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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-05-04 - Orange Coast Pilot• . I • • • en. . -IXOD· 1e • Ves~o Hired Nixon Kin~ - Before ·Fraud Laavsuit fltlOA'( AFTERNOON, MAY _4, !973 VOL .. MO, •1M. 4 lllCTION~ iW PAOIS • • • • • • •• ·• .. •• • • • • • • • '· ·~.---... -~-..~ .. ---=· .. ~ ( :0 .... --... -.. --· .. -.--·----.-_-_-_--·-·---,~-----:--......,,----,'-_-c:; . Autopsy Done on Ul"I,......... ACTING. STAFF CHIEF Gen. Alex•nder HAig Jr. Segretti Named For Sabotaging Muskie Campaign WASHINGTON ·(AP) -Doriald H. Segretti, a California attorney.· with reported lies to the White House, bas been indicted in an alleged scheme ·aimed at sabotaging Democratic Sen. Edmund S. Muskie's presidential campaign in F19rida last year, the Justice Depart· ~t said today. . The department said Segretti, long Wldfil' investigation in the Wa~~gate oc9n<1a1,was-indicted by •.~al d jury in Orlando, Fla. for ''.eubll~g and diStributillg a letter ... w\licb· failed to identify thOse responsible.'' 'lbat re/erred to .a·ruer said ·to:bave been forged on Muskie's stlittonery'Wblcb accused •two or his lea9mg oppOne,npi,1 sens. Hube<l·H. Humphrey. and H.enry lL Jackson, of sexual misConduct. 'lbe letter reportedly was distributed by tbe thOusands jusl pr;or. to ,the March H prlmary.. . 'nle JndiclJn"!lt also cbargl\d Ge<rg~ J.o.. • Hearin& of Tampa, Fla. on · the same colinls,. Roget!. Millon ll<ol,-a, ·Of ()4essa, Fla., a Conner _Nixon ~ign -ker and on .. time president .'«; \he Tampa 'Young ,Republiealls, W89fDBD'ed ·as an W'lldicted"CO-C.'On3pirator. Segreltt and 1Awir1ng were named on lwo counts, the jl'.rsl Charging; ll\llt ,Ibey manged for ·tl>e ,Jetter ,lo be published and the second tbal lhey .coospbi.I t<i dLttrlbute jt. ' According to the canoplreey counl, StgretU and Benz met Dec. 1, 1171, at a restmrant near Tampa, Fla. and "diocuad dla:aplkln lit tlle-campelpl" of Jackson and M11Jlde. • •. . I " Gen. Haig .Replaces Haldeman Boy JIJoUied fo.-B ·laze ,h l"f.. • • -~-. ~.-... . : ' .... KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -Pres~ dent Nixon picked Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr. today as temporary chief of the White House staff. The 4!1-year-old Haig has been Army vice chief of staff since January. Prior to a two-star promotion by Nixon to that job, he served as chief deputy to Nixon's natiooal security advi>er, Henry A. Kiss- lnge!'. The President met with Haig Thursday in Washington before leaving the capital for a Jong weekend at his Key Biscayne retrea~ Wliite Hou8e sources said. The SOlµ'CeS said Haig's new assign- ment is a temporary one . and that he would return to military duties after helping Nlxoo reqrganize the 'White House staff which was shattered by the resigna- tio~ of H.R. Haldeman anC! John D. Ehrlichman . Haig has been one of Nixon's favorite troubleshooters .. He fttqµently undertook missions for the Preslcfent to assess the military and political situation In Indo- china. . • .,..., '"" ""'! "' ....... ., ...... In selectilig Balg as slaff chief, Nixon followed lhe example of Presldent Dwight D. Eisenhower, who also pickci:I an Army man to head the White Honse staff In 1he wake ol th o .,.,;gnauoe ·of Shenltan Adam! who was implicated in a vicuna coat scandal. FIREMEN . ATTA;GK• BLAZE IN HOME ON MARILYN STREET IN HUNTING:roN BEACH ( Thund~ After.noon Fire Damages Home, Destroys Boat; No lniurin Reported Haig Was an Army colonel when he joined Kiaalnger'o· Natiooal Seeurity Council staff In 11119. HljlArmy advance- (See BAI~ Pqe I) Ves·co Firm Hired Nixon • -Bandit ·Sorry, Returns Loot "A repentant bajldit w!io. wore a U.S. Pootaf Servke uni!Ol'lll In the •u1 anneCI rob1>erY of a Corooa del Mar coroet shop 10 clays ago has remorsefully maDed the money bacll, Special Delivery. . The' gunman who relieved Sour Persons · of the.lr cash at the !ilhouette Shop, 2737 , E. Cqast Highway, enclosed an anonymOUS oote of explanation. He said he went to churcl,tliil- follow.!l!s SUnda and became cofto." ~over. VIQg· both the Ell!Jlb CGmmandrnent of ~ Old Teslanle!lt and "Section 2U of the C.lllomia Penal Code. , "Lord .. , I don't remember any other c.,. like tt," Newport Beach Detective Sam Amburgey aid to- day. "1 1'isb more ol tbete guys· would go to chw-ch." .Kin Prior to Fraud Suit . . Donald Nixon, 26-year-<>ld Son or F. D<inald Nixon of · Newport Beach and ne~hew of the President, has been in" the employment of a · New Jersey l financier connected with a securities and:excharlge commission complaint, it was reported today. The' New York Times said young Ni11>n was hired by Robert L. Vesco In July, · 1971, one month after the SEC.began in- 've;"Ugatlng the New Jersey financier. An a590Clate of Vesco was quoted by • : tJte. nmes ~u -saying ltbere! as )'no ques- tion11• <that Donald Nixon ~as hired , because. he cciuld "'!'{bow beli1 Vesco'> ) plau ;in the "1jlre. -N'aoo beeame · ed with J6e )'esco fari1!1y In 'their large raneh ·nonie.Jn Bo!>nton; N<w Jersey. Vesco, who ·secretly gave ~.ooo in cash to the Nixon re-election campaign, has been served with an arrest warrant in conn.ectlon with a $224 million civil fraud suit filed by the SEC. Donald Nixon. has oerv.ed Jn the Navy and las told .....,.ates that he was wound~ •1'8hlly In Vietnam. His position with .the Vesco organizat~on apparently was handling personal arrangements for Vesco and included traveling in many foreign· countries. His oUitjal position was descr:fb81 as l•conaultant." His father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. F. Donald Nixon, have ~ longtime residents of Newport Be;lch. Young Donald Nixon was graduated from Newport Harbor High School in t964 and attended Orange Coast College and California State U n i v e r s i t y at ~orthridge. · His family· Jn Newport confirmed today (S.., .DQl\I NIXON, Page Z) ~ .. ' . ' ' :SS EY.a.JJgelists Held ·.LAS VEGAS1 )';ev. (AP) -Police have ·arrested 55 members of an evangelical associalloe here alter Ibey paraded ilhrough the downtown casino center car· rylng a 10-fciol wooden cross. Officers oak! Thursday those arreated purportedly were members of a group 'known as "Christ Is the Answet Crusade ." Bo y, 6, Ignites $12,000' Bl.aze In Huntington Fire investigators said todQy a &-year- old boy started a blaze Thursday af- ternoon that caused an estimated $12,oo:> in damages to a Huntington Beach home. The home owned bY: Rick VandC\iort at 6902 Marilyn Drive silffered e1iensive smoke damage from the fire which com- pletely destroyed the adjoining garage and the fiber glass ski boat parked in it. A team or 17 firemen 'quickly knocked down the Dames tbal broke out at about 2, P·f"· 'l'he, I hick column of black smoke could ~·BE!f:n over a ·wide area of llw.- tlngton Belich. Fire iJJv<?Ugators aid today the· lire was star\ed by a boy who did not live in "the house: They aid the child started the fire with matches and paint thinner. Neither the boy nor firemen fighting the fire were lnjllred In the blaie. The occupants were not homo at the time ol the fire . • • • 4Doctors -. Investigate : . . ·For Poison ·'f llANNJ!IAL, Mo. (AP) -Audr~ County authorities were waiting the results today of an autopsy on fomier U.S. Sen. Edan! V. Long , whose body, was exhmned Thursday for investigation of a report Long may have fied of poison- Jng. In a copyright story, the Kansas Clf¥ Star said the body was taken fnial Grandview Cemetery here to HannliCI hospital, where an autopsy was perfOTill· 1 ed In the presence of four doctors. :· Samples were taken rrom the stom.t:b for chemical analysis but the J'e5'.0°is were not immediately known. ; .. An observer told tbe Star the autoilif revealed a large pituitary tumor wlijiir ci. may have caµaed the veteran politician'• death Nov. 6, the atory said. Long's widow, Mrs. Florence Long, asked investigators to check the progress 9f the tumor, which was discovered at J. Washington hospital in 1967. . The report that Long may have died from poisoning came last month from Helen Dunlop, Long 's secretary. She lokf authorities Long complained shortly before his death that he might have been poisoned by a box of candy which had been given to him. _ Long's body was reburied yesterd:zy after being exhumed at the request ol Thomas Osborne, Audrain County pros- ecuting attorney. Mrs. Long approved the autopsy with certain conditions, in- cluding having present a physi cian of her (See EXHUME, Page Zl Oraage Cout The weather service sees low · clowds blocking out Old Sol on Sat· urday with a chance of partial clearing in the late afternoon. Cool· er temperatures are eipected, with readings in the 60s. Lows 48-58. INSIDE TODAY Two staff writers take a look ai the Returis.tance Pleasure f'aire which takes place each May 111 Aooura: one from the perspective of the participating artist and one from the view of the visitor. See today's Week· e1uJer. -. • • -• •• • J j t • • ( • ·~ Church's • lmcriptinn f-; OAIL Y PILOT $1 Million 'Secret' Ni.xQn Fu · d ~f~old G'l'ON (AP) -'Ille Conner of President N-'• campaisn mlttee lw testUi<d In a d UOn that ti,e campaJgn rais- 1--4.i --m1ln! ·!!>an-fl mlll!On -In caali con- tJ1bt.1Uon which apparently were never ·-led. 1,.,,The Sl!iemenl wa. macit ~y Hugh W. sioan Jr.. fonner tttuurer of the ·~Jnllnce C<>mmlttee to Jle.elect the President, on Oct. 24, and unsealed by ~us. District Court today. Attomeya for Common CaU9e, a cililW group, uked Sloan bow much cash money was covered in a missing ledgtr sheet of cash lnrulaCllonl by lhe committee. ' • A. I don't ha ve a precise rigure in mind. But It was in excess of $1 million. Q, You have Indicated that the amount was lo w:eos of fl mWJon. Coun you put a celling oa ii? Was it under SIO million?" A. Oh, yes, it w111 under $2 million. * * * "fitaance Records ' ~.:Kalmbach Says ~. r;. Files Destroyed ><! NEW YORK IAP) -President Nixon's ,former personal attorney has told t.aovemment investigators that h e .~royed all his campaign finance ;;records belore the 1m federal campaisn •I • -;Brag Queens Vie ~· . ,Jn 'Miss Gay ~;-1 • .America' Fete -'t' •·. 'N~L_E. TeM. (UPI) -More than 40 young men vying for the title of r..Miss Gay America anive in this music I· city nt!Xt week for a two-day pageant In 'which they wi ll be judged on poise, ,Jalent, makeup and other -factors. -~\,The female impersonators, ranging in -..ge ~from 18 to-~and -winners o{ • preliminary contests in 3t slates;-will ap- . ·pear' lo evening gowns and sp<>rtswear 1@ing the second annual Miss Gay ...America pageant al a local night club · l\lay 11).12. Pageant chairman Jerry Peak said the ~lair has "grown by leaps and bounds" .,flld lhat contest.ants this year are com· .peting for more than $8,000 in cash and ..p.r!z,es. ~ ., The man chosen Miss Gay America _..Will receive a 1973 car and $1,000 in cash, fµk said. "Next year we will add three college scholarships to the list of prizes -like in the Miss ~erica contest," Peak said. Ul'I T...-i1 Pe11ta9011 Pick? David Packard, a multimillion- aire California industrialist and former deputy secretary of de- f ense, is reported to be Presi· dent Nixon's top choice for the defense secretary post left va- cant by Elliot Richardson, now attorney general-designate. OUN51 COAST IT DAILY PILOT Thi Or11191 Co11t O"ILY PILOT, wlltl wtlk;fl b clHnblned nit Htwt-Pren . II publllohed by th.-Ori"" Cotll Publl.itlf>V Cemfl&ny, !4111· rU1 ..Silloftl ,,._ pybli11'Md, .i.r.oncs.y ~ ,-,io.,, tor Co111 M..-, Htwport Buch, Hvnl!"91on 8tltdliF"""llln Vatley, Lav.,.,. a .. cn, 1,..ln1/S~\l'Hck 1!1d S•n CltrMnll/ Sin Ju1n Clplllr•no. A 1lnglt r191oMI M llion !1 POJOll1Md S1turdr(I 1fld Sllr>OI~. fne p<lrKJpel publlalling Pia"! lt 11 DJ W.SI llJ S!r-.t, Cosll M..-, Clllfofnl1, t'H'H- Rob1rt N, W11d Prniffnl Ind Pl'flll"* J1ck It Curl1y va l"rniffnl 11111 Getwr•I ~ Tho1r111 k11vil l!ll(lor Thol'l'JU A. Murp~in1 Mlln1gl119 EllllOr Ch1r41t H. Looi Ric~•"' ·r. N1U A11l1t1nt M•"'llnl Elllltor. "'"'• CM•• M ... : »O Wftl B•r StrH I .........,, ...,., Jm ~"""1 BOulnl"' L ....... B.-dl: m Fot"al A-"""'111111111'1_,.: 17111 lffdl .....,_ ,lfl'l c"""'"": m Not1l'I I I Clflllne lllNl , ........ 17141 '41-4111 Cl rt .......... 641-1671 ,,.. c.-tll .,_ --.. i...,.. MKll 4t1MJ:I ,_ .... °"""" °""""" e.. .......... -•m ~. tm. ~c-1 ........... CfoNlltrL ,,.. ..... --.,... ...... ~11r _,,.. • .-~ .. ,,., •• ,. """"" .., .. ~ ......... 1 ....... IMillln .. ~ --· ...,..dlM,........W.tc ... -... -~ ~... .., ...,.., tut .......,., W MIU '3,lf .........,, """"' •luitsallM~· I finance law took effect, accmlJng to sources quoted today by the New York Time.I: Tbe Times said it learned from sources close to the case that Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, who was Nixon's attorney Wltit a few days ago, said be deslrOyed the records to protect the names of donors. Most of the funds raised by Kalmbach came from wealthy Republicans living in Southern Califomla, where Kalmbach maintains a private law practice, the newspaper said. Kalmbach served as a a s o c i a t e chairman of the Republican 'fe-election finance committee. Such destruction of oecords, the Times said, co\,lld be a violation of the 1922 Cor· rupt Practices Act A • spokesman for the Republican !inanCe cofllJllittee was quoted ·by the Times as saying, "We haV-e no in· formation that any records were dtstroyed."" · The Times ,said.Kalmbach coi\ti-Oiled a secret $500,ln> fund , part of which was allegedly used fo1 espionage a n d sabotage during the im campaign. It also said be i.a known to be under gr&Dd jury investig~tion, for his alleged role in a reported conspiracy to obstruct the Initial" federal investigations into the bugging of Democratic national head- quarters in Washington's Watergate com· pies. United Press International quoted an associate as saying the records were de stroyed in Kalmbach's office in the headquarters of the Committee to Re- elect the President and at Kalmbach's home in Newport Beach. F..-Pagel DON NIXON. •• that young Nixon had done considerable traveling ror Vesco, mainly in Nassau and the Dominican Republic. 'Ibey de- clined further comment on his role with Vesco. "I have no comment on any activities of any members of my family,'' the elder Donald Nixon concluded. Meanwhile, A s s o c i a t e d Press dispatches from New York reported to- day that a federal judge ha! ordered the arrest of Vesco but Vesco's lawyer still says his client wiU not appear before a federal grand jury unless granted im· munity from prosecution. U.S. District Court Judge Edmund L. Palmieri signed the bench warrant Thursday after noting Vesco had failed to respond to subpoena ordering him to testify before the grand jury in· vestigating his $250,0CKI contribution to UM: Nixon re-election campaign last year. James W, Rayhill, executive assistant United States attorney, told the judge that the govenunent had information Vesco intended to renounce his U.S. citizenship and settle in Costa Rica. Vesco has been sought by the grand jury which is looking into whether his campaign donation was an attempt to In- fluence an investigation that resulted in a civil suit against him by the Securities and Exchange C:Ommission. That suit, which is being tried here now, charges that Vesco and 41 others siphoned off at least $%24 million from domestic and foreign mutual funds con· trolled by Investors Overseas Services, Ltd. of Switzerland. In a related matter. Vesco's wife Patricia was subpoenaed to appear before the grand jury on Monday. Vesco, 37 has been residing in Nassau , the Bahamas. An assistant U.S. attorney claims he was thrown off Vesco's pnr perty on Nasuau April 15 while al· tempting to serve him witll a subpoena. Vesco's lawyer, Edward Bennett \\'iliiams. told the court during a 30- minute hearing before the arrest warrant "·as issued that the government has refused to grant his client immunity. Williams also said of his client. "I have strong reason to believe he will be in· dicted." The grand jury has questioned former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitcbell, who headed the Committee to Re-elect die President for a , time, and former Commerce Saretary Maurice H. Stans, Nixon's chief political fund raiser during the campaign. On Wednesday, the Justice Department accused the Nixon campaign of failing to report $200,000 of Vesco's contribution. A convictk>n on the charge carries a $3,000 fine. Governmtnt popers say the ctir>- tribuUoa, which was in cash. w1s receiv· ed by the calllpalsn's finaooe committee on April JO, 1971, throe days after !be l!ilmpalgn contn'bullon dllclosure law took effect. On Jan . 31, lbe Nixon campaign com- mittee returned the entl1< fli0,000 ..... trlbuUon to VelCO. • ' -Q. Somewhere belWff!l fl mIIIloa and #million! A. Yes. Later_ In lba.depoo1Uon_Sl0an.J'1J!IJM rnl18lng shoets on cash money listed "about $900,000" In disburaemenl!. Apparently tner. Is r» publJc reoonl of unreported calli raJjed ond bandlod by the Nixon campaliJI, allhough !here baa been court testimony of aums up tO $350,000 kept ln various safes. . ' • • l -•• · Ntws nporta have said Prelkknl Jti--,.,. Wilna lo report ....._ !tom on's pmon.ol lawy.,., He<bert Kalmboljob a thlrd -el fllDd ~ In campaign at Newport Beach, had a fl(I0,000 bank beadquarten. account mota!nin& c 1 m p a I ~D eon--_ . When the new campalgn finance trlbullona used,_ at leut In part, to P.!Y d~w ...,,t jpto,o!fect <11 April 7, for political tsplonage. l'7i, lliii Nliiii CiiiiiiilttM" re An aide In former White House Chief ol auetS o( SlO million. !l'be $2 mUIJon or Stall II. R. Haldeman baa beeo quoted In leu ~ .... lijloed In h1I dopoa!Uoo .... grand · Jllrf , IUUmony u ta yin g Jlll'!Ptlr lllil In~ lo Ibo repcrtec1 Haldeman kept '350,000 In· apparen!ly lund.s oo hw>d. • , . unreported campaign money in hi• sari!. Sloen U!otlllectlhfl...,,. teCOlclo'"ol lhe The Nixon campaign wa.s r .. ed '8,000 calih l(anaacllonl.had been destioyod. ' .. E(:o'iQgy Unit Names Board In Lawsuit Qrang_e C9mtty~rvisors today face Superior Court action based on the allegation that their overturning of the plan¢ng commission's decision on a con- trovenial El Toro development was il· legal. The lawsuit filed by the Environment.al Coalition of Orange CoWlty with an El Toro church and school as co-plaintiffs claims that the county board acted unlawfully March 21 w~en it rezoned an eigtit acre parcel at El Toro Road and Muirlan¢; Bouleva"t That action cleared the way for the Rinker Corporation to build a-shopping center on the site. The company's plans had earlier been balked when the county planning commission refused to rezone the area. Lawyers for the county, the coalition, the Abiding Savior Lutheran Church and the Good Shepherd Lutheran Home of the- Iloom.e 87 WILLIAM SCllREIBER ot .. DtlfY "" .... Tbe commandments of municipal law prevailed 'lllllnd•Y · lllght ,as Newport Beach plariiiln& commlsllonen ruled the bold e,Pma!on of laltb oo a blulllop C1lff Drive church wall must come down. By a 4-1 vote, the commission decided the large "Praise Ye the Lord" in- scription on an outside wall of First Bap. tist Church, 2501 Cliff Drive, comes under the purview of the city's sign law. Though commissioners voted t o remove the 196-square-foot sign, they told the church it could be replaced with one not so visible and overbearing - somewhere in the range of 15' square f~eet. C official• say they will C001ider ·. g the ruling to the city council In effort to continue carrying thelr message to motoris ts on Pacific Coast Highway below the bluffs. Church leaders and other supporters turned out in force at the meeting to reinforce their belief that the inscription is not detrimental to the city and in fact is not a sign in the conventional sense. "The church takes the position that the inscription ... is not a sign within the ~ of the ordinance," said church bOard Chairman Frank Barton. "This position is based on the a~p­ tion that the city COUDCll, In passmg the on1lnance, intended to uphold the U.S • Constitution and its protection for the ex· · ercise of religion," he ~dded. Earlier this week, Newport Beach at· tomey William Drake, who also spo~e Thursday night, said the black, p~c lettering is an expression of religious West have been ordered to appear before .. belief and as such rails under guaranteed. Judg~ Rober~ P. Kneeland May 2.3 for a protections of free speech and religion. UP'I T.-.11 TIME TO RELAX -President Nixon and his friend Charles "Bebe" pretr1~l .hear1ng. . Ass ' tant Cit Attorney· David Baade Coal~JO~~wr~rs allege _th~-t~e W~S~-__ ·-_ • RebozlrSlll.ile-a_Jt:-lhey-,walk lo the Florida White House where-Nfxon and his family.are spending the weekend. supervisors aec.is1~e ttie e1g~r-He said that while • the ConstituUoa acre area from res1clent1al to commercial 1 · freed of li · n ·1 doesn't give use violated state law . a~rs om re g10 · 1 . , More Warrants sued in Cult D ath in Florida DAYTONA BEACH, Fla (AP ) -Police said todaY first-degree murder warrants have been issued for two more persons .in the "witchcraft cult" torture-slaying of a 11·year-old California youth. Seven persons already baa been charg· ed with mW'der. .. Authorities declined to reveal the nalne of the new,.suspects, bt!t said they were believed to be members of the band of young devil worshipers implicated in the death of Ross Michael Cochran of Fresno. Police chafged six residents of a ramshackle rooming house on Grandview AVt!nue Wednesday, and Thursday brought murder charges against a seventh -Steven A. Skaggs, 21, of Petersburg, Va. Cochran's beaten and rope·lrussed body was found in a remote wooded area southwest of Daytona Beach Tuesday night. Police said he was flogged with chaiM and stabbed with broken bottles tbe Friday before in the rooming house occupied by tbe young cuJtists. One of those Charged, Cindy Black of Rexdale, Ont., told police she was 17, but a judge and her parents later revealed she was only 15. She told the judge at a hearing Thursday she did not want her parents told of tbe charges. Barefoot Bandit Hits the Colonel For $1,000 Haul A burly bandit walked barefoot in~ a frie<khicken restaurant in Sa n Clemente Thursday and robbed the outfit of $1 ,000. Police said the robbery occurred before noon as employes were preparing for the busy lunch trade et Kentucky Fried Chicken, 700 E. SI Camino Rea l. Detectives said the man brandished a two.inch-barreled revol\ler and demanded moneh. Employes gave him the cash and the man Ded out the back door, the way he entered. Investigators described the bandit as extremely stocky with a large cliest and broad shoulders. The man 's hair was shoulder·length . He wore a white t-shirt and jeans, witnesses said. Frona Page l EXHUME •.. choice. The Star said one .doctor from Han· nibal, two from St. Louis and one from the Louisiana , Mo. area attended the autopsy. Also present were pike County Coroner J, 0 . Mudd and Marlon Wuinaer, a Han· nibal attorney who represedts Mrs. U:mg, Mrs. l.oog bad !lied .. alieiiatlon ol al~ons suit against Mia Qa!llop, seek- ing damages ol $3.25 million charging that ~ Dunlop "cam1lly111 ~w IA¥ii· A few niiliilhs before bis deatb, Long, who was ,.parated from bis wile, revlJed bit wlll, leaving $10 each to his widow and their daughtU, and the bulk ol his Olllte, estlmaled.. at more than # mllllon, to bis granddaugbter • Frona Page l . HAIG ... ment was meteoric after that. He was a major' general when Nixon decided to vault him over scores of senior officers for appointment as Army vice chief of staff and promotion to four- star rank. Haig was born in Philadelphia and is a graduate of West Point. He received a master's degree from Georgetown Uni· versity in 1962; .O!ficia!S said the President bas not decided on a pennanent White House realignment. But they said Nixon wanted to move quickly to name an aide to help wi~ the reorganization. Haldeman, as Nixon's chlef of staff, bad virtually complete authority to de- \ermine who would. -and who would not -see the President or even speak to him on the telephone. Ehrlichman serv- ed as Niion's chief adv1ser on domestic matters. Kenneth Cole, Ehrlichman's c~et as-- slstant, has .taken over as the President's top domestic strategist, although be lacks much of the influence wtetded by Ehrlich- rnan. And they further claimed that state c~un:hes !a~or_ed stat.us· ove~. other m- laws clearly Point out that a county sht1:1tions ·s~mllarly situated. com- board can amend a general plan onJy if ~1tr o!ficaals st:essed to the lbe I · · · 1 "th m1 ss1on that the sign has drav.11 com· " p anrung comm1ss1011 goes a ong wi 1 . 1 · · . tho gh it faces Pacific the recommendation. P am s, even u Rinker Corporation president Harry Coast ~ghway and oot any of the ne&r· Rinker saw the supervisors' decision by residen<:i!S. . , March 21 as vindication of his argument 'J'.heY .also said the ch~ch 1s. 1n a that the planners had unfairly denied him rcs1denh~I zone and the sign on:hnan~ permission to build on the eight.acre site. allows ~1gns of onJ_y .two square feel m Rinker's first a pp ea I to the area without ~nruss1on. supervisors in January was rejected Planners ~aid that eve.n lho~gh because his plans indicated the building churches enJOY . some . Special zorung of two service stations within the status, the big mscripllon Is ~ar larger development. than ~e at any other church m town. He promised to eliminate the service ~loners generally su~~ the stations and his revised plans were ac--s~f position that the exhortation 1s a cepted by the supervisors after again sign under the law and a very oversiz.ed being rejected by the planning com-one at that. mission. -------------. Submarine in Error PLA"fBQY 'TVRIVS ON' SEARCHERS WASIDNGTON (UPI ) -The USS Greenling, a nuclear attack submarine PHILADELPHIA (AP) The ca rrying a crew of more than 100, dived machinery at Philadelphia's lntema. beyond its nonnal depth during a tional Airport is getting turned on by traiNng exercise off Bennuda March 27, Playboy. but managed to return safely to port after Playboy Club "key cards are opening the error was discovered, the Navy said the way to careful searches at airport Thursday. The Greenling is similar in de--security checkpoints. The cards have a sign to the USS Thresher, which was lost magntic tape that sets off metal detec- in more than 8,000 feet of water off the tors, said Russell E. Miller, a Federal New F..ngland Coast a decade ago. Aviation Administration security official. ~----------------~~ l ;/j . ... .I I'" ' .. .---:~ ' THE ANEST IN QUALITY AT ACCEPT ABLE PRICES. WE ARE ANXIOUS TO SERVE YOU AND SHOW YOU Tl-jlS FINE COLLECTION OF CHAIRS ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT. STOP IN TODAY! DREXEL--HERITAGf>.4iENREOON-WOODMARK-l(ARA51AN IKTERIORS WDllDAYS & SATURDAYS t :OO lo l:lO NIDA 'I' 'TIL t:GO NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLIF, DR.: 6<12·2010 IOp111 S11M1y 12·11JOI LAGUNA BEACH e 145 NOllTHCOAST HWY. co,.111 s11M,, 1z.5,Jo1 4••·••11 TORRANCE e tlMf HAWIHO!NE ILYll. JJt.12n ' J ' ' ft DE gai th• Ca inf kn· mt ler I lh• Ex "G Th loc shl se1 ed. obi pl• Sjl< of 19! tee An 0 I bn m1 -.iu fo1 b" sa; 'str ra• th• frc wi liv fai a" wl I~ re ar re yo co de or gr Sb cb V8 q' '' "' or m D• It! ., at ., re R• SC 01 m wl pf a1 l le sii ot fit \Yi Mi Y: M M Ji~ m "' CE of di 0( lb 19 m h< ot Ii! Ix " "' cl er C< ., at yt "' 01 ct pl 41 .. Ix .. I .. "' .. wt In At· Your Service A &uMloy, 'If .... 1.., ud Fl'tday Feolve Of tbe Dally Pilot Got a f)f'Obhnn1 T~m write Pat Duttn. Pat will cut red tapt, gel the- • answers and action 1J o u need co -1_-rolve inequl- U.t m gov- tmmtnt and ti our ques· tfO'na to Pat Dunn/ At business. Hail Your Seroice, Onmge Coast Dailv Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Meta. Ca., 92626. lnclude your u~ephone number. Hydropo11ie Gardenln9 DEAR PAT: We want to try our hand at gardening and are interested in exploring the hydroponics met bod as a possibility. Can you tell us where to obtain reliable information about this system? Do you_ know of anyone locally who has tried thi~ method and what their suceess or prOb- lems may have been? F. G., Costa !\1esa ' Dal1Y P tlol St•tf '"°,_ VieW From On High Friday, M11 4, 1973 Guest Spe•ker• ' Trustee Criteria By JAN WORTH Of .. Dt"Y Piiot $Mff The lack of crlterla on wba\ is con· troversial in lhe speakers policy of Sad· dleback Communlly College is "a purposeful 111ck." Michael C.Ollins, one of 1he school's trustees, said Thursday in an interview. • ··1f Dr. (Benjamin) Spock came here to OC Race~ay Noise ProteSt Brings Calls • s DAILY Pfl,OT I Claims • (' J Lacking speak on amnesty for Vietnam .. 1\ evaders l'd consider that eontrOVttSlal and say no." Collins said. 11ll he spoke~ chUd raising, I'd say yes." The campus speaker's pollcy allows ·• single speaker if his topic is non-con- troverslal. If a controversial is.sue is In~ valved, speakers represenUng both skies must be scheduled for the samr pr1>- gran1. Collins said he felt specifying what is controversial and 11o'hat is not would restrict the board. "Eaeh case mll.$l be treated In- dividually, depending on the mood of the campus and the community," he said. "We have to take a very pragmatic ap- proach," he sakl. "To btvlte Jane Fonda fo campus fo discuss the Stanislawski school of acting would obviously be in- A Laguna Hills Leisure World resident viting trouble, and I'd say 'no way'.·· said he fias received at least six obscene Asked how a speaker could be phone calls since appea ring be£ore the prevented from discussing a con· Kenneth E. Mueller. farm advisor at the University of California Agricultural Extension Service, advises you to study "Growing Plants in Solution Culture." The booklet is being mailed to you. If any local hydroponics gardeners want to share their experiences with you , letters sent to At Your Service will be forward- ed. Other readers interested in learning about the hydroponics method, in which plants are grown 'vit h their roots in special nutrient-bearing solutions instead of in soil, may request this booklet (AXT- 196) by writing to the Agricultural Ex- tension Service, 1000 S. Harbor Blvd., Anahi!im !l'llJ05_ lf you're on a freeway, it doesn't look like much. But an aerial view provides a different perspective, in this case an interesting pattern. The photograph shows the San Diego and Newport Freeways. U you were traveling from the upper left of the picture toward the bottom right, you would be beaded to- ward Newport Beach. Board of Supervisors · two weeks ago troversial issue during a question and regarding noise from the El Toro answer period, Collins said, "The Raceway. chairman would have to handle that. lf it Nonnan Horowitz charged thal the gets out of hand, it gets out of hand." Orthodontic Co11t11 Runaways, Metric U.S., Israel Probed on Sunday As Sunday's edition of the Daily Pilot press relations from Washington to Nix- shapes up today, editors predict the on. DEAR P"AT: Our child is in need of following will be among "Sunday's Best" ~ braces and we've found to our amaze-in meetin g needs or lickJing fanc.ies of 'fi.1IDNIGHT SPECIAL' -The youth- ment ~-.~.@ .cost or iU~-~!!ices....h¥-::_local.zeaders :___ _..1... ori~-sbo__w with top musical groups Stripper Star Comes Back i•i Bw~e of Glory supervisors were allowing the track "Everyone keeps assuming that this is operators to "thumb their noses at you." a question of the constitutional rlghts'::or Mike Jones operator of the Orange students. That's not it. Rather, it J9": a County International n aceway, spo ke question of how we are going to use the against applying the proposed coun-facilities of this school." - tywide standards on noise to raceways. DoMa Berry, another trustee, said She "They call for the allowance of more interpreted controversial as "anything noise if the ambient sound level is high in · that has at least two sides " the area," Jones said. "This favors El ''I don't Care who the ~udents brin1 Toro Raceway because it is under the El on campus, as long as he or she is op- Toro Marine Corps Air Station flight pat-~ by a speaker of equal stature," tern." she said. BALTIMORE (UP!) -Blaze Starr got County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said the . Asked I! she woold require an opposlllg back in the saddle in the Baltimore strip board had three ways to go in regulating view to a nationally eminent apeaker I racetrack noise : Set noise level limits such as Barry Goldwater, Mn. Berry area, "The Block," Thursday night and for raceways in a separate ordtrumce ; .said, "Certainly. We would -be unfair· to told everyone "it au came up roses.'' have the health officer issue permits; or the students here who deserve to bear The roses came from other owners require a license from the heaJth officer the other viewpoint if we didn't have 'ffi0Sror~1sts.1Sffiere . any wlif o.ul ---gets cover-page-treatmenHn-'FV ·WEEK-- for a family o~ m~est e~rntngs to affo~d METRIC AMERICA _ The days o[ .as NBC announces its renewal for braces. for ~heir children. When someone feet and pounds may be measured in another 13 weeks . The week's specials, along , Ille ~ast_ J?altim~ st!iP ~~ea _ _:_ fo r each raceway. . . . Goldwater malched." ....;._ 1 where Blaze was the top banana among T?rl!' "t'OQDtywtde-no158"-ontinance--wHl---Ttte--most-recenHnstance-'ot ·the,...·sot~---''I the lers for 10 years. no~ be ready for another 30 days, Kuyper cessfu1 use of the .dual.speaker poba1 says 1t will cost $1,000 to $2,SOO to ... · d -·d th -· I d t -ht t • t th -,, meters and grams. Pressure continues to prev1ewe inst e e magazrne, inc u e .., s ra1g en ou your sons ee , 1 s th fnal · tallm 1 · Ar ta' Gook • pee . said. was scheduled for 11 a.m. today, with a Blaze reopened he r renowned T\vo debate on amnesty involving foUr rather staggering. We also understand mount irf the U.S. for a change to the e 1 lllS en m 15 ir es "America" series. O'Clock Club. participants. She shut down last October, blaming Co1nedian Succ111nbs Favoring amnesty are representatives the entire job usually takes anywhere metric system of weights and measures. from a year lo two years to complete Daily Pilot Staff Writer John Zaller with many visits for adjustments. We . . Jive in Costa Mesa and are a one-car reports on what 1t would mean to the 1n- family. dividual citizen in this 'veek's lead story of YOU Sectton. L.B .. Costa Mesa If transportation to the Los Angeles area is not possiblr, you should consult with several orthodontists in your local- ity, explain your financial situation and request that a reduced fee be given, or arrangements made to pay fees in small, regular amounts. Tbe other possibility, if you can arrange transportation, is to contact tbr three UaJversity.aJ'6Ualed dental clinics currently o f f e r I n g orthodontic treatment by dental school graduates under the supervl•lon of in~ struetors. Keep ln mind that thet1e clinics choose their cases based on lruitructionaJ value and your son's case may not qoallfy. USC Dental CUnlc will begin ac- cepting applications in November for next year's three-month schedule or orthodontic work. Call !13-74'-!1410 to make appUcation. The UCLA Ortbodontlc Dept CUnlc, !ll-1%5-3%1!, bas scbedoled its next appointment period for screealnf applicants during September. Both USC and UCLA base fees on a 11lkllng scale according to Income and work lite case requires. Loma Unda University, near Redlands, wlll ac«pt applicants for screening next January. Call the Dept. o{ Orthodontics at 714-824-0030, ext. 163, to make arrangement5. 'lbe flat fee Is $950, with a $250 down payment and monthly payments of $35 required. Only patients aged 10 through 14 are accepted. ENERGY CRISIS -As Congress heads for the showdo\ol.11 on energy. ecology and the Trans-Alaska pipeline. the question continues to be whether or not the energy emergency is real or phony. Sen. Barry Goldwater says "We Need Alaska Pipeline" in his edit.oriaJ page column. ISRAEL'S BIRTHDAY -It was a group of idealists who, 25 years ago, formed the new nation . The thought that may nag at tbe minds ' of thouehtful Israelis as Monday's anniversary date approaches: How well has their new, in- dependent nation lived up to the dreams of its founders? PRESIDENTS AND PRESS -It has been no love match over the years as press and president (no matter who be was) crossed pens and swords. Special feature reviews history of presidential Doctor, Minister Held in Sodomy With 15 Boys J..ot to Celebrate HAUPPAUGE, N_y_ (UP!) - A DEAR PAT: Where do television psychialrist specializing in treating emo-tionally disturbed children, a Protestant feature shows get !heir lists of all the minister and six other men were charged silly as well as serious monthly Thursday with taking h o m o s e x u a l observances usually announced on the liberties with about 15 teen-age boys. first day of each moo th? Today, May 1, it Saverio Fierro, the chief of the Suffolk 'vas announced that May is Car Care County district attorney's rackets Month, Internation.111 Air Travel Month, bureau, said sex parties involving boys Yams for Summertime Easy Llving ranging in age from "under 11 to IS" Month and Play Your Own Harpsichord took place from January, 1970 to Month! Someone must put out a book December, 1971 in the $00,000 home and Jisting all these observances. If so, how on the $100,000 yacht or one of the de£en- ma~y events are included in a one-year tants, George Brehm, 50, of West Islip, penod, where do they all come from and N.Y. can an individual get one of these books? / Asked how the boys were recruited for R.T., Laguna Niguel the sex parties, Fierro said: "We believe 'This year's edJHon of Chases' Calendar that several of these men may have of Annual Events Includes 1,71& special fraudulently identilie:d themselves as days, weeb, tnontbs BDd other special members of Big Brother." occurrences. Chases' statl1ticlans claim The Big Brother movement provides that If you started celebrating Jan. 1, male companionship for boys whose 19'13, It would take 35 years, three fathers: are de8d or who come from months, one week, five days and <1ne brokeit homes. Fierro said one suspect, boar, or unW 1 a.m., March 1!, !008, to Hal Oelke, 48, of New York, was a public obsenre consecu11vely all the events relations man who was a one-time listed in the sixteenth edition of this employe of the Big Brother movement. book. Editor Wiiiiam D. Cha1e says Also charged were Dr. Morris Fraser calendar Ustlngs come from offlclaJ of Belfast, Northen Ireland, a sources, public laws, presidential pr. psychiatrist specializing ln the treatment clamallons, governors' offices, foreign of emotionally disturbed children, and a embassies, travel associations and Protestant minister, the Rev. George count.less organizations and private Ros.wan, 53, of New Haven, Conn. 1pomon of special event!!. N e w Another defendant was awiting ex- autborbatkm for event1 ts required each tradition proceedings in Puerto Rico and yeai-, Including name, address and three others were fug!Uves. Their names purpose of each sponsor, to assure that were not releued. only' bonaftde event!! are htclllded. Tbe Fierro said Fraser, who is on the staff caJendar can be <1rdered for $5 from AP"" of the Royal Belfast Ho.!pital, flew to the pie Tttt Prft1, Bo:a: 101%, Flint, Mich. United States and voluntarily sur- 41511 and a frte Jeanet, .. How to An-rendered. Fierro said Rossman is: on the noance and SponlOr a Special Even&" caa staff of the Yale University Divi nity be nque1ted by l<lldlllg a 1<H-addrellltd, School and is dir!'cl<>r or the Ecumenical stamped envelope to Ute same adclreu. Continuing EdueaUon Center Jn New --HaYert. - Lib Fes t Canceled LONDON (AP) -The !int worldwide women's liberation festival has been can· celed for lack of interest, organlurs here said Thursday. The week·long f..Uval wh ID have been held on Ille Ille ol Man In late September. Each-suspect was charged with rt counts of sodomy, sexiial abuse and con- spiracy. -They pleaded lnnoceol to the charges at thelr B1Talgnment In SUffollc County Court. Brehm was aervlng a one-t.o-10 year term in Auburn State Prison on 81mllar chatgt.1 In N..,.u <;ounty. Tho other 9U!peoll """' "'leued on 12,ootl ball. ' RUNAWAYS -Concerned about the problem of young runaways, coast area youth agencies feel the solution to the problem may be to establish a hostel for the youths where they can be out of danger. Daily Pilot Staff Write~ Candace Pearson tells. the story. "the encroachment of creeps and thugs" of Vietnam Veterans Against the Wair along the gawdy strip. VAN NUYS (AP) -Stage and film Allredo Cabrera and Bill Hage. ~ "The other owners assured me that comedian Alan Camey is dead of an ap-ponents are Albert Strong llI ·and PrlCe everything had been taken care of and I parent heart attack at the age of 63. Saunders, rtpresentatlves of the Orange looked around and T believed them,'' said Camey collapsed and died \Vednesday County RepubUcan Central Committee., the woman who made the 44-inch bosom at Hollywood Park Race Track in This proposal was accepted without a household word. Inglev.•ood after winning the daily double . criticism by the board of truatees. SEE THE DI FFERE NCE IN JOHNSON & SON ' . . ' • •• • ~ ""' '• • STATION WAGONS ;~ • ." • e l\fontego MX Villager "Golden Touch" only at Johnson and Sons presents These Beautiful Station Wagons At Tlieir Finest e Marquis Colony Pa1'k e Monterey Station Wagon SEE ONE ••• TRY ONE ••• BUY ONE ••• TODAY! Rome or The New Car • • • ........ 'J'~' Jlom• Of Tiie New Cll' • • • "G•ldat 'l'••dt'" l. 1\t If I I 2121 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • 540·6'30 _, -: -:: ·-·- • ' I .• ~ DAIL'i"Pli.or ' . ........ ., 4, 1973 . . ' ·Jet Slams · .Into-CainHodia Barrack·s: . ' ·-!ree Speech Tak~s a Dive f!IEE TALKERS DEPT. -They've gO!! a Free Speech Movement going ~t at the two-year Mission Viejo insiJJtution of hi*her learning known as sa&lleback College. ~ intelligence might cause you to up ~ quick mental pictu~ of es from the University of ornia at Berkeley some years ~ck. wft*a a chap named Marlo Savio held f~ oo soap boxes, rantihg and raving at: abe student body. l(. so, forget iL ~ surrounding the Free Speech M°'ement at Saddleback College are eollSiilenbly dillerenl. Mainly, if there arr :golng to be any speakers, if they are rrwto say anything, and if they are .mov• ing 'anywhere. PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A U.S. A6 Intrude!; jet fi&bla'bamber crasbod Into a CJ'OWded roWW')' barracU at the Pboom Penb airport toolght u Cambc> dtan b'oopl and their lamWes ,...,. eating • 'thefr evening meal. It burst into names and de$troyed u area ball a city block sqaare. (Associa ted Press repom oaid tho al,. croft was a 47 Comlr.) (AP dispatdles said a hospital was hit). Heavy casualties were feared although tbe pilot balled out and lived. Gives Testimony wu .... at the_,.,. uld lhor<! mflbi be .. -u :ID detld alllf ~ Wi.,..,. l&ld "'"" ... • dillil • ltg near the wndqe ...i tfJo body of a ""' man •l the crash tceoe. Umpelll .lkalJbor bullell from tbe Al WemJClllel<d -!!If ~ but no bombs ,..,..-~ indlcathi(tlie- plaoe bad ......,...... a -prior to tbe cruh. 'Ille pl.--Iii Tballanc! _.. •"""1i tbe !I.-bombing Cam- bodia Jo the 17tb clay of U.S. air mc1o In Carnhodia. A -ol an engino wu toooed 50 yards from tilt area ol the CTUh and 'Was Half Crucified;' Says Martha Mitchell NEW YORK (AP) -Martha Milchell says ahe wa.!I "haH CT\lcified" by the White House after the Watergate affair last year when she publicly demanded that her husband quit as President Nix- on's campaign manager. "It was about that time that all the Republicans were trying to say I was in an insane asylum -they put that out ... The loquacious Mrs. Mitchell ba.!I said often she knew of "dirty business" in the campaign, but after 1\lursday's deposi· tion lawyers said she had Uttle new to of· fer. She testified in oneoi a serie's of civil suits growing out of the Watergate affair. Lawyers described her as cooperative. from the White House," Mrs. Mitchell UNTIL THE Democratic headquarters reportedly said in a sworn pre-trial state-break-in, Mrs. Mitchell said she cam- ALL nus COMF.s a boot because the ment Thursday. paigned harder than anyone else for the tniM.ees and administration on the HU husband, John, President Nixon's Republicans. former Jaw partner and attorney general, "For instance, when the vice president Mission Viejo campus have a-rule that if quit as manager of the 1972 re-election didn 't want to do anything they called on inY "controversial" speaker is brought campaign two weeks after the June 17 Martha Mitchell," she was quoted as in?·fben ,notber speecbmaker must at>-break-ln at Democratic Party head· saying. pe_AT on the same program to ~resent quarters in Washington's Watergate To do what? '#fo make a speech, to t~M. idde. oomplex. dedicate anythipg, any official function ." .. ~..,.,.... Mrs. Mttcbe:ll talked with reporters ~ dictµm bas frustrated ~e mem· SOURCES SAID that w he n Mrs: later outaide the office of attorney Henry 1>11? of ·lbe atuden! body. TheY contend Mitchell was asked vrho at tho White B. Rothblatt. UPI TllepMlo LAW AND ORDER -Fonner Attorney General John Mitch- ell .had instant reply to news- man.. who said, "Y QU were once a symbol of law, order." Mitch- ell snapped, "! still am· and a d~mn good one." the rule haa stagnated any effort to bring.. .House put out the stDry that she wits in-She said that if Mitchell knew in ad- • 11 speakers of natitt&at protn:ineuce wm-sane, sbe repli.ed:..:'Well, the top ~~Ion_, vance about the Watergate "I didn't -Ch .:-S ba.!e lo 'lbailalli. They said one of. tbc 1"Jured 'pilou was nown on a Ct30 lrlnl- port piano Joni&ht bound !or a mllitaJy holpltal in Bangkok. A wltnes.s to the Intruder aash said two U.S. jets were coming into the airpol't and wben theJint _aill:[aJl crt-~ the second circled the airfield and flew off. Tile jet burned on Jmpoct in a barTacb area used by cambodian Anny engineers aOO their !amities. Fire trucks and am· b.llances raced to th&· '3'a.•..b scene and the witness said at Jeest four per3CW were taken to a hospltal wtth injw1es. Cease-fire in Effect Syria Told to Keep Out Of Fighting in Lebanon BEIRUT (UPI) -A cease-fire today ended two days of bloody fighting between the Lebanese army and Pales· tinian guerrillas aided by tank·led com· Tades from Syria. But the situation re-- inained tense and there was a threat of another Middle East conflagration. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat cau· tioned Syria against intervening as it did in· a similar flareup in 1969 and diplomats in London said any significant inflUJ of Palestinian guerrillas into Lebanon from Syria could provoke armed. Israeli reac- tion -with unforeseeable consequences. Israeli leaders were silent on the new crisis but the Tel Aviv newspaper Yedioth Aharonoth said ls r a e I was prepared to warn Syria against in~ ttrvening on the side of the Arab guer- rill~s. THE AUTH()RITATIVE newspaper said lhat if regular forres from Syria have penetrated into Lebanon and are jieh's statement Thursday that Lebanon would not accept an "occupation army" on Lebanese soil . It was a thinly veiled threat to disann the guerrillas and turn them into a force that would provoke no further retaliations from Israel. ' l r:. Ral.ston Purina Recalls Tuna After Fatality Sf. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -Ralston Purina Co. began a "voluntary recall'' Thursday or cans of "Chicken-of-the--Sea" tuna fish following reports that a Moline, Ill., -woman became fatally ill alter eating a tuna fish salad. A Ralston six>kesman said the recall .,.crtvered.~ases of ?o/•-ounCe cans ! •· •• ' - ' could light the -fires o( intelJectual I.Presume , but tha~ is what they did." • kfiow it ~ e--wooldn'L have--been -in-Oui.ae:r -a.ys.- E N. t ~·t d that h · Washington as long as he was." thought .oo the campus just above tbe .. ven Mrs. IXoo pu ":' wor ' ' He lnterc-..led San Diego Freeway. understood that Mrs. Mitchell was very. SHE ADDED: "He has always assured etl _ Jikeb'._tg ~hallenge the military balance and endanger LebanQ.n's independence. Israel will severelywani'Damascus--uiat it cannot sit with folded arms. distributed mainly in the qlicago area. -------~ The code number on the cans is wH9M3-- THE MORE VOCAL amoog students protesting the double-speaker rule have even suggested that the whole idea by trustees and administration is to keep rabble rousers. off campus. Well, you have to conced~ that so far, Jane Foodi, Ralph Nader, Martha Mitchell or Angela Davis haven't visited a speaker's rostrum at Saddleback College. You have to consider the Saddlcback student body problem in lining up such national persona1ities. They'd have to get opposing speakers who carry about the same clout. ~ So if Jane Fonda were to appear to hurl about her warmonger charges, you'd have . to line up somebody like John Wayne to knock down all her arguments. GET RALPH NADER rapping about Unsafe At Any Speed and you need Ford Motor Company President Lee Iacocca up there on the same platform. I don't know what the Saddleback peo- ple would do if they got Martha. Maybe give John equal time? Thus the problems of getting top-flight speakers on the Saddleback campus do seem vexing. The college presiden t. Dr. Fred Bremer, however, doesn't see it as that tough. Dr. Bremer has indicated that it isn't so much who the speaker is, but what he 'talks about. Thus he hints the speaker could be controversial as a public figure, so long as he doesn 't talk abou1ticon· troversial things. 1lllS OPENS UP a whole new arena for Saddleback student leaders who are trying to line up interesting speakers. Jane Fonda could appea r and telHUI about nice P.arties she has attended in Hollywood. Martha could discuss her delightful visits at the Newporter Inn. Angela could speak of the advantages of higher education at UCLA. Nader could outline the future of bicycling in the United States. ALL OF THIS could be done on single- spcaker programs at Saddleback College so long as the lecturers don 't stray from the assigned subject matter. That, of course. might be another little problem. very ill,'' Mrs. Mitchell was quoted as th t be t · 1 d " M'tcbell' me a was no mvove . 1 s saying. deputy in the campaign, Jeb Stuart Nixon Cautions Russia, China On Aid to Hanoi WASlUNGTON (AP) -President Nix· on has cautioned the Soviet Union and China that U.S. relations with the two Communist nations could be set back i£ they keep arming North Vtetnam and do not press their aJJy to observe the cease· fire agreement. At the same time, the President cau· tiooed-Hanoi that it tlSkl "rev.tved COJl.- f rontation wit,h us" by using fon:e to ex· ploit the Jan. 27 agreement. The warnings were contained in a fourth annual "state of the world" report to Congress. Despite the continued strife in Indochina, the President's over.a.JI view was that "a changed world bas moved closer to a lasting peace." Nixon said· fundamental chaoges in American.Chinese relations had sharply reduced a risk of l'Onfrontatlon, while the United states and the Soviet Union ap- pear to have accomplished "a major break .in the pattern of suspicion, hostili· ty and confrontation that has dominated U.S . ..SOviet relations for a generatioo." The Preside nt noted that liaison of. fices were being opened in Peking and Washington, that trade between the United States and China was reaching "very substantial levels" and that leaders of the two countries had held hundreds or hours of direct talks. As for the Soviet Union, Nixon said the Uni ted States is prepared to consider long-term economic cooperation. For e1· ample, he said natural gas and other vast Soviet resources could be developed with the help of American capital and technology and then e1ported to the United States. In Eun;pc, he said 1973 presents historic oppor1Wlities for economic cooperation and a flex:.ible new nuclear defense policy for the United States and its allies. Magruder, reportedly has told federal prosecutors that Mitchell was a t meetings when the burgtary was planned. MitcbeU said he heard the discussions but always vetoed the scheme. Jn ber depositioo, Mrs. Mitcbell reportedly said: "I wanted Jeb Magruder fired from the very beginning . • . because I didn't like him either .•.. I just dkin't trust him." Asked if she had any conversations concerning the Watergate with H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman. who resigned earlier this week as White House chief of staff and chier domestic adviser, Mr.!1. Mitchell is quoted as saying : "I don't talk to them.'' She reportedly gave the sa me reply when asked whether she had di scussed · the incident with John W. Dean III, who had been associate deputy attorney general under Mitchell before moving to the White House as counsel to Nixon. Nixon fired Dean earlier this week. Mrs. Mitchell said her husband regard· ed Dean as "a nice little guy" whom Mitchell hated to lose. Nixon Coverup Seen by 50% PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) Half of the American public believes President Nixon took part in an attempt to Cover up the Watergate affair, according to the latest Gallup poll. And 40 percent of those ques. tiooed in the poll Wednesday night said they believed the Presi- dent knew in advance of the at· tempt to bug Democratic national headquarters i n Washington's Watergate complex. But the survey also indicated that nearly three out of five Americans -58 percent -consider the present admil?istration to be no more corrupt than previous ad- ministrations since World War Il. To Free Hoffa WASHINGTON (AP) -A former presidential aide says he interceded with the White House to free former Teamsters leader James Hoffa from prison. Murray M. Chotiner of Newport Beach Thursday told newsme n that among those in the White House "1th whom he discussed Hoffa's case was H . R. Haldeman , who this week resig ned as President Nixon's staff chief following disclosures concerning the Watergate case. Hoffa was sentenced in March 1967 to eight years in Lewisburg, Pa., on two separate convictions for jury tampering and pension fraud . Two days before Chrisllnas 1971 . Nixon freed Hoffa on a grant of clemency with the stipulation that the form er labor leader refrain from union activities until 1980. OP.EN 7 !Wf~"' Nursery Hours Daily 7 :30 to 6 Sunday 8 to 5:30 There were no really accurate reports on casualties ip the two days of fighting with tanks, artillery, bazookas and planes but government figures put them at more than 95 dead and 200 wounded . Some guerrilla casualties were npt reported. · Lebanon, faced with a political crisis as well and a threat by Premier Amin Hafez to resign, cracked down on the guerilla movement today although the last time a Lebanese government did that it ran into violent opposition from Arab governments friendly to the Palestinians. SOURCES CLOSE to the government said Lebanon is renegotiating its agree. ment with Palestinian guerrillas govero- ing their rights in Lebanon in the wake or the anny·guerrilla clashes. The new agreement would replace the '1Cairo Agreement" signed in .$ovember, 1969, after similar clashes brought the country close to civil wa r and into a direct con· frontation with Syria. The tenns of the new agreement were in line with President Suleiman Fran· Corner of Newport and Victoria MK2JE .. Thi:! spokesman said there was no COD· firmation of any connection between the death Thursday or Mrs. Mildred Rodts and the Chicken-of.the-Sea tuna sh<..had eaten Wednesday. He said the rccalT was "a precautionary measure." MRS. ROIYTS, 52 .. was hospitalized Wednesda y night when she became violently ill about an hour after eating tU11a fish salad containing the Ralston Purina product, Rock Island County Coroner James Shaw said. Shaw said the brand or tuna was removed from the shelves of all stores in the Moline area in Illinois and Iowa. Dr. Jose Acosta, the pathologist who examined Mrs. Rodts, said poisoning from the tuna was "suspected, but not definite." He said he was "baffled" because it did not appear that Mrs. Rodts died of botulism, the type of poison usually associated with contaminated caMed foods. NURSERY 646·3925 PATIO SHOP 642-4103 CAMELLIAS ... .tttul .,.,Iffy of $149 Ca'f.Turf SOD Floods Kill Cotton Hopes TIF· GREIN 95c roll Levees Save Cairo, Ill.; Weather Clearing Tti. Mfsslulppl creslkle •t 54.• fMf 11 C1lro. Ill., Thvndey. bu! IM' city WIS u l9 bll'tllld 6.S foot 19VMI., 11!d ll'M Up. l>M'" Ml1slulapl V•llW beH" • cle1nuo ll!ICl'lf ctelr, dry wtelhtf. (Coastal summary and tidal data appear today mi Page 22) DAll.Y PllOT DELIVERY SERVICE- °""" ~ ... °"" ~"' ·- COLEUS For shade g1rden -changing color -many colors to choose from . ,49¢ qt. DJCHDNDRA roft REDWOOD TUBS Can be used es either ·• h1n9 .. ing b11~et or • Bonza i planter in three sixes-1 0° 14" 17'1~ 259 to 311· f.:.1l\~;;,~::._::..=·::: 1~w::AX':'::'":"Le='A'.:'F=--r--J·d· .. ·,·,·.-.------6=-~g=-·¢-~~E"'s~C~A"'"'L~L-o~"'N_l_A ____ H_O_U_W~-"'t.A"11-Nr·0·~-'Cno--N- ~~~~ PRIVET Hedgi119 g•I. FRADESI BUTTERFLY PALM :;..-..=; ~·== BQTILE BRUSH 89'¢ ~ ~" 4ss :--.. :..~::;· 211 ,,.::.i"Jf. S,1=.,.~-Firt Red Brush Like lllooms gol, bf. 7·'' " !. ~L ,,. I State Senate ()Ji Assembly to Get Death Term Bill SACRAMl!NTO (AP ) -A move to restore the dealh ponalty !er torture killers ml multiple murderers bas ~ in the Cllllornla Senate after a debate ran'lng from bomb-illlf lo the Bible. 1'be Senate vote 21·12 nun-.. day to send the measure to the Assembly where Jt faces all!IOll certain doom. The Assembl y 's majority Democrats have vowed they will kill It. ' Nov. 7 wbentbey--l ~t~=tlve, Prop. ,.I don't tblnk there's a doubl ln -·· mind that the people spoke wry clearly and Ibey aeid they need II, .. be aald. . ANOTlll!R Dl!A111 penalty baclcer, Sen. Clark J. Bnidley . (fl.San Joee), laid the Bible did not problbh capital punish- ment with the ~ "1bou shalt not kill." "When the Bible says 'l'bou UPI,....... Nixon 's Me dica l Records Rilled LONG BEACH (llPll -Luncret said. '"l'llml Is the -..it Nlmi'a med I c ,1 llql(>Olitloo Iha! they might ..-di ...,. rtn«I by have bem pbotocraphed." IJuralan who~ Into 1be Tbe Independtnt-Pr.ss offtl:e al bis_. (ll!yslclon ~'a ccpyrilbledi 5101}' dul:lnl~beicbt ol..lbe 1'IL aald 11>1-FBI nl\laed ....... 111. ~tlal calll\)llf!ll, the on the cue but !hat ...,... in Long B e a c b lndependen~ lbe t.nau foJt the -nta Press Telegram rtpOrted to-could have been (lbo!olnphed day. or haad copied. Masseuses Get R ubbed SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Two robber• P!'liJed with l2!0 rrom • mUllge porlor 'lbtlrsday, leaving btlllod three y o u n g -and a 111rtled wed customer. one...-atJJnda'I Muaage Parlor missed the whole lhJng. He was in the shower. DR. JOllN Lungren, who TRI! lll!lOOllDS dated bad< '--------~ last eumlned the President in to N-'• c1aya u vice presi· 1989 and DOW ls hil "medical dellt coosultant," said that althOOgh "Ii Is bis complete medical money WU In plain view It record .. Lungren said was not • taken by the J.n. "H • I ha "c1ea r truders. owever, ve no 1 o I - Frid.,, M" 4, 1973 DAILY '1LOT • f , Break-ln Stu~Alril By Jo seph Bus~h LOS ANGELl!il (AP ) - Dial. Ally. Jooei>8 Buach 111.Y1 hll office will pro-a e c ut• penons aCCllHll al brnklni Into the ollloo qt Daniel Ellsberg's poycbiltr!st ii the evidence Is IUlllcliiil. "IF WS CAN_prove that a crime wu c:ommltted ln- volvln& the dlelt al document. from Dr. Lewis J, Fieldinl'• B<verty fills olrlce, we will prosecute the case," Busch told newsmen Thursday after. returning from Washington • ' "· •· ' ' . ~. ~ ;j • . . SEN. GEORGI! C. Deulane- jian, (R·Long Beach) the bill's author, insl!ted d u r 1 n g Thursday's two1 hour debate that the gas chamber was a deterrent to murder. He cited cases ol escaped convicts whl killed, convicted murderers killing again and torture slayers who used baseball bats lo bludgeoo their victims. ~ii:.~:~~::" to'~~ PUSHING MEASURE 8 Ille u pun!sbmen~ It •i>-Sonllte'1 Doukmojl1n u1 don't believe tbat any of. what value th~ rfJCCl'ds .could the Nl>oa -....,. JD!s&. be to anyone, he continued. ing but the papers were out "Every examlnaUon I've ever of 'their cbroook>gM::al order given him showed him to be in and obviously acrutlnlud," perf~r~!i''there were two LOS ANGELES (AP) -A J ane F onda (.ensure Gets -study "What more facts do you need?" he asked. Calilornians demanded a return to capital punishment plies to the Individual," be ---------- burglaries, one Sept. 4-S, 1972, motion to censure actre~ and the other two weeks later. Jane F--.1 .. for her comMenb said. '!be State Supreme Court ruled !hot l!!!o_~th _penalty was unconstitutionally cruel and unusual in February 1972, a decision overturned by the death penalty inl tla ti ve. However, the U.S. Supreme Court has also ruled out the death penalty as pri!8enUy ad- ministered. Deutmejlan said his bill was lallored to meet specifying death for certain offenses, Including torture slayings, murder ol a police officer or witness, multiple murden, killings by convicts serving life terms. Berkeley Initiative Restrained by Judge Bolb times the burglar opeoed ~ a sliding glass door to gain en~ concemlng ret.urning U . S . trance. prisoners ol. war will undergo The first time $27 in cash further st u d y be[ore con- wu taken. but another $100 id tloo b the I u 11 Jylng in the open was left, he 5 era Y u counc · said. He said the content! of O>uncllman Arthur K . OAKLAND (UPI) -The possession or culUvatlon. the unlocked safe where the Snyder Introduced the motion marijuana smoking public of The oouncll reversed itself Nii:on file was kept had been to censure Miss Fonda for her Berkeley had the law on their Wednesday night and ordered ransacked but that the manila udisgraceful and shameful side for less than 8 daf. 1·mplementat1·00 o1 the tn-envelope containing the actual A Superio!' Court judge rd 11 , h d not remarks" but on Thursday itiative, approved by Berkeley reco 8 apparen l a fellow councilmen sent the issued a t e m Po r a r Y been disturbed. restraining order Thursday voters last month. 'Ibe city of.-motion to the state, county preventing the university city ficials, who said they wanted a •'J CJIECKED to see if the and federal affairs committee GIANADA MIUS 1800 Chats#Dfl~ St. l!OllANCI s.111tw:dJ and 11M11«11 of 125,000 from enforcing an legal test of the ordinance, file was in the larger folder, fur study. WOODU.NDNI W 21SOOVic1Dfy Blvd u.•1WOOD Cw1S1.•~1M. initiative requiring advance acted while a cheering au-but I didn't actually open it UP. ~t.iss Fonda attended the llVllSIDl 3520Tyltl St. IUINA PAll8taci .W011111!llOl'9 approval by the City Council dience of young people puffed and check It thoroughly," council session but was not SANTAANAJ900 S041th BristolSt. OIA NGEG11deft6rC\eBIYtllllllbldlclW Clue Found In Murder Of Coed, 18 THE LOPSIDED Senate vie-f ·J joints · the-·-~• cha ~ Lun id all wed to k Ote11 w11ki•rs t:30 I• ':30 -~· 10 te 7. tory will improve the blll's,_o_f_an_y_arr_es_t_s_or_man __ uana _____ m __ ~_~ ___ m_~_··-· __ g_re_n_sa_. _______ o ___ spea __ ·------------------------- CHICO (AP) -The car slight chance of success in the believed driven by a man Assembly, Deukmejian said. sought for questioning in the "It ls certainly gOing to be ra~murder or an IS-year-old extremely difficult to get the glrl near a college beer parlor ~I : 0J:: ~wfi?l~ tit;~~ was round Thursday in a moun-tainous area or northeast ~ible," he said at a news .. California Butte C o u n t y Conference iminediateJy after Sher1fLi.a'n:v-Gillick .reported . the Se~te vote .. ·------. --~Y~t~ -1!..o.b _ THE CAR· was returned to Moretti (0.Van . Nuys)~ -has Chico for fingerprint tests. It said be would restst any move was believed driven by Aden to get the bill enacted by a Rohrbaugh "Tray" Miller 23 legislative end nm arourxt the an unemployed non-studeni Criminal Justice Committee, from Maryland. Alllboritles on wblcb a majority ls against said he came to Cbico thtte the death penalty and which months ago. would oonnally hear the bill . Miller ls wanted In connec- tlon ·with the death of Patricia Cathaline Farish of Chico, a pretty brunette and mother of 1 &-months old baby boy. Mrs. Farish's partially clad bndy was found early Tuesday after a beer party in a n d around a fraternity house at- tended by an estimated 1,700 to 2.200 persons. The party was the kickoff of "Pioneer Week," the annual spring festival of Chico State University. Snake Bite Kills Bo y In Vall.e y DESCANSO ( U P I ) Authorities have declined to bring charges against a couple who treated their 3-year-old son with a mixture o f charcoal, potatoes and onions after be suffered a fatal snake bile. Robin Moriarty dJed Wednesday ebout three hours after suffering the bite. The accident occurred in the rural Japatul Valley area where his parents live in a tent. Robin's father, Joseph Moriarty, C2, told a San Diego County Sheriff's deputies that he used the homemade remedy instead of seeking medical help. He was quoted as saying he had no way ol getting a doctor and did not believe in t h e medical pro- f essloo. Bar Owners Tell Girls Keep It On LOS ANGELES (AP) -A series of raids on Los Angeles county topless-bottoml ... bars signaled the dawn of the cov- erup era, sberifrs deputies said100rsday. Detectives, operating unde< new court decisions, raided 27 bars in widely llCIUered aec- liOQ.1 of the county and IUT¢- ed 98 pen<111 W-y night. CAPT. GERALD Patmon, head of the sheriff's vice d .. tail, said the raids ...,.. just the beginning of a drive against ban feeturing bare entertainment. 'Ibere will be "continuing enforcement'' of newly upheld laws and regula- tions affecting nude waitresses and performers, he said. Paterson Slid he espec!s widespread voluntary comptl· once by bar owners. He said owners of the Tl raided bars had agreed to tell their em- ployes to keep their clothes on. Meanwhile, in San Jose, law enforcement officials swooped down on the Pink Poodle 'Jbe. 1ter Loonie, arresting the manager and a danceJI: -waJt- ress less than 24 hour1I after the state Supreme Court rul· ing. -POND PUMP & fill TER SYSTEM HAllllAK•" It *tl9llell for lll!Mnt Witt!' '9. -n JIO!ICI• CUI 11 '°' 1111, n111<>llly . -wltll 11.-.nt wai.r t111t te11c11 fll tl .. 11111, It dHnt Incl llOUrlshH alYl"t 1""'"9iftt •Kytlll for l,ll!cltrw•l•r llf•. W11tr llft .. llldlllf, Mdmtl fhl, 11'11111 llacl Ind IMoMMI lffcll9mk:•l!J' dHf. fllttlt MICll WI "" WOii "AIUAKI Ind '°"' ,.,.i lll'fl ei..n tM ,,..,, wltl!Ollt Aftllll""9 wpplln If ""' Wlllr ••• Onlr $159.95 =- $1 09.'5 500 Gal. FANCY KOi FANCY GOLDFISH KOi FOOD 42% PAOTllN BAN KAM ERICARD e MASTERCHARGE , P acific Goldfish Farm 14700 GOLDENWEST, WESTMDISTER ( ..... ,.....,, ,....,. " ...... .,,_,, · = :".:!l.~°tw ":l4 893·71 OS ER· . ~ Sl!KIAL SAVINGS Otl STEREO COMPONENTS -·-~~--- . . . -. ' ----·· --r -· --·· Looking for a good store manager? We're h1Ving 11pecial once·in·a·lifetimefactory 1uthoriztd sale on our entire stock of new m1n1gers, ind the savings run as high IS 500.41 Striously, we •re having a sel11t our Cost• Mesa store, bu1 of stereo components. And wt' do hM i new manager there, S1an Matsuoka, but ht's definitely not for sale; we want to ktep him. Stan's 1 great guy and really knows stereo, ind you11 find his store a relax ing pl1c1 in which to choo~e just the right equipment to suit your listen ing tastes and situa1ion. THIS WEEK ONLY ESPECIALLY •FOR THE OCCASION • A GOODSCIUtlllltG CCII •OIBCT l'ri I &JI FORCIND'SMa l.ETWUR HEAllPHCllES COtlETQ'ftXI Hm is 1 complete sttr10 component sytttm featuring BSR reliability, and WI htvt It 1t 1 rock· bottom price of $148. Tht rectlvtr Is BSR'a R30mrid they're to be complimtnttd for comlnt up wi th 1 $130 receNer that sounds this: good. An Urtt.lattal f11tur1 ls ,rh1 FM center-dltnrtll tunfftl l'nltl(, wtlktl shows whln you hm th• clunett tlgnli for !IOOd FM rtQpdon. The receiver llao has llt*ltl bm end trtbf1 r.pn1 control1 ind t ftm11 ceit. ,, Thi BSR automatic ttcord player It 1 fln1 'lllut You won't hl'le to choose between your headphones and your favorite chair if you pick up ont of these 25·foot coiled extension cords. We normally sell them for $3.70, but it you come to meet our new manager this week you cen have the cord for Sl.99 at $49.45, including 1bullInd1 Sh~fl Ml~ lflllMdc , ., cartridge with a diamond stylus. Th1 3 tO l1 1n 111· A SPEaAU.Y PRICE> SN1SU1 ns1 ui S.nsui'1 1ootlX AM/FM sttr10 receiver his 11 com· plete an err1y of conlrols as you 're ever liktly to need, including two tape monitor circuits ind provision fGr two sets of speakers. Power is 1 hetlthy 56 watts I RMS) with ICM' distortion, and the tuner has an Ill· iellent 2 microvolt sensitivity figure. A walnut Ctsl is included in th• $289.95 price. Thi Gerrard SL558 record player his G1rr1rd'' Svnchro·L1b mo1or for in tune record playing, 1 cue- ing lever to keep records unscathed, 1nd 1 gentle, fail· s1fe record chtnging mechanism. The $80.85 price indudes 1 base and an Empire 999XE/X ellipt ical cartridge. . You probably know H1rman-Klfdon's very fine rtceivtrs ind you should get to know their 1911ktrs. too. The model 20'1 intludtd her11f1 two-wty eight· inch syst'emt in walnut ctbinets. You11 likt both thtir sound and their low price of $79.90 e piir. PY!« lncluda PKific Stweo'1 ftv•r-r warr•"'Y To purct't ... these separately you would SMY : 5-n1ul IOOOX ................. $289.95 SJ99 G•rrard SL55B with b1se and Emf)lre 999XE/X ..... 80.85 Hll"man·K•rdon 20 IPtlr).. 79.90 TOTAL. $450.70 SAVE $51.70 • ,S'a,u-...1.: ~-"' ~-31 l!!!jiliil ( • Of BIAM ~Pl IOIES FORM Th• Ou1dr1flex 0· 10 stereophones hava \. very liQht wtight foam rubber earp ieces whic h don 't r_equire 1 compltte ear seal in order to prov ide deep ban. Thty sound great, and will handle very high volume levels with ou t dis· 1urtion. Our regular price tor the O· lO's is $10; we'r• off•ring them now tor ju~14_ MIML~ OO'lttour11 tremely reliable performer with • cueing lever that mtkn It twfully hard to scratch your rtcordL Thi Audio Design 806's 1r1 two-way 1p11k1r systems with 1n eighl·inch bass ape1ktr. ThlV •II for ·$59.90 t p1ir, ind deliver the kind of clear, n1tunll sounding bau tines that you un't 91t just by turning up the bess c~ntrol on your port1blt. Full tMnUfKtur«s' w1rrtmltl .. lftdudtd To purchue these seper11ely you would pay: BSA R30 ........................ $129.95 Sl48 '!!~r~~'.'.~.~~·~·~····· •9.45 Audio Design 806 (pair) .•• 69.90 TOTAL 1231.30 IAVl .. 1.30' •. ,_ .. -· AuOlo~ Hoursl MON flU 9-9 Mr I0-6 SUN 11-6 60·CAY EXCHANGE PRIVI LEGES; A ONE•Y!Aft SPEAKER EXCHANGE ; A WRITTEN NO·HASSLE 5-VEAJI WARRANTY: It coven free pMll for 6 v•arl •nd lrH labor for 3 vaars. Absolutely the only exclusion Is tM nffdl• on ll'I• re<:Ofd pl1yer. PROBABLY THE BEST PRICES IN TOWN: If you thould bl olfer9d a belier priet1 on any current modal WI urrv. we'll m.tch it or r•fund thlt difltrenc•, 11 the CBM mlY be. LAV·AWAVS, BAN KAMER ICARD, MASTERCHAROE, MONTHLY PAYMENTS. 90·0AY INTEREST·FREE ACCOUNTS . A LIBERAL TRADE-IN POLICY AND A LAROE SELECTION-Ofl-QUARANTEED-USED OE"AR: E1ch-tt~ has 1he HALB Blue Book stating 1Ulh0fi19d tradt·in v1lun of jusl about •n\I stereo component ever made. A AAINCH!CK AND A SHORT SUPPLY M!RCHANOlll SEARCH : W1 N91ly w1nt vou to hw• O ertlled m1rWndl .. 11 1ha ldvMised priw, •nd we·11 do our belt to IH th•t vou Otf it 9Ven if one perticul.,. uore is out, A FULLY·EOUIPPED SERVICE DEPT. IN EVERY STOA!: You u n bring tnY Utreo components to PecHic Si.r•o for l•t. tkU!lul 1ervic1 at rtuan1ble ra tes. 0 1 course Mrvic• 11 Ir•• undet our w1rrantits Or und•r the m1ny manufactur1r1' w1rr.,,tln we're 1uthorl1od to lullill. • ... ' r . • • -. -. ... •• ·ECOLOGY ,. 1 .. ' . , ; 'i f • • • . .· fildiit •.. ., 4, f9)l_ • • UVl.lfl MOTOllL -~. • i;AffERS & SA11LER ·· 30 INCH m LEVR 2 OVENiAS RANGE OUR LOW Pila •Both ovens with. glass windows, "in· -\eriot lights • Separate glide·out ·smoke· less. broiler • Fluorescent lighted cock top .,Glee~"'" j~l!ouWimer .... Bud. w~l!ll.~­ linished manifold pane l and door handl es GIVE .JUNE :3 \ • Both ovens clean them sel ves as they cook • Clock and automatic timer • Black glass windows and interior lights • Separate glide-out broiler • Deluxe gas range has programmed cooking controls for both ovens • Full view black glass windows • Continuous Cleaning feature in both ovens • Fluorescent panel light rumE WAXllT ~~ KITS FOR CARBURETOR 311~· I BEl:I JUNE-UPS · CLONER •• ··- ~t ' .. " "'" . 3~~1~ s1 .... 1.49 I~., : ·2 81 :::· Offll FOR EA. 3\~ ,~ Hea>J duty mode~. pipe jaws and Heavy duty 30 wt oil in l qt. cans. Sold in main store only. 10 OL ~ze with appti-. catOJ. leaves a gleam-. ing shine on cars. Rotor, condensor and Mechanics braOO; clean points: ignition kits fuel system as you for most cais. =,,_ drive. 2l2M AUTO MOT I YE ITEMS NOT IT TV l APPLIANCE Mlt!TS DI LONG BEACH SAVE AT WHITE FRONT ON FAM•S BRAND VACUUMS AND FLOOR CARE APPLIANCES Ideal lo< use around the ho11se. pool, patio, gara ge wl!ere heavy1My dirt. wet or di'/ needs cleaning ug. 65001. ' I •VER ll·PIWEI CANISTER VACUUM 24,,, 21.97 All steel vac is light & maneuverable. With complete set of tools for sur- face & aoove floor cleaning. 2017 REGINA POLISHER AND SHAMPOOER 34~~ 2 speed model with accessories to scrub, polis~ IMJff and sha mpoo !Im and carpets. #P862 ·••••••arr ll'~=~~ • SAVE *8 ••• CANISTER VAC FllM PIEMIER RIG. · 27.97 99 High powered vacuum with all the fea111res you want. Swivel top, floating action floor & rug nozzle, .above· floor cleaning tools. #C350 UPBl.IJVAC FllM PIEMlll 31~~ lllwertul, revol~ng bnstlts dee, .clean ca<pets. 2 positioo carpet pile seOc!o.'. lJ.9 • ... TClll:Sftll ... , ..... ,.., ..... llft. ' JMt S.. It LA lURA BllllA FAN JET CANISlEI VACUUM 2.9 .. ~ ,..,, Ye!Yti~ powerhouse wilh complete set of tools for all surtace and above floor cleaning. #550BW · -952 •• ... Y." ·~c ":,•; .,.,-.j • .. . ,.I :,:.. )redsion ~Milla ·'.i\!Ck ~g~ ; >~ I. . • MAJOR APPUAN.CES IlLEVISION & SMALL APPUANCES. A lso Available t;tt Oiir · -TV-alll-AP.PLIANCE MARTS 1:00%. SOLID STATE \ • .- ZENllH 19" ::,.CU ~RIABlE -~ -. ·~ . Nqw ONLY • New Titan IOI chassis is ov~r· 90% solid state for tile" utmost in de-pendable service and :superior . i)Mormance · "-' · MOTORU'15":::t, COLOR CONSOLE SAVE 1D s - , ·COMP. AT 579.97 • .. -.. See Conve1iie11t locatiOns ~.-ct~--,-_,._,,,,~=-listed Be/9~.~""""-~-.-J..1 . : •,Come_ up to,, coiof witl) the biggest screen made .• .. lnst&-M,(ti~,p~h-f, ~biltton 11ne..tun1nµts.t!)!i • Famous Quasu works m :a dr;1wer •gheSS1s •'Co$mporary watnuf1.inished cabinet• '1111 yr. in home service . i. ' ~ ..• '18 .. .":1 IN.l::tti PEllSIMI. SIZEJV Mion ~fted ·to dellver a crisp, ~!ear ~icfl!re · ~,.5 .. -I _ Ml bodied sooocl • Modern styling with 1e! · · k ilgl iml'ct ca~net • Built·in antenna Ht. · -• 69.97 . I · JET JJIBCH I BY BHINZ"' i 411 ' "'~ .. ,. 1.,,, . 7.J7 Complete torch ~it with brass peocil f!am.e OOroer and fyel cylin· der. #JJ.fO .,.. lfAVll" m · L·shape~eel.sk~lacedpalm, 418 fvll leattl!f lining, tt..imb & :_ finger low. 42/3715 · • .. ,, ' SAVE 140 ... PHILCO AC/II Ill.ID STA1f JV ~ Here's !lie -TV that ·plays aniwhere • 'Wo~s . -sa· I ... Ai; O('_optiolal battery-or.car cord . 8 i1<h COMP. ' screen, ~retf. diagonaUy AT · . 129.97 ~ IAlawJi U'E Designedtomake.su~catt~ 51z es, gM y1111 extra reach. : All leatlier. 199/209 •.• , 14 PC. 1ta" · SOCKETSEr -2~., U7 M•fric socket Mt ,•nd m • t • l tr•y. Trip i• chroll'I• •Y CARBl '.MITT fllll al1in cowhide, ,Y· ·• r3 construction well alll padded. ::, wrist strap •• #99/208 • '·'' • ' ( 11·•• ·iltiflsEI -·3·99 .. .. :. ' '' ' , .. ,,. I • ' Most JIOPOilf . .,, ,, hiil ·~: jriJJs i• .Mod! s4ctor case. ~1130., ' Clitck tllst safltJ flitlia:' · 1. Ill" I 111• 11111 , c1ufa '-I 1M Cl'S - -t'111" 1111 ""' 11111 - ' I. .... ""'"" 11111 hHJar -tnu . · 1 •• • • ~ . ' LONG llEACH -tAPJ: Purse sn1tchlnr Is · boiog btamecl .l<J< I rioe in lw\d' In- juries IO the , vlctfml, I 'll'i"'" said here. 'Dr. Gerald aiatt · ol U..1 · Bei<li Wl9 ill · con- f er1111Ce "at Me~rial · thif" ~ ~ -.iiten - reoult.l:tn''a·tendcn'nipture of ' . • . . 4. 1 • . ( Mt~IONE ) - ' ~-' ·~ • I I f I • I ---... ··--- 'J».&D.Y PILOT EDITOIUAI. PAGE Saddlehack Speakers ___ ·,..ne.nt dedJIOll aUbl ·S..Scllli.k_Cilllftt BoaJd of Trultea to malnUln, tlle 9$001'1 ailtlaC ..,.U... llOlley and the atWidant ·ll'dulll, llonl a amall group of lleddlebock students la a Coaflld. more lbadow lh111 sul> ,u..ce. . \ In ftct tbe school bu _..,. In Ila llll·year history bad a l'Ollll<mnial llltlker, ICCOl'dlnl to Joie! Klldlell, community services clfr«tor. . . Tbe embottled policy requires a speaker on a con- troversial tsrue to be balanced with a speaker fOf: 111 opposing view on the same program. To be aure, the policy seems an_,ullNUOllable bar to major 11peakers 011 campus. Nationally known apealt· en wfto may discuss controveralal lmlU do not trsvel p~ up pro ond con. If the campus had an opportunity to ,,_,,1 WU· llam Bucl:l"/ lhe chances -1llm that Kenneth Gal· bralth woul be available at the wne time and place. Who could PoOSlbly balance Jane Fondat In -· the college'• policy ls • convenient way of borrlnl COll- troveny without overtly dlsallowlnl It, cluplte the Sood intentions of the board. Noneuieless, students as well u the ldmlniJtratlon must ehoulder 80llle of the blame for not taltlnl more Initiative to tee! the reality of the board's poatlOn. Jn the blllory of the policy lllnee It wu enacted In = students have never been denied a controversial er becauoe they have never come up with one. R_ugged ?A>ning Problem The lut ol. San Clemente'• O!'tn acreage -the ruued lnllDd hlllB and canyons -IOOll will become port of the d!y muler plan. Tradltiollally the -peat. rougbelt terrain la the lart to be developed In a commuulty, ond the fituation la preclaelytbat In San Clemente. · So, to talte advantage of the erratic topography, planners who dnfted the city's new open-apace element lo the general plan have a!Uoed that the density could be quite high in the few ffat are11, but low or zero in theateep9ection1. t.ntimately, If the areas -developed according to the pion, the tceoic bills and ravines inland of the pres· ent community might be preoerved. Views from the most prominent hilltops would be pr«ected by desi1D1ted "vista corridoro." In the moat unstable are&1, property with heavy pc;. tentlal for slippage and sections where faulting occurs wOuld be strictly controlled. Planning commissioners already have conducted their hearing on the open-space element. Next, uie Item must clear the council. ---·~ 'I > • , ' • •. Two nationaBy known speakers, ldentiat Edward Teller and author Ray Bradbury, IJ?P'!ared on the cam· pua In .~:lnl':r~· They ~ not Judced controvers.lal 1>y .the· lion. A reeuJation designed t.O shield colle1e etudenta U It pa..... that pane~ the city will have a well con· celved IUlde to the planning of a sensitive geographic area. 'Nixon Law and Order Admini•trstion. Sorry, they're all out wwezinB aubpew at r.he moment ••• may I tali:e a me1J1Jaget' Persuasion Wins Mo~i. Arguments ~~NEY ]:HARRI~ 'llloma8 . Aqulnls, -who knew more about education and per1ua1lon than almost any~y wbo ever lived, once said that ·wben you want to convert aomeone to your view, you go ovtr lo where he Is standlnJ, Like him by the hand (menLllJy speaklnc), and aulde him to where you Wini to go. You don't sLlnd ..,._ the room and llhaut at him. You don't ..u him a dam1111. You don't order him to COIM over to where )'OU are. You start where he it, and work from that politlon. That's the only way to get him to budge. We have lost slibt ol this elementary psychological fact. 11le world IJ full ol passionate advocates, ICf'Urtling their own prejudices, and ezcorlatlng their op- ponent.. Thia does tme thlng.s : (a) II makes the people who agree with you feel better, (bJ It mak" the -le wbo dilagm wtlh you stiffen their resiltance, and (c) It m1k .. the people on the fence uneasy and skeptical !hat Y"' are speak· ing the whole truth. I HA VE nevtt known a single passionate and p&rtiun argument to win over a person who diaqreed with it, or even to pertuade a person woo was neutral on the subject. 11ie chief l't!ason being !hat all puaJooale and parlilan arguments overstate thtlr cate and ur.derstate their opponents' case. When you think that someone ts wrong, and you disagrei; with him, lbe first task is to detennlne in ~t way he ts right. Dear , .J;Joomy Gus 11 dop ClllllOI be kepi In lhe pr- _m al llifht, Ibey should be kept ander !heir 111&11er's bed. Let blm be lhe ..,. to be •waktlled by lhe olf and ... barklnc durJnc lhe olpt. R. T. ......., ... """-.,. ......... ., ,....,. ............. ,.,, ntltcf .... ........................ ,.., ... ..... ......., .... n.ltr ,...., Tb1a ii not u poradollcal u It aounda: DO vletr CID be .. tlreJy -·· and everybody bu * Utile piece o1 tJiJtb by the Lill. Tb1a la the piece "' ILlrl with, ... wort fnim theie , and ooncede u much u we boatltly can. LORD ACl'ON Nld that we have no rifhl to -a politlan unUI we can II.It• that pooltlon In a Wly that lully aatilflea U-who bold II; unW, Indeed, we can make eul a bolt.or cue for 11 lban the Jll'OPOl1<ftt hlmMll can. (Mell el us, ol coune, dlstClrt ot lam-the _.11e pooltlon, and then ~ to demoUlb thls straw man.) And all lbil ii much more than an academ1c eurclae. ,,,. arts e1 arsument and penuulan are oo Hiiie -and preelle<d that dlli>ulallll have no recourae to anythlnc hut vleltaoe. If peo- plt can't qree on bow to dlllpee, UMr;e !J no hope el reooocWltlon • ....,. Jn!>llle. And the art "' llJ1UIDll\I .. 1 .. rninl bow to di_.. producllveJy. WE BEGIN to fl&l>t when words fill UI. And words fall UI wbeD n Ille Ibo ...... -to tbe ...... -1< f"' tbe wrong rea90hs. It 11 far easier to be pesslonate ln defeftff of what one belleVes .han to compnbend why oomebody .1,. bellevtt oomethlng dlf· ferent. But, ultimately, only this com· prehenslon (wbich ii nol~t) can replace v1o1 .... wltll i-..r e1 lhe deafenln1 monolop !hit ead to war. 'Secretarial Ghetw' Every year thousands of American girls look for secrot.orl•I jobs, confldenUy anilctpaljng the good pay, pleuant work· · lng conditions, Interesting fellow-workers and en.-ellent chancts of 1dvancement promised by the cl11Slfled adl. Only too many wind up in what lively -and v.·ell Informed -author Mary Kathleen Benet calla 'Ille 8ecrolarla1 G .. U. (M<'<lraw· Hill, ~.95). MJ. Benet has worked Jn many offict• on both sldtl of the Atlantic, Including ti-of the San Fnncll<O Chronicle, tbe Chicago SW>Tlmes, McCall's, and 1 book publlshln1 house. She hu 11to been a joumallst, an adven1Jln1 copjw1iter, and a literary agent. Her views .are frank, ootspoken -and controvenlal. As Ms. Benet notes, well Ofer IO per- cent of American office workers are women. By the sbter forct of. their • OUffl COAST DAILY PHOT -Robert N. Wm!, /'llllffalle1' 2'lloma Knoi~ &lf14r Bori>ani Kr11bkh Bdltoriol Pag1 Bdll4r PlidlY, May 4, 1971 (~BOOKMAN J aumb<rs and the vl!lety ol !Uka they perform, they have become ~ble to the smooth llmctlaninl of Americon business. How many ncolft the ._i. Uon ~ de,.rve! What -a secrtLll)' • job NlllJ' mean today! DoM It bring lndopendence and lulflllmeal! Or does It ~tulle, Jn a DOW Mll1nf, a whole ranee "' ~ fenlale !Ola, all 1Uboervlellt to lunctlono and l""'l'Ol•Uve1 of tilt male! 'Ille Se<rttanal G-Ll<tl., all tbeoe qutltlonl •trallbt .... lleertLlrtet wtl1 c1a .... to nod lbil --and lholt -mn't afford not lo. CAROLINE llARXLEllOAD s Cheap LafJOr Greed Behind Immigration Woes To the Editor: There are a sreat variety ol foola Jn America, but the benellcent, allnllstlc, Cllrlal1aJI -!'ho poy tuea to feed, hou>e and care for lllepl allen Jm. - mlinnll without complalnln1 about It are deJlnltely In a CIUI by themselves - a clw with no lmm1nent effort to rehablllt.ote !hue iinlonunate oouil. LET US tell these ~e what would happen to an American Jn a foreign coun- try under the A111e cimlmltances: He would be hmnedlatei, lDcarterated (yea, put In Jal!J and blJ relsUves Jn the states would be billed for hiJ food, lod&Jni and medkal care, plus a ' "fine" for his mlJ-vlor which could In many cues amount to ranaom moaey, and he wootd Jancu1sh la a foreJrn prlJoo unW the demandl Wfft poltf -Jn cash, man, what else? Jobn -Valtena'a story on Core ol Aliens _ (Pllol Apr • .-ZI) teU. all, and the aob sillerl alicioJld ,.ad every word ol It, and then gel mad al the lmmlg1tlon kooks, the Welfare .-S and the Social Security croob Who aid and abet the Jl. IecaJ entry el a1leo8 wh1le ~ born bent -Jndlaa1 and Negroes -f.,. Jn. stance -cleaerve a priority for jobo ...,. all immllF&nt. ol whatever oolor er aa· ltonal orllJn. .. COULD It be that alien cheap labi>r ._rod by areedY employen IJ 11111 Jhe reaaon for all lbil jm about lllecal aliens? Poulbly, because cheap labor has always been the lncmUve for welcoming VUI hotdel of fonJrners to our counJry. S. G. UNDJNE .Elftclon Needed To lhe Editor, The pod boot teaches u1: 11only in repentance there II Nlvation." 11le unrepentlng i>n•torian palact 111ardl (allu the Berlin Wall) did Indeed resl.. but the crodlblllty pp only ~ and the hlglleal offlce la the land remains 11USpect. ONLY ONE avenue toward heotablllhlnc credibility In the White House ·IJ to hold special bonallde national presidential eloctlons within Dlnety (Ill) days. The preoent dllef executive ii IO food of "fil'ltt'' IO, who knows, perhaps IUCb action woold mtore hiJ im11e u· a knciwledgeable leader &l!d give us aomethlna to celebrate an our forthcom- ing 200lb IMiven&ry u a geat nation. BORIS DUZAN Wh.C'• • B-.eh2' To the Edltcr: II ~ memory ii cood and you're old -h to quallfy fer Social Security ~11. you'll recall tilll ln the dim bul nol too dlsLlnl post the ctly f1tben Jn Atlantic City bulll a bomlwalk. It became -Jd.lamoua. It's still theft. And U theft's me thllll It !Jn~ tlotac It's undulatlnl. · 'l1len lliey bulll a "Mllllon Dollar Pier'.'. and !he rest ii biltory. OI course Jn -days .a mJJllon dollars WU a Jot ol money. They oven uaec1 to meuure tho national debt la mllllaaa. ANYWAY, here Wit an ooean, a tJeach llld a boonlwalk. The three .. tocether. Quotes W. ..,.. Mattia, S.JI'., INvel ..... -........... Man, Ilk• lhe -· Who -JU -lllouid every .. often n1td! lo _.,. •tlnlJ dllfuetll to ma!Dtaln ldl Yllallty .•. I like to ,.. wlddi wrf Ufi IJ fOlnC to jump and which Y11 lt ii loin& to make me Jump." MAILBOX Letter1 fTcrm rtader1 are Wflcomt. Normall11 writer1 should convey their mt1sage1 in S~CDords or less. The r\Qht to condense" letters to fit space or elimtnate libel is reserved. All Utters mwt include signature and mailing addres1, but name1 may be wlthh<ld on r/qu<rt l/ iuffidenl reason is apparent. Poetry will not be publl.rh<d. For all of ti-wonderful years when Lquna Beach was building 113 place Jn the sun, there was the ocean, the beach and the ~rdwalk. Thea came_the plaaners, F_or them the formula for fun wasn't good enough. "We must have a pvk'', they said. "We'll call it the Maln Beach Park." And it came to pass that they tore down all ol lhose fun. ny little beach-front cottages and leveled the whole area. 111ey were going to have a park. Not a beach but a park. THEIR PLANS call for a grassy park. The.re are to be .,...groves of trees - eucalyptus and pine -walkways to the beach and plazas for gatherings. Some beach. Tot lots for toddlehl, presumably 1t such a distance lhal Ibey won't get their feet wet. Perbapo the classic In the planners' ap- proach ii the undulatlnlf boardwalk. 111ey don 't seem to understand t h a t bomlwalks should be flat, weathered with ace and lull ol splinters. People sbooJd undulate. A beach should he a place where you meet the water bead on. You get sand Jn YCMr sandwiches, cut your foot on a rock, get too much SUD, examine tide pools, get frtchtened to death by a big wave, take a lot of. ove~ picture!, lose your watch and go home a complete wreck - • but detennlned to come back next Sun- day. Or, more simply, if you want a park go to a park. THE ECONOllllCS of the whole Jiroject are ridiculous. The water will attract the patrons -even if they do have to wade through an arboretmn to get to it. A tax ha.st it im't. A souree of revenue it isn't. A big, upensive palii Jn the neck it is. It's a,cool million dollars we're talking about. How about Liking that mUlion and speodlng it on bulldlng a bunch of seaside cottages Jll:e the ones that were there. Al ooe end ol the beach we build an en· teitalmilent center probably called "The Barefoot Bar." At the other end another den of iniquity we'll call 11Dante's'' or 1K111ethllll llke that. That way kids caa have fun building sand castles and gettlnlf sloshed around In the surf. Grownupe can relax knowing lhat at the end of the day Ibey can get sloshed within a few hundred yards in either direction. Let's give the beach back to the people. And if there are a few bucks left over let's build a retirement home for the plamers. GEORGE WOLFE Wl'Ollfl Slant To the Editor: A headJIDe In the A)l<ll 25 Dally Pilot read: "FDA Action Ups Meat Costs" It should have read: "FDA Action Eliminates a Cancer-cauaing Chemical from Beef." Thank you for changing priorities Jn the futur<. RENE SMITH PlaaC a Tree To tl1e Editor: Anny barrack houslng. H u m a n warehouses Jll!tead of homes. Parking lot., parklnc lots, plastic grw. AJ a lover of the sea and trees, I'm feeling the squeeze. I agree wtth landscape architect Richard Bigler (article In Aprn IT lsauei that Huntington Beach needs a. forest. · Maybe it could be a memorial forest. Instead of buying cut nowel'3 at the Ume · of death a Zriend or relative, why not plant a Jong living tree? Or why not plant a tree celebrating the birth of a child? Maybe the memorial forest would beeome a national habit replacing wilted flowers and cigar ashe!. JAMIE "WATERMELON" REIN Press GuUtu? To the Editor: The Watergate scandal has been blown entirely out of proportion by you, the liberal press, who has been Jrylng to discredit the Nixon Administration since it took office in 1969. Now you feel you have a chance by somehow implicating the President in this unfortunate incident by printing every sleazy rumor that comes out of Washington before tt is declared fact or fiction. I am convinced the President had no prior knowledge of Watergate and with or without this scandal bis Presidency will go down in this nation's history as one of our best! RICHARD RIGGS Something'• Wrong To the Editor: Your article, Hope for Dying Diabetics in the Pilot (Sunday, April 29 ) c,.talnly raises some mighty big questions . You quote Dr. Hauntz as saying," .. , the big problem is money . . . the life-saving operation costs about $20,000 •. we are • in the position of behlt able to at.end this new hope ooly to the patients who can pay ... " Well now, somebody please explain. Here we are spending millions of dollars to save Cambodians from communism • · and we can't spend $20,000 to save an , : American citizen from kidney failure •• :·: Something wrong somewhere. · J. A. DAVIDSON ' • Great Art Nee~ Great Suffering .•• Remarlcl an· avant-garde arllst geil tired ol bearing: "R<nfro, the landlord says thal If you dcm't at least make a down payment on the back ront by nooo, we'll be thrown out Into the street by nightfall." 11Yeah, Jt'1 a nice painting. What's it a painting of?" .. ~'They say the greatest art comes from ~ .,..test suller- inl, Renfro. Maybe you don't have ~ trouble In }'OtD' life." "Qualntnea comes IOO biih here in Greenwich Vlllage, kid. For what this pm! dump COiis pou, I could get a l.......n aportment off Put Avenue with two baths." ''THE GROCER lllYI he doesn't cm If you .... -Rembrand~ -Ho soys tt'a cuh on the line now or you don't 1et any more grocerlel." "'ftley uy that Nonnan Rocmll can llilll pl lhouaands of dollan for U-old polntmo "' hla Ibey -to pul In the ....,,.,. ol !ho SllUrday Evenlnl l>oot." "I've 1ee11. 9lme of the landlcapes 70U've pointed. llaYe you ever pointed 1wl.-and bllns! I mean for a Jiving?" "Some llY be'• a cubist. Some say be'• an e~ Bui I Jtlll thlnl: he's another tlUlty ublbltlonlsi." "Well, 10 me Ibey look kind el Uko ,... ... been bnltalJnC the °""' po1nt- ( HAL BOYLE J Jnp thal the cbimponzee at !he zoo does. You did want me to speak frankly, didn't you?" 111•ve alrudy been down to the mailbox three Umes, Renfro. 'nit welfare chect can'I poeslbly get hero before the day after tomorrow." "MA YBI: IT woold belp If you started like -artist.I tbroughoul history 1tarted, Renfro -with IOIDt talent?" "Are you sure lbal one Is hanging rlghlside up? How caa you really tell?" "All I know about art 11 Whal I like, and what I don't like about this art, If lhal'1 what you call It, ii !hit I jtlll don't like lL" "Whal do you mean when you say !hat you'd even be wlJllng to give this part1cular pointing to the light museunt Art1 muoeum that would take It woold be the wrq muaeum." "Whore did you put that tea bag ....... ed Jut night, ilenlro! We have to use It acain -or we can't have any tea for breatful" "I don't mean to lr!ghten you, Renfro, but I don't tbJnlt Iha!'• Jtlll an ordinary nllh you've pt In,... beard. Have you ever had tbe mmpt11 "II' ft BAT llto lall two apples, Rea- fro, wllol will 1"tl have Jell for the sl1l1 life you planned to paint today?" h i "The only canvas we have left ii on I that old anny cot I use for a bed, hooey'.11 But 1f you think I'm goina: t.o aleep on the 1 floor for art, you're out of your mind.•• . "My kid in kindergarten can dnw be~ · ter than that." , i "The only thlng left on the Bhelf la a 1 • can of dog food, Renfro. I tell you wha~ 1 • I'll do. I'll spill JI tme way1 -between you, me and the dog -U you'll agree to go and apply for !hat job wtlh the sanita- tion department, like you proml.ed.'" Wicks .,.""" 'Ut,,,. begin by aylng ••• HELP/' Fo1 R•nSOl'I, NI Mlltt, HI Coli, Sylvia Dvkt, Syl~ M•rfln Motf"1. l'rl Prl(t, ,..,.r, H1vm1n. Et L• ll:ov, Sar Po~r, h it llr•ndUmp, HM"' Pylt, R1n1C Weddle, JOI Mvrl)hy, Go Arlt I Qvlngton, Raymond Gru1M1,111ll, M•l'lltret L."' Moo y \llKJO, Viti Poth.rd, C\1 MCPl\lnlln . 1(11(111, J11 Ellzallttl\ Stubbs, En SIOlll, 11: .. t> Ltvt, EtM Fo,x, T"-1"1 St1mn, T~ Dant.ls. II• .IJIJlJ,.J!lldi Hel\P', E! J1rilc1 R WU.on, 1181 Woodford, 8t\KI Htlch, Ott '"' TsulJok&, J F0$1tf, J111 Bloom, WI Jove• Du<:kwoor"ll w-811llll'd, JI Wlrl'ltf', c;! Cool~llllh '"'-"· Atllft Bragglns. I H1.19h11, 8 Perkins, H TlblMIS, SI R0,1.aJ1, II:• Natt~ •• T11J1, $trod Conti, Pr11 Rtlmen. l IOMttl'ldall, Lou !ladet", Ml ~In, Pt ...... \Kii, J ,,,.,_ Avwy, S!li GfffM, D .uti.. LIV H;tm1treel J11n Wllllem1, Wqnur, F MlU.r, Ly Ell, Otvii SOtl1, Hut Louis L. llot ~·'"' Mlly 2 of Ille hol'I' S1cr1rnen10 11'111 Artllur , G1r1ld ol Fr 80r"Ol':l wll Mllsonlc and n01111. Sal\ln t11ttnN1n1. I Newoort 81 Olr11:tors. Sldrll'I' B. Fi ot dMTl'I M. San!Ol"d and Mrs. Jeen L 11,..y Ind A FrM SOns C Bait?" Bltl Forw1rdl1111~ Grice F. Lffl,/nl Hut S1,1rvlYlld bi G1rden Oro< Mlld..-1 Id. County}, II 01n1 Point Mae). Six ~fcind$~~ P1c"1rk V1r. v ........ Mortvat'Y D Alie• Milar at BIWrlY , b1" llvtblnd one11111.EI dll.llll'ltli' M m 1l1i.r 1,1n1 Hll Rtirililll Botti 11 $' comm111111 1 Ctn-11t1rY. Mortu1ry 0 AR WEST 4%1 E. ~ c.r.. Colla l Bl UI Bl ,McC I BE '1'111 Temporar9 €t11todf Wl a f c'~'"":::.·~M~~'-'4.~1~9~73:__~~~~~-.-.~~D-~_L_V_P_IL~OrT-,-'<-9I .... •"'~-~~-~~-""~~~1 •(i~~~~~~~~ or The ecord ·· Boy Retu:rne.d to Ho~e s.-.w. ....... ,, Oeu~· "''' .. 110 " ·SAVI UP TO 5~ o.c.t ............ SflM'e,H~ ShKlu., SMm. •wtm ANY NII • flll Al1UA1MMim' lssol11tl ot1• ·.lfl•rriage 1111'*1 ~1 ll , Cltetv' Alln Ind Oenftlt Atldt"""' , a.rltlrl AM Ind OOUlllll , Do&1ol11 JI'/ Incl T«IN .Cl1lr11t ....... WMll•m e . •tMI Elllllblrltl H. ' eouiMth L. Ind R1Mlelt Jt , UITWN!, ¥1rl1t1 lluth end Kim Arttwr t. S\IMn It. 9M IMll A. lll'IOWll'"t4tr~n N. and j>eMIOpt L. rl'lbfr'llkl. P!IYlll1 E. and MldlHI L, mb9n.1 J11Mt •nd JllOMU W. , IUtll'IOI'" Gilt -.id C"-rf" autord rf(lfl, O.Uor1 Riii Ind •rttwr E1rt ton. Unda LM 11\d Wl111am 0111 f'W'f, Alkt f . tnd e ... ,._rd M. , .HM!fW Mllflt Ind all'lord u"-"' II n"lef"e, Jotn Miry and Vlc:IDI'" OVll.t boll, COIW"ad C. Ind M..-llyn E. , M.t.ry M1rg1rt!I tfld John - llrvcir 11, Fred W. tnd Gfflld'Vne IVl'Sltf', Ratiert A. Ind Ctlherlne "M illlOI, J11nnet11 ind Alt•tncler Ger1rdo rTlll, Nlol)C'I' lff tncl T~I Weslty v... S.ndrt Lynn tnd Wlltltm M ..... llQro, Do!llld M. tllf Miry R. lt$0n, )l!l'lml9 Nitti.In tnd Jov Otrluit : own. Rl'blCU Ju11e tr!d G•vlon J. 0g1r1, Wilt.,-Incl II.tty J11n ewart. Ann L. tnd oavtd O. mml1191. 01111 and Dont ld ,_,, JHM 11'111 M111'90 It. . o-•r lletty J11ne tnd Le<i H1mPtO!'I ,,... ..,. " 111~. Nll'IC'/ Ruth tnd Edward Mii .. , Ill olt, Sylvi. ElllM Ind Eddll LH ke. Sylvl• N~ln• 1nod Edward M11•lln ot11tt, Fl'Wtrlck E. 1nod 011nn1 K1y rlc1, Mlrt L. ~ H1rry R. 1yman, Ellreblth ind E1mll" Le Rov e RO'f, S1ndr1 K1y 1nod Rlchlrd W. ott.r, 8elul Gldlk Ind Cloyd E•rl r1lldklmp. Hlldl ,.,.,. Ind ClllrlH """' yle, R1nwm Lllll'llrd ind Anne addle, JOHPh aen end """'' Ann rptiy, Gecr99 Arttwr and P1ullne .,~ nglOfl, Oepbne, 1k1 Ill.Mint 1nod R1ymond rubllollJh, Ron1kl Jim" I(. 11Mi M1rg1r1t J1ne H , Moo YI Ind l(yung JI 1111141 Apfll 19 li.clo, l/lclor J. 111d l/lr11lnl1 L. oll1rd, Clludlne S. 11\d Clllrl11 A. Pl*SOrl, P1'1'lcl1 M. 1nd W1rr1n H. noO, J"''" Anthony and Miry EUubeth . tuDllS. Ern• MIY Ind RlcMrd 10\lt, A14pll 5111'lln and Slndrl J .. n -· Ernest and rma • ox, Thelma:W. 1nd Glendon O. f1rnn. Thunlon M. and SMUI W. 1nlt11, 81rblr1 K. 1nd Ronekl M. .J:!!ldtQtl'dl E. 1~ ~~9derlck_W .• 11\P'• EtdriOt.,-Etiiltnli. Jr. -ll!'ld Jank• Rose U!IOft, aarbara and Wllll1m Alfred oodlord, Tatty G1y Ind Alchlfd Bruce 11ch, Debol'lh J1ne and Richard Car- '"' suUoM, J1nlc1 R. •nd Aon•ld I(. Fosler, Jrw c. and lAon•rd Roy l-.'1, Wll11llm Augu1t and Plllrlcl1 Joyce uckwoorth, Dorona G•ll •nd· J1lfr1y w-aullltd. J•mes Alan and Dyanne T. 1r11M"" Glorl• and wan ... w. CoolbalollJh, J11n R. '"" Marvin L. oi.man. ,.,.llWr WlUlltTI and P11.1l1 Anlll ar~lou. LDUIM A. and Homtr A. Hughff. a1v1rly J. and Jamtl C. p.,.kJns, H1lft1 line! George W. Tlbblls, Sharori o . and L~lhlr A. lllltcl AJH11 21 Ro.illle, Roy S1nder1 •rid P11rl Arlene Not~. J~I C. and 'w1lt1r L .. Jr. Taul, Sandra S~ and John WllU1m ont1. Pr1i.c:IU1 e. and Anthony Ill Reiman. L1renc1 Paul 1fld Allee L. rkendall, 5Mrlda AIWW Ind Floyd ...,, 81d1r, M1.-1ne •nd Robef't J. IMl'tln. PllKIY &1191'1 Ind GIT)' Lynn Mauck, John w .. lay and 1(1thl11n --AYff)', Shella 11'91'11 ind Monie D .... 1vn1 GrH$1, Oline M. Ind Lerry L. AIM, LIUflPIA M., Jr, Ind Su1n B. Ham11re-e1. Roy WOOdrow, and S.rb1r1 J11n WllUtm•• Donlld·L. lfld Karlft L. waener. Frieda M. Ind Thom•• c. Miiier, Lynd• MCLffn Ind Ann El1, DaYld Paul Incl Ann1IH Soria, HUIJO J°" and LUC'!' Gl0tl1 Deatla Notices .OltOl.S Is L. BOl"llH OI L111un1 Hllli. D1M of Ith May 2. 1973. SurvlYH bY Wiii Rita Ii.. homl. One 1011 Aot>lrt A. ol ramento and ThrM br011'1ff'1; A. F., Arll'w.or 80fV9t_ bOTh of Uf'nOOl"I and raid of Fr-. Two llflndchlldrlf!,.Mr. es .,.,, 1 memblr ot Lll•ure world IOfllC and Shrllll CJubl. S.rv1c" 11 12 . Slturd1y In Paclllc Vl1w Chapel. termini, P1clllc I/Ir# Mlmorlal f"•rll.. wPOrl a..cn.. f"eclllc vi.w Morlu1rv SANTA ANA -A Pla<enua • the diS[llll~ ~w... th . ·couple 1w won a temp0rary-Mltchell.s and the Los Anaeles "viClory lo a loog fight to County agency lw been set : regain afstody of a seven-for July 2 in Superior Court. yell'<lld 1'dopled ..., taken Mitchell, 43, and his wife, 40, _,... ---•1-!rom-tbelr boille last sept. II allege lnJheir.actlon tbaLtbey. by the Los Angeles Counly adopted the boy through the ,,llol~ of Ado,_pth>M. ' Los Angeles agency In Morch · Qrange County S u p er I o r 1971 alter the child's molh'! ~ Judge Byrm K . ORANGE COUNTY Westminster Man Gets McMIUan ha•· onlered thal SaJidy Jack Mitchell be returned to Robert and Grac;e Mitchell peodlng the outcome of a child custody bearing set for May 18. A jury trial that is expected to provide a final solution to Newport Man Gets 60-day Term Stiff Term SANTA ANA A Convention SANTA ANA -A Newport Beach man who admitted the theft of a $1,000 camera and photographic supplies valued at more than $400 from a San- ta Ana camera shop bas been sentenced to 60 days in Orange County Jail and placed on three years probation. Westminster man who tol.d ar- resting officers be shot and killed a bartender because the victim had been "fooling around" with his wife has bt.-cn.sentenced to five years to lire in state prison. On Shopping Centers Set Orange CoWlty S up er i o r_ Court Judge James Turner imPoSed sentence on Richard F.dward Ruvaleava, 35. after the defendant offered the guilty plea to reduced charges of second degree murder rather than face trial scheduJ- ed Wednesday. ANAHEIM -The California Pharmaceutical AssociB.tion will hold its annua1 convevtlon May 23-26 at the Disneyland Hotel here . . , The convention is efpected to draw 1,000 pharmacists, wives and children. Keynote speaker will be John Veneman, fom>e.r assis-- tant secretary of the depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare and an announced candidate for . the office or Lieutenant G o v e r n o r of CalifCl'llia. Judge James Turner suspen· ded the state prison term of one to 10 years he initl'ally ordered for Theron Wilson Atwood, 43, of 1019 Marion Way, after the defendant pleaded guilty t<r charges of grand lheft. Santa Ana police s a i d Atwod was arrested Oct. 5, 1972, after he obtained the camera and equipment from a Broadway store by supplying false information to a store clerk. Ruvaleava wa s arrested at a Santa· Ana bar last Dec. 17 shortly after the slaying of Alejandro Salinas Lema, 36, of Garden Grove. Witnesses said the pair argued over Lerna's r e l a tionship with Mrs.1------------------------ Ruvaleava end that the defen--1 •--------------------. dant Jert the bar and return.ed \Yith the weaP'.Qn sued in the slaying. · Leena's widow, who lists her rive children as co-plaintiffs , sued Ruva leava for $1 million last rwmJ.hJn..a~ciYilaclioo fil-_ ed in Superior Court. 'Asia Game' Talk Topic "The New Diplomatic Game in Asia" witl be discussed by a Stanfo1·d University professor at a meeting of the Stanford Club of Orange County set for the Colony Clubhouse in Irvine . Dr. Claude A. Bu ss, diplomat, Far East scholar, history profe ss or , and member of the graduate school of business facuJty at Slanford, will speak at 8 p.m. f\olay 14, in lhe ClubbotIBe, 3611 Soulh Mall, Irvine. Prostitution Trial June 6 SANTA ANA -Two women accused of bein'g members of a prostitution ring operated by convicted pimp Willie Crit- tenden from a Santa Ana bar have been ordered to face trial June 6 in Orange county BllCID CIPISTBIRD · L'lllld ·of the Doos UNSPOILED, SECLuDED 2 'lz to 3 acre ranchos amid the great oaks of Cleveland National Forest Deep in the peat oak n Pon of the Cleveland National FoTML lies a·JOO:.cre idand of rollin1Jlills, ~valley& and &flli.1)' 11Adc~ known as Rancho ,!;,pi,~no. Vast rcocbc.!!ff the National Forest recreation uu stretch in. aJmoct every direc- lion, a Governmenti.owned buffer apinst populatioD. and. commercial encn:>M:hmeat. Rancho Capistrano will bck>n1 to just l ]) owner&. in t~e .fin1plc. Each of tho 21h to l acre nncboll is c)eared and bu Oementc, Only 21 !Ctllic miles fr9m San Juan Capistrano. Randto Capi5lraDo p&JUJJ a.re priced from $9,150 to $18,150, easy down, liberal financing. Plt11san1 Scenic Drivr: Santa Ana/San Diego Freeway to hiatoric San Juan Capistrano, then cast on Hwy. 74 (Orte1a Hwy.) 23 miles to the tnrn-off to the ri1ht at "'South Ma.in Divide" and follow the signs . w ater service and arMled roads. ~---?.~/JS.----~ Ancient Spanish oab 1till .... !:": lland on most of the ra.ncboL \ This xcludcd pracnoe. ooce ;o ~ '""\ ractors. l"ltlt.ID Su rior court. df!IY II, Freud..l forft'llf'IY of ChlcaQO, 111. ,..;::::1::::_::::....:::::::.::..-----11 aold, can never be duplicated. ~ E ~ At Rancho Capistrano you'll ....,. .;-. cstalh May ;i, 1973. Survl....ci oY IOI'! nfor'd 1nd a brother Jel'T}'. 0.... 11l1t1r n . Jttn Levine, two Of'lnck.hlldren. Jet. rlY '"" AprU. StrYICIS May 7..l ltn ,, " SOn1 Ctrnellf'V In Forni t'llrk, 111. tfl" BerOlfOll Corona dtl Mar , ,...1rdlng Olr=~AAT race F. H1nhlrl of ,77.9 C11l1 Cadiz, uni Hiii•. Dall ; dfflh MIY l. 197l. rvlved bV e111111h r Glorle Su11•CI' of 1rden Gr0\11 . son1 1me1 R. Henhart of 1 (dlt!rlct 1ttorn~ of MacMr1 nty), Ind ltldlerd 0 . H1nlwlrt of 1~ Point (buOdlng dll'Kfor of Cost1 tM). SI• 11r1f1Cklllldren and laur ltl'lll· •~lldren. Prlv111 Hrvlc11 wnl bl ld turd1y, May S, 1973 1t 2 p.m. 1n ac c I/law Ch1pal. Interment! Pacific 1-Memorlal Park. P1clt c I/Ir# tuary Dlr~Li\ltKIY Ilea Mtl•rtc•. t>ate of d111n M1! J, 191l t Beverly Manor. L111un1 Hll!1. ~rvl...., 'I' l'lusbllnd EUOflM ~.of Lll!~ftl HIU1 I nd son, Euo-J. Jr. of Norwalk. one IUOhi.<' Mfl. Atlc1 Tl'IOmPSOl'I of Oxnard. •liter Mr•. Mlldrad M!lchlll of uni Hiiis. Rnary, 7:30 P.m. Mond•Y nd RIOUltm Mo!••, 10 1.m.k ,_.,_ oltl 11 St. Nlcnoo•• Cat!IOI Cl'lutch. ommlttl•I Hrvke 11 A I c In 11 on emeterv. McCormick Lqune Beach tuarv DI.rectors. ARBUCKLE & sqN WESTCLIFF MORTUARY U7 E. 17111 St., Costa Mesa &16 4811 BALTZ-JaaERON FUNERAL BOME C...llelMor -Colla M-llt-UU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY Ill _.,..y, Colla Mesa LIWQS • I MctlOllMICK LAGUNA I BEACH MORTUARY 1711 Lqalla CUyoa Rd. -Ii I • PACIFIC VIElf MEMORIAL PARK ·~-MtmwY ~ ' Siii Podllo VleW Drive N...,..i -· Clllloral• J ·~ 'i'EU ,AMILY COL:oNI~ FUNERAL ll!IME Tiii Bolu Avt. Wellmlnsler !tU525 SMITllS' rloeroARY m MUI SL Haatlngtn- Ulmt Cou1it y Cleanup SANT A ANA -County orficials have declared May as cleanup month for the unincorporated areas of the county. Beginning Saturday, county crews will visit various parts of the count y with trucks to pick up bulky items and discards. Reservations for trash pickup can be made by ·calling 834-3492. ( enjoy usnred teelusion for an ":;' infinite· future, the beauty of ~­ "nature at its lovlic&t," a tem· ~ pcrate year-round climate at C:i"i:"~l\l'=,,......-...- 3)0().ft. elevation. and -4S min-/• ute acctss to c:outa1 rttre1.lion at Laauna, Dana Point and Saa '---'---'-~h~· -~· =-=~"~-==~,.. Pto(Hrty open for showing wcckcrul.ronfy 1 I a.m:-5 p.1n. Write for our free. illustl'tltcd brochure. llRCID CIPISTBIRD 2172 Dupont Drive, Suite I, Irvine, Calif. 92664 (714) 83)-)223 ·Tr y Saturday's News Quiz froln to C2 lfomla's unoHldal state bird. Or fly the PSA Grlnnlngbirds to San Diego and San Francisco. over 160 flights a d<!Y connectjng. ali of northem and southem Califo rn ia Give your traVljl agent or PSA a bird whistle ana take off. PSAlfRI .,..u·a lft. had ,.11nquilhed all rich!! to lllm. The couple aueg .. lhat the boy was taken from them by Los Angeles aulh<rities last September after they were given 30 minutes notice to sur- reoder the child and pack his clothes. The boy is now back 41 Milchell borne peodlng the rul· inl.to.lle bsU<d !.l!Y_lt are • nee . The General Jet COMPACT CARS INTERMEDIATE CARS STANDARD CARS L~ARGE CARS ' ' s..9so,*,.,,. I 1.1s.1s $ r:· * . ·2 1.isa14 1.21115, ·s oo·· 23 ....... JO~ ...... , ... II~ t2 "'91b~I• ..... 110 7~ Sii~ WMI • , , , 14» 1l ~ •.•.•• llJ 7J SM.to ., ... .,. 11 7 .,,.,, _...,. . ,...,, ',_ fl91&S1 IM,OITlt w00t.11U • n 1n ~I r:::.::51 5Af' .. ,, iiiilii ~ DAl~'I' M ,., lfptlll-1 ,._. IU-4111 1155t MllcMhUf' 11¥41. -4tfl .......... /,. #wr. ••It If Me<Arl~"' I Md.-Act ... 0 ,C Al<,.,, ll•t-·" -....... ... t•"•-....i ht.k. C.Uf, a..tl £1 (MIJIL'(t .f llASt•Jl.,.ltC• Twin-Tread ~ · ·nactio·n Half .P.ri,c·e. Closeout . ·:-s _ .. 95 Gener~! Q.ailtl$1:R • 3-Rlng Whitew all • • 4·Ply Polyeater"Cord while they last! WAS .$35,95 NOW .•• Sli. E"l'Ft4 lubellH wl'lltewell,,.._ $2.22 ,.,. Eld1eTu . Larger alzoe 11 compol"llble S1Ylngal Complete BRAKE OVERHAUL 1. lltltell NIW Mny ~llty lhll .. Oii Dll 4 ,whffbl 2. lllMlld the cytlllden Oii oll whffh! J. 15"4 II*:• -IMNll llMyY d.ty broU fhild, 4. llll!Nd ...... rfllta .,,. •• 5. Tllfll -4 trM oll 4 .., ... dr111'111. '· 111:-,.ck "°"" wMel "9rl1HJ1. 7. Alljnt llNtet _.. cllecll el'!Mfgncy 119'11 .... I . 111:..cttestye.,cnrt....-iM ALL $ FOR ONLY. •. MOST U.S. CARS {OiK b11U1 not lnc:ludad) I I ·'64) A (NEOATIVE CAMBER) i~ (POSITIVE CAM&EF!) ~ ~(10£.00T) Only ... • FRONT END ALIGNMENT We correct Caster, Camber, Toe-ln, Toe-out to·your car manufacturer 's specillcatlons .. :Safety check and adjust your steerin~1 $ so Amerlc1" Cir• 1c1r1 ... im Air Concl. and/GI' lor1• b!lr1 COii 1xtr1.I C11m99cl UTU URVIC[CHAK(Fo.tMIWITNAlll COMOITIOHINCOITOUtofl IAllS "-DISCONTINUED TIRE SPECIALS ! 8 ONLY 10 ONLY 6 ONLY E78x15 :::::.u $12~ H70x14 Blem• . . . . . . . $15~ . 77Sx15 ::~1: . s1~~ 8 F78x15 white ONLY Walls ..... 4 650 13 Whitew1ll ONLY x Blems .. . 10 ONLY F70x1S ::lilt; ..... . 11141. I._ Tu fl'ln'I ti.ff M 11.'4 . Don Swedlund \ COMl'Ll!TE CAR CARE SINCE 1959 646-5033 . 540-5710 HOURS: 7:30 ,. 6:00 Daily • 1 ' • r ·- • _, • J. OAtl Y PtlOT Frid.II', Ml)' 4, 1973 Kiss~ge1· Stops Off In Europe Bapid Transit Will Try Again COPENHAGEN \UPll - PruldeOtial adviser tJenry A. Kissinger. on his "'ay to ~1oscow to set the stage ror Soviet party chief Leonid I. Brezhnev's Washington visit, conferred with SALT negodat« U. AlexiJ Johnsoo (1N SHORT ... ) By 1110MAS D. ELIAS Once apio, tho Southern California Rapid Tr a n s I t District says It will complete a "corridor analysis" in the next few months and m a t e re<.'Ommendatlons {pr place· ntenl of rapid tr~t Unes across large portions o f Southern California. Since lhe RTD was formed in 1964,' It has proposed three similar plans, only to see all shot down either by the voters, as In 1968. or by cily and coon· that the "rapld" In the Rm'a name has always been a misnomer because the district hu never opretated anything but b""' d<splte aborted rail r11pid transit plans. tte RTD'1 new plin will likely be similar 19 previous ones . calling for lnlUal coo- SOUTHERN CAIJFORNIA FOCUS ty planners. struction of a rail line dogleg· .. -be .... JD the Southland, tile rail -certoin!y would nol. In !act, each ol the plans the RTD has put forward In .-.cent yurs hu borne a striking resemblance to the system of rail tram;U enjoyed by large portions orSoothem ca11rornla until as recently as 1961. That !ystem begwi in 1901, belonged to the now-dcfUru:t Paclffc Electric Co., a subsidiary of Southern Pacific Co., and was affectionately known as the "Red cars." ging trom the downtown Los AS A RES ULT, the RTD. Angeles area through south· JN REAIJTY nothing more which serves Los Angeles central Los Angeles to Los An-than trolleys, the Red cars County and parts of Orange, geles International Airport. operated on 1,164 miles of during a 90 minutes stop-over Ventura and San Bernardino track at their peak in 1926. here, u:s. Embassy officials counties, has shirted im-WllAT'S GAlJ.JNG about Main lines radiated outward ·d mediate emphasis to improved this prorvw~I , at least to rapid from downtown Los Angeles w . b . ~-Kissinger's Presi<lential jet us transportation . transit advocates, is: that while to the San Fernando Valley, landed at Kastrup airport to __ C:._r_iU_"<:.:•.:.· _hoc:._w_e_v_er.:,_m_a_in_tain_· __ th_•_'_'r_ap:..i_d_".:po_r_t_io_n_o_r_the_id_ea __ s_a_n_t _a __ M_o_n_i _c_a_c' __ s _a n refuel and take on Soviet navigators for tbe last leg to Moscow. Kissinger met Johnson at the foot of the plane and in- vited the top Strategic Arms t Limitations Talks ( S A L T ) negotiator inside ror a ~ minute talk. e Illegal Aid?' WASHINGTON (UPI) The General Accounting Office (GAO) has charged that President Nixon's campaign committee violated federal elections law when it placed an ad in the New York Times last year in support or Nixon's decision to mine Haiphong Harbor. . The GAO's Federal Elec- tions Office said the ad - which appeared to have been placed by w>vate citizens - actually was cleared by the white House and paid !or fn - cash by the Finance Com- mjUP.:e to Re-elect the Presi- ----_d.enl....-.- OUTSTANDING MUSICIANS Seaton Blanco, direcror of the Fountain Val- ley School District .Orchestra, congratulates Wendy Carpenter, winner of the · most -im~l'O"led--pl-aye-a,vard: Othe'I'-d1s triot awa1 d wirnrers-w-e r-e;--&'6m-left, Shari Williams, Wildwood Music Scholarship; Eiarl Redding, most valuable play- er, and Mrs. M·argaret Maio, presid·ent of the District Orchestra Music Boosters. e Rocket Falls WASHINGTON (AP I -A Soviet rocket, believed to be ca rrying a Lunokhod space vehicle, fell into the Pacific Ocean last week, T h e Washington Post reported in its Friday morning edition. According to the Post, it was the second consecutive space failure for the Ru ssians and the second time a Proton rocket railed to boost its payload clear or e a r t h · s gravitational field. e Kea1t l'fgil KENT. Ohio (AP) Memorial candles flJckered early today on the-Kent State University campus sites where four KSU students were killed three years ago in a con- frontation with Na ti on a I Guardsmen. A crowd of about 2.000 KSU students and faculty members stood in silent vigil on the University Commons for an hour. e ltlagee Plea SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Ruchell Magee has b e e n granted a handwritten motion to have hi s retrial in the 1970 1.1arin Co u n t y courthouse shooting held outside of San Francisco. Robert Carrow, Magee's court.appointed attorney, said ¥agee filed for the change of venue without hi s knowledge. "He wants to go lo Los Angeles," Carrow said. e Press AUacl,6 WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Alan Cranston CD-Calif.), to- day said the role of the press in breaking open t h e Watergate case "makes more urgent than ever" federal legislation to protect con- fidential news sources. Coastal Permits Eight W. County Projects Okayed Eight West Orange County construction projects have received approval of the Soulh Coast Regional 7.one · Conservation Commission. Seven of the pro jects, mostly single and multi-family reside ntial , ""~re gr a n t e d coastal permits. One other development already under way when Proposition 20 became law last November was exempted from permit re- quirements. Receiving permits this week were: -S IN GLE-F AMIL Y residence on Sandra Lee S1reet in Huntington Beach by Don Koland. -Four-unit apartment building at 16682 Sims St., Huntington Beach by Blaise J. Subbio ndo. -Four-unit apartment building at 166n Sims St.. liuntington Beach, by Sub- biondo. -Four-unit a pa r t m e n t building at 114-loth SI., Hun- tington Beach, by Charles •lennanson. -THREE-sTORY, three - unit apartment building at 213 Ocean Ave., Seal Beach, by \Villiam and Laura Gill. -Sixty.six-unit apartment complex on Algonquin Street, about 1.600 feet from the closest poinl of the Huntington Harbour Channel, in Hun- tington Beach by Prudential Construction Compap.y. --Olfice building with three offices and 6,353 square feet on the inland side of Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach, by Leonard O . Lindborg. G RANTED EXEMPTION by the commission was: -A 119-unit two-story townhouse con do mini um development at Al gonquin and Boardwalk in Huntington Harbour by Lincoln Property Co. The company had building permits for 28 or the townhouses before Nov. 8 and was constructing the first nine at that time. The commission decided the entire 119-unit pro- ject was interdependent and shouJd be exempted. The commission denied a claim of exemption by \Villlam Siverson and Edward Sukla fo r a seven-unit apartment building at 311 Ocean Ave., Seal Beach. They had a local building permit for the project by Sept. 20, 1972, but the commission determined the $18,700 spent and minor foundation work by Nov. 8 wasn't substantial All projects before the com- mission are within the coastal 7.onc of Orange and Los Angeles counties. 14 Musical Students Wi1i H 01iors Fourteen young musicians have been honored for their performances in lhe Fountain Valley School Distri ct Orchestra. "The group, directed by Seaton Blanco, represents the best musicians from the district's 17 schools. Their achievements were noted in a recent annual awards night at Fountain Valley Elementary School. Receiving special recogni- tion were concertmaster Earl Redding, 12, G~!er School, most valuable player; cellist Wendy Carpenter, II, Harper School, most improved player, and basooonist Shari Williams, 14, Fulton School , who receiv- ed a partial scholarshi p to Wildwood Swnmer M u s i c Camp. FOUR ARROWBEAR Sum· mer Music Camp scholarships also were awarded to violinist Laurie Maio, 12. Fountain Val- ley School: violinist Amy Wada, 11 , McDowell School; C1arinetist Carla Buddingh, Tamura School, 14, and violin- ist Elizabeth Gil martin, 12, Lamb School. · Perfect attendance awards were presented to clarinetist Norman Kaczorowski, 13, Cox School; Garia Buddingh: Amy Wada; Wendy Carpenter; violinist Leslie Mosher, 13, Nieb las School; oboist Bob Bergh-Oltz, 11, Arevalos School, and violinist Dori Matsuyama, 12, Fountain Valley School. Special recognition was also given to Mrs. Margaret Maio president of the D i s t r i c t Orchestra Music Boosters. Cranston sai d "the president and vice president are seem- ingly offering a cease-fire in ndministration attacks on Ille press," but he expressed doubt this would be lasting. Your Solon~s Vote e Quints Stable PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) - T"·o of the week-<ild Anderson quintuplets were repo rt ed in stable but guarded condition today arter they tempornrily stopped breathing. How Courity Legislators Cast Ballots •lere's how Orange County ~---------, l~gislators voted on bills con-( J ~dored by the California CAPITOL Legislature last week : Dr. Fred Nomura of Bess Ka iser Hospital said Diane and Scott stopped breathing Thursday and had to be struclc on the feet to stin1ulale respiration. e J11dlan Talks STATE SENATE BAY AREA TRA NSIT: State Sen. Dennis E , Carpenter (R-Ne"•port Beach) and Sen. James E. Whetmore fR·La Habra} agreed the Bay Area Rapid Transit district sllouJd be required to Culflll PJN_E ~JOGE. S.O. (UP I) -_service commitments within Negotl8ti0ns at Wound~ Kn~ present boundaries be{ore ex· Umped along today 1n what tending service to other areas. one federal negotiator descrlb-· SB t60 passed 28 JD 1 and goes ed as a ~tremendous at-to the Assembly. mosphere or distrust." Richard Hellstem, deputy ...tstant attorney general, sakl after a "non·productive" ..... 100 Tburoday that no Ume . was set for a meeling today but that a session was ex· peeled. CRAB SEASON: Assembly BUI 59, extending commen:ial fishing season in certain areas ol Northern California between Dec. I~ Aug. 31 to aid the crab Industry, pa3'ed 'l1 to 3 and wa s sent to Gov. --~~~~~~-- Reagan. Wbetmore, yes, Carpenter, absent. and EQUESTRIAN RULES: SB 422 requiring horse riders to exercise caution a t in- tersections even though they have the right of way over autos pasSed 30 to 20, to Assembly; Whetmore, yes, and Carpenter, absent. 'SIR FRANCIS 0 R A K E : Adopted Assembly Co'"'"""nt -8'oolullon creating a joint commtt!ee to study stat.'• pratlclpalion in tile 400th an- niversary ol the circum- navigation of the earth by Drake, Vote was 23 to 3, Whet- more, yes, and carpenter,. absent. ASSDIBLY ACTION TIPS: AB IO, a bill malting restaurant employes the sole owaers of gratuities and pro- hibiting employe~ r r o m deducting tips rrom wages, passed on a 55-16 vote to the Senate. Voting yes were Assemblymen John V. Brigg• (R-Fu llerton) and Kenneth Cory (l).(;anlcn Grove). Op- ~re RQbert E. Badham CR-Newport Beach) a n d Robort Burke (Jl.Hunlhlgton Beach). MEDICAL LEVELS: AB 19, requiring same level pro- vision of Medi-Cal care, pass- ed 6tJ I<> 10, JD Senate. Cory, yes: Badham, no, and Briggs and Burke, abo<nt. I Betfianllno, the San Gabriel VaUey-Wbittier .,.. and Long Beach. At one thne, there wu .. .,, • plan "' -the Loog -Uno 50Ulhwanl "' Newport Beach. Ironically,_ the f r ~ e w a y sys!em wblch helped pul tile PacUic Electric out o f business used m1ny of the trolley's routes lo do so. Many or today's major highways directly parallel the old rail lines, THE BEGINNING of the end for the Red Cars came in the late 1920's, when popular, cheaply -priced cm necessi· tated many new roadways. These roads cut across Pacific Electric rights or way, forcing the trolleys to slow down and stop to avoid col- In the Service Second Lieutenant William ~1. Hutton, son of retired U.S. Marine Corps Second Lieutenant and Mrs . John W. Hutlofl, 1821 Port Westboume Place, NewJ)Ort Beach, has been awarded his silver wings at Webb AFB, Tex.. upon graduation from U.S. Air Force pilot training. Lieutenant Hutton is being assigned to Peterson Field , Colo., where ·he will serve as a T-41 pilot instructor with a unit of the Air Training Com- maDd wbicb pro.viJjes _fl yi ng. technical and basic military llslona with can. Freeway between El Monie What · coold hive been lhe and a point near the dowlllown prototype lot a modern rapid Los Anaeles area. tnwit lystem eoieried In Ille But that busway hasn't 1'40o, When the Cabuenga -_____ _ Pass Fttleway, now known as ~ the Hollywood Freeway, w.. Crttfc• -lnt•lta bull\ with I!. two-1tack ~Y •Jaat 'Npld' hu ..... line clown the oeater. . L __ Modem freeways in many tCleflS ...,.,.. • mis• Eastern cities now are corr ~. structed wilb rail rapid transit .....,--~ _ _ _ _ _ line In their center dividers ------------.-. and ![ mon: ol the South-really llOlved the traffic prob- land's Jreeway, had been Iems ol the .. ,tO[Il Leo built this way, the Red Cars -Angeles area and soott the or 90me other form of rail RTD will present another plan transport -might still be ron· it will claim can make a start nlng. · on doing just that. TODAY'S SOUTHERN CaliComia variation of this idea is the experimental busway running down the mid- dle of the San Bernardino Because the old Pacific Electric rights-or-way n o longer exist, any new system wo.uld require massive land purchases. Even the limited system the RTD presented to -And nobody "12 ~9. n.eor Billy 'cePt Mommy 'coos~ she'. a-Mt:INffL--~ ' ' lhe voters in HIM would bafe cost more than '2 billion. I ANY SIMILAR newton< 'f- da,y would probably cost D!OfF, and tt It wett eveotua!l1 l. tended JD •uch polnto -• Newport Bea.cl~ ~a n Bernardino and the west~ San Fernando Valley -none of which have been included tn the earlier plans -ii woukt ' co:;t much more. 'Ibis sort of dolelu! reality Is cited by the R.TD as Its reason for wishing to start a $S million program to expand bus service. Even district spokesmen say they know such a program \\'OUld at best be a band-aid when major surgery is called Cor. ........ ="''"'___ . For the Record • Dissolutions Of Marriage Flied .t.pril 11 Rus~ll. Robert Tllamlls 1nd Robin~. Diiion, JGen H, and Terrace J . Wiiiiams, Stllrlty: and O.vle e. HoU11111sworth, Vickie A . and Cllf+ord 8. A1xrwoe. R•~ and VICIOI' v. Kuslk, TrudH Given 1od Jld Wiiiiam Carlson, H1l1n P. and Lawrence L.. For1svth, FIQr1nc1 L. and Robert F. Htvens. Marllvn S. <1nd L1rrv H. Lawr1nc1, N1ncv M. llnd Mtrk S1tv1n Wflll1,-Juanl11 Ind Jatnff O. L09 Georiie 1nd Riii! Fraocn , L1r~ln, Rita J11n and Thom•s Fr1rw:01 Forrnt. Oouai.s Lee and Pamela M~~~~., Slllvtdor L. Jr, •nd Cynfhl• Sc~ift, Ann C. Ind LD<lll 0 . Stump, M•rllyn E. •nd Jimmy L. llurQ, Irma Eli.ti 1nd Harold Culver, Shella 1nd Donald L. ~fWMH, $¥.1 L. and WIUlam W. L-rv ... A.1¥-11-Hlli.cuind Arthur Jll't' , Avdelotie, M11rv Cl11ire and OCu,ocihi' training for Air Force person----------------------- nel. Francl1 Totten, Gana L. aml Jason R. Rottlni, Vlraln!a W. and GelHI A. H1rnev, June J. and Addison e . Fl1zp•lrlcll. Sllaron La Ind Denflll He was CQTl1111issioned in 1971 upon graduation from the School of Military Sciences for Officers at Lackland AFB. Tex. Navy Fi reman Michael R. Jeooer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don L, Jermer of 608 Hun- tington St., Huntington Beach, has repor ted for duty aboard the amphibious transport dock USS Dubuque homeported ill San Diego. Principal Appointed To Board Barb11.ra Dolph, principal of of Golden View Elementary School in Huntington Beach, has been appointed to the State Department of Edu ca- tion committee on e a r I y childhood education legisla- tion. Mrs. Dolph is one of five Ca l i for n ia school ad- ministrators assigned t o develop a model school plan to implement the earl y childhood program. All schools developing educ- cational programs for kin- dergarten and p r i m a r y students can then follow thal model guideline. The com mittee will work with State School Superintendent Wilson Riles. New legislation calls for placement in early years based on abilities and potential, rath- er than age and grade level, and for more use of parapro- fessionaJs and non-graded methods. ' That structure is scheduled to be phased-in into all eleme ntary schools within five years. Freeway • Approved SACRAMENTO (AP) -The State Highway Commission has approved construction of a new two-mile stretch 0 r freeway along Ca1ifomia 4 in Contra Costa County, the state Public Works Department haS' announced. Commissioner Vernon J. Cristina of san Jose said !bat the freeway Is intended "to replace an aocldenl-pi~. lw~lane section or Route 4 near Concord." Newport Man Ear~ Degree Oiristopfle< If a n s e n ol Newport Beach has been awarded the doctor 0 r pharmacy degree lrom the University ol the Pacific. He was one of 92 students .-.ceMna tbe ~. He 15 the son ol Ill'. and Mro. Martin E, Ila,_, %1 Unda Lsle. Assembly Actio1a ,,_ Pultio, Shirley Marie ond Carmelo Pelfr$Oll, Elvl R. 1nd Rrw:irr M. Curlr>Qlon. Timothy D. 1r>d Jiil Stwnln. Marcia and Dennv J. M~gList Luao. R11ymond S. 11nd S11nd111 L. SIOM. EIU•beTh s. and Robttl I(, J r. Wilco-en, Larry O. Ind Irene J, Miiier, Cnrl$10Phtr M11rrvn 1no TtrHI' Gii~~. Ev111"1Qellna llnd Adolfo 511Vl5 .J<'. A$11lh\e, JacQurUn• Ann and C1rl1n Dale Ba\lce, 81ttv loul11 and Pet'1" John Louria. Eva s. and Henrv w, Erasure Posed H~rv. Jovce A. atld Robillrt Oal!Q(I, Ml-I O. and Luel1 E. MC'C readv. Corrine S. •tld Joseph F. Relcl'I, M11r!llll Arerra Ind M.inron Atci~~. W. L. 1nd Lon-11lne A. Ollverl. L1u1a F. and Anlho11v F. SACRAMENTO I AP J Californians could have their names removed from mailing Jists sold by state or local agencies from official records under a biU introduced here. Assemblyman John Dunlap,· (D-Napa) said the measure would require the agency to notify the attorney general of plans for selling mailing lists and allow individuals to get their names removed from such lists in Uie future. e Tax f'or1n Raps SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A federal grand jury has in- dicted a San Jose tax preparer for a 11 e g e d I y overstating deductions on eight income tax (CONSUMER) returns prepared for clients by some $9,100. The government claims that Suzanne Lopez, 26, co-<>wner of International Tax Service in San Jose. overstated deduc- tions by $775 on one return to as much as $1,415 on another in preparing 1971 tax returns for customers. She is accused of knowingly preparing fraudulent and false tax returns by taking otf for medical expenses, taxes, con- tributions, i nt e r e s t and miscellaneous when h e r clients were not entitled to such deductions. e Special Page SACRAMENTO (AP) Telephone directories would be required to list conm:1mer protection agencies on a special page near lbe front, under a proposal by Sen. Allred H. So!lg (0.Monterey Park). '1'be measure_ requires that the list of state and local agencies be drawn up by the state director of consumer af. fairs. eRent Cuc OAKLAllll (AP) -A reJ!t rollback on Berkeley'• 25,000 rental units will he delayed unlil Superior Coort Judge Robert L. Bostick rules on the oonstitutlon&lify of the board that onlered tbe rollback to what they were In August 1971. Bostick also warned tenanla that withholding root from landlords wOuld b e "ifn.. proper." Bui the judge .. Id be was not limiting the boenl's power to hold beorlnp oo alleged abuses by l~. He said tbe board could .Ull ask landlords for evidence their rents met federaJ price con trol guidelines. e Co11rt OK Asked SACRAMENTO (AP) Banks allowing access to private bank account records could do so only under order of court subpoena -after giv· ing prior notice to t h e customer -·under a nteasure proposed by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty. The Beverly Hills Democrat said in intnxlucing the bill it is related to another measure to make it unlawful for slate or local bank investigators to re- quest bank records without a subpoena. Sieroty sa id that ''recent controversial federal legisla~ lion al l ows lederal governmental scrutiny o f every banking transaction, without court authorization and prior notice to the citizen. nus constitutes a ser ious in- vasion of the right o f privacy." ..._,,, e Smog Detliee SACRAMENTO (AP) Californians could deduct the. cost of installing an air pollu- tion control device on the.ir car from state personal income taxes under a state Senate bill. The measure was introduced by Sen. \V. Craig Biddle, a Republican from s m o g - plagued Riverside. Li1li., Rllll Mlf 11\d Harry Ralph 01tH, l lm'.la C. and Jonn' A. Brootiv. Sand•• Loul$1 and J1mH GaA~~u~otitm A. and A119lnnl'llt Kimes, Char1111 L" and B•verlv Ann Flltd APl"ll 16 OcMrQer, Kathryne ~. 11nd Edward H. Alu. Carl O. alld Otborah K. Roff, Auror• Marie i nd Jall'le1 JI~=: SOiia Eti:wnOo 1r>d Pllclro Oomlngvel • Schmid, J0$10h A. •nd Judith e. KODlnltr, Vicki Jeon and Jl,.,,.,,v Thomas Car11r, Rachaet Jane •nd Edward e:11~~n~11511n w. ,oind W1ll11m oouql.n Koon. v11..,u11a Lorena •nd Darrell Bertrand F11rreU. Ell'lel Earlene •nd Reul1 Charle~ , OTehls. Dirk Rr11an 11nd Deborah EUen G1•t11·ne. Beverly Joen and C1vde Harold Ho!Wlelh, Miidred M111'1e 11nd ll:tlbtrt W1~1T::n.,, Robert A. and Clndv Lou Ainley, Rober! Slmp$011 ind :!.1111'1e.,. Jn.anl'e McBreen, Marv 1. and Richard l.., Johnson, Joler11 SUUllM and Gr•nl Forres I Llbt>V. Holl11ee w. and James w. Wr11Htl, Loll Marguertte Ind GH'llld L~w Rav. Karen and C1aren<:e Calwert nerrv, JUI G. and Duane A. Culler, Harlan L. and Glor!a B. Ealon, Ron and Judlltl L Swanson, Btverlv Ann and J1mes C. Beclclund, Donna Looi~ ind Waller Jr. McMinn, Viola Cllarlotlt Ind Ktnne1n Lawr~e Beaume>nt, Janet Ellen 1r>d Wltlls Wayne M1r!ln, J1m.1 R. and Jenet R. Wl'!fflbilr~r. Rt-G. Ind Arlene J. Matotl, Rober! H, and Virginia V. Hoggall, Jamts T. Jr. and Je11nne C. Oumovlch, Richard J. and Ma1"9arel t... Gonzat~. Je11e Juan Ind Ch1rv1 Ann si.venson, Robel'I Louis ar>d Marv Jo- '°" H119l>es, James TOdd and Sharon Ann McM,,•llrf", Yvonn.t and Wllll1m John Gerlfer. ClndV 1nd Btrnlnl M, Jr. Amp1r111, c11nv Lvnn and Stephen Lorrence Mulligan, S~rry Ann 1nd Jack Alex- ,,.~ Mlar1, lil:OSI' F. ind Robert M. Jr. Hlvelv, Herber! Lre end Ludll• P1r500s Wendzel, Marg\lff'tte M. 11nd Fr&nk J11shtr, Marwin Wtvne and Dor!1 Lor- r1lrie Rll ey, Sh1rron L. t nd ltllbef'I David Ovrham, Volney E. and GllodVI M, Wynkoap, Le Ann and llllchard ~Qt H11v1~. Ruth Ann 1nd P1trlck Murphy M111tr, Mar9arel Lynllf •nd Jerom1 SIM!lfV Hoffa in Shape Former Teamster President James R. Hoffa, In mid- dle of Washington banquet In his honor, got down · In hl.!t tuxedo and did 21 pushups to prove lie was [it u day he left prison. 15 month> ago. Piri Stri e!ci.1 ' hll u.I Hoa t laclllly • didn't . bar&ajn, -vessel I aiar1 .. • •Qceanfr, brass bra; worth I said. I Ma To On th residents to Mexlcl Mayo eel library's I has put c headed t room in I Margar' UC! libn said sor s4rplus I ready ti libraries j "111E which ha taxpayer CreSJaty duplicate already are. nee unive.rsl~ An inte' vlded th! Jn:ititutlc foreign_ . -ctmnge- plained. The 60 Mexico ( pound 1 the shlpi reet of s MOST ma t er. magazln issues~ leclions City. Anothc library t Cressaty seeing t Project ego geU Chemlci ni ... Univertl ships w; them c basis. SOME ·at UC! I -Gardem: offer or large e1 to the wareho1 Any or with ei Japan E books rl ty at 83 ' - . \ • Pirate1 Strike A walthy Newport Beach lnvtJ1or who took h1a .Q.r.ot yacht to a f J o 11 t I n g maintenance facility told pollce he dldn•t~get much ol 1 baraatn.'ebOiiided Someone the vessel belonging to Charles Ullman, 1520 E. oCeanlron~ and pirated a brass barometer and clock worth $20'1, lnvestlgatOrs said. ate'rials NeedRi.de To Mexico On the chance a r e a sldents miaht be travelling Mexico City for Cinco de ayo celebrations, UC Irvine brary 's exchange department as put out a call for tourists eaded that way with extra m in their lu ggage. Margaret Cressaty or the CJ library exchange section id some 600 pounds of ,rplus library materials are · dy to hitch a ride lo "braries in Mexico City. "111E BOOKS are not anv hich have been bought with paym' money," Mrs . essaty noted. "They are upllcate gifts of materi als we ' DAILY PILOT Schools Requ·esfed Wallet Removed I Noise Battle Collllty Airport 'One Yeai· Ahead' Officers .Re.elkted . To Ilon·ate 2 Sites A brlef -icoot I t the Slnll Ana ()>untry Club -111 Onnge pbyalcian a l300 gold watch and more than l300 In cub, l)e told lrivesUgatlng Orani• OOllnty aherlll'a olllcen. SANTA ANA -OfDcen of the Orange County Airport Land Use COm mlsaton have been re-elected. lly RUDI NlEDZIELUI ot .. D1MW Hit-..... A Colta Mesa en- virorunentalist has urged the Newport-Mesa Unified School District to donate two un- needed school lites as open space. 'Mle prvperty. totaling 30 acres, Is located Immediately QUEENIE nHt to the Fairview Regional bolnl ICllon on ~ methods Park alte-lll<Lwlllli<llllwer by he 1clv1111Ctd for releaao of the some $185,000 in open SJ>lce property: ---· bond J>lckage\ under con· -To transfer the land sideratlon by 1:ot1t1 Mesa If outright, add It to Fairview Dr. R<>bert-E"'l::uer,53: told deputies the watch and billfold contalnlng the cash were taken from his locker while be was ta.king a shower at the Coal& Mesa club. Named ctlalnnao lat the coming year was Mayor Donald ~1c1Mia of Newport Beac h. SANTA ANA -New jet the airport, we could probably noise reductio prot'tdUtt9-extend lhe Urne pt1riod for begun at LI>! An eles lnterna· eastward takeoffs. because tional Airporl thi week have jets can hundle a llttle more ller1nan Beverburg Wa s the district goes along. Reglooal Park, and .-Ive m A LE'ITER t th from the county the right to been in use at Or nge County adverse wind." named vice chairman and Airport for more t n a year. Bresnahan said or a n g e n r i a n Douglass, Fullerton according to county Director County Airport gt•nerally has Airport manager, secretary- oI Avi ation Robert Bresnahan. been aboul a year ahe,ad or treasurer. -r 0 e use the entire park as a "Llv· disttlct's board of trustees, ing school district """'"'lea! Verlyn G. Marth, 31111 Cape · and biological laborat.;ey~·• Verde Place, requested fonnal ,..1 th ~ The new Los Angeles pro-Los A n g e I es International Beverburg. the member-at- cedure requires jets from 11 Airport in fighting noise. large. was reappoirited. By ·Phil lnterlandi FATSO -v ve e county a _..year, $1 per year lease on the pro- perty and, In return, receive the same educational privilege!. Judges 1iip Petitions Circulared p.m. to 6 a.m. to make landing ll~~==~=~=~-=====~:;=====~~ approaches from over the ocean -the reverse of normal -Retain full ownership and have the board pass a resolu- tion indicating intentions to re- tain lhe land permanently as an outdoor labontory. 'l1lll is being done by several Midwest school districts, according to Marth. -but keeps them from residenti al neighborhoods in Inglewood. IN DOING this , pilots ignore onshore winds up to 10 knots . which would ordinarily lorce Memblln o.f the Irvine them to ma ke approaches RepubUcan Assembly will seek over Inglewood. pet..ition signatures in support Bresnahan said 0 r a n g e THE TWO sites soon will be of an initiative limiting terms County Airport has long bttn offered as surplus on the open . of California Supreme Court reversing normal takeoff pat- market since they border on justices to s.ix rather than 12 terns to keep jets away fro the F · · rt d Upper Newport Bay and airview prope y, an years. Balboa Peninsula residential h~ve been recommended by At a recent 11).eeting, IRA areas. City Manager Fred Sorsabal members endorsed the in-He said that whenever wind for purchase under 8 total Ulatlve s p o n s o r e d by is less than 10 knots, airplanes $6,580,000 ~nd. Issue. A s s e m b 1 Y m a n F 1 o Y d take off to the east ove r the Sorsabal s timetable <:'11s Wakefield at South Gate. The Tustin area rather than west for the measure to be decided proposed ballot measure if over Newport Beach. He said by the voters ~pt. 11, b~t the approved by voters, w~uld normally this is from 7 to 91 Costa Mesa City Council has result in elected rather than t t k a tvv1.itio on the a.m. each dav. no .a en r--n appointed high court judges. WHEN SANTA Ana winds election. . Wakefield will disc uss the are blowing. he said takeo ffs Marth suggests that smce issue at a June 8 dinner in the to the east can be made all taxpayers have a Ire ~ d y Airporter Inn. day. purchased the school sites, Tickets are ava ilable from "We're pushing it to the desirable that the school tak e Whiteside at 551-5976. said. "If we only had jets et KAPX M ·usic and News of Orange County 108 At The Apex Of The FM Dial STEREO !ready have. We know they 13;~i~==~~;:!=;!~:'.!~5~~~~;:J e. needed in P.f exic an iverslty libraries." /'They're like a baseball infield. Butch pa~ the fiuck An International service pro. to Stretch, Stretch-passes it to Fatso and we get hied throu~h the Smithso.,ian "m~y people find it un-1l·~I~R~A~m~e~m~b~e~r~B~o~n~n~i~e~·~1im~it~ri~~h~t~no~w~,~"~B~res~n~A~ha~n~~=====~~=====~~~~~~~ a big profit on parkland purchased with bond money in the first place." 1113Ututlon in Washington helps through the inning." orelgn \ibrarieS seek out ex- angf-materials, she ex- lained. ANOTHER COSTA Mesa resident, Phil-Evans, has .stated flatly that he would gather opposition to any 'me"'w-e includlDg.school pro- perty .because he does not believe "the people should have to pay for the same land twice ." The 600 pounds to be sent to exico City are bundled in 10. und packages. Altoli{ether, he shipment takes up 12 cubic eet of space. MOST OF the Mexico-bound ater i als are serial agazines or journals and the issues being sent complete col- ections of libraries In fl.1exlco ity. Another example of the library ex change service, Mrs. essaty noted , is its part in ing to it the U.S. Navy's Project Handclasp In San Di· ego gets delivery of a ton of Chemical Abstracts volumes. These are bound for the University of Tokyo ~la Navy ships which make room for them on a space-available basis. SOME OF this shipment is at UCI and the rest is in a Gardena warehouse awaiting offer of someone with a truck large enough to deliver them to the Project Handclasp warehouse in San Diego. Anyone interested in helping with either the Mexico or Japan shipments or exchange bookJ may reach Mrs. Cressa- ty at 833-7222. Divi-sion of Ford Given New Name School district officials said , Marth's letter is before baard ..president Marian Bergeson but that it had not been placed on the agenda. Insisting it has no local im- pact, the Ford Motor Com- pany has announced it chang- ed the name of the parent division of Philco-Ford's Aeronutronic Division i n Newport Beacll. Formerly called Aerospace and Def...., Systems , Opera· tions (AOSO), the dJvision will be known as Aerospace and Communications Operations (ACO). . A PHILCO-Ford spokesman said Thursday the change will in no way affect Aeronutronlc or any of its 2,000 emplOyes. "The change more closely reflects the business areas the operation la directly involved in." a spokesman said. Besides Aerooutro.nic, the two divisions under ACO are Western Development Laboratories in Palo Alto and the Communication Systems Division. The latter formerl y was known as the Com· munications and Technical Service Di vision. It is in Willow Grove, Pa. A state law prohibits school districts from dispOBing of lands bought with state aid at less than fair market value. Marth, however, suggested his long-term lease plan could be .put into effect while that problem is rem edied legislatively. Coed Honored At Kansas St. A C 0 H E ADQUARTERS were aJSQ in Newport Beach, at Philco-Ford's Ford 'Road facility between MacArthur and Jamboree Boulevards, un- til late last year. The ad- ministrative stafff of the operation was then transfer- red to Dearborn, Mich. Cordy Kuenzli, daughter of A er onutronic's functions Mr. and Mrs. Abner Kuenzll, continue the s a m e , a 3009 Royal Palm Drive, Costa spokesman said. Mesa, is among 24 Kansas Aeronutronic is primarily a State University c o e d s suwlier of weapons systems selected by Mortar Board. a tcJ, the U.S. military and ln national senior women's non-defense operations it pro-honorary society. duces liquid processing pro-To be considered f o r ducts for industrial and membenhip, women mi.1st municipal water as>elicatlons have at least a B average and and a computerized auto ex· show leadership and service to haust gas analysis system. the university. Take home your favorite movie tonight from U.nited Artists 1 · ' ,, tapes •••• 555 . albums-. album 5" tape L1J 688 album 3" tape 5ss .JCPennev We know what you're looklng for. FASHION ISLAND, Newport Booch (714) 644-2313. . .,59· .. ~ HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington 8t1ch (714) 8'12-7771. ' ( ' ' -· whatever her age or life style, you'll find 'her' kind of portable color garden at Roger's ... perennial favorites blooming in a hanging bas ket ... exotic plants growing in free form driftwood ... stately flowers graci ng a low, round planter bowl. Choose from th ousands of our fa mous color gardens, all de- signed and planted by our ga rdening artists. o You'll also fi nd ma rvelous gifts in our new Indoor Plant Bo utique and fu rn iture and. accesso ries in our Patio Shop. Free Gift Wrapping. 2221 Fairview Costa Mesa Phone 642-8686 Rogers Ga~::r.lenS Mission vieio I U Phone837-7781 24741 Chrisanta Open d•lly from 8 a.m. untll 6 p.m. • Free Gudenlng Demonstrations S•lurdays at 11 a.m. • • /' l .. • , JJ DAILY PILOT FrtdaJ, Mor 4, 1973 • Wlelu Crities Croaking Frog Fans Jump AU Over Governor , Prvm Wire Senicts a Flrlt National Ban er ,op n on po among SACRAMENTO fAP) -Oil year 1because they mistake -ln a parkingJot 11 years ago Republicans showed him nm-sumps at drilling sites would oil for water . Gov. Pllilc'\" J, Lacey bas and escaping with $8. ning second to v'1ee Pretldenc--e.J.Q be stue~gainst ~ ib..( e e been urged by t~ Wlse:o'1sln Miranda's arrest on other Agnew las a~GOP presidential wildlife under legislation in-· agencies oo the number of Senate lO reconsider hi.s en-choict for I 6. 1-• ed b Assemb•~·· s · Call' rua· ••• trance of 8 frog named °'charges led him to the U.S. HEven if only OOe person 1uuuc y "'....... umps 1n 1or r-"Qe "Bucky ~adger" as the state's Supr~e COOrt, ~hich ruled in feels you are ualified for that Walter Karabian (D-Monterey ~ !ircr~~~he ~u:~· as represent¥tive in the lntema-the 1960s that ~lice must read job, Jt is flattering," Reagan Park). shallow ponds into which the tional Jumping Frog Jubilee ln \ defendants their rights. said in an interview in San Chief. We 've just uncovered 1 Karabian told a news con-first spurts of oil are drained Aik Andy· California. * Diego, where be addressed a 8 new file of WatBrgat• rerence Thursday that nearly during the drilling process. He Think B•~•rfl to lflldlif e Qil Sump Screens Propysed The SeMte S3id the frog had Gov. Roaald Reagan says il convention of the Calllomia I' 150,000 birds, including 50,000 said they are often abandoned1 Ki.ds L:ke .,A •··· ed ltbout the suspects. . " ,,., ~1 enter w con-is "heartwarming" that an _P'..'.a'.'.''.'.'":t·:.:T::eac~he:_r_:As~soc~ia".'.ti'.'.'on':.. ~=========!......w:a'.'.te:'.rf.".o'.:w:'.:~_:di:'e:._:in:_:llllll~'.".ps:_:eacll::::_::stl'.'.:l"_I ..'.coo~ta'.'.i'.'.ning'.'."_.".o'.'.:il,:_'.'.'.af_::te"_r_:t:he:__~~~~_""._"".'".:_ __ '.._ ________ ~• sent of the Maxwell Street --------- li1arching and Frqgleg Society, ( PEOPLE J which it said is "charged with the promulgati o n and enhancement of all matters relating to frog s '' in Wisconsin. . "Whereas. this major <Wersight, ~bile It has not inade the members or the society hopping mad, it cer- tainly has not left them jump- ing for joy," the Senate said. The May 17-20 event at Angels Camp is based on the old Gold Rush era pasttime of holding frog jumping contests, sometimes with high stakes. * Elhlbetb Taylor's latest ae- qulaiUon -measles. 'I'be .fO-year-old actress was placed ln quarantine in her bole! In the winttt resort of C'.ortlna, Italy along with hus- band Richard Blll1on after ' a doctor reported she contracted measles. "1'1.ey're both taking it fine," a prtss agertt said. "Both a~ in good spirits ,about it all . 'Ibey come out onto the ba 1- cooy of their hotel room and --wave to"us"from·ttme-to1tme.11- * President N l x..o n , en- tertaining Ambassador Dav:ld Bruce on a farewell call, warned the new head of the U.S. liaison office in Peking about the fiery Chinese liquor Mao Tai. Chatting wiUt Bruce in the Oval Office during a picture- taking session, Nlxon recalled his experiences with the drink on his trip to China. He recall· ed how he had managed to toast 30 people 11bllt I didn't finish the glass. If I had, I wouldn't have lasted," ,,. for Mao Tai, Nixon . 1""1eY say it will cure an,Ything." * Vicki Lynne· Cole, 18, the girl who gave President Ntxoo his ''Bring Us Together" in· augural theme in 1969, said in Carey, Ohio the Watergate bugging case has "given me cause to wonder" about the President. "But it hasn't been proven President Nixon w a s in- volved," said Vicki , who car· ried the sign "Bring Us Together" at a rally during a whistle stop train campaign tour Nixon made of Ohio in 1968. * Jolt.1 Oelorean, 48, who recently resigned a $400,000-a- year po.st as one of the top chief executive! of General Motors, will marry actress Chrildna Fern.re in Beverly Hills next week, a spokesman for-Miss Ferratt announced. Delorean, formerly married to actress KeUy Harmon, daughter or onetime football star Tom Harmon, works with the National Alliance of Businessmen. Miss Ferrare, described as in her early 20s, appeared in "The Impossible Years." * The Arizona Supreme Court upheld the robbery conviction or Ernest Miranda. the man responsible for the now famous Miranda decision. fie was convicted of rofibing One Su,rc Barrier BOISE . Idaho (AP) -A Boise School Board hear· ing on whether principal Dean Windham should be transfetTed to a teaching assignment at another ele- mentary school was reces- sed -to the men 's room. An attorney for \Vind· ham, who is appealing the shift , and two school iffl- cials retired to the rest ~ room to discuss certain de- tails of the case out of hearing of reporters . AJI reporters covering 'the hearing were women. TJANTIK IMPORTS Aritiqv", l•tlk P•lf1th19t .~ C•M'l119t 1942 s.. c..t ...,. 1--4f7-14H OPEN ' SUNDAY 11ti>5 -----~-._......._ TRIPLE PLANTER .. I --- * E R We are celebrating Cinco de Mayo by bringing y~u this hea utiful handcrafted iron furniture in brushed gold finish at real "Celebration Savings'' ' 42 Inch • SPECIALLY PRICED ON,E WEEK ONLY! Round Curio 829 00 GLASS TOP TABLE AS SHOWN 4 PC. SET GLASS WINE SHELF CART s4900 $99°0 Baker;.. Rack s2900 t f 72'' 74'' i i • 64" • Corner Etagere ·Tf'1 . . , .. Staircase s2900 " )·,.. -' ., Arch ' Curio .. '4800 ~ t~ '11 72''' ~l ' Pyramid . Curio . ·INDEPENDENTLY OWNED -SERVING ORANGE COUNTY FOR 10 ·YEARS • Creative Interior Planning At No Charge PULUlTON 221'N, Hllm•""ti<"°'w'"""' (--) (714) 171·1120 HUNTUl8TOli RACH 11112 _.,lfvll, (l'.14) 962-4477 OllilOl ·..,·1 ' ' 1131 N. Tustin A ... (714) 637·1420 Ill ,.11, So. of °"''!ll' Mall) • • r • --Sl'ORE HOURS: Open 9 to 9 p.m. every 1Veek nlte Sit..'.# to 5 :3_!> OP.EN SumJ Y 11.to 5 p.m. iii :,.,; l;'ij ~ ~ ~ .• ,, • ·':'I ~~ : ! .~ !·~~ ~! .. ' " !~ ,, . . )· " ' " ·~,, . 1 •• ..... ~ '§. ~~ .. " ·' • Chilo teac culh pare Engl mee' his I wat. th Children of students and teachers learn about new cultures while their parents learn and teach English. Oliver Crowell meets Vicki Espinoza as his mot her Setsuko watches (above). Dally Pilot ·l'hoto• by Rlc1'ard Koahlor and Jo Olson . . Learning to knit under the direction of LaVerne .Miles is Celia Guerre, 11 student at the Dana Point Center which is I . in St. Edward's Cethol[c Chur.ch. \ -. . Crafts lessons as well 111 English lessons take place as students and teachers become friends. Working on a tapestry (above, . left to right) are Setsuko Crowell, Dee-Dee Leif · and Ma nu Shastri. At right, Col. Frank Andrews tutors-Mrs .. Ernes·tina De Angelit. -- --. ·-m-en- llEA A_rlDERSON, Editor ........ Mltf .. 1111') ... lJ Cu tures Exe ~nge~ • Pupils Teach Tutors Too By JO 01.'lON ......... ..,. . .,. Put yourself in this situation: You have moved to India or another country and you don't speak the language. You have to get a driver's license, go to the grocery store, check books out of the library, make emergen- cy telephone calls. How do you do these things if you can't read, speak O!' write the language In which all business is conducted and aJ. most no one else around you speaks your native language? • This may happen in other coun1rles, but not in America. Right? Wrong. ln America, where It is assumed that everyone speaks English, there are an . estimated eight mnuon people who cannot speak English well enough to function as part of society. These are the recent immigrants and those. Americans classified as "functional illiterates," and it is with these people that Laubach Literacy, an international organization dedicated to abolishing ii· " literacy, is concerned. NEW CENTER Administering the program in south Orange County is the Sooth Coast Uteracy Council, which recently opened a new teacrupg center in the capistrano Valley Blptlst Church, san Juan Capiltnno. In its ail different centers· in the car>1strano Valley, 125 volunteers work with ·195 students from approximately 12 dUferent countries Including India, Chile, JtaJy, Mexico, Guatemala and Germany. Most of the students are adults but some are teenagers who are school drop- outs, said Mrs. Dorothy Jackson, presi· dent of the council. Following the ,Ystem establlshed by the late Dr. Frank Laubach, vplunteers W<irk with students on a one.to-one basis teaching them to speat English first, then read and write it. The curriculum, provided by Laubach, is the New streamlined English Series, which emphulzes word meaning and word re<Ogll)tloo. Each lesson also features a story structured aroond the key words. EMERGENCY HELP In some literacy centers, such as at St. Edwsrd's Catholic Orurcb In Dana Point, the whole group, comes together for a demonatratlon and lwoo, then breaks up fO< orie-IA><Nle teaching. A reci!i! demonstration was on how to get emergency help on. the telephone. ,The l\OOth Coast coonctl, which receiv- ed a Disneyland Award two years ago; al~'usei visual atdi drawn by one ol the tuton and a group of "conversationaf pattema" developed by Mrs. Onalee carter, lhe council'• tutor trainer. 'lbough the materials are the oame, the six centen are unique. One of the more unusual Is gearod to teach the Maican gardeners and landscape ll!flntenance nien at Lel~1florld. ~,a+nts meet at 4 p.m. wheil they are through with their day's work and are tutored by Lei· sure World residents. Some tutors do· not work out of a center but go into homes when there are students who become ill and cannot go to the centen or U-who tsclt transporta· tioo. IDEA EXCHANGE There are many side benefits to the in- struction for both student and teacher, Mrs. Jack&Qn said. Lasting friendships often are fonned and there i.s an ex· change of creative ideas. "One group ts Interested In knitting end crocheting. One Indian woman makes beautiful batiks which she brought and demonstrated." Favorite .recipes also are exchanged by ..the students and teachers, giving the teaching centen an ~tematlonal flavor. A miniature cultural exchange takes place in the children's pl.ayroom. as well, while parents are belng tu t or e d . Students' children Jeam English from their playmates and the American children have a chance to become ' I ' ' f f I ' ' 1 ~ ~ ~ ~ .. ~ ' familiar wltb boys and IJftls lnJm other lands. What n\akes the students ..et aul a literacy center and come for m.tnactiaDt NEED ARISES "People don't sign up unut ~ ts a need,'' Mrs. Jackson said. "For eome, it is when their Children 10 to school. H And what i• the reuon for the con- tinuing success of the Laubach l)'llem which to date has reached more than eo millioo people In lo:J countries speaking 3t2 different languages! It is the one-to-one concept that Dr. Laubach first used to teach the Moro tribesmen while he wu a m!asionary In the Philippines. And it Is the dedicatlm of the tutors, who 'Jl"lld 30 hours tn t-Jng classes and purchase their own materials. Both men and women, the volunteer teachers come from all walks of llfe ·and are simply interested in helping others. They agree with Mn. Jackson that the work is very rewarding. "Every rnmnent II exciting," she said. "You get quite in.- volved with your ,1tudenl!. You never forget any of them." Anyooe wishing to join the corp• of turon may call Mrs. Jacksoo at 830-5678 or Mrs. Carier at 497-1138. bird b 15 I b c 1 b c ' i d d d I fish ' f f f I girl g g g hand h h h • \ • rrr.s.,, May 4, 1973 ' OH to Work They Go-Newport Style • Busy Signal Is Her Hangup DEAR ANN LANDERS: Since a '"°at We lookecl forward lo lhe day 1fhen 'ft DllD1 ...... unJood their pet peeve1 on ...Wd be lr<e of tho respoosibilJUet ol you I think I'll Jive you mfne. ralsini cblldr"'1, ao we coald lravol llld What sbouJd ] MY to ~ who be 11boneymocmen'1 agaln. Welli DOW Wephooe me llld ~olf on Iba atlact that the lime ii hm I am deeply disap- becauae they bad been try!ng1o set my pointed. Our ,., Ille bas !IOddenly llne for awhile llld It waa busy! U..Uy dwindled down tu ootlllng. And I do.mean "fDeS ~like thlt:-·"l've-bom~_,.. lr)'ll1i lo reach you fer an hour .•. "Then I About sil months ago I began lo think aome lllidO remark about bow gabby I perbaJll be W.. seeing ......,. elae, b\Jt am, etc. now I'm lllln! be ii completely fallhlul What botbera me Is that I allow myaell . and I'm ashamed ol myaell for having lo be put on the defensive~ 1fhen It ii thought otherwiae. really none of their buslneM bow jong I Laa year be began lo take medication talk. I sometlmea find mYsell apolog1Jlng for high blood prealllln!. Ia there any and even telling theae clods the nature of posslblllty \bat the medication Is in- tbe call. I know thla ls stupid and I bate terferlog will! bil ability lo functloo aex- myaell for K. ually! Pleaae check with yoor medical Will you pfease supply me with 1 good authorlUes and let me know. Thanks, put-down! -MA BELL'S LOVE anLD Aon. -THE BIG Q. DEAR LOVE CllIW: TrJ ....... JOit DEAR Q.: 'l'llere b IDdeed a po11lbDllJ' .. -ol deod air. It ... be Vf!r1 el· thal Iba ~ mtillcalloe ...... !ecdve. Elpedally wll<n you .... book ~ for your lllllbud'o Im...-.. with a oubject completely llllRlated lo Bo -.i dlocul tbb wllll ~ doctor ,. tbe comm.eat. Fwmy, people are alwaJI he wW II.ave a 1ood. aadentandlDg of uklllt whit lo oay lo put -·• --t bao boppeot<I to lllm -llld wby -back lo joint wll<n the -c1e..-g and IA Ima explaln ll lo you. respome cu be no response at all. am goinL!!l!Y!i, ~*11: 'male !fiend i.· l>ecomlni . want d_.-ately lo keep my mariiito,IAtact. The anguiJh and torture Is mora ,than I can bear. We. live in a small towo. where there are no psychiatrists. Time olf !iam my job lo go lo the neatesrdty (t!O'mlles away) Is out of the queotlon. Con you suggest anything? There ls no one else I can trust or turn to. -DESPERATE IN N. CAROLINA DEAR N.C.: You must dbcaao this problem with a doctor, cltl'l)'DIU or coutelor -IOIQeGae wbo CaD ltl'Ye u • oaloty valve. Sele<! the lllOlj com- passlooate, and gel golq. While new parking facilities for Lido Isle shops are under construction, Lido Isle residents who own or work in the shops have been going to work by boat. The open air commute has become so popular that the Lido Islanders report they may never drive to work again. Enjoying being "chauffeured" by Gor- don Atkinson are Anne Chatillon (front) and Grace Soll, Mary Lou Molander and Ginny Warmington (back, left lo right). DEAR ANN LANDERS: My• busbond and I are ln our late 40s and we have always·had a good relationship. We enjoy each other's company, both in and out of the bedroom. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a mar· rled bomosexual (male) but have not been involved in any homosexual activity sinoe my marriage. My wife does not have the faintest idea ol the coollicls I What's prudish? What's OK? If you aren't sure, you need some help. It's available in the booklet: uNeck.lni and Petting -What Are the Limits!" Mail your request to Ann Landers ln care of the Daily Pilot, encloolng 50 cents In coin and a loog, stamped, sell-addreaaed envelope. Speakers, Shows, Election on Tap For A Career ••• NOT JUST A JOB BE A ''WOMAN IN WHITE" B~nM• lletlkal or Dental A.ui.tlant in 4or1 monllu. ~~ Exercise New sessions of Diaper Gym for babies 3 to 12 months will begin Monday, May 7, in the · Uniyenlty United Methodist Otµrch, Irvine. . guidance, and Mrs. Betty Stin· nett, Mattel Toys. St. Anne's . St. Anne's Guild of St. Jess are invited to a lwicheon in El Adobe at ll:30 a.m. Tuesday, May 8. Assistants Irvine Jrs. Irvine Junior Woman's Club has moved the recycling center from the Irvine Town Center site to the University Fire Station and bins will re- main· on tile property for the collection of aluminum, newsP!'per and glass. NB Ebells Re-elected president of tbe Newport Bead! Ebell Club was Mrs. Clayton Thompeoo. Also elected were the Mmes. Philip Fluharty, Mar 11 y D Dana, Robert Jacobs afid Rich a rd Hodge, \rice presidents; L .. H. McBride and --~,i. ' -CUSSU STARTING MONTHLY Lifetime Placement Aaistancl 623 W. 17th, SANTA lNA .541-4461 vmtAH'S lfHfflTS· AVAii.Aili Mommy's Night Out classes will start· ·Thursday, May 10, at 7:30 p.m. A hall-hour ex- ercisoJ!lO&tamJVlJJJ>o.!oJ!ow, ed by lectures. Wilfrid's Church, Huntington VD or Not VD will be the Beach will present a fashion topic of Dr. Don Steele when show and luncheoo . at 11 :30 he addresses the Orange a.m. Mllllday, May_ 7, in· tbe .. Sbores Chapter, Amerie&I\ parish ball. 'llckets will be. 'ABsOclatlon o1 Medical Assis~ avillibte1it'llfnR>Of.--·~--·· ( silts. -· ----Las . Tortugas Richard ·Ray, secret:aries;l~~~~::::::::~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii L.W. Jenks, treas.urer; Theodore RObins, audit and budget, and Rudolph Vanasek, parliamentarian. Speakers will include Dr. Lanny Taub, pediatrician; Mrs. Marti Malterre of ·the Fami,ly Study Group of Orange County: Mrs. Dorothy Wenck, University of California home advisor; Dr. Ivan Namihas, obstetrician-gynecologist; Dr. Ron Jones, pediatrician; Dr. Stanley Walters, educational Speakers Newport Harbor Toastmis- tresses will elect officers dur- ing a noon meeting htonday, May 7, in the Old World Inn, Corona de! Mar. Art League Techniques in oil painting will be shown in a demonstra- tion by Vincent Farrell, guest artist of the Huntington Beach Art League at 7:30 p.m. Mon- day, May 7, in the city's recreation center. Newcomers Irvine women who have been residents two years or Your Horoscope Tite group will meet in the Airporlcr Inn Tuesday, May 8. Lido Women Lido Isle Woman's Club will combine a fashion showing and a Hats in Bloom contest during the luncheon meeting Tuesday, May 8, in the island clubhouse. Mardan The second annual bathing suit sale, which be n e l i t s Mardan Center of Eudcatklnal Therapy, will take piBce from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday May 8, in the Huntington Beach home of Mrs. John Hines. Mrs. Robert Noel w a s elected president of . L a s Tortugas, a women's social group, in Irvine. Serving with her are the Mmes. Tom Kosvic, vice president; Don Miller, secretary, and Ed Wright, treasurer. AFS Mrs. Clarence Rlchmond will head the board or the lrvine Chapter, American Field Service. Also named to offices are the Mmes. Fred Muenchrath, Hike Pollem and Larry Hoffman, vice presidents; George Cullers and Nocman Ginsburg, secretaries, and Ralph Davies, treasurer. 3 BIG DAYS! FRIDAY -SATURDAY -SUNDAY SAVE ON HOOVER SATURDAY MAY 5 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. Cancer: Seek Facts Engagement Announced Ground to a perfect uniform edge by experts with the finest commercial equipment avail .. able. Bring in all )'OUr scissors. Your neighbors, tool All work done while you shop. ONE DAY ONLY SCISSORS 49~ SHEARS 99~ Harborite To Marry The engagement of Martha Ann Elliott to James Joseph Coulter has been announced by her parent.s, Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Elliot, Newport Beach. Miss Elliott, a graduate of Mater Dci liigh School. is now attending Orange Coast College with a major in medical technology. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Coulter, Coll- ingswood, N.J ., is a graduate of Paul VI High School in New Jersey and Canisius College, Buffalo, N.Y. An Aug. 4 wedding Is plan- ned in Our Lady QueeQ of Angels Church, N e w p o r t .Beach. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY When Yo• Wo11t ,,,. .... '•zz HClfbor ltffl. Costo M-. -541.02:59 SATURDAY MAY 5 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (~1arch 21-April 19): Ideas may reach roadblocks. Means not all is smooth, but not all is lost, either. Key is to be thorough, to note what ap- pears minor, to build on fac- tual information. Aquarius, Leo and Scorpio persons might play important role s. TAURUS (April 2().May 20)• Be ready for change of scenery. Those who do much talking may want you to give without giving you anything in return. Know it and find alternatives. Gem.lnl, Virgo persons might be in picture. Protl'Ct valuables. GEMTh'I (May 21-June 20): Pressure could be applied by those who want you to live up lo potential. This is no time for game playing in connection with obligations. Family will back you but you must show interest. display integrity. CANCER (June 2t-July 22): Avoid basing actions on wishful thinking. Get behind Lyle's is Bair OVERWEIGHT? 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS Under Medical Supervl5ion I Omega Clin i~ I at the t m 1 HOURS: 9:00. 7:00 CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT COST A MESA AHA.HllM lANTA ........ l"•lltrtoft.t.. ........ 1149 ,..,..,_, 1"4 W • .....,, 1JmTlflllllA"' 7'41 W. l•H11M"11 l lYll. 646 1633 nMMI 547-6319 (714) 871).9347 • (2131 697-1791 scenes £or v a I i d answers. Someone may be telling tales out of school. Don't become in- volved in foolish conflict. Check with Pisces person. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You may not immedi ately get what you want, but you do build for future. Many persons, quiet and unassuming, are begin- ning to back you. There is no flash, no loud applause. It is just a matter or fact that you are slowly but surely holding a winning hand. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)• Now you can complete proj ect of importance. You can gain added recogntion. Circle of ad- mirers will increase. You draw people to you with their problems. Be sympathetic sincere. But don 't get in: extricably involved. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl 22): \Vhat is worthwile will take time. Know it and accept it. You could st rike u po n valuable, original concept. But there are nuances which need to be comprehended by poten- ti al backers. If you insist and ru sh, you invite Joss . SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): A void trying to do too much at once.· Concentrate f o r c e s . Build for future . Steer toward definite goal. Aquarlan coold play key role. One who cares much for you could appear in- different. This is but tem- porary. Know it and be mature. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22- Dcc. 21 l: Let others show their hands. Be extremely cmorrs SPORTSWEAR Wtlfc1ift' Pf11ta, J7th and Irvine, Newport 8t.1ch,Caiifornia~2660 cautious in legal area. Permit mate, close associate to ex- press views. Consult one with experience. Don 't attempt to be your own attorney. Strive to be aware of needs of those who seem argumentative. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19J: Your own ways, methods and pace serve your interests. Means be .pleased with yourself. Refuse to permit any person to lower your self- esteem. You are making pro- gress despite a p p a r e n t obstacles. Check d e t a i I s . Thoroughness now is a necessity. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().Feb. 18): You may feel left out in cold by one who usually ls enthusiastic. Key now is to be analytical without brooding. .You are learning some lessons about persons who basically are immature . Don't compound error. You are ultimate "winner." PISCES (Feb. !!I-March 20): One who seemed to merely be a friendly acquaintance could play important role. You are Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Tuz of Santa Ana Heigbls have an- nounced that their daughter, Cindy Lou Tuz llDd Jclm G. J.oog plan to be married in the First Methodist <lNrch, Costa Meaa, In August. The bride-elect Is a graduate of Corona de! Mar High School and California Professional College. Her f1a0ce, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dmald W. Long of Irvine, graduated fr o m Mission Viejo High School and attends Saddleback College. Spot Stopped Keep a kit of spot and stain removal supplies handy for rugs and upholstery. It ought lo contain• clean white cloths, paper towel.a: of tissues, rug shampoo, white vinegar, ammonia and solvent. capable now of separating fact -===========. from fantasy. Flimily ties can1 r be strengthened. Harmony can replace discord. You could be ~n road lo happiness. Mother's Day 8 Days Away TWO GREAT BUYS FROM HOOVER $2888 $5488 ... U4005 DILUXI! CONSTELLATION CONYERTllLl ........ ,.. ... , .. • Finger-tip 1witch e W1lk1 on 1ir ••• 110 • 3-poiition handl1 wh11l1 • no runn•t• • Conv1ni1nt to1 • Sn•p·clo11 out1r b19 1witch • Wr•p·•round furniturt • li9htw1i9ht 9u111rd • All 1f111I con1truction • Poli1hed bt•ttr b•r• • Wrtp·1round butnptr • R•pltc•bft bru1h11 9u1rd • l1r91 throw•tw•y b19,., ch1n91 in • Jn1t•nt rug 1dju1trn1nt 11cond1 • Pow1rf11I motor • Doubl1 ttl'•tch ultr1- f111 ho11 • Compl1t1 with 1tt1chtn1nt1 ........... IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are vibrant, sexy, talented, able to express yourself in compelling, en- tertaining manner. You draw to you many born under Gemini and Virgo. December will be an outstanding month Think ""· • ""· · s... for you in 1973. J ~hi r-----COUPON SAVING ____ _ .~~:.'.="'-I SUPER· SAVINGS on this special ~~~ii GENUINE HOOVER 3 SAVE YOURSELF SOME TIME I BAGS , ....... u 1" .. Shop TM _.......,. first for .. ...._..., Drily. Y•'N _.. l'9 ftlMll wllat Ille-welltl h111 o•r If"' .. ...,... ef •s-1 ~ , , • •ltCI Yo• COll't bMt 011r MrYke: • • n. ... .. T ... I ::IJ,., BIDTIQUE ............ .I 24'1 "" u.r. ..,.., .... 671-4111 aw..11 c111,.. 1-tOUl,, Wf(kOATS f 10 I SAIUlOAf ANO SUl'IOAY I 10 6 ,M • I I I I c- R t In ' w sa J!, of gi ( I I anl P5J \be M• Pn wh art hel he det hu1 goi sai ... in Ce!, f "" wit .. , de; !en cet jot gel PE YOI &> Ho ·~ • pet,· • • • • .. , .. ·' ~ ha· ""' I 4: . tio .. . , ' • ' • • ' r • ' •• ' • FrldaY, May 4, \q73 DAILY Pit.OT JS There 'Auto' Be an Alternative . . . P-sychol ·o,gist ~Drives His Point Home By PATRICIA McooRMACK -NEW-Y-ORK"(Ul'I) -Que>. tbelt.s and other types, tbe lat-traffic situations are usually thoughts and his day. In the te.r because of the ease with frustrated and lhtit might evening he uses it to become wblcb the maChlne enables the-hav,-~some tendency to in· relaKed. lion among teenagers end a resultant stampede ol vene.re.al ~- Romantic Remer:nbrances~ . - • Io carrying out the theme, Remember When?, members of Delta Zeta Al- umnae will model their wedding dresses in a showing scheduled after a salad brunch ,at 11 a.m. Saturday, May 12, in the Newport Beach home of Mrs. Robert Koehler. Mrs. Lows Rayer (left) and Mrs. Curtis Leonard will be part of tile program. Proceeds will aid the county's hard-of-hearing cbil<Jren's pro- gram. \ non' What ts lbe most ex- pensive thinj and gives fhe least return for the money? Answer : The automobile. U you disagree, the !Jl&n to argue with ls Dr. Arnold Mysior . director of G e o r get o w n University's Psychological C e n t e r in Washington, D.C. In an interview Dr. Mysior described the auto as an isola- tion chamber that leads to the developme.nl of fragmented in- dividual>--almoot like curdled milk. That is, in addition to being the "most expea..ive thing giving the least return." By no means is that the ex- tent of the auto's sins. The psychologist links the auto to increases in crbne -auto thief to split from the scene of. crease their aggressiveness. Radio ·seems to help take tbe crime. "Since there is not very your mind off the frustration. By choice, the psychologist much they can do about the too. If that's the case you can drives to worlt each day """.'" 11 aggression, they're stuck. It use the con1mutlng tin1e as a miles from home. He drives increases internal st r ess . n1usic hour. Then. you won't during off hours so as not to There may be so ma t i c worry about traffic. be stuck In traffic jams. symptoms such as high blood NO\\', c a r p o o I s , psycho- "I have arrived at a position pressure and ulcers. At lee.st logically 5 p e 8 king . prob- in life where that is one of my there 's a tendency towards ably ar e b e t t e r than liberties (riding to wo.rk at the that." lonesome cars. Dr. AJysior o(f hours)," be said: ".If nol Honking and yelling at other said they n1ake for sociability. that, then ~ would ms1st on motorist s might help relieve "l\•e been in carpools off and ~ovlog ,,within walking some tension . But Dr. fdysior on for several years and di.stance. says you can't get away from thought it was rather a good Dr. Mysior knows his cam· the frustration altogether. experience. Simply from an But he did mention that since many men consider thelr cars as a mistress It would be hard to convince a lot of males that carpools would be a good 1hing. "They wouldn't want to share a mistress and they don't want to share their car cast in that role," he said. Hospital Has Gifts palgn against the automobile The nice thing about doing ecological point of view it is ~ an unpopular one -these things within the privacy sinful not to be part of a considering about 3 O O , O O O of your own car is that you carpool." work: directly in .the _industry een do it with impWlity. You Dr. Afysior also talked about Las Madrinas Chapter ol the ~ a~~er "'! 1 11 i 0 n In· can call people all kinds of people who commute by bwJ South Coast co m m u ~ I t y directly. curtailing it would names, and you can do this or train. "Good pub Ii c mean a lot of people would be without having anyone call you transportatiqn is good for Hospital Auxiliary will tum · out of work. a n"ame back. The psychologist peOple" he said. "But public over to the ~a tries ward Seat Safety "The auto is a real isolation sa id this probably is how some transportaUon today is In· toys, finger puppets, rockers box," Dr. Mysior said. "You people manage to survive. efficient. It gets bogged down ijnd handmade baby rugs and If you purchased children's lock your-rel! in and you're by Some experienced drivers in traffic and it's too slow. furniture scaled to a child's ts be! A ·11 11 t yourself -so you don't have going over the same route "If 'd . I k car sea ore pr1 o as 1o . 1 Ith th bl" you s1mp y nui e a size. . year and want to know if what ming e w e pu ic. t"Jery working day lo factory conversion and have at least you have is safe, you may "Ir you didn't have the auto. or store or office become what half of the people travel by Led by Mrs. N ° rm 8 n send 20 cents to the to the extent you have it then are known as a u t 0 m 8 t i c bus, you 'd have nlore buses, Beruchi and Mrs. Ronald May, Superintendent of Documents, you would have Pub 1 i e drivers. but nothing to cornpare with the women have the speclfic Government Printing Office, transportation and it would be The psychologist said they the 11mount of automobile responsibillty of supplying and W .. binm•n DC used enough to pay for itself." probably are the least put out space !hat eou'd save. equipping the pediatrics floor. •-' .. The hol · t al · ood ' This recent gm Is \he result of Ask for a copy of National psyc ogi.s so is con· by the commute. Like a g "We'll have to make this -'- med bout bat It. ·g · many months of fund raliswg Highway Traffic Safety ce a w ge 10 vi o 1 in is t who flngers conversion some time anyway Admin istration 's book 1 et, behind lhe wheel does to some automatically, the driver and it's only shortsightedness by the group. "What to Buy in Child people. Shy guys turn into brakes automatically, picks up tha t allows it to become more Another g If t • to be Restraint SyS'tems." warriors. And that's not good. speed or slows down -all by expensive by procrastinating distributed next week to new The booklet shows you how It's a change triggered by reflex action. And because he about it.., mot hers is an unusual birth to weigh the efficacy or rrustratiop. · does, there is time to think record which is a stitchery kit .various restraint systems and ·"Frustration does h ave behind the"wheel. Dr. !\1ysior did not !ouch on that mothers can make when .points to con sider in scmethihg-todo with at least · ~uch a driver, according to the auto as a bedroom on they are at home. The kils evaluating a pre v i o u s I y i n c re a s in g aggressive Dr: Mysior, uses driving time \\'heels an1 its cont.ribution in have been donated by a _P-::=:.::based=::..:c::ar:.:se=al::_· ___ __:be=h:::a:.:.V!or:::' :.:.•_" :;_~e:..::sa:::ld::_. _"P:_eo::::.:_pl=e.:in~:::in::_t:::h•:..m=o'.:"'.:·n,,_g-"tp:..o.:r::.ga_n_iz_e _h_ts __ ,_ha_t_r_ot_e ro the sexual revo::lu:_"_w_ho_le.:sa_le_llrm_. ____ _ Spirit Has a of Volunteers Healing ·Quality _ · BEL_OW WHOLESALE I By JO OLSON Of fll• ~I~ Piiot Stiff Dr. Arthur L. Bietz, popular and charming lec turer in psychology, gave members o{ \he Auxiliary of Ho a g Memorial Ho s p i tal , Presbyterian, an insight into why their jobs in ~ hospital are so valuable: 'I "Volunteers who have a helpful spirit couJd be greater h e a I e r s than those with degrees. Unless you add the human element you are not going to help a person," he said during the annual lunch· eon meeting of the auxiliary in the hospital conference center. His topic was People and Human Rela tions. "If you can make a success with people, you are a suc- cess," he sa id. "I find myself dealing with people's prob- lems. An estimated 80 per- cent of people who lose their jobs or leave their jobs can't get a1ong with people. PEOPLE IMPORTANI' shouldn't continue to see that patient. "lf you enjoy people it doesn't tear you' down. Each person gives you energy." He next asked, ' ' W ha t makes hwnan relations tick?'' Every person is asking "How am I doing" in essence, he said, and needs attention from another person t o reassure him that he is doing . all right. ("I have to authen· ticate mysell with you.") MAJµUAGE STAYING SecOnd, a person needs a person. "Every human being is looking for a permanent relationship. Marriage is here to stay. Even the person who plays around is looking for a permanent relationship." "If there is stress within • your life, you are not well. '· ' Success depends on people. Ile told the auxiliary members that they should volwiteer because "you need help -you do it for your own morale and health. If you withdraw you are inviting sickness.'' When you meet a person "he is thinking about what you are thinking about him. The run you can have in authenticating yourself is worthwhile," he added. • How do you get along with people?" ~· To love people, he noted you have to figure out what people ;. '• need. ' • ,• First, they need a good rela· ~' . ti on.ship with other people. ~ "It's a matter of teamwork " Dr. Bietz illustrated. "If a ~· tient comes that I don't like, I But he cautiooed that "easy does it is the key to rela· tionships. People don't need too much honesty. Don 't be honest With me -be kind." '' ., ., i ' • . ' 1 •· • • • • • • "' To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the wedding . Pictures received after that time will not be used. , For engagement announcements it is imperative that the-story, also ·accompanied by a black and wblte glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more bel'ore the wedding date. If deadline Is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill reqnirements on both wed· ding and engagement .stories, forms are available lo all the DAILY PILOT offices. Fur!Mr questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members, at 642-4321. • RAINING NOW Dr. Bietz lamented "Americans have no time for tenderness. We have to ~ busy making money for a rainy day. We don't know it's raining right now." And he regrets that "we ha ven't been trained in the art of listening -only in judg- ment." The nation's drug problem is oot a drug problem at all, he said, but a "people problem." "People are healed by peo- ple. People are healed by volunteers who know how to share. It's not what you know but who you know - don't ever forget it. "Your fr iends raise your value. Institutions and cor· porations -\vhat are they for ? Life is people." .. Wedding In Offing Mr. and Mrs. Wilhelm Reinhardt of Tue b l n gen, Gennany have announced the engagement of, their daughter, Marla Reinhardt of Corona del Mar to James 11. MIUlpn of Costa Mesa. A June 16 wedd)ng Is ,plan- ned In Calvary qiapel, O..ta Mesa. The brlde·to-be attended schoots in Germany and ber ftance gradu1t.ed from high ICbool In Sonia Fe, N.M. where his porenta, Mr. and Mrs.'llanrd MUl!pn reside . itEMS10 .. • u~ • If Pl&lllf :'rc'Pfls co•lBIM NO-EXCEPl RXt1.. fUJllS • U°' • auc IONS • Slfl 'd\': nrL'p••ms. • "w~'~ M·":•s • IUDBOA!! AN ADDITIONAL so3 °' lllU UI Ill ,.,.. ,1 ·-"unn• WILL BE TAKEN ON • SCOUNT • .1 At Ql1MiSr 1£C81l1WE • C1111uu:o IN THIS llEPr. EVEN EVERY ITEM • ~ _.. pAlllt l•EI, • Bltlll00M • ~d\Tli;o TRADED GOOo FAIR • -· ·~ .,. """' M!I 11••mllAl\E • Mi MORE SAVINGS AS H:GH. WITH SOME : :"I Wl-~-~_.!llftllll~'";:~-.~:-:-.-! OFF OUR DlscouNT ~R~: COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. Sin 01090 Frtow1y 11 Bristol I • . . . ' • ' ~· ... ,• .... , • i• DAll.Y PILOT FrtdoJ, M11 4, 1971 We Weren't Aggressive EnQugh-· SharBlan By GLENN WlDTE Of ,,.. Dlol/y fl!llM ..... ING~EWOOO -The Laken are laced wtll1-baving to "''ln one ol tbe t~'O up- J:orning NallonaJ Basketball Association Championship series games from the New York Knicks as they move into Aladison Square Garden after splltting a pair of nwtcbes wilh New York at the Forum. They dropped a 99-95 verdict before the customary fu ll house of 17,505 Thursday night and Lakers coach BilJ Shannan frankly admits. •'we have lo win ooe of those two games back there or we're in · fcal trouble." And he's quick to point out that the Lakfn bavt lar<d partlcularly wdl at the.Garden thjt past two seasorui, winning Jive of ,.Vl!!l ~ers there. Sharman says thlS series is shaping up as a rematd) ·of the Chicago set, which was a rugged ph,ytical struggle in which the Lakera seemed to come out second molt of the time wben punishment was belng di.shed out.1 "They (NY) push, shove and bump like Otlcago did. But we have to adjust to it. We have to pass and cut qu1cker. We weren't aggressive enough and we got sloppy oo pwing. It was a tough game to Jose because we did so many little things that fuu1 us. Turnovers really played .a blg put -we lllld 11, they bad rune ... Shannan observes. "There waa -time ID partkular when-we were on a spurt-bl the third quarter then we came down four timel tn a row without getting olf.a ahot." Three of thoee limes the Knlcks toot ·-the ball. the olher time Wilt Chamberlain stepped oot of bounds. The Laken made a furious rally the final 1:56, coming from -ID lrall 11&-96 and Jim McMllllan bad two chancel to make ooe free throw wtth 16 -to go. But he missed them both and the Knlcks had It locked away. New York coach Red Holzman said the GAIL GOODRICH, WILT CHAMBERLAIN DEFENSE SHOT BY NEW YORK'S WALT FRAZIER. A11gels Ta11gle ~itlt ~llllllJlillg .: Orioles T 011igltt BALTIMORE IAP) -The California Angels. showing some firepower and on a winning run, open a tllree·game weekend series with the Baltimore Orioles tonight. The Angels started the seven-gamC' trip wlth a pair of vic torie s in Detroit Tuesday and \VednesClay night lhrn had Thursda v off for lravel . The 6-2 and 5-3 viC:tories gave th e Angels six wins in their last eight starts as they moved in to face a Baltimore /J~y 4 ""', s M•v 6 M~~ I ...... ¥ ' A119eb Slate All G1m11 ton ICMl"C 11101 C11lllO'l•l1 11 81111-• C&llf'ornl1 ,.., B&ll more C1lllOrnl1 at B1tllmor~ C&IUornJ1 11 Cl~vel&ncl Call!O•l'll1 II Cleveland "j5 p.m. 3: 5 p.m, 1a:5S a.m. ]•SS p.m. 9:55 .1.m club that just returned from a seven game road swing that produced only one Orioles victory. The Angels took their first two meetings with )he Orioles earlier at Ana~e1m. 1\udy May, 2·1, is sct\edulcd to sta rt for the Angels tonight with Dave McNally. 3- :l including a loss to California . set for llallimore. CaliforTiia unloaded 14 hits in the first game against the Tigers. In the secon d. which went 12 innings, 1hc Angels got 13 hits including a four· for.five performance at the plate by Bob- by Valentine and a two-ru n homer from Bob Oliver. The hitting spree by Valentine Wed· ncsday night followed a three hit show Tuesday night and boosted t h e shortstop's battin~ average to a healthy .397, second highest in ·the Ameri can League. Valentine has appeared in 19 games with 78 at-bats while the I.op batter in the ·' ""ndlngs. Pat Kelly of the Chicago Whitt Sox, l.s hitting .487 with 39 trips to the plate in 11 ga mes. The Ang,la wrap up Ute Baltlmore set Sunday, have Monday oU then play a pair Tuesday and Wednesday a t Cleveland before returning OOme next 'J'hursday to host Chicago for four game5. catifornla enters BaJtimore with an 11· I ....... d. good for st<OOd place In the \Ve.'ltcm Division two games behind first • place Ollcago. Secretariat's Prestige At Stake in 99th Derby LOUISVILLE !AP) -Secretariat, hi s reputation tarnished. '\'ill try to win the 99th and richest running of the Kentucky Derby Saturday and bring trainer Lucien Laurin and A1eadow Stable their second straight victory in the Churchill Downs classic. "Now bring on Saturday," La urin. who 'von the 1972 Derby with Riva Ridge. said Thursday aft er entering Secretariat in this year's field or 13 3-year-olds. Secretariat. 1972 llorse of the Year. losl some prestige when he finished third. behind Angle Light and Sham, in the Wood Memorial after havin g scored impressive victories in his first two starts of the year. Edwin Whittaker's Angle Light also was entered and will run as an entry with Secretariat because he aJso is train- ed by L.aurin. The entry was made the early even- money choice while Sigmund Somf'ner's Sham was second at 7·2. Pritchard. Thomas and Resseguet's Our Native was third at 8-1, ro11owed by the Lou Goldfi~ trained entry of .Joe Kellman's Sbecky Greene and Arthur Appleton's My Gall an t at 10.l . Others entered, and their odds. were El kwood Stable's Restless Jct. 20-t: Ed Elzemeyer's Warbucks, 15-1 : Stevenson and Stump's Navajo. 3().1: Elmendorf Fann's Twice A Prince, 30-1; Aisco Stable's Royal and Regal. 1~1 ; Lazy F Ranch 's f'orego. 12-1, and Gottdank and Sechrest's Gold Bag. If all 13 start, each under 126 pounds, lhe l l/o1·mile Derby will be worth $198,800, with $155,050 to the winner. Post time is 2:40 p.m., PDT, and the weather forecast is swmy and mild. Secretariat will start from the No. 10 post under Ron Turcotte while John LeBlane will send Angle Light out of the No. 2 slot. Santa Anita Derby winner Sham will start fnm the No. 4 post under Laffit Pincay Jr. aru:I Flamingo winner Our Native will start from No. 7 under Don Brumfield. The fleet She<:ky Greene will break from No. 11 and Blue Grass winner My Gallant will go from No. 12. Braulio Baeza will ride My Gallant while no rider waa named for Shecky Greene. Baeza replace! Angel Cordero Jr. who "'as suspended by Aqueduct stewards, ef. fectlve Saturday, for 10 days because of a ride Wednesday ln which his hone was disqualified. Baeza became available w h e n lmpecunlou! wu not entered in the Derby be<ause of recurring problems with a bruised heel. Goldfine said a rider probably woold be named for Shecky Greene this morning .. It's a Breeze for f\1 0NTREAL IA1P1 -Newport Beach's Roy Emerson and Corona del Mar's Rod Laver breezed through a three-set sweep Thunday to post a victory in first round play of the 1811.000 ltOl'ld doubles tennis championship. Laver and Emerson defeated Newport Beach's Terry Add ison and Colin Dibley, IH, 7-5. IJ.t to advance to Saturday's semifina l round . In the only other match played Thurs- day, Americans Bob Lt:lli and St.an Smith downed Alan Stone of Austra11a and Yugoslavia 's Nikki Pille, 7-4, W, M, 1-e. Eight doubles twns, four each from Groops A and B on t!te 1pllt World Championship Temls (WC'I'}, tour are competing here f0< the '40,000 first prhe. The secood·plnce finishers are to share 1te.ooo wtth $8.ooo png to the thJrd. place team. The nm roond Josm rate home $.'1.000. Emerson and Laver, after taking the Drst set, ran Into trouble in the lleCDOd -thing bis foroes did beilU tball 'nleo-• --' pme700'nl glad -,... ,. day when they fell, 115-1.12, waa lllbt<n home comlni off a wtn." up on defeille. IJthough tlle Laken commanded a 56- "Dll< ~ wu _btocllng~and 4S edge In r<boundl, the Klllcb oeemed t~ more ol gottlng poeition on lllO ID be gettfug more or the--and boards, • ffolzm•n aaya. ''Now we must third rebound shotl than they did tue. IUllaln It ml do a job at home. I thDuahl clay. we ~ too cautloully ln the final kw And BfD Bradley wu deadly from minutes but ......n "" .-cl better and outside, connectlng on 10 ol Z2 ohota and got a better cbolce ol abots than we did settling f<X' 26 points overall. Mate l'bll Tuesday." Jadaioo wu potent in a reserve role wtth Ask1ld II he was satisfied to split the 17 points and aeven !<bounds. And Walt games here, Holzman saya, "When It Frazier shook out ol the doldrums with starts and aomeooe aaya you'll spilt ln 20 points and a atronger noor game than LA, you say, 'that's •deal.' And when tt he showed Tuesday. begins you'd rather win that finl game. "We've got ID get ID tho6e outside But when it's over and yoo've wm the .shooten: quicker, break through their Messersmith Can't Kick Bad Luck LOS ANGELES (AP) -Andy Messer· smith doesn't admit to any aupersiUUons but he's trying to swt1£b his luck which so far, hasn't been much good. Like Thursday night at Dodger Stadium when he was scheduled ID pllcb against the Chicago CUbs. Normally, the Loo Angeles Dodgers' right-hander wtll take Infield practice and Dodgen Sr.te All Gamn 911 IC~l ( .. ) $1. Loo.II• 11 Loi ~ ........................ - St. loul1 11 LOllo Anoelts Pltbbut11h at lot AllQeM 1:55 p.m. t'H •m. : p.m. 7: p.m. worJc out before the game, even when he's . the pilcber. . This Ume he relaxed, trying to change his fortunes. For eight innings it looked like he might be on his way, working with a l·O Jead and holding Cbicago to just six hits. But ID the ninth bis luck turned sour again as he was chased from the mound wtth three straight singles and Jim Brew· er came in with the bales k:laded and no one eut. Before Bre...,. could retin! the CUbs they scored four rurui: as nine batters paraded ID the plate and Chicago made off with a ~l victory. ... • "A guy can't pitch much better than MeMersmith did tonight," Los Angeles manager Walter Alstm said of Messer· smith . "We just didn't get him any runs and the one we did get we kind of stole. NEW YOR ·ts .BILL BRADLEY DRIVES PAST WILT CHAMBERLAIN •. "I didn't want to take him out when 1 did but they bad bit three Une shots In a row and, anyway, he'd thrown a lot of pitches." Just three outs away from his first Na- tional League shu tout, Messersmith was chased off the mound when Joe Pepitone, Ron Santo and Jose Cardenal lined three consecutive base hits to load the b3ses. Brewer came in but walked pinch hitter Jim ffickman to force in the tying nm. Don Kessinger singled home two more runs and Paul PO)lOVlcb brought in the fourth with a sacrifice fly. Clllc ... (41 Ut ~ 111 1111 r JI 1111 •Ill r " rti-1 HIHr. cf j 0 I 0 Lopes, 7b 3 I I O Pollovlcll, 7b • 0 1 l MOf•. tf l o o l B.Wll1!111'1$. ff S O O O 8udlner, lb ' o o o •krr, p O O o o W.Olvl1. cf 4 o o o Prpltooie. lb ' 1 2 o W.Cr1Wford. rf ' o l o S1nl0.Jb 4020 Cr,,lb 4000 C.J1mes. pr 0 I 0 0 YH091', t 0 0 0 0 F1nLOM,lb OOOOLfcy,ph 1 00 0 C•f'd.e!MI, r1 ... 1 1 0 Ruuell, u 3 0 I 0 Rudolph, c 3 0 I 0 Masenmlth. p 2 0 0 0 A.CO.r....tt, pll 0 o 0 0 lrew.r, p o 0 o o Hlcllmel'I. r1 0 I 0 I Kes.lnoer, H • o 2 2 RN1ct..i, p I O O O Mond&y, pll 1 0 0 0 L1Roche. p I 0 1 0 Huncnr,. c o O II O Tot1l1 3' • II 4 lo11ls 21 I S 1 Clllc1go 000 000 OO• -4 LOI Angetes 100 000 000 -I E -Rlldolpll. CP -Ol!Qvo t. Loe -Cnk:eoo a, Los Al'IQ911S '· 28 -Rudolpll, San!!). SB -L®". YNg1r. S -RNKt!t1, Mtuerwnltll. SF -MO!I. Pop.wld!. l .. H Rl!R •ISO R.....chel 7 4 I 0 3 4 LIRodlt (W,1-0) 1 0 0 a O I Aker 110000 MUHnmlltl (L..1-J) I 9 J J 0 4 ··-121111 SIYI -l\ll;IW (3). H8P -by ll-a..I (Y~). lime -2;1 .. Att.W.nc• -12.I». HERE'S ONE THA.T DIDN'T GET A.W A.Y LIVE OAK, callf. (UPI) -H<ft'1 a ftsh story aboot ooe that didn't get away - a 420-powd, nine-foot four-ilrli atur· geon. "I tbouiht It was a Iog," said angler Armond Be&gelt of Li~ OU, who land- ed the f1Sb this ,...k near Grimes alter • two-hour battle. "I didn't belJevt It """11 saw k come out ()f the water," he said. "It didn't give up for a while." The fish was cerlffled by wanlen Walt Frazier of the State Fish and Game IJe. partment, which described It as a rod and reel record. \ Beggelt said he caught the monster on a I> pound teot.llne using sardines as ball Sports in Brief 0 Hill Leads Tournament; Black Hawks Hold On HOUSTON -"You've got to keep your cool ." f\.fike Hall , a broad-shouldered one-time beer truck driver, was talking aOOut his mastery of the bumpy, tricky, nerve- testing greens on the 6,905-yard Quail Valley Golf Club course. "If you get hot and let these greens get Wlder your skin, well, you're going to shoot some funn y numbers. "You've got to keep your cool, have patience. You've got to reconcile your- self to missing some short putts, take it in ·stride and Figure that everyone else is going to do the same thing." The 34-year-old Hill, winner or two titles in bis six years on the pro tour, followed that difficult formula to a hard· won ftl and the ftrSt round lead Thursday in the $205,000 Houston Open golf tourna- ment. His flve--under-par ef!ort -he was the only man in the field of 144 to escape without a bogey -gave him a two-stroke margin over Steve Melnyk and amateur sensation Ben O'enshaw, tied at 69. The group at 70 consisted of former PGA champ Dave Stockton, Pele Brown, George Johnson, Bukh Baird and toor sophomore Billy Ziobro. Black Hawks Win -c CIUCAGO -'Ibe·Chicago Black Hawks blitud the Montreal Canadiens with four fu.t period goo!:!, two of them shorthand· ed, within one minute, to score their first Stanley Cup final round victory 7-4 Thurs- day nlghL The Hawks' lriumph in their first home start after 8-3 and 4·1 defeats at Montreal left the Canadiens leading 2-t in the best· ol'"!even championship series. The fourth game 'viii also be played at Chicago Stadium Sunday. The Canadien.s, down 5-0 until midway through the .second period, almos t caughl the Hawks and trailed 5-4 at 8:01 of the final period but when the desperate Ca· nadiens pulled goalie Ken Dryden from the net, lhe Hawks pumped in two open net .goals in the final half minute. $3,154 Payoff INGLEWOOD -Hollywood Park paid off on a $3,154.50 exacta Thursday in the largest such payoff this season. Rock Dweller and Bug Tussle, a 46-1 shot, came in one-two. The winning numbers were nine and eight. Collins Signs PHILADELPHIA -The Philadelphia 7!Jers today signed Doug Collins, the Na- tional Basketball Association's No. I draft choice, to a reported $1 million-plus contract. Don DeJardin, 76ers' general manager. said the guard from Illinois State was given a multi-year pact. Russell Says No LOS ANGELES -Ex-Boston Celtics basketball player and coach BUI Russell has turned down a reported offer to coach the Seattle SuperSonics Thursday. Russell, who led bis team to 11 NBA crow:ns in 13 &e890DS a.s a player, aaid he has been offered seven coaching posts. but has turned them all down in favor of his nightly radio talk show here. Colonels Triumph Emerson, Laver INDIANAPOUS -Artis Gilmore scor- ed 28 points and blocked a key shot wtth 20 secondli remaining to pact the Kei>- tucky Colonels to a 92-88 victory over the lndlMa Pacers 'lburwday night giv- ing the Qilonels a 2-1 edge In tbe'best· of-seven American Ilattethell Moocla· Uoo championship 80ries. ,.1 and found thomselves down IJ.1 "Yes, they ...,.. coming bac:k then and we wen ~ Just a Httle too mud!.," EIJlet'ICll oald alter lhe malcb. "So Wll got ""'tber and .-the game down a IKtle." Emmon held bis serve to make It S.S and ltart an . elgbt-pme lllrtak wblcb save tho duo a aecmd set vlc:t«y end a ~ lead In the flnl1 aet ber.n loalng a aame when Laver iG<!l his .... How•vet, tho two veterlltl du( In again to shut out the ~er players 11¥1 tbt match wu all over. • "We had a lucky break when we ftre down w and too~ advantage of It," Emerton said. "All they bad to do was keep ,.rv1.,., .and It cW!d have been a very different nlltcb." . "Deaplle the aoore, Terry and Colin played well and bad they QC11 mtssed a lew dooe shots we'd probably still be playing now." . • Aussies Lead . MADJ!AS, India -Australia lost only aeven slng)es games i"riday in laking a 2· O lead ln Its besWf·five Eastern Zone Dam CUp lennls finals with India. Veteran Mal AOOerson down ed teenager Vijay Amrltraj S-1, S-2, IJ.I after Auttrallan pror ... 1ona1 John llowtombc bad an easy time with Amrltraj's older brother. Anand, winning·6-1, 6-1, 6-0 • • • " Dolphins .. ~pset Uni, 3-0 Dana HiUs Hlgh's surprising Oolphlns rocked University's Orange League baseball title hopes Thursday as • Do n FoW !er went the distance on the mound, allowing only three singles en route to a 3.() triumph at University. The loss knocks University 's Trojans two games off the · pace or league leader Sonora, which took host Laguna Beach apart, 111-0, behind the 16 strikeout pitching of Marty Frazier. Fraz1er allowed only a fU'st ·inning dOuble to L-a g u n a Beach's Dave Marriner and scattered three free passes. The key to Dana Hills' con- quest or host University was the pitching 0£ Fowler. He gave up 6nly three singles and although Vniversi- ty"had its chances with five runners on the basepat hs, Fowler was equal to the task. fle walked only two and struck out six batters. Mitch McComb's double in the third inning knocked in Fowler and was all the Dana Hills pitcher needed in sup- port. But the Dolphins added single tallies in the sixth and seventh frames thanks to rbi singles from Steve Miklos and Mark Schrey. Twlce University .got run- ners to third base, but to no avan,.....:....:.-_ · 1 • Sonora~ ·in -.:early, scoring three times in the first inning and adding three more in the fourth to bury Laguna . IMIM Miiii· IJ) Utlole, 2b Mc.Comb. u Springm11n, 3b Miklos, lb 1 ROIMlrt1. rt 8-ldH. rf Thomuon.c: Lturlt. ct Sdw"ey, If F-tcr. 11 Tol•ll U11tftnlty 101 at1rlll'9I 4 0 1 0 4 0 I 1 l I 3 0 4 0 1 l l 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 3 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 l 0 2 1 3 1 I 0 27 3 l 3 ab r 11 nH l 0 0 0 7 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 Cl 0 Sllv•. II Hericoc:ll., » Hollttt. 111 P•'!Wd· c K'llni1•11, p Mougt..n. pll Slyer1, 11 Htlf, cl Bro1i.rs. rt WlllMlll, pn DenlmOr'e, lb l(IOe. 2b Tol1l1 n o J o Score lly IMlftll O•nt HHI$ Unlver1lly ' . . 001 001 1-3 3 I 000 000 0-0 3 I SOl!or• no ellrll rbl J 1 ! 1 4 o a o J I 2 I l 2 1 I l l 2 1 4 0 I l l 0 0 I 1 I I 2 2 2 0 0 I I 0 0 1 0 0 0 11 10 I 9 LltllN ••ecfl tOI scon by t11ning• 1llrllrt>I 3 0 0 II 3 II 0 0 J a 1 o ) 0 0 0 II 0 0 0 I 0 II 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 J o a o l 0 II o I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 21 0 I 0 ' . • , Sonor1 301 Jll G-10 B LtVUN kll O(ICI GOO 0-0 1 ' • Awaiting Saturday Rac!e FrldaJ, Mu 4, 197J DAILY 'n.ar J7 Golden West Wins, .. l But So Does LACC 111 HOWARD I. HANDY °' ........... .... ,,.,.. .... good and bod news for the Golden West CollfCe R8stlers b a 1 e ball ttAm 'lblll'ldoy allemoon. With a dianc:< to pin a tie for the Southern Calllomia Cool......,. bueball clwn- pimsbip hanging in t b e balance, tho Ru!tlen held "' to win a S-% vt.ctory avtr Cyp<ess Oollege In actlcn on the GWC diamond lo< the good ...... Thell a long vigil beaan· Loo Angeles City College was playlni at LA Harbor where a Harbor victory was needed to put GWC In tho ilile tie. their last sl.I in -· In Tlmlday's outing at home, Golden Wet! SC<1l<d U.-times In· the thin! and made the Jone llODl'ing binge stand up lo tho end-albeit with ccmideRble cmcem in the late stqea. ,....,. Qt>OCI opened the thin! with a lincle to left and moved to seoood on a NCrlllce bunt. Left.l1IDded bitter Rod Brown drilled a """1'l·field double down the Jen field line to """" er..ct and Mike Dodd wu safe on an infield hit. Alter Dodd stole second, Phil Macartney slnglod to right to brlni the two runs ...,,_. Starting pitcher C r a I g Lundgren ran into trouble In the oeventlt when .the Cllarvers llCOttd thelT -nm ond hod a 111111 m -with DO out& Rlgbt-handed cumo ball specialist Pat !:lpiDoll RI _called in and mclod !ht - with an infield out and two strikeouts. In the •l&btb be put down another 'upr!J!JC but saved the beet to last. 'Ibo Charien loodocl the bases with two any In the ninth on a 1ingle and tWQ walks. Erplncm: calmly blazed a last ball by 1'red Zlm- mermM, then two feeble swings at CUl'WJI ended the threat and the glUDe. Today the loams -at Cypress lo< the Mb time this oeason with the elongated Orange Coat tournament Hile at stnke. Sunset Warfare One of the fealured races in the annual Newport Regatta Saturday will be the junior varsity clash between Orange Coast College and UC Irvine. The UC! jayvee boat is pictured (from left): Jim Erwin, stroke, Bill Simon~,,Mike lie.man, Greg 'Rose, Bruce Ibbetson, Lance Airkagaard, John Walker and Briggs Shade. ~ LAOC llCCJr..t a pair Ii rum in the top ., tho 17th inning, a boot 7: 15 'lburoda,y evening. to gain a 4-2 decision and an ootrtght champloolhlp over the Rustlers who had won * * * Lions Surprise Loop .Kings, 2-1 Sea Kings Top Barons, 6-5; Eagles, Mesa, Edison Fall Corona del Mar High's Sea Kings kept lheir ,flickering CLF AAAA baseball playoff berth ho~. alive 'fhursday witb ... a &.5. triumph over• host ·Fountain V:il!eY with the aid of six unearned runs. The victory keeps the Sea Kings one game behind third place Santa Ana Valley with two games remaining in the Irvine League. In other ii.ctivity the Orange Coast area was dealt a dose or defeat as Magnolia ripped host Estancia, 6-1 : Los Alamitos rolled at Costa Mesa, 9-5; and Edison was dumped b y visi ting Santa Ana Valley, 8-4 . Corona del Mar got rich twice when bases loaded er· rors provided two runs each time and the icing came in the seventh inning with the aid of a walk, free pass and a Foun- tain Valley error. Fountain Valley's Barons tried to get back in the game in the seventh when Bill Hat- field led off with a home run and Steve Deeter doubled to left with one out. But the next two batters whiffed, as did 13 others against C.Orona's Bob Palmer and that was that. Fountain Valley took an ear- ly lead with the help of Joe Mauler's bases-loaded walk, a balk and Clarence Austin's two-run double. Mike O'Roarke swung the heavy bat for Santa Ana Valley, stroking in three runs _ with three safeties and he scored twice·. 1 Mike Selwood had two of Edison's six. bits. Co!Sta Mesa's Marte Schropp had 4 two-run homer in the third ullilng and slammed home another rbi in· the fdth frame. steve Sharp . bad the... _ other two rbi for Mesa, but it wasn't enough to olfest the 11· I O I ! ! ! ' . ' 0 " ' Jctnl .., '""'"" ' 0 0 0 0 0 : g 0 0 ' ' ' 1 .. r --tt-• on· m-~ ' 2 O(ICI llllO 1-1 .. .. Ln Allmltot. (tJ hit attack of Los AlamitoS'. Estancia had little success with Magnolia, committing four errors en roote t.d haJld.. ing the SE!ntinels Sil. easy markers. Clr9nl .. Mer (6) .. r II rlll j 1 3 0 ~ I 2 0 3 l 2 0 2 0 I I 3 1 0 0 ' 0 0 ' ' 1 2 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ' l o a 33610 1 ....rela Vlllrt ISi ar11"'4 i~~ ~I~~ Eckle .. 11 .f 0 O O DeeetT. lb !3 a 1 o M.Mtlcr, p 1 1 I Patlson. p O D O Hlddow, o O O O O T1$Sl.,.,cf 4110 Vele11ll, rt l O o o Aus!ln.c: 3122 HV~Ti:"· IS ~ ~ ~ : ""' Fin VII SC81'8 by l11nl11tl ' . • ' • DO'Z 003 14 IG 112 000 1-S I Mlfldl• (tJ Prllrttl l (I (I (I 3 2 1 0 2 I G 0 l I I I 3 I 2 l J : (I 0 J 8 1' ! ' • ! 26 ' ' 3 Urllrtli .. 0 1 0 l (I 0 0 3 0 0 0 J o 1 a 3 0 0 0 1 a , o Joynt. rl Root, pr C11rpenl1r, lb MclCelwy-, d CMmbef'l•ln, If K111g, If-cf Vt'l•rde, u Litty, 2ti Tk;el'!urst, 3b Alltfl, l)b ... ,,., c Wllll•rns, p Tol1l1 •llfllfl>I 3 2 2 0 (I I 0 0 .. 3 2 l 3 I 2 1 ' 0 0 • .. 1 0 • l 0 1 1 .f 0 S I 2 0 • 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 • 0 , ' 1 0 tttll• C-11 MIA CS) • Vatentlne, lb Qelanv. c Sd1r11pp, cl Brown, 11 Sller11, lb 811ume, If F'r'90SI, rl Cr11ld1ll. M TryOll. 2b Tot1l1 ,_.., •It r II rt>! .. 1 2 0 4 1 1 0 4 ! I 3 3 • 1 0 3 t I % 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 l 1 1 • I "''' ..... ' . . Los Alatnllot 012 mo ,_. 11 o Colle M"'I OQI 0» o-f ' l s..... ...... v....., (t) EUle'f', C Loftus, p TtmPle!Ofl, t s Wllltl, cl O'Roerlle, lb H11allp, 2b Carter, If c11r11, 3b Zk11rllll, rf Ril<llllo. rt Totel1 m-. 14) Mt;;Coy, c~ Alboll, 1'1-d Nkhoh. rt Selwood, c Leper, 2b Hints, u OfsrMltrl. Clb Weoll'ltllrlltr, :JD.IS Mecy, lb """"'· . Hfbbilrd, If •It r",. .. ! 1 • .. 1 1 0 4 7 2 I 3 1 I 0 .. 2 J 2 .. 0 1 2 ... ! 1 .. 0 0 1 2 0 0 • I 0 0 0 34 110 1 •II r",. .f I 1 0 2 1 0 • 3 1 1 I l 1 7 I l 0 (I 0 2 0 (I 0 J 0 G D .. 0 1 0 ( o I 0 1 0 •• 2 0 0 0 Tot11l1 2t • ' 1 S-'11Mltllll ' k • ~ Arlt Vtllay 410 flO H Ml 2 EdllOfl 2IO 001 G--4 6 6 Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Milwaukee Baltimore New York Cleveland Detroit Boston Chicago Kansas City Angels Minnesota Oakland Te<llS East Division W L 10 10 10 11 JO Jt 10 12 10 12 8 11 WettDlvlllon 12 5 14 9 11 8 9 9 10 12 1 11 Tllll'l!tl'M 0..... No Hn'ltl tcMduleCI. ,,...,.._GMnH Pel. .500 .476 .476 ,455 .455 .421 • '1116 .609 .579 .500 .455 .389 GB I> •\lo I 1 Ill. 1 2 3% 4'h 51> Al!ffll {Mey ,_ll It 8'111rnor9 {McNlllV Wl Tu•s l&otman N) •t Oelfolt fPwrr 241 O.klilnd (HufltW l•l ) et C1e¥91tl!CI {Pll'l'V Wl x1ns.a-s Cll'f (._.,·Ml et.-MI~ (Sll!cri 1·11 '*'IOI! IP1ttlll l ... J et Mfnnesol1 (K1111 :J.11 New York (Stotll9'nYA J.3) ill O!lc.ffO (&.Mt-_, 3-1) NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago Pittsburgh New York Montreal Philadelphia St. LoWs Ea1t Diviston W L 13 9 10 1 12 10 9 11 9 11 5 18 West Division Sen Francisco 19 8 Cincinnali 15 8 Houston. 16 10 Do.1gers 12 13 San Diego 8 17 Atlanta 1 15 / Pel. .591 .588 .545 .450 .450 .2.18 .'104 .1162 .615 .480 .320 .318 GB I> 1 3 3 '* 2 21> 6 10 9% c-m all r II ..i Bucs Set °"""' rl ' 0 1 0 ·~·cf • 0 0 0 ZlrnrMn'!lln, a ' 1 1 • Mii._, .. ' 0 0 0 Lere. • • 0 ' ' -·· • 1 1 • "''"*'• 2b • 0 ' 1 Tl~. " • 0 1 0 Morrll, p ' 0 0 0 Mej11, ... ' 0 0 0 • • 0 0 2 National ,. .......... .i: w-. ' 0 ' 0 Blum, pr 0 0 0 0 '"'" ,. ' • .' --"' Ill r II ,_ JC Marks Brown, 2b It I 2 1 Dodd,c •120 P. M.KtrtJ11¥, t.f~f 4 0 2 ! Pel9"Clll, lb J 0 1 0 C.tdlr,lf 4.000 w. M<CwtMy, t.f 0 0 •• LOS ALTOS ~ ..... e Slmfl'Ofl, rf<Mt , o o e . VI G.118 Cr.cl, 3ll ) 1 1 0 Coast -College swimmers set-ei.~. ••-, o 1 o Westminster Higb's Lions gained a measure of revenge for an otherwise cilsmal Sunset League baseball season Thurs- day as they nipped champion Western on lta own dlamond, 2·1. · L~p 1 o·o o Huntington Beach wasn't as two national record! but the 1aoi-a. , 1 o o o Pirates WQ only in fourth . ro1 ... ..._ 31 3 ' , fodUQMe, losing a 1-0 etght-ln- •--~ -.. _,.~ ·-J .. _ ... ---. -n1n ~~ --p~'m•er.~ 1-Y.,.VL-.&UC---... .,,-:,...,.,,......;~ .r ~-• -g ue..:1Skm ·at l.Oara . late 'C . . g and diving ._.. -..-111:11--.xr-OOlf..:I' ' ..., -1-. ·-t . I .. 1.. ...T -s "' swunnun · CYP"9H OCXI 100 -..:1 • 1 ur~ ~ t""'Y -.1.1e .. !"'. • champicmhi.ps.at Foo t h i 11 Harbor and Marina we.re s_hut College. off. Senta Ana rallied for a !'>-3 FoothJll leads with 00 points, JC, Prep triumph at Memorial Park followed by Oiablo Valley and AnaheJm took t h e (851'), Pasadena (12) and measure ol Marina , H, at La OCC (51\1). Golden West ts in Palma Perl<. the No. 10 spot (If). Baseball Westmlnlller'.s tr i um~ h OCX::'s 400 medley relay came in the fifth inning whfn louroome clocked 3:36.8 In the Tim Rk:llards, Marl< Hoole morning prelims, setting a na-s ding and Bob Hale rapped out base tional mark, but Diablo Valley tan O'S bits, Hale's S<Oring Richerds. equalled that time in the finals Lary Walbring followed one in beating the Pirates by a out later with a single to drive tenth of a second. sovnt•R"' C•L cONPn•trte• in Houle and the Lions had And the Bucs' Ron Mi.siolek '"".., w L .. overcome a 1.0 deficit. went l :M.O in tbe 100-yard Loi A,...._ cc tt • Hale struck out 11 ln six in· backstroke portion of tbe ~ w"' ~ ! ~ nlnga and allowed onb' one.hit medley relay, wiping out his LA H.,., • " • to the circuit kingpins. own o.aUooal reconi of 1:54.2· :!°. ~ ; ~ : Loara's Su:ODI carno: ·UP !et in the prelims. &Mite Mollln 1 11 I with thrM aing)es in (be ~ """' ~~!!_---, ·-of the •'""th ...... _ to Ste .. JC lwlM C ...... •llllllN .._ ..,...., .,. ,..1,..._ WIU ~ ~ 500 fr-1. V•r: 1:•ndl (Footllllll u.cc ... u-' f ~ H tlngtoo Be cit' ft 4:41.Gi 2 . ...,~ Fiii ertml 4:d..JI· l. • ....... ., 17 ...... ,,.., snap un a s ve- Fr.: 'I ) ~ • 4 W ~ EHt LA 4, Slnt• Mll'llct 0 Townsend 1 4: .. ; · •• game ·~nnlng streak. IAmerlun II: verl 4:0 . 1 5. O'I' fl ~ ... "1 01=t v'M1i •:"49.11 •· K•llll lDllblo .Gototn Wld "' c:ypr-.. c11~-~--·""w·· The losing Oilers bad nearly v~iw ~-in.Ii. -1. 11.oc1r1Q11Q :=,~~.. 11110; "' 0r.,,,. eo..t pulled it out In the top of the (MOl'lf .... Y Penln1ul1) 1:J6.S <n11tlon11. rtcOl'"d, bl'tltks old m•rk Of 1 :.M.4 'l Mllllotf COMP•laNCa eighth, blJt stranded NnDerS Bvc:kl1111tllm tS.n Mltea) lffSl; • fft I Cl•rlrv IR~~ •. V•~l•vl 1:11.~ i. .., on first and third with one out. fl::!:n.\1l!!f.1~. =9Q~~ CJtrw :: ~ •• Run-scoring slDglea by ,;:~:...::.l. ~.,. ;1"\efQI 2~.:72. :r:._.~ne ~~ ! ~ Marina'• Kirk Kyler and Mike Murphy (H~ 21.,; ). T•lll•ll l"•lomflr ' 1 .. Wetzstein were not enough to l~~t1i ~ ,Ltt.l.:~ i:o"i!t.ct ; : : offset Anlbeim'a eight-hit at· v~=r' iu. _ 0t11er1 _ 11. s111 oteoo 1 ' ' tack. Marina was further (Ol'Mle c.-1) IU. II.Iv~ •• '12' ', hampered by the -"-•'-• one~ tJ.~1. "'11ln• ~t.rn \NUUUU.U• f~::t:tt:1 Cl.ti: ~"'~l,...!i,nv"'10@ Tin....~~--•"" ktrm Injuries to Den Welll (sprain-DeltaJ )Q.OJ L Slmori ( s'" S.clcllebecll l1. , .. r 11 no '""" ed. ankle) and Ron SW1llll00 ~~:;.~~"f.~1'f·~·~tonJ,(F;i:~ ..J.~f1~ 1'!r!ru1 9, Slln 9-l'Cl'lno S {plnched nerve in r} £ht OfMn _ '-Wit-(.,,...,. C...u Rtwnlde I , 0,..,,.,, 1 -1.-·lder) )16.... SCvth-"'"' J, Clllf'tey. 3UUt.I • Medley Nl•.,._t. 011blo v,11.., :1::w.1 ••••-• ··•u• ~ ... Harbor p It c be r J.tlft n41tlollll ,._a Ml b'f Or"il• • I ~ w •• ., n .......• {~i:l..:. l~:"'J.:' _,:-~ c-1 weit9fn 'I ~ •• Peder White fell tictim to J ill,,/J , l"tlildniol 3:31,,fi 4. roo':'f1l Alllllelm l 2 p00r backing from his ifi.. 3:3'.61 i.!.,ullerton 3:4S.I / '-Secwolol L,~,.r: •--' 5 l field-U •-ta ••• _...,,_,_. :i:¥t~m KOr'lti ~ o:::'thi~b~ ~un11111h: .. ech s 1 I f fl-• -in ~~of V•llev U V., PHldelll S1, c .. tt Mtrtllf .. I or ve nma UJICI INMUIU sn.,, S1Guo1•1 ..o, Funerten Pl.mi N--1 Hlrtlor • ,3 the sixth Inning to reverse i 3-2" Monl9rt'f P~l11wl1 ,,, rvssmanl Wttfmlfllfel"TIM•t'I .W:. IS. ~ W9lf 1'-An•helm 4, Mtl'lil• 2 0 deflcll OCCWomen Place Second · Orange Coast College 's Anita Smlth and Cindy Welker advanced to the finals before losing in Ute women's com. munity oollege division of the Ojai tennis tournament last weekend. Peggy Swiers, the only OCC entrant in women's singles, advanced to the second round be!°"' losing .. The women'• duo ol Smith and Walker beat a Chabot Oollege t e a m In the !~st round, S-0, &-2; blitzed a squad from Oollege of the Desert in the second 6-0, 11-1, and beet a team from Menlo in the quarterfinals, 6-2, 7·5. \ S1nte A111 S. NewPOrt H•rbDr J LMr11 (IJ Wlttmtntler 2. We1lern I L.Nr• 1, Mun"noton 8MCtl o (I ln- 111111111 .,....Y'I - Wftlenl •f Ane"-'m Loert 11 M•rtn• S•11ll Anl ti Hunftl!Oton 9'ectl Wftt!nlt11ter 11 H-' HtrbO!' OllANll• ..... ..,. W L •• Sonora ' 3 llrN I ,f V1letlci1 I • UnlY11"1fty 1 S S.odle!Nck 6 6 El OOr.00 4 I o-Hlll1 3 9 Lnllnll Medi J ' """....,... ker.e 0-1t1n1 :1. Unlvenltv 0 SOnorll 10,. lt;llfll llMdt. 8rH 6, Sllddlebaek S V1lf!lcl1 6, 'II Dorlldo 4 \ --u~ '' UttiM IHctl Viii.Mii st 9rw El Dorlldo et S-. Dtlll Hl1l1 et St!ddl1ll1dt taYIM• UU.•n WI. T .. los a1_.mte1i 10 I 0 - MMftOll• 10 2 0 - s.m. An•· Ve..., t ' o 2 ~:;: dtl Mar ; ~ : ~ F'ounttlft Vetlrly :I ' 0 1 E1ll!ld• 2 ' 1 1Yi Co.le ~ tt..! ' L_M .. , ...... 3 0 I 0 i 11 i I 1 I I 21 1 6 I ............. , •rttrM M1nlOllM. 2b .f I I 0 \1111 ........... ,ort. 11 • 0 " I!~~ li 1 l Tot.11 S-W ·~.fl I '4 f Hunt!,._ ........ t I Lolf1I --,,_, • • " ••••• w' . .-.... Wiiii.i..,, -S)'l'l,..,:.r;t:: Ac~r1 Rh;...,._ IWll Hoult, c: H11f, ~lbop Hl,ld1ari, If W1ltirll'IO, It Twl1 .. lb Tlldllt, p Runoo,. 1• TOClll -"' • r 111'111 I 0 • • ' . . " • 1 I I • • ' . ' 1 I 0 • • I t .. . . , '"' Dvffy, ,.. , ••• Ev•ns. M J I t I WM.a.c JIOI 8oo.ze, p J 1 J I uv..,,lb 1000 Engel. ti J t 1 I 01bon, 21> J ••• Bllllltl', rl J' I O t Cor1t1, II J I I O Tot•ll I' I J 1 ... ., ....... w .................... , W"*'"' M -t-t I I -m ~tid .!i f f ii',· Adfimt, p s 1 ~ri'.f.. "•t.r ~ ,, t I Yl!1:i . c ' g ,.,1c:114tf, t11 1 I , : Goru11M.11'1 I ! 0 F'f!f.!10 I t J ' -mlJ. ~ .... ,.., ct .. t { ~ wi°"~-, : '.: ~='·11~ ~. ; ~. : 1t.,,.. :it. • 1 1 =:"""'• j ~ t ' ""-., p , • • • Tlfllt 4' I t =.o"t. -q ::l I ' .......... tll ' .... a~ ! I I i ~.11211 ' f !' l ml'r."I." I I I ""''"'·:r' ,•,' I I ":£'• . I ' .l I t flltii' "· • 1 .._ /lllta •" r It "' w.111..,, ,. t o 1 2 &~'ef '1 1' ' g MOlll\I, Jb l I Sllffonl, rt 3 I 0 wz.:: J I : t~~m?{i1t i l i W~,p J I 0 Tot•l1 r.it. S S ' M~ ..:=•100 'lft ..._., Stnte AN 000 iii •-' t I Miss Smith and Mjss Walker then downed a duo from Long Beach City ColJege in the seml!inals, th!, 6-4. 'Ibey lost to . a San Jooe City Oollege team 1n the finals, tr!, &-3. CdM f,~Vlllev 5 lo. Al«nfllDI '· C.g ,,,... I s.11ta Ant V~, trdhon 4 Magllofl• " f: • 1 ,..._y"IGIMll (.dM .. Ml«loll• LEASE •• .-Mercury ~Ill V•lkv •I Cosfll """' EdllOfl el Loe A""'"-Elllrldl ti ~ Vllley Paramount Sports Gver'l'l£ing in ':lenni6 NAlVllN• AU -llANDS INCIALlll M'IW DUMLOI" ftUOI# AUIT11:All.ul TENNIS IAW 1111 c~~.,:,su. ""-' Cwtlt fnllMll " 2 .... Mlh.J NOU .. l r MOte. I, P•I. ' TO I TUil.. W•D.. ntU•S. a IAT. 'T1L ' IUMDAY to TO I 333 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa (Behind The lnterna.Uon&I Houte of Pancakes) PHONE 642""6 • l~•IRT STRINOINO & .. OM'1' a.,AlR Full Malntononc• LH1l119 •.• Your Chola, .....,. 540-5630 ,, • ' . • •• -.. , .. Harness · Results -· --Qlw& ..... PIUT RAC• -One mlle. f'ltt. <....,..,,. ........ ,._ lltOO. ltmtV ~ (Sttw.rtlllA s.e 1M .~o· ... " , ... uo '1ftlltyl At""' !GlllMI) 2A ' Tl--lM. ScnttMd -w....,.,_ ••"-'· '"'"""" ..... . •• hadt -.....,. ........... ................... lllCOllD ltAC8 -OM Mle. l'ect. CoMltloll ..........,_ l'w. SID. I nvl 11c: I Iii• I II 14'•W IMl'llerl •• .UO .uo ... ._,.,. {°'ntlW 7.tO ut ~ IHwh lt.r.w.yl •.211 . ,,__ tM f/S. AIM ·~ -Ht>n' Vl#I, Don! Ulolt le*.. J"'""" lun City Kid • . ·~-or.mom.~ . . TNl•D u,Ca -One mn.. ,.Kt, Clllmlftl ........ ~•1100. Good Gr"'811 A (Al,elnl .UO 100 1.:11 ..,.._ (WUll-1 .... uo n-ty .0.-,...._,.,, uo TIIN -UJ.1f1. ...,..... -v.n.ntt w.rt. · ~ llACI -One inn.. ,_ Oil6iWff,..llt .......... 11111. ,,,,,,.,,.., ,..,...,,_, , .. (.00 "' 0-.. ....,_.. raww-1 t.JD SA WOJMlllrM _... !°"""""" S.111 n--1• 11s. 'IJ• rkllld -.,...,_ In L....,, ,...._. ,_., ltRyfMI C, Cllliltal N, °"" '""""' ~-llWMi,..._D, ""'"' llllt9 -0.. """" ,_ ·a.1.-. ........... .,. ....,_, N (#llllr) MM 1.00 •.• n-Fn.tlf <tN*t .... J.20 CW.. H-CGlll'911) S.00 Tl'"' -1.N "s. .Aho need -'""" ttodMy, Armbl"e Jtititr, J1 Jan. C...... ....... A!'llf)'t -~11tlNll -..,_ 0 1 '*• Lucy'LM. ttXTM lt&CI -One ...... l'I09. 'CY~ .......... l"\lrM .,,... Mltltr Het '"'' (D1fto MJ 1111 UD JJID B»c:owmr ll.o!WOl UO J.21 .... (Holl) tA • """"' -t.112 ,jJf ~~ ramlll -W..-w~ o. Jtf. ,..._ Cq,lft, laottltll '*" .,.. l#fl/lilr-1, l«.111 Jrto!L ·~-.....,Deft. . -.......... '1'-.•,.· -,...., ......... " ... II , ..... at&.-.. ' . --·~ brf!'-ON mn.. T,..., .................... -. ,..,,. ~ •• ·, ..... ,,ii I••~ _.,, 11MMM JM -~-...... u...r ...... ---.... .-;'lti6iito-,.. us. ~ t'IClld -L...,,.._ SM. , ... 'tW· ~ ~ °"""' \M, .laalrtilll ...... -...-. 'Y';-;ot--··--. - .: • .--nt aAC• -°"" ..... , ..... .......... ,.....-. fWttMWI ' 1.-441 2.• 0.(--.) 1M ,,_ Ji(P ..... ~l IA ~~-... ... ~ ........ -°"'°' ... l'l1not. =-, .. ~_.,....,.. .. . -· mll£a -a.. ......... ... f',:" .. a.e . ,. :: -.. , '· • J !~~ Traek ~ JC Net ·'· -' MD ~Qualifies 16 -ResuJts -_,__ r ·· FJ?r LaOp Finals COOLANT SAVER KIT fo1y To Alloch So~t On Ce>olonl Wo1 re .•• 1!? KOOLMASTER ENGINE COOLANT Gfeol For 9' A;.<oMiti-d c~. CHECKER COOLANT Prole1;t Yo..r Cor Agoin11 SlimirH1r1 H•ot 1~,9 THERMOSTATS F.• 99' Am•ric•n c," I Fish Report Ll'J'llJam . ~~:·=' ==iL~ --~ ii> 9 PIECE METRIC SOCKET SET STRONG BOY AUTO TOP CARRIER ' ! SAFE REFLECTING TRIANGLE Prol11;1 Yo11r Lif• Gvord·All P11rpo1•1 N.ed No Battery f1;onomy fo1y Honcl1.ng AUTO LITTER BASKET ' Slips Ov« "- 199 49c • OIL FILTER 'II' RENCH OR OIL POLR SPOVT p ...... 111. Colo 0... c._. ,,_ ...... .. .., "'''"'' 2f.,, FULL ACROSS FLOOR MATS Fit1 Mo11 o o,..sti1; Car• A11or1H Colon GREASE GUN MOOEl. 10 R•·F}n.lil• 179 F• f..,,,., ""°""''"11----t ....... i-~ F&. E1rtl.,UW-!~ ..._ Gt.it F• e •• ,..1....0,.... ,., •• C-.,.1, ..... .. 3!! ' • ,--- AUTO PARTS ' PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MAY 8, 1973 OPEN SUNDAY-9 • 6 R.•t· 7.99 S.w ll,00 CliJK On ..... Sctolch "'""'' Y-Cw• $1.orfoc• Gl.ioronleed Fe..-The Lif,1i111e Of YOVt Cot ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT TYPE LIFETIME MUFFLER .... ,, .... For Tiie Llf•tim.- OfY-C°' ·7!! • STAR'I:,ERS MODEL T ·372 Rod Ty~ Hanel I. w.1d.d Ribb.d Tubulor S1e•I Rock Bor . ' •.ooo 1.;. Capacity P .. Stand Ad i11ttobl• H•i9ht 30,000 MILE BRAKE SHOES 0.-o•"" Fw 399 30,000 Mile1 AIMficon & Volk1wog•n P•• Cori A•I• .WATER PUMPS Fw ...,..,Kon c-. s~~ r11' E•th"~ ., ALTERN~TORS 1699 ....... ' ... ' .. --..., ..... , '· • " ............... • L I ' up --:: . raU Ila thel sm1 silo yea are con DO\i re1 Iba lac ·Set WOl the poc a 1 out teg , ' SI VI E - ' I . ,• , ~ ·' " :· ... _, ...... L 1'1. .... I -Cockroach Uses r • Legs. t~ Smell ' .Sa•M A-C•Ue,e • 'Minority Ve~dor .. Fair .Scheduled ..., lotrn ._ lo IOU lbelr ..-.. i...i __ ...... Whal -Ible ewnts In ,.... Hr. .,. apt lo abake ,.. up moot? !'lame 10. Tbal'• wbal lhe pollllen _Slkl lo • lllDplilc ol -cllllenl. 'lllelr npllel 1adicaled lhe -.i._-or all wu.....,....ny ftllldOd to'be 11a- doalh or a apouse. D1Vom ·came In .......i. JlbrlW IOi-' • r1Uon1 third. Orulb' Pw«M~~ H-*tm a.,,_ ::i:u:c;:.·.;:i .:: '------ lluf hn locol and m~ h-but -hwP-swc• an DOt a.Jar ' . Am now advloed lhal nob(lbcly1 but noboclY bas seen a feral came1 ... 1111 Arflaaa llolerl llnoe lhe 1111'11 ol lhe coalury, ccnlrary lo lhe .._.t ol a Ymna ..-. 'Ibo camel ,._, 111111 IUOlvor ol lhe U.S. Army cam.t Cctpo, ,.porledl,y died In lhe Grillllh Part Zoo In Loo Aoieles on Aprll '¥1, i8S4. -When a homJna ~ lands on • ship al 1U, II uaually gets oo bope- . . leuly CGllfused It .... , PQlllibly llnd lta way home, not unUI lt'a taken to a port It recqp>'HS, therefrom to set oU again .. THE HAit!> FAcr8 -Al for Ille coclr:n>ach's ..... ol smell , it's in its legs ••• Were you aware this country'• !horellne was shrinking ·1nwan1 by hall an lncb evuy 50 yean? • , . A third ol all di..,.. suits filed nalloawide are dropped before lhe court bearings ••• A feline fancier coolonds you ought to feed lhal cat ol J'Olll'S a little celery now and lhen foe the sake ol Ila beallh ••• ,Mqrder b regarded as a lesser. atn lhan 8Ulclde In lhe boot of )torln. Nobody bas ever proved lhat a clean man b boallhler lhan a dlrtjl m a n. Thal la lhe romartable clalm ol • faculty member wilh lhe .Ualversity ol lllimlelola Medical ·School. A bwman who bas made a I I U d y ·of pictpockeb worldwide says the thieves of different countries dHfer in their tecbalques. 1'be Arab ·prefers·to rasoc slll lbe back pockets ol tourisla·ln bars. 'lbe F11Jplnocuslomarily'bolds a large bouquet over' his beail as be manipulates ,wallela out of hip pocl:ela. 'rbe Jap.ne.e 1pray1 acid lhal dlaln- tegrates trouser clolh. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Bo:i: 1875, Ne"" port Beach; Calif. 92660. DUPLICATING NO XEROX COPYING AND 4' ... SIZES UP TO 24"X36" . ~~,. VOl.UME DISCOUNT e PICKUP I DILIVERYw1_,.... DOUBLEQUICK 340I 1m. ·-N-- 11\t "· 1Ni.1:!~~ Ml aHm ,. Now-to celebflle Preview Opening of unn 111 ... Vllll Rellro- our aperkllno new 1ddltlon1I floor plan ... 3 bedrooms (or 2 and den), 2~balhl. " ,. ' ................ llANIC l'RESIDINT O.W.kl I, Waltw Pacific Bank Opens~ch City Branch Pacific Clty Ban1c of Hun- tington !leach celebrated !ti Ki-and oeen1ng Thursday, r1"' bon ,cutting ceremony at its tempoiary QUl!lers at Golden West and EdJnier. Present al the ceremonies Were H1mlingtoo Beach Vice Mayor, Henry Duke• bank President, Iiooald II. 'waiter; Jerome !lame, Hunlingtoo !leach Chamber of Commen:e president, a.amber 'Manager RaJpb :xi.er. Miss Huniincton Beach, Vlcldo Tlillman and Ca1iforn1a siate B a n t I n I Depart.ment Deputy SUperinlendenl, Jack Tauter. Locally owned and operated, Padfic Cily.llank will be open sis days a week. Asllsllng Walter Jn Ibo bank's open· lioll! are Jury Jobmon, vice · pre!ldenl liicl lOan mana;er. and Morris Lile, vtce-prelldenl and cashier. Smith, Inc. Acquisition August A. Franck, president of Genstar Limited a n d Richard B. Smith, president of R1cllard II. 'Smith, Inc., an- nwnced lhel lhe acquisition ol Smith's Tustin-based develop- ment finn bas been finalized wtlh the transfer of all outstanding stock to Genstar Limited wh05e headquarters are in Montre"al, Canada. lnt.elcom's Transfer Re-ported , lnleleom Indwtrlu b a. completed lie prevtously 111- llOlllK>ed purchale of lhe !\ad Tech Dlvlaim ol Gull Energy & EnvironmenW Systema, San Diego, fnm-Gull Oil Corp. Total value of 1be tranaac- Ucn wu 15 mllllon. JntelCOlll also announced ii Is moving ill c..-ponle head- quartera to San Diego from Newport~ '!be acquisitloo ol Rad Tech will moi;e than trlpfe Inteloom's annual rate of. sales from llboul $3 mllllcn to llboul $10 millloo, and Is .,,,: peeled to inerello earnlng1 "substaptially," said .Robert E. Beny, president of llXelcom. Retirement Talk Slat.ed JMCbad by oar llolym," lie ...... <BllUY BOPBS lhe lair will olf. limn die-lllllly lo -not aaljr the Oounty Purdlulnc omce bul ..... so to II other qeftOies by mak- lni JOit me call. '!be purclwlng _. said lhe counly has a conlinulng need lot -llemll as Janitorial IUj)llllel, f o o d s, clolhlng, chenllcals, !llll'lef'Y stoct, lill typeo ol C«llllrucllon materials, aulOmollve parts and a grul vailety ol olher goods. • 'MOOll orders lot gavemnen- tal a1enctes are ix-llOd by compet!Uve blddlag. The purpose of lhe fair b to educate minority -In tbe lnlrlcacles ol federal, state and local~ MINORITY 0 w ·N E D buslne..,s can register at lhe fair. Advance fnfonnaUm can be obtained by calllag Ibo C'Alunty Putcbulng Depart- ment, SSW400. Doh Begfus New Office Consiruclloo b iJMOr way on Dob Coli>'" IU mllllon manufaclllrlng and dla~lbu­ lton bclllty located within lhe dlvtslm of Fairmont Foods Company of Omaha, Charlene Vance, •ocounl ex-Nelnska, and ts a manulac- ecuUve of lhe Laiuna ee.dl • lurer of frozen foods. branch office of Mitchum, Designed by Rob e r I Joneo & Templelon will speak Clemonb and Associates Los on lhe "Fwldamentall In Angeles archltects, lhe faclJtly Plannblg a Soond Re~I will Involve !be comtructlcn ol Procram" at hor olflceti n-three buildings on a JH<re day at 7:00 p.m. site. Plans call for the coo· Reservalloos are available struction of a on...tory 1,400 by calling Melva McMurray al square foot oflloe building 4:M-9781. -featuring a bronze mlar g1us 'lbe office is located at 295 e x t er I o r and canopy Forest Ave. overhangs. Cl ~aim ~prtngs JRf\lls . . No shared wslls in living arees at CenYQ11 &Inda Enjoy single-family Privacy If ycu\le seen Amfac Canyon Sands Vitia before, com e back: for another took. More 1election: Enjoy tennis, swimming, putting, park surroundings, freedom from exterior maintenance. ' -: ' ' ~ •' .· 3 bedroom•. 2~ bath1 or 2 bedroom•. 2 baths; 4completely d.lfferent lloor plane, each In your choice of 2 different exterlof'I, You may tee plan of new VI/la Retiro now-fumilhed rriodel soon. Come b>ckto C.nygn Sanda. 3 bedrooms. 2~bathL 2 bedrooms. 2 blthL $38,500 to $41,900. ,. ' , Nllet to Gene AU!I')' Hotlf, :· "4300 E. Palm~ Dr., Palm Spring-. (714) 911115 ~-........ ------------------------"----- Rossmoor's Operations Reported Contractors To Hear Mesa Firm Tells Sales Staco Inc. of Coota M•, I ·~ :MuTuAI. FuNJ>s· · · ••• . ,, • • . :. ~ -. :t ·A : ., • ' .... . "· ' I •• ' " -• .Ni~on Rejects f arin .Products Controls 'IVASllINGTON (UPI) Pm1dent Nlxoo -.. that food irfc!s are still the eeQIJOIDJ'• 'NO. 1 enemy. but Im njected new oontrills on 1----11nn (lnlduci.. Ill.stead, be ordered a closer w a I c b Wednesday no price booN by bit buslnesl. IN A STATEMENT released at the White House, Nixon said the nat101111 I a r g e s t cor· pc>ratlo.os must give t h e government 30 days advance notice when they want to raise Recall Se t AtChrys~r DETROIT l UPI) Chrysler Corp. has recall· ed I0,717 of Ito 1971 model Dodge compact trucks for replacement of a dereaive steering asaembly part lhat could cause a Joss of vehicle control. A company spokesman said Wednesday t ha t !llthough there . w e r e reveral complaints there was only one reported ac- cident connected with the b:uck. The spokesman '31d there were no injuries and no other vehicles Involved in the accidcnL Jlrices by more lhaJI an average l.S percent atxwe the ' level of Jao. 10, when tbe Phase m -c stablliza. llon/JlrOgram was~­ ~preilOtiflcaUon'' rule does not cbaoge lhe government's. guidelioes for prlco lncrell8el. It w 11 I , 00.ever, "'bject those In-creases tQ closer scruUny by the C-Ost of Living Council. TREASURY Secretary George P. Shultz, who ex· plained Nixon's declsion to reporters, called the rule .. an insurance policy" a g a I n s t future inOat.ionary pressure from industrial giant .. Big companies may M'if think twice before raising prices with governmen t stabilization officials peering over their corpo.rate shoulders, Shultz said. Industrial price!, which have seriou!I nationary Impact, have shown disturbing increas-- es in the past two months. BUT NIXON S!ld, "It ls the cost of food, more than ... anything else, that oow -the return of price !!ability." Tht difel uecuUvo said meat, dairy and egg pro- duction lJ too low. He txhorted farm.era to pro&lce -fl'lattl ,.y1ng tblJ would mean latttt incQme for lhem u well as lower grocery prices for COD- sumer1. "The country need.a more food~ and American farmers have never failed to deliver when we needed them," the President said. rrru INFLATION running at the hlgbest rate since the Korean war, m a n y con- gressmen have ca.Bed for a general price rollbact or a new freeze. Nb:on dismissed thL! as 11a superficially simple 80lutia.n." For example, tr meat prices were rolled "3ck to January Jevell, "cu6tomen: would not be boycotting meat today but would instead be storming the supermarkets to be the 111'!1 in llne for the scarce. supply of meat," Nixon said. Demand to Bise Gasoline Crisis Seen for North . . .. . Complete New York Stock List ..11;.'" .. "ll:'i..l.~ln.,-~ ... i=-....... .ir .... !:.l:!_ ........ c:: ... rr.r ........ ""11;. .... • ~ '" ~ ' ,.;. ~ ~ J '""'::ct1 f 11': ~ ,c tt ,.. < .. > ._.""' '--'aw. 1 ._ I f ii l1\t l11~ fi+ • :: ll ·• ' ' -' ; J, ~· h .• :• t~ ' ... ~ •«,~ 't 'l!J;, ·~ 'J '1 J:+. u ~ tt !~ I J 1M '1•~ 21 »"'~Vi ' .1 Jlj l1o; ij\!t'~ ~ ' llUi ~I £ -t ~ m ~~jji ,,. '"'•.~ ,,. Ca 24 ,, -IU: ..+"' t 14 S--!. -= ~ 1 I .• ~ "r' L q.._."' ''A? 11 1 ·~ .Ill .. ~ .q ~~ ~, • • ,:11 ·, .. n .,: ~ 1 : • rill i1~ f.tt·~ • r.~ M '} ll! ·! ua •m:.. " ':I fit • • 'I P. t • ~ j~ ·I l! !fl Ir J.m+ .. •:!~ iilo!l -~-= ' ~ '1t--lif11¥. ~~!i~ ~ '--:~~!",. :! ri =mi ii'~ ~ l " I' ,.. ' fl.1 !In :l.iJl ".J! " iij t'ff ~ " 11.:.. ~ i:± :t ~~.~ ~~ ·1 .11 ~ ... i1mu· u Ii.. ~~i~~ :: h 't.t t~~ :-t : ~ ~ ;G ~: 11;!'~ :1 '" .. l :1 s ~ ! ~~ u.i , :: :1 1 ·H ·H +~·· i~~J: 1 J J: 1~ !~~ n l ,• ,1'i i ·1F m'~:+: ~ • !! f ls kt l: ""'I' :j tt ~ ,..+ • 1~• .J' ' '!,\,."" ··~ !li\f I! ;~ ''1! l ' ·~ • ... ,,,,::111~ 1.44 .• ,,J "= r.R· ~·l~ $ 1 iil , ,:1~~", ,.' ... ,, t# St i: t: +" iA w: Mi mi Hill "If' ~ U H lRi if++ ""' L 'l ••+ rn ' ':,f •I II 2' ... 2t -· ' U ·!! ' 2 2> 2 \; iAI 1a ff I~ H,~ ff" + lnv1·~ 1 ,,J ftt: fm ftl\+ ~ ~~~ 11. ~ll10 ~ ~ i2tt1~ ~~ .i~ ~I Slf I~ 1~~ I \\+I llt ,7$ I\ 1 •« 1.lo iY 1~ .. , ·· .45 2" tY. 2\.4o-1"' l'oai.or. ,.eo 1' • U 2:Nl U -ffl .1~ :S 1$\\ IHI .,. f'Hocl IS 1114 ~ 1~ -. lly ltV pf • 12 ~ 2'\.\ 1111/al \lo Fr111ktM .20 i> II 14.,., 131~ U\.\+ W AO. ' 110 lf\'11 20 •• l9cl$1 1 I 19' 25\lo :.~ ts~t .\Ii J!'.!.!~ l .:S J t7 25 17 :S FrtflklSt oiO 15 55 3"6 2S\f, M -111 Cl 1,20 TS 7't .OV. •I :t:' ~~f .n: f; I~ = J~ ~'t-~ -;3~ ':I~ D !l" :m'4\lo ;t" I~~~~ &22, 'b~ ~\i ltt 11~~! ·ft 1f ~ ri1ti 22~ im~ ... UP> -A rA11 o A NI t I~ 10\4 ltM+ l4' LC Am 1411 1 • ~ ~ ~;.;;.TM 41 6 IS2 In\ 12\4 12\4-.,., I(= A1rt . IS :JM J7'll ·~: Aol'IAPt ... 7 6 lW IMlo l:silo Nell 1.'2 1 2 I II: ,.. _.0--l(n IN .•21 I• 45 '4\.\ +w TIGHTER PHASE Ill ll\IC8f l,f.I IS 11' !! S6 JM+2 leY E U2 11 ~ ' · bt9 Inds! 7 » 11\\ tt 11 k .lllb 10 ' !~ lilll !f.t-"° All'Mt5" IM I tf ff! ~"' = in JfSf "'-+ C ~ . I ~ ,,_, m " 5"09Wpf N it: n ¥is;;-~ TrH surySoc'yShuln ~= .ol: ,! "'"'"Ill j" ,.:.,-, n, $ !l.,=~ AFJ"•,:; ·, ~ '' '" ···R'::::,.1·7: f 1' ,:: , .~·i, ------------i:;z.1.211 • S: 2f"' 21 2n:.+.. '""' fo u ," 3' ;f;+, .!5* ,'_30 7· 1'r iw W :t ~ Kr•nu 1,111s ,,, $4o ~ ~"' . 'l ' F.i ~m . .,., HA Fin 1 )1J 1• <i\.\ 14 ....... "" •'"°4ol' TV. I 21 21 II N ~,. .211 ,, t2" "" SJ\\ 3t14+tt~ AM 11 21• F, 1~ NA llf 1. o >t I~ I~ lfYJ+ 14 rnSl>f l.60 ·' g tt tt ,, -ti\.\ • 1 r ~ \' 1~+ \ti • H•j.. '5 r: •W. 11 St Gt I 5115 ..Q ll'" ii \i, .2S II 40 31 .ol(I 2 rOQft' 1-"' IS C U'4 I 'l'" All'IA rFI ..a 17 190 • -Vo ttSGllf 1.lt .. IS 24 \,\ \.\ rdDen .70 IA lrlll )I(\ 1914+ \.\ k'l"OI' In "° • • 14 ,. 1 +". AM Alrlllllft. f'3 ~ 14' 1 i " ~-I.ff . sit ~ ff a ,. •rlock ... • 21 I~ 1'11.i l•Vt-"' -l. ~ t"a!.~ .. ·~ 'ii" _,. _, 1VI oe:'•8!!.._ l.'U fl i• 1 • I , 11,. l ,,. 11 S\i'C 1.12 ' S ln't 1~ I~~ Lael i.oe IVI I 11 fl°" !IV. !'°"+VI •-.._.. m ' ~· ·,. n !ill '" .t.Wrt In 6 S ~ ~ iPlt-'4 •muo Sf'I I f 4 11'4 14\11 4'4 :E~~ ,i fl ,it Im ft! M~' oM ~ ,:: ~ ~ ~ ::'tt+·"" "'' 'cf,i? ~ 17 1?: 1::· 1r~ ~ t:~~·.1:i= M 11 ~ Im ~~+_:: •1•nlll' '"' s Wli u 2,.,;-\~ °'9olft 11¥4 1 jj"~ r.w.+''-' In .. j 1•"' 14~ 14\lo t:!r~ s11 lf l • m I + ~ • "" ':! 10 16 ti ~ 21 +'Ill ~!Pl 3\\ '· ilO" ~ All't llV 1 SVi 1'™' 1~ \4 rs= f.: t 16 av. •Vi l,f, ... Losses Told At Mattel A t>aln }j II 4 231/, ~ !iE \ti :l;r:Alk .S6 t 161 ,12 11Ai n~+ \lo n Afi'r 1j; 11/ ~ ml 401: W"-! ~tr~ 2~ :: J, = ~v: ~ -·~ .a.mcwan 11 1fl ~ ~ Ol1 ns Food 14 ~ I~ 12~ lj~ 14 T Df 2Y.i , sm j2t• 521'11 " LHswy .too 14 14 3' 35 ,.; t ~ Am 0111111 ' 17 7 uv.· 24 \lo ourn R.olo '' 1• ,,..., 1 .. "~nc ,,, 1 • 13 11!1' m 1•\.\ v. LNdJ&N' .JI 11 21 14 14 I' • ADlt:JJ.i .o 27 llJ1 ~ 4 48\lo-"" ol hllll ~ 4] ''f ~ .. "' ~ii r 1.20 • ' I I ~ \4 LMsoM ..«I 1 s ISV. 1i~ ~+ '4 T F• ~~ ;t "'.:! '. J l~I,\ lJ ~V--\.\ :Jr.5~ 1: : 1321 lnt l~ l"1. : val 21 If 12 t t-J: Pt C. ~ I :U Im lq; S'4-\.\ oy Inn ~Et'tJ:: '.o ~ i't:lt "~ ~c.·11 olJlipf1~ •• 12 1'3 ~ lll'I i}v. .~ n ~I W":'Jl ff,,~ ·uv. im t tt L~'11.ki. .· 2~~ ! ... ,·n+ r; Arn E~ Df u20 ' s~ Siio-~ ol G•• 1.90 la 13.5 31V. ~\ 1114 14 nF 1AO 1 115 ™• "u.nn.r Cp s m ~ l M •~ A FlnSw 110 10 1r 17 I• n t 'Ill ol PJc:NrH 11 1)9 s1' s s -~ •o -'lb H 1-™ 1 v. LIHIOJ( -50a 20 to "4V. :U\'t-IYJi HAWTHORNE (AP) -Mat-t F1'&f): ·: i1/ if: Ji;: ~~ ~ =~ \:~ 1: ..,U lilt w~ ~ t; n n f::1'1r ~ '' * llft l~ ll\l 4\ t~1ri:n·7~ 1s J .l~ll.~ lt~ Ht:±~ I ,__ he · , I A ~'-vs "5b '' 1r l~ lSt•+ rnE pf \ 10 12 '° §! '° ±1v. nt"' : ' 3 31'; \v, 31 · Lawlh Furn lt "6 12 ti.,. 12~+1 le un;., t nallon S argest A ifri c:r.; ·_i 'e fl U'lt l~ \'"-~ )omStllv :.o 11 S5 '""-flt? l~ +\Ii MllM~ 1-l 22 'l 1~ lOl l,,...._!l.._114 tft~E Cl1!£tl 7' ~'It •4'-'lt toy m a n u f a c t u r e r • has :"H'!n: , ... ~ w 113w.111~ 1Jv. +!l"' c:E~ 1il1 ~\ 2U ~l: r,l'J rrlt:t ~ ·\\t 10 ~ mt mt • + ..... , L F Df 24U . ~ 'H ~ J: J:fi.+ ~ re ted I £$324 ·11· AtnHomewl '542lio41 41V. 'lll!omEdor ,2 .. 10~26'A~+v. n pf • lli!ms ,+\\L YMcNI 6l 4~ "'" .;r. por a OSS 0 · ml IOil AmHolp .21 .0 ~ 41v. 2Mio 41v,, V. wEdpf 1.42 •. S 21YI tl,:i,o 21 \."t en Port j 1 l l fit lf.l · llbrtveo .JO 10 ll lM l7V. 17V--\4 ~e.spile 8 26 perCeD.l increase :~~VII n I I 1J 4 l~t_V. 11~ l~O -~ ::ed I~ '.: l~ ff"' f&"'; ffV.f ~ PubR'{I:~ f At 6 'r' ,.. ·: tlf.r.il:1n f~ I~ 1ll ~ih = ~~1~ Jn sales for the flSCaJ year A Med~orp l lSf SV. m S~ l'I omEd Bwt 7 10 :f1 '°''f 10V. I. nSklneit .'5 lf lDJ l G'4 ;rn+ • ~IYNEttO 1·!,! 4112 n,s ~ti If"' ~·~+11.ti A M•ICM IV. 11 Al :Sll9 l!i!" l';y,_ v. omwOU 2k " 17S rv. ·~ t v. n S~I Ind ,, 31/a l\i ·-I 34~ ,..,., lf.t..... "' ended Feb. 3. ArnNGs 2.«1 ' Q '1 , 1 • '~wOllaf i:a If J !114 lU:: ~}~ i" T e 1.60 11 .. , tt!M ,.,,.~ 2' + "'t nc "l'or~ ft n ,, 7Jr. ' +214 The news of the loss :~i13: ~12 , ~~\12:M1o~"'1~-_tt~:n, i ., 12J 1 1~ 1~ il""Z l~~ ?(,-:: rxJ Im~ t¥'2 : ti~('/~ 1' 111,~ 3Y~ t\~ i ((; Wednesday was paired with a ~!r-l~r 1:~ 1.0 = .,/"' :.,., ll~ us= ·1.QI 1 2 ''"' 1r l~\H-& TIF,:r,. '~ ., 1m 1nt m: 1~ lt rrn:n :I t :. 24 !Mi I~ f.U:! \.ti separate announcement that t~sf~ ~ 1.1. SZ: li: ll~ lh.~lv. ~::'rJ ilJ: ll ~ ~~1t~t\t-.. ~P ~ 34 ie 1"t: l?v. ~~,v. t:~"' ·, id 1m ~ 1J111 \-. ::tt.rtTH2~ ;~ d ~ R~ :e~= \lo~~Ett t .. -11' 1311 35t;""11"111tt ·~ 7~ IS 1~1L1~~ ~~.I~ l.j "' ~· f"' It:: ( KI J AmT T of 4 S71 " 59J't ,, l ~ onFdpf 4\.'J . s 101 " 1a1 f Pwlll' 7 n i 16'"" 103'h 1.UVtt2 LornM "'"" I j7 l£i ~ ~ 1ll" AnplA l-"I • Zll SN S2 .S214 v. on Frcrt .52 I .. 14't 14'h 14~.. .. bft 1°3$ t u 11\4 '"' 11\4 \lo London Mf'O t 2 1 1 "I ~ 't .l1 I\ AmT'T w1 '.' 27lf 1 6~~ 7 ~C-NG 2.Al I 22 21 27:\ti t7:r.-\!i 1i1b 2' '6jl2t 11.-12411o 31Jti::::L-S tncl I I 247 1 ~I I •• \> AmWatr 64 7 10 12 11~ 12 \lo Consrn Pw 2 10 1t 291/o 21-li 21\ti+ H ttvof 1 20 ~ ~ 2CA~t lit. -$pt 4..., · I 72 71: ~ +t M ' 1 d STOCK AWtr Pr li,:;, no 16\'li i,Y, 1•V1 on P pt 4\li :oo 6CK'I 60\t. 601\ r, Bw ioo 1114 1 .,,.~ w. 7\4 v. SIG T.4 12 ~ SN. ,... 1.._ Vt annean SACRAMENTO AP) I N N llELESS , . ArnnSllOtt .i ll~i6'9~··onPl>f7.72 . J.5111.Ul«M~l~+'to at1IPC~· 7 14 13\11 13 13 -V.(-~llM!a 4122'-"21" i,:;,i" ( -0 · 0 ET , district Amet•IL: ·~ 10 50 14 13VI 14 + v, ontl Alr Ln 15 290 11141 1~ 11V.+ \'I lbr Finl ' ' :tt It 1111:1 lf + \lo IL I ~ . I 15\IJ IS.,., IS'h 2 f. ' J f "-· · n· f r the f' · AMF In IOI 10 1n1 3114 :JOO. 3CPJlo-\lo nC1111 1.60 10 '"!No 21'h :zrn+ V. dd t . JG 7\ti ~~ 7 -V. L-* A '1 1• 61"' 61 '!"" .. 1Cl8SO UlllC'CmajOrOI com-managers or-twoo inns AmfK 06.1,. 11•1~11 1nti+"O nCM'IDf•V· .• zlalHl!U'I~~ ... tfHl\l_.2 • )tl7'411 IN+v.LorM If l 3\.\ 3'4 VI Ill panies say Northern California -Atlantic Richfield and Shell ~e Hawthorne ba~ed ~trm has ~~; :" ~ ,1!f 11k, 11m 11Jv. +2·~ c:11c~osif16 ·, 1st 3~ 3m, 3}1_·411 ~1l1~f."'"\./: 2\1 ~\11 ;J: fu~ ~f1"' [:~IC~!~ i3f m°? ffi? Jr' +2~ . Troubles may be in for 1 gasoline _ said their firms had no -signed.a new credJt agreement "'"PD ~ 103 4\i 4111 4\0o--·v. Cn11c1 ot.zv; 1 4-• 41'1.1 •n'* •.. g/rnOtt 11r 1 11 _ lf 11111 11v. ''lit~ ~ L,ouGas 1.1 12 1 !' l' j" +" --Its ~--1·-• • Arn••o Corp 4 17 J'lt 7'AI ~+ VI ClllH r ...so 11 11 11111 II\~ 11'4 .•. noa 111(0f' ,, 79 21'4 '°"' ,,. S\ __ , ·"' 7 $ ilU • ,. ' ... ~ .... e during the coming establlshed pl'l'\ln'!lms to cope with ~ perrruthng up to Am•••r 1.10 1 1s ~· ts1. ~ • on!lnvst 11 10 41 1 ""~ 1 • , ie-...., 11 • 25 2•'-' ts v. (TVTV On .. 1~ II 14 :,.: ---. --~--3 mill" I nd-~ 8 Amslr.,. 61 , 1 k •~ a:lti ~ v. onMTo .S4b 10 \44 111,1;; 1~ HVif ~. Global Mar n st lj" •~ \31rio.+ Corp A. •• 1 14 ~,.. summer months -but were with a serious shortage. .....,. ion m oans a -· Am11ec:1 2 ·611 a 11 ,,,~ •1 i1 42..:.+ "" on11 oir l'h la 71 31'!4 Xl'9 ~ '~ GloblU11 M ' '! ' 1 !jv.+ n' £!. J o1 ..... Ila " fl +1 G _s d • . mJUi • I · redJt Amtel In 21) 21 1 S'fo 5\~ 5\~ Cont Sii -~ I 30 12\ti 12 12\.\ V. t'".oldWlt FCI 10 i l 1 . -. .4 :S "" 37 7"4+ ~ o;: __ -_,--_ ._.P>.t tll _Y:-_ reJuctant to &noes how senous The dist rict manager fol" on m revo v1ng: c . Afllcon .l?b , 436 1914 iav. l9't.+ ·~ con1 T11 .... 1• " 22"-2211< 2m v. e.!:11 1 1 \!51 ,.. ws .JOD 11 2 1• Ji , _,. r ----Y, 1fjgjgbT be~=:::__ ------· 1'1:1:1-AnchHf. 1 OI I 11 ~ 2314 ~+ v. Conb1 °"'' II "] ~ ~ •rv. 3 .'2 10 m flt/a ~14+ y, udlow f,Qi • '"' Ni .. --.---:.-- _ -:--~-Standard-of ~rnia. ChucK._ ePeir0Jett•---.... ~-:~~c:!¥'rJ=if '...l~ mt t~1;-+'4~i:.10 zu~.21~ a.v.~k~J! >Ol.I 1k°21 1!0 J J~ lID gt;~L~'85"ec:: JJ 0 ~Yo '°i:i'" ' Officials of Standa'rd Oil or Edwards, said he was sure A11mcht .32°~ • 16 lllh 131,ti 131"'-~Cook On .$2 6 •a 1.\11 n• ,,,_ "\i r;rac:t w 1ih 1 604 24'"' W"' ''~+ \\ trt• Yostn •• m Jf .. ~loll 1 u: ' J .. WS ANGELES (AP ) California, Shell Oil Company distributon would be limiting Sped~ to the Dally Pilot :~~~ .1, 1J 1H 1it: 1~t~ 1f(L v. =nd ti~ l~ tt ~ r',U ~~f ~ w:~w~ \;~ ~i 64'J ,if' ~ 23~+tt L~~w 2~ u J 1kti '°"' lor. v. n:u Wednesday that increased de-end of the summer Basins Petroleum Co has AAA sv 1.22 21 1 .. 12'\'J 1231Ai 126~+ v. c~ Aarioe lSI 11.,.. 1•~ 1v. v. ~''it.'iA ~ 1T~" ,, \m~ l!"~ti 1t" +"' MKOonl " .m JV. + 11ii -'I'hreeslde--.l"°"°"'to puls 1ar1 e ~~1~jy and AUantie Richfield said the supplies to retailers by the LOS ~ ANGELES -Great tJ;ktc1 c~ 1: 1: 1l~ 11~ 'l~+ 114 ~=~ ~~ l~ J ft: lf..! 1'tf: ~ :t=W ~ I U 11Y1 ,!» l~-MKAF .G1b 14 Mi~ 12~ I+" lrOUbled Mar•-land of the . . Arc1t1N . u • s ·~ ~ ~ v. COJJWld L21 ' 30 71 '' Vi 27 .. l -~· Ill • .m iii ·----•for gasol'•• dunn· g su~ Ed ~-d · entered 1"nto a JO-••t venture Arct..ro .so 11 '' 2~ tw. in1i+ ""corc1ur• cp • " , .. rv. 1~• · 110 · 16 1 214\'i n . • 1 +·~ Pacific out of the red, Jll.IWU • UR> u.-Wa1U3 aaJ some JD8j0r • . . "' Arctk EnlP 5 41 61/o 9'1 6V.+ 1"' CornGls 1 12 33 429106\'J lOOY, 106\lo+Hlo ~tH,lr .10d 12 f 1irz °"' l03U-tt R H t ~ +1 .tockholder. Or l h. en-mer vacation months is el· retailers in Nevada which With Atlantic Richfield Co. ArlJ PS 1.16 ' 6.l 21'rll 2JV. 21'!.fl + \14 Cousin 1 l2b 13 60 71 ~ 27 GN'tr~ 11.$' l 36dVt Jlt"~ti. ..... t -~ rc~A ~ .. ll ff"" SI ' .. pected to ta1 their supplies. draw on sunplies in u'tah had under which Great Basins will :~r.~~ fi ~ ~ 1~ 1~ 1?~ 14 E:'~~ ~~ r, J... "~ 2n:+2v. g1~tif11n ~ "1 3;J 1r-1~·1 1;lh-"' ~ .. , !! 16 ,'!, ~ 1~"' Iii=~ tertainment center's parent r' • dr ll -' r I Arlen AJIOv II 141 'J'.'1 ~ 7 I "CPClnll 1.71 11 " JI lOV. 311+ * r. w~ On ol 10 '~""' l l4V. ...... "' ... • !ii 'I ~ ' • •• I to • !Is t h ArmcGS 1.20 9 Sll 24\IJ 2311 2~ Yo Credit Pl .JI 10 19 IO Ro fl\ t; G1 I ~ 12 1, 2m. 7•• ~A!-\~ Mallor( .ff 10 I' "' I,_ have learned. ;oJready been restricted to 80 I a mmunum o our ex-Arm.ia CP .. 11 •1• ' 6~ v. Cr•MC .1ag 1 12 11v. 1P.4 u1 .. + Grt w st1 1 •· s 3v, ,.... ~,n. n.'w i.to '' l ' 131 ~" percent Of Jast year's Volume. p Ora f'Y We On re e Arm '1_ 2.10 S ll 30-"o 31 ·~ Cr«ker 14' I 3' 27'4 :16Yr 27~tlV. ~:~•nl,04 r 3Wi lJ({ ~·· IQ,\-\~ =:nici:r..:J j 2: 41 m · · THE HOLLYWOOD Turf FAA Si'gns naturalgasprospeetsandone:~,Ak 1::l 1! ~~ ~'?~1~~:bf':1: ~~~~HIP.ti 1}!'~~.; 1 #tl~ 1ri;1~~~M•-.J2 11 21525 21 +1 --. Club, owner of Hollywood 441T IS DIFFICULT to say oil and gas prospect it was Aro co .toll 1 2 16'io 16=11i 1~+ v. Crwn ?I 1.20 11 511 m• Viti 21 "" """"""' u fl'i ~ '1'1+.;, ~~:; 1 54 ~ ~ ·~)1 ~ n + \\ the what is going to happen," said announced Wednesdaf by c. :~l~il"1~~ I~ 1~ ~ ~~ ~~~ti~ E= :~ ,: ~ n1" ~ is~ ~ r.':'M'::·2~ ~ ~ ~ i 1' ~+~ ~·mr1·~ l1 1\1, l!~ ~ti.II. ::::Ut ~om~;~~a ~~ting R kw ll F.dwards. "We Oil the West W. Hatten president of Great :!rl~ ~·4g,,13 1~ ~ = !1~1~ ~-.... ~ l~ 7~ ~ :i:i: ~ +~ R~: !511' 1tt ,f = ~ n~ ~1'1+2 ~=-of., 1 1* r ~~ § tl of stockholders Wednesday, ()C e Coast are up against it. There Basins. ' ::~r,.k~ . 9 1~ ~ ~ 2:/t:f: ~ w~ "::'21 ~ s~ ~ fit ~111tl.,.. g~pf~..,S~ 10 .• 16 ' ~ 1~ ~ _v. ~~1 1 ii, !i ,3 1 J1"" 2~ 2t board chairman Vemoo 0 . ~ no allocatio: yet, but we All four of the well sites are !~°': ~ t J h~ ~~ ~ :f: ~ cypn,11 ~ ~ : n ~ = ~ -v. ~:!rfS"tt i~ 12 J lr.l l~ ~t+~ =~ ;~~ r: m ll'lt M"¢.tl '!\ Und erwood said "Marineland Co veto ezpect m." in r.entral California. Great t, i~'·f ~ 1,i: ~ ~~ ~1,~ ---o 0-·· ~...,~Y"es. •::l 6 l~ ~ §U 11T.r'"i~ X\:' \'Cc~ ~ 1! ii JOYJ ,It+ U .is· D0t a happy Situation, but ntract "We are limiting ourselves Basins Will be the Operator Of :rR<~J;, '.'. 1~ jl~ ilt ~ I~ B:n"Jn"vr 5: ff 201~ ~ 2*~ 3m,~S!r).%~ 5 '.' ~~ ~t~ JI.ti J~1~ ~~ 211:t 1t ~r1 k 2'41f mttl~ ~~blthlne.· .. t it can be<:ome prof-to 100 percent or last Ye:1f'S two gas prospect!, one about :n:s Cor~ 102 2i 11"' 11 11 ~'h 8:~1: .r;,. '~113735 H"' ~I~ s=°1nd1t 17 ~ 1;.~ 1:~ 7;~= ~ ~~~~11:1\ 6: l25 1m ~~ ,~ ~ ,._.. WASHINGTON(AP)-The sales," he said .• 0 But .s1nce 20 miles northwest of:~~nco.:!jf ~ 1f~ r• 7rat v.g:'~nd"t 14 , f'J 11~ o '',-°"'Hin "' JO a"7 "19H, ltv. lw.-v.Mdc, .. .JJ1> ;1 21\ti 21:t 11 -\.lo The e1ecutive said options Fede r a 1 A v 1-a t 1-0 n sales have been mcreasmg at Sacramento and the other :aw:o coro 4 iu 11* f~ 1m+3t o.ve:ot 4'4 ztD ,'(A ~~ ~:i.-\'I H•lllbln 1.i2 l6 1u 139VI 1:u'l't 1~14' ~ii! ·n ?: 1.l j4m ~ :1-f I: I d he t f 7 t Aw:o Cl> ~ . 20 21'1 2* ~ Drttlnl" .24 ' 6lO t~ 9111 9?\ +V. H.mP• .50 fi 29 12YI 12"' 1 · ~llltty (Q; 10 Jl 14' \l\lo lf'ti V. are (1) selling Marine an Adminmtation S!id it has t ra e o percen a year, near the town of Oakdale in Aw:o pf 3.20 23 41 40"• «P.1.+ v. o.vtor.H .s.t io ns 11Y:1 11 111."'+ ..,,, H•rndCP .«1 • 38 ·~· ' ' ... M1UC1 ;l.fb 1i-. Y~ 21~ "' tri ht (2) IJ' lhe f 'li thiS means · · . AverwPr .2S 3' 33 3'"'-38!'• 39-h+ 'l't 0.yPLt 1 ~ 11 #9 2lV• '2~ti 23\.lo '4 H1ndl1m .Iii 9 n tv. r 9 -•• Mn Ml JOb 11 ~f.1 :n~ti .. !2'-ol4i ou g 1 se 1ng ac1 ~ signed a $33,982,080 contract someone is gomg the northern San Joaqum 1v11 inc • .a 11 " 11v. ~ 31 ~1 Of>~ 1." .. zeo 1021; 102111 lm'ttl H~•::CH ·7lo 12 1 f,,19~1A1r1:Jl\1~ +n Ml"uE J~b ' r2 ~ ~ "" ~ ty while keeping the real with Rockwell International to be left out." Valley. A~~r1 : J ~ 1:J 121 l~ 3t; 8:an..e'1t 7:l: .. ,. or 1~ '"r' 1'tt:1~ :"n• pl,:is 21 li: .(714 41 O\lo +:At ~~s l~ 10 121 ,r..: tfil+ -- estate and (3) a possible Spokesmen for both Atlantic Allee 011 "" '2 16 2l'!ll 21v, 21v.t 'Ml°"""• I.GI 10 l~ n Vt 31V. nVi+3'11 H:=6 1l 1'l 1~ 11~ i~ il~ l·?. ::;w ~ 1:12 1, 11 ~ lf4 iliZ+ tn bi t 'th Corp., El Segundo, for the She • w --'t S "t -B ~ DtlP&L 1.14 r 141 lMll 1•14 16\lo-v. H•msll:I 1·20 25 21~ 21v. 21~.,.. Ma°':Jw 50 l J' ~ • lY1 U, pat ers p 8rtangemen WI }ease-purchase of 11 Model Richfield and 11 echoed ~·v. % UI ft:b&.Wll .IO !S 164 2&'h 27\'o 27!'1 .. ~,~:r 1j.0 17' ..,,u ~ ~ t -Yl ua"fil!t i2"f 19 oM It I•\~ ~;z-~ M~•ID 1.:io 1 :sfVr ll 14 ll = "' an investor who would sink $5 7sA Sabreliner 1·et aircraft. :Edwards, saying they were LOS ANGELES (AP) -s.~~ 1n·1.t~ J 1U ~\t 2m ~"'2: ~ o.1..,~-'"'"c 4 ll n. ''h ~~i ~ H~n1a1" 11 ': r."" ~ Jii ~~... ci:onc ·:: 1f ff r,v. «~ 11;t+ v. mil('OQ IJl' to the Orv>ratlon Jn 11 ch ti , . llai\erOll .J7 27 lOt:t 31 30\.'J 31 '"',. P 6 201 lAYt 13\.\ lA "HertSMlt .114 11 1' jlJ? lf I,\ VJ 1·20 1 221Mi , ' l r-~ • 'Ibe FAA said Wednesday try g to se as nw gaso ne Under a stipulated )Udgment Bal1Ga1 l N 10 4\ :zit~ :la 21\11 ... Dtnnlsn .IO , JI ?tl• 26 26~ ~ HewaEI 1.56 1 Sl 71,. 71 .+ Mc. rrmoi, ,1 ~~Vo~;. ll~t,v. THE PA R ENT firm thecontractispartof its pro-aslastyear-butnomore. Levitz furniture subsidiaries ~~~lar1 1~~12 ""~ ~v. ~.,...=1 ~=.~~J ft~ 13~ ~ ~.,._-i,t ~!~"1~b 1 1: 1~ 1fa 1~ 1~~~8:11~I1m :MVa ""fm+': Wednesday reported eamingll gram to replace 47 propeller· have agreed to pay $50,000 in :::= ·~~ ~ 21~ 3 2~ ~ +1 o.ie&"1:~ 1g ~ 2m 20~ ~it;~ ~~T~~d~~ i~ l~ ~ !iv. ~·;.+ '" ~~~~ ;WI 11 1,\ 21 ~ ~ 21 !: .a of ".5 million and ""0.4 driven DC3s and T"l9s -penalties ending tbe state at-B•norP r?J 2 . . 2 2.s'4 24~ 2SV. v. !:\~ 's~ .. 112Y '!I 1J:Y.i l16Vt-l'll Hec:k Inc ~ ll ~ \~ l~l4 ire-~Mc: r HI ~ 10 1#9 ro~ '" Ui\\+ • ~ •• S da ' tomey ge' neral's suit filed. two :.~~:' ... ~ . .l 11 3t ~ If""' ~t+~ ~°','"• ,eo,, ~ 11,' !! 1w.,~ · !.tl?' 11 ,,10•, t'(~ ~ ... t!~~.n1 .01,, •,•, ,','• ~~;, ~,-"'-, ••• -,~. ~ n::'~ ~ 11 z1M sw. 11'\.\ ssYJi+·Y. million in revenue for the year modified Convair 24-0s -With atur y S , . '"kTrust ~ 10 .ilJ sv.. 52 51'1 ;,. t 1 tr 1-; f .. -1'l!~ -.~ """' . ~ • i"" iT McKee .lSb 11 sr lt\4 18~ ~ ended March 31 , 19Tl , com-21 modem twin-engine jet years ago charging Levitz Blrbef"OI 2k · 2 mi l'V11 32~1+ It. 1:mnstwrl 1 11 "'1 ~ ",.r,a m~+ V. ~!'-00 o ,''.," 10 ,s ~W ~~·~ ... ,~ '•~ MeLun ;'° 13 1!1 ~'It. -'SYI ~lh-. . . B•ro CR .ll c 264 30 2tV. ,.,._ \'i .., "'""' .. <V'I"•+ v. "" er n • ~ ...... Nn-» Mc:L.oulh n 1 lot I~ ISV. ~+ pared to $2.7 million earned on aircraft. with false and m.lsleading B••net 1.m 1a '° 21_.., v~ 211o<+ \lo ~:i= 0i'J ·· 1,' ""• .. " "',,~ XI'+-v. !:l!1,rnei:,r ·'° ,•, '•' ~.~ ,,13ll1 1,', .. +l'lli Mc:N.i1 .1s • 11 11v.1JY, l:i'->-"' B f S 'k . · B•1lc tn .«I 1S 4 1 1 7 _.,. -"'l~ ,...,., .-•Yne ""'.,... vo Melcl CO . .0 11 11 14't 1~ l441f-'4 reVeDlle!I Of $19.4 million the The Sabreliners, cqui--' ee tri e adVertlSIDg. 81t1tMI .20 22 I 11'11 11'-" 111'11+'\4 =n .JO Jl 1t Mlt N ~t ~ HtmljO Cap ·· 2 ,',~. ,"' ~+ /\, Mtdun I\~ 17 25 2~ 'l + .. J'V<" 1.e· did t dm"tto B•19'Moll .. 617YJ IW.17111 AOD ,, 4 '5 4414~ Yi.Ktmn .JOb 4 ,,.. MEI COrp lO 13 3\ti 3 \ti,,. year before. The 1972 figures with eltensive e I e ctr 0 n I c v1tz no a 1 any B•lh Ind .:io 1 111 25"" m. 24.,.,+ ... ~.-" • 11s 1tM1o 1ov. 1~+ v. Htreul• 1.12 20 m n~ nYJo 7N+1'4 Mel Shot .., 23 11a ,,.,. :a.v. 21'1r'I+ "* th I ·~ ·1 bl do" -Wed ---'-' B1u1ehL 42 '~ '"" Zl4ti lV\lt 21'11+ \I) IB • qpl ... n 12 .... IO 12VJ+l\/o Htrculel WI I :16 36 3' + v. M1mo•e111 23 2' 7v. '"" 1 were e a~~ avat a e. systemS, will be used in flight wrong mg 1n nQU<ly s aa1111u L ·.u •2 so1 "'* n At*+tv. gl11jnoh .c 14 11 1Vt nti w. . H•r-5hw 1.10 11 22 111;, '"" 1m Mne•1m •I , , 1oi.. 'ICl\ti 10\ti-·i,.ri Und·~ood attr1"buted tile testm· g the -curacy of more Lacks Aid settlement and said the agree-e1w11kCo .50 ia .s i2v. i2Vi 12.,.._ v. 0111!."r pt 2 16 i ll~ ?!l? 24v.+ v. ~Ir~ -~ ri l~ ~~ ~ ~""+~ NMcst 1.60 22 11.ss 1ss 1ss ... ..... .. ..... BNrl!'IQ$ AO 11 7 .53v. """ n v-"" DI MYW'""" -_,,, ~ -14 ~e'!\'l.J E ~k 1.11 <45 JS. 9JY. ro r:rA+ v. r' • Btc:krnn .SO 21 111 31illi l l 3Ni-'A DIJlllSN ,1\1 21 I ~ ~ Intl+.. llTon Hn I l lOS 2SV. 2A'4 ~· Mtrrll'el' .56 ID 106 au 1)-\to l3:t"' revenues to problems at aids in the national airways trial court expenses. ft~~ it ~ m f~ mt ~'h+Y:l'lll Dlwnlfd In . 1• P4 '1\i, ~ : : , MW · Indus 20 6 :W• W. :»'1 · • · =-tot 2'.~ l~ ~ 124 l~V.124 • ~ lower nrofits on h I g her than 7,00'.I ground navigational ment was reached to avoid 81•1 Fds ·" 11 21• 15"' UV. ,..,...... 'ti 01:S1on Mb ft ~ f~ :'v. '4'-0+oA\ 1~1 .J 291' :n ~ ,!:Z ~ ... Mer.altti ·111 7 ' ~ u .. 14~"" Marineland. sy6tem WASHINGTON (UPI) BH<h c AR 1100 3~ l"" :w.-VI DivMt 1..m. r s. w,, 2S4'i 25'!1it "" rlM .M 16 11 Jd't. lO XI -,._ Mewbl .6411 n G ""' ""' N+ \Ii · • Mi i p 1.icohl 2k 'i 29 12 1 "" 12 -\'t DrPeoor .22 60 211 2Mtt ZS 2~ ~ """° .97 II 111 30'"'" ~ llM+ ~ Mftl• MKh 2 14\IJ 14\11 1•1111+ v. ------------;;;1;.-----------.. Pha II r tbe t bo•"""*t .. tnUtn ay atdtn 1111 9 31 211" 21 21 DolNMn I• :n 5' ••"• 17\li 171111-.. I Elec:ln • ).I 9Vt 9V. rV:i+ "'MGM Inc 11 7 1"9 17Vt lW. se O mea J'-~ • ae11 How 'u 11 111 33\'i 31\/o 33V.ii ' OOfT\Fd .191> • 4 ,,,.. 1'4 1v. =Inns .. '!! 1f Ut tsv. 2•'11 25 + v. Metro .soa r 10 JM\ 11 1ri•+1"' - a national day of nrotest WASHINGTON (UPI} -A aarnll:o :'° 1 r 1' it 1' v. g:~ft, -'.,' ,•, .2 ,"',~ 2w. 1v.-:t11 ollYSUr ·~.., ,, .. ~ ~42 ... ~.· ~ .. ·~~ M•fEpf 1.12 .. 1100 101\'.l 1011t101'h-"' • IMMEDIATE MAY SPECIALS R19. H1irc.11f •• , •• , •• , , J .50 w/Sh1rnpoo ••••••• , , l .50 Styli Cut •• , • , ••.•••• , . 3:.SO w/Sh1rnpoo • , ••• , . , . 4.10 Ha1r Styl• •• , , , , , , • SI.GO 1i11p R•zor cut. JAii FUSON'$ PAIK LIDO l.Allll SHOP lly "''"'"'"""' 548-1346 lll N"-"•1 •11., N•..,ort •MCfl In "" Pm Llll9 B .... DELIVERY PANTERA by dd'l'oma~o •.• Import~ for Lincoln-Mercury. Italian coach\\•ork crrnt r>d by th e brilliant Ghi11 Studios of Turin. Ford desil-,'11£'d th e 35 1 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four wheel in· dependent i;:uspcnslon and mld·!!hip engine placement. Five speed gear box, Cully synchronized ••• "PBnt em ... Italian for Panther , . , r • Bind .II 1.60 II 43 40 384• 41) IV. Dor "'c . ~ 11'1 21,,.,_ .. _.., ........ ..-,. MetEClf 7.61 .• 110 ,, ,, " + \lo against food prices -is due House labor subcommittee Bffl3 x Pf J 4 60 69¥o '° ~ Jc: P .tt 4 30 13 11 13'6+ 111t Honrw 1.«1 2' 2011ov.10S.\li 11011o+1~ Meteot 3.90 . n10 so .,"' At\4--~ Btn Cp I.IS 7 1]15 21>'ii ~ 26* y, c::r Oflver II G 12Y:I 11~ 1214--Vo Holwtr 1,21 10 9 31'111 32v. 32V.--11 MGIC: In .la 4 1072 61~ S1Vt .mit+l°"' Saturday. But so far it does voted a to 6 Wednesday to a~pof ,,,., . ino ,,..., 32 ll v. Wt'C .10 ' 6 7% 1•1o 11r'I+ v. Hotl:ron Cp 2 1.s2 ·9~ Pi• 9 + "" Mlct!Gs 1.0. 11 • ,,.,. 11v. 1~.,. • t Be ol>f s•;. I Ill Ill I I S DowfCp ,94 12 I .ol(I~ J9'loli ~ f1ti liMl>ll•I ~ff ' llO 11 10 11 + ... Mlc:hSnb I I I 14_.., 14""' 'i" not appear to have the raise the $1.60 h o u r I y B pf 4 30 : : 6 "'h 61 61v-1 R!"_,.c11 1.ao n '46101 1o.c i°'v.t111o HosilCP .060 11 "' 1~ 1s 1.sv.-"" MJc:rod ,.., , ., u\4 121,ti 1 111i+ ,-. "d -• bi" t . · B !>Pl 41/t ?29 37 51 51 ...,.. ... hm wf • • 14 ~ S2 ~ 1 ~Pit liltl .)6 12 6 14"• 14V.. l4V.-"4 Mid CT 96 11 2t 1~ 17\.lo I ~ 1~ w1 esprc-.ru pu 1c suppor won minimum wage to $2.20 m one Btn!Wt!I Inc , 2'll 3v. 3 3 _ ~ o PF 1ncp 12 ~• 6 6-111 • DW111e 60 1 22 ino. 121,.,. 12~+ 'h MklSOU 1.10 11 :s::n mo. tt\4 n"+ ,,. b I st th• •• lllfk.•w Pho 10 31 l:Mlo 11• '"'! 'h Or•wo l'h 9 7 '11:V. '111r'I 274' .. .. F•b!'I 13 ,, ~ 64ti ""-IA MklMto .Ub ' ,, 1• ,l" IS¥-'4 y a mon s meauess year. ar:•nst l.«ta 9 57, :mi 2 v, 30\:o 'h gresllf' 1.«1 ,1• 4 41 "" ~ 41\ti OllMFn .a. 11 11 21YJ ~ 27'~!.,, MldRos1 .10 r n nYJi 1 \.\ ,,.,... Week Th b"ll I Id · th Ballnd5222 46474\~(7'\t y. rnpf2.20 ,, f.t2filo.OV.'2~+•,1oH~PI'~. 161J1J.60V.60\lo YIMIJnLbl211S· 7'~4~oM-~ · e I a so wou raise e 8 ld:'Dtl; • 1 46 221106\'z t91'1 l06 .s rt$t1r Df 2 . . 31 317,\ j1V. 37~1 +'II Kol/IF of w. s ... .,.. 6SYJ 4''1'1 11111 Miiton Br · :u '' 63 ,, uv. 11Yt-~ The Pro'·st l.S be'•g hacked $1 '" an hou' f minimum wage a ol;.i;r.J1 ,a 1 24 ·~ 1111 I'll V. D0rbll f.otb ,. 7 21't' IV. 2H~+ 111 HoutH NLO'G 1.~ ,." '•"• e 30•1r-41""'-14 MlnnM&M I 3S IOA ~ "°"' 10 i·· u:: •u • .w • Dils~ In I I 153 201111, 20\li lllt rttllltCf 1 oM 10 'i\ \~ 10111 OU i.>t .-_.,, o'i ~ V. MlnnPL l.'1 t I 21 21 21 Vo by the National Consumers for agricultural workers to Bloc: R .24 11 21s 12 nv. 11{1; "" °""•'' ", ,-",, lJ 112., ,22~ 21v. 22\'t+ ~ H~~ ·1,,• "10 "',,•, ".,,,.~ "',, •• "•~"-+'~ Mluneci :u 12 31 16'6 \''' 1"' • Blue~•U .• s 1 "' 1~ 1w 19 -"" Ouke D 1 11 Ila 110 _, H ........ ..,, 20'/J ... ~ ... M!u Rl'I ·'° 11 117S IAI! A\ ""' 1 Congres!I, a loose coalition of $1.90 in two years and extend g:1i:i: !'~3 /3 f], m, /1i.r. 1i~t ,,.. 8:3fJ ~= ft i~~1fi,. 1~ 1~1 ~ ~~=~"·'~ 1l 'l ~ 1~ ~ ~ ~~~is 1:n ,z .J i:~ M,,1 ~~ ~ local groups and individuals co.v~rage of t~ law to 1.1 a: C1~1 .' 34f 'rt 1m 1m+ \; = 1~C Jr ,: I~ 14J ll~&i"°+l~ ~wrh T?fl n '°i f? W° 11 i it~ f:~ l~ ~t g'(t \°\1,. ~+~"" active in the meat boycott. m1lllo~ ~omest1c workers and a~ ?:~ 1g ,: i3 ~~ ~+1v. B"!~e' t~ l'6 J 6~ 61~ v. ~w':rc~ :~ ,f 11: = ~ ~~t1~ ~~bD{ , 1H ,.4: ,::: 1f~ ··: THE GROUP Was fo""ed 4.7 m1IJ1on federal, state and = W 1JS t to 27Vr 21 27~ ""OWL pf.In, .• zro fr' i J1 + a H'ldrrnt .06!1 ' 2' 10V. 10 101;.+: 1" Mo1Yb Coro 12 1(7 16'\li 1s .. l~+ 'Ml I I Bormar4 In 17 17 4 J~ 4 + v. DuciUtt 2 . r110 21,. 21 21 +fi -I 1--Mot'll)f 1.11c: . 1 " 34 i. WI' th the heln or several con· ocal government emp oye.s. aost Ed ;·"'"' 11 19 D!'i 33~ ~+ v. Ovcll.llf 2.os \,. z.so ""' v .., 27-14-111 lc" P!Mlrrn c ,. 10 r'\t 10 _ y. MOl'IO!lr•rn 1 71 rt.~ 1 1,~ · ·: r BOllEol II 1.t0115 TU'4 llS , OWnoln .20 1u S6 II . lM I• + \i, dllll'loP 1.76 10 147 2'14 2t 2'l'I. , MonrwA U 12 .51 lt'4 19\t lf'Vo : t bl o. Be Bour111 Ill; f ll 1•1"' !:Mt l4V-. ~ -i! 1(-tdfflB•1 .10 ' 10 14"" ll~i 13';1 Mon1nt 1111 13 US 5.P,\ Sl'I\ 5-0\+ll'o gressmen, no a y l\.C:p. n-• Rf cider Buy 1r•nUAJr 31 14 5'0 12\lo 11141 u . t i; E.ai. Pl .,, ID 10 mt. m\ ""' ldt•I Toy .i ' l:U ~ s ~· Vo Mon• pf 21ti ' 6§' Q ... • jam1n S. Rosenthal (0-N.Y.), R~\m,, w1'~ ~· & ~~ ID? ft~+ * E•SCGC .20b '° • 1~ li111 ~ K: l/~:1;. 1i~ 6 100Z = ~ :4 ·v. =~~ 1~' 1~1 110 if: if.: X\4rl-l who at the time were pushing .LOS ANG.EL~S (AP) -=~ ;,t:{ ~~ :u st ffit ll~ tl~+ tt ~:~f'i it 1f,T = 13l: if":t ti /lh::'w 2:: g 'f ~l = a!±~ r::;..'M J:t V i., 1~l. 11:{1' ft.t U legislation to force a rol lback Ridder Publ 1cat100s Inc. has Brod Htlpf 711• 43 ~~ 56u =..... ~=Ko t11,.m, J9 ~I~ 134 1 +2~ 1~l•I Co 7 4511 11 10'!. 11 + ""or111n JP v w !m'I .. ~ rt 11 of all prices and interest rates. completed acquisition of the l:':k"J, .rs '1• fi ifil ~ v. ~t:+ v. ~~ci:5: ~ J ~ iv. ~"'" ~±11; ~~Pc~": .~ ~ ~ 3:"" 3:-._ v. =:\f"fr S :6 1,'f~ Yr = ~ Tbat legislationwassoundly Witchita , Kan., Eagle and £c* j ll 2~1t ·~ '~~~~~~~ .20 11.o -; \ti fi: ""+'tl:C..::C.1: ·; M = ~ =+-::rr~1.6s\ r ;!:1'~~ Ji• Jm~ ~ defeated in the House. Since Beacon, Bernard H. Ridder Br~,. /.1 ,f I 1nt i i'l""t .,,,,Ecr'"Br 1:6: 16 l:ilYJ . 1=0.. \"" ' 'f •141 2~ mt-~=~ :J l i''& 102""+1 .. then, there has been little con-Jr., company president, ~· lLr.!! :u l\. ~ 22!~ "" flv.+1 \41 E~ C~:SI "511vU' JsU'" ,,tr+i"~ l="~'H!f \! 1« ~~ !~ w~+ v. ~tlir.l 1~ 1r ~l :lmlt ,~vt+l ed Tu sd arwn W .«1 t 1• 2.m. Eltc:t Meme 22 •I! I" ,,._ ~· Df It 411.1t .iOYJ ..,_ MSL 1nc1~ I , ~ 1 Jl• · , gressional interest in _ or nounc e ay. eucw e 1.211 12 n ' ~• 2".t.+1v. El M pf ·~ . r r. r l In cont '° 11 4 ~ *" 38...,t 14 Munford 1& · · Add1't1'on or the Eagle and .,.. Co ... • !"!" ·~ ·1··---. •••• ... ... .. ' • •• • "'"" "l'J. • !! ...... ,.,. "M'"~ '· ! ! • "~ !Ir." rallying point for I~ Ind f 4 ti"' r '4i v.r11.111r I 7 m • "" • l\11, ~· 11. ~~!'It~" M~I I , I lflt ~~t~ Saturday's protest. Beacon brings the number of B~ .~0 ,~,~ 12 1~ 'lfl~ ~~ g ... '"' ilir~~.21 : m W' ~~ ~ u ;;i\g~· jy. • ... ll 114 \,'•+ :~ t:~rr 0 ~ '' u" li lll '· PanPrS In the Ridder group to Bu OVIW 60 ' 11 12~ 12j111 12~!. 'A rntf" El IV. J) * tr~ \4 • -l'll lnN> cooo t 10 t9 .c-. 1(2 4214-2 f.'4/tOrn .7111 l rm 7~ ·M"\/o The CO.'l)Jtion left it Up tO r-~ run~rR wl I l 14 I Vt ll'llo V. tnEI ~f .90 • ~ Ml'll t+:ll'll ntt lnw A0t> t ..,f 14 14 ~ ~ M.,._r1 L .IO 11 l:W. l~ 1 ~ local members to decide wbat -19 daily and 12 Sunday 8~~ ~I l.l'L ,. ,pl ~ ... ~"' fi ... t \1,1, ~=~ ·Jf rl ~'1 6~ tYI '""'±'II nt1reo I .~ 12 .. ,2 QYJi .a -t N t '30 I-111---new spapen! Ridder aald. '" •• !.), • " "" ,.. ",\l · Emhort 1:!d "" n-•1•+ •I"~'~" l:ll J .,.Jm ,1!~... I" .:f,~, -~ ~ '.!!"lilt Jl"t ~ form the protest should take. • B::'~ ;;o 1· ~ 21~ ,r,"Ji 2m · ~~'i:ft: \ ',:'II :i:;·~ .,,,._~•nr:ttw' -~ 1i i°" ll" M4' ll" ~~:;gU. 11 ~ ~ 16v. 1;v.~,« Some said they p I an n e d • n-·· Cht~t Burro"' 80 " ''1"~ 21n1 !2 .... +••• rnDPl8 .50 ~ v.+"' t~~1r 1 ~lb ~" ~ tSi,; fW.+ ~ Nal Air .i 1 I'll lll\ ~ l•" I k · h .:;-•K c;. 8111h UnlVT ·· t'll ti ,._ 14 ITlll Fin Sk I N. Tt?+" \ti ~ 1 'Ind ·· ~ l~ ~ ~.tAw 1 C5b . ~\I jl" ~·1' bop cycoettitn_g; ot ers, 8 grocery 'Special to ~ Daily Pilot ablT 1.11b 11-'fl~ 24YI lf . =:.i ~ 1\ 1~ \1.n l11o11 1114~ '.: J~~ :: ;~ ,. l!tt; JJ~ Nf1c~~ I~ • "1 1111 ~~tt 1 " lllDICO ~ 3 2.6!'1 26.. +Ill nnlt8"9 F 10 f!, W: L\t S'ltit \Ill !!!Mt. i A ;• ' Natc•sti '£a , +1" LOS ANGELES -Herm~ :•om ~~ j u I~ lll -~ ::::\:::if' .. 'I r. 11\l. ll" 1~·~ ... ... ' :.ii? " • "" h tt t ~ ~I g~(:ji 'I ~ +• ' T 11 E DECENTRAIJZED Stein has been named pres1· •M Finene ~~ 11 •Vi ·~ ~+~ ql,111112;:: 11• ,r 2'* ~" _ In"~ 11 :: ,13 I': ~.,, N~rt ':;; • ~ ~ II j l! nature of the new organization dent or Abbey Rents, a na-.,.,~~ fo !J ~ ~ +'Ioli se ::ic ~ 1 l"Ml'll ll\'lt ,::; i.~ lj ~.~ ':~ "' ,vJ;: ~ :nr:~"~· 1f i h" {:!, l.% and the lack of continuing na· tionwlde renter of party and •=\ fit fi 22cf ~ +11t =\'iii -B ·i 11~ 1; '"' jS; l: '1"1 ote': .• :!;1gf" r, 11f"'.!J~ ~t."o'="i: • 1\5 l'll ri-s ~ tional publicity has left the convalescent rquipment and a ~·r~ "'! ·~ L&;°; 14 Ill\ +v. l .., lii 'l J6 m; r J"" ¥ri" ... 13$ 611111 6$ ti"'f2" Ni Home . 1: 1~5 1:""' ~ Impact or the protest doubtful. division of Consolidated Food! :~g 1:ri l ~Wt~: 1=;1~ 0 J21 n111 F ~1~ I bi.,:: 'llm h7: tm 1 tf: g~~~ J 1~ ~ m: .-fa_ There are some organized Corp. "~~""'·" ilj.lr,• ~..!11 jl'l~''"',,..."i f:lo"; -.-~ W~·~c;:,,-"j J ••ll'ilmll~+ efforts under Way, however, Tbe annou~ment W 8 S =~ ... :~:I\ r ~ 2b\~D -·'A EUOll 11.iti 13 al2 J 9'V. tR't d'h+M :b J ,7 4f ~ Im n~ ~~~I ti.=~ l2' \i 56\;:: !!!specially Jn New York City. made Tuesday m Chicago by •rDiffC:.c 1s1 'l" l' i,. _., 1 ~sl;; , .m± ~ IMDlliGf ..S l It 1m i,_ f',_-" ~: 'r.: ' "' ~f:? A group calling lt•elf William Teets, president and ai. ~'I 1 I + El"~m, "ll "Ill~ .1~+·11 ·•'·1'" 1.1~ •"'1• ·ii::·sii!! li ill lm r fm!lli ~~i~~~U:~E ~u:ei:~.olll~r of :~ ~ '.! I • ~ :£~ ~ . : f g ~;rn ii~ ilii~ ~Jii l B It;.§ 1i~7 "~ r~ E~ f:i·:~ Pacific Tea eo. CA&P), the Pe uotes ~~'ti 4 1' ~ ~=::: .. ,U "' -"1=~:' 11 ff 'm IF¥,. "MM' 1 ::f ~ ~ ,~ fi:m i}~ country'• largest aupennarket ' · ! +•• ~·~ I ,g l + • ~"'""' ' " ... !Ill Ct'-• ::m'&' ~~ " i chain 11-'-::: lit I • ',,.,JM, , "" ~ •t ~I ,crll ll m ll~ !!<I =~~ .. .J!f l·~ • ' ll!l ,!!! • · """"" i111r i i ... '" •-• " + u u r.i'<•·i w •• ,. • 'N1:1 :'11 r 11 3;;::r • ~:~~~ri~a:~ .ratlE>Ar ~ ~J-111 ... 11fa ··:_.~ 11 :m '.!; 111·~1~~;?.:.i ~~:1~lif.=~t.:c..i1 · 1~ ~11" ~·mI·i enter stores to determine how in the l1f.Jlijijl11ij :: • l! ~ ~ ft ~ u~ Hi 4;:z ' ~Tio ·" IJ 111 r r r+ "'rrrt!.· iJ clean they are. =.., · · •, , tt •1: It n ti" ""' "" 1"' 'It .,. c .J 10 '11 .,.. ~ ...,. ~.,.. .... 11..,.., l n. 1:t _ ol :In Cl nc "" ., UJ "' A Jo - :r. '1 .... ' I ! P. " jl! i ! I ' . "I " l -ll ! ll I . " • f ... "'1 .• lWJ $. DAllY PILOT 11 • • fl GAILY PILOT F'1d>y, Mq 4, 1973 , Canoe Paddler Determined "Weekead Cale.•• - Some Y achters .Stny Home SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) - Mrs. Shirley Haycock, 40, 1 clhor<ee, bas left !or tile East Coast from wbre 1he plans to poddle h<r 1&-root clDOe to Europe delplte warnlnp from the Cout Guard, Mrs. Haycock said she took her canoe on a shakedown cruise on the Great Salt Lake and it was "in excellent .shape." She and Bob Geedy, 38, an auto mechanic lrom Manti. Utah, are motoring t o Wlhnington, N.C., lrom where they wlJI leave for Lisbon, Portugal. Blackfin; Passage Rematch? • A ~tch of the Transpac yacht race rivalry between Ken DeMeuse's 7 2 ~f oot Blackf1n and Mark Johnsoo's 73-foot Windward Passage loomed this week when rt was reported that Blacklin has already entered the race and. Windward Passagt is expecetd to get her entry fee on the line before the May 7.6 deadline. -Yore than SO entries are olnady ~goed for the 2.22>- mile classic and the limit of 75 is expected to be reached before the deadline, according to Charles Smith. r a c e chairman for the sponsoring Transpacific Yacht. Club. The race will start at I p.m. July 4 from off Point Fermin _ _near the Los Angeles Harbor entrance. In the 1969 race Windward Passage beat Blackin across NEITHER TUE prolonged wait for the canoe, which wu to have been itac!y by mkl- Aj)ril, nor the letters from the Coast Guard a.sklng her to recoosider could -!Wuade her from undertaking her voyage aeross the__Allanth:. Her only worry 1.3 that peo- ple will "get so wrapped up in the l'ldventure aspect of the trip that they forget the real reason for it." Mrs. Haycock said. She is sailing her canoe aC'"nSS the ocean to raise money for senior citizen ceutets in rural Utah. The senior citizen services dlr«lor In Carbon Cl>unty !w named ber canoe "Senior C1tizemi' Ark." The eo..t Guard warned her that the ocean voyage can precipitate "hundreda 0 r manhunt hours at sea." "WE (IR!!E you t o reconsider. You a r e un· qualified. You. vessel is unsuitable for such an un· dertak.ing." the Coast Guard wrote to Mrs. Haycock. The survival training teacher, howe ver. was relentless. She said she won't know whether her craft is unsuitable until she tries it. The canoe wu specially made for the voyage f>y a Salt Lab City canoe eoJbiiony. It is made of fibol' glaa and plastic roam and will be powered by can and 1181b. AFl'ER A sbakedown cruise on the Great Salt Lake, MH.llayCoek saiCI ·in. canoe "performed beautifully" Ind she expects to cross the AUan- tic in-approxiJnately_ 'J:T days. After reaching Lis:bon, Mrs. Haycock wants to see the Mormoo Temple !Jlere and in Switierland and "to td:t my feet in the Alps." Tben she wants to come BOATING ~ at the y~cbpng liaternity will be in Enoenldl this weekend. either . a s parlldpanta to the bil Cinco _de_ b!tOYO dM.!lc orJotlowen of the race. Small boat action on tbe local scene will be Huntington Harbour Yacht Club's Lldo-14 Tournament of Champions Saturday and Sunday_ Here b the Southern home in time to climb Mt. CalilDrnta Yachtioe Assoeia- Rainier in JWle with her two tioo -calendar for th i 1 sons, aged lS and 13. · weekenCI. • ~ NEWPORT OCEAN SAJL. ING ASSOCIATION -211111 annual Newport to El!senada race, Thllrlday, Friday, Satur· ~. -.. Loi Aagtleo-Loq Beaek LlTl'LE SHIPS FLEET - Stay At Home Regatta , PllRF, ·Saturday and Sunday. llUNTINGTON HARBOUR YACHT CLUB Lidc>l4 Tourna- ment . of Champions, Saturday and Sunday. · . SUia Moalea Bay MALIBU YACHT C~UB - Spring Series 4, Pl\IA, ODMH, Sunday. s.. Diego SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB -Lauren Series, Cal·Z9, SUn· llay; HU.song Seri .. , -Ca1·2S, Sunday; Blue Star Serles, Star, s u o day ; InvltaUooal Rt!gatta, 5.5 and &-meter, Bun- day ; Round Series, 110, Sun- day. SOUTHWESTERN YACHT CLUB -Spr~ Trophy Series, 470, Sunday. MIRROR, MIRROR OH ~TRE WALL, n ·o RAS THE LOWEST PRICE or.....--=.::: • MIRRORS BY HAMILTON • 88: •yoUR CHOICE ·Bene to IClf a few thlngo about lb.-l!llnoro belo<e I lor;et. Bamlltou Royaie Sterling . ·SU--lllliOn, .. .., the uatne bao a lot of clau. P!Gttt NJnor, 'the real llletlme --And look at this cbolce ol 1tyle1. / ·' the ~~ ~~e~inr.~1Une 1----<"y"-an ' . to finish with a new record was nullified by a starting line P.oalty. ' Jn the 1971 race Windward Passage was again £irst ~o finish by sue~ a large margin that she saved her time on the remainder of the neet to cap- b.lre overall and Class A han- dicap honors. She also set a new elapsed lime of nine days. nine hours, six minutes and 48 seconds. Four more Newport based boats have entered the ra<:i! since the last tally. Thev are Robert Beauchamp's Colum- bia..S7 Dorothy 0 , Newport llalilor Yacht Club; Bob Grant's 61-foot sloop Robon. NHYC; Al Gasset's 50-foot sloop Warrior, Bahia Corin- thian Yacht Club, and T o m Gretlenberg's Sirocco, Balboa Yacht Club. Boat Mark Attempt Postponed Problems with his 36--foot jet boat has caused John Beau- doin of Paramount to postpone an assault oo the world speed mark of 285.213 miles an hour until this fall. Beaudoin had previously an· MJnced that he would try for the world record later this moqth on Lake Havasu but has postponed the run until September or Octbber. "The boat is taking on water and we are still having a problem with the hydraulic steering," he said. Tbe SS.year-old "driver, who hopes to hit an average of bet- ter than 300 rrilles an hour in two runs -one each way as required by the American Power Boat Association - said he couldn't chance the high speed witlx>ut a perfect boat. Coastal Weather H19ht 1nd morn!nv lciw claud1 wlltl Mry 1....-noon sun1h!n1. Winds liOhl 1f>d \111rl1b11 ~lght becomlJUI wnl to northwe11 10 lo 11 knota. Cult1I lfinlM'f"lll.ll"K S7 to •1. lnlend , '11mper1tur•• SJ to 71. W•l•r lt'mper1- ture "· Sun, Moon. Tides P:a lDAY, Mir' Sun •bft •:111 e.m. Stlt 7:31 p.m. Moon alMI 7:11 1.m. Seh 111:17 p.m. StcO!>d hloh 111:SO p.m. •·• Stcand low 4:l1 p.m. I.I lATU•DAY. MIV S Flrrt high 7:55 1."1. l .• Fl.,! lciw . •:ll1.m. -1.• 5lml'lll l'llOh II : 3' p.m. •.O 5econd low .. . J:ll2 p.m. 2.1 SUNDAY, May' First hlOtl ... l :Olp.m. 3.S First law .• 7:111.m. -1.I Stcond llljll'I • . . . . . . _ 17:3' 1.m. S.S s.concl low ............ •:Jt p.m.. 2.• For Sports The DAILY PILOT'ls the -per !Or sporta along the Orio&• Coast ••. complete statlltJcl on local home and 11r11 pmes, stall coveraie. "-. orelUlfve -OD °'"""' QlUI llJQrll than 111)1 ...,. I o c 1 H y dlslributod -.. • BEVELED MIRROR ROMANO GoltheV-BenL 11lpor clear and llaw1"1. 1/2" bneled and j>ollsbod ..ig... preuecl wood_ back for 1tnagth. 41r'x30". I a lway• lb.ought that wa1 a cheeM. but noth· Ing ch""f about thio. Plate glao1 and eam!d fraiue appoaranc:e looks rich. 33 l/2x38 1/2 Ml.fu. Gold Flnlllh CONTESSA CmTod otyle .,.al, Mldcu Gold Flnloh with hand applied IGble antique toDIDg. KWIKCOVER sm.r PIPER 26c YD. U there la a 1heU Ill L.A. or Orange county that ham't heft conrod with this 1naxay colorful .. u .. tlcldng 11\df, we want to hear from lt. MIRROR TILE CLEAR 47a GOLD YElll SMOEED .A wall. a Hetlon. a.er the mantle, lt nta thlng1 olt pretty w11L (the bill uaually Htl me off).· Th• "nlce colors with the IDClllf lnter- We<n'ing. You could put a bunch up cm4 make a little neighborhood calo. Put notu on II like. "Lonny. 111 your 1hoea," or "Sua~j,r: the milk away ... or dOD'I put cm on It and make the family .......... • , ~:6 WALLPAPER --:-;.!~ I 0 .i TQ 50% OFF Mecmo th-· 1ame palteml ccm be lound Ill the high cla11 lolnt• lor that much more. . You gotta make the comparison or jull lrull 111. {dedlions, decls!oD1). SPAMISH WALLVlllT 19aa A completely c:ompl8te masterpiece. Strong enough to really load thooe old Captain Marvel comlc1 boolr:1 on (or porbapo. a little Dre!Hr or Plato). MtwELL SOPER GLIDE TRAVERSE RODS .Sf zag From 24" to 42", they expand, that'• Dice lau't It. {Peopl1 Ill Pe11111fl•cmla talk tbat way.) With mounting brack- eta. ICNWI, and cord.1. SPARTUS DECORATOR WJlLLCLOCI 7'' The "CounlrJ8ld•" pattern. Electrlo, and with all the charm It 11111 bepo - VANDYKE Spcmdrel llfle owl llhape, Dlcely dotallod. Mldao gold -lllllob with Sable _ . Brown cmtlque toulllg. MOHICO -MADRID L!lke the lamouo 26 1/2 x 31 1/2. with double sets . of hanger. to hang either way. Gothic Arch {or la that the Noerllh arch. woaldn.'t want to start oomelhllla). NUICll gold. llnilh with Sable Deepcarnd . Mecfltemmecm 1tylo (the -Mod la pretty dMp. come to think ol II). · Hcmd rubbed black antique toning, 16"x56''. B.rOWD toning. 16''x56''. CLASSIC BRIK 497 6 SQ. FT. The WCZJ they hllff CNalod the real look of .-.Y brick la -thing. And 11111 a lot 1--ey Ill the long or abort nm. DECORATOR W1IDOW BEADS 147 50 FT. Cut the llrlllg lo the right longlh to inaU au llltereotlng window curtain. Mix or mateh .colorw for mor• charm.. NEWELL CURTIDf RODS 33c The IUpor olldMo that ltlll' maa great hiiclug loU. lor the lddo. Errol Flfllll learud h!>W to f..,.. with tlil1 kind. f"lllmow. SPARTUS BEIWILL CLO« 688 CLASSIC STORE 697 4 SQ. FT. A chdee ol colon ol l1lch real looldl>g otoae. TOD'd -a moD1ter truck to c:arrr the real 1111111 cmd the doctor to cbeck JOii Oltl -""' did the lilting. t)ila II better. . 3'x6' 4'x6' 6'xS' 6'ic6' 1n white, cno~a-l8.'7 do. cmd orCIDIJ•· IO'x6' The llllerwocrring ol the coutra1tlng and matching colon make thn• locd: pretty., IORDOVIH : DECORATOR SUD ES J97 36" In '°""' PN~ fancy colo,.. And why. llhould a lhade lull be plain when It coald be part of the color oc"-e. 3-UEl.I' .ECOIOMY BOOkCISi: 699 . With lumbot.gett!Dg ""high a It to. rd -thla for JOU chlldre1>'1 . lnboiit_., It m1gbt be worth a ' lot -tboto. . • ' . . • •· • RENA ISSANCE FAIRE TAKES VISITORS BACK TO ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND ' --Arts I Dining-Out ··Entertainment DAILY PILOT 23 Friday, May 4; 197' Merrie· Olde England Calls • By CANDACE PEARSON Of 1M Dall\' P'llot Sl11tt Walk under the drooping oak tree bran- ches over the small wooden. bridge and there the gypsies are dancing. Around the bend, a yOlmg woman in E!Uabethan .dress is lightly strumming a guitar and singing in a high, clear voice. Past a series of artists' booths made of eclectic materials and down a slight, dus-- ty gully, the costumed thespians are doing a "new, 25-minute venion" of "Hamlet" on the Drury Creek Stage. Almost every palate can .be satisfied. The variety Tll fOOd Includes !lusslu ~ ancl· Arabic meat pies, Greek ~riel, stp ing barbecued ribs and c ~ I c k e D , ' homemade bread, fresh cheese, can- taloupe and ice cream and chilled fruit. Hypnotic, Dali-like metal sculptures stare ·oot of one tent sales area. Elsewhere are simple garlands, jewelry , bamboo flutes, toys, pottery, leather and other artists' works. · It's the Renaissance Pleasure Faire in Agoura, Los Angeles County, a mixture of the super-commercial and the very real. The faire, held on the Old Paramount Ran c b off 'the Ventura Freeway ~ • &·a st e r weekend and will continue S2iturday and Sundays through Memorial Day. The event is suppooed to'l>i.1 ikrea- tion of the revival of arts and culture that took place in Europe between the 14th and the 17th centuries. Many of the costwne, plays, music, puppet theaters are true to the period, some are just American efforts at im- itation. The air is also filled with the sounds of fo..rced F.nglisb accents. The cover of a foreign accent enables "tradesmen" hawking their wares to say more than they wou.1d normally dare. "Bring a drinking goblet and lead . a life of dabaucbery" and "If it's nuts you're cravin', this is your haven," are two en- treaties you ~ likely to hear. The festival isn't necessarily cheap. Admission for all over 12 years old is $3. 75. Admission for children 12 and under is $1.50. It Js possible to have a good time after ,that without spending any more money. Some ·people bring pic- nic lunches and watch~ touch and feel, but dm;t buy. For others wh> can't resist the tempting foods and olten-eipenslve wares -the cost may go up. But the Elephant and Camel Parade down those lush green hills makes the trip worth the price. 1be trip is worthwhile if ooly to enjoy the ....,_ tryside. To readt the faire, you drive west oo the Ventura Freeway end take lbe Kanan Raad eslt. GYPSY DANCER GIV ES · HER ALL Craftsmen Enjoy Journey In Faire's Time Capsule ' DllJ "" ,.....,-.., Pmtdl O'DIMfll By JAN WORTH Of ... DeHr ........... Artists and craftsmen entering the Renaissance Pleasure Fa.Ire are quick to learn that hot pink, p!Ywood and plas- tics don't go with sixteenth century. That's 11ot all they learn when they climb into the six.-week long time capsule that most of them say is their favorite art show of the year. Craig Canoy of Capistrano Beach and his wife JoAnn spend time before the faire each year researching costume styles and shop design. Last year they found a book on heraldry which helped them determine the design of a banner for their shop, fealuring C8noy's pottery and candlesticks. All participants wear medieval cos- tumes which Canoy said are researched "down lo the buttons" for authentic detail. Visitors to the village are en- couraged to do the same, with ~ponses varying from full regalia to usual 20th century attire . . Jill and Larry Cooper of Laguna Beach also enter the faire each year -Jill with macrame and Larry with slained glass windows. 'This show gets us more excited than the others we enter," Jill said. "There are so many more things going on and so much good food -and the crowds themselves are more enthusastic." The Coopers rate the show one of their most lucrative. They said they find it gives them a chance to widen their market beyond Orange County into Lo!"'Angeles and its nertbem enviroDs. In addition, the Renaissance theme gives Cooper a chance to exhibit biJ older designs for stained glass wlndQws. He ,. said demand is mostly for modem designs in slalned glass ~WI at the Sawdust Festival and the Fe!!lt1val or Arts in Laguna , but be enjoys mating UM! older patterns most. ~acrame is an ancient art which began in Egyptian times to provide slings for meat and wine botUea and other practical uses, JIU eiplained. Cepiltrano Beech P,9tt:r Crei9 Canoy throws pot on wheel, shepin9 design by 11pplyin9 pressure on the wet clay. It developed into decorative uses dur· lng medieval times, when it was used for belts, hatbands, lace trtm for umbrellas and clothes. All work entered in the faire 15 !elected by a jury of craftsworken who judge It on lta period aulhentlclty, lta quality of workmanship, and the spirit and in· volvement of the artist. A total of 150 artists are chosen, with a cor~ of 50 who return year after year. All artists design their own booths, trying to maintain as much authentlcy in mat.erials and colors as they use in their wares. To the canoys, what makes the show so unique Is the actual sense of com· munity that they said develops among the partlclpanta. Most of the craftsmen, musicians and actors camp out either in their booths or on the parking lot nearby over each weekend-: "After the faire closes down each night. the musicians relax and start playing for each other and the rest of us, and we all sit around talking," Canoy said. "It's that real feeling that holds the thing together." Jill makes the C08tumes she and her husband and their five.year-old son wear each year -featuring muslin shirts and knickers for the men and an embroldere<i muslin dress and over . .:.ldrt cinched to the waist for her. Jill relies on muslin for her dress and apron, too, dyed ln earth tones and em· broidered. Her husband wears a muslin shirt and dark pants . covefed with a n1edieval-style smock laced up the side with leather. They both don straw hall. Canoy found out about the Renaissance Faire several years ago when he saw a full-color story about it in Life magazine. "I'd probably do this show even if I didn't make money on it," he said . ''The public comes here not only to buy -they come to experience the total concept of living for one day in the past. "The y leave their problems behind- and we're a part-of that pleasure." CANOY ADDS FINISHING TOUCHES 'r • ' • •• ~ _... " . -.. " . . • \ LAGUNA BEACH CIVIC BALLET: MOLDAVIAN DANCER.S -., . . Ballet . ,, ' , Moldavian folk darree music and "°""' by Spanish com- :! poser Rodrigo and Johann ~ · Se~ian Bach will b e featured in this weekend's dance programs at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Presented by !he Laguna Beach Civic Ballet -0n S~tur· day, llfay 5 at 8;30 p.1n. ::ind Sunday, May 6 at 2:30 p.m. wi ll be "Three Plus Two." a v.·ork choreographed by Lila ZalL artistic director of the company. to n1usic by Bach. · Also included will be l\VO new works -"Para Un Gentil Hombre," set to Rodrigo muslc by young choreog rapher J ill Sweet, and "Moldavian Dances." staged by guest choreographer Victor !\iorcno. Lead dancers arc Caroll Stasncy, Joan Gair. Lisa Robertson. Merilee !\1agnuson. Molly Lynch, !\1 i c h a C' I Hillman, Roger Faubel. Billy Pulliam, Robert Pete!. Steve Smith and Benj amin Sperber. fourth in the company's membership series. the pro- grams arc free to members of the Laguna Beach C i v i c Ballet. Tickets at $3 for adults and $2 for stud1:nt s ant! . childrC'n arc available rrom thC' Bal!cl Cenlcr, 1863 South Coast l·ligh1ray, La g una Beach. 92651. a self -ad- dressed envelope should be enclosed if tickets are to be mailed. 'Borrows' Bach • Radio ·Walking Wild .Side· Some pret17 wild ~· are going on In local rodli> circlet, witness the first an nu 11 "l'.leanna !lmtJln-Jillm and Straw be rry Shortcake Festival" being held by KMPC's Kathy Gori thia Mon- day with 100 winnen and their guests slated to attend the gala event. elleru Stales. P r o 11 fl c 111,mten will ollo bave an opo Jlli<jwllly to w1R big prbeJ ID a grand~ Promotion will 'contirnie tbnlugfi May. - Tuming on . That station also is set to air a 4i,t.hour "Radio Sees TV" special Friday from 10 a.m.""3 p,m., to be C»bosi.cl by Scott ~MaiiChester 1be "Festival" will include a screening or "Sometblng in the Wind," a film in which Deanna Durbin porlrafed a female disc jockey. Shorteake winners are also assured there will be a number of movie greats at the aflair. Maybe Robert Stack? He gave Dean- na her first "movie" kiss. And KFI's Bob Kingaley is spreading his own tlnd of joy. He's offering ~llslenen free packet! of seeds -poppies, nemesia, basil and parsley - to plant "KFI Cou,ntry" in an effort to beautify the vast ter~ ritory reached by the station's 50,000..watt 1-A clear channel signal at night. Kingsley's "KFI Country" (11 p.m.--4 a.m.) reaches one third of the Robert Q. Lewis and Hilly your bag, KF AC will launch a Rose. The show will ''listen" two-day. eight -h our to the earl; days Of televlaloo "Bacbanalia" .. a tribute to amt will lutuno guest •I> Johann Sebostian oo Saturday pearances from many of the lrom·3-7 p.m., and Sunday, 4-8 stars and produclloo -'" p.m. Program D!redor Carl who were the· mid-wives when Prlnci promises lhe special TV wu born. will make B a c b com- KABC Talkradlo's Michael preheosible. and pleasureable Jacboo will JWeSeDt a two-day for everyone, even if up to this mtm..pectal, "Radio Looks at point yoo have ooly dug on the Tele.Woo" lblJ Tur.day and Byrds. (Princl point. out Illa! Wedneeday from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. the special demonstrales the with many of the giant. of the influence Bach had oo today's Industry elJO on band for an -jazz ·and rock groups). in-depth probe at what mates bas been .• regular morning the tube tick today, including feature with listene1> being Dick Cavett. Harry Reasooer, · Marlo Tbomaa, ~y Tomlin, NEW SERIES Aaron Spelling, etc., among Roger Carroll is airing a si x- the ·50 guest. J1cksoo and hiS part series of "Bold Venture" screener [A)Ulse T a m b on e every evening at 7: 15. The have scheduled. syndicated series s t a r s On the other band if Bach is Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall. KMPC is the button to Live Theater J"l)Ch for this trip back into time. Lohman & Barkley's SO's "Sock Hop" this coming Tues-'C k lds' s l t 0 k day will be held ln KFf's asked such "heavy" questions as whether the Mousekfteers were the sons of Mickey Mouse, the stepchildren of Minnie, mice exterminators or none of the above. "Wlne Country Safari" con· eludes the two-part "Involvement" programs on California and imported wines this Sunday from 3-5 p.m., with many experts on the sub- ject to debate the quality of wine! !roln France, Spain, Portug81 -and Ger-many as guests of Producer Reid Leath. Phones will be open for listener questions and com· ments during the second half of the program which will be repeated from ·9-11 p.m. Sun- day night. Jeff Beck, Miles Davis, Poco and Janis Joplin are just a few of the top artists whose music will enhance KNX's John Clark's show on up-coming Wednesday nights from 3-10 p.m., boating quadraphonic sound for those of you who have quad decoders on your FM receivers. UC 0 aps lC ·• Auditorium aod wm culmlnate their nostalgia contest which 1-;::=~==============; Presented at College KLONDIKE ICE ARENA "The 'l1ll'ee Cuckolds" 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Openin_g tonight for two Mesa, w i t h performances weekendS is this slapstick Wednesdays through Sundays. comedy at Golden We s t Curtain 8 p.m.; reservations College in Huntington Beach. 646-1363. Performances Friday ci n d "A Barrel Full of Pennies': Satt¥"days at.8:30 p.m. in the The San Clemente Com ... -~~-!fliiater=-1vl~unlty Theater Wiltpresebr: tickets avail.able at the GWC ~John Patrick comedy next bookstore or at the door. Thursday, with performances "The Gingerbread Lady" May 1().12, 17·19 a nd 20-23 at Neil Simon's only serious the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 play is being pr es en t e d Aven.ida C a br i 11 o , San Fridays and Saturdays Chpnente. Curtain 8 : 3 O ; • P\JlllC Sl(4TING • !Cf HOCl[EV • f lGUllE $1CATING o S•l(O S(.O.ll~G • ,lllV.O.TE • GllOU1 l~Sll\UCllO~S • $1(Al[S -S4lES -ll~Nl4lS -11 [, ... IA~ "'SPf.Cl ... l AlllES TO GllOV1S NOW- OPEN •IH•VAflD<ll fOI (l AllU MOW l l>NG , ....... Of'EH 7 DAYS A WlE• • MOllDAYS 6M '-'-UlAlllHO ... VE . COST" M(Sli • "1("11 ~UHi COi\ST ,lAZ4 '· "40HI !"llll t11-\7't through May 12 at the Costa 1ror~e~se~r~va~t~ion~s~492~-0465~~· --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mesa Civic Playhouse on the II Orange County Fairgrounds at 8:30 p.m. Reservations 834- 5300. "Cheaper By The Dozen" A family comedy ls being perlonned this weekend and next by the Fountain Valley Conununity Theater, 18280 Mt. Baldy Circle, FoUntain Valley. CUrtain. ·7:30 Fridays, Z p.m. 88.turda:Ys and SU' n day· s. "! Reservatiom 968-9663. "The ·Desperate Bour&" The Irvine Community Theater will give two holdover performanees of this supense drama May 11 and 12 at 8:30 p.m. in the UC Irvine Humanities -Playhouse. No performances tonight o r Saturday. lteservations 646- 3178. "lo The Midst Of Ufe" An original musical makes its world premiere nei:t Fri- day at South Coast Repertory, Pat Dunn Gets it Oone ·in At Your Service Sunday, Wednesday and Friday in the rmlt°&s ANIMAL and BUMAN Orange County Wednesday Showtlmes Fairgrounds May 9th 4:30 & '7:30 SPONSORED .BY THE COSTA MESA JAYCEES We Sold Everything In Our Ads At .Cost o. o o For furth er information and . reserv ations, call 494-7271. DlllY l"Hat Stiff l"tltlll DAILY PILOT •nd mad• more money 'then we've ever mada in cur history! In helpin9 President Nixon to held the lina on sky rocketing prices, we decided last week to sell all our adve.rti11d 1pecial1 at co1t! The result1 were fantastic! Thous1nds of cusa tomers came in to 1h1re the speci•ls and then they bought everythin9 in the store! We even 1old I 0 ca1•1 of strawberrie1 with tha long stems on them. What 0110 con wo do but Rll'UT THE POLICY. HILLMAN, ROBERTSON AND FAUS.El PERFORM .. Loggi11s & Messi11a Perfor111 i11 Cou11ty Loggins & Messina, con- ,_ sidered one or the liveliest They cu rrently have tv.·o albums on the musical charts, "Loggins & l\lesSina" and "Siltin' Tn.'' They also have a big single, "Your l\1amma Don't Dance." country.rock acts in tlon , will pe rform the na. in th e Anaheim C.Onvention Center, May 12. Featuring the talented Ken- ny Loggins and J in1 ~les.sina. the six-member group has performed at sellout concerts across the country. Other members or the group include . Larry Sims, Al Garth. l\1erle • Bregante and Jon Clarke. Tickets. priced at $6.50. $5.50 and $150. <ire nov.' on sale at the Convention Center Box Of· fice, open fron1 10 n.m. to 6 p.m, f\1onday through Friday , 800 \V. Katella Ave .. Anaheim. and at all the usual ticket ageoci~. ' ' ' . ' ' .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii SOUTH SEAS .TROPICAL FISH ---VALUABLE COUPON BLUE GOURAMI Rog. 24~ 69c ••· \ \ sppfo,fj hath' SpPDRfl~"- drapery cleaner• \ ~ndaervlc• ' ''World's lorges/ exclu~ve guaranteed drapery serVK::e'' Your draperies made fl ower fresh & color br ight. Coit profess ional dr3 11erv cleanin g procesS i' guar- anteed perfect .••• NO SHRl NKAGE, perfect even hems and fan folding . 100% replacement guarantee if tceeptetl. · 20% DISCOU NT on ca1h & carrv drapery cleaning. Free loan draperies available. Free est ima1es .• , without obligation. ) 54<?·t366 642-02?0 1702 Nlwport Blvd.>. .., , A11711'1S t. r;:o111 Mes• \ FOR ANOTHER ~K HERE ARE 6 SPECIALS AT COST AGAIN! JUST WHAT THEY COSTI JUST WHAT THEY COSTI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • 110 IUNCHIS ; ICEIERG-Mf.ct 0 51.ze • GORGEOUS FRESH • • 2S To 11 9,XACT • LETTUCE • swm PEAS • 11, CARNAnONS • • Up To lll In a lunch • :11 125 . • IOC Hoacl : 5 ..... 100 : • Limit 25 • Limit 5 HNd1 • Limit 5 lch. • • • With This Coupon • With Thl1 Coupon • With Till1 Coupon --. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• JUIT WHAT THIY COSTI JUST WHAT THEY COSTI J••················~·········~ • tRVINI GROWN • CALl•ORNIA • GIANT SIZE • • ASPARAGUS • VALENCIA • GRAPEFRUIT • • : ORANGES • You ShouW ... Tho Sin • : 4 ... 100 ~12u...$1 00 : IOCLoclr : • Lhftlt 4 Lk Limit 12 LIN. • LIMlt ' • • Wtltl This c..,,.. • Wltft Thi• Coupon • • Wtltl This Coupon • ........ , .. -................... . COUPONS DPIRE MAY 9111, 1'n • •Orange Coun~1 MOit Poj)u!ar Produce and Flower House" NIWPORT PRODUCI l'LOWUS IY DhltA ()pee 7 hys • WHk I -. fo I P."" 2616 Now,..t ao.1.,.~ • lllo '""""""' -67M711 '7M711 '7U2tl "3S Y ""1 of Pr,oduc• IOlo1o How" ION OED FltUIT S41 PPflt FOR II YEARS "Whert Qualltfi ii the Ordef' of the Houra'J • • .. St eve Hatakeyama, manager of new Chi.ck-I eri restaurant, 310 E. 17th St., Costa -- • Frldq, May 4, 1973 OAllY ,!LOT 1$ Chick-Teri Brings ~ast · We ~t ., • • Witll Fast Japanese Detigh,tS" Leave ll to the innovative and en-Steve 'l\'t al.so learned Mime inte~sting lerprislng Japanese. They've now arrived racts about his backg\"ouh<t. Starling with on three shores with a brand new food bis original career hopes while s~udylng concept that's wlnning quick American to be a singer in Tokyo.. ravor. A serious automobile accident !II JoUrther, Costa Mesa is the first \Vest · years ago disrupted those studies and en· Coast city to come by one of the opera· dcd hi! plans when be suffered laceration tion's establishments which will soon be of the throat. As a result. be turned his epringing up throughout California and ambitions toward the family business - other Western states. a restaurant. The enterj)rise' ls CJiick·Teri, a fast· Not content \\1ilh following his father's food house specializing ln a limited line footsteps, he set as his goal the founding of Japanese delicacies. Principal menu of a restaurant of his own -one \\'hich offerings are several' chicken items and would use the name of his sister, Mldari complimentary side dishes. Hatakeyama, a famous Japanese folk· Service includes facilities to dine oo the singer. premises or packaging of all selections to So Steve set out to learn the rest&urant take home. business in all particulars. To do so he The bill of fare leads off with teri.yaki traveled to New York, where his brother chicken -in the Corm of the Chick·a·bob had arranged f0r him to meet Yojl or chick~teri. Tabbed at 33 cents each, Nomaguchi, president of Chick-Teri the first provides tender chunks of International (which operates chicken char-broiled with teriyaki sauce, restaurants in Japan, as well as p.m., and until 1 a.m. Satunlay. Coral Reef on Friday and Success .stories are unquestionably the most satisfying to report. Especially \vhen the principals involved also halJpen to bt people who are competent. hard· \YOrklng (and therefore deserving) and lhoroughly likeable. Which is why we take particular dtlight this v.•toek in extending con- gratulations to Claude and Jill Floyd; the genial husband and \vife team operating gracLous Jill ls always on ln the d~ I lng room adding her personal touch to the delails that insure run customer satisfaction. Located al 2645 Harbor Blv.i .. Costa ?.1esa, the Qlral Reef is open nightly for dinner, ~londay lhrough Saturday. from I to 10 p.1n. \'ou can likewise enjoy en- tertainment and dancing in the adjoining lounge. Lunch is served Monday through Fri- da}", from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m .. and tht're's banquet facilities for private parties and group meetj.ngs. Out 'N About NORMAN STANLEY and served on a skewer. while the latter America). nets a plump drumstick char-broiled in He arrived ih June of ,72 with a little the restaurant in conjunction \rith the Jn:::::; Band teriyaki sauce. English and a lot of determination. In a Coral Reef A1otor Hotel in Costa A1esa. Afidltional inenu offerings are tempura short time he proved his abilities so well Claude and J ill have just completed Orange County jazz buffs \\•ill be taking shrimp and vegetables -a jumbo that when Chick· Teri decided to open its their first year at the helm of this dining in their own special kind of "feast" th is shrimp on a bed of deep fried tempura first festaurant on the West Coast, Steve <'Stablishment. During those 12 months weekend. And fron1 .all appearances the vegetables, $5 cents -teri burger was asked to be manager. they elevated the Coral Reef 10 the ranks ''banquet table" \vill offer "+.at's prob- deluxe, 65 cents (with cheese, 75 cents), Although he misses his parents, of the area's top dining attractions. ably the finest repaSt ol the season. a bowl of tender and fluffy fried rice, 30 brother and slstery in Japan, Steve en-It's not an easy task to move as n1nnv TilC fan1ed South Frisco J az•Band will cents. joys his work tremendously and plans to mountain! as they did in pulling off such present an afternoon or traditional jazz. The chick-teri snack, at 97 cents, com· stay in America for a while longer, at a feat. But the vast improvement over Sunday. May 6, starting at I :30 p.m., at bines one ch.ick·leri, one chick·a-bob, and least until he 's gained enough restaurant the previous operation is now strikingly the Los Alamitos American Legion Hall. fried rice. Two chick-a·bobs, one cty.ck· experience to start one of hls own in evid~nt in the quality of both food nnd 3252 Florists (near Katella and Los teri, one shrimp and two mu:ed ·' Japan. service. Alamitos Blvd.). vegetables tempuras, and a bowl of fritd In his free time he likes to visit the Out 'n' abouters who haven't yet avail· This John Rocher production, with an l rice make up the chlck·teri family c6fu. area's restaurants to sample the cooklng ed themselves of an oPPQrtunlty to test admis~ion tab of $2.50 per person, will bo, $1.97. and to see how they operate: He likes Claude's special -prime ribs, au ju,s, feature tho3e "stalwart fellows" Alan -Key to the delicious flavor of all meat American food and also enjoys the Euro-$4,~ (Pau l Bunyan cut,· $6.25.) _ are Crowne, Mike Baird. ·oan Barrett.-Ro~ · at Chick·Teri -we concluded following pean cuisines. missing one of the South Coast's fin est · bie llhodes, Bob Raggio,. Bob Ram and our initial outing to_ the restaurant ope Steve's language limitations present no (and most re~nably priced) restaurant Vince Saunders. -1 ----M-'esa, checks house specialty., teiiyakTChiCl<e-n.---~ night last v:eek -is the distinctive problem to his outgoing personality as.he -orrerings. · During l'he proceedings t~ South . te.ciy.aki :sauce. -Manager -·~ f ~ye-soops -to chat -wtttr;rustomel-rat the -1\nd mudr'"the-same--CBrr1>rsald4'qr F1 lsw-·groap-wiH-ue-iazzitMtte-·-com--~---j Hatakeyarna told us it's an authentic Chick· Teri restaurant. 310 E. 17th St ., some or his other dishes like bacon wrap-positions of Oliver, Armstrong. Morton. Motl1er's Da y S<1nday, M~y 13 Oi nr.;i r Served From I P.M. 37 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CEIITTR Japanese mixture made from a blend of· near Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa. ped ground round, veal Alaska. English Watters, and Murphy, together with tht Oriental herbs, seasonings and spices. · Open seven days a wi!ek, Chick·Teri's filet Of sole and New York cut steak. ballads and dance crazes o( the Roaring ln the Course of conversation with hours of operation are 10:30 a.m. to 10:30 Backing Chlude in the kitchen, ever· 20'.s. p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!~~ mITIJf.I Mexica1i Restaura11t PROUDLY PRESENTS THE . CHAPTER II . For Your Dining And Dancing Pleasure .,. Playlnt Nlthtty Wed. thno SUI. "Finest Afexican Food in Orange Cou1ity" OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS . ~7 W. 19th STRfn COSTA MESA 642-9764 AIMENIAN-MIDDLE EASTllN CUISINE ~ DINNER SPECIALS NIGHTLY _ ·IJloft~WHAtE 873 .. 633 NOW ! NIGHTLY I SINGER · GUITARIST 1 JOHN GLORIA!· Prime Rib • Steak • Lobster The Exciting ~MARK DAVIDSON ~· TRIO Tuesday thru Saturday 2201 E. 111 St., Sonia Ano , ........ 5411tf9. "'"' -.... ,.,, fwyt.) I I I I '~~ I I I I I . SHOP BUFFUMS . NEWPORT SUNDAY 12 TO 5 Luncheon Sunday 12:00 to 3:00 Francl1c1n Sunday SPKl•I, 2.50. Complete luncheOn lncludt1: IOUP or Sllld, tnlret, vtttltblt, cholc. of Potato, hot rolls and butter, coffH'or tea, sherbet. EOIOY your favorite -cocktail. ~complete m1nu selection also available. YOU CAN ALSO ENJOY AN ICE COLD COKE Steak • Lobster • Chicken For Your Dancing Pleasure I I I It 's the real thing . Coke . \l Ar by' s 7942 EDINGER AYE. (Edinger ond llHch) HUNTINGTON BEACH WATCH FOR OUR WEEKLY SPECIALS! I I I ••••• Coupon Good 'Tll Moy 11, Midnight •••• ~ c-o-n .. ......._ "'\U ~W\~~ Still Tops In Hor """'Y I. Origlnolltyl NIGHTLY! Mon. thru Sot. M• Clftt He ....... SCENE Ill T ......... ,. S.ttrrtlq Jolly Ox Huntington Buch (I ltKb S.•~ •f .-S.. Dt.,e fwy. H IHdl tho4.J WAYNE GABRIEL TRIO ,......, ,.,. s..'"' Jolly Ox Mlulon Viejo f Le P• 1"4 eH ... S. .,..._ fwy.) SUNDANCE Titwt*r """ s.t..'9y Jolly Ox Anoh•lm ·--Pwy ... loll .... , I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 3901t ContMl1hwoylcOiOni dol Mar Phon'" 675-0900 NOW OPEN MONDAY 0...-d-'tft' IM lnl..,.ltil'lmllll Tllttd., tllnt llHIO•W ,.,.., 'hi .. l'•rlllnt • • • j . ' • ' -·--------.1!!!-l!llB!!!!!ll!!!! If DAILY PILOT F""7, M11 4, 1973 • . 8rfo_tlf!:rs~.cnar IN THE GJLLERIES/Le<!-gl1£ ~lwWs~Oib, Waterco~r-s 'r:fami}r~1ntter at GOIJ>l!N WEiii' (l()!J.BGE -Llbrlry;J57ff Golden w .. t CROCKEJ\ CITIZEHS BANK -Soulh c.oast Plaza, '390 cloy ibraulll SUnday, 1-6 p.m. 'Ibrologb May . l • ·~-•. ' St., Hunllllg10Cl Belch. J'Jblblt ofc!-nwwklnal desliD Btt.'1<11 St., Costa Mesa. Oils by Joe Barnel lbrough May. NBWP0RT BEACH CITY BALL-Newport Blvd., Newport : '~ mata ewport and cralls lllldenll of. -Scl~lb', .. tllroulb May II. DAILY rum -330 V/. Bay St., c..ta Mesa. Watm:olon Beach. Oil fllUratl ... by Torkem Baleoll of. Colla w.sa. A ~ -.l,Q 1 ~; Moada!"1bureday, l:Jll ..,,.,.10 p.m.; ·Frldly, 7:10 by Soozy West through llay. , grldulle of. lbe'Lebane!e Fine Arts Jmtilute In J!elnll, Lelr • -SOUP • Sunomono Salad .. Shrimp Tempura .. Chicken Terlyakl -Beef Teriyakl .. LobtterYamato. *' Fresh Alparagus • Rice• Tea $5.95 -tor -el 4w-otY-Nowpoot. _,, EARLY RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED Pl.EASE TELEPHONE (714) 644-4811 waaat11 #60 FASHION 'ISIANO. NEWl!ORT CENTER a.m.-6 p.m. and....,., I• p.m. anon and lbe School of Fine Arts In Paris, Balenls was born ORANGE ()()ABT couiiiit -uinry, Z7DI Fairview DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LQAN .: ·:ieo E. 17th SL, cOsta .in_Turkey.~ parents. On uhlbit throusb May u._ ; Road, Costa Mesa. Sludeot'Pbolograpl>y si-oo the aecon4 Me'8. Acrylics by Virginia Kllng, oils and waler<olora by floor. Aj>rtl 17 lbroUib May 17. ~: Moodoy lhnllll!h E. A. Stelly aod oils by Gloria Gurley through May. 'lbunday 7:SO 1.m. to 10 p.m.; ~' 7:30 a.m. to $ p.m.j Salurday and SUnday from )IOOll to 't P-l'L ... DOWNBY SAVINGS AND LOAN -Jleli Mulrlandl Blvd., Mlaloo Viejo. Palnllnp by Lyle Kerr " Newport Beach. Scenel of !he caUlomla and Orqoo ClOIStlines. Open dlll' Ing '"IJu1ar banld"I houri. CHALLIS GAU.ERIES -mo South Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. Gerald F. Brommer, author, lelcher aiid nailooal- ly known walen:olorlsl will display hiJ recent -ks through May 5, dally 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. AV()() SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Brillo! St., Costa Mesa, O!IS by Edith Scott and Ruth Miiier through May. BANK OF OOSTA MESA -Harbor al Baker Stnets, Costa Mesa. Olis ~Y Thelma Mackenzie through May. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Ol\Al'ffiE -!GOO Adams St., Costa Mesa. Oils aod acrylics by Ann Souza throusb May. GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Oils and watercolon by Olga Stearn through May. M&A VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Dr., Cosla Me'8. Oils by Ann Rootiedge through May. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Oils by Dorothy Hailey through May. TRANSAMERICA TITLE CO. -170 East 17th St., Costa ti-fesa. WatercolOn, pencil, scratch board, pen and ink by La· Vergne llosow through May. MARINERS SA VIN GS -ISIS Westolllf Drive, Newport Beach. Arts. custom boat phoU>gnlphy 'by Edgar Gilcbrtll of Lido We. CHAUJS GALLERIES -llliO South Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. Recent watm:o)j)rs by Gerald F. Brommer on view through May 5. Open dally from 11 to 5 p.m. • CAL STATE LONG BEACH' -Galleries A and B. Hours: -Y tbrOllgh Friday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, 1-6 p.m. Potpouni of. 55 black and while prints by four 20th Century anlals: Barladl, ee.-, KokDocilka and ~ will be ohown in Gali«)' B. 'lbe show ls oo loan from lbe Norton Simon Inc. Muoewn of. Art. On Wlibltioo In Gallery A will be 15 graplllc works by Krusbeolck, resident arllsl al CSULB. ; . NEWPORT llAJliloR ART MUSEUM -2211 West Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. Film showings of two Danny Lyon ... ==:::·=· == BRENTWOOD SAVINGS -1840 Adams St., Costa Mesa. Oils and walercolonl by !dJWe Wlnkler through May. OOST A MESA AllT LEAGUE GALLERY -206 W. Wilson St., Colla Mesa. Olis by Geraldine Speheger, folk art In oils by Mand Schoolbal, watm:olora by Edward Johnson and oils by Dr. Fred B. Olds through May. CORONA DEL MAii .LIBRARY -421> Marigold, c.n.u. del Mar. Photography by Mary Alice Kier of Corooa del Mar, . featuring a trip to Greece,. Also, American Fiekl Service dis-. play of Uganda and Thailand. Hours: Monday through Wednesday, 1·9 p.m. and Thursday-Saturday, 1-5 p.m. Through May. films In coojunctioo with an Wlibltion of his photograJ!hs . Screening oo Monday, April 23, at 7 and 9 p.m. Admissioo by donaUoo.. Entrance Gallery: paintings by Jerrold Burcb- \-: ... Have yau heard about · COSTA MESA LIBRARY -566 Center St., Costa Mesa. Oils by Pat Ingram through May. ' t r, • • ' ' t,. " .. ... •• • ,_ .. • " ~· .. ' • . DINNER AT ltm~Mft:fn:m ' • ..... W, 4 P.M.,,. f P.M. ................... JP.M • ____ ... _ .. ___ ,,.,.. __ • RIBS, 2.25 CHICKEN end SPAGHETTI, 2.25 --~gru;lt!IN end RIB, 2.25 .. . . . -··- Sl'AOHETTI and TWO RIBS, 2.;15 PIZZA end SPAGHETTI, 2.25 l'lllA. 1.50 • ... ' . . .. .• CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Olis and acrylics by Lucy Sanford through May. ' ., ... t • I 0 A.M. to 3 P.M. Spotlighting the Unusual In CREPES • OMELmes FISH PLATIER ftMEftA ftDfAUUNr Contlnontal Cuisine Cocktoll1 Sennng · Luncheon and Dinner llondow lhrough SotuNfa~. 10ant-2pnt Closed Sundays We ire loc1t•d next to the M1y Co. in South Co11t Pl111 . JJJJ I. lrlatol Celttl M... 540-3140 MUCKENTHALER CENTER -1201 W. Malvern, Fullerton. Lecocque Retrospective of post-impressionistic paintings booors the Czech landscape artist, Al Lecoque. Hours : Tues- FAMILY MEXICAN RESTAURANT ''OUR-MEALS-:ARL - A TRIP TO MEXICO." FRESH LOCAL LOBSTER Complete Dinner $5.ts BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, r •••.. s.1 . ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR 4 to 7 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. ,_,... Si.ow by Mm.l's. 12:15. 11M1nc11..,. 0,... ~ hyl. 32802 COAST HWY • (II CNwn V•ll•)" P1rlcw1y) LAGUNA NIGUEL 1. ~251 E. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH RESERVATIONS--CALL 673-1505 PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT . • •I':~ ...... iJ. .. ·... . U4i "· .. :Reuben~s 10ant.-2pnt ~~ 1555 .ADAMS AVENUE COST.A .MESA ·nSERVATio~s~CAIJ, 54o·9672 , . ' SINCE THE OLD DAYS 2 for 1 Prime Rib Thru May ·- 1117 WEITCUff. DlllVE llEWPOllT IEACH, CALIF. C191111 $un_clm FOii 11Elf'RYA'10lll WL (714114~ mao, lhrotigb May 13, NEWSPACE -1535B Moorovla St., Newport Beach. A ..... profit coo~ve ·studio, workshop aod gallery exhibiting the works of Ned Evans, Charles Hill, Bruce Richards and Jean St. Pierre, Hours: Wednesday, Friday and Salurday, noon-6 p.m. and 6y appoinlmelll, 1145-7017. Real Cantonese Food eat her• or t1k1 home STAG CHINESfi:ASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORfole 3-9560 . o,., Y"-I.Aro1ntcl Deity 1J·t:i-Ftl. ~-!!!·:!:!__~~ 11,....k,.,, ,~, Dlnntf' Cockl•lls Entwtllrlrrltnt W.HITE HOUSE RESTAURANT Lunch & Dinner Dally GIVE MOM THE BEST SPECIAL MENU MOTHER'S DAY Sunday, May 13 BILL MALDONADO AT THE PIANO BAR 330 SO. COAST HIGHWAY ' LAGUNA BEACH 494-9496 <Mother's 'Day Her Special Day at ~Q/Y~ Champagne HUNT BREAKFAST ~,QO AM·2,QO PM DINNER-MARINE RESTAURANT 4:00 P.M.-tO:OO P.M. 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach (714) 644-1700 ,. MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB Lark Rooni DINNER SPECIALS Cholc• of Soup Df s.1.4 l1k•d Pot•to or Rico Pilof e 6arllc lnM WlDNl$DAY. -Top s;r1o;n Stuk ................ $2.'5 THUllSDAY -Prim• R;b ......................... _ .. _ $3.40 NIDAY~·Shr;mp Stulf•d w;th Cr•b ............ $3.10 SATURDAY -Tournedo• of BHI ...................... $1.15 ' SUNDAY -Louisl•n• Pr•wn• ............................ $3.'5 Or•llfe Co1111t11'• Top Elltert•flltneKt THI TWIN GUITARS taddy aod Hot .. WIDNUDAY THRU SUNDAY 16711 alAHAM AnNUI CAI W-1 HUHTINa-llACH cn41 ........ 11111 lf2·1H4 -............ ~ .. ..... .. .. . .. . .. ' '""' _ ... . . __ ..... . ·----,;;.111 ' -· . '"' . ...... ,_~··~ ...... ""' .. ' .' ...... In tbt finut tr.Jitio• of tbt tr1<1 innlcttptr' 1 «rt. Dory Sings of Hangups ......... • E•ctllt11t Sra/ood with Ocr<m Vi"1D Dmlng SHIP AHOY -, OPIN DAILY-11:10 l17Z7 S. c-t Hwy. (Near Monarch Bay) Sao .. Lav-4H.J900 tAP) -llol)'. Pr<Yln, who bas mad.e IOlll' rtcon! albums ol her own aoog.s over the pa.st three yean, bas conquered ber fear of peali'ormlng 1 n d .J801 E~~T CM.s.T H«:;JI "'-''::ll,~iiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiii:iii, COIOSA l>f.!. MA•, CAl.11'01ll!IA PHos t : (71") 675-1374 F.t Cl111lc Co11tht111t1I Di11in9 + TEMPLE GARDENS QH~S6Re1taura11t RICKSHA COCKTAIL Luncheon & Dinner D•ily 1500 ADAMS l.t H.tMrl COSTA MESA 540-1937 540-1923 AJMI, 11 GardH Gro .. Featuring ExoUc Tropical Drinks 1 HOI llOOIHUIST IAt C ........ I 6l ... 70JO Corona del Mar Fi11e -ltal_lan C11lsi11e Caekiails 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 Ruerv1tio'k' Open Dilly - 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. CLOSED MONDAY NOW APPEARING WALT & PAU.L Wed. thru Sun, SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A..M. to 2 P.M. IANQUIT FACILITIES l17 PAClflC COAST HWY. HUHTIN•TON HACH :lLe ma~1ulf THE EVERYDAY PEOPLE Now F11h1recl IN THI LOUN•I INTIOAINMINT AND DANCIN• Nl•HTLY L1111ch e Ma11 •• Frl •• 01lf HIWPOIT ILYD. AND 17 .. ST. COSTA MBA Far R111rv1tia111 642-8293 1111 ltoth1r1, New Proprietor Futurint Orlftll County'1 Finest Am•ie¥16 Kosher StyC. Food1 CA TlllNG & IAKllY LUNCH I DINNlll ••from II Sllrtd,.·>Clt 10 II Mtlll" ··.-EDNESD4 Y NIGHT NE., YORK~R .. DELI -BUFFET -DA¥·BUF~ET FROM 9 AM ON Qptt1 7 Diy~ i W££k Sun.· Thur1.. 10 A.M.·9 P.M. Fri. & Sit. 10 A.M.·12 A.M. M5 -IHO 421 Ent 1 Jtlt St C1rt1Mni. Ca. --------,,., .. ,,.---1 AlTENT1UN ! ! I 536-2555 I SWAP I I MEETERS I ~~1 1 I r ---..... ___ -~ I I ORANGE DRIVE IN THEATRE I Chin c . . S.A. fwy., a....-& s-CollofO ....... .,._ I /!Jr... • .•• DAILY 11 -~.8!. ,!!~1!~.. J I INVITES*YOU TO I I BAMBOO Lu~~£r<s:~~s 1 I PARK -FREE I TElll&CE COMPLETE DINNERS I I x._ from $2.95 I I _ SUNDAYS AT ·11-,~ Oc;cntal Cocktail Lounge I ANAHEIM STADIUM I I I J ;cntunng Tropical Drink> I 1 I : Ill -ii ~~-1t-', •, R10£situn00 _LE 18uscrREE I PHONE •••• 645·5550 L .... -!H EAST 17TH .... COSTA MESA I I TO FAMILY FUN AND BARGAINS I ~---- - - - -_. I $WAP MIOS EVERY SAT •• $UN •• AM TO 4 PM I SILUIS INFORMATION PH.· 714-551-7336 .. We ore pr••d to offn • dtlklom MlectlM of ......_ -U. blldlm olld • ta um Hw caelM e. ,... w,1.i..r enlef. DIHHllS -l•I .. Jr..a ....... hi, & Hewr CHICKEN • SHRIMP • FISH • RIBS PIZZA-Wide S.locllon of Toppings PICK UP OR HOME DELIVERY Mon. thru S•I. 4 to 9 p.m.-Sund•y 12 to 9 Serving Newport Beach-Costa Mesa 500 W. CoHI Hwy.--642-6700 · L•gun• Buch •nd South Lagun• . IOI GlonMyr• St.-494-8501 W ... 0.,,111 1JO 4.M ... IJ1l O M ... s.t. 11 tll A.M. t. 1 :10 BAN9UET FACILITIES Upto~11:30·•pm S.lurd1y Only S.....,.t •:00-11 MIDM.-..T J 9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-791 I , .. ___________ _ CIMO"' .... (IXC. SUll. • Hol. 12•• II 1•11.ITI 1!00 d :·· 2 11'1Mlly Tl"Mhl "•ROTHER Of' THE WINO" "VANtlHINO WllDERNlllH .'"' Jll gllrl (,., SHOWING NOWI ''Fists of Fury•• Noiooool ~ Plcu•l"-INotlM ln'ASTSOf MY' Producod 1'yRovmond Chow • Sc> ....... Oftd-1'yloWO .l~L. '"j""5-1 :--·A ~···' GtMrol "'°"'" ....... CW. lllUM FOi SIMllE -AllD PGUCll :,-''RED SUN'' ("1 • DAILY PILOl',. TV HIGHLIGHTS ~ KC!:'!' e ..:. KCET Auettoo "73. Chllllle! 28'1 an-~t­ null fUJld.ra!slnJ.:"nt otferi"lnmy lllluaull Items « with auction coollnuinC 'tllrou&h mldnleht-.: l NBC D 8:30 p.m. -"Weird Harolil." lloybood ~ clmatters made fllnOUI by 9ll) Colby's mono-:.: logues are depicted In an anlmaled spedll. -" •• :l Friday Mning Saturday Morning .;• llAY4 llAYI l.<111B88llllllll!lm-l:OIBCIJ •-,..., wa... e a e••tai' " ·-8 CI1Cil ll.l.-(j)W__ :--' .............. 7:• ....,,,, ..... •""-a•--... ,.. 1·--...... b,PI,.. Cl)CI) ......... tDllHM! ICIT ..._ '7J (l)TVIQ 1111• ~ f . • ' • • . • • • • • : ·~ Ctll""" II'• ...... ........... ... -... ""' . --_.,.., ____ ;;..._......,_ wittl .... ,.,.. coatlllllq ta .. { ... ) '4J--W;e "'"" Iii 1114fH1M. ROblM011 .......... tt T ..... II !IN..... 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(M) '4'-«lrli -(I) (I) ... .... .... hi•_,_-· ·<•~~,.:.1>..-... ..,., ... - 111"" lltw MM ~...,. 1 ·-I •• en.tac --•«• I -_....,_ IClt a... 71 OMtiMI ti ll* (IJ llA I I I 11 ·-•L Giil_.._ _ __,., ~-.. ---·· ·--l'-llllllfttlltl It ())........ .. ·""-'-M-111 ... (1) ...... lllJ ''I (t ll:Jt IWr.""'*C II ; -- Giil-..... (I) --· .. D Cil!llll• .... (J)M . 1(1)==· 1::'1::.'tl· ......... ""'··~ (llor)-Mnrlilt ...... =, J1 • • Aftemoon C 1111nr.... lltl ...... "*" 1llC w. UCLA ................. r...i. ..... . u111aa111m1--DCIJ••-D CII Cill!Jliio-.._ ,_ ·-tci-"., ... ., """ ....... ,.. (R) ,........ .,. ... llt1rt ,.,..,, 1---la.h· ..... _ · lllrl...._'7ICl1I 11tt • ..__ '(f)J! tlr ...... Ml4nl&M. -... w.-v,,-.-· I· et tm... 1:11ema1•...,,..,..... t.118 (I) Ill M1or -(C) {j) 1ltt A•a I w T 'i111· (dn) 'U -DMI* ~..,.,. (COii) 'u- [po, San -.......... __ 111 9111-.. ,.. {))l .. --........ .. [ .... (I).,._ ....... . ··---"" ........... , ... -·--, ..... l (J)a-llltJ> I.. _,,_, ..... . ... !"19M1l12 ........ .. (~ ........... 11-• i.--=.i ....: = """"' 1---ma 1 +· .._ l'.M ..... 1111 a•ia GMltl wt ·-i I c -MRl« ... Pfl,_ · -•-1 ... B CII Cil OJ n. INtl "°"' 1:11 ' Timlb ~ ,~ .. °"'' """ M'"' B Thrill lo lht 99th II -• w1t11 '"""' ..,.,.. *'Run 100' lht R-i """'· THE KENTUCKY D£111Y ·-G(()T .... --.... •• c.r . ..,,. "-""'....,.. 1111 TV AUCTION M:TIONl B """°to -* NOW THRU MIDNlGHTI • ...._ ..... USC n. UC1A 1--lltCl--111. 1-11:11 11:::........ =. •Ci51JJ•""-1:11 .. _ la'le IM: '1lw Kii" DMI," ...... II 1 .. "L.Ny l.M. • "l1o "'*"" F -Lio -· .,. ......... w 1•1a•--•111111 ... -.... ..,..,,.. ._Lam ... _ ... _ lllT-'n-• ..... -.w• -411·-111 .. h: 10-.».loalool ""'"'!:" LNV.t:t.I. --.. --1-. ·-·-..,...-!* •1 •••-(Oro) '44 -a,,. Tncr, i CIJ -......... .,...,..,.. 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T... ... ... _ U:OI ---•i:11y~ IZ:Jllll-="ftlloo!•ll¢ r(Jd-* llopr ..... fl) 'SJ "" ... -lluit -.. lll'f ·--...... -witll hoot: ....., ,.,.>,,_...... l"""""""--!:'t.::i"" _._ .... ..,_ ·-"I• • ..... ::. ~ llool -"' -<-> ''2 ....... -. 1·-.. ,..,. -..... -----1:459-tcl -(..,'II --........ _""'"" --............. .., .. _ ....... 1 -~· ,,. -.-·111---. -• ' - • • • .. •·--:.:. .;•· .• , .. ., .... ...., , .. -~ . . ,, .... ·- OAILY PILOT Fri~, M•1 4, 197) ' Crafts .f'tair Saturday OCC Off-ers· Art in Action An Arts and Crafts t'•l r sponsored by Orange Coasl College and the Costa A1esa Art League. "·ill take 1>lace Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the OCC Student Center. The theme for the fair is .. Art in Action." Lecture-demonst rations and guest lecturers include: "fiber Con- cepts," \vith Helen Rj chards of th e llelen Richards Galleri es; "Art Gal- leries and Aquarelle," ,~·ith water co lorist Claire Jones: "Ye s You Can," featuring free lance crafts1nan Donn a ~~rie be rtshauser; "The Body Adorn- able," with goldsmith Elaine Schlup: and .. From Rembrandt to Rouschen- burg," featuring Doris Berry of the l'iggy Bank. Exhibits a nd displ ays \\'ill cover oil pai nting; \Vatercolors; fra1n· ing; \veaving; stitchery; n1acrame; jewelry making; strained glass, p~int· n1aking; sc ul pture; \Yoodcrafl; rugmaking; leat herwork; cand lemak1n g; needlepoint; papier-mache and tole painting. More than 25 exhibitors will take part in lhe fa ir. Floren Saddlehack Gallery Site Of One-woman Show Presents Big Show A one woman show of the mountain, meadow a n d 'desertscapes of Kathi Hilton The fifth annual Myron will be featured in the Western Floren Extravaganza comes to Art Gallery of the Santa Ana The Forum in Inglewood for Saddleback Inn S u n d a y through June 6. just one performance at 1 Miss Hilton. daughter of p.m. on Sooday. John Hilton, recognized as one The extravaganza includes of America's g reat es t the entire Lawrence Welk landscape art,ists, will exhibit Orchestra. all of the Welk 25 paintings, many of which television , stars, and the will be available for purchase. honored guest will be the A feature of the exhibit. ac· · cording to Mrs. Betty Miller, maestro himself, Lawrence \Vestern ATt Gallery director, Welk. will ' be two personal ap-- WHAT TO DO Uni High Returns to-R-enai.ssance • AlAY 5 FESTIVE FAIR~ -The EliutbethlU' Age comes lo Univer· •ill' High-School S.tur<lay..Jrom 3 th 8 p.m. ~ tbe student body presents its third annual Renaissance Faire on the school grounds. Continuous entertainment, food , drink, arts and crafts. games and raffles will all ta ke place. Prizes will be given for the best homemade costume. Eutertainment will be provided by Hal O'.Neal's School of &Het, Shake- spearan ltepertory Company, UC lrvlne Tov:er ~Jusic, belly dancers, palm readings and magic show. l\1AY 3-4 DANCE CONCERT -Dances of many countries wi ll be per- forn1ed by 22 Santa Ana College students on 'fhursday and Friday at 8:30 p.m. in Phillips Hall Theat campus. 'fhe public is invited to attend. Admission is $1 . APRIL 21 -l\IAY %5 LECTURE SERIES -"Here and There" with Lloyd Ma n Smith, naturalist, science professor. world traveler and photographer. will bring a series of Friday lectures to Orange Coast College Science Halt from 7-9 p.m. Tongiht's lecture, open to the public at no charge is on Asia and the Far East. l\JA Y 5 CRUISE OVER CALIFORNIA -You can ~over 1500 miles in two states and take the routes of Cabrillo. Sir Francis Drake and Father Serra by joining the second annual l\1u- seum Al liance Fly-Over on Saturday, l\1ay 5. A plane, spo n- sored by the Los Angeles l\·luseum of Natural Historv. takes you along the San Andreas fault as far north as Oregon's Crater Lake. The fOJ!r hour trip costs $60. 1711 ) 749-3U3L ~1AY4·5 FOil ·J\-JA1'UltE AUDIENCES -Golden \Vest College pre· scnts "The Three Cuckol ds," a commcdia del arte for adul ts. on Friday and Sa turday <1t 8:JO p.n1. in the Golde n \Vest Community '!'heater. c:eneral admission is $1.50 and fiO cents \\'il h Associated Student Card. l\1AY5·6 DltA.l'.llA "·oRKSJIOP -'"Feiffcr's People" b.v Jules ,.~eiffer. sponsored by School of Fine Arts. will be presented in the Village Studio Theatre of l'C Irvine at 8 p.m. Admission 50 cents. l\IAY 7 AWARDS DINNER -UCI Friends of the Library Annu al Awards Dinner honoring Orange County authors. "'ill be held Mo nday al Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. 1601 Bayside Driye. Corona del J\lar. Socia.I hour· at 6:30 p.m., dinner ::it 7:30 p.m. For reservations, call 833-5300. . \1AY II 60s" in the SOcla l Science llall on UC Irvine can1pus a t 2 p.m. -• _· TlffiO_UGIJ llt\\'.J%. STORY THEATRE -Join in the "Ad,ventur~ in the Taper," a program for young theatregoers featuring Center Theatre Group's on fo,rldays and Saturdays at the Mark Taper Forum, 135 N. Grand Ave .. Los Angeles, Curtain times are 10 a .m. and 11:30 a.m. dramatizing international folk tales with mu- s ic, slnging and narrative story telling. Tickets $3 for adults, $1.50 under 16. MAY LI SYl\,1POSIUM -Bionergetic responses between man and plant forms will be one of lbe tQPics at a day-long sympo- sium on "Science and Psi" at Golden West College's pavilion, beginning at 9 a:m. Dr. Marcel Vogel, research chemist with IBM 's Los Gatos laboratory, ,wiU report on his investigation into plant sensitivity which has led to startling discoveries. Registration for the symposium is $10, payable to the college at 15744 Golden \Vest St., lluntington Beach. MAY 19 CO.\"CEf\T -Karen and Richard...Carpenter will appear in concert in Bridges Auditorium, ctarc1nont College, at 7:30 p.n1. 1Ylay 19. Tickets available at !he usual ticket agencies. Inronnation (714) 626--4523. . MAY 23 LIA·UTED ENGAGE~tENT -Marcel Marceau, acko\vledg- ed as the \VOrld's greatest interpreter of pantomime, wilt return lo th e Shubert 1'heatre, Century €ity. for an 11--<tcJy ('ll~agement. Performances are Tuesday through Sunday with 1na tinces on Saturday and Sunday. For ticket informa- tion. ca ll (213) 535-9000. [l~d\\ig. He loved women. He loved men. He lived as controversially as he llJ)ed. But he did not care what the . - '********* DtfYl·IN su,11 swu wrrs1 fljllllfi(fltl~ "'"*'°'' '..,,r &U MY! IU.fO-•,AL Al lll.llOl li'l'D· 5~~ Do•~o l"••· ~I l•OO~~ .... ! I So ) 962·2•81 KARATE/ICU~fU! FISTS Of FURY 111 klll t OWUI~ RED SUN (PGJ I An added feature will be a pearances by Miss Hilton . choral grollp or over twelve· Miss Hilton will appear at hundred voices made up from--the exhibit .from 11:30 a.m. to high· school students and 2:30 p.m. Monday and 6 to 8 churches from throughout the · p.rp. Tuesday. She a~ will ·--;tatC";-~albmder the directiQil~ ~em~lra.te --Hiler! technlQ!!ihoue~. - of Myron J<,Joren. · The senior 1 ton.-w .,~s LECfUIJE --Jan~es \\lilson. chairman. depc1rtme11! of gov· crn.rnenl. Ho1vard University. ru1d an aurhority on police and '--'~r -urban--probtcmo::-\'l.11tl~pc8k· on-'"What \Vent \Vrong.·.With the ~ world thought. He was the world . From LlichinoYIF::onti,the-, __ director of "The Dam-ned..,,-----~, ' Myron Floren, the fast-had m~re t~n 100 on~ man fi ngered acconlionist par ex-show~, including many in New WESTERN ARTIST cellence, celebrating his 23rd Yorks Grand Ce_ntral ~rt Kathi Hilton year with the Lawrence Welk Gallery, has pra1~ h 1 s ---------- organization, travels 150,000 to d~u_ghter by say1~ 1t 1~ o.rten 200,000 mJ1es yearly playing d1ff1cult to tell their paintings special engagements away apart. from the Welk orehestra, Both wor.k entirely with a returning each week to palette ~ife, using _ oils in a assume his job as Welk's right wax me~hum to ga 1~ ~ext~re ann for the television show. perspective ror realistic 1m- All proceeds from th.ls Ex-presS"ions of depth. travagan.ia will go to benefit Miss Hilton now resides in the Post-Coronary Care Unit Idaho. Some of her new at Centinela Valley C.om-paintings depict the nearby munity Hospital in Inglewood, Grand Teton mountains. and is presented under the Hours of the Western Art auspices of the hospital's Gallery at East First .Street Women's Auxiliary. and the Santa Ana freeway Tickets are on sale et The are 11 :30 a.m.-10 p.m. Tues- Forum, all mutual agencies, day through Friday, J..11 p.m. or through the Women's Aux· Saturday 5-9 p.m. Sunday and lliary at 673-4660, Ext. 201 . 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Monday. • -....cv<1"' " .. ' ........ ~ .. ,,,,.,. rranm zemretJJ ltl~ l ilt~! I HM ~IN( I ··~f)l>llU ~ ~.(H !" ·ero"J:Her sun sas-rer Moon· . . . . Singers Offer Party "The Parly," featuring the musical talents of l h e Breckenridge Singers, v.·ill be prtsented on Sunday, May 6. and May 13 at 7:30 p.m. al the Muckenthaler Cultural Center, 1201 W. Malvern. Fullerton. Under the direction of Stan B r .e ck en r id g c. I he Breckenridge Singers · are composed · of 14 si n g er s between the ages of 17 to 25. SHOWING NOW! CO·HIT "THE SECRETARY",., Everything You've Ever Heard About CHEERLEADERS Comes True SEE THEM 00 IT IN ... . -:;;,,. '"""'-::----::a ·"' ~· ,/'--.:::;.... Produced cy P\Ul. Gl.ICl<LER o1llll RICHARO l.ERNE~·O.r&eted D1 PALA..GUO(LER "c1iintllttd""ii~c}IE~l;.r1Q_Ntilus~ GIVE us AN \..X) CO-H IT AT BOTH THEATRES "THE SEDUCTION OF INGA" BOTH FEATURES RAT.ED X G•rdtn Grav•· 5J7.&€:::C. . ~.'iimvE 1rJ 2 · ~nta Ana Frwy. "'•'Chapma n Or~nge e JSf.7Ql1 MON. THi U. 'RI. 7:30 SAT. & SUN. 7 P.M. 2nd FEATURE "GRIMM 'S FAIRY TAUS" and"Death In Venic~ , ~ Once again your eyes will be ~ YINCfHI 'IKI THEATRE OF BLOOD !I) DAUGHTERS Of SATAN Ill opened. i f, ..... y """' Cl•apmM• ~.e. 5~8-7022 (THE MAD KING OF BAVARIA.} EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT SHOWING NOW! IT411 O'NUI 1 16CCIJl1M MOO THIEF WHO CAME TO DINNER fl"G) RAGF. ~l'OJ f "'O'I .' :;lf'!"N o t "I 1 WllllNOOI< --·----------------------- People ne!!d ii... • "in lheyeor 2022. fl.o'ETRCX:Ol..Cfl • P.ANAVISlll>B fTii'il CHARLTON HESTON ~J EDWARD G. ROBI NSON e 2nd TOP ATTRACTION e : o••" HaAT"a •••• ! •••• ····3102 •••• ""•90• •T •o••• c.os•• •••• .. _ ... ' ...... ,. ___ ... .J.••. EXCLUSIVE RUN SHOWl~G 'E'DWARDS' THEATRES NOW. . _ 'They've come a long way si nce that summer of 142 ! 0J.a\ .. 11q ... jg! 0 ... -... ~~ JULIE ANOREWS . CHRI STOPHER PLUMMER e PHfOIMANCE SCHEDULE e MONDAY thru FRIDAY -7:00 & 10:00 P.M. SATURDAY -SUNDAY -HOLIDAYS 14-7-10 SPECIAL WE~NESOAY MATINEE -2:00 P.M. • 2nd TOP C C Style, Class, Grace. MAGGIE SMITH 'Tr.web With rTly Aunt' ~--.. -- ""'"" -. · ~·····~ EDWARDS < :1-.;r \1 \ CE'>TE R HA ~BO R A' A0Al.A ~ \..Q~T A Mf ~A • 9794141 LAST Wl.lK • INDS TUl5. ~~ 8~~ _ .......... in ........ ·-·~ ........... i "Pete•ft'Tillie" -·All.._, .... .-~-··· • .._.Pit...,.·~·,,__ .. Pj!J Piii$ • RVAN O'NEAL JACOUELINE BISSET "THE TlllEF WHO CAME TO DINNER" (POI ALSO CALL 19J.7.S11 1.Alll ll:N:t: CM.IVll·ll MICl~i\t'.I . CAINE :r: -~ '-'" lotol•Co. l',c;st llllllol lltd< ..... ~ ....... .:i~nost ~OCOLCllt ' ~_,, .. • • STAIS: Garv Grimes J erry Houser Oliver Conant Clas or44 2ncl Hft "THE GANG wHo coucow·r SHOOT STRAIGHT'' l!DWARDS HARHORcl.'l':.2 l&AHOll kYO. At W1UOfil IT, COllA !It.IA ·M•·lm"I l .... l(Nflt OF Ult eMIO • • Rot I - " . ' -,. ' • , Jim .de Priest and Mimi Smith perform in the South Coad Repertory production of 'In the Midst of Life' NAT I 0 N'A I GINERAL THEATRES OW PLAYING RISIRVID SEATS On Sale Dai~ 12 'Iii I MARLON BRANDO ~·ltL ' 'j>8i1s 'Ml'.DAYS 6:11S U.T. & SUN. 12:45 "CHIER LEADERS" "SEDUCTION Of INGA" BOTH fU.TUllS lATlD IX) ~ I'; ' I" ' I ~Life' The last time Sooth Coast Repertory opened an original musical, it was greet~ With a standing, cheering ovation, established new longevity and attendance records at the Costa Mesa theater -and Orange County as well -and evolved into a nationally tour- ing show which wound up, somewhat the worse for wear, on Broadway. Now, from the J)eople' wlio brought you "Mother Earth," comes a brand-new creation already touted as standing superim: to i1S "predeceSS<r It's called "In the Midst of Life:" 3nd it opens next Fri- day at SCR. This time around, there are more hands involved in the creation -Ron 'Ibronson, who wrote the book and lyrics for "Mother Earth'' and \also directed, has turned the stag- ing chores ovei to Martin Benson; Toni Shearer h.as written OD1y part of tbe music, the ba!IOCO being supplied by Bryant McKenlan. The show wlll agahl be backed with visual projections by Toni's husband, Ken Shearer. THE THEME d the show is" the life and work!: of Ambrose Bierce, a colorful au~ soldier-journalist who cafved ou t his niche in history between the Civil War, in which he was wounded three times. and the Mexican War, to which he went off in his 70s never to be heard from again. Bierce, Benson points out, was noted for many fictional works -"An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bri~e," "The . . .. . ... "The Best Comes Again" In Bia.zing Color! • On the Big Screen! SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRE I Sin Olttt hit. II lrl1lol St .. Cot!• Mesa. Ph, $46-2111 SEAL BEACH BAY THEATRE Miii! II., 11 l"aclllc (oltl Hwy., I'll!. 4ll.fSS1 SpK. i"fllllftlllt -Mml1tl0n-S2.SO-7:>1 11111t:JI11.m. FROM Fash ion Island Newport Beach Friday, May 4, 1973 DAILY PILOT q UCI Frienas of . Library Honoring County Authors ' • • • Orange County authors will be honored f\1ondllY 1A·hen the aMual Book nnd Author Awards Diru1er sponsored by the UC Irvine Friends of lhe Library takes place. ' ' n1emorallng their achieve· r-.1 iss Zada T:lylor of Ne"l!l!I" : menl. Beach. Patron reception • Premieres at SCR -.. The eighth annual event for those authors who live In the county will begin at 6:30 p.n1 . in the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, Newport -Beach. Attending the dinner will be the 35 authors who have had books submitted for the judg- ing. The winnC'rs "'ill be an· nounced after dinner and "'iii receive p I a q u c s com- Award-winning authors will chairn1cn are Mmes . o..it · be invited to appear on n tleK:llb of Newport Beach ... • special progrnm to be 1.aped at Laurenct K. Reynolds d ; KOCE and shown both oo Laguna B.:!ach. Orange County 's only -- television stat ion and ~---------~ cooperating cablevision sta· lions later in the month. Those up for nomiiiation met with patrons at a reception. in the home of Chaneellor and Mrs. 08Iliel Aldrich. Jr. of Newport Beach. Chair1nan or the dinner is r-.·lrs. Ri chard Poueher of Tuslin. avlards chainnan is MOVIE RATINGS mR PARENTS Al'tlJ 'VOUNO PEOPLE Ji..~ .i -'"''"9'" lo""- _..i1 •booll ,,.. -°""II' °' -·-'°'., ..... .,,,....,~ Grateful Dead Launche s Amphitheater's Season -------~------------ The popular San Francisco rock b.and, The Grateful Dead. \Vilt launch a summer sea59n of "superstars," June 29-Jul y l at Universal Studios' outdoor Concert.goers \\'1Jl find an @•o 0,.1 u1101-11 •01111•10 unobstructed view of the stage (•'I' 11111111111v ~•rt (no seal is more than 140 fei't .n,wt1111 11"111J from center stage. To insure • •• ••••••••••••••••••••• •••• the concert public the finest '"D M -!W .. ~'""""'' acoustical quality. a special ........ ca.- Am hl h t I h -......... -..... ~ ........ - p t ea re. environmental wal as been ':=======-==~ Devil's Dictlonary," .,, The Fantastic Fables" -but his own life far outslMXle anything he ever wrote. Following the Civil War, he set out alone through Indian country, win- ding up in San Francisco where he became the top journalist for the San Frad- cisco Examiner under William Randolph Hearst TOM TITUS Following n1e G r a t e r t.L I constructed to ~ject the _ -----. Oead in concert are: John ~otind spectacular with.in the Denver, July 9-15: Henry Man-amphitheatre w at the A FAMILY TREAT! same time sound-proofing the cini and Johnny Mathis, July outside environment. T•H 'WJ r..10ST POPULAR Wllllt I• r flltv'S EVER MAC'l Intermission ~29; Tom Jones, July »Aug. 'f II d i all certs 4; Harry Belafonte, Aug. ~12 ; "1 or ers or con · ''Biers:e actually was the model for the Joseph Cotten indeed, be no mean achieve- ment. character in 'Citizeri Kane.' .. '!I DON'T know hov; popular Benson points out. "He and it will be with our audiences,'' ·H~arst, who inspired the Thronson says. "li'.s more Orson Welles cha:r.!1¢.er. cla~h-· ·mature than .:MotJteJ' Ea,rth_' ea on a great ·nlany subj"octs. and the music is very In fact , Bierce virt"ally ~p-sophisticated, rich and 'ex- ped Hearst from becoming citing. Tonils music is the best governor of California by she's ever written, and the The Carpenters, Aug. 13-19; may now be obtained by send- w A 20-26 , 1 h 1-a check and 1 self·ad-ar, ug. ; " d"'" .... d I Dimension, Sept. ~9 and 1'~ stampe tnve ope to: Theater Guild. He never found Engelbert Humperdinck, Sept. The Amphltbe1tre, P .O. Box the time to see it in pro-17-Z3. Additional concerts will 8679, Unlverul City. 91608. duction, however, -since the be announced'. . There will be a special dis: C'ro playing dates all ~n~lic-Enlarged to 5,200 sea.ts, the count for subscribers to seven ted with rehearsals for Midst amphitheatre ·ma de its or more concerts. · oC l.-ife." · theatrical debut last season 'rickets for individuijl con· . ;WW''~--HH.· .. .A JJtli 6.s.l ~~Jock. -o.~a. "Jesus -~ ~rt§ .Will ~ m)_-mle;J.4[1~ J:_ at Bierce musical will strike the .,. Q\rilt Su~r . . ~ the amphitheatre box-office. · just -oU .the H'oll ywood same responsive chord in its audience as ·~other Earth'\. Andy Stars Freeway at Lankershlm Blvd., and all agencies. publ~shing a J>OOTl derogatory other music, by McKernan, is did two years ,.ago only time to the publisher.'' scmewhat similar. The two will tell. The Iattet centered HOLLYWOOD UPI) styles blend well together." around ecology, which was an Andy Grifffilb will star with For information regarding special discounts for group and theatre parties call (213 ) 980-9343 or 980-9345. SOUTH COAST Repertory's production of the Bierce story, with "Mother Earth" alumnus Michael Douglass playing the title role, will be, in Benson 's words, a "musical essay - half staged, half sung, a very sophisticated form. It follows Bierce's life with excerpts from his works and words from Bierce himself.'' Thronson still carries some "in" subject in 1971 -but few William Shatner, Ruth Rorrian visible emotional scars from people arc-on intimate terms, and Julie Adams on A"SC 's ----:::;;;;;;f;;;:-- his travails with "Mothec historically,witb<Bierce. television movie, "Go Ask Putting the show togelher has been no easy task, the director says, ainc&iour of the actors in the cast, including Douglass, were performing in the previous SCR .show, "The T e mp est,'• until the Shakespearean play closed last night. Thus. rehearsals for "In the Midst of Life" Earth" after the production "Whatever hap p ens , ' • Allee." left Costa Mesa for the "big Thronson ~ises,1 "the abowi-C:.----..,---.,.---:: time.'' He refers to those will Uve OI"' die ·on its own years as "a bitter, painful ex-merits, not because someone perience in the camps of tampered with the original enemies." idea. Right now it's all hap- "I've learned a lot over the pening just the way I wanted past two years, and I'll never it to happen." again allow myself to be put inl--:==---=======- a position where I'm forced to compromise one of m y show&," he declares. "l'm really pleased to be back at SCR. They haven't changed a note of music or a line of dialogue without my permission.'' All Dllnt" SMw "CKARLl lE AKO TK£ ANCEL" .,... H(INDERS:LLA" OFOUNIAIN VAlll Y ., .. Joell i..1,llt'tOfl -AND- Ice skating everyday. '"~"'~D ._..,,;on;;.-;,;~. 0.1,p,;;c.1• have been confined to Monday THRONSON, WHO says he's nights and weekends. MESA YllDI enjoying tbe'luxury of just be-SHOPP1Nel CINT'I MatinHS Sat. & Sun. "LAST OF THE RED HOT LOVERS" Yet optimism and en-ing the abthor and Jetting Mar-"SAVE THE TlffR" loth Color IRI 2701 Harbor 81wd .at Ad•rrll thusiasm abounds, with both tin direct the show," has even "LADY s1NGS THE ILUES" t•> Co,ta M•••· Calif. 'i2626 SURF THEA JR£ director Benson and author found time to write an original /;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:I J~T~e~I~. ~1~7~1~4~1~9~7~9~·~8~8~8~D~~=:=;:H~u~n~t.~8ch~~· ~S~J6.~9~39~6~d Thronson predicting that the musical, "Due to Lack of new show will be better than Interest, Tomorrow Has Been - - - "Mother Earth"" This would, canceled," ror the Children's ADVENTU RE AND BEAUTY ~=-=~~= 1· -... t~ .. _ • ..,lltl.-. STADIUM . l ;~·. .. ~·in.:r:t' l tl'•:irwl -.. ,. ·-"'' STADIUM ·!::: ..... , ... y,_ ''"l ,•. "Sounder'' AND "Finian's Rainbow" fGJ • "Pick-up On 101" Ill "Charlie One Eye" PLUS "Sterile Cuckoo" CPG) ''Tiie Getaway" I PG l ... "Lady Sl"IJS 'Ille llHs" !R) "Fist• Of Fury" IR l ... "Reel Sun" ~W'i EAS OD JOE KIDD 0 TECHN(,()l()R..tPANA'o'ISOl8 ~ A Un·~Wi/l,'a·1~1~ Comp.5111 PrO'JOO>Ol'I , Eve. Show St1rt1 7 p.m. Contlnuou1 Show Sund11y from 2 PALOltAR PICTURES LVl'F.R.1'ATIOSAL ~ LAURENCE OLIVIER MICHAEL CAIN in JOSEPH J. MANKIEWICZ f'ilm. of .............. ·-i ,, <rhinlcolthe CONT. SAT • .... SUN. from 2 ,,,,met crime""" " "Then go one step further Also This Suspence Thriller CLINT EASTWOOD !R) "PLAY MISTY FOR ME" 11 i11'itli ::~::: Tfitli iMd NIWPOIT 148·1552 WID .• 1 '·"'· STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR • . . . • ~··· • • / , , .. • . I ' Spring Has Sprung, . The Grass Ha Rls, Atlas Is Where The ·~ Savings Isl NEW 1973 DUSTER COUPE ~ ·.· .. ===~ LUXURIOUSLY EQUIPPED INCLUDING AIR CONDITIONING No. CH4l-TJC.f4l8SO ·PLENTY OF EXTRAS INCLUDING AIR CONDITIONING Ser. No. PP4 l ·MlD-169918 DISCOUNT Off Suggested Retail Price SPRING-TIME USED CAR VALUES! '72 CHRYSLER NEW YOllER 4' DR. H.T, Vt, llltomillk, r•Cllo, ~t.,., pow.,. 11Mrill9- br•kn-Mlh, W5W, vinyl top, (USESG) $3295 ' 1 COUGAR XR7 .2 DOOi HARDTOP VI, ilVIOmilllc, rildto, ltelttr ,.Wtr ll .... in9 & b••kH, ;1lr eond., blKktl 11111, cGMOt1, IMlll1r lnltr., Vlnyl top. CWXH141) $1295 '68 DODGE COUPI YI. automatic, racllO, ,....,,, llOWtr SIMri"I, po'fller br••es. WSW, ¥1nyl ,.,, 1lr con.:11· tloning, (WPK412) • $1095 '71 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 4 .DR. H.T. Vt, •vtom•llc, radio, llMtff, pew1r llurint. power br•kn, WSW, •Ir eonctltlonln9, vinyl tGp. (~701R) $1895 '70 PLYMOUTH IELYEDERE WAGON VI, f,11!om111c, rtCllo, lltf,1.,., pcow.,. flHrlng, wnllt 1ld1 ••H tlrts, root rKk. {MU.SJ) $1395 '67 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPRIMI 20r. H.T. VI, llllomilflc, rildlo, tiMi.r, pew. tr 111trlll9-br•k-Wllld0wi. 1lr cond .. wlnyl roof, wlrt Wllffls, WSW. (VOV176J $895 '69 CONTINENTAL 4 DOOR SEDAN VI, automallc, rll!IO. nutt4', poww 1fHrint-brak1-llldoWl--I, vinyl top, lflllher in!er., l•pe d.U, 1111 ~. CU5FVZI $2295 '66 FORD LTD 4 DOOR HARDTOI' VI, f,1,1tom.ltlc, r.Olt, l'llilllr, po.wer stHrin9, power br1k-. WSW, 1ir cO!Mlitlonfn9, vinyl lop. IRRM67JI $695 '68 CADILLAC SEDAN DI VILLE VI, IVhlmltlC, rlilflo, llNI.,., ,OWlf ll""'nt- brilktt--wlnclovn--1, vln~I top, illr <on· OllllHllnt, WSW, !%VCl50J $1595 Prl~ll Ar1 Pllll TIX Ind L5clflM Ind Are Viltld 'Tll It PM, SwnOy, MIY 4 1t i All c ... 1'1 Subttcl Tl Prior Sille, ' • .-• NEW Y2 TON PICK.UP ' .. \ Plu• i 1x And lic:en11 Sir. No. JHICOCHB68814 ------ NEW 1973 .TRAVELALL BEAUTIFULLY Elj)UIPl'fD Ser, No. JHOHOCHlll2lll NIW 1973 31.. TON PICK-UP "CAMPER SPECIAL" Sir. No. JH2COCHBl7598 ''GET EM UP SCOUT'' HEAD FOR THE HILLS ••. THE DESERT . . • OR THE B E AC H IN A RUGGED, GO· ANYWHERE SCOUT. IMMEDIATE DWVERY ., Excellent Selection @1scouNQ. • OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE Off Suggested Retall l'<lce 'Pric:t Doti Not Include C1mp1r. I DISCOUNTED I $1000 j • - ' ! . ' " ' ) ~ ' \ ' { . ' ' • ' ' • ' ) " " -'• ~ I " • I ,, ' . ! ~ · .. ' .. ' l' .-' ' (s .. ' ' ~ • ': \ .. .:f, May 4, 1973 l - l ' • ; • • 1 _,..-.. ' • .-Jtt GOOD Wlti .-1$ t:J.HE~ ·i>ESl.RE-OF THE~STOM£R ~ ·,0 :11· ;.,. -JG, WNERE HE HAS BEEN WELL TREATED* ~'T ..... _ .... "I\ • • . ' .... :,J ·--:.; .....-. . ... ·"' ·~"-'.1(:'::. :_~-: .::~ ·iSunset Ford " . . . ·.Has Rec.~ived Every _., I ,• i-• ·M " .. . ~ l . ~' .. ~ ' '1-.t '," I. _r A ward )Possible . . . : 808 HEUSsER'' 6ealer • The· United States Su.preme Court on.ce ruled that *"GOOD WILL IS J"!;il' l)E. ~ SIRE 'OF THE CUSTOMER TO 'llEh\JRN TO W'H E R E HE HAS BEEN: ,.WELL TREATED." lf 'you think about4hat':f~r a moment, ·it ·ma•k·e,s an awfurlor'of senie. It , closely .'paiiall~ls the tho~~ht we have at Sunset Ford -"Doing busi- ness.in the good . old-fashion,ed . way.'" ,. . . ' : ' . r -' ! ! ' • I ' " ' \ ' ' . I ' , "• . . ' I . ' ' ... -~- ' • • ' .. " ' .. , ,. ;. .. ·' ·Fr·om .. Ford Motor Company! PACIFIC ' I • .. ~ . ' ~ .. '-'" :SUNSET· FOR.D 5440 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. WESTMINSTER o.636•-40IO · Take ValleyVieW Off-ramp f Fr I . ' , ram eewoy .-• • ......... ' .. ,,, No gimmick advertising to i n s u It the customer's intelligence, no high pressure sales}f!ctics, and no questionable s.erv- ice prO'ctice. We are dedicated to the principle of treating customers fairly and giving them outstanding ser·1ice. If we do this well and consistently, Sunset Ford will be a modle of success. 5440 GARDEN-GROVE. BLVD. W,ESTMINsJER ·,CAUEORNJA- ... ' ; 4 I ' • 1' • • j I ' ' .. • < . I ' ' • j • • '. ·---·-·· , ., AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS 'MUTT & JEFF 8066, HERES W SUP FOR c>/ERTIME! WILi. YOU Pl.EASE O,K, IT? ,,.-1[:~"'"""""''<""'~ FIGMENTS -~N .. DID \OOTAKE: A ro=F cw AIY PIPE \fHIU: I . WM\ IN THE 0!1-iE"' li:OQ\\? NANCY .. . I ,. . . W!! AllE 801N& ON A ~Ffe l\UMl'! 10 MAIN MA~ l'OROUR SHEL."t'Elt CumtlN& NW fOOP FOR OU!{ SURVIVAi.! \J LAST NIGHT/ ' I~THREE 1-fOURS OVERTIME.' AT T IME AMO A 11ALF THAT'S~- NOBODY WORKED OVERTIME LAST NIGHT/ l'--f~ ROLLO, HOW DOES IT'S KIND OF BORING, EVEN THOUGH I HAVE PONIES, BOATS, BIKES, -------, A POOL, I'M GIVEN EVERYTHING I WANT···SO NATURALLY IT FEEL TO BE SO RICH? E'TC., ETC. I DON'T GET A KICK OUT OF ANYTHING \" ' ' ',. I ' -· ' by Tom K. Ryan ftAj), l\OW J!QURrii'OIS. • by Al Smith I OID,BOSS! I CREAMED I DID ANO I/MEN l WOKE UP1'HIS MORNING, . Sm:' WAS l TIREOI by Dale H'!le by Ernie Bushmlller SN!FF···I FEEL SO SORRY FOR "THAT POOR KID .... DOOLEY;s WOR , ••, ••4-<-•lo •• A·,, •• GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS .. PEANUTS by Charlie M. Schulz ..--------;, TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLl 1 • ·---- .. Yeaterday'sPuzzleSol\led: ~ _.;t..,. /~.'"A"OfrL -Jnno~. ACROSS 52 D1v1de ~ 1- 1 'Male enima!s 5-4 Motion -·-···· rt & 1. f herring lnonks ~ 5 Young 58 Buddhist ~ 10 Young 59 Mouths: perM>n . An11. 14 African plant 60 Communi· 16 Self-cate by anurince 16 Can. p1ov, 17 G11 18 Boundary 19 er .. the hlrd 2D Gene -··---; 01k11nd b1Hbllter 22 Euu's country 24 Number 25 Place upright 27 01creed by legis11tion 29 Me1nt 32 Title 33 C11d gaml! 34 -----Sea: · Indian Ocean um 36 Houaehold furniahings 40 Tall, thin and · ·ungainly 42 Engli1h.ci1y 44 Burrower 45 Newspaper: Informal 47 Asian kingdom 49 Negative word 50 Oomicile,ofa '°" 1peech 62 Footbed player 65 Magician's 1cce1aorv 67 Violin- meker 69 Trillion: Prefix 70 Within: Comb. form 71 Chinese figurine 72 "··--Go . Bflgh" 73 live wildly 74 Covered with winter precipilation 75 Changed the color DOWN 1 Talk irretione!!y 2 To leeward 3 Variety of feldspar 4 D.C. or Ontario body 5 Firsi-class 6 Food of The Islands 7 Kind of poem:Var. 8 ln privacy 9 Grand·-----: Mountain r3nge lo Expe,iment room: lnfo1m1l 39 D<V 41 Retained 43 Greed 46 Under tension 11 Divide by lot -48 Crippled 12 Bri_tish weight 51 Asplnitionl unit 13 Did some 53 Talked senseleuly 64 ~ight carpentry 21 Negative contraction 23 Leners SS An Asian 56 Nova Scotia 26 Uncleanspirit stfllit 28 Study h11d 29 Troubles 30 Biblical min 31 Birds 35 Cause ave1sion 37 Monks' milieu 38 Novelist's necessity 57 Violinlst Mi1chJ ·-·· 61 lake: Italian 63 A Great laka 64 S. Africen coin 66 Feminine nickname 68 Act of pulling bf!hind JUDGE PARKER THERE'S A LILA SANOS ON THE PHONE, JUDGE! CAN YOU TALK TO f-{ER? MISS PEACH FlfANCIN&, l. OON•T ~NOW WHV ~ CAL~ ME ~:11.U.•f·•UMAN ." AFT& ALL, l HAVE TH& t;AW: ! H~MAN Niii!~ .-S A"'VONE e~~ ... j DICK TRACY ~-CMI-~~ :Jkm,"ff'"' .wiwit. !.·DON'T KNOW ... ll\IT SHE'D LIKE TO TALK TO YOU ABOUT eeT&Y FREMONT! C'M.AY1 Lii 14j. ~ ..... by Harold Le Doux I'M SORRY. TO 60THER YOU, JUDGE PARKER ••• euT I 'M OETSY'S BUSINESS MANAc.;.ER ANO I'VE .JUST ARR!'t'ED IN TOWN! I WONDER IF IT'S POSSl6lE FOR 'YOU TO Gl't'E ME A FEW MINUTES OF YOUR Tl.¥\E? = by Mell :1'1.L NAM&~, SMAr<fY .. i IJANANA~, #IPA Tr<lli 'n) CLIM9! DAILY PILOT · by R09er Bradfield ---~-"'3 . . . .. . . by Gus Arrio~ by Ferd Johnson -·~·'}'· by Roger Bollen ' 50MeHOW,I E~fet'eDA UlllO~E LOI" MQ~ ... l---; THE GIRLS '.j S-1 ~ "Tbe Wq I doai like ablol -II Yoll try to concen-l tratt on IM m•lc but yoa elwa)'I end up wonderlal laow ' mllcll Ille ,...,.. ID lnat 01,... paid for ber bat." l DENNIS THE MENACE 1 '· ·11 i • 1 I G • t I I The 'Bfaast Marketplace on . the. <>ranee Coast · ~••I• o o500 •S2.4 k10.1w:ibaw • . • • • ••• '50 • 990 loah. & Marini; lquipmn 900 • 9M 1~ ............... 700 ·199 DAILY/ PILOT CLASSl ·FIED AD·S • ~ ••....•.• szs.549 "" ..t s.o.i;., • • • • ' • ISO • l9f ... &tot. o..rat. • • . . t50 .... ' financial •.•.••••• 200 -299 ..... kw Sam • • • • • • KK) • l24 L05t ' found ' . . • • • • 550 • 574 Mortt.-tiM). . . • . . • . aoo . IM9 You ~n ~I It, Find ti_,_ ( 642 .. 5678 J Trade It With a Want Ad . One Cal I 5;rvice Fast Credlf AJiproval ~, • • • • • • • ... XIO-"" """""'" ............ ,,,,.,,.. _.,.. -........ • • • -..600 • 111!1 lion.......,_ • • • • • • • • cnJ • 94'9 ERRORS. Advort l,.rs should check their •do dallJ & report orfo<t Immediately. The DAILY PILOT a11umo• ll1billty for the flNI Incorrect lnwrtlon only. _ ....... ~~~~~~~~ Gantr•I ~I -.. s. I~ ---~-"'-:d-tc#-Saif4 Giner al General ·-, A l.NIOOI: li()MI: REAL ESTATE SPECIALISTS. Unique Homes has limited openings for sales indi- viduals, knowledgeable in the areas of Ba)&- crest, Dover Shores, Lido Jsle, The Penin- sula, Newport lleights, Irvine and Mesa Verde._ If you have the will and fill the bill, call Jun \Vood . Experience not required. 67~ . -Opitr .J/ouJeJ Sunda'I 1-Sp.m. *' ' 1380 Galaxy Drive .............. $195,000 1724 Gajaxy Drive .............. $139,500 '1630 Antigua Way .............. $118,500 1532 Keel Drive ................ S 88,800 600 Poiasettia .................. s 67,500 3408 Sausalito . . . . . . . . . . . .. S 95,500 1321 Outrigger ................... S 97,500 2836 Alta Vista .................. S 67,500 19201 Edgehill Drive ............ S 94,500 1812 Pt. Taggart Place .......... $ 81,900 OPEN SATURDAY 1·5 2591 Crestview .................. $59,500 2595 Crestview .................. $54,750 600 .Poinsettia ..................... $67,500 2836 Alta Vista ................. $67,500 207 Milford ...................... $99,500 19201 Edgehill Drive ............ $94,500 * * * * * * * EASTBLUFF BONANZA ~ MlllSSOCllTIS REALTORS 2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CAUF. 644·7270 e LARGE e FAMILY HOME PRICE REDUCED-TWO STORY ... for the large family with a need for many extras. SEPARATE family room, 5 bed· rooms, 3 baths, LARGE kitchen with dlning area, PLUS a for1nal dinit1g room, two-fire- places ( l in the upstairs master suite). Large fenced yard for the children . . . . $54,900. ~ e THE e "PRICE IS RIGHT" and within \VaJking distance to schools and shopping? 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, FAM· JLY ROOM, fireplace. Jlas assumable VA loan-'All for only . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $29,950. • DUPl,EX ~ DELUXE e CdM Beautiful .. tree-lined street in Old Corona de! Mar. ·BOTH UNITS HA VE 3 bedrooms.- den, fireplaCf!i 2 baths, builtin_ kitchens, PATIOS. 2 blocl<S -to sliOf>ping and schools. Choice location. . .. : .......... , . $98,500. ..,..........,_ e HARBOR VIEW 1-IOME e SOMERSET MODEL WelCOf(le children in this family TWO STORY 5 bedroom. fan1ily room home \Vhich fea- tures 3 baths, formal dining room , WET BAR. large convenient kitchen 'vith all the extras. Tremendous fenced yard on dead- end type street. FEE LA>'\/D ...... $79,900. ~ _..,s. a:.,.,.; SUPPLY LIMITED. DEMAND GREAT! ........ Crest Condominium Hornes. cluste.red about handsome e«irty1rds, OCCUPJ orie of the few rem1lni111 11111 properties In desirabl1 Newport Beach. Exactly rigtit lor perma· rient residency ar hOlid•J' llome. Sundecks, firepliM:ts, wet b1rs. Sun·Lite• kitcheas, tuek·under d~ 11ni11s. He1ted swim-· mfng pocH, li&hted tennis courts, saunas, therapy pool. All 11te· rlor m1lnten1nce provided. A l1stin1 experitncl In &lorious livin1! r ...... , ... ,w~ """$65,495 FR>ftl" P1ciflc Coast Hid!WIJ, up SllP9fior Aven!Je to Tlcoftdero11, a11d 1Ureetly to .#12 Robo1 "'"- Te1t•111: (714) '4S.,141 Sain Office •11t11 •.U, lOa.M,.tl suiaeL ** ** ** Heritage Collection BALBOA'S BEST DUPLEX MOST OUTSTANDING DESIGN -in this 2 & 3 bedroom duplex. Each u1tlt two story Vlilh living and dining upstairs \\rith balconies and high pitched bean1 ceilings. Excellent location near 10th St. bay/beach. Brand-ne,v, \Vith first-user advantages. Landscaping in , and carpeted & draped. 896,500. OPEN HOUSE. SAT. & SUN. 1·5 PM at 820 West Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. CALL S>IG-1151 HUGE TREES SURROUND THIS CUSTOM 4 BEOROOM 2 bath, Eastside Costa Mesa home. 114'xl53' R-2 lo t affords complete privacy. OY:ner will exchange or sell at $37,5()0. CALL 546-5880 BACHELOR PAD FOR THE PARTICULAR SINGLE -A Gor- geous. no-,,·ork townhouse. One super-big bedroo1n overlooking a spacious living room. Shag carpets, wood paneled walls, builtin kitchen, double garage, used brick front, 1 'lz baths and lot s of extras. At $22,000. you must see this! CALL 540.1151 BOOM TOWN! IS DESERT HOT SPRINGS -New construe· tion starting everywher;e including 500 Con- do1niniu1ns close to o.ur' 10 acre parcel. Ideal for n1otel. mobile home or recreational vehicles .. Sale or-trade for this area·. $30,000 or besl offer. CALL 546-5880 · ON BROADWAY • EASTSIOE COSTA MESA . Ove rsized, bright, cheerful, custom built 2 bedroom home with many personalized custo1n fea- tures. Bonus of spacious rental unit in rear. A real home and income. Just reduced to $39,500. CALL US AT 540.1151. TUCKED AWAY IN A QUIET CORNER OF MESA VERDE. 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, family room and large separate living room. Perfect setting with beautiful landscaping. Close to schools and shopping. Call us quick. Priced only $34,500. CALL 546-5110. NEW USTING FIRST TIME OFFERED -Near·new 4 bed· room and fami ly, carpels, drapes, builtlns, lovely fireplace and wood shingle roof. Near schools and major shopping. Look au you "''ant, we don't think you'll ever find a better value at $37,500. CALL 540.11 SI. GOING UP! OPEN SAT. & SUN. l.S. 2836 ALTA VISTA. 5 Bedrooms, 3 baths -dining room. On large, beautiful lot. $67,500. Russ Flynn. CAMEO SHORES OPEN SAT. 1·5 Beautiful view down canyon-large lot \Y/ room for pool. Large living room \V /hi- beams. 3 Bedrooms, 2 balbs. 207 MILFORD. $99,500. Carol Tatum. . lllnpMI Cml b I ;njtd tf Pldfic :·.,. N.C.,lwc.llllert H.&rHlCefpwi ... TWO COSTA MESA HOMES on large 'h acre lot. Will sell or exchange up for units. Priced only $37,500. CALL 546-5180. OWNER WANTS TO MOVE Turtle Rock Hills "President" Plan "70':.,, Reduced $5,000 to $94,500-Fee. Compare 19201 EDGEHILL DRIVE. OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 Or Call Paul Quick. IT STEALS THE. SHOW Enjoy baylront view from this two--story 6 BR., 4 bath nauticl!lly oriented home with pier & slip. $375,000. Gary Knox. THIS HOME NEEDS LOVE! ... and someone to move in & enjoy the quiet H. V. Hills neighborhood-view of hills & peek·a·boo of ocean. Has 3 BR's & a £amily room Triana Bergin. EXCLUSIVE DOVER SHORES Oae of the most delightful homes; 4 bdrms .. family rm., living room with beam ceiling. All this & a pool, view. $139,500. Eileen Hudson. CORONA DEL MAR CHARMER Old Corona de! Mar. Delightful area So. of Hwy. Walk to beach, park & shops. 3 BR's. & gst. qtrs. Remodeled 1971. $89,950. Cath· ryn Terutille. LARGE LIDO LOT Room to garden or expand or for your fav- , orite pet. Three bdrms. & den & charming. ~'ull price $94,500. Gene Vr eeland. l~LOVE Tennis huffs to the Bluffs! Everythiag you could want in this great condo, to free you for THE sport! · tncl. a view of the N'pt Beach Tennis Club. Toni Escobar HARBOR VIEW HOMES Portofino model; 3 BR.. 3'h ha's., lam. rm. formal din., detached game rm. & loft. Land included at $81,900. For app't call Howard -Wells. OOVER SHORES LUXURY BEST VIEW -over 4,000 sq. ft. Incl. 4 bdrms. -fam. rm. -formal D.R. -in- viting pool & jacuzzi -lge. closets -the ULTRA. COMPLETE HOME. ,195,000. Bud Austin. 833-0700 --644-2430 Coldwel.a.1kar ~ 550 Newport Contor Dr., N.B. . HEATED 18'x36' -Great EASTSIDE location! Close to Westcliff shopping. 3 Bedroom, convertible den, 2 baths, fire- place, plus ROOM TO ADD ON. 10% down -owner will carry 10%-2nd T.D. $39,500. Call for appointment. ..,..........,_ AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS . . . . . . . . . 644-7!70 General General SellfllC.CrKW e lt73 htifia l .C .. 1-. • --.. _ I TREES, TREES, TREES A RARE YARD full of trees including beau: tiful fruit trees plus a lovely 3 bedroom & oversized family room home Jocated •tn Col- lege Park. This one is priced at only $32,900. lVe've ssid enough, you better take a look. CALLS>IG-1151 . OWNER .. ccifi ce. Beautiful ' FIVE UNIT FIXER UPPER home . 3 bdi1n• .. 3 baths. FIVE INDIVIDUAL 3 BEDROOM HOMES on }~ainily nu., fonnal dining r n1• t'ireplacc, tile roof. large 300 ft. Eastside Costa Mesa lot. Paint Built-Ins. relU' living rm. and clean up to be worth more $$$$. Owner bkr SG,750, 540-113'J. asking only $72,500. Just listed, call us no\v. O\VNER desperate. Bt:-autiful CALL 546-5880. 3 bdn11. in Irvine. 2 baths. Dining nn., built-Ins, dish\\'asher. Fan1ily rm. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Sl111g carpets. C e n t 1· a l • a ir-co nd itioning. bl"k ERITAGE THE BLUFFS -VIEW In the original section of The Bluffs, with a fabulous bay view. 3 Large bedrooms, 2'h baths, formal view di ning area, large pri~ $~~~60s0undeck. Very neat & comfortable. 4 HOMES Each \Vith 3 bedrooms, fireplace, built-in kitchens, carpets, enclosed double garage & enclosed yard. A great investment oppor· tunity on the East side of Costa Mesa. $120,000 90 f'EET OF BAYFRONT On fabulous Lido Isle, actually 3 ·R·l side by side. Pier & slips permitted. sell or land lease. $550,000 Jots, Will 'CAMEO HIGHLANDS -VIEW Lovely 3 bedroom home, immaculate th~ out, with spacious, cheerful living room open- ing onto beautifully landscaped yard with lots Of tall trees & privacy. Den convertible to 4th bedroom. Private community beach. $72,000 . HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS 2841 E. Coast Hwy., Co,...,. dol Mar "Selling RNI &1t1t1 In Newport Horbor Sine• 1 N-4" 673-4400 $31,500. 97~2390. REALTORS Q\VNER 111Lxlous. Dclwi::e 4' bdrm. 2% baths. Atrium off "::::::;::::;::::::::::::;:::;::::;:~::;;~~I mester suite. Family rm., -= '""•'"""· '' 0 '""' 1 dining f Act;on Call 642-5678· rm. Built-Ins. BeautlfUI Qf J • • • lr'v!M. brk $52,000. 540-1720. General General HARBOR VIEW HOME S LOVELY MONTEGO MODEL 4 bedrooms, family room, formal diningi carpets, drapes, super landscaping, covered patio, wood deck. LIKE NEW PALERMO MODEL 4 bedrooms, family room, formal dinlng. wet bar; up- grade carpet., floors. Perfect for your family. HARBOR VIEW HOl\fES REALTY 833.07~0 * BAYFRONTS FOR THE YACHTSMAN * J, BRAND l\1'\V on Lido Nord. 4 Bdrms .• 31,41 baths. Pier, dock, & a1nenities far too nu111erous to mention. Can 01tly see to believe. $285,000 l 2. NEAR PENINSULA PT. 3 Bdrms .. 3 baths. \\1ith 111aid's quarters. Living rm., diJ1ing rm., den, elevator. Pier & slip Try $250,000 3. LINDA ISLE , to be ready in August. Es· late size house , pavllion & S\vbruning pool. 5 Bdrui.. 6 baths & 6 fireplaces. Co1nplete list of features in office. Pier & slip. Leasehold. $335,000 * CHANNEL CONDO WITH SLIP * Nearly nc\v, 3 bdrm., 21,.~ baths, \Vith slip fo r up to 38 ft. yacht. Easy accpSs to bay. Assu1nable 7SO loan. Asking $77,500. "--'-, BURR WHITE,, Rooltor V'f 11U°'2l 2901 Newport, N'pt Beach ~ 675·443o. 24 Hr. Service ;f;nJa . J!Jfe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Lindi Isle W•terfront Custom 4 bdrm., 5 lJath home with vie\v of n1am channel. Soft co1ors, rich-\vood paneJ .. ' ing & 3 frplcs .. give a warm Intimate feel - ing. \\''aterfront n1str. suite has dbl. bath, sitting area, vie\\' deck. . .. ~ .... $295,000. Lind• Isle Waterfront Beautiful. new 4 bdrm .. 41h ba. ho1ne on lagoon, \Yith Jiving r1n., family rm., lge. game rm. or Slh bdrm ........... $255,000. Linda Isle Waterfront Custom 4 bdrm., 41-> bath home on lagoon. Fully equipped Island kitchen, waterfront family room, billiard room ...... '245,000 For Complete Information On All Homos & Lot1, PloHo Call: .llLL GRUNDY, R~LTOR 341 Bayildo Dr., Sulto 1, N.I. 675-41~1 Gonorol MACNAB IRVINE _______ .... ______ _ FINER HOMES BALBOA PENINSULA OCEANFRONT! View miles of shoreline &. Catalina. Luxur- ious 4BR, 4 bath-partly furnished, beau- tifully decorated. Many, many extras, burglar alarm system, large garage. $177,500. (P ill FOR THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN Boarding & ridlng stables nearby. E le- gant 5BR. 3 bath, format DR. Beautlful gardens. Pol size lot. $62,000. Lois Egan 644-6200. (Pl2) EASY LIVING ... Elegant early Bluffs 4BR or 3 & Den. 3 baths. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5 p.m. 2120 Vista Laredo. Ron Sherman 642·8235. (Pl3) BIG CANYON: LEASE OR LEASE/OPTIONI Buy thls beautiful 4BR, FR next year at today's prices. Lease or lease/option. One- year new. $900/m o. Inc. gardener. J ack Howell 644-6200. (Pl4) CORONA DEL MAR INCOME ' Ocean view. 2 custom homes-pool & pa· tios. Located on prime corner lot-3BR. 2 bath-2 BR, 2 bath + spacious p layroom. J>.car garage. $174,500. H. Perry/R. Sher· man 642-8235. (PIS) JBR ON CUL-DE·$AC 'Out.landing location-<:oovenient to sbo1>- p lng center. Excellent home for young or elderly, $38,500. Walter King 644-6200. (P16) BALBOA COVES-JUST LISTEDI 125' on waterfront. 30' float. Beautifully remodeled. Huge n1aster suite, additional 2 BRs, 2 baths. Formal DR. Lg. FR. 2 fireplaces. A terrific home for indoor/out- door entertaining. $170,000. Gloden Fay 642-8235. (Pl 8) BIG CANYON CUSTOM BUILDING SITE Lg. !airway lot. Price includes city •!>- proved plans for lg. home. Tom Queen 644-6200. (PIS) . [Irvine IM .. --""""'-~ I tOI Dowr DrlM 142--1211 114'llRAttllttr'"·uoo • ' • ' • I , • •• . ..... ' .. ~~·· *· *'* '* * ; *TAYLOR CO.* • . • . • F r ' • 1.., ttiil helldy till'ffto'Y wllll ,.., tlalt ..... • yo• t• i.vw.H•tMt· All ... leMtl•• 11~4 Nlow .,. delulbM I• .,..._ Mteff ~ e4Hdti1Bt .iu- whffo lw today's Dolly Piiot WANT ADS. Patro• lhowint Opell k9MI fof Mle ., to rHt .. 11r9ed to Hit 111ch l1f.,.iMtl" I• tlil• cel11H HCtl frldoy, Sot• .. ,,., & S1uukry. HOUSES fOR SALE l BEDROOMS 2595 Crestview (Bayshor .. ) NB 644-2430 $S4,750 (Sat l BEDROOMS 600 Poinsettia Corona de! Mar 644-2430 $67,500 (Sat 1·5) 2591 Crestview ( Bayshores) NB 644-2430 $59,500 (Sat 1-5) 207 Milford (Cameo Shores) Cdm 644-2430 $99.500 (Sat 1·5) flOO Poinsettia Corona del ~Iar 644-2430 $87,500 (Sun 1·5) l BR & FAM ILY RM OR DEN 20751 Elizabeth Lane, Huntington Beach 968-4903 (Daily 12-6) 2030 Port Provence (HVuHomes) NB 64-0-0237 $69,500 (Sat & Sun 11).4) 1532 Keel Dr. Corona de! Mar 644-2430 $88,800 (Sun 1-5) 1812 Pt. Taggart Pl (HVuHomes) NB 644-2430 $81,900 (Sun 1-5) 4 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 1527 Seacrest (Lusk Harbor Vu ) CdM 644-8569 $88,500 (Sat & Sun) 4633 Dorch'ter Rd. (Cameo Hi'lands) CdM (Sat & Sun 1-5) *1380 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 644-2430 $195,000 (Sun 1·5) *1724 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Sbores) NB 644-2430 $139,500 (Sun 1-5) iG30 Antigua Way (Dover Shores) NB 644-2430 $118,500 (Sun 1-5) 34-08 Sausalito Corona de! Mar .644-2430 $96,500 · (Sun 1·5) 1321 Outrigger. Corona de! Mar 644-2430 $97,500 (S un 1-5) 19201 Edgehill Dr. (Turtle Rock ) Irvine 644-2430 $94,500 (Sat 1·5) 5 BEDROOMS 2836 .Alta Vista (Eastblufl) NB 644·2430 $67,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 5 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 27191 Arena Lane Mission Viejo 837-4448 $65,000 (DaUy) DUPLEXE ~OR S~_.. l 38~ - 820· W. Balboe · Blv ., w rt Beach 5'0-1~1 $96,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 3 & DEN & I BR 305 Ruby. Balboa Island 673-6900 (Sat & Sun 1·5) * l'MI ** w ....... ·*"* "'_..,, .... • THE REAL ESTATERS Lachenmyer Rt'.-lltor IOHl\1 LOl\O\ ;.'!""A 'rJ'./ CONDO· * SOME'flllNG ' SPECML IN COLLEGE PARK associated * BROKfllS R£ALTOAS •r1~ W 8olhrr Ill l•ll --~- IDEAL FOR GUEST HOME 5 Bedroom, 2 baths. Oose Ill "1opplng. $32.500. Roy McCordle Re•llor 1310 Newport Blvd., C.i'.f. 541-n:19 Bolboa l•l•nd MANIAC * 305 RUBY * Have YoU caught the fever Unbelievabl~ 9 unlls on the OPEN SAT /SUN. 1-5 for carefree living? Then oceanf_ront tn the best area! Brand new duplex. 3 & Den, you must see this spec-Fee simple, l2ro,OOO. 3 ba. + lge. lovely apt. tacular new listing In an Zming prohibita duplication adult condo dcvelopn1cnt JONES on this xlnt lol;a.tlon. which ha. the pre.inOalion-REALTY INC. SALISBURY REALTY ary maintenance fee ot only EStl')4f 315 Marine, Balboa Island $18. per month. 3 Bedrooms, * 67:1-6900 * upgnuied carpel! & drape!, I (7M) 873-8210 I huge ma...ter bednn iru:ite, WATERFRONT lot, 50x80 Olympic.size pool and Early 2001 W.a.lbool l!Wd. W/'!IJ' Boat Slip. Make offer AmeriClln clubhouse are ad·,--"'---..-.-=;;;·""'=-=',,,'"°,.....-~'°~°"-·-""~'~· _673-~m.....,o __ _ ded (jlatures. Vacant and• HONESR y ll1lboo f>on in1ul1 rendy. $24,950. • ' COATS IV• hate to •Tite ads on DUPLEX-479,500 & houses like this, because 2 &: 3 BR .. 3 ba. 2 [rpl. WALLACI! they sell so quickly. This ts Modern A refurbbhed a REAL DANDY. A brla:ht <»' Act fast" REAL TORS and immaculate 3 bedroom, •n car gar. · · · '· 1% bath on a comer lot. It's --GEftM,,..-- Open Ev'enlngs '90 clean it squeakll. And the 1610 w. Coast Hwy., N.8. e 962-4454 e ~rice is right •. • only REALTORS 642-41>'23 $32,900. 847~10. * TRIPLEXES * --------WHY SmLE • TEXAS SEUER """"""'"'""'°·"'-' 189,500"'"'o1125,ooo HELP I NEWPORT BEACH ARSHALL 1 ~ ·-• Forced to give a1vay this fan· M Rea ly u•--..v FOR A lastic 4 BR, 3 81\ charmer. 2 Bdrms., 1 bath; frpic.; on Capl1tr•no Beach. Owner Desperate Ii'•· ma1n1enrui.,..r,.. yard, USED HOME? Huge rumpus room. family w/lge. enclo!<ed patio. De· All reasonable offers con-room, fireplace, 1onnaJ din. All indivtc'lual ground floor !ached 2-car "'Ar8.ie plus BLUl',S BEAUTY sldel'ed on this beautiful 3 Bbuild_:f sac2r200ificing 1h1 14s lngt. wet bars, NO J\fAIN · 'homes on one acre 1 EAST· rm. for boat• 4:: trailer .. l-=----~7"=-BeauUful new Spanl!'lh style BO 2 BA 2 Story home. rar1u-ne1v 11q TENANCE. Prtme "Green-SIDE prcperty. 101,000. Corona del Mar home on the q u I et. Sunken !iv rnt w I U B bedroon1 2 bath home with belt" location. $77,500, land loan available. Conaistent Priold at $36,950. Capistrano Beach bluffi!I. fireplace. linn1e.culate low wall-to-\vall · ca rpe t ln,a: tncluded. Don't Waltr Call monthly income of $1665. Call: 873-366.1 642·2253·Eves. Dup18x Spacious rooms & lots ol n 111int. I a 11 d ~cap Ing, thruout, drt1.perle~. cori\· ,,..., oAl'ln, /· Owner may trade for 20 w1-~· f 1 · a white· bull h V"hl'"O........, 11ere ls home le jncome. for , • .,. ... , ac ng sprinklers . cov. patio, ext. pletely tin k J t c en• 7 to 30 units. CALL to see. th. e most discrlmlnatlng in· water ocean view &: Dana Uahtit"'• can1per/boat gate, tinplace, sprinklers, lawn, Point Harbor True Spana• phi.~ h~gc Ux28 bonWI room fenclni:, etc. Full price Htwptrt vestor. Two units -eadl · •1 plunibcd for 3rd bath -'40,995. HURRY! C ll l l t with 3 spacious bedrooms, tllechen•ntryon a~ alllot '1 1f02· OOOkH· k>clltt.'<I in North Costa 531-76n for detaU1 Agent. I 1% baths, bullt·ln kitchens · .. ~. · • rd lo •~'l'!'~~~~!'i'!"'"'r TR r PLE x · and ,·ust g ye•-new. Ex· Century 21 Nova Rtalty 1.Iesa. only 7 yra o . As w l'ol-'--· ~.-.~ ""' 4-•n• E as SIOOJ down -Open house SAL.E OR TRADE ,,......,, FI»UP, protlt! Du Pl ex cellent rental record wtth .... ...,.. """"'~ .,....,. ve Sat/Sun, Cull Bkr 643-6646 Balboa Penln•ule '4Ul11 $22,960 lotll tenn tenants. Shown * FlRSr-TIJ.IE OFFERED Rosemead home, 3 BR, 1'-' 3 le 2 Bdrm. unlt!I: ree TWO 3 Br. houaca. Good net by appointment. '82,r«i. -Oceanfront lot, walld11t dist -$f 50 DOWN . ha, pool. Plu• 1 llR r.ntal, simple. Shows good b1como (1n,..lmt) "cuh flow." $29,500 C F C I _._ to Dana Pt Marina. Ex• garage & sloragc roon1, will potential $279,!!CX). '' 5 UNITS $61.950. l«· 3 Br. l • • 0 .. wonny clullve community w/pvf On U1is gover nment consid<!r hon1e, lncon1e or ba. house + 2 duplexes on Re•ltor1 640-0026 bench, road & gate. H.D. "'"""""'""· 3 h u I e business prop. In Nc'Wl>Ort • oc•USIVE I Good lneo . 0 646-8362 bedroonis. big yard, and ac-0.1-ea. CaJl Sat or Sun 10 an1 JON~ . .. U' ot. me · ·,.:.u FIXER UPPER J RNSON, BKR. • ctss for boat or tra.ller. Qn. to 4 pm, 675-.1S80 Owner. REAllY tNC'. Mltll'1ft Rid .. Home ~perfye le r~:=t. Mt. Unique Costa Mesa., $50,000 21.n Placentia Ave., C.M . ly $U,950. S.tter call.today. * CUSTOM * IStl"6 Outat,..lint View Fare! Walker Rell""' F.P. $5000 0 .P. Id.., Jo. SPECTACULAR oceon view, o'WNEJi .trlnllerred 6: mUlt , ASK FOR BRUCE cation on .R-4 Zoot, pou:lbU. unusual 1 BR furn, pr, Realtors ~3 \\'eslcliff Dri~-e 646-ml Open cvea NEW TR I PL E X~S IN C~'T A 1'.f~;SA 3 Bdrm., l ~ BA th 2 Bdrn1., l ~ii Bath 1 Bdrm., 11.1, Ba.th 10'"t 00\\"N Orange County Apartment RHllors 547-4791 Need a "Pad"'!' P11o.;,@Uld ! HOM~ I " 11.M)'lf.3·8110 I '~ Pr.otie11tona117··~121. ..,. MG--741-4 tty 10 build mon. Alie for pe.rkin& can1per I bolt, SIDE COST 'fESA 200,w.W!ot...,,.. decifttM__"lr_ !antt1e9....t • 1UC'h!J'd Van Wen. =---~~~----i EAST A " · ___ ._.._,,.,. wllh l.lilo __,,. A °m APARTMENT HOUSE Corono ciel M.r ~~lotrn:un:~ ~ ~~ i..t1ta. 'UNMtched ....,... SALES A ANALYSIS Cd I 2 BA, flr<pl, Hdwt! !loon PENIN. DUPLEX 'lional tacflltlct available iii M Dup ex "'/deep shag carpetlne, all Near· shops & b each. nea.rbY. tttint.t., IWlmm.l.na', i4 Cute 3 BR 2 Ba front hotvi41 bltln~. formal dining, a.net 1-Bdrm., 1 ba. e~ch; on gol831f --~~il ~~ ~--mf ;m; w/frio(I piiv patio I: yard, onJy $34,500. Owner rettrtna: sJJa.ble tt-2 lot. $51,500 ~2f -v •..,.., 11 ~· . Jmmecl. ocoup. 2 BR, 1 9,_ to 1.ravel . Call now, ~8424. Call: 613-31163 61J-6688 Ev.._ SAND Polntt, So. Cal Pim (RVINI TIRRACE i ,.., hou,., xtn. wide U' Sooth Oo Reallon ' 1r<a, 3BR + privacy + Thia a br1• 2 be, lam m1, lot. $69,!IOO. Call fl5.6900. SALESME N= . m•n~ xtru. 2 yn nu, 7% b<aut pttJO, loolt1ng tor • Don'l· atvw up the ~lei A.r.~XIOUS ro EARN VA. assumable. Own• r • ,.... tarnlly to r&lare. $63,500. "Lllt .. lt tn clullned, snap . ~ioNEY • llU'ler spilt, bon· showhtt! Thun-Swl. fn9.ll09 CAIL~ . to SlloroatBulltl '4HITL u~ other "1118" •ben<Ol>. Diily Piiot WJJii Adi blvo --~ mul1a 11'1 ,IUl!.a pboal ~~ CALL GINNY, !IST.fUO. buplno raJo<t, a.ASllll1ED ....... -,. =-=-:•:;;"1=-;:,-::..;;;=. ___ ~-----~ • • I I ' I -. DAllY Pl.UT ~. fllor 4,lt7S ! I .....,..... -·--I -·-f e I -·-~I --l!~J' I , ,.."=" I ,~~c..r.n.~~~c1o~1~Mo~r~~;~l ~Co11~~.;;;~~;;~:;;;;; ~'"•'• ~ .-.... .... Ml._. Hufttk•• ._. ...... .._. \...-...... ~ IMch J ,.,;.;•;h;•;••il•ilPi;!!il~il,il!'lilrii•;i;*;j 'TWO !DI'S TOl'AL.lOl'dll' • . "¥~ 'lqMS" OOWIOOSE ...... --.. Jm'RIGln'• * Pl.ACE REALTY tlFEIS * QIOICE t.OCATIOH, - HONEYM:Xlll coT -COUNl'RY .... YOU --~....,,.,., .-... -.--.. • ._,N8!'d'-ss.'ze11Rr:o.o TAGtan-.....JWloL ..,._ .... -~----.1-~VllWLOT$~ BOS! Q r Hrt.--.. ~~--UT.Aft --e .... -.-1_ ~ -,... ·• --&.Jea.,. ._ -.11>--FESSIONAL oR o•mCDI b•amoth~, lit....... POOi: _,,.. DollohOtl ~ ltltd>tn -IMl'.o -·· "11' --. Start al 10,llllO. Bullclab & level-$17,8)0 ... TEftMS -new~·--...... OVER l4 Aa1E. HOUSE'tlOIOO Hfft'• ~ lor '!:· ~~ Gnod ._. -$40.!!0l. * C.1 IONI ONLY $14,tsl * =AK, :\Siii Klbol ,!Id., waterlall, lndt -· ...,, CUolnooloed 4 bodlwm a lloor plfll lllllt will ... :.:.i.• ~ ":;"~-;;;:! *'l!:ND 'l'llAT SEARQI * 4 BR. borne; more units possible. Leu than I Malll, Hawaii. 12\.900. • l!!thl, -llltdoen -...... "\': -... ~ --patloo. Lot It 1', • 100 wllll ..... a block to lbe stairway & tho beach. c-i.ey 1111'~~ ........ a..::· oomu. Weu COtllt -J:'~~ '1!,8)0. BIClt1IMllU"-~~~.:;.~"'= * 51,DllO DUPLEX.* -Lo41JC!l£!1 IN has aiv· $11,GOi. ~ !.!:..iiittl ~c -1or • -__ ., -1 BR ... ;-i BA .... sa:n111. ri... ·liiilif"'';R-~ 6 , Vlctor!a Beaeh area. Ocean vi.w.·Bolb units •• "C£Mrny· u.i.. ._ 1>uny on ·-...,, i i j,;;i"...:: ~ ~·· s Bedr .... 2 ...,. -°"?'.,, H.B.. .l!M< ,.. new -iilorfUI l)>clt ll'ple. a...,. have frplcs. Ocean side of Hwy. View 'Memcrial -. Will nu: REAL ESTATE ""' .lob "' -La Ote«a --· Pro-tlol-. rl)i """"' Cllm ... lhll Otl'!· -"9,9!11). . dbaounl. 98).Zllf aftor4Pll , !13S.2111 ~ t:OW>ll'Y u-dcoe t-~ lnilo-°""" e-.rm •? !\:ut * llUlLDDtS ATl'N. * 2Mt $, CNll Hwy., L•-, ::::: Com..,.rcl1I BY OWNER'-S Bdrm ~ lao -· f:ALl -. ::..;. CAIL "'l:r:.-fr· W~ Ji.~ z ~ ~ .. t.'° ,!~,!~ 1075 ..... C..ot Hwy., L .. uno . Propmy ISi F~ i:::.. 'i::~ Pri'!.do:c $25,500. $21,SOO. Yl1S lltlllo ~ ~/~ . ~I~~.~-Prlt:; LW. I.., Nwport IMch 2. AroOINING ....... il.~!29;r::n~el-'ISS.1 i::..i:i.r:.."'.= NO DOWN ::-_Pm. ow·NtR, ~'t\:i.'":!.~sT=..~ THE BLUFFS :~~ ~ilr2~. --==--· -_...,..., BEDftOOJIS 1 BATHS, * VM.Ntr + bl. borne, w/awto' custom l Block Tennll Club " Shop-DvpkxHfUnlh SUPERB COASTLINE Wall< ii> -· ........._ -..... --...,... 'palbl. SM 1\> !eahlml, ouch u tinted LIDO ISLE ~~End unll on'°" Hie 162 Solis bury R~..>lty Lites at ni~v. beach 'It ~ = c1U, . £• ~~~·= =o.\'=ra ~.::..:~_: !eBBQ~~~"!..~:r,~ l:~~ "f:~ m '~u 1 ~ee~ BEAUTIFUL 3 BR. upper A pool. Adj. Marina. 2 BR, l~S ~•: dram. be ad. ~ llfJ)'tlme, ,i wuu ~ , woodertul Open llcue &m: 1'6 euatom dnil, crpta It lleht lov.-er, North LQuna. ocean EXCLUSIVE BA,.Q:indo. By>owntt. l'ee to~~• ~ REALTY. 536-1$!.S t..= a1'o incl. deluxe fixtures. Wet bar. Encl&ed Yin', nr bH.ch. $16,500. CARNATION COVE land."$59,500. m...._185'1 -· . * 4 IN>RM lo POOL* ,. ....... ""1UherAtl<ye\'. Tbo Manicured. 1 m pee c a bly P;'tlo, beautllully lntbcped. -6'15-<ll4S . . · dup4ex; k>t over 250 lL deep, East Bluff 52 OOO lmm&c. landlci.ped home on price, with an extra Jot. an ............. -nic'""'"' situl.ted " Xtra lrg 2 car gar BY owntt, 2 • 2 BR. l BA. • 3rd interest iu .pier. Extra 1 • • ipackNI comer lot, rock lnd8cpd., for' $109.SOO. ..~ .. ....., ""V w /cab l nets. Fu 11 ~ M'4t beuh, new cpq. ~g. Fee land (you own LUSK BUil T REDUCTION IN PRICE. fountain, OOYered patio, all * JUST LISTED * for aalel automatic water aoft:ner. $.lS,500. after 5, ~ ill: ~e .:_~ryh·~ 12qulet000& . VIEW! Wbat a buy! 3 Bedroom. 2 xtru. lh&a: crpt. nr ICboola.. Tb1s apacloul home, bavfn& 4 3 BR's, 2 Baths ~ 000M~ ~i:__xtras10 ! """" CapUlrano ~ach. pnva..., ....:ac a.Jl;, 10, · Completely redewra.ted 4 b&~ bMutitul lt'ftUl'I en-$42.950. 9fi-751o . BR., 3 ha.. I: family rm.; 2 Deti&htful Patioc d' ~~ ~;;; Income Property lM OPENSAT/SUN.1·5 gleamlnc;4BR.,211b8ths, try ---open HOUSE BeauL "8R 2llA, newcarpetlne&verycleon! Onlyi74,a!O ~k PhoneSi&-~ldays l ---~""'.".-'---1 111 Bayside Piece family nn.; 1-story. Ice. ''READ THIS'' teeUng. Lovely carpets. fonnl d1n. t.am nn 'tlrepl FabWous Mt. viewa. $62,500. AND 640--0Zis eves & wlrends N~ SIX UNITS SALISBURY REAL TY k>t. -· ~e family room, orot bcpd. Many xtru'. * IW II ACRE * Soll" wlc 1" TD -.... ...... ' West dde ftve . 2 bedroamo 315 Marine, Balboa Island $72.500. Jmmed. Posses!. t.lreplace. water a'.1ftener, .Priced for quick sale .. El cal'ho VWqe; sur--· ! pl hacbek:lr 673-6900 675.4437 Eve. EASTBLUFF REAL TY Fixer • 4 Bdnn + patio, 3 car garage, ~ owner, 116S-'1562. """1tled by Cleveland Nat I. uoo ,_1 • BR 1 ba all :','.'..--.t .... , __ "' 2 ·~ 644-1133 30' fa Rm door openers. Unbelievable MUST le Brand Forest; beautltul Oak tree•. Atue Cll1 644-ll!iO we.' · ·Av · ... .,.. -..5.., urnn.ium ' Q.UAL ITY u" UJ1 m. • + for the Jlri<:e. CALL ~. S •v: ;re~k Ht Rural envtronment. Mt. : . p';;jJ-125 Mo.2 >aacy 1 0Yme1"1 unit haa 15' x 32' .What's more impar~'? PRIME Bluffs Condo 40' Pool -·---h. :!1·m1man ssi.s ol: :e.~. WW take 3 bldp. CHARLOTTE LONG 1''um. 'orPt~urn. mo:·. Hl'F pool, large covered Mr. Sproul will plan your 4 BR + den, 2% Ba, trpl ~ ~I 893--0956 0 .., -_.., patio. Income $910. a mo. fawnte ·exterior .& ;n1.no, crpt/drp. Owne• m.=. $27,500. ~ · "':::. · ENGWND REALTOR SINCE lS60 yrly. >'ltll price ~.5fl0. Owner/ rolon.,,,lhJs cho•ce duplox. El Toro UNBELIEVABLE BUY OF ofrpt.~~~ om.,; IEAL mATE BKR, -.. 1146-1130. ~t walk to everything loc., mE CENTURY!! cenb;n ': ~ $36 500 · pJe..,..t views. We have OPEN HOUSE Just listed, you can't mlM! 847--0982 • ' ' ' · 318 nlAUA <!ll-8093 OUR EXCLUSIVES * DUPLEX * the piano! 3 BR. 3 bath • · Modem convenience~ 4 OCEAN & CITY TRIPU.:X 1179 000 Studio 2 BDRMS. EACH home, Jge. 2 BR., 2 bath NOON TO S p M queen bdrm". Huee paneled Irvine. , . 2 BR. I< .; .. 2-bdrmo. unit. $102,500 ICho1ce of 3). • • ram· nn. with mammoth KICK YOURSELF . , .view · trom abeolutely 3 Sl'ORIES, baytront, ocean Bltlna-Ptneed Y•nl University Realty SAT. & SUN. tirePlace, overlooks fan-. every room ot this fan-view. 4Bdm\8., 4 baths Lido Isa. S..ut'91 Good H.B. Locetfon 3001 E. est. Hwy, 67J.ffil0 Decorat"!' Lake View m•ne, i tasttc 40' pool. Deluxe·,<,.{ ~"';... ~ ~~ SOFT & SOOTHING tast!cally aJTanged 4 bdrm. 123tl,OOO ON WIDE street; 4 bdrms., FORTIN CO. GOT 'EM' low mamt. garden. pnvatel builtin kitchen. Bar. Full upol'aded 3 bedrm, ill bath, Lovely pale .,...n """"""" larnily home. All tinted LIDO REAL TY 3 bath&; fealw.1 aa1o,..1 RNlton '42-5000 • club, + + +. $55,900. 24562 me dining rm., n 1 ~ e family or wed and draperies ctve ~ lm· glus wlndowB. 1arp living 3ln Vla Lido, N'Pt. Beach Price Sl3S.000. Auumable $50 000 F .P l500t ON 2 charming triplexes! Side-Overtake, El Toro. By carpet&, boat acceas with brick 1Jttpl.d'mblg rm,.lha&' mao!l•te S bdrm., Z% be.th room with .bride tireplace, 6~7300 6<;~ T.D. 40 'UNITS IN A PARK. by-side! 1 Block from Walker & Lee. eeparate ston.ge, near the thruout. ~l6ctben. home a feeling' that you'll :=.te di1~ ~om~ BY OWNER 1iO IT. GARDEN charmer. Ourstandina' garden aiG 00 ocean !~! In Corona del Fountain V.all1y beach, E-Z ~ ~M-I..uab.(}> planted back yard lave. Large beautiful Beautilully I and 1 caped Elegant 5 Bdrm, 3 Bath, ta'~~ room, ' 1.6 acres of lmm~ Mar!!!!SBEMy aPwLE't. ooly. . Ml~ 'ia:iyro~ 1 w/2.level circular patio, ~~ ~:n n~; garden patio entrance ; f&mily rm, lr&:· So. patio & l.100' REALTY ~ept sroundL Poof, ale. . . Only $750 Down I boat &'&te. CUl-de-sac loca-... ~ there's even room for more garden. Prime 45' street to 11,ti ftnanclni, &.1 x cm.. tion in 'prlde-of-ownerstrlp" acbool&, . shopping and expanglon. $13,500 street.location. 3377 V*ia r1..cf.'--~'pt.*Bf;ach $4951:Ul Prtnelpal cd1 Real Estele. 675-2101 Completely refurbished 2 & 3 --FuJ1 price ...,.,,...tlnn Asking ~500. lllll 000 rn-2147. -.. noo ~~ ~ o.1' 8~15 ~;,.~.;-;;~ ~~:' f: ~~f,;..11~\'. 132j:n,W~b~!1~-i~°'."'· 8 ~eel h·.· 11 -~//'IN, ~~~ "-~•!19 • HAR~g:,~11W-TWO Ulill'l'S ~~; 1.:i~. ~;,· ,;;,·.;,~ =edal:.!':';.:, ~-c~ 9614405 CM hrs) I' REAL ESTATI LOVELY 4 BR, 2 BA. family Canne! mode~ garden ca· EASTSIDE-$24- -<;J_""'Jing o,.n, air . «!nd. e.n.cl~,gy,_clul!!!<>u••o,~'!!"'· _ $28 5.0Q.l 8U IA " . ll90 Giennme SI nn, patio,.~ -· As-bana. professional land· 2 Bedronm borne wi-~=~ ::::.t, lfJi~ ll?.°1y~~'!:n the Land $750. Don i:,use ~ar the H;~htti ~ olm:::1'~-Vtskm -~ --_.,_ ~6 :~ :~.500 M&O'JBJ ~.;t-";8~ ~· Plus 1 brdnn ttffituppi!i"'Ji $88 644-8569 f Priced $25750 to $26950 ... moves you in, seller sec of town. Sharp & ~lean, Univ. Park Center, Irvine REDWOODTFIR OON-lllOft 0 Baths. t~il.y room. u~ rear. L&rre c6vered pa~ :;: ,500. or 18650 s erookhurst F v '1 pays all cosh. $23,000. FP. 3 nice neighborhopd; Will .go Call Anytbne ssi.7500 TEMPO ·-S?rel'A:CULAR. S'IURY San v a I a r d e l'()Om. By owner '$69,500. fenced )'ard, tndt UM&. Open Wec1 thru ~ 1~ · BR 2 BA, all elec blttn VA or fllA. says the seller Office hoUnl 8 AM to 8 PM Enter stvn priv attiwn lhru Model, 5 BR, massive Principals only. 2030 p 0 rt Owner I BKR, 6C-H22 CAMEO HIGHLANDS SOUTH BAY REAL TY RIO, retrig, FA ht, w/w or su~i:nit the new 5% down tall louver doon graced b)I master· suJte, 2~ BA, tam Provence, 640-0237. ~646-"'1"730.--,;=n-===:-:: Garden oriented l u x u r Y crpts &: drps enc covd p r o g r a m · Are you OPEN HOUSE broilze'C&tT lamps into new· rm, trplc, fully crptd & Open house 11)..4 Sat. & SUn. PLAN YOUR F UT U Ft E home, 4 BR. family rm, din· 968-nn * 968-4004 patio, walk to 'major shop-quallfie~?? Call Sat 'May s, Slln May 6. MU ly reblt 2 bdrm &. .den, 2 dil>d. Walle: to shopping &: Newport Heights TODAY with Real Estat.e. ing rm, beamed ceDlngs. POOL iur ping center. Everyone Amalti or., Irvine. Turtle baths, ocean vfew home rec. center, magnl!icient For an appt, call 9&J..S83T Corner lot. Private beaches. J 111'1 qualifies for FHA asswnp-Rock Hllla. · m-3353 For w/tonnal din nn. firepl, llv view of Saddle Back, huge * SPANISH * TIIE REAL E S'T ATE Principals only. OPEN SAT tion. Payrnts Jeu than rent. Sale By owner. President rm w/3 wan. gJASI, prof walk-ln pantry, dramatic TREE INC It SUN 1-5. 4633 Dorchester Rea1tors 5e-949l home, Model cond. Cor. vu decor wJlots of wooa, mk-staircase, 2U> 8'I ft ot living Swiss chalet w/Spenish motif . .,;;;;.,';-;::::'c;;;;;-:::;:c::= Rd. BY OWNER. Splashplinto_ this~~--::: IJ Open Eves lot, proiessional laMcp., Jar. ror. foils, term, flowers. 3 area. New landscaping In 3 BR. 2 ba, ttmOdeled to ·~M sssk .~~-~ "-- Olym c-Stze '-',..lUl.LI 3 br, 2 ba. tam. rm. ~·~ blk Redwood decks, shake roof. progreu, cul-de-sac St. By perlectlon! Extra )ge. yard, .........,, • .,_ e CdM DUPLEX e decking and _bl'i~ patio all-t6Z..4471 (:;::,) 546-110 to poob '&: tennis. . Near 500• glass. Muter bu Owner. $65,(0). 8J7....f.448 room tor pool. Hurry! pt Harbor, 496-6988. · 2A~i;:~::&i·~R1~t ~gaspai:pit~~. C~UN'IRY Check These Features ~!,~ ~~2=·-~°,;,~BY owner_ 3 BR tri:level. *LEASE OR &UY* Industrial P,.,.r,!! 1M Walk to beach. 173,f>OO Swnm" evenings. Sbup 4 I * LIKE NEWI * -CLUB-W/W lush yellow •ha& see• 169 r.oo By owner-Open ,..,., den, patio lcitchen 3 8~· ..... family rm. 2 Full · -* UNDIR' --* OPEN DAILY 1-5 ly bdrm 1% bath • =·· trplc, self-cleaning ~ ll.-1 SatJSun, Temple w/view & bltna, 'fonnal d_ln-be. s., 2 frplcs. ~· yard. .-- 513 ORCHID =ied 1 % ~ ~ ~c~:e simi)te. $36,sOO'. A~~~~ 1np' ~'ett~ted ~ Hills Dr at 300C Outa Wa,y. ~ 2 fzplcs, 2 1Jevel bnck =· ~~t.1~i~p~tlon. ~~ ~~::'.Jxirm. Ocean.new Realty 673-8500 to ..i1 · 139,900. Ask tor OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-5 b-, ~11 l baths. rm' wl•lnk. brl<fat nn. ICaU !162-1267 tor othe• :;::.i v~gff 831he:;;: BALBOA' BAY PROP. CAPRI RtAL~ Mf. Pdces Jump In Juno Wayne or Dick at . 1551 ST. AUGUSTINE rormal -""1ie larnily sprinkler ays. Interest..i tlm".l . w • . -. * MZ-7 ... 1 * &lit oq. It. lnd.-J _._, KASABIAN room wttb wot b.r tdmken pnnc. only f12,5()0. IN "THE VILLAGE" Lq\&na ea.,... ""°'"'°" H~~i.u:tl:+~~ Real Estate 962-6644 , KlNES ~~.==:fl: e;t~:1~~tot1i:kS::; 'o:!tode~. =a. ~tc~rB~~rPtan8337:na~:~~~ 8~~-;~r,:'f:i::: Mo~~.·ln, ,..: __ mo. lrplc. $87,900 includes Janel. 0 REA.LTV INC Ing in master bedloou1 3 owner AJJ rooms look o~t to Mstr. BR, suite ""/pnv. "" J..car garage. Unique gazebo _,,, ~ Open lS Dally. 64f-J450 $75 .EStl'M6 car garag:e. Lots of trees. pri gaj.den. Colll!lidered to be ha., on level sliding g\alS Newport Buch In back yard. Priced to aell ~rt 174 BIG R-2 PROMISE-TOTAL DOWN 1714,873•8210 Eajoy 1he c1u-... I< pnol 1 of the most beautifully opens to ocean view •t 145.000. 646-1720. Small vacation home, amall I. 2, & 3 BR, l " "211 Ba .actl.no ... Ju'1 llsled. won't decorated & landscaped balrony. $56,000. ·~~i IMMACULATE OWNER, 3 BR. 2 BA, tam n.aLANDu••·• ~ price $43,900. Call '673-7311 711 2001 w . ..._ llVd. llll't. homes In lll'ea. $69,500 with Mlssion Realty _,..,,,,> . rm w/FP, cul-de-sac, nu uor u.uu uoovo:: ~· Wt\); Deni"'" Assoc. ~~b~':d."c a ~pm/~e:"J~ ,";-"SPAN-ISH.-YIL'L'A~ CALL 142-4451 lot. Call alt 6pm oo wltda>s, DUPLEX LOT BAYFRONT c:Pt>. drp<, usume VA 7%. ~ "~~~ k<t CHARMING 2 B• i" CdM. N' Bltm. Priced below mari<et. 83>-2800, l899l Racine, pr. BIG with TREES I< VIEWS! $69 500 l45,000. -· &.atlon • '° ACftO $135. • sllop'g & beach. $54,000. By 4:1> sq. ft. f1niabed bonus Approx. 3000 5<I.; It. of home HANOVER. ~l, End unit, Walk to beach 8t downtown • San Clemente acre .$].750 down. Balanm Owner. 640-8078. rm., 2 car encld gar, priv wh /.,.,,tra11 au-4'Bednncond., P1LUS 3 BR T~~~~~l~ Laguna. Only $32,CXXl. One 4 ~~ nea-test, cleaneat 2 · BLKS /'I""• ·"' $3tl.50 month. l&J ACftli • C t Melli patio, pools, you own the uge poo • s., ailte Parle. ()u....,.. ...... '6 ......,.., ...... , Horva.th lftity Dave ~" ea )'Otl wW ocean, W 1 4/N v•N· Ame land, $100 per acn 01 • land. $19,995 to $26,950. basement rumpus rm, for. &: features. First Time Of· Dobert)' ~1912. f!M.0615 see. Dinine room and 3 2 BR, 1 ba, }OjN~ ~· sa;o;, down. s.J~ WANTED MESA North east corner of mal liv. & din. rms. Man,y fered! Open HoUM, Sat -· 3 BR. 2 BA. baths. For further 1nfmna-Value $56,000. ~ IUUJled. month. 9!7--0136 ~nt. Euclid and Slater, FV. customized. features . Sun, 1-6. 18281 Mandrake BY owner-I: ... A.... h1llaide non or to 9ff call 646-nn. 181e. 831·2888 or 213-316-2814 RMI loti•· _O,pen Wed thrq Sun 11 ers trans.l'etted hOrth, Call Way corner ·Sandbur&' & redwood 5-,.,.. SOUTH BAY REALTY THE REAL ESTATE FAIR 'MandRke. iro.eoo. home, ocean view. stalnede>a7".t•J1"*'flW J=i lxcluiftlO 567-$14' .,, 962-2449 .•. 5.16-2S61. LITTLE RANCHO U,VFRENnoCH ":°'CHEN ~th ~~-~-m.:~: ~-·ID•. jff!1JI --I~ PEACEFUL Don! Mlso Thie Onol O.N this large lot wned for ~· w• Df:ii~:'J1 1 4 bedrooms family room uruts there aits a cute little slate Door & raiaed hearth ~~ ....... !;~~-N~lgt~· ~.Jtl~~--::-::1~~~~~~~~~~1 ' MORNINGS air conditioning. Higheai 2 B~ houle. A.rzyone can, fpl Secluded 3 BR 2 ba WOODS 408 PLAN * UKE NEW 3 + Bonus, I qual ity carpeu, drapes; qualify. Soe<u1at<n dream. o.J; W.500 ., · CONOO. :t BR 2IIA on Golf * BAY VIEW* Jlfo! bath condo. COYered pa 11 o w/BBQ. $23,500 ~ .. J\ltin& Beaut vu 5 Units, 2 Lots * GAS B·B-Q on patio HARBOR VIEW HOMES for PE~CE DISTINCTIVE «fy1e Tennis club. 10% down. XLNT 0INCQM.'.E. #?JOO * CUSTOM ~~.'...~II REALTY 'ill7-w/vlew; beam1, 2 fplcs., 3 135.900 831438 * WATERFRONT * * GOLD shag uu~t (TI4) 83W780 REPOSSESSIONS BR; 3 Ba., dlnlifo: nn., & OWNER. 4 BR. 2 BA, tam. DUPLEX · 196f>OO * "uviUngGE pools &. maint·tree . family rm. 3 Blkl. to ma in rm., pe.tlo, bltna, dlx crpt NEWPORT BE' ACH PRESTIGE ?or infPrmaUon and location beach. MOney can be made thru-out hill vtew 25482 Via *ASSUME at 71'.% 2100 MODEL of th,.. >11A li VA home•, on this. $'!7,500 de Anzi_, 831_1209' REAL TY 675-1642 * PRlCED to ,,.11 at 131,900. 2800 It of luxury IIvfng. 4 Bed-·rontaKct A-SA. BIAN Hillie MoConnack Roaltor 3 BR, 2 ·Ba. ......, covered 21127 New}lOJ'I Blvd., N.B. WE Jusr SOLD 3392 Carmel. 968 1•44rw05ln roalty(;:;chrs) rms 4 bath home w/"'pe'· lOOO N. Coast Hwy. <JM..'155! patio,. tam nn, all bltpa, BEST BUY NEWPORT at a top price, and need I ;';,~~~::::::::-'.~~~ big 'rec room upstain with Re•I Estate 962'""44 CUSTOM B_UIL T , Iarie tncd Jot. $44,500. Prin-For sale by owner $56.000. two more houses. Buyers OWNER anxious. 4 bdrms., 2 full bath, plwi family room * TRADE YOUR HOME * Cl.0&e-ln walk to tovm &. ctpe.ls on!y. Owner, 495-441.4. 440 sq ft family rm, 30x15' DBL wide, tri enclaed porch, will assume your cutTent baths. Patio. Dining rm., &: fonnal dining room down· for income Five units beach. New 4 bdrm., 2 bath Lido Isle nvtne nn, 3 BR, Ip dintn& crpta, drps, patio, corner 531-6800 loan and .will take over al family rm. Forced-air heat. stairs. ~ $52,900. CAIL ~th 3 BR ~·BA awner'a home with Ia:e. yard, room U'ff, 2J,ii Ba. Few blkJ lot, pri beach, jacuzzi, A reg on ce, or l-!160 days. CAIL Picture windows, entry hall. 847-8531. unit Near Huntington Har-for pool. Heavy shake ~t. from Mariner's School• le pools. Putting green, pool c;1a;:;;1~e~ty ~-bnc 131.500. lll~l!E "°*':eauC~R·..:_..., ~~-sldlng. Ask•~• .~~:=:bath~ i.~~=SaJ:.~ :b'::.."'~~-Ad~ts= liiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,.. I OWNER leaving. Garden • • • ,... -•• J •. ~ 50 Ft. Nord corn er . Bay11de Village, N B , * JUST lfTED * Home. 3 bdrm•., 2 baths. r BY °"""''' 1i950 down T ,..,__........ M$1fl<ent. cuatom home. STEPS TO OCEAN n<-187~. 686-0m Fa!1'1ily rm ... t I rep I ace ·0 Ovr T% Gt. Pm.ts $366. j ~.,-$170,000. 2-St)'. A-Frame. 3 BR. 2 ha. ~· x 4.1'. 2BR. space rent 2 BR. home Eastside Bu1\t-ms, d 1 sh w a s h e r . ~ --Br tam rm 2 ba bonus mi Bit-ins. "Walk to beach, $59.50. Stt to appredate! El ~~~~~~~~~ Zoned profesSlonal Patio. b Nk"3 :Jes9fi2.-~ OWNER desperate. Gorgeoua 833-1103 or 'ssi-95oJ. . .,...,lt71 4H-2100 ~~ Summer, winter pools, tennis. US,50J. Nido Pk. 1640 N~ ~ ~--127w·5!"111 Park. ' ' ' . home. 4 btlnns., 3 bath&. GLEN MAR 4 BR phts tam, NEW 2 BR, 2 Ba home, . .LIDO RIALTY CAYWOOD REALTY ~P· 36• CM. Nr. · 1 A 111 .... rge ' •moon SEE-BUY-Move T"""y Roar living rm. Family 19771LexingtonLa.135,900. ocean vu, oeparate dining, 3377-Via ... -,.NpL •-·-' * '541-1290 * ~--------"""1 Realtor 54&.6570 l5000 On. Assum 7% loan. nn, flttplace. DlnJng rm. Bkr/Ownt-673-SO'll. Open fli>lc, bltno, 139.500. $5800. ~ _ ~· 12X44 BUDDY furnlabed Jn $269 to~ Mo. Payment. BWJt-ibs, dlahwuher. TwolSa~{Jl..S~======jjhandleo~~::· ~496-2218~~=· ===.:..o==~.,~,..,~-~==~r-~Yi!~~~~:--Ooeta Meaa ad~ Low . BY Ovmer. 3BR, 2BA. Dble Move In Today! Nke 3 BR. patioL Top area. b r k[,; Beyfront Comer = rent, .. 10% gar. Cor. patio. Lge fncd. 2 BA. CQrrJer lot. Nr' schls. $44.500. w..z&J., Near NewPort P!.er Pa)'lnei;kt.a like rent. yd. Nr. 11<:hool11 &: shopping A'EWPORT MESA REALTY OWNER" moving. Sharp 3 3 lotl 1: 7 .1ma!l apts Dealer 557-9390 center. $26.0CKI. VA, Conv. or ~!MU bdrm. 2 baths. PaUo. Dining Cifiq"(l Al'-,( _ f)-C ~Q. • Prine. only. Alt 6T.J..3012 10 J: 55 GREAT Laket, Ex· rnA. Open House, Sat-Sun. TIBURON Townhouse 4 hr, rm. New shag carpets: Fire p~ '-""t.I ~... 'b P</" v BEACON Bil¥ Fmt -2 + pando llvtrc room. 2 BR. 12-5 PM. 642-8464. 2~ ba, tam rm, bltns, patio & buralar alarm. Stereo. TL . .1. f f , , W _ _, G J'b Cb -L'• aueat rm + apt, dock tor 2 new crpts A drpl, turniabed. OESIREIJ Location. ~esa w/bar·b-<i, 1na11Y xtras, Hand>man'1 worl<bench, b11t rKlT /! tlgUtng Orv ame W T 0 ll<;«I> _ 55• boat> dble gar renn~ 11 mk !rom Ocean, 536-0388. Verde No. 2 yr. Immae. 2 choice lot. $37,500. 962-6287. ~.500. 84&-1383. ---....,·.--~., C&A"Y I. POIWI------1165.000, 10% dwn, ~nalde~ NEWPORT BAY"BEAUTY TAX SHELTEit..lNOOlll! • Produclne au well unii.. . .,. to $50,000 inw~nt ,,.. quired -retum 5 to 10 tlmet. Local owner. Write ClaaafUed Ad No. 685, l>.O; -1560, lla1ly Piiot. . Me1a,.CaJU.9'lll2ll ' story, 2300 sq, tt. 4BR, 3BA, Huntington Be.lch OWNER must sell. Sharp ..... ......,. llnws of th• tradea. JMD, 838-2257 . Adtilt park, private bet.Ch fam. rm. Nr. Elem. & pool home. 4 ~ .. 2 baths. fO!Hi-.. ••11 WOids a,.. OONDO • Park-like •u r-2 BR, f·BA, Jg LR, aundect • ~ LlcOff •-~ , lnlem1ed . .chi. Avail July. SPANISH HACIENDA Patio. bln)ng rin .. bu11"1nl. low., • ...,'--'"-"'" roontlinp-pool. NB, l BR. 2 Panoramic view 50-S8'12 _,. By Owner $44,950. 557-6500. Desperate mvner must sell Fireplace. Shows like a I R Hi E H A T I BA. U'J,IXX>. Bkr. 673-52'.ll, 10x46 FLAMINGO mobile e CINM~· * Ralax by tho Pool * lmmed. 3BR, 2BA. like new mndel home. bl1t 138,900. I I • I I 1 . 642-3645. home., tum, lull awni.. • llutchor Shop{Mld ---=----=---...o--.=--' n..:et 2 t 2 BR 111 BA carpets, drapes, bltl.M. 5 96l-3865. HIILSIDE hOme ardUtect xlnt cond~ 4 Seuons Partc, • lldr1 SuNfv ltw Oft!, Aduit ~. &-side CM: min to beach. Large well OWNER sacrifice. Lovely 3 design, ~m bullt, 4 y'rl 2359 Newport Ave., SP. 68. HOLLAND-.;,, S.lee St I th' !ro kept lot, fenced yard. bdrm Covered IK:!fftned • In<~· old 4 B ·• Ba .,. ~-·-"--FOR nt ~"--963-ea .,.,_ .,11 1 '"Mm owner. $36,950. EZ Tenna. r.!,"'-' 2 balba. Termeed ~ • · r,:. · _. .... .......-.. re ' ~ space, 645-4110 or ~ l'VL ·~· ~ ~ tor PERFORMANCE --~ ~-11. F mlJy I H-A F E S I ~ °'· Owner. Open dally. 24x36', Ne.._ Beach, SIS . ins 0rup, °""' -COLLEGE PARK 3 BR, 1 '~•· ~,.. a --• I 54H272. per mo. lla1ly be!on ,_, •'!t'!!!!!!!!'l!il!!'!'!!!!F.:-1 HF 1~ B 847-3584 nn .. fi..~. Rear living I I I J f ~1-PARTNlll Anthony Pool I ~ A ~-!lo ' BAYCREST-Extra Clean 00 ~ -ACTIVE • 'b .... : FOR --•-by -.. Delux rm. Enc uvul pa . • needs loving care ut ..,....,. -........... brk ru: 450 8C-al. · 4 Bdrm.I, 3 Baths, lamlly 3lx57' 3 BR; Mod a la r w/-•--ent ~ t.'U,003. Exel . K ln,ga ard Seabury 3 BR. tam Rm. _, ..,...., • Rm, formal d1nb¥t room redwood w/vint A bch. 30"'t;;Q"~ R<al "'"'" 642-2222 ;:":1..:i,~1.;r._~ O=R ~~~ i:~;; 1· H A L E T · 1 ~ By Owner. 165,900. M'-J40G (nt) -· 1n mtr hf.profit ~llptl ATTRACJ1VE ~ "'' ft . 4 beaoh, ochoolt, and shop-rm., !lreplace. Built-Ins, C I I JI I llJ 'IG lll!IY bo unoonttary, 0.,1ftfront Duplex plMt Jn C.M. -. BR home w/~I, din area, ping. Open hou9t dally 12-'I dllhwuher. Cathedral cou. -L · but thoil, ""' don~ do· It 4... + beado Iol lll5,0CIJ I .... .._ I~ GIFT, Soovenlr • Toy -tam rm , lrp c. By~ p.m. 20751 ~th Lane, laa.. Bta _play •re~-. yow~ ~-1 Prine. only., Aat. 813-3012 ~ on beauUtUI Balboa blaall 137.ti00.!;41Hl32S. HB.96MI03 ·. ~U\Mhfe VA .• IO•JI· ·1 ·RUT AICE I HOUSE/Of..ie_by.....,Jn . $10,000andttlayounI<looll MESA V•"'·· ilii Owner,~ COO:Y SPANlSH OOITAGE MtJlfllol.--4• ...... . -..... "l'beBlufll",ISfl,900.3BR. ...... just"""""' n!\i BR,211 BA,d•~cd,1n·nn, .4 blocko 10 ocean. Hlah -· • • 1-..,l.-.."r,..;..lr;..."l-"-... ,-4 ,Gf;";:ll:.,!'",..'"""°"""'· 211 BA, lmmaculate .. AcrugolorHlo 150 MartneAve.,675-18,t, btt!-oor lot, .new!Y pun led "& vaulted ceilings, ado be FOR Sale Bf OwntM BR. 2 ._ ....... __._._ .. __ .. _ _, ... -'· 'fC* c1...iop ffOM..., ...._ 3 liilow. decorated, 644-21-46 by ·~ =~""~"""-.--:=:-:-:- decorated. 166,950, 540-5597 lirepl, procn kitchen and BA. 14. of.om rm. f'rl>lc. pofntnlem only. SELLING bull-, ''Tn!e GI COLLEGE PARK Cam. """"yam. P,erfect honey· Bltno.-..,, ... ~-. E PRl,"!!..~:mi10.lfn!1S IN I'. I' I' 1: 1: r J HARBOR View Hmo . LAKE l'RONTAOI W."dNUtlhoJ>. ldealloclli bridge model 3 Br, '2 Ba moon cotta.gt with s Olkle-MC nr abop I center, ~ "'"""11; @..._ . _ . . . _ _ Monteao. 4 Br, 2 Bl, FIR, 240 ac. on buutlful I.. a tr: e lion °" Cotlt Jfwy. ii J rtples. By owne~. Job 11.arter't price. B K R .IChll.. OPEN HOUSE Wkndl D/R. Owner. $a 4 , 5 O O , Nacimlento near marinu A Ll..."W1a BMf'I. \I' el" t..,,,le>Ted. 91!r56LI ~ 1-6. lB50l Lorie Circle. 8 UNSCR.\Mel! AIOvt lfTlln I J I I I I I 133-3894. rffldentlal dev<lopmentl. ,...,,,.bly pr!Ced. ~"'' y OWNER..!. -4 gf(' 2 4 BR. 3, BA. tam nn $36,500. MT-U43 , TO GET ANSWh . Du.P1exea near the ocean $850. Ptl' acre w/tenn1. ESTABUSHED Slkftiiri&:i ~)I 2'IOtl (Oi.d., ' !Zr.GOO. w/fli>lc. tlln rm, bltlnl, nr Tbo ,.,_ draw In the WOlt. • ' '. . . Mil., !..anon, !Wal!Or lncld pattlal mlet clallle A .ftervke lor l&le. e..t -· , """""' 11!9' Dog.-I sr., ochl• " bch. by Appl: · • "'DallY Pllnt C!on"loll SCRAM-LITS · ANSW!RS IN CWSIFICATION 700 •6'1W563• anall.-., Bltr.-S364000. 1133-28«1 ~,-CM. 893-5.110. 968-61129, '!_Ad.~·-~'!!:,. ____ ,_..:..::.:::::=.=:.:=.....::::.:::.:..:..:=...:.:::.....;:..:::..::..;..::..;-'---'------'---"-'-"-="""--- • • ' •• I ' • 'f ---1~r :.1 _ ..... _ ... -..;;.J~;;;-1 1 ~ ·--.·· ~--~l~i!!!J ~1 -ii.!-...... -~lft1~•;~1 ·'t'-~·-~· ... iilli-.;.:·1 ~~1~1 -;.;-~ .... -~11'J~· 1~1 ,,.~·-~· ... iiiiiiii-~llJ~! --.-;"';;-;:1 ~~1j ! 11 :• House. :;;;='..;U;.;nfuno.=""--..;as;:; Houooa Unfum. 30S Houte1 ~nfurn. )05 Af!" ,_ NO Apt. UnfVnt. Ml Apt. Unfllrn, ApK., ••Pb., nfu ' l~I I ~!!1~"2~;;·~o:fl;uiol~ty~;;;;;~20C~D -,.,.... ... Unfum. m ~.um. or U m. 1; ---= , _G_or_:o_ro_l ______ ,llu"tlngton -hN -;;;•wport;;;;;;;;;;;l;;;o;;;oc;;;ft;;;;;;;;;;;;;; _C:.._t•-------2~=: .Q.. ': Cottt Mou • * PARTNER * BEAUTiruL, Ex.....,tive 11n-• LIVE LIKE A KIN& Reil:or fiH-1210 ~ ' cienda 4 Jk'arOOOUI, 2 Sath5, ....... ftl ftd Active wltb $2!,IXMl cash, family room. dillin< room. At Bud~ Pricesl 1 ( ____ ,. AENTM.I Located nc1tr schnol», !UK>p. 1•m~SHEI>. NE\V ~w d°upJex. S UJi, ~1 for m~t.mcnV ... __. .... .-+a P::.'f. & h'eev.·111y1;. Y11rd Rtal~ C...m "~" ---•-·-•t•·· ~ated ..-• •-k UN!o"'ruulSHED Yea.rly. \\Uher, dryer , _.... ·-~ ......,. ....-1-~~ n nltr111inc~ lz waler JMt. I. NEW DT EACH ·vu·•~ blHna by Jtadinr manufacturer. Duslll 11 ONLY 2 YEARS OLD: All OCl!•N"F -... rclrtg, . m-oo St~ wut. a.cope:. Sllll'ti4 HolW of the ~mas to tnhnnt.-e "" Rvn T * POOLS ~I PenrlNUIJ ...wy $15,000 1.t yeal' plus t"ntertatnlna: &: renJ flunlly r:ew, deluxe 3 BR. 2 bath • * INCt"OSEO ~ mare of profitt. 433 w. 19th St., Colla ~lC$1 llvint'. $315 per mo. 8'17-7987 3 ?Ir gar~e. Lowe. .. ~A~~'.:".: GARAGES BRAND New Octtntront qualify: Wllllngnou to IBM s. C...t Hwy., Laguna $650/mo. yriy. ·~~~ * CONVENIENT Coodomlalwn. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Jea.m, be en~nlal, ready tPlccadlUy Circu1) 2 BEDROOM, elt~tric 63823:i (P39) S4'IO/mo. Year le a 1 e . to 1tart at once & enjoy a TO AU. BEACHES 67>169-1 dlvm.!n.d participation In COSTA ME&\ Of'l'lCE bulltlns, FA hoet, will-FROM $140 MONTH 3 Bit 2 BA. trplc. "'••h A bJ.protlt de-preu k>n/lnflaUon c.-Arvin<-Co•t• ~le&Y. i\'ci•i'""rt t•w•ll carpets, double Day Llk = -• fi la! ~. I ~ ' ·~ ADULTS PLEASE ~·_;,~, ' new! -1""'· ....,.....,. nanc ""'s neu. Bmch, Huntlnaton Beach. var.1ge. $210. per mo. 642..S235 644-6200 ~ 0.11 !ollO U/I lrtt• •no 10 W!fJm• W•lh WJlftlltJ' Clf~lf t "'''1"1 u lh111 tar ~::i.tbe R~etre~ s~~. ~)u11~Ji:.'ae~ CALL DALE, 962..4471 ~ VILLA POMONA Coron. del Mar exdwlied .. For . pcnonal ,~111..,. Small patio. •gt. NEWPORT HEIGHTS PHONE 642-2015 .... ·amr DELUXE }OU• 1-Pl<IOUI nrw l or 1·~eO•OOlft '0~•101111!. $m1U Pth oi.. from ~1 6~. fu•tt•tu•t ~1·a•f,blt. r.1oor1~ oor11 9.00 I~ t OD, 1300 rAlr1lrw lld . Cell• Mt\t. Pho"t: S.1~·2JO~. ,,., I I ,, cont.identW 1nte:tv1ew, ivrl~e SlOO • 2 BR House. v.•/gar. $.160 l\10, ·'"ar.11 lea11e. 2 Bft, -Immaculate 2 bed· t1760 PomoQ& Ave.) APARTMENTS Cl&ulf~ ad no. 656, _ ,o Child ok. New 1."f'l)t!; Ir: drps, ...._"'! DtJ.ly Piiot, PO Box Li60, $l60 _ 2 BR. houM:, chlld/pet crpts, slove:, sml enc l1I .),'d. room 2 bath and lanai. 0i ~,... Air Cond • Frplc'l> -3 Swim· Costa bl es.a, catUomla, ok. Gar. A: yard. t!n<'l<I g11r, art Spn1. J36-t9.17 l Sumrher or 6 months. Casa de Oro ~ mlna: Pools . Health Spa 9262t and lnclude phone S2al -3 BR. house w/gar. Irvine I BARRE1T REALTY, ALL UTILJTIES PAID r.. ! ! !!, ~~~I'!t ~:~ .. Game ano number. Encl. yard I: patio. Kids I 642-5200 Compare beflll'e .)'OU ,rent OS TEN ACRES 1 Bednn. r·rom 5165 ..__ 240 ·pets ~ALL s.G-0111 . -I BR. 2~l ba., ··•••·•··· $435 1 ~ ~~~="ld~~ea~ Aptt. fum./unfurn. Lease 2 Bcdnn. From s:n; tfW'f· m<ll!' .. J to Loan __ ~ :~· 2 ba. ' ·" ·· ·" · · S~5 Newport H1ight1 direct l.lihtlng Fireplace' / }>riv. patios. , MEDITERRANEAN ~ tff~ 1 LAGU:-.l .\ BEACH o n ·rcE ~ . ~ b:-· lnrn mt ...• J:;IS • Separate dln'g area Pools Tennis Contnfl Bk.fst. VILLAGE 9a11.er st TD Loans 1Si'n-ln8' LagUna, Dana Poi;1,1 "13?~r 2•.~ ,~· Delu.'<el' .-~,..,./2 l~R.. Clean. Adi!~. No pets. •Home-like stora&t> 9CO Sea Lan, CdM !W·2611 ('Jf/S Sa C C . u s. · ·0 •• • • ..7<l ,JU</ $2.j(J. AJ!;O '& 2 Br apt. Sm. (Mac.Arthur nr Coast IJ"~J 2IOO Ha bo Bl d C 'I 55i1" $150 • On the Beach! F'um 3 Bit z bu., furn ....... S400 • e Ckn>ed ~ara.ge \\'/atoraaeJ ~!!'!!!!!ll!!!!!!\!~!l,!!!~!I,!!!~ J . ln-1) 557$2() UP TO 95% _ n lenti:nte, ap1stru1hl 14 nn. 2 ba. f.R. Hills •• s475 1 646-ISOJ &1.5-l04S e Private patios " · r r v ... 1• • 7\0t/ Bachelor pad. All ulil pd.. J Newport Shorts e 1\tarble pullman NE\VLY DECORATED 1 REI'\'TAL OFFICE 2 d TD L Pot"' I • Klng-szlidm" bedroom, utiliLi<• paid, o0PENNE9:30STAMAN,.DS5:300 Pu'T' !,!~~~~~~!'!~~~~~~~~! n oans1$175. \\1atk lo Beach! 2 Br. N'P'T. Shore.~ 3 1:R. 2 ba., e Pool . Barbecues. sur-fireplace. $225. n1<>-tcrmo. furn duplex. Encl gar. Yard. frp!.; pools, tennis; v.·11.lk to rowuleJ \Vilh plush laud-Realtor, &i<l-7270 Lowe1t r•+•• Or1n9• Co. Avail 5/15. beach. S32'i. Rltr. 6-12-3850 I sc:aping. . .'.s'BR JBA, ti.rep!, bltins. Yoo can look a lot, but you Apt. Unfurn, 365 Aph., Sattler Mtg. Co. [SW . Nr. !!arbor. 2 Br 2 Ba. . Houses Furn. or 1 J\dul~s. _No ~els. \V/accept s i 11 g 1e 8 or v.·on't find any!hlng to con1· --------furn. or Unfurn. 370 '42·21TI 545-0611 trplc, bltna.. Adult!i. Unfurn. 3t0 ~ l .. AltGE 1 ill. SJ~. families. $36S/i\fo. 675-7977, pure \Vitti the great nppear-Newport Beach _:...:;:...:;;...:.;....;.... ____ , -.,,_ Harbor area 21 ..,... sm -Quaint. Older 2 Br. "SlNCE UM6" -36.l \\/, \Vilsoo &12-1971 m l\la.rigohl, CdM. anee, great Jocatlon and :C:;o.::•':;•:...:;Mc:;•:.:H;;... ____ _ ~.... ··-h trpl I I "ill K'd / LO E great ganlen apartment ''Rent A Piece DON'T BORROW ouse. c. nc" · 15 1 tst .\Ves~ernBank ·B!t_lg. Cust.1 Mesa WWE KLYRATES 2BR IBA 2bUtstoL1ttle -ta u tv p , 1 E I S • • • here: 2 bt!droon1s, den, of 1 Peloco'' 'fH£ EXCf! lNG n · n1vers1 a1 "• l'\'111C xtcut ve u1tes Corona .. Ll'I pool. $220. Dys spacious entertaining areas, PALM MESA APTS. 'TIL YOU CALL US! C.t.LL 494~1 Days 552~7000 Nights I SMALL1\VO bech'OOm .hollsc 3 2080 N-port Blvd. Mr. Brock 5is-ltW, eves "er••••i" klici••••. 2 batl•• CJ .8on'ow on your home i!qulty * LANDLORDS * n1ilcs from beach ln CO!lla ...... 833-3271 ... ... ... OCEAN d i\il NUTES TO NPT. B -1. for any a:oOd purpot1e. Serv· ntEE RENTAL SERVICE -l\lf'~. Con1ple tely furnished. Costa Mt1.1 0-==c.--:--:-c----set In a garden \\•ith fimi.-ers, Gft FURN. Oli UNFUR!"'i. 1ng Loa Angeles County for BIG 4 BEDROOM 2 :>.BR. 1 Ba ......•••.... s28.:i / $165 month, \Yill a;hart half 642-2611 2 BDR~I. patio, g-.u'age, Putling and pool , You1'S for HARBOR VIEW UnbeJievably la.tee apts. over 20 )'ears 111KI NO\V Jn ~ '.! HR. 2 Baths .. , .... $3:.S nu gas and electric. ~l STUDIOS & 1 BR'S viCVr.', 516~~ Larkspur. sm. SoITY, IJO children. huge pool, Jacur.:i elect bJt. ~c County! B .Ith home .1bout 2 2 BR, den, 2 ba, air cond $275 1 hct"-een 5:00 pm and 8:00 e FllEE Linens 644-St75 or 673-0817. THE ORLEANS ~~~~~ 8=~~1~~~1~ns~ ins, shag crpts. drps, sauna Sl.:iNAL MORTGAGE CO. miles to the beach, 3 BR. 2 baths ...... $~1275 1 llm. e rnEE Utilities ctITE Ne,visl1. 2 BH, 2 BA, 1741 Tustin 833-0886 perb houae security, exclu· S~~GA~~s, no ~m Sl50 • (TI4) 556.0100 lmmedl.1te occupancy. 3 Bil . 21 ; ha ....... S39:-/4fil Irvine e Full Kllchen no child, S\\•edish lrplc. cov. No DEPOSITS sive Versailles Club and 1 BEDRJ\l. From $l6S • 4600 Campus Drive, N.B. $291 p e r month 4 BR. 2 baths .......... S295 I e Heated Pool patio, SZX> 1110. 6T.r5720 pool with unique AQuabar, 2 BEDR...'1. Froni 1185 2ND Trust DHdl AGENT SC6-4141 • ~ BR. 21,~ ha ........... $375 FOR t'<'nl 4 BR. TO\\'llhou!le • Laundry 1''acilities Costa Mna 'Lo\'ely 2 Br apL"I w/a fountains nnd fom1al go.r· ...: ' . a BH. 2'~ I.la .•••... s:::6j1 :l~j l In Unl\'C'r!l!ty Park. $410 per e TV &maid scrv avail. k .. ·inngd·,~zapcdBR. ?!.u""nd•,•. tifG<;lla>,' dens .. All l_)<U't ot !he South Unfum11· tt~ A·..-aiJ 1''1"01n $10 rRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. Coron.1 d•I Mar I \\1e !lave Swnn1cr RC'nta ts 010. 552-9314. e Phone Service NEARL y NEW incl l~ rent. Chud up to 3. Coasts finest apartn1ent .. -i?ou'~ l'ight: lliey're undef· ' Any Amount I i d h·11 Condomln"'ms $30 WEEK & UP 2 Bdrn1 ai;it over gara~e. No pets. ·~ blk E. ot l~~~u_nlty/.i dlo fro s•tl.":. priced! 1561 J',Jesa Dr. . * CAU.. GT:>-4-194 BKR. ' * O IARJ\11NG 2 ~R, 2 BA. re I u furn 320 • Studio & 1 HR AM•. Frplc. Bit-ins. Selt~leanlng 1'1arbor. .OCW.\Nffi 'u s m_ ~ (;) blks from I\'ewporl Blvd.) Merftales fl'plc, shag c:rpt g. \Jean1 " ' ...... ~ ~-· .I'... ovens, dJshv.·ashcr. Garage. CASA GllJ\NADA 2 Bedroon1 lrom $305 ~S.ll60 ' ceilings \\'()()(.( P811J':llng H . 1 8 h • 1'V & Maid Service Avail. A\'ail July 1st. Yea.l'I'-' leaBe. • ..... >lem'mac W•• 557 i=:n Models open 9 A.i\I. til dusk --~,=.~0;:=,.---Trwt DMds 260 patio, 1 child ok. $325 pe;. . unting on eac • Phone Seivice-Hld. Pool $275 mo. Lois Vogel, 'Realtor 'IUU ""J -~ NEWPORT mo. Lease. 2212 \\iatcrtront H.EAL TY • Children & Pet Sectiol\_ 548-9346 ...,_a=-"'ru~----,..-~.M=.-sa-:-. ~ APARTMENTS PUT YOIJR MONEY Dr .. 673-3456. UA . Conionny "''i1h Vision 3hl~~1~s.l~k~A~t~ c;:~:· e '$120 l\Jonthly THE VICTORIAN 2 B"R"v $165 1 BR:-& 2 BR. OC AN V H t. II n1v. Park Cc.ntrr, Jn·l nc 'l?IO/MO ''1 "19l B'-2376 Newport mvc1., 0 1 • • F & Uni fro $ll5 TO WORK FOR YOUI * E u ome. ,.·u Y CaU ArtyH111e, a.-;2.7jU(} -·-· ...... ...., ...... 543-9755 or 645-3967 2 BR \\'/gRr. Adults. Crpu, All Util. Pd:'No chtidren. No . . urn;l"Ml ,"'~·e_Al_';; ._t__ £am-1Q%'-fulere1t on well malnt'd pool, deck furn. Of!ice-hou. l"S S Ai\tto s fl i\I .... .!...3t~M N!gual Ad <.iood .For. li.On · drps, ~ bltns, tllcd.. Y .rd. Pet&. Pool & recreation -ON-THE-BL.Ui;.f,.__,__ v •A.~ ~ ..----. = ~~~.!~11~ ~· •• 2!"~i=~~ag~;:· BF:AUT. d~rnterl 2BR 2BA '.! BR lrg $17.o. Ideal for 1 ~?°~~·Call btwn 1959 Maple Ave., C.M. --AT NEWPORT· U'iO~~'fO:· CM ,' SlGNAL MORTGAGE 00._ drps. Lse $500 nio. 673-661> Laguni Beich Condo. on the 7th hole of the IJachclors, sv.·mi pool. ter· 667 "D'' Vl1.1oria St f.160 646-6505 ,. N · t Bl d.' I 1 * CASA VICI'ORIA ,, • 5 Co race Adlts onlu 1 9 9 3 ' rom J e\\ por v , urn 8 (7141 556-0106 3 BDR..\t, 2 BA home in $180 . n~d~ 1 Bi·. apt. Good El r\iguel Go r urse. · ~ · QUIET studio on dead end Mor• Room·Ltlss Money Jfospital Road (1 block l l· 2 BR. Fum &. Unturn. 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. Irvine Ten-ace. Avail l\lay loc. r-;"r. l>cach &: 1oi\TI. /\. v a i I ah I e June 1st. Church. 5-13-9633 St, dellL'I: 2 BH., 1~~ ba, CQP.·IE set> R real garden aJ,)()\•e Pacific Coast H\\'Y) to Carpets, drpes, D/\V, TV : 20. Lease $42:l. 6i.r66-l·I S?L; . 2 Ur, bltns, J ift blks Si7a/1no. Agt 495-i827 * Sl-IADY EL!\IS-POOL cpts, drps, pool, bltns, pli apt! Like Hving in it home entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, ant. Pool, elc. Come by & 30% DISC, "·ell secured eves. bcacl1. Patio. Vh!\\'. Snil pct. BEAt.rr. decorated 2'BR 2Br\ • Adults Poolside $145 up. patio. Oilld ok 00 pets for $162.50/1\10. 2 BR, 1~~ Ne\vport Beach, Ca. 92600. inquire about our l\iove-tn $64,000 lit on 40 ac Apple OCEAN side Hwy -front & $275 -4 Bil, 2 BA, frplc, gur, ! rondo. on lhe 7th hole of the • Children dead-end st. Con\r-. Joe., shopPing &: bus: BA: 2 prk'g places, .PriV Telephone: (714 ) 6-15-0060 Allowance. 525 Victoria St. · Valley. Pays S&lO. mo Incl rear yard. % dbl garage. yard. Nice CQnd ! Luguna El !'l:iguel Golf Course. 177 E. 22nd St. CM 642-364;) 735 Jo.Ann St. palt0s & rec areas. \Vilson PADK NEWPORT at Harbor, C.M. 642-8970. lCl'f.-•11 tl:"• ""':'8. Bx 3 Ap-'Call 536-9831 Jltlls. :\ v ail ab I c. Jun<' lflit. * SUS CASITAS Lrg 2 BR. Garden.<>, on \\'ilson St., \r. " Huntington Buch . .. ·.>'2·3144 . Cotti MHI NU.VIEW RENTALS 1215/mo. A"t 4!JS..ml Furn Bachelor & 1 BR'S. d . • ....... drps, or Harbor. No child./pel APARTMENTS L .~~~~~~~ shwsr, pool, quiet area, 2283 Fountain W•v East J BR Oel Ad I I id ·I 673-4030 or 494·3248 Mission Vleia. J\loclels Open Daily. adults only. $180 rree utils. Mfr2S46 -'I on the bay · uxe. u t poo 8 c r I~ NEAT 3 BEDROOM 4 BR 2 BA F/R D/R 2110 Ne..vpon Blvd., Cl\f f..'6-1204 . garden bungalow, ll ea l' L ...._,...._ fl! hotTM w /l.1rge y.1rd, frplc.' Ilurbo~ \'u Honie~: 3BR, 2BA corxk>, enclsed at-NICE 1 &. 2 BR Trailer:;. $85 EASTSIDE la 1 BR ALL UTILITIF.S PAID Luxury apartme'nt living ocean. Frplc., lrg patio, 6 -. 9.1r.1 .. , C • r p It I & 644-5-177 or {2131 792--182·1. tac g1u·, crpts, drps, d/w, S.: Up. i\laturc adults. 133 E. fr11lc beamed i;; l 11 n g s ' CI-IILDREN 2 \\'ELCO!\.f~ overlooking the l\'8ter. LrJ. ~~una, tennis. $100. dr1po1. $210. por mo. $490. • self cleaning ove11" p!a,!!~· 16th St., Ci\I. 642-la!S. patio' 1 a<lult no pets St6o. B~d netw d bbdrhrms with joy $Ta0.!Xl0 health spa, 7 "'-'~='-~-----H-Furnl·L-• 300 S\\'lm pool Pri'' · L,,N. ' ""' 'o::"" · reu .gera or. s w • range, swimming pools 7 lighted N•wport Baach .,.... Now VKent. CALL 1 BR cottage, charn1ing, 83(H)8TI 1 BR., clean,,crpts, drps, gas ""-oJAP dbl lavlltories, shag crpt, tennis courts pltls miles of --;....;;._ ______ _ 540-1151, HERITAGE quiet area. n;;o m?. + utll. Townhou1e Unfurn~ 335 & \vater paid.~ Adults only, * Sl-IADY ELJ.'\1S-POOL drps, walk·ln closet, patio bicycle trails' putting shut· OCEAN VIE\Y: modern, all REAL ESTATE Acllts only. 49-1-4365. no pets. $140. ;,.10-9il2 • Ad~ts Pools'lde $145 up. garage.. Call fieboard. cn:xiuet. Jun'ior l's .J!lectric, crpts, drpll, bltns, $lD5 ~ UtU pd. New & nice 2 BR. lri::: yard, patio, gar., N rt Beach 1 BR. turn apt. $125. Yard. •Children dead-end st. CJS Real Estate from S189 50 monthly· also 1 bnlcony, pool. 1 BR., furn & bach w/,rar. Ideal student COUNTRY a.uB VILLAS. util paid, refs. /l.vlb. 5/6 & twpo No pct11. 177 E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 548-1168, eve 557--6244 and 2-bedroom pl.u'is and un.lun1. LeaM!. Adu!U only. Cd.AL Prime Mesa Verde locatlon. 1 6/1. s~. 645-662':> AOUL TS-LEASE Call 645-6172 alter 5 pm. LARGE 1 & 2 ~R Apts. ** 3 Br., 11h: Ba. ** 2-~o~ to\vn houses. EIM-l\talTai Apls. 1510 W. Bal- $l!ij • Util Pd. ~all cotta~. =·inlt, :{~~JI tsihnas ~ L.aguna Nfguel 2 Br. 2 ba. carpo1·1. · $250 BACI-IELOR apt. $118 & up. ~rpts., drps, bit-ms, pool. Large , nc.v.·Jy decor. E ncl. tnc kitchens. private patlos OOa, N.B. f714l 67S4230. , ll-'DOdsey sett~ng. Ide a I prh'Rte courtyard. Pool & 3 Br. 2 ba. gar, p:x1I $3IXl No children or pets. 2llJ l'\r. ~· 171h St. No ~ts. $130 patio. bltino;, crpts, lh'p:-. or '?alconiei, carpc.tln~. dra· \''11'-l"t;Jl. Summer, Yrly. ~le. u't:""t n.1. clubhouse fucillUcs, and LAGUN,\ Niguel ne11· Sea ' 11 E/l.LTOft 642·a333 Elden Ave, Cl\! Apt 1. & Sl50 per mo. 675-1573 Bkr. Cloi;e to everything. $17() & periei:. Subtrrranean park· Anita's R<'nlals, Bkr, 2005 ....,., • . Pd. Deco1"9:tOr 11·a.l k to gol! coul"SC. Lease ·~~1,:ace Tot\·~;ioui;e. Ocean 0 I U f r 350 1 BR, Pool. Util Pd. Adults 2 llH , 2 Ba, lrg step do\\·n Ii\' Sl80 nio. 863 Center St ,\;1t. ing \ViU1 e!e\'a!ors. Op1101utl \\'. Balboa Bh·d. 673-2058 .tum. 1 B1; apt. Beautiful $300. 1110. _ADULT ONLY. \IC\\, 2 Br, 1 ~Ba, drapes, up exes nu n. over-35. $l25. ~2407 or rm., frp!c, encl pntio, gar. 5 1, C\I or call f>4%=817:1. n1ald_ service. Jns1 norU1 or l ';!!~~~~~~~~~I ocean vit'\\', Laguna. CALL M5-84Z.I South Co I Cl:pt&, gt!nerous nit. 2 car B1lbo1 Island &15-3394. min. airport & ina.j. shop. I Bl~ 1-'ree in exchange for Fa.sh~l Island_ al ~amborce I' .NU-VIEW RENTALS Realtors · gnr., encl patio, pvt lx!ach. ping. $17:j mo, 557-9.152. light clean-up and building ana San JoaquLn Hills Road. 1~ 873-4030 or 494-3248 ---· I Co111munlty rec f11;cllitiC's. LEASE _ \Vaterfront. Pier. DIN Point ~ 2 B\ V lrg inal.nlt!n&nce. Prl\'ate Pa.rk. 'felepbone (7 11!1 641·1900 ""'WI & ••iL--1 I d DESIRABLE I Pr iv:i cy, securily &1.1-11;,7 " . ..., '· C'l'Y r n1s. tor rental inforni::i.lion '--------' -· - -1 an J-IOi\tE I '.'le1v ::: Rr, 2 Ba. aU elec. LIVE in the a.ll nei\• Dana I\e1\· drps & paint. Nr. Retired couple preferred. . _ . ' NE \\' Se a I c r r a" c S42:J. 67::-38.~. Zl4 Grand Point Harbor at the B..'lker &:: li'ain.·iew. }.fgr al :;J7-37ffi or SIO-,"",J61 3 BEDROOl\f 2 bath 2 BR. 2 B;;t. Den, crptd, d~p.!t, To1vnhouse. 3 br. 21 ~ ha, Cann!. beautiful l\-farlna lnn 1\-lotel 1040 "C'' Valencia. 545-.3046. ANNOUNCING EXCLUSIVE 1:ttllltie1 paid.' Avail '.\lay'/ forced air · heat, Garl>-dtsp, balco ny, . 2 frplc, dbl. gar., Hunl•'ngton Beach 3490'1 Del Obispo St'. AITR.Ac •-. 1 • 2 ~ ,~,. BIG CANYON Rooms 400 15th to June l;>Ur. $2GO 1110. lill·ins, patio, garag~, water pa.nor_an11c Ot.'f.!Hn \' i c 11·, I !>;."' ) I'-1 f u• • on. .,. New 8 Apts. All lrg 2 BR, 2 ,;.;.;;;.:.::._ ______ = Realtor 644-7270 I fun1 . AdultR only, no pcls. security, rcc!'cation & 1.4 . ~ • • lchens, e · Quiet area. Adults, no pets. BA's, Bttns, W/Y.' cpts, drps, Luxury Golf Course ROOl\IS $18 \\'k up "''/kit $30 ' 1 • Jt;\1'E REASON,\BLE private beach. $300. 49-:i-1728 NEW 2 BEDROOM ftciencies and apartinents. Coin laundry. $135 up D/,Y, gar, $1!)5. 2Ui Doctors Apartments \Vk up apts. Cbildm le pet Across !rorn Country Club c,·es & 1\·kends. heated pool, direct dial .>l8-{)S(}t . Circle, 5-15-5800. Nt.'"''Y\RT BEA~! 11ecU011. 2376 N<'wport Blvd, COMPL f \ • BR "-27-...... .,._ "·'"" 06 'l Bt:lfh. en<"losed pvt garage phones. television. sauna r..n rv ..... c•1. "'"9"•". O•~ -1. · irn." '"'tne ·M::il\fesa..,,.•ru . .,_...o7 'M V d 'in duplcxbuildin2.Sl8J.per bath. 1Aundr y ·racllities,~NING·1&:2BR.2BA 2 BR, 1 BA single story $-IT:.i -$730 "' .....r"" ~ on Can~I. Ava il • i\lay & ~-ESA VERDE -1 ••• er • 1110. i\lana<«•1· at 31 ~ Oa1vego. n1eelini: roon1. close tet San Garden AP, ls. Pool. Rec gru:tlen uni1, shag crpts. Phone 714/644-0509 llOOl\I Close to stores & June. S3U0/1110. No pets. 1 ~'UPER h-..... "' a1'1)a 710 \\ 18th St .-i,i5 & d d I I f :d tlo "675-6737. For Lease Lovely 3 BR, 21 ... · s ........ ,, 3 Br. 2 ~· llun!Luglon Beach, Clcn1enlc and Lacuna · · · 'fA rp5, s1w1r, nc pa 'I'"""""""""""'"""""'"-bus, CM. Can baby.'l'it for BA. 2 frplc , fam rm, encl . ho n1e. Nc11·Jy cptd. Quiet :l:JG·lli2 Beach. Cotne play in our up. bea111 ceil, frpl, gar. Adlts. · 2 ba Blk -pi1rt of l'('nt. 962-6435, B1lboo1 Peninsul• 1 patio. On quiet cul-de·sac. .<ilreet, nice yd. $350 l\lo. ~portfishini;, shopping and 1 BR, bltns, crpts, drps, $180. 2650 Elden !"137-3125. 2 BR., · 1 · to OCC'an. 612-.~>194 335 Lir.;DQ, :.: Hit. 21~ ba . Dbl . ear. Avail, lilonth of AueuJJt. $2,000. Ke J s o n Robinson Rllr ti7,j...fl~ Nr. lx·st schl.~. 2 chll<lre11, 1 J:ay &. Beach Riiy. 67~'.:00) N'!lwport Beach restaurants. S50 \\'eek and patio, pool, elderly pref. Dana Point ~:~\~··~~~~~);~';: i\'ICE room for working man I pel ok. \\'a!er & gW"Ciener 1 Newport Beach up. Brin;: rh!s acl and $135. 1762 1-1 Ken .... "OOd Pl. -,\sk for Mike \\'ilh kitchen privileges. No pd. $37.i :\lo. 301S Ceylon.: -----ATTN SURFERS recei,·e S.'.i of( tin fi rst &16-ID98 LAR9E. new 2 BR_. 2 BA nr JOi\'ES REALTY 673.ii2IO drinking, no 8 m 0 k Ing . Avall lmnted. SiS-6342, ,.~ J.:rand nc\\' I Bdrn1 uppe1· \Vet>k's renL NU SfiANISH P.lannu k shopping, grnd E. Cl\f. 642-0227. Newport 8~~'=~--­ NEWPORT HEIGHTS CHARMER • 2 Bed· 'room, c.1n lease from 3 to 6 montht. Call lo '"·REALTOR, 642-5200 .5BR 3D.\. \\'~lk t11 public &. S 'U P E R 8 E A C H duplex in i\'pl Shores, J H_untlngton Buch 3 BR :l BA apt, $2'Q. Drive by flt". 496-141.1. 2 BDR~f. nc.,.,·ly decorated IDEAL for student, close lo "nroch\al schools & !Iha"' I HOUSE 3 n.•room & block l<l ~an. Frplc. UOO Vic'·"a. "' '177 E t Bluff units. Adulls only, no pets . .-;-,. • g.u Bit-ins. CpL<>, d1'Ps. enclosed LA QUINTA HERMOSA ..,., VW"O 11 Sl&>. mo 1604 Coral Pl. OCC. :rurnlshed. S55 per ~~·+$3:;3:~?~g1:;:~il~ast dJon,pluts 3 ba,throoms,. J:l1r. $37j h10. Yenr\y lcasc.,S11anish Counl.I'.V Estate Liv-E-SIDE 2 BR. $150 -.~O'ELU)fS: e Open Sn l-Sun12-3. month. &12-8520 :-,.is.1195 Ufi S eps O sur • J,.·,j~ V(Jj!t>\, lk :tltor ;,.18-9346 ing & SpacioUs Apts. Ter· llll11s, w/w, displ, htd pool 3 BR, 2 BA AiJI, for lease. 2 B~. 2 BA, bltns~ crpt'd & BEUROOl\t, lrg closet, w/W . :: IJEO_J:_O_O_"_· 2 bath, doublf' Ye.1rly r1ntal only. 1 ;;BQced v r:'· sb~ken gas Adu lts, no J>ets. 642-9520. Incld spac. master suite, ~(%7dHthru~~· ~2;:1 ~~fj i:1?~~ f~,-i!i~ ~~2~. ":ira•,•o, nice i·ard. '2.JO Call to see. Agent · n lieva. Ll\'ing. NE\V ., BR 2 BA. drps din rm & dbl garage; ::i.u!o . avcn • 1 • ' ' 642 '200 ~ t RH FURN $18'i 2 • Pool. BBQ ' il p I & o1 6-16--7382 CLEAN Bedroom L r g n1011th. Call 67~ even· • ., • ., BF'· run.~ S'>i~ t'l'P g. • . Gar. door opener a\'a . oo · · ~111•2'-0200at1d \\'Cekendl! Ol' ~ Ap~rtments !or Rent ALL ITTILITIEs PAio ~~~Is only, no pets. 376 \V. Recreat191 sS:S~a.. :E~:-22 i!~·~~-~:;~S.'GO :t~'.·1.a~~ oni~. i~;4 & ~ THE BLUi ·Fs.-LoV!;ly 4 Br, Adults No Pets ~IAJlSfiALL ReaJ"' 67l').4600 1 BR. Colt;i,gl', k id;;/pcl~. AlllO 2 BR 1\loblte $87. Bachelor uniL'i in all heh cities. A~t. r·ec. 979-8-130. SHARI>, clea n 3BR 2B,\, 3 Ba. pool privil. & yard (4 hlks S. ot Snn Diego Frwy QUIET 2 BR, crpts, drps, 86j ~~ligos ~\IT{· NB v ROOl\I "11/prvt entl'arlce Jn crpts, drpll. bllins. $260/1'10. 1 n1aintcna nce $450 pe.r 1110 • Apts. Furn. 360 on BC'ach l blk \\1. on Holt l)ltns near Ir.vy. & shopping. · ana.gc Zt * EASTBLUFF Dix 2 sly 2 exchan~ for lite repairs & XI n t I o c. 5 4 O -.11 51 1 lst & last nio's in advance. S\Vl:-.'GER'S JJad $29;')~. to 16211 'ParkHidf' Lane.) ~!::' 0,!_ncl 2 • ulil. 531-8508 or \\IJLLlAM \VALT S CO. Br, 21: Ba, frpl, patio, 2 car overseeing. 642-1460 IfERITAGE REALTORS. j 8 n10. n1inlmu1n or 12 1110. nlonth, one bedroonl, a1l Ctl-1) 8'17-5441 ·~ UNFURN Attr. 1 br apt, closed gar. Adlts. &W-641>5 Guest Home 415 1904 ORANGE Ave. 3 BR. n1ax. Lcalif'. No P e Is . utilities, 011 the canal with $145 _ $16.5 LRG, qu iet t Br $140, Nr crpt/drps, frplc, 2 "tall 2 BR nr ocean. shag, refrg. l~ ba. No gane:~. $2.-iO :i\Io. I 644-490'1 or ll I 783-1690 slip for 40. boat. Can BACHELOR & 1 BR., patios, shoJ>i & lrwy. 1'!? i>t;_ts. 2812 carprt. $115. Call 644--0079. $225 )-Tly h;e. Adult5, no pet Ncl!IOll RoUinson R 1 tr. ~E\\'PORT ISLAND wnter· sublease sliii ~-for ~7j.00 a frpl~'s priv. garages . -LaSalle, ,\pt 2, .l07-1584 Huntington kach 390-36th St. 644-4.140 Avl 6/1 YEAR 'ROUND 75-8120 front upper duplc.x, 3 BR, nionth. Bkr. 61.,..7223 Divided baU1 &. lots ot 2 BR, 1 BA, garage, ne'v NEW Baytront·priv Bch & 7 BR Honie. f1'fll, gar. Al!IO 3 2 B,\, dock space, no pets. B lbO'lllal'ld close.ts. Rec. hall, pool & C8J1)etR & paint. Yearly 1 BR. •• $123 Pier 3BR, 2BA, $.550 mo }T- 2 'bedroont + den · quiet • BH. horse ranch in CQUntry, /\\'a.ii 5'25. $3-l5 lea~:. i1 a pool lnbles, sauna baths. lease. $14.:>. 673-5134. 2 BR. • • $144 ly. 979-06..11 or 644-4510. cul de st1.c "· •· •• · $21}.j,OO Sl75 util Pd. ..\Q't. .fee. 673.Z!JG 1 BDRM, ycurl'-', preferably Sec for yourself. l730l 2BR pt bill t Cl 3 BR •• $1.64 LRG 2Bn. ZBA. .. ... ~. 3 Bedroom · brand new 979-S.IJO ' J l\eelson Ln. (1 blk \V. of 11~ • n s ove, ean ALL UTILITIES PAJD .~ tn CdM ............ s~.00 13 Br/2 Ba !lE'\'ll,y det'()l', I rl'lnale.6~['.gl~ uli l, lleach, 1 blk N. of Slat.er). 06.ls-73.'rs' &ft 6 VILLA YORBA ~undeck. cloee to beach, 4 Bedroom _ Spygius . 3 Bit, 2 BA, crp!s, d~. j blln;;, h1't"ak[sl rm, 2 cur 8-IZ.iS.lS yearly, 673-6640. amt vte-.v ........ SG75.00 frplt', bltn~~· big ba<'k yard. gar, 1 1 ~ ht~ occ11.n, pool & :3alboa Penln1ui1 NEW furn. Studio, acroria fr. 1 Br dupl~x.'v/ gar. $11i No lluntingtoo Beach 1 BDRM, beach 1 hlk, stove. 5 n~-11 ,__ Sa35/n10 . .i-17--0791 Bkr. clulihse pri"I. 'Y rly. 213: -,, children no pets Adulls 388 (714) 142-9622 rertil:', parkiiig acllts. no Vie.-::~.~.~ ... ~~ SGOO.OO 4 BR, 2 BA, stove, dbl gar, 799-5973; 714: :i?.&-0740 $25 WEEK & UP ~~chJo= a.=t_ '~\~: V.1• &y,'c~·I. stJi-1311. *MOVE IN TODAY* pets. Sl65. yrly675-2124. 3 Bedroom . Lido Isle $1000 00 block 11·all lence. Nev.·ly mE Bluffs. brand new 4 BR, e ~le1•pini,: Hoom~ view. S19j , 213:863-8291. l..ARGE 2 BR. LiJ.."C a home. Spac. 2 BR s14g..i16S, furn San Ju.111 C.1pistrano Bkr. 675-7223. ' decor. $250. 6~. 3 BA, pool & y:utl 1nai11t. e l/ousckct•ping Roon1s $135 _ ULTRA NICE Apt'. 6 Encl garage available. Call $lr.9 Kid 1 Pool l.;.:...:;..;..;c..;._;~.;;:.;.;.c:.;.;._ 2 BR !rpl be ed ·11 CJ.st crpt & dn)ii, srll"MJ n10. • Ocean Vic11• Apts 1~•-' GanJe··. Sauna 642--1656 , .i;. i • \Ve come. , 2 BR Condo pool 3?10!'1 $Dl -2 BR. 2 HA, bUns. I C, am CCI ngs, lst & las! plus S200 dep. BALBOA INN -..... -.. .... gar. l736l·A Keel.son Ln (1 p C& r' SJC $]· •• Neo.-port Shores. Child /pet. patio, l small child ok, no 83.'}-86.15. Tenni5. Prh•. pat Io , ** SPACIOUS 2 BR, crpts, blk \V. of Beach Blvd, off R5f!C:> ro ma. • ,fN, '395 • 5 + Den, frplc, bltr11, pets. $16;) yrly &l~ l.)Otl\fal n Street ~a9: drapes. $140. l\Iai1·iC'd pref. Slater). 968-7510. 1,,:<9J.::::..:.:i0'-"78'o------- rar, "ard, kidsl·~ts. Irvine. l\IESA Verde beaut. 4 Br, 2 Sl·l1\RP \Vfllcrfront, Jg. 4 br G'i5..S740 -6n..8145 aft 6. Lrg 2 BR. 11·. BA. In 'plex. S.1nt.1 An.1 " ,.., shag cpt, bl~!ns, lrplc, doc-k PENISULA POINT MEN, small beach hote:I.,===~~~~~--1---------$525 • 4 + Den. Peninsula Ba, frpl.c, family nn. patio. ava.ll. No pel!l. $450. Yrly Rooms $21.50 pl!'r v.·k. Apts UNnJR..V 1 & 2 BR Garden 1 blk to 5 pts. 11tore&: Shag NE\Y 2 BR, nr HIU'bor Pl, NB. Bcautuur house, $29.i . .'.i ~281. 1 673 07'l2 Li.l.1).:. 2 bl', 2 ba, dressing Jll'i per nlOllth. 5.16-7056. ApM. Frplc O/\V, priv crpt d'l"PJt paneling palio ad 1 1 HouNI Unfurn. 305 Gener.11 PRIVATE Room for Excellent mcal.11 & S325 mo. 6-12--8381 lady. TLC. PRIVATE apts or rooms tor senior citizens, meals It maid service. 642-9'178 Summer R1ntal1 420 UDO Isle, 2 sly delx 4BR, 38A, (slps 8) enclsd patio July & Aur. 18 Own. 644-4895 2BR holl8e on Pe.nln. 11S blk to Cla!an k IJay, by week, call eves 6-16-6140 V1utlon Rt"t1l1 425 GREEN Valley L&k~ -New 3BR, 2BA Cabin. Frplc pll\,YnJI, 1 bllc to Jake: 675-QlS prlv. lx>ach. '* IIOUSE for rent J llR, 2 ~ast>. •· · ' rrn , cnrpo11 , S200. Lar.1 br, N-eort a •• ch pado. $16.5--$100. ri>7-7g.jl $160'. 7721 E:111s, Apt B. Ope~ 1 0','v'' ,cen, u,pstail "11• it~by'· Nu VIEW RENTALS \\!ATl'.:R1'~RONT ' BR •••• , ••• '" A .• J 1 "" -~ I tio' Sat • SU ' a r, pno' l\C u II, I.II\ • HA, C'hll<lren ok, Avail 5/6. · ·• : ~. 1j. yr.,,. Vl\I u~!? !I. .,. . . LG.! BR, 2 BA, cpti:, clrp~. ror nspec n "" nor OK no pclll. $175. !'m-7465 Rent1l1 to Sh.Ire 430 673-GO or 494-321! $215. 979-53-'>7. ~turly, 2 BA, v.·/dOl'k, urll . ;o;_n lie'!!<, adults. 61a-l3::i.S. $29.;:,o per \Vk L up, 1.JJIJ, 2 ~·. OCC, up&tairs. fl79 per ca.II O\\'nf!I' Si.>-4869 eve1. 1,,:c.+' '-~-~~~~-LANDLORDS! incl. yrly. $:>50 nio. 6'12·0306 la !~ ~ltr1nar DI'. BR & Bachelors. Color TV, , mo. &J"j~ 2 BLKS lo Beach! Attn. 2 Apts., SHARE Apt or Route & ~~·Br:c;~a~a::~~urs~l':!; !\BR.:; BA, F/R, DIR. Lrg Corona del Mar maid !if!rv, pool. The Me~ NF.:W :l Br. Bit-ins, \V/\V BR. ltedec. Bllns. $145. Call Furn. or Unfurn. 370 SAVE SSS llOM.E W. Specialize in Newport pets. 673--71 13 yrd. J>ool prl\'l. lla.rbor \•'u -41~ N. Nev.'P)r't Bl., NH crptt. ~· nsa 1110. Avail. an 6 pm, 536-8638. C .u ... a_ •PARTNER Uc, Bultnca Beach e Corona del M!.t e 2 BR. patio, c a rpet 1. llms. $600. 833-3894. SHARP 1 BR HOUSE 646-968l 5/l S'IS-7429. e 3 BLKS b'Om beach. brand ost• ,.,... Call 836-US4 or 54~1479 ~ 1i:~Er :!/~~: ~ $146/n'IO. See manager, 980 BLUF·rs, 2 br, den, 21,~ ha, coinpletely ru.111. incl util & FUR.i\\ New 2 BR Duplex. 2 E·SIDR 2 BR. SlSO new 2 .l 3 BR. 410 21st St. EXTRA LARG!': 1 BR. s:JARt: my 2 bed rm Nu-Vltv.•' \\'.lilhSt,C.l\1. \Iv. rm, fonnal din, $47:>. R:ardener.St.tS.mo/lse.P.!a· Br, ttfr rpace, on bch.Bltn , dlsl hid I OpenSatASt.ln. 1-lea;tcd IKWJI, From $145. ewport apt. Matu1r •. NU I leec 644-55n/6TJ-3752. ture adul1 only, nn peL•. Adults oo pets. Yr lse. Ret: •, "''"' P • _ poo · 2 BR.. crpted, w/prl fel'ieed Malurt adulta. lntant ok. No em5 1plo)1!d woman. Poo • aft .. y l!W RENTALS Huntington h SllARP 2 BR .. 2 B", Bluff I!, Avntl Junc I. O\\'lll'r Bn-l~S 2'13 I 6113-0l -13 or Bu•: 213 I Adlts, no pets. S.U.9.520. Yard, 7843 Ronald Rd, $160. Ptfs. 1!87 Monro vi & • A: f46..6055 673-403'.o or . -4.!!.4·~2~8 MEREDITll home for l!>e, all bit-ins. Cl!rp., drpii, pool. 1 BJt ~n:rous \'l•'I\', no 4t2--i4JO. 2 BEDftOOi\I, no pet•. adult!\ MZ-8100. 645--2174. \Nr .... for lt•rit .4t15 VERY CLEAN 4 bMI~ Oean 3 DR. din, lru fRn1 sn> l-fo. 642--0 177. sun.1n1cr r<>ntal~ .$2."iO per ~'UllN. I BJ! S.· Queen sofa ollly. i\IOliUi lo month, $100. irvln• .. 'ffiOPJCAL 1 POOL e GARAGE hlah door ault&ble room hom• w ith fir... ro1, cvrd paUo, 962-3600 or t..GE 3 RR, 2 BA, bH ns. 11li.·u:-, n1onth. 1;,.10 ~fl\•ic1\-, Call llCfl in Hv. n n. on 'R4taltor Mt-1270 2 llr Studfo, 1~ n.., frl>', camper boftt 389 La pl.1ee, f.1mlly room .Ind 963-3079. welbnr, pool, lx-1u:h 1 l)lk. tiT3-l:i.'2 01· GT.r6413 eves. l:ittachft<lnt. $2.iO nio. ~\vall, 2 BR. Adull1, no )X!t.s. BAY 2 nrt . .11; ba.L air cond. $2'l3 splrnl strca11~. Gas & wtr Canado '\y .... C~t •u •-l.rp f9"cec:I y.1 rd. V.1• SINGLES or }o'amllles. 2 BR. S37lt Yrly 6Tr2124. onl). until July l«t &46-8824. ~IEAOO\V8 APT. 387 \V. 808 t"E't'Trr pd. £/side on Uth, GG-11£i8 'Y• • ~· cant-.1nd. rt•dy for w/evel"}1.hhw. Alao 3 IJR TI~E BLUITS, 4 Br, 3 Ua iri1.Kll>Bij::C orona Beftch .. 2 BR, Sh¥1J. sundeck, park· Cl:lYSL CM. 6:&0073 JtEALTOR 53,._.'lOOO JSR lB•\ furn-mo .office_ltental_ f•nt,!!J now. Lease r... horse ranch In country, Sl'r.i cust, crpt, encl patio frplc. One I-Br. sm mo., furn. Ing, Beach l hlk, adlti., no a BDRMS, lM. BA, L1'pli , Mesa Verde 2BR 1 BA unf\im Sl90 FOR LEASE utH pd. Art Fee. 979-M30 LAe. $400. 644--1180 One 2-Br. S235 mo, unlurn. pets. $2'Z> yrly, 67"'.,...2124. dfll~· blllta, pnt!tf1, water 151 E . Zttt, C.J\.f. Office nd Oom' ti of $215. por mo. VERY nlC<' 4 BR. 2 BA. Br111d Ntw Oupln Bay & Beach R.11¥. 87J;.JOOJ MATURE linti. adult rental pold. llla!ute lduli. M!l-1806 DLX 2 ! 3 Br., 2 Ba. Diel * ~ * Union ~eder:r'° p I a z a . ALL A .. nt 546-.414l . crpts, drpg, bltnt. dthwhr, Ocean Vu, v.·alk 10 bcli, 4 BACHELOR apt, ve.ry nice, thru AuiUJl 1tudio apt. turn. CLEAN I BR 2 BA Sl80 pr. $165 11p. Rental OU., l BR tum, prefer 'oldtr Br 0 ck hunt/San ~ "Weed It rt fW&p" trplc, pa.Ha w I b b q , Br. No peta. ~. $l!(l/n10. • -,100. per 1110. 64~4 alt 5. St!'•.i.. drps,J~2Near So. 3095 Me.~ Ave. 54IH034. pet:nlOn, $1JO. 1 BR untum, Frte\\'Q. Carvett, ·draPea. From trtlturet to trash prdener. S2115. Sl62-a. Call 71wv1.,,.'701~ NOi• iO J'uly 1.ct .....,t t"lm. """"""'"' 2 BR. 2 Story ~'rtnmhaute. flreplaee1 downtown near all ut:UIUet 'p.Jd. C 11 1 Turn then1 Imo cub Sell Idle lttma OO\\•! Call A good " .. nt ad 1& n. aood in· ··Uat". It ln clauift'"', Ship 1 BV< ocean A lhopl ~U the old &t\dl ~ tbt new Cr;ttt. dtpt. ~ncl ptqe. bu• llnel, $13$ Martin -StoYaJI : --=C.W.=~D:::"::"'c.' :..~=llo'-''--·'-' -=-==.:-=:..! ___ 1 \'t'l!il.iuc.nt. lo Shore ncsula! 642'"5Gi!. St«> mo. ~ ,ttuff. Patta~ Pool. SJ». 5'$-Tm PriCf' ~•1115-18-m --~ tn!~n .. 1of"-" ~'"-'=-- , ' -[ s. " I .. Ofi -I Col di No ~ ~ .. "' 64 ~ M w. 2'lll A• ,, " .. 64 -t 20C w c fll fc <i ~ "' ., .. i; v 14' 0 • " ~ b .!i .. ., 0 I E • 'J • n • d 2 ~ I • • I 1 3< ' l • 61 1 1 i B s 3 I . • I 1 -· . . • • F""'1, M<f. 4, 19/J 0 DAILY PILOT r., ~ ]~·Ill-.... _ ... ;;;;-~i · ~II~ -~~;;;;j ..... ~· ]~;;;1 ~I ....,_!!!!!!!][Il] I •oM1 I ](Ill l I'.''' I 1@] I --I-P ....... I.. ~ W ....... M & F 71G Help Wentoa. M & P 711 Help W-, M & P Jltll <Nr-fw ..... 435~ t.r Rllll 435 IMt SSS Go"'"""'. . AtJTOM!mVE CONOl!:'l'E .,.,.. .,._ • -~ 5 ' Y'-us s11n' 'n111$7501• I.DST: Bladt. whlta nua,. EXPER.J-Gardono<. ~~~ LOT MAH • -a.-......... DeatcnEnalnoer $12K AUTONOTIV'E -~ 1111111 u.w-'l'llU , cot, male al\OrOd. ,.a.-Know bow. T r I m m lo I · :::.::::i!~ ~ Exporimced. ~ la -waril. m-li5ll Deo.tal "'1t Ole ID llOD ~ =.,-.:::. ~ c:Onta.c\ mt ., to the ""1eft C l ean • u p , S l'Q a 1 I &043a MIC • to Don. ..=a.: 1 Jnveucey ci.rtr: !!!, .we, etc. Knowledp ol CUI ~ 9811-atofage ='?rr~cl':~.l:~:P. Japa=. ...... ~~~ Plumblna ROlllN3FORD -~~ ,.m; ~~~A~i;i ~ "1lnl• lnl.54S--nll teoanc:e , c lean ·up . PLUNBING ft.EPADl Xl&O:BlYd., F/Ume ditPtQdable day Stc'y t&tk Bkra:I "35 Pl'oductionPl. N.B. '1 L. LOST Vic: Sane• Ana I: Del Landlcape. !o"'lu c x t . No job toO mnalJ lltta coUee thop fry cook. Ex. Sec'y Buena Pk to $'1'0 ·: WBl'8hOU89 Mar, tan colcr -balr IMW44211147.-* * mSl23 * * AlfO Mechaftlc =H= ~ G!NllAL LAIOll : Units tabbj< Smo_ old m~e ""~ EXPEi!. Ja...,....G&rdenor. NEED EXPERIENCED \JS. Aj>ply In p.....,. 'Secretary !800 l llh•· tag -neck, ana Complete yard sr•>. R<1la. It Sewlng/Atter•ll.,..1 ED CAR NEafANIC roR R 'fypll $SOO -N.8 ., C.X., LA. ; Safe ot Al'-'" aod you -tile My ~·lakl $1~00 Reward. neaL Free est. oo-<!89. CHEVROLET DEALER. ~/ F~keei.r !800 O~ It LNtne :: •TaN&W • ~N -f~~·-·· -··1 P0:3INUM iniature GARDENER ct 2'l YI" eJC· NAl:-1tlontl ,:42.$145 CALL 808 MAY ~In Jh-~ Mf!d Fmt ore Wi0 N8J~l1tt. ff~ p·~ ~ •ICllMl•....,.. 1tM111Qi1 l . ! \ fe poodlef/Jy Ans':en to perie.nce. Seeks 4-S bad· ea• accu:ra •· YMn exp. GENERAL Ottlce. Typlnc, Prod. Conttol G. Mar ~ lf'&veyard. : •STOUGI Of ALL 1111a ! ,,. . : m · cUUonM malnt. Jo • • Tt)epbone FWna etc N.u.at Ri Eitec Secmary $9Xt • p p S : 1.._Ys:P. ... ~ .. J "Angel," vie. Van ReDy~~ *549 .. 2015 • Georae Tiie be depe_nckble, Salarfopen. ·ager Sales.Enar; Deart-e $~ • • • " ~ ~ 7 ~ Summit, Lag Bch. WN\ol. Hampton. m-2066 "(/ Eacrow Ott1ctt ........ !' ---:idM@iA#1i¥fj .. :: ~ai4 494-1:! e:~ _ . 11t.. . ~~ J!eLE est~nJ BABYsrM-m -DepeMable PerN-IW 119 P01 ~RT 500 Newport Crater Dr. .. ' yr :reniral .,.rvtcn ~ welcome. 536-205. dtter tor one 9 yr old boy, 16 F•lhlon Island SUite 900, N.8. ............. ..., .......,.. -.... ............ ._. Afghan, dlappeared f.71' nr ,.,_ ew hrs A SUnd•v H.B. ch 133 Do D N 640-19111 l~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~I Cal 1st Natl Bank. Dana ART -Oxnmerdal deslJnl are~ Own tn.ns;;-rt&tlon Newport Be• ver r,, ' • u Central To.wr, Onrti;e Office Ren t1I 440 Point. Reward. 496-9289. tor letterhead•, ca rd 1 , 75c hr ·--before 10. :Ki Betwn 9 & ll am or 3 le 5 pm 642-3170 541-6446 I ~ · Portral~ Allee S Poteet l[fil · .._.._.., · Equal Oppor. Em~er PRIVATE OFFICE -J • LOST, Siamese cat, feml, c~::: '""" ' g t 0~ • • a.m. or btwn 3 & 4:J:I. DISHWASHER·p/•--. -. F.qual Oppor. Employer O>mp!etey furnished, 2 run grown, black marlrlngs. _,.....,.., ., ..-·' w f' BABYSITrER for 2 eirl• 8 Ullft" .,.~. Fa.lrvlew &c MacCormacll: PRINTING -Let us help Ir U in Mesa Verde ~a, COOK Me1a Verde Conv. Hoq, 861 desks, air cond., util paid. Ln. Reward. MT-4506 you. Saddlebaclc Printing & 2-~ Mon+Fri !i6T-1M8 Center St, CM. ~. GENERAL ~~5M:xv:r1~~ P1rson1l1 530 SEALPOINT Stame1e, Orapblcl. 830-9386. Job Wanted, Miia 700 ~ · ~d~·==:t;; ~be::ctw:.::,;;n.;,8;,;l<;,;;3·,.,...,,..,-- Coota Meaa. Ughled ~ens. vtclnlty 17th & Tu"1in Ave, Heul lnt I SCRAM LEJS BABYSmER 3 children W• Ina.· Apply IU. DISHWASHER LABORERS • copy 1; ottice machines VETERANS C.M. Pleue call 60-2251 • Tuta &. niuri, 9:30 to s. mY SAM'S ·SEAFOOD lo.lust be neat&: clean. <>wr · ·" avail. $95, mo. Phone Earn $4.58 to $'1.00 per hoUr Reward! GET RID OF UNSIGHTLY borne. Own car. $1.20 hr. 16218 Paclflc Cout Hwy. 21. Apply in pel"90n, Surf .l. 642-21.n or 6'13·'7865. guaranteed by uaing your BLACK part.f>ttt:lan female TRASH A DEBRIS. $10 ·NSWERS 5e-4197-c .M. Hunttnston Beach Sirloin, 5930 W. Coast Hwy., SPACE available, Coat a G.I. ~nefits wblle at-cat, vie. Laguna Niguel Sea LOAD CALL STUDENT H BABYSl'ITER Occuiooal COOKS, OVER 18 ,c"c,·.;:B'=. =~~~-,=--Mesa tending Santa Ana College. Terrace. Reward. 493--0826. 548--6«28 daytime &. eve. Corona del DOMESTIC Help Georire WALKER & LEE BLDG. Call now -YARD, a:arage cleanups. Hearth -Sheaf -Lathe -Mar area. call 64M55.9 Full 6 part-time. Days &: Allen Byland Agency, 106-~ 2790 Harbor Blvd, Hll.J'bor at S..7-9561 Ext 370 Remove trees, dirt t "'Y·; Mature -HEALrn BABYSI1TER ·wantM In)' ni&ht'· I' J R E. 16th St,. S.A. ~7~395 Adams. Flrst calu deluxe e FREE yo I a,. Jli-J t>rtvewys,padtng.847-2666. Kissina:m&ybeunaanitary, home 6mo'sglrl 8-6 Mon A , .. •~I r • .::!· 2 DRAPERY WORKROOM suites including air, music, Demons tr at Io n for htrvction SKIPLOADER Ii: dump truck but then, you don't do it for Tues.' Wed & Fri.' N.B'. pp.., penon, ' een Openines for , exp'd or carpets, ample pa.rkl.n& full hi&'h achoo! A co 11 e g e · work. Concrete, ~t your HEALTH. 67>1803. pm &: 5 pm at Cart s, 2092 trainees ln ..aJ1 po11Uons. service. Call Gene Hill, sytudentsA. Mon .•• ,,4:E30 [,~ sawing, breaking. 846:--, API'. Mgr. 2'h yr experience. BABYSITI'ER needed my Bristol, C.MOO. Good pay, holidays&. vaca· 642--0200 I 557-<1136 · oga "'"'nter, 't'l<J • Sc;hool1 & 32' FURNITURE Van for in 60 unit family complex. home East Side 'Costa C K tlons, Beach Drapery St., C.M. 646-8281. instruction• 57S local tum hauls & aen'I Freier CM area. Re!I, 2lJ.. Meaa' ~aft 5. Good salary. Exper. only. Service. 900 W. 17th St , UNION BANK SQUARE PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-hauling 548-1862 -839-9802 ' Apply Derby ,Restaurant. C.M. ORANGE tldent, 1 y mp at h e·t l c Ebronix GEN. ~aullng. TreetSbrob EXP. apt. or motel mgr., BEAU!Y OPRS (2) 546-8390. D'°'RAP~"E"R"Y.,--cl,.eantng-.-:--:-ho=Ip ml ICJ ft modem oWce bldg, preenancy counseling. Abor· Tutoring Cllnlc trini. Gar I: Yd cleanup. capable comp. charge. Apt. No loliowing necess. Comm/ COOJC..cn.ve yard shUt. 6 Deeded pttSSer, bookin&. will dtv:lde. All services. tion &. adOptions rel. READING Eat. 531-63'Tl, 557-6904. tum. + sal. 496-8336. Box ~1050. Busy 8hop. Cal1 days a week. Apply In mark1nl ln. Call or apply In Carpeted, panelled. 6th APCARE 642-4436 LOCAL movin& &: hauling by 472, D.P. 1nor • • perwn Jack ln The Box. penon Coit Dr apery IIOOl-1 "Sacrit:lce sub-!fllet. IdCalleal To Scottie McCorkle SPMAELLTIHNG student , ·-truck. Reu. BEAUTY Operator, exp d, 1205 Baker St, CoAta MH&. Cl:Bl~tal1Q2M N .. e.YJ,.P,!!, t or msurance 0 ce. * HAPPY BIRnIDAY * c~•-~ .. ~6· 0-r 534-•'2164. Job W1nted, Female 702 ~ to take over vu., ....,.. e Q'T.....,.,.., <n4l 547-0039. With ~. Dorothy, Free Diaanostic Testing """' J.O't clientele, xlnt opportunlt)o. COOK. experienced, f 0 r DRAP~Man exp'd in Blaclde & ,.__,,_,.e. 979-1624 Housec:IHnl-WORK WANTED -2 d""' Call 557-3986 hospital. Immed. opening. lnt. desi ..... for our expanded VOLT lntt•nt Personnel : Temporary Service :· ! -CamJl'I> Dr SUlto 106 •• NewPQl't Beach ., M&-4741 ; Equal Oppnr. Employtt : GENERAL Htlp, p/Umo . eves from 5pm on. Drivers · A Kitchen. Over 21. APPiy ·: 1n penon, Me n Eds, 410 E. • 17th St, Oolta Meaa : GIRLS & BOYS 1()..16 GET YOUR SUMMER JOB NOWI Dal~ Pilat * MESA VERDE ~• ··• -., Colt& Mesa Memo r I a I .. .. stlo I BATON Ieuo-· '··J s-·1 & EAN woelc • llou>ework · ""' !or Boetyanl VI r1a c M CU.tom Shade • nra...,, S C'---~ -•-pound floor • Five ottloet ~~ .. ~!!!._o 8!,~ 1 inf e ~ Modeling. '.':"~b_· ~ts" HOUSE OF CL ederly in Balboa, LI do Water l r o n t boatyard H<>1ptta1, S>l cto , . . Sl'lop.3535 E. Cat Hwy, CdM -•-"---==cc'"="'-....,_-_ and reception room. UOO tnatrud;'~'"~ung, lee-Parade Corps now forming. Floors, windows, wall&, cat· lai&nd,CoronadelMararea. worken. COOK, exp'd only. The Cot· Employment GIRLSll : sq. ft. $473 .. per month. call turet ~2529 Janet CUmmtns 645--45&6 pets 4: drapes. 7 Yrs. area. Have own transportation. Exper. prefd. Perm. t/tlme tqe Coffee Shop, 562 West HEtRWOOD SHUI'TERS WANTED to take l*rl 1n col· ~ UNIQUE HOMES, MESA the G l1 64U824 or 64&-2527. MIC. Call 5'5-2368 btv.rn 10 le 2, only. 'frainees acceptable. 19th St, Colla. MH& 1977 Placentia, C.M. Iese psyebolortcal expert. , VERDE, 54&5990. SHAKLEE Products are THE Wet CanvM Art~ a ery C•rpet Cle•nlng NEED }ll!lp 11.t home? We Must bave short .~ &c CUTTER, SAILS * Estlmaton needed !or lM ment. Must be at }J:ut 5'5".,: 444 OLD Newport, 3 blkt No. ~:Cr:::1~~~: X:. ~ =ri:1~as'!;:· Floor C•r• & Windows have aides, nu r 1e1 . clean record. Blackie s Boat McKibbin S • t l a , 1811 .. Cbmpaey Up to SZ per eventnc. ·, of Coast Hwy. Approx, 900 Call 551_1034, 963-29'29 Dutch Ma.int Serv. 537•1508 ho us ekprs, compaJUom .. Yard, 2414 Newport Blvd, Reynolds Ave, S.A. 54()-3684, SC'OTCH TINT SU1I pro. 847-9172 bet. 6-7 PM. ~: sq. ft. Incl 4 prlv. offices & Homemakers U pj oh n, N.B. DATA PRDCESSING tectlve window film. Hours GIRL FRIDAY ~~ GJ l I * INGA QUALITY Dedlated Clunl-•• , ·-· * BOOKDEEPER * . recep,t... rm. ~""a or MASSAGE * * WE DO EVERY"mIN~ * '" -.... n. . , . CONTROL CLERK your convenience. Com· For auto aamcy ' engineering or draw ln g Men women, YMCA. I " I~ Re'-to-.:.. ~IJ! -E?CPER. full-charge ~-D1v:lsioo of AAA·l Corp. re-tor leadi~ o ... ...,.e County mlsalona. 644-8494 bod)' 1tlOp •••• 8l.1.a300 ex 3' ! buslnesa. $300/mo. Utll Incl. 642-9990 S..... ft ltlpllrl .... ~ '~ est. ~-. keeper ,,eedt part time qui.res accurate, dependable, data ~g·rirm. Ac· GIRL Friday &el'· otflae .~.<vea.__ · Xlnt H~le~. . work, !""!' o~ ..!!!_my . willing person to oom!"e_. ll»LJ!lor data entry EXEC. SEC_R!'J'~RY -work. u1o 1yp\nC, llllng e tc, I FULL SERVICE ' PREGNANT? Th.lnkin/ ab-~y __ Day. Own ~ti.on home. 83(RS8t: ~-oiran~ op;: eip. df;aii"a~. KnoWledie It YQ.U would lib-the :ct\al--~ phone -volct. Ap-21-orj WHtcllff Bufldlng =!~b~all i.mE ~= B•byslftlftg * 836-<1648 * COLLEGE gilt 1 eek 1 ~atlon .tor-home ottlce. ot 10 leer. _adding machine. 'le"nie of lhe ad bUa1neN A: over. Matt haw IDftllll-0 • II Corna-We1tclltf Ottve & LM COMPLETE H OUSE put/full time work u Uabt typing. $150 wk. + Call 548«llM> or 646-7425-for have these qualitica.Oonl, per. $2; hr. to atart. 0011ar trvlne Blvd.; Newpor l hrl. 541-&al. Licensed Day Care Q.EANING SERVICE. receptionist, sen. office. benefits. Langlois Fancy appt. or send resume to Jive us a call. Appt. 6G-4088 ~a;_h0.1. Mr. HO\\!_ARD Soci•I C•ubl 535 Licensed day care mother * 646-5943 * 548-3068 * 979-1861. l"'rozen Foods, 2975 ~ l.D.C. Corp., box 557, Colta e Shorth•ncl GROCERY chl!cftor, :·1 - Q'W'VJ. ha.s an opening tor one HOUSEWORK by day. HB F/C Bkkpr lhru tin. St. tax-Canyoo Rd., Lquna Beach:. Mesa, sa>ZT. e Accuracy mature woman for~ ·1 FRONT corner suite -2nd LOVE WORN child. age 1 ~ yrs -4 yrs. area. Re!I. Own tra.naporta-es, varied experience. OWn .t97•1741· * DAY BUSBOYS * e Sharp Looks 1lze trtendl,y market. Muat I sty, Coast Hwy, CdM. 2100 Discover DISCOVERY Fenced y~. private. room tlon. S36-6a'.J1 transp. 548-&487 , BOOKKEEP.ER I SEC'Y, Full time, apply after 3 • lnltl•tlve be able to 'MJl1c: weelmnda. • 811· ft, crpt, drps, alr/cond, PROFESSIONALS in a field for nap, playmates, will pot· lronl-LI-I W •-• M & F 710 exper. Marine ~1anul. finn. pm. Tonio's, 210 Newport Apply !MT E . Cout Hwy. ,· music, elevator, Pr k 'g, of Amateur Matchmakers. ty train, Hot lunches, ,._ ,,. P •nJ11U, Fringe benefits. Good Center Dr, Fuhlon Ialand. U>al•70 CdM security patrol. Can be (Est. 19661. anacka and TLC. Week days IRONING APT Maintenance cple. Apt Conda. Stable"" Interview-DELI COUNTER & GROCERY Clort<. Ace 21. .:, divided. From 37c sq. ft. (tt4) 835-$185 (713) 387-3393 only. Shore Creat Tract. ill&' Now. Must have A11lJly S.ll 111 Mlric 2711 E. Coast Hwy. 673-4m Between Indianapolis and 6 Pl~es for ~oo. furn. Newport Center· resume. Call !or appt. ASSISTANT MGR EXPERIENCED teamatreu 2".ml = ·HB • :: DESK space available $S0 Atlanta • off Brookhlll'lt. • Phrine 567· • Penn. Electrical &: Plwn· 979-9190, Mllll: have Nll deli exp. &c to worit ln factory or ·wUI d, , . ~ mo. Wi11 provide furniture 968149n. Janitorial bing exp. Write Clualfi~ catertnr knowleda:e. Must train qu.aUtied home tewer. Hesplt•llty Holtfts ~-': at $5 mo. Answerlnl service Licensed Babysitter -· ad no. 658• Dally Pilot, BOOKKEEPER be able to work Sat or sun. Apply ln ~ Surdlo\l:er Service .,.; available. 17875 Beach Blvd". I.ad: and feud Licensed care for youngsters CARPET Cleaning Spedal! ~ 1560 eo.ta Mesa. CaUt Coat Music has opening for Call 833-889L Swim Wear. 148 L 0 1 Is looktJw lor women to , Huntington Beach. 642-4321 after school. Robert Burke 8c sq. ft, Mln ~· C?>mplete a full charge bookkeeper. DENTAL As 1I1 tan t -Mollnos, San Clemente welcome a: Interview ns1t:' 1617 WESTCLIFF School District ln Hun-Service Specializing ln A Touch of Insanity and P l ea1ant surround1np. Newport Beach Orthodontic I residentl. SalH or ad~i 3400, 1294, 156 & 540 sq. It. Found (frM ·..ta) 550 1""'°n ~fh~~rve now !loora 642-5536. 1 unfaltering ft""'blltty In Many -benetita. olllee, cbalr aide. Approx. 4 EXPIRIENC D vort11tnc -· hilJlllll..·1 Am P 1 e Pr k a:. u t l l . or next . OFFICE cleaning, i c 'd, auper ~Friday/PR.. w!:r Salary open. 6t6-027L D131 I wk •. Top salaey, NOTE TELLIR Mlllt bave car• t;newrillr. Baumgardner No. 104 . FOUND ma1e min I at u re YOUNG Set School ._ Open bonded. 7 Yrs exp. in area. ~-Com~ete' ~ ~ liberal frln&e benetita, con-l\ppl In Penon ~54:::7;;;-:::3095::=·~====- 541-51132 °"""· tan color, no collar, 6f.m-7pm. 6 day•.,..., u ll4U824 or 646-2527. J anie, 31111 w. 5Ih, Santa BOOKK.EEPER genl41 environment, Dental SECtRfTY PACIFIC HOUR~ "~ 600 Sq. Ft. OFFICE w/ldt I: =~. =-?n11CSeact Pro. teachen. $21 Weekll'. Masonry Ana. 97703 No phone calla Expq. p/tizne w/mt. Ma-exper. ~&.:aunok· BANK .. on 600 Sq Ft -~-(;16..3'1()6 or 645-1057. . pleue. ture. Apply Cout General Ing. Age • Enal1111 -"IJV" IJ~In, 5 Ba, $!55. ~ ',..~;. ~ evei. BABYSITI'ING u .. ~-BRICK veneer ='=um Tire ••• W •~ CM DENTAL As 1 Is tan t, 3415 Via tJdo dQ'I. Gen1 hliiwwk, 2 ICbJ:, ~RE $"'" C M 646-~ .. .., ,..,.,...,, ' ' * ASSEMBLERS * • -· J.Dui, ' • .,. __ .. -' '"'--' -i ...,.v WJ, • • FLUFFY Tenier -!Family Ages 3 to 8 'FV-HB area concrete block, iron energttlc, enthualaatic In-Newport_......, ap • vwu rm. -: 1 & 2 RM. dlx. ·~· MJ. dog, small. Grey 4 white Ellis a: Bush&ro. 962-7689. . fences & . store trontA. Assembly position open, tit-BOOKKEEPER -Mature dlvldua1 wanted for I...quna !"-" pd nc. "$10 per 'wk. Airport.er Hotel. No 11e. req. w/some tan. Red collar. . Custom work '.>bly. 968-7865. ting b&nfware onto boats woman at least 2 to 3 yn Bch practice. Ex p er . Equal Oppor. EmPoYer Mtollil50. ~ 2172 DuPont No. 8. 833-3223 Vic ~ Apt. Cd.M. Call MATURE, dependable, fenc-p I ti ,.· etc. Apply at Co a s t bkkpg exp. Salary open. ~. F\lture llnUted only HOUSEKEEP.ER to ltw 1n. : aft 5 640-0830 ed yard. My home. Refs. • n "9 Catamaran Corp., 3 3 O 12 Cali 64s-m28 Npt. Bch area by iniatl to uaume .EXPER. llhoe· aalesman er OFFICE space 9lO sq. ft. er p.m., ' Hot lunch. 545-1067 P•peT"h•nglftl Calle Perfecto San Juan BOX a...-Needed, ......... ve saleswoman wanted. 2 ~· Own room, bath, prtvatit .•~·= Air/condt. a>t:h ~ near SM tan """-w/wttlte mark· • ' Ca ·~--••~ ~ntact ....,JD ...... y re1pon. aalary 0 pen· a week onlv. App~ In tranolt A: color TV. Xlnt .. -B r~rvlc. P••u:iu.., ._,__._ "'""' -i .... hours contact 'Mr -4!M-3596 ' cond N •-•-N ta. ' Placentia. 6t6-9896. inp, medium lone hair, Ullftffl ~ HARLAN CU!n'OM hy Haggard or Jim Lomt1. f,';;;;6 lU~ L l d 0 · person The Booteey, E. • o ......... ,.. o "pt • Bu1in-Rent•I 445 !emote,· eo.la Meaa & PROFESSIONAL Ty p Ing. Pllillting & Pape..._ e ASSEMBLERS e -~ 3433 Via Lido, NB Dent•I A11lotenl 17th, Colla M-. ISO a -k plua "'°"' • ; TE bulld'-+ Tustin. &U-3IM9 Libra Office Services. 2588 Rood ::0 ~:for flat bt 4: 2nd thift in Electronicl Business Salu Rep ~~ M:xi be=~~ EXPERIENCED booldceeptr H~~ Wt ..! SEPARA: ...,. pr. LABRADOR -approx. 6 mos Newport Blvd-B. 645-8850 Bonded Guaranteed Ft.rm. Night p~lum of· H·~•·· olc ......,.., salel. Sal· -teeretar:Y needed tor busy am•.; l&lO sq ft, panlg, crpta, adJ old. Male. Vlc of 49th SL, C c--.1 fered N ..........,....,.nee req ... ....._ ... ~l'J 2445,1Aguna.Hilla,Ca926t>3. accounting offtce in bul&tory home Call ladila). busy comer. 645-Xl2> I Newport -Beach. Ca 11 arpet .-. ,,,ce 213-322-4663 AiJy fup~ · ary 4: comm. 4-5 bra daily. DENTAL Ant. Exi>erlenced CaplatraDo Beach. D. J . Uve-ln, Room • board + ~: 642~ 641;.91611. JOHN'S Carpet A: Upholstery No Wutlng Potter &c Brwntield Div: Can 83J.8691. only. Newport ottfce. Good Atldneon A 0>. .. 1224. Salary, &t>l381. ~ 35 FT. OF olllee or ~ WHITE -_ Newport Dri·Shamooo lree Scotclo· * WALLPAPER * AMF Incorporaled BUS boy: It kitchen help day opportunity. 646-5411 Salary open. • frontq:e, 14.S E. 18th SL, Ave in Tultln. Male -'o\'l!ar· guard (Soil Retardanta). When you call ''Mac" 26181 Areopuerto or nigh(. App'ly in pel'90n at FEMALE over 111. NEA\. HOUSEKEEPER -can of C.M. Approv. 21XX1 sq. ft. at 1na: brown leather collar. Degreuera &: all color 543-1444 eves. San Juan Capistrano Ancient Mariner Rest., 301 Department Store ambitiousl:itealf1 totet up ho~ A: 3 c hl ldre n .' 28c aq. ft. C.J.S. Real Estate, ' 8.1&-1855 brighteners & 10 minute PAINTING & repair, 35 yn An equal oppor. empt M/F N. Tustin Ave, Santa Ana. THE BROADWAY tables, 1erw food A M .. rrt. 1\u'tle Rock am.: ~ 548-1188. YIC Me• del Mar track, bleach tor white carpetA. workmanship guar. Take ASSEMBLDtS wanted for CAFETERIA WORK cleanup. Some exp e r . Own tn.na. 979--3&12 or aft 8, • DJCAL unit or omce l()'J) C.M. female Germ a n Save your money by saving advantage of my exp. Wt growing boe.t co. Apply With or without ariil exp. Now Hirtna: in helpful. Must apply ln ,.:m-3193::::.,:;::::,,,,,==~-,,.- sq ft, top E/atde loc. Reu. Shepherd. ApProx. 1 yr ~ extra trips. WW claen ~7056. at Clipper Marble Corp. 1919 Hrs. 6 am-2:30 pm. AU SAW penon, HW'ltiftaton Beach HOUSEKEEPER I Prac-' rent. Ph. Ownr ~ weerfn& collar. m-9554 ltving rm., dinini: nn. A INTER/EXTER. Ac c 0 u 8 E . Occidental, Santa Ana. wknds a: hoUdays off. Call Convalescent Jbpttal, 18811 tical Nune. Ll~tn or I hr •. , RE. good"~Sq· "'rt N~ FOUND • very attectionate ~~ ~{O ~ r:· 15$~, ceilings sprayed.64~~ ins. Auto. 833-8691. Pem., full A: p/tbne F1oSflrldlNaG, HT.acid Sale• &. ~~~::. ~o mc!if )! post_oftlce. :HO.I • • half grown white cat, needs exp. is ~hat counts:, not Joe refs. free est ~ OMV GIRL CARE "for bed patient, live Daya&: evenings FI a e 642-6381 .. : Mo. Agent 646-24l 4 loving home. method. I do work myself. TOTAL SERVICES CO. in room &: board plus aa1. Experience preferred Service. Boy wanted for 1' lndustrl•I Rental 450 MS-'1904 Good ref. 531~101. Painting, lite carpentry. ~. Must be ~endly, in Am Penonnel Dept. ~ ti;;c~::u~~ H:&?~~. ~1ye..C::1; DOG, part Irilh Setter, vie. C1rpenter , 646-0977 or 646-1809 O~ lf:rborfuU~£:. good health speak 10 am-:!~Ion:l-41~and knowledge of aalt water week. Start at $45. &IHlK1 1; NOW LEASING Crown Valley PkwY & INTERIOR. Exterior. Low .... English: Call 968-1931. No. 47 Faa.u ... flihlna req. Send resume to aft 7PM Niguel Rd. 495-1145 after 5 GENERAL CARPENTRY rates. Local refs. Pbllllp. New Car Dealenhtp. Must N@WIXlli Beach Box no 657 c/o Dail)' Pt.lot, ==""-------H:~Sq':~ tt~·ch ;;;;;,.G black puppy, white "~~-;::.~R~:NGER * Se r':i.~~ ~ career Secretaries QUICK CASH ~f~!ll611!-· Coota Meaa, Ham11tOO A ·New I~ markings, female. V 1 c MINOR home re pall's. Plum· Carl Rebko 646-2449 tails of put experience and I n..olUST, apply Peek Faml· TIME FOR . 833-05!9 Tultln/Rochester, C · M • bing _Carpentry -Palntini recent photo 11 available to Average ranae $500-l7SO. Top ly Shop 1801 BolA. Avt. 646-0897 or . -&0-6U&, after 3:30 P .M. _Tile. Call 54l)..5500. Pl•:..ter, Patch, Rapalr Box 649 c/o Dally Pilot, PO $. NO FEES. N.B., C~ THROUGH A We!ltm~er. M·l, 1680 11q ft, 1870 Plaoen-FOUND La.rge grey I: white FOR Experienced Carpentry, * PATCH P~ Box 1560 OMta Mesa, Cal.If: Irvine, Orange &: s.A. FLO~"WER:;;::;:;V;.,•"'-'-'=."""'.oelllng::n;:: tia Ave, CM. c;eor;e Wood1, ttaer. Altered male .. Vktn\cy 'nrough or finish. Call Dave -,Ul types. Free estimates 92626. ' · lmmedl.atelyp. ,P.S. flowers on wknda A 675-1380/646-1164, $175. of .Newport~ -Calta ~5792 I 494-7197 eves. Call 540-6825 Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! DAILY PILOT boUdaya. • 13-16. Aho 4001-H BIRCH, N.B. Mm are:;,.... b. 1 r ,.4 { A:I CARPENTRY N...i a "Pad"? Place an ad! l Call 64H6T8. !'ft"r.°ii.,.~~ 53l-7l64 4000 sq. «. sn.-~hlte ,.,,,,.: poppy'. c.ti Gonion ~ 500 N=~~'.:{ Dr. FRY COOK, EXPER. QUICK CASH j THROUGH A,i DAILY PIL01i Storeve 455 VI< Munol1a .. Ellls, Fowl-c~ment, Concrete 64(>.19'10 WANT AD P/lime. Mlllt be clean .. tain v .Iley. 962-8955 T d , Pa d. 24 Central Tower, Oranae H 9 I pm ~~';,,.oo~lnfi!'or"s~1 ~ ~~~~1;""::.~·; A:=:~:.T~. ra er s ra 1se Equal o:.~Employer ~y, = & Sir~, sooO CM 646-9136 Brookhunt on..,beach, Hun-FOUNDATIONS -Artistic 642-5878 W, Coe.st Hwy,. N.B. 12xl6' STORAGE SHED tington Beach, 962-5230 Plant ..... concrete" brick l1"nes CASHIER White Elephant Dl .... A·IJne 1 $20. Call M8-9Em FOUND y 0 u n g male patios, etc. Llc'd 644--0687. WANT AD 642-5671 -· R.ntal1 W1nt.d 460 cock-a·poo. flea collar A PATIOS, walks, drives. Saw, t1" mes GM N -Ieaah. Vic of Runtlngton broak, '"move A .......,. Oran&• County • • "" WELL-Known writer o n Beachll62-Ell concrole.54&-8E6111orOll. CarDeelernoedllanexperl-STAR G "'""'EJt-11¥. • coast assignment wiahe• to FOUND _ small brown A S & T MASONRY = c:'1~ ~ :ee:: .r&IU "1' lease 3 or 4 BR view home white female dog. Vic. Patios k Walka dollars perience, OutHne all pre-""'='l""---llra.ATJ.i ).rt ln Newport, CdM or N. Atlanta I: Newland. lt.B. 963.-1855 vk>ua experience in reply. J1. y..,o.rfr:.-...,CMIM ..,-. Laguna, June lst. $350. 530-7553 Send recent photoet&Ph tf .,,_,..,,,,, te "'-1'$;• ..t-• u ..... ... ,,rh oc:+.1111l6'1\ Quiet adult faml1y. 673-9119 FO.::;UN:,,;::D:::.._~.~ ... -•• "n .. -.:tt-e.'ki'"''t,C c.:.:".:.:".:.:''.:.:•.:.:clo.;.;.;r _____ .._ ________________ _, 1 _ ··-"·"'·. Re..:i ....... ..,._ To ckwtop mtllOge for tur ..... ,, ............ UJ ... • ., .. ,. vlUlavu: VY .... ~ nadwanfaC01 11; wd"'Gto ~ ~'-TT v\c. 21.at st. nNr" Tult1n. JACK Ta.ulane -Repa.lr WILL -.a... -__ ...... tn HAVE DUPLEX 2-2BR, ,_ m . 63S c/o Dally Pilot, PO of T~-...... Ca!Itoldentlr,;&12-492; remo4., addil. :II yrs ""I>· 16 -·~~.,IPI yan1o. Aaume VA io:;'. Boo<l560,Coota ,M...,Ca!U. 1~-01~· Ill~ FOUND vie. Mesa Verde: U c'd. My Way Co. 547--0036 ldor: EllroNev. l"fC1'MtkJnal $7000 eqiy. Want late model 93iX ~~ fi ,_ ~~ purebred .Dufb' med. _aittd Drafting l&Dd fer prop or land in luxury car or camper, mtr.i ·*,.-'CERAMIST===;;;,-:o, ::,::p7' 7d , •Go 34" "'~ male dog. ffUM.Y! 546-9965 H.B. area. 847-6947. home??? ~ owner. wanled tor dental o Hice. Sc.I 3'~ "°" 1 I Ind u1< .,... 4lott 360f '6oit.. !"'IUL.-""4 L-al Notices StO BLK puppy, .*· S.A . Re1kf, Comm', vs. 10 Acret, free of indebted· HEMEJ'lOl4:51BR Mobile, Unllmlted oppty, .--1 .. ,. 7 5odal 379u111 67FOYMd · JAlrTT.uM j.;:"2;•::..;.;.;.;.=:....---IJ33.-0l1IO. AK tor Bryce. Room Add!tloN. ~ ...... levellUhdlvllloo!Md, w/otN'd petio lo oiled. l.c-CHUCKERS a LArnE '"" ,._ ..... -u.J..a D~lRE to contact ~iton ooUJE-m&i..Lona Peach Des ign Dr•ftlng Assoc neu Barltow, equity ST,000.. lot, tidlt pric, Tlsde for eq Machlne Open.tors to work 1~ ~ :r!.,. ;:~ OtC.' tt ml ol lndustrlal c.rtale. Inc. aru. $98-6161 .,. 2960 R.&ndoli*t Ave. CM tor home, late model car ln home, condo or 2nd TD. for clean machlne 1hop. 11 Guol'd •i ,,_. 71 v-1•14.lJ.36 of SUn V&lley, Callt. for Lott SSS 567-<1626 or 557.9 or boat. 979-9165. 8-£1305 CW. A or B, days Ii: 12Yw "'l~ '2Controc• ....., mutual benel'lt. &t6 'P E tectri 1 1963 Rambler to trade tor VMWn'2.13actand,vlew, overtime. 543-«167 ;~~ !!=. J!~ -LOST. h1ltl Setter S mo old , ca art objects, antiquet. Jewt14 Mtllbu. W-.nt tnoome or l)y,_ "5Md nr.._ ]~ t.male, .,._ c:a1I E LECTIUCIAN, 1-. ry or --)'Oil lor -lQ -· For CLERK nPIST .l~ :;:::.."": ,.~~ .. • 615-UllO or ~3344 bonded. Small}'*, m&lnt A $400 value. detds. CJS Real Elttte. Girl' Frida.)'~ nffded for 11~ AIOrl . • RE'WARD. mack A white TCplln, 54l-6a)3. fn-0802 1740 Orvce, C.M. 5M-.ll68. Admln. otc. fi:$ w.p.m .. 2 yn >;:!!""'°-! ~~ ;~ :,._.. alterod male cat, G!enneyre No Job Too $""'11 HAVE 37 unit LA &Pl-'°"" STEEL aide boxa, •fttl 8' recent olc oper, ablo to 21To 51 ~ Olt::I; P9rson•I• 530 A Pe_arl, Lquna. *2356. c..u Aft .4:30 pm 56461-4 plex at 6% 1_1mesgroe1 w/ plckop truck, llOO V&lue, &MUme reap. Intert'ltina' & ~=:' ~~ fiTrtti~ ·-+ REWARD. M&le Irish Setter, Gardening , mo.ooo_~ty~=-= ~11e _f«__~ medlankol v·'ue. altl'l•e"lialcdve~mna.ll e:c w/«Jn. ~~ M .. ~~ t~t!:" YOUNG COUPLES 18-35 1 )'Ml, no coller ~ '-''..u"'ftl . ., ......, -... v....... ai .... ._ .. Parties or mttt cpl to c:pl cnll Frank. 835-8581. EXPERT Japaaeie e -75 ,. 8:tcr 615-7225. • W5-215l. MUNIC IP L WATER ~~1ott r,=• f,~'°' Call "Leah" 2-8_pm. 539--334'i LADrES pre•e rlptl on Gardentr. Complete Yud ;.2p:opertyw/$33Stncomt. LlketotradelOurTrMn'" ' DISTRICT OF 21~ SI,,_... -..$i:ier:lal ,..,,, 1tou cs Anonymc»"'-crtJurtiH. cJatk balf framc:s. ~rvJce. Free eatlmates Value Slt..500. Trade tor Pa.ndlae c:otumn ii for you ORANGE COU NTY ~c... ~~ ==:-.a ,,,M,,. I AntltJl•••:tl I~ - . • • " ' ' . 'i , I I I . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • • l • l .1 ' ' ' I • I ' I Phone 542-7217 er writa !'iWai'd1 lll-1'16· 548-2661 oqlllty lor paper, tJqat er 5 U-17332 Irvine Bl.d. ® 6\ .,, P.O. Bex 1223, C..fa 'M.... MED ll'I Jfiy "jiOOcn., Male, It's o broe•'1 .• ..U )'OOl' home. 5 d&)'1 &rlto G • Tustin .,!£)Good "'1-.,;Nt-cnl oo~~Sl~L U ~ .. ~-~~~ ~~-~--~·~-~~:-:D~--~~-=~:s:~=~-J~(~l=~~&~ol~-~~~~~1J ____ !~~~-~~~~~=~~=~~~~~--~ c.u "Leah" u pm. 539-3121 Rewud. SI0-411M alt 4 Pilot Clull!l•4. 60-66IL • -. ' I • ' " j .--' , I I ! " ., ~ ' ' ' ' • •• I '-• • I ' •••• ·a .. •• ' . . . ~. .... .., , ........... ................ w .... ................ .., .. ........ i,.. ..... I· A"41 /_, iWil B.,,.,.., Arie hi tile DAIU'f P!UiYJ' ''""""' ··"""· ' l \ ,. • ., ' ' ' ; \,/ i ' '' ; Hera comes the seeker! . ; . . ' - Ev;, on the move, 1ear~Jtln& out the ~· Cl~ th~ people and the tnith with· In ~~!(., dtl1· folk.rock sbJglng, itar phmJea ~o romimttc adv,eiiture1 In • .~· : ' . ,,, . ' .. '• ' ' ' ' ~-' • ' ' " '" I ! I I ,, ' • • • ,. • • • ' ,• ~ L~f iiii•iiii2iiiii1 ;iiiii, ._ 110 """...... ! • . :!'l'l . lIHJJ ~)~rs~~ WJ. 1 ·','s'o . HIJfl :11:·~ h flJl 'tuts ' I .·,;, e IJ [ .•. 9' ......... MJ~ I' 711 ~~~~m. 4 w-'. M & ,.,;.,...WD!!lMe M1~,1!1 ..... ~ ... 11 w-... Ma I' 711 ~-·~,!_a I' 111 """""'"' ~G ·Ul'!: 1~ 'l Mam~ • • • ' '' ' ' S!EAl..1$. Socnl.,,...9t.pl. ,,• ' BEAUT · . ,¥00 u,ru, nt Mu.• with ' Ibo-I!· •blliltCi, .. r , .Jol.&ZD~ · ' : .~ ~A~ ~.:_ rtno. llrm TY~.,, """" · .. ~._:,i"'f • .• "'IJCIAL •. ._..ILR_Q._ . ..:. .. ~ ..... 1---...... ..,.-. ~,..-. PM'llillt~ CA~ OfPmE N ... .r---..Jo1n• olilued ... _ t IL• °"""""' Greot ....,. •._ .. Ck c11n, fllll ,...i. USEl<Ea'EI\ tor ....u; e <ANIY w«i..'la W..I Onil .. -Oowlt,fa 'neweotllid Miida •W-:1 ..... Md -w/--~ a ~ _.._ SW. '4'1$. NewQ< "'ll>bOllllrta cl•b ·~ef:U.... JAN;!!·~~~ ·.u.... ·d.ealerbuol>Olllllgsfor.q~Cluaia ~~?..:''= &QOd •-el-•. ~"d· ~~~.!:.i ~ ='.-r.~'.C:U~ WE~~OWN ' ~-~~-.... ,. -~ .. • Jliew Car Sales-6..;, ·' • 4 ..,.. and blcame a Some. • c •Ir• ~. ...~,,., atave no. for' •j>pt. VAN'S ; ._.._-.....,..;; f/ilfM -~~~lu ;'{: ·· e Used Car Sal.;;;. ' -'IUtmJ>tt,,_~~.;t'!ll....,,. ~Jis_ Salary -. Call 2190 -Blvd., CM. DECORATOR Mo v 1 n t ! -DI_. l'-lhir. " 'Call ~ ·~ ·al,\· ~ · " ~• GWral Mecbanlcl E.,.,.,,.,.~...,.... dollar UNDEIUllWUN~TV lJ> R • d • c.o~ all!>r.. CU1ton1 '11w.'41119t., SA 517.)W HOUSE\VORK'i4 -each JANITOR-f.itim.~ ii; e DMV Cl k · · _.. Fne ·S.C1'91•ty $QO 1-expor ,.,._, dtolaneil !Urnlt.,. al 00.t, 2 0.,.. do1fi lM. Sat !!Ml ~ Monltihi Fri, $40 a -V!fde,' Coow.' Hosp, an · er llcanalac Jl!llool. Gd akllJs. cona14e..,i, · :t6U 1..ov< ... 11 Gl&u top la col· w«!<.OWncar.6#-~ c.nti>r ".St,'C.M. 518-11585. •Contract Clerjr. .o\MIOI tnb>tna. , WeotclU! W. Oooft II• N.a ltt tabte:.un.....i' dJnlnll DOVER Sbcno aoJlld jfo,u S.E.K EtE p EI\ Con-bOtwn.U s . f l e LOI Malntaldence, Man ' "n CW/. Y\rslJlll J.... l'erloonel ~ Th =••1" Eq . Oppor. nn ,.,. !4&ny ant1q...,, :;t';Nl't., ~~~ {:f:: val!"'"nl llospl\oJ•f\111 time J ANlTOIUAL . Superv!aOr, e Delall lllan. · RiD cARPl!T ' lilil ·E.·~ A. • . ' . 6#-46>8 '"'~ . .,......., $1llQ. Mlm>r "'°' .eniptoymwt.Call~O ElcP'd !nOOorcare•l«,aipet We Offer: Securlt>:< .,. '" R . "'-. f>laJ!<lllC.. tor) Wi\'!i!I.$ IS LARG . · re1rl,1_...., M .. 's drwer $1Z. l:Ct ID.EAL-~ time cte"'1 C>ll be • F•"'..,..:J!'rilolng; , · / .. ,""" . :5¢8836 o .... !&' , .. : Ii.' part.time\ ·stalnle• !rool, ..,.-..., ,.. .. ~ <hr ~ Red ..i-1 m I d -da ~ · tor Job dl!rlng ~' "" 1 5 & 71'!!'-; Re~t ~ .' ' , . R. • .E. SALES SECRETARY port · thne, 9 0.,. ~ nlaf>t>. Groat i>u3< •' $100. alao !D' ..;ji' 1P!•'$'Z. (2) .old ~vesoralude~ JANrroiu.u.· ·.,;,.. Part : lncenlive Prc\mm1 , .MOVl .. UP TO-'11' lo 12:30 pm, ·5 cia,s C•rl'a Jr. Re~t. black nauaahlode .hlde-a·bOd vinvlchn 0 . .4J•t,.ldeOJI . :&.c:eeu.tul nmcmtm u1""" • ' ... -..-1 INC9ME -~ , recuJar. $225. per mo + A.ppl)' lit jltr'S)I\ between 2 llOfL .$50. M M~Frl A hie c · sz a Gu ·•• ---~~· ........ nm. Help neodeil. Exp'd : ln~uran~Pro~ · sM..if-" OYel'thne wheo ·-..quired. ,.. • 5 jlm at Carl's,'2182 49<-&!!&3: •·lcenda-. 1oga p;. - h,rly 1e&mlng:fP· Call -Rob; mqi.t.womCn.979-3652 · For Intervlew;ttontact "' Excdle11t.OPPORnnmT. ~call 641H374. -Bf.btol, c.M.. MOVING, 11-rusr SELL ~="=,...-:=~..,.....,..... ~yert>ofs M '-J UNIOR SALESMAN · •Ot (ONGPIJ!· MAZDA; .,._,,.. w1111ra1n. SECIU:TARY Rll:EPT Waltreuu, •• ,.,. FURN CHEAP! 14 aq. tt. ~ & = .1:::'::: ~: IN$T~UMENT ~6;1gg ~-~ wi! "The Car With The: Rohrv ·~gine" ~ ... NQW • ~"I~ F:: ~Uc~~ "'fn~ F::_. ~ ~E~~ S~~e~fa~~s:n. ~ ~~a~~nai:!i~ ~ LOAN on Sahmiays getting .... 2001 I. flt-ST.,.:t.UIT~ ANA 'Slr10l& e • HW\la~ • ~ beds & mU.C. :11).18 Wallace stand. desk & chah-. <$<" '' CLERK cuitomers for the D$ilY (7141 "2-66Sl ··;," ' SERVICE Station Salesmen • · "E" CM &l5-6M8 v.·lth hutch, l•mp, bo..' Pilot. ?\tls is not .. a"-paper H . M &. F 71 'w-~ Must be 'exper, 1c have a.In WAITRESS GOLD 8' 110la. $100. 2 ~ aprina: &. m11.ttttu, llkt nt\\', }:. · · rOu_tt:~ ~ not iricl_lllie ele W•nttd,, . • G ...... '"·"'°''-' M & F 7lO . , ablllty. 1 to 1 P.M. 5 days; Exper, M\qt be Over %1. Ap-match club cbrs, all vin,yl, $"50. 548--2-t79. · ~liv,_ • o~ O?llectilli. LIVE-IN compOnton lo r MAlff.<\'f;R • · liiA.liltiSALES alao, experienced craveyud ply in -· Surl l Sirloin, UC> each, 2 Gold uphol wing EXTRA 6" LONGER , r';. -UNITED-~:.~~~~ ~~ . widowed man. Lite duties. ~·, wbo's : ,had EX· fDEE LICENSE man. Apply: 5930 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. chn, $35 ta. Brown club 'ENGl..4N~ FULL SIZE '·CAL.IFOl!t.NIA .. ANlc . . . . Prefer older male or 'PEftl!:NCE in a fl n e , ~T"•IA NG . 3190 Harbor, Co&ta M6& WAfrRF.SS uper, over 21, chr. $30. both f •,br i c . BOX SPRING 1: MATIRESs • · . Hu_nttntt.o!'I, Beach . only. female. $15(!/MO. room '&. cttatlve' •~ialit¥ shop. Ph . , ""'· I SERVICE St8.Uon Salesman c~i.n &. neaL Full Ol' 96&--0748 ·SALE BOTH FOR ONLY . ~ Edinger, Ave Applt now . 968-9&il. board. Appl)> in penon. 226 ~7-:"mJ · ~ lteal Eltate. Uce.n. a lube man,· exper. pref'd. p/time. En &. Ale , SP="~°""1S11""""'•"1"n..,g-s..,i""•""•--;& $39.00 I , •Hu.ntf-ton Be--L KEVPUNCH Cabrillo St.,· Coata Mtaa "t11ru"''~n nowR'·'toav~! Top pay & fringe benefits. 640-812>, Mr. Zimmer, children's bdrm turn, living RF.POSSESSION CENTE:R ••• -..n AAA Fitril ·loc8tett ln'~So. aftemhi>ns. ··MANAGERS ..... IMVCl.I ~ n ..... ..,., Fl:lll,& p/ttme avttll. Apply w ... aw I rm A di.nine .rm, G.E. 619 E. 4th SI. Santa Ana I j .. 147-?5'1 orange Co .. Mu.st. have 2 m LIVE . In HOUICkpr/Cook. e; ASST MANAGERS rµaotml"ut Service. Fref Shell Station, 17th & Irvine, • rt ": tresna w~. 6 mo. Movinc ,nuat Daib' 9 to 6 * 8'1nday 11-5 t Equal Oppor, Employer exper. ~n Uruvac . 1no. Erigl.l.sh speaking. Jte~~ • ·KIY-LEA"D MEN ·=-~ ~Cau~ rj.Q.: ~~~ ~ din#1!::'~1 :0'""'"'°'6'6-6r""'~71'-. -,..---l'llUST move 1'iay '7th., btst 1 ' ~ Great betiefits .. ·Salary. ~ req'd. 2 Orlidreii iri e 9AS ATTENDANTS Sloiln· (7\Cl 832-M, on SERVICE Sta. needs 4 pump l\I · r PAIR of annleas orange offer takts custom fumiture • INSfALLER -Praa:e ~caw~ Grayi houlel"R>ld, age• l •. 8. . M .. tr c· w·-L ' Weekend& .(n4> m'nXK>. bland salesmen \Y/lube ~bO. B.1y Club upholstered 0 cc as I 0 n al 11' l\Iarge Canon sectlot"lal ' door qpqraton lntercon1 • e~~ 64!).-38..10.. -•_4' ar van . exper .. Full or p/time. chairs 'w/tall backs, like w/curved mahot. tble to »S~m. exp t ~ 1 enc ed . Aflncy, 2790 Harbor .Blvd~ LVN, for light duties a: Growth Co-4 Locations * REAL ESTA.YE * Apply Aro> ~tion at l?lh & l22l W. Coast Hwy .. N.B. new $35 tht pair. ~221'9 flt. Cocktail tb11, lampg. oil ·&1~90 . pleasant work. Apply ln · . CALL 546-1191 Opportunity?. Fatbhllt -Bl&: Irvine, CM. 'I \VELD ER w/ornamental art SPM _ pa.inti,.-. (n4l I 4 6-10 l i ~ ... m ... ;; LADY ~ ljYe-in . &: t.eip penon, 1 Omep-Cl~ 18)69 . Canyon • Bay areas. Est. SERVICE . Station, C d M I r on e x p t r , M I k e · 1 COUCH, custom made, g ft., 1-luntlngton Harbour ' ':'!""'• ; •·•• . ·w•· '"/new babr. some ~t Newport Blvd, ea.ta Meaat . . ~tlce needs young, aggres.. ~a . .\Ke XI or over. 5 Ornamental Iron Works, olive ere@n, 2 matching 0¥er1iucl exec. •di •. D.&.r DCDO""'IL-..,.. hou&e"MH'k. Salary OIM?P·. 646-1634. MARAUDER MARINE aive licemeet who wilh ro Nltes -· 4-12. SeUSun ott. 7251Ai Laguna e n Rd., Lag chain & ottomans:, ltSS tMn fmJIOl1ed, teek a cane-, tthr 19\.Ylf~I; ' &.l\,J\.Jl...,'fCL Baysho~s area. ~. Ne;ed moldet'$. Hand lamlna· be suc:cesstul. Write short Phone 673-3118 foc appt. Bch. 494-6376 3 Y.l'S old, all for $300. t'A·lv. armchair. Orta. '12C!O~j .~Al""'tt" e LAGUNA ladies' specialty MACHINISTS ·:titip. 2>11 Plactntia Aw. CM resume to P.O. Box 49>&, • Weldt r 548-24'19. Sa $250. OJlonllll bit.r .-Viu:.>"'AGEJICY Wj> ·nee.Ji' thorougbQ< <X· MECHANICAL Co.ta M .... 92627. Our' stal1 SHEET ·METAL SHORT Arc, 1 yr oxp 2520 So AVOCApO O>mer bed ""'· 1'5'.' 7• Contemp. :iioo, · F,.._l fH Posltlona oei:<"""" young, o:'""°n. DAVENPORT ASSEMBLERS 1"~"' about tlus ad. All ,... SKILLED l SEMI SKllLED Broad-. SOnta Ana nowe...i spreads. ·11 O O. et<. 615-2160. l\~ve 1sa.1iel.Jnkt engr ~th ·~~·-::~ Cofut .set.-_Ull(~tn Uberal company bas open· {llies ·ocmfidential. With Exp,'ln following WHO WANTS TO WORK? White, 9 drawer aawc 6' ~D~Eco=RA""ro=a~la-m-.,.--x=·• Cat&: Ex~_!!Bel) to SUK wy, J..qwia ac . inp··for mechanical l.Slel11· 1 e SHEAR-BRAKE . DRIVE A CAB! drelllt1' $J.OO. Zl34 Anl1.la, doubl. lobe Uk lus : Accnt/RE(CPA exp ., 125K • LEGAL SEC'Y BROWN . biers. Good working cOodt· REAL ESTATE· SALES e PUNOI PRESS OIOOSE yoor boon, work Eutblult. 644--0329. table' la~ps wf.'h ..!t0m Mtnqement Trile to sa:n Fee Pali:I.' ~tiful prest:ig· & SH & •IR . tionS"I: benefits. 4 dl,)"work New 'ti~~le·; -~ewport I. • DRll..L PRESS for )"Olll'lelf, be your own $350 MAGNAVOX 1tereo for aha~ $25 each. Small wt!).&: FIC Bookkeepers $700 kxLs olc. Attorney needs in· . "'~., weeko-·~. HuntAR.-BcJBe.8.u.. • WALES NC PUNCH boss .. Men ~ .....omen. Can $35, new cllrome lhel1 unit chair curved ltp $35 . taJ Ole Manager to f!OO div) dual w/business lik~ at-Sel-Up ""en 1t4E111lOL.~~O. HA . BOR VIEW LAYOUT . TOOLING • ~ ~~Uy handicapped. $50, l'[alnut desk "1th 2 !Ile 6'&-4im. . ' Sec'y/DO sh/Anaheim to SfiCX> tltUde. Great benefits 111-, l.1191·~ HOMES Xl1>'t ••• & benefits eat ean Appearance. drawers $50 968-0t98 atter •ii '. 'I Secretaries to $650 cludtng prqfit Marina. Start Good wages. Xln't co. bene-• ,._ . ItVine' ' 1829 Port Shettleld 'Place k. c. Holloway Inc Vts-1 ret~. Aae 21 to 70. ~noo1,.,"1.=-...,,.·--,-....,.--Ger ... Sa .. 'fypista/a:en olc to $00) $650, Also Fee Jobs.· ca'u flta. Penn. stea<!f employ. Newport ·Beath 833--0'180 66IO ' a.. Supplement your income. ~ nven Contnll Clrk S450 Gloria Gray ™ ~-ment. ·2nd shift openinaa. MEDICAL"_ •1 .. G•nt. good wk-daya !l1l11 1 Armstrong -e. Drive a cab e hrs or~ a PARTY dlf.e set,: 1:15' -------:--·I. cePtlGen'I owce $450 ill Penonnd Age~. ~mo 'UXNORD INC: ~ ~will . tram. wn~. · ... · • S•nt.1 An.1 day. 1'ptly ln pert0n, t!9::!:atw WI~; c cwrh m: ttUGE C.rap aa1': ·Furn, ·~ F/C ~kp:/Sec'y S700+ Harbor Bl'ftl., CM. _ , ~'•F Di "\., ....,...~O~ ~.:58, Dali)o: -. 'RNI Estlte-. .,. (714) 07..tCMO .YelbW Ca Co.p 186 E. 16th All x.lnt eond." ~. 2100 -r:::a. h11 • w ~e •,IP-' : . btsuranCe Sec!y to: S700 ·.~ . dt~er J!' _v. PUo~.J> .. ~;J,$1). Costa 'R· nt I u .. ..:..._ • St .. Colt& Mesa. Petenon· Pl No 494. CM P ... • •. !. UI m maft. i ~Geri Ole to $550 .• . " . • . . • ·.3130 • H•rvar.I· ~-;cauJ.,"8lli::· o • ··-~mon.t . · · · · ll402 ~~ Clr, H. B' . i=:-"' .,$700. · "Tl,..E·-FOR=~ S.nl•Ana -MttilCAL~' · -"·':;~.!·~ ~· ···SKIPPER l-'-.,. ___ 11~1 . NE&DY.FA!"'ll .. Y 5.36-4931 , ~CALL' TRISH HOPKINS FO .... ACTIO:it . .. n4/Sj6-5100 2U/i;8!;.2]B4 .Front ' )!oeeptionlzl. • -. Guu· -a I . . Wan!I ..,. -tum. & KNICK-lcnaeks, ..... bedrrit . JERI WHITTEMORE ·~-•!• ... • 'EQul.osiPx'. empk>yer m/f, J.~ ~ -116'. 8.1!.teed dra'!, aome salts -_ r _ repairable tum. Pleue call set, TV, chain. ~bJe1, . '88 E.17th St (at lrvine)'~M · DAfllY: Pl' OT '", lllOTEL~r Will tralri lfc req. 832'0133. for PU. 96Hl62. ~bi """ chlldn!•• t , Suite 224 642-1471 ·" ~ · A~· 'In per.;n, only.. eoati. ,., "'* Real Estate Sales * Sailing experience, Ucensed , 2 BEDS, 30" & 39" width. f'tc. May 5 I: 6. 9-4PM, '. C~VSIFIED. ADS Mad>bdst M ... ~ --u-~Blvd, '20Ulee• e Laguna Beach for at leas. t 160 -· 130' Antlq.... IOO Comnlete w/lllre nu fitted T•h•na 1'err., CdM "'"" ..,.... "'"°' t'll w '642-5678 CM -. '"".'''_'."-Pt:ACE REALTY 494-976§ Gail R1ued Ketch. \Villine .,,;.;,-;:, & 2 bolsters, Gold & GARAGE Sale* Sat lo Sun llOUSE Hunting? WatCh the J ' ' Progressive manufacturing • JUX:EP.'I'IONIST t typl.st, to rek>cate to South Sea ~ our~~ 111tlectk>n of an-on.nae cneclt, $65. 5*--0104 Freeter, tum, c I o t he 1 , OPEN HOUSE column. · company, xin't working cot ·-> N d d accoilntiflg background Islabd. X1nt opportunity, ~ h""'•'~ ~rman ~ FOR sale OOllCh ebait ot-dllhe1 etc. 2lJ Dt.hlla ODI. i jiiijjiijjjiiijjijjjiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiliiiiii"l!'iiiiiijiiii I ditlon~. Frtngt benttiti:. ,~ ' ee e be Ip f u,I . Woric ..' week lhort ctuises only. Living cloc:. in~oek wa:;i~ loman, • tables,' &: "1tac ~675-4822~~-----~ Immediate Openine Foc~ · · Wed-&m. 9-5. Mesa Verde quarters aboard. mahogany All reasonably furniture. Call any~lmt GARAGESa•;MovlnaEut, ' . AUTOMATIC SCR W ...lmmed1"ate· ly Country Club, 541Hl37'1. Mn. Alao UCense<i marine · •. priced. . ~ Sat" Suo 9-6. 3792 He"""!<, · C I _ :-1 .· -Myer. ' ter + 3 ttew mem~ Tl.me 'N 0.ime Anfiques BEDROOM 1 .et, bk cue ~· Ollvtrdale. Main I: MA HINE R EC E P nDNISI'/SilCR& sailing exper. ' a;: 30th St, No ro headboe.rd, end tablet:, Jg. =~-~·=~---- OPERATOR Jtniif.h.· · TARY ;e ll-40. Apply in Ne\\'PQn Beach 675-47" chest, dbl. bed. _Sota, lloral REMINGTO~ port. typwrtr, SHUR-LOK CORP. -Jl""w' -· peroon, 395'lnd St. Lag. B. Sa c . Open 11-5 Closed Monday gold & brown. 832-Um ~. ....... albmm, App"' A• . • c·-~ T"""st RELIEF cooK . mar ruises EUROPEAN An, 1.". s, WHITE P.non. .. • • • ~·~~o . Sip, Rohe Scientific ..,.~ JI'" Exper. A.Pro-in pel'ICl'1 only, Annolre1, Stalned . G.Lui, w/cobalt bl~ top, 6'', never ="o=·==~-=---:-.... A CONYE.NffNT SHOf'PINQ -c::I •· SEWING GUIO£ FOii: T~ . CAl <* TH"f"GO. • • So e Sr T~lt Alley West, :nos W. OceaJlo Ben!WOO<I, P<akJ, acceA. used. R<lal)l 1:r $500, ool¥ MOVING -lun!i ..,i., ~· • Lyon :St.. . ,. . : . l?ont. N.B. Ul7 Huntington Drive ..... Burl«! Mlrior. -. noo. 613--01'/ll . -.. etc. NO l'"*-: SOnt•.M=• ·•--'~-~i Tedi yplst Rellab,le & ...,..i.. Sal)Marill'>,,Ca!Jf· 91108 or9'!Hl!56 . . ' ... MAPIZ dbl bed, ...,_ !lolt4TT .,,.,,,_nd. Imp "· F.-,-... -""~. "'1•n•w!"'_,..!!P'. • W.rld . t Coll "\o!~,~h~4j!~~~t •. 3311'. j 4 Ma' 'p" ,.,. \'fi::~liffy;". 'iJ.':..: ., 1n arts ,· ~ . , roc:JUll •J. " . ;9334 8-18 =m" ...,,... ···-~ T' • boasek ...... /l>abysltt.r tor . . ~ PLA'Pf\GRl\l•ro•'ker w/mimr, J ,.,.i "~~ l!edJ!!nd!·Pl.,9!,, ....... .. I.' ._..,C!'' '-''st ,''. lic>ys,age U,' !o·• 5..5.i.,s, , ('l1;3}"881t2·777 pMliolerjd,' ·c~'. '>i>t,tttO" lilui .U. $200. ~ +alll! '.ti l!Oiti a. MA . \ e ·Secretaries ~ ·8-5, some eves. ~fer., re-L r . ~cellent condltl·on .. ~1100 ·-WOlnt1"t Cldtblril1' II lf-11, l lftt['O.PR · ' • · · quired. Salary open. '°" , 54Hl60. HIGH back . recliner chair. ~1961' Harbor .ell ~ UllD . . ... (VOLT ,. ' . ~amt Plua. Days .. . PAINTINGS. cloekl, irons, brown tweed.moleriol, $35. • . · tnst.11tt Personnel · · SML bbai bullde need pewter, brass, copper. 'l83n Ct.l.l S51-3llt. , , Din .mV'Bid Must do cPNn ,aet·up 4 have Tern~ .serJice: ;l, · RN·"tun thn~ l2 to 's nights. w/fibUgla.ss :xP. •A:p~; Pi.itel'l!ln Way HB No. 2 * •· * SOFA A Lovneat Rm~ Mlle. Fri I: Sat .. ~ own tools. GOod oppor. ·tor: 3M8 Camplis Dr., Suitt .u. Raleigh 1HW. HQ a pi I al . Holder Marine; 1919 B Phi-"842-1'79l pri"-· · fteVtt1 Uled, both for $155'. 1 P,olriie!U& Av, CcW. ad"VMCm1ent. Xln't worldna: N~ Beach 546-4!'1 645-5707. ' centia~ Costa Mesa EXQUISITE Antique Gram 968-191b-u.sualb' home. IRVINE 1.F&ea 'Market, S.1): conds'. Perm. "°"'lion. Good EciU&l · Oppor. Emptoye? -S~IM ~I TECHNICIAN I b r llen-Pl&ao. Must See to Ap-COffiE' table chair am i;i._!! _, CUlwr ,\ roliow !If beoefita. ', ' , . Nffi£ -•Ii ' · ·' T.rllnoo · deruin1<' aaJon, lull lline, prectate!'-. din.,.; oVal, ci..rr, ..iod..~ ._. Sat. May !I. 1()-4. ' ENORD INC c.meW> ~tired .fttt~ We wUl train 2 yOOng men Omega CltnlC, 1546-1634. ANTIQUE ·Brus It Iron dbl cbn, leat/pada. ~1430~ FURNIT.URE A Mite. st&il& PQlkiemaJ(. pret'd. 17·-un1ta. !pr.career pos!Uons wflh one ~HONE Intervie\\'ers bed. Good oond. $150 HEADBOARD , red velvet Fri. 12 ,Noon thtu Sund~. I Specialty Futener DIV. ..tn .. 'toroDa., 2 blla to beaCb .• Of. Am~'' leading Llfe wanted, no selllnt, 1¥0l'k 640-1029 or 497-lTZl gold trim. dbl', lili! ne'JI(, Jll()'. 311 Meaa Dr., "CM. 31}1 W. Horv.,d · C&ll 645-1624. .. ,,, 1....,,.,... Companies. So'1'e lrDm YoUr Mme. Hours ~IJancH t02 548-~'19. 21 'cu.ft. OOifttlOl. ro!nc . S.1nt.1 An.I · Nµnes .... ~ . ~~ exp er I enc e ad-flexible. Write ClllS&ifled Ad , MOVING telllna houlebold ~. hkie-a·bed couCh, , 7!<1'"6-$00 2lJf585.2l84 , RN-LVN:AIDE . · ~-Prelerm.uTlecl. No. 684, Daily Pilot. P.O. G.E. Range.,_ •W)dini lltm., R.frl&, TV, beda, ~Amllt!)2111Bl'<!Odwaf·, equal Opp>r. employer mff 11-7 & other sh~. ~ ovt ~~'ti~~!; ~~ ~ 1560, Costa Mesa, Calli =~n, ~r;?ll~ St.Olf cbain, drtsaen. 979-5115. SUPiR 3 Fam: Gvap ale, duty P8.Y. Immed. tJ8Y iar •to$800with.,lncreue1 bued 646-1788. ' 1..ARGEde~antiquedwbtte MIY,~"'1attftineDr., floor dUty. County w I d:e oii"'~rf~ce. Phone for Telephone Solicitors Good condition. $4(). tr.B. ·<Balnlrd 4 Banntnc> Intrvws. Mon-Fri 9. $'. Int~: · 831J-'.879l:. Part-time w o r k . Hourly 17. .. CU Ft. Whirlpool refrlg, 54$.l301 . GARAGE Sale Fri. Sat LescouHe NUI'les Jtegiatry, •.a• 5 · wage, Good wotking envir-freezer, coppertont, GOI..Dtectlonalo:iucb Mai 4th 6 5th. 113 J~ 351 ijospltal Rd., NB (I& ~i MEN . ·onment. Excellent · swnmtr tr.oat-he. Xlnt.. S 115. J S25 Ave ' Balboa Jlland. 1 . MlCHINl$TS · Needed for the following : by Park 1.Jdo B I d I ) S~ Springs ::,w need1 6 job. 536-2591, 10-5. 492-6870. . . ' 5'8--4681 Us. '· :72 ~-Rac'I Man : =:el &a-9'1"6. 541).995ol ·111aran~:; plus COmJ'l\~S:~nk 'l"EMPOB.ARY weeding job, Rent Wis~/Dryers ORIEm;AL Black ~·~ .-' ~L '~00 ' f! e Milling Machtn~s NURSERY 1Ch-Out£tand!N' . full .time. Part t 1 m ~ ·8 hrs· per day. $2.35 hr. $2. Wk, FUil malnt. I:. cOtlt«! tit.bit. Set $40. • 54M917·evft'A. wMnda ~ I SmaJI Shop, Work 50 bn ·~nt cooperative nunery available. Apply in person: M2-28U _ * ~Ut2 * . 5'8-4681 · 2 ftOUkF..S ... Great· variety! • w ... k. Good benefits & schoQI. 6"eks qual director. SILVER sPRlNGS WATER . . . TOU"uup FREIGHT -Sale on Frl • Sat Mo •T - wages. Aeromil "Engineerina' '548-2405. 9&4 N. Batavia, Orange lllr new Hotpoiltt I: Whirlpool CLASsmEo , , • , , , 642-5678 Qay, (off Blyllde) NB -' -l :;r:-s.1,.'"'! E. SL Gertiiide . 2 or;r~~t:JRLS ~ ~1 * Mini Ooiriputer company ~.•'·-ahtrllclryen CyclM, llkoa, , ty..,., '"* ..1. ~ R&dJo·'ltlebbone dis tch : , • .needed to join the ~ .2 glcla .w;ith .1 )'I\ exp. KENMORE Waaber/drytr _Scabtert: 925 ~ 7 • ~.Mu.t,.J:ie 25, abl~ to :ve Hedtage Real Estatt te~. ~t'°'t!.r~ °R.£1M"~ ctf ST9~ea. OV,si: DJ walbf'rs, wA•IHOUSI SAU wA.•••011' SI SAU '1· MAOIINIST R It D, exp'4, Apply' In Person If you're ready to 1et with · . · Yi-Y et'lt reu • from $39.9S. ' " . · ""1 days 0nlY· 11»-Dynamlco YliLLOW CAB·co · ·on artive . ...,... call Dave pm, • • i Ind., 11?42,ArmJtrong Aw., 186 z.16ih. o.ta ·M~ MY hr~. ·5·•0-11 s 1 18&5cr11rt.er~~~ sso1 YR.parn, dei1:.Utfta11. · JUST AlllVED . Santa Ana. ~ · H"E RITA GE RE AL on ' Latt mbd. KenmOre wuher <t1. MAN to work full tlme mi -OFFSET PRESS.. -ESTATE Tow Trude DrlvtF-636--2840; 839-1"8. . .... rental yard. Neat in appear. 1:A.Tr.'-~PERATOR'coll SALES· ' Ai)ply lton-Ftt; .. Harbot"Tow· RECOND. APPLIANCES ' >I FROM ' ltA"LY ,.;;/neat .~wPti':'&~ WUI .OpefattolOt~t ~ &u sl ~rnindt<i creative tng, 964 \V. l~tb St. CM Delivered -guar, Dunlap's, , '~wport~ arm· 1.930 I:' related photographic• ~:who's _o~ lhelrl'rainees -Mtn.l:Women l.8lSNewJ>ort. ~.5'8-TnKI . , r , ,r\· l>iilDiiiaiiilllii'iill-ii&a dl>P.li<4l!nt( .equip. Ex-p . ~~t'!ll shoj>, )nJereoted REPAIRMAN hu. washer ONl.T IN 'Oil CIA11 .. · , MAID iect'<I' ·eoo1act Penonnet "' ~' A.9"at11a!iv~1• .. u.,. Full It. Part Time e•ectrt~...,...." dllh......; IC SOLD Yoii'll ~crocheting thlA or.;.~108 ~-• ~~ '"!" ty ·•hop. ., . • • · • "5 ea. -· ._, T• A1u11lll1 • ~ LlllJwal .. t algi)ali_, )'0'('11. lie.''l"""'i ID F/time. Exper prel'd.' -OFFICE HELP--Ful~ ci: •. ~-~· Salary 'Seeood i!ilft _.tngs, men e DISii\VASHER.s, ...,oo;, ~ ' ,..,... ~ 1t Ml'OUI" hanittwork! Part Time · ·'"" -T It women., No ~ •• Nee. dryers • ntlit ~ _ A 1ij JtftY.:cfQchet afghan in an Apply Penionnel_ Oftict .BgAL'S -FURNl'I'URE • . LADV,, ~ """· pmmg. provided U delv'd.' 138-7620: ~· , ' unusual modtrn design -10 am-12 a:~-~--STORE·· ~ W PNfeflo ~~ ~Some rnanq:emenl ' ' ' , • irii\lt l 'Iii '3 . 11i ad e.. THE BROADWAY \ Call ~ aJily over . A In Pei-po<ttlon> ~wilable.. • =A--* • '"usi 4 ma1n'pu(c ,.m•\lkojora .. Revenlble.: No.4TFashlonltlud... Qf'l'ICICtliRK -•Plcl<wlclo~-· 'rui.LTIME'~ Me .. onty~c .. ta 1 O SPJED -llCY~U ~ 4 .• J I , \ • ALL COLORS • Al:I. 1111$ 1 ckif CA'rTAN ·: that ~~L ,~ttem 7006· N~ ~..ii P~. ~;'Dpt nt..c. l9 Futdon ~./tB P~·TIME $300-$410 APT. sl7.e, retri1 llke new. EI .. a~~ <1(1'$.:'t ~~ · .ct!m llo\AIDI wXNtll& 1:he ~--.55Mm '~bt. TV --~~,;to.r su~llOrs· ~ per $50. 1000 W. Oc:e~I, Bal e1 t"'f."~~ on~ y.,a-&1..: 1.-.c ........._'-add 't!i ' , -wu1·a. uuuu pay, . Ille 61$-l9(ll Sew ii:hort, Joni '-with -. a:-._,. -Mature. Mwrt be ,exper, Fun OFFlCE':"" Gtrt,·-pUt"' tlnae, , flexible , hn. Apply In month. Call Fri. or SaL only c=O'·""'o.;;;;::.,~~~~1 ck rack trim. cent.I ftir e~h~ P,&tte~ .urne. See ~~ ·~ •tolit~ ~ penon. Teleprompter,"~ to make appt. with Pmaon. * 21CU1T :A<lm1ral retrig, Printed Pattorn 9S 3 4 : :;~~~.clail ..... --._ . exp. r;41;iljlf !f!!$1!. , w. Cooit' '""'l'·, 'Newport p<l •. Director. lluntlntrton copper!Me, 3 years $195. i ,, S!lea 8. 10,.u. 14, 1S dell will .. take _ B._.• a.y Clull .,_OP.Ii~• v Beh. ·1 • • . s..ach ..... '36-259L ..1n.. - ' Siu ·IJ (bull 34) ·~ _,,.-;> .. jl)Ol'O. ~nd ., 1221 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. ,.NEW ·gsTAURANT SA.LESMlo:N . -colleclor for beim area 7*8551. lo..\ P!\I. GAS Deyer, Kenmore, T '"°" V & yarda 60-lneh 1:=-n ~ l;iO:oliii;. ~ DAILY MAID WORK In exd>atoge COMPllll'tE SJAl'I' turn ·otor .. Good 6ppty !or TURRET old. !Jlol,new.Movlng. muat Ell'tt .nvg ' PILOT' Jal. -tor apt. 4 'hrl d.y. 2316 AP c...Tltnis. ~ A the rtghl man. 54T-2ll2. sell $13(/, 9<B-4881 ..., .r:: Po':" ;.::-i: Dlpt., ~-,024 ~ N..._ Blvd. ~. ~ ... ~-&'iiiiiF~. ~ 64&-75tl ) ' ' .. , ...... -la IN "' ' ' ON ... Y , ·s98JB Man'".::l~Hon41· f;,~~°'}n~ MAINT.l!NANCE T; Tlieaday.'·~.;.\' SALESMAN· l >f&rl, m/f, LATH£ e SURPWSBVILDING I · o-thlnkiall ~--· MECHANIC Ttf,i:(ANNitu<Y . PIG l up ~~ u MATERIAL • 1000'• o1 Ni;W ....,, .. ~ -~~ l:DL.JlJi:IW'l:. '.721 ELl!CTRICIAH. -~~~ --tm1i = . . ~ or· EIATORr· l'lEMSl.Donn, lumber.P,. ...,.. ...... kS or ~ "'""' :y 'liidt.' ·~· Flee 3rd -. Muat ....ct ache--.-. -Wood, alum aht<lina mold-$140.00 Martin, !hf DAJI; ~ !!l"i" matlea. 'Come In • ......, 'PART 'l'IME;Salea 1/erk. Sat SALES re~!Joral .rental . . . 12ng. windows etc. • . . . v..;. ' . ' w'eatm,~ n;:; ·-...., i:,, ~ 10.u • M. . or &in. ! 1*, wlliliys 5" ::S,.~ &C-25~1on. Call . . , ' -BUILDERS SURl'LUS I • -· . < ~ N.t,~' ;= · · · '· \•;.:. ~;.:=_~An. ~~'cil'"...: z1"il'. SALm ,;_.1n Lig, ~ , TIP S$S . ~~·~a1ns::i:.•· ·Iii• ~olaDera11er • Atum!f>~m CMtn Pn>tec-' L -.allif'"",9'JUI ·,c.oEC ' Pai Equal Qpply. Em-rnif'~:"toat&Meaa ...... £lilt tiqle. Ow!t tralL '. . n41·Mi'lm ' ....... Ah.mlm>n>_Cen~r Pull ..... k •• Alun>lnum • ' . ._... -·~ ; •MA "'9NAHCI! PAA'NtDIE "aid. u~1 ~. "'"'"'"· betwn 7-jl, -· NO -"'"'!'. . , Geor-Prot.-• Aluminum KlclJ Stand . Solely~ I lll()RE " Q u I ck ~ :;w...... --~I '"•""C 'reieJ>ho!!t !tnlltl"'l .. salary .. , ·"""ll\L • .. neral ollloe ~ C•IM!Hl!"il • Retlecto• Sldt a. Rear e Al\Ul'b>um ~ndlo llol'I ,. _.,,....,,,_ ....,... • "--"'--' ... -· ~ IY'"v,.. ~ --~i~--~ la.ii IOlll t0t 1· H/ahGnotleGumnt...e Alil\'nlnunlWldol!-llld ·-... .J1....n. -la 'sUb> " · plant ' --~~· ~·-:l'IH11.;i![1'"'"" 1-• ...-~"'u r; H ba e Q\l(Ck Bt<J.ue Huba •e ,._...,, Wi'appod . tla!"'.su.!'9'-&:...~ $1Al.0 : , . 1 .. -.-~ 3rd !>lilft. eome"'i."'"""" ~ a.c.~11~_001t, -~~.:!8-., · P S. · NIKON ,..111,0DY ',.'.'Ptuaod IWldleBara. • I l Only !IOc l 1 • • I~ ~] -U• 11).ll le 2=t. ---MW i;ac &11w ~· . , _._ .., ' ' • · $300 ~ , , JNsrANT SEWlNG BOOK r.·~llr .... -. 511C. CALll'CIAM-CORP. !33-4!1/0 ex 3L . -Closlt~ ~ lOO N~·""'9r Dr. •1'NIKOMAT Frli, 10 m • ' . · • ~·--"'-· .-:.-.t.p'l'llie-.!t' .. ; ! 18861 Vonl<am!antmSairtaAna ~~~~J-;1!"h! ~ .. ~,.II .:. -ll00,•N1!' n.• ie.., xt•t oood. $225. 11. NEWPO.IT IMPOllS; _'! l! /IOe. • • • . a,.w Qpply, P!Ol'!'-: -"1t)t ,Sloli>m• 440 ~-. ~-. r: . . K~ ~IOJ1 ~..,,,: ">~.pat"'f'.'."" ~ :l.' :.ni:. '*'9!>-..:tarUiw aalary,>;· Lla~i ~ '4~14'1~· Omit fl-it,,.. . .'. ilO Iii 1100 W. ·~ it'tlY• N1•pwt ~ SL It I a ... """ S, --n'lonll>ly to '$UO 6r :: • .,,..; .~m-. l -· ~l>OU-Eq.al ()ppr. llill"'1« . 'IWlN SIZE .... ,... 9•01 l!>~Oltr -·• ·''-· · • wlllllal . 0-25. Tall. ~ :""" ';'"':' '.' ~ waloJl>e<!Jrtmo ,'31. -··-•-lpodPi!·iiiltatila'ti O!liS; -L 111lii. . . •. _ ' Dal5' Nat .... Ml ----ll'fltlltlt....... -.ml · w1111ac1-:, ... --•"Pl<l"t !'Pllild! .,.._..._ calll!ll·~ : C!aMl!/<4 Ml •.. ~ WAllHOUSI SAU W,l~OUll ~ 1 ' I • • • I ~: i ~ . ., t ·- I ' DAIL~ PILOT . - I~ I .. ,,,. I~ I Mu&u'u , .... "' ·.--~-,-!Eli: ~··I~ I ..eu... I~ I ..;..~, .. I ~.ii.,.iiiiiis.~,.iiiiiiiii~,!!l.2J ,_1ry 115 ~u....-ni 111 hw"1f ~1noo 121 -i L....., 2 ""-< "!!,r · 1; ,. . . ,Ji . 11, o--i 900 11oa1-. P•nl 900· IM!s, ..._. · ···~ e * 7 DIAMOND •~ment * AUCTION * LOOKI MAY, SPECIAL &ASl'ER ~tree; -POPPY 11\'0~. !0li _. •• uJ,. DftlT ~· RUNABOUT, Ubp FISHJ!IG iloot. 21 ft. e PATIO ~ lrnO. U NEW Zic Zac Nallonolly od-collil, 3 mo old. U87'2 Pupo, aJoo ~ s.tt.r ... lllftll U11f1 J"'-". lo hn,. blJ wbl _ --ltlboud!O-. May 516, 9 am to 4 pm. set. A~-Se FRIDAY.7·30 pM "'1'1!sod, Sibliift .I< cl>r, -Willett-la, Huntloc_\."'1 -Ill>~ -tlO.-.Illa, w/drm "'"'· idnl, _ a-, 6 cy1.-- AnUque --emarser $!500. MAY •TH only? ............... 1139.95. s .. c1> Keelhound $». 11o11 ,_, IJlllS FOR SALE "'bett otser. ~ ~ aw,. ..m :!00 ..,.. w/a!w neas. al yn old. Mlocello-1 Ill NEW t. USED-f11•MITIJRE: S!nrer T It S (URd) $89.95 DARLING little _ .. ~ T-Otp Pocidle, Cblboab""-DINGHY 8' ftbeq:lw, aood Bait ...._ depth · llnd<:t; Other Anliquol, d Is h • ' • Bedroom ta ~ OJ Sintl<r Port (uood.) • • •. $9.95 bearle/poodle 8 ....U old. Lab., ilol«r. SbeI>bord, condition $50. SIS ,_ $3 600.. Call ~~:~baby """,: MISC. FOR SALE vans ~ 01 1• 11 . NO Gl!llMICKS! !<>!>lilna tor bOmeo, 567-4071 Co<bpoo. Open Eveo: Stud Avallahle ot Oo1ta llfna. * 96M170 * 630-lnO or 633..S'M ' e mer, cm Paper~. Books. l0c·2Sc. ~Cabinet ·Oesb ne s!: Auth. New Home dealer. &ft 6 pm Serv. 531=!2'7 Noldl t:lr'. manui..cturlna 8Mts Mahtf I · · --· Vollu bucket Back ...... of -25c. Ing mAchine Lampo . Color ~">!~a-. Fl!im. *-FEMALE; Blade-" whli. MOVING ..... ___ ,,_ 111e---.-mies arftbel< ~... • '°2 llRTIAM • .. , 0 =~ne~.~ ri~s~ 01,:_~~~~ ~'ll'a """TV'•, Ster'eot. llke nCw &ide 18'18 Harbor ~~~~ Be.,P, l" )"e&n old, To ~-,German She~ .•;-~-Power boa.ts . Quick Dellveryl •,;,. Didi materlols, car cov<r, ~. ~ u•• · _, -' by side Rdrigerato<,·WUh· ' w aood home. "~1 yr. popero, ~· Madelf.Lv\ BOATS 1lepalred, l)lr1ll ol 25-28-31,,. & 3M6 llulb de& bei&'e dttorator drape!, 2173 dubs, cart • t).2.00. tn Drytts Upright treez. The sewing Room 615-lm w/cwldren Make ofter. 1ftlm 15t18" accea Banuelo& Boat Shop · dlelt:l ~ lCetten~ , E. Ocean Blvd. Balboa ~AV !':A imi"' Th':!:,., ... • !leaqty ihoo equipment, 2210 Ncrt1\ Malo, Santa Ana FIW\_Fluf!y Kltteno. 8 w1<1 =· N : Royal S t • e •:.-.. ~ ~ ~~ 8576 Hamnton S~ Hunt'. o..a Point Harl>or, -~la. St pmCM 567..000 nice Spinet piano. MUOI Mother's Doy Speclol '!kf..'~ I< wbli., aloo , I .• •5Modeloilfaallboatsfrom Bch.960-121L 16' RUNABOUT Fiberrl ... DEATH cauan 3S yet.rs col· ·• ' · MP.~1 1 Necdil _ Alco's bert zta:·iaa Calleo colon. MS-ml an 5 FEMALE Gftat Dane ll' 19' Elect ·~· lec:tlon of holllehold Ii.mo to u:ool!...i~/Ma~ WINDY'S AUCTION SIJ'etch atttch. bllnd be.,; pm. ~~ ":' :"1· ~ R<al i.arxaJo at$10,000. FOB Boots, Power 906 :.~'&.Mi:'. wh .. I tranel'! be llOld this Sat &-Sun. Llv· Parrot case $2 ColOO rick-rack, buttonholr, 25 yr 3 LOVELY k1tttna to good HOME• with l&rp f1%E'ed Colt& Mesa for entire )at. l&' DOLPHIN kl tilhhic skis & accen. XJ.nt. coni =' ~~1 2 '::~· 1o:: Kitchen atep •1 ~~·COME BROWSE AROUND fl:. ~~ym,i: ~ ~,.~~,8 C: yard. m.,.7258 after 6:00 ' =~ ~ ~ boat. Deep ~. c:ii ttus. $1200. 557·3096. 1 ' various sitts etc. 8969 1tfaytag apt •z dtyer .....,, 2075% Newport Blvd. mo. 0.A.C. Supplies ttmHed. 642-32'9 c&ll John Rau 548-TlM. l<Mr Mere O.B. w/wotl\b .\ 22' CARAVEL w IM e r'c NicbtenPle, Fntn Vally, ott Orange naugh s w l ve I Behind Tony'a Bldg. Matt's. SJ&.5446 ....... ....,. ... v u-1--te 2 Honn 156 .11--1...--bal trtr. D> Vic1oda !I., C.M. cruilel' 1/0, b1g whl ~· ..... -u.. rocker, $40. Xlnt cond. Costa Mesa * 646-8686 • • ~" __......u >"'· -FOR Sale·9 ft.............. .. tt romnn ... ..i h cabin, head, radio. lmii::: nlh J .._............ &12--1775 alt 4pm o:r anytime Sporting Goods 830 fem . unbreedable, won-8'>RSES bOarded, cniJn &: type. 4 HP eve. mtr, mint * 23' ~v~ e 1 t· $5950. 645-1407 MS.n:rt Sat. WANTED dertul pet. 54&4228 aft. S hay $56 mo. AlaG boreea tor cond. Paddle, oars, anchor. ~ter , t ~ (Don F) :" BIG BIG GARAGE~ NE\V & used furn & rum SURFBOARD. for, ~.ale, P¥•wkndJ rent. Pol\Y rides avall, tor dolly.~ (213) 661-2439. ~head, x1n condi . 26, STAMAS Fbrbg l>I r Red1W>Od fum, table, chairs, mage sale. c 0 u ch e 8 , Gordon & Sm1th 910 good 6 DAltLING baby Id~ birthday parties. Redwood ~ 22 Bay Shore '.Park, 112 Cruiser 4 yr!. old. · craY marine m, buyer getii di.ahv•asher, desk, books, learn~ board. Make othr · 6wkl, to aood bomeat Stables, 20286 Laauna Cyn W. Coast Hyway, Newport 18' So Coe.at L&pstrake, 100 cond. x'in•t fWllng boat. 250 2'' boat free. Glau, pots & beds, posters, etc. Sat May TOCKETS TO SY>-4135 644 0803 Rd. 497-2910 ~·~· hp, gray, nu top, cushions. hp 110 eng. Asking $T.D), pens.2retrtg.une"N,col· 5th,9·3PMMethod l1t LEO ZEPPELIN PENN International reel. 2BLACKetr1pedandllfackMOVING? Box d .are WANTED: Airline Clptain $1995,64&-0910eves. (213).592-1065. at TV, metal~-!'-11 Youth, Mesa Verde & CONCERT 10--0. new, $200. Phone (n4) &: ·white kitten need lovina: open at "the Red &rn". retponsl~le &: eJ(pel'ienced 25' FAIRUNER -2'l5 HP l5.!!!%~IT~~Out~board-.,--40""°'H"'."'P'.t open to offers. l.51? =r Baker, CM Ple111te call 533-1638. home. 96S-1235. Home of Fantuma N. would like to make ar-V!. SI~.~ ~::·~ey, bait Evtnrude big Wheel till Aw., a.ta Mea. · """"" 9'xl2' Coleman Oasis 5"4S.7881 TV R d i HIFI LAB/"~-~/ · I mix Peruvian PJM> ltalUon at rangementa to periodlcally tank. $3300. • trail 113 •·-•= Of ·~~VEo ·ro S 11 r "~" ' • o, 1 ..,...,.... · ...,.......,_ rent good sport fllher er. ._ ... ..,.,.., i::.e" M 1'"! au e ~ tent, retails SJ.29.50, will OLDER Upright Piano, ideal Sfireo 836 puppies, need Eood bomea, Senice. ~1 :r 644-l6l6 · 20' GLASTRON 150 h.p. best offer. sn-9'J.tl. MY an 1 ~ d ' take $75 or offer, alJO An· for Beer Bar or Fam RM -. haebrkn, 673-0!l91. 494-5192. PINTO, Gelding for eaJe Mere °'= 1/0, 1oaded BMts Siii ~ 3 ,v~~le desk~ 11& tique Forge. Make olltt. 87~1 xlnt tone, lh -~-1973 RCi\ & Zenith televlaion Apt Size Servel Rebig. Spirl~ 8yr old.' Engllah o; 9~~lGNoo=. ~=e w/xtraa:, • 49'2-1934. I :·~~~· .!!:!!.---...::::;n ahelves, 50 pictures, 500 548·5123, 28'J Del Mar, CM ing. $195. \.i of! any dothes & stereo clearan~ sa1e. All Runs iood· You haul. We1tem, pleuure A: ·trail, oru..; used 3 times, s:n>: e 18' TROJAN, 185 hp, inbd INTERNATIONAL }: b«>ks, an Collins Ave FREE LUMBER purchased with this ad, thn.t avi\ii, models In stock & on * ~ * 54~. 642-3776 after 5 pm. ski boat. , Sailboat w/trailer. Musf , Bllboa la.land. Located at the rear of 1374 May 8: Santa. Aria 442 W. 4th disflllJ'. Priced less than the LABRAOOR pUppies mixed, SALE or lease, x Int DINGY 7'2" flber&lass !WI 543.-0223, 64>-4325 sell! Alik ;349. Make any of· GARAGE Sale: \V a t1 h er, Wo.rehouse Rd., C.Ptf. Brina: Anaheim. ll5 \V. Lincoln ~~ul~~~ ~t~ 3 ~1P1& 8 wka. Very cute. Need a Gymkhana 4:: ~ hone, 6 floatation 17' INBOARD, Runabout. !fe::r_;_! _,6T.l-c:::::c57SO:;=.~~=~-I dryei' Quallty men's i;port your trucks, 2't4's, plyYIOOd Value Vlllage, O.C. Assoc. service. Free UHF/VHF good home. 495-{i592. Yl' gelding, exp d rider 67rr2008 Top tlbape, recent overhaul. 14' HOBIE CAT «1&ta.' suits, shirts: ties. paneling, cablneta,. ahelv· ~~~~~~/. d re n · color antenna w/any COil· MOTHER &: Kittens, 2 592-rl697 . . , $960. ~2114 king with trailer. 645- Mary Kay Cosmetics at Ing, etc. sole purchase (oiler good males 3 females HORSES Qoe.rded, riding The fasteat draw in the West. 70 SKIPJACK 20 FB, as CATALINA 22 $3500 I cost. Sunday May 6th U)-5. ROTARY gas mwr. 3HP $35. USED fliihl~ tackle, rods & thru 30 April) ABC Color ' 557-3399 arena & tralla. ~ Acacia ... a Dally Pilot Claulfied $6500, make offer. Lots of ' 311 Santa Isabel, Costa Fr/pl tools, Jog set $40. 9 x reels, lines, tackle boxes, TV, 19046 Br 0 0 k h u r 5 t St. S.A. Heflhts. M4-5:m Ad. 60-5618. extra.I. 837-iliOO 542-2578 aft 5 or Sun. Meta. 12 Wilton rug. Ice cream tools, houseivares, cabinet 968-3329 & 9021 Atlanta Motor Hom.a Motor Hornes Matar Hornet Motor Homes GARAGE s ALE : Kit· freezer 642-4996 hardware, and many other 002-5.559 Huntington Beach 5 I /R -Salo/Rent -S /R -11 S•le/Ront 1 lture ~ ' items too numerous to men· j 11~1 • • ent "" -•I• tnt "" chenware, um b • , ~ SECRETARIAL desk like hon. All very reaa.onable. RENT TO OWN ~.,.. ....... MO I plianee1, wed rte • new Metal w/whlte 36Z \V. 5th St. Santa Ana . . ~le.~~~ ii~~· Cost $37;-S.ll 1;~i.:~ ~I;;~· I block oil TV'S & STEREO The TITAN The New! Qua6ty Built!; Blvd, c.M. . WASHER. crib & matt:reM, u::ITAR $12, refrlg $49.50. $10 Pets, Gener•• 850 EASl'BLUFF BACK YARD love :;eat & oota. bulf•t. ... dnJm• $150 dinette 4 "FUN FOR PETS" Low-cost! Motor Home ~ Me~ter= ~,.!: dresser,. RCA TV, chain chn $55, coffee tbl $12, No Credit Oleck•No Deposit t-tor 'variety misc & ~~C..9 ~,,!',... & o u p • vanity $8.flO, chest.a, rocker, FI't'e Delivery . Free Repair ~~!_.lngmyk~l•. Ow~~ By' .• CHAM PION '.·, ~ 'Sal May 5 9 AM. to 4 ~~ '~;" tbls, bka, bunk & other Monthly Rentals Avatlable uua.&u ""' r PM ·:2?.()6,Arbutu~ NB TOP line, Rotary mower beds, bikes, tvs & misc. AU Open Eves. erator, tender loving care. ' ' . ' Bargairi paid $93, uaed 6 kinds USED USABLES. Closed 11 am-2 pm. VELVET chr~~~ble:ar.gol~ mo. Sell $45. afternoon Tue1t-Sat, 2560 Ne w po r t STEREO: 1973, .20() Watt. PF.:l' !:!' :!:~/pr{,j; pO·rt 548;.1,815..:..._ , Blvd., C_M .. -· --··· Quadruenk, Garrard -VA~N4NQ-~- wubeT· wrght tron rack KENMORE 600 washer . SWIMMING Pool -24 x 12 x model, systemiz.ed auto· , etu ~lws 979--8587 ' White, xlnt -OOlkl. ,$45. Call 4. complete $150. 'Scar's turntable. AM /..FM / MPX Cats 152 . · · SALE ~19 · shallow-well Jet w at e·r Receiver. 4 Qua<J Speakers, . GARAGE MJSCirJ,eltems for Ale inc pump.-new~$75.-ti91 -W;-Wil~ · !ape-·:deds:.-·Wu :-Ie_:f,.t .~ION·,aired--~-male -·-- Gu dryer, copper .tubing, 2l" co1of TV cona>le A aoif;. CM. , unclaimed, s~ brand new ~stud seMce. CFA. tittinp, dresael, ceramics, auto washer 645.-6864 in box apd guaranteed. Orig ;,546-9965:::..::::e:·-----= etc. 9082 Aloha Dr., HB. · · MJgollonoo111 ~ pr;ce 1400. Now $1B5. Cash "-• 854 4 Porty Gorago Salo USED BICYCLES Wonted 820 or small paymenl!. 89>--0501 :=.::J!::__ ____ _:::;: Oilht's fum old trunks. You All Types * 642·1Z12 SI'EREO: Unclaimed 1913 SAVE A HOMELF.SS PET name' 11! 'Thurs til aold. EARLY Amer couch $25. WANTED -Shirley Tempi~ Garrard model, full size Cockapoos, Irish Setter, 11532 van Buren, H.B. (Cor-Good gas stove $25. 138 E. 00&1Y6 cereal bowl • rel. turntable, AM/FM Stereo Dachshund, Beagle, Ter· ner of Slater) · 18th, C.M. scs.4485. art. Id Southern Pacific receiver, full range air tiers & poodles SM-3228; :::;.c.:::__::::::"-"·'----9 ORA WER dresser $40 dinner gong. Dionne doll speakers, tape deck and c4::SH853:...::=. _______ II Anti~o!.1:~=-Cop-Tank type vacuum $10. u8 Ccloeed mouthl • good, headphone plug. in jacks. FOR sale, AKC miniature ,._ Retrlg., It 0 th er E lSth c M 548..f&85 reuonable. Please reply -Brand new m box, Schnauzers w/puppy vac-~· H llotro · ' • • • 545-2368. guaranteed. Orig price $190, clnation. Pri. pty. . lt.UI PllCI $7995 The Titan .•. Order Yours Today ~n•llYr •~-hotn• f.or th• Nd9•f~'.':.:-' . 1dv1nfvr1r, On• th•t.1ncorpor1t11 w•ldff·!f•el · cocutn1ctio1t witft crisp f1o11tction1I d11l1n. luilt on • _r1Jnforc•d ch•11i1 IOod9•, Ch••· or Inter• 1tlo•-H•n1•1t.N-1--you-•n chotn• from l. . 1p1clou1 -ftt.c1r pl•1t1 lft 20 or 74 'or n -foot-T l•n9tft1. And looli: et th•1• f••t1o1r•1 : • Autom1tlc tr•n1ml11lo11, pow•r br•i11, pow- er 1t.•rin9, v.1 •n9I•• 1t•nd•rd. e Duel "''' wh11l1, h"V. dwty 1hocli: •b1or• IMrt on front •nd r••r of •II modelt. , e All 1t••I c19• contfruction with 1up.r qul•t high J1n1ity poly ur•ffl1n1 fo1m in1ul•tion. e Aluminwm 1idin9 acc•ntff with p•bbl•· wood1r1ln •lumlnum p1n•k. goodies! 600 e pe, CARPET cfld, 75 yards, xlnt ORIENTAL RUGS. Private now $95. Cash or small n4-531-9916 CdM. 614-!372. cond. 11 540-3022 * party will pay cash tor all payments. !93--050! AKC Beagle puppies, 7 13801 HARBOR BLVD. GARDEN GROVE DANMAR MOTOR HOMES e l1r9• 9•llrt f••furin9 four-burner r•n9•, r•fri9er•tor •nd doubl• 1t•lnl•11 1t.•I 1inli:. e 11th with twb •n" o.,.1rh••d 1how•r, e St••p• up to 1ix, " 1' '. Hou.hold Goods 114 * SlO sizes. 644-5326 *SPRING SPECIAL* weeks old, male & female, s., And Drl•• Tod1y. 8~ ~thm e=:l!:f.ee & Musical Instruments 822 Rebuilt-Picture Tube beaut If u i mar kings.1'-==,,,,,====""'"7=1=4=/5=3~1-4800=--==,,,.,,..==,.,.====""'~""°""'..,"""==-=-~1'·~~ l2 PLACE Settings, hanb 2 ~-:;;or uWheels $10 644-8697 $8>-21'' or 25'' Color ,=~;;1526~·:,.,,--,,,.,.,.--=-1· 80 painted china. 0 r I e n t a 1 . ' ELD:. Gui'tar LYLE model * 2 YEAR WARRANTY AMERICAN Eskimo Pup.,,.~A~u;l~Ol~,~fii~ow;;!iiii!ii~9~80~A;u~t;Ol~,·N~ow~---9~80~A~utiiiOli'•Niow~---~t~~Aiu~lioti'iiiiNiowiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ motif. All serving pcs incld. GOOD working m· Jtj of a Gibson S.G. Blk one Installation Available male, 10 weeks old, 15 to 20 $90. 494-nOO Power mocr M 642-5666 pickup, st neck, xlnt conct Rice's Television Service lbs, full grown. $50. 847..Jm LlU Fut results are juit a. phone Orange Ave. · ' $10. 540-9458, formerly Mesa North Center :d"ys"·--------' call aw,Y 642-5678. Want ad resulls ..... 642-5678 SPEAKERS • 8-12" Allecs In 1 Bick S. of Biker 54&<002 SILKY Pupp; .. -(7 wits) · . Bauer ........ ck's Autos, Imported 970 Avtos, Imported 970 2 boxes. New. Call Bob open 9-5 (6 days) lntell pets. ~ groom, no ... UI 642-4810 AM/FM SfEREO, with 8 shed, no odor. 557-2821 •~ .... ,.,~""~ Office Furniture/ track, 2 speakers, complete. OLD English Sheep Dog pup. • Equip 824 Pay off balance $129.88. $6. pies, AKC, xnlt blood line, t/ I I Asks ••• WHY PAY MORE • • • When You can get a NEW 73 DATSUN at the OLD PRICE! The doll1r has been devalued. lut If you 1ct right now vou can still save big on • new Dehu11. For ti limited time all the Dahuns ere .it the old low price. There's never been • Mtter t ime to find out about Dehun's hl9h performen ce cars, .OOD SILICTION NOW IN STOCKI ---------240 ZI$ IMMEDIATI . DELIVERY l6 .,.OS. O'IN END LEASE s 11711 WITH All COND. Mo. AND MAGS. ' rmnthly. U.S.A. STEREO, shown by appt. 962-7444 SCM Copier, auto, Mod. No. 37'Zl SS~~· S.A. INVEST in love, St. Bernard . ~I ~ 44, $4?JO. 3-M Copier; Mod. E 17th S CM pups. Dominio It Subira ,Jl \ 9 No. 107. $125. 646-am 179 645-244;· · · lineage. 75l-72'l9 \U" EXEC swvl chrs $15-25 Sec 21.. e SAMOYED p u re b re d , ~1 ~-~ chra $8/32 Desks $20/95 OU RCA Victor color '!"' f mal 8 kl $fJO ' I:::~'/ \J Supl 867 w 19 CM 642-3408 $75. French Prov i n e 1 al e e, ~7g · I I cabinet, works good . MUST ~crillce office desk & 67'5-5726 or 673-1884 a.ft 6 AFGHAN Pupa, rare blue =ng credenza. Call _,p"m".'--------brlndles. Reasonable . MAGNAVOX. walnut console Tenns. 645--2235 Pi1no1/0r91ns 826 · $130. 21" b & w TV -stereo * ST. Bernard, AKC, pups. ORGAN HOBBY Don't buy any c· gan until you can play! Non-players \\•elcome to attend free work shops. For information Contact: Tom Dieterich 642·2151 Coast Music Service Newport Blvd. at l{arbor Costa Mesa -AM/FM radio. Good Shots. 5 wks old. Ownp. condition. sired. $125 up. 5f6..8594. i:;· 64~ MIN. Dachahund puppy ZENITH color TV, Zl", 4 mos. Veey small $00. remote control. X 1 n t 1 ___ •:::_:548-6529::::..=::..,;•:.... __ working concl. $ 15 O • * AKC flaahy golden Germ. 673-1052. Shep. pups. Champ. llne. * TV -2l" Philco, Color, c63::7:c:-81=55'-"0range'-""""'-' __ _ large portable, $ 15 0 · OLD Enflish Sheep Dogs 7 543-7820 wks. Very reuonable. Show WESTINGHOUSE Color TV. quality, AKC. fi39.8939. all channels, xlnt cone!. $115. AOORABLE re. Beagle pup. 64fr5982. 12 wks, AKC, shota, $75. BABY GRANDS 962--0117 Now save up to $l£IOO on cer-, , , AKC Registered Pekingese tain Ooor models. Other , ---'"'--'°-~_ .. __ :::pu:opc.p:::le::s.:.:Showo::: __ •loc_k_. _1_w_ks Grand Pianos from S729. -. _old. 842-1128 TW:11~srnMusicre Cify I •3•L•l•"•"'•'•2•T•lm•os•,11$112•.00• JA .L;;:.;;'c./;:,!1;:-:::;:';;'·..;i~~:::~;,';::'i:.,8:-~-_,. .. , .. _, South C.oast Plaza 54G-2830 • TO give to good hornis: 2 ·MIN·, Schnauzers 12 wkl old, EXQUISITE Antique Grand fluify orange kittens, 7 AKC, 3 males. Plano. l\fust See to Ap-weeka, 642-9846 Cail 637-4578 preciate! 675-0042 Classified Ads •• .... 642-5678. ,SeU idle items ... 642-5678 I I Auto1, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 _ 'k USED CAR SPECIALS * . '10DATSUN T,10 DATSUN-NEW '73 DATSUN IT•noow•-j •••••""• PICKUPS ~C. radio, lllcrtw. Law SflVW Wiii! Moll ...... 5 .... 1t11i-. l•CIOllOllllllY ~ U-lfrCN., fllH. A.I II a-.., Clftlt No. 125 BHJ. SN llF. '15951 •995 --------.-70 TOYOTA I 72 PINTO ·-CIOMllA MAlll:IC 11 WAelll 1~ rocll9. .......,, ... ~ UH, elr -.1., ..... In~ tllCDf .,...... l..-ft'llt. ...,. •ll;Mtdllne Wit, U&. Ne. ..., """"'8c:ulote CIOfllfttlM. Uc. .. '1495 ~··;1995_ '1!,!~.~D l~~~lJJAT}Jj,l ....,. ..... lt'I~ y.._ _,.,, Al LOW Al lllt,..., YWV I-mllet. 72'Jtl,. ONLY $64.47 PER MO. ONLY $150 DOW1'4 SALE PRICE $2315.00 Totel D•f•rrN Prlc• for 41 11'10. $1707.14 A.P.R. 12.ll %. PICKUP WITH CAMPER ONLY $73.03 ':: . ( IUY . •3113 01 LLU1 11713 M .. TH NEW 73 BUICK ELECTRA 4D~ HARDTOP loMl'M $!WIO, Wl'lltt Wiii llr"' •Ir CO!ldltlonlr.e, 1Plld 1"'1 & trip ocllrnlttir, tkllft ti••, bumper protldl.,. •lrlPf, ,front • ,., bumper OUJrd1, .. ._.., powtr "''· PoWlt" wl"°"""" tllt 11""'11 wt.I, iow fuel lftdk•tor • .,,_ecnw 11c11 rnavktlntt. Slrltl IJH.oHll IUY, '6413 ..::.. •1311a _,. .......... -·--i '1695 '3695 ; ,... 41 ... ~ ...... ,.. $.lltl.44 ....... 14,1414,. ,. " WOULl*1 YOU REALLY RAlHER HAYE A BAUER BUICK? All p1)'1'1'14"fs MMd on " "'°""" '"" .......... Pric. lfltcTt .. onfy fhrU Mond•Y "''' 1, 1m ~ Zl -1 ! I --., I I I ~ 8 I I I S.Q 909 Cydn, lllk.., fif<,....------1 Scootort LIDO 14 Dy equip boa~, trlr, sail1 & 2 GOOD bl.k~ 20" & 27", al" • 1n xln t cond. Call ha:s new tltts . and :it•Uy I ~. ll"IP<. mail" extra part!, lf Comp! w/trailer 8-ii-2816. I de Anza Bayside BI;;';;K;;EC'. ';Mi::-::,,7::.,-,3;-,-pd-o-. °"E,-.ng"'l"'l,.,-h, torqe or call I 11 4 ) xlnt a>nd. $40. Bike, ladieA 3 3'69 spd. EngU.i,, good cond. HOBIE Cat, 16' super $35. 548-5t68 itioo .. Good . buy a1 1'·n""-7H°'o'°'N"°o"'•'-JSO--CL.~-to-w- 325.. Call 'Jtn:i, days mileage, some front end 9&-filTI, eves .f9&...3256. damage, S350 as is, ~Ul....2'124 , near new, race rtg-100a=tt5..,. ~--,--~~~ ' . Ullman sail, nlum. FOR Salf:I, handmade Goof· t, dolly. 645-5137. fry Butler 23~~ Ml Campy, ._Cat, super f8.9l, trailer pro qulty bike. Aft 5, s extras. AnxiowJ. 494--5507. ' 7-5&0 & alt. 5 675-5980 *~1972="'v~A.,.M~AllA=..,250~~M,..X~* RN SAILING on a Cal Jo mijeage. $'150. .. $50. Lido Sailing Club * 548--0353 * l.lc:7";;;;"::7.6.;:i;.os"'='='":::C::::-=;,.. ARIANA Weekender fold up Alr20 "<ith 1nooring. 1'Ully bike, $50. Nearly nc"'· Super td p, 6bp OB motor. $29%. bargain. 3 speed. 549-2698 >-2526 BSA Convened Mini Bike · o 14, X1nt, 2 sails, lrailer, $75 e terms to responsible 531-&in · $995. 61H1'9 MIN.I BIKE IOBIECAT 1972 Model 3\~ hp * 842-2019 ltraller, St4SO. * '70 TRJU'MPl-1 """TR 6 R. 644-5619 eves """ Xlnt ('Ond. Must s e 11 . con· S~/bl.'st offPr 548-7820 , on, $1.95. ·i nian boat '"" GREEVES 0 250 d. b'k Qf!der w/rack, $15. 847-0051 ""' . irt 1 c. -$.175. Xlnt conchtlon. Call ,1 SAILBOAT, w/trailer, aUer 5, 496-7878 olli5931 Victory Class. S-l9i LIC!\ gas rationing -ride a 1 i:.;::.c=:....,------1 motorized bicycle, only $125. 27' TP.A Vt:O '.!·,· J •t.;• l.)Vl:l<EH 2'1'·22' COi'ITINENTALli al' Pltll ll:: & JOYS v ;l.N L'ON ~ 1·:ns1JNS -lt : • Servlee • Rentals PARTS ONLY FOR SALE CHEAP 1959 SEDAN de Ville' CADILLAC Transmission Radio Air Co1,dltioning Uuh 1212 South R()S.S St., Santa Ana "'2~120 --!Wt I~ Antiques/Classics 953 1931 FORD P.1.odel A Cou!X' w/'55 Mere e11gil1{', llC'I\' radiiltor, needs some body 1-~:ork. Must sell. $950. or best of!er, 84.7-W93 after 6 & "'knds. I00 14. Very good shape. Ph: !:"'40-3283. u center board, $825. -:-•-,·"'a-~, °"B°'s"A~650'°-"""T~,~,;-,,-,.-·30 MODEL A Ford, 2 ctr. zu4 Clet1n MUST SELL! J;';.'10' Ha1·bor Blvd., G.G. Chassis restored to orig., * Danmar Inc. * . ti, Speed & Ski 911 $350 • &15-8205 :>31-6000 ne1v tires, all new pans, Mob"( Ho 935 Next lo G.G. Datsun n1any exn·as, running cone!. RUNABO!IT G lo'' 'e mes 'MOTOR HOMES $1.400/oUcc. 962."'91. /\\'Ood, Mere 55hp eng & l.~O!l'°"CcoAD-:'-, ",~~,,,.'--"gd~."p"t1"y-rc~bll ~\er. Runs good. $7";i(), HEMET A1xillo, Pacesetter, Baron , /-" trl ·-~9322 c •·-.,..,. eng. w n.u smog en . ~w. 1:1'"'. • an ...., s~n ""3 10 x 45 1 BR w/coverl'd J an1boree, Robinhood or besl offer. 962-1834 anne, BI.. patio on xlra j...,. lot. Acllt We've got 'em al ·o KEN DON Recreationar ' GLASS ski boal, just park, No pets.. $3,500 -\Viii · alnted. $600, or best oUcr. consider trade for equiry in MOTOR HOMES 1 __ v_e_h_lc_l_es ____ 9_5_6 1 1~1~~~~~~~~~1 'Nn1J home or condo. Cal'! DUNE Buggy running gear elson. 707 N. llarbor, S.A. "'1'69 1'ransaxle. ch r 111 846-1305 1 1 554-0033 whls, roll bar, ligh~ & in- Tramportatlon Motor Homes 1~171 DiSt"'O\'erer and Sundial sl111n1C'nts. Hvy dty tande1n l'jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjiiiiii~iiiii~ Sale/ Rent 940 I J\.totor f.lon1t>s ror rent, 1nake axle nat bed tr a i J er, JI rt>servalions lor Sun1mer \V/t'Wllps. 8-16--0168 Sat & llO\v. Phone Mims Bennet at Sun or wkdys aft 7:30. S•mpers, Sale/R~nt"° 1970 PACE-ARRO\V, 22' self Bob LongpN> Po 111 i 8 c · FACTORY Built streel type ZEPHER English Ford , contained, generator, roof & 892-6651 Ol' 636-2500. Dune. Buggy w/top & side Frldl), M,.y 4, 191) l~I ~ GRANFDROEPE. E,.NING GIFT 81 Get a Deluxe Road Alias and Travel Gulde with an Apollo 20 minute test ride. • 22 and 25 fl. luxu,Y model• • Superior engineering •·Sleeps up to eight • Bui II-In bath and shower ~ • fully equlppftd kltcf'len • Color-coordinated lnterloni • Reinforced fiberglass outerbody • Ring·of·Stl!tfll Construction NIW & USED OVER 30 APOLLOS • TRADE-INS WELCOME •oil 0 YR. FINANCING ' DAIL V PILOT -:J .. ·E:?hber & runs, 4 dr, eng. air cond, roof deck Trailers, Travel 945 cu;taias. xllit cone!. Low 75. Commerical R 0 t 0 w/ladcler, new crpts, drps miles. $1200. ~ ter, hand operated, $20, & upholst('ry,,8 track stereo . , 644-0878 or · 640-0786. I ~ T Chevy Ttuck , w/nu & many extras. PriCi!d to ~IS1'<X'fAT low hfne.~. 16 '70 DUNE · Buggy Fae!. ~tor. nu tires, ml paint, sell, 646-8402 . • eeps .1 .. gas; .. r e_ rig.:.• made, xln't-$950-. Trail .t:_11n~•EIVJC.E•••nt,_.IENTALS .·_ , . -~L -no.----hcn-10'6"" --mon1>:<mat1c;-:-.t~il&.--Lo.a..d. Mil8: 70Ct;1160 842"~ ~, Jfl"'" ------. ve ..,..ee!l ~ _ .<1 , 1 , --leveli;:g hitch, Jess than ' · · I d"IY batlcn", 3 ""' 72 > 20 ESCAPADE 3,000 mL Hke new $1650. Trucks . 962 707 NO._ HARBOR BLVD,-. 554-0033 •SANTA ANA ks, polio potti~ -elect Custom. air, all extras. ByJ fHG--1740 SF VALLEY (213) 89' "94 HARBOR CITY 1213) 5'"1331 cc P"n>P' 30 gal W•lec """"'· ~'le oc I'" no · -~~===~~-·n DODGE Pkkop, a~ • ' ....,. ;. _. , 2 hydrallc jacks, 49-1-2742. 761 Temple Hills 15' ARIS1'0CRAT Lo-L1llt:'r. shocks, nu tires, radio, l .,.~"""'~~!!i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dy To Go! $3,500. 26 Dr. Lug B. Sleeps six. Gas refrig. Like heater, auto, "318" eng. Autos, fmported--970-AutoS:-lmported--970Autos, Imported 970 A utos, Imported bar, Lido Park. NB ~-oR rel\I: 22• Winnehago. new. Ete<:tric brakes. Ex-Xlnt cone!. $2550. 673--29;,7 Ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~' 1f 673-73.17 Sleeps 6 air, seU-rontained tras. 690 Capital St, CM off ----~-----II Pomona. '56 FORD l'h ton flat bed, HOME built camping $2.1 day lOc mile. Phone rehlt VS. good working iler, great buy at S900. &l/J-861'l LET us sell your clean travel tr k $550 ffer C 11 355 Rent A Motor Home trailer or cainpcr for you. uc . . or o • a Demand is good ll0\1•. l\fesa John ah 4· 536-4220. VW Adventure camper for your Vacation Camper Sail's, 3:136 llarbor., '58 CHEV. % TON lnt rond.. 22,00lrni, Priced * 531~6800 * Cosla t.lesa 646-1002 · IP.U. Good ~voric truck. S350. ght. 675-2348 556-0868 ,, C . RENT my new I 9 7 :l 21' Travel-l"'ze. i\ "' n in g. --~------ 8 "" ABOVEi:t. paneled 111-EIDorado Mini Mob i 1 e Storage shed. Air con-'69 Chev. ~z ton truck de. $300. Trail Honda 70 cc Home. Sleeps 4. All po\11e1" di1ioncr. Color TV aerial. w/reblt cng. '68 Dodge Van. 61), 80-4000. fiijje-declt. 956-2764~ 1'.'ully equ.iP1J.:18=.~78:i 4~38.'!8 or 499-3788. * BALBOA Motor llo1nC' ·72 COJ\1FORT 17', fully sC'lf '72 FORD Col.trier, all ex- 925 970. Air. Good <.'OnditK>n. i..'Ontained. Lik!' ne11.•! Ex· tras, take over pymnU; or ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. $6250. 673--0121. tr.i.s! S2295. 8.\6-5710. $2500. Call Rick, 968-2687 RLEY .. DAVIDSON AulQs, Imported ' 970 'Autos, lmpo'1ea 970 4utos, Imported 970 WESTMINSTER Boise, Westminster 531-6440 893-6274 ay thru Saturday ILY MOTORCYCLE SALE S6~5 1 $625 $400 Honda SL -100, $300 in xlnt cond. Properly inlained &. with xtra . 4!n-6383 . SL 350 HONDA. Top lion. Only 2,IXK> miles. <.lcnts. Perfect shape. er been in tht> dirt. This is bcrler than nc1-v. e yourself $2$0 or $350 new price. Only $100. • 556·85.97 • n's Racing Cycles * BULTACO * DQUARTERSFOR SERT, J\101'0 ,X, T'T Accessorie~. r at Wilson, C.l\f. 646-4655 or 646-2428 CZ'S ON SALE NO\V ! C.-.0 ® c. avail. IO'/;. dn 2-1 n10. Pete's Rw.·i ng T~am 'Ne1vport: CM, 6"5--/!00S SALE -1968 Honda 350, 8,000 n1i. Good con- n. Ne\v s1ator. rcgula- ballery. Just luned up. c starter $425 or best r. 1994 Maple' Ave., , 3, CO!rta Mesa. :ALlAN Bianchi racing 10 Campa,gno!o pe.rts, ts, racks. Opaque grn. letlers. 25 mi. 1 for or·S375 for bolh. Phone 5111 . ASAl\I. :al -'70, dirt . Completely cherrted. miles on reblt eng. Must . $650. ph days 5-10-3561 -MAVERICK Mini-bike, road. Ex. c one! . rnper carrier. $125. 329 aft 4. llONDA 350 SL. Xlnt I:cc-c·. ·"Asking $6j(). Call Jell , PEED bike, llf"W, $$. only till 4Pl\f. !'i66 Joann Apt B. 642.-ll52 70 360 MX Ynmnha ~I legal, Xlnt cond., , 1475. • . 6411-1158 7 Hodek•, AC·220 S:::/? l?©©U:D@a~ ON GREAT VALUE! SAVE $$ $ ON THESE DOMESTIC TRADE INS '71 '71 '69 FORD CHEV. CHEVROLET PINTO VEGA CAPRICE H~,,,!GP (ouH. J2,0lll 4 Spted, "&dl1. O•Y· 2 Or. Sl!Ytr W/Blk 1111.t new mll"· •ir, ~·inyl 111terror. oelu~• P.~ .• P.8 ., 01h1•t r• -· Y• .. wl llt Whttll Ind 1Ylr5lled Oio. GofYl-5 lfl •IMI vinyl illlerilr w~ lrl(k lirn. r•dio ovt •nd Vf~Uy lllW. $1099.00 •t Inly $1099.00 51899.00 -. '71 '61 '70 BMW CAD. International SMl•n ff Vlll9. Ge+O JOOZ, 2 Ol>lr, ltldlll Wfll'KIOllM lnttrllr. "4 Wflffl OrlYI'' Sctlll llrn. "'° w/1111. lft> Air, P.S., P.I ., AMI .... fllllft. .... 11-. FM SIWM, tfft wtlttl, ll:uni incl look1 ...,. lerlff-A c•r fer •NI i'cll.1. ll:Hlflt Tlrtt. tect-Ctmper1 dtli9hl .. _ Wln!Mwl & ITunll. •t enly drlv1nt plellllt'U II ~"''· IEltcfn: dCllr . SIUt Ill $2299.00 $2399.00 $4699.00 VOLKSWAGEN <45 E. COAST HIGHWAY f•t 8.ry1idt DrW.J A NEWPORT BEACH J \t~ 673-0900 01' 'o~,4-~s @ PORSCHE AUDI •NEW • USED '65 , CADILLAC c" dt Vltlt, Ab$01ut• ly •mering. Till1 IT.U m1tc11 ..., wtbt119u•bl• (I,.., A 111111111 -HM ,,.,.. lttkl J '"" -· .,., Twms & t• m111111 lltl•11C.lfl9. '71 OPEL Sport Coupe. Air UNI- dlll....0 • L-l'lllln. lm111u 11111t. LllF.t lltw, .. $1599.00 r BRAND NEW ' 1973 DATSUN PICKUP PRICED FROM 52286°0 1973 240Z FROM 54181°0 NEW CAR TRADES 1972 2.~~ ;,,, 's, .. d. l<lJGJJ< s4495 1973 ~~~.~UA~lo5 !~"'· AM R•dio 1578H"I $2495 1967 1973 1970 1968 M.G. MIDGETT 4 Spstd, M•t Wheelt. (J75B8Yl DATSUN 510 WAGON 4 Speed. AM R,dio. !XCL7551 -rf·J - FOI $1395 $1395 "" I UtH C. Se .... "-ltMJ • D.n, bntol1 • Sitnke • Ports IALU HOUll SIRYICI HOUIS .... • s.t. t ...... t P·"'· M..,, • hi. 7:)0 •·"'· ts I p,m, BRAND NEW 1973 610 WAGON AUTO TRANS FROM 5.3 0 4 6 °0 ATTENTION D-A TSUN OWNERS BARWICK IMPORTS DATSUN 33375 Camino Capistrano San Juan Capistrano Speclol T111M1 Up Offer fer Moy 197J "Chee• Yo11r Yehl. ci. EmluioM Me11th" Fiii N•I pl•ta. Nlno11 pol11h, ce11de11Mr. 011d rotor with "'t· SIS.GO 1111. T11• Up. All O.h•1t1 -All MOllftt -l rlrtt Co11ps11 -rf·1- FOI Now I. Utod C., S•let • ~flt · Dolly .. ntoh • ~. • '9rh SALIS HOUIS SIRYICI HOUIS M•"·. Sot. t o.M. to t p.111. Mon.· Prl. 7:JO •·•· to I p.111. l • -------·-· I 962-J58I ·n. 1'tAOl IJ I . s....,. t •·"'· " 6 P·"'· s.twrdey 7:JO " Neo11 CALL 4,.3375 or 83 ~-1375 511114-yt t •·"'· to 6 P·"'· ~ 7:30 N H ... CALL 493-:J:J75"'or Bl1·137'----11--...fl . 560 \V. Hamilton. CM Apt. 8, ~- t . . • I I • IWLY PILOT Frldlr. 111J 4. 197l , lliiii-..... -~1§liiiiil :.' --.7s.~l§:;.;1 =1 ~-;--;51~~i i;' ~·;;·-~~~1 ;' ~-;; ..... ~1§l~IE' ::-~--;~!!!!,,~~-~ .. ~-l§J~ .. l ~f ~-~--~l§l~I ~;.{ ~-;;"'Sole~eml 1 .v..;•..;'"-· _______ 963_,~A~Ufol~,(.!!lm~pot~n~oc1~_;9~70 ~· lmjMM1ocl 970 Auto., l"-1ocl . 970 Autol, lmponocl _ 970 AutOs, h-'ocl Alllol, lmponocl 970 ~, 1"-'"" 97o Auto1, Imported WANTED 1 __ B_M_w__ DATSU~ RAT MERCEDES BENZ MERCEDES BENZ MERCEDES .IENZ I PORSCHE PORSCHE BMW ·-PORSCHES DATSUN 1968 Rat MDCEDES ~1969 • '72 .... __ ....... _ AT THE BEACH 1961 PORSCHE Super NEW 1973 ,......-Roadster. Silver. M\lst-,. 850 AT THE BEACH Mere-~-•---350 SL ·70 • 9llS TARGA, Spou... oo1y 114oo. ean wkd>,y> PICKUP 4 cyl. 4 speed, radio. l1et1.ter, ·~ . 230SL COUPE, Ermine ~ IHrllA Sable B!ack with RteaJTo ly, 833-3362, ask for Steve. NO DOWN Bright orange matching In-Whlte with Black Leather, 280 SL V1. lactoey air, full power, S..ts, AM-FM Stereo, Fuel '64 Por~\'& Sup 90 terior WAL453 · BotJ;i Soft 6 Hard Top&. New 6 cyl auto trana alt con-on!y 12.1'.0> miles. s.>FBC. lnjtctioo, The Best Porsche ""' $611.23 per mo. for 48 mo. $677 -Radlllll, Beck"" "Mexico" dit;OOu,g, power' steering, -, $10,750 •Builds, 13311RJ';-. 5'1&-1487 •tier 6pm TICKETS To LE ZE EL N '67 1(j()J Beige, Sharp! D PP I '68 1600 lite ~. om/fm CONCERT ·ss 1600 lite brwn, Nice! Pleue call '69 ~ Red/blk, A/C, Tad. 548-7881 · '70 :1002 Or.mge, A/C ·12 FORD V-8, p/I, p/b, :10 2800 Sedan, silve"1thr a/cond stereo multiplex 72 Bav. AIC, SIR, stereo ru11.Y iclf .,,,.... $5500: BOB McLAREN fi!:l'314'.~;[.rice $3213.60. see It_ You'll a.., Jt AMt-·FMu.::!!f.,, Alr ~tion. AM/FM ateteo, rad t •I Jim Siemon• Imports ndi~~ ~~E.,,AMor <".or); TOYOTA , ·-Ji.J:JW, tires. Jnunaculate lhnH>ul. 1301 Quall uuuu'6. oa.-...'l'r exiro 1--------...11 - f\IAlt "liiO:• 10 • 250C, Alr CondJtloolng, 025DSZ Newport Beach AM-FM Stereo with Casette, X~·111p11rt D.11'.11 11 !'":ii.o van. Cru'J>'t, BMW, INC. panelled. Nice a h a p e SALES, SERVICE, LEASE throu,gb>ut. $650. ca 11 n4-522.-5333 842-1''8 LEASE A '61 VW Van, '65 rebuilt engine, new Utts. and bat- tery. 12'15. 96tr 1379 Autot Wanted 968 WE PAY 'roP DOU-AR FOR. TOP USED CARS U )'OUl' car la extra clean, aee w first. 1973 BAVARIA CREVIER BMW Sa.Jes • Service . Leasing ro8 \V. 1st St., Santa Ana 83$.3171 . '• ... ' ; ',',' '71 Datsun 240% 4 Spd, Air Cond, Maga, Beautiful Green w i t h natural tan Interior, $3795 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W, Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 lUu.n. UUID Auto Trani.; Power Steer· Hurry $9300 , 313EOZ. Toyol'I lno. Power WlndqwB, Beclwr ·n . 914 with Appearance . ft. AM·1'"M, Sope Clean, 55,2. See It .. You'll Buy lt ENTER FROM MacARTHUR Group, Air Conditioning, CPI. • 9"••• 111.:• '72 Mercedes Benz AM-FM, Lo Mn ... 296CRL. 1006 Harbor, C.M. 646--9303 lUWl'r Ulf• FIAT '70.124 SPIDER VOLVO 220 Yellow Roadster, AM-FM,, ,, 4 cyl, automatic trans. fac- New ·Ra.dials, $-Speed, On1,y tory air, pc>Ylet disc lnkes, $1895 at 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 radio, heater, 356E'LC. =:====';==""=== '70 Mercedes Benz '66 Mercedes Benz $5950 1970 Porsche 280 SE 200 Jim Slemons Imports TCll'CJCI 91 lT 6 cyl, automatic traN, fac-4 cyl automatic ~ radk> N~=ch 4 cyl, 5 speed, AJ.1/F?o.t :::;,""'====""'= l?ry ~ conditk>ning, me.ta!· healer landau top. yieyt in'. • 833-9300 stereo, radial tires, Mag [ll'arl1 Jh11p1111~i ' +, .. ' '" .. - 2840 Harbor Blvd. C.OSta Mesa At~~--[h\1rh ]hnp1111 ~;. +•· ....... • .. ,, • • • ' ' •..I • BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Meaa m.2500 IMPORTS WANTED Orange County's TOP $ BUYER ·n BM\V 2800 CSA, pigskin int. completely recond thru out. Super cln. Iml itereo '70 DATSUN PICKUP tape. 37,00'.l. $7,51Xl. 673·5ffi with 6 PAC caJ>.over-camper, CAPRI i;o1llEL1S2195 FIAT '70, 124 spyder, prl pty, he pa.mt, excellent oonditiOn. terlor.' P'lUl'l7. ENTER FROM MacA:RTiruR .~e:!,!· !!!:r~ ~~ ~L 0 r • ;;,'ll !~!·~~';" yellow, S78BZS. $5995 $)795 MG Hurry l!!!l!~!!i~~!!~~I J. SI I rt '72 NEW MARK II . JAGUAR Jim Siemon• lmporll om emon• mpo ' See II -You'll B"' II WAGON BllL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blv :. • H. Beach Ph. 847·8555 We pay l'ligher ca.sh pricE>s for clean late model cars & trucks ~-" m1 Quail ~ MG ~ l • 2 2 --~· 833-9300 AT THE BEACH WA QlllO Auto Trans., 6 cyl., 5 doo . + 833.9300 ENTER FRO/'! MacARTHUR VOLVO «•03681. 1972 JAGUAR E TYPE N-~a;;;;.,h Newport Beach -fta1t 11.0• Beige with Black foterio Total Factory Equipped, l ENTER FROM MacARTIIUR '67 Yellow B ••.•.••• ZYD732 '' $3131 lB881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 NEW CA~~.':,l~J. '70 Cadillac 50 USED '69 Black c ....... , l58AKV 1966 u ... boc. c.M. 646-9303 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA HUNTINGTON BEACH .......... El Dorado MERCEDES '67 Green B ........ 868DIM 1967 PORSCHE •12. 5 ,pd, ~lllarquE; 11\ttlin~ 11llm11 ~1 '.1.111 ~ 111·" . ,, ' ' ' . . HOWARD Chevrolet Newport Beech MacArthur Blvd &: Jamboree 833-0555 BRAND NEW '73 CAPRI '71 Datsun Pickup AM-Fl.1, stereo tape,1 VS. auto trans, factory air. ON DISPLAY perfect. Low ntilcs. $3200 or Mag wheels, Tonne au Covl'r, be u D 557 1021 ~--~~=~=" Blue wilh Blue interior, full power, vinyl roo!. 526-Sharp New Car ev!~ ~~1 ays - ; '72 TOYOTA CELI(~ Immediate Delivery GUSTAFSON Never used for hauling, ADY. Trade-ins 4 Spd, Air Cond. Beautif super clean '71 JAGUAR XJ-S, sable $4,250 Coming In Everv Day MGB POff:SCHE 914-4 APR/GRP turquoise finish (15.lEKR) $1895 ~=: J~~~7. Orig. Jim Slemons Imports Ask About Our.Unique c84'~7s~~;. i~['.;:i~";· $3~~~~ BILL$3M14AX9 EY NEWPORT KARMANN GHIA 13111 Quail Used Mercedes Luse '69 MGB GT AAl/F"M R&H ~ IMPORTS __ ,, _____ ···------Newport 8'ach Plinl new radial~. $1600.' Day; '58 PORSCHE Coupe. Cherry TOYOTA 833-9300 H f I rts 644-3185 eves 543-5668 rood. Flared fenders, wide '69 KARMANN GHlA, ll{'W ENTER FROM MacARTHUR OU5e 0 mpO MGB '70, reblt •ng, nu top & tires & m"""'· Newly rebuilt 18881 BEACH BL. 847 paint, engine, brakes, tires. ~ "! h t B p k -· TJNGTON BEACH CAR zonked just need a tow or maybe irs 100 old. Junk Lincoln-Mercury cars towed away free. 16800 Beach at Warner 636-0!!10 n:untington Beach JUNK CARS WANTED 842.a844 * (213) 592.5544 I pay top U for junk or ''Home of the Viking" wrecked c/U'S. 714/547-4365. Capri '73-2600 Coupe VAN: Ford -Ch~ -Dodge Radio 4-S........i Radial T. $500 -$1250 Pri ply . .............. In!S. CASH * 646-2S39 #9690 at 3100 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 See to apprec. Best orrr. '61 Mercedes Benz ~~ 1fu~c~t=r~e~ ar tires, Jo mileage, Lug rack, engine, 548-ll).1. HUN 493-7346 220 SE C 523-7'250 must sell. $2000. 493-0095 '60 PORSCHE Carrera. '70 TOYOTA, MK II, Reali OTUS pe. 1 '65 MGB Recently overhaul-$2300. l\lust see to np-like new, 4 speed-ra R~ with b!ack interior low L 6 cyl, 4 spe¢, classic, fully 72 Mercedes ed. immaculate condition. preciate. Aft 6, 673-0800. $1800. '12 DATSUN Pickup Autos. lmf>Ortod 970 -, --· -.. [11\trh Jh11p1H1!i miles, radio. step bwnper, restored. GSM600. 0 S 83&-8564 1968 PORSCHE 912 673-6400 $1895 Lotus '69 Elan, Rdster $4950 35 L "'ORSCHE lmmac cond AAl/FM/SW '68 CORONA-OOI. Rad BEACH La Power Windows and all kinds • VS, automatic trans, factor:Y r $3500 ·536-l727 auto, Beautiful cond. guna Imports I of goodies, ll4ANQ at J im Slemons Imports air conditioning, full power, , · · 644-6432 MONEY -SAVEii,$ ·-071 ....,.R 1 _....,_ __ _ 494-1075 1 -~ _ _ll!ll Quail _ _ mag ... wh"la.-.2..-"'-cboooe· PORSCHE _T.,,,. '69. Low 6"l S~ER, reblt eog. Xlot ~·~"9.So:;.t~a-c.W"'a--.$l"'OOO='-i I +~ I,,, ' ••' ""1 "'' . . '• :•.•••' II· • .':• ~."\ ;.<. • "All Under. ,S!kX>.00" . Sunroof. automatic, Jo miles. ·10 PICKUP t Newport Beach OJ6f'LW. . miC .s!Xdlnt,.A~931'9 Must sell. ~~·/ Ra!lerd1X!_!i~·,, amffm:--64. 2 3~ '67 VW Bee , x nl eond, 833-9300 $10,500 as y, ~ . . ~ o . .,......,.., -' Ue •.••• YXY062 494-8791 -· · l8 000 o-•g I t · 1 A -• '5.5 ~lac CdV .• 1'~M4 DATSUN FiM st~reO ~~! ~k · EN't'ER..F?."M MacARTHUR Jim Slemons Imports Autot, UltJt;I-990 :Autos, Used 990 utos, Us .... '56 Beetle •.••• .11Y1v487 w/spkrs. Blk vinyl root..& .. '73 Mercedes· Benz . 1301 n. • ....;1 , '68 Toyota Coupe. • • WOZOOl . tOnneau cover, duPI exhaust '70 IDTUS Europa, new ALL MODELS "CUO.U ·134 VW Beetle •.•••• OZB210 '73 DATSUN 1600 erig. New system, mags $l600/best paint & tires. 19,000 mi's. PURCHASE N~~h • $325. 71 Toyota 8RC $2'15 offer '556-824J $2900. Ca$h on1y. 832-0080. Hemi $199. Auto tram $99'. LEASE .. ENTER FROM MacARTHUR Complete car, reasonable or '71 DATSUN pickup w/air MAZDA Overseas Delivery [h\tfh ]l111p1111~i . JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ parts 6TJ-l784 cond .. large wheels, step Call Anytime bumper & Six-Pac cabover * Mazda '73 Rotary * ==;======='~IDATSUN 240Z '72 . 4 SPD Camper. steep• four adult.. -$66 MONTH --*"-548-:..:..:...:5.:.104:..:_*"--e THE FINEST IN ~~S,CAIR, EXTRAS. PVT Icebox, stove, boot, roof 36 1'10NTHS OPEN LEASE '72 MERCEDES USED IMPOR S . ALL AITER 6 P?>.1: rack. $2350. or offer. Will 350 SL J\1etallic red. Call Alm-lORIZED T • f714l 673-31JO or f2'13) .separate. 496-4123. c.:tf ~~)!R~a~ 640-1004 • SALES & SERVICE IM.PTOHE FINEST IN 393-4758 197\ 240 Z, 1 ownec, no J" SI RT SERVICE. DATSUN '71 240-Z radial•. mags, am/fm Hunt Beach '64 MB, 220 SE. Xlot cond. Im emons Perfect mechan. am/fm, Do yourself a favor and come red, mags. air, like new, I stereo tape, auto, air. low • J\1ichelins, 507-7000, 642"'6845. Imports and Th til 9 Sat S 6~3008 The "Yellow o.. .... s.. of 1301 Quail ti! 5. w-s. ' · un '72 DATSUN 240 Z. Perf£>ct ='~..:::::.·-----~ classified .... 64ifms. Newport Beach f:.! , " . . ",.,." ,,, .,,.' • ' 1 •• ir .. , see us first .. Open Tues. makeoffer.644-2935aft6pm . mileage. $3950, 642-3392 or MAZDA '± cond. Below blue book. Ph: FIAT "Make Room For Daddy" 833-9300 ~£AN AUTO) ~64Q..0879~=.:,":,,:';c'·c._=~~ ... clean out the garage ENTER FROM M~RTHUR .w. ~Lwlb:l<a) .s.-.m. * * '69 Datsun 510, 2 dr., '69 FlAT 124 SEi(fan-Air fine 1733113eaClfB1. 842-0066 , .. tlirn lhar-junk"irrto""lC'astr 1 MB 256 S, fuH pv.rr. sunrf, 2100 H11rt1ar9od. ca...,..._ MS·-r/h, xlnt running cond. $795 condition. Sav. $ 5 7 5. 'Sell the old stun. Buy the with a Daily Pilot Classified xlnt coed. $3850. 67:H620; or best offer 557-2568 646-1151 new stuU. ad. Call 642-5678. Eves. liTJ-07'28 ALFA ROMEO Motor Homes Motor Homes Moi;;.:.to"'r"'H"=o-me-.----Motor HomH Motor Homes ALFA ROMEO AT THE BEACH '66. GT SPRINT, A'M·FM, Sale/Rent 940 Sole/Rent 940 Sale/Rent 940 Sale/Rent 940 Sole/Rent New Radialll, S.speed, ·---"!~ Sparkl1ng Finish, "I..i.)re. new" Interior, Dual Carbs, 4-Wheel Discs, Double Q.H Cams, TNE436. '69 GT VELOCE, Custom Cr;'1tal Mist finish with ·Landau Top & Matching In- terior, AM-FM, Double O·H Cams, F'ucl Injection, ~r 4-\Vheel Discs, $-speed, 031- AKY. 'S7 GT SPIDER, Roadster, New Radial Tires. Double O·H Cams, Dual Carbs, 4- \Yhecl Discs, 5-speed, 031· AKU. '72 BERLINA, Demonstrator, Fuel Injection, S.speed, Double Q.J-J Cams, 2 Litre, Po\ver 4-Wheel Discs #0284 '66 ALFA ROMEO GTC (convertible) Dark Brown with beautiful tan upholstery, chrome wheels, recent e n g i n e OVl'Y'haul, ONLY 350 OF THESE EVER BUILT Laguna Imports 494-1075 1967 ALF A Romeo, duetto spydcr. Precision sports c11.r In mint cond. ?i1ust be seen to appreciate. Please call 6~2 !or rl<'lalls ASTON MARTIN '50 Aston Martin 08·2 conv., green wilh black upholstery. 'ol.'ire whe~ls Laguna Imports 494-1075 AUDI '10 AUDI LS 100, am/fm radio, air, sunroof, 4 dr, 673-M71 : 646-3213 BMW SALES BMW LEASE SeNlce Traveling Overse~ this &um- merT We can arrange for delivery of the BMW of your choice including .ehipping by phone. Delivery ls avaiJ. able · in mOIJI. all foreign countrlea. Bob M e L a r ~ n authorized BMW Dealer 850 North Beach Blvd .. La Habra m.5624 or 52'1-5333 Vll1t our new home! 0 ROY CARVER, Inc. 231 £. 11th St. Colla M... 5tM4t4 '73 T. Bird "Loaded" Stk. #149 lletail Pritt '717S Our'Price Newl '73 Pinto -,ullyfacloryEqulpped Only s1 999 +Ta• .& Lie . used Pick -uo Sale 7 Plclcup1 from '67 . '69 Big savings Eum ple: O '69 Dodge Pickup Pr~;e 1 099 ri 1~=----~ -'73 Grand Torino'""' Factory equipped Stk. # 168 Retail rnco Our Price 04214 · 3369 '73 BROUGHA 2-door. Stk. # 172 Rttall Pritt '540!.07 Our Price 4199 • 940 DUE TO MASSIVE NEW CAR SALES, WITH. USED TRADE-INS WE ARE OVER STOCKED "70 HORNET '70 TOYOTA "68 CHEVY SST CORONA IMPALA _.,ir cond., P/S., lndi¥. Good Second cer fT•n1-low mi1e•9e 9ood f1mily p1rf1ct. R•clinin9 S e • t 1. 1721· portttion, run1 CIT. IBGJS79 l BXDl I 5688EWI. $1695 $1095 $1495· "73 HORNET '70 JAVELIN '69 JAYEUN SST HATCHBACK Low mi1e19• Fu!I Power, Air Cond., Auto. Tr•1u. Exc•1l•nt r•po1s•1· '1ion, l697FLYI Vinyl op. Auto. Tr1n1. tr1n1port1tion. IXTflll) ll02AEWI $AVE $2095 $1495 '72 JHP '70 REBEL '69 TOYOTA COMMANDO STATION WAGON LAND CRUISER 4 Wh•tl Oriv•, H•rdtop, L.1~ th111 ]6,000 mit•1. '4 wh••I driv•, 1•1• th •n V•rv Low Mil••9•· 1721-fOllCFFI ll,000 mil•1, HT. IYPT-' CHNl $3495 $2195 '71 YW VHy Few Air Condi-VAN WAGON 172 J $2595 "69 AMBASSADOR WAGON . ' ' < v.ry Low Mil•1, Mint tloMd S.,.clala ... n.11 Pow•r, Air Cond. condition. 10'41FU M l main Ing. 197l Grem-!597CUNl $2495 Una -Hornata -Ma-$2395 t1dora. . *5 Year-50;0GO Mile Service Policy Available On These Fine Used Cars ;;m::'T SUPER BUYS AT BOB TERRY'S BUICK-OPEL .Dl$COUNT CENTER ''. • HERE'S THE PROOF s1234~ .. ?.~E r.1 •• Ser. #H4t lltS NEW BUICK ELECTRA LIMITEO 05~7 OFF -WhNMw Sticker Prke s.t. aJC1051 S7 NEW '73 BUICK EST~TE WAGON ,8787 OFF WIMow SttcNr Prk• S.. •aC100'20 NEW '73 IUICK Ll SAIRE 4 DR. " " • • • ., NOTE: We have a Few Cllolce '73 Opell at tllo Old Prlc ... Act- N~. ~ SM,....,. Wll le Greatly Iner-..! I• Price. ~: TERRY BUIC.K ~-• . , . "' 5rll Ii Walnut, Huntlll.9f01\ Beach 536-6588 "· > '· f', I . I , I I ' ' ' I -"'- TOYOTA SALE AT l'ii=C. .. llHlllon · PRICES BRAND NEW 1972 Auto. trans., radio, fact air W·S.W tires, tint. CTE210061507i. $2563 $AVE NOW AT VW's NEW I-USED 2 Big Loutlono 5 MINUTES FROM COSTA MESA 2U4 E. 1S't ST., s.A. .a3s.6531 (4 Miles No. of So. Coast Plaza) 15 MINUTES FROM Ml~SION VIEJO AREA 1442 SO. BRISTOL, S.A. 546-0220 (S.A. Ftwy. Ea.st on 1st St. 14 mi.) Commonwealth '12 COUPE DE VIU.E. '59 Chev. No t':ngfue or tJ'l.N. SUIU"OOL All factM7: options. Set up *>r' ~ block Blue w/white top best ot~ /head 4 .. ~ ' w en. ....... .-. map. fer. 613-5569. 2 new lrQ)..15 tires $l6, 1968 CPE de V. all xtras, 644--0863 eves. wboleaale, buying car ln 1 ·...,~-M-.U~bu-~SS-, -.~tr-.-n-ow EUl'Ope. Must tell. 84ft..S518 ercine, steel bdtfd tires, 'ti8 Cad Eldo, all extras. PIS, PIB. Xln~ $1100. or Very nice. Best otter. Oill betit olter, 830-3.587. 19:1-""'6 '°s"EADTJFUL~==,=.a"°· ,,.,.~-gre-y-·""ts CAMARO Impala. Xlnt <'Olld. A/C. Very low mileage. $1250 or best offer. 562-9517. '68 CAMiRo 321 V-8. air, p/s, r/h, gauges, vh1)1 top, low miles Sharp! ~A Lincoln, HB. 536-2686 CHEVROLET '64 IMPALA PIS, aJ.r.-con, radio. Recent valve job. Gd tires. call 842--4850 '67 CHEVELLE-SS396. 4 spd. Bucket seats, mags, reblt eng $850. 673-7564 • • FrldQ, Mor 4, 197' DAILY PILOT -..... I~! _.., .. I~ I ---1§1 I I~ ~·I ~ ........ ;;;; .... ~ 990 Autos, UMc1 CHEVROLET 72 CHEVROLET l\IONTE CARLO COUPE. CU1t. 350, P'>\T. slr., brakes, tac. air, au lo., RAJ-I, vinyl top, bucke-t -seat., oonsole, dix. inter. Low mileage um. FWXJ. $3699 2840 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa Al Fair Drive 546-a()JI CHEVROLET 1971 .Chev Vega 6 cyl, automatic trans, Fac- tory Air, power titeerlng, a compact at economy price. $1677 See lt --You'll Buy Jt ~IJl.ltW W YOLVO l96G Harbor, C.M. 646-8303 l.96G lllALIBU, 4 cir, 6 cyl., auto, a/c, w/s/w, 81,00J ml., $475. TI4 : 8~7-5144. aft. 6PM 990 CONTINENTAL Autot, UMd CHEVROLET '61 LlNC Coot. Very good runnlna cond. I will mak< • .~'9 CHEVROLET )'l'l.i 11. deal )'OU c&n't rell.UiC! KINGSWOOO WAG-_,,._. __ 7.,44::-::-:-:-::=-:-::-- • 0N. vs .,..., ract<><.,, COUGAR aJr condltlonln&, pwr. stt.-erlfW, a u t o n1 • trans.. ,..,d\o, heater, v1nYl top. Pmect for v&ealJon. (YPt.297). n1" 2!!40 11arbor Blvd. Co&ta 11.htsa At Falr Dl'ive SIG-8017 '1:l IMPAL.A Chevy 4 dr sl'dan, air, PIS, P/B must sell! ~2219 '67 COUGAR, auto, n.dkl, heatt•r, nu palnt, Kood ttrea, good cond. S*XI. sn.295T ''ro GOLD Eliminator, new 302 ~ en& .• disc brakes, 4-sprl. x.1111 cond , 847'"'3331 '69 XRT, looded, good tlrM, private party. Days. &t2- 57ll, ('\"eS IH2•f;kJG. DODGE DOD~E ~ 1970 Monico VS, 11.utomatic.._ tact. alr1 P""r· strg. &: bt'ks., R.&H;-e~. door locks, WSW. (729EMSl $1~.t HARBOR AMERICAN 1969 Harbor St. Costa Mesa &t>-1770 Open Sundays FOR sale, 196'1 Dodge, 1 owner, .1.6,<XM) orig miles, -nu tires, nlr. ,\ pv.rr. Spolleu t'Ond. Very good buy at $495. 968-60::.ll or 66-5121 '66 OODGE Polan., 3-d, d<'pendable. Auto, R & H, 3S3 <>ng. $-l50 or best oUer. 8474-159 eves. thru Sat. FALCON Moton Ltd. ,_,..,.s,.•,•,••_.,.A--n-'•:....---IAuto1, Used ~~H;:;arbo;;:r;;., ~C;c.M::;._:646-~9303~1, ,68 VW Li 7 Pass Bus .,Pw. lfJOi& W TOYOTA '56 CHEVY 2 door wagon, 283 3 Spd, runs good. Call Phil"'4+-0986 '68 CJIEVY Nova, air, P/S, radio, low mileage, $899. Pvt .,....,., 548-3009 '13 BLAZER. 6,000 mlles. Air cond. 4 whl. drive, a uto, 30 gal gas tank, $4900. All ex- lra.s. Days -545-5893: eves 536-3412 990 Autoo, Used 990 '55 CHEVY, 1teeds \\'Ol"k, good battery & tires, $25. Ca.II MS-95TI cwnings. Autos, Used · 990 '63 CHEVY NOVA 12)!1· .Call 642.2398 OOOOE ·n Charger, SE, 17,<XM> ml. Sharp, vinyl rop. air, full pwr. $3250. 4%-5010 '68 OOOGE Chat'g('r, sl"1't"O, n1ags, air, vinyl top, $1~. * 6T;,-7oa9 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 '60 FALCON 2 dr. 3 sp. 6. Reeent brakl's, tire!!. Runs good $150 Fh,n 6-l:r?i68 Autos, Used 990 1 t70 Toyota WhUe wtth red Interior, 'MK II AM/1-"'M Radio, low ntllcs Hide-a-Bed and Table, ' Station Wagon $1695 ~ cyt. • '"""'· rad;., heater. Laguna Imports ·11park1ing red, with n1at-494-1075 chlng Interior. 552BQN $1677 '66 VW BUG Orlll'lge, perfe!Ct car (889CXU) $699 See It -You'll Buy ll .,Pw.lfJOi& ~-TOYOTA 1966 Harlxlr, C.11.'I. 646-9303 '67 TOYOTA STOUT PICKUP Bill MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 BEACJ-1 BL. 847-8555 HUNTINGTON BEACH '68 VW 7 Pass Bus '''hllc 1vith red interior AM/ FM Radio, lo1v n1iles,' Hide. Late model, overhead cam r.·BPd and Tab I e dlr engine, ne1v tires, camper 494-1075 ' ' "''"· c830CPni. Laguna Imports $1199 494-1075 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 1.&881 BEACl-1 BL. 847-8555 1 HUNTINGTON BEACH '70 TOYOTA Corolla, r/h, vinyl top, Fa s tback '67 VW Bus \l,r/beds & or seats. lee box. New tires. New battery. Full rack. Low n1iles. Perfect cond. S1450. Ph: 64&-5612 aft 6. VOLVO J ~~~1~:;H "''· VOLVOS SALE! I TRIUMPHS uge irviilgs- ,,A~RS~'!~ !~=;~, '72 & '73 . AM·F'M, Red-stripe Radials 230FWE. I ONLY 66 Tll4A. IRS, Blaupunkt , AM:'FM-S\V, Ne1v Radials, 12 VGZ174. i2 GTS, Custom Striping, Radio, New Radials, Low Niles, Like New, #6514. . -.... ; ~h-;1d1 Jh11p1111!i . fi 1.'Q\) ... '-.._.,, '""""""" ' '"~"·• H• ,._1 t~!~ ,,.k)f, -"-· -· - '68 Triumph TR·6 :\'hite with blk interior, ex· tremcly low miles, perfect car for the fastidious buyer $1695 NEWPORT IMPORTS LEFT AT PRE-DOLLAR DEVALUATION PRICESI We make overseas deliveries See It . You'll Buy It ~tJJt ltAoi& W YOLYO 1966 1-farbor, C.M. 646-9303 '72 VOLVO ~ dr sedan. Sacrifice $200. t.o.p. Pvt Pty 960-1072 aft 6. 100 \\I. Coast tt .... iy., N.B. A 642-9405 · uh>s, UMd 990 RIUMPH TR4A '67, Good AMC cond, Extras, ma~ wheels --------- Ask for Phil, 675-Til8 · Hornet 1973 Hatchback 67 TR-4, IRS, \\'ire 1vheels,_l V-8, auto., fac. air, PIS, owner car. good cond. $92,,. P/B, vinyl 1op, n1ags. FM 896-4089 stereo 111ltpl". 149&-GNOJ 2 TR4, top & Tonneau, reblt $3195. (!ng, needs some "''ork Best HARBOR AMERICAN ofter. 833-1486 1969 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa VOLKSWAGEN 645-mo open Sund.,.. · Gremlin 1971 ''12 VW Panel, 5000 miles, CUst. lnl., bucket seats, roof ~ Must Sell? rack, R&H. lo, lo miles! 6T:>-ll82 aft. 4 f997CCFJ $1595 f '66 VW FASTBACK HARBOR AMERICAN .· ·n ::; ;z.~eR xlot :9iiioarbor BIO~~ , .a>nd. 11100. all tho oxtras. BUICK I .838-TOOS or 213: 693-8093 '68 Buick Electra 225 '61.. VW Bu~. Sunroof & !leeds 2 Dr. 1-larcllop, Full power, 1iime engine "''Ork. $150. or Vinyl top. MI/FM Stereo. I trade. <96-r'4s YXX 683 I '67 VW CAMPER . $1495 i 9J9.Ir'2 HARBOR AMERICAN I ~fl VW Squareback, "'bit. 1969 Harbor Bl., Costa Mesa , ine, · new brakes. Must &i:r-mo Open Sundays ! l11 sooo. 642-5835 arts '61 BUICK . Call after 3 PM Body & Int. Runs good. $2.50. I '68 VW Bug, as is! 2 dr, V-8, Auto. Real clean - ~139!J • 543-3691 • ! ~%.!Ju~!t =tf~e:~ 1911 BUICK 8 pa~ Estate ' -5 Wagon. • 19,000 nules, new country. 673-9565 alt • tires, FM stereo, All power. fi6 BUS, 100 rni.lcs on rcblt. Trailer PKG $.'l995. 548-3123 Bed, tape, good cond. $800. 19TI BUICK Umited, 4-door, 6'5-6884 or 673-2223 loaded! Xlnt condltkln $3500. V\V Camper, xlnt cond 833-8010 or 644-2609 with extras. 1961 BDJCK 44,<XX> actual 962--0590 miles, origil\BI in & out. 7l POPTOP Camper, low A-tint cond. $195. 83l-OIB7 mn..g., fully equippt<I, I970 RIV1ERA •harJ> warranty. '3695. 962-7633 f790CPG) brk 645-4392 '70 VIV Bug, must acll! CADILLAC .WUJ take best offer. 645-5989 ~~~~~~~- 64 vw Bug ChclT)'! sunroo(, '68 Cad Sedan D1Vill1 new trans & ,tires, also tape FUil ix>wer & F a c tor Y deck! $650 979-4138 eves. Vlnyl top ~;:25· * '71 VW SQU~RE BK * HARBOR AMERICAN Air, stick, radio, orange. 1969 IWbor Bl., Costa Mesa lin-1933 645-1170 Open Sunday REAT Dune Buggy, material '60 V\V, runs good. 72 CAD. Coupe DeVIUe. Full $115, call 645-i813 eves power. Xlnt cond. 1 ownl'r, 5.57-9:Dl day1, eves &. TD VW -xnlt cond, yellow wkenda 675-3968 wtblk fnt., radial tires, etc. $1275/best offer. 6~266 '72 ELDORADO Cabrolet & sunroof & leather top, '72 vi.v Bus, sun~r, am/fm, stereo, tJ>f! deck, many extras for camplng, air, etc. Mi.I'll green & white, $3000, xlnt roni'l, 962-nGS P'ri . pty. ~a-344&. - I) VW, new tires, new '70 SEDAN OeVllle. All bnkes, good cond. $1l00. po.,.,.·er, vtnYI top, guA?. Ca.JI S45-re.10 32,00J ml. 1 OV{IJer. Like CAMPER XNLT COND ne\v. 6'fl.-3it5 $950. or best oUet '89 CP DeVllle Landeau, full 67rr1428 pwr air AM/t'M 1tereo tape '66 VW Bug. pX) or oUer. dk lealhtt int $2600. Prt pty. Needs eng. work. Good &Q--0129 aft 6PM body, clean. "640-4St6. '68" CAD. Sedan DeVUle. '70 VW Squ&r<back. $1450. Fully cqulpd. Stereo, vh1yl Good. condition. $491-1037 or ~~1950. 675-2733 BUY OR LEASE .TODAY. <9flw S11eeia1 oorid OF cadillae Wide Selection of Models & Colors available for lniniediate Delivery 1973 Coupe ,.-ue Ville · FULLY 19UIPPID WITH CllJMle conlrot, •Ir cM!litlonlntl, F11tl poWNr lllcl. ' w;y ... ,, AMll"M •ferM, WSW llrft ... host ., """' ..... tldory COll'HllllllCt PlrlL UD4JR.)Q2Jnn) 56666 FULL PRICE LEASE ~~y $168 80 Mo. 24 Month "p•n End Lease on Approved Credit !Stock 3569) NABERS LEASING • LEASE A 1973 . . COUPE DE VILLE Lease for ONLY $161 2!. 24 Ml!ltll Open Elld LHM on •ppn1vH Cr .. lt. (tll,..VWI Exqui1lte Dvn•1tv Red with whit• vinyl top, full red l•alhtr interior. Full powar incl. 6 w•v u1•f, door fock1, remote control trunk lock, pow1r enttnn•, f•ctory eir condition· ing, AM/FM 1fer10 t•P• pl1yer, tint~ 91•11, right side mirror, t ilt & t1le1copic 1teering, twilight 11ntin1I, l•mp monitors, etc. ( 9l l- FYWI LOW MILEAGE. Lease· for ONL)' $141 2! .. ll Monfll 0Ptn Encl Leise on 1pprovH Cl'ldlt. ltJlfYW) Immediate Delivery-Excellent Selection - FREE Pickup and Delivery -FREE Loan Car While Lease Car Serviced. 1973 Sedan De Ville cu-11 ·:~: ~~u::::'.T:nyl Mp, 56888 l•lt ll'IWlf Incl. O..r lotb,. • ••Y ..,.,, AM/ "M ......... WSW ti"' & I "°"' ltf mony •lllet> laclery ctnvtnlonc• 111'1'•1. l•D4tll)QU6<42U FULL PRICE LEASE ~~~y $173 80 Mo. 24 Month Open End Lease on Approved Cre_dit l Stock ib09 } LARGEST SELECTION OF' CADILLACS I N ORANGE COVNTY .. 1968 COUPE DE VILLE . 5porldl119 Pol•r wlllle •Jl•rlor with bl1ct viflyl lop 1nd i11l11rl1tus m1tchln9 l&e!ntr IQl!!;tior •. Full.power, J•c1ory ajr. clltllll/lon!ng, 1111 wltffl, AM/FM r1dl1t: Olll1l•ndln9 v•lUI. !OlKRG l 1969 COUPE DE VILLE C1M Bline• y.llow with bl1ek INlfler interior. Fult p0wer incl 11crory ••r condlll°"lng. 1ill 11nrlnt wheel, PQWl"r docir lock1, AMfFM r1e1io. Lullury plus beluty. (ZM03J8) 1969 EL DORADO Vinyl !lip, l•PtSlry & INtllet' lnlttllr, full pe.,,.r, 11<11try 1lr c1tndlllanl119, lilt wh .. 1, AM/~M ., ...... mtllt111t111, po0w1r ooor tkkl. AHctlUltlY ,.i'IMUI c•r wUh •JINnttty ltW m11.., .. (llllNJ 1970 CQUPE DE VILLE EX<lllnQ Sllallm8r Gold with black vlnyl top & m11cnlno lull 1H1Mer 1n· terror. Full POWer, facrory •Ir cone!., 1tereo, tllt & ttle1coplc srterlnu. etc., !91lBEJI 1970 EL DORADO Full INtt>er upholstery, f11ll power, f•Ctorv •Ir cltndllloning, tltt steerlno whttl. AM/FM ,,.,.eo muttlpl111, pOW.,. doOr loct1. H1rd let find 11\!s cle1n. M11sl Ml. (16"'9741 01971 COUPE DE VILLE Vinyl 1op, full IN1ner lnlerbr, lull POWtr 1ul1t P1u1 l•ctory •Ir cor.dlrlon· •no. TUI 1teerlng Whffl, AM/FM 1l•reo m11llJpln, powet> dolt!' loct1. lm- PICCtbie •ulomobllo. {l563)ll 1972 COUPE DE VILLE Autumn gold exterior wltn vlnyl top, 1llklle 1eatner Interior. Full POwer. factory a1r condltionlng, 1111 wt>eel, AM/FM sltreo, POWtr door locks. e!C. Truly 1n oul111nd!ng v•lue. (Sl9ECTI 197 1 EL DORADO convtrtlbi1. Spi1rklfng Acryflc ~ flnllft "4rl'I whit• "» Ind JMfd'llno tun lt•Ther lnterklr. AtlisOlutoty ~ wltll Ml PfWW, !Ktory air c.. Cl!rlon!ng, 1111 steering whel, AM/FM 1t•rirro multiplex, POwer dOOr lockL (6SJCZNJ 51999 55666 SELECT TRADE-INS 1969 PONTIAC l!ONNEVILLE WAGON t pas1. won., vinyl top, lugo1ge rack, vinyl lnlerlor, lad, •Ir, •ulo., P.S., P.8., El1cl. wlndOWI, rlKllo, hNter, W/SIW, ttc. IZDVU~l 1970 V.W. "SUNDIAL" CAMPER Fully c•mi:i..-equfpPed lnclud!ng custom 1wnlng-s. RIKllo •nd hNl1r, r1C1l•I tires. E11tremtlY low mU•ge. Vou really must '" 11111 ctnt. (047A0NJ 1970 MERCURY Ml\RQUIS BrOlfllh&m. Vlnyl top, taoe1try lnter!OI', au.I CDmlMI '"''· full pctW1r, 11ctory •Ir C'OlldlllltnfnQ, 1111 11eerlng whffl, AM/FM 1let>oo mullfptp, l>O'Wef' door lockL 13121SWJ. L .. 1 thin 35..000 mll1t. 1970 CONTINENTAL Sed•n. Pewcler blue with white vinyl !Op tncl blue lull INlhlr lnllrlor, ~I comtort ... 1,, full pawtr, l•clory •Ir tond!llonlnQ, tilt Wl'l .. t, AM /FM s11roo multlpl••• pawer door lock1, most •wrv 1t11llon 1v1ll1bt•. (l'UAJOI 1971 FORD COUNTRY ·sQUIRE WAGON Autumn gold txlerlor wllfl gnld lni.riof'. Full -r 1qulpmtnl olu1 IK· tory •Ir condlllonlng, rOOf LU!lllte rtck, power 1111 11•tt window, while 11C11 w•lt Urn. f1'9CICVI 1970 FORD LTD 4 DR. H.T. vrnvl 1op & Interior, fKI. 11r, rldlo, h••t.,., WIS/WI llres, 11c. ou1111n111ng V1lutl {laetSI FEATURE of the WEEK 52222 1971 MERCEDES 300 SEL SUNROOF SHln. Thlt lmpe(clbl• lllJUry 111Mmctl1Ut II fVllY tqlll'"" •I YOW -Id •XPtef llldefllll S.J ....... .._fie 1t•n1mo1111tn, run OfWtt, IH!ef'J' •Ir cllldltltftl1111, AM/f'-M •lttlO m11Ulp11x. S,.,.._ lhlllft 111f 1~11 lelllltr lnltt1et>, lltHfy ftr ywr l!llflHlllll •nll ttlt frl'f'I ..... ,. {J41SUI --.NABERS .- 2600 Harbor · Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 · SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8.30 AJA Jo PPM Moft. thrv fri~9.00 AJA to 6 PM Sa!. and Sunday ,,._ ~ "" ,_..., ""'' 6fll. ttn • • I ' .. " ., DAILY PILOT frillaJ, MIJ 4, 1973 .. • -..... · 1~ I· _...... ]§1 1 1 .......... 1§1 1 ~1 ;;; ..... ;; ... -;; .... ~ ~---.. ~l~iiiii I .......... J§]J 1 · A.tos .. s. . l§J I · --... ·1~ [ --.... · m~~ ·m~~ m~~ m~~ m~----FALCON MUSTANG MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH PONTIAC L-~~~~~-1 :::;;;;;;-:.;~~~~U~S~T;A;NG;;-~si FALCON \Vagon, new HARDTOP COUPE 1966 H.T. 8. P/S, R&H, $600. engine. Good transportation . • or best ofier. car. $300. :.48-S988. dF.conoln1cal 6 ~:~ ~1 or 54s--0122 er. &UtO. uo.i~.. ---~ FIREBIRD ,....,. ste<irln& radio '69 MACH I. Mags, 4 ~· heater, vinyt' 1op'. R/H, Blutt \\'/black vlnyl. .Loaded "\\1th extras. Sharp. $l67S. 673--0507 f71 l~IREBIRD Esp1it, air, I PIS, P!B. Cordova Top, 1 19,000 mi, $3500. 616-3-111 ~68 FIREBIRD 400. P/s, <"'5CFT>. OLDSMOBILE $1999 Sale111 &: Service 2840 ""'"" Billd. OLDSMOBILE '70 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 11 f'lll Power., Auto Vinyl Top. $2~ Trans, \1°111'11 q111•, lllt11t11'. fm\llA ~ li\l.IW! "'" • , ..... . . . .. PLYMOUTH I d~, very good cond. i\·lust sell. Eves 839--SW.i Costa M"a GMC TRUCKS At ~?,""' HONDA CARS Ply. 1970 .S•telllte '72 Gr...d Prix WHOA THERE BIG FELLA! Power Sten-ing, Po 'v er Competition/luxury, 1 911 Brakes, tUt wheel, Air Cond, CT>C. LOADED • alr. power Bucket seats, .'\M/FM, $1ttring & brakes. auto 17,000 miles, Rallye \\'heel! tran'!, 440 CID, 4 'BBL. AM / <l38FWD). FMmf niultiplex, . vinyl $4695 top. Out of production • lim;ted edltlOn. Must see DAVID J . PHILLIPS no\\' • tonlOJT('ll.V might be BUICK PON'TIAC OPEL, in<;. too late. Ph. 675-1527 aft 6. 546-1975 PONTIAC •....... .,. ... ~1 UNIVERSITY OLDS 9 f>"S"· wag. Air rond. R&H. , \VSW. Uke new. $1695. CSer. LAST pr THE r.RF..AT 2850 Harbor Blvd. No. P833) ?.1USCLtE CARS! '69 GTO FORQ BUY OR LEASE '73 PONTIACS · DAVE ROSS PONTIAC m Auto., Used · m Aufoo. UMd . ' PONTIAC ~--:e· 1968 Pontiac Bonneville PONTIAC T·BIRD --------' '72 SAJ>'ARI Sta. Wagon. ~-'70 T:sntl> rar-tandau, l ml. Ex. cond.. AIC. D1ac owne· 31 ooo mi AMl•'"?4 brakes, all poY:er, R.H. &tere!'. i~I JIO"'e~ opflons, SQ)O. ~329 aft <I. tilt whl bucket sea.ts. viny 4 door Hard top, V8. auto (RAMBLER .. top, radials, }oof;s &~ driv~ traus, Factory air, Power 1 __ .;.;._;;_____ like ney,• $2!12:>. M()..(t56l Steering, po .... ·er windows, radio, het1ter, Vinyl rool A Rambler 1969 Amer. 1971 T-BIRD, 2 dr l.anch!,_ clean car at a Bargain Air cond., lt.&I{, Lo 1ni\cs. 16,500 n1iles, full P\\'r, a/c, Price. YEU411 Eco.no1ny plus. Only $U95. 11.m/fm stereo. -Xlnt $1177 IXYU41l11 ph. Do·. Adams. Da)'!J See lt -You'll-Buy It HARBOR AMERICAN 962-3319, eves 543-8709 1\ L . . 1'l69 Harbor Bl., Coota Mesa VEGA lUtall fW ~~rno Open ~ays -----------, - TOYOTA 65 RAMBLER Classic, xt"o SHARP Vega GT 1912, air I 0011(1, IQ ml, auto, p/s, p/h, chrome wh~els, like lll'1\'. good tb-es: $450. 5.~ 1-lB • 968--9270 * '69 FORD Costa Me,. >U).9640 HARBOR AMERICAN Qmv. l •t><l. 40(> en,;ne. t_ FAi\11LY STATlO '71 MUSTANG VS, auto, air, '72 GOLD Toronuclo, all pwr, 1969 Harbor Bl. Costa Mesa Perfect hO<ly, intf'rior $9.10. \\!AGON. Eull .~ize de· Jo n1i, Br-new tires. Prl. cru!~c control, am If m &15-mO Open Sundays $40--0141 days, 551--3.177 eve&. luxe VS, factory air AO. 6, & all day ~·eekend 1;tP.1-eo, &: nluch more. Under '66 STATIO!\ \Vag:on, \1--8, c"~·k~"d~'~· ~----­ conditioning, A ~1 / 97!J-<lj8S l..>,000 n1i. S-'90'J. Days air/concl, P/s, P/b, 4 new '6.l PONTIAC TP mpest, 6 cyl, 1'~M stereo, P\\T •. str., Daily Pilot \Vanl Ads have 642-5225; eves I 'vknds, tires. Good cond, $350. stand ll"ans, xlnt running IJl6S H.arbor, C.M. 646-9303 W:O lfarbor Blvd., at Fair Dl"i\'e, C•<Oa M-a 5'".S<Jll T-BIRD __ ---~ ' '" ~ -• '12 CataUna Bmugham. 1----.:...----19TI \'EGA llatchhack, 4 spd. fnc air, radials, R/H, lo mileage, 552--0074 CO~V. 60 Ponl. get top full Loaded. Try $3495, private pwer. nc1\' pJs, rad. smog party. 968-ro.t4 $100 p1;·1. prty. Al 897-79'J4F ~-.. -th~.,~,~,.~m'"""u-nd_e_r _$50_. -, -try-v E brakes, auto., R&H, ~ains galore. ;.644-'-'...:24::.lco>~----= ;.64'-'5-462ic-=oc'0c· ~~--~= 1 cond. $]85. S.12--0977 aft 6. ~"·lug. rack. (S4l-A\lto1, Used 990 Auto1, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UHd 990 You'll find it in Oasstrled _!he Penny Pincher. Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used '57 -Nu Chev Z-28 dri\'c linP. :'.SOhJ>. 4 s1>d, ~i, disc brnkes. n1echan pert Cost $:000. Sell $1950. 8-12--3476 990 Autos, Used 990 '72 VEGA GT -all xtras. Lo mileage. Take over, payment<;. f,.16-3265 Autos, Used '990 R 0 s $1895 2S·IO llarbor Blvd. Cosra Mesa A( F:iir Drive 5-16-8017 A JOHNSON & SON 5 PONTIAC .~ --· ------! Phtto '72 Squire Wagon ' A'ir Conditioning, Auto. Trans. Roof Rn.l'k, Ratlio, Sharp, LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • • • • ! 7811'"'\\'X at . ' -' nh·arh Jhup1111!i +~ \.'O<J l'Y r ,...,,,i .,.,,..."'I , l t«...,1;., 1:1o-.. ·o o4'> fAOb . ----. . '71 COUNTRY Sedan, 1 01vner. 1\Iichclin liN's, hvy dly trier htch, never used, 1 lill 'vhl,, rack, \vht w/.blu int, pert cond. Sacrif. S2695, 531-3:~7'1' '65 GALAXIE 300 auto p/s I new \jres, n1a~.~. ne1v paint ' $4j(l, call aller 6 p.n1. : 847-3863 • 1967 FORD Galaxie j(J(I, V-8 1 R&H, P/S, good tires, BC· \ lual n1ilcage 39,000, cxc. cond. 546-2932 ''Golden Touch; makes the difference -at Johnson & Son . . . . "63 .F:ORD Seel, good' tireit, ~w ba!1., radiator, tune-up. Best orle.r. 49.1-3679 nit l .-'pm. - Jo'QRD '69 SuP.Cr van raised top VS. stOVL' O\'en, ITrer. Vci:y clean, many exlras. 551-4001 '72 Country Sedan Sta. \Vag. S?.400 or be.<rt offer. CaU. 837-2951 . • ' -. ROAD TESTED HAND POLISHED • 1970 LTD Braughrn, 2'J.000 n1iles, 4 door sedan, xlnt cond. Call .)._?£-261S arter 5 PM '70 FORD l\'lach I. loaded and c!ran. Firrn $2000. "'ork '545--9S72: 'rRpc' 968--911) • • TUNED TO PERFECTION '65 ¥ALCON 6 \Va,i::on, anto, good tires, good lrans. S3-l5 . . ;)4~ 10;}8 -• TROUBLE FREE DRIVING '61 FALCON Sta. \\'gn, auto, 1·adio. Runs good. Really 1 clean. 1 owner $16:> . .j.1~6~ "69 LTD hdtp. all pov.'t'.!r, stereo. $1795 or best offer. 963--2109 SEE ONE ... TRY ONE ... BUY ONE ... TODAY! 1969 FORD 4 dr. 129 e~. Xlnt cond. $800 or n1akc of· rer. 557-£372 "68 FORD Fall'lanc, 29.000 · act. miles. 1 01vncr. $990. 5.16--3832 Rf\ 5 pl1l _ • '62 FORD Galaxy, lll!IV ·127. \\Iii! sell or trade for pickup. &15--R21Jj '68 CORTINA. 34,000 n1i. ne11· pain1. runs xlnt. Ca 11 'a.:Jf.-;j()j7 aft. 5pn1 SEE THE DIFFERENCE IN Johnson & Son "67 FORD Sta. \rg-11. delux, p/s, p/b. air, A·l cond. $895. 548--5:?4.7 '71 MERCURY WAGON 'GS FORD Gahi.xie, Sharp & Clean, p/s, p/b, fac/air, lo n1ill"age. $9~i0. 968-4339 eves. '64 4 Dlt, V-8. air cond. 7)7,000 n1i's. Like nr11·. $:595. 646-.j()33 days. 646-0;81 eves. GREMLIN Colony Park 10 passenger. Full power, factory air con· ditioning. Immaculate condition. (532CXW) GR E 11 L I N , X. 1971, air/cond, au10 1 rans , ycllo11<, S1650/2J,OOO 1nilcs. Jll"i pty. 8.'H--2276 $3775 LIHCc-O~L-N- -L-JN-.c-,o-LN--c-·o-m-e-rtib!~ '172 Couga1· Black --goo<! condition $49:i * 979-JS77 VS, auto .. 1"adio, heater, Pl\'!'. steE'r· ---------ti ng and l.Jrekes, landau, (3390Z1'") MAVERICK $3775 '10 l\IAVERIC.K It/~£. Air1-----------• eond. Good 1.'0nrl. St<111d. 1rans. S~lj, Ph; 5·18-7108. '70 Pontiac MERCURY Grand Prix. VS, auto. trans., l'adio. ----------lhPatcr, po~rer steering, po\\·er '70 MERCURY hrak~s. fact. air cond., landau roof. • (;)13AEY) COLONY PARK Sia· lion l\'agon, full po,,.. $2 7 7 5 er. fa C'!ory <1ir con- ditioning. roo[ r11C'k. 047BEDJ. $2799 '69 Continental counc, full rio\Vcr, oir cond., Jeatll· Pr inter., vinyl roof, (614FYV I $2675 '69 Cadillac Coup{' de \Tille, full pov,:er. fact. air, 6 1\·ay scat, landau roof, (KSS- 182 ) ·$3175 2~~0 ll;1rbor Blvd. '70 IMPERIAL LE BARON Cos1a ~lc:.n At Fair Dri1·e 5-16-S017 '72 MERCURY Marquis Brougham V-8, 1\uto Trans, 2 Dr J·JT, 1''ull Pw·cr. Landau Top. $3999 ~ll lan1111 •; llltt 1111" m<t>:I L .!UllJ .11 1 ' 'illl\1ll . . .. . . . 'n MARQUJS Brougham, I loaded, xint coM. lo mi. Take over leue o r ! purchue. Must s e 11 ! 00-2466 . 1 72 l\fONTEGO, MXB, air. pb/pg. rib, gold w/landau, db. 1ht., Jo mi., below blue t-· 64$-2482. ·" 1. 651 PARKLANE. 4 dr, pwr, alt, radials, clean, Io mUC"8<'. $700. 9G8-<'>571l Prlv prty. ,o 2 Door Hardtop. One Owner. Immaculate. Full po wer, factory air, AM/FM radio, tilt whee l, 6 way power seats, landau roof. ( 684BEV) $3675 NOW. 1973 LANDAU CONTINENT AC MOTOR HOMES . • Home Of Th@ New Car • , • "Gold~ Towcltl' ''Ho1ne of Previously Driven Prestige Auto111obiles'' '72 CONT. MARK IV 12,000 actual nliles, full po\ver, 6 way power seat, auto- ten1p air, 1\iVl /F~I stereo, tilt wheel. power door lock s, cruise <.:ont rol, Landau roof. See and drive to appreci· ate. (2Y89A876309) $ALE PRICED MARK ID's Au Excellent Seleclion of MARK Ill's &"iV's 1969-1972 All At Appreciable $avings. "Orange County's Fomily o} Tirit C~~: '72 CONTINENTAL 4 dr. sedan, lll?'ury equipped thru-out, ful l power, cli- ma~e control, air cond., Landau roof, tilt steering wheel, cruise control, pwr. door locks, indiv. adjusting front seats, 4 brand new radial tires. (166EAF) $5975 '71 Cougar 1'011·1er s teering, po1\·cr brakes, air cond., uulo. trans., vinyl roof, ~ ;:,4.1c1u 1 $2675 '69 Ma1·quis Coupe. Auto. trans., radio, heater, r.>011 ct· s teering, po"·er brakes, fa('· 101-y ai1' l'Ond., landnu roof, (313· DFBJ $2175 '69 BonnevilJc 2 dr. hardtop. VS, auto. trans., ra- dio, heater, µo'ver steering, J)()\ver brakes, fact. air cond, landiu ' roof, (417AGH) $1575 '67 Volvo 114S 4 dl" .. auto. trans., a ir cond. Clean (626BSXJ ' ' $1275 '70 OLDS CUTLASS Convertible. Automatic transmission, r adio , heater pow~r steering, power brakes, air conditioning. Ex: ceptoonally clean. (398ETY) $2475 ohnson & son Rome Of The New Car • • • "Golden r-elt" ' A.,an nu ~~ - L IC\:~UIN l,lllf.._;;l,fi Ci\P l~I 2626 HARBOR BLVD'. o ·F CARS, COSTA MESA e 540-5630 NOW .. 1973 LANDAU CONTflllERfAL MOTOR HOMES ' • • .., ' ' •• • • • • LB. ' LB. -. . OVA BRAND ·NEW ''.T-BONE. • .. '73. ·NOVA STEAKS · ~ ', . MEGA ., (171606) -$2481 TOTAL PRICE ENTURA Ph,11 T •• &: lie. POLLO · NOVA!! THE FATHER OF ALL GM COMPACTS. WHY PAY MORE FOR THE SAME CAR WITH A DIFFERENT GRILL? 1/2 TON 8' FLEETSIDE .. \ Gau911, h11vy duty r11r 1Prin91, h11t1r, vinyl· BRAND NEW '7l VEGA COUPE Tinted gl11i, h11t1r, vinvl interior. (1574771 , •a1Hd on ro•nutKtur•r• cvrb wt. of 31'2 lbll. 1973 VEGA WAGON 314 TON 8' FLEETS I DE Tiftted 91•11, h••t•r, vinYI itihrlor. ( J4220 I) . IMMEDIATE . VI, 9111,.a, CltllPff, he1~ "Y dvty~ coolln9, (a 160. 7951 IMMEDIATE -·2-20·6· DELIVERY s.2g. -~· ·-~43 . DELIVERY -. . ----. 7 _ . -----------............. -------------~---· --- 'I. • I 1 '~" ..... BRAND NEW '73 BIR-HEY. 11711711 pow1r 1t11rln9, power disc brak1" t1d11r w.sw tir11, tinttd ti•••· 1458061 ) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY s-199. 9 i::~:~~iE w;.!~~~d~~,~,k. s3 791 IM_MED~A!E ~s3· ··721· . . ·""' d.ty .. d,.,M. • . • .DELIVERY • • • ' : ' J ' ' • -• . I MILEAGE STATED ON ALL ·CARS ADVE.RTISED. • • ,.. . '71 •,'•1 CAMARO Coupe. 24,470 mPes.,.vs, vinyl root,r air condlilOning, · power st#erin&. power brakes, auto-'m8:tic. ·ra,dio.m;etnendou.sly nice. . -(lllCF\{) • • ''•3299 " Y ··~1 ·'MONTE CARLO 1 \.. . . ' Coupe. 31,689 miles. Vinyl roof, i' Vt air conditioning, automati c, · poWer steering, poWer brakes, superior car. (317CYR) ... ·~ '70 MONTE ... CARLO Coupe. 40,161 miles. Remaining factory warranty. Vinyl roof, automatic, power steering, pow- er br.lk~ air conditioning. . (52:lllBM). . '2899 '70 CHEY. WAGON Kingswood 6 pass. 44,608 miles. VS, automatic, power steering, power brakes, automatic, air conditioning, root rack. (574- 32E) '2699 '71 FORD TORINO - Coupe. 25, 791 miles. Bucket seats, automatic, V8, power steeling, air conditioning. Super sharp. (504.DQG> '2599 '70 FORD WAGON Country sedan 6 pass. New tires, 47,451 miles. Roof rack, pOwer windows, automatic, power steering & brakes, air cond.. AM-FM stereo .. (832AKN) ··2699 '71 FORD WAGON Country Squire. Air condition- ing, root rack, power steering, power brakes, automatic, 42,- 143 miles. Nice car. (772CTK) '3199 '67 FORD GALA.XIE 500 H.T. 2 Dr. Air conditioning, power steering, automatic transmission, VB,1 58,494 miles. CTSA190) '1199 '68 BUICK SKYLARK ' 4 Dr. Sedan. Vinyl roof, VS, autom~ti,~. power steering, elec- tric windows, 46,888 miles. Nice, (XTE313) .11799 . . . '70 PLYMOUTH Fury m 4 Or. Sedan. Air con· ditioning, power steering, auf.o.. matic, VS, 50.806 miles. Bar· gain. (261CBU) '51450 '71 PLYMOUTH Duster O:>upe. 28,178 miles. '6 cylinder engine, !!tick shift, ra- dio, sharp car. (755Dil) '1899 '68 CHRYSLER • 9 passenger wagon. Full power equipment, air conditioning, 61,000 miles. Extra sharp. CXCZ546) '1899 '69 CAPRICE · 4 Dr. H.T. VS, vinyl roof, pow- er steering, automatic, AM-FM . radio. A re ill bargain. (YXF • 421) •1500 • '70 SUBURBAN CalTya.JJ. 45,000 miles. Big ' 6 cyllnder engine, 4 speed. super- ior condition. Commercial rub.. bei-. %. ton. CSSOAFG) 12499 '68 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille. Full ~r equipment and factory air con. dltlon. A super value. (VZJ· 335) ' . • '69'" LAND CRUISER Toyota. 4 wheel drlv,e. Radio. 48.805 -.mil ... Htrh rubber. CZST101) • '2199 ~ ·' '72 VEGA WAGON .. GT. 16.782 miles. 4 ap<ed trana- mlsslon, radio and hffter. (626EIJ) '72 MONTE CARLO 14,993 miles. VS, automatic transmission, power 1t.eerlng, power brakes, air eond.1Uonifli, dead sharp. (136EXX) ' '72 VEGA HATCHBACK • Coupe. RadJo, automatic trans.. tntulon, 16,lOl•~es. Good Buy. Regular &Qi •. ( rwETF) '2099 -'73 IMPALA 4 Dr. Sedan. 4,4S2 miles. Air conditioning, power Steering, po\\'Cr brakes, automatic trans- mi!lsion, VS (Rea:. gas) (713-- GJZ) '3799 '72 MALIBU 4 Door. 19,088 miles. Use regu. lar gas here. VS. automatic transmis!lon, atr condltkm.lna; power steering, nice car. (396- EmJ - VISIT OUR · SERVICE DEPT. Where Good Service MAKES FRIENDS * • . ~:~~ 546-1203 • ' • -,, ·I I I ' • - • ' . • . • I 1600 cc, '4 speed 1yncro, 600x 13 SSW, rear bumper'guerds, Calif. emission, bucket seats, ell vinyl trim. l3RI IWl772661 ' . . ,.firand slam sav.11191. •• every. car· rn · our tremeaual l1veator;r. You am'i-.. our dollar -., . .NIW 1973 GRAN TORINO OURVOtUMl-PRICl':ONL~ NEW· 1973 fORD 'GALAXIE 500 for dollar values · anjwlltre. 2 DOot HARDTOP $2 11487 .3.51 V-8, 1elect shift Cruis·o·matk, AIR CONO., pwr. 1trg. & brks., whites ide well tires, front & rear bumper guards, tint~d gloss, wheel .covers,, AM/FM stereo radio, vi1ib'I, grp., power windows & viny roofl i•3A38H17996Q) 2 DOOR HARDTOP , ~00 C.l.D. eng., v.a, foc:tory oir, A/T, ·power disc1 and st eering, AM radio, tinted glass, · wh eel . covers, wsw tires, deluxe ·bumpers, "truls·o·matic, '& more. • t #3J56SI 0266<f t"' SEE us FOR: OUll·VOLUMI PllCI ONLY $3998 77 NEW 1973 MUSTANG OUll VOLUMI PllCI ONLY _s38 756-5 . ' " eSUPER VANS . 2 DOOR SPORTS ROOF 302 C.l.D. eng., select shift cruir-o·molic trans., pwr. steering, deluxe ·bUmpers, .CIR CONO., AM radio, tinted gloss, sports wheel cov.ersr speciali.W:ipes & motel - {#JF02F1 101on - 'LEASE A 191) .FORD LTD 7-DRi· ILi~ ' s9929 36 MONTHS O.E.L •Liisl , DIRECT FROM A-FORD 'DdUI~ ·· & SAVE THE MIDDLE MAN -EBEISI·.'-• , • · • ·c1tu1sAtiE VANS •MINI HOMES •CAMPERS . OURVOLUME PRICI ONLY II OVER 4 ACRES OF ROJINS -READY $3841'1 RENT A CAMPER! TRADE IN SPECIALS - FORD '66 GALAXIE 500 4 door, H.T., radie, ft1et1r, eul11metic, power 1teering, VI, good milet. (RRY. 332 ) '679 '67 MUSTANG V·I , ... ; •• '"'"· ..... ,,,.,;,,:$1055' Good mil1t. IVCJl62l '6B FALCON 4 DR . VI, .,d;o, hoot,., "'"" pow" ''"'''1088 in9, good mile1. IWXG919) '72 FORD 10 PA~S. WAGON Only 16,000 mile1. VI, radio, heifer, s3 291 •ulomatic, P.S., 1ir conclitioning. ( Bll· FVYJ i '69 MUSTANG GRANDE VI, FM/nd;o, hooto•, "'"" pow,.,$1669 1teerin9, eit cond., viny l r1111f, good mile1. 125511Sll . '70 MUSTANG H.T. Rod;o, hoot.,, oto-'onl oh;tt, good '1888 mlle1. I077FYWI : '71 GALAXIE 500 2 door h•rd!op, r&dio, fte1t1r, eul11., , .. 995 1ir, ,power 1teerin9, vinyl roof, Good ~I mile1. f996CQLI ~ l . ' ·u PLYMOUTH 2 DR. H.T. .Redio, he1t.r, 11i1to., power 1te1rin9, V-1, air cond., good rnile1. (FCJ805) '67 CHEVEUE WGCJon C11ncoun:1. V-8, redio, heater, eulo., • . poW•r iteering, g'ood rnile1. ITNWl 081 $89 7 $989 '68 CHRYSLER New Yorker 4 Coo. Honlt,op, f,11 po•"· ,;, .,,. '114' 3 ditioning, good miles. I YCNS 111 ' ~68 OLDS Cptlass Supreme 2 doo. H•nllop. .,d;o, hoot,,, "''·••13 7 6 power tfeerin g, vinyl roof, good milei, air. !YXN859l '72 VEGA COUPE Rid. -4 1 ;,d,. t•dio, heater, mile1. 16421) · ·-~~~~~~~~~~- ' 4 ''67 CHEV. IMPALA WAGON VI, tedi11, fte1ter, 11i1!om•ti~. powl!r steering, red with bleck interior, Low mil•t. IVIT025l '888 '72 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX Redi11, h~1ter, •ut~., power 1t.••rin91S4094 itow1r windows, vinyl roof, air, low mile1. 14S2~A~I .. I 1. • CHICK OUR LOWUNTAL uns ON R/V'll MISC /IMP'TS 72 y AMAHA Motorcycle 250cc. Only 2600 rnile1, 11cld le beg1, wind1hield. IUOY0751 "66 VW FASTBACK 5583 Radio, heater, 4 1p1ed, good mila1 . s94 3, !TBZ4B91 · • '68 MG MIDGET Yellow with bleck tap, good rnile1, <XNGl31 l $871 '6 9 VW SQ.UAREBACK FM ud;o, .,, .. ,,,, huto•., low ··1291 miles, lilre new. I09<1AGl l • "' 'r ·BIRD TRADE·IN S! 7 TO CHOOSE FROM! '67 TO '73 MODELS Fine low mileage -some local owner cars, buy today •nd ••. $AYE . ' Ex .. ple '69 T-BI RD LANDAU . . ~~-~~ ..... -. ''11 ...... ,;, .... ;,;.,;,,, ···,,•1· 7~ '8 8 windows & 1e1t1. 1969CPAI. • . . .. .. • ' • '71 Ranchero 500 Pickup VI, eutomatic, reclio, ft••fer, •ir conditiOning. 13637611) '72 Courier Pickup Only 12,000 mile1. !427EYYI HARD TO FlND USED! '69 Chevrolet 1/2 ;; , ·: , P_!Fkup. v.a, automatic, power 1teer· s. ·6· ·58' ing, fle eter, n1w p1int. Goocl miles .. ! 21450CI '70 Chevrolet -3/4 Ton · p;"'" ••• , •. '"'"· ., ••• ,,;,, v.o. '1892 power steering, good mil11. (13311H) , . ' approximately 15,000 1T1i1e1. 121'4· • V-1, nd;o, '"'"· '''-'"d ohm, ·$2398 17Hl '72 Ford 1/2 Ton P~U. ~7 1 Ford F250 3/4 ·Ton · WITH CAMPE,R '4641' !11.cl. 9 1/1' Cemper. V-1, o1uto., R&H, · I' •Ir, 1plit rlm1, gd. mi, (38474HI Nu , '70 9 'h' Hunter C.O • ~r •· '. ~ .. -:::, --------~ 4-· . ---.· , , --·· 1iiiiiiiiiQiii •. - I 7 7 • •• San -{;lemebie-·~­ ·capistrano • EDITION •· • Teday's Fin~ N.Y. StoekS ' ' . . , O~ANGE CQU!'!TY,·c,4.U~A PRIDAY, MAY .f, 1973 TEN C~TS,:. VOL. 66, NO. 124, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES -' ~--~----------------------~----------.... ----..... --...,.~~----------~----'"'"''"-"---------------------------------------------------------------------~·----------~.. Junior High Double SeSSions Seen as ' Certain · Double sessions for hun4ttds of jwUOr· blRI> youngsters In the Capistrano Unified Scftocil District seem a certainty next fall, Man:o Forster Junior High Principal Ed~ Kincaid on Mood!ly will recom-. mend that trustees accept the double seision.9 as the Ofl}y way to cope with the OOOmlng enrollment facing the district's Only intennediate-level campus. Earlier this year Kincaid and other <Uslrict officials had hoped ·that by ad· • Pendleton Requested · The U.S. Defense Department asked Congress Thursday to authorize $13.1 million in construction at Orange Coast military bases. The n!CJU<Sl for the 1W4 fiscal year budget totaled $121.4 million for oon- stntcllon it 13 Anny, Navy and Air Foree 1iases In the state. The largest local request.was for $1D.9 milUon in construction at C a m p Pendleton. A Marine · spotesrnan at 1he Camp aald the request was made to build MIO family housing unltf modmtlr.e other- facllltiea one! Improve ili:;t llchWtg. . Also requested was ·na,ilCIO In eon-structlon fonda,for the Mirlne'Corps Air Station at El Toro. A spokesman tbere said he believes the money · will be eannarked for construcUon of a cold storage warehouse. 11But we haven't bad official con- finnation yet," be said. HWe're expecting more than that, because we also ~ to convert over from oil to natural gas. We're still waiting on that." A request for $1.5 mllllon to build new bachelor enlisted quarters and mesa halls at the Naval Weapons Station at SeaJ Beach was al90 included. Abollt hall of that money, If approved by Congress, will be used for similar comtructlon at the base's annex at Fallbrook, a Navy spokesman s3id. In all, 13 bOJioo In construd!on .,... re- quested by the Defense Department for baS<I throughout the country. • 'Cinco--de Mayo' Festivities " ,. <!Ing more portable clas.vooma and stag- gering the llarting and ending Umes for various groups of students, the double sessloo8 could have been averted. Biit the crush ol new pupils, Kincaid said in a ~ to trustees, 1s simply too great. , " Despite the double sessions, Kincaid said, the children In ae ... th and eighth grades still would receive a full program. Kincaid will offer a specific schedule of • I Barulit Sorry, Returns Loot ' • A repentant banait who Wore a U.S. Postal Service uniform. in the $131 aiined robbery·ofa Gororia·del· Mar corset shop 10 days ago 1J,as remorsefully mailed the money back,, Special Delivery. , The gunman who relieved four persons of their cash at the Silhouette Shop, 'rr.rl E . Coast Highway, enclosed an anonymous oote of explanation. He said he went to church the £ollowing ~Y and became con- science-stricken over having· broken both the Eighth eomina-...t of the Old Testament and Section 211 of the ·California Penal Code. "Lord. •• I don't remember any other caae like it," Newport Beach Detective Sam ·AmbttrieY sajd to- day. "f wish more of these gnys would go 19 church." Barefoot· Bandit Hits the Colonel For $1,000 Haul A bUrly bandit walked barefoot into a fried-chicken restaurant in San Clemente Thursday and robbed the outfit of $1,009. Police said the robbery occurred before noon as employes were preparing for the busy lunch trade at Kentucky Fried Chicken, 'IOO E. SI Camino Real Detectives said the man brandished a tw~inch-barreJed revolver and demanded money. Employes gave him the cash 8']d the man Oed out the back door, the· way he entered. Investigators described the bandit as extremely stocky with a large chest and broad shoulders. 1be man's hair was shoulder-length. He wore a white t-shlrt and jeans, witnesses said. ~ ' cl...., for each of the two l'ad!:I to trostees Monday. ti Kincaid believes tllat Ilia S)'ltelll' Would ca~ the "least disruption.~' Tiie double sesskm woul<l be proposed to last two at least Into the fall of next calendar year. - Directors of Administrative Services Jo5eplt Wimer will propose, to trustees Monday that the board approve plans t<> revamp erutlng drawings for .a new junior-high campus In the Lagima ?figuel • area~on a: llte donated by Avco Com-County planners setUed that issue ear· munlO' Deft)opers. ly in the week in Avco'a favor. The use of that site was assured in an ' Wimer said that the plans already -"'·· •••---• b 1he were drafted for the new campus but action _,, "~ w~ · Y county . were cleslgned for a different site. plaMing commission, He characterized the modifications re- Originally the .school bad been planned quired on the drawings u mirior. for completion by the start of school In U trustees accept t he recom· the WI of '74, bul a dispul<I over align. mendatlons of the district stall and the ment of · a oew COWllY road enq>ted double sessions indeed become reality, betWeen Avco 8nd a n e i g h b o r i n g this sort of schedule Woo Id be put to use : developer. -For chHdren in seventh ·grade, the _aces~. ·-D" ' . Nixon Kin Emp~ed By Vesco Donald Nixon. 26-year-old 90n of F. Donald Nixon of Newport Beach and nephew of 1he Presiden~ has been in the employment of a New Jersey flnaucler connected with a securities and exchange commission complaint, it was reported today. The New York· Times said young N'lllon wu.ltired...by--L. V8800-iD July,-- 1971,--moo=.,.~""" ..,.__ In-. veatigii~ the' · · ~ An associate jlf Ve8!X> was quoted by th~ Times.a· ~.ttere. u , "no qoea-tion" Iha! ~· M.o0 was hired ~ M Ccillldfllqaleltow help Veico'1 plans In the ~. \'!JUllC:"Nllott became tbe perannaJ a1de' !Ii Vesco iD'cl lived with 1he v...., ~ I!) their large ranch llome In Bocinton, New Jeraey. Vesco, who -leCl'e!IY gave l300,000 In ~ to the, Niml l'Hlect!on campaign, bas been served· with an arrest warrant In connection With a ~ million civil fraud suit filed by; the SEC. DooaJd ?faoo has served In lhe Navy and has told 8SIOclates thet he .... wounded sllglttly in Vietnam. Hli position with ~ Vesco organization apparently · was .b8itdling personal arrangements lor Vesco and Included traveling In many foreign countries. His official position was described~aJ ':consuJtant." · His father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. F. Donald Nixoo, have been . kngt1me residmlts of Newport Beac:IL ' , 'Young Donald Nixon was ~led from Newport Harbor High Schooi Jn 11161 and attended Orange Coast COllege and California State U n i v e r s l t y at Northridge. • His family in Newport confirmed today that yotmg ffixon had done· consklerable traveling for Vesco..-mainly in'. Nassau and the Dominican( ,Republic. 'Ibey de- clined further comment on bis role with Vesco. ' ' . . . ' R DmRr•""' Si.ti ...... STIJDENT·To.$1'.llDENT :rUTGRING. ~JCS AT DANA POINT- . -~urSmlth of pt,l)lt:l;tll~1.HlgfltWor:l<~·Wllh °""lel,Qullaft,tan . . . t .• -r._ ....... J'S.' ' ' .Elementary Kids Learn )Jegin Saturday . Anliallu:aLPMli!!.es..Jlu.JLeJ:duLleLlsu.~~~---- bloodless bullfights anc1 s1ree1 c1anc1ng a11 Pfunners'--Pka wlil 'mark the first fomial celebration of "I have no comment on any activities --o£.any-membera-of-my-familyf'-tlie·elder - . Donalil Nixon concluded. From 'Cross-(tge' Pla1!_ CiDco de Mayo in years in Sao Juan Caplltrano Saturday. 'l'lte events -all sponsored by 1he chamber of commerce -will start at 7 a.th. as. the first buevos rancheros b~ast ls cooked up In downtown San JUabl Bnakfast will be served untll 10 a.m. Al)l o'clock, horseless carriages rrom throughout SoothErn Calilomla will pull ifito town for a parade orfered up by the Hortt!ess Carrage Club. Drivers will dreU in perioCI costume. A noon, meat simmered In a deep pit for 'M hours will hJt the tables In a barbe- cue wblcb wUl last throughout the af- temooo. In the early afternoon hours special ac- tiviljes Including. dance concerts, a tortilla-eating contest and pjnata-bh!ak- lng parties are scheduled In the heart ol the ' small downtown area near the mission. Aid. at 4 p.m. a bloodless bullfight of· ferittg two .Mexican fighting bolls pitted agalrist amateur toM'OB from San Die(l(I'& Los Muleteros club wllJ be the at· traCtlon at Rocky's Arena . Blended with the bloodless display of capework will be a Mexican charreada rodeo. Hollywood producer Bud Boettlclter' wtU al90 cllsplay the art of -bullfighting lront..borseback, using horses whlcb once belollged to the late Mexican matador CaHos Arroza. • Tickeu lo the few ectlvltles requiring admlallon Wfil be 1Yall1ble at downtown bosineaes lbroughollt the day. Mat1)> of the actlvllles, Including the evening street dance Saturday. Ire free to the public!. Gets Councilmen Hot U'llAkr Collar 1be annual request for air conditioning in San 'Clemente council chambers came from city planning commiss-rs thb week I!!!! city councilmen couldn't have 1 haij a liefter night for It •. The snggestlon from tltO planners ~· on the council's Wednesday ageOOa in a session marked by . the wannest tem· peratum of the Y.,ar In the small meel!nC-place. BUI the warm weather did little to chante traditioft. As usual, ""mcill)IM set the Issue aside 'UnW bud(iet aesa!otts. "We're going to have to see If we have any money for it," Mayor Clifton Myers said before the Issue was dealt with. Installing the cooling equipment is a project costing about $14,0llO and In past years it h!i• remained low on' a_ speqdytg priority list. ' - Nixon 'After Union' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -United Fann Workers Union leader Ceaar Olavu 1iY1 that tltt N I x o n acl- mlnlalratiOn Is o,u I to destroy his union. He told a USF audience Tltuaday that "government officlala of the Nixon Administration" are conspiring with the Teamsters Union, which .he aid con- tributed l'lil,000 to Nixon's l'HlectJon carnpaJgti. ' • Meanwhile, As soc i ate d Press dispotcbes from New York nported io. d81 that a federal judge bas ordered the arrest ol Vesco but Vesco's laWJ!'I' still 11)'8 Ilia ciienl'will not appear before a fedetal grand jury unless granted im- munl,ty from prosecution. -• U.S. District Court Judge Edinund L. Palin!eri , signed ,!be bench wltrrant Th~ ~ter noting Vesco had fail<d to respO,ttd WI subpoena ordering him to tesU!Y ·before-the grand Jmy ln- vestipti!ll his $2®,000 contribution to ' (See DON NilioN, Poe•· Z) .l. • By JOHN VALTERZA Of 9'M o.ll'f' ,ilot Stiff 'lbe common image of a tutor ts that of a dour mentor browbeating a kid who neoos'lreip. BU! teachers at a high scltool in Dana Point ahd those .at an elementary scbOol in the ·same coastal communilf baVe · foWJd tha'f'liver the past few inont tu~figf.modem s~yle iS far differeiit. ·· ~ it can be as big a boon to'the one doiiJg the teaching as the young.Ster doing the' learning. Condominium Firm Wins • · Cleniente COuiicµ Backing A N.Wport Beach development firm -· Planning Director Dick Ahlman and City whosa.oottdominiwn. project Is under at· Engineer ~hll Peter on the charaes tack by a resident lteit door won ,.new-WedQOSday one! both staff members ed support flVnt Sau Clemen!A> city coon-repµed that they disagreed wilho Charles' cllmen thiS week. allegatloos. Aries· Development Compony, the Ahlman conceded that Charles' com- builder of a major condominium project plaint of a constntcUon trailer occupying on ocean bluff )and once the· site of the spoce on a city street V(U valid. Larry maltlion ,.u, charged wllh "But as IOf the allegations of potential creallnl pl'Oblems along•P111dena Court. structorfl damage ," Alhman added, "wo ~. Rlcliird Chatles oJ 406 have looked at the exterior of Mr.· Pasadena Court asserted~ ex-qterles' property-and It looks fine to us.'' cava\l<ltt for the Aries pro t Is e11oslng Charles lodged the complaints through slnklitg of IOU bt the area nd is causing laner L. Patrick Lane. craclced wills and jammed door& In Lane repr~ted tbe andowner before Olarles' aJlll"""°l onlta. councilmen 'Wednelday ·and hinted that COUndlmett pdlecl CtlY Building aud (See SUPPOllT, l'flA I) ' ' . ~ In tl'le iq.fonnal program working at Dana llllls High · and Richard Henry Dana elementary school teenagers do the tutoring and elementary pupils do the learning. Since 'January a busload of about IO blgh school sludl!l\lS makes the trip each d11y· to Dana where pie !IJ1aller. studen~ walllwitb.antlcipotlon. · · , '"'The relBtlonshipS that 'hive been struck ~ between the older kids and-the younge.i ones is absolutely remarkable.'' said Dana Hills tnstructor John Porter, the founder or the activity. Technically, the process Is called "cross-age" teaching and Porter and his fellow organizers of the project have found that it sets up relaUonsitips which would be impossible for adults to simUlate. Porter's duties at Dana Hills en- compass teaching of educaUonaUy han. dlcapped students. Some of them have joined the cross- age program and since they started last January those students have marked Im- provement in attendance and academic achievement, Porter l&id. A1 for the youngsters bn the receiving end, they bave Improved aa well. "Kida seem to learn .from eacb other far better than they do irom an adult," Porter said. . "And orten, a child can't functloo in a large group." · • llecaoae teachers often can1 offer II> dlvidoalilled leam!Jlg, to aoch YQWIMters, tutoring can be the key to lhtlr learning and behavioral problems. ln practice, cross-age teachtnc II· lostrates that point. AotomaUcaUy and without lnducemept. !See TUTORS, Page I) , . first three J!Oriods of the day would be taken up by "core program" classes of; English, math and 10Cial sludles. Period. four would be an offering of pltyalcal: education alternating with aclence .. Period five Vlould encompass art or ex..; ploratory foreign 1Wlgll8IO. -1be eighth graders ...Wd lollow U,.: .same core-subject schedule for the fint. three .periods, but the phyalcaJ edUC.1t,1on: session would alternate every other day: (See DOUBLE, P ... I) 'Sabotage' . ....... ' ' . . ,. '· Of Muskie -· Charged WASHINGTON (AP) -Donald H. Segretti. a California attorney with rePorted ties to the White House, has been indicted in an alleged scheme aimed at sabotaging Democratic Sen: Edmuad S. Muskie's presldenUal campaign ~n Florida last year, the Justice Deport-I ment aald today, The department aald Seirettt, Jane MARTHA SAYS, SHE WAS 'HAL~ CR\l(,,IED''"°' ... 4 ~ under lnvestlgotton In. lite Waterga\e scandal, WU Indicted by a federal C'ltld jury in Orlando, Fla: for "publlahlng and distrlbul!Jtg a letter ... which fa!led to idellllfy l!tOoe responsible." '!Ital refeired to a filer said to have been forged on Muskie's stationery wbich accused IWo of bis leading opponents Sens. Hubert H, Humphrey and Henry ii( Jackson, ol aental misconduct. The letlei' reportedly was distributed by 0. thousands just prior to the March 14 primary. . · The indlctment also charged Gecirge A. Hearing of Tampa, Fla. on the same counts. Rogert Milton Benz, 25, bf Odessa, Fla., a fonner Nilon campaign worker and ooe-time president of the Tampa Young Republicans, was nameil as an unid.icted eo.a>nspirator. Segretti altCI Hearing' were named Oii two counts, the ·flrst charging thet tllor arrang~ for the Jetter tc> be pultlbMcl and the "lCOOd that they cmsplnd to distribute It . PLAYBOY 'TURNS.' ON' SEARCHERS '' PHILADELPlilA (AP) Th~ ~a~'l' at ~'1.cJnlan\O.­ t1onal Airport ls getting turned on by Playboy. Playboy Club "key cards are opj!lllnc the way to eareful seorcbes at ab'poj1 security checkpoints, The cards bave t magntic tape ~t aeta off metal . ....,.,:. j tors, said iw.n E. llllUar a Fecleriil Aviation Mm•at~ ..#tty o~l Orq•e - ' ~ . ·' • • ' j DAILY PlUlJ SC Nix~n Taps . White House ~ . . ~hief:. Haig 1•·1CEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -Presl· r.atnt Nlion picked Gtn. Alexander M. Haig Jr. lod*Y u temporary cblel of the .. White llome staff. ... The 411-y..,...Jd U..ig has been Army Vlte chief ol. staff since January. Prior ~ a tWCM1tar promotion by NI.I.on to that • EX·NIXON PHYSICIAN SAYS ..... RECORDS TAKEN-P•go S tjob, he served as ~hid deputy to Nixon's :MUonal security adviser, Henry A. Kiss- inger. The President met with Haig Thund1y J)i, Washlngtoo before leaving the capita l far a long weekend at hll Key Biscayne retreat, White House sourca u.ld. ·!~ sources .said Halg'a new aasign- fo.iint ii a temporary ooe and that he #ould return to miUtary duties after helping Nixon reorganize the White House SWf which was shattered by the resigna- ~tttKL, ot H.R. Haldeman and John D. Elirtichman. '":.Haig has been one of Nixon's favorite 11-Publeshooters. He frequently undertook 'irri!.siona for the President lo assess the military and political situation in Inclo-;chlna. ...... ,:, ID selecting Haig a.a at.an· chief, Nixon ~o)!owed the ewnple of President Dwight <f[); Eiaenhower, who also picked an·Anny man to head the Wblte HOUJe stall in the :Wike of t h e resignatJon of Sherman !A'&uns who was implicated in a vicuna coat scaoclal. ~"Haig was an Army colonel when he JiJ!oed Kila!nger's National . Security COUncil staff in 1969. His Anny advance- IJ)ent was meteOric after that. 1 .. ; ,~e-wu..a major general when Nixon ~ded to vau1t him over SC<lrel of '.¥fiior oUkers for appointment u Army ;iiice chief ol ~tall and promotloo to lour· ~~:~s ~ in Philadelphia and is .. · f &raduate of West Point. He received a .tfl@!ler's degree from Georgetown Uni· v&aity In 1962. • · Officials said the President bas not li~ded on a permanent White House roalignment. But they said Nixon wanted ~·~ve quickly to name an aide to help \fjlh the reorganization. ··'Haldeman, u Ni.ion's chief of staH, ~d virtually complete authority to d .. 11ihnlne who would -and who would ndt -see the Presldent or even !peak to 1iltn on the l<lepbone. Ehrllcltmatt serv· e<Las Nixon's chief adviser oo domestic matters. 2 More Warrants Issued in Cult Death in Florida DAYTONA BEACH, Fla (AP) -Pofice said today (lrst-degree murder warrants have been Issued for two mor.e persons in the "witchcraft cult" torture-slaying o! a 17-year~ld California youth. Seven persons already had been charg- ed ~·ith murder. Authorities declined to reveal the name o( the new suspects, but said they were believed to be members of the band of young devil worshipers implicated in the death of Ross Michael Cochran of Fresno. Police charged six residents of a ramshackle rooming house on Grandview Avenue Wednesday, and Thursday brought , murder charges against a seventh -Steven A. Skaggs, 21, of Petersburg, Va. Cochran's beaten and rope-trussed body was found in a remote wooded area southwest of Daytona Beach Tuesday night. Police said he was nogged with chains and stabbed with broken bottles the Friday berore in the rooming house occupied by the young cultists. One or those charged, Cindy Black of Rexdale, Ont., told police she was 17, but a judge and her parents later revealed she was only 15. She told the judge at a hearing Thursday she did not want her parenl:I told of the.. charges. DAILY PILOT Tiie Or"'1119 Cwlt 04tlY f'ILOT, will>~ i. ~ tl'le ,. .... f'rnt, It """tlhlil w "'9 Or•nv-C~ll l'l,IOlltllln9 C°"'""', .sttioe ,.,. ldlllon$ ''' Pl/Dllal\ell, MOfldlr "'"*'" Frldlly, !Or CHI• Mn., N-• kKll, HUtlllnttm 8•1<111Foun1tl11 Valtfy', i......,. loeldl, lrvlM/leddllMdi Md a.,. ,........,., S.... Ju.,. Clophlr-. A •lntlt "liaMI •llll•n It PYl>!h'-S.twV•Y• Md ~n. Tiit prlnc:ll•I Mllfh'"9 pi...! l1 •I DI Wwtt .. ,. Stf'MI, C:O.I• Mn1, C.lllOnlle, tM». "•btrt N. w,ffl ll'rnlftnl •l'ld l"vOl!llfltf Jtck "· Curlty Viet f'rBldWll lll'ld GMer'1I ~ Tlto11111 IC1..il """ Ttr.011111 A. Murphin1 MaMell!ll Editor Clritrft1 H. loM Ridi1r4 r. Ntll "1tl1t.,.1 """"''"' Edi""' S. Ch••I• OMs. JOS Nri fl C•111lri. a,,1, 92672 --c.11 INM; DI ~~::r t"-1 .....,.,.. ittc.11: :m:t ... ....,.. ....... lhlcll: 1717J •ltd! ............ ""9WM ...,.1 m ~ • .,... fll J' II 1714t 641.Qtt Cl 11111M1 Mtall I I MJ.UJI hi CJs•nlls A• D"*' I IW T1l1p•rn1 4tJ.44ZO c.rrtlflt. ltn. °'""" c..t '*"""" ~. ... ,.... ...... """"" ..... ........ --., ~--.. '*'"' _, "-••*""' ..,,... ......... ~ .. °"""""' --· .....-es... ~ ...... C.tt Mist. Ctlfflnttt. Mlf(Ti,,tlol't ... OHritr ... fMilfflh'i ... -11 U.11 .......,., ""llft•? .............. ~. : ' ' NEW YORK (AP>-~ Nlaon's fonild ~ ' ittaruij.' ltM 'tald government Inv~· • lhit Ii e de.iroyed all bis .Ompalgn • ti.we ·records before~ 1rn 1ec1m1 com"-1cn llpnce law took,, eUect, lccoidlng ·to souroe1 quoted today by the New York Times. 1be Tlmea said it learned from sources clooe 'to the case lhal ~Herbert ·w. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, who was Nixon's attorney until a few days ago, said he destroyed the records to protect the names of donors. A spotwn.in !or the Republican finance comntltlee "'" q""'"" by the Times . as saylng,-"We .have: no to- ·lormation that lllY .reconls were destroyed," . :. ; .. . 1'116 nm.. said Kalinbicli cootrolled a . secret ll00,000 lyncl, part of which was allegedly used fot espionage a n d sabotage during the 1912 campaign. It also sajd he Is known to he ltDder grand jury lnustlgatton !or bis alle1ed role ln a reported conspiracy to obstruct the Initial federal Investigations Into tlie bugging of DemocraUc national head-- quarters In Washington's Watergate com-p!••· ~,. .... , ......... NO PROBLEMS WITH DISCIPLINE; YOUNGSTERS SET THEIR OWN BEHAVIOR STANDARDS From Loft to Right Joff Shuy, D•vld Martol •nd Kori Thompson In lnform•I Soulon Moat ol the funds raised by Kalmbach came from wealthy Republicans living1n Southern California, where Kalmbach maintains a private law practice, the ,newspaper said. United Press International quoted ao aaoctate as saying the records were destroyed in Kalmbach's office ln the headquarters of the Committee to Re- elect the Pre!ident and at Kalmbacb'1 home in Newport Beach. From Pagel TUTORS ... the .younger children in the program at Ddna buckle down to serious learning Jn a tutorial situation. No disclpllne is required at all, beause the kids have set up the rules. of the day, not the teachers. Porter said that through the past month the program bas been built from scratch and is more or a "club" function than a formal educational program. Rather than taking part in a fonnal class the scores of Dana Hills volunteers have done all their work on their own lime. , "No ooe enrolls in tUIDrctass," Porter SSid. lnstea4,. the Dana. Hills students use their student hbur free period !or the tutoring. · "They could be 10tnewhere else it they waiited to •.. even home," Porter said. "But they would rather come and work with the little kids." · Although an acknowledged success, the program still is in its transitional stages. Porter soon plans to present at plan to trustees whereby funds lo continue the project -and make lt a formal part of ·the curriculum -would be sought from government soorces. In an ag~ of federal cuttfacks of educa- tional program grants, tutoring projects enjoy a rare position. "Although lots of programs get the ax, this one is still among the favored ones by the people controlling fede'ral educa- tion grants," Porter explained. ''We'd like to get some help from the trustees in the district and expand the project, he added. And with the strjdes m.wle so far, he hopes the plan has a chan&. Traffic Violatol' Slams Into Pole, Causes BliJ.ckout A pursued traffic v~ator ~ck a power pole in Cypress '11lursday and blacked out half of the city, police reported. Officers said Stephen W. Morris, 24, of Signal Hlll, was speeding in the area of Ball Road and Walk er Street. Lt. Don Soma tried to stop the speeding car and Morris made a U-turn and tried lo ram the patrol car. the offi~r said. He pursued the vehicle at speeds up to 110 miles per hour. Four other Cypress units and three Los Alamitos police cars joioed the pursuit before lhe driver lost control. Near the intersection or Denni· street and Ball Road Morris skidded 400 feet and struck the power pole . He was un· conscious at the scene and taken to the Orange County Medical Center where he is reported in sta ble condition today. Charges of reckless driving and assault with a deadly weapon, the car, on a police officer await him on recovery, police said. Motlier-killing Suspect Engaged To 17 ·year-old SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Police say a newspaper clipping found with the belongings of Edmund Kemper Ill reveal that the man accused or killing his mother, her best friend and six coeds became engaged to a Turlock girl in 1\1arch. The 17-year-old high school gir1 was reported to have gone into hiding to recover from the shock of learning that her fiance led officers to the bodies of the murder victims. Her ramily pleaded not to disclose her identity. Kemper, 24, and his blonde girl friend were engaged March 29 after meeting last summer at a Santa Cruz beach. The engagement date was three weeks before Kemper 's mother and her friend were slain. The girl's parents have sent her from Turi<* and school officials consented to excuse ,,er from classes until the ·e~ tional pressure lets up. The ~foot-9, !.IO-powld Ktmpei bu been arraigned to Mtmlcieal Court oa eight murder counts. The grand jur)" wUI meet soon to CONlder Indictments against him, Olsl Atty. Peter a.an& said. Results of Long Autopsy Awaited; Poison Eyed HANNIBAL, Mo. (AP) -Audrain may have caused the veteran politician's County authorities were waiting the death Nov. 6, the story said. results today of an autopsy on former Long's widow, Mrs. FlOrertce Long, U.S. Sen. Eclard V. Long, whose body asked investigators to check the progress was exhumed Thursday for investigation of the tumor, whlch was discovered at a of a report Long may have died of poison-Washington hospital in 1967. ing. The report that Long may have died -1n_ a copyl'igbted s1Qry,.Jbe_Kansas. CltY-. from J>Ois.Q"!!!g ca~e la~ ~mo1M1nefi-om Star said the body was taken from Teien Dllrllop, U-ng s secreurry. told Grandview Cemetery here to Hannibal authorities Long complained shortly hospital, whei:e an autopsy W&!!_perfonn-be!ore his death that he might have been ed ill the presente of four doctors. pots0ned by a bo;i: of candy which bad Samples were taken from the.Stomach ~ '!ven to ~hlm..-. for chemical analysis but the .r'esults _ Longs body was reburied yesterday were not immediately known. after belng exhum.~the request of . Thomas Osborne, XllP'iln County pro. An observer told .the Star the autopsy ecuting attorney. Mrs. Long approved revealed a large pituitary tumor which the autopsy with certain conditions, in- cluding having present a physician of her Board Decision Prompts Suit By Eco~gy Unit . Orange County supervlson today face Superior Court 1cUon based . on the allegaUon that their overturning of the planning conimisslon's decision on a con- choice. The Star said one doctor from Han- nibal, two from SI. Louis and one from the Louisiana, Mo. area attended the autopsy. Also present were pike County Coroner J. 0. Mudd and Marion Wasinger, a Han- nibal attorney who represent! Mrs: Long. Mn. Loog ·had filed ·an 'alienation ol ~ffections suit against Miss Dunlop, seek~ 1ng damages of $3.25 million charging that Miss Dunlop "carnally" knew LC>ng. Kalmbach served a• as.soc late chairman of the Republican re-election finance-committee. Such destruction of ,·ecords, the Times said, could be a violation of the 1922 Cor- rupt Practices Act. Last Rites Held For Mr. Puzin, Golf Course Aide Roman Catholic funeral services were conducted this morning in San Clem ente for /~tired golf course superintendent StevePUi'm, 78, of San Juan Capistran . Mr. Puzin, of 26726 Calle &mba, died Tuesday at home.. _ He -was ---a ..... retired goU course superjntendent . for links in Highland Park, Ill. Mr. Puzin leaves his . widow, Catherine, of the home ; four sons, Leroy and Robert Puzin, both of Anaheim, Stephen Puzin of Temple Hills, Md., and Richard Puzin of San Juan Capistrano. Other survivors in· elude five grandchildren and two great- grandchildren. Rosary was recited at Our Lady of Fatima catholic Church Thursday. Re- quiem Mass was celebrated this morning with burial following at Ascension Cemetery, El Toro. Lesneski Mortuary was in charge of arrangements. Front Page I .. SUPPORT ..• troversial EI Toro developmeot was ii-Front Page I legal. • the city might be liable in case problems 'Ibe IPsult mea. by the Envlronment'1 DOUBLE arose along the narrow ·street. CoaliUon of Orange County with an El • • • Aries uresldent Philip Stearns defended Toro chureh and school as co-platnHlls claims that the county board acted with elective classes in science and his firm Wednesday and insisted that unlawfully March 21 when it rezoned an liberal a.N. 1 most of the allegations by the neighbc:r eight acre parcel at El Toro Road and ·Kincaid said the real problems will in-were erroneous. Muirlands Boulevard. volve scheduling for orchestra, band and Stearns said that any damages to the 'lllat action cleared tbe way for the chorus activities. Rinker Corporation to build 8 sbopplng As for starting and ending times, Kin-roadway itself are covered in a standard ceoter on the site. The company's plans caid projects a schedule similar to that bond and would be repaired before the had earlier been balked when the county used at San CJemente High School last building was occupied. planning commission refused to rezone year while Dana Hills pupils waited for Councilmen concurred with t h e the area. their campus to be completed. · Lawyers for the county, the coalition, One group of students would attend developer and city staff , v 0 ting the Abiding Savior Lutheraa Cburch and from 7:30 a.m. to 12 :25 p.m.; the Other unanimously to "receive and file" the From Pagel DON NIXON. •• • ' • .· tht Nixon re-election campaign Ja!lt year. James W. Ray hill, executive assistant United Slat., attorney, told the Judge that the government had information Vesco intended to renounce his U.S. citizenship and settle in Costa Rica. i Vesco has been sought by the grand jury which is looking into whether hJJ campaign donation was an attempt to in- fluence an investigation that resulted in a civil suit against ,him by the Securities and Exchange Com.mission. ·-Thal .auU..--whlcb i' being tried here now, ctfarges that Vesco aoo 41 others .siphoned off at least $224 million from dqme.stic and foreign. mutua) .funds ca& · trolled by Investors o.er..u ~ --,... Lid. of Switzerland. . , In a related matter, Vesco's: wife : Patricia was subpoenaed to appear before the grand jury on Monday. Vesco, 37 has been residing in Nusau, the Bahamas. An assistant U.S. attorney claims he was thrown off Vesco's pro- perty on Nasuau April 15 whileJ at- tempting to serve him with a subpoena. Vesco's lawyer, Edward Bennett \\'illlams, told the court during a 31).. minute hearing before the arrest warrant was issued that the government bas refused to grant his client immunity. . Williams also said of bis client, "I havo , strong reason to believe be will be in- dicted." The crand jury .has questiQned lonner Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, wbo headed ' the Committee to Re.elect the Pr...tdettl for • a time, And former Commerce SeU'etaiy ~aurice H. Stam, Nlxoo'1 chief polltf~ fund raiser during the campaign. !>ri Wednesday, the Justice Department acCused the Nixon campaign of failing to report $200,000 of Vesco 's cootribuUoo. A conviction on the charge carries a $3,000 line. Government papers say the Con- tribution, which was lo cash, was receiv· ed by the campaign's finance committee on April 10, 1912, three days alter the campaign contribution disclosure law took effect. On Jan. 31, the Nixon campaign com- mJttee .returned the entire $250,000 coo- tr!bution to Vesco. the Good Shepherd Lutheran Home of the from 12:30 to 5:25 p.m. letter of protest. Weat have been ordered to appear before 1-----------------'---------------------- Judge Robert P. Kneeland May 23 !or a pretrial ·hearing, Coalition lawyers allege that the supervisors' decision to rezone the eight- .acre area from residentlal to commercial use violateQ state law. And they further claimed that state laws cle~ly point (JUt that a county board can amend a general plan only if the planning mmmlssion goes along with the recommendation. RinKer Corporation president Harry Rinker saw the supervisors' decision March 21 a.s vindication of his argument that the planners had unfairly denied him permission to build on the eight-acre site. Rinker's first a p p e a I to the supervisors in January was rejected because his plans indicated the building or tw.o servJce Stations within the development. He promised to eliminate the service stations and his revised plans were ac- cepted by the supervisors after again being rejected by tbe planning com· mission. Drag Queens Vie In 'Miss Gay America' Fete NASHVILLE, TeM. (UPI) -More than 40 young, meo vying for. tl!e UUe of Miss Gay' America arrive .ta~ \_N.s musi c city next week for a two-day pageant ln which they will be judged on poise, talent, makeup and other facton. The female lmper90nators, ranging tn age !tom II to 25 and winnen ol preliminary cootesta In 31 otates. Wiii ap- pear In evening gowns arid . opoitawear during the lMICOltd annual • Mlaa Gay America pqunt at a local · nl1hl club May lt>-12. P11eant chairman Jerry, Pta.k lald the iaffair: his ucrown by le1p1; and bounds" and 'that cootestants this year are com· ltCUnc (Or more than $8,!itlo In cub and prlztt: • • . ne man chostn Mlsa Ol)I Alllel1ca Will Neel•• a 1973 car and '1,00l In calh, Peak said. · • "Next year we will add thi'ee oollO(e schi>larahlps. lo the lilt ol ~ -like In the Miss America conteat, • Peok aald. Chairs By Woodmark Originals ~- 'ii;, ' ~; ! ' l . ~ • • THE FINEST iN QUALITY AT ACCEPTABLE PRICES. WE Al!E ANXIOUS TO .SERVE YOU AND SHOW YOU THIS FINE COLLECTION OF CHAIRS ON DISl'LA Y NOW AT TED von HEMER:T. STOP IN TODAY! DREXE'-HERITA61D-HENREDON-W000MARK-KARASYAN • INTERIORS WWDAYI I SATURDAn t:OO le ,,)o l'IJllAJ ''T1L t:OO • ' NEWPORT BEACH e ln7 W!:STCLIFf DI.. MZ·20lt 101"11 SIHM!lty 12.11lOl . LAGUNA BEACH e 145 NORTI-4 COAST HWY f0,.11 S11Ml1y 12-S:lOI 4,4 .. 111 TORRANCE e 2JMf HAW1HOlNE ILVO. )7t-IZ7' • -f -• f I 1- j I I t- i %0 DAILY PILOT SC F"rtday, May 4, 1~73 California Loans Mortgage Rates HeadToward8% LOS ANGELES (AP ) - Home mortgage rates In Callfomht are movlng into the 8 percent range in a steady rise that has tieen under way ·for two months. Some major lenders have gone to 8 percent oa coo- venl!onal loons for single famlly houses in recent days while others are holding at 71'< percent. The rate has moved up from 7 percent in quarter pt a percentage point steps. DEMAND FOR loans and an Inadequate supply of lending flmds are said to be the causes. The residential market is booming and the flow of 'Savings into banks and savings ard loan associations bas, · slowed . • "Money Is tighter and the savings inflow is lo•er," a savings and loan executive said Thursday •in discussing the factors involved in pro- pelling intfrest c h a r g e s upward. 'Independent Gas Supply Requested ' A one percentage point In- crease In the mcirtgage in· terest rate makes a home buyer dig considerably deeper into his pocket. For example, the interest charge on a $24 ,000 loan on a $30,000 houoe would rue from $159 monthly to $176. There have been two other lighl money periods which af.., fected home mortgage interest rates in recent years. The firs_t began in 1966 and mortgage rates moved up in 1967 and part of 1968 and then subsided. Tlghl money tttumed In 1969 and: 1970 and mortgage rates stayed up into 1971- THE CONVENTIONAL loan rate prior to 1966 was 5~~ per- cent. It hasn't been lower than 6.9 percent since the 1967-68 peak. In 196!).70, Interest on home Joans reached a record 9 If.a percent in California, where there is no limit on such in- terest rates as in some states. lnterst rates have risen throughout the country hut the cost of borrowing money varies from section to section. HOME SAVINGS and Loan Association, the biggest in- stitution of its kind i n California, said the bulk of its conventional loans is being made at an interest rate of 8 percent. WASHINGTON (UPI) -A group of senators asked Presi- dent NixQn today to force gasoline refineries to· supply ... · all their old customers "iest a gas shortage -put 40,000 in- ~ ~.t.-d.atioos out of -business tO the detriment of 'competition. The Colwell Co., Lo s Angeles mortgage b a n k e r , said ils rate for conventional loans, and a 2 pe rcent down payment, was 71h to 8 percent "and going_YR·'.'.$j!h a..jP ~ _ cent down payment £he-rate ts 8 to 814 percent and with a 5 percent down payment it is near 8Y.i: percent. ·' Under an amendment to the Economic Stabilization Act - opposed by the Administration and the oil industry but signed into law by Nixon Monday night -the President .has power to require m a j o r refiners to allocate gasoline, crude oil and petroleum prod- ucts among all their former cuslomers. SEN. PIHLIP A. Hart (J>. Mich.), chairman of the Senate ant i -trust sub- committee, said independent stations, which sell about a fifth of all gasoline, are being · forced out of business every ; day by the shortage of gaso~. Once closed, they rarely can reopen, Hart said. He sought co-signers among hls colleagues for a letter which is to go to Nixon Mon- day. So far, 14 have signed it. SEN. FRANK E. Moss (J>. Utah), chairman of the Senate consumer subcommittee, in- troduced ~ bill Thursday to make it illegal for refiners to refuse to sell to independent retailers or jobbers or to raise prices for them but not for their own stations. According to his staff, Sen . Edward M. Kennedy (J>. Mass.): planned a simi~ bill plus a measure requiring refiners seeking i m p o r t licenses to maintain reasonable supplies and prices for independents. IMMEDIATE * * * 3 Banks Up Prime Rate To 7% NEW YORK (UPI) -First NaUonal City Bank a n d Chemical Bank today an- nounced a ¥• point boost in the prime lending rate to 7 per- cent, effective Monday. They were joined by the Bank or California. The previous rate at the banks was 6¥. percent. This Js the rate accorded a bank's top corpora te customers. The move by two of the na- tion's major banks had been expected since C i t i b a n k previously expressed the in- tention to make the transition to its base rate formula in a manner responsive to guidelines laid down by the Committee on Interest and Dividends. On Thur.day, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said it woul(i increase its dis- count rate to 5.75 percent, from 5.5 percent, effective to- day. This was the second in- crease in the discount rate in three months. MAY SPECIALS Reg. Haircut •••••••• , , 2.50 w/Sh•mpoo , , , • , .••• l .50 Style Cut •••••••• , ••••• l .50 w/Shampoo ••••••• , . 4.50 H•ii ~tvt. •• , •••••• $5.00 up R•1or c:uf. JAKI FUSON'$ PARK LIDO IARllR $HOP ll't AppolnflMlll 548-1346 lSI ~pll•I RO., 1'1•--' I Mdl I• ttlt Plrtl LIOO 11111. DELIVERY PANTERA by deTomaso • } . lm1>0rlcd for Uncoln·MCl"(:ury. Italian co&chwork created by the brilliant Ghia Studios or Turtn • • Ford designed the 3.51 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four wheel in· dependent suspension and mld·shlp engine placemenL Five speed gear box, fully synchronl2ed •.• "Pantera .•• ltsllan for Panther , .• • World's Tallest- Jn, Anaheim Olson Laboratories Inc. has opened a new headquarters and vehicle emission . test facility in Anaheim, according to R. L. Gibney, company president. Olson, a subsidiary o f Northrop Corporation, i s responsible (or Northrop's ac- tivities in the environmental sciences fields. The company Connerly shared facilities with Northrop's;Electro-Ml:ohanical Division, also in Anaheim. Actor's Ki1i Sell Home . ' ' • • • • { ! \ L JfJ. BO,d '~ ·Cqckroach ·Uses -~Legs. to Smell Whit poosible evenla In your Ille are 1pl to &bake you up -? Name JO. Thal'• whal the polbters said to a -ling ol oeasooed clllzem. Tbelt ropllet, lndl~r.d the -occurrence ol all WU generalJy..nprded to be the cla&lb o/ I spollle. Dl"°"" eome In secoad. Marl~ l!)p&· ratlan, third. ' Am now advised thal DObobdy, but nobody has seen a feral Camel In the . Arizoaa Deaert aince the !um ol the century, cootrary to the report of a \Yuma customer. 'lbe camel Topoy, last oumvor ol the u.s. Army camel Corps, reportodly died In the Griffith Park Zoo In Los Angeles on April rt, 1934. When a homing ~ lands on a ship al aea, II usually geta so bope- flli ., leslly confused il.canl poulbly find Ila way home, not unlil ll's taken to a port It recognlzes, therefrom to set oU again. · THE llAl!D FACTS -Al for the cockroach'• ..... of smell, it's in its legs .•• Were you aware thl! country's shoreline was shrinking Inward by hall an lnob every 50 yeara? . . . A third of all divorce sulfa filed nationwide are dropped befcre the court belirlngs ••• A feline fancier contends yw wgbt to fee4 that cat of yours,a liltie celery now and then for the sake of Ila health , , o,· Murder Is regarded as a lesser slJI' than lulclde In the ·booli of Koran. Nobody bas l!Ver proved that a clean man Is healthier thao a dirty man. That ls, the r~able claim .of a faoulty meniber wllli the University ol -Medical School A JaWDlan wbo baa ·made a 1 t u d y of pickpOckela worldwide says the thieves of different countries differ in tbelr techniques. Tbe Arsb prefers to razor slit the back pockets of tourlsta in bars. The Filipino customarily bolda a large bouquet ovet hi.I bead 8S he manipulates Walle~ out ·of hip pockets. The Japanese sprays acid that disin- tegrates trouser cloth. Addrcu mall· io L. M. Boyd, P. o. Box 1875, Neu;. port Beac'h, CoJif. 92660. • · · ox COPYING AND 4" -. XER ... DUPUCATING .. NO , SIZES UP TO ~''J136" "ll/!;,. VOLUME DISC~Ul(f. PICKUP l DELIVIRY•l""~- OUBLEQUICK -Im. Aw. I!<--D . ' 111J N ••• 11~!·::11~? A11• awin Now-to celebrate Preview Opening of Unit 111 ••• VIiia Rotlro- our sporkllng new additional floor plan ••• 3 bedrooms (or 2 1nd den), 2~baths. -. - S-2•ta A ... Cellege --.Mfilonty Vendor Fair S~h@duled. . , D1llr Pli.t Sltff ,..... BANK PRESIDENT Don1ld B, W11tor Pacific Bank QpensBeach City Branch Pacific City BaJ!k of Hun-- tington Beach celebrated its grand opening Thursday, rib- bon cutting ceremony at its A ''Minority Vendor Fair" will be Jtaced at Santa Ana ~· -eel by the Oral!ie O>uoty Purchasing llepartmenl and the college'• Bwioess and Ji'iMncial Alfaira Deportment. DATE FOR THE event Is May 18 at 2 p.m. at the students cafeteria, 17th and Bri3to1.streeta. Purchasing agents from school districts, and from sPectaJ districts Such as water and sanitation have been II> Vlted to man information sta- tion.. so that minority sellers . · 1nrelcom's Transfer Re Ported temporary quarters at Golden Intelcom Jodustries ha s West and Edinger. completed its previoosly an- tit nles nounced purchase of tbe Rad Present at e ceremo Tech Division of Gulf Energy were Hwitiogton Beach Vice & Environmental S~stems, Mayor, Henry Duke; bank San Diego, lrom Gull Oil Corp. Presiden~ Donald B. Walter; Total value ol the transac· Jerome Bame, HWltington tim was $5 million. Beach Chamber of C:Ommerce Inte1com .also announced it · presi~t, Chamber ~anager is .mo\tini its corporate head .. Ralph Kiser, Miss Hwitingtori quarter's to 8an Diego from Be~cb, Vic!tie Tallman and Newport Beach. C8lifomia State B a n k i n g . The acqui$ition Of Rad Tech Depar·tment Deputy will more than triple SUperUltendent, Jack Taufer. -JJ:ltelcoln's annual ~t~ of LOcally owned·and"operatid, , sales·lrom about $3 rrull!on to Pacific City Bank will be open aboUt $10 ~oo. and ".ex· eek As · t' peeled to mcrease eanungs six days a w . sis mg "substantiall " "d Robert Walter in the bank's opera-y, sa~ lion! are Jerry Johnson, vice E. Berry, president of president and Joan manager, Intelcom. aild Morris Lile, vice-president and cashier. Smith, Inc. Acquisition August A. Franck, president of Genstar Limited a n d Jpchard B. Smith. president of Ricbafd B. Smith, Inc., an- nourioed th.at tht! acquisition of Smith's Tustin-based develOp- ment firin "has been fittallzed with the transfer of all "wtstanding stock to Genstar Limited whose headquarters are in Montreal , Canada. Retirement Talk . Slared Charlene Vance, account ex- ecutive of the Laguna Beach branch office of Mitchwn, Jones & Templetoo will speak on the •·Fundamentals in Planning a Sound Retirement Program" at her ofiices Tues- day at 7:00 p.m. Reservations are available by calling Melva McMurray at 494-9781. . 'Tbe office is located at 295 Forest Ave. e :j;)alm £'prings Jlt\\ls No shared walls in living areas at Canyon Sands Enjoy single-family Privacy Doh Begins New Office Constructioq Is under way on Dob Coi'p's. 12.2 mtllion maoofaduring and distribu- tion facility located within the Irvine O>mplex at Red Hill and Carnegie Avenues in Santa Ana. The Dob Corp. ts a division of Fairmont Foods Company of Omaha, Nebraska, and is a manufac- turer of lrozen foods. Designed by R o b e r t Clements and Associates, Los Angeles architects, \be facility will involve the conSlruction ol. three buildings on a 14-aae $ite. Plans call for the con- struction ol a ooe-story 6, 400 square foot office ·building featuring a bronze solar glass exterior and canopy overhangs. II You've seen Amtac Canyan Sands VIiia before, come back for another IOok. More selection: Enjoy tennis, swimming, putting, park surroundings, freedom from exterior maintenance. 3 bedrooms, 2% baths or 2 bedrooms, 2 baths; 4 completely different floor plans, each in Yo Ur choice of 2 ditferentexterlora. You may see plan of new Villa Retire now-furnished model soon. Come back to Canyon Sanda. 3 bedrooms, 2~bllhs. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $38,500 to '41,900. • •tennis courts right on Canyon Sands ground&. Your private club. No lnlUatlon fM, no dutt. woocM>u.,1n1 n,..._ · 11 tt. f\lgh ceiling.Noone can ... anto )'Our private. wallld patio. ~ Elegant earty and contemPol"I eauromla 1 .. roryv111aa have~,._, colorful tile roof - NearooH oourat1, r=::~~~~~~~=~~==~~~~~~~~~~ii~ 1hoppfng, evtl)1hlng. 1 Eadtfng nhf ..... ., concept. Wldo · distances betwffn · !lvlng ar111. -·-lll1111t1uon. ~ .rtllt'• ~ •pftpendlllf, All JIOh1t ~. Dloti: Flflfltttfto IM. rAmrac CAnyon SA1l~S "'ms", . , Next to Gene AuJrY Hotel. • 4300 E. Palm canyon Or,, Palm Springs. (714) 328-2185 , ' AmtlC Communtt .... ·lnc,. home-bulldlng erm of Atnfto. Inc.,• 750 million Hawaii-baled dlveratfled aeMco company (NYSE> ...:.---------~ ------------------:-i I CANYON MllDS, Dopl. , j "'°° E. Palm Cln)'on Ot,, P1lm Springe., CA ttm. I Pleau aend me brochure 1nd lnlonnaUon. 1 I I . I -I Ad- i Cl , • Frid•i. MJ)' 4, 1973 • ., \ - • • • DAILY l'ILOT J9 , MUTUAL FUNOS if ii@ ... Friday's Closing Pri~mplete New York Stock ~change List Gains Third Day Highlight Market NEW YORK ( AP) -S!Otk market prices were . .strongly hlg~e~ today, and ·some analySts said with . guar<fed optiJmsm that 1! might mean the marlret bottomed out and is In for a strong rally, at least for the near term. The analysts noted that the market bad been higher Wednesday and Thursday 11$ well as today, desplte some economic news that in the past would have sent the stock prices spiraling downward for days. .,_, ,_ • SC • Done by Dunn Pat Dwm gets~­Throw her )'OW' and see bow she bandies It her "At Your Service" "°" WM, DOW appeari!lll fl!lf1l1 Sunday, Wodneoday aM Ji'Do day in The DAILY PILOt ' • • • , • D DAa.V 0 !'1LOT Flldlf, M'7 •. 1'173 ' • • • ' • Weekead Cale11dv • , · · ~o~ Yachters Stay Home Canoe· ·Paddler Deterlpin.ed t ! • I SALT 0 LAu CITY (UPJ) -N;,lluU Tll£ ~ged !:f ~~Zn': ..:: to~..,.-::,= Mn. murtey H1ycock. to, I waJt for tbe 08;00t, .. WU c lhenl' Ark."· .. 1.lke ptty ~ ..... .,,. Jt -· Im left for the Eu! to hive. beea ceadr by pif4-''Ille OioJI--Oiiinf 'wamed lJ 'made of fiber glaao l!ld Moa,I of tbe _' Y.I c b ti a g Coul -wbre abe plans to April, oor ll>t.Jettul trom tho 'her that tho ....-n·v.yage C.a plialie loam · and. "111 be fraternlty 'llill be In E-. • ~ Spring Series 4, PMA, ODMH, NEWPORT ocEAN . SA11r SUnday . ING ASOOCIATION -26th Saa llltp annual Newport "' Ensenada SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB race, 'lburaday Fri<ID', Si • U.unn llerleo, Cal.29, suft. . piddle ber 11-fool canoe to COul Guard · asking· her" to precfplllta "bandrodl o I pow.ered by ea11 and sails.\ this weekend,· either a 5 _ Europe dMplta warnings ln>m recooslder coul~ her manhunt hour8 at sea." AFTER A shakedoWn parUclpanb In the big Cinco -ll>e-eo,al Guard. from undertaking .her voyage -_,,..on.the Groat Salt•-•·, de. Ma -•---' t "·-Mrs. H1ycock aaid ahe loOk ....,.. the Allantl<. "W.E URGE ·you Io " -~ yo_~c or o~• her C&QC>e on a sbakedoWn Her only wqrry is that peo-reconsider. You are un-Mrs. Haycock said the canoe of the race. cruise on the Great Salt Lake pie will "get so wrapped up in qualified. YOUI vessel ls ''performed beautifully" and Small boat action on the dayi.o. Allgel&Loag Beach day; Hussong Series, C&l-25, LrrrLE SHIPS FLEET _ Sunday; Blpe Star. Seriea, Stay At H~·R egatta, .Stal', Sunday ; lnvltaUonal Pllllf. ·Saturday""' Suhaay. Regatl!', 5.s and f..n;ie1er,' SUn· HUNTINGTON. HARBOUR day· Roond ~~:. '10 SUn- YACllT CLUB lido-14'Touina' ' " · · "!1'f"' " and tt was "in excelJent the . , .. '.!venture aspect of' the unsuitable for aueh an ~un-she expects tp cros~ the Athur· .BQAJJNG . _· J~I ~ v.rill be lfunfl~ori shlpo.'' , . trip that they forget the real dertaking." the Coa~t;GUS!'d .fie In apP'1'1ima\ilY 27 days. · .. lladlollt 'Yacht Club's.Li~ .. lt She ind Bob Oeedy, 3' 'i'1 l'fason f:>r it." Mrs. Haycock wrote to Mrs. Haycock. 1 • ¥ter· reJC~ J.fs~ "'1"· ''-...;. ____ .• __ ._._ .. ;,1· ;,·TOU:rnBmeot ·:or · Ct),a.mpions auto mecbanlc froo1 Mantt 1 said. She it sailing her canoe The survival train Lp g Haycock· wants ~ see . the . SatW'day and ~day.· , . Utah: · are' ·motoring 0 acr.-ls the ocean to r~ise teacher, ho w e v e r , w_as "Mofmon Temple there· and in · Heie lS the S o u t h e r. n W~ N.C., ~ ~ money for ·senior citizen relentless. She sakt she won't $witzerla'nd. ahd ·"to test my borne Jn time to cUmp t.J1. ·~C&llfoniia Yachting As.socla: they wlll leave for Lisbon , cenlets iii rural Utah. knoW whe,her· her craft ls teei in the 'AIJ)s." Rainier in June with her two tiai calendar for th Is . day . ment Of Cbfmplons, ·Saturday sOIITHWESrERN . YACHT and~y. · . Portugal. The .entor CuiZen servi~s unsuitable until she tries It. 1ben she '!ants to · come sons, 8ged 15 and,.13. . .ii~. " .' So"'8 Moolco Bay ·CLUB -St!rinc Trophy M.AL@U VACI!'.!' CLUB -Seriea, 410, ~ .. Blaclctin , Passage . . Rematch? . . \ A rematch of the Transpac yacht race rivalry between Ken DeMeuse's 7.2 -foot Blackfin and Mark JohnSon's 73-foot Windward Passage loomed this w-rek when it wais reported that Blackfln has already entered the race. and Wbxtward Passage is expecetd to get bef entry fee on the line before the May 25 deadline. More than 50 entries are already &igned for the 2,22> mile classic and the limit of 75 is expected to · be reached before the deadline, according to Charles Smith, r a c e chainnan for the sponsoring Transpacific Yacht Club. The race will start at· 1 p.m. · July 4 Croin off Po.iot Fermjn near the Lo!J Angeles HaJ'.bor entrance. In the 1969 race Windward Passage beat Blackln aCross . the Diamond Head finish line by an hour, but her first to flntsh w\th a new record was nuUUled by a starttng line penalty. In the 1971 race Windward Passage was again first to finish by such a large margin that she saved her time on the remainder of the fleet to cap- ture overall and Class A han· dicap honors. She also set a new elapsed time of nine days, nine"'bours, six minutes and 48 seconds. Four more Newport based boat! have entered the race since the last tally. They are Robert Beauchamp's Colum- bia...S7 Dorothy 0, Newport llart>or Yacht Club; Bob Grant's 61 -foot sloop Robon. NHYC; Al Cassel's 50-foot sloop Warrior, Bahia Corin- thian Yacht Club. and To m Grettenberg's Sirocco, Balboa Yacht Club. -Boat Mark Attempt Postponed Problems with his ~foot jet boat has caused John Beau- doin or Paramount to t>05tpone an assault on the world speed mark of 285.213 miles an hour until this fall . Beaudoin had previously an- nounced that he would try for the world record later this month on Lake Havasu but has postponed the run until September or October. "The boat is taking on water and we are still having a problem with the hydraulic steering," he said. The 58-year-old driver, who ~ to hit an average of bet- ter than 300 miles an hour in two runs -one each way as required by the American Power Boat Association - said be couldn't chance the high speed without a perfed boat. orann . 7 ' ·m ·,, W;.--~1 Cout•I Weather Nfgftt •nd morning 1-cloud• wlltl lt9JY .,,.,.,_ S\Hlstllnt. Wl1161 llgllt •IMI YMi~· tanl!llll b9eornlng _, to northWtttl 10 to 11 k1"10l1. COHt.i t.mw•tvrn 52 lo 67. lnltnd '"'""•Turn J3 to 71. W1t.r l1m~• f\H'WJt. S•n, Moo•, Tldes ... IDAY, Ml}' 4 • $1111 """ 6:01 1.m. H• 7:ll p.m. ~ lti.t 7:11 a.m. kh 10:17 p.m. Stcond llklfl ....•.... lD:JO p.m. 6.l s.cor.t kM .......... •:Jl p.m. 1.1 SATVltOt\Y, May I Fl"1 Motl ••.•••••••••.• 2:15 a.m. 2.6 First low ............ 6:1l•.m. ·1.• StcOlld 11191'1 , •.••• , ... ll:)fp,ni. 6.0 S«ONE tow ........... 5:01 p.m. ti IUNOAY, "'-f6 Flnt fl!flll . . . . . . . . . . t :01 P.ITI. l.5 ,lrtf -., .............. 7:111.m .• 1.1 $fcON'l'llllltt ........... ; 12:111.m. S.S Slc9M low ...... ' ...•• 6:23 p.m. :u For Sports 'Tbe DAILY Plipl' Is the ......,... !Gr .oporla along the Ol'qe,eo..t ... complete llllloUel m local home and •hJ-lllff<o....age, 1110n1 .-.. -on Onuice Coat IPOria Ihm 11111 .._. I o o a If J dllldbuted ni!wlplper. ' •;. MIRROR, MIRROR OR TIE"llLL, . .. . no HIS THE LOWEST PRICE ·or ·LL • . • ' . I . . MIRRORS BY HAMILTON . . 8 .. 8 .. ··. =i:..~.;.: ~ I lolg9I. Jlam!lt-BQfClle . S19rll!>iJ : llil"'9 ,. Jlbion, ....;1M.....,..haaalotol clan. Pldto : lllnor, the ·YOUR real· .JU-dme · -. And. look al thla tbolce of alylea. . CHOICE / / ' . BEVELED MIRROR ROMANO VAR DYKE MORICO Got the y..,o11cm BenL •uper clear mad OawlH"' 1/2" beftlod Cllld pon.hod odgn. 'p......i wood back lor lllrength. 40"x30". 1 alway• tbougb.t that """' a clMoM. but noth- IDg cheesy about lhl•. Plat. glau Cllld caned frame ~ looks rich. 33 2X38i/i Mlcfua . Caroed otyle ooal, il!da• Gold Finish with hcmd applied tlable cmllqu• toalng. Gold Finish ' KWIKCOVER sm.r PIPER 2&c Yi>. U there la a aMlf In L.A. or Orange COWlly that ham'! been COftNCi with thla auaay colorlul Mll.,licldDg atull, we wmit to bear from lL MlldiOR TILE CLEA1l 47a GOLD VEIN SMOKED 57a EA. 67a EA. WOVEN CAFE , CURTAINS 48"x24" IO"x30" 1.99 2.89 80"x31" 3.88 !i!IVJILMCE. W2" •.• l Tho nlc9 colors with th• many lnter- wea>IJ>q. You could J>Ut a buDc:h up and make a little neighborhood. cale. , $'6 WALLPAPER ..... "<I>-· . . ~"1 ' 'l 10 TQ 50% orr M.cma theae· same pal .. rna can be IOWld In the high dau joint• for that Diuch more •. You gotta make the compmhon or juat trual ua. (dec:ialon•. dodalom). SP.IKISR WALL U-ntt 1.9aa A completely complete malterplece. Strong enough ID NGlly load thoae old Captain M<ttftl comlc1 boob on (or perhaps. a little DrelMr or Plato). RUELL SuPta GLIDE TRAVERSE RODS 299 From 2(" to 42", th"f expand. .that'• Dice Isn't It. (People In PeDDSJl'nlnla talk that war.) With mountlna· blGck-. eta. 9CNWI. and corU. SPIR'tOS DECORAT9ft . WILL~ ,.,, Spcmdnl •tyle OTGl . •hai>e. Dlctoly detailed. Mldaa gold ·flnlSh with Sable. . Brown cmtlque toalJMI. · 26 1/2 x 31 1/2. with doable aeta . ol i._., to hang either way. L!lk• tl>l lamoua. Golhlc Arch (or la that Ibo Mocirtah mch. wouldn't WGlll ID ala.rt aomethbia). llldaa gold . llnlah wit!. Sable ·MADRID fi:Ct:::!m atjlo (the ·Mod la pretty cloep. come lei think ol It). · HCllld ruhbod blade ant!que toning. 16"x56". B.rowu toning. 16"x56". CLASSIC BIUK 497 6 SQ.FT. The way they hClff created the real look of _-.,. brick la IOIMthlng. And atl11 a lot 1eaa 1D0111f In the IOllll or abort run. ram~J)ECORATOR ··WIRDOW BEADS I"' 50 FT. Cut tho llrlng lo the right length to iDab an lntereatlna window curtain. Mix or match colon lor more charm. ntWELL CURTAii RODS 33° The IUper aliden that attU make great . leaclnG lolls for · the klcla. Eno! Flfllll 1-...ci h9'r to 1....,. with lhl1· kind. JWbow. .. SPIRIUS iENWILL ™ &••. CLASSIC STOIE : .. &~'· '· 4 sQ.FT. A clMib of colon ol -11 -W!Jrtng -· Ton'd ~ a · --track to canr , the ·real a1a11 and the c1octor .io · c:beck ""' ont alter '°" cllcl tho llltlDg. Thia la better. : WIDOW Sllll)£8 • ~97 ' 3•x1· 4'xl' 8.17 &'xi' 11;;97 . ..,... 13,37 ID whlte .. er.oca-IO'xl' . IL77. · do. and-· . . 'l:he lilt•rwecmng of the contm1tlna and alatclilng colon ...... theM looli l'"'lly· .. KORDOVIK . DEC0a&TOR: SBJU>ES , J ·97 38" 1z1 IOIDI sfancJ colon. And Why tohollld a lust be plain wheil It could be pcirt tho eolor lch ...... ~111:1z ·ECOIOM'l BOOJC.ISE 699 . " . Put notff on It like, '1.onnr._ tie your aboeo," or "Sua~j,f.:: the milt awaj:• or dOD'I put cm Oil It and malt• the family .......... • .. . ' . . 'J,i.-.t111ao .,._.. -~ =-_,,. ..... ~ _,..,.._ ..... (Biiie fl!!!. ·-,.., . re .lleatdi. .?'+B.; lilc ·~ ', . . . • ' ' ' • 7 ...... -1 , . • • I Lag.11i1a Beaeh Teday's .Fl•a l ' N.Y. Stoeks EDITI O N • . 124 4 -SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAU.~IA FRIDAY, MAY '4, 19n • TEN CENTS •. . -• l .B.,al#erina Conaes Honie to Play Lagu~i By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL Of ... DeUy Pu.t lt9H Mary Hanf was just a wisp of a girl in 1960 when she went for her first ballet lesson at Lila 1.all's studio in Laguna Beach. once just another young face at the studio, Miss Hanf today is a member of the ballet co•ny of Basel, Switzerland. Over the ~past 13 years, she has performed throughoot the United States, Canada, Fra.1ce, POf\ugal and -Ireland. • The tour ol Ireland was a high Point for Miss Hanf who made It appearances performing Bl~k Sivan !'as de Deux from the third act of "Swan Lake." Mias Hanf will repeat the Pis de Dew: at 8:30 Jl.m. Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sun- day at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse as a special guest of the LagWJa Beach Civic Ballet Company. "Ballet has been my whole life, something I'm totally involved in. It's not a bobby I do for exercise," said Miss Hanf. "It's fantastic being able to affect so nlany people at once ... to give them something they can take away with them . "But I feel a responsibility to those who have paid money for a perfunnance. When I pay for something, I know I want n1y money's worth,·~ she added. Yet what the audience sees on stage reflects only a small amount of the work ~Iary Hinf must go through every day • A typical day-during the II-month long performance .season begins in the mom- htt; with one and a half hours of practice, followed with lunch, then an afternoon of rehearaals which often last until 7 p.m. "There ls .10 faking it. Dance requires a great deal ol thoogbt. You have to be aware of eveey movement or your anns, legs, even your fingers," .Miss Hanf ex- pl&ins. Because'tbe art Is so exacting, dancers (See BAU.AlllNA, Pip Z) \. Jury Indicts Segretti In Sabotage of Muskie Fraud · Suit •• • -.Nixon's Nephew · Hired t:'y Vesco Bandit Sorry, -· Reiums. Looi-- A rePentant bandit who wore a U.S. Postal Service uniform in the $131 anned robbery of a Corona del Mar corset shop 10 days ago ha! remorsefully mailed the money back, Special Delivery. The gunman who relieved four persons of their cash at the Siibouetto Shop, 2737 E. Coast Highway, enclosed an anonymous oote of explanation. Uonald Nh:on, :z&.year-old son of F. Dmald Nixon of Newport Beach and n<pqow ol the President, has been in the employment of a New Jersey fmancier cooneded with a !eCUl'iUea and exchange S.ehool Plan For Summer ' Adds Funds There's an old financial axiom that st.ates you have to spend money to make money. Trustees of the Laguna Beach Boan! of EdueaUon soon may be asked to put It in- to pracUce. ·In essence, the school boanl could spend a few tbousand dollars oo a sum- mer school program which could generate up to $125,000 in new money di.iring the upcoming fiscal year. The idea is rooted to Senate Bill 90, the new school finance measure which becomes operative July l, Dr. Charles Hess, assistant superintendent f o r business told ·trustees this Yt'..eek SB 90 guarantees school dislricts an amount of money per "average daily at· tendance." The total ADA of the school district is roughly equivalent to the number of students. But there are ways of increasing ADA. One is summer school. Hess told the board that 600 students (See SPENDING, Pqe Z) commis_sion "complaint, it was reported today. The New York Times said young Nixon was hired by Robert L. Vesco in July, 1971, one month· after.the SEC began in· •eslii* the New1eney, financiet. An associate Of Vesco was quoted by the Times u sayiDg there as "no ques- tiOll" that llooJlcl Nixon was hired becalise be could somehow help vp.c.·s plans in the fUture. Yowig Nixon became the personal aide to Vesco and lived"with- (See DON NIXON, Page Z) He said he went to church the following SUnday and became con-- science-stricken over having broken both the Eiglltb Commalldmelll of the Old 'I' • ., and ~,at! of the Can!' enal OiclO.. .. "Lord .•. I don't remember any other case ·like It," Neirport Beach DetecUve Sam Amburt•Y aald to- day. HJ wish more of these guys would go to church." Ma1nie Wouldn!'t Husband Fil.es Divorce SuiP. By TOM BARLEY Of tM DMty PIW It.., LaWyers for actress Mamie Van Doren and ber third husband tangled in a Santa Ana courtroom today over the shapely blonGe's demand for a two-month delay in the Orange County divorce action fl.led by·her spouse of just 37 days. Superior Court Judge Willi am C. Speirs heard arguments from both sides and promptly sent the fi le down to Presiding Judge Bruce St1rnner of Laguna Beach for his decision on the motion for a delay until J\Ule. That motion will be heard later today. ~~year-old.actress was not present to bear her lawyer explain that a stage conmtitment in St. Paul, Minn. made it impossible for her to be in Orange eoun. ty for the oourt hearing. Lawyers for wealthy business ex· eartive Ross McClintoct; 51, of Orange, arguod that the. divon:e~action med by him required ooly 10 minutes of testimony and should be disposed of to- day. His lawyers contend that tbe maniage contracted in Las Vegas last Dec. 1 disintegrated on the wedding night when Miss Van Doren refused to go to bed with him and instead spent the night on a couch. Documents filed in support of the divorce petition -Miss Van Doren is listed as Joan L. McClintock -allege that the actress never intended to be part of a true marriage "and married for wealth." · 11 Is alleged tbat her firsl act alter marriage was to demand a $10,000 chincbilla ooat and a $35,000 Rolls Royce lrom McClintock. It is also all':!led that sbe refused to share the c:oople s Orange home with the peUUoner's teenage son, Bo McClintock. -'Published- S --·-·a1 -~ · exu Charges' WASHINGTON (AP) -Donald H. Segretti, a California attorney with reported ties to the White House, bas been indicted in an alleged scheme aimed at sabotaging Democratic Sen. Edmund S: Muskie's presidential campeign in Florida last year. the Justice Depart· u;,\, -.:~nt said s'egrettl, long MAll,THA SAYS ·SHE WAS · 'H.ll.1' CRUC:IFIED'-P• 4 under investigation in -the ).Watergate scandal, was indicted by a federal grand jury in Orlando, Fla. for "publishing and distributing a letter ... which failed to identify those responsible." 11lat referred to a flier said to have been forged on Muskie's stationery which accused two of his leading opPonents, Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey and Henry M. Jackson, ol Se>:Ual miscooduct. The letter reportedly was distributed by the · thousands just prior to the March 14 primary. Segretti could not be reached tmmed~ ately for comment. Ills telepllone answer- ing service in Los Angeles said he discon- tinued using it two months ago. Muskie finished a poor third in the Florida balolting behind Alabama Gov. Wallace and Humphrey. 'Ihe defeat was the first in a series of primary setbacks ttmt led ttle one-time Democratic favor- ite to withdraw from active campaign- ing, even though public opinion polls had shown him to have the best chance of beating President Nixon in the general election. 1be indictment also charged Georg~ A. Hearing of Tampa, Fla. on the same counts. Roger! Milton Benz, 25, of Odessa, Fla., a fonner Nixon campaign worker and one-time president of the Tampa Young Republicans, was ·named as an unidicted oo-<mSPirator. Segrettr and Hearing were named on (See SEGRETl'f, Pqe Z) • . . -1 r111wr --"I'll TELL YOU, IN EUROPE YOU GET AN HONEST REACTION" Miry H1nf Returns to Laguna Beach Where Dance Began for Her s,,eamore 'Plan' ·Planners Get W ariting To . Watch Legal Actions : The Laguna ll<ach Planning Com· mission has been advised by Tully Seymour that the proposed Sycamore Hills development may well land in the courts if the city takes unfavorable ac- tion . Seymour met with oommissioners Wednesday lo caution them. He counseJ· ed the p\anflen to "take extra pains" and sUck strictly lo procedures in the bearinp on the Syaunore Hills sPectfic plan. "II Is obvious that Ibey have laid careful plll\8 to push thil project, if . necess3ry, into the courts," Seymour said. He said he had information "from various sources" that N e w po r t Inve1tment1, Inc ., Sycamore Hi 11 s Laguna Council To Preserve Glenneyre Dip By JACK CHAPPEU. Of flll Dtlly Piltt ltltf developer, wbuld seek legal remedies if unfavorable decisions were rendered by Laguna for the proposed 2,000 unit proj- e<:t. Seymour suggested that all meetings of 1h-e commlulon dealing with Sycamore Hills be tipe recorded and that study sessions on tile project cease in favor of public bearings. "They look at this as round one .•• the first of many hearings," he said. Howard. Miller, vice president of Newport Investments. said today he believed the city oi Laguna bas been "very fair," ID tar. but declined to w what action wi>uld be taken if tbls pro~ were turned down. "Well, we're hoping that nothing gets that far. U It's denied, the owners havt already made up their mind what the nut step would be and I am not at liberty broadcast lt," MUI er said. "We have to do something and we are not at liberty to say what we are goinc iO do. . "We do not wish to get Into any Jaw suits rwith the city of J..a&una BeaCh. that's the furthest thing from our desire," he said. ~ .. ·Traffic Counting Program Started On Park Avenue Opponents to the realignment of Glenn- eyre Street appeared to have won a clear~t victory, and one with unex- pected spoils, as th,e Laguna Beach City Council voted this week to preserve the Blueblnl Canyon dip In the road. He said Miller said he planned to have a tape recorder and secretary to rncn14or the public hearings May 14 and JS when the big project comes before the pl8mtoc commission. • l A coritlouing program. of traffic count- ing and' study is now under way al.ong Park Avenue in resPQJUe to complaipts by residents of noise and speed from heavy traffic using the road. Tbe Laglina Beach City Council · arden!d the study after a petition from 13 nstdents was pn!!1ented to them. 11\e council set consideration of steps te relieve tbe problem to its June. 6 meeting when the study will have been 'completed. One possible solution involved removal -~ oome residential parking spaces. The council a!Jo insructed city staff to talk with residents aboul the loss of spaces in the 800 block of Park. -A temporary stop sign has been in- sinllod easterly Of Slcyline Drive in one attempt to control traffic. 1be petition stated, 11Unnecessary noise cr .. !ed by motor velllcles •.• gun- nlll&.of motors going uphill and downhill dlllurbs us from 7 ·p~. to midnight." "The ~bove nolaes and speeds prevent us .from carrying on normal coo- versaUOlll and from eoJo7lnc radios and televlllon, u well as disturbing. our sliop," the petition Aid. II allo died several accidents, one a fatal, ml """""""' thal 15 mile per hour speed limlt be lmpooed. • 4 Course . o( St.udy Okayed Classes to Upgrade Graduation Requirements The Laguna Beach High Schoof course of stud.Y, Including changes to offer mo,. basic Instruction in English, recelvtd unanimous approval of the Board of EducaUan tl!ll week. , ,, Startfal Dell !all, atudenls will be re' qulltd lo tak• five trim611en! ol English, wttb empllUfs on grammar, punctuation, vocabulary, readina and wrltiilg skills. A trimester ls equtvaltut to 12 weeks of in- stroctlon. To meet upgraded graduation re. qulremonta allo adopted by th< board this week, lhldents will have to take at least four English electives in such varied COW1el as Shakespeare, plays o( George Bemard Shaw, poetry ' of the 1970s or lantasy·and science Octlon. •0 purtng the moat recent 'campaign trail, the llatoment wu put lo me that the high school English department has no depth and slluis oll too _,, IJ this the cue?" asked Trustee Nonnan Browne.' "I think the statement ii ridiculous," ._.ied O!arlel Schlller, chalnnan of the humlnltl.. division. lie ci\cd ex· ' 8.IJlples o~ courses in English literature ~ .Bbakespeare. • 'llespondlrig to a question from William Tlwimas, board president, Scbiller aald most ot the basic instruction will come dlU'ini the first two trimesters in the ninth grade. · Other items included in the 83-page course of study document questioned by trustees included COJJsumer education PL AYBOY 'TURNS ON' SEitRCHE.RS PIDLADELPHIA (AP) • -The raacliine,ry at Philadeiphla's Intern•· tlonol Alrpolt I! gtltl!fg turned on by Pliyboy. · Playboy 'Club "key can!• are opening the . way to careful seardles at airport ieCUrlty checkpoints. The cards have a magnUc tape that sets off metal detec-tors. said lluS9tll E. Miller, a Federal Aviltlon Adminl8tratklft aecurlty official. I and advanced courses in language and mathematics. Trustee Gerald Linke objected to the fact that a required course in con.sumer economics did not cover all aspects of the American economy. "I say we put a real course of economics in be.re," declared Ll.nke. Josh Bright, Associal<lt Student Body .president, told board members most con- cepti' of Ute American econom.lc system are covered In social science classes. The consumer economlca course, be said, treats the concepts in greater depth. "Students are not totally in the dark, but have some knoW1edge of economics and the economic atructu,. of the United States,'' be said. AdvanCed ctassea In foreign languages 11111 m,uiematlcs, have always pret1e11ted problems because of the low number ol l!Udentr'who sign up for them, sakl Dr. Donald Haugh~ blah ecbool principal. In the case of advanced math, Haught said ,oom• 'students have been able to recelve part Ume placemenls at UC Irvine and Saddlebsck Com m u n I I y College. • • In addition, the council ordered staff to )consider an offer by develOper~Mark Gwribiner to put in bicycle and pedestrian trails alongside tbe eaisling road Instead or a third lane to the thoroughfare, as requ.ired under city law. Gumblner, who originally precipitated what turned out to be a six-month nap over the $25,000 road project, shook his head following the meeting and said that despite the council actlon;he still didn't know exactly where his property lines started along Glenneyre. The saga of the dip in Glenneyre began when Al Thea!, director of plibllc works, became aware of the lmpendtng develop- ment oceaitward Of the road, the $4 mlltlon Gumblner Village Bazaar sho~ p~.g complex. . Y .. rs ago, the city council had decided that Glenneyre Strett .,.utd ·have to be four lanes wide from the lnlersectlon at Calliope throogh to Nyul'lioe, and dre'(f It that way on the ldeet system ol stmts. ' Some small pal'Ctll of property were boug~t for right-of-way but nothing r .. lly was done to widen the road. . Placement Of the lour lane road on the stlect system mapa t'eqylltd Cumbiner to widen the road lo Its ultlmate size and put In curbs, gutters Md slde,..ll<s on bis side of the roaJ. Thea! though~ that since the road was (See CANYON DIP, Pqe II " I • Miller. sakl that the !Zl acres tnvo1Yeil (See SYCAMORE, Pqe I) ., •• Oraage C'Allitl' . .. WelitMr· The 'weather service -low •. clouds blocking Git Old Sol cm Sot-~ urday with a chance ol portJaJ ) • clearing In the la)e allemooli. Coal- er tempera1Ul'O$ are upectod. wllll readinga In the &es. Lowt -. J ' INSIDE TOD& 'I' Two st.a// write" -a loot at tht Renaissance ~ ~ faire wh1ch taker ._. .ocr. , May ln Agoura: ... f1'0llt i-. Jl<"pectil)f 0/ Ille fXlf~ ar'Hat a1ld ont from tllo ..... of~• th< •iritor. s.. toclor'• ~"' •. ender. Al VMr &.nkt I L..M. IMfC tt ... t1111 n (aflflnM .. 11 ( ............ c.k• .. c-.. ·--. .......... ,... . PlflMct lNI ,., .. ....,_ ,.,. -=. 14 '' M AMI UMln II ) ........ j =·-' ,. ........... I'! .,. __ ... t; ""-·~ =-. 'ttMMlll .. = . w-.-n --w........ . , LI f DAil Y I'll.OT .;,_ Fre•P ... l CANYONDIP •.. being widened Of> ... slcfo, It would be I good Idea to rlllllp and level Ille whole 1hing wb<r. It awtrVes and dips Into Bluebird Canyoo. But, quite • f ... .-. .. In the .... "Improvement" of the road was rst step in a series which would . the village atmosphert of their ~mwiily. Irate, they got up petitions. ,, Since the ,..Jtgnment requlr.d a ?)&ad trade between tbe city and Gum- _}>iner, they demanded an Enviro~ental "'~mpact Report for the 350-foot proJect. When 1he EIR claimed the project was ,_.ry for vehicle and pedeotrun .ol•l)I. they rebutted succosalUlly !hat J:ontentlon with figures going back to 1965 Showing the area had a low accident "hte. .. •. Gumbiner Ume and Ume again stood befon tbe planning oommission and said ,ibe didn't care where the road was, he 1 ,Wat wanted to know where to draw his • property tines to draltsmen coold com- plete work oa the Bazaar. : Alter batting the proposal back and • ferth for months, the planning com- mluton agreed to recommend to the 1 ptmCll that the road be left aa it is, but ·:tali. ";r :11!:'.;!y b!~ ~0:1~ ~nd Improved safely. "'Ibis Is a highly Involved problem," • LL'Omm.ented Mayor Charlton Boy.d, 111 the • ~ council mulled the mailer. '"''After discussion the cotmcll generally : ~ lo go along with the planning ; ij)mmis1don 1uggestion1 but balked at ' f\lndlng the $5,500 project. , · . • Then Gumblner sl<pped to 1 h e · microphone. "I'm not going to wait until ·'next fiscal year. If you want, I will build • y\1u a bicycle trait In lieu bf a third "·J'ane," he II.id. "I kind ol 1hlnk we would like that " ~:mayor Boyd said. ' :taguna Planners ·:'/,' o V i-eiv Wat.er . . ' ~:Runoff Areas ~ . .. ' " The Laguna Beach Planning C.om· . ~ulon has removed the subject of ·Yachu Plcctiu, a proposed $15 ffiillion ·Top of the World townhouse develop. 'n1ent, from the agenda of its scheduled study session at 7:30 p.m. Monday at city 'ball. , Instead, commissioners will meet at 4 :>p.m. Monday in the Canyon Acres Drive ·area hit by flooding in the 1969 stonrui to .~rsonally view water ruooff Courses. OppoMnts of the 25().unit. project located above Canyon Acres Canyon along Park Avenue between Thurston Intermediate and Top of the World, have claimed that increased n.iooff created by the development could cause flood hazards below. The next hearing on Machu Picchu will be at 7:30. p.m. May 14 at a regular plan- ning commission meeting. Machu Plcchu is named for an ancient Incan hilltop city. Creative C.ommunities of Huntington Beach seeks city approval of a specific plan for the development. The study session of the commission will include a report or the Glenneyre Street Rezoning Committee, a status report on the progress of the Open Space and C.onservation elements to the General Plan, a report on tree preserva- tion and a report on the TOPICS traffic circulaUon plan in Laguna. · FrmnP .. eJ SEGRETTI ... two counts, the first cnargtng that they arranged for the Jetter to be published and the second that they conspired to distribute it. According to the conspiracy count. Sc:gretti and Benz met Dec. l, 1971, at a restaurant near Tampa, Fla. and "dlscussed disruption of the campaigns" or Jackson and t.1uskie. Other "overt acts" listed in the in· dictment said that on Feb. 20, 1973 Segretti mailed a supply of Citizens for Muskie stationery to Benz and a letter containing the proposed text for the phony flier. OU.Net COAST U DAILY PILOT r ... Or1noe eo..1 DAILY PILOT,..,.,, wflk;fl 11 tomll~M 11M N-·PAQ, Is MlllMd ill'!' _,., Or1""' COfl1t ""bll'11lntl CM!Ptn'!'. a.. ... h ldllloni ••• MlllMd. ~ ~ l"rldly, fro!' C1t1!1 Ml'M, H-.,ert IHCll, H .... 111191on · lh1C111F-111" v11,..,., Lttvnt l11c11, lrvlnfl~ltbldl -Sin <~nltl S•" Ju•n r1~1tl•1111. A 1111911 rt111ontl eC1n1on 1, riuo11l1Md S.!\mllln 1nd Sunday,. r~. ,,1nc1111t Pllbllt~f"ll Sii•"' 11 tt Dl w-.1 It'!' s1._.1, C111!1 Mu1, C11ttom11. t2'H •ob.rt N. W.M Prn....,t lflol P!ilOlllMo J1ck It Curt1, Vice '°"'iftnl ~ fHrwnil M8l\IOI< Th•'"•' k•••ll t:4'11W Tll0fll11 A, Murphlft• IMntofne l!.itor Ch1rlff H. l.eot alch1'4 P. N1U ~lltatll IMM9loif fill"'" a...-..... OMe:. 222 F.t.,. Al'lftUI M1!U119 A44~r~ .... t26S2 c.• '-'1 • w.::.:r ••·wt ~ hMJ!o1 aUI flt '°"''"'"' Hurl! ....... -..cf!: 1"1J llldl ~ .. IM·O.-ttt .. ...,.. 11 CMtin. lt•I ftl J' M f7141 '42o4JJ1 C' rrw ,...1 8:; ~611 t,.... .... ,,. ......... , T11J1t1rr 4f4."'6 ~llftl. Ifni. ar.._. C... Nolillllnl Cllu .. .. -J..*..t.... 111-.1-. ......... ....... w ""'-"" ...... ""' 11 ,., f mtt """*" #IClll _. ...................... ................. c.t.-... ~ f'I MIM .... ~ .... fl'llJIWr1 W INI G,lf ,_.,, fllllnrwt ..... "-......... ' O.tlY P'Uot Stiff P'lllt. STUDENT-TO-STUDENT TUTORING WORKS AT DANA POINT Bil l Smith of Dana Hills High Wo rks With Gabriel Quilantan Teen Tutors • Elementary /(ids Learn From 'Cross-age' Plan By JOHN VALTERZA Of t'he 01lly Piiot Sltlf The common image of a tutor is that of a dour mentor browbeating a kid who needs help. But teachers at a hlgh school in Dana Point and those at an element.ary school in the same coastal community have folmd that over the past few months tutoring modern style is far different. And it can be as big a boon lo the one doing the teaching as the y:xmgster doing the learning. In the informal program working at Dana Hills High and Richard Henry Dana elementary school teenagers do the tutoring and elementary pupils do the learning. • Since January a busload of about 60 high school students makes the trip each day to Dana where the smaller students wait with anticipation. "The relationships that have. been struck up between the older kids and the yoWlger one~ i:s absolutely remarkable." said Dana Hills instructor John Porter, the founder of the activity. Technically, the process is called Sewer Pipeline Complaints Aired Before Council The Laguna Be~c~ City Cou'ncil Jent a sympathetic ear Wednesday to com- plaints from Arch Beach Heights residents about Jitter, property destruc- tion and trespassing by workmen con· structing the $525,000 !'ewer pipeline system in the hilltop communi ty. The council ordered city officials to do everything possi ble to assist. resi dents and to carefully watch the work of the contractor. City Manager Larry Rose told the council that the city had recently shut the contractor down to clean up messes. Rose suggested that residents with problems file claims and "we will help them with the proper forms." From Pagel BALLERI NA ••• find themselves riding the Ude or direc· tors' whims and ever increasing stand· ards within the theater. Most companies hold audilions once 11 year to recruit talent for the following season. Others are given contracts because they've impressed a company director. In Europe, the theater is subsidized by the government. "It's good in the sense you receive steady pay no matter \\'hat, but bad in the sense that you're an employe of the government. That's sometimes destroys the artistry,'' said Miss Hanf. In the United States, where ballet lends 10 attract fewer persons, companies de· pend solely on admissions and outside grants for funds . Miss Han! is excited about returning to Europe, particularly Basel for !he up- coming season running from August 1brough July, 1974. "It's a new company, a new dlreclor, a brand new theater. We won't be touring -that CO$tS mcney, but there's an au· dience in Basel the yea r around." But retumibg to Europe also brings some anxiety. "I'll let! you, in Europe you get an honest reacUon. They'll 'boo' If they don 'I like something. "Her. In the United States, they're so poUte."' • "cross-age" teaching and Porter and his fellow organizers of the project have foupd that it sets up relationshi~_.which v.·oUld be impossible for adults to simulate. Porter's duties at Dana Hills en· compass teaching of educationally han-' dicapped students. Some of them have joied the cross- age program and since lltY started last January those students ha e marked im· provement in attendance d academic achievement , Porter said. As for the youngsters on end, they have improved as ''Kids seem to learn o far better than they do Portf!r said. e receiving ell. each other an adult," "And often, a child can't function In a large group." Because teachers often can't offer in· divid~allze~ ~~rnipg, to such ~oungst~rs, 4ator1ng· can 'be the key to their learrung and behavioral problems. In practice, cross-age teaching ii· lustrates that point. Automatica_lly and without inducement, the younger children in the prograin at O.ina buckle down to serious learning in a tutorial situation. No discipline is required at all, beause the kids have set up the rules or the day, not the teachers. Porter said that through the p a s t .month the proeram has been built from scratch and is more of a "club" function than a forma l educational program, Rather t~an taking part in a formal class the scores of Dana Hills volunteers have ~done all their work on their own time. "No one enrolls· in tutor class,'' Porter sai d. Instead. the Dana Hills students use their stude nt hour free period for the tutoring. "They could be somewhere else if they wanted to ... even home," Porter said. "But they would rather come and work with the little kids ." Although an acknowledged succeSs, the program sti ll is in its transitional stages. Porter soon plans to present at plan to trustees whereby funds to continue the project -and make it a formal part of the curriculum -would be sought from government sources. In an agt: of federal cutbacks of educa· tional program grants, tutoring projects enjoy a rare position. "Although lots of programs get the ax, this one is still among the favored ones by the people controlling federal educa· tion grants," Porter explained . "We'd like to get some help from the 1n.1stees in the district and expand the project. he added. And with the st rides made so far , he hopes the plan has a chance. From Pagel SYCAMOR E . • • in the 10 yea r phased construction was recenUy reappraised by the land· owner, Great Lakes Properties. Present worth of the property is estimated by Miller to be about $6.5 million. Newport Investments has a purchase agreement with Great Lakes, he said . Previously published rtports have inclicaled a sales prlqti cf about $4 milllon for the virgin territory, As proposed, the 2,000 residenllal unlu or Sycamore Hills would be clustered on 30 percent of the 520 acres In the-pro~. The project would be locattd In the 1rlangJe betwe<n Laguna Caaybn and ti .._ Roads, west ~f preoent R4ssmoor CorporaUon development. The areas involved form a portion c[ the Laguna G,...belt, &ill! the ~"IJecl baa been met with &1111 oppoSltloa from 'nvironmentallsts. N .. -. ~ the v.o ~ ~·1w1c borne lo -:~ ltney. •. y.,.., who~ •v• Qll0,11111 ~· cuh to the 1ib:on ~ _.,,., · bu been -ed wll6 .. --~ In cooa0cUcm with 'i, $224 nltnton ci•ll lmld .,it .iUtd by U. S!C. ' llliiold Nlxonoal ed iiltlieY&VY and l1U loll! asaoctalei that he was wounded sllgbUy In Vietnam, HI• posuton with the Vesco orgllJlzalion appam>tly was baiidllng per...,i an'lllgemen!Hor V..CO and Included traveling In manj foreign 001111trles. l.f¥ l'fllclal position · was descr:l~ at "ccmsuJtant." His father and mother, Mr. and Mn. F. Donald J:llxon, bave been toogtime residents of Newport 11 .. ch. Fro•PqeJ SPENDING .•. attending summer school for six. weeks would equal 100 additiooal ADA, worth roughly 1125,000 in money from the state. A summer enrollment of 600 would be about 20 percent of the nonnal yearly at· tendance. But even 'an enrollment or 200 would bring close to $40,000. The advantages, Hess said, are many. Summer school ls inexpensive to operate since custodians and administrators are 'being paid to work whether summer ' sessions are held or not . Another factor is that summer school classes generally have more students than reguJar classes, which translates in· to another savings. Another bonus is that tbe school district does not have to pay fringe benefits to summer school teachers. Hess's comments came during board review of a survey which showed 213 parents in favor of summer school and 261 opposed. The Laguna district bas not offered summer school classes for three years . Trustees agreed to delay a.decision on whether to hold a program while Ress prePares a report on how~ much a sum· mer school program would cost and: how much· ADA it c<Juld generate for the school distrtct . Drag Queens Vi,e .. In 'Miss Gay America' Fet.e . I aJS.11 Staeiau ~ · ble Sessions • I --~ . _A;ppe~r Certain Double sessions for hundreds of junior· higb youngstera.tn llJ&.Capl•trano Unified Schocil District seem a certainty next fall. , . l\larto Forater J.unto~ lf>&b .Prlndpal Edward l\lncaid on Monday wW' reoom- mend !hat trustees ocNpt the .. dOllble sessions as the only way to cope with the booming enrollment facing the district's only intermediate-level campus. Earlier this year Kincaid and olber district officials bad hoped that by ad- ding more portable classroopu; and atag· gering the starting and -ending tJ.mes for various./ groups of students, the double sessions could have been averted. But the crush of new pupils, Kincaid said in a memo to trustees, is simply too great. Despite the double sessions, Kincaid said, the children in seventh and eighth grades still w9uld receive a full program . Kincaid will offer a specific schedule of classes for eacll of the two grades to tr.us tees Monday. Kincaid believes that his system would cause the "lea.st disruption." The double sessions would be proposed to last two at least into ~he fall of next calendar year. · Directors of Administrative Services Joseph Wimer will propose to trustees Monday that the board approve plans to revamp existing drawings for a new junior-high campus in the Laguna Niguel ·area on a site donated by Avco Com· munity Developers. The use of that site was assured in an action early this week by the county · planning commission. ....._ -Origiil311fthe schOOl had been plarmed for completion by the start of school in 'the fall of '74, but a dispute .{!vp.r align- ment o{ a new COWlly ·roa9 erupted between Avco a:nd a neig h'boring develope r. County planners settled that issue ear· ly in the week in Avco's favor. Wimer said that the plans already were drafted for the new campus but were designed for a different site. He characterized the modifications re- quired on the drawings as minor. If trustees accept t h e recom· mendations of the district staff and the double sessions indeed become reality, this sort or schedule would be p.at to use~ -For chlldren in seventh grade, the , firs! three periods of 1he day would be taken up by "core program" classes of English, math and spclal studles. Period four would be ID ilfferji)g ol llllvaical education alternating.' wilb scleoce. Period five would encompass art or ex· ploratory foreign language. --The eighth graders would follow the same core-subject schedule for the first three periods, but the physical education sessioo would alternate every other day with elective classes in science and liberal arts. Kincaid said the real problems will in· volve scheduling for 3rchestra, band and chorus activities. As for starting and ending times, Kin. caid projects a schedule similar to that used at San Oemente High School last year while Daha Hills pupils waited for their campus to be completed. · One group of students would attend from 7:30 a.m. to 12:25 p.m.; the other from 12:30 to 5:25 p.m. Sen. Lon g's · Body Gets Autopsy HANNIBAL, Mo. (AP) -Audrain County · authorities were waiting the results today of an autopsy_ on former U.S. Sen. Edard V. ·Long, whose body -was exhumed Thursday for investigation of a report Long may have died of poison· il)g:- In a copyrighted story, the Kansas City Star said the body was taken from Grandview Cemetery here to Hannibal hospital, where an autopsy was perform· ed in the presence of four doctors. Samples were taken from the stomach for chemical analysis but the results were not immediately known. An observer told the Star the autopsy revealed a large pituitary tumor which may have caused the vete ran politician's death Nov. 6, the story said. Long's widow, Mrs. Florence Long, NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -?I.fore asked investig~tors to check the progress than 40 young men vying for the title of All Media Show of the tumor, which was discovered at a MiM Gay America arrive in this music Washington hospital in 1967. .city next week for a two-day pageant in The repart that Long may have died which they will be judged on poise, Opens in La glllla from ,poisqning came last month from talent, makeup and other factors. ' Helen·0un1op, Long's Secretary. She told The fegiale impersonators, ranging in authorities Long complained shortly age from 18 to 25 and winners of An all media show, ~'Figure or Today, before his dellth that he might have been preliminary contests in 31 states, \fill arr will open at the Laguna Beach Museum poisohed by ·a ~ or candy' whlch bad pear in evening gowns and sportsweat of Art with a public reception at 7:30 been gtVen to him. during the second annual Miss Gay p.m. Saturd4y at the museum . Long's body w.as reburied yesterday America pageant at a local night club The show is In gallery five and on view after being · exhumed at the request or May 10.12. ' daily from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. to May Thomas Osborne, Audrain County pro!' Pageant chairman Jerry Peak said the 24. A showing of life members will con-ecuting attorney. Mrs. Long approved affair has "grown by leaps and bounds" tinue in gallery one. the autopsy with certain conditions, in- and that contestants this year are com·. The Figure show was open to all eluding having present a physician of her peting for more than $8,00> in cash and associate and artist members of the choice. prizes. museum. It was juried by James Fuller The Star said one doctor from Han- 'l'he man chosen :P.1iss Gay America of Claremont. Fuller has a masters nibal, two from St. Louis and one from will receive a 1973 car and $1,000 in cash, degree from the UC Berkeley and has the Louisiana, Mo. area attended the Peak said. participated in 12 one-man shows. autopsy. "Next year we will add three college The museum is at 307 Cliff Drive, Also present were pike County C.oroner scholarships to the list of prizes-like in Laguna Beach. Further in[ormation is J. 0. Mudd and Marion Wasinger, a Han· the Miss America contest," Peak said. available by calling 49"531. nibal attorney who represents Mrs. Long. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~--'~~~~~ ' THE FINEST IN QUALITY AT ACCEPT ABLE PRICES. WE ARE ANXIOUS TO SERVE YOU AND SHOW YOU THIS FINE COLLECTION OF CHAIRS ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT. STOP IN TODAYI ' DREXE~ERITAGS-HENREDON-WOODMARK--kARASlAN 7tJ11111 • INTERIORS WiiWTS r. SATUIDATS f :OO to S:lO N IDAY 'T1L t :OO •• ' • NEWPoRT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLIF~ 01... '42·2010 10,.n Swftdey 12.SiJO) LAGUNA BEACH e J4S NOlTH COAST HWY, Ope11 Sut!41, 12.11io1 4t4-6Sll TOllRANCli e 1J'4t HAW1HOlNi ILVD. )71·''" • I r . - •' 7 7 -~,.-_,,..--·· . -, ; Saddlebaek I - ORANGE COUNTY, CA\.IFOJtNIA 1 ' • ' FRIDAY,. MA:Y <4, 1973 • • Tedey's Final N.Y. Stoeks • I TEN CENTS ; • ' Hoag Backs UCI H()spital-With Conditions: \ Directors of Hoag Memol'ial Hospital "unavailable for cormnefll." ed the meeting this morning "vecy OCMC, under the latest UC! proposal, Worlds Medical Foundation for a nearby ·Parker slso said that Dr. Van d~ l in Newport Beach this morning voted Dilect.rs·announced tb¢ir endorsement s\rllighUorward." would continue to be an arm of the hospital tbat ts the real concern of Hoag Noori ssed · d •· una,niJnously t.o endorse the concept ol a in a ~teoce presa release following "Dr. Van den Noort ptt:Sented the directon. erpre an interest in eve1opuig teaching and rtsearc;h hospital at UC the meeting with Dr. ·Stanley Van den latest coocept for the en-campus bo&pital university's medical school and about 200 Hardage insisted that it is not the 8 working relationship with Hoag and JrVine. Noort, ac.llng dean of the UCI medical that oow calls for ooostructbl of a of the 515 OCMC beds would be potentlal complication that bothers Hoag other county hospitals, as it has with But thef conditioned the endorsement, school. · --teaching and research . fadlity with 200 eliminated. but ..rather the current oversUpply or Long Beach ft1emorial Hospital. _ 1 tying it to a provision that the on.campus · 'Ole endonement is Utely to spur a bf;ts." . Parker and other: sources confirmed hospital beds that is of primary concern. The last tie between Hoag and UCI w~ hospital "does not increase the total similar vote by Newport Beach coun-Parker said Van den Noort also ouUin· that Hoag directors continued to express He said too many hospital beds forces broken last summer when Hoag dlrec- number of hospital beds in Orange Coun· cilmen Monday nlgbt. Councilmen two ed. the latest UC lproposal to spend $1 concern about the influence of a teaching up medical costs by requiring fewer pa-tors , under pressure from their mediCal ty." weeks ago delayed action on a r,cguest by million of the $37 million in health UCI to support te ~mpus facility pen-tients to pay for fixed operating costs. staff, votl'd to do away with the The closed-door session lasted more UCI to support the on-campu'f facility sciences bond maoey approvO<f by· voters hospital. • "Western Worlds was discussed but so hospital's family practice clinic. than two hours and after it, Board pending input from Hoag Hospital. last November to refurbish Orange COUn-Hoag director Earl Hardage Thursday was the entire subject of overbedding in ''No comment" about any future pro- Chairman A. Vincent Jorgensen was Hoag Administrator Scott Parker call-ty Medical Center. said that it is the plan by the Western Orange County," Parker said. grams were made , however. Parker said'. * * * Carpenter Nixon's l(in Linked Seek s Funds For Hospital Nephew Worked for Financier V esco I>Onald Nixon, 26-year~ld son of F. State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R- --Newport Beach) has· introduced a bill identical to ·one by A8semblyman Robert E. Badhiim ..(R.Newport Beach) that seel<s to ~ding for the UC lrvine- Califomla eoUege ~Or Medicine teacbfng hospital by ,addhlg $24 milllon to this year's UC budget. carpenter and Badham say they haVe been working with Assemblyman Willie Brown Jr. (D-San Francisco) to determine ways the Legislature might hasten the approV.i of portions of the $38 million or state bond funds approved by voters last fall as part of a $1!'>5.9 million state health sci~ces bond measure . Donald Nixon of Newport Beach and nephew of the President, has been in the -MJploymenNf· -a~Ne·N--JePSey--financier · connected with a securities and exchange ... commis~ion complaint, it was reporte'd taday. . . The New York Times said yotmg Nixon · was hired by Robert L. Vesco in July, 1971, one month after the SEC began in- vestigating the New Jersey financier. the Times as saying there as "no ques· lion" that Donald Nixon was· hired because he could somehow help Vesco's plans in_the fu.tur.P.. YouJJg Nixon.became the personal aide to Vesco and lived with the Vesco family in their hu:ge ranch home in.Boonton, New Jersey. Vesco, who secretly gave $200,000 in cash to the Nixon re-election C8JDpaijn, has been served with an arrest warrant in connection with a $224 million civil fraud·suit filed by the SEC. Donald Nixon has served in the Navy arid has told associates that he was . wounded slJghtly In Vletn,q'I. His position '~ith the VesCo o'i-ianiz8tion apparently Was handling personal arrangements for Vesco and Jnc:luded traveUng tn many foreign countries.· His official poslUon was described as "consultant.·· His father and mother, ~fr. and Mrs. F. Donald Nixon, have been longtime (See DON NIXON, Page II ' • Brown's Ways and Means committee has final say on when and how ·the money is spent. ~~ditioaally, Brown chairs a johlt legislative committee on teaching hospital althlg which ~ report to the Legjsiablre on matten -lncludlnc the UCI medlcai school lllnding. -The 1talf ol that lommitfot: Is believed to be recommending a 11cohi.promise" divtsioo of the nearly $38 millloo which would see $12 million ll[lel\t on a classroom and laboratory building on the UCI campus, $11 mUllOI) !or a teachhlg bospilal with 200 beds to be constructed on the UCI campus, and fl million of the UC bonds would be spent improving Orange County Medical Center where UCI medical students presently train. A Carpenter aide said today the $24 million bill is a •·vehicle" 1or funding whatever is needed to accomplish the teaching hospital needs or the university, including the ll(leRding of University bond funds to improve the county's general hospital facility in Orange. Mai1man, P r aised F 0 1· Quick Action In El Toro Fil:e An El Toro letter carrier was credited today with preventing extensive damage to an apartment t'OIDplex as fire broke out In the garage area and destroyed $10,000 111 property Thursday. Orange county Fire Battalion Chief George Toussant cited the quick action of postman Joseph Rayes in Investigating and reporting the fire at the Timbers Apartments, 23333 Ridgeroute Drive, El Toro. Two vehicles were burned in the blaie and an estimated $8,000 damage done to tht apartment. structure. Damagi"would _have been far greater had the fire not been disrovered early by Rayes, Chief Toussaint said. . • captain David Cowardin said the blaze is believed to have started from faulty wiring in one of the vehicles. 11!,ere were llO hljurles. He said residents of the apartment complfl< attemptod to light the fire with a garden hoae and extinguishers. Units from the El Toro, Laguna Hills and Mission Viejo county Fire Depart- ment stations quickly put out the lire aft:er their arrival, he said. PLAYBOY 'TURNS ON' SEARCHERS -. l'ID.I+DELPHIA (AP) -The tnach!nery al Phlladelphla's lnterna- tlonal Airport Is getlinl turned on by Pllyboy. • • Pl.,t>oy Club "key cards are openmg the way to careful aeardles at airport aecur1t)' checkpoint&. The cards have a ma«nttc tape that ..ta oH metal detec- tors, Aki RutaeD E. Miller, a Federal Avlallon Al!mlntstratton ~ty official. An associate of Vesco was quoted by Ma111ie Wouldn~t Husband Files Divorce Suit By TQM . BARLEY • • t Of 1111 Dally Pht Slltff . lf'J-. • .., ,. ........._~ • ~~1 ~'f~','~ · ... ·~for actress Mlinie Vu Doren TIM~<TO'·ltftAX _,.. rnomdent Nixon aiid·bli tlbar!BI' '11ene · and her third, husband. tangled in a Santa Rebozo smil a• they walk to the F!prida White Ana _, .. _ todav ~· the ·•·pe•• if''"~""" ' ""'-·····•"" k d --~--""'1..:C:~-_,_ -" an ""'UDWf are ·I"'!-uie wee en . • • nl9'1d•'• ...,..,..,. for a two-month delay Lawyer Segretti ln~cted In Muskie 'Sabotaging' ' . WASHINGTON (AP J -Donald H. primary. Segretti could not be reached immedi- ately for comment. His telephone answer- ing service. in Los AD:getes: said be discon- tinued using it two months ago. in the prange County ,divorce action filed by her spouae of Jllllc 17 days. Superior Court Judge William C. Speirs heard arguments from both sidea and promptly· ""'t the file down to Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner of Laguna Beach for his decis1on on the motion for a delay until June. That motion will be heard later today. The 40-year-old actress was not present to hear her lawyer~ explain· that a stage .commitment in St. Paul, Minn. made it impossible for her to be io Orange C.oun- ty for the court bearing. Lawyers for wealthy busil)ess ex- ecutive Ross McClint.oct, 51, 9' Orange, argued that the divorce action filed by bim required only 10 minutes or testimony and lhould be ~ of !'>' day, His lawye11 oonlend that the marriage contracted In-Las VegU last Dec. 1 dUhltegrale\I DI! tile wecldhlg night when Mtsa Van DOren refused 19 go to bed with him and lniteacl spent Ille nlght on a couch, Docwnenta filed in aupport of the divoree peUtion -Miss Van Doren is listed as Joen L. McClintock -allege that the actress never intended to be part of a true marriage "and married for wealth." It is alleged that her first act after marriage was to demand a $10,000 chhlchilla coat and a $35,000 Rolls Royce from McClhltock. It is also alleged that she refused to share the couple's Orange home with the petltioner's teenage son, Bo McClintock. Segretti, a California attorney with reported ties to the White House, has been indicted in an alleged scheme aimed at sabotaging DemocraUc Sen. Edmund S. ·Muskie's presidential campaign in Florida last year, the Justice Depart- ment said today. Tfie department said Segretti, long MARTHA SAYS SHE"WAS 'HALF CRUCIFIED'-Page 4 under investigation in the Watergate s.candal, was indicted by a federal grand jury in Orlando, Fla . for "publishing and distribqtlng a letter .... which failed to identify those responsible.'' . Muskie (inisbed •a poor third in the Florida balolting behind :>Jabama Gov. Wallace and Humphrey. The defeat was the first in a series of primary setbacks that led the one-time Democratic ~favor­ ite to withdraw from iictive Ffl-1.llpaign- ing, even though publiC:opintop \:soils had shown him to have the best ,ctiance of beating President Nixon in the general election. The indictment also charged George A. Construction Funding Urged at County Bases That referred to a filer said to have been forged on Muskie's stationery which accused two of his leading opponents, Sens. Hubert R. Humphrey and Henry M. Jackson, cJl. seT.Ual misconduct. The letter reportedly was distributed by the thOusands just prior to the March 14. - Hearing of Tampa, Fla. on the same counts. Roiei::t Milton Beriz, 15, of Odessa, Fla., a fonne r Nixon campaign worker and one-time president of the TaJJ'lpa Young Republicans, was named .as an unidicted co-conspirator. Segretti and · Hearing were named on two "CX>unll, the llrst cnargtng that they arranged for the letter to be published (See SEGRETl'J, Page.I) E&i(drO Ca~ , .. :. ~:E~ology CoaUti~n Sues Supervisors Over Rezorie orange County supervisors today face Sui!erlilr Court action baaed on the alleptlon that their overturnhlg of the ptanning commlaion'1 decialon on a con- troversial El Ton> development was 1~ legal. ' The lawsuJt flied by the Environmental Coalition ol Orange County with an El Tdro church and school as co-plahltlffs cllinw that the. county board acted iinljwfully Marth 21 when It rezoned an elgbt acre Wroe! al. El Toro Road and Mulrlandl 9culevard. That action cleared the way for the Rinker 'toivoratl9n to ""'1~ a shopping center on the 1lte. Tbe company's plans had eatUer !Jeon balked when the county planniol coriunlllloo refuaed to rezone thealea. Lawyers, Im: the "!""IJ, the COfliUon, the AbidlnC S.Vi!>f Lutherao Cbu.ai and the Good Shepherd Lutheran H"'ll" of the West have been ordered to appear before Jodge .Jlobert 2. kneeJand Mt,)' 23 IO< L pretrial bearing, ' ~tion lawyers allege that the superVisors1 decision to rezone the eight- acre area from residential to commercial use violated 'state law. And they further claimed that state laws ~clearly polnt out that a county board can amend a general plan only if the planning oommission goes lk>ng with the recommenda~on. Rinker r.orporatlon pl'.'eSideot Harry Rhlktr saw the ·supenhors' decision March 21 as vindication of his argument tbat ![le planners had unfairly denied him permission to build on the f!lght-acre site. Rinker'• fll'St a pp ea I to the IQl)erViaors in January was rejected became bis plans mdlc•ted 111e hulldtng of two service sta!loria wltbln tha development. ~ promiJed lo eliminate tho aervtoe statloriis ' lllld bi> rovised plans .,.,.., 1c- cepted by the supervisors after again beiA1J rejected hy_ lhe p~ oom- mission. .. The U.S. Defense Department asked CongresiJ Thursday to authorize $13. I million in construction at ONlnge Coast mllltary bases. The request for the 1974 fiscal year budget totaled $121.4 million for con- structkxl at 38 Army, Navy and Air Force bases in the state. The largest local request was for $10.9 million in construction at C a m p ~endleton. A Marine spokesman at the Camp said the request was made to build 800 family housing units, modemlr.e' other facilities and improve street lighting. Also requested was $74.7,000 in con- struction fonds for the Marine Corps Air station at El Toro. A spokesman there Bandit Sorry, R eturns Loot A repentant bandit who wore .a U.S. Postal Service uniform in the $131 armed robbery of a Corona de! Mnr cor!et shop 10 days ago bas remorsefull y mailed the money back, Special Delivery. The gunman who relieved four pemns · of tbelr cash at the Silhoutt!t Shop, 2737 E. Coast Highway, enclosed an anonymous note. of e1planatlon. He said he went to .church the following S<lnday and became con- 1Clence-strlcken over having broken bolb the Ellitth Commandment or tho Old Teafament llDd Section 211 of the Calllomla Penal Code, "Lord ... I don't remember any other caae like lt," Newport Beach Detective Sam Ambw1eY said to- day. "I wish more of these guys would go to church." \ • l • said he believes the money will be earmarked for con5truction of a cold storage warehouse. "But we haven't had official con- firmatJon yet," he said. "We're expecting more than that, because we also want to convert over from oil to natural gas. We're still walling on that." A request for $1.5 million to build new bachelor enlisted quarters and mess halls at the Naval Weapons StaUon at Seal Beach was also locluded. About half of. that money, ll approved by Congress, will be used for similar construction at the base's annex at Fallbrook, rt Navy spokesman said . In all, $3 billion In construction was re- quested by the Defense Department for bases throughout the country. Wire, 4 Motors Stolen in Irvine Irvine police are on the lookout today for a burglar who heisted 143 rolls of electrical wire and four drill moton from a parked truck. The loss, estimat.d at $3,66ii, occurred sometime between Wedneaday night and Thursday morning while the truck wu standhlg In front of a conslnlction_ p10J- ect at 14800 Culver Drive. Investigators say the burglar enlered the tnJck by destroylna 1 padlock on the rear doors with 1 boficutter. Owner or the truck ls the C McGee ElectTlc Co. Truck Driver Killed RIVERSIDE '(AP) -A hay truck driver from R~ wu killed when his vehicle pl\lnied over U.S. 1111 onto the Rlveralde Fn!eway, the hlgl!way __ ~trol reported. Irvi ne 'T eam' ·s aves Life Of Motmist ,- A 1'scue team Including two phyllctlill who just happene<! by and an ~ ...tunteer ~roman llvlill t"° 61ociia ·-the scene saved a man'a life late '1'hur.a-. day after a beadon car colllllcri. • - The hlJured motorist, a vlsltlOg MissourJ buslneuman, was reported Jn critical condition but responding to treat- ment tbia.momlng at Tustin Community Hoepital. Jacques Gale;4.3, of Eureka, Mo., suf.. fered multiple lacerations of the face aOd head, a crushed knee and other injuriel still being diagnosed in the 11 :30 p.rri .. crash. . The other driver, Joel F. Lemke, 39, of. 4S8l Greentree Lane, Irvine, was ar- rested at the ICelle and booted on suspt- cioo of felony drunk driving. · Investigators said Irvine Vohmteer Fireman Robert Goldstein raced to the accident scerie at Cu.1ver Drive ancl Michelson Avenue from his home. His house at 171Ml Bascom St.1 Ii equJpped with an electronic alerter tt~ gered by a fire department emergeDIY system. : Goldstein imtnedlately began treating Gale, who was bleeding severely and Jn shock, while Irvine Patrolman Mite Donovan drove back and brought Mg. Goldstein, a r:eglstered nurse. By that time, two unidentified doctors bad stopped and the trio worked swiftly over the unconscious victim who was em- ned in the c.ar. "They did a tremendous job in keeping this man alive," Police Lt. Tom Durham said today. ~- County firemen from I.be Universl~' Station also credited a witness, Mrs. Michelle Moss, or 1111112 Norton Sil Irvine. for inlHally aldhlg Goldstctn at the scene. • Ceut.l The weather service aees low clouds blocklnl out Qld Sol Oil sat- urday with a chance of partial clearinl in the late afternoon. Coot- er temperatures are espected, wllh readings In the 11118. LoW8 43-58. INSIDE TODAY ' ,• l TW!> 114/f wrl lera l4ko a loot •' at the kenaillO'nCt PleanrC 1: -Faire which takes ptace each . May In Auouro: °"' from ~ 1 perspective o/ the parti~ arttii mtd one /Tom the view o/ 6 the vlritor. See IOdoy 's Wee•· ender. • AtTIWltNlclt J L.M •• ..,. ,, ...... , n c.,........ 4,lt c......... J1-4t ,_ . ·-.. DMlll....._ f ....... ,. .... ,...._. tNl ,. ..... ·~ .. ,. ••1•tw1 14 11' lwllct lt ·-~ lJ • • ==-..,. ....... _ ; NltMMt ..... t. --."...,.." .... ...... .. =--'"ll ' -.... -. ""'"""' ........ =...::.-~. • ~ • I ! • I . ' ,, ' d ~ ' i~· _;~~~ ·~ --~~,, '· "l'LL TELL YOU, IN EUROPE YOU GET AN HONEST REACTION" Mliry Hanf Return• to Lagun1 hech Whe,.. Dance Begin for Her " Ballet Her Life • j Lagunan to Appear T·wice ~--By -PREIHH\IGK SCHOEMEHL ·--to attract fewer persons,. compartl~ ot -. 0~1, .. ,._. st.tr pend solely on admiuk>ns and outside · '·Mary Hanf was just a wisp or a glrl in grants for runds. . ~-when-she-went-!or her flrsl b-Ql~t__,_ '"'.Mis~ Hanf is excited about returning to _ L.. ........ at Ula Zali's studio in Lagwia Eur~, particularly _Basel for the u~ ;i;~ coming season running from August ·"-Beach. through July, 1974. · .,~ce j~st another YOtJ?B face at the "It's a new company, a new di rector. a .IWdio, MW Hanf today is am.ember of brand new theater. We "''on't be touring ._the ballet company of Basel, Switzerland. -that costs money, but there's an au-•~ Over the past 13 years~ she has dience in Basel the year around." performed throughout the Un ited States, But returning lo Europe also brings Canada, Fra..,ce, Portugal and Ireland: some anxiety. . '1be tour or Ireland was a high pcnnl "I'll tell you in Eun:ipe you get an .for MW. Hanf who made 14 appearanet:s honest reaction.0They'JJ 'boo' if they don't .perfomung Black S~an Pas d~, Deux like something. -.{rom the tblrd act of Swan Lake. "Here in the United States they're so Miss Hanf will repeat lhe Pas de Oeux polite.'' ' .at 1:30 p.m. Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sun· ilay at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse as a special guest of the gwia Beach Civic Ballet c:ompany. "Ballet has been my whole life, something I'm totally involved 1n. It 's not a bobby I do for exercise," said Miss Hanf. "It's fantastic being able to affect so many people at once . . . to give them something they can take away with them. "But I feel a responsibility to those who have paid money for a perfonnance. When I pay for something, I know I want my money's worth ," she added. Yet what the audience sees on stage reflects only a small· amount of the work Mary Hanf must go lhrough every day. A typical day during the ll·month long performance season begins in the mom· ing with one and a half hours of practice, followed with lunch, then an afternoon of rehearsals which often last until 7 p.m. "There is no faking it. Denet: requires a great deal of thought. You have to be aware of every movement of your anns, legs, even your fingers ," Miss Hanf ex· pl&ins. Because the art is so exacting, dancers fmd themselves riding the tide of direc-- to~· whims and ever increasing stand- ards within the theater. Most companies hold auditions once a year to recruit talent for the following season. Others are given contracts because they've impressed a (.'()mpany director. In Europe, the theater is subsi dized by the government. "It's good in the sense you receive stea'dy pay no matter what, but bad In the sense that you're an employe of the government. That's sometimes destroys the artistry," said Miss Hanf. In the United States, where ballet tends OUHI COAST " DAILY PILOT T"9 0.."Ut Cu1t DAILY l'ILOT, wl~ Wfllcll h conib!Md IM N.-l'reu, II ...,..,._. b'f ..... Or .... CO.II P\11111 ......... Gon<INnr • ...,., r1i. tdllk>l\1 ,,. fllblllfled, MOllOt'I' tr.re!IOl'I ' Frld1y, IOr COl1t Mftl, NfWllOl"I B"d'" Hunll"91on l1tcll/F_.i1111 V1lley, Lquna ~ell, lf\llM/IAH~ Md. S.n Cllmenlll S." J1>1n ClplJl•lllO. A 1lngl1 r111 IDtt1t tdlllon h ""**lt'*I hlllnM'l'I Ind Sllnd1y1, 1"9 Pl"ifKIPtol Pllblh~fl!IJ p11nt 11 •• l» Weir ••l' SI ..... , CHll Ml'M, C1llfoNll1. fBH,. Robttt N. W114 Prftlllt1'1 1111111 Plllllllller Jeck ll. 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Young Donald Nixon was graduated from Newport Harbor High School in 1964 and attended Orange Qlast College and California State Universi ty at Northridge. His family in Newport confirmed today that young Nixon had done considerable traveling for Vesco, mainly in Nassau and the Dominican Republic. They de- clined further comment on his role with Vesco. "I have no comment on any activities of any members of my family," the elder Donald Nixon concluded. Meanwhile, Associ a ted Press dispatches from New York reported t~ da} that a federal judge has ordered the arrest of Vesco but Vesco's lawyer sti ll says his client will not appear before a federal grand jury unless granted ~m· munity from prosecution. ·. U.S. District Court Judge Edmund L. Palmieri signed the bench warTa'llt Thursday after noting Vesco had failed to res~d lo subpoena ordering him to testify before the grand jury in· vestigating his $250,000 contribution to tht Nixon re-election campaign last year. James W. Rayh.itl, executive assistant United States attorney, told the judge that the government had information ~e~co i~tended lo renounce his U.S. c1t1zensh1p and settle in Costa Rica . . Vesco .has . been ~ug~t by lhc grand Jury which 1s lookmg into whether his campaign ~onati9n was an attempt lo in· fluence an investigation that resulted in a civil suit against him by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Hospital Slates T,vo Preventive Medical Sessions Two sen1inars on preventive medicine ~·ill be offered to the public rtext week by r.lission Communi!y Hospital as part of ils observance of National Hospital "reek. Five one-night s e s s i o n s on cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR ) will be offered at 7 p.m. Monday through Friday in the hospital classroom. At the end of the three-hour course participants should know how l ~ recognize a cardiac arrest, distinguish between clinical and biological death and know how to apply CPR. Le.cture material and manniktns wlll be used to demonstrate the techni ques. Re-- quired reservations may be made by calling the hospital at 49$-4400. A hypertension and kidney dJsorder detection clinic will be held from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 13. Free tests for kidney disorders will ~ av~llabl~. tncludln~ blood pressu,.., 11nnaly~1s and crestinine blood test. The Kidney FoundaUon of Sootbem California js cooperatil)g In U1il proll'am. Hyeertension ()ligh blood pressure) bas been relal<d-to lddney dlseaoe and can be roUnd In people of all ages. I Saddleback Lee lures • -- UnderW_!!y .. Some 150 citizens of the Soddleback Valley pondered future growth and many other questions as they began a slx·week lecture series Wednesday night at La Paz Intermediate Scbool on the hlatory and oe<>loSY Of the Saddlebacl< Valley. Coonlinator Boo y ... county planning commissioner representing the Sad- dleback area, told the enthusiastic au, dience that "it's time to wake up and take a hard look at our resources - everyone is racing to get here from LA, and if we d0n't do something better than they did, we don't have any place to go except underwater." Lectures ·will be t'Ohtlnued at 7 p.m. Wednesday at La Pu Intermediate School on Pradera Drfve in Mission Viejo with the theme "The Saddb!back Valley Then -An Historical Heritage." Succeeding programs wnl co v e r natural and archeologlcal features. vegetation .and wildlife, watershed and t1Cshed factors, and the citizen's role. All programs are free of charge. Yeo introduced the series, co-sponsored by the UC Irvine extension offiet: and the saddleback Area Coordinating Council, with' slides highlighting landmarks of the valley and retracing the steps of Don Gaspar de Portola, the "first European explorer of Southern California . "Our heritage is rich. but short ," Yeo, a Newport Beach architect, said. ''It has been only 204 years since Portola and his band of Spanish explo rers took their 38-day hiking trip through thi s area ." Many Saddleback landmarks owe their names to that first trip through Southern California, which impressed the soldiers with its beauty and variety. 'Ttit';'lrirseoat-into-tbe--Gobemadora Canyon was Sgt. Jose Francisco de Ortega. Pad of the area where .. he <;amped is' now called the Ortega highway. · The party trekked through what is now the O'Neill Ranch and Coto de Caza . When they reached the northern edge of the 'Saddleback Valley, the land was shaken with a violent earthquake , and several severe aftershocks. Whether it was the earthquake or the beauty of the land, the Spanish party never forgot the Orange C'.otmty area. One of them, a 26-year~ld named Jose Antonio Yorba, came back 41 years later to develop one, of the flfst land grants in the territory . By 1889, when Orange County was in- corporated, it had three cities: Santa Ana, Orange, and Anaheim, and a population of 13,500. By 1950. when the Santa Ana Freeway opened, the populaUon w., 216,000. The 50s brought a huge boom to the county, with population of 704,000 by 1960. *: r* * Official· Claims Property Rights .. Views Changing During discussions of the past and present of the S.ddleback Val[ey at the first of a UC Irvine lecture series ·Wednesday night, the future nudged in. Ron Yeo, an Orange County planning commissioner and coordinator of the six· week series, told the audience "Our. idea s on the meaning. of property r.ight.s" may ~ave to change. What we're_ beginning to see 1s that people don't have the right to do things with their land that is harmful for. the total population." 11Are yon deme aning property rights?" a citizen asked. "No, but perhaps my view is dirferent. from yours on how government should control those rights," Yeo said. He said discussions with the county tax assessor &fl! now being held to determine if alternative forms of valuing property are available. In Kauai, Hawaii, Yeo pointed out, valuations are based on the county's general plan rather than on the "highest and best use" now used in most of the U.S. "Perhaps the highest and best use no longer means houses," Yeo said. If the county decides to preserve its agricultural lands, Yeo added, it will have to develop a means of making the land pay its owner. Purchase of the land by the county and leasing it to the previous owner may be one alternative. Hearings on proposed open space and conservation elements of the general plnn are . now being conducted at the county planning commission. Since the 1()(1..square·mile Saddleback Valley is unincorporated, it will be directly affected by whatever proposals are accepted. The state has mandated that all coun· ties update and implement their open space and conservation plans by June 30. F,..... Pflflel SEGRETTI ... and the second that they coMplred to distribute It. According to the conspiracy count, Segrettl and Benz met Dec. 1, 1971, at a restaurant near Tampa, Fla. and "dlscu....t dlorupUon of Ille campaigns" Of Jackson and Muskie. Other "overt act.s" li!ted in the in- dictment said that on Feb. 20, 1973 S.gretU malled a supply of Cltlzenl for Mllllle stationery to Bel1! and a letter coolabilng the proposed test for lite phony mer. Cinco de Jt!ayo Fete The. Misfilon Viejo Art Association will be part of the festivities at Misfilon V1eio !ligh School Sunday for the annual celebration of Cinco de Mayo., Handcrafted items and painUngs will be on display from noon until dusk. Anna Marie Martin publicity chairman looks over ·stoneware offerings. ' ' • HQmeTraet • I ''Approved' • For Irvine l'lte fmal · single lamlly bomi d<velop- ment planned for University Park waa approved on a 8 to Z vote ol the Irvine Planning Commission Thursday night Opponents cited the l.ack<-Of ..... ''grff:n. belt" flavor and jll'Oblems wlll park sites, but the J30.litime d<velopment of 158,000 bomes by ~ llevtlopment Company will be bullf as designed. ComnussiCllera Maryarme Gaido and Lowell Johnson voted against the ten-- tali,ve subdivision map for the 47·acre parcel at University Drive and Yale Avenue. Commission Vice Chairman Robert Smith al>!ented himseU from the lhree- hour d i .s c u s s i o n of the tract, noting that be 1s the a~torney for interest$ (.'()n· cemed about the downstream flood con· trol channel which draln.s most of University Park, including the new tract Mrs. Gaido :said she viewed the tracl design as being different from the rest of University Park in that it Jacks the greenbelt "flavor". Commissioner Frank Hurd observed today that the designer s of the trac t "evide ntly followed the city's con· sultant's advice to a tee by lumping all the greenbelts together into a commonly o~ ned private park." ~hat park is 4.7 acres and is located ad1acent to a future public elementary school. Its location resulted Jn a condition that a wall, fence or earth berm be m. stalled by the developer to provide separation between the public and private facilities. Larry Deane, president of the Deane Development Corporation, agreed plans far the ~rk separation will be presented for _rev1e"." by the 'city's (.'()mmunity services director, Paul Brady. Deane said the average rost of the =homes to be built on lots rang?tg from 4,500 to 8,200 squHCe feet, with niost to be Le • -w • "Id' v ),:--!-):' 5,000 squaie feet,. will be $58,000. -1sure or · s---e1fie1es~· --~~~~u.;:f.'T!cl~~~y~~~ Running 011 Natural Gas Twelve vehicles of the Leisure World Management Corporation today will begin rurming on compressed natural gas stored.Jn a tank in their tnmks. A d~ication ceremony for the pilot project waa scheduled for this morning at the natural gas station built to ac. commodatt: the experimental vehicles. Five mini·buses, five security cars, one pickup truck, and one forklift have; been converted to t h e pollution • reaucing system at a cos t"of $200 to·$300·each:----- Fuel cests will be cut by on~u~rter, according to Leisure World direcior of operations Bob Mitchell, while prO\'iding the same amount of po\ver available "'·ith gasoline. COnversion of the entire transpart system in Leisure World is scheduled to be complete by April, 1974. The compressed natural gas system easily meets the federal government's 1975 emissions standards and is con- sidered ecologically superior lo gasoline by the California Air Resources Board. Ot.he r advantages include no additives or solvents and consequent longer life of the engine oil. Natural gas contains no lead and thus doe s not form deposits. Since the compressed gas is a vapor, it generally facilitates smootheJi starts and no vapor lock, Mitchell said. The regular gasoline system has been maintained in the converted vehicles and can be used instead of the compressed fuel at the flip of a switch. The new system can be transferred to a new car when the old car is sold. Sliiphoard Prom Ser For Viejo Students "Seabreeze and Stardust" is the theme of Mission Viejo High School's junior· senior prom at 8 p.m. Saturday aboard the Prince, a cruise ship in Long Beach Harbor. Th e Prince will leave the Long Beach port at 9 p.m. for its cruise past the Queen Mary , Ports O'Call. and other sights. More than 200 couples are ex· peeled at the prom, where music will be by "The Other Side of Time," a student organizer said. the 230 homes will be "attached" in the sense that'two homes will be built abu t. • ting each other on the lot line. C~mmissioners_ also required site plan review by the city planning director of the staggered setbacks and zero lot Jines prior to final approval of the tract. Drag Queens Vie In 'Miss Gay America' Fete NASHVILLE, :renn. (UPI) -Mo,.. than 40 young men vying for the tiUe of Misi Gay !A.Jherica arrive iJ1 .this music .city next weetc 'for a two-Oay pageanl ln ~·hich they will be judged on poise, talent, makeup and other factors. The female Impersonators, ranging in age from 18 to 25 and winners or preliminary contests In 31 states, will a~ pear in evening gowns and sportswear during the second annual Miss Gay Alterica pageant at a local night club May 10-12. Pageant chairman Jerry Peak said the affair has "grown by leaps and bounds" and that contestants this year are com· peting for more than $8,000 in cash and prizes. - THE RNEST IN QUALITY AT ACCEPT ABLE PRICES: WE ARE ANXIOUS TO SERVE YOU AND SHOW YOU THIS FINE COLLECTION OF CHAIRS ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT. STOP IN TODAY! . DREXE!.-1-iEJUTAG6-HENREDON-WOODMliRK-lCARAS1'AN NEWPORT BEACH e 1127 WESTCLIFf Oil.. 442-2011 CO,.n S11N11 12·1:10) LAGUNA BEACH e J4S NORTH COAST HWY. tOp1~ S11nd1y 1J.11jOI 494-1151 TORRANCE e 21"49 HAWTHOlNE ILVD. J11·121' 7 • \ I I I I ! I • • " . --·----·~ ' • r DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Saddlehack Speakers The re(ent decisi9n of the Saddlebock College~ of 'l'rustees to maintain the school's ellstlng speakers policy and the attendant protests from a small group of · Saddleback students ts a conflict more shadow than sub- stance. In fact tbe schoQI has never in its six-year history had a controversial speaker, according to Mel Mitchell, community services director. ' The embattled policy requires a speaker on a con· troversial issue to be balanced with a speaker for an opposing view on the same program . To be sure, !be policy seems .an unreasopable bar to major 5P0akers on campus. Nallonally known speak- ers who may discuss controversial issues do not travel paired up pro and con. If the campus had an opportunity to present Wil- liam Buckley the chances are slim that Kenneth Gal· braith would he available at the same time and place. Who could j>ossihly bal ance Jane Fonda? lo essence, the college's policy is a convenient way of barring con- trovt!1'9)' without overtly disallowing it, despite the good Intentions of the board. Nonetheless, students as well as the administration must shoulder some of the blame for not taking more initiative to test !be reality of the board's position. In the history of the policy since It was ena cted in 1969, students have never been denied a controversial speaker because they have never come up with one. Two nationally known speakers, scientist Edward Teller and author Ray Bradhur)', appeared on the cam· pus in past years. They were not judged controoerslal by !be administration. A regulation designed to shield college students lrom ''controversy" doesn't measure up as very Sound educaUonal policy for a college in today's world, wilb Ille right to voile coming at age 18. Cinco de Mayo Sunday, from noon 1.!Dtil dusk, Saddleback Valley residents will be welcomed to the Mission Viejo High School campus for the sixth annual Cinco de Mayo cele- bration . The fiesta featµring 34 game and refreshment booths will raise funds the school 's Parent Teacher Or- ganization employs in providing needed school equip- ment and scholarships. Entertainment, dii!plays of arts and crafts, selec· tion of finalists in the Miss Saddleback Valley competi- tion and performances by student music groups are some of the offerings, sponsored by a host of commu- nity organizations for the good of school and community. '.Jbe traditional community celebration, commemo- rating the end of European domination of Mexican ter- ritory in 1862, has become an important contribution to community spirit in addition to the funds raised. . Visitors are invited to participate, wearing tradi- tional Mexican fiesta garb to avoid "imprisonment" in the South of La Paz Road "jail." SB J -~ . .. 'Nixon Law and Order Administration. Sorry, they're all our . answering subpeJJB11 a~ t.b.e m oment .•• may I rake a m--ser. Cheap Labor Greed Behind Immigration Woes I 1i I Persuasion Wins Most A rg uments · ~YDNEY J.HAruu~ Dear Gloomy Gus 1llegal-AJ1ell ~Support Just 'Fooli.s4:i!- Thomas Aquinas, who knew more about education and persuasion than almost anybody who ever lived, once said that when ' yoo want to convert someone to your view; you go over to where he is standing, take him by the hand (mentally speaking ), and guide him to where you wanttO go. You don't stand across the room and shOut al him. You don't call him a dummy. You don't order hlm to come Gver to where you are. You start where he is, and work from that position. That's the ooly way to get him to budge. We have lost sight of this elementary psychological fact. The world is full ol passionate advocates, screaming their own prejudices, and excoriating their Oir ponents. This does three things: (a) it makes the people who agree with you feel better, (b) it~makes the people who disagree with you stUfen their resistance, and (c) it makes the people on the fence uneuy and skeptical that you are speak· Jng the whole truth. I HAVE never known a single passionate and partisan argument to win over a person whO disagreed with it, or even to persuade a person who was neutral on the subject. The chief reason being that all passionate and partisan arguments overstate their case and u(.derstate their opponents' case. When you think that someone is wrong, and you disagree with him, the first task is to determine in what way he is right. Wouldn't it be nice if the Irvine Police Department got up as early as do the sand and gravel trucks which speed along Jeffrey Road in the mornings running innocent commuters off the road. P. K. This Is not as paradoxical 11 It llOllDds: no· view can be entirely wrong, and everybody has a little piece of truth by the tall. '!'Ills Is the piece we start with, we work from there, and concede as much as we booeslly cih. LORD ACTON said that we have no right to oppose a position unti1 we can state that position in a way that fuUy satisfies those who hold it; until, indeed, we can make out a better case for it than the proponent himself can. (Most of us, of course, distort or lampoon the opposite position, and then proceed to demolish this sirs w man.) And all this is much more than an academic exercise. The arts of argument and persuasion are so litUe known and practiced that disputant.! have no recourse to anything but violence. If peo- ple can't agree on how to disagree, there is no hope of reconciliation or com- promise. And the art ot argument ls learning how to disagree productively. WE BEGIN to fight when words fall us And words fail us when we use the Wrong ones to the wrong people for the wrong reasons. It Is tar easier to be passionate in defense of what one believes .ban to comprehend why somebody else believes something dif- ferent. But, ultimately, only this com- prehension (which ls not agreement) can replace violence with dialog instead of the deafening mono logs that lead to war. • 'Secretarial Ghetto' Every year thousands ot American girls look for secretarial jobs, confidently anticipating lhe good pay, pleasant work- ing condltiorui, interesting fellow-workers and excellent chances ot advancement proml!ed by tbe classUled ads. Only too many wind up in what lively -and well informed -author Mary Kathleen Benet calls The Secretarial Gbet&o (McGraw· Hill, $5.95). Ms. Benet has worked in many otlices on both sides of the Atlantic, including those of the San Francisco Chronicle, the Chicago Sun-Times, McCaU's, and a book publishing house. She bas also been a journalist, an advertising copywriter, and a literary alel)t. Her views are frank, outspoken -and controversial. As Ms. Benet notes , well over 60 per- cent of American office workers are women. By the sheer force of their DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Publisher Thomas Keevfl, Ed ilor Barbara Krtibich Editorial Page Editor Friday, May 4, 1973 (THE BOOKMAN J numbers and the variety of tasks they 1 perfonn, they have become Indispensable to the smooth funcUonlng of American business. How many receive the recognl- tlon they deserve? What does a secretary's job really mean today? Does it bring independen<e and fulfillment? Or does it perpetuate, in a new setting, a whole range of stereotyped female roles, all subservient to the functions and prerogatives of the male! The Secretarial Ghetto tackles alt these questions straight on. Secretaries will clamor to read this book -and their bosses can't afford not to. CAROLINE HARKLEROAD ·~ edit"OriaJ pqe of· the DaJly PUot· Jetk:a 1o inlcinn. -and stimulate readers by vre-nttnc on 1hil pqe diverse comment•ry on topics o! in- terest by synttlcat~ columnists and cartooniata, by providine a forum for readers' "Ylewa: and -by preeenUng thl9 newspeper's oplnW and ideas on cumint topk:I. 'l1le 'edilorlal optnklru: of the Daily Pilot appear oaly 1n the ectttOrial column at the top nt the P93"· Opinions expr'ft.9td by UM! a>l· umnltb met 4!art00nlsta: and Jttttt 'A-rlfcn are their own and no em. ment ot their views by the Dally PTiot mould. be We:rttd. To the Editor: There are a greal variety of fool s in Am erica, but the beneficent, altrui stic, Christian boobs who pay taxes to feed, house and care for iliega l alien im- migrants without complaining about it are defmitely in a class by themselves - a class with no lmrninent effort to rehabilitate these unfortunate souls. LET US tell these people what would happen to an American in a foreign. coun- try under the same circumstances: He would be immediately incarcerated (yes, put In jail) and his relatives In the Slates would be billed !or his food, lodging and medical care, plus a "fine" for his mlsbebav~or which ~d in many cas}; amount to ransom money, and he would Janguish in a foreign prison until tbe demands were paid -in cash, man, what else? John Valterza's story on Care of Aliens (Pilot Apr. 28) tells all, and the sob sisters should read every word of it, and then get mad at the Immigration kooks. the Welfare shnooks and the Social Security crooks wbo aid and abet the il- legal entry of aliens while people born here -Indians and Negroes -for in· stance -deserve a priority for jobs over all immigrants of whatever color or na- tional origin. COULD it be that alien cheap labor sponsored by greedy employers is still lhe reason for all this jw about illegal aliens? Possibly, because cheap labor has always been the incentive tor welcoming vast hordes of foreigners to our country. S. G. UNDINE Eleetioh Needed To tRe Editor, The good book teaches us: "only in repentance there is salvation." The unrepenting praetorian palace guards (alias the Berlin Wall) did Indeed resign but the credibility gap only deepens and the highest office In the land remains SllSpect. ONLY ONE avenue toward reeotablisblng credibility In the White House is to bold special bonafide national presidential elections within ninety (90) days. The preaent chief executive is so fond of "fll'Sts" so1 who knows, perhaps such action would restore his image as a knowledge.able leader I and give us something to celebrate on our torthconr ing 200th &Mlversary as a great nation. BORIS BUZAN What'• a B e a e Ja:> To the Editor: U your memory is good and you're old enough to qualify for Social Security benefits, you'll recall that in the dim but not too distant past the city fathers in AUantic City built a boardwalk. It became world-famous. It's still there. And if there's one thing it isn't doing it's undulating. Then they bu ilt a "Mllllon Dollar Pier", and the rest is history. Of course in those days a mi:llion dollars was a lot ot mooey. They even used to me.a.sure the national debt In millloos. ANYW AV, here was an ocean, a beach and a·boardwelk. The thr .. go IogeUler. Quotes ' W. Scott ~hrtin, S..F., lra\·tl Ute· taraed booUeller-"Man, like the snake wbo shecls hi• skin. should every so often switch to some-thing entirely different to maintain his vitality. . .I likt to see wh1i!:h way life is golng to jump and whlcb way it ls going to make me jump." MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words OT less. The right to condense letters to fit apace or eliminate libel is reseroed. All letters must include signature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if suffi~nt reason is apparent. Poetry will not be published. For all of those wonderful years when Laguna Beach was building its place in the sun, there was the ocean, the beach ~nd the boardwalk. Then came the plaMers. For them the formula for fun wasn't good enough. "We mu st have a park", they said. "We'll call it the Main Beach Park." And it came to pass that they tore down all of those fun- ny little beach-front cottages and leveled the whole area. They were going to have a park. Not a beach but a park. THEIR PLANS call !or a grassy park. There are to be groves of trees - eucalyptus and pine -walkways to the beach and plazas tor gatherings. Some beach. Tot Jots for toddlers , presumably at such a distance that they won't get their feet wet. Perhaps the classic In the planners' a~ proach is the undulating boardwalk. They don't seem to understand that boardwalks should be flat, weathered with age and tllll of splinters. People should undulate. A beach should be a place where you meet the water head on. You get sand in YOl.U' sandwiches, cut your foot on a rock, get too much sun, examine tide pools, get frightened to death by a big wave, take 8 lot or over-exposed pictures, lose your watch and go home a complete wreck - but detehined to come back next Sun- day. Or, more si mply, if you want a park go to a park. THE ECONOMICS of the whole project are ridlculous. The water will attract the patrons ·-even if they do have to wade through an arboretwn to get to it. A tax baseJt isn't.. A source of revenue it isn't. A big, e~ive pain in the neck it is. It's a cool million dollars we're talking about. How 1bout taking that millloo and spendlng It on building a bunch of seulde cottages like the ones that ,..,. there. At one end of the beach we build an en- t<r<alnment cent<r probabl,y called "1lle Barefoot Bar." At the olhet end IJIOlbtt den of iniquity we'll call HDante's" or something like that . Tluot wrry kids can have !Un building sand castles and getting sloabed around in \he surf. Grownups can relax knowing that et the end of the day Ibey cal! get sloshed within a few hundred yards In either direction. Let's give the beach bock to tbe people. And if there are a few buckl Jett over let's build a retirement home for the plaMers. GEORGE WOLFE • Wrong Slant To the Editor: A headline In the April 25 Dally Pilot read : "FDA Action Ups Meat Colts" It should have read: "FDA Action Eliminates a Cancer-causing Chemical from Beef." Tluonk you for chanslng prlor!Uea in the future. RENE SMITH Plant • T r ee To the Editor : Army barrack bouslng. H u m a n warehouses instead of homes. Parkh>g tots, parking lots, plasUc grm. AJ a lover of the sea and trees, J'm teelfn& the squeeze . I agree with landJcape architect Richard Bigler (article in April 2' luue) that Huntington Beech needs a fore,. Maybe It could be a memorial toreit. Instead of buylng cut flowers at the t1&De of death a frlend or relative, why ~ plant a long living tree? Or why not pllilt a tree celebrating the birth of a cblldt .:i Maybe the memorial forest woald become a naUooal habit "'placing wtl1'14 flowers and cigar ashes . JAMIE 11WATERMELON" ~ ' . ' To the Editor: • 'nlo W1targ1ta ICaJldal bu -blooin enUrely out of proportion by you, Ille liberal' who has been l1'Ylnl '1o dtscrec!if'::'Nlxon Admlnlstrattcin Ute It took ofllce In 1969. Now you feel )'OU have 1 chance by somehow lmpllc1111)1 the President In this unfortunate lnddent by printing every sleazy romor that comes out of Washington before ft Js declared fact or ficlloo. I am convinced the Prealdml bad '° prior knowledge or Watergate and wflh or without thls scandal ru. PHsldellcy will go down in this nation'• hlltory U one of our best! • - RICHARD RIG<la: • • SOllletlal Mfl'• w...... ·: ·1 To the Editor: ' ;;1 ' .... , Your article, Hope for Dying Dia?! In tlio Pilot (Sunday, April 29) • raiJes some mighty big queltJcm. Yi' .e quote Dr. HaunlJ u saying, ''. .• Ille C problem ls money . . . the lllHlvll!f/ operation costs about $20,000 •. ?I In lhe pciltion of betzc able to this new hope only to the patlenta l can pay .•• '' ',".; Well now, aomebody please ~ Here we sre spending millions or do~ lo save Csmbodlans from commun.lll:ik and we can't apeod '20,000 to •ve ~ American cltir.en from kidney ~ Something wrong somewhe~. ~ J. A. DA,-~ --~ Great Art Needs Great Suffering • • • . ·' ~ .. !' -· Remarks an avant-garde artist gets tired of hearin g: "Renfro, the landlord says that if you don't at least make a down payment on the back rent by noon, we'll be thrown out into the street by nightfall ." "Yeah, it's a nice painUng. What's it a painting of<" "They say the greatest art comes from the greatest suffer- ing, Renfro. Maybe you don 't h ave enough trouble in your life." "Quaintness comes too high here in Greenwich Village, kid. For what this garret dump costs Yiill, I could get a four-room apartment off Park Avenue with two baths." 4'TRE GROCER says he doesn't care U you are another Remlnndt, Renfro. He says It's cash on the Jlne now or you don't get any more groceries." ;'Tiiey say that Norman Rockwell can st\11 get thou.sand! of dollars f6r those old paintings or his they used to put in the cover or the Saturday Evening Post." "I've seen some 0£ the landscapes you've painted. }lave you ever painted houses and barns ? I mean for a living?" "Some say he's a cubist. Sorn' say ne·s an expressionist. But J just think he's another nu Uy uhlbltlonist." "Well , to· m• they look kind of llim you've be<n imitating tbe finger paint· ( HAL BOYLE J tngs that !he chimpanzee at the zoo doeo. You did want me to speak frankly, didn't you?'' "I've already been down to the mailbox three times, Renfro. The welfare check can't pos9lbly get htre before the day afte r tomorrow." "MAYBE IT would help ii you started like most artlsta Utroughout history started, Renfro -with oome talent?" "Are you sure that one la hanging rightside up? How can you really ttll?" "All I know 1boul art Is whit I like, and what I don't likt about thil art, if that's what you call It, ls that I just doo 't like It." "What do you mean when you say that you'd even be wWlng lo give" this· particular polnUng to the r1gbt muS<Um ? Any museum that would take It would be the wrong museum.'' "Where dld you put that tea bag we us- ed lest night, Renfrot We have to use it again -or we can't have any tea for breakfast." "l don't mean to frighten you, Renfro, but I don't think that's just an ordinary rash you've got in your beard. Have you ever had the mange?'' "II' WE EAT the laat two applet, Ren- fro, what wW you have left for the 1\111 ' Ille you planned lo paint fodl1?" ~ "The only canvss we ha"' left la Gia that old army cot I ooe for a bed, baailsi. But U you think l'm"(Olbs to "aleop GD 1111 floor for art, you're out of ywr mind." - "My kid in klnderprtan can draw bet. ter than that... r "The only thing' left oo the shell Is '' can of dog food, Renfl'o. I tell you wldt I'll do. I'll spilt It three ways -between! you, me and the dol -ti you'll agree lo go and apply ror that job wtth the sanita- tion department, like you promised." t Wlclu ..,, .. 'Let me begin by urylng -... HEt:l'I' ..... - MAJOR APPLIANCES TEUVISION & SMALL APPUAtlqS Also Available at our--:-- TV 1111 APPUAPIE MAl1I See Convenient 1ocati"'om · liSted Beww! . .100% SOLID ,-~sTAT£- .. . • ., • -. 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I 4,JJ Complete torch kit Interchangeable fuel ·'with brass pencil flame cylinder for•1\I propane burner and fuel tyli11-~ptiances. Stock DP d~. #JT-10 . LOW .DISCOUNT PRICES ON TOP .QUALITY SPORTING ;EQUIPMENT ) • f • "JIM iAVll" UVE l-sllapoloeel,sk~lacedpakn, ' 418 full leather lining, tlwJmb & :: finger loop. 4Z/371 5 .. ,; FlllT IAIRua GLDVE Designedtomak!s"""ttl-512 es, gjve you extra reach. ::l All leal:ber. #99/209 't,tt · • , nAR111 r11J. full grain cowhide, v. rs construction web an:I padded : -. wrist strap. #99/203 t.t1 3088 BRISTOL 51'. • San .Diego Fr'Hwoy 11 Bristol pertonnaroe pOrtable • One set VHF fine tuning • · . • See it all'1•110lliaoit, detailed color on thi! high' s22a· system • &ilt~.a.nteanas.· RIG. . 249.97 13PIECf DllllSET '3!! •n Most. poplllar ·size of high sp~: drills in sel1ctar ... #1130 "" SAYE ·i·~OCK $2 ··• ·F• TOILET .·3 .. ~ ' ... Renlacement unit for ma1fuDCtioning cocks. Stops wasting. BIG . WDER SALE SAVE ·1~09 .: ·11 FQllT , EXTEllllM· LAIB •\ 88 ball- water "' Cleek !Iese safety futures, -. 1. 21h ... I •••lils wil• c7c1l1c .1M ca,t 2.1%" flat .steps w1t• 1rt1Y1s . l.,!Jso ""!!!•-wltl t,•hl•! , .. tn'ss · ,.., · STORE HOUltS1 MOll.-fll. , -1 o-AM'~9;9, PM . SAT. UUll. 10AMto7PM • .. • ' " I ;cswpc= 0 DAJL" ~ILOi l ' ~n •AllMLlt ,w• -H' ~TM M iAVtt4-llEvt'ltlri\Oll£- \/N·QUOT.-!" Victims Rupture Tendons LONG BEACH (AP\ - Purse snatching is being blamed for a rise in band in· juries to the victims, a surgeon said here. Dr. Gerald Blatt of Long Beach told an orthopedic con- ferance at Memorial HOspital that purse snatching often results in a tendon rupture of (MEDICINE) the victim's middle or ring finger . He said the injury occurs when by reflex action the woman tries to hang on. to the purse. Surgeoris can correct the in- , ;~ .. ~Y ....!'~att~cbing the ten- don, he said. e NetD Hospital SAN DIEGO (AP) -A $4.S. million, 150-bed hospital has opened near San Diego's Mission Bay. Mission Bay Me m o.r I a I Hospital was dedicated with speeches by slate Sen. John Stull, Rep. Bob Wilson and City Councilman Ro b e r t Martinet. e Closln9 Set HANFORD (AP) -Kings County supervisors h a v e .~ 1 decided to close Kings County General Hospital, effective Aug. 15. 'Ihe · decision came as a resultiof what the board term- ed " vague, technical prob- lems" which· will keep the hospital from receiving medical and Medicare ac- creditation after June 30. The board emphasized that the accreditation delemma had nothing to do with the quality of health care at the county-run facility. eEqertment• SACRAMENTo (AP) -Ex- periments using living "post- abortion fetuses" for medical research would be outlawed under a proposal by a freshman Republican assemblyman. Assemblym8n Michael D. Antonovich of Glendale who introduced the bill said, "It is outrageous that In a country dedicated to the principle of human rights, we should even consider using victims of abortion as Jiving human guinea pigs for m e d I c a 1 research." e Dedlr11tlon LOS ANGELES (A P) -The City of Hope which specializes in treating diseases for which there is no known cure dedicated a $16.8 million hosnital unit. The c eremony drew Sen. Alan Cranston (0-Callf.) and Harry Ashmore, president of the Center for the Study of Demociatic Institutions . e Abortion Curb SACRAMENTO (AP) - Private hospitals could refuse to perfonn abortion,, under legislation p r o p o s e d by Assemblyman Frank Murphy . Murphy (R.S.nta Q-uz) said no current law requires hospitals to perform abortions, but that hi s proposal "is a safeguard against either a court ruling or a future statute with such a requirement." Cuffed, · utFree TRIESl'E, Italy (AP) - Two Italian youths ar- rested by Yugoslav fron. tier . police !or trying to smuggle ,a carload"'Of blue jc'ans acroSs the border ned back into .Italy lllll handculfed together. Italian police unshackled and-released lt>.m. as they had committed no crime in Italy. · - J c. •• ' 7 I I 7 --• . . ' • • '\ , . • • / VOL 66, NO. 124, 4 SECTIONS, 46 P,._GES ORANGE COUNTY, °CALIFORNIA ' , I , ' , ' 4, 1973 ' . • -· Today's Fln a l · --...... N.Y. StockS . . lEN CENTS Lines I Harden • Ill · Teach~r Pay Negotiations By TERRY COVILLE ...... D91tr' .......... An average teacher in the Huntington Beach ·Union High School District earns $13,327 a, year, accordin.l to the District Educators Assoclallon (0EA). Such a teacher would have five or six Years' experience, a bachek>r's degree in education, plus about 30 writs of graduate studies. The DEA bas called on all district tel!.cbers to laun~h a series of protests, • : Sen~Long Exhu,med • .. '· For Tests HANNIBAL, Mo. !AP) -Audrain County authorities were waiting the results todlY of an autopsy on former U.S. Sen. Edard V. Long, whose body was exhumed Thursday for investigation of a report Long may have died of poison- ing. In a copyrighted story, the Kansas City Star said the body was taken from Grandview Cemetery here to Hannibal hospital, where an auto_psy was perform- ed in Ille i4sel!CI' of four ~· SamiileS 1'ere tUelJ from the stomach for chemical ~lysil but the results were not immediolely.lnow!!o All oboerver told ~ Star tlle lllloply re~ a large ptiiilt.uy tum<ir which may have Cjlused the veteron politiclan<1 death Nov. f, the story said. Long's widow, Mrs. F1orence Long, asked investigators to check the progress qf1tbe tumor, which was discovered at a WashingtoQ hospital in 1967. · 1be report that IA>ng may have died from poisoning came last month from Helen Dunlop, Ldng's secretary. She told authorities Long coft!pialned shortiy before his death that he might have been polooned by a box of candy which bad been . given to blm. Wng's body was reburied yesterday after being exhumed at the request of Thomas ·Olborile, Audrain 0oanty pro. erutlng attorney. Mts. Long approved the autopsy with certain conditioos, in- cluding having present a physician. of her choice. . 'Ibe Star said one doctor from Han- nibal, two from St. Louis and one from tt.e Louisiana. Mo. area attended the autopsy. Also present were pike county coroner J. 0. Mudd and Marion Wasinger, a Han- nibal attorney who re~ts Mrs. Long. Mrs. Long had Wed an alienation o[ affections suit against Miss Dunlop, seek- ing damages o[ $3.25 ' mD!lon charging that Miss Dunlop "carnally"· knew Long. A few months before his death, Long, who was separated from his wife, revised his will, leaving $10 each to bis widow and their daughter, and the OO!k of bis estate, estimated at more than $2 · mi!lloo, to his granddaughter. ' Truck Driver Killed RIVERSIDE (AP) -A hay truck driv~ from Ridgecrest was killed when his ffhicle plunged over U.S. 60 onto the Riverside Freeway, the highway patrol reported. incluCliQ8 the wearing of black armbands, beqluSe,, DEA officials say, tallls with the adliliDistratio aboot raising that sal8fy liave stalled. · Teachers, represented by a negotiating commltlee, have asUd for a nine percent w~a:e 1n~a~ for an teachers. An administrative team, handling negotiations for the board of trust.ees, bas said It won't authorize more than a five pel<:<nt increase. Tll!' olily point .or discussion in this ' ' . - year's salary battle ls the~ w~e increa&e. Teacben agree with llie admiNstratioo that they have a good 'frintie benefit package and have ui<ed for no·change in it. Both sides hav~ alreody cmn(!rOmised on one ~int -~ salaries for teacliers new to the dtstrlct:"'Tbe ad- minlstrittiou did. not want Jo give 'credit to a new ieactier fO!'-any previous teaching experience , (ii cumolly gives up to fi~e ~credit). Teachers wsnted . ' to give.~ full credit for previous ex· perience, Both sides dropped their proposals and it will remain at the same five-year mu- imwn ~t level. A ~ • teacher, without any previOUS experi.ence, now earns · $7 ,964 a year. 1be blgbest salar), after ll years. is $15,911, except that figure can go higher stridly on a longevity grant. The current protes~. an n o,u n cc d FIREMEN ATTACK BLAZE IN HOME ·ON 'MARILYN STREET IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Thursd1y Afternoon Fire D•""9M Home, Destroys &o.t; No Injuries Reporttd . ' ·Ma111ie,· Wouldn't Husband Files Divorce Suit .. . By TOM BARLEY him required Only 10 minutes of Of ltM O.lfl •11o1 11'" testimony and should be disposed,1of to- Lawyers for actress Mamie Van Doren d and ber·third husband tangled in a Santa a~s lawyers contend that the marriage Ana: courtroom today over the shapely bl<.llde's demand for a two-month delay . contracted in Las Vegas last Dec. 1 in ;the Orange County divorce action filed disintegrated on the wedding night· when b~ her spouse of j~t 37 days. Miss van: Doren refused to go lo bed with S~rior Court Judge William C. Speirs him and instead spent the night on a ~ arguments from both sides and couch. ' promptly sent the file down to' Presiding Documents Wed in support or the ~udge Bl'uce Sumner of Laguna Beach divorce petition -Miss Van Doren i& for bis decision OD the motion for a delay listed aa Joan L. McClintock -allege Uiltil J\ll)e. · that the actress never intended to be part 'Iha! -Ion will be heard later today. of · a true marriage "and married for ~ Tbi~40-year-o1d actress was not present wealth." to bear her lawyer explain that a stage It ii alleged that her first act after commitment in Sl Paul, Minn. made it marriage was · to demand a $10,IXMl i!11Pooslble .!ix her to be in Orange Coun-chiocbllla coat aild a $35,000 Rolls Royce ·fy loetbe 'court ~· from McClintock. ·~,. :l'!< wealthy bjlainess, ~-It is il!o all~ that she reru..ed to ~ jil~ 51,"lf.~ ' share the couples Orange home with the ai;;uea.tf>'t 1be lj&orce;&ctl011•~ ~:·_ ,ptltliooer'"teenage son, Bo McC!intock. ' . '• .. "' Boy, 6, lgni'tes $12,000 Blaze In, Huntington ·Fire investigators said today·a 8-year- old boy started a blaze ThUrsday af- ternoon that caused an estimlited $12,000 in damages to a Huntington Beach home. The home owned by Rick ·vandevort at 6902 Marilyn Drive sUffered extensive smoke damage from the fire which com~ pletely destroyed the adjoining garage and the fiber glass ski boat parked in It. A team of 17 firemen quickly knocked down the names that broke out at about 2 p.m. The thJck column of black smoke could be seen over a wide area of Hun- tington Beach. Fire investigators said today the fire was started by a boy who did not live in the house . They said the child started lhe fire with matches and paint thinner. P•rents' Approvdt· 3 Astronnats In Rehearsal All-year Pro~amT ·Backed Parents with children in the two all- year schools in the Oceai1 View School Distrj_ct gave solid support to continue that program , aceordlng to a ballot count conducted Thursday. • At Crest View, 66.3 percent of the ~ who returned tbelr 11yea11 or'!<m" ballots favored aoother year ol an 11!· yet1r ochedule. ' The vote at Westmont was 59.8 percent In !m>r of tilt all year program. Both schools are in Huntington Beach . ·ru Information, together with at- titude survey~ ol the porenll, children and teachers II both ICboob will be giveo lo dlltrict trustees Monday night. Trostef9 are •xpected to determine the future of scliedullll( at tllole two -· Pistri~I bfficlals indicated they were -aurprised at the. strong support ·Bhown, grades al neighboring sctx>ols wbo would ~ ~!Jering the controversy aj.l-oyear attend~ Westmont or Crest View next · schools caused over. the past y.ear. yiar. Because 'of a lack of teacher support, When the ballots of lhoje parents were and ~ vocal criticism from some added, the r~ult waS less favorable. parebts, the dlstrict's 22 other elemen--In fact, at Westmont, the all·year plan tary IC:bools never wtnt on an all·year actually Jost because more Westmont schedule. -• , poreoll had transl erred their youngsters Crest VI.,. and Westmont went all· out at tlie start than at Crest View. yelf a yur 1go. · 1be final. result a\ Westmont was 51. 1 The boDoll, coonted 'l'bul'lday If· peroeat against continuing it and 4'.9 ternoon wflh Mrs. Ruth Finley, prtslderit percent favoring all·l""' aclJools. There of the · HunU11819n Beach Loque o1 were 1125 ballots malied out to W-ont WOOien Vows, standing by 11 a iieutral porents and 262 (60.9 percent) returned. oboorver, were not limited to just At Crest View there were few perenll porenll ol chlldml in the procram. Tbe' • bad transferred their cblldren, but also surveyed tlae puellll o! cbUdren who the poreoll of outside 41'11h graden VfJllli ti from Ibo llllrt and tram!ered <-.i Oceall View'• schools do not to ot~ school, and parents o! fib (See AIJ,VEAll, hp II CAPE &ENNEDY, Fla. (AP ) - The Skylab 1 astronauts were aboard their spaceship today for the conclusion of a nine-d•Y countdown rehearsal tbil:t cleared the way for the Jawiching of Arp.erica's first space-station May 14. Wearing spacesuits, C h a r I e s Conrad Jr., Paul J. Weitz and Dr. Josept), P. Kerwin entered a modified Apollo ship atop a 5aturn lB rocket and participated in the final hours of a simulated countdown and liltoU of the blg booster. Launch Operations D I r e c t o r Waiter Kapryan reported alter the test that It w11 "totalry successful. We bad no significant probiem1 In lhe spaeecran or the launch vebl- clt." Wednesday by the DEA, involve such ac- tions as wearing black armbands to class today and next week, boycotting administrative meetings, and picketing next Tuesc:Jay's boa.id of trustees meeting. If a compromise isn't reached by May 15, the teachers plan a general meeting to vote OD whether they want to strike, call a minimum day schedule thalf (See TEACHERS, Page 11 • I Sabotage Of Muskie Suspected WASHINGTON (AP ) -Donald H. Segretti, a California attorney with reJ)Orted tics to the White House, bas been indicted in an alleged scheme aimed at sabotaging Democratic Sen. EdmW1d S. Muskie's presidential campaign in Florida last year, the Ju stice DepMt- ment said today . The department said Segretli, long MARTHA SAYS SHE WAS 'HALF CRUCIFl ,P'-P"'" 4 ' ' under investigation in the Walelpte scandal, was indicted by a federal grand jury in Orlando, Fla. for "publishing and distrlbutjnc a letter •.. which !ailed to identify thole respons!ble." '!bat referred to a fl ier 11id to have been forged on Muskie's stationery which accused two of his leading opponents, Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey and Henry M. Jackson, of se,:ua! misconduct. The letter reportedly was distributed by the thousands just prior to the March 14 primary. Segretti could not be reached immedi- ately for comment. His telephone answer- ing service in Los Angeles said he discon- tinued using it two months ago. The Justice Department said bis whereabouts were not known. • Muskie flnlshed a poor third in the Florida balolting behind Alabama Gov. Wallace and Humphrey. 1be defeat was the first in a series of primary setbacks that led the one-time Democratic favor- ite to withdraw from active campalgn.- ing, even though public opinion polls had shown him to have the best chance of beating President Nl.J:on in the general election. The inifictment also charged George A. Hearing of Tampa, Fla. on the same counts. Rogirt Milton Benz, 25, of Odessa, Fla ., a former Nixon campaign worker and one-time president of the Tampa Young Republicans, was named as an unidicted co-eonspb'ator. SegretU and Hearing were named on two counts, the first cnargtng that they arranged for the letter to be published and the second that they conspired to distribute it. Acco~ding to the conspiracy count, Scgrett1 and Benz met Dec. 1, 1971 , at a restaurant near Tampa, Fla . and "discus.sed disruption of the campaigns" of Jackson and Muskie. Other "overt acts" listed in t h e in- dictment sa1d that on Feb. 20, lt73 Segretti malled a supply of Citizens for Muskie stationery to Benz and a letter Containing the proposed text for the phony flier. On Feb. 25, 1972, the indictment said. Benz gave ~aring a proposed letter and stationery and Hearing malled It March 11 to persons in the Jacksonville, Orlan- do, Tampa, and St. Petersburg areas, among others. The maximum penalty upon conviction on each count -both misdemeanors -is one year In prison and a $1,000.fine. Rock Concert Earns $1,024 for Charity Last Sunday's rock concert at Hun- tington Center earned Sl,024·for charity, according to the Junior Woman's Club of Huntington Beach. Five young bands competed for top honors with Tree Frog winning a two hour recording session at a Santa Ana studio. A spokesman for the shopping mall 11id more than 1,100 -le JI· loocted the fO\ll'hour concert Sunday night. • • D-'IY l'llol Steff ...... , PAY PROTEST -Edison Higti ~ history teacher Dave Hansori displays armband he wore to school today in protest over teacher pay. Symbol means ''5, doesn't equal 9." Teachera -want ni ne percent hike, High sc)lool distnol hu offered five v percent. • , Fountain Valley ~ Clerk Collars Bandit Suspect ~ A Fountain Valley man Is in jail todiy after a store clerk he allegedly tried ~ hold up turned the tables and jumped the would-be bandit. Police said Mark John Mullaly •. 10~ pf 183-05 San Jose St., has been hooked qp suspicion of armed robbery and ~ for the attempted hold up of the· 7-Eleven Market at 9951 Yorktown Ave. in Hun-1 tington Beach. i According to police reports, Mullaly entered the store at about 1:30 a.rt>-. Thursday morning when clerk Keru11l Olson was aJooe inside. , ~ · With hfs hand in his pocket simulatlfli a weapon, Mullaly allegedly ordered t~e 20-year-old Olson to empty the $12.6 in the cash register into a paper sack . Olson was then repo rtedly ordered to "take a walk" with ~1ullaly and.he told orricers that it dawned on him about a block from the store that Mullaly wasn't armed, that he just had his hand in his coat pocket. - SO he turned on his alleged abduct91' and threw him to the ground. Police said Mullaly got punched in the nose in the enusing scuffle before be surrendered fo Olson . Police were notified of the captufe by a passerby. Orange, Weatlter The · weather service sees low clouds blocking out Old Sol on Sat· urday with a chanee .of partial clearlng in the late afternoon. Cool- • er temperatures are expected, with readings in the &Os. Lows 411-58. : 'INSIDE TODAY Two sta.ff writers ta ke a look at •· tht · Renaissance Pleasure Faire 10htch. takes place each Mp.JJ iJi Agoura: one Jrrnn the p¢rspectiue of tile participating ' artt1t.a1ui one from. the view of the. Visitor. See toda~·s Week .. ettdef\ r . - tr ....... . :.. ... ·~ .... .. '. . ....... -.... ~ ,.., ... , ..... " • ~:~Secret' Ni*-on • Funds -Revealed -. ">WASHINGTON (AP) -The former uUsurer of President Ni1.on'1 campaign fi.Unct committee bas testified in a sworn deposition that the campaign rais· ed more than $1 million in cash coo· * * * ehrlichman, Haldeman I Face Quiz WASIDNGTON. (UPI) -Senate ln- ..... ll&atora questioned today ~dent .Nlm\'s two top former alde.s about the Watergati buglng .... and any coverup o! lt. '11 · marked the second aay H.R. lllldeman and John D. Ehrllchman 1ub- rillt10d to tesllmooy .before _,ate ln- Vl!lllgaton. ·'!'he depooed White House aides, who iaidenrent lengthy questioning Thunday bY.• federal grand jury, aaid today they were sure any suspicions of • any pttS!dential knowledge o! the Watergate alfalr would be dlapelied "when the truth ii"'fully known." ·!be grand jury which beard Haldeman and Ebrllclunan Thursday convened late ·this morning while Frederick C. LaRue, 44, an aaalstant to John N. Mitchell when the. latter was director of the Nixon re· eledlon ean>palin, met with federal at- llrneya, apparently before being called !4:testify. . .jl'ollowing (Nbllcati<lll ol a public opln- lm. llUQ'Jll'-ladlcatlnsc.Jllal ·~.<!.~ questioned believed Nlsoo knew or efforts ~.cover up tbe Witergate, Ebrllclunan 'llld Halde!)um were asked U they felt --IUIPiciona-would be _dlapelled in - tinte. (Story, Page 4). , ~I lo!ow that whe!f ·the truth is fully iqown, this matter will be cleared up to eyeryone'a saUsfactlon," Haldeman told ' . re rs. reporter asked: "Including any S!J!Piclon concmting the President -thilt will be Jispelled as well?" • 110f oourse -without any question ," Haldeman, Nixon's former chief or staff, replied. "Ebrllchman, fonner Nixon domestic ctdvt,er, chimed in, "Let me join in tbilt:" :'nte meeting t.ook place in t.he offices or a sped.al Senate committee created to conduct an independent investigation or the Watergate case, as welJ as other political •pylng. HaJdeman and Ehrlichman spent a total of nearly U hours at the federal courthouse Thursday, much of it waiting to talk wlth prosecutors or the grand jury. Their attorney, John J. Wilson, said Haldeman was ltft "twiddling his thumbs" during the entire four hours that Ehrlichman was a pp e a r i n g separately before the jurors. It was 8 p.m. before the day's ordeal coded for them. . Wilson, close by to advise the two all day, was asked by reporters about reports that indictments would be handed down against Haldeman, Ehrlichman and several fonner officials of t h e Administration or 1972 Nixon re.election campaign. Budget Session Slated Saturday Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees will hold a special bl!dget session starting at 8 a.m. Satur- day. Trustees also have scheduled an ex- ecutive session to discuss teacher pay propoMls. The special board meeting will be held in the confe•ence trailer at the district administrative offiet!s, 1902 17th St., Hun- tington Beach. OIAN•I COAST Ml DAILY PILOT TM Orlll09 CO.•! OAIL Y PILOT wllll wt!~ I• c;ornblned.th9 N•ws·Prtu, 19 pUllH1h«I b., tile 0!'•1119 Cot1I Pl,lllll .... lnlJ C°"'Pen.,. ~ ,,,. edtl'°"" •re pUblfllled, """"*" ttw...,.iri Frk11y, far Cmll Mfll, Ntwporl 8e1ci\, H111>llt19IOl'I 8..cll/Fovnt•ifl V1!'9y, Ll'!lllM lktcrl, lrvlnt/s.odltbKk and Sa" Cltrntnt1/ Sin Ju.n C•ciktr•l!O. A t llllli ..,.l'!llonll Mllloft It P11bll11'1«1 Satvn:ttyl •nd S11nd1y1. t ... prln<:IPlll pvtiH1l'llno cii.nt 11 fl SXt Weit l1y St'"I, Co.11 M111, CtlllOl'nlt , '2.,.. Ro\1rl N. W11d Prtt'ldtnl t l'ld Publl1htr J1ck R. C11rl1y Vkt Prnldtlit lllld G-rtl Mtnt;t<' Thorn11 IC11.,il Editor ThoM11 A. M11rplii111 M111a91r11 E6!tor ChtrlH H. Lee1 fti'h''' ,, N11ll ANllft!ll MINtlne E4lltor1 T1rry Corill1 W.I Of,,.._ C:-1~ Editor .............. OMu 17171 l11d. a.1111•1'4 M1 flliti M4t•••t P.c;>."t.• 7t0, 926'41 --~ ht<flt m ,.._, A- c.i. ...,., ,. w:,;.~r l"'"' ~~j.sm,.,. I Cl~lt'+':: t I i I 1• Cflft '43-4121 QulM Mtu••t •-MJ..1111 ,,.... --...... '*"'1 QI ,., ..... _l .. c..,r111111. 1'71. Mfllt C..t ""81111111'11 ~: No ..,. 1wtts. 1n1111rtt1111t. .......-fMtw .. ....,........,.,. flfttlll ...., ................... ...,.., .... ,...,... "' °""""' ..., __ a.CMf .. ,..,,.. ...... c.tl .... u,..,,._ •• •""• ..,. ewnw_ .... ..__, w ..... -.1• ,..,....,, ............. ~-:_ -trlbUUons which apparenUy were never reported. Tho statement was made by Hugb W. Sl~n Jr., former treasurer Of the Finance Committee to Re-elect the Pr~ldent, on Oct. 24, and unsealed by U.S. ·liblrlct Court todJly. Attoroeya for C.Ommon Cause, a citizens group, asked Sloan how much cash money was· covered in a missing ledger sheet of cash transactions by the committee. A. l don't have a precise figure in mind. But it wa1 in ei:ceu of $1 million. Q. You have indicated that the amount was In excess or $1 muu.n. Coun you put a celling oo It? Waa It under $10 mllllonl" A. Oh, yes, it was under $2 million. Q. S<lmewbere between ll million ·and $2 .mtWon? · A. Ye,. Later in the deposition, Sloan said the rilissing sheets on cash money listed "about $900,000'' in disbursements. Apparently tJ;iere is no public record of unreported cash raised and bandied by the Nixon campaign, altboogb there has been rourt testimony of sums up to $350,000 kept in various safes. · News reports have said President Nix- on's personal lawyer, Herbert Kalmbach at Newport Beach, had a $500,000 bank account containing c a m p a i g n con- tributions used, at least in part, to pay for political espionage. An aide to former White House Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman has been quoted in , grand jury testimony as saying Haldeman kept $350,000 in apparently unreported campaign money in his safe. The Nixon campai&n was fined .$8,0oo for failing to report disbursements from a third secret fund kept in campaign headquarters. --... -.. When the new campaign finance disclosure law "went into effect •n· April 7, 1972, the Nixon committee . reported assets of $10 million. The $2 million or less Sloan mentioned in his deposition a~ parently was in addition to th<:: reported funds on hand . Sloan testified that some records of the cash transactions had been destroyed. Board Decisio11 Prompts Suit By Ecology Unit Orange County supervisors today face Superior Court actioa , based on the allegation that their overturning of lhe planning commillsion's decision on a con- troversial El 'Toro development was il- legal. The lawsuit filed by the Environmental Coalition of Orange Collllty with an El Toro church and school as co-plaintiffs claims that the county board acted unlaWfully March 21 when it re:ioned an eight acre parcel at El Toro Road and Muirlands Boulevard. That action cleared the way for the. Rinker Corporation to build a shopping center on the site; The company's plans had earlier been balked when the county planning commission refused to rezone the area. Lawyers for the county, the coalition, the Abiding Savior lAltheran Church and the Good Shepherd Lutheran Home of the West hav.e been ordered to appear before Judge Robert P. Kneeland May 23 for a p~trial hearing. Coalition lawyers allege that the supervisors' decision to rezone the eigh1- acre area from residential to commercial use violated state law. And they further claimed that state Jaws clearly point out that a county board can amend a general plan only if the planning commission goes along with the recommendation. Rinker Corporation president Harry Rinker saw the supervisors' decision . March 21 as vindication of his argument that the planners had unfairly denied him permission to build on the eight-acre site. Rinker's first a pp e a 1 to the supervisors in January was rejected because his plans indicated the building of two service stations within the . development. He promised to eliminate the service stations and his revised plNls were ac- cepted by the supervisors after again being rejected by the planning com- mission. • Valley Hospital Plans Lectures As part of National llospital Week May 6-12_. the Fountain Valley Community Hospital has scheduled a series of public lectures. Here is the schedule: Monday, "Scoliosis -What 'Is It?" 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium . · Tuesday. "What Goes Up," llith blood pressure tests given at no cbrge, 7:30 p.m. In the hospital audil()rtum . Thursday, poolside safety a n d emergency measures, 'f~30 e.m. ln the auditoriUQl. The hospital is ioc.!ted at the corner or Euell' Street and Warner Avenue. • • • u, •. ,....... ~ \t. ', 'J' • "-, TIME TO RELAX -President Nixon and his friend Charles "Bebe" Rebozo smite as they walk to the Florida \Vhlte House where Nixon and his family are spending the weekend. · •very Exoti~!' Costa Mesa Nuaie Bars Still Ope11 • ·Fhlaau Rec!erds ·Kallli.hach· ~ay~ .~- ~ ·Fires !?estro_ye~ NEW YORK (AP ) -President Nlion's forMef" personal attorney has told aoverriment inv~stigators that &. e destroyed all his campaign finance records before the 1972 federal campaign fiuance law took effect, accordin& to sources quoted 10\fay by lbe NelV 'Y"':k Times. The Times said it learned from sources close to the case that Herbert W. EX·NIXON. PHYSJclAN SAYS RECORDS TAKEN-Pap 5 Kalmbach of Newport Beach, who was Nixon's attorney until a few days ago, anociate as aaYing the ~ ...... destroyed In Kalmbach'.tl!fOce in the headquarters o! the CoinJi>i«ee to ~ elect the President and a) Kalmbach's ho-in Newport Bea~ ' ~ AtwrneyA In Pentagon Case Silent said he destroyed the records to protect LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Delense at4 the names of donors. tomeys for Daniel Ellsberg and Anthooy Most of the !Wids raised by Kalmbach Ru5"o today refused to take any part in came from wealthy Republicans living in further testimony at the Peptagon Southern California,< where Kahnbach Papers trial, but the judge ordered maintains a private law practice, the testimony in the government's rebuttal newspaper said. Kalmbach served as associate case to proceed anyway. chatrman of the Republican rewelection The defense attorneys. vowed tbey finanCe committee. would sit silently, refusing to voice ob- Sudl. destrucUon of :.'eCOrds, the Times jections or engage in croes-examin8Uon said, could be a-Yiotation of the 1922 Cor4 of witnesses unUI the judge resolved an rupt Practices Act. investigation of Watergate and White A spokesman !or the Republican House links ' to the _..,.uon or finance committee was quoted by the Ellsberg. Times as saying, "We have no in-U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byme formation that any records were made his ruling on testimony after destroyed... numerous arguments followed )lis an- The Times said Kalmbach controlled a nouncement lhat the government had not By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI counties "does create some concern." yet given him the grand· jury transcript 01 1111 0 •11v '°1'°' ltaff Costa Mesa City Attorney Roy E. June. secret $500,000 fund, part of which was of Watergate conspirator E. Howard Threats of imminent prosecuti6'n under an embattled nude bar fighter alnce allegedly used foi espionage and Hunt's testimony in Washing t o·n strengthened anti-nudity statutes has he ran Baby Doll's out of town in sabotage during the 1972 campaign. regarding a burglary of Daniel Ells""'-'s Ii h h the It also said he is known to be under ~ 6 done little to curb the frivolity of dancing 1967, be eves e now as weapon to ll psychiatrist's offiet!. · girls at Costa ·Mesa's 'two nudie clubs, win his war against the Fire House and .grand jury investigation for his a .eged The defense asked that the trfal be " Papa Joe's~ the Fire·House. • ·Papa Joe 's. role in a reported conspiracy to obstruct stopped, but the judge refused. Business ~as conducted nude as usual Although be bellevE'$ the old Costa the initial ~~into the The government prOseeutor explained at the Fire House and sans bra at Papa Mesa "entertainment" ordinance ban-bugging of Democratic national bead-that it.he tranScript bad not reached the Joe's Thursday despite-W\VS from city · ning topiess-bottoroJi!ss bars is now en--quarters in Washington's Watergate com-Justice Department in time to be fiown -officials to~pnt .the clotbes..,baCkron..lhe -forceable ·hl Jigb~rof the court--n®l&.:--~Uriirea -i>ress--1n~tional··quoteci· an h!!.i:e overnight -atter it was OTdered --~. girls. (Related story Page 5.) June said he. will .ask for a new law to· -· ·re1e3sed 01i Thursday. He said it was A state Supr.eme Court .~isioil. last supercede it on Monday night. t>f ing sent here by Telecopier and should Tuesday allows them to d~ 1.ust .t~at. The Presented. to members-of the City FrOftl. .... •e I arriv e here within the-day. ·- court ruled that local mun1c1paht1es have Council will be an emergency ordinance _,, Ellsberg's chief attorney, Leona.r4 u p h o 1 d i n &. • the topl~s-bottomless containing the same provisions as the TEACHERS Boudin·, arose and demanded that the waitresses and performers 10 bars and county ordinance~. which was upheld by • • • trial testimony be immediately stopped restaurants. 'the court. because it was "farcical" to continue "We'll be open no matter what," vo~ed "Uthe council approves it, it will be in Strike), or aceept the five percent pro-with testimony against the defendants. Fire House dancer Ida Cannon, speak1~g ef!eCt Tuesday morning and enforcement 1 "We cannot engage in what we for her boss, owner Ray Rohm, now in wil1 begin immediately unless the city ~ percentage increase Ls the issue in honestly regard as a diversion from the Las Vegas. manager and the police chief decide to this year's discussion, according to· Ray main course of events -namely, what Doorman Chuck Kaufman added, "I defer enforcement for a period or time." Cooper, one of the teacher negotiators. has the government done to us, not what don't koow what b,e's got in mind to do June further disclosed plans by the If the teacher's nine percent request is have we done to the government of the now. But as of right now, if you're 18 and Orange County District Attorney's office granted, that average salary of $13,327 United States," said Boudin. have a driver's license, you're welcome to draft an air-tight county wide would become $l4,527. u the five percent He again pressed for immediate to rome in. We have some very exotic, ordinance against nude bars. That raise is taken, it would be $l3,993. . dismissal of the indictment against very intriguing, and very exciting en-ordinance would be passed by vatious In tenns of total cash to the distflct, Ellsberg and Russo on grounds that the tertalninent here." cities and create uniformity for ease of 1 Dr. Jay Settle, an mistant ~-government is guilty of corruption and At Papa Joe's, where the~girls are on~y prosecution. f tendent, said the ·nve percent would 'Cost ma1feaSance in Connection With'hi! trtal. half-nude to romP;IY with Alco~hc Since the Supreme Court ruling the district about $774 ooo while the nine U.S. District Court Judge John J . Beverage Control ~~. regulatwns, specifically excludes theaters from nudi-. ~t.would cost fl.i miwon, above the SUi.ca, heading the Watergate probe in Manager Don Foote said, As. far as we ty law Jft)secution, June predicted that 1 ~· ~1 bud· ~··~ · 5 \!11hiD1toa,, Thunday ordered the kqow. we ruii;l"Kye~. been ordered to ~l"'ll!e houses might come back. :" 1 are !o~}be ~! tu..my an~t tfanacript o! Hunt'• teatimony .. - stpp w~t we .e . Thats where you JUSt buy a t1cklt to i' include,additiooal teachers hired for next to Byme after Byrne demanded to know . At the ·same time, wever, Foot~ ~d-ogle and there is rlo beer, nor ear be said. what Hunt had said about the Pentagon mitted. that Tuesday's 4 to 2 dec1s1on sandwiches, food or drinks involved," he Y ' papers case. up ho I di n g the topless-bottomless said. "But it bas to be a legitimate Defense attorneys said sources told ordinances o! Orange and Sacramento theater production:" Mm· uteman Launch~d them Hunt informed tbe grand .jury Wl\'f· ' As Tuesday approaches, Fire House nesday that he and Watergate ~ Y outli Trapped In Auto Freed Huntington Beach firemen worked for nearly ·a half hour Thursday to free a youth trapped ... his overturned car. Michael Phemister. 17, of 8171 Deauville Drive; Huntington Beach was listed in satisfactory condition today at Pacifica Hospital. Police said the teenager was driving eastbound on 17th Street when he lost control of his car on the curve btween Lake Street and Yorktown Avenue. The car crossed the dividing line, struck a power pole guide wire and rolled three times before coming to rest on its roof, officers said. From Page 1 ALL-YEAR .. : have seventh and eighth grades) who would co me to Crest View, tended to Ofr pose the program. With all ballots counted, the favorable percentage at Crest View dropped to 61.5 percent, with 38.5 percent against. There were 300 Crest View ballots mailed and 208 (63.4 percent) returned. . District officials said they expected. parents whose childreTI were not irr the all-year programs to oppose it. but they were encouraged by the strong suppoort shown at the schools themselves. \Vestmont parents have one more ballot to fill out They will be asked to say whether they want to keep the same all-year schedule now imposed -stag- gered quarters, with some children al· tending classes in different weeks than others -or a single cycle, where at! children start and finish at the same time. This last ballot was requested by a parent-teacher advisory committee. The results will be counted Monday. The purpose of the single cycle is to make sure a child has the same teacher for the full yea}. Crest View parents ex· pressed no concern over the current schedule. Art Brings $93,000 NEW YORK (AP) -Four works by the late Pablo Picasso brought a total of f93,000 Thursday at a Sotheby Park .. Bernet galleries auction. They were among more than $11 million ln im· presslonist and modern art works auc. 'ioned by the galleries in a t~y aalo. dancer Cannon is unafraid of giving up ~ spirator G. Gordon Liddy "participated her profitable career. VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE in the burglary" and were in the office of "I can always find a job. I could be a (AP ) -The Strategic Air Command test Dr. Lewis FJelding, ~ Beverly Hills dance teacher, a bank teller, a secretary launched a Minuteman I I I in-psychiatrist who treated Ellsberg. or, if I went to school, a real estate tercontinental ballistic missile down the Former president la I adviser John D. broker. But I just happen to like where · Western test range over the Pacific Ehrlichman told the FBI he knew Liddy _i'_m_a_t_.'_'_sh_e_c_x~pla __ m_ed_. ____ . ___ 0c_e_an~·Th_u_r_sday,the~'r--F-o_rce_s_ru_·d_. ___ •n_d_H_un_t_ha_d_bur....:gl_a_ri_zed_the __ offl_ce_.~ " , ..... THE ANEST IN QUALITY AT ACCEPTABLE PRICES. WE ARE ANXIOUS TO SERVE YOU AND SHOW YOU THIS ANE COLLECTION OF CHAIRS ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT. STOP IN TODAY! DREXEL.-ttERITAG&-HENREDON-WOODMARK.-ICARASl'!-N --·- . ' NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLIFF OR.. 642.JOll IOP•" S11Ml1y 12°51101 LAGUNA BEACH e !45 NORTH COAST HWY. IOP,111 S11"41y 12.11101 4f.t..6511 -TORRANCE e 21641 HAWTHOaNl ILVO. an.121t I 1 • f'rlday, May 4, 1973 H • I ' ... DAILV,PILOT At Your Se'rvice Gen. -- ' Haig .. New Nixon· Chie' A SuU7, W...._."1 ud FridoJ Fealare Of i-. Do111)'"t • c.1 • prob1im1 r;..,. ·..nee Pa.I Duim, Pat will 014 red ta!)<. gel "" amw<n and • action JI o " nted to 'ttl'°I"" ill<qu~ tie• "' flOO' emment and flOUr Q'Ut'S- tio'ns to Pot Dut1>i "/ Al bwiness. Mail Your Sm1ict, Oronoe Coa.st Dailv Pilot, P.O. Boz 151JO, Co•EO Meta, Ca., 92626. In.elude uour ttiephone numbn. DEAR PAT: We want to try our hand at gardening and are interested in .exploring the hydroponics method as a possibility. Can you tell us where to obtain reliable information about this system? Do you know of anyone locally who has tried this method and what their success or prob- lems may have been? F. G., Costa Mesa Kenneth E. Mueller. farm advisor at the University of California Agricu1tural Extension Service, advises you to study "Growing Plants in Solution CuJture." The booklet is being mailed to you. If any local hydroponics garden«:rs want to share their experiences with you, letters sent to At Your Service will be forward- ed . Other readers interested in learning ;ibout the hydroponics method, in which plants are grown with their roots in speciaJ nutrient-bearing solutions instead or in soil , may request this booklet (AXT- 196) by writing to the Agricultural Ex- tension Service, 1000 S. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim 92805. ' 'Nixon· Kiri Employed . By Vesc~ Donald Nixon, 26-yeal"<>ld IOl1 of F. Dooald N1mn of Newport Beach and nephew of the Pmident, bas been In the employment of 8 New Jeney financier coonected with a securities and exchange commission complaint, it was reported · today. The New York nmes said young Nixon was hired by Robert L. Vesco in July, lint, one month after the SEC began in- vestigating the New Jersey fmancier. An associate of v~ was quoted by the Tbnes as saylng there as '"no ques- tion" that Donald Nixon waa hired because he could somehow help Vesco's plans in the future. Young Nixon became the personal aide to Vesco and lived with the Vesco family in their large ranch home in Boohtoo, New Jersey. Vesco, who secretly gave $200,fl» in cash to the Nixon re-election campaign, has been served with an arrest warrant in connection with a $224 million civil fraud suit filed by the SEC. Dona1H Nixon has served in the Navy and has told associJtes that he was "'Owtded slightly in Vietnam. His position with the Vesco organization apparently was handling personal arrangements for Vesco and included traveling in many foreign countries. His official position \Yes described as "consultant." Orthodentie Costs His lather ·and mother, Mr. and Mrs. II . . 1 F. Donald Niion, have beeii loogtirne -... ..._, -DEAR PA\:, Our ch d ts m need o residents of NeWport Beach. braces and: we ve_ found to our .amaze-Young Donald Nixon was graduated __ ,_ '7'"'11. the higbcost of sucli_.servu:e~ by ___ from Newport Harbor.High School in 1964 most or_th~t.s, l~. there _ any...way out -and attendecl ·Qraoge'_Coast College:._·and - for a family o[ motlesl earmngs to afford California State U n i v e r s i t y at bi-aces_ for,~heir children ? When someone Northridge. say~ it will cost $1 ,000, to $2,500 . ~o His family in Newport confirmed today straighten out. your sons teeth, 1t s that young Nixon had done considerable rather sta~cnng. \Ve also understand traveling for Vesco main1y in Nassau the entire )Ob usually takes anywhere and the Dominican' Republic. They de- from a year to two years to complete clined further comment on bis role with with many visits for adjustments. We Vesco. live . in Costa Mesa and are a one-car "I have no comment on any activities famtly. of any members of my family," the elder L.B., Costa Mesa Donald Nixon concluded. , If transportation to lbe Los Angeles Meanwhile, A s s o c I a t e d Press area i!: not poss.lble, you should consult dispatches from New York rePorted to- with several ortbodooUsts to your locaJ.. day that a federal judge has ordered the lty, explain your financial situation and arrest of Vesco but Vesco's lawyer still request that a reduced fee be given, or says his client will not appear before a ar;rangements made lQ pay fees ip smaU, federal grand jury un1esa granted iJD. regular amounts. Tbe other possibility, lf munity from prosecution. you can arrange transportation, is to U.S. District Court Judge Edmund L. contact the three U.u.iverslty-aUil.la&ell Palmieri signed the bench Wlll'[_ant destal clinies <.iµn1&Jy o.f f·t r I a f 'Jlhursday alter noting VeBCO llad faUed to ort.bodontlc treatment by dental kbool respond to subpoena ordering blm to graduates ulKler the supervision of In-testily before the grand Jury In- structors. Keep In mind that these-clinics vestlgating his $250,000 contribution to choose their cases based oa instructional tht Nixon re~leetioa campaign last year. value and your son's case may Mt quafffy. USO lleatal Clinic wfll begill ac· cepting appUcations In November for ne1:t year's three-month schedule of orthodontic work. Call %U.746-%8t0 to make appUcatlon. The UCLA Orthodontic Dept. CUnlc~. %13-&t5-321%, bas sc~aled its next appblntment period for screening applicants during September. Botb use and UCLA base fees on a slkting scale according to income and work the cue requires. ~ma Linda Ulli"ersity, near Redlands, Will accept applicants for screening next January. Call the Dept. of Orthodontics at 714-8!4-0030, exl. 663, to make 81T8ngements. The Oat fee is $t50, ~·ILb a $250 down payment and monthly payments of $35 required. Only patients aged 10 through 14 are accepted. Lot 'to Celebrate DEAR . PAT: Where do television feature shows get their lists of all the silly as well as serious monthly observances usually armounced on the first day of each month? Today, May 1, it ~·as announced that May is Car Care Month, International Air Travel Month, Yams for Summertime Easy Living h1onth and Play Your O\vn Harpsichord Month! Someone mu st put out a book listing all these observances. If so, how many events are included in a one-year period. where do they all come from and can an individual get one of these books? · R.T., Laguoa Niguel TbiJ ye"ar'IJ edition of Cbues' Calendar of Annul Evellll includes 1,71' special days, weib, months and other t:pecial occurrenct1. Chases' statlstlclana claim that if yOa atarted celebrating Jan. 1, 1173, it would take 35 years, tlln:e mooibs, One week, five days ud one hour, or antil 1 a.m., March 1%, zeoa, to observe consecutively all the event• listed in 1be sl:rteentb edition of tbls book. Editor William D. Chase ~Y• calendar Ustings come from' offfclal sources, public laws, presidential pro- clamations, govemors' offices, foreign embass ies, travel associations a n d countless orgulzaUons and private 1poason tf special events, N e w authorization for e\ltnls is rtilu.ired each year, Including name, address 1and purpose of each sponsor, .., urure that only bonaOde events are locl'lded. Tbe calendar can be ordered for $5 lnlm Ap- ple Tree P.rtt1, Bo1: 101%, Flint, Mkh. 48501 and a free ldflet, "How te Alto noance uil SpoaMI' • Spedll Evettl" c11 be requested by ....U.g a sett--...t, stamped tnvtlope to ~e droe addreu. Lili Fest Canceled LONDON !AP ) -The first worldwide women 's liberation festival has beeiJ carr celed for lack of interest, organizers here said Thursday. The we<k·Jong-feltlval was to have been held on the Isle of Man in late September. Metric America, Runaways Probed In S'unday's Best . Aj;Sunclay's editioo of the Daily Pilot shapes up today, editors predict the fol.lowing will be among "Sµnday's ~" in m~ting needs , or tickling fancies of ·local-readers: METRIC AMERICA -'l1ie days of le<t and pounds may be measur<d in meters and grams. Pres.sure conUnues to mount in the U.S. for a change to the metric system of weights and measures. Daily Pilot Stall Writer John Zaller reports m what it wouJd meaa...to the in- dividual citizen in this week's lhd story of YOU Section. ENERGY CRISIS -As Qingrosa heads for the showdown on energy, ea>logy and the Tran&-Alaska pipeline, the question continues to be whether or ( S~day's Best J not the energy emergency iS real or phony. Sen. Barry Goldwater says "We Need Alaska Pipeline" ill his editorial page C.'Olumn. ISRAEL:S BffiTllDAY -It WU a. group of. iclealist.s who, 25 years ago, fanned the new nauon. '1be thought !bat may nag at the minds of thOOalMll Israelis as Monday's anniversary date approaches;-HOw well has their new, ~ derendent 1natlon lived up to the dreams of(jta I~? PRESIDENTS AND PR~ -It bas been no love match over the yeat'I al press and president (no matter who be w.,) crossed pens and swords. Spectal feature reviews histaey of presidential p<eaS relations from Washington ta Nix- on. 'MIDNIGHT SPF£IAL' -'1be youth- oriented allow with top miislcal gnM11J1 gets cover page tmtment In TV WEEK as NBC .._. Its ,_..el for another 13 w..U. n.. week'& opeclala, previewed lmfde. the magaslne, iDc:ludO · the final lnotalbnent in Alistair Ooolre'• "America" ~es. RUNAWAYS -Ooncemed about the problem ol. )'OWJg runaway•, cout area youth agendea /eel the solution ta the problem may be.to ealablish a bOOld for the ,..tbs where they can be out of llqer. DollJ Pilot Staff Writer c..dace Peanon 1en1 the ajory. -• ' £endletQn - .. Ex-Army I Aide Named • u .... ,. ....... Pentagon Piek? David Packard, a multimillion- aire California industrialist and former deputy secretary of de- fense, is reported to be .Presi· dent Nixon's top choice for the defense secretary post left va· cant by Elliot Richardson, now attorney general-designate. Edison Outlines Cooling System Cutback Danger. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Soothern CalifQmia _Edison has relied .solely · on safety analysis·provided by nuclear rea~ tor manufacturers and bas done no in- dependent study of one of the most · serious potential accidents, say engineers · for the utility. The engineers told a Public Utilities Commission hearing Thursday they had done no independent study on the poten- tially threatening sudden loss of cooling water. But Kenneth Baskin, chief of Edisoo's nu~ear engineering services, said the emergency systema were infallible in the case ol. a loss of coolant. ~ .·, Additions • ~equested ·POW Party Slated SACRAMENTO (AP) -The latest in a series or dinners ror former prisoners or war is set for tonight in Los An_geles, Gov. Rmald Reagan's office announced. Some BS guests, including former POWs plus their wives, dates and guests, are expected at the home of Los Angeles businessman Bill Wilson, a friend of Reagan's. SEE THE DIFFERENCE IN JOHNSON & SON For Staff •• STATION WAGONS •• - .. e Montego MX Villager • "Golden Touch" only at Johnson and Sons presents These Beautiful Station Wagons At Their Finest ., e Marquis Colony Park e Monterey Station Wagon SEE ONE • • • TRY ONE • •• BUY ONE ••• TODAY! .. Home Of The Nw Cu , • • "Geldn 2'•111:111' ohnson& son Home Of The New Oil' • • • "Golde1t T ... ela" t tr\.((JLN i\1f I~(.! If~ y • (CJ\ I ,\,~ ( ."\t' f I I l 2129 HARIOR BLVD. COSTA MESA. • M0-5830 'I , ' .. ... ; ... • •jol"'- 'ff) .,1,.1 ·"! ,: :•11 .·•;:i.o' •• 101 . " ... ,!"!• 'nl:• ........ '11:. . :~·1 . : .. " .'; •'l . ,. : ... ' .... f { : ;-.i . ' .• .. .. I I!: '~·1 r ~ ... : .. • " l .,: I_,: !, : -1 ,. •• •·' ' I ' . .. • · l I • • . I • .. . ' I • • • I I • -· • • " t _, I I • • ' • f. lolll.V l'llDT .free Speech Takes a ··Dive FREE TALKERS DEPT. -'lllcy've got a Free Speech Movement going downcoast at the two-year M'"J.SSi.on Viejo insi.Ututlon of higher Jeaming known as Saddlebaclc College. I This intelligence might cause you .to form up a quick mental picture of memories from the University of California atr.Berkeley some years Dack, when a chap named Mario Savio held forth on soap boxes, ranting and raving at the student body. If so, forget it. Factors surrounding tile. Free Speedi Movement at Saddleback College are con..iderably dilierenl Mainly, if there are going to be any speakers, ii they are free to 'say aeything, and ii they are mov- ing anywhere. AIL TIDS COMES about because the trustees and administration on the Mission Viejo campus have a rule that if any "controversial" speaker is brought in, ~n another speechmaker must ap- pear on the same program to represent the-other side. This diclmn has frustrated some melll- benf,of the student body. '111ey 'contend _ ~rule bas stagflfiled_any_elfort_to ~g .'."Jn speaker$, of national prommeooe· "W!lO <.'OU.id light the fires of inlellectual thought oo lhe caiii.pus just above the San Diego Freeway. 1lfE MORE VOCAL amoog students protesting the double-speaker ru1e have even suggested that the whole idea by trustees and administration is to keep rabble rousers ()ff campus. WelJ, you have to concede that so far, Jane Fcnda, Ralph Nader, Martha Mitchell or Angela Davis haven't visited a speaker's rostrum at Saddleback Ccllege. You have to consider the SaddJeback student body problem in lining up such national personalities. They'd have to get opposing speakers wh<l carry about the same clout. So if Jane Fonda were .to appear to hurl about her wannonger charges, you'd have to line up somebody like John Wayne to knock down all her arguments. GET RALPH NADER rapping about Unsafe At Any Speed and you need Ford ,.1otor Company President Lee Iacocca up there on the sa me platform. I don't know what the Saddleback peo- ple would do if they got Martha. ~1aybe give John equal time? Thus the problems of getting top-flight speakers on the Saddleback campus do seem vexing. The college president, Dr. Fred Bremer, however, doesn't see it as that tough . Dr. Bremer has indicated that it isn't so much who the speaker is, but what he talks about. Thus he hints the speaker could be controversia l as a public figure. so long as he docsn 't talk about con- troversial things. TillS OPENS UP a whole new arena for Saddleback student leaders who are trying to line up interesting speakers. Jane Fonda could appear and tell all about nice parties she has attended in Hollywood. ?\tartha oould discuss her delightful visits at the Newporter Inn. Angela could speak of the advantages of higher education at UCLA. Nader could outline the future or . bicycling in the United States. ALL OF TIJIS cou ld be done on single- speaker programs at SaddJeback College so long as 11\e lecturers don't stray from the assigned subject matter. That, of course, might be another little problem . frld<r, Mar 4, 197J Jet Slams Into Ca , PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A U.S. A6 IDlrudtr jel ~~to a ~ nin11ar7 borracb at' lbe Phnom Pmb airport tmlCbt .. Clmbc> dJan .._.and their -..-.. 11ni their <venlal meat It bursl inlli llamea and dtlb.,ed an aroa ball a city block square. · (As$Jelatcd Press repor(s aid the air· craft was a (7 Oonatr.) (AP dispatches said a bollpilal was hit), Heavy CISUlllties were feared allboogh the pilot balled out aDd lived. Gives Testimony wu ...... at the scene ssld there might be u many as 30 deed and injured. Wltneao<i saJ4 they saw a child's ltg near the wroctage aod the body ol a we> man at the cra!b ocene. Unspmt =-w bulloll Inn the A6 Wtre SCIUer<d about the wreckage but no bombs were vlslble, indicating the plane bad completed a mlslloo prior to the crash. The planes bued In 1baillncl were 8IllOlll the btllldreds bombing Clm· bodia In the 17th day of U.S. air ralda In Cambodia. A section of an engine wu tossed 50 yards !root the area ol the crash and 'Was Half. Crucified,' Says _ Martha Mitch~l~ NEW YORK (AP) -Martha Mitchell says she was "half crucified" by the \Vhite House after the Watergate affair last year when she publicly demanded that her husband quit as President Nix- on's campaign manager. "It was about that time that all the Republicans were trying to say I was in an insane asylum -they put that out from the White House," Mrs. Mitchell reportedly said in a sworn pre-trial state· ment 11lursday. Her husband, John, President Nii:on's former law partner and attorney general, quit as manager of the 1m re-election campaign two weeks after the June 17 ~break-in at Democratic Party head- quarters in Washington 's Watergate complex. .. The loquacious Mrs. Mitchell has said often she knew or "dirty business" in the campaign, but after Thursday's deposi· tion lawyers said she had little new to Of· fer. She testified in one of a series of civil suits growing oot of the Watergate affair. I.:awyers described her as cooperative. UNTIL THE Democratic headquarters break:-in, Mrs. Mitchell said she cam· paigned harder than anrone else for the Repub!icam. "For instance, when 'the vice president didn't want to do aiiythlng they called on · Martha Mitchell," she was quoted as saying. To do what? "To make a speech, to dedicate anything, any official function ." bowls ol rice were scatlettd arolll1d the wreckqe. The cnsh.ba~_at tho evtlJini meal time lor the mill~ do- --al the .,..i-paat. Two ball.fa> trucb ported •I !ht -pall wee beclly-damaltd. en.la-of ~bcltllan aotdlera ""re kepi away from the buriUng wroc:kaie by mllltarj i>Ollce. Fire trucks bad to drive into Plllcm Peoh to reftll their waler supplies. '!'kl rooflng waa sca!Und about tho com- pound And Cllle coocreto butJdlnc bad A fl~ool hole in Its wall where pieces of debris ripped through it. The cra.i. came smrtly after military -Ul'I Ttl ..... ID dia soun:es said a Communist mortar lbell -a_,,__~· c:omD*'dal .liner as It ~ taldllg oil from lhe -them Cambodlall cily· ol Kampot Tlwl'lday, ldltinr-~ ..... WllUDl!k1g eight othen. 'lbe'J)lane wu operated by llan$a, a prlvfle bltemal airline. The control tower at Pocbenloog idantl· fied the ~n plane as an A6 lntrud- er jet. 'J1le tower ·"'1d the pl-.,..,bed about 5:20 p.m! appe.rently while trying an emergency landing. Informed military sources said the American plane was based at Korat air· . . I • ·S base bl 'l'ballml. They lald .... ol the ll\fured pllols .... flown .... CJ.ID - port plane toolP' llound 1.; a mllilall' bollpital bl Bangkok. A wtm. to the Intruder crash said two U.S. jets \ftre coiD1ng iDIO the i1ijiiiri and-when the flrot aircraft crashed, the ll!COlld ctrcled the airfield aod flew of1. '!be Jet bwiJed.., lm!lld>ID a barracu artt used by Cambodian AJmy engineers and their lamllles. Fire trUclcs and am· bulances raced to the crash ,.... and the witness said al lout four pnons were taken to a b<Jopltal with Injuries. Cease-fire in Effect • . Syria Told to Keep Out Of Fighting in Lebanon BEIRUT (UPI) -A cease-fire today ended two days of bloody fighting between the Lebanese army and Pales- tinian guerrillas, aided by tank·led com· rades from Syria. But the situation re-- mained tense and there wu a threat of another Middle East conflagration. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat cau· tioned Syria against intervening as it did in a similar flareup in 1969 and diplomats in London said any significant influx or Palestinian guerrillas Into Lebanon from Syria could provoke armed Israeli reac- tion with unforeseeable consequenCes. Israeli leaders were silent on the new crisis but the Tel Aviv newspaper Yedioth Aharonoth said Israel was jieh's statement Thursday that Lebanon would not accept an 11occupation army" on Lebanese soil. It was a thinly veiled thrliit to disann the guerrillas and turn them into a forte that would provoke no further retaliattons from Israel. ·j l Ralst.on Purina I Recalls Tuna After Fat.ality prepared to warn Syria against in· -:>r. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -Ralston · t!:rvening on the side of the Arab guer-Purina Co. began a "voluntary recall" rillaS. r Thursday of cans of "Chicken1)f-the-Sea" THE AUTHORITATIVE newspaper tuna fish following reports that a Moline, .SOURCES SAlD that w he n Mrs. Mitchell was asked who at the White Hoose put out the stoey that she was in- . ·sine, slfi·fepli~: .... '\\_'.elljthe-~ ~~· I presume, but that is what they du;[ Mrs. Mitchell talked with reporters later ouWde the Office of attorney Henry 'Jt. Rothblatt. • She i aid that if .Mitchell kneW in ad- LAW AND ORDER -Fonner Attorney General John Mitch· ell had instant reply to new~ man who said, "You were once a sym!>oi of law, oroer ." Mitch· ell snapped, "I slill am and a ~~n g~ one .. " ~· .,_ ---<sa.!&l<'dHtbat "ir·re~a, · Iorces-iiom-Syria .JI! ~n !Jecame fatallJ_.,ill after ---- have penetrated into Lebanon and· are eating a tuna fish salad. ~ Even Mrs. Nixon put out word that she "understood that Mrs. Mitchell was very, very ill," Mrs. Mitchell was quoted as saying. Nixon Cautions Russia, China On Aid to Hanoi WASIDNGTON (AP) -President Nix- on has cautioned the Soviet Union and China that U.S. relations with the two Communist nation! could be set back if they keep arming North Vietnam and do not press their ally to observe the ~ fire agreement. At the same time, the President cau- tioned Hanoi that it risks "revived con- frontation with us" by using force to ex- ploit the Jan. 27 agreemenL . The warnings were contained in a fourth annual "state of the world" report to Congress. Despite the continued strife in Indochina, the President's over.all view was· that "a changed world has moved closer to a lasting peace." Nixon , said fundamental changes in American-Chinese relations had sharply reduced a risk of confrontation, while the United States and the Soviet Union ap- pear to have accomplished "a major break in the pattern of suspicion, hostili- ty and confrontation that has dominated U.S.-Soviet relations for a generation." The President noted that liaison of- fices \Vere being opened in Peking and Washington, that trade between the United States and China was reaching "very substantial levels" and that leaders of the two countries had held hu ndreds of hours of direct talks. As for the SOviet. \l.nion, Nixon said the United states is prepared to consider long-term economic cooperation. For ex- ample, he said natural gas and other vast Soviet resources could be developed with the help of American capital and technology and then exported to the United States. In Europe, he said 1973 preseµts historic opportunities for economic cooperation and a flex..ible new nuclear defense palicy for the United States and its allies. c •\IDJ;l!·:•bout .• t!Je w,~•te ·:r.,<!idJ!'.L ''1L 0-.:;;;;..,. ... , ca know 11 ..,. he ,wouJdn ·I ·have-been-m -'-'ll .u.u~~ }'S-- Washington as long as he was ." . . SHE ADDED: "He has always assured He Interceded me th~t he was oot Involved." Mitchell's deputy in the campaign, Jeb Stuart _ To Free Hoffa· Magruder, reportedly has tol<j. federal prosecutors that Mitchell was a t meetings when the burglary was planned. Mitchell said he heard the discussions but always vetoed the scheme. In her deposition. Mrs. Mitchell reportedly said: ''I wanted Jeb Magruder fired from the very beginning . _ . because I didn't like him either . _ .. l just didn't trust him." Asked if she had any conversations concerning the Watergate with H.a Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman, who re/igned earlier this week as White House chief of staff and chief domestic adviser 1 Mrs. Mitchell is quoted as :s~ying: "I don't "talk to them." She reportedly gave the same reply when asked whether she had discussed the incident with John W. Dean Ill, who had been associate deputy attorney general under Mitchell before mov\flg to the White House as coun5el to Nixon. Nixon fired Dean earlier this week . Mrs. Mitchell said her husband regard- ed Dean as "a nice little guy" whom Mitchell baled to lose. Nixon Coverup Seen by 50% PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) Half of the American public believes President Nixon took -pa.rt in an attempt to cover up the Watergate affair, according to the latest Gallup poll . And 40 percent of those ques- tioned in the poll \Vednesday night said they believed the Presi- dent knew in advance of the at- tempt to bug Democratic national headquarters in Washington's Watergate complex. But the survey also indicated that nearly three out of five Americans -58 percent -consider the present administration to be no more corrupt than previous ad· ministrations since World \Var II. WASHINGTON (API -A. former presidentia l aide says he interceded with the White House to free former Teamsters leader James Hoffa from prison. Murray M. Cbotiner of Newport Beach Thursda y told newsmen that among those in the White House with whom he discussed Hoffa's case was H . R . ~laldeman, \Vho this week resigned as President Nixon's stal.f chief following disclosure! concerning the Watergate case. Hoffa was sentenced in A1arch 1967 to eight years in Lewisburg, Pa., on two separate convictions for jury tampering ond pension fraud . Two days before Christmas 1971, Nixon freed Hoffa on a grant of clemency with the stipulation tha t the former labor leader refrain from union activities until l.'!80. OP.EN 7 D4.Y~" Nursery Hours Daily 7:30 to 6 Sunday 8 to 5:30 li.kel~_to c~U~g_e__Ql~ !111~tary balance A Jtalst.Qn spokesman sai~ .ihe rt.eall -apd en~~ .l.AHiahOD.s.. inde~ce_. _ coveud 1 .DQO....cases of_~~ce cans o... ~srael Wtll ~v~ly warn Damascus that distributed mainly in the Chicago arf:a.--- 1t cannot. s1.t with fold~ arms. The ~e number on the cans.. is wH9M3- There were no really accurate reports MK23E. o~ casualttes i~ the two days of fighting The spokesman said there was no con- w1th tanks, artillery, bazookas and planes firmation of any coMectlon between the but government figures put them al death Thursday of Mrs. Mildred Rodts more than ~ dead and. 200 wounded. and the Chicken-of-the-Sea tuna she had Some guerrilla casualties were not eaten Wednesday. He said the recall was reported. "a precautionary measure " Lebanon, faced with a political crisis · as well and a threat by Premier Am.in Halez to resign, cracked down on the guerilla mov~ent today although the last time a Lebanese government did that it ran into violent opposition from Arab governments friendly to the Palestinians. SOURCES CLOSE to the government said Lebanon is renegotiating its agree- ment with Palestinian guerrillas govern- ing their rights in Lebanon bl. the wake o( the anny-guerrilla clashes. The new agreement would replace the "Cairo Agreement" signed in November, 1969, after similar clashes brought the COWltry close to civil war and into a direct con- (rontation with Syria. The terms of the new agreement were in line with President SUleiman Fran- Corner of Newport and Victoria MRS. RODTS, 52. was hospitalized Wednesday night when she became violently ill about an hour after eating tuna fish salad containing the Ralsti>n Purina product, Rock Island County Coroner James Shaw said. Shaw said the brand of tuna was removed from the shelves of all stores in the Moline area in Illinois and Iowa. Dr. Jose Acoota. the pathologist who examined J,frs. Rodts, said poismlng from the ffina was "suspected, but ·1not definite." He said he was "bafned" because it did not appear that Mrs. Rodts died of botulism, the type of poison usually associated • with contaminated canned loods. NURSERY 646-3925 PATIO SHOP 642-4103 CAMELLIAS • $149 hntlf11I Yarltty et celers f., lhade. WUI Cal-T11rf SOD Floods Kill Cotton Hopes • TIF ·GREEN roM Levees Save Cairo , Ill.; W eatlier Cleari1i g J'etnperat u res Mi.ti!~ Pr«. " " 7J ~2 .l2 ~ ~ :t 11 SI .n ,. " .Ill " " " " ~5 ~ .II .. " " " I• " . .. " .. H it " .. ,. " lhe MfSllHIOPI crw1tlctt 11 St.6 feet II C•lro. 111 .. Thun.o•y· OVI Ille clrv w.s1 1ar1 behind 65 taor tYffl, Ind IM Up. !>II' Mlish1lppf 11.i11v b191n 1 clnnu11 Ondtr cltlr, dt'I' .... !Mr. (Coastal tummary and tidal data appear today mi Page 22) DAILY I'll.OT DELIVERY SERVICE· -.. "' °"" ...... ·- COLEUS For sh1de gard•n -ch•n9in9 color -meny colors to choose from. ,49¢qt. DICHONDllA ron REDWOOD TUBS ". Can b• ul•d e s~ •lther • h•nt .. ing b•slc:et or e Bo~z•i plo1nt1r in thr•• sil•5-IO" 1-4". 17". 2 .59 to • 311 i I ·" fi ' ! : ............. 11 ",.. .... ··-· , _____ ,... _______________ .. ____________________ _ l:'t:;. ... •;:;:':..,"".:;",.:= WAX. LEAi" , 69.t M 11 ri ' 1 • ,... I ldMI fo r " ............ .....,. ........ ~ PR VET ""' -" t -. .......,, • , -. Hedging 911. ....., .... -. ..,, ......... .. """'*_,.__ ... .... T-89 =---== ... ··-BOTILE BRUSH ¢ ...... l d .... -...... ,::,'l';:}e""~--f l,. Rod l rvth Like ~' gal. f ..: .ESCALLONIA FRADESI I NllllNI MMM1119 "'"'1, .... IM ....... ,. ""'"· " ..... 7.tl 495 ' 5 : -.. L ' ROM OUI HOUUPl.ANT llCTIOll BUTTERFtY PALM ' ... .•. ti -.. " ..... 211 ~ -'"1tllf Mrlll(td ... -· ! l I I ' I I I I I I l a DAU,y PIIAIT .EDITORIAL PA.GE ·' A ~ot for the Money Ju publlc worts projects go, the construction of a dlrt-l!llCUd, ~-<O'Vered '!!'tdoor amphitheater al Gold·· en West College Is not a alajor even(. T!iO tolal coat tor it mar be less than $40,000, but ii will be one ·or the more significant, and most plea&- ' ant projects In Huntington Beacll. - It's significant because it will be the first such out· door amphitheater In to.wn, Available for both commu· DJty and college use. With "'Ullg -on th<o &round or on chairs -for 2.500 to 3,000'.people, It can be the site of conce~, ublic speeches, theater productions or ge~ eral m s. It's a p t project because of' the spirit of coop- eration between the city and Coast Community College Distr!~. The cttr. will spend about $11,000 to help grade and landacape it. The district has piled about '24,000 worth of dirt to form the natural bowl. Private interests mar later donate liglrts, a permanent stage and a con- tro booth. ' ' Communication Hangup 11-tembers of the academic senates of the Coast Com- munity College District still are awaiting ariswers to 78 , questions about the operation of Channel 50, the dis- trict's qew educational television station, which they directed to the administration last month. . ·A procedure for responding to the questions has been worked out and a response is being prepared. In this month's edition o! Forum 50 KOCE-TV pub- lication, district chancellor Dr. Norman Watson dedares the station's activities are "ri~tfully open to public view." This is quite correct, SJ.Dee it operates on dis- trict and government funds . to be satisfied. The teacben deserve specifics. A new and innovative venture of tbls kind natural- ly .needs ·time to get rolling-smoothly. And a fine pro- 11ramm1Dg balance.mllll.bLstruct between..t.be ilulru llonil courses that concern the leacben and lhe public service programs the station js required to provide. An open. and harmonious understanding between lhe stoUQn administration and Ibo district faculty Is the best guarantee that Channel 50 will be able to live up to the original and continuing high hopes for Its success. Worthwhile 'Extra' Recently, eight members of the Fountain Valley police force ignored potential bodily harm to play basket- ball against some of the larger members of the Los An- geles Rams football team. Earlier this year, some of the Huntington Beach Police took on some high school students in basketball lor what bas become an annual sports event at Hunting- ton Beach High School. The games represent a small porlion of the efforts of local police officers to do more for their communities than enforce the law. The fund-raising sports events are one of the ways in which the police associations in Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach obtain money for the commwrity proj- ects that Ibey back. The beneficiaries of these efforts are the young people of the communities. In ,the past year the two or- gamzations have giveQ financiil or personal support to the Fountain Valley Boys Club, Junior All-Ame rican football, Pop Warner Football, Little League and Bobby Sox baseball. But if the answers to the faculty questions are as general as those published in response to questions posed in a Daily Pilot editorial, the faculty is not likely These officers dese rve the appreciation of their communities for their extra efforts to make the cities better places to live. 'Nixon Law and Order Administration. Sorry, .the,.•re .0 out answering subpenu a r die m omenr •.• may l ralce a meaaaget' Persuasion ~· ::Win s-Most ' 1trgu1mmts-= ~YD NEY J. HARRI~ Thomas Aquinas, who knew more about education and persuasion than almost anybody who ever Jived, once said that when you want to convert someone to YO\JI" view, you go over to whe~ ·he is standing, take blm by the hand (mentally speaking). and guide him to where you want to go. You don't stand aCl'08S the room and shout at him. You don't call him a dummy. You don't order him to come over to where you are. You start where he is, and work from that position. That's the only way to get him to budge. , We have lost slght of this elementary J>'YChological ract. The world is full of passionate advocates, screaming their own prejudices, and excoriating their op- paoents. This does three things: (a) it makes the people who agree with you feel better, {b) It makes the people who disagree with you stifien their resistance, and (c) It makes the people on the fence uneasy and skeptical that you are speak· ' ing the whole truth. I HAVE never known a single passionate and partisan argument to win over a person who disagreed with it, or even to persuade a person who was neutral on the subject. The chief reason being that all passionate and partisan arguments overstate their case and ur.derstate their opponents' case. When you 'think that someone is wrong, and you disagrel: with him, the first task is to determine in what way he Is right. • Dear Gloomy . Gus _ If dogs cannot be kept in the gar- age at rtjght, they should be kept under thefr master's bed. Let him be the one to. be awakened by the off and on barking during the night. R. T. O'-"Y On '"'"""" .,.. """""" '7 ~ •11111 .. Mt _rt,., Nfled ... ..,..... tof tile -•r1s1-. SIM nw ,el _. trt OIMmY On. DmlfY l'llilt. This is not as paradoxical as it sounds: no view can be entirely wrong, and everybody bas a, atilt pl~ of trutll by the tail. This la the' piece wt start with, we work from there, and concede u milch as we bone:stly can.~ • toRD ACl'ON said thal we have no right to oppose a position until we can state that position in a way that fully satisfies those who hold it; until, indeed, we can make out a better case for it than the proponent himself can. (Most of us, of course, distort or lampoon the opposite position, and then proceed to demoll!h this straw man.) And all this is much more than an academic exercise. The arts of argument . and persuasion are so little known and practiced that disputants have no recourse to anything but violence. U pei; ple can't agree on how to disagree, there is no hope of reconciliation or com· promise. And the art of argument is learning how to disaeree productively. WE BEGIN to fight when words fall us And words fail us when we ll!e the wrong ones to the wrOng people for the wrong reasons. It ls far easier to be passionate in defense of what one believes .han to comprehend why somebody else believes-something dif- ferent. But, ultimately, only thls com· prehension (which ls not agreement) can replace violence with dialog instead of the deafening mono logs that lead to war. 'Secretarial Ghetto' Every year thousands of American girls lOQk for secretarial jobs, confidently anticipaUng the good pay, pleasant work· tng condtUons, interesting fellow·workers aud excellent chances of advancement promised by the classified ads. Only too many wind up in what lively -and well informed -author Mary Kathleen Benet calls The Seerttar1al Ghec to (McGraw· Hill, $5.SJ). Ms. Benet has worked in many offices on both sides of the Atlantic, including those of the San Francisco Chronicle, the Chicago Sun-Times, McCall's, and a book publishing hou,!ie. She has also been a journalilt, an advertising copywriter, and a literary agent. Her views are frank, outspoken -and controversial. As Ms. Benet notes, well over 60 per· Cfnt of American ofllte workers are women. By the sheer force or their OU.N6l COA$T DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. Weed, Publisher' Thomas Keevu, Editor !larboto Kr1ibich Edftoriol Poge Editor Friday, May 4, 1973 (THE BOOKMAN J numbers and the variety of tasks they perform, they have become Indispensable to · the smooth functlonlng Of American business. How many receive the recogni· tion they df8'rve? W~t does a secretary's job really mean today? Does it bring independence and fulfillment?. Or does It perpetuate, 1n a new setting, a whole range of stereotyped female roles. all subservient to the f\mctlons and prerogatives of the male? The Se<relarlal Gbello tackles all these questions straight on. Secretaries will clamor to read this· book -and their bosses can't afford not to. _. CAROLINE HARKLEROAD The 1'<litorial pqe of· ~ Dafly Pilot aeelcs to Wonn. and stimulate readen: by 'Ptnenllng on thb pqe tli'Yerse commentary on topica of In. te-rest by 'Syndicated rolumnlsta and cartooniMJ, by provkllq • forum for ~aden' views and by preecntlna: thlJ newa~r"a opiNons and: ide11.1 on current· toplo. The tdltorial oplnk>N of the O.tly Piiot appttr only In die t:dltOri&l column at the top of th& -· Opinloaa ...,.......i by tho eol-umnl.Jtl and. cartooniltl Ind letter 'ATiten are their own and i».endon&- mt'nt ol their vlew1 by 1he DaU.r Pilot lhould be lnfent!d. H . Cheap Labor Greed Behind lnamigration·woes Illegal Alien Support -Just__,-Faolis~· To the Edltor: There are a great variety of fools in America, but the beneficent, altruistic, Christian boobs who pay taxes to feed, • hOO.se and care for illegal alien im- migrants without complaining about it are definitely in a class by themselves - a class with no imminent eUort to rehabilitate these unfortunate souls. LET US tell these people what would IU!.ppen to an American in a foreign coun- try under the same circumstances: He would be immedJately incarcerated (yes, put In jail) and bis relatives In the States would be biUed 1.., ltls foocl, lodging and medical care, plus a "fine'' 'for his misbehavior which could in many cases amount to ransom money, and he would . languish • in a foreign prison until the demands were' paid -in cas~ man, what else? John Valterza's story on Care of Aliens (Pilot Apr. 28) tells all, and the soh s1sten: should-read every word of it, and then get mad at the Immigration kooks, the Welfare sbnooks and the Social Security crooks who aid and abet the il· legal ~ of aliens while people born here ~ Indians and Negroes -for in· stance -deserve a priority for )obs over all immigrants of whatever color or na- tional origjn. COULD it be that alien cheap labor s~red by greedy employers is still the reason for all this jazz about illegal aliens? Possibly, because cheap labor has always been the incenttve for welcoming vast hordes of foreigners to our country. S. G. UNDINE Election Need ed To the Editor, The good book teaches us: "only in repentance there is salvation." The unrepenting praetorian palace guards (alias the Berlin Walt) did Indeed resign but the credibility gap only deepens and the highest office in the land remains suspect. ONLY ONE ·avenue toward reestablishing credibility in the White House is to hold special bonafide national presldential elections within runety (90) days. The present chief executive is so fond of "firsts'' so, who knows, perhaps such action would restore his Image as a knowledgeable leader and give us something to celebrate on our forthcom· ing 200tb anniversary as a great nation . BORIS BUZAN What'• a B ea cli? To the Editor : If your mem9ry is good and you're old enough to qualify for Social Security benefits, you'll recall Wal in the dim but not too distant past the city fathers in AUantic City built a boardwalk. It became world-famous. It's still there{ And I! there's one thing it isn't doing it's undulating. Then they built a "Million Dollar Pie~", and the rest is history. Of course Jn those days a million dollan was a lot of money. They even used to measure-the naUonal debt in millions. ANYWAY, here was an octan, a be a th and a boardwalk. The .tllree go together. Quotes , W. Scott Martin, S.F., travel aec- tmled bookseller-"Man, like tile snake who lbeds bis skin. should every so often swltdl to -ething entirely dUferent to malntaln his vitality. . .J like to see wbicb way rue is going to jump and wltfch w1y II ls going ID make me jump." . ~·----- MAILBOX Leturs from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 word$ or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or elimi'nate libel is reserved. All letters must include signoture and mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reason is apparent. PoetrJI will not be published. • For all of those wonderful years when Laguna Beach was building its place in the sun, there was the ocean, the beach and the boardwalk. Then came the planners. For them the formula for fun wasn't good enough. "We must have a Park", they said. "We'll call it the Main Beach Park.'' And It came to pass that they tore down all of those fun- ny little beach-front cottages and leveled the whole area. They were going to have a park. Not a beach but a park. THEIR PLANS call for a grassy park. There are to be groves or trees: - eucalyptus and pine -walkways to the beach and plazas for gatherings. Some beach. Tot lots for toddlers, presumably at such a distance that they won't get their feet wet. Perhaps the classic in the planners' ap- proach is the undulating boardwalk. They don't seem to understand that boardwalks should be flat, weathered with age and full of splinters. People should undulate. A beach should be a place where you meet the water head on. You get sand in your sandwiches, cut your foot on a rock, get too much sun, examine tide pools, get frightened to death by a big wave, take a lot of over-exposed pictures, lose your watch and go home a complete wreck - b<it detemiined to come back next' SUn,~l\fcbard Bigler (article fn ·Ap;u 'rl ls111e) day. Or, more si.rnply, if you want a park that Huntington Beach needs a forest: go to a Park . Maybe it could be a' memorial for'~. Instead of buyii1g cut flowei't: lit the-tJme THE .ECONOMICS of the whole project of death a friend or relative, why uot are ridiculous . T!'e water will attract the plant a long living tree? Or why not Dlmt patrons -even 1f Ibey do have to wade 8 tree celebratlng the birth of a ·cblld? through an arboretum to get to lt. A tar. -·'"' base it isn't. A source of revenue lt Isn't. Maybe the memorial forest WVW\.I A big, e>pejUlve pain In the neck It ls. become a national habit replaclni willed It's 8 cool mllHon dollars we're talking flowers and c1g~r uhea. " about. llcnr abourtaklng that mllll'"1 8l1d JAMIE WATERMELON l\E;!N spending It oo building a bwlch of ... side cottases like the ooes lhat were there. At one end of the beach we build , an en- tertainment conter probably called "The Barefoot Bar." At tbe other tnd another den of iniquity we'll call "Dante's .. or something like that. That way kJds can have tun build.ing sand castles and geUing ilosbed around ln the surf. Grownups can relax knowing thal at the end of the day they can get sloshed within a few hundred yards in either direction. Let's gtve the beach bock to the people. And if there al'!I a few bucb left over let's build a retirement homO for the planners. GEORGE WOLFE wr.,..si.nt To the Editor: A headline In the April 25 Dally PUQI read: "FDA Action Upo Mtal Coata" It should have read: "FDA Actlon Ellmlnatts a Cancer-causing Chemical from Beef." Thank you for charv!ng prlor!llei In the future. Rl!;NE SMITH ' Plant a Tree To the Editor: Army barrack boustna:. H u m a n warehouses instead of homH. Parking lots, parking lots, plastic grus. M a lover of the sea and trees, I'm feeling the squeeze. I agr.. with landscape arcbllect To the Editor: The Wal<l'late ocandal baa -blo'in entirely ooit of propollloe by you, II'" liberal pms, who bas been ltylaC llO dlJcredlt .the NIIon Acfm!al1lnttlon .• It took office In tll69. i;ow you 1 .. 1 ,.. have a chance by 10mehow lmpllcatlng the President tn this ut)fortunate lnci~t by printing every altuy rumor lhal comes out of Washington before It is declared fact or fiction. I am coovlncOd tile Presldeal had DO prior knowledi• of Walerpl• and with or without this scandal his Prtlldeacy will go down In thi.t nation's hlatory a one of our best! RICHARD RIGG,'! ,. " s...et1a1ng•• w,..,... : To the Edit«: ,} ,. Your article, Hope for Dyiltg Dia~; in tile Pilol (Sunday, April 29) cerlalnf;; raises .eome mighty bJc questlOM. YClll~ quote Dr. Hauntz as saying," ... the bit] problem Is money _ . . the llfe-sav!Dfi operation coats about $ZO,OOO •• ~ In the poslUon of' belnc ab!• to this new ho~ only to lhe patlentl 1 can pay ... ··~ Well now, somebody please expla~ Here we are spending millions of doUari, to save CambodJans trom communJlnr. 8l1d we can'I spend $20,000 to uve itll Amtrican citizen from kidney fill~ Something wrong somewhere. J.A. DAVIDSOl(t .. ~ -:a ..., •• :£ Great Art Needs Groot Suffering •.• Remarks an avant.garde artist ,gets tired of hearing: "Renfro, the landlord says that IC you don't at least make a down payment on the back rent by noon, we'll be thrown out into the street by nightfall ." "Yeah, it's a ni ce painting. What's it a pai nting of?" · "They say the greatest art comes from ( HAL BOYLE • J ings that the chimpanzee at the zoo does. You did want me to speak frankly, dJdn't you?" "I've already been down to the mailbox three times, Renfro . The welfare check can't posslbly get here before the day after tomorrow." IUe you planned to paint today?" "The only canvas w' have left lJ,r that old army cot I use ,for a ""1. hot!Cy. But If you think l'ln floial to aleep '"1 floor for art, you're out ol your tnJnd." "My kid in klnderprlen can draw ter than that." "The only tiling left Ott the ahelf can o! dog foocl, Renfro. I !ell you ~ I'll do. I'll split tt tllree 11aya -betwee you, me and tile dot -If you'll agrte go and apply for that job with tho san1 Uon de1?3rtment, like you promlled." , the greatest suffer- ing, Renfro. Maybe you don't hav e enough trouble in your life." "Quaintness comes too high here In Greenwich Village, kid. For what this garret dump costs you , I could get a -< "MAYBE IT would help If you started 'llt.e most art!JU lluoughout history started, Renfro -with eome talent?", "Art you silre lhal one 15 hanging rightside up? How can you really lell111 four-room apartment off Park Avenue with two baths.'' ••THE GROCER says he doesn't care lf you are another Rembrandt, Renfro. Ht! 11ys It's cash on the line now or you don't get any more g~ries." "They say that Norman Rockwell can still gel thousands of dollars for those old paintings of h!J tlley uB<d to put In the cover of the Saturday Evening Post.'' "I've seen aome of the landsca pes )'Ol.l've paJnted. Have you ever painted hvuse.s and barM? J mean for a livlng7" "Some say he's a cubist. Some say he's an expressionist. But I just think he's anot!J<r nutty .. btbltionlst." "Well, to me they look kind or like you've been lmilallng the finger paint- "All l know about art la what ·I Ilk•. and what I don't llke about th.ls art, 1f tllal's whll you clll It, la lhal l just don 't like It." "What do 'you mean when .you say that you 'd •ven be wWln1r to give this particular painting to the l'llbl muaeum? AJty museum t!Jat would tsu It ...Wd be the wrong museum." "Where did you put tllat tu bag we us- ed last night, Renfro? We have to use it again -or we can't have any tea for breakfast." "I don'I mean to frlgllleo you, Ronfro, but 1 don 't think t!Jal's jUSI an ordinary rash you've aot Jn your beard. Have you ever had the mange?'' "IF WE EAT Ibo i..t lwo apples, Ren- fro, what will you have ltft for tile ¢11 ' "'""" 'Let me b9f1/n by ~ ••• HELP!' ) . , • • MAJOR APPLIANCES ---~ . . . 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BIG WDER -SALE .SAVE -86~09 ' 1.BfOllT OTENllON WIEI 88 Check tiase safety featunis: 1.2Yt" I ~1111s wit' crc•l1c tH "!11 2.11>" fl•t 1t1p1 wttk ITftHI . 3.111• sap,1rt•• wit' IWl•lar , ' 'tr1U · • STOil KOURS1 MOll.-Fal. lOAMt~~PM SAt.&;suR. 10AMto7PM • • I I ~-.-.crt·ftM' eP/t -..;,,. """...,111.:~.,•~e-. ~QUOTM!" Victims , Rupture Tendons LONG ·BEACH '(AP! - Purse snatching is being blamed for a rise in hand in- juries to the victims, a surgeon said here. Dr. Gerald Blatt of Long Beach told an orthopedic eon- ferance at Memorial Hospital that purse snatching often results in a tendon rupture of (MEDICINE) the victim's middle or ring finger. He said the injury occurs • . w~en by reflex action the "'Oman tries to hang on to the purse . Surgeons can COtrect-uie 'in- jury by reattaching the ten- don, be said. _ ... - ··New UCHplt.I - . SAN DIEGO (AP) - A $4.5- millioo, 150-bed hospital bas opened near San Diego's Mission Bay. · Mission Bay Memorial Hospital was dedicated with spee<:hes by state Sen. John Stull, Rep. Bob WilS<Ml and City_ O:>uncilman Robert Martinet. e (:losing Set . HANFORD (AP) -Kings County supervisors h a v e deolded to close Kb)gs Counjy pe.eral Hospital, effecUve Aug. 15. The decision came as a result Of what the board term- ed'"f" vague, technical prol> !ems" which will keep the hospital from receiving medical and Medicare ac- creditation after June 30. The board emphasized Ula! the accreditation delemma had nothing to do with the quality of health care at the county-run facility. e .f.:a:perlments SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ex- periments using living "post- abortion fetuses " for medical research would be outlawed under a proposal by a freshman Republican assemblyman. Assemblyman Michael D. Antonovich of Glendale who introduced the bill said, "It Is outrageous that in a country dedicated to the principle ol human rights, we should even consider using victims of abortion as Hying human guinea pigs for m e d i c a 1 research." e Dedieutlon LOS ANGELES (AP) -The City of Hope which specializes in treating <liseasea tor which there is no known cure dedicated a $16.8 million hosoital unit. The c eremony drew Sen . Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) and HaITy Ashmore, presl<1ent of the Center for the Study of Democrattc Institutions. e Abortion C•rb SACRAMENTO (AP) - Private hospitals could refme to perfonn abortiona under legislation p r o p o s e d by Assemblyman Frank Murphy. Murphy (R.santa Cruz) said no current law requires hospitals to perform abortions, but that his proposal "Is • safeguard again!t elther a .court ruling or a future statute with such a requirement." ·Cuffed, But Free TRIESTE, Italy (AP) - Two ltattan youtlur .,... rested by Yugoslav fron- tier police for trying to smuggle a aarload of blue jeans acroos the border fled back Into Italy sUtt handcuffed together. ftaUan pottce unshacilled and released them. as they had committed no crime In Italy. .. I - • I VOL". 66, NO. 124, 4, SECTIONS, '46 PAGES ORAN6E COUNTY, .CAUFO~IA FRIDAY, MA 't; 4, 1973 I • • • " TedaY's F lu l ;~ _N N.Y. St.o$f . . . --• TEN CENTS t Hoag Backs UCI Hospital-With · Conditions, Directors of Hoag Memor1al, Hospital in Newport Beach this momlng'voted unanimously to endorse the coocept of a teaching~ and researeb bospital --11t UC Irvine .. But they conditioned the endorsement, tying it to a provision that the on-campus hospital "does not increase the total number of hospital beds in Orange COun· ty." The closed-Ooor session lasted more. than two hours and after It, Board Chairman A. Vincent Jorgensen was * * * Carpenter Seeks Funds .. .. For Ho spital State Sen. Dfnnis E. Carpenter 1 R· Newport Beach') has introduced a bill _jdentical to one by Assemblyman Robert E. Badbarn (R-Newport Beach) that seeks to.~ funding for the UC Irvine- California College of Medjcine teaching hospital ~Y adding $24 million fo this year's UC budget. Carpenter and Badbam say they have been working with Asse1:pblyman Willie. Brown Jr. (0-San Francisco) to determine ways the LegislatUre might hasten the approval of portions of the $38 million of state bond funds approved by voters last fall as part of a $155.9 million state health sciences bond measure. Brown's Ways and Means committee has final say on when and how the money is spent. Additionally, Brown chairs a joint legislative committee on teaching hospital siting which will report to the Legislature on matters including the UCI medical school funding. · The staff of that committee Is believed to be recommending a "compromise" division of the nearly '38 m.illioo which would see $12 million ~t oo a classroom 8Dd laboratory building on the UC! campus, $18 million for a teaching hospita1 with 200 beds to be constructed on the UCI campus, and $1 million of the UC bonds would be spent improving Orange County Medical C.enter where UCI medical studenls presently train. A._Carpenter aide said today the $24 million bill is a "vehicle" for fun<j.ing whatever is needed to accomplish the teaching hospital needs of the university. including the spending of University bond - funds to improve the county's general ho.spital facility in Orange. Superior Court Judge Succumbs OCEANSIDE (AP) -Superior Court Judge William H. Macomber, 62, of Rancho Bernardo, died i.p Tri.City Hospital Thursday after suffering a stroke. He was supervising judge in the north county region. Gov. Ronald Reagan appointed him to the bench in 1969. A Los 'Angeles native, he was deputy city attorney of San Diego and city pros· ecutor from 1939 to 1943. He was in private law practice until 1969. Macomber served as cbainnan of the state Bar Association's oommittee on rules of court procedure in 1968. 0 unavailable for comment" Directors llllllOllDCed their eodoraement in a Olle-<lelllmce pr;.. release following the-meeting with Dr. Stanley Van don. Noori, acting dean ol the UCI medical school. The endorsement is likely to spur a similar vote by Newport Beach COWl- cilmen Monday night C<Juilcilmen two weeks ago delayed action on a reqµest by UC! to support the OIM:lllllJJUI faciltty pending Input ll'om Hoag Hospital. Hoag Administrator Scott Parker call· ed the meeting tbls momiDg "Vl!IY stralgbtforward." "Dr. Van don Noori presented the lalell conoept foe the . ......_. boopltal that now calls for coastrucUon or a teaching and ruearch facility with 200 beds." PDJ'ker said Van den No<irt also outlin- ed the !ates!; UC !proposal to spend '7 million of the $37 mlllion in health sciences bond .money approved by voters last November to refurbish Orange Coun- ty Medical Center. OCMC. under the latest UC! proposal, would cmUnue to be an ann of the university's medical llcbool aod about !00 , o1 the 515 OCMC beds would be eliminated. Parker and other sourees confirmed that Hoag directors continued to express concern about the influence of a teaching UCI to support te on-campus facility pen-- hospital . • Hoag director Earl Hardage Thursday said tha• it is the plan by the Western Worlds Medical Foundation for a nearby hospi1al that is the rul coacem ol Hoag directors. Hardage Insisted that tt is not the potential oompllcaUcn that bothers Hoag but rather the CUITeDt oversupply of boSpllal beds that is ol primary c:Gncem. -He said too many hoBpltal beds forces up medical costs by roquirlng fewer pa- tients to pay for lilted operating costs. "Western Worlds was dlscusaed but so Was the entire subject of overbedding in Orange County," l'lrfter said. 'Donors Protected' .. Parker slso said that Dr. Van dq Noort expressed an interest in deVeloping a worfting relationship with Hoag aOd ~ county booplta~. as it bss wit~ Looi Beach Memorial llospltal. . nie last tie between Hoag and UCI wa" broken last summer when Hoag ~ tora. under prwuno from their medical staff, voted to do away with the holpltal's family pracllce clinic. "No comrnent'' about any future ~ grams were made, however, Parker.said: Kalmbach Finance; I E·1 Il . tl'? 1 es __ restroyet .• __ -- --.. -- -NEW-YORK (AP) -!'reslileiil Nfion'!- fonner peroonal attorney baa told govmimeDt _ipv~ators _that h e clestroyed all bis campaign finance records before the 19'12 federal campaign finance law took effect. according to sources .quoted today by the New York Times. ' The Times said It learned from aources close to the caae that Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, who w8' * * * $1 lWlliqn ' .. . . . . Nix:On•S ittorriey-until a few days ago, said he destroyed the records tel protect the names ol. donors. -MOst of the funds raised by Kalmbach EX-NIXON PHYSICIAN SAYS RECORDS T AK EN-Poge 5 came from wealthy Republicans living in Southern California, where Kalmbach maintains a private law practice, the newspaper said. ·Bandit Sorry , I-'±!-" . ' . -· -,, 1 • KalmDach served as a 11 o cl at• chalnnan of the Republican re-elecllon rinance corninittee. Such destrllclion of •ecords, the nm.;;::> said, could-be a violation of the 1m Cor- rupt PracUces Act. -• A spokesman for the Republlcan finance commlttee was quoted by the Times aa aayllll, "We have no iD- formatloo that any recordl wve 1" destroyed." I *; * * u.s. IJ!mcts -Unreported, Returns Loot A repenjlnl bandit ,.... -. a U.S. P08tal fllrylce anlf«m Iii ~ •»1 llhne4 robbery of. eo..... del Mir conet obop 10 claya qo baa remorsefu!Jy malled the mooey back, Special Delivery. Lawyer Segret!i.:' ln Sabotage • •1 ba1tr· PUit ,..... n . Wltllnl SdlnilMr PAINT WASHED ' DOWN -STORM DRAIN DISCO~ORS BACK BAY Park Newport ~cloh Vow It Won't Hoppon Ageln ,- Painmr Cleaning: Up Qiscolors l!fpper Bay A painter \Yashing out his tools at ibe Park Newport Apartment complex in Newport Beach inadvertently caused the pollution spill. that discolored the water along a 200-yard stretch o! Upper New· port Bay Thursday. A spokesman for tbe apartments, which are perched atop the UPi>er Bay bluffs, aaid today the ·painter was UJI. aware ol -.0 the nmofl from bis cleaning job was going. "This was absolutely an isolated. in· cident," the spokesman said. "He didn't know the drains flowed out into the bay." The flow , which was dlsc;overod sbort· ly before nooo, came through one ol the three stonn drains that carry .away ,.,.. face nmoll nter at the facility. 'Ibo drabis go down tbe bluffs, under Back Bay Drive aod dJrectly into the Bact Bay. Sloan Says WASHINGTON (AP) -'Ille fonner treasurer of President Ni.Jon's campaJgn . finance committee bas tesUfted in a · sworn deposition that the campaign rais- ed more than $1 million in cash con- tributions ·which apparentl:y were never reported. The statement was made by Hugb W. Sloan Jr., former treasurer of the Finance Committee to Re-elect the Preaident, on Oct. 24, and Wlsealed by U.S. D!illrict Court loday. Attorneys for Q>mmon cause, a ciU-. group, asked Sloan how much cub .money wu covered In a nUulng ledger sheet ol casb transactlona by tbe oommittee. A. I don't have a precise figure in mind. But it was in excess of $1 million. , Q.· You have indicated that the amount was in excess of $1 million. Coun you put a celling on it? Was it under $10 million?" A. Oh, yes, it was under J2 million. Q. Somewhere between $1 million and '2 million? A. Yes. Later in the deposition, Sloan said the missing sheels on cash money ltated "about $900,000" in disbunement.s. Tbe gunman who relieved four penons of their cub at the Silbouetlt Shop, 2737 E. Coast Highway, eiiclosed an anonymous note of explanation._ He said he went to . cburcb the rollowing Sonday and became con- science-stricken over having broten both the E1'Ibth Commandment of the Old TMament aod s.ctlon Ill of tba Callfomia Penal c.de. jjLord ••• I don't remember .any other cue like It," Newport Beach DetecUve Sam Amburgeil.:ld to-day. "I wish more of guya would go to cbW'Ch." Settlemen t Seen In Marinapark, Newport Dispute ·. WASlllNGTON (AP) -llooald H. Segrettl, • California attorney wll6 reported tiea to the Whit• House, jlU been lndicled in an alleged acheme aimed. at sabotaging Democratic sen. Edmund S. M111kle'1 . _.r.nUal caJDpaip-In Florida last year, the· Justice Depal'V ment said today. ' The department said Segrettl1 I~ ~ MARTHA SAYS SHE WAS ' 'HALF -CRUCIFllD'-P ... 4 under lnveatlgation In the Waterga~ scondal, WU Indicted by a federal lrli>d jury In Orlando, Fla. for "publlsblni aliil I distributing a letter ... which fall"'\ 1li Identify those reaponslble." • That referred to a flier said to bavt been forged on Muakle'• staUonery wblcb. ac&sed two of .bis Ieadln1 opponents, Sen>. Hubert H. lfumphrey and Henry M. Jackson, of. ser.ua! misconduct. The letter reportedly was distributed by tlio 1 thousanda just prior to the Marob H primafy. Segrelll could .not be reached hnmi41· .I ately for comment. lilt telephone ...,,... . lni aervlce Jn Los Angeles said be dllcao-· tlnued using It two mmtbl qo. The JusUce Department said his wi-houts were not known. I Newport Commandment: '"1e painter apparently waohed hi• equipment at a tenant car wash station thinking the water flowed ln1!' the com- plex's saoitary sewer system, Apparenlly there is no public record of unreported cash raised aod bandied by the Nixon campaign, allhough there has ~ court lestlmony of sums up to $350,000 kept in various safes. , News reports have said President Nix· on's personal lawyer, Herbert Kalmbach at Newport Beach, bad a !500,000 bank accouiit containlng -c amp a 1 g<n coo- lributi<N used, at l•t in paft, to pay for·polltical espionage.--- Newport Beach city officials aod the tenanta of. city-owned Martnapart have apparenUy reached a compromlM lbal will leep the trailers fr<m being evlcted and the park opened to the public next year. City Manager Robert L. Wynn said t~ day be will ask the council Monday night to approve a resolution giving the 58 trailer: owners at the 1710 W. Balboa Blvd. park a 39-month grace period to move out aftet"the lease,exptres June 30, Muskie flllisbed a poor third Jn Ibo I Florida balloltlng belllft!f Alabama Gov. Wallace !IDd ~-The defeat wu 1 (See SEGIIB'l'l1, Pop I) I ;nie apartment spokesman sa_id the pamt was ~a wateMJOlable acrylic that breab .down intc> fine particles when combined with ~ter. Church Sign ~ust fall _ Newport Beech offlcials, the •only oaes inscription ... is l)Ol a sign within the responding to the polluticn : 11ld 1974. • . But Wyrui's recommendation -13 con- ditional. By WIUJAM SCHREIBER Of tll• D•ll'f' Pl)tt Sl•ff The commandments oC municipal law prevailed Thursday night as Newport Beach plaming commissioners ruled the bold expression of faith on a bluUtop Cliff Drive church wall must come down. By a 4-1 vote, the commission decided the large "Praise Ye the L<lrd" In- scription on an outside wall of First Bap- li!t Church, 2501 Clill. Drive, comes Under the purVtew of the city's sign law. Thou.gh commissioners voted t o remove the 196-square-foot sign, they told the church It could be replaced with one not so visible and overbearing - IOl'l'leWbere in the range of 15 square feeL , Church officials say lhey will consider appealing the niling to the city councll in an effort to continue carrying their message to motorists on PaciOc Coast. Highway below lhe bluffs. Church leaders end other supporters tumed out in force at the meeting to ..mtorce their belief tbal the inlcrlpUon Is DOI detrimental to tbe city and In !act 13 not a alllJ1 In the conventional ...... "'nle church takes the position thal the meaning of the ordinance," said churcb = ~ !riJ:'u."~1 the':..!:: ljoanf Cbalnnan Frank Barton. wi" be monitored ••• . in caae. "TblS)ii!sltion 13 baaed Oil the BSIUlllp-~ ,_ tian tbal the city cooncil, in passing the Or.nge Ooomty iffBlth Department ol- ordlnance, Intended.-to uphold thie U.S. = :tr ~y~ye &':i = Constitution Ind ·11s proloctlon for the ... erclse of religion," be added. , to lbe spill because they dldh'I-know Earlier this week, Newport ~ at-about It. . tomey William· Drake, who also ~e City Eng111eer Ben Nolan said there la -• I h 'd be' bl "' , . ' no "8Y ol mowing bow mucll pollu!Ut TOO~ay ·n g t, sat t . aa-, ~ . c flowed out (i the pipe into the bay. lett.enng is an e11>re:ss1~ of, re JgIOU9 uFlnety dlVlded " substances ,like this behel and as such tails unil<r guahmt~ can dll<Olor l1t••· areas ol Wllter with protection• of free speech and religloli. .-1.. llttl b" .rN la aid -t •~-•t Assistant City Attomey· David Baade-... iv 8 e n, 0 n 8 • -, \Nalll.i • •Jll)eer to be a big deal at thfl point 1Mz1 think.! otherwise. . . . if ft recurs we'll be on top1 of tt. .. Re said that while the ~tuUoo l'lrft Newport officials lnslited tho 'Pill favors freedom ol reill(lon, It doe.m ~give woo•t ba~ again. ch~ favored status over other tn-rr-- 1Ututicm "aimil.arb' 1ituated." City olficlals iltre.d to the com- milOloo that the liln baa drawncom- p1alnts, even thobg'h it facea Paclfic Coast tngbway and not 4DI' ol the near- by ruldences. They also .aid the church la ln • retidential zone and the 11gn onlinance allows t1p of <"1J hn> oquara feet In area without ptnnilslon. Heart J)emonstration Tb e Cardiopulmonary. Resuacitatlon Commillee ol the Orange County lio.ort -.iuon will demonslrate resuoclla· ting kldlnlquos In the ltoac M..-W llOlpllal oonlerence -... In Newport Beach Monlay aH t>-j· Ki nde rgarten Sig11ups Set Kindergarten enrollment in the Newport-Mesa school district wUI ccnllnue through next Friday dur- ing regular llcbool bours. Otildren who will be five yean old on or before Dec. 2 this year can enroll In kindergarten at their own neighborhood llChool. Dislrlct opoketmen said written documentation ol age -a birth or baptl!mal certificate -mus1 be presented II reptratioo alcng with proof of lnfrmlnizatim against diphtheria, tetanus, wboopln1 codgb, messles and poUo. Any specific questlona about reg· lslratloo or the kindergarten pn>- gram can be ....,.red by calling the district CJIIld Welfart aod At· tendance Olllce. He says the city must raise rents near· ly 50 percent over the transilioo period, build better public acceuways to the beach and begin installing new recrea· Uonal facilities. The city now charges between $115 aod $170 per month for trailer spaces and that would reach a range of $200 to $245 per month by the end of the Pnl!lOsed grace period In 1977. "Hone.Uy, the higher rent and wide walks are not part ol an effort to force these people out," Wynn aakt. 0 1t is a middle of the road solution that benefits everyone Involved." Wym said the compromlae with Miirlnapark tenants, who have been vocal In tha past In their oppoottlon to ci- ty plana for the Balboa Peninsula parft, bas another key element. "It requires an 58 residents to alCJl a docwnent a""'ptable to the city attorney which woold guarantee to the city that ~ will be no contelt ol evlclion at the end ol the transition period," be aakl . "I doo 1t koow If any lelal action would be takou In any case," Wyrui ald. "But if I can find 1. mJddle ti the rood and save a battle, I'll do ii every Ume." • J \ I • • • ·«:•Mt · ' .• . -' I The weather aetvJce .... Jow_: clouds blocJdni oul Old Sol CD Sat·.~ urday wilb a cbance · of partial , ·Clearini !JI the lite altm-. Cool-1 I er temperatures .are upected. wltb 1 ' \ readl;nP In the Ills. Lows *68. j INSIDE TODA. 'l' · Two aloft IDrilen l4kc a look • at the 11""'"'"-p""""'" .· Faire which tokc1 ploct f4Cfl , Mo¥ In Agou1,0: one f'°"4 IM !' p<rspectlvt of the ~pollng ;; artist. end_.,,. /r0111 !he 1'lcw of t th• o1111or. s .. lodall'• w .. ,.._ tndeT. At'Yew,..... t -. I L.M • ...,. 1f -...... -" CllMI,.... •• ,. -..... -. C11a::1 ' a --' ........ , .... ·-,...., ..., .. ~ ... ,. ••••c .. · I' ~-. ........ ,, 'v • I ~ --;-. ........... ,.,. ~ --' ....... .. -, ... ................. ~ .:· :11-.:~ • ---~ .. w r r M ' • .. • , ,•. • • • • ' -· ' OAllY PILOT • • . evatnpmg t• Considered • In Newport ; :tlewport BNch City Manager Robert L ·"')'M today announced the slart of a reorganlntion of the city administration . W)'M .ald he Intends to lake bia time b<foro filling the vacated position of as- sistant city manager and dlscl<-' there's a chance he may not roplace Philip F. Bllttencourt, who resigned last week to ~ the Irvine Company. ri":'lt's been the policy of this admlnistra· lijin)o m•ke •thorough reviel!Jl"henever We-have a vaCancy," Wynn said. : . .Jle said he will ask oouncilmen to re- lalb the posltioo In the budget, for the ll1t\e being, but aald he may eliminlte i~ r«lasaifY It to a lower grade, such ... 11 •. an auistant to the manager, or even iciot !tire an Intern. Wynn says he baa begun • complete biftntory of all ot. Bettencourt's asslgn- ~ts and responsibilities to see which ~:(hem can be delegated to department . fie~ in the planned reorganization. ~:Immediately, he said, he plans to give 1tti' responsibility of managing the city's 8~t p r o g r a m to Finance Director .li'!!"°ge Pappas. ::Re'll propose to cooncilmen Monday lliit Community Development Director l!IC!tanl V. Hogan, or bia asalstant, , laines Hewicker, be named as the city'• r~tative to the Orange County 'lr.<ring committee supervising prepara· ffcZ of an environmental impact report lie Orange County Airport. . • "We do have excellent department d1-~rs," Wynn.said. "And l do slibScribe iO the pltil<loophy of decentrallzation." \vynn says he's JPllng to find out u the i nt staff can htndle the workload ore making a decWon on replacing ncourt or reclassifying the job . .,,._- 1•There are a lot of duties that can't tit:farmed-Out, however,"~ said. "We're <J!Sponsible for preparing uny number of ~dies for councilmen -the one on-the iJC Irvine teaching hospital for instance .:..! \hat my office must do." ~·"Each of these takes time," he said. ·1lressing that he, personally, cannot take ~· Ume to do them . ··"If they become of such a magnitude Jl1.¥t ,I can't do general management ~g. then the posltioo just Is going ~ve to be filled to take care' of that on," Wynn said. ; It would be Inefficient if I, as c i t Y manager, got too involved in detail!," he -said. Wynn said he is doobtful that the third suggested altemative, that of hiring a college intern, would be his recommenda· tion. Bettencourt ..,as making $21 ,300 a year "'hen he quit. Wynn's two administrative assistants Judy Kelsey and personnel di· rector Frank Ivens, make $17,500 and 111,900, respectively. Stripper Starr Comes Back i1t Blaze of Glory BALTIMORE (UPI) -Blare Starr got beck in the saddle In the Baltimore strip area, "The Block," Thursday night and told everyone "it all came up roses." The roses came from other owners along the east Baltimore strip area where Blaze was the top banana among the peelers for 10 years. . Blaze reopened h e r renowned T\vo O'Clock Club. She abut down last October, blaming "the encroachment or creeps and thugs" along the gawdy ~tfip. "The other owners assured me that everything had been taken care of and 1 looted around and I believed them ," said the woman who made the 44-inch bosom a household word. OIAH•I COAST H DAILY PILOT Ttle,Or..,.. CM" a.-.JLY PILOT, Wiit. wllld'I .. ~ IM H-Pt1n, If Mllth«I bY h ~ CN•I Pultlltlllftll (Oll'Cltfl'I', .... rat• ldllloia 1r1 Pllbll~, MOndty ll'lrwgll flrl01y, ~,' C111t1 M..-. Nt•Otrl Be1cll. Hunt1119IOft lltKh.lf'IVllllln VllllY, LIO!fl>I •Hell. ltYl'lt/Sedci!IMck and S~n Cllmtn!f/ SM J-C.pl1lrtf\CI. A lf"llll reglOMI edltklll 11 putill1Md s..1n1n 1...t S1111<1ay1. Tltt ,.-IMllNI PJ11ll1M119 •laftl 11 t i UD Wt1I llY ltrnt, C.0.lt Mew, C.Uh>rnlt , tHN. Rot,1rf N. W1N Pr•ldMI Ind PWUtlltt J•<• It C11rl1y Vici l'l'ttlHlll Mii GM!ertl Ml...,ft' n'"''' ic., ... u llllW 11tom11 A. M11rphi"' AMM!lllW EcHhlf L P1t1r Krltt ~ htdl City Elh" ... ,...,. ..... ~ JJJJ N1wporf l111l1•1r4 Mtllllllf ~mu P.O. lo• 1171. 92l6J --Clett M-!!UI WHt lty llrMt , ~ltMt11 ml'-IA­t!tlftl"""" IMc;ll: 1117S INdl lou!wtr« JM CflMMttl; IOJ "°'"' El C..l'lllN llMI ... , •• ,, (714t '41-4111 a ........ , a II I I ••2.s111 ~-tfn. °""21 GMtl l"Wlltllllll ~: ...... :· 111\ltlnllelle. ~ ..: -,._.., llertlfl .... .. ........ .. ........ ....... ,,~ ........ ................. Mc.taMtN, =:..:~·::. ... ~~~ I Frid'1, M11 4, 1973 Police -Auction Set May 12 Abo!!l 250 lll!!'lahned ll!Gll, .ln- eluclq approx!matel,y ~ bicycles, 8" Cit the acuUm bloclr; May II at the COiii --police deportmmt. Tbeatlan ...... •t10~1D tbe ,_., tbe -but bid -may be lt>specled an !tour earlier. -Other Items ocheduled for lUCtion 11\Clude fll1nlture, 11ereo1, TV ..U, ~ Je,welry llld auto tape deeb. I Pn>ceed• from the auction are returned to lite city general fund budget. Ehrlichman, Haldeman Face Quiz 1Sen. Long . . Exhumtid For Test,s HANNIBAL, Mo. (AP) -Audrain County authorities were wa1Ung the re!ultl today of an autopsy on former U.S. Sen. Edan! v. L<>ng, whose ltedy was exbmned Thursday for investigation i of a report L<>ng 11/•Y have died of poloon-I ing. In • copyligltted story, the Ksnsas Qty Star said the body was taken from Grandview Cemetery here to Hannibal hospital, where an autopsy was perform- ed in the presence of four doctors. Samples were taken from the stomach for chemical analysis but the resulla were not immediately known. An observer told tbe Star the autopsy revealed a large pituitary tumor wblch may have caused the veteran politician's death Nov. S, the story said. Long's widow, Mrs. Florence Long, .WASHINGTON (UPI) _ Senate In-asked investigators to check the progross of the tumor, which was dlscovered at a vestlgator• questioned today Pn!sident Washington hospital in 1967. Nixon's two top f~r aides about the The report that Long may have died Watergate bugging case and any coverup from poisoning came last monlh from of it. Helen Dunlop, Long's secretary. She told Tt marked the second Gay H.R. authorities Long complained shortly Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman sub-before hls death thlij he might have been milted to testimony before separate in-poiaoned by a box of candy which bad vestlgators. been given to him. 1be deposed White House aides, who Long's body was reburied yesterday w1derwent lengthy questioning Thursday after being exhumed at the request of by a federal grand jury, said today they Thomas O.bome, Audrain County pro .. were sure any suspicions of any ecuting attorney. Mn. Long approved presidential knowledge of the Watergate the autopsy with certain conditions, in- affalr ~wld be dlspelled "when the truth eluding having present a physician of her 'is fully known." choice. The grand jury which heard Haldeman The Star said one doctor from Han- and Ehrlichman Thursday convened late nibal, two from St. Wuis and one from this morning while Frederick C. LaRue, the Louisiana, Mo. area attended the 44, an assistant to John N. Mitchell when autopsy. the latter was director of the Nixon re-Also present were Pike County Coroner election campaign, met with federal at-J. 0, Mudd and Marion Wasinger, a Han- tomeys, .apparently before l?eirig called nibal ~ttomey who represents Mn. Long. to testify. -" Mrs. Long had filed ao alienation of Following publication of a public opin· . ~ff~ions suit against ~ Dunlop, ~k­ i<>n.. survey-indicating that hall of those. _UUL~g~~ Q~.J3·25 ~on charging questioned believed Nixon knew of efforts '-that MfsSDUitfoP camalt:r knew· Long. to 4 cover up the Watergate, Ehrlichman A fe~ months before h~ d~ath, ~ng, and Haldeman were asked if they felt who v.:as se~ated from bis wife, revised such suspicions would be dispeUed in his will, leaving $10 ·each to his widow time. (Story, Page 4). and their daughter, and the bulk of his "I know that when the truth is fully es~a~, est~ted at more .than $2 known, this matter will be cleared up to mdhon, to bis granddaughter . everyone's satisfaction.'' Haldeman told reporters. A reporter asked : "Including any su.spicion ooneemlng the President - that will he Jlspelled ss well?" "Of course -without any question," Haldeman, Nixon's fonner chief of staff, replied. Ehrlichman, fonner Nixon domestic adviser, chimed in, "Let me join in that." The meeting took place in the offices of a special Senate committee created to conduct an Independent lnvesUgatlon of the Watergate case, as well as other political spying. Haldeman and Ehrlichman spent a total of nearly 12 hours at the federal courthouse Thursday, much of it waiting to talk with prosecutors or the grand jury. Their attorney, John J, Wilsqp, said Haldeinan was left "twiddling his thumbs" during the entire four hours that Ehrlichman was a p p e a r i n g separately before the jurors. It was 8 p.m. before the day 's ordeal ended for them . Wll.90n, close by to advise the two all day, was asked by reporters about reports that indictments would be handed down against Haldeman, Ehrlichman and several fonner officials . of ·th e Administration or 1972 Nixon re-election' campaign. "l don't know about that," Wilson said, but added, "They (Haldeman and Ehrlichman ) have no fear of being con- victed." ' Sales Tax Hike Delay to Senate SACRAME NTo (AP) -A $100 million pl arii to delay a state sales tax hike scheduled for June 1 has been approved by the Assembly and sent to what foes said in almost certain defeat in lhe Sen· ate. The tax delay plan was approved 48 to 2S on a party line vote by the Demo- crat-controlled Assembly Thursday over unanimous Republican opposlth>n . FrontPqeJ SEGRETTI ... the first in a seri~ of primary setbacks that led the one-time Democratic favor- ite to withdraw from active campaign- ing, even though public opinion polls had shown him to have the best chance of beating President Nixon in the generaJ election. The indictment-also charged George A. Hearing of Tamjla, Fla. on the same counts. :flogert Milton Benz, 25, of Odessa, Fla., a fonner Nixon campaign worker and one-time president of the Tampa Young Republicans, was named as an unidicted co-conspirator. Segretti and Hearing were named on two counts, the first c~J that they arranged for the Ietttr to ~ published and the second that Ibey conspind to distribute it. According to the conspiracy count, Segretti and Benz met Dec. 1, 1971, at a restaurant near Tampa, Fla. and "discussed disruption of the campaigns" of Jackson and Muslt1e .. Other Hovert acts" listed in, t b e in- dictment said that on Feb. JO, 1973 Segretti mailed a supply of Citis for MU!kie stationery to Benz ed 1 letter containing the proposed te1t the phony Oier. On Feb. 25, l!rl2, the indictment said, Benz gave Hearing a proposed letter and statimery and Hearing malled it March 11 to persons in the Jacksonville, Orlan- do, Tampa, and St. Petersburg areas, among others. The maximum penalty upon conviction on each count -both misdemeanors -is one year in prison and a $1,000 fine. Segretti has been named by President Nixon's persona] lawyer, Herber l Kalmbach of Newpot1 Beach, as the man to whom Kalmbach paid between $30,000- $40.000 on orders from Dwight Chapin, fonner appointments secretary to the President and Segretti's personal friend, from a secret $500,000 fwld kept ht a California bank for campaign operations on the West Coast. Various news accounts based on in· vestigative reports have named Segretli as a chief recruiter for sabotage opeta· tioos. Ma1oie Wouldn~t Husba1id Files Divorce Suit By TOM BARLEY Of "'9 Diiiy P'lltt Sl•ft Lawyers for actress Mamie Van Doren and her third husband tangled in a Santa Ana courtroom today over the shapely blonde's demand for a tw~month delay in the Orange County divorce action filed by her llJ>OUSO of just 37 4aya. Superior Court Judge William C. Spein heard arguments from both sides and promptly aent the Die down to Presiding Judge Brue. Sumner of Laguna Beach for his decision on the motion for a delay Wltil JWle. "" That motion will be heard later today. The 40-year~ld actress waa not present to hear'her lawyer expllln tbat a 11aae conunltrnent jn St. Paul, Minn. made It impossible for her to be In Orange Coun- ty far the court· lt<!arlng. Lowye,. for~.,eaJthy buslneu u - ecutlve R4u llcCtlnlock, 51, of Orange; argued that the divorce action filed by him required only 10 minutes of testimony and should be ~ispMed of t~ day. His lawyers l'Olltend that tbe man1age contracted in Las Vegas last Dec. 1 disintegrated on the wedding night when Miss Van Deren refused to go to bed with ltlm and Instead spent the night on a couch. Doctttnenla ftled In aupport of the divorce petition -Miss Van Doren Is listed u Joan L. McCllntock -allege tltlt the actress never intended to be part of a true marriage "and married for wealth." II Is alleged that het first •ct after marriage ·was to demand a $10,000 cltlncbllla coat and a $35,000 Rolls Royce . flqm MaCllntoct. It ii also alleged that Ille relUsed to sitar. the couple'• Orange home with the petitioner's teenage son, Bo McCllntock. •• " •· View From On High • n.Uy Plltt Staff Plltle U you're on a freeway, it doesn't look like much. But an aerial view provides a different perspective, in this· case an interesting pattern. The photograph shows the San Diego and Newport Freeways. If you were traveling from the upper left of the picture toward the bottom right, you would be headed to-'· ward Newport Beach. Ellsherg Defense Silent In Watergate Aftermath LOS ANGELES (AP) -Defense at- torneys for Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo today reiused. to take .any part in furthut-:iestimony-at the Pentagon Papers trial, but the judge . ordere<J testimony in the government's rebuttal ... , . case to proceed anyway. The defense attorneys vowed they would sit silently, refusing to voice ob- jections or engage in cross-examination of witnesses until the judge resolved an investigation of Watergate and White House links to the prosecution of Ells berg. U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne made his ruling on testimOny after numerous arguments. followed. his an- nouncement that the government had not yet given ltl!n the gt'attd fury transcript ol Watergate conspirator E. H9ward Htmt's testimony in W a s h i n g t on regarding a burglary of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office. The defense asked that lhe trlal be, stopped , but the judge refuseil. The government prosecutor explained that the transcript had not reached the Justice Department in time to be flown here overnight alter it was ordered . released on Thursday. He said it was being sent here by Telecopier and should arrive here within the day. Ellsberg's chief attorney, Leonard Boudin, arose and demanded that the· trial testimony be immediately stopped because it was "farcical" to continue with testimony against the defendants. "We cannot engage in what we honest1y regard as a diversion from the main course of ev~nts -rnimety, what · has the government done to us, not what he.ve we done to the government of the United StateS;" ·Said Boudin. -~ __Jlc;=aID!m pressed -for .immediale- dismissal of the indictment a&ainst Ellsberg and Russo on grotmds that the government Is guilty of corruption and malfeasance in connection with his trial. Doctor, Minister Held in Sodomy With 15 Boys HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. (UPI) -A psychiatrist specializing in treating emo- tionally disturbed children, a Protestant minister and six other men were charged 'lburs4&y wjlb takitlg 'h o m o s e x u a l liberties with>. about 115 teen-age boys. Saverio Fierro, the Chief of the Suffolk County district attorney's r a c k e t s bureau, said sex parties involving boys ranging in age Crom "under 11 to 15" took place from January, 1970 to December, 1971 in the $60,000 home and on the $100,000 yacht of one of the defen: tanti, George Brehm, 50, ·of West Islip, N.Y: Asked how the boys were recrui ted for the .ex parties, FJerro. said: "We believe that several of these men may have frauduU!otly identified themselves as membdrs of Big Brother.'' ! f : ,. : : . 1 OC Race,way Noise Protest Brings Calls .., '· . A Laguna Hills Leisure World resident said he has received at least slx ~e . _ phone cans since iippearing be(ore the . Board-of Super-viso"rs-tw weeks-ago.~ ----- regarding noise frµm the El Toro RacewaY. . Norman Horowitz charged that the supervisors were allowing the track operators to "thumb their noses at you." Mike Jones operator of the Orange County International Raceway. spoke against applying the proposed eowt- tywide standards on noise to raceways. "They call for the allowance of more noise if the ambient SOW1d level is high ln the area," Jones said, "11tis favors El 'roro Raceway because It is under the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station flight pat- tern." County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said the board had three ways to go in regulating racttrack noise: Set noise level limits for raceways in a separate ordinance; have the helHth officer issue permits; or r~uire a· license from the health officer for each ractway. The cotmtywide noise ordinance will not be ready for another 30 days, Kuyper said. Art Brings $93,000 NEW YORK (AP) -Four works by the late Pablo Picasso brought a total of , $93,000 Ttiursday at a Sotheby Parke- Bemet galleries auct ion . 'They were among more than $11 million in im- pressionist and modem art works auc- tioned by the gaUeries in a two-day sale. ----·-· • ... ==-==·· .. THE RNEST IN QUALITY AT ACCEPT ABLE PRICES. WE ARE ANXIOUS TO SERVE YOU AND SHOW YOU THIS FINE COLLECTION OF CHAIRS ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT. STOP IN TODAY! DREXEi,,..-HERITAG6-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN IN!tERIORS- wmDATS • ·SATUailAYS t :OO to 5:30 NIDAY 'TIL t:OO · NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCllFF Dlt.. ._.2.JOiO IOptfl Su!ld•v 12·51101 LAGUNA BEACH e J'4S ~OltTH CO.AST HWY. IOpa11 S11111l•'t 12•51101 4f4-6511 TORRANCE e 11649 HAWTHO•N• ILYD. 11-1·117' • . - -. .. .... DAD.y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' Fun Zone's Future Newport Beach COUDcllmen Monday are scheduled to mate a decision on the future use ot a·vez:y valuable piece ol beyfroot property ID Central Balboa.- For most of tbls century, the one-acre ~l hu been known as the Fun Zone. It's ~ quite' a history, a eol<>rilll one to ll8Y the Jeut. Many people in Jlalboa don't like what's been haJ>- pening to lhat mini am-nt perk in recent years. It's ruo·down, a menace to ID,Onla of children, they say. Jqbn Konwlser, presipent Ill the JAK Construction Compaey, pys be wants to change that. He'll put up gleaming new condominiums, he says. That'll lower the auto traffic demand and upgrade the area, he vows. Konwlaer is malting bis pitch at a very opportune time for he has found many people willing to accept anything just to get rid of w~at they feel has become a real nuisance. U councilmen grant his request, however, they w!H be acting contrary to strong recommendations from the city's professional planners who say that area should be retained for some kind of commercial ""'· • To allow a residential project in the middle of Bal- boa's commercial core would be the start of something. Slmllar requests will follow. They would sterilize the community. It would be wrong to act in haste, and on emotion. :Balboa needs, and can support, business uses. Communication Hangup Members of the academic senates o! the Coost Com· munlty College District still are awaiting answers to 78 questi6ns about the operation of Channel 50, the dis- trict's new 'educational television station, which they directed to the administration.last month. A procedure for responding to the questions has been worked out and a response is being prepared. In this month's edition of Forum 50, KOCE-TV pub- lication, district chancellor Dr. Norman Wat.son declares the atab's actlvitles are "r!ghttull,y open to public. view." '!'bis ls quite correct, s£noe It operat .. on dls-bicUnd government fund a . _ But it the answen to the faculty quesUons are as general as those publlllhed In response to qu .. tions J-1 ~ a Daily Pilot editorial, the faculty Is not likely to be satisfied. 'lbe teachers deserve specl(jcs. A new and lnnontive venture of tliis kind natural- ly needs "lime to ge/. rolling Sillootbly. And a fine pro- gramming balAnce must be struck between tlMI lnstruc- tiooal courses that concern the teachers and the public -ce programs the station Is required to provide. An open and harmonious undemanding between the lltatioli adminlstrauon. and the district faculty is the best guarantee that Channel 50 will he able to live up to the-original and continuing hi~h hopes for its su""""5. Crime and Punishment disagreement between the pragmatists and the philosophers is looming in the Newport-Mesa school dis- biot as trustees rwppraise the need for corporal pun· ishment in school. Though big strides have been made in dealing with behavior problems on a more sophisticated level, the need for rare use of corporal punishment apparently still is there. Like parents, for whom they substitute, school teachers and administrators probably need the option of a variety of disciplinary actions so that the one most effective in a given case can be utilized. Most students can be reasoned with -but not all. Most can be shamed -but not all. And simply banishing students from school often defeats the Pu:.1"'5" of school. So, lacking any compellrng contrary evidence, and given the careful controls on corporal punishment al· ready in existence and the obvious restraint in using it in Newport-Mesa schools, it probably is just as well to leave this option available to the schools. N 1 " ' J : -' . - 'Nixon Law and Order Adm.inistralion. Sorry, they're all out · , anaweriDg s ubpewu at die moment ••• may I take a -.ger_ . Persuasion Cheap La...,. Greed Belaitad lm-.igration Woes 1 t • ' r --. Dear -·~loomy . I -Wins-Most:...-.. . ---·-·· --•· Arguments, · !(;"us ·~·--~~ -IH:eg~ -A:Iien -=. Su-_ppQtt .. lYe.t~¥~~_lisl!1~_~· ~~ ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ 'Ibomas Aquinas, who knew 1 more about education and persuasion than almost anybody who ever lived, once said that when you want to convert someone to your view, you go over to where he is standlng, take him by the hand (mentally speaking), and guide him to where you want to go. ·Yoo don't stand across the room and shout at him. You don't caD him a dummy. You don't order him to come over to where you are. You start where he ls, and work from that position. That's the only way to get him to budge. We have lost sight of this elementary psychological feet. The world Js full or passionate advocates, screaming their own prejudices, and excoriating their op- ponents. This does three things: (a) it makes the people who agree with you 1 .. 1 better. Cb) it makes the people who disagree with you stiffen their resistance, and (c) it makes the people on the fence "'wieaq and skeptical that you are speak· ing tile whole truth. I HAVE never known a single passionate and partisan argument to win over a person who disagreed with it, or even to persuade a person who was neutral on the subject. The chief reason beJng that all pesaionate and partisan arguments. overstate their case and understate their opponents' case . When you think that someone Is wrong, and you disagree with hlm, the first task is to determine in what way he is right. So you want to phase out trailer pafks. We are the pioneers who kept your business going when your wealthy residents fled the city after Labor Day. Newport Beach, don't bite the hand that fed you! C.R. OlwlnF OW _.,..llb .,. •""9lttlolf ~ ,....... ......... --"" NttlCt "" ..... " .. ......... .... ,.., "' """ ,. •lllnrt ... DlllY .... . This ~ not as ;>aradoxical as It sounds : no view can be entirely wrong, and everybody has a little piece of truth by the tall. This is the piece we start with, we wort from tller~. and concede as much as :we honeStly citn. WRD ACTON said that we have no right to oppose a position unUl we can state that Position in a way that fully satisfies those who hold it; until, indeed, we can make out a better case for it than the proponent himself can. (Most of us, . or course, distort or lampoon the opposite J)OS.ilion, and then proceed to demolish this straw man.) And all this is much more than an academic exercise. The arts of argument and pefsuasion are so lltUe known and practiced that disputants have ·no recourse to anything but violence. H peo- ple can't agree on how to disagree, there is no hope of reconciliation or com- promise. And the art of argument l.s learning how to disagree productively. WE BEGIN to fight when words fail us. And words fail us wben we use the wrong Olles to the wrong people for the wrong reasons. lt Is far easier to be passionate in defense of what one believes ~han to comprehend why somebody else believes something cl.if· ferent. But, ultimately, only thi5 com· prehension (which is got agreement) can replace violence with dialog Instead of the deafening monologs that lead to war. 'Secretarial Ghetw' Every year thousands o( American ' ( ' J girl_• .look for secretarial jobs, confidently ' THE BOOKMAN anticipating the good pay, pleasant work- ing conditions, interesting fellow-workers and excellent chances of advancement promised by the clasai!led ads. Only too many wind up in what lively -and well informed -author Mary Kathleen Benet calls The Secr<tarlal Gbelto (McGraw- Hlll, $5.~). Ms. Benet has worked in many offices on both sides oC the AUantlc, including those of the San Francisco Chronicle, the Chlcap Sun·'I'lmes, McCall's, and a book publishlng house. She bas also been a journalist, an advertising copywriter, and a literary agent. Her views are frank, outspoken -and controversial. As Ms. Benet notes, well over 60 per· cent ol. American office workers are women. By the sheer force of their OUN•I COAST DAILY PILOT - Robert N. Wttd, Publfsh<r T"""'4s Ktrvil. Editor Barbara Kr<ibich .Edil<>nal Page Editor Friday, Mlly 4, 1973 numbers and the yariety of tasks they perform, they have become btdispepsable to· the smooth functioning of American business. How many recefve the recognl- ,tioo lh<y desene? What does a secretary's job really mean today? Does It bring independence and fulfillment? Or does it pelfK!'tuate, in a new setting, a whole range of stereot~ female roles, all subservient to the · flDlctions and prerogatives of the male?. The Stc,..tar!al Ghetto tackles all these questions straight on. Secretaries will clamor to read this book -and their ,bossea can't afford not to. CAROLINE HARKLEROAD The t'ditorial' Ne of· the Dally Pilot seeks to inform. ancl atlrnulate readmr by ~nth1g on thll p&p diverse commentary on 1oplct o( ln- tm-st by syncticated colwnnlots """ cartooni&ll., by provktini a forwn for readers" views and by presentlna this 11ewspa,per'~ oplnlocia and ideas on cumnt topks. 'lb• edit.orlal opinloni ot tho Doily Pilot .,pear Olli¥ In tile tdttor!al COlWnn •t tho tQp o( the. pap. Oplaloo&, --by the col- umnfsflo ml -.. and I....., writers I.re thtlr own and n:> erOx• • ment or 1htit' vSrn by &ha Dlijy" Pllo< -be lnl..-i<d. • To the Editor: There are a great variety of fools in America, but the beneficent, altruistic, Christian boobs ,who pay taxes to feed, house and care for illegal alien im- migrants without . complaining about it are definitely in ai!las,, by themsel.ves - a class with no imminent effort to rehabilitate these unfortunate souls. LET US. tell these people what would happen to an American in a foreign coun- try under the sam6 circumstances: He would be Immediately Incarcerated (yes, plll in jail) and his relatives in the States would be bJlJed for his food, lodging and medical care, plu~ 1a "fine" for his misbehavior which could in many cases amount to ransom money, and he would languish in-a foreign prison: until the demands were paid -in cash, man, what else? Jolm Valterza's story on Care of Aliens (Pilot Apr. 28) tells all, and the sob slaters should read every Word or it, and then iet mad at the lmjnlgretlon kooks, tile Welfare shnooks aDd the Social Security crooks who aid and abet the iJ. legal entry <A alieos while people born here -Indians and Negroes -for in- stance -deserve a priority for jobs over all immigrants of whaiever color or na- tional origin. COULD it be that alien cheap labor sponsored by greedy employers is still the reason for all this jazz about illegal aliens? Possibly, because c:tieap labor has always been the incentive for welcoming vast hordes of foreigners to our country. S. G. UNOINE Election Needed To the Editor, The good book teaches us : "only in repentance there is salvation." The unrepenting praetorian palace guards (alias the Berlin Wall) did indeed resign but the credibility gap only deepens and tbe highest office in the land remains suspect. ONLY ONE avenue toward reestablisbing credibility in the White House is to bold special-bonaf.ide national presidenlial elections within ninety (90) days. The present chief executive is so fond of "firsts" so, who knows, perhapS such action would testore his image as a knowledgeable leader and give us something to celebrate on our forthcom- ing JOOth anniversary as a great nation . ' BORIS DUZAN Isn't It the Truth! By CARL RIBLET JR. Here are four measurements of ~ Clatlon : a ticket at a movie theater costs Sl more today than it did four years ago, an average priced auto is up Sl,000, a status-symboled boose.costs $10,000 more and the tab for an hour of prime time on TV has gone up $100,rol since 1969. The only thing that basn"t spiraled up and up ls the price ol the political handshake and that's because lhere ls 90 little de- mand for it. "!%Ce1Bive cost kill.I pleasurt." -Dictionary of Oplnlon.i Males oland aghast at lhe cletj>down hatred of men expressed by a number of the more communicative Women's Llb- bert. Biographical research reveals that tn some ca1e1 they had cruel falhers who womanized or who wert drunks. And to, we male chauvinist pigs are belna: made Io pay for the sins ol the fathers -lbe Ubberi' !allten. ,. It U a sil111 ooose that comes to a foz'1 1trmon." -Hafldbook of Proverb•· ·MAILllOX Letters f1bm readers are welcome. Nonnally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense fetters to fit space or eliminate libel is reseroid. All letters mu.st inclt«le signature and mailing addrts1, but names may be withhtfd on request if tufficlent reason is apparent. Poetry fDill .not be· publish'1d. Sign J1111gle To the Editor : l have yet to figure out why Costa Mesa businessmen feel !hey need enonnous signs in froot of their places of business to attract customers. In my opinion, big signs are repelling and I prefer to do business in a shop that is tasteful , attractively maintained and de- pends on its reputation to draw clientele. HARBOR BLVD. is an example of the worst sign' jllllgle in the area. It looks like parts ol Beach Blvd, which I think ls the worst street in the county. My belief i! that a person usually has decided where he is going before he ever goes out to shop and either knows the location or can find it once be gets close, without the help -or hindrance -of a monster sign. Big signs are an insult to my intelligence. And ¢o needs a big orange ball or big yellow shell to tell you there is a gas station_ underneath? ' I PREFER to do as much shopping as Possible in Newport's Westcilff Pliza; where the absence of sigtls is a delight. I like to go there, and to Sooth Coast Plaza and Fashion Island because· it Is a pleasant exJ)erience just to be there. And these shops do not seem to be lacking in business for their lack of enormous signs. Let's clean up Costa Mesa and make It a garden spot instead of ·a sign jungle. ' MRS. D. T .. Ol.80N 9'1-te Clarified To the Editor: I find U uofortWlate that in the article on-,,...i "ll"":!shmeot publlsbed in your newspaper: oa., ~ay l, l was quoted u saying thal /'We've beard plenty ol other grfpe!.U Ull!d in the cootext ol tho story, the statement could imply that 0~" hear many complalnll llbout the poUde. or practices of the school dlltrtct. This fs juat not true. IN MY capacity n an ol!ker lo a paN!flt • teacher group, I naturally hear comments about the schools. The com- plaints I have heard mult be -rlr.ed mainly as communUy probJems (1qr ex· ample, bicycle tbefls), oot criticism• of school policy or practlcfs. I !eel the .,.,...,. attributed to me was inaccurate and m!Ceadlng. It Ii my belief that the Newport-Mesa Unified School District ertjo)'I wldolp.,..i · con- fidence from the public, and to Imply otherWfse would be quite e""""°"'. OOROI'llY T. HUBBS. J\loDOtoNS"Olle To the Editor: We owners ol 419 E. Bilbao Blvd., and all our neighbors up and down this block, are very much agatnst the C.1 zcne being taken away from w:. Peraonal opinion ls no rea900 to downzone along with town character etc. THIS down-zoning has put the whole town in shock and fruatratlon and we art ready to fight it out. Discussing the three reasons for downroning, one being 1he town character. Your problem now b the people's character. We are mad and ready to fiaht tor our rtghta and we may fight a Jong time. For sure, thla 11 atlr- ring up pltnty of trouble and hard feel-· Ing. IN AIL the meeUng• at the etty baU, night after nlg~t, t!ll two and mi> tonger, we heard all the opposlUoo to th9' downzoning. We were only treated·llke,. bl.Dich of sheep, who have lost their way; Aga.i.n I will repeat it We do not Wint our C.1 taken away oor any olbor , dev~atlon ol our property. • MRS. J. H. llO\JTLEDGE , . .' " Prus 6•1U•1' To the Editor: 1 · • ! The Waterple scandal bu boen'bloft entirely out ol propoi:tloa by fall, -ll!f llberai-'pmf, who bu been tryfna to dlscredll the Nll<on AdmlnlsttaUOn s1n&· it took office in 1969. Now you feel you have a chance by IO!Dehow fmplfcaUng the President lo this unfortwuole lnddent by printing every sleazy rumor thlt comes out of Washington before ft b: declattd !act or fiction. -• I aln coovtnced bl Pr.sJdeot hid Do pnor lmowledge ol Waterpte and wilh or without this ICllJldal his Preoldeocy • will go down In lhla natloo's history u one of. our best! ~ · RlCl!ARO RI~ ,1 SometJalng'• Wro119' . ::i To the Editor: ·;, ~"', Your article, Hope !or l>yfnl 1:=1) In the Pilot (Smday, April 29) . raises some mighty bl.I questkm. !~ quote Dr. Haunti u saying," .•. the"'~ prOblern is money . . . the UfHa~: opera)lon, COits about t:I0,000 • , wo - fo the pooJUon ol beJnr Ible lo - lhla new hope only Jo the paUtnll wile:~ can pay •.• " ' .;,~; Well now, aomebody please explain:·~ Here we are spending millions of dollari,,'~ to save Cambodian• from cunmtmfsm1 · and we can't spend m;ooo to Ave ~ American cillien !rcxn kidney faJJuii.1~ Somelhlng wrq somewhere. .,...., J . A. DAVIDSO!'I\! ... ~ ... ;t Great Art Needs Great Suffering ..• . " -~· ~· ., , .:~1 ~- Remarks an avant·garde artist gets tired of hearing : "Renfro, the landlord says that if you don't at least make a down payment on the back rent by noon , we'll be thrown out into !he street by nightfall." · "Yeah, it's a nice painting. What's It a painting of?" "They say the greatest art comes from the greatest suffer· ing, Renfro. Maybe ,you don't have •enough trooble in ~your Ille.'' • "Quaintness comes ~too high here in Greenwich Village, kid. For what this garret dump costs yru, I could gel a foor-room apartment o[f Part Avenue with two baths." HTRE GROCER says he do6n•t care U-you are llllOlber Rembrandt, ·11en1ro. He says tt'1 caah on the line oow or you · don 'i get any more groceries."• "They say that Norman Rockwell can stlll get thousands of dollar• for those old polnllngs o! his Ibey used to put in the cover of the Saturday Eve'nlng Post." "I've seen some of the landscapes you've pointed. Have you evtr .painted houses aod barns? I mean for a living?" "Some say he's a cubist. Some say he's an expressionist. But I just think he's another nutty exhlblUonist." "Well,' lo me they look kind ol like you've be<n tmltaUng tho !lngllr poinl- [ HAL BOYLE J lngs that the chlmpomee at the r.oo does. You did want me to speak frankly, dldn 't you?" "I've already been down to the maJlbox three times, Renfro. The weHare check can't po!Slbly get here before the day afler tomorrow.'' "MAYBE IT would help U you started like moot artlsll lhrilupout hlsl<>ry •tarted, Renfro -wtt-O ·oomt talent?" "Are you sure that one ts hanging rlghtside up? How can you really tell?" "AU I know about lrl ls what I like, and what I don't Ill<• about this art, If that's wba~you call It, ts that I just don't like It." "What do you mean when you say thllt you'd evtn be wlJUn& to ctve this particular paJntlnr to the right mllHlllll! Any museum that would take It would be the wrona: mUJe\Ul\." "Wlicrc did you put that tea hag we wr ed. 1a1t night, Rentfro? We have to use It again -or we can't have any tea for breakfast.'' "I don't mean to frtghtcn you, Renfro, but f don"t think that'• Juat an ordinary rash you 've got in your beard. Have you ever had the mange?'' "IF WE EAT lie laot two apples, 8'11- lro, what wlll you have left for the still , - Jile you planned to paint todayl" .. The only canvas we have left ii an that old army cot I ""'for.a i.t. honu- But U you think I'm gofnfl to aleep on dit floor for art, you're out of your mind." "My kid In kindergarten can draw hel- ter than that." "The only thing left on the shell l.s i con of dog food, Renfro. I tell you whit I'll do. I'll split It three ways -between you, me and the dog -U you'll ..,... to go and apply for that Job with tho ...UU.- Uon department, like you promlled." " .t,<.t. 'I.« m• begin by ...,Ing ••• HELP!' • I 1 . .. t· .. .. ' • ' . ' • . fl r, ~ . 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IO•WHITE~BLUE,. !89 All ... inest look ba&t-.. .. ... ,.... #99111)3 ;: .. .. ... 1,.. -' '•lfAVEi"lllliE" t-shapeheel.sliplacol""', 4· 18 · full leather lining, thllmll & :': · fill(er loop. 4213715 Lt7 • .flUT IAIR GlDVE Desi&nedlomak'"'~""• 512 n , give you eJ1:11 reaclL : All leafier. #99/209 . . '·" • • ' ,. ·full ·grain cowhide, Y-· construction web a!KI padded ::': wrist strap. #99/208 t.t1 : . 3088 BRISTOL. ST. ; San Di.,.. Fr-ay •at lrlstol • Pei1o\rnalic'•;P~···· ·onrset VHF·fil(e \JJning . .. . . sfitem o.Built·iOunas. REG. . • · •• ' 249.97 , .. ..-: ·~· ~ . mm ·.9?! '. 1 .... ,., • Most . ml!' .si~ of ~lh sito!': tfiils in hallly Silt'ttOr ""· #Hlll : . I .811.LCDCK . FOR .JOllET " '3'~ S.11 Rejllacement 11ait b' maituil:tioning ball· cocks. Stops water . wasting. · BIG ·LADDER ' . ,ULE ... JAVE·: ·~8.09 llFOOT EXHNllON IMIEI 88 Clletk ties~ safety 111i1res: I. 2~" I ~tams Wit~ CJClllC 1IMI ca,s 2. ffi" fl1l sti•S witf 1r11n1 . 3. Iii• "'"'rtol wltk t•nfu ' tnis " ' I • ' . • ' , • ·'Victims R~pture . ' . Tendons LONG BEAC!l (AP) Purse snatching is being blamed tor a rtae in hand in- juries to the victims, a surgeon said here . Dr. Gerald Blatt of Long Beach told an orthopedic con- :ferance at. MemoriBI Hospital that purse snitching often rtau!ts In a tendon rupture or (MEDICINE) lhe victim's middle or ring. finger. He said the injury occurs when by rellu ¥t.ion the woman tries to hanf"-.to the -,_purse. ·----~ -~ Surgeons cart correct the in-J.ii,:.; .. 'f:~~~-the_ tell-... e Net0 Hospital SAN DIBGO (AP) -A $4.~ million, ~6ed -hospitaJ has opened near San Diego's Mission Bay. Mission .Bay MemOrial Hospital was dedicated with speeches_'by state Sen. John Stufl, Rep. Bob Wilson and City Cotincilman. R o be r t Martin<!. e Closing Set H,\NFORD (AP) -Kings County supervisors h a v e t decided to dose· Kings County General Hoepital, effecilve Aug. 15. 1 The ' decision came as a .resuff"o[ what the board term- ed · " vague, teclmical prob- lems" which wllf keep the .hospital from receiving 1 medical and Medicare ac- creditation after June *>- ' The board emphaaized that the accreditatlcn delemma had nothing to do wtth the quality of health car< at the county-run facility. e E.i:perbnents SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ex- perime~s using living "post- abortlon fetuses" for medical research would be outlawed under a proposal by a freshman Republican assemblyman . Assemblyman Michael b. Antonovich of Glendale who introduced ~ bill said, "It is outrageous that in a country · dedicated to the principle of human rights, we should even comider using victims of abortion as living human guinea pigs for m e d l ca I research." e Dedieatlon LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The City or Rope which sPe<;iallzes __./" 1 in treating diseases for which there is no known cure dedicated a $16.! million hosoltal unit. 'Mie ceremony drew Sen. Alan Cranstoo (0.C.lif.) and Harry Ashmore, president of the Center for the Study of Democratic In9litutiona. • AfJortlOK Ciir• lfACRAMENTO (AP) - Prfvate hospitals cook! muse to perform abortlona under leg;Lslation pr o p o 1 e d by .\!Jemlilyman Frank Murphy. Murphy (R-5at!ta Cruz) said no current law requires hospitsis to perform abortions, but that his proposal "Is a safeguard' against ei1her a court ruling or a future statute with such a requirement." Cuffed, But Free TRIESTE, Italy (AP) - Two Italian youths a!' rested by Yugoslav fnln. Uer police for trying to smuggle a carload of blue jeSns acto8I the border Oed ·bock ;.ito Italy still handcuffed together-. Italian police unshackled and · releued them, as the' had oommJt!ed oo crtme In fta!y . • .. 7 7 .., .... -- =---- VO ' 66, NO. 124, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ... " ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNJA FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1973 c TEN ceirS • • · 87 IWDI NllIDZDlVOD : Of .. ~,.. .... 'l'lu:tel11 ,of hnmllleutp._,utlon under streucllieoc11-,antj-nudity' itatutes has done llttle to ...,,.the tmolltrof dancing girfj at Coola Miss's -tliv nudi< clubs, Papa Joe's aoclthe Fire House. Bn..:lhtts was conducted nude as usual at the Fite House and .... bta at Papa Joe's 'lbunaay de&pi!Ao vows lrom city ofJloiili ID put the clolhes back on the ~-~~Related:~ Page 5.) -. A otai. SUprome Court declsioa Jut Tuesday alJoW them to do jusl that. 'Ille court ruled that local IJlUllidpalitles have up ho I ding the toples&-bottomleu waitresses and performers ln 'bars ml restaurants. 'jWe'll be open no matter what, .. vowed Fire House dancer Ida Cannon, speaking for her boss, owner Ray Rohm, now in Lu Vesas. Doorman CbuCk KIUfnian , added, "I don't know what he's got in milJd to do ' as now. But as of rlgbt now, if you're ta and have a driver's license, you're wekome to come in. We have some very exuUe, very intriguing: and very eiCiling en~ tertalnmeot here." At Papa Joe's, where the girls are only half-nude t<i cot\lply with AIQobolic Beverage Cootrol Board regulatlons, Alanager Don FQOte said, "As. far as we know, we have not" yet been ordered to . stop what we're doing." At the same time, however, Foote ad- ie--ffubs . • . . milted that Tutaday's 4 to 2 doclslon u p h o I di n g the topless-bottomless ordinanc!s of Orange and Sacramento counties "does create some concern." Costa Mesa City Attorney Roy E. June, sn embotUed nude bar fighter since be nn Baby Doti's out of town in 1967, believes ~ now has the weapon to win his war against the Fire House and Papa Joe's. Although be believes the old Costa Mesa "entertainment" ordinance ban-. ninfl topless-bottomless bars b now en- foreeable in 118ht of the court ruling, June said.he will ask for a new 1aw to supercede it on Monday nJsht . ~ed to members of the City Council will be an emirgency onilnance containing the same provtslons as the county ordinance which was upheld by the court. "If the council approves it, it will be in effect Tuesday morning and enforcement wlll , begin immediately unless the city Sex Allegations manager and the police chief decide tO defer enforcement for a periQd of time.·~ ~une further disclose<! plans by t~ Orange County D!sttict Attorney'• ollict to draft aa alJ-llcht countywld~ """""-apiDsl nude bars. Tba:t ordinance .....id be passed by var~ cities and create uniformity fur ease Ol pro!eCUtioo. ; Since the supreme Coort rulini specifically excludes theaters from nucfl. (See NIJDIES, Pip I) ' Jury Indicts In · Mu,skie Seg:cetti Sahot~ge WASHING.TON (AP; -Donald H. counts. Hogen ~liltoo Benz, 25; of Benz gave llearlDg a p_..i Jetter ,.-,ill Segretti, a Califomla attorney with Odessa, Fla., a fonner Nil.on campaign stationery and Hearing malled It M~ _-re~ ties:~ tO.~tb-e-:~1e.Jlgu~1: E.,as worker and ·one-time -president. of_ the . 11 to persona inJbe Jac~vtlle__. ~ _ --been lndl~i.d in aJtilllegeiti<:nemo a1me.r:::-Tampa-: Yoong-Repubjjcans; -wu Jl8!Dld_ do, Tam~ ~t-.Petersbw;& _ .. .,.,w ................ • ; .. A,o .• ,. t'•·-~! tY '~'~ ~\~ ... ' 4 ,;.:;i_,;fN ,.11 .. , \' •' ... _·· •"1 If you're on -a.freeway, ii doesn't look llke mucb. But an aerial view pl'llVldes a different persp_ective, -In this case an lntelelling Jllttern. The· pho!Og?apb shows the San Diego and N'ewport Freeways. If you • W!1f~_ lraveli'!g from . the upper left of the picture to1lllll'd !he bottom ngh~ you would be headed t~ ward Newport Beach. Hoag Directors Back Teaching · Concept at UCI Difectors of Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach thls morning voted unanimously to endorse the cOncept of a !Aoaching and research hoopital at UC Irvine. But they C()nditioned the endorsement, tying it to a provision that the on.campus hospital "does not increase the total number of hospital beds in Onnge .Coun- ty." The closed-door session lasted more than , two hours and after it, Board Chairman A. Vincent Jorgensen was "unavtiilable for comment." Directors announced their endorsement in a one-sentence press release following · the rlreelln~ with Dr. Stanley , Van den Noort, acting dean of the UCI medical school. The endorsement is likely to spur a similar vote by Newport Beach COWl- cilmen Monday night. Councilmen . tW<> weeks ago delayed· action on a request by UCl to support the on-campus' faciJity pending input from Hoag Hospital. Hoag Administrator Scott Parker call- ~ the meeting this morning "very straig~orward." '.'Dr. 'Van den Noort -presented the latest concept for the on-campus hospital that now Calls for conlttuction · -of · a IS.. HOSPITAL, ~ ZI . ' Bandit Sorry, Returns Loot A~ repentant bandit who Wore a ' U.S:-· P:os~ Service uniform in the $131 armed robbery of a Corona del Mar ,ooriet shop 10 days ago has remqrsefully mailed the money • ~c~ ~l~l Qellvecy. ·, The sunman who 1'lieved four pel"IOJ\S of their casli at Uie Sllhi>uett• Shop, rm E. CoHt Rigbway 1 enclosed an anonymous note of explana~on. He said be went to church the following Sunday and became oon- scienc~stricken over having broken both the Eighlll Commandment of the Old Testament and Section Ill or the California Penal Code. "Lord .•. l don't r~;:ibm' sny _ ,_o~ like it," N Beach ' Detectl~• 58111 Ambarley said 'b>- day. "I wish more of these 8UYS would xo to cburcli." Autopsy Tests Await,ed _As Sen .. Long. Exhumed HANNIBAL, Mo. (AP) -Audrain County authorities were walling the results today of an autopsy on fonner U.S. Sen. E<lard V. Long, whose body was exhumed Thursday for investigatiDn of a report Loog may have died of poison- ing. In • ropyrighted story. the Kansas City Star said the body was taken from Grandview Cemetery here to Hannibal hospital, where an autopsy Was perform- ed in the presence ot ·four doctors . Samples were ·taktn from the stomach for chemical analysis but the results were not hnmediately known. An observer told the Star the autopsy revealed a large pituitary tumor which may have caused the veteran politician's death Nov. 6, the story said. LOOg•s widow, Mrs. Florence Long, asked !nve!llgatm to check the progress of the tumor, whlch,w8J discovered at a , Washington boopital In 1967. Tlie report that Long may have died from poi>onlng came las! month .from HelewDunlop, Long's aecretary. She told authorities Long complnined shortly before his death that he might have been poisoned by a box of candy which had been ~Ven to biin. Long's body was reburied yesterday after being exhumed at the request of Thomas Osborne, Audrain County pros- ecuting attorney. Mrs. Long approved the autopsy with certain cooditions, in- cluding having present a physician of her choice. The Star said one doctor from Han- nibal. two from St. Louis and one from the Louisiana, Mo. area attended the autopsy. Also present were Pike County Coroner J. 0. Mudd and Marion Wasinger, a Han- nibal attorney who represents Mrs. J..oog. Mrs. Long had flied an alienation of aHectkm suit apinst Mlss Dunlop, ... t. ing damages. ol '3:25 million cbarP>i that Miu Dunlop "carnally" knew Lema. . A few mcntha be!ore his death, Lons. who was separated from his wife, reviled bis will, leaving 110 eacb to his widow and their dauglli.r, and the hulk of bis estai., esllma!Aod at more than $2 njillion, to bis granddaugbter. Husband Files Divorce ·Suit By TOM llAllLEY I Of .. DMtf Plltt IWI' La)YY'"' for actr,es& M'amie van Doren and her, third husbond, taligled in. Santa Ana courtroom !nday o...-the shapely blonde'! demand for a two-month delay in the Orange County divorce action filed by benpouse of just :rT da~. Superior Court Judse Wllllam c. Speirs hea<d arguments from both sides and promptly sent the file down to Preskllns Judge -Bruce .SUmner of Laguna· Beach for his decision on the motion for a delay untU June. That motion wfJl be beard later today. The t0-yeaJ'oOld actress WU not present to hear her lawyer eqilain that a 1tqe C111Jl1llibnent In St. Paul, Miin. mode ll Im-Ible for her to be In Orange Coun- ty for the court bearing. Lawyers for wealthy bUslness es· eculhe Ross McCliatocl<, 51, cl ~ argued that the divorce action flRd-'lly him required' only 10 mlDutes cl tesUmony and should he dispoaed of 11>- day. • -His lawyers contend that the marriage contracted ' in Las Vegas last Dec. l , dfsintigrated on tbe wedding night when Miss Van Doren ,..fused to go to bed with him and ins"'8d spent the nigbt .... COllCb. DocUmen\s · filed in support of the dlvQrce petition -Mi~ .V.an Doren is llsi.d as Joan L., McClintoek -allege that the actress never Intended to be part of a true marriage 11and married for wealth." · It la alleged that her first act after marriage was to demand a 110,000 dlfncllUia coat and a 135,000 Rolll Royce from McClintock. It la also ~eel tbot .Ille relWed lo shat. the couple I on.p llomo with the petttiOMr's temqe ..,, BO McClintock. M<CJ!ntoct clalmed in p re -t r I a I documtnla that Miu Van Doren lino! hf111 lllto merriqo by Jl"'htlsing to lesm " .• be • coot and a housew!lo. _ He claims she abandoned -.tlllns, however. Ind Ulled hlm..:Jor $1,0oo I month for her clothing allowance alone. • .. at sab6taging Democratic Sen. Edmund as.an mifdicted co-conspirator. among othen-. ---· • s. Muskie's presidential campaign in Segreto and Hearing wett named on The m.ulmum penalty upon ct11vlcllcil Florida ·last year, the J!JStice Depart-two .counts, the first CIJarglDg that they on esch count-botb ml..W.,.anon.-,ls ment said today. arranged for the letter to be published one year in prison snd a fl,000 fine. ,• • The department said Segrettl, Jong and tbe second that they conspired to SelfOtti has been named by Pl e&lillio1t distribute it. Nixon'• peraonal lawyer, H·e rb trt MARTHA SAYS SHE WAS 'HALF CRUCIFIED'~199 4 under investigation j in the Watergate scandal, Was 1ndictea by a federal grand jury in Orlando, Fla. for "publishing and distributing a letter ... which failed lo i~lily'thoseiresplillSible." 1'1111 ref"IT"'! to· a flier said. to have .,,..., foi'ged ~ ¥uskie•.-ot8-.y which accused two of his leading opponents, sms: "Hubert !!, Hwnphrey @od Henry M. Jachon, ol w:ual mJaconduct. The Jetter reportedly waa distributed by the thousands just prior to the. March 14 primary. SegrettJ coold not be reached Immedi- ately for comment. His te1epbooe amwer- in8 aervice in Loo Angeles said be discon- tinued using it two months ago. The Justice Department 18id his wherea bouts were not known. Muskie finished a poor third in the Florido ballotting behind Alabama Gov. Wallace and Bumphrey. The defeat was the frrst in ~ series of primary setbacks that led the one:Ume Democratic favor- ite to withdraw from active campaign· ing, even thoug!J public opinion polls Jiad shown him to have the best chance of beating Presid<nt Nixon !n the general election. The indictment also charged George A. Hearing of Tampa, Fla. on the same * * * $1 Million Fund Secr et, Former Nixon Aide Sa y-s WASHINGTON (Al') -The fonner treasurer of President Nixon's campaign finance committee bas testit'ied in a sworn deposition that the campaJgn rais- ed mo.re than $1 million in cash con- tributions which apparently were never reported. (Related stories Page 3.) 'lbe statement was•made by Hugh W. Sloan Jr., former treuurer of the Finance Committee to Re-elect the President, on Oct. 2-4, and unsealed by U.S. District Court today. Attorneys for Common CaWK!', a citizens group, asked Sloan how much cash money was covered in a missing ledger sheet of cash transactions by the committee. A. 1 don't have a pteclse figure in mind. But It was in acess of II million. Q. You have indicated thal the amount wu In excess of $1 mllllon. Coun you put a celling on ii? Was It under $10 million?" A. Ob, yes, It wss under 12 mllBon. Q. Somewhere between II million and $2 miJJion? A. Yes. Later in the deposition, Sloan aa\d the missing sheets on cash money llsted "about .... $'i00.000" in disbunemen\a. Apparently there ls no public record-cl unreported cash raised and hsndlecl by the Nixon campaign, although there has been court tAostlmony or iuma up to $350,000 kept in various safes. News ,.ports have uld President Nit· on'1 peraonal lawyer, Herbert Kalmbach at Newport Belch, had a flG0,000 hanlt 11CCOU11t oontalninr c 1 m p a 11 n con- tributions used, at least In part, tO pay !or political espionage. An aide to former Whit. Houae Ollef ol staff II. R. Haldeman has be<n quoted In 1See-SlAJSJJ FIJND, Pare I) • According to the conspiracy count, Kalmbocb of Newport Beach, as the man S.grelli and Benz met Dec. I, 1971, at a to whom Kalmbach paid between $30,000- restaurant near Tampa, Fla. and $40,000 on orden from Dwi&bt Cbapip, "discb.ued disruption of the campaigns" Conner appointments secretary to tba oi Jackson and Muskie. President and Segrettl's peraonal friend, Other "overt acts" Jisted in t·he·in-from a secret $500,000 I~ tept &ta dictment said that on Feb. 20, 1973 California bant (or' clmPiJgn ..,.,......., Segrettt mailed a supp(y of Cltllens for , on lbe West Coast. Muolde 11Jtfoner:y to Benz and a letter Vorloua """' ,-t• bllld m-111:- cootalillnll the ptopooed tut !Gr the vest!gaUilt ,..ti ...,. -~ pboo,y flier. , u a chief recruiter for sabotap apir.- On Feb. 25, IV/2, tbe fndiclment ale!, tlollL. Whoa Pinto!· ' ' ~ - Car Takes Off; Driver Bails Out A horrified housewife bailed out of her compact car Thurlday as it roared -ac· celerator stuck -down a -O>sta Mesa street, slammed through a garage door at a rorner house and self-destructed. ·· The s~ • p.m. crash didn't do much lir~tbo-_.ty...oLtbo..Jlaward Tatum family, $53 .Fuchala Ave, either. Motorist JoAnnettAo W-in, 25, of 3363 Wlaterta Clrdo, esc~ with only minor pavement burn!' and ahaken nerves, accident lnvestlpt<n said, by jumping out about ~'feet before the ...,,. ~ct. ~ She told Officer Tom Boylan the _.,.,. celerator stuck, rovving up the eqlat and sebdlnr !lie Pinto gaJloplJll down tbo street at Increasing speed., :· JI the Pinto had been a horse, O!Dcor Boyland~ have shot It. · "It's just about totaled;"' hi -..a; No lmmedia!Ao astlmate wu availal>le for damagea t<> tbe Tatum resldeDce. ~ d1mage wu confined lorrely to dlo a:arage. .. -. Newport' Comm~dment: ·· ' Church Sign Must Fall By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of .. Detly ""' ltlft The commandments of munlclpaJ law prevailed Thursday night as Newport Beach planning commissioners ruled the bold expression of faith on-a blulflop Clm Drive church wall must COlll1! down. By a 4-1 vote, the commission cleclded the large "Praise Ye the Lord" fn.. scrlplloo on an ootslcle wall ol Finl Bap- Ust Churcb, 2501 CUH Drive, oome,t under Ifie purview of the dty's sfgll law. Though commtlsklner1 ·-. t 0 remove the 196-<qua,...foot sign, they told the church it could be replaced with one not ao viaibla and OV<rbear!ng - llCXDOWhere In the range ol 15 oquare feet. Church officials say they will consider appeeling the ruling, to the city oouncll in Police Auction Set May 12 About 250 unclaimed Items, in- cluding approxlmatAoly 40 bicycles, go on ·the acullon blocl: May II at the Costa Mesa police aepartment. 'Ille aucti111 heg!ns at 10 a.m. in the rear of the atattoo but btd Items may 6t inspecled an hour earlier. Other Items ICbedullld. for auction Include hlmitllf'I, stereos, TV setr, OOllume jewelry and auto tape decks. ,_ lroJll Jlle_lllCl!on ... ~ retumed to the city pnll'll fllnd budget. an effort to continue carrying their meuqe to motorl!:ts m Pacific Coast Hl!lbway below the bluffs. Church leaden and other supporters turned out in •force at the meetlnll to reinforce thetr. belief that Illa lnacrlptlon is not cletrimelltal to the d ty and !n f1et (See 'CRIJRCR, Pop I ) . I I .......... • _, • , ' • • . The weather een1ce 1ee1 low .. ~ 'clouds bloctln( 1IQI, Old Sol 1111 Sal-; 1unfay with a c/ianco ol pe11fA1' . clearing In the lalJ aftonloon. Coo(. er temperatures are especiad__. wltb readings In the '°"· Lenn .a. INSIDE ~DAY : Two •f4ff wtilcn tdlcc G loolo ·• ot IM Rcnoluo1lca Pl<Glllre Faire which """' placa adcA May in Agoura: one frOm Ille penpecti~ of Ille~ - arlllt ~·d 011• Jrqwi Ille Nw: of tht vlaftol'. s .. todow'• w .. ro. "'der. •I Yf/lllt "'*" I ...... _ " =--~: e:. : --' := .... ....t ~,., ........... . "911tCOll 14 ........ , . AMI '--n II r/ -. =-:;-............. --> .,, , •. ..., ...... , ... ---............. - - -. ~ .... , .... ......... ..... ' ............ ' • • • r eeks Funds =-F 0F-ll-0spital- ~ S<n. Dennis E. Carpenter IR· Belch) has lntroduoed • bill Ucal to one by Assemblyman Robert l'J. Badham (1\.ll•wport Beach) that ... ks to speed funding for the UC lrvine- Call!omia Collea• of Mecllclne teaclinfl hospital by adding Pl mlllllll to thll year's UC budget. Carpenter and Badham n y they have Eworking with Assemblyman Wlllle · Jr. (fl.San Francisco) to -">• ways the Leglslatutt mlg)Jt the approval of portions af the 138 .qil!Uon ·of state bond flmdt approved by ~last fall as part ol • 1115-9 mUllon ;~te health scieoces bond measure. ,;·,11rowo•1 Way1 and Meana committee ~ final say oo when and bow the mooey il spent. AddiUooally, Brown cbalro a egisJaUve committee on teaching • 1 siting which will report to tbe tutt oo mattera lncluding the UC! 'm't<tlcal school funding. The staff of that conunittee. ia believed fd --"be recommending a "compromise" ~\111on of the nearly 138 million which 1iQbld see $11 million ~t on a ·~m and laboratory building on the tJCi: ·campus, $18 millioo for a teaching ~tal with 200 beds to be constructed "'j\~the UCI campus, and $7 million of the ~ bonds would be ~ spent improving <>tinge County Medical Center where ~itQ:-med:ical student! presently train. -:•J.; Carpenter aide said today the 124 lbllUOn bl11 Is a "vehicle" for funding Wtiatever is needed to accomplish the ' teaching hospital needs of the university, ,ft'lduding the spending of University bond ttu:nds to improve the county 's _general ll!llpital facility In Orange. ,,_::,. * * * Fi-otti P,,ge 1 Jffl~i?ITAL .~ .. -B and resean:h facility with 200 beds." . ... :Parker said Van den Noort also ouUin- .i .lbe latest UC !proposal to spend JI lrllllloo of tbe $37 million In health scieD.ces bond money approved by voters list November to refurbish Orange Coon· .fytModical Center. ,,_ ()CMC, under the latest UCI proposal, wlold. continue to be an arm of the university's medical school and about 200 iii' lbe 515 OCMC beds would be ~ltd ~ ~£8.rker aod other sources confirmed t6at Hoag directors continued to ezpress l'JDCOl1l about the Influence ol a teacblng UC! to support te ~pus facility pen- hospiW. Hoag director Earl Hardage 1bunday said that it is the plan by the Western Worlds Medical Foundation for a nearby hospital that is the real concern of Hoac directors. Hardage insisted that it is not the potential complication that bothers Hoag but rather the current oversupply of hospital beds that is of primary concern. He said too many hospital beds forces up medical costs by requiring fewer pa- tients to pay for fixed operating costs. "Western Worlds was discussed but so was the entire subject of overbedding in Orange County," Parker said. .... Parker also said that Dr. Van den Noort et:pressed an interest in developing a working relationship with Hoag and 'other county hospitals, as it has with Long Beach Memorial Hospital. The last tie between Hoag and UCI was broken last swnmer when Hoag diree- tors, under pressure from their medical staff, voted to <Jo away with the hospital's ramily practice clinic. "No comment" about any future pr~ grams were made, however, Parker said. Art Brings $93,000 NEW YORK (AP) -Four works by the late Pablo Picasso brought a tota1 of 193,000 Thursday al a Sotheby Parke- Bernet galleri es auction . They were among more than $11 million in im- pressionist and modem art works auc· tioned by the galleries in a two-day sale. DAILY PILOT Th• Oratllll C...t DAIL y rn.oir, wllll •1c.111 It _,.,.... fllt ,..._.,,_ .. 11 ........... W .. Or9nOt O..st 1"11111 ...... ~. ,.,.. ,... .. " ..... .,.. pubtffkl, ~ .......... fl'rldly. tor (.ost1 MMI. H......... had!, Hunll~ 191<11/'-"'" V1llty. UQi.N •.-di, lrvlne/StddltlliMt Mii Sin Cllf'Mrli.I 5tn Jlollll Ctplttn... A ""91e rtQIOllll 9dlllor1 .......... kll.lnS9)'9 .,.. ~,.. Tiit ll'ln<IPll ,willfllrll plMf It 11 »II Wttl ••l" s"'"'· c.tt Mttl, ar~. ,,..,._ llob.rt N. Wt.4 ltr•ld«tl Ind l"ublltlltr J t ck Ill. C11rl1y VD ,,...illerlt 91111 o-t'll ~ Tlion1t1 Ktt•U ld!tor ni-•• A. llt11rpl.1,., ~'"'~!!'fr 0.1rtt1 H. Lo.ft l lclri1r4 P. Ntll ~ MtMtill9 11111..,. C:.... '!-' CNIW :tJO W"t a.y Stn.t I M1Rl1t1 AM'"u'P.O. lo• 11.0, •2:621 --H""""' ._,.! Diii .....,..,. lollttv.N U9WM loodt1 ttJ l"-t A-.......... ~: l117J ~ ...,..... .... SM ~ at Nl!1fl •t ConllM AMI T .. 1f'lr•1 (114) Ml-4121 tit '""" ,W.s:1 b t '4W671 """""""· 1m °""" ~ l"l.tltWilrll Clli!MMY. "' ... ,,.,..., lllVllrt t ... ...... IMtW • •""*"'""'" ,..,.... ...,. M-•••fecrt WlftllWt tP«iil ,... .... If '*""'911' ..... ..................... c.---. QMii111M.. I l ....... _. _. tlM .,,..I..."" ....... ,, ,,,....,.., ......,, ..... , ...-......w .. '~· M11•, 1973 Kinder gart.en Signup~ Set Klllderprteo enrollment ID U,. N~M... IChool dlatrld wlll -U lh""1Cb nut Frtd•J d"" lnlnpiuldlool--wbo wl11 bt ·IM ,_.. cild iii« ~-1-711 ...... em ...ii ID. ldndtrprten 11 their °"" neighborhood ldlool. Dlatrlcl spokesmen said wr!l!en\ d<J<lr-tatioll ol age - a ~1r1b' or bapttmud certl!loote -in..r be presented at rqlstratlon along with prool af lnrm1mlzatloo aplnst diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cooa1J, ,...., .. and polio. AJl'f ipeclllc questlona about "'g· istratlon or the kindergarten pro- .gram can be answem! by oolllng the district Child Wellare and A~ !~Office. Att.orneys In Pentagon Case Sile1it Buu.ETIN LOS ANGELES (Ul'l) -E. Howard Hunt told the Waterg1te grud Jury he bad WlLtte llome •alborl:z.atioa to bar- glartse Daniel ,Ellaberg's psycblatrlJI'• office, It wu revealed thfl afte1 noon at tbe Pe~tagoa 'Papen trial. LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Defense at· tomeys for DanieJ Ellsberg and Anthony Russo today refused to take any part in further testimony at the Pentagon Papers trial, but the judge ordered testimony . in the government 's rebuttal cue to procffd anyway. The defense rattomeys vowed ·they -.would sit .ailenily, .rel using to voice ob- jections or engage in cros.H:xamlnation of witnesses until the judge resolved an investigation of Watergate and White House links to the' prosecution of Ellsberg. -~ U.S. District Court Judge Malt Byrne made his ruling on testimony after nuinerous argwnents followed his an- nouncement that the government had not yet given him the grand jury transcript of Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt's testimony in Wash Ing ton regarding a burglary of Daniel Ellsberg's psychlatrh1t's office. The defense asked that 'the trial be stopped, but tbe judge refused . The government prosecutor explained that the transcript had not reached the Justice Department in time to be flown here overnight -after it was ordered released on Thursday. He said it was being sent here by Telecopier and should arrive here within the day. Ellsberg's chief attorney, Leonard Boudin, arose and demanded that the trial testimony be lmrnei!iatel.!' stopped because it was "farcical" to continue with testimony against the defendants. "We cannot engage in what we honestly regard as a diversion from the main course of events -namely, what has the government done to us, not what ht.ve we done to the government of the Onlted States," said Boudin. He again pressed for immediate dismissal of the indictment against Ells berg and · Russo on grounds that the government is guilty of comiption and malfeasance in connection with his trial. * * * Senate Probers Quiz Haldeman And Ehrlichman WASlflNGTON (UPI) -Senate in· vestlgators questioned today President Nixon's two top rormer ai des about the \Vatergate bu gg ing case and any covcrup of it. It marked the second ciay H.R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman sub- mitted to te stimony before separate in· vestigators. The deposed White House aides, who w1derwent lengthy questioning Thursday by a rederal grand jury, said today they \vere sure any suspicions of any presidential knowledge of the Watergat~ affalr would he dispelled "when the truth is fully known." 'nle grand jury which beard Haldeman and Ehrlichman Thursday convened late this morning w.bile Frederick C. LaRue, 44, an assis.tant to Jotm N. Mitchell when the latter was director of the Nixon re- election campaign , met with federal at· torneys, apparently before being called to testify. Following publication ol a public opin- ion survey indicating that half of those questioned believed Nixon knew or efforts to cover up the Watergate, Ehrlichman and Haldeman were asked if they felt such suspicions would be dispelled in time. <Story, Page 4). "I know that when the truth Is flllly known, this matter will be cleared up to everyone's satisfaction," Haldeman told reporters. Costa Mesa Parents Will ·Visit Campua Parents of Incoming freshmen as well as !hose of students currently attending Costa Mesa High School are Invited to tour the campus and visit cJassrooms next week . Parent Corps mem bers will conduct toura at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Monday through Friday, To Join one of lbe tours c•ll CoslA Mesa lllih School, IMl>IM.!I, Ext. 14. \ , I ( Kalmbach Says- • Files _Destroy!'d~ ... NEW YORK .(AP) -Pmldent Nixon'• former peraonal attorney has told government inveatlgatora that h e destroyed all his campaign finance recordl before the 11172 federal ca!llpalgn finance Jaw took effect, 1ccordlng to sources. quoted today by the New York Times. 1be Times said it learned from sources close to the case that Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, who was Nllon's attorney until a few days ago, said be destroyed the records lo protect the namea of donors. Most of lbe funds raised by Kalmbach EX-NIXON PHYSICIAN SAYS RECORDS TAKEN-P1111 5 came fropl wealthy Republicans living in Southern California, where Kalmbach maintains a private law practice, the newspaper Wd. Kalmbach served as a s s o c I a t e chairman of the Republican re-eleetion finance committee. Suell destnic:tlon ol •econla, the Times Board Decisio1i . Prompts Suit By EcologY. Unit t>~ge County supervisors today face Superior <;ourt action based on the allegation that their overtuming ol the plaiihlilg cllmmlssjon'a·declslnn 01t11 ~ · lroversial El Toro development Was il· legal. '!be lawsuit med by the Environmental COalltion ·of 0range County with iii El Toro church Ind scbool u co-plaintiffs claims that the county board aeted unlawfully March 21 when it rezoned an eight .acre patcel at El Toro Road and Muirlands Boulevard. That action cleared the way for the Rinker Corporation to bµild a shopping center on the site. The company 's plans had earlier been balked when the county planning commission refused to rezone the area. Lawyers for the county, the coalition, the Abiding Savior Lutheran Church and tbe Good Shepherd Lutheran Home of the West have been ordered to appear before Judge Robert P. Kneeland May 23 for a pretrial hearfng. Coalition lawyers allege that the supervisors' declsJon to rezone the eight- acre area from residential to commercial use vloJated state law. And they further claimed that state laws clearly point out that a county board can amend a general p~ only if the planning commission goes along with the recommendation. Rinker C.Orporatlon president Harry RJnker saw the supervisors' decision March 21 u vindication of his argument that the planners bad unfalrly denied him pe~lon ,tO build on the eight-acre site. Rinker'• first a pp ea I to the supervfaor:s in January was rejected becBUse blJ plans Indicated the building of two . lervice . 1taUons within the developmeul He pronllaed to eliminate the service staUons and his revised plans were ac- cepted by the supervisors after again being rejected by the planning com- mission. From Pagel NUDIES .. 'l ty law prosecution, June predicted that burlesque houses might come back. "That's where you just buy a ticket to ogle and there is no beer, nor sandwiches, food or drinks involved," he said. ..But it bas to be a legitimate theater production." As Tuesday approaches, Fire House dancer C8nnon is unafraid of giving up her profitable career. 1:111 .,I can always find a JOb. l could be a dance teacher, a bank teller, a secretary· or, if I went to school, a real estate broker. But I just happen to like where I'm at," she explained. M1:s.· Ashcroft, Wife of Irvine Coach, Succumbs Funeral services for Mrs. Elizabeth M. Ashcroft, Costa Mesa. have been set for 4 p.m. Saturday in Pa<:lf'lc View Chapel, Newport Beach. Mra. Ashcroft, wife of UC.Irvine soccer roaeh BUI Ashc:roft, died In ber home on 160 E. Bay St. Wednesday. She was 57. A native of Britain, Mrs. Ashcroft and her husband came to lhe United States In 19" and setUed in Orange County In 1962. Mrs. Ashcroft was well known for her heraldic artistry and bad her coats of arms and shields exhibited publicly. She was a<tlve In the UC! Town and Gown and an enth\J11astlc tennis player. She 11 survived by her hu1band ; daughters Sluan Hobart, Cypress, and Leoni PeM!nglnn, Los Gatoc, and two grandchildren. aald, could he a Ylolatlon of the 1121 Oor· rupt Practices Act. " J A spokeaman for tire Republlean nnance committee wu quoted by tire Tim~ u saying, '1We have no tn. formation that any '9COnll were destroyed." The Tim<!< said Kalmbach con~lled a !!l!Cfet IS00,000 fund, part of which wu allegedly used fo1 espionage an d sabotqe during the 1172 C11Dpolgn. It al>O said be la known to be ll!!<ler grand jury lnve1Ugallon for his al!Opd role In a reported conspiracy to ~t the initial federal lnveaUgatiolls Into. tbe bugging ol Democratic natlooll head- quartera In Washington's Watergate com- plet:. United Press lntemaUoruil quoted an associate as saying lbe ~ "'re des~yed in Kalmbach'•. 9!fl<e In the headquarters of the Comirilttee to Jle- elect the President and at Kalmbach'• home in Newport Beach. U,I Ttffphel1 TtME TO RELAX -President Nixon and rus friend Charles "Bebe" !Uobozo smile as they walk lo the Florida White House where Nixon and his family are spending the weekend. '· F,....P .. el ' SLUSH FUND •• Cancer Kiis Available . grand jury testimony as saying Haldeman kept $350,000 in apparently unreported campaign money ln his safe. The Nixon campaign was fined $8,000 for falling to report disbursements from a third ucret fund kept in campaign For Costa Mesa Drive I - headquarters. Neighbor·t~Neighbor Cancer Crusade When the new campaign finance kits are now being passed out in Costa disclosure law went Into effect on Aprll 7, Mesa , according to Mrs. Belle Hout, city 1972, the Nixon committee reported chalnnan for the American Cancer ailset!".l>HIO' million. ~Ilion or-SOiO>.;y's Orange Counly""1it. less SJOan mentioned in hla depo&Uon ap-Key workers helping to raise Costa pare.oily was in addition to the reported Mesa 's goal of $6,000 are Gen Odenwald, funds on l;l.and. Dolores Forge. Joan Whisenand, Loretta Sloln ttstlfiedlhar...,,. recorai of the Howland, Betty. Murphy, Barbara Ball· cash transactions had been destfoyed. inger, Jean Vestre, Mary-Jo Hammetr, Building Chiefs Mother Succumbs Mrs. Grace F. Hanbart, mother or Costa Mesa Building Director Richard D. Hanhart, died Thursday after living in LailllUI Hills for 13 years. · , A former school teadler, abe came to Orange County to retln! and lived at 4Tl- B Calle Cadlx until her death. Private services for Mrs. Hanhart are scheduled for 2 p.m. Saturday Jn Pacific View Chapel with intennent to follow at Pacific View Memorial Park, Newport . Beach. · Mrs. Hanhart is survived by sons James R. Hanhart, the district attorney of Madera County, and Richard D. Hanhart, Dana Point; daughter Gloria Suggs, Garden Grove; six grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren. Co1uedian Succumbs VAN NUYS (AP) -Stage and mm comedian Alan Carney is dead of an ap- parent heart attack at the age of 63. Camey collapsed and died Wednesday . at Hollywood Park Race Track in Inglewood after winning the dally double. Liz McGraJI, and Margaret Dowd. · This year's theme is ''Let's wipe out cancer in our li£etime" and every9ne can help attain that goal by placing a con· tribution in the kit and taking it to the next-door neighbor. . "We are hoping that people will make more than just a routine contribution this year, because our momentum in the fight against cancer must not be pennitted to nm down," she said . From Pqe 1 CHURCH ... Is not .a sign in the coilvenlional sense. "'I1>e church takes the position that the inscriPtion ... is not a sip within the meaning of the ordinance,' said church board Chainnan Frank Barton. "This position is based on the assum~ tion that the city council, in passing the ordinance, intended to uphold the U.S. C.onsUtution and its protection for the ex- ercise of religion," he added. Earlier this week, Newport Beach at- torney Wil liam Drake, who also spoke Thursday night, sa id the black. plastic lettering ls an expression of religious belief and as such falls under guaranteed protections of free speech and religion. Assistant City Attorney David Baade thinks otherwise. Each kit contains educational pam- 'phlets listing the seven warning signals of cancer as well as pertinent !acts about the disease. Residents of COSta Mesa .are J!lge4 to take a pamphlet out of the kit and to rei:!'ll. ·-• . TONIGHT "THE GINGERBREAD LADY," - Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, Friday and Saturday, 8:30 p.m. Admission fl. LLOYD MASON SMITH -Travel, Egypt-East Africa. OCC Science Hall, Fridays through M•Y 25, 7-9 p.rn. BETWEEN PARENT & CHILO" - Gestalt and other approaches, Mar}ory f)tts, lecture~\ OCC. Science Lecture 2, l'rldays througn May 25, 7.9 p.m. . UC! DRAMA WORKSHOP -"Feif· fer's l>eople," Fine Arts Village Studio Theater, Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m. Admission 50 cents. MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING, Fairgrounds, &: 15 p.m. SATIJRDAY, MAY 5 NEWPORT REGATIA -UC! and OCC Crew teams will host Stanford, Loyola and use. Lido Channel, 9 a.m. SUNDAY, May 6 OCC BENEFIT CONCERT -0C Choir. Oiorale, Chamber S i n g e r s • Concert Band and Jazz Ensemble will perform as benefit for Nancy Leenerts, Auditoriwn, 2 p.m. Donation $1. THE ANEST IN QUALITY AT ACCEPTABLE PRICES. WE ARE ANXIOUS TO SERVE YOU AND SHOW YOU THIS FINE COLLECTION OF CHAIRS ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT. STOP IN TODAY! OREXEL,..-HERITA6E-HENREDON-WOOOMARK-KARAS) ,A;N INTER I 011·s WllllDAYS I SATURDAYS 9!00 to 5:30 NIDAY 'TIL 9:00 · . NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLIFF OR., 642 ·2050 10,_1t S11ncl•y lt•StJO J LA6UNA BEACH e 145 NORTH COAST HWl COpti11 Sun-'•Y 12.S:JOI •t4·6551 fORRANCE e 2JM9 HAWTHORNE llVD, 171.121• :::&l----==----.-. • ' •• .DAD.Y PlLOT EDITOllIAI.. PAGE Bo nd Action · .F11ding ( Never bu ll!ything eo quickly passed Crom the llmeligbt Into obscurity .. the ifllld plan to bold Costa ld-'• very first bond election. That wu-the ... 1ect100 -in wbicl! the -1t-would · decide wllelher they wanted to spend f&,5 m!Woo or their, ~Y for th~..-rvatloo or 1pproxlma~y 100. acnl o( Wldevelo !And aroud Ill& clly ..,.Jncludiq • 38 acrel at the · Groun4". It was the eJecUon ror which a m~o campaign wu to have been inltlated t!lli1iiiinth and the electlOllllCbeduled· Sept. H. We N'/ ''.wu" .becAuse members of tho dty council, wbo at one. time appeared enthusiastic about the proj- ect, appear 1o have IO«t Interest and may -as eome augg~ -already bno abandoned tho Idea. . AJ tbe 4oadlille for Initiating the election machinery draws near, we remind the council that there are mllly peopl• who are Interested In preserving open space and who recognize \hey will have to pay for it. · Do they outnumber those who believe ~ta .Mesa already bu ·enough parks and open space? Only an elec- lion can decide. • . • 'The post year or so bas seen lots and lots o( talk In civic groups and among the cttilency -and among tbe councilmen 'themselves -about 'the need to Im· prove Ccota Mesa's image and to en]!aoce the-quality. M life here. Wiry now the reluctance to give the c1Uzens a chan<e to do oometblng about it? Communication Hangup Members Of the academic senates of the Coast Com· munlty College District still are awaiting answers to 78 questions about the operation of Channel 50, the dis- trict's new educational television station, which they ljirected to the administration last month. .. '" yiew. "· This is qui le ~ llince it opentes 011 dls-tnct ll!d government fUDda. But If the answeri to the faculty ques!Wns are u genepl u th.o8e wW In ,_.... to <j11estlo115 PoOed In a Daily PilOt eclKOrial, tho faculty Is not lltel)' to be satisfied. 1Thil -en cleaerve specifics. , A new ll!d imloftUft._"'°lurl et ~ kind natural· Jy needs time to get rolling smoothly. And a fine pro- gramming bolll!ce must be struck between the instruc- tlot11l-unos that concern..the teachers and the public oentce programs the station ls required to provide. All open ll!d harmonious understanding between the station admlnlstraUon and the district faculty Is the best guarantee that Clianoel 50 will be able to live up to tbe original and conUnuing high hopes for its success. little Lihbers June will soon bring the ope'oiog day ball tossed out tn 27th annul! Harqor An!a Baseball Program play, but with a couple of significant changes for 1978. , 'There ·w111 be less pain in the elbows for pitchers. And there may be more pains in the ego for some· of the preadolescent boys involved, because there will pre- sumably be more preadolescent girls ·involved, what with feminine rigbls and all. A new rule developed by Commissioner Rod Mac- Millian and the coaching staff limits those smal) right· handers and Jellies out there on the mound to facing no more than' 10 consecutive batters. 'This will help prevent that painful ligament and tendon strain syn· drome known as.Little U.ague Elbow. l , ~'tfi/!77 J ,..... ................... 1,.,. ---~ A procedure for responding to the questions has been worked out and a response is being prepared. In this month's editjon of Forum 50, KOCE-TV pub- lication, district chancellor Dr. Norman \Vat.son declares the station's aclivities are "rightiully open to public · But one of !he rules that makes the Harbor An!a Baseball Program particularly appealing cootinires, that of assuring everyone who signs up will play in every game on scores of teams involved. lbe other change is &imply a fact of our time. "How many boys do we have," says Commissioner MacMillian when asked how many participants are in'. volved. uwe have 3,700 'kids,' sOme of. them girls." 'Nixon Law and Order Administration. Sorry, rbey're all orrr ' answering subpew at tbe n1oment ... may I talce a mea1.,,et". Pers uasion Wins Mos t A rg umen ts ~YDNEYJ.HARRIS)' Thomas Aquinas, who knew more about education and persuasion than almost anybody who ever lived, once said that when you want to coovert someone to your view, you go over to where be is standing, take him by the hand (mentally speaking), and guide him lo where you Wlllll lo go. You doo'I stand across the room and shout at him. You don~ call him a dummy. You doo't order him to rome over to where you are. You start where be ls, and work from that position. '!bat's tbe only way lo gel him lo budge. We have lost sight of this elementary psychological facl The world Is full of passionate advocates, screaming their own prejudJ ces, and excoriating their op.. ponents. This does three things: (a) ii makes the people Who agree with you feel better, (b) It makes the people who diJagree with you stiffen their resistance, and (c) It makes the people oo the fence uneuy and skeptical that you are speak· ing tbe whole truth. I HA VE never known a single passionate and partisan argument to win over a person who disagreed with lt, or even to persuade a person wbo was neutral on the subject. 'Ibe chief reason being that all P119looate and partisan argumenta overstate their case and ur.derstate their opponents' case. When you think that someone is wrong, and you disagree with him, the first task is to determine ln what way he ls right. Dear Gloo.my Gus , ~! - If dogs cannot be kept In the gar· 'age at night, they .should be kept under their master's bed. Let him be the one to be awakened by the off and oo barking during the nlghl . R.T. This_ ls ~ot as f_'!radoxical as it sounds : no ~ cin •tie enUrety wrong, and · evirybody has a llttle piece of truth by the WI. This Is the piece we start witb, we work from therf:, and concede -as . ' much as ~e honestly cut: ; LORD ACl'ON said that we have no right to oppose a position until we can state that position in a way that fully satisfies those who hold lt; until, indeed, we can make out a better case for it than the proponent himself can. (Most of us, of course, distort or lampoon the opposite · position, and then proceed to demolish this straw man.) And all this is much more than an academic exercise. The arts of argument and penuulon are. '°' li!Ue known and practiced that disputants have no recou~ lo anything but violence. U peo- ple can't agree on how to disagree, there is no ho}>e of reconcillaUoo or com.. promise. And tbe art of argument ii learnlng how lo disagree productively. WE BEGIN tO fight when words fail us. And words fall us when we use the wrong ooeJ lo the wroog people for the wrong reasoos. It is far easier to be passionate in defense of what one believes ·~han to comprehend why somebody else believes someUtlng dif· ferent. But, ultimately, only this com- prehension (which is not agreement) can repl1ce violence with diaJog instead of the deafening rt.onologs that lead to war. 'Secretarial Ghetw' Every year thousands of American girls look for secretarial jobs, confidently aotidpallng the good pay, pleasant work· ing condiUons, interesting fellow-workers and ezcellent chances of advancement (THE~oo~J pn:mlsed by tbe classified ads. Oflly too numbers and the variety of tasks Ibey many wind up in what lively -and well perfonn, they have become tndlspenaabJe Informed -autbor Mary Kathleen Benet to tbe smooth functi-g of American calls Tbe 8ecrelarlal QellO (McGraw· business. HOWJllllllY rece!Ye .the ....,...u. lllll, 15.15). tion Ibey deserve! Whal does a Ills. Benet has worked In nlany offices oecretary's J\lb ru\1Y mean today? Does on both sldeS of the Atlantic. including It bling independence and fullillment! Or u-ol lhe San FrBDclsco Chronicle, the ·. does it perpetuate, In a new setting, a Chicago Sun·nmes, McCall's, and a book whole rangelol stereoeype<I female·rol<S, publishing bouse. Sbe has also been a "11 subservient lo·'lbe functions and. ,Jdonalbt, an advertising copywriter, and prerogatives of the male? a Qterary agent. Her views are frank, Tbe Secretarial Ghetto tackles all these outlpolten -and _controversial. queslioos ·straight on. S<cretarles will M M.s. Benet notes, well over 60 per-clamor to read this book -and their ctri&.··of American of(ice workers are bosses can't afford no~ to. • wda!n. By tbe sheer force of their CAROLINll HARKtEROAD • OU.N•I COAST DAILY PILOT .RoOtr1 N. We<d,' Pub!uhe!' Thomas Kett>il, Editor Barbara Knib!ch Edi~ P~ge Editor Friday, May 4, 1973 • c Che ap LalHW Greed B e h i nd Immi gration Woes ' ' -1~IegaJ Alien -Sup.port . :Just ·Foolish·:; .. "';""· --------,,.~- To tbe Editor: There are a great variety of fools in America, but the beneficent, altrWstic, ChrlsUan boobs who pay taxes to feed, house and care for Illegal alien im- migrant,, without complaining about it are deflnltely in a class by tbemseJves - a clus with no imminent effort to rehabilitate these unfortunate souls. LET US tell these people what would happen to an American in a foreign coun- try under the samO'clrcum'stances : He would be ~lely Incarcerated (yes, 1JUl·iJI jalll.-nd.h!S reteti ... In the Slates· would be billed for his food, lodging and medical care, . plus a Ufine" for ~ his misbehavior which could in many cases amount to ransom nlooey, and he would languish In a foreign prison until the demands were paid -ln cash, man, what else? John'Valtena's story on Care of Aliens (Pilot Apr. 28) tells all,· and the sob slsltts sbould read every word of It, BDd then gel mid al the Immlgralloo kooks, the Welfare slmooks and the Social Security crooks who aid and abet tbe ii· legal enlry. ol illlens while people bom here -Indians and Negroes -for lp- stance "":"' ~e a priority for jobs over all immigrants: of ,whatever o.>lor or na- tional origin. . COULD It be that. alien chesp labor spoosored by greedy employers is still the reason for all Uli!: jazz about illegal aliens? POlllbly, because cheap lBbor has always been the incentive for welcoming vast hordes of foreigners to our country. S. G. UNOINE Wrong Slant To the Editor: A headline in tbe April 25 Dally Pilot read : "FDA Action Ups Meat Costs" It should have read: "FDA Action Eliminates a ~r-call$1g Chemical from Beef." Thank you for changing priorities in the future. RENE SMITll Election Needed To the Editor, 'l'be good book teaches us: "only in repentance there ls salvation." The unrepentlng prsetorlan palace •guards (alias the Berlin Wall) did indeed r<Sign but the credibility gap · only deepens and tbe highest omce In the land remains suspect. ONLY ONE avenue toward ..-abUshlog crediblllty In tbe White House Is to hold special bonafide nations\ Quot~ \ 0 U all we're doing ap to now It ac-'ctdeatally~ dlscoverlag tbeH thlng1, one woliden bow macb 'of thll kind of crlmlul acUvlty 1' plag oa lht never pla dele!:led." -Doo B. Parker. • ruu:rcber 1n computer abu!e and se<Utlty, on the growing use ol com· 11\!ten to embezzle money or 1teal cor· pOnte -wonnauon. .• J1111e1 B. Kn0ger, llh<nlde attorney and vtlu&ary lecturer oa ea\llroemental law ud policy at VCR -"You can 't auddenly change the tastes .00 demands • ol this oountry, even though they entail envirclunental .hann ; the government bu lo 1<1 standards and the courll have to dodde In each case Wbethtr the gofemment has -!ls job properly." Leib ScUplto, S.fl'. -"Next in war lllCI pestilence, inflation ls I.he most doalnlctlve social phenomenon!' ' MAILBOX . Letters from readers are welcome. Nornwlly writer1 should conve11 their messages in 300 WOrds or less. TM right to condense letters to flt space or elimtnate libel is reserned. All letter& must include 1ignature oM mailing address, but name& may be withheld on r<~st if sufjidenl reason l.s apparent. Poetty will not be published. . '-' Jlresidential elections \\'\thin ninety (90) days. 'lbe present chief executive ls so fond of "firsts." so, who knows, perhaps such 11ction would restore his image as a knowledgeable leader and give us something to celebrate on our fortbcom. ing 200th anniversary as a great nation. BORIS DUZAN Sign I Ullflle To the Editor: I have yet to figure out why Costa Mesa businessmen feel they need enonnous signs in front of Utelr places of business to attract cmtomers. In my opinion, big signs are repelling and I prefer to do business in a shop that 1s tasteful, attractively maintained and d~ pends on its reputation to draw cllebtele. -HARBOR BLVD. is an uample of the worst sign jungle in the' area. It . looka like parts of Beach Blvd. which I think Is the worst street in the county. My belief ls that a person usua11y has decided where he is going before be ever goes out to· shop and either knows the location or can find it once he gets close, without the help -or hindrance -ol a monster sign. Big &iiflS are an. insult' to my inlelllgence. And who needs a big ·.. ·--~· -, .... ~--· ... -orange ball or big yellow shell t<>.lell you -Richard Bigler (article in April :r llouo) ' there is a gu station underneath? that Huntington Beach .needs. ll t~ I 11REFEJ\ to do as much shopping as possible In Newport's Westcllff Plata, whe"' the absence of ~KM Is a delight . I llke to go there, and to South Coast Plaza and Fublon Island becaww, it is a pleasant "1"!r1ence jusl to be there. And these ahoM. do not seem to be lacking in busloeu for,~ lack of enormous sign1. tet'1 deaa,1"5> Costa Mesa and make It a garden •pOi lnsliad ol a sign jungle. MRS. D. T. OLSON Quote Ci.rifted To the Editor: -1-flridl It\dnfortunate that In the article oo corporal punishment published In your newspaper on May 1, 1 was quoted as saying that "We've heard plenty of other gripes." Used in the cootext of the story. tbe statement could Imply that "wf' hear many complalnta about the poliCles or pnctloes of the llcbool dlllrtct. 'lbla ii JUI! not tnie. IN MY capoclty u an olflcer In a parent • iteacher lfCUP, I naturally hear -•bout the IChools. '!be OOlll• plainta I have heord IDllll be categorlzed mainly as communlty Problems (ior ex· ample, bicycle thefts), not critlcisms of school policy "" pr~. I feel the senlence allrlbuted lo mo was lnaccurale IDd ·mllltading. It is my belle! thal the Newport..Mesa Unlfled School Dlslrtct enjoys widetpread con- fidence from the JlUbllc, and to Imply otherwise ~ be quite emxieous. DOROTHY T. HUBBS. Pleat• Tree To the Editor: Anny barrack . housing. H u m a n wuehowles Instead ol homes. Parking loll, parking lots, pla1tlc grua. As a lover of the sea and trees, I'm feeling the squeeu. I agree with lendacape architect Maybe it could be a memorial forut.1 · Instead of buying cut flowers at the tlm1 of death a friend or relat.!ve, ~by plant a long living tree? Or why not · a tr~ celebrating the birth of a f .. ~ Maybe the memorial forest ~ become a national habit replacinc wtlteC£ flowers and cigar uhes. REif!~ '•· 1 ' JAMIE "WATERMELON'' ·' • "' I •• TO the Editor: ~ I • , The Walergate ICtndll,,_ -)lloljli entlttly out of proportion b1 you, l,!IJ 'liberal --. wbo baa -trJllli'!i diser.dil the NI'°" Admln!MRll!O ,lllpof it tool< office in 19119. Now you feel Yau have a chance by oomtbow lmpltcatloi the President In Ibis unfortunate indd'llt by printing every sleazy rllmOr lliit' comes out of Washingtcn, before It II declared fact or fiction. I am convinced the Presldml Wlli prior knowledge of Watergate and wllll or wllhout .this scandal his Prellcleacjr-_ will go down in this nation'f b11tGrJ u 1 one of our best! ..... RICllARD RI~:% ·~ SollM!tlah1g'1 w..... ·:1 To the Editor: ·t.~ Your article, Hope for~ Dia~ In the Pilot (Sunday, April 211) ~ raises aome mighty big questlclll. y._,., quote Or. Hauntz as aa)'ing, 0 ••• tbt M&.=! problem ls money . . . the Ute::~ operation cools about $10,000 •• ,we 1 In the pooltlon of beq able to ' '. this new hope only lo tile jiotlentl wlllho can pay ,' •. " ·.~ ... Well now, aomebody pleue uplaltf.t~ Here we are spending mUUons ot doUauj to save Cambodian& from ~ and we can't spend $20,000 to 11ve q ;: American cilizeo from kidney fall~' Something wrong somewhere. ...!.J. J. A. DA VlllSON"' ... .,,. ·~ •a Great A rt Needs Great Suffering ..•. ;~ Remarks an avant-garde artist gets tired of bearing: "Renfro, the landlord says µ.&t lf you doo 't at least make a down payment on tbe hack rent by noon, we 'II be throW. out into the alreet by nightfall." "Yeah, lt'11 a nice painting. What's 1t a painting of?" <!They say the greates t art comes (rom the greatest suffer- ing, Renfro. Maybe you don't hav e -enough trouble in ·your life." "Quaintness comes too hlgh here in Greenwich Village, kid. For what this garret dump costs you, I oould get a four -room apartment off Park Avenue with two baths.'' 4111IE GROCER says he doesn't care 1f you are another Rembr>ndt, Renfro. He says it's ceh on the line now or you ,don't get any more groceries." "'Ibey say that Norman Rockwell .csn still get thousand!! of dollars for those old palntlnas of tils they used lo put In the cover ol the Saturday Evening Post." "I've seen some of the landJcapes )'OU've painted. Have you ever painted houses and barm? I mean ror a living?" ''Some say he's a cubist. Some say be'1 an expressionist. Out I just think he 's another nutty exhibftlonlst." "Well, to me tbey look kind of like you'v• been imitating the finger palnl· ( HAL BOYLE ) lop that the chlmponzeo al the """ does. You did want me lo speak frankly, didn't you?0 • , "I've already been down to the mallbox three llma, Renfro. The welfare check can't poaslbly gel here herore the day after tomorrow .11 "MAYBE rr would help II you started like most artists U>roughoul history started, Renfro -with llOlll~ talent?" "Are you sui. that one ls ha:,ifing rightside up? How c1n yoo really ten ." "All I !mow about art· Is what I like,' al\(l what I don't lll<e about this art, U that's what you call It, Is that I just don't llke It." "What do you mean when you say that you'd even be willlng lo give this particular pointing to the right muteum? Any muoaun that would take It would be the wrong museum.'' "Where did you put that tea bag we ""' ed !all night. Renfro? We have to use It again -or we can't have any tea for breakfast." "I don't mean lo lr1gltten you, Renfro, but I don't Wnk tllat'I jllll ID ordinary rash you've got ln your beard. Have you - ever had the manse?" • "IF WE EAT 0ll>e tall two apples, Ren- fro, what wlll you havo left !or the still • ' life you plBMed lo paint today?" "The only canvas we have left LI 9f' that old anny cot J use for a bed, hol:Mj,,, Bui il you think I'm going lo lloep oo Iii floor for art, you're out of your mind." "My kid in kinderaarteo can drsw bet- ter than that." ' . "The only thing Jell on the shelf ii t can of dog food, Renfro. I !ell you willll I'll do. I'll split It three ways -between you, me and the dog -U ·you'll aar• to go and apply for that job with the sanlla- tlon department, like you promlaed." Wicks "'i<*' . . 'Liit me begin by Mr(/t!g •.• HELPt' ' . ' ' MAJOR APPLIANCES . TELEVISIC>Ni& SMALL APPUAIQ$ ' Alsa-:1 'll.iilable.at Our . IVlll APPUAPIE·MUTI ' ... ~ ;.5-etfI:oni!FniID1:ffiicati0M"' . . listed Below! JOTISll BYBERNZ .. 4~~ Complete torch kit with bfass pencil flame ,burner and fuel cylir1- dtr. #Jl-10 "TIM lfAVll'' UE L·shape,..1,sk~lacellpalm, 411 full leather linint, IOOmb & : finger loop. 42/3715 '"" • 1·00% ,SOLID '----SfAJf • . - .. ' '"""'' '"" •. 1m , 4 1 • , ' • "\ J • ... I Ii • ' . • • , ' • New Tttan JOI ~hassis is·ovet-~0% solid. ~fate .tor ine.utinoS! in de- pendable sel'lice and supeii«-,pelfOmlance · , ' :·. . • • ·.; ... -.... _; .......... . WTtllltU~25".i:::.; CIOR CDNsolE · , S~VE sBo ; s. . COMP. Ai 579.97 .. -· . :---~-- • Come ·up to ,Cllipr ~th 1he biggest sere.en made • lns1a:Matic push-- . buttorrfine-tuning.-sy;!em.e,.famous-Quasar. worl.s in1a drawer-chassis --•-Contiinpora~Walml{1iniitiede2biiitt.:O..wt!yr. in home.seNiCe -, . . . . . -... . .. ·' JAV.;*40 ... PrllCl ACIDC-IOUD ST~ lV • Here'$Jhe 1V that plays anywhere • Worl<s . $ on ,~ or optional'l!lttert or"' con!• 8 inch COMP: 8 I screen,. measilred··diagonally · AT · . 129.97 fllliiAllMAM lDVE es, give you eKt11 reach. :::. , D"lgned ~ noke su~c.tc• 512 NI leather. #99/109 '·" 14 PC. 311" •KOSH :_2~.p .M .. nc 1ock•+ ~ ••t encl m 1 t 1 I tr1y. T r..J p I • Chro"'' 30,88 :iRISTOL ST. S.n Dievo Fl'Mw1y 11 lrl1tof ' i . • • • ' • ~ BAl.lCllCK ~ FOITOllfT 3!~ Replacime'nt unit tor· ,n1anunctrot11n1 · .ball- cocks. Stops ~ater •wastint; BIG LADDfR · SALE . ' . . ... SAVE .. '8·.09 :. -·1· ·EOOT 8 , EXtullON UDDER . · ·88 ' .. .• Ckeck tkest safety ftat•rK : 1. i~" I •l1111i wit• crc•lac ... ,., ... 2.1%" flat ltlfS wit• 1r1n1s . . 3.1111 14111J!tJ wltl tolf!lr, ', '!!:!'' .c..'.· _., ., - -~---~---·~··~- -.. GAil , PllO i 7 ~ • '"j;, Victims . -. Rupture . ' Tendons LONG' 'BEACll', CAP) Purse snatchlllJ Is being blamed for · a ri.,e In hand in· juries to the victims, a surgeon said here.' Dr. Ger~d, Jllatt of Loog Beacb told a• orlhopedic con. ferance at Memorial Hospital that purse snatching often results 1!1 a tendon rupture of (MEDICINE) the victim's middle or ring finger. He said the injury occurs when by reflex action ,the woman tries to l!Jng on to the llllL'if· Surgeons caD correct tbi in- jury tiy reattaching . the ten. don, he said.'-· e Netc ,'ft'Npit.i . SAN OIEGO (AP) .l: A f4.S- million, 151).bed hospital has opened near san Dleao'• Miss~n Bay. Mission Bay Memorial Hospital was dedicated with speeches by state Sen. John Stull, Rep. Bob Wilson and City Councilman Ro be r t Martinet. e Clo•lng Set HANFORD (AP) -Kings County .supervisors h a v e decided to elooe Kings County General H'6)lllal, eflecUve Aug. 15. · , The~sion· :Came 11 a resfllt1 i>f what the board tenn-- ed ' ": .. vague,· technical prob.- lems'' which will keep the hospital from re ce iv 1 n g medical and Medicare a~ creditation.after June 30. The board emphaalzed that the· accreditation delemma had nothing to do with the quality ol health care at the county-run facility. eExperlmenu SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ex- periments using Uvtng "post- abortion fetuses" for medlcal research would be outlawed under a proposal by a freshman Republican assemblyman. Assemblyman Michael D. Antonovich of Glendale . who Introduced the bill said, "It is outrageous that in a cc:iuntry dedicated to. the principle ol human rights, we should even consider using victims of abortion as living htunan guinea pigs (or m e d l c a I research." e Declieatlon LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe City of Hope which 1jleclallzes in treating diseasea for which there is no known cure dtdieated a $11.8 million hosoital unit. 'Ibe ceremony drew Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) and Harry Ashmore, president of the Center 10< the Study of Democratic ln8tllutions. • Abort«en C•r• SA<lRAMENTO (AP) - Private hospitals could mwie 14 perform abortions under legislation proposed· by Assemblyman 'fiank Mnrphy. Murphy (11-San!a cru<).satd no current la.w requires hospitals to perform abortions.~ but that Ills proposal "Is •a safeguard against either a court ruling or a fUture statllte with such a requirement.." Cuff,ed, But F!r~e TRIESl'E, IJaly (AP) - Two : Ital~, y911ths '. ar-- rtSted by Yugoslav '""" Uer , police for trying to smuggle a carload of bluo jeans ac;lqss the border Oed 'baclt Into Italy aWI handCuired together. Italian J19lice unshacltled and · reltaled ll1ein. as they had conunitted DO crime In Italy. . . .. t \ '\ ,. .. •• . • ' • ' VO -.- • I ' ,. . ) E: Si Fi • '