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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-04-16 - Orange Coast Pilot" ' . • --B.s"ted B~ring • • ' .. Anxious Divorrees lnqu~re · Into Legal • ID Status. ·. .. .... - ~ON DAY. AFTERNOON, APRiL 16, 1973 VOL. U , NO. 1116, J SECTION5,.4' PAGES • , DAILY PILOT Pfloto by ltlch•rf Kotllltr• 1.Jth Hour Dilemma Pretty Marguerite Marsaudon; Miss Costa Mesa, illustrates the iast minute plight of many who put off their income ta."< calculations. She is surrounded by tax forms -1nd adding machine tape but seems un· perturbed throu~h it all. Perhaps it's because she has unW midnight lo make today's filing deadline. • j • Man Killed -In Arrest -At Dana Pt. . ' ;:. By JOHN VALTERZA 01 IM DlllJ 'li.t Sllff A · ~year-old unarmed man whose notoriety as a master thief and swindler was assertedly reported in the Saturday Evening Post was blasted from the balcony of a Dana Point motel early Saturday by a fatal shotgun blast_ fired by officers trying to arrest him. Stanley Scott Singley died instantly in the bizarre shooting which took place at 2 a.m. in. the Embarcadero Motel at 24662 Del Prado. erficers at the scene as well as in- vestigators called in later said that 'Singley, who had .a long record, asserted.- If dropped both' ha-nds to his waistband before he was shor. ··· The man was hit two separate times, first as he stood in his room, and the sec- ond time at the edge of the balcony. No weapon was found. Although Police officials are.saying lit· tie about the shooting -pending the results of a District Attorney's probe - it was conceded that four detectives from Orange and one from .San Clemente were on the premises when the incident took place. The o£ficers from Orange held war- rants for Singley's arrelft on charges or auto theft, trp.iler the£t and the forgery of motor vehicle pink slips. The officers r e po r t e d I y entered Singley'.! room, immediately identified themselvj!s and told the man he was under arrest. At that point, said Sheriff's Captain James Broadbelt~ Singley allegedly thrust his arms downward and an officer (See SUSPECT, Page !) • • • ' • I • ' • l • Overrun Laotian , Town; U.S .. Threaten~ BoJDbing ' eac ava- ose ' .• .'• / Connty Dlssolutlons Reassigning~· For 20,000 Anxwus Divorcees Question Legal Stat~ Men Slated By TOM BARLEY Of "'9 o.llJ 'Uol Staff Anxious divorcees or both sexes pro- vided the first order of telephone business today for Orange County Clerk William St John's busy offices. Employes said each caller had ques- tions about the legality of his or her divorce and the action that should be taken if a fM;lal decree had not been issued in the dissolu tion of marriage. And many of the callers said their anx- iety had been aroused by a Daily Pilot story which disclosed Friday that at least 5,000 divorce actions in <>i:ange OJunty have never been legally concluded because of lhe absence of a filial.decree . It !s now estimated by St John thl:it DOGGONE-PILOT AD FINDS F1DO Doggone it! "Where has that little dog gone?" Here's a quick way to find out : ' WlfiTE male poodle with grey ears, needs clipping. Wearing black jeweled col- lar & Oe.a coll ar, nr H.B. Hi. School. (Phone number). This dog was gone for a week. The first day the ad appeared, the owner got a call and the dog was found . If you've lost something, find it fast wfth a DAILY PILOT classified want ad. The number to call -IW2-5678. ; such actions have actually been ruc~ing at the rate of about 2,500 a year. The county clerk estimates that 18 per- cent of the.· divorces filed in this 8.rea have gone no further than the issuance by a judge of an interl ocutory decree of divorce. By The Associated Press 'fhe' Long Beach Nava l Stalion will be shut down by June 30, 1974, .and its 63 shi ps and 20,900 creWmen reassigned as part of a $1 billion cutback, .the Long Beach Independent Prc.ss Telegram reported today. The newspaper says that ·« ships will be sent to other porl.s and 19 will be Many divorcees leave the courtrooin at decommissioned . that stage believing that any further There are 500 sailors assigned to the court action is unnecessary , county station plus -another 1,500 civilians, workers have said. representing a tqtal payroll of $11 y.iillion But those divorcees who remarry annually. • . outside Orange County without obtaining Most operations at the Long Beach Naval Base, which. coordinates Navy and .that ~ital final decree may not be legally Marine activitres in Los Angeles , Orange, married, St John warns. Riverside ani:I San Bernardino counties, Superior Court Presiding Jud ge Bruce will also ~ closed along wilh ,the f..ong Sumner of Laguna Beach plans to take / Beach Marl.Ile barracks. care of the future by seekirig Ieglslatlv~ . Naval b~ operatio~s to hf: shut do~n . . . include the finance office, anti-submarine action that wdl make a_f1nal decree man-warfare school, motion picture trainirig datory, he has stated. unit and the hospital auxiliary ship But that action, county employes Repose. ..... pointed out today,•will not remedy the · HoWever, the newspaper a~ded ; 1,000 . thousands of illegal marriages that may men will be added to the 6,500-man Long Beach Naval Ship Yard operation to · have been recorded over the past 20 offset the closing or Hunter 's Point year,s in Oran~e County. (See SHIPYARD, Page %) St John poii\ts out that divorcees who seek a marriage license in Orange Coun· ty are promptly warned in his marriage license bureau if they have not obtained a final decree in this area. They are compelled to obtain one before St John's marriage bureau clerks will issue the necessary license. But many Orange County divorcees may have remarried in jurisdictions where that rule is not in effect, he said . And the county clerk has predicted that Orange Coast • Weather Low clouds and fog are expected tonight and early morning but weather otherwise will be mostly sunny and a touch warmer. Highs, • . i • • " ' N-. Viets Ov~r1!1lll Lao s Town; p.S._Thre~tens Bombing · the shock wave rolling from discoveries made in the divorce division is bound to be felt ln such departments .as the pro- bate division . He predicts a spate 6f legal actions «m wills and bequests by lawyers who learn of the absence o( a final decree in cases where the deceased person may have remarried outside Orahge C0un1)'. 63-73, lows 46-55. • . INS~E TODAY -/ WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon warned North Vietnam today that unless It stops aggression in Laos, tfie U.S. would begin a new bombing campaign, Pentagon spokesman Jerry W • Frlcdhein1 said North Vietnamese forces Jed by firik:S-overran ll town. defended by Royal Laotian forces. oear the Plaine de J arres in Laos within the last several b(lij[S.. -. He described it ·as "a major violation of the cease-fire.'' The Pentagon spokesman said an an- nouncement abouf wbelher U.S. BS2 , . • bombers had begun rcne\ved strikes over Laos would come from Pa~ific Command headquarters in lfawaii later today. U.S. bombers have bee!\ hitting Cam· • bodian targets for six weeks. There have been no American ai r strikes In Vietnam since the cea:se-fire was signed Jan. 27. Fciedheim• said there has been heavy fighting near the Laotian town of Tha Vtcng for the past few da)'s. He could provide no dctans on the size of the· Viet- namese and the Pathet Lao Communist force which occupies the town. -• There ha;.. been a separate ce~·flrc " declared in Laos and there has been re latively fittle fighting there in recent weeks. -, . -•• Friedheim said he was not sure if the Laotian government in Vietiane asked for · U,S, · bombers, but indicated the Am~rican government expected it would. In the Vietnam cease-fire agreement effective Jan. 28, the United. Slates, South Vietnam..t ·North Vietnam aod the Viet Cong agreed.lo end all military activities in C8mbodia and LaOs, withdraw au troops and not use the two countries as staging areas for attacks else.'!..¥'•' .· A cease-fire was agreed on in Laos Feb. 22, but there haS been no truce agreement signed in Cambodia. The United States and South Vietnam have charged that Hanqi Is infiltrating troops and war materiel into Cambodia and that North Vietnamese troops still are fighting beside the Cambodia:n Khmer Rouge forces ~posed to the Phnom Penh aovernment. T1\e Pl'o-0>1'1munist Pathet Lao and North Vietnaptese troops with. mortar and artillery support overran three (See LAOS, P111e I) /. I . Divorcees seeking assurance on the legality or their marriage dissolution were being advised today to consult their lawyer! on the issue. County workers can ont~ confirm the existence or absence or a final decree, they Wtrt told .. Devastating tornadoes ha i;e killed. eigllt perso11s 111 Texas . Tiie stonns toere so violent that tliey tore cars to bits that were trapped a1i '";jf'eeway. See story, Pape 4.· L.M. llYcl 1• • .. ""' ~ \1 C1lllorril1 J, 11 Cll••llltcl ~·4' .('"''""' ,. l>Ntll Ntll<ff 11 l!cllttrltl '•" • E1ttl'11l"mtftt •tt iJIMllCI ..WI Jl'lf ''" Jtttlt'd 11 "°~'" . " """ LIMtfl ll Movie• It N•lllllll H••• 4. 4C' Otl"'' Cov"IY 1t .Sporn :M-SJ 5t.t• MMkth )WJ Tt .. ¥ltilft " Tf!Uten It 'Wtlllltf • Wemilr't N"" 1141 ' W•rlil. NM 4, 4' 1..ta:al action remecytng what 'mounts to an ;ncomplete dlvorCe should be taken throu&h an attorney, divorcees are being advised. · ' '---------==--I - . ( '• ----· . ' ) , • DAILY llOI s s. Viets Saigon Says Border Push 'Defemlf , SAIGON (A PI -?i.1orc Sooth Vlel- r111mesc troop~ \l'efe reported n1ovlng to1\•ard the Cambodian frontier toda y fo llowing the fir.st incursion aeross_ the border lhat Saigon troops are known to hi.I ve made l'i ncc the Vietnam cease-fire. F!eld reports indicated ttiat the South Vi('t naincse 01x·rations aloni: the border v.·tre def1·nsivc. aimed at driving Com- munist force~ froo1 the border rather thap the start of a major offensive lo lift • lhc thrept lo fhnom Penh, the Cam- bodia n capita l. .. South Vietnamese air force gunships ' joined an armored column on ·the cam- bodian side of ~rte border, and new fighting was. reported on the Vietnameae :iiide of the frontier. The Viet COng called 1he l!Ulrcli Into Cambodia ··a blunt and very dangerous act of the Saigon military forces." A Viet Cong broadcast said' the Operation was ordered -by the United States and "criminally violates lhe Independence. UnllicaUon, sovereignty, ·neutrality and territorial integrity or Cambodia as well as· the Paris agreement and the in- tcrn!ltional agreement on_ Vietnam.'' Despite . reports irom newll1len who saw the SOuth Vlelnamete armored col- l!lllll and gunships in cambodl8 Sunday • and today, the Saigon command denied that any of its forces crossed the border. Field report.! said 1:he crossing was made Friday from t~ Vietnamese town of Tinh Bien. 125 miles west of Saigon, after Communist troops burned a Village on the Cambodian --side. About 500 retu8ees streamed into sOuth Vietnam. Associated Press photographer' Neal Ulevlch reported fr<m Tinb Bien that two colwnns of South-Vietnamese annored persoMel carriers penetrated about· 500 yards into C4tnbodian territory. i... A ..,Pipe Drea1n~ No fighting was reported in the Tinh Bien region today, but 15 tJ:Uckloads of -troops :were seen rmvlng lowprd the Liquor Store Pot Sales. Vrged DE NVER (UPI) -ii member of the Colorado House of Repre- sentatives wants to sell marijuana in licensed liqu~·s~ores and ~ve the 1n oncy raised to elderly people. "\Vhethcr you approve of marijuana or not,. lnd I happen to disapprove of it, it should be put in to la\v as a revenue measure as \Ve do alcohol," said State Rep. Mike Strangr a former captain of the f'rinc.:eton UrUversity polo team. -- Strang i.ntroduced a bill allowing Lbe sale of marijuana in liquor stores purchasing a marijuana license. He said proceeds would go to the state old age pension fund. "I have no idea how much would be raised from the tax," said Strang, a rancher. ''All \Ile do know is that the revenue would be very large for the state of Colorado and for the old age ~ension fund.'' ~... border from Chau Doc, lhlfit provincial capital. Ulevich reported the South Viet· nam ese gunships were reconnoitering in- side ea·mbodia . · Lt. ' .Col. Le Trung Hien, chi.ef .spokesman for .!he Saigon ·coinma~. repoMed sharp fighting Sunday but said it was nllrth\\'esl or llong Ngu, \Vhich is on the Mekong River 30 miles Portheast of the · point where the Saigon troops crossed the b9rder. Hien said 22 Com- m11nist troops and three South Viet· namesc WE're killed and 38 Saigon soldiers were \1'0tinded.' From Page 1 LAbS ... '--'~~~~~~~..,...-~~~~~~~~~--l-govemment positions in northeastern • UPI TelfP!llllO 1:addli1a9 t~ Atlaiatie Six Minneaf?Oli,s .teen:age b~ys and their leader padd.J; t~ii-canoe up the Colurnb1~ River 1n Vancouver, \·Vash., on the start of a journey to the ~tlant1c Ocean. The boys are troubled teenagers fro1n J\·Iinnesota correction ce nters \\•ho hope to prove they '"have the ability to n1 ake it." . - 1 Fr.11n1 Page 1 3 Held After Laas over the weekend, a Delense 'W al 1 · ' Al• p 'ff Ministry spokesman.. Jlrig. G en. . e t 1y 1en ayo s Thongpha_n ~oksy, srud today. · · SUSPECT ... from tb<' Oran&re d<'partment -wh0m Broadbelt did not identify--fired a single shot from a n1ne-millimcler pistol · Si1!£ley then reportedly ned from the darkenc'tl room and officers chased the wonded man to the balcony. Broadbelt said the grim ·scene wa~ repeRled there as Singley assertedly \\'heeled a11d reached once more for his waistband. The sin gle blast of large buckshot blew the n1 an from the second Ooor onto the pavement bClqY:. Broadbclt said that all the ·shooting V.'<lS done by investigators from Orange. In San Clemente Public Safety Director Row at Beach Drive-in Three men were taken into custody Sunday night \Yhen 20 pallee officers were called to a Huntington Beach drive- in theater to quiet a disturbance•therc. According to police. the incident began when Officer Art Droz tried to take a man into custody for gate criishing the \Varner Drive-In, 7361 Warntr A\'c. No casualty reports were immediately ~· ( available. -· · 1 '~P~ :,~='~~~:~ ,~~r~~ne· -g-e ·1n Bord~r ·Scl1eme· -Crontal,rwJposls of fhe government moun-. --~-- lain base at Buam Long, 18 miles north . 'Qo. ~ ' of the Communist occup1ed·Plain of'l.lars. Another strategic deending position at Ban Th!. Vieng, 100 miles northeast o( Vientiane, also was overrun and govern· ...ment troops retreated some five miles across the Nam Ngip River southeast of Tha Vieng, the spokesman said. Earlier the acting defense minister, Sisouk Na Champassak, said a nc\o,r regi- ment of North Vietnamese troops inoved to tile Tha Vieng area and ·posed an im· mediate threat to the town. NEW YORK (UPI J -A number of region.al commissioner Of the Inf: Mexican peasants who enter the United migration Service. Slates illegally are ousted but are allow-The Times quoted an unidentified ed to sneak back into the coontry. ir they Jus.tice Dcpartinent spokesman as arc willing and able to make payoffs, lhe saying, "It's all very strange .and i\cw York Times has reported. marvelous, and we're now in ·the process The 'rimes s~id Sunday it uncovered of trying to determine· Y.'h<i:t" the .hell's the .system of payoffs used by the United going on." _,, States Immigration and NaturalizatiGn Gilman, the Times said. told two Service, Mexican irnmigratio11 officials federal grand juries in California that the and privately owned ~1exican transporta-removal program was the result of an ' - Receives $1.9 Million ' NeYl'port ,Be:1ch.,, soci:.i!itc C I :i u d i a Hutson Hirsch hasl be C'n aw<1!'dcd nt•arly Sl.9 nii!Uon as her share of con11nunity property valued a{ bt t1\•ccn S4U rind $5o million during the four -month trial of ht..•r divorce from racing tycoon Clement L. "Buddy" Jl,irsch of Corona de! ~a r, it \li'as leame<i today. 'Judge. Frank Con1enichini's division of the couple's asse ts and his for1na l endin!( of their seven-year marriage \\'ill b<' made public later. Orange-Coun1 y Superior Court officials said . lie has ordered Hirsch. 59. to pay ~lrs . Hirsch, ~5. a total of $850 a nlOl)th for support of tbc couple's tv.·o sons. Case~. 9. and Chr istopher. 7. ll irsch n1u•t al~o pay Christopher"s monthly tuit ion at 'the ritardan School and th~'--l'OUngcr son 's bills.up to.$600 i\1nont h. _ · Judg'e. Boincnichini refused to order ~lirsch to pqy spousal support. A11d he.~ has additiopally ordered l\trs. ll i r~ch. who takes over sole ov"ncrship of hC'r hon1e al 30 !!arbor Island. to ray tier O\\'ll attorney's fees. · Testimony during lhe lrin l an.d the cosl ·, estimate offer·cd b,!v her la\\'yC'rs -John - K. Trotter· Jr. of Santa Ana and David Jfamey of Los Angeles -iru:l icates that those fees \\•ill take about $800,000 or her $~.88f.73 a\\'<trd. · · ' · -- l\frs. Hirsch is givC<n cu;tody of her 1110 · sons y.•ho both no1v live \\'it h her :it lhl' !!arbor Jslanct J1ome. She is a1so nllo\~ed to retain a one-fifth intC'rest in ll irsch 's valuable .. Bear Brand" Ranch. . . But her shares in a lo1ig list or other -llirsch iissets. in cluding his pct food and facing interests. arc conve rted to cash by Judge Domeni"chini· in a summ!ltion that gives her ju.st over S2 n1illion, Judge Domcnichini ordered he r . ho\\'evet. to repay Hirsch SIO(i.502 for ex-_ penditure on 1hc !!arbor" Island home an d to repay hiln $14.185 for his interest Jn -' · the Chef's Inn -the wpor1 Beach restaurant operated by ri· s. 1-lirsch's parents. Her ~L~ mill ion shnrc ·a · · in ludc.s Sl4.976 for her half-share in !he 1 \'port- base.a yacht ··Ciervo.'' · · · !r"tvas stated during the triul that .\I r~. llirsc·h is S200.000 in deht an d \vas at tha t.._ time unable to provide for herself on the $2.800 a month . nllo\\•anee granted her pending Judge Domcnichini 's ruluig. "' Clifford J\.1urray said that his detective. Droz alleges that the man. in at- tempting to escape, backed into his un- marked. p~trol ~ar. Theh the suspect and a comparuon reportedly got into a sucffle v.·itl1 Droz. lion companies during a year-long in-"unofficial" 1969 arrangement between vestigation. officials of the United States and Mexico. She \\'as sued by the Unit t'd · liforn1a Bank for more thiin $17.000 \\"hile the trial was under Y.'ny .. >\nd her 1nothcr. l\trs. fi1 nry Ellen Hill of .\'.C1\'J)Ort Beach. \\·as sued for Slli.flOO by Hirsch in ·:in Orange County Superior Court acliou· that charged her v.·ith non-pay1neot of; promissory notes. • 1 Roger \Vihcrg, was along on the arrest "simpl y because oor dl'pnrtment had traced the n1an's (Sing l e Y, 's J wherea bouts." Broadbclt \vould not give any details of the victim's prior criminal record, bu~ other sources described the man as "a majur crin1e figu re" \Vhosc proficiency al forging vehicle documents -and steal- ing large qu11n titics of cars was known across the nulion. /\!though officers could not in:i.inlly dig up !he article, several sources said the man \\·a s featured in a nalionally- distributed <irlicle several years ago and had been na11y identi(ied ·as a "n1aster svt'indler." . . Single~··s crilninal record s h e et reportedly is nine pages long . Broadbt>lt sa id lhr office of lhe District Attorney \Vas notified im1nedialcly afl<'r the shooting and that a]l investigation has been laun ched. "\Ve \\'on't bt> givi ng out many more details until !h:it invcstigatlon is com- pletell." he said . Al the DA 's office investigators v.·ould no1 di'icuss the case al all . except to say they \vl'rc "1n\'estigating." Broadbc lt said the re~ul!s of that 1>robe \'/ould be 1u1nuu11ccd ''in a day or so." i•cron ist Su ppol'lcd B LJJ·~i\"OS 1\IBES 1/\P J -ltunoff elec- tions Suntla.v assurl'd /\ r g e 11 t i n a 's Pcroriisl pre sidcnt-el ecL Or. Hector .J. Ca1npora. of :t strong: n1ajorily in both houses of Congress and the support of 1nost provincin l go\"C'rnors . 'J'he second ro und of 1>a 11oling increased the l)eronist eoalitjon's huldir.g in the Senate lo 41 of the 6~ scats iind raised their gubcmalor- ifll "total to 20 of the 22 province chiefs, • oul<i?;E COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiit O•~ngt Con! Di\ILY Pit.OT, Wl111 wllltll l1 .:amDlnt<I lllt Nt .., Pren, I• PVbll1llR by tM 0•1ngt COe•I Publl1f\1119 Comp,iny 5tp~ r•i. ftllllon1 1•e out>l!111...i, M-•1 lllrougll F flGIY, lo• CO•I~ MH~. N1wpert 9t•cll, H1111tlnoton e~4cll/Foun111n Vll lty, 1.1011'11 11 .. o;.11, lr~lnt151ddTtl>fle-1"" $In Cltmtnlt / Jtn Juan C1pl11•dno. A, 1ingl1 rr;rlOf'lll edlllon 11 pUDl .. ~ld S.rurd1y1 Ind Sunll lV'fi. TM P•lnclllol! PJDh1~!nt pltnt !• •t lJO Weit ~ ~y l!rHI, C111i. Me••, Ci!lflmll, 't1Ut, Roblrt N, w.,d l'r"ldllf\1 8n0 Pu!Hl•n., Jeck R. C1,1rl •Y Viet Pr1t odtnt t nO Gt,..ro! M1ntg~r Tho'l'ltt Ktt•il Edltvr TllOll'l'"I A. M urpl.in• '"•twOtr\11 Editor Ch•~•I H. Looi "ic~trd P. N1U Alllltt~t MIMt!"O EdllDrl The supcct , Lyndon Robert Chenard, 19, uf Anaheim, and his companion, Jesus Albert Michael Chavez, 22, of Stanton, were bot!J booked for disturbing the peace. Chenard "\\'as also charged with petty lbeft and Chavez was charged with assault on a police officer and drunken driving on priva te property. While !he two were beiog arrested by Droz and back up ofricer Dennis Marlin, a croY"d began to gather and allegedly began shouting obsccnitiC.'I and throwing rocks and bottles at the officers. Sixteen 1-Juntington Beach policemen Rnd four from Fount.ain Valley were call· ed in to quiet lite crowd which reportedly dispersed and returned to their cars. Juhn Kiirl Cox, 20, of Fullerton. however, allegedly did rwt depart the scene and was arrested for disturbing the peace, assault on a police officer and in-_ terfering with a police offi cer. Tortured First: 5 Women Seized At El Tol'o Site Five Los Angeles women accused by Orange County Sheriff's officers of plying the oldest trade in the world at a brand new El Toro hotel were jailed on pros- titution charges during the weekend . A team of sheriff's investigators book- ed the five suspects after each member of the force allegedly was propositioned at the bar in the recently-built Hyatt House, located at the intersection of El Toro Road and the San Diego Free\\'ay. Booked into county jail were: Suzann Kidder, 31; Helda June Moore, 25; Jo,v .. Malbrough, 24; Loretta Moore, 20, ... Lorette lwLarie Trabert, 23. · Investigators said each of the five \\'Omen offered to share a room 'vith an undercover officer for $100. Motorist in Huntington . Dicov~rs Murder Victim ( Hy .JOANNE REYNOLDS Of lh• 0•111 "llol St•ft Huntington HcAch police said today lh£'y believe an un idt•nlifi~ murder vie· lin1 found in the cilr Salnrday 1nay have been beaten :ind lurtu rt'd prior to his death. · Orange County Coron<'r's in,·estigalors. who list thr slayin~ \'ie1in1 ns a John Doe. said today !hoy :;1111 have not established R c:iuse or dcAth for the young 1n;u1 or his "Identity. TI1e body \l'as found eArly S;iturday morning near lhe intersection. of Ellis Avenue and Gothard Slreet~y.a pass ing motorist. Detectives said tl-.bad ap- par~tly been thro\\'n out of a moving car. Sgt . J\.lonty 111cKennon s.1ld he believes the man may have been beaten and tortured before death because or several cuts llnd"abrasions on lhe body. "SOme nlRY have been caused \\·hen the hod~ \1·as dumped in the street." ~·lcl\en· non Sflid. But he :Jdded that h~ol believe all the 1vounds were caused~ tflat ~·ay. Police are continuing lheir efforts to identify the victim who is about five.feet , 11 inches in helRht and ISO to 160 pciunds. ?i.lcKennon said there were several tat· toos on '~luding the ln.itlals "D.f'.," a S\ a. the number 13 on the left ankJe, an foul(dots on the left wrist. "On the right ankle was a cross with mark!'l above It -usueJly called the 'Pachuko:..sign;'.'-Pl1cKennon snlct; The detective noted that all the tatt08S appeared W b e non-profC$sk>nal, homemade tattoos~ The murder victim was dressed lo a cut~ff denim jacket and d111rk blue pants and bright blue socks. Jie wore no shots the detective: sa.id. ' ''.As-far -as we ca,_ 1e:H,1J Mc:Kennon ., said, "he was killed someplace else pro~ ably Friday night and then brought here · and dumped ." He said that anyone who might be jible to identify the dead man should call the polire "departV1ent at 536-5331. Lagiina1i$ .Flee . ' Blazing Trailer; Dog Loses Life A Laguna Beach waiter was nearly trapped inside a· burning trailer Sunday ill Huntington Beach as he -seafehed for hfs wife and their pet pekjngesc. Huntington firemen said f I a mes destroyed the triiiler home or Julius and Nadine Dawson, in the Driftwppd Bench Club. 21462 Pacific Coast HighY.'ay. · · Both Dawsons and a lhird occupant, Dan Rallno, were able to escape from the mobile home unhanned, The Pe- kingese died in the names. . Firemen said the blaze broke out about 4:45 a.m. Dawson first ,1,.ent outside, th~n, t.hlqllng bis wife was inside trying to save the dog, he rushed back in with a garden hose. She wa s nol inside, however., and fire.men said Dawson was.. able to.set out of the trailer lust before it was destf.oyed. Some o the b.ilir on his heo.d ~ Well singed. r Dawson told firemen he ls the heod waiter at the ~hite House In Lagqna Beach. .,, • . firemen estimated the total damnge to U1e Jrau.r, Ito fumlJhlngs and a nearby car at $24,500. The Cause of the fire Is 1Ull under iJwestigation . ., The way 'the system works, the Times The Tim06 said American immigration said. is that many of those a~r st~or officLals d~fend the procedure-on lhL~ illegally enteririg the .country ded grounds tbat shipping alients into the in- onto Border Patrol buses. driy n thrO ga_....grounds that shipping aliCWj into the in- a hole cut in the international bouiidary to the United States more ~difficult fence at Tijuana, and i1._Ias.-ed aOOard a · wailing OC6. Once in the air, the Mex- icans are told that they can avoid a flight deep into the interior of Mexicc. by brib- ing the crew. The plane then lands at Tijuana, the Times sa~, and usua_!ly, about half the ~·texicans •1ake the payoffs and are free to sneak biick into the United States. The others are flown to Leon where t~cy try lo scra pe together enough money to get back to the border or go home . The Times saiQ more than one quarrer of the Mexicans arrested each year for entering the cou ntry illegally -nearly 450,000 in fiscal 1972 -are removed under the systenl. The Times said.it conducted, during its year-long investigation, interviews with. official~ in California, Arizona, Texas, 'Vashington and Mexico. . , Among those playing roles in the system, the.Times said, are: -Attorney General Richard G. Klein- dienst, who "is reported to have helped establish the system hut denie.s having done so." - _ -Armando Verdugo. ';kingpin or coin- operatcd vending machines in Tijuana, with influential connections in Mexico.'' John · Alessio, a San Diego millionaire and a business associate of Verdugo. LconarBc \V. Gilman. so1.1thy.·est From i'01Je 1 . SHIPYA~TILL OPEN ... Shipyard in San Fra ~. cisco Bay area. Pentagon officials said today that 274 ·Flying activity at Alameda Naval Air military bases soon will be closed or cut Station is to be tran sferred tu ~1offL•lt bacK. A full list of the affected '6ases was Field, Sunnyvale, and the Na val Air St=i- no: given to newsmen im mediately. , tion at Lemoore. The Defense Department also plans to Jn pulling the Jlamilt on AF'B in rescr\"C close the Hunters Point Shipyard at San status, the Air r·orce plans to drcln1·c Francisco by June 30, 1974, California su rplus 600 housing un its. All support ac- members of Congress were informed to-tivities \\'ill be closed. The pcrsonnrl day. (The Boston 'Naval Yard also will be reduction in military and civilians totals closed.) 2,372. Defense cutbacks also include closing or Hamilton AFB by Dec. 31, dropping all flying activity at Alameda Air Station and leasing the Long Beach Naval Station and moving. the fleet to San Diego. _ Californians were in formed that the net reduction in personnel in California will include 5.800 military and more than 4,000 civili ans. Some civilian personnel at various sta- tions will be offered transfers. , 1'le closin~-~ers Poil)t Shipyard alone will af~ct . 5 civilians. Some work is to be transf rred to Puget Sound in Washington and some to Long Beach and othet: private yards in the Salf'Fran· Transfer of fleet acti"l·ity from Long: Beach to San Diego v.•itl. affect 16,000 military and 646 civilians. The San Francisco and San Dic~O N2 District s are to be cornllined \.\'ith he!'aqttarters in San Diego. .The Pasadena Under\va tcr La boratory \\'ill be closed and combl ncd 1vith a si1nilar installation in sntr Diego with a _Joss of 780 emplo.vcs. The Imperial Beach Naval Air Sta~ lion is to be retained as a flyin g field only. Sen. John V. Tunney (0-Calif.J, ca lled the wholesale cutU<lcks ··one of the cruelest examples of insensitive govern- ment." NO ONE SELLS G.E. FOR LESS THAN~ • QE'1 ~•dlnM F.itS·f.lo Wm Action-tor · r1n1.1,... wWIW. son FOOD WAST! Dt!POS~ • 3WMl'l end2Rin• .TtmpM"•bl"' • JW.,,.C'f'tln-Normtl, \ Pllf!N"""' P•tu Ind At1P.1ttd Solk; Powt~ flo M1d1enli111 • 2 l1-1l Th1r1-Woih ~AVllfllCltic Oeter9enl Oi1p111ier1 • Swi1t9 01 .. DNI" • Slitlt-Ovt letk1 • s.IKtlon ol 3 ~q 20"9fs ""--' rl / • SDZSO~ 1sr5 • UPRTClfT '"CONVf.NIE~CO:: • P0Jr1!ve SArcty Door t.tch • FaJt f'rttt inl •Ooorl«k- 17'195 • 90 DAY , WITH AJIPlOYID _cit:DIT . 1815 NEWPORT BlYD. CASH Downtown Costa' Mesa . -f~one s~:-n:s • ) , ,• . - -· Cl ' s, thre the \\'OU raet tim1 Ai thre nea1 ti cu -Ar twl und clcc 24.5 B tru: arc, 'B 1 ~ ·Att he fol: fro blo gr< vol th€ ild I l'a' 'Vi sir cli< I iri j th• ter Wl Jar tr1 th1 an th· .1 go j I! 1 Y' tJ br bl h< J •" vi " ht al Sl ti If ~ .J " is ~ • • CU$D Elec • wn • ' I • ' I .. , ' • • • 7 Win.d .-U • By JOHN VALTERZA Ot tt11 Dfillr l'ilot s111f Seveq South Coast area men seeking three slots on the board of trustees foi' · the Capistrano Unified School District wound up theif campai'gns late today in a. race whlch '.wiU be resolved for the first time Qj'at-large.votin'g. All .have conceded that campaigning throUgh the entire. district whi~h sPans nearly 160 square miles has been a dif- ficult .task. · · And . seasoned election observers v.•ill not off~r ptedictions on .voter turnout under .the new system approved by the · electorate last November. A· total of- 24.552· 9oters are eligible to cast ballots. Before the at-large issue was settled trust~cs ran onlY in their ov.•n resideiicy areas, '6u.t thls tin1e · ovt. the y have ·had to .. DA Will .Try To Sidetrack.· ' ·Snake Cult • NEWPORT. Tenn. (UP.I) -District ·Attorney General Henry F. Swann says he \viii ''take every 'angle'' to prevent followers of a mountain church near here from · using snakes. poisons and blowtorches to demonstrate their faith. Swann said he ~ould go before the grand jury on May 7 and seek in- voluntary manslaughter clmrges against the Rev. Llston Pack, pastor . of the campaign in conununities far Crom their In the last of tlie ·three trustee areas, home base. ~e _zone .cQVering San Jan Capistrano Jn lbe trustee area representing Dana M<L.tbe Mn!~ J>O_rt~ of Mission . Pomt aild the coastal commun.itieS to the Viejo, three Jf1~ ~.~!for the post north, t\l.'o men &re vying' fot a post pcing ·b~ fot.:.Jntny year~ b~ Fred Newhart vacated by ~short-term ttustee, Stephen nr., a San ·Juan businessman ~·ho _b._as Smith . " ) . served on school boards ror more thfill 2"f--- ln that race Louis Boitano, the head or · years. _.. . a large teaCher's asso:cjation ,in San · Newhart is retiring at the end of this · Diego .. Count)', seeks eleciiOn al9ng '"ith • cl!JTent .term.· . computer programmet; ~ matt.ematician The three men seeking election to thal 11. C. ''Chuck" Pierce. -spot ~re \Villiam 'ThomP&<Jn of· Mission Smlth chose not to seek re-election Viejo, a. director of· admissions for a i:)ecause of time Commitments. He was midwestern college and former leader in C'lecte~i'\ a special poll last summer. the citizen <t:ii:ittle against all-year school In the-trustee area. dir.ectly to the in the district; trucking firm ow ner Cecil north'o\•est, which comprises all or Homan ~ who expects to draw support Laguna Niguel, incumbent caiididate and from voteis wtto have backed Newhart - current Board Chairman . Bob Hurst. an,d Raf Baker, a transportation fi\nl seeks a sccontl term. His opponent is owner \vho for many years served as \'Ince Winninghoff \vho for years has · v 1i ncipal Of continuatioo schools an d been active in youth athletics in the other school operaJiQ,ns in the Sou.thern South County area. California area.· · / *.* * * * Swim Pool--Measure · Also ·Will , Be Decided \ • Not only 'viii three slots on the board of ddrsed tile concept by signing petitions trustees be at stake in Tuesday's el~c-seeking . the .,special . tax rate \Vhich tions,buta fmancc measure, as Well, ·Will amounts to 10' cents.for $100 of assessed- appear ori the ballot. ·Valuation for each· of two years. A two-year effort by ·parents in the · The te~nue from that issue will di s.trict to create a special tax ing di strict a56.ure thC ~nstruction of tjle tv.10 pools to pay for swimming pools at Dana Hills which \vould be used for organized sv>'ini.· and San Clemente High Schools .\viii ming in the area as \vel\ as · general come befo{e fhe electorate. ' : . 'recreation activities for the public at Thousands of perSorts already have en· large. The propon,ents argue that the high i1oliness Church of God in Jesus' Name. Pa.ck's brother..., assistant pastor Buford Comedi' .~Kin!! Pack, and the Rev. Jirop1y Ray '-' · schools are the only ones in Orange .-...Coun~y. without pools, adding that despite heavy demands.. on fresh-\va ter swim· ming facilities the only ones available a~e the cro\vded San Clemente f\.1un icipa\ pool or·a pool.at Camp Pendleton. \Villian1s, died a v.•eek ago afte~ drinking ---'- strychnine -during . ·a Saturday night In So1·_1 cfiurch· service: , ' _ 1; Ptick said he had been served wifh :an ~ r--'-· ' irijunc~i~n protii~iting such practices, ~ut <-.F Takin· g · Car• the miruster said about 15 persons at· tended services Saturday night.arid there ' . ~ was ''some handling of snakes." , , !NEOLA, N.Y. {AP ) --The 18-ycar· "I bclieve,jn obeying tb.e laws of the d son of comedian Alan King was ar· land," Jlack Said, "but \Vhen they're con· ested -at hls parents' request -for trary-to Godls la~,we..wiU-hav.e to. part.'_' _ t.aking_one _oLlheJamily;j_~C~rs wi,thou_L The members of the chl\_rch believe permission. they · can . ha~dle ~,riakes. dririk po!~ns Andrew King was· picked up Saturday and. end.ure. fire ~l~hout hat'm, provided night by police and spent the night in a their faith is. sufficient. detention pen at the Nassau Police head· ·"These. people ai:~ tal.king about ~;i,ng quarte rs. a .blowtor~no~'•', said Sw.ami. I n1 He was arraigned Sunday on· the ~otng to c every ang~e to the grand unaufhorized use of an auto charge and J u r y , "i n. 1,u d 1 .n g 1.n v o I u n tary for felonious possession of drugs. . n~l.nug~tcr. . · Police said they found 141 grains of r.acy. said he and his group ~ave not marijUana and 41 grains or hashish in the y~~ us;t1 the tor.ch, but are plann..i.ng t~. car...that belongs to MrS. King. \Ve re .loo~ing forw~.rd t6 . go~~g Police said tl1e youth had taKei'r his through this. fire ordeal, he s~1d. A father's Rolls Royce without pennissio,p brother up the road has 1t (~he Friday night and had been told not ·to do bt~wtor:ch ) and ~e~ the Lord leads·h1m, ft agairi but. took his mothei:'s Pontiac he .. s.g~1ng ~o .br1ng it. . . Saturday night We re g1v1ng no thought to quitting. If "If he won't llsten to what I tell him. 1 were to get bit by a snake and die, it then ·he has to do what the law says," w?ul~ be okay. 1t would be the Lord's King said. "The boy had to be punished \v1ll. . . and that's what we did." <:=ocke County Sheriff B.obb~ Stinson The Kings live in a $300,000 mansion in said he had not made up ~1s. mind about King's Point near !'!ere. . how lo handle the rehg1ous group, although he served injunction papers Saturday preventing the dangerou's prac- tices. · •· 1 don't know whether we will arrest then1 or not ," the sheriff said. "These people arc strong in their beliefs, but it looks to me like it's against state la\v." Pack termed the injunction the \vork of "some old devil'' and said he wiJI not seek the services of an attorney when he is scheduled 'o appe~r for a hearing Saturday on the injunction. , .. ? . JUS T DESSERTS? SPOKANE, Wa sh. (UPI) -Pay- day will come late for U.S. Post Office workers here: · Their checks, due 1'"ridey, got lost in the n1ail. Body Frozen . . ·For 18 -Years SYDNE·v , Australia (A P) -A man's body kept under refrigeration in a funeral parlei:.for 18 years wa s cremated today with the bodies of ·his .widow and son. The lather. Theo Karkower, died in 1955 at the age of 74. tlis son, Ron .. • believed in cryogenics -that scientists some day may be a hie .to restore a frozen body to life -and had his father' body frozen. ·Theo Karkower1s widow d~d April 8 after two years in a hospital.' She wa s 77. Her son, 47 and still a bachelof, died four da ys later. .. Opponenls led by Delbert Curtis of San Clemente_ argue that parents or students in aquatics activities want_lilxpayers to "finahce their expensive sport." Curtis said that in other areas Aquatics devotees form private 'clubs to build pools. Curtis· added th3t the new taxes add to ··inflation ~ and cause hardships on tax- payers on fixed incomes. City councils of San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano a lready have endorsed the pool proposal as have service groups and parent-teacher organizations. The .Local Agency Formation Commission and county stipervisors also have en- da.rsed the special distric!. ' Tliree Seats Open •·. l1i Saddleback Board Electio1i Three trustees \1•ill be elected to the seven-member ·Saddleback Community canege board Tuesday. ( Polls will be open from 7 a.in. to 8 p.m·. lor ~he district's 110,000 registered voter5-. The· ee trustees will be elected at large y all voters in the Saddleback distric In. Af~a T\\'O, incumbent Hans Vogel of Santa Ana is unopposed. In Area Four. incumbent Patrick Back·us is opposed by Honald Mincer of Ca pistrano Beach and Thomas B. Le\1•is of San Ju 3 n Capistrano. . Backus, an elementary ..scbool. prin· cipal, is a res'ident or Dana Poinl:.;dincer and Lewis are both students at Sad- dleback College. In Area Five. incumbent Or. James W. · f\1arsh'all of Laguna Hills faces Daniel J . Conran of Laguml Hills. Con ran, however, said he is no longe r interested in the post. San F'rancisco's lamed l?alace llQl•I wh~re Preslden.t Hardin g dled and Carti'so survived the 1906 earth· qu~ke, is being soltt to a fapa ne<e 'conglomerate. Pictured is the hotel's glass.roofed and ·chandeliered Garden Court dinin g room where President Wilson gave ~is histori~ ~ague or N~tiilns speech. . ' .. " ·. .. ' ··-' . ' UPI Ttltl>llOIO Whale of a Tinie -. "" . A pod of killer w~ales frolics ~in the choppy \\'aters of Puget SQund off Three Tree Point south of Seattle. The black and 'vhite mam1nals often grow to a \Veight of~everal tons. ---1,. • ~· ' S ,DAILY PILOT :J Idaho School Post Eye~ By. Scl1mitz BO ISE. Idaho (AP) -John C ·Schmitz . of ,Ney,·port -Beach, t h c ,\n1l'rican Party presidential candidate lust ~·e;u'. says he's looking for a college 1c:.iching post in Idaho but ·hasn't .found one yet. Schmitz told newsmen Saturday be has applied to teacti at three Idaho schools and has been turned .do\\'Jl by one, BoisC State College. lie hilS applied at the College of Southern Idaho in 1\vin Falls and the Church of Jf!Sus Christ of Latter-day Saints .Monnon·o\vned ·Ricks College iit llexburg. The fonner Ca l·i f.o r n i a Republican cong ressman said he has not heard from the two school~ about his ap- plicatioos. · '· Schmilz, a Cattiolic. is a tenlH'Cd in· structor; in philosophy, history and_ political science at Santa Ana college. The 'faculty se nate at Boise State tum-; ·ed down his application to }oin the 1 school's political science department·, because faculty' senates "are liberal," Schmitz said. Dr. \Villard ov'ergaard, chairffian of the Boise State departmen! of political science, said Schmitz was turtled d.oWn because he did not meet the re- quirements· of the post. He has· a master's degree in education. and "a number of the 130 app1ic;µlts for the job had. q!)alifications \Vhich _!lX.Cecd that of · fllr . Schn1ilz." Overgaard said. Sclunilz tol'd ne\vSmlffi he would like to . live ID Idaho. It-would he a 0 fine pl ace to raise seven children ." he said. He added he hoped "to spend a few ex· tra daysTo look around up here." 1r he moves to Idaho and were to seek ·- political office, ·it would pf9b8.bly-be the i__ U.S. Senate, Schmitz-said·:'-"One-wottld----, have to know the state and its politics better" to run for governor, .he, added. : •• GOPU11itAs~s Mc·etosl\:ey Some have asked him to enter the Ri publiCan prfmary in the 2nd-District-· ----1 against Rep. Orval Hansen (R· Idaho), he • To Quit Republican Party The California Republican Asseinbly p_~ssed, a r~~olution i9 Anaheim Sund'!)' demanding that antiwar congressman Paul McClosk.ey" (R-Calif.), change his registr~tion to "any party other than the Republican party." The resolution said McCloskey .should, drop hls· Republican reglstratioD· OOcauSe~ "be ties ~aused great internal conflict in • our party" . and because he has "con· tinuously criticized President Nixon's ef- forts toward a just peace." The measure was ~ by the, 500 delegates of the organization at its an- nual convention. The CRA, which claims 10,000· members, is composed of local Republican volunteer units. McCloskey was not available for com· ment. " Other positions taken in various resolu- tions _were: · • -Active support for Gov. Ronald Reagan's attCmpt to place his tax reform mea·sure on the· baUorthrough·popular·in~ iliative. . -ApprOyal' of Nrxon·s "strong stand against amnesty" for draft evaders and deserter.$. The resolutiOJ) noted that "f\.tany citizens.or othet hatioi\s would be glad t~ serve 1?~ ~s in oUr arme~ forces for·the Privileg@"l>f residing here " • . I -Condemnation of ''those t>eOple" who ha ve said returning American POWS \Vere .lying about being tortured by the North Vietnamese." · • -Support fqr Nixon's dismantling of the Office of E!"conomic Opportunity. · The three-day convention ended with - .the election of a new president, Dick Krugh of Morgan Hill. He succeeds Dr. Donavon Pretzer of Thousand Oaks. said. Schmilz was in Boise to speak at a J.ohR-Birch Society-sponso red meeting in nearby Meridian. Accompanying him \Vas his 16-year-old son, Joseph. "Joe is the new student body president of Georgetown Prep School i n Washingtont¥and he also is a member of t~ JOjm Birch Societ)'.1'' Schmitz_sa.::id::.. _ L'ot.s to 'Sho·w And Tell' About . SEATTLE (AP ) -There .was a lot of showing and telling at AJki School here \rtlen a ·second grader brougl)t two small ptaots to show his class. The teacher showed the plants, which were gry>wing in trimme_ij, IDUk cartons, to the principal. The principal showed the plants tci the police. The police told school authorities their suspicions were correct: The plants were marijuana. An investigation was under way. WELCOME T~ OUR HOUSE! Look fr•1h ;n Your GRIECO Linen and Wool sport c;.1 -$135.00. All Wool En()lish Tw ill Trou se rs in Five Sprin9 Sh.tde• -$ .. 5.00. Dacron & Cotton button down shirt by Eagle Shirtmakers _,.. $13.00 ~Helps cJl'Ceager- 1 . -~-~= ' Newport 81<1th, W;l1hi1e, S .. 1r1n8n o.~,, P'll1•d•n•, l•ktwood, Wist Co .. !111 . --- • I' , • .. - . __. I ,, I -· ' • -- • . ' . .. • I - ~.~•••il-1 .. 1973 • -\ --.• .:. -- -Tornitdoes-De,rastate Towns ,ill Texas · ' . . ' i . A.! • • • QUIET WESTERN FRONTS: Early on to the llite,Wtekend, there was· a"iman flurry of ac;tivity ii) B~boa tbat ~t.'tise to belief that student throngs might once again .be visiting our ~line tbil spring - racatiOn. II was app3r.ent1y·a .false.Jabor pain. UPI T1111'111!0 Whal happe~ was., tlllll dOWl\ tn .Balboa , the forces of law.and order came upon an apartment 'house that was vastly overcrowded wUh student bodies. ' ·~ . THIS WAS-ONl'.,OF SO HOMES TWISTER DESTROYED JN PLAINVIEW, TEX. Addilio~ •. to the .bodies, the offlctrs di scovered some pot' and evidence of alcoflolic bever8ges. Fortunately, Family Wai In Callforni1 1n.d Esc1ped'lnjury in Storm . Now, if YO),& tpok 'that apartment hou!t· in Balboa and , multiplied it by, say, 3,582, you woW.d have ibe apP,Oltmate ..iwne. of bwlln<S3 Ural could bO ... pected for the. forces of law during a spring vacation or yesteryear. TIIUS TI-IE ' SINGLE discovery of allegedly loose and wanton living by a 'Jewish ·Passengers Pray; -· . Ship Sails Under Guard LONDON (AP ) -Passengers aboard from the ship said the hu sky young group of students left police a bit ap-· the liner Quef:n Elizabeth 2 prayed today Britons, with close cropped haircuts, Preh~sive. Could ll ~ that those old · • were easily di&tinguished from the )arge- wild Oays of s'Prl!'la vacatiOri.s up6n· our. for a safe voyage to l;lrael on ·a Passover ly middle-age regular P3!0sengets. coastline were abOut to return? cruise. t~at defied the possibility of Arab' The general feeling on board was tha_t · Nixo1i Return H an.di,car.ried IVASfilNGTON (AP) -Presi- dent N~xon's tax return has -been filed by special deli Very to the commissioner of the I n t e r n a I Revenue..service. , .: -~j·a;ipeifra0Ces'i:Oday1 suggesi that the terrorist _atlaeks. . . . . .no terrorist had penetrated the security, ·answer~IJ-no·-no"dlance:-. _A~ th~ v~ ~team.ed !'° l~lil!l JX!rt)--but -runiors persisted that terrorists· I agree with this anaJysis on the baSis of call. Lisbon, P9~ugaJ, the' passengers might try to. smash an eiplosive-laden . The White House said the haitd delivery, traditional f<lr presidents, was made Thursday, well in ad- vance of today's midnight · filing deadline. of the. Bedroom Window Test. This is. a -almost all Jewl~ -be$'.~ their fi~st ffiotorboat or airplane into the Queen .. . full day aboard with a reh g1ous service personal system l have for detenntning. in a bal~m converted into a On Sunday, almost as soon as .. the the. nature and extent of spring vacation synagogue. , ' ~esser s~iled . ther~ were .. the usual Jn qur neighborhood. There, a{ a service conducied by 10 lifeboat and ~tre drills. But th~re were Our bedrooin window face~ the sea and rabbis._ they prayed for a 5!1fe voyage. also l;lom~ drills. On one occasion crew · . . ---Many of .Lhe passengers said they felt members were s u ~ m o n e d by Nixon Announces European 'Grand Tou:r!-.-in -Fall IS pointed drrectly at C.oast Highway, In . secure "behibd the. protective screeif set . loudspeaker to a bomb se~rch of all the Easter Weeks past, the sea breezes have up by the Cunard Line and British offi· . cupboards, closets and cab~s aboard. wafted into t~s window the late-evening. Cials, -wbo -pu~ s~cial----guard-wlits-Loud-bangs · r.everberated-ar.QUnd-the soun~ ~!screeching tires, rparlng ex-a~. ~i~ nayr and aJr force 'units . ship-,· at anot~er •poiri.t, making ·some ·~m'Bt pipes and Whobps and boilers or are tr~.tht: ship. . · passengers t~nk,. for a .moment, that WASHI NGTON (UPI) ~ President ')'Olith lnt.o fhe ·sp.kig flight. • New of·act,\v1°'s on t!1e sb.i~ r~ached fear of terrortst attack liad ~ome a ·Nit"on plans a trip to Europ,e this fall , ..,. . · " , , . ~ndo~,~ln~le~.r~ to Bntish. ~~papers reality.. . " which White Holise sou rces say will tak e , ~1.lO~yt;Aft. -AS in 1ll9St recent . and via s~~e tel~~~· . , But . .the explosion~ were _set._~ ,bY hiin ... to Great nntain France West sp.r~~· it .'i'f:.tti so.silent ou& there ~t ·"You hell',,~e t~:.a .. ~~t.lhe,~w:1~ -Sf:CWdY lJfficers testing emergelley'·Pro:-.. Gehnany an!,1 Italy.• ' ' • couJd"even hear the water. drippihg in the Jacob Heo g, ;a· ~~;-ofarssenger The flagship of'the Curlard'Line~ sailed ' SUnday whi!n •·tie-=--talked to reporter after . yoQ cfudtt' heal' lltl; crickets ' cbirpµig. 'I ly .bul 1 th · !J!!,sus~IO.~!• :"!•d · cedtjles. · • · · "• · • '.Nili~ revealed plans for the~·; rney kitchen sink. l mean,. It was qulet'h k9t,n New ,Y~.City.v _P~p ... are en-.~ from .SOUt~pton on Sunday,, Wtt!i~ .~ '• a ""White ·HOU(e religious ser\ii . He Thus, by the Bedroom Window .T~, joying It as a ft!>~l c~1se. passengers he~ for .the ~r't~ of described it as "a grand tour" t did you can presume ·that we are ·lh ''for Among .t~ose ta~~ng, the crulse were 2Q , -~s_rasl!&"ZMb anruvel"SlltJ,·~ ... ~~ ~·~·mention specifi c dates lh ,.,_l d M pr! 1 to 30 ijr1t1sh marine commandos, out-w1tb a ,Srilall anny ot Special guards to H !so did l 'I · th l . ano er q""F. .PP · ~ s ng un ess titted in civilian clothes. But reports protea them from Arab terrorists. .:. ~ a . no ~Ill on . e coun ries there is some dramatic tufnarOund in .. ,~ ,. , ... .., • .. he· WOl;lld visit, but aides said they wouJd .QUTellt student ·mores~ . : · · · · in~lude the . la rgest nations of Western . .Fe"l'..w!ll lament the pa:;sing of the rtu-Europe. dent nordes of yesteryear. Mlybe the ., . ·White House sources also revealed &un- m.ercbants who rent surf ridei:s or: P;eddle \ day that Soviet Communist party leader ~rroun bananas. But few others will '::"'\ Leonid I. Brezhnev will come .to 'µiourn . · ·" ~1-Washington in late June for talks with V · r Nixon. PERHAPS THE PASSING of the youth 1lnvaslon is a <ndlt to the advance of our civilization here 8.1CIJ!K thi s best of all 'possible coasts. Law and order ha~ at last' come to those locations just easterly of 1he high Ude line. Vac&tiOning youngsters have always ha~ ~ pcflchant for getting away from it · 1aU,over Easter week before they return ·to . the classroom grind on the stret('h !'dr!;.:e toward summer. They can't get ,1 awa'y from much aroun.d here anymore. ! Tl:)ey tried Palm Springs and that lasted , only a couple. of seasons. LATEST REPORTS ha ve it that Palm . 'Springs police are closing off their can· y,on campsites and 1 sending the •kids b.ome. 'J:he s,ame ~~is happening .alopg the ·Colarado Rj~r. "'Sdme dispatches have indicated the vacationing young people have drifted off to MeMico, or up i.Qto the Il}OWltains Jn areas like Big Bear. · AlJ. th is suggests that modern living l.:ecps creeping into the recreation 'spots of our ·1and. Poople keep IOOking for places to go to get away from it all. 'Pretty soon. the ~wer may be that you can't get there from here. " ' UPI TllfPl!oht QUEEN ELIZABETH II RECEll/E5~EAVY SECURITY AS IT LEAVES Security Follows Ft1rs of Poulbl.·P1le1tlnt Extremist Attacks TIUS J\1EETING will follow-up the summit ·meeting Nixon and Brezhnev held in Moscow last May which resulted in stra.teg ic a r :m s limitation treaties and agreements for e_xpanded trade and cultural ex changes. Nixon also said Sunday lh<it he~ would meet with French President Geo rges Pompidou before embarking on his Euro-· pean trip. He indicated these talks might , not take place in Washington. ~"7 The · President apparently has tried lo · turn-his .attention in foreign affairs to Europe following the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Vietnam. He said recently that "this i§Jhe year of Europe." Most of his foreign ,isltors this year have been from Europe and the Middle East. President Giu1 io Andreotti of Italy will arrive iil Washington Tuesday for an of- ficial v.isj_t. West German Chacellor Willy Brandt plans two days of conferences with Nixon in Washington starting May I. DAILY PILOT DELI R)'. SERVICE tl!vtr)' of tht Dally Pllol is guaranlttd 8-Persons Dead' •" .. ••• I . ---5~ oii~.F-ree~ay . lly Vnll<d Pnsa illlenlatloaol . il apt! klllmi him. Hii w~e. wflO was with him al lhe. tlnie . was hospitalized ln ,,,> Killer tornadoes raided Texas.from lhe Panhandle lO lhe-GuH Coal( Sunday, causing death ani:t-l.Djllry' fu three cities and destroying homes, cars a n d · shock. -, airplanes. . . At least eight pel'SOl)S were killed, and 19 others were inj~ed. A huge tornado trapPOO.:mototists on Interstate 35 in soUthem Texas near Pearsall .Sunday evening'. The twister crossed Ult highway smashing cars to pieces ind killing five persons. Nine other persons were injured in the storm. Half a mile of higtiway pavement -was dug up. · I! ' IN·PLAINVfEW, in the Texas Panhan· die, a twister struck before dawn, killing. a child fleeing for a storin cellar and a n'ews reporter · in his car following a police vehicle. • 4 An , oil well worker was k~_led in Rockport, on the southern Texas coast. late. Snnday whf:n high winds blew an oil .rig on top or him. The persons killed in the Pearsall twister were found alongside the freeway Jllllong pieces of cars. . , "Most of the dead people we found had their clothing stripped off them by the \Vinds," said state patrolman Bill Rowan. "We found parts of cars -doors, seats, fenders -for (l mile a1ong the highway, but we can't tell how many cars were ·· , wrecked. ;,We have this stack of purses, but they are a11 barren, torn' open by the t.OCnsdo and emptied ," he said. THE PEARSALL tornado also st ruck the Frio-Co1.U1lY Airport, y,·here 13 airplanes were destroyed. It killed · a number or catUe along the way, leaving dead carcasses strewn along either side ot a rot in the earth. · The Plainvie'w twistei destroyed 25 homes and two businesses and ·damaged . 40 other homer. It first struck the west side of to>wn, where Kevin Lewellen, 2. a~d his ~rents were caught before they CC!U\d reach .a storm cellar. Tile clilld-was k11100 -a:nd·his-fath:er wfs hospitalized .with' serious injuries. Ne'¥1'S editor David C. Bryant, 30, of the Plainview ~J?aily Herald, was. in bis. car traveling oo yards behind a patrol car \\'hen the twister struck his car, wrecking * ·* * Storms ~Hnmmer .. .. . The Jl!ltroi .Cl!f was o~erturn\!d, but the ~ ~. sUl'V,iVec.1 wtlh only rumor ln· juries. . TwiS:ten.-ahd hit. Cor~" in North ·~tfil Te~~ WDere a .grocery warehou9e 8n4 seyeral honies were destr0yed ' end two 'Pmons ln}ured, end in the Gulf of Mexico off COrpus Christi, neal'Rockport. Republican Would ·Back· Quiz Arrests ). WASHINGTON (AP) -Seo. Charles athias (R-Md.), says "if we're force.cl the lasi resort," he would support the Senate arrest and trial of any Whit e liouM: a\de who refuses . a subpoena to testify before the Watergate m.. vestigating committee. · Mathias . said President Nixon has ' defied . the" Spirit bf the Omstitution ·by shielding presidential aid~ from con- gressional questklling in the Watergate ' case. The scandal, Mathias ajd in an In- terview, has become "a serious em- barrassment for the Republican party . , . ..!__S!ain that ~oes not we.sh awaY.." -rm; MARYLAND SENATOI} went bey6nd other GOP critics when he en- dorsed the last.resort arrest and trial for contempt of illy White House 'aide who . refuses a subpoena to testify under oath about the Watergate bugging and related allegations of Republican political e~ pionage and sabotage during th e presidential campaign. Seo. -Salli J .. Ervin Jr. (O-N.C.), chairman of the Senate investigating · committee, has suggested the possibility or such a confrontation. "l 111INK TIIAT'S lhe last resort and if we're forced to the last resort, I would support it," Mathias said. '!.I think there are some nece.ssary steps in advance.''. He said there should be an\at\eJllpt to repair· the . lnlditional system' OI com- promise through which preildents and congressmen have averted traumatic Flooded Areus ~ confrontations.· VICKSBURG, Miss. (UPI) -A line of · heavy thunderstDrms churned through waterlogged Mi.'ls!ssippi today with flash flooding reported in Jackson and other areas. . But weather officials said the rain was not expected to have any major effect on the backwater flooding in the Mississippi Delta north of Vicksburg where several hundred famili es have been evacuated ~ during the past three weeks. "This rain isn 't going to .help any, that's for sure." 'fiver forecaster C. J. O'Brien said .. Asked whether he believes the White House . is engineering a Watergate .coverup, ~1athias replied that -the five . men caught inSide Democratic head· quarters at the Watergate "had on them a large number of" newly·printed $100 bills with consecutive serial numbers. "No one has ever said where the)r got that money. No one bas ever said who gave ~tiilnOOey, for what pu~ they were given It. This one fact r.li"9 a whole. sei;ies of necesaary qu~ons. Until questions, pf that !1611 are answered, we cannot .say we ·know the story of the Watergate .. '! r«"""'"~~?.XZ:..~~""j~ . I ~ostly Goodby? ' l Proxmire Raps Gen.eral' s Rites '1 WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. William Proxmire .(D·Wis ) com- "' plained today that the Air Force appare ntly spent "'tens ~· thou-~ sands11 of dollars for an elaborate retirement ceremony for a gen· er al. The Defense Department denied the charge. · .. Ptoxmire, a per~ent critic of military spending, asked the · defense secre~ to 'estimate the cost for a retire1nent ceremony at ~ Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mont., in February for Maj. Gen. William S. Harrell. He said the Pentag<m also should justify the expense for these ·~aborate cerem~nies." · Vacation Travel Sluggish Mcnlllllf• ldlf : II YIU dtl Mii ~IYI fOll• PR~XMIRE SAID he tmderStood Harrell 's retirement mcillded .... , ly • ,111 •• c•ll 11111 YIU• copy !!!JJ" .3 COC. ktajj,part.y, ban.quet, Change of ci}mma'nd --mony and -• .... e, . • .. " _, .. 'l'fflfll .. JM, Cllll lfl !i"ktft Ufllll al _., o l"" OU 7••--.m, aeti revie~ mv<?"IVIng more t~an two dozen planes, and a reception • '"""''' '" s_. • .,, tt .,... .. ""' rec11v1 The aenal display, he srud, in~a fl yby of 12 F106s and .,_ ClllY llY f ·1.m,. l11urd1y, tr • 1.m. 16 F!Ol B57 F104 d T3 '"'"'''· c111 1n111 1 c.,., w1n 111 """"' tv • s, s, s an 3s flo~n by Air Force and 'Canadi'an 1•u. c1111 •r• t111n 1111111 11 •.m. pilots that must have cost tens of thousands Of dollars.". Cloudy Skies, Cool Days Cut Down Resort Busiliess ·Teltphontt Tht: Pentagon sai? a "routine and n_ormal ceremony" ~ras held. M111 a''"'t c°""''' "'••• ....... •12·m1 at the time· of Harrells retirement. It srud there was no parade no ~1•111••11 wu11tlftt1M ••••~ flyby and that th h ' •11• •••'"'""'" .... ;· .... Mt-1221 ' , ere :vas . .8 1!0:: ost dinner instead oi a 1~q~et.-It Hit!! LIW ,.,, 61 A7 . " \ 1!tet'ldftlc. down to 50.000: perlOl\1 Sun. S.11 Clt1t1tilt1, C"ttl1tr1111 ltKll. Said ~arrell'S only retirement gift W3.S a frariied hof,rd 00 wbJCh WIS g::'.iki~·~~,.~~u:;~~ 1~~ .~~~~ s111 ''"11 c111111r1111, v1111 Poin1, mounted. on~ squadro!1 patch kom each of the units he had cOm.. to South e1., be•<Ms., '"111 L••-· u,.... to11t111t • • • • m~n manded m hJ.S last asSignment. In !Hf, 1 1111r.,lot erupt.ii whtn 1uthorltlo1 1rrt11«1 1t11tr1I . hundrtdi ,-'===============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-..~~~~~'!"'!~ \IOlll'IO ~(Mini l~lr1111aulno a! thf ~1!'!"1~'!'!1!'!"1'!!'!!~~~~ dHlrt fftOr! of ultz C11n11on neer f'1lm Sorlno1. T 1111r, onlv 1t1out JI) '""'••..c11 Co ~\I'-+::=;,~ l.OIA-tt:.11 ~ ;.:;"'\\,-10 ' uPI wtA.1ttllf010<Aal . l)W10M hllll lllln !Urned IWllY HI fir 11 !hf <1"ll'Nlf there 11 ftr below ~en! Yll,., ofUc;J1!1 U lcl. T• h!llll IMl"'llurt 111 Los All9f!H S11Mty w11 U.. Howevtr1 11 w1rmlnt trend. Jn Sovttllr11 Cat !omit m1y ul111C1t EISltr l(fCl l!Oll \let. Tilt hlQh temper11urt In lff Anoelu Tllffdlv II ••PKlfd to ••rite from .. 10 n wl!h 11ows In t/11 mid .soi. Tht IM~hll wl I 8110 Wlrm UP II l•m· Pf"<1f\lrq rH(f1 Info tllt -1Gs. • The 1M11nt1Jnl will conllnw lo 11•111 O•"IV~•lnd1 lt-llrnes, bllt llmptratu'" "'Ill flM tllalllly Wllll hlQti. MOllllY 11'1 f~· "°"' sos. Coastal Weather "''"" cloucty lod1~" V1rl1ble wtnc11 "letlt 111d mornl"'lf hou" b«or!'lllll wltftf4' 10 to IS kl\Otl If! t lttl'l'IOOl'll today ·~ !"'.td•Y· High today low 109. Cw•IM ·tt-mw 1turfl ,.n;, from o 11:1 5f: ll'llllld Te-mper1tur\J l'lllOf "°"" 1V to JO. W1!0t" tlm0tnl11r1 D. S•n, Moon. Tides • MoHoAv , SKand -hlt h. .• ., , • •t ;1l PJ!t, .M C'allfernia ~1~·, .. , 1n 1•n 81,~1,ci1llO .~ 1tcolld •ow "tu1~0Av 21°' p.m. 0•1 TPlt lractllt OMI !llllr "ICltloll RI....,..= «1.'nllq , •lld re:r,•t OWMtl Flrt.f high ... ... 't :l31tfn, 4.1 . .,~ ~ •o::::;r <•I-I• IM .. ~ •IOfllll Color1de ll l111r,~0M1,...., P"lrtl low .... ,., .•• ,, 3:01 &.Jft. -G.4 • • • ~~;;, l>r.FRtDRICI( C. Lut>wt& ¥ Afllil/.. 17. SCMOOL~ BOA1t1J ·ELECTION ' . """ l<•..-1• Wit CC!f!~dtr&tlll' llowtr 111-111 tllPKltd kOl'ld h'-'" 1•..C •m. t• l'l'IOVf'l l/11, IOl"Wfllf-lllflilll ~tlflo ffrttfwOlllVf"lll-tl\i~ llOll_._.,,,,,, '·'' ' 1~t~1 1t1rHd Jflff'I 111111ll\Ol'"I """1 vKt lon ' Second low ..•••••• t ::.J o.m. 1,$ _tr ~.1!!!. •.,Ktl'-rs ivtr !flt WMlittld 1t .li .... -otnlll 1 tf!UIY-¥11tff" S,un_ ..._, S~tl a.m. -Stll •:lS p.m.L--==-------_::"'::' ::"':.:::"~<::•::-:::J!o'::_.:°':!";:_L-=!"°;;;?''?•:;:""':::~T~M;;;·.;·~t ::rta!:•:l•t1i::._:: ... ~ll:_:C.::!! .... ~°"~,,...~:· l~-~~·~·N~~c._-------01 _,,,_._ In tl'iCI to61. llrrlolr•llH'u --.flf!!Ml'll\lrt' tf ~ .. ,... klJlf lllllpC:ll MWll AMiil •:• "ll'lo .... _.i:n ,.t:i, ' . •' ~ ~··~---­• • ' . " ,. ' I ., " ' • ,, ., '" "·' • • • ....,.-_ , UP'I Ttl ...... Specifl.! Attentimi · --Bubbles and Bangles. perforn1ing ·pilot wh~eS at l\1arineland in Palos Verdes, receive some kind \Vord s -and so1n~ fish -fro1n two ~iri s in the attraction's accounting .departn1ent, Billie Perry, left, and Alexa l\1 au·hesell i. Office. ~taff and man- agement personnel h'ave been feeding the sea. ao.i· 1nals since the oce·anarium \Vas struck by Operat· ing Engineers Union. • 1028 Irvine, Newport Beech, California 9'2660, Phone 642· 7061 l~•ld Pollllc•I All YU11t.tmenlJ -DAIL V PILOT 5 I _ s ·an .. Diego Nuke 'Site . Planned Monday, .April lb, ~ J Chavez 'Planning Strike, Boycott ~ ' . -SAN DIEGO . (AP) -Con- tradlqing a statement of 1 company spokeRn&D, t h e prtBklent of San Diego Gas Ii Eleetrlc Co. says the utility plaM to build a·nuclear power plant in the northwest corner · 0/ San Diego. "'Ibe SorrenJo Valley site of- fers what may ht one of the last oJ%>orlunlUes for us to place a power plant facWt,C in the city of San Diego,":Wa~ter A. Z!Uau said. He said tbe plant will be finished sometime in the 19a>s. INDIO fAP) -Cesar CUvei' United Farm 'tforkt:n Unioo, embroiled In 1 jurlidlc· t1oP&t d.Jspute wUh 1 t h e Teamtltrl,IU'Vctseveral &rape r~btl la tM lower Coacllella VaUey at daybreak tod1y. INDIO (AP) -Farm labor organizer Cesar Chavez ~ays he plans a mass exodus from ,the fields and a renewed na- tionwide table grape boycott after an announcement that contracts woo with growers in the Coachella Valley have been lost to the Teamsters Union. • THE UFWU'a contract ex· pired at midnight Saturday after several weeks or negOtia- tions. The union has been ask· ing an in;tial raise to $2.70, the maximum provided in: JM. Teamsters' four-year pact. · The valley ~uces about Oiavez' United Farm three milion · boxes '0 f EARLIER another SOO&E Workers Union; AFlrCIO, won California's annual lable grape executive Frank DeVo{'e told . the first raim labor contracts harvest of zs million boxes. the'San Diego Planning Com-with grape growers in U.S. From May through July, the mission: "We have absolutely history in 1970 following a two-region produces about 80 per· no plans to build a PoWet plant· year boycott, strikes and some cent of the nation's domestic ~re (in the Sorrento Valley)."· violence in the fields. grape supply. The utilitY bought 3f9 acres A TEAMSTERS' .,...,.i,....,man Ralph i.. -Co;tner or the in the Pensaquitos Lagoon ,..........,, Western C o n f e r e n c e of area south of Del Mar in 1965. announced on Sunday that his Teamsters threw a stack of Last Week:, the planning com· union.~ signed field worker · petitions onto a table at a · contracts' with 1~ growers, misslon rezoned '.the area to news conference Sunday. He ban , all industrial develop-contended they cont a in e d Tuaehella Valley have made il . unmistakably cle.ar they wanl UF \VU. 'l'fle :rean1sters have muscled in at the request of the growers, not the \\'Orli:e rs. in an obvious conspiracy to destroy our union. . . . . " Chavez said in a statement. "\Ve are calling on all our (riends again· to help us lli''e our wiloo mim 10lll deotNo- tlon by boyoollln( ;ropei until .the' gt'OwtrS nqotiatt a saUsfactory contract . .,, I t •,,, UFWU." he added. VOTE 1'PRIL:J17th-AND ' ELECT • I RON SHENKMAN For Board of Tm.tff1 Huntington Beach Union Hi9h School District Join Us In Electing RON SHENKMAN .I.I C-ltmle. Sv•l•llll .lrdl1 lr1W11 Ml.yor, (llV• of Hunllnglon l!INdl CQU!"Kllman, (Uy or F6\111llln Vel1ey 1'11nll •ry111t · Al Hollllldtll . Dtnnl5 Man11rs Mkll"Ht CllJllll M1yor pr<>-tem City 01 Founl&ln V1lle\.' Pretld~I, ScllOOI •r!"i HBUHSO" ~.:-"~~~·:,~'~:" Clll't M1rY Adltr ll•tll''J.lg.., l'•llcll c- CO<Jncll,man, City of Foun!•ln Velley Foun1.6rfv111~v School Board Ge•rtt 111c su. c,_r ""''' Duk• S1'11U• Mntr' Cltftl \1"111 D•lk • CQUncllm.'ln, Clty_al Huntington l!lucfl Foun!1l01 V1Uey Scflool BG#lrd l'ubllclty ment. Th• company opposed Vote Slated signatures from 4,000 at the h . Norma •r•nd•I Oltiik Frid Ytit t e rezo1ung. 5,000 {arm wprkers employed ~ou~ilwoman Fountoln v1111v sc11oo1 pto.i•d l tfllrif HllliMM L•rrift L•m""" Mr, IM Ml"I. 9W M1"911• Mtri ...,,_. "Obviously there are many seasonally in the. valley, sup-City of Hu1111n111°" 1te.ic11 K•r•11 A<kl•v SACRAMENTO (AP) A -h T Ed Ju1t ~1mpalgn Trff!Ur« Chi11 '"' ...,_...,_.,.... .... ..-JllN Wlkll hurdles to be cleared,".Zl.tlau · -porting t e eamsters. cou11Cllman, c11., ot FGU1111ln Villty .1.Ueft T. K"'""' said. "We will have to make JlUle 12 special election to fill J..-r-, M11rwiv c1mpa1g11 c1111rm1n nwne ......... studies, including th(l: se~t of former Assembly CHAVEZ CALLED the coonc11m11n:c11-,orHunt1na10<iBNcro wm11 ... D.Arrm1r1"' 111' w-• -S · fieorgt Seti! Jtr11M M. I•"" D1vhl 1111111 ..... v..-engineering eval!ij-tions, peaker Bob Monagan ol ' Teamster atreement ' ' a Mayor, cnv of FOV1V11n v.u,., Allft• ••v 1 ~1rt111 1111 '"'vl seismic evalualio~ and en-Tracy was called by Gov. Ron-sweetheart contract. "•~ tor 11., 1t1t c"'"""" ,. er.1 .... s11,. ..... 11 vironmental impact evalua·,_:al'.'.'.d___'__Rea".""g~an".'.;__. --~<::::._ _ __:_"The~'.___'.f~ar'."m'.';w~o)l'rk".'er~s _i"'.n~th~e~~~~~~·'.,,.".,,." .,,.'.,,.· ".,,.".,,."'~".,,.c.,,.•m.,,. .. .,,.•.,,.•.,,.•.,,."'.,,.'~~-~m.,,.•.,,.•.,,.".,,.".,,."'.,,.-.,,.· -~-.,,.""~'"'~1.,,.-~·.,,.•.,,.•-~.,,.·~~~~~ tions. We will also have to go through numerous regulatory p~eding;!J." HE SAID THE utili_ty ex· ~ to begin eartl¥juake StudThs or the area · in a year or ,two, but hasn't chosen a starting date for construction yet. sod&E. owns a share of an operating nuclear plant at San Onaffe in northern San Diego Oounty-and-ts planning ~two new generators·there. · Appeals Court SACRAMENTO (AP) -Los .-Angeles ,Superior Court Judge James H. Hastings, 55, was nominated by Gov. Ronald Reagan as associate justice of the 2nd District COurt of Ap. peal in Los Angeles. The nomination is subject to con- firmation by the Commission on Judicial Appointments. · 'Tliroatl Seized FRESNO (AP) -Tbe controversial adult movie, "Deep Throat," has been ·seized by Fresno County shertrrs~ deputies. · A department spokesman said a warrant l ~·as issued by Municipal C'oort Judge James V. Paige after investigators rrom the department ~iewed the film, which \\'as in it! loth week in a Fresno theater. No arrests were-made. Introducing a $13,500 sedan that Promises the most remarkable driving experience of your life: the new Mercedes-Benz 450SE Y EARS OF intense engineering Mort - ' wae iawatedin the new Mm:edes- Jlenz 4SOSE. Technical advances~ where combine to produce handliJlg teSpODSe, secUrity and stability thatjnay well surpass any Mercedes-11enz sedan yet built, according to the engineers. New front suspension This cai's sense of conuol is uncanny. The 450SE goes wh4re. you aim. ir-,S<) precisely, that even veteran Mcrcf;d_cs- BCnz drivers may find themselves as· tonishc<f. --- each wheel. Purpose: to bathe all four disc brakes in a steady gust of air. No domestic Jwniry sedan even employs 4-wheel disc-brakes. Mercedes-Benz has used this system in its sedans for nearly a decade. Of course, the 450SE carries on in this uildition. - Shaped in the wiiicl tunnel Its designers gave the450SEashapelhat owes much ta: aerodynamics~ . te(l1, standard equiprnenJincludelpouiia steering and brakes; automatic irll'dlllii- sion; electric windows; AM/PM stereo receiver; tintC!I aJw; twin front foe lights and-mmt-and rear-seat annrats. -The brie f option li11 includes: leather upholstery; elecuic sun roof a filled luggage. · · • The final lipificuce The 450SE incorporates more iaf•IJI rmMi'iifl)iiiliny Mcra:aes.Benz in history. Mettedc .. Beaz mocor from $16,594• to $6,761• • Mercedes-Beaz offers a vaat r•nse or modds. Here are su11ated retail pricat for 8 of the most popular types: 450SLC Coape 4>0SLCoop</ltOld>lu -450SEL Sedan 450SESedan 280Coupc. ·2soSectan 220 Scdan 220 Die$el Sedan $t""4 .. ._ St ..... $13,491 $1o,llN $ ,,. •• ,...., $ 6,'MI_ •YM Cont: pon of entry. atluriw of •w;pon111le:i. cwhcr .opdons, IUtc IDd locel utXe1, lf enr.~ 197), Mercrdes-BeQO(Nonh Amtrka, Inc. ON lUESDAY> APRIL 17, IT WILL BE The reason: a zero .suering offset fron! suspension system, adap1Cli from the 180-mph C-111 experimental coupe. Rear suspension design is the same fully independent system you will find on the 450SL. And radial-ply lires arc - -Massive windshield A'.ipers a"" mean I IO harness the caf s airflow IO ,lay flat on thcglass,cvcnatmaximum speeds. Vanes on the forward pillars anc!' catch gullcrs on the rear window l!t• placed · there to scoop rain over the roof and away from lflc side and rear _windo"'.S. Ribbed taillight lenses were designed to use the cats own air turbulence as a constant ''scrubbc.i' in rain and slush- staying visible to following uallic. Some of it you can see, like massm Jocks fined at eVery door; sturdy wind- shield anddoof pillars; wraparound front and rear bumpers; lavishly padded in- terior. Some safety thinking is invisible; like the fuel tank mounted inboard over the icar axle as far from harm's way as the engineers could devise-then en- cased in steel bulkheads. 3 FOR q 1'1741 I 1f.f 1S" I 1'176 I /'117 Th-r~e ne.w School Board. Members; A ne~ ~chool Board -.,.,.~-ort!Y :for 1he. Next Four yea.Y.s · .... .... .... it - You. have. ihree .votes oh. Tuesd~. ~ Use. ihel't\ fo elect a respo"sive ancl Resf"'f\S ible. School 'B-oar-cl JANE. BOYD ·-. .)( NORMAN BROWNE. )( . ' ' Ml CHAEL SAGAR )( ~ 11111 .. """""""'..,. .... .., k...,1 .ni,...-.. Miiter c.a1n-. ,. • .....,,. For • ride to Jhe-polla, C•ll 497-15!5 • • , standard equipment. .§=;;=;n-. Nt:f!J front susplnJion adapt1djrom C·l 11 expni· mn:lal 1portJ cor . The 450SE's dcsi81)crs wanted to keep the car as unru1lled as possiblc- cvcn in sudden, violent maneuvers.· 2.1 turns Iock·to-lock · An already superb power steering sys- tem was reworked. to transmit an even surer road feel. Steering response has been improved, too: The 450SE goes from full left to full right in only 2.7 turns of the steering wheel-a figure un- matched by any domestic luxury sedan. Under the hood is a 4.5 litrc·clcc· tronical!y fucl-injectedV-8. And specifi- cally designed 10 mate with this engine is a 3-specd automatic gcarttm. with-a :tloor-mounted sltift lever. A disc brake on eVery wheel Jo the new M<rccdcs-Benz4SOSEa ring of air scoops is built into the inside of Compact outside, swprising inside This spacious 5-passengcr sedan only needs a turning circle of 37.5 feet- morc than -7 f eet smaller than any do- mestic luxury sedan. The 450SE itself is smaller, .too. It is narrower and over 2.9 feet shorur. Surprise: in most vital 'resi>ccts, this new Mercede&-Benz gift's you equal room inside. And there is nzore trunk space. lmitatioa'\o a iemarltable aperience A new Mercedes-Benz inevitably stirs · wide interest. So call your authori2" -- dealer soon and.arrange a test driw. A Cf>lOI' brochure on:ui. new•50SB and other fuOdels will be mailed ID you upon sending the coupon below. Frontdoorsthatlneathe -r----, The 450SE's built-in air-conditioning I '® ., -1 system is designed to prevent jarring I blasts of frigid air; instead, controls arc I· J im Slem.t lmperts, Inc. I infinitely adjustable for temperaturi· I 120 w. w.,,..~ Av•ttu• • I Cooling or warriting air is channcllccf'.....,,,,_ , S111t• A.1t1, C•l1ferftl1 92707 not just through separate instrument I 1 I panel vents but also via hidden outlets Please send me your ful1<01or ...,. in both/ronl doors. I chwcoftbcMczccdu-Bcruunotw .... I A vacuum-operated central locking I N•m< I system -is-also built into your 450SE. 1.""""" One twist of the key in the outside 0 .,,____________ I drivers door lock silently secures all 4 I ... ~ '• I doors, the think lid and ihe gas pon, · L-:=.J Be , •-Iha , -•'·'-, T<I----;;:;::::::=:;::;;;;;:;;;= s1Wa t au.coUUILlUlllDI sys. ------- ' Jim Siemon~ Jmports,.Inc. 120 w. Warl)tt Avenue, Santa An~ cal!Iornia 92101Phone:11•-546-411' • ·-.... • I • .:; • . , • .., • ·• DAD1Y PIL,OT EDITORIAL PA.GE ' ....................... c.. •'-..... - Conflict ln a Congressional heal'ing room i• Waabinglon D.e. l11t Wffk, a ICflne that could al!ect much of Orange County was played out. · . The issue: control of the county's most powerful lanoowner and the fUture. of tbe 83,000-aore· Irvine , Ranch. • The !aces were familiar. Sen . Wilbur Mills (!)-Ark.)· and his Houoe Ways and Means Committee, probing the Junctions or the James Irvine Foundation. Joan Irvine Smith charging that the ~·oundation ls ·deUberately evading requirements ol the Tax Reform Act of 1969. Foundation attorney Howard J. Privett rebutUng her ctiMges. ' . I The Tax Reform Act set new standards foi charitable ' foundations . Among .other things, they were given 10 . 1 years to dive!t themselves ol holdings tn excess of. 20 percent In any one company. · . · · The James lrVine Foundation owns 54.5 percent • of the Irvine Company's stock, under terms o.f an in· denture · set .up !n 1937 by Mrs. 5'\llth's grandfather, James Irvine JI. Mrs. Smith owns 21.1 percent ol the stock· and the balance is divided ""long other Irvine family members. · . The Foundation's indenture opecifies that iu Irvine stock be kept intact and not dispooed of "piecemeal" and lberein lies · a direct conflict wllh the Tax Reform · Act. Since an indenture of trust can only be amended in tbe COW1Jd he Foundation has flied a lawsuit to Ibis end ·ana lbe court's ruling this summer may resolve the con1lict;---, -11•1 a big g~e .. being played in the courts, behind the scenes and even-in the national arena. ' End? ~· .. the .,pt{ market. But aU thiJ will take lime. And tbey have 11111il 1979. · There iJ no reason to expect any abrupt. $rig.,. in Irvine operations, now in hfgb gear for devtltdpment of tbe giant nnclJ OOldin~s. _ · · But tbe current activity does spur hope that some, lon&-ttandlng conflicts eventually will be resolved, and this at least Is rea50n !or relief. Judge 'Knows the Law . U.S. District Judge William Jones displayed a. fine . undemanding ol the workingt of democracy -and considerable courage-when he ordered a halt to tile ·dismantling ol the Office-of Economic Opportunity and lo termination of federal funding for anti-poverty pro-grams. , The unilateral action ol the Nixon .A ation tn moving to close down OEO, tran!lfer so e 'if !L'I pro- grams to .. other.agencies and dump the re in the laps of' local aut'1arities·-if they want \)>em ntinued - was illegal, niled Jud~e\Jones. He therefore en1oined Acting OEO Dil:ectoi'Howard Phillips from contintilng the dismantling procedure launched in Jailuary on Presidehtial orders. The President, be said in a 40-page opinion, does not have the authority to halt programs authorized and funded by Congress, without .congressional approval. "If the power sought here were found valid," said -Judge Jones, "No barrier w.ouJd remajn to the execu· tlve-ignoring any and all congressional authorizations if be deemed them, no matter how conscientiously, t.o be contrary to the needs of the nation." ·· There "'°"" to be no question that the Foundation 1 \Oill have a Jess pomrlul role in operation of the Irvine Coinpany .. When the legal maneuvering is completed ..A!IJl vii~ of tlle Irvine lltock established by appraisal, more ·than half of the Foundatioo'1 holdings could go on • IJ). other words, the law is ·the law, even iflou per· ~onally disagree with jt (~s any good 14law an , order" . candidate would confirm), and in a democracy laws are neither inade nor overturned by individuals. •i11R. P~HIPlMT, W!IAfS DAT P«IVILtfi YOU USE TO MEEP YOIJ~ rAlS OUTJA TKOUSlE?' ----·-· ---- Dumb ·smart Man One oL the durtibest smart men in America 'is Dr. Edward Teller, the nuclear pbysicist nnd Nobel Prize win- ner. It puules me how one man can know so much and JO fittle at the same time. Recently, at a p.d> lie functiao, in Jndo> nesla, ll\'. Teller·~ . tigated 'lhoie ·eom.. anmenlllliia Who:ire impedlni: tllt c1e .. 1. . opm<ohaf l'Duc!eer reaci«'I lit the 'U.S. seca.,. of their pro-. tests that the reac- tors wwld raise watir lemperstures md threateD: fish life, he Mtid, the whole program has been delayed at least· two years, , "I differ from the environmentalists," he stated. "I like people more and fish less." CONSU>ER that statement, both in "'·hat it d:ys and what It leav's un9:ald. It· ·sugge1ts that the environmentalists like people 1.,. sod fish more -which Is i>ut· ... ting the whole argument upside down. The reason environmentalists care about the fllh ls that once you brealt.-a link in -• the great chain of life, you imperil all • human society. It is grossly un!air to imply that en- vironmentalist! are Jo pp y sen- tlment.ali.sls shedding copious tears over sharks and sting rays, while ignoring the true needs of people. Quit~ t~ reverse : tht environmentalists know that the ultimate welfare of man depends upon our safeguardin g the weUare of the other Uoks in the chain. ·rr IS the coarse and pragmatic short. term "realista" llke Dr. Teller who ac- tu3UY care little more about people than they do abQ\fl fish; wlefare so concerned with "power" and "energy" and "productlon" that they suicidally plunge ahead into whatever technological pro- gram seems to promiae "growth" - even though such growth is at the ex- pense of the permanent . health and homeostasis of our pl'anet. ~ Of course the Dr. Te.llers are not "dumb." They are brilliant men, who prove_ once a"gain that brilliance is not enough ; it must· be allied with vision, Dear Gloomy Gus It's time the ecologists get going on "pollution of the mind." CouJd be a little late! 8. c. OltMl'I' Out '-""' •rt 1111bmltt.I b"f ,,-.,. .... 411 Mt MC111Ur1/"f rl'flKt fllt .,... ., .. ...~. hfllll .,...., "' """· ,. ....... , ...... 0.0'1' , ..... humility, and hum.aneoess, if it is not to destroy--the very structure it is so am·· bltii>us to create. If you. _are stubborn, and-Vain, and rigid, and self-justifying, then the smarur you are, the more dangerous you are. . ' l.t is not a quest!Ori ol uliktng fish more'' or "liking people more."• It is a question of recognizing that the balance of nature calls for oooperation, not con- flict ; for cultivation, nol eradication; for reverence, not ruthlesmesa; for respect- ing the basic fragility ol the eco-system by making no changes that might have irreversible consequences. 11fE ·DDT way to thow that we like people more· is by refusing to gnU.fy our greedy desire for "more" of everything, and by treating the globe we live on a1 a legacy we must pass on to the future. If the fish go, you ·can bet that school will soon be out for us as well. The Greeks Called It 'E~phora' f\tario ·Pel , "¥.'han that Aprill with his Titxes Harshe," lntellectual Dlgei;t. April J9i3. writes, "The purpose of taxation throughola history has been to support ':" rxi slinS' governments. The terminology \'aries from period to period and from . countyy to couotry. What does not vary ls the iJ\t(ilutlon Itself." "The,.oldest form of lualion oo reconf is the iyltent of. tithes on the produce of the land. It amounted to one-fifth ol \\"hatever was produced in the Egypt or rhe Pharaohs, two-tenths in the Palestine o( the early Hebrev>'s: one fourth in King Asoka's ancient India ." "THE ANCIENT Greeks \\'ere the first EDITORIAL RESEARCH to introduce a complex system cf lax· atlon of which we have fairly complite aceow)ts. Their eisplton. (literally, ·~ brloglng,') bore close resemblance to an income tax.'' "The Romans systematized ta1ation over a 700-year pcriQd, ultimately making ii sotne\\·hat like \\'hat it Is today. The "·o.rd 'tax.' ilself comes from their language ... In the seventh and eighth centuries, the ?i.1erovlngian and Caro-- lingian kings of France still had their fiscus, to which they IJl\fixed the \\·ord s1ctr ('holy'), .•. The tenn was used lroolcally by the people: in!lead of 'boly tax bur.eau.• it got to mean 'damned tax bureau. I tt • "!MONG THE Roman languages, t\vo general tendencies are noticeable. One is to make the taxpayer feel good by calling him ·a 'contributor.' The other is the tendency to 'perceive' or 'exact' taxes rnther than 'collect' them. . . .The Portuguese have a picturesque term for imposing taxes, ·tancar lmpostos' to 'launch' or 'hurl' taxes at the vlctim ." f Nixon Sees Another South. K .orea f ,Viet ·support Disag~e~ement \VASHINGTON -South Vietnam President 'Thieu's visit to San C\emeilte and \Vashington brought into focus ir- reconcilable issues between President Nix.on an1 his opposition on American responsibilities in Indochina. .. President Nixon, it is now d\ticlosed, wishes to do more _ ~ \.. than "prop up" the ,,,._.._ Thieu government. Essentially, the com· mitment he made to Thieu was the use of American political, economic and mili- tary power to create 'a government so sta- ble and secure that it wOOld attract foreign investment for conUnulog development. The tone of their joint communique was di£ferent in emphasis than the speeches and statements which ·a~­ companied the 'Vietnam cease-fire. The emphasis then was upon as&ring South Vietna1n a right to exist. Now the emphasis· Is upon making South Vietnam into another Soulh Korea . TRE INFERENCE can sensibly be drawn that such an undertaking would have an ultimate price tag -RlDDing into the billions of dollars for economic- (rucHARD WILSO~ lnllitary aid and political backup. 1t would be a long·run program protected by the continuihg presence of American airpower. This perception probably does not cor- respond lo the prevailing view in . Congress favorihg a p r Q g r e l! s l v e disengagement all down the line in lndochina. And not only in Indochina. · De!ense Secretary Elliot-Richardson has sensed a growing se'ntiment for toding n1ilitary assistance as it has been known in the pa.st and is maldJ}g a detennined _ defense of the prcsram on a world-wide scale. Legislation introduced by Senator J. William F\ilbright to terminate military aid over a ly,·o-year period prol>ably will have a more favorable reception th~n PJ]Vious proposals. Reaction against the cOfilinuJng bombing of CambQi:Ha is another indication of a hardening attitude in Congress agahtst continued in4 volvemenl. THE PRESlDENl''S determination in Cambodia is probably correctly,asisessed as a measure of what he~may do in Viet- nam itself if infillration ot troops and equipment from the North continues. The President docs not recogni:.e Jlmltatiorui, constitutional or otherwise, on his freedom or action if violations of the cease-fire pose what he jui;iges to be a threat to the mili~ry stabillty of South Vietnam. All these factors bring into question the President's real inteotlonl in Indochina ; or. at least, they cause his opponents to . express publicly suspicions 'that he is back on the road to war. The validity of such suspicions can also be 'Questioned because-, on the whole, President Nlxon has been a better judge of how far he can go than those who de· ·lriand that he· ceJISe all operations in -lndocblna. . IN ANOTHER way President Nixon maddens his critics. He will not give . them absolulion for having opposed his policies In the past, but instead tries to rally the majority which has supported him for future tests. He thus recognizes that concilialion in ttlls country can be brought about only by the aba,ndonmerit of hia insUnctive juQgnrent on what is rlghl. If conciliation were his clllef motiva- tion · he v.oold not have 'received Presi- dent Thieu as be did, nor have promised him !ht material support which<(bigress has not y·et authorized. Faced by thlt resolve oo NI.mu's part. his oppo1ition is trying to find ways to limit his power which it could not find before the cease-fire. and return of prisoners of war. The usual unrealistic talk about impeachment is heard. Legalistic arguments-1« offered that repeal of the Gulf Qf Tonkin Resolution withdrew Nixon's authority to act in Indochina. Legalisms have not prevented Nixon from acting in the past, oor are they likely to do so in the future. The President's hands, however, can be tied. Congress cannot force him to spend the money It appropriates, but it can refuse to provide the funds fo r what he desires to.do. This Is its remedy if it "'ishes to frustrate the -San Clemente agreement between Thieu and Nixon. At the moment, it is doubtful if the con· gressional oppasitlon can succeed in lying up: the President. Survey Warns of Trouble iri the1 Streets This Summer WASHINGTON Oln inous reports. locked In fhe files of Attorney General Richard Kleindien~t. flatly dispu te his · public statement that the days of racial tension in the cities "might possibly be behind US'. ' The truth is that the J115ticc Depart· ment is deeply ap- prehensive a b o u t rrooble In the street! this summer. A sur- vey of poilible lrOO· ble spo(s,_Jntenaca (Of' otfidal eyes only, W""J" that tensloos are iising in city ghettos, millQrily com· munlUes and distr8ssed areas across the country .. mE SURVEY, conducted by th~ Justice Deparlmt!'l's Community Refa· -Se<vtce._JIUl8e&IJ the trouble could ·he lriUered, Ironically, by Presl~ent N_lxon' cu~clcs in social programs. We have seen 'i c:cpy of the findings, wbl<h Kleindienst and his top aides are keeping Wider loclt and key. - Typical Is this r<port from San Diego: "1'1ht ~ w-morw.. to !ht President's budget ·action \\'as stunned disappointment and confUllon. Now these feelings are being translerred into anger and resentment. Seven hundred teachers are being fired. ?i.fost or them are minorities. Child centers are closing ... Mothers who relied on child care centers cannot \\.'Ork. Unemployed fathen. are further discouraged by longer w1emplo)'· ment lines. "TAI)\ on the streets is defeatist and someti1nes 1nilltnnl • . . Youth are harden hit &nd represent the gt-11atest thrt!flt to the community trnnqullity. Ac· conllng 10 a Neighborhood Hoose cowiselor, they cannot contain for long their anger .and fruslraUon without some ouUet or 11ucct5a. '' U)> the coast In Los Angeles, accon!ing to the survey, the peace may be threatened this summer by "youth gang activity" and "thre1~ cutbacks of f~rnl programs," ·wama -the survey: ''.Fears have been .. pnssed that lhe phaseout of federal categorical grants will fo~ t.hclu!ands oL tetnngers Into Idleness . . • 'J"ht; lo!" Angeles Indian population 'is the lsrgest In lhc llnlted States (~\000.70,000). There , JACK, ANDERSON is no predicting with accuracy how they will react to conditions. arising out or Wounded Knee." ACROSS the counlry in New York City, states the survey, there are "grumblings" about-res or t·i n-g to ''violence," It de!cribes "polarization betwttn the white ethnic communities and lhe bl@ck and La.Uno communities over con1ntutftty control" and cautions against "potenlinl violence during the spring bet~·een AJro- American, Puerto Rican, Asian and other groups on the cnllcge-campus.'' 1 Across U1e Hudson, "factors fueling tensions ln Newark Include the polartza. lion t>etween blacks and whites; the phaseout ot1eder&l progfafn!; unemplo)r- mc.nt among min2rltles a d veteranll i dail}' school crises; and b aCk-White con- frontation within the poUce deportment." In Musachusttts; 'lhert Is "potential ror violence during the summer ... partit'Ularly in Lynn1 Revere and New I . Bedford ." The Justice Department is also troubled over a "series of crisis situotlons in the state prison system" and the "unemployment situation a~ pears to be critical, particularly in those cities th.at have defense-related · in- dustries ... "INTEGRATIONISTS and non · in- tegretlonJsts are gearing up" in Boston, says the report, for "school boycotts, plcketirig, demonstatlons, etc." And tensions" between landlords and tenants i·are likely to. cause ' problems this sum· liltt in Spflngflekt" The survey suggests that i n PemsylvanJa "disturbances are following a trend !rom the large metropolitan ireu to the smaller towns," but warns that the small towns often don't have the "law enforcement BIPhlsllcatloo to prop- erly handle tmslon allllaUoos." Down South, trouble ts expected in Alabama. "A number or confrontations have occurred In protest-of alleged police brulallly , . .' Ille report alleces. "Many black comnumltfes art oreaniz'1d and have capacttlee"for Immediate con- frontation with "T pa!Jce should a preciJ>itous act occur. 1be 'poicntial for conflict during lhe summer is very real .. , A1aas demoostratioos over education, Wleqiployment and injusllce are also "in the planning stage and will come as early as May and can be expected to be well •organized before the summer Is over." In Birmingham. "there are widest)read rumors of plans by the poor to take to the streets ln protest over antipoverty program cuts." Racial tensions are also reported in Georgia and a black-white coo!rontaUon is expected in the "raclaUy rense rural town!!..of.Sparta. "A numbu oltowns, in· Cluding Lavonia, Colllmbus, Augusta and Valdosta," adds the report, "continue to have pollct-e0mmunlty problems which ~ are producing tension." ln<lcedi "racial tenilons are cipected to increase generally over the state." . FINALLY, "demons1ratlooa will prob- ably , occur tbrotJibout the oprjng and ear1y smnmer" lff the n~Uon*s ~captta1. Tho rtport speaks ol "interdepartmental police tension" and "increased use by police of pby>ical l0rce," adding: "There js some concern In tbe ~er clty sur- rolinding the clrcumatances In the-arrest' of two suspeC\I tn the (Sen. John) SleMis shooting." Conclui3es the report: "The local temperament, combined with the nationally organized demonstrations will increase the tension in D.C. throuihoul the summer.'" ORANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N, Weerl, P11blislier Th omas· Keev,l, Editor Rorba ra Krcib ic lt Edltoria< Page Ed itor The <'dllnriRI l>IU:C Of 1hc r>til)• Piiot 1ttk!I to lnlnnn and 111ln1u- h1t l! rt•ldl'f"ll by prtst•nting lhi~ nc11.·gpaper'1 opl!Won~ end con1· mental")' un tnptct or intf're!l l 11nl.1 ~lanUicancc.._ ~ pro\'idlng a fnruni fror the exprea1lon !"If 1)ur re11dt",..-. ol1ll'llon.t. and bl' prcsl'ntlnit 1n1• d \'er&e ,vlew1K1lnt1 of tnfonncd ob· sf'n•crs .. nd ~f)Ok&tmen oo 1Ql)lcs of Ille d~. Jlonday,-April 16, 1973 ' . ' _, t"l"-~.._---~-~·---· -- I --·. .. • ' I ' • • , . • • • • ., • • ... • { ·' "" ·n "' '"' .•ni qo " -u. < " ,,, '" " <I " • ' I " ' II ·r J taster 'Bunny & ~is''Jops)lrints''·: .. l ' • ' • .. T if Ir . •I ,. ' h ... . ' · ... are in . our Carousel Court daily and ,Jots_. of magic. Magic Land of dz through alJ the.ir . hippity-hopping they pr~sents four ~hows daily t~ru Friday at J . are ·taking time to sit long enough or · 2,3i4:30 and 7 p.m. Saturday shows at · . _. " ' spe~ial Easter photos. Bring the c~il~ 12:30, 2, 3 and 4 p.m. For our shoppers ~outh P.oast ... a wa· ~ d~en . All week lQng, we also promise the magic of 90 stores await ~ you. cJ \I J 186 " , , BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA ~ ' .. C!>VER-85 FINE.STORES.A,ND•SERVICES ;,. .'CEPAR'FMENi-S:rORES ..• May Co.• Sears • WOMEN'S APPA EL ... Albert's Hosiery • Al roe • Mr . Ell (ot's • ChrlS' Fashions ' ~ l r ~ Finn's • Gene's • Greta's • House pf·N ine •Hubbub • Jud 's • L.arJe Bryant • Lillia n's • J oseph M agnin • Marlene Fabrique • Miss H awaii • Sabr~na •The Wet Seal • Young "Maternity • Zelig's CasuaLEashions • MEN'SAPPAaEL, •.• Carat's • Chasln's •Gentry, Ltd.• H arris & F rank • Hoelscher's •Prep Sh_cp •Rebe l Shlop •Tie Rack • CHILDREN'.S 1 APPAREL ... Bergstrom's Baby News • FAMILY SHOES •• ·,Qudes-Ba rnett •Innes Shoes • Tho m McAn •WOMEN'S SHOES ... C.H. Baker • Cameo • Field 's • Joyc:e Shoe .'. Tree • Leed's •CHILDREN'S SHOES .. , Cabot's • HOME FU~Nl!DHINGS .. Golden Needle • Kouse of Fabrics • Singer • Udoff 's •V ARIETY-DRUGS ... South Coa st Drug , . . . --' ' -•.F. W. Woolworth~ JEWEL.RY'GIFTS ••• Chic Accessories• Galleon • Jewels by J oseph • Keven Jewelers • George Murray • Pace Sett!'r • Raj of India • Raj l ~rnational • Sunset House • Weisfi!'ld's •FOOD-CANDY, .• HickoryF.arms •Lindberg Nutrition • See's • RESTAURANTS. ••• Coaches Corner • Harvest H6use •Hungry Tiger • Kaplan's ' •.Le Petit Cafe • Riviera • SPECIAL, i:v SHOPS .•• A La Card • Cline's • Decorator Line • H ouse of Terry ··Pickwick B ookshop • Rooten 's Ltiggage • Sports Plaza • Tinder , El.~~. T~y C_enter • Wallichs • .Westen.'s.Cameras ·• !:iJ:RVICES . · ... Bak Port~ai·t Studi.o • 6etter Barbers • ~un..Nichols Optometrist •. Crowning•Glory l:leau!y Salon • House. ' of Ta1lonn •On the Go T av I • 1s au S Ion• FINA CIAL , • vco Savings & Loan • BaQk of America •Crocker Bank • First West!''!' Bank • Ho usehold Finance ~·=s·omr. u~ ".'SOUili"'enASI ~VilllGt;~'":B& UiUQUE'"°SHOPS" & RESTAURANlS ~ , I ' • • .• J l l -... • . ' • ~·-- " ' _, -f DAil V PILO'. • ' ·Easr er W ee k: Magic 'Tiffie at outh . Coast · Plaza --r-.-- . -• Real Rabbits--Two K inds ' v · . . ' ·Remember Her? ' • Motner's Day is not too . ' far awai', plan now for that special gi~. I · Your Portrait! ·- SOUTH COAST . PLAZA ~. ' . v Spring .ls the-time for rabbit. at South Coast Plaza. ltnd lh<!re are plentr of live ones there -· both the two-foot kind (above? aJid the four-foot kind (right). Name of the man above reall y ts Peter Rabbitt and he lives in Newport Beach wh ere the Rabbitt .family · home is at 1806 Leeward Lane. Little Rabbitts in- clude (from left) Kelly, 8; Chris, 2; and Katie, 7. The Easter Rabbit they met at t he Plaza is shown at right with some of his little rabbits. They're on d iSplay· daily at Carousel Court. BAK · S:TUDIO 549-2103 • . . Royal Worcester Egg Coddlers ' Remember egg-shell? Haired In 11$ time as perftci package. Air-light. Waler-light. Classic design. Unsullat>le for bolllng eggs in. Couldn't se ason. Cooldn't peek, check progress. Enler Royal WorcMler of England. Eo; Codr:lle;rs, Theory simple. Brea_K egg In cup. Acid salt. Pepper. Butter. Whatever. Screw on cap. Plunge in boilil'lQ water. Open cap, !tee what's what. Underdone? Rep lace, cook more. Done? Eat from cup. COflven!ent •. Lovely. . ' '9" the pair. Dou.hie size cup '6" each. e SILYEI • 01ns ~&&&t,~ .. • /; /• \. , SOUTH COA PLAZA Bristot ol the Son Diego Fi:wy .. Costa Mtsa Phone: 54().26V-- ·tte~ -t ke Ion~ loo k of -fu.~hi on J.ti ~e ~ Jr-:'. of Ci.!~ ... nio.. d~s1g vie.d 1rt Ein cron(]:fbl ye.&"kl' pink. or blu.e.,old-t'o.$ho n c~a rm -lu.cke-d dnd -flouncea and , lo.ce -h>imrned --·· 5· lo ~- llf ~eo.t ~~ e CHINA e CRYSTAL lllllllllllllllllJ.lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllll .I · FAM.DUS · MAKER·S _· 1 ---·------WAREHOUSE SALE ~ - :: 10,000 DOUBLE KNIT SUITS AND SPORT -:: COATS! We've done it again! The nations third . § largesf manufacturer of quality mens clothing -= has again · selected our stores for this very important event. Here's brand new fashion = styling for you,. AND unprecedented savings. OAIL Y PILOT Slllf PhCll05 § Just ask any of our customers! HEADED FOR MESA Eddie A't'caro Racetrack Calculator =) ---------------------\Vhat could a Yale pro-_ lessor, a Broadway actor, and - jockey Eddie Arcaro have in --common? An interest in Thoroughbred racing, for one thing, and in · = -picking winners. Y a 1 e -educated professor Alton Kel sey. through the en· courageme11t of ·Michael Cox, : a Broadway vet-eran . --developed .the "principle of : established class." which. in = laymen 's terms .means that =: the Thoroughbred class is best : mea sured by the size of the = -purses a horse has competed - for successfully in the past. =: Prof. Kelsey transposed this = -formula onto a slide rule-like tle\·ice "'ilh an amazing record = • fo r accuracy in picklng "·in· --ncrs. The invention i s _ n1arkcted under the name = "Kel co Calculat or'. = 1\lay Company \'isitors "'ill - · te able to meet Prof. Kel sey, : actor.. Cox, and j~k,eys Eddi e - Arcaro and Con Errico. and learn al! al)out \Vinnin~ at the = tracks wi\h the Ke I co Calculator at the South Coast Plaza Store Tuesday from 11 = -a.n1. to I p.m. Da tes Set for 'Wizard of Oz' ---------------- . , DOUBLE KNIT DOUBLE KNIT Famous Maker Factory Fresh Vast Selection PRICE Special Credit Accounfs available or BankAme ri_ca rd & Master Cha rge · s75 Coats ~ ........ 37.50 580 Oe~ ....... ~. 40.00 585 Coats.: ......... 42.50 , s95 Coats ........... 4 7 .50 590 Suits.:: ..... : ... 45.00 s100 Suits .. ; ....... ~. 50.00 5125 Suits .... : ....... 62.50 . .. '41. " Soulh Co3:;l Plaza visitors = during Easter week will be = treated to The Mag~ La = of Oz -one of the most U-= -nique programs ever present-: cd! :c ~OEtSCHER'S-; . . ~ . f h . Il 's a magical experience :c • and one that include~ an en-_ -· ---------. ----= ------------------------ , -------- -- ------ --· - -- -----------------·--------------------------------·chantig magld JhoW, feat-= You're thi5 close to being tnuch bett~r dr~sed 11 halt the prlctl /.... . -..;,,. = uring charachters from the =:------------,-------J popular chHdren's fairytale, : '" "Wizard of OZ." : . COSTA MESA· --' ANAHEIM , The Wizard1s show, a creat-= 33l3 BrlstDI SI. '47 North L.oara HUNTINGTON BEACH n Huntington Center 1Beectt l "ed11'19er --------· - • io ocr11e. ~ou.. Ive ConcePf fea,turing live act· -E: South Coa~LP11.,.__ ,Anah•lm Center ors, puppets ana magic In a : -171•1 $.l0-<1140 !71•1 77"291 OIANGf ,1°'4 N. Ol'.-ige Mell Mill of Ot-tn0t· {71•) '91·7J61 !71•) 192-337~ -... • .. 1 . ---fantasy, setting. will be per· ;:-;-------------------f rqrmed four times dally this = -week ln the carousel at 2, 3, : LOS ANGIUS PASADINA ALHAMllA ·GLENDALE RIVIASIDE : :!! .~~~. ~.f-~:30~~~~ iii I II llllll lllllllllllltlllllfllllllllllllllllllllllllll 111111111 L.... 11111111111111111111111111111111 llllllltt 4 p.m. , · t • ··• --· ....... ... • • . . -, •• "' . I . . • . ' .. • Ecology Hopefuls Triump_h SANTA CRUZ (AP) '1' hr e e "environmentalist" candidates have won cify coun· cil seats easily over six oppon· • ~..,_ cnls. ---:-... - - .. , ...,._ . . • 1.1ond11y Apr il 16, l~?J • UAIL Y PILOT fJ ltt Fo1rtatnin V nl'ey Environmental concerns of ''ill head the progr~m telling next sesslon. Classes are hel the Southern C111ifomia Edison students of the concl'rns aud in room 301. ·· Con1pany and a Jook al hOw svlut1011s ol ihe po<1'e r coin· 1''ut1Jrt• sessions wlll ~d; air quality is coptrollcd ure pan)'. talks on snnitaUon. waterf the two topics explored duri ng Also on the progra1n '~Ill ~. qualit y control. recycling el the second part of the ~ Or~ \\'ells ~f U!e Air Pollu-forts. refuse disposal, cit En v irorunental Awareness h0J1 ~ontrol D1s~rict. w~o wi~I plnn ning, population trend series being held at Fountain exp_lain. ho\v air quality 1s arid !he oil industrv. Key issues in the. campair.n included saving tl}e area's redwood trees, preserving the coaslline from high rise hotels and halting urbanization1 'all supoorted by the winners. The winners -Burt Muhly,. Viri;:inia L. Shar11 and Sally.. DiCirolamo -had help from UC students here along with Valley High Schoo.I \Vedncsday maintained, rt' lat e the. The eight-part ~cries w1H evenings at 7 p.1n, 1nethods Of' establishing st and-run ihrough Ma v 16 "all who According to instructor Bob ar~s ~1cptalk '.lbout. currrnt 11re concerned ;1bout the en- Rolle. Robert B. Beck, south ~eg1sla.t1on ~ffee!Jng air qunliry \·ironrnl!nt are -'invited to -att eastern division manager of m Californ ia. tend "the classes and take ad-' the Edison Co~pany. and The public is invited to at-vantage of the opportunity (o Fran)IA. '-1cCrack1n, manager _ tend the lectures free. one n1rC't experts ·and question of·-1he environn1ent division, may register by aUending The lhem personally,'' Rollo says. ( ECOLOGY) encouragcn1cnt r r 0 tn ron- servationists an d the un- derground press. Th ey urged that Santa Cruz ·not become another. "San Josi! by the Bar." e He r bicides Lie Not So Hot Golfer Donna Caponi Young finds way to cool off . in \VOmen 's g~lf tournament in Palm Springs in 95· · degree \veather. She successfully plays ball out of Lake at Mission Hills Country Club. , / Finally, a seersucker with straight lines. SAN DIEGO (AP) -The U.S. Forest Se rvi ce plaos to use chernical herbicides tll clear the remains of chaparral brush frotn a seve n-mile strip of the Cleve land Nationa l Foi·cst for fire protection, says Forest Super\·i~ The purpose is to develop a ~--'---=---~----------------------------------! It used 10 be 1hat when you wore a Se()rsucl(er su1! on A hot Clay 11 ~auld wrinkle so badly that 11s straroht lines began 10 go In circles Now. wrlh this Cr1cket('er doublekn1r seersucker you can forge! aboL>l ,Y.flnklcs and c1e:ises bec<1use lhe 100°~ Dacron ' barrier fo'r c6ntrolling fires," he said. "This is an area that ~vas burned out in lhe 1970 Laguna fire, so we're just following "'hat nature has don:! -removing the chaparral for con\•t•rsion lo grass." Clark said precautions will be taken during the spraying in late May and early June to keep the poisonous chemicals from water su ppilcs. Perfume Gets-'-em TORONTO (AP) -Uni· versity of Toronto chem- ists h a v 'e ,reported they created an a rt i f i c i a I perfume thaf stimulates male houseflies to do so much that they become too exhaust~d to mate. Firm Planning to Add Pill To Snacl{s for Fi~o, l(itty _Jlolvesl('r fabric stavs crisp and sharp all day and so wrll you. Add a pair ot our c.olor coord•na!ed doublekri11 odd slacks and \'OU can go home w11h your whole summer wardrobe Ifs a smar! Way lo spend the summer. 'CRICKE!EER· e l _.etitl Ti111e SAN FRANCfSCO (AP) The Pacific Gas & Elcclric Co. and the A!ornic Eilcr,(!:v .. ;Com- mission are holding lalk s aim- ed at settling "in advance a half-dozen or so licensable sites for major nuclear power plants between no\v and 1990," a company official says. 'Get VD '- Before· It Gets You SACRAMENTO (API LOS ANGELES IAP) -Nothing is definite yef." Carnation Company is plan-A shareholder of the Carna- nlng to add a ,J1irth control .• tion firm bought lhe topic to rompowid to· it~et foods. bot light by questioning a_ firr'n of- Fido and Kilty may no have fleer at a stoc kholder s to \vorry .:about the n1oral meeting. issues of such a pl an for quite Dr. George Stabcnfeldl, some time. associate professor of The dairy and food produc!s reproduc(ion at UC Davis, said company confirmed that a the iC:ea is not new. form of ';the pill" may be ad- ded to pet foods. but a spokesman rmr-1'hC firm said the idea is "still in the plan- ning stage. \Ve are 1-•:orking "THE RUMAN birth control pill has worked well on dogs and cats in the past," he silid. "And a scheme of this sort aminations before they begin using the food ." KlJMMEL ADMITrED food additive may be a-long way off, ':.but we feel there is a need for a product like this. We f~I this iS a timely and humanitarian move and for that reason ~·e are in- terested."' He called the production of a bi rth control food, "a specialty item for thOse-people ~·ith the problem" of pets who become Regula r $110.00 NAVY-BROWN-GREEN etitff' Ltd. SOUTH C9AST PLAZA ._ COST A, MESA-540-1502 MALL OF ORANGE ORANGE-998-1520 LOS CERRITOS CENTER PG&E mav submit an in- ventory of nuClcar power plant sites for AEC approval to reduce ''lead time" between a power plant's design and its nctual operation. Barton \V. Shack('lford, company plan- 'ning and research vice presi- dent. told the American Society of Civil Engineers meeting here. ··;Get VD ." Californians are being told in an intensive1 pub- licity campaign during April. And offiCials say they hope the message comes across as "Get VD before it gets you .. , ~ 'llu111nn b ·; r t h c" 11 t 1· o l pill ht1s 1corl<ed tc' e l I "" ""gs tllld Ctlts ill t/1e past.'· CERRITOS-&28-9330 has been discussed before. But pregnant frequently and whose I don't know of any serious in· owners don't want to have the vestigation into putting the piU-::::an::i::ma=l ::'::P•::y::e::;d;:. ========================================== Currently, the "lead time" is reportedly almost JO years. because or the many agebcies involved in nt.iclear power plant approval procedures. e JJ end . Trees OAKLAND (AP) -Proper· ty O\vners must .clear dead trees and debris to reduce th e fire hazard in the Qakland hills or the city c:yi move on lhe land to do the job and bill the owner. a new city ordinance says. The ordinance, requires the city to notiry property Q\\·ncrs whose lands must be cleared and provides for protest hear- in~~ J~tters tell landowners t~emove "all trees with dry a f ammable foliage within 30 t of a structure or 100 feet of designated road\vays'' by June 1. e Tah"e Swt1p SACHAMENTO. I AP ) The Ca lifornia Assembly has urged the U.S. Forest. Service to accept a proposed deal in which the Forest Service \volild receive 10.120 acres of \Voodland in the Tahoe Basin in exchange for timbering rights in national forest lands ~in El Dorado County. The Assembly vclled 69-0 in favor of a ~solution authored by Assemblyman Eugene .A. Chappie (R-Cool ). It went to the Senate. -, "GET"VD" match CQVCI"S are being distributed and other devices are in store. All arc part of t h c <nl'areness carilpaign raunchcd by Gov. Ronpld Reagan and the California Ve n c r ca I Disease Advisory Council. "Venereal dise3.se costs Ille citizens of California ,$36 million annually in tax money and n1edical bills:' Reagan said in a statement. "The spread of VD can, however. be arrested through public educa- tion and proper prevention and treatment." with a Orug house but it's really quite premature now to talk about anything definite." ROBEl\T O. Kum me I , senior vice prcsidenlof Carna- tion . said. "A pharmaceutical company is investigating sup- into. their foods ." . :; He said the Idea would prob- ably· be ihe best commercial way to control reproductive population: "I can't think of a better way to control . reprodu tcive function than through the pet's faotl. For reaching a large number or animals and very inexpensively, I think it's a fine idea." plying an active ingredient-, HOWEVER, HE noted there and \fe arc exp loring in-are obstacles in the way of corporating it into a finished producing . something com- product." merciallf. · lle said he knew of no other "Probab1y the main problem company investigating a pet is in the area of dosage," _he birth control food additive. 'S'llid. fie noted. however, that any "How do you know if the additive would have to be ap-animal is getting the right proved by the federal Food amount of 'the additive? I im- a.nd Drug Administration. 3gine the · only safe arid truly HE SAJD that for 11 years. effective way of administering venereal disease has headed KUl\fMEL seemed a bit such a pr:tgram would be to the ilst of reportable com-upset that th e topic became have pet O\vners take their 1nunicable diseases. 01nd pro-public kno11•ledgc be c a use " animals in to veterinarians for bably 5 0 0, 0 0 0 Californians "We're ln the initial stages. complete l1 h y sic a I ex- have either undetected or -----------'---·----'------ unreported cases. The chainnan of the council, Scott R. \Vinders, said the largest single ~adblock to controlling VD is "lack of public knowle'dge ." . IF NOT treated . one in 25 will become crippled or in- capacitated; one in 200 y;ilJiogo blind: one in 13 will develop syphililic ~heart disease, and one in 44 will develop syphilitic insanity, he said . DON'T PANIC! For th~ lady whose . busy schedule doesn't permit a pla nned re'servation . . :-or that unex- pected important date ... or when out-of ff own guests ·come Jhexpectontly . . . you can walk righ t in! 0, • ' °l¥ BEAUTY S~LONS lliOOfS South Coast Plaza 540·8888 Bri•tol ·encl $4n Diogo Freeway t,1 SOUl H COAST PLAZA ONlY . . -·- ' SINGER .MAKES IT EASY with great machine values ... and fresh-up pastel fabrics -11--. ... ~·r ,. SUPER STRETCH-STITCH MACHINE WITH CAB~NET SALE ·$17 5 REG. 209.95 The §.!ylist• sewing ma chine has all 1he marvelous lea-' lures that make sewing easier: 1. The exclusive fro \.,,A.A.A A • drop-in bobbin. 2. A var1 of sti tches: stretch for knits; zig~zag, straight, and a bu ilt-in blindslitch feature. 3. Push-button reverse contrq!. 4. With a handsome Pace· setter cabinet. SALE~135 ~- REG.159.95 '" CARRYING CASE OR CABINET.EXTRA A SINGgR• ZIG·ZAG MACHINE THAT'S RIGHT ON THE MONEY! s97Model 177 , Newsmaklng F>1t'stel Fabrics! All r;nachine washable/dryaJ>!e . COORDINATED 413 POLYESTER GABARDINES s299yd. SOLIDS s349yd. PLAIDS The top·cholce WO'Ven fabric of the moment 1 To mix and mate 1n pink,blua.. lavender. 44/ 45" wide. Solid Polyester Jacquards $399 YO. · so· wide Polyester Double-Knit $399 YD. J1cquards 60~ wide Polyesler Double Knfls S299YO. s1110· "''d• Nylon sond $ 99 Jerseys 45/48" wide 1 yd. ,.., ___ · · SINGER Sewing Centers ants participating approved dealers ·A C1eda Pf an lo lit your budget ls ava1!Abla al S1ng"l1 Sewing CenllHt. M;riy .a po roved dealers tJ.sO oiler aUrac!i~e c1od1! terms Singer has a liberal trade·1n pohcy, We W•ll apo!y an ellowlnce on you1 used sew11:1g machln•loward 8fly new sewing m11c.hlne you buy al Sln9tf. for add1es1 ol s\Ofl Of d•1lcf nearest.you. ~fie lhe yellow pa9e1 unde1 SEWING MACHINES or FABRIC STORES •A Trad,merK oftHE SINGER COMPANV ., • COSTA MfS4-4rltftl & tWflfltwtr SMll'I CM1t· l'litl, J40-HU COITA MIU.-nM H1"°4" 11~11;. "•rMr t:C!l'l1M", ttl t ·l!tS ' '" , HUNT INOTON elACH-lllflttr 11 lt .. tfl Hu11rtflvlon INCll Ct111tl', ft1·1MI ---~,---_· O!tAMO.-tl st'lltOllOl'I 1!•11 ''TM c: .,.,.. (911tef'. i-tl-Jt(' ' ' • I : i • ! j I • I • ' • • ' • • • • £ • \ ' '. ' I • • ' .. • -· •• \ JO DAILY PILOT Monda1, .lprll 16, 1971 City' Planned ' ·McKissick Designs To w n for P~r People WARRENTON, N. C. (UPI) -Author Tboma!I Wolfe wrote "You Can't Go Jiome Again" after leaving his Asheville, N. C. home !or the intellectual e.z:-. cllement of New York. Many years later, another. man frOm Asheville retll.med to North Carolina from the north. bent on creating a city he hopes v.•Tll offer sucti economic op- portunities ·and racial harmony that none ol its citizens \\'ill ever have to leave in search of ll better life. .. 1-'LO,'D i\1cKJSSJCK, 50. a lawyer and civil right;; ac11vis1 since l~ 1940's, mov- ed this year from his Ne"' York home to a trailer that sits alongside several others on a 5.000-acrc plot of farm!.ftnd in a cor- 'It will be •elf·eotllabt· . . ed "''"' 110 depe11denee 011 . 011tshle. •011.ttes lot" . v./ , fo.r servlees and job,s.' nei' of War~en County near the Vit:~inia line, about 60 miles nort.hea'"St of Raleigh. A reminder ar the past, an ante.bellum mansion, 'sits on-a knoll . A barn and several crumbling outhouses are scat· tered across the red soil and tall pine. .. U,I Ttl...tl~IO In the next 30 years. thi s is lo be transformed into ·a city -McKissick calls it Soul City -of 50.000 persoils. a dte or rnore jndus!rics, shopping a s, schools, hospitals, and chu¢hes. a I e, a golf course and flWTicrou s ~rks. CIVI i: RIGHTS LEADER FLOYD MCKISSICK POINTS TO 'COOL CITY' M_unic~p•lity of 50,009 P•rsons Is Planned Within SO Years , 'J'.llE DESIGN IS patterned after the tr.!w city of Columbia, Md., but unlike that suburb of Washingtcin, D.C .. Soul City will be self-contained with no 9 dependence on outside soµrces for services and job. Congress Or Racial Equality and founder whc want. tO work here, Who want to of 'McKissick Enterprises, Inc., a C<!m-move here period ... Many were suspicious when McKissick announ ced almost three years ago plans to build"<:! city w_here poor people could find jobs, housi ng, education _and medical care. Some saw it as another attemprat black -11ep<1 ratism. ~OtHers branded it as unrealistic. • · But McKissic k got backing from several big financial in stitutions, such as Chase ·Matmattan Bank. and planning grants from the state and federal governments. pany aimed at fostering black capitalism \vhich serves as the base of operations here. He discussed his newest venture recently among the colorful maps and diagrams that hand on the wall Of his tr~iler office. "WE MIGHT-NOT BE entll'ely a Utopia." McKissick said , but sees the concept as the only means to revitaliz'e blighled rural areas and to stem migra- tion to the large urban centers. ''\Ve <1re losing people and these people are untrained v.•hen they go to the city :ind there is no place for them," he said. TllEN, LAST SUJ\1~1ER: the-Depart-"So. if We arc really talking about sol.y- ment of Housing and. Urban Development ing the probJenlS' of the cities and trying gave McKissick the break be "eeded -a to solve the problems of the minorities guarantee for a S14-million bond 'issue for )'lho go to the cities and fight the prob- Soul City. It means if Soul City is unatil:e lems of race, then you have to start at lo ll?P3Y th~ money it receives on the -the roots of the problem" · hood hie. the federal government will . In IIK>O, Warren County was the onJy foot the bill. r North Carolina county with more slaves Civil ri~hts leader turned pragmatic than free men and women, and lhe polilieian. A-1cKissick dropped hi s legacy .is seen today. Blacks make up Democratic party allegiance last sum-about 62 percent of the populatjon though n1cr to campaign for Pres_ident Nixon, a (whites run . co~ty government. The move some saw as unlocking the door to average family iricome is less than $2,500 the federal bond guarantee. -per-year. - The onl:Y--evidence of physical change today, outside of the 10 or 12 trailers that serve as offices and housing for ap- pr.oximate!y 30 staff members, is an ac- cess highway the state is carving through the ro lling hills. Slated for construction in the rirst yca r-.ire a health services cenU!r, hou sing facilities and at least one industrial plant. l\1cKJSSICK SAYS AN electronics finn is committed lo locate in Soul City and expects at least one other firm to be on the land befor~ the year is out. The elec· tronics firmJ•ill employ 350, he says. :\lcKissick is a former chainhan of the IT'S EXPECTED THAT the majority of the Soul City residents will be drawn fr001 the poor blacks~who now try to eke out an existence as sharecroppers or low· wage employes of the region's lum ber and textile industries. But McKissic k gets emotional, even ir- ritable. at the suggestion that Soul Ciiy is an all-black project. ''It's not going tO come out an all-black thing. It 's not an all-black thing and never was in tended to be an all-black lhing. Among job applications, you 'll find that we have a tremendous number of while persons who apply for jobs here, 'IJfE REACTION ·fROM Warren Coun· ty's white officials was cold when land was purchased and the project unveiled in 1909. But much of that has changed \\_'ith t~e an the election of a new board of coWJt.v COOlmissioners. McKissjck says while· the board remains all white; It's enthusiasrn...'.'is ex.celle n ,. for-Sou l City 3ild its prOmise of an increased tax base and olher benefits. McKissick sees Soul City as a pro- gressive force in the region. It already has formed a local planning corporatlorrolhat works with one of the state's 17 regional planning bodies. It also joined with the i't!gion's two largest cities in adjoining counties to form a company to provide water: for alT Uiree from the nearby Kerr ~e Reservoir. IN -ADDmON, SOUL' CITY Foun-· dation. a nOnprofit organiz"ation, received a $100,000 federal grant to plan a· com· prehensive medical health program for Warren ·eoWJty and adjacent Vance County. And the plantation house, from where the white master could watch his slaves working the fields more than a century ago. has been. serving as· a day care and Head litart center for preschOOI children of the area for more than a year. Box Office F eatw·e: Karate Vs: Mafia ROJ\.1.1;: (UPI) -l\.1afia "films are all the rage in Italy these d;;iys. Hong Kong· made filrris about karate fighters also a"re making a.Jot of money in Italy . Petra Productions of Rome put two and two together. It announced plans for a film entitled "Karate Versus Mafia." - ' ·:Emerg~~ey £1assroom. Savored . . l·s ; ystem Praised Wine Apprec· tion to Be . • S P11 I N G FIELD, Mass. (UPI) -II all final examJ m<nl 10 45, I il enough ap- pllcat5ocu are ·ved the cJaa could.be ex ded. offef. a broad in~uction to the wines of th world tailored to his Interests as a con-- sumer," the deun said. Capitol NOw1 Service were like the one for a new course at American Interns· SUNNYVALE -Last year, . COORDINATING the urse tional co. Uege, the dropout the" California Legislatu re ap-will be Erofs. Paul E.....P...roY.os.t .... proved a law 'Whic"h wUT re-rate would probably dlsa~ and Robert T. Markel, who ,quire telephonC 1 c0mpanie~ lb pear. said the course will consist of :make "911'l the emergency And it might be assu~ a consumer-oriented survey of ~ call nwnber for P.Olice and f~ ' lha~ students woul~ get mto the world's major wine's and 1services. Techiiic31 detarb their homework with a bit vineyard regiqris. E~ch cl~ss "The more knowledgeable \vine drinker wl ll have. an op- P9rtunity to broaden ""his ei· ~rlence throug_h the ~ex4 , ploralion of .fine wines from lesser-known regions,'' he must be solved and the system more gusto. will have a lecture d1scuss1on in operation st.atewide by 1982. ""lhlt a"Wltle-li.stlng~ · THE COURSE offers three Dean Bowne said the course .One city of l04,000, · Sun-Credits in wine appreciation. 1 has been designed for both the nyvale on the ~ Franclsco De_pn Clinton Pwt. Bowt;n of ~amateur and the "serious stu· Peninsula · in Santa qara . Al C's Evening College said the dent." Some applicants are County, already ~ e c~sses, beg.inning Sept. ~o. expected ·from the wine in-· system in operation it is will be held in the faculty ~-dustry, including packa ge dlawlng rave noti' from ing room fo . rl4 consecuitvc store operators and salesmen. ' . . Monday everungs. householders, busmessmen Plans are to limit the ·~nroll· "FOR THE novice it will and . those involved in -·-------------------, emergency service. said. BUT JT' the final exams that .sound most Interesting . On -the fittal night ol the course, ,students wUI .be blindfolded and asked lo Iden· lify and evaluate various types of wine. As the AIC spokesman said, "\llhee.\' ( tM=' SUNNYVALE IS differ:ent ·in this· respect; It is the larg~st city in the nation with a com· bined po~ice and fire depart· men t. It's called the Public Safety Department. •· .The city installed i~e system •0c1. 31 tHalloween ) al~d:it has worked li ke a charm, ac· cording to George K. Hansen, rtilef of the department. · · •·Since we·ve had the system installed," Hansen said, '173 pe rcent of the calts for emergency service have come in on the ·'911' line. It has meant a reduction of 80 per· cent of the calls placed by the , operator." ~ HANSEN EXPLAINED lhal h0is department took a survey in Sunnyvale 18 months ag_o. Of 800j>eople interviewed, only three knew the se ven-digit emergency telephone numbef used by, tbe combined depart· I" ~i tli3t time, 73 out of eaai· - 116 calls came through the operator from people who would just .Oial "O" and say; "Give me the police ; this is an emergency!'' ··statistics no\v tell us that most fpeoplf. know the number and are using it," Hansen P,1id~ l ·HE 'c1TEO the example of community action when a peeping Tom was spotted looking in a bedrootn window. Neighbors gave chase, and one shouted, "Call 911," as he ran after the culprit ,..., One worry Hansen had was that, once installed, the "911" line would pick up calls~:trot .related to an emergeooy. " - "Officials in Seattle told me that thefr phone calls deman- ding servi~ rose by 12 per- cent, and there were other cities which had a 35 percent hike in the number of calls," ~lansen .said. "But_ we haven't experienced that here." HE · ·SAJD there . w8s a ''slight increase'' -in the :.'fii"st 60 days of service, but that most of these calls cou1d be attributed to "poople curiousl as to how the system works," and "some crank calls!' 1 Choose from 14 Full-Flavored Blends. YANKEE TRADER teas are more 1han 14 blends of a popular bever- age. They can be equaled with hearth and home, hospitality and tradition. Regardless of the blend, you will enjoy the futl flavor and bouquet ... a really satisfying drink. Add to that the speed and conven· ience of the tea in bags.· Check our selection. p . .89 Reg. nee c 79~ 14 Blends, 24 Count Boxes Available only at yciur Tea Treasurehouse--"....... . ' ' . . - fl(ttdf'1 t•!~f . South Coast 'tla.z:a COSTA MES A lower Caro11sel Mall-lrktol at Sa11 Dl99a frwy, -~ ·--OPEN DAIL IS1111day after church 'til 5 p.m.J PHO!'."E 540·6991 AMEBICA~S LEADING CHEESE STORES . . Two Golden West I DECO ~TOR WINE._. Teachers Honored T"·o facu lty n1cmbcr's at Golden \Vest College have been selec ted lo be included in lhc 1973 edition of "Outstand· ing Educators in America." Willian1s of Costa Mesa. direc· tor of learning resources at th~ college. Williams, formerf chairman of the 1nalhematics and Sciences division at the col· Jege, was recently appointed to a statewide community col· lege advisory committee on coo rd i na1ed instructional systems. ~lonored were .John JI. \Vadhams of Fountain Vall <'y. a lacult)l leader in the development of cr1mputer in· \tructional pro gr a m s in mathematics. and ~I a yd en . . All together looks - \vardrober.; lhat give you- pre-coordinated -:·. iacket/sh iry'skirt and pant 4-piecers in a selection of print-solid oombinations. Many to choose from - in your very own size ;3 to 11 4 pieces from about $50 Houu of Nin• Ch1rg181nkc1r,ds ~1/fk . SOOTH COAST PLAZA. 3133 Bristol St., Costa Mau -WALL FURNITURE ... SPACE ORGANIZERS our wall furniture creates instant space and flexibility. This unique furniture concept will enhance any room in yol{r home. Decorator Line offers a wide selection of cabinets, chests, and shelves. There are over 46 sizes and _ more than 156 different components ... all available in four rich wood tones plus six accent colors. expensively styled . • • reasonoblr priced • • . BIG EFFECTS . . .. for Uttle money .• , don't wait another minute , Come visit D~for 'une and get acquainted with "h " our ang ups ... tbis hang up as shown is 84". long . · $331.00 BEST BECAUSE .. STUDY AND STORAGE '· ~ ' ·WALL SYSTEM ........ ~,~ .~ drewers and doors, desk . ' · end shelves, everything you ne&d for compact yet spacious storage display and work ing space. this unit as shown 112" long ... $437.00 .. " TWO LOCATl0NS TO SERVE YOU- So yth · Coast Plaza 54b-7777 COSTA MESA The Mall of Orange 637-7777 OftANGE •L--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.......J You Won't Find Greater Versatility or Selection!. .. ... BANKAMERICARD M STER CHARGE • I. ( ' I • • ,. • • r • • • . .... • p ~ ' ' • • ... • • • .o; • .. ' I' J \ ' . • • • • -· \ .~·~le-Es .in-Pnf!IWg,,.apky __ . . I ·-.Cliiim ~Di~ty ·Deal,~.~ue- SAN rnANcfsCO (UPI ), :... quiring jurors lo be a resident Two distributors and seVen or the.state and county for one stores selling pornbgraphlc .ye3r violates both the U.S. and books have filed a flP million California constitutions. · sutt · ~ainst local · 1aw en-A jury 18 ... design~ to be i forcement agencies for· raids cross-section of.) lhe com-. staged la•t monlh, .-· monll)1, Llndsley cslitd .. Ex,. The pomqgrap~y peddlers eluding those with less than a sued the district attorneys ·of year's resideilcy in the com- Santa., Clara and Sa1,1 ¥atl!O munity .majea this cross-sec- • 1 tlon inaccurafe, he said . . c TH~. LAW: ) ~!o !:::::) . Los AngeieS attorney Seth M. Counti~ and 19· officers in Hufstedler has 'been chosen feder~I court, charging ii-president-elect of the State~ legalities in warraiits used and B~r of California . the ·ctinduct of police during . Also scheduled to take office the raids. . · . in (September are v i c e ' federal ~mcers and !hen only with coort permission. . Biddle (R-1\!11erslde), bas iptroduced similar Ieglslatioo during the past five years, while serving_ In tlie Assembly, but· tbe bllJJ(have' beeh killed each time· in .the Assembly Q-iminal Justice Committee. eu.t o .. t SAN DIEGO (API - Lawyers• ·fees are no longP..r being recommended by ' the San._ Diego County Bit r Association after a federal judge in Vlriinia ruled a similar arrangement there was illegal price-fixing. A secret schedule o f minimnm fees covering 13 pages bad been Issued to San Diego attorney s , recom- mending rl(ltes ranging from $15 to $1,500 for various assigninents. Searcber:s were made in a preSidents M.f.c·h a e I · ~ '•rans ack:ing, ' ~ful, Leonardo of Sunnyvale, Jo-· destructive and Indiscriminate nnne M. Garvey of San Fran- manner" .and trµCkloads , of cisco, 1.{ark .P. Rob~n ~ of "graphic" .adu l"t literature Los Angeles ·a'nd .H~ H: were impioj)erly seized, the Kilpatri ck of.yallej1>, who ~ plaintiffs said.. . . , will Serve as treasurer. ,....------~-- . Tranquil Nom Young couple find pri· vacy beside a small lake · on . a peaceful Sunday . afternoon . in Hanoi. _e !UMJ ,flull_ng SAN 'DIEGO ' (t>P ) California's · one-year residen- cy requirement for Superior Court juror.s ·. is un· c9nstitu~ional, .Ju.dge Byron F. · Lindsley -says. · . Thf' eight-page w. r·i t t.e h decision said Ute state law,re- e ·wiretap Bili, . SACRAMENTO (AP) Loco! and state law en-· forcement agencies cQW.d use wiretapping ·under a . bill. introduced by state 'Sen. Craig Biddle. . Wiretapp1ng under current law· is allowed only if it ls by JCPenney _.:Newport Beach. , PR~ENJS . · The Camera Industry's.· Most Excitin g Camera Demonstration · ' -·. 0 ~00 0 00000 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Q .0 -0c dJ. A-INSTANT ~ ~·KONI .. '' FACTORY 0 0 • . . . X CAM'ERAS '· DEMO. 0 0 FULLY AUTOf.\ATIC SIN~LE LEN~ R~~ b 0 0 0 0 0 0 o· 0 0-0 00 000 .000 0 -~ This ·is it The demonstra· · tion that. ,ii. camera world has been raving ahoat ... . . AP.RIL · 16 ... 17' KONICA! The most advanced, most~ wanted camera. KONICA! The SLR all others-are trying_ to copy. . . . ' Dur ing this d emon stration : you will actually be · able to · use the · · · new Konica , and see the. films developed in ·minutes. See· the · results before you. buy! KONIC~: THE ·FULLY AUTOMATED REFLEX. NO NEEl>LES TO MATCH. FOCUS AND SHOOT! All photochemic1I, by "Tow nl•v " · ·Det;ector Finds Coins B~GHTON, England (AP) -AA electronic detector turned · up a bucket Of Romp.n cOins on a near-by farrit. The 5,546 coins were dated frOm 253 A.A. to 275 A.ri. • /.. -• MoMIW, Aprll 1&1 iq73 ' . " DAILY PILDJ . . l1"1i. '91ltlc:•l A-.. I ,,,-WHY does Tht.1r1ton Jr. High cost 50 % more to operate than TOP elementary school, wht'ft'ltafe-widt jr. llighs operate at only 15 Y. above elementary cost? WHY do our graduating seniots b~e • below •v•r•ge reeCling, 1core, when our school district has th• highest budget in Or•nge County? · WHY i1 this .ye•r'1 budget 21 Y• hjgher than·la1t year'1 ? What er9 we getting for this $50.0,000 .00 incre•t•l.::.• ~ ' WHY doe1 it cost us $62.00 "Per 1tud9nt for administrative costs, when the aver«1ge for Orange County is $22.007 You Should Be Told The anlwei!os to these 11uestions. _ . Thal'• why I'm running.' · . [!] ·rioN KREBER For LC19una Beach School Board · ' WI SUl'POU .ION. KIUER, Ch1rle1 H. & Lou ise Ad1m1 Mr. & Mrs . Milton Chapman Mr: I: Mrs. Harold J. Air.ins Bill Cini • John Albade Mr. & Mrs. Sam Garst Mr. & Mn. Alton Allen . Mr. & MN. Marshall Hout s Dr. Ji Mrs. David T. and Lila Almon Mr.'& Mr1 .. l .arry Hunt Mr. & Mrs. Norman And.er1on Mr. & Mrs. RiChard Jahraus ·Robert Anderson 'Mr. & Mr1. Richard Kuhn Mr. & Mrs. Gordon AtkinSon William Lambourne Mr. & Mr1. O~ho. Behr, Jr. Harry Lawrence Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Bentcn Bill & Derry Marriner Mr. & Mrs . David Phillips Mr. & Mrt. Ernie Qui9ley Mr. & Mrs. Edwa rd Qu inn . Mr. & Mrs. Don Rackeman ' Or. & Mr1 . Robert Ralston Dr. & Mrs . Robert Roper John & Joan R·udolph Mr. & Mrs. J ames Schmitz Mr. & Mrs, Earl Secor Mr. & Mrs. Ge"e Shidler Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Syf.an • Mr. l Mrs. frank Booth ,Mr. & Mrs. Rob ert McDonnell · ~ Mr. & Mrs . Rog er Nic~olson larfy Campbell Walt & Muri Ottmer . Mr: & Mrs. Raymond T ensfeldt Mrs. Paul Trimble "" . • Suzanne E. Carlton '\-' George & Sharon Peters Dr. Vincent P. Carroll Barbara Peyton Mr. & Mrs. John Q. and Joan Upton Mr. & Mrs . David Young If you need a ride to the poll s, call 497-2578. Tiiis Mwirtl_. N lill ftf' by Lq111111 Cllfllell,. Elect It°" ICl"'tbtr Cll1lrm1n Ernie O..l9l•Y• 112' AU11, L .. IHll '. READ WHAT THE EXPERT$ SAY ABOUT THIS DEMO: ' . ~ • "Perhaps the top job done ... I can't \·"The Instant Ph~to S~ow is a revela- !hink of any type of 1~emonstratic.ii that ti'on i~ a.utomation. See it ... it's a 1s more effective... must! · ~ lepplet', Modern Photogrepliy ·, 1ert Left:ewltl. Photo Me~; for iitdustry '" Photo Wttklv • KONICA PRICES . . I ~ , S"ECIAL DEMo11f.f£R!''__._,tA.T.:.AT ONLY r , •&"°s · .. . the.de~ons.tration, if y~u y- Ouring f" der urcha se a Konic• ren91-in •. P era you will rece.1ve or refle x cam ·d White fr~e a roll of Bl!ick en film . . Y can then immedieta\y shoot ou If d return th cemera yourse en th: film . during th• demo~st_r~- 1, It will be process• im· 1on. y u ~-.. ' I . , . ;.. . / .... mediately before your:eyes. o. 'II ie• for yourse!f tt.e beaut1-;~I aufomatic c~pabilities of the Konica ceme~as: C"6m• .early to- teke adv a ~t.!_g• of t~is mo1t un• usual offer. ••••••••••• • Use YOUR P!_NNE~·-v ~HAICE ~Alto· · ~·~ ; 01{. • ,_ PENNey·s No oow' • TIME PAY PLAN N • •••it•·······' . JCPenney.· .. ... . . ~ . .. We know what you're looking for: ' . FASHION ISLAND • ~ NEWPORT BEACH" ONLY r r . - . .. ' ... Warn ing: Th1,Surgnn General Has Determined : Tl\at C~aretl9 SmOking_ lsOangeroos to Your Heahh. ,, ' • •' • l • • ' I \ ., • • • • ' .I . I • -• ~ I ' ' • I •' ( . • J % DAILY PILOT M.,..,.,, Apr/I 16, 1"73 SF-Wo•-Pies WHY YOU SHO\JLD RE·ElECT Teamsters Strike Van Firms Knifing Figure ' ~urder S~pect , GEORGE H. RODDA JR. & WORTH KEENE Ul'IT ........ LOS AN~ELES (Al -The SOuthe..(!l Ca Ufomia van and storage industry was fo be _shut do"·n today by a strike of Teamsttrs Union members SAN l<'RANCISCO IUPI) - who rejeeted a new contr~ct A YOUQ8 Chinese wool.an was BRIEFS apartment early Sunday by a ( ) stabbed to deaUt outside her mpn police said they fear may be the . same attacker who offer against the advice of brutally knifed a Jaj>ancse most union , officials. The ·coed a month ago. ~tr-ikc is the ~rst against the . Police said that Cuey Yueh, industry here ln 25 years. 27 : was s ta bbed Once above .. . INCUMBENT TRUSTEES Coast Community C~llege District !ORANGE COAST COLLEGE & GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE! RECENT NEWS HEADllNE'~­ "FIRST TEST ON IMPOUNDMENT" .. HlossoH1 Tl111e . Rhoda Kay Umano, 19. of Saratoga, is cro\\•ncd ~1iss Cherry Bl osson1 of By a 70 percent margin, the. the right wrist and once in the ... members voted to refuse a left chest whil e walk.Ing to her contract that would have_ in-apartment 'on Pine Street. cr'-ascd y,·ages and fringe . ' "JUDGE FREES FUNDS FOR VETERANS' EDUCATION" . 1973 during festival 1>ageant·al K?buki 'rhe· nter in Ja~3.J1 Center, San F'ranc1sco, \vhere she re i g n s through • ·April 22. benefits by m;ore than 30 per-MISS ~. who works at I , cent over the next three years, _ , . a spok~sman said Sunday. the ll)alt Hotel m San f ran- ------ Ms . State : _Co1npetitio1t Sc lte£lule£1 LOS Al.Td S i AP) - A. ··~is. California" pa ge a n t dramatizing •the plight or Teamsters research direc-cisco, staggered into her · tor tl.J. Sperling said the apartment and coUapscd. drivers \l.'ere di s c on len t Witnesses chased . a man becall!le "'everything I h ey negotiated for (four years ago they later told police appeared When the old contract wa~ to be aged about'24. si gned) has been eaten up by An inveStigator said "we're inflation. afraid it might be the same man" who slabbed. Ja panese e We bb Cl1ar11ed coed Yoshika Tanaka, _24, LOS ANG ELES cU PI 1 _ outside her door a mo11th "ago. ARTIST'S SKETCH Baby.faced Su1poct . Tanaka and other victims. ~SS TAN AKA was stabbed two-dozen times bf the man whom police said tried t<Trape her. . The striking Writers Guild has Police have circulated an charged five writer-producers artist's sketch or a baby-faced including Jack Webb With man they want to questi on in Miss Tanaka was close to crossing their picket li~es set connection with the knifing of death after the attack ~ut ~f. up outside motion• pictures Miss Tanaka and attacks on , ficials at San Fran c 1 s c o studios a month ago. • possibly four other women. General Hospital said she had The five have been ordered The sketch was drawn from pulled through and might be to appear before a Guild tf'ial information provided by Miss going home soon. boa rd in May, and if convi'cted l-r;;J~:;:~r;;;;=;~ry;;:~~;;;;;,;;;;;::;;:;:=;;;;;~· 11 they face substa ntial fines and I suspension or expulsion from the Guild. , women "·ill f!Ompete with this year's "~iiss Cal irornia" beau- ty contes t in June, says the National Organization f o r Women Santa Cruz chapter. Katli)een Malley, a Santa e Airfield Peril Cruz NOW spokesman. said a,1Qt1NTAJN VIEW (AP) _ Mr. c.orge lodd• 949 Col~enrod Ave. Corona del Mar, Cali!ornla :Dur GeOYge: 92625 . ·On be.hlll.of tte Allerican Ali1ocl1tlon. of ta.untty 1nd J ,,ud or Collegew , t Van t to thank. you for your 1ct l va and oggr e11fye role io t he passage and tmple~ .entatton of, feder al ald progr aaa·-programs which wi l l t rearly benefit-co ll~ges and 1tudent1}11. Cal 1forn1 1 a nd the J est of 1he nati<>rt• • ~e have been par ticularly igpre1sed vlth your effective v<>rk on behalf cif t he veterans co1t~f-iostruCtJ on progr !llll, whlch,"Jf fully funded, would pa)" col leges $300 per .,.ear for ench full·time-equival<int Vl!tera11 entol)J!d. Funds vould do a great de1l to help both 0<:o lh•11•• and individual Vletna,. vetarans , I "kllOll t1't you wer e one of t he mos t influential leaders In persuading t h" • Co~:J to adopt this particular pl ece of 11gi1lation. You lllso pla:<Pd n ke;i _r ole iD pir.rs~dlng the Community Colll'ge Section of the Callfor nin School Boards AS'll oc tation to go Int o federal dlatr ict coYrt and get a coYr t order ~hich should lead t o t he rile11e of t he1e funds. • The &tate of Californla , and eYary cOa111u1 i ty ~ol l<i11e in that'state, vlll benefit greatly i f t he1e funds are r eleaiad. You haYe played a major role i n thia whole progr11111 , "'nd .allot u.a 111 education are very r1uch indebtt'd to you . Sinccrt'ly, 'P . ~lla{I fCtoc. of Pr<>gr:i111s for Veterana and Servlctmen ' Committee to Re.elect Incumbent Coost CoU119e Trustees the purpose will be to protes~ The Na vy is inviting trouble- the . ?eauty pageant :Which like last Week's · two--plane rem1n1sts reel is. demearung to crash which killed 16 persons women. She said conteiitanti -Wlle11 it 1huts down Moffett from eac h (;.•!llornla coun9~~d.-~-~o n-a-1 d selected by the local Nor E~~-· __ --· chapter will represent BOme "With all these overfUfhts probl.fJll, s u.ch 11 ' ' r.1 s .~ · going"on I have felt for 1 fong Un cf"e r p a 11:1 '' and "M1 . time lhat this Wu a rather Unemployment." dangerous situation and a Wiiiard T. Jord1n- John A. Hopwood Arlene Schafer H11_nry "HJink" Panian Jemes K. Canon Cheri L. Connell Ellis Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Williard Han:ilik Jack Hamm ett Pa UI Gruber Or:.-~arold E. N ~ibling Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ya si us Don I. Huddleston ' C harlotte J..yke Picasso Kin In La Jolla Plan Fight nuisance," the San Jose Democrat said Saturday in a letter which derilanded the Department of Navy close Mollett. OIANAIA NILll _LIOOO_CMtswor#I ~1J_OLU.l!ICISnul~fdL•nd lle!thllfflf WOOILAND Mlll121SOO YletorJ BIW LA•1Wo01~1tlOll SL and '•fMMllnt Bll'I. •tVllllllJS20 T1I• ~t. • IUINA , ••• sea Ind Oran1•• ....... ANA3900 Sou!ti ltlitol SL OIANt1Q1rden Grove Blvd. tnd M1nc11tsl# Bob Cavanaugh Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Cole -Ja~ines T. Sutherland ·oonfta E. Willou;hby Olive Ableman Julia Thornton Thomas Lambert Wm. E. ! Bill ) Kettler Robert l. Humphreys Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morton Howard Ro9ers Bill Blurock Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wa~d Betty S. Inman Thomas D. ~la ncy Carol Hinds.on Alfredo Garcia Raymond Cobb Stephen l on9 John Kennick". Frank We st Mr. a1)d Mrs. Scott Flana9an Donald Mcinnis , ' Donald G. Hoff Alvin M. Coen e Pot Bftlced ALPINE (AP) -A PP called the U.8. Marijuana Jnitl atl\'.e ·p1an1 a petition driv e to suppory legalization of NEW YOiiK(UPI) - A son __ marijuana in California and=====-==--'---------- and daughter of P a b I o 1. !he n.1tion, its l~ad~r says; Picasso living in La Jolla ~harles S. C10~!1 of Alpine a re preparing to challenge the said lhe San Diego County- artist's widow in the French based organlzatlon ls an courts for a share of his offshOQt of the California multlrrTill ion·dol!ar estate the l\fe.rljuana Initia tive Cam- N.ew York Tin1cs reported to-p8ign, which got Prop. 19 on day. the state-wide ballot la~t Picasso died a week 11go al Nov~mbcr. The me a sure , his villa in Mougins on the ·w h 1_ c ~ . w _o ul d _have French Riviera at the age of decr1mrnahz~ possession and ' 91, leaving no \\'ill. · , ~se of marijuana, was •re- The Times sa.i4__!:1audc JCC!ed by the voters. Picasso, 24, and Palom1iltuiz Ch" T Picass'o, 23. Picasso's children • 1na our by his former-m.istress Fran-HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) coise Gilot, wriuld be joined in Actress Shirley MacLaine and the action by a half-sister. 11 other'A-merican 'vomen will ~frs. Pierre Widmaier , 38, of start a tour of the. People's ~farscillcs. who was born to Repu blic of China Tuesday to Picasso and ~1arie Therese learn more a bout Chinese \Valter, an earlier mistress. · \\"Omen. CP•ltl PolitlCll Ann0111Kfmtnl) .RE-ELECT WILLIAM THOMAS Ill . . Laguna Beach School Board PLEASE VOTE APJllL 17 e More Education-Less Frills • Strengthen the Role of the Teacher -Where ·the action isl • More efficietlt use of tax dcSllar • e Keep the public informed on accomplishments- Both positive i1nd negative . r • Work fo r higher standa rds of student r11pon'i billty • Member of Local B~1in111 Community ,.we ••r 1., tlllttilt ,.,.,..,,.. , ... 1111 '"'"'•• •lc111nl J111r1vt. Sic, '" .u. t+lf• or .. ~ t..o --. ' . • ~INFORMED ,/, EXPERIENCED ~CONCERNED ~ ACCOUNT ABLE TO TA., AYERS cares a.bout chil.dren. in • Tliis is a critical election for Ocean View childpn. They ca11.'t v ote, but YOlf #;ANZ loin 11s in support of MARIANNE' BLANK for the Board of Trustees: Mr. L•on•rd Sh•ne Dr. and Mr1. Alfrtd Wrobel Mr. and Mr1. Roy P•rtrldge M1. Marguerite Davenport Mr1. Bettr, Hegle Mrs. Flor ne Davin Mr1. Mary Sullivan M1. Henrlanna Sl1tt1ry Mr1. GMrgla IKhl•r Dr. Ind Mra. ROii Wlntrowd Mr1. Su1anna Htryman Mr. end Mrt. Wllllam Smaw . Mr1. LoulH S~lreno Mr. •f!d Mra. Wllllem Wrnn Mra. Prl'" lhN • Mr. Jerry M•tMy ' ' Mr1. •uth Duncen Mo., a.rltere Htck Dr. and Mra. Kenneth M•rtyn Mr. lind Mrs. Don•ld MecAlll1ter Mr•. Carolyn Rtt•n Partial List of Endorsers Mrt. Katherine 1 .. uchamp Mr. •nd Mr1. Jack Staley Mr1. Lynne loldlnt Mr. •nf Mr•. O.rr911 Hettmiln M1. J•ckle Watson Mr1. Bewerly V•l"kl Mra. Robert• Smith Mr. end Mr1. Walter W. Johnton Mr. and Mr1. H1l Mund•r Mr. Keith Halfpop Mra. Meurlne lehrend fv\r. and Mn. Robert M. DawWton Mr.' end Mr1. Rlchanl Gra.- Mri. Lolt Plckf~ Or. and Mn. o.naw Mltch9ft Mr. Ronetd llVff Mr. and Mra. Henry Dub Mra. Gerry K1lfln ""' Mrt. N•ncr May Mr1. Ger1ldlne Brown Mr1. JoAnn Preldmen Mr1. Jan Quinn Mr. •nd Mrt. Homer Danduran Mrs. and Mn. John D. Don Mr. P1ul J. Alexender, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Char ... Pox Dr. and Mr1. Jt1hlh hlMr Mr. and Mn. Richard Llintl•y Mrs. Grace WlncMll Mt" M. M. L_. - Mr. and Mn. Chr•W a. Cttftn Mra. Trudy L lleeli . . , Mr. and Mn. Pr•M11 )Vltlte Mr. and Mr1. John Palme Mr. and Mrs. Jay Llntll'hld Ma. Chrl1tln1· A. Kopclie Mr~lllfon" ~Mrs. Una Pal1J1_1. Mr,1. Linda MotlNgtn Mr. aMI ~rs. Jamtt I . Hunt \ Mrs. Virginia Reese Mr. and Mr~. Robert Oslin Mrs. Barb•ra -Brockmann Mr. end Mrs. Clyde Goodm•n Mt. Mary Tracy .... Mrt. Paula Clark Mrt. Fr1n Thomten Mr•. Valerie Hurni Mrs. J11dy Leland Mr. and Mrs. Norman Whipple Mrs. Beverly Wiodford . Mn. Norma Gibbs Mrs. Erma Van luren Mrs. Karen Ridout Mrs. Marg1ref"Carlber9 Mr. and Mrs. Mlch11I Greenwood Mr. Doneld Shipley Mr. and Mr•. Ian Albert Mr1. Lou Saylor Mr1. Wynn WH t Mri. E .. anor M•ben Mrt. Marilyn Holm•n Mrs. Joan St•nl1y Mr. end Mrs. Lerry Levlnt0n Mr. and Mrs. Wllll•m Chapman Mr. and Mrs. Dennl1 Ma..-n Mr1. Marl• Wallace VOTE BLANK APRIL 1.7 ( -• • ' I . • . •• • .. J • 'I • I .,, "' I - ~· 1,For The Record Dissolutions Of ltlarri,.ge ...... uct WW•rd J, \;,.co .. , .,_.;rrv. lil11IOt nl 114 h\l!IUl\i,l!Of1 11••,u; '"''"II• ... ~~"'•"""'"! 1~, "'~· ......... _, ""•· .................. ,; (lfUl;lhrer, Mfir111rt1 K. · H11010r1; gr1no-._:........ .. ....... .. ............... , ........ ... ~in•H 111d H111n Jun•~. 1-unirtl 1ervk:11, '~'"'""" I•'"'""""'"'.,,., ..... ,.,.,,.,..., vi1 .. 1 "~"· ..... , •• ..,, .1. .. n~.; 1;ull1<1+M1W. ln1wmern. An.icoul "'"'°"' iv..,,...,.,11111. '""""'V >-'Siii~•·• "~~ >u•thR!I oO 111<1~ fl'llffiUflll "'"" •JUnon .. P_·~· .. tontrll!IUI 10 '"" K..0..11 ~""" M~•llllT•ul Ft,111<11 L.onll llfacn Mll1nor ... 1 "~""''"'· u1111•t "'"'" .. '" tt\lnnl'llloOO tl~~C" Aow(o ... ry, M:l.•//111 OlrtCIOfl. _ DEHGHAUSI N Olfw M, 0..l>!l•!dU ... 11. ""' !S, of )d M,o.!lnOU• ~ ... "'"''" Mew. ~"''iV"'.!1.-JIY n~ ..... no. How•r\I, !oOl'I, 110Wl.rJI }r.; rr»t~. Mr1.. OUvt Mtnna .COlll Mtw; • • ' • Politleal Notes Y(}uth ·cadet · Plan Alive , Bv O.C. llUSTINGS jected on a s.-0 vote. In ''a ot .. Mfr ,..., Slttf 5enate Flnance subcommittee. A slate S e n a t e S'IJ.b. General Glenn C. Ames, interest on the national debt, it ~ms clear that this Is the nine to call on those who owe committee has turned back a conunander of the National move to abolish a milltfuJ' Guard, said n California high us money to pay their bills," training program for 3~~00 schciols now have the program he said. callfomla hJgb sc h o o I and e'.lght more have applied The resolution would require studen':() for It. Students train up to~rour the Treasury Department to The legiSlative analy1t~1 ol· hours a week and uniforms submit to O>ngress within 90 flee rec om men 4 e d the are provldf°d by the state. days an accounting of all ' 1 1 O , 000-a·.:t:ear CaUtornla:=----. '-fnOfliff'-~~e United . Cadet Corps program· Of-the AMES SAID three Cabfornla States by other nations and to California Arm)" N a t i o n a 1 school dlatrictA ln Fresoo, make . i m m e d i 8 t e ar-~t!::iu~e~~e i·deafrow(llas lrbe-e Anaheim IQJd the Norwalk-La rangements for the repaymtint ui; Mirada areu account . for 4 of all overdue debts. percent of the cadets in the · program statewide. * · * * * * * IN WHAT he says is an ef· CONGRESSMAN Cl I W f~rt to cut the cost of ~iden-a r · t1al co n s truc~ton, \vork rules and outmoded local bullding codes, Court action in a federal or slate court could' be instituted by any person to prevent the locaJ epforcement or any code or wor~ rule reetrlctlng his use or ·new techniques or materials In a federally assi!te.d housing p r o g r a rn , under the measure . * * * M EANW HI LE, Coo- gressman CI a i r W. Borg· ener l&.Rancho Sant a Fe ) has co-sponsored a resolu- tion urging the administration lo combat rising housing con- struction costs by increasing the supply or lumber fbr domestic uses. Burgener tR-Rancbo Santa Congressman Anderw J . ~e) has _cy-authored a :esolu-Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach) t1on calling r~r collection of has sponsored legislation tliat the d~bts.Jore1gn governments would allow the use of in-BURGENEJ\ pointed out O":~ ~the U.S. . , J _ • • d u·s tr i alized. construction that Congress has aulhor~d . With a $12.9 b1lhoi:t <lef1c1t techniques including precast ll,833 billion feet of lumber to in the proposed Feder a I or pre-assembled products. be cut from Forest Service Budget, the Upba lance of t I m b e r , A d m inlstration payments running at an all HINSHAW SAYS his bill policies have held the cut to time high, and a $24,2 billion would cut through testrictive only 19.6 billion feet, he said . debt servicy budget, it isi-------=----~--~--------11 astonishing that the United Ac1v1rtlMm1111 States would continue to carry What Do Many Doctors use over $45 billion worth of debts rrom 1ore1gn government• on When They Suffer Pain its books without making ~very effort to co1 1ect''. OfHemorrhoidal Tissues? • Burgener said. · Eidusi" Fonnala Gives Pnmpt, T empomy Relief la Mu1 Ca"' fro m . POINTING out that over $18 S.ch Pain. Also Helps ShriU Swelliac of Such n ..... O.e 10 lolectioa. billion 1s past due from World · . . . .- ' MOl'ldAy, Aprll 16, 1973 DAILY PILOT ON TUESDAY> APRIL 17, IT y/ILL BE. ~ q <j FOR I '17" I 1'115 I 1~76 I 1917 Thre~ nt.w School Boan:{ Members, A new School Board. Tn~ori!) .for-1h~ Next Four yea:rs · ~ tt ~ -.... You. have. -three votes ot>.. Tuesd~· Use 1heW\ -it> e.le.ct a respol'\sive, ar.Gl R.espans ible.. School 'Bo~" JANE. BOYD NORMAN BROWNE. - " -11101~r~. Mri. J•M 1""141111, "-Olol• UCI GRADS WANTED Mi;Wi ,_..,~. J~"li..1 1" :O.ulllol•._ ""''"'""' - \Var I alone, Burgener said he Jn a survey. doctors w~re asked !l18"Y cases _rrom _pa in, 1lch1n_g · tJf r I r what they use to relie ve such 1n hemorrho1dal t.i.seues. And 1{ can :set no _JUS ica ion ° painful symptoms. Many of the actually he!lp1 shrink painful Ml CHAEL SAGAR two oro1Mr1, ~ernon. 01 LOI Anii-111; ACTION Rtcruiter Tishman &irl Dengn.au~, rorrt nc1. .., '"""' allowing foreign governments doctors report ing 1aid theY 1welling of such tissues whf'n ,._ __________ ,.. ________________________ _. w•ICIS lnoJ m11rmen1 ~,. Mia. litll ilf0il3W•Y MOl'l""'~f:E~rK1or1. Petll Geer. Aw Iv, ot 2001 Swen Or., cesr• MeH. 0111 of llN1h, APl•I l•, 1Y73. )1t1v1v1~ uy wr1n11, Mr. •na Mr1. Rltn•ro w. Gffn oro111tr. Rlcfllrd W. a.er Jr., Hur11u'1g1on t1 ... c111 •••••r. ... e'"" Rl~•~rua, Hunnnoton BtAChl Ptrernol 11r1rwmo1t11r, Ruin >II. G••f, .._ot11 M<'w1 r.wuer1111, or1naP1>r1nt$, Mr. •na Mr1. ~rl G. l>lllSOn, ut LI. Verne. :.1rvlte~. TllllCllY, Z:JCI PM, !.Jrltl LlllOll, ~1. Mar~wi Prffuv1tr11n 1..nurch •. lnllrmlnl, , PACltk Vlow Mtrri.ori•I P•r~. F1m1ly Ulll· 1111•5 111as. wl~11!ng mov mo1k1 meu1ono1I 'c«Jtrlllull-IO Sr. Anar1w1 Pr11oy11rl1n 1.,nurcn Youth Pr09r;1m, Pa<lllc; Vl1w ~hu1rv. 01rettttJ"1t!T Ele•l'IOr M1rl1 l·h,1r1 . 1201{, 31th St., Newl>Of"I e eoth. SU(•bved ov hu1Wo<J, John e. Hur1!; d1ugh1er, Jacou.lyn Ann Ptrn1k. Rt'lkllno1 two 1111er1 Lal1 8ertar1111, S•nll Cruz; M1rl1 F1rr1d , M1mv\ 11. l"nv111 tamHy 11rvkff, Tu••· div, 1 PM, P1cltlc ~ew Ch1ae1. Entomo-~"I P1cllk.r"1• Memurlel f'lfk .. "-m Iv IUllQe'R lho51 l~lno ni•Y mek1 ll'femorlal conlrlbull~s o 1111 Ametlcfn 9nc1r Sotl1lv. Poclll VI" Mol'f..,.ry, IJ/rKlort. KUClN~KI Q1r1 Ser1h Kll'Clftlkl. DIN of dffltl. ,t(Drfl 1,, lt73. Survlv.a by •Iller. Mrs. Jiiek Swan1 br'othlr' Andrew lorllowslrl, • mll"UU• fll,cn 11'111 l)IPhfwl. ll:eoul1m Tllftdly, 10 AM. St. Jcwttnlmt c Clwrch. lnltrmtnl, Good rd c 1m1 I 1 r y . B•l!l·l!ler;eron F;Vnlrtl Home, Coile Mli.e, OlrKlari. • LUHNOW ! F. Lutr,_. l ttld>MI of Colorlclu; of dM!h, April 10, 197J. Survived OV 1, W1Hl1m arid John; d1uohl1r1, 0t0r1 er.-Daflnle, 111 of Allllnt. Color1do; twlfl ruUGllllrs, Lori ind Ll11, Sin Juen obtT1no. Services, TueKllY, APf'll 17, 11 , St. Merv's E11l1cgpel Church, Ll!Jlln• wlrh Rrv. Rober! L. (Ol'flllll>Otl Qf· Q. Prlv111 ln!1rmen1 11 Rost H!lls 111 Park. Famlh• SUCMll'I'-ltiote ncr may m1k1 memorial conlrlbu!lons 'S . M1rv1 ElllKOPll Church or Men-r Founaal!on, To111ka, Kan111. Shll· ttr 111un1 Bea(h Marlu,,rv, Directors. • MALAlfl(Y ru1 M111rkv. P.01 ••, or '16 ona1, rt ee1ch. 0 ... 11 al CM1th, Aprll 151 1 • Survived OV lhree n11lh1ws, l:IOWlrG .'. leller1, N-w1 Bt1ch; Htr9'd lend, Weldon. Call!.; Jot Mlll<klV ., Arliona; 1hree nlKl'I, Mr1. Vern r Miiwaukee; M•t C h 1 r I 1 s Hug~, Encll'IO; Mrs: 01vld Jolllt11. LM I'!. Rosary. tonight, M~1y. 7:30 • Requl1m MIU, Tund1y, 9:30 AM. 11 our Lady o.,...., of Anuels ftlolk Church. ln1ermen1, Hotv Crou erv, L(lf. Anoelrs. Westcl!tr Chap.el rv, ~,,~0~~'6:rs. J. O'Connor. 1100 l(lr.g1 ROid. B•Kh. 01!1 of dlllh, Aprll l•, i,rrvlv-.:1 l)y wlle, Con1!1nc1; two IOflt, TllGmes 1na Jim. bOlh of NtwPOFI IRllCh; ltlrff 1ltlrrsR Dorothy O'Grmdy, ~le Cuvas, bOlh of Hun!lngJon 8tKh1 l!Un b1Uh Ge1rh&r1, LO!!Q 1!111ch; Orolhlr. lemlnl O'(orwior, Wnl CavfN . Rowrv, I, MundlY, 1:)(1 PM, Biii BrOlclway I. Masi al the R111urr«llon.1. Tues-9 AM, St . .Julchlrns C1th0Uc .._hurcn, MHI. F1m1Ly sU0911h m1mort11 contrlbullon1 m1y bl maot to HUii ~111" Memorlol Fund. Bell Broadway .IM!nuary, Olre<:lors. ••• PIA ""9 Pia. Age 17; rl'lld'"I ol mono•; n1Uve at ll•lv. 0111 or !ti, APrll 15, 1973. Surv!v<ld by c""r. hter1. Mr'\. Lucy NOHRJU, UI a ; Mr1. LOU!st Cn1mb1r1. monoa; Mr1. td1 An lon1Kcl, Ou1rtt1 or1ndcnildran; •I• II r 1 1 I - E andchudrrn. Rosary, Tund1v, Aprn1'7, PM. Or1111r MOlu1ry, On11riu. R-·~~ "'" •r.• Wldn1sa1v, 10 ,.M, Sin Srcondo st , C1rhal!c Church, Gu11!1, Call!., with f r. Mele• ofl\cl1111111. 1n11rmenr, Bellv!ew t.\.iJV$Ol1um On!irlu. Famllv IUllGllll fllPM wlthfna mlf make m1morl1I con· trU1ut1on1 to !Mir avarlle charity. • • THOMPSON Arvt! c ThamP~-Resldtnl ol H1111-tlngtun 8Ntl11 d1t1 ol dt1th, April 13, n. Survlv<ld llY wlt1, Wlnllrt d E. )H)mp~· d111111111rs, Sharon S1nc:hl1 • Sull~ ThomPSonl bruthlfl, J1m1s, ernon Georqe, Harald and Elvl" ~: thret 1!s!1rt, Alvca, Clar c1 Mae; thrtt grandchlldrtn. S1rvlc11, illftdly 2•31l PM Olld•r Brolhefl "!ptl, :..1111" Rev. Hirrv S!le gflJcl~tlnQ. n ombmefll M11ro11 AbblV. Vl1H1llun kl•v 9rortl.rs Ch11111t, , lu ~ ln<f 7 ta' M, IOC11v, Munda~. Olld1y Brulhers 1rv, S•2-771iR'i~'I1ur1. o c. Ur1n1. Ape JI!; rnld1nt 01 Hun 16" eeach. oa11 01 de1th, APJlt ll, Survlvtd by wile, HOPI!: d1U11hllr~. '""''' Kirker. Garden Grove: R.,.. L. · fM 1te11Chlldren, Ann Maril I nd f Let H1rn1nG1L, 111 of Hun!lfl!llon eeh; mother, ltamon• C:.1trlKO. Mt•· 1 bfOlllll' Juan Ure111; rwo sl1t1<1, lllJI 111(! N.i!lvldld. Servlttl ptndlr>Q 1r lltrs Mortuary, SJ6-6$39. ARBUCKLE II< SON. WESTCIJFF MORnJAllY . U7 E. 11lh SI., Colla Mesa -y . ·B.U:'l'l-B,RGl!RON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar ns-HSO Colla M-lff.!IM • ·BELL BROADWAY MORnJARY • 1Jo Broadwty, Coslli Men LI J.MS3 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MO ARY ,.J.11rba~'P.,•YOD Rd. 15 • PACIFIC VIEW -MEMOllIA L PARK • Cemettry Mortuary Chajiel ISOO Pacific View Drive NeWport Stach. California '44-1100 • PEEK FAMILY , COLONIAL FUNERAL .,_ ~OME "faet llolu Ave. We1tmln1ter U3-35U • • SMfTHS' MORnJARY , 1!7 r.1111la SL • _..,. lle.cli 5311-639 Volunieer Recruite1· '.f0-V-isit- to continue to default. "When either use Preparation H them· infected and Inflamed. Just s1-e 1• we have to borrow billions to selves or in their office practice. if doctor-lt'!!led Preparation H., pay our operatinll: expenses Preparation .H gives prom~t, doesn"t. he)p )'OU. Ointment or and spend ore billions to pay tc>mporary rehef for hours 1n suppos1tor1es. Tll!i edv1r!1Mm111i paid 11r by SclllOIJ '7J, l eb Miiter c .. c1111rm111, '>O G1-Yt1 For· a ride to the' polls, CaU 497-lSSS Peace Corps and VISTA Workers m-ihe "fields of physics, chem i stry and ~E~~~E1~::: a~ua•111 E a1 .. s•a11.· ~·ii!; 27, will be on campus from 9 M Ii • 111 -1 ~ill a.m. to 3 p.m .. each o[_the l~====~:::~::~~~.::~~~::::::::~::::::::::::::~..:::::::=::::::::::~~'.'.'.:.::~==::::'.'.:::~:'.'.::.::'.::~~~====::~::~:::::'.~~~~:..~ th ree days. Interviews will be held in the Commons building. He said the merged volun- tary governmental organiza- . tion -ACTION -has re· quests ror degreed math and sc ience volunteers in at least 14 or 60 developing co.untries . Assigrunents range f r o m teachJ.Qg to e d uc at io n supervisory positions . Countries seeking biology, physics and che m is tr y graduates include B r a z i 1 , Ethiopia, Kenya, Sierr!l Leone. Fiji and Malaysia, Tishaman said. Wi th Tisham. will be VISTA volunteer-Rocky--Diez, Z31who taught English to an Indian tribe near Sall Lake City, and Roxie Bagley. 29,' who was a Peace Corps health worker in Korea. Bar Slaying Suspect Sued By Widow Mrs. Meir BiographJ. Scheduled ORANGE -A documentary Olm on the Ille or Israeli • Prime Minister Golda Mclr will be screeoed April U by the Women's DI.vision Ill the Orange County United Jewilh Welfare Jt~und. The BBC-p~oducod Ulm will be shown · at 1L a.m. at 1the Orange Mall Th~alre, al Ille intersection of TusUn arftl Lln· coin Avenues in Orange. 'l'he mm 1races lhe modem history of Israel and Includes Oltens!Ve ln\m'lews with Mrs. Mell'. For rurther IJ!lormadon call !33-'l'/2:i. REESE'S DELICIOUS PEANUT BU.TIER CUPS ·--""" 2 . .... 7J¢ , PIGS. 100 01lic;iou1 pe1fluHy c1ndy1 fur 1n•c~1 or tr11h Liinll i Pkg• Ptr C:.ovpcrn UNFINISHEb BOSTON ROCKER 2 DAYS ONLV 14.88 20" BREUE BOX FAN ' 111 ... 15.U • 2 Mys Hlr . 12.88 l 1p11d--;_pPrl11bl• •l•cldc f•n • M1t1I c•11, H 1 n d I 1 , J u1t llV "Ch1r91 H!" __ \ I ACRYLiC FLOOR FINISl'.I _, 63' 27 oi. Self poli1hln9 flgor fini 1h lor vinyl, /ingf111m, rub· b1r, 1sph.it tll• tiftd hrr•io. )./ LONG-SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS No-iron pocli:1t, stripes. 2 DAYS ONLY • I I polyester/cotton. Sprt•d 2-button cuffs. Pr[nts or Clla rge·ill ' • \ • ' . 1 GAL FUSHSIA •" 77' Up right or .li1n9in9 -Su'mm1r colgr in th• 1h1J1 - A11I, cglor1. TUES. ONLY l WED. ONLY •/1 IA.KID CHICKIN W hl11p1d pgt•to•1 I t r • Y v , v19•t1 bl1, cr1nb1rry 11uc•, roll & butt1r. DELICIOUS MEAT IA.LL SANDWICH W ith to1,td s1l1d •nd cohoic• ol clr1s1in9, S1r.-1d 'till 7 p .n'I. d1ily. 66'· Use Your K mart Chal'fJe BankAmericord or Master Charge TERRY CLOTH • ,,~ .. 45'/46" cotlot1 t•IT'I· 11-11 ycl, • I I --. - I ' • ••• • f.f DAILY PILOT M...S.,, AP'll 16, 1973 L • .M. BOfld _ . W hich Force Motivates -You? ·Few dog ex perls agree. but U.S. 1'...,t Q!fice SJJOk•• men. who should know, now contend that dog leaat likely to bite is the cOllle. It's truir the " ladies who drive cars ge t into just as rnDny fendel'-bendlng accidents as do the men. What's signifi cant. though, is the girls hav.e only half as many fatal crashes. Afost young v.·omen prefer loose ca~I waves In their hair. Most older ~·omen prefer tight set waves. Explain the why of that, please. It was generally recognized In the Old West, true or otherwise, that the best bronc busters came from Mon- tana. No. malter where he asked for ' work if he identified himseH as a Mon- tana cowboy, the potion was generally accepted that be knew his horses. 1' ~ Europe, this wils also true of the Hun- g,arian drifter. And in Asia, al course, the Cossack. -· SQUARE 'DANCE -Three times a month is bow often th e usual square dance club member goes out to ~i-do ... It 's still said the city or Fort .WQrth ci,.ims the world'• \\·ca lthicst bache iors .... Average mother. is age « when . her youngc.s\ child leaves home now. The need f~r power. the need for ' achievement, and the. need for love. These are what most motivate men. . Or so ~ays a Harvard professor: Power boys are those who grea!IY desire to have 'an impa ct on other folks. Achievement boys Yl'&nt to get the job done, whatever, then go on to somet hing else. Love boys, presumablf hu gging and kissing a lot, look for affection. E\•erybody, says !his savant, has a little of each, but is dominated by one in particular o!·these tfges. Classify yourself, sir. QUE RY -Q. "Was . Peggy Fleming ever beaten In amateur ice skating competi tion?" A. Not after she woa her first world championship at age 17. Five times United States champion, three limes World Crown~·inner. Immediately after dusk sometimes in the sahara Des· ert, travelers there hear what souhds like volleys_of rifle fire. Ominous. But I understand the natives lenore tho6e noifiCS, knowi ng them lo be just stones exploding. The sudden drop in temperature does that. Lovers marry. Children arrive. And the romance then wanes. The foregoing is .contradictory to popular belief, but the psychological scholars who study ure among the ma rried in sist it's true. Children do not enhance the af· fec tion between husband and wile, they aver, but dimin· ish it. Sad news, if true. Nt 41 5 people are born every hour bas been report· ed. Less widely known is the fact that 2,750 dogs' and cats are born every hour, too. Can't seem to find any expert who c;an say for fiUrt which is t~ ··more daBgeroas when angry, a bOU or a boar. Do you know ? Address · ail to L. 1\1. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New· port Beac , if. 92660. • YMCA Sued -Over Death OAKLAND (.IJ') :.._· The widow of lndian&c tiv is t Richard Oa~es' has filed a $1 million wrongful death suit agaiflst the Bukele,Y YMCA, which runs the ca.nu> where Oakes was fatally shot Sept. 30. In the Alameda County Superior Court suit, Anne " $677,200 SuitFiled For Dog SAN RAFAEL (UPI) -The owner of a pel poodle named _liuzy ~hi• flied a 1677,200 malpractice suit, claiming the dog was partially paralyzed during an operallon. . . MRS. PATRiCIA Duslin said the bl~k toy poodle sur- fers greatly since the opera- tion ·and sit: weeks in the hospital. She said that· pet doctors made assurances that Suzy would recover and I a t.e r 1'COl!lmended the pet be pul out of her· misery. THE SUIT asked f o r $177,200 In· actual damages and $500,000 in punitive damages from . Dr. Hartmut Fischer, Dr, Gideon Sorokin and the North8ate Animal Hospilal. Mrs. Dustin· said that when she brought Suzy home from the hospitaJ , the Poodle's rear legs were atrophled ror lack of exercise. Oakes contends the orgilniza-~-----~--1 tion ''ne g Ji £en t l y and Kid Lik T ' wrongiully" caused the death s e 0 or Oakes, 30, who led the In-Ask . .._ -'d dia n occupation of Alcatraz i"l.Il y Island in 1969. l"•l• r •lilluf Allv-rti.en-t [!] Vote for ' FRANCES 0. MANN TUES., APRIL 17th _ BOAR·D Of_ . TJUST ES Coast C•unity CoHege District l"•W lly C9'11mlttff to Elect ''"'" O. M•1111 Cllalrm-.. 51Nr1 H. Mllfttl. 4M1 '""" Cir~le. ~ •..ell ~I on April 17 ' ' l FOR I CONTINUED QUALITY . -EDUCATI.ON IN THE Huntington Beach City School District K. DALE BUSH RE. INCUMBENT • • JACK CLAPP INCUMBENT . . BUSH .. STEVE HOLDEN INCUMBENT Cl.A.Pl" Committee· for Continued Quality Pat Bell, Chairman Education . . -Mrs. -n.tJ 0...,-C... Dr,. "wllql• .... • \ .1 nwow .l ~ ' I "j/ • ·Bank ~·on the ·Treasury for dependable ' prescription service - ' • A prescription is serious business. And that is the way yours is al - ways treate.d at the Treasury. Our prescripti~n department use~ only -theJ inesUresJl.!!_st drugs and is so fully stocked that we are usu•lly able to supply your needs without delay. Our pharmacists checlrlnd re '.check every stei> ·of the way: to mak1t certain that your doctor's order is followed precisely. They are deditated to serving your healt h , .. • :.: ' I needs. ~ • Next time you have a prescription to~ filled , bring it to the 11.:0-: · fessional pharmacy, in th u reasury. It's so convenient to d~ all your .' other ~hoppinc.at the salllf time and the Sfllle place. You can bank.on the 'treasury. ~ • ---- ----~--~ ---~------. _. .. taLl21.~M •••F-ID,.,._ IMIAWNt.lllt!llllC.-~ ftlllANCll•pn.Nllld ........ ~ .... ,.,._.,...._ ~,,_-,01~ IW'M lllUl•ClllilMr*St. -0..GIMk•..._., . OPEN DALY .l::IO 10 ·1:30 :SUNDAY10 10 7 ~ . ~ ~---~4 --~------------~---, . . . • , • J \ • •I • \ . -. . • Mo11day, Apr II ·lft, 1971 DAILY PILOT J$ • ' . - " I • I L... /,:. ~ I -.; .. "' A • :) ' ' 1 t • I • ··Trell~. Sl;iiy . has-plerity et sWeef things to fill your · Easter basic8ts . . -. . '· ' . ~ l..:.J~-;;;;:~~ _..r- t ~ .. MP "'!!~ ~ CHOCO~ TE VERED EASTER E. G -' YELLOW, :.MARSHMACLOW BUNNl'ES - I Box of 12 · ' SPEtRY 1-1b. 66c . JELLY BIRD EGGS 1-lb. Bag , 36c OCOLATE COVERED CREAM EGGS 6Pack __ 37c GAYLY TRIMMED FILLED .EASTER BASKETS : 7 7 c ,!, •. 'i!!!Jf' to • . SOLID " .. MILK : CHOCOLATE NUT . EASlE~·: EGG 14-oz~ ' ' $ 89 .... I . . -.. FOIL- WRAPPED SOCtD MILK CHOCOLATE ·EGGS 1-lb. Bag . • i • ' CANDY . ~-' -~ND TOY,, .. FILLED . PAIL AND:., HOVEL --~ w~ ,.. . ' s11'~'- • ,PECAN .._ COVERED . EASTER EGGS 1-lb. -. ' MALTED MILK ROB-IN EGGS • 1-lb. 79c . -,. ~ ,._ I • ·ASSORTED • . ' SOLID CHOCOLATE . ~· . ' I · · SOLIO MILK , . -tRtJCOL-:ATE EASTER BUNNY , , · 9•oz . . . ' . SPECKLED MAL-TED . ' MILK EGGS 1-lb. MINIATURE PACK • ~--BRA CH'S ' . . . : · CHOCOLATE . ' . ·• MARSHMALLOW RABBITS lO's 39~ . :.: . ~ffi'J·@ ·~··'.o~ . ·the '. '· · · --_____ ~ . rreasury -.• D ·y . 1.....i..-ancf'I ·· . , P .IN AI L ~91 30 to 9 :30 -Sunday 10 to 7 • • 1 . · -··1~e oodoenier • ~ .. • \• • • . , ' NGl r "Grove ~J.tlld Mlnchesltr GRANADA H1LLS lllCOOC!Ja!Sl'tOftn ~t. WOOOlANO MILLI ·~u• Vic.IOI'¥ tlYd. l lVIUIDIJ.SlQ t vlff ~'· SANTA ANA ~or tho! Sou!ll Cc.1~1 PIJtt I UlNA ,AllC kttfl a, Or1ngf1Nrpe TOUANCI s.pu1....-111c1 Hawt)lonit U.tclWOOO Ctrwn ~1. &. PArtme:U'll Blvd, Q9< G1 de , . ,. _ -. - '' • f ' • , . • . ' • ,. ' ' • • . . . . ' . ' . " •.· . ::~ .. ' • • '~· . . j .... . - ••• + .· : • \ Jf ·DAI~ Y PILOT • _(;ourted Trouble . Drivers Tango-01ie Was Judge From Wire Services Rooald l\tyen s :i I d the other driver, Jack Ale.a::, \li'8!i follo\•."ing too closely ¥.'hen l\1yers turned into h i s , driveYl'ay. Alex said ?<.lyers failed to signal the turn. Harsh "·ords followed . Alex called police and Myers was charged with disturbing the peace. He ¥.'ill be arraigned Wedne s da y in Citrus Municipal Court. Alex is a judge there, However, he 'viii not be eligible to sit in-the case. for Harr<Jh, married previous- ly to singer Bobby Gtnlry. * . Joseph F. Deeb Jr. paid $180 for one vote. In the April 2 election for ci· ty councll Jn Wyomlng, Mich., Deeb. lost by 44 votes. He demanded a recount and put up $180 to pay for it. The recount showed he lost by 43 votes. *' former House Speaker John The ec1s1on of lhJ""-3rd District State Court or Appeal reversed 1he September 1971 r~ling or Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Wilila1n O. Gallagher. · The nev.· ·eng'tneering studies ccimplex at the U.S. Naval Academy will be named in honor of Vice Admiral llyman <;. Rickover, the "father of the nuclear submarine." The four·~tory, $27 million complex: is scheduled for com· pletion in 1974. \\'. !\1cCormack received an honorary doctor of I a w s degree at the Nationa l . * University of Ireland in * Resort owner William Hw· Dublin. Reputed labor racketeer rah and his wife of six month s The 81 -vear. old }.tassa-John "Johnny Dio" Dioguardi ha\•e separated, a spokesman chusett s Democrat retired wa s sentenced in New York to confirmed. from Congress in 1970. nine years in prison and fined • QUE~NIE · By Phil lnterlondi Acqmsition Completed • Sptclal to the Dally Pih>I The transaction invol\•es ex· LOS ANGELES .._ Ewiron· change of an u~disclosed num· •ll.f\llal Systems IoternatiO~ ber ,of shires of ESI common ~Joe. announced Wedne!Klay it w stock, according to Barry A. bas completed. tbc.a.~guifil.tio(I...._ BerklJS.i' pr_ e s Iden t and on a poollngo0f-interests basis, chairman ~( ~ara. of ESI. of · ·R.M. Ga J Jo way & The· acqulslt1on._ 1 will be 'Associates Inc .. an ln· reported in ESI s J"CCen.tly temalionally known cl v 11 completed fisca l year, which engineering (lrn1., ended March 31. . -· LOSE WEIGHT . ,.!~1t~ p~~!!C fOU bf(Omt llttflim.tllll pttM that fOU would llU to k. Od1fer h,t~bten us~ su«Uslully by ltlOllSlndt Ml over th• coont1y l0t 14 ye111. Gel 11d or ••cm lat anr1 llY.t Jopger. • Odrinex Is 1 tlnr tablet and e1sllf swallowed .Contains nodanaerous dru1s. No sWvin1. «o sptdal txerdses. Od1in11• Plan costs $3.25 ind the llfll eeanomy slzt $5.25. Yoit must Jose UtfY. tit or )'OW tnOll'Y wlll bt r•lundtd. No qunlionl asked. Actfill no substitutes. Sold wltlt Now ••.• Plastic Cream '"' ''"""' .,, , : l!!!'!!!J~~ A~.~ti,~!1~!,!,!f!! 11"~~1~ __ e;;;=1ez=?.iianc1ay=uot~es~) Se Mltsal .. , .. -.;" It let.I you bite harder, chew bet· n~ SU Now.forthefirsttime.scienceoft'ersa ter, eat mon!. natural.ly. FIX~l!NT Fll n· rul''f plastic cream that holds dentures as lasts for hours. Resists mo1~turc. &;11' neverbeffte-:-formsaneblsticmem· Denture1 that fit are essential to bClne that htlPs Jwld 11u111 to tll• health. See your dentist re1ularly. . r!l''lll'iP.!'11!" nallirol•lissl'tS of yrrnr 1t1oulll. It's a Get eaHy·to-U&e F1xODENT Denture •ii'\ the l•b11lJill!tll unique diliCOvery calil.'<l FIXOOENT• Adhesive Crea.in. ' ••••••••••• H'arrah, 61. and the fooner $30.000 for plotting a stock R.olanna.Carlson, 3'l, had been * swindle. ,_ ffiarried Oct. 15 at Harrah's ~n appeals court !}as ruled "You have d e d i ca. t c d "Yes, operator, I'trt holding -and happily!'' ON 1UESDAY> APRIL 17, IT WILL BE Lake Tahoe home an d that Fresno State acted legally yourself to a career of crime." -----------------------11 separated recently. No reason in reducing Engli sh Depart-~ Chief Judg~ David Edelstein for the separation. was given . • ment . Chairman 1': u I e n e said in passing sentence on The marriage was the fourth Zumw~lt to rank of professor. Dioguardi. 58. convicted Ja sl January of conspiracy to in· flate shares or Be I mo n ... t f'ranchise Corp. stock. In Costa Mesa (&It Plllllltll Advtrtlttinenll • Elect William R. Thompson .: .. Capistrano Unlfled Scllool District :Trustee-Ar• 1 ( * "'4S·IS w•1 •lmott forctd upon"''· Fu rth•r contro.,•rti1I pro· 9r•rn1 m'u1t b• mo rt -.thoro119hl,v & objttliv•ly inv•tli9tttd." * "2S million doll1r1 in bond mon•y tr1111t '?-1p•nt tffititnlly 1 proclucliv1ly." * "1't1_fhtr • l~1rd comll'lunic•lion dtmt nd1 improv1rn1nl," I VOTE APRIL 17 Mt. Tltomp1011 Is Wnt CN:lt Director •f Ad111luloM for Dr .. • U11/v1rslfy P•id tor by Conc1med Partflll Commillff of CUSD. Cllrm. 11i.1 Partt.,., 21f5Z Qu1v.-, M.V. T.he * Senior Citizens 1'hc dean of the Uni\fersity of Massachusetts School of Education says any teacher who can be replaced by a n1achine ··~ould be." Offered Event,s Dwight Allen told a group of educators from throughout the country teachers "n1ust get on top of the process of change and teach people to accept that change as the standard in their daily Hves,. ·' Mixed Breed By United Press lu~rnalional 1 The hybrid offspring or a tiger and -lion is called 1a · i'tigon" ift he father iSa -tig.Cr and a "liger" if the father is a lion. Costa ~tesans 50 and uµ 1-•:ith Tuesday and Thursday leisure tlme can fill it with fun, sitting out Tuesday and spending Thursday on their feet. The Costa Mesa Senior Citizens Tuesday Club n1cets from II a.m. to 3 p.n1. in the Community Recreation'Cenler at the west gate of the Orange County Fair-grounds. Bridge, canastaJ _pinochle and other card games are of· fered, with even free brush-up instruction for those who ' ., ,.,.__., . ) )' . '9't?ifo' " '* ,. t•,$i •• ,.,~~ ...... '. o1"1ll:t Tax-free Tax Form Sought by Senator Following SAY People haven't played a hand for awh ile. Round, square. socia l and folk dancing is the specialty of the Thursday Club, which meets from 12 to 3 p.m. in the Community Re ere at ion Center. Officers elected for 1973 by the Tuesday Club include President Roy Ch\'en. Vice President Emma H a 11 , SecreTary Aniia Fi n k'e , Treasurer Henry Sa n d e r s . tlistorian Clara ,Pratt and Auditor \Valter Griffin. Thurscfay Club officers are Ma,nage.r Harry Heins , Treasurer Ruby H 9 u s to n , Secretary Ruth S t e v e n s , Dance Coordinator Roy Owen and Game Coordinators Alice Schwarz and Angela Pesenti. Kids Like To ' Ask Andv • • 3 FOR q , ., 7'# I . 1t:t1S" I l<J76 I /977 Three. r,ie.w Schoo/ Board. Members, A new School .Board Tn~ori!) .for 1he. Next Fol!r yea.rs " " ... i$ You. have. ihtee· votes ol'\. Tuesd~­ Use. 1helT\ tE> elect a respol'lsive . . aru;l ~sron..siblc. Sch.ool 'Bo~r-cl • JANE. BOYD . -)(. "' NORMAN BROWNE. )( , • ~ . MlCHAE[ SAGAR • )( Tllll •G••rllstmrnt p.oicl tor lly 5cho011 '11, l oll Mlll•r c~Ch.,lr!Mn, tJt GJMn•Jl"I For a ride to the polls, Call. 497-1555 . ' JEAN BOGEN Endorsed because ... "of her ~xperience and. significant contributions to the district •. . . far greater knowledge Afvl1 M. Coe1, M•.,o• 'hllclo e- Ted lorti.tr. Cit., Co1111ctf111911 He"ry Du••· Cit) Cou11cllmo11 Nency DU• . Joe• Greett, Cit., C•1111e.ilnt01t N1111M1, Gtbbs, City Co111tCUwo111011 Jerr, M ... y. Ctty Co11J1cll111011 Dr. Dot1111d Shlplff, City Co11tcllmo11 '" Olld HorrJll Wieder J11dy L1-..1 . Jetty nd leffrty Ket1efic k ICe11•tt< Golde11 Fred oltd Lynne loldlnt ic .. nd Atdls lrowfl I . L. H11Mld H1111m a11d Eloh .. Wo'd L. Dovld Altdeno11 Hete. J. Fto"y lbwlll oad CorO/ Konocfo Wopo ..., rllffl lro1111 Dr. lie...., .... loy ¥hW K~tll 014 Mickey DewM Dick 0114 J .. H11111pr0111 JI"' 011.i Morlly11 Lewk Alln CllMI SWfOll lo1111lefleld Clltetils eltd lefty S111lth Mr. -4 Mrt. Cecil l lr1bo11m Doll nd DloM Myen J11dy l'ellloff Jerry °'"' S.ll11t E'llltf'( wnn •• oltd Jo11 llss Dick 11icl Jo11 Hampton ' is REALLY Ocean ~ View's Friend! Ken kerlns Ll11d11 Lcibelson Fli11t oftd Adrienne Morriso11 It" ond Mlldrt'd Moo Goll McK0111le A.1111 Moreland Mr. 011d Mrs.Horold Gooder l•tte Munday 1111 o~ Joo1t11e Gass Dick olt Scolly 1'ho111pso11 Charlotte Wl1111 Dr. L111l1 H•t11111de1 W•yne 011d M111rl11e lehr•fld So11j• SHrty Mr. 011d Mtt. Im lok•r T•rry ond Joe lri1•• E1ttlle Kenefick Na11cy Cet11ell roula Clark Joh11 Do11° Glorle Fforry lha11da M1rfy11 Dick 011d htty Hetle Chuck end Ho11ey McGlht<hey De11t1h MoMrt. loord rrnlde11P H.I . U11lo11 HJti• School District Linda M1"'.rs Naffft ollcl Kitty Wollh• Ke11 011d lhedo Morry• lo11 aad Peny Noftt• Tom Co1,-.r ~b Sllitoke r. 011d Mrs. Dcnld CorfHtt .011d lkro• .,. .... ~o..-o,011d Joe111te hetty lob and Groce Wl11chcll Ho11k 011d H•IH Todd Antho11y a11d J•a111M Hickey J..-ry 11111d rrlm Shea EU1obeth G11m11tttrmo11 Do11 a11d Jeo11 Gledt Mild,.d Arnokl loHfttery lartoll lob 011d Koy KnowJn Carolyn lontloo Yol•rl1 Hur11 I Jim and Noncy Moy Joh11 olld Lindo Lontow G1or,. oltd IHll• Wiiiia"" Jim 011d lath JolleS · Chuck 011d Co111•ie Howard Dr. Ale1•11ffr Loaclotpo A1111•tff Losclolpo Jim and lobblo Sllepord Ed 011d Shirley lerlftS Al and S•roh Enenso1 Jo111n J. Falrfleld Koth•ri111 Folrfkold Mel 011d Shirley Kl111mef Jo11e P•nff1•ha1t Alda Staley JuM St1phtnson MafJ' Trocy Marcus Porter Murltl Wo911tr DoR ORcf Mor5e Woll-.. Jeny Oftd Dlrie Wotltl111 Jo A.Jiii ff5ed- for JEAN ·Ocean BOGEN View School Board --Tuesday, April 17th l • ' . .. of and interest in the entire district.'' · ,,,t) ' •. , . Daily Pilot • We know you listen; We know you're concerned -for • the public AND the pupils. We're going to write yoli in 'tor District T~. \ I The Newpart.Mesa Voters Mrs. Nigel B•iley Charles Catanese Charles Nadoff Mrs. Carolyn Kimme Mr. and Mrs. Dan Scher Barbara Mallett Jim Wood Phyll is McKown Ela Siabo Norman H. and Roberta Prif!c• Willard Reec• Br. Tom Nelson Judy Riley John end Petricie Powell Helen Englehert Pat Drew Marrie l•uck Barbara Mertin Willi•m Bush1rd Ell• t.:f•• Mer1m . Mickey J.ackiorr • Toni Acone Eleanor Canzoneri ~Bert ind Jo•n H•k• Hel en L. Hill . J uO'fROs•ntt Je Nelda Procheske David Brees Merritt and Jefinne Johnson Laura Connolly Bob Francy Norman P. Thomps on Jerry Shannon Mr. and Mrs. J1ck Lincoln Elizabeth S. Meyer Mary Afin M c~lliriar Jim Clough Nancy Chamberlin ' Margaret Cunningham F.R. Butterfield Charles and V•lm• Gordon Frank Ellis Bill Ritter H ~9h leetherman An9alo a ~~ Marilyn VessOs Hilda McCarJ ney L.Ou Yantorn Dr. lrvin9 R. Stone K!•d•lyn Plott Di ck: Riley Ann Sorenson ,, 1 •• NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL CO OISTRlq DI TllJSTff AllA 2 Vet. for Q,.. 1'lU. . ' ORV1LLID A.MBURGE"f WOR · C-41$lloolll otttetor 1 .... CHARC£s L. ''CITTJCK~ BIUDOh. 8R. FRA -'--1:11-ttw ,_. Thurman and M~ry Alice Bramon ~ Linda Kausen James Daley Mrs. Dcnald A. Str1uss Opal Pric e Marcie Ohlsen Elvin and G1yle Hutchison Dorothy W. Jones \ Carolyn Goubet Neil Abr1m1 Har.ty and Louanne Core• Vera De Camp Cl1rence Nedom , Geor9e •nd Mlldr•d Kuyper , Janet Telly Joan·Mar9ol Ro9er Walk• Hank Panian Gil s .. r Bert Peff ers M1 rt.l\a Boegel Richard-ind Nancy Ma,Ys Glend1 Pfeiffar Manuel Robles. --. -Larry ;•nd-Bev•rly Little 1 .. • ~ A.W. and Sharon W•lters ¥ ... John 'McGowen S~er.yl Caverly Don Lowry Teresa Patterson , Steph•ri 0. and Miry L•• T1Ylor: . ··.Robt.rt Jordo n Ross • Opal Price Chris McKinley_ Bob Kausen Kenneth Mowrty • ., . I . Newport-Mes• Fed•raficin of Teachers ! • • ~ ... ~.. . ~ ,,.., tw Dr "• "' tf ,...,.. .., 1.lr; U11r-c11rm. ""'" ~. m •llCblill •• .. CM. • ' . , I _J ---· I ' , ~· . ·-.. --• ' " .,. ~t ~ , __.-. Mo..tay, April 16,' 1973 DAIL V PILOT J Fbu~ Ne~portSkippers C·aptilre Oi yfil·pic Class Honors· -i;-:----.• --Ip -.. • . • . --:ll..-·~ ; • ; 87 ALMO!(LOCXABEY ArsY!e Campbell and Dove aurptlle wlllner In. the Tomatlo ' Wju. 1klppen com\al llOm as · lalr \o bocome an' Olympic _ ...... ..., Ullman, both" Balboa Y.cbt e1tamaran claa, be.sU.na oo' ·far south as Dallas, 'Tex., v contender in 1976 when the FL YING IJIJ1'CHMAN t ti\ -(t ) Chicken of the Sea, Jack Strathman and John Riggs. Denver (Colo.) Yacht Club, 8.7 points; (21 Eskimo Neil . Jeff DaviS, Kitsilano YC, British Columbia. 27 .1: {3) Poof, Alfred Gart, Northern Colorado YC, 46; (4) No name, Helen Damoutb. CYC. 46.7; (S) Fair Dlnkum, Gerald Campbell, Utah S a i I i n g Sunshine, 'Henry Sprague 111. N~IYC, 13 ; (2) Toad, R.Qn Dougherty, SOYC. 29 ; Ill Petunia. Louis Nady, SFYC . 31.8: (4) No name,. Randy hfcLaren, 1'-1BYC~ 42; (SI Wild Turkey, Fred .PxJk, ABY C. 69.4. St. FYC, !P.4; (41 Mucho Gusto, Mike Oyn!Tlure, SFVSC. 42; 15) Stellavantor, S_t u Weiner, VYC,.JB.1. ' . ;. . ' . , ,a..i • • ) ; ; ' . ~ . • ,. . ' ! ' ) j l ! • • l ) . • • ' l • • ' i ~ ) 1 l • ! • • • . , ' • • • • ; i l • I i ., • ) . •• . ' ' •' ' ' .. •' . · ,• " . :I •• :: ~ :1 .. :! :l • ' l • • • • • j .. ~ ·' .. ·' " • " • • • . • Four Newpart Harbor 'skip-Club ....,. tbe CIOly two ol<ip-14 olber enlrlet, Including the far nortll aa BrlUsb Columbia. yachlin&' games are h<ld near . pen were wlanora In Alamllos pen lo win their reapecllve claas champion and favoril• u far wat as l!onolulu. and .. TQConlo, Canada. • l}ay ftMt· Cub'• llth IJ)nual clusts with pUfect ICQrtll un. •·Tim Taylor " Cabrtllo Beaob. ~• far eaat as Denver. l ~pbell is a former All· Olympic Cl-·Reg at ta der tbe . Olympic seoring Yacht Club. 'Spragu• ta a form0r~· AmOriean c;o~egiale s a H o r Saturday and Sunday. sys~.· Ca111Pbe11 JllA!I~· Sal~'•-were bit by . and North Amerlc81f Ion· 'from· Us<!. I two-time wumer " 1'""1,L •~11£ lll o or cleaii . .;,_.p,GJ ~i,iO.Tf!i · ''~.-.1Ui1 '!'Inds up lo,.,. lit tlie n1ued one:Dilit . ,. of lh10Coogmslonal Cup and Newport 1larbor Yacht Cl!Jl> .q~ apios! I} cont.eQflen, Ju>Ot. wlilt;b oontrlbuted lo a Clias, and In 11164 weal:• lllO mad'e an unsuccesslul bid !or was t~e winner of the ABYC '1en<i Ullnlan 1<Jlll!04 21-rtva!J Jn nwnber ol copolzlnp and 1ear Olympics In Japan ,;ti !ah• Ille Ol)'l1lllios'last year in the Olympic Cla~ llerve!ual tbe 470 Claaa lo wind·up with a fallum. Winds on· SUnday , alternate lo Peter Jl'amtt. . Tempest pass. , . Trophy u the top skipper in zero ·score.. ·· · w~ llah1 to moder,ate. ULLMAN IS.the ~t na-. Here are the five trophy the_ JS.boat Finn . Class, lbe llUP'laUO'M' of Newport 1'bereg11ttaclrewlllentries Uohal and North ,American winner! in eaCh of the six largest In tbe reaatta. Harbor Yaeht Club waa a ID tbe lb< Olympic classes champion in th< 47119 and bids classes: Association. 67. • FINN .(23) -Ill Mr. ' . .Easter Race Hit ·· . . ---' . •\. ... By Gusty ·wiruls Dem°'), Brad Swan, :NHYC. Strong, gusty winds on Sawrday <i.windled . to fluky zepllyrs on.Sunday lo highlight Balboa Yacht CIUbis Eaittr Regatta whlcl(drew 19\ boal3 MO~OMERY·ll . (Sl - (1) B.l·ackjack, Jerry . Aans-g. VYC. SAB!ll' I< (7) -(1) Ra<lng ,. .. Machine, Mark G a u d i o , ljHYC; · (2) Far Out, Ty in 18 classes. , 'BOATING Only one race was scheduled Beach, BVC. !or ool3ide cl.-Saturday SABOT •B . (13) -.No. 51JI, '---------' and a number of boats aban-Mark GoJison, LIYC~ Lalsy done<! it because of the Daisy, o a y n.a Williamson, blustery weatber. Trophy win-BYC; (3) No. 114.11, Janice ners: . Johnson, BYC. Michigan · U · Inside Clall<s . . SABOT C (16)·-(I) Red TIIISTLE (7) -(I) Ferrari. Devil, David Gales, BYC; (2) John Brawn. CBYC. No. 6154, Flint Smith, BYC; Wins Race (mmterpolnt Second Deaver Wins Whitney Cup Dick Oea~er of Newport. Beach, sailing for the host Los Angeles Yacht Club, was the _ overall winner of~the Whitney ... Series for yachts rated under Uie International 0 r f s h 0 r e (!OR) Rule. The Whitney Series ls com· posed of six offshore races with the best five counting toward the skipper's final ~- COUnterpoint plaOed second overall in· Sunda)''s · final feature, the Stewart· Trophy Race, a. two-legged race with an overnight layover a t Howland's C.Ove,· Catalina Island . separated the three boats Robin. before the final race. ·CLASS 0 -(I) Balandra. _ • McClaire/Ullman, LIYC; (2) THE OVERALL ·WINNER Band :. B, Barnhill/flatch, of the Little Whitney Series LAYC . ror yachts rated under ·the H o w I a n d ' s Cove Rac.e Midget Ocean Racing Fleet (MORFl rule was Gary Swenson's So OVERALL -(I l Escala· Long £rom Anacapa Yacht lion , Hank Schofield , ABVC Club. (protest pending); (2l ri1agic. Steve Mulhollen, ABYC : t3l Overall winner of the .Fred So Long, Gary Swenson, AYC. Harris Trophy series £or CLASS A• -{1) ·Magic; ~2) Pacific Handicap Racing Fleet So Long; (3) The Spirit, yachts was F1ame, skippered Gordon Larson, Sl BYC. py Dick Ramage of Long CLASS B -(1 ) Escalation ; B~ch Yacht C1ub. The fi ve-(2) Tenacious, Alex and Grace race Harris Series ended last Kimball, ABYC; (3; r.1anu TORNADO (IS i -Ill JCI. Skip Elliotl. NH\'C, 20 : !21 Full Tilt Boogie. Bob Harvt>y, CBYC, 21.4: (3) &reaming YellO\V ZonkE'r. Tim Ta"lor, CBYC. 32.7; (41 Sokitoun1. Bn.ici! Harvey. WVC, 52.7: tS 1 Torea. Cappy Sheeley, \Vaikiki YC, 54.1. \. TE~lPEST (12 ) -t i \ Snake. Argyle Ca1npbell. 8\'C. O: (21 Screaming 'i'e\lfHV Zonker. Ken \\feiss. ABYC. 20.4 ; (31 Spoiler. Jack l\Iorris. 470 (22 ) -(l) No name. Dave Ullman, BYC, O; (2) No name, Bob Bain bridge, Stat:e Harbor YC, 25; (3 ) Dynamite. Dave Patterson , Dallas .YC. 49.1: rt ) No name, Dennis Durgan, BCYC; 411.l; (S) -No name, Jefr Miller, Palo Alto YC. 511.7. SOLING ( 12) ( I l Bellwether, Tom Pickard , ABYC, 28.S; (2) Osiris 11, T. H. Truesdell. NHYC, 39.J; (31 Turtle. Duane Kime, St. FYC. 39.8: (41 Jump, .David Sharpnack , Richmond YC, 41 : (5) \Voomera, Ken Young • eve. 48.7. UNITY ME T A PHYSICAL BOOK STORE OPEN 1 O • 4 • . • MON. • FRI. * E njoy Our Meditation Reading Room * Browse Through Our lend ing Library 1827 WE STCLIF F DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. PHONE 646-51 81 Dial~A-Meditatio~71S7 lNTERNATIONAL-14 (7) -(3) Born Free, Jim Langer, ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) _ ~ (1 ) White Tornado, Peter BCYC. 'lbe University of Michigan Gales, BYC: . . Olltslde Ousts won the John F. KeMedy Before the final race Deaver w~y leading Al Cassel's Warrior, Bah 1 a Corinthian Yacht CJub, and Bob Grant's Robon, Newport Harbor Yacht C1ub for-the series overall honors. oiily three points week. . K~a~i~,W~a~l~tGOOs~~-ha~TI~,$~l~B~';C~.~~~~~~~!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!"~====~~~ Both the !OR and MORF ;;; fleets had a rugged race to Howland's on Saturday as strl)ng gusty winds blasted the course. The race home Sunday was in light airs that dwindl~ METCALF (S) -Cl ) No. U, SANTANA-22 0 2) -(I) Intercollegiate Sailing Regatta Dick Willson, BYC. Shadow, Dave Turner, Sl in Sunday's final two races at LASER (!) -(I) No. 211111, JlYC. . the 'Naval Academy. Carl Reinhart, NHYC. . . PHRF (14) -(I) Ole, John In five lo IS-knot winds, th~ LI00.14A (15) - ( 1 ) Ridel~ NHYC; (2) Sparkle, Mldtlgan team moved from H · d't ho ey G red Smith Alex Irvmg, BYC. the1'r No 2 slot after ea J up n • a , P..CAT (11) -(1) Great . BYC: (2) No. 3811 Gary Di 'de B . M k . BCYC . Saturday's three ""'° lo ·G ar"'s Res-cue Hamilton, ilYC: (3) Header, .\'!.. •.-rian ar • -oi · o•ertalte.. Navy · l!nd the U U to near zero near the finish. The race was not concluded until .after dark. -7-- Scott Shock i:,YC · (4) Banana (2)· Tie Among, No. f«, Uritversity o £ Sout h fl; r n Boat, John nx.:.;,, BYC. Richard Scott, USV!; No Ex-,California who were tied !or' Co llege Chiefs HERE ARE the results of cuses, R. B. Atherton, BYC; first the final races: · LIDO-JIB -(1) Pagan, Moody Blue, Lance McCabe, . d d Marshall Gram, BYC; (2) BYC, and Yellow Submarine, Navy finished secon an LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The 'Stewart Trophy Race (!OR) Westward Ho, Jim Forsyth, Owen Minney, sssc. Kings Point followed in third. diancelloi of P e pp e r d i n e OVERALL -Independence, BCYC; (3) Ra(·N-stlck, Rick RirODES . 33 (li) _ (I) Now In il3 ninth y~ar;.u~ University, Dr. M. Norvel Linskey/Wagel, WYC/cyC; Crisfield, VYC: (4) Mersdah, Mistress Carl Shumacker Kennedy Cup Regatta 15 (2) Counterpoint, Dick Deaver Doris Kirst, BYC. BYC; (21 Thef-apy, Gayl~ = Li:e~ayv:~l~~ademy's Young, 53, was l'escued by LAYC; (3) Robin, George KITE (8) _ (1) No. 281, Poot, BYC; (3) No. ll, Blair county lifeguards afler he fell Tooby, NHYC. Tom Willsoo, BYC; (2) Speed Barnetle, BYC. from.a catamaran in choppy CLASS A·-(I)_ Sanderling . ·SlllEl.Ds.{12) -(1) No.-14, OEO' Director . waters aloog the_Malibu <'0351 IV' Poole/Jo~ BCYC; (!) John ()'Hora, NHYC; (2) Pa-and was dragged nearly six Raider. Rooteri'JHlin, BCYC; " ... _ H NHYC -"--(3) Robon, Bob Grant, NHYC. .1ence, ~· omme, ; SACRAMENTO (AP) -u~ Canners Chief (3) Tomino, Bill Martin, Gov. Ronald Reagan named The guards also rescued CLASS B -(1) Illusion, Ed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) :-NHYC. Salvador J. Espana Jr. of WliverSity president William l\fcOowell, KHYC; (2) Ariana, J . L. Sullivan. Yuba City LUDERS-16 (10) _: (1)-~t's Sacramento as director of the S. Banowsky, di, and his 13-George Thorsen, LAYC: (3) ·peach aild pear grower, has Paw, Keith Dinsmoor, BYC~ 5tate Office of Economk: ap. year-old son whose small Su~merwind II, Dit;k Meine, beeo elected -lo his sixth con-(2) Ariel, Carl Davia, LIYC. portunlty Friday, replacing sailboat capsil'.ed when they LAYC. PHARMACY WE Q'UOTF PR.ICES OYER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -CHICl THISI SUPI R SA.LI SrlCIALS-Sugf. Rei. ' 011r It ... ~k• 1 MYl.ANTA Liquid AMh1cid, 12 01 .•.••.•.•• · .•••••• $1.9S $1.29 Murin• "Cl.'.EAR EYES", 6 01 .•••••••••••••.•••••• I.tis 1.25 B~YLCREEM, 4.5 01. Tub1 •••.•.•••••••••••..... ·1.11 ,.19 ~OLGATE SHAVE CREAMS, 11 01 ...••.•••••••••.•. "/9c-69r S1lll l"rk t $1.09 1.09 9Sc 59c -2700 E. Coast Hi!hwav. at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar secutive term .as cliaiTman of EXCALIBUR (8) · -(1) Robert B. llawlclns, who attempt<:<! to come to th< · CLAJlll C -(1) lndepen- the board of California Can-Husky, Flint Jlmltl>, BYC. r<Slgned. Espana, c, bas been chancellor's aid Friday: dence; (2) Counterpoint; (3) nen and Grower;: With ei(ht RllODES-19 (!) -(I) deputy director for operatlona --~ .. --~-.:.....-----'----'----'..:....:==="" cannin( planl3 Jn California Ready Eddy, Clnlck Eddy, of the state OEO sine~ ·arid:CIDI in·an.-Milllilin, -' '!::: .BYC;. __ ..... --·-~ .. ~ . '"",~.) October 1971. ' :-..... » '~ "·~· ••• !· ..... WE, iRE,iDEftSIGNED.· ACHERS OF THE ,LAGUNA B CH UNIFIED SCllOOLS, . --strongly· support · the "candidacy of ' • I l • .• , , \ The Great Western feeling•· • DR. FREDERICK LUDWIG Everyw):iere you go, all over Califo:mia, the giant GW means strength. And when you save wit h Great Westerri, our strength is your strength .. Because then you know you have money that is safe and growing. Sured savings. And, of course, you're getting all of our free financial service.s. With the help of more good people in more o'flices t han any · tor ·the • ' . BOA:RQ ·of EDUCATION ~~ . . An educato r who firmlr stands for ·quality edu- . cation ~ concerned with basic ~um~nistic values, . . and . not limited to new methodologies . This in • spite of the-views of educators fro m a nearby college wlio~ to ·our knowledge, hQve never vi~ited _ ou r campuses.-- Hal Aikins Quinn Farnes . Ed Bowen ' David Lang Jack Lythgoe , " Rqy Bradshaw -. Emanuel .Calamaro Herb <>elke .... Mf.,. ...... _,It• .. ...,,.. ....... M1111 !If ........ cell ...... II• ....... Dr .. \.lfllM 'fldl • 1 j You're backed by assets over $4Billionand our r ecord of absolute safety since lsS7. You're e&rning the highest rates in the nation.on in~ other savings· association. · · Get the good feeling of strength. The feel- ing that comes from knowing you've put your savings in·exactly.the right place . That's the Great Western feeling. GR:EAT·.WESTERN SAVINGS ' · ...,,..,,....,_ C-... I , ' · •auinu. MAK 1 ·LAGUNA HllLl/lMllH'f World I •1ANrA AMA • I .,!Al llACHILeten _... .. ........ ....... • •• • ••• "" ..... ..., LI ,... • '21-6112 M'IOO ll Toro Roff. NJ...11~1 ~ ..... ~ "1,$1t. -47·71n .... W.•Mtln• ... Av ... ~ MM P. Moen, V.P.-Mlf. w.yna L Shepperd, V.P.-Mar. Jtc~ Hoel, V.P.-Mar. Jity Elliott. V.P-MKr John A Howe V p,u•r °""'.....,. .... P:& . . • . ....... 9 A.M. to 4:30 P:M. Diiiy I Until 6 P.M. Fti<S~sf Free Parking Pl'lll: WIT1t ACCOUWT'I Of' ~.Olll MORI.! .... 0.,.., lol" ... ..__....,,,. 'h•Mn CMtllt. Moner Otdiart. Not.r, s.r.ic., TNtt o.MI Nott Col""'°"' Alto ''" Ctl.c:k·A·MOMl'I ltl•llL *MBERa FEDERAL. ~Nq,\MO LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION, FEOEAAL HOME LOAN BANK• A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OF GREAT WESTERN FINANCIAL CORPORATION . . . ---·--· • 1 • - I • -. \ - JI DAILY PILOT MOftdat, ~II 16, 1•73 DavurCity ./ Smokii;ig in Public Places ... .... . " Ul'IT .......... Transit Stud11 l!ayo~ John Lindsay or · New York checks out futuristic bus in Vail , Colo. The onl y other One like it operates in · N e w York. Backers hope it is an answer to mass transit problem. DAVIS (AP) After a tumultuous hearing, the Davis City COuncil has passed-an ordinance· barrirlg smoking Irr elevators, two-thirds of the (l(Q' space of theaters, an~ public meeting halls. -Alter the ~2 vote, Police Chief Bill Bartholomew said the ordinance will not be tough to enforce because citizens.are u:pected to react with volun· tary compliance. The council approved the ordinance after striking a sec- tion requiring re.staurants to set aside two-thirds or their floor space for nonsmokers. The conunittee's actions alternately sparked shouted audiepce criticism and cheers. e Chain Sued LOS ANGELE.S (AP) -The district attorney's office said it filed a suit charging the Hughes market chain with mislabeling and adulterating meat products and false advertising. . The complaint, filed ln Superior Court, cited two of the chain's retail stores. It asks a civil penalty of $2,500 for each violation. A Los Angeles market was actused of selling as chicken breasts a package whlcb coo- tained the less desirable vertebra ribs. ' A· Monterey . Park market was ac.-cused or selling fish marked as rccl snapper which in reality was a much less ex·· pensive lype or codfish. e Official lleld DENVER fAP) -A top of· ficial of a national cosmetics company was arrested here (CONSUMER) 'end charged with illegally sell- ing seclirities by the Denver District Attorney's office. Being held on $2.500 bond was Roland R. Nocera, 41, San Rafael, who was arrested on six fe lony charges ranging from s e I I i n g unregistered securities without a license 10 theft and traudulent practices through. the sa le o( securities, Fred Rodgers, a d e p u t y 'district attorney , said. Rodgers said Nocera, an of· ficer of Holiday Magic, Inc., ·April 17th Cast Your Vote For Progress ORVILLE AMBURGEY NEWPORT· MESA x SCHOOL BOARD cir•••·· e I 7 ye.,. with th• City of Co1t1 M111 e 11 of tho11 y•1r1 with th1 Polic1 Dept. whir• ha 1tt1i"1d th1 r111k of l i1ut1n1nt HE'S CONCERNED '\ e 6 .y11r1 11 Dlr•clor of Com111v11ic.tio1u for Iha City of Co1t1 M111 e A f1mily "''"• ) childr1n '"d lon9°tima r11id1"t of Cost• M111. Ambur91y 9rad111t1d ftom Newport High Schciol. Don I C1,Yt Mollie• M1r1ll11 011119111 eTactlc Bit SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A charge that Safeway Stores is conducting "fraudulent and deceptive meat labe\ing·prac· tices" has been denied by a Safeway executive as "dirty tactics." Safeway has upgraded rib steaks to club steaks, club steaks to T·bone and T·bone to porterboose to . Increase the chain's profits, charged Ken- neth Doyle of the lnterfai Committee to Aid Farm Workers during a n in- vestigation of high meat .Prices. "We'll deny that," said \ QuefifiR Reynolds, Safeway board chS:iiman, addiilg the Charge is "some more of their dirty tactics" involving the chain's $150 million s u i t against· the interfaith com· mi,ttee ·and United Farm Workers Union. e Public Aid LOS ANGELES (AP) -The · Los Angeles Bureau o f Consume'r •Affairs has receiv· ed more than 10,250 com· plaints and saved consumers $1.~ million in its first year of operations, says g e n e r a I n1anager Fern· Jellison. Consumer saVings have been .. . •• • .. ,. -· 2 Stuaents Given .Awards James K. Carson, student body ~t al Orange Coast College, has be e n rewarded with a $150 savings bond (Dr volunteer service. .The .bond, presenll!fl by the Southern California Edlaon Co., was ..awarded to Carson during Ille aonual ballquet of the Orange County C.Ouncil of Women in Chambers of Com· rnerce. and Orange Coast College stu- dent JefJrey Dooald Paul was awarded 1 $'1S savings bood. Carson Is a merqber of the oollege's Volunteer Bureau, an organlzition-be he Ip e d establish two years ago. The Project in Fountain Valley. He ls I freshman at C>CC:'· The Help Ille Children Club, wiMer of the other $150 bond . has arranged cu1tural and educational activities for underprivileged children: bureau IU~ed tly the stu· -~===~=~:o==~ dent body and enlists more than 1,000 student. in com-Good Deed munlty volUnlier work: make the scene Sundays DONALD STRAUSS . / FOR • COLLEG.E TRU_STEE A PARTIAL LIST OF HIS COMMUNITY-WIDE SUPPORTERS: , Daniel G. f'ldrich, Jr. Arnold 0 . Beckman John F. Bishop . Ted Bar~lett J. Herbert Brownell Joe.and Janet Bell Chisolm Brown Agnes Blomquist Sylvia Bogen Harry Corea Mrs. Pa,ul Connally H,.nry Duke Robert 't.. Duey, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Duncan Mr. and Mrs. David Eisenman Mr. and Mrs. Ronald.H. Frank Ira frlsbte Charles Godshall Mary and Bill Garlay Pat Hadden Bart and Joan Hike Dora and Nod Hill Allan T. Kennedy R1lph Kiser . ' Noia and Hal Lehman Dennis M1ngers James A. ind Nancy May Ken and ~hoda Martyn Dr. and Mrs. Ray W. Otson Mr. and Mrs, Robert Paley Mrs. Alvin Pinkley Louanne and Bill Peyton Joyce Peterson Paul A. Palmer Joe and Judy Rosener Mr. and Mrs. Ladlslaw Rtclay Leon1rd Shane Mr. and Mrs. Willi1m L. Stabler Mari Schiff Robert Shelton Ron Shenkman ~ S.feve and Mary Lee aylor Arthur F. Thompso , M.D. Mrs. Jean Tandowsky Jean and Don Ulander Donna Willoughby F1y1 Wilson STRAUSS will bring PROFESSIONAL experienc;e to the Board • Newport-Mesa Unified District '!!:ustee -10 YCFS • Extension Teaching -UCLA and Cal Tech -12 years • Vice President, Beckman Industries, Inc. lob & l1tty lomboy Viaf1 & Oolor11 Y111for" Wm. l Oon1 Sd1ni1d1r -D1v1 I Ryth Ann P1troff H1I I Dorothy Schrupp T 1d B1nnatl ~ J oh n I Joye• Conn11i N,d I l11 W•bst1r Chit I V1lori1 l1119h Ed & l itli1n Gl119ow Rob1rt I J1n1 Mo11lic1 Frank & Millit P1lm1r lt.'Col. Wm . & P19 Bucher C11ll I Gail Binfw11i Pat l Phltli1 Charf co mputed by evaluating the ·· fair matket value of merchan·\~~~~~~~~~~~'~'"~"'~"~1~M~'~'"~'~"~'~"~'~~~~M~~~M~·~"~·~"'~·~-~'~"~'~"~'~'"~""~· ~-~"~"~'~"~"~~~~~~~~~~ Ed & Sherr¥ l•1hhu~i Kq<th H&milton Florine "''~>Jler dise returned, services --- Guy I 811b111 Rtlly pe rformed, money refunded an(i contracts canceled, Mrs. Cfmmllt" I~ l!ltct Orvlllt AmbMl"lfY, Cll•lrnv", Sam 51rokll, 11116 S1nta Crvt Cl"°"' Co'sr1 Mtsa -Jellison said. . . !Paid Hilhcai liiliiiilK-1) ~~~~imiiill .. . ·: . • ' • . • ~ . . ' 11'-t!I ,.Nlkal Adve rllwmenll ·-Vote For • CECIL HO ·MAN ' April 17, 1973 For Trustee, Area No. 7 Capistrano Unified Sc.hool District ·Cecil Horrian stands for maximum ef.ficiency in the ad min is tration and operation :of our schools at the lowest possible exp end itu re of your tax money •.. alleviating crowded classrooms by careful planning with a minimum amount of new construe· tion : .. new emphasis on basic education in .r ~a ding, cn~thematics, lan9ua9e and spelling , , . , Cecil Homan ... A re~ident of the Capistrano Sc hool Distric_t for I b ~~ars •• Owner of H & H Trucking Company for 11 years . , . Married and two children, •. Past Governor of the Loyal Order of the Moos e , .. Member of the 'Board of Di- rectors of the Little. League, Pop Warner Football Lea9ue and the Youth Ba sket - ball League . •. ' APPLY SUC~ESSfUL BUSINESS EXPERIENCE· TQ OUR SCHOOL . ADMlNISTRATION BY VOTING F<,>R \CECIL HOMAN ! . '* ltr.., C...........__, Cid ............ H ... , "'" l"hw C.rtll!\1, Sa~ J;1111 t.-tJl'tM. C-A ! WE CARE. WE URGE YOU TO -CARE, TOO! ....... -Mr. IMHI Mn. Nhr ffyw• Mr.'-DlUty M;. -4 ,.,._ .... G11..tif1111r Mr. •tfM"'°'....., O. lhM M,._ Ml l . c.tlt .. f Mr. •M ,.,., ....,. c.tteren • Mr. -4 Mrs. lr.c:• Cf'Nlt Mr. _. M""-.foci W. Glen Mr. •ttd Mn. Aniold HllrH Mr •• •IMll Mn. Corl I. Johao•, Jr, We care that Jane Boyd cares for children. She wants them ta have an education that is both meaning· ful and interesting • We care that Jane Boyd cares for parents. As a mother she knows their problems. and joys. We care_ that Jane. Boyd cares for 1.acJuna Beach, a special community .,.. tfiilt-deHrvesspecial schools • ,;~···· -........... '°" ' Mr. M Mrs. ,,_. L.-t Mr. nd Mrt. ....... t. l .. p~ttt Mr. -4 Mn. w...-F. ~ Mrs.DH I- .,. Df ................. ..... ,.,., 1.uw-1 M. n • .,.-.. Mr.9"Mn. ..... f.W. .., ... ,. ........ ,..,. Mrt. U .. W Mr, eH Mn. Aoyd Wllh Mr. Freet Yo• .. lla.Mtll W. To.....-ct Mr ..... Mn. A. I. ~"l' Mr ..... Mri. hria a- Df. eM Mn. JM A ....... Mr. _. ¥,., W.a.c. arttty Mr • .JMn..lolttl .... Mr. -Mrs. T, k•wo1ofwl Mr. & Mrs. Stml9y MtCllttk itE-~ELECT JANE ·eoYD ON TU[SDAY APR·IL 17 • -------Commi.tat_Jg__..Elt ct Jtn• Boyd to La una 81•ch School Bo•rd John Ball1w, Chai~•n AudrY Chri1t'f,"'Tr11surl~~ ~ 1273 St1rlit Dr., Ll9un1 l l ach, C.lifornia 92-651 ,. • J • ----- Re~y~le Ba~kia~h .E111eq1es SAN FRANCISC O - 1rdvocate3 or re cyc l I ng : l'repare to duck and derend ~uurscl\'eS. l~ecycling turncoats ·arc be- ginning I\) throw verbal bot- tles ilnd cans 11Lyou,....bccausc they s·ay recycling ISultimate- ly ·a waster of lime, energy and resources. :. -r-. ' They ·charge Illa! the toW the back sea~ drive Dve mlllll energy used and the pollution 10· the neighbqrbood recycling prod uced in the recyclln1 of center, and then drive borne. S-Olid-waste material requires Separate and crush the bottlel 1norc energy than it takes to and cam at· the center, produce a new product. transport the . material 20 THESE CRITICS cite a typical example of recyc ling. Take one l~bp. car, place six pounds of bottles and cans ~ miles to a manufacturer, unload, and remanufac.lure the material. ~t: human· energy wasted. pollution produced, and resources depleted. "It'• ftry hard to get h> rormat.Pl fro m manufao- turers.11 0 t h e r informaUoo con· cer1llng the . need I o r awareoea ol the cousumptlon problem -as the other side of the -to the rec)'cllnc I"'> lilml -ls .-iy •vaiWIJ•. and cm*lered io be ,,,,,..... by .envlnxunlotallsts. For Jnsllmce, tile city of Sal! . 8 E -E .1.-E-C T Recvcllng t11l'tt• eotlt• •re .... nlng to tltrote _,.. ·bal fJ o (tie• •nd CGIU. Fraoclaco ls baulmg Its l ,'100 to Z,000 dally tons of solid wam to a landfill site 32 mn.. from the city. 1be of· llclal estimate Is that the city has less than five years of use left at the site. Bob D. Hurst IN CUMBENT, TRUSTEE AREA 6 CAPIST~ANQ, UNIFIED SC~OOL DISTRICT A sludy by Arthur D. Little, Inc., indicates that by 1990 the daily volume of commercial and domestic refuse In the "0£ course;-the recycling of United States may have doubl- cans and bottles does benefit ed over current use. This the environment by reduCing means American consumers, solid wastes aDd conserving at the current recycling rate, raw materials," says a critical could be throwing away 80 report by four St an f·o r d,_,!"'-ill_lo_n_to_n~•-o_!_:pa_;_pe_r_a_lo_n_e._ University 'tudents. "But· it also uses energy to crush , transport, and remanufacture the product, •produces pollu- tion, and· depletes o t b e r resources, so it ls-legitimate to ask whether, when all costs are considered 1 whether rec )'cllng is indeed worthwhile." • Fill .... m.r .JAflr .. ,.. ......... ..i11M1tw1An• WI 1111 llr'ltlt Mi .... ,. ............. a. .. k.Cllff .... ...... 14 .... --ln-· -Liii.... 421-1112 --·mGQl.1111 • Monday, Aprll lb, iq13 DAI LY .PILOT * maintain OCEAN VIEW pro9ress * ,_ - ELECT DARRELL CAR·TER TRUSTEE * * * (Part ial li $t of endorsem ents) JAIES SHAFFER ... , .••• , . OCIAH VIEW SCHOOL 110A.tt0 - ROBERT KNOX OC•~· v .. w '""" GEORGE LOGAN o, .. , ... w ""'" RUTH DUNCAN ,,l'.D.PRESIOE Nl LASH HOWES ........ , OCEAN VI EW LITTLE LEAGUE FLORENCE DAVIES • , .. ""'"'" JUDY LOWER'·' ... "" ... ;,.,., VOTE APRIL 17TH K~N KERIN S l'AST PllE:\ll>ENT 0 1' SOL VllTA H.O"V' OW NElll/<SSOC1AllQN GILES "EYER "" '"""'" ftf Sl . BONAVENTURE MEN'S CLU& BUCK WILLIAMS BURTON MARSH P <l~T PllESID£NT ST. llOH•VENTURE MEN'S C:LllB P,T.A. PllES!OENT " BILL ANDERSON ' M.C.A. ""'"" '"" • JACK ALLEN '"""" OHOCOAC RALPH DAUER HUNTINGTON HIGH SCHOOL TRUSTEE DA RR EL L CARTER STAFF MANAGER x Paid ~r bV Comml!IH lo E!KI D•rrtll Clrttr 1Ct11nelh 011,llad, C..,Clll!rm1n -UH Swmmtrdilt' Dr., Hw11r1nglon lll•ch 19 o'. • :· ·. -.,...,.. __ c.rucr AIDGHSQIOOL studenlm·1;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::~::::::::~~~~~~~~~~ Los Angeles arrived . at the __ _, same conclusion. For 18 weeks -. -,. be collected. bottles from a Paid Pollllc•I Ad:ern.emeni i restaurant to ralae money for -·-• ! a favorite organiation. At the ~ ~~~~~ Attentuate -the Positive! 1 rnore than $19), and used 153 • • man-hours of work. It is di£· !~ • fie.ult to estimate the-nmomh ----=---.o---• ...-~. --! e EXPERIENCED 4 years School Board Service President '70-'71 and '71 -'72 Tredsurer, O ra nge County School Board, Asset.. Member, CS BA Delegate Assembly, !Governing body of the St ate School Boards Associotion l e CAP ABLE Pol ic y and leadershi p positions at county •nd state levsls • e OfDICATED Strong loc<!l control <!nd sound business ma nagement of polluUon bis car threw into the air. Moreover, the student was concerned about the amount of -nonrenewable resources used ip the glass--meltlng process (natural gas, electricity; low- sulfur oil) and the emissioos from tile glass·melUng plant. · Still, recycling advocates In- sist that ·such criticisms are only partially justified and miss the broader reasons for any and all recycling efforts. 11THE ARGUAIENT i s strong that recycling is a waste," says advocate John Van Daam of.Survival, Inc., a nine-depot recycling effort in Endorsed By The Following Citir.ens Marin County. "But we see Mi. Pit Cooper Mr. Johll Cooper Mr. Wl111•m Kl119 Ml. Jr•n Kin! Mt. Barbara Sryanl Dr. Gevr91 8ry11n1 Mr. & Mrs. John oa1t1m Mr. & Mr:.. P~ul l(~i11 Mr. & Mrs. J~m•t J. Wais.on Ms. Cer•td'"" A, Orl•ll Ml. Na"CY 8. Burn\ M r. & Mri. Ellwi<O A. S'llYth Ms. K•Y PUl\•f'r Or. & Mr~. D11ntri1 Vall!s Mr. and Mr~. Tr11 l<ro9iu1 Mr. , N"rt. Hrrbrrl W. Tellman Mr. & Mr:.. Jo\tPh Armon Mr. & Mr~. Tnoma1 J . Winget Mr. H~rnld Ambutlll Mr. M1k(' llr.ldy M r. It. l. Qtmm~•I Mr. M~nnel J, A~il• Mr. P1u1 PrHIW recycling as an educational Mr. P""' R. M<:K ... 1it process also. It's not just a Dr. & M". ThM!trtt. Mtw---111-'k, '•Jd · j effort or. & Mr~ Fr.cl 0eb1 ~~nv · 1Jl"O ect;-or-an Mr. D~n J. Ph!li1tPb1r by one person. Mi. C1n1I SP9lm1n 1<11h11 w1rne1e1 "We see recycling as a-com- M:i. Toni WMlll · • -·-' M:i. shrrrle cn1ss mun1ty project aium.a at ~:: =:;' \.~~=~~= -dra.'lging habits o f con- M:i. ll1mbl Com« swnption," he continued. Ms. J1n11 Re9•1brutt• "There Is a tremendous waste Mr. J.1ck E. Cr•t:im•n M•. How1n1 K. L11n• in our society by overpackag· Mr. Let AndrtWI Mr. a. M". w.11ra11 ,, Dtim11111 • ing, and we would like to see a Mr. H. Ptrdv•I Chase y ~-~•-~ Mr. & Mri. Cll lhlnl Grant re-llSe ecODOITI CltWll.rUltUC\.I _M1. Robert A. Honne11e . rather than a depreciation Mr. AU1n o. St hmldl ..,...,nomy." Mr. & Mrt, John C. Zlnil ""'v • . Recycling advocates also _ chlrge that glu .. bottle and ·EC~ D. H~RST · 1 x INCUMBENT can rnanufa.Cturers are reluc- tant to reveal information about the extent of can and bottle use in the United Stales. co rA~.·llTTEE TO RE-ELECT BOB D. HUR.ST Commllltt ta Rt·EIKt llMI Hursl. Chm. 11111 Kini J1121 hie Roy1t or .. L11un1 Nl1~1 /P •ld PoUll,al .-.dve•ll•em1111) "THERE ARE NO available facts on how many cans are produced each yeat in this count ry," says a recycling ad· vocate Crom San Francisco. ON llJESDAY> APRIL 17, IT Will BE. .. 3 FOR q Three. new Schoof Boal"c{ Metnbers; A new School 8 card -m ~or i !Y .for 1h e.. Next Four yea.Ys ~ ~ /'f7" I l'f1S" l 1976 . I 1977 tt --.... • You. have. -three votes ol'\. Tue~d~. Use 1hetr\ fo elect a Tesponsive an.cl R.es~ible.. School "Boar-cl JANE BOYD . --)( NORMAN BROWNE. -)( . - ---. - MICHAEL SAGAR )( . lh1' ad\'er! ... mtftl lflkl lff' ltr k~I .,,, ... Ml"" c~ ... 11•• •YN F~r o ride to the polls, Coll 4'7-1555 1 • • ' ExDerienced Board Membe r Financial Professional Parent and Property Taxpayer . • BOARD OF EDUCATION NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIEB SCHOOL DISTRI CT Mr. & Mn. Nigel Bailey Hancock Benning Carl Boswell Mr. & Mrs. Dou9los W. Burg•" Mr. & Mrs. Don Burns Lewis Byington Ward Chamberlain Charles-Cringle Richord D. Croul Erwin S. doMoc:skony i Ruth Ecldin<Pon ' Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Eilertson Mr. & Mrs. Lyman S .• Faulkner Mr. & Mrs. Welter Geynor Dr. & Mrs. Wallace Gerrie , • j Supporters: John Grimley Mr. & Mrs. Don Huddleston Bob Kelchner Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Kimm e Robert Lilly ·_Mr. & Mrs. M. Manahan Mr. &. Mrs . Jul e Marshall Paul F. Marx Mr. & Mrs. Davis McNomee Mr. & Mrs. Carl Neisser • R ich~rd Othmer James W. Peyton Dr. & Mrs. Dudley Plaff Dr. -& Mrs. Tom Robinson Mr. & Mrs . David Schweiher ' . Holl Seely Tom Sharp Dr. Davi d Smiley Will iam R. Smit h Mr. & Mrs. Kal man Spelletic h Mr. & Mrs. Bill Speyers Mr. & Mrs. W. L. St.bier Albert Stockton Mr. & Mrs. Jo~n Stockwell Mr. & Mrs. John Stoneman Dr. & Mrs. Dona ld F. Stoughto n Robert P. Sviift Jan Unvert Roy Ward Herbert R. Wilson • .... • ' 1 I ' ' •• . .- .. • ; ' . .. .. . . -• .. • -~ :1 ~ :: • ' .. ' ~ .. • . .. :~ :~ ;;: :<: :~: :~ . '· ·' • .. .. .. •• •• .. .. • •• •' ·< •• '• ;.. •• ·P •• :t ;f ·' ·' ·' -,: ~ { ., ;, { ;, •• ~ :-: ~ ~ •' •' " ... ·' :t .: ... ••. ... " ••• :•: ••• ·:: •• .. ••• ·' ,._ •• ••• ,• ·~ .. •• •• .. •• '• .. .. .. .. .. •• •• :: :1 .. .. .. :i • .. ! • ' ' t .-' J ' ' ' • . • .. • -t • • • • .... • -. •• .... I • • -• • ; , I • . .. .. v • . " • .... • .. ~ e. • Monday, April <o, 1913 '2 · NY ·.Ptck1ng Our ~P~ ·~·.-;;;;;;;;;;:;;.;;;;;;o;..-------;;;;;.:.;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i....---~ '·'.*31RAUss~-* '• HUNTINGTON BE.A CH HtGH SCHOOL DISTRICT BOARD OF Til.UST~ES • ZAY BRAND IS DEDICATED TO e QUALITY EDUCATION , e RESPONSIVE ATTITUDE TO THE VOTERS e COST EF.FECTIVE MANAGEMENT , e BUILDING COMMUNITY PRIDE Porti._t List of Endors~ts Mr. and Mrs. Ted W. Bartlett Mr. and Mr,. Th oml!s E. Blackman Mrs . Lo is l eBard Mr. an d Mrs. Cha'rles Mashburn Mr. William E. "Bill" Kettler Paul l ee and June Dugmore R6g er D. Sl ates Mr. and Mfs. ~tephe n F. Holden Mr. and Mrs. Ha rry M. "Cap" Sheue Mr. J oe Irv ine . George and Doris Moo~e Mr. and Mrs . Harold l . Jannsen Don and Marilyn McAllister Mr. end Mrs . Joe Wigginton Norman and Joa n Warn er Mr. Rey M. Schmitt Ralph and Yvonne Alcala Mrs. l aRue Nitxkows ki Mr. end Mrs. Forrert Miller · Mr. and Mrs . J ack K. Clapp Mrs. Pauline Ba uc hwitt. Mr. and Mrs . John Don nelly Mr. and Mrs . Orville R. Ha nson Rusty •nd Mammy Watson TUES., AFl~IL 17 • 1 • Ca1lfomla ~.'I JI Ifie halslatlon · dOoo llOI -;'~··""'-""'the U.'1. Cooinol ' wilt ·do IOIDOlillng lllmllar. • Order. now from a large selection of bright spring flowers and .plants all tastefully arranged by profes- siOnal florists. · • Exclusively Lido For Easter Egg Candles 1/2 Price . ' ~--~ Last · on the ·. Ballot, , FIRST IN EDUCATION FOR COAST COLLEG'E TRUSTEE Cltlnn. ,.,,,,~ Ch&lrnw" Jkj. M. e. AfoMrWf'I, '" VII Lido Saud. Ntw!'Prl'BMdl . - .RIPE ·Bananas Central-America11 LARGE FRESH Artichokes FRESH PICT Chop Suey Vegetables 29c Celery Extra Fancy Large 29c bun. LIQUOR .. 4 I~' l • • ~ WINES FOR EASTER- Almiden Grenache Rose Almaden Mountain Chablis Almaden Mountain Rhine Richard's Priv1te Label 1;1th flflh filth Richards Gren1che Ros'e fifth Rlch1rd1 Ch1bB1 filth Ric.h1rds Cabernet Sauvignon , fifth SAVE EXTRA I 01. ,BY THE CASE Mix ot Match Seme ., Slie ~ · • -... 2At. 2.29 . - J;H '£.~ LI DO CENTER ·. 3433 Via Lido, Newport Beach OPEN DAILY 9 -7. syN. 9 - 6 673-6360 f • .r • • • ------..-·----,_ . . ' M~Aprll 16, 1973 · DAILY PILOT 11 • • .r- • ~ • ' : ,, ·All . This Holidar· '·~.aste! ,:.w.~~~ .· .. . -' . .,, ---:---·_.__,_,-~---------'"- • •• ' • .. -.. " • • • l . ·, • • ' '· _ _, . • • . ' . Bl(; TOI? CIRCU-S • ·ICE · CLASSic·s • . . . ' . ·' .. Monday and Tuesday Only · 4 Days -Wednesday ·'.'_Thursday Friday & Saturday -. I ' • ' .. p 1· • .• ' • 'J • See the famous LaLonde family .plus 0 Show Times: (off t4'e west parking lot) . Mon~11Y'.·. ~:oo ~;M., 8:00 P.M. Tuesday • 2:00 . P .M., 4:00 P.M., 7:00 P.M. ' ' ' ' ' ' . --- other stars of national ice show fame at • Fashion Island beginning W ~esday -Show Times: (in Stage Court, ·center mall) . Wednesday, 11:30. A.M., 2:30 P.M, Thursday, 11:30 A.M., 2 P.1\1., 4:00 P.M. . · Friday, 11:30 A.M., 2 P.M., 7:00 P.M. 1111: coo~ret~ wifli :N'""'°" ~' ~·~ ~A. John Strong C"trCUS) Satutrday, 11:30 A.M., 2 P.M., 4:00 P.M. ' • ' ' ' ' . ' ' . . . ' ' ' ' ' . ' . . ' ' ~ . Free Ki4dies Tieketi a·t Fa8hion lslarul Stores · ·A special Easter treat fre~ to the public. · • • ..... ' . . ' . .-·. : • • f . . ' . ' ~o stol'es including J;lroadway, Butrums•: Penney's. and Robinsons: ..~.: •. t~.· ' . . . " _· ~ . . . . ' ,FASHlON · I ISLAND ..-.. \, _;,. ,,·~ ... I · ·: .. • · " :Ol ~,:·: · • N~w1woa1''-c:£NTE·R- 1 • ~ ,.. ' • • .. -·-t1j ' ' ' . . . ' ·NclllC'Coat 'tt1Qhw11-1e1we1n' JM!borie end MacArthur . . ' . . ' . . . ' -· I • t ' " . ' I I .. . . . . • ·' • • . ., •. ... .. .-. ·. ~% DAILY PILOT • ' MondaJ, April 16, 1913 Show Times for· 1---+--whµ Strong C.""· -~-11 .; • . • . ' " Monday and Tttesday Only " Mondli'f, April 16 -6 tnd I p.m . Tuesday, April 17 -2, 4 tnd 7 p.m. Free tickets for kiddUs at FaJhHm J:ikind Storts ' Ir's Showtime at . " . ' • • ~ ~~~~· J.~liln~: · Show T~ For ~iroos _7 +.·•'.;:..... .. -. ,-y-Iee~{;lassi~, :. 1 • . ., .. -. . ~1s~· cOmi~g . W ed.ne.1d11y 1hru Saturdiy ·only ,.. --. -!'t • • Wod ....... y, ~ 1:30 u11. "~ ,p.m. •• ' ~. .. . ' Thunday, 11:30 a.m ,·2 p,m..·'3130 ~m. ' °,? "E):erybody lovet I clrcwl, IO i :lll' jllie.tldt from ...... •: fno;! p.t' ready lo bavo I biC "• .• ' ., -. l'rlday;'i1:30 a.m.·2 .p.m.,·7.00 ,..... Satu~y, 11 :30 ~. m. • 2 p.m. • 31i0 p.m. ' . 't . ' . Tl)O . .Bie JOiin SUu1c ~ ' < . Is ·~ it Fl!hlon ,lllaad~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ abopPlng center uodlr • ttw _. l '~ sponoorshlp of Ne~ Buch ; • • ' " 7 FASHION ISLAND I NEWPORT BEACH PRE-EASTER SALE ORGANICALLY GROWN WASHABLE 2 PIECE ACRYLIC KNITS w.,. $25 to $30 NQW R·EPUCEb-"-TO 's1s~ s20 Whitt, Navy, MalM, Phil<. lo Tlla -p Slan: S.M·L. SA~E BEGINS MONDAY, APRIL 16 THE PLACE F.tshion l1land-Newport Beach OPEN : Mon., Thurs., Fri. till 9:30 p.m. Tues., Wed., Sat. till b p.m. Sund1y 12 Noon fQ 5 p.m. PONY ACT ONE OF FEATURES OE. JOHN STRONG °CIRCUS Showlirlder Big Top is Beck 1t F111hionJ1l1nd Thl1 ..ac: ;., . . . • Ice Follies Family ' At F ashiori. Island .. The LaLoode family of Holi· 5. SOPHISTICATION ON . dar on Ice and Ice Follies JCE -Rick Earhart fame is back at -Fashion 6. · DELJGHTFUL & EX- "· .. l ~. Island for the Easter week. CITING , FATHER & Free perfornlances will begin DAUGHTER -The LaLondes Wednesday..~abd::c o nJi g_ u e ~Buddy &fTanni ··-'·--.-.. -""'+-..;,"°~'"·". "'. through Satul:day. Ice. ClaSSICS' youngest stai: . The shows, free to ·the pub-· is 12-year-old Tanni. who is one . lie, will be beld Wednesday of the wtstanding chi Id , at 11 :30 l!.m. and 2:30 p.m. !katers in tbe profemonal •, ~-~~ Thursda y at 11:30 a.m., 2 p.m. world. Tannl maae her debut and 3:30 p.m., Friday at 11:30 at the early age Of 17 month$. a.m., 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. and on Robbi LaLonde has been a Saturday al 11 :30 a.m., 2 p.m. featured star in Holiday on Ice • and 3:30 p.m. and ice spectacular!-in Las Thirty-minute performances Vegas. Rick Earhart of Ice will reature six big acts in Capades will join her on stage. Stage Court in the center mall Performing on their 21·bY-'" •. of Fashion Island : ~foot portable skating rink, I. FREIDA THE FROG . three feet off the ground, is no 2. THE FA BU L 0 US easy task. But Buddy LaLonde J UNIOR J\.1ISS OF THE ICE uses 16-inch speed skates on -Tanni LaLondc the small surface wh ile doing 3. J UMPING NOVELTY tricks over props and through ACT, EXTRAOROINAIRE -hoops. Duddy LaLonde The talented skatet's will ap-~ ~ Junior Chamber of Com-, . ' merce. \ The billowing big lop will be on the west park1n& lot at Fashion Island for two days. Performances are scheduled for 6 and p p.m. today and 2, 4 and 7 p.m. on Tuesday: Big Jolm Sirolli! 11169 Clrcul, now Jn Ila: JOth year, bu h'8Clllned state and COU11ty faJis. in most of tM Weolem state1, -lnC!udlng • C.llfomla, QregQI!; W asbington, Artwna and NUada. · 11· 1J known as ''The show with more friends than Santa 'Claus.''· 4. · WORI.J)'S MOST ELEC-· pear on the center mall or ~'l'R!FYI NG SKATER .-·Miss -Fashion Island shopping YOUNG STAR OF FAMILY ICE. SHOW l~obbl LaLo ndc center. Robbi Lalonde Performs in Solo Number f.or her alone, diamond solitaires in 14 karat white gold: A. Heart. $1,096. B. Pear. $426. C. Round. $1,075. In 18 karat white gold: D. Oval . $825. E. Marquise. $476. F. Emeralcl-cut, $595. Enlarged to Show Det1il. Do Something Beautiful._ .QM,... AccMtl "'°'ltM -A1Mf'k111 l.1,,..u l111kA-UN ... Mutw 01,,., .... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION "ISLANO . NEWPORT BEACH -644-1 lBO · Wllfl loc•llon1 of:--Torranc•, O.afl!M, l•~errltos, L• Habra. A.ISO: S11n Diego arid L•s Vtvii. ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -' ... Blatk P1tent Wh it• P1ten+ J 4.50. 15.50 Actord;n9 to 1i11 s;,,, 11/r to l $16 ·-d 116 Actord <n9 lo 1i1• Easter Stride Rites They want terrifi c-lookin g shoes. Mother know~ they have to fit perfectly. With stylish Stride Rites. fi tted by our trained prof cssionals. it.II be a Happy Easter for cvcryhody. Stride Rite. The most trusted name in childrcn"s shoes. -. otrideRite· f/eyla 54 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER OPPOSITE BROADWAY t 644-42223 U1e Your BankAmericard • Master' Charge • Hemphill Chargt ' • Gar y Somes Heads .. Store for Buffums • ' 1 ¥=, + . . ~ Gary T\t Somes. recently named new manager of Bu!- fums' Fashion . Island, first joined Buffums' in 1965 and . spent several y~ars in Bur. fums' traini ng program. He le~ Buffums' in 1968 to join another national retail organization where he heltf I •• "'->::::r; various merchandising. and management positions until rejoining Buffums' in 1971. Prior to coming to Newport, · Mr. Somes was assigned to Buffum!' Pomona store. He is ;i graduate of Loyola Universi-, !y. an d resides in Cerritos v.'ith his wife Ann and 3-year- old son R1 chard . · · THINK OF ELECTROLYSIS As . \ PERMANENTLY ARCHED BROWS . AN INTRIGUING ' ¥ WIDOW1S PEA.I<. THE END Of' ·UNWANTED FACIAL HAIR. THEN LET OUR -t--., LICENSED TECHNICIAN SHOW YOU ~OY( SAFE ANO EASY IT IS, , IN OUR BEAUTY SALON. ----~- 1 OUR BEA,.,.UTY SALON'S SPRI NG TONIC the pruning cut - ' A REVO_LUTJONARY f'iEW METHOD OF' HAIR CUTTING. IT1S CALLED PRUNING• QA~DENERS KNOW THAT PRUNING IS NECESSARY FOR THE CONTINUED LIFE ANO GROWfH OF PLANTS. SIMILARLY, HAI .. THAT IS CUT AND SHAPED PROPERLY WILL. . . . ·' GROW THICKER AND MORE LUXURIANT• • JT1S iHE SECRET OF MAKING BfAtTTJFUL HAI~ HAPPEN, ,.. NATURALLY! HAIR IS CUT ON "r'HE BIAS AND ARTFULLY TRIMMED. THIS .61w1·HAJR BODY, THICKNESS ANO . VITALll'.Y. WHETHE!( SET pR El..OWER DRIED, YOUR HAIR STAYS IN PLACE FROM CUT TO CUT• U~fKE CONVENTIONAL. tfAIRCUTS, THE HAIR IS NOT -., SECTIONED BUT TR~ATED AS A COMPL ETE UNIT• THIS MAKES FOR A CONTOURED CUT THA'r I MPARTS ENOUGH . ~UNCE TO MAKE TEASING ALMOST UNNECESSARY~ IN THIS AGE OF ECOL.C>GY • NOTHING CAN MATCHRTHE LOOK OF GLEAMING, WEL.L-t<EPT HAIR. HAIRCUT ALONE, SS TO $10. BEAUTY SAL.ON• ·- ' . NEWPORT FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 .. .. • • ' ' •" •, " I GREG BATES DAILY PILOT 51111 PholOJ MIKE LUCIA Key Club · \ Leaders Elected ~ Thr.ec. of the four officers goyerning the ~l ,000-merTiber \Vcs tt.:m region of Key Club, a high school service organizii- tion, are students at Fountain Valley High Sc~ool. -----~·---· -· • -. .... ------• .. · Projec~ns of Population In . So~tlw.rn -California Dip ' Uy THOMAS D. ELIAS SOUTHERN Southern California ·· plan-( CALIFORNIA ) oers, Jong accuston1~d to nocus astronomical growth rates, .I', are re~_lsing projections sharp-__ -.. ..... ..., .... __ _ IY downward because or the r~ioo's decreasing biMh rate. Most 1and-use planning for the next 20 years has been based on a projected 1990 popu lation or 13.9 mill ion for Los Angeles. Orange, Ventura. San BernardinO. Riverside and ln1pcrial counties. expected to bear an average of .2.1 children each, down from the ex~ted fertility ratio of 2..1 births reported iif' 1967. BACKING THE Census Bureau report are st1ttewide figures showing that eanfornia BUT NEW figures released had fewer live births in tm by the Southern California .than in any year since 1953, Association or Governments when the state'S population are moving that f i.g u r e was about tWo-thirds o f downward by two million. • today's. Similarly decreased pro-Besides the Io:wer birth . jections for San DlegQ, Santa rales, the SCAG planners Barbara and San Luj.s Obi spo reported that while only "sket· counties peg their, total 1990 chy'data" Were available, "the population a.t 2'.4 milli~n,. a rate of immigration into the~ drop or 500,000 from earlier region is decreasing and out- migration Ill Increasing." O..lmlgratlon bas already resulted in a slight populaUon loss for Los Angeles County, while San Bernardino and RJverside counties have re- mained stable for two years. MEANWIULE, inmigration to Orange, Ventura, San Di· ego, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo COWlties has con- tinued, with further growth expected for all . ·ey 1990, for inst am e , Orange County's population is expected to increase by more than 500,000 to. 2.1 million, while Ventura County should be more than half-again as large as today, with 618,000 persons. San Diego County is expected to have two million people by then, while Santa Barbara County will be up to 350,000 and San Luis Obispo County to 130,000. estimates. .. This would still mean an in-~ ~""~~ crease of more than two Ii! ~ million over the Southland's ~ Ah • . presenl po p u I at l o n • but l~· ort1ons etc '' SCAG 's planners say a slower ' • growth pattern "\vould have a '_: •) 1najor effect on the J.leed for ~ .l) urban land and public services i T D d t •bl .:J ••d iacmues." •1. ax e UC I e :· THEY HAVE not, however, ~1 analyzed the gro\vth stow-· -~ down's impact on business WASHINGTON (AP) -The hospitals could be deducted around the region. costs or abortions, vasec-.. as long as thiy'are legal." If the executive com.m.Htce tomies and birth control pills The IRS spokesman said, of the voluntary federation of are tax deductible, under a however, that, since the recent the Southland's city and coun-1 U.S. Supreme Court ruling I t rf. · II ruling by the lnterna Revenue Y govemmen s o 1c1a Y declaring most state pro- adopts the projections, its Service. hibitions against abortions un- decision will be felt whenever An IRS spokesman said the constitutional, virtually all anyone in Southern California deductions could be claimed ,abortions should be deductible. applies for any federal con· on 1972 income tax returns, struction funds. and that there was no ceiling That's because SCAG "com-on the amount that could be inents" on all such ap--clajmed f9r abortions and plications and makes negative vasectomies. THE RUUNG on abortioM was permitted under IRS regulations that • s t a t 6 ; "Amounts pa.id for operations recommendations whenever proposals are ou t or line with . its projections or its · overall "SCAG-90" plan for land use in the Southland through 1990. or treatments affecting any Bur, THE IRS Spokesman portion of the body are deem- said, the two medical pro-ed. to be for the purpose of af. cedures S'lill would fall under reeling any structure or fune- tax regulations that-permit tion of the body and are deductions for only that por-therefore paid for medical lion of medical expenses care." amounting to 3 percent or In ruling on birth control more of aruiual income. pills, the IRS also said thaf ex· • Monday, April lb, 1~73 naCJabo exquii;ite collecLion of authentic A1uerican .Indian jewelry ' Handcraf teJ treasures of exceptio nal qua lity , -you 'll find squash blossom necklaces. bracelet s. rings, turq uoise beads . His~i shell beads, pendont s, pin s, belt buckles, ond more. The collecti on, meticulo usly selected for our Newport store. BRett-walkeR inc. DAILY PILOT Z:J . . -• . .. Greg Hates was elected rccordinM secretary and Miki! Lucia gove1·nor of t h e C a I i f o r nia-Nevada-1-lawaii region recently at the regional convention in Los Angeles. Both are ju~rs. THE GREATEST effects "'ould be on proposals for water treatment and transportation facilities since they are the underlying fac- tors deciding where growth The IRS said, it had not penditures for these also are :; taken moral oonsiderations in-"an amount paid for medical !: AS GOV EllNOll, Lucia will a pp o i n l a corresJ)onding secretary from-the Key Club at Fountain · Valley Ii i g h School. can take place. The regional planners are basing new pop u 1 at ion estimates on state Depart· ment of Finance figures which show that California as a to account in arriving at the•1 _~car~e:::• ____ _: __ _'I========================-================~= decision . I· .: The Fountain Valley Key Club \\'as further honored when the report detailing the club's activities won first place at the regionat con- vention. II will be entered in an in tc111ational contest at the Key ('Jub convention i a Chicago this summer. FOR ABORTIONS, the IRS said, only those performed in clinJcs, doctors' offices, and whole is gradually.Jieading for_ -s· nday -. "Zero Population Growth." .U IS Those projections, in turn, Fllllrn.AV' are the result of federal &;11' I Census Bureau findings which showed that women in the IS. to 24-year-old bracket can be , take a plunge into -. -at a ripple of a 40th Anniversary · M. ACQlJ~§~ 14 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER • 644-4661 DESIGNER ood MANUFACTURER 'OF WORLD'S FINEST FURS ' Storo Hours: 10 a.m. lo 5:30 p.m. Daily; Mon. & Fri. 10 a.m.:9:30 p.m. you-really -ft\·U$-t -s€€. oo~­ '.ALBOTT TIE· SHOP - / -··---·--.. . . -fYont +v.e ~fut't-1albotf·sttdi05 jt\ Car-Mel Valley to at-ease of Newport ~ea& ... si~ply +fie worlct~ fit'lest ties. @) o~ -§~ 44 fashion island, newport center -644·5070 . ,. - I ' • •. • . • • • . . . • • . . ,-1 • ' . . • UPI T1l1Pi10ll Thnberl Berkeley house\vife Lee Zepp zaps Eu calypl.us Jogs al Tilden Park. Log is fr orn seetiOn of ~ondemned trees \Vhlch Were cleared because they posed a fire dan- ger. l\1esa Stud eul Ea1·ns Degree \ \ M_,, ..,Tl l b, l 9n • State Fiasco Uncovered Audit Reveals $302,000 Mediial Overpayments CGpltot Ni!Wt Servlct SACRA~IENTO -l..egislative wati;h- dogs have UJK..'OVtte<I another fiasco. ·Th is invnlves the new MediCal Manage- ment System fMMSl. which was sup- posed to b.e the cure-all for whnl looked like a _lerntinu l illness in the handling of fl1 cdiC51 clai ms. . A l\\'o-month audit of the experimental f\1.".15 by the state's auditor general. unrlcr the dirt"Ct '.on of the Joint . Legislative Audit Committee. ha :s brought 11 13-eount indic:ln1cnt from the "'atchdog co1nmitte~. ,\.\IONfi O'rllEI\ TH INGS. it w.:is h•i1rrcd th e state overpaid the system 11P\'1•lr1ll<'r nr1nai.:ers. the 1!1•;ilth Care S"rVJC!•'i .\•t-iini,.tr::itor<:; t ii Joint vent··~e I• '•.,,.;t ... :,f11111 •' I l'" '"<:;l j!°'lntr r -. 0~. 1•t1~•••1en1t., 1.,i r • tltfpli · c •:1t•C:, J•AitZ t1• !t"rfJllff p r 11 .. -:_·~d11at•s tltld IJl ~tf!e iJI C.~· ,..~·s '< ;;._.,.,,~~ • .,~"\. ......,,----..-· .L... ---""' --w~~-. , • J11;:• l,i11· insurunce Co, of C.:a!llornla <Jn ·1 Caiitornia-\Vcstcrn states Insurance ~u. I bv about $302 ,000. Audit C o m mi t t ee. Chairman As~crnbl_y:nan Vincent Thomas (0-San -~roi noted some 71 £Jctiti ou s ber.f#:ficia ry names and,..more than 60,000 fi ctitious b e n e f i c i a r y identification numbers had been in troductd into the system lo process claims. which made it nearly in1possible to ident ify dupl icate claims or for providers to identify paymen~ r~eived . THE STUDY CONFIR~1ED complaints of providers of medical service s, who last vea r told of extraordinary delays in recei°ving payments duu for services rendered to f\.1edi-Cal patients. Auditors found some claims entered In the $YStem -Tape and disc storage !aclllttea a.re inadeq uate. -Controls over iss~ance of Iden· tiflcation cards arc lax . -Clerical .pcrsonoel b1tve ex.c:essJvc latitude In overriding computer controls. -Syitel)la and programmi ng revisiorl5 have been ma de to rela1 controls and reduce I.he claims bac.klog . -Systcn1 l'eport s are no t;i:vailable. The !lystem i~ st ill having pt·obleJllS with maintaining eligibility beneficiary _files.· -The Departn1ent or Health Care Services failed to consider county prol>- lems in the design of the l\1PilS .eligibili- ty subsystem ; -P::1yments tn providers h'IVC been 111:1aye-l, are in error . an'! it is dirficult, "if not im1>0ssiblc" to i:lcntify services rendered. fT \Y!t.S ALSO NOTE(} thnt adcqu;ttC nccounliug controls arc not bclng main- f:i.incd over the cJ;:iims processin'( and the rost per cl<1i1n processed is runn ing at $3 .50 each. ' The same sort 01 experiment by a eon1-~ nanv ul5ing its 0\\'11 funcl::1 probably would h:tve put it into ban kruptcy, observers Sf\id . ' /\bout the only good thing auditors had to say about the operation was thal the Department of Heal th Care Serv ices has an exccUenl security system at its cen- tral processing site. They also noted !he use of security codes (passwords 1 to pr{'- vent unau thorized access IQ. confidential files ··has been well.. implemented by MMS." NOT ONL V WAS THE paYJ!l ent premature, according to the auditors. but also it was $302,000 over whdt should have been pa id. It Wat learned HCSA O\'Crch:irjed the state by some $2t2:,000 . for expenses, which should have been deducted from any settlement. Alter Med lCal ( y,•hlch provides health crire to welfare recipients and other in- die:ent!) had been Jn operation for SPVCral years, it becam e apparentJhere . v•Crc proble ms in processing claims. A J2fl7.(Yl0 study of Med!Cal \VilS conducted bv Lockheed Missile and Space Co. in J9tl9. Jn June that year, the Human Rela· tions AJZeney Task Force revie'ol1ed and POOl"ze'.'f the Lockhee~ report and recom- mPn rlpcf a 1na'laPl'fl1ent system ·be im· rt'"m"ntl'CI on a prototype basis. """' ·" ""'ff '~-" RE"Pfl "'i'TJ.-:n to the -..,,,.._ .. ,_,._, ,.., ""~"'-,... .... ~"'rll\"f'S 11· 'A ,.,,,,,pa rr•tr. 1 \s~t•9 .,fts "'"" I. " n d s p rob•bly l!"•••,fd hn~'e 9011e i nf, o .:~",'"r'~'r"''~., .. ,, .. ,' '\•'ita tion ror compe1itive bids to acsign and implement" the MMS and prototype ope ration. T1vo fi rms were elimi~ated and it ca me down to H':SA and lUue Shield-Blue Cross. JICSA y,·as selected, winning a $5.5 tnillion contr<1ct. This was hiked to $6.5 n1illion a year lat'er because the state fa iled to supply necessary data on schedule. The system wa s put into operation in Santa Clara and San Diego counties last August and wa s to have gont statewide · in November. Jamie T. Lavenia of Costa l:ist August had not been paid . . Mesa was one of 637 m1d-yc;11 The legislative committee summarized · TllE CONTRACT BETWEEN th e Department of Health Care Services and the insurance companies (HCSAl pro- vided a $2.5 million budget for operations Crom Aug. I. 1972, through June 30. However t'he amount had been exceeded by $1 millio n by the end of J8nuary, and it is estimated another $3.5 million will be req uired to take the operation through J une: • SOl\1EBODY MUST HAVE gotten wind or the problems fiOme time ago, however' bec;ause statewid~ implementation was ba_nncd by restrictions in the 1972 budget act. The tu·o counties selected thought they would.be able to participate-in the plan- •'gra~uatcs Cro1n SL Lou is it this way. • Ufiiverslty, school officia ls , have announced. ~Payments for claims are being ]\-1iss Lavenia has cllrncd her duplicated, paid to wrong providers and B.S. in • Nursing and v.'ill be arc being pailfin excess amounts. eligibl e to participat e in the -Procedures have been developed that year-end commencement ex· encourage improper di sbursement of ercises in May, officials sald. funds. "The~contract also provided -that the dcpart.r:nent should withhold fina l pay- ment to HCSA until it is salisfied that the system is free of Problems. ning, but It just didn 't happen. ' Au~itor,s 'said0repeated attempts by the couryt1cs and their technical represen- tatives to discuss problems areas in the A1MS design •·were ignored by DCHS and HCS A." ' ---- SPRING CLEANING • ,';J, "' ~ FRESHEN UP · FOR EASTER CLEANERS £.LAUNDRY. #68 FASHION ISLAND 644,251 2 1056 Bayside o •. -6 -5385 =2 Park t~ewport 4·6113 Oakwood Apts. North-548-0115 Oakwood A h. South-648-0121 EASTER.. ' ' ~ro rn r ' - .. ' . ln Spite Of the many flaws, it went ahead and gave HCSA a finar payment of n1ore than $500.000 March 15. At C:laren1ont Coast Students Make Honor Li,st Eleven Orange C o a s l I residen!s were an1011g the 467 students nan1ed to ·the fall scrnester honor list at Clare- . n1ont Men's College. Four Orange Coast Scildents \\'l'rc among the 219 wfio also qu~lified for the DisJinguished Scholar List by earning -a ~rade average of 3.5 or bette r. The other seven c o a s t resident s earn ed a 3.0 average '3 Denied , Funeral' or helter to make the Dean 's List. Those named to t h c Distinguished Scholars Li st were: Richard Mac g urn., junior , son of Mrs. Violet t>.1acgurn. Huntington Beach; Marshall Toppen . son of Mr. and t>.1rs. J!arold J. Toppen , Hun t in g ton Bea c h : l\1ark Lauria, fr~man. son of Mrs. JoAnn Lauria, LagWla Niguel and Kenneth Drew, sophomore, son of Mr. and ri.lrs. Marvin W. Dr ew, South Laguna. THOSE NAJ\IED to ' the Dean 's List were: Richard Cramer, junior. son of Mrs. SAN ·FRANCISCO (AP ) -Marjorie \V. Cramer. Costa Three persons killed in an auto Mesa: Kenneth fl 0 { f m a n , crash were denied a funeral freshman, son of Irving J . at a Ukiah mortuary because Hoffman, Huntington Beach: they were Indians, a suit filed Peter Merandi. senior, son of here charges. A1r. and Mrs. Louis Merandi. Amelio and Ann lnay and Huntington Beac~; Thomas their infanl son John were Whiteside, sophomore, son of among nine perSQns kilted in a Mr . and Mrs. Dan J. two-car accident at Hopland Whiteside, HWltington Beach . on March 12, 1972. Also, John Chamberlin, The suit, filed in U.S· senior, son of Mrs. Virginia Dis trict Court here. says Chamberlin, Lagun a Beach ; relatives tried to arrange Bartlett Tabor, freslunan, son funeral services and buy of Mrs. Margaret B e h r , caskets tor the !nays at 1..aguna Beach: h-1 a r i o Eve1"S9le Mortuary but were l\'tainero. rophomore. son of refused "on the sole grounds Mr. and Mrs. Mario Mainero, . the !nays were Indians.ii"iiiiiiSaniiiiC!iieiimiieiiniiteii.ii. iiiii nusso~s Et.IDS EXCESSIVE BARKING 1- Jn5tantly Avtomotlcally It wor k·s automatically by picking up t~ 'libretions from l_hj~:l:'.~ the sound of tho b•rk and at th1t very in stant create' a startli ng se ns•tion . The dog learns by association. He will curb his ewce ssive barki ng habit immed iately. For S.le or Ronta l, Wonderful World of PETS, Inc . .. 1--·r----'---- • • ') ' --. , • • .---~--~-~BU$TER . m \Vhitc and !\'avy Blue Clogs PATlftTID FOR LITTU GIRLS \Vhlt~. Red. Black and Blue Patent •Xl"l•TLY fllTTID I Y oua s,.•CIALISTS "WHERE SHOPPING IS A REAL PLEASURE" , (/} ~(!Ji~HOEB YY,~ '"' •• m."IJ.:.,,, , 1052 IRYINE AVENUE WESTCLIFF 'P,LAZA-NEWPORT IEACH JO FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH •, Imported fabrics from aroond tht "WOrld, 1ogether with domestic fib« blench 1ra seat0n9d into 1Very timeless, clnsic, n1tur11I shouldered Theodore V suit and IPOrt Ce11t. Our suit collections are vallad from $80 to $.185, with spor.t.cotu..from.$60 to.$135. Within etch of these collectiont, are coon:llnat.t ICCftlOrlet d11lgn«l to suit the mott ditcrlmlnatirig t"te. We ire cOnfldent you wlll enjoy thopplrig at Tlloc:>don V, and we wtlcome the opportunity to RM vou. EASTER BUNNIES! • Nonnal • Dlttch • Dwarf CHICK INCUBATORS -0111 yMr' own dilck& Si!IECIAL. !FOR EASTER Baby Fe.-le Capu~ln Monkey .... p1.n1y-• '395 ,,._-------, 51 F•thlon ltl1nd .,....;';.,;,· ____ .,. N-rt BNch I s-1 A<--._......, 2 .J.OCATIO~ • 644-0HO • • • ' I I • " 12 , .. h1on Sq. · ..._Moll_W_ S.nl• Ano • 135.(1311 • • ' i ~ ' '" • • ' ---' , • ' I ) • . • Mfnd•y, Aprll 16, 1'17.l " DAJL Y PILOT 1$ . . ·Ken M&:1nard One-of His ~nig4~ ' ·-, . By DICK WEST .,.__W.olSl!lNl'TON (UPl f -Up- , on leaming of Ken Maynard's death recenUy, I began ttylng to compose a suitable tribute. Theater in downtown Merkel. heroic horsemen he would . Oc<:asionally, the Que en still haven't made Up my QUnd Tex,. yOU--would ve-\\'lt~ ...raUle.r.._ • -_ CW§t4.._us u 1...Jiy showing n ~hlclt one Was~ Idial. nessed a minor riot. , the way it worked out, we "Bob Steele movie On Siturday Specifically, you would ~ave always wanted to be the afternoon. Nobody. wanted 10 s~n a group of smnll boys co\\·boy whose movie "'e had be Bob Steele on account of he preparing to r~act the just seen. ~ ,had curly hair. YOU CAN'T 1mqlne-what it's been like living wilb thl! dilemma all thea Y-'4m among divided loyalties - burdened by doUbt. It's a • . UPI Tel.iiotot RAYMOND BURR (LEFT) WILL FULLF.ILL LONG-TIME AMBITION · Actor Will Depict Incident in Life of P-John (Right) · . !'. • i:Burr-to Play Pope · ·-c ;'HOU.YWOOD (AP) -Ray-children under the protection mood Burr, the star of of Portugal. television's "Ironside" detec-BURI\, WHO had several , tlve series, will p I a y audiences with Pope John in ArChbisbop Angelo Roncalli in 1958, ~id, "He was a gentle an Easter drama about a little-~an .with great strength and his influence was felt far known incident in tpe life of beyond the confines or the the man who 1became ~ope Roman Catholic .Phurch. Next ·John xxm . ABC's "A Man Whose Name ~--------~ Was John," is to be shown Sunday April 22. to Jesus Christ.· he has had more effect on the world than any other person who ever liv- ed ." ··-~ Reca1ling his first meeting, Bw-r _said, "He looked al me and said, 'Ah , yes, Perry Mason.• " Burr played that role for six years and the television series is sti ll shown worldwide. F-·~--WI~.-,,-'T~u..,E_QNE-BOUR sh1>W tells of an incident in Turkey dur- ing World War II when Archbishop R.dtlcalli .was in- -strUmental in saving a boatload of 647 displaced Jewish children from Nazi persecution. Gossipers Rei11stated TOKYO (AP)_ -J'l]e TOKyo District Court has ordered a taxi company to reinstate two drivers fired because they pl.it up a 1>9~ter dealing with an 3lleged love affair of the :ompany presi dent. FOR THE . ROLE, Burr underwent extensive makeup changes. His hair was clipped short and bleached white. The shape of his eyebrows Was altered and he was given a Roman -nose. -The--~ntire-·production was an ecumenical affair. David V!ctor, the ~xeeutive pro- ducer. and Buzz Kulik, the director, are Jews. David J. O'Connell, the producer, and John McGreevey, the writer, arc Catholics. Burr is a Protestant. • ~chbishop Roncalli, then apostollc delegate to Turkey, ob tained bapti s mal certificates which served in lieu of passports and put the ·- • l7),;;;;;:-'-'-THe-Juliet-roor r ' I • i I Set a romantic mood. It's easy in a long sweep of printed voile wilh fluttery cape collar. Mostly pink or blue polyester /cotton, 5-13, '17 In voile for modern .heroines. ~ ~ JCP~nney We know what yoo're·looking tor. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P;M· 91 -the.follOwlng atoi'M: -- F11hion lil•nd, Newport Beech ( 714 I 644-ll I l . Huntl1t9ton Center ~unt;ngton Beech. {7141 •892-7771. Har~or Center, Cost• Meia 171 4 ) 646.5021 • ~ • But.each time 1 started, my typewriter became so drench· ed in nostalgia the keys stuck -together.· Saturday matinee. / · IF A (JUCK Jones movie SO INSTEAD of playing -MAYNARD, YOU see, was a party to . my first identity crisis. And I have been in somewhat of a quandary ever since. U in the gloaming of any given Saturday during the silent movie era you had cban· ced to pass by the Queen PLAYING· COWBO_Y was always preceded by a sidewalk shoving match to determine who was Tom Mix. 'who was Buck Jones, ~hO was lloot Gibson and who "'as Ken Maynard. The violence stemmed from tile-fact that none of us could decide for more than a ·.wecl;; at a tinJ.e ythic;.h of those , . Argyle bikini of combed cotton/ nylon terry, navy or red/while, .. S, M, L, f'11 Halter neck print bikini ol nylon tricol, 5-13, '14 v.•as pla~ing that Saturday, cov.•boy after the movie we everyooe wanted to be Buck woulQ: go down to Vaughn's Jones. 1-'his bonOC could only be _ Meat ~tarket aQ.d W?it ~found won-by shoving the other boys for an order for spiced ham to off the sidewalk. come in so We could watch Secondary disputes were Doc Vaughn run hi s new elec· then resolved by shouting tric slicing machine. "dibs on Hoot Gibson," ''dibs All are gone no\r .. l\laynard on Tom MiX" and so on u!,'ltil \\'as the la st of the big four. to C\'eryobe was some kind o!J pass on to that G r e a t cowboy, BunkhoUse in the Sky. And 1 Ruffled waJ1t hipster of acrylic crepe, lots of prlnll, 5-13, tf 2 wonder all or us orl f J!)'en't ~d-"' what I'm leading up to i,.e is a plea for a retrospective showing of their work -a sOrt of shoot-em-up film !eslival'lt which Miyriard, Mix, Gibiiii and Jones could be vi~ slde--by-side rather than ... weekc apart. . j . .. . .. •• ~ -. :. ·: ' Cotton knit bikini with cotton eyelet trim, 5-13, '12 l· Penney bikinis. Front-tie bikini or nylon seersucker, while or lllao, 5-13,_'13 Because usually it's the little things thatmake · all the difference. . . ' . Ii < . • ,• • '• ' ,. •' •• .. .. • •' ,. •' .. . . .. . ,. •' • . . , . .. .. ·_JCPenney _We know what you're IOoking for. I I • Shop Sunday noon to~ P.M . ~t the following stores: i:ASRfC5Ff ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-2"3 I 3. HIJNTINGTON CENTER , Huntington Beach (7 l 4)-89Z·777 I. -' \ HARBOR CENTER, Cosio Mes• (714) 646-5021. -- ' ~ ( ~ ~ " ' • . I • 1 • . .. . . • Monda1. Aptll 16, 1'7) ' ' M DAILY PILOT # Sex Change • HARTFORD. Conn. CUP!) Dr. John H. Houck. a 1---='lllnnedinhlir<ctor of the-psyehiatmt, oaid_,.x ool ol Institute of Uvlng I a y I Wedlock tlas lost much of ill pmnarltal and extramarll8t sU~a and unmarried couples iu are m°"' openly pnctlced "' 'bt1ng tolerated by society than ever. to an unprecedeqted degrte. SlJM~I EK FRESllN.ESS ... ('ri:f while \.;n11 trinu a bol gingham chcc~ jacket ~nd h.JP§ wilk legged cuffed panh. ln polyester and r.:otton. Sizes 5·1.l. Navy: Rtd. Jackel, $211. Pant, $22. COUPLES WHO I i v e together wilbOll! llting mar- ried ''dQ not really iejecttfie idea of marriage," Hoock said la a lecture of the 20th annual mental health series sponsored by the institute and tho Hartford Courant. "They only reserve it as an alternative' and, t;videnUy. as_ a deeper commltnient," he ':::::::::-:t'~ said. • ''THE CURRENT phenomenon oJ the 'unmarried marriage' is really quite new, not so much in its open, unapol ogetic quality as in its degree or general public ac- ceptance it has achieved," be said. \ '""l'•'-"" .,,..,,.,,_ J "Parents may quiver a bit and their friends may look the other way," Houck added, "but the kind of massive social revulsion which wouJd have occurred 25 years ago is -----------------------11 gone." . -•' SUCH TmNGS. he said, may affect eventually the number of divorces and mar- riages. For ctl1e Record ~·If the trend continues," , Houck said. "there may be · ;;.."ii~ fewer marriages in the next M ar·riage decade. If there are' fe\rer. marriages. of course there will be fewer divorces." -The frequency of out-of· wedlock sex has not increased significantly; Houck said, but its acceptance ha~. No Booze Before 10 PRAGUE, Czechoslo- Licenses KOBISH-OU F~ER -F~. 2(, Oonakl Henrv KOO!lh, 29, and S1f1(1r1 G••CI Ollftner, 25, bolt! of 1-iunllnglon 9eld\. • SlEMA.NTEL·LEVEILLE -Feb. 2(, Aul.Mii David Sl11m11nt&I, 23. ot Hunt- lneton Baach, 1nd Lori Rulh Levelll1, 17, of W15lmlMl!1". WALTERSUMOREAUX -Feb. 14, Aon•kl J. w,,1,.,, 33, ot K•n~i Cl!v. Kan., and P1trkl1 L1mdreaux, 21, of Wtttmlnster. STlMKA·SHOWALTEll: -Fet>. 14, Randv Edwaal Stlmka. 25 and Cathy L. snowalter,'"'25, bolh ot Co"• Meia. RIFFE-DURRETT -Feb. 2(, Gordon Edward RUie, 33, of NeWPOfl BtMh, and Linda Diane Ourr•!I, 30. ot HUl"l-rln<1IM 8e1teh Mc.KEEVER·WEITZMAN -Fab. 15, Tedd MC.Keevtt, JO 1nd Jo Ann Wtlltmiln 26, both ot NtWPOrl Stach. •• W1!dron, 81rb1r1 and Edw11'd Ctrl)lnltr, John Thom11 11nd Dorolhy L. Slrohlu11 V!r!)lnla A. and R1ymond H. S1ndova , Marv 111\d Na•d1co S11ndec.1t!, L111le Ann• 1nd Jo11pll E~ward ~:1:~11~11:\1~ f."~~0~11~0ld G. MOf OllVI EllLaDelh Ind R1lph Harrll coufnt. Phyllis C1rot 11!11 J1rry WIYIM Wychl, L1wrenc1 Oll1 •11d Dorothy Mlrihlmer, Eugene H. and P1tricli1 I. Blflla, Jotin J., Jr. ind Killhy Marie Pitkin, Tl'IOfnlS Wllll1m al\d S1ndr1 Sue Whllt, K1tllerlne Jo and Thom1s 111n ColUn., H1rold R. 1nd Pllrlcl1 M. C-r. Dean F. 11ld 8eri. M. Ounn, RebKCI Lyn Ind Ofnnh WIYlll F~fi'r, JudHh Ann 1nd Elick Fenner CllHt. MllodY J. Ind Robin E. . . FINAL DECREES Enlff'H April 2 La1111w11l, Sh.iron 10d Rlcl'hllrd Sto"' L1wr1nc1 S. and Che<"yl Anrie RallO, Rooert T. and Linda J. CarlUe, Florence p. 1nd R•r."""' " Pennlnoton, Linda and Rona d o. • Br.uct, Joan v. ind John W. Movius, Lonni• J. ind Elli J, • • ~ .. ~---- DF SOLVONG· iNEWPOt1'1 ~~ter Basket Specialists Fiii "Your E1ster Basket For Th• GourrMt • GOURMET FOODS • GIFT ITEMS . • IMPORTED DELICACIES • LIQUORS • , ,. WINE • • • CANDIES • CHAMPAGNE FOR YOUR EASTER BRUNCH • WINE & CHEESE COUPON THIS COUPON IS GOOD FOR FREE WIN_E, and CHEESE TASTING 10% DISCOUNT ON ALL CHEESE PURCHASED WE ARE AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE OPEN t.tONDA Y AND FRIDAY 10 A.M. • 9:30 P.M. TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY & SATURDAY 10 A.t.f.-. 6 P.M. SUNDA-Y NOON • 5:00 P.M. NEWPORT CENTER 644-0991 vakia (AP) -The east Slovak town or Presov sta r ted a c~mpaign a~ainst drinking by ban· n1ng the sale of alcohol in · low-price restaurants be- fore 10 a.m. COOK.CROFT -Feb. 25, WIUl1m JOMph Cook, 16, ol G•rdtf'I Gro~. •nd Betty l.ou !!roll, l7, of Hunt· lrig1on Btach. PALMER.PALMER -Feb. 'l.S, P•ul Patmer. '2, of An•Mtm, rcm1rrled Anlt1 -Joyce Pillmer • .O, ol Newp0rt P1rkln1, Miidred Ol1n1 1nd Carron Ree Booller, Marv Ell1n and J1ck Curlll Morrl1, M1dne E. and Charles R. Hftlve,son, cvnlhla A. 11!11 How1rd o. l(rou~, Elliabllh R. 11!11 WUll1m E. Hobb$, Shlrll'f M:"''".lnd Richard O. M11!h1w1, Carolyn K. and Jeromt C. I~.,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,..~.,...,..~ w;~'8f1io Hiid• Slil1ld1 and Artliur i: 56 FASHION . ISLAND (Oppos~t• Broadway) • )fl::WPORT REACll l·a\luon hb~d LA ll AB RA Fashion Squ:irc ' l\;ewporl o~n n1ond:1y and ffiday nij?.hts til 9 :30, sunday 12·5. La llabr~ open rnonda)'. 1hurMla)", friday nigh!~ til 9:30. • . , 1t s 1s 'Fulloo hlaod Norporl Buel . BERNARDO SANDALS visit our new ... SHOE DEPT. ' • I • • • . • . •. I \ ' ._-.;· \•;:·; .... ... " • ewport B~l!ch 2• FASHION ISLAN D 6#0022 BIKINI .TIME AT f4AWAllAN '5'40PS LARGE SELECTION WITH • l\IATCHING FLOOR . LENGTH COVER-UPS! Santa Ana 2f FASHIQN .SQUARE . 543-8688 • Anaheim DISNEYLAND HOTEL PLAZA 635...S281 Beach. . GLASS·JENNINGS -Feb. 25, Robert Pre~ton Gia», ,5, and Carole Ann e~r'en~~CcR.1~~ 0~ifo~'~s.M~~ilam Andrew Er.11.v, 37, ol Coil• MU&, 1na Jean E11tier McGlilr1, "' cl N11W1JOrl B1ach. KIOO.HIRSH -Fib. 2.'i, Edwin L. K'"I :J.I, Ind Ji;dy Hl!rsl\, U, both o1 Hunt na1on Beach. ~r11~~ntir~f,17n'J ~en~'1.0c1• Lee Thorn. Deborah K1Y Bl11111 1nd D1nlel Lee • Collins, R.o~•nn1 J. ind Melvin G. Orpp111, Su11rine L. and Ronald c . Stielbv, Su11n Lynn and Jo1eoh J1m1s. Soet11r, Linda LOI.list .1nd Charles ThlodOre B~~himRachllll R. .1nd Kenneth H1rper, Shlrl1v C1rol and Thoma1 Allen ' Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You ... MAZER·L ... UBE -Feb. 25, David M;irk Maier, 25. ot Murrle!f, and LHnn M1r!1 L1u1>e, 11 ol Hunllnatcn BHch. TRUJILLo.GRODINEZ -Feb. 16 Robert Truli11o, 19, and Cbr1 Dugtrel Godlnei. 19. both ol FOtJnlaln V1llev ICINCAl().BROWN -Feb. 26, OC-nn!s Edllrom, Mary E. Ind Edwin G. Arnold. M1rlorl1 J11nn1 11\d Robtrl '"" 1-~----------~-----~----------~---------~-Marrow) Lnt11 C. 11111 M1rv E. ~ :r~~. ~~~:~ : F1~1a~~r~11~':. MtCOMBS-PEREZ -Fell. 26. Terry McCorr>bs, Zl, ot Weslmlnster, lod Mtrlt E. Perez, 2~. ot Wiimington. HELO.FOSN ... UGH -Fib. ,21 John AdrJ1n Held. XJ, ol Hun!lnolon e cach. 1nd N1ncy Ovo11n1M Fosn1u11h, 11. ol Torrance. BUSHARD·BUSHARD -Feb. n. Fr1n· cl.• Wllli1m Busl'lllrd, 6J, remarried Rurh Smll!I BU$h1rd, 5'/, t>Qlh or Coron• del Mar. Dissolutimas Of Marriage INTl'"ILOCUTO•Y DECltEH Enlfrtd Aprll > H1nten, Ruth L. •"" Ctrl J . Thre1d;lll M.urrl>Y H, and Elaine Vlerr1, Mary e. and WUll1m J. Gr~'!\~fe Frederick Hotld1y 1nd K1tnv F!ores, '"Pa!rlcf• M. Ind C11sar E. Hiii[ F. Thomls Ind P•lrltll Ann Ferr 1, Ootln1 and Danie! O.rra..,.,..r .Shryock, Lena A. 11nd ForrHI M. Hostler, P1tr!cl1 c. 111<1 cr.1rl15 War· ·~ t::ol•clon, JDan 1nd L1or,,rd llulcMr, NiM!ml 1nd Lvnn J . Movmblow, Tl'l(MTl.IS Ern11t Ind Ctrol ·~ Rven, Oebor1h 5ye Ind John Edward Mever, Su11n Qveln int Rlch1rd Frink H1""m1rly, G1r1ldlM Rea Ind Robtrl C1rl Whl!e, Lllll1n 1nd Thom1s r:. Coot . Joh11 O. 11nd Sh1ron E. l'l•Of1t, Oorollw M. Ind Gl~nn L~ Cl1rk, Carol Lynne and FrankU11 Larry Alhlr, ohn (llarles and G"'1vieve M. SD1r11, J01nn1 Oenlse a!ld Gary Lee ThomPMltl, R1loh J, 11\d LI Rein Htrwlmen, Pat 1rwl R11ssel Chlln, M1rt1vn 1nd Clltt w. Gl1sby, Lyndl Gill and Ravmood cuoen• Strim, Ell11beth J, and Francia E. G1lleQos, C1rolvn 1nd Larrv R. Hlck1m, 01bor1li Lvnn I nd Robert S!lven K.nnedy, P1lrlcla AM and J1mes Greooorv 5k1Uon, Oavld A. arwl s111na J. 8r1ndQll, SlllrYI Lynn Ind J1rry DDn Davis, Judith K. and Artliur D. Mumtord, John Anlhony 11\d Mary Jos~t11ne OW1ft1, Susan"• I(. ind W1yne A • Wetwn, Rober! L. 1nd Lis• Kaye Ford E.1t1r1d Atrll l Ch1vn, Chrlsllftne Francois• •'4 Norman Alfonso . Aut ... son, Beyerlv M. 1nd Loul1 L. Mt111, Miry M. and S!an W. Gomer, Leon1rd J. and Virginia A. Burn1, Judith Ann and Terence N1ilon Schr1mm, Ja"' Kav ind Roberl Lee Wchb, Tommie Lee erl'd ~Ober! B. Smith, Barbara J. 1nd Cite Roy Nehon, olnq4'11 1rwl Euoene A. H1rrt1. Jo Anne 1nd Harold .W. Aelenio, Dorothy M11 and Geor;e Ill ti Ph Otrthl11l, Wiiier E. and Anne G. Sherrod, Linda K. 1nd Glttw.rt E. Hendrix, Fred G. and Madeline B1ad1sarl1n, K1vont J. and Judith A . Ci:ann1t, 8~rrv 0 . and Jo A. Lowe, Jin Paul Ind Ctrol Otrllng Giibertson. OOrotlly G. end TMlmas S. John1ton, Vlrglnl1 M. 1,,.:1 Peter A. Chlmolll. Anna _and Auou1t Wiison, John v. ind Estherl111 M. l lndlrm.n, M11111rel L. and Robert E. Tully, P11m1li DorNA Ind Jeut Lii Otran, Miry C. Ind D11vld E.-' Trlpt1!1, Joseoh Wlfll1m 111 1nd Ur1ula Waltraud Land, Oebor1h Jean 11\d Fran\ Edward Jonw, Marv sue tnd Harold L. Ber111r, Mtdofyn Jean alld Biii 0. A Sriccial Girt tor Eu,.11•r Fumnus \Vcdgc\vood bone . . . \Vorld chlna by Etrueia & Barla.ston. The 3 piece S('t; clip, cereal bo"'I, and dish in the Befltl"ix Potter, Peter Rabbit Design is nw.de in England. To compll>te lhc Sl~l. a complete collection of "Pf'ter Rabbit Books by Beatrix Potter. Available at The Red Balloon. Ltd. . .. ,, ;::!!(jiflj4' ... Town & Country, Or•nge -1110 ~islS Fasbloa Island, Newport Beach -(111) Ill !IOI Ha~tlapn Horbtwr -(111) l*-1• • ' Diamond sale. · 20% off every sparkler in -stock. Limited time only ' Now $380 Reg. $475. 8 diamond bridal set with 30 ct. center stone in 14K gold Now s555 . Reg. $695. Heart motif cocktail ring with '?32 diamonds in 14K gold. • l • Now s2ao Reg. $350.50 ct. round diamond sollta\re en- gagement ring in classic 14K gold ..ning. Now $142 Reg. 177.50 21 Cl. diamond engagement ring with matching bride's and groom's wedding bands. 14K gold Now 3n.so Reg. _ $472. 14K gold wedding band with dou- ble rf!N of diamonds. 1 d. total weight. Now s95 · Reg. $120. Man's ring set with diMIOlld In 14K !Pl· --jCPenney fine jewelry We know what you're loOl<lng fer. , Shop Sun~ay noon to 5 P..M. at the following itom: F•'shion lsl•nd, Ntwport B1•ch 17 141 6'44-2313. Huntington Center, Huntin9fon h•ch 17 14 I 892°7771 • . I I ! • -- ... . ... '• .) ..~.: .. ·. . • . . · . • .. , . . • •• • • .-. . . ' .. I ' . -. • • Monday, April lb, 197) ·'~ DAILY PILOT, %7 xteltsi-ve ··.Bald Count ~ SACRAMENTo -(UPI) - State \vildllfe experts are ~"Janning an intensive survey California 's bald eagle pulalion, which they hope II show a hait to the national bird's rap.id decli ne to ex· llnction. · ( The once-plentiful eagle - f mbol of the United States - as been quickly disappearing on1 California's w i Id 11 f e cene in recent years: The major reason is people. THE STATE Fish and Gan1c Depertirient two years aqo placed the majestic bird with a 6-to·8 foot wing span ori a , list of 19 endangered wildlife -species. -Th~ move -cleared' the way for state action to help the eagle survive in callfornia . Robert Mallette, wildlife manager-biologist for f h e department, said his agency is .. Youth-Dew fragrance BOUTIQUE EAU OE PARFUM SPRAY 2 •I• oz . $7 D COLOGNE 4 OZ . $7 .SQ C BATH O IL 1/z 'oz . $5 0 ' I oz. $8 lJ SOL ID P ERFUM<'. $8.50 0 DU STING POWDER 9 OZ . $6 .SQ L] BODY. SATIN EE 4 oz . SS D 8 oz . $8 0 CREAMY M ILK BATH~ s 3/4 o.. $6.SO Lj EAU DE PARFUM, !lP,~.i\Y 2 oz . $6 D ? i 4w:.~ · i '------·· '~/.µ!~~ . ..,. NEWPORT • setting up the survey -this spring and summer to "firm l!,p" estimates that about 100 bild eagles sfillexist in the .. stale -no change from the estimate two years ~go. MALLETTE SAiD I i e l d observations last year at 11 of the 20 eagle uesfs located by the department s h o w e d reproduction \Vas· averaging J .2 chicks per nest. If such a rate of reprodut· tion Is taking plaoe ln lhe estin1ated total of 50 nesting ~ites in California. he said, -"'the po~ulation may have · stabilized." - By locating · eagle nests through the Sl{Vey, be said. wlldll re pcrS-Onnel can take steps to rrevent the nesta and the birds from being disturbed . "IF WE DON'T know where .. the bird& are, we can't help them,·· he said. He noted there were many more bald eagles until the 1920s and 1930s . when the jump in the state's population caused "encroachment of habitat " and Jed to_ a loss of nest inf areils and food. Also, he said, people are scaring eagles away fron1 favorite water\vays v.· h c r e they feed on rish. ' • NEW FACES ARE HERE! THE DEPARTMENT'S pro- tection errorls have included alerting people lo. not dls1urb or destroy eagle nests. It also warn s o( a Hnc of $1 ,000 or one year in jail. Qr both, for shooti ng the bird.' Mallette said the depart· ment has received "good cooperalioh" rronl loggers who ha\'e agreed not to cut within IO trees of illlY tree containing an eagle tll'St. / .. .-,..,.;... .•. ;;, ..,. ... ~ . ! I I. Estee, 1 He said the su rvey, to~ conduC ted during the 3·«M month nesting season. will M be confined to ground obseyv~ li~n. flelioopters and alrplane ! .\~·ill be used-. TllERE ARE c•e!e Qefil!Jll. ·rela tively remote sections o Shasta , Trlnlty, A 1 pine Ainador . Butte, Plumas, Lake ! N~pa, Fresno and SiskiyOt counties , the super fragrance SUPER PERFUME 1/4 OZ 0 $12 0 SUPER COLOGNE SPRAY 2 oz . $10 0 SUP ER COLOGNE 2 oz . SlO LJ PERFUMED BODY POWDER 9 oz . $8 .50 WHIPPED P eRFuM~ 3/4 oz-. $10 LJ , MOISTURI Z ING BODY L OTION 4 OZ . $6.50 ) AN ESTEE LAUDER BEAUTY GIFT WITH YOUR $6 PURCHASE Radiant makeup FRESH A IR MAKEUP BAS E $7 .SO NEWPORT BEI GE LJ SUNRISE BEIGE LJ Ll The egg and-you~- EsTooERME CREME (FOR NIGHT) l oz .$5 0 2 oz , $7 .so _J EST OOERME EMULSION (UNDE:_R MAKEUP) 2 oz . s1 .so n To a fresh clean skin • ORY DRY SKI N ASTRINGENT 8 OZ • $ 6 ~ WHIPP ED CLEANS ING CREM E 3 1/4 oz . $5 0 oRY oRY sKtN CREM E-2 oz . $8.SO r I ALl_-OAY EY E CR EME I OZ. t_6 CJ FASHION IS LANO " ·' YOU RECEIVE,TH E FACEMAKERS G IFT WITH ANY PURCHASE OF S6 OR M ORE OP es\EE LAUDER COSMETICS . THE GIFT CONl'AINS: ENRI CH.ED UNDER-MAKEUP CRE M E , AUTOMATI C SHADOWl.INER, RE-NUTR~V RICH, RICH LIPSTICK, SOFT FILM COMPACT ROUGE, , ESTEE SUPER PERFUME PURSE SPRAY • MAIL/PHONE . COSMETI CS . GIFT W ITH PU RCHASE ' CAL.L 644-2800, PHOHC OROC.R llOARO OPENS AT 9 AM , OR MAIL. COUPON TQ ROBINSON1S 0 F'ASHIQ/'I ISL.AHO, Hll:W..ORT CCNTCR , NE\VPORT BCACfl , CALIF', 92660 PL.EASE SEND ME THC ITCMS CHECKED . NAM E----------------- AODRESS•-~--------l'HO ... C ___ _ CITY STATE----'ZIP- c.o.o CHARGl D ,. ... Y"'4ENT C:NCLOSCO ,-. ACcouNT f .·~·'-------------~ ADD 5 $° SAL.ES TAX I F' Ot L.lVERED IN CAL.IF'Ofl'NIA. 75~ Sli:RVICE CHARGE: OH c.o.o's DR PICICUPS. SHIPPING; CH,.RGl:S AOOEO OU'T SIOE OUR OEL.1\ll;HY AREA , HPT_.-16 -ta SHOP J0:0<>--9 :30 ' (' , ' . . .- \ 644-ZBOO .. ,• J • • I .18 DAILY PILOT •• AMILER Monda!, Ap<ll 16, 197) . . TUMBLEWEEDS 'SIR: 111Wsf v¢t.L NoTlfY '(OUR j , ffWLI': !iCIONi f()Rft1Wrrtt1 TtlAf , I -00: J.af5A J.UCK f)(l'RfSS, fSQ., 1 , ''~P UFON-HIS Nf;W, il/lilll' I CHAR&f:R, AWAITS W11HOUT. MUTI AND JEFF ' by DOlllJ Wiidey by Tom K. Ryan A PEEWEE ON A FcfA~P& TO SE!O WU, Vf'AR " ' m ... ' 'YiM11 .• . ~~· by Al Smith I W~TE,"GENTl.EMEN :· 'BECAUSE l Tlo!INK I MACE A MISTAKE IN MY INCOME TA'IC I CAN'T SL.EEP NlGMTI! I AMENcl..OGINGACHECK FOR THlRTYOOLJ..ARS!". FIGMENTS NANCY HAVE YOU BEEN READING ABOUT THE : ENERGY SHORTAGE'? ~-S"Y. EV ERYBODY :-is TALKING ABOUT THE ENERGY SHORTAGE by Dale Hale ·by Emie Bushmiller S LU~GO HAS HAD A N ENERGY SHORTAGE . FOR Y EARS -~"-"'.r-:r.r;o <:: ·~ .. ':'!;:. '.~"!';'":."' J1.MS.W~ •LL--., ...... TODAY'S CRDSSWDBD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Garlands !i Read studiously 10 Cerumon1al Sli!!f 14 Can. prov. -JS-Actress-··· Rainer 16 Resembling wings 17 Sleigh I, 18 Exominong carelully 20 11..ind of miner : 22 Folds in cloth · 23 Parasilic I irniects 24 Close by 25 Withdraw from a , group 28 Enuusts 32 Greek j goddess 33 Equine noise 35 Wife of Abraham 36 Speech detect 38 Turn inside o"t 40 Molten roclo: •t Bakery employees 43 Rive1 to the Rhone <IS Scottish cap 46 Kind ol Sa1urdav's Puzzle Solved: window 48 Is as great as 50 Glowing ~~tell+!~ 51 Rura! rleity 52 Kind ol E !l!CC\i119 55 F1ac1ions 59 Hoving di~cretion 61 Titleol Athonu 62 If ever s 63 Nerve· 1acking 64 Milit ooth 65 Pedal dlu11s 66 Let s it stand 67 Foo1b.illr1~ 11 Inter ···< Among other 1hi11gs 31 Imposters 34 Sheeplike 37 P1efaccr. 39 Swe~ DOWN 12 Negative contraction com11ounds 13 Units of work 42 Chasten 1 Slrike with a 19 Sort 44 Same: P1el1• whip . 4] Incidents 2 f\1i5s Raines 71 Disencumbers ,9 Not 3 An .. 1onucal 24 ·· ··Dame manufac1ured passagl' 25 01 certain 51 Qanquct 4 Bicycle seat fianks 52 Dot !.> Qt a geologic 26 H1.1ath genus 53 Pisa's river 11n1o 27 legal aflai1s 5-4 Clare Boothe . 6 Weivht unit 28-Her11ldic 7 Oange1 f1gu1e 8 Sixlh sense: 29 Pa1sona -····: Abbr. Acceptable 9 Mako more pe1s~n in tenso 30 The "N" of 1Q Notlceal.Jle "USNA" 55 Ear 56 Boy's nsme .... 57 Moke lo11ns 58 Droops 60 $1;1igon holid1y " ·1 · 7 '" It " " ' .. . IS . t7 •. , II t .., .. ~ -~ " • m .~ !SlJ .. , ,. ., .. " . ~ -Ir~~ .. ' ·-· ,, , .... " »·"!-~ "' , -~ .. ''"' ., ,, ' ,-•7 • •• " ' ' ~· " ". ~· ~' ' ,. ' -' 60 '"! " ' -.. .. ' --" ,., " . • ) • I _j PEANUTS 'iiS,~~-1',11 THE TEAM MANA6EK AND THl5 IS ()(JR SECOND 6MEIOIN, LINUS WI PELT .. HELLO, SAM! D"ID VOU COME IM HERE FOR REFUGE'? WHAT ARE T.-,E WOMEN DO IN6? AND ~OU'RE THE LfAGllE PRESiV£NT? WE'RE Vii.~ 6LAP TO KNO~ .'/CW, ,I~ TALK.1~6! MISS PEACH PUTU.R~ • 1-AWYE ' of' ' \ AME~l(A • ' MEEf ' • 1-lE JtC . l>TCK TlfA1: N MIS PANIC TO FLEE GRANDMA'S TIRE ESTABLISMMENT. 'l!IUTTON" TRllSTO OP!Jl•TMi!MANDCUFfS.'WITM A HAIRPIN. \ DOOLEY'S WORLD .. ,SALLY BANANAS ....... . . .. . GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS l\W, ~l '\ qou ~e: ~(;%' ~ "i45 HERD? j 11 -"' 1.re<; •. ) (..Cl\ ~·' ,-- '"' ' ',,_ . . , ' - by Charles M. Schulz ~~~~~~~~~ • I ' • , '· by Harold Le Doux PERHAPS SHE WAS MORE IMPRf&$ED BY HER GUIDE TM;..H THE lOWN ITSELf<, COUNSELOR! .Jo;:=or' . WHO AMI TO QUE.&TION EXQUISITE TASTE, JUDGE? ASI<' A"ST!rAIGHT QuasrroN, ~am", ANC> ICNOGK OFF -f>£,MUM80·JUMIO! 6y ~c;liesfer Gould - ·-WOllT~=".'.WOR~~K7!::-:'C::U-::FF=s~ Ml!: TOO RUSTY. 0 A FOR VOU- CRAWLI • ) -- • by Roger Bradfield ,.------- !ly Charles Barsotti .---------i > by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson· #I! You FINf.11.LY FIGURED OUT 'SOMETHING 1'0 Do ABOtJT THE HIGH PRICE' OF BEEF' by Roger Bollen MEET c./A I~ QI)!! ~R! THAT DOESl>'i Go l~E ll'E MOCH TIME.10 1.EARl-l l'UN<d-FU ... · -l • ' ' I ' : ! I; ' I : . ' "Just once, I'd like to argue with them \Vhilt I'm in lhe .:; · ! ~~· balbtub-tbat's always wbert I remember \\"bat I ~ • . ,• should have said.'' ' .. DENNIS THE MENAC E '~/ I f'·'1> 1 ,,...- ! ' I ! I { I I~ f (Pro,,ests \'Pay Oft >For Ga)'S .,. ~' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -:The emergenee gf milltarit .- • bQrnOHxu81 ~ressure groups ' has caused a decline In Pollce ~.slU'Velllance of the gay com. munlty, a p!llychiatriiltsays. Dllr ~CIS J. Rigney told tbe city's mental health a'dvlsory bo ard th at plainclothesmen no longer are ~ed to gay bars • • JU~ ••id "-police official .c... told him the main reaso n for ~ the policy change was in· creased protesls by homoscx-t ual group! agaimt su~h ac· , tivity._ "NOW THAT the gays also are a pressure group," Rigney quoted the official as saying. "we can never go back to the ·old ways." .. Rigney, a member of \he board 's subcommjttee on homosexuality and the law , said his group recommended "total repeal" of all \a\vs defining the ".normiilit y and abnormality., of sexual ac· tivities. Ten~is star Evon ne Goola gong Oef1) serves fellow pro Janet Young to the At- lantic Ocea~ during break in tenn is tournament at Miami. Both are from Syd- ney, Austr.:il1a. Use Discovered · .springb®k For .Cow Chips " ·----... DALLAS, Tex. !AP) - There may be goJd in them th.ar' cow chips, Chemists say cattle manure can be converted into pipeline gas by mixing . the dried manure with hydrogen, which reacts to form methane and ethane, the major· constituents of natural gas. Pick a pair of plaques --Her.men Fe!dmann of the U.S: Bureau -of Mines in Pittsburgh _told delegates to the 165th national meeting o! the American Cbem.Jcal Socie- 1.v all about it. Only'he calls iL "hydrogasifica tion or cattle manure to pi~ne gas." Tum any room in your home Into an Instant art gal· !efy with wood plaques from Springbok. Lots of d esigns to choose from-everything from .flowers to Peanuts charccters. Pick a couple soon. FELDMANN SAYS the Bureau or Mines is developing technology to convert solid \\'astes to clean energy proc· csses. He contends that if an economic way of doing this can be rol\nd , the solid waste disposal problem could be solved and the clean energy shortage alleviated. .. . • HATCH'S HALLMAR K #39 FASHION ISLANb-M4-20t4 • Al u. Avcillcibt. At Ycilley Hollntark, Oro1t9e Moll SPECIAL EASTER SALE IMPOR'rED CERA MIC ELEPHANT MANY COLORS TO SELECT FROM 2 for J ,. 39~· 5 ~. . . :· , ~BUYS ONE LARGE {1ppr0Jr, 22" Hlfh) and ONE SMALL (approx, I" Hlg~) NEWPORT IEACH: FmWo• k1011d Ho11R: Mon. & Fri. 'Tll t:JD: Dally 10 To 1130; Closod $11ndoy. 644-4737 ' LONG llACH: I . Hiii it. ilt' ... !Mlo St. Hours: Dolly 1D To 6: CloM'S•""' (21JJ 597-1119 ... ' I , I . ' .. Which brings us back to· cat- tle manure. "An attractive feed stock for a SY!Jthetic natural gas plant" is what Feldmann calls it. For example : -Cattle manure ls abun- dant, and the size and· con- centration or feed lots simplify its collection in the amounts required for reasonably sized gas plants. -The manure requires no Preparation.~ apart from partiai' drying. The cow has taken care o.f the necessary shredding and grinding. -The areas with the highest concentration of catfle feed are also areas Of high natural gas production -so gas transmission lines are usually available. -Experiments show that cattle manure is easily con- verted to a gas having a greater heating value than could be gotten by co.nvetting coal or naphtha. HOW IS IT done? .B'eldmann says the reaction occurs at around 1,000 degrees and at a pressure of aro.und l,000 psig -pounds per square inch gauge -thus allowing the gas produced to be _ injected i n t o gas transqtission lines w 1 t, ho u t recompression. About 40 percent of the carbon 1n the' manure ts con- verted with the hydrogen. ·rbe remaining portion or the carbon is used for the pro- duction of hydrogen, so that the only residue remaining after converttng·the manure to pipeline gas is the sterile in- org~nic ash. Attorney In Suit SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -A Rialto attorney bas filed a $1 millipn claim against San Bernardino County, saying he suffered a reduction in clients since he was arrested -but never prosecuted -f o r allegedly threatening to blow up the courthouse. - Adrian F. Smeltzer, 41, was arrested March 14 in con- nection with a bomb threat the previous day. But Deputy Dist. Atty. Lowell Lathrop said he would not issue a complaint becau s e of ''insufficien t evidence.'' Smeltzer said In his claim that he has not had a single cllellt Siftce fiis arrest, while he averaged three or four a week before. , Mond1y, Aptll 16, 1CJ73 DAILY PILOT 29 • Reporis from the Service ~1 Miu Oldy J. J'tttaro, mines from North Vietnamese or11n1J.atlon incft cuStom! an<' from recruit tratnlng at tho diughter of Mn. Mary F. harbor. received special instruction in Naval Training Center at Sao Porcaro rt 813S Foxhall Drive, hu111an relations. Diego. . Huntington Beach, attended Cadet J 1 me 1 F • The 11irman has been asslgn·i;:::::::::::::::;::;;;:;; lhe 181h National Angel Fllght MultOgany/ son ol Mr. and ed to the Technical Training Ii Conclave just concluded in Mrs. George N. Mastrogany ol Center at Lowry or specialized BE' I) i\: \ nDO Salt Lake Clly, Utah. 5602 Kingsford Ter., Irvine, !raining In the munitions and \i.<'ll\ . .Miss' Porcaro, a member of represented the University o( weapom maintenance field. the .,.odd'• l1rci••' ••l1t tio11 !he Angel Flight unit at Southern Callfomla squadron ~NAR Callfomia State University, of the Arnold Air Society •Marine Ma.!lter Sergeant was one of. more than t ,600 (AAS ) during the society's Albert F. Derrlbg Jr, husband N .coeds . and cadels who met to 25th annual national concla ve of the former 1'1iss Judith L. B · . discuss organiz.ational pro-just coocluded in Salt Lake Baldwen of 157t2 Swan Lani', grillll for the comlng year City, Utah. Hunting1on Beach, is a ~ and to tw.ar addresses by member of !\1arine ~tedium noted aerospace lead~rs. Cell 0. Kellol{g. daughter of Helicopter Squardon 165, a ~· Colonel and 1'·1rs. Wilbur C. e:ontingent unit of a special Navy Electrorucs Technician Kellogg Jr. of 17966 Splcey.·ood task force wh!Nt is clearing Tbird Oas:s John A. VUburn Drive, Irvine, w a s con1• mines from North Vietnanie se • \. Jr:., son of Afr. and !\frs. John missioned an ensign after harbors. A Vil• .. -of 5-o...i;.,ger graduating from the Wo1nen • 1JU1.11 u"' i:.u... Navy Boatswain's !\f ate Aye., llun.tington . Beach, has Officers School at the Naval First Cius Robfrt ~I . I.It his homepo t at Alameda Officer Training Center here. r • Ohle1ulorf, son of !\tr. and r..trs. Calif., for an ·e xt e nded Airman Thomas l\·I. Kin~, G.?i.1 . Graham of 16092 1\1elodv Wes tern Pacific deployment son of to.1r. and 1\1i's. Russel F. Lane, Huntington Beach, is 3 aboard the aircraft carrier \(ing of 2326 Rutgers Lane, crewmember of the helicopter USS Coral Sea. ,,.--Costa ~1esa. has been assigned. carrier USS New Orlanes, a Navy Data Systems Techni-to Lowry AFB, Colo., after contingent unit of a special clan Third Class Timothy R. compte'ting Air Force basic task force which is c!el)rlng Jlanley, husband of the former training. mines from North Vietname se Miss Dawn M. Golden of 6002 During his six weeks. at the harbor. Rosemont Drive, Huntington Air Training Com man d 's Navy Seaman Rec r u i t Beach, is a crewmember of Lackland AFB, Tex.. he Robert K. Rogers, or 2110 16th the reineswee per USS Illusive,.IJs~t~ud~ied~th~e ~A~ir~F~o~r~ce~m~iss~i~on~.~S~t~ .. ~N~e~w~po~r~t Be~· ~a~c~h,~gr~ad~u~a~te~d~~·~'~'~'~·~·~H~IO~N~IS~L~·~·~·~r I a contingef)t tmit of a special r task force which ia clearing mi1'es from ,North Vietnamese harbor. ' ' ' Ni'V)' . Airman Apprentice Robert D. Hoyt, --or Mr: and Mrs. Hazen L. Hoyt 111 of 2006 Leplinos Drive, Costa Mesa, has left his homeport at Alameda, Calif., for an ex· -tended Western Paci l i c deployment aboard the aircraft carrier USS Coral Sea. Airman First Class Brent L. Rielllpi, son of Mr. and Mrs. DeVerl Richins of 14701 Bromley St., WestJniM!er, has arrived foi duty at AIConbucy RAF Statiot1; England. Airman R.ictim.-'. a • com- munications -a n a 111 t spec- lalls~ ls a member of the U.S. Air ·Foree& Ill J!lurope, America's 09el'ie8s"'8ir arm assigned · to ·NATO. He previously 1erved . at' Lowry AFB, Colo. Airman Richard D. Harlderode, son of Mrs. Donna Gernert, 34056 Fonnosa, Dana Poin~, baJ been assigned to Chanute AFB, Ill., after com- pleting Air Force b a s j c training. · \... OUR EASTER SPECIAL DINNERS Are-Yo11rs to Enjoy Every Night!* Sesame Chicken/Shrimp T'empUra · A palate-pleasingc.'Onibination of Yamato's two most popular favorites, sesan1 c chicken and shiinp tempura, - designed for a dinner treat lcbi-banl ,. $3.50 Sesame Chicken/Beel Terlyill DitC-sized scs;\nlc chicken, fit for Nc\\'port Generals· as well as Kentucky Colonels, combined with your favorite top sirloin steak. $3.95 (Both dinners include. soup, rice, green tea and !l fortune cookie. •Scrvedcvery ni ght except Saturd!ly. lleserve QOW for Easter Sunday.) . ... . 1 Dinner hours: 5:00to10:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday; Sunday 4,30 to9,:J0p.m. Luncheon: ~fonday through Friday frorll 11:30 a.m. to5:00 p.m. Award Whmlng .Japa11ese Restaurants Join us for our llappi Hour from 3to 6, Monday through J:~riday. Cornplimcntary hocs d'ocuvrcs; "Tolrudai" (almost a double drink), major labels, 95c. No. 60 Fashion IJland, Newport Center. Reservallons honored' 644-4811. f ' ' • .. ·~·1 . ' . ' l • . ' . ' : I ' : I q •• . . . ' i ' The airman has been assrgn- ed to the Teohn.lcal Training!~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~1 ~ t! Center at Chanute forl-~ specialized training in the o • • :~i:;::mK~;;: ~~-Jiti\s11E0·R:Go0.~oie.·S· \9~. j Hideo Kawaratani of 945 1 ~t(), . Q @• ()'• Skyline Drive, Laguna :Qeach,. • •O ~ • fRQM 0 · Q• • =:"'..:: ~"';.:: ~ . 9 dll..,,, J;ilf. ... BDR... -ES· .• ~~ . " concluded in Salt Lake Ci\y, '4JJ>I Utah. Miss Kawaratani, a member of the Angel Flight Wlil at the University of California at Los Angeles, was one of more than l ,800 coeds and cadets who met to discuss organizational programs for the coming year and to hear addresses by noted aerospace leaders. Cadet Daa S. Azlin, son of C.L. Azlln of 2099 Contlnental Ave., Costa _Mesa, attended the 25th annual Arnold Air Society [AS.S) Nat Ion a 1 Conclave just concluded in SaJt Lake City, Utah . The AAS, a professional honorary service organization for outstanding Air Force Reserve Officers T r a i n i n g Corps cadet!, was formed in ..Dctober J947 and was named in honor' or the late General of the Air 'Force H.H. "'Hap" Arnold. The cadet is a member of the AAS chapter at ~ University of C3lifornia at Los.Angeles. . -li•.Y Radioman Third Class ~UcQel "'· Molde, son cit Mr. ai1i:i Mts. Norman Molde of t571 Rome Circle, Hun-· tington Beach, is a ~r ~wmern_b _g__r of the minesweeper USS Illusive. ~ contingent unit or a special task force which is clearing 0 !'t? 'n to"' Accordlllt ta Sl11 ll.fCI ,. 1(,$0 Acconll111 to Sh1 54 FASHIQt'.I ISLA!'!D • NEWeOR1~CE.NTER OPPOSITE BROADWAY • 644-42223 Wlll'9 1'119'11 Bl1cll l'flMI .... "''"'' .. Use You r BankAmerlcard • Mas~er Charge • Hemphill Charge . ' . ~LFRor,,-Fashi0n ls-land L- Newport Beaeh •• 0 SOUNDS -OF ·TH·EJiARBOR . ·· '• f • I I - . . I ' • • • . . . ~··~AJLY PILOT ' MondQ, April lb, l•i7J De n t a l P e p Tal:k ' Madi son A venue ApprQac . . SAN FRANCISCO (AP l Dentists should sell them~ selves to the public by r<IBtihg healthy teeth to things like sex, money and success, says the president-elect of the California Dental Association. "Dentists are a"·are that in order to motivate people to take care of their teeth, f\tadison Avenue techniques are ne<>essary," Dr. Burtoo fl. Press. or Pittsburg, Calif., told ·the CDA 's annual mee ting here. "The mouth is an irt strun1enl of Jove. sex. recogni- tion. defense and survival," Press said, but the problem is "to make the patient un- (MEDICINE J ' derstand thal a healthy mouth is important" in getting v.•hat fie wants and need.s. He compared the appeal dentists must make to that used by big companies in !KU- ing toothpaste. eGland Biii SACRAMENTO (AP) Coroners could remove the pituary glands from unclaim- ed dead bodies to help prepare a serum that would allow .. d\\•arred children to -grow to normal size under a bill in- troduced by Assetnblyman Edv,.in Z'berg (0-Sacramen- tol. There are numerous children who need the serum to grow ta ller, Z'bcrg said . The pituitar y gland regulates hurpnn. growth. • Glands \VOUld have to be taken from bod lcfs that went unclaimed for 48 hours, Z'bcrg said. e Dednetions eHepatitls ·BAKERSFIELD (AP ) Kem County health officer Dr. O"'en Keams says there has been a "serious outbreak" or serum hepatitis in the county since January. Kearns said three persons have died in 25 reported cases. Kearn s said many of the cases involved the use of unsterilized needles, used in taking drugs. There were four reported cases of serum hepatitis in the county in lhe first three months of 1972. eDlet Hit ·sAN-FRANCISCO (AP ! "Dr. Atkins' Diet Revolution" cOu.id cause such problems as kidney failure, gout. heart disease and mineral defi· ciencie's, a Stanford heart SACRAMENTO (AP) ·specialist and tv;o Berlteley ' State income tax deductions or nutritionisl contend. up to $150 a year wou ld be The criticism of Dr. Robert granted Californians who give c. Atkins' best-selllng diet blood under . a legislative book was made at a news con- package that would outlaw ference held by Dr. Sheldon most donations of blood for a1argen, chainnan oJ the pay. nutrition department at l:IC Commercial blood donations Berkeley; Dr. Doris Calloway, would be illegal after 1975 ex-a professor in hi s departm!!nt. ctpt for badly needed rare and Dr. John Schroeder, chief blood types under a measure of the Stanford a1 e d i c a I sponsored by Assemblyman School's cardiology division. ~an S!-eroty ( D • B e v e r 1 Y ._ The session here w a HllI.s}. · .-spo.nsored -'--by the Pu-bJ-i·c S1eroty told a Capitol ~ews J t rest Research Center· in c o n f e rence commercially n c . . donated blood was at l~ast 10 Berke ley: . . r 8 mOre likely to , have The ~c1enbsts also said th~t ime . . . • there 1s a danger of brain hepatitis infection than blood d:.inlage in the fetuses of preg- fro m volunteers. nant women who f 0 11 0 w e Caneer S t11d11 Atkins' high calories, super- low carbohydrate diet. SAN FRANCISCO I AP ) Recovered cancer patients are being recruited here for blood donations to obtain a blood factor 9rilich scientists hope will help other cancer victims.· A joint UC.l\1t. Zion ~fospital research tea1n said i t ultimately hopes lo make ..,former cancer patients irn· mune to a recurrence or the disease. It will be three lo five years before th e immu nization theory can be establi shed through testing, the research- er.1 say. Meanwhile, the lnbora!ory team has taken blood dona- tions from a small group of cancer patients "'ho have been free or all symptoms for at least three years follo"·i11g treatment. e 11 Connls OAKLAND (AP \ -An ar- rest warrant h;is been issued for a Berkelev obstetrician and gynecologiSt charging 11 • .. • COIONA Dn MAI J401 l. Co••t Hwr. ' • e 1•ranspla11ts SACRAMENTO CAP ) - Coroners would be permitted lo make the parts or dead bodies a vai la'ble for transplants ·unless the dead person or his family has o~ jected, under a bill before the Legislature. ~ Assemblyman Paul Priolo (R·Pacilic Pa I is ad es) in- troduced the measure, which is AB 863. e Fund Aid SACRAMENTO (AP) -A $15 million appropriation for contracts with private schools and colleges to help edl!cate Californi a medical students has been introduced by state Sen. Donald Gransky. The \\'atsoo.ville Republi· can's measure would approp- riate the money over the next t\vO fiscal years to !he State Scholarship and Loan Com· mission. SHOE SERVICE Complete shoe, luggage and handbag repaiTs. REGIONAL IEPAll SHVICI . FOi SPUIY TOP SIDllS AND SPECIALIST IN adldu •• REP.All~ #74 FASHION ISLAJID_ NEWPORT· BEACH e WfSTCLlff PLAZA I 7ih & lrwin.- Ntwporf. B~_,c:h '--'"'--' Ull.Q~ll.IL!~·-iit. ____ • #I FASHION 1_9114~1.. J<tJ) Vi• Uilo St11tt An1 1 •• - ( • • .. . . . \ • • .. Fump )Tested· to -Clean Up Harh~rs . . • . " • • -fustdr.y riy/'». swiM, ,. .. I , ''hld(b.:.hood Jackets 11-1eii'~a11J boys' 0 ' • I le~ s+ripe SUJIWt r@) 9Fl(df~~j(:=l - 1 44 fashiQr\ ·liland, newport c9nter 644·5070 ------ •• • • . . . . • -~· • •I • • 1 .. .• I • • . . .J • .. •• •• " I •• ., t By AWSON l>EERR ot .. ...,,.. • ...,,.. You W.Uldii1 ,il>lllre ber u a 'W· l;he oould pass,Jor a teenqe/ although sbe's In ber 0mld-20s. When ·aJle lalka tbere's a mingling of police jargon, teenage slang ancli the lmpage <ii 1he drug ciilture. · ! For several yean she's f>etn a special agent foe area police departmeiits., uSually 'f'Or'king narcotics. cases. She'• also woi'ked eecurity for a large area departmt.nt store. For obvious reasons, she guard,1: her cover caref~y; " "I work when they call me. Not every· day drug busll. J\111 whoo--tbey really need me. I'm not worried about 20-year- olds smoking a little marijuana Jn their apartments. It's when they're damaging the innocent that I get involved." The beginning of her involvement was . Narc:otic:s buys, and detecting shopli~ers and parking lo t ra·pists are 'not-something just anyone c:ould handle.' ~men BEA ANllERSON, Editor.-.....,, ,.,.. .. ,., 1m , ... " Illustration ,by Staff Artist Tim Pete rsen I • , • Agent.: Ris s 1 1ocaJ case of a 14-montl>old girl whoo< pamRJ gave her. beroln. 11Mlre wu Onotber baby who overdosed 00 um. And babies born addicted, NARCOTICS "Wben adults "bUy aad use drugs, that's ooe thing. eUt when oomeone sells to If. and-10.yeaM>lds who don"t even l!n<>w what they are taking; something has to be done. "We're after the heavy pusher wtio doem't care what he's doing, who he's ·hurting. ' "Kids Ire oeardllng. They go front ooe thing · to another.· They aren;t really strong enough to handle drup. It's the children who are suffering," she said. "I hate to see kids so lost, their minds so messed up." She began working for the police oo -a voluntary basis. Whenever a case came up !hey would call her at her regular job. She'd find out ·tbe circumStances and dress to flt the situatiOO.~ • "Usually a couple ol kids who had been uslng would come in,'~ she said, 0 aeclding Oley were ready to go straight. We'd arrange to meet the pusher and ar-- range a buy." ADJUSTMENTS "Each case ·is different. You never know what it will be like. You have to ad- just to the situation .. To do tbb kind ol work you really have to be an extrovert. You have to get into the scene. whatever's ~ppening." ·That doesn't include using. "I've managed to' talk. my Yt'ay out of using anything, but it's been awfully close sometimes." The on_lY time she gets "spooky feel- .) I . .. • . I • lngs" is whtn her eompaniom leave tbe room with the dealer, leaving her alone. or leave her alone whb the dealer. "I'm paranoid and they're paranoid. Nobody wants to get busted, right? So I keep my eyes and ears open and look for pOssible exits. I ~ve to remember every detail. "Who said what to \\'hom and in what order?" What's in the room? Who sat where? What drugs were visible? In what cootainers? What names Y{ere men- tioned ?" DANGER THERE It can be dangerowi, she said, although she never bad any trouble. "Sometimes 1bey put a bug on me, to tape everything that goes on. One time they called me to y,·ork a case and I had to borrow clothes frvm a· fi'iepd. They '!Were small and I y,·as afraid someone . ' I • 0 1'-ould opot the bug. I hadn't had lunch and whln they played the tape all they got wu my stomach rumbling. 1 was really embaqas~d ." ,. Other times, she said, depending on the location of the posher, police officers are Jn.,.nearby halls In case she needs help. After the bust, she has to wrlte a report and laten appear in court . "I have to . dress according to lhc scene,'' she added1 "and son1etimes I've missed. I usually don't \\'ear n1y ring or Watch because drug users usually put every cent they get bacll. into drugs. And I don't y,•ear as much makeup: ATn"nJDES "I have to adjust my atlitudi!. tOo. Sometimes· I come on super cool and other limes·l'm really giddy. You have to remember the whole time ·where you are. what you're doing_ You ha\'C. to kind of • .. 1 feel your y,•ay in every cast." \'lorking deparunenl store security ll another game entirely. "It 's a game or cat and mouse," she explaint>d. "I \\'Cnt in tO apply as a salesclerk nnd ended up in security because of my experienoo." The store detective has to deal with shoplifters -pro and amateur dishonest employes and parking lot rapiS ts. ·'Everyone has his own method .'1 she said. "~1lne \\"as shoes. All t h·aa to do \\'as look at shoes in the dressing room and l 'd hil a ripoff. "~lost of the S,hoplifters J caught were juveniles. M~y \\'ere doing it just for a kick. And then there are the heartbreak cases. kids who really want little things like sllnglasses or earrings and can't af· ford them." PRO RIPOFF The pros, she admits, are not easy to catch. ' .,, '"l'b\l)I can rip off 20 pounds ol clothes \\•ithout anyone ·seeing them . There arc ce rtain times when the pros come out and \\'e have pictures of many of them . . They y,·ork in teams and often have a cover. One \\'as a li ttl e old lady in a \\'heelchair. · 1"\Ve \Vatch for bulky clothes, large bags. They like to \\'Ork in crowds, during sales, especially fur !ales. "Some kids are really brave. Two put ·on expensive suede coats' and jU!t walked out with them. Kids will lQOk at sunglasses, put one pali-on the counter, try on several more, then pick up ·lhe pair on the counter and wear them out of the store." . She also \\•orkcd with "shoppers" hired by the store to check ouG mployes suspected of steali!}g. "n>e store detective . and the shopper watch to see where the employe puts .money from a sale. Another not so pleasant racel is handl- ing men who approach salesgirls. ·More seriously there is the parking lot rape. men who follow female shoppers or wait for them in the lot. GETS HELP "\Vhen \re see someone ~ho really looks suspicious," she satd, "We let one of the men know lo follow. We also work "".ilh other people in security when we t~ they've spDtted u.s. "I'd have someone else pick them up at the other side ol the store and follow them out. Standard procedure is to wai t till they ~eave the store and ask them to come back in, but n0:t t.ell them why. "The pros are fighters and 'that can be dangerous, so we often call one of the men in to help." "You learn quickly how to watch from across a counter, the opposite side of a store, up one level rrorn the escalator. It wasn't that hard . After all, who would think I'm a store detective?" ' She doesn 't win them all. "Sometimes you follow someone all over the store. Y.QU know they've ripPed something off but' you can't touch them. Then you lose them. It's really. frustrating." The security office was on the !Hfrd floor of the store where" she work- ed. Sometimes it wasn't easy to be in- conspicuous taking a bandcufl'.ed suspect up the escalator. ';leople looked at me as if l'd done soMcthing. But we never used the elevator. You don'I want to be alone in an elevator, especially with a pro. They're really rough." When police arrive, she rides along with the suspect. ,. \Vhy use women in this kind or work? "I guess \Ve ha ve an easie r in . We're prettier. Jl;laybe \\'C're better talkers. But it's really exciting and I hope to keep on working for awhile." ·Blind rlandicapped by Those Who Have Sight DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read . your column every day1 Well~ I don't actually ..._re••IJt.-butl.kno\l..l<• to because 90me0ne , reads It to me. 1m blind. I've decided the bes\ way-lo Pus the word la through Ann Landera. U slle prints your letter you have a pipeline to million•. I hope I make It. I becaine blind 10 years ago, tbe result of a JUO accident. (My friend didn't lmoW . 'it was loaded.) Slnee _l. know what It's like to be both aighled an<tslghUass, may l 0£fer 11 few suggesUons? -'ll.member. ~en a bllild penon wallll to know who Is In the room. When you enttr, say, ,:Hello_,, Jim. I'm~-It's good to see you. ~ • . · . Moot bltnd people can loclte and han- dle,sllverware and they can cut meat and • 1 • please. Call it "An Open L<tter to All . --. 14-.1,41#.ltu e Wives." If your husband isn't cheating now, he might cheat later. Don't think you are safe because you· have spent your . • bell re malskining 11ome1 all wondfilllnmul h~lace to • ,. poultry. But they approctsto a little help with the aalt and pepper shaker1, the meat sauce, sugar bowl and IO on. Don't forget· to hand h!n.-1heoe articles· and tdentily _thein. ' Don't fee~ that· you must avoid •Y rtlerence to blindness~ We -are-ae-- CUJtomed to It, and to the q~"t on!; too. • t>on~ taie the arm ol .a bllild pcnon. and. try to ltad him. 11'1 easier II you let him lake your ann. Procede him down , ra g a am y, 1 g 1s ert»- tional anc1· physical needs, sharing his ••· sta" d •J hi th illn !C>rrows aod !allures and he]PinS him uffl' 1rs an ~' m grasp e ra g. become a success Nmi !r~ ajgh~ -as 11 he _ · . . , . is seriously banaicap . onen M"'"lllNs Take my word for d, NO wom1:1n 1s . handicapJ>fd than l1><>se who can oee, but sale. One day you oould wake up and get are blind to-ffii-QeiUty of nature, · the ·news. You don't' know where you brotherhood and Jove. -DES MOINES messed up, but you did bect:iuse he wants RE.µ>ER. out of the mamage. Why! Because he DEAR READER: Tbm,..,....... thinks ·he is missing something and he lng oar-ey'ts. Yoar Jetter U1 betped to wants-to-grab It-before~ is too okl-and ~eato·,.u-ll'a too late. What is he misilntl! He doean'I know, hut he's going to find oul DEAR ANN LANDERS: Print this Ollcrlni to help him find 11 Inside 11U1r- j •• • -- riage is useless. fie wants something new. Different. Probably younger. So you do your best to make him look less than lousy to the kids'. You hold your head up and hope friends and relatives don 't ask too many personal questions. You are determined not to talk against him. You will keep your tlignity. Butilt's Mrd because you are bitter and Y.ou tiart. If anyone bad told me·two years ago that this could have happened to me I would have sa id they were insane. But here 1 am -another sttitlstiG. Tell me, -. Ann Lanu. where did I fail ? - DISCARDE'D lN WARREN, 0~10 DEAR FRIEND: I'm DOl llJ't )'OU f1dted. It l<Mfftd1 to me n If JWr ftt.. --lalled.-Pkk-y .. ndf 1p, dllt y- sell off and earry ... Pmlpt the 11<11 lJ yet to come . • - . . DEAR READERS: 1\\'0 ""'eeks have passed since I printed the colwnn aPut the loss or my beloved mother-in·law . Gus tie Lederer. Forgive rne tor aot \rriting a personal letter of appreciation .10 each and every one who wrote. Please accept instead the l?eartftlt.., thanks o{ Jules and myseU\ f()f your. wann ex- pressions of compa;slon and sympathy. -ANN LANDERS Don't nunk your chemistry test. Love is more than one set of glands calling to . another. U yoa have trouble maklng a distinction you need Ann's booklet, "Love or Sci and How lO Tell the 01.Uerence." Send a long, scll-addressed, stamped envelope with your request and 3$ Ctnta in coin to the DAILY PILO'l'. . · • I -· ' • • • .. ' ;;% QAIL Y PILOT MQT1day, Aprll lb, l\73 \ Ma~ing His Prin :t-er .Mar ·~ • Rodney Scoggins likes io do what people think he can't. He is Goodwill's Worker-of-the-year. By JO OLSON . Of !1141 Dlilr 1'"9t Sl•lf Come 'June, Rodney Scog· gins "'iii have a new challenge to meet. Orange County~s Goodwill _Worker-of-the-year is about to become a father for the first timi and he already is an- ticipating' the joys of fatherhood, even ch an gi n g diapers. - For Scoggins1 whose hand is crippled, diaper changing will be the most difficult part o( fatherhood. This will be a happy Challenge though for the \\'estminster resident, who v.•as !he victim· or rheumati c fever at the age of 3 whiCh also left a foot crippled. Born i1' Cleveland, Tenn., Scoggins has be€~ working hard to overcome obstacles all his life. He first studied viith a home teacher then entered pub lic school v.·ith his six brothers and l\\'O sisters as he ·grew a little older. Alter completing hi g h Coast Couples Recite Vows ·RUMBLE-McAUSTER Debra Kay McAliste r became the bride of David Allen Rumble during nupt lals conducted by the Rev. Bruce A. Kurrie in the Presbyterian Church of the Coven3nt , Costa Mesa . Parents of the newlyweds are Mr~ and Mrs. Victor McAlister· of Costa Mesa and Marine. LL Col. ·(rel.) and Mrs. Gerould M.-Rumble Jr. or Lakewood. Bridal attendants were Mrs: Marvin Nixon. matron of honor and M-iss D a f c y McAlister and Miss Robin King, bridesmaids. David Folck served as best man , and ushering guests were George . 1'homas and Douglas McAlister. The newlyweds, who are students at Orange Coast College, will reside in Costa J\1esa. She is a graduate or Costa Mesa High School and be is plaMing to transfer to California State University, Fullerton in the fall. APP-FITZGERALD ' St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Newport Bea"ch was the· settjn~ for the marriage of Jan Fitzgerald and James App. ' Performing th e-double ring rites wa s the IWv. Don Mad- dox, a&'>isted by Kim Strutt. Parents of the bridal couple are Dr. and Mrs. James · S. f>~itzgerllld and Mr. and 'Mrs. C. Joseph App, all of Newport MRS. RUMBLE Fossell, Veronica St r a us s , Lisa Carlson, Carrie Allen and J<:athy Baldwin, bridesmaids, and John Reese, R 'i. c k Cohron~. Pesto\esi and Lou Binginhicmer, ushers. MRS. APP CARTER-CANNING Suzanne. Lee Canning and Gary Lawson Carter were married during cereIJJ-Onies in the Plyn1outh Congregational Ch urch of Ne\vport Beach. Of- fic iating were the Revs. John Lindvall, Norn1an Brow~· and. James Combs. The bride graduated fro1n . Huntlngton Bf:'.ach High &hool. Orange Coasl College and Golden West College. Her hus- band, who 'grfiduated from Parents of the bridal couple Edison High School and occ are r-.1r. and Mrs. W·illiam ntlend s California S t at~ David Canning oC Costa P,.tesa , Unversity, Long Beach. .........Lawson Carter, Los Angeles ' and Mrs. Freda Mae Carter, Costa Mesa. Brida l· attenda nts \Vere Car- rie Canning, M i ch e I e Richards. Susan Carter, Mary Lyne Carter and Joanne Can-- ning. -Beach. " Serving as best man '''as Michael Spare. and ushers v.:ere Arnie Remphner, l\1artin Mallrejean and Jeff Cole. Attending as maid of honor was ri.1iss Rachel Perham, while bridesmaids v.•ere the Misses Lisa tloag. Anne Lawrence, Mindy i-loln1es and Brigid Grupe, l\'lrs. Stewart Hicks and fi.1rs. Lee Hall. Serving as best 1nan v.·as John l\·Ioody. \\•hilc ushers v,•erc Jiln and Jon Filzgcrald, 4 H<ill . l~ich Kredel. John Sty li an d Richard Cook. Both the bride a n d bridegroom, who will reside in Whitt ier, are graduates of Ne,vport Harbor High Schoo!. She is in the associate degree nursing program at Golden West College and he is a Bible major at Biota Cpllcge. CARLSON-DAILEY cmon'S SPORTSWEAR MRS. CARLSON The newlyweds, who \\•ill reside in Costa Mesa , -arc graduates of Newport Harbor High School and students at Orange Coast College. WALTON-BAILLIE Ka thy Lyn Baillie. daughter of Mr. and J\olrs. John Ki ng Bai lli e of Coro na de! ri.1ar. became I.he bride of Dr. Keith John \Vallon of Fairfax during double ring rites perforn1cd by the Hev. Robert Cornelison in .,. Crad11ntc .Co1-s<'tll"r~·~ ~ • S~iallzin~ ltn:I tllro:-FJi: C\l!l~ ~ :.._ 390 E._IJ th Sl.-Co1t• MeH fl~ Westclift'1kra, 1,1h tnd Jrvinc, _ Next to Ralph'i Market-642-5430 ii! ._Nf-wp0<_•."'.'.'."'•C.•l•ifo•m•l'•9•26•60-'I ~--,~~~~ > '• , ... St. t-.tary's Episcopal Church, Lag una Beach. _ The bride is a graduate of r..tarlborough School for Girls and earned a BA at UCLA. A member of the Assistance U:ague of Southern Californi a. she wa s prese nted to society al the Medalli on Ball and dur- ing a pri vate ball given by her parents in .the B e v e r I y Wilshire 11otel. Her husband, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Spencer Walton o'f Sandford. Somerset. England, earned a BA from the University of Keele, England. At UCLA he received iin-MA , C. Phil. and PhD. He received a Fulbright Scholarship for 1963-73 and a Chancellor's Fe! Io wi;;h i p UCLA . 1968·1972. Currently he is an energy economist at N.B. Guyol and Associates, San Rafael, and the newlyweds \.\'ill make their home in Paris in. May. ' . Attending the bride were Miss Robin ·Dore as maid of honor, and Miss Liz Hen· derson, Miss Georgia Jensen, fi.>Irs. ~obert Roundy and f\.1rs. K enn e t h S imo ni an, brides1naids . Best man was James D. Hardy, and ushers were Roger Goss, Robert Roundy, Robert Spitzer, John Hickey and ~1ichael Stoloff. MRS. WALTON Patients' Rights NEW YORK <UP!) -The American Hospital Association has prepared a Bill of Rights for patients. Among major points ·listed in the document: a patient's rig ht to considerate an d respectful care, privacy of a patient's own medical care program, confidentiality of hi s n1edical reco rds, a clear underst3nding of v.•hich doctor is in charge of his over-all care, the options that exist for treatment of his condition, and the necessity of advising the palient if experimentation is involved in therapy. The Bill of Rights specifies the pati~nt's right to choose death by rejecting medical therapy and an individual's right to obta in full explanation of his medicaf condition in terms the patient can reasonably be expected to .. understand. COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS Spe(l1!1 For April 16 to April 21 1' El Molino Wheo? Germ Flakes ~~~!.- YEAST 500 i ib. <" ••·> SPECIAL $1 69 'Regular $2.19 • I Mort Ptl•l•llle, mere POl•ncy. II• fUr• r. rffCI the i.ttel 011 this •~celltfll IOOd Ytill, • -~·-..~ Dr. Bronners Peppermint Castile Soap Shampoo Liquid .,.!1:;· ,., SPECIAL 59¢ , .. ,~.~·,,,,,SPECIAL 99¢ ~,,..., ' ROSE HIPS VITAMIN C 0 m9 . :;•;r.:. SPECIAL $1.99 Coastline Health-Foods- Costa Mesa Hillgl"ln ~rt t1t I . 17lfl SI. .. .fSl7 ~, • . . Tustin 10t4 lntlM l/'f'd, Hur s~""'°"' t44-1U4 L1guna Hills 1•1n .. T•l'I· ••· I HNr Rtlllh• A•"" ' I ( • " :u:hool, he found his first job "I "'ant to Goodwill again rently include r e a d i n g, fiye miles from home Qnd and tal~ed them into putting ske.tchlng and p Ja y i ng made it to and from , work me in J)tint shop training to be horseshoes, softball; ·the lat•· each day without a car. evaluated. They were afraid three in spite of a heart ~ I'd get my band caught In the dition that would dbcpur' BROTHER'S INVITATID•"'N--...pr-ess;U--Seogg in& said -many_h:om..-par.tielpaUn1J!-'(tf-- A j>er1od of unemploymenL CHANGED Bt.ADE sports. followed, during which one of "I knew what to do. I'm "No one should feel sorry his brothers suggested be join v,ery strong in my right hand. for mm;:e1f. I'm J1:1st a normal hini in California to toor.. for A week after I went in I person, he explained. work. changed the blade oo the cul· PRAISES WIFE "I bad one day to decide. 1 ter. I liked the idea of. doing Scoggins also has high had the opportunity to make something that s o m e o n e praise for his wife for sticking something out of myself. I thought I couldn't do." with him during the difflcu1t thought if I don't gamble I'll Now employed by Martec years-and being encouraging. neve r do it again," he said. Printing Co. in .New po t"t~ ''We had to suffer a little but After coming to California Beach. Scoggins is "just en-not too much. A lot of women he found a job with Goodwill joying life" and putting his wouldn't have taken it." Industries at 80 ceots· per parents' phil y to w or k He al likes to helP others hour. He later worked for a each day as h works and a as he can. While still marine production firm at plays: tn Tennessee, he volunteered $1.80 per hour, then ,wa s laid "Do the best you , nev at an Easter Seal camp, hel~ off and faced months or give up and never sa " ing men who couldn't dress or unemployment. .... ·ere the encouraging words of shave the mselves. At Goodwill he met bis wife, his mother, Mary Fleta Scog-His goal now is to "continue Linda, who wa·s a co-worker in gins and his late father Glenn, making progress and im· the toy department. They who was a.truck driver. proving his skills" in the game were married Sept. 20, 1969, "My parents never showed or life as "1e is ·doing in the and before their first an· me any favors," Scoggins game of horsesho('s: "eacJl niversary he began collecting added. week ! get better," he says unemployment com pensation . tlis outsi~e aCtivities cur-'Yilh priae. Five Decades of Marriage During an open house in their Hunting· ton Beach h -0 m e, Mr. and Mrs. John Deem celebrated. their golden wedding anniversary. Hosts were their sons and daughters-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Don Deem of C?sta Mesa and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Deem of Northridge. Also attending were the honored couple's seven gratjijchil· dren. TRAIN to be a DENTAL TECHNICIAN • Six Months Intensive Training! Enrollment in CROWN and BRIDGE, and DENTURE programs now open for day and e'(ening classes. For in!ormation, ~phone immediately . I 714 I 635-3450 ., A.it ellglllll• h1stlt•tfo11 •'"'-' tfte Fed.rally IMured SNdet1t Loen Progro111 APPROVED FOR mERANS Sout11e1·n Califo1·nia College of · Medical & Dental Careers 1717 S. BROOKHURST ST., ANAHEIM, CA 92804 Acc.-.Slltd 1Mmll1r, H1Uon1I Auoci.11on of TrM1 & T9dlnk•1 ScMIDls. E:t\STE:R -~t\BRICS 47/.f.'!: Wide· Wa1ho\bl• 1~! FLOCKED NYLON SHEERS 44/45'' -Poly11$t11r /eotton·ma1h. wa 5h 1~! COLORFUL VOILE PRINTS 45" • A.c:.tate ·"Morning Glory" 1~! CREPE PRINTS 4'4/45" • Wt 1habl11 • 100 '/. Nylon 11.~ SPARKLE ORGANZA 4'4/45" Poly111ter/Cotlon • maeh. wail 1!~ SHEER AIRLAWN PRINTS 45" M•c:hine Wa1h. Cotton 2~! OTTOMAN SCREEN PRINTS '45'"'Poly111l11r/Cotton · Wa1hab!t ~! EMBROIDERED EYELETS 58/60" M•eh. Wa1h · Po ly111le• CHECKNIT FANCIES 3~! ' f ) ' f ' )' r. I ' .. • f f • -i "VOGUE" POLYESTER +--1 DOUBLE KNITS DAISY and CHECK patterns on • jacquard stitch for • new and unusual look in double knits. Wide selection of spring and summer colors. MACHINE WASH • TUMBLE DRY ' ~@@yd. 60"/62 " Wide ' ' ' I II HOUSE OF ·FliBRICS · always first qualitr,.fabrics ' . ' -H•ntllll9N• c ...... -EcU11911i at hach 11 ... d., H11ntin9ton Bee ch -lf7 .. 01J ·-s..;;. CMStPw..-HeMr P1im •• Or•nftlllorll't •M Hl111tr 11111 •I •r11i.1 Co1to MtH -141·1516 S.1tt. AllO -14J•ISIT . ' . IMl!I• '°" 0 CMfrer -· . • ~·tr M•ll-lrttiol . I Ufl D'"' , • .,.. L ... I' .llN •I SINll ... . F11llert.1 -126·2114 ......... -1214Jll ............ ~ 12111 lfOOkh11rtt__l 1111t to Von;11 -.:Jf..,W- '· •• • ~ • I i , ' . • ~ ' r • • • • ' MOR(lay, April lb, l't]J OAn. V PILOT ~ Variety Spi(:es Club Agendas -J Presentations -Laguna ll each Recrealioo an Easter party by _ the Assill· .An Easter Week highll&ht Departmeni. -~J-t/r;-~u,. seven will be the pttsenlatlon of the ORT Dwarfs was lhe UUe of a skit Mitchell Manooettes of Whit: Glady.s LorealO, Seal-Beach-wr.itl&n~ted aod perform. er ntliree coloffWsliOws. librarian Will review "Eleanor ed by. Assisteens. Performances are ached· and Franklin" at the ·hext uh!datlla.m.aodland3p.m. meeting of Irvine Chapter or El ·Camino W~e~ay, Apnl 18, ln the ORT, to take place at 8 p.m. Mrs. Florence Larter has Uruv~rsdy ·.High Sc boo I Thursday, April 19, in the been selected president of the ~ultipurpo&e ~m. Sponsor--Culverdale home of Lorraine El Camino Real Woman's mg the s~o:ws IS M~ C~ l.Jeger. Club. A11111l" A~. or C)!i!di:en 1 ·The groUp will -a -Elected to serve wllh her H~e Soclet~, lhe · olde~. benefit card party at 10 a.m. are 'the Mmes. Don a Id pn~ate . adoption agen~y in Tuesday, April 24, in.· the Graham, Hube.rt Jooes and Ca~orn1a. • Parkwest Apartments .recrea· J:>Qfotby Graumba'un , vi cc Tickets, at $1 , mey be tion room .. The party Is ~n presidents ; G. R. Salmon .and purchased at the ~r · to the public and reservations Austin Mine(te, secretaries; Vick. l.alA'rence Woodward and Brian Zenta. The league also voted to turn Project Schooltime over to._tbe ·0oce ltt f the Newport Harbor Art Museum. Artists June Alaine Szueber will demonstrate painting in oils at the ne.'(t mceling of the Arlisls Beach North at 7:30 p.nt. Associati on of Huntington Wednesday, April 18, in the 1i1urdy Communit y Center. Indian Ma idens totemkttper, ti.1rs. Ro n a I d Oa ks, Christine; w a m p um bearer; A1rs. Al Hart Eliiabeth, and scalphunter, J arnes Com rdo and Julie. . Soroptimists Eileene Bidwell , president or Soroptimist Federa tion or the Americas. \\'ill be tht! honored gut•st .... ·hen the Laguna Beach' club observes its 2Sth an-. ni\·ersary and sa lutes cbartef' members on Thursday, April 19. The 7:30 a.m. meeting in El Nigu~ Country Club will have an Easter theme. AARP are to be made wilh the presl· Glen G 1 rw4>0 d , treasurer; Nalion of the White Buffalo. Are We Poisoni':,f. Ourselves dent, Mrs. Stan Corbat. John Renfro, historian, and Huntington Beach Y ro.1 C A l~liiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiim P ··"-S"ll dil 'ndian Maldcns instnlh .. 'CI nC\\' will be the topic Daniel L. Auxiliary au.uue t s, au or. officers. Wulff, ~sociate proffessor of More than 1,000 members . Junior League J:Iolding the position of Where~ biochemistry at UCI when he and guests ar et"""'ted at the . . princess are ri.1rs. Gary ~-loore addresses the Huntington e . r,-~ · ProvlS~ls, who have met _ and -daughrer Melissa, and Beach Chapter. American Forest Home A~iary ~efit all the re<lu1rements! were ac--others' are assistant princess, LvJe'S· 'P• • ASM>Ciation of Retired , 'f~ursday, April '19, in the cepted into actlve statllS ~f. the MrS. Robert Ha r-i u n i an , 'J Persons. Disneyland Hote!. . Newport ilarbor Jun 1 0 r Christine and Susan; n1edicine The group will meet at 1 Fellowshlp will begm at League. tau, fl.1rs. ri.1ario F'avaro.1_~~::::~~:~ p.m. Wednesday, April 18, iir 11 :15. a.m. and. after a noon They are the fl.tmes. John Michelle: tallykeeper. Mrs .!;: --- Murdy Park Re c re a ti 0 n lunc11eon a fash~on sh~w from Anderson, H~rry Boon, George Clifford Hanan ch e r y I ' FO.R Center Huntington Beach. th_e Queens Attic Thrift Sbop Brokale, William Campbell, ' -. . PRESCRIPTION 'N" I wlil be shown, and Ethel Bar-Gustave Olabn!, Ge 0 r g e 1gue Art rell, lecturer and author, will Finch. Thomas F 0 rester ,1r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ll PRICES , • Marcella Kenney will be the speak. · Thomas Frank, John Gabriel, DTER:f C II · guest artist of Niguel Art Proceeds ~ill be given in John Garret, Michael Helin, a • • • Association at 8 p.m. Thurs· scholarshiPs to the resort and Omer Long, 1Joscph Lynchill, 642-4104 day, April 19, in the Crown Christian camp In the San Thomas Malcolm , Michael A11t srEl"-BE RNAROO Valley Elementary Sc boo I Bernardino Mountains. ri.1arr and Kenley Mays. --"~"e~•a:~1~~·~s [ ~ ] cafetorlum. • Others are the Mmes . PF FLVERS-u .s. KE Os M~EDICIJll'I OP M K ! I r Asslsteens Dance Wellr by Danillln rs. enney, onner y o Gerald McClellan, Mar Ii n c1pe1io Dall{• s~oe1 - Denver has dorie more than Students at the Huntington McKeever, Nancy M i J I e n , J9 0 I . 17tli St. at T9lth1 Ave. Storybook ch•ra·cti rs on strings ap~ar 1t thrH fchool performances. 6,000 Pastel portraits. ciir·. Beach Assistance League's Gilbert ri..titcbell, R 0 be rt c.n~~v; :."tttti,.,St~lllldrtt Nest h ... ,.. Mb. - rently she teaches classes-trr-Speech Center and .t-b e i r Mor~e. ·Anthony Moiso, Larry c ... Mftel • 148.J778 c':!:. ~~''· , ,, ..._,.~!:~ M Oil, pastel.A;OO' acrylic at the families were entertained at Root, Thomas Taylor, Snider I '.!':~~~~~~~~~========~ Horoscope: Gemini Builds Se~urity TUESDAY GEMINI (1\1ay 21-Junc 20): are elevated to higher position SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Eastern Rite Set Mr. and Mrs. Donald APRIL . 17. tr you stick to specific project, because of past preparation. the odds are that you can VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): ARIES (March 2l·April 19): succeed. Rewards are not ob-Deali ngs with relatives occupy ~ncern ind icated with vious at.this time. But you can much of your time. ousehold costs. Des ire is ror build ror. future·-security. Discussions tend to center re comfort, beauty. But CANCER (June 21.July 22): around home, property values,· dget could represent an One you are attracted to talks _ long-range loans and plans. 1hstacle. You can gain of faraway place. Key now is Key now js to be versatile eooperation of fa mi I y to get perspective into focu s. without SCifltering'your rorces. iiember. This is necessary. Don't be -i:ntimitlated by Aquartanjs in picture. Cycle is such...that you can ~ more independent, oriimat You can set your own pace and others will follow your lead. You also can tear down in order to rebuild. There no longer is a need to stick with outmoded concepts, methods. ment. You are likely now to get what you ask for -be sure it is what you really neetl. Taurus, Utira persons figure prominently. No\v is time to invest in your own abil· ities. Emer!lln Garr o( Newport l.jlmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj;~ Beach have announced the j j engagement of their daughter Leslie Elizabeth Garr to HaMld William Lockhart Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Lockhart of Bernardsville, _i_ TAURUS .(April ZO..May 20): circumstantial eividence. '{our UBRA ·(Sept. 23-0Ct. 22): AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb. 18): Take aim toWard goal. What you want is available. Be selective. There is no need for yol.\ to accept second·rate product or assignment. PISCES (Feb. l~March 20): N.J. A June 9 wedding is planned in Osterville, Cape Cod, Mass. B~N syntha sound Synll'lo·Sov"d i1 lh• llrlt bl• IYft" lll••b•r 1+.or1 on .111,.grol port of a lwo-lllCl-1 "'VOit ., , ~ lftal'l CU eo1y to 1tlay 01 It II hill. You a·re right to be ·cautloUs .. O\vn creativity 'ls s ( r on g You may be spending 'too One who wants you to rush enough to serve as reliable in-much in wrong areas. Key S not familiar with fa cts. dicator. now ls to consolid.8te, to be Take your time. Plan and LEO (July 23·Aug. 22 1: flexible witho\Jt being weak . observe. Accent is on mar-Blockbuster events could oc-Be familiar with liabilities and i;iage, partnership, public rela-cur which spoUigbt --}'OUr , assets. Open lines of com· ~ons. YQu.may not be seeing originality. You get chance to munication. Deal Wlth Sagit,. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): One who tells stories behind your~ck w I be ex- posed. Maintain cal , dignity. Sense of hiuno Id be your best weapon. Be analytical:. Find rea.90JlS why certain events have t ak en sudden tunis. . Good lunar aspect now coin· cides with ability to reach more perSons, to· articulate ideas and to reach beyond what 8ppearS to be your capability. The brld e·to .be, v.•ho graduated rrom V a s s a r C.OUege, resJdes in Boston. She attended Beave'r Country Day School and Newport Harbor High School . Her f i an c e studied at Wesleyan Universi- ty, Middletown, Conn. WOODWORTH .... ttw.~.11,. • St! ... , ,n f PIANO AND ORGAM SALES l-i.,. ~ .,,.i.t..t r clearly. break from restric.t'.9ns. You tarian, .; ' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Spotlight is on wish £ullill· 515 NOllTH MAIN, SANTA AHA • 547..SISI I I l I i I I ' ! • t . i I • I ' • l '' .t I l ' ! • • • '. NEWPORT-MESA BOARD OF -;EDUCATION. AREA .. 4 -MARGARET SmERHOLM is an exceptional 18 year old gradiiGte Of Corona def Mar High ScliOCK. She 1iGs studied financing education in a summer session: at Georg·etawn University and is a former editor and head verifier for Ralph Nader's Congress Project in Washington D.C. . Margaret knows the co!l'lmunity well: Her civi~ activities lnclud~ membership on the Environmental Q!Kllity Control Committee for the city of Newport"leadi and attendance"at school board meetings for two yael'S. ·. .. Her vital interest in education, experience in public servicet, stamina, and executive sl!ill, qualify her as an out· standing trustee. It's time for new penpecti.ves and nisponslblet represetntation. Vote April 17th for' Margarett Settetr· 1 holm • ---------~~------- _Margaret' Setterholm will: ' *-recommend that a · study be conducted on the counsel· ing program to det,,.millll the need for improve""nt. *--support-the., teacher's right to collective !MmJaining. Collective l)_argaining provides for a more ,stable wark force which·is necessary to have and improve the ~6· ty-ot-eclucation-1n-m·•-dismct.' - *-work and coll)mllnicate with students, parents, educa- tors, and ,t-e;co.itimunity to assure their representatio!I on the scnoot board. *-recommend that the baard seriously investigate thet im· pact of jet noise on ovr schools. If leamillCJ ability is in any way impaired or inconvetnienced as a l'.flUlt of the noiSCt, the board shauld adopt. a resolution in support of a new location for a jetport, or tak.• other appropri· ....___ ate actlan. *-work with th• board to get the best mileage possible from taxpoyer money spent on-our schools; ---- *--keetp informed on legislation affecting education and what contetmporary societty expetcts from ovr schools today. SUPPORTED BY: la partial listl Newport-Mes·11 Federation of Teachers Judy Rosen er Councilman Paul Ryckoff William Mason Max Sturges Esq. John Trebler Esq. Am in11h Clark Mia Decker Joa n Coverdale ' Roy Woolsey Esq. Hollie Smith Th e Rossiters Joanne Buchanan Betty Dobbs.: (partial listing) • Raymond Watson Steve T eyl or Frank and Fran RQbinson Bart Hake • I • MAllGARE_T' • • • • . 1 --W~RKER! . ' -· s,..._... 'Y tltl•• Ct1t1m1n .. H lltcJ M•rtal'ff 1ttttt11t1m Cllalr-, .. ., ·-· utl W!J UIM, C9f'9NI .. , Mir . - ' , .. \ - ' • • ' ' . < -• . .. U DAILY· P!LDT MandiJ, ""11 16, 1973 - King Facing Suspension Lakers Were OU:tplayed,: A -. .- ., ' • ,, • LUO:RNE. Switzerland -11tany of the world's leading women tennis players in- cluding BUii• Jean ~· and Mrs. Margaret Smith Court of Australia. face suspension by the lnternatiooal Lawn Tennis Federatk>n. • Most of the playera are -competing as an independent group oo the $&10,000 Virginia Slims circuit io the United St.ales. The ILTF said at a meeting here Sunday 1ha1 they must sign a statement not to play in any tournament that is not approved by a natkmal 8530Ciation after. ?!fay 15. "li Billie Jean King does not sign she ~·ill not be able to play again at Wimbledon or elsewhere," said Allen Heymen, Danish president or the IL TF I afwr a meeting of the ILTF Managing Commit toe. Pearson Wins DARUNGroN, -S.C. -Hustling Davld Pearson "'on his third _500.mile stock car race in a row Sundiy,,alertly weaving hi! reel and while 1.fercuij through a maze of broken can to caplW'e the 17th Rebel 500 at Darlington International Raceway. Only 13 of· the original 40 starters were running at tbe fm ish as wrecks, blown engintS and spioouts toot their usual toU oo a race course built.2.'J years ago for can running 7$ miles per boor. One of the massive pileups ckcurred with only 33 laps remaining. and-in the middle of it was the fabled Richard Pet- ty, stock car racing's on]y $1 million career winner .• Pearson finishes! the tortuous 367 laps around the ancient l~-mile oval almost 30 miles ahead of the second place Chevrolet of Benny Pa rsons, who also was involved in the Petty accident but managed to limp home With his car look- ing like it had been in a demolition derb~~ • Uf'ITt ......... Coulil -DsiMore Ti~ w Ttegi:mip,-Say~~ ... ~h To , ·~ By GI'J!NN 'wm1t: But lnalead of .hootini'w-llff to ., "' -'.!'I ,.. Blill"Love and (be· Bullr.bld ,lo gl~• ap INGLEWQOI> -Still ~ pi<> the ball wlthwl ... , sellJoc e« • llhot. : fu>i!ly from SimdoyliJpi'a -NatiGnal Foriiod Jo fool with twO "'"""" to go Basketball A.ssodllloa -OOll of the the Bulls gave up two,"""' Jiolnll on Chicago Bulls 91 .tbe FOrum, Laken Jerry Wm's !roe tllrows•lbeD"ihe lutl- coach Bill SbarmD tiled to lool: ahead to in& West stole ~·1,IJDal,. o( the Tuesday'i oeries opmir-Wilh lbe ,Galdeo ..-, to ciDc!s,U'i W,edp II lie bil- State Warriors, bere· • terf1'louil!t ltries. ~~ • "I wish we bad •--·to -Wm' 11111 a!terw""11hal bad ... get roady to tilllDt the b'N>fkl>," played fanlaaUcallr well. "'I " •· ablme Sham)an told tbt DAILY PIWF. "'Ille , they loll -I feel' we were-ouipl!yod." Warriors will be on mtu.i, dlf!ermt Stall revealed that Oiiqcq , b a d type of opp>nenl )ban auco., was -olillcO«d the 'Lalten· from the ileld by they won't be ,. phylicaj 0< u defensive-• ooo field goal, suci:umb~ .lianJbe free ·lllindoil.-But they'll-run more oncM11<-l<>-'---str1pe, 111-14. • ·, • • " rut broal: us a lot: • • .. Asked liow the .Lakers ~ "ible to "lbey have thne potenliai' auper s1an ·tum thlap antUDd ,. druUeallY 61 the in Nate 1bunnund, Rick Barry1 and final 90 aecondl, West sard:: "befense. Ca1.zie Russc!ll. 'Ibey' have a good benc:b Too they · bad been i { u•h ·r 11! n g· and they 've just 1D ~ 1erjes.from the eveiyuung we""tried t.o ·do and.~· were -team I figured mlgbl lie the lllugbest to playing so well (. figure ~y bad ~ slow beat o(. all the playo!f entries -down a little bU." 1 Milwaukee. ~. } Oiamberlaln said his ~ of Van "'.11le Chicago ....i..wu 3\L~-ltut Lier's -wu natural r.ac:tloo instead sometimes a toagll 'oerioo mikes you of 80lllelbing be was antlcipati.,.. And he sharper. I know 'ooo lbing, we have t,o lludod Vm••Ller, aying, "lie played ·Jmpro¥e our sbooticig." 1be Lakers-bit alrollt.u -lood ·,. 11111e ari·blsllttball 36.5 percent of their Shots from the "floor player can." .;: ·'" while the Bulls made 41.5 percent of. Van Lier wu the 1ame'1 high acorer lbeirs Sunday. · with 23 and addecj 14 ro!Jounds. Sbarnlan's wonders pulled ciut the vi,,. West bad rr points f<r the Lakers tory with a mercurial .finish. while Goodricb and Oaamlllerllin bit 22 They trailed 92-88 with 1:54 to play and pd p . _ -z .... the Bulls bad the ball. Few of tlie 17 •. 5(!; One reporter asked West ~ )J!! was con· screeching Forum fans could have un· siderlng .retirement aner this campaign. agined that ChiC8go would not. score 1be response? "Once you've played IO again. years of pro ball you don't think past the 'lbe Lakers went ahead 93-92 with 2.6 next game." seconds showing on the clock as. G~I It was a crushing loss for the team Goodrich put in an easy layup afteii-Wilt that had so richly deserved victory. After Chamberl ain had bl~k&:d a s~t by Nonn tra~g 36-26, the Bullsl:Neot on a spree Van Ller and fed GOodrich with a perfect sconng·the next 18 poin sol the .game as pass. the Lake rs were' scoreless for 4:3.1 durin g Still, the Bulls could have pulled it out. that second quarter outburst. They worked for the last d~r-die s~t And Chicago, which has never woo a Thfrd place went to Bobby Allison, the . only one of the early leaders who could rwt with Pearson. JERRY WEST USES . WILT TO SCREEN OUT CHICAGO'S JERRY SLOAN. and finally Jerry Sloan had the ball with playoff game on the road in 18 tries, two seconds left on the 2HecoDd clock. didn't relinquish that advantage until Soviets Champs . . MOSCOW -The Soviet i.lnion com-Boston F1"nds ple ted the World Ice Hockey ToumameC with a perfect record of 10 ~ictories Sun-~ · day by beating second place Sweden. 6-4. R • G In another game, third p I ace unmng ame• Czeclloolovakia, the defending champion, . ' trounced fourth-place Finland S-0 with · three goalS"'ln the first period and five in B • K • k the third . ur1es me s Horses Burned LEXINGTON ,Ky. -Twenty brood mares were killed as fire engulfed a barn on a-tborooghbred horse farm near Lex- ington. Three horses we re rescued from the barn on Leslie B Combs' Spendthrift Fann No. 3. Cause of the fire was not . known immediately. ,., A spokesman said identity of · the horses would be disclosed I a t e r . However, it was believed there were no big-name or big money-winners among the broodmares being boarded. Four Wlits and an arson inspector from the Lexington Metro Fire Department responded to the alarm la.le Sunday. Verdieck Nan1ed BERKELEY -Jim Verdieck oj the University of Redlands has been named men 's tennis coach for the U.S. team that wil l compete in the World Unive rsity Games at Moscow this summer. BOSTON (AP1 -The Boston Celtics · were off and running. wheeling and deal· ing in a fantastic pe rformance that le[t the New York Knicks gasping long before the end of-the opening game of the Na- tional Basketball Association Eastern championship playoff. "Oui' guys did everything, you couldn't ask for more," coach Tommy Heinsohn said Sunday after the Celtics blitred the Knicks 134-108 before a packed crowd of · 15,320 and a national television audience. "ln a shootout, I'll be on them," said New York sharpshooter Walt Frazier. "It's exactly what we didn't want. \Ve didn't play any defense. That's the only adjustment we ha ve to make." During the regular season, the two riv- als split eight games, with defense the key in the outcome· of most. However, the opener of the best-of.seven series wa-s a true shoot-ou t. Boston spunea to a 67·56 haU·time lead by hilling on 31 of 47 floor shots, 66 percent. New York hit on 25 of 38 for 65.8 percent. "That \vas som e first half." Heinso hn said. "They shot like hell, and we did, too. Then \Ve broke it open in the third period." Goodrich's layup with 26 seconds re- maining in the mr. Coach Dick Motta of the Bulls com· mented, "A loss like this is just like a year's-work down the drain. l thought we bad tbe game woo even with 20 )secc:mds to go because all we had to do was get a good shot. Wilt just barely defloct.d Norm~ shot .'' O!Qee Cft) Let .......... IHI .,.T G,.T Lot• 6 7.. It BrktsJes 2 6-I ~ Wlllt• S l·I 11 A\cMllUt11 1 1·1 1 Awtry 1 0-0 6 Cll1mb«l1ln lD l·l 21 Slotn I 2·2 11 Goodrich I M 22 V1nLlet U M 21 Wtsl t f·12 21 Weis• J IMI 6 ErlcklOll ( 2·2 10 R•'f 2 o.o 4 COllnh. 1 G-0 • Toti.. lt 1•1S n Tot••• :II 1f.n ti c111caoo 22 21 JI '' -'2 Los """'" 22-24 a n -ts T1;1 ... toull -Chicqo n. L.o1 .._,..._ 11 Missed Putt Gives Blancas One-stroke Win ' PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) -"ll was a- ~ind of shaky finish, OOt I'll take a one- stroke victory any time," Homero Blan-· . ·cas said aftu Ji.is back-off triumph in the $150,000 Monsanto Open golf tourna."'Tlent Sunday. 1 • • Blancas "bogeyed t\vo of his last three holes and had a fat , four-over-par 75 in the gusty winds of the final round bi.it managed to outlast Frank Beard by a single stroke for the $.10,000 £irst prize. R~in, Day Off Angels Nemesis "We must have played well in the first half because we were OlllY 11 points down against shooting li ke that," New York coach Red Holzman said. "It was marvelous shooting. Obviously, though , \\'C didn't play good enough defense . They outplayed us and they beat us." BILL BUcKNER SCORES FOR THE OOOGERS BUT GRIMACES FROM A HARD TAG BY ATLANTA'S OATES. Blancas claimed his fifth victory in 10 years oo the pro lid with a 72-hole total · of 277, seven under par on the 6,679-yard, par 71 Pensacola Country Cub course. Beard, who twice shared the lead in the windy final round. blew it with bogeys on his final t~·o holes for a 72 and 278. BLOOMINGTON, Minn . (AP ) -Hop- ing to extend the ir complete-game pitching streak to four games. the califomia Angels do the next best thing : take three days off. Of course. this early in the season t.bree days off isn't a great advantage. especially when the team may be faced with a squeeze$1 sche.dule later in the year. The Angels \Vere rained out of a single game with the Texas Rangers Saturday and then couldn't play a twin bill Sunday because the outfield wa§ flooded. The two games will have to be made up later in. the season, in a state which is noted for its heat and humidity later in the season. Today the Angels are idle, too, and on Tuesday manager Bobby Winkles has set Bill Singer. J-0, to pitch against Min· nesota's Twins. The Angels have a 3r3 record but have golten eomplete games out of the last three starters -Singer, Nolan Ryan and Clyde Wright. Singer whipped the Twins in Anaheim 4-2. striking out 10 and permitting si-x hits. 1beri Ryan fanned ll and beat the Twins 4-1. Wright, who allowed just.four hits, lost a complete game to Texas 4-2 in the first game of the one-ganle series. Ryan will hurl the second game of the t~ame set here. With Jo Jo White hitting fo r l3 of his game-high· 30 paints In the third period, the Celt ics out-scored the Knicks 3~27 and took a decisive 101-83 lead. Boston breezed the rest of tl}e way, handing New York its \1·orst ·d~feat ot tt:ie season. Braves Can't Top Downing "I was nervous all day," the ~year­ ohi Blancas said, and he was never ¥10re nervous than on the 18th when Beard stood -over a IO.foot putt for par that would have tied it up and sent it into a playoff. "We were moving, ahd we ha ve to n1ove. '' Boston captain John Havlicek said after scoring 26 pOints . .,..,'111e ea:iiest LA Carries 3-gam'} Streak Against Astros ''Of all the players on the ·tour, of everybody out here, he's the last man in offense to guard is when everyone stands LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Whatever it is around. \Ile didn't call many plays. 'We a~ut the AUC¥1ta B~aves. they ~rtainly just moved. we were freelancing:" .bring ~t the ~st tn Los Angeles left· Dave_Co \vens_and.Dan CIW!.ey-each hiL---hander Al Do.wrung. __ for 18 points, while "'sixth man" Doo Sunday at Dodger Stadium. Do\vni ng Nelson came off the bench and hit £or 21 whipped .the Braves for the fourth time in just 19 minutes of play in the Boston without a Joss, 6·2, and in 36 innings has offense, which finished with a .shooti ng allowed· them only three ru ns -\\\'O mark of 57.3 percent on 59 field goals in earned~-for a minute ERA of 0.50. 103 atte1nprs;"' •·1 just haJ>pen to pitch good against New vottc n1111 , eoii.i. ll>tl them," Downing said. "I don't know o " T o " T what it is because they've sure got a Brodi~ 5 1·2 17 HaYllcelr. 12 7-3 76 d h h had IJ h 0ea ... ttl'ler• 6 o.o ,, ~:'.,,, ~ ~ 11 good lineup an t ey ave a t e :~1er 1! ~:~ 2: White 1, 2.7 : time I've faced them.'' MCl"roe ' o.o " c~ney 1 ,., 11 Sunday's victory compleled a three- Lv<:"' ~ o.o 1 i::11111er 2 o.o • 4 game s~eep over the Braves for Los Gl-IU • 1·1 t NtlM>ll I W 21 J•O.Min !I 1.1 11 wmltfoll 1 1.2 l Angeles. The Dodgers entertain the :-C::!1111~ ~ ::; ~ :.,::: 1 t; ~ Houston Astros tonight in the start of a a1men 1 o.o 2 ·Slndtn o o.o o three-game ser-. Don Sutton, 0-2, "'ill w~':°t+t ~ ,~, 1~ 1o111s st, .. ,. 11'1 start for the Dodgers, against the AstrQs : · ... N.-. vont » ,. 21 n -1C11 Ken Forsch, 1-1; in the se ries opener. :::: oui _ '""" ,. 31 34 J3 -i:w Downing didn 't allow the BraveS' a hit until the sixth inning Sunday but after 612· innings trailed 1.(1 when Atlanta got an unearned run. The _Dodgers, meantime. llad similar podgers Slate An Glmet tn IC.Fl 16401 Apr. 16 HOO!IPll t i Los AllO•ie, Aor. 11 Hou$!0tl •rl.~ A119tles Aor. 18 Houilon •I Len. All!leiet 7:55 o.m. 7:15 p.m 1:s.s p.m. success nga lnst Gary Gentry who also had a one·hitter for six iMings. But in the seventh the Dodgers unload- ed for six runs, their biggest inni ng of the season, and Von Joshua supplied the: big blow wllh a three-ruu -homer. BUI Buckner had tl'FO hits in-the-iMing and Downing even had a hit later but was thrown out at the plate. ··1 thought about knocking over the catcher," the mild.mannered Downing said with a grin, "but the more I thought the world f wanted to see on a 10-12 foot about it, it sounded like a bad Idea." putt when the presrure is on," Blancas said. "He's deadly -the best there is." Downing did join one rather unes:-B_ut Beard missed it and Homero bacf clll!ive-club. Hf was tagged-f'<lr'11 nint!' lbe victory with the highest finishing 1nn1ng home nm by Henry Aaron, ~s total by a winner.this season third this season ~d the 67lth of his · career, leaving him· just 38' short of -,, =0 a!~nu• ~:: ~~~:-:t~ matching Babe ,Ruth's record 714:. Andy Nor111 s10 .. so 12..u1.n-21t &ob Cherl1s U .200 ff.11--64-7~111 "J might ha~e chal\enked him witblbea P:u'l9 G~!.m ::;~ ~t',::tl fast ball but 1 .wasn't gotng to in DOuo S•rlll•r1 UA5 '8-11.71.n-21J ninth," Dowr.ina said. "The pitch he hit Chuek Coi.rrlllf'f u.as ,,.n.1J.1'0-2IJ ., • Jlm WIKflll"I U4JJ n ...... n.~ was a curve. It's the firSl one he's hit off Frid M•rll iJ.011 n.10-10--1~ me." . The ball barely cleared the left field wall alld might have been caught a year ago wllen !be Dodger Stadium r.nces were five feet deeper and two feet hJgher. It was Aaron's ooly bit of the' series. · ~ Bui it was Joshua'• blast wblch ttifned around the Ught pme. ' AKll!tl (t) ln ........ t•l .. ,.... .. ,.,., l .. Elffr Sl.015 7>70-71·70-2&4 Mlli:t Kelltm U,01J JO..J1.~ Tom W1lllOll U,VS 11·1!-1'Ht-21M Hiii lrwln S3.01S 7J-71·1J..'8--l!M 8111Ct Crt"""°" 11.tSI 111MHfo.17-215 M..-Rudolph 11.,SO 1HM,_7S-2t5 D<l\ltl IElc:fltJbtrlt( 11.,541 7 ...... 7'""-215 Oellnt 9-11.tsO 73-JV..ff.n-tQ T-...Jellll.IM ,,,,. 1+11-1M1-a5 Griff Jlll'lft "·"' n.n~ 8111dl 8•1rd Sl,tsO n .1J.1Ul--a5 BIUY Zlobfo SI,* · 7).1Ml-7s--.a. Jim ColtltiH 11,JIM 72-1).JO-TI-tN 8oei E. Smllll 11.266 11·11*-76-116 a. "''""" 11.IM 11-'2-*76-216 • 9oCt L~. 11.-. ,,,.., .. 11-ZM • Gl!T,-tr • 0 • 0 Ltcf, ill • 1 • 0 0 GUbrHlfl. a .i o o o 81,11;knlt, lb 4 l : 1 H.Atron, (" t I l I W.Dl\111, d , • I I l a.t.1r, (f 4 .1 O 0 W.Cr1Wfor4, rt 1 1 o 0 IEY-,111 •OllF.,.._.C 4111 _ o....,__a <I O I t JCW., If J l 1 J Bla~k Hawks Tie· Series Wi1h N\7 LA. VER NIPS EMO, BEATEN BY SMITH ClllCAGO (Al!) -"lt was a tremen· dous game but} wouldn't ca ll it classlc playo!f hockey, sal~ B!Uy R"Y after his Otleago Blick Hawn liold off the New ~r itH. ;tclory in lhcl( Stanley Olp oemlnul ~- .The 1-llhttlillf; -ajJerr.-cootesl Sunday en1bled the llawkt to .Ue lhe best-o0evtn otrles al one pme .. ch, lhlflins 1.he 1eene to New-York I or game! Tuesday and Thursday nigbCG8111!' No. ; . ... will he playl!ll in Chicago lhls Sunday. Tjle Black llawks, who hod teken a t..(] le(d in Thursday's opener, only to sur· render fOLll' straight Ran£en goals in los- ing ·4-1, put ,New Yori< Ill an.early hole Sunday witn lhr"'I rust periOd c®!C' "They had to open up whoo we .got ahead'3-0, • said Reay. "Alltr !bat It was from one end of the rink lo tbe ·otbet'. They threW caution lo the wind when they fell behind and the got away with I ' ft. But I was proud ol lhe, ""1' "'1f guys came back. lt was tYe)cal of tbtm. '1 The Black . ~.,111 """' admiUodly lucky in breaklnj an bip. Pat ~ -..I lwfce ilLlh• llnl period -hli• 1001 111J)8holCJl11 Rl!IPr piii)ira ..,a. ..... iii bebiml' llUf1lrlled goelle Eil Glaoomln. - Dertnls Hull then mad<! It 3-0 with the first Of his lll'O goals when his shot hit Glacomln and trickled down t h e °*-c·:.i: l' t o I Ct'(,» Ji O 1 O -'-' M ...... • J 0 I o R .... 11, .. I I I 0 goajtenver'1j)ack ... , o.ntrn • t o 1 o IMWnFnt. 11 J o 1 o '!'hen lbe Rangers atruck. Rod Gilbert u--. P ' ' ' ' 0 BRUSSEU! (AP) -Stan Smith needed HMrnlf•P 0000 conncc\cd al 18;54.~lhe Hrit period and '""~ "' ' • • • oal,y 80 -·~ to win the 'men'• .I na.. .. n ~ ..;...o.1 al$ 'I H!fM! , • • O t O 1 ·--11'111.._--....... -"~..__,,,, ......_..__., .-eaa n•.._.,.e ~v·---; I ~r ~ :'I' TlllllfJ.... • 1 4 2 TO!tt& • lt "f f .1 'Pit """""or;. m "" ... ....-w .. D o!'the oeoond period, (.eoa lhlD Jht'<O ·.:_.~ • , Tennis' se.lm itn!l'tl-Co~• mlnules ll,ter, Bill Fa!J1)11nfil~U -t:""'.....: ":. ':.-::: de1 Mari llod ·Liver, wltt llid to play ''Gll&erfs 1011. p~ them ~ ~" \ 1,. " 11 el ~. '° two matdm .... " aaid Reay. "U ""· iiaiitil ·have -.cl the .=:: ,,_,., , .,,, • • • 1 • Smith dia-Lllvor W, ~. 8-1 arttt • ~ fourth goaJ It would aU have been Oftr. :~ ~ : : ~ : L!Ver hi• wtin bis aemtftnaJ by beatlnl The fact Utat the• ~eel' l\)didD't dellatt -t • • • • • Nowpon lleacb's Roy Emerwm, M, M, I 1 DDwrt1nf {W,I .. ) t 4 t I I 1 •i. • -us. Tbere's too rouch at stake. ' Tlmt -t:M. Attl!'INnel' -"""' v • • ~ ---... ' 1 • . ' ' ' J "I ' u " v "· !! . ' 1 ·~· "' • ,, .,. ,. ' ). • " Monday, April 16, 1973 DAILY PILOT :15 ~ ju~d Binl~y-· Lagii1,1~ Pied Piper I • By .HAN_~ Wj:SCU ..... the eviiit;'' Miiler says. "An;d Orang~ League's ·tbp pe·rrorm.. foot range in his Or!t coin·. °' ... o.11Y .p111t "-" l realJy 'hlnk that the dedica· .er with a heave of 52-3. peUtlve effort. athlete h<Js managed current He \vorks until ~ark nearly marks despite the handicap of every nlght of the year either a strained tendon in his hand To bear Len Miller tell,-'l"'t -'ui'.:!·on he· haSshown has been a Similarly\ he set a seti.ool By lhe end ol ths yeac, he h~'s liid filSvery oWn viii on catjilfst rc>r he w ifif p~ reco-or~.%~ \\1th e h.a'.d Improved to 5I-101rt, of the Pied Piper on the gr.am and the track program discus in the J.;aiuna Beach ho\\·ever; and fU\i.Shtd second suffered in January which 011 the track or in the weighr hampered early training . roo m. and he's looking to com- ''l'd estinlale Judd has pete far beyond high school. -· ' Laguna Beacl,I track team. for Here in' general. . trophy-meet, the best throw in · ~ ln the Cec divlslon behind ~tt\epasrtwo a 10thel'S'1l:tvet~rrho"W11a 'the Ora:nge--cda"St-area hts tt~amrnate1CurrShuU: • The Piper -one Judd he works, and the progess be St'!ason. Last season Binley bettered -.--Bif)ley -.-c;toesn't-mess around -hJls-made and they've-rollowed-Both efforts-were t\\'O ye<.\rs-~:rfeet"Wlth the1 2ipound shot. with any musical instruments; ~is ex.ample." in I.he making. but from ;i.U ·1u-and lhrew it 49-9 in the Oronge however. He ha~ charmed a , bot_ ff, and 170 pelunds dications there 's better still 1.6 .. l.£ague mt!et to finish fourth s811mdalld1.scuspopu.~ac-e using a ~ !Bintey ~·t~possess the bulk' coine. "'~" _ · . in tbe vatslty ~ivision .. lle also early trtpted-hts-srrepgth-tn -~-,r malfe a very g CO"-----• the p<lst two yeurs," l\1ill~·r leg_e \\'eightman , ~nd he_ could says. "And through working with our weight coach. Jim throw the javelin 01' hammer Toomey. he has learned to t'X· 100," Miller states. usually associated with shot Binley 'took up. the. sport in improved from 126-1 to over ecute the funda1nentals well . \Vhile d eve t.o p Ing hls "He has good ~peed across capabilities Binley has ac-the ring and .J'd say he utilizes . ' ;'The progress th4t Judd has putters, but he bas parlayed earnes~ as a some w..h at · 150 feet in the discus du ring made, and bis success,.haS: m. good strtngth. speed and sav-scrawny sophomore, heaving the season. spired quite a fei_otbar,s in of the·even.t tQ rank as the the eight-pound ball in tbe 31· 'i'b4i season Ute senior his physical capa bilities better cumulateo an entourage thn"n an.LQ.f his competitot'S. · which 'lho~h not large in .. • number, should keep Miller in ·Mesa Net· ,, Tourney Espinoza-G W C's Stopper shoJ putters for quite a while lo co1ne. Cohorts Shull and P a t l~leason have joined Binley in forming a triad which .).;1s the Artists a heavy point total in every dua1 meet. ... By CRAIG SHEFF an outfielder. Th. d 01 "" DellY '"1'°1 St•n • But with the Rustlers loaded • urQ~ ay.· AlthQUgh -Golden W e S t with outfield prospects this ----~----College.'s-"""'ball-teatl\.-has-_ ..;~,~ _ ~ • ..:-..., . had somewhat Of a disap-season; noover·lurneu 1wn'ut- ... Seven Orange Coast area pointing season, ther.e -has to a pitcher. . high school tennis COl)lingents been one very big pleasant . "We watcheC: him in 'the will . be in action 'lh~y surprise for coach F r e d summer and we saw that he wherf · the .· inaug~ar Costa Hoover's Rustlers. had a very strong arm and a Mesa High spring · vacaj.-ion H~'s freshmalf pit£ber Pat very good temperament," .. tenhis tourney gets· under way · Espmoza, .proW,bly the ·top says ~oov.ei:. ,. at Oran'ge Coast College Golderi, West c~date to earn · "He's ·been an. unbelievable " Costa Mesa High a n d all-Southern C a I i f o r n i a sgrprue for us this year. "He's TeWinkle Park. . Conference honors at the end\ really ,been super. And he's • 1 Action begins at a a.m. and of the season. . . "' . the first real ·stopper we've --~ ... •i; t· d 'lti-n.-::--And-tbe-irome-thjng about 1t ever-had here;''-runs u1e en1re ay w1 u~ . th tE . . . 1 . . . finals billed for Friday , !s a ~ptnoza JS Just earn-Espinoza 1s the Rustlers' top Among the 16 tea~ are 1ng how to P!tch. . short reliefer and his pitching area crews from Costa Mesa' At Westmmster High, the ~ stats are one reaso n why. tn _Estancia, NewpcJrt Harbor: 11, 170-pouhd right-hander was ·33% innings this season, he's " " ' • •1. ' • ,. ,. n .. . D_All.Y PILOT St•Jt~Photo ' . Westminster, Marina, Hun· tington Beach and·University. . LAGUNA BEACH-HIGH'S JUDD'BINL_E-'W'. Marina is the team favori te,· a title that will be decided on an overall basis for varsity, oovice -anO r r e sh man classifications. GoJf Tou~y - -clir1s Figlits Bae-k ~ ...M!!_er-Dei-High'S-third-an· • nual go!! iOiiiitey issche<!Ule<! · ' for Apiil 23 at Irvine Coast · Country Club. It begins at 12:30 with a shotg1,1n start an d re£respments and d i n n e r follow at 6 and 7 p.m. Title to Rosewall Entry fee is $50 per person with a 11 monies reallz'ed scoring from tiCk~ for spring sports MIAMI BEACH, Fla.-Teen· ager Chris ,Evert came· fi;om behind Sunday to d e.f ea t Australia's Evonne Goolagong 3-6, 6-3. 6-2 in the Miami Beach Carner Bank tennis tourney, marking the second time Miss Evert has beaten the Australian in as many. weeks. . Miss Evert, leading money ~winrii!r on ··the United States Lawn Tenni s As- Sociatlon tour with $36,000 after Sund3y's event, drqpped the first set after Miss· Goo, Wright's , 'Drought . Snapped PALM SPRINGS -Mickey Wright, who found herself drifting away from golf after Jagong 'Started the net. In the next two sets, Miss Evert lobbed over t h e Australian's head and forced " equi.fm.tent at Mater -Dei. Further information can be obtained by calling athletic director Jerry Tardie ·at 54!;.>161. ,1 . it made her . the world's· tcp woman athlete in the game in the early 1960s, came all the Way back Sunday with a two-- . , . stroke victory in ihe richest tournament ever for women . • " -I Baseball Standings I . The tall, · blonde 16-year ' veteran hadn't won ~ touma· '' ment since 1969, but she shot a QUINCY, Mass-Australia's n Margaret Court b r o k e ' four-under-par 68 -sinking a ·' AMERICAN LEAGUE E~s& Division • NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division tricky, downhill birdie putt of American J~nis queen Billie :r 25 feet on the final hole of the Jean King ¥1 the first game ,-$154,000 Colgate-Dinah Shore and went on·to a speedy 6-2, 6- w L Pct. GB w L PcJ. Winners Circle T.o,i,maruent. 4 victory Sunday for the Her putt broke a tie with championship of the $25,000 I Virginia Slims of Joyce Kazmierski, who ater . Massachusetts indoor tourna· inissed a 40-foot birdie putt and wound up with a bogey on ment. · the 18th green. The first game 0£ the match "I was just trying to b1oCk was at deuce six times before , out the Idea· tfiaf this was a ~rs. ,Court ~rokThe lhrouA gh al~rs- birdie putt to win the tourna-ng s ~e~ice. e ustr' 1~n ~ -m~nt_,. the· I;PGA-Ra1t-uf-'bous_e._w1fe and. l!_loth~t_ was 1n Frun~ member said. ' • I OOmma~d the !est or the way, thought of it as' just another akin~ fi rst pr~ of $6.~ .and tt " · boosting her overall w1nn1ngs pu H~ 72-hole -total wag 284 and for the year to $73,850. · produced her 82nd career Mr~. Couri; empl~yed a •, championship.· She Won 34 booming service ~nd steady + •. tournaments betweerf 1962 and . ~urt play in the victory. Mrs. ~ -· d d Kmg, who collected $.1,llOO sec-, ~: lw-s, . an wa~ ~ 8 m "' onil prize rriooey, was eria'tic :1 AsS0C1ated Pr:ess_.A~ete of in her first tournament after .theyearforJ963and 64. '. being sidelined a month :' !'It gets~u ~ back off your because of tom stomach -headothe ion of-whether .. DiiiScJer · ·;you'll e 'get II all blck • • ~togi!t!l>J< apln;" she said. ·• ,,. .. -.. My putting has been so bad NJCE; France Manuel :., that seeing that putt drop Was · O~ntes of Spain OUUasted .t.like someone else bad hit it."· Ita)y1s Adriano Panatta 7-6, ~ _,. 1be .. m~ fiJ:st prize ~as 7, 4-6, 7-6, 12-10 in a gruelling •. more than she won in all or f V•·bour match Sunday and L 1963 when she set the record won the men's singles title in Bostcin 4 I Baltimore 6 2 i:>etroit 3 4 Cleveland .. 3 5 New York 3 5 Milwaukee 2 4 West Division Kansas City 7 2 Minnesota 4 3 Angels 3 3 Texas 2 3 Chicago 2 4 Oakland 2 5 Cle'leland 7, O.troll o NeW Yorll: 6,Boston 1 ......__ 1(1111111 CllV 12, Chlcaoo ' ,800 ,. " .750 .429 2 .375 2~2 .370 2'h .333 2Y..1 .778 .571 2 .500 21! .400 3 .333 31! .286. 4 r" "' MllW•r.tk" M , 8alllmon 2·S, 11_1 ••mt, II Dftklat'ld 11 Mlnnesot1, POii. Allftll .tf TUBI, 2,.l)lld, TllMY'I Oamt DtTroll ILOlldl 041 ., '°''°" IP•llln 1-01 Only ''""' Kl'll!hJlld. Pittsburgh 5 I .833 New York 5 2 .714 Chicago 4 3 .571 Montreal 3 f .429 Philadelphia 3 4 .429 St. Louis I 7 .125 West Division Cincinnati 7 3 .700 San Francisco 7 4 .636 Houston 5 6 .455 San Diego 5 6 .455 Dodgers 4 ~ .400 Atlant~ 3 6 .333 hM•J'• 0--. NM York 2, Phlladtll)l'll1 I PlllitM!roll •• MonlrHI 3 ' Clllcaoo I, St, Loul1 ' Cln<!n,,.11 11·7, san Fr1n<l1CO °'' San Pleuo S-C. HouslOn 1-' Dlofffn 6. All!Mlfl :t TMMiw'• Oetllft GB \)'!ilh 13 IOUrnament •l~lorlqs. ~ th• Nice Iqlernalional ·Open "' 1 ic1•m 38, but' I feel 'like 21," tennis tournament. .-.....~ .pld Miu Wr!Jh! 1fl>o. !•id " , Orantes , finally ended the )be now'plMt It comiieli la'U\ morolhon When be hi! a slul· .. to 20 tournaments a y-,r. mg serve to Panatta In the ,,.1,,, She had pla)'icl 1ln 011JY 2l · 22nd game of lbe O!lh · set. • lrom 1969 unUI thi& )UT, WI · hlcb. the Italian could not 11.T ;ftnlory"llrhU lett wnst~ to re urn.~ semhret~ from goU, •• '$Wedell'$ 'ln8rid .Bcntier • •1 "' "I cut dowtt my play In 1111150 toot Ille "°'""'" •lnllff 'll~tU hurt m~ wrist. Tile Iii-c h,a m p lo• n 1 h I p , bel~ng ~1 jury clear.Cl upln 'fl iiiCI l f.Ui!e!la Bonil:lielll or Peru f.1, ~ !,;.aidn't pi.y ror almos~ a year." -6, M. --- k. ' ; ~ ~ • ' ,, ' . I -. -• ·~· I I I Qnly allowe'Cf.five earnQd ;uns -an e.r.a. of 1.36. And three of those rWls came against LA rbor arl)'. in the conference season~ And the ex·Westminstei-star has struck om 31 batters in those 33 innings while ap- pearing in 15 of the Rustlers' 20 games. His record is 3· 1. Control, says Hoover, is his biggest asset. · But he ha s good quick break- ili_g, stuff -to go \Vith his fas.t ball·," says the Golden West mentGr. Hoover feeJs·Espinoia-fins a bright future ahead of Jlint. "As far as next year is con· cemed, I really don't knO\\' if he'll be a starter or not. l-le's accepted this role· ·as a reliever very "'ell. Gleason is right behind 'Binley's best in the disciis. ShulI, a lefty, fights discus layouts with~ wind factors. designed to aid right-handers . but h'as sti\1 been nround. the 150-foot ntark. And of ·course, inspiration be(!:ins at home. Sophomore Wade Binley has bested all or bis brother's marks at the same age. An ineh shorter than Judd, but th~ same weight, he c<iuld •·He's only \Valked nine bat· ters-tfus season so his control has to be hls biggest asset. ~----· - Hoover adds that the four~ year colleges are very aware of Espinoza, but that moSt major league scouts are not. For Los-Alfttnitos -break.,--his brother's. school r~rds in the next two seasons. Harness Entries Entrl11 For Mond•r AprH 16, lt73 ·c11ar .. "'''· Ffrlt P0$1 I P.M. SIXTM llACE -OM mile. Cl1lmlng 111 .111es. ·TOil ~lalm!ng price $7500. Purse S2600. ·wade is one or s,ix Laguna underclassmen throwing the eight pound shot over the 50- foot mark, -and f o u r sophomores cast~ng the discus over 120 feet. A commendable total for a school of Laguna's size. l'!IRST.,..RA.C~ One ml14. P1«----=-slll'dow1\la'' 10. Cronk I Claiming all a!;les. Clalml"'il price \2500. Non winners since March a. Pur•e Gre111 Irish (S. Ottomerl s1600. Irish Cam {L. Bruns) Silver Aec0<d (A. Winger} Mister Brown (J. L111hthllll -f!eler Richard. lJ~T-.Russe.11) .Swrent11. TaH (J...Markl!telU W8" Can .o (C.-CampbeLI Jr.) .8amb0o.&-(J. T ·-Ruu.elO Further a<iwn the 11 n e there's younger brother Thad, ~ who has r-eportedly topped age group..reCords for the shot and throws the .discus in the 90-foot range. """' """' -""'' -Lady Setter CJ. Miiier) Jet11rson Crain (C. Boyd) """ .,,., AcHori Boy \R. Ak hmondl Armbro J1nlce \M. Jorie•I Andys OahUa (F, Hayden) • ·-- Knl11hl Sc1mp (J, Wllllamsl SEVENTH llACE -One mile. Trot. Chloe Barmln (F. Todd Jr.) Ctalmlng hlnc!IC~" all 1111e1. Ba•lc AIMI Ell9ll>I• clalmtng prices SIOOl).ttQ00.10,000. ·Tap Hal Sti>rm (G. Lon-go) clalmlnq price $1 1.~00. Purse $3200. J Uls Cholca (J. l l91'1!hllll Two Below (R. Wlll!ams) S9600 SECON D llACE -One mlle. Pace. Coridlllon~ for ( & 3 Yffr old meld<!Qs. Purse 51600 • Mev Tona tJ. wunams 1) Me Gi>!IB Go tR. Wllll.em1) So Jn Butter (J. McGi'egor) Oori'I Look Back (E. CObbl Native G1m (J . Pennis) Sl1r Asset (L. Gregory) -Olamonte Prince CG. Holl) Slop Watch (J. M!lllerJ AIMI Elltllbll Minute Llld (J. Wllllims ll Aii> Grande (J. Bennett} TH IRD RACIV-One mile. Pace. Clalml"'il ell 1t11es. Tnp ctalm!ng prlce- $4375. Purse 51800. Ti>mmys First IR. Wll!l•m1J S..200 tlncol (A. Winger> 5.0.15 UilJn Low.. (E. Cobbl ·-S35IWI Foll Pay (J. Milter) S11 ,600 Batlle Li>rd CH. Elvlns) UOOO NegOTlali>r (T. Wine) MOOD P!cturef>rlncess (J, O'Brien) 59'00 Magic Alr (K. Meynard) \10,000 Worthy Enwgh (J. B11<1nattj $10,000 EIGHTH RACE -One mite. Pace. Cl1imlng an ooes. To clalm!ng prlCe $7500. Purse '2600. Tammy Lobell (R. Wllllem1) "6000 Joe Thistle IT. Bari~) ~ Sc1ven11er (K. Maynard) $6000 Sldnev Brnwn (J. O'Brien) s.6000 Armbro M•rvel (R. Vall•1 Key) $1500 Galt Buller CE. Cotlbl irzoo Local Nola (J. T. Rus!i'tlll snoo Berkey (R. McGan1111e> uooo ·• NI NTH RACE -O<le mile. Pace. Cfa!mlng all ag~s. Top clalmlng price . SWS. Puroe $:!S«I. Jack Addison CK. Carina II ~ Lui:kee Nibs {0. LBrt.Oll) $3100 Lucy Lu IP. 81ltllchl SOlO J1ckes Qvesl1on CR. McCllml1111i $3500 Delano Kid (M. Holt\ U5CO Goodshow N (II:. Wltllamsl Sh1lney (G. Holl) • l.lttle Mlu C01'1"1i'"TJ:"Wltllamsl JOl'ln Dee (·J . 8•!1ey) """' "'" '""' . moo AIM l.llflMB Rhythm C. CJ. WUFlarntl Sp.ace Bl11er (H. EIVll'lll S507S ""'- Lane! Freight (T. Perkins) L.cl (F,.Todd Jr,) Mv Dough IJ. O'Brien 2) SCorc:l'llf Wav1 tJ. Benntlll "''' 59375 """' "'" SoCal Tenni8 ~ I .I And then there's sister Brook, who requested and received exactly what every little girl wants for her fifth birthday - a 'four-pound shot. J C, Prep Goll Results Elll LA l:M) (tt) OOl4t11 Wi ii Al ~IBCC Tl\Ofnsori (£) 15 d~I. Pru1I• 76. +-1. Sctlull1 (GI 75 <Ill. Smtih IO, ... ,. Mlnkley !Gl 71 dtf. P•ltler 7', •·2. Haddow (El n def. R.aQ«I M. H . Chambtorlaln (El 75 def. Jordan 17, 6· O. $1\~eros (El 71 ai. H1rf a(. •·t. M•rlrw I") (tl H•w"'1 Hartlor A ·M•adtw/artl CC _ Camphrt<;ier (Ml 73, dlf O'ShM IO, 6---C. -~ -, J1tob5 !M/ n, 011 Kell 13, 6-o. Kentlrlt k Ml 12, d•f Fr...-n1n (, H . l(lm <M\ 11, def Or"'llJllO 7', 5.1, 1110 (M 74 def Gabrlitj IO, S·l. Taylor IM) 76, def Vac•rfo IO, l>l. Mlrln• (fl) OSI HWl!ltntftll •tlldl Al MlldowlarlC CC Camohr19er IMI 10. def Debolt 76. •· o. Jacnbs \M' 71, dtf Str•chan n, 6~. ~Im (M 77, 10$1 10 GlllOrd 71, 0-6. J. •ndrlek !Ml n , !ltd ~•'-r'°" 11, l • tuo CM/ n , def Wann8maktr n, 5.1. T11ylnr Ml 12, !OSI to wtlltn1y 77, 1·5. NEWPORT LEASES flocaffy 9..ed I epe:uMdl Leasing all Vehicles 645-2202 t 1 \ - { ' . .1 .. ' I A verag_e College Budget .-ReporLAiLto_ Students ' By SYl.VIA PORTER lf you're the parents of a teen-ager or t"'O head.log for college In 1973-74, you're ,intd the most brutal financial sq~ ever :__ and il will C0911"Ue relent1essly to get worse year after year, While thiS mld·April deadline for filing your federal income tax may seem a cruel weekend on which to give you the facts, the sooner you face the realities, the better you will be able to cope. And to- day, from the ... College SCholarship Service (CS S ) comes informaUon n'eve·r before maae available to parents, students and the high school community. 11IE CSS, A part of the College Entrance ExamJnation Board, obtained ·reports on avenge stw· dent budgets from lhe II· 4W>clal aid - directon ol more than 2.000 public rlt::~:i , and, private, to: tWo-year and four-year in- stitutions in POl:TEa the U.S. From theoe, It worked up avenge college cost.s for the current year and the basic data ror forecasting trends in costs for dillerent types of col- leges. Here are t.be crucial figures: -If your child will commute to a public two-year institution -and this is by far the cheapest -his first-year col- lege costs Will average $1,635 of which tuition and fees will total !200. · -If your child will be a rcsi· dent student at a-public four- year institUtion, his first-year costs will avefage $1,985, and if be commutes to this public -Jnstitutlol), his" first-year costs will average $1,760. Of these total!:, tuition and fees will represent $f65. -IF YOUR YOUNGSTER enters and lives at a private ·two-year college, his first-year costs will average f2.540, and if he commutes, the costlJ will be $2,090. Tuition and fees will take ll,210. -And I~ your child becomes a resident student this fall at a private four-year institution, his costs will average $3,280; if be commutes, the cost will be '2,745. At ihese institutions, tuition and fees absorb $1,725. -Al both two-and four-year iriv&te institutions, commuter PRIVATE TIUn FUNIS AVAllAILE FO" MAL llTATI'. LOAMI --111 I. 2nd TRUST DEEDS ·-=-'-< f";D::Y--•"lnO.c!DO- UP TO IO% LOANS ON TRUST OEEO COLLATERAL MIWPOllT EQUITY l"VNDI ~rtCtm1•• • ,...-port Cerl1•r om. NftpOrt 81Kh, Cali!. (714) ~ and resident st udents spend ,-------..._ college of your choice. Send for "Student Expenses At P o st-secondary Institutions 1973-74," College Board, Box 592.C, Princeton, N.J. 08540. Uie largest percentage of the b_udgets on tuition and rees. -AND DO NOT pin yoor hopes for ".cheap" schooling on a pubUc two-year In· stltution. The fastest rate of rise in expenses Is occurlng at th is , type of college. The smallest annual fate of rise 1n recent years has been record- ed ' at private two-year ln· stltutions, and even here, for residents, the annual rise has been 2.8 percent. The following shows the trend in costs: The rise In rate! over the FINANCE As the student, uk your - high school gu(daoce counselor for a copy of the CSS booklet, "Meeting College .Costs in 1973-74" to get facts on how much financial aid you might be able to get from the col· leges themselves. period 1970 to 19'i3 at publio ·'---------' two-year cominuter college1 is PICK UP A copy at your counselo r's office of th e "Parents' ·Confidentia l State.. meot," have y0t1r patents fill it out and send it ·to the CSS immediately for 'analysis. This statement will be the basis for the colleges' decisions on the amount of aid you will be able to get. 7.1 percent; at private two- year commuter colleges, 5.9 perctnt; at private two-year resident colleges, 2.8 percent; at public four-year commuter colleges, 6.8 Percent; at public four-year resident colleges, 5.8 percent; at private four-year commuter colleges, 8.6 per- cen_t; and at private (our-year resident colleges, 4.2 pe~cent. WHAT CAN YOU do -about it? Invest $2 in the CSS booklet and study it with ubnost ·care, for it gives you the breakdown In costs at the more than 2,000 institutions, and surely among these you'll find at least one If your counselor doe!n't have the booklet or sta tement, you can get both -these are free-~e address as above in.Prid&ton. In High Gear MilliOn-itnit Year Sought By Dodge Division in '73 Dy CARL-CARSTEliJSEN pacls and Dart , Sportsman 1( '* * or ~ 0•11' '1111 Sr.ff compacts. Like automotive s a I e s , Rewriting nearly every c;i.r * * * registrations ·for the Spring and truck sales record on its Donald J. Crevier, new car BuSiness Conlerence of the boo•-Dod Di · , I d sa les manager fQr Theodore Motor Car Dealers Association ..,, ge v1s1on· c ose of '"~"them Cal1'fomia at Jn. I Ilk I Rob ins Ford, has graduated ~ out ast month e a ion. dian Wells Cou'try Club, April from a four-day sales manage-n "Dealer retail deliveries ment course conducted at the 24-28 are booming. Wt!re the highest In Dodge's 59-Ford f\1arketing Institute in With registrations s t i 11 year h1story for any sl11gle IO-Dallas. straggling in, Executive vice. day period, any month, any Tbe course is one of a president James Go r m a n quarter and any six-month number offered to benefit predicted attendance for period," . sa\d Robert D · Ford and Lincoln · Mercury dealer members, wives, and Loomis, Dodge general sales cus.tomer.1 by emphasizing associate members would top manager, "and this applies for after-purchase service and last year's record mark of 874. car! as well as trucks and for belier customer relations. total v~hicles. A HEALTHY automotive in- COURSES ARE developed dustry 8.nd an informative "\YJTH A SfRONG order from met_hods used by sue-progr am with talks by in· situation, it appears sales will cessful dealerships. More than dustry leaders on consumer continue favorable. 91,000 Ford dealer personnel and legislative problems fac- "We 're pleased at buyer have attended the institute ing the business appear to be response to our products, and suice it was first opened in reasons for stimulating dealer we're . anticipating Dodge's 1959. attendance. first million-unit year." 1;::==='===============::;1 With a combined total of 335.036 cars and 172,557 trUcks • • • '-1*;.r~~,_,_,_ __ .,.."""',....,..., :i:raTr~~ys~~~~.0~!~: i· -~g~.J~~ ~ ... ,ICfl~\ Based on past performance, , · " . ~~ .. ~~: pa~!m .es~~~~~~ ca~ f '.to~~ RI~~ 4 Yi' sales records have been set .. .~ ......... ~•~....,. ~,;..;;;o.....;;:...;,;u._WI fo r each of the last eight months and truck sales have establ ished records for 20 coo· sccutive months. \\'JIJLE S1\LES in all car nnd truck lines were up significantly, Dodge's highest monthly sales ever were reported fof Colt sub-com- • Sylvia Porter's readers can beat that headline ... she told them how lo save up lo 25.% on_ meat buy s. as much as 20 i'. on canned goods: 'Follow the most XERO, x COPYING AND 4 ea. DUPLICATING C NO COM'PLm XEROX SERVICE , MIN. VOLUME DISCOUNT e PICKUP & DELIVERY•1m1.~~;;:; fundamental, DOUBLEQUJ(K HOO 1 "''" :;;:2s:f"°" '"'' 1111 N. M.1111 St., S1nl1 Anl I M--GQJ • Personalized • Stylfsli • Efficient Order For Yourself or a Friend' May be used on envelope' es return eddr•ss l•hels. Alto very h.andy as identil.ic•tion l•bels for m•rking personal items such e1 lloo ks, records, photos, etc. Label, stick on 9l•ss and m•Y be us ed for marking home c•nned...-focd items. All labels •re printed with stylish Vogue typo on fine quality white· 9 ummed paper. I ---------------------, I fllll II! tftb """"' tlto Mid .... u wllh ll.U to: I • 1'1191 '""'"" Llllitl Oh· .. ,.o. I OJ. \ut I I ' C.)11 M .... Ctllf. '*' I I f I I. I ~t----~~L~!-~~!!~~ -~-~-j • I . simple and ordinary of an the rules .•. Sho~ the specials.' Maybe it seems Ollvious, but when Columnist Sylvia Porter tells her readers something like: watch newspaper ads for bargains, she always goes the extra step. She asked questions of some of the food industry's leaders and found out savings·can amount to many, many times the' 41h% predicted rise in overall food prices. That's economic advice you can believe. Test it for yourseil. ·Check the specials in the bar- gain-laden ads of the Wednesday Food Section every week in th e DAILY PILOT. And ii yo u want more lips on getting your money's worth, read Sylvia Porter's "Money's Worth" column appearing sev· era! times each week in tin! financial pages of the DAILY PILOT. The One That Means Business • DAILY PILOT . . " .. Wall-Street • • • • . ·-· . ·~ .. . . . . . . .,. . . . . . . .. ··;flit/ay-·s :·'1-ttiell;;/i ";;1ot/f"";)~·#e'fdiJ111net;~; • • ••• • .• • •• • .. • ~fl': •••• ' • 'l'.'!'I' ••• • •• • • • • •• .. •• •• • • • • • ••••e• •• Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own. stock. We couldn't prove it, of cqurse, but it see'ms likely that the percentage is even greater her& in the Or- ange Coast area ... and it's growing every day. That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago; to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring ifs readers -"today's final stocks today" via super high speed wire servic:es. We're stiff doing it · in every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. • Wall Street's computers "talk to" computers in · the DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate of more than 1,000 words per minute. It takes only ii minutes to move the entire New York and American ' . Stock Exchange reports from the c·a nyo-n-s of Wall • • • Street to the typesetting machines of· the DAILY PILOT _right he re on the Orarige Coast. And when technology finds a way to beat that speed . record, the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the first to use it to bring readers "today's action today." When it comes to financial news, the one that means business is the ..._ ...... DAILY PILOT • • ' • -. ... " ' .. • • Bu:y The DAIL.V Pl~OT For Peanuts ! Here's here's here's CHARLIE BROWN,., and ~UCY ••• and LINUS ... and here'a SCHROEDER.,, and la&t but no\..lMal, here's SNOOPY Plione 6"42-43~t-(Clrculatlon Department)--to have-the- whole Peanuts g~g come and vlslt you dally. -. • -. .. • ' " • .. f . .. • '\ - • . .. DAILY PILOT . . . ' .. . MondaY. l\pril ·16, 1'173 'Tlte Desperate Bour..s' . . . .--" . J • ' . ' • PU.BUC NOtlCI! PUBLIC NOTICI! • PUllLIC NOTICE '4CTITIOUI IUllMDJ • JlllQ 1'AM• ITIT•MbT l"'CTITMMll •utl••tl NOTK• TO C•IOJTCMll Tiit kllio.Mg ~toM an ... Suspens_e, Violence . . . --........ MAMli ITAT•MIWT ..a IUf'••ICMll coun Oii TMlt bllslll"' II" TM loUeWlni ,.....,.. ¥• 118 ,ITAT• Ofl' c.A.LINIUU• FOR OATA iolOCEUINO '°OW!.~!!!f ~ .. --~ ~ Hv*• Cwr'd. TM• '°"lfTY Of OUMOIE HINWfllft(lllinl. C:.11 .. ~ HY*t VK. HyOra S'-"o 17• ~ Ed .. • ft11 "'i~t: H1"U1Elll ,_,,. H...,_ uwi, " ,._,. """'~ CO.I• ~call! na7 ~IU..EN. o.c.... . .. warr:_ Cot!• ~ CaH,.,.,.... C:~ I.~ .,.. a.Mia pt,. NOTICE If" HE•E9Y'-GIW:N 19--'tla ~ H. ~. 12111 ........ ...._, IHdl. caa11 .,.... c1wdhon o1 ttia Mova IWMIS •.-it .u._ Torr.nc..~calltornta ,.. M1C:t11111 Etbt W..I, '"9 '*'-'*" Dt .. !Mt II.II Pfl'tOM lia\Mi clal"'9-11J41IM1""" DcMiifi A. ltt~. l• ._. ll'MI.' Gripp.ing-at irvine ...,_ -----........ ~ ,,.. '""4,. to tllf n-m. Fosttl' cir,. Ctlltorilk N4' • Tiii•. ~ _ .. _. bV ' .......... win. 1M ~ ~ 1" lfll Clffk• Tflll ~ I• clll'llllldld by • ~ petfnarW1111. .,. ...,....... .. ,.., .. It .. tlle atlO'tt..eo.11.~ 0( """*"',.. ..-tttloll ...... ....... • °*"" . -to ,......,.. """" wlltl -it. "'°"",.., .... ,,. .... Thh •ltltfMM "'" "'" •• ,,. "" c-_,_ .. to "" lollldtr•lOl*I •t-IM oftlc9 w.;r., H. L .... ry O.lt of ~ty t111 Mardi t. of tltol'NYI JA.CIC.SQN, GOOOSTIEIN, Thll ttattmtrtl ._ .. fifed wOh ft'lt C.. 1m l(UMLIEll.. COPES. CR051(£'t' • SMITH. IV Cl«'k °' 0r--. c....,tty en Mll'cli ,,, ....... 1.01 .t.vt-of 1111 Star1, SUl19 1651, L• Im PubttlNd Ol'MOf COl•t Dalty l'Uot. °"'"'"·· Callfoml•. 90061, ~ Is tM • \ I ,_.. !«!• '· 16t...t!i :JO. 1m • nt-n p1.au.o1'-'-1111t11 ~ m..•11 -"~ OranoJ. c.c.u 0t11r ""°i By TOM llARLEY Of 1111 DlllY Pllet SlilH 1'ha;ee convicls lireak Out of state prison, head ror .lhe home community ol the two brothers In ·the trio and take home. of a fri htened family -while t y await t e aid and funds which will allow them to flnally elude their pursuers. Sound fi'mlliar? It ahould. It is 1 tall!! thet was originally u3ed in the creation of a memorable Broadway play, was iater adapted ror a not so memorable movie that even Humphrey Bogart couldn't im- prove and which was later - and typically -beaten to death in a mess of television mutations. But the Irvine Community Theater has gone back to "The Desperate Hours" and author Joseph Hayes In a praiseworthy _and emln~ntly successful bid to recapture the magic of the play that won a "Tony" award nearly 20 years ago and iput laurels on the brows ot Paul Newman. Karl Malden and James Gregory. ENTERTAINMENT , contact with local community theater. Gary Saderup was magnifi- cent -there is no othei..word -in his depiction of Glenn Griffin, the brutal leader of the trio that take over the home and lives of a frightened family and the elder brother of a man who comes to realize in those hours what he missed when he followed the path ot Crime blazed by the older man. SADERUP'S FINAL memorable scene is the best thing in · a play that had many to offer. He explodes into almost insane violence, lapses Into gibbering selr-in- crimin'itfon when he realizes that his carCfully conceived plans are going awry and !hen grovels in...::pJllhetic sell.._ pjty when it comes through to him that he had . lost his bid for freedom and the kid brother who had already rejected his tutelage. Sadfrup stood head and rr coNTAJNS a nuctuatin,g shoulders above any other mixture of suspeiise and ·-member of the cast and t~is is violence in a series ur cliff. not meant to be unfair lo hanger scenes that tiad this playe_rs "'.'ho made ~remendous criUc oo the-edge.-0f his seal-contr;tml!gns !O_ t_!l!s _hammer more times than he can ac-of a play. curately recall today. Tom Among -them were Ben Titus' direction most capably LeBeau Ill. my second star as keeps this splendid pot on the the seeay, thoroughly criminal boil and give.s us a final scene Samuel Robish who was by far and outburst of violence that the most villainous Qf the trio is just ~bout the most gripping and who was only narro\Yly 15 miriutl!!S of theater we've held in check by the elder come acros.s In a long time. Griffin. .. 1-------,--,---'-I niattar• ptrtalnln9 IO the •'•'• OI s.aljl Match it 1nd Aprll r,t, 1( ltn. ~m-n dtc.eOtnt, wlfllln fOoilr "'°"thl tfttl' "" ' .. ..,., PUBUC NOTICE nrat pt,lblt~111111 • ""' notl(f. 1------------flrst moments on stage to bis 0•1M1 A.ptf! it. 1m.. PUBIJC NOTICE !Ul. al herser"k exit. ,JTA.tUUNT op_ AU.NDONMINT 011 EUGeNtl Ml &OOENHOFF -VII 0' PICTITIOUS SUllNEfl •AM• Mml!IWt•tri..... f'ICTITIOUS •USHtett· He was only a little ahead of Thi to11o11rt•t111 Pf"IOl'll llilw •bilnclontd of "" • 1 •" • the •llOYI NAM• ITAt•M•NT ttte ... Ml Clf tM lktl11-,.,.,_ nllll'lt c nllfNCI ~ • hla Cather, Ben LeBeau_. In our •• HE.A.TING • AIR CONDITIONING JACQOM. MOOITl'IN, KUML • i.::,,.~!i1"" ,.,._. ..... *""' .. co ... _AL3062 T•11or .w..,. C.111 Mtili, c,,., ...... _, ............ ·~~.™-·~ ... 'AMERl'AH -•• analysis of'" thls' -ti-1 a-n I c . c.;11,.-ni-• tmi1. • ...... •• ,!<0,,0.M, .!,. EMt r,;., ';lf:'·-,; • ~<"Tm-ficmtc. ........ llilft'IL.ftita.!!t_ to LAI ........... taNf'. teM1 " --" LeBeau, as the torlurtd faml-•boW wu flltd '" 0r1rve c ...... ty en n11 ntl) m..------.svU• 1. corOM_dal ,_, cmlf. Saptem._.. 11, 1m. .t.ttwMop tw ~flill1• Proora~v. Fa"'11""' iflC., .., l'llt ly. head, Dan Hilliard. had his Cl'lltMs HtftrY Nortvn. 305I T1yklr PublltNd °'""" Coeft Oa!IY PllO'I. s~· HIOIWl•Y, ~orOM *' Milr •. ~If. W1y. Co.Iii ""'"'· CaHlornl• """' AJlrll 16, 2:1. 311 Mid May 7, Im lllf.7'3 7 • I finest mofnents in his scenes wiuar.s ,..,..,.., *2 1..,1or wa!J', A.tnarlciln A.er~lllhiral • • r Y c • C01t1 Mell. cantornl• mN I-----...:.~------· I corpora!IM. 1165 E••I co..t H\pway, or confrontation with Grilfin . Tllh b&Klne11 ... , concl«led by ii PUBIJC" NOTICE S\llla 7. Cot-dill M.r. Callf. NlS fl'(lef'al iwrt,.....,hlp. Thh ~ 11 bllnt conductitil 'by I and Roblsh -no-holds-barred Cl!ilrl•I Henry Nortol'I f'lmt PlctltlOUS ··us1Nl'SS Clllhlnll~!:-:.~..::-""'1uft encounters thnt once had hi"m c , MAM• STA.TEMl!Nt * >.orlcw1iw1t SilrVIC• COf110f•l\ol'I Pulllltlwd Or•~ Olll 0•11!1' :;:i,,· 'Thi toll-tne ~ fl dOlni bullMU Mk:hilat s .. M~•t• most coltvincingly writhing on ""'11 1. '· 16• n. im •s; T11li 111temant n1M1 With "" County MYLAN DlllYWALL, 1476 Oltlow, Cltflt ol Qf'anga Caunfy en: Mercl'I ti. tpe floor rrom a beating ad-WKITTllnsltf'. ca111orn1 •• me 1tn. BY Thar.,. M. W•rd, OtPutY PUBUC NOTICE Thom•• H•td!l' Mylan. n3S Ny1!1, Publllhad Of'•noe coast Dally Pltof, ministered most convincingly •-· N1vtc11. MS02 Al)l"ll 1. '· 16. n. 1m -12 by the callous, brutal Griffin. DAILY PILOT s1at1 P._.. mn dJ!l'J~,buslnas 1•...:l;a'lduc1ec1 bY •n 1 "" • I flCTITIOUS SUSIMISS l---ccc-C'0.,,-7'":::::::::--- F th t It I'd 'l'LL TAK" E h f N""I •TAT<M•NT ' 'Thomn Hardy Myl•n. ._ PUBIJC NOTICE or e res , was a so 1 --. THAT' -Ben LeBeau thwarts t ~ e • ..... Thh ... 1_1 w11 n1ec1 wtth fht covn· • ~ TIMI followlllll Ptf'Mlll 11 dol~ bl/slims ,, ------0:-::::::--team effort with a flaw or two Torts of his son (Richard Riley) to send a message 11 ty cim of Or•1111• county on Apr11,'·:a!m1· • ..., noted by the writer that will for help in. his composition book throu2b teacher N~ ~4:c11.wc~!f~cr!1~111tr.w•!l'· Puti1, '""', Of'angt c°"'' D•llv ,,.."110~ MOl•c• To CRIDtTOl:t • D D c lh h f Aor•lllvto lnltrM11on•I M•rktJ!nn, Apr L ,, " 23, 30, 1f73 ·~ SUPl'ltlOlll ceu•t Of' THI not be recounted in this .-. a oun in t is scene rom the Irvine Com· , 2AOO wait co.st Hluhw•Y·. N-~11 ___ ~--------·I stAT• 011 CAL1ro11 .. •1• •o• II anal . f fi I munity Theater drama "The nespfrate Hq.urs." BeilCh, C1Htornl• (St ille ofl" • TH~coi:.~I.fJ11 AN••., overa ys1so a nepay. ___ __;'-------------'-----'---''-1 lncorpor•llon·C•lllotnl•) PtlBUCNOTICE 'E111t• of ALBERT MARTIN Alsq noted: a delighted au-c~ •• :.1ne11 I• COt'lduc:t•d by •1---c,c,cr"-,-,-,.-.-,-.-.c,-,.-.o,c,---lfc":iEg~~ ~ R·~· • k~LB~R( ~ e:T d. that · f"·•• t I George M. Turllilr, s+trtllf'Y MAMIE STATEMENT SCHllOEOER, Decautd. , 1ence re~ o accep Off .. Thfl 1111amant w•1 t11ec1 IO(ttl'I !ht court-TM to110'*'11111 pe!'son• 1r1 c1o11111 NOTICE is HERE.IV orvEM 10 ""' the non-appearance of the cast • ,.-D "d T IY Cle<k of °''11911 County on Mtr'h 11. bU1lnM1 11: credlf61'11 "of ,.,. •boft namld dlCNlnt at final curtain aad en· ice av• oma 1973. Pm::t:> B.l.S,B, PROPERTIES, I 523 2 11111 atl pen.on• hilvll'lll clllrm agillntt the II Chlrbourv A.vto .. lrvlne, Callt. 92705 wild d1<9danl ar• l'fC!lllr!d to fll• thtn't, thusiastically clapped for their Pubtllhed <>r•nQil C011t Cally Piiot. John H. BacMll. 1sm Chlrtlour11 Ava., ..tfll the ,,_..rv ~ In tllt oMcil ----1 .. Apdl 1. 9 • ..16..Jl. lf.73 '32·13 lrvlnf, Ca. 97705 of""' ctark.of the 1bOW 911t1H_ad cwrt. or return. It was regrettable that c f M F ltlNt';' lvi111Clc. "' Forest '-"'·· JOllrt-10 pr ... nt ttitm; ...,.,. 111e ~ we couldn't have them all op 0 any aces ' PUBIJC"NOTICE .-. Po. """ • -'"~ ~"" ,_,,,,,.." ""- back lo Show them tn . the !Jest Franlo; A.. Skar'!,-216 ll'aul lna St .. of ettor-... GIBSO,., OUNN &. Jdln•'-"· Pa. 1J904 C.ll!UTCHER, "° Nl'll'Jl«I Cantet' °""'· way possible how t h e i r PICTtTIOUS •USIMl'SS Mlchiltl G. Be<:IMk. .a36 Ml. Royal Sult• toa. N.wporl 1.-ch, Callfwnla. NA.Ml STATl!'M&NT Blvd .. A.JU-Park, Pl. 15101 ilrlhlch 11 IN plilOf ol 11Mlnea1 of flMt "DesperaU! Hours" had had at NEWARK, N. J. (AP) -stakeout here. "This is where ·TIMI 1011-11111 P'''°"' .,, doing Tt111 tM.alMll l•condUC'9d iw • GeMrat un11«1l11r* in•" matten wt•lnlnt to I st t 0 on! k d t f d d f ,. bu91nffl as: Partrlfti.tllp. ltlil ttlll• of 1111d daclldltll, wltllln !Our ea w oo ers esper~ e-DaVid Toma has been a man of ma e my name an _ame. 01scovERY TRAVEL, 20, Otun JoM.H. B~ . . months,,..,. ii. t1r11 pu1111ca11on of t11I• ly clinging to each other for Toma spent his accumulated .._.,.,,, L'9UIM ee.cl'l. c.111. ms1 This •t•t•"""' 1r111 fllad with 111e coun· no11«. -~-several desperate and rat.her many roles -the beggar, the vacati"on tim" e of three months c. conract W1hl(flll1t Jr .. 4U 0ert-tv Clei"k of Otanga county on April J, oated A,prH s,'1tn. moor, L.ag\11111 hilCll, C1llf, m51 1971 ' ~ tLlfFORO '-· SC:HttGEOl!ft hairy momen•" during that banker, the i·unk.ie and the in Hollywood Dunng the film MarlL'ffl w. w1111qu11t, 64.5 D•r1-. f24SIJ E111eutor o1111e w111 o1 tha i,.:> • • -L~un• Baild\, c1111 m51 Publllhfd Ol'•nue Coast Dally Piiot, ebow named O.ClllMI performance. junk dealer. Ironically, SOPle--Ing Of "Toma," broadcast This buslnns I• c~ueled 11!1' tn 111-Aprll f, 16, 2l. 3D, lt73 991-73 DllSON, OUNN & CIUlfCH•R Pet.e Jason In. 'Revere' Peter Jason, a movie and teleYision actor raised and schooled on the Orange Coast, will appear in a musical version of "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere" Wednesday at 6 o'clock on KITV, Channel l_l. Jason. better known locally as Pete Ostling, ·graduated from Newport High School and Orange Coast College, where he played the leading role in "The Music Man." He also performed at South Coast Repertory and returned t o OCC last summer to play Lan- celot in"Camelot." Della Signs one else recently played the Wednesday. hls ~ife, ~~tty, dlvldulli::. Conr..i Wahlciul•I. Jr. ~~::= ~~~ .... Sllltt .. role of David Toma 'himself. and their four children JOtned Thli 1t11am1n1 was tiled ..,th rt11 court-PUBUC NOTICE NIJWPll'f BailCh, C•lff. nut him in Hollywood for two 1y ciartt 01 Oranoe County on M•rch 26, Tll: cno ...,ten But he's-not griping. It was 1971. ' • •1rnT1oOJ aus1NEss AHon11!1'• tor •i1eutw Weeks. ' ,• PM• · NAMI! STAlEMEHT Published Orange Co.It OlllY ttflot, for an ABC·TV movie about Despite all this activity and Publl1tled Oran~ co.st e>_aUy Piiot. The followtng person Is doing Mines• .fiprll '· 16, 23, 311, lt13 . 1lDl·1l hiS real-life exploits. as a publicity -his picture tre-.A,prlt 2, '· "· 23, 1973 ,,..73 11: THE WELLCO MOll!TGAGE COM·l------------ Newark detective w ho s e PUBI)C' NOTICE dfsgfilSes fuive led-film tO -quenUy appears-in 1 oc·a-1 PUBLIC NOTICE ::~:·~~c.iif,...:_w•!l' Sult• 207'1=='-':_:_;;;;;;,;,_ _ _:::_ __ newspapers T 0 ma's THE NEW WELLIK OEVELOP-NOTICI' OP TRUl'fll'S SAL• nearly 7,000 arrests and a fair disguises continue to be ef-.. 1CTITIOUS IUSINlll MENT: CORPORATION, c I 1110 r n I. J LMll Na.'......,.., share of publicity here. f t" H he h ......,.. STATSMl'NT Corporation, 7100 N. H•!J''tt!!hUUI St., t .s. Jf•· ,.,..n . And after all, he did gel a ec 1ve. e says as a oon-Thi 1ouow11111 ptt'aon1 •r• dol1111 van Nw•. c11111orn1a -T.o. sE111v1c£· COMPANY "dul'f .,... v"1cf1on rate of 98 pe-nt buslnns 11: This buslna11 11 being conducted by ii pointed Tru1te1 111"111tr !hi fQllowlng Small Part . th m "e '""' · DALE'S J1"NITORIAL ,SERV1CE,S1.U Corporilllon dncrlbed dHd of trust Will. SELL Al in e OVI ; HE DRIVa a r 0 u n d Coollclge A.Ye .. Co.II M1$1, Callt. '2626 THOMAS H. BURMEJSTeR PUBLIC AUCTION TO 'THE HIGHEST "Toma." He even was briefly Newark which has the hi........... Dillt P11!rkk CrlU, 31.U Coolldge·A.¥1.. VICI 11'".ffldtn!, Markatl119 • Bl DOER FOR CASH (p.9Ylbll •I !Ima ol considered for the title role • l!!i'.,..... cos11 Mff.I, c1111. 92626 'This 11aremen1 flied ..i111 thl covntv "'' In 11wful monrt of the u1111ec1 st11n1 -before- 1 -1 wa's gi"ve-n to . a crime rate in the nation in a Paul• Jt•n Crill, Jl.U. Coolklllt Aw., Clarlt of or•• County ·on: March 26, •11 r111111, 11111 •nd 1.,ternr'.COllW!l'ld fo be t 1963 t -' -T·h Cost• Men, C1HI. f262to lrn. By 'ThtrHI M. Ward, Deputy Caunty and now hlld by II Under said t>elld o1 \leteran -actor, Tony Musante. a -up compac car. e This bull,_ Is canduetld by • """' c1.n:. Trust Jn tlMt prOPMtY .,.,_.n•ttar car's trunk iS loaded with cos-arll Pirtnarahlp. .---Ft4m dncrr11ec1 : For Toma, the life of a C(lJI . • Dill• P. Crill ll'r.rblllhtd Or"antll COilsl Dally Pllol. Tll!US'TOR; LOUIS J. TOOOROff, • fi tumes, wutm"ms, wigs and Thi• ,,,,_, ••1 111ed with tt.. coun-Aprll 1. t, 16, 23. 197.1 196-T.I """" m•n and the life of a movie 1gure makeup ty ci.r~ 01 Or•nu-count!l' on March 1t, BEN I!! F 1 ctARY : covNTitYW1D£ blended for a .. while wben he T _ · .d h used 1 11 1973. PUBLIC-r-«>TICE FUN01NG coRPORA.TION, • N-York was commuting from his om11 sa1 e near y a F2411l Corpor•tlon d . he -.. 1 his disguises in his biggest ar-Publl11\ed Orenoe COil•t 0111w Pnoi FICTIT>CU• ••••••••-Recorded A.1)1"11 11, 1m.,11 ln.~ N,o.1 police uhes re to u.-mov e Mardi u, •nd AIH'll 2, t, 16, lt73 ..._T.I 7606 In book 1cms page ' o1 ..,.,,c • I the rest -one that broke up a-Jot~ NAME STA.TEMEWT RKordl In the ofllce ol tbil ·-dtr of roe on West Coast. tery operation handling Mn "The 1011ow11111 ~s 11re 0011111 Of'•noe county; Hid dfed of lfVll v-N buslnffl as: dncrlbe5 the follow1ng Pfl)ptl'ly: IN HOLLYWOOD he did million aMually PUBLIC OTICE UNITEO PROTECTIVE COATINGS. Lot" of Traci No. ~176. In the Clt!J' of ' 1.Q2 Wiiiow L.lne, Wnlmlnster, Call!. NfW1!0'f 9•aeh. Count!!' ol 0!'1111111. St1t1 "Toma" ana had two other FICTITIOUS susiHl!SS t2613 o1 ca111orn11, ., per map recorded In roles -as a cop -in another PUBLIC NOTICE NAM.I! STATl!Ml!Nt Victor M. aarr, 26.5'2 P~ll· Or.. bOok "· PlllK :JD ilnd :n. Mltc•tl-• TIMI followlng par_, II doing to.Klnoeu Ml1slon Vlalo, Cal. 9267S MRps, In Ille olflct, ol' the county TV police program, "Colum~ as: • , R•yrnond Gl•ilb!l', "" Hq111on Av.. recorMr ot .. Id countY~ . bo." He returned to his beat, cttR.YSLE-CRE.t.llONS. \m -a.J!I-s.nt• F• S9flng1, c.1. tcMJO 2012 P11om1 or1w, N..-.,,ort BHch, h h k d N •,otlCI! 011 pu,•LIC: HUR'!'D St .. c.o.1• "'"'' c11nf. mu ~' ManhMI ·"',UI Pl~T.Mllll J"ltlaw C.tlfol'nl• 1 , .... -w ere e trac s own 01 c• ls hereby 11 v"' !hilt tlle ..-l•nn1ng crer9 P. ChrySTe, l63'.I 8 I01111• SI., L-, WKlm nstw, -.-tMG --"(II • atr.t,-..tdrlU JI[ ~C!!l"""O"' bl the n t 0 Comm I 1 •Ion of the C 11 !I' Thi• busll'lllSI Is conducltd by an I~ Tiils lllltlMSI I• COl'lductMI 11!1' a genaral d4isl11n•llon Is Nio\llft fboYI• 1111 warranty gam ers, n ew ol Nn1POr1 BHch wn1 hold a publlc Costa Mawi Call! 92626 Pilrtnanhlp. Is 11lwn 1s to 111 (OIY'IJIM'9!11n or cor· Hollywood for two "Tonight hnrlng on Amend!Tlflll No. 373 rn111ated dlvldual ' · Victor M. Barr rtc:tnes1J." Sh ,, Tbe h bV the CllY ol NilWport 8eaci'I to consider Craig p Chr.,.le Tiils fl1lam1nt·••• flltd With 1111 Coun-The t11n-ell(l1tv undlr Kld o.ld of ow appearances. n e an 1r!'llndman1 to Tltlt 20 of ,Ille Newpof'l This sl•temari't wis tlltd With the Court-l'f Cltlrk of Or11111• County on M•rci'I lt, Trust, bV r11M>11·tit • llnilth Dr c1t11ult In But this review will have to be built around the tribute this critic intends to pay today to an ·actor who gave Saturday night"the best performance I have seen in my 10 years of HIS W A.S a special brand of uenom in this ca r e·f'u 11 y sketched Hayes role and he caught the spirit of the part HOLLYWOOD · (UPI) and built on the role from his· Singer-actress Della Reese came back here and went Buch Munlclpel Coda by the iddltton 01 ty Clerk of Or•noe counl!l' on March 19 1973. -1111 oblt911ion1 HC1.ll'td t ti • r • tt !I'· b h . bl Ch•pter 20.'1 anttlled Specific Plen 1973 ' P241M tiai'alofort 1xac:ultc1 and dell....,.lld lo ttw ack to C as1ng gam erS. Ol1trlc1. . ~ Publl1hed Or1nge Coast Dally Pllol undlrtlllnlld • wrltlan O.Claretton of -Signed for a continuing featured role in the CBS-TV projected series,· "Daddy's Girl," starring Eddie Albert. "Jim stilJ a ...,..K,.,.man at Hotl(f 11 /\ereby 1Ur1her 9l'tt!! 1111! said Pllbllshed Orilnge COii! D•lll' Piiot Mlrch 16, Ind Aprfl 1. t, 16. lm 111·7l Default Ind Otmand fllr·$al1, end wrll!MI h rt. " the""'';': Id p.ubtlc hearing wlll bt htld on !he :Uth d•!l' March 16. ind Aprll 1 9 16 1973 117·73 notice of brnch •nd pl al1etlon to causa ea says 't\ryear-o of Ap•ll, im, 1t the hour of 7;311 P.M. in ' · · • PUBLIC NOTICE Iha uncttr11gritd 111 Hll wtd property to detective who admits the life ttw councu Ch•mber1 of the NfWjlOrt sattsty wild$iill••I0111, and t11tn11t1ar tM . • B••ch City Hill, at whkll tlrne •nd piece PUBLIC NOTICE t undKslol!lld •usad Mid nollta Clf brMCh 1n Hollywood beats a predawn any •nd au persons 1ntere11.c1 may •i> NOTl~!LL~~o c~• ~~WRs · and o1 eiactt to bf R..:onMd J•nuarv •· Ptilr and be heard lhereon. S hoot D l I I I NEWPORT MESA lt73 1s ln11r. N11. 6122 In b°'* 10506 Pflll JACQUELINE E. HEllTHER, a SIK4 UN~FIEO • .r _c ;_ . f', of Hid Otflclal R-.ls. Secre!ary NOTICE TO CllEOITOllS . , Silld Silla wlll bl niildl, bvl wtlllol.rl Newport Beach City SUll'IRIOR COUllT 011 THI! Bid DtildtJl'lt: 11.00 oclock l.m. of the covenant or -.arranly~axpnif.1 or lmplled P'lannlr>g Cemmlsslon .STA.Tl! Of C:ALlfOll!NIA. fO• 2llll dil!J' of 1"PRIL, lm rt111tdlng !Ille pm.wulon' or 1111-Publls!Md Orange Coal! Olll!l' Pllot Ttlli: COUMTY 011 OltANGI! Placl of Bid Receipt: ll57 Pl•centla cumbrancas, to 'Pil!l' ti. r~lnlng prln- A.prll 16, 1973 11n-r.i Na.. A.-74D& A;~ CO::i!n'i:~ Name: 'ELEC-cJp1I wm of Iha not• sec:urtd llY~ld OER OeceaMld. nol• Pf'llYklMI. ildvancn, II 1ny, ....., the 'Echoes' Empty prama --------------! E1llfa ol MA.BEL KA.Y STEVENS LIN-'TRICAL MAINTENANCE SERVICE TO OMd ol Tf\111, wlfll lnl.-.st ti In Slfd NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to "" OISlltlCT OWNEO PttOPERTIES Jarni• of uld Datd ol Tl'\lll ,.... thal"llD At B d Tb t PUBLIC NOO'ICE credllors Clf the abow n•med 6tcedefll Pl•a Pl•nt •r• an Fll•: 1157 Plactnlll 1nd e•pense1 ol the Trwtff Mid of thl roa WaY-ea er Iba! 1t1 Ptrions having claims IOillnst !hi A.-;.~i:~°t~1 ::::EBY GIVEN tllal the trusli crnled b!l' Hid DMd of Tl'\111. hid . · ---· 1114 dteedenl ire tlClulrtd ta....111•. Jti•O'I· .~mec1-Sct1oot-DOtrlct 111 OfMI09 .l'.!• wlll ~ hel•f on TUttld•!l'• Ma!J' 22. 1m -FICTITIOUS BUSINESS With Ille neceuar!J' vouchtr1, In the office C ly C•llloml cllllll b!J' nd th II 1t ll:OO A:M~l"llil: llftlce ol T.0 ;-"Sarvlca NAME STA'TEMEHT °'""clerk of !ht aboYll tnllfted court, or H~ounGo;Knlng e:.·r:. hereiNj~er refe~ Compan!J', Btnk of A.')'lll'lca T-, Orlf NE\V YORK (AP! -The of the concept ,·, mated w•"th a Th• lollowl1111 ptt'son Is doing buslnns to present """'· ""1111 thl MCillHfY lo., "DIS'TRIC1'" wrn race!~ uo lo bu! City llvd. West, Sultl 1110, Orange, 11 : -YQl.ICherl. IO the undtrslgned ill !he o!llCI , ' C•lflornl•. • dull thud of dramatic anguish plethora of profound inanities GRAPE N' AtL, 210 Fiith st .. Hun-or.11ornav LAWRENCE K. HARVEY. eu not..!,il1:fct.t11,..~ .,."" ,,.,,..,,111ted 111""; D•t•: 1"01'11t,1973 - d th h ""f he 11ngton Beach, Calif. 97~ Norllf: Bro.dway, S1nr1 Ana. CallfDrnla, SN awar o 1 con rac T.D. Slrvlc• ComPilhY rcsoun s rough "Echoes," a sue as 1 you remem r, Jeck Nell Leum, U93 Ellilsmere, w11rc11 11 the placa of bu1tnas1 of lhl tor ""~ Pl'lll.ct. •• Hld Trua'"' play unwisely staged at you remember· there's no Cott• Mn1. Calif. -m26 under11111\ed 1n •II matt1r1 par1111111111 to 111:;i1: 11 bl ~K~~ ii:,_ the P 1= ld';::i 8y Ru1h E. Brown Broad,yay's Bi"i"ou Theater. ,, " ' be lif I This business rs conducted bV 11n In-the 11111e of uld decadent, wllhln lour publicly e!d 'aloud •t lh ~1 ~ed Anl1t1nt sacr1tar1 escape. Or may e S dlvldu1I. mon1111 ettar the llt$1 publ1c1llon of 1hl1 llrn. pl e 1 a STA-11115 N R. h rd h · th another "llus'io " -Jeck N. Leuni no!lce. • eca. Pubtlshad NIWPOl'I Harbor Ntwt Prau. • IC a Nas , its au or, I n. Thl1 s111tment was flted w1111 the coun· 0111ed April s, 1973. E•ch bid must conform •nd Ila combined with .Dally Pllot, N_,or1 has a certain reputation in this In the circumstances the rv c11rk ot or1n11e coun1y on Aprll 11, A. RAGNAR LINDEii! responsive '0 th• conlraci documents. Bt.Ch, c.111orn11, Aprll' 16, n. 30, 1973 19n. Executor of lhe will Thi OISTR!CT ~ !he rJ11ht to tt· · lf70.73 country for · comedy . and performances by Lynn F24Slt o1 lhe 1t111v1 n11med d1eedent Jttt any or •H bid• or to waive env L•-1------------- 1 l"b d M" Publllhed Or11111e Coa91 Dally Piiot LAWRENCI! K HARVl'Y regu1•rlllll or lnforrn•ltles In an!l' bids er P U UC on musica 1 rt,tti, is a mired 1lgrim lj.nd David Selby as Apr11 16, ,3, 30, •nd May 1, 1,1, 1101 73 111 North •rotdway ln~:;'b~~=~llll,n,, .,-,,, ,1 , •• 1 B N CE abroad mostfY for . probes at the incarcerated companions ~!~~·1:1~~· ~;;'1' period o1 fortv·Hvt '(#, ~':,: att'er °';11! M1llf the more sober side of ex-with Paul Tripp 'as their Attorna!l' for E•1eutor d•t9 set for"'-oPtnlllll o1 bids. NOTICE 01' T1tU1T•l:'S SALi "sl h · d I · · I PUBLJC NOTICE Published orange Co.JI Dtll!l' Piiot, A payment bond •nd • Ptrlorm1111ee T .S. No. 1·1lllU 1 encc, av1ng won a ozen mys ery v1s 1 or are Apr!lt,16 r.i.:io 1913 10•11.7.1 bondwlllber~ulredprlortoexecutlonof OnTlllMl•!l'M•vl,1973,•tll:OOA.M .. European prizes. remarkably intense and ' ' 1111 conrr1ei. "Tiie paym"'' bO!ld 1t1au 11e BENEF ICIAL sE111v1cE co .. •• dul!l' ,,,.. This piece catnlogues in his mimetic under the direction of Fi,;r::~o~~ ... ~~~:=~s PUBLIC NOTICE ~oc~~~:;-:m '' 1 forth 1 " tha contrKt ~ed of T~~~:: =~ndO:;:~';:, darker canon being concerned Melvin Bernhardt. The fOilowlng pef'aons ere doing c.-ning Board 19'6, ''Inst. No. 1sn, i... book 11,., ll'llil ' binlnell ••: NOTICE TO Cll!l!DITORS B!l' Dwotlly HarYlt!J' Fli.l'ltr IA.5, ol OlllClll llitcOl'd• In the ofllCI o1 with a man ind woman Tripp is an eminent author-· MESA. BEA.RING co .. 1m w. 11111 su11E1ttoR cou111T Of' tHli Purch1s11111 Agt11t 1111 county Rac:ordar of oral'lllf county. metaphorically boxed in an in-actor on childr_en's television Sr .. COST• Mese, Call!. 92621 • STATI Of CALll'ORNIA 110111 Publllhed In Orlngt CNll Dillly Piiot C•Ulornll, WILL SEU. .t.T ll'UBLIC 1"UC-"'-' Wiiiiam Matvln Faber IGtneral P1rt-TME COUNTY or OUllGE April ' •nd l6, 1m 1DJ6..n TION TO HIGHEST BIOOER FOlt CA.SH sane asylum. Tilda is a total programs wi~ch credits as nari. '550 DrlKOll 51., Long Beach. _ N•. A.·1S714 Cpeyable •I ttrM o1 •le )n'lawful lnllllilY escapist from reality who con-"Mr. I. Maginallbn" and ca111. n1s Es111te of JOSEPH LEEO 1"BRA.MSOM. PUBUC NOTICE of "" un11M1 s11t.1> 11 tM '°""' front Keith Randall Fiber, 6550 Orlscoll SI, also known •• J~ph L. Abramson, entr•nc• lo ti. Old Or111119 CCMltY fesses Inability "to find the "Tubby the Tuba." Selby has LM!I Beach, Callf. 9(1115 Oeceelild. NOTICI: Of TRUSTIE'S SALE Courthouff, local.a In "" 200 a1oc11 of C be root f pJ " n.. · 'led f milli 'd Otf'rlck Scott F1blr USO Orlscoll St NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to !ht No fC stnV Wn! Sanlt A/Iii llioul1Y91'd (IOl'rn«1!1' W..t U O peo e. u.ie v1s.i a-ew OD-Vt eo l"Ql\Q Beacti. e.ui. 908j5 ·• crldltors. of tile •llPv• n•IT\ed _decedent 0n ~ 11. 1tn. , 1 11:00 A.M .. COL-6th s1,..11, -~•nt• .Anll. ca111orn11. •II script's most memorable line. homes on the "Dark Shadows" Tt.1s bu.hieu 1s conducted tiv • Hmlted that a11 ptl'l(MtS 1111vr1111 c1a1m' aotlrt1t the ONIA.L MORTGAGE SERVICE co OF rfgti1, flft• 1ncr ll'lllf'm CO!'IV'IYld te end Pl · · · . h · perlnat1hlp, w1d decedlnt are rl!Qulred lo me flltm, CAL 1 F o RN 1 A' '' dUly 1ppijin1..s no-. lleld by It uncMr wild Owd of Tnnt ay1ng imaginary games Wit series. . . Wiiiiam M•rvl n Fiber. with 1111 n«eiwirv vouclltrs, In tlMI olflc• Tnntee under and p.urwant to Deed of I~ tlMI Pf'.llP'rtv lltuatld In ... Id COUnfY her is Sam, perhaps a kill er The stylized set~ by Ed Thl1 1t•rti'nent was flied with the coun· of Ille cllrk of the •bow en!lllMI court, or Tru11 recorded M•Y 29, 1Ht, •! fnslr. No. •ncl St•te ltlxrlbtd as: h h , · f I th w· · · ly Cltrk of Or1ng1 County on Aprll 11 to _prnent the!'n, wllll !hi !'llalHl'Y 2!D3:l "In b11ok 1973, pege 178 of otflc!al ol.11 ol IM IHMl'lllle ••1111 of Tnnlor ~ ~ ~sn t_ qu1~e orgot e~ _e __ .ittstem, a triple s 1m box 19n. ' YOU'Chers, to tti.t unc1er1111ne<1 clo Mr. Rac~d~~ In "" ofllce 01 ihe county ln lot t7 o1 Tr1et G2l, 11 .i-n on • outside world. setTnclos1ng a --pile o-f -__ _ _ au21_ Edward H~ stonc._.wo C~• or1v1.:...!'0 RecotdK-ol oranoa---Caunl'f'.--Sla.~of l'N'P rectll'dcd In Book 157...-P•f'I 1 . . Publllhed Or'ilnge Coast oitl;-Piiot BOJl'---i207, ---'Newport BeiCh, Cilllornl• canrornt•. WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUC· tnrough 14 ol-Mlllt+I..-.-~ Between them comes the geometric props, IS the af-Aprll 16, r.i. :ID. anc1 M•!J' 7, 1,73 1072.73 '2660. •hlc11 11 lhl p11c• 01 bull""' of "TION TO HIGHEST BIDOER FOR CASH racords. of Or•ns1t c°"""' ca11fornle. •• Person a symbol of anything fair's most attractive feature "" unciarslllfl'd rn •It m•tll~ p11r111n11111 IP•!l'•bl• at 11ma Clf .. 11 1n iawtut moMY Said L••satlold 1st1ta In l!"tera1t having ' , , . . · to the .. 11t1 of Hid. d«edtnl, wllhtn four of the United !f1tHJ 1t tht SOUfll front bun crHled b!l' lhlti.~rt1ln IN" dated , from guard to perhaps 90Cial "Echoes,'' prior to this , PUBLIC NOTICE monllll •11111' the nt11 publlca.llon ol 11111 enrr1nce to 111a orange county Old June 10, 1961, axacytld b!l' 11111 lrvtna f "t h th "I t tat" ff .;.• I notlc•. CourttlOU" City of S•nll A.nil ~Ill• ol Companr, I.I Lfi!IW' Md by MKco con ormt y, w o mou s SI en presen ion, was o e.'1' O Dated March '17, 1973. cillfornia.',11 t11iht. tllte •nd iniKest con-c~riora ion, • "Nava.di cerrioranon. 'Out With Bi111' Mike Duffy orders his youngsters. Renee Hassay and Danny Reiser, .to evi~t the fami1y dog as their mother, Jennifer Higginbotham, looks on in this scene from "Cheaper By the Dozen ," being staged afternoons this week by the Fountain VaHey Com· m~~ThM~ • words and ultimately woos the 300 college and community ROSE LEIKER '-BRAMSON v1yec1. 10 and l'IOW t1t111 by n uf'Oer ••Id ·Harbor 1nvutm1f!I co .•. • ca11torn11 · . . l'ICTITIOUS SUllNl'SS E1ac:ultl• of the wlll of 11111 DHd of Ttult In !hi prcper1!J' s1tulflod ln corpor1tron, doing bu11111111 •• OOVar ~·Sam into another room. leav-troupes serviced by the NAMI SlAtl:MliNT •boW• n•rn.d d1eed1n1 s.ald C011n1Y 1nd sta11 dlM:rlbed •s: s1iora1 o. .... 1opmtnt c11., " • ._.._ ing Tilda to whimper "mama American PI a y w rig h t s Tha foH01111nt per1oo111 •P9 doing bullneu IDWAll!O H. StONI Liii SI o1 Tract No. un. 1n 111111 city of whlth 1''" wn racordtd In ""' office ' ilS ' .Qtl C•....,. Dmt C01!1 Millil Covnty o1 Or•1111t1 Slafa of ol lhe <;;ounl'f .Rac_.. of Orafl9' COllll- mama" as the final curtain Theater as its award play for · 1. si.,.ra vu1...,1 '· 51 , r r 1 PO ... _,. c.u1om11. ~. ,.,. map recorded 1n book ;;. o:, ~~~' ;:i. 1'63 in Book ""' "• blessedly descends. 1972 Just how many of them Entarpr1sas, 11' £. 20lh St .. COit• fM51, ,-. 111,,-_h. '"'"""" nut "· P9llfl :io. 31 •nd 32 of Mlt.e11W.MOU1 Tiie •Jrlll ~~:.~,iii ,, .. _ . , . ' . C1tlfornft '2627 1 M1p1, ln tht ofllc• of fhll COl,lllty ~' common The existential strangulation took the dare IS not reported. W•!l'"' M. F .... 11. uoo Oowr on.,.·, Atl.-Y • •MU1tl1• .. r1eorder o1 said COl.llll'f'. dnlOIMI !on, 11 '"v' Of the r-":""""" flle•port 8eecl'I. C.111ornla 92660 PublhllHltt Or"lflVI COlll Dally Piiot, the i!rtel eddreu Ind olhef' mrmnon delcrlbed lboYI I• l)Ul'1IOrtad to bt. }· M1rg1rat s. Fas.ell. 1400 0owr April t. 16. n. :ID, 1m 1~·7l dell9natlon, If any, of "" ,..,. Pf'OPlrfy c~M:..::''"' Otlw, Mawport l111Cht OrlYI, NIWPOfl 8HCI\, Clllfornla 92660 -PUBIJC NOTICE dascrlbed •bOYI 11 Pll!"POl'tld lo bl: 30ll Thi undtnl(lned Tni•tM d!Klilms MrY Tllll tMl"'"1-h cand.alld-tiv.._..vn;~ Donn)'brOQk Ll'll· COiia Mell, C.tl!ornJa, llafllllty tor fllf"/ 1_,-1e1MM,_ol tM ttrwt corpor•ted auociatton oltlll' ~ • Of•noe County, .......,_ ...... ptrtnilfthlp. --The llndlnlgnld Tn111M dltdllt111 "'' ..,.,,,..M,..,,.. lllillf CCll'M'IOl'I ~ff Mttpril1 s. faltltl • --llabfllty laf Im' fllfllf'P'ICIMSt"ol' the ttnMt eny, Nlowft hffell'I. Thi• •letemlnl •• !lied Wiit! tM ,__ NOTlc• to CR•DITOlll addrnl •nd oltlilr cOlflrnon c111•natlon, II Said .. 1. Wiii bl "'*· but w4ltloul ""' " _ C _ ........ ,.. SUPl'llllOll COUltt Of' TM ~ -~nt or warranty. nprK• or 1,..ir.d. "' .......... _,.., en J • -n.a.tl OP Col.LlfotlNIA POil .ny, . !'9flrdl"9 ""'· '"""'"'°"· or ~ ltn. THI' c;ouNTY o, CHlANOa hid Ml• wlll bl inada, .,_.t wllllolll CV!Ylllrancett lo pa!J' It'll l"ln'lllnll'll ..... ~ . f't4S11 ........ 7JUI CO'vtfitnl OI' • .,,an..,, ~ OI' Jtrlplltld, (loll Wftl ol "" not•(•) llCUfad bV &fld -' "P~frt, l>r. FREDRICK C. LUDWI& Publllhtd Oflflll' CO.it ()ally Piiot, £st1'9 of JESSIE M.t.Y WELLS ,..._rd!nt 111111, POIMSMofl, or -Dllld llf TMI to-wtl • 17•.MUt ..... ti\ l~­AprU 16. »t..•• •rid MilY 1, 1973 1on.73 o.tuNd. CV!ftbr•nut. lo Pl!l' Ille ttmalnlnt pt'!:"-,...., ~ ••• ~,In ltld NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN lo lht dPill sum of 1ht notellJ tolCWtd try "Id ~1) ildYanca 11 .,..,. l.lllOlr tt.. ,,.,_ ----------lcredlton 111 the •bovto Nrned d1eacltnt o..d'if TMI, 11).wlf: ID.toa.U. with In-Of ,..ld•Deld OI Tr1111, .;,.., Chll"ll" and PUBLIC NOTICE tt1at 111 perlQl\I 111vtrv c1111n1 191lnst "" t.rflt """'°"' ~' Df'OYldad ,,,_ tt!ld .. ,.._, ot 1t11 Tru1"' afld ot 1t1e trusts 1~-------------i "Id daclOlnt ar• rlQulrMI ta Ill• ""m, not.l•I, ld\ranct't t• •nor• under "" '-""' Cl'Hltd ti!!' lilld ~ of tn11t with Ille MCllSMl'Y vouchart. to the of Mid Otlld of trust, ,,.... Cl'ltrtff •rid Tht btMflelt.., Ul'lllll' Mid Otlld Ill' ¥ AP/lit. 17 SO~OOL BOAR'P- E LE cr-1~0-N~- PICTlllOUI IUSINliU l#ldffll111\td It Iha OfflCI of tllOfllf't' I•~ ol 11'11 ltvt"H tl'ld of 'Ill TMI Tru.I Mrttofort ldClltld Ind dfll'vtfad NAM• nA.Tl¥ENT COLOfrlE\. HEltltlNG s. FltANl(LIN, 107 Uldlffd by Mid Dffd Of Trwf. 10 lht \lncllrtl91'110 • '1"'1'1lttn DtcllrlttO!'I Thi lol)Owlng per_,• ,,, dolno l!•st lift! 1frffl. C01l1 Mnil, C1llfort1l1 Tiii blnefldary unOtr' .Mlli Dlltd of of O.fautt Ind Olmarid for .. 11, ri ·• D11Sln111• a•: · 92627. VllllCll ls 1111 plea ol' 1111111'11-' of trw1 lltrltofor. •>tacvttd tll!I cltllY't!'ed wrltttn Notk• Of Oltautl Ind tlactlon lo THE &AYSIOE co .. ""'' Offlc• lo• ll!t uncter1lll!lld In •II mtlltl"I p1tt.i11h'G to "" "'~ • .,.,...,. Daclaraf\on Siii. tht \lllCllll'i.lol'lfd ctUMd Mid Notte. 1m. N""*t ~tch, Cati!, n..:i. to It. "'''-Of lilld dKIOlnt. within f0\11' of Dtf1111t •lld °""'"" far Sii•, •ncl • ol Oetllllt trld" l:littlon lo *'" tO tM Ja~ lt09'1' lllfkt', '"' Sltlnnu St,. mot11M '"" lfll ftr•I 11Uflllcel!on tf thh wrln.n frtOllcl ot Dtfatilt •l'ld llael!IWI to l'llCordH In !tit c.owntr whltr• ti. rul. lrvlna. Cal!f tt10J IMlfl(••... Siii. TIMI undar'tl9ntd UllHCI tekt Noll« ~ootrty 11 loc•IM. JHn Ma,f. &Ill'~. $236 $llnnlll" s1.. Dllld Aprll J, lt73. ol OtflUll ilnd iltctlon fo S.11 IO .,. o.i.r M•l'Cfl ''" "" -.----IJ'Ylllf. Call!, tnOS:---J..-M.t.XINa...nt.e't'--~ In tha C°"!'!'I' """""' "" •t•I BC:l'llFICIAL J£kVICI! co .. Thi• t11nlnn1 ti cotldw.ted tl!J' .,, kl• • lllllCUll111. ol lfll •Ill propttty 11 locat'fd, • trtma. W • di.,...... of rile '"°"" llilmMI dlC-.nt Cllllll'Jlll ~ Sltfvlce r.o. tlTLe l=--NCI! AND .ma 11.--.111' C4M.Ott•L "lftUfO t. NIJU(\.111-ol Calltomiil, n aald TMIM 1'11.Ul'f ~NY Altllf :... Tiiie 11atement ••• lad ¥1'1111 l1w Coun• 117 ••" lttl\ ilrHI lf 'J(a.ftW1Jl!lfl(lld, -ey L'I~ ttAU'itv "' ti< Clti'l"" Of Or"1119t--<..,,,.ty Ol'l-AOtllJl. t•ft Meta, Ca/ii, mD .t.Vlllortlld SIONtufl Avtf'lorllH SltMtw• 1m. Tll1 tTMJ ,..-nn 0.11!-Mwll •· 1m --ri:.,~ ~ublllMd N""'°"' Ha.raor ,...,. 1tt1n P.•11 Attof'MJ fir l•tc-111"1c S.--CiiTil>l!Mlf 'fl1ltl the Or.,,.. C..W Dtttf ...... ""' ., °"""' ,., Dt.-~. <!'""'-t . M, ---.iu, -II C.Mllll Dlt Mar, Ll'f'N-.-PUbllthfd Of'al\OI CoNI Otlly Pllot, PublltMct Or""' Coa11 o.11'( "llot, ll'l#OfltNd . Orlntt CO\'tt 0.111 ll'llot, llflot. Newport a.di, C..lllonlf•· Hirn t. ===--:__-='---_:::::.::.:I....::=:.::..::::=::-:..::=:::.::..::.~~r:-·!::·:.::::~:'.:'.:'...=.:'.'.'.'...:'.:!:::.=::...c:.---------ll..;.i1 ,., n.,.. w M•!l' 1, 1m lOM-73 ,4,pr11" w. ,,_ '°· 1m 1t1H.1 ""°1114 n. aim l) ionn p, 1 .. 1m • , -.,.,73 • • ' ,, • I • • • • ' . .•. Mond•I, April lb, 1973 oAiL V .PILOT 31!. .'fOMGHT'S Harrison's 'Henry'ReachesBroadway 8y WILLIAM GLOVER ptexiUes too lnlltmle for mask, we might as welt ha"' "An intttesting bore." one NEW YORK (AP) -Rex review, bLs pervene beloved, two."' onlooktr"'"wb"heard-to venturt ' .- . TV .. IDGHLIGHTS • • SOLID SURFING! •• Harrison leads an _ ir0tv1<lt'ng her l aM her da """t at lntennlssJOD. lt was a con--= O"i"" .,.... "•" er ar-After revelation that the tradtcUon that ' might have "EXPRESSION SESSION II" ri'LA e 7:SO -"The Paleface." Bol>-Hwe and Jane II.~ bj OJ!!! of Dope's .mosLmeinorable. lnOvle comedleo from 1948. cast through "E:inperor Henry rive at tbe'casUe, a!OogWllli a presumea ma-aiiiaillil\]nong charmed the author. IV," one or clasiic drama's dc:ictor--dttennined to--: eod since regained bis seMes but1j;l~;;;~;~~=J .NBC D 8:00 -· Laugh-In. Carol BUrnett, De .. rilOnd . Wilson , Ross Martiil and Paul Gilbert shllre tb~ fl/A~~ Row~ an_d Martin toni_gbt. _ _ • ABC. D 8:00 -Paul McCartney Special, The fper Beatie, a com~rfonner who.e music l1U changed. tile life style of a generation, appt!ars. with bis wlf'\! Linda and their _groyp V(mgs. . KGE'l' fll 8<00 -What You Don't Know .Can Kill you. A report of the Presidential· Commission on l'ubllc ~tb,-eJ<aminlng-ways-of-diAAe1Dinatin bellth.Jn!ohnatlon to prevent deaths of millions of Americans from diseases that could be cured. CBS D 10:00 -Bill Cosby Show. Remember the Smothers Brothers? They're back to'night along w!tli singer Maxine Weldon. ' -TV : :DAILY LOG Monday Evening APRIL 16 •=•m---·llil- Wlfllllliii'ruoy IRl u.,.i Brido· ''· IS Of, Stevt Ml.llrlJ', •ttracta the llllllfGUS attention of Luclllt 1:00eauimmimm-· "'""·"" • -""" ... • Cf) II.I ._ broken let frorn • skii111 accident. • Q!l!NIC - -: tC) • ..... (8r) ...... (drl) '66--So9'11• (1)111 s.111 Lor1n, Prter Finell, JIU ·Hnklns. • Wedld Dull• AIM . An lsn•ll ltadtr end th• ex·wlf1 , •Ja. f'llllbm.MI of • Neri officer iofl'I fOfttS In II 511r Tnt tr1ckin1 dalt!t • Germen 11neral who Is w1nted es• wer crlmtn1l GI Jl_lll_ D(l)_@mMC-- less impo!ini P a r a d o x delusion. austalned the deception only 11 .....,.,-··~rnatoly ms' tailed PliandeUo as eyer Ill ixol!lng 0""'~·-~··· for the thin tlne,•be1-n \IU'O!lib ~~r caprice, a final at the Barrymore Theater. sbactow~and ·substance, -fa.ocy ironic· twist is given to tbe. Harrison, absent f r o m and fact or, as this Henry IV phllooopltic escapade. He kills ""'Broadway since the glories of ~~am, irony ol tX• his amorous rlval , and tO istence. • escs.pe punishment m u s t "My Fair Lady,•• belongs to henceforth sham inSanity, the stellar elite who, by an-p'ped in h' dece' clent cllche, can encPant by i-+--~-----"--'---tr_a.:.:_ __ "~-~-o~wn~-·.._'1. __ . declaiming a phone _dir~tory. The challenge here is not that severe. But indisputably the_ Luigi Pirandello charade only comes fascinatingly alive in scenes where Harrison quirks and ranls through elusive illusion. THE EMINENT others, in- cluding Eileen Herlle, Paul Hecht, David Hurst a n d Douglas Seale, have little to do but set up his mock·regal en- trances and exils. . The text, tranil:\ted by -steplien llich and trimined in the Clifford Williams staging, tells of a latter-day Italian fl~ ble who for 20 years afte r a bump on tile noggin imagines he is an 11th century emperor. Being rich, his fantasy is sustained by servants until a .......... ,....,. A~L NIWI IN COLOal "THE GREAT WALTZ" (G) Pia c.i.t~haNt•"• -'11..J. _.........,. !:lltfDD.tlf ?D::. .... , .... ..__..,,_.....__... -"" -.: ....... !:INEDDtlf ?I'!' .. ··.'...-·.:. ·"~.U.'C-!tL"' _.,. -, .... STADIUM -I ~ ..... .UURL:-f.-'-'-u.!2' -"II·~'.!. ·-'·"'"ll• $TADIUM"2 ~ o.. ••.l..Lt1a.-r•.fm -.,,. ,,,-,-·n~•·" STADIUM •3 -~ .. ~u;;.c.llL!::If" ... _. .,,. ,. ·--n''-' STADIUM ·!,;:.:, .. ..-:>"..ll<'~--Cf.l"lll!•'l'"3 ''Slewtti'" . ... .. ~ Milty for M•..-IN) "lutterflin AA Pl"ff'' ''So-. & C•rol llTecl·& Ali<•" (R,) r "Flddler On 'th• Roof' .. "On A CINr lbiy, You"c•n __ s .. For~rnr'' lG) "The· G-ay" IPGl , A"d "Lady Sl"91 Tito lluff" IR l "Poteldon Adventure" and tPGI "Fun" KLONDIKE ICE ARENA o M llt SK.\TIHG o ICE HOCKEY o f!GUllE Sl(.\TltlG o SHI D l~.\TIHG o HllYAT[ a C.llOU, lfoiSTllUCfiOHS o SU.lfS -SAllS -RENTALS -~lPAlft) o $P(CIALllAl tS10GftOIJI$ o ft(STAUll•NT NOW OPEN •IH•YATIONI •DI C\,AHll MOW •llt'IG IA~IM of'EH 7 DAYI A Wll" a ..OllOAYI 66~ PAULA~INO AVI., COSTA MESA • Nl.\11 SOU!rl COi\5T fLAtA· 1 l'Ml>Hl (11 .. IJl.li'SO 81-lldlt (C) (21N).-U.--"(ldv)·'ll 9nr9....... -J1mtsCUn,M1rl11111a'llm,La11t1 ''WONDERFUL l:ll CIJlliW•""* ~~~=t:r~~ :i:~ AUSTRIA'' ~~~ ~·-Coron• del M•r 'fl MM: (IO) ....,._ .. (dn) ·eo ""' sPMd beyolld wblch It is d•• i:~~~~~~~~~~ll ' ah 673-6260 -Dftid udd, John ""· Julio IH ... to-·-"'·... + u· As . ERFO ANCES/REOUCED PRICES Mtms. tht story concem 3 yo1111i 11111mba11 U CIJDS-W•ltlrC..011!1 .. I ......... ---NATIONAL G'ENERAL "Jiddlc Roof. 0""''"'*'• ..... "" -.... ,,,... THEATRES • er th ...... -... . . ,;.,~,""'"" ""''""" . I~~~~ I on e ...., ...,.. ®)Miiie: (C) (211) "'Jllt ..... Sbowtlma 7:1f 1ttd t :U. Clll Tl!Ullf" for Simhy Sdled1,1la ll!J--"A -Ullm" I.,.) 'rl -Ala """' ,,1 '"'""'' • Shirt., Eaton. I·---m ...--~--lf)h · nit rr11t ,..,.. IE La CitMa .. Crillll ·--~· llCIJ -· ... -(R) -1• 8 Cil D Ill..._ Mertin, °" lent of 1bsenct from 8 ...... tw..... TodlY's World. HMS •s press sec.-1 Cl) 'f,,. .• t.i11,i 11• rtllry to • Cooartsslonll CllldldalL I ..... ,___ ···•·fW. -·-"Aft ........ lty llllf llnkletter Urntls tlll lllO'Wiftl tllrn ·I LM I.lier • story of ... ,.. Alill! Gf)lhl111-. I l ~'!t. "':! '",llm 1 been lb1odoned tollunrer and 1 LHu Qulftlt "Haydn's OIM squa or.. 4} " 20" Pait II 0 Jim; 11 M..a ID,..., f'rlt BIC Iii,_-· ID 111ktr 111•""""" .. , ::::.c:.. !l)M--l!i)V-1=-•--·-" .. -·(R)TotloFlolds....... lO<IOll (l)lil --IR) Tho CJ) ........ .,_ ~mothers Brothel'I llld ...... Ma· D "' llliw rricl 11 ll&lil 1111 Wildon llJISl. (Radlldulld) •-tCJC21M!""'""""" ocn.nfl(tlln (com)·-"''" JIM-· m Ill -(j)ToTsl!MTrollt iPI) .... ._ (J)Tllelldltl bi•. &l)Ylrltl: ,__ 1 ... A Id: a-'-= (2IN) -1t1nc1· • -· ~ fiiiiiii 1r.-w -w -(myS, ... 41 111 -• .,~.1111. -£dw11d G. RoblntOll, P1ul luUI. &J $llerts ~ ..._ GIOrtt S.nders. ll'JO It INI «G""'-m11n...., lXUUSIVl OlllGl.CO, llGAllMEJIT 01*! Dally trtn1 11:.u U .. A.. CITY CI NEMAS LADIES DAY EVEll:Y TUES .. SOC {ALL LAOIES a SENIOR CITIZENS 111• TD J:M,i • S451Vial.ldo Nnrport 9-ti .. ~-:6TWl60 SHOWING NOW ROBERT REDFORD ::Jeremiah Johnson" .... IPGI CLINT U.51'\VOOD "JOE KIDD" BMCh B~l1¥ard SOI.Ith of Gll'd1nGr0111 Frwy. Watmfnstll' • 534-6282 , ..... -"VANISHING PO!Nt'-'-(l'G) MOH...#11. onH ~15 P.M. Slt. & SIM. DnN S:lii •.Ill SltOW S'fo\ITS 6:4S P.M. Phn T..... ICtay- ICartoon Of TIM: JO'• '•rfor!'114111Cn 7i,JO & •:JO WlDNISDAY • FllDAT -6:»&:l0o1Di>O ..... SATUIDAY • MSMY OftM 11:11 DlllT PICTIJRE THAT CEllllRJ\TIS THE TIMELESS 10Y Of ORl(JINJ\L INNOCENCE. ~l'ICTUUJ -"rlMIY ~ zet"•ll etJJ HIS F~fllM SINC.E"RCMEO & JUU~T' .. oroTHer sun Sl§Ter Moon" --CRAWM FAL.Uc'NER I JUOl 80WKfR-AlEC cu11-ies .i POPE INNOCfNT Ill -----....::"'DONOVAN / ....xwi """"'"°" DYSON lOVEtl ___ __. .. susoCECCHID'AMICO . KENNETH ROSS. UNAWERTMUl.lER -FRANCOZEFFIRElll / -.aii., LLICw-K> PERUGIA ~---~--·· '-·•WICOZEFFIR<W I ·A.I llONCO.OR° ~ A~P!Cfl#t( • • IPGI ·!l'o-:,i@o I '-~.' -WES? 2nd TOP ATTRACTION BILLllllBERf' c:osur-CULP l•ffll](I!\' I ll0Gllll1 . • I ' L .. • m TUI llot re TY M""" l~':o·~ llil_,....,. COAST PREMIERE COLO• m o ......... :• ~~r 11 TM u.111111t EB 42 Pl• &> ....... ,,,..,. lt:OOllOD !E!l!Ell-m ..... _ OOl])ilj- l!J TM AUIM1 Fe•llr 1J DIM Stmp llyolcl 1:19 8 ([l 11 ... "The Rlwr" Pert I (R) A' h1fd.r\din1 outllW 1•n1 tryla1 •to re1aln thl spolls from • ierkl of robberies drim M1rsh1I billofl off • cflff 1nd Into • rush· kli rtwr. J1tk B1m, Mlrllm Colon end SHrn Pickens rue'*- @)f1101•• ..... 0 Movll: "Dlleu•m" (ICl·fi) '&o -Ward Ramsey. m Ttlli or eo .. 1a"'"1Aoccn1s m-"'"' ED DDUT lllrtil ..,....., Finl of • 5-part prolflrn on tilt Common M1rket. Iii) oa ..._ llto 1ut 0 111 m ...,..1. <Rl "'"" ·~ Pterencts 1r1 11"11cll by Cllul Bur· flltt, Demond Wiison, Ross Mertil 11:311 IJ ([) C1S tn Mtrie: (C) •KW , e4ld Cllllllllllll P111I Gilbtrt. hllW' (dra) "U-.J11'111 Lallh, Don 8 CIJ(j)aJ!MC14l J1•11 MufTIY .. hll ~ fol'fll!I' 8Utl1 Pell\ 0 at C JMMr C... ShttkJ' MceartlllYr • C91""poltf·~ GrteM-ls substltutt host. "'*' 'musk llu cll11111d tlll lifl" 1J MM Im e $1i1tm ..,.. ol. II 1111:ir1 pnerlllon .,. a (})@ m Dkli Cmlt Ru Har· ;.m wltll Ills wff• Linda and their nson 1um. erOTHersun s1STer .MOOO" PLUS BILL COSBY L ROBERT CULP t..r- "HICKll AND IOGGSI Jtl!RY Ol!r.ACH. LEIGH 1.t.YlO• YOUNG 'THE GANG-THAT COULDll'T SHOOT STIAIGNT" lNDS THUIS .UllL 12 . -"SOUNOll"CICELY --rYSON" -- I R K" Nl IMUIS. NCI 12 " l1MWUCIHH50lf' .. "JUDGI IOY UAH'' • • • , --""l~°:.-lln.Milf m J oTslllMTrollt lt:.,,-• 12:00m __ _ ---.,_ ·1M<WIWWfHDM1C-&JMl•RfftlSlllw C. 111 fll A nport of thl I'm!· dtntlal Commission on p111l'll pub> U:30 A Nns •· lie Mllttl. Thi Pf'Ol'lnl aemlnts ID ~: "'1'11111 llllf ......... wa,i fl dlsSlmlnatinl IM•fttl in· (dre) 57-Mark Damon. 1 tormltion to pfMnl daths JI 11111· .... Ctllly 11on1 ~ Amwkons """ dbml ""' 1:00 Cil 0 D Cll - could bl e1.111d.. '-..... 1:4511 Mnil: "TN nptln1 , ... tE Mlldtltis• (a~) '4~J1mes Ca&ney .. m-·--. II !Mfr. (llM) -Y*f 3:10 II Mwlo:..,...; of M .... -· (dn) •47"4dl wplno, ~ Cll"-l""l ~t---.. -•· Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES • l:ltfl'(C) -• -(com) '61-8ob Hope, Lan• Tuntr. 3• (I) (C) •A .., Tn r.t fall" P1rt l (ihl '65-Utinrd G. RobintOll. Feraus McC1ell1nd. lllltCl -..... -• ""*" Conti. (dra) 164--Fnink SI· utn, 0..11 Mertift.. M1111 If tM - ' I , EDWARDS I 1\1 \l\CI \lfR Hh•!-'-~ Al hi'Aio-4\ :';1A lo.4!,A • '-i79 4 14 1 J -" ' . . . .. . . .... 1,1 •••••• ••••• ••••••••• •tACH •l'<IO AT t.l~tS • • .., CO•lt MW• • ..... DtlllO ••• •4J'·••l'lll • HUNfllOft1'nN t1•,ar.H NOW TOGETHER· McQUEEWMaoORAW THE GETAWAY """"'""" ~ ft. ., ~ ~ y ) • ' EDWARDS (l\f \I I I f \T ~;R HIL~~l•I .:.T .a DAlr.4\ O'i' .t. Mt .A. • 7 7thlKOIDWHK IM TOM ' THRU -LAUGHLIN BILLY JAC • -. • ( f- ~ l - -.. ') . ., . ,' c. ,, • v. .. . . . ·~·· ........... _ . ...,, . • .. a DAILY PILOT Mor.clay, Aprll 16. 1'73 . ., 3Religions Celebrate Holidays Justi~e at Last Tijuana Police · . Lite in Space, ANIMAlogk"¥1r-. ·: .. • • " ' .. . . Mono'i>oly ~ecaril Recognized - Collect .Exp_er~-E~ ·: . . ' .... . .. ' By The Associated Press ,._ 'llie calendar today linked observances Or three of the world's major faiths as dir[i.. tians were In the second day or their pre-Easter Holy Week, Jews ~epared , to be g i n celebration oI Passover at S1Dldown aOO Moslems ob&erv ... ed the annlversary of the birth or Ille Prophet Mohammed. Roman Catholics carried Qilve. branches and palms on • Sunday as t h e y com-• memoratecl Christ's triumphal (1N SHORT ... ) • entry into Jerusalem five days before his crucifixion. ln Jerusalem, more than 5,000 pilgrims r e t r a c e d Christ's path into the Holy Ci- ty on the six;th Palm Sunday under Israeli rule. - ~ • cr .. h Killa 4 -BRICK TOWNSHJF, ·-N. J . (UPI) :--At wl n ·e n g in e aircraft crashed today in an area of rivers and lagoons bordere4 by a housin g development, killing f o u r pas~gers, authorities said. j'lt was a mifacle no one in the housing area" was killed, said pplice SJX>kesman Joseph Maguire. Parts of the plane - believ:ed tQ be a twin-engine Beecbcraft -were {oun<f scattered through .a one-mile ~~-! .. .'~mpassing a number--of homes and -.tfio- Meeteteconk River. eGMAect11ed WASHINGTON (UP!J -A Ralph Nader-backed consumer group said today General Motors has failed to recall .. 100,000 Cadillac cars \Vitti potentially catastrophic steer· ing failures. ·Lowell Dodge, director of the Center for Auto Safety, urgeG'COffgress-1rgIVr 111e- NEW YORK (AP) -ll ls official and nudisputed: the record for the longest Monopoly game e v er played belon~s to a group of people m Danville, Calif. • The Californians, who played in relays for 820 hours ln 1971, were Ig- nored by lhe 197! Guinness Book of ·world Reoord\. whiCh .listed the 1271'-hoor game Played by a group of · SCottish students. SCO'IT PREV AHO USE of COneord, organizer of the West Coast Monopoly marathon, reacted heated- ly to being ignored by -, govemment the power to '1 force automakers· 1o recall uP'1 T•l•lloto cal'll with safety, defects... On Probation e V.S. Plotted? Warren Russell, prose· • By United Pm• !Jllematlonal cuting attorney for San Cairo' J ff · · J Juan County, Wash., · ' 5 s e m 0 1 c 1 a leaves court after i· udge newapaw , Al Gomhouriya said today the UnLted States defers sentencing for collaborated i n Saturday's falling to file income sabotage of American-owned tax 1968 return. Proba- oil storage tanks in South tion conditions are pay- Lebanon. in~ all taxes and not The editorial said the action drinking alcohol. was taken to ·create friction ~---=------­ Guinness aft.er ' • w c ·· devoted 34 da)'S of our lives to establish a world'• record." Also heated wu ~ I.et· • ter sent to Guinness editor l"Orrls Mcwhirter b J Edward P. Parker, presi- dent of the makers of ~fonopoly. D E M A"1'1·DING "Jm. mediate steps .to correct your error," Parker said he even saw "a most serious threat to peaceful A n g I o -America'n tela· lions." Thi~read prospect was removed when Parker an- nounctd be received 1 le~ ler from McWhlrler pro- rnl!lng ,to make the ''"' rection In the nm prlnUng to be lasued -· McWHIRTER allO ..... mloed to relv In tile future on Parker's ''~ly Marathon RecOrda Doc um e ntatlon Com- mittee" for all future U.tings. "I am most grateful to )'OU for wr iting,'' McWhirter. said l'n hls let· ter to Parker,· HbtcaWlt there Is nothing which we • djslike more than to have imperfections." Breakthrough? Pharaoh's Grave Probed by Rays PASADENA (UPll -A Nobel Prize winning physicist is using cosmi' rays to probe a pyramid ·ror a pharoah's burial chamber. If he finds it, the discovery would be the greatest in Egyp- tology since T11.tankhamen'.s tomb was found in ln2, lhe scientist, Dr. Luis Alvarez, said. "We have proved.--the feasibility of our technique," said..Af.varez. The eiperiment is under So far, Hirsch and bio!hg y professor Dr. Cornelius A. G·.· Wiersma have noted that the crB:bs have fantas tic • memories. "A crab can remember its surroundings so well that it will recognize the change in position of a background ob- Ject a~ting to on1y l/&Oth of an inch, although it didn't see the change ~ing made," Wiersma said. ['"-~~I!~~!--) ·e Ages Same NOGALES, Ariz.~ (UPI) - Despite the· advances o-f modem medicine, the oldest way in Egypt a~the pra~id of Khefren. whose face has been immortalized on the Sphinx, ,Alvarez said in a lec.ture af' Cal Tech. e ·Crab Study PASADENA ( A P ) Researchers at CalTech are studying tiny crabs which in- habit tidal pools in an effort to draw a link with the human memory process and determine its p h y s i c a I makeup. "There's no direct ap- plication to humans right now," Dr. Richard L. Hirs.ch, a psychologist, said of the pro)- ect. "Rather, its' to find out what the stuff of memory is." people in ancient Rome lived just as long as today's senior citizens, a cancer scientist s3Td hefe. The reason, said Dr, Roy L. Waliord, is that sicence has not actually influenced the basic rate of aging. He held out hope it ·may do so in the future. "Great progress bils been made from ancient ROme to the modern United States in extending av'erage longevity," Walford, a professor of pathology at UCLA -Medical ,School, told an Amerk:an Cancer Society s c i e n c e writers' seminar. e 'Eye' Built TIJUANA, Mexico (AP! - The flrat women to be hired as police officers in Tijuana are beiDc aulgned-to tourist crossing areaa where male of- • ficen bave betn accused of obakedowna. SAN DIEGO CAI') -A researcher into lbe or.lglns of We believes that living creatures exist beyood earth -but . a single word from outer space still is ~· "AU the evidence we have· from aStronomy, from con- ditions on other planets arfd ftom oar ta15oratotirui-Ieads us to believe that life does exist elsewhere," Dr. Cyril Pon· namperuma said ln ~n.interyiew. AFl'ER STUDYING RECENT findings, he said an ir- regular movement observed for seven of the closest 100 stars convinced him that they poosess· planetary· systems. ' Chief of Police Ernesto Vizcaino Garrlda oaid he fired eight mo ... pollCemen 11SSigned to traffic near .the U.S. border!·;;;;~~~~~~~ croaing gates. THE OFFICERS were iden- tlfied by tourists as men to whom they gave money In the guise of traffic fines, Vizcaino said. He personally drove one of the patrolmen, Manuel Guido, to confront a San Diego couple in their home. There have been dozens of such dismissals since January as Tijuana authorities try to improve tourist relations. ' THE MAYOR. Ma re o Bolanos Cacho, said be is loo~ in_JQ__ whether "the payoffs involve only a few police or lf there Is corruption higher in the department among command officers.'' He said Americans have complained of being held in a police traffic island a blQCk from the border until "traffic fines" ranging up to $12 epch were paid. A command officer was moved frolit the traffic island for failing to report the prac- ti~, Bolanos Cacho said: • LET'S on INVOLVED TOGETHER VOTE APRIL 17th· RICHARD P. ALEXANDER "A Young Man Of Adlon" ' OCEAN VIEW SCHOOL DISTRICT 27 Yoars Oki Native California• Chaplalo-HuntlftCJtGtl loacli JaycHS - Past ChalrmGll Jol•t Actlo• Commlnee For Release of POW'1-MIA'1 of H.I. Active Leader-Golden Wftt Homeowners Anoe. P'•ld for 'Y Rieii•nl P'. Alnll'Mltr •10 A"""' Ort'lf, ~UllllllllOll Bttell Fredrick C. Ludwig, M.D., Sc.D. VIEWS ON PUILIC EDUCATION . ' . .. '· ' PASADENA (AP) -When a BOARD FUNCTION Second. the strengthening Of decision and policy maldng abilities of the board by the formation of technically com-- pctent ad.visory groups accountable to the board. As the ex- ample of the Educational Priorities Study Committee (EPSC)' shows, citizens committees can do this effectively. between the guerrillas and Saudi Arabian and Lebanese authorities. A.ls(>, Libyan leader Moam~ mar khadafy said that Beirut turned down an offer he made to send "thousands of Arab .volunteers" to defend Lebanon against Israeli attacks. Hands-off Urged colleague . suggested to Dr. The duty of ·the school board Is Mt only to define educational Nicholas George that it was policy but also to ~udlt educati.onal perform~nce. Only th.ls unlikely that anyone ~ver dua~ function can·1nsure the climate of confidence essentui wo Id build a machine to to public schools. . ~ . · ha The Independent exercise of these two board functions is d1stmgu1sh between s pes, threatened. This threat comes neithr from th govrnmnt nor much a~ the human eye does, from th public, but from the complex-and--tectmical "-Mturc he tooR 1t as a challenge.1 of modern education itself, V.'hich almost precludes supcrvi- Third, Scholastic 8.nd cost performance audits ot the district' 1>a.rticularly ot its innovative programs. Such audits are cru'' cial to improving the decision and policy making abilities orl the board and meetng the increasing public demand. for ac.J Countabllity .• CQMMUNICATION At Coast Locations George, an e 1 e c t r c a 1 slon by laymen. As a result, Jay boards are in danger of be· engineei-ing professor a t coming mere extensions of school administrations. r---,---a-1n:dl11ns-J:;auded1------ CalTech, decided he could THI LAGUNA CRISIS ------------build ~-machine1hat-could·!ee The crisis-in Laguna can be tracedDick-~this dilemma <> _onlmended for ASBS status ·the d1ffe~ between. a dog which is neither peculiar to ou r corrimuniJy nor to public Ttt'e n1ethod, the results and the implications of the perform· ance audits and the board decisions must be explained lo the public. The EPSC report recommended creation ot a qews~­ letter published by t he board, providing data about the' schools. I support this Idea. Such a medium will provide the· hest vehicle to disaem.inate-.object.ive infonnation about the- district. HONG l!ONG (UPIJ - China said today that the In- dians occupying W o u n d e d Knee "fought hard a n d heroically." In a long evaluation of re- cent Indiah protests in the United States, including the occupation at Wounded Knee and the Bureau of Indian Af- fairs in Washington, the· of- ficial New China News Agency said Indians "live in the bot· tom Of U.S. society." e Skylab Moved CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. (AP) -The giant Skylab space station that will house ·nine American astronauts for a total of~five months in earth orbit moved to its launch pad today for preparations leading td'e May 14 launching. The station, as large as a five-room house, was cradled under a protective metal shroud atop a Saturn 5 rocket that stood upright on a large tracked .transix>rter vehicle. The transporter moved out of an assembly building at 7 a.m. for the 3.5-mile trip to the pad, expected to take several hours. .. ,_..,.._ ' r - LOS ANGELES (AP) - A 27-mile segment of coast from north of Mugu Lagoon to Cor- ral Beach in Malibu and parts of the Channel Islands should be designated as Areas of Special Biologic al Significance, the s t a t e Regional Water Quality Con· trol Board for the Los Angeles region recommends._ An ASBS designati'on under state JaW means that the area should be •1subject only to natural stresses" and man's influence should be kept to an absolute minimum. THE COASTAL area de~ignated in the recom- mendation has been referred to by the Department of Interior as "the most outstan- ding )nshore marine area left between Santa Barbara and San Clemente." Significant biological features in C I u d. e l:elp and clam beds, tide pools, offshore canyons and open beaches. THE CHANNEL Islands rec- ~ and a cat. schools. Prior to the 1971 election, the school administration included the Sa:nta Barbara "That struck me as practically controlled the district. The present board major- and Anacapa I s l ands in ..,something"' that really should ity, brought into existence by a dissatisfied electorate, chal- the Channel Island National be simple" he said in an in-!enged the administration 'vith~ut defining alternatlv~s .to . . ' its pollcles. The retulting confhct between board ma.ior1ty Monument and San Nicolas tervlew. .L .. Jj and administration climaxed in a recall election 8.nd a series Island an important rookery He te,amed WI t-.-=. ~mes of dismissals. The present eJection campaign. is nothing more ' . d . Thomasson of Re<:ogn1tion than the continuation of that very conflict. The question t& for seals and sea hons .an ~a~e Systems Inc., of Van Nuys, to ask now is': Who Is going to control the school district-the of S outh e rn Califonua s combine 8 laser beam, a previous administration through its obvious slate of candi- largest bed of giant kelp. patented Image con~rter and dat~ or a .ne~· board genuinely independent of the school The we.st end of Santa a computer ihto such ·a adnunistration · r cat a Ii n a I s land , th e machine. MY PROPOSED SOLUTION southeastern tip from Jewf1Sli • Drllllng Trip · ~:!,~:us~ ~s~:t~ublic ~ntrol of our schools, three condi· Point to Pinnacle Rock, and · . First, the election of board members on the basis of their ln- Famsworth Bank, known for LA JOLLA (AP) ..... Scripps depend ent ability to define policy consonant with the wishes Institution of Oceanography the electorate rather than by their block support of the its purple coral, were also in· plans its next-ocean-drilling i:lmlnlstration or some other political entity. eluded in the designation. exploration aroun<l the islands . ALSO RATED blologicajly Valuable was a ll of 8an Clemente. Island except for a sma11 section near a Navy sewage outfall at Wilson Cove. ' Many areas within the regional board's jurisdiction were unqualified for ASBS designation because they had already been seriously altered by man. The recommendation, ap- proved by a 4-2 vote, went to the State Water Resources Conlrol Board. northeast of Australia, in- cluding Fiji, the Solomon!, New·Guinea·and Guam. . • PIRIONAL HISTORY - At least three of the giant Four.year resident ot LaKUna Broch. with wife Francine who crustal plates that make up taught 1'-ench at UL Htsth School. the surface of earth come Deeply conc:emfd p&rmt cl four sons who attend the Laguna together in that area, a Beech IChools. . ' spokesman says. Member ot EdUC'atJoMJ f"rtorttles Study Committee f'o!o La,. The AuslraUa·New Guinea guna B.Mch IChooh. Plate is moving s l 0 w1 y Member at IASuM Beech Rot&I')', and Sl Catherine of Siena Church. northward, the Caroline plate Professor In PatboJoa and RaJilologtcal ScienCt's, UCI Col· slowly southward and the vast Jege bt Medldnt, with ·Ktmtlflc research specialties in Pacific plate in a northwester· cancer, leukemia and •King. ly direction. New information Member ot Curriculum Committee of UCI College of Medi· on contlnental drift and the cine, and Chairman of the Committee of Academic Free- spreading ocean floor is being dom, UCI Academic. Senate (composed ot tenured lJrO· sought: f~on). {P'•llf P'olltktll Ad'l•r11MfMftl) - ;· -tlrrte foi Vr:fREDRICK C. LUDWI& ¥ APfllt.17 _-SC·MOOL BOA·R:P. , ELE<:TION /, I , .. -. . - PERFORMANCE AUDITS ,1 No change of,the exlitlng programs should be considered~ fore the performance audits or ·without making all owances for opinion. Educatio,!l~gt,iided by intangi bles a.nd by value&' 'vh!ch are largely a mattec ot opinion, but verifiable daui from the performance audits can make this opinion mo11' informed. - EFFECTIVE THINKING J\.lodern education stresses social adjustmen t I am .sympa .. thetic to ,this objective-as long as It is not at the expense ot scholastic performance. Adjustment to current conventlo~ o[ behavior, although desirable in itself, Is not and never w~ be a substitute for the realization of effective thinking. Erl): phasis on effective thinking is essential for individual su~ .c~ss. qur society, our culture, and our country cannot su . vive wtthout it. . J I' ask your support in the forthcoming April 17 school board election. ~ Member of the American Cancer Society Board of Directo~ and Environmental Coalition of Orange County. Rotary Foundation and Rockefeller Scholarships with gradu.. ate work at the Universities or Pennsylvania, McGill; cambridge, and Madrid. Ph.D. in physics earned undnr :n.tadame Irene CUrle the Nobel Prize wlnn~ and ,discoverer ot artificial radicmctivity._. Awarded special sclenilli,c prize for bio-medlcal research bj the Soviet Academy of Sciences. Formerly on the faculty of the San Francisco MedJc&l Cerf. ter, and guest lecturer at universltlet in Mexico, Londoit" Paris, caracas and Berlin: Consultant of radiology hygiene to the government of Brazd", and formei: advisor to the governments of West German.f, and the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil on education, universitf roforms and student problems. Au thor of 70 research papers and 3 books. ' • -tlrrte foi Vr.FREDRICK C. LUDWI& y · AfJfllt. I? _S.CHOOL _BO_A&lL E Le-CTI ON·- ' l • .. • ' ·I ' • r.tooday, Aorll lb, 1m DAILY PIWIT • ~ •••••• 500 -514 The e1gg8st lii.rkatplace on the Orance Coast · Mobile ~ for Sole • • • 115 -W9 , . ,,..., ••• ,. • • •••• 950 -990 ' . -·--900 .914 . ' (,f,pO,: ............. 700 -7W DAILY Pl' 01 CLASSIFIED ADS ""''°"°''· . . . , . . , . , !SlS .. St9 "-" Dnd Supp .. , • • • • • • S5iO -899 Rtol l:\toi. c;.n.,at .• , •. ISO • m f....,,.;,i_;/ . : • . • . • • 200 • m ............ Solo • • • • • • 100 -12• .... & '°""" . . . . . . . "° -Sl,4 ~ ••••.••. 800 -149 , -far-l~I ., General Gener ii ._--~1ar--__,l!ell.__--_1ar_~__.·I~ w.-·-for ••• , .. 1 General LARGE 3 BEDROOM OWNER . TRANSFERRED! $29,500. Very l o v e l y home. Quality construe-M113t sacrifice th Is tton . O.i lL quiet cu)_ de beautiful home. 3 spac- sac street. 2 baths. Pa-ious bedrooms. 2 baths. tio, shake roof. Kitchen Secluded r e a r · living built -ins. Fireplace.· room. Family room, Room for your ·boat .. fireplace & even a huge Assumable VA Io an. bonus room ! Dining brk 540-1720 room, built-ins. On a 1---------quiet cul de sac street. IN' MESA VERDE $36,950. brk 540-1720 G1n1i'a1 General BEAUTIFUL TWO STORY HOME We have had a listin~ on this lovely home for quite a while now but because pf certain · restrictions in showing it, and perhaps be- cause the hon1e is a bit overpriced, we have been unable to market the proe,erty. the way::._we ~bould have. NQ_w, the sen..,:ls~moti­ vated and willing to help us get the job done. You will love this four bedrool)I, 3200' beauty in such a convenient Newport Be~ch address and the. exciting decorating and magnificent family room are outstanding. Call 675-7225 General SEA SIDE SOLITUDE A decidedly outdoor feelin g dominates the glass enclosed living rm. w /lrplc., m this charming 3 BR.. 2 ba. Corona de! Mar home. $67,500. Gary Knox EXCLUSIVE DOVER SHORES One of the most delightful homes; 4 bdrms., family rm., living rm. with beamed ceiling. All this &. a_1J90l & a view! $139,500. Eileen Hudson SMALL BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Retail store, apartment, studio, 2 garages. On Coast Hwy., So. "Laguna. Adaptable & expandable. Income pot. good. Call Bob Yorke. $100,000 LIKE NEWI NEAR LIDO ACTION ·Prooli to offer this lovely, well maintained · 4 BR., F /DR. combo. Comp!. remodeled & beaut. Huge So. patio, 45' lot. Best value, $11_9,500. Charlene Whyte BAYSHORES 4 BR . HOM!; All newly decorated. Sunny patio from EACH room . Large 2 car garage. Walk to private beaches. Call for details. $59,950. LaVera Burns EM5RALD BAY-WHITE WATER VIEW Tree studded vista . Steps to beach. 6 BR., 6 Ba., pwder. rm., Irg. frml. din. rm., brk· fst. rm.; 3 frplcs., pan. lib.; lge. play rm. w/wet bar. Rec. comp!. redecor. Kathryn Raulston JUST LISTED Charming 2 bdrm. Bayshore hoine. Lovely large llv. rm. Tree studded re">:J'ard & -plltiO'. fiO' on street. $54.~ With low lease. Mary Harvey J33.0700 ---Coldwell.Binker 644-2430 . ~ -sSO-Newport Conlo;. .B'-. -- for Action-. • • Call 642-5678 .. • " ·- 'A114t<M-SMid ~ A.llJ ASSOCIATIS •REALTORS 21121 EAST COo\ST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MMcAuF. 644·7270 SHOWS LIKE A MODEL CORONA DEL "MAR DUPLEX NEW LISTING -Beautifully remodeled Cape Cod DUPLEX. Front unit~ Bedroo1'ls, fireplace, carpets and drapes, LARGE PA- TIO. Upper unit has beamed ceilings, l Bedroom. Close· to shopping and beach. .........• ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $73,900. , LARGE TWO STORY -FAMILY HOME - -for the large family with a need for many extras. SEPARATE family room, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, LARGE kitchen with dining area PLUS a fo rmal dining room, two fireplaces (1 in the upstairs master suite). Large fenced ~ard fo'. the children. ~ 4 BDRMS. -BLUFFS CONDO Beautifully upgraded, near pool & wide greenbelt. Low monthly fee incl. outside maintenance of home, leaving full leisure tim.ei. An ~t spot for travelers, golfers, boatmen, etc. $52,500. BA YFIONT WITH SUP Large water frontage & pier will accomo- date 2 lge. boats. 3 (Or 4) Bdrms., in one of our best areas. Only $150,000. ABSOLUTELY IMMACULATE 3 Bdrm. 2 bath home on large (87 X ·145) secluded lot, which is beautifully landscaped. Many wanted features incl. extra size kitch· en with eating space for large family, also, low, low taxes. A real honest value at $38,500 ** ** ** * TAYLOR CO. * LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT -$245,000 Ah, the luxury of your own pier/slip at your door step! Lovely custom })ome w/4 bdrooms (including extra large master BR.), lge. lam: rm. with sunken wet bar, formal J?R., game rm.· & 41h baths. Built-in vacuum system. Abundant Del Piso tile. Patio faces lagoon. · ''Our 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San J!>lquln Hills Road - "Ovorlc>oklng Big Canyon Country·Club"~ NEWPORT CENTER,. N.B, 644-4910 Gtn1r11 Gener11 fiai·tor CARMEL MODEL 3 Bdrms., formal dinfftg rm., family rm. Brlck !rplo. Only one year youg. Owner leaving area. $71,500 INCLUDING THE LAND! CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS Coll Anytlf!!o 644-7662 Gener11 Gen•r•I NEWPORT BAY -CHERRY -WE VIEW Fine Custom Split Level Home 4 Br. 3 ba, up•tau:l living room wtVlew & !rplc. Lge family-din rm, overlking patio. E\ec kit w/blt.rfs & brklst bar. sep service .room. Cus~uallty lnclds plaster walls. raised foundation, high beam ceilings. Lots o! tile, brlck & woOd. ONE OF .A.JUND_ 2 lots-over V41cre, land value 1pp-rox $40,Q_OO Bost BU)' In Newpot't-By Owner--$87,750 2319 HNthor Leno, N.B. 64"6563 I -far-.. G!ner1I ' _ltitn!al • • • • • • • , , , • JOO • 499 Sc.ho.Ii ond lmtrutlian • • • 57S • 51>9 S.'l'icft end ..., •••• 600 -11'19 frontpOl'lotian. • • • • • • • 91$ • 94q 1~· _ht .. l~ G~n1r•1 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOI NTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront • Beaut iful , ne\V 4 bdrn1., 4l,:! ba. hon1e on lagoon, with living rn1 .. fan1lly rn1 .. lge. gan1e rn1. or 5th bdrnl. ........ , . $255,000 • For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please Call _. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bo yside Dr .. Suile I, N.B. 675-6161 G1ner1I General I OKI\ I I. Ol \O\ PlALfUl-J • • •• •• •• •I FIXER • UPPER , ·-HERITAGE . . REALTORS Lachenmyer Realtor CUSTOM HOME & Room For Hcirses Beautiful custon1 home on % acre wilh 3 Bedroom guest house or rental, fenced cor· rill, one of a kind buy . won't last!! Only ... $65,000 1797 Orange, c.~t &U-1m 6ntul};21 ~ •• •"T • .....-.-.--1 GO.YERNMENT REPOSSESSION FHA REPO Great Condition. • .New Carpets and Paint. 2 Bedroom, 1 be.th. $21,!i)O. Total .or $1150 Down. Call anytime, 646-0555. • •BUILDERS ·SPECIAL COLLEGE .PARK HOME 3 Bedroom 1 home to be painted inside and out. close to schools and shopping, several fruit t r e e s . Hardwood fiOOl"S! ! COATS & WALLACE . REALTORS -S46-4l41- (0pen Evenings) OWNER anxious. Executive 3 bdrn1. 3-baths. Family rm., formal dining .riu. Fireplace. Tile r o o f • Built-ins. Rca1· Jiving rm. brk $45,750. 540-1720 OWNER sacrifice. Ex~utlve JlO\ne \Vllh 4 bdr.ms., 3 baths. Family rm., fonnal dining mt. Flr~plac e . Sundeck off ma!'!ter suite. Ncnr South Coast Plaza. bric Authentic Easlsidc C o st a $42,900. 9'5-2390 Mesa Spanish l;>ome. Just OWNER leaving. Beautiful 3 remodeled with ne1v car· bdnn. Huge family m1. pets and palnt. Comer lo. Large corner Jot. New shag ration, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, carpels. }o~ireplace. Di.ntnii fireplace, hardwood noors rm., built-ins, brk $32,!m. and plaster \vallst Just re. 540-1720 l=. and priced onty i ..:.:::.T"'H'°'=E~F=R=E"'"N~C=H~ 546-5880 Open Evos QUARTER -~ 5~ HERITAGE , . REALTORS COSTA MESA FIXER .UPPER - $25,000 3 bedroom eondomlniunt In great Costa ~Iesa area. As. aume existing rnA low In· tetest financing. Only ~.soo.tiG~imming pool 1tnd reqeaUol1ltt tacililics In· eluded. Call us today for details. 646-717 1.· Of'E.N Tll • • fT'S FUN 70 BE N/Cfl BARGAINS never last . so TAKE ADVANTAGE FAST. Mammoth 2 story with 4 huge bedrooms 2\~ baths, family room. FORMAL DINING. SUNKEN living room v.ith fireplace. Builr- lns, carpets & drapes, patio le baJcony. NEAR TIIE BEACH, Only 4 YEARS OLD. Redecorate a mansion )or yoonclf. Call early • 1TI4) 962-5585. I OKI\ I L 01 \0\ "JA "' RUSTIC . E11t1ide Cost• Mesa Assumable G.I. Loan Shake roof chann,'hard\.\'OOCI floorw, u9Cd brick fireplace; close to Westcllf1 ~hopping. This G.I. Joan is assumable at 5% + lo all buyers. Sale!! price $39,9-10 \.\·Ith loan balance of $21,000. Three large bedr6oms, I~ baths, bonus roon1 and calin'g a rea in the bui h-in ~itchcn, formal dining Brea. F.x· cellent neighborhood. Low interest financing, and a 80Ulld Investment. C. F. Coleswortfiy Re altors 640-0020 CLEAN ·N·NEAT ·ON A NIFTY STREET Call us on thls well Kept home , in College Park. 3 bedrooml'I, formal dining area, fan1ily roon1, \\'asher and dryer area In the houS<', large kitchen and poo l sized yard. $34,950. 10% Down. Call 6T:>-ti679 RLTil. Nf9el Balley & Assoc. Newport Heights 2 Bdnns., 1 batti; lrplc.: on lge. malntcnance-lrec yard, w/lge. enclosed patio. De· !ached 2-car garage plus nn. for boat & trailer. Priced at $37,500. Call:. 673-3663 642·2253 Eves! associated BA:OKE~S-Al 11.L TO~S ?Cl~ W 8nlbor "111~11 Needs WQrk but would make ~ I ~g~~=i~ ~'. ~ ll~lill =~Call R<-d Carpet, *FOUR * i ""~N'l!E!!'!W'!"!!T'l!R~IP~~~E~X~E~S~ HAVE CalilomU. City ·101 2 liR. HOUSES IN COSTA MESA v.m-tb $4500 ..... t leal'· & -s5l'.XXI ON 1/t ACRE 3 Bdrm., 1'' Bath cuh. \Vant bread & butter 4 2 Bdnn., l111 Bath pklx or triplex r r 0 m , EA$TSI DE l Bdm1 ., 1 Balh Newport Bead! lo Long COSTA MESA 101> DOWN Beaeh. Broker 6~7225 Encl. G!U'llet>S Orange County A good 1 d ~ ~ EORTIN CO. . Aputmonf veslme~'"' a ts a,....."" REALTORS 642..SOOO RHllors / 541-47'1 l CUTE COTTAGE $19,950 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, corner lot home. G•Jc, GI loan al $127 ino. for everything! Cull lo sec fo1· you1·self • Newport I I F•irvi1w 6-46-8111 . (enytimo) .. ~.v ..... HERITAGE '.• REALTORS , ........ . Sell Idle Items nowl Call 642-5678 NO\V! Gen•r•1 STARTER 3 BR + BONUS IOKl\I L 01\0\ R £" ,-! , I V /..' , ••••••••• I SPRINGTIME FRESH Neat and clean . 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath, dou ble detached ~a.rage, shining kitchen , \1·arn1 living room nnd hijge fenred yard. Located in Costa ¥cu. The licst part is thf' price • $27 ,500. 546-5880 Opon Eno. .~ • ~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS _._._ ••••••• I GLORY BEl WHY PAY «ENT? NE\VPORT tl E IGHT S char1ning 2 bedroom. home, Oak floo~. builtins. R·2 zone for addl.tlonal unlls. RLTR. SUPER HOME & INCOME You can have it nll with this one. Custom built hon1e with handluyed hard\\·ood floor, hnnd scu l pture d cabinets, mitny bit-in, ex- lnt.!I. lfas gignnlic gnrage work shop 11rl'!I. Smaller rental in rear. Located in desireable .. Ea.'!1side Cosli1 !\tesa, $41 ,000. Call 546-8640. Red Caf'pf.'I, Re11ltors Havl' son1ething you want to sell? Classified ads do it well · call NOW 642-5678. [Ge~ M-Af NAB "IRVINE COM FORTABLE & COZY Absolutely lovely 3 BR & FR -excel- lent neighborhood -outstanding home at $67 ,500. -Walter King 644-6200. (L28) BEGINN ER'S i.UCK and ii you hurry you can be the lucky person to own thi s charming 3 BR home wired brick fireplace, large yard & East. side location. ONLY t.!8, 750. Lois Miller 642-8235 (L24) MARV.ELOUS BAY VIEW Charming 5 BR home on lg. com er lot w/pool & prote<:led palio. Invi ting FR w/ hooded fireplace & bar. (L23) -------...,..-..... ------ lmne · tGI Dow< o.t.o M2•12H IOU llecAnttor l"-1200 ~ .. porl IMch, C.lltcwnl• 121U .... • - ' • ~I ~i .. Ob ~ .. "' • ~. !f;.. !• a Ir .. ·" ·~- ,1 .. -· 1;- J ... fJ . ,.; ,,,. • •• 1.1; 1. ~ ·.1:: .H ' ... ' . . . -• 41 OAl~'f Pll OT Moodll, •P<ll 16, 1973 .., i i!-WH~Y;;;..D;;;;;;;;olD .... TW=O;;;;;;;;i· liiiiiiiiiND~EP~EMi;i;;i,.D-EN-TL-Y .-SUC_C....::.ES..:..SFU_l-,~I -~-~-:-~l~~ie 1 ~f ~ ..... ~ ..... ~@]~~ [~~.. I~ I -·w; I~ ~=;;1 I . 6--•I ' General ~ S!;!!• MIU i'ountaln Vallef . A HOSPITA ' .REAL ESTATE BRQKERS .CREATE 1'M-JUST •WHAT ,MEWPORT'UVl_HG-_ $24,ooo-ow!1,:>.~~V.~!'.rr· ~OllSE ' ~ . . .. . . I • ......... _ VISION REAUY, INC. . \1iloe Realty, loc,. Is the lint ful .,..'"'"' "'""°" ...... -.. to lie craote<I with Its foooden' compa11ln as member broker'° MAINTAIN IDENTITIES TlloH compaoln -Reel HIU loalty mMI Altlior A. T-ar I. Auoclatn -rnalataln their ldena tlttn GI le<lap .. doot buslOftlft . wllR• tal•l"t th nnlcn of Tiie VlllM Syst-.ooul IU_cU""' •KO<J· .--comnframbelotmam• bar ·broil"" of o lar9• "'90"izo. • • YOU WANT 3 BR • Beautifully designed Easlldde: oozy 1 BR house Bought new needs to sell Feeliok Of f~~ tht THE VISION SYSTEM'I 1 am a btautltul 3 bedroom ~:~ "'~~~l~aat~ :: ~~· ~JS: ::~!~~· •uc: ~! =~~s "'fUr~~ ;;· 1~1=; -• home wtlh 90 many enliclna: place • profess,W)nally land· vestment. Backs up to alley everything schools 'shop-upstairs retreat. Lots of extras. To' men I.Ion a few, J acaped, Westclllf school• & l:Safpar~ ..... tor ~7th SL. & ping and '~urches: Bring w a 11 pap e.r_,_ excellent Because they felt the need for an orgonito- tion that would unite >lrong independent . brolm and prov~de morl~ting pro9rom1 lo. meet tho challenge of an evolution on tho .,.1 eitate industry. THE MEN . OF VISION IDWAID A. NAHi.AN RH HIH lHlty c . -AlTHUl A. TUINll Arttl•r A. 11.rlll'f I A;iMChrt.s have tl corner lof, a boat shopping. eway .inA1.. the hot dogs and l(ids: Pie-throua:hout. ¥11\Plone-patiQ gate, new paint 11.nd 1.:ur• GnttJ CALL ti) •••·1•14 Ilic ln your blg •backyard. with CU$lom ;-r~ue. """'"" BuL.J.-t wam IC --IV ,, .!,..~ Will-tell wl!h·5% down.--AfJUJr"'""''"'ubroit "'™' bf'84: •.. you'll be.vtt to "'21 _.........., Wm. McCabe, Inc. Seller w.lll ~Ip en closing see me to find out llKll'I'. ~ 11,EAL TY • R I !state , cost.a tf'he ·,p:rt~' Will' aur- $32,900. 847-6010..._ Nttr NtwJort Po1 t orr1e1 * ~2-4405 * · pris'e. you! -" ~ '°"""" · rrs'"" '° "''"''" · £ASTSWE OUT OF TOWN ~ [ 1733 ~i1'~'?22i N.B. * * ~tington Beach Owner .n.;;i hav~ quldf .,. 2 BR •• 1 BATH crow on .... J?shveJt'Ad~lo~ NEWPORT BEACH -$21,950-Stj)UEJll(Y .C~ ~~;',""3 ~u,,~i:,;_ DUPLEX $1,150 DOWN SKY-BLUE POOL . lamily l'\)Olll, lormil d(olng CHARMER 1-Bdrm. each uilit. Near Gear W'll' son room electric kUchen~ 10% -ocean & aci'Osa fron1 park. ge 1 iam 3 ·Bedrooms 2 Baths. Adult down,' seller flexible in ColT·AGE--;--Xlnt su1nn1er/winter rent-·Re•ltor. --541-6570 occupied, builti.ns, so much .. 2 fJOO t . Lo I t price. ~ Older, cute lw:i2!1e on huge C~fi·: ~~ 673-66ss. Eves. 'NEW DUPLEXES :~1~a~icse~d': n ~j CAlJ.. ~4456 18' x 104' fnut treed lot , I Nov; being built. 3 Bdrm. & 2 t14U sell you. cat! quick., ii large private rear yard, I bdnn. Xlnt loc. ~Y p:-\.\'On't last. Just listed. !~fc':i~i~:· b~.2i~el!l'i~far~:': I :i;! NOW ls the Ume to -l27;5l)1J-CR{-. ho1ne. $25.950. MORGAN REAL TY Seeing is believing, this low CALL 642-1771 673-6642 675-6459 price buys so' much! 3 ~- Qntu ==,,.--..,.....,-=-,,,,,--,;I 1w1ns, 2 Baths, electric kit-. "ll:illill=l!!l!!=ill::i: I 0'-"1''ER -LeB.Ving AJ;ea, 3 chen, hardv.'OOd Doors, car-.. Ill'. • SIX UNITS Br. Fp, BI. quiet pe1', dra ..... 20' x 40' rov· ""21 cUl-de-sat." Huge 19x28' fin. ered patio 79' x 110' lot, ~ • •. --2'! Jwge lot, Eastside ~rm. $1850 do\vn. Bier. doubl~ .~a A ,steal! \ JUST LISTED ~ 11 , Costa 'JieS'a.. $72,500. _ -Vel's, 'here is~~ 4 &drOO,;, 2 ~th large I • • • • •• • • • • ---\ BY· ov.•ner, Eastside 430 home; OAI) A~ l heated and nftered ' pool, ·c • ZONE E•ther St. 3BR. 2BA, $34,500 CALL '."""5 patio, fenced, landscaped, 2 YEA~S NEW COMMERCIAL LOT Gt-ea~ . o e 1.g h b o r s. Nr $1.500 down, \Vall to v"all Must have quick sale, 3 BR, . 59, x 290, Westchf~ Plaza. 8.17~7• carpets and drapes, builtin 2 Ba, ~uge country kitchen, I $37 ,500 BY O\Vner -New Mesa Verde R/0, dlsl11vashet', oversl:ied squeak}' clean a~ neat, Roy MCCerdle Realtor Beauty on Costa Mesa, Golf double . garage, many large covered P,atJo, pool· · course, 3 bd, 2 ba, so many cabinets in ga1·age, Ooures- siie Jot. Priced right at 1810 Ne....'JX)rt Blvd., C.M. extras. $59,200. 645-5916 · cent lighting, a must to see. $31,950. 548-7729 FOR Sale By owner, $26,500, Ow· best buy! l · 540-1151 Open Eves. I !'!'!'~'!'!'~~!"''""'" 3 Br, i ba. lrg baok yard, If BRIGHT AND orpt/drps. Will con,i<ler '"" CHEERFUL option. -...1. . TWO BEDRM 96Z.4471 ( ::::.) 546,1103 :llage Real Esta te '. ~ HERITAGE REALTORS EASTSIDE 3 Bedroom home Oona Point MINI PALACE • • • • • • • • • 1 with . fonTJal dining, 2 --;:R;-_2:;-;0c;::a:o:nv;,F-.~:--~/ . * PRESTIGE.*. , MES VE'rtOE · -sparkling baths. pl\!sh car-'Fhls little gem has new shag Model l900, 4 BR, large fam-. A peting, all builtins and on 4tY Lot crpts in the living rm & iJy rooni, plus fornial din-Close to schools, cul-de-sac country-size yard. Adult oc-Charming 1 BR w/self·cle hall. New tile in kitch & din ing rooni. Three car gar. street, 3 large bedrooms, cupied -retiring to travel -ing overi &: brick c. area. Relax on the covered agl'.!. 1.lodel home condition. fanlily room \Vith fireplace, A niust to see -$34,500. $26,900 finn. 847-6987 aft patio looking out over the C 11 847 8531 only $38,750. CALL 545-3424 SOUTH 4 pnl. v.'Cllmanicure:dyard. '"'.ith2 *a HARD To FIND* GINNY .r.-rORRTSON COAsr REALTORS BR 1 .BA It's an ideal. . Fountain V1lley stai'ter home for a Young 4 BR, 2.Bath home, pool-s.1ze **lt -REALTORSa ''DON'T READ THIS'' Priiu.-e and his Princess. Jot, ne\.\' shag carpets, quick ../ *•-: l!i05 Mesa Unfess you Want to buy this OWNER anx10us. Superb 4 The price is only fn,000. possession. Assume GI loan. •CIM•Verde Dr. East, 'veekend. 3 lxir., 2 bath, bdnn. 2 baths. Patio, din11ig $250 per n1outh pays all • ..,~,..'..tioo1~-·--- Serving as board ch1irma n and president for Vision Realty, Inc., ere the men who developed The Visi~n System, Edward A; Na.higan, presi~ent of .Red Hill Realty~ a large res1d ent1al s~le~ co.mp.a_ny, and Arthur -A:-Turner, -a realtor who specializes 1n_ 1n:vestm ent_prp~­ ertiei. Nahigan is chairman of the board and Turner 1s *--* Costa Mera j·tm-ced air heat. beautiful rm., built-ins. dish,vasher. IJ Only $32,000. Call S47.853L **:_• ~· 557..WO stone fireplace. New carpet, J':_a_mlly rm., fireplacy_, Rear ~;::~l:~~r~~ 'if.:r i°,"Jl91 rm. b'k $38,SOO. 53]·5118 ( :::1 .531·5100 11· ·1.~111· ~­ . ''" ) tf· • "' ·. '" ,. . ' .. " ,r ; ,. -· ,,,, ....,., . I .. .. ... '" " .. ) (" .) "' ~-";,· .. ,. •• . "" --:-...... To Its """'9 INrH of succHSllll offlcn -tllrH to. rnld•tlol soln 111111 ooo spoclollli"'I lo ,lo· wntm•t propartln -Yhlon Reotty, loc., Is oddlot selactecl Oraoci• Cooaty brolcan. l'lotls '°' , -.1119 ..... b ..... lp · 10 The YI· s1oo Sy,,_ •• . detennloe<I by quollWIH rathr thoo quootllo• tin objodtvn. As Vision Roolty, lac., botlM ox ..... loo Into oraas od(oCoot to °""'9• County, It also wll ltttrodoca Th• Vlslott Sy•· tltO to Hlactllf '"""'ets outside of Sotith-' C'oljfornlo. .. BENEFITS OFFERED president.- EXTENSIVELY RESEARCHED The Vision System was introduced after 11 months of preparations that included mar.keting and systems research. · In 1959, Nahigan formed Red Hill. Rea~ty, w~ich ~as a staff of 60 sales associates and off1ces 1n Tustin, Villa Park and Irvine . ' DOMINANT IN MARKET Now known as Vision Red Hill Realty, the residential company is a doriiino11nt force in. its marketin~ are~. Nahigan is a . 9raduate of Pepperd1ne College;:-H11 b~sra ness interests include Patrician-Sutler Development, • constructio[l. company specialiiing in custom homes~ . Active in California real estate educ1tion P!'09rams, Turner has his own investme11t property sales company, Arthur A. Turn er & Associates. He is an investment properties instructor for the Graduate, Realtors lnstia tute, an advanced education program of the 50,000- member California Real Estate Association. Before openfng his own company, Turner was regional sales manager in charge of the Forest E. Olson, Inc. invest- merit division. He also holped develop the Fast Stai;t training pro9ram. In addition, he is a Certified Com- mercial Investment Member of tbe National Institute of (Open Evenings) BEAT THE RENT RACE! OWNER sacrifice. ( bdrms., "HONEYMOON 2 bath,. Family rm· , JUST UKE NEW SHACK'' . fireplace. Rear living rm. Why pal'. rent when you can Charming ·Easts!de location. P~ ti o, b u i I t-in s. 1 Yr new, highly upgraded own this newly remodeled You'll just have to see this Dishwasher. C:Orked en-Ct'Pts thruout, 4BR 2BA. 60' 1\-Y~ Verde 3 bedroon1 home home. 3 bdr.. 1 ba., ll'ance. brk $37,462. 962-1373. x 100' lot, elegant entry, \\J'llh as little as $1800 ®'vn hard\\'ood f.lool's, Jg. R-2 lot, OWNER. anxious._ Beautif lir~pl. '\\'OOdfrtul family !iv-J\.1'an1moth 2-story C a I i f . $35,990 and lo\\' monthly payments GREAT investment. Only pool home. '4 hdrms. He"atE!d ing y,·/2 pools, clubhouse, ranch with gia:sS girden of $250.00? Call us for de-$27,000. Don't hesitate, can & filtered pool. Patio. greenbelt, ac~s street kitchen,j·walnut cabinets, tails now. 646-7171. Now!!! Red Ca r pet , Bull · fro I e t fam:ily park in pantry & patio pass-tbru. OPE r. tr~ FUN ro BE NICE'• Fonnal dining rm. t•uts. m arg s H»•e· family rm_ wi th roar-N IL SI. .. . Re~lton: 54&-8640 FamiJy·rm .• tireplace:-Reai·. Orange Gounty. -Walk to -. i r,EWP· ORT HGTS Jiving nn. brk $43,000. championship golf course. ing fireplace. Win d ing l'W Larg ho lu". staircase leads to master 842-2561. · e me. sume ex-suite \Vith vanity bath. 4 DUPLE:)( "FANTASTIC" istlng FA loan. $34,95tl. Bd»m 2\1 BA. Heavy plush ======""'=='T' 2 Bdr, I Ba., ea. rear unit What·else can one Say about I' carpets and decorator has large fenced yard. Sep. a home like Uiis one • , , 3. drapes. Still sn1ells bt"dlld enclosed garage for ea. unit, car garage, covered patio, '62-4471 ( :=J J4W103 ne,v. BKR 962-5511 new paint, new carpet. Best garden kitchen, mirrored *WOMAN'S DREAM* Hgts. location. $51.500 Call ,wardrobe closet and a mas--Super clean--3 BR, 2-Bath &4&S640ca~t. Re'!.•,.-See Red· ter bedrOOmmmod. ·iarg,··,e .. ~ -$"4 000 home. Walk to shop¢ni:: & lf you see this spectacular "-'"' ~=-7~w"'c .. ;----to aceo a e ui;:ui......,m fo • • sdlool, Only $32,900. Call home you'll have to agree Balbo• ls11nd sets. A1so ~ . ,. it's air eon· 3BR ·2BA, oversi:ied dbl gar, 846-l3Sl \___ ~~!~~a~~·t~d4 &bd~co~a~'. BA CB O A ISLAND-REAL ~~ ;g.Plice_d to~ sell. ~Q'. l:'ti!;;cd ~:~: e~~·b:~~ •· l~l!E r:~~tn~d~~n!~ii°t:n~ ~~Af~~ ~~an~Li~~ ''BRING M~ AN ~;~Ii~ r~,F~ht~~{e~ · ! ! , · and much more, priced to comniission agreement. Call OFFER suite. Sl200 dn y,•/paymts · · , • sell FAST at $33,500! ! ! Call ltlelvin G. Elliott, Reii.ltor; This O\vner is moving out of less than rent. 546.:..sG40 Red C a r p e t , 6~54. 301 Marine Ave. the cotmtry and must sell .• , · · Realto" No. 7. Bal fal. 11 you have been looking for $2"'500 2 BR 1 BA a 4 Bedroom bargain, look v,. "INVEST IN AN WATERFRONT lot, ~ no more! Com.r lot, beauti· 531·5111 I :=1 531·5180 Doll bous• near th• Heights w/YJ' Boat Slip. "°lake otter ful neighborhood. Call us -sec of town. Sharp & clean, EASTSIQE DOG" to Ow"''· 673-7770 today ... SJG.2551 BKR. YOUR OWN PRIVATE nic:e "'ighborbood. Will go Investers here's YoUr chance Balbol Peninsula • INFLATION ORCHARD ,-VA or,~; 1t1ys the seller to build that duplex you've --~··-·a-TER or subnut the new 5% down always wanted in a prime DUPLEX-$79,500 FIGH A variety of fresh picked p rogram Are You Eastside C.M. IQC:ation. Lg. 2 & 3 BR., 4 ba., 2 frpl. SH1-H-H! SuWe'v~--foun~th ~ fruit is yours as an added qUalified??•c&i.1 lot, existing house is rented. ModerT:t & refurbished s eeper. per, ilU\lse W1 " bonwi feature! Just re- The VlslcNt Systam offers beoo- flts to. soln OllOClotn of m1tObar brolcan, locludlo9 -"••l"'I Mu· cation protrams on~ llKlllCNJtm•t opportunities. The complete per· -•al program ,.,.. .. from ,.. .. llce1tHe, basic ud continuous tral•lot to. l<lln ouoclcttes to -1-:s '°' """!!19!ftlettl. Real Estat._Broker-s.-$24,500 This won't last. Call 21Ai car-'gar. kct fast!!, Bedrooms. andlo 2 downBaths, i:luced 3 Bedroom, 1% Bath, • ---I 546=8640 Red C a-r-p e I, -GEM _Ql;ln'J_f\esdate_;'J!_ ~ family-room, covered.patio, Realtor;; .-traa,:e~ presenf hOme. builtins, ana full price .is Realtors 545-9491 a wAL!([H & 11 t "A FULL-SERVICE COMPANY" Member Brokers Serving Orange County RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY DIVISION TUSTIN Vision Red Hill Realty 180025~~~;oo Blvd .. SANTA' ANA Vision Yi G~le9os Realty 2211 S. Main SI. 979-6750 TUSTIN Vision. Realty llSO·E. 17th St. 547-6934 Investment Property Division ¥illcllt Realty Artfliir A. Turner & Associates 18071 Irvine Blft. Tustin 544'0760 ~ VW.. Four~ Star _ _Beal!Y , -1745 N. Grind Ava., Saoll• Ano 135;4422 IRVINE Vision Red Hill Realty University Park Center 18 I 24 Culver Drive ' 557,7500 --SANTA_ANA ·Vision Four Star Realty 1745 N. Grand Ave. 835-4422 • ORANG£;VILtA PARK Vision Red _HilLRealty 17133 S.ntiogo Blvd . ~7-4000 For lnfonnalion about: The .Vision System, (7141 547-6454 Geaeral Offices: 1 B5Q . .'E. 17th St., Santa Ana "SURPRISE'' 1610 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. AnxJOUs seller. We will only $29,000. Open Eves REAL TORS 642-4623 guarantee the sale 01 your larwin re•lty inc. 'o;,WN=E"'R-d"c"'spe-=ra7i.=-. ~5-::bdrm=-,·. I Yes you'll be surprised to see i Coron• del Mar ho.me to help you purchase 968 4405 (24 hrs) 2 baths. Rear living rm. this super home i n • this one. 1'~amily rm., f i rep lace. prestigeous Mesa Verde. 3 I Corona del Mar Wm. ~C.abe, Inc. BEA~H LOVERS Patio, dining nn .. built-ins. bdr., 2 ba. immacula!e Beaut. 3 Br., 1% ha _ Pool. Re•I Estate $21 500 Spacious thruout. b r k throughout for only $39,950 Corner lot. Cofupletely re-* 142""4405 * Fonner modei home. Wlnd· $37,950. 962-5566 Call M6-8640 No\v before cond & deCorated w/new KEEP HIM I · l _._ t O\VNER trans, Spaniah 4 it's too late Red r ......... t, c-t•' th--·t. Only '"'.~. ng staircase eau.:i o mas-_ ...,...t"-.,,. '"""' ..,...AN A PET t 'te 'th vanity bath bdrm. Formal Qining rm., Realtors . 714/833·8160·, Alt 6 pm, FOR er su1 WI • 552_7655. Ladies don't wear him out 3 .big BR.s, country kitcryetl bu81t-lns. Family · rm . , doing' yard v.'Ol'k. Move into wtlh eating nook, roaring f i rep la c e . Near the IMMACULATE I BY Owner~ 2 story. Blk to this Tiburon "Monterey" fireplace, double garage. beach. Lava rock B BQ . 3 BR. & family nn., frplc. beach. Bay & Ocean View. condo _ 11 has total exterior Lots of cozy extras. Walk Beautiful decor. brk $45,950. Best College Park location. Bedroom & study, upper. maintenance, 3 bedrooms, over to beach. Nearly va-_96_"8865_-oo:-.-.-..;---I Owner says, "Bring offer Bach. apt. lower. Gar. & 2i,s baths, dining room, fam-cant. BKR 962-5.'ill. AT LAST this week!" carport. Garage door I · b ·11n REPOSSESSIONS k R S I BALB.A BAY PROP. ~ ~ 219 lly r<J?m. e !"'"'.' uo t ' No w or e-a e , opener. Immac.! """•"""' and all' oond1t1onmg. Over-~ . . Evel'ything's been Clea ned, * 642·7491 * Dahlia. 675-4822 looking pool and green area .. or 1nformatlon and location painted or replaced. It's BIG & BATTERED LU~k.~"it~/ :R~ra! Vf~m. All fOr $34,500. . ot these F11A & VA homes,. ready to move in.· SBR. -• lorwin rHlty inc. '~'""KIA· SABIAN 2BA, Sep. iaund rm, Shag Jn Santa Ana just off P!1clld.. Rm· Xtra lrg. lot, upgraded 968-4405 (24 hrs) crpt, dsh/wsh, f.rplc, hugt Big 4 br, ~ ba).h, house & Immac. Owner, $79,500. at patio. Sprinklers, block wall built for conversion to 644--0128. Open Sat & Sun. 2400 sq. IL, tri/IVf, huge ·Jot, Real Estate nt2a6644 in poolside yard. 842-3407 duplex. Just 7 yrs. old but 1-5. 919 Tiller 4 br plus fam. rtn & din. by · Dont Mill Thi1 Oriel BKR, 536-5000 11eeds' TLC. $29,950. All vacancies 008t money! Rent ownr $47,250. 979-7667 4 bedrooms, family room, GI NO DOWN terms. Call 546--8640, Red your house, apt., store Pllt a little "loot" tn your alr conditioning. Highest Carpe!, R~alto~_ bldg., etc. thru.a.Dally Pilot Levis-sell those b.J.ubles for qUalriy -carpets, drapes; OR· 5% D 0 W N TO For that item under $50, try Classified Ad. Sell idle itetne-._..bucks"• Call CluaWed covered patio w/BBQ. ANYBODY th n n.i._ .. _ -w!Call 642-5678 Now! -~. ~ """ 2 cozy used brick fireplaces, e r-enny .,.,.,..OCJ. .• _ '"' -:1_.NU. Bdrm 2~-~ it --ARBOR VIEWHO}.fES--s-;-~t .. , ..--- S©\\gf}lA-.l&£trS". The Puzzle with the Built.Jn ChucUe • I jEDAD I! • I I . I I l!sially, an odolesc:ohl b :. " I minor with ~ -prob!:4 1 B lJ T D A C O Compieto ·ti.. """"'• , quoNd ' I I I I I b1'., fllllf,o In the m'-lnq word you develop froni lltp No. 3 below. 8 PRINT NUM8U!D 'lErTERS IN THESE QUAR S • REALTY today! Call anytime. (n4) 83.1-0780 tscOTT REALTY 536-7533 ''SOM~THING OWNER u.crifice. Ide~! 3 SPECIAL'' bdrm. 2 .ba~hs. Patio, dining rm. Bu1lt-1ns. Dishwasher. Here is a home designed for Family nn,, fireplace. Shag a growing fam~)., Country carpets. brk S 3 2 , 5 O O style kitchen with a large 846-0604. . eating area. huge family room with a wet bar, for· OWNER relocated. Elegant ma1 Jiving and dining ho~e . ~ .txhins., 3 baths. rooms, pJus • 5 Bedrooms. Patio Dmmg rm., built-ins. THE .BEST~ FEATURE · ts.: F~ m l Ly . r:m ·'--Best 'O::CE PRICE , . . O N L Y. fteigh~rhoOd~ Gree.t yard. $44,00!l. It's a mu!f. to see. brk $42,500. Mfr~. ~:z;;,'it .BKR. . ? ''\'¥ANTED NOW" wsPRIN<; SPEC)Al" 4 bedroom w/pool or big Ottck· this-one·ouf ..• 5 Bed-yard. Chicl.go fXec moving • rooms, Covered patio, park.' to H.B. -F.V. area. $10,000 like yard, loads ol cabinets, down . A.gt. 5'6-ti154. and best of all, it's '6nly TAX WRITE OFF $39,500, A perfect home for • the gi"Owing family. To see, Sharp, .J.ike new duplex a.t the call $36-2551 . 'BKR. beoch, zoned (or 5 units. WAl:K TO BEACH 129,~10. J.O. Young R<lllty * Clean 4 .Bedroorrf, ~• bt\th s.f7-1216 _or -~ *•Brick lrplc & 30' llv. rm. PARK trt:lntgn; Bra.rid nu, * Jo"reshly . ~nted 1 10 }felmsman model, t1~ roof * Bul.ltlnc, &Old wall tQ_ all ex~u. Avail now below list •-Double garage pnce. By1 owner. 893-0056. • $27,SOO • _Jtm) IMPROVEMENT lerWin 1r.e1lty· Inc.\ BY -Owner + add-on .dtn, • ·, 961 4405 (24 hfs) reclecorat<d. shag, panelllng e· UNSCRAM!IE ABOVE L!ITUS • j j j j j j. . A wallpaptr. • er. Near ;:_ TO GET A~SWER \=---. . . . . .·· Ub.J,O.'ll'ade? OJ!r ~r'I rchb, pU1t -· 96Ul63. ·• Paradlot column Is lnr you! ~!!!~~~l!!!!!!""."':"""""~"""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!"';"!!!!!!!!!!~J_:S:::C:.::R::A:::M::..•.::LET$:::..:_=A::.:N:=S_:W:.:E:::R:=S...:l!:.·N7C:.:LA::..:::S.:.Sl:.:.Fl.:..:C:.:A.:.TI:.:O.:...:..N~BQ0.:..:...._,_;5:.;l:::lnetl:;::•.:o5.:::dayg:<.::.:lo:::.r.:.5 .:.:•uc=k•. Wail) ad~ ....ulll ••• 642-5611 . ' • I I ~-- • , .. .· • I • .. i: • • -~. ... . , ' MondaJ, A"'\ I&, 1973 -DAJ L:Y PILOT' I, t . . ·Ur:~· -.... ' \ --; .. ~ r ;..;._. 1~ r --. 1~1' ._ _· _ _, -~ ., ....... ~~-~ A ... t-... _ 1'l ll J H;;l!l';l;lafl;;'°';n~Be;ac;h;;;;· ~'~Udo ~le-· • ..-....,.. Ila!!* .~ • 1 , I~ ~1 '""~ -Unfurn. .\ · s. HouMi UtlfWn. 305 Apia. Furn. -MO "OUR l!XCLUSIVES . For Salo -· 125 =~ltv q• , Corona dol Mor Newport INch· • Huntl~ BMch...:-::._ 6 MONTHS N~ s =· 4 deo. ~~ 1"'-Wtar "91ie Rentils ·tOJ; ~~°:~~"cd ~ s l!R.; 2 BJ.. • 1p1c. ~· j225 .~,.. iim. '""" .. 11o. 1 -11~ "-sies-• ~ - ' • ~ lon:ter I t 'i ..J I! ' I . tO -:1 ~\ Bet!« ~ a_model, 3 Bed· ' · -• ~rcen[ purity.· YniYetsal S.VSun trt>a:n IO to 2· $350. bou.te bay, 2 bikaoeean · BACltELOlt &. l BR., patios, f09M•. 2 Balhs, ankle-deep 5 BDRMS. plus !amUy rm., SA'lES & LIAS ING Silver Exel ....... -tT1;4') 7\J Po .... wa. 64H170 $325 -Red;..;:~· 2BA, 'lrPIC:i ,..iv, ........ • ..... ··-e J'-""/dinlna 3 bath&. 40 Fl. lot. SlJ0,000. '1u11 C"-1a"w 64>-1010 or (TI4) 64!;-3631. c~. ...... b1Ull8, ·Jg • New-DMtS.d ·btitb & lots ol ~· -.r.5 .~ -:c-l·STORIES. ~nt, ocean ......... -.. c '>' _, -.... · ' -· .1... ~-l hall ~, Pt:iC<d nght. Move >n vleW; _j ' bdrnu., • ba's. oa-· ....._ H-·· MOnev to Loon 240 -MESA VERDE Heights. '"""~· ,..,.. • pool • -~.nolhlng to_do_):lllf. en· ~000 ~ ----, ..... IWUUR UlllW' _ $500 • 4 plus-den Penn pOo\1 tab'et, launa baths. w~ A mUll .. ...,, ...,..L10o-sPL~,,,.. Lovely fBR, 2 BA. 2 frpk, Point, prt"" l>ttcb;. lovely See . or-youilellr 17301 .SOI, VISTA _3317• v•· . .Lldo.·~.J>.: B<aoo 531-6800. CASH 1 DAY . ·Fam· Rm, bttin kiteh\ ,.,. 11ou... • -If.: ·u,,!>lk w -.. "7J. iiio v;ce poi'C1', tndd patio, ronv NU-VllEW RENTALS B<aeh\ 1 b~ N. ~Slater • ; SPECIAL . 1 MOBILE borne 18 x 4 5 in emetpency with ' .to all IChls, 2 children, 1 6~ i. JA-494-3248 842·'1848 · want\> irrOadw..-Y' ~int· IMMAC. 4 Br; den, 3% &. 'Ro ad I Iner; Ex~ptiona1 ioed ti ·e & m lty pet <lk. Gardene• & water *TH It.BLUFFS* ${t '.... ULTRA NtCE A.pt. 6 ·vets niah , be!Or'e ·interest ~~-10t -116.~,-Owner. .....,;toca~ In :ad!>lt park. ' l,OOO·AAtoM$ES,ooo.. ~ on6 quleiet cul de sae, Im-_·,, A ..... ncy -nn''1·.·• PGrianlv.•"'p· aSat lunao. ratlll!9. 'Seller will pay rni,c. only. §75 .. 766.7~; ,J5500, Trma aVall. Phone . . ..,.,,,. mo ue acceptable, JTl'9Uo ~ ... ' points. 4 Bedroom., 2 Baths. 2~, 4411-4486 . . . 64&-IU7 an 3 pm OM AN 545-6342. 2 BR .. I ha, c .... n~\t ~ 9*--0200. e:lectricJdtcben, new.drapes, BY owner -2 year ... old F'URNISHED mobile in _,, H E LO FRONT duplex, elderly cou· 3 BR., 2)1, ba, 2-sty. $38& MEN"7.=,"m-all=:;:q.::a"eb'"""'°hot"'eh-.-.I bardWQod l\ool's, ceramle .bayfront 5 Br, S Ba. J.ai:una NUIJ;, 60' pan:h. 541 5557 P\e· 2'BR, lrple, back pallo l ~~:; ~ \:'.: !~llta" l: Room• $23.!IO pe• wk. At>IS tile kitchen and ba~s. Blocl< ,$215,00l. 67&-t242 Or 847-1181 $22,000. Ope'n House April Slate Uc. ;kr. 18 YI"!!:. &: yrd. Front of:t .!!tr. prk'g. Eastbluff Realty 644-1133 $95 per. month. ~7056. -'"'-'l"e""'"' • ~ m&m.t~nan1,.~ Ml_I_ vi-· »-:12 ...... 498-flOO,.. Adults-as $200,. flS. dep. 1st & last. 156 -·.'Yard. -· · 11 on .. 10 pemianent residents.. 1 I TD L E. 19th. 548-$)72. ~ Newport Belcli. ' J ·:B~o.rder I . I l ·1 ' I. r 1~' j ' I·· I I 'l:- 1· - ' I . 1 · . ,'!' ·, . - I . . ' ' .J~ .. .'-(. Every classified want ed in ·.ti.,, DAt!). Y ~ .... PILOT appears in ~very editrOn-' ever;y ~~ay, Tlwof m~ans your. all · wiU 'be· ~en in · papers deliv•red to homes and sold frpm newsracks from border to ·&ord'r all ~long· the Orange Coast . . 1 aft the .. ;ay from · ' Seal Beath to ........... ~ San :Clemente " You Get It • -'-1 Atl-, ' 'l ' ~·~l!.~1 ' .. Bwrtlngton Beaeh Fountain Valley -· --(Jesqa Mesa Newport Beach . -'Laguna Beach Irvine · Saddlebaek · San (:Jemente Capistrano · (Plus the daly -newsrack edition) For . One -Price · ' 'With A. ' > ' ·crossifl• 'Ad' ... " Phon~ ·. 6'42~5678 .. YoU CAM CHARGE "rr, TOO ·..:. --· ··--~ I, -. ' ' CAU. . • . .# 893·8533 BY owner great view, 2 hr. BAYSIDE Village, Newpon s oans 3BR, -2BA, bonus rm , • 4 Bedroom, 3 B•th ... . BR 2 Ill ba.-lirl>\e. _.,,, dra. Beaeh, 2BR, 2BA, good • c1eon. lovely kitchel>, 1'.und Bluffo condo Im-$29.50 per Wk • up. I • , $29.~:·_ 494=-9l194; ! rond. Great homi, a\va,y 7% JNTEREST rm. n<i·' .Xtra ~or, pr, 6 macul•t• • Bn .. & Bacbelots. Color TV, ~ N9wpod ~h .'•. ~~33~°0~~r retirement. 2nd 1 TD: loans ~~l ~'t'e~~il uM.~$270 .• ~ ~~idN~~~ T~ .. M~ ·NOT :otE USUAL 2 BD, I( ha, den, din. nn, Lowest rates o~· Co SHARP, clean, 3 BR, 2 BA & _... ---~~70 ___ -----646-9681 • 3 bdrms., i bath pool l)ome. shag crpt, petmanent dbl. Sattler M'-0 · family, trplc. d o u b I e --~ San c11..o..-..a-• Vaulted oe~ and raised appear; • cabana. New I y ••• • garage. crpts, d rps' THE Bhtff1, bm.nd llC\Y 4 ........ . ' bearth:i(t ~ 6nusual ~!?le painted. ~. 642-6698 ""2-~~71 • · .~11 ,SU6imlX "' CaU. • D a·v e, BR. 3 BA. pool & yard • 2 BR, 2 BA * with g .. let!t ln the living SPARTAN MANSION '«l' _sennnallarbor aree..21..-yn., i«H:Jlt~t~.Rltrs malnt. CUst. CTpt & drps, \VHITE WATER VIE\V $1000 rooqi • .Trailer and boat ac· immac, park' rent $45. C.M. DON'T &ORROW VACM*r~ .. ·Q.'Abo 2 $SIX!mo. lst&·1astplus$200 la.39 Bop1A VISTA ' cess. $67-,900. 833-3380. 522-4080, ·537-9148, J & J. -'TIL YOU CALL •USI ~.... . "· $,'155,. dep. Avail J\pril 15. · M<>*.s yot.i· in, seller pays all . ... ok A...1 ~ 833-8635. ~ Unfur.n. 365 coats, $23,000 full price. 3 20x57 2B~, 2B!': unfurn., Bay Bo~ ~n :your home· ~!litY ~--, ,,. .. , , , ·~· 3 BRIZ Ba Jle\\'\y decor:. •-I .Bedroom. 2 Bath, all eiec. Side Vil.laje. NB!'" $14,500. torany good purpl)llt, ·~· · Bltns. Breakfast nn, 2 cat· v.ner• tric buflttn range & oveh, 524-0lDJ. -' ,ling Los Angeles COt.uµy for gar, l~' blks oee'an. Pool &1..;.;;.;;.;N_O_D_E_P_'O_C_l_T_S-.-I refrigerator, FA heat, wall ·.over m ·Y@ari and NOW in / ~.. . .,. to wall carpets, .drapes, ' Orailgc"County! ' mo. Days (2131 22>4191. enclosed covered pat io, I Re4'Esbt.7 I ~.a 5rJNAL MORTGAQE .CO. , , Wknds TI4/536-0T40. king.-n,BR. On J;>eautifully walk to major · shoppng . Gerwal _ .R , (TI4) 5.56-01060 4 BR, 3 BA, TV nn & frplC., B nd N 'Dupl land.!ICaped ground•. Gas center & schools, everyone ,--r4:j()Q C&mpus ·Driv_e, l'(B. Xtra stor .. rm or sttuUo. 6 r• ew ex incl In rent. ChUd up to 3. -qualilies fm" FHA aswmp-2ND T D ,.a_ mo t lse. $275. North CM. Ocean-Vu.-walk to bch, 4 No pets. * blk E. or tion, ~ents less. than _ Acreaie fqr l.•.le lso· . ruStltm ~In. 546-2346. Br. "llo pets or chldrn. Hlil'bor. tent. PR!VA~ FUNDS AV~ iMMAc. Small .. cot ti ~ .646-0384.. CA~ GRANA!>A ' I' Fee siinple home. 3 BR .. zt,4 CALIFQRNIA Cr,r):' -160 · -'Alty Amouit; ~. ..Picket fence. $150 mo ~. f,,, ·WALK to water, single_s 400 Memmac Way 557~95MI ba.; vacant. Lovely patio. acret clo11e .to town. center.• • ~ CALL 6'l5-449t BKR;>i · : l'* 642-6889 *: ~t;M!:f . pref'd, ·but will consider, Ballla;a ,Ii~ .~71 ' \-::;J MWIOJ :Atroa.A· BAY PROP. !~~ors ~rCe~d~:~ ~: ,.rtg~, .r~ ~°ve-Wf~ J~~~t~~\ ,,~11~!;.2~ has all. FOR le~. by the rear. ,..,.,,;...,..,;,...,...,...,...,.,. [ * . 673-7420 * terest only tor 2 yrs. ·Trust Deed• ' 1 2qu $1&0 .. 546-0f69;·, 979--07.s ·~ THE Bluf!s. ~. vleW. 3 BR, 2 braftd1 new, 2-BR unrurn 552-320J533-2MO. ba. Quiet loc. New cpts. & g~rag' ap.t . Crp.ts, BLUFFS SACIUFICE! ! Cemetery PUT YOUR MONEY $255M0.3BR,l~~BA,bltinJ, drapes. $41SMo/leasc. dtshwas'ber, c on· . Hunli"t'on Harbour BY owner -Lee 2-sty, 4 BR, 2% ba, faro rm, din rm. Nr water.,. $66,000. 213/!iG-2728 lrvlM· '··' , VIEW THE HILLS Ultra deluxe 4 BR, 3 BA, L ~/Crypts IS6 TO WORK FOR YOUI feneed yrd. Nice flun!ly REALTORS ·· 6'4-'ro62 tlnuouo-etoan oven, a..-fam rm plus. huge n:nnpus. 01• hon1e . Pets ·ok, 714-968-2656. 4 BR 2 ba 1 d1n , d I s,p o s a I • , S-2.P 0 /.mo • room. Priced by transfer· SiNGLE plot, Harbor Rest, Earn ur!'!i%2n:t'~t ;:rowell· MESA Verde; lge. 3BR., 2 H bo vi amHrm, P:i fil/465-8492. • red owner at ~77,500. FEE. $255. Write to we s 1 e y ~~ange County ~al CS:a~:. ba, fam. rm., 2 frpl cs. carp, pifvn.r $450~~=s. NEW ly. ~wet'W ~~plexd. 3llR. M~ SELL tlus week. HW"· Anderson, Rt 3, Davis Rd, SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. 'drps. Patio. $310. 642-5000. Year . aa .... r.· ryer , r:y. Agent 645-8400, Stockbridge Ga 30281 . (71-4) 556-0lOO Fountiln~•·onov Newport $bores retng, bJt.:W. 675-1387 BEACH Cottage. Vacant. C • I I 4500 C D N B " ' C ,_, ~-Parking for 4 cars. Just '!mmerc a , ampus r., . . · -~ ~-. ·-~ · ·-1 BR & convert den, 2 BA.1\i~O~l'OM~.~-~~-~--~r~~~ Crom the ntuter bedroom sleps to the beach.& across, _;_P.;,r;lopo=rl.;.Y,_ ___ ;_158:,; \~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~ . · · bllns, walk to beach. $250 balcony or snuggle near the street from sho ppin g·, 1• _ LUX Tiburon. condo, 3 J:!ed· , mo. (1)755-9069 Sat & Sun. fireplace bf> fore retiring. $59,500. Newport p i e r 2 -ADJOINING income-pro-room, fanuly . room, .21.~ .-wkdays aft 5: 30. · Enjoy the attractive entry, 6..., ..,,...,es cent CM . $75 000 -~-Bath, fonnal dming room, C clom a ~ 'the llvi",,. room mural, the Realty, ,..,.21)58. .-..... ' · · · ' · .....-wet bar, $325/month lease on lnlum1 · '· 1 -----. built-ins'--'& and the greenbelt iioWN~'i)ERit-':.'js~u~pe;;r:-CCl;;ean:;;;;;!~. 44'l;o~wn~er!:c·...'645-~~211lO:!'!!l:t;>642-656tl~~-;.,.66 (adults), or $350 (one child). Unfurno 320 ~ location. These are only the Br, 3 Ba, tam rm, 2 trplc, Income Property 1 H F llhecl 300 No pets. ~arwin realty Inc. ___ ...;;... __ ...;;;;cl r ;!! '!. fe"'l}>l the many fe~tures of· ~5. CWestclill) $69,900 4-PLE-XES {J) OUHI urn 96&-4405. Newport Beach ON TEN AcitEs ~~redba~ ~':J~~I~~; Beaut garden apts Pride-General SPACIOUS greenbelt, end Apts. flan.~. Lule ••• 900 BAYSHORES-1 blk to pvt. owne~sbip Xlnt inY~stment HUn_tr-oton Bue,' h · unit 2 bd 21i'I ba den formal Fireplace I pr1v. padol. _,., · beach. C~rful 3 Br, · · ' $160. T>'ny. but n\"e •ep .• col-"•' ' ' n-16 T nnl Co ~t'l n~L od kit b $47 500 area & cond., Anahetm. .. " din. rm, Blurts $ 4 7 5 , :ruu~ e s _ni.u P&U1 8redhJll REALTY .. A Company With _ Vision Univ. Park Center, Irvine 5 Call Anytime, 552-75((1 Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM er~ c en. • · S800/mo. inc. Priced ri_Jht. tage, patio, pool. Laguna VACANr 2 Br, $13.5. Also 3 673-3752 Or 644-5.573 · 900 Sea Lan, CdM ~2611 644-5005 $78,500, Has good spend. & $200 -Util Pd. 1 Br. Bllns, Br, $175, fenced, kids/peUi. TownhouM Unfu.rn. 335 <MacArthur nf Coast ~wy} BY owner·-}!aycrest on San-xlnt terms. Will consider gar, deck. 511 thru 10/1. Agt. Fee. ~8430 tiago Dr. 4 BR, 3 ba, formal hoUSe in trade. Aft 3 pm, CdM. . 2 BR Cond N h ..,... G N~== • Bt -~ Ba, dln nn, lam rm. Pool-size n 4/55'7"'". I""" -Util Pd. 2 Br .. Bltns, · · .0• ews age • ._,,., ener••-... ~-· llM"~"· 4··' . -_no v roa "'J drps, Pit-ms. Pool & club . children. ~~A tiO Clek. ~ii>:6l.-~oo" $<i6.500. Final Ph•-. SELf-0uT f:,;,.n:eek. Oeean v;ew. faCI. Lse $200. 53&-2315 ..... LOC:ATION! S'!"'lsb •!rpl. '-6 o /mo . "'°~="'-"""'-'""-~--n..h. 1 Deluxe 4 Plex left NU VIE ALS 4 Br Condo 11h· Ba · · I -. 67a-5'Z20i., ,, HARBOR View H omesj';'thisgroup . No·more,ike - W RENT crpt/drps, bltns,. poo l '. W~t~all1 0 CdM'sshopsLGE3'Bl\2 BA.-bltna.,abq: Mont~o . 4 BR; 2 ba, fam them, so HURRY-! Large 673-4030 or 494-3248 refrjg. Clubhse. $ 2 2 5 . ana st~;es. S~ln.~. brand crptg, cJrtig; • !fried Jl.t\o, ··-----" -~ ,rm, din rm. $62,500. Owner, unitS w/a,11 amenitie s. Irvine 548--1405. nt,w Tow;flhouse~ three. ·hldrr ml,,i•..mclr pr. '$310. . A HOME OF 833-3894 Open House Daily l0-6 bedrooms, · two s t o r Y , e ULTIMATE . ELEGANCE * LlOO 2 Sty,~ BR, 3 BA l2ll2 S. Has4T, G.G. . SURROUNDED by parks _ RENT. or Sal~J. ~Br72Ba, beautlfuI?-lr..· ,, , -IC;JI"°· ;.i:;;~:.....,.·-----.~Pl~ ~Ntd-wJovt;r den; xtra·lge muter suite spBrUng JWiiistment Corp. futn 3 BR. 2% Ba; Clecorator maey xtr.as. Vac,:$.alS/.mo;r Bkr. 675-7225 ~> ~:;,, ~sq, t;lµS borne was ,bu1)t-w/fplc. $76,500 .. owner , '631-.5662-'styled, priv patio, 2-car ~~~s. ~U03. ,ev~ Duplexes Unfurn. 350 DELUXE for entertaining. Panoramic · L"'n<-..,Aett garage Just ste~ from 4 view of ocean & eaqyon. "r~ 7 UNITS--$75,000 pool' & tennlii eourts. $400. E)O'P!'!'!VE home -4 hr.' (:osta Mou APART~ENTS' 9pei:i .beams,, marble Doors Duplexes near the ocean Excellent Starter 'fir Retire-549-3347 btwn 3-5 PM or larg family room. $350 mo. · · Air Cond -Frpk's -3 SWfm· m _duung &:: kitchen, 2 BR, 2 Miles Larson, Realtor ment Unit.1 Blk from Coast 552-8572 eves & wlrnds. For details call 536-25.51 * PRN Patio -encl. gar. 2 ming ,~~· Health Spa· BA. By Apt only. Call * 673-8563 * Hwy. Walking distance to Newport Be•ch Irvine ..... , BR. ~pis & drps. $170 mp. Ten'!.lf~~s • Game and Katella 'Realty. 714492-2030 Oceanfront Duplex all schools & shopping. . Fartuhes. No pets. 673-3690 BWlara Room. BYChvner,Colonial Mansion. Prlnconly. A.gt, 673-3012 ALWAYS RENTED, WALK to Wate r , ,.,,ha bana Point ~12 ~·. ~~!J! Over 1 wooded acre .w/ Bkr. 638-5662 .!lingles/couples, dupl·ex 4 B~ ~n ths ........ $360. ;;;;;;_;;..;.::;:;;,.__;_ __ , Pt:\Uu• rlVlu .- lovely ocean views, 5(XJ) sq. -...... Lido Isle Belluties 30 UNITS, 2 & 3 BDRM . $L'l0. Also HB $95. ·Lag. Bch ~ BR. 2% ba., new •••· J425 OCEAN V~1 br duplex, -MEDITERRANEAN ft. home, plus sep. 1600 sq. ON WIDE street; 4 bdrms., .Suitable .. fur ·eon00 con· $ll0 & .2 BR Mobile, CM ~ :} ;,~ha'.·······. $365~ brand nf!Wlh1te'(!!ll" Uved,..Jn. r 1' , Vil. LA'"'-E tt. guest honie. 3 Block3' 3 baths; features galore! 'version, Priridpa)s ordy. $130. Util pd on "11· Agt. •' n · ........... .,.._, Comp bl\i!l~ ldtchen p!Jlsh ~ ff°m ~·~us~~ to~· Price t135,000. Ass,wnable .~nt. P,O: Bpi' 782, Dana F'ee. 979-8430 3B':1.. ~~a. Delw:~i'isoo crpt, paMf'lnii.1c;.r ~llll" & '2«Xl'Harbor Blvd., C.M. eve. . . tra e. 6% T.D. Point, 92629 t.0.VELY . 3 & deil, 2 Ba, . .' . ••• ••• . rhlll side ·vitwo $285. mo I cnl) 557.saJO 494-2848. 60 FT. GARDEN channer. U UNITS N. LAGUNA Lido. Paneled den 17x21. ; 499-2895 # REN'J'AI,. OFFfCE UNIVERSITY Park, Sg l 4 Bdrms., family room, .. ~On 4 $1oti.'200' +J'CH (21.3)638-4179. Huntlnrton ~ch 0~9':'SOAMt05:30~t ~~R~~ede~;·2~~i bathL 1~·~i:ALTY , rr ·;mt·MorE:'roo~.t~ HouH1 Unfurn. 305 HARBOR GRiENS bar, beaut patio & lndscpd. 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach Id. Bkr. ~m9 '· . NEW 3 BEDROOM Furn. & Unfum .. Fr $130. Bright, cheerful, lmmac , * 67S.7300 * Ranches, P•rms, I General 2 Bath, large pvt yard, 11cJ Bach, 1, 2 !c. 3 BR.'s, Models home.-17891-Bascom,_Open Groves. 180 _ ~ "SINCE lMG"--b2 _e1!-,'1 .,,t$250' gara~ in Q.uJ_e__x .~~~-Wayti1l .ckpmnr. J:. hse Sat & Sun, 10-5 -u Kl ng • per mo. Man· • · • lrvlfte . STEPS TO QCEAN 21A. AC.. ~t S.J /CapiStrano -~st WC!~ern Bank B)~g. -~,at ;313 Oswego ·Hunt· bor ~lvd. & Ad8llll. 2.sty. A-Frame. 3 'BR. 2 ba. !t-Lake '"E!Stnore. Level, l1ni_ver11ty Park,. ·Ii;V~e ! '.lliktOn .Beach. ·s.164152. 546-0370 uNJvER5JTY Park, ,Oxford Bit-ins. Walk . to beach, 1deal 1_or horse~~· $9,150. HouMI * ••to, Days 552-7000 N19ht1 _·_ . STUNNING 1 ol 2 BR. 2 BA ~eJ,.e. l BR, 2-16: ba, bonus pools; tennis. s.tS,500. Full pr., ez trms OH""l223 ..,. Santa Ana Garden AptB. Pool., Rec -,.,~ 55:t-9195 CAYWOOD REALTY 'Roal Est•toWantodU4 * 145 0111 * now 18thSL ~45& .,., .. ..,.,.,..... • 2 BR. I ·Bath ........ $285) BDRM .~t>lex.'i •Yl' old area.· ·-• ~ Laguna Buch * 543-!2" * * "'ulck Cash* .W.~lhCOITAMUA 2BR.2Balh, .......... tJ:is •. 121G ...... ;;s.;;1a :Aharrusttti,1-"'>lt>:;,•;;,·'====~-1 'Ill' These Are Just A Few Of 3 BR. 2 Bhths •• : •• $275'7285 area "962-5283 _ NEWLY DECORATED ,'.f,.At,1111. Y PRIDE Will buy your properly. All Ou< MANY RENTALS .•• 3 BR. 211 Balhs ...... $395 · 2 BR w/earport. Wtr pd. • ,. .Will captivate you & )'Our N.EW EXCLUSIVE cash with 962 in _ 885 72. 1 _ hrs:, Call -* 4 BR. 2% ba ..••• $375/450 _ Call .~tv:!t l A: 5; 6.'J6.4U>. •--n ha t HUNT'INGTON BEACH •_ , We Have Summer ~t~ I ~ : : · i l9l 2566 D Orange Ave ··.$14(1 ~au1'bt~-n~l;ou5 ~~ Baytront 4 BR., 3 baths f. $265. CAN'T BEAT! 3 Br, I 'd h··11 1 · Apartmtftb fol~ 9CEAN BREEZE Apta;.,. lq home; located in quiet Pier & Slip • $215,000 · 111,,~ 2 Ba turn house. Car, encl .:e I 3 BR. 1·% ~ Bltns, ~ neighborhood, on cul de sac, LIDO REAL TV ~ ii yard. Consider singles. 11 · · drps, dwnstrs. No pda, 2 to insure privacy &: con-3377 Vla Lido, Npt Beach ~ A-" F .. . 360 . children ok, $170. 546-3215. te·ntment. Be au ti f u I l y 67•7300 ' BR~•-\NC. NEWPORT -~ REALTY ,.,_ um. ' 3 BDRM t. I -·~ ~ ~07 B ACtt • $135.. C w· . . , . -+ pa 10, ge, ,, ..... t, land scapcd. 'Reasonably N _ UNREAL! 1 Br turn apt. A . ompany 1th V1s1on Corori• del ,M.r Nr. Baker & BriJtol. Iquned prlced-.$49,500 ewport Heights 1 1 ~ Yearly. • .~u31v. P8*Center, Irvine ~··--· . ~·-· ---·-~--~~~Mgr 1040 c V,alen· .. . /. OCEAN & BAY . --• * owat1 hoAnjitim8e.M552-1000 1 Biie, crpts;drpo, bltns, ..r .. .;::;•""; ;:;;'"3046~-~~---1 . ~ .H -• CORONA DEL MAR. $130. ee urs A 10 6 PM pool, 1165., d!i•• by . 40.1 ; ~SIDE 2 BR. $ISO V .... , ,,., VIEW trom~ ups~~.fa~ily B:Siness. ___:-Walk to ~ach! Fun\, Bach~ LanUnl 8Hch ~~pe, ~n ca 11 Bltn11, w/w di.spl, htd ,pool. REAL ESTATE rm. Cbarm•ng 2_).!R .. 2 tiled Opportunltv 200· elo< . ulil pd. ., -• ··~~ Adlt•, no pets. 642-952!. -. balhs;~e. dmmg area; * $l77 U ·• C 1ta u--1190 Glenneyre St. b · k & h' t J t & • · · .50 -Ut Pd. 1 BR. vie· O .._ 2 BR no pets adulta 'Onlv •4.Mi-9113 ___ . 549--0316 nc c. ea o,a (_)r HOUSES AVAIL •. NOW COstA MESA. $160 • UN· toria Beach. Deck., Ocean -Monih to ~onth .$100· IN' 1,THE VILLAGE"• ~:~he~t; Ext'k !~e, kit. & All-Areas • All Pr'ice ranges REAL! 3 BR". house. Stove, view. • Casa de Oro Realtor 644-7270 • ', · 4. BR.· deni bltn kitchen bfrch c~~~ & ~~·~~'.*IN ' FOR.ECLOSURE crpt/drps, gar & yard. Sngl $300 -•. Util Pd. Lott, trplc, ALL UTIUTIES P/dl> s:wo ·-2 BR. Single ,~ '.opens to dln. area. 2 Fpl. EXtra 1ge, 'dill. garnge on Learn bow You can _ take men ok. * _ ~ ;i:,· ,:. rm, huge llv rm, Compare before you rent >bHfu ceil. 2049 watia·oe: ·~s~.,.~B!:,:n ~ wg:v .. ·. all~&o.r & extra parking. ~~~ ~~.~Y re~~Sti COSfA MESA • $210. Fami~ $475 ~ util Pd. 4 Br 2 Ba. ~m designed, featuring: C.M. 646-8882, 774-8610. gla•• -opens~ to -ean vi"'" -bOJ~O~llCense, dOWl'i ....,,,.1 JB~aloni -2 rrple'S, magn1 1cent ocean ~. ,..;.,=~"1th· EW-2-Br:-Btt-tns;--Wtw ""' ""' .... c~.LL •I;\: 646•.1414 .. ~~ · d!reCtU.., c:rpt drp $185 A u -balcony. $55:oo::i. -~, payment, or credit regu. on lot. •Kids/pets. Gar I: vN1e.~·.1IEW. RENTALS •Separate dln area 5/1 s67"' 74s29 mo. va . Mission Realty . 494.--0731 · '•A ~-ALL forms, study material, enc~ yard. ""'·• e Home· like --.'98 • :i-· • ~w ._. default list in for., written *., 67~ • or 494-3248 "''"'!'-DELUXE 2 br c .. -aa. SWEEPING· white watei . : RIALTY . 1 t AND full d PER--e Private patioS dra ' _..., · view • Jot, !rom Newport. Nelir.N••P•rt Pest Offle• es • a ay LANDLORDS I LAGUNA Niguel. 4Br, 2 Ba, 0 Closed garage W11torage pesC.ALLbltin~_.~gUar03, $165. Beach to Dana Pt. Tenns. N=RT tl~IGHTS SONAL class & follow up, FREE RENTAL SERVlCE liv rm & din1 ng area, family e Marble pullman .....,.. tiWPU ~ b)' eXper. degreed 'lnsfruct-· 2 BR. H p 1 = Lee H~, Realtor OP.ENrlOlJSE SAT & SUN. OJ;" •• TOfal cost ONLY $'18.SO. BEACON RENTALS rm, frpl, built-Ins, carpets, e Klng·sz Bdrms -eated oo. ~ A 833-1355 or 499-1731 . 3 Jid,, .2 ba. playroom, Others ctlarge to $250 for * 64>0111 * drapes, fenced & sprinklers, •Pool • Barbecu" • sur-up. Adillts. No pe~ fJ53 OWNER 2 Br, 2 Ba, oet"an clelightful yard. All new LESS. FREE DE TA 1 Ls 2-car garage. Immac. $325., rounded w1tb plialb land• Center St. 645--3965.. · vjew, new1Y.: ~r; $69.500; ciblni~Ca'rpet &-Paint. mailed on ~ -4916 $ea~ LANDLQRD_S!_ ~~all~ .·Jay ~~.p 0 s It · 8CaPin&· NEW 2 Bedroom. Cart)ef1. 1100 Tem~e Terr. Di" . Ocean View. $55,000. By thore, N.B., 646-8002, 7 ,da. We Specialize in Newport 4954244 ·~1, •8tRllSSl90bett Drape.s, ,.g~rag720e •• Pat\£l. 497-2961 . ' OWner. 642-3377. or 548-2698. "·a-h • n~ a de! .... ~ .., ~s ·• SMILE I = • ~•vO "~ • La Hiii ~ BEDROOMS $210 -Legun• "llUll . 415 SaJJta Ana St. • & Lagunac Our Rental Ser· 1uno . • · No Pets 3 BDRM, 2 Bath, dbl ""f'"" 7'.:'l';> -, .~DupleA:e'l bear 'the o<iean ¥ou're onto something~! vice 1.!i FR~ t~ You_! Tl)' 365 w. Wilson • -642-l97l 2 story wffrpJ c. New 1drpa NEW East··mne Condo -2 Miles · Lani>n ·Reallor 1f 3 OOi:tiooms, 1% batbl In Nu-View! 4 'BR. 2 Ba. Xlnt corner cul & crpt. $2'20. ~. BR. 2 'ba. $37,950. Byi '.' ·*~* ~ pretll' ne;ghborhood. 1' NU-VIEW RENTALS de~ toe. $290 Mo · $30 Wl!EK & UP ** BEAUTIFUL 11< •BR. 4 own 9 .,_!,i,t.,Agt;, 837-8)42 ' or 5.,; Ciemeftte What .you: need, chetk 1hts 6734030 or "94-3248 494-9 Agent/Owner • Studio Ir 1 BR Apts. Contemporary Garde~Arll•. ~~• ___ ....;. _____ 1 one out. It's so )10mey that · 4 BR. 2 Ba. Xlnt comer cul • TV & Maid Service Avail. From $175-$190. Pi,H;, Lido lite , ,· OEI:JGHTFUL 01d Spanish you'll wafit to move right in. SPARKLING 3 BR. or 2 & de sac location. $290 Mo. e Phone Seni:lce-ijflf. Pool f'rplc, dshwht, new~· ta A ~ac' ho.user .. "-'id· beam lt'S a-ltOOd value at $31,500 den, all bright nu paint & 494-9727 Owner/Agent e Children &'Pet $eCdon ..__ , priv patio. ,_ "" n -"'"'-847..&rll. ·~ _ , " redecorated kilch. $21'5 n e $120 M · '-"Y" .ur * EXCLUSlVE * Ceilings, frple. 212 Ptll%8.da. OPEN tlL, ~ ffS FUN 10 BE Good Harbotlr area loc. '-•tun• Niguel onthty ' t ok. Call 5.\1-2841. l 450~" . .fJ:Sd~;oSr~~rs: ~~:-831~~ OP ~trade: ~~TI-Sl'..A TERRACE. High wide 237:l;r:~~ S~~~US iu:ec~ 41~~ Ma&nillei!nt, custom hOlhe. . , 'lflwV~ ~ ocean view. Gate guanls. Ad Good For-$5 on Rent view. oi-p., w/w ..!-.. 1 bl\:. Sl70,(X)). . ' ' s.::n~!'ieBe~~;e Oce1: ' I 3 Bedroom house, 2 Baths, Want to beach. co mm. pool, J* iii PER· WEEK * 'ran«e. gar. Nb pef;,ui:chUd RENT• ALS· ,c.•--er w'·ter-Vu. R-3l Needs deco'rating. ~J tl::8pl~ce~~%!8c .. ~~ tennis, e~~ all paid. New 3 a: Up. Poot 6 lflaJd lft"Ylce,ok ·~· 66-"'",.:7;:,485"-----~·"t• ' ..., ~*'"'-"UV\ 08 -1 "-so For W .... t"' bdnn., 2 Ulith. Cpts., drps., Kit,.. .. -... ·-'"' r.1 .... .i. ...... 1.11·1" ~~•nR & leues.., ~ • ...,,,.......,, ....., ·~l"' • ORESS1" igs 9f, WhaleVer, and drapes. 3(6 Broadway, frplc., film . rnl. EZ mntnce. .. • .,,., a,v•11· \P\ta "'""11 BA .... ~ Ap\ w I ( u 11 LIDO REALri quick sale eall 831·2888 Shop. EaS)' money. Low CM. Vaeant .• Immediate $400. 493-5769. C:On>el'HarOO.' Vletoria. klteh. Pallo. Pool. })'pie. 33'77 Via Udo Jipt. Beach S•nta La overheat!. Owner oeerated. possession!. ' • -EiSIDE Altl'tlc Film 2 Br, UtU pd. $150/mo Yrly. •__.._ -. ~ Esh ~~· all 496-.139!· art _. _Ph-'--673-4577_._ _ Mt•tt•n Vlelo 1\1'.,Ba. h!d l)OOI. Nr sehls, ~. . •••-OWNER'Alr aind., 3 BR, 2 6'3o ~ • · ~ = ~ A ·~ ts 11 -,.,.~u~,,,.=K-C~A·""s=H'""'' "' w'w -·· '-·, "'•! ---·FOR Rent' 3 BR. frt>lc. ·74 • 0 pe . 2 R. Adullt, no pets.-llA\' ..,. v -U<'"--"' .... ,.-'°"v;, ""' -BR, 2 Ba, French Norman.. pa,tlo, . nr. Stlddleback col· . •• ~ . MEADOWS APT. ~ W. THROUGH. A rond. 132,500• 557-lS-16• .4DAILY l!'ILO't..., d)', 1iit_cotintry_kiL, b'l)tc kge. Water paid. $215. Call $130 ino. J>lx>: ~u,11o.me. Bay St. CM. 64&-0073 ! ' • '· + BDRM CONl:XJ. 1\1 Ba, CLASSIRED AD' s ' 1400/mo. ALSO 2 a •• 2 .Ba 64>-1634 an 6 PM. }'urn. Hid pool. Malure J..loRG. 2 &I. 11; ""· Studio DAILY PILOT ~ encl, garar. Pool priva. . • uni. •pt.. beam e< d. Newport Beach •dulta, no pets. 4 Se....,s, new "1al, pool, 1175.; uUI L.i.LASSIRED 'AD N•w~ ~~' sa,oqo. FOR 'ilC110N ••• •$273/mo. -· 2359 Npt Blvd, ~ pd. _, 1911 1!5>1t '" ~ -CALL 642 s&-OCEAN 'l)e'! s BR. 3 BA. 2 ! BR. 2 BA. crpt/drp, lrgo NICE 1 Br d)>lxc"Qul<t. Sep Un t0' il'ldt1 OUi -· 64 ·2·5678 lllily Pilot Wont· A4" hi"" . • 1u 1undeckJI. 2 ototy. Lea., yrd. Nr. all achla. $325: By by'"""'· Employed adult Paradloe column Ii tor ,.,.i i -.. bargains calore. S6.'iOfMO. 494-M30. appt only,.54$-9341, 64&--2348 1 ov~r 3fl. no pets. 543--1021 5 llnes, S day11 for 5 bocD. ' I • .. ,I ' I ' l ·' ' -. • . --. . • . ' • • • 44 DAILY PILOT ,~1-_,_ .. _-~1~~--~,,,-~J[!]~• I ;w1 .. ouf0<RM I[!] I· ... ~ I~ [ -· 1~1-... -;.I~ r---1~,. L•9"1n• [fi)ll-1 ;;;;" .. '';;'·~·J[ll]:..J1 4 ,11 ~pto Apll., , Ofllco Rontll 440 •--! I Cl L. 35 C clo I j • lmll! · --. ~" " Furn.orUnlurn. -o --• u~ 5 ontro r Plumbl~ HelpW1 ntod,M'.1Lf1.710 HelpWO..IM,M&l'711 ~ Furn. or Unfum. )10 Furn. or Uf\furn. 370 ...;.;;:..;;:...:.:....:.:...;..:.;.:.:..~"'"' 1 ;~~;; .. •:;;:;-;;:;;;,;;;--1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I-~.:.:...:.;...;=~;,;...;:.;.;.....,:_::;..:.::...:::....;::;::;;;.;;::.;;.,:. Cosio -. --uNION"llKNK SQ\JAJU; SINGLE?' . Com m 'I, lndu1; RHlcl I PLUMBING REPAIR BOAT ASSEMl'llRS ' -- • Huntington 8e1ch Huntington 8 e1ch 200'.J sq It ~ftice bldg. Rece've 1 ~~ 11umber of New, ttmodttf repair. Store No Job-IOo-'°"'U ASSEM:w.Dt.-.,---o:c-------.., per. $~:-~ t ~f All services. C.,, r Pe 1 e d , quality compatible matches fronrs. cust patios, oles, etc. * * &12·3128 * * RAIN ' • MZ-0042 _. ruiN>lled. 6th noor. Sacrifice trom 1000'1 In your ;area, Lic'd. 962-1961. Sewinn/Alter•fi.:'Jftl T . £ES F.qual Oppor. Empioyer e HUNTINGTON BEACH FINEST e SPANISH COUNTRY ESTATE LIVING 2 Acres beautiful park like surroundins:s. Sunken pool . Sparkling Spanish foµnta1ns . • Spacious Rooms • Separate dining room e Walk in Close ts. Home like kitchen & cabinets I Bedroom Unfurn . $165. Furn. $185 2 Bedr09m Unfurn. $1115. Furn. 1215 e ALL UTILITIES FREE e " _ Walk to HunUngton Cent;_, ADULTS NO PETS- LA QU INTA liERMOSA 16211 PARKSIDE LN (714 ) 847-5441 4 Blk. S. of San Uiego Frwy. on Beach 1 Blk. W. of Holt to Parkside 365 I Apt. Unfurn. N•wport Beach , _________ _ Apt. Unfurn . 365 C..111 - ADULTS LA COSTA APTS. I & 2 Bedroom • Can>ets e Drape1 e Pool e RBq'• All Ullllt>H P•id 354 Avocado St., C.M . 642-9708 Huntington Beach J. BR. Deluxe. Adult pool1ide garden bungalo"'" n t a r ocean. f'rplc., Ill: patio, 6 pool!!, sauna, tennis. $160. 846--0259. r-·-each \V/LARGE PJ:IQTO & • · suh-let. Ideal for lqsurance coinpri!hi'nslve profllu. JACK Tau18:f1C .. Repair " !££l!!X-•**"' :z?" BOOKKEEP-EJt.i-'yl;\ obarile office. C.aU f714l 547-oo39 _1 G , 1 d, nlld . 1 remod., add.it Zl yrs exp Alter•tlons-642·5145 Poly-Optic•, In-. for .the WH'i• ~·1 tttall • _____ ,.. ___ I ... u r;111 ee 11< co. cnt1a . Llc'd My Wa · ro~ .,~1 ~,." N • 20 •• ' • ·./ Call now &: rrceive fitE:E · Y '-"· ... ~· eat, accurate. ~ exp. ~ Dl:J'lc 1tore. Juit.. tlM ' op. I & 2 ft?i.1. dlx. 11untl1» Adj. 1111.mplc profi le sheet on t Gardening M~nufaC iurer o.C the port~~"-' eoftonei.who Alrporter 1-loteL No !Poe. req. PE'rlpqctlvt JNTftA·DATA [IlJ fa 1 c In at in g l'J 1,h ts, W¥1' to Work ID. N'eWport :?172 DuPon t No. 8. 833-3223 1na1ch. , ,. C 0 ~PL ET E gardening· [ I i I Po!y-Optlcals, baS·· openinp ~ ar_nong ari1atit Pf'O'" Bu1Jn111 Ren t al 445 714·541 -3738 213-658-'M·A·T-E' S£1rvice by experienced & ! fi ..... ynnt f for assembler trainees. 1st pie. Call ' Mrs. Langton at l .~~~~2~4 ~11~o~ur~,~~~~-, reliable professional . & 2nd shifts. Applicant CPA'll fTI4) 6#-4400 DESJG__N CENTER gardener, free estimates. should have good dexterity BOOKKEl!:PER Fine location w/oountry al· [ [SJ 968--0832. Job Wanted, Female 702 Ir be interested in factot')I fART TIME mo.pbcrc. I.d e at f.or LMt Md fcw.nl I PROFES.SJONAL gardener work in a clean air con-Evenings . OK M8-M15 a r c: h J t c c t U r a 1 , en· · tree v.•ork, p r u n i n g ' NEED help fit home? We ditioned environment. No ''ironmcotal, i n I c r i 0 r !!prinklers, c;leanup )obs: have aides, nurse 1 , phone call! please. BUSBOY$ t1e11ign, advertising, pub-I a nd s ca p l n i: GeOrge. ho us ekp~ companions. Please Apply Full Time . Days • lishing or related fields, 1260 Found (frH ads) SSO 64&.5893. Homeml}kcrs Up john, POL Y-OPTl(:S, INC. sq. fl. at 50c D. Wright, · EXP. Japanese, main· 547~1. 1815 E. Carnegie Ave 644-7955. FND lrg male wht German ten an c e , c I e a n ·up, Help W nt·, M & F 710 Santa Ana Qf.~FICE • 19 cenl!! Yi tt up. 900 JQ ft or more, individual heat/err, near all freeways. Xlnt parking Shor! 'tt>rin .Jease. Agent, 835-4422 Shepherd-type dog, Vic. Landscape. .Free est. a .u, Equal Oppor. Employer btY.·n Del t.1;1r, Newport 842-8442 847-9438. ~ Blvd&. C.M. Hi_ School. EXP American J apanese * * * AAA Employment ASS~M~LERS - 5-49-!65..I! gardener for clean-up &. ageOC)' hu opening for ac· For 2nd shift in EJectronk:s KEY case w/keys found on mal'n. N.B., C.M., & H.B. complished Ind Iv Id u a I firm, night premium Offered. 1500 block of Caraway Di'. 540-7373 wt proven success in the No exper req. Apply in HOSTESS Part-Time HOCHMAN'$ DEtl & Rl!STAURANT 428 E. 11th Street Costa Mesa Oy,·ncr please identity. Con· E.'l:PER. Japanese main! profesglon. Established 1965 person. OCEAN and "THE r ACTOR y , , con-tact F'rank Caudell! 1592 Apt Cleanup, landscaPe. ~ 100% Fee Paid 13 Y Potter & Brumfield Div. Equal Oppor. Employer sisting of 22 unique stores A, Cara.,..•ny Dr. 545-3310 es 11 mat es ~3333 Employers. Beautiful en-, AMF Incorporated- HARBOR VIEW has shops avail. fr S'rolmo. FLUFFY h"t Lit 8am-8 . • : ' vironment to work in a & 26181 AreoP.Uerto BUS Bo 11.J M F.ri & "Cannery Village," 425 30th tic & ro~:iii~ w ~t ee. pm excellent renumeration. San Ju•n caPistrano : some %Ves. ·eo13c'!; 'Bow1 ''Rent A Piece of a Pa lace" 3 BR., 2 ba. lowM duplex. Xlnl C;'Ono:l. J.'l'plc., close 10 beach. $300 ~fo. turn, yearl y. UNF. 3 BR., 2 ba.; close 10 hay & ocean, &Orne view. Brand new. S.400. yearly. associated BAOKEAS -MEALTOAS 1011> W 8olboo 671·11161 El~a.nl apartmen!s designed, St.. NB. 673-9!i06, Agt Begonia & Ca~ n at i~ n n ~ERh~!pa.~e~ qardfnner. I ** Secretary An eq).lal bppor. empl M/F Restaunlnt. 23862 Bridger with a Master's !ouch, SU· 642-8520. Coi'ona de! Mtir. 673-0835. ' C 1 w _ · rs m nl lg i P_art-time until J une. Typ-A~ 11e mb·I er11 ;. Molders, Rd, E'l Toro, 830--0440 , Ovfl ~00 1;11! t·~··\ and lO 111~~m' w•lli ~'J!erlatl1 ueilr ~ you• ~PJt>ou• nrw I• or 1·b,O!OOl'I ~p~!!m~nt Sm1U prl1 (ll. l ram $1~5, l v•~•l•"' •1~•l•ble. M(lde11 Ofl'n •1 00 la b 00. 1300 f "'••rw 1\11 . Co1it• Mrsa. r r.Ofl" ~4~ 1l00. ~rb house security, exclu· WINTE!l S 1'~ND G ean .u P • m a 1 ing, sh, good fttling for Fiberglass touchup , & I "-==;,..;;.:==="---I sive Versailles Club and , • un1mer, Yrly, SEPARATE building + gar. r~y ta.bby, un~tered landscaping 968-3486. • figures. neat attitude, pret· repairmen. Apply at Clipper CA ~f PER· Manufacturer r~;~:it:';'~"t"';'~'~'~\q~:Er·r.A~n~ita~·~·=-Rc~n~l•~lt'~B~k•~·;:2005~IJ~OOO~~sq~f1:·:p:anl~g.~crp~~1>~,~ad~·tm~a!e~.1E~e~su~tilw~-es in lett .GEl'i~ mow, ty 'l)hght~&~l"=W>B~·-::cau9~M~ar~h~"'~·=!9~I=&=E~.=Oc~d~de~n=ta1:-J~nced~~·~exagpe~r~.C.hcil~p.§M~e~1~alrile~r.~.:__ __ fountains and formal gar-8 v · r:,'. ~=,f«'rner. ::r-eye. ic Adam!! &t3roo · edge & trim. Reaid o r Karen O!OOrne. dens. All part of the South "V.NU ~urst. 963-2738. · comm'l Free est. 645-5855. ** Accountl nts u.... & Cook ~~d.~ Ca~pcrs, 2930 Grace Coast's finest apartment II &I STORE -850 "I· ft. Hea"l/ FND ' Cute Blk & brown JAPANESE GARDENER g,;ghl, de.,...d. ll(>.il5,000 ~ayst;;·~l~e. Vtime ' LOVELY VJ£\\. from this aicy, sunny upstairs ai>arf· ment ..• Set in a French garden with pool, golf, plu.'I convenient location. $156. THE VENDOME 1845 Anaheim Call -M,r11, Phillips, 540-0781 ** 3 Br., l'h Bo.** Large, ne\l..Jy decor, Encl. patio, bltin.'I, Crp(S, drps. ~Cli:uie to everythlng. $170 & $180 mo. 868 Center St. Apt. 1, CM or call 548--8179. DELVX 2 BR, 2 BA apl, wttrplc Dsh/wsh;-& gar, in Triplex, Nr Costa 1t1e!la City ha/I, No children or pets. call 529-5422 for appt to see Dana Point community. Rentals ,-traffic. Opposite Main dog, pregnant. Part beagle CM. NB. AREA level. Apply OIEF -$1(00 Per .Mo. • I l3edroon1/sludlo!! from $195 Beach. 211-C Broadway. pt .. ~chshund. Vic 19th & • 645-l79G • ** MBA· Jack In Tho Box The Blue Beet 2 Bedroom from $30:5 494-oo23. \Vh1tt1er C!\I 66-7965 • Call 673-9904 aft 3 pm Models open 9 A.J\.f. tit dusk I d · 1 R 1 450 .' · · EXPER. Japanese Gardener. Fresh out of C?llege, trainl?f', 17243 Pacific. Coast -Hwy. Rooms ;;;n;;;"';;t;';'a;;;;~•;n;;t;;•;;;;;;;;;; j TAN/while young _F'. dog. Complete yard serv. Relia. extremely bright, moxi In· Sunset Beach ClULOCARE, (5 & 9yrs Old) • ---------'400c;..: May be J>ll:t Spaniel. Well & neat. Free est. 642-4389. terested in learning all . . Cooking,. lite hsc:keeping, ~ ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT ROOMS $18 .,...k up w/kit or?n NOW LEASING behaved. Vic. 't>rg Cst Col-COMPLETE L phase!! of manuf. SlD,OOJ. :ATTENDANT for. Service cfro~m'!..!noo~n<;':"!'p~m':_·!644-~"°8~~"I ----....,., lege 968:-7366 awn & Liz Reinder's Agency Sta. Full & part time, 40 or CLERJCAL-OFC wk up apts, Childrn & pet Huntington Beach · · · Gardening service. Hauling 4500 Campus Dr. ove~. Gentleman w/Service section. 2376 Newport Blvd, NEW M-l BASSET Hound female, l'h: &. clean-up. Jim 548-0405. 546-2llS N~rt'Bea .... station exper... App 1 y A~rt intellige•I wom•·. In- CM. 548-9755. 645-3967. yrs old. bl'OY.'n &. white ~··..-"'' Che 6().t S "' " "'' 940 Sq. Ft. &. Up ro1.1nd vie Nev.'J)Ort Harbo~1;G;•~n~e7r~a~1;s~e;;rv~lc~e~1~::-;:-l ~-~-;::~-~-;::::;-~-;::::;-~-;::::;-~-;::::;-~-;::-~:\JP,.~vro~~n~~S~ILaa~to~onJee'~~h;_~· tere!lting work. Mu!!t be 2 R00!\1S w/balh, furnished, Hamilton & Newland If" h Sc 1 6 3-62U st wy, g. ac • good w/numbers. We will F N B C.M. noo inc util's. Older 646-0697 or 833-0519 . ig hoo . 1 3 TOTAL SERVICES CO A Be T Po ~ train. MacGregor Yacht ffo~ita~ .... ·po~d lvdii tu::~ tenant. 64:>-2)20 I 642~ """"""""""""""""""'!' YNG c:;·ay &: while fe1nale Paint'g, Plumb'g, Mobil~ u R'"o' EemNp T L!lityiol'J Corp., 1631 Placentia Ave .• above PacUlc Coast H'A'Y) to Summer Rentals 420 NE\V t.1·1 Space with Office cat . ~ wht collar • Fnd · Hms SWcialist. 646-0!!77, • C.M. en!rance. 900 Cagney Lane, 1300-2600 ft 3 phase 208V ~~c;~~ Coast H\vy &: Main ~Sl.::&-,_l,,809=·------CLERK TYPIST Ne\~rt Beach, Ca. ~. * * LIOO Isle Waterfront 3 2540-56 Fairviev.·, S . A . · · RA I N Gullers Installed NEEDED Position require!! individual Telephone-: :Q;W.).645-0060 Br. 2 Ba. Avail My 1st. Q\vner: 646-12.52, &g-2228 f'ND n:iale Siamese ca l. Very Quality work. Reasonatile: AUTO accurate typing sklUs. Must PARK. NEW $2500/t.10. 673-8&16 UOO SQ FT new, 3_ o[cs, affectionate. Blue eyes Vic. Free estimates. 968-2208. Transmission & Une mechan· type 45 .,..'Pm minimum. To · · .P,QRT Vacation Rentals 425 w/heat, N.W., 3 ph-pwr, Mi!!Sion v4;•9'f;...,0., Hauling le combination. Must .have work •in the purcha\Jng APARTMENTS front & rear enl 6'13-1417 Pm ;rv.x.u !---''-------TYPISTS i yrs.-minirnum ·ex~r:lenef! dept. or an electronics firm. BIG BEAR, lrg mod. cabin '•••••••••• YOUNG F. calico cat, vie. FATHER & SONS, tree Ford, Lincoln Merciiry. Excellent fringe benefit1. Oft the bay at Snow $.Lmlmit. Day or 11 Park Avt!. near Collin Is .. \vork, trash, yard & gar. .Health & life, dental insur-Pa.id medical; dental & Ille '· ... ·~. , .. __ 1 living V/eek. (7141 6:!9-2742. ~ Balboa, 4/11. 673-2464. clean _ up. Free est. Interim ance benefits. 1Ai shop un i· insurance. Paid long term 'ff""'-... _. ........ , • 84°"182 forn1 "X"""'" pa;d. ,. days di b·1·1 · Ex overlooking the water. En· • BIG Bt!ar -atlrac. l & 2 Plnonlfl PARAKEET, vicinity 17th &:,:::::.~=:::..· ------.. sa 1 1 Y insurance. • joy $750,000 health 8J>&, 1 Br. cottages w/trpl's. Day. ~------' Santa Ana, Costa l\lesa, on SKIPLOADER & dump truck Personnel Service .week. 7:30 to 5:~. Excel· cepting applications daily 8 swimming pools 7 lighted Wk-Mo. 714/866-7222. 4113. 640-4006. .,.,,ork. Concrete, asphalt 17581 lrvlM Blvd. ~~~rug~~°!t Call ciD~fi·cs tennis courtll, p!Us miles of BIG Bear. $50 Wttkend; $100 Personals 530 Lost 555 sawing, breaking. 846-TilO. #115 Tustin Gustafson 18.J9 s. P..fanch6 ter bicycle trail!!, putting, ahuf· wffk; $1!"iO Mo. 2 Sty. home, ----'-----= YARD, -garage cleanups. 838-5460 Anaheim, Calif. reboardsl89' ~et. J,unior l's MoonMdge. 494-972'7 HEU..O! \\le hear you're $50 REWARD RcmO\'e trees, dirt, ivy. Lincoln•Mercury Equal opp!. Employer rom ·-month y: a1JIO l 8 -ntols to Shi ro 430 I · G FF IR !or return of sml blk/bnYn Drive.,.,'YS, grading. 847-2666. Equal Oppor. Emplo~, and 2·bedroom plans and ,_ P annmg a ALA A A f dng Sch ~~ 714-842--8844 CLERKS-2-!!tory town OOUSE's. EicC-& you ~ some goOO em . nauzt>r-Scottie. LOCAL moving & hauling by BOOKKEEPING Irle kitchens, private pa:"l!l PtIALE or Femi 11hr 2 BR, 2 cntertainn1ent. We would I-fad fl ea collar w/bl'll. Lost student. Large truck. Reas. ACCO AVON WANTS YOU! DANA POINT new apt 2 BA Home, Newport Shores. Ilk& to offer our music. CaU -'"';;· ,;C::>~l ,:':;.":::·;,· ~642-.=._71'004:.'.'... ~7l,~534-~1846"':"'.:o"''~534-":".':~2lc><S4~. __ UNTI NG Be an inde.pendent AVON Desire. !Ome exper. or school· ~-SIOO or balconies, carpeting, dra· $150 mo r---rge , --,..,.. "'"'"'n · G ~ G ,-R t & v.. Ing in accounting. Typ;•• uu.iu" . mo. perles. Subterranean park-· ........, ~per; ,,.,.,...~in a.uen rove or LOST: Male Boxer 1 yr old, 32· VAN for short furniture epresen auve · "'<Un ~ ... 640-1197 Ing with elevators. Optional ~~-:311 days or 642-5836 646-T;i67 .. 1(11g~s51.~ _Mesa. female Boser 9 mos old. hauls & garage cleaning CLERK money in your spare time ~~~P~~·\:";!~~ ben- LGE 2 Br. redec, vlew, nr beach & yacht harbor. $210. 25081 La Cresta SL, Apt A. Inquire 1030 S. Coast, Laguna Bch. Ph. 494-6848 DANA Point apt -2 BR, 1 ba. Oceanview. Adults only. $225tmo. Eve11: 644-2911 EaSt Bluff maid service. Just north ot !"'===-~~-~--!Both '''hite.l Vic Harbor & 548-L862.. · near home. CaU: Sir S--'y Inc.' 1-1ashion Island at Jamboree WANTED: Girl in 20s to ___ c~;n~do,y~&~D_an~--llamilton, C.A1. Re1vard! GEN H I' Tree Shrub 540--7041 Of' 546-5341 ..-- ATTRACT. 2 br, 2 ,ba apt and•--Joaqu•·n H•'I'-Rnad. share apt. C.M. ar,ea. May VETERANS Call MS-6418. . . au ing. I AZALID .. ,__ 892 W. 16th St., N.B . ......,, "" 1 1 A •on c'C=-===--~---1 tnn1. Gar & Yd cleanup. V • D M macuu"' operator. 642 9470 Crpt/drps, frplc, 2 stall Telephone (714) 644-1900 5 · pprov. """ m o· Earn $4.58 to $7.00 per hour LOST grey & white cat Est. 531·6377, 557-6904. arian ate achines Min. 2 yrs. experience. Call • crprt $300. 640--0292 or for rental information ~54.::il-4:,;;;683:::;;o;af:::t:.c';;,·===--I guaranteed by u!ling your \1•/tan spots IK'ar So. Cst H I • A leader in the mini com-' 979--0550. Mr. Jarmusz. CLERK Typbt, exper. for 6Jtoo79 an 5. 3 BR. 2 BA. Bltn.s forced air Sl-JARE APT-HOUSE G.l. Benefits while .at· Plai.a. Answers to "Zipper." ousec ffntng puter Industry has an im· purchasing deak. EI e c . 11 lr: 2 BR., $185. $26(}. Adults, heating. 1507 Haven Place. CALL HOME -PARTNER tending Santa Ana College. H.cward 979--0870. COLLEGE girl will clean mediate opening for an ac-BANK typewriter, 10 ker adder. rec. &: pool, 801 Domingo, S?.80/mo. 6 4 6-2 7 2 3 or 836-tl!M, 548·l479 Call now -Ext 370 e FOUND OR LOSf A PET? house. 4 hour minimum. counting clerk ln our budget Pl tf Apply 2--4 pm, 174 P lacen- IN.B. 6444767. 6-16'.-7382. Garages for Rent 435 547-9561 Bureau of Lost Pets $2.50 hr. Mesa Verde, dept. Yo1~ must be f~iliar a orm tla, C.M. 2~R. 2BA, Townhouse, $285 BRAND New Ocean fron t FULLY LICENSED Open 9am-2pm, 636-5685 College Pk. area. C.M. Call w I var 1 o us b u !! I n e.11 Coco's Adlts, no pets, Call 64().-0319 Condominium, 2 Br, 2 Ba, AllSPACE •SPIRITUALIST• BLONDE male mixed cock· c54c.G-44~"-78"·-~~~--machine s ( 1 0 k ey Se t lo t I $400 S If St Spiritual readings 10 a"m-10 -"alculalor I ) ha I ' ere ary r app o aee /mo. Year J e as e. e orage er, 8 mo,s .. "Gumper" in Carpet Cleaning ... • e c. . ve a 675-7694 M ' • W h pm. Advice on a U matters. C<lM 67:1 9586 least l yrs practical or UNFURN Atlr. 1 br apt. ,;;:;· ~~=-~-~~ 1n1 are ouses 312 N El Cam;no, San area. · · Floor Care & W1'ndow1 1 ed '/ ,_ f I 2 1 II v · · re at accounting exper., crp ..... ,,s, rp c, 1 a EASI'BLUFF -Spac. 1 Br. nrious sizes from S25 1t.10. Clemente. 4 92-9 13 6, Sil1 fen1 S.iameS(' w/flca ""!·Dutch Malnt ""rv. 537-1508 •-bl · rt. $175 "" -alt o 1 ~.. ~ I.><:: am lious & quick think· carp . vn-"N"' J , Huge priY terrace. Adults, U ock it. U keep the key. 492-9034. lar lost vie Harbor Vu Hms. • · HuntinMon &e•ch no pets.. $19J. 644-5298. On site m~rs . 24 hr. access PR6BLE?o.t Pregnan<y. Con-"Bonnie". 644--0321, 644-1122 Dedicated Clt~n1ng ing. •· EXEC No movr in -No move' out fl'e l :~~~~~~~~~~I * \VE DO EVERYTitING * If t the all!. . Llving for $200? Yes! Sec . fident, s Y m Path e I i c Refs. Free est. 646-2839 you mce se qu ica· 2 Br, 2 BA, bltns. Nr. Hoag. urity Patrolled pl't'gnancy counsellng. Abor· lions & are looking for a 4126 Hilaria. Way, 646-!231. 0J>('n Daily for Inspection I.ion & adoptions ref. 11 J• j l.ADY 1vanrs house & apart. career w/a growing Orange NOW OPEN!!! CASA TIEMPO Deluxe l & 2 BR w/Fri>lc Pri Patios -Dshwhrs • Ja. cw::zi • Htd Pool • Rec Bldg LARGE 3 BR. 2 Ba, f'rnJ c, Hamilton .& Newland St., HB APCARE 642-4436 Instruction n1ent cleaning work. Exper. Co. company that offers cl .,. 833-0519, iI no ans, 646-0697 ~------;;· ;.~1~0~wijn~h-~an~s~. ~84~7~-363~7~. -;;;~ xln't benefit!! & working en . gar., nr. Hoag Hosp, SING PREGNANT? Thinking ab. conditions. adults. $235 mo. 642-4387 ~car garage Jor rent, ortion? Know all the !acts W0:\1AN wishes day \\'Ork. S•n Clemente vie St, Balboa Penin. first! Call LIFE LINE -24 Schools & Good. R~ferences. Please Apply in Per.ion $25 mo. 675-3126 eve!I hrs, 5-11-5522. inst ructions 575 * 541-8029 * Or Contact B. Krafka • Shag cptg. -Adult!! Only 8912 Heil Ave,, Hntg. Bch. 847-4982 NEW 2 BR. luxury apts. Office Rental 440 e e e FREE Yoga Demon. . Day Work, Exp'd . $200 •. Ocean view $225 .. 1 4 - 4 - 4 .;.0_LD;....N_;,;;;,:.;_ __ = stration. \Ved at 10 am & BATO~ lessons, incl. Strut & Call 547-3164 Year round, 105 Ave. Car· ewport, 3 blks No. 8 pm. Yoga Center, 445 E. J\lodehng. "Poka Dots' ·1---~--=--- mclo, 492-8U3, 492'-l315'. of Coast Hwy. Approx. 900 l?th St., C.M. &16-82Sl. Parade Corps no\Y Jorming. Landscaplng 3rd Door _ 2 BR AP'l'S WITit sq. fl . incl 4 priv. offices & Janet Cummins 645-4586 VrEW! ! S144/mo. lncld!! Ail Apts., recept. rm. Great for SHARE Apt. or House. Save I ~~~~~~~~ii!~I LANDSCAPING STILL AVAILABLE! Utilities, 18 hole putting Furn. or Unfurn.· 370 engineering or draw In g SS. Call Home-Partner, Lie. I; . For unique & personalized green & nMv· rt'Cf'Calional , business. SJOO/mo. Utll incl. 836-UM, 548-1479 [ · . I~ style In landscaping, ln- facilitics. Corona del Mir 548-5.100 eves. S\VI NGING SINGLES · Servlcn Ind R•PMI tcrior pl~nts decorations, & VILLA YORBA I · FRO'~ I 2 Call ''Le&h" 2-8 pni. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimm~~.,;1 Iull maintenance, contact SO. of II""'. Charming 2 Br. "' corner su le -n<l Ja1nes C. Elmer, Land00a-I Be -~;t l sty, Coast Hwy, CdM. 2100 539-3122 ..._ ,~ Huntington Beach · ,am.~.M; poo. Adults, no sq. fl, crpl , drns, air/cond ~==~7"=----I Appli !lnce Repair & Plant Care Co· Free (714) 842·9622 cf' s . ._.. o. music;. elevat~~. pr k 'g: A~~~~O~i.81211 An:;;Y:,~y~~ & Parts estimates, 646-7229 SPACIOUS 3 Br, $219/MO. range Coast R.E. 644-48<l8 security patrol. Can be P.O. Il>x 1223, Costa !\lesa. LANDSCAPE. garden main!. VDM 2722 Micheloon Dr. Irvine, C•lifornia 833-2400, ext.336 Accounting Clerical 1''ee !'aid NewpOrt Center Branch You'll enjoy th• m a n y interesting duties that art in· volved in this posi· ti on. Previous bank ex:· perience is desir· able, but not r• quired. If you have good stenographic skills, call us. We offer• fine starting salary, ex:· cellent be n • f its package, a pleasant working environ· ment and plenty of opportunity for 1d· va ncement. ("h rent mo's rent + dcp) ;C;o;;sl;1;;;M;e;11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p r divlded. From 37c sq. ft. BILL'S .Appli ance Service. In ter decor. p I ants. All Extras. Pool. Gar. Kids 2711 E. Coast Jfwy. 673-4120 YOUNG couples cJu6, 18·35 + Se rvice, deliveries & in· Sprnklrs: Uc. 13 3 7 9 0 welcome. 968-'lJHI· 17361-A FULL SERVICE Call ?:'39~ .. or 548·364i8 pm srallations, 892-2458. ~2. Kfflson Ln. HB. $8-1510. * * ' * Westcllff Building Babysitting Masonry 1 Glr1 Ofc. $550 Steno Typist $550 Please Call For Acctng Clerk , $500 Appointment WALK TO BEACH SPARKLING NEW Comee Wes<cl ;ff or;ve & Social Clubs 535 New 1, 2 &.3 Br, l'pt/drp, Irvine Blvd., N ew port dwhr 1 ..... 1 -~ 1 ·th Beach. Mr. H 0 WA RD LOVE \VORN 847-39>1."'. ~ ' · BAY SHADOWS "'64"'><;"'1°'01~. ====~ rn>COver DISCO\liiRY SPACIOUS 2 BR, Sl69. furn. Apartlllttnts 1617 WESTCLIFF PROFESSIONALS'"in a field All 1294 of Amateur !\1atchmakers. S179. xtrus. Po111. Kids S 1 L , 756 & 540 sq. ft ., ample (Est l966l ok. 96&-TJlO. 17 3 6 I -A pac ous, ight & Cheery! pkg, util, janitor. Baum-· · Appllcilnt Pays :ree? · Mrt Bercse BABYSITTING my home, BRICK ~eneer11, slumpstone, Secretary to $600 •· dependable, Jove, care, hot block'. hreplaces & wrought Bkkpr, 'f"/C • to S700 644-0113, ext. 227 lunch day or night. 642-5299: iron fences. 968-7865 Girl Friday $600 SECURITY YOUNG Set School -Open Paintin'g & .Free & Fee Position!! 6an1-7pm. 6 days. Ages 2-6. Paper hangln9 RlJTI{ RYAN AGENCY Pro. teachers. $21 ""'eekly. 1793 Newport, CM 646-4854 PACIFIC &16-3706 or 645-1057. CUSTOM PAINTING 17931 Beach, HB 847-~17 LAGUNA HILLS Has lmmtdlete Opening For DAY BUSBOY Apply In Person 24!1:ll Ave. De LaCarllot& Laguna Hills (At the El Toro off ramp, S.D. freeway) COOK Fry& Sandwich Combo Cook Irvine Area Days, top wages. Call Tues or Wed 9am-12 noon for ap- pointment 552-9153 Keeison Ln, HB. I BR's FROM $157 c•;an!:;;n~ec;;;;;#~l;;04:;;. ;;;54:;;1:;;-50~32~. ;:;;,~171;';' ;!'5-£885;.;;;::;-;;;::'";';>;387;;;::-~~~3 3 BR, 2 BA, new duple:<(. 2 BR's FROM Jin " COOK and counter help, l3ABYSITTING my home. Inter/Exter. Unfum. inter. A . y l p/tlme to f/time, 18 or Nice yard. Prefer baby • spec, pr!ce. Free color con-ggressive OU."9 •dy BANK over, midnight to 7 am Oiildren/peL'! 0 .1\. Lea5C . or lease option. 5-18·3-HG or Beautiful appointments In· · 536-2914. I <"lude Decorator Fireplace!!. 2'BR, 2131\, clean, cloSL' to Sha~ Carpeting. s. Private_ Patios. Pool • Jacuzzi • beach, elec gar door opener, Vol!eybaU urt G Sl85 mo. No p!'ls. 21732 S. I BBQ'!! CJ cod G'arage~~ Brookhurst. 5-11}-327R I Adu!J~· N' 0 1,"', ' '0 (' s. 2 BR , 1'·~ BA Sh1d)o. Palio & yard. Gal'nt;c. Sl.i750. Avail 409 W. BAY St. 00.,.." 842-1549 Costa Mesa l &' 2 BR to11·nhOUS('. Bl1ns, M anager Bldg e.103 patio, crpti;, d1·ps, rec facil. I * 646-3387 * $150/Up. 91i2-1>.~ ==~;:::;.::::;;::::; lrvlne I CONVENIENT Located nC'ar Ne....-pon Blvd. at Zill Elden Ave. 2 B(>d. l'OOm!I, JUiag CaJ'JK'tS aJI buiil·in.<i, pool, t'T)('lose.:i gar· ages. Gas & 11 al er JM.lei. Adults only. SIS:. Pl'r monlh. 1-Bcdroortf also avalluble overlook iniz pool, $160 pe;. monlh. Drive b)' or call 2 BR, }t~ ha, air coral S2'l5 BOB PEITIT REALTOR !"\32-71'.XXl Mesi Verde OLX 2 & 3 Br .. 2 Ba. Encl gar. $165 up. Rental Ofc., ;ms Mace Aw. 546-1034. Newport Beoch ci.EAN, lrg, sunnr,, modern 2 BR. Apt. Bil· n~. displ, crptt. drpt, paUo & gar. II blk to tht! b8y, 113 blks 00011n. Yearly 613-1900. 645-5780. HARBOR COMP" ANY REALTORS . SINCE l!\'H ~73-4400 . ON Bay 2 BR, 2 BA, 1a...., patio. Stove, T"!frla:. Adulrs. Yrarly. No JX!tl. 2'll 19th SL )296/mo. 613·2706 or 675-1849. ,,..~~~~==-w=-in· -2 BT, \II Bo. 11<& f;XCITING Tlmhse. pa\Jo, bltns. Allulf. PALM MESA APTS. onlyj oo pe1a. $220/mo. 1'128 MINUTES TO Nl'T. BCll. Bed ...r Ln. 548-7533. 84ch, I & 2 BR. F\'om ft<; 2 81\., 2 bL Ooet1n view, Adults, No Pets. Yetrlt • ms ftf9nth 1561 Mesa .Dr. Ask tor Mike 15 hlkt fn>m Newpon Blvd.) ·-RoallY m.6210' 546-9860 .• • • r • Trader's Patadise lines times dollars 1 yr old. \Vil.son Ave atta, suiting & est. Lie. In!!. Hosle!lll/<:ashler, Over 21 & shift. No exp nee. $1.90 pe~ Costa t.Iesa. 548-3311. \Von't be underbid. 642-6005. not ln school. Must be good hr. 3 mo's local res., neat Of!LD Care. 1'.ly home. No Wasting w/figure!I & paper work. Equal Oppor, Employer ij11f appear, applv In pel'9i>n. Snacks, hot lunch. Mon. * WALLPAPER * Some cxpcr. helpful, but Jack In the Box, 1201 S. th F [ F 11 ru1 d not req'd. Will train. Saltp'y BARTEND E-R exper Cea I H LB nii'u -r bi u or P ays. \Vhen you call ''Mac" according to ability or p8.st F/time. Mesa Verde Coun: 3 wy., · ' asona e. !Xi2-7689. 548-1444 646-1711 exper. Apply 2:30-4 pm try Club, 3000 Clubhouse CopKS Carpenter PAINTING & repair, 35 yrs. daily Mon-Sat, 1545 Adams, Rd, c . M. Interview Intervlewlf!I now for broiler . Workman!!hip guar. Take CM. Alk __Ior Mgr. Mr. Fri/Gal & Sun, See Mr. .2n.d cook & pantry mari WOO~\VORK. c n b_ In et s , advantage o~ my exp. Hagan, 546-7392. Murphy-Bar Mgr. No phone wllh hotel or club cxper. etnehn.g, gen rcptun, Duke 536-7056. calls please: Call Big Canyon Countey Da Durka, 646-7598 846-9495 PAINTING & Papering, 20 ANCIENT Club for appt. 644-4494. Corpet Service yn in Harhor are a . BEAUTY SA[ON COOKS arpe & P stery 642-2356 C I' J R' JOl!N'S C 1 U hol Lie/bonded. Refs. turn. MARINER Full &: p/tlme. Day11 Ir nights. Ori-Shampoo free Scotch· · •r • r. est. '------------------''I guard (Soil Retardants). CUSTOf.I Pain~ Ing, in-NMdt 4 Oper1tor1 Apply betwn 2 & 5 at \VA:"IT i'vtrrecdcs Dlesel, TRADE $6,000 ,,.q In 3 BR, Degreasers &: all color 1er/exler, lie. & ins. .24 )'l'!I Carl's, 2092 Bri!!lol, CM '67-'71. Have '70 Cad. Cpe. 2 ba C.f.1. home. Frplc, brightener'3 & 10 mintiW! ctrg. Co. Le!, 645-4449. Now Accepting Full or 1p/tlme COOK, PART-TIME DV, plus smaU l,sl TD. Sea. fried yd, vtew of golf course. bleach for while carpets. UP ro 75% ott on hanging if Applicationa For , Expet. Over 21. Mmt be soned or small cleai\ prop-\Vant camper, motor home, Save your money by saving you ·buy material from The With or wlthOO.t following. clean A: 11eat. Apply ln per- erty. 54li R79.J, 5-S P;\f. van or '!' 551·1278. ~ extra triJ)A. \Viii c1aen Hangmen. 547-sMG Cockt1il Walt rt sses Operators w/lollowln&,ipec-aon, Surf & S1i-Jriln, 5930 LAUNDHOMAT In JIB on TRADE 3 bone, -4 cycle, living rm., dining rm. & PROI-~. painter, hone.st ~rk, & lat con$idtration. Excellent W. Cou1 HW)'.,N.B. , Bc.h Bl\'tl, Fully cqulpt. Briggs Stratton, hooka com· hall $1S. Any rm. $7.50, mu. Int/ext, fl'ff est. lunch Waitresses benefits. COOK -Mature Womah. Call going business. \Vant rPsi· pressor &.vol. tank tor 6-25 couch $lO. Chair SS: 15 yrs. Refa. 543-2T'a9 ;47-7455. trom 8am-3pm ·Me1a Verde d ·a1 ~ OB exp. ts what. ~unu, not · ' Mont W nls l"llli or rcnlal uniu. Calle motor, good cond , metf1od. I ~ work myself. INTERIOR _ EXTERIOR Apply Jn Penon gomery a Conv. llosp, fi6l Center St., 549-3>41 ' bcf. JO am. 'Good ttf. S3l~tQl. WAIJ.. to.t~JE2SRIN'GS 3 .pm-S pm, Mon-F'rl C.M. 548-$85. 536-8667 on.r-"" 2607 W. Coast ffwy, COOK **'*Will-trade new stereo Ci ment, Concrete N'ewport Beach 1 646--0201 192-66l1, ext 250 'EXPER. equlprilent for 25 to 40 hp 'f'6 JAGUAR sec:htn 3.8S,/,;;;:;:.;;;.;.;:...;;.;;;.;,;;;.;;.;.;...._.IJNTER/EXTER. Ac co as around work. 1747 Anaheim • Bl~E DOLPHIN e electric start •••<board . ..-wire whl'C'l!!, Michelin tires PATIOS a1•-dri l"-ce\tlnat sptayed Lie ins 3356 Udo N B l'lm/fm , etc. \Vant OC'elUl· • w 11•• \.'t8, .:x•W, l ·oe·· ' ' . BEAUTICIAN wanted tot · • • • motor. 66-1440. 1> r Iv ate able aailboot. \Viii considPr break, ren10ve & replace oc rets, ft'ff e!lt 64~ ARTISTS Aialllc's Wig & Beauty COOK, exper. Beverly M&.nor party. equity in lal'gcr boat. Ph. t'Oncrete. 54s..8668 for est. • Flnit Cla~ii Painting/ \Veil-known Interior design Salon, cxpcr. Jn hair goods. Conv. Hospl!al. Lag. HlUt. * Gf5.S25S Ir 893-8.175, Jf!rry, CONCRETE· Pat Io s, Paperhanging. Int/Ext. firm located In the Design Sdl CQmm & vac. 548-3446. _C~•-tl_&3_7_-8000-;;"==----·i $45 000 llAVE-Sl29.~ 181 Tnuit Drivewayg, !!ldcWa~ li"ree e!lt. 9~ Plaza, Newport Beach, Beauty Operator Wanted. COOK 2nd TD as down P&.Ymr!nt Deed. Wiii trade ..,or gen'1 mafnl. 543-8578. * r'APERHA.NOElr"*~ -"WOtih:!'"llkc to ·prevti!• '3M· Gwen's Besuty-.$hop 3 ORY• A Week ; for house up 10 $.l50,IJX); yacht. _ F'OUNOATIONS -Artistic Carl ~bko 646-2449 ples of YoUr work to dl.I· 494-3294 Sawycn Hom&, 6f6.iT16 ~-o.ttl or$« .. ~ 49MSll Pla.nte~. cona;ete A bMclc ,>lar.ter, Pa tch, Rapt.Ir ~'If onR~~'lf'}~~~Ie11~ BOAT REPAIRMEJ-4-_COOK/HSKP~, mus~-1>° ... ~ Llke 10 t111dt! Our Tr~fk>r!" patios, etc. Uc d 644-(1687. -644·8330 be1"'1!1:'n 10 ,\J\I & CARPENTERS , coolt, bliut new ~ 1967 GTA FAiJl'BACK Pl1'1ldiM column 1g tor l"UI PATIOS.PLANT ERS *PA'.l'CR PLASl'!JUNG 5 PM. Mu•! have watt'rfronl boat Bay, relJ, 2 '4Ulll f'actory a.Ir cond. Auto-5 llnet AU Concrere \''Ork. 894-3533. All types, Frte tsdma.\ff repair yard e,"'(per. Muat OOUPLE to Mana,ee Sl maUc. Trade for trudl:, but 5 days Ukt to trade.f Our 'l'rader's Call StO-Ql25 Thl' tutett dr'Rw In thll West. know hull repair. Gd. Jobi un11;1, Newport Bt1cli a.ru. ""·1ii'"iiimii""ii'ii·li615-iiiS258iiiO.•.,;•••tor 5 buckl. Paftdlle COiumn Is for YoUr ctd a •IP_d.d''! Place-an adt I . .a DaUY Pilot OaJAlDed for top rrien , Bladrie'1 &..1 Exp d. Calf MS-12m • _111-. 5 do" lot Sbuclt.. Call 64Mm. Ad. 642-5618. Yanl 673.Q34. S<U Idle ilelN ••• 612.5fi78 I ' • • ' • • • I ' MondoY, April 16, 197} "j[fi] ._[ _.,,_,._ill].--[. -c.--.----,Jrw l .... ,11 01 )[iI]IL-~b;te::•__.1 llDJI 'et; 1 llllll m,,;:tl 1rml L,,., I ID11 -]~1~: l!!J ' Help WanlJ, M 1 F 718 1 I DAILY PILOT .4!!, Help Wanted, M & I' 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wentod, M & F 710 HolD Wa-. M & F 110 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 , Typist/Receptionist ,Furniture llO "'· ----------;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;:1 ;::::::::::::::::::::;:: Real Estate S..les SECRETARY Maluecd lndi"1:ia1 wt mio Floor Sample . e CROSS.COUNTRY DRIVERS • e MANAGERS e FOREMEN e ASSEMBLErts e INSPECTORS All 3 Shilt!! We'Will Trdin MacGregor Y•cht Corp • 1631 Phu.-entia, C.1\1. Housekeeper -Cook Mature to care·for elderly lady. Dependable. Must drive. Newport Beach waterfront home. Live-In . No discrimination. UP TO $500 PER MD KEYPIJMCll OPERATOR NURSES AIDES OPENING FOR Y~I::· :' ~:!:';.:; ~ ~~~r •l~~;,,,:ij, ~ -Closeout "" r rred , ..i n....1 II scd maricetin, maMg('r of ttne ror1cspondertee 1111!3 lor C.M. Ra.1ti'1 Ability 10 operate-key punch Exprr. pre .e new or e:cpei-ienu;u ctn I l Sal t an111ll t.."Ompany on U1~· Uphnh1tt'r)' \VorkroonlS "" niachine with spct.-d & ttC· All Shifts R1,enl Estate . 5;'1~r;;f1i ~ ~~-pt~~-JotJ!ryca~ Orange Co. Air1)0rt. <.~ood ti8S \\'. 17th, C.t.1. <·ura1..-y. Thi& position will be l~witlnston Beach QUJ" °'"1' pr:;:; . .,e t swiY Jlurt ~ Cow.ital starting salat)' + pi ufit· &-C'>-3800 IN.lmianent PIT 2nd 8hiJt ConvaleiCCnl HOIJPilal ·=~lst:' S.'lme·~~aJ: Pf'.r:tennel' Agency,' 2190 ~iiu;iiigl'\1.o& J~id~s~;;~~.~'\'~ GHl-.:F'.N uphol1tcred Ci\llllt =i.J:-y :m=i~n w~~t'~ 18811 Flortdn, B.8. 18 years. Call for interview. 11arbor Blvd, Ct-.! A~~ Y Co:i:~ l\~Csa (N~ liakt;r Goud Cond $40. Map~c 111esa arcn. Victor Tl'ni· l ~~~~l4~7~-35~1~5~~~ \\'. E. Lachenmy~r, Rltr. S..""Cretaric1 ~400·$1100 & n'~hilll . kCJual opporrun-~~f'r ~SlO. Coffee table $15 • ., Write Stating E xn.rlence poraries, 635-0031, 1360 S. 6-16·39~ Ev~. 6734577 Acctng A/!' & ll!lt $~ <tit)' ecnployt>r. .)6.~ ..>llJ. • r• Anaheim Blvd., Suite .UO, NurSl's RECEPTIONIST Clerk Typists to $500 C U s T 0 r-.-1 111 ad c e n· To Classified Ad No. '31 Anaheim, Ca. RN.LVN-AIDE }~et' Pnid. £stab. firn1 needs 1000/o FR.EE URGENTLY lt'trainnH'nt center, a:,lal)I • .!!!!!.!!!.!!!!!!!!!!""!'!!!!!!!!I \ \ l \ It tiur "·/i:1oragc. c n n n i; c /o Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 U-7 &. other shifts. Top pvt nd v du::il \\'/ g ow ig J>f'I'-Ll% Reinders Agency h'1t1l, extends. China cl\b., C 1 M C Iii 92626 KITCHEN Helper, Call from duty 1>3y. Jmmed. pay for !IOl\o.lily & cham1 lo handle 4500 Campus Dr. 1 , • .•· ,1 , '!-DATA CONTROL CLERK os a esa, a • 8:un-3pm. ~lesa Verde floor duty. Countywlde front desk. Lite lyplng. 546·2118 Ne"110rt Bt'ac:h NEEDED-J\'U1i.;: ....: uuung rrn pcs. ~~ Conv. Hosp, 661 Center St, lntl'W·s. ~1on-Frf 9-5. Sim $-4.25. Also Fee Jobs. 1 _ Dt.l('Xt>l6 dcs~~bdnn fum-& Help Wented, M & F 710 , Help Wanted, M &. F 710 ,C:;;.M;;;,.· ;;,...;;sss;:::o:""-· ~.,.---c I Lescoulie Nurll<!s Registry, Call Helen Hayes, f»0..6055, SECRETARY for sa es t! n11sc. ~·hlloo,, LIVE-IN, compaUble wornan 351 lfospltal Rd., NB IL.ob-Coastal Personnel Agency. marketing oftice. Must DUNCA.1\!·l'h,y11: $Ola & lovr l!OUSEKEEPER, rel la. to care for semi-in-.alid by Park Lido BI d g ) 2790 Harbor Blvd., C.t.t, sharp, l Y PI n g • 60+ • KEYPUNCH OPRS ~'Ill . $1.lO. ~latching la.inp ELECTRONIC w/rels. Lag. Niguel area, 2 '-dy ., ... , drive 8.: cook "·12-n=.'-. 540-~. RECE~IONIST for dcnth' short.hand iO+ Preferlsa~e.s rhlt•, Si,'i, unli11u~ Tea cart ~ da)'s 1vk. 496--0958. .... · u "" · "' ""JJ •' "" office es per. & apt tuue. • f!.'1, F:arly A m e r I ca n ASSEMBLERS \Veterfront apl. Reply P-0. Nurses Aides ~~ce w/typingDe& talhte ~.k· ~1us1 be able to grow. Interim ··1:u\lll" a1n/f111 phoro con-... Varian Data Machine1 HOUSEKEEPER, f/time. Boy 753, Balboa, 9'a1 E 1 rr~ Xln't ..... ,,ping exp. n ~ ....... 1s-979--0660 1 l"& r...,. .,~.0 Apply in person, Mesa xpcr. pre (' "'· • tant chairside, p/lin1e 3 Personnel Service S<• l'. "'" e\'Cll. ~ 'I ls lookina: for a Data C.Ontrol A."8embl<'rs needed "•/PC Verde Conv. Hosp, li61 LATHE OPERATORS starting '1'a&<", &:d hl'ne.fif'!!J days esp'd. :>i~1427. SECRETARY, lype 70-80, • SOLll) innplt• beollnn suitf', Clerk iri our shipping & board & soldering esper. Center St, C.!11. MS..5585. TUlt·l~ding g.ro11ubcp ~,_.1;'1.ede~•~; RECE' ~ Typt'ng d a Y, S.H. 100. real endstate or mk! 17581 lrvrne Blvd. rtual U..·d~ l\'/klng hend-. receiving area. You mui.1 be Permanent employmen!. rdlfle<>s wi ·'""' ... .-u .• ,. • • exp. hel1Jful. Sc resume to #115 Tustin hoarrl , l\l'O 3-drn"'<'"r cbe'l'!s able to type at lea5t 50 Pleasant surroundings. Ins. Ofc Mgr (exp) to $700 N/C OPERATORS !f "·itling lo IC'am & sin-f/tune. Penoonnel Dept, P.O. Box 1960, N.B. 92663 . 838-5460 11·/vanity & n1irror. 1130. w.p.m., be familiar w/com-Sa.Jes Trnc f-lrdwe 10 $600 cfre in SLS.~~:rm· em· Hoag Hospital, N.B. SECRETARIAL Supc_rvisor, al()-.8097. puter listings. he indU9lrious Call For Appl. Ins Unden\•rlter Top Woges P oyinent. · RECORDS CLERK days, 1'~flin1e. , Pe1'SOnnel Equal Oppor. En1ployer ',-"1"0"-v"tN""G"-A-lu-,-t -,.-11-.-Q-ua-l-ity & \1•llllng to \\'Ork overtime. Industrial Relations Comm'l/Pcrsonal to $650 h h.if O I NURSES AIDE Help keep the record straight Dept, Hoag Hosp, NB , . livlfii::-rin .~ den f\im, If you like a busy riist pucerl , 17.141 49•9401 Exec. Secretary $6-$700 Nlg t S • t n Y Exper. Nite shift. Retire-~or beau!iful bank. Must ('n· S E:.C.Jl ET AR y I B kkpr, U1 ilJTY l\1 an -Active & lahles \i•astK.•r & dryer & ~ Med Back OHice $500 Min. 3 yrs Exper ience ' ment resid. Apply U1 person, .}Cly detail "'.'Ork & have ac· p/timc. Kolelcs ,ft. Vo.nden ht"!althy. Rc!iroe &/or on nilsc. '35;) Vista Baya, NB environnirnt, arc u, quick Dental Frnt Ofc to.$600 Guaranteed Overtime 18851 Florida, HB c~ate typ1nR". Salary to BoS8che architects, soc·. sec. to \\'Ol'k lr.1 r11rwl-al 1)-16-2760 nfl 5:30. leru·ner & n1ect t 1ese TELONIC ,1, •. t ~--"ler stk b'·· ,.7., •~ Call Sally Hart 1 " • 1 II . ,, \...W>l"t ..... .,., 2 OFFICE GIRLS .,.,.,... • 646--05~ 1011\C. r or u1 Ct'\'11,'I\' ca 111 DE A BED t lJUaliflcati<>ns you n1uy be l~l'<'Cpl {gd typing) lO $500 . APPLY 540--6()00, Coastal Personnel ,..,, G-IG-2lll * -· -, n1us lhe individual 11'e at·c look-INDUSTRIES Shio/Rec Clerk $435 • NEEDED Agt>ncy, 2790 tlarbor Blvd., SERVICE StaUon Salesninn WAITRESSES sacrlrh .. '<', 1 1110 old. Also Ing for. Data co1111•ol C'Xper. Elec. Engint.>er $15K Newport Radio telephone dispatch Cl\t & Julie n1Rn. To1J p11y & • llcrculon sofa. & loveseat. . . • desired, but not mandRtory. Laguna Beach Girl Friday to S530 1 I'· Cor•ft, l\lust be 25. a~!e to drive RESTAURANT fringe benefi ts. Expct'. n1an rull &·p/1in1r. Days & /\'iles. All 1ur quallly! 536--6&11 ::__J....~· ~P.,=~-1-~-~~--;:--,.---j-Attt;-M I~ • ppl¥-l'!'"'!~~;;-;:--fr'Mlci'-Piiiii.;;;rio"ii"'1r..--.f.:1'~"!' ~:!''~ '·-";,c--p.·"'tln·'-·~·-....._Ap, --C•i:l!~,._.RH• ~ Ol-' l:!fnCtlCK G'.t! dtJt 1i,~8=Yj3~1~~~11 EqUal Opper. Employer . .N.EWPORT 909 W. 16th St. YELLOW CAB CO. \..~ lc;.ri~ai~rP.re1 f' ·3 ·µJy Shell $talion, t7Ui & Apply.bt>t1\•n 2 & 5 at ho~ spg-& nu1.t1 chairs _ -- • - ·voM 2722 Michelson Dr. Ir vine, California 83:1-2400, ext. 336 EqL4aJ Oppor. Employer - -• • A Newport Beach 186 E. 16th, Costa Mesa !Cr u-· iring or. Irvine, N.B: Carl's 2092 Bristol Ci\I vCrv n·as 6i>Jll0 rear of Personnel gency loca11ons in Costa ~tesa. · · • J : ~~~~~ 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 8 _AM to S PM OPPORTUNITY Apply in person, Jack In SERVICE Station, Cd l\f; WAITRESS TI5 r rn11cat, Cdr.>t . Looking for individual with 642~3170 Equal opportunity employer Growth Co. relocating The Box, 2235 1-larbor, C.M. ai:ea. ~ 12'JJJ g:: 1s;:r. tf Esper. t-.hat be over 21. Ap-!llEDI'IT. style din rtn table, vldeb systems exp & r "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~· Adjact>nl to Orange Co. air-~~s 673.:SSis f 1 n 1 ° ' ply in (X"l"Wn, Sur r & Sirloin, 5 ·ehnirs, buffet. Da.rk <n1k, mechanical kno"'ledge. Xlnt 1}NSTANT Printing shop in MACHINE rt R b I ne · or app · 5930 \V. Coast lhvy., N·.B. can •t'<i. About 50 yr.ii old. • fringe benefits. 3 "·eeks paid f'osta ~Jesa needs clerk: rM~chinists eu en s SERVICE Sta. Salesman, \V,\ITRESS, exper. over 21. P{'rf t-ond. $25(), 673-:552 : vacation. Paid medical. ':'-OPERA TOR * Turrell a the ·--p/tlme eves/11o•knds. Mech, Clean & Neat. Sonic SP.Iii HRO\VN hi~-bed. lll'\Vly lvning, counter, patcpaste· e per Ne t Apply mor"s • ' dental, life insurance. Paid JP bindery, learn type set· Experienced in operating • Shipping & Rec. clerks x · a · shifts. Apply Egg & AIC', J'l'ro\'('\"Cd ~ Pair o , long term disability. ac-ting & photographic "'Ol'k. drill press, lathe, mill. MOODY SPRINKLER 2590 Newport Blvd, C~t. &-10-8120. 111·111\es11 orange chalrs $25 , ccpting applications daily. &-1:Hl884. Should be able to read . .... COMPANY Has opening !or SERVICE Sta. Attend. full & \VAITRESS. Dining Rooni, eu1·h. 540-2279 Gyyr Products. Div .. 01 ·1"N"s"u;;;RANco;;~c=E~~Cl'"e""rk-.-d'"a-,s-·, 1 micl"omeler & calipers. 54f9 N. Peck Rd., Arcadia p/lime. Apply 604 Co. Coast Choice or hours. Golden r~rNE r-.taple Hu I ch. ~\· Odetics Inc. 1B59 S · Knowledge of basic n1ath. , ~'44'9488 LEAD COOK H\vy, Lag. Beach. Bowl Restaurant 2 3 8 6 2 Louvered doors. Xlnt. Cond. _ ' Manchest A n a h e i m I/time. Personnel Dept, .. ..,.. .,. _ DELIVERY, fen111Je Y•/car. E' I e0r. · ' .Hoag H°'p, N.B. -Some tools. Take Pede Rd. north of San SHAMPOO Girl Assistant Bridger, El Toro ~O $'Z5.-557-5603 1! q un pportuntty /Calli 1· A I i · no exp nee. Hour pay + car Employer • Bet-nardino Fwy.) w -ic. PP Y n WAITRESS, exper, over 21 , * * 3 Pc. Gold Couch , ~ aUo"'ancc. Must have small ~ Call For Appl.-OPPORTUNITY r 0 r at-h Pet10n. Ken Templeton's, i·lean & neat. Son1e 1>plit '· t-:xcellent Condition. , car. Jnq ._l\h'. Jannusz 4301 Employment -Industrial Relations , tractive Girl Frid a Y Full Time-Nig ts 1701 \Vestcli1l Dr, N.B. shifts. Apply Egg & Ale, $'15. * Ml-2432 • Birch NB 979--05.'"JO HEIR\VOOD SHUTTERS ~ PERSONNEL (714) 494-9401 '''/youtt~growing compMy. p SIGN service electrician. 64G--il.120 • • ~ SOFA ,_ Lov-eat, •• 1977 Placentia, C.1\1. Apply In erson To be 1·1 N Ill ' ~ -. DELIVERY n1an, ear I Y \ii..iiii..iiiiiiiiiiioiiiiio.. SER.YICf5. •J\GENCY Neal, w olesomc. outgoin.\(, &r ll :un or alt 2:30 pm P pay ne 1 s. e WAITRESSES -l"ood & n('Vrr· used, bOlh for $155. ;•' morl)ings. Musi ha~c depen-EXEC. SECRETARY TELONIC enjoy meeting fX'Ople. be Neon, Inc. 531-3314 Cocktail exper. only. Sid's 96>t-7DIO, usually hOine. h • dable car. Good pay. Fre & Fee "Position5 INDUSTRIES .able lO_type, &.-tukc. . .i>0n1c -251 E . Coast-Hwy S1'ITER, for 7 yr old, Ute B1uc-~r,-673-9001. REDECORATIN G }>~urn.,; 'i 546-1780 or 546-6427. l~e~-~~ 0~0~:~ !~b~~~e~~al& Accnt /RE/CPA exp to S25K lite S/H & like a \'aricty. Newport Beach cleani ng, 2-5:30 pm, Mon -\VAITRESS, e.-.:p, o\'cr 21 , lanips. {'llg.1, etc. l\fust go. '. • DENTAL PERSONNEL h h 1.1. 0. l\1gmt Troe, R.E. to $700 Laguna Be&ch Sales exp helpful. 'ro S425. f.J1·~,9271s or older. CM, clean & neat. P/tilllf'. J\p-Apprai~ ...... '79-352'1. ~· E . 1 1 ·ncomc op-ave 1 ese qua i ica ons, Sec'y/Construction to S6i5 C.O ntact Jerry or Kathie: • . ;no-i.; ""' 01...,. "'""~' ;_ xc1t ng es ra 1 give us a call. Comm'! Loan Proc. to SS50 642_8961• Equal Oppor. Employer ply Egg & Ale, v-iv-o .. v. T\VO SINGLE BEDS. .,. portunity. Earn money e Shorthand Tax Processor, Savings & Equal Oppor. Employer .'.'.''-"''°"''--------•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'I STATIONARY ~"'n gin e er , WANTED S35 li'OR HOTlf ,.. ' evenings for extra hours. e Accuracy 0 PAINTER.$ Helper: Oceas. SALES CLERK steam lie. Days f/time. PART Tl?ltE l!ELP • &12_9309 • Potential unlimited. Phone Loan, Exper. L.A. pen \\·ork. High pay. Exper. Some e>:per necess.' Full & Persnl Dept. Hoag Hosp, _ In Fabric Dept . G S I 112 ' Mrs Ham·, Til·838-6981 e Sharp Looks Payroll Clerk lo S57fl MACHINISTS helpful. No long hair. Apply NB aroge • e · ' · · ' Exec Secy, get skills to SG50 p/time. 645-8264. Checker ?-.lon1ing5 & Aflen100ns t--=--------t DENTAL assis1ant for busy • Initiative Sec'y ·skkpr, Conslr $600 ~~-;~~~Readier, 569 W. Auto Parts, 111 E. Ulth, Cl\t TELEPHONE from hon1e -_ -h,p~_ly Jn Pl'1·son l\IOVING Sale: 15 cu rt , Costa l\1csa office. Min 2 yrs Sec'y/Architect to $i00 Experienced in rotacy s"·ag· SALESMEN wanted r o r Help your budget & humane THE SINGER CO Coldspot fl'Olltles1 refrig. 147 exper. & must take good X-833-1670 Secy no sh Anaheim to $600 ing & tube forming. ShOuld PARTS man, aircraft or Cable TV \\'Ork. Good pay, pet control. Call 549-3849, • 2300 Harbor Blvd lb l-··r ~. Amana '-·p , "'"-JBS' !~~~~~~!!!!!!!!..,.. be familiar with Senn swag-maru· -. Inside sales. Retail n.3 'Ir '-rra c t M ,.., ......... ....,., ut.~ rays. tH<T" -· Dictaph Sec'y Anahm. to $600 "' flexible hrs. Apply In ;r-• '" • "'-'"'''' OS a esa. fn't'Zf' ,che!I 23 cu ft. 805 ,.,_ DENTAL A"st., E'xp:d or .EXPERIENCED seamstresg Asst Bookkeeper to $650 ing machine. k wholesale exper. nee. Pti:-person. 'J,'.eleprompter, 2624 TELE. SALES. Will train An Equal Oppty Eniployer $200. Dining roon1 set, table ' training desired, ll'lon-Fri. I lo "·ork in factory or will A.sslstant Personal Lines Excellent growth opportunity 540-T~. -West Coo.St H"1.')', Newport you to earn $ID-S40 daily WIG Stylists _ E.xper. $2 '. & 6 t.-hrs + bWlet $75 644-n62. train qualified OOme SC\lo'Cr. Undenvriter $500 & fringe benefits. Salary PART time, older person lo Beach. from our olfice or your $2.50 hr. Sal + Bonus. 7800 S.t!t-2757. 1 _. 1 ;1 • Apply in person Sunflov.·er R t' 'rl/T p1'•t "~ t ·th h 1 '°"lrol parking at Ken hO «• -N'·-H I Sch Dental Assistant Swim \Vear. 148 L os ccep ionl<>• y o¥"NV <.'Ommensura e \\'I ex-e P • SALESLADY, not O\'er 50 1..::::m=e·c.~::::,c=,'7'•=---......... 'O ... r, un . GARAGE SALE I'd SI" •07, f>'ile Clerks $350 perience. tucky Fried ChlckeJJ, 693 So. tor •-•cry & "'nd\\'ich shop. TELLER \VHO WANTS TO \"ORK' Expl'r. pre · ·<>-• '" t-.Iolinos,TSan Clemente ..,h I Pl · o · ~---1 II•"'• Laguna Beach. UdJ\-~ • AND .x:V('ra lime rcn1ngs ... Ul<ll'I "" E~s. Please call collect, DRIVE A CAB! + AuTIQUES EXPER. Ornamental Iron To $3 Per Hour Apply at Apply in person. 496-1574, PART·TIME OOSE I k ,, ' s Desperateiy NE~DED Secretaries fabricator for position in c,.\LL: TRISH t-tSfKINS SHUR LOK CORP PART time work for elderly er ~fur be IOW'I, "''Or 9 a.m. ,lo Swisct 1 • shop. i 25Yi Laguna Canyon JERRI Yr'lllTI'EMORE , • man pick-up & delivery SEAMSTRESS, Exp nee, ~s~oMen ~r ~·o~cu,:: C~~ 2976 A~. Cost11 Mesa. ' Rd., L.B. ~i6. 4S8 E. 17th tat Irvine) Ci'vl El S A service Good driver . Xln~ ,"·orksing col "ad. Northh Excellent opportunltyrk 'so"h"' be sllghtly handicapped ~.f075 • "J Suit• 214 . 642 1470 1200 E. Normancly . · · 0 .,....,.. Sat s:, ea ea c , expcr. teller to wo rs OLD n .. k '"Ir 1 EXP'D Waitress needed, A~ ' • (1-Blk No. of McFadden, S.1o-o""'· 21' ~ ·~ k M ~In Ne N ca t-<'lean Appearance. 1.1\!ll Cua. , Pay pen, • _, ply Odies Restaurant bet. l '!·~~·::~'l~··~~-~~11~·~~,.~~lt/~I % blk \V. of Grand) PART time sales girl, 12 hrs ~.. a wee ' on-..... -, our w• Vts retired. Age 21 to 70. bric-a-brac. Sa.t &. Sun, 528 ·~ 3&5 :t-.olon-Fri. 212 E 17th St, • ·•• >-per week. Ex p e r I en c e port Beach Branch. hiust suP'ptemcnt your income!. E, San Juan, Son Gicmenle. ; , C JANITOR A I . r." I 0 E l Secreta·r"1es type 50 w.p.m. Have a min, rl b G h • M. -PP Y in.person, .:..1ua ppor. mp oyer Prefer reel • Bu11hards . of 2 yrs o( college & the D ve a ca 1'.8 or more a Mlscell1neou1 811 ;' •"·u::.L,:;L~-,~,,.-,.-.-,-boo-,.kk""ee_pe_r-.1 ~!csa Verde Conv. Hosp, 66l Pharmacy, 494--0145 ability to supervise. This Is day. Apply u1 person, 1 , VOLT Ex:pcr. requlred. Apply in ~Ciieii"'iieri;;iSiit,;iCii'io1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim \MACHINE OPERATORS PHARMACIST'S Assistant a promotable position & will Yell::nv. Cab Co., 186 E. 16th USl~D fishing tackle, rods & JX'rson only, Lido Ship • Openings on 2nd & 3rd shifts. _ """"'ing Required Newport Beac.h el'entually be<..-ome full time. St., Costa -Mesa. rrt!l s, lines, tackle boxes, Instant Personnel p k D . I w R bm' son . ( -.,, . I t I ho b' t Yard, 900 Lido ar nve, • • Q Accepting exper. opera ors 40 Hour Work \Veek Xln<t "·orking conds &: fringe WO?ltEN,-s&lc11, earn 111 y oo i;, usewa1'Cs, ca 1ne Tl'mporary Service Newport Beach.. & trainees; opportWlily to l\1embcr of Relall Cle.rks The Irvine Company benefits. profit & wear latest BeC'linc hardware, and n1any other 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 1-':0•.'.'.!"c"-AL-"'"FRl""'~,B~KKP=.~R~ IC'arn while working. Apply Union. Located in Newport , i:or Appl. Please Call }~a5hions. No· Invest, trans it,,nis too nun1erou1 to mo'n- Ne1vport Beach q, 5'l6-474t Exp'd. 1'Ull or part time for in per!On, 9 toll am. 2 to 4 Beach. Ask for K. 1Iyder, Has OpeRings ?llr. Rohr nee. 534-7863 or SJ)..3100 Iron. All very reasonable. ~ Equal Oppor. Employer bu f Age no barrier Newport Beach pm. G42-22ll 833.3006 YOUNG MAN :;ni;-1 \V. 5th St. Santa Ana DOMESTIC IIelp George AUen Byland Agency, 106-B E . 16th St,. S.A. 547--0395 D00Rl\1AN wan!ed, Miramar Theater, San C\en1ente. Ap- ply alter 7 pn1. DRIVER City Auto Paris 2066 Placentia, C.M. EARN MORE WITH US! SECRETARIES Interim Personnel Service 17581 Irvine Blvd. #115 Tu1tin 838-5460 Equal Qppor. Employer ELDERLY lady needs.help. 1 hot meal daily, & light house \\'Ork. 2 hrs. daily, 5 dys per "'~k. Westminster area. can 5.1&-0227 ~Js c. · llas Opening For Calif. Injection !'ltolding -•• For Secretaries w/min. GLENDALE 9;30 10 G P~I. I block oU -200 Briggs AIX!. CM PORTERS WANTED 2 yrs. related experience: TO 00 YARD WORK. I/arbor sl,•d. GARDENER-?o.1ature on I Y · PBX ' ?-.lACHINISTS \Vanted for 4A!'ll~12:30 pm shift. F/time. FEDERAL FOR LARGE APT \oii ... iioiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiii-.\ Permanent. Paid lnsuranre short run jobs \\'/enough See Personnel la-Igr, Balbon P.enonnel Sec'y COMPLEX LOOKING & vacation. Pleasant v.'Ork· k · · Bay Club, 1221 W. Coast SAVINGS ing conditions. Newport variety to eep 11 in-Hwy, Newport Beach. Numerical aptitude, good $2 AN HOUR for sorpethlng Ip help you Beach. PH: 644--0606. 552 Multiple terestingl .theWillpr'°w"'/aidedresi·anre POWER ••-'•• ma"hi'ne s p e 11 in g & punctua· • 500 Newport Center Dr. CALL ~ look & 1tktclln hctht~rlpool!? Try& . exper. a o .... "~oe. .. tion. Wage & salary exper. Nl"'A·port Beach ,our "'a · _ w 1r Gel.Coat Repairmen Expcr. Part-Time lo learn. 858 Production Pl, operators, Dave Ca1TOU helpful. Type 60, sh 80. Equal Oppor. Employer sauna, followed by a fan· r.tust have a min. of 2 yrs ex-~Ion & Fri Nites & Sais N.B. l;iSaijiiilroaki;iiii'ii"ii'iiCMiiiiii645-4i;ii;iii7300..;; J Pub. Rel Sec'y [ II~] tasllc full body massage. per. & able to ha-ndle total MAN for telephone order Part time ok & full time ... _.. .. , ·. j::al! 645-7502 any day noon repair. Regular 40 hr \\'Ork Apply in person 10-5 desk. Pal Electronics Co., PRODUCTION With pleasant pcrsttnallty & T£IUIDO NEEDS HI 4 an1 . wC'ek. Starting rate $3/hr 1 1 N 8 6391 \Vestminster Av e, CONTROL LEADMAN good dealing .v.·/lhe public. rm-•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I ,~ d ( t ., 50/hr No. 2 Fashion s ., . . T 7o h 80 • hi "U" · v.·/a vancenien ° .... Equal Oppor. Employer Westminster Required to setup original ype • s ai: mac 00 HELLO! \\le hear )'CIU're 1 '; if capability merits. Contact \!!!!!!""'~~~~~~.., iiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii planning, prod. !!Chedules, & transcription. DAY Antlqws 800 planning a GALA AFlt,AIR ;. C. Bi'l'.laded. 642'-&42 JR. SECRETARY MANAGER status reports, relative to Secretary CALL TO '' • & you need some good . :. GENERAL OFFICE manufacture ol small elcc-WORK TOMORROW! SCRAM LETS entertairunenr. \\le would , Fee Paid. Beautiful modern bl" \Vith exper. in real estate, • like to offer our mU!!.ic. Call E~t~i·t. !-~~~ i:~e;~~~r, orficeoverlooking !he ocean. LIFETIME OPPTY ~~n.m:fh~ii~s ~=c11fu~ legal or escrow. bac~Wl~ RECEPT·SECTV 5.1!J.-S559 In Garden Grove or . LAWSONS Jewelers Good typing skilis & math We seek outstanding sales control cxper. in lite Exper. typ,1ng . egn 'Nice & Easy· ANSWERS ti46-7565inCosJaMesa. aptitude. Lite sh helpful. . t d l d t manufa•tur1·n.,. or electro docume~ts req d. 1:YJl.1ng 10 Prestigious !Inn. Lovely llC\\'· "CHOPS" 77n Edinger Ave. Salary to $500. AlsO Fe<> orK'n e a Y 0 manage our .. "' b 1 & machine lran9crlpt10n. office. Beautiful group to Cl d & D _ Hunlt'ngton Beach Jobs. Call Helen Hayes, Irvine office. Ideal for mechanical ass em Y. Sec-a...ry ··-1·a1e with. . Pennit -Vocal -Jaded -n Y an ;:, I results oriented, career Reply to Classified ad No. 1cru '""""'""' '·-' OR * AUCTION * $600 540-6055. Coastal Personne n1inded, creative \\·oman 632 c/o Daily Piiot, P.O. \Viffi background in tinanet'. PBX-RE(EPT. i\uuuct -MAJ ' G•n•riil Ofc Agency. 2790 Harbor Blvd.. "'ho likes to 'Run Her 01\'11 Bo~ 1560, Costa Mesa, Cnlil. Emphasis on acrounting "Right On" Usually, an adolescent is a Fine Furnlluro r ' ' Westcliff C.M. Sho\\'.' This is a responsible ,~~ on'••tcd , ch e du I es & This is where It 's at. Fron! minor with a MAJOR prob. & ApplJanct'!S If , Personnel Agency .;;~;·;;,,"· !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!! "" Jem s A & dignified position offering reports. Exper. in. budg. et de~k spot. Poise, & good lyp-· Auctiona Friday, 7:30 E:,m. ~, 1~~{~~j!~te~J . K II G• I ~&,~ faiW'snaiist~~0:0~~ ~~~Yfo;"b:t !;:~;J~~~ ~t~=~~n h:ipf~:~a~:i • Ul~E~R'E~A~ed. Beautiful~r!i~~ etc. for W indy's AuC:tion Bam ,;· e y. 1r ing -Temporary He 1 P turing tirn1. Apply in person 60 w.p.m .. 10 key b-)', tou~h. BEGINNER sale. 9 a.m. to Sunset. 2976 2075~~ NC\lo•port, Ott 646-36S6 GIRLS OVER 17 -Summer Service. Xln'I starting at c.oast Catamaran, :ms Xln 't benefits & \\'l'.lrinng 'Keep On Truckin' ;\1Kll'O!, Col;ta Mesa. Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'l. 4 travel as assistant courtse)or salary & loads or benefl~. l\1cGaw, Irvine. Contact Jim conds. Get it all !ogelher with this 545--4075 NE\V Loveseal, $55, Push .._ "·/girls 12·15 Y8rs ~ 1; · Ute Call Bea. ~z.m. Con-Black. Call Mrs. Smoot ~."". group. Real cool A_ ppliancet 802 lawn n1ower , $4.50. Tricy-~' Europe 6 wks or w · I. • I lidt>ntial Appt. REAL EST,\ TE SALES ....,., c.-le, $3.50 Books, pictures, or full time, stud<'ots OK . • lnduStrlG 'l'EMPO SUCCESS CAREER 644 3389 SUPER KENMORE 600 elcc dryor, 3 M;sc. Uoed usablcs, 2500 , Set your own v.'Orking hrs & Temporary Help New or experienced. Join the '"· or SECRETARY cycle $65. Lady Kenmore Ne\\·port Blvd.• CM. , :Cn;:!m pai~I ;wi®~~ Solderers World's largest and tastes! 644-3317 Penonal Growtti?! 11ulo \vashcr $75. No.~~ I0am-4pm. ., salary. For interview appt: S l\fOTEL -DESK O.ERK. growing resale organlzat\on Bctwn 9am & 12 noon only Dignified & stlniulaling ~i· Kenmore a~to \\'asher ~-CB RADIO, Elm.ac Clt.y-Fone ! \loTite P.O. Box m, Cdr..1, Need kn<>wltdge of N.A .. A. Exchange for room, 4 hrs. with a neJ.work of over 300 I.ion w/more responsibility Guar & delivered 546-86Tl, SS. 23 Channels wilb 18' • Calil. ~~. Iodud<' photo & requirements ccrtilled or per day. 2370 Newport Blvd . oUices and become a E ut• &: better onnty for develop-s.l7-8U5 whlp antenna, now mounted '.!. --· ' ' ' ! ' Electro Mechanical . Assembler ".w.w comparable. ::Ao9"""' member of our Millionaire Secreta·ry, xec: IYI ,.,. KENMORE washcr/d-•r on a "°' Cabin Cruiser. All ..l• hone .......-. •JJ· tnllllo doll Chall · u· musl ment. Top$$. "" ....., P · 0 ~ Club. Multi-n ar enging ~ __!!~.. . $79 ea. Over 200 wash£tn, for $95. 641-1140 : ~ _ , HAIR DRESSER w/follow-Elec:. Asseinblen ~00•0,roorRgl"'ri"atteleapenst 1 1 6 at!' advertt1lng program. Free lrilve gooasecretar1iil skills, Long or short assignments -dryers retrir trom $39~ ORIG Whl u u ho H7S t ing wanted. Unusual deal. guamnleed licensing school. be able to have excellenl You d-iclc, Cafl [)(ltt1e, 780' ~ ' . 11 CT t •~ ·• ~ s I Able to · \\'Ork undC'r 1nicro-o! age. Laguna Beach area. d k'll "" 545--0 · Hlrostilge Woodblock $185., __ I Bud's Beauty a 0 n · scope. Needed lrni11ed. Motorbike okay. Mu.st have Excellent sales training. typing and shorthan s 1 s. ~0--44.iO Appt. ' l YEAR GUARANTEE Goya Etching $225., Braqut> '· J 673-4900. • valid drivers license. Phone P lt>ase call Virginia Jones I Neal, att.ractive, pleasant NEVER AT FEEMEPAOT TEMPO l\t a Y tag...J<C?TUnOre-Washers· Llltio $1SOO. Pvt p 1 Y. ~' IHAIRDRESSER new salon 20 ~t . pcrsona\lty & able !o v.1ork ,. Yerian Oat• Mechin11 • 2061 Business Ctr. Or. 6424321 or 492-44 RED CARPET well \\'ith people. Salary ~5595. ~ ;., In H.B. ~~-...AA Irvine 833-1441 MOTOR roule delivery of Reoltors I"'''-. to •\115 ... Excellent Temporiry Help 636-2840 * 839-1778 l\fQVlNG Sale: Bdrm se1 • ~· A leader In the mini com-· Call 548-5.172, ...,.,.,)17'1"\1 ,..., "°' ~ l k Across from O.C. Airport DAILY Pll..QT, afternoons \\'Orklng cond1ti0ns and ~ NE\V El£'C. Maytag Dryer, ~ .. dining rm rel, I c new .{ pUll'I' industry ho.s nn ln1• •Hairdresser -Exp.• and Sunday. Phone J\'Ir. REAL ESTATE SALES fringe benefit'!. Send resume TEMPO used one month.. $100. Priv $50., d~ek , &: ctt,.lr $20., • ·" 1n('(llatc opening for ·8': Guaranteed salary ~Sce;i;l;•Y;·;;642-4;;;;;;';;2;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I FREE LICENSE to Irvine Unified School ~y. call bef. a : 30 , ml!M:.1.i6 F~.19\h . C.M. i~ EI e c l r o 1\1 c c h n n1c<1 •846-2900* KEYPUNCH TRAINING District, 4861 ?ltichclson Rd., NEEDS YOU 6~250. ·n ENC'!'. Brit. lnc. gk>be, _..,, A•"'mhlor w/e<per. lo HOUSEKEEPER/ d 1 . ~"·' FOR IMMED OPENINGS 11 M ,. pcrforn1 n..OOerately oom-Swing Shift N d Famous Ren.I Estate Licen5· ivine, "~· l\ h ci I'S'. RECOND. APPLI,.cyCES dicllon.1ry. t.'O · prep ae es • plcx clectro mechanical UVE IN ee e lni Course now available SECRETARY·EXEC. : ~b: p Delivered . guar. Dwilap's, Advrnturcs in L_I vi ng . wembly using wlreleu &. G l\lo's actual work expcr. thru Tarbell Realtor•. Free Unulllla l position for mature e Stenos • 1815 Newport. 0-t 548-7780 $300/lkst offer. 645--0672. ~'~· sketchOe. \'ou must be able Why ~ lonely? Here's the on kc-ypunch, keytape or lmmed1"alely Plactment Service. Frtt secretary. Competent 10.ae-• AIJ>a:yable NE \V 1 s • co 1dspo1 ESTATE SALE: Natun1 ;!5· to perform engineering chance of a lifetime to join key disc device. Hours Training Progrllm. Earn cept de 1·e ga I i-o n_ of e Cert. Public. Acct refrigerator. Green. Xlnt autumn haze minjc stole, .cbangtS It repair operations Mppy family in ·a beautiful 4 pm -t2 midnite, 5 days , while you lellm. Call Al re~ponsibillty l n nice Org. e Carpenters cond. Best ofitt. 675--4.984 . perft'Ct rond. 552-9715 aft 6. ' Without detailed written or new home localed in execu· k T 'st Sloan 1nt1 837-5440. on Co. ofc. Assist In ad-e Elec Asst'mblcrs W he /D OROIJO 1 ts 1 bl ·I Oral instruction.. Exper. In live Orange County neigh-a wee • -YJll S -Weekends (714) 832-i!XX). ministration ·~ mflnagement Irvine · 510-4450 Re~21 WkasFUrls . ryers groiv out~. $9.9;; up~ ptlnlcd circuit boord re-borhood. r..1om, Dad. and 3 Apply In The or TCg\onal uu;urnnoe ofc. Anaheim ~2322 " . . maint. Cre t A f-I 8 536-Z3'19 .5' (2nd Shi~) : I ' • ' work octtu. well manner~ grade school Pft'l!On~I Department REAL ESTATE SALES Call for appt. 842-77ll or ~'EVER A FEE AT TEMPO * 639'-Ial2 * s. v. . . , ... ~- children net'd reflntd, ma-?1Iond1cy • Fr1. 9 am·l2 ~oon • Clerk Typist New & resale. Newport It M&-2662. Tempo :remporary f-lcJp GE Combination v.•ashct & TfL\~S back East. 17 cu'\").:--~ Thi• Po~illon ifii for 2nd ~hlft . JI you n1etil lhesc qualifica- tions & have 3 yn. cxpcr. ture lady to live In -On a lluntlnEcton Bcoeti. UNI-OARD --1-clij'tr fi)Trofd, 6Ut ~1y """T'rl"";-fl:ttto-«i • ."":- pen,anenl baa!•. Lovely PACIFIC MUTUAL e Sr. typist HARBOR VfEW INSURANCE TOOL MAKER "B" used. 1195., 49G-5816. '"'c dr: "" dryer. boby • • l J,lf'IUC! Apply ln Ponon 01· Contact 'B. 1<r3Jka VDM 2n2 Mldlelson. Dr. fr v1ne, C11lfornla 133-2400, ext.336 !:qua! Oppor. Employu • private quarters, Saturdays • ·~ crib, bar s:lools, -195-0447. ., Ii Sunday11 oU. salary open 7~ ~='::~or: • Tech Typist .. -~OMShef~e~d P1aee 1 ---------1Noc~6~t8~ ~r~P. ~ DI~~sm:ns~~herl -USED BICYCLES '., ~1~':.'tt".""54~u ,. ~:,.~ ...,..,....,,...,_..,.~ • Repro Typist N~~Beach 833--071111 SECRETARIES & 2910 s. oa1<. s.A. 567-1321 d:fv .•. 83!1-76"': 546-521~. All Type• • &12·121'1 ·,j for lnlerview. TIME FOR VOLT wk-day• only Build ing Matoriols 806 * Custom Pool Tabloa 1• TIME FOR DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS FOR ACTION ••• CALL 642°56-78 , I '-'UICK "'ASu Instant Personnel • • TYPISTS DAILY PILOT • SURPLUS RUii.DiNG . 1478· Cal~ Dody '5?.(1002 ' ' .,. -..,. n-. -Ti'mpi>Nlt')' Scl'V!ce-D-All;Y PIL-OT ----MATERIAL , 1000'1 tJf NEW KENMORt;, w"""" •Pl'"' ' THROUGH A 3M8 Campus Or .. Suite 1116 VOLT • CLA. SSIFIED ADS. ITEMS! Doo,., lumber, ply. 2" yrs 1"· Sm~lo bed Slll. I N•wport Betleh "'6-4741 CLASSIFIED AD p I •wd, tllum sh .. littg, mold· Soll! llO. Call 5-15-633·1. DAILY PILOT ~equ.•-Oppor.-EmploY<f" --· lnstent euonne FOR CTION 1,g, windows;'''· SAVE Monet wtttn you !01" WANT AD FOR ACTION-••• 384ST&~:.i..~~~ 1116 A ••• BUILDERS SURPLUS 'l'ak• ...,. my Uollday S lines,~ diy1 fOr S bocks. CALL 642-5 678 N•wport Beach ~741 CALL 642·5678 2-106 So. Main St ., S.A. ll•alth SltO """"""' 4Wl·:lm • 642·5678 Lllte to !rad•T Our Tl'id<r"I Equal o-. '£mt>ktY<T "°" lhnt Sal 11).5 Need• "Pad"? Pltlee 11n ou11 ·• Paradl1e C'Olumn Is for )"'OU! 714: 54-1032 ~C.::llccMHm::=..==..· --""'-- • . > • • • , • • . . r- .. ~ ., ·-• 48 DAll,.Y PIL!O~T ~~~~~~~M~oo~d~.,~· ~Apr~l~I rl6~, ~19~7J~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~ I~~~~~~~~!"' 1 ·---------·----- ! .. <No... l~ I ·d-I~ I ............. I~ I.__·· 11~·· .. ~·.,.~· =i _...... -·· 1§1 I -·.. 1§1 ~I ~-~,,,-~l§J.:1 ~1 ~·~· .. ~1§.1~1 Mlscoli1~oou1 iii ;miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ - ICAJ\lE·='-R-A.._S_M..;,lnoJ'--1.-l-6-wt;..;.lh.,;.I Ploiios/Orgono 826 C.tl 152 ~les, lllkos Vons 963 Autoo. l~oil 9711 Ali!Oo, 1..,...n.d 970 VOLKSWAGEN Aulol, \Jlld "° -·~~~~r=;:.:=.=.;;:;:;;=1 Hash, Poloroid exp. met tla>, CONSOLE Hammond J.r212 PAIR &--toed mb:ed ma.le Scoo .. rl. 915 19TJ CMC ~ Van • Bl'<l\!'.llle rcnex Kodak 61!, Faotocy bltin.-board'. cats. Neutered & d•'<lawe<J. FOR SALE' JJl69 Yamal,. Brand New, "1lly Factory DATSUN MGI ·66 ·vw Bu; CHEVROLET \Ves:t .tf8..~~ 16'" coUcc 2 k----l>oii'ds--:lllkeke -~ -125. caeh. a.7·'""'" n't c Equ:if)pl!'d 1ncludtng 4 spd, ------.... --11---..;;;,;,;~---.....i.,.i 1 GE 1 11 ~., ~ ..., " 125 ,Enduro tha~ Is dirt. radio and awe: 1 ea 1 .,. TSUN. Ji'""'I'-"' amps, e ec. 295., $1800 new. 540--0044. Dog 854 ready! Bike has an ex· fTCQL53VSU281 ). F 0 LL 11A --'«t MGB GT, am/fm, radio, Orange 1899CXU) $7~9-.~!, c~l~~.F·,~ TV, R1dlo, HIFI, 1 pan.11k>n ciulmbcr, compre• PRICE s.2999. \V~ v.•111 fi. NEW 1973 ~~~. ~elss~~~i~ -0lL>c. mop__llhsel carp swpr, Stereo 836 FREE -only want nice slon rcleafie, bigb OOJUJ)l'ei-nance-a.nd trade. Royal nuinual l)'p.:~vrllcr, 1973 bonw for a woncklrlul dog. Ilion head, over.liizcd .pi-ton MIKE McCARTHY -PICKUP PORSCHE BILL 'MAXEY TOYOTA S30. GE l-dr pink 13 c.!. Z£NITH & RCA 1'Vs & Moving to nn· apt 3 yn. & barrel, nev.• rlna:11 & BUICK NO DOWN re!rig....xlnl-rohd. $l15. Chi· stereos priced to clear. All Golden Retriever mix. Very piston, dbl loop fork brace, llf'Se silJc: dresset;. &lze ll , avafl: MOdcl!l t.lrt' tn 11toc~ & vleuant dis~. One of the m.'W reOU" knobby tire elec· BEACH BLVD~ AT $68.23 ~ mo. tor 48 mo. 18881 BEAClf13L. 8•17·8555 FAST IMPALA '71 Ponche 914 • 11uNT1NGTON BEACH . 6 Cyl ' "m"'vw:;:::.,Po~p.::1':.;o.::·p". '-1 "'ow",.,"°'r". N-u I Faster lha.n U1e jungle cal, ,,_ ri .... "" """ this is a '67 Chltvy. Impala, W-e:s.. m_..eage ..:..:,n.JU. $2,450. all cooled '"llh alr JO DAY $30. 963 •5793 Monday thru on, display at Orange Co~n· few dogs that is so hu.ppy to trlc starter, full ruetOr tool tHE SAN OJEC'.0 FR\VY. Def. paymenf'Price $3213.60. Thursday 'I.ii 8 n.m. • ty s largest deulcr •. J yr pic· see you that he smiles. kit. Needs only n1ain bear. 894·3341 A.P .R. 14.34%. · -$ Spd, A.!\!/F'M, 37,100 miles, 833-1471 11-·eekdays 84:30. -• · .mag whecls, radif..i tires, Other tinles 546-00J5. FREE TRIAL EXCHANGE. h.lf'C tube, 1 yr parts & You'll never regret having ingrs, a good buy for U1e ·n DODCE VAN. X1nt cond. Miscenaneous service warranty. Ca.sh !)() this do~! 673-4702. beginner. Best off('r over Auto.' trans., custorn con· W1nted 820 or lcrms lb 36 mo. avail, OLD Engll1.h Sheep clogs $250. Call eves, 830-6697, version, ice box, fold away unbeµevably clean 1 own" -'•"'1B66;:;::,-""'vw=:::,0:,:b:::u:::i:..l _t -1500-. GUSTAFSON ' :'\l'11111or1 D,1h111t . ' ABC color TV, 19 O 4.6 raiiied b~ \l.'Cll planned A11k for Jett. be<I, cabinets, shag crpt .. llrookhuril, 1-1.U. 968-3329 Ol' I till b ll·'I J-L' • R · C FM sterl'o/tape deck. r.tag -~~==;_----'= 9021 I ~c en c y u ,,. rig pro-vnn t •ctng ycles ,1·-s, new ti-, .,~or of· = At a11ta, H.B. 962-5559. gram combined v.•/much uf· * BULTACO * '" ..... ...,._, 'b°S DATSUN '510 Wagon FM ST·EREO: 1973 Quad System !eel.ion. We believe you can.· " fer. ~ radio, good tires, low miles, Garrard mO(lel full size not buy a healthier. puppy., HEAOQU.ARTERS FOR . exc. cond. thfu-oot. See it .&l 1 clt11ngcz-. 4 Quad ·speakers, Conceived on Christmas a nd DESERT, MOTO X, TI' Auto Leasing 964 ll6 34th St., No. B. Mk· for ~:i'~r~_____w.ith._ blru:k in· ergineL$200 or best o(fer. Uncoln·Mercury 894-7056 . $4995 , , , . 16800 Beach at Wru.11er 67 VW, Xlnt c:ond. 1600 eug Jlunting\on Beach NEWPoRT ~~. ~must .. 11. 842-8844 * (213) 592.5544 IMPORTS I .;:;o=~=cc..,.-~1 "H""'e of tlfe Viking" , . . ,, .. . " A 1\-1 /t'M/MPX re<.>elver, ready for Ea~1er baskets. Accessories. .~Al=-~==------1 O ffico Furn·oturt/ t~ deck plug in jacks. $500 finn. &la--097.3. 1-larbor at Wilson. C.M. '73 '71 DATSUN, 4 dr yellow, prl 3100 W, Coast Hwy., N.B. \ a I rt I · 0 st·11 646-4655 or 646-2428 o 11295 all 642 ~s . Equip. 824 ' ' unc rume . ' PUPPY WORLD. 100 ML<ed UONTE CARLO . wner. . c 557-8267. =-=...;,.·c:.-=---1~.;;;?=.:!:.:.-----=:. brand ni'w in box & Pups. Buy & seu pups, also BICYCLE SALE *'"" . Santa Ana 1961 POR~ Super 90 OLD ORIENT AIJ RUGS will pay 5-10'7-1 n1ort? {han fOP' $ payers. Eves. 5-15-5070 OR IENTAIJ Rugs. Pri. ply wlll pay cash for all Sizes. 644-5326. Autos, -Imported 970 -,72 Blaze VOLVO. SALE! 4 Whee.I Ddvo, Aula'Trans HUGE SA. YINGS .Pow<c Steedng; pow.,: ANSAPHONE .... 1th t'empte guaranteed. \Vas $250. Now Pit Bull TeITier, Cockapoo, NE\V 10 SPEED ITALrAN LANDAU '72 240Z, lo miles, xtras, Roadster. Silver, Must sell, control. sWl undl'r \\'Ur· Sll:i. or take over small Porn, Chihuahua. T-cup B'ICYCLES $59.95. Beach p S i p . elean. Below blue -OOok. Only $1800. Cal l wkdays on· ranty. \i; Pric('. I B 1\-f payinclll~. 893--0501 PoocUe, Lallrador. ·Open Bicycles. 806 E. Balboa o-.ver leer ng, ower DISC 492--5907 aft 6pm. ly. 833-3362 ask for Steve Brakes. Cheyenne Decor, 5 Ne\v Tac•:llna Wheels & OYER 30 Gates Tires, Gerry Can ty""'writer. ..hairs, fiHn <• STEREO: 1973 -240 \Vall Eves. Stud Service. 531-5027 ·Blvd. Balboa 675--7282 B~akcs, Power Seats, Poiv~r ~7'-:.'.;;=~~~~~~-r-... ..., · · Windows, Auto Trans Air 1971 ~z. NEW Radials, " 1 PORSCHE 914, Sharp, cabinets. 673-2429. Garrard model, profeRsional MOVING forces sale of RICKMAN HOOAKA Cond, "'AM/FM s t e i-e 0 , clean. Must sell. Eves -B/\V. Appearance Group, lo ' Rack, 9.200 ml/l's. slill under PRICED AT PRE-DOLLAR DEVALUATION PRICES! 1varl'nnty Pl"i Pty $495o ca.JI "'Cekdays allet• 6 PJ.1. EXEC S\.\'VI chrs $15/25 Seo size cl~anger, Jensen air beautiful ~>olden Gernu1.11 Xlnt rood. Race ready. Cruise Control, Instrumen· &15-8243, days 6Ta-46ro ntiles, am/tm Xlnt cond. chrs $8129 Desks $20785 Off suspension s Pe u .k er 8 • Shepherd, 9 ino, x 1 n t ~tany xtras. Mak~ offer. tation, tilt wh!!el, white '70 DATSUN P/U w/Perris $3,495. 55S--8749L 61:).6118. ~upl 867 'v 19 .CM 642-3408 . ~~~~r~~~i~~rl~:11~e$415~ w/children, papers. Besl 6442694 after 7 pm vinyl root, THIS CAR. HAS camper. $11XXJ. or best oller. 160 PORSCHE Carrera, P1anos/Organ1 826 -now $175. \Vas Jcft uncln im· offer. 640-l59G, 52 Royal St. 'fill HONDA Chopper, many EVERYTJ:UNG <3~HNSl. 546-1>989 $2300. Must see to _ap- ed, s\111 Urard new in box & Gearge, Newport Beach. accessories, make offer. , lmmechate Dehvery Pl'J!Ciate. Aft 6, 673..£l800.· ORGAN HOBBY · guarant('ed . Cash or s1nall A6Ft?_~~N P&UP•8. /Mrare · Blue 548·5913. TJ.77 Maple No. 8, $106 FIAT RENAULT pymnts, Bfll-O:'j(}I Muwes 1 cream. Cl\lf • \Ve n11ike overseas deliveries Sec It • You'll Buy It Chevrolet Ole' *E bred for coats. body & 1 • b ASTER SPECIAL temperament. Very reas. 1971 ,1. HUSKY 250 allored par mo. '59 RENAULT Good: shilpe, $14{) or oUer. • For. a ~uiclt'. trip across the ) ( \. ' '·, ~ . 9264 SIZES 34-48 ' ' 7286 . . SO. CAL 1st NAT BK LEASING 19' Tf-IUNDERBIRD, 160 hp, !r~i.le.!:!, ~"'!!:!!el 945 TIO. loiv hr~. l\l'in bait 15' ARtsrocRAT Lo-Liner. ROY CARVER, Inc. tank.,, full canvas, 600 F/D E u rccorrlct\ in1n1ac. $4900. _xce ent co~ilion. Sleeps 234 E. 17th St. ~,57--830l tux. Gas refrigerator. Ex-Costa ~lesa 546--f.444 tras' too. $1500. 548-1395. * * * 14' Jt~iberglass run· 17' TRAVEL Trailf!r, Semi -'68 BMW 1600 <ibout. ~ hp. Elect. st. contained. Xlnt cond. Sips 5 4 Spd, Green, 1Xl-IA349). Evinrude W-/!rJr. Must sell. $800 Call 495-0135 ' Hurry for this one. !\·lake orr. 646-0l\.~5. $149S 22' GOLDEN Falcon. Comp ~-oR sale 22' all ~lass skiff. self OOntained. All extras. BILL MAXEY 8' bea1n. stringf!l'S co111pl $2SOO. 64&-4017 o:•'=""=· l600=::..· =64:::2·.::9::29:.:.'---:18' BREEZE Sips 6, toilet, • TOYOTA 16' GLASS Slickcrart, 40 HP shower, etc, like nu. $2000. 18881 BEACH BL. 847·8555 Evinrude \vl!raller. $675. 536-3.118 or 213 -863-1008 HUNTINGTON BEAC1-I 64:>-1701 or 493-9188. Auto Servko, Parts 949 LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA '69 F1AT 850 COUPE -UJW I __ s_u_N_B_E_A_M __ • mileage. Cherry. \Vhere you'll fipd "this '68 Can1ero just right. JO DAY FREE TRIAL EXCHANGE. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 GUSTAFSON After 6, ~5506 '68 FIAT 850 Coupe. New brakes & tires. Good con· dilion. $600. 644--0631. JAGUAR '68 Jaguar XKE - Rdstr Chrome \Vire wheels, 4 Spd, Beige with complimentary interior, New top, Low ~liles, Extremely Clean, \\'ell kept automobile. '61 SUNBEAM ALPINE BEST OFFER 531-5142 TOYOTA '73 Corolla TOYOTA SALE! No Down Payment $59.53 PER MONTH C *KE~l $59.53 per mo. for 48 mos .. '71 Volvo 2 Dr Lincoln-Mercury 142s · 16"00 Beach at Warneo· Huntington Beach 4 Spd, 2-1,100 n1ilcs. Blue 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544 with light blue interior. "Home of the Viking'' $2~95 KINGSWOOD 1972. Statiot> NEWPORT '""'n, 9. P••,,nger. low mileage, like new Loaded IMPORTS ,. oola ~30. GJ!ll a1ier 4 p.m: 499-3840 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 '64 CHEVY, El Camino l-:'"c--~.::.:_,;::__~=I Beaut cond. P/S, nu paint' A-"'u;.;t•;.:•;.• ..;U:;;sed;.;;;.-___ 990 $1200 invested. li-fake offer~ ... 842-3042 A MX ·5~ CHEVY 4-dr. Good cond. $300 or best oUe.r. '10 AMX Call 58&-3'127 air 5 $2695 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 ' " ~--H N total det. pmt. price $2857.44 'Y. '--"'"'st wy., .B. APR 1429~ OAC 642-9405 ' . . . '0 • • • 4 Spd, Air Conditioning. Jo\v '72 VEGA ,1•agon blue auto, roiles, Bronze "Yo'ilh Tan call bct11'cen·J.2...9pm. '72 Demonstrator leather ,interior. 499-3624 MAZDA MARK 11 SEDAN -----'-'-----Automatic, radio, factory air, * Mazda '73 Rotary~* \vhite side walls, 376EYV. $1795 '67 lMPALA, P/S, P/B, air cond . .._ radio iv/rear spkr NEWPORT n1ust sen. 962-2012 aft i pm'. $66 MONTH See It • You'll Buy It IMPOR-TS CHRYSLER 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE \ViU accept trade·ins CALL MR. FRY ~ Hunt. Beach "MAZDA Auto Transt.~ir Conditioning. Electric windows, Power Stecl'ing, AM/FM, Lo ca 1 Garage Kept Auto. $6495 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coast Hv.:y., N.B. ---64~2-_94_0.:.:S:._ ___ 1'73 NEWPORT Custom. p/s BUICK p/b. air cond, vinyl top. aPtmt LtADi& -TOYOTA l\'lany extras. 6,000 ml. 1966 H bo c 'I 646 9303 ----------1 S.15So.··ca11 bh\'. 10am·7pru ar r. .1• · · '79 Riyt:ERA -All po1ver, 644-5358 · '69 TOYOTA Corona new tu·es. Xlnl cond. ·Vinyl 4 Dr, Auto Trans, ,\ir Con-top. 42,000 n1i. S3300 . CORVAIR ditioning,. Beige ()..'\V~) 545-7769 01· 5.'>2--0-367, Pri l-----,.;.;..;:.:.:_ __ $1249 pty. '63 Corva,ll· not BILL MAXEY }I WHITE Bukk Wildcat running. ' r convert. All power, lilt 962-9993 TOYOTA w~I. 1 owner, xlnt. cond. COUGAR 18881 BEACH' BL. 847-8555 asking $600. 4~1479 :;.H;;;UNTI~~N:;_G::_!TO;;;. e;N~B::;EA~CH:!!.__ 1'6ha2 BUICK Sp .• v5, 2 dr, '69 COUGAR air/cond good -; rdtp. Ex. cond, auto cond ' . • '67 TOYOTA Va Ton ~~';~ ••. pwr steering. $~. 642-l!in or 540 •090 \Vilh camper shell (S35CPH) ;JU.)';wt't ()-4 $1249 'TI RlV!ERA Exer. auto. FORD BILL MAXEY lmmac L'Olld, Full prnVer 68.000 mt, $2850. "63-1896 ' '67 FORD Con,.rtiblc XL· TOYOTA CADILLAC 500. Top cond. $875. Sl&.1323 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 ____ ...;;.:;;::...;..:;... __ 1;;,o;-'.<'16-06""""97;-;';,',:;'e;::s . ..,,,=-- HUNTINGTON BEACH 0 '6-t RANCHERO. Good con· '70 TOYOT~ 4 dr air/cond EL D RADOS dition. New tires & Fliptop 3100 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. auto. pri owner. $1595 call 1967 to 1972 S500. 548--0297 __ _..c64.:.:2c,,-940..:.:;5:._ __ · -1 557-8267 Santa Ana 17 TO CHOOSE CONVERTIBLE. '69 XL 50 USED TRIUMPH COUPES.CONVERTrBLES loaded. Lo mileage, Xlni • concl. $1850. 586-266;8 MERCEDES DE .VILLES '70 9 pa5' .LTD wagon. afr '70 TRIUMPH Spi tI I re. ON DISPLAY Clean, lo mileage. Orig 1966 to 1972 cond, l'aclt. ~-Jichelins. lo\\' Sharp New Car ov.•ncr. 551-0000 \Vkdays, alt 34 TO CHOOSE mi. Gd. price. 494-1992. 5. Wce~ends all day. COUPES JEEP Trade-Ins Comint In Every Day Ask 1!1lout Our Unique . VOLKSWAGEN cmJ'i:'i,'i!t~LEs Und Mercedei Lean '69 VW Squareback Plans Blue (347BEL) $1349 House of Imports BILL MAXEY Many e.'\:cellent c:olors Choice of interiors fCloth & leatherl Factory air conditioning Full power. Choice of: SACRIFICE • '67 Jeep \vg, 4-whl. dr. Auto. AIC, P/s P/b. $1600. \Vkdys 5.S7-9770;0 eves & wknds. 492-5041. LINCOLN Charter 57' Ketch CREVIER BMW 6862Mancbester,BueoaPark TOYOTA I§] Sal "-I • -· on the Santa Ana Frwy Stereo AM/FM radio Cruise control Trunk opener & 1nore "67 LINCOLN Cont. 59,(()(1 miles, motor A-1 cond. Int & body in good shape. Tape deck, stereo, aif'. See to ap- prec. Make oUel'. $925 968--0628 . "Tioga'' ,........ n, es · ~rv ce • l.>e"as1ng No ,,,_,. 1 . & .-, 208 W. 1st St .. Santa Ana 523-7250 18881 BEACTl BL. 847-8555 w .,"'' ing: . 0 1· spnng · . 835•3171 '68 Merc-...1-HUNTINGTON BEACH sun1n1et cruis<'s. WUC> C'J1et Salisbury Jl CAPRI Benz 280SL '68 Yellow VW Bus, ne1v 61:.r--8.14..J or "Tio~.1 ". Box 316, Recreational eng., reblt trans, under Balbou Island 92662 Vehicles 956 C Reist y,•arr, body good cond. $1300 ~X B I 909 '& pe r or best offer. 646-4986 betw ·;%·t 1 .::.::•.::at:.:5::.• _:5:.:•::.i:_ ___ .:;:::.1 RENT a Sundial Van Camp· AJ\1 /FM, Air Conditioning, 5 Pllil & 9 PM >!'.Yi. 1' J SIO 95 • Burgundy with black inter· ,67 .!·1·-_,, CATAi\1ARAN B-Lion, all e ony . plus 6c pel' ior, Rebuil.t engo"ne . with BLACK VW. Very gd alu n1 ,t._ fbrgls. 21)' Jong, 32' mile, by the day, 'vcck, or 1-lercedes Benz 12,000 ml.le condition. $900 or best offer. All in immaculate condition Largest selection in Orange County Nabers Cadillac AUTHORIZED DEALER :.>GOO HARBOR BL., MUSTANG <XlST.<\ MESA "68 FORD 11 UST ANG 5-l-0·9100 Open Sunday t'ASTBACK -VS, good cond. $950 .. Call 536-8906 ,,.,~.. MIKE C guaranty. .:;:~=· ~-----"W."i.~'l Xlnt cond. 645-7091 eves. Mc ARTHY $559S MECHANIC Special '68 VW '66 MUSTANG. Red w/wht vinyl lop. 6 cyl, auto trans. Gd rood. $675. 548-3519 . -§ n1ast. $1175 firm. Complete. u1onth. Reserve yours Today BRAND NEW 673-3750 '& , 1 f.xr !"\,, '!':> .. n. '72 HONDA SL350 low mil". BUICK '73 CAPRI Sqbk, Jnjec., air, engine, • 1-ftke OAHtW. Good rood. Mu't sell $600 · BEACH BLVD. AT I d ' D I' NEWPORT troz, bst. offer. 962-7459. tinn. 2273 Maple St., Apt E THE SAN DIEGO FRIVY. mme tale 1 overy FOR ACTION SOMETHING B PONTIAC Y"u'll love this light, ''"Y c"" Me<a !9'-3341 GUSTAFSON IMPORTS . • • • IG =-=---~~=--I t'api~ \\hl'n breezes blo1v! CAL-20 sailboat No. 625. '72 JEEP CJ-5, never used L'incoln Mercury 3100 W. Coast Hwy ., N.B. DAILY PILOT A . '67 Cacli~lac .)"lcet\\•oorl. '71 GRAN Prix. perfect cond, Cuddl.Y -0s a caress! Toss Good cond. Ne\vport nioor-V-S, P/S, PIB, 10" gates:' • 642.9405 CLASSIFIED AD Big Car. Bigger Value. 10 lo n1ilea(t:e, all equipment, nn this lacy. shell-stitch cape ing. $3200. 642-4178 mud & snow tires. Yello\v. 16800 Beach at Warner DAY FREE TRIAL EX· veey reasonable. ~4-4839 or i1·hl'll lhe sun goes down. Must sell 00\V. 646-4187 i-luntington Beach Vacancies cost money! Rent WANT AD CHANGE . 673-5507 Ct'Ochrt of knitting 'vorstcd LIDO 14• mint cone!. da~s._ 673-8608 eves. 842-1844 •··(213).J92-5~ your hou se, apt., store GUSTAFSON '6"7;"-;;Fr;iR;';E"s"1RD=---,-~I New. young, s I i Jll 111 j n g ~~,a t_rio ~r,,tone1G'20· ~at,tern . ~7i~1N~~ $~: I S~po~r~t~··;,;R~·~·~·;· ;.D~od·~·;:-;9~5~91,';:'H=o;:m;;.•;:::;of~th=·~V=ik:l:n:g~";::.~:l~:·:~·i:f~:~:·:lhru:d.=·=Daily=·=Pilo=·=·'===-=-6'=4':2~;;5~6~7;8;;;~-I' Linco -n-Me-rcury· .SAitll' • Plb.-:.PL~. ~ ::!: from the si<l c"S\\"CPI neck 10 1".;i : :;i1.cs ..,. : • inc· 1' . 00/bst ofr, 644-4896. the plcat-bre<'zecl hl'1nl1111•! st;vt:l\--r\•.mrt~ (..'E?li'TS CAL-CAT sailing cataniaran '72 Einpi-blt Super Bug. 6ooo 16$00 Beach at Warner ,;;lOC-';G"T;:;O;:_;Co:;:.;.-"':,;.,';'.'.'.:--1 Bask in the sunshine 0! all for each patten1 -add 2;J ~nt cond. great fun $500. or actual mi. $.'500 & T.O.P. £~ " ~ Jfuntington Beach nvt. , Full pwr. the .l'OJlll>lin1rnts you'll gel. cents for each pattern for best offer. 833-ll-44 545-0629, 6-S Pl\1 '",·, S T ; ""R. G Al ,,,E·-o· j( ¥ 842-8844 * (213)~ )92 5544 32 · 000 actual mis. $l900 or ""1ff..,.; .... 11T .... -r ... 6 A . • 1 - 1 S , ndl SI ~ ..l"'S.&I .I'-'-tit ,, • orrcr. ~29. Printed Pa11 crn !l 2 ·I : 1r ,, ~1 a nd pecial l"'a. • 27' Coronado oop. Deluxe T k 96• "'°Ylt Home of the Vo.kt·n " · s· 3t "" '0 10 I ti · I ird I · 2 old A king rue S "' ARllS By""""""' • . -g PVT Parry '69 Venlu'a 2 dr, \Vomt>n s 1zes ', ,)\), ,,,.., ' . ng: o.o 1er\\'1i;e 11 --c ass 1ntcr1or yrs. . s :..,;..::.;.;;:. _____ .:.;:: ~ UHA 42. 44, 46. ·18. size ;-;(i 1hu1>t delivery \1·ill takt> threE' $7500. Eves (714) 682-7339. /.IA1t.1i J:t. YoorDoilt~ilyGclic:lw M Sf/'T i1 rl"'l '68 CAD. Cpe de Ville ale, R/H, air, auto, vinyl top 40) takes 3 y1:1rds 4.i·inch 1,·~eks or more. Send to SNIPE w!TRAlLER '69 FORD Ranger 1·~ ton 1<H it Aecon/ing fo Iii• Stor1. -v"" ~· ll~~ ail xtras, perfect cond. xtras $1.14:1. 54()-8588, ' fabric. Al ice Brooks, thr DAILY 1 d k P.U, Auto, air, ne\V tires. .. ll·lo4.: ~ To ~deve"lop message_for.!uesdoy" ~.ist..ss . Make offer. 6 7 5-o 7 6 4 , T·BIRD SE\1E1''TV·f'rVF. Ct:NTS PILOT 105 NeM\ecrnft Cornp ('IC, Nee s some \\1or • A-1 cond. Also nelv '73 ca1n· ¢; 48-6-t·1l re«twordscomspc:llidinglOi'll.l'nbcrS 1~7-10 552-8780. tor each pauern .. odd 2:i Dept ., 'eox 163, Old.Che.I.sea $125. 673-6474 or 67~1575 per shell. Must sell. Reas. ofyourZodioebirths9\, ii<i9~1oi-'iEi'iL~OOMiRi>A<;DO;;n---;Fc:;;~l:=:---_:;:.:.:; ___ I cents for e;i.ch pallcrn fnr ~to1ion , Nc11• \'ark, N.Y. * HOBIE 14 ' -Xlnt oond, 5.57-9868 J f'::1,~ ~~ ~141 :~== equipped. Xlnt cond. 23~~ 196Lan7. Thund~rbird, loa~ed, Air Mail and Special J.lanrl l· lOOU. Print Nnmt', Ad1\rt.'!i!'I, 1tl n & yel101v hulls, 2 ·sails, '65 CHEVY %. ton camper J Poulbiliry 33Tu.e 6J Horr.. nii. Call A99--1704 d~u lop, powr . steenng, b•g; olherwl<e ll>ird·''"" lip. r ntl<rn N11111h•r. 11·,.llcr. 6'3-64M special w/81> 11o1 l·da y •Th< """" 6' t"""""" · p<i.T b'akes, ru' cond. delivery will take llu1'C N E EDLECRA1'-r "72! l\.ITE No. 703 Cabover Camper $1200. 5£...nlflSJ 35\Yho 658-'68 DE VILLE convl -Red burglar alarm. A car that o~d to C-h<>t k II •· 646-9'"' tro 8 5 al 5 60f J6Md 6'To. lthr Int. $1950. 894-f455 has been t"eally taken care weeks or tnllre. ~-,, .......... n . etc. r ret' +dolly. •A75. . ~ m to ; l , 7Wonde J7M·---"" ~1u-d 9=1907 I Marian ri.tartin. the DAtf.Y directio ns, 51)c, Callfi?3-i97 54S--0351· &Htori r 38 pJ;--411 T;'" ays: /;r \eyes. o ·Don't miss this. Besideli pJLOT, 442, Patt e1·n Dept.. ln!'>tlu1t . ~1acrarut' 81"111k. •68 CHEVY PICK UP 8, bed 9Dllft•l'l1Ctt 39 ,,..~r. ~9fi!TN '64 CAO Cpe de Ville. Xlnt being clean & running ;ood. 232 W~st 18U1 St, JliC\\' Basie, farn:y knots, pal· 16' HOBIECAT \v/trnilcr. · · IOShould· AOO.Olll'io 70~ cond. $700. or best offer. Or ii l_~s .beautiful. For only York N. y . 10011. Print ll•tull. Sl.00. &st offer. Call 673-7613 or $1200. 8 I I Aftemoen .. , Sr"°""' ~g:.il'lcl Ira.de tor pickup. 492-4868. S1250.. its your.1. Private ,__..,...~__ADD~ \l'ith Instant Cr1>ehet Book -67J...3j:z.2 Call 963-41 7 !><0 """""l ~J~ ~~. 731,n.~~"""'"•••• f===""'I '60 & '61 Cadillacs. ply. 141 Florencia. Apt 'A, ZIP, SIZE and STY'[}. --Utirn Y p1cfUl'('S !-----pjit. UJ::'j('}TI" -1700:-Xtm. race '72 FORD Ranchero. All CAHCll 14 Pn:ipltio11t" .. 4AtluM .. 7'4 &dfina ~ Priv owner. , ~lake offer. ,SaFOn CIResma'1c"."1t~92-T266-Bird1. ]'{UMBER. terns. $J.OO. . rh~gt'd. H\~-y. trailer, $IOO. goodies everything heavy ~· JUHiZI t5Vour .. 5E..pe."""* 75&.tttt 842 83 _.. SEE MORE Q 1 Jc k Cu1n1>leh: lrt,..tant GUI nook 673-2097 duty. Ca11642--0245 JULY z1 11~i~loft ~~:'II ~= -76 $3.iO. -1 -1nore than 100 go"fts -·1 CAMARO 11 -· 0 153 Fashions and choose l'ln(' $l .OO. • LI DO 14, r-.:o. 3458, 2 suHs Vant 963 . • 1-s-!flnoncro ,.8W'11h 7!0-. ca '1'XrG pa.t~em he ,.'!?.?i' 0Au 1 r 1 (;oniplel8 Atxha.n Book _ ~ails, trailer, $1~. 67'".r-31~9 ,72 DODGE V N '6-&:>-75 ~~~ ~~ :~ * For Sol<' * Spnn&.Sununer \,Allf,G.!og. Sl .00. PvLply. . A . uo · '210atkhd 51~ 81&.!ul,.nft '69 CAMA-RO V-8. auto, ycl * '57 T-BIRO CLASSIC size&! Onb' SOc. • JG .,lff,\' llut noo..-~. !"M. Boats S Md & Ski 911 PR.Jelled. New tires • V-8. /~ JUl.:ID 22You',. !ls.a.ti 82Con1F•h:ft ./Nf .. 10 • w/blk. LOru:led. Must seil. CAii 548-6789 A.fler SPM * JNSTANT SEWING BOOK RMk of U Prlu A.f.a-Mn-. r P $32!"!0. ._. 494-0322 ~ ;;.11 ~~ ~~ :~ ,0. 11 6'12-8961 Dianne 9-5 wkdays. VEGA 1 ~ today, wear t•mo"'"'" ~int .Book I 15 I ·1!>;8 .E v l N Ru DE 16. '66 ~ ~'g;,Runs good. $900 ~~~~~~""' _,.,,_;; ~~ -.... \ CHEVRO.LET INSTANT ..FASH l 0 N ~ ' . "' pat em$. ~~rtsn;!1ick 1y~1~ hul· or Call 567a-i1~{7 aft G p t\1 ~2llt!!... -l 2281 ~~ 57~!!.~•IOI ::~.........__ PllCD -----------·n VEGA hatchback. .t · BOOK -Jtunc:trtds _o t l\l~in ~Ht .. --.-s ""'\e, t 11 • ....:P·-1 • ~-on-...,_ ~ ·68 Q-!t\f. ~fallbu Wagon, tfl('ed, tartlo .... 36.000 mil. --' ~ruhlon tacts. p.. I JOc. · .,-nuu.. -Aini an\ -Y 111: std uuat, 1970 t1JRD van. r:ew tires. ---..v..v 29~.---atllwlb ~ •II AJC. P/•. P/b, good--eond. Vf'ry fiO()d :,cond,---Jt,Q, ' _ · • sz.m. Kl.1~2299 Runs .-..i. 12100. 1 .... .;., 22 .30Bt 60Fell 90Corao&ciebt ..... ! • tor.n or best ofl<r ....,. '"'r.N! 557 .- f'or thll uem under '50, trJ I Quilt• h1r Tocby . U\irlJ" . 'Llk I de• 0 Trad ' &'U. 543-3493 ~·' iO ®-() 4/17 ';."111.rt = --. 0.lU'"'O;NO. 1.,:;;;,~;;::.·::·,,..,...,..-,-,_~ the Penny Ancbtt. 15 bellulirut oanertw: 50c.: I (' ., trn · or er s · ...... ., ... \21Gool Ao-Nmcal Jl.ISl1 • 1' '63 CHEVY 2--dr. MUST t.ell toda.y, best P11radi9e column ii (or you! Daily Piroc Wan( Ads have _.. ,... Slick. $21)'.) 1952 Pomona, '72 Vega CT kMl.dOO, 5 line!t, S dAyg for 5 bucka. barg&lm plore. O>sta Mesa . 642~ -~---- ' ' • . ' • 7 • • 7 •. • . • I -' San (;Je 111ente • • ~apistra no '+-. • 'iOL. 66, NO. '106, 3 ~ECTIONS, 46 P.AGES ,, t " • Today's Final EDITION N.Y. Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1973 TEN CENTS P_a yoffs .to U.S. Agencies by Aliens Reported NEW YORK (UPI) -A number ol Mexican peasants who enter the United States illegally are ousted bUt are atlow· od to snw back into the <OW1try ii they are willing and able to make payoffs, the New York Times bas repj>rte<I. - The Times said Sunday it uncovered tlie system of payoffs used by the United St.ates Immigration and Naturalization Ser.vice, Mexican .immigration .otflclals and privately owned.Mexican tnuiiporta. Uon' companies during a year·long ln·4 -The plane then lands at Tijuana, the vesttgatlon. Times said, and usually about half the 'lbe way the system \\wks, the Times Mexicans make the payoffs and are free said, is that many of those arrested for to sneak back into the United States. The illegally entering the country are loaded others are flown to Leon where they try onto Border Patrol buses, driven through to scrape together enough money to get a hole cut ln the international boundary back to the border or go home. fence at Tijuana, and placed aboird a The Times said more than one qu¥ter waiting DC6. Once in-the air, the Mex~ o! the Mexicans .,arrested eac:h year for leans are told that they·can avoid a flight entering the country illegally -nearly deep into the interior of·Mexi~ by brib-450,000 in fiscal 197'l -are removed in& the crew. .under tJie--system. The Times said it cOnducted, during its year-long investigation, interviews ~ith ofjicials in California, Arizona, Texas, ~asbington and ~1exico. · Among those playing roles in the system, the Times said, are: -Attorney General Richard G. KleiJl- dienst, who "is reported to •have helped establ ish 'the system but denies having done so." -Armando Verdugo, "kingpin of coin-.. operated vending machines: in Tijuana, with influential conne<:tions in Mexico.'' -John Alessio, a San Diego 'millionaire and a business associate of · Veidugo. -Leonard \\'. Gilman , south\\·est regional commissioner or the Im - migration Service. · The Times quoted an unidentified Justice Department spokesman,. as sayi ng, "It's all very st range and marve lous, and \\'e're no\v in the process or trying to determine what the he1l's going on." Giln1an, the Ti mes said, told two federal grand juries in California that the removal program \\'as the result of an "lmo rficia l" 1969 arrangement betYleen qfricials of the United States and ~1exico. The Times said American immigration o!ficia ls defend the procedure on the ground that shipping aliens into the in- terior of Mexico makes their re-entry in- to the United States more difficult. us ee • ' ' • Nav1 Station Dana Point County's Divorcees 'Anxious' ' L~ng Beach Bas~ Will Be Closed Motel Sc.,.e Of Shooting By JOHN VALTERZA Of tM 0.llY ,11.t Stiff By TOM BARLEY Of ,._ DlflJ' P'IW SW!' Anxious divorcees of both M!Xe5 pro- vided the first order of telephone business today for Orange County Clerk William St John's busy offices. • EmplOyes said each ciller had qlles.- tions about the legality of his or ber divorce and the action that should be ~-ii a fuial cleqee ~ not been !Jsued in the dissolution Of mirrlage. And many Of.the caliersald tlieir-aDX· re1y had ·beell .........i 1iJ a DallJ Pilot story whlcb clisclooed FrldiJ that at leut lib\IO divorce actions In Oralij' Ooilnly hHe never been legally eonelllded because of the al>lenee ol a final clecne. . It ls now estimated by SI Jolm that lilch actions have actually been running it the rate of about 2,500 a year. 1be county clerk estimates that II per· cent ol the divorces fl1ed In this area have gone no further than the issuance bY a judge of an interlocutory decree· of divorce. Many divorcees leave the courtroom at that stage believjn1 that any further oourt action is unnecessary, county workers have said. But ·lhooe dtvoroees wbo reDl&ll'Y outside Orange County without obtaining that vlW final decree may not be legally "married, SI Jolm warns. .-superior Court Presiding Judge Bruce !Umner of Laguna Beach plans to take care of the future by seeking legislative action that will make a final decree man· llatory, he bas stated., But that action, county employea p01nied out today, will not remedy the thousands of illegal marriages that may (See DIVORCES, Pqe I) By Tbe Aaooclated Press The Long Beach Naval Slatlon will be shut down by JWle 30, 1974, and its 63 ships and 20,000 crewmen reassigned as CUSD Board 'lo Wnsider Growth Plans . Trustees will continue to tackle the problem of sucklen growth in the Capistrano Unified School D i s t r i c t tonight as they consider bond maturity schedules and plans ror a new elemen- tary school in Laguna Niguel. The board's agenda for the 7:30 p.m. session shows several other matters at- tribuled to the surge in pupil populations. At crown Valley School the stall is propoetng that a· klldlen be converted In· to a classroom to make space for children. At C.plstrano Elementary the staff Is proposing the trustees abandoo plans to keep a quomet hut in service as a classroom. Instead, a new portable classroom ill suggested . In another growth-related matter the board will consider a suggestion to urge cities and other government agencies within the district to require developers to sell Jand to the district at dealer's cost (See '1R0WTH, -Page Z) Former Newspaper Writer ' . . J Patrick McNulty, 46,_Dies • Patrick A. McNulty, 46-yety" old Iree described· by them as a "favorite of Janee writer, rormer Associated Press stlldent.S of writing." Since earning a newsmaJ\ and lecturer for UC Irvine "Ex· master.or line arts degree at UCI In 1967, ifnsl~ died .swmy of an apparent heart McNulty-had;_taught ~ an <!-·~tact. . •-•· · fict ' I t and ,.11'1le publisher of an air travel \\'Ora.auups ~ non-ion , ea ure magazine and realdent of capistrano creaUve. writing. . Beach was stricken after having pulled·a A native of -Cleveland, Ohio, he "".as sailboat from the neean near his home. graduated from the UC Berkeley School Mr. MeNulty was teuh!D( a class in of Journalism in !951, and .studied at tile creaUve writing al UC Irvine this Sorbonne Uwvemty m Pans durmg 1951· quarter 52. Univ.;..ty officials today -. }hoebd McNulty aerved for II years with the by"tbe news of the IUClda> death ol a n\an Assotlated Preaa from 1953 to 1961 m the , N.W York and Los Angel .. buriaus and ...:.-----·-'------..,-until ltA as 111 overseas coITespondent in Europe .. Clilna .and A!rica. lJ OGGONE-PlWT A.D FINDS FIDO -Doggone it! "Where bu Iha\ liltlo doc gone?" !f:ere's a-qlll<k way to Dod out: •• wlllTE male poodle wttb' •grey ..... -~ Wea ... J>lact •jeweled .. ~ lar :lfea collar, or H.B. Ill. , School. (Phone number). -m·~ r ... a week. Tbe flrit day the ad _.,.cl, the ._ 1ot a call aQd tho do(:"waa fouod: II "iiM've loll -.thlnl. find I\ fut wtth a DAILY PJLOI' clasailied wllllf ad. The number lo call -104171. • '• •• He wrote for the AP in the fields of sports, televi sion and mo V l e en· tertainment and was both a feature and news writer. He was most noted for Is eoverage of the Algerian WiNor lhe AP, a Uaiverslty spokesman recalled. ,ffe wu a member of the Overseas Prat Club' of America and Anglo- Amerteao Press Club of Paris. _ A lree1anee writer since 1960, ~Nulty had Interviewed heads of slate including lhe late Presidents John F. K<nnecf¥ and 1-oyndon B. Johnson, the Ill• French Pmldeilt <llarles de Gaulle andl'Wii er Gecq.. Pampldiiu, th•~ late Soviet !'lender Nlfiita KhrushcbeY. lie is airvlvtd by hls wl-. Mary, and ,lltt children of the home, :ism Beach Rood, Coplatrano Beach.. Funeral It• rengementa ""' pending. - part of a 11 billion cutback, ll)e Long Beach Independent Press Telegram reported today, The newspaper says thlft 44 ships will be sent to other ports and 19 will be decornmissione.d. There are 500 sailors assigned to the. station plus another 1,500· civilians~ represenuall ling ~ .~ !"'yroU of $11 jlii!Jl!"'-., aM y. . ·. · _ M_osl operatlQns at the LQng Buch NaviUBue, wbiCb -.lii>ales--if'"!Y ana· Marine acUViPes in· Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside ~ s.an Bernardino counties, -1 will also be closed along with tile Long Beach Marine barrac)ls. a, Naval base operations to be shut down include the.finance office, anti·submarine warfare !Chool, motion picture training unit and the hospital auxiliary ship Repose. However, the newspaper added, 1,000 men will be added to the 6,500-man Long Beach Naval Ship Yard operation to offset the closing oC Hunter's Point Shipyard in San Francisco. Pentagon officials said today that 274 military baaes soon will be closed or cut back. A full list of the affected bases was not given to newsmen immediately. The Defense Department also plans to close the Hunters Point Shipyard at San Francisco by June 30, 1974, Califoruia members of Congress were informed tir da)'. (The Boston Naval Yard also will be closed.) DAILY•P'ILOT'Plloto., IUClllrd Kotlllw Defense cutbacks also Include clOsing of Hamilton AFB by Dec. 31, dropping all flying activity at Alameda Air Station and leasing the Long Beach Na val Station and moving the fleet to San 11th Hour Dileninia Diego. . Californians were inrormed that the net reduction in personnel in Caliromia will include 5,800 military and ,more than 4,000 civilians. Some civilian pel'SCQilel at various sta- tions will be offered transrers. Pretty Marguerite Marsaudon, Miss Costa Mesa, illustrates the last minute plight of many who put off their income tax calculatlons. She is surrounded by tax 'fo rms and adding machine tape but seems un· pe rturbed through it all . Perhaps it's because she has until midnight to make today's fil ing deadline. ·Wron g-way Crash l(ills A 55-:year-old unarmed man whose notoriety as a master thie( and swindler was assertedly reported in the Saturday Evening Post w8s blasted 1rom. the balcony or a Dana Point motel early Saturday by a fatal shotgun blast fired by officers trying to arrest him. , Stanley Scott Singley dfed lru!tanUy In the bizarre slxloting which took place at % a.m. in the Embarcadero Motel at 249S2 Del Prado. Offlcen at the scene as well as In- vestigators called in later aald that Singley, who had a long record, asserted· ly dropped both hands to his waistband berore he was...shot. The man was hit two separate Um.es, first as he stood in his.l'OOfJ). and the sec- ond time at the edge of the balcony. No weapon was found. Although poljce officials are saying lit· tle about the shooting -pending the resulls of a District Attorney's probe - it was conceded that four detectives from Orange and one rrom San Clemente were on the premises When the incident took place. The ofrice rs from Orange held war· rants for Singley's arrest on charges of auto theft, trail er the!t and the forgery of motor vehicle pink slips. The officers r e po r t e d I y entered Singley's room, immediately identified themselves and told the man he wu under arrest. At that poin t, said Sheriff's Captain James Broadbelt, Singley allegedly thrust his arms downward and an off.icer from the Orange department -whom Broadbelt did not identify -fired a single sbot from a nine-millimeter pistol. Singley then reportedly fled from the darkened room and officers chased the wonded man to the balcony. Broadbelt said the grim scene was repeated there""' as Singley assertedly wheeled and reached once more for his waistband. · The single blast of large buckshot blew the man from the second floor onto the pa vement below. Broadbelt sa id that all the shooUng was done by investigators from Orange. The closing of Hunters Point Shipyard alone will affect 5,500 civilians. Some work is to be transferred to Puget Sound in WashiogtOn and some to Long Beach and other private yards in the 5an Fran- cisco Bay area. Flying activity at Alameda f'.Javal Air Station ls to be transferred to Moffett (See SlllPY .\Ill), Page Z) Costa Mesa Motoris t · In San Clemente Public Safety Director . .../ Cliltotd ~urray said that his detecJlve, Roger Wiberg, was along on the arrest "simply because our department bad traced the man's J Siogler 'a ) TWo young women -one of them a Jhe freak crash involved three vehicles !See ~ECT, Page 2T 309 More Illegal ·Aliens Arrested·- By B9rder Patro\_,, The massive rnigration..of illegal ali ens -at the pe8k of the fann planting season -continued over U\e weekend as border patrolmen delained · nearly 300 persons at the San Onofre ~lril And the busy weekend wao kicked off by another major haul ·ol marijuana at the permanent roadblock south o! tile Western White liouoe. Patrol Capt. Eugene Harris and the marijuana amst took place Friday eve- ning and nettt<I ,,_ then 700 pounds of weed bwl tile tnJlll< of a ear lnitially pulled over" durln1 a cheek for possible allen·1111uggling. _ The driver or the ear, Dennis Rich (who would not give his age or addresl) WU turned om lo U.S. customs agents .. Fer the remainder or the ~end patiolrnen kept the checkpoint open and conftned tbelr amsts to lmmlaralioo vlolalfons . ·t w-ro~·itg~·-.w-a-y_d,_r~iv-e-r ~r-ro-m~c-.,-1-a ,M~,-,-.--~~a-nd~1-·n-ju-re-d~,-,-~e·-,-.1~pe~rso-.-ns~s'oo-rt~ly ~·,~-::_-::_-::_-::~~~~~~~~~~~ were killed instantly late Sunday in a before 1nidnig ht. grindin g head-on crash along a stretch of The incident occurred about four miles roadway which once bore the label of north or Oceanside on the San Diego "slaughter alley.': r~reeway . Hunt for-Gl s To Begin. Soo ri BANGKOK (U PI ) -U. S. military spokesmen said today a ~pecial American unit assigned to search for more than 1 • 3 O o American servicemen missiiig in lndochlna wlll begin its task a5 llOOD as diplomatic permission Is rece ived from the countries in- vOl9ed. , Spokesmen said formation' or the Joffil-CCsualty ReSolulioo Cenfer • was .70 pe:rc1tnt complete and that ,,_ then 100 of oboul 150...,ldler!, · sailors, ainntm and ~tarin&: who wUI make up the unit have arrived in Thailand and begun trpining. _,, Hig hway patrolmen ide ntified the \VTOng-way driver as Patricia Geer of 2001 S\van Drive, Costa Mesa. The other dead \VOman was Rebecca Ann Cohen, 20, .of San Diego. Highway patrolmen in Oceanside re- mained bafOed this morning as to why and where the young woman entered the modern freeway, traveling the Mong way. '"She must have gotten on about rour miles to the sooth at Harbor Drive," said one CHP spokesman. The Geer woman's car first hit the Cohen vehid(!, then slammed a third car drlVen....by Cbarlcs E. Dawson, 12,-ol Oct!anslde. Oawsort' suffered minor cuts and brufses:~hll! wll•. Lillian. sullrnd moderate injuries. Miss Colten had a pssenger ln her car. John Charles Davey. who also was hurt only slightl y. Or ange Cout Weather Low clouds and log are expected toni ght arid . early morning but weather otherwise will be mostly sunny and a touch warmer. Highs, . 6.1-'73. lows !~. . . INSIDE TODAY Devasto ting tornadoes have killed tight f)trlettl,J in Tt%C&. The storms were to violtnt that tlley tort cart to bit& that were trapf)<d.. on freewcu. See story, Poge 4. · , .. ·~ I • I • ' 2 DAILV PILOT SC Mondly, APfll 16, lR7J -i'ti H•ntington Man Mur-de_red; ' NixQnSays -Cutbacks ' Torture Seen - • • . . ' ..... ....... . . .. . .. ~"' ... .. . . ... . . -.. . ·- \ • . . . . '.· .. ' ' ·-· .... . . • . •. .... ' . · ... • ..... lllA . .. . . . -. . .. " . ...._::::::.: :" .· . .~ , .......... -"" ..... ·,;.. •, :~ U.S. Warns • Reds Over .- Laos Moves ~ :~r::m -,::,:. -_, ;: ~ ., wil•~'~ ,.,, -.. ~- e y JOANNE ltEYNbLOS McK'tnnon said there were several tat-Nixon told about 4,000 , construct.Ion a =:-:-.-::.:::"1 1 warned North Vietnan1 today that unless cw t11• iHn, l'llo• s1111 !{)(.IS on the body including the initials workers today tha't those who advocate 'i•LA1NY'IWI it slops aggression in Laos, the u.s_. Huntington Beach police said today "D.fo'.," a gy,·aska,-the numbe r 13 on lhe sllshing the defense budget would , . • . • would. begin a new bombing ·campaign. they ~licve an unid entified murder vie-Jeft ankle, and four dots on the left wrist. d tro h of otl Unir f rth •• · Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. llm found iriathe city Saturday rnay have "On the rlgbt ankle \l.'as » cro~ with n~~lei ~~.fa~~ent. ~ a "& u er tubbock Frledheim said North, Vietnamese forces -betn beal'n and tortured prior to his-marks above It -usually called the led by-tanks overran a town defended by dl!ath. 'Pachuko' sign.'' McK ennon said. 1-Ie said cutbacks in-defense spendlng • •. Royal LaoUan forces· near the Plaine de ,,.A · · · t The detective noted that all the tattoos v.·ould make the United States Impotent • · · · T EX •s Jarres in Laos "'ithin the l.iist _several Orange Count y \,Uroncr 5 invesuga ors, at negotiations for a mutual reduction of I\ hours. "'ho list the slay ing victim as a John ap peared to be non·professional, , Doe. said l.oday they still h ct v e nol homemade tattoos . forces in Europe. · • :. He described ii as "a 1najor violation established a cause of dea th for the The murder victim was dressed in a Negotiations on force reductk>ns will or the cease-fire." young man or his ident ity. cut-off deni m jacket and dark blue pants Open with Warsaw Paci countries Ulll • : : ... ' ... • · The Pentagon spokesman said an in- The body \\'as found ea rly Saturday and bright blue socks. lie \\'Ore no shoes, fall . :: : : : : : ":::: ::: · nouncement about wbetncr U.S. 852 momlng near the intersection of Ellis the detective said. "There wiU be no deal," if the United bombers bad begun renewed strikes over Avenue and Golhard Stree t by a passing "As far as "'e can tell ," ,.icKeMOn States bargains from weakness. Nixon Laos would come from Pacific Command motorist. Detectives said it had ap. said, "he was killea someplace else protr told the National Conference of Building headquarters in Hawaii later today. Parently been thrown out of a moving ably Friday night and then brought here and Construction Trades, a group u ~• "_.,.,,, us bo be h bee h'tf c tn re. present1·ng about 3.5 million con-T d ft• T · · m rs ave n 1 ing . a · ca r. and du1nped ." . ortaC1 0 tpS eX88 bodian targets for six weeks. There ha ve Sgt. Monty ~IcKcnnon sald he believes He said that anyone who might be able .struction workers througt.,t the United been no American air strikes in Vietnani. the man may have been beaten and to identify the dead man should call the Stales. " 1Spotted on the map is Plainview, Tex., \vhere a tornado whirling out since the cease-fire was signed Jan. rl. tortured before death because of several palicc department at 536-5331. "It is essential if \ve're going to make 1· . I t th d t . d th h I tr cted . . • F .edh . .d h h be h any kind of deal with them that to get o a v10 en un ers orm nppe roug a new y cons u , res1-r1 e1m s111 t ere as en eavy cuts and p_brasionS: on the body. anything from them you have got to have dential are'a, destroying two commercial buildings and damaging 18 'fighting near the Laotian •town of Tha "Some may have been caused \vhc,, the From Page 1 somclhing to give ." homes. Eight persons were killed and 19 injured. (Story, picture Vieng for the past few da,Ys. He could ""----b2'"'=1~~'D.ll~~i!):n~thc~s~t~rc~c~t ~"~~~1c~K~"e~ni---=-==-;,;__;~:;~~~~-,----:'..i;~c-Presideiit speiit---mtteb-6f:-bi&-l-~&--==P~a':lg'=~=====~===================-{p~ro'ifv~id~e~nojid'jetai'fi*·11s~onilliilh:\'e~s~i~ze~ofC'oiti/h~e~Vifiep,tf--_;____ non said. But he add t at e oes no DIVORCES n1inute talk thanking the cOnstruction namese an e a ie o ommun1s believe all the ,.,.ounds v.•erc caused that • • • workers for backing him 00 his policies on force which occupies the town. \\'ay. South Vietnam. He recalled that in J\l~y There has been a separate cease-fire i' Police are continuing their efforts lo have been recorded over the past 20 1970, \\'hen he made the.decision to send Cou t Pla ers to Stu' dy declared in Laos and there ltas been i identify Ule victim who is about five feet, years in O_range County. U.S. forces into Cambodia, the con· fi y llll / relati vely little fighting there in recent ll incbes in height and 150 to 160 pounds. St John points out that di9orcees who stroction workers marched in support. weeks. Oglala l1idicuis Bar _Helicopter At Wounded K1iee PINE RIDGE, S.D. (UPI ) -A helicopter loaded \Yilh medical supplies was prevented from entering Wounded Knee by local Oglala Sioux Indians who vowed to keep all supplies out of the hamlet until militant Indians end their 48-day occupation. Federal authotilies, caught Jn fhe squeeze of trying to keep local peace and end the occupation without bloodshed, apparently gave 1il fO the local Indians when the helicopter \lt'as turned back at -federal roadblock No. I. The Indians saw the federal helicopter fly past the roadblock toward the village. When it stopped at roadblock No. I, the . Indians confronted federal authorities who agreed to fl y Ole load of supplies back to the airport ... ' Meanwhile , an attorney for American Indian Movement members entrenched at Wounded Knee said in New York Sun· day that he would attempt to obtain a restraining order against the local ln· dians who set up'lbe blockade or suir plies. Tensions in lhe Wounded Knee and Pine Ridge areas of the rcS~rvation \\'ere heightened "'ilh the· report today by ranche r George Coa ts that his ra nch house and several outbuildings were burned to the ground during the night. The report \\'as made to Jim Curtis , social services officer for the Bureau oC Jndian Affairs at Pinc Ridge. Coaats told Curtis tha t his family escaped v.·ithout harm . Searcl1 Goes On For Missing Tot The search continued today for a miss· ing 3-year-old Orange boy, police said. ~tichael Todd Rockwood of 33.t S. Orange St .. has been 1niss ing since fri· day. A tf'ouse-to-housc s£'arch v.·as conducted Saturday by 80 police officers and volunteers \\'ho combed a 35·block area . The boy disa ppeared after his mother let him out to pl a}' Friday. ~le was wear- ing a yellovi sweaLshirl, blue pants and bro\\11 shoes. Little ~iichael has blond hair and blue eyes. OlAN61 COAST IC DAILY PILOT • It telflblflld tllt NtWS·P•lll. It 1'1,1011.r.tf b'f !tit Or•not C0•11 PuOll1~l11t (O'f11'9n'f, St!N r"t tollliOftt ••t M ll1hf11, Mondl 'f lhroi;oll il'rieltf. IW (O<lt Mfl,t, NtWPOrl a..ctl, """''•"'ll!Oft Btiw:ll/l'Ollf'!tln Vtl!t,, L•O'UIW •Nell, lno!nf/"'°"ltllt(~ tnCI $111 Cle!Mtl!t/ S... J-Ctpi1ttt no. A l lfllllt rtQioNI tdl!>Oto k PV01l1tlt(I '-1Wnlt~• 11111 S.,,.,Ot n . ,,,. P•"'<ietl llYOli.111"11 pl111t b II n~ Wftt .. , $trMI, Cltlt Mtw, Ct tl/o<nlt . n.llt. • lteb•rt N. w.,d "•nllk<lt tl'CI P\/DllU!t• J.,k It. Cutl1y Viet ~rnlOt'll tl'lll Gtnfrtl Mtl'lfQlt Th111111 Kt•wil • £alter Them11 A. Mut phint MtnfQ ll'lf IEdlter Ch1rl11 H, Looi ltiUi11d P, Nill A11!111nl MtMOl"O Edo!Ol't S. cs.-... OHie• JOS Nor#! El C,mino lt11I, •2&7J "*' °'"'" Co'tt Mc••= »a WHI 8tY itt•ttl "'""l'IO'I lt.ttft: 1.W NtwPOl'I l ouff,,.l<d H""l(ftOlen l l•d'I: 1,.11 fl .. Cfl &ovlfYAl'd LtOIJl\I !H(ll~ 221 ,Ol'HI A~"'ue T .. .,. ..... f714J 642.fJll Cl ... lflM Aclfff'tld .. 642°5671 S.. C ....... All D.-,,_.,.. , ... , .... 492-4420 ~"""· 1'71. Ort"'" C..tt 'lllllklllnt C9noPI">'· N1 MWl ,,.,Ion, IM""'tr'~ 9'1..,191 -II• w N-11t_,. IMrfil ,...., .. ~ .. "'""'°"' .,. .. , - lllltl""' II CtlV\'Fitlll -· ....... NM •I• ,_W '' C.11 .Mtw. C.Htoornll, S*clcttle!! 1W uirl'ilf' SltJ MM#lllt/ ~ -· u.u l'!ltflftll'fi ""'"'" fttttoe tWrt a...s mMlfillf. • seek a marriage license in Orange Coun-Those who would cut defense spending, Friedheirp_ said he \•as not sure if the.•' ty are promptly \\'artied in his marriage he sattl, .. will have 10 take upon F z Ch Laotian gdtiernment in Victiane asked license bureau if they have not obtained . themselves the responsibility of sabotag. reeway . on11" ·1g anges for U.S. bombers, but indicated the a final decree in this area. · ing the peace o( the world that now American government expected it would, They arc eompelled to obtain one seems so promising and destroying any In the Vietnam cease-fire agreement before St Johri's marriage bureau clerks chance of further arms limitations.'' effective Jan. 28, the United Stales. South will issue the necessary license.. Nixon appeared before the group By JAN WORTH Free"·ay in the Saddleback Valley will be Vietnam , Nortti Vietna m and the Viet shortly after · Rep. Gerald R. Font (R· 01 "'' 0111., ~il•t St•tt ·d ed Tu d b the Or Co Cong agreed to end all military activities But many Orange County divorcees Chan · · f d · t d cons1 er . es ay Y ange un-thdr 11 Mich:), was loudly booed when he at· ges 111 zonmg o areas es1gna e in Cambodia and Laos, wi aw a may have-remarried in J'urisdictions · I d · 1 · d t · I ty PlaMina Comrhisslon · tempted to defend Nixon administration commerc1a an commerc1a ·!fl us r1a ·-o · troops and -not use the t\\10 coun tries as where that rule is not in effect, he said. I ·1 1r· of th •-o· The t t · tall · led I economic policies. a ong a seven-mi e s 1p e .;Jan tego coun y p ann1ng s 1s expec staging areas for attacks e sewhcre. And the county clerk has predicted that . In his remarks, Nixon stayed away to present a report to the commission_ A cease-fire~ was agreed on in Laos the shock wave rolling from discoveries from specific discussion of rising prices, comparing · alternatives to the existing Feb. 22, but there has been no truce made in the divorce division is bound to but defended his position in_ hQJ_dlng Ra1-iglf rs B·racing situation -more than 2,100 acres agree1nent signed in Cambodia. The be felt In such departments as the pro-federal spending to a $26& billion level. United Slates and South Vietnam have bate di vision. "It's no pleasure for the President of designated commercial or . industrial· charged that ·Hanoi is infil trating tr.QOp~.) He predicts a spate of legaJ actions on the United States ·to veto spending bills F B • C d commercial. and war materie l into Cambodia and that wills and bequests by lawyers who learn and, after all, it isn't my money -it's Or ig row Arule-of·thumbfigureusedbytbeplan· North Vietnamese troops still are of the absence of a final decree ·in cases yours," he said. ning staff is three acres of commercial fighting beside the Cambodihnan K~e~ where the deceased person may have C'h~rtly before Nixon spoke, the union At O'Nei'll Park I d t 000 'd hi Rouge forces opposed to the P om en ~N _ C 1 an o serve I, res1 en ts, Usin g t · s government. remarried outside Orange County. d I gates cheered House <-•ker ar e e ..,,..... bench mark, the nearly 2,200 commercial The Pro-Communist Pathet Lao and Divorcees seeking assurance on the Albert (D-Okla.), when he said the peeled or ccmmerci·ai-m· dustri'al acres 1-n ex· North Vietna. mese troops with mortar I l.t r th · · d' J t. Ad · · t 1· • · t 1 h d Five tMusand visitors are ex at ega 1 y o e1r marnage 1sso u ion rrunis ra ions econonuc coo ro s a •ou; and artiJlcrv support overran three Were being .dvl·sed_today to consult thei·r bee unfai·r to labor O'Neill Park south of El Toro on Easter istence \\•ould serve 750,000 persons. ·.1 n · government positions In northeastern lawye rs on the issue. Then they hooted at Ford. Shouts of Sunday, five times the number of visitors The popula tion currently is about 70,000 Laos O\'er the weekend, a Defense County workers can only confirm the "No! No!" swept the audience when on an average summer Sunday. persons and is projected at 195,000 by the Ministry spokesman. Brig. Gen. nd • l Richard Dyer, Sl.lpervising p a r k existence or absence of a fina l decree, Fbrd said, "Jobs are up a unempoy· ranger , said the normal staff of four will year 2,000. Thongpban Knoksy, said today. they were· told. ment down." • II' II I "-No casualty reports were immediately be increased to 10 fOl' the first of the · e are a aware o 1.1~ strip com· Legal •·ct1'0n remed y1·ng ""hat amounts" And when Ford said the President was he -~ ••ai'lable. , " hold do i·ear's big holiday weekends. A s r11r-s mercial zones In LA County and northern to an incomplete divorce should be taken making every effort lo wn taxes The spokesman said Nor th Vietnamese deputy will be on hand full-time for the o Co t " I n -y id through an attorney, divorcees are being and prevent a tax increase, one uniof weekend 85 well. range un Y, P anner nun eo sa troops supported by mortars overran two advised. leader shouted "cloae the loopholes." "We'll probably be cleaning up garbage recent~y. "They tend to grow outward in frontal outposts of the government moun· A Pipe Drea1n? Liquor Store Pot Sales Vrged DENVER (UPI) -A member of the Colorado House of Repre· sentatives wants to sell 1narijuana in licensed liquor stores and give the money raised to elderly people. ' ·'Whether' you approve of marijuana or not, and I happen to disapprove of it, it should be put into law as a revenue measure as we do alcohol," said State Rep. Mike Strang, a former captain of the Princeton University polo t~am. . . . . ·. Strang introduced a bill ailoWl.Dg the sale of manJuana in liquor stores purchasing a .~arijuana license. He said proceeds would go to the state old age pehs1on fund. . , . "I have no idea how much would be raised from the tax, 1 said Strang a rancher. "All we do know is that the revenue would be very large for the state of Colorado and for the old age pension fund." Freeway Crash Fatal to Woman A Lon g Beach \~oman was killed late Sunday nigh! \1·hen a cnr in \l'h ich she "·as a passenger crashed inlo a stnllcd vchictC on the Garden Grove Free\\·ay in \Vestminslcr. Killed \\'hen lhro\l'Tl from the car \'.'::IS ~lrs. Sar:ih J-l crniindt•z. :11 . Sl'riously in· jured in th e crash jusl cast uf the Spl'ing· dale o,·erpass \1·as her husband J\-·lario llernandez. 32. driver o: the car. A California lligh\vay P;itrol aid the· stalled vehicle had par!ially blocked the Cast in-·cstbound lane of the frcc\~a,y. Frona Pnge J From Pq., J GROWTH . ••• t so that future school sites can be assured . The new school plans will be ·dra\\'ings for the nt\v J\1oulton Elementary School -a project \\'hich had been shelved several years ago because or lack of funds. That campus \\'OU!d be buill on a site already owned by the distric t in Laguna )liguel. \Vherc heavy pupil growth is ex· peeled to eontinue. In a related aclion which will help trustees understand the factors affecting .iucreases .in population..aod the need for educational facilities, trustees will hear a progress report on a lnaSter plan whicll is being compiled through funds don ated by major de velopers iil the area. for ttn-ee or four days afterwards, judg-a radial pattern. We'd like to control that tain base at Buam Long, 18 miles 11orth ing from our past expert~ ... Dyer tendency while we can." •1~ of the Communist occupied Plain of Jars. d Another strategic deending position at sai . Interchanges examined by tpe planning Ban Tha Vieng, JOO miles northeast of If this Easter is like other recent holidays, the capacity of the park will be staff in a report last week included the Vientiane, also was overrun and govern- reached by mid-afternoon, after which unfinished Canada Road, El Toro Road, ment troops retreated some five miles ·Alicia Park,vay (proposed), La Paz across the Nam Ngip .River southeast or the park will be closed to any additional Road, Oso Parkway, Crown Valley Tha Vieng, the spokesman said. . - visitors, Dyer said. Park,vay and Avery Parkway. Earlier the acting defense -minister , Depending ·on the wea ther, camping is An example of the problem which com-Sisouk Na Champassak, said a new regi- not too frequent during Easter Week , missioners will consider controlling can ment or North Vietnam ese troops moved Dyer said. "The kids out of school come be seen at the El Toro Road interchange. to the Tha Vieng area and posed an im· out here a lot for picnics but usually 1'1ost of the 220 acres zoned commercial mediate threat to the town. leave at night," he said. su rrounding El Toro Road have been Vandali sm in past years has been developed. . minor at O'Neill Park. The park's max-Traffic congestion at this ,interchange imum of 1500 campsites are open 24 was judged the worst ln the area. "A hours a day and are taken on a first large part of the congestion problem can come-first served basis. FromP,..el SHIPYARD. •• Field, Sunnyvale, and the Naval Air Sta- tion at Lemoore. In putting the Hamilton AFB in reserve status , the Air Force plans to declate surplus 600 hou sing units. All support ac- tivities v.•ill be closed. The personnel reduction in military and civilians totals 2,372. Transfe r of neet activity from Long Beach to San Diego will affect 161000 military and 646 civilians. -- be traced to the conflict between through traffic and traffic using the commercial fa cilities," the report stated. Of those areas zoned industrial, all but 350 ac res in Mission Viejo could be developed for corrunercial use according to their zone-use description of com- mercial-industrial. Of the 780 acres in this category, 250 acres are developed , clearing the bulk of the area available for zone controls. Planning Director Dave Moore said several alternatives are available to the commissioners. They could rezone the areas involved -perhaps to a light manufacturing district -or add stricter design controls to existing regulations. · A new zone could be devised, or the conunissioners could do nothing. Artl1ur Wiley Rites Wednesday Memorial services for Arthur S. Wiley, founder and former president of the Alliance Francaise de la Riviera Califor· nienne will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at St. Mary's Episcopal Church, 428 Park Avenue, Laguna Beach. Mr. Wiley or 970 Summit Drive. Laguna Beach was stri cken Thursday as he dined with his wife Mary at the Hotel Laguna. He was 72. ln lieu of flowers, the family requests that thosi:, so desiring donate to tlie Arthur S. Wiley Scholarship Fund of Pasadena City College · or to the scholarship fund or the Alliance Fran- caise in ,.tr. Wiley's name. NO ONE SELLS G.E. FOR LESS THAN~ • OE'• flltbftil , ........ ~-Actloti -·'°' liflt ........... SUSPECT ... A private consulting firm has been gat heri ng data for the document which v.•ill serve as a basis for planning in the district .in coming years. • :SW•NZllllNI ,1...,....,. • S Wllh t"""-"--'r '""""*"' ' ... -----·~9fJ · , • "'hereabouts." Broadbelt would not gilie any details cf the vicllm's prior crlmlnal record, but 01hcr sources described the man as "a major crime figure" whose proficiency at forging vehicle documents end steal- ing: large quantities of cars was knwvn across the nallon. · Although officers could not initially dig up the articJP., several sources said the man v.·as featured in a nationally· distributed article se veral years ago and had been (18tly identified as a "master s"•indl er." Singley'!l criminal record s h e e t repo rtedly is nine pages long. Broadbelt said the office of the District Attorney wa s notlrJed immediately after ihc shooting nnd that nn investigation has been h1unched. "\Ile won'! be givi ng out many more detans until that invesUgatlon is com· pletcd." he said. At 1he DA 's office inves tiga tors 11i·ould not discuss the caSt. nt all. except to £BY the} were "lnves1lg.11ing." Broadbcll said the rcsult.s of that probe "®Id be a.o~nctd ''In a day o~ so.·• , The trustees' packed agenda ton ight also includes these items: • -Revising the OOard policy on the order of business to be follo"'ed ~r board meetings. -Approval of applications for grants to aid special projccls for the coming schoo l year. -Approve a workshop to examine the Mentally-Gilted·Minors program. -Approve recommendations suggested by a special advisory committee on the e.s.rJy childhood education program and , consider applying to the state for fu nds to slart the project. ' Bandleader Succumbs LOS ANGELES (AP) -j!amey Sorkin .• an architect turned bandleader who recorded background music for Roy Rogers cowboy !ilms, died Sundey of an apparent heart attack at a~t 70, F\Jntral !CrvlC<O were sdledtlled tod4y al Hillside ~1emorial Park Cbapcl ~re. I w-..- • •Ul'JUCHT CONVENIE1-0CE • Po1itive s.rcty Dam LMch D--~ ... -~,~ h .. .LLI «U1-!-,,_ ., • F'utF1ita1111 •DoorLoclc 179" 90 DAY CASH 1815 NEWPORI BlVD. Downtown Costa Mesa • • -, . " . "' " . WITlf APHOftl' canrr -Phone 548-7708 • • ' ' ) I t I l I •• 8 DAILY PILDT SC Mond11. Aprij 16, 1973 ' l' our Moneit'• lf_ortfl \ Average C.ollege Blldget ' Report ·Aid to ·S!udents· ,, By SYLVIA PORTER If you're the parents of a '.!<en-ager or two beadlng for and mldent •t..udeots opend the largest percentage ol the budgeta on tuition and f .... college in 1973-74, you're into -AND DO· NOi' pin your ,~ most u\al financial hopeL~:'cbeep•" -:'!ac!l'!cboo~~~-squeeie ever :... and-1t Will on a public tWQ..year continue relentlessly to get stltutlon. The fastest rate 'of • wone year after year. • rise in expenses Is octuring at this m I d -A pr ii thls type of oollege. The deadllri or filing your federal smallest annual rate of rise in income tax may seem a cruel recent years bas been record· 'weekend on which to give you ed at private two-Year ilJ.. the facts, the sooner you face stitutions, and even here, for the realitlu, the better you re!idents, the annuil rise h~ will be able , to cope. And to-been 2,8 percent. The following day, from the Col l·ege shows the trend Jn costs: FINANCE Scholarship Sen'lce (CS S) The. r.tse hr rates over the COflU!S .Information never period 1170 . to 1973 at public , ____ ...;. ___ _,, before made available to two-year commuter collegu ls parents, students and the high 7.1 percent; at private two-scoorl community. year commuter colleges, 5.9 resident colleges, 4.2 percent. percent; at private two-year WHAT CAN YOU do about THE CSS, A part of the realdent colleges. 2.a percent; It? College Entrance Examination at public · four-year commuter Invest $2 in the CSS"booklet BOard. Obtaiiied reporu:r1o"nr-"co"ui:e::ges"".°'&".1"'pe'*n:e:;;;n~t:;:1;;t;;pu;;;b:.;ll;,e-a-n;;a::.s~tu;::dYltWith utmOSt care, ·~ average stu-four-year resident colleges, 5.8 for it gives you the breakdown t dent budgets ~rcent; at private four-year in costs at lhe more than 2,IXKl from the fi· commuter colleges, 6.6 per-institutions, and sw-ely among nanclal aid cent; and at private four-ye-.r these you 'll find at least one dinlctors ol more than 2,000 public .• and private, tw~year and In High Gear · four-year in- stitutions in PORTI:• the U.S. From tbeee, It worked up average college costs for the current year and the basic data for forecasting trends in costs for different t~s of col- Million-unit Year Sf?light leges. --Here are the crucial figures: By Dodge Division in '73 "" -If your-cl'Jild will commute to a public two-year institution -and· this is by far the cheapest -his first-year col- ' Iege costs will average $1 ,635 of which tuition and fees will total l200. By CARL CARSTENSEN Qt ... O.IY ''"' Staff -. Rewriting nearly every car and truck sales record on its books, Dodge Division closed out last monlh ll~e a lion. "Dealer retail deliveries were the highest In Dodge's 59- year history for any single 10- d!J,y period, any mooth, any quarter and any .s.ii:-month period," said RoDert.-L> . Loomis, Dodge general SaJes manager, "and this applies for cars as well as trucks. and for total vehicles. -If your child wiH-be a resi- dent student at a public four- year iMUtution, his first-year costs will average $1,985, and if be commutes to this public institution. bis first-year costs will average $1,760. or these totals, tuition and fees will represent $465. -IF YOUR YOUNGSTER enters and lives at a priv~te tw1>yee.r college, hi! first-year costs will-a"Yerage $2,549, and if he commutes, the costs will be $2,090. Tuition and fees will take $1,210. -And If your child becomes "WITH 'A STRONG order altuatioo, lt appears .aales will contlmle favorable. ~ • a resident student this fall at a private four-year lnstituUon, his costs will average $3,280; , if he commutes, the cost will 1 be $2,745. At these institutions, 0 We're pleased at -buyer uspome to our products, and we're anticipating Dodge's first ~unit year." With a comblned total of 335,036 cars and 172,557 truck s for the first six: months of the model year,, Dodge is more than halfway to its goal. tuition and fees absorb $1,725 ... -At both twb-and four.year Based on past performance. -private· Institutions, commuter Dodge baa established a strong pattern. Monthly car sales records have been set for each of the last eight months and truck sales have established records for 20 con- secutlve months. ' PllVATE TllST FUii$ IVllL.Ul£ fOfl MAL UTATI LOAMI 111 l tM TRUST Ol!EOS 11,IOO To llH0.000 UP TO ., .. LOANS OH TftU8T DEED OOUATEIW. MEWl'OftT EavtTY PVttoa • Ntiwpotl c.n1 .... WllILE SALES in all car and truck lines were up significanUy, Dodge's highest monthly sales eve.r were reported for Colt sub-com---c...-~Hwport S..Ch, C1Ut. (714) tu-1124 'I XEROX COPYIN!t AND A' ... DUPl.ICA TI NCO NO COMPLm XllOX SbYICI . M~Nii• VOLUME DISCOUNT • PICKUP & DELIYDY•1m1u:'w DOUBLEQUICK -·-:~;--111• w. MaA11 11 .. s.t1 ._ awm , , ORDER ~i l~O~! , :?: Stlc:k-on , ' ' YOURS ·).,, LABELS v ,_ONLY~ TOBY!-; -$121 ~AXINC':;,j Personalllecl • Stylish • Effldent Order For Yoursolf or • Friend' Mey bt used on tfl¥tlopt1 el return edclrMI le.btl1. Al10 v•ry hendy ts idtntific•t ion l•bel1 for mtrking p•r1on•I lttms such •• books, records, photos, etc. Lebels stick ott glass tnd may bt used for mtrkin9 home canned food lttm1. AU lebels are print.cl with s!yf;sh Vogue lypt oo ,/Jne qu1ll!y whl!r gummed p•per. .,--------------·----·----1 ,11111 "'"---. • .......,. .... n.11 llt I ,11 .. '""'""~ ..... P.O. .. wt I c.tl ..... Clll. ,... l I -1 I I I I I l-~~~!_L~!-..P.;..;...Rl~~~----J • • pacts and Dart Sportsman compacts. * * * Donald J. Crevier, new car sales manager for Theodore Robins Ford, has graduated from a four-day sales manage- ment course conducted at the Ford Marketing Institute in Dallas. The course is one of a number ollered tb benefit Ford and Lincoln Mercury customen by emphasizing after-purchase service and better customer-relations. • COURSES ARE developed from methods used by suc- cesslul dealersblpe. ~ than 91,000 Ford dealer personnel have attended. the institute since it was fll'St opened -¥' 1959. , • ., • - ' I ' 4 •. t . ' . . . . . . . . . -.. . . . . • . . \ Monday, April lb, 197l By HANK WESQI - -the event," Miller says. "And Orange I.ague's toP perfonn· foot range in his first com-athlete has managed current or nw D•11Y •l11t ,.... Ti:.eally thilllc that the dedica· er with a heave of 52--3. petitive effort. marks despite the handicap of 'l'o hear Len MUler te~ ltr tion )le hu &hown ha• been a imilarly,...l!e~ ~y · the eod of lbs ypar ht,, a strallltd~doo in bis )\and he's had h~ very own vei¥o eaQl!Yst for the weight pro'; record ol ,1 .. 211 with~ 'llod 1-ved ,to ~·ioli. sulfered in January which of the Pied Piper "1' ~ ~ and•the lrac~ prq¢ll!P ' ttis~ in the Llg\111~ J!e&i:!t hoWJIYtl'f -end finished second hampe~ oorly training. LagWla Beach track team .• f<.r , ~ .... Ji,L~_ral~. trophy meet, ithe best iflrdW in bf--tbe~ ~ ~vitlion betilnd 0 J'd esttmate Judd has the past t.1,1,·o seaso~.. .. Otliei's have 5eeo bo.w hard. the Orloge Coa_s.t. area:Jhls . teamcnalt Kur..t ~I. · --neatly tripled his strength in The Piper -one ~ he. Works, .1ind the progess he 5eason. 4 Last seuon BlnJey bettered tbe past two years " Miller B!nley -doesn't meu Around ~~·made~, the-f've followed Both:etforta Were t~o_.y.ea't& $0 reet wtth the It-pouttd shot, • say1., "And-lhrough 1 working with any musical instruments, 1l1s exan'!.P1e· ,In the "'8king, but from aU in· and threw. It 4.9-9 in the Orange wllb our weight coacl), Jim howe ver. He has charmed . a • At f.O, •l\d 170 pounds dicaUons tbere'a,_better stitl lo ~ue meet to finish fourth Toomey, be: has learned to ex- small populace Uling •..-;'ihot Sinley doesn't possess the. bulk come. ' in the vanity division. He also ecute the fundamentals well. -~d discus. , usually auoclated with shot Bioley iOOlt up the iJ)O<l ln 'imJl'Ovoob lrom JU.I JO over "11.e ba,.good spOecl across 'The pro~ess that"'*' "-"'-_-pultera,-but he i)a• par!ayfljl <11J1!1!1t as a s-o mew b-a t ·lill'fe« In the dloeUs during tM rinf:ai)d I'd say he utiliies made. and his success, 1" m;. good· strength, speed and sav· scrawny sophomore, heav1ng the· seuon. hlS ph,Ysica~capabilities better spired quite. a rew othets in VJ of the event to rank as the the eight-pound ball in the ~1-This aeason the senior than ahy of his competitors. ' Mesa Net DAILY PILOT S$ He works until dart nearly every night ot the year either on the track or-in the.-welgbt -- room, and he's looklllg to com· pete far'beyond high school. "He'll' make a 'very g()Od col· lege wcightman, and be could throw the javelin or hammer ~." Miller states. While developing his capabltitles, Blnley bas ac- cumulated· an entourage- which though not large in number, should keep Miller in shot putters for quite a while to come. Cohorts Shull and P a t Gleasoo have joined Binley in forming a triad whidl has the Artists a heavy-Tourney By CRAiG'SHEFF or t11e Diii( "1'-' s .. ff an outfielder. ooly allowed five earned runs But. he baS good quick break· point total in every dual iri.eet. -an e.r .a. or y&. And three ing stuf to go with his fa st Gleason ls right behind of tho5e runs came against LA ball,". say_f ,'the Golcljn .west Binley's best ln the _discus. fl8.r))or early In the conference mentor. ;• . _ .Shtlll, a lefty, fights illscus seasOn'. Hoover· feels ESpinoza bas a lay.outs ~ith wind factors . Thursday - Seven Orange Coast are2', high school tennis contingents will be in action Thursday Although' Golden W es t College's baseball team has· had Somewhat of a disap- pointing season, there has 'been bile very big pleasant .surprise for.. Coach F re d Bu t with the Rnstlers Joaded with outfield prospeCts -+this seas~t Hoover tUrl'led him in- to a pitcher. ' And the eJ,:·Westminster star bright '(Utq.re ahead of·him. deSigned to aid right-handers. .has , 1 st ruck.· out 31 batters in "M far ,as next year is con· but has still been around the those 33 innings . while . ap-cemed, l really don't know if 150-loot mark . 1--""""-lll• . ri.1esa ~igh spring vacation tennis t~'under way at Orange Coast ~ege, Costa Mesa High a n d Te\llinklc Park. H ' I rs. 1 He's fTeshman pitcher Pat Espinoza, probably the top 'Golden West candidate to earn all-Southern C a I i f o r n i a Cooference honors at the end of tbe· season. "We watcheC:· him in the summer and we saw tliBt he had aver stron arm and ·a very g o o d temperam~ , says Hoover.· 1 ,. ~ - pearing in J5 ,of.tbe Rustlers' he'll-be.a:starter or not. He's ~d of COU,l'Se, insplr•tion ames. ecord1t$1•-. --a~cc~d--:ifrls-role--111,....-a-'-"ei!IJ"-'lLil""'.._ _____ _ ' " • f -DAIL y ,..LOT Sltff ,.ltt .. LAGUNA BEACH HIGH'S JUD.D BtNLEY. Chris Fights Back; Title to Rosewall Wright's Drought Snapped PALM SPRINGS -Mickey \Vright: who found herself drifting a\\•ay from golf after il made her the world's top woman athlete in the game in the early l96os, ca me all the way hack Sunday with a two- stroke victory in the richest tournament ever for women. The tall, blonde IS.year veteran hadn't won a tourna- ment slnce 1969, but she shot a four-under-par 68 -sinking a tricky. downhill birdie putt of 25 feet on the final hole of the $154.,000 Colgate-Dinah. Shore Winners Circ le Tournament. Her putt broke a tie with Jayce. Kazmierski. who later missed a 40-foot birdie putt and wound up with a bogey on the 16th green. QUINCY, 1.1ass-Australia 's Margaret Court b r o k e American tennis queen Billie Jean King in the first game and went on lo a speedy 6-2, 6- 4 victory Sunday for the championship of the $25,000 Virginia Slims of Massachuse tt s indoor tourna· ment. "I was just trying to block out the taea that lhls 'vas a birdie putt to win the tourna· ..------mentf!--the-LPGA-llall---{>r Fame member said. ' ' I thought or it, as just another putt." The fi~ game of the match was at deuce six times before Mrs. Court broke through Mrs. King's service. The Australian housewife and mother was in command the rest ollhe way, taking first prize of $6.000 and boosting her overall winnings for the year to $73,8.SO. Her 72-hole total was 284 rind produced her 62nd ".arttl' championship. She '\on 34 tournaments bel\\'ecn 1962 and 1964., and was n 11 n1 e d Associated Press i\thlcle of the Year for 1963 and '64. "It gets in the back of your head, the question Of \Vhelhcr you'll ever get It all back together again," she said. Mrs. Court employed a booming service and steady cdurt play in the victory. ~trs. King, who collected $3,000 sec- ond prize money, was erratic in her first tournament after being sidelined a m o n t h because of torn stomach muscles. "My putting has been so had NICE. France -Manuel that seeing that putt drop '"II~ Orantefi-0£ ·Spain outlasted like tomeone else had hit it." Italy's Adriano Panatta 7-6. 5- Tbe $25,000 first prize 'vas 7, 4', 7-6, 12·10. in a gruelling more than she won ln all or 4 \~·hour match Sunday and J963 when she set the re<:o1d won the men's singles title in wltb 13 tournament victories. the Nice International Open "1'..m 38, bUt I feel Hire 21." tennis tournament. • said Miss Wright. who said Orante~inally !!nded the ----~~~ om te in 15 ITlmtlhoo,.ben he"hlt a slzzl· to 20 tournamen ts .a-ye .. -mg serve to Panatta In the' She h_..r played In only ~ 22nd game of the fifth set. from 1199 until this year . .An whicb the Italian could not in !!!Y to her lert wrl$t led Ip return. ---1'"' tem.1-retirement Crom gotr. Sweden's Ingrid Be11tzer "I cut down my play ln 1•, took the women's singles when I burl my Wrist. The ill-c h a m p lo n s h i p , bealln1 Jury cl•ared up In Tl and I · Piorella Bonlchelll of Peru 6-1 dldn~ ploy for almosta year." l.f, M . ' ' Action begins at 8 a.m. and runs the entire day with the finals billed for Friday. 1 Among the 16 teaim are area crews from Costa Mesa, Estancia, Newport Harbor, Westminster, , ,.,farina, Hun· tington Beach and Uµiversity. Marina is the team faVorite, a title that will be decided on an overall basis for Y,rsity, novice and fre s hman classifications. Golf Tourne11 Mater Dei High 's thfrd an- nual golf tourney is scheduled for April 23 £t Irvine Coast Country ClutM!-- Jt begins at 12:30 with a shotg un sta rt and refreshments and dinner follow at 6 and 7 p.m. Entry fee is $50 per person "''ilh a 11 monies realized t ick~ed for spring sports equipment at Mater Dei. - Further information can be ob~ined by calling athletic direc.Cor Jerry Tardie_ at 54~161. And the ironic thing aboul it is tl)at Espinoza is just learn· ing how to pitch. r At Westminster High, the ~ 11, 170-pound right·han~er was "He's been> an .unbelie"vable surprise !or Ui this year .. IJe's i;eally bCen !µper. And he's the fir st real st'opper we've ever had here." Espinoza is the Rustlers' top short reliefe.r and his pitching stats are one reason why .. In 337f.i innJngs this season, he's Baseball Standings Al\IERICAN LEAGUE East Division ' w L Pet. Boston Baltin1orc Detroit Cleveland New York Milwaukee 4 6 3 3 3 2 I 2 4 • 5 5 4 West Division Kansas City Minnesota Angels Texas Chicago Oakland 7 2 4 3 3 3 2 3 2 4 2 5 SvllU)''1 OaOMS Cltvtlend 1, Oetroll O Ntw Yol1r. 6, Bo51on 2 Ke<nas Clly 12. ChlCH& S .llllO .750 .429 .375 .315 .333 .778 .571 .500 .400 .333 .286 GB \\ 2 21,1z 21,1 2~1 2 2\1 3 31f.i 4 MllWlllllH ,,_., 81lllmon l·S, Ill ,an"lf, II r '"""" O.•IMMI al MlnneiO'l1, OPd. Allfff• ,, Te.la •• 2, ppd, T ... Y'• o- Ollron ILolldl 0.11 1t Botton IP1ttl1t 1-G) OnlY oamt KIMdUltd. , NATIONAL LEAGUE ,. East Division w L Pct. Pittsburgh 5 I New York 5 2 Chicago 4 3 Montreal 3 4 Philadelphia 3 4 St. Louis I 7 West Division Cincinnati San Francisco 7 3 7 4 Houston 5 6 San Diego 5 6 Dodgers 4 6 . Atlanta ' 3 Sllndlr'• Galftn New York 2. Phllad1h>hi. 1 "'"~rvfl •. Monlrell J ChlcHO I. St, L1111I• • 6 Clncl"""'ll 11-7, Sin FnnclKO O.t Sill! Oleva s.&. How• 1-G ' Dlftln .. All11nT• I T1MY'1hmfl .833 .71 4 .571 .l29 .429 .125 .700 .636 .455 .455 .400 .333 GB \\ Ill 211 21\• 5 Clnd"""'fl l l Ullnphtm 1.f) 11 Sin Di1tO (Nof- m.ri •ll Houtton !Fond 1·11 II DMNn ' [5utton 0.2) °"'" ,.,,. ldlfdult. Control, ~ys Hoover, is his reliever very well. Sophomore ;wade Binley has biggest asset. Hooyer adds that the four· bested all of bis brother's "He's only walked nine.bat-year colleges are "ery aware marks Bt the same age. An ters this season 90 his control of Espinoza, Qut that most inch 'shorter than Judd, but has to be his biggest asset. major league scouts are not. the same :weight. he couJd break his1 ~ brother's school For Los Alamitos Harness Entries t:nlilH Fot MllMl'f Aprlt 11, lln C1tar & f•'t· flrl! 1'051 I l'.M. FIRST RACE -ON milt. Paci. C11lmlng ell·eQfl. Cl1lm!ng-prl(I llSOO. Non w1nr.er1 11nce Mard'I' e. PIH'H S1600. Sliver Record (A. Wll'l!lff'l Peter Ft!ch•rd CJ. T. Flu5Wltl WH C111 0 CC. Cempbltll Jr.) Lady Setter (J. Miiier) Act!Ofl Boy (R. Rlthmond) Andy1 OilhU1 (I'. Hayden ) Knl~l Sr;amp (J. Wllllamil Chloe B•rmln (F. Todd.Jr.) Also Elltllllt Hal Storm (G. L~l Jllls Cnoltt (J. LlthlhlllJ SECOND RACE -' ont milt. PKe. CDlldlllontd for l & l v-old maklen1. Purse $1600. M•Y TOfl.t (J. Wllllerm, 21 Mt Gott1 Go (R. W1Ul•ml) So Jo Bullff' (J. McGreoorl -COi'l'l"l:OolC 81clrfC.CobbJ N11lve Gem CJ. o.rm11I Stir Aswt (L. Grl90'l'I Ol•mon•e Prlnce (G. Holt) Stop Wiich (J. Mlltltr) • _Alw.El)tlllle Minute Lid (J. wt1ll1m11 ) Ato Griln<lt {J, ~'\ THIRD RAC! -Ont m1t1. Pace. Claiming all 11191. Top cl1!m!ng prkt Ml1S. P urst SHIDO. Tomonv-First c•. WISlt.msl Llncol !A,)Vlri;terl L1tln LOYff !E. Cob&) Jtck Addison IK. Cartn11!' LuckH NlbS co. L1rsonl .... M3.75 --= Lucy Lu ID. Bel"kh) $GOO J~kts Qutstion tR. McCl!ml1n1! $3'00 Oelano Kid (M. Hl>lll '3$00 Also eu11111e Rhythm C. (J. Wllllamtl Sp&tt Blazer (H. Eivlnt) SS01S - r 9fXTH •ACll -OM-mllf. Cl1lmlnt 111 IOl!t. Top cl1lmlllll ptlce S7SDO. Pur$t $2600. Sundown L111 (O.'Crvt1kl Great IC1$J'I ts. OtsOmerJ lrbh Ctm (L. Brunt) M1tlff' Brown \J. L~hlhllll Sorrento Tass CJ. MllrkweUl Bambooz CJ. T. Russell\ Jrfleri,on Cr•!n IC. Boyd;) Armbro Janlct (M. Jones) "'" .... .... """ .... ..... ., .. .,,., SEVENTH RACE -One mile. Trot. C11lml11g hlfldlc•D •II .,... Basic clalml11g Pfkts SIQOO.S9000-IO.DOO. Top claiming prl(I '11.600. PIH'!ll! J3200, Two Below (R. Wllll•m•l St6Clll Fait Pay IJ. Mlllel"I SllAOCI B1lllt Lord IH. Elvlnl) SIDOO Ntt1tDll1tw CT. Wine) tlOOO PkfVA Princess (J. O'l!lrltn) "'600 Ma;k Air (K. M•ynerdj Sl0,000 Worthy Enouth {J. l!llftfletll Sl0,000 EIONTff-•ACe-----0ne-mtW;-.. ac1; O.lmlnll 111 llft· To claiming price ~,.-u.oo. Tolrlrny Lotie41 (R. Wllll1m1I ~ Joe TlllS!lt (T. Ba~I UOOO ~J!~l>ll'' {K_,_t~~·b!:~LJ _ = Armbrv ~r (A. vafr: K1yl S7JOO G•ll Butter (E.·Cabbl snoo Loc1I Noll (J. T. Russell) snco BC'111.tV (R. McGOMgle') \6000 NINTH JlACI -OM milt. "act. c111m1ne-111 ...... TOlf~cllkftlno~pr1n S937S. Pill'W $MIO. - Good!ll\OW N Vt. Wlllitmll Sh•lnev (G. Holl) Utt!• MtssCCWll'll• IJ • .w1m1m11 John On tJ., eaneyl Lind Frtl{lht (T. PtrklMl L•d (F. Todd Jr.l My Dough !J. 0'9rl1<1 1 ) Scorct-Wtw IJ. ,eennettl """ .... .... ., .. ., .. ""' ., .. ""' SoCal Tennis • records in the J)ext. two -seasons: Wade is one of slx Laguna underclassmen throwing the eight pound shot over the ~ foot mark , and four sophomores casting the discus over 120 feet. A commendable total for 'a School of Laiuna's size. , Further down {he I i n e there's younger brother Thad, who has report~J!l~ age group records for the shot-and throws the discus ln .the 90-foot range. . And then there'S! sister Brook, who requested and received exactly what every little girl wants for her fifth birthday ~ a fowi.poond shol - JC, Prep Golf Results Elll LA !)II 1»1 ~ WHt At MM1111>911t CC TtlorJlson ·tEI 75 def. PrUlle U, +2. 5cllullz !Gl 7S df'f. Smith ID, 4-2. Mlnklf'f IGl 71 Gel. P1llltr 11. l ·1. H.odow IE) n dtl. llOOff'• 8', 6-0. Cl'llmbtrl-sn IE) 75 def. Jor,d~ 11. 6· .. . $1$1\411'0. !El 'JI d1f. 'Hirt 11. ~t. M•,.... A\uk.~•J.:rcc ,,..,.. C11nohr-(MJ n. dtf O'Shel IO, •· JKobl Ml n, d•I Ktll l:t, Ml. .. i 1(1odrlc (Mi 12, def Fr11man "M, • Kim \M\ 71, dtt Or111111110 71, S-l. hzo M ,,, def Gtbrltl 10. S-1. T•vlor (Ml 76, dff \lll(.1rro IO, J.1. Mli'IM (II) llSI N...il.,.. .._ •• 3. Al Meffowladl CC Clmoilrtllff' (M) 70, del ·DlbOI 14, 6· JacoM (M) 71, dtf Stftchll'I 71, 14. l':lm IMI 17, lost to Glftord 11, 0-6. Ktndrlck !Ml n, tltcl PelWIOll n, 3. 11.10 IM/ T.I. dtl W1nn&1Nk1r n, 5.1. l•"°" Ml 12. r..i to WllllNY n. 1·5. NEWPORT LEASES tLoallr ..,_. I epa:a1MJ Leasing •II Vehicles 645-2202 . ' ... • ' ' ' .. - Mondl)', Ap~I 16, 191) Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List '~ Stocks Drop ·Off; 'Neglect' a Factor NEW YORK (AP}-Stock market.prices drifted lower Monday In 1 fairly lackluster 1es&on. . -'-"!be market wu oufferlng more from neg· lect than any real heavy sell," said Newton Zinder, analym with E. F. Hutton & Co. News reports thet the economy might have been overbeoted In the first quarter and repor.ts of widening fighting In !ndochU1a "were enough to keep buy8l'I on the si.-UO.," he .said. Other analysu attributed the downturn to teobnlcal faoton, citing-the sharp runup early last week. -" . ' SC DAILY PILOT 3~ • I I • • .. = Monday, April 16; 1'173 ' .._ a tlltl fllCTITIOUS IUSINlll S -. 1'Jae · Desr•"flte Hours!-. PUBLIC NOTICE PIJllLIC NO'l1CE" PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTtTM)US autu1as:s NOTK• TO CllDl.TOl:S ' KAMI STATIM•lfT MAMI ,, ... ,._MINT .u ...... OI: COUIT o .. TH• TM follOWlllf P'l•totlt •r• dolllll ,TM_, f?llOll(k\O IMflOM 1rt ool119 .STATI OP: CALlll"OINlA fOI twsliitss tt: biltlnal at: THE COUNTY 0,. OttMlff DATA PIOCE"$$1NG POWEi,. 11" 1'1Ydr• CIMfl $y.ttmt, HYdr• O.ni, ... A-7.Hn ~ngbini, e ... ,_._, can~ Hvdr• V.c. Hydr• S!Nm. ,,.ilD,....,.,lor E.•l•lt of f$Tl.Ue: HALB£1l 92U6 !::tr: I """ Cott• ,.,,.., ctltl, 1¥27 ~ILLEH Ote....O. Wttrll' . Ltwh. '"' Hum-Cl\.w ... l. SffYtl.&, •1 Ctntt&I• l'f.. NOTICE is HERESY GIVEN lo "" 'iillllgblrd, COi Mnf, C•lllofnl•_~ .. N.....,.., I.Pel'!. C•lll f26'CI. (recl/IOB of llW ·~ 11tmM' O.C.tdtnl Frink. H. L.IWf'li't'f, ti7Clll e--Mldllel e1tio Wffl1 '71\ Worlfttm Dr .. '"''•II P'!'IO!lf lllYll'W (ltlnu .,.,,.,,... StrMI. torr•~· Ctll ... 1111 tolllS Sus.pense; .. ·V'iole~ce . ' ' Wlllttl..-.a.et Miid ffcedtnl wt '9QU!rld to lilt thtl'l'I, OOMld A. ~l'l'IOl.ld, lJU ... eh p.,._ llllt ou.inttt r• COl\dl.IC:lld by • 1i1fMr•1 with tht '*""'" Y01.1Cl\tf1; Ill !tit oflltt For.let' City, Cl\lfol'nlll t4«M 1 pt.11nei:Jl)!P, J 'i--~ This buslntM la eotld\IC11d by 'Ir! u11 n-. a.,.,.. T .. _-:::. __ ,~ ofJfle_c _fCUl.J!'!t 1boYt tnl ,_ coyrt, or COl"POl'tled a.aotl•tron ot/lt'r fllen , • ...----to """"'' ifierii, with tilt NCt$--..f'Y kltnhl This stafMltftt w.1 tlled w1tt1 tht e~ ~. 1o·tnt undl'r•lgnld ,, iM ott1tt par w:rrtn H Ltwl• ty Clwk ot Orll'IOt County on Mtrch '·!If •llOMfY• JACkSOH •. GOOOSTEIN, Thi• "•IM*d-Wu -flled,wlth h_~ 1913 ___ kU~Ll;'.ll, COP_ES.--GROllCE;'Y 6 SMlltl, 'Y Cl«k of ...__.__Cwfitv °" Mardi lt -:r. r" ·ltl»-A.....,_ oftht St•rt. Suli. 16.SI, Lot -··-' Publllheci Or1n11t Co.st D•n1 Piiot ....... C•ll!9'11l• f0067, Whldl II !tit 1973. t ,,... Gri_pping:-.:af ~Irvipe~ By TO~ BARLEY • 01 .. OaHy Plitt ttett (j Three cooviCts' break out of state • pr!ton,. heM 'for the home · 00111111unlty of • the two brothers in the trio and take over .the-home Of a· frightened family while they await the aid and funds which will allow them to finally elude their pursuers:-· Sound, familiar?' It should. It ls ,a tale that was originally used 1o the creation of a mei:porable Broadway play. APf'fl-t.-1t. 2'. _,., 1m 71"11 l>lt<e or.""'11,..,. or-11"-undtt110ntd.ln.•U PubllihH Or•not coast oaur Pilot ' ..._ --------------I ma1ws pertalnlno to !he Ht111 of 1o11d M ,, •• , ... A-... 1 2 9 16 •m m-n ~ dte90ent. wt thin tour mon1'hl attu tht •r ""' '"' "'' " • ' " first moments on stage to his PUBUC NOTICE "'6~/:0lf;~\o.;"2.°'1~ no11c1. Im' •1 berserk exit. STATl!M8NT Of A•ANDONMllNT O" EUGENIE M. BODENHOFF USll 0" "ICTITIOUS •USINl!SS N.\M• ACllTllnblrtlrh1. He was onl• a J1'ttle ahead of Th• tot1ow1no ~-· h•"' aancloned ot "" .. ,,._ of .,. •bOY• P1CT1T1ous •us•Nltt " the Ult or ""' tlct1t10UI bUS1DlllS na!T'lt c n•mtcl dtc«ltnl MA.Mil STAT£MINT hla father, Ben LeBeau, in our & 9 HEATING &. AIR CONDITIONING .aACIUOM. 9000STllN, kUMLEll Thi fo!l~lrlll Ptl'IOM .,. Oolrllt CO., at 3062 Teylor Weyi Coste MQe, COf'aS. CIOIKllY I SMITH btAlntU as: analysis ot . this c 11 s s l c. ~ -C•llloat!•..t'l61.6· - . --1111 A .......... .,... SW!t I.SI WORMSElt AME I: I c AN PLAN• TM Hctl!IOU1 bUllMU 11tmt reftf'rld to LM ......... c.tlf. ""1 TATION, 2965 E•st coast Hlthwey, LeBeau, as the-tortured faml-•tiiivt~was fllld rn Or•ll9• county on T•h tl'IJ) m.--s11tt11,-CoroM ·6'1 Mir, c1nr. nus--·s.ptember 11, 1m. A"°"""" fw. Alllnlllfstntl'h: ''"°"'"ti..,. Firming, lne .• -2145 Eest Jy bead, Dan Hl!Uard, had his cur1 .. Henry Norton. :iost Taylor Publllhtd Or•nee cw,t Dally Pilot, 92c~~t Highway, Coron• de.I ftMr, C1U1. .... finest moments in his scenes W1y, C01t1 Mfft, ce11klm11 m.u April 16. n :JO •ncl M1y 1, 1973 111,.73 ~l~n J/;rkultvr•I 5 • r y 1 c, ,, Wlllf(ll" Meers, 3062 Taylor ~Y·i~~~---------~~ I , __ ,,_, ~w c··•• "•-••Y• Costa MMe, C•ltfof'nfl '2426 ~ . -......--· "" ""'' or conlrontftion witli Griffin Thll bU11ntH we1 cOllducled by • PUBUe-NOTICE Sulft! 1, COl'on• Mir, c,11r. t26U- . g.enerel pertneohlp, l -'·~-------~---I Thl1 buslnfls 11 btlnil t'Ollducltd b_'f • and Roblsh -no-holds-barred • ctiarlff Htnry Norton caJ11orn11 llmlted ~rtner1hlo. ,lJUe l"ICTITIOUS ,!USINl'SS G&l'ltrlll Plrlner -A,,,_,lc11n encounters lhat once bad him Publlshed orinoe co.,1 0,.11y Piiot. NA.Ml! STA•EMl!HT Agrlcuuural Sef'vlc• corpor•tlon 903-73 Tia followlng Pf'"°" " OOlng~bl.ollntH MICh••I s. Myers most .convincingly wrlthing on "0'11 ~. 16• 23• 1'13 ••: This s11ttm.nt 111 ... with ttit county 1--...::C"-----------1 MYLAN DRYWALL, 1At76 Diiiow, Cltrk of Orenge County on: Marth 26, the floor from 8 beating 3d· Wtslmln1lw, C1tlfomfll, '2"83 19n. BY Theresa M. Ward, Deputy "THE Dls~'itATll HOURS'' PUBUC. NOTICJ:: Thom••· Htrd'f Myltn, 1135 Ny11a, Pllbl!~ Qrjngt Coa1t Dtlly Piiot, .. '= JllHPll Hf\lff. <1lr«ted ministered most convincingly --'----1 Reno, Nevade, 89502 April 2. 9, 16, %1, 1m ..... 73 ENTERTAlflMENT *"" -by Tom Tiius. IKllfll~I by the callous, brutal GrU:Cin. -DAILY PILOT $}.., ,.,..... 17H3 •••••• d1!1~!!111M.\nttS Is c~ucted by en· In·,_· ______ • ------- (1/Al(tW ~ Jtnton, l(Wnd by Er1-1n1 F h , FICTITIOUS BV Thomls Hardy Myl•n r MonNtt. n1iltt1111 b'f.Gtcy writht, siao• or t e rest, it was a solld 'I'll TAKE THAT1 -Ben .LeBeau thwarts• the ef-NAME STATEM&NT ·This 1tattnMnt.w•s 111t11 wnh t11t c°""" ·PUBLIC NO'l1CE mlN>Ofr J•rrv ll•f\.•, prewn!"-'<I 11v the , f TIM followlng Ptr$(11\ Is dolno DUl1M51 ... Clerk of Or c fy •· II l 1 _,, ----'---~~------INlrM eommvnuy ThNt.,. Frle1ay1 •nd contact with local community" . team effort witb a ~a1r or two orts of his son (Richard Riley) to send a message 11 , · • •Y •119e oun on ,...r F ·~;1· 1 .., ~t'::r:il?" 'l:~Yt'V~1.~!e ~ th'e -n"t ted b h · h for help in his composition bOok throut:(h ·teacher "'M. 2MIO Wnt coast Hl9flW•Y· Published Or•rige coe11 oanr PHot. NOTICI! TO CRt!DIT011 · trv_IJ)t c1mpus. !!:1tHrY1t1on1 646_;3lll-lheater. saal no Y t e wr1t~r t_. at wi~I D. D. Calhoun ,·n this scene ·from the Irvine Com-. N::=.:••c~~,;,~=~ ~r11;e1tnv. AprH '..J.'· 23, 30, it13 . • m-11 su,.11110• •couaT oir nte Gary erup Was magnill·• not be recoun. t~ 1n this 2..00 Wist Coolf Hlghw1y, Newpor'l'J __ --,,.,.,-,.,.--:c-:cc-c---CI --STAT.E.OP-CALll':ORPt.IA~:"---TH~ CA.ST munily Theater dr~ma "The Des perate Hours." Beach, Ca111ornla (s t. I e l)fl' THI! COUNTY 0 " OltANOI. • Gtenri Griffin . . . Gary S.0-.ruP cent -there is no otbe:t' woid o~erall analysis of a fln~ play. ----''------'---~---;_ _________ , lncor~lllon • C1lllornl•) PUBUC NOTICE . Es11fe of N:..ta~s::i.:. MAR T I N 1_ ___ -1•~··:;·~·~11~11s'"::..c.::~·~""'~"::l""~~' ... ::E~'':-_;;;o:;,.,ni;=;i~~b;.;::;;~Cj,;;;1;.,_;--;J\Jlso~ll.led:.~..dJ:111!hl«l-au.-----------------__:-----'------l<>T~•:1•~~ .. ~·~1~~·~"~'~.,,;:;"~';";;_;';'__:''l::::::::=:ccc==ccc-cccc'C'O~--ERT M I ~_s__IJJJutESS SCHROEDER, eke ALl!I ..,,;;o;.· --- o.puty hrd · ~;~~:!~~~ · dience that refused to accept G1!111'11e M. Turner, Secretary f ,•1 AM1 ~ STATEMENT 1 ~~~~_;~-At ,• ' semu.l ll001111 Griffin, the brutal leader of Off• D •d · T~ Tiils stalement was tlled .wllh the Coun-Th• o owng persons •r• dong NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN to tllt Cindy Hllll1rd Sh•ron 011vfdson h , h t k h the non-appearance of the cast ... Clerk of Ore"'e Courily on March 12. bUslnen es: ' Rtlphl~ Hlll!ard Richard Rllev t e trlO ta ta e OVer t e ' icer avi oma ifn. 8.1.$.B." PROPERTIES, 15232 creditors ol ttM •bi:rvt nimld dectdenl Ha1111; Griffin . . . , Jeff L•Beau home and lives of .a frightened at final curtain and en-1 · . ,.na1 Cherbourg A ..... LrYlne. cillf. P2705 that all ptrsons h•vlng dalm• a;aln•t It!• ~1,. c~~on O•Y~3vp~~.'in":~ thusiastically clapped for their f'ubltsMd Orang• Cool! D•llY Piiot. JPhn H. Btcllek. 15232 Charbourg A Ye., said decedent are required to file them; Lr. ,.~k• 11:o11ert Plffitol"d family and the elder brother t 1 I April 2, t, 16, 23, 1m · '32-73 Irvin•. ca n10s with 111t1 n".!!'~'.:Y ~her~J.,n tilt :."''' Ch~• wr•hi Dew•v Knklhte11 of a man who comes to rea11·...... re urn. t was regrettab e that c Rudy 1Yenc1c m Forni Ave John. ol ltie c ~k"' '"" '"""''" " cou 'or I f o o r 1hOlln "'° uJd , h , f M F to!'le p 15902 ·• to · pre,.nt tll.,, with !tie t'UtcffU.l'Y M" Swl I .. Ersic!M Moroen in those hours what he missed we co n t ave them an op 0 any aces PU.BLIC NOTICE a ' ' •• vwchtrs, to 1111 undtlrslgned ., !tit office Mr. Pttter10n back to show them in the best . Frenk A. Skert, %16 ,.~ullM st .. of iittorneoys GIBSON, DUNN & when he (ollOWed tbe path of Johnstown, Pa. 15904 J CRUTCHER, 5.SO NewPOrt Center Drive, Cnm. e b'··~ by' the older way possible-how their FICTITIOUS IUSINESS Michael G. 8ecllek, AlJ6 Mf. Ro1el Sullo 800. Newport 8each, Cal1tornl1. was later adapted for a not so memorable movie that even ~ , f)e · NAME STATEMENT 81vd., AHllOll P•rk, Pa. 15101 wll!ch Is !ht pla~ of bl.llilntu of , fl'lt man. ' sperate Hours" had had at N:~WARK, .N. J, (AP) -stakeout here. "This is where TM followlne persons •r• dolno PThls 11u111 nt1S Is cond11<:ted 11'1 • Gentr•I unden.tgnfld In all m•tt•rs Pl!f"l•lnlng to Humphrey Bogart coUldn't im-s ADER u p; S FINAL prove a nd which was later :._ memorable scene is the best and typically -beaten to h' · 1 h t h d death in a mess of, television 1 ing in a P ay t a a many mutations.· to offer •. He explode.! into But the Irvine Community almost-insane violence, lapses 'Ibeater-ffiis-"offe "back to into _g j b b ~.r_i n g s~lf-in- 6 crimination when he realizes "The Desperate Hours" and that his carefully conceived author Jose~ H ayes in a · d h Pr&iseworthy ·and eminen_ tl_y plans are ·going awry an t e n Ii grovels in pathetl self pity -successfiit 15id to recapture t e when it comes through to him mngic--of the .play that won -a that--he had lost his bid for "Tony" award nearly 20 years freedom and the kid brother ago and 'Pl.It laurels on the d 1 • d h' brows of Paul Newman, Karl who h a a ready re-1ecte · is Malden and James Gregory. tutelage. ' S8derup ,stobd head and JT CONTAINS a nuctuating shoulders above ·any other mixture of suspense and member of the cast and this is violence in a series of cliff. not m eant to ·tie unfair to hanger scenes that had this players w ho made tremendous critic .on the e:Qge of his seat contributionS to'-; this hammer -moretimes than 11e-canac=-orapta . --- curately recall today. Tom Among thetn were Ben Titus• direction most capably · -LeBeau Ill, m y-second .star as keeps this splendid pot on_the the seedy, thor:oughly criminal boil and gives us a final scene Samuel Roblsti .who was by far and outburst ·of violence that the.most1villainou.s o(·the trio is just about ·the most gripping a nd whot ·was oi\ty.~!larrowly 15 niinutes of tbea.ter we'vt · ttel(f., J1to1·thck-by •·fbe ... elder come across in a long iime. c ·rtffin: But this review will have to least two Onlookers de.per t I d d r ., llus ln6S 11: artner1h P-the e111te of sold dKedeflt, within tour a e-David Toma has beell a man of ma e my na~e an ame. oiscovERY •TRAVEL. _201 oceen John H, B_eclifk montt11 •fl•r the flrit p11bllca11on ot thb ly clinging to each other for Toriia-spent his accumulated Ave., La;ima ench, C•HI. '2651 This 11a111nen1 Was 111.ct with 1)ie Coon-notice. · - -- several desperate and rather many roles -the beggar, the t' t' r tlir' ths c. Conrad Wah1ciu111 Jr .• 4'15 01rt· ty c1.,.k of Or•f19• county on April J, Dated April 5, 1973. vaca l&n-une 0 -ee m9n moor, L•gunl B11ch,-C•tlf. 926Sl 1913. CLIFFORD A. SCHROEDER hairy moments during that banker, the junkie apd t he in Hollywood. During the film-M1rnvn w. Wahlquist, 445 Dartmoor, P ,,1 •• ., 0 c t F2436) executor of the wiu 01 tilt r · . " •• Laguna Beech, Cal!I. 92651 u • ., r1ngt OJ,llS Dally Pllot, abOVe named decedent per ormance. junk dealer. Irol'lically, some-1ng of Toma, broadcast Th!1 buslnen 1s cond11<:1e<:1 bY en Jn. April •· 16. 21 30,1m 991-T.I GIBSON. bUNN • cauTCHEllt ' Pete Jason In. 'Revere' Pete r Jason, a movie and television actor raised and · schooled on the. Orange Coast, will appeai;-in a musical version or "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere" Wednesday at 6 o 'clock on K1TV, Channel IL Jason, better known locally as -Pete-Ostling, graduated from Newporl High School and Orange Coast College, where he played the leading role in "The Music Man." He also performed at South Coast Repertory and returned t o OCC last s ummer to play Lan· celot in''Camelot." Della Signs I I pl ed h Wednesday his wife Patty dlvldu11. llY: w1111am A. Anclenon one e se recent y ay t e . • • . . • · c. Conrad Wahlquist, Jr. 5511 NIWPOrt C1t1t.r Dl'tV't, s1111i. • and their four chadren JOlned ·•'fllls s1ntement was llled-wlth-lhe Coun-PUBLIC NOTICE N1wport 11e1ch, ee111. n..o rjlle ot David Toma_ him.self_, him in Hollywood for two •v c1er11; DI or1.nge county on Merctt u. T•h tn4> tM-•n But he's not griping. It was ks 19n. P1CT1T1ous 1us1NEss 111111onitys '°" E:.:9(1,ltar wee ' . F24206 NAMI! STATEMENT Pulltl1hed Or•ng• Coa1t O•HY ""°'· for an ABC.TV movie about Despite a ll this activity and Published oran11e coest D1ll1 Pllo1, Tiit tortowlno person 11 doing bllllness Apru 9, 16, 2'3. 30, 197:1 1039-T.I t:iis real-life exploits. as a .publicity -his p icture f~ April 2' 9' ,,, 2J, lflJ l7J.13 as: THE WELLCO MORTGAGE COM·I-----,.-,--,,.,==,..---~ Newark-detective w ho s e PUB-LIC NOTICE qaenuy~ appears in lo ca J PUBLIC NOTICE PANY, 212'l ~· Broadway suite 201, -disguises have led him to , s.ma-Alll, cai.t. '2706 1--------~..,..-ccc=-- I 000 d r . newspapers -' T 0 ma s THE NEW WELLlk DEVELOP· NOTICE OF TRUlnE'S SAL• near y 7, arrests an a arr disguises continue to be er-FICTITIOUS llUSINESS MENT CORPORATION. c 111 t o r ,n I I L.Mn No. S4-SfU7·t share of publicity here . NAM~ STATEMENT corwa11on, -11100 N. Hayvenhur1t st.. T.s. No. 241f.n . fectJVe. He says be has a COn· The lollowlng persons· are doing Ven NU'fS. Celltornla T.D. SERVICE COMPANY •• dul'( ep-And after all, he did get a viction r'ate of 98 pe" rcent bu1l11tu '" This bu11ntss rs being conducted tty • pointed Trvslee under 1t1t tonow11111 Small Part l'n the mov1'e . OALE'S JA NITORIAL.SERVICE. 31 ... Corporation '''"""' died of trust WlLL SELL AT ' ffE -DRIVES j a fO ll D d Coolldg• Ave., Costa Mesa, Calif. '2626 THOMAS H. BURMEISTER PU8LIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST "Toma." He even was briefly NeWark which has the highest Dale P•trl(ll; cr111, 31u Coolidge Aveff Vk• Prttldtnt, Mertttr.., BIDOER FOR CASH cpayablt 11 tlmt of Considered for the title role . • . , · . Costa Mesa, Callt. 92626 Tiiis $111trnetil Ill~ with Iha County sal1 In l1wful monev of !he Unlltcl $talld before-,.1 was vi·~.'n to a crnne rate in the1n at1on· 1n a Pa111a Jean crm, 31u coo11c1pe Ave., Ctef'k 01 Or•ng• County on: M1rch u. 111 right, 1111e ind inter.it conYl'f'd N •"' beat p 1963 CO -I ' The Costa Mesa, Call!. 92626 191J. By Th•r•1• M. Ward, Del)vty Counly •nd now held 11'1 II undfl' sald Deed OI' veteran actor Tony Musante. ·U mn-c car. Th!s DUslneu iJ con<1uc!ed 111 • srtn-Cler•. ' Tru11 In 1111 prol)tfty htrtlnefltr car 's trunk is loaded wiUt cos.. .... 1 partneniritp. • "2'202 dfferlbed: For Toma, the life of a cop ·1 . d Dale P. Crin Publlshed Ora119e COll11 D•llY PUot, TRUSTOR: LOUIS J. TODOROFF, • d--th lit f · fi tumes, uru orms, wigs an This t1a1emeflt w•s liled w!tli th• eoun-Aprll :z. t. 16, 23. 1913 896-T.I 1111111e man an e · e o a mov1~ gure makeup. . , 1y c11r11; of orinue county on March 19, a ENE F 1 CIARY ~ COUNTRYWIDE blended for ». while when he T 'd h used 1 11 1n3,-• -PUBLIC NOTICE --FUNDING CORPORATION,• Hnt. Yor• • f h. oma sa1 e near ya F24003 corporat!on was commuting rom IS his disgw"ses in his biggest ar-PubU1ll!d orange coas1 Dally Pllol FJCTITlous.ausiNESs Recorded Aprll 11, 1912 •s Instr. No. police duties here-to his movie -t h b .k -1 M1rch-U. •nCI Aprn 2, 9, ''' 1973 toa-n 7+o6 1n 1>oo11 1001s page •16 of Offlct11 I the W I f'AAM • res -one t at r.q e up a ot-NAME STATEMENT Rtconls In tl>e _off!c• OI ""' RecorW of ro e on es ~~· tery operation handling _ ..,,. The following perSOlll ire doing orano:e cooniv: tald deed OI' tru11 -VBLIC NOTICE b\1$fntt• as: oescrlbes the to11ow1ng "'"°'"""': IN HOU.YWOOD he did million annually •. ,. .. p UNITED PROTECTIVE COATINGS. Loi 19 l)f TrKI No. 3176. In tht City OI' UOllt WlUow Lane, Westminster, C•llf. Newport 8.each, County of Oran;e, Slate ''Toma" and had two other FICTITIOUS 8USINESS 92413 of Calllo!'nl• •• , per mtp recordld ln . roles -as a cop 'l"""', ,_in aoothe. r PUBLIC NotlCE NAM• STATEMENT Victor . M. Btrr, 2'5'2 Paplt• or.. book n. P11~s '°•rod 31, M1sct11•1M10U• ,_ l ~ ~,. The .to1IPW1110 person Is dolf!o "''SlnesJ! Ml1alon Vle]o, Ctl. '267S Maps, 111 t!Wt, oHlct or !tit iounty TV police, program, 'Colum· ••: .. .. • . . ""'"~.. .. R•Y""'!"I Gl.utw,"" Houonton Av .. nocor_def'__,,.~ld..CDllll'l:· , • . ho" He returned to his beat NOT•t• OF PUO'IC •••• :,·,·. CHIYSLE CREATIONS: 1i:n'ie, I~ Stfltj Fe SPl'lnet.'"t:tl. '°''° 2072 Paltn>A-llrlyt, -~ llMcll.-. ' .. St Costa Nitta C1UI 92'26' • M•nillill V~fl Plttm1n. 102 Wlllow C•lllonil• \ ' where he traoks d 0 w n Notice 11 hereby given !Mt the Pl.annlng Crelo P." Chr'vs1e •. 1632 B 1!!Wa Sf., Lane. Wttlmlii•ter. Cal. 92"3 ~"(II • """'. lddms OI" ~ gamblers' then n I 0 Com rri 1 s s Ion of tl\e C 11 'f Thi• tlvilMSS ls cend11<:led by 111 In-Thll bu11neu 11 conducted by • generll destgr11tlon 11 shown ebQw, no -rre.nly ew of Newport Beech wtn hold • public Coste Meso C•llf '262' partnenihlp. Is given as to 111 compltttntas or cor-Hollywood {or two "Tontght 1H11rlng on Amendm~l)t No. 37:1 lnllle1e<1 di ld 1 ' · Victor M. Barf rectnesd." . Sh ., . Th h bv the CllV of Nfl'WP(>rl B«ietl ·lo consider Y ua Craig p Chr'($fe This tlatement WH tiled wlth lhe Coun. The Deneflcl1ry undef' sold Dttd ol be built around the tribute this HIS WAS a special brand of critic intends to pay today to venom in this c a r e f u 11 y an actor who gave Saturday sketched Hayes role and he 1----;naight the best performance I caught th!_ ~Q!i:l~f U~e ~rt ave-seeri 1n my IO+ years o a n -b'Uilf on the role from his HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) Singer-:-acfriss-Delia Reese signed ~r a cont inuing featured role in t he CBS-TV projected series, "Daddy's Girl," starring Eddie Albert. OW appearances. en e .an •mencim~f to Tltle 'lQ DI. the Newpor1 Thi$ stitime.it w•s flied with IM coon. ly Cler• of Orange Couniv on M1rch 19, Trust, bv reason of • brNdl or" def•ult 1n came .back here and went Beach Mllllklp•I Code bV Ille addition of ty Cieri!; of Orenve County on March 19, 191J. IM Obllgetron1 secur~d I h •rt 11 y, b k--:t.--.~ ---.:.----· ChaPiW---20.41.--enlllle<l-'SPKlllC-_Plln 1913 __ . -F2•S hecelofort Ue!:Uled •od lll:llYft'td to the ac to C11as1ng gam J1ers. Olstrlct. · ,.-"NOn -·po5f!ihed Orange COiis! CellY--PlfGt underilgned • wr itten Ded1r1tlon of "I'm still a policeman at Notlc1 Is llerelly further given thet sa!d Publl~ Of<1nge co.st Dally Piiot Merch 26, encl A.pi"ll :z. 9, 16, 1m tll-T.I De1au11 11nd Dem1nd lo!' s11e, •nd written h public hearing wlll Ile held on Ille Uth d1y Marci\ 26 and AprU 2 9 16 191J 117·7:1 no!lce of breach ind of el&ellon to c1uM eart," says the 40-year--0ld DI APrll, 197:1, •' tne houriof 7:30 P.M. in ' ' ' ' PUBLIC NOTICE 111e 11ndenlgne<1 to .i1 wold property to detect. h dm'ls th !'! the Council Cllember1 ot Ille NewJ)Orl s1t11ly s11d oOl(9at!ons, and thernntr the • . !Ve, W 0 a I e l e Beach Clly Hal!. at which time and pl1c1 undef'slgned caused uld not1ce of brHCh 1n Hollywood beats a predawn eny ar)(f __.!! person• lntiri"ested m1y ap-PUBLIC NOTICE NOTl~:LL1~ C:C,"'.i~~~ORS and DI 1l1etton to be Record!d January •· 'Echoes' Empty Drama At Broadway Theater pear and be t>eerd thereon. 1 1 EW 1973 as Instr. No. 6122 In llOOk 10506 P'9f JACQUELINE E. HEATHER, 9 SIOS4 Scllool D st r c I: N PORT·MESA 94, of 11ld OfflClll RKOl'ds . Secrel•ry · NOTICE TO ClllEDITORS UNIFIED , Seid sole Wiii be mad1, bl.II wtlhoul Newport Beach Cl1Y SUPERIOR COURT Of' TM~ Bid Oe•dllne: ll:OO odocll; i .m. of the covenant or warr1nty, expr"s or 1mplltd Plannlng Commlulon .STATE OF CALIFORNIA. foa 24th d•Y of APRIL, 197:1". reg•rdlng 11111, llosseulon, or en-PuDUshed ·O'rlng11 Co.-st D•llY Piiot TNE "COUNTY OF OIANGE Pla(e l)f Bid llece!pt. llS1 Pllcenlla cumbrancff fl:I pey the remtlnlng prln· A 'I '. 1,,3 1 ' N A. 74!Jll Avmue, Costa M"• 1 ' '1 -·" "' _ '' pr • • _. 125-73 °· · Proiect ldenllflcatlon Name· ELEC· ( pe sum 0 '"' ,,,.,e -"CU "' " E1t1te of MABEL KA.Y STEVENS LIN-TRICAL MAINTENANCE SERVICE TO Deed ol Trusl, w11ti lnfef'e1t as In Nld --~----------1 DER Deceased. OW R PER note provided, 1dvanc"' If ~Y~ under !tit NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IP Ille DISTRICT NED p 0 TIES terms of so!d Deed o1 Trust lees chi"" PUBLIC. NCYrICE crtd!IOr$ l)f Ille aDOYe "'"med decftlml Pl1ct Plans are on Fiie: 18l7 Pll(llnl!• and expenses of !tie Tru1tfe aN:t of tM th~t al~ persons hav!no c111ms a;aln51 lhe A~~~C~o;~• ~~aESY GIVEN _ 1 .... trusts created b' urd Deed of Trust. S1ld s•ld decedent are r1qulreo to Iii• tll!!m, '"a ""' sale Wiii be held on Tuesd1y, Mey 22, 197:1 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS with tile ntcessory Yoochel't, In lt>e offlcl tbove-named SChool District 9t Ofli~e 1111 :00 A.M. 11 t11t ofl!ct of _T.Q. Strvlce NAME STATE MENT ol lhe clmt of tile •bove entllled court, or County, Calllornle, actl119 by •nd fhrDllllh Compenv. Bank of Amerlc1 T-r. One N'EW YORK (AP) -The r h . Tiie lollcrwll'!ll person 1$ doing buslntsl lo present !hem, with tile rlKffta'Y Its Go.~rn!ng BO!rd, lleretnafler referred City Blvd. West, Suite 1110, Or•""· O t e concept is mated with a •s: voucher•, 10 !I'll ur>derslgrw<1 81 !he office to as DISTRICT . w111 re:eeive up to, but C•ntornla. duJI tbud Of dramatic anguish plethora of profound inanities GRAPE N' AIL, 210 "'Fllltl St., Hun-of ellorney LAWRENCE I(, HARVEY, 817 nl)f later than lht •llo~Hfated lime. Date: April f, 1'73 tlngton lleach, Call!. 92648 North BroadW1y, 5anta Ana, C11trorn1a, sealed bids for t1>t award of • contract T.D. StrYl(e Comp•ny resounds through "Echoes,'1 a such as "if you remember, Jack Nell L~m. 2891 Ellttmert, which ls the place of business DI 111e tor t111 •boVe Protect. 1s Hid Tru11e1, play unwisely staged at ·YOU remember there's no Cosla ~~'-C•ll'-ty26 une1ert1grm1 In •II metters pert•lnll'lll to 111f:I' ::_:~ ~~ec~~1 '•,.the place Iden. av Ault! E. Brown • . . Thl1 buslf\!!51 Is -coliducled~by an Ill' !hf' est.re OI' said dtcrde!'IT, -w!ltlln tour 1 • ClPtned •nd A5Sl1t1111 SKrtlary Broadway's Bijou.Theater. escape," or "maybe hfe is dlvlduaL months a11ir 1111 nru p11t11Jc1t1on of thil publcFy read •loud•' Ille •bov.s111e11 STA·l 20S th 'JI · " Jack N. Leum · riotlce. tlmt •ncl otac:e.. P11bltshld Newport Harbor News Pr151, N. Riehard Nas~, its author, ano er I USJOn. Tiils st•tement was llled with the cwn· Dated April s. 1m. Eich bld must tonform and be comlllnld . wllh 01lly Piiot Newport has a certain reputation in this In the circumstances the tv Clerk DI Orange C~IY on Aorll 11 , A. RAGNAR LINDi.:R ri::~°iiT':i~ contr•ct ;:ume1 ntli. Beach, c11tfomr1, Aprfl 16, D. Xi. 1m 197:1. , Exei:.utor of the w!ll '"ertts r ght to re-lm-T.I country for comedy a n d perfonnances by L y n n · F24Slt • 01 the aboYe nemtd decedent feet •nY °' •II blds or to waive 1ny lr-1------------- mus l·cal Ji'bre"i', 1-5 admired M'lg · d D 'd Seib Published 0ra119e C0115t Dally Piiot, LAWlllENCE k. HARVEY regul•r!!~'! or lnlo!'m1!Mts In 1ny bids Pr PUBLIC NOTICE fi I. rim an av1 Y as April 16, :u, 30, 1nd May 7, t9T.I 1101-T.1 817 North lrotetw•Y 1" the ...uu!ng. abroad mostly for probes at the incarcerated companions s1n1•An1,ce111om1a No bld<kr miy wlthdr-his bJd,for •1--------------------------Tel· 11141 IJW73ll period of lorty-llv• ('5) Clan ~fter the l o.Sl'tn' the more sober side of ex-with Paul Tripp as their ""°""Y for ex&eutor ctate set for 111e opening DI Dfds. NOT1ce Of' TRUSTEE'S SALE l·stence hav'ng won a dozen mys t · · t e PUBLIC NOTICE . Pub11•1Md Or•-coast 0111y Pnot, A payment bond 11'1d a performance T.s. No. l·l'*A , I er Y v_1 s I 0 r a r Aprll P, t6. 23, :io'.'i973 l(M1•73 bond will be requlr!d prior fl:I execution of on TUftday May t, 1973, et 11 :00 A.M., European prizes. remarkably intense and tt>e contract. The P•yrnent bond shall tie BENEFICIAL SERVICE co .. as duly •P- Thl·s-pi·ece ca•·Jogue',m' his m '1met' d th dir t' r FICTITIOUS BUSINESS PUBLIC NOTICE Ill lhe lorm 1et forth In ltie contract pelnled Truslte Undl!I'" Ind pursuanf lo "' .. IC un e r e ec ion o NAME STATEMENT docum~ts. Deed of Trust ncordld Oec:tmber 29 darker canon befng concerned Melvin Bernhardt ,The foUow!ng persons are doing Govtmlno Board 1966, •s lnst. No. IS30I, In book 1139, peg; ' . . ," business •s: NOTICE TO CltEDITORS By DorolhV Harvey Fisher 145, of Ollld1I RKords In Ille offlce of With a man a nd ' WOman Trtpp IS an enunent author-MESA BEARING CO., 11125 W. 18th $0PEltlOI COURT Of' TNI! Purth•slno Agent · Ille County Recorder of Ora~ County, metaphorically boxed4n an in-actor on children's television St., Cost• Mesa. Calif. 92627 STATI! OP CALIFOINIA POil A:.~r~s~ ,1~ ?~nge Coast Oally Piiot C•ltfOl'n!•, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUC· , . Wiiiiam MerYln· Faber {General Part-THl!J COUNTY Of'' OltAllGE ' 1036-lJ TION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH sane asylum. Tilda is a total programs with such credits as 1 mo D IKVll st L B h No. A-15714 <P&v•ble at time DI sale 1n i.wt111 montV escapist from reality ·who con· "Mr. I Maalnation" and ~;uf. 9e115 r " ong "'' Estel• of JOSEPH LEED ABRAMSON, Pt!BUC NOTICE of ttte untied s111"1 at the 10Uth tnint " · b"""' , Kellll Randall Faber 6550 OrlKoU st •lso kriown as JPS&ph L. Abrtm50n, __ en1ranct to the Old Or1nge County fesses inability "to find , the Tubby the Tuba.' Selby has Lon9 Beach, ca11f. 909j5 ·• Decte9e<l. NOTICI! Of: TRUSTE E'S SALE cour111o111e, loc•te<1 fn 111e 200 Block 01 Cube l'Oj)t 01 people '" the v'is'ited a f m'llliOn Vt'deo Derrkl.. Scott F•btr 4550 Drllcoll St . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to Ille Ho. FC ssnv West Sant• An1 Boulllverd {forrJMlr1Y Wtsl CW Long Be•(h, C<')!lf. 9Qll'15 ·• creditors of !tie above nemftl d&eed~I on MflY 11,, 1t7J, 1t 11 :00 A.M., COL· 6th Slteefl, Senta Ana, Celltornla, all script's most.memorable line. homes on the "Dar.k Shadows" This bu91ne,. rs conducted bY • umuea "'-t 111 Pfl'llOllS l\IYlng clllms against the ONIAL MORTGAGE SERVICE co. OF rlghl, trt11 u1d Interest CflflV•Ytd 10 1nc1 Pl · I ..., 'th · p•rlner1hlp. said decedent are required lo Ill• llltm, CA LI F O R N I A 111 duly appointed now held by II Uncll!f' said Pted of Tl"ll1>1 aymg masu•3rf games WI ser1eS. Wlllllm Mlf'lln Fabtr. with the necttMry YOUChers, 111 !tie office Trustte under and pt.1rsuanl to Dffd of ln ttie property 1ltualed0 ln N1d County her is Sam, perhaps a killer The stylized setting by Ed Thi' st111ement was 111td wttl'I tM Coon-of the clwk of !tit •bo"' entUled court, OI' Tr11St rtcorded May tt, 1'69, ,, 1nt1r. No. and Slate de~cr!bed 1s: Who h.so'I qw'te forgotten the W'ttst · tri' I · bo ty Clerk 01 Or•no• County on April 11, to pniserit them, wtth t11e nec:usary 20333. tn book 1m. page 17t, of Oftlel•t AU of tht tnsellotd "'•'• of Trvstor I e m, .a p e SCrlfJl X 1973. YOUChers. . lo !ht Uncltnlg11ed c/o Mr. Records In lhtl offlct of lhe County 111 Lot 97 of Tr~! 4224, IS shown on t outside world set· enclosing a pi'le of f14J2t Edward H. st-• .,., C1mpus DrlY1, PO Recordtr of or1111111. county, Slate of map temrdld ln Book 157 Pqiti 1 • · --_. __ ·---~ublllhtd Ort1111t-c-t O.Uy Plk>t, _8o~c_ _2!Q7, N~I_ .!.~"· C.llloml1 .C•llfornlt, WILL SELL A.T PUBLIC AUC· thr111111h 14 of Mlsutlaneova_ -~· · o.r.JLT ,.,Lor S:t•ff '"°"' Between "tliem . "CODleS the geoitiett1c props, IS tlie af-AprU 16, ~3• 30, •nd May 7, 1973 1072..,.2 9'2660, whTcff,Stlil----plac• orDUiTne-.toJ T10N-To-H•GHEsr-BrDDER-FoR-cAsH reqrci.-et--<>rt119rCouniy;-c.n • 1----~·oat w· i-4-L-n.1•.,.11.'J-----------ferson-, &-symbol-Of 8.nythin~ fair'S-mOSt attractive-feature __. the llnlltrslgned In •II l'Nllltrl Ptrttlnlno {PIYI~ t_lmt ot salt hT lawful money Slfd Leuthold tlflll 1n lnltrtsl l"'7 ........ D · ---to the-estate of Mld-oececleTltrwlttllft-four of-tnt·=~-Sl•ttsr--~-Sliijltf rronl been crwted·by-lllttt-cerllltn-11•• !M from guard to w.rliaps' soci "Echoes," prior . to this PUBLIC NOTICE months •It.,. the first pllbllc•tlon of lhl• entr•nc• to tnt orarioe couniv Old June 10, 1963, exec:vtftl by the 1"'1ne Jn I · h tbs 'I t '•ti ( ffered t notlct. COUT!house, City of Santi An• Stele of Compeny •• l.Hsor 1nd-by M'"o l M .k Duff d h ' 0 A c on orm1ty, w o mou s1 en preseo.,.. on,· was o o D•ted March 21,-1m. • c1utorn1a, ,11 right 1111, 1nc1 initrest (on· corpor•Hon, a Nevada corpor1t1on, 1 e y or ers ls yo gsters, ~nee Hassay and words and ultimately woos the 300 college and community -ROSE LEIKER ABRAMSON veyed 10 and now '11e1d bv 11 under saici Harbor 111 .... stment co .. • c.111orn11 Danny Rel.ser to ~v1'ct the fami'ly dog a the'r -. -'ced b th FICTITIOUS IUSINESS Executrix of the will or tM Oetd of Trust 1n ~property situ11_, t~ cor~r111on, dol119 busln'" •• °'°"" ' "" , S I Sam into another room, leaV• troupes serVI y e NAMI STATEMENT 1bove named dtt!denl said County and Sl1Je dtKrllled ll: " Shores Oe'lelQPmtnl Co,, •s LtsMI mother, Jennifer Higginbothain, looks o n in this ing Tilda to whimper· "mam,a, Amfrican p I a y wright s ~ follcrwlng 11trsons ertc1o1no butlntU &DWAIO N. sTONI! Lots. 01 Tr1c1 No. u11, rn the city DI which lease w11 recordld In 1ht offlc• seen f "Ch a B th D " be' d . . Is: 1$)111 Clm,vs DrM c,,,,. Mttl. County OI' OrellQt, Sl•I• of of the County RecorWr of Ora11111 Coun-. e rorn e per Y e ozen, 1ng stage mama" as the 'final curtalb Theater as 1ls award play for 1. siure v111a;ei 2 s 11 ,, 1 '° ._ ftD1 cen1orn11, es Ptr m'P recorded 1n book tv ori A1.10ust fl' 1963 In B6ok ""-Peo• afternoons this week by the rr~otintain Valley com-blessedly descends 1972 Just bow inany of them Enltfprlses. "' E. 20th St,; Colli Mtso, t":'""'m.1-=:.:•11fol'ft1t flUt u. pagu 311, )l •nd 31 of Mlsctllantoui +~ of,011:cr~RIC~ ... 't Th . • · caUfornle 92•21 1 Mep1, In the office of "'' COllll!y s ree ress '"" of!lt>r common mun1 y eater . The exlstentiaJ· strangulation ' took the dare is not reported. Wey111 M. Fissell, ,. Oowr ori ..... ""-'· tw keclltrb: . ' record., of Mid coontv. d"'gn•flon. If 1ny, of !!If , ... proptrty -------------------------------------"-----------'·----'----1 Newport Bta(h, Calltomll 92660 , Pvbllohed C>nln11t COISI 01lly Ptlol, The 11rffl tcklrtSI Ind otlltr common described lbo\'11 fs Wt~ lo bt? ( l "t'rne frt, Ur. fREDRiCK C. lUOWI&- • V' APll/t. 17 SCHO.OL BOAR'P ELECTION M1rpret s. f'aswll. 1.00 Dover Aprll 9, 16. 23, 30, 1m 1'04ol·73 dtiltntlfon, If •ny, of !tit ,..., property 1m Po1trl1 Drl..,., NtwpOff 9Hch. Orlvei Ntwport 9ffdl, C1Utornl• "660 -dtlcrlbeid ebO"ie It pufJIOl"lld lo be: 3083 Cellfornl• This buslnest Is conducted by •n unln· PUBLIC NO'l1CE , DonnybroOlt LerM, COlll Meu, C1!110rnl1, ·11.1'Ti.,":",1-1 T~ ~• ... ltM ~ corporetld es$0Cllllon otlltr 1t11n • Ortngt COll!'lly. . ny ncorr...,.nns "' s .... t pertnershlp. The imdmlgrltd Tru1i.t dlstlilmt eny llddreu •rod Othtr commfn .dftltn•llon, If Mtl'O•ret s, F•SM11 OTICE ~O~IOITOllS lllblllly lor •nY tncorr«ln .. of the street tny, lhoWn herein. Thf1111~1 wu fllld wtfh ft\t CllV'I· su'i.ealOI coUu 0,, ,...., tdclrfft •rod o1w common dtflQIWlllO!I,. 1t c!'~.n~·:; ,:~~1r.-::fv,':~iss~ .~~t ,.., Cl'"' of Or•1111• COllnty Oft J.Prll 11 , STAT£ 011 CALl,OINl.l POil eny, shown lltrtln. -"'9tnllflll 1111• ...... p llon .. .,... • 1973. TNI! COU"TY 0, a-.ANGll Stld Hit wtll bt mtdt, bllt W!ll'IOuf • ........ ' °' .... P "I O C ""• n• Ht. A·75'21 t~nt or r,:renty, t11;prr1 or fmpltld, ~~!~e!f ::. ':'te~';t =~":., ~~ u,,, Shed ren;t OllSt Delly U.1, •Estele of JESSli MAY W!LLS rtOinl llCll 1• posMU on, Olf fll-Deed Of Trust ti>w!t• S74"6<1 n with I Aprll 16, n , 30. and M•Y 7, 1t13 1on.n Dectim. Cllmbf!fl?S• to PIY !tit Nmlllflh'lt Pt'I~ ftrfft tt1trtoft. as." orw1dtd • 111 ..fcj .. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to Ille clpal Rim or lhe no~l•I NCUl'td bY setd toot«t), ldVtnces, If •ny. llncltr tht ltrms crNltor1 ol tl'lt 1bovt named <ltctdefll . of Tnnt. h>-'Nfl, S23.f(l0.IS, wllh In· of Mid Oftd of t rust, !ml c,..,,.. •nd PUBUC NOTICE llMI •II Pf"Ol'IS hlYlng dlilm• 'apln" lht rtil thtreon, •• PfOY!dtd In Mid l!(pentfS of Ille Tru.tee efld of tile tr111t1 1--------------l••ld dlCedent art requ1retl to fllt ll'ltm. not.tt), tOYtncts. If ""Y• ,undtr 1ht-ftrms trt•ttd by said DHd l)f Trutt • with lfle nectsury voocllel'I, to the of Mid DHd of Trvtt, fftt. dlarlff Ind Tilt btnelfclery Uftdtr' Mid Dted of f'~ITIOUS IUllfllEJS undtr1lgned 11 the office of 81tornlY "*"' OI' It. inntot •rod ol •111 Tri.Ill Tr1111 htrtfolort 111;tc11ttd trod dlll'oWtd NAMI STATIMINf COLONEL HERRING s. FRANKL.IN, 101 c;rtOlttd by tald o.td of TMI. to 111' _,.,.,,fltd • Wl'llttn Ded•r•tton Tht following ptnonl .er• doing EHi 11th Slrett, Coste 'M"•· C..tltornl• Tht btrltlld•ry undet Mid !;>ttd of of Otf•ull Mid Dfrrlltld for ••••· •lld • Min~ • 92617, whlCll II tllt pt.a of bulll'ltU of Trust htrtlolOl't t l(tcUled Ind deUvertd written ~Otte• OI' Otltt.111 encl Ettcflon, 111 THE IAYStDE co .. Potl Offlct 8011; lf\f lll'dtrsfonld In •II meltert Ptrl•ln1ng to.tilt undtrllOMd. written C>ecltr.llon S•U. TN lllldlrtlOlltd ctu.i: Mild Nollet 1073, Ntwport Be1eh, cenr. nw. to 111t '''"'of Mid oftcldttlt, wltllln four of Off.ult al!d Otmtlld fof' S.Je, end •Of Qft•ull and £•tcllon '° s.11 1o bt Jeme.t llloper. lurll;s. U36 Sill~ SI., montti' 11ter the llrtf publ!cetlon ol thl' wrlttllt Noll(f of Otleu,lt tnd Eltcllon fl:I ttcOfdfd In tl'lt ~nty whert lht l'llal lnitne, c.111. nm-_ .noUct, ~IJ. The undtl'SIOl'ltd -,.~Md '"o Nllllc'e ~ty •~ 1oc11...i JNJ'I MarJt Bur••· 5236 Skflll'lfl' St,, D•tttA;TR. 1t73. or-Difi'Ull•ftd--'Ele<iw-fO Stfl--..0 bl O.•n Merdl t7, ·ltn-lr'llnt, Clllf. '11t15. • J, MAXINE SE"L.IY rtt:Ofdld In tht ('Ollrlfy wfltr• "tllt tt•1 l'i:NEFICIAL SERVt¢1 CO.. Thi• IMlnttl ,, toncl\ICffd .,., •n In• -IX«lllffX ol !tit wtll prGPtr!Y ••• IPC11ed., ., fl'\l"etl; by • dlvklual. OI' "" •bOW Nmtd dtctMnl C:otonltl fo\Or!Qavt &ervltt "o. TITLE INSURANCI ANO Jtmn R. 8urll1 COLONll. NlllllUNI). s. FlAffKL.1" --ot--C..llfomle;-n--..td Tnrsiw-TRUST COMPANY. ,.,,, TNi stetttntnt w•t fllfd With the COi/ii-101 Ettl ltth ltl'ffl I Y K•lllY ,U~CI. .. ,., LINDA HAl.SIY IY Clitfll; Of Ol'llltt COlolllly 0!1 A'"'ll 11, C11te Mttt, Ctllf, n.rr Allt!IOrlnd SigNllltt Autl!orlltf SltMlurt lt1J. Teh {714) 141>7111 Dltt: APtlt 9, 1'13 -PW111'*',.NIWPOtt Herbor ....... t':.*M Jl<MS17 AllofntY kif E.uanrlx IPS4SOi ~liiel ff'I fM Orll!!Of COW -ltr. P"°'llNll Ortfllll C..11 O.!ly Piiot. PUllll>l'ltd 0r-. ~COMI D•ll'f Pltot. -P1'llllll'lld Ore11119 Corist O.lly Plloi, Piiot, N~t I HCJI. C•UIOn!Jt, """" 2, ·-----ll.Jlrll 14 21 JD; •M May 1, 1tn 1..,n ,.,,,,, '· ""' a. •, 1'73 1oa-n Afl'll 16, n. •· tm lllf').n t. 16. lfn fUt7J • " • J .. I • J ' '• l I I -• • L8g11:1ia . Weaeh EDITION 'Today's Final N.Y. Stocks - VOL. 66, NO. 106, 3 SECTIONS, -46 PAGES ORANGE -COUNTY, eALIFORNtA--MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1973 TEN CENTS • . Long Beach JS~ Station May -Be Shut :Oown By .. Tbe ..\llOClated Pre11 The Long Beach Naval Station will be shut down by June 30, 1974, and its 63 ships and 20,000 crewmen reassigned as part of a $1 billion cutback, the Long Beach Independent Press Telegram reported today. - ·The newspaper says that 44 ships will be sent to other ports and 19 will be decorwnissioned. There are 500 sailors assigned to the _sJation plus another 1,500 civilians, rePtesenpng a .total.payroll o) ..... $11 million_,.. _unit and. the hospital auxiliary.· ship annually . Repose. Most operations at the Long Beach How~ver, the newspaper added, 1,000 . . . men will be added to the 6,500-man Long Naval Base, which coordinates Navy and Beach NaVal Ship Yard operation to Marine activities ittlAs Angeles, Orange, offset the closing of ·Hunter's Point Riverside and 'San Bernardino counties, Shipyard in san Francisco. • . will also be closed along with the Long Pentagon officials _said today that 274 Beach Marine barracks. military bases soon will be cl<ised or cut NavaLbaSe operations to be shut down back. A full list of the affect~ bases was include the finafiCe office, anti-submarine not given to newsmen immediately.· warfare school, motion picture trainir1g The Defense Department also plans to • close the l:lunters Point Shipyard at San Frarlcisco •by June 30, 1974, California members of Congress were informed to- day. (Tb~ Boston Naval Yiln! also will be closed.) • Defense cutbacks also include _ closil}g of Hamilton AFB by Dec. 31, dropping aU flyiitg activity at Alameda Air Station -and leasing the 4>f1g Beach Naval Station and moving the fleet to San Diego. Californians were informed that.the net reduetion in personilel in CalifOrnla \viii Include .s.800 military and more than '1.000 civilians. Some-civilian personnel at various sla· lions will be offered transfers. The closini ot Hunters Point Shipyard• alone will affect 5,5()0 civilians. Some workJs to be transferred tO Puget Sound in Washington and some to Long Beach and.other. private yards in the San Fran- cisco Bay. area. flying acUvity at Alameda Naval Air Station-is to be tran~ferred lo ~fofrett {\ Field. Sunnyvale, and the Naval Air Sta· lion at Len1oore. In putting the Hamilton AFB in reserve status, the Air Force plans to declare surplus 600 housing units. All support ac- tivities "'ill be closed. The personnel reduction in military and civilians totals 2,372. ' .. Transfer of fleet activity from Long Beach to San Diego will ·if feet 16,000 (See SHIPYARD, Page 2) aster us pee l(illed During Arrest - fJamlidaie In Blast At Rivals School board campaign literature for William Thomas distributed over the weekend has blasted fellOw trustee can- dJdates Jane Boyd and Norman Browne as "obstructionists." Thomu lHerature also accuoed Laguna Beach teachers of brainwashing and call-ecf persons who have .atlended board m~lings "hooligans." He said "left· winger influence" was responsible and ti«cl that to claims that a left-wirig ele· ment is Supporting Mrs. Boyd, Browne aiid-MfCliaeI sagar; -~~ "Since being elected in 1971, myself and the majority board have ac- complished quite a lot, perhaps ·Mt so much as hoped for due to the obstruc· tlooism of Dr. ·Browne and Mrs. Boyd arid certain staff members," the state- ment by Thomas said. Titled, "Bill Thomas and The Truth," the literature was distributed in Emerald Bay and other parts of the school district. In it, Thomas decried the teaching of "-attitudes" by district teachers. "I dollOt~feel--that a teachershould constantly forct his or her opinion on students, and believe me, there was plen· ty of this brainwashing going on when I was first seated t'vo years ago. There is still progress to be made in this area , because some teachers seem to be rather defiant about this. For them, I spell trou- ble," the statement .said. Thomas, who is currently school board president, hit the participation of parents, students and others who have pt'Qtested at board meetings, first during discussions about an administrative con-_ tract policy change and then during the firing of the district's three top ad- ministrators. ·!'There have been several of our board meetings that attracted rather large ciowds, and at which a number of adults arid some young people behaved like OO:oligans !• deliberate attempts to '. (See !!LAST, Page !) An Editorial R~turn ;Laguna Schools To a Production System Voters in the Laguna Beach Unified School District will have an opportunity Tuesday to break rne-rnreecmember votin_g_oIOc thit has charted a destructive course in the .district since 1971. This can only be accomplished by re-electing .!ol!s· Jane Boyd and Dr. William Browne, who have held fast to their principles dur- ing two painful yem as ihe board minority,.and by ·replacing Board Chairman William Thomas with candidate Michael Sa~ar. · , There is no reason to beliove ~ preseqt wurse will he alrered · ox the election of any other candidates-. ~ --· Combining.his vote with those of trustees Patricia Gillette and Gerald Linke, who will he remairiing in offke, Thomas has spear· headed activities that have lhreatened the reputation of the district, shalren staff morale, scoffed at public concern, wasted money and resulted in the loss of three top administrators. W-0rking-behind-the scenes-and-in-meetings-closed to-the-public.- the bloc has pursued its goal of imposing a new "philosophy" on the school district. From what we have seen so far, this "philosophy" bears little relation-to the educational gOals sought by parents whose voices have beev falling on deaf ears for the past two years. Tomorrow's vote is crucial. The Daily Pilot strongly urges all concerned. Lagunans, whether or not they h a v e children in the schools, to take time to go to the polls and vote for the election of: -Jone Boy<! . -Dr. Norman Browne -Michael S1g1r Laguna Election Ex-trustee Assails Board Candidate s ·iatements Larry Taylor, a veteran of 12 years as a Laguna Beach Unified School4 District trustee, has charged that some school candidateS' statements are fal se and criticized tactics used by several con- testants and their supporters. Taylor refers to a claim by Frederic Ludwig that. "prior to the 1971 election, the school administration practically con- trolled the district." "That statement is completely false, The board never rubber-stamped the ac- tion of the administration. All decisions were considered by the board and only after much discus,,ion and careful con- sideration were approvals given," Taylor Yictim, 55, ~ Shot Twice . At Dana Pt. By. JOHN-VALTERZA Of tile El!lllY Pllet Sllff A 55-year"Jd unarmed man whose notoriety as a master thief and swindler 'fU '~ ftported in tlio,S.turday Even\ng Post was blasted from the balc1my .. flt..11. ~ Point . motel early Satul'day by a fatal shotgun blast fired by of(i"'1'8 trying ta arrest him. Stanley Scotr Sintlley died Instantly in the bizarre shooting which took place at 2 a.m. in the Embarcadero Motel at 24662 Del Prado. Officers-8.t-the~scene--as·-well-as·-in-­ vestigators called in later said that Singley, who had a long record, asserted· --1y dropped both hands to bis waistband before he was shot. The mari was hit two separate times, first as he stood in his room, and the sec- ood time at the 'edge of the balcony. No weapon was found. Although police officials are saying lit- tle about the shooting -pending the results of a District Attorney's prgbe - it was conceded that four detectives from Orange and one from San Clemente were on the premises when the incident took place. The bff~rs from Orange held war- r<\flts for Singley's arrest on charges of auto theft, trailer theft and the forgery of motor vehicle pink slips. The officers r e po r t e d I Y entered Singley's room, immediately identified themselves and told the man he was Under arrest. · At that point, said Sheriff's Captain James Broadbelt, Singley allegedly thrust his anns downward and an officer from the Ora{lge department -whom ll·ili. Bour Dilemma DAILY PILOT Ptltto bJ RlchlrO KOllllV Pretty Marguerite Marsa~don, Miss Costa Mesa, illustrates the last tninute.plight of many Who put off their incdme tax calculations. She ls surrounded by tax forms a'nd adding n1achine tape but seems· un· per_turbed throug}l it all. Per.haps it's because she has until n1idnight to make tll<hy's filingdeadline. · · Hotel Laguna Hit for $40; Police Hold Bald Suspect Broadbelt did not identify -fired a Laguna B.each polict arrested a bald As officers arrived at the hotel, Bab- single shot from a rune-millimeter pistol. San Francisco man following a $40 rob-cock noticed the same bald man across Singley then reportedly fled from the bery at the Hotel Laguna early today. Coast Highway near the Jolly Roger darkened room and officers chased the wonded man to the balcony. Officers apprehended the suspect Restaurant. Broadbelt· said the grim scene was within 75 yeards of the hotel following the Babcock contacted Reynolds while repeated there as Singley ·assertedly robbery in which a red-headed man nearby other officers found a brown wheeled and reached once more for his paper ba~ntaining a WY Luger, a red waistband. wearing surgical gloves and brandishing wig, surgical tape and gloves. Sgt. The single blast of large buckshot blew what appeared to be a German Luger Purcell said Reynolds had $40 in his the man from the second Door onto the pistol confronted the hotel n i g h t possession. -. . pavement below. a'9 A court appearance-will be Tuesday or B "bet 'd~"--"11 h hoo · manager. -,,;;;-..--~o..EurcelLsaid. ______ .__ _ __j J'.'Olu · · \uI u41t-'"a -t e41 ting--,""'l"w"a"'nt"'t~h~e •mo=ne~y~;~p=ut lfinthe g," was done by investigators from Orange. InSanClemen~..DJxec~to~<'---~th~e'--"ro~b~bll~rL..>to~l~d_D~a~v~id"-'Mnc~N~•~a41._nwi~ghnL--,-------------- E rmerNe ~ • said in a statement to the Daily Pilot. 0 11ATQpape.... I .... -.tb..-"That board an~vious boanls _ _Q-0 . •--;I.rt tr.1.--on-whlol! I serve<! were all composed of individuals who were dedicated to -------=--'------------<!in· g-eduattioo,-nol-to-politlcal Patrick-McNulty, 46, Dies Patrick A. Mcl'!Y!ty, 46-year old free tince writer, former Associated Press newsman and lecturer for UC Irvine Ex~ tension died Sunday of an apparent heart attack. The publisher of an · air travel m.agiµine and resident or Capistrano Beach was stricken after having pulled a sailboat from the ocean near his home. Mr. McNulty was teaching a claas in q'eative writing it UC Irv~ this <J(larter. University officiab today were shocklld by the news o! the IUdden death o! a man deterlbed by the!n u a '1avorite of students of writing.• Sln<e earnlh( a muter.J>f fine arts degree at1JCI In 116'1, l\leNulty had taught c1..... a n d "°'kshops In llOl>fictlon, feature and ~tat~e-.mung. A native of Cleveland, Ohio, he was graduated from the UC Berkeley School ~ o!fJoum411sm In 1951, ancl studied at the SOrbonno University in Pam during 1951· U< ' • I ' • L McNulty served for 11 yea.cs with the Associated Press from 1953 to 1961 in the New York and ltos Angeles bureaus and until 1964 as an overseas correspondent in Europe China and Africa. He wro/e for the AP in the fields of sports, television and rn o v i e en· tertainmenl and was both a feature and news writer. He was most noted tor is coverage of the Algerian War for the AP, a University spokesman recalled. He was a member of the Overseas . Press Club of America and Anglo- American Pre" Club of Paris. A ~ance writer since 1960, McNulty had Interviewed heads ol...tate including_ the late Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, the lat• Fr<nch President Charles de-Gaulle and Pi'cmier eorges--Pornp1110 • t~ late sower Premier Nikita Khrushchev. • Ile tuurvlved by hi& widow, Mary, and rive children of the home-. 35679 Beach Road. Capistrano Beach. Funeral ar- rangements are pending. motives or directives. They made decisions as individuals. "In mY opinion, at this time in Laguna Beach, political motives are the reason for the actions of many people taking sides. I am sorry for this ·since our children will suffer anct the community will be the loser," Taylor said. Taylor was defeated for re-election to the school board in 1971 when the ma· jority of William Thomas, Gerald Linke and Patricia Gillette100iSeats. Taylor said that actions taken ~y the board prior to the seating of the three tnistees, has saved the cllstrict 110 million in new construction by expanding the existing facilities. ' "When I ftnt went on the board In the late 1950's the liih scliool was reported to be adequate C. lea than five yean, '' he said. Taylor-referred to a statement by Ronald Kreber, a candidate, about the disregard in Laguna Beach School District tor the Acadtmic Decathlon, a 'iir01ec of Roberf l'eteroon, COO.Ty superintendent of schools. "In my opinion, that program 1$ Very 'cosily and many who have resigned from county assignments have nised ques. (See CHARGE, Plge 2) Clifford Murray said that his detective, manager. A brown paper shopping ba Roger Wiberg, was along on the arrest was thrust out, said Sgt.'NOrman Bab- "simply because our department had cock of the Laguna Beacl1 police. traced the man's ( S i-0 g t e y ' s ) whereabouts." After collecting the cash, the robber Broad belt wbuld nol give any details of forced McNeal to lie on the floor, and the victim'.s prior criminal record, but then bound hlm with surgical tape. The (See SUSPECT, Page Z) thief then fled into the interior of the -----~otel, Sgt. Babcock said. DOGGONE-PILOT Jonathon Scolt Reynolds, 39, of San Francisco, has been booked at 4:28 a.in . Orange Coast Weather Low clouds and fog are expected tonight and early morning bu t weather otherwise will be mostly sunny and a touch warmer. Highs, 6.1-73, lows .. 46-55. AD FINDS FlDO today by police on siispiclon or" armed robbery, pending investigation of the INSIDE TOD AY case. No bail has been set, ~Sgt. Neil Pun:ell said. Devastating tornadoes have Police surmise that the robber inade kilted eight persons iii Texas. h · • The storms were so violent that ls wszy through the secor:.d floor of the they tore cars to bits that were hotel and then exited via 3i fitt escape. trapped on freeway. See story, 'l'!1e night-managex. struggled free.,,of---t-~g< 4.--- his bonds and called police to the hotel . A witness told officers she ob,.rved a bald-headed man walking away from (he hotel along l.aguna Avenue shortly after the crime occurred. # ·--- Eprllcr in the morning, Sgt. Babcock bad ob,.rved a similarly dressed bald man.· I l...M, 81yC 1t ... ,Int 11 C11lt.i'ftl1 s, l! Cllttllltf 41-44 CNlttWOrf 2f D11111 Hollen 11 Edltwi1I P... , ElllM'lll-.t!t »Jt ll"IM11t• M-11 fllt !tit llllCI~ 11 ... _... u Aim lllldtrt 11 ...... .. !MttoNI Hirn 4. • O•lllff CWn1't U ''°''' Jt.:U ltocl! Mmttl ~1 l1r.vl11ttt tt 'TIHllltrt 2t WtltMr I Womt111'• N9" .)1.U Wlflll Ntwl 4 ... • • ,,::,_o_AJ_L_•_P_IL_O_T ___ .,a -__ Mond~'-· A_prll _l6_, _1_97_l __ · J:!a11otls-Told . W ethacks Buy _Border Re_turns -... , Lag1J11,a Voters ' -- To Pick Three Fire in Laguna Nearly -Sets Off Major_'lnf ei'no A fire in a "Bluebird canyon Drive home destroyed the residence Frida.Y night and nearly set off a major canyon blaze, Laguna Beach Fire Department officials said tod!lY. Loss from the fire was pegged at about $20.000 for the structure and $7 ,000 for contents. Firemen said $6,000 insurance ,.,.as carried. It was owned by Warren Hopkins. .,._,.. . ,__ , . Tfie residentSorthe fram-e-nouse, Roger Van de Vauter and his sister Kathy had left about three hours before the fire. "When they got1 there, you could sJ open rafters," Fire Capt. Forrest Johnson said. Capt.1J~ said 11fSrby tr~ in tbe heavily wOoded area were scorched aild some had begun burning. Spot fires plagued firemen who were rorccd to return to the same area Saturday. Johnson said it was fortunate the same __ · _blaze.__did not_occw:....during. summer__ months when the area \vould have been dry . He said 16 firemen and nll Laguna Beach fire units were called to the scene of the blaze at 1085 Bluebird Canyon Drive. Firemen worked more than five hours on the site. Johnson said the house involved wa s rather isolated, and that homes nearby \\'ere not occupied. A resident several streets awoy spotted the fire and called the department. Fro111 Page l CHARGE ... lions about its merit," Taylor said. Taylor, c1uestiortcd the Involvement of son1e i11 the com1nunity in the current election. specifically that of Mrs. Teresa Yale Eagles, president or Facts which has endorsed candidate s Ludwig, Kreber and Thom as. --"I look down the list of people en- dorsing candidates and find many who have no children in our schools and many who have never been to a boahl meeting or even inside of a school for some time," Taylor sa id . OUNCJI COAST .. DAILY PILOT _ Ttte Oranoe-Coa~ 0411.V-Pll.Of·r •ltll·Wf!lctl i i tGmb1nfd l~e NtWS·P•t51, II l>Ublllohtd by fti• Or•"V• C03J1 Publl~lnV Cam1>1nv. ~. t'lli. tdll lon1 Ire Mllshtd, Mord1y lhrDUgh Frld•v. l'Qr (OJI• Me», .. _,, 8Hd'I, H1,1n11119ton ' 8!!&eh/Fovn1a111 Vall1y, u.- a ... cn, lrvlnt/SaddlelNtk end Sin Cltmenrat San JUfln <"•1>l1tr1(ICI. A 1!,,,Jt r11Dion.t edition I• PVOllsl\lod S.1urilaya Ind Svncl1y1, Tllo Pl'lflclp.tl publW!lno pltnl It 11 U0 Wflt flay Str"t, COJll M-, C.llfoNlll, tteH. Rob.rt N. Weecl Pr"ld~ lf'ld Pllbllihf! Jaclr R. Curley Vite Pra>clonl Ind G-r•I M1n1oer f Tlu1"''' Kee•il l'Oltor ·Tlrom11 A, M11rphine M1n~!l'ICI fdl!OI' Ch1rl11 H , loot.. R.ich1rcl P. Nill Auru1nt M111111,,,. l'crltor1 Let ........ Offtc• 222 For11f A•enua M1Hi n9 Aclclre11 1 P.O. lo• 6•6, 92•52 .,_ .,.,._ From Pagel SUSPECT ..• other sources described the man as "a maj or crime figure " whose proficiencY at forging vehicle documents and steal- ing large quantities of cars was known aer.oss-the-nation;--------- Although offi cers could not initially dig up the article, several sources said the man was reatured in a nationally- distributed article several years ago and had been flatly identified as a "master swindler." Singley'a criminal record re(Xl rtedly is nine pages long . Broadbelt said the office of the District Attorney was notified immediately after the shooting and that an investigation has been launched. - "We won't be giving out many more details until that investigation is ,com- pleted ," h~ said. At the DA 's office investigators would not disc uss lhe case at all , except to say they were "investigating." Broadbelt said the result s or that probe would be announced "in a day or so," Frona Pagel BLAST ... disrupt our business sessions. ''l don't like to label things or people. but in relation to the disruptive tactics, l franklv feel a large amowit of left-wing infltierice \VaS largely responsible, 3nd you know which slate these people are backing (Browne and Boyd Saga r). Fortunately, I 1nanagcd to maintain order although I n1ust say at times it \11asn'l easy," the Thomas statement said. Thomas denied· that he or o1her board m'"t!mbers had held secret meetings. "I have been accused by ~fr. Sagi~ (a c"iinaiilate) or-conliiiU1ngS ecref nice 1ngs with other board members. This ls an outright lie and ·I challenge him to prove it," he said. !Thomas listed JO goals he promised to work ror, including improvement of discipline, the holding of administrative costs, objective teaching, more efficient use or tax dollars ."constantly question in· depth nc\v pro~ra!'ns," improved com- munications with the community and lm· proved curric uhuns at all levels. Searcl1 Goes On For Missing Tot . • From Pagel SHIPYARD. •• military and 646 civilians. The San Francisco and San Diego N<ival Di stricts are to be combined with headquarters in San Diego. The Pasadena Underwater Laboratory will be closed and combined with a simil ar installation in San Diego with a loss of 780 employes. The Imperial Beach Naval Air Sta- tion is to be retained as a flying field • only. Lagun.an.s Flee Blfzf,.ig Trailer;_ Dog Loses Life A Laguna Beach waiter was nearl y trapped inside a burning trailer Sunday in Huntington Beach as he searched for his wife and their pet. pekingese. J{untington fi remen said f I am es destroyed the trailer ho1ne of Juli us and Nadine Dawson. In the Driftwppd Beach Club. 21462 Pacific Coast lligh,vay. Buth Dawsons and a tllird occupant, Dun ~lino, were able to es.cape. frortl I.he mobile home unharm ed. The Pc. kingese died in the flames. Cci••• MIM: Ull W .. l lley"Slrffl Ht.,$r0rl lf'ldl? ~ Newport llou111<11'11 l'lvntlnvton lltldt: 1111J Bff<fl 8oUlfY'lrd h n Cltn"ltfl11: JllJ HOl1ft El Gt"'ino 111 .. 1 flf.,i.o.. (7141 '42..fJJI CllluffW ... ....,.,... , ..... ,,1. The search continued today for a miss- ing 3·year-old Orange boy, Police said. Michael Todd Rockwood of 334 S. Orange St., has been missi ng since Fri- Firemen said lhe blaze broke out about 4:45 a.m. Dawson first went outside. tl~cn. thinking hi s wife was inside trying to Sav e the dog, he rushed back in with a ~arden hose. -She was not inside, hQwever, and firemen sa id Dawson was able to get ou t of the trailer lust before It "'8S - destroyed. Some o the hair on his hca~ Le,ne INc.• AU hJ• 11 ...... 1 ,, .. , ... 4f4·f4N C..,.,.IOl!r, 1111. Or111;11 ~IT "*llhlllf C-111n1. Ho . nt• 110tln , llh111r111en1, WJtorlal 1'111"-°" lllv1fl~l1 fllr'lln '"'Y 0-nondlltld wt"'°"! ai11Cl9I Ille!" !Mt•'-" or copyr1tn1 O'fll"•r, ~ ci.b -1-vc 1>11d fl Cott• Mna. <'•tr~. $1.ibtcrl"IOft fly tarrier a • .s -lfll't'": n mall U,\J •1>orlll!!r 1 mlUNnr IH\tlfltlllnt 1.1.46 INl'llhlY, day, . AMouse-lo:llouse senrch was conducted Saturday by 80 police officers and vol unte<>rs \vho combed a 35-block area . 1lM? boy disappeared after his mother let him oul to play Friday. ~Jc It.' as wear· ing a ycllo1v sweatshirt, blue pants and bro"'" shoes. Little Michael has blond halr and blue eyes. was singea.---- Dnwson told firemen he ls the head waiter at the the White House in Laguna Beach. !i'ircmcn cstilnaled the totaJ damoge to the trailer, its furnishings and a nearby car at $24.500. The cause or the Clre Is still under ,Investigation. \ I FREEZER • •Urntc•rr · CONVENfENCf. • Poiltlve sarcty;DoorL&kh •fast frttZiPJ •DoorLoclc ft&& ---11-~--tA, •• -11..AC..f,a. County' Divorcees -.4 • ' anxious Arthur Wiley Rites Wednesday Memorial services for Arthur S. \Viley, founder and former president of the Alliance Francaise de la Riviera Califor- nienne will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at St . Mary's Episcopal Church, 428 Park Avenue, Laguna Beach. Mr. \Viley of 970 Summit Drive, Laguna Beach was stricken Thursday as he dined with his wire Mary at the Hole! Laguna. He was 72. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that those so desiring donate to the Arthur S. \Viley Scholarship Fund of Pasadena City College or to the scholarship fund of the Alliance Fran- c.aise in Mr. \Viley's name. NO ONE SELLS G.E. FOR-LESS THAN1>u4la.e 90DAY CASH WITH A""°Ylll Cl(DIT • GE'1 £•..,.,_ FiMr-, .. WWI AC1icwl -.... -·llftt."91 ...... • JW•-i2ai. .T- e >W•CV--NOflllll, ,.,_,,,...., Actlwtt..S ~· ....... .,. -w ....... 209'6 1815 ·NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -,Phone 548-7788 ' • ' ' • ( ---V - Saddlebaek TOilay's FI N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. I 06, 3 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COl.JNT-Y0 CALIFORNIA MONDA-Y, APRIL 16, 1973 ' TEN CE.NTS Long~Beach J~avy Station May Be Shut Down . ' . By4'be-Atsoeiated...Press---~representing4a-lotaJ..payroll-o£-$U..million-unit-and-th&-hospital-aux-Uiar.y hip lose-the~Hunters Foint--Shipyard~ei-San--~uelion-it1~rsonneHn-€a1ifornla-Wil'r--o.1::at"-io::n'-is-t;:o-be;::-7tr::a::ns:;re::r::re::d;-;:to~M;:o-;;rr::et7t---1 The Long Beach Naval Station will be annually. Repooe. shut down by June 30, 1974, and its 63 M t operations at the Long Beach , How~ver, the newspaper added, -l ,000 sh.ips and 20,000 crewmen reassigned as -os . men will be added to the 6,500-man Long part of a $1 billion cutback, the Long Naval Base, which coordinates Navy and Beach Naval Ship Yard operation to aeach Independent Press Telegram Marine activities in Los Angeles , Orange, offset the closing of Hwiter's Point reported today. · Riverside and San Bernardino counties, Shipyard in San 'Francisco. The newspaper says that 44 ships will will also be closed along with the Long Pentagon officials said today that 274 be sent fu other '"JX>rts and 19 will be Beach Marine -barracks. · military bases soo~ will be closed Qr . cut decommissioned. Navafbase operations to be shut down back. A full list Q.f the affected.bases was There are 500 sailors assigned to the include the finance _office,_antl-suhma{i!le ; not g~.v_e1~t~Lnewsmeq immediately. "'Slatfon plus anOthe-r 1,5~ civilians, warfare school, motion picture traini!i'g"'" The 15efense Depaitment also plans to Francisco by June 30, 1974. California include 5,800 milltary and more than J<'ield , Suiinyvale, and the Naval Air Sta~ members of Congi'ess were informed to-4,000 civilian·s. lion at Lemoore. day. (The Boston Naval Yard also will be Some civilian personnel at Various sta-Jn putting the Hamill()() AFB in reserve closed.) lions will be offered transfers. status, the Air Force plans to declare Defense cutbacks alsq include closing The closing of Hunters Point Shipyard surplus 600 housing units. All support ac-- of Hamilton AFB by Dec. 31, dropping all alone ·\viii affect S,500 civilians. Some tivities will be closed. The personnel flying · activity at Alameda Air Station work is ·to be .transferred to Puget Sound reduction in military and civilians totals and ., leasing the Long Beach Naval in Washington and some to Long BeachL 2,372. . Statton and . mov1ng the fleet to Sa'n and other private yards tn the San Fran· Transfer of fleet acti\iity from Long ·;. Diego. ci~o Baf~rea. . . Beach to San Diego will affect 16,000 Californians were informed that the net ..Flying ·acfiVtty ar Aiameaa Naval Air (Sie SRIPYARD;-Pi"gn)- aster Thief l(illed During Suspect Arres-t By JOUN VALTERZA 01 IM DlllY Pltot Slaff -- .A 55-year-old unarmed man whose notoriety as a master tl'lief and swindler was assertedly repo rted in the Saturday Evening Post was blasted from ~he balcony of a Dana Point motel early Saturday by a fatal shotgun blast fired by office rs trying to arrest hi.Jll. . Stanley Scott Singley died instantly 1n the bizarre shooting which took place at 2 a.m. in the Embarcadero Motel at 24662 Del Prado. Saddlebock Area Officers at the scene as well as in- vestiga_tors called Jn later said that Singley,who had a long record, asserted- ly dropped botji hands to his waistband before he was shot. The man wa s hit two separate times, first as he stood in his room, and the sec- ond time at .. the edge of the balcony. No weapon was found. . . Although police officials are saring lit- tle about the shooting -pending the results of a District Attorney's probe - it was conceded that four detectives from Pl_anners · Weigh Zoni~g Changes Orange and one from San·Clemente were. .on the premises _when the incident took place.,~ __ _ The officers from Orange held war- rants for Singlej>'s arrest on charges of auto theft, trailer theft and the forgery of molor vehicle pink slips. The officers re p o r t e d I y entered Singley's room, immediately identified themselves and told the man he was under arrest. At that point, said Sheriff's Captain James Broadbelt, Singley allegedly • -HU1it for Gls To Begin .Soon -------------------.-- BANGKOK (UPI) -U . S . military . spokesmen said today a special Ameiican unit -assigned to search for more than 1 , 3 O o American servicemen missing in Indochina will begin its task as soon as diplomatic perm ission is received fro.rn._the __ countries in· Vo1Ved..~ Dy JAN WORTH 01 1111 DlilY Piiot 511U Changes in zoning of areas designated commercial and commercial-industrial along a seven-mile strip of the San ~iego Freeway in the Saddleback Valley wall be considered Tuesday by the Orange Coun- ty Planning Commission. Pianning Director Dave h-1oore said several alternatives are available to the commissioners. They could, rezone thf areas involved -per haps to a li ght manufacturing district -or add ~tricter design controls to existing regulations. A new zone could be dev ised, or the commissioners could do nothing. Spokesmen ·said formation of the Joint Casualty Resolution Cen ter was 70 percent complete and that more than 100 of about 150 soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines who will make up the unit have arrived in Thailand and begun training. thrust his arms downward and an officer from the Orange department -whom Broadbelt did not ~dentify -: · fired a single shot froffia rune-millimeter~ptstol. Singley then reportedly fled from the darkened room and officers chased the wonded_man to the balcony. Broadbelt said the grim scene was: repea ted there as Singley assertedly wheeled and reached Once more for his waistband ., The single blast of large buckshot blew (See SUSPEl;:'l', Page I) -N-ews-Perplexes Co~ty· Exes Of · Both Sexes By TOM BARLEY 01 !ht DlllY P'lltt Staff Anxious divorcees of both sexes pro- vided the-first order: ·o.r---tel~P!J~ne· business today for Orange County Clerk Willi am St John's busy offices. Employes said each caller had ques· tions about the legality of his or her divorce and the action that should be taken if a final decree had oot been issued in the "dissolution or marriage. -. ll·th HoutLDtlemma DAILY PILOT Pboll by Rkll1N KoMllr- ' , - The county planning staff is expected to present a report to the commissi~n. - comparing alternatives to the el.'.1st1Dg situation -more than 2,100 acres designated commercial or industrial· Former Newspaper Writer Patric}{ McNulty, 46, Dies - And many •of the callers,.said their anx- iety had been aroused by a Dally Pilot story which disclosed Friday that at least 5,000 ·divorce actions in Orange County h"'aV Vi ~en -JegaUy concluded because of the absence of a final decree. It is now estimated by st John {hat such actions have actually been running at the rate of about 2,500 a year. Pretty Marguerite Marsaudon, Miss Costa Mesa, illustrates the last minUte Plight of man·y who put off their income tax calculations. She is surrounded by t.ax forms and adding machine tape but seems un- ertµr)>ed through--lt~alLEerhaps i~S_because she· has unW midni hi to make' today's filfng·deadline. · --------~---- commercial. . ... A rule-of-thumb figure used by the plan· nlng staff is three acres of com.merci~l land to serve 1,000 residents. Using t~1s bench mark, the nearly 2,200 com~ercaal Patrick A. McNulty, 46-year old free _ or commerl!ial-industrial acres tn ex-lance writer. former Associated Press istence wou ld serve 750,000. persons. newsman and lecturer for UC Irvine Ex· The population currentl y 1s about 70 ,000 tension died Sunday of an apparent heart persons and is projected at 195,000 by the attack. The publisher <if an ai r travel year2,000. t • d rc·t "We are all a\vare of the s rip com· magazine and resi ent o ap1s rano rnercial zones in LA County and norttieJ:nd Beach was stricken after having pulled a Orange County," planner Ron Yeo sa! sailboat from the ocean near his home. recently. "They tend to grow outward in Mr. McNtHty was teaching a class in 8 r.adia1 pattern. We'd like to control that creative writing at UC Irvine this tendency while we can." , quaMe.r. Interchanges examined by .the planning University officials today were shocked staff in 8 report last week mcluded the by the news of the sudden death of a man unfinished Canada Road , El Toro Road, described by them as a "favorite of Alicia Parkway (proposed), La Paz students of writing." Since earning a Road oso ·Parkway; Crown Valley master of fine arts degree at UCI in 1967, ParkWay and Avery Parkway., McNulty had taught classes and -An example or-irurproblem-wh1~b-com--workSOOPSiilnon·fiCtion,leature ane! ---missioners will consider contrQlling can creative writing. be seen at the El Toro R03d interchan~ A native of Cleveland, Ohio, he was Most of ·the 220 acres zoned commercia graduated from the UC Berkeley School surrounding El Toro ~ Road have been of Journalism in 1951, and ~tudied at the developed. . his t le ha e Sorbonne University in Paris during 1951~ Traffic congestion ~t t n re ng 52 was judged the worst in the area. 0 A · large J>{lrt of the congestion problem. can McNulty served for 11 years with the Associated Press from 1953 to 1961 in the New York and Los Angeles bureaus and until 1964 as an overseas correspondent in Europe, China and Africa. He wrote for the AP in the fields of sports, television and movie en- tertainment and was both a feature and news writer. He was most noted for is ·coverage of the Algerian War for the AP, . a University spokesman recalled. He was a member of the Overseas Pre_ss Club of_ America and Anglo- .American Press Club of Paris. A freelance writer since 1960, McNulty had interviewed heads of state including the late Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson , the late French Pr!Sldent Chatlesjle Gaulle anOPfeniier Georges Pompidou, the late · Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushche.v. He is survived by his widow, -Mary, and fi ve children of !he home, 35679 Beach Road, Capistrano Beach. Funeral ar· rangements are pending. be traced to the conflict'between throu~h traffic and tralfic using the commercial racilities." the report stated. . A Pipe Drea~11? Liquor Store Pot Sales Urged The county clerk estimates that 18 per· cent of the divorces filed in this area have gone no further than the issuance by a judge of an interlocutory decree of divorce. Many divorcees leave the courtroom at that stage believing that any further court action is unnecessary, coupty workers ha ve said. But those divorcees who remarry outside Orange County without obtaining that vital final decree may not be legally married, St John warns. Superior Court Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner of Laguna Beach plans to take care of the future by seeking legislative action that will make a final decree man· datory""";".he haSStited . B"ut that ~action, county employes pointed out today, will not remedy the thousands of illegal marriages that may have been recorded o,.er the past 20 year-S in Orange County. ' . St John points out that divorcees wbo seek a marriage license in Orange Coun· ty are promptly warned in his marriage license bureau if they have not obtained a final decree in this area. They are compelled to obtain one before St John's marriage bur~au clerks will issue the necessary license. But fi'ilfiY Otaffge Coutty l1iv.orcees (See DIVORCES, Page I) DOGGONE-PILOT AD FINDS FIDO Doggone' It! Of those ateas ~fl;ed ind.u~tr1al, all but 350 acres in M1ss1on . V1e10 could . be developed for commerc1a.l ~se according to their zone-use ·description of-c~­ mercial·industri,tl. Of th• 780 acres m this category, 80 acres are developed, clearing the bulk of tbe area available for zone controls. . -th Col d H c u.. "Where has that little dog gone?" DllliVER (UPI) -A member o! e ora 0 ouse 0 .,.,pre-Here's a quick way to find out: Rites· for Auctioneer LOS ANGELES CAP) -Fune~ services were scheduled .today for .,.. _ _,,ot!Y!ood auctioneer Lewis S. Hart, 84, >-who sold anllqucs omtpl111111ngs-formliny entertainment figures. Hart died ln a hospttal Satunlay aflcr a short Illness. Among the well·known people who us~ bis services were -.Jack~ Dempsey, Jackie Coogan, C.role Lombanl and Marlon Davies. ' \ sentatives wants to sell marijuana in licensed liquor sto~es and give the money raised to elderly people. _ WlfiTE male poodle with uwhether ·you approve of marijuana or not, -and I happen to grey ears, needs c~:t- disapprove of it, i\ should be put into law as ar revenue tne.asur1ethas ~rea!fn0geabl~l~r,j~~e~.B. co81:. we do aloohol ,". said State Rep . Mike Strang, a ormer captaJJI o e . ~I. ·(Ph ne number). Princeton University polo team. . _Strang Introduced a bill allowing the sale o( ml\"!j uana in liauor ""''s.Ma._was_11one ~r..a week. The first stotts purchasing a marijuana license. He sifd pr0<:e~s would go to day the ad appeared. the owner got a call the state old ag~ pension fund. --~ •'--_, __ -·--._ .. _.. 1r ·-u'ire Jru;t "I have no idea bow much would be raised from th'efa,,," saia .son!ethlng, find It fast with a DAILY Strang a rancher. "All we do know is that the revenue would be veri; . PILOT clanilied want ad. The number to large for the st;ole of Colorado and for.,tfte old age pension ·fund.'~ call -642-6678. . ...,,_.. -::..::=====----=---.-, ) U.S. Resumes Bombing Of Laos; Threat Cited BULL Et IN WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. planes l}jgan bitting targets near a village in Laos overrun by CommuWst (orces, Pen. tagon sources disclo"§NrNSC!ay, WASHINGTON (AP) -Tho Pentagon -warned Nor.th Yietnatl\._q,day that unless it stops_aggresslon in ~os.!_ the-u .s. would begin a new bombing campaign. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W , Friedheim said North Vietnamese forces led hy tanks overran a town defended by Royal Laotian forces near"1.he-Plalne-de Jarres in Laos within tbe . Jast several hours. He described it as ''a major violation of the cease-fire ." The Pentagon spokesman said an an· nouncement about w~lher U.S. B52 5 Women Seize(l At El Toro Site · Five ~Los Angeles women..accused by Orange COOnty Sheriff's officers of plying the oldest trade in the world al a brand neW El Toro "'botel were jailed on pros+ tltutkm charges during the weekend. A team of sheriff's investigators book- ed the five suspects after each membe r of ·the force allegedly was propositioned at the• bar In the rcctnUy·buill Hyatt House, located at the lntersectlon of El bombers had begu n renewed strikes over Laos would come from Pacific Command headquarters in Ha wall later today. U.S.. bombers have .been hitting Cam- bodian targets for six weeks. There have been no Am erican air strikes in Vietnam since the cease-fire was signed Jan. 27. F.riedheim said there-has ,been heavy fighting near the-Laotian town of Tba Vteng for the past few days. He could provide no details on the size of the Viet- namese and the Pathet Lao Communist (See LAOSi -Page Z-) Orange Coast Weather Low clouds.and log are expected tonight and early morning but" weather otherwise will be mostly sunny and a touch warmer. Highs, 6.1·73, lows 4~55. INSlDE TODAY Devastating tornadoes have ·kilted eight· pers°"" tn Texas. Tht storms were so triolent that they tore cars to bits that weTe trapped an ...... J-reeway. See storv, Page 4. ' . Toro Road and the San Diego Freeway. ".M. ••Ylll u """ ... ....,. 11 lklo.ktcUnto..counlS.J,ail ~: SUiann :=~:.._ JL_;;:.. ..... .,,_:_. ___ _ Kidder, 31; Heida June Moore, 25 : Joy ~~~~!:. 41-: :'..:::• c..,""' ,J} Malbrough 2•· lAcctlL.Mom:e.-20'-"Jlll.-l-lff!t~"!!tj:"c1-"!--!'~~-...o'!!'-t LOrette Mari€ Trabert, 23. tfttffl11-.!1' .. ,; t.':.'::' : Jnvestigators said each of the live :~'::'':: ; .. ,_ ~~ :.~'::. "'" ,,.,; women offered to~share a room w\th an ~ u """' ..... 4."' • undcrcovtr office( !or ltCIQ.,_ • • ·' qoffs-1l'old-·-Countian's W e tba c ks Buy Slaying -~-Border Retur-ns Accident? The shooting of a santa Ana youth Fri-NEW YORK (UPI ! -A num ber of to sneak back Into the United Stutes. The day by a \Vestminster JXl!ice o!!icer ap-- f..fcxicnn pcasnnts who <'nter the United others are no1vn to Leon whcfe they try pears 10 have been accidental, Districi States illegally arc ousted but are allow· io scrape together enough nloney to get Attorney's Inves tigator James Enright ed to sneak back into the count ry if they back lo the border or go home. said today. are willing and able to make payoffs, tht The Times said more than one quart er Mi@el Ronquill<!, 29[ was _ ~llled ln New Yor-k-Times--has rcPl)rlOO .......-of-the· Mexicans &rrtsted eaeh year for Fountain "Valley wtien heWas ShOt lfi the The Times said Sunday ii uncovered entering the counlry llleg&lly -nearly bock by Qfflcer Timothy Miller when the the s\'steru of payoffs used by the United 450.000 In fiscal 1972 -arc removed officer was trying to tak e Ronqu illo in'to ._ ___ StaleS.Jmmigr.allml.....iilld~~turali~lion under t~e systei:n. _ _ __ st . Service ~1exican imm igralionot11clals e Times sa1dl t conducteir,'dur1fil'lts•--'"~E~n~ri:,ght:;l:--=,.;,.,-,t=-m=ve'°'s JgiliOO 6r!he and pri~ately owned f..1exjcan transpor!a· year_-long . inve~igati?n, in~erviews with case L! continuing in an effort to decide lion companies during a year-long m-offic1~ls 1n Cahforn1.a, Arizona, Texas, whether the shooting was "a reasonable" vesligation. \Yashingtoo and Mexi c_o. . accident or w~ther the case should be - The way the system works, the Times Among I.ho~ pla)'.IJlg roles m the taken to a coroner's jury or the Orange said, is that many of those arrested for syslcm, the Times said . _are : . County Grand Jury. He said he expects illegally entering the coontry are loaded .-~ttorne~,.GcneraJ Richard G. Klein· to make that decision by Tuesday. onto Border Patrol buses, driven through d1eost, who 1s reported to have hel~ Ronquillo was shot once in the upper h 1 ' t · the inter-national boundary-cslabllsh the syslem but d~lcs havlllg • back when he pushed o(f a fence he was a 0 e cu in -d done so•• facing as Miller and Fountain Valley Of- fence at Tijuana , a.nd pla~d aboar a _ rui"nando Verdu110 "kingpin.of coin-Heer Robert Mosley IJ'erc trying to arrest waiting OC6 Once-1n the a1~, the Mex..---fi d-~c=--• ·h .. -· · T .. · · ti' 1 opera e venuwg mac mes 1n 11uana, him . r • ica ns are told that .they can a~oid a 1~ it \\'ith influential connections in Mexico." Enright said the gun discharged as · ~eep into the interio r of l\1cxicc by brib-_ John Alessio, a San Diego Ronqui llo backed into !\.-lillc>r. tng the crew. .. millionaire and a business associate of The)nvestigator said both officers had The plane then lands al TiJuana, the Verdugo their guns dra\.•:n because a broadcast Tim~s said, and usually about half ;he -teonard W. Gilman, southwest put out earlier that evening said that the · Mexicans make the payoffs and are l ee regional commissioner o~ the lm· men being sought aloog with Ronquillo migration Service. might ha'ie been armed. San/ Diego~to 'Be. Top Navy Center In ·world-Aide SAN DIEGO (AP ) -The new military cutbacks announced by the Nixon ad· ministration will make San Diego lhe na- tion's largest Navf ceater, a Republican congressman's aide said today. . Major shore headqua_rters, warships and -research operations are -being transferred ,to San Diego from other California bases. Jn addition, San Diego bases are ex- pected to gain 10,000 or 11,000 new Navy and civilian employes. "This means San Diego will be the na· tion's major nava l complex in peace as v.·t:ll as war." said an aide to Rep. Bob Wilson (R..Calif.). The onl:r1;an"Diego base being closed The Times quoted an unidentified The incident began about an lfrour Juslice De~rtment spo kesman a s before the shooting when two Fountain saying, "Its all very strange and Valley officers arrested a man .for marvelous, and we're now in the process drunken dri ving. of trying to detennine what the bell's The four occupants of the car ap- going on." proached Jhe officers in a threatening Gilman, the Times said, told two Jn..ann.er, l:!.Y.t.ran.Jrom the sce11c \Vithout federal grand juries in California that the becoming physically involved in a scuffle remOYal program was the result of an \vith the drunken driving suspect or the "unollicial~9_arrangement between two patrolmcn,-Enright said. officials of the United States and Mexico. As !hey ran, the officers allege one The Times said American immi&f"etion said something about "getting a gw1." officials defend the procedure on the The investigator said he played back ground that shipping aliens into the in-the tape of the radio broadcast put out terio r of Mexico makes their r~ntry in-and verified that the officer making the to the Uilrted Statel'! more di!ficult. broadcast did say lhe fQl.lr 1nen being ft "'{::r -f:r sought might be anned. "That's why Miller and the Fount.ain 300 M Ill I Valier. officer had their guns drawn y,·hen Ot•e eg~ they Were arresting Ronquillo," Enright. Aliens A1·rested By Border Patrol said. is Imperial Be?ch Naval Air Station, one The massive migration of illegal aliens of 274 installations being shut down by He noted. however. that neithe r Ron· quillo, nor ·three. of his companions v.·ho "M'erc also taken into custody. ~·ere arm- ed. A fourlh man is st ill at large, but Fountain Valley police said they expect fo gl't a Warrant for hi s arrest today . mi<f.-1974. Jts 180 combat and loglstlcs---at -the peak of the fam1 planting helicopters will be transferred to North season -continued over the weekend as Island Naval Air Station and to nearby border patrolmen detained · nearly 300 Camp Pendleton . persons at. the San .Onofre checkpoint. How many of the 3,500 military person- From-Page 1 LAOS ... • • • .. DAILY PILOT 11111 PIK!ll Patriot Soa1•s ' \ Mrs. Hirsch Receives . $1.9 Million . Newport Beach socialite CJ a u d i a Hutson Hirsch has been awarded nearly $1.9 million as her share of community property valtled at between $40 and $50 million durtng the rour-moolh trial or her ~divorce _£rom racing tycoon Clement. .. -i .. "Buddy" Hirsch of Corona del Mar; it \V3S Ic:arned loday. udge._Er.ank...Oomcnichinl.:$-d.ivision..of.-- the couple's assets and bis formal ending · of their seven-year marriage will be macie public later, Orange County Superior Court officials said. He bas ordered Hirsch, 59, to pay Mrs. Hirsch, 45, a. total or $8.50 a month for support of the couple's two sons, Casey, 9, 8.nd Christopher, 7. Hirsch must also p{!y ~hristoe!!_er's monthly tuition a\.;the J\.1ardan SchOOI and the younge r-5ml's bills .up to $600 a month. Judge Domenichini refused lo order Hi rsch to pay spousal support. And he has additionally ordered Mrs. llirsch , who takes over sole ownership of her ' home at 30 Harbor Island, to pay her own attorney's fees. Testimony during the trial and the cost esti mate offered by her lawye'rs -John K. Trotfer Jr. or Santa Ana and David Harney of Los Angeles -indicates that those fees will take about $800,000 of her Ken l·linkle is launching his box kit e during the. \Vin~up r~riday of J->atriotism on f->ar ade-\Veek at-La Paz lntermediate School, "'lllssion Viejo. Not only did Ken's kite soar like an A1nerican eagle, his cos- tu 1ne \VOil first in the hu1norou s outfit category. $1.882, 73 a\vard. ' ~1rs. Hirscti is given custody of-ber-two sons who both now live with her at the Harbor Island home. She is also allo~·ed to retain <I one-fifth interest in Hirsch's valuable ''Bear Brand" Ranch. ~--------- Nixon Tells WorkersArms But her shares in a Jong list of other }Jirscb assets·, including his pet food and racing interests, are converted to cash by Judge Domenichini in a· summation that gives her just over $2 million. Talks Hinge on Spending J.udge Domenichini ordered h e r , however, to repay Hirsch $106,502 for ex~ penditure on the Harbor Island home and 10 repay him $14 .185 for his interest in th e Chef's Inn -the Newport Beach restaurant operated by r.1rs. Hirsch's \VASlllNGt ON J UPI i -President Nixon told about 4.000 construction l\'Orkers today lhat those who advocate slashLn_g !he dc~.!l~~-Q!JQg~LJ.IT>Uld destroy ·any chance of negotiating further nuclear disarm ament. representing about 3.5 1nillion con-parents. struction workers throughout the United Her· $1.9 million share also includes States. $14.976 for her half-share in the NC'A-'J>Oh· '..'ll is cs.scnlial if we·re.going..to .mak.G--_.based-Yacht.::cier.~o./' .--- any kind or deal with the:n that to get It was stated dunng the tr1a1 that Mrs. anything from them you have got to have Hirsch is $200,000 in debt and was at that something to give." time unable to provide for herself on the The President spent much of his 15-$2,m>l;l a month allo~~n~~. gr~ted her nel and 250 civilians now at Imperial And the busy weekend was kicked off Beach will be retained was not an-by another major haul o! marij uana at He said cutbacks in defense spending 11•ould make the United States impotent at negotiations for a mutual reduction of force which occupies the tow n. forces in Europe. minute talk than king the construction pendmg Judge Domen1chin~ s rulin~. . v.·orkers for backing him-0n..fiis policies on She was sued by the United Ca~forn1a South Vietnam. He recalled that in May B~nk for more ~han $47,000 while the nounced. the pcrmanent "roadblock south of the But. San Diego apparently is gettipg a Western White House. large share of 63 warships scheduled to Patrol Capt. Eugine llarris and the leave Long Beach Naval ~talion for other marijuana arrest took place Friday evc- \Vcst Coast ports along w it~ ~everol hun-111ng and netted more than 700 pounds of dred scie ntists and techn1c1ans at the weed· from the trunk of a car initially Navy Undersea· Cent~r ~t Pasadena. pulled over during a check for possible -The Ttth-Naval D1str1ct-Headq~al'ter-s --alien-smuggling. in San Diego will be expanded to 1nc_lude The driv~r of the car, Dennis Rich the 12th, presently. al San Francisco, <who would not give his age or address) Navy spokesmen satd. was turned over to U.S. customs agents. The changes will base about 130 For the remainder of the weekend ~'arships in San Diego, plus more than patrolmen kept the checkpoi~t o~cn ~nd 100.000 NHVY personnel and stepped-up confined their arrests to 1mn11gratton electronics and oceanographic research violations. fac ilities. 1 \\'ilson·s aide also snid there arc pl ans 10 make San Diego a major base for nuclear-powered aircraft carriers an d other surface \\•arships. Norfolk, \1a, has been center of the Navy's largest complex of ships and in· sla llalions. •'ro111 Page 1 Sl-IIPYARD . • • mililarv and 6·16 civilians. Tht> ·San Francisco and' San .Diego Naval Districts are to be combined with headqua rters in San Diego. The Pasadena Undcr~·arcr Laboratory will be closed and combined 1vilh n similar installation in San Diego \Vith a loss of 780 employcs. The Imperial Beach Nava l Air Sta· tion is to be rctaint..'CI as a flying field only. oaANGI COAST " DAILY PILOT The Or1n11t: Cotll DAILY PILOT, wllll "'111cll ., coml!on"' Ill<! N•ws·Pr~n. 11 11Ulll!Med ltr Ill~ Oran9e Coio1t PuDll1lll"'41 ComNnr. Sep.1. ••le "'l!lon1 •'~ pUltl11h..,, Monday llllWO'h Fr~•r. for co.11 MtW, Ntwpor1 8eKll, Hun!lntton 8,Kn/F0unt1+n v111..,. Lf911M aNc~. lrvl,,.15•11dltb.tcl •rid S1n Clt n.enll/ Sin Jllan C1ol11rano. A 1lntle r991on.1 Million '' l!Ubli•'*' St111~••• •rid Sulld1r•. r,,. pr ;.,,;1""1 11\fl)llJlllno pl1nt ,, ti JJO wnt l •w '""'· CIJI!• Mnl. CtlilO•nll,• ,Ji.,.. Rob,rt N. Wttd P•nOltn! ~lo:I Publ.,~er J•c• R. Curl•r Yott l"•t 1kl""' u"' """'''' M•ntttr Thom11 IC•••il ThoP11a1 A , Mw1r>h•nt M••IQ•ftO Ecrotor Ch1tf•• H. l oot p,,,,,,, P. Nt ll "'"'1tnl M~""tlno EC1110n Offk" Cllill Mnt JJO Wtl! 81, S,.,., N•w1xn-1 l •ftl!· Ull Newpe•t 8ovltvf1t l "°"'"' flt~tl!: ??l Fornt /ovmue l'tunl""!Ofl l tttll' 111/J fl••"' eou11~1td $111 Clt<'Nl'lt: JIOJ Nott~ El C1m•"O Jt111 T9' ......... fn41 '4J·4lJI Cfntlffrt4 AcfNrtlih19 642·5671 S.11 Cle"'""' All D"P•ffll'ttlltt: ,.,.,. ... 4fJ-4420 Cc•Wlfl'I!, 1t7J, Ortnot Coo1t P111t!i11llnf CO"'JN"'· No ntw1 "'"""· +fl\l\!•111tni, KT•trltl ""'tier err H~~ll llff1tn INIY M r~ wllllfuf tOKMI ""' 11111.tbl of tOOYrJtlll •-f. hurrll t ltll GOii_, Mid f l (1Kt1 N.ru, Ct lllcrl'nlt lultlc'rft•lon fW u "ltr U U -*ily1 " 1114111 u .u """"'to1 ml"'"' •it!Mtiloll u ·'-' ,._!I'll•. • .. Ra1igers Braci1ig For Big~Crowd At O'Ne ill Park Five thousand visitors nre cxpCctcd at O'Nrill Park so uth of El 'roro on Easter Sunda v. fi ve ti1nr s !he number of visitors vn an ·avera ge sumn1er Sunda y. Richard Dyer, supervising p a r k ranger, said the normal staff of fou r \viii be increased to 10 for th e first of the year's big holiday \\'eckends. A sheriff's deputy 1\·ill be 011 hand full -lin1c for the \\'cckend as \\'('11. "We 'll probably be cleaning up garbage for three or four days afler,vards, judg- ing from our past experience," Dyl.'r said. If this Easter 1s like other reccnl holidays, !he capacit y.Of the pa rk 111ill be reached bv mid-aflemoon. after \.\'hich the park Will be closed to any additional · visilor s. Dyer said. Dr11ending on the \Veathrr. camping is not too fr('f'Jucnt during Easte r \Veek, Dyer saiQ. ··The kids out of school-come- out here a lot for picnics but usually leave at niJ:h!." he said. Vandalisn1 in past years has been minor at O'Neill Park. The park's ma x- imu1n of 1500 campsites are open 24 hours' a day and are taken on a first come-first served busis. Fro111 Page 1 DIVORCES • • • may ha..-e rcn11Jrrlcu l11 JUrisdic11011.~ \\'here tha t rule Is !]Ot in effL'Ct, h i;a\d. And the county clcrkllllS predicted that the shock wave rolling fro111 di scoveties made in the divorce division is bound to be felt in suctJ-.departments as the pro- bate division. He predicLs a !pate of legal actions on wills and bequests by Ja~crs who learn of the absence of a final decree In ceses where the deceased person may ha ve re marrlell outsidP Orange County. Divorcees seeking assurance on the legality or lhclr marriage dissolut ion \\'ere being advised today to consult their la'A'yers on the issue. Count y \rorkers can only confl rm the existence or absence of a final decree, th ey were told. · • There has been a separate cease-fire Negolialions on force reductions v.·lll declared in Laos and there has been open with Warsaw Pact countries this relatively little fighting there~i1i~?ec·ent ·•·rt.i!!T· h ·11 be d l " ·r th U .t d erew1 no eQ , 1 e n1e weeks. States bargains from weakness, Nixon Friedheim said he was not sure if the told the National Conference of Building Laotian govemnient in Vietianc asked and Construction Trades, a grou p for U.S. bombers, but indicated the American government expected it would. ln the Vietnrun cease-fire agreement effective Jan. 28, the·U~ited Slates, South Vietnam, North' Vietnam and the Viet Cong agreed to end all milila':1' a_ctivities in Cambodia and Laos, withdraw all troops and nor use the two coun tries as staging areas for attacks elsewh_ere. A cease-fire was agreed on 1n La os Feb. 22, but there has been no truce agreement signed in Ca~bodia. The United States and South Vietnam have charged that Hanoi is infiltrating troops and war materie l into Cambodia and that North Vietnamese troops still are fighting beside the Cambodian Khmer Rouge forces opposed to the Phnom Penh gove rnment. Freeway Crasl1 Fatal to Woman A Long Beach \\"Oman \vas killed late Sunday night when a ca r in Which she was a passenger cra shed into a stalled vehicle on the Garden Grove Freewa y in \Vestminster. Killed when thrO\.\'n from the car was t.lrs. Sa rah Hernandez. 31 , Seriously in· jurcd in the crash just ea~st of the Spring· dale overpass was her husband f\.1aNo Hernandez. 32. dri ver o: the car. · A California High1vay Patrol aid the stalled vehicle had partially blocked lhc fast westbound lane of the freC\\'ay . Consumer's Aide Will Give Talk A representative of the Orange County Office of Consumer Affairs \viii speak al a public meet ing of the Saddleb<1ck V:illey Vriends of the Lihrary at 8 p.m. April 25 in the f\1i ssion Viejo Library, 24851 Ch risanta Drive. The Consume r Affnirs agency in- \'cstigates consumer complaints. reports \'iolations of consumer law, and seeks to arbitrate disputes and repres<'nt con· sume rs before regulatory agencies. From Pugel SUSPECT.· .. the man from the second floor onto :he pavement below. Broadbclt said that all the shoo ting was d6ne by investigators from Orange. In San Clemente Public Safety Directo r Clifford Murray said that his detective. Roger Wiberg, was along on the arrest "simply because our department had traced the man's (Sing I cy' s) "M'hereabouts." Broadbelt would not give any details or the victim's prior criminal record~ but other sources described the man as "a n1ajor crime figure" whose proficiency at forging vehicle documents <ind steal- ing large quantit ies of cars was known across the nation. Although officers could ncit initially dig up the article, several sources said the man was featured in a nationally- distributed article several years ago and had been flatly identified as a "master swindler.'' 1970 when he made the de cision to se nd trial was under way. And her mother, us' forces into Cambodia the con-Mrs. Mary Ellen Hill of Nev.yort ~each, . · · · : k d · · rt \vas sued. fo r $16,000 by Hirsch m an struction Y.Or ers marchc 1n suppo : Orange County Superior Court action Those who w.ould cut defense spending, th t h d he lth non-payment or he said "will have to take upon a _c arge 1 r w h 1 • th ·b·1·t r bot promissory no es. ! emse vcs e responsi 1 1 Y o sa ag-Hirsch, who maintains offices at 2515 1ng th e ~ace .o.f the world th_at no\V. E. Coast Highway, Corona del r.-1ar, is seems so l>rom1s1ng an~ d~st~oy1n,~ any the O'A-'ner of more than 50 thoroughbred cha~ce of further arms hm1tallons. race horses and is a familiar figure on Nixon appeared before the group the nation's race tracks. He is particular- sh?rtly aft er Rep. Gerald R. Ford (R-ly associated with Del Mar and the sue· Mich.), wns loudly ,t:iooed wh~n. he .at-cess ful · efforts some years ago to lcmptc~ to defend Nixon , adnuruslrahOn preserve the track from a takeover bid economic policies. by outside interests. In his remarks, Nixon stayed a'i'-·ay from specific discussion of rising prices, but defen ded hi s position in holding fede ral spending to a $2611 bill ion level. "It's no pleasu re for the President of the' United States to veto spending bills and, after all, it isn't my money -it's yours." he said. Shortly be fore Nixon spoke. the union delegates cheered !·louse Speaker Carl Albert (D-Okla.)', when -he said the Administration 's economic controls had been unfair to lalxir. Then they hooted at Ford. Shouts of "No! No!" swept the au!iience when Ford said, ''Jobs are up and unemploy- ment down ." And when Ford said the President was .making every effort to hold dov•n taxes and prevent a tax increase, one union leader shouted "close the loopholes." Search Goes On For Missing Tot The search continued today for a miss- ing 3-year-old Orange boy , police said. Michael Todd Rockwood of 334 S. Orange St., has been miss ing since Fri· day . A house-to-house search was conducted Saturday by 80 police offi cers · aod volunteers who combed a 35-hlock area . The boy disappeared after his mother let him out to play· Friday. He was wear- ing a yellow S'i'-'eatshirt, blue pants and bro\vn shoes. Little Michael bas blond hair aod blue eyes. ·-------- 1 NO ONE SELLS G.E. .....,.,.... ' FOR LEsS THAN~ • . . • Gl'1 l' .... ,,_...,,_ "!:.=-.;t •1"-"1N12RIM ' .Tt11 .. ,..._ • J ... CV'dll -,...,..f ,......,...t,....,.. ---............. _.._ 209'6 Since the Orange . County office was opened Ma rch I, 1972, more than 2,300 complaints hav.: been handl ed. •UPRJCHT CONVENfENCg Representing the office will be Gerald P. Boehne, a retired Air 1'"orce officer and specialist In finance wOO has "'orkcd in the counly office since Its formatio n. Singers to Pet-forn1 Saddleback College's ChAmber Singers, dlrt!cled by Donald A. Walker. wJll perform for members of the Montana Club of Laguna Hills et 7:30 tonight in Clubhouse 'lllrcc of Leisure \Vorld. • l'ositiyt Safety Doori..atch •Fut 1-"tt~•lnc •DoorLock 179!'5 90bAY CASH Wllff-AIOIOftt C:RIDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa .Mesa -Phone 548-7788 • \ • • Dunitngton Beaeli Fountain ·Valle -* * VqL 66, NO. 106, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES -oR:ANGc COUNTY, CAtlFORNl11 . ' • Teday's" Fln•I N.Y; Steek8 MONDAY, AP'Y.L 16, 1973 TEN' CENTS ~ --- Good __ Turnout Predicted in-School Election -----. ' ' r ~ ....... -. . ' - By 0 Of 11111 O.lly Plttt Sllff Despite the Easter vacation, the Orapge County Registrar of Voters is predicting a good turnout for Tuesday's scll>ol elections in which nearly 112,000 west Orange Cowlty voters are eligible to oelect school trustees. - At stake In the election are three Seats on each school bo&rd in five West county ~lementary diStricts and the Huntington Beach Union High Sch.ool District. Ata Editorial ' T e 8 po lirig p aces wrrrDe Open from 7 a.m. to' 8 p.m. A spokesman for the Registrar of voters saia today hls office e1.pects a turnout better than tbe 16.4 percent voter turnout in the 1971 school board elections. The prediction is based on a higher number of requests for absentee ballots, the spokesman said. Me!inwliile. teacher groups in three west Orange County school districts have thrown their support behind some can- West County Distriet diaitef"ln1'Uesday's-ellecti"iorr.-.----l>oard..rraa'------..:...:---"°"oc1.lllll!t..I01SlttSJWn the field of six The executive board or the Huntington There are 19 candidates rUMing for the who are running for the Fountain Valley Beach Union High School District three seats on the high school board. Ac-elementary board. Educators Association bas announced its cording to the registrar, 111,929 voters In Ocean View, !1 ,350 voters can go to support for Dr. Ralph Bauer, Robert living in HWltington Beach, F0W1tain the polls Tuesday to choose three new Knox and Ron Shenkman. Valley, Westminster and Seal Beach are trustees from among 14 candidates. None In tbe Ocean View School District, ,the-eligible to vote in that race. of the three ~ wJ>o,.,e lenns ex· political action committee of the teachers In \he Huntington Beach C i t y pire this )tear-are funning for re-electiM. association bas endorsed Joe ~tilazzo. (Elementary) ·School District, 21 ,109 .Westminster's 23,912 voters wjJl be And the Westminster-T e a c h e r s voters will choose three trustees from choosing lhree trustees from six can- Association has thrown its support to eight candidates. didates, and, Jn Sea1 Be~ 14,538 voters Harlene Barrett in that district's school There are 21 ,020 voters eligible to are eligible to cast baUOts on the five U.S. Planes Bomb candidates running for the three position.! in that element1ry scbool diltriet. Much of the attention In this election has centered oo the Incumbents, m: lade of lhem. The Ocean Yie:W' race attracted a large number_ ol Cll!ilJdates when all ·three incumbents -R. James Shaffer, Robert Kno< and George Logan - declined to run for re-electiori. Knox is running !pi: the hl&h llCl>oal boanl. John BenUey, longtime member of the (See ELECTION, Pop I) ·. • Laos Candidates Endorsed Action Taken Near N. Viet-besieged Village It' Easter week and most people are thinking more of vacations, the beach and Easter bunnies than of school boards. But Tuesday is a critical day for west . Orange County schools. It's election day, a time when new school leaders, or old ones, will be picked for the next four years. · . · . In edilorials last Wednesday and Friday, the Daily Pilot out· . ·lined its reasons for supporting certain school board candidates. Today we repeat those choices. · We support these individuals-because we believe they could help provide the best education for the children of west Orange County. . By district, we feel the best candidates .are: Huntington Beach Union High School District: Dr. Ralph Bauer (incumbent), Robert Knox, Ron Shenkman. . Ocean View School District: Maryann Blank, Jean Bogen, Dar· rell Carter. ~ Fountain Valley School District: Ro~r BeJgen (incumbent), Sheila Meyers (incumbent), WiJJiam Crane !incumbent). Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District: Stephen -11Dldeii.lin.cumbentl • .La nee Neumeister William Thomas. Seeking Three Seats ' 8 Hu~tingto~_Hopefq,ls , • Express Their Views Th.ere are 19 candidates · TUnning for three trustee seats in the April 17 electiun in the Hu,i tington Beach Union Higli Sclloot District. Frida11, the '1iews of eight of the candidates were set forth in this 1pace. Totiay, tile views of eight more candidates are presented. Three can· didates did not respond to question· naires. · The candidates .statemet1ts -whfcli follow are reprinted with permission from the April 1973 "Ca11did4tes' Questionnaire" which was compiled by the League of Women Voters of Huntington Beach. The ca11didates' answers are in their own words. Two of four League questions have been selected for use. here: 1) What advatitages, if any, do you see in all-year schooli'ng, and 2) bo you see any reaso11s for unifi· cation? J(Jlrt A. L u e d t k e is a consuJting psychologist and instructor in the Los Angeles city school system. He holds a BA Degree from Bri~m Young Uni- versity and is doing graduate work at Pepperdine. maximum utilization of physical plant facilities. While the trustees do their part, the planning commission must also do its part by limiting the density of papulation in affected areas." 2) "Some of the main reasons for unification are fin{lncial, thus the issue of economy is again raised. I Wlderstand that the state offers a bonus in grants to unified districts, thus promoting this type or-organization. Hav-tng a consolidated administrative facility cou1d also mean real savings, along with the increased ~chasing power realized from the union. "The most critical factor in unification would b,r the assurance of local control. In a large urban district like L.A. City, much local control was lost , only later to be partially restored by decentraliiation. I firmly believe in local control." ~·-~ Julio "Jay" RI v er a, 44 is an e n g i n e e r with McDonnell Douglas A$tronautics. He holds two BS Degrees from the Universi ty of Miami. He is married and has three youngsters. 1) "The primary advantages of all year schooling are: the ~ flexibility for family planning and the futufe possibility of • distributing t h • BULLETIN WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. planes began bitting targits near a village in Laos overrun ·by Comipoulst fore.es., Peo- . tagoD sources 'disclosed today. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon ~m_.e!f_l'{or1h.J'jetnam today that unless it stops aggression in Laos, the U.S. would begin a new bombing campaign. Pentagon spokes~an Jerry W . Friedheim said North Vietnamese forces led by tanks overran a town defended by Royal Laotian forces near tbe Plaine de Coast District Voters to Pick Two Trustees . Voting begins" at 7 a.m. Tuelday for • two seats on-the-Coast Community-Col· lege District Board of Trustees. The bOards governs both the campuses of Golden \Vest College in Huntington Beach and Orange Coast College in Costa ~fesa. "" Polls will remain open until 8 p.m. to allow the district's 183.344 registered voters to cast their ballots. A light turn· out is forecast. Eligibile to vote are persons registered in Zeal Beach, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster and several unincorporated county areas. The candidates vying for their ballots are: -,George Rodda Jr., incumbent, Corona del Mar, on the board for the past four years. Rodda is president or his own Management Engineering C.Orpora· lion, _past president of the Board of Trustees, and past chairman of the com· munity college section of the California School Board Association. -Donald A. Strauss, Newport Beach, a 16-year resident of Orange County and vice-president of emptoye relations for Beckman Instruments. Strauss served four years -0n the old Newport Beach Elementary School District board and subsequently seven years on the Newport-Mesa Unified School District board. -Wortb Keene, Seal Beach, in- cumbent, retired postmaster of Seal Beach. Keene served on the college board for nearly 12 years and has been its presdident three times. RecenUy he wa:; appointed chairman of a national committee developing TV programing for ethnic and minority education . -F r a a c e 1 O. Mana, Huntington Beach, mother of five children and prac- ticing medical management consultant. Jarres in Laos within the last several hours. He described it as "a major violation of the cease-fire." The Pentagon spokesman said an an· nouncement about w"'etner U.S. 852 bombers had begun ren~wed strikes over Laos would come from Pacific Co1nmand headquarters in Hawaii later today. U.S. bombers have been hitting Cam- bodian targets for six weeks. There have been no American air strikes in Vietnam since the cease-fire was..signed Jan. 27. Friedheim said there has been heavy fighting near the Laotian town of Tha Vieng for the past few days; He could . provide no details on the size ol the Viet· namese and the Pathet Lao Communist ·force whicb occupies the town. There has been a. separate cease-fire declared in Laos alid there l)as been relatively little fighting there in recent weeks. Friedhelm said he was not sure if the Laotian government in Vieliane asked (or U.S. bombers, but indicated the American government expected it wouJd . In the Vietnam cease-fire agreement to 5"028 Huntington, Cagers 'Sore' Aller 61 hours of play, the score of the. Hun\illtgon Beacb lllch Scbqol =~ll'=l=~~~~ . .,.'!,·~·~p~ - Tho wn"e started ,8t ·9 p.m.~Fridiy and tile tarpt of Ille· JI "'-' Is to play C<lllllliuously onlil the end of Easter vacaliln -Iller hift. par ID • total ol .1§8__bours_on the coyrl In the Oller l)'iL Tho slaDdllil .-'t>tf 1411 boors will he pe..00 at 5 p.m. Thursday. -_ _ Paul Madera, organizer of the marathon for the high scbool'~lloyl Loque, saicJ. one player, Lonnie Brownell , suffered tom Ha:aments during the ~ day of play and has been hospitalized. He said the f,ame is open lo the public at anylme, but noted that tile best hOurs ire ftom p.m. 10 9~pJJL0We"ptilybe--uefifWe hive 8D audience/ said. . Asked if he thought the players would be able lo last until tile end of the week, ~tadera commented "it seems like an'"'wful long Ume."• Death of Santa Ana Youth Ill Valley Called Accident The shooting o{ a Santa Ana youth Fri· · might have been anned. day by a Westminster police officer ap--The incident began about an hour pears to have been accidental, District before the Shooting when two Fountain Attomey'.s Investigator James Enright Valley officers arrested a man for said today. drunken driving. Miguel Ronquillo, 29, was killed in The four occupants of the car ap-- Fount.ain Valley when he was shot in the proached the officers In a threatening back by Officer Timothy ~ler when the manner, but ran from the acene without officer was trying to take Ronquillo into becoming physically involved in a scuffle custody. with the dnUllten driving IUl)>ecl or the Enright said the investiga:tion of the two patrolmen, Enright said. case Is continuing in an effort to decide , As they ran, the olficen allege one whether the shooting was "a reasonable" se1;id something about "getting a gun." accident or whether the case shou1d be 1be investigator saJd be played back taken to a coroner's jury or the Orange the tape of the radio bf'Oldcast put ~t County Grand Jury. He said he_e~ts and vel;lfied that the olfJcer maklnti tile to make that decision by Tuesday. ' broadcast did say the four men beiJig Ronquillo was sbot once In the upper, sought might he armed. · · back when he pushed oU a fence be was .,That'• why Miller and tbe Fomtala facing as Miller and FolDllain Valley Of-Valley officer had their gum dn~:whm ricer Robert Mosley were trying to arrest they .were arresting Ronqullk>," ~t him. said. Enright said the 81:.lD discharged as He noted, however, that neither ROfto •• ellecllve Jon . 21, the .Uiilled Btlles, South Vietnam, North · Vlelnam -aiiil the Viet Cong. agreed lo end all 'military lcllvltles In cambodta and Laoo, withdraw all troops and oot UM U.,-two eeuntrles as !laging areas for attacks ebewbere. A cea ... n ... ·w111 qreecl on In Laol Feb. 12, but there llaa. boeil . no· truce agreement signed in . =· la. The United .. States and South V . hive charged that Hanoi Is lnOltra troops anti war materiel lnlo ClmbOdia and that North Vietnamese tteopa sWl are (See LAOS, Page I) Long Beach Navy Station To Be ·Closed ..... 97 n. •111 t ,,, ... ,,. /A"g Beadt ...... .w lllll, be oiiul ~Wn br· Juoe I0,.'.1.-it, """'''" ~ ships and 20,000 crewmen reu!Igned as part of. a II blllloo cutback, the Long Beach ms Teleir~~a~m,_ __ reported today. --. The """'PIP'' 11)'1 that " lh!po will he sent lo other porta and lt will he decommiHloned. · - There· are 500 sailors asa!gned lo the station plus another 1,500 ctvlllans, repmentlng a total payroll of 111 mllllon lllllWl!ly. . Molt oparatlons at the Loni Beach Naval Bue, which coordlnai.i Navy and Mlrine activities In Los Angeles, Orance, Rive~• and San Bernardino counties, will abo-!ie-dolad-alonc wi!h-lhe-J;q Beacb Marine barrack&. Naval but O,.ratlona lo he lllut down include the -olllc<, antl-IUbmartne warfare lcbool, molloa plcblre .tnlllrc R unl! -&l)d1 tile boopltal aualllary. lblp e-. Howev_er, the DeWl]>lper added, 1,000 men will he addoil to tile f,SOO.man Long Beach Naval Ship Yard ope<atlon lo o11 .. t the closln1 of HIDlt<r's Point Sblpyant In San FrlllC!lco. Pentap officials lald today that 171 military baaes -. will he ctc.ed or cUt bock. A lull list of-the allected bases was not 1iven to newsnten tmmed.iately. The Delenoe ·Deparlment aJao !>lam to cJoOe the Hunten.Point Slllpyard'at San Francisco by Jiw-IO, 1'74, Ca!Jlornia memben•ol Conll<SI were ·1n1ormecHo- daJdTho -N&Yal Yaioil U.. will be clciled:) . . Dtlinlo ·ClllbacD aloo Include Closing . of llaml&n AF!fby Die. !I, droppllil all n~ ·activity at Almned a Air St.tllon and ·leasing the Loni Belch NaV.l (See SillPYAJID, PAP. I) I ) "One of the in- novatiom that we must take a bard look -ar-la the alter- ¥Uve of year-round ~lJtMlljng. The idea ties 119tn ·around for i IOllg tlm~. but con- illtlonrhll-Ve.,._n-ever forced Its time-to tourist load through- out the year at our overcrowded r e - sorts; employment opportunities t- would offer for stu· --5he.,,sen'ed.threJLY.CJIU..Oo.Jb lx>o.l"<Lof lhe Southern C.lifornia Hospital Credit Managers Association and is the cuJTent vice-president of the South Coast dents who need to work by· ena- bling them to take vacations wh~n peak labor demands,,exi st. Ronquillo_bacl<ecLlri!o_Mlller _·quilJ9,_l!Ql._three of hla componklns who The inv:estigator said both officers bad were also taUo Iii ~-.:rm;:r==;;:;:::::====::::::::;---j their guns drawn because a broadcast ed. A fourth man ls still at Ja'rge, bUt Come -until now. LUIDTKI "l have spoken with many parents. and though there is some resistance ex· '---ssed, most feel that it is the logical way to go. Most favor a four-quarter aU· · year school plan with no options~ ....,. "This would lmmeaiateJ.yulleve much of the pr~t burden , and proVide for "I '"ould not favor its adoption on a mandatory basis because of the problems it would cause for families with students in both bJgh school and elementary schools, unless, of course, all elementary schools were also on all year scheduJes." DOGGONE-PILOT 2) "Emphatically yesl In view of the recent deleat of the bond Issue for school construction, unification of tbe elemen--"D FIN'DS FIDO tary..and.blgb.adiool dislrlcll II euenUal ..P _ . to allow the communiUes to·ldeollly with 'Do i"t•. theiJ>lgh scbools and thereby obtain the ggone same level of support for the high schools "Where has that liltle dog gone?" as exlltl !or the elementary sehools. ere'1 a quiet way to find out: ' "Added voter support might also allow WHITE male Pooc!Je with a return to the state-recommended high grey ean needs clJpplng. IChoot 'lllze of t,500 to 2,000 students Wearlrut b!aclt Jeweled coi'. which I !eel would help the students Iden· 1Jar &ITea colllr1 nr H.B. Hi. t1fy more closely with the.Ir schools and School. (Phone number ). increase their chances tor partlclpaUon in extrAcurricular actlv-iUes. _This dog was gone for a w~. Th e _Clrsl ~Wj,tho.111 .the benefit of \lie data flhe ad ap~. the o r got a call necessalr to make an i!aucated recom- and ·the do,-.,..-'lound. JI '"" loo! mendatlon ~can only oay that I would- tomelhlng, nnd II last with a DAU.Y support a ' plan which would furnish an PILOT classllled 11\nt ad. :I'he number lo equitable ta.x base for each of the . -call -MJ.6678. rciu!Ung diJtricto and I would strive to " (ko CANDmATl!S, Ptce 11- •• ·'-.. , (See COAST, Page Z) put out earlier that evening said that the Fountain Valley police said the)' ..eiPtct men being sought along with Ronquillo to get a warrant for bi.I arrMt tOcll)'. Seen as· Favorite Matney Beach's-Mayor? By TERRY .COVJU.E Mainey ,.id of his chance of. being nam· Of .. oa1rr '"" ,.... ed mayor. Councilman Jerry Matney is the heavy Matney was first elected. to the city favorite to be selected as the new mayor council in 1968, and re-elected ii1 1972. of Huntington Beach at tonlcht's city A new mayor is selected each year by council metUng. the seven city councilmen. The mayor's The !0-year-old Matney has turned poat Is partly honorary, partly functional. down the Offer tWiCf lfl the past because The mayor runs council meetings, but or a confiic.t with "his job. He is currently ha1 no greater vote or veto power than princlraJ of the county's Otto Fischer any other councilman. The race for ScllOO lit Juvenile Hall. mayor does someti mes become a Matney said tod;ly his job 1SSl1P1ment polilical battle hetwoen factlw on the .-will-ht switched tbi1" year ancLlbe new:_. mmcll, tOOugb-that does...not . .appear to )>oo!Uon will allow him the Oelibillty to be the cue this year. ' devote sufficient time to tho mayor's ·11a1ney•1 .chief liyal wu."COlllldlrod ·to post. bt" Coanctl)fOman Nonna Glblll, who "Yes. thiJ lime t Intend to take It," once aervecl as the mayor ol Seo! Beach. • '. . . .... If elected, she may he tile lint _..14 strve u the mayor ol two itpal'lte citle1 In the U.S. Tonight's election wlD be held at 5 o'clock so current May:ur Al Coen can cast hla ballot. then leaft tllrlY to omtrve Pas.aover. Be!fdes ,.rvtng the Piii )fear as mayor, Coen served once before, in 1968. Councilman Donald Shipley bas been mayor llu'ee times (l!IM, ,1917 and Jll70), Jack Green oo& (19119) and Ted Bartlett Besides Ma!Jlcy, . Gibb< (elected tAi the council In and Henry OOCO. (1117), -,r' Dub.(eloctad In 1972) ""'""u mayor. • .. • ' . Or .... . Low clouds and file are erpeclod . tonight and ' early IDClrDlnl but weather otberwlae-Will be moit!7 IUllll)' and a touch warmer. lfllba. 13-73, lows IM$ . INSIDE TODA"Y ·-. • DAILY PILOT " '"9tP .. e l SIDPYARD. • • ~ llid movbol lhe Deel lo San Catifomlans were informed that the net MOfldoy, AP<ll 16, 1973 1 llVD, I . . N : WESTMINSTER :;; IW-1-4' SCHOOL , c l~-~ .... ~;·~rrc·-:J11 -l in Califomta will , r•-mllfllfy-and more than .•• C,000 chlllano. ~: DISlllCT -~ i31 MC fillii>fN AVI: -~ ----------- s • Some clVlllan pe,,90r1ncl at various sta.· tJons wUJ be offered transrer~. , The elosJng ol Hunters Point Shipyard -··alane will .affect 5,500 civilians. Some -" la to be tl'aruferred ll> Pugel sound in Waahlngton and some to l..ong Stach and other private yards in the San Frru .. claco Bay area. ~ OCINl)llEW 2 SCHOOL 0 DISlRICT > -.. r--o ~ ~: FOUNTAIN ., 3:1 VALLEY 1t SCHOOl Flying activity· at Alameda Naval Air StatJcm t1 to be transferred to .?tfoffett Field,_ StmnyVale, and the Naval Air Sla- -Uorn~oo:re: --.. --------..--., -I ADAMS AVf , · In putting the lfamllton AFB in reserve 1tatus, lhe Air Force plans to declare surplus 600 housing units. All support ac· tlvittes will bo dosed. 11le personnel reduction in mllllary and civilians totals- z,312. Traru:fer ol flttt acti vity from Long Belch to San Diego will aff~t 16,000 military and 646 civilians. The San ~rancisco and San Diego Naval Dlslricts are to be combined with headqu arters in San Diego. The Pasade"na Underwater Laboratory will be closed and combined . with a similar installation In San Diego \Vith a loss of 780 employes. The Imperial Bea~h Naval Air Sta- tion Is to be retained as a flying field only. Sen. John V. Tunney <J>.Calif.), called the wholesale" cutbacks "one of the cruelest examples of insensitive govern· ment." Sen. Alan Cranston (0-Calif.), com· plained that there are no cutbacks to overseas bases or any ovcr·all reductions of military personnel. "The rough ru thless treatment "·as resenred ror civilian$." Cranston said he would begin working immediately to prevent domestic base · cutbacks until overseas bases in 30 lorelgp cowitries have been pared. \ -HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISlRICT --·ELEMENTARY DISTRICTS "----·-----HUNllNGlON BEACH ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DISlRICT O ... IL 'I' PILOT Ntwt MIP MAP OUTLINES WEST ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICTS Voters to Decide Sc:hool Board Races Tuesday 'Citizens Panel Backs Police Computer Costs A further boost for the proposed Hun· lington Beach police computer address file has been provided by a three.man citizens study committee. The committee will recommend to the city council tonight that phase two of the information as voluntary gun registration and the names or some residents with specific medical problems. Front Pqe I ELECTION .•• · computer system be authorized at a cost of about $264,018. · The computer study team also recom- mends that additional services -lire departfnent, library, harbo r s and beaches, plannfng -should be ,added with the approval of the council. high school board is retiring this year. So is Ruth Duffy of the Seal Beach elemen- lary diJtrlct. The issues that haVe been most prcm· inent in all six districts have been unification and all-year schoo ls. Two of the districta -FoWltain· Valley and Ocean View -currently are operating pilot programs in all-year scheduling and it has been suggested·as a means of eas· ing th&,J:rowding in the high schools. The question of splitting the 52-square- mile high school district into smaller unified districts Was raised when 'voters failed lo pass a bond issue in February for new high schooJ construcUon. The FoWltaln Valley district is actively work· ing ·on a pla n to set up a new unified district along boundaries of the elemen· tary district. ' From Page I LAOS ..• fight ing beside the Can1bodian Khlner Rouge forces opposed to the Phno1n Penh government. The Pro-Communist Pathet "Lao and North Vietnamese troops ~·ith mortar and artillery support overran three government positions in northeastern Laos over the weekend. a Defense Ministry spokesman, Brig. Ge n . Thongphan Knoksy, said toda y. No casualty reports were immediately available. The spokesman said North Vietnamese troops supported by mortars overran two frontal outposts of tht! government moun - tain base at Buam Long, 18 miles north of the Comn1unist occup ied Plain or Jars ... Another strategic deending position at Ban Tha Vieng. 100 miles northeast of Vientiane, also was overrun and govern- ment troops retreated some five miles across lhe Nam Ngip Rive r southeast of Tha Vieng, Ule spokesman said. Earfler the acting defense minister, Sisouk Na Champassak, said a new regi- ment of North Vietnamese troops moved to the Tha Vieng area and posed an im- mediate lhreat to the town. · OIAN•E COAST HI DAILY PILOT The police-compulers have been the center of considerable controversy the past few months because of charges that the system Is taking a "big brother" ap- proach. The charges. mode mostly by syn- dicated column ist and radio personality Pat i\.Iichaels, spurred a federal in· vestigatiJ>g April 5 of the Hu ntington Beach program. After a_ full day of t\ear ings, the federal Law. Enforcement A s iii s t a n c e Administration (LE~) cfcared Hun· tington Beach of all such charges and gave the city approval for its compu\ers. The three·man citizens committee which reports at tonight's 7 o'clock coun- cil meeting was not asked lo investigate the social implications of the computer address flle. The committee, composed or computer expert Jerry Kene fick, Planning Com- m.issioner Ed· Kerins aQQ.. chamber of commerce officer Dave Fredenburg. in· spected the cost feasibility of lhe project. -These three men dCtermined fhaf .. 1he city should proceed with the address file· because its value to the police depart· ment \\'OUid more than offset the cost of the system. The address file is designed to provide rapid information to police units in the field. Son1e subfiles V.'ould contain such McGover11 Offers Tax Reform Bill WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Se n. George McGovern today proposed a three-year tax reform plan to he.Ip close loopholes exploited by lhe v.·ealthy. lie said his plan would bring in ~1 1.5 billio n in revenue the first yea r. flilcGovern told the House \Vays and Means Committee the revenue bonanza could be used to reduce taxes of "ordinary citizens" and to restore Adntinistratlon cutbacks in domestic pro- grams. Among the Soti1h Dakota Democrat's proposal \\'ere acceleration of d('precia· tion provis ions and adjustment of !he in- vestment tax credit . which he said would ra ise more than S5 billion. Torttared E'i1•st'l Th~ total cost of the additional com- puter files is estimated at a minimum of $424,6.15. Committee members also suggest that, to provide file security and privacy of da ta, the city council should be informed of all new files or data elements created. and told whenever any department has access to files other than its own. The committee report will be sub- mitted to the council tonight, but it is unknown whether councilmen will act on it immediately. Gate Crasher Sparks Drive-in Melee; 3 Booked Three men were taken into custody SUnday night when-20 police officers were called to a Huntington Beach drive· in theater to quiet a disturbance there. According to police. the incident be gan when Of£icer Art Droz tried tCI take a man into custody for gate crashing 01e \Varner Drive-In, 7361 Warner Ave. · Droz alleges that the man, in at· ten1pting to escape, backed into ~ un· 1narked patrol car. Then the suspect and a companion reportedly got into a sudfle \\'ilh Droz. The supect, Lyndon Robert Chenard, 19, of Anaheim, and his companion, Jesus Albert Michael Chavez, 22, of Stanton, were both booked for disturbing the peace. Chenard was also charged wit h petty theft and Chavez was charged with assault on a police officer and drunken driving on private property, \Vhile the two were being arrested by Droz and back up officer Dennis Martin, a crowd began to gather and allegedly began shouting obscenities and throwing rocks and bottles at the officers. Sixteen Huntington Beach policemen and four from Fountain Valley were call· ed in to quiet the crowd \\1hich reportedly dispersed and returned to their cars. John Karl Cox, 20. of Fullerton, however, allegedly did not depa rt the scene and was arrested for disturbi ng the peace. assault on a police officer and in· terfering w\th a police officer . Tl'lt Otlnot C0.11 OAIL'I' PILOT wltll tllftl(fi 11 comblMd 1111 N1w1-Pr1nL h pUblltllfl:I by "" 0••110• Coil! P11bll~Q Com'P.111.-kr»- r.it ldltlon1 ••• "'1tlll1h1C1, M<lfl.S•r lftn>1111fl Frld1y, ltr C111t1 Mt18, NtWPO•I eem, t111nnno1on 81~hlfou"i.1n Vtllty, L..tVUM IMCll, lrvl11t15tddlttw<• •"II S.11 CMmtnll/ Stn Ju.n C1pl1!rlll0. A 11119!1 ret'-1 edition II pUOllllltd lelvnl.tys Incl &l;Mtys. TM SN"lnclpal publlJhlng plent 11 ti llO Weil 81y 511 .. r, Co111 Mttt, Ctlltornlt , m2t, --Mot-01·ist in-Huntington Discover s Murder Victim Rob1tt N. w,,d PrwslHrll tnoll "vt>ll1lltr Jee• A. Cwrl•v Vlu .,rt11St11t Mill Grntrt l Mt lll99" Th°"''' Kt1¥il Edtlfl flioMll A, Mwt,hint M""'Vl!til t:d1101 Otrln H, Looi ~ich11tl '· N•tl Allllltnl Mtll .. \rlt Edlliol"I T 1rry C1.,ill1 W"I Ortf'ID! CW111• ffi!Ot H119MttN ..... OHke ~ 17171 l •tch lowlt "t f'll Mtilinj Adtlrt ttl ,.0 . l ot 7f0, flMI _ ....... Lt~ kocfl: n! "°'"' ..,_ (Ottt MtMI 211 w.:-r.; Sir"' Htw~I IOKll: :&XU N ~I'll it" Cl~: Jti Norfll I Clll'llllO IMI ,.,,,. ... (7141 '4J-4JJ .. C'-'"'H ~l•'-rf '4J.J671 _ .. _ .... ~- • Mf.1Jlt ~'-''· lm. on•' 0.1 '*\Ill"" '*""'"'' Ht ,.... tWltt, Olutlrlt'-", ..t•ltt -""' flt "'"'~ flfltln _,, .. ·••lbctf '""'*1t .,,.,.. pow. ........ -~-· ' . .__.,, dew _. ... ,,.w tl C-oJlt MIM, Ctllfwnll. Mleo'Wliltl /t11 <.,..,.. a.u IN!dlll¥J llr -'1 st IJ '"""llllr'l ~ .,.......,.,. 1JAS ""'1flll'· . By JOANNE REY~OLUS Of t1t1 0•11' "llol Sttll Hunlington Beach police. said loday they believe an unldenliflcd~murdcr vie. tim found in the city Saturday may have been beaten and tortured prior to his death. Orange Counly Coroner's Investigators. who list the slaying victim as a John Doe, said IO<lay they sllll ha v e not established a cause of death for the young man or his tdentlty. The body \\'SS found early Saturday morning near thtl Intersection or Ellis Avenue and Gothard Street by a passing moiorlst. Detectives said il had ap- parently been thrown out or a moving ca. -. Sgt. Monty McKennon said he believes the man may have been beaten and tortured belore death because o! several cuts and abrasions on the body. "Some may have been caused when the body "''as dumped in the street," McKen· non said. But he added that he d°"s not believe all tbc \\'OUnds were caused thnt way. Police are continuing their efforts to identify the victim who is about five feet, 11 inches in he ight and 150 to 160 pounds. f\1cKcnrion said there were several lat· loos on the body includlng the initials "D.F .. " a swaska. the number 13 on the left ankle, and four dots on the left wrist. · "On the right ank le was a cross with marks above it -usually called I.he 'Pachuko' sign," McKenn90 said. The detective noted that all the tattoos appeared to be non-professional, hQj11emade tattoos. The murder victim was dressed in a cut~t! denim jacket and dark blue pants ~nd bright blue socks. He wore no shoes , the dctcetlve Saia:- "As fat as "''e can tell." McKennon said, "he was killed eomeplaee else prob- •bly Friday ntgbt and lhen brought here and ftumprd.' · He said that anyone who'lllighl be able lo ldenlify the dead man •hould call the police department at 536-5331. -~ • • F,.....P .. e l HUNTINGTON BEACH CANDIDATES • • • .. . lnsure fairness for all parti es ;nvolved." Mn. Dot<>lhea U. llotlt Is an ln- atructlooal media consullant in lhe health sdences. S!ie bolds a BA from UC, Berkeley, an MA from Stanford and an EdD from UCLA 1) "Jn the past, were designed to and have alleviated teacher shortages, a n d , selectively, have demonstrated Improved lea.ming. It is obvious that Such a prograRIWill- relieve overcrowded racllities with some additional operating aOTM eoel. ''But I still have some questions about the all-year program since all of the preceding ones from the beginning of the century until today were discontinued vohcn teacher shortages were no longer a problem, "There is, then, an implication that such programs have not been viewed by ~ their communities as d e s i r a b l e . Moreover, I am not yet satisfied on two dimensions of the plan, cost and qu~lity of education. "I want. lo know whether quality can be maint.a.ined when costs are held con- stant or. e-0nversely' what is the cost or maintaining quality. "In general, I \YOUld favor any plan that has community support (students, teac hers. parents) and can maintain the quality of education. I do believe that the final choice n1ust be a mandated ,pro- gram; economic conditions seem to determine that route." 2) "In principle, I am in favor of unification. I believe the issue should be restudied inasmuch as successfuJ ac-- quisition or revenue sharing funds may depend on a unification based on government.al unit bowl.daries. I believe current Conditions on high school cain- puses in gen~f!ll strongly nega"te 8ny unificl:!tion plan or the entire district and its feeder schools." F r e de ric k S c hmidt, 28, is a graduate student at UC Irvine, and also works for the Orange County Planning Oepartment. 1) "Given the current debate and con· fusion surrounding the all-year schooling issue. the board's position and role should be one of objective coordinator. "Tite cont roversial quinmester plan (all·year schooliiig) is not ,clearly under· slOOd by the public sector .and teaching community. Tbe con· fusion that exists is a product of pn ad-~ ministrative f i a t which is trying to create instantly tbe kinds of cnvir~-$CMM tDT ments (k nowledge, familiarity, and ac- ce.ptance) that require time 2nd a great deal of effort to develop. ' ''While_ such ~pe.rime.ntal ef for!s_._M, the quinmester plan· may represent first steps in a better direction, they can prompt disillusionment and ~jection by the public and teachers. "I believe there should be a concerted effort towards establishing a medium for communicating the advantages and/or disadvantages of the program. A Mblic forum should be established to provide for a constructive dialogue bet~·een representatives of all interest groups in- volved in the plan. "!£ commonly studied, communicated and prepared by all the parties in con· cert, the year·round school plan may yield positive alternatives. An en- vironment of confusion induced by rear of the unknown certainly is no proper way to proceed. 2) "The issue of unification has two distinct yet dependent considerations. They are unification or elementary school districts with high scbool districts and secondly deunification of the Huntington Beach Union High School District. "The first, unification of the elemen· tary school districts, is ~ multi.faceted problem. The main advantage attributed to unificalion , however , is the enhanced •. coordination of hllb IChool ond elemen-sebool disll'ict be IDll!led Into ,.veral tary oehool curricula. sma1lfr districts. 'l1le number o1 new "I led lho ld\'•••••e ot curriculum dlstricta ond the exact boundarje• should -be draliu IO mulmlze community Id.,,. coordlllatlen (wbldl ..,, be actODlplJJhed Uty and eontlnully of educational ap- by personal Initiative on the part of both proach . elementary and high sebool prlneipals) i. "Although Seal· Beach will require outweighed by the dbadvantage of los-special attention since It lacks . a h!gh Ing the close relationship between ~ school campus, the details of u~1flcat1on . . --can· be easily .settlfd if the--maJQr prol>-~nuust~ators and teachers present!~ en· Jem of equalizing flnanclal support is Joyed in the elementary school dlstn~ts-resolved by the state Legislalure in ac> "The second consideration, deunifica· cordance with the principle laid down by tion of the entire high school distri.c:t, is the state supreme Court in the Serrano related to unification. U deunificaUon ls decision." the only way to provide needed achoob <l am not convinced that this ls the only l\11cbael W. Vandor, · 18, Is assis· oplion) !!Min U-shoold lie eqilltalllY-tm~-,anrmanager lor Syst ein Auto Wasll. plemented. Boundaries would have to 1) "There are definite advantag@.S to provide for equal fundin~ and ~Id,. in aU·year schooling , some ~ses, .be cotemunous "'11h. ~ity just as there are de-boundanes. Given on equltable deunif1ca-.. lion formula 1 I feel unification of elemcn-fm1te advantage~ to tary sch~ districts would be a de-almost everything. sirable policy to pursue." For should .lhe mad-man comnut suicide Edmu.nd C. P. Sbee ban, 42, i~ a he will most certain- Califomia Peace Officer. He holds an ly enjoy the "ad- LLB Degree from .Blackstone College. He vantage" or escaping ~ is married and has five children. his end-ol·the-month ~--~ ~) AU-year schooling wlll Increase the bills. But he will just vAN .:·~- uSe and efficiency.A ( as certainly suffer from the concurriilg existing class:tQOnis p1 disadvantages one·encounters from such and reSources. It will a deed. not reduce existing taxes, but can re- duce the cost of fur- t h e r construction _ ~ and maintenance. ~ "Many eastern ~istricts have im- plemented successful sHEEKAK programs and I beLieve the board or trustees should review these programs \\'ith final implementation decided by parents and taxpayers." 2) "What is· good for one geographical area of our district is not ne<:essarily good for another area. I favor unification if it will create a smaller district, more readily manageable and more responsive to the will of the taxpayer. Unification has never been known to decrease district's costst so it cannot be advanced on .thal theory. "I believe that forced unification is always wrong. For any unification plan to work, the decision must be made by the voters." Ron Shenkman, 37, is ·a senior vice president 'vith Mercury Sav ings and Loan. He earned a BA from San Fernan· do Valley State College. He is married and has t,hree children. 1) "There are t\VO advantages in year- round schools. One is the potential to in-- crease the district plant capacity by 25 percent, and the t other is the educa-' tional advantage in providing programs to meet the individ- ual needs of stu· dents. SKENKM ... N _. "Perhaps this is a rather radical parallel to the subject of all-year school·· ing, yet it does demonstrate my paint. That being that the disadvantages of all· year schooling are far greater in number, than the advantages. "l\1y preference in plans lies \Yith the. building of a new high school in our district I believe this is the only plan we can implement without cheating lhe young of the proper education \\"e all desire them to obtain. We cannot settle fer a plan that can be considered only second best. We must strive for the best. No, we canoot setUe for a 'second rate' ~c;tucation fo r today's youth. For this onlY. unproves their chances of becoming. m~Iy second rate citizens tomorrow." 2) "I see but one important reason tor uniftcation. Yet, that one is enough. If un ification can _l]rtng abo~Lthe-~· rectlon of a new high school then I will. back it to the hilt. I think that the most feasible plan would be to reorg8Jlize along the existing boundary lines of th? elementary schvol districts. This \fould give the responsibility of educating the joung in these districts up to their own respective Joards -all the way from • elementary school thru high school. This is tt.e·most "·orkable unification plan." J o n at ba n M. Yost, 51, is an at· lomey practicing in Huntington Beach. He ha~ a la\v degree from Beverly College of Law, is married and has 4 children . I) "Year-round schooling is, at the present time, an unknown quantity in "The type of plan and its im- plementation, unfortunately, are usua lly deJ ermin_ed by ctrcumstances. When a district is not forced into al ·year scOOOl- by overcrowding, it must carefully con· sider community attitudes and poten- tial educatiOnal benefits." our district. But, experiment! witJ\ various plans for an all-year educational program are ~ conducted at both the elell\eDlary and high school levels. Until these-test programs have been completed and evaluated by parents, teachers, school administrt.lors and students (in that order) I believe it is foolhardy to at- tempt-to-promote.or '.sell!.-any-such plan.-- "The strongest advocates of the plans admit there is little or no aid to the overcrowding of school faciliti es except on a mandatory basis. I question such a mandate until there is proof of the workability of one of the plans and solid evidenei! of the parent and teacher ac· ccptance necessary for its success. 2) "ft is essential that the present high FromPGjJel COAST ..• Neurological f\.1edical Group. Strauss is challenging Rodda in Trustee Area 5 (Newport Beach) and Mann is challenging Keene in Trustee Area I (Huntington Beach and Seal Beach). The terms are for four years. Although the candidates serve in regional districts, all voters residing within the boundaries of the Coast Com- munity College District are eligible to cast their ballots. The county Registrar of Voters said t~ day the 510 voting precincts ha ve been reduced to 14 pollin# stations for this election. Results will be tabulated' at the county office, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., San~ ta Ana. 2) "The arguments for 'wiification' which I have heard thus far arc all predicated on first 'breaking-up' ·the present school district. Perhaps this may prove to be necessary. But, before that takes place, I think we would all need to be convinced not only of the necessity but also of the advantages to be gained. It is easy to break an egg. It is quite another thing to put -It back together. "I believe proponents of the dis-joining and later reunification on another scheme have a large obligation. One that begins with a very clear outline of the reasons \\'hich they feel compel such an action. This is to be followed by facts and fi gures "'hich show the voters of the district, the parents, the teachers ... all of us ... whet we can gain through such ·. actions." · NO ONE SELLS G.E. • FOR ·LESS THAN~ • • on~ PllW-fll Wtlfl~-.­~ .................. e3WllflllWll21U• ,Tllf+st .... • sw.c,...-NonMI, """"""' '-"" --.......... , ._.._ 209'6 •UPRICHT COHVENIENCI:: . DtUt(a(>, • Pol!Uve S.fety Door La~ • Fttl irte1£n1 •Poorl.ock 90 DAY CASH -=<:...J. ·!~!,I~., r·~~ ~ ,_ ... _ • .j ='-' ••••· ' ' • J W!TH·APPt- CllltT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Dmtm Costa Mesa -Piia 548-7788 f . - ' MOftdtl. April 16, 1973 H DAILY PI LOT 3 Policeinen Slay 1 Dana Theft Suspect _' , Divorcees T ieup Lines • News Perplexes 'Exes' By TOM BARLEY ot JM o.11'1' l"lltt Stiff Anxious divorcees of both sexes pro- vided the first order of telephone buSiness today for Orange County Clerk William St John 's busy offices. Employes said each caller had ques- tions about the legality of his or her divorce and the action that should be taken ~f a final decree had not been issued in the dissolution of m,arria'ge. And many of the callers said their anx· iety had been aroused by a Daily Pilot st'bry which disclosed Friday that at least 5,000 divorce actions in Orange County have never been legally concluded because of lhe absence of a final decree. It is now estimated by St John that such actions have actually been running at the.rate of about 2,500 a year. The county cleik estlmates that 18\~t· cent or· the divorces filed in this area., A Pipe Dre~m? L~quor Store Pot Sales Urged DENVER (UPI) - A member of the Colorado House of Repre- sentatives wants to sell marijuana in licensed liquor stores and give the money raised t~lderly people. . "Whether yo pprove of marijuana or not, and I happen to disapprove of it, i should be put into law as a revenue measure as we do alcohol ," said State Rep. Mike Strang, a former captain of the Princeton University polo team. Strang introduced a bill allowing the sale of marijuana in liquor stores purchasing a marijuana license. He said proceeds would go to the state old age pension-fund. 0 1 have no idea how mU:ch would be raised from the tax," said Strang a rancher. "All we do know is that the revenue would be very large f.or· tbe state pl Colorado and for ~he oJd age penSion fun4." 'Wealthy' Alien Payoffs ~leged in Border Scheme --NEW YORK (UP I) - A number of back to,tbe border or go home. Mexican peasants who enter the United Ttae Times said more than one quarter States illegally are ousted but are allow· of ~ Mexicans arrested each year for ed to sneak back into the country if they entering the cpun~ Illegally -nearly are willing and able to make payoffs, the 450.fOO In fisCal 197% ....,.. are removed New York Times has reported. un<ir the system. · , ' The Times said Sunday it uncovered Tfi,e Times said it conducted, during its the system of payoffs used by the United ye'1t,._blg investigation, interviews with States Inlmigration and 1Naturallietion offtcla111 in caiifornia. ,Arizona, Texas, Service, Mexican immigratlOi lit)ftielals Warln~n and Mexico. and privately owned Mexicari"tfat1Spo rta-Amoni tbosi playing roles in the tfon companies during a · year-long ii\· system, the Times said, are: · ' have gona no. further than the Wuance by a judge of an interlocutory decree oC divorce. Many div~rcees leave the courtroom at that stage believing that any further court action •is UMecessary, county • workers have saia. But tboSe divorcees who remarry outside Orange county without obtaining that vital final decree may not be legally married, St John ·warns. · Supefior Court Presiding JUdge Bruce Sumner of Laguna Beach plans to take care of the future by seeking legislative action that will make a final decree man~ datory, he has stated. But that action, county employes pointed out today, will not remedy the 'housands ol illegal marriages that may have been re.corded over the paSt 20 years in Orange County. St John points out that divorcees who seek a marriage license in Orange Coun- ty are prompUy w8med in his marriage license bureau if they have oot obtained a final decree in this area. They are compelled to obtain one before St John's marriage bureau clerks will issue the necessary license. But !D_!lny Or~nge Cour.ty. divorcees mily . have remarried in jurisdictions' where that rule is not in effect, he said. And the county clerk has preClicted that the shock wave rolling lrom discOveries made in the divorce division is bound to be felt in such departments as the pro- bate division. He predicts a spate of legal actions on wills and bequests by lawyers who learo of the absence of a final decree in· cases where the deceased person may have remarried Outstdt Orange County. Divorcees seeking assura~e on the legality .ol tlieir ·marriage dissolution were being advised today to coosult their lawyers on the issue. COunty worker{ can only confinn' 'the existence or absence of a final decree, they were told. '' Legal action remedying what amounts to an Incomplete divorce should be taken through an attorney, divorcees are being advised. vestigation. , .~ Attorney .General Richard G. Klein· --nieway-~Sjstem works ; tlieTfniei--d1enslfWhet..U1s-repor:ted-to-have~bel~ ___ ~, said, Is that many or those arrested for establish,, the system but den1es havmg WID""(J.ImKJng -illegally entering the country are loaded done so. " ·. . . 'f" onto Border Patrol buses, driven through -Annando yerdugo,.. king:s>m ~~ com- a bole cut in the international boundary ~~ted v~g mac~ m 1'.JU~a, Turns J So Whale of a Time A pod of killer w~a1es fro~cs in the choppy \\•aters of Pu get Sound of! Three Tree Point south of Seattle. The black and \vhite nlammals often grow to~ weig_l!t-of seyeral tons. · GOP Unit Asks McClosl{ey To Quit Republica11 Pa1~ty Hit Twice Dy JOltN \I AL TERZA 01 Ille D1llY 1')111 Staff A :»-year-old unarmed nlan whose notoriety as a master thief and swi ndler 1,·as assertedly reported in the Saturday E\·C'ning Post \.\'as blasted from th(' balcony of a Dann Point motel early Saturday by a fatal . shotgun blast fired by officers lrying ta arres t bin\, Stanley Scott Singley died instantly in the bizarre shooting wh ich took place at 2 a.n1. in the Embarcadero Motel at 24662 Del Prado. Officers at the srene as "'ell ns in - vt•stigalors called i11 later said that Singley, \\'ho had a long rL>eord. asserted- ly dropped both hands to hi s \1aistband before he 1vns shot. The n1an \\'as hit t1Yo sepa rate lin1es . firs\ as he stood.in his room, and the sec- ond ti1nc at the edge of the balcony. No 1\'eapon was found . Although police officials are saying lit· tie about the shooting -pending the res ults of a District Attorney's probe - it was conceded that four detectives from Orange and one from San Clemente were on the premises when the Incident took place. ,.-:-, The offi cers from Orange'l'leld war- rants for S!ngley's arrest on charges of auto theft. trailer theft and the forgery of motor vehicle pink slips. Tho officers r c p q r_t e,d I y entered Slngtcy's room. immediate.Jy~identified themselves Hnd told the man he was un:ler ar rCst. · 1\t that point, said Sheriff's Captain James Broadbelt, Singley allegedl y thrust his arms downward and an officer fro m the Orange department -whom Broadbelt did not identify -fired a single shot rrom a n1ne-millimeter pistol. Singley ~then reported!)' fled from tht! darkened room and officers chased the wonded man to the balcony. The Call·rorru·a Republican-Assembly A . Broadbclt said the grim scene wa.!t -chve support ror -Gov .. Ronald -led ti s·n I ssertedl passed a resolution m· •--heun· Sunday Re , repea tcre as I g ey a y lUld agan s attempt to place his tax reform wheeled and reached once more for his demanding that antiwar congressman ~a~re on the ballot through popular in-waistband: Paul McCloskey (R.ca.Hf.), change his 1hahve. . T"-· t r J bu ksho bl registration tO "any party other than the 1n: single bast o arge c t ew Republican party." -Approval of Nixon's'""strong sfan(I the man from the second floor onto tlJe against amnesty'' ror draft evaders and pavement below. The resolution saicl McCJoskey should deserters. The reso lut ion noted that Broadbelt said that al} the shooting drop his Republican registration l:iecause "Many cl!izens of olher na'tlons 1vould be was~d11ne by invcsUgator,:s lrom Oranae. "he has caused great internal conflict in glad .to serve long periods in our armed fn Sn1i C\ein cntc P\1~11~ Sati!ty'Dl~eClor our paftY'' and' 6eca6.se be has '·'corl-forces for the ·privilege of residing hei'e Cliffoi'd Murray said that hts detective, tinuOOsly criticized Pr'i!sident Nikon'S ef~ " ---H.oger '\Vibcrg . wns along on the arrest forts toward a just peace." -Cond~mnation ~("those people" who "simply because our department had The measure was passed by the 500 have said · returning American POWs traced the ntan 's t Sing I e y 's ) delegates of the organization at it s an· were lying about being tortured bi'. the \l'herenbouts." -nual conventiorr:-The-eRA,-whicl1-clalms orlh-Vietnamese."--------BrOailbclt wi'Jotd-not glve ·any details of 10,000 members, is composed of local -Su~port for Nixon's dismantling of the victim's prior criminal record, but Republican volunteer tmits. the Office of Econom ic OppOrtv.nity. other sources dCscribed the man as "a McCloskey was not available for com-The t~ee-day convention ended with major crime fi gure" whose proficiency ment. l~e election of a ~cw president Dick at forging vehicl" documents aod steal-fence at Tijuana, and placed aboard a ~th inf]uential connections m MUJCO: ll ll weiting OC6. Once in the air, the Mex--. J?hn Alessio, . a San . Diego icans are told that they can avoid a night mllhona!I'e and a buSUless associate of F T kin (:a. ~eep into the interior of.Mex.let by brib· Verdu~ard W. Gilman, southwest Of a g r Other positions taken in various resolu· Kr_u~h of Morgan Hill. He succeeds Dr. ing large quanttti'Cs of cars was known j tiioinsiiiwieirei,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil.lliiiinai vioniiiPriietzer or Thousand Oaks. across the nation. mg the crew. · I · · f th I Th I the I nds t T . th region a commissioner o e m-. e P a.ne n a a 11uana, e migration Service. T1m~s sa1~ and usually about ha1£ the The Times quoted an unidentified 1t1ex1cans mak~ the payof.fs and are free Justice Deparbnent spokesman a s to sneak back into the United States. The saying, "It's all very strange and others are flown to L~n where they try marvelous. and we're now in the process to scrape together enough money to get of trying to determine what the hell's Body Frozen For 18 Years SYDNEY, Au stralia (AP) -A man's body kept under refrigeration in a funeral parlor for 18 years was cremated today with the bodies of his widow and son. The father, Theo Karkower, died in 1955 at the age of 74. His son. Ron , believed in cryogenics -that scientists some day may be able to restore-a frozen body to life -and had his father 's body frozen. Theo Karkower's widow died April 8 after two years in a hospitat.She was 77. Her son, 47 and still a bachelor, died four ' days late~. going on." Gilman, the Times said, told two federal grand juries in California that the removal program was the result of an "unofficial" 1969 arrangement between officials of the United States and Mexico. The Times said American Immigration officials defend the procedure on the ground that shipping aliens into the in- terior of ~_Jxico makes their r~ntry in· to the URfted States more dilticult. ·1us T DESSERTS? SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) -Pay· day will come late ·for U.S. Post Office workers here. • T~ir checks, due Friday, got lost in ti}e mail; • 1 . FormerNewspaper Writer Patrick McNulty / 46, Di~s MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) ~The I&-year- old son of comedian Alail King was ar- rested -at his ·parents' request -for taking one of the family's cars without pennission . 'Andrew King was picked up Saturday night by police and spent the night in a detention pen at the Nassau police head- quarters. He was arraigned Sunday on the Wlauthorized use of an aulo charge and for felonious possession of drugs .. Police said they found 141 grains of marijuana and 41 grains of hashish in the car that belongs to Mrs. King. Police said the youth had taken his fa,ther'~ Rolls Royce without pennission Friday night and had been told not to do il again but took his mother's Pontiac Saturday night. "ll he won't listen to what I tell him, then he has to do what the law says," King said . ''The boy had to be punished and that's what we did." •The KiQg.s Jive in a $300,000 mansion in King's Point near here. Pair Arrested For First Tiine A headline appearing in the Daily Pilot F_riday over the story on the arrest of Robert E. Tilistle and Gary \V. · Hen- derson of Qpsta Mesa· implied that the men bad been arrested more than once. This implication was incorrect. In actual • jPatrlck A. McNulty, 46-year old free lance writer, former . Associated Pre!s newsman and lecturer for UC Irvine Ex· teMion died Sunday of au apparent heart attack. McNulty served for 11 years with the fact. the an-est was the .first such in- Associated Press froi'n 1953 to 1961 in the cident involving the suspects who were The publisher of an air travel "lagazine and resident o! ·Qiiilllrano Beach was striclten altk.havinfl-i"i!l'*l·a sailboat from the ocean Dear, his Mine-:' Mr. McNulty was teaching a .i:Ja~ bl creative writing at UC lzyille tli!J qUarter. · -• ! • University of!iclals today were shocked b)• the news of the audden deatW' of a1niri· described by them a!a "(avonle f- students o{ writing." Since earning a master or fine am degree at ucr ilPl967, McNulty h•d taught classes an d Workshops in non-fiction , feature ·and creative writing. A native of Cleveland , Ohio, be was graduated rrom th UC Berkeley School or Joornallsm In 11111, and sludled al the Sorbonne University lh Paris durin& 11111· SI. • New YIU"k..and Los Angeles bureaus and arrested on -felony warraiits cbarglng r sale of hashish. ' until 1964 as an overseas correspondent The Daily Pilot regrets the headline er- in Europe, China and Africa: ror .... . · • , He wrote for the AP in the fields or '-· ... .. sports, television and ·m 0 v I e en· - • tertiinment and was both a Jeattlre and news wn1er. He was. most noted for Is <;j!Vmlgt of-the A!ierhln War !or the AP, ' a Univ.nlty spokesman recalled. ·He ·was a member of t.&e Overseas Press. Club or America and A!iil., Amcrlcah Press Club of' ·Patt . A rreeJancnvrtter since 19!CI, McNulty had interviewed heads of state including the late Presidents John P. Kennedy and Lyndon B. JOhmon, the Jal~ French President atMlea de Gaulle and Premler Geor.ges PompidoU, the lite Soviet Premier Nikita Khr1W1chev. He 11 su.rvived by his•~, Mary, and five children ol the bom~. 31671 Beach Road, Capistrano Beach. Funeral ar· rangemcnu are pending. Lots to 'Show A1id-Tel~ Jbou . ' "sE.\rrLE~P -There was a ·Jot of showing and Jelling at And SchoOT bcte when a second grader broughl two small plant.! to show hit claM. • · '111e teacher showed the plant•, which were growing in trimmed milk cartons, . to the principal. The principal showed the plonta to the poUce. The l"lice told school authorities their suspicions were correct: The planls were marijuana. An iovesligation wu under way. • ·• WEbCOME TO · OUR HOUSE! Look~fres-h-in Y-our GRIECO linen and Wool SporFCoat ~ $135.00. All Wool (~1 English Twill 'Troustr5 in Five Spring Sh 11de:l-$45.00. Dacron & Cotton button down shirt by Eagle Shirtmakers -'I 3.00 · -'Helps cflreager Ntwport 8t1ch, Wil 1hirt, Shtnnt" 0•~•. P•1•dt111, l1~1woo~, W•it Co,,.i;t --------- • • • ' ..... • •• - • I. 4 ' DAILY PILOT wltla Tom lll'plalne .(_ .. :.:.· .... ' • • TOrnadoes Devastate. Town.s-in Texas " 8 Persons Dead • 'Gettillg Away'- ~~ Harde~ By-Utdled~Proff-IJllttutionol---it-affil.kWln( tilm. His wile, iiho·was with Killer tornadoes raided Texas !tom the him at the time was hospitallzed in Panllandlo lo lbe Gull ~ ~y, shock. -..., causmg death and· Injury in lllieO clues The patrol car WI!' overturned, but lhe and destroytni bomee, cars a n d men inside sw-vlved with only minor in- airplanea. · .. juries. ., , · • At least eight persons were killed ind_.. Twisten 4Jso hit Corsicana, In North QUIET WDTERN FR01''TS: Early on to the late · weekend . there was a small flurry o{ a('tt.tvity in Balboa that let ~\se to belief lhat student throngs might once again be visiting our shoreline this sPring vacation. It was..apparenUy a false labor pain. What happened was that down in Balboa, the fo~ces of law and order came upon an apartment house that was vastly overcrowded with student bodies. Additional to the bodies, the officers dJscov~red some pot and evidence of alcoholic beverages. Now, If you took that apartment house in Balboa and muhtplied it by, say, 3,582, you would have the approximate volume of business that could be ex- pected for the forces of law spring vacation of yesteryear. during a 111US TIIE SINGLE discovery of allegedly JOOse and wanton living by a group of students left police a bit ap- prehensive. Could it be that those old wild days of spring vacations upon our coastline were abc>Ut to return? All appearances tOday suggest that the answer is. no -no chance. I aR:lee with this ana lysis on the basis of the Bedroom Window Test. This is a personal system L have tor determining the nature and extent of spring vacation in our neighborhood. Our bedroom window faces the sea and is pointed directly at Coast tfighway. In Ei:ister Weeks past, the sea breezes have wafted into this window the late evening sounds of screeching tires, roaring ex· haust pipes and whoops and holl ers of youth into the spring night. THIS YE AR -AS in most recent springs - it was so silent ou~jhere tha t you could hear the cricke ts chirping. I coW4 eveo hur the water dripping in the kitchen sink. 1 mean, it ~as quiet. UPIT......_ THIS WAS ONE OF 50 HOMES TWISTER DESTROYED IN PLAINVl'EW, TEX. fortunately, Family W11 In California and Escaped In jury Jn Storm ~~~~~~~~ Jewish Passengers Pray; Ship Sails Under Guard --. LONDON (APJ -Passengers aboard the iiner Queen Elizabeth 2 prayed today for a safe voyage to Israel on a Passover cruise that defied the possibility of.-Arab. terrorist ,attacks. As the vessel stea1ned to its initial port of cal1 1 Lisbon, Portugal, the passengers -almost all Jewi!>h -began their first full day aboard with a religious service in a ballroom converted · into a synagogue. .. from the ship said the husky young ·Britons, with close cropped haircuts, were' easily distinguished frorn the large- . ly middle-age regular passengers. The generat f.eel~g on board was Uiat _ no terrorist. had penetrated the .security, but rumors persisted that terrorists might try to sma sh an explosive-laden motorboat or airplane into the Queen. Nixon Return · Hand-carried WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Nixon's tax return has beeri filed by special delivery to the commissiODer of the Int e rn a I .Revenue Service. The White House said the hand delivery, traditional fOr presidents, was made Thursday, well in ad- vance of today's midnight filing deadline . Nixon Announces 19 others were injured. ' Central Texas, where a g r o c e r y A huge tornado trapped motorists On warehollse and • aeveral homes were Interstate 35 ln eouthem Tezaa near destroyed .and two persons injured, and Pearsall Sunday evening. The twiSter in the .Gulf of Mexico oU..COi:pus Christi, crossed the highway smashing cars lo near·JWckport. pieces and killing live penoos. Nine other persons were injured in the· storm. Half a mile of highway pavement was dug up. IN PLAINVIEW, in the Texas Panhan- dle, a twister struck before dawn, kWlng a child fleeing for a stonn cellar and a news reporter in his car following a police vehicle. An oil well worker was killed in Rockport, on the southern Tezas coast, late Sunday when high winds blew an oil rig on top of him. . ~ The persons killed ' in the Pearsall twister were f0W1d alongside the freeway among pieces of cars. "Most of the dead people we found had their clothing sbipped off them by the wi nds," said state patrolman Bill Rowan." "We found parts or cars -doors, seats, fenders -for a mile along the highway, but we can't tell bow many cars Were wrecked. -- "We have this stack of purses, but they ·are all barren, torn open by the ~do and emptied," be said.--·-_ _<...._ __ Republican Would Back Quiz Arrests ~ WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Charles Mathias (R-Md.), says "if we're forced to the last resort," he would support the Senate arrest and trial of any White H~ aide who refuses a subpoena to testify before the W a t e r g a t e in- vestigating committee. Mathias said President Ni.J:on has defied the spirit of the ConstiMioo by Jhi~-presidential aides from coo· , jffeiSIOiuil ijueatiooliig in the Walergate case. '!be scanilal, Mathias said In an ln- terY"iew,-=-has--become_ua-aerious em- TJIE PEARSALL tornado also struck barrassment f0r the Republican party the Frio County Airport, , where 13 • · · a stain that does not wash away." airplanes were destroyed. It killed a TIIE ~1ARYLAND SENATOR went number of cattle along the way, leaving beyond other GOP critics when he en- dead carcasses strewn along tither side dorsed the last-resort arrest and trial for of a rut in the earth. contempt or any White House aide who There , at a service conductecf by 10 rabbis. they prayed for a safe voyage. On Sunday, almost as soon as the vessel sailed there were !he usual lifeboat and fire drills. But there were also bomb drills. On one occasion crew members were s ummoned by loudspeaker to a bomb search of all the cupboards. close ts and cabins aboard. The Plainvie w twister destroyed 25 refuses a subpoena to testify undfr oath . homes and two businesses and damaged bout the w t t bu · d I d Europ. ean 'Grand -.4o. other homes. u first •.truck the west • .a erg• e ggmg an re ate Many of the passengers said they felt secure behind the protective screen -set up by the Cunard Line and British offi- .cials, who put special guard units aboard. British rtavy and air foree units are tracking the ship. New of activities on the ship reached London in i'e'porta to British newspapers and via)l)iJ!"l<Hlxire telepoone. . "You hear people talk about the secur1~ ty but I think the suspense is over," said Jacob Heonfl, a 23-yeaN>ild "~; .from New York. City.! "P·~~ ~ joying it as a nonrlal cruise.' ~ .. Among those taki ng the cruise were 20 to 30 British marine conunandos , out- fitted in civ ilian clothes. But reports . allegations of Republican political es-s1de. of t0\.\'1\, where Kevin Lewellen, 2, pionage and sabotage during t h e Loud bangs r.evcrberated around the $hip at another point, -making some Tour' • Ill passengers think, for a .;noment, that WASIDNGTON (UPI) _ President fear of terrorist attack had become a Nilon plaris 8 trip to Europe this fall reality· · which White :soose sources say will take But the .explosion~ were set_ :~f_.by him to Great Britain France West security ofhcers testing emergency: Pf<r -t~iny and Italy. ' ' cedures. _ . . NixOn revealed JH,ans for the journey The Dagship of .the Cunard Lines sailed SUnday when he·t.alked to reporters after !roll> ~tJ\tmp~n. J!!l.. S~' Jllh.;11111 ·~ ''iilllte lloulO< f<ligious ...-vice. He passe~gers ~ea~ 19r'»ui ceie&i"1!!" ,Of ~bed it .. .-"a grand tour" but did ls!ael s .2Sth anruv~ary ~JI. ~tiqor and nOtim~ntlon specific dat-es. with a small army of special ~ to Bel also did not mention the countries - protect, them from Arab terrorists. he would visit, but aides said they would and his parents were caught ·before" they presidential campaign. could reach a stonn cellar. The child was kilted and his father was -Sen. Sam -J. •Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), hospitalized with serious injuries. chairman of the Senate investigating News editor Davtd c. Bryant, so, qf the committee, bas suggested the i:msi bility Plainview Daily Herllld, was in bii car of such a confrontation. traveling 50 yards behind "a patnil car .. 1 -~ -·T's lhe •--t -··rt and when the twister,otruc. t-his car,..,....,'"' •~•a •~ = ·~ ... -r-u if we're forced to ther lAst resort, I would * *-* . support it," Mathias .said. "! think there I . are some necessll'V·llel'Wl In advance." ~ :\~ ·~ -Stormk':lfµ.,· m. nUit ~,sa;:.t~di=~ ~:...'~~ , --~T promlse"ihrough wl)lch prealdents and Floode. d Areas · coogmsmen have averted traumatic · confrontations. Thus. by the Bedroom Window Test, you ean presUme that we .are in ror another quiet and peaceful spring unless there is some dramatic turnaround in current-·student mores. -------- -include-the-largest--nations-of--Westem ------~ -Asked-whether he "believes-the-White - Few will lament the passing or the stu- dent hordes of yesteryear. Maybe the merchants who rent surf riders or peddle frozen bananas. But few others will mourn. PERHAPS TIIE PASSING of the youth invasion is a credit to the advance of our civilization here along this best of all possible coasts. Law and order has at last come to those locations just easterly of the high tide line. Vacationing youngsters have always had a penchant for getting away from it all ·over Easter \veek be!ore they return 'to the classroom grind on the stretch drive toward summer. 'Mley can't get 'away from much around here anymore. They tried Palm Springs and that lasted only a couple of seasons. LATEST REPORTS have it that Palm Springs police are closing off their can- yon cam p.sites and sending the kids home. The same thing is happen ing along the Colorado River. Some dispatches have indicated the- vacationing young people have drifted of£ to Mexico or up into the mountains in areas like Big Bear. . ' ~;... :...._ EUrope. ;,$ • "'--?--f ~ White House sources also revealed Sun- U,I Ttl.itl .. day that Soviet Comrrtt:mist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev will come to Washington in late June fOr talks with Nixon. THIS MEETING will follow up the summit meeting Ni~n and Brezhnev held in Moscow last May which resulted in strategic a r m s limitation treaties and agreements for expanded trade and cultural exchanges. Nixon also said Sunday that he would meet with French President Georges Pompidou before eaibark:ing on his Euro- pean trip. He indicated_ these talks might not take place in Washington. The President apparently has tried to turn his attention in foreigft affairs to Europe foll owing the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Vietnam . He· s&ld recently that ''this is the year of Europe." Most of his "foreign vjsitors this year have been from Euro·pe and the Middle East. President Giulio Andreotti of Italy will _arrive in Washington Tuesday for an of- ficial visit. West Gennan Chacellor Willy Brandt plans two days of conferences with Nixon in Washington starting fl.1ay 1. VICKSBURG, Miss. (UPI) -A line of heavy thunderstorms churned through waterlogged Mississippi todaY. with, flash flooding reported in Jackson• and other areas. But weather-officials said the rain was not expected to have any major·effect on the backwater flooding in the Missilsippi Delta north of Vicksburg where several hundred families have been evacuated during the past three weeks. "This rai n isn't going to help_ any, that's for sure," riyer '.foreca.ster C. J, O'Brien said. • ' ·House is engineering a Watergate coverup, Mathias replied that the five men caught inside · Democratic head- quarters at the Watergale "had oo them a large number of newly-printed $100 bills with consecutive serial numbers. "No one has ever said where they got that money. No one bas eve r said who gave them money, for what purpose they were given . it. This one fact railes a whole series of necessary questioos. Until questipns.,gf tlijlt sort are answered, we. C1M9t •Y we know the story of the Watergate,.." F""...._..... _________ ~--~----~ •• CQstly Goodby? I Proxmire "Raps .General's Rites WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. William Proxmire (l>-Wis.) rom· . plained today that the Air Force apparently spent "'tens or' thou· ~ sands" of dollars for an elaborate retirement ceremony for a gen-r.1 era!. l The Defense Department denied the charge. . All this suggests that modem living keeps creeping into the recreation spOts oC our land . People keep looking for places to go to get a\1ray from it all. Pretty soon, the aMWer may be that you can't get there from here. QUEEN ELIZABETH II RECEIVES HEAVY SECURITY AS IT LEAVES Security Follows Fe1r1 of Posslblt P1lestlne Extremist Att1ck1 DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Proxmire, a petsistent critic of military spending, as ked the ~' defense ~ to -estimate the CQ5t for a retirement ceremony at · Malmstrom Air fyrce Base, Mont .. ·in February for Maj. Gen. William ·S. Harrell. He said the Pentagon also should justify the expense for t hese "elaborate ceremonies." Dtlivery of tht Daily Pilot i5 guarantttd Vacation Trave-1-siuggish ....... y.J'rillll ,1 II '" .. llOI lllYI Ylllr ... lllt' tY Ji• '·"'·• (Ill Intl J9Vr (otJrwnt--1- 111 ,,... 11 ~. (1111 '" likn '1fllll .11•11-m. S1ftll1l1y IM SIMOlitY• II .,.. M Ml nctlvt YIU'I' r•ttY ~ ' 1.m. k U1f'll1r. or I 1.m. S1111ll1y. c111 1nd • c .. r wrn IH ,,..,,,., te Jiii, C1ll1 1rt ltklfl Y*"lll If 1,m, PROXMIRE SAID he understo()(j Harrell's retirement induded -.reocktail party, banquet, change of command ceremony and parade I ae~ rev!ew involving m~re tha~ two dozen planes, and a reception'. The aerial display, lie said, included "a flyby of 12 F106s and 16. FIO!s, B57s, F104s-llld T33s flown by Air Force and Canadian• pilots ·Ulat must have cost tens of thousands of dollars." • Ttltphonts Tb~ Pentagon sai~ a "~utine and normal ceremony" was hel<f M•n o ... ,. c•1t111v Ar••• ...... "1-m1 at the time of Harrell s retirement. It said there was no parade no Hm11w.11 """''"'"" •••c11, M flyby and that there was a n<>-host dinner instead of a 1ban~ei. It "\ Cloud y Skies , Cool Day s Cut Do1vn Resort Busi1iess Ternperat•res AIDa!!Y All1nt1 Hltfl Lew ,r. ,, •2 ~ " 9Dtl0n jf •• llutf•lo 11.5 .. CMfluton 61 41 "'-"· ~ ~.. . ~,, .11 riall ~ ... -"""" .. .." ,\,) o.trol~t,I ~ :~.·-~ D "°' k'.1nw.-OTY " 31 ,..,.,, Lo• Vitt 14 SI Lim. octi ,n, 61 1.tt kl'.!:.. ... 7J ,. Mltwl\llr.tt . • ft7 "• .CO Ml11t1t~lt·St.,1ul fl s• .3$ . " " ·~...c·t·~··~-t=·=··~t.:·~~-i1 \O• AIH>lLt• ::: :a;.':M ~1 : -"""" OIY "i-1!--rJl-~h"'i u~1. tt ,, V-Hi..,,::;.:i; p •• ,. _j), r""· ti 1: fuct~ (llY ' s7' • D ,,·-~.':c1teo •r ... ll.S.S•-rw ·" "' "' T" -e"'" ,_,,. " "" I'll tlliMf s.rvk • """'' •11clv0,,.._ -''' ~ H1wfll, """ ... 1f LI,.., Tn. .. r ... 1111W111 rlOOt'*I 11111 1'Wn wt• ll ., MIMJ. $.0 . _, Uf'I wt.U,.l IOIOC.UI. ' 8flf ""'"'1'"19' .... ·· .... j4t.lttt said Harrell's only retirement gift was a framed board on w ch was ' •lte~nct do...,, lo SQ,000 perion1 $~ llft (lelfttnlt, C1,ft~1 ... ltKll, <1av. 11\0uah 1ueqwro• ••Id "~11 ••n JM111 c.,..~ ..... 01"" 1"e1111, mo'Jrited one squadron patch from each of the units he had com- t1re-1k1rs" 111r1ch!d .arne lD.000 111rftl'"t Sevll'I UtVM. Lfltflf Nlllltl .... tn-+IH l d d • h' !·~ · t 1o s..,111 111v btktit1. man e lll is cr.::r~ asSignmen . '" \'~'' • nNr·r ot t •llPled ..mtn •lllhor '"' lfffJted ··~et"ll rtvn«9d .-.::============:::''.....J:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~ vcvllll oersons 'J; tr131>1ssl1111 11 1111 de$trt rftOrl of 11\Qultr C111YOn 1111r P11m sorr11111. Tll 1 ~•••· or11y 1b0\lt 30 -""" .... bt'lft l1trnl"d IWIY so l•r •• tr.. C•rl'l'"d lhcrt 11 for btlow rKtnl yH.-., offlcl~ll 11!(!. TM l!lgll i.mper1tur1 In Lot Anoelfl $undlY Wll U . How..,,.,. I w1nnll'PCI trtfld In SOUtNr" C11l1ornl1 ll'll"t' WIYHe iMNI' llKlllon v.t. . Tile llklll l..,.,lltf"ll11t1 If! Lh Anotlt1 TuttdtY I• fllllfl:ttd to rl'109 f!'olTI 61 ID n wlll> low-1 ... tlM mid 5111. TN """""'' wlll l llO "'""" ~ •• ttfn. cit·1111r" r~Jch Into IM low 10t. Tiie 1no1mt1101 wlll conll-to l'llw D•'•"' •11l1'1Ch Ill tll'l'll•, !WI ftmcltfl!U,_.. will rl~ •ll""11fy wlttl llloh• ITIDll1y In !I'!!' ••!>Oft $0$, Cou t•I We•ther Pl"IY CIOUltY tod.y. Vtrilblt 'fl'll'lfl 111•"' 111d Mond119 hour1 blcomtnv wn1111r lO"'"to TS kllOI• ln •"--• fOIUly ll'ld TUHC11y. HIOll todl'( low 10t. Coetll'I ltm~ftllf'M r111111 from U to-41,..l~ '-PW•lvr.t "'"" 1"*"' 1'0 to to. Witt!' mnw1tlll"t .. S••· "'"""· Tides MDfrloAY Second fllOh •..•• ·-·· t :21 !toM. S,O Second low . 2:0t P.M. O.t TUISDAY t"rrle frt, lJr.fRf~ C. LUDWI& ¥--APN/t.-/T -. . S-ttllClO:L BO E~ECTION • I Pint 1'11;11 .•••••••.•••.• t1ll 1.M. •.I Finl loW , .•....••••• J:Ol 1.m. .. .4 S«Orld lllOl'I . • . .. . .•• , . I: u o.rn. J.O $«:0ftd tow • • • I • t :JS ~f'l'I, l.J '\-• S\11'1 l lMt J:tt 1.m... ht'& •:2S 11.m. ..... ,.,.., ur.. ""Dr, L ...... °"""'9 f , M. °"""""". 1J CMtlJlt Oii Mir, \.l'lllM a..o MOOll •1* •:•p.rn. ...... :Jl jt.l:t • .0-----------~------- . ' • .i _I •• .. • Oran-de· Eoa•t ·@!t EDITION • • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks --• --¥0L 66r NO. 106, 3-SECTIGNS;-'46 PAGES M0NOA-'Y', APRIL lb, 197~ H -TEN-CENTS • ' • BarfJor District Voting -· -Turn·out· • Predicted Light By WILLIAM SCHREmER • 01 TIM OloilJ Pllet Sl•ff Election officials are predicting an ab- normally light turnout Tuesday as voters go to the polls to fill four seats on the Newport-Mesa School District Board of Trustees. Predictions call for Jess than 3tl percent -of the 71,000 registered v.oters to cast ballots. One official of the Orange County Registrar of Voters Office said today the turnout may even drop below the record ·1ow .of 18 perCent several years ago becauU Easter vacation.r, "We·hav'e been· getting re~RI nµmbers of absentee ballots but unle'Ss it picks up a Jo.t more, we won't reach near 30 per- * * * Coast A rea Polls Open At 7 a.m. Voting begins at 7 a.m. 'l'yesday for two ... ts on .tbl Cout Cmiliamlty Col· lege District Board of Trus~•· _ The boards govci'ns both tlie campuses 'of Golden West College In· Huntington Beach and Orange Coasi College In cOSta i1esa . cent," William..Cook, field worker in the registrar's office, said. The 68 polling places in the district, which covers all of" Newport Beach, Costa Mesa 's Area Seven are running sliver of south Santa Ana, will be open from..7 a,m. to 8_ p.m. Only two of the four trustee seats on the ballot are contested. ·Incumbents Arthur F. ThompsOn in Newport Beach is Area FiYe. _and R@erick ~ac~ian in _ Costa Mesa is Area Seven are nmning unopposed. Three candidates are on the ballot in 'Frus~ee-Area Four,.which represents-all~ of Newport Beach east of Upper Newport Bay. They include: · -1bomas Caley,. 43,. 2007 Kewamee Drive, in Corona de! Mar. Casey, the in· cumbent in Are"a Four, is a banker in Santa Ana. · -Margaret Setterholm, 18, 2601 Way Lane, Corona del Mar. Miss Setterholm is a recent graduate of Corona · del Mar High School and bas been-active in many conservation groups. -~ -James· K. ~JtJ!arz, 43, 2910 Third Ave., Corona del Mar. Schwarz is a teacher at Balsa Grande High School in Garden Grove. Only two names will be on the ballot in Colla .Mll.l!'A Pe8.!fto,.w.bi<:b coma. Mesa Venli and llolMI to the east and north of Orange Coast Cojlege. There is one legal write-in candidate in Area Two. . -, ..; .<>ma.-• r•t•JJ. 916 Coronado . Dr., Costa _lo!• ~btlrgey is corn-· munications direCtor for the city of Costa • ":.'F.7 ': - . . . . . _... Near Town .Taken By N. Vietnam ese WAS!UNGTON (AP) -U.S. bombers began hitting targets near a village in Laos ovemril by Communist forces, Pen- tagon sources disclosed today. The · sources said both B52s and fight er planes were being used in strikC"s near the town 'of Tha Vieng south of the PlaiCle de Jarres. There had been no American air strikes Long Beach Navy Station To Be Closed By Tbe Associated Press ' . The Long Beach Naval Station will be shut down by June 30, 1974, and its 63 ships and 20,000 crewmen reassigned as part of a $1 billion cutback, the Long Beach Ind~pendent Press Telegram reported today. The newspaper says that 44 ships 'viii be sent to other ports and 19 ·will be decommissioned. There are 500 sailors assigned to the station plus another 1,500 civilians, • . tol~.JW!llil· • Over Laos since Feb. 23, but neither had fighting in that country been heavy since the Vietnam cease-fire "'as signed in Pnris Jan. 'l:T. The U.S. Pacific Fofces Command in Ha\vaii said that at the request of the Royal Loatian government, the Ameri- can plane~ conducted operations over Laos and Cambodia. No further comment was made by the command. Pentagon' spokesman Jerry \V, Friedheim said North •Vietnamese forces led by tanks overran a town defended by Royal Laotian forces near the Plaine de J..a rres in Laos within the last several hours. -- He described it as "a major violation of the cease-fire." U .s. bomPel"s.Jlal' been hlttillg...cam- bodian targets for six weeks. There have been no American air strikes in Vietnam since the cease-fire was signed Jan. 27. Friedheim said there has been heavy fighting near the Laotian town . of Tha ·Vieng for the past few days. He could provide no details on the size of the Viet· namese and the Pathet Lao Communist force which occupies the town. There has been a separate cease-fire declared in Laos and there has been relatively little fighting there in res:ent weeks. -· - In the Vietnam cease-fire agreement effective Jan. 28. tbe United States, South Vietnam, North Vietnam and the Viet Cong agreed to end all military activities in Cambodia and Laos, · withdraw all Most operations at the tong Beach troops and not use the two cotintries as 'N..-al Base, which coo~tea Navy and 11aging. areas f1ll; altacb .--... ~ acUvilles In f'9' Anf!!jes; qtonp, A cease-fire JIU ogreed on In Laos Rtteralde and San BernatdiM counUes, Feb. 22, but there has been no truce will also be c)osed along wilh the Long agteement signed in Ca111bodla. The Be~ch M@rine barracks. United States ,11nd South Vietnam have Polls will remain· open until 8 j>.m. to H --· :..:a now--the-district 's-183,344-registered,. voters tO cast their ballots. A light turn- out is forecast. M~CharleS L. "Chuck" Bridges, 38, 3105 l Ith Bour Dilena~ Femheath Lane Costa Mesa. ~ridges ~--· _ , . _ -. _. . -an msurance company executive. ~~TgU-e-tire-Mb:rsaUdOh, WSS-C~-Mesa;--illastrates-tbe-Iast- -Elizabeth M. Lllly, 208 Dartmouth minute plight of many who put off thrur mcome tax calculations. She Place, Costa M~. Mrs. Lilly is a is surrounded by tax forms and adding machine tape but seems un- Naval base operations to be shut down charged that Hanoi is infiltrating troops include the finance office, anti-submarine and war materiel into Csmbodia and that _ -war-Care -school;-·motion-picture-training --North~--Vietnamese-·troops -still -are--- "unit and the hospital auxiliary ship fighting beside the Cambodian Khmer Repose. Rouge forces opposed to the Phnom Penh However, the newspaper added, 1,000 government. . ...,, ' Eligibile to vote are persons registered in Zeal Beach, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa . Newport Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster and several unin.corporated county areas. The can~idates .vying for their ballots are: -George Rodda Jr., incumbent, Corona del Mar, on the board for the "' past lour years. Rodda is preSldent of his own Management Engineering corpora- tion past president of the Board of TruStees, and past chairman of the com- munity college section of the California School Board Association. . .. -Donald A. Strauss, Newport Beach a 16-year resident or Orange CountY and vice-president of empt9ye relations for Beckman Instruments. Strauss served four years on the old Newport Beach Elementary School District board and subsequently seven years on the Newport-Mesa Unified school !listrict board. -Worth Keene, Seal Beach, In- registered nurse and fonner Newport· perturbed through it all. Perhaps it's becau._se she has until midnight Mesa school board member. She is the to make today's filing deadline. -· only legal write-Jn candidate in the district, according to the registrar. A spokesman at the registrar's office said today those wishing to vote for Mrs. Lilly must write her np.me in the vacant (See TURNOUT, Page I) Socialite's Share to Be $1.9 Milliori Newport Beach socialite C J a u d i a Hutscin Hirsch has been awarded nearly $1.9 million as her share of community property valued at between $4-0 and $50 million during "the four-month trial of her divorce from racing tycoon Clement L. 0 Buddy'1 Hirsch.of Corona 'del Mar,.it was learned today. -· Pre-school Bunnies Had Hippity-hoppity Help There will be ,no bunnies· this ·~aster _ Mrs. Pell figures it ~as a. couple of for the children at iastbluff Preschool, kids who ·took them and .is hoping some 2601 ViSta Del Qro, in Newport Beach. neighborhood mother will · wonder how Oliver and Henry were stolen Sunday those two rabbits got into her boy 's afternoon. bedroom. -"Somebody came over the fence and took them ," said Mrs. William Pell, who operates the·nursery school. Sbe said she knows they jll!iit didn't run away, because their cage is gone too. "Oh, sometimes they'd disappear, we'd find them in trash cans and everywhere, but this time _they're gone," Mrs. Pell said. "Maybe there's a chance them •back," she said . we'll· get 71 Tons of Pot Gone men will be added to the 6,500-man Long The ~Communist Path.e~ Lao and Beai;:h Naval Ship Yard operation to North V~etnamese troops with mortar offset the closing of Hunter's Point and artillery s~pport . overran three Shipyard in San Francisco. government )lOS1tions 1n northeastern Pentagon officials said today that 274 L~o:i over the weekend, . a Defense military bases soon will be closed or cut Mllllstry spokesman,_ Brig. G e n . back. A full list of the affected bases was Thongphan Knoksy, said tod~y. . 'not givenfto newsmen immediately. av~fia~~!~alty reports were immediately The De ense· Depar~erit~ also-plans to The spokesman Silid North Vietnamese close !he-Hunters Pornt Shipyard ~t S~n troops supported by mortars overran two _Francisco by June 30, 197~. California frontal outposts of the government moun- membei:s of C.Ongress were inform~ to-tain base at Buam Long, 18 miles north day. (The Boston Naval Yard also w1U be of the Communi~t occupied Plain of Jars. ~losed.) . . Another strategic deending position at Defen.se. f Utbacks also include ~losing Ban Tha Vieng, 100 miles. northeast of of ~anul~n _AFB by Dec. 31, dr~pp1ng _all Vientiane, also was overrun and govern- fly1ng ac~1vlly at Alameda Afr_ Station ment troops retreated some five miles and . leasrng the , Long Beach Naval across the Nam Ngip River southeast or St_at1on and moving the fleet to San • Tha Vieng, the spokesman said. Diego: . . Earlier the acting defense minister, Cal~orn1_ans were informed t_hat ~he n~t Sisouk Na Champassak, said a n~w regi- reduct1on JR per~o.nnel m Cahfom1a Will ment of North Vietnamese troops moved include. ~,_800 military and more than to the Tha Vieng area and posed an im- 4,000 c1v1lians. mediate threat to the town. Some civilian personnel at various sta- tions will be offered transfers. Strike in Third Week I cumbent, retired postmaster of Seal Beach. Keene served on the college boai'd for nearly 12 years and has been its presdident three times. Recent1r he Was appointed chairman of a national committee developing TV programing for ethnic and minority education. -Fr a a c e 1 O. Mann, Huntington l3each, mother of five_ children and prac. ticifig -medical-management consultant. She served three years on the board of ihe Southern California HQ&Pital Credit Maiiagers Association and is the curreht viCe-president of-the ~South Coa$ Neurological -Medical GrQUp. Judge Frank Domenichini's division of the couple's assets and bis formal ending of ·their seven-year marriage will be macie public later, Orange County Superior Court officials said: He has Ordered Hll'SCh, 59;-to-pay Mre. Hirsch, 45, a total of $8.50 a month for support ()f the couple's two sons, Case y, 9, and Christopher, 7. HirSch must also pay Chfistopbet's monthly tuition at the Martian School and the younger son's bills up ro $800 .... a month. -- Oliver and Henry are the second pair of bunnie1 to be abducted from the scbool in !l!e ·gast couple of m911tbs.-· "SorheOne took· Marshmallow and Elridge about six-week·ago," sfie said . . Chilly Weat~er _ MEXICO CITY (AP) -Mexican authorities have burned 71 metric tons of marijuana since ,Feb. 9, \the· attorney general's official said. The marijuana, eonfiscated. in the Mexican antinarcotics campaign, was (festroyed in seven burn- ings in different parts or the country. The closing of Hunters Point Shipyard alone will affect 5,500 civilians. Some .work is to be transferred to Puget Sound in Washington and some to Long Beach and other private yards in the San Fran- cisco Bay area. Flying activity at Alameda Naval Air (See SIUPYARO, Page%) HONOLULU (UPI) -The s?rike by the Hawaii State Teachers Association entered its third week today after in- fonnal discussions were held between the union and state bargair,ers during the weekend. The etrike was still on even ' though Hawaii's school system began a one-week spring vacation . Strauss is challenging Rodda· in Trustee Area 5 (Newport Beach) and Mann is challenging Keene in Trustee Area I (Huntington· Beach and Seal Beach). The terms are for four years. Although the candidates serve in· (See ELECI'JON, Page I) DOGGONE-PIL,OT AD FINDS FIDO Judge Domenichini refused, to order Hirsch · to pay spousal support. And he has additionally ordered Mrs. Hirsch, who takes over sole ownership of her home at 30 Harbor Island, to pay her own attorney's fees. . Bal . Week Beaches Barren Testimony during the trial and the cost By JOHN ZALLER . Th i estimate offered by her lawyers -John e on Y weekend statistic u p down here to say the week," be added. K . Trotter Jr. of Santa· Ana .and David ,Of ftlrt OtllY , .... •1•" significantly over the first weekend of "We may have seen quite 8 few of those Hamey of Los Angeles _ indicates that The ma~iv~ youth invasions-et Easter Easter Week last y~ wa& the arrest b W k .... barely t rted b poll over t e weekend because '"1be weather thOse fees will take abaut ~.ooo of her ee . t""'" were ' •memory in ra e repo Y ce. . -$1,882,'13 award. • Newport BeaCb-oye(-"the weekend;;._ City A year ago police arrested 43 persons wasn't good for going to the beach." Mrs. Hirsch is given~ of her t.,_vo lifepards reported· •11fidersized beacb for the-first weekend of Bal Week and HWe're not doing aDythlng like the sqns who both now live with her at the crowds and Hartx>r._irea )fterCbanla said t~is )'ear the figu~ was 65. Trank ac-business we used to do," said Gary Harbor Island home. She if also allowed . they ~w only !IOaU ~.In '!ales c1dents on compantlvel)I deserted streets Fi;her, manager of the Jolly Roger Doggone it! to retalD a one-fifth interest' in HitBCh's volume. were down a ~rt. restaurant, also on--&lboa Island. "Where has that litUe dog gone?" ,., valuable "Be¥ Btand" Ranch . Lifeguatda, who were braced ror an , Most of th·e·incidents' were minor. They ''This weekend was just nonnal for us llere·s a quick way to fina~ out: . B~'ber fahares in a ·long list 'of o!her onslaught of vaca.tloning you{b, sent their ~ocluded a drunk who got hi! hClrw:f caught for this, time of year/' he &aid. "Actually, WllJTE male poodle with • Hirsch asaets, including his pet food and men hOme parly Wilen only, 15,000 ~"" . m. a .P'?"I t~ble .o~ a bar In jll_c Fadclen . I like It better ihis way. We still do a re ears nteds cll · • ---racing interestJj8tt"cortVerted""to~sh-~W~~~Wtekeod..of~Bll-SqUaie7and.'.a--teenage--gi~-l;--wJ\o'....refu~-good-'btlsiness-Hk~ we-do'lanrweekend, fve!'rin~ black jewel~,--by Judge Dornenlchini In a, summatron w .. k. '~d, by cofnpal)son, . pleas to stop riding her bike around pie and t.h.ere's no problem with huge crowds Jar & ffea collir nt.K.BIHr:-that gives btt just over a: million. ~ch ·attendance m Newport,.._ was nef-'-on.an Eastbh1ff tennis court,_,. __.. Jammtng up everything.'!_ School (Phone ~umber): Judge Domenichini ordered her , estimated at 1~.0Q9. · ~ Harbor !lrea' merchants catering :to "Our business was abQut the same as it ' however; to ~ Hir1ch $1'*,502 for ex· · Chilly wind!, water temperatures that beach traffic reported slightly lncrea§ed has been for rhe last few weekends." sai~ · 'Ibis dog W&ll gone for a wett. The first pcndftun on llie Harbor llPlana home and dipped• to _ M degrees, and ~threat of sales th!\ .weekend. bill no big Jun\ps ~ jlob Snyder .Qf,,!h~ Balboa bland Ferry. , cloy the ad appdared, tbe owner got~ call to r:e!'".Y'_ blrn fH,185 for his liilerest in r>Jn &mdiy were held ,...poMible for 1lie coul<L be attrllmtt!d"ttlter W:eek. Boating activity in Newport Harbor • and~ttre-d91 was found. If 'Y~'" lh~• nn -the ~ewpilrCBeacb small beac~ turnout. , · Wiliad a good weeke'M, tiiif nowhere was reported slightly above average for something; find It 'fast with • DAILY restaurant operared by Mrs. HlnOh's "It used to be that Bal Week by 1!$011 near wlrat U used to be," said Pere the weekend. Out in JO.mil .. an·heur PILOT c!a•ilied want a!!, The number to paren\s. • . would atrract big crowd•," 911id a city Juteau, manager ·or Mr. Mlddy'll, the · winds, five aallooats capsized, four broke call -&IU678. Her fl.t million lbue llso-lndudes ttreguard . "Now we need good 'weather largest Cift·sbOp on Balbal"tsland. to0se ~ th<ilt moorlng1, and one was (Seo HIRSCH, !'qt__!)_ J~st to get normal crowds." "'I)>trt are some people who sUll come dismasted~orncials said. ' . r ' • , ' • Orange Coast Weather Low clouds and fog are expected tonight and early morning bu! weather otherwise will be mostly _ sunny and a touch warmer. Highs, · 1 63-13, lows ~. INSIDE TODAY Devastating tornadoes have killed eighi persons i1l Texas. The &torms were so violtnt tliat t1ie11 tore-cars---tO' btts .. that'°Wer trnpped on freewo11.' See story, Pagt4. - • , • • • • • • • • • • • • • i • • • • - ·' MAP OUTLINES TRUSTEE AREAS IN ~EWPQllT-MESA DISTRICT Conte1t1 for Seats "'9 Ar91s 2 and 4 to Be Decided Tuesd1y FromP-.gel TURNOUT IN HARBOR ••• spot under Area Two on the ballot and then put the vote mark next to It. . 'Ibe regfatrar will accept four versions of Mrs Liiiy's name. including El\z.abelh M. Lilly, Elizabeth Lilly, Belly M. Lilly, or Betty Lilly. Arry others -including " rs. Lilly" will be rejected. The campaign for the four seats has , Sclimitz Looki1ig .For Teacher's Post in ldalio been relatively lackluster since it :started a month ago. The only "issue" injected into the cam- i)aign came at the eleventh llour 1a~t '"'eek when an anti·jet noise gro~p .1n Newport Beach cha llenged the can- didateS to .take ·a stand on jet noise created by planes at the Orange County Airport. Only two candidates -Schwarz and Miss Setterholm -agreed strongly \Yllh the Airport Action Association (AAA ), \Yhich claims seven district schools are suf(ering·from the jet noise. S. Viets · • Defending· Cambodia • SAIGON VJ') -More South Vle!- namese lrOOJ>S.-W.ere reported .movtoa toward the Cambodian lrontler today following the first incursion across the border that Saigon troops are known to have made since the Vietnam cease-Dre: Field reports indicated ihat the -South Vlefnamese operations 8.long ~ border were defensive , aimed at driving Com- munist forces from the border rather than the start of a major offensive to lift the threat to . Phnom Penh, the Cam- bodian capital. · South Vietnamese air force gunships joined an armored column on the Cam- bodian side of the border, and new fighting wu reported on tbe Vletnameoe side oI lbe frontle< . The Viet Cong called the march into Cambodia "a blunt and very dangerous act of the Saigon military forces." A Viet Cong broadcast said the operation was ordered by the united , States and "criminally violates the independence, ·unification sovereignty, nel.ltrality and territorial 1integrity of Cambodia as w~ll as the Paris agreement and the m- temational agreement on Vietnam." Despite reports from newsmen who saw the South Vietnamese armored col- umn and gumhips ·in <;:ambOdia Sun~ay and today, the Saigon command derued that aqy of its foret:5 croissed t~ border. Field reports said the crossutg was made Friday from the Vietnamese town of Tulh Bien. 125 miles west of Saigon, arter Communist troops burned a \'.lllage on the Cambodian side. About 500 refugees.streamed into South Vietnam. A•sociated Press pbotograpber Neal Ulevich regorted from Tinh Bien that two columns of south Vietnamese annored personnel carriers peaetrated about 500 yards into Cambodian territory. _No Oghting was_reported .in \be Tinh Bien region today, but 15 truckloads of troops were seen moving toward the border from Chau Doc, the provincial capital. Ulevich reported the South Viet- namese gunships were reconnoitering in- side Cambodia. · • • • 01.ILY l"ILOT Stiff 1"11119 NEWPORT POLICEMAN CRICKETT HELPS LAKEWOOD SOYS ON AMBITIOUS HIKE Ja50n (cente.r), Joel Knox Walking Down the Coast to Grandmother's House Va1i Strike Hurts County Ttle strike of moving and storage companies by the Teamsters Un~n has eff~tively shut down ~ovmg activities in .orange County, it was reported today. A spokesman for Bekins Movlng and Storage Company in Santa Ana said the major moving companies in the county had union contracts but there may be some smaller operators who do not. "We are shut down and I believe most moving coml>anles in · -the county are also," the moving com· pany spokesman said. He added that he had no idea how long the strike might last. The Orange County office of the Teamsters' Union refused to make any statement on the strike. From PqeJ· HIRSCH ... $14,976 for her half.share in the Ne\\1)0rl· based yacht '·Ciervo." lt waS stated during the trial that Mrs. Hirsch is $200i000 in debt and was at that 1ime unable to provide for herself on the $2 800 a month · allowance granted her pe'nding Judge Domenichini's ruling. She was sued by the United California Bank for more than $47 ,000 whil~ the trial was und er way. And her mother, Mrs. Mary Ellen Hill of Newport Beach, was sued fo r $16,000 by Hi rsch in an Orange County Superior Court action that charged her with non·payment of promissory notes. Hirsch, who maintains offices at 25~5 E. Coast Highway, Corona de! Mar, 1s the owner of more than 50 thoroughbred race horses and is a famili ar figure on the nation's race tracks. He is particular- ly associated with Del ~1ar and the suc- cessful efforts some years ago to preserve the track Crom a takeover bid by outside interests. 2 Y ou1ig Hikers From Lake,woocl Head Downcoast ' '· Notice to the rangers at Doheny State Park in ~an Clemente: You're going to . have some special guests tonight. Their names are Joel and Jason Knox, youngiters from Lakewood. hiking down ·coast' to grand mother's house in Fall brook. ... ~TtieY started out Sunday morning and spent the night at Huntington State Beach Park. They got off to an early start this morning but ran into a short delay afte.r crossing the Santa Ana River into Ne\vport Beach. There were actually two problems. First. Joe l's new boots gave him awful blisters, a real en1barrassment to a lf>. year~ld Boy Scout. --- The other candidates for the mO!t part agreed that a study shou.ld be undertaken to find out just how senou.s the problem is but that the jets could never be ban· ned. Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, chief spokesman for the Saigon command, reported sharp fighting Sunday but :said it was northwest of Hong Ngu, which is on tbe Mekong River 30 miles northeast of ~ P-Q.int where ~the Saigon troops crossed Uie border. Hieo said 22 com- munist troops and three South Viet- namese were killed and 38 Sai.gon sol~ers were wounded. Arson Suspected He bu.ill the Kal·Kan pet food empire into a $24 million concern after starting the business with his original partner on a door·to-door basis in the Los Angeles area. He is also the owner of substantial and valuable ranch acreage in Orange, San Bernardino and San Diego counties. Second. Newport Beach police spotted the unlikely looking pair, Joel in full limp and his little brother, Jason, 13. toting a backpack bigger than he is, struggling along \Vest Coast Highway. ' BOISE, Idaho (AP) -John G. Schmitz, of Newport Beach. t h e American Party presidential candidate last year, says he's looking for a college teaching post in Idaho but hasn't found one Yet. ~ lold ne"'.UJl\'fl 51'lurday be blS applied to teach at three Idaho schools and has been turned down. by one, Boise Slate COiiege. He has applied at the College of Southern Idaho in Twin Y.'alls and the Cfiureti of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Mormon-owned Ricks College in Rexburg. The fonner C a I i f o r n i a Republican congressman said he has not heard from the l\\'O schools about his ap- plications. . Schmitz. a Catholic, is a tenured in· structor in philosophy, history and political science at Santa Ana College. nie faculty senate at Boise State turn- ed dO\\'n his application to join the school's Political science department because faculty senates "are liberal," Schmitz said. Dr. Willard Overgaard. chairman of the Boise State department of political science, said Schmitz was turned down because he did not meet the re- quirements of the post. He has a master's degree in education, and ."& number of the 130 applicants for the Job had qualifications which exceed that o{ ~1r. Schmitz." Overgaard said. Schmitz told newsmen he would like to live in Idaho. It y,•ould be a "fine pl.ace to raise seven children.'' he said. He added he hoped "to spend a few ex- tra days to look around up here." If he moves to Idaho and were to seek political office, it v;ould probably be the Us Senate Schmitz said. "One v.·ould h~ve to 1cnOw the state and its politics better" to run for governor, he added. 0 N•I COAST • DAILY PILOT lhe .Ort"9f CHJI O~ILY "tLOf, Wllll lllhlefl I• comlll"" lrlf H_,.reu, I• Pflllli.hed by lh• Or•no· Coout PVOll.rilno CClmlltllY. Sllflll· Ille lldlUOM frt lllltl!lllltd1 MOnd•"f fllf"OOlllll frld•Y· !Or cc'tt M1$1, NewPt•I 8ffd\. "'ll!llln11on euMi/Fc11n11111 v111ey, l.ttllflf 8191lth, 11vl11115eddl11Mlcil .mil Sin ('~ttf $111 J111n C1pl1111no A 11111111 ~ edition 11 P\IO!llhlld S1l111a1y1 Ind Suncla~ Tiie pl'lnclpal Pllllll•~lng Plllll II ., iJO Wnf lllY SlrHI, Ca111 Mna, Celilorillt, t1'2'. Roberl N .. W•1d Pt11i6tnl Ind P11llliMlt r J1ck R. C11r!ey Vici 1"1nldt11I trll Glllertl IM111991' Thorn1 1 1Ce1vil Eo1tot Thorn11 A. M11rphlne ~''"' 11a110 .. L. Peter Kti•q "'""'°'' a.Kii cur t:a111r ""'"' ..... Offlu ]))) Newport lo11lt .. •rd Maili11t Addreiu P.0 . lor 1175, 926•1 .,_ ...... Cnt1 Mtu! JIO Wttl 81~ Str ttt Lii-IN<fl; m '°""' ,,__ H11111lln1t111 llf(fl: 17811~10\lltYtfll S.n CJlfnlrlf•I ., "Off!! l!I Clirnlftll ... , , .. .,.... (714 1 °'424111 Cl ............. ,. .. '41.a&71 CfO"ftJtlll 1'7>. OrtllOt CO.•t Pl.IOllth~ Ol\'Mlny; No ntwt llrfi'lft, llli.rtltltleM. •ltotlll m.fttt ., .tvwt11-1t "'"'" _,. .. ~ wlll!Wt _ ... , - ........... ., ClfOrl'ltlll -· S~ <ltA _, ... Niii 11 C..lt Miu, c .. 1..,.,_ ~,.... w W"•'iel tu.s ...+htYI tit JNll tJ,11 Cl'lfilMlllJI llll!lttty •ttir.i• 11.M -1!11'r'. Also last week, ty,·o teacher organiza· lions gave strong endorsements to Mrs. Lilly's v.Tite-ln campaign. One of them, the AFL-CIO affiliated Newport-Mesa Federatloo of Tead!ers (N-MFT), backed f\.1iss Setterbolm as well. The N~MF.T and the much JJ!JJer Newport-Mesa · Education Assoclahon (N-MEA), represent about 80 percent of the district's 1,000 teachers. Both gave high . praise to Mrs. Lill y, who they said has far more valuable ex· perience to offer. She served on the board from 1965 to 1970. N-MFT was critical of incumbent Casey's perfonnance, in Arca F~ur and . though it stopped short or making any endorsement there, N-~iEA also :said Miss Setterholm found more favor with its ·members than did Casey. The record low turnout o( 18 percent came during a vacation week, too , Cook said. ··usually in an off.year election, the turnout is arowid 30-35 percent and in a _normal ):'ear el~ctlon it goes u~ to ~round 40 or 50 percent, 11 he said. "But with the vacation and everybody gone, it'll be in the low 20S." Mrs. Lilly said in an interview recently she feels a low turnout Is good for her v.Tite--in hopes because many of the ~ pie who remember her from the past will be the ones voting . lncumbent Area Five tr u st e e Thompson said he thinks the Jack of issues and the predicted low turnout in· dicates a general public satisfaction with the way the district is being run . From Page l SHIPYARD. •• Station is to be tra nsi'erred to l-.toffelt Field, Sunnyvale, and the Naval Air Sta- tion at Lemoore. In putting th.e Hamilton AFB in,re:serve status, the Air Force plans to "'declare surplUs ~ housing units. All support ac· tivities Will be l'C>Sed. The personnel 'reduction in 1nilltary a ~d civilians tot als 2,372. Transfer of fleet activity from Long Beach to San Diego Y.ill 'affcct 16,000 military and 646 civilians. The San Francisco and San Diego Naval Districts ere to be -eomblned with heackfuarters: in San Diego. Oglala lndit;ins Bar H eltcopter At W ozinded Knee PINE RIDGE, S.0. I UPI I -A helicppter loaded v.ith medical supplies '"as prevented from entering Wounded Knee by local Oglala Sioux Indians who vov.·ed to keep all supplies out of the ham.let until militant Indians end their 48--day occupation. Federal authorities, caught in the squeeze of trying to keep local peace and end the occupation without bloodshed, apparently gave in to the local Indians \Vhen tbe..helicopter was turned back at federal roadblock No. I . The Indians.aw the federal helicopter fly past the roadblock toward the village. When it stopped at roadblock No. t. the Indians confronted federal authorities ,vho agreed to fly the load of supplies back to the airport. Meanwhile, an attorney for American Indian Movement members entrenched at Wounded Knee said in New York Sun· day that he would attempt to obtain a restraining order against the local Jn· dians who set up the blockade of sup. plies. Tensions' in the \Vounded Knee and Pine Ridge areas of the reservation were heightened with the repo rt today by rancher George Coats that his ranch house and several outbuildings \Yere burned to the ground during the night. The repof1 was made to Jim CU.rtls, social services offiCer for the Bureau or Indian Affairs at Pine Ridge. Coaats told Curtis that his family escaped without harm. Indian Land Rellu·ned BANNING (AP) -The Banning City Council has voted to return a strip or land to the Morongo lndlan Reservation which the city annexed a year ago Without know ing it was re servation land. , Hu1iti1igton Cagers 'Sore! After !l hours of play, the score oI the Huntintgon lleaeb High School maralhan basketball game Is 5,288 to 5,028, one disabled player, several bloody noses and "everybody sore all over." · The gome started al 9 p.m. Friday aod the .targel of the .23 player'$ l.5 to play continuou\ly until the end or Easter vacation when they have put 1n a total of 168 hour5 on tbe court In the Oller gym. The staodlng rocord of 14-0 hours will be passed at 5 p.m. Thursday. . ' Paul Madera, organizer of the marathon for the high school's Boys League, said one player, Lonnie Brownell, sufferedJorn_Ugamenis durlne the first day of play and has bocn hospitalized. _ He said tbe game I• open to the public at anyime, but noted that !Ill! liest hours are from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. "\Ve play better if we have an audience/' he ' . lnLido Isle Blaze at Home Police believe arson may be involved in a fire which Sunday moinlpg 'Ca~:se<t an estlinated· $5 ,000 damage to a Lido Tsle home owned by a retired Beverly llills couple. The blaze at the bay£ront home , 813 Via Lido Soud, was discovered by the owners. Firemen arf.ived in time to con· fine the loss to a partially.burned sofa and smoke damage . Investigators believe arsonists cut through a screen and broke .a living rOC!m window. apparently starting the fi re fro m the outside by throwing wads of burning paper onto the cou ch: . Firemen were able to extmgu1sh the blaze with a garden hose. "\Ve drove up and my wife saw smoke coming out the chimney," said Lee T. Bevan, a former supermarket executive who told authorities he had no idea who might have started the fire. "At first we thought someone was staying there but we opened the kitchen door and the whole house was filled with smoke," Bevan said. .,, He said he ran across the street to a neighbor's house and asked him to call firemen. Bevan said he and his wife only stay at the $125,000 waterfront home "a couple of months each year, usually in July and August." "Sometimes we let friends use it .'' he said, "but it's usually not occupied." Racing fans know him best for his im- partation from South America of two · animals which won rn.ahy ,major stakes races in the United States -Snow Sporting and Figonero. Upper Newport Bay Talks Slated Mrs. Frank Robinson , a longtime cam· paigner fdr preserving the natural state of Upper Newport Bay, wil1 address a meeting of the Women 's Civlc League of Newport Beach Tuesday at.9:30 a.m. Her talk, entitled "Know the Back Bay ," y,·ill include discussions of the history of· the bay, its wildlife and the current status of legal battles involving its future. Also on the agenda for the meeting in the l\fariners Library multi·purpose room , 2005 Dover Drive, will be a presen· talion on physical therapy for stroke vie· ti ms. Actress Dies at 81 SANTA l\10NICA (AP) -Actress !\-lin· na Gombcll, 81, who appeared in more than 100 movies and starred in Broadway plays, died Saturday. ---- Thinking they might be runaways, of- fiti!r Dan Crickett pulled akingside. Hearing their story, and seeing their plight, officer Crickett drove them to police headquarters where he and fellow officers administered first aid to Joel's tender fteir ;o "I don't understand , it must be those boots," groaned Joel. trying unsuc- cess fully to hide the pain. Patche<l up, the youngsters were given :i~lift by officer Crickett to the Newport. Beach city limits at Corona del Mar. Sore fe et. overstuffed backpacks and all. it's a good bet the boys will make their 23·mile goal today, and grandmother's house by Thursday. "Dad promised if we made it he'd let us hike the Pacific Crest trail this sum- mer," gr inned young Jason . The Pacific Crest trail is a 2,400-mile path across the Sierra from Mexico to Canada . From PG!Je 1 ELECTION ... regional districts , all voters residing within the boundaries of the Coast Cofl\· munity College District are eligible to cast their ballots. The county Registrar of Voters said to- day the 510 voling precincts have been reduced to 14 polling stations for thii election. Results will be tabulated at the county office, 1119 E . Chestnut Ave., San- ta Ana. NO ONE SELLS G.E. son IOCD WAST! DISPOllW rew1r fie Mtthlfli1• • 2 l•,tl l1Mrt·W11• • A11torn•tic Dtttrgtnf Oi1pe11ttf • S•ing Dtl\'ll 0.tf • Sli4t-Olt •cli1 ~ .. SD1'GN 1sr~ •UPRIGHT CONVENI E.~Li • Po1itiveSafel)'DoorL&kh • t'11t trt!!zlnr •Door Loclt 179'6 ... • FOR LESS THAN 90 DAY CASH ' ' wim Amon• CllDn I 01'1 I.....,.'"-'"" WllflAtdollo-,flw ........ ,.... ...... 1 )WlllhlftCl2AIMt .T- • 3 w. C\'dll-Nlirmlt, ,...,..,., ,... .,. ... _ ... . ...... , w ... L.,... 209'5 saidi.skcd tf he thought 111e players would be abie to w1.unu1 tbo end of the I 1815' NEWPORT BLVD. Dawntawn &1sta Mesa P11one 548-7788 . . 'A'ttk, Madera. commented "It seems Uke an awful 1003 Ume." t L __________________ ..;. ________ ..,;,_.,;;;'----------- , , ' • • • • • • • c • ' -- Orande Co·ast ~ EDITION TodaY's F inal ' VOL 66, NO_ 106, 3 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES • Harbor District Turnout Voting Predicted Light By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of lllt 0.llY Piiot Sti ff Election officials are predicting an ab- normally light turnout Tuesday as voters go to the polls to fill four seats on the Ne\\'PQrt-Mcsa School District Board of Trustees. Predictions call for less than 30 percent of the 71 ,000 registered voters to cast ballots. One official of the Orange County Registrar of Voters Office said today the turnout may even drop below the record low of 18 percent several years ago because of Easter vacation . "We have been getfing record numbers of absentee ballots but unless it picks up a lot more , we won 't reach near ~ per- * * * Coast Area • Polls Open A t 7 a.m. Voting begins at 7 a.m. ·ruesday for l\vO seats on the Coast Community Col· • lege District Board of Trustees. The bOards governs both t~. campuses of Golden West College in Huntington Beach and Orange Coast College in Costa l'\1esa. Polls will remain open until ·a p.m. to allow the district's 183.344 regiStered voters to cast 1heir ballots. A light turn- out is Jorecast. Eligibile to vote are persons registered in Zeal Beach, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Fountain Valley, \\'estminster and several unincorporated county areas. The candidates vying for their ballots are : -George Rodda Jr.. incumbent, Corona de! Mar., on the board for the past four years. Rodda is president of his own Management Engineering Corpora· tion, past president of the Board or Trustees, and past chairman of th~ co~­ munity college section of the Cahtorn1a School Board Association. -Donald A. Strauss, NeWJXlrt Beach, a IS.year resident or Orange County and vice-president of cmploye relations for Beckman Instruments. Strauss served four years on the old Newport Beach Elementary School District board and subsequently seven years on the Newport·Mesa Unified School District board. -Worth Keene, Seal Beach, in- cumbent. retired postmaster of Seal Beach. Keene served on the college board for nearly 12 years and has been its presclident three times . Recentlr he wa s appointed chairman of a n~t1onpl committee developing TV programing for ethnic and minority education. -F r a n e e s 0. Mann, Huntington Beach, mother of five l-hildren and prac- t)cing medical management COnsultant. She served three years on the board of the Southern California Hospital Credit Managers Association and is the current vice-president or the Sout h Coast Neurological Medical Group. Strauss is challenging Rodda in Trustee Area 5 (Newport Beach) and Mann is challenging Keene in Trustee Area I (Hun tington Beach and Seal Beach). The tenns are for four years. Although the candidates serve in (See ELEcnON, Page %1 DO GG ONE-PILOT A D FINDS FI DO Doggone-it! "\V~e ha9 that little dog gone?" Here 's a quick way to find out: -WHITE male .poodle with grey ears, needs clipping. Wearing black jeweled col- lar & OCa collar, nr H.B. HJ. ll!'hool. (Phone number). This dog was gone for a week. The first day the ad appeared the owner got a call and the dog was found . If you've lost something, find II fast with a DAIL "I' PILOT classified want ad. The number to call -642·5678. -< cent," William Cook, field worker in the registrar's office, said. The 68 polling' places in the diStrict, which covers all of Newport Beach, Costa l\1esa 's Area Seven are running sliver of south Santa Ana, will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Only two or the four trustee seats on the ballot are contested. Incumbents Arthur F. Thompson in Newport Beach is Area Five and Roderi ck MacMiUian in Costa Mesa is Area ~ven are running unopposed. ,Three candidates are on the ballot in Trustee Area four, which represents all of Newport Beach east of U~r N,!;!wport Bay. They include: -1bomas Casey, 43, 2007 Kewamee Drive, in Corona del Mar. Casey, the in- cumbent in Area Four, is a banker in Santa Ana. · -l\targaret Setterbolm, 18, 2601 W~y Lane, Corona del Mar. Miss Setterholm is a recent graduate of Corona de! Mar High School and has been active in many conservation groups. -James K. Schwarz, 43, 2910 Third Ave., Corona del Mar. Schwarz is a teache r at Balsa Grande High School in Garden Grove. Only two names will be on the ballot in Costa Mesa's Area Two, which covers htesa Verde and homes to the east and north of Orange <;oast College. There is ooe legal write-iii oandidate in Area TwQ. -Orville 'Amburgey,-38, 945 Coronado' Dr., Costa Mesa. Amburgey is com- munications director for the city of Costa l\'lcsa. · -Charles L. "Chuck" Bridges, 38, 3105 Fernheath Lane, Costa Mesa. Bridges is an insurance company executive. - Elizabeth l'\1. Ully, 208 Dartmouth Place, Costa Mesa. Mrs. Lilly is a registered nurse and fonner Newport· Mesa school board member. She is the only legal write-in canj'.iidate in the district, according to thE! registrar. A spokesman at the registrar's. office said today those wishing to vote for l\1rs. Lilly must write her name in the vacant (See TURNOUT, Page!) Coctst Socialite's . Sliar e to Be $1.9 Jl-!illio1t Newport Beach socialite C I a u d i a Hutson Hirsch has been awarded nearly $1.9 million as her share of community property valued at between $40 and $50 million during the four-month trial of her divorce from racing tycoon Clement L. "Buddy" Hirsch of Corona del Mar, it was learned today, Judge Frank Domenichini's division or the couple's assels and his formal ending of their seven-year marriage will be made public later, Orange County Superior Court officials said. He has ordered Hirsch, 59, to pay Mrs. Hirsch, 45, a total of $850 a month for support of the couple's two sons, casey, 9, and Christopher, 7. Hirsch must also pay Christopher's monthly tuition at the Mardan School and the younger son's bills up to $600 a month. Judge Oomenichini refused to order Hirsch to pay spousal support. And he bas additionally ordered Mrs. Hirsch, who tates over sole ownership of her home ai 30 HarbOr·Island, to pay her own attOrney's fees . · Testimony during the trial aod the cost estimate offered by her lawyers -John K. Trotter Jr. of Santa Ana and David Hamey of Los Angeles -indicates that those fees will take about $800,000 or her $l.88'l, 73 award. Mrs. Hirsch is given custody M her two sons who both now live with her at the Harbor Island home. She Is also allowed to retain a one-fifth interest in Hirsch's valuable "Bear Brand" Ranch. But her shares in a long list of other lllrsch assets, including his pet food and racing interests, are conv~rted to cash by Judge Domenichini ln a swnmation that gives her just over $2 million . Judge Dornenlchinl order~ h e r , however, to repay Hirsch $106,502 for ex- penditure on the .Harbo r Island home and to repay him $~4.185 for his intertst 1n the aiers IM -th e Ntwport Beach restaurant operated by Mrs, Hirsch's J>llrcnts. Her $t.9 mllllon share also includes IS.. RlllSCH, l'llp t) N.Y. Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CAtlFORNIA MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1973 c TEN CENTS • • -------· Village Captured By N. Vietnamese. WASHINGTON (API -U.S. bombers began hitting targets near a village in Laos overrun by Communist forces, Pen· tagon sources disclosed toda y. The sources said both B52s and fighter planes were being u5ed in strikes near the town of Tha Vieng south of the Plaine de Jarres. There had been no American air strikes Long Beach· Navy Station- .To Be Closed By The Associated Press The Long Beach Naval Station will be shut down by June 30, 1974, and its 63 ( ships and 20,000 crewmen reassigned as -part of a $1 billion cutback, the Long Beach Independent Press Telegram reported today. 11th Hour Dileuama P.reUy._.Marguerite Marsa.udon, ?tlisS Costa lttesa, illustrates the last !Dinute plight of many who put off their income tax Calc ulations. ·sbe IS surrounded by tax forms and adding machine tape but seems un- perturbed through it all. Perhaps it's because she bas until midnight to make today's filing deadline. Coast College Student Dies in Freeway Crash A 19-year-old Orange Coast College stu- dent was one of two persons killed over the weekend during a head-on collision involving three cars. on the .San Diego Freeway north of Oceanside. Pronounced dead on the scene were Patti Geer, 2001 Swan Drive, Costa Mesa, and Rebecca Ann Cohen, 20, of San Diego. Three other persons were injured. California Highway Patrolman said the accident occurred Saturday night when Miss Geer's car collided with the Cohen car and then collided with a car driven by Charles E. Dawson, 72, of Oceanside. Dawson was said to have received minor injuries and his wire, Lillian, n:iOOerate injuries. John Charles Davey, a · passenger in the Cohen car, was reported· to have sustained minor in- juries. Miss Geer, a 1970 graduate of Estancia High School, was a sophomore at OCC and sang with the Orange CO~st College Chorus. She. "".fl.S a~ member of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Funeral services for Miss Geer are scheduled for 2: 30 p.m. Tuesday in Grace C.hapel at the Newport Beach church. 1furial will follow at Pacific View Memorial Park. The family has suggested memorial contributions to the St. Andrew's youth program. Miss Geer is survived by her parents l'\1r. and Mrs. Richard W. Geer, of the home; a brother, Richard W. Geer Jr .• and a sister, Bettie Rikansrud, both o( Huntington BeaCh, and grandparents Ruth W. Geer of COsta Mesa, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert ,G. Gi bson of La Verne. Co1Incilmen to Close Door • On Garage Sale Measur.e? eosta 1-tesa's UJ.fated gar~ge sale ordinance may meet its doom tonljht. The document, subject of cohslderable controversy since it was proposed last fall, comes before the city COWlCil at 6;3J) p.m. for a final decision. With three votes filready lined up against it, it Is forecast that \he ordinance wUI not be enacted. Mayor Jack HammeU and· Councilmen Willard T. Jordan and Alvin Pinkley all S!IY they will vote again.st the law. 71 Tons:of Pot Gone MEXICO CITY (AP) -Mexican author!Uas have burned 71 metric tons of marijuana since Fe . 9", l1ie 8 ttorney general's oUlclaJ said. The marijuana,. confiscated in the Mexican antinarcotlcs campaign, wa9 destroyed in seven burn-· lngs In dUfcrent parts of the country. The ordinance would have restricted sales by imposing a limit on the number of sales that could be held in a certain time ~riod. An earlier version would have.added a $25 permit reo but that.pro- vi sion was withdrawn after councilmen. termed it too hanh. Other· items ol interest slated to come be(ore. the eouncil durtn8: tonight's session In city coancil cham bers:, 77 Fair Drive, are: -A report on the surplw propert ies recommended for purch11.se this fnlt through an open space bond decllon. -The general plan amendments, one for the .north Costa Mesa area and the secorld ·for the Newport-Harbor,Victori• triangte._' · I -). m:ie exception permit for the con· troverslal E:arde!H Pre-school, 250 W. Willllo St. . 7 A ~ exctption for conatroellon of a '7,000 oqua"' root Douglas Oil Co. building •~3160 Airway Avr. • The newspaper says that 44 ships will be sent to other ports and 19 will be decommissioned. There are 500 sailors assigned to the station plus another 1,500 civilians, .representing a total payroll ot·tll?.llllion annually~. . • • tillJli!'lra!lons "! llM>-bfll!.,liach Naval Base, Which cOordinates Navy and Marine activities in Los .AngeJes, Orange, Jl)verslde and' San ~iho ·counties, will al90 be closed aloaf-wlth lbii Loog Beach Marine barracks .' • Naval base oper3.tions lo be shut down include the finance office, anti-submarine warfare school, motion picture trainic1g unit and the h"ospital auxiliary ship Repose. ---- However, the newspaper added, 1,000 men will be added to lhe 6,500-man Long Beach Naval Ship Yard operation to offset the closing of Hunter's Point Shipyard in San Francisco. Pentagon officials said today that 274 military bases soon will be closed or cut hack. A full list of the affected bases was not given to newsmen immediately. The Defense Department also plans to close the Hunters Point Shipyard at San Francisco by June 30, 1974, California members of Congress were Wormed to-· day. ('111e Boston Naval Yard also will be closed.) Defense cutbacks also include closing of Hamilton AFB by Dec. 31, dropping all fl ying activity at Alameda Air Station and leasing the Long Beach Naval Station and moving the fleet to San Diego. Californians were informed that the net reduction in personnel in California will include 5,800 military and more than 4,000 civilians. Some civilian personnel at various sta- tions will be offered transfers. The closing of Hunters Point Shipyard alone will affect 5,500 civilians. Some Work is to be transferred to Puget Sound in Washiniton and some to Long Beach and other private yards in the San Fran· cisco Bay area . .. Flying activity at Alameda Naval. Air Station is to be transrerred to Moffett Field, Sunnyvale, and the Naval Air Sta- tion at Lemoore. In putting the Hamilton AFB in reserve status, the Air Force plans to declare surpJus 600 housing unlts. All support ac· tivit1es will be closed. The persormel reduction in military and civilians totals 2,372. Transfer or fleet activity from Long Beach to San Diego will a!Cect 16,000 military and 646 civilians. The Sap Francisco and San Diego (See SHIPYARD,.J'age.%)- Can,'t Tell Kook B y ·lts Cover A Young transvestite complained to Costa Mesa police this morning that he was dumped off tn Costa Mesa this morning after being picked up by tv.·o men who became angered because the "she" ttirned out to be a. "he." The female impersonator tokt-in- '\festlgators that he was picked up in Compton while driving his boyfriend's car. Whetr the curve! turned out to be padded rather than real, the men ordered htm to get out and took the car. • Costa Mesa police took a courtesy gran<I theft and kidnap report for Co mpton ltt"·men. over Laos since Feb. 23, but neither had fighting .in that country been heavy since the Vietnam cease.fire v.1as signed in Paris Jan. 27. The U.S. Pacific Forces Command in HawaH said that at the request of the Royal Loatian gove rnment, the Ameri- can planes conducted operations over Laos and Cambodia. No further comment was made by the command. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W, J."'riedheim said North Vietnamese forces led by tanks overran a town defended by Royal Laotian forces near the Plaine de Jarres in Laos within the last several hours. l·Ie described it as "a major violation or the cease-fire." ll.S. bombers have been hitting Cam- bodian targets for six weeks. There have been no American-air stri):tes in Vietnam since th e cease-fire was signed Jan.· 27. Friedheim said there has been heavy fighting near the Laotian town of Tha Vieng for the past few days. He could provide no details on the size of the Viet· namese and the Pathet Lao Communist force which occupies the town. There has been a separate cease-fire declared in Laos ' and there has been relatively little fighting there in recent weeks. In the Vietnam cease-fire agreement effective Jan . 28, the United States, South Vietnam, North Vietnam and the Viet Cong agreed to end all military activities in C8mlx>dia and Laos, withdraw all troops and not use the two countries as staging ..areas for attacks elsewhere. A cease-fire was agreed on in La~ Feb. 22, but lhere has been no truce alrecment signea-'!rtalftbodla. The United States~· and South Vietnam have charged that Hanoi is infiltrating troops and war materiel into Cambodia and that North Vietnamese troops still are fighting beside-·the-·€8.mbodian Khmer Rouge forces opposed to the Phnom Penh go.vernment . The Pro-Communist Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese troops with mortar and artillery support overran three government positions in northeastern Laos over the weekend, a Defense Ministry spokesman, Brig. G e n . Thongphan Knoksy, sa id today. No casua lty reports were immediately available. The spokesman said North Vietnamese troops su pported by mortars overran two frontal outposts .of the government moun· lain' base at Buam Long, 18 miles north of the Communist occupied Plain of Jars. Another strategic deending position at Ban Tha Vieng, 100 mil es northeast of Vientiane , also was overrun and govern- ment troops retreated some five miles across the Nam Nglp River southeast of Tha Vieng, the spokeslhan said. Earlier the acting defense minister, Sisouk Na Champassak, said a new regi· ment of North Vietnamese troops moved to the Tha Vieng area and posed an im- mediate threat to the town. Strike in Third Wee k HONOLULU IUP IJ -The strike by the Hawaii State Teachers Association entered its third week today after in- ronnal discussions were held between the union and state bargair.ers during the weekend, The strike was still on even though Hawaii 's school system began a one-week spring vacation. Orange C:.ut Weather Low clouds and rog are expected ton ight and early morning but weather otherwise will be mostly sunny and a touch warmer. Highs, 63-73, lows 46-55. INSIDE TODA. Y DevaJtating tornadoe3 liaue killed tight persons in Tt%0$. The storms were so violent that 01ey tort cars to b£ta that were lru.pped on freeway. Set story, ·page 4. l..M. ...,. ,, katl... 11 (1llftnll.t ,, 11 Cltt tlntd 41 ... Cr.t.1w....i 11 Dtltll IMtktl 11 t•lt'lf'lll ..... ' •.tftofl.tl-MI ._,. 'fMllc• ...,, ,.... ,... •tctre 11 M•N~ if • • •· % DAILY PILOT c Monday, Apr!! lb, 1973 S. Viets Defelttling Cambodia SAIGON !AP) -More South Viet- namese tr~ps "'ere reported J)lOVJll8 toward the Ca mbodian frontier today !ollowing the first incursion across the border that Saigon troops are known to have made since the Vietnam ctase-fjre: Field reports lndtcated:t.bat the South Vietnamese operations along the border 1 were defensive, aimed at driving Com· munist forces rrom the border rather than the start or a major offensive to lift the threat 10 fhnom Penh·, the Cam· bodian capital. South" Vietnamese air force gwishlps ' join'ed an anno red column on the Cam· bodian side of the border, and ne\v fighting was reported on the Vietnamese side of the frontier. The Viet Cong called the march into Cambodia "a blunt and very dangerous act of the Saigon military forces." A Viet Cong broadcast said the Operation was ordered by the United States and "criminally violates the independence, unification, sovereignty. neutrality and territorial integrity· or C<!!11bodia as well as the Paris agreement and the in· ternationa l agree1T1ent on Vietnam." Despite reports rrom newsmen who saw the South Vietnamese armored col~ umn and gwlShips in Cambodia Sunday and today, the Saigon command denied that any-of its forces crossed the border. - Nixon, Defe1ids . Defe1ise· Budget, Raps Cutbacks WASHINGTON (UPI) -President . Nixon told about 4,000 construction y,·orkers today that those who advocate slaslling the defense budget would destroy any chance or negotiating further nuclear disa rmament. He said cutbacks in defense spending would make the United States impotent at negotiations for a mutual reduction of forces in Europe. Negotiations on force reductions wi ll open with Warsaw Pact countries this ran. "There will Qe no deal," if the United States bargain s from weakness, Nixon told the ,~J11ional Conference of Building and ConStruction Trades, a group representing about 3.5 million con· struction wo rkers throughout the United States. "Jt is essential jf we're going to make any kind of deal with the:n that to get anything from them you ha ve got to 1lave soi.nelhing to give." - TONIGHT .,;;, COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL Regular meeting, City Hall , 6:30 p.m. UCI LECTURE -"Understanding Investment Real Estate." part of sertes on Investment Alternatives. Rm. 101 Physical Sciences Bldg., 7-10 p.m. Adm. 16.50. .... TUESDAY , APRIL 17 NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD ~l..E(,TION -Be sure to vote~ COAST COMMUNITY C 0 LL E G E BOARD ELECTION -Please vote. COSTA MESA SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -Regular meeting, Community Recrea tion Center, JI a.m. • 3 p.n1 . OCC STUDENT PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW -OCC Library, 2nd floor, through l\Jtay J7. • OIA~GI COAST ,. 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The-campaign for the-four seats -has been relatively lackluste r since it started a month ago. The only "issue" injected into the cam· paign came at the eleventh hour last week when an anti-jet noise group in Newport Beach challenged the can· didates to take a stand . on jet no ise created by planes at the Orange County Airport , Only tY.'O candidates -Schwarz and Miss SeUerho lm -agreed strongly \.\'ith Victim Possibly Tortured Before Deatli-Police By JOANNE REY NOLDS 01 l!'lt DtllY Piiot Stiff . Huntington Beach police said today thev believe an unidentified n1urder vic- tini found in the city Saturday may h;ive been beaten and tortured prior to his death. Orange County Coroner's investigators. \\'ho list the slaying victim as a John Doc. said today they still h a v e not established a cause of death for the young man or his identity. The body tvas found early Saturday morning near the intersection of Ellis Avenue and Gothard Street by a passing motorist. Detectives said it had ap-- parently been thrown out ·of a moving car. Sgt. Monty McKennon said he believes the man mav have been beaten and tortured befoie death becaUse or several · Cuts and abrasions on the body. "Some m·ay have been caused when the body was dumped in the street," McKen· non said, But he added that he does not , believe all the \\'OUnds \Vere caused that \\•ay. Police are continuing their efforts to identify the victim v.•ho is about five feet, Jl inches in height and 150 to 160 pounds. McKennon said there \verc severa l tat· toos on the body including the initials "D.F.:" a S\vaska. the number 13 on the left ankle, and four dots on th e left wrist. "On the right ankle was a cross \Vilh marks abo\'C ii -usua lly called the 'Pachuko ' sign.'' McKennon said. The detective noted that all the tattoos appeared to b" e non-professional , homemRde tattoos. The murder victim \1·as dressed in a cut-off dcnin1 jacket and dark blue pants and bright blue socks. He \\'Ore no shoes, the detecti ve said. "As far as 1ve can tell," McKennon said. "he 11·a1 killed son1ep lace else prob- ably Friday night and tlten brought here nod dumped." He said that anyone who might be able to identify the dead 111an should call the police depar11ncnt at 536-5331. the Airport Action Association (AAA), which claims seven district schools are suffering from the"jet noise. The other candida tes for. the. most part agreed tha t a study should be undertaken to find out ju~ how serious the problem is_bu Ltha.t the jets could never be ban- ned. Also last week, tw& teacher organiza- tions gave strong endorsements to Mrs. Lilly's write-in campaign. One of them, the AFL-CIO alf.iliated Newport-Mesa Federation of TeaChers. (N·MFT), backed Miss Setterholm as well. 'The N-MFT and the much larger Newport-Mesa Education Association (N-MEA), represent about 80 percent of the district's 1,000 tea chers. Both gave"'.'""high praise to· Mrs. Lilly, who they said has far more valuable ex· perience to offer. She served on the board from 1965 to 1970. - N·MFT was critical of inewDbent Casey's performance in Area Four. aod.. though it stopped short of making any oodorsement there, N-MEA also said Miss Setterholm found more favor with its members than did tasey. The record low turnout of 18 percent came during a vacation v.·eek, too, Cook said. "Usually in an off.year election, the tu(Tloul is around 30-35 percent and in a normal year election it goes up to around 40 or 50 percent," he said. "But with the vaClltion and everybody gone, it'll be in the Joy,' 20s.'' Mrs. Lillv said in an interview recently she (eels a low turnout is good for her '~'rite-in hopes because many of the peer pie who remember her from the past will be the ones voting. Incumbent Area Five t r ust c e Thompson said he thinks the lack of issues and the predicted low turnout in- dicates a general public satisfaction with the \Vay the dfstrict is being run. Search Goes On For Missing Tot The search continued today for a miss- ing 3-year-old Orange boy, police said. Michael Todd Rockwood of 334 S. Orange St., J1as been missi ng since Fri- day . A hous~to-house S('arch \\•as conducted Saturday by 80 police officers and volunteers who combed a 35-block area. The boy disappeared after his mother let ttim out to play Friday. He was \\'ear- ing a yellow sweatshirt, blue pants and brown ~hoes. Lit.tic Michael has blond hair and blue eyes . Indian· Land Returned BANNING IAPl -The Banning City Council has voted to return a strip of land to lhe Morongo Indian Reservat ion which the city nnnexed a year ago without knowing it \VEIS rcsgrvation land. to Hu1iti1igton C(J:gers 'S ore' • After 61 hours o! play, the score of tI:te HWltintgon Bea.ch High School 1narathon basketball ga1nc is 5.286 to 5,028, one disabled player, severa l bloody noses and "everybody sore all over:· . The gan1e started at 9 p.111. Friday and the target or the 23 players Is to play continuously until the end of Easter vacation when they have put in a tou1l of t68 hours on the. court in the Oller gym. The standing record of 140 hours will be passed at 5 p.1n. TtrursdA y. Paul Madera , organizer of the rnarathon for the high school's Boys League, said Otle player. LOOnie Brownell, suffered torn ligaments during the first day of play 1tnd has ~en.hospitalized. --- - lie sa id the gtime Is open to the public at anyimc, but noted thnt the best hours ar~ from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. "\Ve play helter if \\'e have an tiudi ence," Ire Sllld. . Asked if he lhought lhc players woukl be able lo last until the end or the "eek, 1-ladera conlmented "it seems like an av.•ful long time." • B·each Turnout Thin . ' -.. ! L Weather Crediwd; Merchant,S Feel Lull By JOHN ZAJ.LllR 6t ... O.ltr '"'"' '''" The only weekend statisUc u p si~ificantly over the first wcekend "-of Easter Week last year was the arrest rate reported by police. ' A year &go police arrested 43 persons for the first weekend of Bal Week, and this year the figure was 65. Traffic ac· cidents on comparltively deserted streets were down a blt. Most of the incidents were mll1or. They included a drunk who got hls band caught in a pool table of a -bar in'"""McFadden Square and a teenage girl who refused pleas to atop riding her bike around the nets on an Eastblull teMis court. Harbor area merchants catering to beach traffic reported slightly increased sales this weekend, but no big jumps that c<iuld be attributed to Easter Week. "\Ve had a good weekend, but nowhere near what it used to be," said Pete Juteau, manager of Mr.' Middy's, the largest gift shop on BalQoa l'!iland. . "There•are some people who ~tilt come down here to say the week," he added. "W.e_may .ha.ve...see.11 quite a few of those over the weekend because the· weather wasn 1t good for going to the beach." "We're not doing anything like tht; business we used to do,'' said Gary Fisher; manager of the Jolly Roger restaurant, also on Balboa Island. "This weekend was just normal for us for this time or year," he said. "Actuall y, I like it-better this \Yay_. We still do a good business like we do any weekend. and there's no problem with huge crowds jainming up everything ." "Our business was about the same as it has been for the' last few weekends," said Bob Snyder of lhe Balboa Island Ferry. Boating activity jn Newport Harbor was reported slig~ above average for the weekend. But in 20-mile-an-hour winds, live sailboats capsized, four broke Joooe from their moorings, and one was diimasted, officials said. · ~ -• I<,°'" Iii From POfJe 1 HIRSCH .' .. '· ""'1 .. ~ ••. , • • Jo; ) Youngsters Take Long $14,976 for her half-share in the Newport· based yacht "Ciervo." lt was stated during t~e_ trial that Mrs. Hike Down Pacific Coast Hirsch is $200,000 in debt and was at that time unable to provide for herself .on the 0 $2,800 . a month allowance granted h~r pending Judge Domenichini's ruling. She was sued by the United California Bank for more than $47 ,000 while the trial wa s under way. And her mother. Mrs. Mary Ell~n Hill of Newport Beach, was sued for $16.000 by Hirsch in an Orange CoUnty Superior COurt action that charged her with n-on·payment of promissory notes. - Hirscti; who main tains offices at 2515 E. C.oast-Highway, Corona del Mat, is- the owner of more than 50 thoroughbred race horses and is a familiar figure on the nation's race tracks. He is particular· Jy associated with Del Mar and the suc- cessful . efforts some y·ears ago to preserve the track from a takeover bid by outside interests. He built the Kal-Kan pet food empire into a $24 million concern after starting the business with his original partner on a door-to-door basis in the Los Angeles area. He is also the owner of substantial and valuable ranch acreage in Orange, Sao Bernardino and San Diego counties. Racing fans know him best for· his im· portation f{Om .South America of two animals .which won many major stakes races in the United States -Snow Sporting and FigonerO. Van Strike Hurts Cou1ity The strike of moving and storage companies by the Teamsters Union has effectively shut down mewing activities in Orange County, it was reported today . A spokesman for Bekins Moving and Storage Company in Santa Ana said the major moving cominies in the county had un ion co els but there may be some sm Ile r operators who do not. "\Ve are shut...daw.Q. and t believe most moving compiittes in the county are also," the moving com- pany spokesman said. He added 1hat he. had no idea how long the strike might last. The Orange County office of the Teamsters' Union refused to make any statement on the strike. Notice to the rangers at Doheny State Park in San Clemente: You 're going to have some special guests tonight. Their names are Joel and Jason Knox, youngsters from Lakewood hiking down coast to gr.and mother's house i n Fallbrook. - They started out Sunday morning and Spent the night at Huntington State Beach Park. They got off to an early start this morning but ran into a short delay after crossing the Santa Ana River· into_Newj>ort Beach. There were actually two problems. First, Joel's new boots gave him awful blisters. a real embarrassment to a 15- year~ld Boy Scout. Second, Newport Beach police spotted the unlikely looktng pair, Joel in full limp and his little brother, Jaso.n, 13, toting a backpack bigger than he is, struggling along West Coast Highway. Thinking they might be runaways, of· ricer Dan Crickett pulled alongside. Hearing their story, and seeing their plig}Jt, officer ·Crickett drove them to police headquarters where he and fellow officers administered fi rst aid to Joel's tender feet. "l don't understand, it must be those boots," groaned Joel, trying UDSUC· cessfully to hide the pain. ' Patched up, the youngsters were given From Page 1 ELECTION ... regional districts, all voters residing within the boundaries of the Coast Com- muolly College District are eligible to cast their ballots. The county Registrar of Voters said to- day the 510 voting pr~incts have been reduced to 14 palling stations for this· election. Resul ts will be ta~ated at the county offi ce, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., San- ta Ana . From Pagel SHIPYARD ..• Naval Districts are tO be combined with headquarters in San Diego. The Pasadena Underwater Laboratory wlll be closed and combined with a similar installation in San Diego with a loss of 780 empfoyes. The Imperial Beach Naval Air Sta· lion is to be retained as a !lying field only. a lift by officer Crickett to the.Newport : Beach city limits at Corona del Mar. Sore feet, overstuf£ed backpacks and , all, it's a good bet the boys will make their 23-mile goal today, and grandmother's house by Thursday. t, "Dad promised if we made it he'd .let us hike the Pacific Crest trail this sum- mer," grinned young Jason. The Pacific Crest trail is a 2,400-mile path across. the Sierra from Mexico to Canada. Schmitz. Looking For T eaclier' s Post iii ldalio BOISE, ldaho (A.P) -Jolm G. Schmitz. of Newport Beach. th e American Party presidential candidate ' lasL year, says he's looking for a college teaching po:~t in Idaho but hasn't fotmd one yet. Schmitz told newsmen Saturday he has , applied to teach at three Idaho schools and has been turned down by one, Boise State College. He has applied at lhe COilege o! Southern Idaho in Twin F,alls . and the~· Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Monnon-owned Ricks College in Rexburg. The former Ca I if or n i a Re.publican congressman said he has not heard from the two schools about his a~ plications. Sc hmitz. a Catholic, is a tenured in- structor in philosophy, history and political science at Santa Ana College. 1 The faculty senate at Boise State turn- ed down his application to join the school's political .science department because faculty senates "are liberal," Schmitz said. Dr. Willard Overgaard, chairma.i of ' the Boise State department of political 1 science, said Schmitz was turned down i because he did 1ot meet the re- quirements of the post. He has a\ master's degree in education, and "a · number of the 130 applicants for the job had qualifications which exceed" that ol Mr. Schmitz." Overgaard said. ' Schmitz told newsmen he would like to Jive in Idaho. It would be a "fine place tq raise seven children ," he said. He added he hoped "to spend a feW ex- tra days to look around up here ." U he moves to Idaho and were to seek political office, it would probably be the U.S. Senate, Schmitz said. "One would have to kno\v the state and its politics better" to run for governor, he added. NO ONE SELLS G.E. P•Wlf fM Mtch!lei•• • 2 lt•tl Tlltr1-W1d1 • Avtlf!lltlc Dtt1r,...t DitptltNf' • Swllts 0... OW • sr.M-Owt I«•• SD~ 159'6 •lJPATCHl' CONVENIENCE • PoJltluc Safety Door&..atch • f"1ist itcc:llnc • J.Joor Loc:k • -· FOR LESS THAN 90 DAY CASH WITH ~P .. OYlt CHDIT • Gl'1 ,...,.,_.fie ~::,z.":;t • lWWll!ld1Rin. ,r_,...._ • 3 Wiit! Cvcllt -Hom.I, "'"""*'t ,,.. _. ActW...i ... . ........ ) w_._ 20995 1815-NEWPORT BLVD. Darntnn Cesta Mesa -Phone 548-7788 )