDR JOBI e 1-HOUR DRYING •CLEAN-UP'WITH WATER • Bl(IUSH,OR'f\OLL ' • IGHT .WHITE a COLORS , :COMP. OUR PRICE 4.50 . RETAIL 99 GAL. ,,- ·---· ,_ .. SPE.ClllUM ·2000 Vi~'IL CUSTOM MiX ' ViNYL . LATEX sEr.Ji1rs LETS YOU CLE.J\N UP Wiftl WATERI' . Vlt.'fl ACR'f UC IS 1 PAINT .FOR BOTtt INSIDE 8r Obl LASTS 8 YEARS! , OPEN7 DAYSI 5'!110HTS · MONDAY THRU FJllDAY,I A.M. TO I P.M.-SATURDAYS;I A.M. T0\1!3,P.M.· SUNDAYS, I A.M.:ID 5:31 P.M. . Sarita Ana-H . ··t·. · ·t · . · D--..;.h Long Beach 1iLK.~~~A~~R(DELHtl un 1n~ on ~ . '2A01LONGBEACHBLVO. TIL...-l 17141...,_1 ' . • 11' BLKS. SO. Of WILLOW &BOO WARNER AVE. EAR OOLDliN WEST TILIPHONE 12131 W ... 1" .. TtLEPHONI 17141 142:.all coA~!l!!mEY ~36~!tY 1 lut. EAST OF 8ROOKHURST AT LAKEWOOD BLVD, TSLll'ffoNI (714) US.11117 TELE,..Ollli 11131111813 ' La Habra CORNER WHITTIER a IDAHO 2 8LKI. E. OF BEACH-HACIENDA TILl"'4:llNI. '213i_•t4'tll t I ' I .. ' . I .. . ~ ---.... .. ... . ) -· ' . • JI DAILY I'll.Of • •= 1"""'"'1, ..,.,, 12, 197) . .. I '... ) \ Senate Will . ·Let Moscone Remin Tax-free;.~· ffice~ , . • -. ' . . ~(AP)-'l'lle la -with he ..-1111t111ce-lobe . _ ......... w .... ~ .. -· !loor stahl .., .. Ule and • 1 .. 11 ..... lo let Sea. ......... the upper-· ' aecretary -to ....... ~ ~"' . 'l1le ..,ilcll -..Ll\18: espollll"e ID Yo I . • J fllr ~ ..,.. JarilY ol U-pm<lil and So.utbom f!ll' a Jiit t--111 tupoyet ... ppoNd YOlbW lo -· gu bid. In Loa Aaplel. "Now tboae wbo v e uld he alnod1 enplcl)t Tiie lie lloar vote come· aplrwt my motion on a private --Inn, Cer- W-oy Clll a motion by record ii In lpendlng · rell Auoctatea lo baad1e alale Sen. James Wedworth, tupo . .!°' pureJy·.J.Outlcal aH..;. In Loa . (Piia-), lo ~ -Wedwmi! :Anaelea. -~ ·; • !\eUfe Rules Comm! told reportera alter the vote. u--~ al a ..,,. · · ? TBI! Ll'DGATION ~ tbe pivva1 ol the olf ' -. .,_ - . M08roNE, Man Fm> 8~ f"•=: -tllo tlQce clsco), denied repeatedly that Angeles p-=-=--•••••• .. 1 ----• · . • llt . cal ap- i"* r..isiauiav* ~viNos· *: ~~i~~~w: · , .iliiii 1ssoc11t1on * ;..... . Ill ... office will N0t .jC91hy· Newpoit' S~ Chairs * N "''' ..... r-~;;i 11 EVERY S ATURDAY •.,1CJ/\.M.-4 P .rVl · .. -. ,_ '• • I ' " • ., .!"~~Lnl ... P"'.' F~ 9unAp .... ~ dcme purely tp· represent Ille . J)emocratlc poity In the Newport Beacl( --have turned down a pro-, ~-'-..., " ........_ said pooaJ to apend $1,0lt far -allllln I« tbeJllSelves: • :"lhe ftoor:' · .,.... .. ~ . O!llY Councilnian Paul Ryckolf objected tit .deleting the Btit Sen. 'George Deukme-rn~r. · jlan, (R-LoJig Beach), said "I srr BACK IN tbla chair and It carehea me on the . there .are already n i n e knees," be complained. •De m o c r a t 1 c:-and six But other councilmen were more sympathetic to tax Republican state senators who money than Ryckoff's oonifc.-t. could represent Loa Angel.. "JI It's uncomfortable I<>< Jong meetings," muie<l *; , . T1lll1ll Morolily Sl'llngt ~dg .. ll'lino Blvd. at NewportAvt. * County t;esldenia-' In t he Mayor Donald A. Mclnnla, "It will just necessitate the * . IA JtAIM.fUUl1ITll MormySril.-G> m11g., 1mpo\~ Hwy. at-* Senate, lneludlni Sen. Mervyn ·council and planning commlssioo to have shorter mee~ ---~mdg., VllltyVlewatlh:Gln HU•TllllTDI -Morolily Srilngo tldg. E6oQer at hoer! •* -lttotlirjSl'llngtmdg.A-Blvd.atSonDilgOF!wy. . ·* Dymslly., the» ~mocratic Jngs." • * * * * * * * ~ * · Caucus Chalrtnan, in4 Sen. But Ryckoll plugged away, unsu=ss(ully. ~ ,·* * * * *· -~"·*. ~ * * *'*-*' John Harmer, l!CR-Gleftdale), · -_, ,. ~~~~·.,-~~__:_~~~~~__:_~~~_J~,tbe~.~G~O~P~Ca~u~~s~c~ha~i~rman~.--'~~!'!!'!!'!~'!!'!!'!"!'! ~~~"!"!'!!!~~~~ ~ . .· :1· . • • • . · .. .. . • . ' ' ' Model 71M:--fMIY American ••. OR ONI; QF ,1,0711 .OTHlft_ ~ltlll• , , , with a total r•Ui/ valu• of ov., lld,qoo_i Yff, ~ldfs giving away_ u,.ooo· every S]lrl"g /pi' th• //le or siillle ' lucky pers<>n (or $20,000 in o••h) ••. M•u"•vo• Will give eway 15 deluxe 25• dl1gqn1I Color TV co"'°'''' 25 complete atar'o component $ystems. ~~ bltck and _white portable TV's •nd'1,000 parilble ra dios I C:oJ1'$ In for your official.ent~ blo"k ind complttt rul11 (no .purchase is n'e~eiitfv) ... ot Write for tht olflal1! entry ' • blao~ and rules Ill Mtin1vox ""H1ul" In A Iii One"' , s-pltak8s;P ,0, ao~ na, N1w Otn11n1llonn.06840, tomatic . Color ·· · · ·'.-Consoles , . Unmlt11kobly MagnlYox .•• In beau.tlful 11yllng, qu•lil)' fe11urt1 alld wonderful viewing .• , these prlza v1lu" h1vt lht •11Clutlvl Magnavox Totti Au1om1tlo Color • • -. · IYtt•m for perftelly·tuntdr prtcllt't~lor-rlght plciUrtl • , , lntttntl~ tf1Cf lutomfllHllY. They also hive 1h1 ••·H prtdomlh,pdy 1olid·.•tata ahlllJt ror grell rtlt1Jllll1Y 1nd lino pelform1nu. I ' ' . . . lee dip Lci11t 111 .Rectlatlonal MtWP'Y . . · • -.. • •Ai Aircraft • 'ilden. •·Power & Sallboots • ~·--. ·.. .. . ., . - . ' . ' . _., 1.:1 14" ••• / ....... "J.. . ·. -~ .. ' ., --E~!~ t . i ·-~"' ,,, . .,, .. / . , ·1mS, IAlf,.. , OTHii FISlllll& : • GIAi AT MIYJAY' • LbW Piiaf. !" ' -- lllAllSNAll·IEEL : ... ~....i • ·~.:1Ptl:l 1, I 95 ,.. ,. ' . . -- · llr/11i1111·M11rl• ~IOIUrt Tijbf, IOo,.for o/torar. 1htrptr, ¥rlfhler pl!lllll'ltl lhtn lhott on 1 convtndtntl tu"8.: , -JhleO/KJI# ' '. ' . m11sr OF COUUI , .. • • . ' Mod .. 71H-M~itf'T•nt•n ~nt ...... ~,,.,,.I, . .,. .... "'' •. ...-., •••.• .,. .••.•.• 1 ., ... ~ ... ~ SINCE 1926 • \ to DAYS CllDIT WITH NO IN'llllST' Jo.A.C:J LOW.~:~..'! ~D,\n,. MIANS HO INTlltln Oft Sli:VKI CHAI.el ............. ~ ... --.......... ------..0..-' 401 MAIN ITREft UNITED GOLDINWUY:..& WARNIR HUNllNOTON BEA'CH ·sTOBBS . . HUNTINOION BIACH I ••••• a ••nlce·S36·7161 -..... Only-142·1196 • 1 I • , ENIE POPE'S • . ''FISHBACK'' LURES • LUft' wobblU cmd wfnlts while d,artino from 4 lo 6 ""' ~in li'9 dlrectioins, W dift 3 to 6 fHt cfeeP .. • frofl"'t or o,t retrieve. Your Choke. .,. , 1·59 -: .. ·:1il . 11• 3{10L 1/20L 5/lpZ . ITORI HOURS: MON. TNRU PRI. IOA.M. TOtl'.M. ' IAT. • IUN.10 A.M. TO I P.M • TUSTIN SANTA ANA NIWP'O"T A'll.. JH7 I . llHITOl.IT. at f.IRST ITfllflT .. ~A•tHU• ........ : w..... PhtiM; 117·1J1l LA MIRADA . ORANGE ' IHOPPINQ CIMTIR • , , .. ~·wet---~ N. TUlttN ,.._..: Ut-111f ~ ~ IJ1•1110 \ "°"' 4 ITO-IN Oll/i.llel COUNTY. • 1 ·r ' . I • '• ' l • • ' • • . ' . \ -. • ' • • Thunday, April 12, 1973 DAILY PILOT . ' . .--JS ' ·G ~~g~ Wo~k To~~rcJ P.~aee · Stua~11t .. - ~ ews"l!!l: • . \ Tilt gangs .of south-eeotral Los Angeles, Watts • an d. ' Compton go by vanous names -Cripe, Bounty Huotenl, Brims1 Rangers. Moot members are of high JCbool age. 15 to 11 or IO, that dlllicult stage ol wreslllng with the demands of mlllbood. " . for them to try.'; ~said. . ... ~ .L_ d The members took on the ~:ll.CCUilme role ol "community ~atei,:' commLsslon1 conYentlon · on !beaters, skating rinks, bowl-. ~;· (itnt~~ ~ Hal'\lest, I he Westminsttr: gang acUYJty. mg alleys, parks 8 n d t~aliiit the increasing H ig h Schoo I stud • · . transportation to other parts ol It. k b nda1'I " -.'111EY WERE dissaUafled of the city further heightens..--" a ' 1 Y va · newspaper pt d In ; with past efforts to -Oe&I with tensioruJ. • ~ "111E POLICE, the Boys' oompe wllb publleallonl , the gang vtol"l""' problem~ "There's ~t-nothlng to do," Club are all just ga,ngs. The 7tl h'gh schools In the an· . ang~ that theY. were ex-sald ~an Roberts, the only difference between m 1 . ; · . ,., Youths':Patrol Watts ' .. eluded from rnQl'e actl~ly ~-c11re,<tor of the group's and the brothers on Jhe· t nuat USC Joumalisrn Day. mERE'S NOT too much partiCipatmg in the .canven!J.M. public relations. "Now it's is that.f,heyhave....airection to d difference bet~ee9 tJi:em and which , was ~ens1 y--a'6out on weekends, but during the go in SjUi-~ equipment to do 11\e recently rev a,m Pe · their conteml'.*'ar1es m other ~· summer the kids will be ®t of thing5. But the brother 00 the newspaper: which explores in ; ~rts _of the city. But too often Tt;c6n!ronted the co~ school and free all day .oo-siftet doesn't have a )llace to depth areas of social ~rid rJYalrli~~ th:~ rangs __...venl' R With a list Of demands that ffi!l8IlS there ,· beJust go, dOesn 't have any money CUitural concern, bowed to the , . eh':SJt ~to vicious bat~ -d mands for better educa-• that much mo uble.'' and so it turns into something slln~ Hills High sch o o t t eat · ) ~ _ tion ol black youth~ . mo~e 11~ lMES 1 . t lk Yiolent." Tyiska said. -publication which took top ~~~ • employment opportun1hes in __..-d~the t t J~S t ~at As support grew, Bro.thers ho ~ their community, bet t ~ s r.~ 5 ~· a 0 Unlimited decided to sponsor nors. O~ti•es I just recreational faciliti atKf a !_Tyne™: -kb lro~ 58'? B "~hold dances for members of gangs.· ln addition. two students,'. walk tile streets plan. for be police--com-u~k~lcd. an ° ro ers hoping to bring rival tangs l\1arty Trujillo and Tina Loo ... . ~uni~~ ons. · • toget her. " •tul talk~· to t-lte Out of this coalttion of black "These brothers are were singled out for writ' ,, t L-,. gang members emerged the talented. The leaders of the · THE GROUP has held three awards. Trajillo rereiYed · "."0 nc:rs. organizatiQn called Brothers gangs are mteu1gent, but they dances and the second, held at third place for column 8 · Unlimited G be -~ have "no place to go. SQc.iety the \Vatts center, drew 500 . . . and Mi · ~~_.,. . ang mem rs auu hoo . , be 1 1 · bl .re\11ew wrthng ss ___.-. · • f · -~ be keeps s ting doWJ\.defeat1st gang mcm rs. t w.as rou e-• The question is why a[ll:t orm""' g~ng mem rs Cllf":e attitudes on them. and they rree but there ha\le been prob-an honorabl~ mention ---what can be .done. 'Iile toget~er! ill the 'Y;ords of their don't know that an .it takes is lerrui. . -feature writing. ·~ .. violence has caught the at· consti~t1on to uphol.d andJ..::c'-::;;lllliiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii.i~~-tention of many people in city maintain the .peace 1n the ~ hall, the police department black comm~ty to the best . ' and the schdols; but for the of our ability. ART "•LL DAY first time gang members THE l\lEMBERS J o o k e d ~ -A themselves haYe begun to arQUnd their community and by Cost• M•t1 Art lugue......-- • Last December, the leaders violence were to be found in oath oasf' ua speak out with answers of concluded that some of the un-?ii their own. derlying causes of g a n g _) s ~ of 12 gangs confronted city of· unhealthy relations with the _ . l -~f~~ial~s~~a~n1d~a~dm~in~~~tr~at;or~s_J·po~llce~and~~de~fic~ien~ci~es~ln~lli~e~-=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:._~ gath~red at a human relations schools. The lack of moVie l U~IT ........ Gallery Girls ~;. · Golf seems to bring out the best of the girls -as tournament demon· strat~. The ·sun came through -and the women fan nned. their most eye appealing attire. . • Newest Movie Stars · Nosy . Proboscises Of Idols Protrude - HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -ff you hadn't noticed, there is a. new look among up-and-com- ing movie actors in contrast to the collar ad types of the 30s and 408 and the unpretty pe<r- ple of(the sos and 60s. The new breed might be described as the promintnt tme bunch. ' AM()fiG THEM are Dustin Hoffman; .. AI ,Pacino, Elliott . Gould11nd Frecteric Forrest. In addition to sharing'a-dif~· ficult-to-describe appearance, the actors are dedicated to avoiding off.screen adulation: Fol1'est costars w i t h Anthony Quilµi in "The Don Is cess, Pacino, Hoffmah and Dead," a story of. the Mafia Forrest have been absOlute not unlike '"The Godfather." strangers to the Hollywood Frederic takes oyer the gang party circuit. They neith~ w~ Quinn is unCoupled from seek nor are sought by prom- his position as head or the inent hostesses to enli\len family. ·• soirees. FORREST DOESN'T speak WHEN IT comes to social for · the others when he says, if aces, the newcomers pasa. "I'm Mr Anonymous I'm a · They are -shadowy figures to . · -, the c!llc aet and ~pparenlly JOurne)'J't'aQ a.cy>i: w!,>o s been want to keep It that way. lucky with the break!.'' . "It's more impbrtant to be It was more than tUck which working than socialiiing," said jnspired rave reviewS for Forrest during a b~ak in Frederic when he played Tom filming at Universal Pictures. BlaCk Bull in "When Legends "l don't even -know anybody Die" with Richard Widmark. who goes to those parties. I'm In their brief fling at sue-not invited to them." -· l'•ld .... ~•rtluft.~ ....... , ... _.,) RE·ELECT ~ · GEORGE H.~RODDA, JR. AND -- J • Presenq Uriiteds nature trips · to Seattle ·and Portland. · You love the natural treats of living on the West Coast. And Unitcd's West Coasters know it. So, in addition to our regular breakfast choices, we'll wake you ilp with delicious, crunchy, highly nutritional granola, if you choose. • • ·-T I I • .. • • .1 I I "I ·WORTH KEENE -~ TRUSTEES . We'll tempt your appetite with raw carrots, celery and pi~kles before you indulge in a delicious picnic basket lunch._ _ i . . : • • COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT . - <Ora119e Coast Coll9911 & Golden West College I Keep Dedicated and . ·Experienced Leadership RETAIN · THE INCUMBENTS THE .COAST COMMIJNITY OOJ,LEGE DISTRICI' • ' •• , '_ ••• Has kept pace with the area~s rapid growth •.. Is rat.cl among the nation's best _ •.. Offers a Wide selection of career programs , •• !llillvides cultural activities for the .community • • ~ Has one of the nation's lowest per student cost ••• Has no bonclecl Indebtedness '. ••• Hal' implemented modem TV techniques <KOCE·TVI • •• Is receptive to communications fro"! teac:hen, stu· dents and the conimuaities it has served for 25 jean! Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Westminster,· 'Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley ancf Seal Beach G~OR(i1E B. RODDA, .JR. AJU) WORTH KEENE ARE UC~NIZED LEADERS AMONG THE NATION'S '50/lll'llVNITY COLLEGE TRVSTEES AND EDVCA'l'ORS RE-ELECT GEORGE H. RODDA, JR. AND WORTH KE_ENE • • • ·APRIL 17th Committee to Re-elect Incumbent Coast College T~ Wlllord T. Jord1n Mr. ind Mn. Robort·Morton John A. Hopwood How1rd R•rs At-I-Schlfer ' 8111 Blurock Henry ''Hink" P1nl1n Mr. ond Mrs. Id Word J1mos 'K. Carson lle"1 S. lninlr> · · I Chofl L Connoll Tllomot D. Cloney Bob co .. nough · · C!1rel Hlncloon Mr. ond Mrs. l>hllllp Colo Dr. H1rold I. NelWlng. J1mes T. SuthO<l1nd Mr. ind Mrs. Frink Yulus Donni E. Wlllouthby Don I. Huddlnton . Oliff Abl.,.,.. Chorlotto Lyko Jull1 Thornton Alfrodo G1rcl1 • 'l'homas Lombort Roymond Cobb Ellis Thomn ' Stophon Lont Mr. ontl Mrs. Willord H1n11ik John Kannl~ " • alCk H1-t Frink Wost . P1ul Gruber• Mr. ond Mrs. Scott Fl1no91n Wm. E. (8111) K,ottler Don1ld Mcinnis . . We'll bring you back 10 the special sweetness of figs and dates and apples. · And quench your thirst with fine West Coast wines poured from the carafe for only $1.00 in Coach. · In short, we'll takeoff on nature when we take off to Seattle and Portland. Fly the only airli ne that offers a wide DC· I 0 and your choice of Coach' or First Class on all flights . · Call United at 482-2000, or ask your Travel Agent to arrange a flight from the _ schedule below . United's West Coasters. A part of West Coast living. ToSaitf\e 8:45 a.m. 2:\5 p.m. 10:45 a.m. 5:00 fo.m. 12:30 p.m. 7~3nc.O oim ' . p. • ToPortlalld 8:45 a.m. 5:30p.m. l:OOp.m. 7:00p.m. 3:30 p.m. I • .. ' I ~ I . -1 ' I ) / • I ' • • ' ' Robert L. Humphreys Don1ld G. Hoff l..~~;·~··~"':.:'•:.::"•:•':A~'~"":;,"·~':"':""'":;;·~"'::.!....,:::'"~·:••:•"':_·__;A~l~•;l~~M.::,C:oo::,n~~~~~~..J!I -~~~~:-~~~~~~~~~~-;-~~~~~:--~~~~--::--~~~~~~~~~....:.~~~~~~~~~~· ., ~ l I ' •. • , • ---·-.. 14 "DAILY PILOT Thursd.1,, April 12, 1973 -n-1aour :.f1nfltt • · ~ World, ,Trip. Nets ! . I )llln Air Reco:rd· ' From Wlre Strvlcet • Barry J, Cooper, 5 5 , GN!t!twlcb, o>nn., a greeting card industry e 1 e cut l v e , relurnod to Cbicago 345 houri, 19 rnlnut<s and 33 aeconds after he took orf, and claimed a rouJld.the-V1<1Cld reconf for · corrimerdal airlines travel. Cooper, slppi>"1n:!g~~~ said he saw ih; rises in 36 hours e trip. PEOPLE movie director Georp Seatoli, Was elected mayoc of Beverly Hills. • ri.trs. Seaton, a member of the City Council -for three years, was elected b ~cil memben to Mayor Richard . She will serve a r term. ll<!p. <>Idea L , ID-N.Y.,) introduced a bill that says Christopher Columbus ·"shall hereafter be known as a citizen or the United States of America." It was re(erred to the House Judiciary dimmittee. ' ... "r'.::.=:i. "Mo~my, how long till you give me bock my roller skates?" Most of. the time he wa,s in +. the alr, spending 30 mlnutes in Jmy ·FriiAelm, top ~ London, an '10\lf in M0a«>w, 35 spoltesman for the Pentagon ----------'--'"-I ______ _ minutes in Tokyo and an hour for four years, Ls being pro- In Anchorage, Alaska. moted. * Presiderit Nlmn named the Tobacco heiress ·Dorts Dake, former editor of the Joplin, several actors, sports figures Mo., Globe to be auistant and representatives .of big secretary of Defense for business and unions were . public affairs. The position among guests at a White pays $38,000 a year. House dinner for Singapore * Prime Minister and Mr1, Lee Apollo 13 astronaut Jobn L. Kuo Yew. "Jack" SWlgert is c<insidering Marine DI Fined SAN DIEGO (AP) -A drill instructor at 'the Marine Corps recruit depot has been con· victed of assault and hazing and returned to duty after being fined $600, a spokesman said here. Gary, Ind., has been ordered court-martlaled on fout counts of derelicUon in duty fer allegedly condonj.ng Morland's conduct. In an unrelated case, S. Sgt. Denzil R. R. Stewart, 33, ~I to trial on four counts <0f mat· treatment of trainees. r ' ___, ' ' Financier -Krock Cit~ m· T~ Fraud . • I . • ; .. BOsroN d APJ, -!nt<ma· pllOod oa five-,._,. .... doa. lawyer-financier Roy_M. Cohn. million to~. Kl<ICI< and ttooal finaoder ~wan! Krock Fifth A.-oold Its bus Colli' wu acquitted m-1969 of ViC:,~;i::,!;,.ed,on.the late has' beefl' charged by a fed-open-·G) New Yori< City In bribery and complracy and In Sen. ~oseph McCarthy'• )n· eral grand jury with evading tlG. and Krock-.band'ln the ' 1971 of fraud conspiracy In the vesl!gatlve staff, w!!.~~ nearly fl.5 million In ta.es ~~. plld In tbe con· Fifth Avenue Cooch caae. other man ordered w...,._y by not reporting more tllan -·-1n the $1.Z milllon In Income. . K,..s te.llfJed u 1 ..,,..,.. '1111! 0 0 V E R N M ENT to shar~' payment Aut. U.S. Atty. Wayne B. meet ·-at two triala ol daJmecl Oillft dlverled $1.7' · Cbicogo bank case. 'Hollingsworth Wednesday c ed k the .. Jargeol lndl tu caae In -the, hlAocy of the United States." MEANWRILE, In Cbicogo, an ntinolJ Circuit c 0 u r t ordered Kroclt-and-a·n associate to pay a fl.&-mlllion judgment lh an alleged bank· ing manipulation case. • •"" · LANb, "'-SEA & AIR SHOW Thursdaj. Saturday-*iashion-lsland-. -· See the Latest In Rtc...atiOllGI MObDlty • "\-!.. Aircraft • GRders • Power & Sailboats • Automobiles The tu: µtdictment, return- ed In U.S. District Court here, totaled seven counts, accusip'g Krock, 61, of falling to report more than $2 million of tax-I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ able income in 1966, 19;67 and 1968 . It also charged him with wlllfu11y filing fr a u d u 1 e n't returns from 1966 throuah 1969. ·' . KROCJr ALW was accused of omitting income of ovet $3 million in sales of securities in 1968, 1967 and 1968 and other income amowtting to about $1.1 million. The $1.1 million •ncJuded a consulting fee, a loan com· mitment fee, interest income and an al1eged fictitious net operating loss. • -1 In pll, Krock wa" charg_ed with failing to report more than $6.2. milliOfl in Income. IN 1971· Krock pleaded guilty in New York federal coUrt to Jumpin' • 2641 Ha,Fb_or Blvd1• 'COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6:00 SUNOAYS 9 TO. 5:00 •• , _.!--j • Geraniums! · The 15 guests· at the affair 1eav1ng· the space agency to given by PrelldeM and Mn.· take a pos!Uon with the U.S. Nlxon included actors Glenn H 0 u 5 e s c 1 enc e and Ford and F.dgar Bergen. Astronautics c o m m i t t e e, Fonner Cleveland I n d i a n s BOW'ces Said. pitcher Bob Felio!' and Olym· The drill instructor was Identified u Sgt. John F. Morland, 23, of St. Louis, Mo. . ~barges of ftling false reports pie diver Sammy Lee were on Swigert, a 1 a s t -m in u t e band. 85 well as Vice Presi-replacement aboard t h e • dent Spiro T. Apew. trouble-plagued.. Apollo 13 * flight to the moon, joined the THE MARINE spokesman said Wednesday Morland's platoon commander, S. Sgt. Francisco Gonzales, 32, of THE SPOKESMAN s a t d · with the Securities and Ex- Stewart, of Oceanside, was change Commission and mak- relieved of his duties last ing illegal solicitations of January. proxies while he was treasur- ., • Pbyllls Se· at o n , wife of aslrooaut corps in April, 1968. He said no serious injuries er of the Fifth Avenue Coach were reported .bY recruits. qo . He was fined $22,500 and ' ' VINYL Al8ESTOI Sllf STICI( Sot.IO Vllffl. . Floor Tile Carpet Tile Floor Tile JUMBO 12•1 t2" ttOT r x r lllAU. llZE .:.14~· Quarry Tile. --.._...,. ....... FIRST QUALITY 32~ C!:"AMIC IATKfVI •O....,V.....,T ..... . ~·.-.. ___, ........... ,.. ......... ~ • SYh1dC.... "-"''""'-I t-JUMBO 12·x1r. NotlMllllrxrlim ::~ 29t "· DECORATIVE CERAMIC Mosaic Tile PRE-MOUNTED ON SHEETS FOR EASY INSTALLATIONl IDEAL FOR ENTRY WAYS COUNTF.R TOPS, ETC. AS LOW AS 7~HEET FIRST QUALITY Ceramic Wall Tile P£RllANl!NT WATERPROOf' BEAUTY FOR BATHROOMS! BATHROOM Vanities Edcinc Kit B1tlltub Floor Seel T1~l-lltSl!pQ tll0t$ cu.cc ........ LU.at tton L1AU & WAfllll DAllAGl.l ............. 179 1n.1i..W' 1.u._ FOlll MlMOOll WtTn ::.:."':=-. 98t DO IT YOURSELF .... ~ ' '!!o .Cok>r Tilt QI••• You Everything ~ Mirror Tile MAKE ANY ROOM LOOK URGER! ·• IN Y'Oluel M¢ wolw PlAIN GOLD VEIN 49~59~ 1011IOIN. • Tnltr n. ~ Of 'Vln}'I Ftoot ni.a ,.._ ....., ....... ....,.s·r Of~ JUMBO 12' x 12' NOf r i. ,. SMAU. MZE v!tt, 27!, "· EN'RICH£S-PROTECTS KlrCHEH WAUS! 1RUsHE01 coPPiR OH ALUMINUM 1 ..... 62~ YAWE -. "· ECONOMICAL ·• LONG·LASTING, LOW PAICEO &'EAUTY FOR TOUR BATHROOM WALLS! SO EAST TO IHSTAU. 00 IT fOURSEl.f! 31 2' VAll.lf l:A. HEAVY, DELUXE Bathtub Enclosures AT THE LOwtST eosn • Addt W•"""' • Beeutr To ,,.,.,, Wiit MAO! OF . DURABLE POlYSTYRlHE Sl.29 VAiUI ~ 79¢ ti: sa:h . .;",. WATUPftOOI', PlRUllENT 1'£NVM,TING TYPE Sile-Sealer Tub & Tile Caulk GMJ CWU & WIS f'lllUUllft 'Jw c.r-ic DI • Will NM .-.-i: Gf9VI, U"fllnd •R ........ ,,_...._1 • Foi r-. IWla, lhowm. We'l&Fie.C....,h$. SNO W~I 129 S1'1 OL TUef:.,'?'\rl .... • WIWI-GtM Ollk:Jilrt • 11.-.s..... Cll~""9f7t a.-1111 ....... • YCKI NffJd to Tiie ii Yourself • a S1ve IM Hloh Cotl ot Ubofl C:OLOl '0"'''°' TILE i Ct#Yf1 COSTA MESA-2221 Harbor Blvd. rn •• WT ' nun '' • IT TMnlll ' K19 MJ. MSO tu Ill ......... I '-•Irr·"'"°" . ·- I 645·1126 -• STORE HOURS Open Sunday -1 1.m. ·5 p.m. Mond1y. Frld1y -I 1.m. • 9 p.m. T-., Wod., Thvra., S.t. -8 1.m. • 5:30 ~.m. ALWAYS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Typical Calif. Favorites Zonal GERANIUMS Hybrid PE.LAl<GONIUMS 4" .POTS 1.25 la • I Got. l,98 s Gol. 5,98 6 For 6.98 . . /~ _, Both •re excellent growers in window-boxes, as potted plants or in the ground as borders or background . . , nRDWARF HYBRID BERMUDA .... .....,, ........... . " ........... ..... or ... fot pcttclll .. , SS.,, ft. .98 lfATILOW I IT'S EASY DICHONDU. SOD DICHONDRA SOD .....,,..,...,.,.m,.,· ••••IM ........... ., Dklteech11wL ' Hydrangeas s s.. ft. 1.69 1 ... 1.2.25 , A LAWN FROM SEED DICHONDRA LAWN SllD SPICIAL .,!'.~. 1.49 ~ . lntt\\\\~1 • BARY. Versatile DECORATIVE BAaK Ui e l•r• ••w. •roulMI ploftts 0114 ••· ... dbcow-.,. _....Md• ...... Lt .• lc.a. ~ ..... 1.98 3 .... 4.98 It l.oob fi.rfftl 1 NurMli Specials Th1'11 Wed., April 18th ' i H~$ f UlW!tl 'SM~P Everything 'Old' is the NEWEST Thing . . . April 22nd is Easter ... Cal1 "' for .. Flowers A7lvwhere "VICTORIAN" Houses And Shops k•l•M '""'-••• Pl....,., .................. , .......... 12.50 PHONE 546-5525 ' I • 4 . • .. ' 'l ·- ·' Her Do,g GreatestJ ~~ssie Can Tal~, Gi;l1lnsiSts By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI _ IM_ .. '™'1, l"llltt St.ff FJossie is a whiz with numberf' and were she human, she jlllght be aim~ as smart as Albert Einstein. She is also a ferocious Ughter, an eipert gymnast 1 and a terrific skater. at · is th1S perreci-- c;ombination oJ mind and body? IT'S A 2-year-<>ld Booton bulldog .belonging to Cathy Murphy of Costa Mesa and if•she has her way, it may like Muhammad Ali soon say, "I'm \he gre8test." The-dog a!Jo talks. 111~ .can say 'ma·ma,' 1 ob 1 ' 'more' and sometimes it says 'please,• • ins!its C.thy, 815-year-old Costa Mesa High School . student who lives at 590 Pierpont Dri've' .. "EVERY ONCE ih a while she will say a whqle ' segtence like 'mama give me the ball'. Honest to Gcd, she's 'a genius." I ' '. It requires corisl~erable attention and imagination 'Ho11est to God, she's " genlu1.' to interpret F I 0 s s re I s gurgles , yelps and drawn- put growls as words but that is probably because of her Boston accent. "I'm trying to teach her hOW1 to pronounce her wori:fs better." maintains cathy. "And I'm trying tQ give her a bi gger vocabulary." CA111Y SAYS she got her black·and·whlte -pet talklng one day when she held her ball and refused lo give It back. "I just kept . saying •mama ,' 'mama' over and ~ver again. At first she started squealing and then ti..n8Jly she said 'mama' but now she is starting lo ·'{l:Y even better wOrds. '' Though Flossie's lin- . qui!tic skills are open· to debate. there are other f)!ats she performs which 1nake her lr>ori: than an ordinary mutt'\ · 'WONDER DOG TAKES OF ON SKATE BOARD' Giving Gu idance Is Cathy Murphy of Cost• Moso inside, Flossie will close the doof', for example. She can also ride down to the beach on the back of Cathy's bicycle, co. u n t n ·umbers, and do backfllps. · But her best trick p~ bably is zipping full speed down the sidewalk on a skateboard, ears drawn back and out ol the ,.;ind'. "l trained her lo do all these t h i n g s , including how to attack. people. She has the st.rmigest teeth in the world and she never lets go." With that in mind, no.body should ever risk telling Cathy that they can't understand her dog. "· IF CATHY says'll~ld ~~~~~~~~~1 a.tiful Things llqeiis When You AdYertise in Newspapers °""~ ~ Happen When You Make Mistakes ... ' .. Lii• tH -n who struck a · inatch to Sff if Ills ccw's CJ111 • tuk was, empty. It -1111't I ' 1 '" •. Or th• guy wtio pal led . a strange b }dog on Ille heo to SH If Fido wos affectionate. He wosn't · if he could n,, . . . ~noth•,r citizen speeded I.IP to beat th• train to Ille crossing. He couldn't .J,..., • ,,.;· • One fellow stuck his finger In Ille .electric socket to Sff If he could stand •1th• shock. H• couldn't~,· ..., ••• And thH the,. wos th genius who cut out his newspaper t advertising to Sff .If he could save money. • , , He couldn't Make No Mistake·s ... Make Beautifui Things Happe~ in Your Life ., NEWSPAPERS ·FIRST Challenge the News Quiz •.. onSatzirday's Fpmily Page ' Thunday, Aprll 12, !Q73 DAILY PILOT .!5 Moretti-Jets Too Rich .for Him said, "I have no objection at all lQ Jt." I and 1the stated each passet1 r business of come out (rQ.tJ.t and say ..• the governor of the largest stttle needs this," l.1orettl said. REAGAN l\EPLIED at a rlews coote~nce Tuesday that Reagah's office has stated he considered that --=Jl"'lt'Wnl to sAC~ENTO · IAP l - Asoembiy Spelker Bob Mort!· II says he can 't afford the $525-an-hour cost of using the state's new executive jet, but has no objtcUon to Gov. Ronald Reagan uoing it at )ax· payer expen.oe. -,:r.e,....sai•dl 11(., eiecutlve jet can get to many cities with lit· tfe or no commercial plane service, but added t ha t Reagan should be more open about the purpose of the Jlane and avoid secrecy -t \I. 1hat $52,000 w.lrth of air' lime 11"1~ be "nitpicking harassment" tQ ..... billed to the Governor's p£flce . Ma~l lnciudet: Mat!Jnl Pl S 2 Box Sprtnga PLUS Ortho-P&Jc PLUS Oo11bi. ~.:'~ *178 FLEX ~ .. -, ....... Box~PlUS Ortho-P1k P u1 Double ._., $ ='bw .. 118 ORANGE The Democratic leader of But "it's a problem for the Assembly added Wed--llleagan" lo justify the $199,447 nesday that the Qlle time he anvual Jesse on the plane has nown in the sleek 400-, "because .they're trying to mile-per-boor jet, tbe cost wes justify tbelr fonntr position billed lo the Rep u b 11 can crltlc:lzlng form..-Gov. Ed· governor's office. m·u n d G. (Pat) Brown's -plane," Moretti said. ASKED AT a news con- ference about the jet, Mor!:ttl "I 11fINK they ought to just since Janu;iry has ~ for which he would not give in. state .busfness, but details of Reagan has first priority on whQ has used the plane and the plane, which the state for what purpose have been Department of General withheld. •· Services ma,a:ges and also Last week, a Senate fmance rents to1othel agencies. Seven subcommittee proposed an state agencies used It chning amendment to t})e. s t a t e the llrst three months of the budget which would require ten-year lease, but Reagan's that a public record be kept of office accounted for 75 percent all pas9engers using the, jct oJ the flight time . all stores join in our gigantic ~ • Now ••• over 50 .Factory Showrooms • -• with the opening of rhree m"lgnfflcent new 1howroom1, In San F11nclaco, Loe Angeles & Atl.ai'tt•s all atorea are celebrating with aenaaUonal "Grand OpenlngH 1>11geln1/ Hete'• your chance ro take adYontage ol "'8ff tanlHflc,,;,,. ••• st the Ol'llKI St0te ,,.., rou/ Alt at super-low pr#cHI-~ EVERYTHING FOR SLEEP LUXUrlo"31 lncludn1: Mat· E~antl lnclud11: Mat1res1 /D cor11or'1 dr11ml With: trna PLUS 2 Box J(ilngs Pl s Box sf''"'bPLUS Mattress PLUS BOii Spring PLUS Ortho.f>ll4t Pl Dou-Ortho·Pak P US oub1e PLUS Ortf'lo.Pat PLUS l)ou.. ....... ,*228 5b s1111 ~~1 '-198 ORTHO • HOTEL The uttlma\el lntlut1e1: Mat· A beauty! 1n~llldn: M1t1redi .Supreme ii•":rc Wiil: Mii• lrHS PLUS 2 Bo:t Sprl119s PLUS Box srrlng PLUS tr••• PL S 0.: siring PLUS Ottl'M>Pllc PLUS Dou• Orlho·Pak P US Double PLUS Ortho-f'all PlU Doi.I-~:''$248 ~i:i..•11i ~~~'""$208 SPLENDOR SPU:HDOft SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM ' osrnRE REST Reg. $199.95 KING SIZE . .___, Voa'll IDwt 11:1 With: Mattreu B•11tlr11Uy madol With: Mii· PUJ8 Box Spring PLUS Dou- tile lon1111 tre11 PLUS Box Sprl11g PL.US Double Bonua! *BB *98 OATH() ORTHO FLEX HOTe. / Grtat cti1m1t lncludftt: Mat· One cf Ortllo'• llntl~ll Mat• ,,, •• PLUS Bo:t Spring PLUS Double Bollu1t lllM PLUS Bolt 6pring PLUS Doubll Bonus! ~iN •aa ~~"°" s1oa LAKEWOOD 2445 N. Tustin Avo. FOUNTAIN VALLEY 1811 Wost Lincoln Ave. 4433 Condlowood Ave. ' 16131 Harbor ~Ive:!. l1tw1111 ~11clld •11d lfoo~h11r1t Condlowoajl Shop• l1cro11 fr;m Or111g1 Mtlll Av111u11 I 1cro11 kin l.1k1w .... C..J ,ho111 417-0111 l1or111r of E.lhtttrl Neict to Zody'• J111t 111t ef F.d Mitt "''"' 1)9 .. 570 "''"'' 116·2190 "''"' 614-4114 \ I ... I ' I \ I " \. • ' ..J J f DAILY PILOT I • • • s Thund>y, April 12, 1973 . . . .... . .. . ' .~ ' ' I " , ··Tustin· :Teachers " ., -. Cite-Grievances Teachen in the 'l\lstin Elementary School District have announced • campaign tp oppose what !hey term "u pressure" ~ harassment )?y distrlct administrators. ' .... C~ur.se ~ Cha~ges . sODghi by District;·:. .• -· •• 1 l ' 'Farim.-a..ilable !or dividual ICbool olficts. -CHANGES ARE within Cotty uid the district en-· philosophy, goals and ol>- ........,. lull participalion In jectlves of the district. developnenl of leerning op-I-;:=====:;:;;;; . ' ~~IONS .. ' · Reyn Sheffer MINI LEARNED, president of the Tustin Educators Asaoci.atlon, sald .the cam· paign will ilielude organl1atlon of a grievance procedure team at all Tustin ochools and an evaluation of each· principal by Irvtne -· atudenll .... _, lo ·~(I• s I cur· riculmn ...._ In the Irvtne Unlfiecl Sebool -· ~ties" • I &igi..uons can lit sub-StinQey is ·- "lNiTiii(DEN'r"""""Sli~~~~'ii;~tl~me~d~unn~·?.-~tbe~tJ!l~l"llrlJl"' "' year. In bis report o -~Uft I ' · teachen. Dan Saling, Executive Direc\Of of South Orange County United Teachers, which represents teachers ip the Tustin, Saddleback, Irvine and Capistrano districts, said the goal of the campaign is "equitable treatment for ,all teachers." Corey ID!velled the CWTlculum board Monday, Corey asked ~= ~~-~i~ r'eli~tha~t~person~· ~s~m~ai'.lng~~-;m-~~::;;;~i~n~the~l~•J~~~jt~f~:lij~,~)i~· ~ me~tiorus consider: if: A ~ly goals com· mittee may eventually pr. .. s.w .... .,. ... •ny knew· 1.q. ......... k..,, ltut .. lm;.tt; fM tf'H• of thl1 rich jewel ls 1-t In conc:MI· rnent .••.• " J...,.. H•ll duce different permanent p~ cedureS', said Corey, but a Wtbhtt o f communicating augge.ltions was needed now. The change f0rm asks for YOUR SUPPORTING_ 0-<: 1-l t 0 :<1 Q ,!' .... GIFT GUARANTEES ri"' { 0 "" Eternal lnltha are often 1im- pJe one1. A vatuS:ble guide- post tor our lives' may us- ,uaUy· be. expressed in a few succinct word$. as ' are 1he quotations o( phill)80llhers· "'hlch we bring you each week. 1 The wise men ·· who were able to express their thought. '° simply and con-. vlnclngly have demonst~ their wlllln~ to 11hare this knowledlie with tis. ulf£ ff A V E discovered several cases of teachers. being forced into early reUre- riten~ others being arbitrarily transferred, and scores more -, barissed and -verbally abused by building ad- ministrators;" Saling said. 'RequestJ Moantiieg,.I Vp . • ' the name, address and phone I ...... number of the person mating Box µpon box of ticket requests for the' 1973 'Pag09t of 1b<! Mlsten are the request; the scllool °' opened by festival staff worker Flora Bass ~t) Qld Karia Allen. 'With"the schools Involved:· a descrlption festival start only four months away, $400,000 in sales have been reoordOd. A '._of 'l)>e ,&ange; •"'! of tbe sold out season will bring in $600,000 to the Pageant. -~ ~=:.; ~ 1\1:. = · YOU MORE. l~COME ~.,. .,i . . • 0., aO By the same token. v.-e should look for opportunities to continue this diuemina- tlon of helpful concepts •.. by concerned counsel and advi ce to those Wl:io migh t profit from it, or better still, by example in the "'aY we live. • . Gur many yeal'I ot1 expe°r- lence' a.re available ti') those \1:ho uk for our help in time of need. We serve all faJ thl and creeds with dlg- aity and good taste. iSneFFGR . mo1tT11AAY LA6UNA IEACH 976 SO~H COAST HIGHWAY 494·15)5 saJlng said there weren't any similar problems in other districts served by h I s organization. But he insisted . that "we will fight for better v.·orking conditions in Tustin. We will not allow our members to be harassed, in- timidated, or treated i n arbitrary mannen. Principals who think otherwise are Tn for a real ®nnybrooi." School Project Capitol N... Service SACRAMENTO ' -Publlc, private and parocial IChools in California ¥" being Invited to. participate in observance of the Interior Department'• fir~t Laguna i Y' Indians Set Fund Raiser The firtt annual rummage sale of the Laguna Nation of Y-lndian .Guides will be from 10 a.m. to S p.m. 'Saturday lot, Park Ave. at Blumont. .. 1/fhe1Y.Ouides, sponsored by tbe South Coast YMt:A, will donate tieir proceeds: to llelp the Y· Wet lts fund-raising goal of•fl',000. · Anyri wi.!hing to make donat\Olll to the sale may call the Y at '494-9431. Joaquin Trustees -Eye Cost Cutting mendaUon will improve the district. THE FORMS can be ol>- Wned at the district offlee at 45t2 Micbelsoo. Ave" or iri In- Unification Cosi cutting 'in the a~eas .or woilldn't have .tb pay ·sales: 'Diseussi·on ~les tax and school .site ac-tax since they rlre public in! quisition -continues to in-stituiions. ~ .,.heduled terest trustees in the San Joa-They as~ed Superintendent ~ quin' School astrict s~uled Richard Welte to prepare ·a ' lo go out or'business1 June 30. resol.ution opposing such tax ~s of the HUllilngtoD J JR~NE AND Saddlel>ack payinents. 'They plmto,send it Beach Union High'• School I Valley Unified School Districts to state and red e r a I District and the · Fountain I will take Over operation . or legislators . =ct El::rndisctaryussS eunifih. 0!.,.~ I area schools July 1, accor.ding In a related financial mat-...... I to a unification plan approVfd ter, trustees passed a resoli&-lion of, Fountain Valley at a I b.¥. voters last June. tion stating that developer~ joint meeting April· 26. I SAN CLEMfNTE ISJl NOlllTH EL ~MINO REAL 492.0100 annual · Jobnny Hcfuon '76 La M "Clean Up Am~l<oa Month" guna · · an san. Jop.qµln tr u s t e e s _ will be asked to set a price ro~ bY1t. ~~ ~:ur°y ~1 I receiltly he31'd 'a' . report by school .sites at the ·time au!>-board because-that ~~ I Assistant 'Superintendent Rex divisions are approved bf .......... : ..... to ~ ... i'm itself and Nerison that the disbict paid local planning.agencies. · yun&UUJ.6 ~IU,. about $64198.1 in sales tax on needs the approval of the high I ta bl hases from 1~7• SAN JOAQUIN has had school district to do so. I u•lal\ Rupel of 1111. II N .. Coast xa •pure ~r " lroubl · the t 'tli" hool High School Ral Sept. l~l 15:' " :==========~FA~S~H;;10;,N~==.I Fire Chief \ UNIFOR~ SHOP W• C•rrr aarco, Tlff•nr. Whtte ••• Lady Dl•n• & T,...., 2 WHks Only 10~30o/o OFF Soil White Uniforms DOCTORS COATS ·.:..:::.:: ""' ·~·· 0,. 9:»-l:M ~ t:fO.l:IO s.t. 31622 S. c .. 11 Hwy~S. Loguno 'ghm B ch h to 1971-72. . e m· pas_ WI SC trusree ph I Hi way, Laguna ea as ... More sales tax is beinr paid site ~ts ~creasing after the , Bauei: ~ that ''we're not I been promoted to the rank or h choo site · 1s picked but be'fore g'oiri'g to 'go to this meeting to I capt.alnEin the Fire Depart-in.t is, the i972-73:s year, negotiations begin. agree or·'dfsagree with them ment or' Los Angeles County, but Neri9tft didn't haVe totals The resolution, to be (Fol.ihtain Valle~. We want to I Fl.re Chief R1'chard H. Houts on that. ' f ded r · • orwar to rvine and Sad-hear.what they veto say." I announOed. TAXABLE f'tJRCHASES dleback Valley Unified He said he waii.ted represen-I 'l1le Promotion. was ma<fe· over. that time "totaled about tnl!tees, also says that sifes .tatives of the other elemen-I aft:er Bucce~ul completion of , ,1.3 f(ljllion. Trustees said .-will be identified wtien tracts t~ districts within lhe hi~ I tbe Civil Service Examination. they lelt school districts ·are ·seheduled !or construction •cho\>l district to Understand I Re has been assigned to the 'In the district. lhat . the -ting Is in-I San-Gabriel VaI!ey ilispat·1 ,, If the 5Ubdivlslon ·isn't com-loC)llational only. "We want to I ching Center. .Se. :eking pleted ;as originally planned, avoid the· confllcls that have I the resolution states, San Joa-arisen in the past," he said. 1 ; ... --.....W,1...... .,., yr . ....,. • I 11..W ......... wW1e ' 0 CALL Ml, JIM HIND ........... ...._cwtllr• .. • _.,_c, •kr·-'" 499-1311 _. ''Uwlet TNlt ,,..,..._"' Wrfte •r ...... --. ,!Ext. 600 SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL :11m c... H.....,, IMtll LepH, Cellf9ralli 92677 ~ .2030FF T.UX RENTALS 5030FF ALTERATIONS •o• •••a wo••• SliClS lHITKEUD .S.1 -81 SIDITllH .~-~~!~ Now SHDITH DIESSU Now .. s11s II SKllTS.~.~~!~. CDATS Now .J350 TAkElt llt .':~.~!f. ~~~·~ THIS COUl'ON MUST •I" P'••Sl'NTIO WITM ~I OAll.MINTS· AT TMI TIMI TM•Y All.I LIP'T fOll. ALTlll.ATIONS. VOIO IP' Pill·· Slo:NTtb AT TIMI OP' PICKUP' • , • / ~·;.MJM J . '"'«'11'1-' •FM'f""==·g-l ---COUPON pooo IHIU AUG . '13 -·~- ·T AILOR SHOP , 58110·EDINGER AT SPRINGDAiE HUNT NGTON BEACH 846-2911 Th P 1 ... 1 l quin reRrves the right to 're-1be meeting will be held at I . erapy ro9rams' . Sup·p ies ~etermine the need lot lhe 7:30 p.m. -1n the Fountain ·~ school or reduce the site size. Valley board room. ~---. . Alternatives of purchasing or Jelslng instruC'tional sup- .plies, · furniture, relocatable claSsrooms ·1Uut buses are ·being eXploied by Irvine Unified SChool District ol- A prim•ry qoal of Beverly Manor c•re is to ro•toro the p•tiont to tho m•ximum mobility 1.nd ~ion allowed by his phy•ic•I condition. Rog ist•r•d phy1ic•I thor•pists ,apirviso p•tient reh•bilitation progrims.-lnhtll•tion therapy sp•och therapy, 'lre"cup•tion•I therapy, and other 1ervices •re •110 •vailable. All the.rap'] rendered by registered therapists i1 ·provided pursu•nt to orders .pr•·. scribe by the patient's phy1ician. · . ' " ....,., »-C.011l•c111 "°"""' 35410 -C.,""-. --49605716 f1eials. District trustees.. .ha 'Ii e authorized the staff to ad- vertise and rc<:eive bids for .such equipment and services . Superintendent stan Corey recommended the general go- ahead to allow research into possibilities without · I o n g delays. , Specific purChases or leases require board approval .. ••••• In A Barrel ·About TIRES?? Consider This ~olution- The fact that we are small has , its advanta1es1!-With our low_ overhead and famous brands such as Uniroyal, Uniroyal z~. Cooper and Miller, we i;an and do &ive you BIB SAVINGS!! We offer friendly service and advice for your own personal. tire needs. Come in or call and see why we are the leadin&- tire.warehouse in Oran1e County. UH YOUR CREOIT FACTORY -01 M.1 IOllAFJO[ • _,,DISCOUNT TIRE DISTRIBUTORS Oii MVOI ClUI PUNS JUST IHDW YOUR 27601 Forbes Road ~INNT~DAT I . 1 Block off Crown V1lley Parkway and San Die10 Freeway LAG UN" .NIGUEL 831-2230 " \Vt'rt a tl!tlt hant to /u1d, B11t 1t•1'rt 1uorth ii! --t --I • i I ....... ..... "". l~ld ;..ltlc•I .UVtrti.e-t) - * . t.1AINTA1N . . ' * EA -V .IE .. PROGRESS ELECT - ' DA RE l BOARD OF TRUSTEES I VOTE APRIL 17~ 7 I • ' ' • ,. "' -"I am convinced that Darrell Carter -has the proper attitude & necessary qualificAt:Bns to preserve and impro•e Ocean View acheiVe· "The present board has labored eight years to • 11 .... ments .. ' • r~IS. Ocean View to • position· of National esteem. ! believe Darrell Carter is the candi- date 'best quoli,fied to mointoin this progress." -James Shaffer > President, Oc9C1" View School Board -G~rge 1.ocJan Past llreslclent, dcean View School ,Board . DARRELL CARTER . Steff Meneger This adftrtlsement paid for by COMMlllll TO IUCT DAHILL CARTER ~ ._ ........ ~ "11 ,__....DJ,. H•U ;II ..... C..,.,. I - r I j I j I j I l l I I . j 1 I , . I \ ' ' ' ~- J ---. 1 _ .T c'c.'_:'1<1::•::.Y ·:..'c:'';;''-;,' ,;cl 2::, c:1_:97:_;l:.___ ______ _::::::___~::_:._J_L 44 <;oast .Residents Join .A-~ej ic a 1;::: __ ==. :::;:=::::::::==::::===::::::=::; OAILY PILOT 11 For The R~cot ~ . ' ' ·/ SANTA ANA -FOrty-lour. incft tllan the _.., bail-Roword ~-Gu-it, )11111 lngsford Rad;'Los Alamitos ' A~. FQWJtam Va~ey:-_ , rtsldent• 61_12 Ormice "coli! Inc !1om Hllntlngtoo Beach. Foxburl Road,. Apt. .swA, Murl'i Anne G~y, ,,Jim SPAIN -Elena Jessee, _ f_o !"mu ni t,i e s becalll1! lin!!loJI Beach. Seal Beoch llld lwo members Pcplor st,. Founlain'\l.U.y: 2Mlf El Picador, Mission Vle- Ap>erica• cl~ 1Vecfna:c!af , ~"-\ l!"ach had ~a l"'W of Ibo While 1amiJy ol 33181 J..... SI°" Teggart, 211&1 Jo- in ~ and outdo o i! Alilerdana, Colla Mesa had Oiula Vista, Dena Point : ~a;, Apt 18, HUil-'SWEJJEN -Sigrid illrgllla erernonles al the Santa <Ana five, Misllort VleJO had lour, Helea Vivian and John David Ii n 1 t 0 n Beach and Ann Yeo, tol lri~ Ave., Corona ~\!I ' Dena Pelnt cfailne4>three ond 1Vhll . 'f • Mar. m• JAeenseS COll!lty courthouse. · Lo&~ San Cle-e. Boogbey, NS Part Drive, Apt, WEST G ER MAN y - _,, , Superior Court l'resldlllg meote and Beal Bea¢ had two -,_Tw1n•~-~odare AlmaWbite~,_!_ialledt 30, Costa Mesa. Helene Dostler, \017 E. Balboa 'Judge Bruce SUrnner ~ each. . "" ~ : -gare IRAN H h d Bl·~-. n-"··,· Rita Lilly j;!S VEG.t.f, MlrrltcM lie~ ~ and Robert Eli White, 131) _ -US m 3 U w-u DAWVQ -~r1N~~L':~ID -F.-.11, Lagunq. Beach, Oapked by BringingpP the uar were Esplanade, San Clemente. Tagbci~ 3JlZ B~atonlan Heidorn. 21oo ·Peterson Way, ... ~.:.;.,,.,, ~ s~'Ofk.t:;',1:;1on Judge Walter Charamz.a of Laguna Beadl and Laguna CHJNA y Kuen and F Drive Los Alamitos ..\pt. 22-C, ~ta_Mesa ; Della ,:1-c~~YL:AND _ '""· ·1, 1tk111iro Huntipgtoo Beach and Judge Hills, each witfl me rtlldent M . ,..,,___ lii:i.a _.._A u ' ~ EU. u .. PU -Barbara Walli Buckner, 3151h: AM Prk.1. a n Jwn L.orral~ Walter E. Smithi took the at the naturallzatfuo ~ ei 'di"'., veuui1c:a ve., J . -eeo. .,._,, Larkapur Corona del Mar and ~t:.nd· ,,, botfl o( H.ilnllntton beocb f_or. Department ~ . ·F~tn Valley; -Bo ~~ O'N~l. mat ~-t ~-.,e, Margarit I Qopnik, 23 151 Lo$ ~RJ;·H~!~,,,.,_ F~t.l%1 L~fr!' cermonles thaf included .~Grelt Britain and cariada Yee, ll.\tl w~ tane;-Hunt4neton .· eaeh 'ana~lsoe, Apt. 24-;:-MiSSiOilViej ~Ett•Mttt\ Hoo.11r.... s1. ::r'L.o. speeches by representatives of topped the list of oootributing .Huntington Beach. · Kathleen Dillon, 2960 Men-and Monika Mirla Freeland: ._~ ... ~ --,-•• or,•• jllllriotlc orgaru,.uw. nations with seven new clti-CUBA -Raquel Maria Yero ilOza, Costa Mesa. " . i!36 Lugooia St, Newport fl~L ir.:'~J:;•'.::11,.f:.",~"I:'. , He then led the way to the -.... eadt. 1 Vidal, ltma ~entry Lane, · ISRAEL -Joeeplr Reich, Beach. w~,. ~~~~;;; ,.~_m;..,~ . Pliza of the Flap to Join bis ·contributing nations with nine Huntington Beach. 22631.La Quinta Drive, Mission . THAILAND-'-lntera Alice I 85~·~r·G •nd PA'::,e,J:, ~ Fr•llone, colleagues and Orange ~ former Canadians lining up in CYPRUS ·.:... s t a v r 0 s· Viejo. ' Chen 9642 •DChev:y Chase c~LLi::,si~•PJ.G ""a~~~t~.P..~. ity'sr131 new·~Cor& West Gemi8ny seot five, 'rheOchari and Maril S(lvro11 J~AN. -;f;MP,S Randolph Drive, Hunt~gton Beach. ,;:r ci-~::Z ,_ &'oil"". li."OI group pbotogrilphs ltiat have Tbe Netherlanda had three ~. , 'IU·B • Sc!Olt ancl Seiko ,Iwasaki Neal for YEMEN -1 Mohamed Kl .r , i '"'1 ,.,. . I See by _Taa,'s Want Ads 8 COOL IT~ \Vith this \Vest- ina;hou'.sc Room air con· dilloner,' 5000 BTU, like nr\v fo1· $100. Also on aa.le n Roynl , Porl!lblr! type-~·rlter. " • \VI-10 SAYS that there it-- no Easter Bunny'!' llei<e are some baby buM les frer lo you for Eastu. llandle \\'ith lean, thouah. sc~·1~i~~F9it 1.11. ""'"°"" v1c. become a traditional feature China was _ ..... ed. by' Pllfce. .. ~ Mesa.... 1 · saMra Ket-Neal', 1939 Rhine Hirned, '422 Riverside Ave., 1qr'"Stli'r,1 il, of NM1mt1r•, ,nc1 of the "·· . thr and c·".t"'_... · · , A ~-~-~ V-" N rt Be h. • ~1'111•.M. Heu. 2s. of COi'"-c1e1 , t!:@lurauu.tioo. .pro-. ~ yprus, Ec\ijl~r ECUADOR -Raul 'D:iU, ve., "'~ auey, ~.~e.'.'.w!'.po~~.'.'.ac:'.~---_:~==""'================~ ' EilN.S-U.WLEll -Feti. 11, Lff Mairk ~· • '\ • and ~land had two each. 1236 Irv.lne Ave., Newport MEXIOO -Pedro Santos - ,, ~~.'2~·~1'111" ~:~ ~=~~ Judge <llaramza had earliU Bra!ll, CUbe, Frani::e, Iran, Beach and , Jenny LuSitanla· ~t 21390 Laguna Canyon 'i'....,_,...,,,...,....,_.,.. ___ ..,.._~---..----~-------.-.,_-.,, L, t ~NNL -, Fiii. :J• F~'r.'i~ Jed the ~ Alrlef~ in the lsr~el,. Mexico, Japanr "nle Cepeda Duran, 333'2 Big Sur1 RQl'c:I, Liguna Beach. v.~. •nd ~---~111•r•1 PllM. Oath of 30-h•nre , _..,.. the Phillppmes~South · K ore a , Dana Point; THE NETHERLANDS-'M 2•:";/ Gardt11 Grov.. • · __... .uu. ' ~ __ ., ___ , and s1u1GEON-"THOflto1ELL -F~. 11. pledge of allegiance to the flag , , lUIUUS.llU FRANCE,._ Francoise· Irene '. .ta Van Dyck. 16730 Maflf' st., i~h,LrJ'r.CJA~f,:..~ after repreteQLativea of.. th!e emeo had one ea~. Cochran, -'6081 -Wintergreen Fountain Valley; Ka.re Isaac f1,otCor01M del M•r. A I r .:· ·be '••-·• -e" A --Dr' d Ma •~72 S d KLING:SVl,NN -Fib 11, R.lcll•rd mer can &..egl<fl, t . ~--. ''" .,.. new merte!'ns, 10 1ve, Huntingto(I ~ch. e 1 n, .,. · 1erra. e ~~"'&m~!'K''J•~ii' 1ult.''mJr.•'•~1 of Women Voters1 the Elks o!'ier of the contr~ti,ng na-GREAT BRITAIN _ Diana Nueva, Irvine and P1~ter E9:~s~l~DERSON _ Ffl. 11, 111:iro11 Club ~nd the Daughters of the. lions, ,are: Gopal for Anthony DomiQic Hui~r, z.42~1 Amurro Drive, wrnd<lu Ev•"" ·.s, of '"-P•rk. Amencan Revolution welcom-BRAZIL Ra be n s Gopal, 4142 Lori Ann Lane, . Mission VieJO, . ~!'':-"..!: AnW1o11. 12'"' Hu"L ed the participaiU to MarabaU, 2385 Via Mariposa Irvine; Elizabeth De Canio, THE PHIIJPPINF.S - N~:N,;:~~n.2. ~wllt c~T:. cit!zenship. West, Laguna Hills. 9714 Raven Circle, Fountain Aurelia Lumban Qu iniano, r.~ -t.uiir: LYllll sh~w. 20• of ~OUl'I• Fast growing .F 0 u.n ta i n ~· CANADA -Eleanor Agnes Va11ey; Estella y u en . N 0 r f7525 Sanat Domingo. .Circle, OLEAR~HAPMAN -Feb. 11, sqoMn Valley led lite par ad e o f. Schuster I71K>5 Winterberry ' W••• 19121 Lindsay Lane Fountain Valley,. LAN _D, SEA & AIR ·SHOW Thursday. Saturday • Fashion Island See the Latest in 'Recreational Mobility Aircraft ~ Gliders • Power & Sailboats • AutomobUes EdW•rli OIMr, 2', of~ Hl.lnllnQ!on • "\ ~' • rz~n.Gr~~!~ LYl'll'I CMpmM;~ange COast ~idents with St., Fountain Valley; Florence Huntingto,n Beach; Ann SOUTH KOREA Soon r...--------------------------.... --..,._ H~~,.~~,., -,,;•:iid 11M.~•r= nm~ representatives, two Thompson Gilmour and Elizabeth Shelton, 11152 Wall· . Douk 9190 Columbine -··'"' JI, both of "-'· 1 " "·•i.v. --.l!iilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiil;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiii~;y!!iiir.~Tiii!ii7:ii:iii'7~n~rriiiliiiiiiiiiiiiir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;••r;;;;;;;;;;••-,iiWIMG-8ARAA ,-. Ftb. 11, St.ve" t .J1.ldl1"'1 ewr1111.-1f, ol w~11m111tler, I •nd ,_,,_ LH l1tr11. 17. of Hu11i. .,,.,. ...... . ' P.!!~lT~j:,o~h~Eli"'otF~,.l~r= orle C•rol• Rose.Ile, 2l. of Clllco. LOFSKY-GUY -Ftb. lt, R,lchl;rd I Socololsky, •1•, ol NewJIOrl lffcil, I l ettv J~llM Gw. •1, of SOUlll i.aoen•. H·MESA -Ftb. 19, RlchMd SHI! I..;; •n, ''" of TuslJI\, •nd Fl•vl• M. '~"N11u, :w1. of Fount•!" \1111.-y Rl-STuAR.T -Feb. 30, Mlhr•n ffi ti, 26. o1 Pico-A.Iv.or• •1'111 L•Von 1~Wt:,:!L~f4:=i~~I.,~ II~· N•ll M•rJMU, 23. Y . MILtON·OA\111 -Ftb. 21, 01Yld l~ .. x•llld•r ~m 11011. 30, Mid Stllrlt'I Ii!;&; 1111D1vl11/i1. of Fount1ln VlllLev. ll KElla.;OA MftO " -Ftb. to, rt J. k:Mrs, S2 .•nd J0111 .f lubettl D•usi.,.._ 41, belfl of Hunt· I '"" _.._ KOeli:R.T~WEllNER. -F.ti. 221.. Frtd l ;,&:WOO!ftk RoMrt1, S3, Ind UOl'Mll '2.'""'rtlr Wtrntr, 2t, both of Hunt- ! ~'""°" a.Kt!. :~IU~C(USKET ·-1"1b. :n, · • Toi.rt • 0..11 Gr•mb!Jsh, 11, ol 1 ~ lwnltkt.~~Mwn All" MCC11sk11, -- I ilifl.S~Mi''-"" -'"· ~ . .:: JdWird I Nlllfllollselll ~. ~ ~~ •nd ErNI Mf.M lt1n, 30, ll:E~lJ:r(i\>~li:RuEGER -Fiii. 23,.. , H"{,s111 McCulloug11, Jr .. 33, l ol Hlllltll'IO!Ofl l e•Ch_, 11911 ~ .. ' Heltn1.'l<l'Ue!llr, 23, OI Llklwood, -·~K~R·INGR,,i.M -Feb 23, Tommy l~o. i1Cker, 35,. ol \11nlc1, •lid Prt Ila Ulll lnQr•m, n, of HUl'll- '~llG!Ofl &.ach E-GR.EEME--Fib, U, l •rrv J ·:~wi'M!-~· l'oU!~ c=1111 ci.120';"'~ I H11nllno!C11 811ch \llG-Gl~BEftTS0N -Feb. 24, ' •'Ger•ld ~~~vlg, 34, 1nd Judith An11 ,GI :J2, botll 'ol 1 .t: tmlnster. 1 1&-peath· Notfff• _ . II.ACK / 8J1ck. 11:101 Y,trmoulh Lin•. Hwi.. 8•-J-o.ti of df•lh~ AJ>rll,A!• ...,. s11rv1L.c:r'."~l;, Mr.,.~,.;. . llCIOtr«tb, Mr. •nd Mrs. F. E, P•Cklr &Oii Mr. •1'111 MB. J. F. 911rk1. Gr•Y'ffkle -r• h9l4 100.y, J llundily, 10 H•rbor ft"t """"°"l•I P•rk, wltll ' , en.rt.. K. Dluenfllkl offlcl•llno. tcllff CMpel Moflu.ry, t46..a., ldOfl. , HINRY lftld L, Henry. R.esldtnl of l1111u11• - 111 Kflw memlllr ot U gun1 Moulton '/flOUM. 0.11 of Cltllh. APrll 11, lf7l. illved DY Will , AOHmond: hlfO .SSlll'I, "''"~' U!lhn , COl'"Cll•I l.oUI .. ~. : F•mltv wrvk:", S.tur· y, APl'l 14, Shlfllf" Utl-9HCl'I • \ll1U1tlorl, Ion~. Tl111rtd•Y · 5 lo 9: Frld•Y• f .f PM. F•mlly 11 mwnorl•I cot1tr Wtloll• ~Y_ bl to •nY l•vorll• mtd~l. rellc\~ or lklAn• Ol'"U•nlU \ICll· ·Hll'llf" --~w-"""""ifmlr." ., ' _, ltar •. SM•rnt. ftL ., ~ Deta of ...... Apr1I 12, 'lpn. " Oltldlno •t ~ ~ leich .,, TltOMPSON 1 D. ThDmPIOl'I. ·Age 7', ol 531 lerton Awl., NIWpOrl l tKh. Diii of 111) AQrH 11, 1973. S11rvl'lld • by , '"t' W•lld• O•vl1, S.nt1 An•: aon. helm~, Hr# Yorki 1lster, Pllerllln, ftOMYllJf, C.11!•{ .. Yin llclr'"I lwo QrMl11r•llO(Jllldren. las will bl hotld S•lufNY. 2 PM. t Unlt.d Mtlhodl•I Chllr~ll ol Cotl• • Fri.Ms m.v c•U •I Biii l ro.dw•w •rv ~111ht1 .Th11rlday, • to 1:30 PM, •II d•Y Fria,v. lnt,rm1nti H•rbDr I Memor1•1 •rk. Btll rHdwlY ry, Dlr.c.tor1. \lot.PE kl Volpe. A911 33, of 194 Port C•r· N.wport IMctl; lnNNctor '" hltectur•I T:f~f!.Y' 11 Golcll!I Wit! ':rveo 0tt.:._ _ .... w.. •·1t4"1~1~ J!u.~m: _, M -_, ""'I' """'"" .,., uis OMi i lftOll'llr, -.n n• M•rll11, blrrw P•rt..f.1 brolhl~Del'lnll , ..,, OIY!fl,ri:.;F l~•l~ 111 w, M.mrll •ro, N • Frio , 12 NOG!lii Jew , l"t•r· .,.. l P.clflc V-. ,Ntlnwl.i P•rk. • 1ty 1.,.m "*-"' contrlbutlol'IS y bl m• fl -1111 RtQtl'lts of thl lll'llhlly of C•llf· Jo bl llMd I" rttMrch th' dlrtci Oii of Dr. Wlll!1m._~1 -· Olp!. of Mldlclnl, •I thl SCPOOI Mldlci"I• U.C.l.A,, DI'" to lhl Gtr1ld Ard!lltehll'•I SChol•r1hlp Fund/ Wnt Colf9", 1S744 Golcleft Wn Huntlnlr!Oll &He:!\. P.clllc \lllw . ry, Dlrlcton. . ARBUCKLE & SON ''WESTCL~F, MORTUARY Cl'/ I!;, lllti SI., Cosla Meu 1111811 BALTZ-Btu:ERON 'J • FUNE~BOME co'tona del Mar · 17!-tllt t1 Mesa "8-%4%( • ; BEU BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 -....1y, Costa Meta UWUI ,, . . ,. McCO!OOCit: l!\GUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1711i Lapa Cnyott Rd. 4M-N15 • PACinCVIEW MEMORIAL PAJU[ Cemetery MorlUr7 Clllpel -Pacific VleW Drive Newport Beocll, Ca!Utrall -• Pl!D FAMIJ.Y COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1111 Btlll A,._ WettmlOller- SMn'llS' J,RTUARY ll'lltldoBt. I B••....,._ DID ' I ' ; -STiil' 0205/14 '34" G78/14 -t STlll H71/14 .... 170114' 170/14 f70 /14 F70/14 175/14 i f71/I '205/14 1.77 1.1a 2.09 -2:00 ' •• 0011• ••••••••••• 1.001••··········· \ 7.S0/16°0 ••······· 6.7011 s ...•...•... 1J+IOl1S.:·········· J,00116-S ......... 1.11111.s ••••••••• ... ,,, .. 071/lS IM/IS 1711) s 5.60/13 •5.2011,s 5.60/13 5.60/14 5.60/13 REGULAR Drum rilpe $ Many 1full •••• u.s. 11.ottn•s ........ , , 11. ,lt.5.-;,:.;·1;;:_. ......... -New L••• •each ltore 2528 COSTA MESA •AIOINSIOYI ~~AllA - l60/1$ Lakewood Blvd. 597-0341, 775-2983 3005 HAllOI ILYD. c-ol lekor...i .._l (714) 117.·8000 1 ... ,.....,., ICot'Tllf W•tmklll11 •N lrookhwtll 11141 -·- ' fComtf Of W!llttllr •1'111 ... cfl) • IUIMA PAl• !Ml Llll(ll11 l ll'CI, 17141 12'-llU I ' ( FULLllTON 1n1 '""' 1"1111 (I lloett NCN'll'I ., Rl'ltt'JkM ftrttw•YI {714) 170.0100 OIANGI ~II N, f"'lln A'!· C7141 6Jto4Jll . . .. .. I • p • "' _ l I lhurMtay, April 12, l'91l osal $10 Admls Card Sought .. ·£ or· Beac .. ., .. .) .. • I' ' .. ! l • .. .. .. Flood P~ Z.nl!fJ . ·t ~quri~y Curbs Canyo1i tcI;}uf!l?ef,opnwnt :'. By JACK BROB~CK The County Bolrd • I .in sania ..... '<;iuiyon ,... In the t!l&t would not be • ., . ...,,,., '"'· •••· Superv!JOl's ac19Pled the llood the flood plalii and would lie · o control the larger · SANTA ANA -The Santa plain zonini, ·de 1 p1 1 e ob-inundated. floods that could occur in the :. Ana Canyo~ is on. a colllsJon jections -fl prt)perty owners. , Floods ,. new to ~he future. engmeets said. ~ w:_: course with disaster l f . . • '".:""T n....t ~o~ll · •unrestrihted buiJdingi.-is 'The effect wn• be to curb a . River . In 1938, Attorney '""'ltger . ·:1 permitted in the flpod. plain, ~velopment in the area, when the area was com-· I"tpresenting the Br Ya~~~· By1V°ILLIAM SCHREIBER Of .. Diii, ,llot Stiff county campsites during peak • Co m m is s ion er s wcr.e months from May 1 lo Sept. 3f) unanimous in their approval of according to Orange County paratlvely undeveloped, 43 Raneh and the Santa Ana~ -....... ~I~ Control Oistz?ct of-· ,NELSO. SAID the enlarg-persons died in .a flood. Valley Irrigation District, ob-~ l1cials Ing, ol i'rado Dom. woold • ...:....__ . • . ·~ecrease the 'llood •threat but THE tl6t FLOODS, the jected to the flood plain '°"':: •~----..1.!!"'a g Count)'.. lf a r b o r s Beaches and ParkS ~com­ rnistioners have endorsed a (and an _ addiU.o~al _Sl a ~ay fee the annu al permjt fee ·and ask· or1 e.ach .a~d1ttonal vehicle on ed that the thfee exc luded !he campsite. . parka be inclu'ded as soon as I ' ' • ' proposed flat $10 per year user fee gqod for admission to all but three county be3ches and parks:" -Au t ho r 1 z e H~rbors. the leases for parking con-Wfll S Beaches l}nd Parks Director . cessions could be chahged. , ~ Kenneth Sampso~ to .cs~ablish Manzo suggested that the Di'. T. Roger Nudd oJ car and po~lat1on 1i!"1ts for county Board of Supervi$0rs 'Laguna Bea·ch,.-deao of each campsite. consider using the name ·student seivices at Gal ntE AD.)fiSSJON c a r d , which commissioners "Say would be similar to annual parli: permits issued by the sta t e and · federal governments, would not be good at Suriel Beach, Aliso Beach Park and Niguel Beach Park 'because of prior ar- rangements with parking con- . ccs.slonairt!s: The proposed fee schedule· u0range Empire Pass" for State Fq]Jert.on, is , the now goes to the Orange Coun· the permit in line with similar new re-gfbnal vice pr~8': . ty Board of Supervisors for names -"Golden Bear Pass" dent of the Natibhal action. ... and "Golden Eagle Pass" -AssociatiOll of Student . t used by the stale and federal Personnel Administra.- TBE ENTUtE _question of governments. tors. · fees was contested by several =-----~-------' The annual day use fee sug- gestion was par~ of the harbor· district staff's annual review or the ·county's park fee schedule and operations. Other changes m the . fee schedule supported by com- mluioners included: -An increase to $3 per day of the lee for bull adml .. ion to beaches and parks. Currently a busload of people can enter any park for the · price of a carload. -ESTABLISHME.NT of a fee schedule for commercial filming in parks starting at lt50 per day with additional charges of $15 per hour for use of county boats, $5 per hour for county cars plus employe pay. -Denial of a ·request by Sunset Beach residents1 to pay an annual .$15 fee to park over.night at the new county parltih; Jot there. -Increase to $3 per day the fee for one-vehicle use of com01issioners who said any charge keeps out the people most in need of the recrea· tional facilities. . "I think any user fees are regressive /'' said Com- missioner Frank Man1.0 of Santa Ana . "Peojlle who need the parks the most can't af- fo rd to. get in." Commissioner T ho m a s O'Keefe of Sar. Clemente argued that repeat users - such as daily surfers -should get a special deal from the county. · "There bas to be some kind of a break for these repeat users or it ju~ doesn't.become worthwhile for th~m." he said. Birr CO MMISSION Chairman Thomas Baldwin said the fees we;re established to keep troublemakers out and that has succeeded. "Mo'st any family who can get to the par~ can afford a 50-cent fee to gel iu and enjoy it without the gang fights and drag races we used to have~" he said. In Sunday's Family Weekly: E••1 lo Prepare, Eaay lo Clean Up: "Easy Sunday Dinners" Fora 11lco.~a1.'t eurly spring S1,ndny, wh:y not try Orangc- Applc Rtfrcslitr followed by Counlry-Styk Chi.ckt" Di1111cr 1vith 1·01110/0 Jellied Salad, nlid ending rvitli 1Lelicious Tipsy ~9."!~c? A Rollcd~ho11ldrr o/ Lnn1b is tender and d~licio11$ whc11 cooked /roni tlic /ro :.cn 1 ~·talc in heavy-duty alurninun' foil. A dclici0118 roast and de.s1erl of cookic8 that moves di.rcelly from llie freezer to Uie oven 1t1ithout thawing.·· ' Or ••• tlurc'sancw flavor combinalion in.Creal CM101's··- Pot RoaJl, Cook in a cook.in bag or ~lcar coOking wrap. To prove that big meals don't have to mean big messes (or hours of prepa rations), Family Weekly food editor Marilyn Hansen offers a collection of big fam!ly-type dinners that require little last· minute preparation. And, best of all, you're left with a relatively cleao kitchen -after the feast. e TALL TAX TALES-The act of paying income • HELPI Please buy our Floor Samples! Frt1 1 .. ediate Delivery! Many other style•, l\01 .lhown, sleep two, with hn1u0.U. double moltress. . 5139'5 ...... ..... Riviera's convertible s'fa in sift •tlYtt wit• 11tT1 lt •rt• ~1ee1 stzt aattress. Fine Mar- flex cushioning. . 1 s349 l imited Time Onlyl · --· .. -- I - Juit •1 " ""1dt, 24" (ktp 31"6"' 1'1'9tl .-- ' / Riviera's 9-pc. corner ffDOP ••• 2 bolsters ••• mar·resistant table ••• 2 mattresses _ . 1 bol spring• s1· 4 8 t-Pc. groU9, Compte• THEY CO!j\l!)ICED COunty noted that plans to Increase ' mCl8l damaging ill ~nt \JeeaUSC it p' 0 h I b It': Super.visors Wetlnesday to the height ti ihe dam were ye.irs, took 24 lives in three agricultural use. _Mu~ o~ the~ adopt a flood plain district ne~. • '. counti~ and property 4amag· Bryant. Ranch ,1s m . citrus: from P.rado Dam to Imperial Featherly Regional Park ed totalled more than $76 groves :.1 the flood ~a1n. He: llighway in Anaheim • ·and the as yet ·undeveloped million. -, urged that Ufe county improve "Anything 1n t.b,e n0oo plain .Yorba Reglonal ,Park Ire in f Ripe for,urbait.developmen~ the river chann(';I_ and_ forget: which extends for hundreds of ~ Qood p\ajr1 iDd wOuJ.d have are the orange groves, and the flood zoo~ ~signation. feet on each Side of the river to be abandoned in a . heavy ranches, the park and recrea-~hannel would' be destioyeO if dqwnpour ~suiting in in-ioruµ ' ~s and t be NELSON SAID the Jitivate ' a heavy fiood -shoold oidlr:" creased release of flood grasslandS that. now occupy owners could protect their according to Carl 'NefSO'n: waters lrom the dam. · the Santa Ana 'R.jVer c.anyon. property through tower-ty~: assistant flood' cqntrol chief W~lson also no,cd. that sec-Although PradO Dam wa.s building and flood 1 eve e, tiom.~f.the Riverside Freeway efiectiv~ to a Jai'ge .. degree .in development.-''- -Riviera·~ E«ly American convertii!Me sofi . , . steeps: 2 • · ·II floH sett vilJL $179 U~H TillM 0..,, -_, ·' ...... -. .,.,,. -••• 2 bods -;-f :· .... ~ tmlt ••• ---...r: -· -.llllfll ..... . , "'9. 9· C1 ,·, .• ~~ ... HEi.Pi Plea'se buy our Floor Samples! Fru l•llttliate Deliveryr Many other styl1s, not shown, tle•p two, with hnuwiou• do"'b1• mattre11o ::= 5139" , Rivjer(s Provincial convertible sofa ••• sieeos 2 •.. 11 st1i1 r1sit11t z1,11• .. -.. 1lep1tlf , ~·iltltl ... color choice. s2s9 Uflllted TllM Ontrf • 2 po1ition reeli11•r 'i11 9lov1 1oft vi11yl. '49'5 SAVE 2 positiOfl recli11er c~· plet• Witfi) H•1t1r, Vibr•- tor, Rocbr. H1rcuto11 or Vinyl. '99'5 tax is painful. but the job of coUeeting . it is absolutely 'laggerin~. An IRS field agent says, "Look ing at the statistics. I find 'it amazing that th e system \vorks at aQ ." Read about a tax haul that's bi gges-than any govern1nent has ever collected in history. • HUMOR_ HELPS -Science·· interesting and provocative f1ndmgs on the subject of humor are presented in this week's "People Quiz.': . ~ ~ "!It' t~~: -. .ii..-~: KING SIZE ~ f,,.,, Riviera's • i i I Learn how Ill use your funny bone to your personal advantage. All Coming Sunday With The I DAILY PILOT ) COMPLETE8EDDING PACKAGE Mck.ldes.: • King Size Maltn!'Ss &. :t Bolt Springs • 8eou1Kvl QuM1ed Bedspteod • Blanket. Heodboord & Frotne plut. •• 2 kingiiie she9h.; onri~ fit- ted, 1wo p!llow ( ote•. 2 pillow•. COSTA MESA 3015 So. lrlstel lWIN or FULL SIZE . ' M~TIRESS & Bo:ii: Spring it!Gludes • Headl>oard and Frame BUENA PARK 1»1 5-Aft. 127-4400 ' m INSTiii! II CIEllT ' IYllLAILE. AM ihot'• requlr•d· i• Y" 1n1of ti. 25 Yff"J of Of', Wetklt!g, e Calif, dfi'll'l lk1n1• oncl OM o~ lOlllPllflY or •k _ ........... WEEKDAYS, 9:30 ID t:ta SATURDAYS 1:30 to 1·00' \ ' • • I • • " ' " ' ' . " . . '• ' .. • • • ' . ' .. , . . ~ • 'f ,1 I .. . ' . I ' ' . i Thursday, Aprll 12, 1973 DAILY PILOT J9 • . . .@iflSe:re:IIs ,.sft0m ( SATURDAY, 1:30 PM See Disneyland's Cinderella 'in person with Gus and Jaq Jaq from the original ·Walt Disney movie "Cinderella". Prizes will beawardedforthecoloringcontest . ' •• • wait DIMiy Production• ' .J .. . Sirlo\n ~·-Purloin 1Under Contrql ' ~ . . By .umrua a. VINSEL lo a burglar who dropped divi!lon's ncords department. . ··through a roof vent last week.· "But this 'was luot one in- ftteat prices may mean misery !or the average colt sumer, but whim it -lo lamb larceny, park pilfering and the purloin of slrlo!D; the average shoplifter t o d a y ...... lnd!Hereot. A ll)ln'•Y of Southland area tDlfkot chains and law· en- lorc<SJl"\11 OJencles Indicates DO a~e cilln&e In peUy , thelt potl«)tlt in ~ meat department. -' CONl1W\Y TO reports ol inereased shoplifting from the Midwest and East Coast, C a 11 /ornla consumer~lass criminals seem to be doing bustneas as usual on a lesser scale. "No, not to my knowledge," chief apecJal agent lot securi· ty Ralph Ries, aays when ask· eel If Alpha Beta _Maret looses areup. ~ . ''!feat-'~0)'1 been I -pn)blem," adils Rl<l!, who6e office Is responsible !or secur~ . ty at nearly 50 Alpha Beta outlels scattered throughout Orange County. 1 "WE HAVE people ... hypes, narcotics addicts, who make their living at it," Ries explains. Alpha Beta stores a r e ..)YDOhg .those wh}ch display, me8;1} .pooltry and 5"alood products ilf open relrigerat~ cases allowing easy customer selection, whJcb complicates securtty. cident," she adds. CO$TA MESA po 11 c el The largest indiv idual home I_... .. i... · 1 · 'd~ Jieat thievery cases occurred rel>?" .....,, o-;v • sing e mcJ ~ rast weelt. with 60 pounds of d11r111g the past mooth in freshly butchered beef burgled which a sizable ·haul of meat at a Costa Mesa a r e a -T·booe st~ -was slolen. residence. I "Ouf Qle&t thelt perceril88~ went up on accouat1ol this," says Marie 1-,oi the pau'OI DOWN IN Mission Viejo. someone also broke into ) lamUJl'.s garage and stole "We haven't had a we of another r.o. i>Ob~ 'l""1ically mclit shopllltlng sin~ the v.·hile they v.·ere gathered start of that boycott thing. At least no one has beeo caught " around tt.e dining room table • for a hearty dinner. chuckles Lewis.I Huntington Beach Police S'(lLlrOTHERS, such as El Detective Sgt. Forre&l Lewi.§. Rmicho Markets al)'.! smaJlel' figures the meat price-sitifa.. independent stores rely on the tion and the shopHfling p_~ 1 old closed-case concept in lem r~alh aboot what they which, one picks a purchase have been. and points to it. bAllY f'ILOT SllH ....... A hungry customer or pro thief can more euUy belly up lo the display and slip a llilce of sirloin Inside his shirt or nonh waistband ..-·-POTENTIAL THIEVES ARE KEEPING PAWS OFF OCTOPUS LIKE THIS FELLOW ULLOCKS FASHION SQUARE• SANTA ANA Sa11ta Ana/Garden Grove Freeways at Main feSl·fldN . ~ RIES. SAYS part of Alpha Sea Creature Is Actually for Sale in Coast Mlrket,.$1 .39 Per Pound Beta's successful security i.s ---------~-------------------------- , because someone is in the stores 24 hours a day, re- stocking meat , cases even when the. ri:iarkets are closed. S UARE . ·Try Satur~ay's News Qui~ We Dare You ' Y• -•111 l111 •1cu ..aoot llilll "'''ttl cl• 11!11f ,...,. 8999 . • Side-by-lido 9" dual.blld<s fur compoct ·~ Do@le insulited-no ground· lni ,..a. Cuitinr h•ight adjusb from 114" JI· 3". foldinr handle. 8021 , lf' ELE~C ~With GRASS !'.ATCHER ~ QbAIJTY HAND TOOLS THAT WILL DO THE JOB · (A) Dtailf Flllt-With thr!t Hit, pointed steel tines. TCC23 (I) lllpllr Size T"""-Chromed blade; ISh handle. TGC20 (C) T......,.ioc T-1 -Pointed blade for easy diuinf. TGC21 (D) -Clltintor -3 cumd prongs. 12" ash handle. TGC22 (I) DanMioo Difllr-Sharp, fofled blade W<>rks quickly. Tf88 No foo(l chains have ap. parently been hit by burglars breaking in to obtain costly grocmes, · allllough a fe'!I home or garage freezer job,, have gone down on Orange Coast police logs. .. " One Costa Mesa ~r-did lose se cans of chili con 'carne :~ ......... SPECIAL 269 ROUNl).POINT SllOVEl Desiciled for 1en111l-purposo diriilt(. -· Hel'IJ·duty, hollow-beck mil bl1d1- 8l1 '.jx 12· .. Comfortabls fire-hardened ISlt n.ndlo-47' loll( SLICS • I t . FREE TAX· RET ·U.RN __ PREPARATIO-N~:-~ . . -. . I ·' -"" ' " I • , •. -t \"it . j ' .. • .• DEPOSIT $3 ,000 -to ,1 ""' or eldttint savinp 'account ~t l'lclflc SO.lop Md -·FflEE pt911.ation of your pM'IORll Federal and State tax retums. Some PIOPi• will 11¥1 S200 to1S300 or niort in acc:ountirl:jl fMS. (This offer doesn't apply to corporation, partnership, t.ulineu or slinil• returm.) , ' -................ PROFESSIONAL -quallfled11Xcou..ionwUt~1-.r·'*'°""'-"" ........ ~ .... you l'ICll,..;..., potlibl1 bonOf!t uncl• the llX law. Elcll ,...m wNI dlOfl bo triplMhoclced fa< IOcuroey by h!Fly<illf"'I. ~1111. All WOfk It don1 In ~ privlcy of yout l'lclllo Sl!wintt offlcl utlnt tho -.,.somot of TIX C«ponition of AtitjrlOL Thl1f!rm,-ln 1946,ltlho-..:l lorvest ,ulrcompanylnlho Un1'8d .Sln!-Jiily cummly emptar -4,IOO coun.ton ·ai!!I .~ P'll!INd mon than 1,000,000 llX rwturnl. ..I I ' ' '" "' . I ' WORK GUARANTEED-..l . byTu~tionofA-10L " Guaranteed Accuracy. Retum• .... irfpt{1Mc:1c111"" -of -Ind Npr'CMl•ctlol. If ,._ c...,.., ...... • efTW liii iMth-lct -! ,.,,1•111"-. It will pCIJ tfle petM;tty er I..,.._ M to their error, btrt "' tllt .......... ta ••ed. 1 . . Guaranteed Protection. 11 you• rotum ;, q..;tioned by 111e Gcwsmmont. lhov will pl'OYfde ... ,. .. lrtlio c._. I• c"fo""lty with Nt•liltert prMN:.,... ' . . ALSO -you "'1 FREE Siio Oe,>osit Box,..,.ic:e c:horge FREE TriYlller'1.Ch1c:k1, FREE. C01fec1ion of Notet, FREE Notary Serv'ice and FREE Financial Counsel~ng. AND -your deposit eerns 6" per annum in I two to tlv[ye~ (SS,000 ~lnimum) Certificate account -5~% per annum in a one to five year {$1,000 minimum) Certificate account or 6% per annum in a regulw P11Sbook account, all compoundtd dlily. Thest are the hlghtst rates paid by ~ny insured institutions. ' REMEMBER -to quslify for this free offer you need only to mike your deposit. If you h .. e .1n ACCOUNT ELSEWHERE, bring us your passbook ind wt will tr1nsftr your money to Pacific for you. Offer pH ••tll r...utl. 1.-t Hr f.tr fin ... •11leu extfflh111 Is obtahtecf; Aprll 16. 1973. · S 0 HURRY -m1kl 'vou• .iLo.11 TODAY .:. "' coll o• 1top by our nurest offlco lo• mort Information. Plus ·- FREE Federal Tax Gwde ' " " ' . . . • • . • " '• :: THIS OFFICIAL GOVERNMENT PUBLICATION OFFERS- VITAi. INFORMATION FOR EVERY TAXPAYER .. • STORI HOURS: MON.-l'RI. "9 SATI,JRDAY M SUNDAY lM • /· ' 349~ , I --~ I , PACIFIC SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION h11purc:h..ct1 llmited supply of th .. Ylluabll booktou. The booklet is av1illble elsewhere 1t rmll pricn, but Is FREE TO ALL 1t your nearest office of Pacific SavinfS and La.n APoci1tion. This offer good only whilt supply lasts. ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED BY FEDERlL SAr !NGS .ufD LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION TO $20,000 '~OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A~M. to 9:00 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M • SOUTH COAST PLAZA Bristol SL 11 Sin Oi1110 F..-y, Cosll ,.. PHONE 540-4081 ,. THE MALL OF ORANGE Tustin Ave. II Mnt1 Ave., 011"1' PHONE 637-4582 • , " • " :: 1 ' . \. .. ' ,I . ·. ·~ ~· · .. . . . \::· ... ..._ • • • J I -· ' 2 Ticket• To The 2nd · Annu,1 Ce.lebrl~ ll!•seball .World . Serles· With . ' All Test ,. Drive. • . . ' . . . . . . . .. ·. . \ NO WONDER· WE'RE' THE .•1 OMEGA DEALER IN Ali. TH~ WEST . ,. BRAND NEW · 1973's . $1 .95 . Catlt or Trado Dowo $6675 Mootll . 148 Moorllsl IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! - $195 i1 tot•/ Down pymt. $66.75 it tot•I monthly pymt. for 41 mo1. on •pprov•cl creclit. D•ferrM pymt. pric• is $1399 inch1cling •It c•rrying ch•rg• .. +•• •ncl lic•n1e, AN- NUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.69%. OVER 20 STAT•ON · · WAGONS IN S~QCK . , . . NEW '73 CUSTOM 1 _ CRUISER .11016251 $1;177 · · '. ·.. . . . i" • . "'OFF tAlll yoUR cMOICll ,. heat• . ed rao10, Fully factory equ1pp ' \240S901. er, WINDOW STICKll[l PRICE! CHECK OUR SUPER DISCOUNTS . ' . . ON A!,J. WAG:QNS. . . . ' . . ' J f ,, ,. /' • ' ' • .0 "• • -.. • i •• t'Yo • --· • I ... • BIG SELECTJON!. ' \ .... ,. , • I I !.' , •• • " . • ' ' -J,. ~ ~ . ,. .... •' ; ' ' . . .. ·, . • •••• l\' ''*"'· THE BIGGER,. ALL NEW . '13 .H9"DA ~l~IC-'.; . ,. · ·LAST CALL FOR ·72's STIU A GOOD -SELECTION NOW PRICE SLASHED ~ · -. TO--CLEAR ' ,OUT THIS . . WEEKEND! .,i.. . - ' i NEW '73 OLDS .... • I • ·• . ,. ..--. -4 Sp ... 0.. A.,.omatlc . , . .. .. / . -'~' . · It's t'flle . / : · :· ''.· .. ·) . I ''! Newest OriYIJag ·n.rii1-·.: : '. ·· ' ' Ot ,... 10'1! ., ,, . .. • Superbly EhginHrtd 'to Give ~u,. :1 · Comfort, Styling; and . '~CAT'" Per· ; ',; ·· · forniance >tyith ~O Mile-Per-Gallon · :, ' Economy. TEST DRIVE YOURS TOPA Y ! . . - . ' 98 4 ·1 DR. SE~AN $11 ·n· · · · · · .. · . ·· . • DISCOUNT OFF . WINDOW STICKER ' ,PRICE! FINE SELICTIO!I 0 , 't -i lo-< t8'1. ' ..... ' ALL FULLY EQU AND READY TO GO! (3174031 . I 1971 VEGA 1969 OLDS I 69 ~;~~~-~"'~"'" ,,,,,.,._ 15500191 · equip· F lly factory 1971 Station 'f' •9:;~ •• ~. \ 704DFA \ · . . . , ped, raa10, tOYOTA ' ' '6' 9 PONTIAC Gtq .. ' Fully F•cfory ~quipped. f~'l98Zl-I--"" .J • ~~ ~66 · 2~~i~. p~~~~!.~-!!.!~· , , , Autpm•!ic Tr!n1mi11ion. ITGIJ55) ~ . • '7'·.t!2~~~ r ~ \ ~ . . ~ .. _ . .. ' ' - I 66' ~~!~~.~~"· Pow" s ........ Pow .. 1 .. 1... s37~ I 69 CAD. Cou~· 1>e vu1, ••<lot s .. u. IRTS2761 I i loodod. v:,,1 Top, lHth0• '''"'"· IYZS2261 • , r • r-• j ..; \ : ' .• .. . . \ I I 1 I. j I _, • . . t , I I • ,, . ' Lt. Bonnie Hussian, 1 .. Los Angeles Sheriff's department, gives class in self-d~fense _'weapons' to ward off attackers. Pictured ar-e ·some simple .techniques she teaches. 't-DAll V 'iiILOT PHOTOS BY E •. LEE PAYNE ' ' ' ' ... / ' -omen · ig t s.ac J • -· 1 Prevehtion Best Weapoo -- . ; . __,,,. ~ By AU{SON DEQ.R ~·t know what it is like to be hurt, and branded as a si~gle girl. JI or ... ....,.. "!'Steff -qie.Y don't .realjze how strong they rea11y INTRUDERS t~-- The assailant grabbed th6 triin are. ' Don't let anyone yoo don't.~w In the bou.sewtfe from be-hind, holding bet tight~ "Most women accosted by a man in the hoWfe, even another woman. She may ly acroos the shoulders. slreet tend to panic. What we try to do is ·itln f f t "" bur I Try The victim &Ii.._. quickly to the caliro1 iJie fear. Fear thal's out of con-sett ng you up 0' a u ~g •ry. 11 ..,...... to have someon~t-horrie \Vi.th you when groundt rolled onto her back and odrew tJ is panic. repait!nen--ca1(" Ask for credentials. lf ber1 knees to her Chest for protection. "~e try to convert t~ fear to rage. _you-st1U hare suspicions, don't let them Wbea 1pProacbed again she extended her You get , the same adrenalin going but in. . • legs, pushing ber a,mllipt off balance. you're not immobiliz~." Having a dog ls good because it can . _ The attack was not real_. PREVEN110N _.. , .<tct as a v.·arning device, she said. Only a I The "VJ"ctlrn" r I . · -dog trained for the purpose will be pro-. was one o ~Vera >t"" 1lef emphasis from the start is · t&Uon, and that ' Isn't always a sure house~ves and stvdents • atten~_.a.. prevention. She spoke of prevention in thing. · . ______-; class m_ self-defel\9lf'"of~ered...}>y-Ofange three ~teas_ at home, in the car, on the f'or safety in y6ur car: ----- Coast Q;Jlege on Tuead&Yfiiloming~. · · street. "AlwaY,s keep all oC ~ doorSlocked, .. " . 'Ibe "assaJJiDt" was µ. Bonn. i,• At home ,· ""'esti"ons ·include·. whether 'you're in. the c@r or not . even t '"66 'ili'hile pa,tked in your own drive\\'8Y or Hussian ° the IM Angeles Shenff 5 Keep doors and windo,vs locked day just-runn ing to the store." she added. Department, instructor for the class. and nigh t. "The lime is long since.. past "Check the 'back seat of car "It is not a spQrts class,'' ~-,Hussian when Yoo can leave them unJocked before gett~ng ,in ." . . . said. "J do not teach judo and karate." 'tho 1 f ,. · Lt. .Huss1 sed agamsl drivrng wi 1u ea,::_ . . · al~,.-4a at hight "in unpopu,lated or_ CLASS GOALS Sec1ure gOod_ locks for doo~rs. an~ wtn· badly lit areas(tf you ha;,ie car trouble, What the ~lass learns is preven· dowa. Get adVJee from the local n don~t get out of the car. Walt {or a police U.ve measures to avoid .being attacked, what types of locks~ or your car Or if.SOin'eone stops to help, have infonnalion on the legal aspects and needs. ----:---. . . . thEhti call for help. · 1 . ·-. · Wh~ansin•ermg the telephone never sunp e techniques of self-defense ii you____.give out the infonnation that you're RUSE USED . . . are-attacked. ---alone. Don't give out your telephone A pop~lar ploy, she said, 1s ~ogive YOlll' _, "The clJJss is like r~_aid," she ex-number. Hanging up \viii discourage • c~r a slight bump at ~ stoph~ht or sfiip 1 plained. "It's sqmetbliig you hope you obscene and crank callers. . -·· sign. Unless the area 1s well-hgQ!_ed and never ~e--to'liie. Bul· Whett you· need il Do 't li t t 1 h be . the there are other people around, exchange 'hive I " ' n s your e ep one n~m r 1.n information through a small crack' in Qte you ve t. , phone book at all unless you need 1t for , d Do ' the She noted that most women haven't busines$.reasons, If you do list it, use in-~in °~ n t ge~-out to survey . f , participated in a contact sport, or gotten itials oply. A-ten often list their numbiers -~ amag · · into a physical fight, for years. ''They this wti.y also, so you 're not immediately (See FJGH'l1NG BACK, Page Z&) . ' ' -. I L. - • BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tllur$Cl1'1', ~rll IL ~171 '°"'· t1. ' ·~ l'l> " , I . - --- ate 1 Jiloahler Tries · for Shrinking Vlolet -~ole . ' EAR ANN LANDERS: I was a virgin: : pEAR'LOU:.Y~ are·a sick cookle;'but til 'I w~s 22. Sud'aenly J became,·pnr .~• ~ ene. Moreover, you lffdi &e scuous and wild. I had rio self-respect have llGle .insight lnto, your prpblem. ,A atever. stase of ..,.iesaness usu.Uy toH blick good friend suaested pi/ychialtic lo chlldllood; Toa '°""" flke a girl - Ip. l'Ve been going1 for scyeraI· months (atller.-wa1 tild and detaebetl. Y• ere ~ I lie to the piychiatrlst and have · pr-y-seardllhg f0< flil Jtve la olher n trying to seduce him even though he men. my type. r just wnnt Io oee if I can Slop· Iytag lo yoar psyclilalr'Ial If Y• It.. don't level with him you are waiting his Number On~ lover ls a. roarrled time and your money. And U you do nc-a:n who who refuses to leave his wife, , ceed I.a c«Ull _,JD • tbt cwch, ellaJtce en though he adores me. I nm too · docton ilo<aile ht wo1't lie able to ilefp ak to let him go. I am lorrifiedl0!:1be-yoa.1r ' • lonely ngRln. I hate lll1Hlf and •m · • · · Ing to climb out of this pit o1 dcspera-PEAR ANN 1.AfIDERS: I koow )'OOI , What I& m)r !!OX hangup! I believe. are· pot"' bllllellq board Jor pullllc an- u know more Ihan most doctors, Ann. ,_ts, bat -paragniph lo Am w me a liCeline. -LOU Landers' column does more good than a I I ' ·, ' ., f" ~-1 loni,artlcie'lu the rest of tqe paper. ,Cine; wijh .the lnoculatljJp" for cfermag Will yoo plelst urge pal"tnts to have mellSies. These are 1)1<1 separate II~ their ., cbildntn imhumlzed a g a i n s t nesses and there are excellent 'V9CCloes measles as soon as they are one year or for both, Please, AM, help us _belp the age -not earlier? Measles is a serious children of the world. - C.M.R. disease and may result In death or men-,. (PUBLIC HEALTH M.D.) tal rew.latk"1. ' DEAR llll I\.: litre'• your ldf«, Allf A vaccine that gives permanent pro--1 nnf lnm A• Uadtn: U yow iectiOll bis betn available for 10 years 'cllUd U. oat bto1 -led for - but ll1ll a shocking number or c:hildn!n -of mealel, iolio. lllm lo yoor faml-an strtdiea w1111 rileisles and die !ram. 17 .._ 111 -. rw. -will pntect It. \la ..... U.. dlle11e1 .lw Qire ftll If Somt par111il oonluse the Jnt8Slel vac-* ldi ' • U Jk do not bave a famUy doctor or "" ~ afford Ute price of a visit.right now,f.caU your city or county eaTt1I ~eat, Ask when you can l:lrtn~ ,_-,\:blld (or cblld,..) In for lllese va1-tt.lon1. They wt n cost you notbin_I{. Cao you .'tbtnk of a betler barg:lln today? I -... ~. I • ' DSAR ANN LANDERS: I can tell from your column that you know. a lot or docto" and Ilke them. Please help my ,dail~· ~e Is a doctor and c•n use some ·, morning Dad got a call at 4:30 fro someone who wanted to catch him -he .....,•t busy. He wasn't busy U.. lie was Ollly sleeping. · • ~ring Thanksgiving dinner Dad got three calls. During Christmas dinner he i ot four. 1 91ease ask your readen to ~ve mercy on their doctors and not call them at. home unless it's an emergeocy.-M.D!~ SON OBAR SON : What's 1n "emerpeey·~ U all pailents and all dtcton coaid ngree oa this, Ufe -Id be taflntttly talitr for lbe MDI of the world. What's prudish? What's OK? If )'OU aren't sure, yOu need some help. It's available In the 11<\0klet: "Nedlng pnd PttUng -Whal Are the Limits?" Mall ·your n!Quest to Ann Landtrs In care of the ·DAILY~looina II conil ill ~n Md a long, ltalQjN. llll"9ddl 111• envelope. I I I· ·-· ., Th°""'· Aptll 12, 1973 , t ussi~ said thal ,if-you 'Wben you get into a sttua· approach a n intersection fion wh~e you can't gel away where people are loitering from n potential attacker, she ausplc'®sly, you , would be saJd, turn and face him. Olten, ~ juatlfted tn tul!Dine.tho-olgn •;.-he will run, the ttglll. ' "Tell him to ~ , ' she .... "No officer would give you I said. -1DQn!t-flgfit unles!i there tle~t under thos& clrcum.stan· ls,.J\oth1ilg else to do. You ar" ces. In any case, a tlc!et-ir at a · physical disadvanta better than an lnjur.r,--But it he grabs yo n· On !!!e-'treer;-waltlng, avoid dicates he. w· you ~ily ~--"·" f ou t lat~ In dimly·li t har Y9U you have a areas. "The 'lffiportant thin _ t to fight back.:' .. to be aware that ing Lt. Russian a d v o c a t e s can happeg " . ussian said. "fighting dJrty ." A woman --~D>eiri'i'ialklng face the traf. should use whatever means 1c. This way,' no one can available to h~r. s_he said. · follow you easily. If someone , Her suggestion J n c .1 u d e d does follow you in a car go to 't.!Je ol d knee ~o tlie ~roln the nearest house (don.'t go inJ trick which every mother and have them call t~e police. teaches . her daughter as soon ·, H'I'be pollce would rather ~s .. she ~sold enough to nee~ check on inciden ts that are it. This, she noted, won t nothing," she added, "than 1 alway~JYork.- lollow up the real tiling~· TECHNIQU!is DONi:r, GO HOME . "Never kick 'hjgh, he can · ''Whate\'er you do, •1 she throw :YOu off balance: Ki ck salci;--ildo;n.'t go home. They the shins." Other ide8.s are to may ~r\e back." " drag the · heel of your shoe If SOIMl?ne rolloWs you on down his shin and .stemp on toot ,' cross the street and vary his instepi-Jake--fingernail s to ·c th k down the .... face and put a fist your · pace see 1 ey eep iiltO the niiddle of his chest. up. Then find a house or bustneu. and Call the police or Many of the other things she aomeone to come and take you teaches-11could be lethal." home. That Is why she emphasized DTERT AIR STEP -BERNARDO - SCHOLL SANDALS -PASSPORTS MAGDESI~ -MISS AMERICA VINER CASUA LS -HANDIAGS - _ -HOSIERY Edw.rd1 -Garborieh -Robin Hood PF Flr1r1 -U.S. K1d1 -S111nlnaratt11 Capailo Dante Sho•1 D•nt• Wear by D1111k!n C•rNC"" SNn hf CMI*" 225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA s 4 8 -12 7 7 8 •. IAflfkAMERICAltO e e MASTIR CH.1.110~ • 8th Annivel'Sary SALE 1/2 :PRICE ·ON SALE M~RCHANDISE GIRLS ~· - e DRESSES e TIGHTS e SPORTS WE!_R e COATS BOYS e COROS e T-SHIRTS e JACKETS PLUS LOTS OF GOODIES • CHILDRENS SHOP 1Q58 IRVINE e WESTf LIFF PLAZA Open Tonight & Monday Evonlngs IANKAMI RICAID MASTIR CHA.RGI Half-Sizes SIZES I 4!-261 Have a happy Eaator and a 1 ... 1y Mother's Day • that a woman use common "purse. "Let hlmjlavt"f with_a sense. If:) roundho~.--Most wom~n's A woman's scream usually pur:seSare lethal ·weapons." ' across hia fa~." , . . _;:.-- instinctive, will SC!!f.e-away WEAPONS ·Mace· a n d teargas dispensers, sold by mall order, are illegal In Ca llf orni a . Possession is a felony. many a ~be-atfacker. Inside the purse a woman ·~ou~Have to have the right can find helP from spray filental set," she explained. dispensers of perfume and "You have to expect to be hairspray. "I'd use this first." afraid. That's naturat:But you A rattail comb, a hatpin, even have to realize that there is your keys are e r f e c t i y e something you can do . U you weapons. About purse-snatching, she advises carrying the purse close to the body whe re it won't be vulnerable. "If it is snatched, let him take it. No property is worth. an Injury to you or the sna tcher." are in danger, Ogbt back in "Always Carry your keys in whatever way fits the silua· your hand," 'she advisej:I . tion. Often that's all it takes." , "That way you dQ._n'.t fumble At home, if there is a burglar in the house, and he is still in another part or the house ca ll the police, she said. If he's already in the Another weapon a woman for them in the parBng lot. If has at her disposal.I is her atta:ked, you can rake them Son's By ERMA BOMBECK Bruce ca me in last reek, slammed lhe door, hit fqr the bedroom and was staring at the ceiling when I found him. "What's the matter?" I ask· ed . "Miss Mays piCked the kids to sing in the spring con- cert. She went up and down each row, tappin g people on the shoulder saying, 'You're a bluebird. Y.ou can sing. You're a bluebird. You can sing., You're ·1; blue .. '" "So, are you a ~luebird?" "l'm'an albatro~." "What ·does that -mean?:' 1 asked. Prt>grams • ' Assorted· .. tonfer~nce · . ' Mrs. Eve Cremers, food service director of Newport· Mesa Unified School District, will preside at .the first general session of I h e California Food S e r v i c e Association's 20th conference. The three·da}r session. which opens Sunday, April 15. in the Los Angeles Biltmore Hotel is expected to attract 2,000 delegates. Keynoter is Se nate majority leader, George Moscone who will discuss Legislative Plans for Nutritional Programs in California. Obesity -Diingers and Treatment is the subject of Dr. Rudolph Nob le, clinical instructor in medicine, University of Ca lifornia llospitaJ. ~n 1Francisco. and Dr. Herb True. a research psyChologist will speak ·on Ideas Make People Great. SC Juniors l\1rs. Ed Borowiec was named Citizen-of-the-year and Airs. Art Holderlin, Woman-of- the-year by South 'Coast Jun- Tenor Feelings "It means I can't sing and I'm too short for the back row." ' 1 slumped to the bed . l\·ty worst fears had been realized. Before my husband and I were married, we were told by our choir · director, "You two should never marry. You will only beget tone dear children who sing between the cracks of a piano and infl ict pain on music lovers everywhere." "But isn't there a chance ... " AT WIT 'S END To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have the1t wedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not be Used. I ~1· • For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- • mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Sedjon staff members at 642-4321. ior Woman 's Club of Fountain ---·'---------'---------- ••• oriel a gNOt vacation V~~i: Borowle<_ wa; cited for I>~ 4 .6i~i--.. ~--• her activities 1Jl the com-~,.,,; Wo • . • munity, school, _church and r IM -• ' · · club, and -Mrs. Holderline's · . --W;li' , , . -' o~tstandlng service to the club ~ · -.,: •-=a was recognized with her -;:; W BRUSHED NYLON ~ "'.0r~iet Center ~.. SLEEPWEAR .. t ~~a I Oict Control Cenlcr clnsses " FINE 9UALITT I RA.NOS I 11re conduct('(! on \Vednc~days. ~~ 9:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. m lhc ~ 1 f._2 . PRICE &. Community Congregational ~. -,.: ~· Church, Corona de! Mar. • ....., Ri:G. $10 . 122 -.· Thursdays, at the same times • 11£.1'; · • in the First United f\fethodist *...:~ SUIP SHIRTS • PAJAMAS . Church. Huntington Beach , J~ WALTZ LIN.TH •OWNI ... and in the Huntington Beach ~· FULL LENGTH GOWNS Montgomery Ward store, 7:3-0" " "-' "' p.m., Mondays. 1F ·T" :i::•r Information i s . .. Ve ta, s .. . ti ::'::~,:,r.~ .. ~~~~!!~~'" ... ~ • Faro GATlll • • ,,, CM!Dr fAFSt 'ff NewJOrt e.ac111 Callfor11la II Jtl ll't tl•1l11M ,. •, COSTA HUNTI NGTON "''""' "'""• ~-kl. "'"" '""" ... . .. MESA BE AC H ..,,, rt11-. ••ti.t , .. trip In your ,lovely new print. The famoui.- name fashions of Ha lf0 Si1.e shop give you that kind of wear and wear. l'rom $21.00 Sunday Shopper? klll•rton & H11fttlftt~n looch t-°'"" 12 fO 5 !·-Effa sr"'uu, to m•rchandl•• in •l•ck Nor1sHALF-SJZE SJJOP 1111 NIWPOlf ILVD. 14 HUNTINGTON CINTllt '"'I• a..ct1tt. _, • Open Thurldar i. Montier lw"' .llL~ 1 ....... flf t• lttwJ IN•tt to ""'-•r lr•1.J M11rtt1t Jt•.MC. Ph '42 1197 ..... ,u::::~=:;~~-;~~~~:~:"· ~, .. :~~ :Jf#.Plii.•t. •°.I ·-=====~~=~,~=~~·~ ,r. ""· ~ .... ~ I bedroom, preteijd y o u ' r e alseep. Mll-de&nsf mothoch tho h(;p.. 1tud9nh won't need' occ ._ ... the ...... LOOK '· ~ for our. 8 page _!Pbloid soon ! ?ith&r;+i.d~y· S.rving Or•nge County...Since 1947 FREE Gtm! FREE DOOR PRIZES! FREE MICROWAVE OVEN! 411 •• 5,, hffr: t·•: .., .•• 646-1684 Saddleflack Volley EL TORO El Toro Rd. ot ,,_., ·!next to 51v-Ord hlty: 1,0·t : Sot. 10·6 837-3830 • She advised ha ving all valuables etched with your driver•S license number or DMV provid~ ID number, so stolen merchandise can be returned if recovered. Keep a list of. serial numbers of valuables outside your home. "A woman is not going to,I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ remember all of the lechni-lr ques when she's attacked," Lt. Hussian said, "but .she may be able to stay calm. "Afterwafds," she added1 "she can go to pieces." Hurt t- ~- E11t•r t•rrl1 • , , • party 9oocl1 ... bri9ht 9ift id••• from Ami ri. ''" , • , intludi119 Holly Hobbie pl1qu11, pl1t11, m1,11it1I figuri1111 111d m11th m"ore ••• Suth e s raligiou1 i1w1lry, to1tumt i•w•lry, t1ndla1, pl111ter 1tand1 •11d m111it boxas. a's CARDS e GIFTS e CANDLES1 e JEWELRY t04t Atk11tt. Aft., et Mat•ll• H111tft119tH .._. -961.01 l I -Dally l 0·6. -CMtHr Olft Wr•p-l -..ei:Am1rlc1rd-M11t1f•Cllar .. , W.lte, .......... -,llock, RM, Nny Siles 5·10 Wld,h1-N, M, W Whh•, loM, Red, NoyY 15.95 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA -HARBOR CENTER 546-6775 \ . Open Mond•y •nd Frld•y, 10 'tll 9 1 Open Sunday 1 0 'tll ~ \ • ·- ., • ~ 'I I • ·I •• ,' I ' .. .. - .. . Laug :· By SYDNEY OMARR , My favorite Capricorn: Henry Miller. A Pisces who leaves me cold: Jerry Lelris. A Ge!llini I wish I had know.: Marilyn Monroe . A Gemini moSt persons mistake for:_Can: 'cer; Jane Russey._.. A Gemini who can sj,ng for me anytime: Peggy-Lee. ~ ARIES (March 21-Apri\ 19): What you would like to !!µnd' - what you .can do ma:r be in temporary conflict Key is to attend to basics. Review health, w o r k . procedures. Avoid' unnecessary broodinJ .. ·• · You are on brink oPl~ittg experience.. - TAURUS (April 21>-May 20): You break through in ,area previously blocked. You are able to negotiate differences with member of opposite sex. Humor plays important role. Laugh at your own foibles . Social gathering is likely to be on agenda. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): • l Lie low. Go slow.-Be thorough. Be aware ' of fine points, details, what is contained between the lines. Y o u r security is ai stake. Don't permit irresponsible person to · ~ · rush you, push you, cajol~ you -a-d'"#... , or unduly influence you in any re--• mea s shaver way. Be grown up. 19 49 CANCER (June 21-July 22): • ~ ,r • eox pt-19-tralnel'! plane 6.99 .• . panther IO.Speed bieyeleit 77.77 DAll Y PILOT 23 • • • zealth eo1J r tfftJUOle . 399.88 Study Gemlnl messa~e. What Deluxe triple heod shover with disposable you think is essenlial may bl d Cc f t C t I I t h d d · · .... merely be 3 whim. KnoW it a _es, m or onr o, s an ea es1gn. · 8'1)d begin st u dying Includes cord. Reg. 25.99. Cameros, Shov- atteruatives. Open lines of ers ., 3 Greo_t for beginning line control pilots! Pow- .ered by .049 engine.·Complete with ho ndle, ' lines. Reg. 8.99. Toys 28 Assembled price. Choose from 27" 'or 24" models. Stem shifters, center pull brokes, · d9roilleur geors. Reg. 89 .99. Sporfrng Gcods. 43 100% solid-stole Ti ton 210 chossis, 25 " diog. '..(neas. screen, caster-mounted cabi~et, one~ hutton tuning. T!31evisions, 72 .. ' ' ' .. .. t .. • • c • l -- ... -! c -.. comm~atlon. Do m o r e ' 1 reading. llecome aware of what is happening where com- petition is concerned. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ):1---------------~~----~~---------~"l'!"~~--~---------~---------------Dorilestic environment now -::::-..::;:::. tends to dominate. Luxury item could be sUbject of pro-·-· and-<:<>n discussion with regard to possible purchase.· Emo- tional response.of onwclose to you is of special concern. Relax. VIRGO (Aug. 2;1-Sept. 22): You could be entangled in legal web if careless. Don't jump to conclusions regarding property ownership, rig!its. Avoid, ~premature actions or.. you 1 coura~be cited f o r trespassing. Pi1<et plays prominent role. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Way is open to make your bid for more fund!, responsibility -also, YQU can intensify lm· portant relationship. Yo u r ability to 'collect, to "uti!iJe material at hand is em- pbaBized. Prestige Is oo up- swing.-• SCORPIO {Oct. 23-Nov. 21): j ,.., T Cycle is such· that cootacls made now can flourish.--Be receptive. Keep clear bead, however, where fmances are concerned. Tendency is to Iea_ve proj~ct before it is 1a-ver delaxe --tght ~aeuam . firushed. This could be a·costly -r-11!9 9 11! procedure. d • .. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· • Dec. 21): Give full play to Two cleaners in one! Converts from upright creative "!181ination. '?11e sky to canister with optiona.I attachments Two can be limit if you pemut your . . • Intuition to flow. Maintain speeO motor, rug ad1ustment. aura of glamor-Don't tell all. Ma1or Appliances 80 CAPRICORN '(Dec. 22-Jan. ' 19): Obtain ,valid ·hint ·from wesf;blgla-frOstproof 249.9S I~ cu. ft. cepo~ity, 131 lb. fr~ezer-both frostfree. Crisper, deep door storoge, toll bottle rock. Mojor Applionces. 80 . ' . . 1--..... famous· lll'tist l.p.!s ·, 1.88 A potpourri of recordings with' many ilrtisfs to choose from. No motter whot your taste, there's something you'll enjoy. Records. 77 • 1-1·· ..!~- Eanty girdles y trimflt!X I t -• t- • ' 2.99-4.98 Reg . 3.50-6.00. Stock up now ot these great pirces. Ea sy core , they're machine woshoble ond dryoble. In sizes S-M-L ond XL. -Notion, 4 Saptlarln message. Tread1~~~~•'"""'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.i..~~--... ~~~~~~~~~~~­slowly. Make real progresS, step by step. Trying to skip essentials now would ~ an er; ror. Spe'cial partnership, cooperative effort is featured. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21>-Feb. 18): Strive Jor practical ap- JlfOach to lnoney situation . Playing games with rhlity results in fmancial loss. Ex-pand horizons without being extravagant. Sqlttarln is likely to be featured. 1• PISCES (Feb. If.March 20): What appears a "sure thing" may in actuality be elusive . Tearing down process may be necessary In onler to rebuild . One in posiUon of authority la not empowered to g r a n t opecial request. Wait. IF TODAY IS . Y O UR BIRTHDAY you are direct, often bl\lflt an !individual who adheres 1basically to the truth. This year you find that new projects, c o n t a c t s are favorable. July shoold be an outstaodlng month. You have chance to begin anew by rec- " save 35.00 witlt trade · royal eletrle portable reg. 119.9'1 1 less 15.00 trade.in ., , . ·. ' • tifying past 1rrors. Creative excitement is featured. ltarillMnlmll lleells u.e• uWy •elwootl litad H ery alldy ., :.:,.4D spelal pr lee on eaa vas . teaais hags in 2 s tlyes -:--:::;;-iiiiiii.::--11a maay eatagorles 1 1.19-12 .• 9&· now 9'1.9'1 , 114.99 \ • 10.99 ............... , ·-• "-Whttt e M4 I HOU •w A 11 C..,.·-b Jl27 E•1t Co•1t Hwy. Coron• 411 Mer 671-4740 ~eg. 2.95-35.00. Mostly' non-fiction. Hob. bies , reference, poetry ond much more. Come and browse. Pick your fovorites. Book!, 18, not ot Wilshi re T rode"in your old typewri\er on _,hi~ Rcyal Apollo 12 GT. 12" corriage, ~I. lih 2 line spacing, case. Generous guarantee. Stationery 15 Reg. 5.00 volue. Simulated hond corved wood in wolnut stoin.· 6 compartments hold pens, ~tationery, env~lopes, much more. By Lerner. Stotionery 15 I - Assorted colors in eonvos . . . lor9e tip- ' pored comportment for balls ond other 1 ·necessities. Special area for racket. Luggoge 33 . • : __ ......_______.5u~~ 8ntt 11nn@ IlDrrao~ CID,~ O~~E, MAlL OF ORA~E ANAHEIM NEWl'ORT HUNTIN&TON IEACH CERRITOS 2100 N. Tv1tl11 Str.•t 17141 tfl.1111 444 N, itclNI 1714) 111-1121 47 F•1hiot1 hl•n4 17141 644°1212 7777 Etlll'iit•' A,•11111 17141 lt2·llll 100 Los Cerrito• M•ll 12111 IMM41t I SHOP 10 A.M. t• t ilO r.M. MONDAY THkOIJ$H fklDAY, SATURDAY 10 A.M, to 6 P.M, SUNDAY 12 NOOfrif to I i-.M. ' 1 • • • -1 r • I . r 14 DAil V PILOT Nee</lework on Ice , . . T~Y. ""11 12, 1973 r-. r .. ' Spare/rime Laced Up un.<:-----. . ""' are time-consuming while doing nothing. pass the time pictures, ~~ of days gooe by For Barbara Wilson it's all W91'kln~ anUqu es, and 80 creeping Into ., many busY of these, and more. The blond~e ~t. Barbara wanted a , f • star of Ice Capades has bee ' ' IUOl!yles? skating-with lier . ~ r, hobby that Involved h e r For 10me, ~y offer a Peter Gordon, ,f~ ye_ars; creative talents to the fullest means of creaUve espnssioa ever •.Ince jl>eY1)olh joined the and allowed her to. work wiqt' and a ... Y to penmaJile their sho~967d 1 'th . her hands. · imper s o o a I ~g ~es = 1 Wed~ "crocheting ls really perfect Uron:i accenl pUIOJl'I Io nesday, April 18, .and runs !or !or me. I can do 11 anytime, clolhing)'._~..<::::aome, ban-fl •·••-la And I . ta••·· diCrafts ~ut part of the ive 8L&U~· anyp ce. • enJOY ...... '6 ~t-'Wave of nostalgia and 11ME' GAPS something l already own and ,,-refum to happier limes; arid It was during their second really mal\lne It my own by for IOme, they are si mply a year that Barbara learned to doing some hand work on it," means ol doing something crochet. H1bere are 80 many she says. ·~· . ' awkward time gaps for a "I personally rebel ~g~- performer," Barbara says. in tt pt>I ~ "Even during the stioW, Peter ~ g pa ems, ex~/.' .. Uf fELL'S , and I are onJy on ice for a 1d.eas !or n~ . hons · short time and s i t t i n g stitches an b1ne parts o Ul'HOLSTERY backstage·ean he very boring, two,!" veraI patterns to ~:.,W• a!tef' the first year." _..m~-~e a dpess or sweater more -1m ...._ IW. Some of the oth~ters original. ~ii-~iii:-iii:ii-iii:MMZ~i:li:t~=-~;;o;;;i:·,,..-/~~;;;i·i.;;;;;;;;;;;~1 EASILY LEARNEp ji -' "Actually,-., crOcheting t s easily learned from books , it's inexpensive, creative and a great way to give-up smok- ing! It - •• • •• - '"' ..... ftltl ., Mr. J-. ... 'iewels by ioseph • S.H clrtl IO\llltl dllf!IOl\d. Vtn clHn , ... "" ........ $6000 2.11 c111t routld" diamond. E-c•lttnl col· ~ .• "" ~--""' $3000 dllmOlld fw onlr •.• '·'' Cffil nlUlld dl1m111Hi VtlY c1ffll ·~· ctl!ll'I color. A bt111!lful $1900 1nd brllllul dltlllOlld. l.ot CIWI ro""'d dl.rr!Olld. Vtrt OOOd color. E~c1!1t11r cut. All $ l 200 el~nl dltmond. , .71 urtt rDUl'ld di-d. VttY, '+'tlY brilllt•'lt, txulltltt $750 allllllY. SOUTH COAST l'lAZA • 3333 111Sf'Oi. COSTA MBA • 540-9066 HOUaS ·OAl~Y 1~9• IAMDA'f ICM• Cl.OllD Wtmlo'T ...,., 0.~, AJHritlll EIJll'ftl • ... ~ • PttMHlbtll ,_ The Ultimate In Footwear StVling and Comfort . , . From AMALFI ' 1- Barbara has discovered that some of her small creations . . . headbands, coin purses, pillows . . . roake thoughtful birthday or Christmas gi!lS. "I made a few pillows for some of the other kids a t Christmas," she says. '"They seemed to appreciate receiv- ing something no one else bad -. .. or would have." ~~:~~lenlni;;,g"~·~ We cany over 2So size5 from AA to EEE. StrideRlte· . t4.SO J.o 1s:so AcCOrdl .. To SIM \ S4 F.~•hJ9n l1li1nd • Newport Center ·Opp. Br0<1dway • 644-4223 fashion shoe savin_gs eross-strap sandal ' The "Double Cross" by Penal-1 jo, white or bone calfi black · patent. Orig. f21 . 1 1:;,99 deUso dells elassle~ .Take your pick of the top fashion stytas, from our ax· ' citing collection· of dress pumps from this famous mak. er. Odg. $2 8-$29. 16.99 • $18 Bel -oir® plotform clog .. ... .. ··-· ... 13. 99 $1 8 Lifestr ide "Ang~l 'rouch" •tep-in cosuol . . 14.99 $18 Bel-oir® stocked heel s!indol _ ...... . . .. 12.99 Better Fo shion Shoes , I 08 Women 's Shoes, JS ' • "You'd be surprised what a small item like a special pillow can do toward making a l~month string of hotel rooms seeni homier and give some coritinu.ity to life on the road," Peter observes;. Robert Payne, son of Mr. and ~Us. Eugene Payne ()f Balboa Island, c I a i m e d Kathryn Anna Fisher as his bride during a Seattle ceremony. She is the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Elmer i'isher of that city. The bride is a graduate •f Shoreline High School and Shoreline Community College, Seattle. Her husband is a grad1.11t.te of Newport Harbor High ~ool and the California Maritime Academy, Vallejo. Barbara's partner patiently serves as her number one guinea pig. . . . and main beneficiary of all the goodies. "Right now," she says, "I'm making him a sweater he can wear during those unreal Canadian winters." The newlyWeds plan to make their home aboard. th e schooner Gol dfi e ld, at Guaymas. Where's Lyl~'s?? TAMURA-SAOTOME Wintersburg Presbyterian Church, Garden Grove was the setting fo r the riuptials linking Y.oshie Saot ome and Nobuyoshi Paul Tamura. bel·alr® imported sandal 13.99 Orig . $18 . Dressy style with open toe, sling bock, white, red. or blue <.1:inkle patent. Fa•hion Shoes, 8 - elassle leather etogs 7,99 Ori~, $12-$1 J. Perforated leotrer or top st rop style s. Junior Fashion Shoes, 75 spanlsh leather woven sanda.I 1:;.99 Orig. $20. Lig ht-os-oir style, white , comel, brown. Junior Fa shion Shoes, 75 ' _--~t19~ cWl ttiln® IlDIBID800ilwCHW ANAHEIM · NEW'°RT ~. HUNTINGTON IEACH 44.f N. E ... 14 171 41 515-1121 47 F•ihion hl•nct 17141 644.121 2 7777 Edln9tr A•tllv• 1714) lfl·Jlll · OlAN&E, MAU OF ORANGE CERRITOS 2JOO N. T111ti11 Sfrt•t 171'4) ftl·llll 500 lo1 C.rrltoe M•tl 1211) 160·0411 SHOP 10 A.M. ft t rlO P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to&S P.M. ( Tamura or Costa Me sa. Attendants were Mrs. Yoko Zirkcl and David Tamura. Joko Tamura was the flower girl and Kenny Tamura was the ring bearer. The newlyw¥s will reside in Costa Afesa. LIND-PERSINGER $25. J anies B. Lind, son or Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lind of Irvine, claimed Susan Persing- er as hi s bride dl!Jing rites ~rformecl by the Rev. Dr. Charles H. Dierenfield in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach . In elegant, feminine themes that neVer 90 out of style. In white and tan. • ' • MRS. PAYNE THE SHOE TREE . - The bride is the daughter of 11r. and l\frs. Joseph Pers- inger of South Sioux City, Neb., and was attended by l\1rs. Cheryl Akers and Miss Carol Lind. Rolly Pulaski was best man. and ushers were David Lewis and Ken Parker. 3410 VIA LIDO e NEWPORT BEACH The Rev. Abraham Dohi performed the rites for the daughter of Mrs. Tosaiko 673 -5 521 • ! I i .. ! • • I I ! ! • fab:rifie FABRIC CENTERS SALE OF THE-~ YEAR! FABRIC SATS ''TllA* TOU" TO MOlll THAN 500,000 IATISPllD CUITOMIRI HllONIRS FASHION KNITS fantOstic Mr¥ings on .100% arnel triocatata fashlClfl knits. 45" to 45" wide eod In. Ql~ners lenth1. (asy care mathfne ftW. MCI dry, Choose frGm a selection of toUds ond prints th.t aN 9NOt for ltloute5 and ......... rt 48~. - PEARLS IMITATtON 60" PURLS. Sn ANOS Of WHIR AHO DISfGHU: COloH. MAKI YOUl OWN THING ANO Tl:IM nwmt ,WLS, PRICES IFFICTIYI THURS. THRU SAT. • JUNTON FULUITON FULLIRION IUINAPUK MUNT. ICM . 11111 .... •11.-L l,JIW • ...........,. '"'''" .. ,.hllltff 1tl•l•l• fabriftel ,,,....,_. ·-t1ltll1f1fll;111 ti Vtlltt Vino ., ......... ••ltJ<•ll l'ltllto1 .. 1 ...... '"' Pll l )t.ltJt •••• , ... 11 LAMllADA PLACINllA GAIDIN GIOYI COIT AMISA 111111-.... 1>41'""'""' ll:tfl( ... -• .., W.lM: FABRIC CENTERS .1u.MIN4-........... t t lu1" .. ,. ... " I ns1••1• , .... ,.,, ........ ,.., ..... ,.,, . . . I .. > . ~- • .. .. 3 = u -Iii ; c • • ' .. 0 .... .. I -i • r: I I i ~ • :I I ... ! I .. II i! • I r . - ' . • , \ .. / A MILER ' TUMBLEWEEDS M¥. N16HT60WIJ" ·~ \SITT MISSING, ,,- MISTER'&ALLf't'! ,,, IT'S MY l106: 'ff.\.IAMAS" ! ..... "I•·== ... Mun AND JEFF --• FIGMENTS NANCY I NEVE'R SAW ONE' LIKE' "THIS l'LL ASK THE' GblY IN HERE-· · HE' KNOWS . EVE'RYTHll;IG TDDAt•s CIDSSID.ID PVZZLI ACROSS 54 Female 1 Fuel •nimala 5 Artlt le of 55 Ottawa and bedding O.C. bodies to Craze 59 Fame 14 The "A" of 63 Norwegian "A.O." man's name 15 Elloc tivety 64 Newtyin..,ent- concise ed words 16 Constantly 6fl Aleuti111n 17 Get better • island 19 Ascend tu i oOn down 20 Act Of --68 Harvest• Howard crop 21' Disappoint• 69 A1!8nwllight 1 men ts unit 23 Sea birds 70 Fro1en • 25 Quantity of raindrops w i1e 71 Chlld's 26 u11rafa1hion· · counting able society: word Ynttrd1y'1 Puu.le SoNed: -:1 '1 r.1 r1 fl (·l [•J ~ j A r. J1 P n '.1 oJ t•l!JI I Ll0l•Jfl Af?f1P. :J'1rJ•,, r.J'lnnr.innri,, 'lfJl~ ~[]l!JI~ f ll:lif"f,; 1.lr.11·11.!lt 1 r.1n1.1,~r-f:ln rl,,RRnri r:lnr1nr r:tl'J r ,,, l•J lJI It~ I 1~·~1 ,1 (•Jf lf ? [JC!JIJ C<Jt~lJl-JrJ t•l'JL ~(•Jf-ll•JJ71t·1lJI iU l-JlJl l'f' 1-ll:JULJ [J ~~11 1 H-11 ii J 0'1£1,,LH l f_~ ~~•tf,lJ f_! 111.l'l ~IC·l f l~tflf; 'if,IJ •'1tt r1 1 11 .11.i nn~~ r,p•fir·1f : !J!!JLilJ UUUl~ ~[·)UI .'~ !11! 1r.i r1 enn1J n~jf l l.J['; 13 o·oee 44 Wiling'ty 2 words 30 Whoops it up 34 Gymnastic ......... --DOWN ,.. ""' ~ lf'lhM ,. wrong 1 Vehk:le . 18 RedC•p 49 Mele ~ 2 Sunday 22 L.e1ter · 51 1Most · punch:Sl•no 24 Def'tnMOfV. pelft~ ~y Tom K. Ryan W! \WAT A sa.tY! I CAN see 1llf: WH'! SCRfAMER !ILAZIN' ACROSS PAGE ONE:!:" PAJ,AMANAPl'l!RS 511UK&!: OVER A '{OC!J/'1N Hl'AVtR: 'CHILV'S m V~! PO& FOl'.CEP 'lb 5U!EI' IN PAW!' WllAI 17RIYM! WHAf SHEER, HIW\r·RENDING' PA1HOS! WHAT KIND -OF'A FISH I~ THAT? ..;.. 7/1',w . by Al Smith AU.All BE Wrnl YOU/ by Dale Hal~ by Emi• Bushmiller INFORMATION . BOOTH device. 35 Helper. 37 Smooth 38 Compau paint . 3 Noun ending 26 Oueenof'"--53 Comfnita 4 Ventilltlng 27 Biblit 9'..,.. alme openings 28 RegiOnt -• ...a.. MISS PEACH 39 Holds back 42 Time of d•V 43 Gun sight 45 Knowledge 46 Ralph ·-··: Pittsburgh banballer 48 Suppose SO Saicf"yes" 52 Curtefl' cap 'S'P1rttoflhips r29 l(indof <>11 Uyefof"9"1""' 6 Pronoun crown Y tin. P'OY· 1 Epochel 31 Occuntnee 67 Dllftlnilh 8 N1ru11I fet 32 River S8 Group of 9 W1tked emb•M~: . unsteldlly 33 Mortimer -Suffix 10 M1ke1 36 Garment 80 · tift. ditcislon 40 EulYUill 11 Ftd. o. ! 11 Confen . con1\lt1,1en .. -62 Dile°""' 12 Chefrr •1 Spit Ir> ~ttriN.,... DICK TRACY DOOLEY'S WORLD ' r SALLY BANANAS ~ e.way FoR® KING!!.. GORDO ~OON MULLINS ..~ .. -.u> VA LUC.Iii ,,. HEAR A T\.INS ? ANIMAL CRACKERS ~SS UIAAr: L'll.E ~ •• ;J: c;o'r i'IC~TOT~ '~AAOD BU!Tel'FJ!I' ~1Qlle!lr/ •I(~ ~1;!}/ ' - SEE IT? 114.ACK WOOL MATllllAL· by Mell • I I I l".'\·.' -i." -, -. . • • · ....... by Che1ter Gould Is· "T\.llS THE MATQ.llMG . MAL.F OF TMAT WMfTE LE4TM!ll COi.i.AR? ' Thunday, Aprtl 12, 1973 DAILY PllOt J$ by ROCJef' lraclflelcl ' ,, ~OAO! • • by Gus Arriola by Ferd Jotutsan ~ .· by ROCJer Bohn j 1 l -~ ii • THE GIRLS _fl_tl__..._.4Z~ "I don't tblak he likes It-be said I can keep It u Jona: 11 I ~mile aever to tab It out of the bu.'' DENNIS THE MENACE • • • • -· .. • I • .. _, • • • ' I - I •. ' .· . . ·~ _, r u liAl\.Y P lor -· -TIM!~y, Apo<I 12, 197) " S~l T.oai9~ 'Haunted ·west'' A.irs 1• TONIGHT'S I ' • TVllfGHLIGHTS , ' KHJ G 7:30 -"Long Day's Ji>urner, Into Night." The 1962 movie version of Eugene 0 Neill's great· e91 drama with Katherine Hepburn, Jason Robards J r. and Dean Stockwe}I. CBS II 8:00 -The Haunted West. This Nation· -.1 Geographic spe<:ial explores an area known as the lntermountam West from U&eh into the Cali· fornia desert and traces the lives of cowboys In· dtans and prospectors who ding to the Old West tr4ditions. ·-'KCET fD 8:00 -."Hamlet." Nicol Williamson's ~cdaimed performance as the prince of Denmark IS the first in a series of films spotlighting "the face Of humanity." NBC 0 9:00 -lronsi<re. Romance comes to Of· fleer Fran Belding in an unlikely setting - a mur· aer investigation -when Ironside receives home . movie films of two killings. With Joe Don Baker. ABC 0 11:30 -Wide World of Entertainment. Tonight's movie is "Possession," a thriller about newlyweds who 'move into an old house in the Eng- lish oouritryside previously owned by a woman who disappeared~ without a • trace 20 years earlier. TV DAILY LOG ,. DAILY "llOT Stiff Pllo19 'Have a Dmi9hn11t' Grace Shaw offers ~me pastry rt.o David Anderson as his bored wife, 'fere Dillingham watches in a scene from i<Mi~dle of the Night," giving closing performances Fnday and Saturday at the Hunting- ton Beach Playhouse. 'Gingerbread Lady' Cast Set for Mesa Thursday Evening APRIL12 1.-00 a o o mm Ql!l m - rn ®J - or lficol Williamson's ICdaimed per· formanu IS tht: princt of Denm1r\: is llrst ln this series of films spot· n111tin1 ''the face of humanity.'' The Olm 1lsa fealurn pop music stir Mlfl111ne r1tthfull. @II Capll!lla 1.'he Co.sta Mesa C i v i c resident d i r e c to r Pat! CEI El Shew di Joe Flores Playhouse is in rehearsal for Tambellini enacting t he e lonam "Thi outcasts" (j)c.t ..... o n.- GI The Fllntstont1 IDbTrtll "" fl) Ml Dlllct E.nllllOrldl m.,.,.,..,...,.,. OJ Tint Slotlft l :lO (I) Hep11'1 Heroes (fJ Movlt the Orange County premiere leading role of the singer. 1:30 m..,. Crtffm Shew of Neil Simon's only serious Barbara van Holt and at')..,_11 ... . play, "The Ging e rbread Robert Engman are ·cast as ' Lady," which opens April Z1 th · ge • t f · ds ·th 1:00-,.....cas ~,~--·· -e sm r s wo rien , wt -I.SJ '" ·-1 , .. , for a three-weekend run. C2Jlr) .. tin ta Sitt 1 M1rrl1ct Sheri Henderson_ playing her 11M1 lluhl Your Utt" (com) '68 _ Marthella Randall is dircc· estranged daughter. Karl DtMI M1rtin, Stell1 Stevens. A Ung the storY of an alcoholic "Nick" Adams and Ron b1Chelot tries to encouraae his un· singer attempting to se t her Aguilera complete the cast in h1pplly married friend to end his life in order , with playhouse ·minor roles. r1l1tionshlp with his mistress. Perfornlances of ' ''Ph e 0 II) m Ironside "C1mer1 ••• ""'°" ... ""'"" <•> ...... ,.. Richard Cite(l Gingerbread Lady" will be coma to Officer rrin Beldinr ill 11 given Jo'riday and Saturday unlikely settinr-i murder lnvestl· evenings, April 27-28, May By JAY SllAJIBlllT It --~ lntemlpt the NEW YORK (AP) poker game. There's a great National "You doo't'lolit much like a .Geograpblc epedal coming up bucWoo to me," drawls one tonight 00 the CBS Televlsioc ~·· ' I . network:; ll's · caJled • ·~ Who s ,~~e best cheater ih Haunted West."-A bad till&, •. t~ house. Shepherd grins." bul It's lhe ooly bad P\l'I of . Nooe of your busln"'!S• the show. \ =Is a prone forft). m a .. It's a brll~tly photo~ph-Things move briskly to the eel, "!eU-wntlen, well-edi.~ process of getting Shepherd a essay on the old ways of life horse, which he bas to l>Nlak that endure m remote areas of himself and the cattle drive the. modem West. And it does and end.<,f.the-drive uproar in its job with care and respe<t. lhe small town of McDermlll It doesn't 9we11 on Nev. ' . "progress'' or t be en-Then comes the small town croachments of the 20th cm-rodeo, where be plunks down 1 ~tury-' It does .focus on the in-$75 for the privilege of· doing dependent spirit of the West about the same things he's and shows that it's still there been doing the past ·four if you know where to look for . months at wages of $250 a it. mont.ti. The look taken on this show covers four basic areas -the~ life.of the cowpoke, the life of a small highway town, the religious life of the Yaqui In· di ans in Arizona and.. the lives of miners who work for themselves or large com- panies or both. In my opinion, the best seg· ment is the one on the cowboy life, typified by that of Bruce Shephe rd -a friendly, chanky man in his late twenties who signs on with the 12-man crew of a large cat tle ranch near Paradise '{alley in northern Nevada. THE CAMERA is rolling when he's introduced to the boys in the bunkhouse, and they know it. But all they do is sHghtly exaggerate that fine· honed sense of deadpan humor and newcomer's "welcome" that still cha racterizes certain areas of the West. THERE'S AN agonizing se- quence -run in slow-motion -in which he and a bucking bronc pa rt ways, but hot before his foot gets caught in a stirrup and he takes a pound· ing that puts . him in -the hospital for a week. It's a fine study and nicely catches . both the misery ancf humor that make up the life of a cheerful, rugged man whose only concession to modern times is a wristwatch. The other segments are almost as good, particularly the one on the Jives of "boqmersf' the tramp miners who still knock abolit the West trying to eke out livings from one-man mining ope.rations. The entire show has a good feeling to it ; it's the same kind of feeling about the West that the late Ernie Pyle cap- tured in "llome Country," a "Well, boys," delca res the NATIONAL GENERAL grizzled old veteran who runs THEATRES the ranch crew, "we got us al'----------- nc1v buckaroo here today." Novel Bought EXCLUSIVE OIANGI CO. INGAGIMllllT 0 _,<CJ (!10) "11!t Cmt M ... 11 hid" (WIS) 151 -W111d1H .Corty, l11r.don1ld Carty, Enen Drtw. (I) CU Nml W1lt1r,Cronkl\1 @) ~ lrfffi• Show m w,crifflt> m--..F-(R) 11tlon -when Chief Ironside rt-HOLLYWOOD (UPI) 4·5 ~nd 11-12 at the Com- ceivts home·movi• films ol twt Pomona College has bestowed munity Center auditorium on l·IOLLYWOOD <UPI) killinas. Joe Don Baker autsls. an Honorary Doctorate of Fine th e 0 r a n g e C o u n \ y · Richard zanuck and David WEO.·THUAS. & FRI. 6:», l :lD. 10t30 m ,_.. c.r1111 ... QI!)-• aJ Tiii frank ,..,.. Ef)Uttltlucal1 1,., a rn om -0 lowfilll fN Delllra (l} Trd ff Conllq111MU (I) •llffkl• i'ilMltlltt 0 wt.It's Mr UM? m•tow l><y Ill I Dn1111 ol Jtannlt EE S1111pte•1tttt Mlria m r11 Cid Q'ualt-U:trclses .,.,_ EID T11t.anlm lllulicat QJ U.n'Chb Ill_ ...... Friday OAmME MOVIES D OO@ &>•••r F• "The Fairgrounds. Advance Brown, in association with Stone" In 1 western town which Arts on Ri chard Chamberlain reservations may be obtained Universal Pictures ha v ~ seems lo have 1on1 mad with vlo-who attended classes there by calling the Costa Mesa bought movie hgh~ to Clive tence ind lntriaue. Ctlne receives before becoming ''Dr. llecreation Department during Egleton's novel "Seven .Days an unusu1I offtr frum three inno-Kildare" on television. the day at 834-5300. to a Killing ." _ .ctnt lookinl thildrtn: they want 1------::---------'---.:.:._ ______ _::_::.,::::::::'.'.:... ____ _:__, lo pay him $4.08 lo kill someone. "'" fi)Nlno @m £J Sltow dt Alejandra Suarez 1:30 0 Tht Hippy W1ndmn Slim and Henrietta Barnard Ylsil Tecap1 Hot Springs. 0Nns @!) Muc1Ydl1 lbli1n1 G) l»tha Ubt1 11:15 im Clnem1 34 11:301J ()) CIS Ult Mowit: (C) "Melt •I thl Fl1btin1 Ltd(' (dr1}-V1n Johnson, WtJttr Pld1eon. D ®'l m Johnnr Cln.1 O Tiii F uiilive 0 (1)@ a) Wide World Of [n. tertalnMtnt "Poutssion·• A thriller about 1 itewly-manied cou~le wllo . mo'l't Into 111 Did house itt !ht Ett~ r!ish countryside, previously owned by 1 wom1n who disappeared wl!JI· 1:45 0 Mowlt: "Wod l&ltltd Tf1ir (wes) '49 -Farrtst Tutkef, Adil• M1r1 Adrl1n Boot!\. ' 2:JO m All·Ni&lrt Shew: "'Dfllte'1 lit- ftnio," (C) """"4 Mottbm,. l:lO 8 Mftl.: -,.,.. l••l •so -RorJ CatllotJn, Jene N!fh. 1:00 m <C) "Ao•-'" ,...,. (com) '4S-WiUifm Nolden, .le•nnt C.lln. 1:30 fJ ......... (Wll) '57-Jott - dltr, .lolnne Dru. Bl'OTHersun SISTef ·MOOU" ~klUS Bill-COSBY .. ... ROBERT CULP tN "HICKIE AND BQGGS! ~- JEl!l!Y ORMCtt lEIGH TAYl Olt YOONG "THfKHTHAT COULDN'T SHOOl'STUtGNT" IN HARBOR SHOPPING .CENTER IHDS THLU ANN. 12 . "SOUNDll:,CICEl Y ~ ~ 1ii1ii TYSON .. I'll• (C) ........ Yt• ..... (mus) J:OO (I) (C) "'lullfl&'f 11 c. .. ncfll INDS Miii. APll 11 .. .llllMWt ICHGOH" .... '"JUDGI IOY llAN" maw: ft' M llf. a DI 'IAKllW .... TOU.llCOlll WI or PICIUll !Dll 111 •111 ,. IHI MmW or IT Will IWlllCS ltL llDUMO l.1111 IOT ONLY ON SCIEEN, IUT MANIACS IN AUDIENCE! hd Horrw Hlt . c ............. 'DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM THE DEAD '' lofil (PG) '50-lltty Hwttolt. How•rd Keel CMk" (Wts) '63-Audle Murpl'ly. ltlll (IJ _,-(dn) 'll -R1lpll !Cl ...... '""" ~ (d<1) -..... Jonn Mc:C.ih•. '66-TM Mims. Dewn Adllfll. • -T• ... ('"l'J ~:~ 1:30 fJ "611 s.e-· (ml '64-C1ffl Qllt. Robert:loli CtotJ• Ch1klriL uae-r .. c •• ,.,,. <*'> ..... .,..,... •• , •• , ·41 -C"f "1111 ..._... AlllllllUllE" ,-.. ~--­GENE HACKMAN BILLY JAC • •• ---trllll.llff-c...-1111. 4:ll(J)S-ul0Allllli'f SMELLEY WINTERS \ • • ,Day • Al Nltlit- KHOF-FN Fhod lh '°" ....,_ .. 1 Lincoln A••• -•I ol Knott 527·1Z2l StnU "'n• FrttWt'fMl f °'''"'"" ,. .... 5Jl..7t22" llDDLll ON THI RC>Of IGI MlltUL orlll 111 '"· ..... 12 .... • . -- _, , • ~ ~ . l I • l , ) ' • ' • • l • • I • • .. ' •• . I • • • j • ' ' 1 j ' (_ OCC Fi "41e · . Splen did Show ,By. Orph~us . Ttio By TO~ lflARLEY Of 1"11 D•l•r l"ftot Stell Flute, hafp and viola make an unusual but lremen~ously errective combination and it is only necessary to point to the renowned Orpheus Trio in sup- poit of that conclusion. Theirs is a distinguished muSical mix that takes ori e'{l!il greater luster in a cham- ber environment .and it very obviously dellghte4 a Harbor Area Community Concerts Association 1 audience Monday night in the Orange Coast College auditorium. The Orpheus players pro- vided a splendid fip~le to the asoociation's season in a pro- gram that was equall_y geared lo demonstrating the solo skills of this gifted threesome: flautist Paula Robison, ~rpist Heidi Lehwalder and Scott Nickrenz, viola. BUT, FOR ALL that in- dividual artistry. it was the combined talents or these three artists that gave us, ffom thl s critic's seat. th e most memorable offering or a fascinatin g program~ Telemann's Trio Sonata in C· SOLID SURFING! "EXPRESSION SESSION II" Ph11 T1101oe Knuy KartooM Of TM J0'1 PIMformollCff 7:]0 &: 9:'l0 m :Mli9 V11 l.ido N•wport &arh l'hon1: 67S·l3MI ENDS TONIGHT -/_ Urol Matthall/Barnett [~~..??!!'] A UN!YE~SAI.. PICTVR£ !i:P) T!CHNICOlOR' · PANAVISOM" Atlo C•I IARIAIA STlllSAND "UP THE SANDBOX" ~---------STARTS FllD:t.Y itOIERT REDFOID "JEREMIAH JOHNSON" Also IPGI CLINT EASTWOOD "JOE KIDD" minor' a nav.•lessly delivered work that gave the evenin g's program a superb sendoff. ~1i11s Robison'.s flute undoubte.dly dominated the work st 11 c e that scored this thotlghtful, In- credibly graceful offering. But the other instruments have their moment of glory, 1nost notably in the spritely vivace that sCc ms to divide the work ao d in the stately allegro that provides a tripmpbant climax . N ickr e ri z and ~fiss LOOwalder took over the spatlight for solo offerings that, to this critic, were welcome revivals of a neglected Bach work and the reappearance of \•:hat must be the Ideal harp offering: Salzcdo's rippling, poignant ''Scintillation. v IT WAS A tremendously ex- pressive performance by this charming artis(" and one which may serve to restore this gracious work to the pedesta l it occupied in an earlier cen-tury. I -~ Ir Nickrenz had a high point in an evening during which his viola made a sterling con- tribution it was during the · Bach Suite In D minor that provided his solo contribution. His bow work was flawless but twq movements i n particular' caught this critic's ear: the "Sarabande" in which our artist em ployed the flex- ibility or expression that tends to escape the lesser performer and a concluding "Gigue" in which he showed · us just how a rousing Bach finale cag..be made even more rousing. Season's end, alas. but let us reflect that it has been a good one for this vigorous Harbor Area organization. May . this column. . go on record as wishing the group every suc- cess in its membership drive for 1973-74; it is richly deserv- ed. U.A. CITY CINEMAS LADIES DAY E\IEllY TUES. Sk (A LL LADll!S & SENIOll CITIZENS U :lO TO l :OD' Cinema .... (().!IT "VANISH ING l'OIHt" (PO) ......,.., OMI 611.l •A Ml1, ........ ~. , ... SllOW ITMn: ..... ,_.. ------------r.;;:.. SOU!H 1.11.·.·,1 I ~· Pl f,/(, I I wtONl$NY·RIDAl ·-~1-•A ENTERTAINMENT Dim Coined)' ·On Divorce Makes Debut By WILLIAM GLOVE R NEW YORK (AP) -A dim, futile comedy. about diovrce , "Nq Hard FeeHngs," opened Sunday night at Broadway's Martin Beck Theater. It stars Eddie Albert and Nanette Fabray, giving two or the least memorabl ..: performances of I o n g , honorable careers. Cons ider- ing the material they are burdened with, the t w o deserve medals at that for going on at all. The basic idea, about a mid- dle-aged spouse who decides to find a new blue heaven , has served a lot of writers better than Sqm Bobrlck and Ron Clark. The partners previously perpet rated "Norman, ls.That Reunited You ?", a quick fold. Thei r HOLLY\\'OOD (U PI ) hwnor and taste h as n 't "The Macintosh Man" will noticeably improved. reunite Paul Newman and Miss Fabr;ty gets The nod as John Huston, wh9 put it the straying spouse, · "'hile together for "The Life and Albert, in the plot's most dar-Times or Judge y Bean." ing switch from routine,.-----·-'=-.i..:=-----1 enacts a husband baffled by , abondonment. S i n c e the character envisioned by Bobrick·Clark and directed by Abe Burrows exudes all the charm of a bu11 moose af· nicted with paranoia. it never becomes clear why stoic.faced Miss Fabray hung around as lon g as she did. The object of her new af- fec tion is a young, green waiter, who fitfully enlivens the act.ion with a trombone solo. ••• "PLAY MISTY FOii ME" •. -.... -~·tt• STADIUM .. I .~:,, '-... .1..1utu;.t•11l.l;.;1.•~ -.. _.M"--"'., .. STADIUM ·2 .:t~ .. ..a:!.JH!tJ;. ' II'.:' .rr:• -,. .. ---·"· .. STADTUM •3 .~ "" . ' ·= .. ... ·~· .. -, .... ,. STADIUM ·I .::;, "" .a.:l.>l{t -ill~ TECHNI LOA~ PANAVI NOW SHOWING! "FIDDLER ON THE ROO "Qi a a.... Dey You Cai See "THE GETAWAY"•• "LADY SINGS THE BLUE • "THE POSEIDON ADVEl\ITUR PG "Fuzz·i. • IP,•ld '•llllu l Adv•rtlleme~ll ., OF LAGUNA BEACH SCHOOLS • • As educators, we are daily concerned with creating good du· cationcil environments. As parents, we are concerned tha ,our children receive quality education. As residents of La ' na Beach, we believe that the quality of our schools is an int ral .part of the quality of ~ur community. We are distresse by the dissension, rancor, and mismanagement forced on our schools by the present board majority. 0 We urge you to ·help stop this destruction of Loguna Beach School • VOTE APRIL 17th FOR BOYD, BROWNE, AND SA . R I Dr. Al .Ahumed.1, Jr .• Soci1I Science1, UC lrl'ine Dr, P1t1r·R~ .Atsett, l iolo9ic.11I Scientt;,-t.IG Irvine Dr. W illiem l1tche ld er, Soci1I Selene.et. UC Irvine Dr. He nry leek, Soci1I Sciencet, UC lrvlne Dr. Gr19ory Bettford, Phy1ic1, UC lrvi111 ltobert J . Bobrow. l"for1ttation end Computer Sci•qf•+ UC Irv ine Dr. Jchn Peul Boyd, Sociel Sclenc•t,,UC lrwine Dr. D•vid A. 8r11"t, Chemittty. UC lrwint Or. Ch•rles Bro••w, Kerckhoff Merina lib, Calif. lnttitut1 of Technolo,1Jy Or. John S1a ly Brown, Information aMd Comp11l1r Sc;11nc1, UC lrwin1 Dr. Th1o>dore Bn111nf't, Cl~s1ic1, UC lrJ'in1 Dr. Mich1el Burton, Soci1I Sciences, UC l,..ine Dr . F. Lynn C1rpe11t1r, Biot09icel Scie11ce1, UC lr .. in1 Dr. D. K. Ch1lm•r1, S11ci1l Sciences. UC Irvine Dr, Roneld H. Chileole, Politicel Scienc;e, UC Rlv•r1iJ• • Or. H•rry B, Coh•11, Sc.hool of Medicine, UC h Yin• Dr. Pel~r W . Culicovtr, Sociel Scienc•1, UC In-Int Dr. F. W. Cr.1mmh191, Phy~lc1, UC l iv1r1ld1 • Dr. Jemes N, O•n1!91r. Sociel Scien111, UC lrvi"' Dr. J1c.\: Dl99int, Hl1tory, UC ln-ine Or.·R•111 Fern•,,..11 Cotrip1teft.,• ¢11ltur-, UC In-int Eldon Folh, M.O., School of M1di~i11t, UC 1,..ln• Dr. Pet1r Fr1.,.,.tn, lnfo1m1tio11 11nd Computer Scienc1, UC !rvl11t Dr. Cynth~I Fr.ill•r';°'Efl91!1h, Celif. Stet• Uni ... , Full•rton Dr. Stephe11 Getb1r, E"fHth, C1lif. St•t• UP1iv .. Fulle t1011 Dr. Alex1n~er G•llty, E119Uth, UC lr.,i11• Chris "On Gl•1coe , Soc.let Sc.l1nce1, UC l,.,.lne Gordon G. Globu'-M,O., Sc.hool of MMlcl11t, UC lr•ine , Dr. Heery H.1mbur91r, Sotitl Sciences, UC 1twit• Or. G,eor911 H. Hunt, J r., B1olo9k.1l-Sc1111c11. UC lrvon Dr. Michael P. John1on, History, UC Irwin• Dr. Robert K. Josephson, l lolo9icel Science1, UC 1,wi Dr. Jerome Kirk, Soci1I Scienct1, UC Irvine Or. Thome1 Kl 1mm1r, En9li1h. Cetif. St•t• Univ., Full• " Rob1rl I. Kohut, M.D., Sehool of Medicin1. UC Irvine Dr. R. Duneen l uee, Soclel Scienc11, UC l1vit1• Dr. Richerd E. M1c Millen, Biolo9ic1I Science1, Dr . Marc Mandellcern, •Phy1ic;1, UC Irv ine Dr . D. Met191r, Soci1! Scienc11,'UC Irvine R•lph Michel1a11, Social Scie,,·c91, UC lrwi111 UC Ir e M•nietl Petti1on, M.0 ., School of Medicint, UC Irwin Or. M. Po1!1r, H islo,y. UC lr•it11 Willi1m H. llol•y. Jr .• Sociel Scienc.es, UC Irvin• Dr. Philip W. llu"d1l. l iologic;._I Sci•ncet, UC Irvine Dr. J ote ph Siwicki, English, Celif. State Uni ... , F11lle n Dr. E. T. Sc.hill, E"9li1h ind Cl.111ic1, '11t:' Irvine • Or. Gordon Shew, Phytlc1, UC Irwin• Arnold St1rr, M.D., School of Medicine, UC l1vin1 Ale• Sttpic.•, Soc.i.11 Scl1nce1, UC Irvine Jon Sto•11b1ry, M.F.A .• Art, C•lif. State Univ., Ful 11 Or. Oevict.N. Sudncw, So'cl1I Sc.l•nc••· UC Irvine Dr. Frid M. fo"9•, lnform11ion t nd Computer Scl1 , UC lrwinl Rou W1l•er, Politic.1\ Sc;enct, UC River.id• Or. John W1ll 1ce, G1.1du1te School of Admi11l11f11tl , UC Irvine Dr. Robert C. W1rn1r, l iologico.11 Sc.le11c11, UC lrvi Dr. W. C , w,.11, Soc.i.11 Scienc1l, UC lrvi"' Or. E.1rl J1m11 W111v1r, Americ1n Studjet, C1lif, Stele Uft <•., FuUerto11 DAIL V PILOT % PUBLIC NOTICE KP ·111 'ICTITIOUI I UlllllSS •AMI lfA1'1MIJriT ~lowlfll· P'tf'tf'I II OCllll tMlnu1 PUB LIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIC• INVITING aUK SCP' 117 Nolle• 11 h .. •llV lllVfll !Ml the lo.rd ol NOTIC E TO Ctll!DlTORS Trual•t1 of the Co.11 Community Col1191 SUP'EltlOR COUltT 0 ' TH I! Olstrltl 1)1 Or•na• County, het't!Mllw STAT!: 0' CAll,OtlNLA FOii: reft;rred lo 11 lhe "Owfttf". win l'k.&Ye THI COUNTY 0' O.ANOI! UQ lo, bur not la!w than 2~00 p.m., April. Ne . .f.."7!1'41 n. lt7' sealed bids IOf the aw1td ot t011• Esl1lt of LQJl:ENA E. 111,Jtll(S, Df<; .... trect for the tvtnlltll"I l l'ld ln1'111ellon el ed. ·•/ • IJl'ld11"11r0Ulld Oet1 Llnll. ' NOTICE I HEREBY GIVEN IO the Such l>ldl 1hlll be rKllYtd In ttw Dlllt t credllor1 ol the .-1bove ""med Olcedenl of the Dl•l•lcl 'Ul'(heflng Afltlt, 1"· "'- that 111 ,.r!IOl'l1 hiving cl1lms 1g•ln11 tM Allmlnl11ratlon Bu-lldlng, 1)1'0 Adi""' 11id cMc:tcknt 1.1• r1qv1rt..:1 to 1111 ltltm, Av~. CMI• Mew,· 0.-1noe County, wllh !llf necessary vouchers, In Ille olllc1 Cerlforrt11, encl "'811 be opwlld 8fld Of !hi clerk of lhl abovt en!llfrd court, puDlldy rt.Id •loud II the eboWI 1ta1N or to pre1.enr lhtm, wllll the n1<ts1arv time tn the lll)olrd lll:oom of tM vouct>ers, ~lo Ill• und8f1!11ned 11 ti. Admlnt1tf"1tton llulldfng. Schull1, Tr1.111 ·p11k1r, Sank of Amtrlc1, E1c11 bid mu1t conform •nd , tie Nallon•I Tru11 aiiir~lng1 As .ocl1llon, rttp0111lvr to thl• lnvlf1!1on, IM pllflt, tot Morlh Main strtt. Sanra An.1, !lfl«ff1c atlon1, end ell oflwr d0(-t1 C1lllornl1 '7101 which Is the t>IK• of comOl'llfflll lflt Ptrtlflrflt cont r 1 c I l!U1l11111 flf thl und1r1lgned In •I! mellt•1 doc:111Nnf1. Copl11 ol llHo Contrtcl peorr11Jnln11 to the 11lat1 or uld dKed911t, DO(um.,,11, era now on 1fllt 11nd OPlft Iv wilhln four month$ after 11\e ltr11 publlc .. oubllc ln1oecllon In rna 1eld Ottlc•• of the llori ol this nolice. Owner and may bt ol)l1lned b'I' deposltl1111 Oa!f'd Maren 1r. 1J13 SIS.OD tor each stt.ot· pl•n• end 1peclllc1· Benk of Amerlc• N1llon•1 tlon1. Thl1 dtPOfll will tie rllfvftded only II Trusl •rid Sevl1191 AltOcl•llon the 11t w .. 11 .,., r.turned con'llillelt: and Extculor In 9ood condlt1cin within !Ive dl '(t eller ol th• Wiii ol lht .1bov1 named the ll!d 09tfllll0. liKtdent A 50'"0 P1ymtnt Bond end 1 109'!!. KINDEL & AM OEll:SD N Perlorm1nct Bond will 111 rtqulrfd 01 !ht 102CI North llrNdw11, II•• ns Con!r•cror 11le<ttd. S1"1 1 Aft1, Calltornla ttm E1th bid 1hlll Ill! m1d1 out on Int Tel: (7141 s11.1m "For"' 1)1 Propoul" bound In 111c1'1111 of Allorn1 v tor •xacullt 1-t>ttlncallont. Publlsl)f'd Oren11r"•'C01$I Dally Piiot, Eich bid lhlll DI accomptnltd by t Marth n, 29. and AorU s, n, 1913 ,.alf.7J c..-lllltod or c11l'ller't check peyabl• to 1n1 - --------OWner, or 1atl1f1clory 81d llond In l1vor PUBLIC N01'JCE ot !he Owner, t~ullld bY lht blOder 11 prl11<lpel ,,. .. ·utrsl1ctory Jurtty com· ------~------lpany 11s 1uftly, In 1n •i\iount not l•1s • 4241'l lll•n ltn PWC*l'lt n~, OI !ht bid. Thi NOTICE TO Clll:•DITOll:S cllolck or bid borlOS ll'llU be 91...n .. .1 SUPl!RIDR COU ltT 0" THI 11uar11nl" lhtl ttle bidder Wiii 1Xk"'9 the 5TATll oc CALl"Olll:Ntl "Dtl Conlrtct If It bt IWll'ded to him 111 -• THli CO MTY 01' 0111:.t.Nql formlty wtth "'41 ConlrlCt Dot~ lftd I No. A J.. 75'11 wlH pr<Nldl the 1urtly bond or ~s E·1111 of WE.NOELL M. JONES, RIMI IPKllled 11'11rlln within Mn dl'l't eltt r known tt WENDELL MANSUR JOMES notlllc1t1on of ttle 1w1n:I Gf the.contrecr Ind WENDELL JONES, OKta!led. . to 11'11 blOdtr. . I NOTICE'" IS HEltellY GIVEN lo the WAGli 11:.t.TliS: cr1dltor1 ol 1he ebow nem.cl dKtdtnl Pur1u1n1 to 1111 Labor Cad• DI !(It !lt!a thal 1111 119r1oon1 haying cl1lm1 1g1!n1t 11111 of C11Ulornla, South1rn Celllorfl.f1·Bulldl!l'll said Oectd1nt are reciulrllll to f!lt lhlm, lrid Con1tructlon Tred11 Co u n c 11 s, with tile neocnwry vouclHlrs, 111 thl olllc• fl ulldlng end Con1tr11Cl1on Trld11 Council 1)1 the clerk 1)1 Ille 1boYe tn1111ed court, Of" of Dr•"ll• Cwnty , !ht ••Id aoerd ol lo prttent ll>tm, with 11\t ntee1111ry Tr<nlHI his esr;erte!ned tftt v-n«tl ~oochert. to tht u~r1lgned 1 t prl'llllllng r•t• of PW dl•m wag11 !or Ao~rt1on, HOW!;tr & G~rlal'ld, Allornty1 NCl'I cr11t or type of wor-men flftdfd to \t L1w, •lolO Cemout Orlve, P.O. Box e~ecute !he coiltr•tt which wll1 br 1w1rd• 21C7, NtWl>Orl Be<'l(h, (1lllornl1, wtllch 11 td "'-tUCCM9lul biddar, and lhMt Ille !)lace ot 1lu1lries1 of the undl!l"tlgned In Preveltl"ll rein ert '°"lllflld In ''Id atr rn•t11r1 pertelnl"ll 10 me 111at1 of1ald -1nc1llon1 edoplfd by !ht Bo.rd • .1nd dectden! within four monrtu .11!1r tti.e 1r• II Hslld brlow: • llrst oOllllc1tlon of lhl1 notke. Any cl11f!llcet1on not enllcl~ttd end Dated Merch ''' IP13. , brlow !11tfd s.1!111 llt Ptld .It Ille cur rent SOUTHEll:N CALIFORNIA w1191 r1!111 for the eppUc11ll1 !rid• 1!>0 l=l ll:ST NATIONAL llAMI( de11Hlc11llon In eUtct wllh tht ebow llv Ch1r!es O. Conwey, tl~lt(I Tr10e1 Counc1,l1. If enY r1t11 llstld Vice Pre110tnt below ••• not curr1!flt or ..,,, r11Ylwd by ELllEATA M. JONE'S, lellor epr-ta dvrl!IG the bidding Hmt Co-E•tculors ol ttlt Wiii ol or con11ruc!Lon time, well r1"11lon1 :lt\111 th• AbOYe n111'1'11d dletdtfll Ill con1lcltrld 11 part of tl\t boriow ll1tfd llOll!llTSOM, HOWl l ll: & GAllLAHD; relt1. Any hHll!I, wllfere, vecellon, pro- l:Hfl C1rnpu1 Drlv1, motion or other bene/111 ltltll bl In 10- ,,0 , lo• ne7. dllfon to 11\t 1M6ow ll11ed w~ tc:lle,. N1WPOrt ••Id!, Cellftintle Al)Jlrflltlces 111111 , be tfl'lpt(/~ lt1 con· Ttl1t1"°"': Ml).S.0 formlty with Stcl$on 1m.s of 11\t Altomtyl tor C•l!•Klllfrl c.1111ornl1 L•bor Codt. l'ullllthtd 0r81191~ c oe1t Dflly p11111 _ Afltntlon 11 dlr~ to Ille provl•l-er Mtrch :n, 29 111\d Aprll !, 12, lt 13 , 131·73 LtbOr COd• St<tlon 1m.s concwnlno ' 1m11h>ym1nt of apprflllfCff. II reQillrts PUBLIC NOTICE contr1ctor1 or 1u11eon1t1<:tort ~t111-tredtlma11 In any •POftr1rknhip · oc:-----------I ci.;patfOfl to 11ppty to 11'11 •~k1ble loln• I 5'7'f •PCM"ent!W1hlp comml"" fOf' • u-•llfktl• NDTICl 01' Tll:USTll'S SALi ol epl val and lblnt lht rtlle of •P· No. A·l1J•N CAll:TER orent! lo I010rneym"" VMd on ""' con· Ot1 Thur!od11y. April 1', 1t13. 11 11 :00 tr1c1. ontrec'OI' ,..., tie requlrtd ro o'cloc~ A,M .. 111 the fllfranc, to Ille par-· m••' contributions to ,,.....ntkes.l!(p oro- lno 101 ol n 1 S. Brookhurst SI., Anallrlm 11r1m1. Contrl(:lor tnd 11ibton1tec10" Ctlllornl•. S•ld fntrenca t1 1oc1ted 50 tell s.11111 .1lw comply wim S.Ctl1111 lmA 111 Soulh o! lht Aames "°""' L0<111 Co Ille empl<Nmtnt of epprenllces. "°" lt1· !MIF"ffi.nent !Wo ~led 11111 llei11. Cit~ ol torm11t1on •el•llYoe 10 1pprtnllchhl1 1t"'· An•~etm, Callforn!11, 04.. YMPIC IN· dnro1. con11e1 Olrtdor of 1ndu1trl11 VESTMENT CO., a C11lllorn!1 Corporn· ll:tl11!1on1, S•n Frandi.co. C.11flornl•, or Ucn. 111 Tryst" under IM de~ of lflul Olvlr;lon ot Aoprtnl!ce11'11p Standir111 midi! by DOUGLAS G!LllERT (All.TEA, bf1nch '111lctl .• t 1l1111!e "''n and rKordoed Jenu••v •~. Ovotrllmt sft.1111 be paid tor -k 191'2, I~ Booll fffi, Pfll't •s. ol Olllclal Pt!•lor~ I" e•cel' qi lhl reguler d1y'1 AKorOI of O•a• County. C•HtornllJ WQrlt llr><I 11t 11\t r••• IO< OVtr!lmt of IM 9lv•" lo HCure an lndebtednoU In ltYOI" crtlt lt1Y01ved, of 11.0BEAT B. BIGGS .Ind MO~A o. HolldlYl 1hlll 1>1 t U hOlld•Vt l'ICCIOfllled 91GGS . hutbllnd find wl!t 11 folt1t tfl111nU In !ht co!lt<tlv• blrt1ln!"1 61il'Ml'l'ltfll 1W rrtMll'I of ll>t brtech of ctrl1ln Obllu•· ~PPll<lb«I to !ht ci.rtlc11l1r c•1lt, llon1 t1eured lllar'°1. notice ot ""'lcrl w1s deuU\c1tlon or tyoe of -i..m"" rtcoroed Oecemw 21 . 1t n . In Bc.ok emllfO\'ld 1111 111t P'O(Kt. IOC, P1ge 517, of seld Olflc l•I lltetrds. ti shall bt ll\llldlltory ttpon !'-C°"" wlU sell at l)Ut)llc 10Ktlon to ttw l\lilhtll tr.1ctor 10 wllom 1 corotrect 11 1w1tttd 111d<ler for c111h, P•Ylblr 111 l.1wtul money end upon •11 1ubConlrector1 ulldtr him, to ol 1111 Unit!'(! St•tu •t !he tlmt of 1•11. PIY not 1u1 Ill.In ukl o-•• Pl'llY•lllno without w1rr1n1y 11 to 11111. f)OIHlllon or rltH of PM' dlfl1'1 -aa1 to Ill _.'°""' enc11mbr1ncn. 1111 lnt1r11t con~ to ~ '" the n KVl/on ol ll)ot C011tre~1. ,tlnd 1'11W l\tld by .. Id Trust .. \lflder .. Id "-" rift Dttd of Tru1t, In •1111 to 1111! IG!lowlno &l..ICT•ICLAMS: dtKrlllld prooerty, to-w11: ~1t '"°"""n Lot •• 910(k F ot T•ICI No. m a1 per Fort!Nn llWIP recorded In IOO!t I•, 1119e I ot SOllrld Ttchnlcl1n Mbctl11neow. M1p1, rteoo'dl ot .. 111 LASOlt.1111:11 111. .. 10.,1 '" covnty, L.1bortr1. ~ner.11 or COMlrll(t!irl S.14S Coonrnonlv knuwn •I: 1~ S. Ptrton 11011 Sll"ttl, S1n1a Ane, CA '7191, .Thi Dwnff rrll!'Vtl Ille IWl""tOt ot ,.,. tor lllt po,irpose of p1yl1111 obllOtllOI'" ,«"no eny end r;U bld1 0< fo w11IYe 111~ tt<UrMI b'f' wld o..11 lncl udh'll fMI, lr~ut1,11111 or lntormtl1tlu ln 1o11y b~ ch••9fS Ind 1apen141 OI '"' Trullff ·~ "'In 11\t llldOtng. Tiie Cont,aclor n'llY not of w11, wllNlrlW hit !lid !OT • oertod of 4S dty1 Oii~! March 1\, lt ll fOUow1119 11\t dflt DI OlleflJ"'t DI~. Dr. ler .. 1re Go~. Cl11tlc1. UC trvl111 D•vid Welntltin, Soc.i,I Scienc .. 1, UC 1,.,;,, OlYMPIC INVESTMENT CO., tOAllt.D Of' T"USTEE' •~ T"•11111• C°"ST COMMUNtlY Dr. P•11I E. &old, l iolo9ic.el Sciencai, UC lf.,ine · Don Wilbetf. M.D., Sc.hoel of M•dlc.l11e, UC IV• '71 S. 81'«'1<.llurtt St., COl.L!Gl OISTIUCT. I '0 IOI! 111• Orange Coull!\" A lc.e Goldm1n, l iocheml1try. UC lr .. in• Ot. D1wld Wi11011. Cl11tlct. UC l1.,i111 A11111alm. CA ~' Cotte MtNI. c1111ar1111 Or. ~ • ., Goldm1n, Ptyc.hology, UC ltiw•r1ide Dr. 0.1rl1t Wrl9hl. E119llth, UC ltvl"t ;~1 ~!!;b:";4':CHeallll:. ~':i:~."o.~ =~~ .... Or. $tie~ Gr111tt•, t;ol~lc.11 Sc.l111c.11, UC 1,.,.1111 Dr, Jo~11 Y•llott, See.ii i Scl•l'lc11, UC l,...i111 .Au•1ttnt "9C"''"' OMll: APl'H n . lt7l • 11• •• ,.. 'l.lbll$Nd 0rll'9' (Mt! 0.111'1' Piiot, "llflll"*9 0.-•• c..ttf DllfW> !'1"lOJ.r ........................... l''~--10!0• ...... _ ... _ .... ___ ,_ .. _._ .. __ .. _ ... _ •• -.. •.M ____ .. _, •••• ".'·'·'·'"-''·"'-'N-Oo'o""'-'..; .... ;..'.'.";..'".·.·.--~-H0,0e>0•0..,.._ __ .. _._ .. _,_. ____ °'_"+·""'-'.·.'.' __ .. ,M•r(ll 1l 11nd AflO'll S. 13, 1'7) ., 11 .urll S. IL ltl'l 191-n IATUIOAl • TUllDAY 0Mt1tt!IWAT I ' I I ' - • , \ .. ) . - Tl'lundlJ, Apt11 12, 1•7J TONIGHT'S ~peelal ~-··~ 'Haun ' ·est' Airs • AllW Al Nhjlit KHOf..FM Rod Ito• .... ........ l ~ • ., 1, It _, lnlerrupt the~ wooder!Ul blok about his l'l~IP!"I polter game. · / travell In f& United States KHJ a 7:30 -" g Dayls Journer, Into Night." The 1962 mo ersion of Eugene O Neill's grea~ est dram.11>"'1 h Katherine Hepburn, Jason Robards Jr. ~1>eari Sloe~!. There's a great NoUonal "You \lc!ll't ~ h II'"' a before World" W11 II. . . buckaroo~t01fie," drawls one "1be Haunted West-" Js a CBS I) 8:00 -The Haunted West. This Nation· al Geographic special ••"'-an area known as the lntermountaln West from Uleh into the Cali· fornla desert and traces the lives of cowboys, In- dians and prospectors who cling to the Old" West .traditions. 1Geographtc speoal com.in~ up man~ I. program you Should watch. lt toolght on ~ CBS Telell11i"!'~"Wbo's th<!"' best cheJlter in should prove a rewarding hollr network. 11 s call~ the house'" Sbephenl grins both vloually and emollo..Uy. KCET f1!I 8:00 -"Hamlet." Nicol Williamson's acclaimed performance as the prince of Denmark is the first in a· S.ries of films spotlighting "the face of humani~y.11 NBC D 9:00 -Ironsid<!. Romance comes to Of·. ficer Fran Belding in an unlikely setting -a mur- )ler investigation -when Ironside receives home ifiovle films of two killingS:-With Joe Don . Baker. ABC 0 11:30 ·-Wide World of En.lertalnment. . To~ght's movie is "Possession," a thriller about newlyweds who move into an old house in the Eng- lish t"Ountryside previously owned by a woman who disappeared witholfil...a trace 20 years earlier. ~ . .....;;...:.: .;4;: " ' ·TV DAILY . LOG \~ -J. ) • ,. DAILY P ILOT St.tf Piiot. 'Have a D~ghnut' · Grace Shaw offers some pastry Ito David Anderson as his bored wife, •rere Dillingham watches in a scene from "Middle of the Night," giving closing: performances Friday and Saturday at the ]iunting- ton Beach Playhouse. Ha~~ West.':,..k1>ad Utle, "None ~f your 'buslnes~," ...... but its tbe ooly bad part of growls a prone (orm in a the ,show. . bunk. • It ica~anUy photograph-Things move briskly to tbc ed, well-wnltep, weQ~ted process ol getting Shepherd a essay m the old waya of life horae, which he bas to break ·that endure m remote ateu ~f himseU, and the tattle drive tbe modern We'st. And it does. and end-of-the-drive uproar in its job with e.are and res~t. the small town of McDermitt, It doesn't dwe l l on Nev.--·-......;,,;..__..___ 0 progress'' or t b e en· Then comes the SIJl!!!_ towil croaclmjents of the. 20th i:en-rodeo, where be plunl<S down tury. It does-locus on lhe in. $75 loi: the privilege of·dciing dependCnt spirit of tbe West about the same things he's and shows that it's still there been doing the past four if you know where to look ror months at wages of $250 a it. month. The look taken on lhis show covers four basic areas -the ' life of th~ ·cowpoke, the lifF .of a small highway town, the religious life of the Yaqui In: dians in Arizona and the lives of miners who work for themselves or large com· p~nies or both. THERE'S AN agonizing ~ quence ,.... run .in slow-motion -in which he and a bUcking bronc part ways, but not before his foot gets caught in a stirnlp and he takes a Pound· ing that puts. him in· the hospital for a week. It's a fme study and nicely catches both the . .misery and humor that make up the life of IDft • • llt •DI ua185 1M1 IOI lltOMt 00 ar "t!UIE 'Ill UI M •• THE m.w or IT WllM !WltAtS Ill UOUMO WI MOT OllLI OM SCIEI N, IUI ~NIACS IN AUDIENCE! ' 'Ging erbread Lady' Cast Set for M~sa ln my opinion, the best seg- ment is the one on the ~wboy life, typified by that of Bruce Shepherd -a friendly, cb&nky man in his late twenties who signs on with the 12-man crew or a large cattle ranch near Paradise Valley in northern Nevada. a cheerful, rugged man whose only concession to modern 1 times is a wristwatch. Thursday Eveni,Qg APRIL 12 1:00 8 DD Ill l?ll llil a> -rno -a lo111u 1 "The Oute1sts" CiJ "' ..... OTIM Anapn of Nicol Wi11i1mso11's tcd1imed per· fotmance as th• prince of Denmark is llrst in this series ol films spot· li1htin1 "ttle f1ce of humanity," Th1 fllm also , features p6p music stir Mll11nne falttlf\111. €fil t.plllu The Costa Mesa C i v i c resident d i r e c to r Pati a:l EJ Shn de Joi flons Playhouse is in rehearsal for Tambellini enacting the lfl Mov1t the Orange County premiere leading role of the singer. l:30 m Mil'f Criffill »low of Neil Simon's only serious Barbara Van Holt and a:lffowll play, "The Gingerbread Robert Engman are cast as Lady," which opens April 27 the singer's two friends, with !:00 II (I) "s T\unday McMt: tel for a three·weekend run. THE CAMERA is rolling when he's introduced to the boys in the bunkhOuse, ·and they know it. But all they do is slightly exaggerate that fine· honed sense or deadpan humor and newcomer's. "welcome" that still characteriz"es certain areas or. the West. The other segments are almost as good, particularly the one on . tbe lives of "boomers," the tramp miners who still knock about the West trying to eke out livings from one-man mining operations. 'I1te entire show has a good feeling to it: it's the same kind of feeling about the West that the late Ernie Pyle cai;r tured in "Home Country," a m ~ Fllntstonn -, Q)ltlrTn k (211" "How te Save 1 Mll'fflit Sheri Henderln playing her Marthella.t,ndall is dircc-t d ht K I arid Rufn Your Lii•" (Qlm) '68 -es range ug er. ar Dean Martin, Stella Stevtns, A ting the sto of an alcoliolic , .. Nick" Adams and Ron bachelor tries to encoura11 ftls un· singer attempling to set her Aguilera complete the "cast in h•pplly married friend to •nd tlfs life in ord~r, with playhouse ·minor roles. "Well, boys," delcares the NATIONAL GE NERAL fl) Ml Dulce Entmor.U m lfoda•podrt Loda• Ef) Thrtt Stoop1 grizzled old veteran who runs TH~ATRES the ranch cre\V, "we got us al'----....:.------ rtl1tfortship with his mistress. · Perforn1ances or · 'The 0 aJ m ltonsldl "Camera • • • Gingerbread Lady" wiU be l :JO Cil H1pn'1 H1ra11 new buckaroo .. tiere today." D MIW!t: (C) <90> ''Tltt cr111 u· aouri ••lcl" (wn) '51 -Wendell Corey, M1cdon1ld Clrey, Ulen Drew. (j) CIS Jhwt Willer Ctonkil1 "'"' · · · ""',.. IR) '""'"' Richar d Cited gi"n Friday and Saturday comes to Officer Fran Beldln1 In •• Novel Bought unlikely settina-1 murder il!Yesti-evenings, April Z?-28, May ~ @j Mtrt CrttrlR Dow 111i0it--when Chief Ironside ,., l{OLLYWOOD (UPI) 4·5 and 11-12 at the Com- ceives home·fllOVie films ot hill Pomona College has DestOwed munity Center auditorium on HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -mWy Ortfl"' m Sdltltt Wltlltutflilln (R} a;,.-. .. C.1111 Slllw Iii)-• li11if)fr. Joe Don eaur ii.res ls. . an.Honorary Doctorate of Fine th e 0 r a n g e Co u n t y Richard Zanuck and David fJ (])CI! m 111.' f I "'Tht Fairgrounds. A d v an c e Brown, in association with Arts on Richard Chamberlain · ob · ed u · I p ·ct h Stone .. In a western town which reservations may be ta1n n1versa 1 ures , a. v e setms to have a:one mad with Yio-who atteilded classes there by calling the Costa Mesa bought movie rights to Clive fence ind in1ri1ue, Celne receives before becoming ' ' Dr. Recreation Department during Egleton's novel "Seven Days (!) Tll1 Ft1nk Pltflt l!J l.iWt lucals an unusu1I offer from three inn~ Kildare'' on television. the day at 834-5300. to a Killing." cen~ looking children: they w•nl 1--..,c---------------------------'--------7"11 111 CIJ D llll •m 0 lowli11& IOf Dollan CI! Trvttl If CoMtqutncu ([) A..OC.t Mftll\1.111 O Wlllt'• My Line?. m I Lon Lucy fE I Dr11m of Jeannlt EE Slmpltr111ttl• M1rl1 fD T'al Chi Cll'u1n-Uerclses @!I fll unece . ml Tele·lttvbtl Musical m U.11' Club l!l...,.•~r lo pay him $4.08 to kill someone._ EE Nino fPJ El Show de Alei•lldro Su1rtz 1:30 O The H•PPJ' Wanderers Slim and Henrietta Barnard visit Tetop1 Hot Springs. ONews i[I Mucllldl• ltlli1n1 al) Luthi Libr• 11:15 @[] Cinema 34 • 11:30f)(j)CllS latt Movie: {C) "'Met 1:00 ol !ht fiflrtillr ladf" (dr1)-Van II Old west lives in a Johnson, Walter Pld1!on. *·NATIONAL GEOGRAP,HI C 0 ®l!DJohn,,c.~,·· SPECIAL: 0 TM"""" -uThe Haunted West" 0 @@ al Widt World af h · tertalnment "Possession" A thriller B 00 1 SJICIA' 1 Natlonat Ceo-1 1bollt a newly·mArried couplo wllo 1r1phlc "The Haunted West" In 1n e•plorit1on·of 1iraie1 known as the move into an old flouse in th• En· lnt1rrnoi.rnt1in West, th• 1rid waste· 1lish countryside, previously tiWned land thal strelches from Utih ln!o by 1 woman who disappeared wlUI· . . out a trace 20 rears ••rller • th1 ·C1l1forn11 desert, the special m To Tell lh Tnrth • delves in!o lhe lives of cowboys, e bucbrooa, Yaqui lndlalls and PIOS· 12:00 m Allred Hitchcock PrtHnts Petton who han1 on to lhe t11dl· G1l> Millie Reese Sllow tlons lhll built the Old Wes!. 12·30 g Nfws 0 im m ~lip Wi1Ml.n Show (R) ' m Movie: NS11ttery'1 Hurrka111"' Frank ~rsh1•, Join Rivers and The (dra ) '-4!}-$1ichanl Widmirlc:, Ver· Templabons 1uesl. onica Lake Und1 Darnell o rn rn m "" """ .. ,,, " m 1111 c.-.., · th• Beholdtr'' (R) Pete's allempt to uve a fur thief lrom f1Uin1 to his 1:00 (]) 0 0 Ci) Mews -tatll f1Jl1 but he Is blamed by the 1:30 fJ Mm «c:tuOk't: brottler for pushin1 him. Utnet M1r,olin. Bmrty G1rt1nd alld Richard Rull 1ual. mttot .. ··- •-'"" tllt °""'" • -·-Cor•i• • IOIT H••ldn fll111 ftn1111 "Hllllet" (2a,ihr) Th• TV premitrt 1:-45 B Movlt: "hek lslafld Trait" {wtS) '49 -fems! TLICket, Adell M1r1 Adr;.n Booth. ' 2:30 m All·Nl(bt SMw: "'Dlfltt'• tn- ftnlO," (C) "lt)ollMI ......,. .. 3:10 O """' ......., roll" (lom) •so -Rory Ca!boun, .lint Nfah. JE'RY ORllACH. lUGH lAYlO' YOUNG . "THE GANG THAT COULDN'T SHOOT STU tGNT" IN HARBOR SHO~NG CENT£R . . .. .. •••• • •• (G) .. ;:~-:.·9•lt,O••:;•t·~·,:; · · •• • co•••"""" • ..... 0•1•0 ..... "U·•llnll • H\INUNtl~n .. fll•t";M NOW TOGITHlll McQUE EN/MacGRAW THEGFrAW/W tlt'lft."'411W'!MJ-"'"""--"' Mll-•Ol.ln'llOI ll!ll•-ta rt.u'. 11s1 Amrss INll :cHANA ·lOSS. DANA i:ios.s IE• ~ ~ . "C0.001£,' ~ ~ • INDS THUii APIA 12 "SOUNDll"c1cet:V AND T't'.$0H •. EXCLUSIVE OIAMGICO.INGAGlMINT WED.·THU•S ... J'ltl. ,,JO. l:lO. 10:)0 Al IOIH - 2H H.,,... Hft · .. e1ir•:p)1r We 'DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM THE. DEAD" lotli-IPGI .. I SHOWll!IG ONLY FRl:-THE 13TH AT MI DNI GHT LL SEATS ONLY $1. IN BOTH THEATRES EDWA R DS Cl\fl1\I f\Tfll HJ\~~I I .\ • A[,,t.~' 0','f, V! I.. I ~' BILLY JAC Llr>t.Ollt Awe• we•I ol Knot! 527-2223 S nt. An• r•••••Y M•r Ch1pm111Aw1. 5SJ.7122" fJDDllR ON THI IQQr IGJ MOILfLOPlll •Vif,, .... lt MClllll ., • . .. ~ • ' • ' •• ' ! > 1 • • • .. • • • ' • I ! I i ' • I • • ( ' • ' I \• OCC Finale ' S-pl endid Show ' Flute..J!arp and viola make an unusu81"1Nt tremendously effective combination ~it is only necessary to point to the.. renowned Orpheus Trio In sup- port ol that conclusion. minor. a fla"'•lessly delivered work that gave the evening's program a superb sendolf. Mi ss Robison's fiute undoubtedly dominated the 'work s I n<: e that scored this thOOgbtful, In- credibly gracerul offering. But the --o~r instrumenls have their moment of glory, 1nost notably in the spritely vivact' that seems to divide the work and in the stately allegro that prov.ides a tri\llDpt)ant climax. Theirs i! a -distinguished musica l mix that takes on even greater luster in a cham- ber environment and it ·very obviously delighted a Harbor Area Community Concerts As.sociation audierfce Monday night in the Orange Coast College auditorium. • 1be Orpheus players pro- vi ded a splendid fin ale to th~ association's season in a pro- gram that was equally geared to demonstrating the solo sJtills of this girted 1h'reesome :.· flautist Paula Robison, h~rpi st Heidi Lchwaldcr and Scott Nickrenz, viola. BUT, FOR' AU.. that in- dividual artistry. it was the combined talents. or these three artists that gave us, from this critic's seat, the most memorable offerin g of a fa sc in ating program : Nickrenz_' and Miss ,L.ehwalder took over ·the SJf>llight for solo offerings that, to this critic, were welcome revivals of a negleeted Bach work and .the reappearance of y,•l)at must be the ideal harp otf e rin g : Salzedo's rippling , poignant "Scintillstion. '' IT WAS A tremendously ex- pressive performance by this charming artist and one which may serve to restore this gracious 'vork· to the pedestal it occupied in an earlier cen- tury. Telemann's Trio Sonata ~n C· If Nickreni had a high point in an evenirig during which his viola made a sterling con- tribution it was during the · Bach Suite in D minor that provided his solo contribution. SOLID SURFING ! "EXPRESSION SESSION II" Plus Those 11.rmy l•rtoo1t1 Of TN 30'1 P'et'fllmf!OllC.H };JQ & 9:30 ~~--- ' • '3.459 Via !.!do N~l"P<H' lie.ch ~· 613·13!>0 ENDS TONIGHT ~/~ c~N.~~J A UNIVERSAL P1CMIE !P,!11 T!CHNICOlefl' • PANAVISIOH' ''.~ . £1\1 Ill IARll aA.· STREISAND "UP THE SANDBOX" SJA,lTS FllDAY ROIElT REDFORD "JEREMIAH JOHNSON" ~Also .IPGI CLINT EASTWOOD "J9E KIDD" His bow work was flawless but two movements i n particular· caught this critic's ear.: the 0 Sarabande" in which our artist employed the flex- ibi1ity of expression !hat tends to escape the lesser performer and ·a concluding .. 'Gigue" in which be showed is just how a rousing Bach fina le can tie made even more rousing. Season~ end. alas. but let us reflect that il has been a good one £or th~· vigorous Harbor Arca org . May this column on record as wishing the group every suc- cess in its membership drive for 1973-74: it is richly deserv- ed. lnl WNkl 2 Acadomr A••nhl .... Otne H1dcm111-Slltlley Wlnlet'I -- "POSEIDON OOVENTUllE " CPGl Color c111rllon H••ltn ''SKYJ ACKEO" CPGI Color ~::;rn UA South • D•ltY 6::IO o.m. A1111t S1nc:rolt SlnMn W1rd "YOU NO WINSTON " ~111 llloss ,t,1 1111111 HolkllY "LADY SINGS THE llLUE.S" "11 ... S1ll1n J1A11111 Pflll'J "WHE.llE ,., .. $1111 aHol. 1:» p.m. l'redl PIYM "IOOK OF NUMIERS" ""'" Clt1om1 .... • • ~·~ R1wr l r111a11 • Acldomy Aw1r4 Wlnn1rl "TH! CANDIDATE " letlt In Colort (PG) DOES IT HUllT?N S1v19e t "SOLDIER SLUE" llflll Ill Color! Bolh In Ctlor1 "' ~.\ISE iiilieiii• M~I,. I AllCMllU I EXIT GG •t.A J•WY iD·llJI D ,j y Wl11111r llf I AcldMny • AWlnlS! IRll AttrHS Liu Mlnn10il . Jool Groy "C,t,l ,t,RET" "!"LAY IT ,t,GAIN,, SAM" Ont of 1111 Yoor'i llHI l"hU Ck•IJ' Ty,..._,.1ul Wlnfltld' "SOUHDIElll" 101 Col1r A "ILISS THIE llE,t,STS" V 1"0 1 0 •• Sttve Mce:tvftn ,t,ti MlcOrft "Tl4E OETAW,t,Y (,.01 Ctlor L" M1,.,ln "MONTE W,t,LSl4 " Soi.Mt of Qfrtter!Oron ,.rtlfY, w.tmlmt" • 5J4.Gl2: . .,,.., "VAHISIONG l'OINT" (l'G) ...... 0'8!6111 •.A Slf, I M. °"9 Ml PA 9'ICIWSUlfSttllfA Wt:DNIMIAY • JlllDl,Y -......_lliMPA iATUIDA't' • 1VDDAf °"" 11111 ... , Auditions S ln wd For J_rvine , PG.T • ENTERTAINMENT Dim Corned)' On Divorce Makes DelJut By WILLIAM GLOVER NEW YORK (AP ) -A dim, fu tile comedy about diovrce, "No Hard Feelings," opened Sunday night at Broadway's Mar~irJ Beck Theater. It stars Eddie Albert and Nanette Fabray, giving two or the least memorable performances or I o n g , honorable careers .. _ Consider- ing the material they are burdened with, lhe t w o deserve medals at that for going on at all. The ba sic idea, about a mid- dle-aged spouse who decides to find a new blue heaven, has served a lot or writers better tha n Sam Bobrick and Jton Clark. The partners previously perpetrated "Norman, ls That Audi_tions for ti\(! lr\•ine Comihunity Theater's la st pro- ducUon of the season and Pac~ic Group Theater's fourth acting workshoi> will be held next week . officials of the l\l'O theater groups b a v c ao- nounc..-ed. ( CA.LLBOA.RD) Reunited You?", a quick fold. Their HOLLY\\'000 t UPI) humor and taste h a.s n 't "The Macintosh Man" will noticeably improved. reunite Paul Newman and Miss Fabray gets the nod as John Huston , who put it the straying spouse, while together for "The Life and Albert, in the plot's most dar-Times of J udge Roy Bean." ing switch from routine, ,--------------1 enacts a husband baffled by abondonment . Si .n c e the character envisioned by Bobrick-Clark and directed by Abe Burrows exudes all the charm or a bull moose a!- Oicted with paranoia. it never becoJnei clear why stoic-faced Miss Fabray hung around as long as ·she did . The object of her new af- fection is a young, green waiter, who fitfully enlivens the action with a trombone solo. plus "PL.l.Y MISTY FOlll MEH TECHNICOLOR~ PANAVIS ION "' . c--·---.-~O••-c•-~ .c:-, olg] -... I'. ·-·l'Y•E• STADIUM · I ."" t.. Allt!Rl..:1~11.1..!;l'.:.O -,._.c.'>_•_Jl>.IJ1o STADIUM ·2 .~ ... ,.ll-'111:1.lllU'" '.!" .. "BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE"••. "Bob & C'.tol & Ted & Alice"• "FIDDLER ON THE RDOF"o "Cli a 0-O!y You Qn See For.Ya'o "THE GETAWAY" . •• "LADY SINGS TH E 0 BLUES"o - ..... !\"•-,. .... _, STADIUM ·I .'::. ... ~ U.'lL!Lll! =- "THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE"•• "FUZZ''l,.G l"lld "•llllul AGv1rlls1me111l ' STOP DESTRUCTION - -,_ OF '· LAGUNA BEACH SCHOOLS As educators, we are daily concerned with creating 9ood edu· cational environments. As parents, we are concerned that 9 ur children receive quality education. As residents of LaC)Una Beach, we believe that the quality o.f our schools is an integral part of the quality of our community. We are distress~~ by the dissension, rancor, and mismanagement forced on our schools by the present·· board majority. We ., u'rge you to ·help stop this destruction of Laguna Beach Schools VOTE APRIL 17th FOR BOYD, BROWNE, AND S~GAR Or. Al Ahu1111d1, Jr., Soci•I Scio"c11, UC.lrYino Dr. P1tor R. Att1tt, Biolo9ic1I Sci•11c:•1, UC Irvine Or. W illi1m Bitch.Ider, Spc:i1l Scienc•1, UC lrvint Or. Henry Biele, Socitl S~ionces. UC Irvine Or. Grogory. Benford, Phytics, UC Irvin• Rob•rt 'u. lobrow, lnl11rm1t i11n •nd Computer Sci1nc1, UC trvi nt Or. J ohn Ptul Boyd, Socitl Scienc•1, UC Irvin• Or. 01vi d A. 8 •4<1!, Chomi1try, UC Irvine I. Or. ChAr lo1 8rok1w, IC1rckhoff M1rjne l ib, C•lif. !.n1tilute of T1tht'lolo9y Or. John S11ly 8rpwn, lnform1tiof1 1<1d Comp11!1r :'; Science, UC ~r,wine _ Or. Th,odort Brunnf'r, Cl1s1ic1, UC Irvine Or.)!lich1•I l urlo<1'. Socltl Sel1t1ces, UC lrwint Or. F. ly1111 C1rpo11tor, 8iol09ic:1I Sci111c1s, UC lrv1110 Or. 0 . K. C h1lm•r1, Soc:i1I Sci.11c•1. UC lr.,ino Or, Ron1ld H. Chllcot1, Politic:.11 Sele ne•, UC Rlvtttidt Or, H1rry 8, Cohen, School of Modicino, tJc Ir.Jn• Or. P~l•r W . Culic:.ovor, Socl•I Sel1nc1s, UC t,.,ino Dr, F, W . Cummin11, Phy1;c;1, UC Riw•r1ido 0,.. J•m•I N, D1nl19or, Soc:l 1t Sci•11co1, UC Irvine Dr. J•c:li: Di99ln1, History, UC 1,.,1110 Dr. fl.1111 Forn11'Hf11, Col\p•r1ti.wo Cultur1, UC \,.,in• Eldon Folt1, M.0., Sc.hool of M.dlel11•, UC 1,.,1110 Dr. P• .. r )rHm•n, l11form•tlo11 ind Computer Seio11co, UC Irvine Or. Cv~• Fuller, E:11oll1h, C•lif. St1to U11iw., Full•rton Dr. S11ph111 G 11b1r: Entlfth, C11if. St1to Uni.,., f 11U1rton Or. Aln•11~or Gilley, El'lgllth, UC lr.,ino Chri1 vo11 Gl11c:.oo, Soc:;•! Scill'lt••• UC l"ino Gotdon G. Globu1, M.O., School o f M•d icl11•, UC Irwin• Dr. l•tbore Gokt, Cl111lc1, UC 1,.,1110 Dr . P111I [.Sold, 1 ;olo9ic1I Sci1<1co1, UC Irwin• Alic1 Gol4ma11, l loch1mi1try, UC lr .. 111• 0 1. Roy 6oldll'l1n, P1vc.holo9v. UC Ri.,1r1iclo Or. $111 A, $r1119er, l iol09ic.1 I Sc;111c:11, UC 1,...11,. Or. H•nry H1mbur91r, S11ci11 Sci1nces, UC Jr,.in1 Dr. G•or91 H. Hunt, Jr., 8ioloqic1I Sci1nc11, UC lrv iti• Or. Mich111 P, J ohn111n, H iilory, UC Irvine Or. Rob•rt IC. Jo•tph1011, Biolo9lc11 Sc:ionc1s, UC11rwin• Or. Jerome k irlr, Soci1l'·Scionc11, UC lrvi"•· Or. Thom~1 Klammer, Engli1h, C1lif, Si•I• Uni•,, Full1rt11n· Robtrl I. Kohut, M.D., School of Medicino. UC 1,vin1 Or. R. Duncan Luce, Soci1! Scienc-'01, UC Irvin• Or,. Rich•rd E. MacMillen, Biological Sci1nc11, Or. Mire M11nd.elkcrn, ·Phv1ic1, UC Irvin• of. 0, Mit191r, Soci1! Sciences. UC Irvin• R•lph Michelsen, Social Sci1nce1, UC Irvin• M•n11ll P•tli1on, M.0 ., School 111 Mtdicin•, UC lrvln11 j Or~ M, Po1t1r, Hi1tory, UC hvin• • l W illitm H . 11.Pley, Jr., Soci1I Sci1nc11, UC Irvin• Or. Philip W. Ru11d1I, Bioloqic:~I Sci1nc•1. UC 11win1 Or, Jo11ph S•wic;ki, Engli1h, C1li( ~!1!1 Ufllw., FuH1rl~n Or. E.T. Scholl, Engl ish •11d Cl111ic1, UC lrvi110 Or. Gord on Sh••. Phy1ic1, UC lr.,in• Arnold Sl•rr. M.O .. School of M1dic:ln1, UC lr•ine , A.1111 Sl•pick, S11el 1I Sci1nc•s, UC l1vl11• Je11 Stok•1b1ry, M.F,A,, Ari, C1Uf. St1te Univ., Full1rion Of. 01vid N. Sud11ow, Soci•l Sc:l1nc1t, UC lrvln1 Or. Frid M; Tongt, lflformttiol'I 1111d C omputtr Sci111~. UC lr~in1 Rou W1l~11, POU!lctl S..:lonc1, UC Riv•rsid1 Or. John W•ll11co, Gr•d~1t1 School of Adml11!llr1t1011, US lr•ln• Or. Robt•! C . W•1n1r, 8lologlc1t Sci1nc11. UC lrvlflo 0 1. W. C. W1H, Soci1I Scl1nc11, UC Irvine Or. E:"rl J1m•1 Wo•vlr. Am1rie1n Studio1, C1lll. Sttt1 u,,;~ .. Full11to11 D1vid Wei111t~in, Soci"I Sci•nco1, UC lrwlnt 0011 W.ilb1rt, M.O .. School of M1diel110, UC lt•i11• Or. 011wid Wilton, Cl11tlc1, UC Irvine Dr. Ch1rl•1 Wright, Enql!1h, UC lr.,i111 Or. Johll Y1liot1, Soc.iii Sel111co1, UC lrwl110 Thur~•1. April 12, 1~7.l DAILY PILOT ,2 PUB~IC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE JiOTICIE Oft • PUBLIC NOTICE fll~IC• lfllVfTlfll• a lDI SC" 111 Nolle• 11 llwl'by 91Wfl !hit fllt I Ml'd of NOTICE TO ClllED1TOIS fru$1Ht of tho Co.ti Comlnill'llty Coif ... SUPElllOR COUllT OF THE Oltirlt l ot Ofl"IH' County. ~ ST,t,TI! OP CALF•ORflllA FOlt r11trrtd ht •• "" ''Owntf''. win roc.lw THI: COUHTY Oft 011.AfllOli up to, tlul not 1tllr llltn l :llO p,m,, Apt11 ,,.,, ...,5'41 ZI, 1m H•lod tlldt far the IWltd '°' ,.. Est111 of LORENA E. auttKS. Docoo .. lrKI for Ille lllrnlthhlt 1nd ln1t11Nitlon" ed. ' I Undfl'frOUllll 01!1 Lint. • . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 111 1111 5111:11 bid• 111111 b9 r1t1h1• 111 tho tfilco cre<1lt11<1 ol tfle .above nllmt<I d1<tdent of 1111 District P'urdl•1l119 AMftl, 111 1111 !hat 111 P41rson1 llavlng clalms ag1Jn1t tht ,t,dmlnl1tr1t111t1 llullcllno, 1370 M9m. 11ld dtcedtlnl •r• r11111lred to lilt IMm, Av•nvo. Cot.ti Mt11, 0r'"'OI County, wl!h 1111 n1c1111rv voucllers, 111 the olllc1 C11lklrnl1, Ind tllell b9 opll'9CI •lld· of 1f11 clork ot tfle 1bov1 fnrllltd court, publicly rtad •loud 11 ttll 1tiov. 1t1!9d or 10 present 1Mm, wltlt !fie ntcas11ry llmfl rn tit• llotrd llllCNTI of 1111 voucller1. to the under1lonee1 at Iii , Adm1nlttr1!1on llulldlno. Scllull1." Trust Olllcer, ll•nk of Am•rk1, E1cl'I bid mu1t cor1!0tm •nd bo Nallonll Trull 1nd S~vlnQI AS!IOCllllOll, r•sponslvt to 11111 ln11lt1ll011, 1111 pllllf, llCI Norlh Main Steil, S1nta An•. 1poelllc1llon1, Ind 111 other docllft'lllll• C1lllornla 92701 whit II 11 Ille pt1ce of comorl1lng 1111 · ,_,.lntnt con Ir 1 c t b!.lilNU Of '"' ufldlfllgnld In 111 """''' dOCUmoflts. COP111 of "" COl'ltl'KI oorl11lnl119 lo lhe 11i.te ol 11!d decid1111. Oocument1 t r• "°"" on flll Incl Opll'I to within !our monlhl all•• !lie '1r1! l)Ul>JIC1· public lnlOICllOll In tllo 11ld otlkn of ft!t lion ol !Ills notlc1. Own•r ind mty bo oblllned bY .. lllftO Oalld Marcll \!, 191J Sl!.00 ICN' otcll 1•! of pl1<11 Ind 1PKlllCI• B1nll ot Amerlc1 N1tlOllil ll1111s, Tiii• d'!lotll will bl rtf\lrlOed only lf Trusl 1nd S1v!ng1 A•toe:l1U011 tt>o IOI or "°" .,.1 r.iurntd c~ ... 11111 Execulor In good conclltl11t1 wll'llln n.,.. d1V. 1fl1r of 1111 Wiii of the 11DOV1 n1mld 1111 bid Opll'llrt11. OKedent A ~ ,.1ym1n1 llond tnd 1 10f'I, KI NDEL & ,t,NDElllSOH Pll<'lor,.,,.llCI Bond will bl rtc1ulrld of 11'1: 11121 Nlrlll lf'OldWIY, •o• ns COllfrl Clor ... Kled. S•nl1 ""'' C1llfornl1 ttm E1ch bid 1hlll bl midi Olli °" ~ T11: 11141 ssa-1,n "Form of Pr000111" bOllnd 111 11cll wt of Atlor!My tor E11t<Ull!f" ~ 'l't<lflctlloftl. PubUilted 0••11119 COii! 01l1y Pllol, EI Cll bid i.11111 bl K<OtnHllltO by I M.:ircll :n. 29, and Aprll s, 12. ltfl l39·13 c.r1tl!ld or c1t11ltr'1 clltck PIYlbl• kl thl --------• OwMr, 0t 11lbfKl0ty l ld Bond In l1vor PUBLIC NOTICE of IM Own1r, e11ec:uttd In' tn. bidcllf' 11 -------------orl11tl111I Incl I lllblKtory 1uroty (Gm--PllllY 11 1ur1ty, In 1n l mclllflf not 1111 I 42411 11'11n lt<1 pwc.nt tlO'll.1 ol tt. bid. TM NOTICE TO CREDITOllS cl'll<:k or bid bond Nulll M II-11 • SUPElllOll COURT Oft THIE PUlll'llllM tllal Ille blddtr Wiii ntcuto tho ST,t,TIE Oft CALlftORflll,t, ,Oil C11t1tr1CI II It be 1-o.d to him Ill ,_, i THE COUNTY 0, 0111,t.MOIE lormlty wllll !!It ConlrKI Doeun\lnt. and ' fllo. A -JUll wtll provld• tho 1urely bond or b0fld1 " E·.111e·o1 WE t-1 LL M. JONES, 111&0 1PKllJ.d lllll'lin within ton dt 't'9 of11r known 11 WEN N$Ull JONES nolltlc1tlon ot 1119 1w1rd of 1111 untr1cl ind WE.NOELL , to tho blddtr. NOTICE 15 HE N to tM W,t,G• ll,t,Tll: cr1a1tors of 1111 1 ' dKld•nt Pur1u1nt to 1111 L•llor Godt of 11'11 Sf1to 111111 all 111r111n1 htvlll(I cl1ll'!l1 1g1tn" llle ol C1llf0tnl1, 5outller" C1lltor11lo auUdl"5f 1afa decldent tr• r9Qulrld to lilt tfllm, 1nd C0111lrucll011 Tr•d•• Co u n c 111 • wllll !ho necn$1'ry VP1Khtr1, In lllo olllct llulldlng •nd C11t1strucnon Trld•1 Councll of 1111 clffk of tho 1bo¥• tnllllld court, or of 0!'•11111 County, 11!1 11ld !lo.rd of to 11reien1 them. with !ho' n1ce111r Trusl-M s •ac•rt1lnld "'1 8'0"0'•1 voucllor1, to ll>t und1r1lgned 1 l prr1altl11g r1!1 of per dl•m w1g11 !or obe•tson, H~er & G;ior111nd, AUorn.ev1 "ell cr1fl CN' type of W0tkmt<1 nwded to 11 Lt w, •3'!0 Campus Orl119, P.O. eo .. ••ecutt !tie con!r1ct whlcll wllt be 1w1rd- 2207, Newport Beach, C1lllorQl<0, Which Is e-d tho 1ucct11M blddor, 1!'1d lhls9 Ille Jll•c• ol t1u1lneu ol the under1lgnl'd In pr1v1lllrt11 r1t11 1r1 conl1lntd In ••Id 111 l'!l1tt1r1 pert11n1rirg lo the esl1!t of said spetlflc1t!on1 ldoilled bY 1111 llOlrd, 1111t \ decedent wltllln tovr montlts 1ner Ille 1ro 11 llslld beioW: QIUod M1rcll lt, 1973, !»low ll"l'd 111& P1ld 11 Ille curren1 !Int 1111bllc1llcn of lfl!s 'nollct . Any cl1s1lflc1~ 1ntlclp1ttd •nd ... t1' SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA w191 rile. tor t k 1ble tr1dtl 1nd FI RST NATIONAL llANK cl1s1lllc11llon In ell wltll 1111 •bov1 By (ll1rlH G. Conw1y, ll•lert Trlldes C01111Cll1. II ln'I' r11 .. lltll'd Vic• Preildont bllow ••• not curre11t or ••• 1...,1Md bY ELllERTA M. JONES. l1bor ''ltNITl!flll dVrll'tll lno blddfl'ICI "nw Co-Extcutor\ of 1111 Wiii of or cor111rvc1l11t1 llmt, Mkll r1vl11onJ $11111 Ille "'boW n•med dlee.Mnt tie con11cterltd 1 Plrt of tit• ti.low fisted RO•EllTSON, 140WSl!lll a OAlllL,t,NO.' r1IH. Any IHPllll\. wtff1ro. vK•llon, pro- 4:MO C1mpvs Drt'ltl, mollOll or otn.r blM!Ui shlH bo In od· ,.,0 , llo• 12t7. dlllon to Ille b11ow U11'1d w1gu tct lt1. Nt.-,ot1 lltlCll, Ctllflnll• Approntlces lhlll bl tn\PloYld In con- Ttli,n-: ~$400 """''ty wllft SKllOll 1m.s of tht AHorntys ,.,, C•l!llKUtt" C1llkll'nl1 LlbOf' CC!df. "ublllM!I Or111g1 Co.st Diiiy p1101 Allontlon It dlrec:tld ht ,.,. provbi-of M1rc11 :n 2t ind AprU s 12 lt13 n•·13 L•-CGC11 SKll11t1 1m .s c1111C.,.nl119 ' ' ' ' 1mploymt11t of 1ppronlttff.. It r91111lr11 ~ ·puBLIC NOTICE ~t•ector1 or 1ut1eonrr1ttor1 omciioYlnv • lr1-In lllY IOPf't<lllcftr!lp OC- ----------cupo!lon lo •PPIY lo 1111 1pPllC1blo foilll I Sfnt 1pprtnllu1hlp commllltt tor 1 otrtlflt1t1 fllMICE Oft TllUSTl!•'S S,t,LI ol 11111~v1tt and llxl119 tfle r1t!o of t q· No. A·lll·fll CAllTEll prt11!1 to 1ournoym1n uw.:I on tht coll· On Thu•ld1y, Aptlt 19, 197), 11t 11 :00 1r11ct. on1r1ctor m1y bl required lo o'clock A.M., at lht enlran~t 111 the Oll•k· m•~e contr1tlullor11 10 11ppr111tlc1s/llp PfO· In-a 101 ol '11 S. er~llur1l s1 .. An~~tlm 11r•,r11. Contr1c1or i....~bConlrKlllri C1llt0tnla, Said 1n1r•nce 11 IOCl!lll SO teer 1111111 1li.o comply wCI~ Secll11t1 l mA in Soul~ ot thr Aamu Home Lo.11n Co tllt" f'mplcwmrn• of •PP•rtillcu. For \,,. lllfMln1111 !WO PO'll9d 1ltrl ~l(ln, City ol lorm,.non •~l•llvr 111 •PPr•nllc11hlp 1t1n· Al!'af'tlm. C11llfornl1, Ol YMPIC IN· 1Mra1. coft11cl OlrKIOt of lncl1111rl1• VESTMENT CO .. 1 C1lllornl<1 Corpor~· llel1ll6r11, S•n Fr1ncltca, C1lltornl11 or tk'", 11 Trustee unoer tllo d~ of 1rir.1 Olvl:IO!I ot ApprtflllCnhlo Sl1lllltrd1 m•de Dy DOUGLAS GILIERT CARTER, br1ncll "lllc:o1. 1 llll!lle rritn •nd recorOtd J1.,..1rv U. Ovortlmo tllall M" Plld tor won: ltn, 111 -'IOClk ,..S, P•"9 •s, of 0111t111 pedor~ In nceu of 1111 r99ul1r Cl••'' RKCN'll' of 0rlf1911 Co11<1ty. CllllO!'llll WO'~ •nd II ,,,. •Ill lllf 0119rllmt ot 1111 1;1lvtn to &ecurt 111 lnitebledntll In f1vor C••ll ln¥olvtd. of ROllElll T B. BIGGS •nd MONA D. Holidl'f1thttlbe1tl llOlldlyt r«0911lled llGGS. llo,1M!.lnd Incl wllt II lolnl lllllflli In lllt collKllYt blr91lnlnt -Oro«!IOfll tw r••SOll ot Ille br•Kll of c ... 11111 obllo•· <111P1k1ble to lllo 1Nrlkul11 c••lt. !I0<11 Mt;ured !lltrfDY, notko ot Wlllch w1s cl1pll!c1tlofl or lype Cl'! -kmffl recora.d Otcemblr 11, lt 7'J, In B-emplO'l"fd Of\ Ille lll'olKl. UMl2, P1ge S:f7. of 11ld Ottkl•I lilecorm., II sn.U bo INfld1111fY 11pon 1111 C-wlll Mii at llUOllC IUCllon 10 "" N9hH! lrKlllr to whom I tlltllrlCI lt IWlrOld bldd91' for cash, PAY•bl1 In 11wf\ll_ -~ arid -111 1ubconfrtctor1 under him. ht ot tllt Utilte(I Siii .. ti 1111 1lrnl""ot Mlt, p.-y llOt Ins llltn IOlcl 0--11 ,...,..1111 ... wlll'IOul wt'fllllY 111 IP 11111:, POlllUIOll or rllll of ptf' cllttn -.U to 111 _k,...,. 1Hf\br1nc... 1119 ltii.rnt CO<IVrfld to ltf'nOloyld lfl !Pie ex~ of IM contr1cl, tnd now l'ltld bY Mkl Trul!N ll!ldor Mid Mtwty rti. Ottd of Tru11, In •nd kl 1119 follow! ... ELIECTRICIAM1 cllt'fioed property, ,._wit: G-4'tl ft~n Lot f, lllock F al Tr1<! No. 1H 11 Cl't Forll'f\ftll m1p recorded !<1 90Qfl' It , Pt'l\t • o! 5ol.l1'ld TK!Wllcl1n l ll ... l(l,41 .... MllCtlllntOUI Miii», rKQrCll Of 11ld L,t,f0itlRS1 counr,. LtDOrtrt, fllMH'll or c-rruc:tlon s.ces ComrTH>rH~ known 11: 1'°1 3. P•rlon alDS1 Strff!, $11'111 AM. (,t, 9111:11, Tiii Owntr r111r1111 1111 prl""lf90 of rt • for tho purpe11 ol 01vJ"11 obll91llon1 ,.c:1t11o9 l<IY •nd tll bldi or Ill w11lw• t f'IY \Kl/rid i.y 11ld Pttd lndudl119 l~e1, lrr-ou~trl!ltt or lnforfl\ll1t!M 11'1 ""Y blci ch..,ro•1 1nd ••Pfnfft ill Ille T ruHff ind tit 111 1111 bladl119. Tiit Conlrt etor m1y flol ol 1All. "'1!hdr1w his bid I« • Ptrlod of 4$ d•Yt Ottld: M1rc11 21. ltll 1o11ow1no "" 1t1t• ~ Clfl'll\n9 01 114dt. OLYMPIC INVESTMENT CO.-llOAl.0 Oft "i!lUSTEEC •1 Trus\'9 COAST COMMUNITY ~71 S. 8r0l'llllllr•I SI . COL.l.ICI 01fTlllC1, ~ IOI l lllll 01111111 C-t,' • An.1tielm, CA '*1 ( .. It MIM, C1ll!Ofl'll• l-': 0 141 1'1'N'10 /1/ MOIUM.N L WATIOH Sy f"AHCY P, KHEMlll. hc:r1t1r)" 8-d of Tnnl .. , AUitflflt Slc"IMl' ()pt!!: ADl'll 2'. ltn • 1!• f ,M, ,.111111tMlll 0rlfll1' COii! o..JIY ""°'· l"\iblbP!ld 0.lllft CM•I Oolly "'"*· M•rdl "•1111 ,t,.Pfll •. 12. ''" 1n.n AorH ~ IL 1t7' .... ' . I I ' • • r • • ' • • DAIL V PILCIT . . -... > ... -• :;:dF!.aY y JJ.Uiu,e Tr a, de of' Land PropOsed . . l . SACRAMENTO (~--A San Bernardjpo..fi:rm has won a $7 ttt6ilcontract · for ex· By L. PETEii KJUEG Of .... Daily ...... ·~...- !j...-t.iiCl.ing lhe Golden State Freeway northward 2.2 miles and then linking it with the Foothill 'Freeway, the state PUblic Works Department has announcoo.-- Newport S.acli Councilman CarJ Kymla thinks he'• got a clever way to get, some valuable property from the Irvine Company -abOut 12·15 acres fronting Upper Newport Bay -for free . tlunking, I realize," Kymla · !tom Larry Moore, general iald, "but I'd like to :iee us ex· planning adntlnlstrator !or plore it." ·Irvi1;1e,. bul drew· _1,h a r p Kymla was speaking Mon-critici!m rroz;n other coun- W ,night on an Irvine Com-cUmeo. • pany proposal to dev~p th• "Were geltlng . lnlo d~p old JIG-acre Castaway Hill!___ water with something me property betw~n· Dover Drive thit,., v I e w e d CouncJlman and the BAck Bay. Richard CrouJ. "We're saying, au~d. there "are a Jot or tioP on Kyml~'s su~estl~. .ramifications. When you ·go in-apparently feeling theJ-U watt to ·the zoning area, if you fee'tf---h>r~ formal Irvine replay. you· Sboukl have open \P8ce,, In ht.s lnitlal comments, you should . zone for -open ._.Ii-Vine's Moore 1)-0ted. that :~the space." ...., • comp~y went through the elr "Yes.· but how do you back erclses on the Castaways pro- up zoning .. without the ability perty for six months ... trying to pay for the property?" . • • DAILY PILDT<$taff PfllM Z, COSTA M~SA, WITH SHEP 'He-'s Wagging Teil ind Eating Alf the Time' Happy End.ng ~ \.. ~ I Shep Gets Home, Love · Shep has seen the last of ~\ Humane Soci~i·y kennels ~ and is now enjoying the run of Costa .Mesa backyard. · It was a pleasant turn of eve ts for the 2-year~ld dog, :tf pictured Saturday m' the DAILY PILOT as the "Coast Pet ~ of the Week" in set\rch of a home. "HE SEE!\1S SO HAPPY," said his new owner, Mrs. Irene Lorenz, 1014 Arbor St. "He's wagging his tail and is eating all the time," she -» r~ported. 1 Mrs. LOrenz drove to the. Humane Society kennels•in \ Huntington Beach at 9:30 Saturday morning -A half hour before opening time - after seeing Sbep'_s picture. • ~ "It was the first thing I noticed wheD I opened the paper'" she said. .. [ felt so sorry for rum. 1 guess be 1 it wasn't eating, he looked so skinny." ....... THE COSTA' l\lESA woman was given the dog after 1 bein·g the first person to s.how up at the k'ennels. Since then, more than 40 calls have been received, said man· r a·ger Robert Sharkey. · "They fell in love with each other," he said. Mrs. Lorenz said she wanted the dog's company. "Now I have sorheone to say goodnight to," she said. '!I. ..... """"" -'" . · 22 Coast Projects Granted Permits Twent y-two Orange Coast construction projects -fron1 Seal Beach to San Cll'nlcnte - reeeived building permit s this week fron1 the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Cemmission. The commission, crea ted by Propos'ition 20, has jurisdiclion over development within 1.000 yards of mean high tide line in Orange a1'd Los Angeles coun· ties. EIGHTEEN OF the ap. plications approved were on the consent calendar. Ex- ecutive Director ~1 e I v i n Carpenter places items on that calendar that he recommends be approved . Approved after ~b\Jc hear- ings were permits f6r: -A t"'O-story duplex at 244 Del Puente, San Clemente: fi\. eel by R.P. Kleinsteuber. -A three-unit apartment building by William M. Tharp at 123 Aviendo Perayo, San Clemente. -A six-unit apartment building al 221 W. 16th St.. Huntington Beach, by Lo\\·ell D. Zehnder. -A 15-unit apartment building in the same area of Ex-e1i voy Wi1is Case SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A ~ former Swedish diplomat who suffered brain damage and partial paralysis when his car was hit by ia city trolley bus has won a half-million dollar settlement. The San Francisco Public UtJUtles COmmlss.ion voted to make the oUt~r-court set· Uement of a $4 million lawsuit filed by attomeY !or Csrl·HCn· drick Petenon1 58, consul general !or tho western United ' Stolet bore !tom 1966 to 1972. Peterten, wbo returned to 8weclai, w • 1 pennanently dlubled by tile accidcnl in Octobtt 1'1 I. Huntington Beach by Franklin J. Buccel\a. Approved as consent calen- dar items were construction of: -A market building at 2056· Jl8 S. Coas~ Highway, Laguna Beach, by Trader Joe, Inc. -A single-family dwelling al 32541 Barerric Road7 Lagun-.:1 Niguel by Ben E. Tarven. -Seven four-unit and one eigh t-unit apartment buildings along Haskins and Algonquin Streets in Huntington Beach by Kenneth K. Rogers. -One four-unit apartment building at 20th Street and \Yalnut Avenue. J1untington Beach,· · by Richard N. Salmonson. -A nine-unit apartment building at 221 10th St.. Hun- tington Beach, by Boyd Cooper. -Two duplexes in block 517 on 17th Slreet in Huntington Beach. by Lowell D. 1.ehnder. -A six-unit a pa rt men t building in block 216 on 16th Street in Huntington Beach. by Zehnder~ 1 -Placement of ~a conduit system in an existing road right'{lf·way 31ong Edinger Avenue in Huntington Beach by, G~neral Telephone Co. -Undergrounding of utility lines within Paciflc Coast Highway in Seal Beach by the rity of Seal Beach and utility companies. -A single-f3mily residence al 1301 Angigua \Vay , Newport Beach, by Roger !\:!. I.ockhart. -A duplex at 3-9 Iris Ave.1 Corona de! ~tar. by Edwin F. AlcNeil. · -Duplex at 706 Narcissus, Corona del Mar, by David J. Malloy. -Single-family dwelling at 430 Via Lido Soud. Lido Isle, by J.A. Gordon. -Triplex at 900 E. Balboa Blvd. Newport Beach, by Robert Seiling -Duplex at 117·31st St., Newport Beach by Robert Hollingsworth. -Single-lamlly dwelling al 314 Poinsetta. Corona del Mari by Beulah Raehn. He suggested the company 'If Y.ou {NlY dS 12 acres, we'll Kymla asked to arrive at a basic schemJ!I Public Works Director James A. Moe . sa.id that KasJer Constructor.s Jnc. was the lowest of six bidders for the contract. The width of the freeway to be built will range between six and 16 Janes, Moe said. The contract allows 44 working days for Completion, he said. Let Irvine bUild a hlgh rise condominium in N e w po r t. Center in exchange tor the o~n space, Kymla suggested to · company and city of(icials this ~week. · · lght ant to give the city a let · yo.u do something you m w otherwise couldn't do.' blufftop atrip-"as a tradeQ.ff "lt boils down to that we're for higher density in other on the verge of saying, 'we'll areas· that could handle it -make a deal with you.' It like Newport Cebter." * doesn't sit too weJI," Croul THE PROPOSAL drew an said. . "If yoi c~'t buy it. you with 'that :would be co1npatible can't have it," observed Crout. and contain al le~1st some ac- ouldn't be I cl cess to the bluffs. "We w or ng · ariybody," Kym1a countered. Moore was referring to ••this would all be done numerous private meetings through negotiations., company officials conducted ' Cute and Colorful Night Light Group Plr.19 thtm right into • w•11 or.1tl•t and outlet • n d th•y glow iu1f enough. Whimsical dt1ign1! 2 FOR 139 GP Decorative · Paneling Pr1·fini1h1d .f'xl' p1neling in· 11111, 11sily! Port1moiith Hemp.4 ,~ ... Fluidmaster Toilet Slop dripping toil1ts! Comes in two 1i111:, 11 1/i " end I)". E11y to in1t•ll, com1s com· pl1te with 111 n1ces· 1ery fitting1. Mod1I -400. . 3ss 011ly Drill Bit ~sharpener R•·1h1rp1ns 11 dlff1 r• i nt bit si111 '.. , 1/1" to l /I ". For c11bon •n( it1•I bits. 1999 uncommittal initial response COUNCllM'AN Milan Dostal • I with councilmen and nearby homeowners. 'Kerm'.s S.creene°d These 'Values V~_ry .Carefully! House Paint E•i:•ll•nf qu1litv oil b1w ptint th•t CO•lrS moSf eller• ior 1orftce1 on one cotf • 7!. Chef Style Saute and F rypan by Mirra Gourmtt d•1 ign tluminurn with T1f10., II® interior. Porc1l1in in kitch1n colors. "t9'CJ I l11eh ala • . . . . . . . £ • .. 1 O Inch 3" Black & Decker ~ H.P. Router Kit Compl1t1 kit in· clucf•s :7610 rout• 1r, 2 w1•11che•. bit ..• 1ll'in CftT'f• ttr1ight tnd circu· i11 qc•s•. 4499 Gre•I on• • co1t ci:tver•t• ••• ctn b1 thinn1cf or cl••n1cf·up with w1t•r. E•t1rior for· mult. 749 .... Screen Door With Grille Na tu ral al uminum finish . With l " th ick pus hbar and 6" kickpla te. Choose 30", 32" or 36" widths with 111 hardwar• in· ,:l uded! ' Prices Gfftll Tlww WM. 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I l j ' J • ' I \ I j I I I ., Thursday, Aprll 12, 1973 . DAIL V PILOT !9 '. I 1 .Reyo~~Ji()n: ,Girl Okayed ·11 .. Strikeouts Fail · to Sa:tisfy R~n . . As -Matador .J • MADRID (UPI) -Women have woo a ri8ht Spanish meo !bought would remain theirs. exchajve forever-the right to !jgbtbulls. . .. . Nolan RY"ll leaves·the hnpreaslon that he would be !rlgbtenlng le behold II he ever pi~ a ~ble gm;ne. All the bu!tet-tinWing California ·Angel righthander did Wednesday • nigbl. was strike oil! II Minnesota Twills, permlt a mere five,hlts and pooled hiJ second.,... secutlve complete game victory, + !. The moot fnasculine of barrlen fell Wednesday when a Madr\d IJ>bor·. court ruled that a buxom blonde aficlooado called Angelita can beeame a fullfledged·m-.- • "My '°"trol was off and I really didn't hear clown unUl'the ninth Inning," Ryan said, sounding more like a loser than a pitcher who lo Z-0 with Z3 strikeouts In two games. --1~l~be.a...lot happier..lf~I-dldii!t strik& out ailybody but got the other team to bit my pitcbf,la," Ryan added. 0 My real goal ·this sel!SO!' is not to pile up a lot of Maria de 10s Angeles "Angelita" Hernandez, 25, had aP.~aJed to the court after the Span!Sb bullfighters union denied her a license . on grounds of sex. The court said it saw M reason ~o dlscrimiriate against women and ordereO ·the union to issue her the license that qualifies her to face the bulls with a .cape and-sword. "This is not just a personal , triumph, but a triwnph for ."women's rights in general," said Miss Hernandez, a p o1 ice J sergeant's daughter. "It is only right that a wOO'lail with in- ~. telligence. a sense of purpose 3.nd the will for a career should have '-the same owortunity as a man." I She is no novice in the sport and f has suffered a oumber of severe gorings. She fought many bulls In Latin America, where there are no ~ barriers against female. matadors. i But many Spanish rans viewe(I' IS: Miss Hernandez' triwnpb dimly. i·.t "Bullfighting is a "tf!fna ·n 's' · business ," one said. "We don 't need bosomy blondes -at least not. in ~ the bullring.". Miss Hernandez may outrage men even more. She said she might also introduce a new-type "suit .of ( lights," the bulUighting uniform - "hesically on the lines of what males wear, but different." \ I ( How will the male matadors take it? L "I think ' they'll like me," said +, Miss Hernandez, who is unmarried. .: .. Anyway, I'm not scared of the bulls." Togetherness, Gu,ts . Sparking Golden State --· MILWAUKEE (AP) -What's gotten into the Golden State Warriors? "Guts," if you believe Rick Barry. Togetherness1 in the opinion of Jeff Mullins._ At· any rate, lhe two are among the main reasons the once-docile Warriors are ooe victory · aW•Y, from what would be one of the major upseLs of the Na- . tional Basketbalr Association seaSQn - ·· eliiiiinating the Milwaukee Bucks. "I think a lot of it is tl\•t we're a veteran team, and the pressure · of the playoffs has a way of pulling veteran teams together," said Mullins, whose steal and pass to Barry for a fasfbreak layup produced the decisive points· in Golden . State's 100.97 victory ~y night at Madison. ' That gave the Warriors a :J.2 lead lri the best-of-seven Western Conference playoff series. They can wrap it up by winning in Oakland Friday night. The law that until now barred wotq.en W!i& introduced by the ' government of Generalissimo Fran- cisco Franco about 30 years ago. The Bucks, who easily eliminated the Waniors in five games last year apd beat them five times -often lopsidedly -in six regular season meetings this _..,sear·-must win Friday and in a seventh gaine at MadisOn Sunday to advance to the second round of the playoffs. Milwaukee coach Larry C o s ~ e 11 o received bad news Wednesday when three players -Bob Dandridge, Oscar Robertson and Jon McGlocklin -showed up for practice with injuries. ' I !! ;Lakers Game ·"' ' . . i:On TV Friday; . · J{odes Wins " t'·NEw YORK:_ The American Broad· casting Company announced it will t!elevise ~i<iay night's Na~i~~l Basket- ;llall Association Western D1vl51on playoff ~game at Chicago between the Bulls and 1 ,!--Os Angeles Lakers. The game will begin ,. at 5:30 p.m. fRussian Ousted • . ;' GLEVELAND -Jan Kodes of •£zechoslovakia e Ii m i n at e d Alex f:M:etreveli of the soviet Union from the .. 'Clev'\land Classic tennis tournament ~~ednesday·with a 4-S, ·7!5, 6-3 victory. Dandridge aM -.on were withheld from work to be treated for a sore back and inflamed Achilles tendon; respectively, while McGlocklin. who has an Mk.le injW')', practiced shooting but did not scrimmage. Costello planned to rest all three unUI Friday night, then "shoot the works." Barry said. the Warriors "certainly don 't feel we've won the thing." "Mentally we're all prepared, but it's one thing to be ready meittally and another to execute," he sa1d. "But I think it's shown a lot of guts oo our Part to come back after getting bloWJt out in the first game. "We're playing basketball now instead of fooling around like we did against these guys in the season," Barry said. "Maybe we weren't detennined enough earlier, but now we're hustling, scrap- ping and playing the way we're capable.'' Mullins said the Warriors, "felt all along we bad never played against Milwaukee like we should have. I ' strlkeoutS but to bold my walks below ,JOO." .. • Ryan did , haV<! his lllOIDelltS ol wlldnesa. He · walnd five and en- cowitered ,...erous S-aftd.2' oounts. But he did not walk a bitter over the final • ~ lnninga and ended the pme on a high penonaI note, striking out the side In the ninth inning. -' · California thus was able to complete a tW<>game sweep of the previously 101- beaten Twins and clQOed out its first bame.tlAllld with a :J.2 recQl'l!. The' Angels lea~ lnday oo a !Woy, nin&game road trip Iha\ b;!gins with an irilennedi- ate stop In EI Paso, ~ for a ·' • . . ' ~i 1 • (wpe agaln.St lbeit Tens League af-1 pletely recovered and "'l! don't want t-o w__., co c.~ <o · . filiate. • -.. . . lake any chances." \• • ll r II ,., a r t f'tl r • Hl1 .. , cf J 0 I I AleJNr, 2tt > f 0 0 ' 'Jbe road work actually begins Friday "\\1e miss FranJc'S bat but il We. all 'l_ C..rw, » .. 0 I 0 V•lwitlrlf, .. ' 0 I l ...... in Ar"••too '··t ... T h . uo OlltW'(I\,• t1 .. 0 I O'!' Pinion, 11 \ ~ I 2 2 'J-l61"' "'• agaul.l l.l~ ex.as ours are, we'U get the _job done," said ou.,,, 11h ~ .o q, • Mt'Cr••· 1t • • o o n .... .-rs. -Vada Pinson. t.i.. tb , o o o 1t.on.....-.r • ' o o o • ......._... 8n1Ul'l,Jb 1 010 $1~,c;.tOIO 'Ibe Angels will be without the services,... Pin.son-1ave a good examPie of doing i~ •• ~ : : g :~~.''u, ~ ;· ~ ~ of frank ·Robinson. at least for the hi s s.hare against the Twins. He drilled ,,ff; oti 1 o o o M...r1, 3b 2 :• :•~.- weekend terlea with Teus. A ~on his first homer of the year off loser Bill :~:;r;;•ld. c ; o o o N.1tyM1, , o ' was. readied Jate Wednesday.-rughl to H~s (1-1) in the opening iMing before H•nch. 1> ~ • ~ leave the 11uaer' in Anaheim where he s~gling borne another tally in the third. ~!'ii "' ~r-1_.s..-11 Toi11s ,, ,.,, , will oontloue to undergo tberspy for the Putsoo leads the Angels with six RBI in M:i=• · "' .. 100 -""' pulled hamstring m~e in bis left leg. five games. ~~f, Mltft. OP -~=~L~ ... "I'd ratbef Frank miss eight games; Bobby Valentine, with eight hits ~~ Holt: 'i:t:' ~'~= ~·u~8s:.. "'°""";· "1 • • not 80." said Angel general manager last three games, contln~~g..-a-H•ndt u .. 1.11 1"'s ~ ~ •: •: ': 1 Harry Dalton. "Naturally, he's unhappy bot.bat,~aidln~e=tiit Angel ·aftack ~: 1w.2-01 , 3 5 2 1° ,0 1 1 i: 1 about the deciaion but he~ not.com-~&Jng1es.wbile-~viilginarun. ""=~~~: ... P•-s1~;T'.:~':6'·.~ ~ ~"" ~'· . ·~-' ~ ~ UPIT ....... I I I I 1 I ' THE ANGELS' SANDY ALOMAR DIVES BACK TO FIRST BASE AS MINNESOTA'S JOE LIS AWAITS THROW. Celts B·ag-Free Thr~w · Duel ' ' Boswn Takes 3-2 Lead With 108-101 Victory BOSTON (AP) -Boston's John Havlicek poured In 32 points and Jo Jo White provided pwich to the BoSloo at· tack in the second half as the Boston · Celtics defeated the Atlanta Hawks (108- 101) in their fifth quarter·flnal National Basketball Associat~ game Wednesday. Boston leads the best.of-seven series 3- 2, as the series moves back to Atlanta Friday. to Atlanta but were doWn 54-4tf at·the half. "I'm sorry it turned ' into a free throw game," Cotton Fjtzsimmons, Atlanta cOacb said. "They (.referees) called it very tight; it was not ca1ted like the other games. But we lost because of our play.'' Fitzsimmons said his teanf''doesn't shoot free throws that well, ·~g that the Celtics "shot like ahvayf' from the free throw line." • Heinsohn was also concerned by the breakdown of his club's fast break. "We just were not running,'.' he said. .. You have to keep the pressure on. We just were· riot keeping the pressure on them." At11n11 (ltl) ltUM ONl 0 • T Havlicek 10 12·13 l2 M1rOYICh Coweris 7 0-0 H Gllll1m $1111 J IM) I 8tU11my Cheney 2 ll • Wesl'llngton Whl!e 12 21 Hudson Wllllo1m1 2 6 Trapp Netson 2 23-13 16 Br•c•v lr:11br11ll!:I o IM) 0 Westphal O 0-0 o Finkel 0 IMI II G • T 12 10·13 3..t 3 2·1· • • 4-10 '' 2 1·2 s • 7.9 21 , ).5 7 3 l·J I Totals :JI 21-35 l(lt Totals l6 2t-4l 101 Messersmith Tries to End Dodgers ·woes· LOS ANGELES «AP) -When CIJi. cinnatilefthanderllon Gullett slipped•of! the mound in the ninth Inning, rnm>B¥er ·Sparky Andersoo slipped off the bepch. Since the N~tional League champion Reds already have Jost ace Gary Nolen indefinitely , with ann trouble, should . Dodgers Slate t· In other second-round singles Wednes-"~ay, Brian Fairlie downed Vladimir . ~ 1.ednik 6-4, 6-2 ; and Roger Taylor drop-L ·· · $JSe<1 Haroon Rahim, 6-2, ?->. "4. And Jean Chanfreau beat Mark Cox, 7· "Almost every time we played them we had one or two key personnel -injured --Rick a couple of times, Clyde Lee, or somebody else," he said. "But we're v>teralis · and this helped. We all were disappointed jn our won-Joss record in the regular season,•:-and we realized this is a -ne~ season. We·waoted to do something With a minute and 32 seconds left in the game, Atlanta's Pete Maravicb, who pumped in 34 points in a losirig cause, brought the~wks to w ithin one point at 102-101 when e hit a free throw. Fo u r· !em.seconds. ter, White hit m a jumper to ~lfiden. 's lead and the Celtics Boston coach Tom Heinsohn ,,who got· a technical foul in the third periOd for protesting a foul call on one of. his players,. commented: · "EveryUme we got a rebound, we got a foul. I couldn't believe it." However All&nt1 71 U V 20 -101 8osl0n lO 16 37 lS -108 FOllled Ollt -BOiton, COWen• Tolll fovts -Atl1nll 29, Bo.ton 21 Tldlnlul rwls -B\kln coed! Htlnsohn Atlend~nce -12,.llS. \ All .. ,... .,. Kfll (641) Apr. 12 CIM11\M\I •t Lot Af!Mlts ADI'. 12 Al11nl1 11 l.os Arlotl• Aof'. 1' Al 1nlt 11 Los Al!Mles Ai>r. 15 All1nl1 11.L.os Anaele& 7!51 "·'"· 7:55 p,m. 6:55 l).tn. 1 :55 p,rn. I I l J r I I . U, 6-4. Cox, who has been off his pace r.in this meet, was last year's defending '-"'.>Classic champion. . .. .. . ntICISm ~ TEL A VIV -Israel today criticized :Yugoslavia for refu sing to guarantee the ~a(ety of the Israeli national table tennis ·iteam at the world championships in 1 Sarajevo. f' ~; The team members arrived home to- day, saying they pulled out of the touma- ~ m~nt at the urging of ,Yugoslav security ~officials. The move followed the arrest of i lour armed Arab.o. . "We deplore the fact that instead of /('(taking action against people threatening ) the Israelis, those ~ the games were t .told. they couldn't be protected," a ? )Yoreign Ministry spokesman said. ~, He said that Belgrsd~, the Yugoslav r'capital, is one of the few placea where •the Palestinian Liheratioo Organization, , the.J!Oreut Arab g11errllla gmip, bas an about it." rolled OD to vjctory. . In a sluggish first hall that saw Boston hit only 33 percent of its shots from the floor, the Celtics managed to stay close Bred by Egyptians. Dog's Life -Not · So Bad -H You're a Greyhound-· MIAMI (AP) For . almost 5.000 But he adds that perhaps only ooe-thlrd years, greyhounds . have been ·chasing of the owners make a profit on dog ra~ rabbits for man's . amusement -but ing. "Our biggest com~titors are night never have t~y had .it so good. ~ baseball and the movies -not the horse 'nlose who survive, that is. tracks," he said. ,. peraUCllS office. - r King Wins * Bred for ~ and keen 'eyesight, the The prime racing life-of' a greyhound' is athletes of the canine family do well by about ~hree years, after which t1l4.dogs th~ir frien.ds in Florida -1producing $481 go to le!¥!Jer tracks, become breeders,·are m1ll1on at the parimutuel windows in used for medical research or put to 1m. The state's 17 dog tracks earned sleep. Very few become pets, despite more than horse racing and jai alai their genUe nature. QUINC'i'., Mass. -Blllie Jean King, reigning Wimbledon, U.S. Open and French Open champion, easily won her first round match Wednesday in the 'Virgin.ia · Slims of Boston indoor tennis 1toumament at Boston Harbor ~riila. Mrs. Kiµg defeated_ Fare! Footman, 6- .3, 6-1. Kerry Melville, second to her coun- trywoman Margaret Court In wtDnings ~ this season, dlspoeed of i:..urs Dupont, 6- 2, 7-6. •. And Francoise Durr eliminated Karen J\nlll2dle, 7.t, w. --.,, • ;Hogan in Upset MIAMI BEACH .:_ Unseeded Pa.Ill Hogan upset No. 4 ranked Katja Eb- binghaus Wednesday night In second f round play of the j20.llllO Carner Bank · t<lffils champlonsblp. Mia Hogan, a member of America's Wighlman Cup team last year, brrezed by Miss Ebblngbaus, West Germany's top player, 6-2, 6-1 In the USLTA touma· ·meni. '!'op-seeded Chris Evert defeated Ann Kl)'GmUra, &-0, &-O: No. 2 seeded Evonne Goolaaorll beat Bunny Smith, &-0, &-0; and No. i oeecled Linda Tuero ouUute<b Lanni Kallgas, 7-6, 6-7, &-1. combined. "A Jot of misguided people think -we "Geryhounds are more like racing should abolish racing and set these dogs machines made out of flesh than they are free but they're just like canaries -they dogs/' says F. B. Stutz, who owns 72 of can't survive on their own," Stuti said. the sleek racers. "But they doo't know "They make good pets but there are very Wtiit •a:nea is and get better care than few good owners for them because they most children." require so much care." Greyhounds, first bred by the Egyp-In Palm · Beach, Animal Control tians in 3.000 to 4,llllO RC., speed around Department ofliclals aay between siI and the tracl<s at up· to 40 miles an hour. IO•dot!• are put to •leep each week on UnUte ·other species of dogs, they use order from their ownen. their eyes instead of their nose to track "How do ycu fJght It?" said their prey. veterinarian Dr. Cecil Sutton. "If we Trainers vlriually·Uve wl!h the dop at didn't put them to sleep, the owners "the Sluts lililnel·, ¥ tho IUOlealt borae . woo!d • P r .~ b a b I y ldll the clogs --.. t.tke ileouiy quew, they· are iu. · ~Ives. . _ ed "'"' and -red. Each animal has Dr. Clarence Dee. a \>eterinarian who • 11s teetli brushed, Its toenails manlcund handles gre~bounds frequently, said the and its coat ell~ aiid brushed. • dop are. raised m a pack atmosphere · and are aggn!SSlve around each other - Food Is measured carefully with an the reason Ibey ~re kept muzzled. adult dot! •eating ,two j)OWlda of beef, "They .,. gentle, docile s around spinach, turnips, and gram a day. people bowever and I'm su rised that Stutz, II, is i:ne of. Florida'• blaeat 1'DQl'e: j,eopte cbi1t have as peta," bt~ and lllned racing_ doll hE aaid in the-· wben the tracts...,. lllegil. "I've ·beeo bitten bye "Tbey'l'I! big bollnul," he sajd, ...,,. at least twice - clop earning u mudl as '20,000 In a greybound, which • single stlRI nee. )'Un." breedol dog eepl by the been around 15 anything happen lo Gullett it would be hard to color the Nattooal League West Red again. . ••He slipped and stePPed In a bole,• Anderson said after the Reds, behind the eigln·hit pitching of Gullett. Pedro BorboD and Tom Hall. had dispatched Los Angeles, 4·1. "He felt a t\vinge or • strain in his left ankle. That's why I took him out. But I thjnk he'll be all right." The victory was Cincinnati's third in five games while the sputtering Dodgers now have dropped five of their first six including three straight. Tonight Andy Messersolitb makes his Dodger Stadium debu~ against the Reds' Jack Billingham. Both are o.o. Gullett bad iestricted the Dodgers to six hits through eight innings and had ~ three..nm advantage, thanks to back·lt> back home runs by Tuey Perez and Cesar Geronimo in the fourth and a tw1> nm first inning, sparted by Joe Morgan's slicing triple down~ lef,tfield line. But With one out amt-Steve Garvey at second, the result of an error on -shortstop Darrell Chaney, Gullett pulled up lame while pJ..tching to Ron Cey. _ "He just couhfii't drive ot( his left foof UPI T""""' ATLANTA' PETE MARAVICH Goe$ UP FOR TWO-POINTER. r and-I had to take him out," Anderson said. "We never really had Gullett last year," he said. mentioning the left. hander's hepatitis wbich prevented him from more than an 8-1 season. "But this could really be the year for him.'' Don Sutton, 0-2, got nine Reds in order her°"' Perez and Geronimo unloaded in the fourth , the first bomm for both. CIMllM" {41 lM ~ (1) "'"~ •rlll"1 A:OM,lt S l 3 tL1cy.2b .. 0111 Morvan. n • I I I BuckMr, lb ' 0 t (I Tolt n. rt 3 o I 1 • W.Devls, Cf .. l o ti 8'11Cll. c 3 o o o l"n11son. c. ,. • l l T.Pnt, lb • I I I Gtl'YIY, If .. 0 0-0 GttonlmO, Cf ' I I I PIClorft, rf .. 0 1 t Clltnty, JS • 0 0 0 (ty. 311 ) 0 O t M'1'1ke, 3IJ • o 1 o J0$1'1\it , ptt 1 o o -t 01111111, p J o o o Rtmtll, as • t 2 6 aor11ot1, p o o o o s111ton. p 2 o· o e Ht ll, p 0 0 0 0 YffOtl", Ph I 0 0 t IUCM(I, p t 0 0 I Cr1wfotd, pl'I ... t , I MCM11l1en. Ph l O t ' Tet•1t S<I • I • To1a11 " 1 7 t Clnchwtl 200 200 000 -A LOS Angeles 000 otl 000 -I e -T. Prrfl, Cey, Cl'l&rlly. ~01 -ClftdMetl 6, Los A~n t . ?B -F°ll"IUMn, 31 -......... HR -T. Pnl (1), Geronk'l'!o (I), ,,. -T ..... .. " ....... G11llftt jW,1•0 "'"* 6 I • I t I 8orll0tl I/I 1 • t t t H•ll 1/lfOtt t s11non IL.0.11 1 6 • A I 1 fl:lef*t 2 t • • • 1 s...ve -H•n Ill. l lmt -1:1t. Ana a , .. 1.u. I ' : I .\ ·1 ,_ ' • ' • ' t I ( ' i I • \ .. • • '• • -•. DAILY PILOT •, l ' ' . ·~ " -\.. ' ' 7 DAVE POWEL L SHOWS TOP FORM IN SKIMMING OVER HURDLE. Golden West Hurdlers Oosing In on Records By CRAIG SHEFF Of "" 0.H'I' P'llot St•ff I ,l. The Dame John Seymour will never be 1forgotten at Golde~ WeSt Cofle.ge -but a ,pair ol the Olymgjan's records might. f Seymour, who finished fourth for the United States in the 4(X)..meter in- termediate hurdles at the'72 Olympics in Munich. has two records at Golden West that nobody could come close to-wttil this season. In the 1969 GWC track ~eason Seymour flashed to clockings of 14.4 (120 highs) and 52.0 (440 intemiediates). But both are in jeopardy of being -broken -by at least two Rustler ·lreshmen. Dave Powell, a 6-3, 190-pounder by way of Edison, has already clocked 55.l in the tntennediates. (fourth in Sou t be r n ,C31ifomia) and 14.9 in the highs. And Steve Ward, a 6-5, 180-po!,1.Dder who prepped at La Quinta, has run 56.3 and 14.7. -The two Golden West freshmen are as different as night and day, says Rustlers coach Tom Noon. .. "Dave is a very stocky individual with really thi~k legs. He's not blessed with too much speed but he's a real technician like Seymour was. Aild he knows ,everything about hurdling. He's a student o! the art o! hurdling and he's e8!Y to catch. It's kind of a partnership ,with t.>ave. rather than a coach-athlete rela- tionstdp, ":says Noon. Ward. on the other hand, has more speed than Powell . "He's a great big kid who is very powerful. He's not a techni- cian like Powell, but they both get to the tape in the highs at the same time." Both have had trouble adapting to the college highs and it threw o(f their· rhythm in the early stages of the season. But they're progressing with every meet, says Noon~ Golden West also has a third freshman hurdler -Mike Zackerdonski of Rancho Alamitos -who has a best of 59.2 in the intennediates. Noon calls Zackerdonski, a 6-3, 170-pounder "A diamond in the rough." Powell and Ward have been beaten on- ly once this season -by LA Harbor:'s Bill Williams, the defending Southef;; California Conference hl!i'dles champion. "Williams went f4 .1 and 55.0 the day he beat them so he has to be favored in the conference meet. But Powell and Ward both should deUnitely make it to the Southern Cal meet." And, adds the Golden west coach, "Seymour's 52.0 is in jeopardy. ~f one of them doesn't get it this·year, one of them will next season." Ex-AAU Chief ~'!lly Hi~ Olympics Qualifi~atwns CINCINNATI (AP) -Wilt Cham· berlain in the Olym pics? If Jack Kelly,O. hnmediate past president of the' Amateur Athletic Unioo, had his way, all pros like the giant Los Angeles Lakers' center would be eligible for the Olympic Games. "It's beyond my lifetime, but all you should need to compete in {he Olympics is citizenship in your country," said Kelly, chairman of the AAU's National Swimming Committee for the 1973.Indoor . UCI at Nevada LAS VEGAS -UC Irvine~will invade the University of Nevada (Las Vegas ) in a si ngle game Frii:l.ay. aijemoon and a doubleheader Saturday With Tom DOdd. Ray Humphries and Gary Wheelock slated for mound duty. In an earlier doubleheader, ·tJCI handed the UNLV team a double defeat, g..5 and 5-0 with Dodd and Wheelock combining for t~e shut.out. Champiqoshlps. . "I don't suggest cash awards for the trials or the Olympics, themselves," the brother of Princess Grace of Monaco conJinued. "A lot of prOs W.,illldn't £0nl- pete just for the glory. 'Some Wflld. 'f.Wever." • Th< 6-foot·l, 2(1().pound PhiladeJpJ!Jan, now 45, once was a world .chan)pion oarsman. He suggested thJlt the de(ini- tion of amateurism adopted by hi.s~old sport_be applied \o_a!LO!ympic spo "You are an amateur if you have ac- cepted no priU! money from rowing1on- ly,'1 he said. "Just think, I could _get-dhe Philadelphia 76ers and Eagles in their off-season to go into another-sport. ~Y probably, would do belier, They're noi so hot in their sports." . } Kelly calls for more sweeping c~es along with his rederinition 1 o f amateurism. "There should be federal funding. Thete should be money to reim- burse guys Cor lost time in salary when they're representing their country," be said. GOLDEN W_.EST COLLEGE FRESH HURDLER STEVE WARD. Trio NomlnaWd Former Area Grq,pplers Sparkle us . Collegians Three Orange Coast area products have been nominated for the title of outstanding wrestler of the yeai on the college and university l~vet~ • - Chris Horpel, a graduate o! Newport Harbor High and currenUy a junior at Stanford University where he wrestle! in the 151).pound class, is one of four on the uniVersity level. Horpel futlshed fdth in the NCAA finals wilh an overall record of 30-4-1 and rank- "· I - HOWARD HANDY One of his foes in the NAIA category Is Mark Lawrence of Southern California College at 134 pounds. Lawrence is a sophomore who took. a 25-0-0_ record to the NAIA nationals before losing. SoCal's Jack Robinson Is one o! three nominees for coach of the year in the NAIA after his first-year team compiled an impressive 15-1-0 record, includiag the championship of District Ill (NAIA). , .... * * * Former UC Irvine basebaH star Rocky Cnlg wbo signed wtib the Kansas City Royals of the American League, has ad- vanced to the Jacksonville entry in the Southern Anoclatton (AA). . Rocky wUI be Ia c-d wben the Sum open tbelr season and ts one of fopr oatftelden oa the roster. · Myron Pines, formerly of Gold.en West College and Cb&pman, ts the fourth out-. fielclei and Don Spatt, allo a Chapinan grad,uate, Is at lliortstop lot lbe Sons. ed. s'econd in tbe state in his ~ght Hats o.ff to ~tancia ~ch Don Burns di . . . · . ~for nmrung a highly eff1ctent dual track v1s1on. , ->and field meet. Glenn Andersoo, formerly of Fountain When the Eagles hosted Magnolia last Valley High, Is one of four NCAA college week, every field event in all three division nominees, also in the ISO-pound divisi~ was ended before the start of class the final\l'elay race. And. the meet ended H ·fin. hed he II d' . . 4-0 minutO. ahead of schedule. e " 13 t year as co ege IVISKlfl Concurrent nmning of field events in national champion with a 38-0-0 record. all three .cJivisions belR!f get these dual He attempted to wrestle with a separated meets over and keeps interest in prcr shoulder a n d was f<rced to de-ceedings high throQghout the action. fault bis second match in the uni· All schools should adopt this policy. versity meet. He a t ten d s Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo). Gabe Ruz, a third 150-pounder, is a graduate of 'Costa Mesa High and is an NAIA nominee. He attends USIU in San Diego and was hampered by a knee in- jury early in the year. He finished with a 24-7~ record and was runnerup in the NAIA national meet. Congratulations to the Jerry Halberls on the birth of their second daogbter, Karen L)'llJI, weighing Ia II 1 poands, 14 ounces. Karen join! si·ster ltriitin and mother Candy as cheer leaders for the UC Irvtoe golf and assistant baskflba.11 mentor. ... • ' _-;...- N"'I'Orl Harbor High'• Jim Neldhart I got off. a 113-0\lo effort in the shot Pill to highlijht Orange Coast area track and field performlnces Wednesday after090n. '!be Newport aeoior got oil tosses of 6t- 9, ~'?-9~..61-3%, 61·1%, 62-6 and 63--0¥ •. The latter is Neid.hart's best toss of the year and ts the second besl put in CIF Southern Section circles. v .... ,., Wntfl<ll•i.r ("41 1n1 .. ....,....., H..-tlw lot-1. ~ (NJ 2. BtlllctS INI 1. no ttllrd. Tl..,.: 10.5. 'l2Q.-l, OlSll11l11to IN) l. 86UIC61 U'ill 3. LJUon IN!. Tlmej 2f·'· ~ ' , IN4fT1m.~" II~ IW) l. ~11_!'.!"""n (NI _ l. H9drlck aeo-1. f.r'1°1w1 2. Stllrltv tWl 3. Etcher (Nl. Tl:f~\~ tiltl HM (Wl CtmlCkV IW) 1. QlllOQlt \W). Tln-.;:--.t:l3.S. -mll~l;-"'-l'rk 00 l. Stacv !WI 3. Heldbrlnk IN). T~: ~f~s.!_: ~ OISltfll•lto (NI 2, Slrlckland (N) 3. Howl• WJ. 1 lli'le': 1s.6. · · 1110 L I, ni.riot uo 2. $trlckltnd tNJ 3. Howlt. {W), Tlmt: 20.6. "*' 11t.ia-1. HN'POrt Hllr'bof. Tlmt: .ft.f . Mll• R•l•v-1. Wnlmln•t•r. Time : 3:12.7 (School Rec.I. HJ-I, P•rktr (W) 2. HontYW911 IN) 3. Hedrick (N). H.igtiT: ~V. (SchOOI Rec.) U -1. Honevwell (NI 2. Howla (W) 3; H..:lrlck IN),• Ol•l•nc•: 20-1~ ' , PV-1, OISttnl1lo.I tNI 2,.$11111et«WI 1 FOlttt•!N). H!l~~i. 1t!it1~rt IN) 2. Frtnl!:lln (N) 3. Kramer <w>. oruance: 63-f~W IOI' van1tv WMllftl•tw (~) {1JI H""'1 Htrbtr 100-1, M<:Cune (N) 2. Fuk_\!IMtO (NI J. Prine• (WI. Tlrne: 11.2. 220-1. McCuM IN) 2. Hoow IH ) 3. Prince (W). Tlmt: :U.l. .U0-1. com1•11 IWl l. Lll:obtrnon IN) 3. Wt!I$ {WJ. Time: 5'. , llCl-J. RoOM'lsonJNl 2. KuDferrtWll IN) 3. 8rttf. 11um~l: Tt'ID'~ 2c:W512. Collfns tNI 3. HHll'ler IN). Tlmt1: •:'5.5. -•· 2~11e-1. Rltlno (W) 2. K.illl (NJ 3. Sketch IN). Tl!ffl; \O:OI.). · I HH--jl SClleUl!lt>lr;er {Wl 2. M•l9fle lW) 3. Strl IN), me: lW. 1110 L.._:.1 , Fukumoto (N) 2. Pou (W_).. 3. Smith (WJ, Time: 22.4. .f40 Rt lav-1. Ntwfl«t Hartlof'. Tlmtl: "4.7. Mitt' Rtlav-1 Nf'NllOrt Htrllor. Time: 3:U .5. HJ-I. R•v-'lpo 2. SChellenberller lW) 3. Slri!W IN J. Htloh.I : 54 • U -1. Strew fN) 2. Hoose IN) 3. Prince lW). Ol1l•nct: 19.J. P\1-1. Pou II~ 2. Htrmon (N).3. lfl•I Hlob and B•bcoct cw!. H qht: l\-6. SP-1. Nu ty NJ 2, \lalla (W} 3. Stn;ster (N). 0111.nc;~:::..i., r.~'-" Hlrtlor 100-1. PtttfftOfl I~~ 2. 2.tt~ 3. Moort IW). T:i1";: 10.9. 1. Humtnn (NI 7. Ptlt9non {WI 3, Gtnen ( >. Time: n.s. '60-1·. KnoMI (W) l. Prince IW) s. O'Hara (NJ. Time; 1:2'.I. . 1320-1. Pl'lnct (W) 2. O'Hart IN) l. Ft.lkumoto (NJ. Tlmt: 3:19.9. 70 HH-1. Htnson {W) 2. Dl$tanlslto !NI 3. Burne (W). Time: f,f, 120 LH-1, Hanson (WJ 2. DISt•nl$lllO (N) 3. RomlM IW). Tin-.: 1.f.S. .uc> Rt •'l'-1. W"tmln.""'. TlrM: "4-7. HJ-1, Wiison IW) 2. l.oll~ler CN) 3. Clemenlt !W). Hfllqhl: .W. U-1: Sl'lllrp fN) 2. D!Sttnlslto fN) 3.D!renlleld (NJv~·i~~: 1tJ1 l. Olrenrlekl IN) l . Whlletlffd '"'• H.iotit: ~-$1 -1. Mull<tall IN).2. ill:lcl'lllrdson (NJ 3. Lftndvl (W), D11tanc•: .st-<!Yi. Vanity Celf9 Mell (411 fm ,._.,.... Vtlln 100-1. C1w (Fl 2. Ltnaa (F) 3. RuS$fll IFJ. Time: 10.3. 220-1. Casi IF) 2. ~mel (CJ 3. LtHigl IF), Time: 12.9 . .uo-1. Ot$rnel ICI 2. S1vln !Fl 3. Jenkins <FJ. (Khool record) Time-: SO.•. ll0--1, Hatfllld CFJ 2. Moore IF) 1. Rlll!ed!I• iF), Time' 2:03.0. T1~'rc~u.r11.nlcl!: (Cl 2. Print CC) 3. 5milh IC). 2-tnli.-l. HotlldflV IC) 2. Priest !Cl ], 5mltn \t;J, Time: 9:43.1. 120 Hl-t--1. Rt tl..-id (Fl 2. L..,..ls (C) 3. ltbone IF). Time: l'.1 llO ll-t--1 , ill:tlltnd (FJ 2. Falkt IC) 3. Tabone !F. Tlmt: 21.l, , 4.411 R•lav-1. F011nlaln Vlller.. Tlmt: U.3. Mlle Rtlev-1 F011nl1l11 Vf! ev. Tlme: 3:44.1. HJ-1, H1rtslftld (F) 2. H II !Fl 3. Hendricks (C). 1Helglit: ..0. · U -1. Moort (Fl 2. CIW IF) 1. Tllcunpaon ICJ, Dl1t1nc1; 19.f. P\1;;!1~ Robuck <FJ 2. Tochll!:Vbo CC} 3. SOlanko (Fl. .._ht: 12-6. · SP-I. Powell (Fl 2. DcwM>ttlH IC) 3. Johnaon IC), Dlst111a: .. 1014. • DlKUf-1.;, Powell IFj 2. Chtmberltl11 IC) 3. OONtelll 1 ... 1. Oht•nc:•; _ _,'9-1~ J \l'llltf' V~llV Cotlt """' Ill) (It) FOlll'ltlill Vt lln Tll:;-,o_r'llson (FJ 2. Hamnak.l CC) 3. COQPff. !F). 220-,-:1. COOPel" IF) l. H•ma•akJ (C) 3. Wfndlandt (CJ. Tlmt: 2"'.3. Tl~h..~' (F) 2. Fancllek ,CFJ 3. s111rp !CJ. U0-1. Stromberg (FJ 2. LaKh (Cl 3. Gl"&l~r ICJ. Tlmt: 2·1111.1. Mli.-, Pl..U (Fl 2. EUii fC) 3. Gostv !CJ, Time: .t:f'/.4. . . 2-m1i.-1. Mnl (CJ 2. Hv.all (C) l. Whl!nf'/ IF). Time: lO::U.1. 120 HH-1. ill:Olt (Fl 2. Petroff IF) 3. Erwin IF). Tlll)t: lt.3. llO LH-1, Kreutzer (Fl 2. ill:OU IF) l . Wida (Fl. Tim.: 12.9. • 4.411 ill:elav--1. Founttl11 Vtllev. Tlmt1: 47.5. Mlle Rtl..,.-1. Fountain Veney. Time,· 2:51.1. HJ-I. Rou IF) 2. frl1led CC) ], llornton IFl. H&lght: S-10. . LJ-1. Ctdo IF) 2. Wida (Fl 3. ICrtutzer tFJ, Dl1lanct: 11·1\4!. PV-1. Harl'ldon (F) 2. 110 M<:O!>d or lllln:I. Hel11ht! 10-1. SP-1. VenHulsen (Fl 2. S1111ler (CJ 3. Cox (Fl. D!ll•!l(.e: 40-10. , Dl!Kus-1. Stll)lch (Cl 2. Fox (F) 3. Mackley !FJ. Distinct: l:n·7'Jo, ·--(nit M ... IJll (6'•/ Fo..tlift V1Uey 100-1. Kers1111w !F/ j · Ill) Cl'lllmblrs tf ) •nd Andfnon (Fl. Timtl• O • l. Andtnon F) 2. Ktr$heW (F) 3. MfNldJJV I me: 2A.f. 1. Prlc:. (CJ 2. Slr1ckland (f) l. Brow.r IF). Tlm<1: 1 ::M.2. 1~1, H•:-glnton (CJ 2. Fencheli: (Fl 3. St1rre11 ICJo H1~\.3~1~ (Fl 2. Nebe!Cirr (C) 3. McDermott (F)i~1r'~1~·1:11et1 (F) 2. PlllUlris (Fl 2. Netlfker IC!. Tritons Thumped By Oran ge, 10-3 • Baseball Standings Kyle Newman started shakily but finishei:l. in a blaze of glory Wednesday night as be led the Orange High Panthers ba!eball team to a 10-3 victory over San Clemente in Crestview League action at El Modena Park. Newman gave up three runs iQ' ttie top hali of !be first inning-then seltled dowrr to pitch one-hit ball for the remaindjir or the game. In addition, batting in the cleanup position, he belted a grand slam bottie run in·tbe filth. · . S111 ci-t. fJJ Ot'Mlle ITtl .. ,.,.. "rllrlM Stavro. ,. a o 1 o lll:ycfb«*, 211 1 1 o o Fbller, cl ' I 0 0 Gl!TW, II 0 I 0 0 Dodcl, c 4 O I O 81rtlert, If 0 I 0 0 OOVgla$t, lb-p 4 I 1 O Newmen, P 2 l l ' Enciu!11, rt 2 1 o o conn. rf 4 o 1 o Voci~, If 2 O O o GrlH_lll'll. c J 1 o o Jantofl, 3b o O O O OOvgl8$, lb 1 1 0 O Ntlt01"1.2t1 1 ooocu ....... 10 200 0 W&lther, p I O O 0 GomtlL ~I•! 1 0 Ktnn.r. lb I 0 0 0 Howell, ~' '\. 2 I 0 Tllftu, rl I 0 0 0 Whitt, JI 2 I I 0 Gtfts, cl I 0 0 0 Marr.c 100 0 Tol•ls 2' 3 ) o Tot~lt Stn Clemen1* Ort"9t ' kort '1 1111111191 • 100 000 0-3 -100 360 ll-10 2, 10 • • ' •• _; • ' • American League East National w L Pel GB Baltimore 3 0 1.000 New York Boston 3 0 1.000 Pi I ts burgh 2 2 .500 1\1 Cleveland Chicago Detroit 1 2 .333 k Philadelphia New York 1 4 .200 3 Montreal 14iJ.waukee 0 2 .000 II St. Louis West Kansas City .. I .800 4- California 3 2 .600 1 Minnesota 3 2 .600 I Chicago 1 1 .500 111 Oaldand .. 1 3 .250 211 Texas 0 3 .000 '3 ' WMMld•r't 9M1n New Yorlr; .f, CIW&land 0 K11n•as CllV 9, Tt)Cll 6 8otforl ti MllweVkM, IMW 01kLand 12, Ch~ 2 '"jllornl1 ' Min"""'• I B•I lmor1 ~. DtltoO 1, 12 lnnlnoa N•n oe- c1tve1•nd ITldtoW 04) ti Hew Yortl 511ne •11 1tLand <Hunter O..ll tt Clllcaoo •• M ~Ill~ (MCNtH)J_•kat e>.T~\t jLoll 0..tl TtllM !BOl!l'lll'l 0-1 11 _,. Crtv SI~ 6-1) Ontv 11am11 iChlOll San FrancL!co HOIP!Qn C'mcinnati Atlanta San Diego Los Angeles League East w L Pct. 3 0 1.000 L 0 J,000 2 1 .667 1 2' .333 1 3 .251L 0 4 .000 West 5 1 .833 4 2 .667 3 2 .600 2 3 .400. 2 ,. j .333 . I 5 .167 GB 1 2 211 311 Spike Invitational at USC ·--C•IJtornl• •l T•x_asi. nttil'lt Oakttnd •T MIMeMllt Ka'1$n Cltv •I ClllctfO 86111n'IOl't at Mlhnuk ... twklltht Clt~tllilcl at Oltrolf OnlY Oimts sdltd\lffod LOS ANGELES -Southern cal!!ornia used to be called the track and field \ dpital of thF world ~t has lost Its nickname In recent years. The Compton In vitational and the Coliseum Relays used to be ma jor !'lt· tractions, drawing thousands. Partially the result of the AAU·NCAA feud and portially the inroadl made by pro- tesslonal sports, both are ne longer stag· ed. The two major ecbools here, rivals UCll.\ and Soutberii Califomla, are al· 1cmpllng to revive thal tradition and l Saturday anolher sltp In the process un- rolds. Th< Trojan Invitational, billed as a "first aMual" Will permit athletes from many schools and clubs to perfonn on a good surfac .. Tartan-with, hopefully, a good crowd. The sprlnta figuro to steal the show, with lhe lop duel being the Steve WllJiams-Don Quarrle clash in 220. Quar· rie bolds the pending world record of 19.8 hul Williams has run 20.3 and Is Arocrlca's top young hope. · Steve Smith aims at 18 feet in the pole vault. Al Feuerbach .11nd George WOod.s renew their 10-foot battle In the shot put and '!'racy Smith continues his amazing comeback in the three.mile run: UCLA has producod the Meet or Cham· pions the past two seasont with some sucoess and both the Brulu and Trojans wi ll be going back to the West Coast Relays in Fresno, once a !ormldablo track spectacular recentli' Ignored by both schools. Th< Trojan InvltatiODAI, II success!ul Saturday, may tum into a tWO<tay .•!fair next year with more thin 100 lllgh • schools and 30 or so junior colleges participating one day and then a field of America's finest ttie next. l Heave • Tlrnt: 1s.2. I "° Rtl•v-1. F011nl1ln V• leY. Time: 47,., HJ-1. Melllrl IFI 2. JolleV IFJ 1. Glbtllon (F), HoloM· >j LJ-f, ;uev !Fl 2. Prk:t IC) 3. DI• (CJ. Dl~\'~~~:Elv:. (CJ 2, ChambtrS IF'I 3. LeQflinl IF), ~11111r: M SP-I. Efifn°"'11 !Cl 2. YanlCN"n (Cl 3. H91tttltr "y· Olit1nct· $1-9V... ' ISCllS-1. i:!uenWrq !CJ 2. /f_oste~(FJ 3. Glltofd tc . OlJt•nce: 127-3'4. , • Vtf!ltY Stfttt AU (~jM) H1111!1Mfon l tKl'I 100-1. Harr1.!J. (61 2. Crawford ISJ 3. Fltl!:MM .(HJ. Tlrne: 10.4. -'20-}·--Eclw-trtls (S) 2. Crawford ($) 3. Frtdef cbon (SJ, TJmt: :11.9. '4G-1. Dll'*" {$) 2. C~rtslenson (SJ J, Rt1 (S). Tlwo-:_,~1.~0llnollv ($) 2. Lomtll ($1 3. OaVll 1fSI. Tlll'1,~i~·~m.rk (SJ 2. Aflllt! !Hl 3. scott (S). Tl~i.::.~·0An0.1 (H) 2. McNtlr fHl J, Eddav (5). Tim: J~:t: CtlH• CH) 2. Maf'SlllH ($) l. COl)tland (~~ TL~1.15J,,.,..u ~(SI 2. ~ ... 11ii1 . (S) 3. C•lll• (H). Tlmt: 20.4. Tl 4.fO Re11v -l. 5tnla ,r.,nt. me: CS.6. Miii Rel1Y-l. Stntt ,r.,111. Time: 3:35.0. HJ-1. Steven CSJ 2. Gonzaln (SJ 3. F'llkr\et.$ (H). He~~. 'i:farr.il 1s1 2. Crawford 1s1 J. CoPtl•nd (HJ, Dl~J;~~:~1J' (SI 2. Cowden !HJ ], llO lllln:I. Htlohl: 12.f • • sP-1. PodhortkV {~) 2. MtveNi (SJ 3. P1rktt (S). .. 0111a11ce! 49·11'1. Jutllor Vtf'lltv ' San.la Ana (101) 10) H1111t11111C111 IH<fl 100-1. Marino (5) l. TobV (SJ 3. Zerall (S). Tfme: 10~1, M•rlno 1S1 2. O.lerlvt (SI S. Smllll IS), Time; 1•.0. $ M ($) .uo--. Plckerlnci ISl 2. Glri:llllnl t J 3. l!IOl'I • Ti~fL'Revn (SI 2. Uulter IS) 3. Tonev IH). Tl~r1~\13~Ucker IHI 7; HOl)klns IS) 3. Maiten IHI. Time: 4:.\2.8. T 1$1 2-mlltil, Malwn IH) l. MtVtl't (SJ 3. 1rr • Tim: ... ~"!.:t Scott (SI 2. Valdez (S) 3, Blll'kt (S). Tl\8~' ~~=1. Burkt (SJ 2. Valdez !SI 3. Scott (5), Tl~~:R2~ii1V-1. Stnia· An•. Time: 4'.2. Mii• Rel•v-1. Santa ,t.na. Time: J:SJ.3. 1 <HJ HJ-1. Sobel (S) 2. Barcus (S) 3. McGu rt • Hel11hl' S-2. B l$I LJ-1. H1rrl1 (SI 2. Thoml)Hln (HJ 3. lfCllS • Olatance: 16-S. H PV-1. Zaun (SI 2. Camd« 151 3. Sloan I ), Helnht: 11.0. SP-1. Hurd !SJ 2. Mllimi (S) 3. Oal!:lf'/ IS). Dl111mce: .U-2'\llK • Frnfl.Septi Santa Ana fSll l«J Hull'llllOllll letdl 100-1. Torm (SJ 2. Mlcklln lHJ 3, Luc:• IH Tl~11.0·\CN"res (SI 2, Roberti (HI 3. lucn tHJ, Time: 23.•. -· 151 660-1. Stauffer ISi 2. RobtrTs (H) 3. Jlln'I • Tl~i~7Jor,oa (SI 2. Wiison (HJ '· Kreiger (H). Tl;oe:HJ~~\5: Stevel'tS (S) 2. Cl\rlstl•-(S) I. S11>eros (Sl. Time: 10.1. 1 120 Ll+-1. MlckUn (10 2. Mundav IH) 3. """"' (S1o T~~: .. ~1~'Huntlnot0t'I BffCh, Timi: 46.S. HJ-1, Ga11man IH) 2. Flores (SJ 3. AMd !HJ. H~j~i. 5J.icklln (Hl 2. Sltwns !SJ 3. Torrn 110. D!~tJ2!,~:e1:,;~·1s1 2. Leonh•l"dl !HJ 3. Mor•oa (S). H~f:~i. 1 ~trn11'h (S) 2, Rav (SJ 3. Avert Ot). Dlslan,e: 65'6. \ltnltv M1rl1U1 l"'I 15-1) L.Hrt 100--1. Haw~lo!i (M} 2. MHIOold (Ml ). Cun-nlnoham Ill. Time: 10.1. 710--1. Mtr!qold {Ml 2. Hawkins (M) 3. Porl9r IL). Tl~f·liewart (L) 2. C1mpbetl (M) 3. V•ldel. (MJ. Tl;'0.:...1~'l:ampWlt !Ml 2. Rffd IMI 3. HllCbon ILJ. Tl~r1~\~9~·ftrtvn tMl 2. Saevedra IL) 3. s.m. ILi. Time: 4:21.2. H I ~·m~\t-1. Ser11e (LI 2. Blum1 tMl J, e llll'l'llll CL1 2o H'H~t~'~f~r1 IL) 2. Rankin (MJ l. Etlhlf'IV (Llao TL~~1 ~5~iit11er1v !Ll 2. R•nkln !Ml '-ll•I"" (lho T~~~2!,·,1·M11rln1. Time: u.t. Mjll! Rl!16Y-1. LDll•I: Tlme: 3:3l.a. H. -1 Palmer !Ll 2. Lafldoraf (M) 3. Lootl !MJ. Htfn( 'L."1'tch!e Ill 2. Smltll (L.} 3. ltndo~•I (M). D!~~~~: ~~am !Ml 2. Mven. Ill 3. H.mlllon {Ml, Heloht: 13-6. l SP-1. Tervln (Ml 2. Olbvr11 (l) 3. J6ntl (M). DTSlanca: s2.av.. Junltr VfttltY' M•ritoa <in t•I Lo•r• too--1. Pol"llllo ILJ 2. O.vl1 (Ll 3. Mtflaold {M). Tl~_,1,0·9i>ortlllo {L) 2. D11vl1 fl) 3. Wiiiy fl). Tl~/''lfndtlekl (Ml 2. Norrl1 Il l 3, WH!hlrford tLJBo_!l~~i6,lll ,~· Hiii [Ml 3. Jftlklflt (M), Tlmt: 2:~1/e-..1. erOwn· (L) 2. !larnell (L) 3. SherrV Ill. Tl~i1:.:..4::2·shtrrv fll 2. Brown IL) 1. Hall (L). Tlr,g :Hl~~~:'Marshan !LI l. Hirko IMl 3.Stutrl(L). Tim": 16.,. I 2 M (Ml O HI '' '!' \l+-1. Mtrshall CL . vetl • r (M ,•T me: 21 . .t. 440 Relav-1, L!lllrft. Tlmt: 46.7. HJ-1. Tennvson fl) 2. OHIO (l) 3. l-!M), Helahf: 5·1~~. LJ-1. Olon1m (Ml 2. wriev {L) 3. N01"1'11 !LI. 01p~~c1~: ~r;t:;"·cMJ 2• Mtndor• tL> 1 Hawn <Ml. Hs!~~i. 1~tmrn (L) 2. Pe!'dtie (Ll 3. Srnllll (M). 011111nce: 44-7. F""'h-$,,ah Mtrln1 1601 \:Ill Lotr• 100-1. "\attes.en (M) 2. e ehm CMJ 3. Orallfl' tL). Tl;;:_i~·1.\.11-!Ml 2. Dr8"1' (LI 3. I'""" n.1. Tl66$_:_,2_~·~~1ne (Ml 2. Drll?et (L) J, G1rd1 (M), 'Tl1~{29~'ho1ar tMl 2. Nash !M) 3. Frenctl (l). T1Jlj'~H3.:.~·4szen~I (Ml 2. Wtst fMl 3. eve CLI. Tlf~rL9./..:.1. Bonifacio (L) 2. Slent!'I (MJ 3. ODlr• (LL Tlmt'· U.S. HJ-1. Rum1ev {Ml 2. Parabok Ill 3. BUlltT tMJ, H~~J~i. 5:1etim !Ml 2. Ogara (LI 3. M1ttnon !Ml. Ol•la11Ce; l' .. ""· PV-1. 81Slll'll'.! !L) 2. Loctcsl'!tw (M) 1. Partbolt fl). Hel11~t: 12-0. SP-1. E~khardl (LI 2. EdwarOS IL) 3. BoullonlM), Olsten,e: 53-4. ' • / j ' I . .J ' Sta.rt Your -Engines!, · WITH DEKE HOULGA1t1 ' ... . . . . , /here bas been a lot ol ~ttenlioa paid In tbe last ~ moaths ~ ~o a number of upcoming assaults oo tbe Land Speed Record In .. ~ rocket cars. ·, , Gary Gabelich, who bolds the ·record of az.48'1 m.p.b. otl lh 1970 wilh the rocket-powoied Blue Fla,me. ts oaly ooe of the candidates to set a new mark aod break thmlgh lbe iound ~rrier. , ., Preyiously announced have been attempts br[ormer record bolder Craig Breedlove and Art Arfohs. nickel car builders BiU Fredrick and 'J'ony Fox and a Soviet team of rocket scientists, who plad to run their car on the Steppes. In all t~s talk of rocket power, which lias also w11imited speed potential, there ttasn't been much speculation late~ about wheel-driven ·cars going after .their own wor,ld record. Now comes word of ail incredible announcement -ooe,al· most too fantastic to believe -that a group of AusU:alians plans to try for the same record the rocket car advocates want tO set, but with a wheel driven stteamliner. The vehicle will he an all-Australian project from conatruc· lion to the run ltsell. ll will have 3Z ,rotary engines ..,_mg !&.wheels to jlevelop 13,!20 horsepower. The car wi,11 be1 31 leet Jong, 3. feet wide and 19 inches high with onIY an inch and a half of ground clearance: 1 -.- Digesting the meaning of those dimensioos, it's dlfflcult to imagine what sort of man can .fit Inside. The builder has thought about the problem. His driver will lie flat on his back and use a closed circuit television screen to see where he i.s going. The s.ix-man team is...headed by a Sydney automotive engi· neer,Jct.tin ConWay, 25. Conway claims he.has tested the stream· liner's shape in a Melbourne wind tunnel and bas already be- gun construction of the rotary engines, which are of his own design. F SerieJ of itlilfortunes It mig\it he ....,alled tbal wben Doaald CamplJell wu trying to break the • m.p.b, barrier with bis fa.mom: ,tarblft.pewered car, Bluebird, he bad a Hrles of almost dllaltroa mlafertaes at Lake "Eyre, Australia. . The dry lake, wllleb Ii belleved by Aborgbieo lo be the home · bf evil ·spJrits, flll_ed ap with water bo&ll J'Gl'I H wu tbere after deca·des of droagbt. Jt )au •wllere HU' M Ideal surface as the Bouevtlle SaH Flali. Tbe bal1der lou ""qM of tbal loo. Conway says his &Qmpany wUI buUd a rabberbed t~mlle track on wbJch the car will r11n. The car wtU· eo1t f'lt,OOI to build, but the track Itself will coat $I00,800. First on the Aussies' Umetable wW be an auaalt In It'i't on the wheel-driven record currenUy held by Bob Sum.men ef Ontario. Driving the Goldenrod 1treamllng powtted by four Chrytler bemi engines Oii Nov. l!, 1915, ~ilie yonger Sam.mm brother set a two-way Dying mile record of 411.%17 m.p~. Bob and his brother Bill have kept the Geldenrod aroud, just In case their record Is broken, because they beUeve It ts capable of much faster speeds. · But the Australians claim their car is Capable ef 71t miles an hour. Jn 1975 they plan to go after the S011Dd barrier. - 1£ somebody doesn't get there flnt in 1 rocket car, that meam tbe wotld 's fastest vehicle could be a wHtl-drivea car again. We purpoM:ly waited !till well aftei April l to report tilt amazing bit of neW&. Tltote people ace really serloas. 11da II not a put-on. • · ft.a! Became Sur-11it;al Derh!f A. J. Foyt thought speed was going to kill at Texas World Speedway last Saturday but .. 'i.f it had the autopsy would have shown the victim died of boredom. Bobby Unser's 212 m.p.h. qualifying feat made 8 parade out of tile first part of the race. Later, as high speeds made pos- sible by a perfectly banked track 1(1.lld aerOOynamics of the mag- nificent cars started overstressing the engines, it became a sur· vi val derby. #. There was haidly any passing up near the front of the pack. Al Un ser, \Yho won , inherited the lead from dropouts and was passed by two other drivers who were unlapping themselves near the end. · ~ _ . Earlier in the week Foyt expressed for the record a senti· ment many of his peers ·have ta1ked about in private. 1be feeling is growing that 200 m.p.h. racing speeds are unsafe, definitely for the drivers and maybe ·even for the fans iD the stands. • l Ahillty to React "letlt1lltflle•• At 208 mlles an bolU' I car ii traveliq Zb fed a HClltd. U anything happens suddenly, the driver'• •bllUJ .. react ii me'anlngless. H~ ""ill merely be along ifor the ride. One of the lean at Indy Is that somebody will 1pfn on tlle front straightaway and th~ wind will catch tbe undenlde of tbe rear wing while tbe car is rolling backwards. Tbb could theo- retically Jilt the car off the pavement and saU It fnlo tbe croWded grandstands. Another safety hazard is speed differential. At Teus tltere was a ridiculous dlHerence In speed be~ Bobby Umer's Ohoalle Eagle and ·ean Ill the bock of Ille paek. la -ala I racing, they restrict the quaHfiers to thole whbia a certain range of the pole sitter. Not Ip USAC. . A third problem, wblcb ls something the driven gripe aboat, ts tbe turbulence they feel when ~Y nn "bebiad another car at the speed!Jhey are getting. Not only does Ille larbalence llop·llle driven' beads around ~ madl tbey can't aee, ... bat it alle dls-- turbs the stability of Utt can IUllilg ta tb~ wakes of etller can. USAC's machinery 'for ebnlJI' ii qalte. l'lllly ud creab · when It moves. The speed problem bu been debited tltoreaghly behind closed doors in mies committee meettnp and over gill rummy games. ~ Wf11gs to Be OutlaHled1 ' -The reactionaries, who dictn:..l want wings in the first place, would like them outlawed. They may get their way, but wings have proved to be a safety factor in the corners, because they make tires stick to the pavement like glue. Car owner Roger Penske proposed that turbo-charged en· gines be replaced by normally aspirated engines, both as an economy measure and to help hold down the speeds. His idea was rejected. 1'ndy Granatelli suggested a drastic fuel restriction. which would make everybody s)ow down to con.serve fuel. We likened lhe idea to .NASCAR's carburetor plate restriction -it was simple and .aidn't require making obsolete a lot ol equipment all at once. USAC reacted to" this aebeme by raising the fuel Umll for the Indianapolis 500. So USAC charnplGDshlp racing gets more parade.Uke, the fast can passing everyllOdy unUI their engines break and Ibey ~ Out. And it gets scarier. College Prep Goli --. • ( 1.- ~mitos ~ · • • .I. t , ., ,., , ;: A~l 12, 1973 DAILY PILOT JI Ch~cking Out GWC Girts ' A G I. • Trifu;tph Harness • , > Entries rea ymnastics Debbie Buruso.f~-we I , ,., / 1 grand slam • run and CONSIDER.YOUR FtLLOW GOlFERS J • • UI ~ •ll"1M llr "T ...... ""'-' .._, • P.lriL CIMr a PMt. U •.act• • 1tt -. ti •uctt .. -,_, ...... KM•MIMt. .r __ lllllST a.t.c:f -OM mllt. flKI. Clalrnlril 9'1 ..... Cltllflllll pr!« S2.SOO, NOii \JlllNWl'1 sine• Mllrclt llfl. ,lll'M ., •. .~:: 1~1Srri~.:~ .. l <~I ... ~i"' Debbie Pt r pitched well In ,, . ,.,_....: to lead Golden · West Hlth 111r-1. C•~ tNJ 1. '"'''""...-i'louege's women's sortball lf~.~ • .!['"~1~"1·..!,.~•: i. team to a 1~7 victory over ,,_ INI s. Aliff I ... .,.,.119:· host Cypress Monday. •·1.-1,._1. " oo t. L1m11 tl'I Ptfls.s__Burlison.. belted her -'· ... ~:·•w . 'e~":'r,), 1'iwr ... : homer in the seventh inning to .._, give the RusUerettes a com· rortable lead. GI,.... ~rle (D. K1imt11.,l Cttdl Me Fll"1t (A. Wl,..,-1 Colaf" Chlonot UI:. Olollnel Chtit.:e P1fl11N( CJ, Lonool &onrllH Mlul11 (IC. INYNrdl Mutllll ...__. CO. Gar1Mlo) JorrMrt Adels IG. ~) Gkri's Kll'll (L. Grtigory) ...,_....., n•n~ c:!iMI s.--v.~u1r.:1'wl1.1S..~~i.Jrtwl 1 Ylfaot: .Hkllt l•t -1. VIII Rult.fi I, J. HM11n (WI, s. ldlofhi.11 ) 7.ll. Pt11ss !tfeyer 1 entered the game in the first inning arter Cypress had scored six runs . and proceeded to limit the host team to just one tally the rest of the, way. . SCCOttD Uc.-::"" Onf mll•. l"KI. Clalmlll'ii aJ1 999'-Tiit! C\11171119 Pl'itl l4800. .... ,... $2000. • Howdy ~I (A. Ctaltl) OkkS Olltml'l'll (M. Holll M«kh\O O•Nl'l'I (P'. Fm Jr.I N~ko Mary (G. Sl~1ulk) Pl9IOfl l'olt IE •• CobOl c-111 """ CJ. etnnttn "" Skit Horw -1. Wlll"•ktt IWl, 1. oEu.u 1w1, s. SOUOll IWI J.0.S '" £11.tttli.1 -\. s.vln lW), 2. J IWJ, ). Gllllt (W!>!i.U '!'•Itel l•(l.-I. TOfl'I no IW), 2. Mii •rotr (W~). Woli. I ), 7,l . •;i• -1. •IJOn !W), 2. Adt:ock 'l:I . H111M11 WI, J.~S. I OOllld -•11 Rul!"1 (WJ 5.45, w · 11 tll •.1. . I , The victorY ran Golden West'.s ree6rd for the season , to 10-l. , t#'N lfj. =~1 :--How of~e" have you see~ a er 'trith Whom TH110 1Ac•. _ OM~ m111. Trot. YoU ire plliying use-his PU s •••crutch'' wtte. cW11m11'19 111nc11c11t, 111 ~. 111k retril"ling his NII from ole? c111m1ne Pl"k .. '50C»-UOOM7000· TOI» This practiCe' Is 1te colnmon, -t ·~· to ..:.. cl1ll'l'llftt orlc1 .... ·PvrM UIOD. ~ .. _.....1N 119 Albklft Vesttonl J. 10 . MeVOC.k•l ~ rrttte-discu ·POint Of etiquette. Area Sports 1 C~endar Kathy Stephens continues to be the RusUerettes' leading hi(ter . with a .MS ave.rage while Mlls,BurlillOD and Sue Lehman are hitting .487 and "' Ernprlti CJ. DIMl•I Wh u ts ,,,,,TM eorsi tJ, e.nnett> e . goner pu most of his weight on the ~~~T1: ~~: :':!'l'"o' no his putter, he not onty dents the putting L•llm £1'!'1 '"r" cA. W11191f"l A rface, but ,also runs the risk of snappi'ng 'his vie Arlltl'I {T. lhr"tOMI • _../' puttefshaft · · R• He1rt.(J . Mlllw • ~ _ : • · _ .... l'OUITH .... ,...-=-Ont 1'1'1111. P•(•. If you Ytollte the ebquett• of the a•me. in this conom-c1, .,..,...-al •nd ui*r ttwi1 manner, I ur1e you to think of the players that ~~:;::: ::r .. =·i!!/ ~=· $= follow 1 whg_mllst putt over your i,-identatlon. And ~,..:~1~n~~)1' • •1•r11• reme"'ber:the next such mark you must putt over M1forc• {J. Der111111 may be your own. -OlrlCt Mll"ll IR. Wlllllml) Anchor .... (J. "'"9¥) A!'ldV-Slhor (J. O'&rfen) ,.~ R.trtl IE. s1-1rll st..-Chick (J. VoH•ro) G1M111t H•l'IOYlf N (I(, C1rln1!1 l'UITH IAC8 -OM l'l'llle. l"ace. Cl1ll'l'lll'l!I 111 IQIS l11t1 ct1lmln11 ptlce S62SO. PurM s2«111. Fre1 HH!flef" !M. Holl) Scotfll h ~ (0 . Ae..,rm•nl N-11..01::rr. Jt1lehfordl SKotld ll1lt (J, 11\ltyl S1l11t C1a1r Chllf (J. Wlll11m1> First lov•I IS. Onolflll") Orbit Mll'I (F. HIYIMl'I) llf!Mnr l•Y (0. ICIUNllfl SIXTH IACI -Ofle l'l'llM. l'llC9. Cl•ll'l'llnt IN 1111$. T11t1 cl1lrnl1111 price s10.uo. """' PIDO. Glowflll (J. a.rw.ttl NIY.0. JICk (0. M9YOcilJ) GrMnltlrll O'lr1"' (G. Lonool Como l+tllOYel' (J. Mllltrl <t.o · Nit.t\."-t..s,..- Seote hi •pit• of tnps, bunkers, rou1h end downhill lies-with thti http Arnokt ,p.i..., offers rou in hiS bookl.t, ''Trouble Shots."· A copy It ~I'S fof 20$ atone with a stHiped, self- add,.ssed •iweloPI sent to Arnold P•kTler, in care of this news· peper. .frjUy tA,,-. })) Swlmmlnct-CIF flnaJ1 11 l tllTIOlll l"Yu 17:30 •p.m.). Gro»l'l'IOlll 11 • OrM!ll Cout !l p.m.), SOC .. COll-,,ttnCi me.t·11 El.AC t10 .. m.). Tr.ctl-N_PON.,.,... Olltrld mMf 11 NIWPO<"I H•rbor (S p.ir-.lr H1111-t1nGIOfl 811t h Olllrict Mfft 11 W111ml111t1r (7 p.m.), Unlv•r1Uy 11 l olM Gr1110t l11Yil1tlonll Hi:Ul, Orange COl•I 11 Mt. SAC \l l, s.ld· dllfNCk, PllOl'llt 11 Cllrut (l . &IMl:Mll-Corona al Mllr at E1l•n. ,.1 Vlltne:ll II Dini Hiii!!. FOUrll•ln \11 llV II EdllC!fl, Hunlll'l!llOI\ I MCll 11 Marina, Wntmlntllf 11 Loar1, LIQunl 9N<ll 11 El Dorldo, 1 .... 11 Unlv.nl· 1v, T1>1lln at MIMlon Vlelo, Fooltlltt 11 Sl!'I Clemel'lfl, Pl111 X 11 Matw De \111 " 1:1sJ, SA V1Llly ... Cosll M .... , Cos 1 Miu Park Ul. NawPOrt Harbor 111 All~lm 11 LAI Palm.t 11 :301! Dr.riff Coast lt!d Goldlll Wttl I Ot°lncte counrv JC hl\lfMY," UC lrYIM 11 UN (LI• VIQlll 2:)0. T111111-e111ncl• •' Coron• di! M1r1 Edl50n 11 Founllln V~lley, Al'llhtlm I N.wporl Harbor, M11rln1 11 H1,111tll'IQIOI\ BHC:h1 Colll Mei.1 11 SA V1!11y, L~ Alll'l'llTOI 1:1 W1Slml111ltr, 0 111 I HUii 11 V1l111Cl1, El "Dorado •.I La.oun• 8NCh, UlllYll'Slty 11 IJ'M, .Ml1slon· • V\110 11 Twllft. S.n C..._11 11 Foo!NU (Ill 11 S:IS), L.ACC al Golden et (t:)O~ Scwtfltfn C • 1111 r " I • •-I' so ltl u<: lrvlne 11 Lona Mell c ... c. ., ........ , , ••. 141. Swlml'l'll~l'Mm Clll!Or11l1 <Ofl· '~"""!r.'"'~' ev.e. It 1-U lrvln. 11 UN IL11 VIQll (dou ~ldlr •t noot1J, Cal Lullltr•l'I It $Ollll'ltr11 C1Ulor11!1 Col· 1...-ldollbllhffdlr at noot1 I. Or•ne• Cout, GiWtn Wiit 11 0rlfl8i COlillly M,, I Ck-f(M,lftlllll \11111\1 11 lll:IYffllcl' •r .o-tt11'1'11 '' 11.m.1 w 11111 '"'"" 1 U!Mlllf l!'IYtlatl-l /lO •·r:"I M111r 0.1 11 11.iioP Amil llll1~ M . SAC I 111 1.l'!'I.; COlll Mtw. MIU Oii Vl1lo. UnlYl!'lllY .i Arcldl1 /11,vll1lloNI f4;)0 p.m.), l"dlsOrt ••I Hlwlllortll DlllllKI ClflllYll 110 •.•n.l, Voloen W11t, Sad-di~ I l1ktr11!1lcl Jl:Nn tt::IO •• m.J, Cal Lulh«ln. W•1IMCW1I, Cal Sl1!1 ( .. ker1lllldi •t UC Irvin. (l'IOOI\). T•fllll-UC lrvlnl at LOl'ICI •Heh C11$11C, t • ''\T.iuc lrlll!'ll, c 11 11111 t~ l 11c ) II Ll!f\ll llta<:ll M-r M ~lldlum; Cll lllti (LOflO IHchJ; U Slf11•· 11..1.rbl•., Orin.-Cotsl Col 191 11 N1-1. .. .452. I ~ ...... w:uv .• rM Orlltr.llt ''I 0 :1r .. t " J I '1' 9u•-.cl l l Ll'l'lml!'I, JG I H••tJl.lll$0ft, p ! I •, Mo::li:, O • #Ml,11 '!'! H•l'!!J .. tb j l ' II ir~~~t rf ,. 14 ,. • Goldtil w::rr-t:.1~14 Ill 0 CvPNM 410 000 o-1 7 t Rangers Romp . 'lbe:Colst Rangers Reserves l squllhed the -Fullerton l R~ Sonday in soccer , P,llY. 3-0, at UC,Irvlne. ~ . I i Good Jtllon II'!. l«dlloJ ar.o. A'*'-IL Qaultonl Htfry Abbi (0, Cl"Ollkl 1 Mii I'll• ll'f (It, v .. ._ K..,-)· · S.VINTM •&cl -JOM rnlle. Pt«. Cl1Jrnl1111 "-!ldlctp Ill ..... l1•k clalrnl111 prlca "1,ClllNUAOO. TOI» cl1lml119 oric. t»,llO. l"ur11 uooo; Pen.ct WNllOfl (J. o.nnlll John Dewar & Sons Ud:- Sit Dowrl IJ. a.-ttl Y.,._ CtMd Ill. Wll~I S.. LIOl'lf (J. O'lrllnl f 118 Timi IJ. hllft'I Fl•llt Oii Pkk {L Olllonl Gus Mlllbar (J. vonwo) l ' IMNITM •ace -OM rnlle, l"ICI. ·Clall'!'lklg lft .,.._ Clahnl119 prtQ 110.000. l"ur1t snoo. L1rry Timi (J. O'~I F1ru tov CT. 09rllllll Srie.rp Sl1r (<J, l•\19VI Stol• Sii"' (J , Todd) ' Shy \11rllty 11. Gord1111I Fiii 1'11~ (W. Sborl ) Mlrtus GUI (J. Wlltt•m1> Tllorpn (P. Conroy! NIWT'M Lt.Ca -One mlle. Cl1ll'l'll110 111 a;9f. T09 cWilmlno prlc1 '6000. PurM ad. "od V Adlos (0. •oc:~l ll•llflOC!l !Mtulon IG. llr1cMr). Jlff.nor1 Tlll9f" (C. 90\'dl MIU Amr MllOI Ill. Wn1111ms1 T-CCII• (J. Todd) JOI lldllrd (J. Wlllltm1 Fl1mlfl8 1"1rktr (J. 01111111) ~lcklow em 1J. O'lr}enl Al~tos Harness ·Results I. T..Ur "'"11 11, 1'7J ciawa ""' • l'lltST •AC8 -0!11 mill. Cllll'l'llllll 111 ..... Plll"M 11711. , J\Ry Rodl!IY IWINill'"I 1.00'°1.00 J.tO Counlfl' Dutclla• !VolWir11) 3.20 3.20 S-IW Mite lllKkmlfll 6.111 TllTll -2.07. AlM f'laCf -ll'tlll I I• Dffn, l"urpil Udy, Clll..,_ L•lhl1Lady,11"11111 Count, Pllll Spook. ... n lfuctt ":'""' w_., • ......, & 1- cwmry Dwfllll, "'" ...._ sacOMD llACS: -°"' mil•. PICI. C:l1lmlno Ill a,e... Pur.e SHOO. S((lffy1 LNdtr (Todd) .U.60 10.60 S.60 Clmmv (Roc:dllol l.60"" l .00 E•sy Stir (ICllmllerl S.40 Timi -2.ot. "''° ractd -Siren•, Mtohty Seotth, All ICtVtd Up, lllllfTIOl'I N, Simpson Frllm. THllD IAC8 -OM m111. l"aa. Ctlll'l'llna all l(llt. l"U1"11 12000. ·--(Aek91'mlll) Nevld1 1 111 (Otsomll"l tn Error (Holl) , Time -2.111 2/!. •.~ •.oo ~-'° 1.60 S.00 .... AllO' rited -1;'11t hy Sky, Liiiy A, Ml» Meac!OW o, Dandy Boy T111, Midway, POO.nt WACI -Olll mn1. Cl1lrn- l119 en 91tts. l"uru aooo. W11 G1ri•r1I F11 11 (O'lrlt11l · .60 ,,00 1.00 Slben G•ll (H1ydenJ 3'.21 t.• A O•rtS tW11111m1l 4.211 AllO raced -Mr. VII, Alld'(I Eddll, Roxy Gr•ll1n, 01111 Cl'lok1, SCOtty1 Aa•lll. . • l'I"" ltACI -Onl mll1. Trot. Condlllon 111 lllft., Pun1 S2iKIO. Lumb1r St•rl1t IWllll1fMJ 4.00 1.00 2.60 e11dw111 ·(e1neyJ '·'° .t.00 9111ttr T1s1 (Llgh!hllll ~.00 Tl'"" -,.G4. Alto r1ted -Aroo Ayres, Olr1 NI*!!, M1"""rl6tr "''*· irm l"•Y• ltock.t 81111. SIXTM kA:C8 -0111 mt1e. l"lce. ~ondlllOfl s YO • Ufld9r. Purse snoo. Andy• Coflo 11•"-l l .»t.t.CI 2• l""""'"f DIWll fS'"°•rll t .00 MO Tobyl Skl"""r (0.UllOl'I) 2AO .:r11M -t.os 11s. Alto rtcld -Timmy T ... , Argo l"rlmr-. Ml1t.r OU hlu, PoktY Chuck, All/tyl OOUO!t, • U 81ld9 -J.Atlfyt CIM & ..,_., °""" '"'"' .,. ... Sll\llNTM llACI -Ona mUt, 'Trot. 111\ll!MloMI ... _ tuOO. FloWtr Chlld (O'&rlfll) 2... ,,20 l.10 Gll!lllll'IWNtltr) JAG 2.~ Ylltew !Clllfl fhflerJ 1.lO Tlml -U:l :l/J.. • Also r1C9CI -.l'lnti, TMI, Nill.,. Stir. • \ invites you to jointk '""""ursHi~ ., • l6u aJied Foran encore ... and here it is. He's offering a fantastic low price on his famous "White Label:' It'll put a little Scotx:li in every Californian! •A lmle better Seo/Jr · "Join the ·clan!". Join ihat happy breed of people who know and.appreciate the fine points of a line Scotch whisky. , · For 60 days, you can trr this Authentic Scotch whisky at a very special price. That means $6. 99 a -fiflh. On June 1st, regular prices take over. Don"t wait. Why aoes a cautious Highlander make such a generous offer) Because he knows that once you try one bottle of his famous "White Label," he's got you m(ROO<I. . ··Maybe. yo~' re alr~dy an old.friend of Dewu's or an. enthus1ashc new fnend. Why not buy a c-of 12 fifths) Now' i the time. You get an extra I 0% discount -even off the $6.99 price. fi ·fh f, · u en re. ·-· • 'DEWAKS ..White Label" r Clan •' ., • SPECIAL FIFTH PRICE APRIL AND MAY ONLY $6?~ Regular price: $7.79 J -=-- <' i " • ., ~. I I j r .... • -· . r • • I • • • • t ' ' I • ' \ • U(l, Prep . ' • Tennis CU.stom Tailor & Shlrtmaker \\' ... 1diff l'I••• • ~Yrnlttnth •nd IF\'HIC' • j r~=-·•07l ' M'"• •nd Wom'"• •h•u11ion' • ,,w,.1¥ln11 * " Th"""'1, Aj>ril 12, 197' .. - ·.Nadiq~ Maze ~egaifis Form -~Jc ~~~ck · · -,. -Horlor Roll L00'K for -8 pacj . tabloid -! We 9~celebl'.!fln9 our • • • To Capture .President~s -Cµp 100 ~-ThcllM, ILACCI t.•1 Ill.on IL.A((), WHll'IOttl (Cltrvtl t .f r Jet"~" (GlfncMltl '"""' St•piltr l•IYrtlde! t .•. Ovt1ht1 ttlll -AtnhMM CNew AM•lcol t.11111. 1'0 -Tlloml• !UCCI 11.tt t. ~th B.irthday Nadine .Maze ~ returned to the form , she displayed before an arm injury and as a result, defeated E 1 e a n o r SWinehart £01 the president'11 cup championship or the Mission Viejo Golf and Coun- try Club women's group this week. Mrs. Maze, an employee of the pro shop at Mission Viejo, has been a dominant force In womeo's golf at Costa Mtsa Golf COurse and at El Toro as Well as ?.fission Viejo in the pas\. When she suffered an arm injury about a year ago, her clubs -.-·erf!""put in storag~ for the duration oJ ~ aiJ. ment. --- This week she returned to win the preSJ.dent's cup com- petlti()!l. June Poff was con· solatk>n winner in th e president's. ·Oight. Virginia Bramsby defeated Joan .smith for the vice president's fiigbt title with Sue Clark w i.n n in g consolation honors. Carol Vukich defeated Ruth Jenkins for the secretary- tttasurer's flight. Coste Mesa . ltfembers of the Costa Mesa Golf and Country C I u b women's club held two tournaments this week. In a better batl of thieesome event, a team composed oJ Ann Pappas, Norine Grady and Fallyn Broob posted a 60 ror top..J1tri0rs. Second place -t to SyM Foster....1.J>oris Ball and Shirley Jackson "'ilh 61. A tie resulted for third place with Gerry Watson, Bet~y Walthall and Alyce Hubbard on one team at 63. On. the other ~ere Margaret Kumaga1. Mary Kent and Evelyn GonnaJ!,-• - Two other teams tied for fourth at 64. B.J. Sleva , Fran Lewis and Camelle Kennedy on one and Barbara POOL TABLES '395°0 --.....::_ and ~p Mortoo, Carol-Ross and Elise mate~ a home-aod·Mme Stipes on the other. series thl! week. ~llll Country Club, Haul Mollica and P•ttY Schottmlller Ued 1or nnt place in the .first Ollbt wtth ""'"8 of 52. Rooemary Ericl<soo wa• third at 53. In a cross country tourney, Low gross honors went tQ a ttam of Vlcl<lf Lohman and Ginny Stasko was the wlnner Arlene Macauley rl. SAOC with In A flight with 29\\ lolJowed N. Bosmum--U. and N. by Betty Walthall (JO~), Ann McKenzie of Irvine Coast with Van Cleave (JI) and Belt~ a """'o1 341. Brown and Mary Oark (32). Second low _. ""11 to Dlgh S d Betty Wjla1IJ and Role Sleight In the second fllght, Liz Brandenburg was the winner with 4111 followed by June poJle (41) and Roberta In 8 1• 8 0 c Y (il'I'r.) with Evelyn Godbtr "lcFarlaod -(U\i)-'!'as-the---f.idGlorla Fleming (SACC) at winner with Rae Mitchell , Vi 351. Andrew• (501 . ' • Third flight went to Bess Ptteroon wltb 52 lollowed by BeUy Peterson (5411 ) and Olah Morgan (55~-Theiss and Eleanor Green tied In the low oompeUtton, Dody at 32. Grant and Jean ~tcCord of El Niguel ' P.ternbers of the El Niguel Country Club women's group' staged a two best balls of foursome toumamen,t t h ~ s week. t On the winning squad $l 121 • were Mary Metz, S t e 11 a Seaman, Nancy Dougherty and Mary~lle Weldon. ln second place at 129 were Sarah Ingram, Marty Tumer, Kay Horn · and~r b a r a Thompson. Third place o Shirley Pen')', Eleanor Ba tt, Lee Ginder and Elsa Wise at 130 with Doris Ha.ndschuch. Helen Holablrd, Jerry Cini aod Eileen Bradwell next at 131. JCCC teamed with Billie Sigrut and Mary Stradling of Metuloll>lark the host course to poJt a 268. Jn a low net tQurnament for • At 289 were Lois F..des and memben ol the Meadowlark Millie RD!lan (SACC) with· COUntry Club women's club. Gloria Dalloe and Barbara played in winds guatlng to 70 Wood. Third net went to Con-mpb, Jeunller Tbompoon cop- nie Kinzie and Alice Nlsoon ped A Dlght honors wttb a 72. (SACC) with Katb,v Tonier Second 'place went t 0 and Sonia Kelley CICCCl at Florence Baker (77). with Lael ~ourth Jow net was taken bv Murray <7S), Anita Appleton II and Cuba Curl next at S>. Rubv to.w~· and LaVeme Ha . In B flight it was B.J. <SACC) w1lh Jove ~ster and Wieland first at 75 followed by Shirley Meyer (!CCC) at 271.' Joyce Thielman (76) and Bea l.agu11a Beaeh Anderson (79). Shirley Steb- blng• woo C night witb 79. Members of the Laguna Beach women's golf club "stagged a poker tournament this week . Low gross finished in a tie ""'ith Maggie Waterman and Diane Stys each firing an 85. Area Track Honor Roll Wlll'l'IOttl (Clh'val tl.31 Jerqul" (Glen. Clolkl 21.M I ..... (LA.CCI 11..41 F•l'fNr llA lellth'"'t) ti.SI MMt C...._ • .... , '1·'· OUttlde 1111* -GllW11tt1 {N"' Mlldcol 20.t. ..0 -Alnel\Ott' (CMffrt) 11 .. ; Twlntlne ~l•kenftetd! ... 61 .aenlOfl C1•11111rton) ... 7~ lloblnlOll (untyl "'I OU!ihM .,.,, -T9Mr( !SOUlll Pit ns. Ttll.I ...... Stivfng Onngo Coun\y Sine~_ 1947 RlEE Glm! FREE DQ.OR PRIZES! RlEE MICROWAVE OVEN! UG -l"Olltr (llket'tlltldl 1:52,Sl ltoblnlOll (LIMY) 1;»..41 HoQl:l!'IWrv fC.nyons) 1:SJ.•; lla)ql (Gto$tn'IOl'll) 1:$-1..21 1WUttw1nd (MO«Htlll l :M.5. Ov'llfdt 1l11t -l1gley (N"' MtlllCOJ l :SS.2. Mflt -Mlndor• (GnKJmonlJ •:11.•1 l v• fGrO.ttnOnll •: IS.11 W 11 1 on (Groumorill •:IU; llollln1011 (Wnl COSTA MESA LA ) •:16.71 Gllkllllrd ID!•DI• V•ll•y) · ___:_ -• •:1•.t . ovr.r •• ,.,, -vn1oen (Odtsl.t. Ha .... or A-T••·' ''''"'-ru • ~ 2-MHt -COiion (Gl'OMll'IOll!l t:• . .i1 Mendol1 lGr°"monl) t :Sl ,-•l i 411 I •--St Htll tF,_) t :07.t; VIII Dint (Sin • -• /MteoJ t :l•.61 •odrlQUtl IEI Ctmlnol M": f•f: S.. f·' t :l7,t , Olllllldt 1t11t -VHto.n t :lS.1. )..Mllt -V•n OIM 1•:11 .01 Rodrfqvtt J 646-16&4 EL TORO Sacldleback Valley - II Ton Id. et,..._., l ntxt to S1v.Onl -. • DeUy : 10·9; s.t. 1M 837-383Q IE•tt LAI 1•:t4,0; Mllryno11kl (Ct· / ny-1 1•:3'.6; Ptlclc J\fP11orMr llJ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1':.0.6; BpnneU (Clfl'f<lll') ~•:43.6. 110 HH -l"ltree (Skyllntl l•.OW1 JIM,.., (Mir• Cost1) 16.t ; C•rler (M1.1 .---------~---------==---=-::""1 l:'.:.;"'~:: :.~~:~'P':.:~-i~.:~. SHL\li-e $2 °0 Tr•1 1•.lw. • ..0 IM -M•rllllt (GrotlmOlll) S4.0; Wy•tl C$kyllntl SI.•; AotlkY U>e AnJ1) 54..S;. Wttlitc:e (1"1.,.Ct) 5'1.t ; ~= ;.',,':, ii.:-' ""' ,_, . , .,;_:-:- HJ -Mii" llono B..chl: (Mltltr " • 'Ill-' ~'!1::~ !~:,c:;.,~;~~~ ... ;.!..rt~~ REAL· !IPPIN'Wll. l~KEV . .-.. :.·.·~-~-River) 6.t. 011111~ 11•1• -81mt1 1;. _,_,, IFICH"lcltl 4-41. PV -S1l11r 1G1tnd•l'J 16-lMI °"'M IC1ny0n1) IS-01 R pity ((YPl'IP , Or1w ~ , :E,~~1 .:~i _K::,~~~=)~ti IN~-nAllONn" o.\I.,;;-,i,:.-;::,.~'l:r."oo:l:"lcl!'ll , 2 ti ~ 2~·1 r !ml!h {LA Sovlhw"tl tw~r , Tllom1s llACCl 23·1, Ovhkle 11111 -1711)1-...!.°'::'J• Tl~•1bo'ti3~l.Jr Km! (Foofflllll 50-01 NMN 1-....11 W•ti '7·111 Smith tlA SOult!Wftl) •7·21 RMd ICanlr1 COlll) C-0. Ovhldt; st1t1 -.(:1ro.n1 ... IMnt, Ariz.) ..... SP -Ad11m (SO MeM) .55-11 Mor-rettt IF""'"""I S6-$/ Roooe {0.bof) S2·•'11i; O.vls tSO MIMI ,l .. \o\1 Mlllfr l!ll:tdwooch ) ».11". Ovtlldt 1t11e -onfl Ul.•nQer) Sl·l'h . OT -lll.llS \Foorl!IUI \U4; l"lt· trrwn (Foothill lff..,; LI,. I 'I . tB1k1rslltld) lJ.1.f1 G•rdMI' (Clllbol) 1S7..il; CO'M IChlbol) 1.SS-1. Ol.ll11dt S.ntc Ana In low net action. Maggie Waterman was the wiMer l\1embers of the Santa Ana with 65. She also finishe4 sec- Couotry Cub booted t b e -Ond to Diane Stys in the A \!.•omen's group fr~m Irvine fliitht. '' ' 11111 -Htrdln \H""' M1111lcoj < .... 1(11)-1. C•te IFOll"llln \11 ev • JT _ Goldlt Cheffly) U .Sr Frink H1w1tl111 (Mllrlnal. Nlllrtln (M.lt•r O.!I (Groumontl 221 .. ; G•rrlrv ICllrull Coast Country Club ma return In flieht B. it ""'as Jean Aba· District '--- jian (82) and Thelma Toomev (84). Hap ~ld1ullen won C flUzht with 94 and Ruth \Vhitaker was.second it 100. Seaelffl 10.0. 111,.1 c11als10n (Oftfrtl 21Mr Krogh 220---1 . Tlltt"lot (Newoorf Hlrbor) fMI, SAC} lll-3. Ovbldt 11111 -22.•. 2. Ct .. IFQl/nltln \f1lltYl 22.s, 3. Sllo.m.tk•r {Ntw Mtxlco) :m ... Ovkt1 {Unl~.,-1nyJ 22.6. 4olO rtl•Y -LACC 41.51 Porltrvlllt 40---1 . 11r1dtord 1un1-11tv) '9.1, 2. 41.6; Wt1t LA 41.ti Ovt11dt 11111 -Humtnn (NtwpOrt .ft.9 3. 0t1mtt OcltsH, Tex. O.S. lCosl1 MHtl tlld Llov (i!dlson) 50.G. Miit rtltv -Ch.tfftv 3;11.0; LA U0-1. Ctmpbtll tM•rlnt) 1:11.0, t. Savtllwtsl l:ll.11 Ovbldt tlllt -P011 (Wt11ni1n111rl l:SS.S. 3. Shlrlw,_<_,~~~·-'-'-'·-'-"-'~J. _____ _ IW11tmln1t1rl l :S6.S. 1· Mll-1. K. Howl!" !Ml11lon \lltlol 4:1, .. , :z. Ano11 /Huntlnqton lletch 6:20.J, l . Gollnlck Co.II Mntl 6:21.1. 2.fl"lll-1. Anotl {Huntlnglon ll•Khl t:U ,I , 2. Blumt (Mtrlnt) t :21.1, 3. K. HOWff (Miiiion \lltlol 9:19. , Spikefests Jn a field shots tournament 120MH--l. Ad1m1 (E1t1nel•I 16.a. 1. OISl1n!sl10 (N-pOrtl 15.0, 3. Ltf'Ot for the _women of Huntington IFovn111n 111111y1 1s.1. District meets grab ::-, L lto LH-1. L~• (Founl1ln V1ll .... ) Ir.ck and fl'eld !potllght i· lt..5, 2. Acl1ms !Eittnel•l lt.5, 3. WVrl-"' (Coron• d•I Mir) •nd R1nkln day night for nine Orange CMtrln•l 20.0. Coast area high school teams. Ski Repol1 .. '.f1~~~ ~::c\~·'i'-~l~' 2• N....,_, Th H t'ngto B h Mii• Rtl1v-l. NtWPOrl 3:25.•. j· e Un I n · ea C w11!n'll1111tr J :u .s, 1. Unlvenltv 3:1'5 • district meet at Westminster SOUTMllltN c.u.1,01un.t. HJ-1. Dttl!t"' 1c-• ~ Marl w. · ~ S1,11nmll -Ftlr to DOOd 1Pr!no t. Ctnntr ._s, 3. C11t {LIGu"t'lltKhl High features v a r s 1 t Y , 1kUM on iwo to 1111 1oo1 PKktc1 POWdtr •4\~. Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You sopho.more and fr e Sh ma n ba~ Mint -OINn dilly this w1ektnd 'C~~· ri.'~~~n•(M~~Kh\>'1121??0~' l competition among Edison, ~~j~';,,. ~'~· 11~1'~~ ~:;ci -1no .-.c11m• 1E1t1nc:111 21 .,v,. Ir;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;:;;:;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;:;;:;;;;:;:;;;::;;:;;; Founta''n Valley Westminster Blut Ri<l!!t! -°"'" dilly wllll (IOOd PV-1. 0151•nl1l•o IN•wPOl'I) lS.O, 2. • , ' 1klln11 on tovt to tight fut of pttktd Grt $h•m IMl r'"•l JU, 3. Slnnw l~untington Beach and Marina. ~~ 111.J:hev _ ~ 411rv thf• <~';!_~~n1!r~11';,.~-{Newport> ,2.3, ~ At Newport Harbor Hi~h, •• ~:l'~'i'kn~~?oo.i~•;,:·, ~1~ 1~ Itl~. CCdM .w-11~. J. Brown ICdM the host school, Estancia, too.wii:~~ ~I~~ dtllv ...... llOod Obcw -1. 81nltY (Lagun1J lS.-2, Costa J\.1esa and Corona del N>l'lno 1kll on two io five toorbt... 2. Gl"ton (LM1un1 1 lS).t, l. TO>Stl · 1Cr111t1 ll -01Nn fOf .wttklnd (CclMl 14'-l . . Mar vie for area supremacy. 1nd rio11c11., 1 "'II. tllnlu!lh e1t1Tr. tood rr111t• J11m11--1~ 11;u11~k• (CdMl -44- . _,,... tkth'lll °""""hi elltllf foot 11111. ' -2. Mt"n f:)CJ 3'·11, 3. GrtOOl'Y .Qualifying heats will start·at Mt. Bt4dY -Clllln d•l•v tor gooc1 1Mvl :11-11. . • · sprlno t.kllno on -to 10 toot 11111. lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jl 3 p.m. 1n the Huntington Mt. w11enn1n -F11r to OOOd 1prlno II Beach "district meet with the ·~1.:..., onv~:V to _!lll~1.,::i1~k'!:,~~·~ finals scheduled to start at 7. ~·~:'.;/'~~.!..~.!.11~~"' °" tavr D. U'tl 'II be i T1b!• Movnti~oPt;°wecrnnc11v lSCUS compe OD WI tllrovllri SuncltY. wriii OOOd •r.rlng lkll nt held at Newport H a r b o r °" lhrM and • 11111 Ii ti• "' 01 11111 starting at 3 but all other field ~ R.lcloe -Good lltl'lf!I' 1k11na and rt.inning events will be ~· °" twe '° four 1"1 °' 111" rt. 7 · TIMIW Fortlf -Good sprlna tkll'"I on Sta mg. at • "''" lo II~ foot MM. OOtn week1nds . • WE'VE GOT • • IT . ALL TOGETHER i NEWPORT LEASES ILMeffy enM • .,_.1adJ Leasing •II Vehicles 64~2202 LAND, SEA & AIR SHOW Thursday-Saturday • Fashion . Island See the Latest in ~ecreation~I Mobility Aircraft • Gliders • Power & Sailboats • Automobiles *That includes even San -Dieao and Santa Barbar.a cti.annels-'Total Te.levision' ..... . ' .. ' Yes, now you can find out what's Ofl San Diego's television channels 6, 8 and 10 • -and even on Santa Barbara's Cliannel 3 -in the week's worth of listings you get every Saturday in TV WEEK and in the clailµgs in . tlie DAILY PILOT. With the help of our friends at TV WEEK, the DAILY PILOT got it all tDC)ether. Now we offer _ readers.....t,specially those in th~ South OrallCJe Coast area and all others on community ·cables who can pull In, all · the signals· the'"' are in the , Southland, 'Total Television', the most complete newspaper listing of television fare available I Every Sunday in TV W~ek-Every Dciy in D.aily TV Log • • • J J • • • I • O"rstll!I •111..,.r11 Gr'OUI) II ·-"' GroWJ fl Group "4 Group #$ Gr1>11p #' GNUP •1 Group #I Group #f C•,,....ten1 C•rl*!i.r _ ,.•bl .. Powwr S1w Operator Poevmetlc Ntn.,. or Poww Sttpl• Plltl Driver Foremcint Pill DflYt Man Ctlfltl'll"'-: C-t MalOn (M&OnMlle, '-'""*'"'" TMTIUO end rnMllc COfTlllWlllOn, -Ep0xy Dex-0-Tu) C-1 M110ns Fkll!lng and Trowellng M1d!IM Opwator Curb &. G11tt1r MildllM <>Ptr•Tor Clary 1. Similar Type SC1"d °'*"'"°" Grinding MlclllM Opef•tor (AU IYPllJ J.ckson Vlbfttory & aim111r T"'$etd Oper1tor SCOflng M lne Opera~ l'"Mrtl I R.il'lforcl l'Oll WOrkll' Slrucf\lrll Iron WOrli:·..- Omllrntnl•I ll'Oll WOrktr Ftnee Erector UMNn: AIPl'ltll ll:1k1r, Lvlt!Nln 1nd Ironer Nohell Sl'IOYtl•t COllCr"t CllT..-... conc:rei. SCrMlng for fOllQh sll'lkt off Dry P.otlnll of Concrele Ktttttrnen. F>otmen, elc:. Ltl:IOl'er -Gener•I 91" C0n1!11Kllorl M1t9t'ltl H0teme11 Mixer-Truck Cll11t1m11n Optf'llW of Pn1urnallc: lo Elklrlc: TOOis, Vlbr.tllng M-clll!lel Pipe Lllytr Pipe l•Y••f Back-up M•n Ttmptf's, '"'ko, W•ck•r •nd 5lmll1r TyPI Window Clt1ner EltctrklH1 Gentr•I FOf'91'Nn FwfiNn Sub-tortman C•blt 1plk.:1r C•bl• t.Pll~r tortorMn JovrMYmen wiremen JOUmeylNll'I !Klwlkllr'I c.rtlf(tcl wtldtr 01111 .... , Gi.tift'" ... _, .... w ~r1lleM•M1tt1 M•rtll• 1ttt•r M•rtll• H .. per, PH!ters1 ...... flrinll, •wino ''"O• Sand br.,i.rs ShMt roc:k l•Pflr P•perNng.-Plpe Tf"lftl1 PlurnO.r Slean'lflfter Lffcl bVrner u11111.,. pli:itUne fOf'tofNn Ulllll'f' pipeline IOl/me'f'rnlln S•w•r ' 1lorm dr1ln PlPftl'f'ilr A/C &-R1frlg•r1llon tilter Pl41tlll'9f': PllJllr•r . PIM!_,. ffnd•r • Plkll ""'"' • o.m,, WI..,,,.. a ""'"'""' a111melef1 forenvn Svt>fOl'efl'ltll J~tl'M'l'fl'IJ•ll lltMt Met•h an..t metal wor1ler att¥1ton ........ ' PUBLIC NOt1CK 11.rn 7.17 >.n '" 7.11 7.tl ... 1.15 "'' ,..,, ... ,, .. '·· .... ..... •. ~I '·'' ... .,, Si'.tttn ...... ...... 1.n+20 ...... ..... ..... .... S.olJS s.1u S.'95 ..... S.'9S ..... .... J.115 ... ~ f .fl '·" f .)1 ,.,. .... ..,, ... ... ,, II.II ...... UIS ... ,, 7.11 ,,, 1.a >.a ..... '"' '·"' >.n "" .... "'' "·"' 1.17S ..... .... .... .... ..... t.JI "' "' '" 7k "' "' "' "' "' '" '" "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' •>< "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "'"' ""' ... "' "' "' "' ""' '"' "'' '"" ''"' ''"" "' "' "' "' "' .lt.J .1H SJ.XI .... I.JI 1.201. I.JI '·" '·" ..,, 1.20 "' "' "' Ok "' "' "' "' "' "' Sl .10 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.11) 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.10 "' 15< "' "' "' "' "' 1: ,,~~ "~ ... ,.. ... 16~ 11.30 $1,2$ "" "' "' .. "' "' .. "' "' "' "' "' .. "' -.. "' "' "" "' "" "" ... '"' '"' '"' "" tl.00 • .. '• Wortla rs Rely Stock Brokers MUa1 OF mE advice oo PUBIJC NOTICE • T"""'''· April 12, 1'173, DAILY PILOT 33 ' OVER-THE COUNTER , I ' .• \ DAll.Y PILOT s , April , 1973 1ty_. r • , Phony Death Claim! 'lnven~ll By DEAN C. MllLEl\ .., __ NEW YORK -Two ttlepbooe calls from COlllclenc:Mtrlciwl for nl er employes revealed an insurance aeandal that may go down as the nation's worsL Whtre state, federal and stock ex· 9'ange regulatory >&•ncles and hlgb- . /' l>riced auditors Kl!d lawyers failed to detecl~)'Ulilll! Wl'OIJtl, the~evealt<L--'i-­ bow a California financial cooglomer1le got away for two years with one.of the mosL lncred.lble business hoaxes In American history. . They told how Equity Funding Corp. of Amerlcar Beverly Hills, llW!Ufactured phoney aeath claims, policies and ln- voictS at ''offttt-fortery partie~." Hundreds or millions of dollars were bllked oul of sma.11 investors around the country as well as some of the biggest banks, brokers and financial institutiops in the world. UPI correspondents in Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington and New York in· vestlgated: Their reports on the still-unloldlng ocandal fix Tueoday, Mareb & aa the day the bqbble started bursting for Equity Funding and its lour i n s u r a n c e subsidiaries. two savings and Joan assoclatlon.s, oil and gas ventures and land and catUe operations in Phoenix, TUcson, Southern California and San Francisco. Its i.nsllrance ~bsidiaries listed. at the end of 1972 $6.5 billion in policies in force , half ol them beld by Equity funding We Insurance Co. (EFUC), stofm center or the acandal. --It began Mareh 6 when the telephone nng in the olfice of Raymond L. Dirks, 39, insurance analyst for the Wall Slreet research firm of Delafield CbHds, Inc. Dirks coold hardly believe what the caller said but promised to investigate. Three days 1ater, Fred Mauck, director of the Illinois department or insurance, fielded a similar call. lie also waii stag· ••red. T Those calls touched off investigations still going on in a dozen states, the Securities and Exchange Commission, t;he Justice Department and the New Tork Stock Exchange. Until they put the Equity Funding jlgaaw puzzle togelher there ls no ao- pirate way to assess total monetary loss. Estimates range from hundreds of million.! to billions in real and paper losses . Uf'I T.._,,ote BEGAN WITif PHONE CALLS Insurance Analyst Olrkt of the EFLIC business was "fake." He told Dirks of fake death certificates being issued, computer runs being doc- tored to fool inspectors, bogus policies being sold to other insurance companies -the whole in Credible story, including the charge that scores of EFLIC employes not ooly helped in the swindle but often laughed and kidded about it as thl:lY forged documents. Secrist said he wanted to talk about the hoax °for many months but didn't because of "fear for my family" and "insurance ethics," according to Dirks. SeCrist didn't explain that reasoning. "I started to investigate,'' said Dirks. On March 12 he to1d one cl!ent, believ- ed to be the Boston Company Institu- tional Investors, lnc., about his fmdings . Two days later, he told another client, and rumors started flying on Wall Street. _ BogU! insurance policies uncovered so far -many of them so1d to re-insuren around the country at $1.IMI oo the dollar -have a face value of $2.17 billion: Five days later, Dirks notified a third client. By then, the floor of the New York Exc®nge was buzzing as big institutioos unl<leded Equity Funding holdings. One week before the NYSE halted trading in the stock, Dirks received a call from Stanley Goldblum, then president of Equity Funding, who resigned On April 2 along with other officers. • Insu~ance stocks have lost heavily in paper value becall.!e of the scandal. Some $25 million in convertible bonds Equity Funding was supposed to have deposited as collateral in a ~icago bank turned up missing when Illinois officials drilled open the safety deposit box. Paper losses on Equity Funding stock, which dropped more than $10 in an eight· day period before sales were stopped, nm into the millions. Damage the scandal has done to public confidence In Wall Street, already hard bit by sliding commissions and soaring costs, is incalculable. It was Ronald H. Secrist, a former of. fleer at EFLIC, who called Dirks. Now working for an AUanta insurance com· pany, Secrist told the astonished New York analyst that he believed ooe-third " Goldblum denied everything and sug· gested a meeting ln Beverly Hills. They met at Dirks' hotel and Goldblui:n again denied everything. · _ They adjourned to the Equity Funding headquarters nearby, and Goldblum again said the report was incorrect as associates listened. Tension was so high during those meetings that Dirks moved to another hotel under an assumed name. "I wasn't taking any chance.'' Dirk! said. Mauck, the Illinois insurance director, received his call from a still unidentified former Equity Funding employe late in the a!lernooo or March 9' three d a y s a!&er the Dlrks call. By LEROY POPE UPI Basloess Writer NEW YORK -Cement, normally one of the most plen· tiful eommodiUes in the world, suddenly bas become scarce nearly everywhere. it for the past two years, the United StateNrom Europe. and Latin Ameri'C?i and Jii:pan from other Asian countries. The United States and Japan, traditional exporters of cement, have been importing NO CURE FOR "TAX llTE FMR" ., . . · ~ ' . ' .. , . , . . -• \ •• br TERRY GRANT. JI.Ph A vel")' common ailrnerit- that almost everybody suf· fers from at this time of year is "TAX BITE FEVER". It seems to ree.ch Its peak in mid·Aprll and then gradual· ly subside. Some people a.re able to avoid a.cut.e !!tymp- t.oml of this chronic dlse~ by · mald~ esllmated pe.y· ments. taking out extra with- ~ 81\d by BSklng lhclr pb,ysidanS !or M>Cru!thiMi: to lcHp tMm calm. At pc"eR!l-t U\ett Is no cure ror '"!'AX BITE FEVER" and U"6e ls none fort'lten ln lh.e nMI' [Uture. FortuMrely It ls relatlve1y ahort In dum tlon and has no tt&I la.stlng el; (oct. . rou OR YOUR DOC'lOR CAN PHONE QS wbon you .....i a cieu_,,. W• wm de- u~ prumpU)' without ext'ra charlt· A s-t m&ll)l ll"Ool• rely on us for thtir health neiedl. We welcornt reQUe!lli tor cle.ltvery • e r v J c e and ....,.,........,19. PAlllC LIDO "4AllMACY 111 '''"Ital .... .... ,.... .... ..,.1 .. ,,.Doi~ KOREA IS SHIPPING ce- .. • . ' • • ' l • I .. • l • • • ' ' ·, I ----. . r- ' April , 19/l DAILY PILOT IS I 1 I • . ' - ri'n ..... d~l-ridden-Metropolis I • • S}rmbol for l!rhan Blight ~ Ont citt1 mort than any other tends ' to be cited a1 a horrible e:mmple of 11 tM tttcov. of city life in Am.nico - -Newark, N.J. A close look at Newark ~ is token in the!e ortides: tDhat's ; wr,ong with it and what need1 to be ' into Niwark commercial buildings, houo- lng, and hOsplta.Js. ,_ _ _,__dotir;--- The other insurance giant Is Mutual Benefit We lnsur8nce Co. -commaoiy called "Mutual Ben" -eighth ranked 1n he-natioo,founded here In 1845; ad- mitted asset! in 19'10 were nearly $2.6 billion. It championed the redevelopment ot Washington Park with an investment or morf than $50 million. I ••• By JI. D. QUIGG UPI SeoJor' Editor NEWARK. N.J. -The opening page of the current City of Newark annuaJ report Is graced by only IO words, grouped in lonely elciquence on the slick white paper, a quotation from the mayor: . "Wherever Americ~n cities are _gOing, Newark wlli get there first." In recent week!!, Mayor Kenneth AIJen l;lbs91J, probably lhe most publiciud . bl;ick ma}'Or or the country, bas changed Uiat senten'.ce sometimes in conversatiQJl to: "Wherever American cities are go- ing, Newark is already there." _ Gibson is 40, a recent grandfat&'"r, stocky and usually quil!tspoken with cream chocolate skin and a smooth round face garnished with· a bit of a mustache. He and his family live in · a rented first floor apartment in a two and one-half famil y house in south Newark. ON T•IE BACK page of the report is a f?eCOnd quotation : "We are the ~le who huilt Ney.•ark and \Ve will be the ~ 'Tf!.e re's teeH1111 ot car• • ruptio11, that euer11thln11 .~ b tor sale, h1cludh1g City fftdl.' ple who will rebuild N e w a r k". ' ' Somewhere in betweefl is the sum of the municipal deficit he inherited: $ 6 . 5 million. Newark has been a national symbol for wretched urban blight, the most writ- ten-about city since Dallas and ·its Ken- nedy-Oswald-Ruby tragedy, a frequent sensation in the news, prototype of ~ trouble. The city has never really recovered from summer riots or 1967 during which 16 people were killed and the National Guard called in. A blue-ribbon governor's commission, speaking of t b e ad- /. ministration prior to GibsoD:'s, found that · a prime reason for black disgruntlement leading to riot was "a pervasive feeling of corruption" and a feeling that "everything is for sale, including City Hall." 111E CITY HAS been in deep financial trouble for years~ ... But the money tide ! flowing in and through Newark is too much to measure. . Newark l!I the second biggest life in- surance center in the natlori, behind New York, measured by the value of life in- surance in force -$150 billion. Its crime rate bas led the nation since 1960, the base year when unified reporting pnr cedures went into effect. In 1950 (with larger papulation than now) murders totaled 24; last year, 148. The 24-story white marble ~lock that is the home office or the giant Prudential Insurance Co., stands solid and chaste in the middle of downtown Newark, sub.stantial as its symbol, the rock of you-kno,twhere. The view from its top encompasses acres o( blight, o f deteriorating half-century-old wooden houses. or developments that put every tenth person in pu~lic housing. · And eight miles to the east, its towers looming in smoggy grandeur, is the co- lossqs of New York. You'd expect Prudential to move its corporate head- qua.rters there. But it says no, it started here and it's sticking here. Prudential - called "Pru" hereabouts -is the biggest insurance company in the -\l(OCld - assets, $32 billion -and the second big- gest company of any kind in the world, behind AT&T. :., PRU SUPPLIED $47 million in long- ~ term fina ncing for the glittering ne1v Gateway complex of buildings that greets visitors arriving here by ra il. It has put about $100 million in the last four years • Mutual Ben employs more than 1~ people: Pru's staff Is about 8,000, about 4 18 percent now racial minority people . This commercial and manufacturing city of 382,417 (35th in population in the nation employs about 250,000 people. orily one-third of them are residents . Two-thirds scurry Into town al 9 a.m. and 'scu,.rry right out at 5 p.m. Nobody is · _going to stick around the highest crime rate -m America at night. NEWARK IS ESTIMATED now to be about 61 percent black, 10 percent Spanish speaking. Of Its residents, about 25 percent were born outside New Jersey; or that percentage, three quarters were born in the South. About 19 percent of the entire population came from the South. Of the total · lJ.S.-born Newarkers, 2.4 percent arrived between 1955 and 1970. ~ In the decade 1960-70, the population shrank from 405.000 to 382,000, with a continuous out-migration of middle class to suburbs and a large immigration of rural people from the South and Puerto Rico. City officials and others acUve in civic work point out that the I Us ot Newark are ·· typical of the creeping sickn ess that besets au cities, but they usually add that "it's probably more intense here, more acute" and its name has becOme a metaphor for urban malaise. The m:llaise has many reflections. At a 24-hour gas station on Springfield Ave ., the area hard hit by the 1967 riots, only exact change is taken for night services, and the attendant wears a gun and holster visible on his belt. A SPRINGFIELD AVE. merc!Jant says business has dropped off since the riots. "We've loot a few thousand dollars in break-ins. We used to stay open at nights. Not anymore. Every night when you lock up yoo wooQe< If tt will be the same way in the mOtn~g." A widow, 62, in the North Ward. "A lot of old people live in those apartments across~the way, and there's always a rilugging. When 1 go home, I just Keep praying and.,blessing myself." A black professional woman: "When' I was a ttid 15 years ago, I could walk from one end of town to the other at night. "Later, when I became a reporter, my editor wouldn't let me go out at nijht." A policeman: "Yeah, it is true, t guess. People don 't have respect for cops like they used to. You tell me why. Maybe it's because, with all the poor groups here, Newark is a: melting pot of ignorance." A \\•hite businessman who spends several days a week here: "Nobody wants to stay here and everybody tries to put it out of their minds." MAYOR GIBSON'S father, Willie, 60, was mugged on the street a year after his son took office. Asking directfons to an address he was knocked down by several youngsters; he fought them off and was hospitalized for a week with head WOWlds. Jn City Hall itself, lasf.''April, Susan Caulfield, 22, · da ughter of City Fire Director John Caulfield, was mugged in an elevator while riding to her job on the third floor. Five stitches were required to close knife wounds on her lert arm. Two months later, in her of!ice , her purse was stolen. · Ne\\·ark is 24 square miles in area, but its residents are squeezed into 17 square miles -the rest is port. airport, and marshland . Fire director Caulfield says Newark has more people living in fewer building& than any other city. ... -KENHETH GIBSON -MOST PUILiCIZfD BLACK MAYOR IN U.S. H. Surwys lmM!tled, Ho"'"-* City Fnim Office Window I ' • l . . . -'llorrif!lf! ~ _ Ci!U ~ i~ ll.S~ -· NEWARK'S SPRINGFIELD AVENUE . RUNS TH ROUGH ONE OF AREAS ' SCARRED BY IUOTS Crime High; Night Attendant at Gas Station Weirs Gun ind Holster Visible on His Belt · - To·wn Teeters on Banl{ruptcy Mafia Took Hold: 'Hughie (Ex-mayor) Gave Us City' NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) -Municipal glitter greets fhe visitor who walks· into Newark from the railway station. The $50 million "Gateway" complex of build- ings is handsome, imRN!ssive, rather rich -and a wholly comfortable fi rst impression of a city that is in an un- comfortable struggle to find its way back to municipal soundness. Gateway J is a gleaming white new big motel and high office building, with shops 'il:l..the concourses, an elegant restaurant, aM~ tucked in corners. Beyond ·it now stands Gateway JI, a huge black building housing Western Electric, the third biggest pri.vate employer in Newark behind Prudentlal .... l,Jlsurance and New Jeney Bell. ' ' I THE INCOMING traveler ~ches this commercial. \velpJme Diat of · civic pleasant life by walking through a long, glasSed-in pedestlan bridge high above the ground, running from the con· ventionally grimy statiori to the Gateway concourse. Soon another bridge will be built from Gateway I to Gateway II. White collar workers and executives can walk from their commuter trains to their Gateway offices without ever putting their feet on the seamy sidewalks of Newark. And there is talk of the possibility or extending this select elevated walk,vay several blocks right up to the· main drag , Broad St. ONE OBSERVER offers this thesis: "The downtown daytime world Mows nothing about the residents." And that ties in with an observation often voiced -------------------------- 1'\'emark (J11e111ploy111e111 rote r1111s tlrree t i 111 es that of tl1e 1111tio11. . ~ by blaCks -that the people who make the decisions about Newark, to a con- siderable extent, do not live in Newark. That held true to a much greater degree before KeMeth A. Gibson, Newark's first black mayor, took orfice in July, 1970. Donald Payne, 38, national president of the YMCA, describes himself as "one .Q( the very few blacks \\1ho wer~ born here who still live here -most have moved to the suburbs." THE SURGE JNTO the city of blacks from the South, mostly from the carol~as and Virginia . created a \\'Orkforce 'vith a larger number of un· trained, unskilled, poorly educated, im- pover· d people. Most jo require skill. The Newark unemplo ate runs three times that of the nar . Of decision-making in the past, Payne observes: "'Ibere were no black school principals here · until about 1965. They even e~cluded as an assistant principal in 1962 a black who had studied In England and gone to Harvard graduate school; they claimed he flunked the oral •nm. '"l'lle city never bad black judges - they were by mayoral appointment - until the middle 1950s. There were no bi!lck administrators with the board of educ~tion until the 1950s. The city hospital had only a few blacks -in tho lowest type jobs. The police department had virtually none, the lire department didn't bave any unUI the lato !Os. City government had none with an aulbority. "NOW GIBSON RAS fivt black municipal judges and a b I a c k magi strate." With the city in deep financial trouble and rumors -vigorously denied by Gibson -that it ·was investigating possibilities of a state take-over in the face of fiscal bankruptcy, Payne was 2sked what he thought was going to hap- pen to Newark. "It's almost too nightmarish to think or," he rePiied. I hav:en't the foggiest. It may be a-~est case. The rust city that goes broke. I thinr it might be a test or th e constitution if Newark has to close the schools -could even saY the city0 might sue the state." The troubles came to <i.. head in the disastrous riots of 1967 -some black leaders here prefer to call it rebellion rather than riot -which left scars still visible -buildings still boarded up, burned out, abandoned, businesses clos- ed. The city now has 1,300 abandoned buildings. BUT TIIE CWUDS were fonning long before that. During prohibition, Newark became 'the bootleg capital of the eastern seaboard. There was a pro- gression of evil thereafter. The first in- dication that' the mob had reached the politicians on a wide scale came in 1969. That was when FBI tapes secretly planted ·at several racketeer head- quarters were made public. One of them disclosed a Mafia captain telling an aide: "Hughie helped us along. He gave us the city." Hugh J. Addoniz.io then was ma)'or of· Newark. Gibson became the fir.rt black rn,ayor of Newark by de(fa:ting ~be first Italian mayor, Addonizlo: ln September, 1970, two months after Gibson was sworn in, Addonizio was sentenced to 10 years on kickback extortion charges involving the Mafia. "Newark is a town that I think had some hope prior to Addonizio," says a black woman psychologist who was born and raised here. ''It Started really crumbling during his administration. You could actually see politics moving into everything. · - "YOU HAD TO KNOW a politician to get a city job. Most of the large federal projects in Newark are dominated by the politicians. They infiltrate. You have peo- pie in powerful positions who do not have the basic educational qualifications. There's a lot of bungling." Newark has been undergoing federal invest igations of its Model Cities opera- tion and Public Employment program. The city's staggering property tax is another problem. For 1972. the property tax was $9.63 per $100 of assessed valualiofl. Every 10 years you'd pay for your house in taxes. But both! Mayor Gibson and Louis M. Turco, city council president, have said the tax would probably have to go to $11.50 this yea r. and some sources say it '"ill have to go higher. Under the system. the city is ex- periencing a 1.5 percent property aban- donment rate. And last October Cornelius Bodine Jr., the. Newark Business Administrator, was quoted as saying that increasing the property tax rate would eventuall y mean municipal bankruptcy. "Jt won't be dramatic, we won't put up a sign on the door and say we're out of business," he said. "It will be gradual - more people and businesses will leave or face foreclosure. At some time the a;ystem will simply cave in,'' , TuDiult Constant Poet, Legislator at Each Other's Throats NEWARK. N.J. (UPI) -On the wall to th e left Cif Mayor Kenneth A. Gibson's huge leather chair in his City Hall office is a blue and white mural titled "The Survival Committee." "It was done by a young Negro painter," said the mayor. "He said the \Vorld needed a survival com(rlittee." In a city with a continuiilg financial crisis, persistent urban blight, and ·· polari1.ed racial attitudes between whites and the 6() percent black population, the idea of a "survival" committee seems appropriate on a muniCipaI basis as well. ON TIIE W AU. opposite the mural is a plaque titled "Desiderata" copied from words of advice found in a 16,92 church. It begins: "Go placidly am id the noise and haste, and remember what peace there ·may be in silence. As far as possible without surrender be ori good . terms with all • pcrS<>ns ... Avoid loud and aggressive persons .. ," Thal last may take some...doing,__ The mayor is surrounded by·J~s and~ag­ gresslveness. Agood deal Of it bas been caused In recent month,, by two men who symbolize the racial polarization in this city or 382,417. The noise and aggres&on bas centered about white demonstrations against building a black -sponsored housing project in a 70 perctnt white city ward that has a large Italian communJty. The two men are [mamu Arnlrl Baraka, 38, poet, playwright, political power and polemicist: raised in Newark as U!Rol Jones, a middle-class Baptist: turned Muslim Bnd now one of lhe coun- try's best known black nationalists -and Anthony (Tony) Imperiale, "Big T" to supporters, "fatmouth" to Baraka. IMPERIALE HAS said he may run for mayor, using as a main issue Baraka's project to build a hlack-tpOlllOftd low and middle Income housing apatlnl<nt in a white neighborhood In ·Big T's North Ward. lmpcrla!e, a s~ astemblyman, is ··1eader of the white militant North Ward Citizens Council that manned com· munity patrols in the 1967 riots. Imper1ale was quoted at that time : "We'll kill any nigger that comes near here." Bulging at ·250 pounds on a 5-foot-9 frame, an ex-Mari ne and former karate te{lcher with hands like great blocks. Imperiale Is chler spokesman against the ''alien Philosophy" of Baraka. Baraka Is intense, bearded, slight , tghs about 130 pounds. He operates a ith:al apparatus, the Committee Cor a que1tlo11, there' s to . argue about a body count," Redden said. "There's no question that there's t:Jeen a tremendous upsurge in ctime. Newark ~as come· to be the home of a dispropor- lionate share of people who have been historically, traditionally, on the short end of the socia l and economic scale. They came here to better their lot in life. "Probably the greaest majority of them are decent, Jaw-abiding people who are just trying to make it and are themselves t h e greatest victims. Between 1950 anU 1960 rouglhly 100 ooo people> left'Newark and were replaced by people from the South and Puerto Rico. been tretne11dous up· 111r11e ht crlnae.' Tl18-:.:ftjJ YOR'S Educational Task Force , created by Gibson in 1971, by ~ .citizens of all stripes. is striving to find remedies. -· Unified Newnrk, and says opcniy that Newark will bcoome the first pan·Aftic1111 city. His Temple of Kawaida rt':· organization is sponsortng the--· Kawaida Towers project that Im, opposes. One lon gtime observer here . Gustav tlenlngburg, president of ~he Greater Newark Urban Coalition, stresses the city's many assests. "We've got the worst health delivery services In the nation," he says. "We've THE FEVERED PITCH or 1he Kawai· got more land cleared under urbaJ da Towers cootrovery prompted Police wa1 hich th· Dlre<tor Jobn L. Redden to resign Jan. 1, rene on w no lllg ha~been boil~ saving the police were· caught in the mid· in tqlio to city size, then any other city, , u• Most of that land ar'a is OCCUpled bJ dle of poliUcal maneuvering and warning emptf!lols, in ratio, than any other city, that the Issue has heightened racial 0 88sically the city Is Oiood, two ot tensfon. three family house!!, now 30 and 40 Yeart Redden, SS, a balding, round-faced ·25-old and going down the drain. The cttJ year Newark police veteran , ta\ked was on its way to ma~ of its Ills befort bluntly about Newark in an interview the big inflow or blackS; when blacks bat before the Kawaida afflir started. 'Ille'rc no political power at all was1 no doubt, he said, that Newark "Newark is not much, worse o[f tha.a reported a hiaher crime rate from 1960 other cities. All are In bad shape, Asl through last year than any other city John Lindsay In New York. But we'vt over a quartqr milllorl population-of • got tremendous assests. Newark Is tht which there are 56 in America. financial center and transportation hul The Newark murder total in 1fr'12 was or the state. has lhe most mode11 143, up 12 percent over' 1971-and showing seaport on tho East Coast, the laraetl a steady rise since the figure of only 24 port or entry for Iorelgn cars In the coun In 1950. • · try. The airport Is the most accessible u "You can tall: 1bout dllleroot slan· New York of the lhree lhat aervt w. dards of reporting crime, buf it's dllficult New York·Ncw Jersey area." • • • ' • -1i Tlwrsdiy, A"'I 12, 1973 DAILY PILOT 37 A~,,.,, .SOO ·S)t .. The BlgpstMarketplace on the· Orange Coast --... ""' . • • 115 • M9 Autol,iobilwi. • • • • . •• 9SO • 990 • loot' & Morine (quipmcot 900-9'4 fmoloy.-.' . . . .. • • . 700.>o>t.-111 ·- 1PI LOT CLAS·SIF.IED ·~ADS ~ .•...•.••. SlS ·Srt9 .... ""' -... ...... a;o .... f"'°"<iol " " Rt'OI f..;.,• ~i:J~ . . . . ISO -t9l1 .._, . . . . ~· . . . . . . 300 • 499 .. • 100 • 11 • Yo&J . Sell ~' find It, 4 • l a 4~ •5678 J ·One Call Service · ""°"''""' """~·~-· ·'" .-;.. : : : :=:: Trade It With a. WanhA<l -~ ~ --_ Fast Credit As)proval :,::.,-;: ~:: : : ·:::::· ERRORS. Ad .. rtlsers should~c;'-c;k~· ti;.J~rr E~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;!!; ][=.]~;;;;;;~~~~~;;~~, ) 5.-~~~...--:<l[~-~JI DAILY PILOT auvme1 liablllty for the flm ·;--~ ~..,.... -~ . _..,Sile ' ~. -~ . ads dally & report error1 immediately. Tllo ( _,_.... Jr-1 JG&l I JG&l 1 l.-_"'_ .. __ 11!!t_L ___ --;_-;_""-;.sao.-;.~JG&l•el!l 1 ~J;ji-~tor:;;u.;;_ ;;h·jfj!;; [ _,... ncr Incorrect in....ttOn' only. . 1 __..--:::> l~I General ** ** ** * TAYLOR " co~* BIG CANYON-$124,500 W9nderlul floor plan in this spacious 5. bed· roonr .home with family rm & formal DR. 3 Fireplaces. Popular open beam vaulted cell· ings. Good cptng & drapes & beautiful land- scaping. Circular drive. Fine location. ''Our 28th Ye•r'' WESLEY N. TAYLO~ CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road ''Ove rlooking. Big Cai:iyon Country Club'' NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 641-4910 General Carm el model HARBOR VIEW HOMES 3 Bdrms., formal dining rm., family rm. Brick frplc. Only one year youn g. Owner leaving area~ '$71,500 INCLUDING THE LAND ! CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytime 644-7662 2 BEDROOM HOUSE ON R-2 LOT, ASSUME FHA LOAN • Thi!! Costa Mesa bouS(> \vith bea zned ceilings and huge back yard is an ideal start. er h9n1e. Note !he FHA as. sun1able + R2 rezoning. iced at $25.500. For de· ils call 646-7tn . THE REAL ESTATE RS General 'EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Near St. J oachim. 3 Bed- roon1 . 2 Balhs, "Dining Roon1 , Firei>laCt'. Extra Large Lo1. $46,900. Call Anytime, 646-0555. PALMDALE Make any reasonable offer. OwnC'r was asking S1500 per Acre. 15 Acie:s. 0 1\·ner May F inance. Call Anytime. &16-0555. . '. <Hneral General A44t<M-~id ~ AMDASSOCIATIS REALTORS 21121 EAST CCWIT HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. . 644·7270 Gon::.:;;;~er~a~l~~~~~-l-G~e~n~e~r~a~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~Goiiin~e·ra~liiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit l =G=•~ne:r~a:l~~~~~~i ·G~en_o_r_a_l-:;;::·:-~~- STARTER· It JUST 3 BR + BONUS TRANSFERRED? · -$31,500! I A U'°"l()Uf liVMf .cREAr-.~ PUF"J<' sr :\rlrER ltOr-itE~ Srain glnss l't11ry! 111a1·ble .t;. Del Pilio tllf' flr1•• 1 plac<'. Larg<' FOlll\I.\!. DINING roon1~ 3 spacklus bedrooms. Cht'ery klt cht>n . ,Laundry. PLUS a SUPl-.:R BONUS R00t¥1 • PATIO 001nbo~ All t>nclosed 1vi1h J ulousi(! \1•lndo"'s so you SHOWS l IKE A MOOE l pick up the n1ood! Fanta.'i'· DELIGHTFULLY CLEAN - Here's an im· . CORONA O~l MAR OUPt.EX ' -;ucally SllARP in and out! "' , ONLY $.11.500! Take ad11an· mnculate and spacious three bedroom home JIM HYNQS NEW LISTING -Beautifully remodeled tage . call 64.5-0303. Cape COO DUPLEX . Front unit 2 Bedrooms, fireplace, carpets and drapes, LARGE PA· TIO. -Upper unit has beamed ceilings, 1 Bedroom . Close to shopping and beach. that roams a ll over a large Baycrest lot i:ns iX'('n in n~al F.s1n1c crea ting formal and informal gardens. Very sl111·c 196S. lie enn1e-10 n l(i ...... '·' .. " "" ........ ·" .. "". $73,!JOO. CONDO· BACK BAY AREA 3 Bedroom, 21h bath, b'uil e--in kitchen, sto'ne lirepace. FAMfL Y ROOM, community pool . & REC ROOMS including billiards. Fee land close to everything ............... $34 ,500. I HARBOR VIEW HOME SOM ERSET MODEL. Welcome children in this. famil y TWO STORY 5 bedroom, family room home which fe atures 3 baths, formal dining room, WET BAR, large convenient kitchen w~h all the extras. Tremendous fenced yar"\on deadend type street. · FEE LAND .......................... $81 ,500. You'll en joy this lovely FAMILY HOME on a secluded street. 4 bedroom, 2 bath. PAN- ELED fa mily rooll\ with dcruble fireplace plus many custom featUres. Large fenced yard and patio. . ..... ".. . . .. . . . $63,500. AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS 644-7270 quiet neighborhood and Yery \veil main-rt>al f'Slttle profl'SSion tro1n tained. Easy to see, open daily al 1725 a clU't'f'r in l'flgin«"ring. lie Skylark, Baycrest, Ne\vport Beach. ..._. has 11·oi1tf'd in nr 11• l"l'Sidcn· ,1 tial sales a~ \\'1'stlake \'il· ·r1ie prlr.c is right 1vith no I ORI 'I L 01 \0\ Pt A TUR\ $27,500 and in the Sit.I(' ur inv1~s1. \IMl'rl for ,1 boat ur !railer UNl9UE HO~'OF NEWPORT IEACH, 445 ... 500 • lag:C', wcsl or Uls Angl'l<'s rio\1·n 10 a VETEH.AN. Sldl' A I .. of Ly1M11 Ewittt Ult'lll fJl'llX'rty in Los An· iuul roo111 enough in bat'k HUNTINGTQN "' R1~l£>s and OrnnE:e Counlil'S. yard for a fJOOl. J bdrms U ~l()US: Ll()US:~ lie bft·;1111 l' H Hl·al t:sinre und a \veil planrx'tl faniily BEACH 1""11111 1 L • I ,._L.:9 Brok1~1· in 1~72 und rot· lhl' t'OOtll. Nt•t'Cls jus 1 lhc rii;ht li1rs. Clean do£>sn't Jive here. pa~t 111·0 yt'nrs has bt'\'11 ' fnniily unll you might ju1t tr she did this sleeping REAL TORS selling l'ei>idf'ntlal Pl'lllll.'1·1y , bt• lhe onea~ $31.500. 5S6-022'J lx>auty woukl sparkle~ 3 in Ornng:c County. ill' is ' BR, separate FR, hard 1vood General G I ll>roud of his l11s1i1ll; asSOl·i· ·~ !~LI floors and: shake roof. 5',t, I ;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:•;;n;;;e;:r:;;a ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;· t nlion 11·i1h 1'ht• ll o a I I :"·wi1f8~%e a;~ ~~v~nn~li Pf~~~e~ntaC't JIM HYNDS ?.!:iFf ~ chanted cottage for only /) I n /} to sctve you In buying or ··--· $27,500. Cail 847-6010. eJ..inda J:J{e selling your hon1c or In· \Ut1i1o tA"J °' rH~ c0tw1u co. OPE"""· "' "'"0 "'"~" PRESTIGE w ATERFRONT HOMES """''"'.~iii;""· . HAS ·rr. ALL THE REAL ESTATERS I ••••••••• 2 YEARS NEW ~lust have quick sale. 3 BR. 2 Ba, huge country kitchen, squeaky clean and neat, large covered patio, pool· size let. Prit"ed right at $31,!ffiO. 540-1151 Open Eves. ··.t.• HERITAGE REALTORS SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 28 Linda Isle ·Drive Traditional hom e \Vi th 6 bdrn1s., 51h baths. Large sunken li ving roo1n, family room & breakfast area. 2 Stairways; 3 fireplaces. !vlain channel view ... ~ ........ $295,000. For Complete Information On All Homes & ·Lott, Please C•ll: ·BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr.~Suile I, N.B. 67S-6161 General Gener•I ••••••••• 11::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ' MONEY Stopping you fron1 buying a hon1e? Set> this nice 3 bdrn1, on a large lot, and 01vner will help finance! Only $26.500! GINNY MORRISON **** --REALTORS~ ./' * 15<5 Mesa NEWPORT 1BAY-CHERRY LAKE VIEW Fine Custom Split Level Home 3 -BD .. M'. GUEST A place lor a boaH A place I( for a 1110101· home and room POOL -532,5001 ror a pool! A mognmcent < bdrm. ho1ne located on a Thul's rii,:ht. PHI VATE. 01-::. cul·de·sitc, a place for your TACllEO , GUBST 1'~ACII.... children lo play sa fely. Call IT\'! Largf' 1d11tde t1·ct•s for n1orc information 10. l'OVl'r. LAH.GEST OORNEH. clay. 5'.i\6-02:12. LOT! l\uge rrd brk·k fire'· pl11c·t'. FOHt\'11\L DINING ROO~I. Go1j.:l'OU.; bcan1ed c('ilins: ran1ily 1\Xltn. Tile kltchcii. 3 giant lk'<i1"00n1s • 4 with gucsL Laundry roon1 . Big slide into splashing KIDNEY SllAPED POOL! Extt'a largr t>nc•losed slor· agf' yard. Fanlnsric buy 111 LO\\I Pll fCE 0 }o' $32,500! 'rakf' advantage . call &15-0303. I Ol!I.\ I L 01\0\ ktA,J(lJ.\ CUTE . LOOK AHEAD Tax Shelter . depreciation · apprc-cia1lon all In th1.!! hcautiful OCCllll view duplcx1 Under construl'lion so thenS is an opportunity to acl4 your pcMK>nal lou<'h! 4 bd· rn1s . up and 2 bdrms. down. Ca ll about It now! 586-0m, •• • •••••• I SUBSIDIAl'I' °'THI COt.wnL co. Gener1I ' SPARKLING 1 _G_•M~'"~'~~~~ •GM• Verde Dr. Eut1 * _,_ * Costa Mesa *•• •* 551-fl.10 4 Br, :J ba1 Upstairs livin g roo1n w/view . & frplc . Lge family.din rm, overlking patio. Elec kit w1bltns & brkfst bar, sep service roon1. Custom cm.ality inclds plaster wal ls, raised foundation, high beam ceilings. Lots of tile, brick & wood. ONE OF A KIND. 2 lot~ver ,v .. acre-'and v.1ue over $40,000 Best Buy in Newport-By Owner-$87,750 COTTAGE $19,950 lillll SPRINGTIME FRESH Neat and ·ciean : 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath, double detached garage, shining kitchen, warn1 living 'TOOm and huge fenced yard. Located in Costa llfesa. The best part is the price . $27.500. 546-5880 Open Eves. -o ~, .. HERITAGE . . REALTORS 3 BEDROOM MAMMOTH AXER DON'T HESITATE (Opeo Evenings) In excellent con1Ufon? Near 2 STORY $32,500 To h"pect <Ms vacant 3 bed· ~ELESTSGAINDTE 2319 Hoalhor Lano, N.B,.646-6563 . ' lake, parks, t'que1trian BARGAINS nevt'r last • so room, 2 balh home in Ne-.v· General areas · beach · room for TAKE ADVANTAGE FAST: porf's finest Bayerest area. -DE-SAC i;:;::;;::,::._ ____ . -- boot or traJler. Bright & Maminoth 2 story with 4 Ready to niove in. Ne\vly Plush shag c a r P e 1 i n g • • • • • • • • • 1 airy-shake.roof, fi replace, huge bedrooms 2~) ba lh!;, painted in!erior and exter· lhroughoul this ncwly ·paint. GOVERNMENT beautiful pallo -quiet relax· fa n1ily room. 1'-URl\fAL 1or and all new 1v/\\' car· 00 beauty! 3 Bedroom 2· ·REPOSSESSION ed neighborhood. It can't DINING. SUNKEN Jivi ng pets and dl'apt's. All el{'('tric story, 2i,;, Baths, formal din· . . IS:st at $32,900. Call NOW!! roon1 with fireplace. Built· buill·ln kitchen \vilh large ing, huge paneled. family Aulht'ntic ~tside e 0 s t a 842-2535. Ins, carpets & drapes patio breakfast area. Contempo. room. Tropical pofl9s high· Mesa Spanisl~ hon1e. Just Ol'EN TIL i> • IT'S FUN ro BE NICE! "& balcony. NEAR' THE ra.ry design. Lovely fe nced light th is tasteful landscap· remodeled with new car· ~ - ... ~ BEACH . Only 4 YEARS rear yard, sprink!et'S front ini:;:. Only $45,900. C..a I.I pels and pain!. Corner lo· · , OLD. Redecora!e a mansion-and N'at. A below the mar-· 545-8424 SOUTH COAST cation, 2 bt'drooms, 1 bath, • tor yourself. Call early · ket price at $69,950. Call REALTORS · fireplace, hardwood floors (714) """'<:<:II!< 613-855() G9ner•I "A LAUGHING PLACE" Therf' i11 a place where cve•'Y· one and his fnn1ily can be happy. We Just lis!OO this p.rofessionaliy acc('nled 4 hechw m horne \l'ilh a den for only $44.950. It also fea· 1urCs upgraded carpeting, cUBtom drapes, professional landscaping and a presllge 2 Bedroom , I Bath, rorncr lo• ho1nt>. 6'ft. GI loon at $127. nio.. for cverylhlng! ~a11~10 see for your'"'H. Newport at Fairview 646-1811 (1nytime) SOllSfOIAll' OI' !Ht <OlW81 CO- WHY SIT & WATCH prices, Interest increase. Get off that couch and come Stt this bcaullful mod<'! Home. That's right, with nil the e)I;-:. lras Included. Converted J;:aragc, air concUtlonerl . 3 pa I i o s , pr ofesslonally rlccorafed in/oul wet hnr. 4 huge bedrooms a nd just 'l years old. Priced to sell at $38,000. Let 's go! neighborhuod. Call t o d a y """"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""' Realtors 545--0465 "2·2535, BEAT YOUR ---"o""pe"-n-""""='·-- • • • • • • • • • I .._............,. · E and plast.er \Valls. Just re· OPENTIL 9 • rrs FUN TO BE NICE! EXECUTIY leas001 and priced only ~ ~ DREAM HOME 121·""°· General General I OHi \I I. 01 ~O\ BAYCREST Mag nificent 2·story 5 BR., 3400 sq. ft. beauty. Formal din. & family rm. Upstairs study. View. upstairs ·roof garden. Inviting pool. Mary Lou Marion_ IT'S A BEAUT! Canyon & ocean view sets the stage for this keen 5 bdrm. with delig htful patio & award winning garde.n. $103,000. Jim Muller DOUBLE LOT -LIDO ISLAND Charming 3 bdrm. home on spacious corner. Large sunny patio with beautiful custom pool & separate ~acuzzi. Priced to sell at $135,000. Bill Benfs -1 .. . TWO STORY -3 BEDROOMS Large boniis rm. \Vell Jocat~ in Univ ersity Park; nice patios, din. rm.; owners moti- vated ... priced w sell at $46,900. "Chuck" Lewis RESPLENDENT . . • in decorator colors; elegant Big Can- yon hom e. J?riv. community; golf course, views, trees, parks. Delightful! $141,950. Paul Quick ' BAYFRONT FOR YOUNG IN HEART It's new, on super 50' lot; 4 bdrms., 5 baths; pier & slip for boats to 45'. custom design for comfort &: fun. Ex. fin. -lee land. $235,000. Call G. Grupe CORONA .OEL MAR CHARMER Old Coron~ del Mar. DellghUul area, So. of Hwy :-Walk w beach, park & shops. 3 BR. & gst. qtrs. Remodeled 1971 . '89,958. Cathryn Tennille 833-0700 644-2430 I I 546-58'0. OPE•n"'"''UN"'"'NICE' WIFE CHARMER [~9 lj~lli'll '~~2:~£~;~;h,;~~':r~~ 0~1."~ ~~~~~"~,'. 1 --3 car garage, professional ! ' landscaping. Professlonally /.'t4 'l"' Open Eves ~.,V,» HERITAGE PHONE US FOR A BONUS "' -decorated with plush, plush deep shag carpet, highly • • REALTORS CLEAN-N-NEAT ON A NIFTY STREET upgraded dmpcs. E ntire'-.========= kitchen & family area ha!! • • • • • • • • • I rorad;n; hies, 3 baths, 4 WOULD YOU UKE bcdrms, 2300 sq ft, ba lcony The privary of a c-orner lot? oil master brm. Was 44,950, A huge back Yard? bdnns with 2 luxurious large prival(' rt>ar yard. OCEAN VIEW ba ths. FulJ price is $31,950. super 16' x 24' Jiving m1 w;u, 5% down ;t can he Call us on this well kept hon1e in, Co llege Park. 3 bedroo1ns, formal di ning area. fan1ily roon1, 1vasher and dryer area in the house, lai'ge kitchen and pool sized yard. $34,950. 10'.k Do1vn. Call Gra-6679 RLTR. Nigel Bailey & Assoc. Gener•I now has been reduced to 3 Good Size &drooms? $43,000!!! Open HouSl' Sat. Nice Lanrlscaping:' & Sun. 1-5 Red Carpet, A tiny Price Tag of S26.900? fron1 this almost ne1v nia· jestic VIP family hon1e. Spacious bcdroon1s, 2 blllh!'! nnd e:<eellcrit area. You O\VN the land. Full price $56,000. RRaltors 5'16-8640 Cail No1\'~ OWNER Leaving. ·Ranrh 837-6010 r style, pool horne. 3 bdrm!!.. OPE.N T!L 9 . IT'S FUN TO BE N/Cfl 0 \l\l/;L1<£H & Ll l lm-ge home, dining room. ' Ii fireplace. prestigious, Br!(. 1 ' 11 •• I 158 900 "" 1720 Reali ors 646-m 1 ' · ......,. ' J. ~I 1 12043 Westcliff Drlve Need a ''Po.d"? P lace an ad! ~~~· ;;,;~~~~~~ Open 'till 9 PM eau 642-3618. General G•ner1I Gener•I ;r• MACNAB IRVINE ----"'----... ···------- 3BR-BAYCREST S67,500 COMFORTABLE . SHARP , NEAT, CLEA N. Gaze out or a lovely landscaped yard from LR or FR. Excellent neighbor- hood .for young childre n. Walter King 6'14-6200. (K32) HARBOR VIEW HOMES NEWLY LISTED-EASTBLUFFI VIEWI 2500 •q. ft.-5BR, DR. Choice location. Quiet street. La rge lot. ExcellenUy priced @ $69,000. Laszlo Shariaoy 644-6200. (K29) ' LOVELY MONTEGO MODEL SPYGLASS HILL 4 bedrooms, family ro0m. formal di ning; carpets. drapes, super landscaping, covered palio, wood deck. $74,950 FEE LIKE NEW PALERMO MODEL 4 bedrooms, ramily roo tn , formal dining, wet bar; up· grade carpets, floors. Perfect for your family. $78,500 FEE ·-- HARBOR VIEW HOMES REALTY 833-0780 Sweeping view by day a myriad o!.lights by night. Lovely 4 BR. home, ready for occupancy. $103.000. Lois Egan 644-6200. (K21 ) ...:..-~~~-~~-.... ··---- [Irvine I tOI Dewer Drlw t42•12SI . 1144 llacArtllolr '4••1200 """""1 ... cll, """'°""" 12111 • r ' w/dining bar. Id eal s1art1·1· yours. Lei us show i1 to you 1 1~ !lfi" by a ppointment. iontc. "''" '"'' C wALl<lR & LE£ Realtors 545-9491 Open Eves. BETTER 'fHAN NEW ' This 11.dult occ upied homq is Jess than three years old and has all the landscaping in and gro'>'>ing. A fine Mesa Verde . location and· a price tag Wld er $40,000 makes this one of the best bU.YB around. CaU Red Carpet; Re!llors 546-8640 CAW.. 642-1171 · SIX UNITS • . , orl' lnrge lot. Enstsidt' Costa Mesa. $72,500. C -ZONE COMMERCIAL LOT 59' l( 290' $37,SOO Roy-Mccardle R .. ltor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.~T. 543-7729 ' " - ,• w. ..... ··--...... , I , • • """'"'· Alldl 12, 1'173 . •. -...... ~~ . -"--a-11 " · .. -r:.~~~;~'· ~~11et1...-~ i • HUNllNGTON · VIEW .HOME l\lNEl('d••••·~ ... ·• rii · _ HAllOUI lllilo .-"Old.-~ bdrn\1., 2 baths. Quiet.,.L s~UEAKY i(:LEAM wloli ilikll Nice Jandscapq. OlnU. 'P' - 97 FEET ON 1HE w • "' w.a ...... ...., bui1t-tns. ...,..,_ ""· Sl(J'.-IUJE POOL t bedraDm b9me-fftPace. Rear llvtew rm. W "11 t lovelJ --bdr 132.990. &12-2/iijl ---S ~ 2 Balha. """1t ,.. ndt u ina..tw nme .. occupied, bail~ ., mum -llftplace 1n lamil>I ...., Hunt""""'-IMCh '°' ......... i-~ m 1 order tot relf.xaOon and 10ft autumn ooJors In ance yard tun'OUDdlng pool .. &f-. 1.eqe ...... --..i wtll oell -Cd' ...... M RNESJ,.; ..., .. -.,.,, -·.r.. w.n...,.... Pool-~ A HOSPITALITY -~ 1ut. ~ - LN-tWBORVIEW ~~·=~= Ca11~12;11. HOUSE $27,500 CIV Ci&Jomittd con1tructlon by ~ f.or everybody.~.....-::::: Fee:~ ot frffdom. ltom the 5::::. ~~'~ ~ -- the ori&jnal developer or 1quare !eel Ve!): open and I ~ awaltl )'CO. 4 ~ l'OOl'.DI,, 2 Balba. eltctnc kit RGE 3 BEDROOM u,;, ...U -""' !·bdml. --. mt.5et. Call --••X'&-.i' ....... hardwood • • · "'ilh lovely mstr. suite, )%. ~2313 lor an opportuillt,J · • · upstairs retreat. Lots of pets• drapes 20, ~ car-56o. Verf lnv . fa m ,· 1· y -ba.'t,""tbnma-dd Mar~: ~i~ -l~is-ftome.-. _w .. aJ.lp .. a p_e..r_ ex~ ered'-patio 19'-xx UD' ~ 't ~,,.-· On OftT 3,. Jq. fl,, freatUring J'\anJ nl 9 "'S Fl.JN...,, BE throughout. "FJ.a&a:lone patio -le ' A t }' • y co .I...!·-.... ~ .... home. Large 106 X 10~ huge ~iv.-_rm .. tonnal. din .• ......-.. ~. v • ,.., 11/CEI THE FINEST If with -cutom. barbeqqe. Vets ~e. •ea . ills.· Pati;."7h:k'e ft. Jol Boat ll tr~r ;j;~:~j~artls~= ,.~,jl!iJll~ u;axm\~ fr""~"!,f~~i Ef i""~":"~:; c:'fil.'·he" '"_.starter Bcl.i1Yins. Fire-access. 4 ~. 3 ":°rkstv:>p. Perfect far-111way -~~!!·~J bar, view~ ~ boats in prise you! I'"'"""°" • I IP~P Room tor your baths. covered patio. ..... · the ""' • Catalina, 26 mi. OUT OF TOWN B~. '!'1!81~-. v;. F.\n. ijy roo.m .• fireplace: . LIVE ON E....,,. Pardee r.=!!"'v ... ~.~." ~ 1 • _,.. '&;ll •-·60' BAYF"'ONT IM'h, Narc. ussus r· .. -e '"' s a ..... ·I--Formal dining room. K Corona del Ma r come, too! Let us ahow you! Deluxe built.-ins. Brk. All the ingredients for com-Mor9an RNlty furlable living with an. ex· You are the \li'inner of 673..fJ&t2 , 675-&t59 540;-1720. pansive water view, are one free pass comb~cd in lhfa lovely Good for • whole carload. Co.rona clel Mar home. Archilecture with a to any of the Beaut 3"Br., l'X ba • Poot • ,Owner .baa bee• . """ .~,;,.,,..... -p•&PlfU: TllrlJRES Corntt lot. Completely ,... _ .. = .HIST WE NEW· . ff!'~ Lmgellome 3 BDRMS, $27..SOO & It bu been lov-main-· 1111 10111 · coad, 6 decorated w/new _ ".'."\ 3 bedroQms 2 tained. There a~ 4 BR. flt'• crpts. tbruout. 0nty $64,500. 1 Yr new,• ~ u~ 1• Secluded ~liv· Nice family home, 2. a 2-Aoryl, 3% t.lhs,. con.-ISub.,iK't to amall service 7141!33-8160; Aft 6 pm, crpta thruout, 4BR 2BA. 60' veniettt to both )noels. The charge al lbeatre). 55.2-7655. .... x 100' ~ elegant entry, in oom. Family room, baths, formal dinh>g ttoot window •alb or g1aas Pio"" call 6C$1!1 ext. ll4 SPEND·YOUR DAYS tirepl, woDflerful family !iv· fir _ lace. Dining room r o o m , builtins, fire-offer an incredible day & to claim your tidret. fNortb ~ wl'l pools. clubhouse, &. , , 8 · em. ~D built· p'--, cov~__,a YWat-io, night bay view. Upper Door County toll-frft 11u.mber is ON THE BEACH greenbelt, aCl'Olf 1 tree t ; .. cl~ ""'1 _ ld\.-C IE:l-""'-r--mslr. ,uite ideal lor privacy MO-IfA)). and cu Jtw! by )'Om' a:riy from la.rgesl famVy park O::-r.r8 '!!! .. cullll droom.e sac forced air heat, Brk. & rel"'"""'"· Pc rs on a I FIX IT & .,D '"*'· -loc 2 BR home Onenge County. Walk to _ "t...__" rensons for irnmed. sales ~ on R.1 lot. Super k.itchdl! !!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!IJ championship golf course. st •. Btr. 5441-1720. 546-l720. ::~::_,:~~1'!~t~ell below S$A 2 YE 0 $$$ ~~~ "":';;.,.6:;~~ * PRESTIGE * = /l"i'.!n. ~~ ex· ic)S ' 2955 HARIOI BLVD. · 4,5 0 LUSK-bit. 3 BR., i..., tam. Model 1900, 4 BR, la.-gc fam.1, · Best Eut:slde locatbt Rm· Xtra lrg. lot. upgraded ily room. plus .rormal din- TA MESA 541-1721 675• .. 000 -......-" small l btdrm home on & Immac. Owner, $79,500. ing room. Three car gar-..... -, ~ SOx.130 R-2 lot -needs ~·ork, 644--0128. Open Sat & Sun. age. Model home condition . .......,71 ( :) 146-1101 I ,.,..,..~~~"'""'""""! e.x~Uent value. Act Fa&t.. it 1-5. '19 Tiller Call 847~1. 1,,..;•1---------------'' 'I •--b~ ~-* HARD TO FIND * .. #'!---_, 1 ON 1 won -· n,QI ........... 1, 0 1 BR houses on tvt'O ..,... .. ,.. Xlnf tax shelter in downtown Realtors 54&-8640 R-2 lots in CdM. Principals 4 BR, 2 Bath home, pool-size 1-t";;:;;;;;--;;;;;;;--· j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J Hwilington Beach. Two -1 OWNER. ll'an&. Executive 4 only. By Owner. &tG-a>78 lot, nC\.\• shag carpets, quick i TWO NEW SP'"•"'UNG Bedrm houses & 1 bachelor. bdrm, 3 baths, family • possession. A~me GI loan. Better than ~ model, 3 Bed· rooms, 2 Baths, ankle-deep ..... l&l'ge family/dining room. Priced right. Move ill with nothing to do but m. joy yourself. A must to see! ... _. ~ ~ Should rent for $650. per ~,_!~aJ dining room. Costa Mesa $250 per month pa,ys aH. :-...:._ UV'l""WiiAllO~ ~ CLEAN mo. $30,txX>. loan available, fi.rep.....-.:, SUDdeck off mas· -Only $32•000• Call 847-8531. :~' CORONA 2-STORY '"""•' will '°'"' $8,000. • ter ,.,~.,near Sooth Coa•< CANYON VIEW j~·. DEL MAR 2h<l. Lot .,. x 127'. Pr1c. Plaza.""'· 142.900. !m-2390. $24 750 . J UST LlSTEO by a. very $46,EOOOX.CLUSIVE WITH OWNER leaving, IJ:eautiful 3 . 1 1 your carpet · Md meticulom owner, is this • , bdrm, huge family room, Thia c:c..a Mesa 3 bedroom SOL VISTA SPECIAL far rither of thl'!SC stately 4 . Bedroom beaut)'. larw1n realty inc, large corner }Qt, new shag ~ ii vacant and is J':':::==:::'.'.:'.:'.::=:=::: ~ duple!xes, row undeT Wives "1R love the BIG 968-4405 (24 hn) carpets, fittplacc dining priced for quick sale and ~dion. Owner's rmitJ FOR1-1AL DINING ROOM, MOYE AFTER room, builtinl, sn:'. $32,900. immediate' pogsess!m. It YOUR OWN PRIVATE Walk lo Broadway shopping. spacious' living arras plus se-parate kitchen bft&k-541)..172(). won't 1ut. Call 646-nn. Vets rush before intere~1 \\'. 3 ..._bearoo1111. Income falt room and sewing area. SCHOOL'S OUT __________ .., dl'EJIJU.l • IT"SFIM108ENal ORCHARD raises. Seller ~·ill pay its are 1arge 2 bedroom, 2 llusbands will REALLY GO w-~ A variety of fre\ pj~k.ed points. 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 0 :~~~ii~ .~ ~"'~E::r~~ '~~~~~E~d~~~ ~J:~ · 1 fflliH~I =~ E:::. ~%~~ ~~EitE Call 873-fti50. spnnkten. NEW SlJAG Lovely pool Aized & .. Z-cu:r A good buy! lmmarulate ~ -·-• ·-~~ family room, covered patio, lencc. Low maintenance CARPETS JUST lNSTA.U.. yard with tall trees. Qc.. larger unit perfect for own-buillins, ~ full price is ya.rd. II ANIMAL LOVERS• irrWodlng & Boardi"I Gr-.ing IMAL l-IOSPITAL }101\IE BAY . Tl'l'm!>. . 9i~(;ALL ANYTIME e ,m or Eve. 675-1 827 ED APRIL m-I!!. Pn~ cupancy mid.June. er or top renlal plus great .PRIME EASTSIDE only f!i, · CAU. Mesa del Mar kx:atiOn. ITS $56.000 bachelor wiit _ can &ee Spac 3 BR 1: fam rm, 1%. ba, larwin re•tty inc. OUR EXCWSJVE $41,950! Call ~ ocean &-bay .•.• $52,500. frplc, pool-W yard, shake 961 4415 (24 hrs) c~TS Nigel lalley PETE BARRffi roo1. 132'6£,MMI--- , .. &Assoc. -REALTOR-, ... w~--H NB . WAL.LACE RLTR. 642.-5211, --RwroRS' .... ~ REALTORS ~~MESA Verde 4 Bedroom, 2 -....!5ifo14'>.cuc1-DUPLEX STAITER aath, fireplace. 0wner .,,,.. lOpon Evoni. "11•1 TRIPLEX '°"' $44,000. FIVE BEDRM -! ,,. ......................... SANTA ANA liEIGlITS A-1 And COSTA MESA REALTY zoning. Good income. easr 4 ADJACENT 548-ml Prestige two story .w/ex· • ceptional.J.y H & F 18' x 38' swim. pool, patio, huge fanJ rm, elegant entry w/formal !iv rm, featuring elec bltin RIO, dshwshr, firepl, a.11 upgraded w/w crpts It drps, <lVersize(f""Obl gar, Hunt IWFFS IEST WATER VIEW condition good. Needs paint FOURPLEXES BY owner-New Mesa Verde and yard work. Loan avail-Beauty on'Co&ta Mesa, Golf abl•-Price $28,000. Buy Ono or All ' """""' 3 bd 2 ba e CALL ANYTIME e FORTIN CO. ex"..'. SS&,200. 64rr:1s""" 646-3921 o • Eve. 675-1827 REALTORS 642-5000 FOR Sale By Owner, $26.500. MODEL HOME 3 Br, 2 ha, lrg back yard, crpt/drps. Will consider lse $31,500 option . ......,L Lachenmyer ' Pe;i h .,r Beautilul iDside I: OQl. 3 Bil BARGAI!" -liit'lOO! 3 BR, ~~iiiii~iiiii~~ bedrms, 2 baths, <Wlux new paint. etc. .frtllc <lnly. l::: ~ built-in kil.clien. Excellent lOo/o down. fl62.4.153. neighborhood. Owner very SACRIFICE. $1500 Auumes Newport Helght6-:\ anxioua to lcll -Submil of-7% V .A. loan; 3 Br, 1 ba. '""'""""'-" 2 Bdrms., 1 bath; [rplc.; on fer. Red Carpet, Realtors Pyb Pl1 mo Agt 642--4623 lge. maintenance-free yard, 546-8640 D•na Petnt -.~.S~P~R~l~N~G~S~P~E~C=IA~L~,~.-1 w/lge. <neloscd patio. °'' MESA VERDE Checl< H!l"'"'"'"t .... Bed· Here" a home designed for tw:hed 2-car garage plus . R.:2 Oceanview covered · park a growing family. Country rm. ror hoar &. trailer. Two years oid 3 bedrt!.1s with --L t ~ird. loads ~:binets: style kitchen with a large Priced al. $37,500. scpuate master swte and • on O and best of all, 1t's onb' eating area, huge family Call: 61'3-3G63 642-%53 Eves. a djoining atrium, are just a Oia.mung t£R w!sel!-clean-$39,500. A perfect borne for room with a wet bar, for- few-features. everything In lng oven. Ii< bnck frplc. the growing family. To see ma! living and dining With large pool INCLUDED this tine home has been $26,900 fll'm. 847-69117 aft call S.16-2.55l BKR. • rooms, plus, 5 Bedrooms. for $31.~. 3 BR, 2 Ba, upgraded arx1 ifs in better 4 pm. ~THE BEST FEA'nJR!E JS fam ily r o o m , hanf\\·ood '---__ _.. · F THE PRICE 0 N L Y and quali bu. •-· t,_, oew ·~~•t>o•>. Huny ountaln Volley WALK TO BEACH ... floors t)' 11t f1u..-on this, Call Red Carpel, ~ .. $44,000. It's a must to see. oot. Covered patio and kits Realtors 546-8Hl KEEP HIM V.A.. REPOSSESSION 536-:1561 BKR. of dl'Cking around pool. I .,,..,..~~~~"""'"•l"~i,ii'iri>;i'i;i~;n::C Neac overyth;ng, HURRY! 1· ~UIET NEW TRIPLEXES FOR A PET Only $25.SOO. $500 down to WALK TO BEACH s.-.1151 Open Eves. ,..--JN COstA MESA Ladies, don't wear him out aeyone, for this 3 Bednn, *Clean 4 Bedl'()Om 21ii bath SECLUSION l Bdrm., lli Bath doing yanl worl<. Mow ;nto 2 bath home. Call anytime, * Brick trple &·30' Uv. rm. :z Bdrm., l'Ai Bath this Tiburon "Monterey" OC'CYIT REALTY, 536-7533 . •--n<eshly painted T/O Newly painted -This t.>me 1 Bdrm., 1 Bath condo • It has total exterior oWNHk sacrifice. Executive * Builtins, gold wall to wall J• spectacular. Ask $33,500 -10 % DOWN maintenance, 3 bedrooms, pool home. 4 bdnns. dining * I>Quble garage Gre~t eutside locatkm pro-Orange County 2 ~ baths, dining room, fam-rm. built-ins. ~ livil1t * $27,500 • 1 • • 9 • • • • • • fess!onall~ landsca~ -Apartment ily ~· e~tri.c builtins rm.'. tnprace. Wet Bar. larwin realty fnc. NEWPORT L IV ING ~I~ --~ri::. ; Realtors 547-6791 ~ng""'poot1a:~·n ~er... ~~arpcts. brk $44.950. 968 4405 (24 hrs) 3 BR .. Beautifully ·designed I I _.... O'llMllN'I Don Thi ~-interior .. huge master -OOt~s, .a~ Jot. Sec t -IMMACULATE! All for $34,500. • OWNER I . c:-..A-4 t Mi11 I """91 huge wood-burning fire. yoo 11 li ke it. Red Carpet, 3 BR. &: family rm., ·frplc. larwin re•lty inc. eavtna:. · •;•u•:u.-· 4 bedrooms, family room, plact" .. profl'ssionally land· Realtors 546-8640 Best Colle1e Park locat:ioo". "'"4405 (24 hrs) ~: 2 baths. J?ining nnu air conditioning. Highest scapccl, \\'cslr.liU schools.,8r Custom c-1it Leve l Owner says, "Bring offer built-w. Family . rm ·• quality carpets, drapes; ...,... fireplace. Rear Uvmg rm., covered p a t 1 0 w 1nan shopping. Newport Helihh th!1 week!" 21' X 30' POOL Expert yar<j. hrl< $32,950. $>11 soo '~' ~HERITAGE . • REALTORS unusual home .. built on a '* 642.74'1 * on the end Of cul.de-sac st. ~rr Ontu Everything Is new . _,. BALBOA BAY PROP. . ~1383 lfAruio~~"H'.W · ll OMES hill side this home has 3 11 _1~-~-I lo SUper ·lrg back yard with OWNER moving. I...arae 4 (n') ~· _ '!'llw.:· ---- -21 bedm1s 2 baehs sun deck -ua -....--l'llU big pool. This 2 story home bdrm. on comer lot. FamJly 1 ---='"'-'-~~~·~--+-~----~. I ded ' l -· • ---· is only 3 yrs old & has rm .• fireplace. Dining nn., 2 HOUSES on oor lot, 3 BR, 0 ER amdOUJ. E~tive -~ .( J SC<' u entry • cus om OUPLEX-$79 500 eVerythlng you'll need: deep built-ins. ~ patio. 1% Ba, 2 car gar. I-1BR,1 . Spacious 3 bdrms .. 3 ~rk10:,~~~ t':xem: 2 & 3 BR., 4 ba., 2 fn.1. shag, tml din; tam nn & Paneli~ area. ~bric: BA, 1 car gar., lg screened .'s. ~~~~iice~!ffi8~ 1733 ~~l~~ N.B. extreme' $5500l Red -CU-M<ldem 1: refurb1*f;\ nlalter bdrm 'dn/atain. $31,D. .. porch. 8 Blckl from bMch. . Built-inl. Rear 11·'----===='--pet, Re~hors' 546.B&to. 2\1 ear ge•. Act tu"! Price ls $43,SOO. REPOSSESSIONS: l:esh for eq. Auume GOn , ~._.""-llaw aomethlng yoo want to GEM ' by ownr. 536-6666 -'l'"-"b"•k,_$4=5·.::1""1::·:.:S4(}.=.::~c::,••~·~ 1 sell? Classified · ads do it Fast results are just a phone For informAtion and locationi.j.iii ... iiiiiii ... liioOiiijiiii-. ;fled;;.=:Ad;:'=::·;·,;·;64;;' :;z.567;::;8:.z;::"•=:l;,1 ;,· •;_o•:;:ll;N,;O;:W:=64;::2;-5618;:,::·~_:..;call;::;,:•:;:w;::ay:,"";;,·;64Ul618:::;::;:;;·:::::="1!~1~61~0~W2.~c[oaat=~H~Wy:_j,'~N~.B~.~ of these F1IA & VA homes, BIKE TO &EACH -REALTORS 642-4623 53J·511D ( r.::J 531·5800 ,~i;tnct · ' 3 BR--2 BATHS •! OWNER mil!! ,.u 2 Duplex: KASADIAN $25,.500 es._ Xlnt oond .. 1 blk to "FANTASTIC" Reol Estate 962-6644 $1 ,275 Com=te Dowri ii• ,,,.. . . --,, -· S@\l~}A-~t-tfS" The Puzzle wifh fhe Builf-ln Chuckle PRINT NLMIERfO LEnERS I .,. t i IN THESE SOUAll£.S ) ~44 Xlnt 1 n c 0 m e • What else can one ia,y_about I -"----'-~"'--""-ST.>--0 • a borne like thiB one •. "'";"'J.. a.or,. llll•mton Coron• dot ,Mar cu garage, covered patio, Th•· RNltor 54MS711 · -··cunE'' ~~ ~=~··aoo in:= oWNER IJOOoos. Preltlae • ler bedroom luge cnou,gh bdrm. binina rm., built-ins, Th;g2ohcdno can't 18'!! Chinn· to accommodate 2 l>ed1wm DAI LY dlohwuher. Flret>llla!. 2 1ng rootn cot~e nicely • ..-Al . ., -•-patios. Bcautltul landscap- remodeled . on a great ..,,.... "° · · · 1' • cr.u-con-lnit "Flower" lh\'!et, and an at· dltloned and priced to .ell. '¥· brk $39,950. 962-65fJ6 tractive bochelo< rental In !5J6.2551 BKR. ~ _,.rllour the back. Ju>t ollered for "BRING ME AN · Thlt owner is movlng out ot lale at $71,500. CaU 615-1225. ·OFFER" p I LOT the country and must sell. If you have been fookbw for a 4 Bedroom ba.riain, look .. no more!'Comer Jot, beauu. ORANGE fuJ neighborhood. Call us ~ ... ~2!!61 Bl<R. W!!IOJAIY Of ntl COlwa&. CO. TAKES HONORS Owner leaving. Estate-med bdrm. S baths. Fonnal FOR SNUGNESS dtrung n11., buUt-lns. Femi· COAST'S What 1t preM?nt ior Mom! ly rm., !lrrplace. Family This 2 bdrm., 2 bl. home orchard. Prestigklu11. brk hrut hardwood noor11, mod-$41,999. 962-1373 em lcllchen, a wtlk to oWNm Is anxious. Gorge-I di tvtrythlna below Co a 1 1 ou. homct. 4 large bdrms. ea 1ng Hwy. IDc•llon. S53.SOO Will Reor llvtng nn .. dlnq nn .. buy 11 (thlt month). built-Ina. F~U,y rm .. University Rulty fltt!>lace. Rm. for boat. brl< BY owner-Ip 2-..,., 4 BR. 2\i be, fam rm, din rm, Nr water. $66,000. 2131592-2128 ll')'IM AIR Corl<!. Decorat<lr model.,'! er, 2 ha. u......i.-i 'thruout, frplc, -{ u 1 I y l1ndscaped. $39,lir>O. Open Kouae, Sal • Sun, April 14 It 15. 15482 Lornjne Way, Irvtne. (The n.& n c h ) • 5'1.-. lllDl ON. · BY OWNER. 3 Dr, 2 Ba. FIR, frpl. Total pymnt $271. 811-11 0 3 , 615-:lllll • G:~~.w lfHllS 10 1 1 1 1 .1 1 1 1 3001 E Cit. Hwy. ~10 $31.500. -1 M ket la · · .. . . . * TRIPLEX WM'H POOL The futest draw ln the We~t. ar p ce '-SCIA.M-1.ETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATI. ON 800 A n. .. , upp<r tor 1&,000. . . "' °""' Pilot €1eal1tled ----"'~--~~-~~~~------_:__:_:..;__:_:..;_~f.!'.Dr~1~u~t.~.,.~~~81a'~~54S-~l'l:l~»~.'-l~Ad=·~IO«l~=-=~lL::...--~~-• DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS FOR ACTION .••• CALL 642·5678 ' ... •• I . ' • Border Bar9ain Every classified wont od in the DAILY PILOT oppeari in every edition ovwy- doy. Thot moons your ad , will . be ...., in papers delivered to ~omes and , sold from new~rocks from border to bordor ol along tfte Oran<Je Coast . . • 11 tlie way from Seal Beach / to San Clemente • • You Get It All • Huntington Beaeh . Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beaeh . . Laguna Beaeh Irvine Saddleuek San . Clemente Capistrano -(Plus the dciDy newsrack edition) For One Price With A ·-- ' DAILY PILOT ! . , Classified Ad Pho"ne 642-5678 YOU CAN CHARGE IT, TOO • (.~1~ l....:_J ' '• 1. .1 J J 'I • I• ... . ~· • , ,, . JOIN THE • ,. .. • WE'RE SAVING SPACE ~--------- YOU ••• ~ ~ ~ ,,-. . ~ ~ .. ~ ~ • ~ • If you sell a service an4 don't advertise in the DAILY Pl~QT Service Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Service Directory (classifications 600-699 in the classified ad section daily) gives you an advantage you get through no other advertising medium. It ~reaches customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you heve to sell. If your service isn 't listed , we 'll start e category just for you. Pick up the phone right now end reserve your spece in the "Sellers Cir,sle" • • • Your Direct Line to • Directory Results ' 642-5678 ' r·~ CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT DAILY PILOT I ' 8~dhill REALTY • I A pany With Vision Urilv, Park Center, lrvine CfJI Anyfu:n~. 552· 7500 Office hours 8 A?if to 6 PM JUST REDUCED 3 bdrm., 2~i bath popular Edinburough mode1 in Uni· vcn;:ity Park. Lovely sun deck and, close to the pool and schools. Upgraded car· pets and drapes $42,000. 833-3380. *CHOICE* Laguna Homesltes Street to 11;treet lot in xlnt. neighborhood; underground utilities & incl. house plans. Sll,000. • Large sloping lot with fine So. Coast views, South J...a. guna. $17,500. / Finest residential are a . Tremendous lge. lot \VI ocean, coast & vulley views. · Underground util. An ex· ceptional buy at $32,000. Rare hon1csite in priv. com· 1nunity, right nu the ocean. r·;1.ntastic vie\\'S. J-lear the \vaVes crash! Steps 10 prlv. beach. Good iinan\.'C. Known architect's house p I ans incl,; $55,000. * 499-2800 * = -to. (;Qli'f HW'f. tovrll ~ Clllr. .......... ._...c:..- 8 UNITS L o e a t e d in impressive, charming community of San Clemente. Watch the money roll in & live easy witlr·• these great rental units. Just old enough to have all the eob \Vebs taken out; beautifully landscaped. $129,500. ~Ian REAL ESTATE . 11~ Glenneyre SL 494-9473 549--0316 BY Owner, ~onial Mansion. Over 1 wcioded acre w I lovely ocean views, m-sq. ft. home, plus sep. 1600 sq. fl. guest home. 3 Blocks from ocean. Must see to be- lieve. $250,CXXl. Will trade. 494-2848. • ·-. STEPS TO OCEAN 2-Sty. A-Frame. 3 BR. 2 ba. Blt·ins. Walk to beach, pools, tennis. $45,500. CAYWOOD REALTY * 541-1290 * NEW EXCLUSIVE Bay[ron\ 4 BR., 3 baUts Pier & Slip -$215,CXX) LIDO ·REALTY 3377 Via Lido, Npt Beach 673-7300 *RARE FtND * Steps to Oce•n i'ee simple hOme. 3 BR., 2~S ba.; vacant. Lovely patio. May trade. BALBOA BAY PROP. * 673-7420 * BLUFFS SACRIFICE! ! Ultra deluxe 4 BR, 3 BA, lam rm .plus huge rumpus. room. Priced by transfer- red owner at $77 .500. FEE. Must SELL this week. Hur- ry! Agent 645-8400. BEACH Cottage. Vacant. Parking !or 4 cars. Just steps to the beach & across street from shopping . $59,500. Newport P I e r Realty, m-mi. Booutlful Bluffs -Sor91lnl 454 Trucha! ! Reduced!! TED HUBERT & AS.SOC . 34TI Via Lido, NB 675-8500 ' - D. 1~ ba, den, din. rm, ,shag crpt, permanent dbl. appear, ca.bana. New I y painted. $5200. ~ SPARTAN MANSION 40' immae, park ront $45 ... C.?.f. 522-4080, 537-9148, J & J . 20x57 2BR. 2BA, unfuhi. Bay Side Village, NB. $14,500. .52+-0J03. Rhl Estate. General lachenmyer1 Realtor • -------------~- BY owner · Bay crest on San· Brand new, 3 BR, 2 BA tiago Dr. 4 BR, 3 ba, formal units. Bltns, wet bars, open din nn, fam rm. Pool-size beams! LJ:its of glass . . . yard. Xlnt codn., $66,500. magnifieent view of bay, Aft 2pm, 646-3406 boats 'n bikinis. Just re. HARBOR View Ho m e s leased at Sl.90,CXXl. Owner MOntego . 4 BR, 2 ha, fam financing after super low In emergency with Kenneth M . Smith DAllY PILOT "!1\'11 1111' 1·lli! . ·11 I ---11·111111 ·· nn, din rm. $62,500. Owner, down. Trade OK! 645-8400. !j1oot;1';:. &$2$-u~ · 2020 Tustin Ave. 833-JSS4 7 F 1oPEN11L 9 , ' ' . Ne wport Beach 4 BR. 2 Ba. Xlnt comer BLUFFS Condo • 4 bcl, 3 ba, AAMES You arc the winner of de sac loc. $290 Mo · t" • fam. nn, $52,500 by owner, HOME LOAN one free pass 494-9727 .Alfent/OwM'r ' prlnclpals only. ca 11 Good for a .... no1e carload L•!una Nl"'!I· :1 :;:';;' 2 Sty, 3 BR, 3 BA ~~~·~':ti:! ~~t!;;?~J; 541-5557 n•c1'r01c•nyTHofEAthcTRES SEA TERRACE. High wt~'· den, xtra lge master suite in this group. No more like .State Lie. Bkr. 18 Yrs. rA ocean view. Gate guarda. IN "TIIE VULAGE" w/fple. $76,500. 0 w n er them, so HURRY! Large 1 JD L W.alk to beach. Comm. pool 4 BR. den; bltn kitchen ~2460 units w/all amen it I e 5 . el oans (Subject to small service tennil, ·etc . ...-all ~·New , , opens to din. area. 2 Fpl. Oc f D I .Open Howie Daily lG-6. ifl chaige at theatre). bdrm., 2 bath. Cpts., d _ ~ Mstr. BR, suite w/priv. ••n ront up ex 12132 S H G G 7% INTEREST · Please call 642-5678 ext. 314 [rplc., fam. rm. EZ mn ··,: ba., on sep. level, aliding Prine only. Agt,-673-3012 Sparling JnS:~f~~t Corp. 2 d JD L to claim Your ticket. (Nor1h ;,14~50~._4_9H""'M9""'.-.----I glass opens to ocean view 638-5662 n oans ~n~!t.,tOll·tre: ntlmber is Newport Buch balcony. $55,CXXI. Newport Heights -'='.u.u.J • • Mmion Realty 49+-0731 * * 7 UNITS-$75,000 Loweit rates Orange co. MESA VERDE 1225 -4< 2BR, pr, patio, · -' O:ER 21 Brd 2 ~ VIEW ~~~{~~lt~~~f~ f:mR~ Settler Mtg. Co. Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA. 2 frplc, ~ ~eJ~Ucs3~ari 2BX ur:· Tu~~le ee<>~rr. 0r: ~~cg,;>r~Ps~!~ ~~ Hwy. Walking distance to 642•2171 545-0611 F_am Rm, bltln kit~h, ser-bltlns, lg yard. Newport 497_2961 · all schools & shopping. Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. VIce porch, encld patiO, conv Hel&hts L NI I W°ed ~::. d~inBg~a: ALWAYS RENTED. DON'T BORROW to all schls, 2 children, 1 $500 • '4 plus den, Penn agune gue . Bkr. 638-5662 'TIL YOU CALL USI pet ok. G8:f'dener &: water Point, prl beach, lovely brick !rplc. w/heatolator; 1---='"'7c.=-=::::..~-pd, on quiet cul de sac, house EXCEPTIONAL BUY F.A. heat. Extra lge. kit. PALM DESERT Borrow on your home equity $3$. 6 mo lease aceeptable, NU·V· ''EW RENTALS In · the Highlands area of w/brkfsl area, walk-in 8 homes, cluster housing for any good purpose. Serv. 54S-6J42. ,. , • Niguel. This 3 Br, 2 BA, pantry, birch cab. & blt·ins. with pool, shuffle board, ing Los Angeles County for lBR 2BA ho 67l-4030 or 494--3241 , den. & ram rm home is Extra lge. dbl. garage on therapeutic pool. Sett or over 20 years :i"d NOW in cle~n. lo~Jy kltche~s la:d ~ ' prof, decorated & Jndscpd. alley w/extra parking. Ask· trade $195,000. 7 tum. Equi· Or~ge County. rm, yrd. Xtra stor, gar, 6 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, , Less than 2 yrs old, ready lng $54,000. ty $120,000. Broker SJ .. NAL MORTGAGE CO. mo lse. Avail 4124. $2'10. garage, pool, lounge WI to move into. Priced at only CALL '-"" 646·1414 (TI41 642-7319 or <n4J ~06 979-9248 eves. bar and color TV, craft.I - $40,500. Don't overlook this ,,~ ~ (n4) 34&-3528 4500 Campus Drive, N.B. room, billiards. card room, , blll'gain. ~. 4-PLEXES (7) 2ND Trust D--.. -SHAfamRPJ)y' clefranpl'c' BRd,o2uBbAI& putting green and more. , Call Katella Realty RB •LTY S9Ua • • e •'l""'Ssob"r month Brok.,.· ,. Beaut. garden apts. Pr1de-garage -·· d r -' • 492-~. eve. 492-4596 Ne•r N1.,ort , ••• orrle• .... Xlnt . PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. • .......... p s I 531· 557·2l89 ~ NEW East Nine Condo • 2 NEWPORT HEIGHTS ::aer &:1p,cond.,m~~~'. . Any Amount S245tmo. Call Dave• ' , ~ * CALL 615-449-i BKR. 540-1151 Heritage Rltrs BR, 2 ba. $37,950. By OPEN HOUSE SAT & SUN. $800/mo. Inc. Priced righL MODERN House _ Fil'llt * T~E BLUFFS * . 4093-~f.,,Agt. 837~2 or 3 bd, 2 ba, playroom, $78,500. Has good spend. & Mortgages, time rented by owners. Nr Jmmed. Occupancy £;QO• delightful yard. All new xlnt tenns. Will consider T t "'--~ 260 L k F cabinets, carpet & paint. house in trade. Aft 3 pm, r.us ..,......s nlk.ts, bus, etc. Prefer yr. 2 BR., 1 · ba. Greenbelt $285 I e · oi:est Ocean-View. $5S,CXXI. By n 41552-7655_ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11ellM!. Must have excellent 3 BR., 2~ ha, 2-sly ••.•• $385 A BETTER WAY OF LIFE Owner. 642-3377 or 548-2698. 1.-nd.-u-11,-,-c10..,1-P=-ro-pe-r"ty~l6I"° I PUT YOUR MONEY refs. Prefer adults. For 3 BR., 2 ba., l·lly. . .... · I 415 Santa Ana St. ' app't. 548-7308 2 BR. 2 ba., "Angelita" DEANE-Bu It garden home, TO WO~R~ FOR YOU! 2 BDRM front duplex, ni stbillff Rlty. m beaut. decor & plantings. DuplexE.'s near the ocean WANTED: Industrial % Earn lO'l(l interest on v.·ell· yard, parking in front, THE Bluffs, brand new Fully improved. C I u b Miles Larson, Realtor Acre-Ml, more or less by secured 2nd Trust Deed.!! on garage in back. Sl90. lst & BR, 3 BA, pool & y membership, lake privgs. *67".?-8563* individual. Write Classified Orange County real estate. last + dep. 156 E. 19th, malnt. CUst crpt &: ~ a~ ~rcx;'~ t ~ 1_s_._n_C_I•_.,.....______ ~~o. ~ :0. ~~ ~:: SIGNAfu~o~~E ro. 548-0072 $li00d mo. tsvailt &: last plua chandelien, patio furn , Ca 92626 VACANT 2 Br. $140. AIM> 2 ep. A April 1$. fountain, .etc. 830-M99 JOB .trans. forces saJe, 3 mo 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. BR. Teahouse 11 55 • 833-8635. • ~ ! II ,.,.,.""'-7"~~~.c.---old · home loo.-in Rancho Lots for Sele 170 ~~~~~~~!~!I Lido Isle Marguerita area of San I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= ---· Kidsfpeta ok. Agt. Fee. 3 BR/2 Ba newly d«'CIV, , Clemente. 3 BR, 2 BA, din I' m.84.30 Bltna. Breakfast nn; 2 ._ ' OUR EXCLUSIVES rm, Hv rm, frplc, lge kit APARTMENT SITE, [. -1..-Rft [[ ll!i I 2BR unfurn '"'" d.,,. gar, 1'.I blks ocean. Pool & • 3 BDRMS. & den, 45 ft. lot. w/bltn GE elect range & 220 FEET X 105 FEET I . · abeol. no 'pets. 1 $ 16 5 '. clubhse privl. Yrly $325.4 • $79,500. dshwsr, 2 car gar, Lge lot, In Santa Ana 645-2451. In.q~ 377 E. 18th St., mo. Days (213) 225-mL 5 BDRMS. plus family rm., Q.ulet neighborhood, close to Fully improved lot No. 4. ~ Wknds 714/536-0740. ./ -; · 3 baths. «I ti:. lot. $UO,OOO. schools. Transfer forces Variance necessary General VIEW of golf routse -3 BR, * *BLUFFS** "~: 3-STORIES, bayfront, ocean sale at $33,900. Open house For maximum development 2 ba, cozy lge frplc, fncd $475 3 Bdnna., 2% bat.bl. view; 4 bdnns., 4 ba's, Fri thru Tues. IG-6 at 206 $34,000 • FREE e yard, new crpts, drps & BAY VIEW $235,000. • , Calle Rica, San Clemente, HARB9R RENTAL SERVICE stove· 1315 mo. ss1-1m $500 3 BR, 219 ba, dlx. A&Ml LIDO REAL TY 492-8385. Stop by and browse thru our 3 BR., 2 Ba. Lrg playroom, 644-!905: 552--'lOCD 33Tl Vla Lldc>, N'pt. Beach Santa An• -refltal book pool . Children, pels OK. $300 AVAIL April 15. Lovely 3 673-7300 If 646-3808 or 494.£.164. BR, 1\i BA. Townhouoe. * EXCLUSIVE * ~ $135 rrM?_;112 BlxR duplex ('.I'ake =t :;ta. Bal= ~ 4 Bdrms., plus den; 5 bath!. REALTORS 191'42 Brookhurst HB 962.-44n as lsfw• f up for higher 646-!391. 50 Ft. Nord c 0 r n e r · sg:~~U:rBJ:!:::.~ SINCE 1944 16139 Brookhurst FV 531-5800 ~re~n~t)Clg~ar~.~kld~s~o~k:,.. -~~~11H'-AR""BOWRtHJIDog;;hl;;;ands;;;;;:-=.:;3iiBRRR, ~~ custom bome. ~-~ 211 yean old, I.ire· "!"""'"6~7!!3!!-4~4"0"0""'~ C_orono d el Mir ':.!to. yrd3B~, 'r.~!"· l'.:~y' 2 ba. bltns, dl•hwuhtt. Nr ...........,, Cose to schools'hlr: ;"' horn Pe k n4--,_, ~ ahop'g center Ir: scboola. No ·~ REN'I'AlS SUm winter South Coast Plaza, mlnules Mounte1n, Desert 4 BR, 3 Ba. semHum. e. ts 0 · --· pets. Children ok. S325 mo. • A leaaea..: mer, to both Newport It San Resort 174 linens & dishes. Adlts, no MESA Verde: lge. 3BR., 2 642-9567 1; LIDO REALTY Diego Frwys, Ask i ng --------pct. $400. 424 Poinsettia, ba, lam.':'" .. 2 frplcs. <~'1>. Bronc! New Duplex J·; 33i7 Via I.Jdo, Npt. Beach $34,950. 80 Ac Mt. hideawa,: In Nat'I 615-Sl18 drps. Pabo. $310. 642-5000. Ocean Vu, walk to• bch, 4 673-7300 CA:!S7'LLSouBILLth Townson~~ forest nr ld.Yllwtld SOOO' el, Huntlnnton Bffch D1 n1 Point Br. No pets or chldrn. '· . , n slroam, pines, e I e c , • 64&-038 IMMAC. 4 Br .. den, 31Ai Ba. Annand Posenaer Realtors S90;CXXl/$IO,OOO dn. ~mo, NEAR Ocean l Br &: FOR Jeue like ne-w, 3 BR. 4· ; 35' Jot $76,500. Owner. nf.870!t8'T'/' Fullerton ~toamf538....3286 Agt. brttieway, 1~ y&rd, avau 2 BA, Dana Point Knolls W~ tbut w::::_f· r!: I Prine . onlY. 675 -7667: ,....,~=;-~~-~-!!!-~~-~-~-!!!-~~-~-~J WATERFRONT VACATION now. mJ. 55&-0236 horn• w/large yard, OU •t. f. u~ 2 Br .,~•·-all ' 213:449-4466 OWNER-Air cond., 3 BR. 2 home. $4500. B e au t If u I recreational ~hlcle park. am 1• ' -...... · BY owner - 2 yeir old BA, wfw crpts, drJ;s, 'Xlnt beach, bay islands, Hon-Laguna Beech lng, $310. \v/water 6: tn.sh A.gt. F«i. m-8430 beyfront 5 Br, 5 Ba. oond. $3l,500. 557-1946. duns Lease hold. 5'8-1768. $I60 • Tiny, but nice sep. paid, 496-0685~ llARBOR View Homes. ne"' $215,<XXI. 675-t242 or 847-ll8J w·""e"11m""'"1n""1"'to"'r""'="----I Also small island avallable. cottage, No. end. Pool. Huntington Be1(h ~.~~· c~' It 2 dr~' ~~ M l •• 10" VI.lo R anch e s, Perms, $225 • l Br. Frplc, garage, --· · YIU.AGE GREEN -New I G roves patio. Nicely furn, Ocean VACANT 2 Br, $1.3.S. Also 3 -""~'~· ~--~--- BY owner • 3 BR trt·level. s1)t 3.BR townhome. Choose llO Vltw! Br. $175. fenced, kkl&/pell. The Blutrs * 3 BR 11iii BA £4e denl patk> kitchen colon now. July compl. 2\l: AC. bet. S.J . CaplstranG $300 . UHi Pd. In 2 Br. Fr-Agt. f\.¥.. 979-8430 New at.rpet. pool privilep. w/vtew A: bl:tna, fonn&J din-Owner 397-7167 & Lake-Elsinore. Level, pie, yard, PAtlo. fblk beach! 2 BR. Condo. New shag crpt, $325 month &44-4359 Ing, I frplca, 2 1 ... 1 brick DESK ll>O<C available l50 ideal for hors< ranch. $9,750, NU-VI EW RENTALS d.,,.,' bl1 -)ns. Pool & club 3 BR, 2 BA, <'Ptldrp, !rs- paUo around ~ heated mo. WW provide turnllure Full pr., n trms 833-3223 673-4030 or 494-3248 fact. Liie $)XI. Slf)..2315 yrd. Nr. all 11Chls. $325. By Poot. View. $5.l.950. &n~:ws at SS mo. Anlwtrlna tervlce LIJ<e to trader our Trider'• Have 90methlns )'OU w•nt to Uke to tnde? Our Ttader's appt only. 548-8341. ~ For that Item under $50, try avallablJ. 11875 Beach Blvd. Paradlae column b tor you! sell? 01Wlned ada do It Paradlte column Is foro you! Stll the old stun. BQy o. l ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'""""I the Penny Pincher. !hUltJnafOll B<1ch. 642-4321. 5 U-. 5 dA>'• tor S buckl. ..,u • call NOW 64Hm. S lh"'" S days for 5 buc~ _ne_w~otu~fl"'. ____ _..1 • • I . • I 4•' DAil Y '9lOT --- Q 3 BR, A MO;\)ler' In-Law Unlr. N e..-.,-P o r t s6orn. ~/dilb prlvl(ll. ~. ~-- II•) I ....... ~.-.iJ IWll .................... ~-- ......-uo Apt. Un_f_ur_n_. __ __;.365;.c·, 1 Huntington &.Kh Co1t1 Meu 1145 -1165 • DELUXE IW'J\EL()R & 1 Bl\ .. patios. APARTMENTS Irplc'1 priv.' gaAL8tl -Alr Cond ~le' 3 Swim Divided bath &: lots ol • ~· • ., • • · c1otlet.s. Rec. lutll, pool & mtna PoolJ • Jleallh Spa • pool ta:btcs. sauna baths. T~~I' Courts • Gamv and See '°r younst•U, 17301 81J,hard Room: K{'(lltio~1 Ln. (1 blk w. of I ] Bedrm. l> rom $J65 l!oaoh, 1 ~~~s1 Slatcrl. MEDITERRAN~AN .p.... ·P''·• Rooms 400 Olli .. .@enlol 440 Personol1 530 Found (fr .. od1) 5~ F u rn. or Unfum. "70 Fum. or Unfurn. 310 fl-'IC£ room: biu.stness FUU.. SERVIQ:. Rod Cruse fEM..\LE T11.hbY'"tat (l)CfC' ; H;u;:n;t;I"";· ;;°";;;B:;•;•;ch;;;::;;;;;;;;H;u;;n;;tl;;nvt;;;°';n;;ll~o~K;h;;;;;l "''Oman. Kitch. Pr Iv 11 . Wtstcllff Buildli\g-._ f.5041 Sussex Circle nan!) round In Oltnlaven Non.-cnlokcr. $95 Mo. Cen· Carner WestcWf DrlvC & Huttt ington Be•ch arctt., N.B. Call MS-4739 tral loc. 646-lm Bet 1:30 Irvine Blvd., N t" w iro rt You art' t"·· wuu)('r of , f'OUND Collie pup. Call &: e HUNTINGTON BEACH FINEST e Pt.1 & a.ft. 7 PM. Beach. l\1r. 11 0 w 8 rd one r;ie)wls idr111 lty 84:t-9770 lilw 7·U SPANISH COUNT$Y ESTATE LIVING QUIET attraoUve room. pvt S<S..6101. Good ,0, a whole ;arload kl\\ & 6-10 pm 2 Acres beautiful par k like surroundings. bath, pool prlvs. Re11)0llli· J 617 WESTC LI FF to any·or the FND: Gennan ~ h e p h e rd Sunken pool. Sparkling Spa n ish fountafns . 010 adult. 646-8502 C.M . 1294. 7"6 & 540 oq. rt., ampl• PACIFIC THEATRES ma!• vlo. F. Y. • Spacious Rooms e Separate dining room ROOM for rent, mature pk,g, utll , janitor. Baum· 839-4991 e·walk in Closets. Home like kitchen&. cabinets C~~~~f~. ~~· gardner #104. 541-5032. SUbj 1 1 II I GOl.D ring found vicinity I Bedroom Unfurn. $165. "-'-. •185 OF1''1CE spa-lo•· "''''· ( ec 0 sma serv ce lluntington Beach. 8-l&-9410 L..-~1rifE Blutla -•view. 3 BR. ! ... Quiet loc. N ... .pi.. & drapes. $475 Motleuc. REALTORS • 6f4-'lfl62 4 iiR. 2 be.. fam rm, din rm. ltArbOr View I-tomes. Pool prlvil. $450. 833--3894 $13.5 • UL'l'RA NICE Apt. 6 .~='-"'='-=::...:=---I Pools. 4 Gardell5 .... Sauna. Heusn Furn. or Tt>nnis. Priv. patio. VILLAGE rwu • DELUXE• Pvt at Maid '"" chal'gc at theatre). · . 2 Bedroom Un!Urn . $185. Furn • ..,15 ·• -e " Newport Beach, \\1estcliJf Pie"'"' cul.I ,,.~ . ...c78 •"· 314 Lo•t 555 "" scrv. No smoken. 1-I ~· •~ ~ r:;;;;; _______ _ e ALL UTILITIES F•C:E e 6T":i-03lO or 548-ll97 area. ,vvv SQ. t., sharp, to rlalm yo.ur ticket. 1Not11i 1· Walk t H · ·~ call Gene 1-llll, 642-0200 County toll.free ountbe.L: _ls $50 ~EWARD O untmgton center * NICE BR kit priv optional WATER VI"E\Y ~wee oJ· a-10-12'.lJJ. for rc1ur11 of snil blk/b1wn l -~U~n~fu~rn.;.;:.'~~~_;:.3l~O r~M=6--0c:::259~.'-c~~~~~ LMu. Pi-1EN, small beach hcite.1. ADULTS NO PETS pri ltdu1t home near ail. E flee 1-000 + SCI 11. $400 Incl. feti1 1log. &·hnnuzt-r·SCOttie. LA QUINTA HERMOSA Cost.a Mesa s-18-4271 u.HL 2400 \\', ~st 11wy: '*Pilm·& card Rtedir Had fl(:a coll:ir \v/tx·ll. Lost ~na Beach Roonu $2.Llll per wk. Ap~ PARTLY rum. hou~ tor S95 per month. 536-?CM. malure salaried a d u I t s: . L1gun1 8.-ch 16211 P ARKSI DE LN (714) 847·5441 ROOM ooly or room & c'44-:.:.o,116=78c:o::.r.::~=='·'-c-S . 1 al p hi p 1 W. 0.1 ,,, .. &12-1101. 4 ll'" S f S Di F Be h boa~ . I . t ho ;=: prr tu · s.YC c. ' as , $1Ta. No children 49-1-8170 I ;;~,;;;;;;..:::.:;:.:;:.... __ _ i.a •• O an ego rwy.on ac •um.nce qwe me. Bu1ints1 Rental 445 Pre11ent, FU!urt.Advi(.oeonsc;o'M'Y black {~1 1 &. ~ 1 Blk. W. of Holt to Parkside DUI 545-al95. t..ove, Marria&-e. Bus.ine68. cocker)XXI blitt?k fF 1 Vic, ":;:;"i'i';::;;:;;;""""'"'"'i:i'i"'!i';:;:""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l :G~ut~1~t_.!H~o~m!!!• ___ _!.41~5 DESIGN CENTER Na problem 100 big 10 solve. Lag Niiuel. Rt>v.•anl. Call CondOmlnluma 1 Unfurn. 320 r tffwport a.och • 1 nn.. reUable middle aged roupll'. St~·p11 to. beach, cable, gar, $1T.>. mon, year tease. 494-3148 Newport S..ch -• PINlCl[ll UYll UP TO ITl lfAMI ,,, Apt. Unfurn. 365 Aph., Fine location w/country at· Special Readings SL Open 495-41182 after 5. Fum. or Unfum. 370 PRIV. & siml private nn mo!<J>herc. !deal ror Dally, 9AM-WPM. 7 3 22 SttVER Grcy.1\-Ialc, poodle. I rvlne 1 -.;._:;..;;;_:.c.....;;.;~:;c.;..;;;..; avail. Spaclou!I w/gounnct a r c h i Le c t u r a I , en· W e s t m t n s I c r A v e , Vic. Emerald Bay, Lag. SPACIOUS greenbelt , t>nd u~it 2 bd, 2~ ba, den fonna l $29.50 per Wk & up. 1 BR, 2 din. nn, BJuffs $ 4 7;;. BR & Bachelors. Color TV, 613-3752 or 644-5573 maid serv, pool. The l\.lesa 4t:i l'f. NeY.'{>Ort Bl., NB 0 • t ~0 I• I• • • ~"d L!) ~1 ,,._ ,.,,," ~.d1•1t~11, 11•·1-. 1.i ... ~~ vtt•~t "' \ ' ~·I •to~• "' ,-. l GI J UtdtGO'TI ~PJ•l..,tnl ~l'IJll I''!'.~. t1cm ~1~~. l uln<1Ur~ "'IOl•l~~lt.1.'llllrl~ ~p .. n ,, o" !•d• Oil '~(l(l rA .. <1f" No 1.~'''' r.1 .. ,., r·~,.~ ... !11~ ilOG. ----------Costi Mes• food. 642-9278 vil'Onn'leru.al. Int c r Io r \Vcstminster. 893--98.54 Bch. Re\vard o J t e r c d , 2 BR, l~~ ba, air t."Ond $2251 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1~V~,~<•~t~io~n~R~t!;n~l~•~ls~~425~· 'design, advertlalng, po~ ~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'!!!!!!!!I •9H206 BOB PETTIT lishing or related fields. 1260 ~ .::::..=:::..-~----,-! REALTOR 552-700} * * * BIG BEAR, leg-mod. cabin sq. fr. at 50c D. Wright, HELLO! \\le hear -you're LADCES' gold Rolex \\'atch N at Soow summit. n.. •• or 644-79'55. planning a GALA AFFAlR w/dlamonds on band, Jost •wport S.1ch SPARKLING NEW VGJ & you nef'd some good in 0 1· near Albert90n's mkt, _Week. (114) 63!>-2742. omertainmcnt. We """Id CdM. Rewanl. Call .._.8782 1...,....;. ____ ..;..._m 64<Hl681 Hunti~"n BMch l BR furn apt. No children ''Rent A Piece BIG BEAR -Cabin for rent. OFFICE · 19 cent!! &Cf ft up. like to ~fer .our music. Ce.II LOST grey & white cat ,of a Pal•ce'' BAY SHADO.WS Easter \Vk or Wkncl.s. s~ 900 sq ft or more, individual 539-5_:559 ~Garden Grove Qr w/tan ,pots near So. Cst nor pets. 2405~~ E. 16th St., per ·da. Sips 7. 494-5625. heat/air, near all ·freeways. "u-1=1 rn c-ta Mesa N~ 1 story twnhsc. 2 br, 2 NB. 646--4664 hi, dbl'"'· pat~. carpets & San Clomento LOW DENSITY dia. trplc, modern kitchen, _...;...;c;c:;c.c:;;.;.:_____ Relax in pai·klike setting OCEAN and HARBOR VIEW ~· ~ ··cHOP-S'' · Plaza. Answers to "Zipper." Apartments Bl $50 W nd 00 Xlnt parking Short term G Bear. eeke ; $1 lease. Agent, 835-4422 Cind & Dan Rc1vard 9m-o870 Spacious, Light & Cheery! \\'eek: S250 l\'lo. 2 Sty. hOme, y BUCK minlalure f, pood le pqols, jac\Jizi, sauna, tennis * 2 BR, 2 BA * Near Coi;tu Mesa lloi;pital cittl, park, nr. beach. $325. WHITE WATER VIEW If APTS.. Elegant apartments designed 1 BR's ·FROM $157 J..loonridge. 494-9727 VETERANS Tues. pm,1Corona: dcl Mar. R I t ~ 430 REAR Sheet Met.al bldglng E $4 58 1 17 00 ho 2 BR's FROM $177 entl s o ..,,,1rt approx 25x40 suitable for arn · o · per ur Child's pet. Rewa rd ! J$p. aduJt.s, avail May. 1539 BUENA VISTA,Q. J UST COM PLETED with a Master's touch, SU· c"P-£,.;:9&14=,::0o.r;;54,::H'i·"7"'45'---...,= Apt. Unfurn. 365 4 LEFT!? . 2 Br, 2 Ba. perb house security, cxt'IU· Beautiful appointments In· MALE or Frm~ shr 2 BR. 2 elude Decorator Fireplaces BA Home, Ne port Shores. guaranteed by using your 644-0634 plu1nber, electrical, TV G.I. Bcnefils while' at· ,::.o.::=~. -~~~­ Repair etc, 824% A, Wes! tending Santa Ana College. LOST tenrus racket, Newport D*s>ltxes Unfurn. ALL EXTRAS. Sl95. i;ive Versailles Club and i:C:.t;::.:.::•::;".:;:_..=: ___ ~~~~~~~~~:1 B1lbol lsl1nd Enter 2126 Doctors Circle 1riool "'.'Ith anduniqu1e Aquabar, 19th St, S135 mo, Inquire 824 Call 00\\' _ • Center Dr. \Ved . AJ.f. W 19th St. Cost.a Mesa 547-9561 Ext 370 833-1969 Sh c ti p · · $150 mo. George Leeper; ag arpe ng. nv.ate M7-43ll days or 642-5836 n..-or n26 Thurin SL 545-5800 ounla1 ns ormal gar· -~ 1'--0R lease by the year, CASA GRAN dens. All part of the South Pa11os. Pool . Jacuzzi • eves . Volleyball court • Gasl"°=o.· -------BBQ's. Closed Garages. \YANTED:-Girl in 20s lo Adults, No Pets. share apt. C.M. area. ?.Jay "THE F ACTORY'' con· sisting of 2'l unique stores has shops avail. tr $70/mo. "Cannery Village," 425 30th .St.. NB. 673-9606, Agt 642-8520~ YOUNG couples club, 18·35 + LOST long ~aired Siamese 539.3344 or 548.3&13 male cat. Vic. Hubor Vlev.• RIV P · b ADA Coast's finest apartment *' auo -encl. gar. 2 rand new. 2 BR unfurn R BR. ~ & d ental Concession community. Call "LEAlf" 2·8 pin Dr., CdM. Rewant. 644-2615 ..... pts rJ>li. $170 mo. garKge apt . Crpts , Lov I 2 f)milies. No pets. 673-.3690 d I s h w a s h c r , 0 0 n . e Y BR, aptJ with a 1 Bedroon1/studios from $195 1st. Approv. $80 m·o. 548-4683 alt. 5. e FOUND OR LOST A PET? Social Clubs 535 Bureau of Lost Pets :r-, k i n g s I z c d BR. On 2 Bedroom from $305 H ti.......;, •--h llnuous-elean oven, garbage bcautilully I and d 'lod 9 A . k 409 W. BAY St, !n .... -.. -.c dlspo .•al . $250/ni o. scape " elsopen .~1.Uldus B "II f' grounds. Gas lncl'd In n>nt. Costa Mesa ACHELOR 'A• share apt ---------Open 9am-2pm, 636-fJ685 SINGLE? 2l3/465-849Z. Child up to 3 years. No pets. ~ Man1ger Bldg E~103 \v/same in C<fM. Pool. flilEW 3 BEDROOM 2BR. F'rplc. F.A. Yriy. Ideal 1A Blk E. or Harbor. * 646-3387 * Near beach, 6Ta-8876 2 '8,th, large pvt yard, encl for couple. 16(11 Balboa Ave. 400 Merrimac \Yay 557-9559 !!!!!!!!!!O!!!!!!O!!!!!!!!,,;,,!!!!!I SHARE APT·HOUSE SEPARATE building + gar. 1000 sq fl, pan lg. crpts. adj busy corner. 645-2020 I 642-<;560 BWNDE male mixed cOl:'k· Receive a ~lect nu1nber of er, 8 mos. "Gwnper" ln quality compatible matches CdM area. 673-9586 2.~car pvt garage Jn duplex Bal Isle. 6~ HARBOR GREENS .,. ON THE BLUFFS . TflE: E..'-'CI'!ING CALL HOt>.IE -PARTNER b1i11 ilding S250. per mo. Man. l>•lboo Ptnlnsu'oo F PALM ESA 83G-ll94 548-1479 a1er at 313 Oswego, Hunt· D · urn, & Unfurn. Fr Sl30. AT NEWPORT M APTS. I~-===·.:;:::.::::.:..~~ STORE, Avail Apt•ll 1st, 690 West 19th St, $135 mo. In· qulI'f" 824 \Yest 19th St Costa from lOOO's in your area, 'COCKATEEL Jost in Santa each w/LARGE PHOTO & Ana Hgts area. comprehe~sive pro(i!C'. Call 557-4379 . Bach, l , 2 & 3 BR's. Models MlN\ITES TO NPT. BCH. Garages for Rent 435 • ""'ton Beach. 536-4152. CHARMlNG P c n ins U-1 a o ·1 T 27 Mesa I Guaranteed & confidential. ---"'. ==-"'"'--~-I I Call now & receive FREE LOST Inah Sel~~r. male, Vic. ~ d pen IL pm. 00 Peterson From Nc••·port Blvd., tum at F1JRN. OR UNFURN. uplex. 2 BR, 1 BA, stove & w CM 11 bo Bl d " u ALLSPACE S , An ay. . nr. ar r \I . Ho•pr'tal Road (1 block nbelievably l"'""e apt•' .. nta • refrlg. Yrls. Adults, &On')' • & A f -<-S If S STORE _ 850 sq. ft. lleavy sample profile sheet on l of N~rt I 1er. Reward . traffic. Opposite Main perspective INTRA·DATA 1 _67~:1-<~13_1_·_· -----no pets, Close to shop's & cams. above Pacific Coast Hwy) 10 huge pool, Jacuz:;I elect bll· e forage 3 PDRM duplex, l yr old, beach. 211 E. Balboa Blvd. S.C.0370 entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, in9, shag crpts, drps, aa•Jna Mini Warehouses m. mo. Santa Ana/Tustin Ph. eves: 985-5822 ** 3 Br., )1/2 Ba. ** Ncwpol1 Bcllch, Ca. 92S60. S~NGA~~Ms· no pets. s 50 Various sizes from S25t~f0. Beach. 21J-C Broadway. match. GREY ,ti; v.•hitc cat, niale, 4'.::1..:--00=23::.· ~------I TI4·541·3738 213·658-'h1'·A·T·E' rrd collar. v.•hl tag, Ellis &. -24 Hours Bushard, F.V. 962-1570 eve afea. 962-5183 YEARLY "''''"' _ 2 8 _ + Lan•o ""'"iy "• E 1 Telephone: (TI 4) 645-0060 From 1 U lock it. U keep the key. • • ., • '"'" .... cor. nc · 1 BEDRM. Fron1 $160 On sile mgrs . 24 hr. access yard. Encl gar. $31D/mo. patio, bltins, <:rpts, drps. PARK NEWPORT 2 BEDRt>.1. From $180 No move in . No move ""t fee HOU SE & garnge. zoned C-2 ~;~;;;~==~ .... -\~:~~~::~~~ w/lrg, clear yard. Nr. 19th LOVE WORN ,, ! · · · Utl l pd. 1500 Miramar. Close to everything. $170 &. Unfum A1>ts A·1all Fro llO .. , i ~· 673--0711. SI80 mo. 868 Cent"' St. Apt. APARTMENTS m Security Patrolled :Ap.,-1meots for Rent • to $~ LESS. , Open Daily for Inspection . Coro,tl del Mar 1· CM or call !>48-8179. th bay YC!u r~ r igh t, they re under· Ha.Jnilton & Newland St., HB I ;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ 'iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 12 BR y,•/kilchen bltins. Ne\v on • pnced. 1561 11esa Dr. SlJ.()519 if no ans 646-0697 c&;:_:N:.:oc:wc:PD::':.:'o.· ::.64:.:&-..:200:::::2c.· --, Discover DISCOVERY Industrial Rental 450 PROFESSIONALS In a field I II J•) of Amateur ltfatchmakers. Instruction {Est. 1966J. • 1 ~illill;pillillill~iiiii~I II I cpls, dra & paint. Take \n. I.uxury apartment living (5 bl.ks from Newport Blvd.) ' ' NOW LEASING A,ka. Furn. 360 ....--\ ..., ~ rant. no pet!!. Call 642-4044 overlooking the water. En-546-9S60 ' Office Rental 4401 Huntington Beach (TI4) 835-6885 (213) 387-~3 11 Schools~ 1~,,....-------~ • -alt 6 pm or wkend joy $750.00l health spa. 1 $135 & UP Biijlbo.I lslend Q.-•,. **BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. swimming pools, 7 lighted Susan Mears 1 94IJ NSqE.":~t~&lup lnstr!-'ctions 575 '1'1)~~ Contemporarv G--' .. n Apts. tennis courts, plus miles ol GIGANTIC 1 & 2 BR 2324 A but S Ilg] 3 BR, short term to 6126, -· ~ .. , _ •3 1Uu,. bicycle trails, putting, shul· You Be1 it's underpriced~ r us t. I l.familton & Newland Lott Ind found BATON lessons, incl. Strut & \'tt')' nice, complete. So Bay ON TEN ACRES :;;::;: ds~~~~1:·w c~~ fleboard, croquet. Junior l's That's \\1ly this apt. won't Newport Beach I 646-0097 or &33-0519 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I Pdodcling. "Poka Dots' ' \llew. reas. 675-5838 Apts. fum./unturri. Lease drp.s, priv patio. Pool. In-from $189.50 mcinthly: all» 1 last long. Cpts, drps, stove You are the \\i Mer of ~ Parade Corps no\\' forming. &lboi Peninsuli Fire 1 / . 1. fant ok. Ca ll 557_2841. and 2-bedroom plans and & re!rig. Lots of green one free pass FOR Lease M·l, 1,680 Sq. _F.;;o.:u"n.;:d-~l.;.•!_'::_:-:.:;"•l_..:S:;~ Janet Cummins 645-4586"'iiiiI\ Pace pnv. pa_ ios. 2·story to\m houses. Elec· lawn. C.OVcr'd garages. Good for a Whole carload Ft. $175. Placentia Ave., _ Ml • EASTER VACATION ::~!e~~.~:1·~~ AVAIL. May 1st. Adults on-tric kitchens, private pa:.,s Adults, no pets. 20 io to any or the I Costa Mesa. Inquire 1665 FEMALE, Shellie, purebred, I , l[JC] . ~~~~ce:~1;~g~~: {MacArthur nr Coast HW)') ~r. 2 N~Ro! ~~e~e~~ ~~~~~~ie=~::: ~~:~n :i~~i.' ~1 ~~ik~·~'. PACIFIC THEATRES ~~~~iaOr G~1~64 Woods, ~k~t. Diero uFnr! ~ r ~ Services and~ ~ available for the holldays 1~·p~~I~~~ .. ~~A Ing with elevators. Optional of Bay, C.M.) 642-8690. NE\V l\1·1 Space \vith Oftlce Valley. IUcense No. is 10961 BALBOA INN PPCRIVATE 1 BR apt, N. of maid senice. J ust north of e TROPICAL POOL e (Subject lo small service 1300-2600 ft 3 phase 208V tt96.~:!u~pclated Ii cc n s e. Appll!nce Repair lQ? Main Street H, has 11mall sundeck & BEAtn'. l·BR. Patio. Gar. Fashion~ at J amboree 2 Br Stud io, 11;2 Ba .. frpl, charge at theatre). 254!H16 Failvlc..,,., S. A. .(r'.h7'1J 675-8740 inclds % gar spc. Stv & age. Be am c d cei}'s.: and San Joaquin Hills Road. spiral strcase. Gas & ,vtr Please. call 642·5678 ext. 31-4 Owner: 646-1 252, 644-2228 BLACK & Brm\'n Male ~Parts ' refrig. Will be avail June 20. •quiet lane nr. C.~1. Civic Telepho ne {U4) 644·19'Xl pd. E/side on 18th. 548-1168 lo l'laim your ticket. (North SMALL forklift for rent, M he t I Ch"h h --------I l Cqrona del Mar 1 BDRM So. of Hwy. Immac. J31tns, no children, no pell!. y/Avall April ]6th. $200. rho. ly. 673-fl082 I BR, crp~. drps, bltns, gar., pQOI, drive by 4 O 3 Heliotrope, then ca JI 67s.<i'JOO 2 BR furn ; nr oc..-ean: child pet ok, .$165. 4/U to. J uly 319 Heliotrope. 6t4-4340 Costo Mesa Casa de Oro · AU. UTILlTlES PAID Compare before you rent Custom designed, featuring: e Spacious: kitchen with in-j direct lighting . e , Separate dln'g area •tHome-llke ltol'B&e •,Private patios 0 C1osed garage 'v/1torage ••Marble pullman •.' King-sz Bdrms • Pool . Barbecues -sur- • rolindcd with plush land· !l~caping. ,Adult l.ivin.1: at \11 best LARGE 1 BR $190 2 BEDROO!\IS $210 No Pets • 365 \V. \Vil.son 642-19TI l $30 WEEK & UP 8 'Studio & 1 BR Apts., e :TV & 1\1aid Service Avail. e , Phone Service-Hid. Pool e .Oiildren &: Pet Section •1$120 lltonthly p76 Newport Bl~d., CM 54S-9755 or 00-3967 Ad Good For $5 on Rent £1 Puerto Mesa ' I & 2 BR Apll. :$130 & Up. Unlurn. · All Utilities Paid POOL & RECREATION 1959 Maple Ave, CM Cost• MeSI * $25 PER WEEK * & Up, Pool ,i:, n1ald service. Kirchens avnll. /.lotel Tahiti oomcr !!arbor & Vlc!orht. NTCE 1 Br dphc. Quiet. Sep by gatagcl'. Employed .adult over 30, no pets. 348-1021 BA.QI apt, beamed ceiling, pJtlo,.$ral mo. lncldg .ulil. 2'l ?1-f& Dr. C.M. 646--7342 • 2 BR-S150 mo. No kida or pct11. n'.>I lltaple, C.M. Call GJ!Him Sl85. Pis call for appt. ~~·~· to Iwy. for rental Information Huntiogton Buch ~~l~oll·frce number ls $150. also cm·pe1 carrier for v1~~cp1:c!~li1:L & G~v~~!~: 8J!'~,i~e. A:lii~~fes Se&'i~'. 6444064. ON Bay 2 BR, 2 BA, large l ;--;;;;~::7.:".":'";"::::;:-:::;::;:::l;;i;ii;;iii;iii;;..,iiii0ii0ii0iii0 same. Prlv. party. 646-2002. 4/8/73. ,,A,, A"2l · stallalions. 892-2458. LARGE, mode.m 1 BR apt. SPACIOUS APTS. patio. Stove, relrig. Adults. 1 BR. Deluxe.". Adult poolside UNION BANK SQUARE Rentals Wanted 460 U't<r'I\> B ,w/beam celling, c r pt s, 2 BR. ll'E kitchen, gar, lndry Yearly. No pets. 223 19th garden bungalow, n _e a.r ORANGE lo'ND 4-7, Very yng Aust. _a_b.;.y_1_11_11_n.:;9 ____ _ ~is.' s1J~~ct ii~~j ~~ 1m. No sngls, 1 child ok, ~~~~/mo. 673·2706 or ocean~ Frplc., lrg patio, 6 2oocrsq (1 nlodern ;Uice bldg NEED garage, min. 22', lor Shepherd puppy nr 16~h & BABYSIITING my home. Avail 4128. 6T:>--2880. no wts. 645-7485. ~~9sauna. tennis. $160. All services: car Pete d :j boa! :<;forage. M~. Thull, Olilrange, CM. Cal_! & iden· Nice ynrrl. Prefer baby • 2 BR -No peta. Will show UNFURN nu 2 BR duple..x, 2 · · panelled. 6th floor. SacriiiCT.' 540-2550: wknds 67a-2056 y l Id y.1il LGE 3 BR, 2 BA, bltns, shag Sat & Sun aft 10 am, 689 Ba, gar space, on heh, Newport Beach sub-let. Ideal for ins~ .2 BDR~1 apt or house . 646-4746, 54(}-8523 Co;~·a 0 Mesa. ~8·~~~. area, crptg, drps, fncd patio, plume r, CM. $160· edits, no pets, yr lse, res: office. Call (TI4l 547--0039 Liiguna. Exec., wife, baby. BRM:.JD nu. baby Kitteru; _ rnILD Care. h1y home. 1ndry rm, encl gar. $310. 213/534-0952 2 1 3- 6 9 3 -S 7 4 3, bus : Start 5/l5n3 $225. 497-1045 fnd 1n my ivy. Owner of lost Snacks hot lunch Mon 544--6784. D•n• Point 213-442-1450 your next 444 OLD Newport. 3 blks No. !~~~~~~~~~~I PG cat pl~ase contact. lhru F~i. rull or part days: NEWISH 2 BR, 2BA, no ----------NR Hoag Hosp, lg 2 BR, of Coast H\lo')'. Approx. 900 ' 5-18-2751 Rell!Klnable. 962_7689. children, Cvnl patio dck. 2BA bltins · patio "nci ga' sq. ft. incl 4 priv, off ices & I I~ FN · S _,1 h I I 12,,,. LGE 2 Br. r@Clec, vlew, nr ' ' · ' "' · t be re 1 G I ~ . D: Beaut. Male Irish Set· CHILD C M ho V.'C'i:U s rp c. "" mo. beach & yacht ha.rbor. 5210. Sl85 to $210. Adults.inq. 4150 ap num r cep. rm . 1'('at or ~-----~ te.r vie Dclafle~·Sea c:haniz 2 are. y me. 675-5720 %"JO!ll La Cresta St. Apt A. A, Patrice Rd. 64~387. engineering or d ra v.• in g -. d"'vs ago. Please i'aentify. Snacks,. hot lunch. Mon. Colt. u... · • business. $JOO/mo. Util incl. ,..;t7!l21 0• 6~3170 . thru Fri. Full or part days. ~ ___ Inquire 1030 S. Coast, 2 BR .. 2 ha. Ocean view. 1:.•g..r::?IV"I '".,.... • •.r n ft bl 96~- l..aguna Bch. Ph. 494-ti848 Yearly • $275 Month ~ , ~ '" ~ cvPs Personals 530 •v.=asona e. '"100 "'· * BRAND New lrg 2 Br apt As k for Mike ~$ FRONT comoc s u;to -2nd FND ' pa~ "'ad;_ng gl""'s YOUNG Set School -Open · , 1 1 k·" U .1 DANA POINT new apt 2 135 1 r ••• H brown tortoise rims 6a 6 d 1n ..-p ex, oc t"U gar. l1 , bdrm Sl!IO Jones Realty 6~210 ~ 0 s y, '"-"<>'>t \\'Y, Cd~1 2100 F1.JLL'{ LICENSED \v/chllin in It. Blue case. m-7pm. ays. Ages 21. room. Close to schls, bus. • s4~~97 BRAND . New Ocean lront sq. ~t. crpt, drps, aU'/cond, *SPIRITUALisr• Vic 17th St CM 554--0227 Pro. leacbers. $21 weekly. Child ok, no pe ts. 839-1190 ~--------.r Cond . . 2 B 2 Ba music, elevator, pr k 'g , Spiritual readings 10 am·lO · · · · 646-3706 or 645-lre7. STUNNING 1 & 2 BR, 2 BA DANA Point apt -2 BR, f omintum, r, ' security patrol. Can be pm. Advi ce on all matters. FOUND desert turtle vicinity · · ba. Oceanvicw. Adults only. $400/mo. Year 1 ease· i divided. From 37c · sq. ft. 312 N El Camino, San Santa Ana Ave. Ne...,·port Wl.L~. babysit in my home. Garden Apts. Pool. Rec $225/n10. Eves: 644-2911 675-769':1 The greatest re ason!! for 2711 E. Coast Hwy. 673-4•"" Clemente. 4 9 2-913 6' Beach ' V1cm1ty Newport & Bristol. area. no \Y. 18th St. $145 &. I I 0 kwood G d .1..<V 548-791 557-8451 up. East Bluff LARGE 3 BR, 2 Ba, frplc, mov ng 0 a ar "n OFFICE space for rent. Cos· 492-9034. 1 r-~~-·------encl. gar., nr. Hoag Hosp. Aparl m8 nts are lh8 re nts, u KEYS on keyn·ng _. 141h BABYSITTING my home, NEWLY DEt'ORATED adults. $235 mo. 642-4387 starting as low as $1 35. la Mesa, beautiful, modern, PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con. St. -Balboa -Oceanfront. dependable, love, care, hot 2 BR w/carport, Wtr pd. 1 & 2 BR., $185, $260. Adults, .::::::::::'.'...!=.::::::.:::::..:::cc__ I And here are 8 other gr"al air, music, cla.ss A , fid ent, s y mp a I h ct i c Fnd 416. lunch day or nlghf. S42-S299. Call btwn 1 &. S; 6J6.4120, re<'. & pool, 801 Domingo, NR. Beach, larg. 2 br, firplc, \VALI<ER & LEE BLDG. pregnancy counseling. Abor- 2J66 "D" Orange Ave , •.$140 N.B. 644·4767. pl·i. patio, yearly reasons ; l!ARBOR & ADAMS. Gene lion & ado ptions ref. ~2637 Carpenttr H 673-6640 swimming pools Hill, 546-582!!. 642-0200 APCARE 642-4436 SM AL l~ b I on d ma 1 cl--'---------1 * SHADY EL~1S • PGOL untington Beech healt h clubs Cockapoo Jn front 0 f WOO~WORK, c ab In et s , • Ad 11 p 1 "d 114_ BRAND nc\V ocean front. 2 saunas DELUXE 2RM corner offiee. PREGNANT? Th Ink Ing Rlch·-"'s •ia~·et. s= "l83 panehng, gen repairs, Duke u s oo SL e ::i up. NO\Y OPEN!!! bd, 2 ba, lease $300 mo. ten nis courts, pro & pro shop , 1st flr, 800 pl.us sq ft. Cam· abortion? Know Rt! the facts wu 1' "" -,,,...., D D k 646-'75 • Children next block-unturn CASA TIEMPO 673-fi719 bllllards pus Dr. Nr Airport, 1 yr lse. fi1'1'l! Call LIFE LINE-24 11 to S; 6'Tr72TI after 5. a ur a, a98 846-9495 177 E. 22nd SI., C~1 642-3645 NEW Bayfronl-priv Bch & free Sunday brUnc h ii nu deluxe desks, R s..,,·ivel hrs, r,.U-5522. FOUND small black & white Carptt Strvfce LRG • 2 BR. l BA. <A'/yard. Dcluxt"' 1 & 2 BR w/Frplc Pit>r 3BR. 2BA, 5550 m6 yr. activities di rector chi's, Files, etc, etc. tor Sl.JARE Apt. or I-louse. Save fen1ale Shelt ie type dog , C(PIS, drps, sto\'e/displ. Pri Palios · Dshwhrs · Ja· !y. 644-4510 golf driving range sale. 714/979-7740 $S. Ca!Pllomr·Parlne.r, Lie. vicinity Baker I Fairview, JO~N S Carpet & Upholstery C1':iiie 10 OCC. SlOO. 546-0it69. cuzzi • lffd Pool . Rec Bldg ~~~::.'.:'--c-~=-,,-pa rty room 600 ~ _ IC "'"l.l9', rn 14..., Costa Mesa, ~29 Dri·Shampoo free Scotch-Shai pt EXEC. Living for $200? Yes Sq. r ..... "FF E w/kit & ,,._,.,. '",,.... "' guard (Soil R a.rd ) E-SIDE 2 BR. $150 • ~d~is Only ... 2 Br, 2 ba, bltns. Nr Plus beautl lul singles, one Ba, $155. ALSO 600 Sq. Ft. SWING ING SINGLES "YOUNG grey & \\'hite k niale Degrca!ICrs & ctll ant~. Blln.'I, w/w displ, hid pool. 8912 Hu A 11 "-h Hoag 646-1231 a nd two-bedrooms. Fur· STORE Sl:ii, C.~f. 646-2130 Call "Leah" 2-8 pm. cat w/\vhite co llar. l\1ain 0 'ght & 1"o co or e ve., ntg. °" · ' · nlshed & unlumlshed. Sorry, n eners minute Adlls, no pets. 642·9520. 847...tm no chlldren or pets. Models I & 2 Rl\1. dlx. suites. Adj. 5.19-3122 ~ac Cst Hwy, 1-1.B. bleach for while carpets. 2 BR. no pets, adults only. STILL AVAILABLE I . Mesa Verff open dally 10 to 7. Airporter Hotel. No lse. req. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Save your money by saving Month to month. $100. 2172 DuPont No, 8. 833-3223 Phone 5-12-7Z17 or write FOUND apparently pet me extra trips. Wlll clacn Realtor 644-7270 3rdVI floor · 2 BR APl'S WITif DLX 2 & 3 Br .. 2 Ba. Encl Oakwood ROOMY olfice, lowest price, P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. Pheasant. Near 17th St. & living rm., dtnlng nn. & c.co=:o,."CC-"'C-~---1 EW! ! $144/mo. lnclds AU gar. $i.G5-up. Rental Ofc., Garden A ... ·--ts 540 sq. ft .. D 0 w n t 0 w n Newport, Costa' 1'1 e sa. hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, $145 - 2 BR. Single s_tory. Utilities, 18 hole putting 3095 1'1ace Ave. ~1034. ..,_.. ... _. BOB GILBERT OR TEX! 546-9912 couch $10. Clair $5. 15 yrs: beam cell. 2()49 \Vallace. green & new recreational San Clemente Ntwpoii B1ach Soulh Laguna. Lease. 494-3028 CALL ~ER~~mu:G~! ! F'ND Med. size b\k-& white exp. Is what counts, not C.~1. 646-8882, 774-8610. facilitie!'I. 1811'1 111rvrne 4001-0 BIRCH, N.B. .~--"--'-'""=-"-==~I fml dog. method. I do work myself. 2 BR upper. Crpt. drps. VILLA YORBA NEW 2 BR, !WCU"" apts. 642.,,170 :;'.·$1:;60~/P,,;::':;::M;;o;;.;;"::;;;1-503;;::;;;2;;;;;_;W;;•;;"';;:•d;;;;;re;;•;;u;;lt•;;;;· ~· ;;· ~642;;·"';78~1 Vic Irvine. Good ref. 531-0101. bllns, refrlg & gar. Adlts ".3 Newport Beach North I-I f 1 B h $200 .. Ocean view $225 . . 552-7664 C.!ment, Concrete only, $135. 646-5983. -· un 1ng on eac Yea r round, HIS Ave. car-1rv1n1 1nd 11111 8 LARG , (714) 842-9622 ,,, .. 10, 492.8113• 492.[Jlo·. 845-G55G LACK & white lemale cat CU~M ~-by E 1 BR , on West Bay ~ T d ' Pa d• w/a new family ot S. Vic. <>•v '"-'..1•11."i-...:le, St. $140. mo. incldg ut il. 3 Bedrooms-$210 mo. Apts., ra er s ra 1se Mission Viejo H.S. ~enal~nce Co. 00·90 day 67"1573 Bk c 3 BR .. 2 l)a. lo\\•er duplex . f>nuncrng avail ~-e t .,.. · r. ondominiurn . :l BR. 2 ha, furn. or Unfurn. 370 Call 837-1313. c.'141 e~~". · r ·~ s · Xlnt cond. Frplc., close to .......,...,.IJ;J :~~. ~rp~~·s1~':J': A~~~~ ~rr%. dr;~j::. bl~~ll~~,;~~ Coron• del Mar beach. $300 i\Ju. futn, yearly. ~~~~I~. l~~~s ;!iptfe. ~~:~ PATIOS, walkR, drives. Saw, Sil. 675--7429. & tennis rourl. 97'9·3984 tves, .;:c;.;.;:;:,.;:_:;;;.;_'-""----UN F". 3 Bit.. 2 ha.; close I 1' nes dog•, v>·cln>'ty <"n""I 0 ••ch. break, remove & replace 10 b11,y .t occnn, some view. ~ "" UC<I t 548-A668 NE\V 1 BR Sl70 • 2 Br $210. SPACIOUS 3 Br, $219/.f>.10 . SO. of llv.•y. Charming 2 Br. IJrand nt-w. $400, yeru·ly. <21Jl S92-5nl concrc e. for est. Nr bch. NG pets. Adults. 114 (1~ rent mo's rent + dep} Beam ceil.: pool. Adults, no ....... mes \VHfT E n1ale toy Poodle LO\VE.~ Price Tn Ora.nae E. 20rh St .. C~i. S4S..Ol:S7. All Exlras. Pool. Gar. Kids pets. $22S Mo. LI lound in Jo"ountain Valley nr Co. Er«! est. Jess 557-&24, weloome. 968-751(). 17361-A OrKnge Coast R.E. &14-4R48 Euclid & Ed•·n-r 3/21. Call•=.Co"s'-'IC'aO-~-"'°;c';,a=---- 2 BR. AdulLi;, no pets. BAY K J ~ •-'· MEAOO\YS APT. 387 W. ce AOn I.n. 1-IB. ~7510. Cost1 ~ d II 839-6240 FO.lJNDATIPNS • Artistic Bay SI . 0 1. 646-00'73 WALK TO BEACH 0 ars SANTA Ana Heights area. PIAnters, con~te & brick LARG. 2 bd, 1 ~ ba, studio New 1, 2 &: 3 Br, cpt/drp, ADULTS Tt~Fa:"'~~~!!!!~~lll ___ _:· _____ ..,. ________ JI Female Tabby caL Recent paUos, etc. IJc d 64t-0687. now •hag. pool. 111;. util ;.1~J9s1.'"'1. 205 I; I h. LA COSTA APTS. WINTER. Summ<r, y,ty. ~ ~':· O~ col· .J'ATIOS-PLANTERS pd. 64~5647: 1978 Maple 1 & 2 Btdroom Anita's Rentals, Bkr. 2005 712 St James Pl., N.B., 3 140 F'l'. trontage Harbor · or Concrete work. 894-3533. 2 B J!eated Pool. Sl50 &: SPACIOUS 2 BR, $169. F\lrn. e ~ts: e Drapes W. Balboa Blvd. 673--2058 BR.. l~ ba., ocean vu, Blvd. JSOO sq. ft . 3 Br., :rOlxUNI? I 1bl&cNk setteBrn1 Adbr.C_on:.;.;,.t;..,ra_clo..;.;..r _____ 1 . d 1•· N 15 oc1 $179. All xtras. Pool. Kids e t RRO 's ~~~~~~~~~~'Own '"·· loc 2 B hom 125 ooo It n1 \'lC n t)' ewport v · r up. u ""' 0 pe · ..,.,,., k """"7510 17 3 6 1 A -;;;:i er con.sl\.ll!.i ,. · or a. e. ' ..,qu y. N F 'nl NB -W C 'I nd ' . D1n1 Point Center t. 64H965. 0 · "°°'" · -All tllit1es Paid 1~ e<hnm income for $45i\1 For beach prop. or v.1hat· car 1 ey · · ~ · omm , I us Re11d NEW 2 m. carpe1s. Keelson Ln, HB. 354 Avocado St., C.M. Rent* ,I' eq. Mark Les Rltr. M8-71ll. ever. 4!J.l.6.164, 646-3808 Oce'antront No. 4-A N.B. New, remodel, ~r. Store LIVE in !he all rrw Dll.na Drapes, Cange. Patio. G.<\.R1DEN level 2 Bdrm !!!!!~~64;2-~9~7;08~':!\'!""" !~;;;;;;;;;;::;;~ CO~fli.f'L C·l property nr SJ'EPHENS 40• mint TSFB FOUNDVl bl1ack cock..a-poo ruront1,962cu•C. J>Af'°8. ores, etc. Point l{arbor tit I h • 645-87'20 • dup ex apl. 1'~resh PAln1• Ontario Airport, 159 x 630' triCtobn cons, U.K ~ty. For pup. c 0 Anabebn A\V, c'd, ·l9fil. hP9UtlluJ Marln..1 Inn Mole\, QUICK CASH crptti 4' Drps. $l55. Call * CASA V"iCJ"ORIA from ~t. to st . FOR lncome prop. or 1 U ns.<1ume 21K C.~t. 646--23.1~ or 540--0062. JACK Teulane -Repair J4002 Del Obilpo S t , Aflcr 6, 968-4300 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn, Rooms 400 un!ls or intlustrlal In Or. loan. Al.Jo ArttM•hd inc. Bx A~k for f\lrs. ooper ttmod .• e.ddlt. :b:1 yrs ~p. 1496-2353). K.ltct.cnt, f'I· 2 RR, 2 BA, clr11n, close lo Carpets, drpca, Dl\V, TV R.ooMS 118 wk u w/kttSSO County. 830-6498. ;341SnDiego921~ 222-2923 GERMAN Shepherd pup. Llc'd. My Way Co. 547...()Ql& {!.~~:icspoot di::;:rn~:i~ . JHROUQ'H A beach. f!lcc 2ar door oh;cr, kn!. Pool. etc. Conic by .~ wk up npl!!. Ch1fdrn ,ti Pfl BE~LBOY sn1a!l cabin WILL ttade iss.cMXi ~1111) ;Js;.u:Jarr>er School, C.l\I. Gerdenfng • 11 ~ . Ion ~!~~;.sr.0541i)'.:~7J821 S. Inquire about our Mo~ln lll'Ctlon. ~76 Nc\\,:iort Blvd, erui!'ler 0.~. Fun fish equip. in rare ac. parcel w/.,tnn.1 -,'.;::..='---~~--1·---~----- pnr>f'll',., IP t'Vl.ll • Slluna • Allnwn.nC'f!. 525 Victoria St. ......1 .... u1 .ft'Tll.11:, GI" ........ 7. & rrlr. \Vill trade for sniall (Many trees) For l~c. prop. FOUND Desert Tortol~ on JAPANESE GARDENER btll h •. laundryft.c:Ultif!ll, DAILY PILOT ''2 BR ho Bl A I' ~c ·1"2 ·~10 ....... .rw-...... , 7.>'111 Own I M Ort 1rv· c •t NB AREA tl, ,,.. town u!IC. tns, t "1a.ruv• , .1• • ..,.. -o.,. • plck·up or clt.·aa.nt hon1e. er es..'\ \'e near wo. .. · · mee1104 rvom, c oec to Sin pnt!o, crptJ, drpa, rec facll. REAS. Attr. 1 &: 2 b' •Piii. 2 ROOMS w/bath, fun1i!'lhed, · '545-l~.>9 agt. (114) 541-0146 wkdl.)'t. Call 545-7745 • 64~1796 • ~mentc and L ai u n 11 . Sl51'.l/ 96'J.6846 C.M. $100 inc utl\'1, Oldtr n "'"X ER J n-•ch. Como ""''•" fn a11r WAN J AD up. No chl1d-pets. t47 t. 18th lcnanl .... -1 "2--er.ni. 1 11~, to trade• Our -der's TRADE 16 COO llW! In 3 BR ,.,U(, male cat. very klvini; c.. P · 1;1panc11e Gardener. ix ,. -2 dlo lo .,...,-.w.w V'J .............., ~' 1 11.11 1 "" ' "1th flea coll ar. VI c. Com plete yard se.rv. Rl'!lla. l!JIQrtlilhlng, shopplnt: and BR.1~ B.A Stu . Pat .ti St, C.M. . LOVELY room, pr,vat t Para~ecolumni1foryout 2 ba C.M. hon1e. frplc, . rftllluninta. soo week tnd y11rd . Gange. $157.50. Avail Vac1.nclea cost money! Rtrtl home. Employed gentlemen. 5 Unes fncd yd, view of xolf <.'OUl'lt. Seabury Ti'ff..d 4/5. 53G-8452 & neat. Free est. ~- op. B~ lhl1 ad and 642 5678 now. M>-4549 your house. apt. •.. store S65 5'16-l?ll 5 da)ts \YMt campt"l', motor home, t.RG Engl~h Sheepdog -Fnd OOrtfPt.ETE Lawn a-.... ttttlw SS orr or1 tlnl • Uk~ to trade? Out Traderl1 bldJ. etc. tbru a oa.uy Pilot • for 5 buckJ. van or ? 551-1718. A.,'S. Nr Bushard School -CIU'dcnlnic tcrvlce. Haut~ ~k'• mit. Paradlle column ii tor you! Od.ii.nect Ad. Wt.nt ad reau1tl • • . ~I••••••••••••••••••• I lt.B. ldcntlly 9"--8153 It clt&n•QP. Jim 548-0405. ' . , • ' Th11rsd1y, April 12, 1~73 < DAILY PILQT. 4 ll ,~~~~ ~ 1~ .. ~1~1 _y...::. < l[Il] i--.,,,.,__ 1rm 1 lllll!,... 1rm;;;;1 _fl..,_, __ ~. ;;;l(Il];;;•i ~' .. -.. -~1rm~+1• 1~-"'· .. -· .. ~ ~1rm~11~fl;;;'f!Iti-~1rm;;;••~-1. Gerdenlnti Plumbing --Z ·,H•leW•"'J,i IP 718 HelpWobted M&, 710 HWaw ... i,.i. M" F 711 Help wonted, M & ,. 710 H•lpW1bted, M & F 710 Hel~W1nted, M & F .710HelpWented,M • F 110 .ti j •noFESSIONAL •ard•nei. PLUMRIN<( R'EPAIR 111co'T. · ' &OAT ~,G <F.i~; t"f..:i."";.:·~;~ F.:.xP·o w·11-"""""·.Al>! LATHE OPERATORS-~~~\ U'W -k. p' u n I~ g. ....,.,. )ob too small -"'!. R<'qulrff 6 mo ..... for: . -Meu branch of ·large !"Ill· t~-~·~TIR°2'1~~ ... ~~h~:.. ' Housekeeper -Cook .". sprinklers. cleanup JObs. _,,.,.,,.,..-* * 642·3128 * • · .... Carpenters "" pan~" Salary bru!cd 011 dn'IX·t • ;) 0~ · ' N/C OPERATORS I and a o 1l pl n i Georat:' [R ll-credit &: iU~l'\'Wory exp. C).1. ~3. _ ~· L & .T PLUMBING, remodel, En9lne ln1ta .. r -979-ni:lS for a.pp1.. £X"'°'P"Eru="'EN"c"m='"'0en=71a71'"'or"'°-' 1'1ature to care for elderly lady. Depend&ble. r I EXP. J i°p y .ri e .. main· 6-l~ water h ea ~_;;.s · _ Hirdware lnstalltr CUSTODIAN -Lie apt com· fit-e . Recepti01Usl. hmn«I Top Wages A-lust drive. Ne\vport Be~acH waterfront home~ ' ten ave. clean-up. • ISLANDER YACHTS plex. General cleaning/ opening. 493-1178. Ni,ht Shift Only Live-lo. No discriminatio11. . tl Lal)dsCape. Frw est . Pool Service ·' NO\V Accepting m \Vest.17th St .. C.AL porter V.'Ork. ~nowledae of FANTASI'lC pa.rt tiJn.e op... UP Tn.-$500 PER MO " ~84a...&142 847-9438. ln1tall1tlon·-Applications For BOAT REPAIRMEN some maintenance p~blt'n1s portui.Uty. Need 1 attracUve Min. yrs Experience u · -~1• EXP. Ja~se Gardener A. NTHONY. POOLS Cocktail Waitresses CAR.PENTERS ~!':~~",·.Xln, -~pbet. i1Cfi~ C1:1.ll gaf1'•1ld.•0Muca,,11 ha°"ve ""'ownrea~!1. G~arantHd overtime W : S I , E • , c know ho"" Tl'! mm in g . Mu t ha e t rfront boat .,..~ ...... ....... rite tat ng · xper1ence Clean-up, SnialJ land.sea~ (\\!ORI.D'S LARGES'Tl & 11 , v wa e DATA PROCESSING Top commission and ex· APPL\" • ~ 1 t Let us plan Your pool-Lunch Wiltresaes repair yard exper. ~ust . peruies. Some advt>rtlslna N ort To Cla111fied Ad No. 631 • • : ng. 6£:(> '>AO.. No Obligation ~ know hull repalr. Gd. jobs mM Systen\ 3 card mstal· background helpful. 54$-.3217 ewp c/o Dally P iiot, P .O. Box 1S60 r1: £XP An1ericao Japanese gardener tor cle~n-up & niai.n. N.B .. C.M., & H.B. ~ • for top men. Blackie's Boat laHon needs dutA ret-'Ordcr C t I C • Sew1ng/Alterati'>nl Apply In Person Yard, 6n.6834. operator who will assist in FEMALE cashier .~ desk, On ro S orp . Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 • 54().1373 . .a Pm·S pm, Mo11-1'"'r'i BOAT ASSEMBLER'S handling llOllrt.>e docu· 801n" ~xpel'. nl't'<'ssary, lull 909 W. 16th St. ~----------------------: 1'lt1r1tloni-642..S845 2007 W, Coast Hwy. meotl, punch all data cards. tinie Geoe·s, 2300 Harbor Ne.wport.&each Help Wanted, M &. f 7. 10 Help W1t1tN, M & F 710 J: Neat, accurate;20 years exp. Newport Beach 64&-0201 Exper. $2.$.$3.05 • run proerams on S/3, act Blvd .. Cf<.1. • ~~~~~!!~~~11~~~~~":~;;.;~j 64U642 "as gt"neral assistant to ac· FIN A~ c I At. iwrv1cei - 8 AM "to S .PM -R I E f, t 5 I ' '•i EXPER. J apanese, maint. ; A('PRENTICE mechanic -F.qual Oppor. Employer count~ payable dept. Ac· orgnnlzaUon located in Equal opportunity e1~pt\1y<'r NursrR N.LVN-AIDE ea $a e a es , ;1:~~~·a t1~0:~cape:®-~ l 111•1 Neat young man for ~I BKKPR·MEDICAL counting background ex-Newport Center has an LEG~L SCC.t't'la~, ~~·11.t (~n-11_7 & olhC'r shifts. l'op pvt OPENING FOR .... ~) 8am-8pm . hiploj11•1t f nrquod work. 1747 Anaheim Challenging position for in· tremely helpful. Salary to opening for a recep· sldet tralncll, I )I' C.1!1f,~xp, d 1 pay lniinNI.. iwiv fol' 11~\\' 01. rxi>l'!rfr•nci'll lltt'fnsed ·: ~;;;;;;·~:;;;1 ·Av, C.M. -dividua1 \Ii/AR & A/P & SOCIO per month. Cot1tac1 tionist/sccretary. Type 60 must have _g~I 1yplng .~ fl~duiy'.Count)"'*':idc l<e:il Estate .!}oillrsf)(l(lple. : JCoAP~ESE Gardener. 1 ARTISTS Payro:ll. Finn will teach Mrs. McClure behvet>n 4 lo \VptlJ, sorne college & exper. Shortha'ld i>lulls. ~1'\\'llf'll'l lntrv\\'S ~fon-loli .!I -5 . Your own private desk & : , cle~u;~l' ~~~':~3102~ Job W~nted, Male 700 Well-known interior design medlcare billing. Salary to ~.!.;~· Mon. thru Thun;. pdrererred. OppoSOOrtunNily for Center LA''' off lc·e. 644-5732 Lcscouli<' Nur9cs Regi~1ry, phon<>, Jit9Cld \\'nlk·1ns, free \1 General Services R. Reaume 21661 Brookhurst Huntington Beach You are the winner oC one· free pass Cood for a whole carload to any·or the PACIFIC THEATRES CSUbject to small service eharae at theatre). Pltt__ase call 642-5678 ext. 314 to claim your ticket. (North County toll-free number is 540· 12'l0 I . ORIVF;It Cl.1, Calif Lie. Exp. Diesel-Gas R i g s . Sing\. Doubles. S -t a i I s , F-Beds. 893-0204 HONEST man has refused to do dishonest work and as a result has not been able ,to secure employment. Ex· perienced in all phases of new ho m e construction, remodeling, pa t ch Ing, repail' & main1cnance. <:an_ read blue prints & make ac· curate estimations. Will go anywhere, will do anything legal. Write inquiries to Bill Windham, 2075~~ Newport Blvd, Cosfa Mesa, CA. 646-8686 or 54&-0768 Job Wanted, r.m1le 702 TOTAL SERVICES C 0. Paint'g, Plutnb'g ..... ~~e Hl,US Specialist. ~''· 646--1809. NEED help at home? We H"'AN=o"'Y"M=AN~-_-all.,,..,.kl:-"-cds-o'r I have a.Ides, nurses, work, snlall jobs a ho u s ekprs, companions. specialty. 979-4636 546-9723. Homemakers Up john , 547-6)81, RA I N Gutters Insta.Ued. Quality \vork. Reasonable. Fi;-ee estimates. 968·2208. Hauling FATHER & SONS, work, trash, yard & clean -up. Free 842-8182. gar. est. EXPERIENCED OaY"'·ork. Top Refs. Top \Vages. 979-9632 alt. 4:30. EXPERIENCED Housekeep· er Reliable. Excellent ref. 646JJ782 after 5 pm. Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 SKIPLOADER&dwnptruck COUPLE -lii ature . work. concrete, asphalt Housekeeper xlnt co .o k ; · b ak ' oA.,.7110 1 Handyman, versatile . sawing, re ing. O'f'r • I Desire live-in. Reliable, YARD, garage cleanups. honest, rels. 646-9172 (24 Remove trees, dirt, ivy. lirs.) Agency. flnn located in the Design $650. Call Jan Page, ,..............,, a vanCt"ment.. . eivport LIVE-IN, oon1patibk• \\'On1un 351 l-f(1s1Jltal f~d., NB •Loi> advt.•rtiSinx. Siuur location Plaza, Newpo~ach, 540-6055, Coastal Personnel DENTAL assistant for busy Cent~ Dr, Suile (i()'.), N.B. to care for Sl'nti-invuJid hy J>n1·k Lido BI d ~) IS yraM1. Call for intcrvj_t'IV. '·• \\'Ould like top v v sam· Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., CostaMesaoffice.Min2yrs GENERAL OFFICE lady. Must driv<' & ('()Ok, &i2-995.J. 5'1()..9954, 1--\\._ E. Lachcnni~•cr,·Rlfr. :': pies of your \\'Ork dis-~.M. exper. & must take good X-Exp'd. Full tilne. Cashier, Waterlroilt apt. Rf'ply P·O. &16·39211 r:vt•: 673-4517 ,· ~ play on CQ.nsignn1ent. Please BOOKKEEPER/ rays. 646-1882. Credit, Lite )lookkeeplng. BQy 753, Ball'IOR, 92661 . NURSES AIDES REAL Estutc S..'tles. \Yby no1 1 1 call Ruth Jameson at RECEPTIONIST DENTAL ASSISTANT -Ex· LAWSONS Jewelers L\1N or H.N, evening sh1ft . wol'k and llvt• ·in Lagw1a , ~~ 1.>t:tv:een 10 Ai'! & Personable, over 30, good perienced .X·ra)l .lice)'lse re-7777 Edinger Ave Xlnl fringe bnfts. Beverly Exi>c'r. p1~f<'rrt'd Beach? and sell an oc· • : . typist, must work '"'ell ~'"lth qulre<l. Call 548-8844 • Huntington Beach . lit u nor Con v 1-1 o s 11, ' .All Shifts casional $200,000 oceanfront' t";, ASSEMBLERS public. p 1 ea s ant sur-DENTAL Asst.. exp"d or . . Capistrano Beach, 496-5786 honlef Sand castle R eu I I For 2nd shift in ElectroniCs roundings. Send full rpsume training desired Mon-P'ri GENERAL 0U1ce Part Tune i·luntington Beach Estate has ail opening for a , firm, night premium offered. to P .O. Box S46, Dana Point 644-7l62 ' · Receptionist, typing req. MacGregor Convalescent 1-Jospilal qualified salesinan at 1786 • No exper req. Apply in Ca, 9:.1629. · \reekends & holidays. Apply 18811 f<1orkl/\\.. JLB. s. Coai;t Hwy. Call Rila ' pel'SOfJ. BUILDERS Harrl'A•are Com· Dental Assi1tant Huntington Seacliff 'Country Yacht Cof'D. 847-351:a ~Iyel"!I 494-8025 ' , Potter & Brumfield Div. pany, Newport Beach, seek· Thper. pref'd. 54s-7o74 ~ub. ~ 8P~1;'·e., HB 1631 Plecentie, C.M. N Aid REC~PTIONIST 1 " 1 AMF Incorporated ~ ing man, sales trainee. 001.rESflC Help George 011 -rt : : Supervisor urses . es , , Fee Paid. Estub. firni needs , 26181 AroopueMo 548-3454 Allen Byland Agency, 106-B GIRL to help on ren1 horses. To su,pervise various OJ)(!rll· Expe~. prcferl'ed. XI~ I individual w/ gloi\•lng per-\l San Juan Capistrano Bus Boy_ Pa.rt Tlme E. 16th St,. S.A. 547~395 Saturday & Sunday. tlons involved In sailboat ~tal'tn~g \\•ngc, gd bene.rits sonallty & chnnu to handle .. ,i An equal oppor. empl M/F Apply in person 2-5 Sizzler IXX>RMAN wanted, Miramar 494-2910 building. nlust have super· }ncl~1d1ng group & llf.e ins. front desk. Utr typing, • Ass em b I er s, ?i.1olders, Family Steak House 18552 Theater, San Clemente. AP-GRE-EN THUMBS visot)' cxper. Ap1Jly in pel'· !'ra1~~ ivlll be considered Start $425. Also 1',ec Jobs ' Fiberglass touchup & Beach. Blvd. H.B. ply after T pm. Full time gardener. prefer son w/your r<'sunie. if "111.hng to. learn & sin· Cnll Jan Page, 546-6055,, , repairmen. Apply at Clipper CA M p ER Manufacturer o\vu equlptnent, technical •• Drivers ('l'I'<' 111 s~kinj( p('l1ll. ein-Coastal Personnel Agency, ., Marine, 1919 E. Occidental needs exper. help. Metallers pRAFTSMEN knowledge 'plus experience To driv~ h·11ck loads of boats ploy nlf'nt. ~·~90. 2190 Harbor Blvd., C.f\.1. , St, S.A.. ·· & Framers. Apply, EZ l'Cquircd. 644-2657 cross·,OOunlry. No sjM'<'inl • .NURSE:s AIDES • RECEPTIONIST , Asst-Mgr, & Cook Riding Campers, ~Grace HAIRDRESSER \Vilh son1e lie. rl'quired. Apply in ,J><'l .. Experience preferred, day Pleasant, attractive gal, , .. 1 Day & Nile, f/Lime Ln, CM ARCllITECTURAL & following needed for son. ~~~~itio~~ce~~~~rly "'~~:!";. 1yping required, good phone ..._. Apply 'CAPABLE women to teach STRUCTURAL STEEL ~~w~~ &ach. salon. Call Inspectors Convalesccnt l1ospitnl, 24452 voice, xln{ con1pa11y iu Jack In The Box my 3 yr old SWIMMING . ' ..... ~ Inspection of sailboat nio!d, \'ia Estrado, l.agUna !lilts. lrvlne area. No h.'C. Call •, 17243 Pacific Coast H\\!y. Private pool. Phone 644-4404 Must be experienced HAIR DRESSER \V/follo\V· ing & asse1nbly. Some pr1•· NURSES _ LVN. p/time ·collect. Victor Ten1poraries, ~ I S I B h CARETAK R fo · I d u I d I vious inspection expel'. he p-, .r'K ~.,1 unse eac E , r pr v t 111g wan e . nusua ea . 7.3. Nui·••s Aides 7.3 & """""""' •. <1 1 hool F ll --tin Permanent Position B d' Be t S I ful . but not mandatory. \Ve "' RECEPTIONIST ' I AUTO Transmission & line mechan- ic combination: Must have 3 yrs. minimum experience Ford, Lincoln Mercury. Health & li fe, dental insur· ance benefits. ~2 shop uni· form expenses paid. 5 days week. 7:30 to 5:30. Excel- lent working conditions. Call Mr. Art M<.-COrmick at sc . u or pa..i• 1e, u s au y a on. . 1 . ll-?. E:tpe•. pref'd. MeR& ~· mu'' d"·ive 962-"''3 Excellent Benefits s-'900. __ \\'ill train. App Y 111 person. , , • • ,),,J'j •.)-1 Gel C••t Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 An~er phone!! & make ' 1 CARPENTERS d k Environmental SystemS HAIRDRESSER -w salon -s c M uo ""o" pt n... n! sh"t; "<•/ • " Ind 1 I • • ·~ Repat'rm· en Center 1, •• ,,....-J;.»;.1. ap s. "'<Y 01· eve ng u 1 ~::~:~:· wood shop & t~il) ;;;.,~ne in ~J· 548-537'2, 963-3644 Previous repair esprl'. hC'lp-NURSES Aldes, all shifts. avail. Call !or Appl. ; ,., WILLARD BOAT WORKS ful . but not mandatory. \\le Xlnt fringe-bnfts. Beverly -AFFAIR Wm-I HAJR I Vega Division 11200 Condor 21 *Hairdresser • Exp.'* will train. Apply in person. M a no r Co n v H o !I p ' --call 962-7705 Fountain Valley D:~~h ~!~f653~v~ach Guaran~~ salary Assembly Workers Capl!ltrano Beach, 496-5786. S RAN ' • -~=='---'=~-·: Ill d H B • * * Sailboat assembly. No""''· OFFICE MANAGER RE TAU T ~: CAR WASH v ' · · ~ 0 US EKEEPER/compan-necess. Apply at gate 7 am· [}('ntal specialist needs son1e· Cook!! (ShOrthalr Ptvf'd) &:. Full & -p/time poeitionS~ DRIVER ion lo elderly lady Downey ilst shifl. 3 pm·Znd shift. one \vho enjoys \Vorking Count.er Girls. Hiring tor 3 ', Drivers, Gas Attendants, City Auto Parts ~a 5 days $45. per y.ie<'k u pm-3rd shill. \v/the public to handle busy locations in Costa ~iesa.' : • Detailers. Good pay, Metro 2066 Placentia, C.M. \\'Ith boa!d & pr1vale l l!!!l!!l!l!!!!! oH\cc. Sh & typing neccss. Apply In person, Jack Jn '• Metro Ciir W•sh DRY Cleaners needs exper. room. 673-5651 1-H.B. area. Salary open. The Bo:ic, 2'l35 Harbor C.M '. 2900 Harbor Blvd., ·c M Unishe<S. HOUSEKEEPER. !/lime. 'MACHINE m<l 96i..<;671. -).: Drivewys, ~1'ading. 847-2666. H~e"i"'-'w=.n=t"ed-7-, M~&"""F=--7'"'10 LOCAL n1oving & hauling by ;.;.....:P:....------- student. Large truck. Reas. Aggressive Young Lady 5.'W-1846 or 534-2164. Hostess/Cashier, over 21 & 32' VAN for short furniture not in school. Must be gocxl hauls & garage cleanlrig. v.•/figures & paper work. 548-1862. ' Some exper. helpful, but Gustafson Lincoln-Mercury 714-842-8844 GEN. Hauling .. ~Tl"et'/Shrub trim. Gar & Yd cleanup. Est. 531-6377, 557-6904. not req'd. Will traiD. Salary according to ability or past exper. Apply 2:30-4 pm AUTO Detail Man, primarily daily Mon-Sat, 1545 Adams, new cars. Must be ex· CAR WASH & 644-089J. Apply in person, Mesa E GIRLS be I managors •'E'~RICAL Vocde Coov. Ho•p. 661 .OPERATOR 2 OFFIC - -Reu n's . ·.1 1 gas attentants. ·F.'ermanent i..l!A...~ NEEDED ·gas attentants. Pennanent DESIGNERS" Center St, C.M. ·548-5585. Experienced in operating • 1 positions w/growth co. Experienced in commercial, I10USEKEEPER, re 11 a. drill press, lathe, mill. Radio telephOne dispatch I Immed employment avail. industrial building design w/re!s. Lag. Niguel area, 2 \Should ht-able to read NJ:ust be 25, able lo drive . Exp er· d only. Call and drafting. Telephone days wk~ 496--09a8. micrometer & calipers. Apply In Person 644-4460 cn4) 499-4341, Mr. Dennis H 0 u SE \V 1 v E S wanted Knowledge of basic math. YELLOW CAB CO. Jing Opc.lnlng fol' jl .Jj OIEF -$1000 Per Mo. Brenton. p I time. De\lve~Dental Some tools. 186 E. 16th, Costa Mc~ LEAD CQQK -T~e Blue Beet ELECTRONIC Lab. · · • > Call Fo• Appl. OPthPOCRTUN1 ITY. I Call 673-9904 alt 3 pm . 64&-5069 Industrial Relations Grow o. re ocat1n9 I CIULDCARE, (5 & !!yrs Old) ASSEMBLERS ••-,. >••-,. _.._,. -"U (714) 494-9401 Aportdjace. nt to Orwige Co. air· Cooking, lite hsekeeping, w • - -•• --v -... Full Tiri1.-Nlgh's ' , H I • CM. ASk -fQr Mgr. Mr. pcrienred. Steady job, good _o_u_sec_u_n_1_"9,::.. ___ cHiiagiiianiii;, i;546-iii7ii39ii:Z:ii. ii....__iii&iiio hours. Apply in person only. HOUSE OF CLEAN • -No phooe acr:eptcd. See Mr. Al.rporter Nietsen._Terry Buick. 5th & Walnut, Huntington ~ach., floors, 'A•indows. walls, car. pets &: drapes. 7 Yrs. ~ll·. ~ &r2-68'M or 646-2527. Carpet Cleaning Floor Care & Will!lows Dutch !\.faint Serv. 537·1508 Dedicated Cleaning Cal~. Inn AvoN wANTs you1 from noon-6pm. 644-2008 . mONIC * Machinist. ' Assemblers needed w/PC tnllnl.tc IXTJC'f"\t..!"-JC'I * TutTet lathe --Apply In P9l'90n : CLERJCAL-OFC board & soldering exper. ""'"L rCIVV''"LL · iNDUSTRIES * ShipEing&Roc.cl••k• ,.Bdllamorall2:30pm , Alert intelligent -woman. In· Permanent employment. SER\llCES•AGENCY I MOODY SPRINKLER ·• ! t WE DO EVERYTHING * Ttefs. Free est. 646-2839 EXPER. HOUSECLEANING Own transportation. Call: . ** 673-2918 ** - Janitorial OFFICE cleaning. I i c ' d , bonded. 7 Yrs e:-tp. in area. 642~:!4 or 646-2527. Landscaplnf Needs · Waitresses (For Coffee Shop) Hostesses & Busboy -- Apply In Person Between 2 & 4 pn1 LANDSCAPING 18700 l\.'lacArthur Blvd. For unique & personallttd Irvine style in landscaping, in-I ~"'l:Z:Z:Z~ terior plants decorations, & I ~ *** FACTORY full maintenance, contact James C. Elmer, Landscape Announcing & Plant Care Co· Free estimates, 646-72'29 LANDSCAPE, garden ma.Int. Inter decor. plants . Spmklrs. Lie. -1 3 3 7 9 0 646--M.52. BRICK veneers, slumpstone, block. fireplaces & \'.'t"Ought iron fences. 968-7865 P•lntlng & Paperhangin9 CUSTOM PAINTING Inter/Exter. Unfum. inter, • spec. price. Free color con· suiting & est. Lie, 11111. \Von't be underbid. 642-6005. No \Vuting" * WALLPAPER * When you call "Mac" 548·1#1 646-lID PAINTING & repair, 35 yrs. Workmansh.ip guar. Take advantage of . my exp. 536-'IQ56, Ne'v Ute Industri4,I. Division For \Von1eri Needed Immediately Experienced . PC AsHmblers Hand Solderers Also • Trainees For Lite Industrial Work Wire Wrappers. Injection Molding ' PAINTING & P11.perlng, 20 ...._ yrs in Harbor a r e a . Lie/bonded. Refs. furn. 642-2356. 8 Many assignments in the Jtl!Wtx>rl Beach, Irvine, San· ta Ana & Costa Mesa areas. • ExperienCed & trainee ~\tlons. Excellent Clll'n- lngs. Weekly paychecks. CUS'n)M Painting , ill· te r/exter, lie. & Ins. 24 yrs Org. Co. Les, 645-444!1. UP to 75S'n oH on hanging if you buy material from The Hangmen. 547-5846 PROF. painter, honest work, reu. lnt/e~t. free est. Refs. 548-2759, 557-745:>. INTERIOR • EXTERIOR WALL COVERINGS 645-5925. INTER/EXTER. A c co u I ceil.lngs sprayed. Lie, ins. Joe refs, free est 645---0809 * PAPERHANGER '* Carl ltt'lbko 646-2449 Plumbing L.R. OTIS Pl.UMBING B.enlOdels & Repaini:. Wattr hCtllt.1'11 disposals, funla.CCJ, dohwunn. 642-6263 MIC & BIA. Complt!te Plumbina s.rvtce. Classified Ada ••• ~ Apply \n Penon Apply Bctwn 9am & noon Kelly Girls 2061 8u1iness Ctr. Or. Irvine 133-1441 Across from O.C. Airport Jim Ziegler .19501 Sierre Mio Irvin• \'.ou nre the winnt'r or one free pass Good for a 'vhOlc carload 10 any of nic PACIAC .THEATRES ($ubject lo smaU JK>rvi C':<: charge at thl'!atrcl . PICase· call MZ-5678 ext, 3t4 to claim yOur ticket. (North County toll•ltte numbtr is 54().1220). Be an independent AVON Representative . & · Earn money in your spare time near home. CalJ; Pleasanl surroundings. Lenune Beach COMPANY 251 E, • CoHI Hwy '~I teresting work. Must .. l\f:. FEE PAID • good w/numbe'5. We will Call F A 5449 N. Peck Rd., Ar<:adia Newport Beech • • • 540-7041 or ~341 BABYSITTER wanted nights, my apt. Own transp. Male or. female. 847-2916 train. --MacGregor Yacht . IndU.s~~RefuP~ns Accnt/RE/CPA exper to $25K Equal Oppor. ·Employer 213-443-9488 1 I Corp., 1631 Placentia Ave., --Purchase Agt/SteeI. $10K . Take Peck Rd. north of San Equal Oppor. Employer ~ C.M. (714) 494-9401 F/C Bkkpr, Conslr lo $150 MACHINE OPERATOR Boraat'dlno Fwy.I I CLERK-typist, invoicing, 10 EXec.-Secretary lo $700 Costa Mesa Jinn needs a PART time, older peMJOn to SEASONAL work. May 1st to /, key adding machine, filing, TELONIC Secy/O>Mtruction to $675 roung, mature woman. will· help control parking at Ken· Sept. 30th. Must be willing exp'd only. $450 per mo. call Costing Cl~l'k • to $600 ing to work toward. advance· tucky Fried Chicken, s.q3 So,. 10 work Sat, Sun & holidays, ; for appt. 642-1912 INDUSTRIES Clerk Typist to $600 ment. If you are intereslcd Coast Hwy Laguna Beach. Apply Big Can.Yon Counlry ,1 Cdmm'l/Lines Rater lo $500 call Deltronlcs Corp. 545-0401 Apply In ~rson. ' Club, 1 Big Canyon Dr .. NB ' Recept, Gen ore to $525 ..... AID-M I I A I Ex 64' .. ~ . Comm'! Loan Proc to $85(1' "..,... • 0 t; · PP Y · PART time sall'B girl, 12 hrs ...._,.., T Proc Sa & Lo ecuhve Suites, 2080 Newport pel' week Exp c r i enc e iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:,;;iiiiiiiOt • Equal Oppor. Employer Eax essor, v. an Blvd, Costa Mesa. Pre t e r ~ed. Bushards Sales trne ·hMw~ to $600 ' "'""""'"""~!'!!'~!!!!!!!!!•I xper. L.A. Open MAID •• "145 Accountant t 181111 ) Payroll Clerk to $575 .P..:ha=:.:nn::a::c:<y.!,' ,;;4~"-'=:._~-o >. ELTEECllNCTRICOINIANC Free & Fee Positions Newport Travelodge 642-82'52 PE RMANENT custodian, Insurance Unclel'Y.'l'iler -Comm'l/Pcrson~l 10 $700 Banking J<ell'I qu1 LAGU'NA HILLS Laguna Beach Coco's Needs Girls \Vitti. Banking Exper. • Escr• e Loen Processors • New Accts. Clerks e Tellers H•s Immediate Opening For Looking for individual with CAIL: TRISll llOPKlNS f\tALE 17 or over work days church buildings, exp._. d Exec. Secretaries $6-$700 video systems exp & JERRI WHfITE~ORE or nltcs in fast food preferred, 40 hr wk. $3.20 Med Bek Office $500 • inecha.nical kno\\•ledge. Xlut ~ E. 17th (at Irvine) CM restaurant. Apply Burger hourly, Reply to .classl!led Dental Front ofc 10 $600 i l fringe benefits. 3 weeks paid Suite 224 642-1470 King, 16331 Beach Bl, 11.B. Ad No. 680, Dall_y Pilot, AUt Cuhier Stk Br~ $471) r.: vacation. Paid ntedical, If .. r4f • 4r ft 'Ii 847-4994. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Receptionist $f'l5 +t I Immed. Temp. Assignments Appy In Person Betwn 9am & Noon 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. DAY dental, life insurance, Paid • ' ; MAN over 30 to build &1-:9'lll26"7====-:==.,. Ship/Rec Clerk $435 , long term disability. ac--JANITOR -Apply in person, deliver nursery 'boxes. Ex· PHARMACIST'S Assistant NEWPORT ! J 1 Irvine Behveen 9 am-12 noon BUSBOY cepting applications daily. ?i-1esa Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 per. w/saws &-measure-Typing Required p I A • Gyyr Products. Div: of Center St, CM ments pref'd. Apply 84:30, 40 Hour Work Week · eraonne gency 41 Odetics Inc. 1859 S. JR SECRETARY 17552 Gothard st., H.B. Member or Retail Clerks 133 Dover Or., N.B. •l l\.1anchester, An a h e i m, •. Union. Located tn Newport -642-3170 ~I -Apply in Person 24001 Ave. De LaCarllota Laguna Hills E q u a I o p p 0 rt u n i t y Fee. Paid. Bea~tlful modern MAN for telephone: order Beach. Ask for K. Hyder, , ... Employer office overlooking the ocean. desk. Pal Electronics Co., 642-22ll SAU:S-DJSTRIBUTORS ~ l ELECTRONIC Good typing ski1Js & math 6391 Westminster Av e , ~""'=·=,,,..====- BEAUTY SALON .... (At the El Toro off ramp, S.D. freeway) ASSEMBLERS . aptitude. Li~e sh helpful. Westminster PORTERS WANTED $100 -$'i'OO per 1no plus. Part . . Salary-to $500. Also Fee MANICURIST \VIUi exp Ap-Must be exper. F/time. ~e time or full lilne. \Vork your Exper,. in hand soldering of Jobs. Call Jan Page. !'llY in Person, Kc n Personnel Mgr, Balboa Bay own hours. No es1) nee. PC boards. Must have 540-6055. Coastal Personnel Templeton Hail' Stylists, Club, 12Zl \V. Coast H\\'Y., Free top quality training .~ l Needs 4 Operators COCKTAIL \VAITRESSES & BARTENDERS. Apply 632 \V. 17th St, C.M. kno.\vlcdge of components, Agency 2790 lla.tbor Blvd 1701 Westcliff Dr., NB. Newport Beach, avail. 1-..:xcellen! opportunity ,v\ring & color codes-2nd c 'M ' " [or High School & College , shift. Apply at Babcock ·1 • MAINTENA..~CE / 1'1ou11 e. PO\VER· Sewing Machine student. (Sunimer \\'Ork for ' • Full or p /time FJ!ectronics, Division Ester-JUNIOR Sec. $400. Typing man. Apply to Mr. Ehrman, Operators -Overlock exper te11.chers). $5 fee to start COMPANION-Driver for ac-line Corp., 3501 Harbor nee, shorthand iw.lpful. 709 Hotel Laguna 425 SO Coast pref'd.' Dave Carro 11 Call 645'.-4163 & leave htune < live lady with impaired Blvd .. Cf\.I. An equal ·oppt. Randolph Ave, CM Hwy, Lagu"a'Beach ' Sallmakers, C.M. 642-856;; & ho ill \Vi!h or \\'ilhout following. Operators \\'/followiflg spec. ial consideration. Excellent benefits. vision. No evenings or I p ne no. I \\' contact :- weekends. Consideration is Emp oyer. PRESS OPERATOR you n1yself. :- attractive bench apt. plus. Employment J W R b" MAY COMPANY \Vomen to "-'Ork for plastic SALES CLERK ' Write Classified Ad No. f,67, HElRWOOD Sl\U'ITERS • • Q lnSOR --molding plants. 546-3370. Some expcr net-e<JS.•'Full & :,, Montgomery Wards Daily Pilot, Box 1560, Costa 1977 Placentia, C.M. QUALITY Control Inspector p/tlme. 645-8264. Checker ' Mesa, Ca 92626 EXEC -CRETARY ls Now Accepting __ ... _.. f boa u1 Mlto Parts, Ul E. 19th, CM f 1 ~~~~~-~~-~· • ~~ Applications For 1\lreU\."U or t man ac· .CONSTRUCTION Co. th N.B. Sh, typing & several yrs ex· Newport Bench luring firm. Apply in persQn $i\LESMEN & i\1grs, m/f. l 250 seeks young Superintendent . per. neci:!SS. to handle this Has Opening F"or 8 Qualified person w/recent at COMt Catamaran, 2026 S200. &. up "·kly guarn i ~~892~!!.'6~1'!:1,~e!'x!!t'l'!!!!~ I 'Gen Mgr. Excel oppty for. challenging pcisition for den· exper. as ful l time wig McGaw, lrvlne. contact Jlm qua!, No eXp nee. 1.fr. ~ := a young man w/small fast ta1 gpecialist. Must enjoy PBX stylist \v/sales background.1.cBI.,,a,,c,,k.c:-=====,,-" _a=I3::l..:17c:0-854:,::"=3·:._ ___ ~ BEAUTY OPERATORS growing firm. B-1 Lie. working w/the public . REAL ESTATE SALES . SALESLADY. not over 50. \Vith or \\'lthoul following for helpful. Salary open. Reply. Salary open. H.B. area. Apply In Person SUCCESS CAREER ror hakery & !!and\\'iCh shop. hlgh fashion Styiin~. in confidenCl" to Mr. \Vilson, {TI4) 962-«71:" ' 552 Multlple 10 am·12 & 24 pm Mon·'I'hur.s New or experlenced .. Joln the Ev<'s. Please call collect. MANICURIST P.O. Box 561, Corona del 33.13 So. Bristol World's largest and fruit~"t 49&-1574. Call For Appl. Mar. EXEC. SECRETARY Expcr. Part·Time Costa Mesa / growing resale organtu.tlon ............ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio[ AF1''AIR \VITH HAIR COOK and counter help, If you would like the chal· ' -Equal Oppor. Employf'r with a nehvork ot over 300 SECRET1\R'l 'l Call 962-77W p/tlme to •-t/time, 18 or \enge or the ad businl"ss & illon & Ft'i Nites & Sats offices and beoome a BEAUTICIAN Wanted for over, midnight lo 7 am. have these qualiHcations, Apply in ,....rson 10_5 i110TEL _ DESK CLJ-::R.K. n1en1ber ot our Millionaire Mallie's \Vlg & Beauty shift. No exp nee. $1.90 per give Ull D call. ,.. Elichunge lor room, 4 hrs. Club. l\lulti-mllUon dolla r Salon, e:tpcl', in hair goods. hr. 3 mo's local res., neat e Shorthand No. 2 f'a.o:hlon Isl., K.B. per day. 2376 Newport Blvd. adverti!j:\ng P1'0"'"1Rl. Free Sal ""'mm • vac. 548-3446. appear, apply in· person. • A Equal Oppol'. Employer 54~9755. guaranteed licensing school. ..... oc Jack in the Box, 1201 s. e Shcc;ur_aLc!_... ~ Excellent 311.le11 lrttlnln1-t. Beauty Operator \Vanted. arp uu...S ~ MOTOR route opening for Pl II Vt I l J Gwe"., Beauty Shop Coast Hwy., L.B. e I I I I K II Ge I boy or rrlrl at least 16 yeM'jl; ease ca fl n ll ones 4!»-3294 C~KS ~ t •I YO e y 1r or age. °Laguno Beach ...... 835-"li~DRHCAltoRrP•ET ~~c:-~-'-~----1r~ull & p/tlme On .. &: nights 0 ri101orblke okay. Must hnve Boat Manu(acturing · • ...,s · 133-167 valld ,driver.~ license. Phone Fiberglass Tooling Cori's Jr. Rest. -· ~-~==~~= M Apoly betwn 2" 5 at _ ............... 842-4321 or 492-4420 REAL ESTATE SALES . en c.r1's. -Bristol, CM [X • · ed Uht MOTOR route deliV<cy of FREE LICENSE Exper. In hbergls bo3t tool·, COOK PART TIME penenc DA!l.Y II.OT. afl•moo"' TRAINING l"g· mold layup, woodwork· , • Industrial anti Siu ay. Pho1>e Mr. F It< J E L. ing. Alrcratt e."l)er. ok. Exper. Over 21. liluirt be PROOF ~iey Q 2-4321 amous l state •Cf!n.,. Many co. benefits. Long cl~an &: neat. Apply In pe~ · · ' Ing Count" now aVa.iiublt tcrrn program. World's ~n. Suri&: Sirloin, 5930 , Solderers Tl 'M~ E FOR thru TarOOU Renllon.l''tte EXECUTIVE SECRETARY \ViU \\'Ol'k for ihe president , o[ rapidly ~rowing com· r pany, localed In tbC! Tor-'.j ranee :n'Co. 1\1\lst b(I fiueot · in both .E:n~ & Japariese. _., Typin~ nnd shortlltind sk\UA ! mu~t be above average. F01· furt her information call: , l (2131 $82-5.)90, ~t '1'S largest builder of frbgls \V. Coascool HK,wyEXP.,.N.BE.R. OPERATOR Need kno"•l...A~o 01 N .. A.S.A. Pia('.ement Service. F'rt-~ sa.ili~""Chts. Contact \Vil· '""'ti' Trnlnlng Program. Eam 3 " 1 re<1ulremcnt!J preferably h'J l Call Al Equal Oppel'. Etoploytr ~1!1e1o;:!·0~lgr 11::f~~b~~ • BLUE DOLPl:tl!'f • -UNITED-CJ'l'lificd or t<omparablc. QUICK CASH ;~: )ft~<I} ea8Jui40. on I '.!'!!!!!'""-"·""'"'"!!!!!!!'!!~~Ii Yachts, 275 Mc corm I c k 33$ Via LldO, N.B. \\leek<'nd~ l714) gs:!.~. Scl"rtHA.rles $l00-$1100 COO CALIFORNIA BANK El-. Assemblen AIP Constru<tlon l61'l Ave:., C.M. Apply Tues. thru K -THROUGH A Cl k T · t to $500 Thurs. 3 Daya A \Veek Ab\(' to unrter n11c.:roscope. REAL ESTATE SALES Pi rou ypis 1 $STh Equal Oppor. £mplay"-r m/t Sa\vyers Home. 64&-GnG , 26151 La Paz Rd Nccdf'd fmmed. " NC\Y & tt5U.lc. N'ewport & 1003 FREE t FOR ACTION .• • • ~.:iJii ~f1~~m;i. :!:,~ •M:;;::Jo 2061 Bu1ineu Ctr. Dr. [DAILY PILOT Hu~A~0aJ'~~iEW DAILY PILOT Mesa Irvine 833-1441 WANT AD HOMES I.Ir. Relnd" A~ CLASSIFIED AD .COQK/HSKPR, muRI lie xlnt E(JUll. Oppor. Employ"' Across f11>m Q.C. Alrpm't 1829 Po1i SI> tneld Pia"' • 4000 Camp11• ·0r. cook. beaut new home Nwpt Nrwport B<>ach ~{.\.O?SO :WU-21.18 Newport Btaeb WAfilT AD Bay, rela. 2 adult• 613-0072 Have ROm•lhlnfl you want to 1.lko to trade? Our Trador'8 642 5678 wk-da,yi 001¥ llon'I Ill"" llp the lhlpl I Nted t "Pad"! Place an ad! aellt Class1fled ads do tt Paradise column ls for you! • "Ust" 11 1n C!lusiftt'd1 Sbii I 1 642°5671 Call 642-0678. ...tl-c:all NOW 642-5618. 5 lln<1. 5 days tor$ buclcs. 1 CI..,.illcd Ads • • • 642.;G'JH. lo Shore Ret0ltsl 6C<J61S. ' • t_ I 11 \ . a Oo\l~V PILOT • Thur<dl}>, April 12, 1973 • ~~~~~~~~1,,,,., _____ lliillll_ll ~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~;! I ''1 ~ 1 • mJ [ r..; .... l[j] •[ '"""'"•" l[ll]I 1 l '!1'1'...• ' j[j] [ ~-)[Ill [ · •<t.i • I~ [ •' -· I~ I · ..... 111 ~ [ ,.. • ..,... JI~ , • ~Ip~~. M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & I' 710 Help Wonted, M & F 71GH•lp Woni.cl, M & I' 710 l:rolp W1ntld, M & F 71t Furnlt"" 110 , Mlocell.....ut 111 PloftOl/0rgaM 124 DOg• ' " ~ V'· SALES TRAINEES WOMAN to II"' In wllh CV.ST OM made ••~I * AUCTIO"" * U$ED ORGAN $ALEI fRE~ ~ THE CALIFORNIAN · ! elderly "'Oruan. Balboa leiralnrbent ctnt e.r, giant FR DAY 30"P HAMMOND' (...103 w/te&Ue 1..ape.4~ :;:;1 :!1~~ , . fal•nd apt. · ~ mo. bar "'/.SIC>raJ:~, "'n t n g I 7: M '892; Hammond M·3 cherry, P1f1s. t ~me due to1ack oJ ~ · ' I · G•EAT OPPORTUNllJ TO ·.·EARN 673-0715 ' iron<. extondl ' cab., APRIL 13th $7'9; Hammond A·IOO -.,., co "'•al conjl'OI'.' they •te RESTAURANT I\ _ \VOMAN llC4Ll energeUc· u~~I.: ng rm pcs,~NEW&.USEOlkdroomliCIS $1995;!t:unmond C·3 StT95; ~r"ino~~dletprob-1 w.Hll .. YOU LEARN THE EX cm.NG ....... ' ,;,.Id .:..it. La&uM Orex ... .,.:;. bdnn luto & Divans, M•J)I• Hutches: Hamroood Por1a·B 11499: l•m~ .... 1<.r1ovor ,,eq, F ~ Beach re,ort. 49'1-l196 n1 • .,........._.. Deaks, c.omnsodes, Din-.AJlen Spinet $495; \Vurlitier .filsh bacOn, etc. No doj 1 Now Acc:opllng Appllcillon• or: AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS . WOMEN. sales. '""' ti<!> v* MAPLi: SALE* "'""· 'Lampo, nanc:1ng eplnet$495. n..,.anifmany !Ood'. F"ll•L EaJtor BIJ\1c J e WAITRESSES e COCKTAIL WAITRESSES . · · profit & y:ear latest Beelffie Complete bousehold, must lamps, King st:r.e AdjU&t:a n\Ore ~1. . nie:s, take home L to IO tot 1 • BARTENDERS • COOKS You'll be tough! by one of lh. country's 111 ·F.,,hlona. No jnves1?"'1rans "" lmmod. Liv nn. bdrm, bed, Lat• model Oolor TV 1, .Walhchs Music City your lonoty child. Call an.r l Day & Night Shifts Available time gre•test automobile salesmen the fun-nee. 534-7863 or 53G-3106 dinlng rm. Hide-a·bed, l()vc. ~t~rsMoi£~ Dryers I.: South Coast Plaza 541).2830 6 pm. 646--0163 I APPLY IN PERSON between 9 & ' PM damental1 to new car 11Je1, uud car 11le1, YOUNG MAN ~:Jn~.tc. N~~b~,:::, WINDY'S ·AUCTION CONSOLE Himmond L-~, ~,! f; ~"!~:I ; I .. Monday thru Friday l•••ing •nd fln•ncing. In a vtry short time TO DO YARD WORK. 673--CSI7 or 646-9078. -Fac!9efblUn rhY.thm b!l'1 • Moving to an apt. 3 yn. l, . 1_4QQ_ S.. Harbor Blvd, LaHabra you m1y be Hrnlng up to $2000. per ,_,th FOR L'ARGE APT DUNCAN Phy!• "''• & '""' COME BROWSE AROUND liiZ' 11~.!;., ~~· Gcldon !Wlrievor mix. Vory ,,__ --Jl!'l"'!""~.i!!!~~~~~~"':'~~~~ -~~~ ,ju_1t !fl-•-ll•Y tht p_rOI do. COMPLEX seat. $150. Ma.telling lamp 2rr~ Newport Blvd ·• ' pleasant dispos. One of the , ..:. $2 AN HOUR tble, $25, antique Tea cart Behind Tony's B1dg Ma.U's APT:-Size small minue~M few-dogs that ls so happy lo .1 H•lp W1nt9il, M 4 " 710 Holp·.W1ntod, M .. " no BENERTS . CALL 546-5025 I 12'.. Early Am. r I <An CoslA .Mesa -* '.M6-86it; ........ XJnt oond. .. ..... you that he amil~ . l 1 ' I ,, • ,, 11 ,•, • I . ,, SECRETARY II 12 Months Secretary I. START EARNING IMMEDIATELY "Guild" am/fm ehono con-PLAYHOUSES tone. $300-SllMl6'!--You'll never ....,.., havtii $ sole, $65, eves. 536-8340 d 1 d. ~ """°i m Sportirlg Goods 830 this dog! 613-4702. l 2. HIGHEST COMJ\'llS IONS · cs gns or stan 0,1,1 pans. . i. , R CH ONUS PLAN FOR EXTRA CASH I If~) ESTATE-UV!ng, d I n in g, A • Fl'anie • caslle • etc. .. , PtJPPY \VORLD, ,00 Mixe, Fountain Valley School District Kelly Girl 3. 1 B MwdYncl. · hrcakfast &: bedrm furniture Kils or installed.· 675-0712 or LANd. G 1 S1kiis00 ~73Sa!:oonod 1 bin· PUps. Buy & seU pups, al&il 4. A FREE NE\V CAR TO DRJVE WHEN . . + lots of fnL'>C. Very 675-8728. 1ngt1 · '"' l• e · Pi1 Bull Terrier, Cock&~ YOU COMPLETE THE COURSE reasonable. 2020 Tuslin, , 644-6939 afler 6PM Porn, Chlhuahun, T-cup 1 5. GUARANTEED ANNUAL WAGE C~!. 64z.TI38 , Claude How10 TV Rodio HiFI Poodle, Shcphcrd. Open Salary: $567·$688 ?Ito. '6. HOSPITALIZA'f!ON Antiques 800 BEAUTIFUL Antlque ••me 243 Robinhood .Pl1co Storoe ' ' 136 Eves. Stud Sennco, 531-<027 I 7. PAID VACATIONS SCRAM LETS table, sacrUI~ $200. Ex-Costa Me111 OBEDIENCE class to start · ., ~ Needs rour iltills! \\'ark Requirements: 90 \\'.p.111. sh, where ymfre a ppreciated on 60 \\' .p.m. typing~ Ex per. long or short term !em· desired. App!y 1N PERSON porary assignmenlS. Work at lhe comer of Talbert & "'/the top companies in Newland Streets, Founlain 'Orange Co. Choc.»;e the VaUey, Calif. no. later than days,•hoUl'S •"< location most Frida,y, April 13th, 1973. convenient _for you. Ex· Eqiial Opportun11y Employ. eellent earnings, weekly er. paycheck. Let us start you 8. FREE CLOSING HELP · • eculive lrlihaped desk , You are the wiMer or C•mpbell't Ster.OS in the Nl?WpOlt/Irvine area I wood, w/rrey leather one free pass Prices were born here ·wednesday-Aprll• 18th, 1 9. ABUNDANCE OF FLOOR TRAFFIC ANSWERS swivel chalr $150. 9'r.Hi157. Good !or a-Wftole carload & raind elHwherel I 7:30pm. Open to all doi::s 10. S£LL BOTH NEW AND USED~ LEAS-T\VO SINGLE BEDS. to o.t\Y or the Don't Pllt)' $3oo to SIDOO for a over 5mo. 546-4928 • ING TOO I $30 FOR BOTH PACIFIC mEATRES .. ' Steroo or Quads, ... ,,,. W•,.H::o;;:r .. ::;•:.._ ___ ·.;.•S6;.;.'1 ~ R.educe.-Jo'inny -Sandy -e 642-9309 • ~ .. have them from $95 to $300,1 - QUAUFICATIONS. !J~~~I~ i!!!lR~hen you Garage S.le 812 ·(Subject to small service name brands. Hannan Kar· RE GJS'rERED Appal~ 1. MUST BE BETWEEN 24 & 30. YEARS think ""Ur barber charaes --charge at theatre). don, Concord, I>Ual. Mira· G/bl~~~~ 8 10r"'g'ooc1' orridrere JV .,, GARAGE Sale, 2 pc Med. Pl II ,,.... cord Nikko SheN'OOd Gar-w ._.,. . OLD too much 1or a HAIRCUT. ealH!. ca vu-5678 ex1. 314 rard', El•clra' pbon•'c, f--a-$500. 644-1547 AN NE T loveseat &. sofa, .green to claim your ticket. (North u:iu 1--"=..:.:;..:::°"'=~==..,;I 2. 'MUST ·BE WELL DRESSED D A ANTIQUES velvet. Washer, port Xlnt county toll·free number ls co, Teak, Ampex, San)'(). THOROBRED BAY w/ywr best fool forward. Secretaiv Executive I Apply 9 am-noon Challengiri£ .• 'position, must 206,1 Business Ctr. Dr. have good secrc1arial skills, Irvine llJ..1441 APPEARING · Beautiful furniture etc. for for mobile home. Upright 5'JO.t220). / BSR, and many others. $300 642•3090 ; 3. MUST BE HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE sale. 9 a.ni. to Sunset. 2976 vacuum. Pa t io fum, Oieck our new born prices . 1 be able to have excell('nt ACl'Ol!.S from O.C:. Airport 4. MUST SPEAK WELL Andros, Costa Mesa. Rcd\\'ood. Slat A\\.'ing & LOOKING before you buy! Ea Iii y HORSE ~R SALE: Pinto 545-4075 stand, har·bt.'-que \\'/rotis. terois! 601 N. Anahein1 A1are: \Velsh & A1organ; 'l 5. MUST HAVE OUTGOING PERSONAL-. ORIENT. art Jad('s. bronze Bath sets, towels & ·unens. for 'something to help you Blvd., Anahelni, 535-7288; yrs aid; $300. 002-6983. j ITY J\lisc. antiques. 5355 Via Dishes galore! 979-8587, 3070 look & 1~~ be~~~?? 1 ~ 8101. Bolsa Ave., Westmln· HORSE FOR SALE: Pinto typlng and shorthand sldils. Neat. flttractlve~ pleasant 1-----------personaliiy & able to "'nrk well \Vi!h people. Salary $735. to $815. Exccllrnt working co nd!Uons and fringe· benefits. Send resume to Irvine Unified School District, 4861 AUchclllOn Rd., lrvine, 92664. SECRETARY 6. J\IIUST GET ALONG WITH PEOPLE Lida Suife C, Nc,vport Trinity. CM, Anytime! our waf ·loin w ll' poo stcr 893-0501. matt· \Vel&h &. Pi1organ 7 ' "'LL n . h sauna, ol "·e<t by a Ian-$300' Call 96~ ' Wr.. vo:ac · SUPER Giant Garage Sale, tastic full body massage. 197~ ZENl'J'.1"1 & RCA TVs &1~~""~·~~·~~~·~~~~~'1 Secretarial skills \Vilh ~h. Som.e Seeurities cxper. help- ful. XJrl•t op1JOrtunily for qualified individual. 7. MUST BE METHODICAL THINKER OIL paint's. -Fr. Impress., SaJ/Sun. ZW9 Rutgers Dr., Call 64>7002 any day noon stereos priced to clear. All • 8. MUST BE GOOD AT SIMPLE MATHE-early An1£'r etchings', etc, CM. Antiques, toys, dishes, ti! 4 am avail. Models are in stock &. 11 1 : MA TICS (Addition, Substraction, Multi-3355 Via Lido, No. C, Npt fio~boardl arlran g ebllcm en t 11, . + on. d}!J!aytadt Oral ange3 om,n-[ _...,,.,..,ment ""'~ , Bch su.-, , urn, e parts, HELLO! We hear you're ty s ...... 6 es e er. yr p c· , ,,.. l plication" Division) OAK library table, oak tools, child 's c lathing, planning a GALA AFFAIR lure. tube, 1 'fr parts & · I Apply In The 9. MUST BE ABLE TO THINK QUICKLY Larkin desk, aak table, books, botllea, jewelery and & you need $>me good sel'Vlce warranty. Cash 90 SECRETARY-EXEC. Per&Oflnel Dept. 10. MUST BE ABLE TO GRASP Y..NOWlr Ornate P /B chrs 646-3478 beads, ski equip. 546-4484 entertainment. \Ve v.'OuJd ar .terms to 36 m9. avail. Bo.ts, General 900 Unusual JlOl'lilion for mature l\lon-Frl 9 am-l2 noon EDGE QUICKLY '""~=-=o..:=...:.:c:..:;.8:;:02~ SAT & Sun; Closing Big like lo offer our music. CaU ABC color-TV, 19 O 4 61"-"-";.;;..,.;,.;....; ____ ..,;.I secretary. Competent 10 ac· ~Pe11•nces House -Chests, tables, 5JS...5559 i1' Garden Grove or Brookhunt, H.B. 968-~ or • CLASSIC • 1937 Gar-Wood ccpt de I e ga t i 0 n of PACIFIC MUTUAL Quafffied Applicants Only lamps, couches, TV, refrig, 646-7565 ln Costa Mesa. 9021 Atlanta, H.B. 962-5559. Runabout. Double coc~plt responslbllJty in nice Qrg. , 700 Newport Center Dr. \~~~GT~~~~ 0 ii.At ~~i : bkcases, guitan, jewelry. "CHOPS" Rice's TV Sale1/S.rv. 17' O.A. Complete w/trailer Co.. ofc. A.o;slst In ad·, Newport Beach l • Apply In Penon Good \VOrking condition. Absolutely not before 8am Cindy & Dan 1375 U:igan Ave., Costa Mesa &. extra engine. Needs ministi-ation & management i ,..,..,..,....,..,.,..,..,.~, i'~ront·load door seal leaks. Sat. 700.Lido Park Dr, No 5, MEN'S bike, s,w. Stereo, $25. fonnerl~ Mesa. North Center restoring. ~lake 0 ff er , of regional l111urance ore. SECRETARY $600 REX ELLSWOR-TH PONTIAC $20. 963-20S2 aIL 4 Pi\l N.a Twin beds w/ frame $8 e Repair AU ~fakes 1 ..:64&-::.:3o:4:;78::.·~-----·I Call for appt. 842-77Sl or Llte sh &: tyolng I< EN M 0 R E_ e 1ec 1 r i c GARAGE/l\loving sale -:-Fri Elec. heater, $8. 'Lrg: • Used 1'V'11 For. Sale. 10' GLASPAR. Xln't con- 546-2002. WeslcliU washer/dryer. White thru Sun. Furn, appliances, n1ahog. what-not shell $25. CSEA Member. • reliable, diUon. $125. UNIGARD Personnel Agency 801 So. Anaheim Blvd., Anaheim -toys, clothiµg, patio, office Poker table, S2(). 557-6ai9 or Orange Ca. stnce 1961. Call 646-6Jll . INSURANCE 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. ~e;J9 condit'on. $115/pr. & other .n\isc. 20181 Kline S.~1189 Open 6 days, s to 5 . SECRETARY for sales & marketing office. Musi be sharp, l y pin g, GO+, shorthand 70+ Pref('r sales office exper. & aplltude. Must be able to grow. . Suire 107 Go See Mr. Graller,Mr. White, or Mr. Romano -·-· Dr, Santa Ana Hgt s , NEW Lo 1 .,. Pu 1BlckS.ofBaker546-6002 Boats, Malnt./ (•1-~ JI! C t J GE 2 D• R trig 1 9""' ........., vesea , .,.,.,, sh 10 """ £'n er ' · · •· e c.r:i. or, l'1""\r.1ll0 lawn mower, $4 .50. Trlcy-CB RADIO, Elmac Clty-Fone Service 902 542-8836 · No Phone_ Calls Please good working condition. SJO. t.10VING Sale: -15 cu ft cle. $3.50 Books, pictures, .S.S. 23 Channel! with 18·1 -..:.:;,;,:;;:. ____ ;,;,:1 <::ECRETARY I ~0.80 lSffi Monrovia Ave No. :f>, Coldspol fros!less refrig. 147 Misc. Used usables 2560 whip antenna, now mounted BOAT cleaning, salvage • "s.H. 100, reai est~ or 1 ntkl 1.H;;;•l;p;;W;;;a;;n;;tod;;;';;M;;;&;;;F;;;!_;;;IO Help Wanted, M & F 710 CM. lb freezer $200. Amana deep Newport B 1 v d . , ' Of. on a 28' Cabin Cruiser. All repair. Underwater. exp. helpful. Send resume to !• NE\V Elec. Afaytag Dryer, freeze chesl 23 cu ft, 805 lbs 10am-4pm. for $95. 644-U40 Call 548-1255 P.O. Box 1960, N.B. 92663 SECRETARlt' & Typist used one month. $100. Priv $200. Dining n."Om set, table DBL. solkl Maple dresser &. ALL cahnnel color T v Boats/tl.arine iiiiiiiillii"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Jot) party, call bet. I' 5: 3 0' !:.o 6275chrs7. + buffet $75. mirror. 2 women's bicycles. w/ncw pbc tube, walnut E I 904 97'Hl660 673-6250. ..,....,_ TV stereo comb. Brit cabinet. xlnt cond. $110.1-.:::·q!:u::.!:p:.· ____ ...:.,:.;/ TYPISTS 'NEEDED GE Combination wuher & GARAGE Sale -6 8 41 Ency!. ~ks, etc. Priced 6'l2-0758 1 REACHING spirt.Qaker, 1 IMMEDIATEL y: dryer 6yrs old, but 'rarely Jardlnes Dr, Htg Bch. Sat & low Jor Quick Sale! 548-7365 25" SYLVANIA Color TV, running spin. !or M40' boat. ·~~---;-=------~-~~~qt/~ . ~ :~f A ~IENT SHOPPING AND "<! SEWING GUIDE FOR THE GAL ON THE GO, ..... ,~ ~ For an Ml rn Woman's World 'Coll Mory Both 642·S678, ext. 330 Seam-Simple! I Tunic is Tops! ·~ •• ,. ~·v. ,' \; ' . • •' 7366 ' ·,., ' ' I ;. i ... '~ VOLT Instant Personnel T£>mporary Service 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 Ne\vpol1 Beach 546-'1741 Equal Qppor. Employer Sr. Electronic Technician/ Jr. Enginnr Progressh·e electronic & medical diagnostic in· s1rumcnta1ion fhm located in Santa Ana is de11it'OUS of hiring an elcctronlq. tcchni· cian \V/min. of 5iyrs analog & digilal. £>xpcr. :).Int co. bencfils. Salary open. Send rt'sume of background \V/ salary r('(Juiren1ents or call: ROHE Scientific Corp. 926 S. Lyon Street Santa Ana, Calif. (714) 547-3916 SERVICE Station ·sales At- 1£>ndnnt to \\'Ork graveyard shift. 10pm~m. 5 nitcs a \\'k. Must have serv. sta. ex· per. Apply in per so n 8anl-3pm, Sec John, Mesa V£>nle i\lobilc, Harbor at S.D. 1''1'\l'y, Ci\I. _ SERVICE Station Salesman & lube man. Top pay & fringL• bcnl'fits. Exper. 1nan pref'd . Full or p/tin1c. Ap· ply Sh<'ll Stalion, 17th & lt·vinc, N.B. - SERV!Cf::'--Station attendant at Sh£>11 Sta1io11 ."< llertz R£>nt·A·Car in So. Laguna. t t'ull lin1c permanent job , \1·/frlnge benefits. 32342 Coast H1\y. SERVICE Sta. Salesn1an, p/limc e'"-cs/i,1·kud~. !\lcch. Trear yourself to a pretty. cxpcr. Ne@.t. Apply morns !unic that tops cvctything! 2590 Nc"•po'rt Blvd, Cl\1. Contrastin'i scallops &CC(!nt SHAt.·IPOO Girl Assistant crocheted slL'C velcss, slKfrt or "'/Calif. lie. Apply in long;leeved tunic. Use sport person, I\en Templeton's, yarn: tean1 \\.·Uh pants, 1701 W...,tcH''fDr, N.B. YOUR PASSPORT to sum· mer is a seam-fSimp!e skUn with • button-tabbed yoke. Beautiful in knits "'"·ith the same or contra.st yoke. Send now! shorlS. s"im suit. Pattern ~ "" 7366: sizes 10-18 included.. , SHA,,lPOO ASSISTA.NT 8El'ENT1'-•""IVE CENTS Lie. Hair Hunters, Jt""ashion for °eclch pattern -add 25 Island. &1~2151..­ Printed Paltcm .9 4 2 3: l\fisscs· Sizes 8, 10. 12, 11. 16. 18. Size n (bust 31) takes 3 yards 35-lnch rubric. renl.! ror each pattern for Air ~tail and Special 1-landl- i~; othc.N1isc third-class delivery \\'ill take three \\'CCks or 1nore. Send to Alice Brooks, the DAILY PIWT. 105. Needlecrllft SEVENTl'-Fll't: ft~STS Dept., Box 163. Old Chelsea for each patten1 -nfld 2.1 y y -ts !or each pattern for Station, Ne\V ork, N .. ....... 10011. Print Name, "Add~ Air Mail and Special Hand\· Zip, l'altem Number. lng; otherwise third-cla!!s N EE D L ECRAf,-'72! Ship1»ers • Packers 1''ull & Part Time 83.>-1098 SIGN Sl!l'Vi(.'C electrician. Top pay benefits. Nelli Neon, Inc. 531-3374 Taco Bell Restaurant M4mngement Trne, p/Un1e Days or nltes. 818 Ocean A\'e, H.B. 1 536-7800 TELEPHONE delivery will take thrff emc~ kn't ~­\\"eeks fir more. Send to ""'" • , etc. r '~ Marian Martin, the DAil.Y directions, SOc.. PILOT, 4'2, Pattern Dept., ln11tant l'llA""mf: Book. trom your home, $1..6& hour -w... 18th St., New Buie, fancy knot.c;., pat,. + bonua. Jnterestlng woric. ~ l~nt'l, $1.00. ~fail cant \Y/namc & phone York, N.Y. JOOU. Print f11Al1u1t Crocbel Book -nurnbu to Box 5211, G·~en ?(AMJ:., .. "'AD011ESS "'Ith -~ ZIP, sn.£ and STYLE Learn b~ictum! Pat-G~~, Ca. 9". ttms. Sl. TELE. SALES. \\"UI train ;r.~RMORE Q u 1 c k Cornplet tant Glft ~ yw to earn s»-$40 dally Faablolll and chOOle one -more an JOO aiftt -from our ofllc:o or )'qQr Em tree h'om our $1.00. home. 558-8271 J:lll.SUmmer Catalor. All 0Hnp4ete Afah•• Rook -, Zflt 50c $1..00. TJDJ DID~ need1 :I m~ure INST• SEWll. NC BOOK 11 .nt(v R11i llooi.:~ • SOc. IRdlelJ rel1dln.g ln Lo,auna 8ook or IJ Prlie Af1h1n.lf. or CaplltNlno area to in- le'W bll,y, YrUJ' tomon'O\v. 50c. fonn expectant mothers ~_._._ F'ASHlON QrdliBook l -l6pnllel'n$. nboot our lfC.l'Vl~. Sales ~"..,-'--"""~ H ! Sl'k. rxp helprut, holpitalh1ation BOOK .... --. .., / 0 ftk~nt Qollt 8nok 1 • .t: many other com~ny •-~~ I 50<. 1Jenclll1 , Ml-4193 nr dial J'ar did ~-~;-. try j _?s-'H11 lar TGdAy'• IJ\·l•1 • O -~ Jor Zenith 7400 tf!e PfbQ)' Phicmy beautiful patterns. SOc. , Fast ttau111 l\rt just a. phone • ct11l away 642-5$'ll. ' \/ Technical Repro Statistical General OffiCe used. $195., 496-5876. Sun, April 14 & 1 5 • CB RADIO, Elmac City-Fone new plctw;e tube. Guar 1 3 KW diesel generator; • e DISH\\o'ASHERS, washers, lOam~pm. Garage Is full of SS. 23 Channels with 18' 'fr., $200. 64!)..8(57. Guest v.•ater light; 4-mah dryers, reblt, guarn & housewares,. outdoor !urn. '\Vhip antenna, now mounted life raft; overboard pole, · Xlnt earniiigs -Long & short term tenipbrary assign- ments -varied & in· !cresting \\"Ork -choose the day, hour r ·Jocation q'll'>st oonvenient for you. Weekly paychecl:t. Apply in Person Apply . Betwn 9am & noon Kelly Girls 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. lrvine 833-1441 Act'Os11 from 0.C. Airport delv'd. ~7620: 546-5218. ntlsc tools, tttt. on a 28' Cabin Cruiser. All 646-U51 KENMORE washer/dryi;r GARAGE SALE for $95. &i4-ll40 I 11 sao. c~ll=~Po_w_o_r ___ ~906~1 S79 ea. Over 200 v.•ashers, AND , ORIG Whistler Utho $175., • frM to You ._.....:.: __ .;.;. ___ ;.,,;;..;1 dryeri, re!rig from $39.$. ANTIQUES Hiroshige ' Woodblock $185., 18' S p orate r Cabin ~R GUARANTEE 2976 9~~~~ ~~Mesa ~~ ~~= $~ B01~~ 3 f 1n.., ~ Times, '$2~00 ~::~: 111f ft h~n~':! M a y tag-Kenmore-W'5bers-5ti4075 ~. tras. Aft. 5 & weekends, 636-2840 * ~ 839-1778 Rent Washers/Dryers $2. \Vk. Jo'ull maint. * 639-1202 • 4 BURNER gas range, sngl I oven, window door, cop- pertor'le, xlnt cond, $75. 6TJ--Olli. TAPPAN E l ectr.onl c -, MicroWav" oven Bi "r\ngc comb. $650 or best offer· 968-S"o!IO C 0 PP ER refrigerator, SALE! Sat, Baby furn, GERMAN · Ship clock, 6", 963-290-t .~ Clothes & more. Corner polishe<l b~ss with. bells. FANTASTIC Dog needs good 19' TIIUNDERBffiD, 160 hp, Georgia, Knoxville, HS, Matching barometer. Also home. Owner moving to I/0, low hrs, twin bait 53&-3882 8'' gold plated ships clock. small apt. Xlnt w/chlldren. lank.s, full canvas, 600 F/D RUMA1AGE Sale at Harbor 962-0094. Good watch dog1 black recorder, lmmac. $4900-. Hi School April 14, 10 am TRANS back East. 17' cu' female. 644-4197. 557-3301 ' for girls varsity lennis club refrig, auto defrost, revers. LAPARDS, FINKST QUALI-* 30 FT. Owens Cruil!er * team. (15th &. Irvine, NB) ible dr; gas dryer, "baby TY PUPPIES, WEANED • Large salon&. Dying bridge GARAGE BLOCK BUSTER crib. bar siools, 495-0447. eat leftov'ers. 646--0163 ·aft Good shape! $5,txXl sale 1806 Port Stirling. 4-14 CUSTOM drapes for fam rm &pm. 494-9727 496--4020 ·Antiques Fum Boo.t Junk open weave, cream • Mold,. GERJ.L\N" .Shepberii, liaht 18' SO. Coast Lapstrake l\10VlNG SAhE.!...1970 vw lo orange rcas. like nu. Lots/ tab F; 1 yr, spayed, xlnt IOOhp, gray, nu Io P., mi 2 aquar \\.'/fish. Refr, szs 644-6249. with children, u·ell trained cushions & crpts, Clean. stv misc. 642-2913 Apr 14/lil l\lOVING Sale: Bclnn set 847-4306. $2500. 64&-0910 lITil.ITY i\Ja n -Active & Kelvtnalor. $40 LAST Chance Sale. Rcfrig, $35., dining rm set, like new PiJANX fem w/unusually * * * 14· F i be r g 1 a a s Honda l 75. 2644 Vista Del $50., del!k &. chair $ID., beaut markings. Afraid or 35 hp Elect. St. Evinrude Oro, NB. Thurs. Best offer. misc. 1.l6 E. 19th , C.1\1. children. Tu•ln kit I ens. w/trlr. ·Mull sell. Make ofr. healthy,· Retiree &/or on Ca ll 58&-3927 after 5 soC. sec. to \\"Ork in funeral _K_E_N~•"'1o"R-E-"',-•• -, .. ~ .. ~ .• -,"',ro-x, \VESTINGHOUSE Room Air 675-4648 6'16-mSS. :. 2·FA.t\J. Garage Sale. Baby & maternity nee<ts, misc. Cond. 5000 BTU. Like new SILVER Tabby, lot & F, 1.8' Gl.ASPAR in brd /obrd , j horne. Jo'ar intervic\v call 21~ yrs. "tiile, $75. Call . 6·16-2424. <154-£114. WAITER ror dining room Hotel La· guna. Must be e.'<pcricnced. Apply in person to Mr. Ehrman 425 So. Coast Hwy., LB. WAlT~E$SE$ \VAITRESS expcr. 1nature \roman prt'(crred. Kitchen e....:pcr. desired. 6 7 3-4 5 5 8 bct\veen J'-5 pin only, exCcpt Alonday WAITRESS Expcr. Must be aver 21. Ap- ply in person, Suri & Sirloin, RECOND. APPLIANCES Delivered · guar. Dt:nlap's, 1815 Newport , 0.1 548-7780 C I CM ... 90.~ $100. Royal Porta b I e altered, shots. Will be Volvo eng., full canvas. 3UO.A ora • · · .nv-41• typewriter $25. 545-3826 destroyed Sat. Pis. call $2000. 0\\'ner 830-G49S. ·'ewelry · _ 815 '71 ENCY. Brit. inc. globe, 548--0058 FOR sale 22' all gill&! skiU , Z ER/"' H ho 2., CARAT dlaonond Sol. dictionary, coll. prep series, TWO ~orable black mixed 8' beam, stringers comp! FREE .. es . ng use-,.. Adventures in LI vi n g breed puppies. 552-1:152 After glass. $600. 642-9294 17 Cu. rt. Xlnt oond. $225. $800. 33.15 Via Udo, Suite C, $300/Best offer. 645-0672. 5 P.M. 16• GLASS Slickcraft, 40 HP Cash anly ~·8346. Newport Beach. 116 Miscellaneous FREE to you baby bunnies Evinrude \v/trailer. $67!a. L~;r, =I co~~~ t;5~ Machinery Wanted · 820 for Easter. Please call 645-1701 or 493-9188. h 646-5848 GE HALOGEN leak detec· 54.9-31l2 Boats, Sail 909 eac . . tor. Type H-10. \Vas new OLD ORIENTAL RUGS Adorable puppy, part Lab. l;;;;;;.;;::.,,.::.;;;.;., ___ ...;;;;;I Building Materials 806 $114 .45 sell for. $70. or best \\•Ill pay 5-10% more th8n Housebroken. llas Mots. Don Bowman ,;;..'-"..;,.:,.______ oUer. 842-lliOJ. lop S payers. Eves. 545-5070 * 536-1757 * 252 Knox St. e SURPLUS BUIT.DL~G MATERIAL . lOOO's of NEW Miscellaneous 818 ORIENTAL Ru.gs._ Pri. -pty 2 FEr.1ALE, 1 male mixed Costa Mesa ITEMS! Doors, lumber, ply. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; will pay cash far all sizes. Collie/Shepherd. 7 weeks wood, aium sheeting. mold· • 644-:"1326. old. To gd hon1e 847-8229 GIGANTIC PARKING !VATE p WH !TE c k ing, \Vindow!i:, etc. PR ARTY o c ·a· po o. BUILDERS SURPLUS LOT SALE • . . . \Vishcs to purchase old Loveable. to good horilc. You are the \\inner of one free pass ' 2406 So. ~lain st., S.A. crystal or glass. 842-2427 Call 544-8554. _ Mon thl'U Sat 10·5 • Furniture. Appliances, Musical ln.struments 122 MALE pup 11 nio, full I:.'l"rl, 714 : 546-1032 clothing; Toys, House-hsel>rkn, smat't, fantastic Good for a whole carload lo any of th£' PACIFIC THEATRES ;, 5930 \V. Coast Hwy.~ N,B, Cameras & l\'arcs, Bikes, Lamps, SELl'lfER Tenor Saxophone. pct, fuoving 543-.9155. (Subject to small .service Curtains, Mo\vers, & \Vllh case & access. Like . chllrge at theatre). \VAITRESS. exper. over 21. Equipment 808 Clean &: Neat. Some split --''--'-------shifts. Apply Egg & Ale, 8 ~Il\1 moV\e • ca m e r a 641HJ120. (regular) , w/case tlctten Plants. new. $600 or oiler, 645-4334 RARE S1apurllco ki ttens, (6 Please· call'642-5678 ext. 314 aft 3pm. \Vks). See at 706 Avocado, lo claim your ticket. (North \\1AITRESS. exper, over 21, clean & neat. Some· split proj. $75 Call 642-8014 alter 5PM , 810 shifts. Apply Egg & Ale, Furniture ~641}.S~~IID;,,,::-~-=~-,.I \VAITRESSES -Food & l.10VING rwtuit sen -Qualily living rn1 & den furn, tables, \\'llSh<'r & dryer & Save to 80°!. Better Than Tho Sw•p Moel Fri/Sat & Sun GRANT'S Cocktail expcr. only. Sid's Blue Beet, 673-9904. \VANTED PART TIME HELP In Fabric Dept. A-Jomings & Afternoons Apply In Person THE "'llm'ER CO 2300 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa. An Equ8l Oppty .Employ('t \VANTED waitress. Apply .ill person Mon-Wed. LA Well Rettaurant,"2106 w. Ooeu. front, NB \VIG Styll!t.s -Exper. $2 -$2.50 hr. 5al + Bonus. 78Xl Edliiger, Hunt Bch. WHO WANTS TO \VORK? DRIVE A CAB! CHOOSE your houn,. \Wri< for youneU, be your own bou; Men or \\'Om(!n. C.n 11< sllihUy handlcaoPed. Ne a t-Oean Appearance. Vts, retired. Age :n to 70. SupplcnM!nt your Income. Drive. a cab 6 hrs or more a day. Apply ln pcnon, Yellow CAb Co., 186 E. 16th SI., Colta Mesa. llttt a lltUt ''IOOl" 1n your ~ll u-bo•hlH lor "bucks". Cal! Cl1Ss!lled 642-!6'7!1, Brookhurst at Adams Huntington Beach misc. 355 Vlsla Baya, NB I ""'""'"~"'""'""'""'""'"~ 646-2'1f.O aft S::JO. LAWN Mowc'Cr, nc1v, 1 21• 3 • Snnppcr. omn1ereia , SHAG Carpet, top quality, HP. $150. Call 894-3610 aft 7 used but xlnt cond 140 yrds pm. gold, 40 ><Td5 blue. Bro,vn DBLE bed, new iM. Dresser steel * desk. Whl lg ctlSI $l5. 2 bed tables $2 ea. se<:tlonal Pri pty. 6'15-53ll ahl 4 hi '·ck Dining nn t e, ., .... * • 3 Pc. Gold Couch Chair• $30, w..c. S57-282S. Excellent Condition. $'1S. • W4l32 * * * SOFA & Loveseat, never used. both for $155. 968-7910, usually home. MOVING t.fake offer -tf.'O 7' Celedon green tofas 64~. PRIVATE 'Plrty n1ust S(>lJ near new Ii~ nn It den furn. Rt:uonable 847-Q!02 REDECORATING Furn ., 1Mlps, f\IP. 1.'IC. Must go. Appral~ 979-3522. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AD FOR ACTION ••• CALL 642·567B NAILS ·ll pllt, cracked broken? Want long beautiful nails all Ute time! 64U263. BEIGE brocade, sofa bed. $30 Stow, 4 bllrnor. 1:11. 548-9465 after 6 pm. f.STATE SALE: NaturN autumn haze mJnk 11tolc, perfect cond. 552-9115 afl 6. CHERRYWOOD din t b I • chra, typewriter, nnl' thain, gla.sswatt, bikes 675-1917 POOL T ABL'.E -Llkc nC\V, Regulation size. 67*:>-0310 or S48-TI97 USED BICYCLES Afl Typo1 * &li.m:I * Cut!om Pool T oblo1 $4j8. Cal! Dody 857.000'J l2" OTSC under. lJorit. metnl band aaw, J>O'oW!r lawn edaer. ~ . · • CdM, or call 6'T:>--n10. County toll·free numl>U is · Offic.-Furniture/ LOVEABLE Labrador pup. 2 540-tzmJ. · ~ "~ Equip, 824 mos. TG good home. Ca11 19• RHODES day sailer, fir. FOR sale otfice turn: & 548-fillB. ed Keel, 3 hp outboard. AH equip: Secretarlal & ex· 68.f~l;y qeulp. XlnL ~ ecutive d e s k s , IBM 1 [[E $1350. 968-3707 - typewriters, calculatars, ""w..,... "-' CATAMARAN B-Llon, aJl elc. Finn moving inlo . . 1' alum & fbrgls. 20' Jong, 32' smaller quarters. W I 11 q mast. Sll75 firm. Complete. sacrifice, Suite 101, .1617 Xlnt cond ... 66-7091 eves. \VestcliU _Dr., Newport Pets, General 150 13%' LONESTAR with Beach 645-0101 trail r LI ' d ..::;:::.:;::c;~="""~---DAL~IATION pUps AKC e · Ce n s ~ & ANSAPHON~ \vith remote shots, ~\cal fish, birds: registcrid'7?. $600. 847~Z7 control. 1 st ill l!nder war· talking p&JTOts, Abyssinian CAL ~ sailboat No. 625. ranty. . ,~ Pr~. I B; M k'ittl'l1 SG 4924401 49241610 ·Good cond. Newport moor-typcwnter, chairs, fihng ' ~ ' ing. $3200. 642-4178 cabinets. 673-2429. Dogs 154 LIDO 14 I II \ \ -l . • , Thursday, April 12, 11113 DAILY PILOT ~3 ~-l~I ,l§J "1§1 ~ [ ~ lfiJ I _ .... ]§] I ..... ,,. .. r'!I I -----.. [~-Me )§J I -·-_,_)~ I ~ Autos tor Salt ' ~~Pt /Docks '" ··•• H, . .,,. Van. 963 Autos, lmporroa _!!J ~-· Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 f'utoJ, UMd 990 W~ 3r~~"°boa" t .uP: Sile/R :nt l 940 "11 FORD VAN -DATSUN TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC FORD 99o Autos, U1od 990 1;.;.;;.;..o.;~;;.;;;;;.._~~---1 CHEVROLET ,.. ~ 2'' ·J.:AVU'..I ni. VI, l"ff~· )(lnt cond. ---· ·• 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l -,,,. I . ' .. "'lER ~·••!If,. . " 67>-'MI DATSUN 1969 TOYOTA Corolla. Ma~ Chrl1\.n..... EL DO.RADOS 11 ·es crev Sedan. Air. Nu WANTED: slip for · 42 ' Z'r-22'1CQNTLNENTALS '6SOIEVY panel, 11.uto, good GoOO nditio $900 ·' 197 Ch I tlret. P /$, ·P1B. Below a&llboat. N.a area. 20' 1.at•l. I; JOYS cond. Privat& part)', $650 NEW 1973 call-613-1'9'11 . 133 TurquciiM l96'i to 1912 1 evro ., Whol('l&le Blue Book. ~ -, VAN CON .... l:~JJNS 673-4263 PICKUP lll66 TOYOTA LAND Balboa, Island -17 TO CHOOSE t,4onte Carlo-_,&1G-=3'.:.:1S::,. ____ ~-1 BOett, Speed & Ski 911 -h ' e Se1vlcc e Rentl1i' '66 V\V Bus. "u.ns good. $900 CRUISER -Cood cond. You :::::!~ of VPEs.C:.'ONVERTmu;s Showroom Condition-. '67 t'ORD Gonvertlble XL-'. 19111 Ev IN Ru * Danmar Inc. * JO)' Be" OUer. NO DOWN 11300. Call ""'· 892-0914. Good lor. Whole carloa< DE v·ILLES 3'•i'Cublc Inch D~placemcnt 500. Top ~'iid. $875. 84&.1323 Sporf:lman DE. l6' J:::1()1 llat·bor R!vd., G.G. • Call 673-4037 alt 6 P~t. $68.23 per n10. for '-' mo. to any of lhe 2 8nm'I Carbutttor t ..':•:..•·.::~::'JH169..:::::.:1..:•c.'~::•::.· ~-- •• 'drift, Bul'ck ~~ ~t-!lZl-&,1)0 '70 OODGE Van-Panelled, Def. payment prll..'t' $3273.00. TRIUMPH P'ICIFIC THEATRES 1966 to 1972 v.s Engifl€' ~ .R1-\N01ERO~ .Good COD-' - .Xlnt tamlly & "1d i,;i· . Next lo G.G. Datsun cork celling, crp'5. IL\00 o•· A.P.R. l<.34%. · 1•·--..,...-----K 34 TQ CHOOSE Pow" Stoerlng dit!oli. New,,,,,,_;.: FHptop tm. 833-2299 ~· OONDOR U69. Immac. 24'. be!lt offer. fi.16-7006 ri'f:=ort~']ii_.__~ ·72· TRIUMPH COUPES "°"""Bl'akes, D~ Frnnt $500. 54S--0297 14' MERLINE. Glass OVer 10 gal ps, TV ant., water Autos W1nted 961 ~ ww.ttUTI SPITFIRE <Subject to small service SEDANS AM-1'".?.1 Radio '10 11>-pass \vagon. Air, wood JO hp Joh I puritler, deluxe dr l v e r .~ 1000 w. C... tw-R di h . cha.rgt' at thcatrel. CO!l.'VERTIBLES Air Conditionini;:-P/scat, rack. Pertee!. l\1L&St bait • I d lrallnllOn, e tt + Mat., lined velvet drapes, \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR ~ NMpcst llwfl 6'5·!"6"1 a 0• eater, 4 speed stick, Please call 00-5678 ext. 314 Pitany ex cellf'Jtt colors Burket St'als ~·ith Console sell. Best otr. 841'~ cute 1 ~int ~ fast~ ~ rack trailer hitch & FOR TOP USED CARS -· rf100ft . condition .. 0 n I y 10 clahn ,your 1ickf'I. tNorth Choll'e of intf'riors Brand Nl"lv \\'hl!~\·o.11 Tire1 CONVERTIBLE. .69 XL. 557..6742. ' · more. Priced to aell ,by If )'OW' car is ex tra clean, '69 J?ATSUN ~10 Wagon FM ' PRm•llCes El<DlOAT<IODI, County t91l·lrte number Is ICloth & leatherl Blue Exterior loaded. Lo mileage, Xlnt owner . L f d 0 Jal e . see us first. radio, good tires, low mµes, _..,,. __ 1m=',.,· =;-;;:=<"""-fac1ory o.ir rondltionlng Black Vinyl Inle.rlor 1 1 850 ·-2668 n4/673-7123 BAVER BUICK exc .. cond. thru-out. See It at SUIT! '69 VW BUG Full poWt>r. Ololce o!: Showroom Condition ~rond:::.:::.· .!1=::.· .:-=-==---1 ------- • NE\V 26, 25, 23' Lifetimes. ""'-1a2925M•saHarbor mv:&,.2500 AJl16. 3-1th St., No. B. Ask for Radio, heatl'r, new tires. 4 ~ICrt"O Al\f/F'~1 radio $2295 GREMUN Pl l.Ull " "'"" peed · k If lk · Ct'UiS<' control Below \Vhoh."SaJr Blue Book 1--,_;.,_;. _____ I ush, 1ully equtp'd. F1nt ":..IRICll=A• __ , s • Stic sh I, I (' -· class rnoto,rhomes. IMPORTS \VM'TED •n DATSUN PICK UP ~· -. .~• -.J brand new condition, a very lnink oprncr & n\Ore -St..¥ o.t 19TI GREJ\1WN ··x" I.__~ '-'-_ __JJ[i] Aller 5 8J8.-0511 Ornnge Q>unty's Air, Ml/FM, wide tires · ..... i} .s.r..w special price. CXUKR60l. All in in1n1aeulatc rondi!lon DAILY PILOT F.~1'a.o.\"EE $1650. Air. C S I u T II T 945 TOP$ BUYER Best offer· above low book. 21DDHirtiorlh<lca.-.. MS·l440 DON'T MISS THIS Ulfl:'t>st scl&·!ion in PARKING LOT 89-1-2276 -~lpa~~ ,!{ ~~~1t )'I.I ra t~, _!!!el BllJ. MAXEY TOYOTA ** 49&-4123 ** '70 TR.ru SP It tire• ' . $900 Orange Coun1y 330 West Bay, Cosla l\fe-so. MAVERICK KING o' !he ROAD T com· FOR the small car 12' 18881 Beach Blv :. FIAT Oean, 0 mileage. Orig Nabers Cadillac or -1c. P $995 13' Fl I H 0 ·1ch Ph 841 ~"" ,~ kd .~~~~~~]j!;!j!B ,1•~1IORlZED DE.'LER Call P..llUltRr<'! Grttnman pact, •w im. (4) 8', (2) 9\1' apoose • ed 4 · uo • ·°"""" owner.· -uvuv w ay1, aft Ii• Ala~,,..~'\ ..,, " • ,.,., 1~1 •70 11 00 1 1--• u• l s-$11'5 N -5 w-~•. -•·aild U---: ~ -·-1 '''""'11.·\RBOl!B! .. , u-i..;;··.;i..; • * arco · auo ~-~..... se f contained model. Sco .... -=am ., • ew '" 11' '48-'49 UNRESTORED MG. ·~ FIAT 124 Sport Spyder. · 11:W11.e•N;t a.y. · .w. ~"-..,-...,-·~COST -"!1!!!!11!!1!!!!!!11!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!! J P/S, 32.000 nil. nu brakes.' Cam~persSaI& S~I.!:· 1.1esa F. tsm1an w/toallllet M$1495. Askfor Suzanneonly. Actual 21,000 n1l; 5 •peed, 1968TriumphSpitfire-4 ---~ w·-A :'11J::S,.\ '!! lf90ll tin•s, dC'luxe interioc. ' per es, ~ Harbor inane ng av . e 1 a * 642-1999. * mags, raidals, di.Sc brakes. Xlnt cond. 0:>11Vertible. 5I0-9100 01>1·11 Sundny '& $llJXI. 644-l480. ---- Blvd., C.M. 646-4002. Camper Sales, :m6 Harbor JUNK CARS WANTED A-tint concl. $1850. 64&-Q;49 to mile,.-. 6441H11.., 170 vw Pop Top. 1 O\\'OOr. Nu '& -Blvd CM 646-«m -~ ~· "ffi r.·IAVERJCI{ .A 'C, auto.,• lft ·SIX Pac·cabover, Import '• · · · I pa,y top $$ !or 'JW)k or ·n FIAT 124 Spider convt. tires, n1il<'ngc 2'2,~. S2.450. • · • t"ad\o, dl'hLX<', C>xcellent con· truck size, stove s.ink., 22' GOLDEN _ Falcon. Comp wrecked car.;. 7l41547-4365. Burg. wttan int. 23,'000 mi VOLKSWAGll:N &1J...1.Jil 1\·eekdt1ys S-1:30. difion, lo rni . 49-1.2985 loebox, boot, aleep.s 4, like self contalnt'd. All extras. •P..1ust sac. 637-3809 or ll!i Othf'r ti111o:.'S ~-0035. new. $650. or consider trade l2300. 6'&-4017 Autos, Imported 970 >l&-8640 <t9 vw s Q u ARE BA c K VOLVO Chevrolet · Ole' MERCURY for tent trailer. 496-4123 TENT trailer made for com-e THE FINEST IN '69 FIAT 850 COUPE_ Low autom., It. blue 49M nii'. _____ _,.._ SOMET.fflNG BIG }-01· rl quick trip across the ---------1 &:.. CAMPER,• Cab high, fits pact car, v.'O~ as prize S12SO. USED IMPORTS • mileage. CherTy. Good cond. $1250. ; offer. VOLVO SALE .I A •67 Cadil!nc 1''IN'f\\'Ood. bo1-dcr or just about any-'70 MERC ?.lnrquis P/S, Chev. or Ford. A bargain at Value sell $950. 58&-4787 e THE FINEST IN , After 6_, 546-5506, -~;;-;;""l_c_v_•·.,--.,--~ Big Car. Bi~g{-r VaJur. IO '''here you'll find this '6S P/DB. AIC. A1'1/l<':-.1 radk> $50. Ph: 561-0696 art 6 pm. 18' BREEZE Sips 6, toUet, IMPORT SERVICE e 68 FIAT 850. Cou ..... New '.72 VW bu!'I. air cond, am/fn> HUGE SAVINGS DAY FRi:E TRI,\!. EX· Caml'ro just right. 10 DAY & tpe player.· Vinyl top. bow l ~ ~!ANGE. l'R>:E TRl•IL EXCHANGE. SO~'I lx>ll"' rn•lia1$. Xlnl '61 FORD converted super s er, etc, Ike nu. $2000. brakes & tires. Good con-stereo, xlnt; cone!, best o(. ..,,-GUSTAFSON I Pvt 847 3.16.1 ·van. Good tire•, eng. lo ml, 5.16--3518 or 213 -1163-1008 Do yourseU a favor and com• dltion. $600. 644-0631. !er. 64H018 GUSTAFSON co"'· pty. ' - I ·--I oo• --·-... firs! o-n Tu•• -..,,..~'-:'---=~~ OVER 30 '"°-MERCURY w·~n. Pwr, owner, """"' ent. ...__, ....... ..a • .,.. • '66 Fiat 1500 Convertible 1966 V\V Bug. Xlnt cond. Unc In Mere <» '""'v '69 Auto Chev. Sundial and Thur.;. '" 9• Sat-Sun = Sunroof & Low Mlle...,. Uncoln-Mercury 0 • ury •" Good cond. $295. Camper Sales, 2036 Harbor Autos forS. II~ J ti! 5• 673-9119 alter 5 pm $800 or best oUer. 644-7442. PRICED AT 16800 &>ach nl \Vanier 16800 B~ach at \Varner 644-Sl7S 1'0l"llni cabana. M&-9853. ~-----~~;: (1!1 Pel 'E.AAI AUTD) JAGUAR 1966 VOLKSWAGEN, very Hunlington Ron<·h Huntington lkaoh MUSTANG " -(wl!A<a) -clean, runs good. PRE-DOLLAR 842-1144 * 1213) 592-5544 842-'844 * (213) 592-5544 --------1 ._ySccles,t Bikes, -· AntiqUH/l:IHslcs 953 __ .,.,,__ .... .., 1970 XKE 2 + 2.4 spd, air, $600. ~. DEVALUATION "H-• of the Viking" "Home of the Vlkll\t" '66 MUSTANG v.s. 3 •.-I ' 00 eri F~ BMW wire whls, 21,000 ml, xlnt '61 VOLKSWAGEN, good ~ & '61 Cadillacs. CHRYSLER stick, R&ll, new glass J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; FORD PU TRUCK, oond, ,$3500/oUer. 548-23.JJ body, needs engine, $75. Call PRICE$! Priv owner. · Make offer. bE'lted hatircs., ne\Vt brnkr'i' ·UIDI rv '35, good cond. $950. ,Call ---.. ~-· ·-· ·------·-·I or 557-S062 ask for Mr. Miu. 847-7268, We make overseas deliveries ____ 842-637_~6 ___ :73 NE\VPORT Custom. p/s ~~. efr.,o~sCal~Y~~ ~ ~I DAVIDSON 837--0463. • LEASE A MAZDA 19'11'=-"'su"'PE'°'R'°"Bee~U-e ""AM"'"'·F=M s.. It. You'll Bey It CHEVROLET plb, a\r rond, vinyl top. ,,....-R-roatlonal radio, Jo miles, xlnt cond, 1\ I ..... ! .. Many extras, 6,000 ml. OF WESTMINSTER Yehl I 956 1973 e•vARI· 1---.---1 $1490., 496--0125. . lUfall i.auia ., ~Call btw. 1!'"'"·7pm __ PL_Y_M_O_UT_H.......-.1, c n K K * Mozda 73 Rotary * '67 vw, Xlnt oond. 1600 eng, -YOLYQ ~-, '60 CllRYSLER Sta Wag. BEST OF I RENT a Sundial Van Camp. $66 MONTH Buying Van , must sell. 9306 Bolsa, Westminster 531-6440 893-6274 TUMdey thru Saturday· er only 110.95 plus 6c per CREVIER BMW 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE 833--0434, 646--0467 ~ilph~,':;1a11i75~~,,oo, BOTH WORLDS , mile, by the day, week, or Sales . Service . Leasing \Viii accept trade-ins .67 BLACK VW v gd l.9El6 H bo C !ti 646-9303 monlh. Reserve yours Today 208 \V, 1st SI., Santa Ana CALL l\fR. FRY 842-6666 condition. moo~ be:t~tter. . -ar r. .. . . -GONTINENTAL \1l'l'Y hord to f\nct 1971 Ply~ MIKE McCARTHY 835-3171 Hunt. Beach rn-:mo. 1962 VOLVO $145 FAST IMPA!..A moulh GTX lw<Ury/sporta John's Racing Cycles BUIC.K Vlalt our new home! '''S2~V\'°N°"'Tran,--,-.. -,t'"e-, -p.,.io""ku-Jp, 673-!508 Fa~t('r Iha.~ !he jungle en~, t 9 6 7 COl"o'TINENTi\L-Cftoy model. 440 C.I.D. Jooded * BUL TACO * BEACH BL..VD. AT 0 MAZDA yell°"' ext. nins good. Call Autos, Used 990 this Is a 67. ChcyY Impala, w/blk vinyl IOfl. Air + wlth air, j)O\\'f'r bro.kes ~ HEADQUARTERS FOR THE SAN DIEGO FR\VY. Sl~599G aft. 6 Pl\f. a.JI czooled with a~r. to ?AY s~ereo + all extras. 4 dr. steering, AM/F'l\1 ste , 89-1-3341 BUICK FRF-E TRIAL EXCHANGE. Xlnt cond. Ne\\· lil"l'S, l'll'w and mon!. $3100 or bett. DESERT, Moro x, TI =~==='=--'68 vw, _ .•. ___ .. -····---GUSTAFSON brake•. $1050. 642-~t97 o!fer. Mu" sell last -call 1 • Accessories. '71. OATS~ P.U., air, auto, new , eng, tires. $92'5. now _ 67>1527 alter 6. "Harbor at WU.On, C.M. fM1FM, w e tire., with 11331 Beach Bl. 842·666 Call 837--0463. '1!,JUICK Sp., '{6, 2 dr, Uneoln-Mercury 1963 CONTINENTAL, lull PONTIAC . RIC-KMAN" 646-0 2428 ~bove~wca~~r. ~ixee:~~ ROY CARVER, Inc. GOOD DEALI ··"'""vw"==-"JOn=-'t'"oo'-nd~.~N~e-w-re-b"'lt ~· ~·stee~. = 1saoo Beach at \Varner ::. ~: ~~z~nt, ·euoo ---------I H DAKA Ice box, 1ink, stove, boot, 23' E. 17th St. Dk. Gm. RX-2 rotary coupe, eng. AM/FM. Mu.st sell. 963·5244. Jluntington ~ach .67 FlREBJRD, ·good o:m.1 Xlnt't cond. Race ready. step bumper. 496-1123. Costa Mesa 546-1444 lo. mlleago, radio, beater, 11095. 96Ml4S. 1965 BUICK El-tra ronv., 142-1144 * (2131592-5544 CORVAIR I ~ 7 •-u.... M -----____ _, rad"' 4 n , .. hi In ...... _ '"'" Ar, prv, p I, new .... _, ....... ..,. xtra.s. ake oHer. ..,., J EEP CJ 5 ··--" uus, sp .J>Vl.lg """"'-'· 1969 VW Camper. A-1 con-be•t oUe•. ''H""'9 of the Viki~" $1100/'·t otr. "" ·-» ' 644-2694 after 7 pm '"' -' never....,,.,.., CAPRI 1911, $2495. Price includes: diHon. Priced to sell' • ··• ·~ Cotvaiti-•·'-Xlrl .. 't cond. '-'="-"-"-'"'"-'--'-'-='--' V-8, P/S, P/8, lD'' gates; ca'.? cover. Ph. 837~. 6'13-563:1; eves·m--0728 . 3000 KIIJybrook Ln., C.M. MARVELOUS hunk of junk ,.,.....,,. PRIVATE party '6& Ven~ '71 Husky mud&: snow tires. Yellow. ---ii::-'7---1~~---'----1971 Skyla.rk-OutBtandtrc for thole care-tree days carpe!S e!C. SW. Call 2DR'r/h air aulo vtnyl top 400 Cross M1 = ~now. 646-4187 ~· eves. · '65 VW ~UG. :,s ~ cond. Fully equl~. Pit a h ead ! Chevy SI a. ~64:.:5--::..;:I028'=='==~=--extras $1145 54()...8588_ ·~ )<lnl Extra<. $125. 61S.l.l34 ' eves. MERCEDES BENZ lnterios'iso ·~ s pty. Wkdys alt 5, 616-3347. Wgn.Trans. work needed. COUGAR '10 Gro C.nvl. Full .pwr. '68 HONDA Chopper, many Sports, R•ce, Roda 959 • work . 79 '69 BUICK SPECIAL ~1548 after 5 32,000 actual mi's. Sl~ Grt acceu::>riei, make offer. 50 OSE. D 'ii8 VW Fastback, good cond. $ll00 • '68 CHEVY Impala wagon, 1970-XR7-P/s, P/b, auto, oUcr. ~. 548-5913. 22TT Maple No. B, HOT 'N B.ebit eng. • &12-9309 • new paint, leather int, jmt ·landau, leather, adj strg. .62 BONNEVIU.E Sta woe·. CM" NASTY BRAND NEW MERCEDES 673-1441 ·n RIVERIA Exec. auto, tuned, $995. 892-2966 aft 6, $2400. Prl pty, 642-1413. Now paint & tires. a ... ;:,, KAWASAKI Endurn 175 Otl . -. tio 19 '73 CAPRI ON DISPLAY ·~vwl9~ -n~ ~tires lmmac cone!, Full -er. ·~all day weekn<bo. Auto, air, ·-. ~DOPGE good. $185. 543-5971. xln't cond. 1425 or o1r. '6ti: t o1 ~:;._,• n 440 ····-• s1n26A111b c°' ss,ooo ml. $2850. 96S-1896 RAMBLER Hood& 90 $125. 646-m3 •f:!!X'o P~ .. ,....lh ·• GTX. lmmediote Delivery Sharp New Car ---. Apt. . ' ,. , . • ffl party, 45,~ ·n DODGE VAN. ·Xlnt cond. ---. 19nY~maho 125Mx , ;brolt,.m.;.d ~~\;''.™~ GUSTAFSON Trade,ln's TIME FOR CAl;>l,LlAC · ::.-,· cond. lltiUU. Auto. Irans., custom con. •62 RAMBLER Xlnt cond. 673-7518 a'ft ~ pi"" st c r eo muIU;J.ex1 Lincoln-Mercury Coming In Every D•y ,64 CHEVY El ,..,_ veniOfl. lee box, rold n\vny Runs Gd .. StlD/bet ofl' SUZUK1 00 1700 miles 8 'viny1 top and more. Must Ask About Our Unique 1 * '69 CONV. DE yn.LE * • \.,;amino, bed, C11binc1s. shag erpt. Call &6--02!13. • speed full ·kit better than sell fast S3lOO or best offer. ]6.Wwi~~~~:\~~er U1ed Mercedts LNN QUICK CA·SH ~. S:~is:J 11orM!pp~nl~ ~~t i=ieJ:'~ 1:1U::: ~8~1=~:~ =·0:1:r. '68 AMERJCAN 1vagon, gooc1' """· 54;.o52~, Ph. 675-1527 aller 6. 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544 Pia"' . see .!4i-3042 !er. >11).3509 oondltlon. $650. Call 552-39119 ~~. aa;~r:?"r~J:-'1. ~!~~ 8~~ ~It~ ~mp~.ki~i·3; ''Home of th. Viking'' House of Imports THROUGH· A ·ss CADULAC epe de Ville ';?.nn~t~~r~ cond. ""'"·ss~.=Dodge~"7M'",,,-.. -,.~soo,,....-T·llRD .cond. $295 4~ ... ,.,,, ma.cs on rear. 1500 e)1gine . '71 CAPRI 6862 Manchester, Buena Park: 17,cm ml on nu eng. Mln't ~Call 58&-392'1 aft 5 Xlnt cond· Calli Glen aft' 5 ~·~~rHg~~: ~ ~~ *j _.,,~'r:::~:;:,.· Xln",=1...:544-=3'1='·:.__·~96=2 4=· e~~~e~ri~~ ap. the ~7sAna F""7 DAIL y PILOT .. ~r~~~~=~ .... \filiE.,~=· .,.55='f'--~-~-.;.,-· belle~._~R""-,.,·' ·~a1r:l!.:n~O:~".° auto, .~m, rn-s;~ 1~:0!=°'":r~·:::r~~ 'i: 642-8171 * ' : ·'65 £HEVY * ton campe; =~p/0"''· 10'v mileage. MG ·wANT AD lthr Int. $1950. 894-4455 499-3624 ~ ccnlly restored. Xlnt cond.1 (TWO} '72 Honda CB75G-4.1 8....,..ial w/8~' Ho I ida y SPECIALLY PRICED days; ~1907 ,eves. • , '67 IMPALA, P/S, PIB, air 289 196,04.,f'P.aRutDo-.t'WXSTOlnt '00 1 nd. $2500. 544-6316. Maroon & gold. Lo mileage. c;:~er Camper $12 o o . FO · MUST seU-teavtng atate '66 ,64 CAD Cpe de Ville. Xlnl cond., radio w/reu spkr, $300. Can 968--842.5 FOR sale ... l9&t T-Blrd Like nu. aft 6pm -545-Z322 54~ from 8 to 5: aft 5, YOUR I Md.!::"'~n~t1•~1e"'vehs. <;<>ndwkellltlllnd. 642 5678 cond. $700. or· best offer. Or must sell. 962-2012 aft 1 pm. '63 Ford Sta -lull pwr -$350. l..ADlES' Raleigh Super" ==~,:::::cl·=~~---• ~ "N "" 1 • trade for picku p. 492-4868. 1962 IMPALA $100 'ovtrload lprl~s.' real good call 968-8153 ~ bike. Xlnt cond. $00. ·n DATSUN P.U, New tires. r-· ;\ 1---------Sell idle Items ... 642·5678 645-0672 ruhncr. $250. 968-4660 llB ClnMlfled,Ad. 642-5671. Call 507.-alt 6 ~'.!.,..300nd. 11395. Firm. IF' IFICI04i!AN fU'°' MGB . Autos New 910 A. utos, N-910 Autos, N-910 '.Auteo, N-910 Auto&, N-9IO SCHWINN ,VARSITY girla' ;:nxr<)IU • ,.... (\Nlb;!ai, .s-..rc. ------'---• -lkpeed. Like brand new. '72 FORD Ranchero. All ZIOO ~a..d. c-"'-Ms·"°'° '69 MGB GT, am/bn. radio, ·l'15. Call 833-2800 ifO(ldies everything heavy D TSUN wire wheels Pirelli tires, '51 -<S Harley Da.nchon duty. Call 642-<!245 A Xlnl cond. $l!IOO. 61S-Oi87 cboppor for sale or trade for '59 FORD P.U. •72 PICKUP / lb OPEL van. Ask for Pit, 545--0368 $375 CASH ' • a c, r • 675-6261 match. shell. Lg miITOl'!l,1---------1 '86 BULTACO a:IO dirt bike, • • step up bumper. Aft 5, 1970 OPEL Kadelte wagon - Looks good and runs good! V1ns 963 536-7722 102 HP, new tires. Good fl,95. Call "Pat" 549-2625 _;....;._____ nd $ll00 833-8802 ~ Sho-'e Van . '72 24£Yl, lo milf!I, xb'al, co · · GIRl.S Sch,.;nn Stingray '" I PORSCHE bike $25. 2912 Comb St. ', Fully Factory c ean. Below blue book. ~-u•·p~ ,·nclu"·· 4 spd, •4~92-S007'::!'!~"'~'~6~p~m~·~~~-l -:--::-:-:-:::--::----I ~La.Stblutf, NB 644-1140 ~ ......,'6 .-:. 1 ..:=~~c7:"7-7.C--· K radio and aux J e a 1 19n 240-Z. NEW Radials, 1961 PORSCHE SupU 90 HODAKA 90 ('I'GQ153V511281). FULL clean. Must sell. Eves Roads!er. Silver, Must sell, ~$195~-~~~C~al~l~962'!:·~3 ~I PRICE $299!). We will fi. 645-8243, days 675...4690 Only $1800. Call wkdays on. YAMAHA 80, xlnt ocnd, dirt no.nee and trade. '72 240Z $4,880. Lime, auto, ly. 833-3362 ask for Steve or street, extras:. Call aft. 6, MIKE McCARTHY ' air, mag am/fin 8 tr stereo. '60 PORSCHE Carrera, 54M64J. BUICK & more. Pri. 557.0168. ~ $2300. Must see to ap- '70 CB 350. Honda. $350. or BEACH BLVD. AT " * '66 DATSUN * preciate .. Aft 6, 67J..OOXI. best oUer. Xlnl oond. TIIE SAN D!<:GO FRWY. Eng. good oond. N.OOs body RENAULT 968-6787 89f·3341 work. ~57 Motor Homes :n DODGE VAN. Xlnt cond. '"12 DATSUN 240 Z, mab, '59 RENAULT Good shape, S•Je/Rent 940 Auto. trans., . custom con-am/fm, perfect cond. $3800. $140 or ofter. 1_.;;.;.;..o, ______ I vel'!llon, Ice , b9xf fold away , Pvt pty. 494-6133. . aft 6, 494-6624 bed, cablne!B, shag crpt. '69 DATSUN Wag Chrm SIMCA 1 Rent A Motor Home for your V1c1tlon ,. •* 531-4800 * FM stereo/!Bpe declc. Mag wh1s, tape dk. New·cllitCb Ir: rims, new tires, $3300 or of. tires· $lint --· 1---------1 fer. ~ . ,..,.,, SIMCA . '70 Waaon. New 24' PACE ARROW. Ready :b' Easter week. '"Fully !equip. Low rates 552-7896 l<eed a "Pad": ,Place an ad! ---· " I ~DODGE VAN '70 DATSUN P/U w/Perria tires $600. Leaving, mult Pa.telled. New tires ·_ v.s. =-$lOOJ. or best Offer. sell. Call: 644-1456 aft. 8. $3250. * 494--0322 s.u the otd stuff. Bey the SUNBEAM Need a "Pad"? Place .rn ad! ne"· stuff. '67 SUNBEAM AlJ>INE BEST OFFER 531-fil42 TOYOTA '13 Corolla TOYOTA SALE! ~own Payment $5$.53 .PER MONTH (. KEa1-'96005 i $59.53 per mo. for 48 mos., total de.t. pmt. price $2857.44 A.P.R. 14.29~ 0 .A.C. 'n O.monstr•tor MARK II SEDAN Auton1 " ritdio, factory 111lr, w . side 1,·al.lsf 376EYV. See. It • You'! Buy It DwtltADi& -TOYOTA lJl66 llaz1>or, C.M. 646-93QI A good want ad is a good L'l-_,..nt. • ' - ••••• •.), c!r!E~E!E9' •••••• : REPEAT OFFER : ~ """ •••••••••••••••••• DON 'T Miss· YOU .CANNOT PAY MORE THAN. . . THE FOLLOWING CARS APPLY ONLY: I PINTOS -.MA VE RICKS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . . I THAT'S RIGHT FOLKS ••• $99 OVER DEALER INVOICE PLUS $90 DEALER PREPARATION, FACTORY RnENTION FEE, SALES TAX & LICENSE I ' • I l . I • • • • • • ---' ! I ' • I Tllursdoy,.Ap11 l2, 1973 DAll.Y PILOT \ ;·. ·B · . :-0 L ·v1N~G 'fB-· wnh down :pay1n:~n-waiver •B .A ., ; g . ~ea~~/:~ ., . ~ . / ·, · on a ~ew ~ar · e~er:! :~ ... !~?!~.s~R, ..... se·g f:. Your1 Now! · NO DOWN-24 MON ~ :~.~~!~!~~~;,, v:. sag ~ R•1•r¥• Your1 Now! NO DOWN-24 MONTHS '73 Le Mans $8·9 ...,. 2 Door H.T., A;r C.onditionng, · ~Mo. Autom1tic:, V-1. l,,,,..., Yo11r1 Now , NO DOWN-24 MONTHS NEW '73 VENTURAS AIR CONDITIONED RESERVE YOURS TODAY • • MANUFACTURER'S LIST PRICE $261070 Cost Cutter Discount $2249 12 . 4 .~ / .. Saves Cash Outlay. . Keeps monthly payments . low ;wtu~ earliillCJ .equity. . Puts you in a 11ew . car · every two vears. What kind of car will y~ be driving~ ')'Nr1 f~om' now? With R~lvlng Trade lack you can be driving a now car every 2 yoar• wltho"' ever making a down JN1Ymtnt, That's right, you'll M driving a new car In 1973, again In 1975, .,aln In 1m , and hev• one• making a down ,_,mant. H.,....1 the plan: start off with 1 brand ,... 1973 Pontiac. (Check todaY'• oum- pln.) Wo waive the down p1yment, you make only tho monthly ptyments. There'• no my1tery to Revolving Trade l ack. The monthly "payment.1 yOu make after 24 montht are dnlgMd to Hrn you no 1-.1 tha.n $50 calh '!CfUlty without ·-lnltlally tying up cath for a down JNIJm•nt. ThertfOla, when you trade Nck for a 1975 Ppntiac, Rt;• Ell1worth Pontiac Will pay you caah for your MnHICI 911ulty off•,,to pay Off your mas:lmum open end 1 .. ,. liability lffl any dMuction Yor eac ... mlle1 or reconditioning COits per Kelley Blue Book. ~ What about your pr"ent ~u? Wt wlll buy · it from you, pat_d for , V. oi>'-~glve you ca•h back fot yo ur equity or u .. It tO lower the • 1 RIYO ng Trade Back monthly payments. • . • . Y!,_• prtdlct that thou .. nc11 of Orante County lo~llff wlll soon dlKovt r th• ama1lng bene- fits It.evolving Trade Back. Hundr9d1 al- ,...dy val NEW '73 CATALINAS . AIR CONDITIONED _ RESERVE YOURS TODAY NEW ·SAFARI · WAGO AIR CONDITIONED RESERVE YOURS TODAY - • MANUFACTURER'S LIST PRICE $4141 99 MANUFACTURER'S LIST PRICE $351465 -· t Cost Cutter Discount s3 2 7 050 . Cost Cutter Discount $290491 EVERY USEP CAR SOLD.WITH 72 HOUR MONEY BACK GUARANTY '68 CHEVY CAMARO Auto,, P/S, R•d io, H,~t•r, luc:lc1t S••f1. lllSOTCI COST CUTTER '68 CADILLAC -DE VILLE Air conditioning, pow1r wil'ld ow1, AM /FM •ftr•o, power 1•1h, l1n· d•u top. IX0Bl411 ' -cosT CUTTER . '70 PLYM •. Roadrunner A ut o m • t I c tr1111ml1,tion, power st••ri119, powtr br•k••· ~l~lEFG) .COST CUTTER '67 THUNDERBIRD Air c:ortditioni"9· pow1r wil'Klowt, pwr. br•ktJ, •ulo. tr•111., l1nd1u top, pwr. 1ul1.. !TYN2761 COST CUTTER • .. '72 PLYMOUTH DUS~ER '70 PONTIAC GRAND;~RIX ILUI IOOI PllCI ILUE IOOK PllCE $1775 52965 A11tom1tic: tr•n1milrion, .•!r c:ond i· Air c:ondifioning, pow•r •t11ring, $995 tioning, pow•r 1t11rin9, r•dio & 52365 pow•r bt•lc•1, •utoifi•tic tr•n1mi•· h1•ltr. V1ry low mil1•9•. {921 -1ion, r•dio I h1•t1r. 1770ACll FWGI COST CUTTER COST CUTTER . ILUE IOOK PRICE '70 CAMARO ILUE IOOK PRICE '69 BONNEVILLE SZS40 A11lomatic: ~tr11n1mi1tion, r11d io & SZll 5 $1 740 he•t•i. power 1le•rin9, power ~915 Air conditioning,. 111!0. tr1n1.,_ V-1, br•k1I, buc:k~t 111t1. I091CBG I l1nd1u top. 1714BEH I_ COST CUTTER . COST CUTT~R ·· . \ ILUI 1001 PllCI s1t11 ' XE ILUE IOOK PllCI '68 OLDS 98 , Automatic: h •n1mi11ion, 1lr' c:ondi-·' 1365 tioning, l•'?t•u top, pow•r 1le•rin9, power br1,•1, p o w • r window1. ll65CTRI COSt CUTTER ILU·e: 1001 PllCI '70 CATALINA WAGON SI 170 ?70 Autom•tic: tr•n1mis1ion, pow• r 1t•ering, power brok11, lu991ge rick. !967BQJI COST CUTTER , SALES DEPT. OPEN 7 DAYS· 9 TO 9 - $2360 Air c:onditioning, pow•r windows, ~960 power 1e•t1, pow•t 1t•1ring, pow· •r br•k1s. l'.'.N'IS l 421 • COST CQJ.TER ILUI IOOK PRICI '71 DATSUN 510 $2605 ~905 St1tion W•9~11. Big .I: 1oomy for work ·or pl1y. t484CLKl COST CUTTER • I: .. WORTH ' POI AG • 801 : SOUTH ANAHEIM BLVD.,· ANAHEIM e 533°3121 • • • ' • ILUE 1001 PRICE $2545 ~945 I LUE IOOK PRICE $1 705 ·sao5 ILUE IOOI PllCI SIUO ~60 ... ILUE IOOK PRICE Sf"010 .~1610 7~.,~~~~"'~wi:!! ... -Sl 12 ..... P,qw1r St11ri119 , Power Oi1c: Br1k11, fAo. Turbo·M•tic:. '-''''"'' Your1 Now! NO DOWN-24 MONTHS '73 Grand AM's. . . ·sg g Air Conditioning, Turbo Hydr•·m•.,; , Per- tic:, r•c:linin9 •••ti, pow•r _1t••ri119, Mo. pow•r disc: br•••1 •. A•1•rV1 Y.our1 · · Now ! NO DOWN-24 MONTHS NEW '73 LE MANS AIR CONDITIONED • MANUFACTURER IST PRICE $311370 ~-. Cost Cutter Discolilrt . TRADE UP .TO 1971 . PICKUP CHEV.ROLE·T CHEYENNE AIR .·c()NDmONED V•8, · automatic tranlmission, power 5teerin9, , power bfak,1•; b'Uclcet leats, radio & heater . Very loW mil,a9e. (22382N I .. TRADE -FOR '217·5 : AND GET A FREE' COLOR 1Y That's l'fwllf, ttl7f II t~t lrldt flfftrtftft wllll Yltf "'"""' INS or newer trH•ln. l"ric:• wllllovl lrH•ln 12'7J. 7 I . • • VOL.laf>. N 02, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES _3JAN$1: COUtlTY, CALIF01NIA THURSDAY, APRIL 7 1-97 Irvi·n g.ndttti~n Denies~IY · . ill s. "" ... · By_..Gl!ORGE LEIDAL / Of .. --ptllt ..... Morning news accounts ~gg,.Ung the James IrVtne FoWldation would · begin se!llng its stock in the lriine Company as early as June were termed, ''.a falsehood" today by the foundatiOn'.s attorney. How8fd J. Privet\", Los Angeles at· tomey .for the 1t"ine Foundatio~ and its spokeapt{lll , 'durmg . recent bearings ,in Washiniltop D.C., derited he bad indicated Bugs Found Ort South Coa.st, Crop Peril ' ·The Western Jlhite ·_House · has been bu8ged, it was revea1ed today. rfot by e1ectrooic s p y i n g 'devices. . But by woolly wbiterues. And the Department of . 6.gricUltun is alarmed becii.iSe. the di.C.very of the tiny white plant· sucking peots marl<s the first ap- peorance· of the insects along the South Coast. The USDA regards the bugs as a threat lo the citrus crop. ' ~Uf& ion. would IS SOOD as 0 thia . summer" begin selUng shares of Irvfue Company sl<>ck. · "The Board of Directors of ·the James Irvine Foundation has initiated studies and: planning to realize 'the full market value of its holdings in lhe Irvine Com· pany,;. Privett confirriitd. Ho;wever. those studies and the pJannin& empba$ed, may result In a deci · to sell Irvine Company holdirigs at any time Pentagon: LivePOWs WASlilNGTON (UPI)" -'lbe Pentagon said today there are probably no more American prisoners alive anywhere in Indochina. -· witbih, the next six .years. 1 "There has been no decision b e board of the foundation tO · selling stock this summer. An that such a decision ha~n made is a falsehood," Rrivett declared. He a that the foundation has until 1 der terms of the Tax Refonn Act of 1969 ·to reduce-its holdings-·in the 1rvlne Comp:any froll); the present 54.5 percent level to the 20 percent. required · .. ' . ' y the federal law. Additionally, be explained, there are. c6urt actioni; pending in California which would in efrect be necessarily complete before any stock held by the foundation could be sold. A court suit filed by the foundation to change the trust instrument drawn by James Irvine is necessary, Privett said, before the stock may be Sold even though the feder;tlJaw llas ordered the sale. I • "Tl!O"°:U.s. Constil/llion protects ._.,h indentures or trust.,'' he explained. "Congress cannot violate the terms of a ptivate contract." James Irvine II, who died in 1947, set up the rowidation and gave it controlling interest in the Irvine Company. Despite the Tax Reform Act, Privett said, "Congress can't come along 30 years later and apply retroactively a law which' was not in. effect when the trust in· \ 7 1be tidbit of information came via AssoCialed Press, whose staff noticed the entry In the weekly "~rative ,EQ:momic Insect Bepqtl" f Dr. Roger Shields, 'bead of the Pen- tagon's prisoner of war tap. force, added th.ere is no evidenCe that any POWs had been executed in c,aptivity, with.t;IJree ex· .~- . The Document said tbe In-Those thi:ee were Ue<;Uted early In the festalim . first spretllj ~. \. . --• Alaliatiml fqr ·~ m<Ulio!I of I ~ anG JllW bill . lllOftd capbirod Y"Jlt cooi ~ acconlhi& The ~lion at La c.-sa lo t ~ V.iet ()mg amDlllCeDleDI al the Pacifica, Mi~~· report, ts "four ~. Pathet J;ao In ~ and the in- 1 nymphs per · surgmt forces m Cambodia will hopefully Pot Cache Found · In ·CRr Following High-speed Chase A 24-year<>ld , man who still muses tq tell officers bia address Jed ·border paliolmen on a high-speed chase into San Clemente Ibey said Wedneoday.J)efore he slammed into a stop sign. illlam M. Reynolds assertedly led the cen in the pursuit. after a .patrolman asked him to· pull over at the im· grallon checkpoint at San Onofre. Of. s .said Reynolds sped away instead ·' and ~ked the pursuit that reached speedS~excess of 100 miles per hour. . The cba8e eDded at El Camino Real and Avenida San Pablo when Reynolda lost cootrol of .his car 'and slammed Into the curbing, Ibey said. ~ Officers said Reynolds and ah unlden- tifiecl companion Bed on foot~.'lbe driver was captured but.hiS·passenger'escaped. In the trunk of Reyncilds' car P.l!Vl· men said they found. more .lban 300 pounds of marijuana. The uninjured driv· er and his illegal cargo were turned over to U.S. Customs Acents. . UCI f..oed Taken . . . From. Shoppin,% Center, Attacked A UC Irvine student was 'taped Wednesday · night by an unknown assailant who grabbed her as she return· ed to 'ber car !rQm shopping In tbe Tultln area, Otange County ;Sheriff's 'deputies said~· · 'lbe ~-yeaN>ld victim, a Santa Ana resident who works part time for a cater- ing company, told d.puties her attacker held a revolver to her head as she en· tered the car and then forced her to drive to a remote ll'P. She. told deputies she was ·111en raped and !Or<ied to participate in acts of: sex· ual J>eMrsliln before being compelled to / drive ber assailant back to their sartlng point. Deputies llid she described ber at- toeker ao being 24 to 25 years old, 175 pounds, and with short dark hair .cut In a military lashlon. Offtcers said the victim did not require medical treaqn<nt. Cocaine in Surfboard MEXICO CITY (AP) -Police have COl!lllCated 1lx pounda or cocaine at Mex· lco Ctty's airport, autbortU~s aald w.......,. provide more informatkm about the fate of the Americans missing In those coun- tries, Shields said, but . .'!we have no in- dication at th.ls moment that there are any Ainericaus: alive in Indochina.'' Rumors lhat there are hundreds of u·. s. leJ'Vicemen still held in Laotian prison. camps "do the families of the missing, a disservice,'' he said. The Pathet Lao and the Kh1ner Rouge, unlike the Viet Cong and the North Viet· namese, have not provided a list of men who died in captivity. "We do not consider there has been a complete accounting," Shields said. In Laos, 317 men were listed as. miss- ing and 1o_POW1 have been returned. AltnOSt all were airmen shot down. Many others were plucked from the ground by resclie helicopters before tbey could be captured, he said. Nixon, Advisers ·Meet on Worse ·A~ian Situation • ' . , • Dl.ILY Plf OT Slaff """' DEMONSTRA1:0R$ AT W~STERN 'WHITE HOUSE FOUND THE STAFF HAD GONE TO WASHINGTON Group,1 Pro'test ing Poverty Program Cutback; Looked at Ho rses And '--''·in Di1m11y . . . . . ,. . Dana Outfall ·to Be Aired I. Consulting Firms tiJ Explain Ocean Project Plai_is. ~ l • . .., , 1 __ • • • ' ..t• ., ~ I • I· • i • ConsµItiilg fil,:ns ,retainett '-to· conduct vironmental imW1ct statement;hich ~ill shar~'in.it~.~ •. : , ' ' •. plaQS'for _a rii8jor oceaµ• Outfall at Dana . be feqllired for ihe Outfall. ' . . The -a~cie8' Which .are members: Qf Point will sponsor 1ln informal session to The project -mandated for com· the org~nµatiQn .are the Moulton-Niguel expl~ the project to the.publ,iq early in pletion be£ore 1976 by. the ·state 's an-w.ate~ District, t~e Dana .Point ~tary May, tt was announced this week. tipollution agencies -woilld replace an O~str~c~, ·lh~ Capistrano Beac~ Sanitary The project, being undertaken by ouUall at Dana Poiot which has drawn D!str~ct, the ~ncho Marganta Water several waste treatment agencies banded considerable fire in recent years. D1str1ct, the c1hes of San Clemente ..and together · as the South East Regional The San Diego ·ma Regional Water San Ju~n Capistr~o ~nd the Santa Ana Recl(lmajion Authority {Serra ), will in-Quality Control Board has declared the Mountain Water Dtatr1ct., volve a major installation of a discharge outfall inadequate and has ordered it_~_ Several of th~ ~genc1es USt7 the cur~ . pipe which might be as long as two and replacement. r~nt outfall ..yhich lS 4,000 feet long and . one-half miles. Once it is completed, age~cie.s which dtSCharges · etflueot near the mouth or _Jay Latham, president of the·..SERRA are in the SJ!;RRA group· would be able to Dana H.arbor. board, said that the meeting May 3 will .be a vast departure from previous proj- ects because. the , public will become in- volved in the process 'Jong. before the WASHINGTON. (UPI) -Pre~ident regular publie<hearings are. held. Nixon "<11lled m his top military, The finn ol Lowry and Associates has Anne xation by Sa~ Juan Of Raney Site Denied 'dJplomatic and intelligence adviaers ,to-...·1·-:been bited to conduct studies relating. to day for coosultations on the worsen.mg the major oUifall whirl>.' would serve all situation in <;iunbocjia. Continued U.S. the wiste treabnent entities along the bombing the!' bas caused growing con-South orange cOast .. gn;iss1onal ~bjections. . Latham said that the session would be ~ Pres1~erit made an early .morning "vecy informal and neighborly, 11 It will bebcopter flight from Cam~ DaVId, In the be held at 7:30 p.m. in the San Juan wesie!'8 Maryl~d tllOl.l;tltainS where .an Capistrano council chambers. Annexation of the 21.4-acre Raney Pl'9P- erty to San Juan Capistrano was disap- proved by the Local Agency Formation Commission Wednesday. unaeucn~J sprm~· freeze ~ dunng. · "We'U have our engineers explain the his overnight visit, to the White House ~ project then we and the people from see bis personal.emissary to Cambodia Lowr. ' ill · and t with the National Security . Y ~ answer any ques~ions the The property '·iiJOCated on· the west side of Del Obispo Street north of Ca· mino Del AviOn in the west San Juan Capislrano area. c:ounclnre public nught have," Latham said. ' Gen. Alexander M. Haig, who made a Much ?£ the, information gathered from four-day on-tbe:acene inspection for the the session will be blended into the en· Prelident iri C8mbodia as well as visiting other key capitals ,In Soutlieast Asia, ar- rive)!,~ ·1n. Washington several ho.urs before "'ClawD and~ was on hand at the \Vlllte House when Nixon returned. Haig kept Nixon jlosted on bis findings th~t • bis vlSlt, .via cab I e d messages, bot the President wanted to bear quickly the newly elevated lour-star. ..,...-al's penoaal evaluation of the situation. A spokeoman for the Viet Cong safd In Parts, "We baft received reportl" thlf, bo<lked"by the United States, Sallon is ixepartng its troops, for 111 invulon of Cambodia." 'lbe spokesman, Ly Van Sau, added : "II Saigon carries out an open lnvuton or Cambodia to maasacre and plllap again the Cambodian -1atlons, It wtn create an extremely grave violation of lhe Viet- nam peace-accords.'' 7 ln a Senate speech Ibis morning, (See CAMBODIA, Pagt %) ' • • • Pomona College Dea n.-to Speak The city liad approved the annexation. Only one letter was received opp0sing the merger and no one appeared beCore the commission to speak against it. The property is owned by Dr. Aidan A. llaney and was to be developed 105.~ The dean of admissions for Pomona units per acre . by Christiansen and College will be the guest speaker at the ·-Associates . first college night to be spo"50red Joi-. The C.plsttanO Valley Genoral Plan students at Dana Hflls lll&ll Sc;hOol. 1 , , .... ,lot.not rlore'thal)13:1il)UliWper acre. 'lbe May 10 progrtml ~ ~ ·~ · · . · . , · ~. ·••-by J hn ""·inla ,......, • • ~• this area. • • · ' ClUW cao O ""' n, ~~ 1 • , , f!Clal, as well as talks by admhlsio • . The ;umexotiM was 1irSt p,.Pposell ;•P !leers l'rom other coll-, • December 1972 but withdlawn when It All pupils in grades 1d -and It and came before th< commission in January. parents....are welcome to the event. which • Commissioner Louis 1'Rtd" Reinhardt wtll llart at 7:811 p.m. in tlit, little moved approval of tbe acneution theater. Wednesday llut his motion did not receive Among the Issues to be dl9CUssed are a second. admissions requirements, costs for col.-"Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. a com- lege education, required tells and .Id· mission member. then moved denial and mission procedures. after discussion his moilon passed 4-1. • \.- • The letter opposi~g the annexation \Vas from Daniel P. Mitchell who owns an acre of property adjoining the Raney property on the north side. W alt~r Thatcher La.st Rites Held Funer3r services Were conducted in Newport Belich today for Walter R. Thatcher of Dana Point. Mr. Thatcher, a51 died Sunday in San Clemente General Hospital. Mr. Thatcher was a citrus packing foreman for many years and lived in Cllllfomia mQ.S,t of bia.dllc. , ' 1 lie, \eaves his widow, Holland Kincaid 11J.'bal!:h0r. of \ll<I bome.ati.1366t Big Sur; a · daughter. Tac1 Ann of SM l)iego; l 'IOll, Jolni l!ollpd Tbaicher of the home. and his mothcii, Mrs. Clyde Smith of Dana Point. Senilces were conduct~ at the graveside today in Pac1n.-v I e w Memorial .Park. I" Friends wbo wish may make con- tributions to . lbe Shriner'• Crippled 'Childreh's Hospital or the Otange County lleart. Association. · • .....___,, . st rument ,was drawn by Mr, Irvine . "It will t~ke a court decision to do that," Privett said. The foundation's su it filed in December, of , 1971 will be given a pretrial hearing ~1ay 9 in Los Angeles Superior Court, Privett sa id . If heard in June or July as ex~ted, the foundation might be·free or· p_reSent trust restrictions which prohibit · "piecemeal" sales Of the stock. Squabbles Eclipse ., I ' I • . I Iss ue s •• ~ • ~ By JORN VALTERZA Of fM "-'IY Piiot Sl•tf I Four dozen demonstrators from the In-: ner city of Los Angeles arrived at the • gates of the Western White House Wednesday, but their protest of poverty -· -- program cutbacks took a back seat to In-· - ternal squabbles. In fact, the demonstration which had been prepared . never really got of[ the ground. Most of the demonstrators grunted ~ their disappointment at !he area wbore : demonstritloili take place in Saa 11 Clemente. ~ , Others began arguing with their : leaders because only one newsman abow· ed up. Shortly after Ieav\ng their buses at about 1:30 p.m. several of the delegates pounced on Public Safety Director Cliffo.rd Murray and demanded to speak to a White House representatives. "There isii't anybody, there who could accommodate you," Murray said. l "What do )'OU mean?" asked one woman. "[. mean there isn 't anybody home. · They're all in Washington, all we hlive here today is a few guards,''' the 'chief I said. "Well we want a tour, then ," said another woman. 0 1 can't help you there, either," Mur· ray replied. 1 "They don1t give tours of the place." : At that point the demonstrators who ; had brought along placards urging Presi- dent Nixon to "rebuild our cities, not ! Hanoi" began piling the pickets into a 1 station wagon. · . The prime motivation for the ap-! pearance in San Clemente was the threat ! by the Nixon Administration to dismantle '. the Of lice of Economic Opportunity. ! That agency has administered the · model-cities program which would have meant about 5,000_ jobs i n the Los Angeles. ghettos, spokesmen said. ·Earlier in the day the demonstrators had m~ched. in downtown Los Angeles. ne~ tlie offices of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. "NQ.\V ,that was a demonstration,'; saJd one delegate in San Clemente. Eyeing the thoroughbred race horses .pastured near ' the western white house he added: "There ain't nothing here 1but lforses • and a couple of cops." · "We're leavin'." Or BlllJe· Hazy sunshine · on Friday, fol· 1owil)g early morning fog and low clouds along 'the coast. Highs of .78 · are ·expected in inland a r e a s. Beach temperatures of 68 are fore- cast. Overnight lows in the 50s. INSW E TODAY Catlty ~t,rphy has an unwual dog. Flossie, her 2-year-old Bos- ton bulldog, can do backflipt, skate, fetch and, 'Ult, talk. That's right. Atut if you dcm't believe .she can, tea jtl.!t tile B6Stoit_ac- ce11t confusing you. Ste sto111 on. Page JS.. •• • ' DAILY PILOT SC Tl\uf'id.ty, April 1?, 1973 . Health Pla:n · Unve·ie~-. . -'~ ~ ---\ I -· f . P<!._licy _tW ould B~ From 'Cradle · u> Gra1'e1 ,. ~ __, . IV~SHINGTON (AP) -A cradl .. to. rt<:OO>meoded ~ privai.ty lllllllCed ~tbl, said 'IJ-r Ii, pl>n ' grave national health insurance plan.~ study by .bultifW leaden and educa. would "Jlf'OVlde 1 ·blllc.-levt: of. medical l>!>rrowing Ideas both from organized Jlie'Oiiiim1tt .. for Eoooomic DeVtlcip. proledlGb tor~ ~ al a coot the "labor and the 'Vhile House, has been ent1 a nonprofit and nonpartl1111 nation can afford." -.. • -roat!' Lewd • ;NY Movie Theater Fined $1 00,000 • -•NEW YORK' (AP)-A midtown movie theater W'\5 fined $l00,000 • today for showing the movie "Deep Throat," which has been ruled • obscene. • Criminal Court Judge Joel Tyler sai d the fine, kvied against : Mature Enterprises, lnc., was "not excessive" and was "weJl within · the means of · defendants to pay and would accomplish the in lent" · of the state's obscenity statute. Th e !beater said it would appeal. ;. The 62-minute film, which· opened at \he New World Theater · ·June 12, was described in Tyler's March I rulin~ as a "nadir of dee· . ! adence." Tyler, .wh'o heard •!be case without a Jury, found the film • tc) be "indisputably obscene by any legal measurement." .'. The film has grossed nationwide more than $3.2 milliori. It was • confiscated by city police last August but the. theater was allowed to continue showing it during appeal proceedings. It netted $152,924 here. Fatal Search Veteran N·eW}lort Diver Found Dead Off Island A Newport Beach scuba diver with ::years of experience was fo~d drowned '9ff Catalina 1sland Wednesday night, after his companion cr:uised coastal . coves hunting_ him in the mis taken belief he swam ashore. The body of Barry Hoskin, 26, of 403 N. . Court Holds Up Obscenity Case .Of LA Paper By TOM BARLEY or IM D.lllY Plllt INn Obscenity charges tiled against the Los Angeles Star were held over . for one month today in a bid by Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Robert RickleS to combine the allegations into one court action along with fraud charges filed by tbe Pacific Telephone Company. "It would be much easier for all con- cerned if we can work things out this way," Judge Rickles told lawyers for both parties ... I'm going to hold both ac· tions over Wltll May 15 with that aim in vJew."" Judge .Rickles' action came while lawmen thro'Ughout the county were still seeking April 11 editions of the con- troversial Los Angeles journal. Fra ud charges stem from the allega- tion by District Attorney Cecil Hi~ that the periodical's operators permitted "an act of massive consumer fraud'' when tliey printed an art icle revealing the telephone company's credit card check- iug and logging system. Hicks blasted the article as "an open invitation to commit theft that could cost the telephone users in this area alone billions of collars." Obscenity charges that now seem likely lo join the fraud allegationa in the same court hearing were filed prior to the fraud counts but include Los Angeles Star Editor Paul Eberle in the Jong list of defendants. · Newport Blvd., was brought ashore at the island's Isthmus by the Bay Watch patrol vessel. Death was attributed to drowning, but Los. Angeles County S h e r i ( f 1 s in- vestigators are uncertain how the veteran diver got into fatal trouble. He was acknowledged to be a good diver, taught by his father Douglas and gran~father, Lyle, operators of Lyle Hoskin ·and Sons Water Sports 1220 w Coast Highway. ' · Sheriff's deputies said Hoskin and a companion, Bob Hart , 19, of 2200 Miner St., Costa Mesa, dove about 1 p:m. in 40- foot waters off Emerald Cove. They became separated beneath the surl~ce and about 45 minutes later,. in- veatJgators said, Hart returned to their boat and waited for Hoskin Flilally assuming he had ~wum ashore Hart fired up the craft and began_cruis'.. ing along shore searchlng for the.mlssing IDan. · 'He notified the Avalon Bay Watch crew about 4 p.m., and 2"2 hours later Hoskin's body was found drifting Jn 52 feet of water off Arrow Point. Berg on Board Of Oerks Unit San Clemente City Clerk Max Berg has been nominated to the board of directors o.f the new statewide City C1erks Associa-tion. , _ Berg is being considered for the spot a_fter the recent merger of two associa- tions representing clerks in the state Initially, separate assoc i at i ~ n s represented the north and south portions of California. Recently the two groups ·merged and reorganized. Berg had been active in the southern· association since 1956. The total membership of the blended groups is 350. A secret govenwent analysis of. the plan concludes it' ~·reflects quite clostly the Administration's bill" in the last Congress except in its extension or coverage to low-income childless families .and single persoos. The CED -arch and Policy Com- ·mittee's l051>&ge report, "Build~~ a Jf_a tional .Healtb-Oare. System," p~s a three-part program that ii.t sponsors say would take at least four years to im- plement. Employers would be required to pro- vide health insurance for all~ employes and tbtir families. Medicare would con- tinue to cover the elderly and disabled and the federal governrnent Would pro- vide coverage fof the poor. Israeli Trip:· Cunard Line . ' -. _To Pax.Extra SOUTIIAMPTON, England (·UPI) - Gunard lines today agreed to pay a "danger money" bonus of $125 to any crewman who sails the luxury liner Queen Elizabeth II to Israel Sunday with a load or 1,700 mostly American Jewish passengers. The Queen Elizabeth "would be an ob- vious target" for Arab guerrillas, a Cunard Line source said. A major ftecurity checkup from bow to stem was ordered for the-QE2. Officials of the shipp_ing line described the operation as one of the biggest ever mOW1ted in a peacetime British seaport since World War II. · Most of the passenger complement Sunday will be Anlerican Jews bound for Israel to help celebrate the Jewish state's 25th anniversary. Cunard began weeks ago taking no chances. Other crew members said a dozen armed security men in uniform rode the ship d_urlng-a-just-completed Caribbean cruise. The mw demanded "anger money" for the voyage to Israel. Omard today offered each man the bonus of SO pounds for the trip. "s&llrity ls . as tight as bell," said James l\Udnlck, 19, of Masaachusetls, son of !lie organiur of the trip. His father, Osca'r Rudnick, said, "We are well satisfied with security ar- rangements and we don't think there will be any threat from Arabs." Sabotage and explosives experts went aboard the liner early today. Cunard security officials said armed guards and bomb disposal experts would be on board when the ship sails Sunday. School Rec Programs ·.....-' Canceled Next Week Afl recrea tion programs sponsored by the Capistrano Unified School District will not take place through. next week, Spring Vacation. District officials said the closure will involve adult activities in the gym· nasiums at San Clemente and Dana Hills high schools. The Saturday music classes and modern dance-gymnastics programs also will be affected. The programs will . reswne after Ea ster. Also listed as defendants in both ac- tions are the High Class Publishi ng Com· pany · and "40 vending machines in Newport Mass Arrest Orange County." '.'.::.-:~ Amon g the 20 defendants named by the District Attorney's oufce in the fraud ac· tion are "Mart( the Lion" and "~ronimo Lightfeather.'' OlAM•I COAST SC DAILY PILOT Tiit Ortll!M Cotll DAILY PILOT, 'illlll wlllcll combl,,,.,, Ille Ntw1.Pra1, fa ""11111-"" llY ""' On onoe Co.it P1JOll11tlntl CM!peny, ,s,p., rite edlllom ,,.. pUblls~td. Mond•Y lhroug!I f'l'lcNv. #of" CCllll Mew, H.wpot1 a....:ti. Hilnt1119ton 8•1e1VFovn"1" v111er, 1..a9...,.. 8Mch. lrvlM/SoddlfOltk •rod Sen CltfMrlle/ S•n Julll Ceplilrine. A 1lngl1 regior.tl ldl!IOll II ptlt:lllll'*' S.llltd111 ft'ld Wnc:ilV-. f'-prl11d,.1 ll'olO!lfhl"ll Pll"I 11 11 U1 Wtll •• ., StTHI, c°''' A\eM, C.lllomll, f'»M. Rob1rt N. W11d PrMIG""I lt'ld PllOllt/ltr J1ck R. Cwrl1y V I«' l"r•IGtt1I lt'ld Gtllll't l M1111911" TJio11111 Ktt·t-U Editor Tiiom11 A. M~pJil11• M111111119 Editor Cfr1rl11 H . ~001 Rit..h11~ '· Nill Ai+l~nt MllllOl"'ll 1!1110!'1 s-et ........ OMce. J05 North El C1111lno R11I, t267Z --Cott• MtM: QI W•• 811 S!Ntl ,....,_,. &M<ll r mi Hewport 8ev1t¥1re "-'lllflOlt lffdl: 17'1S ... di ao.;1..,1ri;t. LlfllM s .. e111 m .,.,. .. , ,,_ Tll1fll111 1714, 642-4121 a 'fW A"-'t! .... 642·5671 S. a. .... Atl 0111•t••1: l1·11F • 492-4420 ~·· """ Or•not Coltt Nllilhfllf .. .:.,._ .. ,.. No -. 11or1ts. m1111n11om. _..... .,, WYfffl~ll '*'-"' ""' • • ,.,,._ wrn.ov1 91111Clll .,., ll'liUIM If ~ ......... =..:.-~::'::..rt,,~~ "::; ~I ... Nil N.IS ll'IOlllll!t-1 mlU~ ••IMtiMf0.61~. • ls 'Bal Week' Alive- And Early on Coast?. By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tlll Diiiy .. H•t Sllff Bal \\'.eek is apparently alive and well -and getting off to an early start in Newport Beach this year. The annual Easler vacation blowout got off to an atypical if premature start this morning as Newport Beach police arres ted 17 Riverside youths crammed into a second story duplex apartment in \Vest Ne wport. Police used a paddy wagon to transport tbe youths, all boys, to police head- quarters after. finding a cooler full of beer, a lid of marijuana, and a bottle· of pills in the apartment at 3308 W. Ocean -Front Officer JOhn Furrow said he came across the youths after picking up a juvenile wearing a backpack and walking on Balboa Boulevard near 42nd Street about 9 a.m. Furrow said he stopped the youth because he appeared to be a runaway. "He told us where he was staying and "''e went to the Ocean Fron t address to verify it," Furrow said. He said there he came upon the other youths "sleeping all over the place" on mattresses and sleeping bags. He said the marijuana and narcotics paraphernalia were lying around alorut \Yi!h other contraband. Furrow sala charges had not been flied against any of lhe youths, Including thn only adull , Clayton W. NetUeton , 18. " He said there was an "obvious viola- tion of the housing codes" and it ap- peared there w8s no adult supervi sion so I charges may include lack of parentaP- controJ. • Furrow said he did not know im- media tely who owned the duplex or which of the YO\l lhs bad rented it for the week. "They were just starting Eas ter vaca· ti~n," _Furrow noted, pointing out that Riverside schools let out a Yt'eek earlier· than most others. Newport Beach police said today they ar~ still counting· on another relatively quiet Bal Wee)t, whic;h is the 'vay it has been In the past several years in sharp (!f)ntrast to a decade agp when youths streamed to Balboa by the thousands from all over the country. "But things have been picking up " o~rved ,Lt. Ed Cibbarelll , adjutant io Police Chier B. James Glav.aS. Cibbarelll said the department still in- tends to maintain nonnal shifts begin-ning Friday. "But if we can't handle It we ha;e plans ready to beef thln" up " Cibbarelli conceded. O" ' While the number of arre.sts and com- plaints about carousing youths still rise markedly during Eester week, police have managed to keep a comparativcly tight lid on lhe city the past four years and have not had tq call out extra of· flcers except for speCiJlc incidents. f •• .. • • • --·- FroMP,,.el 1 ~MBODfX.·.L __J -· ~ 1 OemocraUe Leader M Mansfield •. warned about rtllJl<)fS t South Viet· · • ....... ~mtilhl be used on one • nank ag,d-'l'tiAUand lroope on the other in • etfOtt(" to relieve the pre!sure· on !--'l~pecl CambodiaD i-. would be a most dangerous pr<> cedure and could have ~ poalblc effect ol once agaln involving this country 10 a quagmire because the support - Jogistlcal and othel')'ise -would come from the United States," Mansfield said. Cleans IJp World · Crane lifts unidentified fiberglass country back into place on. giant globe i.ust off Avenlda de la Carlotta in La~una Hills. A symbol for Rossmoor Corporation's Leisure World retirement community, -the globe was recently sand·blasted in a regular cleaning operation. The countries w~re reIDoved and cleaned in a gentler manner. A foun - tain, palm trees and other landscaping will soon be added in this world's domairi. Reporters Bit Agnew: Some Newsrne1i Take Sides WASHINGTON (AP) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew today struck out at journalists who take sides in news stories, saying the nation's news media seem to feel more and more they should control public reaCtion rather tbarl rep:lrt what happened. Agnew's ~etits were contained in the text of a speech, released here, in ad· vance of ·delivery at the "April Freedom Forum" of the National Educational Program at Harding College, Searcy, Ark. The speech was critical of so-called "advocacy reporting," a school of journalism in which a reporter takes sides on an issue ... _ 1'0nce journalists believed that their job was to report as much as possible what happened. Today, the view in- creasingly seems to be that the media should control the public reaction to wha t happened," Agnew said. Advocacy jouranlists, he said, act more as lawyers develop1ng briefs, than as report ers. France-N. Viet Ties "They ferret out and publicize prin· cipally those facts which support their own points of view -points of view which are · considered by them to be revealed truth and the only ones that should be presented to the AmericaD peo- ple," be sail:!. "It is advocacy journalism more than ,any other factor that has caused the cur- rent ill feeling between government of- ficials and the opinion-making lJledla," Agnew said. He identified opinion-making media as the television networks, wire services and "the large newspapers a n d magazines whi ch cover the nation and world with their own personnel." Saying the "idea of interference with the free flow of information to the American people, by government or anyone else, is repugnant to me ," Agnew claimed the Nixon administration wants to be fair with the press. He said there is right and wrong on both sides in the controversy between the media and the Administration, and called for "reasoned debate and communication between the parties" to reach a solution "or even an improvement." The White House-sought to indicate the meeting of the Security Coancll ..:ieom. posed of the highest Pentagon. State Department, Central lntellige-Oce Agency officials ~ weij as_Wb\ti House a~ was not a crisis meeting, .. yulg-4rh..i )Jeon long-scheduled. ~ ...-- However, Pt___..E'hn6m 'Penh, a crisis at~ mosp~~ P!'evaUed as more than 50 w~tern diplomats or their families, in· ~ludirig Anlericans, left the carnbodian capital in anticlp•Uon oran allout attack o·n the city by Communist forces. Despite more than five WO<ks of dally bombing. of Communist concentrations by American BS2s and other warplanes, the Pathet Lao, allegedly with support from North Vietnam, has blockaded the city. Meanwhile, fierce fighting w a s reported' the leng<h and breadth of South Vietnam today, e~n though the official cease-fire was halfway through its 11th week. . Radio Hanoi said today Viet Cong troops have warned peace-keeping teams to stay clear oi certain areas to &void ·~heart-breaking accidents" such as the one Satw'day in which nine men were killed when their helicopter was shot down in northernmost South Vietnam. South Vietnam said 139 Communist mortar shells from daw.n to midday to- day hit in and around the South Viet- namese ranger camp at Tong Le Chan, 50 miles north of Saigon. The spokesman said there were oo casU.alties. Fighting has been heavy there for six weeks. The spokesman said Communist troops Wednesday attacked Saigon Infantry and ranger troops in Quang Ngai province, 300 miles north of _Saigon. ' - Bone Discovery Not So Ancient VICTORVIU.E (UPI) -The bones that Debbie Hart brought to her high school anthropology class were ruit - of a long-dead Indian, or an ice age man bitten by a sabre tooth tiger. The deceased was apparenUy killed by some more modern means -like two bullels Jn the head. the San Bernardino County Coroner's office said Wednesday. A dog discovered the bones that Miss Hart brought to her school class - a skull, a jawbone and a 1egbone. Investigating deputies sakl the skull bore what appearep to be two bullet boles, and the bcnea, "deflnite)J human," were about two years old. Two New Employes For_Com·t Approved Two -Wlbudgeted positions for the South Orange County Municipal Court were ai>- proved ~y by the Board of Supervisors. Added were positions for a deputy clerk I and a deputy clerk Ill. The hiove was dictated by the appointment of a third judge to the court. The supervisors instructed the County Counsel to check on the advisability of bUllng the state for the added cost as a state-mandated pro-~ gram. Mexican in Moscow PARIS (AP) -France and North Viet- nam agreed today to full diplomatic rela- tions, with an exchange of ambassadors . Since the 1954 Indochina peace agree- ment, France and North Vietnam have maintained .commercial missions or general diplomatic delegations in the But he said the staffs of opinion-mak· ing news media have come to "think of themselves as representatives of the peo-MOSCOW (UPI) -President Luis pie and just as routinely to view the Echeverria of Mexioo arrived today for federal government as the enemies of the talks on how to improve his country's people. sm~Jl and dwindling trade with the Soviet "Now something seems very out of Union, and to seek a larger voice for joint about this. Does a man who works lesser powers in world affairs. Echever- for CBS represent the people'? Or does he ria flew in from Paris with his wife for a week-long visit to the Soviet Union fifth primarily represent CBS.'? stop on his world «iur. ' ~-~=====~~:::::::::~~~~ FOOD C ! MEET RISING other country's capital. FREEZE FOOD PRICES With This COMPACT 206 lb, Chen FREEZER 159'5 • r . - •'*""1111 •&7k. 1JF111F ......... ................. .,., ., ... "" ... .., __ ......... ---•'111111111 ........ ............. CA 12 or .. 11.1ci.tt. Member of 90 DAY Cellfornl1'1 L1rg11t CASH Cooper1tlva Buylnt 'w1iN Amoftt Group With Tho CllDIT M 'irASHCIATm Power of 110 Storti t.i••11t"" ~ Volume Buylnt ml ..... ",..... fQCZ _ 1815 NEWPORT BlYD. llowntown -Costa. Mesa -Phone 548·7788 .. . I . .:... l -- I f ' - )· I I I -r l t . I . . 1 \ I l I • r· ( I • . I ! I I ' ) I I _._. ~ ~ l!AltY PILOT SC Thursiloy, April 12. 1973 ~ Auto. M.a~ers Gripe ' . . In Spitt1 ~ H>elay DETROIT (UPI) -:....!l'be aut<> lndunry clalmsled'strin- 1ent 1975 auto emls!Jlon stand- anll oel-·by the Environ- -ta! ProtocUon A I e n c y donl let It out r .. m under in- leDJlve -to cut ponu.. tlon from · can. Ruct•bhaus, ldmlnlstra'f of 11andanl.! -one for calilomla the EPfi;. propooed' that only-lrith emllslon limits close lo cars sola In calllornla ln •)f/$ _tbooo comldered tbe tong.term be required -le> use calalyUc naUoniJ (Oil. and another for converters to meet emission the rest of the country, with •lanclanll!. tbe aptomalters say &0mewhat lower limits than the pollution contn>l devlcu California. General Motors Chairman Rlcbard C. Gersteoberg said he waa: "disaPPointed and dismayed." Ford chalnnan Henry Ford ll said further legal octlon might b e oeceuary becall!e of tbe EPA decision Wednesday. Both said their companies •till mlgbl not be able to · make It down to federal emission levels. New Shoes A ·l{azard? PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The Keystone Auto Club's safety dir~tor h.as urged a recall of women's plaUorm shoes, Saying they "could cause more highway. accidents than bald tires." Roy D. Hanshaw claims the "new platform shoes which the ladies are no\f buying · by the millions are probably the worst driving shoes ever created. Earings lJp At Wallichs .. Special lo tbe Daily Pilot HOLLYl\'.OOD -Walllchs Music & Entertainment C.O. Inc. reported Wednesaay revenues for the nine lDOllths ended Feb. 28 of 16,247,557 as compared to revenues or $6,120,161 IOI' the like period last year. Net operating income for the nine months was $104,272, or 9 cents per share, compared to net operating income before extraordinary item of $105,689 or 9 cents per share for the year earlier period. NO CURE FOR "TAX IITE FEYER" lty TERRY GRANT. R.Ph A very common ..ailment that almost everybody suf· fers from · at this time of year is "TAX BITE FEVER". It seems to reach its peak in mld·APril and then gradual· ly subside. Some people are able to avoid acute symp- toms of this chronic disease by making estimated pay· ments, taking out extra with· holding and by asking their physicians for something to keep them caJ m. At present there is no cure for '"I' AX BITE FEVER" and there Is none foreseen in the near fu ture. Fortunately it Is relatively short in duration Pnd has no real lasting ef· -YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US whc:n you need a delivery. \Ve wUI de- liver promptly without extra charge. A great many people rclv on us for their health neetis. We welcome requests for delivery s e r v t c e and charge accounts. PARK LIDO PHARMACY S51 Hospltal RoMI Ntwport le.ch 642·15'0 ,,... Delivery still may-be needed on· all cm. That could add '2111) lo f300. lo !be COii ol tbe 1971 modeli. Riickehbalis anoounced In Washlngton Wedneoday be bad a<ceded lo tbe D e I r o 11 autQmakers urgent plea to postpone application of tbe stringent 19'15 clean air , .. quirements for one year. He substituted two temporary Tel.ephone Customers Increasing SANTA MONICA (AP) - General Telepbooe Co. of California will add 48,000 new cuotomero and put about 100,000 additional telephones I n to service.during 1973, says the utility's president 0 Witb the general upturn In the economy, the California company already has added 18,000 "new customers this year and we exPect to have 30,000 more by December,'" It. Parker Sullivan.tOtd a meeting or preferred shareholders at the fitm's armual ~ing Wednesday. Including business customers, each subscriber a.v e r ages about three telephoJ.les, a G e n e r a I Telephone spokesman said. The company's commo n shares are owned by General . Telephone & Electronics Corp. of New York. G~al of Californii operates 2.7 million phones serVing ·r.g million customers primar ily in Southern California. Most of the south ' state territory is covered by the Bell System's Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. • SUlliv.an said General bad operating revenues last year of $517 rilillion, up $60 million from 1971 and a net income of $50 million, up $6 million from the pr~vious year. Last month, tbe firm applied lo tbe California Public UQI- iteies Qxnmis.!ion for a $59 mil· ion rate ·increue to meet rising costs of labor and materials. llClfl1IULI Q ITATQllMTOP COMOITIOM otAVCO'ftfN'1' • olfll clo• of blillneM on Dtotolblr:at, 1112 ....,. -' ..,.,. c•'"Offk*l.l.nk ....... '..1 .......................... ~····~ ... _0 :.._ 111ftft11111nt1 (Sito Footnatt No. 11 '"''''"'0 "·••••" 0 0 ' ""''''''' ta 157 "9CtlvUlt1: Loan1 ............... , ........................... ,. '°'107'u,,. Conuaote l Traff Accapttnea• .......... ............ I, -otMr Aeeal~lblal ............................... ,,. -o-t.'"4 l l 11lldfng1 {H1t -Anar O.pree\1Uon) , ....................... -o- f'llml!ll,. Fl-111,.., EQ11!pmant l LMltl!Old lmprovem1n1t , •1,... (N1t Aft1t DtpNeiilloll) , ... • ••• ""' ••••••• "''"" • •••••••:•••• Olfitr ,....t. ................................................... "63,"2 Tott! A..-.. , .. •··••• , ........................... ,,,,$37 T« 3AT _ UAllUnD AMO CA,ITAl. llRlllWI TMft Ctrtllltllll Uncll,1dl11g Actr\lld lfllllUI ThaNOn} ... $27,tOll,1" Acoow!tl PIYllbll l M!C:Nld l!ipen-o ••••" "'"''"''''''''''••• I 11.1, 179 lolfll a HotM Paylbl1 • ...... , •• •••••••••• ••• "' "'''''·'" ••••• i,.5~ .....,.... for Ooub\1111 Miooutlll .. ... ..... ••••••• ••• •••• ........... 1.-.,0I °""' ~ ... . . .. . . . ... ............ ... ... ............... 134.6',• ""'"""" Ct\lftll Oii Aec:ll\1lb ................... ••••••••••••••• IOl,O!I Olllf UllblHllM l """""' ISM fooincn. Ho, 2;I "••••••••••••••• !1.100 Total LllblHUll .................................... ,,,.m1•tt.03S CUITALNtoeullft.UI Cloftal atoet 1 •••••••.•••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••.•••••• , 1,000,000 tllttvlOrJ l Pl 6-1.-luipllll • o "• •" •" ••• oo • • ••·• •• • ••••·• "·'' •·••• ~7$,000 iltftld Surpl111 .............. .,.,,.,,, ................... , ........ ~:..- Total CtPltal I. lurpl111 ,., .................. , .. , •• ,,,.,1 S,,121..)Jl Total Ulbtl111 .. 1. c..,itt1 1oecouma ...................... m ?«,!:fr Opposes Fertilizer Barrer 0 K' d MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet• officials and Armand Hammer, chainnan of the Occidental Petroleum Corp., signed an '8 ttlllon ch emical fertiliUr con· tract loday lo be--1lzed over the next 20 years, olficlala repo~ · ~COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST • ' I I I -' . I PUBUo NOTICE . __ PU_au-:;:c:;;;N;;;-OTl_OB __ ._1 _ _,PtJBUC~~.NOftmCll~--i-----,:"',,:u~!l!'='c,,..,NOl'ICE==--I · M•¥1'• 1f ortla -----,~,.~-=.-,;,;,,.---1 ··--.-~ ,IC'fmout Mtflill •tc'T"nOW Mtlwnt ' ' • ....._ ... COUaT OP TWe ' IUfl•RtOla COU!tT Of' TMa --.. KAMI: STATl:M9WT NAN lfATllMlllT , STATS OP tAUPO•Un A Hit ITATI 0, CAUNllWIA NII ti. tllil)Orfrj/nt ,,.._ la dollle IMI,_. TM ~ ...,_ It ditll'lt IMI,_. fu t TMI ~,::rr.,:.OllANOI THI ~-r;.:,.ou.MI -:i 1si.M.ot~ Ol"'R, ......... Ml ~.f•lltTY IHln MITAL.;,. W, ves ors NO'nCa ~ 1''hJlll ... 0" AMaNOWD NOTICI 011' tHIAal"9 Oii' '-ITIYIOM A.._., """""-"" ee.dl. Cl. ,,..1 , ~ ltvd .. c .. 11 ...... n.21 • - fl'nTr10M flOll PltOIATI tW WILL flOJ: raOU.TI Ofl WIU. .D' NA MtlfY K.W"*"", Untt. -.... ltlcNlnl "'*"• MIM OirttY kt11 Or.. \ ... POil LlfTTl'lll TWITAMINTIJtY LITI'W"llfl Tlffa.MIWTMY (MINO Avt., h~llfh:lll IMcfl, Cf. f8'0 M\lf'I""""' e..ct1. c:.llf.,,... • .... of ANPlt(W "· lflATZll!lt. ••to WIYIO) L Thh au&!-I• cnumo .,. IWt "" Thlt ""' .... " Cl t =-llY • I~ • ~-A."· SJ'ATZIE-. 0.CM...S. RlJt ol iMIUOH A. Wt:DI L, G!vlckMI. + + -dl""'91. ; k HOTJca 11 Ht:ltllY OlVIN' ltl9' OfCNMd-H•rff ~"'""'"1' UMe ~ •kNN lllM On St' --.a.w.ton & Wlhofl. I~!-. hl1 ftlld NOTICE IS MllEBY GIVEN lt'lllt l'lrsl Tti/1 1ttt."*" -• '"'° .i1t1 fN C...... Thi• Jt•i"'*" .. fMM ~ ttlt CCIUfto ,' " oc hiA!ft t l'I ~ PIM!llon fgr f'r*i. et HtlfOMI lt_lllc of Orltlpl C~ty .... fll9d IY Clttll of Orellllt C0!.#11¥' Oii ~ ,.,, ty Clerll of 0rtfllt '*"'l'f' Oii Mlt(h •• ..win Mid tor I~ of Utt.rs ""'*" • pttlllon for pl'OMtt of W!O .. !'Id 1'73. -1m -T-~t•ry to n.omt1 I! JOMllOll and for l1iw•~ of Lltttfl T•lamt11ltl"I' t0 PMt2 ll'MIU. H""'91' wu-~ "to ~ ,. PtlltlOl'llf (fOIMI Wt1¥9CI) ~ tO 'Publlltltd or.,.. Coe1t Deby Piiot P'll'l:lllWod 0r...... CO.It o.n., t llol. "*"'for"'"'* PWflall,;rs,.,.., ""'the whldl 11 "''°' t0r flltnitr P1rt1cut1rs • .,_, Aprlt s. 1z. If, u. 1tn M).7) AprU.s. 12, If, it. 1m ,..n 11,.,. ..., pftcll\ et httrtno 1t1a sal'!lt "'' 111•1 lhl 11m1 •114 IJl11t• of l'lllllrl"' "."' i...n.., tor Ma., 1. 1m ,, •:oo •.m .. 111 ':""" ""'1'-""'torMt.,1• im. •1 t,oo PUBUC NOTICE _.,.,, .. C ~CE JIJ llYLVlA POBTER ~ c~ of ~rtmtflt No i of '·"'" 111 the cou~ of~ No.l----'--;;;;;;-"-----·1---~~:,:~-='.,'.~;:":::,::,_ __ j Mlill ~. ti M Clv1c C.nt ... • Orlve J of Mid CCll,lrt, ti 700 Civic: Ctnlrtt Orl.,.I Dnl a1t, l11 tht City of hnll Af11, Clllfor11\1, • W11t, lfl tilt City ot s.nft NII. Ca!Hwnla. PICTITIOUS IUJIMllS l'ICTITtoUS IUll ... U u )au.,. • typical llllall !n- l'lltor, 10'& .,_ve been "lffl careful -your oelectlooa of lf<>Cb than with your "")'Ing °'* Aflril 10, lm Dlltd Aprll 10. 1m MAM• f1'ATl~IMT NAMI STATIMINT ' WIU.IA.M E. It JOHN, WILLIAM E. SI JOHN.._ TIMI foCIOIWCllQI penon 11 dol119 butl-Tiit followllll ,.,_ IJ fOlnt ...... C...111Y <:terk _, County Clttll ~ J OHNSTON • WILION. INC. 'WILLIAM v. SCNMIDT, ai: MEOICAL SPEC1M.Tif!, Im Orloff ••:THE l"EIN .. ACTOltY ... ..,,.. .;, ll-..dl ...... * hi! MltWI IM... 0r1 ..... Cost• MIN, Clllf, tUH Pitz.I err ..... '9111a AM. C.IH. tf1\M ::~---~.'.t.~J:. $1111e"' :f .. ",!.-:,..~afl'9nllt ftlla c!.~'N....~[i;, ~ OtlOM ortv1, c!:~"::..~~~r::';i/,,.....,, INd.. ol -aD)'lblng elle"-ond you have relied "almolt 100 percart, lJ rd 100 .,..... Cll 1 .. 1 tn•1 ....... Tth (7141 ......,._ Thh b!.1111'1111 11 COl'ldllCtld "" '" In-Thi• Ml'*' I• ~ttd .., an '"' A...,.._.__._ ......... A'"""9Y fitr dlvl6u1I dlvldvtl. . tbe ..... --of your PubUllltd °'""" Cotlf Di lly P11of P'vtlll1111d OrlllOI Coe1t Dtll'( P'Uot $iw•I Macflr • lllldlltfd Mor1M1Y ~11~12. 13, 20, 1•n 1on·n AorH 12, 13, 20. 1m · imn Thti 111~1 wu 111• wttti ttoto COUl'I-Thi• •'•'"'*" -"""' wffll ""c°""" broker.'' ,., C111'11 of Or•not County Gn M•rcll ... Ty Cltrk °' °"'"" C...I'( °" Mllrdl 7, ~ PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE lf73. ~ ,.,... 1t1i. PUnt Pllbl1f!lllll Ot'll'IQ9 COl1" C.lly ft!IOI, itvbltthlcl Ottllfl' Cotlt O.lly Pilot NOTICI TO CllaDITOff NOTIC• Ofl' DlllOLUTION April 5 11. It u ltn t7t<n Matdt 2t and """1 •• lt. It. Im 11 .. n Yet, your -.,. (or res,lot.nd SUPl!llllOlll. ~OUltT DI' TH• Notte• I• 1111'~., 91ven our-111 to S-C-1_.:_c.:.,' ~-·-·-------1 ----~~.,.,.==----I sTAT• °" CAL•P0••1.t. 1'0tt ttOl'I 150).S.s o1 the c.r1for'll1 Corpor111on1 + p·UB·uc NOTICE ··~· Uve-~ ac-TH• COUNTY °" Olt.\MOI Codi "''' UNION IEALCO •• C•ll!Or11I• PUBIJC NOTICE N .. A·117U corpOrallOtl, •r.d Cl .. MEAD. INC., 111 ()fllo,l ___ :_=::;~:;:.:::.:::_ __ ,J·---;;;;;;;;;;;;., .. ;;; ... ---1 e111i. of EUIE KLE IN, ()l(H111d. corportllon, ""rttofor1 dolrlQ t1111l1111• .~1· • seen l'ICTITIOUS IUSINDS NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN to tlle 1>1rt""' ulldll' 11'11 llrrn fllrnt of SUPlllllH C:OU•T 0, THI NAMlf STAnMINT~ count execu- tive or what .. tRflt tlUe you use) la, In Ct'ldll-OI tlll above ntl'lllCI dtclldtlll CAllAllERO IND us TR I Al. P'll:OP. STA.Tl 01' CALl,OANIA ,0. TIMI tonoiw11111 ,,.,._, .,. do!l'll tlllt all Pll'IOlll lltVll'lt c11rmi agahu l tlMI IERT.IEl •I •uo C1bllltr0 1ou1 ... 1rd, TMI COUNTY 01' OltANOI b\ltllMIU •1: Mid dtUclerlt t ra racwltlld to tilt flllm, 8Ullllt P•rk C1llforfll1. haV. dl•loOlved N• A l'6Mf COLLECTOll'1 SHOWCAS!, t SJ Wllh tlMI ~lll/'Y voucw1. 111 tilt oft!CI IUCll Ptrttlll".hlp a• of ttll• d•I• trf mulull MOTICI! 01' "~ .... iMo OP PSTITION l.tllllll'lt LIM. Colla """" ..... of tM ti.wk of 1111 t bovl .-itltllld COUl'I, or coni.tnt, IY tllton of wc;h d!PO!utlon, 110 ,011 PIOIAT• 0,-Wll.l. AND POil M1ry E. ZltllnP;I, tS5 L•nlllnt lttll• to pttiMfll lhfll'I, wltto tlll lllC_.l"I' penon haa au!IK:lrlty to lflCUr lll'f oblltt· ITTllS TISTAMINTAIY Coe.II MIM '262' ID Jncndibly Noma VOUCl'lffl, to the U"°""1tntd al the office !lon• on bt111ll oft,_ former perlMrllllp, ~tltlt of MllDJlEO LEYVA Dlctt!llld, Vlr11l11l1 A. K~~:r:•::;, Tuttln Aw., of KU RLANDElll, SOLOMON AND HART, and Mllfltr OI ll!f' urideralfnld Wiii bl OT CE IS HEREBY Gl\tEN ttllll Nl'tfl'POl'I lltch, .... · larce percentage of caaes, ''not adequalely trained O< oulllclently knowledgeable to advise you on UM! in- vestment of yoo:r savtnss." He "lliinl>IY does oot ~ tbe conlldence you place-in him." AllorM"ft.•I L•w, 12:Sf LlflColn loul1v1rcl. l'ftPOlltibl• fw ·aft'/' dtbla. lltbllltlft or L!!,!MI St nborn "'' tlllld IMlriln i ·rwtltton Thi• blnln1t1 I\ condVclM b'f • '""*"'I $ant• Monie., C81Homillo, 1'o'llk:h •• 1111 lltlll91tlon1 lflCVf'l'lld undtr •uch firm for Probat1~of wm and tor l_.l'ICll ol parh'lll'~/P·1 1, ).' l(emplll" ' pl~ of bYll-°' rill vncllttlfftld 11'1 aW "'"" or bY an., PtftOll -or' Plf'llOM l.lltart T•l1mtnt1ry to tht ~111-Thi• 1,,r:.::.,., W., fflad wttt1 tM c- l'l)oltt ... 1 ptr11lt1lfllt 10 t11e "'''' ol wld 6prr1tlnt uncllf .. hi firm ntrnt 111 ... 11111 rlf•~• lo wllldl 11 mlde. for fl.lrlhlr 1 k Jt-0r --. Covn!Y on ~rt;h 21 clladlnt, within lour" motll'lt 1tt... 1111 date, rtlcultrt 1nd l!Ull Ille t1m1 1nd pltcl IY C Ir ,,,..... ' flrtl pW!lcotlon of thll llOflCI, Tiit 'tdd,.._ or flMi formtr 119rtntr1 :,' hffrlno Hi. Mf'ilo"Nit '-'! Ml for ""'p lfn. "'111 C.tld AMII 11, 1t73. ••• at follow•: 1973 1 t ·OO 1 1111 courtroom o1 1~ "' CONRAD LEI! KLl!'IN and Union ... 1co MS SOU!h FlollOl'OI 2" 'a . a.m., n Pllbtllllld 'Of'•• Coe .. 0. ., Pl • RICHARD DAVID KLEIN Slr"I Lot ... ~" C•llfor11I• ~11 DIP••tmtnl Ho. l ofw llldl (~·,·,,.,· ~ Marcll 2' •nd Aprils. 12, ,,, 1m w.n ' ' Ovlc COfli.f Drlv• "'' n ,.,. ... Co-P1tlllon.1 ot 1111 Wiii Clpm.Nd, lflC., C/O Smllll & klllllCkt, Santa AM Ctllfomll of Tiie 1bovt named dlel<ltnl T11t1ott T-. Dayton, Olllo .&s.m Dalld "P,.11 3 1tn · fl.JBUC NOTICE KUltU.NDllll. IOlOMON MID HA•T. Dtllldl M•rcll 30, ltn. w1u.1M\ E ST JOHN, 1W Ultctl• Mlilll't9"1. UNION lll!ALCO c--.. ,,.,.,· •1-mous IUSINIU MUCH OF THE advice on , ..... Mlllllc.. c11...,.;. I Y John J. Paltrmo. Pt'Mldlnl It " N•™• ... T~I J9Ml11 17M1tS CIP'MEAD, INC, iiii or.1111 A-T,_ to1.!nAM.,•=~=-bull_.1----PUB--UC--N-OTl--CE----, & .. _ _,;i .::1Vt e.htlfl.-,. ::.l.O:· ~OVMI\ Vite Prufdtftl '"" MIM. C•lll. nm Ill PublJlllMI Or1noo' Cot1t Oall't Piiot l"ubll•hld 'Ci-1no1 c091t Oalt'f P'lhit r~>:J::1~ IO&'S AUTO SUPPLY, lOltC ltk ... 1-------------·I Apt11 lt.1t,. and MtY :J. lm 101+.n Aj:lr11 12. tml 10l1·73 .. , ..... -.,.·~· -·-· c'011t Diii' Piiot St(.MI. CO.I•,,.., Ctll!Orl'll• 12'2' "tcTfTIOUS IUllNftti """ .. ...., v • .. ,. Robtrt Hloftdl.ly, S115 North Col.... NA.Ma STA1'1MIMT PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE April S, '' 12. lt13 ICIOe·7J A.....,.., com Meat, Ctllforftl• t:M» Tiit folloiwlflf P9l'IOlll 11'9 dolnt -Thi• WlllllM I• COl'ldllCi.d b'f •n In• bullnft:I ••: ::-::--:-:---:--:-:-:-Ai;v.~~Moi!TiOOiiOiDl--:--:---:--:-11--__!P~U~B~U~C~N~OTl~~CE:!~ .. '---I dlvk11111. CAttOL'S CARDS AND GIFTS. 11120 ADVllllTISIMINT ISOlll llDS lobat't Hlftdlty lrooktu,ll'rt, Founlalll Vttl..,, CA Notic. la MrllW ''"'" fhll tllt IOlrd OI' Tnntw of 1111 °'"' '°"""""'"' c.tl1119 SCP IJS Thi• 1t1t.,_1 WM fllld wlttt tht ~ Ltl'flf".rlCI Hllfh McCul11y, 1m Olllrlct of Drtngo '°""'"'' Mrtl11tfl9" ,.,...,. .... II "" "Owftlr," wllt ,.. .. va SUPfttOtt COUlllT °' THE ,., Cltrlr;. of or~ Cwn!Y on Marc;~ .. 11;,y1.,,. Pl .• POll'IOlll. CA 91761 UP tq, byt "°' llter tlltn 1:00 p.m. Ml't ... 1'12. ... 1111 bids for ""' aW9rd of STAT• 01' Ct.LllflOINIA "°" Im C1rol AM Mceuh.., ... 1571 ··~Pl.. • tM COlltr9CI for C-trucllon ot Tr .. Mid ll'ldllttl"I' Addition, GOiden Wllll Cotltat THll COUNTY O' OIAWOll !'MIN p-a. CA tl7'7 111 HUI'!~ IM(h, CtHIOrlll.I, hdl bid• 111111 be r.ctlvld In ttw offlc:1 of 11'11 Nt. A -J .. S2 Pubt!INd Ottl'IOt Coe•t t>.lly Piiat. Thll butJf'IHI 11 COlldUCtld by tn lr1- P11!"dlttlno "°'"'· In tile'°"" Comnwt1lf'f Coll• Dl•lr1cl Admlnl•tr•llon lulldlng, NOTtCI 0" H•AllNO o,-PITITIOll April J. 12. lt, 2', 1m ,.,,.73 cllvld111I. 13711 ...,.,,,, A~. COila' M .... Or ... Cout\ly, CallfOrril•, •nd •hall be GOtnld POil PlllOUT• 0, Will. AND l'Olll LAI.,,,._. H. MtCuUev and ouOtlcly r11d •loud 11 !!It al»vo 1lttw:I 11'"9 In 1111 IOlrd Room of tllo Ad-l.•TTlll Tl:ITAMIMTAlll'I' PUBUC NOTICE Thi• •l•t-f w11 lflld wlttt 1111 Coun· ml!llltrltloll lulldl111. -E11111 of ELEANOR R. $MITH, I'( Clerll of Or•noo c_,., on Aflrll ,, E•dl bid rrlllll Olll'ltOrtn Ind bt t•pot'l\IYI to thl1 l11vllallon, "" pl111S. tPeClllC•· ()l( .. lfd. "" 1m. llON, Ind Ill olltar dO(uft'llllll c;omprlllnt IN ptHinenT Col'llrtcf Docurn111ts. COpln NOTI CE IS HEllE~Y GIVEN ftltl PICTITIOUI l~UllNUI ..,...S OI th1 Cotltrtct Documtnti wl ll bl on Ille •llCI 01*t to puOllc lnullctlon In 1111 t1ld Mtrctlll lllobCfllOll Uovd lllt.!llld hffOln 1 NAM• STATIMIWT Publlshld O!'artOI COid D1HY Pllo off~ of the Qwnw, Ind 11141 .Vdlltect. WUlllm L. Pwalra AllOc:l• .... Urbtn111 ptllllon for Probll• ol wm tlld for Utlel'f Tiii lollowlr19 "'"°"' ar1 llloll'll Ap!'ll It.,,, 26, I ncl M•Y i. 1'73 liUt-1 Squtrt, M9CArlllur '°"'9v•n:I •t Ford A:Oldl C-ffl Mtr, In Mlcl Cou!l1Y and Tftl1mont•1T rot..-.nc1 to wtllcll 11 m9dl bl.Ill,... 411, St•t1 •nd ml't' 119 Obt•IMd •llor Aprll 11. m •I 1118 oHic. of 1he An:lllltcf b'f for _furthtr ptrtlcvlltf'I, Ind tt\91 tht 1111'11 K y iNVESTMENTS 1610 Wiii PUBLIC NOTICE dli'OIJlflll U0.00 for Heh "' of pl-Ind •l*lllullont. Tlllt. dtpl)flt wlU .. and pl1C1 of l)Hrl"t th• ·Mrnl ha• "'" c ; Hlahw•1 Sutt• ' E ,._, rlt\.lr!H:I on1., If Ille Ml Of' Ml• of COltlrK1 Docllfl'ltl'lt1 dlll-ld .,.. r.iwn.cl In wt for Aitrll 21, 1'13. •I t :OO a.m., 111 Ille 1~ Ctilfom I m.o ' · · --_., , l10l1d bOUnd icondltlon within flvt d•'l't 1tt.r Ille blcl optnlnt. e«irtrOOll'I of Dlftlrlmlnl No. ) ol Nkl tr1 T l(Ubl k. #AO l!I Tull Cir-PICTITtoUI I USllllSS E•ell &lei ll'itU .. meci. out on tht "Form ., PropoMI" bound In ..m ... of covl1. ,, 7llO Civic Ctnllr Drl .... Wat, In d c ,-Cll,lit11111 v-:..W Ctllfllml• ~ NA.Ml STAnMINT SPtelfk:tllont. . tlla City of Sift!• ""'· c1n1orn11. ~] Mrd L Voetl. 1nl Port HemWt Tiii followll'll ""°"' .... dolr11 E•ctt bid 111th b9 occemoenllld bV · • cwtlnid or celhl..,.• Clt9c* Plrebl• to llMI Dalld Aprll J, lt7) f ......,,... ...di Calltoml ""° bvll-••: OWl\w, or .. ttslaciol'y bid bond 111 ··-., ""' Owner, •tcut.d by ll'te llcldll" ~ WILLIAM E. II JOHN, -~~ ·:.....-. ti 11i11n9 cond~ ., • STANLEY l.Al'IDAlllY P'ltOOUCTS, •1 prlrtdp!ll t nd • lllllllCW't' .ur.i., com,.1111 •1 lllf'ef'f, lft In 1mo...it not 11M C-fY Cterll Glnertl P•rlNr'llllP. 51)3 SOUllt Or.itd A....nue, Stnta AM _ tlla11 tin pen:errt 11004) Of thl blcl. Tiit c1t«tc or blcl bond 111111 119 ti"*' 11 • llCMAlllD A. NEW•LL , c r1 T Kublltk t270S 11.11r1111H that 1111 aw ... w111 •ICVf• tht CorttrKI It II be awwcStll ,fo him In w.....,, ,.._..I I Tlt8tdtlr .,!rt.,.;. Jottph ~ubln, sn t.t Mont Dr!'l9, "°"tormlfY with Ille Contr1d Document• Ind Wiii pnwldl ""' tlll"9tY bond OI' bond• .., .............. HtMt .... Tiii ' '-' fli.d wllh Ille '°"""' Mon""Y Ptir1c •1 ll*lli.d th.,..ln wl!hln !In dl'fl ttt.' notlflcet1oit· of flit twtf\I ol !118 Ct111tr1ct N..,.., IMcfl, Cati .... ,_ ti.rk1 J ~_,.. Coun1Y on April l 1'13 Wtrr.n L. Htlnet, '12231 SlllllflCl'#OOll to t11a llddll". _ . · T•h cn41 ..,.... 1 Tl!wlM M W•na. Dtputy Couriti Ortve, Slflt• Ant mos 'Tiie OW'Mr ~ h pr/v1119f of rtllC!lflt lllY and .n bldl or 19 •11"9 lll'f .. ,..,._,. W .......... ,. __ O I" Piiot crtt"ll. ' Thl1 bl/SIMSS l• bolnt COllducl9d trf ·• ltr'911lari!Mt or ll'llorlNllll11 11'1 .,.., bid or In llMI bkkllnt. PublllMd Or•f!QI Coast • •Y ,..,. ptrtnennlp. Pw-nt to tlta lAlbol' CQda of tlMI $11119 .t Callfomlt, Soulhlm C..llfomlt eulldlnt AprJI S, '· It ltn IOJO.n 1'11&/l"*I Oranot COid o.l!Y Piiot Wtf'f«I l.. Htlnet' and COMINCIJon Tr.0. CC11,1ncl11, lulkllnt 91111 c-fn.ldlon TrNta COurtell of PUBUC NOTICE A"ll J. l2. 1, 24 Im 1012-73 Ttll1 11at-' ftMd WI"' IM CWrllY Or•• CO\lnly, ftte Nlcl lolrd Of Trwt-has ttnrlllf!ld ttte ..,....,, pr ... 1111111 ' Clerll of Ort!'IOI CC11,1t1ty on: April 6. 1173, r11a Of Pit dltm wa'" tor eldt cran or 1YPI Gf W'Ol'lllTlll't """'"° to •ecuto "'' PUBLIC NOTICE •r, Tlllr ... IA. W•nl• OlclUtY touf!IY owitrtd Wltidt wlll be •wal'lllld 1111' -1111 l>lddtrl Ind "'-8 pt"IVtlllftl ,.his NOTICI OP ClllWDITOltl , C .n_ . • ,. c;onhllnld In w ld NllClflc•I*-......, b'f·lill' Boenl, Ind •r• ill /111.i. IUPallOlll COURT 0 .. TM• ~'.... """" """ cl•11lfk:tllon not ,•nllclpefld Ind 11•11111 """ be pelcl •t th• Cll"""' ...,... STAT• 0 1' CALll'OlllNIA fl'Oll ,-ICTtfHWI I UllMlll --'fillDl1$1!1d o .... COltl C•lty Piiot, ratas kH' Ille applkllil• 1r1d1 aftd cl111lllullon In lffe(f Wltll till' •bov1 lfstM THI COUNTY 01' OllAN81 MN!d STATIM•NT Aprll 12, lt, "-1nd M8y 3, 1913 l00-73 Trldn Counclls. If an., r111S Ustld ''' 11111 c;Uf'rettl or Ira revlltd b't l1bor ,,,... No. A·7tl47 y ............ Thi followlllll Plrtol'I h dolnt bll1\ntaol~='-'--''-:..:;'---''------mllll• durl"t 1111 blcldllll 11'"9 or CONllVC'llon 111111, 111dt r ... 111or1s shill bl COit' Ert•I• of MARK C. FRANC • _,__ .. 1•: PUBLIC NOTICE sldetld • Plrt Of th• Ualld ,.,... Id. IL.ACKBIARD'S GAL.LEY, • 'so"-------==------APPllllNTICWlt Attention 11 dlr.ctod .. tM proyldol'I• °' l.lbor Cod9 $.C:llon NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN '° the .M1rtlnotile w • .,, N9'#P(ll'I B..cll '2..o I 1m.J coftcar111no M1p1Gy1111111 of 1pprtr1llctl. crtdltors of Ille •bov• 111mlld dtcldlfll °"""' Arms Inc,, Callfornlt . 1"2S m'l7 It ,..qu1,... c:on1 ... ctor1 or llllM:onlfK!Ort trnplo'flflf tTtOllmen In ltlY l pprenllc•bl• lill't "" Plfsonl MYlno d&lms ... INt the Venlur• llVd., EnclflO fl31' MOT'IC'll °' AVAIL.Alll.ITY occup1t\on to lppl'f to Ill• tppllClble tolnl a~lktitllfp eonvnlttw for • ctr• wld dl<;ldtlll •r• rlQulred lo flll ltllm"" • Thl1 1111tlrt11t 11 1>111'11 concluc:t.d by 1 Of' Alt~~ Al•=-C:I " "" tillClle of •pprov1l t nd tll!lnt th• ""''° of •ppr1ntlnl to lountlY'"tn UHd Ol'I with llM nec .... ry vouc:,,.,.s. In ,,.. c. c;orporttlon. l'ur-nt lo -'""°" _., 1 ·--1111 conlrtcl of the c1 ... k of !ht •bcrv• entltlld court, or Jotin snw 111iomal 11......-Codi. , ..... ee • ._ ..... contrlC'lor" ,n.y be r..irld to mtkl contrlbulllfl to ..,,,..,i1C111111111 JN'Oll"m&. lo '"""' ttwm. with Hie ,._.ry This •ltllmlftt ftlld wlttl tltl C-1Y t lVlfl thet-TM -I r8POrt for the Confrtctor •nd 1ubconlt•Clor• sllaU l llO c;omp/'f with kct!or\ tm .• In n.. wn; VOIKhwJ. tO 1111 ul'llllnl11Md al C/O Clll"k of or.,.. County-Ofl! Mlrdl 21, CalertdM' ..,... ,,,, of IN Wiili.,,. Lyon plOVl'l'lllll of ·~He•. -Rol;lerl c. Saflfllll", UM W•ldlff Drive, lfn. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY •fld MlrlMI L.yon l"Olll'ldltlOl'I. • lltl~•!• For lftformi!ltlon l'l'lltlvi to ~ttcllh]JI •t•nd9nl• confect Dll"ICIOI" of lndU.!rl•I Nt'llflOl1 a .. cn, C1lltorn!• "'60. Wl'llch I• CLERK, a., Ttllr'-M. W•rd, Dlput'f, toul!dallon, I• •v•ll•blt 11 the touncl.lfkill. • A:1ltllon1, Sin ,rtnelsco. Calll«nll or Ol~lion of ~llC11111P Sta!'!Olrdt brtnch Ille pl1ee of bUllltllSI of_ tht und.,.ltntd In "'111 pr'lnclpal lfflc8 for llllPICtlon dutll'ICI otflclt. •ti "''"'" Pfrl•lnlnt lo Tnl 9Slat1 of "Id l'lltllllhed ora,.. c o111t Din., Pllot • ....,.u11r bvll"'" llol>r'I tr:om t 1.m. 10 s It..,. ..., • ......,... -htlet• 11 lurid c11c1111nt, wllllln tour tnonttls •ftW !hi M.rrtt 2' and Aprll s. 12. lt, 1m M0-13 p.m. W •n't clllttn wtlO rtqutSIS II within TlllADI 0111 OCCUPATION 0""""'9 1ne11111n1 GrouP #1 Group IJ GrOUP #J Group 14 Group #S' Group ~6 Gl"O\lp #7 G""' .. Group .Jf Cllfllllllllor11 Car""11wr Tabl• Po....... li•w oP1r1tor Pnevrnatlc N•ll• or P-s11p11r Pllt Drlwr Forem111 Piii Drl'l9 M811 C11'11111t Mtllntt Ctn'leftt M9IOll (Mt ...... llt, M8fMt.11-- TtrTtDO tnd """le CO!T\POIJtlon, EllOllY Dtx.0-TtlC) C-1 Mt$0111 FIOlllllll Ind Tr'OWl'llnrg Mtd!lnt DPll"'lor Curb a. Gulltf' Mtc:lllne O,.rator Clary a. Slmlllr TYPI SCrlld 0Ptfator Grtndlnt Machlr19 O.,..ator (All l't'Pltl J1ck.lon Vlbr•!Orr' a. Slmllflr T\IPI Seta.I Optrttor Sc01'ino M1chlne 011tr11or Iron W•rti:tn• Relnforclno Iron wor11• Slructurtl Iron Worktr OmtlMl'llal lrwi Worker Fenc1 Er'9Ctor · l.tMrtn: AIPfl•ll lll1k1r, Lultrnlft •nd lrontt AipNitt $h0\lel1r Conc;ret1 Curer Conc;r111 krlldlnt for routh 1trlk1 ofl Ory PtdOnt of COIK,.11 Keflltmllr'I, Potrnen, etc. l abol'tr -0-•I or Con1lructlon Mtt.tl•I Hos1rn1n Mll!er-Tn1ck Chuteman Oper1tor ol Pr!eumttlc a. Eleclrlc Tools, Vlbnllllf MICf'llMS PIPI L.l.,.r P!Pt Lt,..rl B•cil"VP Min TtmPlf'I, 81rllo, W•Cklf Ind s1m111r Typt WfndOw Ctffntr El.c:lrlcltll: G-r•I f°""'9n F 01' 1!'11111 S(.lb.forln'lfl11 Cable •plktr • C1bl1 10o1lc1r for1m1n Javmrfmln Wlr.,,..n Jot.1rnevm111 t.cltrtlcl•n Cll'lllllld Weldat .... ~ GM.1111' L.llMl'fl L1llllr Mt""' Mh0nl1 M1ttll1 Mlllr M•rbl• Hl'Plr• P1lltt1rs1 "'"" er111tt. 1wtnt tt•oa Salld bla1t1rt $l'lffll roc:k •• ,., P.'"~ Pl" TrNet1 Plumbtr s1eam11111r "" ... _ U!ll!l'f i1111Hlin9 fortmln Ulllll'f pl.,..1111 fourney!Tllln Sewer a 110t1Tt dr1Jn f>lp1t1ytr AfC & RelrlgtrlllOn ll!!•t Plattll'ft"I P1111er1r ;:::~--=·· D•,.,,. w ... ,..,..., ... ~ ..... '"'"""" Fortm1n SUD4oremt11 __ , ,,.,,.. Mttlll $11fft mtltl wonttr • HMr lllM'ltcl p9Mitft VKlttln flr1t pUbllctllon ot lhlf llOllCI. · WI! dtYt •f+w lllt dl't Cll-Tiiis oubClc:ttlon. "'' 0111e1 AOl'll '· 1m PUBLIC NOTICE Thi foundll\on'1 prl11tlP1I offlco 11 "·" 7.27 1.51 ,.., 7.11 7.t l ... t.15 1.2s 16,75 6,9$ '"" 1.4 •• ... a '·'' ,,1, ,,16 '·'' ,.,. ... $1.ft.+21 I.I»+» e.i»+:io 7.tt+20 "·"' 5.$1$ J.MS "" 5.-195 '·"' S:'9S S.'9S S.'9$ ""' ..... S.115 J,tr)J 5.oltS SIO.fl t.tl ·~ 9,Jl ""' r.~ .. ~ •. ~ Sl.17 .... 1$.15$ •.3'J S6.n 7.11 7.U 7.4 1,.Q ... ,. '·" '·" 7.11 '·" '·"' '·" S7.49j 1.11$ '"" .... .... "·" a10..x t .21 7k "' 7k 7k 7k 1k "' 1k 1k '" '" "' '" "' "' "' "' "' "' "' '3<+o5 4 <+05 AJc+OJ O<+o.I "' "' "' "' "' "' "' Sk "' •k "' '" Sk "' -------- "' "' "' "' "' "' .ltS ,ltS Sl.20 '·" ... , ..,, ..,., '" ..,, '" '" '" "' "' fk "' fk "' •k "' '" "' .ctVt+25 .av.+2s a \ll+U .ctl'l+U Sl.10 . 1.10 1.1(! 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.10 I.I~ l ,10 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.10 1.10 --------· lk 1•~· 16"-16~ 1•·• I••• "~ SI.XI Sl,,S '"" "' "" .. SI.OS "' "" "" "" "' "" "" "" "' ·"' "' "' "' "' "' fitOBERT C. FRANCY. I~ ·II '2t VI• Lklo loud. Newport ~ Ex.tutor of t111 wlll Of .IMdl. c.1""'111• nMO . !I'll t bOVI 111m<ld daCl<llfll PICT'rTIOUS IUllN•SI TIMI prlnclpflt m1nager ot 11'11 follndal!Ol'I llOllltT C. 1.IMOITllll NAMI tTATIM8NT 11 Mr. Wllllam Lyon. 16olf W•lcUff Dr. Tlw lollowlno Plflllll I• dolfll tlllllneu K""""" ~I .. c ...... ., N......., 1~. CA nut 11: .t.c-t111t Tlh {7141 '6ftM BALD COW LEATHEA: SUPPLIES, 1• A....-If t1M sttn. s•te t1t AllOl'IM't IOI' I XKvtor 2" Wllt0n, Coll• MIN I.el A1191111, Ct lffenlltl tlN1 PubUlhld Or•l!Of C0111t D•ll't Pllol, Sflphlll PtlUtp LOlck, %71 Vlr11nla Pl., P'ublls.llad Or111111 Cotti D•l1't .. Hot. April 12. 19, 316. •llCI Ml't ), 1173 10n•n Cost• MKI, Call!. 92'21 A01'11 12. ltn 10f7·73 Th11 bUlltteU II COl'ldlldlcl b'f tn ln- dlvldu1I. PUBLIC N<'TICE SllPhln P. Lotek This ttl lmnlflf WIS fli.d with ftle Cou11·l-------------·I NOTICI TO CltlOITOll• .__ ot -c-M -21 fllCTlTtOUI IUSIUU IUP'llllfOlt COURT 01' THI ty c,..,. ""111111 on ll•.w• ' -NAMI ITATIMINT STATI Ofl CALll'OlllNIA lflOlt lfn. . nntt Tlll_follOWlflf ptnon I• dolnt Mlf'IHI THI cou.:::z...i':Irt OAAMel Pul:llllhld Or•noo Cont D111y Piiot, ••: If& MEDICAL SEii.ViCE, 5l5'J P'll*I E1t1te or TERESA KIMaAU. HAAT. Mareh2', Ind AOl'll J. l2. It, lf73 1156-73 DI' •• H1mn1191o11 8...:tl, C..llt. '2"9 PUBUC NOTICE 70c DICettld. Rabtrt 'L ~. ~ Pinon DI'., NOTICE IS HER EBY GIVEN to !Ill PUBLIC NOTICE Huntl;,gton 81ttch, C11lf, nut 70c cradll«• of tht tbova ntmtd dlcldtnt , Judy M. Goodl, JIS2 P1non Dr., Hun- lltlt 111 Pll'tol'll llaVlllf cltltl'll tplnlf lhl irlCTtTIOUS IUSINfll 11(Klton 8MC:ll, Caltl. tuct "' "' ttld d.c:ad.-il art requited to tilt thetn, NAM• STAT8M•NT Thi• bl.lllllftl 11 c;ondVc'-d W an In-' wllh lhl ntclWtrv voudlor•, In 1111 ofl1ct Tiii fotlowl111 Pinon 11 dolnO bUlllMU d1vldu.I. of Ille cltrk of !hi tbovt llr'lllllld c;out'I, or 11 : Robert L" Goodl 70c to prtslfll lhtm, with till' t1K•11ry PAUL-II.EV FILMS, .2090 l'ltcW1fl1, Tiiis •t•'-'"'"' w1• fllod with. !he Cau11· 70c voucti.n to 1111 un!l11"1llnld •I 1'17 cost• Mftl~ c .. '2627 , 1Y Cllrll of Onnril• CounlY on__Aprll '· Im W1t!tlllf' PrlVI) Sulll 209, Newioorl ~· P'aul ll:,~,lnkenblnd1t, 1051 '#. Wlltott, l'244A4 !Oc+5 Catlfornl• 92660 wtilcll I• the p\ICI of Ca&ta MIN, Ct. '2'27 Publl1hed or.tlQI COlft DtllY Pllof, soc+s bllllntS• of !ht ~lldtr•ltnlld 111 '" m1tt1r1 Tiii• bllfiftlU 11 c;oncluttlld bV •n I~ Aprll 12, lt, 2'. and M•'t :J. 1t1' 11)17.n 50c+5 P1rl•lnl119 10 11M Ht•tt of Mid dlc>ld~I, dlv1d11tl, .soc+s wlll'lln four months •ttw lhe flral fK'bllc:t-P•ul 11. Flnk.nblnd... PUBLIC NOTICE tlon of this llOllc• Thlt 111tem111t w1s flltd with tM Coun--------------! :IOe-'D•ted April 3, 1t7l. IV Clttk of' Or•• Count., on Mlrch 21, l'ICTITIOUS IUllNISS 3Dc John Hyd• Plltll!ps 19n. l'M111 N.t.Mll STAttMSNT ~ Extcutor of !tit "'''' of Pllbllmtd Or•-Cotti D11... Pllol The fol'-'"t ,.,..-. '"' dOlllll bull• ..,.. the •bova n1mld dlcldtnl ··•• •Y ' .,... ••r JOc SllDEl, ClllAIL & SllllR Mtrcl'I 2' Mid Aprtl S, lJ, lt, ltn 11»-n OltANGE COUNTY TOOi.. & :JOc 1'11 Wlllcllff Dr .. lull•,., ENGIN-EERING, ,. SUMn st., Slnt• 3k Newport IMC'll, Callf, mH PUBlJC NOTICE Ant. C1llf, :; T1li m4> MH4tf 5*64n Don•ld w. T~, 1'1" C•rlbol.I Attontt'l't for Wl!«illlor PICTITIOUI IUSINISS 51., Fount•ln Valle'f, C•HI. '27Dll PuDlllllld Or•• COit! 0111v Pltof -NAM• STATIMIMT Rontld w. S•nd .... , 22'5 ROMl1t Or •• Apl'll 12, 19, 2'. •ncl M•'t 3, lt7J 1070-73 The fl)tlowhtO ~ •111 dolnt bufl· /lul1ll'f011, C•llf. MSJ 11: Wtlltr W, Whl11, 11533 Kltnbroutll St .. BON 90N PAL.AC!, flt 9a'(lldo Dr., $1111111, Ctllf. LA, N~ letel'I. Clllf, ""2. • Tl!!• busfnou 11 conductld b't a ~ PUBUC NOTICE I SIN1 Wlllftm M. Cr•wtord. tlf 9a'(lldl Dr., .,., !MrfMnl'llP. NOTICI TO CftlDITOllS LA, Newport hlell. Calif, f'H62. Don1ld W. Tllomplon. -SUPEltlOlll COUllT 01' TMI LAI~ M. Sdttr. ta Plld"c DI',, Thb 1111tme11t W_fll flllld wlllt thl Coun- -ITATI 01' CALll'OlllNIA l'Olt c..-det M•r. Cll!f, 9U1'. IV Cltrll of Or•l'IO• COUllfy on Aprll '· -Tit.-COUNTY 0, OllANOI Tllll blltlf'IHI II CillldUCtld b't' • tentrM 1973. _ Ne. A-7'515 ptrlnonlllp. l':MW7 -E1111o of DEAN HOLCOMBE Otce•tlld. WllUtm M. Crt wfOrd Plllll11had Or'tl'IOI COid Ptl!y Piiot, -NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to ll'lt Thlt "•i.mant """ flltcl wllh ttle County Apl'!l IL lf, u. •nd M•'f,3. 1tn 1026-73 _ ct'ldltar• of the 1bova nemed doc:ldtl'll Cllrtl or or...,. County on ~rdl IS. ltn. --Jllll 111 peraon1 havlnf cCtim• qall'lll fM l't htlY J. lwptlft, DIPlll't (OllnlJ' · PUBLIC NOTICE _ dtctdllll 1r1 r11111lrld to Ill• !him. with Oerk. 1)% Ille lllC-•rv vwcl!trl. In "" offlct of PDl'tl l'ICT1T10US IUSINSll !lllCI. In 1111 cl•tK of llMI atiovo .-illllld c;ovrt. or 10 ' "'1\llllhld Or•l'l(ll COlst Dtlly Piiot. NAM• STAT8MENT Wltft) ,,.,en, th911'1, with TM l'llC"Mry M8n:h 22, 2', lllcl APrll s. IL 1tn 1~13 Th• foliowlnt flW10ft I• dolf!O 111111-vouch .... .,,10 tlta uncltnltried •t It'll offk.•1----=c:=c:-::-::-c:-:-::'.c:::---I ..... 01 •ttorner COLONEL MERllllNG s PUBLIC NOTICE ••: NATIONAL BUSINESS ,.ooum .,.....; FR,i.NKllN, 107 E11t 11th Str'llt. Coe.II . ' M.,., ,,111. '2421 w111,11 1, 11w pt1e• of 21m autkltlld ·c1rc1e. Hunflf!Oton "' "' "" "" "" "" "' buJlntSJ of""' undor•lllntd In •II rnlltlrl PICTITIOUS •UllNISI ••• en. C.Utol'nll .~ I I ..... 111 1 I of Id•-.. t N.t.Mm ITATaMl MT \ Ednt lrollt IKktlttl, 4'a KtiOll Aw. 1111'!1 11 nt '" 1 _, t 1 II """ _,.' TM fl:ltlowl"' ,.._ " -butlllttl No. 6l. llltnl l'trk, Cttlfot"llll 90l21 wltnln tour monlh1 •tt ... 11'11 !lt1f publlcl· ,,. Tiii& blnlrt11t I• conduc:tld b'f an ltt-tlon of 11111 notlc1. . DATED April '· 1913 HICKEY CltEEIC lllANCH 20292 cllvldutl, JEfitOME c. SALSBUllY S)'(:lrnoN Qrt..... Tt1111Uco 'c.nyon. • Edlll '· 8-c:kllart EWICUtor of llMI Wiii C•lltornU n171--Tiii• "''-' wa• fllld "1th"" COIHl-Ot~thl •bollto Nlmld docldlnt RIClla'4 o. Roblll11'd, 202l2 SyCalllOl"I ,., Clerk of Or•ntl Countf on Ap'lt ... Cot.ONIL. HlltltlNO S, PltAMKL.IN Drive, Tr•lluco CanYofl,. C1lllOfnla tM11 1'1'). PM411 • ::: 147 1111 11th Sll'ltl 1~~~~!':l1""' 1• bllnt conductld b't •n P"blliflld °''"'" COftt oau., Pltot. lMI. ~::',:l':t'~~\1i 91617 1111ctt1rd o . llObiln•rd Aprh s, 12. lf, i-s, 197' 1016-1' 100. Altomt't for IJ:tclltlr Thlt ltthlmtnt lllld Wllll the CCll,lftly 10% Pllbllr.hld 0r1r.gt COid D•ll't P'llot, Cltr~ ot Orltltl County onr Mlrtll JO, , PUBLIC NOTICE I,,. April 12, It, 2'.-and M•'t 3. 1'13 1069-73 ltn. ,., T/tlt'tN M. W1td, DIPlll'f '°"'"'"•----~--------·I Sl.00 I-'--------'------Clari(, 1· , .... , llllCTITIOUS •USINllS "' "' "' "" "' PUBLIC NOTICE PublflMcl Onnqe Cot•t 0111., Piiot, NAMI STATIMINT l----·----------1 Aprll S, 12, It, 2'-Im ff4..7' TM follow!nt penon 11 clolnt bu.r"'"5 NOTIC• TO CIEDITOllS •t: SUPl•IOI COURT OP THI! ~ • , PUBlJC NOTICE THE TtiY IOX, 211' M..,... Pltoel ITATI 01' CALlllOl:NIA flOA CO.II Miii. C•llf. t2f,t7 THI COUNTY Ofl OlllANO• WHHtl'l'I 8, QoollJ, 217' Mr(W ~ N•. A-11Ul' I -Cot~ MfMt Clllf. ftll1' ., IE•lllt of CHAltLeS H. Willi.IMS, •k.1 IUPIWIOft COUtrT OP' THI TMi but!MU It eoMllcf9d i'f tn !Ml• 1~ CHARLES HALLIDAY W I LL I AM l , STATI Ofl CAll'°lllNIA POI \'fdutl. "'- (ll'ICl. In 0tc:11Md. TH• COUNTY 01' OU.WO• Wlnltm •• Goilll w111•I Notlca I• IKnby olv111 tO 1111 cradttors ,.., A -HNl Thi•,,,,.,....... WH,fl-.i 'llfftl IM eounry Of Ille •bcrv4o "'"*' dlcelttnl fhtl "' MOT1ca o" HUllllNI o~ PllTITION Cllt1t of°""'° Coufttyet'I Maf'dt 15, tm. 2'6. ptnonl Mvllll cl1lms tttln•I IM l •kl ,01 PlllOIATI Of' lltlLL AlfD POfl ""11 (to J yrt.l Otctdlnl 1r1 required to tU1 !him, wtlll L.ITTPI TllTAMINfAlllY Pllbllttlld Orlllfl .co.st D.tl't ft!IOf, .20 4'Mo Iha lllCHH/'Y voucltlf'I, In '"' olflc• ot ,..... or-El..tlABVH TA o..,,u 1. Mirth 22. 2' llld ...,, .. 1J. "" ,.....n is yrs. or tht cltf'k of Hit al)OW Oflllllad court. or to O.C••ttd. ' · ll'IOl"I} Dl"ttll'll tfllm, lfll!Tll Hit ntc ... ,,,., NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN thtt C1rol PUB' U• NOTICE C•r,.t, UM ' Sitt Tll•: vouchfn. to the unclal'tllll'llld •t ... 32ftd """ Movttrup Nt ~frld """'" • (ltllltOl'I ~ , l.1v1r ,._... .v ·" ..u Strffl. P.O. '" ll», NIW'porf IHC'll, tor Probe!• crf Wiii •nd for 1••11(9 of $tWW J.76 .11 .n ... Clllfornl• ,,.., whl(P! II tht pltc:t °' L.tl'*" r .. tttMl'ltlf"( 1o rtte '""1'9oMr • PIC'T'ITIOUt: IUSINIH Ml~ Htndltl" S.06 .J7 ,,. ·" bvs!lleU of"" lll'ldlrtltnld '" 111 tnllllr'I merenc• to which I• !Md• tor fUrlhlr NAM• STATIM•NT ::::~tiM~ApPlic:•o:, Holll:l•'l't 11 t1y1ln '°'~~ to .:i1 bt ~ fO be·~ :'~j~"~1~n.:'!,;:, %."~~~!: ::~~J:i.:':.r:" 111~.!im:.. ~ = .. '/,. flllowlftl '*"°" 1• fOlilt IMIMM y .. ,., De'f, Ill 0.'t, l~•idll!U Cly, Lllliol" Dl'f, Vatnn•t Dly, flon of lhh llO!lca. 24. ttn. at t:OO 1,m., 111 IM~ Of HAITtNOS COMP'j,N'f ,,o, I Oll 114 Tl'l.lnkftlvlnt OIY lld~lf1N1. II any of the 1bov1 hol!Ot'l't Miis on lul'lo•1· Plltd A9rH J, lt13 l>t!i>trtment No. ) GI Mid cout1, •t no NfWl'Ol"t 1 _,. .,...;. ins Jltlltftefll 111e Mtndl't lol1oW1nt sl'llll M oomlff'lld a llfll holkll'f. , Ch1ri.. e. WIUllll'lf, CIVk COfl"'° ortv. W..t, 111 thl Clt't et Ttrr_... Cortrll cJot1 1fM nta It Wtl Dt tNl'ldatory C.IPOft 1111 C.clfttndor to 'lrr1tom • ~ Is awtl'dld Ind AO!l'llnlift'tliot wllh Win s.n11 AM, Cal!tornlt. CMrlta A l'flflkrlfl, tm lal'lttnefll UpM Ill MlllOOl'l!rtc:ton Ufldtr hlin, to ,.., Ml lll1 lllfifl .. If tenef'll prev1llflljl ........ ..., °' Tiit Etltt. of !!It 0.frld Aprll s. 1f1) Ttrnt'lt. cof.on. • lfM,., ,., ... , "" diem wao-1o all WOtlu'll9'I """'°"" In ~ llt.wflon of rite COl'llrllc:f, ....... named dtc«llnf WILLIAM I . SI J°"", TJtlt tMIMM " c:ond"\ldtd bY Ill I~ 80.-.tiP-OF TlllUSTllS, NUl'#tTl. HURWITZ & llMllt COlll'll'( Cterlt 'lvldutl. • Cots! Cl'!l'\l'l'l\ll'lll'f COll .. t Olt lrkl ...... ltr.tl t AltO\. AlllN MOVLTltUP CllM!n A. Ftl'llkllfl °''"" County P.O. hit ,. m• Cltiell Thll •t•t.'"'nt -· fUM """' Iha COllll' Goe.tt MtN, C•llforllll ""'"" IHCtl. Ct llforftlt ~ C•ll MIN, Cant, ""' tr tlll'k of Otll!M COUl\ly tfl ,..._,(ft il, Sl9111d1 ~! T'4t. (1lt) ,,,.,._ T .. 1 tntl '*""' 1'1.L HonNll I , Wit.on, Mcrt11ry ~ fer Aflltllllstrtlof CfA 111 .. ,. ht IMl'd ot Tnnl• Pubtlll!ed °'"'""' Cot~! o.u., Piiot P11bllllhld Ot•not Coe1t ~lt!IM Ol'*lllt C.tt Diiiy Piiot, AP!'ll "' ''• 1'11 wwa AprU '· 12, 1t. 26. 1m 1011.1J Apri. s. .. u . 1tn money. ' . NASO Liiii,... for Wodnood.y, Apfll 11, 1'73 --=-' MUTUAL FUNDS .. - ~ "' "" "'' ' I • • • - ·' . I • trea_k Sfup-ee!1-· I By Profit Taking -NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe stock mlrtet b6unced around Tbunday, amid oome profit IUing on a market that ocored lmpreuive 1&1na In four _prior. \ Hsaiona. Tbe Dow Jones avence of 30 Ind~ climbed U .91i pointi In that,.llD!e, sported by Ille flow of good flnt-quar1er reports and Ille general . feeling that Pre&dent Nixon soon would do ·aome- thlng to eom~r tnflaUon. ' "It's just a Utile pJOflt-takblg plu.e ~· follr liood days," Aid-Newlon Zlnder of E. F. Hulton I: Cp. "That would be expected after tbe climb." • • .. - - .. I • ' ' I ' • I -----~ --· -l 3t OAILV PILOT Thunday, April 12; 1973 _, -f· NmMrli-~Ollt ' Horrible" City , 1 :Scand8I-ridden Metropolis _) . ID IJ..S. -., . . · ··SYmboI f «?r -Urlfail Blight • • • One city morethan any other U'lul! I to ye-cited "' a horrible example of > ~,.. decoy of city 1il£,.in..Ammca - -Newark. N.J. A close rook at Newark e. ft taken in these article1: what'• wrong wiiii It and what it.eds to be dO!lt. . Jnto Newaik commercial buildings, hous- ing, and hospitals. •-·--- The other in.surance giant is Mutual Benefit Life lnsurance Co. -commonly called "Mutual Ben" -eighth ranked in the nation, founded here ln 1845; ad- mitted assets in 1970 were ne;µ-ly $2.6 Jlr 8~ Q~r "-billion. It championed the rdevelopment . . ~ el Waihlngton Par wit6 an Investment -the~~"!~/~ili~f'!."!fr:~ of more than $50 million. If graced by only 10 wcinls, grouped in Muluai Ben employs more than !;JOO lonely eloquence on the slick white paper, people; Pru•s staff Is about 8,000, about· a qootatioo from the mayor: 18 percent now racial minority·people. "Wberever, American cities are going, This commercial and manufacturing Newark will get there first." city of 382,417 (35th in population in the Jn recent weeks, Mayor Ke~tb A_llen nation employs about 250,000 peopl,e. Oqly Gibson, probably the most pUblictzed one-third of them are residents. bl~ck may.or of the ~try. has chan~ed Tw~third's scurry into town at 9 a.m .. th.it 1~entence somet~es m .~versahon and scun-y right out at 5 p.m. ·Nobody is ~: Wberev~r Amencan cit!~ are g~ going to stick aroupd the highest crime mg, Newark ts already there . rate in America at night. Gibson is 40, a recent grandfather, stocky and usually .quietspoken with cream chocolate skin and a smooth round face garnished with a bit of a mustache . He and his family Uve in a rented _rirst door apartment ln a two and one-half family house in south Newark. ON THE BACK page of the report is a second quotation : "We are the people who built Newark and we will be lfte peo- NEW ARK IS ESTIMATED now to be'. about 61 percent black, 10 percent · " Spanish.speaking. Of it's residents, about 25 percent were bom outside New Jersey: or that percentage, three quarters were born in the-South. About 19 percent of the entire population came from the South. Of the total U.S.·bom Newarkers, 2.4. percent arrived between 1955 and 1970. ,, • I• I ., I ~ " t1 ·~ ~ ~ ..I i .J ,\ I · 'There~ feeling of r or · r np t lo11, t hnt ever11t h l119 Is f o r sale, h 1rl11d!119 Clt11 H alf.' lri the decade )9ll0-70, the population shrank from 405,00IJ to 38'l,OOO, with a continuous out-migration of middle class to suburbs and a 'large hnmigration of rural people from the South and Puerto Rico. City officials and others active in civic work point out that the ills of Newark are typical of the creeping sickness that besets all cities, but they usually add that "it's probably more lnteiiie here, more acute" and its name bas become a metaphor for urban malaise. NEWARK'S SPRINGFIELD AVENUE RUNS 'T H ROUGH ONE OF AREAS SCARRED B~-RI OTS Cfime Hi,g h; Night Attend•nt at Gas Station Wears G':'n and Holster Vi sible on His Belt • Ple who will rebuild N e w a r k . ' ' Somewhere in between is the sum of the municipal deficit he inherited : $ 6. 5 million. Newark has been a national symbol for wretched urban blight, the most writ· ten-about city since Dallas and its Ken- nedy-Oswa.Jd-Ruby tragedy,_ a frequent sensation in the newsl prototype of iroubie. ' The city has never really recovered from sununer riots of 1967 during which 26 people were ki11ed and the National Guard called in. A blue-ribbon governor's commission, speaking of t h e ad- • ministration prior to Gibson1s, found that a ~ reason for black dis~tlel!l~t 1eading £0 riot was "a pervasive feeling of comiption" and a feeling that "everything is for saJe, including City Hall." THE CITY RAS been in deep financia l tfoubte for years. But the money tide flowing in and · through Newark is too much to measure. Newark Is the second biggest life ln- eurance center in the nation, behind New York, measured by the value of liie i~ surance in force -$150 billion. Its crime rate has led the nation since 1960, the base year when unified reporting pro- cedures went into effect. In 1950 (with larger papu]ation than now) murders totaled 24; last year, 148. • The 24-story white marble block that is the home office of the giant Prudential Insurance Co., stands solid and chaste in the middle of downtown Newark, -substantial as its symbol, the rock of you-know-where. The view from. tts~top ~compasses acres of blight, o f deteriOrating hall-century-old wooden houses, of developments that put every tenttl person in public housing . And eight miles to the east, its towers looming in smoggy grandeur, is the ro- la6sus of New York. You'd expect Prudential to move its corporate head- quarters there. But It says no, it started .here and it's sticking here. Prudential - called "Pru" hereabouts -is the biggest insurance company in the world - assets, $32 bill ion -and the second big- gest company of any kind in the world, behind AT&T. ' PRU SUPPLIED $47 million in long- term financing for the glittering new Gateway complex of buildings that greets visitors arriving here by rail. lt has put about $100 million in the last four years 'nte malaise has many reflections.-' At · a 24-hour gas station on SprinifieJd Ave., the area hard hit by the 1967 riots. only exact· change is taken for night services, and the attendant wears a gun and holster visible on bis bell A SPRINGFIEW AVE. merchant says business has dropped off since the riots. '"We've Jost a few thousand dollars in break-ins. We used to stay open at nights . Not anymore. Every night when you lock up you wonder ii it will be Ille same way in the morning." A widow, 62, in tbe North Ward. "A lot of old •people live in those apartments · across the way, and there's' always a muggihg; When I gO" home, J just keep praying and blessing myself." A black professional woman: ' "When I was a kid 15_years ago,-I oould walk from ooe end of town to the othh at night. "Later, when I became a reporter, my editor wouldn't let me go out at night.'' A policeman : "Yeah, It is true, I guess. People don't have respect for oops like they used to. YOU tell me'why. Maybe it's beCause, with· 811 the poor groups here, Newark is 'a melting pot of ignorance.". A white busine~man who spends several days a week here: "Nobody wants to stay here and everybody tries to put it out of their minds." MAYOR GIBSON'S father, Willie, 60, was mugged on the street a year after his son took office. Asking directions to an address he was knocked down by several youngsters: he fought them off and was hospitalized for a week wilh head wounds. In City mdl itself, last April, Susan Caulfield, 22, daughter of City Fire Director John Caulfield, was mugged in an elevator while riding to her job on the third fioor. Five stitches were required to close knife wounds on her left ann. Two months later, in her office, h~r purse was stolen. Newark is 24 square miles in area, but -its residents are squeezed into 17 square miles -the rest is "Port, airport, and marshland . Fire director Caulfield says Newark has more people living in fewer buildings than any other city. • ... _ ICENNETH GIBSON -MOST PUBLICIZED BLACK MAYOR IN U.S. He Surwys Embattled, Hard11ro1sod City From Offlct Window ' I '. .. Town TeeterS on Bankruptcy l Mafia Took Hold: 'Hughie (Ex-mayor) Gave Us Cit y'' NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) -Municipal glitter greets the visitor who walks into Newark from the railway station. The $50 million "Gateway" complex of bUild· ings is handsome, impressive, rather rich -and a wholly comfortable first im,.p_rPSion of a city that is in an un- camfort&ble struggle to find its way back to municipal soundness. Gateway I is a gleaming white new big motel and high office building., wit~ shops in the concourses, an elegant restaurant, and bars tucked in comers. Beyond it now, stands Gateway II_, jl huge black building housing Western Electric, the third biggest private employer in Newark behind Prudential Insurance and New Jeraey Bell. -THE INCOMING traveler reaches this commercial welcome -mat of civic pleasant life by walking through a long , gl8ssed-in pedestian bridge high above the ground, running from . the con· ventionaJJy grimy station to the Gateway concourse. Soon another bridge will be built from Gateway I to Gateway II. White collar workers and executives can walk from their commuter trains to their Gateway offices without ever putting their feet on the seamy sidewalks of Newark. And there is talk of the possibility of extending this select elevated walkway several blocks right up to the main drag. Broad St. ONE OBSERVER offers this ttiesis: "The downtown daytime world knows nothing about the -residents .. , And that ties in \\'it h an observation often voiced Nemark U11e1i11•lt1y111e111 rule r 111ls three t 1111 es tha t of t11e 11utio11. ......,.. ---------+ ---...i.._ --w~ ..w.:c.w-.-.-.. by blacks.~ -that the people wh°l:akc the decisions about Newark. to con· siderable e.xtent, do not live in Ne ark. • That held1.rue to a much greater degree· before Kenneth A. Gibson. Newark's first black. m8for; topk office ln July; 1970. Dona?Payn~. 38, national president of the CA, describes himself as "one or the ery f.e~ blacks who were born here wh~ still /Jive here -most have moved to the suburbs." J THE SURGE INTO the cily of blacks from the South, DlQS~om the Carolinas and Virginia: created a \\'Orkforce with a larger number of un· trained, unskilled, poorly educated, im· paverished people. Most jobs require skill. The Newark unemployment rate runs three times that of the nation. Of decision-making in ttie past, Payne observes: "There were no black school principals here until about 1965. 'I'Qey even excluded-as an assistant principatin -1962 a black who h;ld studied in England and gone to Harvard graduate school; they claJmed he OunKed the oral exam. . _ "The cily never had black judges - they were by mayoral appointment - until the middle J950s, There were no black administrators w1th the board of educltlon until the J950S. 'nle city hospital had only a few blacks -in the lowest lype jobs. The poilce department had virtually none, the lite department didn't have any until the late 5(1s. City governmenl had none wilh an authority. "NOW municipal GIBSON judges HAS five black and a black magistrate." _With the city ·in deep financial trouble . and rumors -vigorously deniect, by Gibson -that it was investigating possibilities of a state take-over in the face of fiscal bankruptcy, Payne was 2sked what he thought was going to hap- pen to Newark. -''It's almost too nightmarish to think of," he l'eplied..,1 haven't the foggiest. It may be a test case. The fir~t city that goes broke. I think it might be a test of the constitution if Newark bits to close the schools -could even say the city might sue the state." The troub1es came to a head in the disastroUs riots of 1967 -some black leaders here Prefer to call it rebellion rather than riot -which left scars still visible -buildings still boarded up, burned out, abandoned, businesses clos- ed. The city now has 1,300 abandOoed buildings. BUT THE CLOUDS were forming long before that. During prohibition, Newark became the bootleg capital of the eastern seaboard. There was a pro- gression of evil thereafter. The first in- dication that the mob had reached the paliticians on a wide scale came in 1969. That was when FBI tapes secretly planted at several racketeer head-• . quarters were made public. One of them disclosed a Mafia captain telling an aide : "Hughie helped us along. He gave us the city~'{ Hoglb,J. Addoni2.lo then was mayor, .t Newark. GibMln became the first black mayor or Ne,wark by defeating the first Italian mayof, Addonizio. In September, 1970. two months after Gibson was sworn in, Addonizio was""sentenced to 10 years on kickback extortiOn charges involving the Mafia. " "Newark is a town that I think had some hope prior to Addoilizi.Q." says ·a black woman psychologist wfiO was born and raised here. "It started really crwnbling during his administration;, You could actually see politics moving into everything. pie in powerful positions who do not have the basic edu«ational q_ualificaUons. There's a lot of bungling." Newark has been-tmdergoing federal investigations of its Model Cities opera- tion and Public Employment program. The city's staggering property tax is another problem. For 1972, the property tax was $9.63 P:el' $100 of assessed yaluation. Every 10 years you'd pay for your house iii taxes. But both Mayor Gibson and Louis M. Turco, city council president, have said tl)e tax .. would probably have to go to $11.SO this year, and some .sources say it will have to go higher. Under the system, the city is ex- periencing a 1,5 percent property aban· donrilent rate. And last October Cornelius Bodine Jr., the Ne~rk Business Administrator, was quoted as saying that increasing the property tax rate would eventually mean municipal bankruptcy. "It won'.t be dramatic, we won 'L-put up· a sign on the door and say we're out o( !1YOU HAD TO KNOW a politician to business," he said .. "It will be gradual - get a city job. Most of the large federal more people and businesses will leave or projects in Newark are dom.inated by the face foreclosure . At some time the .politicians. They infilirate. You have peo--..... .syst~ will simply cave in." ,- . '· ' Tnn1ult ·constant Poet, Legislator a t Each Other's Throiits NEWARK, N.J. (UPI) -On the wall to the left of Mayor Kenneth A. Gibson's huge leather chair in his .City Ha11 office is a blue and white mural titled "The Survival Committee." "It was done by a yoWlg Negro painter," said the mayor. "He said the world needed a survival committee." · ln a city with a-eontinuing financial crisis. persistent urban blight, and polarized racial attitudes between whites and the 60 percent black population. the idea of a "survival" committee seems appropriate on a mWlicipal basis as well. ON THE WALL opposite the mural is a plaque tiUed "Desiderata" copied from words of advice .found in a 1692 church. It begins: . "Go placidly amid the noise and haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence. As far as possible without surrender be on good tenns with all persons ... Avoid loud and aggressive persons ... " i.~ leader of the white militant North Ward Citizens Council that manned com· .. munity patrols in the 1967 riots. lmpe!!ia le was quoted at that time : "We'll kill any nigger that comes near here." Bulging at 250 J>:OWldit on a 5-foot·9 frame, an ex-Marine Ind IOrmcr karate teacher with hands like great blocks, Imperiale is chief spokesman against the "alien philosophy" of ~araka. . Baraka is intense, bearded, slight. weighs about 130 pt>linds. He operates a political apparatus, the Committee for a 'No q11est lo11, t h e r e's hem. " tretne ndon• t1p• sirr.,,: i n r rlme.' Unified Newark, and says openly that Newark will become the first pao-Africnn city. J;lis Temple of Kawaida rr'' organizatlofl is sponsoring the Kawaida Towers project Uiat Irr. opposes. · That last may take some doing. The mayor is surrounded by loudness ~d ag. gressiveness. Agood deal of it bas beeri causfd in recent months by two. men who syrnbo1ize the racial polarization in this city of 382,417. The noise and aggression has centered about white demonstrations against building a black -sponsored housing project in a 70 percent white city \Va rd that has a large lta1i8n commwtity. ~e two men are tmamu Amiri THE FEVERED PITCH of th~aw • ..- da Towers oontrovery prompted Police Dirtttor John L. Redden to resign Jan. I, saying the ·police were caught in the mid· dle of political maneuvering and warning ' tbat the issue has heightened racial Baraka, 38, poet, playwright, political power and polemicist: raised in Newark as LeRoi Jones, a middle-class Baptist; turned Muslim and now one of the ooun~ try's best koown black flat1onallsts ....... and • Anthon)I (Tony) lmperiaie, "Big T'' to supporters, 11ra1mouth11 to Baraka. IMPERIALE BAS said he may run for mayor, using as a main Issue Barak•'s project to build a black·sponsored low and middle income housing apartment io . a whlle neighborhood . in Big T's North \Yard. Jmperiale, a state assen:iblyman, tt!tlslon. . Redden, 53, a balding, round-faced, 25- year Newark police veteran, talked bluntly about Newark in an interview before lhe Kawaida affair started. There was no doubt, be sald1 that New8rk reported a higher crime r.ate from 1960 through last year than any other city over a quarter mtiilon population-ol which there are 56 in Arilerica. The Newark murder tolal in 1972 was 148, up 12 percent over lf71·and shol'!ng a st•ady rise since the figure of only 24 In 1950 . "Yoo can talk about di~rent· s)an- dgrd.! of reportln11 crim•, hut It's difficult to argue about a bOOy count," }\edden said, · - "There's no questioh that there's been a tremendous upsilrge in crime. Newai'k has come to be the home of a dispropor- tionate share ·of people who have been historically, traditiona1Jy1 on the short end of the social and economic scale. They came here to better their Jot in life. "Probably the· greaest majority of them are decel).,t,. Jaw-abiding people who are just trying ' to make it and are themselves . t n_e . greatest victims. Between 1950 and 1960 rouglhly 100,000 people left Newark and were replaCed by people from the South and f.uerto Rico. THE MAYOR'S Educational Task Force, created by Gibson in 1971, by , citizens of all stripes, is striving to find remedies. One longtime observer here, Gustav Heningburg , president of ' the Greater Newark Urban coalition, stresses tM city's· many assests. "We've got the worst health delive~ services in the nation," he says. "We;ve got more land ·cleared under-urt>an rene..val on which nothing has been built, in ratio to city size, then any other city, Most of that i~nd area is oe<:upied bj empty lots, in ratio , than any other city, -.-O!Ba~lcally the city is wood, two· Oi t~ree family houses , now 30 and 40 yeart old and· going down (be drain. Tlie Citl was on J.ts way to many or Its ills befort the big lnflo\V of black$, wbl?n black$ ha4 no political power at all. · · ~ "Newark !s not much worse off tha~ other cities. All are in bad shape. Asl John Undsay in New York. But we'v1 got _tremendous· assests. Newark ia th1 finaDclal center and transporiatlon hul of the state, has the most moden seaport on Ille East Coast, the iargetl port or entry for foreign cars in the couo try. Tbe·alrporl is the most aec<ssible ~ New York ol lhe 1hree that serv• ti• New York-New Jersey area.'' . .. r I 1. I . l I .1 • \ 'f I r I ... ... .... -... --~ \ • • • • -.~ag1111a Beaeh - -. -EDITION Today's 'Final -·' ' • N.Y. Stooks .J • • 1 - VOL:' 66, NO. 102, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ' ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDA t. APRIL 12, 1973 ,TEN CENTS -· Irvine F:oundation Denies It Will lSell Stock By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 1111' DMIY l"lr.t Si.ti ·Morning news accounts suggesting the James Irvine Foundation would begin selling,lts stock In the Irvine Company as early as June were tehned "a falsehood" today by the foundation's attorney. Howard J. Privett, Los Angeles at- torney for the Irvine Fouridation and its spokesman during recent hearings in Washington D.C., denied he had indicated the foundat.iOn would as soon as "this summer" begin selling shares of Imne Company stock. "The Board of Directors of the James Irville Foundatioa bu Initiated ,1tudies and 'planning to realize the full market value of its ·holdings in the Irvine Com- pany," Privett confirmed. How~ver, those studies and the planning, he emphasized, may reSult In a decision to sell~lrvJne Complny holdings at any time em ers . Laguiia 'Crime Wave' Goes On The crime wave behind the Laguna Beach City Hall and police station continues with the theft this time of the siren and radio equip- ment troin a lifeguard jeep, a loss of $400. Early this week the red spotlight from the fire chief's car and radio equipment trotii ooe of the police department's metennan scooters were pur~ined: . Laguna Beach police surmise the siren was unbolted from the front · of the jeep, and the radio gear filched while the vehicle was in repair between Friday and Wednes- day. The thefts have occurred while the veblcles were parked in the city parking area near the rear or lhe police station. Youth · Pursued Across Campus, Held by Police A l~year-<ild youth chased by Laguna beach detective and unilonned police of· fioer across the high school grounds, caJ>' lured and handcuffed ~1n a • sbop c1assroom Wednesday before noon, bas been released to the t'UStody of his parents. Tbe youth, a high school student, had been booked on charges of resisting ar· rest, bllt--the charges were dropped after a discussloo with the parents, Det. Alex Jimenez said today. Acoording to Jimenez, the youth has been released from school in the morning to pick up some materiaf for a school project. . He wu spotted by Del. CliU Nye In the llOl'lh end of town, ao area of rugf burglary Incidence. Nye attempted to stop the youth's vehicle with the detec- tive vehicle but~ was Jed on a chase back to the high school area, Jimenez said. I P ~.!!tag on: No More LivePOWs WASllJNGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon said today there are probably no more American prisoners alive anywhere in -Indochina. Dr. Roger Shi•lds, bead of the Pen- tagon's prisoner of war task force, added there is no evidence that any POWs had · been executed in captivity, with three ex· ceptiool. TbolO -9't't ezecuted early In the war in retaliation for Slip. t:llll:Hli.m of . . . capllftd Viet Cong guerrlflu, acconlil( to •. .Viet Cool ··-al !!le tlme. '1be Pathe\ ,Lao in Laos and the tn- surgeot forces In Cl!ilbodia will )lopefully provide-more· informatkm. about the fate oi the Americans missing In those coun· trieS, Shlelds said, but "we have no in- dication at this·-moment that there are any Amirtcans alive in Indocbina." Rumara that there are hundreds of U.S. servicemen still held in Laotian priaon camps '!(lo the families or the missing a disserVice," he said. The Palhet Lao and the Khffier Rouge, unlike the Viet Cong and the Norib Viet- namese, have not provided a list 'of men who died in captivity. ... ~·we do not consider there ha! been a complete accounting," Shields said. In I.;aos, 317 men were listed as ,miss- ing and 10 POWs have been returned. Almost all were airmen shot down. Many others were plucked from the ground by rescue helicopters before they could be captured, he said. Mildred A~ Post within the next six years. "There has been no decision by the · board qf the foundation to begin selling stock this summer. Any report that such a. .decision has been made Is a Ialsebood," Privett declared.· He added lhat the foundation bas until 1979 under terms of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 to reduce its holdings in the Irvine Company from the present 54.5 percent level to the 20 percent required by lbe federal law. . Additionally, he explained, ·there are court actions pending in California which would in effect be necessarily complete before any stock .held by the foundatiori could be· sold. A cow't suit filed by the foundation to change the trust instrume!lt draw!\ by James Irvine ls. necessary . Privett~said, before the stock 'may be sold even though the fedl}l"81 law has ordered the Sale. • "'Jbe U.S. Constituiion protects such indentures of trust ," he explained. "Congress cannot violate the terms of a private contract." James Irvine II, who dieci in 1~7. set up the foundation and gave it controlling interest in the Irvine Company. Despite the Tai: Reform Act, Privett said. ''Congress ca,n't come alOrig 30 years lil.ter and apply retroactively a Jaw which was not in effect when · the trust in· s1ru1nent "'as drawn by P.tr. Irvine . .. It will take a court decision to do that." Privett said. The foundatio n·s suit filed in Deceriiber of 1971 v.·ill be given a pretrial hearing t\1ay 9 in Los Angeles 'Superior Co:Urt. Privett said. If ht?ard in June or July as expected. the. foundation might be free of presenr trust restrictions which prohibit "piecemeal" sales· of the stock . e1n ~. , ' ~ School :ff.opef uls Speak Heatedly By JACK CHAPPELL Of .. o.ll'r l"lr.t ll•ft they haven't been proved yet," he said. "I'm tired of people asking questions to elicit a political response," Sagar said noting that four of the six questions on Kreber's lit.erature were " c l e v e 'r I y Tempers shortened and t o n g u es sharpened Wednesday in a candidates forum for the Laguna Beach School Board, now in the stretch run for Tuesday's election. · de signed" to throw a bad light on the school district. Candidate William Thomas, board president, angrily snapped at several speakers, at one point insulting one man who asked him the phitoaophie:.<dif- ference between the school board ma- jority and fired ~ .• Witllaq!. Ulloip, fonne!' l!l.trict s~t. "I told you 'phliosophlcal dillerenees' and that's all-I'm &0ing to tell you, so jlilt !orget it. I've been t!lreatened with a laWIUlt II I 10 -r than that. Ir you haven't got the intelllgence to accept that . , ••• " Ttiomas said, trailing off. It was the second time the matter ot • '1philosophical difference" question was directed to Thomas from a crowd of about 60 people. Earlier, Nonnan Browne, an in- cwnbent1 candidate, slapped the News· Post , a twice-weekly newspaper, for an editorial in which he was endorsed, along . with candidates Frederic Ludwig and Ronald Kreber and Thomas. _ The editorial of the Wednesday edition had charged that Browne, Jane Boyd aiid Michael Sagar had not spoken to the Dr. Frederic Ludwig said tha( modem school systems have become so comple!' that "lay people" are .no longer capa~le of understanding or adequately super· vising their schools. He said the friction between the school board and the school administration Was a result of that lnablltty to understand the eduational sysb!m. He said the school board and the ad- ministration bad beei:i :'indicted" by tbi Educstional PrlorlUes Committee for failures In communlcatlon. The 11difficulty" w~. riot anybady's fault, he said.~ Mrs. Boyd, was spared stiff ques- tioning from the audience. Her presen- tation dealt with lhe necessity of long- range plaMing for the schools in areas of education, finance, building and opera- Uons . She said priorities had to be set regarding the disposition of available monies. DAILY '"'OT"'",.... issues of the election, but had ·cam-PrettB Def per , paigned by attacking o[her candidates. ~ "When they can ·do things Uke this , * * * 63 V11iversity . Belinda Caldwell,'19, gets liead s_tart on the pilot project to collect that are absolutely not true," Browne solid ~uminµnrcans~ Laguna Beach Easter Week. Many large "pop said, balding up a copy of, the New11-Post, Educators Back Board Hopefuls art" paint~ cans will he_ set out on Laguna sands. Collected alumlnqm "I think you have to loot at what they wil!Jie s,old for IO cents a pound and the funds used to benefit local recommend ... charity organizations. Rec)'cle Now also will collect al.uJUinum and He cited specific examples of glass· every Saturday betweeb._,_9:30 a.m. and noon at the high scllool statements from campaign literature of parking lot. "'\ his own, from Mrs. Boyd and Sagar Sixty-three university faculty members which proposed positive actions for the living in Laguna Beach have criticized ~-school system. ~· the present school bOard majority and Browne said the charge that the supported the election of candidates Jane Schools '73 candidates, Mrs. Boyd, Sagar Boyd, Norman Browne and Michael and hlmsell, had been "invisible" during Sagar in the Tuesday election. the election was false. ~ . _.__ _ "As parents, we are concerned that our ~ ,Krebe:r. cited his statis'tlcs on failings children receive ,suallty education. As of 12th grade Laguna Beach students to residents of LaiUna Beach, we belle.ve perform well on tests, and said that since the quality of our schools is an intregal the "senior" represented the "finished part of the qualily of our community. \\'e Supe_rvisors Deny Btd Tbere, the youth usertedly stopped his car sod Oed on foot across the school campus. Det.'Nye followed, along with a · Rites Conducted uniformed officer who l'e!pOIJded to a ·For Seawall Extension product" of the district, low test scores are distressed by the dissension , rancor; there were significant. and mismanagement by the present Kreber said critici1.ed the fact that board majority," a statement by the ed- radio call for assistance. Pri te ' · I · he Jlmenez confirmed that \ the short, va memona semces were Id By JACK BROBACK Of Ille 08111 l"lllt Stlft small-framed youth had · been ordered _ today for MUdred A. Post, 58,' ot 925 "stop or I'll shoot," by police while on Temple Terrace, Laguna · Beacbr who A South Laguna oceanfront property owner's request to fence his private pool and estend a seawall led to discussloD or indecent exposure, fornicatioa1 and wan- ton inVasion ol private property Wednes- day before the Orange Cooillf'Board of Supelvisors. the campus, but he said officers did not died SUnday. uoholster their weapons. . Mn. l'<J!'s -body was· found In the Coast Weatlaer Hazy sunshine on Friday, (ol- Jowing early morning log and low clouds along the coast Highs of 76 are e1:pected in inland a r e a s. Beach temperatures ol 68 are fore- cast. Overblght lows Jn the OOs. INSIDE TODAY Cathy Murphy nos an unwuof doQ. Flossie, lter 21/ear-old Bo,. . ton bulldog, can do 'backflip11 skatr, fetch and, uh, toLk. That's rlghl.· And if you don'I believe sht can, ~,.,, Jutt the Boston ac- cenl con/wing you. See al6rf/ on Page 15. I lagoon belilDd the Loog Beach Arena SUnday morning. Investigators said the came of death · bas not yet been detennlnod. SUrvtvon include a son, Lenard Post;- and a alller, Audree Orr. Mrs. Post was a California native ·and 50-yeal'ftSident of Orange County. . 'llurial Is at Ha-Real Memorial Park, Costa M~. Bell Broadway Mortuary handled arrangements. W .I. Cain, near M, built bis pool on private land above the mean high tide land almost 20 years ago . He aJso built a protective seawall and a private pier. He wanted to fence the pool and extend the seawall to protect his property. Th.e area in question is just north of Three Arch Bay, a private community. Cain said the pool was invaded by G~I Injured Victim of Grinding Lagu,lfl Crasli A .1'-real'Old Laguno, Be~ch girl ts c1e u Franci9C<> S. Rodrigue>, 19, of San- hosp1talized today foUowlnli a spec-ta Ana . llodrigues told officers the lacular collision In. which a parked' car · brakes of bll car faUed and that he was was hit and thrown 60 feet ripping ou~ 40 forced to bit the parked cor ~y an on- feet of fence Wednesday on Wendt Ter-comlna vehicle. Charges alleging er- race In Laguna Beach. ....1ve speed are pendina, police said. Alita L. Wataon ol 1474 PaclOc Avenue Alter being hit by the Rodriguez vebl· wu reported in sa\lsfactory condition cle, the perked car turned completely with head injuries received in lbe 1n>Ulld, llpllntered 40 feet or wooden smashup as the car In which she was fence and destroyed a mail box. riding plowed Into a parked car In the 700 The other vehicle careened across the block or Wendt Terrace. •tree! sod rammed into a stone retaining Pollee ldentlOed the driver of the vehl· wall. strangers and ttJeir dogs and when it was no Laguna Beach Students had entered ucators said. empty, used for a toilet. the Academic Decathlon, a project of. Tt\e_ board majority is composed of He ·said he has caJled the sheriff for Robert Peterson, county s·e h o o J s \Villiam Thomas, board p r e s i d en t : . help but that a 24-hour guard would be superintendent. Gerald Linke, clerk; and Patricia GiJ .. necessary which the sheriff cannQt . pro-..# Kreber said that in his ~to-door Jette~ member. 'lbomas is ~g ~lee. vide. campaign, be found it tough to "sell" the lion m the Tuesday balloting. Gain said he paid $9,000 in property ~guna Beach school district. He hit a Candidates Ronald Kreber, a deputy taxes a(Kf h.ad no objection to strangers h1gh.dis~rlct ~dget, and said !"Ore com-district attorney: and Frederic Ludwig, using the beach but objectej to the van· mun1cpt1ons with the commuruty were a professor ol pathology and radiological dalism. necessity. science s at the California CoUege of A neighbor, Robert warner, president He said he had discussed the i:oost re-Medicine, UC Irvine are also nmniOg. of the Three Arch Bay AssociaUon said cent test scores with dlstnct ad-or the 63 university educators, 51 are conduct of people on the smaU beach was ministrators and was shown that the from UC Irvine and several are col· "an outrage." He said he and his visitors studenls are above avei'age across the leagues of Dr. LudWig. ,vere embarrassea by fornication -"a board. Arnold Starr. 1\1.D. neurology, saJd complete breakdown of ·decency." Sagar asked Kreber where he had got· Tuesday, his feeling was that after look~ He urged approval of Cain's appeal ten his information. and Kreber refened Ing at and listening to all the candidates from · a county Planning Commission to a newspaper article. the educators felt that Pifrs. Boyd, Dr. decision denying the fence and seawall -"I hope our children aren't suffering,'' Browne and Sagar were the besl. Michael C.Ollins attorney for C&ln said Sagar said referring to what be called Ronald Chilcote, of UC -RiY;erslde_ he had observed 1dru.g users at t~ pool Kreber's "allegations ... that means .-political science deparbuent, saill the during a recentu'~it.-group was formed because the educators Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers, maln-became concerned with the direction of taining a public use stance, said police Drugs, wreapons education wider the three-member school protection should be improved lJut that W i board majority. the pool and pier sJ:tould never fiav~ been "Because of our professional status, we buill He moved to deny the appeal. His Seiz' ed m' Ro~d feel we have some expertise ln thi• motiO'ifCarried 4 to 1 with supcrvlsor A.A rleld ," Qr......Chjlcote said. ·David L. Bak& dissetlling. Dr. Chilcote sald the gathering Of tM Ba~er thought the supervisors should 'l'IJUANA, Mexico (AP) -A raid on a Educators was spontaneous, sod was in• make an on-t~sccne inJpection o! lhe house turned up 10 submachine guns, 1.1 dependent of any othe1 campalp property. kilos of cocaine and ~ ton of marijuana, organization. Alioto 'Still Hurt' SACRAMENTO (AP) -San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto saya a 1969 Look magazine arllcle that attempted to link him with tbe Malia may still be hurtl~g his chances to become California's next governor. " ~ ) authorlUes disclosed today. The list of educators endorsing the ca111 A federal district judge, lloraclo dldates was expected to grow as morf CBrdoso, took part in the raid Wednesday became aware of the program, he said. night along with federal police officials. Included In tho list are S4 PhDs ., The marijuana wu found In fiQ\lr MDs. Fields covered include medlclnfl •aoks. 'l'wo men were taken Into custody. soelat sciences, blologlcat tclenc~ Also conrl.'IC8ted were 5,000 rounds of classics, computer 1elence, physic~ hlgh-<:aUber ammunition and carui which history, English, 00.tne" admlnlstraUOll may have contained aviation gatoltne. and American studi - " Ii 1 I I • . . ~ DAIL V PILOT LB Th11rsday, AprU 12, l'l7J Six Seek 4-hree. Laglina · SchoOl I j ' Bo.ard .Seat~ \; . • • JANE F. BOYD, 50, ol 1274 Slerlil Drive , J.;aguna Beach Is CCH1wner of 6dtaWt 'Inver Service. She fint ,wu -... to the Board of FAl..,.uon 1n ·1189. Mn. Boyd and htt-husband, Charllon, have throe children, Scott, %7' Alan. 25. ind Lucy, 19. Each graduated from Laguna Beach High School. , A resident of the Laguna Beach area for the pa.st is,,..ears , Mrs. Boyd is a past presllfenl or Jbe A\i!o Elementary School · PTA, the Laguna Beach High School PTA _.,.i tbe Laguna Beach PTA Council. ~· Boyd lisls lhe roJlowlns •• key In the <lectlon campaign: : ·, ·Whether Ille ldlool district will be ~ow.d to build on exbtlng strenll\!IS and .. prove on ils wi!aJmcss-es. ·~· Hone!l and open discussion. : ince~ evaluation or educational : trnaUveS free of preconceived ..... .. or attitudes. ~'My efforts have been and will con- : Jionting the new board ' will be to ~tablish broad community support. :the schools in Laguna did have this sup-:?ort at one time," commented Mrs . ;~d. .~ My elfo!:)s have been. eon- • liue to be direct,ed.-to ard rebuilding !~fidence in onfSchools, our programs ::i.pc!.J>ur-f)ersonnel,'' she said. >-Concerning innovative education, Mrs. Boyd said changes in education are best utilized by developing programs which who 1 1ttends 1burston , intermediate SclilOJ, and Stephanie, II, also a Thunlon student. According to Browne, the key Juues In , the election campalp art: - -Communleatlnna at all levels. -lndlvtduallu!d program1 venus tra- ditionaJ sclf-cootaJned classroom teach- ing. -~vel of student achieverneot <; mlllee also recommended a newsletter primarily practical, Jn that l believe that publilhed by the boanl, provld!1.:,lmple edueallonal goals mun first be set • Voters ln the Lquna Beach Ullllled edUClllion? numerical data about tbe 11. )---'telllallcally, and then the best and ~ Se!lool Dillrict w).11 ,. IO the polla 1\leJ--Wb.lt will you try 10 aeeompllsh U strongly support thlt Idea. · eeonomlcal means to achieve u .... 1oafi day to ~-of .als Q!!dJd1,! eJecl<id! 1 deptDdent board , corr ronne<j mlJlt be selected. · ebcillld be · to-~ ~ -Wbat ls your poolllon regartllng the publlo, school oUicl • lhat they "Decision making must be by the the Board of Educltkla. • ~-of Dr. W~ U 11 o ~ , are accoun · e ienced, critical democratic process of investigation, To assist. local residents in making supenntendent, and his two . to p lay _tePttSentatlves will rapidly restore discusskm and concerted board action, responsible choices the DAILY PILOT assistanll, Dr. Charles Hess and Dr. ~climate of confidence easentla.l to all in an open and Cree forum/' he added. · today publilbes ,Jlie bac~ and Robert Reeves. good education. · · -Discipline. "Lnguna schools have phllooopbies of the six Cllldldat... -What are your e d a * lhe respect of They are Incumbents Jane Boyd( Dr. philosophies! * Norman Browne and William Thomas Ill The candi wwers to those ques-MICHAEL SAGAR, 39, or 974 van Dyke WILLIAM THO~IAS ID, 51, o! 31501 First Ave., South Laguna currently is president of the Board of Education and owner of ·Bill Thomas Cameras. and cont.enders Ronald Krebcr, Dr. Uons__.ar give(l in the accompanying Frederic Ludwig and Micha<! Sap... rliis. -. Drive .Is an .attorney with o!llcos In Santa In lonnulatlng this mateiial, U1y>Ar-Polls will be open from. 7 a.m. to I p.m. Ana MC! Laguna 'Beach. LY PILOT Uked the c · !Of the Tuesday. Any regislered vot.n living Sagat, a JNlll member of the Educa- -following : --wlthln-lhe-.chool-dlstricl-limlts who-is-Uonal .Prlociti~s S!l!dy_ Q.o m Ill [.t t ~"-- -What is y kground in the unsure as to bis polling place may con:.1· <E.PSC), an<_! his wlfe, Sh~n. liave lwo Laguna_....BeaCfi commimitf?. . tact the ne·gistrar of Voters, 834-2244. children, Steven, ti, _and Knsten, 9. Both .....-;:;,:ll'liat ate the key Juu .. Jn the cam--Election results will be posted Tuotday are sludents at Aliso Elemehlary School. palgn as you see them? night at the Laguna Beach Unified School Sagar listed the f61~~in' points as key -How do you view the Laguna Beach District Education Center s.;o Blwnont issues In the April 11 election campaign: schools today? St. Persons may call 49f-is.t& for latest -Reconciliation. -How 'do you feel about innovative returns. -Evaluation. -Communication -Discipline. . itself. Nowadays, only school officials -Innovation. -:-.end-faeullies are knowledgeable about -Cost control. · -the business of education. AS a result, -Solid subjects, such as math, science, scllool boards are in danger of becoming language and reading. . ~reatlve use or funds available for school program. • 111be school board must heal the great divls1oo of our community created by lhe <lecUon of Ille Bill Thomas maJorJty, which brought with it negativism, mistrust, Polarization and abandonmfnt of democratic process .. in decision mak· ing," said 8agar. Thomas, a 28 year resldalt of the l.oiW!O aria, and his_wi[e,_!>Qpna, !!;!~ two children, Susan,-a teacher· and Robe.ft, a senior at Oregon State University. _ Thomas frrst was elected to the school board In 1971. He ls past president ot the Aliso Elementary School PTA, a member · of , the Lions Club and active in the American Field Service program. . Tho~s cited ~he following as. key issues m the election campaJgn: · help promote individualized instruction. ·' "The important question in any cba~ge is, will the change help to create a school system that beUer meets the needs or the students, parents and taxpayers?" aaid Mrs. Boyd. "The high school and Tl\qrston are the subject of much conceni am'bng paren ts who feet that their children are not being J>!ei>ared properly in certain areas," said Regarding innovative education, Sagar commented, "The 'question or the role of innovative progratl)s in the overall Lasuna school system has divided the community needlessly in a semantic bat· • If reelected, Airs. Boyd said she will work to reest ablish broad community , support and confidence in the school :system. -Regarding the riring or Dr. William Ullom, superintendent, and hls two · TRAVEL SERVICE CO-OWNER Jane· F: Boyd assiStants. Dr. Robert Reeves and Dr. Charles Hess, Mrs. Boyd said, "It is well known that 1 did not favor the firing of Dr. Ullom. Dr. Reeves or Dr. Hess. "Aside from my personal confidence in them as educators and administrators who were sincerely interested in quality education, I have yet to hear from any Source, clearly sta ted , a single reason for · their being dismissed from their posi· tions," she said. "My philosophy of education, as a board member, is the dcep ·belief that my task is to help create an atmosphere con· Qucive to educational excellence in the administration, staff and students by in· terpreting the desires of the community,. as its spokeman in policy matters, and direction toward educational goals. * DR. NORMAN BROWNE, 45, of 420 El . Camino de! Mar, Laguna Beach, is a local dentist who is seeking his ·third tenn on the Board of Education . Dr. Browne and his wife. Carol. have lived in Laguna Beach for the past 15 years. 'They ha ve four children, Jaimie, 18, a student at California State Unlversi· ty. Sacramento; Doug. 16. a student at Laguna Beach 1-ligh School ; David, 14 , _ OU.Niii COAST " DAILY PILOT The Oranos CM'1 OAILT PILOT, wlltl Wflir!l hi COfTIOltlW ltle N...,..Prts., IJ MllSl'lecl 11y ltle 0r•""9 CM1l PullUsl'llnO COfnPAll.,. S..· rei. ""ltlonll •rt llllblllhed, MOf!dar ttwa11&1~ Frldly, IOr co.11 M.,., Ntwpef"t &e•<JI. liUl'llll!llllOn . 8ttctVFoun111n Vtllli', i.to11111 &eKtl, '""ltll.ISHlll<eti.dt ..., "'" (IMotntt / $11'1 Jllefl C"t pl,lr1na. A 1lnelt 1'99ioM1 Id/lion ... !Mtihlled S.lvrHYI MOii Suiooo1Y1. TIM Pfh'lc:ISlfl M/Wlft'9 Pltnl 11 •t Ul Wtsl 8ti' Sh'WI, COllt Mt-11, C1lll!)rnL1, ""2'. Ro btrt N. Wttd Presidtftf Ind Pllbllvotr J•c• It Curley Vk:1t ~ftidlf!I t(ld 0.....fl Moa(ltf T~Offtlt' 1e .... ;r EdlJOr Thom•• A. Murphln• Mltiffllng Edl!Or LOCAL DENTIST Or. Norm1n Browne educators through(!ut California," said Browne. "The students achieve very high on achievement tests and generally like school." JnnoVations, said Browne, are a necessary part of educational plAnnin g. "New techniques should always be looked at, sometimes tried and a I w a y s evaluated closely," he said. - If elected to a third term, Dr. Browne said he will work to refine and improve the present .program with probably no major changes. "l would try to elicit precise direction in tenns of goals and objectives from the board and community ... T would like to see the board start talking togethe r - cibout education," commented Browne. Browne termed the firing of Drs. William Ullom, Charles Hess and Robert Reeves "unwarranted.'' "Dr. Reeves and Dr. Hess both had ex· cellent evaluations and Dr. Ullom was 'never evaluated by the board. Most Jm. port.ant there was not one )Vord of board discussion about the dismissals. The on1y logical conclusion I can come to is that discussion and preliminary decisions were made outside the board room," he sa id. In slating tiis educational philosophy, Browne said he believes in education centered on the individual. "Jn order for each individual to pr~ gress to his greatest potential there must be variations and flexibility in the school program, just as there are variations in individuals," he said. He called for the use of para-pro- fessionals and special sch e du Ii n g. "Ultimately we must utilize tools to determine individual learning styles to - best teach children," Browne said. * RONALD KREBER, 36, o[ 3130 Bern Drive, is a one year res ident_ of Laguna Beach and a trial deputy for the Orange County Dist rict Attorney's office. He and his wife, Virginia, a former teacher, have two pre -sch ool-age children, Mary Eileen, five, and John, two. Before joining th e district attorney's office, Kreber worked as a community relations officer with the Los Angel es Police Department. Kreber listed the following as key issues in the election campaign : Dr. Slocum Sued In Childbirth Death of Woman A wido"·er who claims that Dr. Wesley Gamer Slocutn was negligent in the treatment of his pregnant "'ife sued the ronner Costa Mesa physi cian \Vednesday for $200.000 in damages. Arnulfo Salaizh of Cudahy blames Slocwn, 49, of Santa Ana. for the death on Oct. I, 1972, of fl.frs 1 ·Estelle Salaizn. The Orange County Supc'rior Court action states that Mrs. 5alai:za died aftet deHvering a stillborn child. Salaiz.a. who nan1es his two small children as co-plaintiffs. alleg_~ that S!ocum falied to transfer Atrf!. Salaiza to hospital at a time when he knew that his patient was in a critical Co™Ulion. Slocum, who was cleared two years ago of charges-Iha~ he killed his Infant Kreber. · ''High school reading scores seem_ to just;fy this concern. My own observa· tions while touring these ~Is have made me aware of conditions which as a school board member l wootd want studied and perhaps changed. "Test scores indicate that there is variation in achievement among the elementary schools. Yet, each partlcu!ar school has 1118111 Joyal pemits and students abs9lutely, ceriain that •their school li best. This tells' me that there is much good. which can be shared," said Kreber. Innovative education, · he said. Is "essential" to successful education. "The conventiOnai method of today was the in· novative program of y e s t e rd a y . However, for every proven 'conventional' method in use today perhaps thousands of 'innovative' ideas were tried and pl°O* ven to be failures," said Kreber. If elected, Kreber said he would heal the "wound of a split community" by restoring community confidence in the schools. "We must get the facts about our schools, and thelf appi:iase them in an unbiased, open-minded way. Some of these facts already show areas that need improvement," be said. Regarding the dismissal of Dr. William Ullom, Dr. Charles Hess and Dr· Robert DEPUTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY .. Ronald Kreber Reeves, Kreber said, "I am not in a posi· lion to be able to pass judgment on the dismi ssal or Ors. Ullom, Reeves and Hess. The reasons behind t h e s e dismissals have not been made public.'' Basic reading, language arts , mathematics, science, and history "are esseuJials in the preparation of futur e adults." said Kreber, in describing his educational philosophy. "These must be emphasized throughout the student's school career. "In learning, as ln life, all is not fun and gamts. When a student leaves Laguna sc:hools he should be equjpped with the self discipline necessar.y .to be successful in later life," he said. * DR. FREDERIC LUDWIG , 48/ of 400 El Camino del Mar is a pro essor of pathology and radiological seiences at the California College of Medicine, UC Irvine. A Laguna Beach resident for five years , Dr. Ludwig and his wire, Fran- cine, have four sons, Christopher who at· tends Thqnton Intermediite School and Francis, A1exis and Oliver, enrolled 11t El MOl"f'O Elementary School. ' · Ch1rl•1 H. loo1 .Rich1rd '· N•ll Aut.i1n1 ~ .... Int Edtlwt. ..._._Offk. 222 For11t-A¥tnu1 M•ilin9 Addr1•11 ,,0. la• 666, 92652 ...... .,,,._ .,daughter, currently races Superior Court criminal action on allegations that he defrauded the stale's Medl·Cal system of at lea st $5.000. __, Ludwig was member or the Educa: tional Priorities Study Committee and has been active In curriculum reform for both the governments of Germany iind Bra:zll. He has authored 70 research papers and three books. CO.I• M-1 230 W•I .. ~ ltrfft H...,..., a.di! UU ,.._. ~,. Hwl"-"" 9"<111 11llJ 8ffefl '9¥1f¥•r-d """ C*"'"l9: .JDS '""111 l!I C.mllll R111 , .. .,.,,, 1714) Ml-4Jll er .,.... ,........... u1.s•1• ~ IMd Al hpa1:411t1: . , ......... ,..,... ~. "'l. Ortflfl C..&t M !lihlnt ~. No • -•!Orla. mwtr.ii.i., edlWi.I rNtftr °' • ...,.,._,. Wtlll mtt .,. rwrlfdfiail ..-l!Mvt ~i.t ""' ,...... ., fllP'l"ltln ..,.,.,. ....... ct.I• ,_., ... Hid ti C0411t Mtw, etll""'1.I. ~l.t~ IW urrttt n...,-- "*'"'IY' 1W ,,_11 11.11 """"'IY1 ll'llUF•ry -.nNlltM UM fl'lllflfllht, His arraignment has been set for April 21. U;S. Clinibers Set KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) -All 16 membtrs ol an American expedlllon to Dhaulagiri have reaehed lbeir base camp and are set for thei r assault on the "'orJd's sixth highes t mountaln, the Nepalese foreign Ministry reportc<I 10- day. A message received from the li,400. foot camp gave oo details about the weather. I Dr. Ludwig asked that his statement be carried as wrlllen without editing. II follows a! written : The duty of the school board is not only to define educational policy but also to audit educa1Jonal perfonnance. Only this dual function· can insure the cllmate o{ eonfidenee essentlal to public "schools. The Independent eiercl,. of Jhese two boanl funetlons 1$ threalened. This lhreat comes neither from the govcrriment nor from lhe public. bul from the complex and techn ical nature of modem education ( . • PROFESSOR OF PATHOLOGY Dr. 'Frederic Ludwig raere extensions of s c b o o 1 ad· ministrations. The crisis in Laguna can be traced back to this dilemma which is actually nationwide. The board, in order to preserve its in- dependence -i.e. its ability to define policy consonant with the wisbea or the .electorate -·must be a well informed, objective auditor of performance. How can this be achieved? . _ First, by electing to the board people 1 knowledgeable aboot quality control or education. Seeond, by strengbtenlng the board by ·advisory groups accountable to the board. As the example ot the Educa· tional Priorities Study Committee shows, citizens committees can -.do this er- rectiv<ly. The role of innovation in schools cannot be discussed without answer~ first the question_: what objectives of education are permanent, and unlikely to change as the result of innovation? _ . One is the developmerit of effective thinking and the acquisition of skHls. The other is discipline,.. i.e. self-control to the end or accomplishment. t Whole-hearted- ly support educational innovations that improve the attainment of these ob- jectives; I question innovations based on the conce pt that these objectives are only secondary: Students who are "well ad· justed and communicate readily .with people '', but who cannot spell or un· derachieve in arithme ntics are, in ac- tuality, ill adjusted.· Clearly, adjustment cannot be stressed at the expense of Scholastic performance, but it should be a concern of the responsible educator. The Educational Priorit ies Study Com· lie. · The Priorities Committee defined in-- novative as nothing more or less than the development of new programs ,to im· prove the learning process, and the adaptation and abandonment of tech· nlques that do not work. "The committee applauded the . .iJl.. novattve approach and recommended its continuation, fearing that adherence to any other approach to improvement would lead to stag!!_!lt!on in education." Sagar said, "I agree." . As a trustee, Sagar said he would im- plement recommendations made by the EPSC to improve communications. He said he would -work to restore open meetings with free exchange of in- formation whether favorable to the schools or not. Noting that the EPSC called for the board to "establish an atmosphere or faith and trust In the present ad- ministration," Sagar said, "The Thomas led majdtltf responded by firing the en· tire administration without an evalua- tion, reason or explanation. "Clearly no administrator has a vested right to his position for life, but common ,l\TTQRNEY AT LAW Michael Sager decency requires that such a far reaching step be taken after evaluation, reflection and open Wscussion. ''My personal educational philosophy is ,,,. CAMERA SHOP OWNER William Thomaa Ill .!:.LOw standards in too many areas of learning. -Inefficient use of hmds in some areas. -Too much permissiveness. -More emphasis needed on fun- damentals. -Weak curriculum in several areas. According 10 Thomas, !bi schools ~ "below average in some programs, above averag~ ln Others and just-average in most." Concerning inDovative educ a.t.1 on , Thomas conunented, i'I'm tired of -this "'Ord, it's so overworked it's' stale, any change is an innovation and' changes will occur." If reelected, Thomas said he would try to achieve results commensurate with money spent per student, strengthening of curriculum, improvements in the testina: and evaluation programs, more efficient use of the school day, reduction of admi'nistrative costS, formation of a standing ·citizens committee a n d implementation of higher goals tor stu-- dent perfonnance. Rererring to the dismissals of Dr. William Ullom, Dr. Charles Hess snd Dr. Robert Reeves, Thomas said the actions were taken because ·of "philosophical dlt· ference and keeping qur options open." Thomas said he believes school pro- grams must be designed "to challenge and prepare our young people to the mazimum of their capacity Jn or~r fer them to better compete in the outside world, to instill in our students a sense of pride in their family, schools, community and country. • lie said he places a very high priority on testing and evaluatiOn and proposed the school district look for successlUI programs used in other districts. FOOD COSTS! MEET RISING FREEZE FOOD PRICES With This COMPACT 206 lb. Chnt FREEZER BIG SPACE·SAVING 405 lit. UPRIGHT fREEZER ......... , ... 1JP11tf-"1 ..... .. lhhlfl••• ..... ""' ., ... ..,. ... 'bir4'" ... ......... ... .. ....,_ -VWlill•1 ..... 1. ........ ""'" 15'6 11ra- Mombor of 90 DAY C11ifornlo'1 Largut CASH rn Cooperative Buyin1 ,_WITH-"'''°YD Group With Tho CllOIT Volume Buying m • ,,, AIWIA"9 Power of 110 Stor11 .,.., ........ ES . ........ ,...,.. ' . 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa --Phone 548-7788 - -· .• I / J I • . • I I I J • I ·.1 l S~ddleha~k - 'I . .., .. ' •. -·~ ...T«pday's Final / N.Y. Stoeks • • • VOL. 66, NO. 102, 4 SECTION-$, 56 PAGES .-J?>RANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. \ . THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1973 TEN CENTS: ------. ; Irvine F~ounaation Denies It· .Will Sell Stock: . . ' -_-By GEORGE LEm.u;- ornte oti1r """" st11t . Morning news accounts suggesting the James·11lrvine Foundation woula) begin selling its stock in the Irvine Company as early as June were termed "a falsehood" today by the foundation's ·attorney. Howard J. Privett, Los Angeles ' at- torney for the Irvine Foundation and its spokesman during. recent hearings in Washingtqn D.C., denied, he had indicated * *" * McLarett's Retirement Defended · ' . r Irvine Company board chairman N. Loyall McLaren retired from the board this week-to allow directors "planning _ time" prior to the finn's June stockholders me~ting to find a suitable replacement, it was learned today. Los Angeles attorney Jloward J. Privett, Who represents the Irvine Foun- dation , denied that McLaren was "resigning under pressure of Washington hearings. He is 81 years old and is retir- ing from his jnvolvement in the Irvine Company," Privett said. McLaren bad been invited to testify before two Congressional committees in \Vashington in the past week. He was due last Friday to appear before Rep. Wright Pat.man's House Banking and CUrrency domestic finance subcommittee. Privett appeared before the Texas Democrat and · spoke for the foundation . On Tuesday, when he . was due to ap- pear before Sen. Wilbur Mills (O.Ark.) and the House Ways a.M Means Com- mittee, McLaren was in Newport Beach. He announced his re~ from the seven-member board of din!Ctors of the Irvine Company.· · Today, Privett said McLaren's decision to retire had been made some time ago and··that Tuesday was the only opportunity he would have to infonn felJo..w directors there would be a vacancy on the board which would have lo be filled at the June stockholders meeting of the Irvine Company. One company director, Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, who holds 21 percent of the company stock, was not in Newport Beach Tuesday to hear McLaren's an- nouncement. She appea~ed before the Mills committee and argued with Privett. Mrs. ~smith, granddaughter of the late James Irvine, has long battled for con- trol of the firm which is controlled by the Irvine Foundation.·' McLaren, Privett said, will cootinue to serve on the foundation board of direc- tors. That board will decide exactly how and when the Irvine Foundation will comply With the tenns of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 which requires the reduction of the foundaton's holdings in the Irvine Com- pany from the present 54 percent to 20 ·percent by 1979. "It is just coincidence lhat the decision to retire ·from the company board and the need to inform that board of the decision came at the same time as the Washington hearings," Privett -said on McLaren 's behalf today. McLaren's tenilre on the Irvine Com· · pany board -dating from 1959 -has no bearing On the foundation's--ooJllpliance with the Tax Refonn Act, Privett con- tended. -· ~ . , As for the requirement to sell off stock in the lr'rine Company, Privett said his testimony '"didn't imply when the divestiture would J>egin. · Tfie law gives "The timing and method of selling the stock will De determined by the foun- (See McLAREN, Page 2) UCI Coed Taken From Shopping Center, Attacked -· A UC Irvine student was raped . Wednesday night by an unknown assailant who grabbed her as she return- ed to her. car from shopping in the Tustin area, Orange County Sheriff's deputies said today. The 21-year-old victim, a Santa Ana resident who works part time for a cater- ing company, told deputies .her attacker held a revolver to her head as · she en- tered the C@l' and then forced her to drive to a remote area. She told 'CltPlllies sbe was lhen raped and forced to participate in acts of sex· ual perversion before being compelled to drive her assailant back lo their •arling point. Dcpulles said she described her at· tacker as being 24 to 25 years old, 175 pounds, and with short dark hair cul In a military fashion. Of(icers said the victim did nol require medical treatment. I the foundation WOufd--as soon 8S' "this summer" begin selling share.s of Irvine Compciny stock. "The Board <lf Directors of the James Irvine Foundation has initiated studieS and planning to realize the full market value of its holdings in the Irvine Com~ : pany," P.rivett confirmed. Hqwever, those studies and the planning, ·he emphasized, may result in a·decision to sell 'Irvine Company·holdings at·any time • • • within the next six years. "There bas been no decision · by the boai-d of the foundation t<l begin selling s·tock this summer. Any report that such a decision ' has been made is a falsehood," Privett decla~. He added that the foundation ha's until 1979 under terms of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 to redtice its holdings in the Irvine Company from the present st5 pe.,tcent level to .the 20 ~rcent requir~ DAILY PILOT Slaff P'llolo Rosstnoor Cleans fJp World Crane lifts unidentified fiberglass country back into pl.ace on giant globe just off Avenida de la Carlotta in La~na Hills. A symbol for Rossmoor Corporation's Leisure World retirement community, the globe was recently sand-blasted in a regular cleaning operation. The countries were removed and cleaned in a gentler manner. A foun- tain, r,alm trees and other landscaping will soon be added in this worlds domain. Pentagon: Probably No American P.OWs Alive -' . ' WASIDNGTON. (UPI) -'-The-Pen\agon said today there ·are probably no more Am~rican priooners alive anywhere · in Indochina. The Pathet Lao in Laos and the in- surgent forces in·Cambodia will hopefully proxide more informati~n about the fate of the -Americans missing in those coun- Dr, Roger Shields, bead <lf the Peir ·tries, Shields said,, but "we have no in- tagon'.s prisoner of war task force, added dication at this moment that there are ihere Is no evidence that any POWs had any Americans-allvejn Indochina." . .been executed. in captivity, wilh three ex--Rumors that there are hundreds of ceptions. · · U.S. servicemen ~still held ir. Laat.ian Those three were executed early in 'llie 1' prison camp-s "do the families of · the \Var in retaliation for Saigon execution of missing a disservice," he said. captured Viet Cong guerrillas, according The Pat'bet Lao °and the Khmer Rouge, to a Viet C.ong announcement at the unftke the Viet Cong and the North Viet- lime. (See POWs, Page !) bithe federal law~ --,-- Addlliopal]y, he explained. there ·are court actkms pending in California which would in effect be necessarily complete before. any stOck held by the fOundation could be sold. A court suit filed by the f9U11$.tiOri to change ~he . trust lnstrume.'lt drawn by James Irvine is nece.ssary, Privett said, before the stock may be sold f!ven though the federal Jaw ?las ordered the sale. • "1be· U.S. COnsUtutiOn-protects such indentW'eS of trust," he explained . <;Congress cannot violate the terms of a \>rivate contract.-'' James Irvine II, who died in 1947, set up the fouDdation and gave it controlling interest in. the Irvine CorTipany. Despite the Tax Reform Act, l>rivett said , "Congress can't come along 30 years later ahd apply retroactiVely a Jaw which was not in effect .when the. trust in· '. strument was drawn by ~1.r. Irvine. . , "It \Vill lake a court decision to do .. that." Privett sai'd. ·1 The roundation's suit filed in December;; of J971 \viii be given a pret rial hearin g: ~lay 9 in Los Angeles Superior Court .. Privet t said. If heard in June or JUiy as. t;xpected, th e foundation might be free of. preseot trust restrictions wqich 'prohib\t' ·:piece meal" ·sales of tpe stock. • ! Saddlehack City? ' ' First Incorporation .Hearings Held By JAN WORTH Of rhl Dlllr Pli.t Stiff Cautious looks at cityhood for the Sad- dleback Valley were taken Wednesday night at a citizens public session sponsored by . the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council (SACC). It was the first public discussion of a report exploring the possibilities for cityhood in the Saddleback area. Additional hearings will c o n t i n u e . through June, after which the SACC will· Nixon Meets With Aides On Cambodia . WASIDNGTON (UPI) -. ·President Niml calleil · ii) . his top militaey, : dij>lomatie nd In~ admen-~ -MY for cansullallont Gii 11ie -1ng · sllualion in Cambodia. Conllnued U.S. bombing there has caused growing con- gressional objections. - The President made an early moniing heliCopter flight from Camp David, in the ' western Maryland mountains where an unseaSona1 spring freeze occurred during hls ove,rnigbt .visit, to the White Hou!le'to see his petsclnal emissary to Cambodia and meet with the National Security coun<cil. Gen. Alexander M. Haig, who made a four-day on-the-scene inspection for the President in C&nbodia as well as Visiting other key capitals in Southeast .Asia, ar- rived back in Washington several hours before dawn and was on hand at the White House 'Vhen Nixon returned. Haig kept Nixon posted on his findings throughout ·his visit, , via c.a,b I e d messages, but the President wanted to hear qqickly the newly eJevated four-star general's personal evaluation of the situ.a ti on. A spokesman for ~the Viet Cong said in Paris, "We have received rep:irts that, backed by the United States, Saigon is preparing its troops for an invasion of Cambodia.'' · The spokeSin~n. Ly Van Sau, added : "If Saigon carries out an open invasion of Cambodia to -massacre and pillage again the Cambodian populations, it will create an extremely grave violation of the Viet- nam peace accords." In a Senate speech this· morning, Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield warned about rumors that South Viet- namese troops might be us® on one· flank and Thailand troops on the other in /efforts to · relieve the preSsure . on 11 beleaguered Cambodian forces. "This would be a most dangerous pro- cedure and could have the possible effect of once again involving this country in a quagmire because the sup1l9rt - logistical and otherwise -would come from: tfie United States," Mansfield. said. The Whlle House sought to indicaje lhe meeting of the Security COCmcit'".:..J. com- p:iscd or the highest Pentagon. State (See CAMBODIA, Page !) formulate an official recommendation of cityhood to go to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Reactions to the issue of incorporaling a new city varied WednesClay night. "The one most in1portant thing to us is, why incorporate if you are being heard at the county level?" Ward Thompson, chairman of a Saddlcback citizens' com· mittee said. . -·-1 After pres.enting a rep:irt on goven1- ment alternatives for the Saddleback Valley, hnplying that cityhood was the eventual destiny for the 110-square mile area, Thompson said he felt the move should be put off as long as possible. "Right now, we are~being heard. Right now, there is nO big push. When that kind of res ponsiveness ends, our desire to have a tj_.ty in the valley shifts to a need for ohc." he said. A straw vote of 75 residents attending ' the n1eeting showed most favoring a 1 (See CITYHOOD, Page !) •Throat~ Lewd -· NY MQvie Tlieater Fined $100,000 ' NEW YORK (AP}-A midtown movie theater was fined $100,000 today .for showing the movie "Deep Throat," which has been ruled . ~e. CrinllnAl Court Judge J"oel Tyler said the fine, levied agaiJlst """1Jlitiire El~rises, Jpc., was 1111ot excessfv'" and was "well witllln the .meanl Of defendarill to pay and woula accomplish the intent"' of the staie's obscenity statute. The theater said it would appeal. The 82-minute film. which opened at the New World Theater June 12, was ·described in Tyler's March '1 rulin~ as a "nadir of dee· adencer" Tyler, who heard the case without a Jury, found the fi1m to be 1'indisiiutably obscene by any legal measutement." The film has grossed nationwide more than""$3.2 million. It was confiscated by city police last . August but the theater was allowed to continue showing it 4uring appeal proceedings. Jt ·netted.$152,924 here. Agneiv · Hits R~porter ' ' 'Bias' in News · Stories . . ' WASHINGTON (AP) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew today struck out at journalists who take sides . in news stOries, saying the nation's news media seem-to feel .more and more they should control public reaction rather than report what happened. Agnew's comments were contained in the text of a speech, released here, in ad- vance of delivery at the "April Freedom Forum" of the National Educational Program at Harding College, Searcy, Ark. __r- The speech was critical ot ~alled Hadvocacy reporting," a school of journalism in which a reporter takes sides on an issue. "()pee journalists believed that their" job was to report '8s much as J>O!iSlble what happened. Today;-the view in- creasingly seems to be lhat the media should control the public reaction to what happened," Agnew said. Advocacy jouranlists, be .said, act more as lawyers developing briers, than as reporters. the free now of information to the· Americljn pe<>ple, by government or· anyone else, is repugnant to me," Agnew claimed the Nixon administration wants to be fair with the press. -. He said there is right and wrong O!).. t>oth sides in the controversy between the media and the Administration, and called • for "reasoned debate and communication. bet.ween the parties" to reach a solution "or even an improvement." - But he said the staffs or opini0n-1J1ak- ing news media have come to "think or themselves as representatives of the peo- ple and . just as routinely to view the federal government as the enemies of .the. people. "Now something seems very out of joint about this. Does a man who works for CBS represent the people? Or does he primarily represent CBS? Orange Coast · Weather ls .. Bal ~ W·e · k Still Alive? "They ferret out and publicize prin- cipally those facts which support their own p:iints of view -points of View which are considered by them to be revealed truth and the only <lnes that should be presented to the American pe~ Hazy sunshine <lD Friday, fol· lowing early m<lnling fog and low clouds along the coast. Highs of 76 are expected in inland a re a s . Beach temperatures of 68 are fore- cast. Overnight lows J n the 50s . By L. PETER KRIEG 01 fflt Diiiy P'llOt SJlltf Bal Week 'is appa rently alive and well -and getting off tO an early start in Newport Beach this year. The annual Easter vacation blowout got off to an atypical if premature start this morning as Newport Beach police arrested 17 Riverside youths crammed into a second story duplex apartment in West Newport. · · Police used a paddy wagon to transport lhe yQUlhs. all boys, 10 police head· quarters 'after Unding a cooler full of beer, a lid ot marijuana, and a bottle. <lf piUs in the apartment at 3308 W. Ocean Front. O(ficer John Furrow said he came across the youths after picking up a jtWcnlle we aring.a backpack and walking , I . _) on Balboa about 9 a.m. near 42nd Street Furrow sai he stopped fhe .youth because be ap red to be a runaway. 1'He told us he.re he was staying and we went to t Ocean Front address to verify it," Fu w said. He said he came upon the olh~r youths "sleep g all over the place" O'n mallres)!ell sleeping 'bags. He said marijuana and narcotics paraphe wtre lying around along wllb other contraband. Furrow said charges ha DOI been filed against any of the youths Including lhe only •dull, Claylon W. NelUeton. 18. He said there was an "obvious viola- tion ol lhc housing codes'' and II_ ap- peared there was oo adult supervision so charges may in clude ·lack of parental • ' pie," be said. . control. Fuirow said he did not know ~ "It is advocacy journalism more than any other factor that has caused the cur- rent ill feeling be.tween government or- ficia'ls and the opinion-making media," mediately who owned the duplex or Agnew said. · which of the youths had rented it for the ---He identified opinion-making media as week. · ~ .-the televisiop networks\ wire services r.ThE:Y were just starting Easter vaca· . and :•the J~ge newspa.pers,, and lion,'' Jo\lrrow noted, pointing out that magazmes wh!ch cover the na.~100 and Riverside schools le\ out a· week earlier world. with t™;:: own personnel. . than most others. Saytng the J<lea <lf interference with Newport Beach police said today they are still counting on another relatively quiet Bal Week, which is the way it ha s been in lhe past several years in sharp contrast to a decade ago when youths streamed lo Balboa by lhe thousand• from all over the country. "Bui things have been picking up," observed Lt. Ed Ci6barelli, adjutan t to (See BAL WEEK, Page I) .. Mexican in Mosco~- ~ MOSCOW (UPI) -Presidenl Luis Ecbevetria of Mexico arrived today for talks on bow to improve his country's small alld dwindling trade wilh lhc Soviet Unlon, and to seek a larger voice tor lesser powers in world affairs. • INSIDE TODAY Cathy Murphy has an u.nu.sual dog. Flossie, her 2-year-old Bos- ton bulldog, ca11 do back/lips, skate, fetch atul, uh, talk. T,uat's right. Atut if 11ou. dO'n't believe sJie cat11 it's j('St the Boston ac· cent confusing you. See storu on Puge 15. • ' ' ., ' ! ~ DAILY Pllill Tt111tSdlJ, Aprll 12, l'f7l • Newport /tlan • Veteran Diver • - ' I Drowns Off ·-Isle A Newport.~nch Scuba diver with years , of experlehcc Was found drowned off Catalina Island \V~tsday nlg'ht . after his companion cruised coastal c:qves hunting him in the mistaken belief . .swam ashore. "body of Barry Hoskin, IC, of 403 N. •Pod Blvd., wu brought ashore at bland'! tslhmus by the Bai• Watch rot vessei, Angeles County S h e r i ff ' s in· ~ tigators are uncerta in hoW the eran diver got into fatal trlouble. e was acknowledged to be a good er, taught by his f11ther Douglat-and End.lather. Lyle-. operators o! Lyle kln and Sons 'Valer Sports, J220 W. st Highway. · ... f's dtputies said Hoskin and a Ion, Bob Hart, t9, of 2209 Miner ta Mesa: dove about l p.m. in 40:- ters off Emerald Cove. ~ ey became separated beneath the -4n·face and -about 45 minutes la ter, in- vestigators said, Hart returned to their f'romPqel ' CIJYHOOD. • • IJlunicipal advisory council. That alternative to cltyhood was recom- rriended by the committee as an interim ..measure pending the need tor in- ,corporatkJn. "We feel that right now that a J>U.:lh for 'incorporation would be suicide for the :whole possibility,". said Vance North, another member o( the 13-member com- ~ittee. :. Reactions from the residents, most of :M"hom where offi cers of homeowners' :.organizations in the valley, was non-com- mittal and curious. Most appeared at- tentive to what the SACC members had •to say. Questions: centered on timing and financing. Several residents said they felt they needed to study the 34-page report before expressing opinions. Present in the audience but not com- menting on the proposals . were Marlin Russo, a community relations director of the Mission Viejo Company, and Robert Hu rst, incumbent candidate for the school board in San Juan Capistrano. Monarch Bay, Aegean Hills, Lake Fo rest, and Laguna Niguel and several I:.aguna Hills mutuals were a I s o represented. · · Coples of the report are available in · the SACC office, Suiee 205 of the Royal ~vir:lgs and Loan Building on El Toro Road, and with most Saddleback VaUey organizations. "We · are not trying to pressure anybody to agree with anything." said SACC president Batt Spend1ove. "We simply want to get community feedback -to get discussion going. on the alternatives." Mission Facility Will Celebrate 'Ho spital Week' -f\1i ssion Community Hospital in Mission Viejo will celebrate National Hospital Weck May 6-13. The celebrations Y.'ill include opening. the Mission Viejo Medical Building ad- jacent tQ the hospital May 6. Tours o! the building and the hospital's outpatient department wilJlibe offered. Also announced during Hospital Week will be the winner of a $4,000 scholarship given by the Mission Hospital auxiliary. Four st uden ts, a boy and a girl each from Mi'9itn Viejo and San Clemente High Scbool8, will be given $1000 for studies in medically related fields. Other plans during the week call for announcing winners of an elementary S<'hool poster contest; a career day for high school students: a kidney disorder clinic; and lours of the facilities. OI AN•I COAST 11 DAILY PILOT boat and waited for Hoski n. , Finally assuming he had swum ashore,. Harl !ired up the craft and began cruis· Ing along shore searching fo r lhe missing man. . He notified the Avalon Bay Watch crew about 1 p.m., and 211 hours taltr Hosldn'a body' was found drlltln g In · sa feet of water· off Arrow Point. " Jl!-ne Fonda Claims U.S. 'Using' POWs BERKELEY (AP) -Acfress . Jane Fonda, who questions the tales of torture recounte~ by ex-prisoners of war, believes the Nixon administration is ·us- ing them to pave the way for reneWed in- terven tioo in Vietnam. "The carefully o~hestrated return of prisoners is designed to make ua hate the Vietnamese, justify the war, discredit us (the antiwar movement) and lay ground for future .interventions," the movie aC- tress told students Wednesday irlJC here. Miss Fonda, wearing a purple poncho and blue jeans, was asked how she felt about some POWs' criticism of her trip to Hanoi and other antiwar activities. "I think there is a strong attack on the part of the Nixon administration agaiMt the anti-war movement,'' she said. "I am part of that movement. A Jot of it comes from chauvinism. "I'm a pretty easy target for J>e;Qple because of w.bere I'm comin_g from. Men• don't want women, and particularly movie stars, to get Into politics," she ad· ded. "It makes tne feel there's a Jot of work to be done in this country." Miss Fonda said the physical condition of the ex-POWs belies some of the tales of torture. "The men look healthy . There 's no get- ting around it,'' she said. "Some men consider it torture to walk the streets of Vietnam with their heads bowed especially at the point of a bayonet held by a woman. Solitary confinement is not torture. Angela Davis was pul in solitary. "Why should we believe what these men are saying?" she continued. "They have lied about their bombing. The prisoners of war need help. They have been brainwashed by their government." Miss Fonda was.here to raise funds tor Medical Aid for lndochlna. She also spoke to students at the UC Medical Center in San Francisco. Meanwhile, .the Tennessee House has Concurred with the senate and sent to the governor a resolution demanding that Miss Fonda apologize for calling some returning American prisoners of war liars and war criminals. "The resolution descilbed her as ·an 'erstwhile aetress and e ntert ai n er recently turned. activist." From Pflfle J BAL WEEK. •• Police Chief B. James Glavas. Cibbarelli said the department still in· tends l-0 maintain nonnal shifts begin· ning Friday. "But if We can't handle it we have plans ready to beef things up," Cibbarelli conceded. - ' While· the number or arrests and com- plaints a~ut carousing youths still rise markedly during Eester week, police have managed to keep a comparatively tight lid on the city the. past four years and have not had to call out extra of- ficers except for specific incidents. Former College Dean Succumbs Friends in Orange County ·ha.Ye been saddened to learn of the recent death in Palo Alto or Dr. Calvin Flint, forme r dean of men at Santa Ana College. He " was 66. Tiie Or1nve Coe1t OAILY PILOT, wllh wllltll lt annt11"9d !II• H•-P'ltU, II P11bll1hM bV """ Or•"ll4' Co111 PllbllsMn<;r Com111~v. 5,,,_. ,..,. 1o!lt1Dr>1 1ro Pl.lbll1"9cl, Monct1v lhl'G\llfl Frld•v. ••~ Cml• M111. Hl'WJIO•I Buell. H\11'111"910" B•1<.h/F'-!1ln V1llty, L1!1Un41 •etoell. trvlntl~e!Mlc:I< •rid S1~ Clt,.,,..,lel S.rt J..,... C1pl1lr"'°· A 1lrrvl1 tf9l11111t ldl!lon 11 Plllltlllltd S1hird1v1 8nol sunctty,i. flit 1Wlncl1111I publl~lnt Pll"! II It l J) "'~II ••v Sir"'· Coll• Ml'll, C1lilflr"l.I, tuu. Rober! N. W1•d Prn.a.nt 11'111 PllDll1l•tt Jee .. R. Curlt'f' 'lie• P!'ellO ... I •NI Gtnt'r•• Ml'ltOtr lho"'•' K•t"il £aitor lhot11t1 A. Murphi"' M-••1'19 E.G!IOI' Ch1'4tt M, Looi Rtchtrcl P'. N1 fl AMltlt11I M-l lfltl Ellllwl °""" eo,,_ Mt1•t "° Wtll B•v Str'ltl N•WPOr• l,cfl~ »lJ Nrw-1 lolil1'¥1•1 L"'""' 1ec11; 'n """"' Awtnut HUl'l!fn9lotl lt•cft ; l1f1S Btlcfl IOUlf"tl<ll S.11 C"-"''; )OS Not111 £1 C.Milw 11111 , ......... 17t4) '42-4)21 Cl-"W A'""4 .. '4W671 S.. C ........ All t.,ertlllntl: Tei.,HM 4t2-44ZO CoPrl'ffl!I, 1•1.l. Orol!H C:0.11 P\llllltllli'll CM\fMI"~' No llfWI ''°"'"· mw.,..tltM, .itwltl IN!lff OI' lldwrlt~ ~ IM'f' M tfff'OllUCtld W!IPIOut tMtltf _. '"'••IM • coovr11111 o-. ' M<Ollll CltH ,ott ... NICI at Celll ...... C•lllorl'I._, $1.1_.,'9ollon OJ c.arrllf lt,'6 -!lllr 1 lh' lfltll ~a mtn,,.,,.I l'IW....,., OttflMlllM U ,6.1 li'Wll\b'. Or. Flint senied as a teacher and dean at s3nta Ana College from 1935 to 1942 when he left to serve in the Army Air Force during World War Il. lie later served as president of Mont erey Peninsula College and was first president of the Foothill College District in Santa Clara County. He retired in 1971. Dr. Flint is survived by his widow, Lenore and two sisters, Mrs. Verna Templeton of Santa Ana and MNl. Mata Potter or Hemet. Woman, 72 , Hit By Auto, Dies An elderly Monrovia woman died early this morning of injuries received when she was struck by a car In Anahtim. Mildred E. Harleman, 72, died al St. Jude Hospital at 1:12 a.m. Po lice said she was crossing Ball Road near 8f1lhaven Street In a darkened area tioout 9 p.m. Wednesday. She was not In a rnarked crosswalk. 'The woman was hit by e car driven by Cheryl Spaulding, 20, of Ill09 Medina Drive, Anaheim. The driver wes not held pending further litvestlgatlon of the ac· cldent, polict said. J , -·-• I • •• DAIL V _plLOT lltll l'M• ~rote~'fs Had Reason T~Gri~ By JOHN VALTERZA 01, ... o.irr ,...., 11etr Four dozen demonstrators from the In· ner city of Los Angel es arrived at the gates of tbe Wes\ern While House Wednesday, bul tbeJr ptolest of poverty program cutback& took a Jjac:k seat to ln- 1ernal squabbles. In fact, the demonstration which had be<n prei)arcd never really got o!f tbe ground. Most of the demonstrators grunted their disa~tment at the .area where demonstrat100s: take place 1n San Clemente: OtherS began arguing with their leaders because only one news:man show· ed ·up . • DEMONSTRATORS AT WESTERN WHITE HOUSE FOUND THE STAFF HAD GON E TO WASHINGTON Group Protesti(1g Poverty Program Cutback; Looked at Horses And Lt ft in Dismay Shortly after leaving their buses at .about 1:30 p.m. several of the ·delegates pounced on Public Safety Director Clifford Murray and demanded to speak to a White House rep~sentatives. "There isn't anybody there who could accommodate you," Murray said. ,,) F rom Page l ·Court Holds Up "What do you mean?" asked one woman. ''I mean there isn't anybody home. ' CAMBODIA SITUATION • • • Obscenity Case Of LA Paper They're all in Washington, all we have here today is a Jew guards," the ch1ef said. Department, Central Intelligence Agency officials as well as White House aides - was not a crisis meeting, saying it had been Jong-scheduled. llowever, in Phnom Penh, a crisis at- mosphere prevailed as more than 50 western diplomats or their families , in- cluding Americans, left the Cambodian capital in antici pation of an allout attack on the city by Communist forces. · Despite more .than five weeks or daily bombing of Communi.st c;oncentrations by American B52s and other warplanes, the Pathet Lao, allegedly with supfX)rt from llorth Vietnam, has blockaded the city. Meanwhile, fierce fighting w a s reported the length and breadth of South Vietnam today, even thou gh the o(ficial cease-fire was halfway through its 11th week. --.. Radio Hanoi said today Viet Cong troops have warned peace-keeping teams to stay clear oi certain areas to avoid "heart-breaking accidents" such as the one Saturday in which nine men were killed when their helicopter was shot down in northernmost South Vietnam. Two Flee Count y Jail; One Mak es It; 2nd Cau ght Two Orange County j&il' prisoners ran hr freedom Wednesday in separate in-:.. cide nts that led to the -booking or one suspect on escape charges and the issu- ing of an ell-poihts alert fo·r the other. ' Still at large· today is Jero1ne Vernon Brooks, 24, who slipped out oC his leg iron~ at the Oraoge County Medical Center denial clinic and galloped. to freedom,. Brooks' guards were given the slip as the prisoner, held on robbery charges, weaved his way through crowded cor· ridors at the county hospital. Stephanie Lucille Haywood. 21 , of San· ta Ana, did not show the same speed. Miss Haywood, also awaiting court ac- tion on drug charges, bolted from a transport vehicle as it entered the jail yard to unload its prisoners. She was pursued and quickly recaptured. Auto Collision '' Takes 7 Lives SPRI NGFIELD, Tenn. (UPI) -Sevon pers'Ons, including two 11-1 e t h o d i s I ministers and their wives, were killed Wednesday night in a'-two--car head-on collision near here. The TeMessee Highway Patrol said one -car was on the wrong side of lhe road traveling at a high rate of speed on a hill when it crashed into the other vehi- cle. "All it was, was a bunch of mangled bodies,'' said ambulance driver \Vatter Goode. Mu seum to Get Picasso Gift PARIS (UPI ) -The heirs of Pablo Picasso have donated the 'painter's vast and priceless col- lection of art by other modern artists to the Louvre museum in Paris, Picasso's a t t o r n e y aif!' nounced today. . The gift of pa l nllng s l\Y Modigliani, Braque, Mat Is s e , Renoir, CezaMe and other major names of modem art is in accord with Picasso's wlshes, attorney Roland Dumas said. Dumas said the family has not decided what to do with works by P!Casso hlm!Otr, which tbe artlSI kept in his villa at ~fougins in soulhem Fnnce. • South Vietnam said 139 Communist mortar shells from dawn to midday to- day hit in aild around the South Viet- namese ·ranger camp at Tong Le Chan 50 miles north of Saigon. The spokesma~ said there were no casualties. Fighting has been heavy fthe re for six weeks. The spokesman said Communist troops \Vednesday attacked. Saigon infantry and ranger troops in Quang Ngai province 300 miles north of Saigon. ' From Pflfle J PO s ... namese, have not provided a list of men who died in captivity. "We do not consider there -nas been a complete accounting," Shields said. In Laos, 317 men were listed as mis~ ing · and 10 POWs have been returned. Almost all were alrmen shot down. . .. .Many others were plucked from the ground by rescue helicopters before they could be captured, he said. Bug~ Found 011 South Coast, <;rap Periled The Weste rn White House has -been bugged, il wa1 revealed today. Not by electronic s p yi n g devices. ' But by woolly whitefUes. , And the Department. of Agriculture is alanned because ttie· dlSC<tvery or the tiny white plant- sucking pests mar~ the flrst ap- pearance or the insects along the South Coast. The USDA regards the bugs as a threat to the "citrus crop. The tidbit or infonnation came via Associated Press, whose staff noticed the entry in the weekly "Cooperative Economic In sect lteport." The Document said , the in- festation first spread into Oceanside and now has moved northw ard . The population at La Casa Pacifica, said the report, is "four nymphs per leaf." '• By TOM BARLEY Of ll!o DtllY Piie! lllH Obscenity charges filed against the Los Angeles Star were held over for one month today in a bid by Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Robert Rickles to combine the alle(!:ations into one ·court action along with fraud charges filed by the Pacific Telephone Company. "It would be ,much easier for all con- cerned if we can work things out this way,'' Judge Rickles told lawyers for both parties. "I'm going to hold both ac- tions over until A1ay 15 with that ahn in view." Judge Rickles' action came while lawm en throughout the county were still seeking April 11 editions of the con- troversial Los Angeles journal. Fraud charges stem from the allega- tion by District Attorney 1'.:ecil Hicks that the periodical's operators permitted "an act of massive consumer fraud" when they printed an article revealing the telephone company's credit card check- ing and logging system. -rocks blasted the arUcle as "an open lnvitaUon U> commit tbefl that Could mil the telephone users in this area alone billions of collars'." Obscenity charges that now seem likely IQ join the fraud allegatioru in the-same · court hearing ·were filed .. prior to the fraud counts but include Los Angeles Star Editor Paul Eberle in the Jong list of defendants. Also ·usted as defendants in ·both ac- tions are lhe High Class Publishing .. Com- pany and "4G · vending machinCs in Orange County." __ Among the 20 defendants named by the District Attorney's Office in the fraud ac· tion are "Marty the Lion" and "Geronimo Lightfeather." From Page J McLAREN ... da tion board of directors aqd all options as to when and how that wi lt be ac- complished remain open," Privett said. McLaren has chaired the company board of di rectors since 196(). He has been a trustee o fthe foundation since its formation in 1937 and ha s been · its president since 1959. A directo r of many other firms, the former accountant lives \n San Francisco. "Well we want a tour, then;" said another woman: "[ can't help you there, either," Mur- ray replied. , "They don't give tours of the place." At that point the demonstrators who had brought along placards urging Presi- dent Nixon to "rebulld our cities, not Hanoi" began piling the pickets into a station wagon. The prime motivation for the ap- pearance in San Clemente wa1 the threat by the Nlxon Administration to dlamanUe the Office of Economic Opportunity. That agency has administered the model-citiea program which would have meant about 5,000 jobs l n the Los Angeles ghettos, spol<ennen SBld. Earlier in the .dl)y the demonatrat.ors had marched In downtown Loa Angeles, near the offices of the Department of Housing and Urban Development. · -"Now that was a demonstration," sakl one delegate in San Clemente. Eyeing the thoroughbred race horses pastured near the western white house he added : "There ain't nothing here but borset and a couple of cops." "We're leavin'." T-r'ail· Ride Set ' Sunday in Viejo Mission Vlejo's second annual trail ride will be Sunday, with riden from throughout Southern California leaving the Mission Viejo Equestrian Center, La Paz Road and Marguerite Parkway, at 8 a.m. · All riders in the area are invited, a Mission .Vi~jo Company spokesman said. Reservations should be made by Fridly by calling 58&-4210 or 837-04. Jerry Curran, director of recreation for the Mission Viejo Company, is the coordinator. Cost wm be Iii Including a lllelican lunch served at Wilderneu Glen. The ride will cover-about U miles through Rancho Mission Viejo. France-N. Viet Ties PARIS (AP) -France and North Vitt· nam agreed today to ·full di plomatic rela- tions, with an e hange of ambassadors. 'Since the 1954 ndochlna peace agree- ment, France d North Vietnam have maintained mmercial missions or general diplo atlc delegatlOll.!I in the other Coqntcy s capital. FOOD MEE.T FREEZE FOOD PRICES With This COMPACT 206 lb. Chest FREEZER 159'6 ...... ., ... 11 •111 ...... .,.. ---•T,, ...... K.,. .... ...,_..., ... ID• ...... --............ WM .... W Mem ber of 90 DAY C11Ifornl1'1 L1rgtsl C:ASH Coopor1tl•• Buying wriH .... OYll Group With The CHiil • Volume l uytn1 ,., •• ,.,.,_,,._Power of 110 Sterne; YK ... •IYDltlK. 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 _, I ' I • I J 7 . I ' I • ·--. ' . .-•' l • I ~untingt•n ~· Be~eh T~ay's Final Stoeks -• ·V I "" * ... ,. THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1973 • VOL...-66,-NO. 102, 4 .SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFQRNIA ---=----------~--------....----------,,.---~----~-'---------------'-· ·. ( TEN CENTS " ' .. .• dio AirU,~ves . Asia Help for .. Fa1nily ' j. . ~ILY PILOT lllfl l"llet. By TOM GORMA'N Of tlle Daitr l"iltt Steff .. There may be a:\no gre8ter lire shat· tering experience than to lose a loved one to the sea by drowning. . Two Huntington ~ families are still trying to come to grips with the boating tragedy last weekend which' claimed the lives of three local ~ilors. There is also a harsh reality to death -one ttiat is being met hea~ by citizen's band radio.operators from coast lo coast. Most of them knew, directly or in- dirttUy, the oldest Victim, Duane Bun- ting, 29. A.n4 they have banded together. like a close fraternity, to help his \vife and child meet bills that cootiitue to :ir- rive at their home, WlChecked by death. Duane, a ·radio operator himself. \\'as national ·sa les manager f9r a Westerminster-based electronics firm · that distributed citizen's band radio equipment. .. \Vlth Ooa·ne on tits 18-foot sailboat-was -~ his younger brother Otf\'ld. 1_8, and . David's best Friend, Bill Sherwood, 17. Neither David nor Bill had been on the catamaran before, so Duane decided to take them fishing Saturday. -'r.he-~rio did not return that evening, and their v.•recked boat was found by the U.S. Coast Guard early Sunday morning. Duane's body was recovered. David's body v.·as spotted. but slipped beneath t~ {See RADIO HAMS, Pa&e I) Surf Wipeout? . Huntington May Drop Contest· By TERRY CO.l'lLLE Of Jiit DIOY l"ilel $11ff The U.S. Surfboard Championships, the surfing contest held in mid-September each year in HW1tington Beach. is in danger of being dropped by the city. City officials say the cost of the cham· pionships.1 far exceeds the fi nancial sup- port supplied by the surfing industry. The last two years, ho\\'ever, the contest has been strictly by invitation only, at· : tr acting 250 or wtbt;.-world's top surfers last year. It was changed to an invitational meet at the urging of the Western Surfing Association which hand les the judging. There have been controversies sur- rounding the contest. Last year ci ty of- ficials reacted angrily to some crilical comments made by five-time winner ; Corky Carroll. So~ s.urfmg magazines and surfert ' have also claimed-the event has become , ''overcommerciallzed." Moorhouse denied that the criticisms had any bearing on the city's con-! sideration of dropping the event. "You expect some criticism in anything· this ·big." he said. ''That's not the issue. It's a malter of bucks." MR. AND MRS.· CLOYCE BUNTING, DAUGHTER-IN-LAW FACE TRAGEDY TOGETHER Thi'e9 Young Men Go to S.1 Off Huntington Be•ch and Don't Com• B•ck "We feel it's a good event. but it's a question of whether tbe city should spend so much money OQ. it," Vince Moorhouse. city director of harbors and beaches and . a director of the contest, said today. Newport Mass Arrest I ·---- 14 in Election ·Ocean V:iew School .Post Cabdidates Voice .. Views . . . •. ' • Fowicn, ccndidates, 1ftOM"Of them tbe1 rotation cycles, and ttM!re is no incumbent!, .• are ·1eeking , election eVidence that there are educational ad- April 1 z. to three· trustee posts i1~ ·,ran~es. _ Huntfugtoh Beach's Ocean View '1A1ao, I object to the way in which the School District. district bas presented \his program. We Wedn'esday , the views of seven bf were rushed into the pilot program in tli.e.' .cc:m.didates were set forth in this t~ short weeks. The 'information cam- space. Today, th<. tlitws of the other palgn' wu OOHided,.empbasizing· only seve1i candidates are pre.se?tted. t1ie. advantages. Then in December, The candidates' statefflents tDhich without community discussion or in- f-0Uow are Teprlnted toith penniB.tion volvement, the board voted to extend the fTum the April 1973 "Candidates 'experimental progrl!D to all of the Ocean Q.Ustiorinaire" compiled by the View schools. LeagUl of Womtn VotlT• of Hunting-"And lbilJ was be!ore the result.! of tile ton Beach. pilot program were known. We can offer The ca11didates' answers ore in their an· all-year school program to interest~ OW'll uiord&: Two af fouT League parents and studenls by at.ending our questions hli"Dt Men-selected foT me -1summer school program. This is.freedom here:· 1) What advantages, if any,-do of choice, the democratic way." you· .see to aU...year schooling, and 2) 2) "I am in favor of unifying the Ocean Do you see an11 reasona for imifica· View School District with its own high tt'ott. · 1 .schools if this is finaocially feasible. 1 . . lkary M. Lyday Jr" 5f, ·Is bead ··feel that the high !j:bool diitrict ls counselor for the Los Angeles City unresponsive to the needs and concerns School. He is chairman of cOncemed .of our community:• i Parents Committee f~· Quality Educ3· "Also, in the near-future the hlgh tion and ~· ~ed withithe Boy Scouts. schools will be on the quinmester all-year A·Navy and Marine veteran, he earned a calendar whtch is incompatible with the BA in political science -at UCLA and an 45--1$ Pl~ and with the traditional calen- MA •in school administration at San dar." 1 Ferna~o Valley .. state Coll~ge. He js Mrt. Jad,y Malls, 33, is a freelance con-married and has four children. , ·I ) "lnitlal)y,.!he all-year school sounds sultant engineer. Previously sfie ·has worked as a process engineer and has like a good idea -the Jtudents will .lqrn served as a volunteer at. Hope View ioore and the tax-School. She attended Wheeling College, payen · will save ..;here sbe majored .in chemimy. Sbe is money. These, how· manied and bas one child. ·ever\ are 'lllusioos. 1berehn, as t be . I) "All year schooling would toc ... se chalnhan of t b e tbe number of children·. who coald be COmmlli.;.' ot Coo-educated in oor present scliools, but I do . corned P1rOnts. I . .I""' a number ol drawbacks to the plan, 15 all • year 8Cllool u...-;_. only a mlnortty·<lf cbildren aiuld I baVe Clllll llid.tlie._. ·"It would.interfere witli\Smily,vaca- , procmn bi ~ ; 'tai6 mel< v&<!atk>na during good we,lber LYDAY View. ~) "-~"' ~·it wouJd preveilt ~from tak· "Why? Because J ,~t~~ fbat 1tb1s ?"~ ing Surnmef' counes 1 to Improve their gram fs educatlooally urilOund slrice ,1t.1s 'skills. In addition, children who are not sic811y a device to .sav~ sct,ool spa,ce ' .up to grade level could not take 5'llJ}mer y keeping one-fourth of the students out classes to bring them up to their class. of school the ye·ar round. The contirruity "On • the whole I believe the issue of' learning is continuously interrupted by dellerv'5 further consideration, but they Mii.seumwGet ' Picasso Gift ' are your children and you should decide via the ballot box." · 2) '"lbere are two main reasons for unification -economic and educational. Basically, we have anutd us poor and ·richer school districts. Economically, the -..teuons for unificatiM are.-to cohlbihe the. poor district.! with ooe of the richer Court Holds Up Obscenity Case Of LA Paper The 1972 championships cost the city $20,000. The event's income was $,3,000. mostly from entry fees and some ad· vertising in the program. Moorhouse said in 1967, the surf con- test cost the city $16,000, but brought in $16,500 in revenue.· That year ABC paid the city $10,000 to televise it on "Wide World of Sports." The surfing championships w.e re televised 00 ABC in 1966, ·1961f and 1968. By TOM BAR.LE)' The 1967 event, featuring super surf, won ot: ..... ., "" ,..,, a Cannes "FHm Festival award for a ~ty cha..,.. filed agalnSt !he Los sports telecast. Angeles 'Star were held . oVer for one Moorhouse .said, a final, decisioo has n~t mootb today in a bid by Santa Ana been made on this year s contest, but 1t . , , • ·-will be a part of tbe city council's blldget Mun1clpal Court Juage Robert Rickles to consideration ov'er the next month. - combine the allegations into one court "I'd hate to see it go .. It. does bring.,. action along with fraud charges filed by certain recognition· to the c i t y , ' ' the Pacific Telephone Company. Moorhouse . said. "But there is a lim!~ to "It would be much easier for all con-what , our c1tl:' should hav~ t~ put out. . . . "Its the big event for surfers, but the cemed if we ~ work things out this city is paying the bill. We're accused of way," Judge Rickles told lawyers ·for making money on it, but we haven't both parties. "I'm going to hold both ac-made a nickel." tions over until May 15 with that aim in The city has sent-500 questionnaires to view." ' local businessmen to see if there migh t Judge Rickles' action came while lawmen througliout1he county were still seeking April 11 editions of the con- trovers~ Los Angeles journal. Fraud charges stem from the allega- tion by District Attorney Cecil Hicks that the periOOical's operators permitted "an act of massive consumer fraud" when they printed an article revealing the telephone company's credit c.!i.rd check· ing and logging system. Hicks blyted the article as "an open invitation to commit theft that could cost the telephone users in this area afone billions of collars." Obscenity charges that now seem likely to join the fraud allegations in the same court hearing were filed , prior , to the fraud counts but include Los Angeles Star Editor Paul Eberle in the long list or defendants. Also listed as defendants in both ac· lions are the>Hlgh Class Publishing Com· pany and '140 vending machines in Orange County." Amciog the IO defendant.! named by tile District Attorney's Olflcein tlle'frauclac- tiori are "Maqy · the Lion" and ''Geronimo Llghtfeatber.'' ~ulon! lollay said they are adding daily to the evidence" they lntend to offer in suppOrt of both sets of charges May 15 before Judge Rickles. be some financial support to continue the contest. Moorhouse said . Huntington Beach might simply tum the contest over to someone else, though he added there doesn't seem "to be any takers." Or the city might drop the national nature or it and just sponsor a local surfing contest. The U.S. Surfboard Championships were launched in 1958 as the Western Surfing . Championships. For several years they were open to any entrants rrom all over the world. NO POST AL HIKE F0.1,IB,CAST FOR '73 MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI ) -Postmaster ' . General E. T. Klassen has ruled out a postal rate increase this year but in- dicated the strong possibility of one in 1974. "Our degree of mechanization is not far enough aJong that we can absorb any suhs:tantial increased costs," Kh1ssen said Wednesda y. "Consequently, the in-' creased costs will have to be passed along to the con,sumer. · "lf we ha ve a substantial increase in cos ts in 1973, in 1974 we•r"e going to ask for a price increase." ls 'Bal Week' Alive- And Early on Coqst? _, By L. PETER KmEG ' Of ttM DllW '""" ltliff eaTWeek 11 apparenUy allve and well -·and getting off to an-early start in Ne.wport Beach this year. _ - The annual Easter vacation bloWout got off to an atypical if premature start this morning as Newport Beach police arrested 17 Riverside youths crA!tUH'td" into a second story duple'x ·apartment in West Newport. Police used a paddy wagon to transport the youths, all boys, to police head· quarters after finding a cooler full or beer, a lid of marijuana, and a bottle of pills in the apartment at 3308 W. Ocean Front. • Officer John Furrow spid he came across the youths after picking up a juvenile wearing a backJ)ack and walking_ on Balboa Boulevard near 42nd Street about 9 a.m. Furrow said he stopped the youth because he appeared to l):f! a nmaway. "He told us Where he 'tas staying and we went to the Ocean Front address to verify it," Furrow said . · He said there he came upon the other youths "sleeping all over· the place" on ·mattresses and sleeping bags. -. He said the marijuana and narcoti~ paraphernalia were lying around along with other contr&band. Furrow saia charges had not been filed against any or the youths, Including the only adult. Clayton W. Nettleton , 18. He said there was an "obvious viola- tion of the housing codes'' and it ap- peared there was no adult supervision so·· charges may include lack or parental control. Furrow said he did not know im- mediately who owned the duplex or which of the youths had rented it for the week. .... "They were just starting Easter vaca· ti on," Furrow noted, pointing out that Riverside schools let out a week earlier than. most others. Newport Beach police said today they are still counting on -another relatively quiet Bal Week, which is the way it lias been ln the past aeveral years la tbarp contrast to a decade ago when youths streomed to Balboa by the thousands from all over ttie country. "But things have been picking up;• observed Lt. Ed Clbbarelll, adjutant to Police Chief B. James Glavas. · Cibbarelll 1&ld the department still io· tends to maintain normal shifts begin· ning Frlilay. Vietnam Copter Crash Victim Valley R Jsident From Wire Services The pilot ol • iruce team hellcopl!J;, downed Saturday in Vietnam has been identified as Charles Leroy Osterman, 31, of Fountain Valley .. He was killed when the helicoptec was Oying for . the Internationa1 m-· mission of Control and Supervision · as downed by a Viet Cong missile. · Also killed in the crash were Firs ·Of- ficer Terry Dean Clark of Palmdale, a Filipino crewman, two Viet Cong reprisentatives and four ICCS members. Ostennan, who forme rly Jived at 17.wt ' Bushard St., had served in Vietnam as an Army helicopter pilot prior to the cease-i Ore. He was employed by Air America as a c!_vilian at the time of his death . 1be pUot's two brothers, John and Paul Osterman, both are residents of Fountain Valley. Llited among his survivors are two daughters by a former ·marriage who . 1 live in Portland, Ore. ~-----------,·I Orange Coast el· 50 .Flap Lessens ·Weather llazy sunshine on Friday, fol· lowing early morning fog and low clouds along the coast. Highs or 76 are expected ln inland are as. Beach temperatures of 68 are fore- cast. Overnight lows in the 50s. I 1riprpve Commu1iicatio11.s PARIS {UPI) -1be lllln' of Pahl~ Picuao have -ted' the ' patnt.11 vast and prleele• col- lcctloll of art by other modem 1rtllltl lo the Louvn liw!eum in Paris, Ph:ulo'I attorney an- nounced today. 'dlltricts. ..__ By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of.. ....... '"""', .... to 74 pointed questions they had about -the station. ed by board members who told raculty representatives had not gone through the proper administrative channels. INSIDE TODA 'f Tht :&lfl or paintings by Modigliani , Braque, Ma 11 as e , Renoir, Cezaooe and other major namet of modem art is in accord with Picasso's wishes, attorney Rolond Dumas said. Oumu said the .family bas not decided what to do with works by Picasso hl'l'8elf, which lbe artist kept In his villa al Mouctu In southem France. , "Tbe richer districts,· Or c:oune, don't WI.ab to unify. Slnce we are1 a poor , ~ I am, of coune, all for It. •'i:ducaltona11y1 unlllcaUon would pro- vide a ...r. smoOthly functioning e<luca· lion for our chlldttn. The high schools would come under unlncalioo and the curriculum would be more e11l)y led up lo by lhe grade !chool pro1nms." Jooepll S. Mllauo, Is empio)'ed by the Anaheim Union High School District, working Jn its Special E d u ca t i o n Program. He bas a BA and an MA, from C&I State, Long Beach. He is married with two children. 1) '"Jbere •re many more year-round pllnl other thalJ' the 45-15 f>lan prefellt)y !See OCEAH VIEW, Page !l I • Contiroow•E"'H'"Y' over the role played by ·Cbai!ael IO in the education of Golden Welt ll!ld Orange Coast College students a_. -what calmed today after promiaee w~ night by both !acuity and cOU<p•officials lo Improve ' communlcallona bet-n them. Teachers from both campuses ap- peared partially sallslied when Coast Commtmity COiiege Diltrtct trustees tOld them they ~ become Involved to • greater decree In the fonnulallon of ' policy !or the new educallonal station. Faculty members, ang<red o v e r allegedly being k.ept in the dark about the academic function and financial picture . o~ KOC& TV, packed !lie boatd room more than 100 strong to demand alJS\!crs ' • -· Several or these were ans wered by Chancellor Norman E. Watson who rurnished them with a draft of a goals and ()\>jectives' s'tatement which stres9es the board participation or experts, in· eluding faculty members, in the develop- ment of courses. · 'rbc other questions and possible solu- tions will be taken up at 3:30 p.n1. today when Dr. ·wa tson meets with the faculty senate of both campuses in the telcrom· munlcatiooJJ b1.1.ilding at Golden West. Amon£ these are questions sbout the budgeting of KOCE, the selection of ~ncl, TV station management, equlpmeni, and llmding. Discussion over these concrete con- cerns or the teachers.however was avoid- r Trustee Worth Keene said the teachers should bring their grievances over the station to the administration and involve the board only when an arbitrator is re- quired to resolve. the differences ... U Kyaw Win, chalnnan ot the OCC faculty ~natc., however, said the ques· lions were sent to the board because the answers were not available through other channels. Peggy Siaggs, Golden W"t's faculty senote chAlrman, said after the meeting that the teachers are not so ·much con- cerned with a potential threat to their Jobs but because a mai<>rlty of them ,.. BOme TV instruction as dehwnaniiing. 11 {See PROMISES, Page !) Cath11 Murphy has an unusunl dog. Flossie, htr 2-ueaN>ld Bos- ton bulldog, can do back/lips. skate, fetch and. uh,1 talk. That's ri94~ And f/ you da11'1 believe she can. itJ• just the Boston .. ac- cent cd11fusitig 11ou. See &tOrtl on Page 15. • -· DAILY Pl(OT H Tl!ursday, Aprll 12, lC173 Inclusive 1 I Insurance . -Plan ·urged --; WASlllN(l'1'9N (AP) -.A cradl .. t0> grave nation81 health insurance plan, --~'<Ol!'.ii!'!ng!__ii;dd<eas both from organized labor an White }louse , has been recommended in vately financed study by business leaders ~tors. The Commlttee tor Eoonomlc Develop-__ -ment. a nonprofit ·and no11parlisan ._ '&rganlzatlon, said Wednesday ils plan . woUld-!'Pfovli:IITtiisfc level of riiedlCBI ,protection for all Americans at a cost the .nation can afford." DUANE AND 'DAUCIHTER '. ---0AVID BUNTING ---~. ' , • '· -l',....P .. el -OCEAN 'VIEW ELECTION ' . .-• being.. lmplementOcl In , our. tivo pilot schools. Advaotaget: Year·rouiid ulU!z.a. · tloo of facilltles • Savlllp .. conilluc- tloo :1 n d telaled COii& ol building new facDJtles. Aecommo. dation of more stu- dents. MILAZZO Disadvantages: Increased coal of lm· plementation whe~er overcrowding is not. experienced. De!ei'ment of building cacy.. slr.uctlon may result-in increased eosu at a later date. " i • ".J.ncteased costs for addlti0ftl1 penon· ncl during inte rsessWnLJ)firfflds. Where in· tersess.ion perlQ!ls are offered, ~re is no - -space saving adv~e.---- 1) "I support the district's. efforts to thorougbly ln~esllple the practlCl!llles Of aJl.year 1Chooll111 under the 45-15 pion, It lhouldn't be' tolllly diocounted j)l'ior lo · ' .................. IYlfutloLol Ill~ being -piled by the · itlstrlct,. Crest Vie• and Wesbnont scbool.o. "I could oo longeT" su~ch an in- vestigation, however:. if. tbe Spring '73 lesUng program shows that 0 45-15" children have fallen substantially below tb&--nonn. when compared with scores for cl}lldren not involved in the plan. "A recent study reported that 20 per- cent more space couJd be generated ' within -the district at a savings of about $2®...per student per =-~ WoJd°g:u: duced substantially TtOOIO.Jf (leaving moft! IDOll.• ey for lnstructionil purposes),. Surnmer- lhne "leemiJw loss" would decrease, DI AD AT 34 . "When· considering alternatives for Coll ... ·r~hor Vol~ " .. , A secret government analysis of the plan concludes it "nflects quite closely the Administration's bill" in the last OXJgress except in 11$ e·xtension of ~verage to low-income childless fam ilies -..d single persons. ,; The CED Research and Policy Com• ,mitt.e's 1115-page ,.port, "Building. a Na· lional Health-Care System," proposes a 1hree·part program that its sponsors say would take at least four years to im· plement. FrOmPagel "Possible expenditure for aJr con- ditlonlng In llUl1lY IChool.o In order to maintain a good yelM'OUnd Ieaming en- vironment. Cycl!s mual be WelJ.balanced , for effective and efllclont operation. Coat ofc~il]g ~OO·plrllclpatlnc ~blldren. Con- tlnul)Y of teacher wtth ...,. otudeqts may ,be loot. "Possible loss of n~ stabWty, . secllrity, and ittlculatlOo. Possible 'parent Ind t.flxpa)'er d 1 a a ppr b-V a I . Teachers could riot grow j>rofesstonally b;ecause of time element. ·Studies have not .-yielded educational advantages. Presuming an alternate plan i s necessary, the community at large, il\6 eluding parents, t e a c he r s, ad· ministrators, and taxpayers, s~d be consuHed. cteallng adclltlooal space -purcli{slng J e1theUcaUy u n p I e a s a n t mobile · l clulrooms with C<ietly bullt·ln deprecla-' G lde · w I· RADIO HAMS AI D FAMILY • • • Employers would be required to pro- '\ride health insurance for all employes 'Bnd their families. Medicare would con· 1inue to cover the elderly and disabled ~ the federal govemment would pro-- ·vide coverage for the poor. ~ To avoid a heavy burden on small employers, the plan would arrange an in· Surance pooling mechanism in which large firms would pay part of the costs of Provkling group coverage in small com· l'"!'!es. ...Although more than 180 million persons · are covered by private inwrance, the leport said, an estimated 20 to !O Ulllllon others lack any health·Jns:urance pro-- ,tection. ' · ' "The majority of these are poor and 1,lear·poor, nonwhite, unemployed -in ·f!ntral the disadvantage<::," it said. . 'fMillions of employed workers have rio Coverage. Also, because ·or shortcomings in many existing plans, millions of other People who are covered have inadequate .protection from the financial con· ,3(!quences of ill health." ·.~The committee estimated. its plan ;yould cost an radditional $5 billion in the .Jlrst year, with the federal governmeat ,Paying about '4 billion of t1!e net increase and pri vate health insurance · premiums accounting for the rest. water before it 'cbuld be relieved. Bill's body was nevel'. COund. - When Frank-Sacks, ownei' of PAL Electronics wett Duane worked, learned the boat was missing, he got on hi s own CB radio and asked other operators jn the area to Point their antennas to the ocean. They picJ<.ed up nothing from the radio Duane h~a. signed out just the night before. ·· Word of Duane's Ceith quickly spread through the airways. And by Thursday more than $1 ,000 in donations had been raised by the operators, with some checks arriving from as far away as the East Coast, Sacks said. Local C-B operators . will hold an auc- tion from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday at Anaheim Bowl to sell surplus radio equipment. Sacks said they hope to raise between $3.000 and $5,000, to be passed on to Duane's wife, Barbara. Ttle proceeds will help pay the rent for their apartment at 7762 S. Sycamore,.., ltuntington Beach, and the other bills. ) It will also help Barbara and her 2· ye<!r.old daughter, Tina1 ge t back on 1heir feet when they move into Barbara's parents, house in Santa Ana. _ · "\Ve have no money," said Barbara, gra sping the hands ot.puane's parents in their apartment next door. "I'm so veiy thankful for what the C.B operators are doing,'! she said. "There's ;~gnew Hits Reporter " i~Bins ' in Ne ws S tories " · WASHING-TON (APl -Vice President ,Spiro T. Agnew today srruck_ out at ~umalists who take sides in new5 ,.Wries, saying the nation's news media ~m to feel more and more they should control public reaction rather than report ,.ihat happened. J ·Agnew's comments were contained in ~he text of a speech, released here, in ad· ·vance of delivery at the "April Freedom Forum" of the National Educational --Program at Harding College, Searcy, .Ark. ~ The spee<:h Was critical of ~called --·advocacy reporting," a school of journalism in which a reporter takes ·Sides on an Issue. · "Once journalists believed thaf their .job was to report as much as possible -¥'hat happened. Today, the view in· 'ereasin gly seems to be that the media should control the public reaction to what happened," Agnew said. Advocacy jouranlists, he said , act more as lawyers developing briefs, than as reporters. "They fer ret out and publicize prin· cipally those facts which support their own points of view -points of view which are considered ·by them to be revealed truth and the only ones that should be presented to the American peo- ple," ti_e said. "It is advocacy journalism more tha~ ~ any other fa ctor that has caused the cur· rent ill feeling between government of· OIANGI COAST "' DAILY PILOT Tll• Ora<>0• CCMlll DAILY PtLOT Wlll'I WhlCll It uml>lntel .!'h• N•wt·Prtn, '' DUC11!111eo or l'tlt Or•nDe Catlil P11bllslll119 Camp111y, !tpa· ,.,. tdltlori1 •rt l>l/bllsllN, Mond1r !hravgll Frld1r. IDr Co.It Mna, Newti0rt 8t1(ll, HUftllnglan lltacll/l'avn11;,, V•Uty, L110un• 9Pt"h, 1 ...... 1n.,/Saddl1blck Ind Sin Clemente/ Si n J111n Capi1tr1110. A 1111911 <f9IOMI edition 11 publl1htc1 S.1vrc1av1 1nd Sund1y1. Tiit prlnc!p.al Pl.llllilh!ng plan! II II 3)1 w.,. 81r Slrttt, Cas11 MtH, Ce111ornl1, t'6:t6. _Robtrt N. Wetd Prftlcltnt end Pvbli1n1r J1ck It Cudty V/(I Prt1lcl9tll tnd G1n1••I Mtl\terlr TI!o1t111 Ket~il Eclltot 11io1t11t A. Murplii11e Me~grna £dltor Ch•rltt H. l.001 Ric.1'.11d P. Nill Anl11ant M•t\ajjll"lt €a11011 r.,,., cov111, Wut Or•ne• Cwntv Eattor H•,..• IMtfri; OHke J 17175 lt1th kul•v•r4 'll M.Vltif Addr••1: r.o. tor 790, 92641 .,_.,_ "'"'""" IM~tl: Ul llornt Awtn11t Cotll Mtu; »I """rm' StrMl llltwPOrf •ttctl: ~ ,.. 80lli.Y•rcl S•n Cltrntnlt: )Qt Norlll I C.mlno llNt T .. .,.... (7141 64J ... JJI Cl .. Jn.4 AdYelt'*'-f 642·1671 ,,,_. ,...,.... Offf! .. C-ty Ctm-lllff l40·1220 Coovrlehl, 1n1. Dr•lllilt CObr Pllbl~lflt .,t;ompll'l.y, N• ""'' .iMlt1. llh1.,r1tlotl1, "t= fll<llltf' ., ff~f111ttmt!ltt ,..,.in Inf .. ''""'°""'«! "''tf\Olll 1ptc;ltl "' fl'lij IOn Of 4'0lll'l'ltkl !>...,,., • htorof t .... --JMoe •I CO•I~ ~. C1llfrtnlla. illbKTIMiOn O'I' ,.,tier '2.ts "*'"'1'' 1rr JMll u .11 111C1111111~1 '1\Ulttl't' •HllMlltint ~,6S ll'IOfltlllY, • ficials and the opinion·making media," Agnew said. He identified opiniun-making media as the television networks, wire_servjces and "the large newspapers and magazines which cover the nation . and world with their own personnel." $aylng the "idea of interference with the free flow of information to the American people, by government or anyone else, is repugnant to me," Agnew claimed the Nixon ·administration wants to be fair with the press. . He said there is right and wrong on both sides in the controyersybetween the media and the Administration , and called for "reasoned· debate and communication between the partie.\!' to reach a solution "or even an improvement." - But he said the staffs of opinion·mak· ing news media have come to "think of themselves as representatives of the peo- pl e and just as routinely to-'. view the federal government as the enemies or the people. "NO\V something see ms very out of joint about this. Does a man who \vorks for CBS represent the people? Or does he primarily represent CBS?" Pot Cache Found In Car Following High-speed C~ase A 24-yea r-0ld man who still refu ses to !ell officers his address led border patrolmen on a high-speed chase into San Clemente they said Wednesday before he slammed into a stop sign. William M. Reynolds asscrtedly led the officers In th e pursuit after a patrolman had asked him to pull over at the im· migration checkpoint at San Onofre. Of· ficers said Reynolds · sped away instead and sparked the pursuit that reached speeds hi excess' of 100 miles per hour. The cha se etlded at El Camino Real and A venida San Pablo when Reynolds lost control '5f hi s car and slammed into the curbing, they sa id. Officers said Reynolds and an uniden: tlfied companion fled on foot. The drivtr was captured but his passenger esc1ped. In the trunk of Reynolds' car patrol· men said they found more than 300 pounds 0£ marijuana . The uninjured driv· er and his illegal cargo w~re turned over lo U.S. CUstoms A_gcnls. - . Frauce-N. Vi et Ties P1\RJS (AP ) -France and North Viel· nam agreed loclay to full diplomatic rela· tions, with an exchange of ambassadors. Since th e 1954 Indochina peace agree· n1ent, France and North Vietnam have maintained commereial missions or g<11.,Jal dl pil>111atic dclegaUons in the otl·.~ CO!Ql~' capital. • noth ing you oan say to those people - thank you just isn't enough." Barbara struggled with her thoughts. "Everybody loved hi,in, and he loved everyone, You can tell by the. donations. He loved his work.1They called him Weak Rabbit:«- Rabbit because his last name sounded like bunny; weak because his radio signals were not very strong. Cloyce Bunting and bis wife also sat in the small living room. They were µium . They had lost two sons. . "They were very happy about going fi shing," Mrs. Bunting recalled. "It was the first time·oot for the young~ boys." The Buntings are a close family. The parents had 'six sons and two daughters. David and three others Jived in the house, the others lived on the same block. Duane was the oldest son. / "You can't say m~. of anything,' the father said. "In large families, a mother and father love each one individually. "David was a good boy. He loved surf. ing, but he was a good home boy, We were so very much proud or both of them," Bunting said. . Facing the tragedy isn 't.any easie r for Mrs. Gertrude Sherwood, who lost the youngest of her three boys . Bill-was a typical teenager , she said. He loved signing, surfing and' working on cars. "The worst thing he ever did was throw a tomato at an ice cream man ," she said. "For two days I could not bring myself to go into his room ," she said, "I finally did, and I broke down ." -- Mrs. -Sherwood hopes to· >hip · Bilrs body if and when it ls recovered, to Iowa, where his father is buried;\She said she has no money to ship the body at this time. Several neighbors near M r s . Sherwood's apartment at I 7 I 4 2 ·A Emerald Lane have brought over small cash donations. Both the younger Bunting, a senior, and BIU, a junior, will receive their _ diplomas this June PoSlhumously from Huntington Beach High School. _Israeli Voyage Means 'Hazard' Pay to Crewmen ' -' SOUTHAMPTON, England (UPll - Cunard lines today agreed to pay a "danger money" bonus of $125 to any crewman who sails the luxury liner Queen Elizabeth Il to Israel Sunday ¥.'i tl'o a load of 1,700 mo stly American· Jewish passengers. The Queen Elizabeth "would be an otr · vious target" for Ara b guerrillas, a Cunard Line source said. A major secu rity checkup from bow to ste m was ordered for the QE2. _ Officials of the shipping line described the operation as one of the biggest ever mounted in a_ peacetime British seaport since World War JI. Most of the passe nger complement Sunday will be American Jews bound for Israel to help_celebrate the Jewish state's 25th anniversary. Cunard began weeks ago taking . no chances. Other crew members said a dozen anned securjty men in uniform rode the shi p during a just-completed Caribbenn cruise. • The crew demanded "anger money" for the voyage to Israel. Cunard today offered each 1nan the bonus of 50 pounds for the trip. "Security is as tight as hell ." said James Rudnick, 19, of Massach4sett s, son of the organizer of the trip. His father, Oscar Rudnick. said . "We are well satisfied with security ar. rangements and we don't think there will be any threat from Arabs." Sabotage and explosives experts went aboard the liner early today. CUnard security o!ficials said armed guards and bomb disposal experts would be on board when the ship sails Sunday. Preacher to Speak Iu Huntington Be.ach The Jlelf. Don Uive of-;-Toronto. Cartada, will speak at 7:30 tonjght at the United Pentecoslal Church, 11!971 Main St. In H11ntlngtoQ Beach. His toolc Y.·111 bP the Bible. . l·lc will ols(tlalk at the church at 7:30 f-.. riday and S:ilurday, and at IJ a.m .. and 7:~ p.m. on Sunday. Mi'. Love, 22, is a grad uate of Apostolic Missionary Institu· tion, Tieton, Ontario. "C8reful resear:ch and study should be conducted to determine which of many options would 'best satisfy our district's own unique needs. The community ahould select their f?Plion, thus providing better schools t~ugh community in- volvement." 2) "There are advantages and disad- vantages to a system of ..K through 12th · grade. Unification must be evaluated and other alternatives reviewed and studied to solve our own unique problems. C.Orr tlnuity of programs is important. ."Saving of monies ls possible through elimination of management personnel and duplication of seMces. After a care- ful study and review of all possible alter- natives, you the taxpayer must make the final decision. State Jaw mandates meth· ods and procedures of initiation and im· plementation... · Mrs. Rita F. Rowe, 40, is a housewife and currently enrolled at Golden West College. She is married and has one child. l) "Jt is my c..untentiOn all·yea,r school· ing should be decided upon by the parents and ~axpayers supporting the schoo.ls -not by the teachers. I believe the employers should make the decisions, not t h e employes. Schools should be utilized rather than standing i d I e (or three months. This would be a' signifi· cant help in elimi· nating our over- crowded schoolS." 2) "Further study should be made on aow1 1 the matter of unification to determine its assets and liabilities." Craig O. Thompson, 30, is a college ad· ministrator. A graduate of Northern Arizona Un iversity 1 he is married and has two children. From P agel P,llOMISES ... don factors; changing to double sesalons • {J U est I _or going to-bond elections -one must , realize the importance of senrching for • i • l .newer, fresher and less expensive J t f 1 methods to relieve congestion, where ap-n s rue or proprlate." 2) "The recent high school bond elec· , tion has shown us that the high school D • t 34 district will be lacing some rather ies a drastic changes, as emergency measures to meet the tremendous problem of overcrowded schools. It's:. obvloµs that the high school and feeder elementary distriCts have become too financially in· trlcate to banclle, Jn regard to fundlng necessities. "The bond election should serve to ac· tuate a' full investlgation, by all powers affected, Into the feasibility or locally controlled districts that .cwould be responsive to the Immediate needs of their Q.ym communiUes." "J:A:J\Velbmeller, 43, ls employed as a weigh\! ~d measures technician. fie at· tended Santa Monica and Los Angeles Clty Colleges and Loyola University. He is manied and has one child, 1) "All year schooling -chaos in many areas. Parents have now limited freedom when to choose their vacation time. With all year schooling it would be impossible. Business geared to vacalion patronage will suffer and •the breadwin· ner's employer would have a dim view of a multitude of men off at the same time. The present program iS still the best." 2) "If, by unification, something is created that grows too big to be handled efficiently, Jt is not good." Mn. Flon:oce Woolbright, 37, is a housewife and business woman. She has ~ BS from Harris College, St. 1.-0uis, and an MA from Chapman College. She is 11UUTled and has three children. 1) "All year schooling on a staggered basis should remain optional and available without· diacrimlnaUon · t o parents desiring this program.-411 expan- ded amt exteRJive Summg.,. scllool en- richment program should be olfered il parental su}lport warrants and evi· dence of the pilot WOOLllRIOHl programs prove Jts value. ~ Funeral ser~ices will be conducted Fri· • day at noon Ill Corooa de! Mir for Golden West College instructor Gerald Volpe wbo clled Tueaday al the UCLA Medical Center from complications o! the flu, Dr. Volpe, 34, was an instructor In architectural teclmoloSY and e1111lneerll!g at· tl)e Huntlngtm Beach communl)Y i:ol· lege . . He was a graduate of UC , Santa Barbara, Cal Stale, Los Angeles and UCLA. -····~ Dr. Volpe began teaching at Orang~ . Coast College in 1965. In 1969, he joliieli the staff at Cal State, Hayward. He returned to• the Orange COast in 1971 When he. joined the staff at Golden West. Dr. R. Dudley Boyce, Golden West president •. will deliver the eulogy at the services in the cha~l at Pacific View l\femorial Park. A resident of Newport Beach, Of. Volpe served. as an educational con- sultant to the National Systems Corp. In addition to bis teaching duties. He leaves his ~e. Regina, and daug6f.fr, Shawna, of the family home, 1948 ",Port Cardigan Place, Newport Beach; his motber, Bettina Martln of Newbury Park; his father, Anthony Volpe of Los Osos, Ollif.; his sister, Marte Ferraro of Newport Beach, and his brother, Dennis Volpe of Olympia, Wash. , ~ The fami\y 1 has suggested memorial contributions 1 to the Gerald Volpe Memorial Scholarship at Golden west or to the Regents of tlte University ol California for medi.cal research. . Bone Discovery Not So Ancient 0 After school activities and evening use of the schools for voluntary parent effectiveness training, child-parent rela- tionships, community aclivities and other programs will be continued and ex· "Of course there are some people in panded. The school will remain a service VICTORVILLE (UPI) _ 'lbe bones any profession who feel threatened by agency of the entire community. Until change." she conceded. But the real con-the community and t e a c h e r s that Debbie Hart brought to her high cern, in her opinion, is that TV Js a one· demonstrate enthusiastic support and school anthropology clast were not tboae way medium which allows no interaction value for "all year schooling"·it should of a long-dead lndiaii, or an lee age man between student and teachers. remain on a voluntary pilot "project." bitten by a sabre tooth tiger. . ~; ~ The teachers earlier had implied 2) "Yes. Unification on community The deceased waS"" appareJ;ttlY killed tiy television hild been given a favorite OOundary lines offers a greater com-some more modern ·means -like two status by both administration and the rnunity identity, support and loyalty with bullets in the head, the san Bernardino Board of Trustees and that cutbacks the school as another community cultural County Coroner's .office said Wednesday. were made in SQfll~ areas while capital cer.ter. Local leadership and continuity of A dog discovered the bones that Miss outlay for the st~tion continued. educational offerings will be possible. Hart brought to her school class - a During Wednesd.riy night's meeting this Terrible overcrowding ·can be avoided skull, a jawbone and a legbone. concern did not receive as much and planned growth can become a reali· Investigating deputies said the skull bore discussion as did policy, procedure, and ty. Joint programs with other local what appeared to be two bullet holes, and who determ ines the quality of KQCE pro-districts will be used if needed for the bones, "definitely human,11 were grams. --·' , specialized purposes." about two years' old. -=-~~~~~~~-'~--~~~~ ·-~~~~~~~~-·-''-~~~~~~~~ FOOD COSTS! MEET RISING FREEZ E FOOD PRI CES With This COMPACT 208 lb. Chest FREEZER ........... 1 ... 159'6 • ,J,..tf ... ..... •Riff ..... ... .,., t F..al:lff ....... ,.,._'*"'.....,. t D"'.._Sltit ... ...... lly _ •YIAll11tf111Mt!. ........ fllst: Momber of 90 DAY C1lifornl1'1 Lergosl CASH Cooptratlvt luyin1 w1iH A"IOYID Group With Thi COIDIT o Volum1 Buying m •••••r AIHCIA'9 Power Of 10 .Slor11 ,, ... lt.119 [8E ........ , .. ., .. 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 " l • •• • \ " ' ... , ~ ' • . ... ..... _ .. ..,. ·-· - . -·-· • • ' Thursd1y1 April 12, 1973 ' H O~L¥ PILOT :J Nlion ' ' C~mbOdia -. EX perts: l -.-, • ' , - .-B-e-au_t_y _K-ee_p_s .~-~ W I • orsen1ng , ~ Situation : It ilt Family cat Stale"" Fullerton adVertising major Terry Olden must really .Jmow how to market a pretty pacb.ge, or else Iler parents just , P!I~ out superior prodllcts . . The Pele Oldens watched proudly 4u'Ml!S Olden, 19; was crowned Miss Anaheim 1973, at the Con~· vention Center if1 g I i. t t e r i n g ceremonies, one of a, kind in a city of 183,571 persons. \ Terry was crowned by Miss Anaheim, 19~, her younger .sister,- Kar~n. Cityhood Eyed · In SadJllehack Valley Meet By JAN WORTH Of W.. D•ll7 Plitt Slaff Cautious looks at cityhood for the Sad- dleback Valley were taken Wednesday · night at a citizens public. sess ion sponsored by the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council (SACCJ. It was. the rirst public discussion or a report exploring the possibilities for cityhood in the Saddleback area. Additional bearings will c on t i n u e through Juoe, after which the SACC will formulate an officlel recommendation of- cityhood to go to the 0(ange County Board or Superviaors. Reactions to the issue of incorporating a new city varied Wednesday night. "The one most important lhing to us is, why incorporate if you are being heard at the -county level ?" Ward Thompson, chainnan of a Saddleback citizens' com· mittee said. After presenting a report on govern- ment alternatives for the Saddleba.ck . Valley, implying that cityhood was the : eventual destiny for the 110-square mile area, Thompson said he fell the move should be put off as long as possible. "Right now, we are"'being heard. Right now, there is no big push. When that kind of f responsl~ness ends, our desire to have a city irtj the valley shifts to a need tor one," he ~id. t •• A Stra vote 1cf 75 tesidentsfattending the meetlng showed most favoring a municipal advisory council.· ·That alternative to cityhood was recom- . mended by the committee. as an interim measure pending the need ·for in· corimatioo. .. We feel that right now that a push for incorporation would · be suicide for the whOle ·Possibility,'' said Vance North, another member of the 13-member com- mittee. Reactions from the residents, most of whom where -officers of homeowners' organizations in the valley, was non-eom- mittal and curious. Most appeared at- tentive to what the SACC members had to say. Quesµons centered on liming and financing. Former College Dean Succumbs Friends in Oraflgf County have been saddened to learn of the recent death in Palo Alto of Dr. Calvin Flint, former dean of men al Santa Ana College. He was 66. • 1 Dr. 'Flint served as a teacher and dean al Santa Ana C.Ollege from 1935 to 1942 when ht left lo serve in lhe Army Air Force during World War II, He later :served as president of Monter e 1 Peninsula C.Ollege and was first president of the Foothill College District in Santa Clara County. He retired in 1971. . Dr. Flint is survived by hi.s widow, Lenore and 'two sisters, Mrs. Verna Templeton of S11ota Ana~ and Mrs. Mata Potter of Hemet. ·pow 'Tax Bill Sig~ed SACRAMENTO (APL-·s1afe income and inheritance tax benefits were set up for former prisollers of war in Vietnam and the families of servicemen missing in action by legislation signed into law Wednesday by Gov. R<llla.ld Reagan . Vacationland Slio·w Tonight Doors open at 7:30 tonight a\ Newport Harbor High Se h o o I Auditorium, 600 Irvine St., Newport -Beach. for the 1973 edition or \laca- tlonland British Columbia. Whatever tickets remain for the four-movie fibn festival will be handed out at \hat time. Tho !ree •sbOw. co-spomored by !he Orange Cdlis\ Evening College and the DAILY PILOT, features a program produced by the British Columbia Department or Travel Indu stry and West.cm Airlines. It's free. ' U.S. 'Using Ex-POWs' BERKELEY (AP) Actress Jane Fonda, ~ questions tbe tales of torture recountttr by ex-prisoners of war, beJfeves the Nixon administration is us· ing them to pave t~ way for renewed In· temention in Vietnam. . ', ( l ' · I 1· Ji ll ' ,, •.• ·' 1 Discussed \VASHI NGTON ~UPI ) ._ Presiden,t Nixon called in-his~-top military, diplomatic and intelligence advisers to- day for l'Onsultations on the worsening si1ualion in Ca mbodia. Continued U.S. bombing !here hns caused growing con- gressional objections. ''The carefully orchestrated return or prisoners is designed to make us hate the Vietnamese, justify the war, discredit US· (the antiwar movemeiit) and lay ground for future interventions," the movie ac- tress told students Wednesday at UC here . ~fi~ Fonda, wearing a purple poncho and blue jeans. was asked bow she felt about some POWs' criticism of her t'rip to Hanof and other antiwar activities ... 1$ • , I I ·t· '1' .. The President made an early morning helicopter Oight from Ca mp David, int~ -.tern h1aryland mountain s where an unseasonal.spring freeze occurred durinJ his overnight visit , to the \Vhite llouse t.o see his personal emissary to ·cambodia a)Jd mCi:!t with the Naliooal Security .Council. "I think there is a strong attaCk on the part of the Nixon administration against the anti-war movementJ" she said. "lam - part of that movement. A lot of it comes from chaUvinism. OAllY rlLOT Sltll l"ltei. Gen. Alexander ~1. Haig. who made 1 -four-day on-the-scene inspection for the President in Cambodia as well as visiting other key capitals in Southeast Asia. ar- rived back in Washington several bouui before dawn and \Vas on hand at the \Vhite House ~·hen Nixon returned. _ "I'm ·a' pretty easy target f!Jr pecple · because of where 1'm coming from. Men don't want women, and particularly movie stars, to get into politics," she ad- ded. "It .makes me feel there's a lot of work to be done in this country." DEMONSTRATORS AT WESTERN WHITE HOUSE FOUND THE STAFF HAD GONE TO WASHINGTON Group Protesting Poverty Program Cutb1ck; Look9d at Horses And Left in Dismay Haig kept Nixon posted on his finding, throughout his visit, via cab I e fl. messages, but the President wanted tp hear quickly the newly elevated four-star general's personal evaluation of tht situation. Miss Fonda ·satd fhe physical condition of the ex-POWs belies some of the tales of torture. ''The men look healthy. There's no get· ting around it," she said. "Some men ~ider it torture to walk the streets of Vielna?J! with their heads · bowed. especially ai .... tQe point of a bayonet held by a woman. SOlitary~nfinement is not torture. Angela Davis was putin solitary._ "Wby should we believe Wbat.-.J.!iese men are sayilig?" she continued. "'ffi"ey....._ have lied abOut their bombing. The pri8or)ers ol war need help. They have been brainwashed by their govemmeri.t." Bugs Found 'On. Soutli Coast; Crop Periled _ The Wes tern White House has bciw bygged, it was revealed today. N~~ electronic s p y i n g devices. But by wooft1-:wiutemes. • Miss Fonda was here to raise funds for Medical Aid for Indochina. She also spoke to students at the UC Medical Center in San Francisco. Meanwhile, the !J'ennessee House has.., concurred with the Senate and sent to the. governor a resolution demanding that Miss Fonda, apologize for calling some retu?ning American pri!oners bf war liars pnd war criminals. "Di! resolution described her as an 1~ ldnllll •hd ,ente 11.1~liii11ter ttioenDY ·rutonecr&Ctlvlst . '' r 11 • ,. * * ··* Pentagon ·Fears ' , No More 'Live' American POWs WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Penlagon said today there arc probably no more American pris6ners aliv.e anywhere in Indochina. Dr. Roger Shields, head of the Pe t tagon'a prisoner of war task force, added . theFe is. oo evidence that any POW!f1iad ~n executed in captivity, with three ex- ceptions. Those three were executed early in the \\'ar in retaliation for Saigon execution of captured Viet Cong guerrillas, according to a Viet Cong announcement at the time. The Pathet Lao in Laos and the in- surgent forces in Cambodll will hopefully provide more information about the fa te of the Americans missing ii1 those coun- tries, Shield$ said, but "we have no in- dication at this moment that there are any Americans alive in Indochina.'' Rumora that there· are hundreds of U.S. servicemen still held iG Laotian prison . camps "do the famili es of the missing a disservice," he said. The Pathet Lao and the Khlner Rooge, unlike the Viet Cong and the North Viet- namese, have not provkled a list of men 'who diec!'in captivity. ' "We do not consider lhere has been a complete accounting," Shields said. In Laos, 317 men were listed a.11 miss- ing and ... 10 POWs have been returned. Almost all were airmen shot down. UO Coed _Taken " ./ From Shopping Center, Attacked A UC lrvine student was raped Wednesday ' night by an unknown assathmtpbo grabbed her as she return- ed to her be from shopping in the Tustin area, Orange Colrnty Sheriffs deputies said today. • The 21-year-old victim; a Santa Ana resident who wcrks part Ume for a cater· ing company, !old deputies her attac<er held a revolver to 'her head as she en- tered the car and then forced her to drive to a remote area. She told deputies she wa• then raped and forced to participate in acts or se"ll'.· \ ual perversion before being compelled to · driV. her assailant back to their sarting point. Deputies said she descri bed her •t· tacker as being 24 to 25 yea rs old , 175 pc)undl, and witb short d11rk .hair cut in ,. military fashion. Offlcer11 said the victim did not require medical treatment. ' And the De part nle-n-t...._ of Agriculture is alarmed because tfie discovery of t~ tiny white plant- -1fucking pests marks the first ap- pearance of the insects along the South Coasl. · The USDA regards the Iii.gs as a ""·-·t to .lb& citru1 crop. 1 " \idbi~ of inrormfllion came via Associated Press. whose stall ticed the •lry in the weekly '1CfloperaUve conom ic I n s e c t Rellorl." ' 1he Docilment said the in- -festation first spread .. I n t o Oceanside and now has moved northward. . ·The popuJatioo· at . La C a s a Pacitica, said the report, is "four nymJ)hs per leaf." Two Flee County, Jail; 01,te Makes It; 2nd Caught Tv•o Orange County jail prisoners ran -· tor freedom . Wednesday in separate in- cidents that led to the boo king of one suspec t on escape charges and the issu- ing or an all·paints alert for the other. Still at larg'e tod ay is Jeriirhe. Vernon Brooks, 24, who slipped out of his I~ irons at the Orange County Medical Center dental clinic apd galloped to freedom. Brooks' guard s were given the slip as the prisoner, held on robbery charges, weav&t his ·way through crowded cor- ridors at the county hospi tal. Sfephanie l.Aicille Hay~. _21, of San- ta Ana, did not show the saIQ.e speed. Miss Haywood, also awaiting court ac- 1 tion on drug charges, bolted from a transport vehicle as it entered the jail y3rd to unload its prisoners. She was pursued apd CJ.uickly recaptured. Two Pr~fs Claim Beer Dri11kers 'Have No Taste ' Two college researchers said in Anaheim beer drinkers can't tell the dif- ference between brand s -or at least 20 students can't at · C&lifomia Polytec hn ic University of Pomona. Pri>f. Frederick Meeker and student researcher Ralph Bettencourt reported the results of their beer preference tests at the 53rd annual meeting of the Western PsycholQglcal A s s o c I a t i o n Wednesdoy . • , They 5'id they choose 10 "serious" beer dri nkers \\'ho pri ded themselves as connoisseurs and 10 duffers who said they could not tell one beer from another. ,;Not ·a single person \\1ho said belorehand that he li ked this beer or that he disliked that one could tell which was· \vhich \Vhcn their labels were removed," the researchers said. They said some vohmteers in th~ test bad been upset. ''Some of the men even feared that nqt to be able to discriminate might be con· sidered a refle<:tlon on their ma.scullni· ty," they &aid. • ' . Squabbles Eclipse Issues;· • Clemenie Protest Flops ·-A} spokesman for the Viet Cong said in Parts, "We have received reports that backed by the United States. Saigon ~ preparing its troops ror an invasion of Cambodia." , The spokesman, Ly Van ·Sau, addec{: "lf Saigon carries out an open Invasion of Cambodia to massacre and pillage ag~ the Cambodian populations, it will create an extremely grave violation of the Vief- By JOHN VALTERZA by the Nixon Adminfstralion to dismantle nam peace accords.'' ~ _,J 1 Of n.. o.11y l'lltof s11ff the Office of Economic Opportunity. ~n a Senate speech this mominir:. Four dozen demonstrators from the in-That agency has ai:lmlnistered the Democratic Leader, Mike Mansfield ner city of Los Angeles arrived at the model-cities progran1 which would have warned about rumors that South Viet· gates of the Western White House meant about S,000 jobs in the Los namese troops might be used on 00. Wednesday, but their protest of poverty Angeles ghettos, spokesmen said. flank and Thailand troops on the othei'. tP. program cutbacks took a back seat to in· Earlier in the day the demonstrators efforts to relieve the pressure on ternal squabbles. had marched in downtown Los Angeles. beleaguered Cambodian forces . .. I [ h d near the offices of the Department of "This would be a most dangerous pro-n act, t e emonstration which had cedure and could have the nn11•lble effect been Pr.pa -'ne JI t rr th Housing and Urban Development. ,........ r~ ver rea Y go o e of once again involving this country .in 1 gr nd "Now that was a demonstration," said ou · quagmire because the suNYirt -[ he --...._ one delegate in San Clemente. Eyeina the .. ,... Most o t • •emo-aWrs· •runted . • , 1~1~..c othenvita -woold COlll* "(' •-... tho.roughbred race horses pastuted near.. YD ·~ .,),,. 11.._ their disappointment at the. area \fhere the western white house he added': rrom lhe ntt.ed Stat~s. 'Manafteld said. demonstrations take place in Si\n ---. · 1 The White House sought to indicate the 'There ain't nothing here but horses Clemente. and a cOiiplt?i-()! cops." meeting of the Security Council -i-com· Others began arguing with their ''\Ve're lea~·:•......_ ~ posed of the: hi&hest ,Pentagon, St•e leaders because only one newsman show----......._ Deplrtment, Centfal lntellllince A.Keney ed up . ... officials as )Veil as White tfouae aides - Shortly after leaving their b~ses , at H ~ot a crisis meeting, saying it had about 1:30 p.m. several or the~de1egates ostage Son's ong-scheduled. • . pounced on Public Safety Director · ' o ever, in Phnom Penh, a crisis al· Clifford Murray and demanded to speak mosphere "J>reyailed as more than 50 lo • White House representatives. Father 'Sane' western diplol/ials-ol'.i)leir families, 111-"There isn't anybody there· who could. eluding Americans, leftlhe Cambodian accommodate you," Murray said. capi(aJ1~ anticipation of an allOUt-attack "What do you mean?" asked... one TULSA, Okla. (UPI) -Nicholas on the 'Clty by Communist forces. -; woman. · ..__ Arevalos, whose 20-year-old son was held Despite more than five weeks of d1Uy "I mean there isn't ao"ybody home. in ...... a family kitchen without a bath or bombing of Communist concentrations b)' They're aU·1in Washington, all we have change of clothes ror three years, is not American B62s and: other-warplanes, tf'e here today is a few guards," the chief 1 psychotic, 8 sanity commission has rul-Pathet Lap, alleged1y 'with support from said. --tlorth Vietnam, has blockaded the city..;~ ' "Well we want a tour, then," Said ed. . ~ Meanwhile, fierce fighting w •~• another woman. Assistant· District Attorney Ron Shaffer reported the length '1Jd breadth of Squth ''I can 't help you there, either," Mur-said Wednesday he would review possible Vietnam toda)'-, even 14lugh the official ray replied. child abuse charges against Arevalos. cease-fire wu halfway through its 11th "They don't give tours or the place." The charges were withheld pending the wee)[ • i At that point the demonstrators who outcome of the commission n.iling. Radio Hanoi said today Viet Cong had brought along placards urging Presi· The son, Nicky, and his mother, troops. have warned peace-keeping teams dent Nixon to "rebuild our cities. not Pauline Areval os, were confined for men· lo stay clear oi certain areas to avotd Hanoi" began piling the pickets into ·a tal observation at Eastern State Hospital. ''heart-breaking ace~· ts" such •as ttfe station wagon. · Doctor s said Arevalos was not one Saturday in w · nine men we~ The prime moti vation for the ap-psychoti~. ~"but _p.ppeared too weak to killed when their elicopter Waf shot pea rance in San Clemente was the threat stand up to his wife . down in oorthefnmost South Vlet~\m. ~~~~~~~= , ~:-:r - RIP VAN WINKLE mattress ,. .. - Handcrafted by· TWIN SIZE ........... . FULL SIZE .....• , .•.. ........ QU~EN SlZE ......... . ....... ·KING SIZE . • . . . . . . . . . • ......... . • llad~flnlirtly by hand. " Hand-st iched s.id@wall s 1h111 11dll ntver 11ag or break dov.•n, • t:::•' rnorc. usenhlr area of $lbepi ng.eur!&t·c. .•.Upholstered \.\'ith d~11 • 1ny,...ril or nurr,11 Dacron by lJU Pont. t lloll ll nd Maifl inner- .1111rin1r for greater -!!l.11.· biltt.y and cottt fort.. • S·wu.y ha11d·t.ied bo,,. 111r in g -l ho:' "nvy o( t he h11lust.ry. • f'ull 20-)·car irua1ant.M -not. pm-rated. per per per per set set set set 219.50 229.50 31_9.50 419.50 H.J.GARRETT fURNIT~2 R~RaoR BLVD. PROFESSIONAL COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS ~poo Mon., TI!un. I. ff!. EHs. 646.0275 '' • • ---~-- D.:IL V PILOT I • wl•h T om a rphine • "'i:'r •. -an:Bal:: Week ' e-Far...Away? . STS IN TIIE MORNING ' Driving o toward work: this rhoming, there p vailed·a C?ertain grayness covering th~ ange Cout sky. Sort of a wet feeling the a&. A strong smell of Pacific ean. What couJd ~ll this mean? e ~!IY. day we~ther ~emed ·nar. While there was this prevalent y~s, you got the strong feeling, snif· g the air, that this was a burn-off sky. is was not the dull , leaden atmosphere t we have viewed for weeks just past. kind that was most likely to dump on u in great gobs of wetness. -- 'ti: "i f ,. .. " NiXon •Aid~ .. 7.T~:stify ', . .I . ~· ":""" ' I '- 1 n dicat ions Poin ·t to W ide ning Inquiry WASlllNGTON (UPI) -A lecleral grand jury'> interVle\y of 'several key White Houle aides iodiCates it II ft· panding Its investigation cl I h e Waterga~ bugging base to other polltical espionage and· sabotage during the 1!172 presidential campaign_ (See · related story, Page 10) Dwight Chapin, President Nixon's ap- pointments ...,,.1ary at the lime of the June 17 buainl, testified. Wedneldoy for . 90 minutelmf Donald 11, Segmu, the California lawyer I>: hlrid lot alleged 31b6tqe agaJnot Deniocratlc candidates, 'leitlfle<nor 45 miiilltes. ~ Olapin and •Segmtl have 'not been In- volved in the Watergate investigation" directly but have been mentioned in reports .of other alleged poliUcal un- dei:over a$°vity. GORDON STRACHAN, a pollilcal aide to Whit~ House Chief ·of staff H.R,. Haldeman,. and Robert Reisner, fonnerl aide to 1912 deputy campaign manager Jeb Sluarl Magruder, also appeared before the grand jury We!Jnesday. 'lbe grand jury was to -meet again to- dily, although it was not certain whom' it would l>e interviewing. THE GRAND JURY had been taking testimony from lhe Waterpte defend· ants, ~l!> were given immunity from further .,.._._ But .. it -to-ward lnvestlcatlng other acts, IM .,._. cution dreW tight the shrouds ol. secur- ity and secrecy and sought to keep re- porters from lmowinc What WM going on_ ANTI.SEX S ILL IN BIG TRO UBLE It ~ been widely reporlcd thatbi,.p- ln hired Segretti as ·an undekiovec agent last yeer, and FBI reporis Wd Chat.at Olapin'1 orders, Nixon's ~ at- torney,'llerbert Kalmbach, of N.,,port Beach, 1>&Jd Segretti more thBn $30,000. IT ALSO WAS alleged that Reisner probably' would have known about a reported secret meeting in Fe~ry. 1972, In which Mitchell, then the cam· palgn manager;. Mlllruder. his deputy ; White -Rouse Counsel John W. Dean' Ill,· an4-Watergate c<>n!pirator G. Gordon Uddy, another former Whlte House aide and re.election campaign finance counsel at !}lo.. Ume, discussed plans for the Watergate bugging. HARRISBURG1 Pa.. (AP) -Gov. The campaign committee denied today Milton J. Shapp says~if legislation mak-that any meeting had-~been lleld _by ing adultery and fornication a crime ever reaches his desk he'll veto it. Mitchell, Magrudi;r and Dean _ for the "l, do not think you can legislate · purpose of discussing Watergate bugging mMals/' Shapp told a• news ~efence • plans: \Vednesdiy. ·· w The Post also . quoted 'Teliable ln- "PertJii~ we should give a lie detector vestigative sources" as saying Mitchell test to leg1s~tors and ~nly let those who itchell and former Commerce Seretary-pass vote on 1t," be qwpped. · · State Rep, Martin Mullen, who's been and former Com??e~ Secretarf Maur- pressing the bill and who says he will run i~ N. S~~ Nixon s campatgn .(und- for governor 00 a morality. _ platform :aiser:, test1f1ed befor~ a fedetal gi'and o, by golly, this was differeftt. This \ s the rolling kind of mists in the morn- that, with the Lord's good graces, uld .vanish with the heat or mid-day The -Los 'Angeles Times and the Washington Post reported that J arnes W _ McCord Jr., convicted Watergate con- spirator and security chief for the Coytl- miftee to Re-Elect the President at the time he was arrested, 1old the grand jury that fellow conspirato• G. Gordon Liddy .uid transcripts ct the bugging of the coun.tered: ' Jury m New ~ork tlV~ m!>Dth ab!iut 4l "'!bat's his trouble. Ile makes light ol $200,000 campaign .contr1but1011 by Rof/ert ' . ·-•hing That'· h I' . f L. Vesco. Ve'ScO ts centr;il figure m a ~· s and reveal to all this best of all ible coasts. So what does it mean? AN ntE NEWS of the day for o1her s. A certain coastal craziness seems l~fill the inked pages. A flying couple r m Alaska floated their seaplane in on I blue waters of Huntington Harbour, f uring they were in san Diego. ~Another poor chap drove his boat up to the beach near Hunting"ton's Edison am plant, figuring he ~s headed into t e harbor at Redondo Beach. A couple or apparent gross errors in vigation ; one by air and one by sea. 'ilfEANWIIlLE DOWNCOAST at . Laguna Beach, a pretty young miss drew a large crowd to the shoreline whilst sun- bathing with nothing more thafi a biPlhmark. to protect her. from the sun r'I!'•· ,?!'he mists of the morning. 11le bum-orf sky. The craziness by land, seashore and i .. ·What· can it all mean? . , finally, your rilind g'rinds into gear a it all comes into focus. Check tM c da,r. , Indeed. \fie approach . th•! of time known as spring vacatioo. \fi.lused to call it Bat--Week in these plrts. A time just ahead of summer's lizy days with the youth of our land gets kicked loose from classrooms and books and go wherever they can to practice the rites of spring. YEARS AGO, '111EY" used to descend upon our coasUlne like hordes of Hun in- ~ers. They filled rental units. They OYer-filled them, as a matter of fael..,1 · I During those spring vacation daY!. they tum~ our beaches into one ·great sea of flopped-out bodies. The boys look-cll at the girls. The girls looked back. Run and hi-jinks were the orders or the <fAy. f At night. it was youth on the move. Always moving. From Balboa's old }iendezvous BaUroom and Fun Zone, to the streets or downtown Laguna back to Marine Avenue on Balboa Island. lAnd in all the moving, flopping sun- nmg, driving. higb-jinksing. you could ffiure plenty ol zany things woold happen - tb keep things lively in the springtime aJong this best or all possible coasts. • 'JN Rf:CENT YEARS, the youth influx of spring hasn't measured up to yesteryear. The law has been more finn. dlords no longer i,1.·ill rent a one-room alow to 50 students. sai~:s dczvouS burned , is gone , but not f tten. )1le"1lWI!· ·1e. vacationing students have ,red o r spots like the desert or · tains n practicing the rites of g. You suspect Bal Week is just a r c of the past. - , et spring is with us. i~ can tell by the mists of the mom· Ul'IT ..... Tower Deaths· Four workmen were killed Wednesday when flash fire shot through an elevator shaft they were cleaning in 'Sears Tower in Chicago. Ar- row indicates approximate death seene between 33rd and 35th floors. Building will be 110 sl<>ries, highest jn world. One F~deral Judge ules Breakup of OE egal WASHINGTON (AP ) -A federal judge ·says the Nixon Administration is acting illegally in its plan to disperse rapidly the programs and people or the Office o!_Ecooomic Opportunily. U.S. District Court Judge William B. Jones issued a broadJy worded order ;-Wednesday enjoining Howard Phillips, acting OEO director, from proceeding further with the admiaistrMJon plan to phate out the .anUpovelty 4'ncY. ' Jones said the administratioo could not unilaterally terminate OEO programs established by Coogress as loo.g u funds are appropriated for them. His decision came on suits ftled-d?f-a union local repreSf.Jlting government workers and a Missouri r u r a I . redevelopment cor- poration. IN CHICAGO, ROWEVER U.S. Dislrict Court Judge James B. Par;ions refused to Rights to= Jjoo ze 'Not Guaranteed By Co1istitutio n' PHILADELPIUA (UPI) -A lhree- judge federal panel has ruled that the right to · buy alco.hol is not a "fun- damental right" guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. The decision came in a suit filed by a g_roup: of college students contesting the state's power to set the. drinking . age at 21. The students, members or t h e Republican College Co u n c i 1 of Pennsylvania, argued that Pe.nnsylvania's drinking lawi denied them equal protection under the laws and inCringed on their £reedom of association an!1 right to privacy. " halt the administration's act ions . Parsons said suits flied in Chicago were premature since "OEO Will continue as provided: by law unless Congress acts to discontinue it or fails tO act to cause its continuance and that Community Action Agencies will · be funded for their programs at Ieast through 1973." The Chicago action also was filed by a union local that re~nts OEO employe1~~ ·""I·~ The White House and·-the OEO said they woul~ have lDO ~t on .the iwo decision• · unlil 1 iooJ-.111 .11,ttorneys studie<t them. ~-·~ . ' . . PinwP R. KETE, · president of the gev~mment union local it'J Washington, told an overflow croWd of about 100 in the lobby of OEO headquarters after Jones issued his decision : "We art! proud to have fought, and happy to have . beaten·, this a~pt to violate the l~ws of the United States." lte urged President N~xon to1_replace ' what he called" ",Howie Phillips · and his wrecking crew" with managers who will . carry out the Economic Opportunity Act · as, he said, the union members. will. The crowd cheered. .,. DAIL 1' PILOT •· DELIVERY SERVICE Otli'lrry of the Daily Pilol is g11aranlrrd Mtlldt,·l'rltlt'' II rtu fo Ml h••• ,..,,. .,.(Mr '' S1M J.m., <•H •!Id yeur (•PY wm M llo.....,ril I• 'l"MI· Ctlll t rt 11\t!ll Ull!ll J:ll .. Ill._ --._, ~ khlf'"t'.,.. $11M1y":• It,....~ Ml fK~M -~ - yeur c•itY' Illy t ,\.m. Sthtnl•J• ff I t.m. Sunlllty, ctll 111• fl c..,.-win ~ llnuiltt i. r•u. C:~tll ••• Ilk"' w11IH 11 t .l'll. . · T rJrphonrs " Mtll Ortntt C-IV Artl• ••.... , 4"11·tJll Mtrll'IWtll Hu11t111tt11i" lttcll t llf WtslMiMlff •. . • ·• ......... lnt 1111 CilmNft, CtJlh!rt,.. lttdh Stll .11111 CtpblrtM , D1111 hiflf, $.to.1111 l ... 1111, L1111111 Hlgllt'I •••• ftt."'9 -· Frost Nips ~~st, ·-South • r;ro we rs.Assess Damq,ge to CropiDue to Cold Nig lits • • Te1nperatures Alr::n' A.I tntt Hlgh Low"'· ll ll BOiton .. " llllltlo ~ " ·" ~Mrltston " ~ ~-10111 ll " ., " ·" f~ll .. " ·" • Vlltlld ., " w' " " 0.ltOll ., Ji Hollo!Uhl .. ....... ~ .. " J•cklOnVIJ'• " ., J(tn':1 C 1¥ .. " U1 11.'' .. " l~v11:• " " " .. 't''"" n " 11~1t" ~ " ·" Moll. I. Ptul .. n , ~"' Ntw lttns .. ., "':r. Otk d " ~'"°"" City .. ., .... .. " .PllH-'Dl'tlt " " 'Pn=I• : " p fhlxl,:t.h " ·" I Potll• • <Sri. " " ··-.. " SI LOUii " " s.)1 ~kt Cltv :! " 5111 Nl!'lc:lKO " ~ltlt " .. •1111,..toti ,. " CaHlornl• Color muc:11 ot Soutllff'll C1111or11!1•s Wfftlllr ,,.., """""" Frlcltl', N1t111 , '"° "°"'"""" daucb t<'ld fot f.l't O<lod~ ..,. CMltl trMI and ,_,, '""' IJ llloecteli /nltnf, Tiii Htc:.-1 We.I~ HI'\>!« Mkl OUll~ W Ui\lld UP ~t In ~-'=::'>'!'"' u ~IWlicnt t«. ' Frlcitov, fM Arll;1nu1'1 tom110 crop m•v bt 711 fl) 1S Dtrttnl c!Mlntyed\ Ofl]Cl1!1 u ld. CrOP lolMI In SOUtllern Ullnols, alr11dy MV.... lrom ftoodlno, wtr1 IUrthlr d•IN!ltd by lht 1ever1 cold. Ont llH'Ch lll'OWtr ltld h11 crOP Wit • 100 Plrtllll IOll -"WI ttn'I IJl'ld -llvt bVd." I A. Hght mriiturr ot r•ln 1nd snow kid trMS ~ tile Gr111 l11kff tnd lht Ohio lltlYer. ·11111 IM .e;cumut1tren w111 , .tight, UIUlll)' ltu tlttn In Inch, Rt!" ITIQ\lld o"'r '"' Oregon ce11st. T"' 1111 lllY drOll OPll'~~ SO\lthwnl.m Colorldo wtrt In tn 1tforl lo f9fd Cllllt 1lrt In ,,. • ...,.. ·-· .... ~'""'''""'" moYld l11to !ht Mii, b1,1rvlllll Cttllt kllJ"' >Y 1tvtrt wt•fhtr b«trl'lt 1 IOll pr orlty. 01111'19111 nllll'ltlll!I to c1t!le """"' t nd lltW ctll>'ll rtl!Ofd Ult Jll Sl4 mRllOll ln Coltlrtdo ti-. As mtn'I' ti Mii lhf 41.00D c1lvt1 bom btfore ttlt storm tr1 , ll\lluohl to h4WI dlH. · '" H"' M11r!co, r111ehflr1 Iott Ill" tstlm11«1 llVLllKClnt ol 11\tilr c1tt..., incl 1111rlv hllf lilt ct!! CfOO• 1 ION ot Ptl'Mtt J30 mflllon, Co•sfal Wenther Ptrlly tll)lldy lod1y. Light Vlrf~blt Wlndl night Ind Pl'IOl'lllll!I llourt bf. comlll!I ..,...,.,,., 10 to It htob In •tl•rl!Oom toe1v tlld Fr4dty. High POdtV In !hi low '°'· C011!11I ll11"1Ptr11ur11 r1119e from S2 to M. ln!tnd 1tmper1tum r1poe """ SO to a . W11tr ttmpir1t11"5t. THUlllOA'f St«lftlll h!tll , . .. .. ... . 6:» p,rn, ._7 S1111, 1110011, Tides ,lltlD.-,T ev~,. ,; s .,"!1 Y m runrung or Securities. and Exchang'e Commissioo governor. suit alleging that investors were swin- dled out of $24: million. Star~: We stor51gas in under· ground ltorage f1clds in the summrr II!:> )"UU11 have mough for tbc winter. Substitute 1u from natural rnourccs; Caal gasifiutioo is simpl1 the reaction of COii with oxygen and hydrogen from stctm 1111 suitablt rucwr. The rault, Htat 'from c::IDld: Huge ~l)C)lilS of naturalgash2vcbtcndiscovcttd · in plaru like Alaska, Northwe;\ Ctnada and the Qinadian Arctic hhu1d5. vie ci.n bring some Of it here in tankm. Some throug~ la pipeline. And we've been involved in c:i.:tcnsivc Arctic rcstarch to find ourthc bat way 10 build that pipeline without harming the cnvironmcn1. a ltl(thanc gas, is then purifi/ to produce clun-buming . • sub$titutc g1~. G1s from ooa1. • With all the properties of • C11 from lndonni11 This projcc1 could brin$ up to one billion cubic fctt per day of nttural gas fin liquid forml IO the Wrst C<>1st ol the U.aited Sta ta. LNC from Au1tr1lla: Jn the P•lm Valley field of Centr1l Austr1lia, there mt)' be as much 11 JO trillion cubic-f~t of na1uraJ g~ If the g1s proves to be there:, and the Ausu1li10 and U.S . Covanmen111pptoYe, Lhi.s ~upply could bt con.,.ncd 10 liquid form and shipped home 'fl11pcci11lycomtructtd 1ankm, natural gas. I ' C11 from Cenut.l ind Sou.th Amtric:a: Althou3b iOmewhat lru £1r along thtn other solirces, Latin Amrrlc:an gu is 1till a very (real possibility. Our plans c1ll for drilling test wclb in Panam1 and Colombia IDOl'I • J This ~try is facing an energy shortage. And it includes Whichever, it's obviously going to cost more. But :..C natural gas. , t~ink )'.OU'll. agree tbat It's a lot better than no gas. Espe-. Docs that mean the Cas Company is runi1ing out? cu1Uys1nce 1t'll still beyouimost economical energyaourte. Not exactly. But we'll have to go to the ends of the eanh And one of the cleanest. _ tn order to keep those home'fires burning. As far as your immediate needs AIC concerned, we'll be Jn fact, in a few years, the gas that supplies the flame __ • 6 -_ .... able to supply all our 11firm" customers, suc:h "" that s~plieg the heat that cooks your roast DUIY come homes and businesses. But until wc hnvc tho(c new from A a!ka.Or rndonesia. Or Austtalta. It'll be supplies coming in, we will have to 1ntcrru~dc.lfv~ natu as that we reduce to a liquid aad shtp home erles more ohen to our indwtritl customers ~ho are in tankers. · equipped 10 switch to other fuels whenever 11ftrm" Or mtybe it'll be substitute ga1 produced from coal. tv'IQ customers' needs require. ' ~ • ~~ ~~ W-y. '""" l'I C111111t11' tll'9l 1r1 u.-cl9d ~ 1111 llHM!. fll'lt hlllll .... ..•.. •:It 1.m. 4.7 1"11'11 low • • 12:1' '·"" 1.0 Stcond hfth ••. "" •• 1:113 "''"' J,0 SICOl'Mf '°"' .... ,. , f2:31 ~.m. I.I sun 11ti1n !:16 1.m, Sits •1n p.m Moon ., ... 11• Jl.fft. ltlt 2:31 '·'""·' ---------------------------------------------.,, ' ·-· • , I I _r.-.J ' l ' l I ) ( I ! f I ) ' . I I ' '} ' I • I " .. ,. ,,,.. .. ' . - 0.-aD-'e (;oast '-1 e EDITION -' \~ ---., VOt: 66, NO. 102, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES l .,.. . .._ . ' ·- '· ' .. .. • ' I THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1973 ' \ '· Today· 's Fina) ~# I . N,Y. Stoeks 1 " ~- I TEN .CENT~ 2 :.School Hopef J).is10i-Anti-Jet Flight Stand ' """ . By -WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of .. DllfY ....... Two of the candidates· in Tuelday's. Newport-Mesa Unified Sehool District •le<tion think Ibo school board should take an iminediate strong stand .qalnst jet flights from Orange County Airport. Both are challengers for the Corona del ~ .. Mar -.eat of incumbent Thomas c~Y in the area lll06I dlr<ctly affected by takeolfs from Orange ·COunty Airport. . Margaret Setterholm, an 18-year"ld Aide Denies Foundatwn Stnck Sa"le . By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. Da!tt ,lltt Staff Corona del Mar High, S!:hoOI graduate, ·and James K. Schwarz, a teacher at Bolsa Grande H1ib School · in Garden Grove, said today they believe im· mediate action Is necessary. "This Ls an ongojng controversy and the distrtct really bas no. choice but to . join other public agencies to do something a.bout it, '1 Schwarz salCI. · Schwarz stopped abort of asking lbe disti'ict to support an. oulright ban on the jel:', but he did call for an ~epth study • {o find ouL "just how serious the noise problem really is." --. ' Miss Setterbolm .took a more adamant position. . She said she is in full ·agreement with the posiliOn taken by lhe Airport Action Asaociation (AA:A), a. Newport Beach an- ti-jel noise group which wants all jet traffic eliminated atjbe alrpor:t. 1be AAA Monday called on all can- didates· in. the Tuesday elecUOo to state their po.sitlons on the issue. , , Other cBJldidates said they think a study of nolie0 and how It a!f.:cti school children ahould be undertaken before there Is any board 8aion. But Miss Setterholm contended that "the ·efrects of noise on the schools only complicate • the learning process. The district has got to take action now. to eliminate noise polluiion.v . Miss Setterholm said that, if elected, she would push for a district ··in·· vestigalion of the jet noise and, "if irr any way learning is being impaired y,·e sho uld adopt a resolution in support or a jetport in andther area." Thomas Casey. the incumbent in Trustee Arca fOl.U', &Aid unless some signifjcant loss of the educational p~ gramf can be demonstrated, the district has no way of taking any k.ind iof stand. Casey said if he is ~le<::ted to tile board •. he will urge ttlat a new study be undertaken to de\ennine once and for all how serious the problem is. . , i. Casey also referred to a .st udy -the \Vllsey · Ham jei noise study com- missioned by Newport Beach three years ago -that was "inconclusive" lnsofar as the impact of noise on the schools. AS$i~tant Cit y fl.tanage r Philip Bel· tencourt agreed that the study doesn't concentrate heavily on the school s and noted that the srhool district didn •t participate in K to any great extent. ~tty Lill)'. a. write-in candida te. ~or !he !See JET NOISE. Page ZI ·~Paddy Wagon Carts Off 17 Youths By L. PETER KRIEG Of !he D•ll., ,llfl Sl•ff the youths, all boys,· to police head- quarters after finding a cooler full of beer, a lid of marijuana, and a bottle of "He told uS where he was sta~ni arid v.·e went to the Ocean Front address to verify.it," Furrow said. • -Morning news accounts suggesting the James Irvine Foundation would begin ' selling its stock in the Irvine company as early as June were termed "a falsehood" . today by the foundation's attorney.~ - Bal \Veek is apparently alive and well -and getting off to an early start in Newport Beach this year. The annual Easter vacation blov.•out got off to an atypical if premature star.t this morning as Newport Beach poli arrested 17 Riverside youths crammed into a second story duplex apartment in West Newport. • pills in the apartment at 3308 W. Ocean Front. Officer John Furrow said he came across the youths after picking up a juvenile wearing a backpack and walking on Balboa Boulevard near: 42nd Street about 9 a.m. rte said there he came upon the other ... youths "sleeping alt over the place'' on maUre sse!I and sleeping bags. Howard J. Prive\l, Los Ang(\ies al- lorney for tbe Irvine Foundation and its spokesman during recent ~s in Washington D.C .. dented he had lndtcaled the foundation would as soon as "this summer" begin lelling shares of Irvine company stock. "The BOird of Directors of the James lrvtne· Foundation hu . initiated. studies and plaMing to realize the full market value of its holdings 'in the Irvine Com· pally/' Privett confi~. However, those studies and tbe planning,-he empbuiz.ed, may .result in a decision to sel) Irvine Compa., holdlnp al any-lime wlthl!I tbe nut six years, , '"nleri Jiu been ... declalo!i by the board of the foundation to bepi oelling stock lhis summer. /lay ,.port that such aclecislonbubeenmadei.oa fallebOod," Privett decllred. He addod that .the foundation has until 111'1!1 under terms of the Tax Reform Act of 1961 to reduce its boldlnp in the Irvine Company from the present su percent level to the 20 percent required by the federal law. Additionally, he explained, there are coort actions pending In Call!ornla which would In effect be necessartly complete befor< any stock held by the foundation could he IOld. A coort suit filed by the fotmdation to change the trust tnstrumenl drawn by James Irvine ls necessary, Privett said, beforo the stock may beiold even though the federal law has ordered. the sale. '"lbe U.S. Qmtltutton protects such indentures of trust," he explained .. "CQngress cannot ".iolate the terms of a prJVate contract." - James Irvine ll, who died in 1947. set up the' foundation ~ gave it controll~g interest in the Irvine company. Despite the Tax Reform Act, Privett said, "COngress can't come along 30 years later and apply retroactively a Jaw which was not in effect when the trust in- strument was drawn by Mr. Irvine. ' "It will take a court decisioa. to do that," Privett said. Tbe·foUndation's suit filed in December of 1971 will J>e given a pretrial hearing May 9 In Loo Angeles Superior COUri, Privett said. U beard In Juna or July as expected, the foundation mlgbt be free of present trust ·restrlctlonl which prohlblt "piecimeal" aales of, the stoct. Police used a paddy wagon to transport ' . .. -... , ' .. Experienced • , 'Diver Drowns 'f' ., . . DAILY ,ILDT Staff ""'9 ,, Rossm.oor Cleans ITp World . Crane nits unidenti(ied fiberglass c..;,,lly baclt ·into place on giant g\obe -just off, Avenida de la-Carlotta in La~a Hills. A symbol for llOssmoor C<\rP!;>ration's. Leisure World retirement ·oommunity, the globe ~ recentJy.,..nd·blasted ill ·• regular cleaning operation. The co.untries were relboyect ind cleaned in a gentler 1J1anner. A foun· tatn, palm tms-·arul othe"'1landscaping will soon . be added· in this world's domain. · Newport to Bypa ss Staff . ' ., ()n -Canal Dre~g Issue ' _.L ... • I '"'~t • The cily of Newport Beach i.o. plannil)(. a lasl-ditch effort to win approy!ll Jor Jong.planned maintenance dredging of lhe Grand Canal between big and Lillie Ba1boa Island. , from the staff concluding that even if we drejlge now. the action of the lides and so forth will make jt necessary to dredge again ln three years · or so/' be said . "~ told .. 'why botller' and that's Off C'1talina A Newport Beach 1>-~ba diver with years of experience was found drowned off Catalina Island Wednesday night, after his companion cruised coastal coves hunting him in the mistaken belief he swam ashore. The body of Barry Hoskin, 26, of 403 N. Newport Blvd., was brought ashore at ~ th~ island's Isthmus by the Bay Watch patfot vessel. Death was attributed to drowning, but Los Angeles COUnty S h e r i f f 1 s in- vestigators are uncertain how the veteran diver got into fatal trouble. He was_a.cPlowledged to be a good diver, tauiht1>y his father Douglas and i grandfather, Lyle, operators of Lyle Hoskin and Sons Water Sports, 1220 W. Coast Highway. Sheriff's deputies said Hoskin and a companion, Bob Hart, 19, of 2209 Miner · St., COsta Mesa, dove about 1 p.m. in 40- foot waters of£ Emerald Cove. They became separated beneath the surface and about 45 minutes later, in· vestigators said, Hart returned. to their boat and waited for Hoskin . Finally assuming he had swum ashore, Hart fired up the craft and began cruis· ing along shore searching for the missing man. . He notified the Avalon Bay Watch crew about oi p.m., and _ 21h hours later Hoskin's body was found drifting in 52 feet of water oU Arrow Point. .Man Leaps lnto Pit. of Tigers Furrow said he stopped the youth because he appeared to be a nmav.·ay .• J:ie said the marijuana and narcollcs para:pfiemalla were lying around alOng, with other contraband . Furrow said charges had not been filed against any of the youths, including the only adult. (See BAL WEEK, Page ZI Changed Again? 1 Civic Leader Beek Drops Josepli • • Joseph Allan Beei Jr .. Newport Beach civic activist and son of · the late seC'retary of the C81ifomia State Senate, ·is changing ills name• . _ The ~year-old. Beacon Bay resident, whose family· ties run .deep In Newport Beach history 1 wants ·· to be known as Allan Beek, which is what he's called and which is what is on his birth certlOcate. "When I was born they named me AJlan/' he explained today. "That's what went on my birth certificate. ' "When l Sol lJ!to IJ'lqun&r school, I wanted to make ~it fMcier -Joaepb AllanBcek Jr. -so my parents med•· certificate pf amendment," he recalled. It didn't work ouf, Beek explains. "Ever since then it's just beert a bother," be oald "ll ge!J coafllled with dad's name and it's longer to aign . So I finally just deeided to straigbtel) it out and be whet I was born in the first place." ·Beek saJd there will be a court hearing on his request May 1: . ' ·More Than $400,000? Newport Man Indicted In Homeowner Swindle Newport Beach fin~ncier Ronald B. "\Vhitman was indicted today by the Orange County Grand Jury on charges that he swindled homeowners -many of them in the Orange Coast area -out of .,m~:i:::.-::~r of the International Development C.Ompany, 1700 16th St., Oakwood Garden Apartments South, has been booked on 22 counts o{ grand theft, the DAILY. PILOT has learned. District Attorney's officers .sajd they planned to arraign Whltma~. 47, in superior Court within the next few days. He has been arrested and freed on ball, they said . Witnesses claimed in testimony before Jost their property through foreclosure. They said the allegations stemming from those acts of fraud Involve more than $400,111111. It' is also alleged that Whitman fold homeowners, real estate brokers and other parties in the multiple transactions that he . was part of nationalJy knOwn~ Rama:da Inns Company. · They claim be also used an inrlated financial statement to support his claiim. Mexican in Mosco~ City Manager Robert L . Wyiln "said fo- Klan Planned Bombs · ~:;!'re~~ .1:iec.!o::"U:, 1:" u,!~~"11 !nistrating.'' . Wynn said the Regional Water Qua lity permit is only the fii'st in a long string of permits the project must get before it can be started. The next step is the U.S. Army Corp~ of Engineers and then on to the South Coast Regional Coas(aJ OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) - A man the Grand Jury that Whitman purchased yelling "I am king of the world" jumped real estate from homeowners by giving into a Bengal tiger pit at the Oklahoma them a down ·payment plus a corporate MOSCOW (UP() -President Lui• Echeverria of Mexico arrived today for taIU on how to improve his country'! ~all and dw~g trade with the SovJet Union, and to seek a larger voice for lesser powers in world affairs. • DETROIT (UPI) -An FBI lnfonner Wednesday detailed a Ku Klux Klan plol to bomb school buse! planned for use in a 11ehool integration program ln Pontiac, Mich. Jerome Lauinger, a Pontiac fireman who said he fed the FBI 1 ... fonnatipn about Klan operations cfuring a three-year stint as an infiltrator.__._ • Museum to Get Picasso Gih . ~· PARIS (UPI) :--'):lie hein of · Pablo Picuso have dcNted the painter's vast and pdcelea col- lection of art by other modem .. rtls!J to the Louvre museum In Parls1 PlcaS10's a t to r n e y an- nounced today. • The gift of paintings by Modigliani, Braque:,-" Mat Is s e, Renoir, Cezanne ana other major names of mOOerri art is In accord w(th Picasso's wishes, attorney Roland Duma• said. Dumu said the famlt,v has not decided what to do with wom by Picasso hhnsel!, which ' the artist kept In his dla at Mouglns In ooulhent France. . . of the Regional Water Quality Control Board and the cily is ready to go alound them right to the fop. "We are planning to get on the agenda Qf the actual board in three weeks or so and go around their staff," Wymi said. "While the staff has been diligent in its ·efforts, we think they are dead wrong in their findings ." Wynn' sakl the first major delay came when lhe waler board.slaff demanded a aampte of harbor bottom sediments for analysis. . • ' "We went out and took cl core and fotmd It to he a good sandy material," Wynn said. "We told the staff it would all be pol up against the canal bulkhead to form a sandy beach." •• ~ But -the water quality lnalysts fOl the samples, Wym said they determined a hiSh level of what tney calledJ'blota" thal could be disturbed bl' dMgtns. . "Biota ls what/we all see as poDullon when il's nootlng on the surface hut when I\ sinks to lhe boltom il becomes sacred," Wynn told a meeting of the NO\\'J>Ort Hll'boMlootl Mela ~ of Realtors todlly at the Balboa Bay Club. Wym said 1t 1-a balf-doien plecos of oort _..._,. wu traded back snd forth wllh Ille 8ttllf, which Insisted that the drodglnc would not only harm canal biota but allo stir up biota 100 or 200 f .. t from each end of it. ' .. Then Wednesday, we received a letter Conservation Coinmission. · "By the time we get through all the red tape and approvals, the paperwork will ha~ cost more-than the main· tenance ww.k1" Wynn said. City Zoo and was seriously injured by a note to secure the balance or the total male tiger. . . purchase price. Paul Kennedy, 37, was in thE. infensive It is alleged that after the original ca re µnit of a local.hospital today. transaction cleared escrow, Whitman ot>- "lle leaped in and the keeper tried to 1 talned trust deeds against the property stop him.·· said zoo ~irector Lawrence and then failed to make payments on the Curtis. "The male tiger went ov~d .. trust deeds. grabbed him behind the back of the n As a res\llt, invesUgators alleged, just as a cat would grab a mouse." homeowners holding Whitman's notes Channel 50 . Flap Lessens Promises Made to Improve Co mmunicatio 1is • By .RUDI NIEDZIEJ.5KI Of• ... De+1¥ '"''ll•H Cootroversy 1 over lhe role played by Channel 50 In the educoUon of Golden West and Orange COast COilege students appears IOmewhat calmed today after prom!J01 Wednesday night by both. facully and college oltlcl1l1 to improve communications between them . · Teachen fri>m both campuses ep- pearod eertloily salls!ied when Coast COmmuruty College District trustees told them they would become Involved to a greater dogra In Ille -ol policy for the new ed-llallon . Faculty members, angered o v er allegedly being ~ept In the dark about lhe academic £unction and financial picture of KOCE-TV, packed the board room more than 100 strong to demand answers lo 74 pointed questions they had about . lhe station . Sevtral of these were lnswered by Chancellor Nonnan E. Watson who furnished them with a drall of a goals and objeictlves statement which sl.rts9CS the boald participation of experts, In· eluding faculty members. In the develop- ment of courses. ' The other questions and possible oolu· .. Uons will be taken up al 3:30 p.m. today when Or. Watson meets with lhe faculty senate or both campuses In the telecom· munications building at Golden West. Among these are questions about the budgeting of KOCE, the selection ol- personnel, TV station management, equipment, and funding . Discussion over these concrete con· cems or the teachers however was avoid· ed by board memben who told faculty representatives bad not 1000 throUlh the · proper admlnlstraUve channels. - Trustee Worth Keene said lhe teachcl's tSee PROMISES, Pl(t !) ; . Orange Coast We ather Hazy sunshine on Friday, Iol· lowing early morn1ng fog and low clouds along the coast. Highs of 16 are expected in inland a r e a s. Beach temperatures of 68 are fore- cast. Overnight lows in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY Cathy Murphy ho8 an unuiual dog. Flossie, her 2·yeor-old Ben- ton bulldog, can do backflip.s, skate, fetch C1nd, uh. talk. That'! rigl1t. And if yott dO'njt believe • she can, it's ;1ut the Boiton· GC!- ce11t confusing 11ou.. Sae storv on. -'Page 15. I J • • • • • . . DAILY PILOT N NO POST AL HIKE. 'FORECAST FOR '73 MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI ) -P..imaster Cenenil I!:. T. KlaS.en has n1led out a pol(al rate increase this year but ln· dlcaled the •lroni j)Oliibillly o( ..., in 1974. "()Jr ,.degree Of mtehanliaUon ~ 11ot far enough along that we can absorb any subsi.antfal lncreued cost.s," Klassen said Wednesday. "Consequently, th<Jiin:. creased cost& will have to be passed along to the conswner. ''If we ha ye a substantial increase in costs in 1973, in 1974 we're going to ask for a price increase." Newport MltTl Seeks Pardon In Perjury ' . .. Newport Beach , attorney ·Arthur ~V. Jones is seeklng a pardon rrom a perjury f.onvlctioo for which .he served one t ear U1 state prison , it was learned today. .. Jones, disbarred following his con· viction in Dec. 1967, has been granted a 11ew license to practice law by lhe State Bar or CaHfOrnia. He now o}era$cs from l414 University Drive, Newport Beach. The 69-year~ld attorney has been ordered io appear before Superior Court Judge James Turner May 9 for a hearing into his petition for pardon and rehabilitation. .. Jones was sentenced to one tO 14 years In state prison by Judge Ronald Crookahank De<. 15, 1167, after beinj suo- cessflUly prosecuted on charges that he induced two Corona del Mar real estate men to commit perjury. Jones and the two witnesses were in- dicted by the Grand Jury after it was aUeged that false tesllmooy in a 196.1 civil trial led to an fll,000 settlement in their favor. • Both real estate men -Donald i'ranklin, 54, of 3317 ocean Blvd ., Newport Beach, ,and Robert Sisco, 40, of 456 Morning Canyon Road, Laguna ·B<ach -were later acquitted. ' .Jones was convicted on two counts of Perjury and unsuccessfully appealed the verdict to the California Supreme C.OUrt. .. The action successfully taken against hlm involved a deal in which Franklin and Slsco aupervised a proposed land trade in Fallbrook. ' That land was OJ"ned by Santa• ~a I-eat esate man William Kachig and in· Volved the home of Lawrence Boothe, t':> OCean Drivel c.oron1 del Mar. Boothe and Franklin -SUed Kacbig for allegedly backlng out of the deal . • A forged letter which sparked the ac- iion against Jones was introduced at his trlal and· was offered as evidence ~that Boothe had aclually agreod to the land ,$Wap. Boothe later went before the Grand , J.ury to tesufy that be did not write the rJetter. ... • FromPllflel JET NOISE. •• -< Trustee Area Two seat in Costa Mesa being· vacated by TfVStee Beverly Langston. said she wouJd never ask the "district to support the stand of an "in· Je'rest group" like AAA without solid background material. ~ "There was the study some year&.. ago ihat concluded that if any other public ' .buildings -including schools -'vcre to 6e built near the fl ight paths that they .Should be soundproofed," she said. Her two opponents, insurance ex· ecutive Charles "Chuck'' Bridges and Costa Mesa Communications Director• Orville Amburgey. both said there is no way the jets can be. banned altogether. but that some kind of study is needed. "I \\'Ould first ask ·for some kind of study to sec if there really is a problem and then if there is I would change the construction at the schools rather than ban the jets," said Amburgey. Bridges sai d he could not push for a ban on the jets unle.ss the jetpcrt is ex- panded. I lj 014NCll COi.ST • DAILY PILOT T1tunda.Y1 .Aprll 12. 197l }\~~~OB · May Dr op -• I , Surf ·Fete By TERRY COVILLE ot 1M 01lt¥ Plltt Slaff The U.S. Surfboard Cbampionsbipa, the surfing contest held In mid-September each year in Huntington Beach , is in danger .of being ·dropped by the city. City offietals say the cosl of the cham· pionships far ex.ceeds the financial -sup- port supplied by the surfing indu stry.· "We f~l it's a gQOd event, but it's a question of whe ther the city should spena so much money on it," V~ce M.90rbouse, city director of harbors and beaches and a director of the contest, said today. The 1!172 championships cost the city $20,000. The event's income was '3,000, mosUy from entry ·fees and some ad· vertlsing in the program. • Moorhouse allid ln .1967, the surf con- test cost the elty $16,000, but brooght In $16,500 iri revenue. That year ABC paid the city $10,000 to televise it on , uW1de World of Sports." .The surfing championships were televised on ABC in 1966, 1967 and 1968. The 1967 event, featuring super surf, won a Cannes Film Festival award for a sports telecast. h-toorhOuse said' a final decis.ion has rfot been made on this year's contest. but jt will be a part of the city council's budget consideration over ttie next month. "I'd hate to see it go. It does btiiig a certain recognition to the c i.t y , ' ' Moorhouse said . "But there is a limit to what our city should have to put out." "It's the big event for surfers, but the city Is paying the bill. We're accuaed of making money on it, but we haven't made a nickel. 11 'Ibe city has sent 500 questionnaires to local businessmen to see if there might be some financial support to continue the contest. l\-toorbouse said Huntington Beach might simply tum the contest over to someone else, though he' added there doesn'.J. seem "to be any takers." Or the city might drop the national nature of it and just sponsor a local surfing contest. -The U.S. Surfboard Championships were launched in 1958 as the Western Sur£ing Championships. For several years they v.·ere open to any entrants from all over the world. The last two years, however, the contest has been strictly by invitation onJy, at- tracting 250 of the world's top surfers last year. Jt was changed to an invitational meet at the urging of the Western Surfing Association which handles the judging. ntere have been; controversies sur- ~ rounding the contest. Last year city of- ficials reacted angrily to sqme critical c6mments made , by five-tllne· winner Corky Carroll. 1 Some surfing magazines and surfers have also claimed the event has become "overcommercialized. 1 • Moorhou~ denied that the critici!1ms had any bearing on the city's con· sideration·of dropping the eyent. "You expect some Witicis m in anything this big," he said . "That's not the issue . lt's a matter of bucks." Court Holds Up Obscenity Case . . Of LA Paper By TOM BARLEY Of lhl O•ll'f "flat Ili ff Obscenity charges filed jJgainst the Los Angeles Star. were held over fo1 on e month toda y in a bid by ~nta Ana ~lunici pal Court Judge Robert Rickles to combine the allegations into one court action :ilong with fraud charges filed by the Pacific Telephon e Cor1pany. .. ft v.·ould be much easier for all con· cerned if we .can work thulg.S out this way," f Uijge Rickles told lawyers for both parties. "f'm g2ing to bold bolh ~c· lions over until May 15 ""'With that aim in view." ' Judge Rickles' action came while lawmen throughout the county were still seeking April JI editions or the con- troversial Los Angeles journal. -. Fraud charges stem from the allega- tion by District Attorn ey Cecil 11icks that 1'111 0r81'Cf Cotti DAILY PIL01. w 1•11 WlliCll II eomtllntO !flt N~ Pr"11, II ll\llllill>ed by !he Ortl'IG'• CG11! Pu1>101'11t19(0),o•~Y Stl'I ••t• tllll!OI'!• ,,, ~i>lled, ~Ol'ICl•t lll•wt~ Frlcl1y, !Or eo.11 "'•1•. N~rf lltK n. .~"111Ulnplon &tKlll"°"""I" V~11•¥. l~~"· llHch, ll'Vill.-lllekf!tb!C~ ...cl Wn (l~mtnll/ S111 Jlt4011 C1111t1rtnci A. \•1191' •tQ OMt M lliorl II lllollllW'll>CI !11\of"llt YI ll'llJ ~ll~all'· Tr.t Ol'ltlciPll llUDi•t~lnt ll!tnl lt 41 JJ0 WOI Illy SlrHI, (Ol!I Mtst, C1Morn11. •i U&. • the perkxHcal's operators perm itted "an act of massive consumer fraud" when they printed an trticlc revealing th e telephone company's credit card check- 11.ol:o t rl N, W11J ,.,ttld<lnl ..... ,.!IOl(ll'iet J•clr It C11rlty \liltl '°rttlOtnl •NI Ot1>1r11 M•'°""'" it.01P11t ICe•v:I 1£1h0t ing and Jogging system. !licks blasted the artic le as "an open invitation to commit theft that could cost the te lephone users in this area alone . ........_ billions of collars." ' l DEAD AT 34 • Colleoe Toocher Volpe Golden West Instructor Dies at 34 Funeral services will be .cOOducted Fri- day at noon in Corona de! Mar for Golden West College in1structor Gerald Volpe who died Tuesday at the UCLA Medical Center from complications of the flu. Dr. Volpe, 34, was an instructor in architectural technology and engineering at the Hun~ Beach community col· lege. He was a graduate or UC Santa Barbara, caJ State, Los Angeles and UCLA. . Dr. Volpe began teaching at Orange Coast Co llege in 1965. In 1969,1 ' he joined the staff at Cal State, Hayward. He, relarned to the Orange Coast in 1971 when he joined the staff at Golden West. Dr. R. Dudley Boyce, Golden \Vest president. will deliver the eulogy at the services in the chapel at Paciti c View Memorial Park. A resident of Newport Beach, Dr. Volpe served-aS an educational con- sultant to the National Systems Corp. in addition to his teaching duties. He leaves his wife, Regina, and daughter, Shawna, of the family home, 1948. Port Cardigan Place, Newport Beach; his mother, Bettina Martin of NewbUry Park; his father, Anthony Volpe of Los Osos, Calif.; his sister, Marie Ferraro of Newport Beach, and his brother, Dennis Volpe of Olympia, Wash. n The family has suggested memorial contribuliens to the Gerald Volpe Memorial Scholarship at Golden West or to the Regents or the University or California for medical ·research. "' . . .... ' ' \ McLare·I) , Retir·es I rv ine Co. Head Allows R eplace11ient Time lryine Company bqard chalnnan N. Loyall McLaren re!hi¥1 !Jorn the board lhll t.wetk to allow .. ~ "planning tlmd'• prior lo Uie fltm's June stockhol ders meeting to find a suitable replacement, it was learned today. Loe: Angele'S attorney : lfoward Jt P:-ivctt, who represents the Irvine Foun· datlon, denied tl\8t "fcLarcn was "resigning under .pressure of W.oshlngton hearings. He 13 81 >:ean old and is·reur- ""'ing from bis i.Qvolvement ln tbe lrvfne Company," Privett said. McLarel\.. had betn invited to testify bltlore two-CongrMSional committees-in Washington in the past week. He "'as due last Friday to appear before Rep. Wrlglit Patman's House Banking and CUrrency domestic finance 51,lbcommittee. Privett appeared before the Texas Democrat and spoke for the foundation~ · · On Tuesday, when be "'" due to ap- pear before Sen. Wilbur Milla (IMrk.) and the House Ways and Means C.Om· mittee, McLaren was 1µ, Newport Beach. He announced, his retirement from the seven..mernber board of directors of the Irvine Company. ~ jL Today, Privett said McLaren's decision to retire had been made some time ago and that Tuesday was the only opportunity he would have to inform fellow directors there would be a vacancy on the board which would haVe to be filled at the June stockholders meeting of the Irvine Company. 000 company director, Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, who holds 21 percent ol. the company stock, was not in Newport Beach Tuesday to hear McLaren's an- nouncement. She -.ppeared before the Mills committee and argued with Privett, Mrs. Smith, granddaughter of tbe late James Irvine, hf.s long battled for con- trol or the finn which is controlled by the Irvine Foundation. l\fcLaren, Privett said, will cmtinue to serve on the foundation board of direc- tors, That board will decide exacUy how and when the Irvine Foundation will comply with the terms of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 which requires the reduction of the foundaton's holdings in the Irvine Com- pany from the present 54 percent to 20 percent by 1979. , "It is just coincidence that t~ decision to retire from tlie company t>oard and the need to inform that board of the decision came at the same time ils the Washington hearings/' Privett said on McLaren·;-1iehalf today. McLaren's tenure on the Irvine CUn· pany board -da ting from 1959 -has no bearing on the foundation's compliance ~it~he Tax Refonn · Act, Privett con- As for the requirement to seU..off ~k Ille Irvine Company, J'rivelt said bis testimony 11didn't imply when the · divestiture 'i''OUld begin. The Jaw gives "The timing and me thod of selling the stock will be de~nnlned by the loon- doticn beard of directors and all options as to when and how that will be ac· compllshed remain ~ 11 Prlv~tt sa id. McLaren tw chaired the company board of directors :1ince 1960. He has 'Womh-to·Tomb' be<ll a t'rustee o !the foondatlon slnoe its fonnatlon in 1937 and Illa ~n its presldenl since 1969. A direcfor ol many other firms. the fonner accountant lives in San Francisoo., Health Insurance Plan • For U.S. Recommended .\• WASIDNGTON (AP) -A cradl .. t .. grave national heaJth insurance plan, borrowing ideu both from organiUd labor and the White House, has been recommended 1n a privately financed study by business leaders and educators. 'lbe Qmunittee for Economic ·Develop-· ment, a nonprofit and nonpartisari organization, said Wednesday its ptan would "provide a basic level of medlcal protection for all Americans at a cost the nation can afford." A secret government analysis of the plan concludes it "reflects quite closely the Administration's bill" in the last Congress except in its extension of coverage to low-income childless families and sqle persons. The CED Research and Policy Com· mittee's 105-page report, "Building a Na- tional Health-Care System," proposes a three-part program that its sponsors say ...Wd take al least four years to Im· plement. Employers would be required to pro- ... From Pagel PROMISES ... should bring their gtrevances over the station to the administration and involve the board only when an arbitrator is re· quired to re.solve the differences. U Kyaw Win, chairmio of the tx::c faculty senate, however. ·said the ques- tions 'Y.ere sent to the board beca115e the answers were not available through other channela:. ' • Peggy Staggs, Colden West's faculty senate chatrman, said after the meeting that the teachers are not so much con- cerned with a potenlial threat to their jobs but because a majority of them see some TV instruction as dehumanizing!" "Of course lher~ some people tq ' any prof.,.6,-woo feel threatened by change," ah"e conceded. But the real con· cern, in her. opiniQft, is ,that TV b a one· way medium whlch allows no interaction between student and teachers. vide health insurance for all employes and their families . Medicare would con- tinue to cover the eld.erly and disabled and the federal government would pro- vide coverage for thf poor. TO avoid a heavy burden on small employers, the plan would arrange an in- surance pooling mechanism in which large firms would pay 'part of th1: costs of providing group coverage in small . com· panies. Although more than 160 million persons ' are covered by private insurance, the rePort said, an estimated 20 to 40 million others lack any health-insurance pro- tection. "The majority of ~these are poor ~ near-pooi-, nonwhlte, unemployed -in general the disadvantag~" it llid. "Millions of employed workers have no coverage. Also, because of shortcomings in m.any existing plans, mllllons of other people who are coveffii have inadequate prot~tiOI) from the financi al con· sequences of ill healU>,." The committee estimated Its plan would ~t an additional '5 billion In the first ,year. with the federal government paying about $4 billion of the net increase and private health insurance pre!Jliwns accounting ror the rest. " From Pagel BAL WEEK. • • 1: ' " CJayton W. NetUeton, 18. '.1 He said there was an ''obvious viola- tion of the boualng codes" and it ap- peared there was no adult superviaim so charges may, inclqde lack of parental control. ~ ~ Furrow said he did not know im- mediately who owned the duplex or whlch of the ,youths. bad rented it for the v.·eelio. Balho:;i ~Peninsula Zoning . ' ' The teachers earlier had ~rnplied television had been given a favorite status by <iotb admlnistration and the Board of Trustees -and thal culbacks were made In some areas while capital ouUay for the station continued. "They were just' starting Euter vaca- tion ," Furrow noted, pointing out tbat R1verside schools let out a week earlier than most others:~ Newport Beach police said today they are still cowtting on another ftlaUvely quiet Bal Week, which l.s the way It has been In the pasl several years In sharp contrast to a decade ago when youths streamed lo Balboa by the tbooaands from all over the country. ,, Session Set by Planners During Wednesday ojghl's meeting this concern did .not r!ceive as much discussion as d.Jd policy, procedure, and who determines the quality of KOCE pro- grams. Newport Bea¢J pl&Ming ~ commis~;iorl­ ers wilJ meet in special session tonight to conduct the third major public hear- ing on proposed general plan downzon. ing for the BaJboa Penlllsula. Also on the 7:30 agenda at cily hall are tv.·o other key sections of the general plan -a specific area plan for Newport Shores and the master plan for bicycle trails. To date, the do\\nzoning proposals for Balboa have taken up a dozen hours of Y outl1 Joh Unit A Alread y 'T~xed' In Harbor Area The lnternaJ Revenue Service's dread - ed April lS""deadUne Is just around th e corner, but when it comes to find ing jobs, the Harbor Area Youth Employment service is taxed the year t®nd. Applications for :JUmmer work arc al ready coming into the YES office at 592 Center St., Costa Mesa. During spring vacation, the office will be open full·tlme and can provide peop!C •for every chore from baby sitting to spring cleanup or even coloring Easter Eggs. The number to call ·is 642-0474. A 24· hour a day answering service can lake your message if lt's urgent. hearin g-time during which scores of .. peninsula residents have voiced displea- sure with city attempts to change the zoning. The Ne~rt Shores, specific 8rca plan to be aired tonight for the first tlme dea ls primarily with the possible future alignments and/or widening of West Coast Highway, rezoning of certain com- mercial zones to permit duplexes and the consol idation of the commercial strip in tha t area. . The biCycle tra1is plan before com- fuissioners is the one that will eventually be contai ned in the general plan . It pro- poses 50 miles of trail throughout the city. including controversial oceanfron~ trails. Or. Matt Duncan, an OCC teacher, sug- gested to the board "there are problems at KOCE" and questioned the educa- tional value of appearances by John Wayne, a baseball player, and a politi- cian's wife who talked about her art classes. Dr. Watson reminded the faculty that programming at KOCE was new and that many progcams were speeded into pro- duction tQ get the station on the air. The chancellor also said that the in· terest of the faculty in television pro· gram.ming "is most appropriate and it's high time the faculty became in volved." Citing ,previous invitations to the faculty to become involved, Dr. Watson said the administration alwa ys has kept the door to faculty panlcipation open. "But things have been picking up," observed LI. 1l4! Cibbarelll, adjutant to Police Chief B. Jllnes Glavas. Cibbarelli aaid tbe department stlll in· tends to maintain normal ahifts begin- ning Friday. Land, Se a and Air Show Set Saturday A land, sea, and air show featuring the latest models in transportation will run through Saturday at Fashion Island in Newport Beach. · The show; sponsored by the Fashion Island· Merchants Association, will in- clude sailboats, a i r p 1 a n e s , and automobiles: FOOD COSTS! M"EET . RISING FREEZE FOOO PRICES With This COMPACT 208 lb. Chest FREEZER ......... '"""'ttlt" _ ,.c....-..11-• """ • lltf·~ 1.., Lill 1 C•_ttf Htilllt..D"""" • ....... .. . ... ., .. , .... •Jf.tf,.... ..... 1111111..,.,.... .... t!T., ., ... hip .......... l11J·f9.'"-'i .1 ....... .-. ---~11:.~ i'lllll ........ Th1m1t A. M111phi111 • ~1111 ldllOI' L ,,,,, Kriet @!-' .. tdl Cl1r lO!tw H...,.,. .._. Office J)J) "!.-p1rt l1~l•••rd Li1nits ·V pse t Pare1its Obscenity charges that now seem likely lo join the fraud allegations in lhe S.me court hearing were filed prior to th e fraud counts but include Los Angeles -S d Star Editor Paul Eberle in the long list of .., pee defendants. 15,6 ,.i,a;,., A4i4r11•: '·9· ''' 1•71. •1••> ..__ C..te MIU: Ill W.• l •Y 5trt11 ~ 11..c111 m ,_, ..,_ M"""NtM -...00: nt1t •Mdl ~lrf S.. ~tl JU JM1111 11 c.ni ... a..i T•1pt111 l7141 642-4121 Cl_..... A"-""11t 64J..1•71 ...,,....,., 1m. .,,..., c...t """"'~ ~ .... -.... ~~ ~ f!ll ,..,.. .. "-''"""""' -. .. ""'" .. ,........ .. "'*"' ~ - ........... ~-· ' 1 ....................... 111 .. Cttt• '*"'• ""'........ ~ ... """"' tt.U .......,, w """ a.u ,_,.,,, ""'""°' "., .......... .....,._ • Also listed aa defendants in both ac- tl-Ons arc the High Class PubJlshlng Com· pany and .. 40 vending machines in Orange County:· Among the 20 defendant.I named by the Olsttoict Attorney's Of!ice In the fraud ac- tion are "~1arty the Lion" and "Ge ronimo Lightfeather.'' Prosecutors today said they are adding dally to the evidence they Intend to offer in suppor~ or both srJS of charges May 15 t>t.fore Judge Rlckles. Jt Wll! stated this morning that PaciOc Ttlephone Com pany investi gators are also cooperating with police In a ooun- tywide bid to scoop up every available April It edition of lhe Los Angeles Star. Newport B<acb and ' Costa ' Mesa parents are up In 'arms over plans to raise the speed limit from SS to 45 miles per hour on Irvine Avenue In fron t of Moote Vista School. Mony of them reel 35 mph Is too Cast. When a spokesman for the county Roads Deparunent was Informed-that a sign ln front of the school $el the li mit at 35 mph Instead ol 25 mph he said he wa.m'l aware of the sign. "I guess It could be coofuslng." he ad· milted. See this and other Orange Coasl related stories on P~ge J8. 1~ • M1mb1r of 90 DAY C11ilornl1'1 Lorllftt CASH Cooper1tlve Buying WITH 4,,1011, Group With Tho CllDIT • Volume auytn1 ••••" •-•-Power of 110 Storn,ii£l ~ ·----. t:;:x:::z 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 '· • .. • ... -\ ...... .. • • ,, I .. ,, \. • Jfl DAILY PILOT , N Thufld'Y, Aprll 12. 197) \ Mor.te Vista Sehf>ol ~· E~-HEW r· • Aide Back In State • 1, .,.. ----By JOHN ZALLER ot fllll Dlllr Plllt Sltff Nearly 500 Newport Beach and Costa Mesa parents reportedly are protesting plans to raise the ·s~ limjt from 35 to 45 mlles an hour 00 Irvine Avenue in front of Monte Vista School. MRS. CHRIS Hel'l)<IQn, gr<Sid<Jl.J or the. Monte ViSta PTA, says the present speed lim.jt of 35 miles an hour "is already hazardous to children" and that il should be lowered to 25 miles an hour in the school area. .$he said she has · collected 499 signatures on a petition protesting the . . DA's Office May Handle Minor Ca.ses · Newport Beach maY hire the Orange County District Atto'mey's o£fice to pro- secute minor municipal offenses sucll as park.int t\cket violations. CITY ci>uNCllMEN are mulling ' propasal to spend Pl a case -about $6,600 a year -to use the DA's office for tne mhlor.' court cases so the city at~ lomey's o(flce can be freed to h.and.le the gro~ amount of .major litigation. Councilmen Monday iodicated they'll choose the part-time .. county help ill lieu of an alternate proposal to add a third member· to the city's'legal staff. Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis said he thought_ a ~d deputy city attorney would· cost upwards of $.10,000 -once his salary, secretary and fringe benefits were ~ib. BUT' cny. Altomey Dennis O'Neil · warned councilmen that the need for a -third attorney is going to be pressing, anyway, in the near future. "There is an 9,ei.increasing ~t of _ litigation that we will need another depu· ty to takewer," O'Neil said. "In the interim .the use of the district attorney.ts office will Cree some time for my assistant, it should be tried as a prelirniom'Y step, but it's only a matter of time.M: lb: ·months to a year or two - if the curferi"t trend of riiajOr litigation continues." O'NEIL ·POINTED out that lour years ago Newport Beacb had only three court cases of significance alive at any one time. ~ 1 ,. . · ".No~1Jt;., 1s-11 plus two or three ap- peals,' .O'Neil 'said. · , O'Neil saJ d he had discussed the use· of the·' DA for minor_ prosecutions .with Police Chief a James Glavas "who said he would Prefer to prosecute in·bouse but is willing to go along on a tMal basis also." .1 /1.,.. O'Neil said other Or~ge C.ounty cities, including Costa h1esa, Fountain Valley and Laguna Beach, using the· DA "seem proposed dlanc• to the Orance County Tral!ic Colhmlt!ee. ;, lloweftr a spo1r......, for tilt· C.U.ty ~ Department said ~tbal a work -r already bu beenl111Ued1o in· stall the ...., speed limit signs. • .. We've· made a very careful .ridar study of the aroa ond found that 85 per- cent of the peoi!le already driv~ at about 45 miles an hour," aaid ·Bob Voien, a senior crunty traffic engineer. "TO TllY TO make -le go slower than that will simply make lawbr<Oken of ~ good many citlups. And It ~ do aey good because the road Is sale a[ 45," Voien said. Mr.;, Herndon diJalf"!S. "If. tbey're going to set.a speed limit at 351 mik$ an hour,'' she says, !'they -abould '-enforce tt.'' ' She argues . further Iha!-ra&Ini the legal limll to ·«s'ijllgbt just cauae· IODle motorists to drive at 50 or 55 mllea an hour. · "Our studies'shoW lhis ls not·wllat hap- pens," countered. Voien. "People tend.to drive at a Speed that is safe, and whether it is PoSted to drive above or below that speed, they'll dO what see~ rUsonable to them. "OF COIJllSE we could ·""'1> a pgllce car out there all the' time, bp\ tbJt'i..n.ot the answer," he sa~. "Our limits ought to be realistic." · The new Sj>OOd limlt is (ilsnPed1o apply to Irvine Avenue between Bititol Street and Moote Vls!a AvenU.. But Mrs. Herndon i.. concerned mainly with the two !arge,bloc:ks bet"""' lfonte Vista Bnd .. Mesa a~. · . :.. "Chlldron, walk 'all aJoog iwe.. sho says. "Besld<s Monie Vista Scliool. there. are three srpaUer private ~ and a YMCA," she '&aid. · ' VOIEN SAYS that only.)!oole Vislil §cbool ls entiUed lo a ·25 mile an hour speed limit, and that ..... signs will be placed warning rnotorisU' to slow down when children are in school. "Motorists should know they have to go 25 in a· school zcue even· if it isn't posted.'' Voleo aakl. ''But these warning signs will be going up IQJW8Y·" • When Voien was mformed that .a sign now immediately acrou the sll'Mt' from Monte Vista Scbool aets, the 11m1r at 35 mlles an hour, Volen admltttd tha( the 35 limit shouldn't be posted then!. '1 WASN'T AWARE <t tha~ lll!n.'• lie said. "I guesS it could be .. ~ing, When we chaoge~tbe.lther signs over to 45, we'll remove that 9ne completely.,"· He said that the 35 limits were tJOsted , at a time When Irvine Aveqa6 w.81 ~ lane in each direction. But it baa been widened in recent. years tO two lanes bt each direction, he said, "and should have speed-limits that reflect its ~w design." Boys Clubs Set Branch Actf,vity oatisfied. . · "But," he added, 0 some ·have the feel· A whole series of activities, demonstra.. ing that ,when the DA's people get .down 'tions and open.house are scheduled at' the to the Iemr cases they don't prosecute two branchl!s of the Boys Club of' the them as diJigenUy" as the big cases of · llarbor Area during the cilm<>t 67tb An. their m : ·npal National Boys Club Week. I "I really don't think that's the case, "Good News About Good KJds;" is the though," O'Neil said. theme <>f the celebration which extends from Maine to Al&ska and Puerto Rico to O'NEIL LATER ·confirmed that the Hawaii and involves more than a million average fine collected in the types' of· · boys. · tw . ., ~ to be handled by the county is $10. Erwin deMockskonyi, president' of the 15. · local chapter, says the club which ex· "Spending $22 a case is a losing pro-poses boys aged 7 through 18 to reaponsi· position ," O'Neil agreed, "but the fine ble adult guidance through leisure-time system is money-making when f.<>U figure fun . . out all those who do not go to coTiff. Club branches at 594 Center St., and ·'While prosecution does not pay for 2131 Tustin Ave., provide a wide selection itself, it does keep the people honest," he of ·athletics, arts and crafts classes and said. ..... other activities throughout"ihe year. I • AU'• We ll Tut ~tads Well DAILY ,.llOT Steff ""-It SACRAMENTO (AP) -J"olm G. Veneman plunges !>lie!< 1nto Callfomla politics April 2:i at a "homecoming'' dll>- ner designed to stockpile a political war· chest of up to,$40,000. Vtneman, a Republican, is expected to run for lieutenant governor in 1974 after spending more than four years as U.$. undersecretary ol. health, educatiOD and welfare. DEFENSE SECRETARY Elliot L. Richardson . Veneman's fonner boss at HEW. will be the featured speaker at the dinner in Sacramento. Richardson :p.id in 1 statement he 11ad- mlred Veneman as much as anyone I have ever worked with in public life. I am delighted thal I will he in Callfomla and can }oin his friends who are welci:un- ing him back home." , ( THIS SIGN MUST BE CHANGED TO 45 MPH IN FRONT OF MONTE VISTA SCHOOL Parents Upset Over Speed Limit On Street Near Four SChool1, YMCA Building Veneman was a state assemblyman from Modesto when 'he left Sacramento In January 1969 to become No. 2 map at HEW Wlder lhen·Secretary Robert H. Finch. Finch gave up the lieutenant governor's job to become Nixon's first HEW secretary. later moving over to the \\'bite House 1s counselor to the Presi· dent. . • Cliff Park . Restriction FINCH IS CONSIDER~D a likely candidate for gowrtlOl' in 1974, rabln(tbe potential of 1 GOP govemor41eutmant ' Federal Funds for Church Propert y 'Only--Courity· go~~~n~~~e:,::~w:::!iie:'~ · • groqp called "Frl<nda of Vene111i!!... ~ Newport Beach can only user its $llO;OOO cut of Orange COunty rev~~ sbfring· ·funds to buy the hlltberan ChUiCh ~property on\ Clift Drive, C01D1ty officWs .ruJed Tuesday. . eity officials and neighbor~ proper~y' . owners bad. hoped some of 'the· money COlil<l ·se spent to acquire other nearby property. BOTH PARCEU • are under con· sideratiOn for expansioti of the Cliff Drive ' view ,park, which the city created last year rby buying two lots from developer Carl Arlholer. 1lie cb~ch ·property is immtiately west of those two lots. It is a 3.5-acre parcel bought by the st.ate several years ago as part of the rigtit-of·way for the now·derunct Pacific COBst Freeway. Newport Beach official> are trying to force the state to sell the parcel for no more than its purchase price -$420,000. THE COUNTY ruling that -specifies the purpose of the $200,000 w.as actual}y an interpretatiO'n of action taken by county supervisors when they ~ppropriated the bulk or their $10 million in federal revenue-sharing funds last month. It came as a surprise to some residents who had hoped the city would be given the choice as to which parcels it could spend the inoney on. Ginger Page, 2412 Cliff Drive, argued that the county appropriated the money fo buy six additional lots just east of the two lot.$ the citx has already purchased next to the church. She ·said her con- ~t!On of hoW the money was to be spent Was lost in the. shuffle. when we were asking for the. money/' ner ·Committee"· headed by Emllf G. she 19.ld councilmen at their study Pike and RJchard Lyng. session Monday. 1 Oihner sponsors said' it wou1d focus on J'llm interested in as much land as we Veneman•s· a cc o m p.11 sh men ts in can possibly get becaUSe in the future not Washington. · . enough people will be able to buy views/' Lyng commented, "I ~ we ~ ~ ..... she said. courage this dedicated pubhc. servant tG The two lots next to the church site reQ181n in public; Jlfe." 1 cost the city $47,500 apiece and after the Veneman has made fl so secret tha\bt purchase, the council voted not to ac-is considering the race for lieutenant quire any more of them preferring in-governor. but DO formal announceinent ~ stead to concentrate on the chlirch site. candidacy is erpected at the dinner, Veneman aide said. The remaining sjx lots along the bluf· Veneman, 47, has opened a public line are now owned by a four-wa;y partnership that is reluctant to part with servite consulting oUice in San Fran. them . ciloo. "THESE PEOPLE are Very desirous of developing the lots with houses 1and "1'"1 VERY disappointed because reaping profits from them," Parks, ONE OF HIS prime taska In Waahington was lo wort for con- gressional approval of Nixon'• Famjly Assistance Plan of Welfare. rtronn. NixOn finally gave up trying to wiJi puaage of the plan this year. that's· not the way things were going . Beaches and Recreation Director C&lvin Stewart told the council. "I am doubtful N~!.Porl Be~ch. Studies ... .•. they will part with therl\ unless we go through co~emnation 1p~ngs ." \Vyn,n s{ud today he. 1s "very • -Pessinilltic u about ever acquiring the six iotS but said the rema\ning parcels, in· eluding the church $!le, will make an im· ' R~dio, llad~r ' t;e&r Taken Fro1u Airplan~; ~ ' - Private Costs fo :City ' - The advisibillty of .sj>ending public money for private benefits is going to come under dose scrufiny ltom Newport Be8Cli counciltnen this year. 1 pressive park for the city. revenue,"· Kymla said . : , IF BADHAM'S bill passes and lhe church land is freed for sale at the original purctiase price, the county will give the $200,000 in revenue sharing In the past two years, the city has spent $300 annually as a purchase prize. I• The two paintings bought have gone into a j>e"nnanent city collection. A $300 prize is planned for the 1973 festival "'1ay 12. money to the city. "They can then use it as they ste fit," said county ,Adminisfrative Allalyst Elias Hernandez. "They can even use it as a down payment and buy the land on time." ., A radio and radar ~qulpment valued ui- the owner at saoo~wert stolen Tuesda~ night from an aircraft parked at Orang~: County Airport. sheriff's officers said. Depulles said the loss was reported ~ plane 'tlwner Paul \V. Good. 58, Santi.· Ana . The equipment wp pried from th(: dasbboanl by intruders who forced Opell> the cockpit door of the parked plane. '; oooNCILMEN BEGAN their annual budget deliberations Monday and already tWo such expenditures have come under question, although no formal action was "THERE IS interest in the city for the art feitival," said Councilman Richard ~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.,;' t~ taken. . . -., Councilman Carl Kym.la , a member of the citj's · biidget1 goals~. ~ttees, critic~ a $25 appropriation to .cover the cost ot City Clerk Laura Laglos' Ii membership 1n the women's divi!ion of the Newport Harbor Chamber of COm· 111erce. Kym la also cballeged a proposal "by Ci· ty Mahager Robert L. WYM to spend $1,500 to finance the city arts -,estival. HE OBJECTED primarily to an ontlay of one-third of thar intended for the city to' 'buy the firit-place artwork in the spring festival. 0 1 wonder if-any amount of money is an appropriate expenditure of city D. Croul. countering Kymla's criticisms. "It's for the good of the general public," he said. Councilqlan John Store pointed out that it ii; a city palicy to encourage cultural events in Newport Beach. "J just can't support il," Kymla replied. 1. He won more support for his arguments against the $25 Mrs. Lagios wal)ts for chamber membership. "I doO:t.see th~ propriety in that," he ~aid, "several of us 8.re members, but we pay our own w.ay." CITY ~IA.NAGER w'rtm ; pointed out that both~and "'1ay0r Mcinnis are honorary . members . . "Maf be t bamber ought to make the ~ city cler an honorary member," Kymla sugges)ed. Kymla's position has f o 11 ow e d somewhat~tablished city policy in refusing to contribute to a nlUDber o[ private organizations and events. ~ The city 'regularly ducks a regutst by the. Balboa Bay Lions Club to enter 1 float' In its Lobster Bake parade and has. turned down numerous other requests h>r' minor contributions. KYMLA AND other COWlCilmen did skip right past another proposed con· trtbution In their budget review Monday, buL Kymla called it'an oversight and said he'd bring 'it up at the next meeting. ,Wynn has proposed giving $135 to lhe Citizens for Re-cycling Usable Discards (Cl\UD). WyM said the money would cover their costs of renting storage bins as well as malling costs. Two Coast Teen s Win Elk Awards Stephen T. McFarland or Newport Beach and Gingtr A. Mari• of Huntington Beach have bee'h.1 named winners Of the annual Youth ScitQJ.a_,.,hip and Leadership awards of the ~e'Wport llarbor Elks l.odge. l\1 cFarland, a senior at Corona del Mar High School, is the ·son of R. Stuart McFarland1and htrs .. £. Neil Johilson. ' Ocean Insects • 1 • ; • _,~::. l . I • U,.t ,.._... 1 lt .Ur!Od llul as a simple phoio publicizing San Francilco'I S'7tb annual Ea8ter nower show, but boy• will be bo~ lllstead or watering the nowen. ScOtt Morris poured waror on 4-year-old Lori Whit· ney. Tbe result wu an immediate bowl from Lori, but Scott mollilied bis fl'lelld with a bug~ a ltl.ss. Ml" Marts, a senior at Estancia High School in Costa Mesa, Is the hugbter or Mr. and Mn. Ernest F. Ma rts, 2701 Beach .Blvd. Both .,winners are cmtinuina In statewide Elks compeUUoo. Sea skaters, relatives ot inland lre.<h water pond skaters, h•V11 the distinction of 'being the only insects found in the oceait. Measuring less ·than a quarter of an inch , they are being tlludled at tbe Scripps , lnstitutlon or Oceanography In San Diego. . _, • • ' \ "• .~ I ' • • -· --· ..... • . . . . • \ ' " / · .. Der Dog_ Gr-eatesi Flo ssie Can ·Talk , Girl I nsi8ts By RUDI NIEDZIE~KI Of .. Oailr l"lllit lt1tt Flossie is a whiz f11th numbers and were she ·haman , she mJght be almost as smart u Albert Einstein. She is also a ferocious fighter. an expert gymnast and a tertific skater. What Is th is perfect combination o! mind and body? l'f'S A Z-year .. ld Boston bulldog belonging to Cathy l\furphy of Costa Mesa and if she has her way, it may Jike Muhammad Ali soon say, "I'm the greatest." The dog also talks. "lt can say 'ma-ma,' 'oh,' •more' and 30metimes it says •p1ease~· lnsilts Cathy, a IS.ye&M>ld Ccsta Mesa High School student who lives at 590 Pierpont Drive. "EVERY ONCE In a whlle she will say a whole sentence like 'mama give me the ball'. Hiiiest to God, she's a genius." Tt requires considerable attention, ~nd imagination I·~ • _!_fJone•t--co-God, •he'• a genhcs.' to interpret Flossi e 's gurgles, yelps and drawn- out growls as word s but that is probably because of her Boston accenl. • /'rm trying to teach her now to pronounce her words better." maintains Cathy. "And I'm trying to give her a bigger vocabulary." CAmY SAYS she got her black.and-white pet ta1king one day when she held her ball and refused to give it back. .. I just kept saying 'mama,' 'mama' over and over again. At first she stan.d. squuling and then finalJy she said 'mama' but now she is starting to aay even better words." 'WONDER DQG I AKES OF ON SKATE BOARD' . Giving Guld1nce 11 C1thy Murphy of Cool• MMI back and out of the wind. Though F1ossie's ·lin- quistie skills are open to debate, there are other • !eal.s she perfonns Which make her more than an inside, Flossie will close the door, for example. She can also ride down to the beach on the back: or Cathy 's bicycle, co. u n t numbers , and 'do hackfl!ps. But her best trick pro- bably is zipping full speed 1.llown the sidewalk: on a skateboard, ears drawn "I trained her to do all these t h i n g s , including how to attack people. She ~ has the strongest teeth in the world and she never Jets go." ~ ~ith . that in mind. r notiody should ever risk ...., telling Cathy that they can't understand her dog. ' '' ordinary mlltt. IF CAmY says It's cold Beautiful Things Happens When You Advertise in Newspapers i.. • "'1Adiful Things Happen Wiien You Malle Mistakes ... Like ti.. -n.who struck a 'match to '"!It his car's gas talk was empty. It' wast;l't " • I ' -"' . • •• Orta guy who palled a strange b~}dog on the to SN If Fido was affedlonate. He wasn't .. . , . ' . , . • ... Another citizen speeded .up to s .If Ire could beat the ,tt11ln to the crossing. He couldn't • • • • One fellow stuck his finger in the electric socket to see if he could stand , • ' th~ shock. ' He couldn't ~ • • • And th~n ther• was the geni us who cut out his neWl'paper advertising to see if he could save money.~~ He couldn't lake No Mistakes ... Make Beaut iful Th ings Happen in Your life • NEWSPAPERS FIRST Clia.lw 1ige tlie Neivs Quiz .•• 011Saturda.y's Family Page ---------- ' I • 1 t P.J1!~~.., .. size Top~:~~dcresl Iron Kfng or Queen size Fitted Bollom Sheet • 2 Fieldcrest No-. Iron King or Queen size Pil'°*'" cases • 2 King or Queen size Bolster Plllow1 •King or Queen size Mattress Pad •·King or Queen slz• Metal Frame on Easy-Roll Cas1ers . oOuble Bonu~ DAILY PllDI I Moretti-Jets Too Rich fo r Him ' SACRAMENTO 1 !AP) -. said, "I hava oo 'objection at AsaMnbl C..••er Bob U_,_ I oll to tt." Y~ ~,~ r - ti AY• he can't afford the Ht Aid tile executive jet 1S25-an-hour coot or llslng the c111 get to many cities with Ill· , 1 • jet tie or no commercial plane state 1 new eiecut ve , but eervJce but added t ha t has no objection to Gov.·, Retganc should be more open Ronald Reagan using It at tax· about the purpooe or the plane payer expense:· and avoid secrecy about ll. The DemocraUc leader ot But "it's a problem for the Assembly added Wed-J!eagan" to justify the $199.447 nesday that the one tlme he ~I lease on the plane "beC;:ause they're trying to Ju.silly their former poallioo crltll:izing 1 ronner Gov. Ed· mu h d G. (Pat) Bro'NI\'• plane," Moretti said, .. u\ mINK they ought to just come out lral)I and say ..• the gOffl'llOI' ol the tar1elt state llfledl Wf•" MoretU said. · Reagan's office has stated that 152,000 worth ol ale time bllltd to ~ Governor's office m-January lw been for state butlnea. but detall1 of 'j'hQ has used the plane •nd , for what purJme have been 1 withheld. La.at week, a Senate finance !!lubcommittee propJsed an amendment to lhe s t a t e budget which woo.Id r@Quire !hat • public fi!Cord be kept or all passengers usi~ the jet all stores jo.in in our gigantic -- and the stated business of each passenger. REAGAN REPLIED at •I news conretence Tuesday tha t1 ' .. he. G'lns idered that proposal to ~ "hitpickJng harass~t" tQ which be would not give In. Reagan has first priori ty on the plane. which the State Department ol G en er a I Serviees manages ahd also rents to other' agencies. Seven state agencies used it during the first three months of the ren-yeClf lease, but Reagan's office accounted for 75 percent or the Oight time. 1 ' • 11 -. . .J·. -· Now •• ~over 50 1.FactoiY Showrooms ••• with the opening ol thrH magnlllcent -,--...., In San Franc/aco, Loa Angeles & Atlanta, all llore1 are celebrating with 1enaat10·nal "Grand Opening" bargelniI Here's your chance to take adrantage at these fantaaUc buys ••• at tlte Ortho Store near you! All-at auper-low prices/. · EVERYTHING FOR SLEEP " King or a..n: Padded Ylnyt Headboard ANO Quitted Bfld.. spread. Twin or h H: Headboard ANO Metal Frame on ~I Casters. 1'>' ... "PPOSruAE AEsr Reg. $179.95 NOW Regal queen! Scroll-Quilted cover •118 Twl F II low price lnclUde1: Mattress PLUS • n Or U Box Spring PLUS Ortho-Pak Pl.US eg. $79.95 aoob~ """"'' "'· NOW POSTURE ..Esr o~f. "' •68 '"""''ow''""'Wl'"'""'"' f p~ x''~~' • Uke T~mf¥!1red.Stee1 lnner$pl'lng. o~\ 1l 'II ~ Mattres1 PLUS Box Spring PLUS ·""" ·Double Bonus! POSTlJRi: REST Reg. $199.95 KING SIZE j, -. Maje!ltk:! "1eludes: Matlresl Lu.-ur\outl! k'lc:ludll: Mrtl· E~I lncludn: Mlltm• Dec::or•tor'a dreeinl Wtth: YOU"ll bft 1!1 With: Maltreaa Beaullfully made1 Wflh: Mat-PLUS 2 Bo.-Springa PLUS Ima PLUS 2 Box Spririoa PL s Bo.-S~rl ntPLU S l.lattreas PLUS.Box Spring P'LUS ~ Spring PllJS Dov· tress PLUS Bo.-Spring PLUS Ortho·Pek PLUS Double PLUS Orl.tlo-f'ak PLUS 0oV-Orlho-Pak P US oubl• PLUS Ortllo-Pak PLUS Dou-.,. "'"'" Double Botlus! Booual s11e ~~T~usl s22a ~~b $158 ·• "'"'" s1ae· see see ORTHO ORT HO OATHO ORT HO FLEX. HOTEL FLEX ' HOTEL FLEX HOTEL ~00!1 lncNde:!J: M.allre66 Tj: ullimatel rncludes: Mal· A ~-tfteludes: Mattress Supreme QUlfity! Mtr: Miit• -Gr1111 ctllTm! lnelode9: lrllirl• -Orte ol Oftho'S Tfnt!!tl Mil· PLUS 2 Bo.-Springa PlUS ' • PLUS 2 Bolt Springs • PLUS Box Srrlng PLUS tre11 PLUS Box Spring 1 ... , PLUS a-Ox Spring PLUS lreu PLUS Box S9ftng PLUS Orlho-Pak Plu• Double PLUS Ortho.f'•k PLUS Dou-Ortho·Plk P US.,Oouble PLUS OrthO-f'lk PlU&'f>Ou-,.Double Bon,usl Double BorlltSI -~, s1 .... ,~, s241 """''· S17e ~·201 ORTHO . see ~~00R s1oe ~~~~ 98 OR THO . ' . OR THO SPLENDOR TENSt()fll TENSION OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS ORANGE SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM LAKEWOOD I FOUNTAIN VA LLEY ·1a11 West Lincoln Ave. 4433 Candlewood Ave. 2445 N. Tustin Avi 16131 Harbor ~lvd. lehr••" E11ctl4 eN 1,.okh11r1t' C1ndlewood Shop• (1t.te11 from Or•119t M•lll Ave1111e1 (•~re" fto'" l•kewaocf Ctn IV) I PhOt11 617·0511 lconttr of E41ntetl Nori to Zody'• Jv•t eo1t of FM Mart itt.01101 IJt-4570 Pho1101· n'-"11•0 Pho1101 614-4I14 • I ' . --. ----., ...... --· ' . . It.~. Orange .Coast · • EDITION • • Today's Final 1',Y. Stocks VOL ~6, NO. I 02, 4 SECTIONS, 56 P/"GES . , J • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, APRI~ 12, 1973 c TEN CENTS ) . 2 .School Hopefuls -rOr Anti-Jet • I • I ........ ·g t Stand Corona · del Mar High School graduate, to find out "just how serious the noise Other candidates said they _Jh. a and James K. SChwan. a teaaher at problem really is." study of noise and bow . it,.afttCis school By WILIJM! SCHREniER Of .. l)eifr ..... ,..., Two of the candidates iD Tuesday 's Newport-Mesa Unified School District elect'9n l}llnk .the school board should take an immediate strong stand against jet flights (rom Orange County Airport, Bolsa Grande High School in Garden Miss sttterholm took a more adamant children sho~ld be ntfertakeri before Gro"e, said today they believe im-position. there ls any action . · ·m.ediate action is necessary. She said she is in full agreement with But M,iis tterbolm contended that ''This is an ongoing controversy and the posit.ion taken by the .. AlrJ)orl Action "U)o..-etfects or noise on the schools only the district really hn no choice but to Association (AAA), a Newport.Beach an::.---'"'"eOinplicate the learning process.· The ~th a~ chal.lengers for the Corona del Mar. seat of incumbent Thomas Casey in the _area most directly affected by takeoffs from Orange County Airport. i9in .other public . apncies . to do . ti..je.t noise group whi9-~ w,ants aU.-<Jet district 'bas~ got ·to tpke action now to ~mething about it," Schwan said. . tra,f[ic 'eunilnated at the auwrv.---elim'lnate:DQise1 pollution~''' Schwarz stopped short of 3s1tins the _'.11)e MA Monday · c;alle« on all can-Miss, Se!terholm said that,' I~ elected, district to support an outright ban on the dictates 'in the Tuesday-eJection·to state · she woulct push -for a district· _in--Margaret ~tterholm, an 18-year-old jets, but he did call for an in-depth study· tli.eir positions on the issue . vestiga(ion of tlfe jet noise and, ''if in any Teachers Partially Satisfied Channel 50 How By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI them they wou1d become involved to a °' ,... Deur l"n•t 'teff ---~_..rester degree in the fonnulation of Controversy over the role played by policy for the new educatlo~ station. Channel 50 in the education of Golden Faculty members, angered o v er West and Orange Coast College students allegedly being kept in the dark about the appear s somewhat calmed today aftq . academic flUICUon and financial picture -' promise! W~ay night by both of KOCE-TV, packed the board room faculty and college officials to improve more than JOO strong to demand answers communications between them . to 74 pointed que~ns they had 8bout Teachers from both campuses ap-the station. · peared partially satisfied when Coast , Several of these were answered by Community College District trustees told Chancellor Norman E. W'atson who Police Hold Lon dme Mesan furnished t with a drart of a goals and objectiye ~ent which stresses the 'board, partlci tion of experts, in· eluding ·faculty mem rs, in 1tbe develop- ment of courses. The other questions and possible solU:: tions will rbe taken up at 3:30 p.m. today when Dr. Watson meets with the faculty se nate of both campuses in the telecom- munications building at Golden West. Among these are questions about the budgeting of KOCE, the selection of It ' --16 Juveniles ' Rires . ' ' ' lnwt1 Satu.rcfu,y In Newport r By L. PErER llRlEG ' . Of ... Dellf PIM SIMf ' Bal Week 11 opplreDUy-al!ve ipd well -and geltln1 off lo an eerly start m NeWport Beach \bis year. . · nie-annual -Easter vacation blowout got off to an atypical if premature 1tart this morning as Newport Beach police arrested 17 Riverside youths crammed into a second 'story dup)ex_aputment in West Newport. Police used a paddy wagon to transport the . youths, all boys, to police head- quarters after finding a cooler full of beer, a lid of marijuana, and a bottle of pills in the apartment at 3308 W. Ocean Front. Officer John Furrow said he came across the youths arter picking up a juvenile wearing a backpack and walking on Balboa Boulevard near 42nd Street about 9 a.m . ~ Furrow said he stopped the ·youth ~cause he appeared to ~runaway. · '"He told us where he w staying and \\o"e went to the Ocean F address to verifY It,'' Furrow said. He said there fie came · upon the other youths "sleeping all over the place" on mattresses and sleeping bags. He said the marijuana and narcotics paraphernalia were lying around along with-other-contraband. Eur.row said charges had not been filed ' agajqst any of the youths, including the oilly adu1t, Clayton w. NetUfton, 18. 11 He said thElre w:as an "obvious viola- tion of the housing codes" and it aP:- peared there was no adult supervision IO charges may include lack of parental control. .For Yedli -D.:Th \ ·~· .. ·~' t;.;_~. ·~,.. --"'-·By .lR'l'lll1lt it~ • Of ... r.lr ,..., ..... ~ Scores of frielldS will g1thet. Satul'day in the church she, helped build -for the community she and bet busbiiid joined 52 years ago, to pay tribute to Mrs. Veda'. D. Thompeoil, who died Wednesday. She .wu 79 and • aaw a country crossroads where two small stores serv- ed a meager populace of dairy farmers and apple growers · grow into a. city of 75,000 persons. Rites for Mrs. 'Ibompson, widow of the 11 tate community leader Prentice M. "P.M." Thompeon, will be at 2 p.m. in the Firs! United Methodist Church. Friends may also call tonight from 6:30 to 8:30 o'clock at J!eU Broadway Mortuary Olapel and all day Friday. Interment' will follow at Harbor Rest Mem<irtal Park, directed by Belt Broadway Mortuary. . The 'lbompsons were married In 1916 after be came to the Los Angeles area rollowing a stint mining in Arizona. He went into partnership with two brothers in a garage in Orange. He then tried being a salesman in Iowa, but the young couple rel~ to Qrange1 where Mrs. Thompson became 1superiRtendent of-the-El Modena Water- Company. -• They nioved to Costa Mesa lld built a .~ home on Avqcil~ Street -it was out in lhe country then, Adm. Thompson recalls -and in 1924 began dairy ranching. They remained ever since, with Mrs. . ~ pursuing her cullural and cburch affairs, while her husband served for years oo the Costa Mesa County ,. 52· Y.EAR MESAN DI ES Ved.1 D. Thompson • 'It _ Water District (CMCWD) i .cofisOJldation of four. old smaller districts. · He served a • as its president, in addition to a tWc>.year 1 presidency of the l~ RITF.S, Page I) - . ' E·ases personnel, TV station management, equipment, and funding. Discussion over these concrete con- cerns of the teachers however was avoid- ed by board mem~s who told faculty representatives had not gone through the proper administrative channels. Trustee Worth Keene said the teachers should bring their grievances over the station to the administration and involve the board only when an arbitrator is re- . (See PROl\USES, Page !) Radio-control Qomh Kidnap Plot Bared ' . HAR'\'FORD, Conn. (AP~ police are · holding .a Massachusetts man in an alleged extortlo6. and 'tidnaP,ing plot in- vot•mg a ·plan to bold tbe latnily of a Hartford man hostage with a radfO.coa- trolled t!Omb taped to his daughter, Police Wednesday identified: ·tlte' man has John H. Moan, 34, of East Otis, Mass. lie is being held on $50,000 boQd on charges of conspiracy to commit larceny by extortion and conspiracy to commit kidna~ing. _ He was taken into custody Friday, aulhorities said. The object of the alleged plat, detec- tives said, was Harvy L. Lipman of Bloomfield, his wile, daughter and-two elderly persons who reside with. the Up. mans. The daughter was not identified. Llpman is a vice president and the son of the owner of Lipman Motors of Hartford, a large automobile sales agen- cy. Thiet Takes Supply Of Leatlie1· Jackets A sneak thief made a pig° of himseU at Costa Mesa's South Coas t Plaza , police said Wednesday. swipinB a dozen pigskin leather coats worth mdrc than $600 from a rack beside a store's open door. Mjly Codtpany employcs A I a n Rudominer and Jean Sturges said an in- ventory showed 12 coats and jackets missing. way learning is being impaired v.·e should adopt a resolution in support of -a jetport in another area." Thomas Casey. the incumbent in Trustee Area Four. said unless some ~gnificant 1058' of the educational pro- gram can be' demonstrated. the district ha s no \vay or taklrig any kind of stand. Casey said if he is re-elected t~ the board, he will urge ,that a new study be undertaken to determine once and for au how serious the problem is: I Casey also referred to a study -the Wilsey -Ham jet noise study com- missioned by Newport Beach three years ago -that v.·as "Inconclusive" insofar ils the inlpact of noise on the schools. Assistanl City' Manager Philip Bel - tebcourt agreed that the st udy doesn 't concentrate henvily on the sc hools and noted that the school district didn 't partici pate in ll to any.grQTl~Xtent. ·Belly Lllly:a write-in candidate for 'the tSee rf ET NOISE, Page II Ros.......-Cleans lfp W~ld Crane lifts unidentified fiberglass country back into place on giant ·.o globe just off Avenida de la Carlotta in La$Un• Hills. A symbol for Ros'smoor Corpofation's Leisure World retirement community, the globe was recenUy s~nd·blasted in a regular cleaning operation. The countries were removed and cleaned in a gentler manner. A faun· lain\ r,aJm trees and other landscaJ!ing wifl soon be added in Ibis war d s domain. .. Obscenity Counts Against • LA Star Paper Postponeel By TOM BARLEY or "" O•Ur PllOt Sl•tf Obscenity charges filed against ,the Lo s Anieles Star were held over ior ont month today in a bid 1~Y Santa Ana I· Muiiicipa l Court Judge Robert RiCkles 19 combine the alle(lations into one coUrt action along with fraud cha rges filed by lhe Pacific Telephone Company. Furrow said be did not know .im- mediately who owned the duplez or which 'Of the youths bad rented it for tbe week. -. "They were just starting -Easter. vaca- tion," Furrow noted, pointing 9ut that Riverside schools let out a week earlier than most others. . Hon.ors Jesko, Weed, Pearce "It would be much easier for all con- cerned if we can work things out this way," Judge Rickles told lawyers for both parlies. "I'm going to hold both ac- (See OBSCEN1TY, Page !) ' Newport Beach police said today they are still counting on ahOtber relatively quiet Bal Week, which is the way 1t has been iii the past several years in sharp contrast to a decade ago when youths (See BAL WEEK , Page Z) Museum to Get Picasso Gih PARIS (UPI) -The heirs of Pablo Picasso have donated the palnter's vast and priceless co1- leetiofl of art by other modern artists ·to the I.Quvre museum ln Paris, Picasso's a t t o r n e y an· nounced today. ,,,. gilt or palntiP.-~· by Afodigliani, Braque, M a t J s s e , Renoir, Cezanne and other major names or modem art is in accord with Plcauo11 wishes, attorney !ll>land Dumas said. Dulilo1 uid the fomtly bas not decided what to do with works by Picasso hhruJel!, which the ortlot kept In his villa at Mougins In IOUtbern France. J, - .. DAILY PILOT Publisher Robert N. .Weed and Llbrarians Dorise Jesko and 1 Gertrude Pearce today were Chosen Man ~ ' and Women of the Year by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. The honors, presented annuaUy by the Women's Division of the Cham~r, were beltowed m the recipients by·Costa Mesa Mayo~ Jack Hammett and Orange ,Coast College President Robert Moore .• A crowd of about 170 civic leaders at· !ended the lunclteon at the. Costa Mesa Goll and Country Club wbefe all three honorees were cited for thel~butslanding service to the community ..• They wei:e chosen secreUy from 1 field of 10 men and 10 women whose names were advanced by a special nofnlnating committee, according to Dr. Hilda McCartney, organizer of the annual Man and Woman of the Year Banquet. -. DAIL. Y ;'ILOT 11.rf P'MtM Weed was cited for his continuous and deep involvement in the community as publlllher of a local new1paper. Mrs. Pearce, librarian at the main Coeta Mesa library, and Mrs. Je.sko, her ....,~rt at the Mesa Venle branch. were lauded for their long-standing devc>- Uoo to Coota Mesa and ill reading public. TAPPED AS CHAMBER'S MAN, WOMJitl OF THE YEAR Lllirorlan Jeslco lloftl, Publisher WoodFLibrorl1n PHrce Weed, actfw in numerous community orgaoiiatktns, be<arne publlsbcr or the DAILY PILOT In l!IM and prosldcnt of • ,.) ' • , Orqe C..t Publishing Company in 1961. • Ke bqan hll newspaper career ., a reporter and editor for a weeldy newspa.per in his bomeLown oC Alex· • • I andria, Minn. In 1940 he joined the Min· oeapolla Star as a reporter. Weed was wlth the Minneapolis ·5u1;r and the MiMcapolls Tribune for 20 years, suboequcntty becoming a dirtctor or , sales promotion and public se rv ice for the MiMeapolis Star and Tribune Com- pany. His participation in community affa irs is varied and includes offices as presi- dent of the Friends of UCI, Irvine fo'oun- dation and Big 1 Boosters and director of the Boys Club of the Harbor Area. Mrs. Pearce was graudated from the Minnesota School, of -Library Sciences and came to California in 1940 to work for the LOc.kheed engjnfering library. Her nei:t step was as medi cal lib,rarian for the Daniel Freema~ Hospital in Jnglewood and later organized a patients libnlry at St. John 's Hospital in Santa Monica. Then the movie industry called and for 10 years Mrs. Pearce served as head of the art re~a r<lh library for Metro Goldwyn Mayer Studios. lier main func- tion was to supply technical information on new films and to ensure the authen· ticlty or what was included in the film. Prior to coming to Costa Mesa in 1965 she was librarian for the Black Fox Mllllary ~demy, a surveyor. !or the Orange Counly Public Llrary, lllld head librarian at the Tust,in Library. Doris Jesko came to the Orange Coun· ty Public Library more than 15 years ago tSee HONORS, Poge ZI ' l Orangie (;out weather Hazy sunshine on Friday, Jo i· lowing early mornipg fog and !ow clouds along the coast. Highs of 76 are expected in inland a r e a s. Beach temperatures of 68 are fore- cast. Overnight lows in the 50s. INSIDE TODAV Cathy Murpfty hos .a1l ·unus ual dog. Flossie, her 2-year-old Bos· ton bulldog, can d-0 back.flips. skate, fetch and, uh, talk. That's - right. Atid if you df1111t belleue site. can, it's jusL I.he Bosto11 ac· cent con/ming you. See story on : Poge 15, ' • .. • • " , I Z U~l. Y P1L01 -----•Throat~ Lewd : --J NY Movie Tlieater Fi ned $100,000 .NEW YORK {~)-.,.A midtown movie theater was fined •l00,0-00 today f9r lll9'"1ng tbe movie "Deep Tbr<>at," which has been ruled obscene. Criminal Court J udge Joel Tyler ~ tbe line, levi alnst 1'fature Enterprises, ln c., was "not excessive" and w ell withln tbe means of delend ants to pay and would ac<;Olllp h the intent" of the state's obscenity statute. The theate it would appeal. The 62-minute lilm, .which open the New World Theater June 12, was described in Tyler' arch 1 rulin~ as a "nadir of dee· adence." Tyler, who he ard th case without a 1ury, found the film to be "indisputably obscetfe"by any legal measurement." r . The film has.grossed nationwide more than ,3.2 million. It was co.nfiscated b)"City police last Augu.st but the theater was allowed lo continue showing it during appeal proceedings. It netted $152,924 here. · FToan Pflfle l HONORS ... ' fn<t star\ed at, the old Costa Mesa ~ranch. 1 ( s~ has been branch head 0 two hbraries, the Fountain Valley Branch Which she opened in 1964 and the ~esa Verde branch where she has been since ' \9:n. Jesko is an .active member o( the women's Club of Casta Mesa, the Friends of the Library, Costa Mesa tnstorical society, Old Timers, town and oOwn UC Irvine a~d many other ofiahiz.ations. ,.she has given numeNus pre~talion.s and book . talks to surroundmg com- 01uniUes and for the past 15 yeais has ~me known as a gran~ promoter of public relations and library services. From Pflfle J JET NOISE ... ~stf; ;rea Two seat in Costa Mesa l\fing vacated by Trustee Beverly Langston, said she would never ask .~~e district to ,support the stand of an m- terest group" like AAA without solid background material. "There was the study ~me yea rs a~o that-concluded that if any other pubhc ~uilding~ -including schools -were tQ ht!-built near the .flight paths that they 10ould be soundproofed," she said. ·;·Her . two opponents, •. insu:ance ex· ecutive Charles "Chuck" Bridges aod Costa Mesa Communications Director Orville Amburge'y, both said there Is no lfBY the jets can be banned altogether, but tliat some kind of study Is needed. "I would first ask for some kind of ftudy to see if there really Is a problem aitd then If there Is I would change the CQOStruction at the schools rather than ~ the jets,'' said Amburgey. _,Bridges said he could not push !or a ba'.h on the jets unless the jetport is ex· panded. Slocwn Sued Over County W on1an's Death A \Vidower who clai ms that Dr. Wesley Garner Slocum was negligen\. in the treatment of his pregnant wire sued the fodner Costa Mesa phys ician Wednesdaf for $200,000 in damages. Am~lfo Salaiza of CUdahy blames Slocum, 49, of Santa Ana, for the death oo Oct. l, 1m, of Mrs. Estelle Salaiza. The Orange County Superior r.ourt action states that Mrs. Salaiza died after delivering a stillborn child. Salaiz.a,. who names bis two small children as eo-plalntifis, alleges that S!ocum failed to transfer Mrs. Salalza to hospital at a time when he knew that hiB patient was in a crlUcal condition. Slocwn, who was cleared two years ago or charges that he killed his infant daughter, currently faces Superior C.Ourt C!'iminal action on allegations that· he defrauded the state's Medi -Cal system of at least $5,000. ' His arraignment has been set for April '24. From Pagel BAL WEEK. • • streamed to Balboa by the thousands from all over the country. "But -things have been picking up," observed Lt. Ed Cibbarelll, adjutant to Police Chief B. James Glavas. ,, Cibbarelli said the department still in· tends to maintein nonnal shifts begi~ ii!ng Friday. . . ' A~Denies Foundation ·Srock Saw By GEORGE LEIDAL Of "" o.lly "'"' '''" ,.,.... Morning news accounts suggestthg~tfie James Irvine Fouodation woufd begin selling its stock in the Itvine Company as early as Jlltle were termed "a falsehood" today by tJle foundation's attorney. Howard J. Pri'('ett, 'Los Angeles al· torney for the lrvine Fouqda"tion And its spokesman during recent hearings in Washington D.C., denied he had indicated the foundation would as soon as "this summer" begin selling shares ·of Irvine C.Ompany stock . "The Board of Directors of the James Irvine Foundation b.u initiated studies and planning to realize the full mark et value of its holdings in the Irvine C.Om· pany,'' Privett conflnned. However, those studies and the' ·plarming, he emphasized, may r~sult . in a decision to sell Irvine Company holdings at any time within the next six years. ' "There has been no decision by the board of the foundation to begin selling stock thls summer. Any report that such a decision has been ~ade is a falsehood ," Privett declared. He added that the foundation has until 1979 under terms or the TaX ~form Act or 1969 to reduce its holdings in the Irvine Company from the present 54.5 pe rcent level to the 20 percent required by the federal law. Additionally, be explained, there are court actions pending in California which would in effect be necessarily complete before any stock held by the foundation could be sold. A court 'ult filed by the found ation to change the! ttust ..instrument drawn by James Irvine is necessary, Privett aid, before the stock may be sold ev ough the fede ral law has ordered the le. "The U.S. Constitution protec ~uch indentures of trust," he exp ned. "Congress cannot violate the terms f a private contract~" James Irvine 11, who died in 1947. set •up the foundation and gave it controlling interest in the Irvine Company. Despite th e Tax Reform Act , Privett said . "Congress can't come along 30 years later and apply retroactively a law \\•hich was not in effect when the trust in· strument was drawn by Mr. Irvine. "It will take a court deci sion foCO that," Privett said. The foundation's suit filed in December of 1971 will be given a pretrial hearing f\.1ay 9 in Los Angeles Superior Court, Privett said. U heard in June or July as expected, the fouridation might be free of present trust restrictions whi ch prohibit "piecemeal" sales of the stock. * * * r "lt it-not a big',prob\em right now, but il it we.re to grow larger It would create a problem," he said. "We should alv.1ays ·Study these things to stay abreast of the 'potential problems.'' McLaren Retirement Not From Page J ' RITES. • • " -old Costa Mesa Ele1nentary School !joard. · County leaders recalled today that Mrs. and Mrs. Thompson were strongly Contributing forces in the practical. s'plritual and educational evolution of Costa Mesa. : Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley said Mrs. Thompson \\'BS one.or the builders of the ~hurch where she will be eulogized Satur· ~ ay and served as its organist for about O years. ' She alSo taught hundreds of long-ago grownup children piano lessons. ac· cording to her son. U.S. C-Oast Guard Adm. Glenn Thompson. chief of sta ff for !he Third Coast Guard District at C:overnor's Island , N.Y. A resident of 531 Fullerton Ave., Newport Beach at the time of her death, . r-.lrs. Thompson also leaves a daughter, l\lrs. \Vand a Da vis. of Santa Ana, a sister, Gladys Peterkin, formerly of Costa Mesa and now living In Roseville. CaW .. plus seven grandchildren and tv.'o great-grandchildren . OIAN•I COAIT CM DAILY PILOT Tn• Or•ll9• CN1I OAILY P ILOT, wllfl -en 11 ~111«1 lfl• Nft<l.Pr•n. II PVtlllsfl.ed ey lfl• Or•noe CG••I P\11111,llll'IO Com~ny. St'fla. r111 ldlllon• 1ro Pllbll)llecl. MCIMly lflrOUOtl Frld•r. tor Coit• Mt", NoWpOrl 9ttcill Hunll"910ft 8111elliFaun11in V1llty, L111un1\ lie.en, lrvln1IS1ddleb9t k Ind Stn Cle..,.nt1/ Stn Jw•n C1pl1!r-. A i<nlllt r~IONI lllJl!IOll II pUbllstltd 51turGty1 oncl l llncl1y1. TIN ,,,.lnclPll P11bllat1lne pl1n1 11 11 lJO Wt1t 811' SlrMI, Costt Mtll, Ctllklrnl,f, t l611. Robert N. W o1d Prftlele!ll Incl Pllbll11>tr J1c• It Curl1y Vlot PrnlCl .. 1 Ind GtMrtl Mlf\IOtf Thom11 k1•w il Edltot Tholfl lt A. Murph1nt Mt..aotno Edlllf Ch1rlo1 H. Looi Richtrd P. Nill """'"'"' Manttiftl ECllior. C..... M .. C>Hk. JJd Wttt l1y St?11t M1ilit1f A.•d,..n:·,.o , lo• 1560, •2616 ..__ NtwPOl't ltoKll: ml N""'°rt &oultw1r• U,l.IM 8ttdl1 nt l"-1 A\'Wlt t-ivnlirlllel'I lff<JI: ll17J IHdl '""""'••d Jlt1 a.mer.le: )OS NOrlf\ I I C.mlM llNL ,.,.,.... (714) 641.CJl1 Ca..fflt4 A4wrthi .. 64.1·1611 Colrt'!'!Pl1, 1'1). Or•"H Cello! l"IJbtlol\11'4 Olfrlpitl'ly, frft -''°',.., lllUtl••lloM, 11111111"111 """" ... dv«l'"'"""h hlr•ll'I _,. .. ,~ """*" M*ltl .... MfnMt If ttlCt'l'l'lll'I! -• ._,.. 1: .. 1 ........ H l4 11 (IPlll McM, Ct11Mntl9, llllMTl"lol'I "" c•rr1rr "-s ~.-1 l'Y IMll U.lt IWWlllll~J l'tt!Ul••r ...,.....,,.,..U-61~- Tied to Irvine Pressure Irvine Company board chairman N. L<iyall McLaffJl retired from the board this week to allow directors "planning time" prior to the firm!s J u n c . stockholders meeting to find a suitable replacement, it was learned today. L<is ~geles attorney Howard J. P:-ivett, who represents the Irvine Foun· dation, denied that McLaren was •·resigning under pressure of Washington hearings. He is 81 years old and is retir· ing from his involvement in the Irvine Comp.any," Privett sa id. McLaren had been invited to testify before two Congression al committees In .. \Vashington in the past \\'eek. He was due last Friday to appear before Rep. \Vright Patn1an 's House Banking and Currency clomestic finance subcommittee. Privett appeared before the Texas Democrat and spoke for) the foundation. On Tuesday, \\'hen he was due to ap- pear before Sen. \Vilbur ?.1ills ' (0.Ark .) and the House \Vays and Means C.Om· mittee, 1'.1cLaren was in Newport Beach. He announced his retirement from the seven-member board of directors of ' the Irvine Company. Today, Privett said ~1 c Lare n • s dec ision to rciire had been made some tin1e ago and that Tuesday was the only opportunity he would have to inform fellow directors there would be a vacancy on the board \\'hich would have to 1>e filled at the June stockholders meeting of lhe Irvine Cotnpany. One company di rector, Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, who holds 21 percent of the con1pany stock , was not in Ne\VpQrt Beach Tuesday to hear McLaren 's an· ncxdicement. She appeared before the f\.1ills committee and argued with Privett. ~trs. Smith, granddaughter of the late James Irvine, hts long battled for con- tro l of tbeJirm which is controlled by the Irvine Foundatfon. · · McLaren. Privett said, will continue to serve on the foundation board of direc- tors. · That board wtff decide euctly bow and when the Irvine Foundation wut comply with the tenns of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 which requires the reduction of the foundaton's holdings in the Irvine Com· pany from the present 54 percent ID 20 percent by t979. "It Is jwt coincidence that the decl1ion tO · retire from the company board and the need to infonn that board of the decision came at the same time !IS the Washington hearings," Privett said on A-1cl.aren's behalf today. McLaren's tenure on the Irvine Com· pani• board -dating from 1959 -hss no bearing on the toundatfon'a compliance with the Tai Reform Act, Prtvett con- ttnded. , / As for the requirement to sell off stock in the Irvine C.Ompany, Privett said his testimony "didn't imply when the divestiture would begin. The law gives "The tlrning and method of selling the stock will be detennined by the foun· dation board of direCtors and all options as to when and how that will be ac- complished remain open," Privett said. McLaren .bas chaired the company board of directors ."iince 1960. fie has been a trustee of the foundati on since its formation in 1937 and has been its preside.nt since 1959. A director of ma ny other firm s, the former accountant Jives in San Francisco. Youtli -Joh Unit Already 'Taxed' !L In Harbor Area 'fhe Internal Reven ue Se rvice's dread· ed ~pril 16 deadline is just around the comer, bUt when it comes to finding jobs, the 11arbor Area Youth Employment Service is taxed the year round. Applications for summer work are already coming into the YES office at 592 Center St.,.Costa Mesa. During spring vacation, the office y,•iJI be open full-time and can provide people for every chore from baby sitting to spring cleanup or even coloring Easter Eggs. The number to call is 612-0l74. A 24- hour a day answering service can take your message if it's urgent. Front Pffe J .OBSCENITY • • • tiom over unW May 15 with that aim In view." . Judge Rickles' acUon came while lawmen throughout the county were still ,..king April II editions or the con· troverslal Los Angel., journal. Fraud ~barges sttm from the aflega· tlon by District AttOrnty Cectt Hieb that the periodical's operators permitted "an act of mauive consumer fraud " when they printed an nrticle revealing the tele phone con1 p.any's credit card check· Ing and log"i ng !lystem . Hicks blasted the article as "an open lnvitutlon to commit the.rt that couJd cost the telephone users In lhls area aJonc bttllons of collars." .. .. -- ' 44 New Americans DAILY l"ILOT Sllfl ·,_. I ~ Residents of -12 Orat1ge. Co3st communiti.es be-ne\v Americans then gathered !or the traditional came American citizens Wednesday in ceremonies group pif:ture in the Plaza of the Flags. See story at · the Santa J\na county courthouse. The smiling oq P~ge 17: - ~~,---~~"----'---=-~~~~~~~~~- ' ,. ·National Health hisurance Agnew Blasts Journalists I • Pla11 for -America Bared For -Control WASHINGTON !AP ) - A eradle-to- grave national health insur3nce plan, borrowing ideas · both from organized labor and the White House, has been recommended in a private1y •financed study by business leader.s and educatOt$~ "The majority of these are poor and near.poor. nonwhite, unemployed -in general the disadvantagec.." it said. ~ASHINGTON (AP) -Vice President "MiUions of employed v.·orkers have no 1 ~p1ro '!-'· -Agnew today _struck. out at coverage. Also, because of shortcomings L.JO.u~ahsts . who take. s~d:s m ne~s in many ex isting plans millions of other stories, saying the nation s nt'ws media The Committee for Economic Develop- ment, a nonprofit and nonpartisan organization, said Wednesday its plan would "provide a basic level of medical protection for all Americans at a cost the people who are covered have inadequate seem to feel. more ~nd nm .they should protection from the financial con-control publi c reaction ratlier than repon . f .11 h Ith ,. what happened. sequences 0 1 ea · Agnew1s comments were contained in nation can afford ." · A secret government analysis of the plan concludes it "reflects quite closely the Administration's bill" in the lfl.S.I,.:,. Congress except in its extensioo "'of coverage to low-income childless families and single persons. From Page l PROMI SES .... quir,,cd W resolve th e differCnces. U Kyaw \Vin, chairman of lhe OCC facuJty senate, however, said the ques- tions w.ere sent to the board because .lhe The CED Research and Policy Com· mittee's 105-page report, "Building a Na· tional Health.care System," proposes a th ree-part program that its sponsors say answers were not available through other would take at least four years to im· channels. plement. Peggy Staggs, Golden West's fa culty Employers would be required to pro-senate chairman, said afler the meeting vide health insurance for all employes that the teachers are not so much con- and their families. Medicare would con· cerned with a potential threat to their tinue to cover the elderly and disabled jobs b!K-because a majo rity of them see and the federal government would pro-some TV instruction as dehumanizing.'' vide coverage for the poor. "Of course there are some people in To avoid a heavy burden on small any proression \\'ho feel threatened by employers, the plan would arrange an in· change," she conceded. But the real con· surance pooling mechanism in }Vhich cern, in her opinion, is that TV is a one- large firms would pay part of th..: costs of way medium which allows no interaction proyiding group coverage in small com· between student and teachers. Panies. The teachers earlier had implied Although more than 160 million persons television had been given a favorite are covered by private insurance , the status by both administra tion and the report said, an estimated 20 to 40 million Board of Trustees and thattl. cutbacks others Jack any health·insurance pr~ -'·were made in some areas Wbne capi\jll tectlon. outlay for the station continued. Speed Limits Upset Parents Newport Beach and COsta Mesa parents· are up in arms over plans to raise the speed limit from 35 to 45 miles per hour on Irvine Avenue in front of · Monte Vista School. _ Many of them feel 35 mp;h is too fast. When a spokesman for the county Roads Department was in£ormed that 8 sign in front or the school set the lif1lit at 35 mph instead of 25 mph he said he wasn't aware of the sign: "I guess it could be confusing," he ad· mitted. See this and other Orange Coast related sto ries on Page 16. ~-~ztt::J::.1 I ---- During Wednesday night's mee.ting this con~n did not receive as much discu ssion as did policy, procedure, and who determines the quality of KOCE pro· grams. Dr. Matt Duncan, an OCC teacher, sug. gested to the board •Jthere are problems at KOCE" and questioned the educa· tional value of appe"arances by John Wliyne, a baseball player, and a politi· et"an's wife whOtaIRed about her art c asses. 1 1, Dr. Watson reminded the faculty that program ming at KOCE was new and that many programs were speeded into pro- ductiOn to get the station on the air. The chancellor also said that the in· terest of the faculty in television pro- gramming "is n1ost appropriate and it's high time the faculty became involved." Citing previous inVitBtiorls to the faculty to become involved , Or. Watson sa_id the administration always has kept the door to faculty part~ipation open. the text of a speech, rele!l-Sed here, in ad- vanee or delivery at the "April Freedom E,"orum" of the National Educational Program at Harding College, Searcy, Ark. The speech was critical of so-called "advocacy reporting," a school of journalism in which a reportw takes sides on an issue. "Once journalists belie'Oed that their job _\\'as to report as much as possible what happened. Today, the view in· t;reasingly seems to be that the media should control the public reaction to w~l happened," Agnew said. · Advocacy jouranlists, be said, act more as lawyers developing briefs, than as reporters. ----. "They fer ret out and publicize prin-- 'Cipally those facts which support their own paints of view -pointa of view which . are considered by them to be revealed truth and the only ooes that should be presented to the American peo- ple," he said. "It is advocacy journalism more than 1 any other factor that bas caused the cur- rent ill feeling between government of· ficials and the opinion·making media " Agnew said. ' • He identified .opinion-making media as the television networks, wire · services and "the large newspapers a n d magazines which cove r the nation and world \\'ith their own personnel." NO POST AL HIKE FORECAST FOR '73 MEMPHIS, Tenn . (UPI) -Postmaster General E. T. Klassen has ruled out a postal rate incr~se this year but in· dicated the strong possibility of one in 1974. "Ou r degree of mechanization is not far enough along that we can absorb any substantial increased costs," Klassen said Wednesday . "Consequently, the in· creased costs will haljf to be passed -along to-th-et·consmnet. , ''If we ha\.e a suj>stanti81 increase in costs in 1973, in 1974 we're going to ask for a price increase." • FOOD COSTS! M'EET RISING .t FREEZE FOOD PRICES With This COMPACT 206 lb. Chest FREEZER I 159'6 t lttfft ., "411,) ""- •I F..t F_lllil ... -'ftifrlprltW ...... ·ltflfl • '"'' t.f-t.t4m fMY-tt-'flllltl .a,.,...,.,., . . ",.........,_ ·Viii* Mi ~ .......... ,.. 90 DAY Mtmbor of \ Callfofo la'1 Lorgeat CASH CoaP41r1t lve 8 uylnt l WIT H A"ROftl Group With The COOIT 0 Volum t Buying m' M••••r AttMIA'9 Powtr of 11 0 Stort i "•••• ~ .... HTnt..C. ~ 1815 NEWPORT BlYD. Dawntown C1sta ·Mesa -Phone 548-7788 ' l • , -