Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-05-10 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • . , . ~' . . ' • > . .. · ., .. - Two San ~Juan StudenTs • ; ·-Find Body: ID Sought ·. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 1.0, 1973 • VOL. ... NO. 1)1, I ll!CTIONI, 14 PA.Gii • • '•· I Drug Raids N·et Seven Suspects · ": -j' ''!r:.:..~ ' Tw01nmei>-..-.by~and · !Xher· _-be.,., .fll. a . ,npllti.qeocy . nareotlcs la!k force -. narrowly nil.., ed by whistling bullj!la W~Y. night in a Costa Mesa-Huntlngtm liodi area drug nld that dovtloped' Wa•p bat- Ue. WhlWer police U. Bradley Hoover, 32, is reported today by C4lla M ... Memoria~ Hospltal.~s ·aa "recover- ing sati8factMJly" froin a bullet wound just below tbe heart. Federal nara>llci agent Leslie Kenney, 34, received lleatment at· tbe same hospital for a woWid in ·tbe right knee and was allowed to Htum home after emergency surgery. . FACING INDICTMENT · Former' AG Mitchell u .. ,;,.....,.. CHARGED IN SCANDAL Ex-Cabinet Chief Stans ' ·_ ..... ..,....,,,.,~· ..... ·INVESTIGATORS.PHOTOGRAPH SCENE IN .SAN JUAN WllERE BODY 'WAS FOUND AT 'FIELD FMt of Male Victim ·show in Center of 11 ictu~e; Death Cause Still Undetermined Both men were victims of a gun duel that erupted when a 20-member task force in wlilch (e</eraletE~rs were back- ed by.c.sta u .. Ill<!. ,,.wttler police and Orange 'County Sherill's ·<illJcers moved . ln on the aeoond ol. two'. Pacific A venue homes. Mitchell, S:t,ans Indicted :; ~~~~~~~~~~ Box of Manure Raises Florida Two San Juan Students Lawmen said information received while they· were raiding' 21113 'Pacific in the Costa Mesa area -the sector Ill on the boundary line that divides Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach -sent them across tbe rued to Z201 Paclflc. In Campaign s ·candal . Democrat's Ire Find Body: ID Sought That raid ended with Hoover and Keir ney on the floor writhing in pain and their NEW YORK (AP) -Fonner Atty. companions moving in to grab the man Gen. John N. Mitchell, fonner Com· Identified as the gunman -Blair Daddon merce Secretary Maurice H. Stans and Alderson, 25, of that address. two corporate officials were indicted to- Officers said Aldmon was quickly day oo charges of coospb1ng to arrange disarmed and bustled off to Orange County Jati with six otber penoos swept a secret $200,000 cootribuUon lo tbe Nix- TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (APJ -. Florida Sheriff's and·COl'Oller's investigators to-a.m. as two students oo their way to up in the laid. Officers clalmed !bey-00 rttlectlon canipalgn last year. House MaJorlty J.:eader ~rl Ogden sar.s da>; continu!!<1 to1 seek the .ide11.tity and Marco Forster Junior High Sc~I notic-seized near}Y two pounds~-o'f COC1ine. : , Others · named at defendants ln the l&-. be resents receiving a .gilt-wrapped h.\• cauae of.death <(.,a. man wJ»Mi,body was ed the body as Uley walked to school. ~<ljleraJ,oagen\S today valued tbe ""' count indictment returned by a federal of horse manure at his chamber desk.-1 appareptty dua;.«f at tbe'eage of a San , '!be 't . bout 100 f t' . fro calQe at• aboat 1211,lltltl, basing the grand jury" were a New Jersey Ogden (0-Jacltsoovilte) rose oo a poini Juan' Capistrallll oom palch early Wed-". e was a' ee away m , e(lf,inate'iln what tbe·drug would bring !xi Re-;"'can Jeador, H•-L. Sears, and · ' al nesday. · Del Ob1Spo Road and a few-hUOdred tbe Ulidt .seller. ,,..... _,, of personal ~vilege ~ednesday . ter Coroner's aides this morning said that yards from Blue Fin Drive. The remain.s They said information obtained in Robert L. Vesco, 'ST, former board Teeeiving the pa~age with a not.• ss)'Ulg, an autopsy falled to tum up ,any cause of w~re easily _yjsib~IIPm ~ hi•hway, . Whittler and. Loo Ange,'8 .led,~ • .,to. ,. chairman ol International Control! Corp. Fifth Avenue apartment building this morning, Mitchell said: "I couWn't iOl- agine a more irresponsible action." He turned aside other queries as be and his daughter departed in· a I~. The ·SEC probe resulted in the filinr:4r a civil suit Charging that Vesco,-:io persons and 20 corporations diverted Sii4 1 mill ion in cash and securities ft00i · mutual funds they controlled. ~ Vesco. 37, has a home in Boonton, ~::i. but is believed to be residing in-tbe Bahamas or Costa Rica. A warrant:'tor !tis arrest has been issued. • ... -"From the reJuning ·~WS! .and. lhe;\J,.death on the:man who •PP<are<tto tie11J'r'' Bfoo,rwa.:\oJWbieci!'tbe'~·i;iit·col' Orange ~in"i~l.t.fi ,,.c-Vesco made tbe donatloo which was mmority ',party.'I • his mid 20s and of Latin descent. oner's aides ~that Ibey 'noted no rc!':l.:i' ~:.Ls. growi/Jg trade in tbe_ ,later ~turned l>Y the Nllloo ~palgn. . -- I ogden earlier Wednesday.raised tbe ire .'!be ne1t sU!ge of tbe oorone~'s Pi:>'><' signs of "aevel-e trawna" on tbe corpse. ~/:,charges of po&aessing cocaine . , Reliable BOurces Slid the scope. of the Orange Coast of Republican Jeeislators when be unsuc-will be a senes of lengthy tov1cological ~. John Doe ictl d-~·~ and . tbe dn!g. were "filed ·-•··t gran~ • J'!rx . ~robe !"eluded " perjul'J!, ' · " ' 1 · . __ , ·-'-d 1 tests to determipe if any drugs,or poi!ons • ·~ v m was ~·~ aa · ~•·-.~. -.-obotrM1JiiiI of "'•Uce bribery and co~ · ' ' ' ces.51uJly attrn91ted ~ e ay con~ .may have led to 'the man's death.· hiving mediUin·l~h, dark-black · hair !~;'; &:i:-~: J~~a1Unc ~ spir~ · .!. , .".'~ • : • • . . . '. ·;--.:i 1 sideriltion of a tresoluti~ oommendlng 1be mystery surfaced at about B:30 and w~ ·a 1*arcon sweater over a 'Ibey are identified u ·April Mai ,.,• Mitcbt!Q, who -beaded Nixon's canf. ,. ,:_: 1 ,· President NI100 for ending the Vietnam white I-shirt , bright blue pants, and Hutchinson 23 of 117 i16th St . Dennis jlaign · ~mittee ontil last July, and .... ·, ·.lf~l,lpter .. 1 ;: ' • war and bringing home Am~rican square-toed oboes. (See i 811""' p J) ·• • 'Stans, wfio ·was tile. NlxOJ1 catnpalgn'fl · ,, · prl~nerS of war. Better Than Investigaton at the acene sealed off' u•, ap . . ... chief .b;iiij railer,. both •leattiled ·twlc!e .Night. and · morning. to"'. clouds~ . wide area to protect any evidence. The be£ore:1iie ·grand jury . and fog,, hazy. sunshine · tn afterJ,: R.epublicam thpugbt Ogden's tadic probers spent hours trying to evaluate . . . ., 1be ~tment is widentood to chargb ~s. ~~·tonight in low 50s, bigb~ was inaPPIOPrll!le because minutes impressioos made by vehicle tires in tbe SKYLAB · BR1EFS · -ibat~ and stans acl:ei>l;ed ve~'s , li'Jiday, m mid-009. · ~ earii~r u. Col. Dwglas B. Pelerson, a With the Girl.s soft soil. · ' ioiurJM;llen In return for..., tVort lo m-• 1. formt\r POW in North Vietnam, ad-The body was lying on a small triangu· . . . ~~·a"-Securllles,an~"Elc~ COm-.. · ", ~µ,JE 1:0~D,\Y. ,.j: dressdd tba House and received a stan-RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) _ The National lar Island surrounded by nar_row dirt PAGE 9 TOD A Y li!i;>~~~~atJdA.ol.Y...,,,, , ·;!}.;'. ·~" •'\· • -~Qcli/ ·killer w J.<lsff~, d. ' ti c quan1 Bure u in Washin"'~ ~-~~ll: . roads used as access !xi tbe ~da. . . ~ . .:..~~·-..:i:..i:,:.~·•tl .... .f('Qla~bf ~w-aaltl<l"JW'i 'lilt·<-1 ,, •itwb~n..111.1/le West Ota•gd , mg ova on. 1 "" • _ ~ .. ~ .. -it:~ .,1 ·~" ~ ,.There .waa.~~~;.t&~,the · .. .: .. "l\~~ormmi,:~11 "'" , • · ttnty.West los Angeles area,' The , resolutie(i 1"' was -adopted after · wiih 'the 'BoYsu :f w~ :e med la boily may have been dumped' l!imetime States' Skylab mlulon appear• on . • • expending the etiergies. of fi.ve Ogdon s motion Eo delay was defeated 42 recrultlng wonten , . before dawn. Paget of today's Daily Pilot. Bus 'fieup Ill Denver ww enforc.~nt ogenciei with lo 57. North Cm>Iina; acting ad fut a o·t .. Aatronauta Paul Weitz, CIW:Jes · _,, l~ttte 1nformat1on to go on. See_ "As a . f~er POW from Korea, I general, Brig. Gen. William Buck, aaid ' • Co-~..._:, °"1rad and Joseph Kehrin embark DENVER (AP) SOme 80 000 regular Page 24. resait this, Og~n wd, bolding up tbe 11111e pamphlet w~s Joo suggestive. _ -t\.rm Y Chief lll.U'med Mmday 00 • new kind of space · bus ridors bere are looking for another '"""' , box of manure. But 1 ilcc~pl It as the ~Buck said he showed It to $evera1 venture . ride today after .(7S bus drivers arid c1111tr1111 ,, i• minority party's ¥gislative ,package.~ ascretaries .in bis office "and they WASHINGTON (AP) -'l,'be Senate tc>-, What will this 28 days of thelr mechanics walked off the job in 1 . con-~=~!~., 4,.~ House Republie@ll feador Jim Tillman, thought It was suggtsUve, 1oon day confinned tbe nomination of Howard Uves be llke t The condlllons -tract dispute wllh tbe city-Denver =::::'"'" \1 a Sarasota catti!man, said be later 'The brodan'o Wlliiied tbe siJ monlhl H. cauaway of Georgia to be Secretary food, objectlvu and means, rescue Metro Transit. The walkout by members ••-• ''" , apologized to Og•n. of active $rty 1Wnmer camp and of the Anny. 1be Senate Armed Servtcei strategy and more -are covered. m the. Amalgamated Transit Union ts ex· ;::"i:-1 ~~ •i11 was intendtifj as a joke but just w6ekend -drlDL~ 'u lbowed a woman in Committee recommended confinnallon Read about lobster tbemi'clor ln pected to be a major economic blow lo ,., -. •tw11 11 turned out bad/' ~Id Tillman . "Nobody unifonn on'ihe covet, 'With the tiUe as a or Callaway, a fonner congreslman front orbit. the transit company which was taken :;·~::..,. ;! was aware Carl w• a former POWI ' caption for the pllolo. -Gelqla; as Anny oecretary •-1-over by ·t;e city In 1971. ' \ l -GAil V PILOT s Schlesinger Tapped for Defense Post B~MHigh Drug Ring: .~ • . . W ASlllNQTON (AP) -Pmldent Nix- on plcUd CIA Director J-R. Sdlle>- IDIW u Oe!enae oecretary today end Id- ~John Coalllll1 to 1111 White House , std u a 1pedal adY\Mr In moveo to plug bolea lelt by the Watergate ocandal. Nixon aho abandoned his "IUptr· eablnet" concept of ooonselon ; pro- moled William E. COiby to CIA director, and named Pentpgon general counsel J. Vl'l<I Buzhardt Jr. to his White House atalf as a 11p1Clal eowtsel wilh "full responsibiU\y 1n matten relating to Ult ~rgate tnve1tlg1Ucn." ... .. . . ' Judge Hears ~Bugging' ... f)f · Ellshe~g l! • ·~·ANGELES (AP)-The FBI hu lold ~judge ID tile Pealagon paper& trial iliai-lllnlel ll:llsbera was ove-by lll!-.l'.'eloclrGalc IDIC'CfpUon" ""!fly two II"" ~" be releooed the P•.ta•on .., to ""' .... mtdl1, the Judi• 1!\'ialed lodo1- :l1.8. DlllrlCi Court Jlldie Mitt Bf'""• _....,i1y ..,....i U.t he wu never leld this before duripg disclosure of wjrirtaps, ordered tbe JUatlce Department ~·f.lnd out how many times Ellsberg was . · 'CIA WRONG IN ELLSBERG , .• ,. CASE'-Story, Pogo 4 overheard in 1P69 and 1970 and il there ab! records or what was overheard. •'!ffle discl osure, apparently conaldered &erious by the judge; delayed the ttart of ..---~~--le~al ..c...-;-.1mentr which ~ hive ~ been- ,, scheduled on defen.se motiOM aiming to Utrow out the case. : ·He said the FBI report says that at reas\ one interception of Ellsberg was ac- complished while the defendant v.·as at the lhome of Morton Halperin, a !ormer dfp!J.ty assistant secretary of Defense. The judge told the government to find eDt'for bow long Halperin'• home w11 uod~ llllrVeillance ·and whether the Sttryeillance waa au tbortzed by a court. ··i!e a!IO demanded to know whether Halperin waa a White House adv1au - a pool he beld lo part ol 11M19 -when the wlretape began. BJnle oald the FBI notice of lhe w!f.tlap came to him late Wedneoday !r;opn actlni FBI UlreclOr William 111fckelobau1, but thlt II noted U,. dlreo- himsell bad only betn notllled Tues- "'" e Judge demanded lo ltnOw wny t~tre was a delay In giving him tm- rifdlale lnfonnatlon oo the lnlerceptlon. lf<i alao demanded to know why this )114Jn't turned over to hlmlell earlier In li)f trial. ;llalperln, a wllneu for the dell!llle ditmil: the trial, aerved u a cow:ultant to Etlbberi throughout the case. He J1 a r_..cher at tbe Brookings lnltltutlon In ~e-ton. • UH of the disclooure, the Judce r . ssed court for ooe hour, ordering the ~IOr lo Immediately p h o n e WUhinglon and get more lnformalloo on tlioi wiretap. He lald the government ~uld probe lt1 flle1 11 far back ao 11167 to' ;try and find out if there were any otti:cr electronic aurveUJance of EU1berg. Oregon Justice (;ood and Swift ~OSEBURG. Ore. (AP) -Speedy j~ce tore up the track in Oregon's J:t>Pglas County. :itQbert Puckett, 37, or Winston , was ar· reSted Tuesday on a rape charge in- vo~ing a 12-year-old girl. lie waived his right to a grand jury and a lawyer, pleaded guilty. and was ~enced to five yean ln the Oregon Co!"I'ectional Institution by Circuit Court Jodge Charles Woodrich -all oo lhe sa:riie day. IT DAILY PILOT 'TI'lt Or•llll CM1I DAILY 'JI.OT. wltll wflldl 11 CO!Nllltll "'-N_,ttu. 11 MllthM by .... Or•nte FN•t f'Wl!tlllftl ~ny ... ,.. r•lil tcll!lom •r• putitl"*, Mond•Y l'tlrwph P:rllll•V· fOf' COl!I Mnl, N"""'°" ltotdt, "llnlll'llllto!I SNCfl/f'-MI" YtllfY1 U.- tSMCll, lrvll'ICIS•dcllllbK~ incl San Cll1nent1/ )Sin JUM C.pr.lt•no. A 1~t1 r .. -.,., •1tloll .. pubtl1htltl S.hlrd9._. _... lllnd4ill'lo , fr.t prlncli»I pull!llt!lnl pi.rot II 11 U0 WHI , ll1y StfWlf. C-Mett. C1llfol'nl1, '11lH. leli1rt N. W1•d '"''""' .,., fl'..-rlllltf Je•ll R. Cvri•y Vlu Prflidtftt IM OtMl'll MIMOtlt Th-•• K•t.,11 """ Tho"'" A. Mwr11llin1 MIMtll'lt .. ltw. ·Ct.•"•• H. loo• R11hanl ·11. Nill A11lll1nt M.ln.,lnl E•1tor1 - '!'Ill Wiii of actlonl lo bolJter 1111 ~ 1dmlnlS1r1Uoo were diidoo- ed by Nl<on al a Clblnet llleellng, tbeD ...........t by press ...miry Rooald L. ZlePr at a White Homo news brlelln1. _,_()lMally, 1 poli1lcally 1avvy Tesan wm l&tt .week s"ltCbed from the Democratic to Republican Party, will be an WJpaid special adviser to the Presi- dent on both domestic and foreign af- fairs. In the part-time job, Ziegler sald, he will be m call to consult with Nixon on a wide nnae of issues. Tlte Pmidentlal dectalons came to dayo alter Nl<on's cl-t aides -H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrllchman -and At!)'. Gen. Rlcbard Klelndlomt ,..lgned amid a owlrl oJ Watergate do¥elopmenls. Nixon hid norolnaled Elliot R!eha..-to succeed Kleindienst aa attorney genera), leaving vacant the Pentagon post which Schlessinger was picked to fill. Nixon told his Cabinet he inlended lo maintain more dlrect communication with Clblnet m6nbers, Ziegler taler repqrted. ;,· .. ~ Smote Maj« tader Mike Vtndleld (!).Mont.), WU lttlormed of the 8dli. lncer 1w<>lnlmeill ID advaoc<. He called the nominee "a aond man" and Mid be could foresee no dlllkulty about - oon!lrmaUoo. Zlecler lald the <OUl1Sel« role played by thtee Cabinet memben "wtllnoi be In elfect any Jooger.'' 11te COUDSe1ot roles were created by executive action thl9 year when Nixon sent COnaress ptopooa!J for broed government reorOnlzallon. Zlqler lald tbe counoelar-concept "wtll be moved lllde unlll the lftllllllon ta pa.Ued." SdMll~er beaded the ..,...,,_.,., •PY lllDCl' for i... than !our months when Nlson tU1111d to him fer the top Dofense pool which Cl!Komla ml1llooalre lodUltrl~ David Pickard lu1'oed down thll week. Oolby, Nl<oo's choice fer CIA director, has three decades of experience in in- telllgence ~ations and served since as tbe spy agency's deputy director for operatloos. He rejoined the CIA In tm alter !our yean ID Blale Department pools rel1tlng to the Vietnam paclllcation prasrom . U.S. Ducks Mandatory Rationing · WASHINGTON (UPI) The Admlnlstration rejected rn a n d a to r y gasoline rationing today, but caUed on the petroleum industry to adopt a volun- tary system for allocating supplies to customers. Deputy Treasury Secretary Wllltam E. Simon said the Office of Oil and Gasoline in the lnterior Department would retain the power to require suppliers to sell to customers if the customers can show they are "not receiving 8 proper allocaa ti on or supplies." Simon announced the voluntary pro- gram at a hearing or the Senate Banking Committee. He aald OOG sent telegrams to the petroleum industry -refiners, Nine HeJJ, Nine peroons were amoted Wednesday nJght by Buena Park and Fullerton police and charged with selling marijuana, LSD and other dancerous drugs at Buena Part llflh School. · Pollca said the mesls cllmued 1 11"· week tnvelllgatlon lnvolvlni drug ula on the b1lb ocbool campu1. Adults lodge In the Or111ie County Jail are Rlcbll'd G. Bellamy, 18, o! 1100 S. MagnoU. SI., Fullerton; Lawrence L. Key, 18, of n 48th SI., Buena Park: ~ey K. NelJOn, M, and Janice ElalDe Nelson, Zl, both of 11642 Gramercy St., Buena Park. Bellamy, who pollct said was a former student at the high school, is charged with sale of marijuana. Key, now a stu· derit •t the school-faces the same charges. The Nelson couple are charged with sales of dangerous ifrugs an(j possession of marijuana and <frogs. The five juveniles, foor of them students at the high school, are charged with sale of marijuana and LSD. They were placed in juvenile hall. 2 Young Victims Of Traf fie Crash Identity Revealed Two Anaheim boys who died Wed-/ nesday in a three-car accident ln Garden 1 Grove . were identified. Joday by the _ -Whqle,%ale(J,_._!li§tributors Ind jO.bber_L=._ announcing the plan. Or. County (?;Ironer's Office. --- They are ~Harris, 11, and Scott Scene of Disaster . . . Heck , 5, both of an apartment complex at 234 W. Orangewood-Ave. Three South Gate resi dents were killed Wednesday when their light plane crashed into a field after take· off from Long Beach Municipal Airport. Ofllclals said the crafl appeared lo have engine trouble be- fore it banked, hit pow-er lines, caught fire and crashed. Killed were Harry Schlitz, 55, daughter- in-law Barbara, 27, and her son Harry, 8. The plan asks those suppliers to make available to each of their customers the same proportion Of gasoline as they received before shOrtages developed. The purpose is to make sure in- dependent gas stations, which often buy "branded" gasoline and 1ell it under their own labels, are not denied fue l and forced out of business. Investigators said the two boys and foor others were being driven to school in a station wagon because they missed the school bus. They were students at Stod- dard Elementary School ln Anaheim. Telephone Ba11dit Strikes Again, Hits Beach Eatery .. . .. . -~ The phantom telephone bandlt,llnlck for the fl!lh time Jn le,. than lhrff weeks Wedneoday nlghl, thll jllme hlll!ng Far- rell'• lee cream parlor In Huntlnglon Beach. The hlndlt, who 110111etlme1 ldem~les hlmlelf aa "La Brlque," followed his earlier method of operation 1n netting between '400 and '4iltl from the re1taurant at 18301 Beach Blvd., pollce reported. FromPllfrel 2 SHOT ... Lee Whilson, 25, of 1312 W. Balboa Blvd., both of Newport Beach; Michael William Moore, 26, 2201 Pacific Ave.; Robert Anthony Contorelli, 26, 2188 Padflc Ave.; James Lee Johnson , 22, 244 Knox Place, all of Costa Mesa and Robert Klaas Wlt- baard, 20, of Buena Park. Alderson was booked into jail on lVl-'O count_, of assault wlth a deadly weapon on a police ofrlcer. Orange County Sherifrs officers intend to seek a complaint naming all seven defendants from the district attorney to- ·day. Ato1n Test llalt Urged THE HAGUE. Netherlands (AP) - Australia and New 1.ealand a1ked the Jnternatlonal Court of Justice Wedne1day to order France to abandon further nuclear test! in the South Pacific. New Zealand 1ald the danger of radioactive fallout "L"ODJtitutes a violation of New Zealand'• righls under lnlernaUOOll Jaw." He called Farrell's 1hortly after 9 p.m . ind lald he had 1 high-powered rtne trained on Cll!tomers ln1lde, police reported. He demanded that money be placed ln a bag ne~ tO' a traah bin in the rear of the restaurant, a Farrell's official told police. The bag of money was picked up before police arrived. In earlier hel1t1 the bandit hit a Foun- tain Valley market for '25, 1 Huntington Beach hamburger stand for $1,600 and a Costa M ... hamburger stand for fUiO. In one cue the suapect threatened a li- quor store clerk in Huntbtgton Beach, but never picked up the money. Police say they have no leadl in any of the robberieo. Accident Kills Huntington Man A Huntington Beach man wu killed early today when his car swerved lnto an oncoming vehlcle on McFadden Avenue, Huntington Beach police reported . Kllled was Richard Ames Wel1h, 42, of 5021 Tasman Drive, following the ac- cident at 12:48 a.m . He succumbed to bead and abdominal injuries at about 3 o'clock thla morning at Huntington Intercommun.i ty Hospital, a .spokesman said. Police said Welsh'• small foreign car headed west on McFadden, crossed the center divider and collided bead-on with a pickup driven by Jack Harold Grant , 58, of 1Wl La Salle Lane, Huntington Beach. Grant was not injured . The accident, which occurred on McFadden just weet of La Salle, ls etlll under lnveaUgatlon, police 1aid. Plastie Poison? Liquor Firms W ar1ied Against Use WASillNGTON (AP) -The government bei!an notifying the liquor induotry today to stop using plutic bottles be<ause they may constitute 1 health hazard . "Even though the toxicity o! distilled epirita In pl1Stic contllners has n?I been delinltely ~ablished, our concern for consumer safety has dictated our immediate action," said Rex D. Divis director of Treasury's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, in' an order to agente in the field. Distilleries are being told to stop putting liquor In plastic bottles as of Friday midnight. Th;i original deadline ltad been June SO under an experimenW program dating from November 1968. Treasury acted alter the Food and Drug Administration said It ooon will propooe 1 ban on the plastic liquor bottles. . The FDA said ii learned three weeks ago that researchers found up to 20 Pllrls per million of a chemlcaf called v I n y I chloride monomers leached from the plastic bottles Into distilled IJ))lrlte stored tor one 19ar. Skylab Checked After lightning Hits Launch Pad Suppliers aJao. are uked not to charge Independent! more than their regular customers. If vital consumers -like farmen, doc- • tors and police departments -are !till left without enough gasoline, OOG may dlrect. suppllers to sell · to those cuatomer1. But such ordm could not control the sales of more than 10 percent 1be accident occurred when the slaUon wagon driven by Freya Murphy, 31, who lived in the aame apartment complex. collided with a refrlgeraUon truck at the lnter11ection of Orangewood and West Street, Garden Grove. The wagon then crashed lnto the front end of a car stop-. ped at the lnteraecUon. Offlcen 11ld the two bora who were riding In the front se•t o the veblcle wm thrown to lhe pavement ond kUled. CAPE· KENNEDY (UPI) -En11Deera checked out tbe elecirlcal sy1temo of ,the Sky tab'. oeoce 1tallon .and Its totke1 today in a parf-by·part oearch for damoge !ropt a launch pad llghlnlng strike. After nearly 24 hour• of teatlng, no slgno of trouble were found ond sl multaneou1 countdbwn1 p r o c e e d e d uninterrupted toward the launch of the big orbiting laboratory Monday and Its !trot Ulree Cl<WI!len Tueaday. The llghlnlng bolt hit a mut M the mobUe aervice structure encloalng the JM.foot Skylab-Saturn $ l'QCket com· blnatlon Wednelday afternoon. "So far, we haven't found any prob- lems," a space agency spokesman said at midmorning. "I don't think we're going to ·have any problems. We have had much more severe hits during Apollo.u By 1:30 a.m. engineer• completed testing 80 percent of the Saturn 5 rocket and the Skylab's airlock module. Today, check.! were concentrated on the Jab'! solar ob1ervatory and its sophisticated electronic sun viewing ln.struments. The testing was being carried out In conjunction with nonnal countdown ac- tivities. the NASA spokesman said work was proceeding without a hitch in preparation for the 10:30 a.m. PDT launch of the space station Monday. of the ouppHers' total oupply. • 'nle Mimlnlatrlti,on11 program spelled oul by Simon eotabltshed • list of priority customers who would be served f1r1t under OOG lale1 uo!gnments. ' The \ruck w11 dt1ven by Wllllam Fletcher, 311 , of Fountain Valley and tbe third car by Renee SamuellOD, a, of Anaheim. Oldest; Snbjeet Sex Course at Gol.den West? PSYCH 115 may well become the most popular course at Hunlinglon Beach's Golden West College. But l>tlore II does, truslee1 of the COUt Community COllege Dlslrlct want to 1tudy the subject a bll tbemselves. The oubject o! the courae Is sex. Approval of the new, 18-week course, which carrtea no prerequisites, was withheld by truslees Wednesday nlibt. They lald they want to sludy the courae outline flr!t. ASKED BY ln!slees whit Psychology 115 (HurnAn Sexuality) Is all about, dl1trlct Chancellor Norman Watson rtplied, "lt'1 not my area of speciall!a· lion." Golden West College President R. Dudley Boyce came to Watson's aid explaining that, 11Thls ls not really a new and emerging Interest. It's as old as man." . Dr. ~yce t~en described the course as "a very timely thing," adding that 1L ~oul~ 1nve~tlgate ~uman sexuality from psyc hological, psyaiological and .soc1ological pomll of view. See 1Allda.f> for SPEED OUEEN Stainless Steel Fabric: Care Tub I t1ali e Swtootll, btt•l'ruf, Chl11· rroo' • 1.t.a1 .., .. , w.w.i. ••brlcs • L•tl .... Ur.thN 9f ttt.W..._, PLUS ••• a washable knits c:yc:le ,,... Mttl .. ,.. ...... ,,.. ,... .... fot ......... hhl. .. ,..... ,,... ., .4911c ... -· ..... -~,.., --rt' loMlot , ... , • YOU CAN IUT A IPllO 9111111 WAIHll AND DA'tll POa Al LOW ~I •36971 !~!SPEED OUEEN.i[IJI e McGraw-Edison Company Division 90 DAY CASH WITH ·~:~~y:o £.& ... ~ ~ ~-1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown C~sta Mesa-Phone'f4f.1m ' I {) 0 • .f'or\Vpper Ba1 Wildlife Refuge Decision Delayed By JACK BROBACK 'Of the Deity Piiot St.tiff ' Orange County supervbors Wednesday studied the complicated · issue of the development or a wildlife preserve and recreation are8; 'in the Upper Newport Bay but took no action. Further consideration was delayed un- til a meeting of the Field eomntittee on the Upper Bay in San Francisco on May 25. Webster Otis, special assistant to the Secretary of the Interior and chainnan of the Field C-OmmiUee, outlined the goals and actions or the committee since its f'ormation a year ago. He said 1,000 acres or the area has fish and wildlife which should be preserved and protected and charged that final responsibility for implementation ol any plan rests with the Board of Supervisors. The recent decision of the Irvine Com· pany not to :urther pursue litigation on the land exchange between the company and the county of Upper Bay lands has speeded ihterest in resolving the various issues presented.. One disagreement cropped up in the discussion. Stanley Krause, county real property services director, recommended that an 3ppraiser be selected -as soon as poosible to determine the market value Saddleback To Feature Shakespeare or the three islands In the bay -by the Irvine Company. He argued that the determination of the future of tile islands was most important to the whole detennination of the Upper Bay prob- lems. Interior Department's Otis disagreed. He said an "ln house" group .in his department could make a good appraisal of the entire area and come within 10 percent of the real value. Krause contended that cost of ac- quisition of the islands, if desirable, should be a key fact.or in determining the economic feasibility for any plan for use of the entire area. Krause said determination of the ac- tual legal ownership of the islands would be part or the job or an appraiser. He said the legal title, engineering and valuation )Jroblems of the uplands to be acquired are for the most part different from those of the islands and that con- siderable time would be required to establis h acquisition boundaries for the uplands. Krause said the county now owns an unquestioned fee or easement interest in 642 acres of the Upper Bay land, that undetermined prescriptive rights are claimed for the public for 383 acres and that the islands are about 104 acres. The county official also questioned the Irvine Company's title to the islands which he said has never been legally determined: fle added that there is disagreement respecting the size of the islands and their location . The "SO--Called Field Committee includes representatives or the county, the state, the city of Newport Beach and the federal government. ' ----The-worknlt-wlHiam-Shakespeare win· be highlighted May 18 and 19 at Sad- dleback College when some 30 cclleges and universities.from throughout the na· tlon participate in the annual Southern Californi a Oral Interpretation Festival. It was formed a year ago at the re- quest of the Board or Supervisors._ -etis-said--its--studies were directed toward the protectioo of opeb space, the protection of wildlife antl the provision of recreation areas that might be COl'R· patible to the wlldlife preserve goal. He said an "in house" appraisal would take six months and that the recreational areas planned must be studied in relation to their affect on wildlife. He added tbat a probable new Upper Bay bridge near Shellmaker Island must also receive ccn- sideration. The Fine Arts Division of the com· munity college is sponsoring the two-day event, which will include individual, small group, and large g r o u p performances. Dr. Doyle McKinney, chairman of Sad- dleback's fine arts division, said speclal events involving faculty 1J1embers from visiting colleges will be interspersed through the festiyal. Representing Northwestern University in Dtinois will be Or. Charlotte Lee, who will present a reading hour; and Dr. Wallace Bacon, who will di sc u s s "Problems Inv o Iv e d in Oral lnteipretlltion of Shakespeare." The School of Performing Arts of the United States International University will present "The Taming of the Shrew," Otis said the" Field Committee should complete its work in the next six months and would then be dissolved. The interior department official also stated that the three islands were the greatest natural resource for wildlife. Otis also said that fW'lds for acquisition of Irvine lands 411~ for development of the wildlife-recreation areas were liinited. He said although there are many possible sources for funds they woold be difficult to obtain. · directed by WyM Pearce, 'i Saddleback College will pr e s e n l James McComUck, of the <llJifornia Department of Fish and Game said the Upper Bay is the most valuable wetland area for wildlife remaining in the state. I l ••Hamlet" directed by drama instructor Joann Bennett. Betty Garrett, an actress and singer, will be the guest speaker at the Saturday luncheon concluding the festival. Other noted guests and critics will in· elude Dr. J anet Bolton of USC, Dr. Leslie Coger of Southwest Missouri State College, Dr. Virginia Floyd of the University of Arizona and Dr. Alec Flett of Cal State San Francisco: Participants are expected f r o m Ariwna, Utah. Indiana, New York, Missouri, and numerous C a I i f o r n i a colleges. Thief Severs Hand SAO PAU1"'), Brazil (UPI) -Johanes Christian Hess, 37, drove to the hospital, his left hand wrapped in pape, on the seat of his car, and told doctors there a teen·aged mugge r cut off his hand with one stroke of a large knife in order tO,..get his watch. Doctors said after surgery it was too early to tell if Hess would regain use of the hand. .~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Ready To Perler••• Pupils of the Georgina Geer School o( Ballet will perform May 12 in a !ree concut at the San Clemente Community Clubhouse. Along with the dancers, young musicians studying with· Au..tln Bulfum also will perform . The performers range in ages from 4 to 13. In fare- ground is Gail Ekuan . Behind her, left to Tight, are Katie Jeti<en and Krlslianne Koch . T-. Moy 10, 1973 s DAILY Pll.OT I Laguna Tidepools Inspected Hundreds of youngsters from Saddleback, Irvine and Newport-Mesa Unified School Districts con· verged on the tidepools of Laguna Beach \Vednes· day. The low <ide gave tire students a better view of the marine life for which area is noted. They are · below Heisler Park. ~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Irvine Scenic Highway 'May Begin Within Year' Construct.ion of a scenic highway from Newport Beach through the hills of Irvine to Oso Parkway in the Saddleback Valley 'fll3Y begin withi,ft a year, Orange · County officials were told Tuesday. The siK·lane divided highway would be an extension of San Joaquin Hills Road in Coron,,a tlel Mar that would terminate at the pl8nned Starr Ranch county park and the privately-owned Coto de Caz.a ranch above Mission Viejo. Plans for the highway, which \\•ould have a 2SG-foot·wide right-of-way, are bein&" studied by the Orang :: County Road Department and major land oevelopment firms, including the Irvine Company, the Mission Viejo Company and owners of the old Moulton Ranch lands. Chapman claims to have verbal agree-- ment from most or the major landowners along the route, including the Irvine Company, which is near completion of a master plal\ fQr I0,000 acres_ along the coast between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. He said the Irvine Company and Mission Viejo Company were '·lukewarm to the plan" but a spokesman for the Irvine Company said today they are more · optimistic. ··we think the proposal is a desirable concept and is compatible wilh our plan- ning," the Irvine Company spokesman said. "The company will be reviewing this as it progresses." State Must Pay Pollution Cost SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state can· not order local governments to Install an· tipollulion facilities unless it is willing to pay the com. says the Legislature1s top legal adviser. - Legislative Counsel George Murphy after being requested by Sen. W .· Craig Biddle (R·Riversid.e). to study the ques- lion. B;ddtC said the opinion · has "far- reachi ng·imptications" for environmental quality control in California. Inmate Branding Told ODESSA, Tex. {UPI) -A cellmate, using razor blades and wire, and burning paper for heat, branded confessed murderer Johnny Meadows in a Dallas jail at Meado\•:s' request, Texes Attorney General John Hill said Wednesday. Ensenada:, Both Sides • • Holler Foul~: ENSENADA, Meilco (AP) -From Mexicans came tales of Jong.haired, ! screaming Americans a rampage, ~ ping fire extinguishers from hotel wal~ I urinating on carpets, kicking and pun. i ctung holes in doors, throwing botUel. From Americans came stories of police piling people three deep into a jail cell and pouring human excrement on them, or purported innocent bystanders swept off the streets. a n d of property qln· fiscated by officers and never seen agl}fn . The reports continued Wednesday ·as this Baja California coastal c i t y recovered from a wild six • hour bra"'' Saturday night in which 50 persons \llere reported injured and 190 Americans were arrested. Polict said four remained in jail Wednesday . Cate D. Darnall, 21 , or Garden Grove. and Lindsey L. Greene , 18. of Seal Beach, were charged wtth assaulting policemen,. and Patrick ·J. ·. Sheridan, 19, and Thomas A. Garcia, 19, both or Carlsbad, were charged with narcotics possession. About 4,000 young Americans: were in Ensenada Saturday for the end o( a yacht race and the celebration of Cinco de Mayo. Juan Zamora, manager of the Bahia Hotel, told a reporter the trouble started shortly aft~ noon when the yachtsmen left and the "hippies" ar. rived. "At first, the hippies just sat around the pool, drinking," he said. "Then mart ca1ne until we soon had about 200 persona around the pool. , .One boy let out ayell , and someone answered him. Then the people were a!L yelling. They got excited, and someone threw a bottle into the pool. Others started tossing things, too. • "One boy started to take ru.. pants elf, but we had the police take him away. Then a big guy threw a girl Into ·the pool. I' I ' • Zamora said he.asked the youth nofto do it again but was shoved away. He sa,id the youth then fended off half ·a dqlen policemen who were trying to grab ~ and the violence started. Americ&JW A'flC- ed through hotel hallways In groups of sli and seven, tearing and b re a k l n.i: whatever they could, Zamara said. : The hotel and Husson.g's Bar Wei;t heavily damaged in the melee. , "We slept three men deep in shirts,'' hr said. "I've had five hours' sleep in four days." The proposal was outlined Tuesday before Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Commissioners by architect John Chapman, whose firm is preparing plans for a proposed amusement park on Upper Newport Bay in Newport Beach. Strike a note for the hearty robust look ' One commissioner. Frank Robtnson of Newport Beach, was sharply critical of the highway proposal calling it a "subterfuge" by commercial elements to bring freeway traffic to Newport Beach. He says any freeway in the city will be bitterly opposed. Proponents insist it will be "low-speed" highway. Chapman said today his firm is also preparing master plans for the owners of 10.000 acres of old Moulton Ranch prop- erties and the land surround Coto de Caza. Chapman said the highway proposal was ·broached to Or~nge County Road Commissioner Ted' ·Mcconville for the first time Monday. "He was highly in favor of the idea and told us money could be made available in next year's budget to put in the first two lands all the way from Starr Ranch to Newport's city limits," Chapman said. Generally speaking, Chapman said, the proposed highway would follow the southerly alignment of San Joaquin Hills Road. It woud run below the crest of the Irvine Hills on the inland side behind the city of Irvine, to El Toro Road then swing out behind Leisure World and down to the county's Oso Parkway at Laguna Niguel. Chapman said Oso Parkway will ex- tend through the Starr Ranch and Coto de Caza. Chapm an said Newport Beach may not even have to be consulted because that end of the scenic highway is already finished -San Joaquin Hills Road. "This will do a great deal to solving some of the destination traffic problems of the whole area down here," Chapman said. Newport Beach officials had no com- ment on the highway plan today because they said they have not had a chance to see the proposal in detail. Chapman said the road will be grade- separated, which means at each major road crossing there will be a bridge over or a tunnel under the road . Chapman also poo-poohed Robinson 's contention that the new highway would force Newport Beach to build new bridges across Upper Newport Bay to handle added traffic burdens. Farmer Really Sitting Prett)' TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Donovan Kippllnger bought a l250 toilet seat to that bis father, a North Dakota grain farmer. can '"feel lik e !l millionaire -for 15 minutes a day." The novelty bathroom fixture "is made of transparent plastic, inlaid with 13 crisp 11 bills, half dollarS, ~uarters and dimes. The father, Theodore Klpplinger, :ollects ootns as a hobby In his native Heaton, N.D. PROFESSION AL of Country English. A, C a~opv Btcl $1.49.00 •• Lrn9•ri• Ch1i1 $219.00 c. o,., •• , $.479.00 F. Ni9ht St.ncl 0. Twin Mino,., ••ch E. Annoirt $159.00 BISHOPSGATE BY c $75.00 $549.00 646.0275 INTERIOR DES IGNERS Open Mon., Tl1ur$. & Fri. Eves. 221 S HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA , CALIF. 646.0275 t· •• ., • • • ' ' . ThurscllY, May 10, 197' • .entric 5 POW s Rip Peace Activi·sts' Visi t s j ) Remembers ' 'ltwo Bars ' NEW YORK (UPI) -'Ibo t'elJul1n at two :.lalhlonable ban !requented by !JouClas S. McKelvy all bad a good word for their late "grtat, brilliant, witty, _.and kind friend." l\lcKelvy, a t95il Yale ll'lduate and 1 mllllooalre by lnherttonce, bad willed $1l,llOO to be Uled at tbe two bars "to delraj' tbe coot or liquid relre.lbmeoll !or their patrons, until such llWl1I be ex- 'Ille two Younr dllldrfn f r o m McKelvy's first manlage got about $1 mJllian each. McKelvy, a Pltl.lburgb native, died in Barbados, West Indies March 14. SOme 'hut Hice Doug to leaee ' '"81' in Mnd Hice tlala.' bar friends and his first wife said he died of liver complications from chronic alcobo!ism. 'l1IE MEN AND WOMEN who drink regularly at Chez Madl1100 or Greaory's Cor;ner 1eArned Wednesday afternoon of. the· windfall. The bar owners weren 't quite sure what to do with It. "It'• Just lie Doo( to leave me In a bind like thla, 11 said Frank McDvaine at Chez l\ladlson, "The guy had a weird senae ol hwnor. He got marrted a 1econd time but put off the wedding date to July 14, Bastille Day. "We'll think ol aomethlng to do with 1----~ money, though._ Someone already SU88ested renting Yankee iAclfum,JIJI. ing the place, and buying everybody one I I drink.." 'lbere were no tinn plam at Gregory's Place either. Nonnan Silver, the owner, asked patroos to sign a guest book In cue be decided to invite them for some kind o1 McKelvy !rlbute. SILVER REJl!Cl'ED a pl'Opolal to hold open house with free drlnJci but with a nominal admission charge which would go to Alcoholics Annonymous. "He W85 a great guy, you know," Silver sald. "But t used to needle him a11 the time because he never really did anything wilh hi s life. He could have done so much with his brain and money. "You know, maybe this Is hit way o1 doing so01ethlng, getting his name known in death. It's macabre." McK<lvy'a lrienda, and they ""' nutnel'OU3 Wednesday, described him as a fine person who entertained lavishly in his Upper East Side town house filled with expensive paintings, 'good liquor , canned rattlesnake meat, e I e p h a n t steaks. tiger's milk and other delicacies. McKelvy's first wife, Mrs. Francine' Delley who remarried and moved to Darien. Coon., said her ex-husband was "a fantastic person who never got all the love and friends he could have had beCause he drank too much. A lot of poo- ple took advantage of him." She said she was an alcoholic during their marriage but stopped drinking several years ago after joining Aloollollcs Anonymous. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Drll~try of thr Daily PUot is 9uarantrtd M•n••,·Fr~•r: II VOii do llfl lllVf ,...,, ""~' tr s:>o ,.m .. c•U •11• r•ur ct py ,.,u k ON••tlU It yev. Cllll 1r1 Ii-"' ltlllil ,,,. , ...... S.lllnl•r llMI Sltftlf1r: II '" .. 11M ,...,_.. .,..,., CllJ OJ t 1,11'1. lfl1,..1,, II' I ''"'' s111M11r. c•ll '"" 1 c.,., wut M _,,...... If y111. C•llt 1r1 1111111 11111111 11 I.ff!. T rlrphonrs "'"' 0111>1~ c .... ~1, "~' ....... "41.m 1 N1rrh,.11l Hlfflllillti.i •1KJ1 ..... w .. 1m111t1w .......... ...,,,. 1111 C.._te, C1"9tr•111 •••ell, SN ,,1111 ti,...,,_, OHi hllllfo U.111 U99M, U,-Nltfllll •.•• fH"4tH WASHING'roN (UPI! -Five !armer AmerlcAn J>rilonen ol war have told Coqrw that vlalll !tom U.S. peace , .. tlvlll.I, lncludJai aclnll Jone Fonda, ln- crwed their lulfertnc, damaaed their morale and 1-ted North VlelJ!am'• delermlnallcio to CClllU!we the war. In lellimoo1)' before tbe Houle Internal Securll)I Committee Waclnead1y, the POW1 deicr!bed how they and Olhen w'"' tortured and olhfrwile preuured by tbelr capton to me<! wllb vlaltlnJ U.S. antiwar .,..pa. They aatd that after the vlalton lell, IOl11e POW• were "punlalled !or devlatlnJ from tbe ap-pro\'td acr1pt.,. • Familiar Pose The !Ive pllotl -low-from the Novy and one r.,,., the Alr Force -deacrlbed their treatment wbllo •peeking i11111ppott o! propooed letlalatlon to reatr!ct travel by Americana to any country at war with tbe United States. • NAYY CMDR. DAVID Hollman o1 Son Dlilo aald he WU "penooally tortured to meet a deleaauon that came to our camp ln February, 1972'' -two months 111tr hll plane waa lhot down. Hoffman aald the North Vietnam ... coovtnced him to meet with the delega· tton by maldna him stand on a cbalr with hll brolten arm tled to a celllng beam. He lfld the chair wu repntedl,y klcka4 out lrom under him. Hollman ukl he and otbm ..re "proarammect" to recite prep a r • d armren to qllelllool from their vlalton whl\il were a~ved In advance ol the meoU.,. CMDR. EWIN SHUMAN, who opent five yun In capl!Yll)I, aald that la September, 1919, he wu 11tortured fa1rly badly" blcauoe be refuoad to meet I peace dtloptlon. "Our mqnle WU de!lnltely Jonrod by Americana vlaltlnc North Vlelnlm," Slwman aald. "It ls my opinion the only President Nixon pledged Wednesday night at GOP fund-raising dinner that he would see that justice is d-one in Watergate case but vowed not to ~et scandal deter him from other goals. Applause fol· lowed. -' Director Admits CI A Culpabilit y in Prob e WASllJNGTON (APl -The Central Int.tllJseoce Agency's.direct.or sap the -crA: was Ul-advbed Ill glvlnf technical aid to hlghly·placed While Hou.oe ~des who used it to commit a buri;lary. Faced with three °""'"'"'"al probes and claims that the CIA has violated the Jaw that bars it from covert operations inside the United States, Dlrector James Schleeinler promlaeo quick relonns. (Schleainger was selected today as secretary ol defense). The Capito! HUI Investigators are look- Liza Pa ying Off Mother's Debts LONDON (AP) -Oscar·wlnnlni Lila Mimelll, in l«idon for three concert a~ pearances, told newsmen she needa the mooey -to pay off debtl run up by Judy Garland, her mother. "I haven't talked about what I'm doing, ·and I really don't want to go Into delaU1 now but I hope to aet things straight for her," said l.Ju, star of ''Cabaret." Min Garland died in London in 1969 , reporledly owing mc11ey In Europe and the, United Stales, MiP MlnneUI would not give fliurea except to uy it was "a subl'ltantlal sum" which she has been clearing for more than a yer, "People had fooled mama and taken advantage of her ao often, 11 she said. lng into cha rges that the CIA helped White Hoose aid~s burglarize the office of Dr. Lewis Fielding, a Los Angeles psychiatrist who had treated Pentagon Popers defendant Daniel EUsberg. SCHLESINGER'S TESTIMONY before senaton Wednesday traced a scenario he said began with a July 8, 1971, telephone call to the CIA by President Nixon's chief dome6Uc adviser John Ehrlictunan. Sen. 'John L. McClellan (!).Ark.), chairman ol the Senate Appropriations Committee, said Lbe ·two men in charge ol the CIA when it provided a White House aide wlth disgu.laes, fraudulent identity papers, a camera and tape recorder will be interrogated as quickly as possible. The men are former CIA director Richard Helms and former Deputy Director, Gen. Robert CUalunan, com• mandant ol the Marine Coqlo. "The most charitable thing you can say about this wa1 that there was some carelessness," McClellan said after a closed-door session with his intelligence operations panel, a subcommittee of the appropriations committee. THE SENATE ARMED Services Com· mittee bu called Schl~er and other witneoaet to appear before 1t Friday. And the Hoose subcommittee charged with overseeing CIA actiVities also hos in- dicated it may begin an Investigation. Schlesinger did not discuzs accusations made by convicted conspirator James W. McCord that White _House pressure was put on McCord and other Watergate defendants to Implicate the CIA In the Watergate buglng. Accord Seen For · European Troop Cut s VIENNA (AP) .-A joint U.S.-Soviel annouecement today signaled a break- t!ir~ Jn long deadlocked talks ()n an Easi-West conference ()fl reduction of t"roops in Europe. The representatives of the two superpowers announced that the first plenary session of preparatory talks will open here Monday. Evi dently some sort C ...... _I_N_S_H_OR_T_ •. _. _) of compromise made the joint an- nouncement possible. One source suggested that compromise had been achieved on several issuea, in- cluding the status of M o s c o w ' s Hungarian allies at a forces reductloo conference. • Ramaey C:lar k Quits NEW YORK (AP) -Former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark says he has left a local law firm "to devote all my time to matters that 1 thought were Important." Clark, acUve in the anti-war movement in recent yeers, said Wednesday he "wanted greater freedom" and would spend his time teaching, lecturing, and practicing some law, mainly in cases in- volving constitutional rights. • Kiasinger in London Fair Over Most of U.S. LONDON (UPI) -Presidential ad- vi""' Henry A. Kissinger coolen'ed today v.•ith U. Alexis Johnlon, ml.el American negotiator at the Stratekic Arms Limita- tion (SALT) talks, before resuming meeting.> with British government ol- !icials. KJs.slnger and John.son met over breakfaat at Kiaalnger's bore!. • • Rap B roscm Sentetaeed NEW YORK (AP) -Black miltlant H. Tliunderstorms Tou ch Pa ci fic Northwest, Florida ll!lt~rllOl'l'l'll rllft'lblld K tOli tc:•I· ............ trom IM l'tclllC NorlhM&I ,, N""' Enoltnd •!Id F!qr!dl IO(I~~. bl.ft mos! of IM n111011 1n10'lt'd 1tlr 10\d lt'll!!i -11'111'. WI .... .,,..,. cloelltd 11 '° l'l\llH ptt l'lolJr 11 OrNlll, NtO .. ll'ICll IJ "'.P.tl. •t Rap Brown haa been sentenced to IHo-15 WHt l"1tm IMCh, Ft1.. d\H"!l'l!I years in prison for his role in. the armed 1n1o111<1«'f1Wm1 wtc1MM11y nlgM. bbe .., twt1fff' 11111 rlOON lhrovoh • ro ry of a ManhaUan bar aod t.be tr1lltn11rt fn • 11,1~ IOUftl of Ml,._ It' ol poll ' 11MllGlll4t. P1u1 WtdMld•Y c~uMll 111e · assau tng a oem.an m the ebootollt 'I:" 11 1 5-Yflr.old boV 1nd lnlurld that followed h t mo hlr crlllt;illy. • NIM wer• 1n1vrflf 1" .. , 1or111do Two co-defendant& received slmllar d .. lrovtod 12 ot 1 trl lllrl n !he 111rll '"' d•mt0t11 oi11tr_1J T"""' oilier fvnrltl sentences Wednesday and the senten"""'"' cloud1 .,.,I 110hll'lll In c.ntr1t Mll'I-f h'rd · ' ~ .. ntt011. o a t 1 was postponed to give his at- 1t11n .,, o--lly ftll tnln 1n lnc:I\ '" ban •M••v•• fll111!Citf'1tonP11 11to111 °"'· wr:ncys a c cc to produce new t he MIMIUlppl \11ll1y "'!' l!Mlr'9d evidence.. mort r1 tn, 11\d tM M1tlont We-atller I S111rvlc1 fl!Vllfd ltt _11tW rlwr c,..t K MdlJI• dowoward. Tlw fl0Dd-1woll1o11 river w1111 "l1tet1rll'l'l off" tllrO\l'Qriovt Ille SI. LOUii d l1trlcl lrOl"l't H11111lb9I, Mo,, !O (11(ro, Ill. TM c•llt Wl l IWPKlllll S•h.inloy. In Sltll!a FelvN.M .. ,,,,, h!QllWI Y crtw1 worlltd tdn~•Y 1(1 r1eh•-l 11 1lrtlc~ OI lilt: Ill lo Gritrtde to ~111111 w1htr lt'oslon of • dlk• In the n«l'll section ot the city. c;,.nstnl Wenthf'r • Operatio n S11pported WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (AP) -The U.S. marthal Who supervised the government's confrontaUon with militant Indians Who occupied the hamlet or Wounded Knee says It waa :':J.ood a ~· b H•iv iwnlll/111 lod•v. Llllllt ••rllblt Id be d wind! nigh! i nd mol'llllll! t\ouMi l)Kom-as C()U ooe ef l e 1no W11t1r1y n to ,, -ttDI• Jn 11..,.. circumstances. lll.'Olll tod1y 1tnd Frld1y. Hiii~ IOCllY 10. w Col""-t d eel co.tt;tl ttm-1"' ... r•• 1rom " ayne: uw 11 ol newsmen W • ro 10. rnt11'1d 19MD1t"1turn r•l'IOI ff'IWl'I nesday tt Was a dlfflcu.lt policing pro- " 19 1s. W.t•r ternptrituri •1. blem, "but I feel the way wt handled it Sun, Moon, Tides wAS su<ceu!ul. ~ lllfi" T.~~.~~.~~Y .s:n 1.m. '·' "There we several different way1 a !tlc:Olld '°"" .. 11,u p.m. 1..i confrontation ot th1J type can be handled_ Fir" "1,11 • '~-~~~~ •:ot •·'"-3_, I wlll admit at Umes other ~YI. oc- r=1r11 tow . . . • .. 12: n """' o.s curred to me. However, I don l beheve seoc:one1 hlott · · •:.., p,m, s.i we could ask for a better IOlutton than Sun IUttt J:S. 1.m. Sftl 1:4' p.lfl. ha " M-1u ... 11s.1 -.m. w. 2!05 1.m, "'e v~. i people Ibey let In that country wm Communlat.s or Comm u n 11 t aym· patblzen." Alr Force Capt. Larry Cm1pn ol ScoUadale, Artz., told the lawmaltmt he WU hll repeatedly -be refUaed to agree to telJ a Women's Strike for Peace group that u.s. bombs were being aimed at civilian tarpts. "THEY (PEACE GROUPS) 1ave aid and comfort to the North Vletoam- and prolonge4 the war," Carrigan aald. He was imprisoned for five years and seven months. Navy U . Qndr. Tbornas ~ aald •liltinr P'""" activlsls "deOnllely had a demoralking effect on us." Hall, held capt.Ive for more tbao five yam, said he lived with prloooera who were "preuured and tortured to see delegaUons and In one lnslance llley tortured a man for poor performance" 1 before visitors. "These people were allowed to come over at will and make anti·U.S. statemenls • . • and Ibey (North Yfel.. nunese) thoulhl these people npresented the majOI' cooaerisus In our country,'! he said. Poseidon Blown Apart Navy Missile Mi sfires Near Soviet Spy Ship ABOARD THE USNS RANGE-SEN- TINEL (UPI) -A Poseidon missile flred from a !ubmerged submarine -whipped violently out of cootrol and blew aput and hit the Atlantic Ocean in full view or a Russian spy zhlp '8l1d 200 guests of the U.S. Navy. One section of the errant missile p1ung· ed straight down, tralling a briaht yellow flame , and spla!lhed into the sea only four or five miles from this spectator- crowded tracking ship. A second piece cartwheeled into the ocean several seconds later_ The incident happened Wednesday evening. A few minutes after the failure, the Russian ship put a small boat in the water in an apparent search fU' debris normally expelled from the top ol the launch tube when a missile is fired. The sub and ·the Range Sentinel returned to port, leaving the Soviet vesael In tbe launt'h vea. j - THE POSElllON, key to the Navy's nuclear deterrent force, waa launched on what waa to be a routtne lest flQlht from the USS Henry L. Stimsm about 30 miles east o! Clfpe Kennedy. The Soviet In- telligence g a t h e r l n g ship, the Zakarpatye, met the sub and the Range Sentinel In lntemaUanal waters and stayed about a mile from the sub throoih the launching . Before the rocket was fired, the R11£Sian--ship -messaged-this v.,..I by n .. hlng light and noted the anniversary o! V·E day by sa)'lng: ''Coogratulatlons on the day ol the oc- casion of our joint viclory over Fasclst Germany." Navy officers aboard the Range Sen- llnel replied: "Great things are '8CCUD.pllshed when 1 our peoples work together. May our cooperation In space exploratiOn prove as fruitful ." I 'l1IE 31-FOOT Pooeidm, carrying a dummy warhead, PoPPed out of one o[ the Stimson's 16 subrnerged Munch tubes, ignited normally ind roared into the cloody sky toward an Atlanttc target area more than 1,500 miles to the southeast. , But after about 15 to 20 seoonds of 1 flight, the stubby black and whlle rocket ,,;,..,1ed-oll-coorsec-lt appeared_ to_: recover, gained altltude and-tben belan llshtaillng wildly, Its briUlant ellflaust spewing from aide to side. Range safety -at Cape Kennedy allowt<I the rocket to per!onn In thlS fashion for about a half-minute u tt , gained altitude and distance from tbe RMge Sentinel and tbe Soviet veaael. Then, 57 seconda after launch, a radio signal was sent to ·the missile which detonated an emergency e x p 1 o s i v e charge and severed the rocket. ~ebanon Troops Battle Guerrillas Fro"'1; Syria BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Lebaneae troops battled Palestinian guerrillas from Syria Into the early boon today along a 5>-mlle front In the easlem Bekaa Valley near the border, a senior army officer said. He said the fi ghting stretched from the army's main garrison town fl. Marjayoun in the aouth to the vicinity of Baalbeck, in the northeast. In mariy veas, including the towns of llubaya and Rachaya, vtllal{ers took to the hllls armed with WO!'ld War II rlllea lo support army jets and artillery at- tempting to repulse "a massive lnfiux" of guetTllla reinforcements from acrou the Syrian border , the officer said. 'Mle number of invaders from Syria \vas not known, but a force of 5,000 Palestinians came over during the fighting last week between lhe Leblnese army and the auerrIUu based In Lebanon. ht force claDd with the army in southeast Lebanon, then return- ed to Syria after a oeaae-fire WI! reach- ed In Beirut. YASIR ARAFAT, tbe titular leader of all the Palestinian forces, made an In· direct appeal !rom hi! headquarters In Beirut to tile Syrian aovemment to pull the invaders bllck. In a message to the Dlma1teus rea:ime, In Bosplia l Comella Wallace, wife ol Goy. George Wallace, bu bten hoo- pltallzed attet 'atypical' pap smear teet. Doctors llfd later, h-Owtver, there were no traces ot mallgoency. he said: "In spite of our human and material IOS!eS, we have bandaged our wotmds and accepted a cease-llre in order to ,...stablish mutual cooftdence with sister Lebanon." 'Ille cease.fire ordered alter fighting between the army and the guerrlllaa on the outskirts ol Beirut Monday night and Tuesday appeared to be boldinl In the capital One burst ol gunfire was beard -dawn on fl!hiooable Hamra street. Police said they fired on a car that ran throollh a roadblock, but the driver escaped. Beirut'• International airport was still closed. Airline sources said 22 planes bad heen diverted 1'l Cyprus In the past 24 hours and unloaded 800 passengera there. 29 Cambodian Soldiers Killed Neai: Phnom Penh PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) -1 At- tacks on government poeltlona north and aouth o! Phnom Penh have killed 29 soldlen, mllltary !IO\ll'CeS reported -Y· It wu one ol. the l.ar&er government death tolls l'!pol'ted In rec.nt monthl. Field reports said an enemy force Wedneeday night overran a detachment guarding a bridge 911 miles 90Utb of the capital, kllllng 18 or the defenders and wounding five. Forty miles north or the cll)I on Highway 5, the Communisl.I made hn> aaaaull.I on aovernmeot troopo trytoa to dlalodre 1 strong force ol lnsUfleril.I. Tho conunand aatd II of Ill aoldlera wn kill- ed and 18 ...... wounded. lfllhway 5, the prlncipol route from the rice bowl In northwellel'll Otmlntla, bu been blacked by lnluri•nll IOI' more than two montbl. The i.t Brlpde aecured about aeven mllu ol the road laal -, but a 1luble atretch la lllll held by the commWJlatl, and r1ce con- 1 voy1 are tmal>le to pt tbroul)I. IN°1l0111'11 VIETNAM, the Viet COOJr I OD Weclnoodly nluled to .... pl ,. , clvlUao prtaanon alter ro othon ldlldul- ed to be tnntloqed demanded to remain , under the Jlaip\ aov.nun.nt, the South ; Vlomen• cOmmand reporlod. I A _.., ol tile Jolot Mllttary Com-I ~·· lllllcommltlee on prllonen ol i war w11 caUed to ~tie the dispute, which could stall lbe alrudy delayed n- change ol cMllan prisoners. A Soulb Vlelnam .... apilleaman aatd 10 ol the 15 POWJ In tbe l1rlt boot croulng tho Thach Ha~ River In Quang Tri pro. vlnce ul:ed to "'1lah\ under government cont.,,1, and the Viet Cone repreeen- tatlve• on the W<lt bani< ol the river "got. mad'' and reluled to accept any ol tho prllonen. ii I t I '66-'70 Autos Mttismog Devi~e Delay Reque8ted SACRAMENTO (AP) -The dlaJmW> of the Ital• Senate Transportallon Commlllae hu threatened to seek emer;eooy legislation to rorce the state Air Re!Ouroes Board t o po1tpone mandatory in- stallation of new antlsmog dev1ctwl on California's f\ve million 11166-70 model CIJ'I. alllr. _, ~ dur- lnfl wNcb the abt devlcol now certlllod by \he -...... bolh pra1aed and crlUcbed. u,.,........ SEN. LAWRENCE E. Walsh (D • Hunllng1oo Park), said Wednesday that be favorod a lhret>monlh delay In the ARB's tlmet.able for tn- stallation of the devices. 'Ille timetable now calla for in- stallation of the devices on all 1966-70 can In the state over a 10-mooth period begtnmlli Ju· ly 1. 1be devlces a r e con- lrovltllal becauae four ol tile •Ix certllled brandJ employ a "vacuwn spark adv a n c e dlscoonecl" (VSAD) which critics sey tends to overheat ellilnel· Some 111Jdles have predicted serious v a 1 v e damaae and cooling system damage IIDOll8 can equipped with VSAD devices. • .. THE OTHER two c.rtified devices are of a difrerent type -eshaust gas recycle EGR - and have eocaped w I d e Escaped Kiiier Nnbed · ' A police defeciive bustles 05Caped San Quentin con- vict Brian Bernier and his w i I e Betty from tear gassed motel room In Riverside late TUelday. Ber· nier, oonvl<:ted of murder WJd 41 counts of robbery, 05Caped Saturday from the Marin County prlson. crltlcism. . Walsh's commenta came Installation ol the five millkxl devices lJ expected to cost califomi.ans some •t&O million. The law requires that they be OQld tor no more than '36, Including Installation. Governor's Violence ' Lawman Shot; 2 Men Held ARB chalnnan Dr. Arie J. Haagen-Smlt told the hearing tlial the ARB would consider d>anilni Its program "° that tile ontlamog devices must be -4!1Stalled ooly when thp car changes handa. Study Plan Blastell · "Change of ownership ls okay With me," n!:plied Walsh when asked about Haagen- Smlt's suggesUon. FA!RF1ELD (AP ) -Two men are being held today in Solano County Jail in connec- tion with the shooting of a California Highway Patrol officer. WAI.SH SAID the com- mittee would write to the ARB asklnj for its reaction to bis sugg-three-month delay in the July 1 deadline. If the board -the delay, however, be said be would try to puah it through anyway. THE PAIR, both from South- ern Caltfomia, were arrest· ed Wednesday, •orne f o u r hours.. after the. "'100!.ing_ of~-------~ --highway patrolman Frank P._ Governor, 27, triggered at~ county man.hunt. Governor was Hsted in good condition 1n Davis Community Hospital with a bu11et wound in his up- per Jell ann, • CHP spokee- man said. The two men amsted were identified as Ernest M. Jolley, 37, of Monterey Park, and Louis Nethen:utt, 52, UJs An- geles. Jolley was arrested in Davis and booked for Investigation of attempted ho\nicide, pos- session of a coocealed weapOO and possession of stolen prop- erty, CHP Capt. Bruce G. Emery said. NETRERCU'JT, · arrested in Dixon, was booked for investi- gation of ·assault on a peace officer, a Solano County sher- iff's deputy said. Emery said the incident be- gan when Governor stopped a driver on Interstate 80 near Dixm, in Solano County, for a sobriety test. First. said Emery, a passenger in the stopped car jumped out and fled on root, and then the driv- er sped away, heading east. Emery said Governor gave chase and stopped the car again at the California 113 exit near Davis. It was there, !aid Emery, that the shooting occured. U 11iversity Asks Staff To Hold Pay SAN DIEGO (API -In the face of a cash shortage, the president of UnWed Slates International University hu asked the school's teacher& and stall to hold their payroll diecl<s. 0 When funds that were due us were delayed last week, we said lo the faculty that II would help if they could wait a few weeks." Dr. Willi am R. Rust said Wed,..<toy. "I im- agine a third of t h e m volunteered not to cash their paychecks." The school's bank accounts should have i!Ufflclenl funds by the end o( next week, he ad· ded . 1sru is a four-year private school with an enrollment of about 4,000 students. Rust denied a report that he has asked teachel'I to loan the school fl0 ,000 until J1me 15. "A handful of teochars who said 'We want to help In some way'.' lent' a small amount," he said. , US!U sold most of Its Cal westem campus on Point Lome to Pasadena College last fall when It WBI 111 million In debt. · Pasadena Coll<11e was reporiad to have paid 12.5 million Ind leken over 17 mllllon In US!U debta. Rock Star .. . TrUil Set SANTA MONICA (UPl) -Sylvester ''Sly ;• Stewart, leader of the Sly and the Fam.Uy Stone rock group, was ordered Wednesday to stand trial July 3 on drug Jilesesslon charges. KUPERS DESCRIBED the center's proposed studies on child abuse and other topics as "a Trojan Horse, CQVering what I believe te be highly dangerou s projects." Stewart, 30, was ar- raigned in Superior Court on one count each of poaesstng marijuana, co- caine, Pacldyl and PCP. The Senate Committee on Health and Welfare was con- ducting the hearing into the $1 .5 million center proposed in • • ' / I the better grill Y11ra of experitMt, from the ludln& m1nufac- turtr of a•• berbeques, h1v1 1one into the de· •Ian of this out1t1nd ln1 unit. The fam ily who alrtady llkts cook-outs wlll fall In love with its speed and d1p1ndabillty . The feature .packed AMK model Mister Chef alves you more cookln1 area In 1 papular· priced 111 barbtqu1, And now you c1n have all of tht· fun of cook·outa without the mess and auua of the old charc'oal flrt. No more tedious flrt bulldln1, ·no Iona wait to start cookln1. Charmalow end modem gas put an end to all the trouble and bother of outdoor cooking , .. It's the "In" way to cook outl CHARMOLOW DEMONSTRATION IN OUR STORE, SATURDAY, ~AY 12, 10 a,m,-4 p.m, 0.monatntlng G11 Ii lloc:trlc 8.8.Q'a & 011 P•tlo HHlora, 10°/o DISCOUNT ON ANY ORDERS f'LACED DURING DEMONSTRATION On Tuesday c~y ofllc:lals agreed to buy the rernalnln1 48 acres at Point Loma held by USIU for j2.2 inllllM. The land oales, delayed by prop. 20, were blamed by Rusi I for the cash shortaae. usru tsshiftlng to a camp111 O,..n: Mon.·~rl. .. , S•t. M Sun. lfl.4 at C.mp Elliott. ~--••••••••••••••• I • Nixon Family Spat ComiM Object ro Relntive's Phone Call SACRAMENTO (AP) -A lllllllr .... lo lllmmorlog --..Prl 'I• NJ1.on'1 ~ ......... ~ "' u. -.. objoms " Ibo l'llllllp Ill~ i.mJ11, "'J'hoy'd btti.t leave me and Ill)' family ..... decland Mllboua' ..;u., Anna. 111B SAID BER ""'· Who has declared bankruptcy' had quit a private dotecUve's job bocl•IOO be Woa btlni lon:od to bret1t the law by beln& assigned as an undercove< ; agent to parties where drugs were being used Wegally. ''ll he'd aot OMJ&bi, he'd ' ' t gone to jall," abe told • neWSlllJ\ wbo asked !Gr btt ""'""""' on ber son'• pltclt. Mlbous 131 the Prtaldtnl'• fint ......_ He disclooad two yeora q<> that he and hi! wife had been W and were forc<d to go on weUare. NOW, THEIR SON, 28-year- old Rooald Milhous, has run Into" f!nlnclal misfortune. Mn. Milhous said ..... 11oclta ll>out his problem! prunpt.ed an irate telepOOne call Wednesday night from aootber Nhon cousin t n Southern California , Sheldon Beeson of Long Beach. "He said that I disgraced Nlx'On," Mrs. Milhous said ln a telf1h:lne interview from ~ home ln Grass Valley. "I have never in my life oald anything against Diet Nil.on," she said. "You know u well as I do that the press takes a Httle story and makes a lot out of it." "I haven't asked any of them for a bit or help. They've never offered any, oor would I I a«ept 11. But they'd better leavo mo ond Oil' laml1,y aiooe. Tbla Is old -beer flcbllnl for her Cllb. "WE BA VB alwoya lived a decent Ille. We may be poor. CAllffllllllA But we're honest. And where UM yeu came from has nevor "'--..,..----""' meant a damn ~ to me. ''They think It's tetrlbl• that I adrnltlad I wu on welfare. Woll, I would Nlltr be on wotfanl thin be lllvolved In • bunch d. ganpt.,.mn ond l'vo about come to the cooclllllm that'• all pol1t1cl ll." Sho llalcl Ille llld .... - -no k11f10r were on welfare. When JlQbald Milhous •P- peartd before a f e d e r a I bankruptcy re f e r e e Wad· ne.9iloy' be &aid be bekl a job in Sacramento but had "a moral objection" to it. He said "I was more or less forced to break the law, IO I quit.'' Ronald Mllhoua' benkrupt<y petition listed debts of 14,871 and asstts of ooly $1,419. Aviatrix Dies at 69 . LONG BEACH (API Aviatrix Gladys O'Donnell , a partner In O'oOOnell School of A vlallon, ls dead at 69 after a long Illness. Funeral services will be con- ducted here Friday afternoon. M.-.. O'Donnell died Tuesday in Long Beadl ~1cmorial Hospital. She new in the womcr.·:;. ~ transcontinental air races ii'\ l9'l9-32 and won the national Aerology Trophy In 1932. h0 . 1936 she was presented lhl' • Amelia Earhart Trophy. 3 DAY DOSE OF HEALTH, DIET & WEIGHT-MAY lfl.12 • I I DAD,Y PILOT EDITOBIAL P,l~ at's Going On Here? U Upper Newport Bay ever does come Into public ownership as a wildlife pn!Se"•· aa outlined In an Ir- vine Company proposal now being studled by a federal committee, It undoubtedly will be one of the moot slgni· ficant eoents in the history of the Orange Coast -and of the Filth Supervisorial 'i>istri.ct. So why bas Filth Di!trict Supervl5or Rllnald Caspers been dumped, unceremoniOU81y from his seat aa county repr ... ntative on tile Upper Bay Committee In a 3-2 vote by the Board of Supervl90l's? And why was Supervlsoc David Baker, the only other bo;ird, member »itb any background In the Upper Bay negolllltlons, overlooked as the obvibua choice for sec- ond 'COUnty rep resentative? And why In the world were supervisors from Santa Ana (Robert Battin) and Anaheim (llalpb Clark) selected to repr<sent the county on the commltlee formed by the U.S. Department of Interior to study ways of bringing the tidelands Into public ownersbil>? Alter the 3-2 v<>te of approval for SUpemsor Ralph Diedrlch's motion to seat Battin and Clark on the com· mittee, it was explained that Caapers bad "too many other responsibilities" to handle the assignment. But he had said earlier be .wolild' quit hls other major as· sig nment, the Coastal Conaetvatipn Commission, "in two seconds, 11 to remain on' the Upper Bay Committee. Some puzzled observers decided it must be a case of partisan politics creeping lnlo the supposedly nonpar- tisan Board of Supervisors. One supervisor indeed has boasted of building power for his party. Caspers and Baker are Republicans, the other three Democrats. Others favored rumors Uiat Caspers just hadn't been displaying enough interest in the Back Ba~ matter. He did in fact miss the vital committee meeting at which the Irvine proposal was made, sending Baker in his place. But if his fellow supervisors thought he wasn't doing a good job, none of them said '""· . U 'It's not partisan politics and not the quality of his work, could it be just a "put down" for Caspers? U so, it's deplorable. ' ' t t ..a upper Bay negotlotloaa ,... of mOll direct, 'Vila! Int~ to the 0-rll)ge Cout'rillclelllf, repmentecl by caapen and BWr. IDd JDolll ~ eoncem the Filth Disirict: Yet the ''newest 11!81orlty!' on the board bu cbooen to give these citizens the baclr.4.the-lland trial· ment. · · The Upper Bay negotiations hardly belOJlf In the bands of a pair of eupervlson who are wltlwut stgnlli· cant background In the long history of the problem, and who are unacco.llDlable to the citizens m.,.t directly affected. The whole affair bas the unforgettable odor of the power Politica manuevers that so badly dl.scredlled the county board back In 1971. Education Cost .. Taxpayers who tend to bewail the bigb coot of educat· Ing Oalllornia's loutb may be aurprised to learn that the state ranks 2 st in per-pupil spendlng In the United States, according to the National F.ducat!on As8oclat!on. New Yorkers, says the NEA, have long spent the most on public 11ebool education, • wb<ipping U .584 a year· per f.upi~ 53 percent more than the national average of $ ,034. Calllornia, spendlng an annual $980 per pupil, bits just below the average. and Alabama is at the bottom of the lisl with a figure of $590. The top spenders iJl the public education field are all In the· East, where high teacher salary scales and expensive building 'construction and maintenance con· tribute to the overall cost. Following New York at the top of tire 'list are New Jersey, with a per-pupil cost of $1,352; Washington D.C .. $1,327; Connecticut, $1,241 and Vennont, $f,211. While statistics may not say much about the quality of education, it is somewhat unsettling that while New York. has lhe lowest ·pupil-teacher ratio of 12 major states, with one teacher for every 17.4 pupils, Calilor· nia's ratio ls 1to23.2. Shakespeare Doomed to Dear Gloomy Courts Oil-rich Libya in Anti•ll.S. Plfln I Panama Seeks Funds for ·New Canal E xtinction? ; ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ One of my sons was profoundly bored by a course on Chaucer last semester, despite all my efforts to persuade him tha t Chaucer was not only a great poet and a magnificent storyteller, but also tunny, bawdy, witty, ironic, perceptive, earthy, gutsy, and "relevant" as bell to the social flux of his times. It still didh't wash. Maybe lhe jeachlng WU poor, blJt f BU:f- pect that even when the reaching is good, youngsters still find Chai.icer t o o "an· tique" to interest them, even when his language is brought up to date? But how can you "modernize" a Chaucer, or a Shakespeate, when what they wrote wa s so much a part of their age, as well as being (at a deeper level) ti meless? Students rarely reach the timeless level, being so put off by the archaic n1annerisms or speec h and locu- tion . SCHOLARS and producers have tried to break out oC this trap by presenting Shakespeare in modem dress, in a con· temporary setting, and even by modernizing the language and getting rid of all the "Marry" and "Forsooth" and "Betimes" and Gadzooks," that clutter up the meaning. 'fet "modernizing" the language of older writers is falsifying it in a way; because, when Shakespeare wrote, the language he used was not only ''modern." it was in some sense ahead of its time. He coined many words and new usages and even gra mmatical forma- tions. When audiences at the Globe listened to his plays, the language struck -----------G'ris------, Do you think the Watergate affair and the coritinued U.S. bombing in Southeast Asia will damage Presi· dent Nixon's chances of getting the Nobel Peace Prize? -0.D. GIDMIY ... CW'lell.. an wM!lttM llY rudtn "*' M Ht MeftMrflY Aflect ftW "''-'-.. ''" _...,., s.11111 YWf "' .......... 0'"111Y Gvl. D•ltJ P'lltl. their ears as fresh and piquant and as modem as tomorrow's headline. Jonson wu more the pedant, tbe Latlnlst and traditionalist; Sh a k esp ear e (like Chaucer) was a man of the people, 'as often coarse as he was lofty, as much at -tn· tlM l>ornfl'l'CI .. " the i-o)'al bed· chamber. · HOW CAN we get this across to young people, when they ere asked to memorize a soliloquy filled with "fardels" and "bodkins" and "contumely" and "quietus" arid "boum" and "orisons" and ail those perfectly good Ellzabelhan words we no longer use or even quite understand? Yet, to wie synonyms, like "burdens" for "fardels," or "stiletto" for "bodkins" would distort both the mean- ing or the speech and the fl avor of its context. Much the same problem has obtained with the Ebglis!Hpeaking Bible. The King James version has an awesome grandeur no • modem version can duplicate, but it is often cryptic a n d cumbersome to modem ears, and corr (U!e:S more than it clarifies. Yet modem transliterallons sound flat anci pedestrian and lose the aura of sanctification. It seems that we must setUe ei,th!r for high solemnity or for low sense, not for both. Will Shakespeare some day go the way of Chaucer? It Is a troublesome, and frightening, question -this prospect that we might eventually lose the greatest literary master the world has ever known. But how many adulta today can truly say they know him better than their children do? WASHINGTON -The Panama Canal would become direct!y embroiled in the tensely explosive Middle East tindefbox -if the virulenUy anti-U.S. radical rulers ol Panama have their way. They are apparently seeking funds from oil-rich Libya to construct a sea· level canal -in direct competition with the waterway built and controlled by the U.S. There have report· edly been discus· sions on t h a t be- tween Libyan strong· man· COi . Mlljllllmar Khadafi, ferociously anti-Israel and hos· tile in the U.S., and .Panamanian finance Dllnlster Jose Gull· lenno Aizpu , rabidly antl-U.S. Lib.>:•· a major alfproducer, bad an·ln- come last year b'om this 90urce of some $2 billion -expected to increase to at least $%.5 billion this year. A primitive country with a population of only around 2 mllHoo, Utis hUce revenue bas enabled Khadali to throw his weight around in Middle Eut and other affairs. AL'l110UGH LIBYA has only a minuscule anny and no navy or 111.r force (despite the purchase of 70 F r e n c h supersonic Mirage fighters), Khadafi vocally is the most truculent of the Arab wannongers. Aizpu is one of rclictator omar Tonijos's closest henchmen . With foreign minister Juan Tack and UN ambassador Aquilino · Boyd', both militant leftist s, Aizpu played a leading role in puttin g over a scheme whereby the UN Security Council held a week's session in Panama. Their alm, lo ram through a bttterly anU·U.S. resolution, was blocked only by veto by U.S. ambassador John Scali. Accordlng to usually well-infonned Middle East sources, Panama and Libya have established "olflclaJ reaJtions" - apparently preliminary to formal ties. Also, the foreign ministers of the two countries are to exchange visits. PANAMANIAN focelgn mlnister Tack and ambassador Boyd have been vigorously courting the Arab delegations at the United Nat ions -stressing their hostility to the U.S. and support of the Arabs' enmity to Israel. Boyd is an avowed Marxist who makes no bones about advocating violence and terrorism Ip ga in deSired ends. In 1958, he led a ·riotous anti·U .S. demonstration in the Canal Zone which had to be sup- pressed by force. He and Tack blocked efforts to work out a compromise resolu· tion at the Security Council meeting in Panama. According to the inside account, Aizpu proposed a $2 billi9n loan to Khadafi to construct a sea-level canal which would be owned and operated jointly by Panama and Libya. Aizpu is said to have stressed that thig new canal would give the Arabs domina- tion of two of the world's main waterways -Panama and the Suez. With the Arabs possessing most of lhe wor!Cl's oil, they \\'Ollld then be in a position to "eliminate" Israel by forcing the U.S. and others to wtthhold support of that country. THE LURE reputedly was also held out to Kbadafi that he would become the dominant figure in the Arab world - even more powerful and exalted than the late Gama! Nasser. In Panamanian quarters. it is claimed Khadafi has evinced "definite interest" ln the canal scheme. Khadafi appears bent on precipitating another war between the Arabs and Israel. 1be Libyan strongman himself dis- closed, . in an unreported speech at the small town of Ziwarah near the Tunisian border, that Egypt and Syria balked at his plan to launch a coordinated assault on Israel at the time Israel shot down a Libyan airliner. Khadafi declared he offered not ooly to U.S.-Russia Agreements Increasing But Commercial Activity Doesn't Cool Military Suspicions \VASl1INGTON -An event of great importance has matured so !Jlowly that its significance is overlooked. Leonid I. Brezhnev has emerged as the successor, of Stalin in the Soviet Union, more sure in his lead ership than Nikita S. Khruschchev and committed to a new relationship with the United States or his· . toric proportions. Very little is heard <X Alexei K06ygin and other figw-es in the collective leader- ship or Russia. Bre- r.hnev haB coosotid•· ted biJ position of power, The l1C\V T"e- lati0115hip Is based upon direct dealings between President Nlxnn and Chairman Brezhnev, and Is wltl'lout parallel in Russia's .world policy .. IRONICAU.V, as Brezhnev's authority 1 bu tncreased, Nixon's has 11t leMt tem- porarily been diminished. But the cause al Nixon's decline, tile Watergate affair . 1 II of no-great concern to a Russian i.lenhlp whlch conai5tenUy uses elec· 1r1111c IU1'Vtlllance f0< lntemal political purpa••· The Rualan press baa ignored Ille W1i<qate 1ltalr. though previously .,..tin( aver lesoor American aber· (rucHARD WILSO~ I rat ions and instead has been publishing some understanding and a d m l r i n g arti cles about life in America. Since a year ago, when Nixon signed new agreements with the Sovlet Union every day of his week ln Moscow, material progrns has continued at an • amazing rate. 11le Russians got the bet· ter of a big wheat deal. They have en- tered into new agreements for technological exchanges which they wijl get the better ol, have negotiated a multibillion doUar c o m m er c 11 l ar- rangement for chemical fertlllzera and are making progress toward Joint ex· ploltation with tbe U.S. of the Siberian oil and gas reserves. AS COUU> be seen witli Nlm1 In Russia a year ago, Ibo IJ"'8!er significance of the new re:laUonablp lay not so much with the namnr llmllatlon • of nuclear arms 11 wltb lbt lnteNocklng' commercial actlvlUea which were being .. 1 up, and on 1 scale whidl baa not been euggerated. A ....iod In-11 beU!g creatod IO that t11<re are m•tertal reuons to •void ( political , ideological and military con- fl ict. The Russian and A m e r i c a n economies are fmding significant areas of mutual benefit on a larger scale than had previously been believed J>OSSible. As these areas enlarge, the reasons i&- crease tor ccmpaUble relatioOsh!ps on world affairs in general. HOW MUCH of this Is duo in Russia's Internal !allures Is probably not worth talking about. Whatever the reasons, con- ditions have created a Russian need for American grains · and tiveslock feed, American technology, American coopera· tlm In 1lullding a lertlllw tndmtry, American help In extracting llld utlll!lng oil and gas In an energy·sbort world. And America needs a market for grains, for fertilizers, new opportun!Ues for its technologists, and a great deal of oil and gas from elsewhere . than the Mlddie East. One area calling !or ~ great deal of thinking and talklnf about, is whetller or not we are belnC clor!e in while the Russians build up 1 military force stronger than """' 'lllere Is no lack ol heafthy C<lllctJ'll in the Nixon ad· ministration oo this point. In fact, Nixon wishes 10 keep the Unlted Stat.s •lnlo&er militarily than tbe Jlernocralic majority In Congreas dellres, although In this 11me 1111jorlty are -who think be Is overdoing it on trusting Russia. 111E IDEA of trusting Russia is far off the mark so far as ,Nixon is concerned, and he must view with some concern, as do others, that Brezhnev has accepted in the Politburo, after a long absence, Russ ia 's top military man and its en· forcer of internal security. This does not indicate any softening of Russia's long run alms. lt is not a matter of trust, but or interlocking relationships of mutual in· tertst and benefit which causes Nixon to proceed with the initiative be began a year ago. Henry A. Kissinger has gone back to Moecow to deal with Bredmev, as he and NI.ton did a year ago, on matters of mutual Interest. Their primary Interest must be that Brezhnev's visit to' the Unlted States shall produce postUve reault.s unmarred by Jewish protest over the exit tax and the treabnent of Jews in the Soviet Union. ff Brtzhnev's visit should produce as much friction as Nikita Khrushchev's tempestuous American jouriley 10 years 11go, the constructive i>roen-o( Amertcan-SoViet relations could be fn .. terrupted. '1111! would be a trq!c development In what otherwtlO has beeo a sldlllully handled progreaolon from omln<lw hosUllly to mutually beneficial ~. finan ce the attack, but to put al their disposal all of Libya's milijary man· power and other resources -including Lhe 70 or more Mirage jet fighters bought from France ror upwards of $150 miflion. The fiery Libyan also angrily de· nounced Lebanon for rejecting his pro- posal to send "thousands of volu nt eers" there to wage "ruthless war on Israel." The U.S. as ,well as I s ra e l has photographic evidence that Libya has se nt a number of Mirages to Egypt. The U.S. proof consists or photographs ob- tained by high-level aerial recon- naiss ance. IT IS known that there are a number of guerril la camps in Libya. 0 n e authoritative source puts the nwnber of "trainees" at more than .2,@0 -not all of then1 Palestinians. A nwnber are said ID be noo-Arabs. The three Japanese who perpetrated the Loci airport massacre last May, as Black Septerhber terrorists, were trained in Libya. Libya is the principal source of Al Fatah and other guerrilla funds. Kbadafi has personally offered refuge to terrorist killers, and reputedJy is trying to "ransom" the eight assassins ' who murdered one Belgian · and two U.S. diplon1ats in Khartoj seve ral months ago. The Libyan strongmah is said to be of· ferinr, the military rulers of Slldan $50 million over a period of years for release of the Black Septembe~ slayers. A Well-trained Nose In The Loyal Royal Palace Once upon a time in the Kingdom of Nixylvania a Senator passing by said he smelled a smell in The Loyal Royal Palace. But as the Senator. was a member of the Loyal Royal Opposition Party and had no love for the King, nobody paid much attention. After all, Opposition parties were always smelling smells in The Loyal Royal Palace. Of course the King ignored the Senator. He said he wa.s very busy with his secret plans to spread de- cency, peace, pros- perity, honesty and hard work througb:xit his Kingdom. He was making "real progress," he said. And he had no time for smelly Senators. But-other leaders of the Loya l Royal Opposition took up the cry "Something smells in The Loyal Royal Palace!" they shouted. And they were noisy about it. To set the matter to rest, the King issued a statement: "All my life," he said "I have been, rightly or wrongly, against smells. And Jf lhere was a smell in The Loyal Royal ·Pa~ce, I would be the very first to ·smell it." YOU'D TIUNK that would be the end of it. But the newspapers began sniffrng here And sniffing there. As the months passed, some began detecting faint scents and others rePort~, strong odon emanating from The Loyal Royal Palace. · The King's Chief Adviser resigned to devote more time to li!tenlng to his wlfe.,. Martha. Several SpkiaJ Assistants sud· denly remembered appolntmenls In private industry, The Kin~ was very, very annoyed . "I have ordered my Chief Smeller tG smell as hard as be can," he said. "Furthermore, I have instructed the Federal Bureau of Smelling to smell every nook and cranny. I have complete confidtnce ln my Chier Smeller and I can assure you that nobody, now employed In The Loyal Royal Palace, •meU.." llut _the problem wouldn't go away. More and more people said they smelled something. At last, tha Senators said they wanttd to •smell around themselo ... • The Opposition Senators wanted to prove there was a smell. And the Loyal Royal Senators wanted to prove there wasn't. The King indignantly refused their r .. quest. "That would be a violation of the Doetrlne of Royal PrerogaUves," he said • I (....__A_R_T_H_OP_P_E __ J angrily. "It \i:ould Right to S,Oell ,"· d~y my Divine BY NOW, however, every subject in the Kingdom smelled a smell in The Loyal Royal Palace. Expert smellers from a score of different packs Wtre hot on the scent. Even the Loyal Royal Senators were worried. "If you don't get rid or that smell," they v•arned the King anxiously, "it's going to cling to all of us." lt was-then that the King made his historic ahnouncement. "My loyal sub- jects." he said. "l hav~ made a momen· tous discovery : Something in 'J1he Loyal Royal Palace smells! "Thanks solely to the keeness of my well-trained nose," he added, "l alone was able to detect it. But rest as.sured I have a secret plan to end the smell on which I am making real progress. Whoever smells shall be banished from The Loyal Royal Palace. For if there is one thing I cannot tolerate for a moment, it's smells." Oh; how pleased and happy all bis sub- jects were! "Huzzah • for our King's nose!" tbey cried. 1'0nce again, he's come up smelling like a rose." MORAL: In unbe!f:vable faii,y tales, be who srpells last ;~s best. OIANM .COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, P®U.htr Thoma.i K•tvil, Editor \' Barbara j(reibich .Editorial Page Editor ,,,., e<ti<orial ,J.,,. ot 1h< Dally, Pilot ·leeks to inform and 1timulate retden . b)o p~ on this pace dlv,rw •'commentby 'oo topics Olin- ltftfl by syndicated eolurnntiti and .-lats, by Pl1Mdlng ....... for rffd•tt' Vif'WI and b)' ptelefltifll' thlll newspaper'• opimon. and kttal on cumnt toptca. Tbt edltorlaJ oplnjona of tM Daily Pilot' appce.r only tn the fd1toN1 ~umn at the top of 1be pqe. Opiniona eXPttiRd b)' tbt. coJ- umnist:s and canoontst. and lttttr writers a.re their own and no~ J:ntflt of 1Mlr \tiewl by lhe Dlil1 Pilot """Id "" w......i. r Thursday, May 10, 1973 ' I • • . } r . ... , ' !.. • • •,•,EXPERT SERVICE AND ADVICE ... . BY QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL SALESMEN. ' ' EX1ERiOR BARN I & FENCE ·rAJNT CIVE AU:YOUR EXTERIOR WOOD TtlAt NEW LOOKI I LA.Tf..Xl -...-' --....::;.-..--::/ ~ii ~-·· Wtdll...,., May «>. 1973 • •AMPLE FREE PARKING ADJACEI« TO All STORES •LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES ON EVERY'lTEM, EVERY OAY • 8400 PAINT AND DECORATING l'l"EMS •YOU SAVE MONEY ... THE FIRSt PRICE MARKED ON THE MERCHANDISE INDICATES THE PRICE FOR COMPARABLE QUALITY THE SECOND PRICE IS YOUR COSTlll • YOU SAVE THE DIFFERENCElllll c::crtNCIHT 1 • • •MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8 AM TO 9 PM Optn 7days• Sn1ghts·sATuRDAYaA.M. Toe:30P.M • · , •SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6:30 P.M. " EXTERIOR STUCCO MASO~~y PAiHT CAii ALSO BE USED FOR AN EXTRIMElY DUl\ABlE OUR PRICE •OIL BASE' O~R PRICE ·99 •BRUSH OR SPRAY :: ' •FINE GRADE LJ\TEX FLJ\T.· INrERIOR JOB •CLEAN-UP WITH WATER •1 HOUR DR YING •BRUSH OR ROLL •GOOD HIDING COMP. RETAIL 99 Vitlfl ACRYUC LJlSTS 8 YE.JlRS •A TOP QUALITY EXTERIOR STUCCO.MASONRY PAINT •CLEAN UP WITH WATER •30 MINUTES TO DRY •BRUSH OR ROLL • SCRUBBABLE PUREST WHITE & AN ARRAY OF COLORS! . WHITE & 4 COLORS CIJllP. RETAIL 3.75 GAL. CLEAN UP Wlftl WATERI OUR PRICE 99 l~lERIOR • EXTERIOR PAit.l CLEAN-UP WITH WATER! •1 HOUR DRYING •FOR PLASTER, BRICK,& STUCCO ,•SCRUBBABLE •BRUSH OR ROLL WHITE & COLORS CDllP. OUR PRICE RETAIL 339 5.50 GAL. GAL ·coMP. llETAR- 7.50 . Vi~'fl LJlTEX SfMi·GlOSS f~AMEL •DURABLE •SCRUBBABLE •INTERIOR •EXTERIOR •FAST DRYING •BEAUTIFUL FINISH SPARKLING WHITE & COLORS • GAL. WHITE & 4.50 DECORATOR COLORS RE.J\DY TO USEI OUR PRICE 99· GAL. COllP. __ JIEIAIL_ 5.50 100%.Pb"RE P~PA~D HOUSE PAiHT •!'INE QUALITY •LINSEED OIL BASE •TOUGH & DURABLE •IDEAL FOR ALL EXTERIOR WQOD , >PRE-MIXED, USE STRAIGftr FROM CAtf BRIGHT WHITE & COLORS IN YOUR METAL CONTAINER ~ ...... '!!!!"!!!!' GAL. LJ\STS 12 YEARSI BRIGHTEST WHITE & MAN NEW cOLORSI INDSOR VINYL ASBESTOS . UR PRICE SPECIAL PURCHASE F~OOR •WOVEN WITll ACRYLIC YARN • Wl'l'H VALA'.NCES · OUR PRICE 3x4FT .......... 6.95 PRE:~!.~!~! WALLPAPER 12c •6 DECORATOR COLORS •MARBLE PATIERNS • ,2 .. x ,2.. TILE EA. COMP. RETAIL 19C I OUR PRICE •ASSORTEO ARMSTftONG ® ~ ;~:~i 399 .~::!~~ CASTILIAN ViNYL 4'59 ~'i;, k~J~NG CUSHl.ON FLOOR •COPPER BACKED •DOUBLE LAQUERED 12. oz. SPR.JlY E.~AMEL • BEAUTIAJL DECQRATIVE QUALITY • USE IN ANY ROOM ' . COLORS: WOOD LOOK & WHITE 4x4FT •••••••••• 8.99 '3x6FT ...•.. -•. B.99 4x6FT ......... 11.99 6x6FT ......... 17.99 -. PLJ\SliC · Blit41S OVAL lUBE $1YlE MATCHSTICK SlYLE •AVOCADO •WHITE • GREEN 3 X 6 FT-.... ·-··-----2.1• 3X6FT--.. -··········-1.59 4X6FT:..._ __ ·_,.2.79 . · 4X6F'.T'--·-·····--1.99 &X&FT •• __ __: ... __ c.19 · sxsn ______ 2,n 8 X 6 FT.-•• -.. _ ..... -... 5.89 • 8 X 8 FT .. ---·--·-··-4.49 10 X 6 FT---·-··--7.39 10 X 6 FT ........................... 5.99 12X8FT-····--···8.99 12 X6 FT ........................... 7.99 • llDGOI • OUTIOOI • VINlON CORD • 6 FOOT DROP · •CRISP, NEW Pjl.TTERNSI 7~9c ALL ~ · • ADOS iEST TO ANY ROOM WALLCOVERING OUR PER SOLO IN COMP. RETAIL 4., 5 PRICE ~~~~E 2 ROLL BOLTS V•1Nifl."RE·PASTED OUR PRICE29 PRE· TRIMMED • •GIVES ANY ROOM COMP. WALL COVERINC :;R~L~s·E~~~:K RETAIL r..:'aL SOLD IN TWO ROLL BOLTS ONLY 4,69 ROLL I . Standard Brands Paint & Decorating I OPE~ 7DAS~~tc;Oi~H~ FRIDAY, 8 A.M. :o 9 P.~SATURDAYS, B A.M. TO 6:30 P.Ml~;;g Ai;;~ \ 1 BLK. s~~F~A~i:. IDELHll Huntington Beach 2401 LONG BEACH BLVD. -, ,,;,,,.nLBf$ n9 convenient \i.e ' ., locations in the west I { I TELEPHONE (1141 Ml-4517 · 1'h-BLKS. SO. OF WILLOW 6800 WARNER AVE, NEAR GOLDEN WEST -TELEl'HONE 12131 427-37" Anaheim CORNER OF LINCOLN lo LINDSE Y 1 BLK. EAST OF BROOKHURST TfLEPHONE 17141 NJ·t507 TELEPHONE 17141142-3118 8635~!1!'-Y AT LAKEWOOD BLVD. TELEPHONE 1213) 111.at1J . I ( la Habra CORNiR WHITTIER• IOAHO . · 2 BLKS:-.:, OF BEACH·HACIENDA TELEPH°" l213I U1.fi10I l, I ). ; • ' , I • t • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ....... at's Going On Here? 11 Upper N"'"l"!rt Bay ever does come into public ownership as a wildlife preserve, as outlined in an Ir· vine Company proposal now being studied by a federal committee, it undoubtedly will be one of the most sign!· !leant events In the history of the Orange Coast -and of the Flftb SupervisorialoOistrict. So why has Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers been dumped, unceremoniously from his seal u county repre6entative on the Upper Bay Committee in a 3·2 vote by l,he Board of Supervisors? And why · was Supervisor David Baker, the o_nly other ~ member witb any back&round In the Upper Bay negotiationa, overlooked as the obvll>Us choice tor "'* ona oounty representative? And why In tbe world were SUJ>9rvlsors from Santa Ana (Robert Battin) and Anabeim (Ralph Clark) Jelected to represent the <'Ounty on the oommltleel<>nned by the U.S. Department of Interior to study ways of bringing tbe tidelands Into public ownershil>? After the 3-2 vote of approval for supervisor Ralph Diedrich'• motion to seat Battin and Clark on the com· mittee, it was explained that Caspers had "too many other responsibilities" to handle tire assignment. But he had said earlier he .would' quit hts other major as· signrrient, the Coastal Conservation Commission, "in two seconds," to remain on the Upper Bay Committee. Some puzzled observers dedded It must be a case of partisan politics creeping Into tbe supposedly nonpar· tisan Board of Supervisors. One supervisor Indeed has boasted of building power for his party. Caspers and Baker are Republicans, the other three Democrats. Otbers favored rumors that Caspers just hadn't been displaying enough interest in tbe Back Bar matter. He did in fact miss the vital committee meeting at which the Irvine proposal was made, sending Bai:er 'in his place. But if his fe!Jow supemsors thougtt he wu:n't doing a good job, none of them said so. If it's bot ;>artisan politics and not the quality of his work, could 1t be just a "put down" for Caspers? U so, it's deplorable. Tbe Upper Bay negoth1tloas ,.. of moil ,dl!ed; ntal interest to the Orange Coaa rtlideota, ,.,.,_nted by Caspers and l!Uu, and l!IOlll·dlrectll coocem the Fifth Disfrlct. Yet 'the ''newest majorltf on the board )I"' choeon to give these clUzens the back-of-the-hand trUl· ment. · J • The Upper Bay negotlaUons hardly belong In the bando of a pair of •upervlsors who are wltholit signifi· cant background in the long history of the problem, and who are unaccountable to the citizena moet directly affected. The whole· affair has the unforgettable odor of the power J>Olilics manuevers that so badly discredited the oounty board back In 1971. Education Cost Taspayers who tend to bewail the high coot of educal· Ing Oiillfornia'• youth may be awprised to learn that the state ranks 21st In per-pupil spending in the United Staie., according to the National Educatfon Asaociation. New Yorkers, says the NEA, have long spent the moot on public 8Chool education, 1 whopping ,1,584 a year per pupil, 53 percent more than the national average of ,l,034. California, spending an annual •uso per pupil, hits jUJI below the average, and Alabama is at the bottom of the list witb a figure of $590. The top spencrers iii the public education field are all In the· East, where high teacher salary scales and expensive building 'construction and maintenance con- tribute to the overall cost. Following New York al the top of the list are New Jersey, with a per-pupil oost of $1,352; Washington D.C., $1,327; Connecticut, ,1,241 and Vermon~ $f,2ll. While statistics may not say much about the quality of education, it is somewhat uDBettllng that while New York bas the lowest pupil-teacher ratio of 12 major states, with one teacher for every 17.4 pupils, Califor-· nla's ratio Is 1 to 23.2. I ' ''WE ONL'!l SUPPL'f . WHAT PEOPLE Petf,ANl>.11 __ , Shakespeare Doomed to Extinction? Dear. Gloomy Gus Courts Oil-rich Libya in Anti-l!.S. Plan , I Panama Seeks Funds for New Canal One of my sons was profoundly bored by a course on Chaucer Inst semester, despite all my efforts to persuade him that Chaucer was not only a great poet and a magniUcent storyteller, but also funny , bawdy, witty, ironic. perceptive, earthy, gutsy, and "relev~nt'' as hell to the social flux ol his Umes. It still didh't wash. Maybe .th•Jea~. "111 poor, but I BUS· pect that even when the teaching is good, youngsters still find ChaUcer too "an- tique" to interest them. even when his language is brought up to date? But how can you "modernize" a Chaucer, or a Shakespeate, when what they wrote was so much a part of lheir age, as well as being (at a deeper level) timeless? Students rarely reach the timeless level, being so put off by the archaic 1nanncrisms of speech and locu- tion. SCflOLARS and producers have tried to break out of th.is trap by presenting Shakespeare in modem dress, in a con- temporary setting, and even by modernizing the language and getting rid of alt the "Marry" and "Forsooth" and "Betimes" and Gadzooks," that clutter up the meaning. Yet "modernizing'' the language of older writers is falsifying it in a way ; because, when Shakespeare wrote, the language he used was not only "modern,'' it was in some sense ahead of its time . He coined many words and new usages and even grammatical forma- tions. \Vhen audiences at the Globe listened to his plays, the language struck Do you think the Watergate affair and the eootinUed U.S. boml>ing in Southeast Asia will damage Presi· dent Nixon's chances of getting the Nobel Peace Prize? -D.D. Gfoemt Cln ~lfleRb •l'I ........... " re.Hen •"' .. 1191 --...rtlt ........ fM ... i..... ., "" .....-. seNI ...... "' PMV• i. Oloemt Chit, Oallt P'lltl. their ears as fresh and piquant and as modem as tomorrow's headline. Jonson wa.9 more the pedant, the Latinlst and traditionalist: Shakespeare (like Chaucer) was a man of the people, as often coarse as he was lofty, ~ much at .bome fll lllil bompnf as fll the.royal bed· chamber. HOW CAN we get this across to young people, wtlen they are asked to memorize a soliloquy filled with "fardels" and "bodkins" and "contumely" and "quietus" and "bourn" and "orisons" and all those perfectly good Elizabethan words we no longer use or even quite understand? Yet, to use synonyms, like "burdens" for "fardels," or "stiletto" for "bodkins" would distort both the mean- ing of the speech and the flavor of its context. Much the same problem has obtained with the EhgUslHpeaking Bible. The King James version has~ an awesome grandeur no modern version can duplicate, but it is often cryptic a n d cumbersome to modem ears, and con-- fuses more than It clarifies. Yet modem transliterations sound Oat ancl pedestrian and lose the auni of sanctification. It seems that we must settle either for high solemnity or for low sense, not for both. Will Shakespeare some day go the way or Chaucer? It Is a troublesome, and frightening, question -this prospect that we might eventually lose the greatest literary master the world has ever known. But bow many adults today can truly say they know him better than their children do? WASHINGTON -The Panama Canal would become directly embroiled in the tensely explosive Middle East tinderbox -if the virulently anti-U.S. radical rulers of. Panama have their way. They are apparently seeking funds from oil-rich Libya to construct a sea· level canal -in direct competition with the waterway built and controlled by the U.S. 1bere have report- odly """' dbcus-sions on t h a t be- tween Llbyan strong- man· Col. Mllflmmar Khadafi, ferociously anti-Israel and hos· tile lo the U.S., and Panamsnian -finance miDlster Jose Guil· lermo Aizpu, rabidly anli·U.S. Llby1, a major dfproducer, had an•in- come last year· b'om this !IOun!e of some $2 billion -expected to increase to at least '2.5 billion this year. A primitive coWJtry with a population of only around 2 million, this hU.ce revenue has enabled Khadaft lo throw his weight liround in Middle East and other affairs. ' ALTIIOUGH IJBYA has only a minuscule army and no navy or air force (despite the purchase of 70 French supersonic Mirage fighters ), Khadafi vocally is the most truculent of the Arab wannongers. Aizpu is one of 'dictator Omar Torrijos's closest henchmen. With foreign minister Juan Tack and UN ambassador Aquilino Boyd, both militant leftists, Aizpu played a leading role in putting over a scheme whereby the UN Security Council held a week's session in Panama. Their aim, to ram through a bitterly anti·U.S. resolution, was blocked only by veto by U.S. ambassador John Scali. According to usually well-infonned Middle East sources, Panama and Libya have established "official realtions" - apparently Preliminary to formal ties. Also, the foreign ministers of the two countries are to exchange visits. PANAMANIAN foreign minister Tack • and ambassador Boyd have been vigorously courting the Arab delegations at the United Nations -stressing their hostility to the U.S. and support of the Arabs' enmity to Israel. Boyd is an avowed Marxist who makes no bones about advocating violence and terrorism tp gain desired ends. In 1958, he led a riotous anti-U.S. demonstration in the canal Zone whidt had to be sup- pressed by force. ~ and Tack blocked efforts to work out a compromise resolu- tion at the Security Council meeting in Panama. According to the inside account, Aizpu proposed a $2 b~ loan lo Khada£i to construct a sea-level canal which would be owned and operated joilltly by Panama and Libya. Aizpu is said to have stressed that this new canal would give the Arabs domina- tion of two of the world's main waterways -Panama and the Suez. Witb the Arabs possessing most of the world's oil, they woo.Id then be in a position to "eliminate" Israel by forcing the U.S. and others to withhold support of that country. THE LURE reputedly was also held' out ~ Kbadafi that he would become the dominant figure in the Arab world - even more powerful and exalted than the late Gama! Nasser. In Panamanian quarters. it is claimed Khadafi has evinced "definite interest" in the canal scheme. Khadafi appears bent on precipitating another war between the Arabs and Israel. The Libyan strongman himsell dis- closed, in an unreported speech at the small town of Ziwarah near the Tunisian border, that Egypt and Syria balked at his plan to lauii.ch a coordinated assault on Israel at the time Israel shot down a Libyan airliner. Khadafi doclared he offered not only to U.S.-Russia Agreements Increasing But Commercial Activity Doesn't Cool Military Suspicions WASHINGTON -An event of great importance flas matured so ~lowly that its significance is overlooked. Leonid I. Bre1.hnev has emerged as the successor o{ Stalin in the Soviet Union, more sure in his leadership than Nikita S. Khrusdlchev and committed to a new relationship with the United States of his-· toric proportions. Very little is heard ol Alexei Kosygin and other figw-es in the collective leader- ship of Russia, Bre-mnev has con9Clida- ted bis position of power. The new re- latioo!hlp is based upan direct dealings between President Nixnn and Chairman Brezhnev, and ls without parallel in Russia's \.\'orld policy . IRONJ~Y. as Brezhnev's authority bu increased, Nixon's bas at least tem- porarily been dlminished. But the cause al Nllon 's decllnt. tbe Watergate a{fair. , ii of no great concern to a Rus.'ilan leldonblp which conststenlly uses elec· tr-* airveillance for Internal political ldPJlll. The Rasllan eress has Ignored Ille wa.....-ate affair. though previously 1iloatlnf ove 1-r American abclr- • (rucHARD WILSO~ I rations and Instead has been publishing some understanding and a d m l r i n g articles abo ut life in America . Since a year ago, when Nixon signed new agreements with the Soviet Union every day of his week in Moscow, material progress has continued at an amazing rate. The Russians got the bet· ter of a big wheat deal. They have en- tered into new agreements f o r technological exchanges whJcb they will get the better or, have negotlated a multibilllon dollar c o m m e r c I a I ar- rangement for chemical fertilizers and are making progress toward joint el· ploltation with the U.S. of the Siberian oil and gas reserves. AS . COULD be seen wltli Nlsco in Rus.!ia a year ago, the ll"flt.el' significance of the new relaUonsbip lay not so much wttb the namw Umttal*'. of nuclear arms 11 with the lnter4ocklnl commercial activltles which were btlng set up, and on 1 scale whlCh bu DOl been exaggerated. A Mttd l-la boln( maied IO that there nre material reuom to avoid political, ideological and military con- flict. The Russian and A m e r i c a n economies are finding significant areas of mutual tienefit on a larger scale than had previously been believed possible. A3 these areas enlarge, the reasons ~ crease for compatible relationships on world affairs In general. HOW MUCH of this ls due lo Russia's Internal failures Is probably not worth taJklng about. Whatever the reasoos, con- ditions have created a Russian need for American grains · and Livestock feed. American teclmology, American cooper&· tin in building a fertilizer lndlltllry, American help in utractlng aDd utilizing oil and gas in an energy-short world. And -America oeeda a market for grains, for fertlllzm, new opportunlijes for lta technolOfllsta, and a great deal of oll and gu from elsewhere than the Middle East. One area calling for '-l"!al deal of thlnldng and talkin( aboilt, Is whether or not '" are bein( -In while the R11ui1ot build up a military force stronger than OW'I. 'lllere ls no lack of healthy conctrn in the Nixon ad· ministration on this point. In foct. Nixon wishes to teep the United Stat.. 111'0111« militarily than tbe llemocraUc majority In Concroll -· although In this llJDe majority are -who thlnt he Is ) overdoing it on trusting Russia. 11IE IDEA of trusting Russia is far off the mark so rar as Nixon is concerned , and he must view with some concern, as do others, that Brezhnev bas accepted in the Politburo, after a long absence, Russia's top military man and its en- forcer of internal security. This does not indicate any softening of Rlwia's long run aims. It Is not a matter of trust, but of interlocking relationships of mutual in· temit and benefit which causes Nixon to proceed with the Initiative he began a year ago. Henry A. Kissinger has gone hack to Moscow lo deal with Brdmev, as he and NiJ:on did a year ago, on matters or mutual Interest. Their primary Interest must be that Brezhnev's visit to the United States shall. produce po~tive results wunarred by Jewish protest over the exit tu and the treatment of Jews In the Soviet Union. · If Brezhnev's visit should prpduce as much friction as Nikita Khrushchev's tempestuous American journey 10 years ago, the construcUve progress of American-Soviet relations could be In- terrupted. This "'"'Id be a tragic development In what otherwise bas been a skili/ul!y handled progreaslon from ominous llo<llllty lo mutually beneficial oo-alstence. ' finance the attaCk, but to put at their disposal all of Libya's military man- power and other resources ,..... including the 70 or more Mirage jet fighterf) bought from France for upwards Q_f $150 million. The fiery Libyan also angrily de· nounced Lebanon f-Or rejectiitg his pro- posal to send "thousands of volu.nteers" there to wage "ruthless war on tsrael." The U.S. as ll''ell as Is r a e I has photographic evidence that Libya has sent a number of h1irages to Egypt. The U.S. proof consists or photographs ob- tained by high·level aerial recon- naissance. - IT IS known that there are a number of guerrilla camps in Libya. One authoritative source puts the number of "trainees" at more than .2,000 -not all of them Palestinians. A nwnber are said to be non-Arabs. ~ The · three Japanese ·who perpetrated ~ the Lod airport massacre la st May, as Black Septerhber terrorists, were trajned in Libya. Libya is the principal source of Al Fatah and other guerrilla funds. Khadafi has personally offered refuge to terrorist killers, and reputedly is trying to ''ransom" U1e eight assassins who murdered one Belgian and two U.S. di~1omats in Khartolln1 several months ago. The Llby~n strongman is said to be of· (erinr. the military rulers of Slldan $50 million over a period of ye~s for release of the Black Septembe~ slayers. A W ell-trai1ied Nose In Tire Loyal Royal Paliice Once upan a time in the Kingdom of Niicylvania a Senator passing by said he smelled a smell in The Loyal Royal Palace. But as the Senator. was a member of the Loya l Royal Opposition Party and had no love for the King, nobody paid much attention. After all, Opposition parties were always smelling smells in The Loyal Ro ya l Palace. Of course the King ignored the Senator. He said he was ·very busy with his secret plans to spread de- cency, peace, pros- perity, honesty and hard work throughout bis Kingdom. He was making "real progress," he said. And he had no time for smelly Senators. But other leaders of the Loyal Royal Opposition took up the cry "Something smells in The Loyal Royal Palace!" they shouted. And they were noisy about it. To set the matter to rest, the King issued a statement : "All my life," he said "t have been, rightly or wrongly, against smeJ]s. And if there was a smell in The Loyal Royal Pa~ce, 1 would he the very first to smell it." YOU'D TIDNK that would be? the ehd of it. But the newspaper! began snlffmg here and sniffing there. As the months passed, some began detecting faint scent! and others reported strong odon emanating from lbe Loyal Royal Palace. The King 's Chief Adviser resigned to devote more time to listening to his wife, Martha. Several special Assistants sud- denly remembered appointments in private industry. The Kin~ was very, very annoyed. · "I have ordered my Chief Smeller to smeU as hard as be can," he said. "Furthermore, 1 nave Instructed the Federal Boreau of Smelling to smell every n0ok and cnMy. 1 have complete confidence In my Ollef Smeller and 1 can assure }'ou that nobody, now employed in The Loyal Royal Paiact, smeU.." But _the problem wouldn' go away. More and more people said tlley smelled something. At last. the Senators said they wanttd·to"lmeli around themselves. The OpposlUon Sena.tors wanted to prove there was a smell. And the Loyal Royal Senators wanted to prove there wasn't._ The King indignanliy refused their re- quw. "That would be a violation ol the lloclrlne or Royal Prerogatives," he said I ( ..... _A_R_T_H_oP_P_E___.J angrily. "It would dc~troy my Right to ~ell ." Divine BY NOW, howevtilj, every subject in the Kingdom smelled a smell in The Loyal Royal Palace. Expert smellers from a score of different packs were hot on the scent. Even the Loyal Royal Senators \Vere worried. "If you don't get rid or that smell " they warned the King anxiously "it~s going to cling to all or us." ' It was then that the King made his historic ahnouncemen t "My loyal sub- jects.". he said. "I hav,e made a momen- tous discovery: Something in The Loyal Royal Palace smells! "Thanks solely lo the keeness of my well-trained nose,". he added, "I alone was able to detect 11. 'But rest assured I have a secret plan to end the smell on which I am maki ng real progress. Whoever smells shall be banished from The Loyal Royal Palace. For if there is one thing I cannot tolerate for a moment it's smells." ' Oh, how pleased and ~appy all his sub- jects were! "Huus~· for our King's nose !" tbey cried. 1'0nce again, he's come up smelling like a rose." -MORAL: ln unber vable raiiy tales, he who szpells last ells best. OIAMM .COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wttd, PubU.h<r Thomas Keevil, Editor Barbaro JCrtibich .Editorial Page Editor The td!torlal .. ,... of the Daily Pilot .&eeks to inform and stimulate' reeden by presenting on this pap dlvtl'St' rCo,nmtntlry ·on IOplcs. Ol in- terest by l)'n(ticated ml:umnist• and cartoonl$ts, by pl'OV!dlng a forum f« mdera' vinis Mid by presentlnr this ftetlr'lp&Pt'r'I oplrrlonl and fdtu on currtnt k>ptca. 1be editorial ppiniorm Of the Dally PUot' apprar c;mly tn ~he editotl&l column' at the 10p ol the --· Opinions -"" tht .,... wnniltll and cartoonlstfl: tnd letter .wrlttn are their own and no~ mcnt of tl1<tr .-by U.e Daii1 Piiot -Id ba -I Thursday, May 10, 1973 • ' • • . ) I • •EXPERT SERVICE AND ADVICE ... BY QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL SALESMEN. . . . LJ\TEX FLJ\T · •AMPLE FREE PARKlptG ADJACEN'f TO ALL STORY •LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES ON EVERY ITEM. EVl,!IY DAY • 8400 PAINT AND DECORATING ITEMS ~YOU SAVE MONEY ... THE FIRST PRICE MARKED ON THE MERCHANDISE INDICATES THE PRICE FOR COMPARABLE QUALITY THE SECOND PRICE IS YOUR COSTlll , YOU SAVE Tt!E DIFFERENCElllll •MONDAY THRU FRIDAYBAMTOtPM n-.n 7days• Sni ... "'ts·SAruRDAYaA.M. Toa::ioP.M • : _,... ~ 1 •SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 11:30 P.M. EXTERIOR STUCCO MASONRY PAiNT CAii AlSO BE USED FOR AN EXTREMELY DURABLE INTElllOR JOB •CLEAN·UPWITH WATE R •1 HOUR OR YING •BRUSH OR ROLL •GOOD HIDING COMP. RETAIL OUR PRICE 99 · l~lERIOR • EXTERIOR WHITE & 4.50 DECORATOR COLORS GAL. CLEAN UP Wlftl WATERI PAihl CLEAN·UP WITH WATERI •1 HOUR DRYING RE.J\DY TO OSEI LJ\STS 12 YEARSI •FOR PLASTER, BRICK, & STUCCO .•SCRUBBABLE •BRUSH OR ROLL WHITE & COLORS COMP. OUR PRICE .. RETAIL 339 OUR PRICE OUR PRICE OUR PRICE OUR PRICE 98 .GAL COMP. RETAIL 6.25 99 GAL ·coMP. RETAIL 7.50 5.50 GAL. 99 Vi~'f L A CRY UC LJ\STS 8 YE.J\RS ·ViM'fl LJ\TEX SfMi·CLOSS flfAMEL 100%:PIJ"RE PRPPARPD HOUSE PAiNT Cll1RANTEED l·COAT LATEX HOUSE PAINT ' . •A TOP QUALITY EXTERIOR •DURABLE •SCRUBBABLE •INTERIOR •EXTERIOR . OUR PRI~~ , •FINE QUALITY •LINSEEO.OIL BASE GUARANTEED JP COVM ANY COLQR STUCCO.MASONRY PAINT •CLEAN UP WITH WATER • 30 MINUTES TO DRY •BRUSH OR ROLL •SCRUBBABLE PUREST WHITE & AN ARRAY OF COLORS! '. • FAST DRYING •BEAUTIFUL FINISH SPARKLING WHITE &COLORS • • INDSOR VINYl ASBESTOS . UR PRICE SPECIAL PURCHASE 1, 2c =~~~i~~~l~ECRON~ORS . •12" x 12" EA. COMP. RETAIL 190 FLOOR TILE OUR PRICE •ASSORTED ARMSTflONG ® -i~T~~i 399 .~~:~:: CASTILIAN VINYL 4'59 ~':;, ~~J~NG CUSHION FLOOR :Zll'E •FOAM BACKED •DECORATOR' COLORS . 3905 w x 1 ~· R00°MUSIZER~RUGS EACH , 12. oz. SPR.J\Y E.~AMEL major --lNAMI& c •TOUGH & DURABLE I 1·COA ' •IDEAL FOR ALL EXTE81~ W:(gO . , •PRt·MIXED, USE STRAi'G F M CAN •FOR STUCCO,.MASON~Y, AND WOOD •INTERIOR •EXT RIQR •CLEAN UP WITH WATER ' GAL. BRIGHT WHITE & COLORS BRIGHTEST WHITE IN YOUR METAL CONTAINER oWITH VAl.A:NCES . OUR PRICE •WOVEN WITl1 ACRYLIC YARN . •'BEAUTIFUL DECORATIVE QUALITY ' 3x4FT.. ........ 6.95 4x4FT .......... 8.99 3x6FT ... , .. _ .. 8.99 • USE IN ANY ROOf,! , COLORS: WOOD LOOK & WHITE 4x6FT .•....... 11.99 6x6FT ......... 17.99 PLJ\SliC · BU~l>S OVAL lUBE $ME MATCHSTICK SlYLE •AVOCADO 3 X 6 FT ........... --.--....2.19 • x & n :_ _______ z.19 6X6n.-.. -..:._. __ 4,19 8 X 6 FT·-··-··-··-·--·S.89 10X6FT---·---7.39 12 X 6 FT---··-··--·-8.99 • llDOOI ' OUTDOOI •WHITE • GREEN 3 X 6 FT __ ,,,_ .......... -.-1.59 , 4 X 6 Ff --·-······--1.99 · 8 X 6 FT.. -·--2.99 8 X 8 FT ·--··-4.49 10 X 6 FT--.......... -··-·-5.99 12 X 6 FT ........................... 7.99 • VlllLON CORD • I FOOT DROP & MANY NEW COLORS! PRE:J:~.~!!~ WALLPAPER o CRISP, NEW PATIERNSI 79c · ALL •ADDS ZEST TO ANY ROOM wALLCOVERINQ OUR PER SOLD IN COMP. RETAIL 4.15 PRICE ~1~~~· 2ROLLIOLTS FLOCKED •PRE· TRIMMED o GIVE ANY ROOM AN WALLDl\PER • ~~t~~¥'ut<J.'lhERNs r ft SOLD IN 2 ROLL BOLTS ONL V COMP. RETAIL 6.95 ·3!~ stNGLI ROLL Vil1\d ;::.;:~~~~D 0\JR PRICE2s· 9 n 1 L •GIVES ANY ROOM co111" WAll COVERINC AN ALL NEW LOOK r. . •GREASEPROOF RETAIL ~:01.9 ' SOLD IN Two ROLL BOLTS ONLY 4.69 ,.OLL 100% ®o,~ SHAC NYLON PILE ~II I; SELF· ADHESIVE =~:~s8HACKED CARPET TILE TWEED TONESI •12 IN.X '121N. A BIG VALUE I Standard Brands ~inl & Qecoraling centers ll9 =4:'~n the we~t ' . . . OPE!f 7.0AYS & 5 NIGHTS · MONOAY THRU FRIOAY, I A.M. TO 9 P.M .. SATURDAYS, 8 A.M. TO 6:30 P.M .. SUNOAYS, 9 A.M. TO 5:3D P.M. Santa Ana . · . long Beach 1 BLK. S~~F~A~~'1.10ELHll HuA'1n9ton Beach 2401 LONG B°EACH 8LVD. TELEPHONE (714l 54M517 •• I ~ 1% BLKS. so. OP WILLOW 6800WARNER AVE. NEAR GOLDEN WEST ... TELE,HONE(213ta7.31M Anaheim.- CORNER OF LINCOLN & LINDSEY 1 BLK. EAST OF BROOKHURST :rt:LEPHONl 17141.IU-1907 nLEPHONE {7141 842·3611 8635R2w~~ AT LAKEWOOD BLVD. TELE PHONE 12131 M1.Y13 ' la Habra -CORNER WHITTIER & IOAHO . · Z BLKS. E. OF BEACH·HACIEND,\ TELE' ...... .: l• •'> 111410I J .-, ' I I \ ' I I ! • . . . . . . • ,. ' ' ! ~ I • • • • . • • • • . . • ' ' } I { • • I ' I ' / - / ' • Thursdal', Ma) JO, 1973 Tempests NortUm-;rican. Tide Race• Re~ ' ' . Set · Sail Alnl>alic ..iu~r dlftll eel ·,.. liotl 11,. 11•1-lw ' Doflldlng · -Id clllmplaa Wiii-... u r l"' eac:1111d_..,ow.......,,11it (la.....,.ofNorolollY.C.ln ::=. .. :..,.lllN f e-!~ ~ t'::'°';~lacl= Duiea, Coon., the UDlted "'"°dozen ar ~ rtJOOlllllllJv•)m-; lllalol' Ol)l111pian In the clld 11poo -llln.tU1'4P,..11filL!ft.~P·m. l'tw 1eama taOl)t Iii! tllt 'l'tlllfl!ll latl Altelllt, will byplU 'ille ---""""llia.V1111'fVJowatl.b:Oln * ~ Auterf<tn Te la p I 1 I =,,J~ ti AIYC • """"" e v I GI tt*•ll lilllltl M«uJ 8nlllil llldQ, Eliogor t,i Bllcll * 1'..1inc~I'~~ ~'frHilioilil-tlll )lliU!M ~I automaUColly * -lloRurylltlilll'IUdti•IMl'ollWll.atllewportAw. * outer ii.~. loog, 611 lee! wide .... ., ~':'Napleo,ABYCof· * IAWIA4'liUllllttll!t!NY~•lldl .. tlllfl'llatHwy.atttaJ1ior * The event, sponsored b_y relattvely lllbt ......... 1111 · Buh1rtuatty all al Ille oilier * --llllWl\'ll~llllBlda .. A. BM!. ttSin Diogo ""'1• * Alamltoo Bay Yacht Club, " Tempell nuriiben nellffY "° 11dppers who lost to Foller In '* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *· * * * * * * amoog highlights o f In-lnternattonal cornpettton Wbo Ille final 0'1Jnpic Triall last.1_::....::..:...:....:...::_:...::.::_::_ _ _;_ ______ _ of small bOOt sailing'• twill· acc«dlng to ABYC olllctal1, Argyl Campbell of Kilb Like To Ask Andy tem1ttonal one-design u111ng an rated •mooc Ille elli. al ll(lftnc an opactecMo bi on on the West Coast this s"'11lg. · the world's one.<lesign ....,. bind at Lollt Jlucb,. lncludln Me a surement , registration petitors. The boat was dellgn-Bill .Co& Jr. al Naroton yJ. and practice racea a r e ed by Ian Proctor of England Anilb' KoltaneCkJ ol New York scheduled Friday and Satur-In 1963 as an all-out ractoc Jldl;· and Jim Unvtlle oi day followed by fi,ve days of madline and wu added to Ille Llrchmoot (NY) YC and Ille ractnc among members of one Olympic schedule In 1119. It 11, = w181' Coat troiJli1 est, mOlt demanding designs. l't'!garded as a class for agile, ·vc e Final standinp will be ba• eiperienced sailors only. ~~~~· iiiij;;;;;;;;;;--;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~- N avigati OD Unit Opens ~gftCDIT·· '. Makes House Calls Newport -Trophy Winner Mayor Don Mcinnis made the Jong land journey to Ensenada to preoent lhe Mayor of Newport Beach Trophy to John M. Krase, San Diego Yacht Club._who ,turned in the best performance In Class D of the Pacific Handicap Ractng ueet. Krase was the sklpper ol the 29·foot sloop, Gaviota. :a: 01-Cuttom Drapery SeMCe .... OPPICE CALLS TOOi f,... ftf(mcrf9s· Life Ja~ket Campaign ~o~t ~~~:.~~~~'· ~-=~.::::::.-"'::~ '540~'86 he ad~~A ~n'T Costa Mesa pte you trusted IO dean them. 84'L02JO The Department of Navlga-at all times," -· .,..=: = ~Cut-W;ndow Deconllln~ £", tion and-Ocean Development Rick.seeker aal<i Per• on~ ~=-=~ ~ • "Orapety Cleaning • Alt~tionr -Guadalupe Island Race Sendoff Carded Tonight UCI Takes (ONOD) bas started a cam-water skiing were coulll.ecf as -=.-=.:;::;: •Flame ProofinO • ln11.tranceCloim1 paign to persuade Callfcrnia persons on IJO&l'd for notation £.;:E.j~ ~ "-' boatmen to wear their ll!e device requirements. necause .=....=..::..; jacketa. ald belts are not acceptable 81 §..;;ii £ Altbolllh Callifornla and meeting legal requirement& inl---------------------------=----- UC Irvine won the Paci'fic federal laws require one Coalt Oali!omia, an approved device ·---·~--~""'.'----'!l'!'-----------""'.'-~,·i Guard approved device for muat be aboard for sklen1 , 1941 race was the famed 67-Coast Intercollegiate Saillng every peraon aboard all boats, wearing ski belts. \" \ J Sail Title skippers and crews invol ved Ill Balboa Yacht c I u b • s Guadalupe !Jland raCi! wlll be atven final in1tructlons and bon voyages tonJght at a gala .. nc1o11 dinner at the BYC clubboule._ ,fifteen oalllnc yachts - eight In Ocean Racing (!OR) and seven ln PacUlc Handicap CPHRF) .,,, scheduled to an· ' ....,. the -signal Saturday al noon w1Uch will · tend them oil-a 60l>mlle clrcult of the l!f!?n-rocl< off -Baja Caflfornfa. Tfte race will be non·stop with t h e Plrticipenll finishing o f f Balboa Yacht Club. · The Guadalupe Lsland race la new only in its modem con- cept. Loi Angeles Yacht Club co.nducted two races to the Island -the llrst in 1040 and the second ln 1941. lt was cancelled during the World War II years and never re- llcheduled. . BUT 11IE BYC race will be &ttrely · different from thooe two early races. Whereas the early races finished a t Guadalupe Island Cove, the BYC ~ace will only give ski~ pers and crews a di.!ltant look at the island a.s they circle it and start home. There were nine starters tn the 1940 race. It was rated as 393 miles, and all finished In light airs that p r e v a 11 ed throughout the race. Donald Douglu Sr .'s famed racing yacht End ymion was the . elap1ed time winner in slightly more th an 64 hours . In memory of that firs t race Dougl as has ded icated an Elldymlon Trophy for the first yacht to fin ish in BYC's race. Elapsed lime winner of the foot racing yawl Chubasco, CharnplonshJp at Mi!!Sjon Bay, neither federal nor state laws When asked what measures \·, ~ then owned by Bill Stewart of San DI.ego Sunday with ski~ require that they be worn. the state would take to ensure \. ~ LAYC It as a breezy race peJ raff MD~y 1Tbod mpson and "The majority of California compliance with the law, . ·.: .. ~. ·~ .. ;u,· · w e cv.:nna.n at the helm. boatmen can;r the required ruck.!ecker said: "Wereeently ~"'= 't that saw more than ha lf the 11 Runner·up in the regatta number of flotation devices.'' completed a eeriet of training \~ 'J~~t.· .. starters ducking for !ttelter was USC with ildppers. Peter said Guy Ricksecker, boating sessions for California peace '""~ before tile race was 24 hours .JVllio.n _and Benny Mjtcbell, 1afety and r__{g_ulatlon offlcerll who eriorce ~~ and third was San Diego Slate . maneger for DNOD, "but na· laws. All '1ii:li -illftie old. Cbubasco's ela psed time with skippers Jack Bateman Uooal etatlstlcs show 70 per· checking out boats for re-;/ was 31 ho~. and John Wanamaker. cent cl boatmen drowned ln quired Safety equipment thlJ 'I,. Communication! for the The regatta_ was tponsored 1971 had devices aboard but .suRi~~i:::__ :'.l.l:od ~-- race will be over a "ham'' by UC San Dlego. -did n~t use them , ·or used c~a '"""' radio network with Carroll D. _____ .:_____ them improperly. who ·ha\'e doub regariiln«i "It II only common sense to legal requirerilents to· obt8in 9. Hudson of BYC handling the K! J _ L;ke To· have children and nonswtm-copy or the "ABC. of the mobil unit aboard Commodore 1(.£8 " me rs wear flotation device!. Calltomla Boating Law.·~ It is George Hoedinghaus' escort Additionally, we encourage all available free by writing the boat, La Fiesta. on the A k And hunters and fishermen or department of Navigation and receiving end will ·be Chuck 8 J others using small, unstable Ocean Development, 1410 9th .. boats to wear their life jacket! St., Sacramento, 9$814. C.Otton of Newport Harbor i-;::::::::;::.;:;::;::;::;::::;::::::::::::::;;::;;;;::;::~;:;:::::;::;::;::;;a:;::=il Yacht Club. Th ey will handle YOU ARE Q~~-a! dally progress of the race. :a HERE IS the off I c i a I ALL INVITED starting 11.st: OCEAN RACING -Spirit, TO A ~·· ~' ~a~~ Robert O'Brien, Calltornia Yacht Club; Bright Star, William T. Pascoe I I I , Newport Harbor Yadlt Club; lnterme:uo, Jack Bibb, Balboa Yacht Club; Loco Vlente, Jim Seals, Balboa Yacht Club; Talisman, Robert Williams, Balboa Yacht Club; Swift, Jack Mallinckrodt, Balboa Yacht Clu.b; Tomahawk, John Arens, Balboa Yacht Club: Decision, Paul Berger, Del Rey Yacht Club. PHRF -Matangl, Ed Carpenter, BYC: Topaz, A.M. Moreno, Cabrillo Beach YC; Aegeaon, Frank Dr a d e r , J1ollywood Yacht CI u b ; Kismet, Bob Willis, California Yacht Club; Ner~id lloward O'Oanlel.3, Sant a Bar bar a Yacht Club; Leprechaun, Wjltney Collins, Long Beach Yacht Club. of Jack la Lanne's COMING ATIRACTIONI NOW SERVING THE COSTA MESA / SANTAANA COMMUNITY. • ., . " ~~------~--~ silverwoods TAKE ADVANTAG~ OF OUR SPECIAL PRE-OPENING Sansabelt II: the ultimate double knit slacks Your Choice of Pleat T1keyout plc>.I Whltl'tl'<e• one ot our :ID l11tc1D.,. P~• Mtl yoOll' t11t1 b\IOI l ·l<ngl•I Ofl 0"1 lot Motl'! •• , ar>clM•I SQ< I She'll IO•I the ge11~111 [•tt)'onl will love the plD! • '"",... • •-flllllllrw • lt.r~ • i..11-1.1-c-• C....o..t""°' • IM••Mlll!llp& • h111•lflllt • lltlO~llM • s.pr-1!1t ci.r, • Ea t1std • w .. ~ *"r • MrtltlU C.. : $iplfl'll -• c.-t etlld • '11111 • t•llll en-... .,rM ........, • ,...... • tlltNrTJ • ''"' """"" ............. . ,..... .... ., ....... • ~....... • ,..,...,.,,....,. • CRllllll~ • tltMC..... . ........ . a-tttm ~ ..... ~1)~81 :.-:=.i-::::~.~""t•"· ~ Ir~ ~ .. °""'"".,_"'-on""'d"" 11 I""'" A Miiie "°'' IAllfO -_, -Oii OU111 0--.$(1! . . ...•......... "\ ,,...,.cNEWPORT''iEAC.H "~· i e~l"li"~~ • 31 I 0 Newport Blvd • '"'0 "" 0 " I • • WITHVOU... • PHASE #30FFER. Thia 11 the total average coat If . you enroll only on a course designed Individually for you . · JACK lA lANNE'S """/"""HEALTH SPAS HUNTINGTON BEACH ! ?:;::;,:::.E,:, ,. 9791 A~ams ! ::::;'..'E::-.;:: COSTA MEsA/ SANTA ANA FOUNTAHIN 'VABWd y I ;;;;,;~ =. 3611 SOUTH BRISTOL , .. !·Ji f 6155 _lrbor lVd.-: ••• 1a. 1m • Construction si te at corner '-------------""••••••••••••••~ Brlstol and MacArthur .. l...,.~;.;m:.;;;;;;;.;;.:;;-..~~....;;,_. ' ' CALL NOW 919·4JaO for y•ur c.oaw• •a.11 10·00 r.M. .,. .,.ft .. . Sansabells by Jaymar look arid feel better thin ordinary slacks. It's the unique Inside elaati· cized ·waistband that makes the difference. It bends and twlals with you. It holds your slacks up, your shirt down and helps keep thet flat stomach look. Tailored in trlm, new model with one button extenoton waletband· and ellghtly flared bOttoms. Select from distinctive , textured aurtaoedoubla knits In solid colors. Navy, black, tall, btoWn, burgundy, white. 35.00 Thfl Ul'llque lrlp\e·Zl!ill'lt webbl,.. In 81111ai:..11 u pttwlcl•• • Unlel\19 kind of comlonl 45 FASHION ISLAND • ~EWPORT CENTER • NEWPORT BEACH .. , \ 1hu'1d>y, Ml)' 10, IW3 ' Skylah~s Itinerary • CAPE KENNEDY. FI 1 . astronauts open hat c bes June 10, 10 a.m. - (AP! _ em are !tlabllghts betw,.. their comman<I shi p Altrooaull Coonld ind Kerwin ror the first mll&lon to Skylab, and Skylab. They b o • r d put on spocellllll and ll10llt the nation's rtrst manned Skylab one! start two do;'• or outllde Ute....., station to space ataUon _ all times movlni ·in 1cUv1tieJ. Th,ls ln-aatber expoted JUm frorp. an Pacific DlyUght: eludes powering up. stowlna: array of 111 a 1 t r o n o m y equipment and food and con· teleecope1. ?t1onday, 10:30 a.m. -nectlng air clrculatlon ductl. J 12 • .. rn.r U ed ••"! b launched on une , .,;.., a.m. -~~ nmann ~• Aft e r n1 o vl ng, t he I and Sal • rocket Into a -· deactlv11I•• lhe .... ab urn " •""' 'IStronauts' \\'Ork schedule wlll ... _,, mile-high orbit. vary !rom day 10 day. Each prepartnc It fO< a 5May vlslt Tuelda;'. JO a.m. -A doy's work plan will be startln1 In AUIUlt by the Sa turn 18 rocket launches created by ~11sslon Control Skylab 2 crew, Conrad, Weltz DAILY l'llOT f astronauts Charles Conrad Jr., and passed up to tbe cfew the and Kerwin board the Apollo ii 'titit Paul J. Welti and Dr. Joseph night before. The schedule wlll li~s~hl~p,~un~tloc~k~and~mov~~·~•~wa~y~~~~~~~ii:iii;i~-+---: p. Kerwin lnto orbit aboard a revol ve around elCperlments In from the space atation. modlfled Apollo spacecraft. · medical. scientific, ea rt h S:40 p . m . The resources. aslronomy an d MOTH.ER'S DAY PLATES UAllll1.· astrona uts, after a complex materials processing fields . . series of rocket r Ir Ing s , The astronauts will be .-- rendezvoua and dock with the awakened at 7 a.m. each day Collecten ,..._ Por Skylab space statlon. The and retire at 10 p.m. They will All OIC•"IN spacemen then eat diMer and get a day off approximately sleep, still aboard the Apollo onct a week and will be given In att. C-Iii-. QllN. rl lods r ti nd ........... , NII 14loltM PRIME CRIW FOR FIRST MANNED SKYLAB MISSION SET FOR \\ONDAV era · p<r or """'" on a ~ Left to Right, Joteph P. Kerwin, Ch1rl11 "Pete" Conr1d Jr. and Paut .. ~J::.· ~W:.:•:::ll:_• ________ w_ed_n_e_sd_a:.cy,_6_a._m_. __ T_h• __ •a_ti_ng_. __ ---~~~;::;;~~!!""!!!!""!!!!""!!~!!""!!~~~~~~~ Cui.sine: Tubes Obsolete, Astronauts S~elect Diet.s CAPE KENNEDY (UPI ) - With lobster therm idor, ma sh· ed potatoe1, aspara gus and Ice cream on the menu , space food for the men ·aboard the Skylab orbiting laboratory has come a long way si nce the days of squeeze tube meals. Each member 0£ the three crews that will man skylab during the next eight months has &elected _hia own menu from the same kind of food he eats back on earth. DH. MALCOLM Smith, head • of the food and nuturition of· fice at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, s a i d because or the duration of Skyla b flights -the first for 28 days and two for 56 days - the astronauts will requlre a hl&her quality food than on previous missions. "With skylab, it's extremely important that we give them aomethlng ~they-like;"-Smith 11aid . "Not because we necessarilY. want to cater to them, but because It's very Standby SpaCecraft Skylab Mission Rescue Prepared CAPE KENNEDY (UPU - For the first time in the U.S. space program, the space agency will be prepared to rescue the three S k y I a b &Jtronauts if something hap- Rtns to threaten their return di earth. ; The response time to a call for help would r an g e anywhere from '8 day11 at the beginning of the firs t 28-day mission to 10 days at the end of one of the two plaMed 58- dlly n~ts. The space station h a s enough provisions to sustain three astronauts until help ar- rives. Three Skylab missions are scheduled over an eight·month ~clod, With the pilots using Apollo opeC<lCl'art to fly to and from the atation. The first three astronaut! are to spend 28 daya Jn orbit~ and they will be followed by two 56-day fllghts. 1£ there is trouble during the flights, engineers would use the Saturn lB rocket and Ap0llo command ship being ·ptlputd to launch the next Skyla b crew. Launch prepara· tlona would be accelerated and the Apollo would be! converted quickly to a fi ve-man ship. It wouid be rtown up to Skylab by-two astronauts. Important to our cx- i:eriments." A NUMBER of biomedical experiments to test the effect of prolona:ed weightlwness on men in space wHI be con- ducted aboard Skylab and scienti sts want to k n o w precisely the amount o l nutrients eaten. The amount of calcium, phosphorous . sodium , magnesium---ud-protein con· sumed daily must not vary by more than 2 percent. There are 18 different meals planned for each astronaut. Every sl,xth day each man will start preparing his menu. IN ADDMON to lob!ter and ice cream , the crew will have such treats as fllet mignon, veal and barbeque sauce, spaghetti and port with scalloped potatoes. Because or the cost or development technology, a meal aboard Skyla b costs about $25 per man. That's about half what a meal for one crewm an cost on A p o 11 o missions. The Skylab astronau ts will eat in a wardroom, on a ta ble equipped w I t h restraining devices to prevent the pilots from drifting away in the weightless envirQnment . "· THE ASTRONAUT assigned as chef for the day consults the planned menus, removes the r ight foods from lockers and freezers in the wa rdroom and places the cans and con· tainers in cavities on the table. Three of the eight cavities can 'heat food. The chef sets a timer that tells when the food is .ready. Hot and cold water comes from three separate hoses in the center or the table. Astronauts Will Play 'Repairman' Alter the lllird Skylab Is ~-------~1 CAPE KENNEDY (UP[) - Skylab astronauts are goina to be space maintenance men us- ing tools and materials 1lmllar to U-In hardware stO<es or Mme worbhopa. THE SPACE station, lo be manned for ~ weeks by three different crews this year, wtll carry more than 100 hand tools, moaUy common items, In two bOxu, 15 by II by 9 In· cbes. The space station allO will have an assortm111t of lights, b u I b s , batteries, switches, seals, sensors and detectora for replace ment purposes ln the tlll-foot loag apaceeraft, the largest ever flown. COMMON TOOLS aboard will be several type1 of ad- justable p 1 i e r s , adjuatable wrenches, open and box end wrenches, a hammer, a vlae, 1Crew drivers and d r I v e sockets of various kinda. Also stow ed with the tools will be tweezers, grid snaps, twine, tape, sclaaon and knives, and repair tn1terlal1 like Teflon tape f Ml aeallng putty. launched, a spare rocket and spacecraft will stand by for reacue work. Project orflclals decided to add reocue capability because of the PoMibiiity that t!le Ap01lo might he disabled while docked to the Skylab for long periods. Apollo c o m m a n d ships have not flown in space for longer than 14 days, but on two of the Skylab mi1111lons they will be req uired to work after 56 days up there. The command ship has been modified .and tested for Jong 11tays in apace and project of- ficials don't expect any troubles. The Ap0llo ls equipped with backups for all vital syst~, 1uch aa propulaion1 electrical power, command-module OJ· ygen, stablllzaUon, untlocidng. U the Skylab Itself abould have a maj<r failure, the astronauts would return to the command ship, The one kind of accident most feared la fire or ex- pl osion. But officials said steps have been taken to avoid both cataslrollhel and SkYlab is also equfpped with fire detection senson and fire ex- tingulahers. Area Firms Contribute CAPE K ENNEDY , Fla. (AP) -Major con- tractors involved in the _. Skylab progtam a r e McDonnell Douglas Corp., which built the orbi~ing labor atory, and Rockwell Interna tional. w h i c h developed the mod ified Apo1l1> moonsh.lp to ferry astronauts to and from the station. Martin Marietta Corp. built several sy1tems and is responsible for systems engineering all d In· tegratlon, and IBM has a major role in guidance and contro l systems. Th e Boeing Co. is major contractor on the Saturn 5 rocket which will launch the unmanned S k y I a b , while Chrysler Corp. has main responsibility ror the Saturn lB rocket which will launch the three as tronaut teams. Space Sleep to Be Analyzed Slumber Trouble May Affect Efficiency HOUSTON (tiP!) -One or the medical tests to be conducted aboard the Skylab space station wlll try to determine how well man sleeps In weightless space. ASTRONAUTS ON SHORTER fli&hts In past hato had some trouble slcepln(-sound- ' ly. And If alee plessness occun on longer Bights, doctora aay a pilol's performance coold be au .. 1ec1. Dr. J.D. Frost Jr. of Baylor College or M~e said performance cbances cauaed by nillderate sleep loo are hard to meature, /, but "from past performance, we feel sleep may be even more a problem on longer flights like Skylab." THE FIRST THREE Skylab pilots wili remain in space 28 days and two later crews will ..,.ch live in apaceJO< Ill days. To meuure the amount and quality of sleep, one astronaut on each milslon will wear a sltull cap while he sleeps. The cap Is equipped with devices to measure brain activity that •bows whether a tnan 11 slee~ in& and eye movement that tells how well he II •leer>lna. BELOW WHOLESALE WA1BB.DW WBDlfSl\lf · Pl\l&ES IDW ON 08\TIHlll IN lBE RESIDfBllAl INlB\IOBS OEPl. OTHEa ORlSTIC PRICE !IOTHlllG HElO Btilti g~~HE REttllllllMG 111- CUl HAS BEEM T ••WE Clll REDUCE THE SIZE Of VEllTORY, SO TII•• E THIRO ITS PfttSEllT THIS oEPARTMEw"l ~E:: THE SPACE fOR OTHER AREA BECAUSE R MOTHlllG BUT MERCHAMDISE. ~t~~~:f stoCK IS OM SALE FIRST QUAL~r ¥ALUES WE ARE OffERIMG · ~~~~:: ~UPLICATED AM'fWHERE ELSE! 111 MONDAY MAY 14 HUNDREDS OF ADDITIONAL NEW ITEMS HAVE BEEN BROUGHT IN FROM OUR WAREHOUSES TO GIVE THESE FINAL DAYS WIDER APPEAL WE URGE YOU TO COME IN AGAIN BECAUSE IT WILL BE A MIGHTY LONG TIME 1 BEFORE YOU'LL SEE INCREDIBLE SAVINGS LIKE· THIS' ONCE THEY'RE GONE, THAT'S IT ••. SO BE EARLYi • • CO STA MESA ••• 30 88 BRI STOL SA N DIEGO FREEWAY AT BRISTOL STOR E HOURS MON.t•fll. * SAT.&Sll. 10t•f 11 te1 I ' ' '1 1 " ( ... = .. • , r I f • , ,. • l I I I. \ • ThutsdQ, May 10, 1973 , Aging Panel Studied Coun ty Seeking Approach t.o Aid Elde rly Count9 Law Buildings, Old and New The old county courthouse, (lower left) was built in 1900 and housed two large superior courts. To- day it is used by the plannin g department, press and ttie human relations commission. It became a state historical landmark in 1971 and 1s located at 21 1 Santa .(\na Blvd. The new courthouse Oower right) which opened in November, 1968, houses 29 Air Officials Slated A t Aviation Seminar Superior courtrooms, a jury assembly room, nine municipal rourts as well as many other county of- fices. The builcling cost $14 million and is at 700 II:ivic Ce nter Drive '\Vest. The law library, located at 515 N. Flower St., contains 66,000 volumes, shelved in three stories of the building. The facility cost $850,000 to build. RUFFELL'S- uPHoLsTERv Whff Yo• Womt ,,,. .... 1 '22 Harbor lmf. Lyle's -1s soon ANAHEIM -A general aviation seminar will be held here Friday morning to give Orange Countians an overview of the airline industry and its importance to the country. Co1ta Mnt1 -548·025' featuring a question -and -1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 a n s w e r excha11ge between[ii Following the morning panel of speakers will be a luncheon Sa 1ita Aita' s Air Quality 01i Decli ne From Wire Services Orange County legislators and newsmen on vital issues facing the state and county .. Both events are sponsored by the Orange County Chamber of Con1merce and will be held starting at 8: 15 a.m. with a continenta l breakfast at the Anaheim Con- vention Center. Speakers at the aviation seminar will include Robert Bresnahan. county Director of aviation. to speak on airport finances; A. L. McPike of McDonnell Douglas, to speak on aviatio.n ecology; Thomas The City or Santa Ana is one Cu rrigan. a vice-president of of a minority or regions across Continental Airlines. to speak the nation still experiencing on the role of the airport in a upward trends in dust and developing economy, a n d smoke pollution. a federal Arvin 0 . Basnight. director of study says. the Federal A v i a t i o n Administralion's Los Angeles The Environn1ental Protec-regional headquarters. tion Agency said that while For further infor1nation and STILL ONLY $2.65 A MONTH Even On Price Alone The DAILY PILOT Delivers The Most For The Orange Coast SUBSCRIBE NOW 642·4321 IOr pi.tN "'9 DAILY PILOT offke 111 Y"' COM•••ltyl some of the nation's most tickets call 541).3220· scenic wildlife areas are also =~~~~~~===~===================~! experiencing upward· trends in smoke /jnd dust pollution, the majority of both urban and rural regions have been im· proving in air quality since 1960. Clialle1ige tlie N eivs Quiz " ... 011.Satzi rday's Fa mily Page ""' '°" wllf 4tlllMl4 416.e tMu.,-•«,le7 7 Do 6 0 ••• Rapidly & easily under doctor's supervision Pou nds and Inches Go F A S T ! . WEIGHT CLINIC, INC. 2345 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar l11e•r M•cArH.vr 11.,.d.) 23861 El Toro Rd., Suite 202, El Toro Ho•rs: ' te I; 2 to 5 -MOllMy tin ffW., Coll 67l·llZI 111 Coro'"' -er -5""'4240 11 II Ten Cllll1c •IM i.uo• Ill hlOIN ,iJR~• -1"'1: CMllfMll, SWltti 4 -~ SANTA ANA Establishment of an Orange County oflicLal cOWlCil or com· mission on aging was discuss· ed thoroughly by the Board of Supervisors Wednesday but definitive action was postpon- ed. INSTEAD OF establish1ng the commission as urged by Supervisor David L. Baker, the board decided to appoint a task force headed by County Administrative Officer ltobert Thomas to recommend the best method to attack the pro- blem of providing needed services to senior citizens. Fourteen persons addressed th board on the subject and most had a different approach but all agreed that something should be done to provide bet- ter transportation, housing, nutrition, financial aid and Prisoner Event Set A panel discussion on "The Right.s of Prisoners·• and a showing of ,the movie "Attica" will take place Saturday night at the Forum of Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. The evening wi ll focus on conditions at Orange County Jail, where some prisoners have complained of mistreat- ment, according to the Orange County chapter of t h e American Civil Li berties Union (ACLU), which is sponsoring the movie and discussion. ' Admission is free to the 8 p.m. event. health care to the aged. TllE TASK force headed by '11locnas L! to include representatives of the county Health, Menta l Health, and Welfare departments, the county Medical C.enter, Hous- ing Authority, Human Rela· tiorui Commi:;sion, the county Transit District and t h e Citizens Direction F I n d i n g Corrunission. Su~rvi.sor Ralph Clark who proPQSCd the task force also said that Thomas could in- clude any representatives of private organization be thought necessary. Joanne Hogue, r e g i o n a I representative for f i v e Southern California counties of the California Commission on Aging said the stage agency was willing to provide assistance to local areas on the problems of senior citizens and that any local agency ap- 9 St udents S ue Co llege pointed shooJd iil<lude older people and lhf .agfncles serv· ing lhem. SHE SAID the present unof· llclal Orange County COOncil on Nd.na was one of the most e!fect1ve-in the state. In tbiS recommendation she was backed by Robert· Green, executive director or the coun· ty Mental Health Association. Others who spoke in favor ol an agency to aid the elderly were DJn o •canagban, direc- tor of the Comn1unity Action Council; Alfred Adan1s of the Community Relations Com· mission: Shirley Modiano of the League of Women Voters: ORANGE COUNTY B031·d OKs Drainage Construction 1 Dr. E. W. Klatte. county LOS ALAMITOS director of mental health: Construction qf drat n ag e Granville Peoples. c o u n t Y facilities on Bloomfield Street director of welfare and Larry lo relieve flooding has been Crisco of ·the Allied Senior approv~ by tbe Orange Cowi· Citizens Club. ....___ ty Boa.Jiid of s~visors. ALSO Jlrtl Carbray, of the The board approved in· National Cowtcil of Senior stallation of 1,500 feet of rein· '. of forced concrete pipe along Citizens; Mark Vogel the Bloomfield from K at e 11 a Santa Ana Senior .Citizens Avenue through the Southern Club; Sam Martin, Westmin-Pacific Railroad right-Of-way ster Commission on Aging: at an estimate cost of $146,000. E. W. Ekstrand, 1 ea de r Flood control officials said of a group P r 0 vi di n g that even moderately heavy transportation for sen i or rainfa11 led to flooding of citizens, Henrietta Winteraub. streets in the area and block· SANTA ANA-Nine students of the Orange County Central h I · d. I I ing access to local schools. w o c aim 8. parame 1ca co -Labor Council. and M a x I f ·1 d t t · led Bids will be opened on June ege a1 e o mee Its p ge Dreyer, of the Seal Beach that jobs wou ld be availabl~ Leisure World Senior Citizens _4_· ~iiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiii~- after graduation have sued the League. I facility for $190,000 in Orange,-:;;;;i~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Counly Superior Court. I t· ;• FOii LATE5T LEASING TIPS They name the American College of Paramedical Arts and Sciences of Santa Ana and operator William J. Anthony in an action . containing the claim that they were assured of jobs with a starting pay of no less than $600 a month.· Mr Chips 531-0607 '72 Pinto or Veg1 $59.65 mo. 36 OEL PRIVATE TllST FUNDS AVAILABLE FOR REAL ESTATE LOANS 1sl & :2nd TRUST DEEDS $1.500 To $1!50,000 Uf> TO 1111"' LOAHS ON TRUST DfEO COl.LATaW. RWl'OlfT t:QUITY fUIKle N•wpott C.nt.w 620 N&111port c.ni.r Dr"9 Hewporl Ekl•ch, C•lil. f714) ~ llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!!! g -DOUBLE KNIT TRIO ~ = -§ BLAZER SUIT WITH CONTRASTING SLACKS § ---------------------------------------------------------------·------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The suit works and plays, never collects wrinkles, only compliments. The slacks are coordinated to team up with the suit jacket. And either suit pant or slack can go it alone. We always have fashion you can bank on. Our minimum prkin9 policy guarontws you this. Just aH: any of our cU1tOm.WSt TRIO ---TRI01 --- TRIO DOUBLE KNIT SUIT PLUS DOUBLE KNIT SLACK A $125 3 PIECE WARDROBE 00 BANKAMERfCARD MASTtRCHARGE AMERICAN EXPRESS OELSCHER'S ;: HUNTINGTON BEACH ANAHEIM --------- HOELSCHER'S Vondl!fmOSls 77 Huntington Centtr _ Be«h & Edinger (71 4)892-3374 HOELSCHER'S \londermosn 447 North LoorG Anohe1m Ctnter (714) 774-8291 \ ' COSTA MESA HOEL SHER"S 3333 B"slol St SOtJth Coas t Plata (7141540.4940 • ORANGE HOELSCHER'S -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------= -----------------2104 N. Orange Mall = Mall ol Orange =: 17141998-2261 = -·-= LOS ANGELES PASADENA GLENDALE ALHAMBRA RIVERSIDE 3 : H0£lSCHER'S HOflSCH£R'S HOElSCHER'S kirk's HOO.SCHER'S Vorcl1nnoi1s McGrath Olson - -Wilshire & Fi9utroa 615 Eost (olorodo 81vd. 215 North Glendale Avt. 245 fost Mo1n Street 3835 Main Strttt = = Hilton Hole! Downtown fo~hion Cen1er Downtown Oownto = m 11 11 11111111 1ii1·111i1111111 11111lii.1ii1111111111111 ii ii 11ii111111111111iiiii ill 1111 111111 111 1 11iliffifii1 111111 iii ' 1 1\ ' t ' • 1 p n s 3! B n d J ti t t • • ~ • l ' • ' I . ' ~ I • I ~ : : Thundu, M1y 10, 197' DAILY p!LOI' 1 ,Pro~st lJplaeld SU.te StaiBtics I . ~Sri\.ervisors Nix Enlarged K~nnel . Court Filings in County on Ri 4 SANTA ANA -A use permit lo allow the onl111 .. ment of an uillln& bMt1 ln Slnla•Ana Heights 1rom alx lo :io· dogs was revoked by the Boord of Superv!Jon Wed- nesday. The board took the action despite a V/i<><Ojls appeal from Jo Ann Van Andale, owner of the kennels. SllE SAID Santa An1 Heights By TOM BARLEY CM ... 0.ll't !Jlllt lltff were dllpooed o/ duJ'lni 1971-LGcal J"""" have polnled Councll noted, jlldglhlps were n in the local Superior Oourt ..,, the lhatp contrut be"""'1 up by 6 per<enl but the A 20-year u.oo of mounUn& -en Increase of bettor than 1 the Or80f• COUnty martup In 1ver1ge C!Hngs i:er judge was the only area left In the fiUngs in Calilornla'1 court& peroont on the provlou.o year's dtlpolltlo111 Ind tbo ltltlwlde deellntd lo l,109 from 1,191. county for kennele near the came 1o an end In 1972 with telly of !l,497. 1a1n of Juat O.t -t from The lf?l flill"' hid also populated ereu from'•whlcll Orange County Superior Oourt the invtouo )'tit. docllnod from thl lotal ol !;19 CU!tomers come. She aald her ORANGE COUNTY one of a few exceptions tn an \ Bul local lawyers have fllln&1 .per SUperlor Court dogs wei:e locked up al niBJ>t overall 1n1lysle thal added up M •~00~ • pointed out lhal the lncrt1oe judge In lf/O, and II any barked they were ...... _______ _, lo a decline of I percent. on~n w9 Cit below the increue in n-ltllllllcs ere oflen US· silenced lmmedJately. Sliperior Court bench strtnlth ed by 1S10ClaUoni and in· Miss Van Aradale said there 11IE COMPAlllSON' Is Facili•ty In Orange County-up by nve dlvlduals who challenge the were other keMels in the revealed in a state JudJclal jud1e• or almoet 20 percent growlnt bench strength in neishborhood to which the Sk } G ts Coune!J report based on <+ from tbe 1970-TI roster Of 24 Callfomla's wperlor courts on resident• did not objecl. y ar e statistics submlu.a by court In Lawsui' t jurlels. the sroundl th•t more judges THE BOARD in· revoking . administrators for the period ire doln& leu 'Nork. her UH pennil upheld en •P-p 'd July I, 11'!1 tltroulh June :IO, THAT TOTAL was recently peal by a neighbor, Jack resl ency 1972 -the latest authorltaUve SANTA ANA -A 1talo increUed lo ll with the ap-ORANGE COUNTY'S boast Mullan of 2031 Mesa Drive. analysis made avallable by the agency bu sued Monttuarl polntmenll ot Superior Court that It i!I far ahead of othl'r Margaret Btset of 21to SANTA AN'A -Mortin A. 1ta.te aaency. Schoolhctlle of Oranae County judges Everett Dfckey and H. major California counties in Orchard Drive, said other ken-~kylar of the Anaheim City Stltewlde1 me 1uper1 0 r for more than $11,000 in a Warren Knight. terms o! bringing lawsuits to LOI ANOllLlll !,618, San l>llF .... Frlncilco Md .., Btmardlno Md • A11meda Counl)' mt-a 1•1111 ,. .. Or1n11 COUlll1 'lllLllf • \he tough~ :11 tet1111 ol ..,,_ 31! of the S,111 sentenced in being reductd lo level Policeman Cleared nels In the area were In School District has been courts reported m ,212 filings Superior Court action that Statewide, the JU d Jc i a I trial appears to be justlfled by shambles and that dogs bark· in 1971-71, 1 decline of 1 per-diarges the facWty with the Judicial Council report. I~~~~~= ed all night. She said kennels elected president or the cent from the previous year's railure to .pay its employee' M h* Only 84 civil matters \\'ere !r should be in an Industrial Orange County School Boards record high. The total In wages. Punch BC me awalllns !rial on June 30, 1972.1 MOTHER'S-DA'(' In Thefts area, not one devoted largely Aslloclation !or the' lt73-74 Orange County was 34,304 for Named with the schoolhouae a drop of 411 fron1 the 130' AT nd to residences . .school year. the same period1 up by ·177 or as defendant. m· the lawsUit Purchase OK'd recorded at the san1e tin1e in! VIKINGS BEVERLY MUILAN added He 11 Joined on the executive .6 percent on the 1971 figure. filed by the law enforcement the previous year. By com· SANTA ANA -A fonn er board b 0 Co Cou ird f th t t • Di 1••-of ••-A ANA Th parison. Los Angeles had 238. "entertainment" to the hear-Y two range ast Ora111e 11ty came th' arm o e I a e I v e.IY'' t\Jft.ll & e policeman arrested and charg-Ing by playing 1 recording of a school board members, Robert heh.Ind Loa Ang~u and san Labor are 1'flrtin F. and purchue of a M,765.95 IBM San Diego had 101, S11n Fran· _ fld with petty theft after he multitude ol dogs_howJtna:_Hur_~t ~r the cap 1st r 8 no Diego countle.s {n the filing .,9udslt. Rotton, Identified as 1ummary punch machine by ci.!lco had 301 and Riverside allegedly solicited donations to whlch she said had been taped Unified SChOOl DlirrlCfi1 vice--tables 6Ut wu aecond--only to -o-perat0i'1 of the facility. the Regiatrar-of--Voters -has had 96. memorial fund! for two Inside her home. president and Mary Hix of the Los Angeles 1n most olher Pay clalma outlined in 14 been approved by the Orange It was the same slorv In the Orange County lawmen killed Supervisor Ron a Id w. Fountain Valley Schoo I ana lyses prepared by the CIU!es of action listed by the County Board of Supervl1or1. crimina l trial dlvi.!lion "'Ith 2-18 last year has been cleared of Ca.!lpers agreed that •'It District as secretary. Robert Judicia l Council. · atate rana:e from '3,708 to Regiltrar Dlvld L. Hitchcock cases awaiting !rial In the the charges in Santa Ana doesn't take 40 dog.!I to drive Lindsay of the Centralia $29.18. All are on behalf of aaid the new punch machine local Superior Court. down hv Ro11t !lief, IHff t-teM, l ·l·Q Rik, 51[Mtli•ttl Sw9di1h M••t 1111' V•rlety .ol .S..•ltd1 _ Uolt-$1.lf CMILD. UJllDt1rU.11.t1 - 0Pl!N 11 NOON TD I P,M. municipal court. you crazy one will do It. I have School District was elected AltfONG TIIE~I we dis· employes demanding the would aid in the more rapid 201 from the 429 registered in l 141 I. ~'C It. Judge Robert Rlc~es ruled -~hl~d~ex~pe~n~ence~~oo~L~ido~l~1l~e~.";;;;~~ea~s~ur;er~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~pos~it;i0111~;w;h;•;re~l3;,850~;co~s;et~;P•;y;m;e;nt;o;f;ba~ck~w;•;ges;;.;;;;;;t•~bu~l~a~U~on~of~v~o~ti;ng;;re;•;ul;t•;·~;;'h~e~p;r;ev;to;u;s;y~ea~r ........ ~;;;;c~ .. ~··~M·,..:;~'~-'4~l4~=== there was insufficient evidence to open the non-jury trial of John D~J\irby, 50. He dismiss· ed all charges Includin g misdemeanor allegations or • fraudulently soliciting. ': Police who booked Kirby ; said he was raising as much 'i as $200 and $300 a day by WI· , Ing telephone sollcilora lo ob- ~ taln funds from c o u n t y 't businessmen. They said the ~-donors were told the sums raised would be used · to eatablish memorialJ.und.LID the names of the slain or- "flcers. They said Kirby w a s re.!lponsible for the publication of the "Law Enforce?nent TI.mes" and that he also used the publication to seek dona· tlons via advertisements plac- ed by the donors. Rape Trial. Scheduled _ SANTA ANA -A Laguna ;o Hilla man accused of illegally "'entering an El Toro apartment and raping a wonJ#Ul at knife· ,,.Int has been ord>red lo ·faco - '. trial Jqij. 2 In Orange County · fiupertor Court. Judge James Turner set the trial date for Dennis Dale Gilbert , 23, of 25261 Cousteau Drive. Gilbert is held in coun· ty jail with bail set al $10,000. Death Notices IELLIOfT ~11111• Corey Elliott. ""'""' of Laouna 1 11 0.11 of du1h, M•'I" t, 1rn. survlvw llUUNin.t GtonM ei. e1 Iott. o1 1ri. llOm•I brofher, A~~I Cor...,, Al'lla, 1Hlornl111 nltc,, L n~• Cjr•v. Loi ncitlll. Mtmorl1I 11r ct1 wl I be htld '""!y ,May ul. 11 AM, P11clllc. Vltw htllt , MtwPOrt uetch:i Ftr'1Uv sue; .. 11 wtihlng to rnakt rnemorlal con. trJ 'I°"'' plttM co:ii\trlbutt to the ~m.r ctn C.lnctr S.OClfY; P1cUlc Vl1w ertuary, 01rtctoro1i1o' Jtrry O. Lont. 615 Jasml111, Cjllllt dtt Mar. 01t1 of de1th, May t. 1t n . urvlv.ct ~ ""IN, Hele!!/ llOn, Mlcht Long, awtllJ 0.IJ!lhltn, Ll,le lndl and Perrin•, dtl Man two r1ndchfldre11. = l1mnv Nl"lkel wuf bl htld i<rl· d1v, Mly JI. A PM, f1'1tll!c Vlaw Mtmorl1I 1111'11. 1"1cfflc View Mortu1ry, Dlrkfor1. 1rHAtLllN COl'?ltlla 1cenri11 SChlblt(n.I ~· 53; mldtnt of COii• M11•. ~•• ot de11h, IMV f, ltn. Survlv9d b~O.~hltr, Su11n J11n1 '°"' Dontld D. h•b In, bo!h 01 COllll M-; mother. ,M'11 _~ftOJ• ... , •• tr,Un1, 1(1ns.1s; ,_ brotMr• •nd Ofll o ~riwate 11r1Wft~'M!'Ylc1J wlll bl d rlday, 11 AM, P1clllc Vltw r 1 Ptrk. Ftmllv 1ugg .. t1 tholt l\D lo 1!11kl memor!t1 cqnlrlbullons, ~11 Cotllrl!Klll 10 w; Amil' lean Cancer 1Cllty1..0r1ne1 CIMI Uni!, 1US6 lrvln1 ~·· 11JSttn. 1"1cr c Vie# Mortuary, rtclon. IHll"A•D Otor;1 M. Shflllnl. All'l•lll, ol f06 19ll'l It,, H1.1111ln111<1n B•lltll. 1>,t. of dtalh, M1v f, 1m Sul"ll~ by WI.fl. Mery; tllret r.'' atr11d, Gl lf'I •nd Ofl.roe Sh81lrd, of Hun11nQ!on 8teel'l1 ttl,.. dll.l!I~'-" Y11 M11 Mor1sf Mtrv L. Brown 1NI 1'1aN1trt! A. 11 ln'I tw0 tl1t1rs, Oiill ,,.~rd and Lt~rt CrofOoh numfl'OUI El. ctllhlren anCI 11rt•t-or1ndcl'l1I~. CM Wiii bl IM!ld illurday, 11 , !hi Chli>el. Smllht Mortutry, 0 fk· ..... ARBUCKLE & SON' WESTCLIF'F MORTUARY 4f1 IC. 11th Ill., Colla M ... 11311181 BAL TZ-dRG!RON' FUNE!W. HOME Corona clel Mar ,,. __ Co1la M11a 111-2'14 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Colla Mesi LI 8-!<33 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1711 La11111 CUyta Rd. ,_, . • PACmcVJEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortlllr)' Chapel 1111 Pldllc Vin Drift -_ Newport Beac•, CelUorlll• -• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME 7801 Bciha AV.. Weatmlaller llS iiz1 • SMITHS' MORTUARY 117 Malo St l!anlhlfjH -m• PO'Y & ITllL BILfS Peerless Qualltyf :;:~L4 205/14 134" STEEL 215/14 136'' H78/14 • STEU 205/15 135" 671115 STEEL H78/1S 7 .35 14 7 .75 14 a.25/14' a.25 15 215/15 '37" 235/15 143" a.55/14 H78/14 170/14 185/14 170/14 175/14 F70/14· 195/14 F70/14 F71/14 070/14' 205114 F60/15 160115 175/13 6.40/13 ·:~:.~:· 175/13 7.00/U •:::.~~· 65/14 5.90/14 ·:~·~::· 1.00/16 ........... 7.0011•··········· 1.10111 ........... 1.00111 ••••••••••• 1.00/16.S , ........ 1.u111.s ......... 10.00111.s ........ Our cuitomer policy b t1 lt1ttfr Nn'•Y••· If yo• ho•• 11 411111tiot1 c .. ctrt1l119 ,,... dllcll er 11nic11 r1"41ff• It yt11, fllttt cell 011, Dirtcltr ef <•"'•"'" Afftlrt, Mr. 5, ,,..ltll (21S) 170.1717 tr Jt1· · 1211• tf w• shi111cl sall ,1t1t or yo11r 1h1, 11 "Ralt1 Chick" will It• is1u1d .•1111rit1t • latir ••llYlry 1t th1 odw1rt111cl price. • • 11.ooa1t.s •. ..,;-,;.;,, .. , ...... i..n.., U.)6 • COSTA MESA IAID111 llOYI Ll HAlaA JOOS HARBOR BLVD • 14'411 ll'oolllwrtl -Wllllfllf ..... !~r W•tl'l'lll'ltlll' (Cot'*' of Wllltflfr 1-.iW.oroll4H .... ) <1M lroolltlllf'HJ Ind al&Cll) 157·8000 '144"6 H•-fkial (714) /' • 4 ·--... . .. """ ........ . lo•Anwn9• -· L4WlllL ..... 11..- .. •111 IMIT.:IT 1i..a":o41~, IALlfillC 185/14 E/171114 '50" 195114 -FR?l/14 153u 205/14 tiR?l/14 '59" 215/14. HR:/8/14 '65" 205/15 6R!?ll1S '64" 215/15 HR?l/1S '69" 235/35 lR?811S 195 .. REGllLAR Drum Type .... •••• u.1. cars 8 Lakewood Blvd. 597-0341, 775-2983 IUINA PA.RI •UUllTOM OlANSI nn L.ll'lCll!l 11Y11. lUl llllfll llMIN 411 IC., T .. 1111 Ave. \COl'Mf' If Llll(Gl11 11 lltdt NDrltl II 1714) 6Jt-4J21 11111 KllCllH llll.,.,.11111 l'rttWIY) mu lff.01'00 " ~ 'I • . ... ' T I I ! I ·-• l ! ' " .. ' • ' . ) --• • DAIL V l'tl.171' Thursday, May 10, 1~73 Official Sentenced As Drunk Life in the Raw OVERWEIGHT? 56 LB. LOSS IN 49,_DAYS J'Nm ,Wire Service• r BAKERSF!EW (AP) -Highway Patrol o!Ocer Jim Napier says the 256-pound naked rema1e guest in his patrol car waa "agile as a gazelle and strong as a weightlifter." Napier w;is Just getting oU duly Tuesday when he spotted the woman prancing in the buff at a Bakersfield intersection. With only minutes to go before being relieved of duty, Napier candidly admits he tried to ignore tbe situati"!'-but tbe honking cars bebind him wouJdn't hear of it. Rep. Thomas IAldlow Ashley (D-Oltlo) ho been Dned $400 and Mntenced to thJee days In the -lthouse after pleading no contest to charges of driv-ing while intoxicated and MUCH 70 NAPIER'S surprise, he didn't resisting arrest. have to chase the woman, she came to him. The charges 1ternmed rrom Napier said she jumped into the car and an incident last month when -. -T-'l'fae luge Cleveland Municipal Judge Sara Harper, 47, has -become first wom - an judge in Marine Corps as a major In the reserves. She11 serve 15 days a year on active duty. Daughter Of Stalin Divorced PHOENIX, Ariz (AP) Wllliam Wesley Peters, ro.. year-old protege of the late arohltect Frank Lloyd Wright, ha!" been granted a divorce "by default'' from his wife , Svetlana, daughter of the late Rus.sl.an dictator J o s e p h Stalin. -Superior -eoUrt--J u d g e- 1.ewrence Doyle issued the decree Wednesday after Mrs. Pe!a's, DOW Jiving in Prince- lo>, N.J., failed to ' appear in court. 1'fB JUDGE said Mrs. Peters can retain custody of .their 2-year-old child, Olga Margedlmt, and Peters will have "reasonable visitation prJvilege!." Each was to re- laln lib or her -property. They were married at T~uln West, a fashionable artllltectural ocbool started by Wr!Jbt, following e whirlwind courtahlp in 1970. It was the JeCODd marriage for Peters and the third for Svetlana. SHE LEFT Peters In late · 1971, aaylng she disliked the communal style of living at Taliesin West. ' ·She IOUght political asylum in the United States In 1967 t.nd was escorted through Europe to the United States by American agents. Coast Man Graduates Antboay A. Horpel, son or Mr. and Mrs. Franklin E. Horpel, 1620 Kent L a n e , Newport Beach, has graduated from Pan American World Airways' flight s e r v i c e training a n d development center and is now a steward. ltorpel, who majored in Latin American studies at the University of Arizona, Tucson and is fluent in Spanish and Portuguese, will be based in Boston. NEW RHINO ARRIVES SAN DIEGO (AP) - A female white rhino was born at the San Diego 1.oo's Wild Anlmal Park, officials said. It wu the sixth birth here among the rhinos, who rarely ~ in captivity. Mother and daughter were reported doing fine, Wed- Moday. ' • Ashley, a member or Congress since 1954, was found 11lu mped behind the wheel of his car in Toledo. Ashley, 58, will serve the sentenre over the weekend. Municipal Court J u d g e CJyde-L. Deeds recommended ( PEOPLE Ashley have a talk with Sen. Harold Hughes or Iowa, whom ~ d esc rib ed ~ a '·distinguished member o f Congress who himself fought a bout with alcoholism when he wa s younger." * Miami Beach police respond· ing to a silent ' alarm broke up a burglary at the home of millionaire John Jacob Astor, Patrol units found a stereo set and a box of silverware abandoned in the backyard , apparently left behind by a fleeing burglar. Astor, a descendant of the faroous New York Astor fami· ly was not home at the time, police said, and two guests staying at the house were not aware of .the attempted burglary. Bernard Delfont has banned a new film, "Hitler-the Last 10 Days" from his chain of 260 British movie houses. It stars Sir Alec Guinne11 , has received critical acclaim and a charity premier this week was attended b. y Princ<ss Margaret. However, DeUont, 63 and Jewish, said: "I consider it was someone trying to make too much of a quick buck, and I felt a great dislike for it." * . A former Vietnam prisoner of war has been awarded a divorce after 11 years of mar· riage, eight years of which he spent in a North Vietnamese prison camp. Air Force Maj. Hayden J . Lockhart Jr. is to give his British-born wife, Jill , a lump sum alimony payDJent of $5,000. She was awarded custody of their 7-year-old son, Jamie, and '100 monthly for his support by a court in Spr· ingfield, Ohio. Lockhart, 34 , saw the boy ror the first time when he returned to this coun try Feb. 16. * The high cost of working has ca ught up with Joseph Bonlra. At 47, he can't afford it any more. Bonica \\•as the first man to \Vin $1 million in the Massa- chusetts state lottery. He sa id his tax coosu1tant advised him to quit the job he's held for 24 years at n General fl1otors as· sembly plant in Framingham . l\-1ass. * Dr. Ross Pritchard, new president of Hood (J\1d., College, says hf will pass up a formal installation and instead put the $11,000 budgeted for it into a faculty pension plan . "I would much prefer to celebrate the dedication and efforts or those who have built the college over the years than to participate in the pomp and ritual of an investiture tha t seems to me a r chaic.'' Pritchard said. The college board trustees approved using lllOlleY-to supplement the retirement income of faculty who served before present retirement plans were 1n- st ituted. AMLING'S , . • Newp.ort Nursery 1100 •11 1 co1•t h !1h••'f fllw11ert b11 cl'I. c1 ll forn i• t•l 1phtn• (71•) 1 7!·1 5 SZ Give Somethin9 ALIVE for MOTHER 'S DAY MAY 13th Frie D•liv•ry Master Charge ~ Ba nkAmericard • Double-Omelet Fryin., Pan by Mirro M•~e1 d11lciou1, fluffy o<n•l1t1, or cook1 , 2 thin?1 •t one•. Gold, 1voc1do, popp.,. 4'' SteGk Waogn Is Portable for Summer 1 l l1 '4" 9rill1, r•movabl1 fir1 box, two towel b1r h1ndl11. I" tubul1r le91, 6" wheel1 . Model 5014 1588 Mirro Griddle With Teflon 11 E.tr1-thic~ 1luminum hetk 1v1nly. ID· 3/1" 1i1e with hetf·proof hendlt. Adjustable Wrought Iron Plant Stand D1cor1liv1 30 Inch pl1nt 1t1nd fit1 •l\Y pot u~ to 10" di1mel1r, Oily 2'' APPUANCE I .. ' commmced Jo "snuggle; Up to him, II Bewtld<red, ballled and bemused, Napier said she took off biJ RJlll)asses and "crushed them in one band" before JumpinJ out of the car. Ul\der Medical Suporvlolon al the Omega Cli.nlc NAPIER AND TWO police cars gave chase but couldn't eatch the nimble oude as she bounced in and out of three patrol cars. • f inally, sbe. was appreheoded in a nearby motel IOOlll· At last report ahe was being 1~~~~~~~~~~11 attended to by a psychiatrist in a Bakers-i: HOURS: 9:00 -7:00 • CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT • Deld hlllpital. Kids Like to Ask Andy COSTA "ESA AHA,HllM SANTA ANA P11lltrfeft.U1Hftr1 M 1"4 W _._., 1;)'22Twtlll\A¥t 7ff W. L1MiW1 llYll, The unldeoUDed woman told police sbe had been evicted from her room and wanted "" _... nMa41 . 547-6329 t114> a111-9M1 646-1633 (213) 697-1791 to show the world her plight. Happy Mom .'s Day From ·K-erm (May 13 is Mother's Day) • Chef Style Saute and Frypan by Mirro Gourm•I d11i9n eluminum with T•llon II® interior. Porc•l1in in kitchen colon. a 1.u 1111 • • • • • 299 10 Inch 3" 12 Inch 4" Prices good thru Moy 16 Interior Shutters Cr•1t• 1 d1 cor1. tiv•, lovely look in your ho<nt. Your choic• of li111. "OM Wonder Weave Vinyl Place Mats ,So pr•ttv a11d c.,tfrtt in wovt"' vinyl. kid: bl11•1 or11191 or gretn color1. 6~ Three Egg Poacher By Mirro I l /I qt. •luminum p•n with l ·e99 T•f· Ion® cotl1d po1chin9 in1•t. H11tproof 4at " 'Mi~i' Ha,nd Dryer With Thermo Control Handy dryer goes with you anywhere. Complete with thermostat control and zip- per travel case. Great value! U.L. APPROVED! 88 Octagonal Redwood Planting Tubs Id • e I cont1iner for blooming ot ecctnf pl1nt.. G•nuin• red- wood In 16 inch 1ite. 2'' Florentine Design Celll119 Ught ' Scr•wJ into 1ny ,.tock•t, lust lik• .t .. li9ht bulb. Whitt, tJing•r· In• or tur"quob•. 1'' ' Conveniently lOcof•d .•. Easy To Reach!. 2666 HARBOR BLVD • -IN COSTA MESA PHO-Nl 546-70-80 • HOURS, WEEKDAYS 9 TO 9 SATURDAY ANO SUNDAY 9 TO 6 PM • 3112 Cj)t. Electric Crock Pot by Rival Electric pot for 1low-coo~in9 b.1n1, Jfew1 ind other di1he1 to ebaolut• 1488 Plant Holder ld•1I he1t9in9 holcltr for c•r1mic pot1 filltd with 10" .,our f1vorit• pl1nt. ·") s,..iol , 2'' l1t•x two 1tep kit i1 q u I c k dr.,ing. Pro.,.id11 1 n•w look for furnitur• ind wood. ........ 2• ... S,.;otts 'Push Sjlent' ,.16" Lawn Mower Sup•r q~l•t 10 you c1n •v•n u1e it eerly in tht morn In 9. St1y 1h1rp bl1dtt, dur1blt wh•tl1, p I u 1 111re•9rlp hendl••· Built for v••r• of u1•. i' , ( ' \ ~ "• • '~ , • " t~ " •. , :,. • .... ~ • ' ~. . ' I • ' '· • " • , ' ,, ,., '"' ;: ~ I •' <' ~- ' • ~ ' ; , ' s ' ! . ' " ; ~ ) • s • ' ~w·. -·-' , t ·Hope Haven, Shell ey learns om music (above) and Nature. my, far right, masters lund1. • ' ' • • • Story and Photos By Allison· D~rr Little Steps Make Progress . ' • I l· was someone-new.-::._ __ --t.eeled~al~hom . !Hhey ,,.,... the only ' I was long hair, a camera, shiny ring, bright blouse, butto~s, a new face. . For DeeOee, Peter and Linda I was someth~,t1o explore. Jimmy played coy f turning down my attentions.at lunchtime. Shelley gave me a gleeful two-year..old's grin. The children at the Hope Haven School, Costa Mesa, are retarded. 1bere are 22 students, divided into two groups, and rive full-time staff members. La Deane Jacobs, director of the preschool, explained that these children range in age from 18 months up. Goal of the program is to ready tile studeni.s lbr public school programs·tlt>'.pm enter·at age five. :.~t • I CAPABllJTlES .-. 11 1be children have varied capabi_lities ~· some are cerebral palsied, some are Downs Syndrome, SOOle brain-<laniaged. Some are at the top d the ~rded ~.sca.Je, just bordering m ?Orm.al in- telligence. CP children C3ll be ex· cepUonally bright. " ' "They are all beautiful cblldren," Mrs. Jacobs says, "e~ in ~bis own way." Some are physically beOutiful. Others are .~mely loving. - "Socialization, interaction . with each , other is very important,': she explains as · t~ children begin to trickle in around ~,.--. 9:'wa;m. ·r. They may stay until 5:30 p.m. ' .. 'these children are often over-pro- child, or the baby of the family, less may be demanded'of them." BEHA VlOR MOl> Tho preschool, spoosored by the Orange County Association for Retarded Children, uses behavior modification techniqu~. "As the children come in we work them one-to-One in stimulation activity," she said. Each '!lay follows a pattern. "The cllildren learn bOit when things are dooe in ·a specific order at a specific time. We do a l'ot of f'e!l!!lting over and ·over." · · ' ;fn I \ 'l • At 10 "°"!es -t!iustc, "t¥;.: ~ well to rhythms aod pat1erns .~ music." There are tasting circles. This was yel- low •week, so the .bibs the children wore and the foOd they tasted·were all yellow. . . . A tasle of cheese, lemoo pudding, banana, bappY face cookies and jWce were accompanied with reminders -that they were all yellow. MUSIC~- Next ca'in~ more music. A' small xylophone and drum passed around the table foi-.eaCb child to play "his tune.'-' ~ At 11 .a.m. some of the children watch Electric Comr)any -oo a color televisim set. Later would be Seasamt Street. "Even the chiJdren who d~'t see well like the bright colors and-the music. Some are learning ciuite a bit." La Deane Jacobs offers pudding in tasting circle, left. Below, Valerie Michaelewitz . with Jimmy · and -Oolores Cortez _, ...... , with DeeDee work outdoors. In nice weather the groups go outside-· success is a bfg one f~WOO e e ·1 i..Mtead. would get excited about a child lea~g to 'go potty'? But each small succeer fJ "In warm weather, we get out our lit-+ tle pools. It ls ·stlmulatlng for them just the basis for another one." .:· to be able to play in the grass." And there is the full complement or outdoor play equ1pment, like any nursery school. A blacktopped area behiOd the school is used for other gross motor development activities, p;n4 walking chalk lines for visual perception. Umeh ls "always" et 11:30. It is a teaching tiine, u wtll. LUNCllTllllE "It gets ,prett)'. messy," Mrs. Jacobs explains, ntedle+.~s the tots dig hito the foods ftom peanut butter..oand-jeUy to spaghetti. "Our main goal js for all of them to feed themselves." After lunch everyone "rests." For some, this ipeans a nap. For ooe, it means time playing outside alone, with special attention from one staffer. "She needs the extra affeotion.'' "We have several volunteers who come - in in lhe 'afternoons to help," the director said. "We do a lot wilh music, around the table. Tho kids love doing thing> at the table. "We work to get eye contact. Once you've got that, you're on your way." The successes at Hope Haven are little ones. Progress is made one tiny step at a !bne. "You. almost have l:o work with them. every day to see the changes, And each 1 HAS HOPE Mrs. Jacobs tries •·aever to say anything negative. The paren,ts Ha~e -already been through ~nough neg8Uve things. And we don't premise things Dwll n1ay nol happen." ' There are other stories at H0p&Haven .. i· Three older girls, 18 to 24, who are 11.W retarded, come in and wort as, volytr tee rs. ··. ,., One, wilh special muS!eol !Unts, entertains tlje cJ!lldren .. The odlers help ' with diapering Md feeding or juat living / · the children affection. • ·'" · r fl ,.,.:_. ~· l\trs. Jacobs 'vill also direct a new ac~ tivity program fur children sli: ~ U ~ offered in the First Christian Qiurcb, .... Costa Mesa, begil111jJJg June 4. •• ~·: ·; The program , offered from 1, to $:30 p.m. will be an activitle.s prograqi. J'lt will be especially good for children who are-fihisbed at 12:30 at McNally. 1bef ' . can be bused directly to the progiam from there," she said. Both programs are funded through-the Hegional Center for the Mentally Reiard- ed, OCA.RC fWld-raising activities and Mtion, based on ]>arents' ability to pay. "I see the preschool program wottihg with just 18-monlh to 5'year-olrls, ll< &,;; future, now that public school prograails can take more children at the klnderior~ en level.'' 4 • . I I • I 'JI I' ' I I l ~- ' • ' . ' l j . l J " l '· ' f 1 ' •• , ' Moroscope:.'~Pisces GO SIOw FRIDAY MAY II 17 IYDNEY OMAM An lnlr!plns ~· TalulJ1 &oolblit. An -.... liiltl -....... to do ""'1lhti>c Ille ~ to help UIJoloo: Joyno Mlllllltld. An Arlil """' .,... hyp- nollnd mo: Gloria"'''*°· A C.-who lltaritd by blln1 dltlni..tod, llllhllY clorlltvt ond l1nllhed by b e t n I oourloout I ft d fudneted: MUlon kle. .UU:U (March 21-Aprtl 111: ConMion ellttt. Don'I a~ 14mpl IOo much at once. Oulllnt 1011. 51lck to 1pectfiod COUl'll. Bo vtrllUle without tcatt1rt111 forcu. Sl&llWtu could ploy P"""lnenl role. Bo awll't ol poMOtlal. Don't toll younelf eborl. T.llll\IJI (April i!O>M~ IO): ll_~ over!Qok lmporlanl You ma7 bo P!IJod In two dttallti Thorouihnoa now II 'dlnellontl •I once. Budpt will your lilly. bavo m!IC!! to do with whero I.BO (Jul 13 .... M)· )'OU 10 c.cor )Ddlvtduol y " ._, M " could pi., prom1neot role. Avoid tendency to bl carelell YOUJll "'°" doll notr .. lly wllh money , Be In I ·~· llavo Ill · 1111 ·-· ru11 • ltallfllllt -would -. above petty dotalli. · pouod,recent l1111tako· Know tt ond acl actofd1n&ly. One who Gl!MINJ (~II.June IO): performs servicu may lock You hove mono ~pont1lh1Uty enthuaiosm. 11 nccouary, thin you pcrhape anUctpeted. make needed c1tan1e. Obta!JI hint from o\rlel Vll\GO (Auf . 23-Sept. 22): mOQl(O You will be able to Whit aeemed a problem can ' be 1olved. Your tlmlna i,,,. make contactt which prove ol prov•. Family me m b • r valuo. Be lronk. Say wbat you becomes active aUy. Be meon and -n what you 11y. diplomatic. Avoid "I told you Thll now 11 producllve poUcy. IO" attitude. T111n11, Ubra CAN(lEll (Juno it.July Ill: per10n1 play Important roJ.,, Lesa! pro,cedure . may block Cycle ta· such thlt you can tuo- planned move or change. cesstully take Jnltlatlve. RtleUve could bl In picture. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 1: Accont ii on dclire . for mo111 You may oot bo dealing wtth freedom and ver11tlllty. Key fact1 11 they ellst. Key now II to • plcturt 'In proper penp..uvo. You could bl pull· lnt ·-I over your °"" eyes. Speclllcolly, reaU.. thlt full ...., may bl OQCW'rtDi bohiDd the -, WllllbQI~ lillal Judcmtnl. llCON'IO (Oct. 1$.NOv. II): Frtllld who wantt to do much t1 handlcoppod by work or health problim. You will heve to lll)lml more mponliblllty than ortllnaUY Intended. Know it anel !Jl'•pare oocmllnilY. ClJll'lcOnl t• leltured. SAGl'ITAIUVS 'Nov. 22- Dec. II): Finlth what you 1t1rt. l!ound out project1. QueaUQn _ot "Jove'' arl.U, You may bo challOJlltd to prove In· tontion1. Key It to ttlck within boundt. McanJ don't promise -more than you can dellver. Study Libra meos11e. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. Executives Are Bold as · Brass , ' ~\ " . /·-· It): You .neo4 r-laril!Oi.! of ooo!l~nce. *toool· 11\11 II bet! !Ir edo;l-lnl 1 ~I course. Do on your own. Bo wl 16 a ohanco on )'OU? -a .._Ono ·JIQU Cll't f(r ~ lo-l!Yt you •!fPecl -II you eo poi'mll, AQUAIUVS (Jan, IQ.Feb. 181 : Emotlona aro apt to domlnato. Don~ fel Involved In money araumant. Ono who meant much to you could 11y foolish thl"8•· Condition II but temporary. Know ii and ,. epond In maturt lllllllW. Oon1 compound error • PIBCES (Feb. le.Mardi IO): You don't havo whet you need at preacnt. Know it and 10 1low. Lot othera make fint moves. Be • shrewd obHrver. Ono clooc to you may bo bet- ter equipped to lead the woy where legal commltmentt aro concerned. IF TODAY IS YOUR 1 BlllTllDAY you 11't lntu!Uve, a !lno tcocher, batlcally loyal ·~ .. · Caught Up in the Spirit j· Pearly shells, fish net and leis put Mrs. Guy Reily Oeft) and Mrs. David New· , . bro in the mood for the East bluff Phil harmonic Hukilau that starts at 6 p.m. ; . Saturday, May 12, in the Irvine Cove Beach House, Laguna Beach. Proceeds ~ from the evening of Hawaiian food and entertainment will help fund Orange '· County appearances of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra for adult and DEAR ANN LANDERS: My blllband II In h1o .. 1y 4111, pldloollI111, ond.a key orecutlvo In lh1o towo: Wo bovo a pod Jife, two lovely teenagers and 1 never thought I bad anything to worry about. To my surprise I learned six months ago that he has been seeing a woman ~e night a week, at her apartment. She JS also en executive with the firm, and eight or 10 years older than be is. They never go anyplace together -just have this week.ly tryst. &toooed &tudylne. Her piano hasn't been touChed ln month!:. She used l-0 take 1wlmmlna: lnstruetlom and was cham~ plooshlp material. She has stopped going to the pool. AJJ she is interested in is boys and driving the car. I've detected faint whiffs of liquor on her breath. Her father is disgusted with her. I am trying to make him believe she is "going through a stage" although I'm beginning to wonder. Her curfew is 11 p.m. and she always make• it. She helps in the house and we get along flne. How 11,rict ahould I be? - WINNIPEG MOM ' . "' / to family, capable ol m.idn1 money but not 1lw1y1 eo akllllul when It comt1 to 11v· Ing It. August could be an out1tandinii montti for you tn 1975. You are better at a14fng others than when It comes to halplng yourseU. But fl"llcr happiness ls due and i4 on horizon . my husband and I were embarrassed to1,__,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,;;;;; death. We saw several parents yanking ·~ . DISTINCTIVE their kids out of there, but we decided to !2 FLORAL sit it out. A few weeks ago we had the 38.me GIFTS youth concerts. -1~'.Child-ren' s-Snail . Pace · Keeps Mom Slugging I don't want a fll'Nilt'ltlon or a divorce. pnd I'm ture, he would never I11ve me. But I'm alrold bl m!gbl bl dllCOYmd by .. the town busyboditt. It would ruin his reputation and possibly-jeopai:dq.e his position with tho company. I've thought ol iiotng to th• president of tho firm Ind llldng him to break up the twosome to prtvenl 1 pguiblt scaJ;ldal. l know the man well and Can trust him not to betray me.-EO DEAR ~lOM: Tbe girl might be testing C.O see bow far sbe can go -and, in my- oplnlou, you've;·let ller ·eo too .far. Have a talk. Tell ber libe umst get back to lt\tdylog, plu1 eUber 1wlmmlng or tbe piano. Let her: ch~se.. . She 1hoald POI bl tolOI out on school nights, exoep& for 1~lal occasions. If '. By EllMA BOMlliCK I had a dream the other I nlch~ that the world w111 com· , ln1 to an end and If our enur, l family could all assemble in the car withip five minutes, we would all'& 11ved. "To trick mo tnto 1ettlng of! tho phone ." Another child wa1 in tho bathroom. "'nle world ls com· ing to an end, Hit for the car." The door opened a crack. "Do I have to go?" boats? I think my shoes are in DEAR E01 IateretUnt that ·you are . you have ?DY retll evideqce that she's them " eotteerned about beinl "betrayed," Jet , been drlnklnl, I •ttUOtt eou.nsellng. 'Ibis " ' · . you do aol view your plan to tell Oft )'Olll' II I IOriouo mallet' al l(e \I, No, Gloria, I ~an keep husband aa: a betrayal of ·IDM. My advice talking , They .~•vent started Is to stay away lrom lh• -!dent ond DEAR ANN LA~O.F<!IS: l!ecently my ·the motor yet. talk io )'Ollr butband. hUJband and I took ourjchlldren to HO 1 j'J'm not oomlng unl~ I C~t G·ratod movie at the local theater, We • window." DEAi! ANN LANDEllS: Our 1c;.year· enjoyed it thoroughly, and so dld the experience, only it wasn't sex: stuff, it was l•ll.'.~l:tl>Ull"' ... bloody violence. I actually became tt:tt FAt"v1EW DR., c.M. nauseated. O'I"' 1 DAYS I . telephoned the theater manager· l'!!!!'!'!"""~.~-:·iii:i:~!"""~ -aboUC the last episode arid he said th ey I have no control over the previews, that they get the whoio Jll<kogo and there I• no way to cut it out ol the reel. lt 1eema to me, AM, that • theater·manaaer could do something to j>rotect his customers ·a g a i n s t unexpected embarrl11ment. Please check and let me know. -REO. E ACED IN DURHAM Women's Apparal by e Bleyla e Nor1t1a• Wiatt e AO<I IHOll "·-Cleto·- Jll7 •••• Cot1t Hwy. I yelled to ono ol the kld1, :... "liurry up and get in Utt car. . ' "Ye1?" Hey, Mom, how long we old daughter all of ·a llldden stopped children. But the previews of the oomlnlJ DEAR l\ED1 Accordlac to my Chlca10 e1pel111 tbeater D1.aMltn have 1 choice betWHD urecM>aadtd" or usreeo-blnd· ed'' previews. No nsau1er need thow a prtvl1w U...i wW 1mban111 parents. My odvlce II to lolorm Ille moo11or that you an 1war1 of lbete facts. Cora111 tl1I Mir '71·4740 "Do 1 have to wash my race iDnna stBy at Ulls place?" everythiog. Sht was an A student and attractlon were so expllcltly se'l:y I.hat fir1t1" ,iiiiii-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Oii;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiOmijjJ-_:._:r:_ _________________________ l_~~~~~:_ __ ' : '1· AT WIT'S END ~. . lhe world Is coming to e.n I--end." 1 "\V~it till I flnd my 1hou/1 1 he said. j • The other one wa!I on the 1 phone. "Hlll'\g up and go to the ' · car, the world!& coming to an end." "Who 11id?" he a&ked suspiciously. "Why would I He to you'!" Syndrome Identified NEW YOl1l< (IJPl l -Jim Wlndle, a professor of In· dust.rial supervision at Purdue University. has identified the "nobody -gives-a -damn" syn- drome. Ho 11y1 It brood• 11bot1ao, t!Mtll, ab1Cntool1m, alcoholl1m and c1rua •bu••· Thi curo! Windle 1uuoot1 job condlUons thlt breed · 11U· r11poct. It tcem1 a workur c1t11't have 1tlf·re1pect if 0 nobody·1I ve1·a-damn.'' '-.../ "Get to the car. We only bave minuta1." The last one wa1 watehl'll TV when I iavc him the news. "Don't ju3t 1Jt there unle.55 you want to 1ee the world end." "Why?" be a1ked. "Is it a rerun?" At my husband t1nd I 1at anxiously In the car w1tchtn1 the second1 tick away, he ob1erved, "It's always been this way, hasn't it? We don't ~em to ibe able to all get together in one 1pot at one time." "1 remember once,'' I aald flatly, "I saw the circus move. They loaded .35 cats, 26 horses , 18 elephantr, 17 truin cpr1 of costun1es and propa a.nd col· lopaed a tent that held 3,000 people in 4~ minutes. "Do you realize It take! me s~ minutes to get fi ve people 11round a dinner table? I'm the only mother on the block who doesn't have to defro11t her TV dinners. I just set them out frozen and ca ll everyone and by the time they get there, they're re1dy to oet.0 "Do you 1uppo10 they heard 1.11?" he a1ked nervou1Jy. •Hfh ey hoard," l 1 a Id . ' 1LJ1ten." li'ro1n lnalde tho houao we could hear four volcc1. "Hey, hu anyone 1eon my ' Scholl 1l9undabQutg .. ; ' , ~edorli_.for tlw < Je~e jOot. 1~ No nlarc. rilnching ur cr~inp!ng, Scholl Roundabout~ urc nrlt• .,,, urally roundii!J to give your / toe• plenty o( roo111- , in a variety uf i:re11.t ', atyle1. Soft ere~ 1 f())c• nnd rel11.xin1:!y 'Jltm 1upport, t<>O. \ 1995 225 E. 17th ST. COSTA MISA 548·2778 e IANIAMHICAH e I MAITll GHA~el e 1<1.1171 ' ! for Mother In LARGE & HALF SIZES: from Ella Nor'1, the .tore thet 1p1ci11lins in tho11 herd.to.find 1iz11. To Size 52 Remember Mom with a dtinly OIW 11Jp, Ch1011 1llky nylon, 1 .. 11h wllh IHI or 1lmply +ollorod. Hor kind of 1Hp ti your kind of pr!H. from ,6.00 Other Gift JdeH ----- • DIDllS e PANT IUIT1 • .oWNs • 1P01nW1Aa e IOID e IWU.1'111 UMtol4od7 Glvo her e ...... 91)'thnt" tlfl cortllica ... Lot M1111 u-. Fro Gift Wrap, 01 Courio Ella Nor'sHALF·SIZE SHOP COSTA MISA 1111 N-ll ILYD .. I Ntf'ttl 9f I M Street I HUNTINOTON llACH 14 N~NTINeTON CINTll t-.. -..... 1 PUWITON-114 Or11a11Wr M.._.. Oouc1 ... .,. • Herfft .. """' ...... n.rs..frl. 10.t -,....w..._ .... tu Bonk••ericard • Monereha,.,.e Try Saturday'• New1 Qu~ I ,, • I ldHI' for WI""" d,Y1l ClltHI 1To111 100'1i oeHon, or poly111tt ... 11Hon •l1nd1, lo prlnt1 .,. 1trl101o 45" wl.. •ooh• I•• wooli .,4 d1J. •A•ION KNITS T•W• ~'" 111!, 1llnkr ,... • •.•• r•ro ... wflfi ... .,,,, hit• • I00'1i 111111 .. • 10°'5 "'-""' " ·-... '"Y'" •l11tde. CltaoH ftt• Ill• orM prlnte •d 11llde lo h•ilr ....... k,, 1 ...... "5'1 "'"" 1n1•1n1 w11h n' "1· 2vaf.1 POK HICll IPHCTIYI THUii., NI .. SAT,, MAY 10·11•12 lo\l"N elOVI i'UClllTIA ~ANTON COITA MllA JU\LlllOll ot ......., 11n Vw• "IMI t111 hlCll tl'l't. 141 w .. 1• .. '"' ,,,_ ....... ,_ "'= ......... t ... -,Ill ... ,.,, l't1 ttr ... 11 Piii ,llU •tll "'"" PAU HUNT. llACH •u~aTON LA MllAtA -... ..... ,_, Molll 111 U'll W, CIMMllM'" 11111 .. .... e CINTIR8 ·-.... ._.... ·-... _ "' _.... Jltu -ltn ''" 1•1•1 ·;~, ttHM '• I • • TUMBLEWEEDS 'lllE Kill \WITS HER Ill?& !JACK, SHORTY. 'IOU'/..l. HAF'Vl 6ff OFF. MUTT & JEFF ~ W}(lt:H IT, MUTT! • ,,~--l..::!"MI ___ _ FIGMENTS NANCY THIS PERFUME ONLY COST ME A QUARTER AT THE RUMMAGE :1'11:77m>::r-, SALE I'LL SEND SLUGGO A PERFUMED LOVE L·ETTER TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLB ACROSS 62 Hite Y11terd1y'1 Puule Solved: 1 Ancient Asian 5 Shout 9 Musical group: Abbr. 14 Polish river • 15 Compositlon 16 Fish feature 17 Bundling again 54 Water blrrier 56 Abounding 59 Mils Doe 62 Pull behind &4 Buenos····· 65 Stent 67 Road rut: 2word1 70 Met1l 1lloy 71 Aclor Fr1nco 19 Shel1er 72 lo be: French 20 Ent1n1in 73 Mysterious, 21 Obtain lm1gln1ry 23 Exprns enlmal 24 Football pa11 74 Observed 27 .l(yle-: NFL. 75 Scorch star DOWN ·1a Beak perts 29 Set9fla 22 -·tee: 31 Genu1of ·1 Rlghteoue -Perfect:2 herbs 2 Effu1lon of words ~ 35 Show bir. 11roo1 fluid 25· Buy--· car first n1m1 l Appointing 26 FuriotJ1 37 Lucily 11 an agent 28 Malay to in number 4 Rubber 30 Granted 39 U.S. Vice 5 Tibetln OIC ·32 Oeep-rooltd Preskl1nt 6 Erie, P1. 33 Cov•r 1 room 40. Lacking airport code surface moisture 7 Fish 34 Tools .42 Make broider .8 Beverege <36 Crippled « Very bid 9 ···can 36 Asian nation 45 M1d ness 10 Clean up 38 "·-··•geinl'' 47 English 11 Grotto 41 Circle county 12 Dutch length dimension 49 litter• me11urt 43 IOU . 60 Hitt 13 Kind ct hou1t 46 In past time 48 Asian kingdom 61 Pan1keofa 11ndwk:h 53 Viscous substencn 1)5 Com-muriititt 57 ··--tirrn.e 58 Glacial '"'°"' 59 Fruit concoctions eo Ending with hex and pent 61 Nurse 63 Excl1m1tion 66 Anim1l 68 8efOl'9 69 Age • I by Dollg Wiidey . by Tom K. Ryan 1 J ~10 R'iTHINfr APP<ARS j j !!£ IN ORI/ER J : • • by Al Smith -A MILE-.!IGM f't'H!ALL GONNA LAND RIGHT °™ROlJGll "TllE RooF ! by Ernie Bushmiller SALLY BANANAS GOi:tDO MOON MULLINS .-. l t><:it-11T KNOW ... I o~INK JT LACKS COLOR- ANIMAL CRACKERS I JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux MISS PEACH f I I ! • l(~LL.Y SCHOOL. PRO~l.Elr\ CL.l~IC.. Mm.r HJW YES! l DO HAVE TO DISCUS& ANO GET HER SIGNATURE OM ' wu:.1. I SEE 1 THINK I SHOULD . YOU THIS &PEHO THE EVENIN6 EVEHIH6, . WITH THE PARKERS, A COUPLE OF CONTRACTS! I'M USING THAT AS AN EXCUSE !'OR MY UNANNOUNCED N'PEMAljCE/ I'Li. TRY TO ~H HER AT YOUR ~OM!: L.A"TER eETSY? SAM I WHY DON'T YOU THIS AFTERNOON! CALL NJ: IN TH E MORNING? by Mell Hr( FATl'll!1' ~l'IA~ LONGINGl.Y °' 'THli P>\Y n&.' HT.MAJrlrllP ANO , Mt:Nf. OUT OF TMJE MOUfl ••• :t FllL. Mi'S H!l<IOLIS TO 6WI' ltO ~ Ma. -Po i MAVli AN c.INUAIAL P1'08L.£M7 ...::-._ IT'S NOT AT ALJ.. LIN~AL . YOl.l1' MOTMJ!ll: FHLS 'THf: SIMI! WAY ..• AND TMAT- uw1 uM? NCONTROLLABl.a MADNESS SUDDENLY I.EAVES AS TME TRUTH COW!S TO •BUTTON.": . • y ' I DAILY PILOT by ROC)81' Br by Charles Barsotti ---/-Yb'-'tb'_, ~I~~ ~ Id!&& . ..., a.e,out~ ~~·.,_;--1 " I by Gus Arriolo11:- by Ferd JohnlOll IF YA DON'T DIG Pui<'P~e, l GOT SOME OR).N<Sfi. , ,V \'11 11.t ,., " ' THE GIRLS 5-10 "I doll't lmtw llow EUea especta 111 to enjoy our club meetbi,p at her place every lime we eome bere, 1be'1 jut newly decorated." DENNIS THE MENACE l,, ' , ' • • l ' I JI DAll.Y PILOT TONIGIIT'S TV mGm,IGHTS ABC 8 8:30 -"Seeonds." Rocle Hudlon t1tfn . p a m~~ecl ballier of!on4 a _,,.,., charice at life bJ a mystenous organlJajlon In uu. 1968 ~movie wfth Will Geer. KHJ G 7:30 -"Walk, Don't Run." The Olym· Jpice l'f"wl.CS. the backdrop f(lt' this 19611 movie ·com~·wltll C.iy Grant, Jim Hullon and flamanlba •Eggar. CBS 8 9:00 -"The.Moon a Blue." A "risque" oomed.Y beck In 1953, Otto Preminge<'• film !ea- . turee "WllJWn Holden tnd David Niven as two friends In love with Ille tllDle girl (Maggie McN• man). NBC D 9:00 -Ironside. Chief Ironside visits Scotland Yard and flnda-bimself trying to 50lve a police lrlm og without authority. Raymond Burr. • KCOP 18 11:00 -"Kan ... City Confidential." Preston Fotter, Colleen Gray and John Payne star ·~ )n this mystecy movie from 1953. • ~~TV DAILY LOG ., ' " ·' I ,. • Thursday Evening MAYlO .... _,_..,_ ""4 -~ -~. H olll .. _., ......... NJ. .. ~ """" -"' -...... ................ 1:00 II DD fd m Iii> al -rna-a-· (l)ht S111rt CJ Wlftttd Dltl • lht m""-111 .,,,,. IZJMl "kt- fl!l""' -7S A "'-411 Tokyo YICllion 11\d I 1973 Dltsr.J11 1200 f1stblc:k sedan 1rt schtd111ed to bt put on the block lofllaflt. mn ... - ID KCn Allctill ?J CGtrtJnua ta 1111dnillrt. ·-. ilmD .... JM ...... 1' m-(2111) --llb(' (COll'I) '41-WONld Rt111n, Mir Robson. 1:JOm-•"""'-m- t:0tt 11 !IJ Iii '""""' _, !ti (ltlft"llll -h ., .. (..m) "' -· Willl1111 Ho\dtn, DIYld NIYM. M1ait'Mdfllflll'I, TlffO frltllU fl rMI thtll'IMMI ht lovt wlll\ tht 11mt ••• D a.,,...., (R) Ctilet Iran· 1ldt. vlsHt Scotlancl Y1rd ind flnd1 hllTlltlf tryln1 to solvt 1 pollct kill· Inc wlthollt 1ut11«i1J. D (])Ci) EE 11111 F• "011k All· 111" (R') Cl lnt befriendJ , d)'l111 prospedot wf'IOll lllKJ, I m1p to 1 f1buloo1 told mint, b 1 0111· "" tld.et to tr11tdr- IZI llJOI l:J0 (!)-·-ID lCl'.T bctioll •n Contlnues to midnl&llf. 11)0-·--0~ ('ll) ......... (dni) '6&-Rocl Kucbon, Wlll Gttf. A t :JO 81111 ...,,, WtMlftfl "Medea l tnlddlt·•pd banktr, tllrtltttltd Ofl $12 ID.,.. P1rt I ~ wrtti blld:m1n, b otflf'ld 1 llCOnd G,.... 1 cll111t1 1t llf• ., 1 irr)'ll:lftous or· IE Mlldlldll ttllnl , :.lutioll IMlt thl tlMll: la llofrtfy-ai) f1tt •el M1• l1ti11 r (f) ... -W•hor C...kb 10:00 D imi m -.......... (R) I a HM .... Wll Trnll Steve Lawrll'ICI .... Cbl~es t4@1son GI llltrr llffftl ..,. Reill}' 1uest. in ... ,.... om m-m•---.2,\.Il~is:;i:~:."~"i:'o : ~"'*,..,.. m111 !or 1 cri1111 Wn1 •lfHI to do '" fs uttSt lnall 1 one more job, only to find hhnnll the real murd1t t1r1et 11 rn am-0"""' ·-. ""' c..· O lowll111 fCK Dlnln (com) '65--\111 B.innen. @ TIWlil or C.• ... nat fl) LI Mtlilltrl (I) AIMrkal _. ..... I o n.rl"' Utol fl!l ICET -'11 Contln• to m 1 LM LllCJ mldnlafll l!ll_ol_ IO:JOOT1&11dl I fl Sl•Jl•••lll llerll IJ Cllnple...., FlaMwt I tl'l""' -'11 Tt bld, m· .... Clll 6'0-2450. IE Acapmi•• Musical Mrla ··-llllNlwll ...... II!) Tit.-·-11:0011 DD Ill m al -al tllll' a111 If)--(})(f)®JNlwl 7:30 II Y11111 Dr, 11:114lrt "Riot" (R) g 011 step ..,_, llJld•rt'I Emtritncy Room 1J fltltd 00 M1nl11I Dll*I wllll campus riot vletlms, lncllldlnl m Trultl or Ctalcl1111Ca Ul"I T1t9Pflolo Nke Place to J'isii Johnny Carson jokes with Sb~lley Winters as he returns to New York for a three-week stint with ~e Tonight sho"".· Cars<?n ,was . ~nee headq·uartered m New York with penod1c VlSlts to Hollywood; now it's vice versa. UC Irvine to Present . Sacred Music 'Vespers' C1audio Monteverdi 's "Vespers," considered one of the greatest pieces of sacred music, will be presented by the University ChOrus and Orchest ra at UC Irvine Friday and Saturday . Performances are scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Fine Arts Village 'Theater on campus. Admission is $9. Newell Jenkins. music direc- tor of Clarion Concerts in New York and visiting lecturer at UCI, will be guest conductor. Jenkins, in describing Monteverdi's "Vespro detla Beata Verglne" of 1610, said, "This vast vesper service is the greatest composi te work of western church music to be composed prior to Bach's 'St. Matthew Passion' over a cen- tury later. Certainly it is one of the greatest pieces of sacred music of all time. "The work is based on plain chant which acts as the oohesh··e factor of the com- position. Over this chant both orchestra and chorus weave an elaborate, sumptuous and brilliant tapestry of tonal col- or, worthy of the golden mosaics and po rphyry sculptures of that elegant Shaft Series cathedral, Saint ~fark's in Venice, at which il was most probably performed.'' Soloists for the UCl concert \Vill be Leon Alexander . Michelle Ayers, Debbie Stru- ble, Phillip Cobel Thouin, Rick Cornell, David Dunlap , Patricia Lacy. Cary Lenard, Katherine Magill , Patricia Notar, DeOOrah Sandford and John Sheets. Jenkins, who received his musi cal training both in the United States and Europe, directed· two chamber orchestras in Italy and served as guest conductor in severa l other countries b e f o r e estabUshing Clarion Concerts in New York in 1956. Since that time. in addition 1o his ~·ork '>''ilh the C I a r i on chamber orchestra . he has fill- ed numerous guest assignments and wa s guest conductor with lhe Royal Swedish Opera at the Drot- tningholm Festival last sum- mer. He also has served as visiting lecturer at UCLA and UC Berkeley as well as at UCI where he cWTently is serving his third appointment. Tickets to the UCI concert may be obtained from the Fine Arts Box Office. For in- formation call the box office at 833-6617. " 'Billy Jack' SurVives Second Clw nce Pa ys Off for Movii By BOB THOMAS BURBANK (AP) -The strange history of "Biiiy Jaek" a movie that refused to die, 'continues to amaze the' film world. The ingenuous film o £ bigotry and idealism in a southwestern town is being released as if it were a brand· new movie. Yet "Billy Jack" was first released two years ' wwtem. So we changed to a ago. yoolb-<Ult campaign. Nothing ~;,,m Ila beginnings, "Billy happeMd." ENTIRWNMDIT Jack" refused to follow the It became apparent that usual patterns. It was the what was selling "Billy Jack" work ot a husband·and·wife was the best advertiSlng of production team, Tom all: word ol_mouth. People Laughlin and Dolores Taylor. simply liked th~ film and told , '---------~ They not only starred in the their friends about it. film, they wrote it.. He pro-But film corporations can duced it and directed 1t. grow impatient, and I h c They used pseudonyms for money men kept asking, 'Re1"ected ' the nonacting f u n c t i o n s "What are we earning from because, Mrs. Laughlin ex-this film?" Tile question was Americans plained. "it become• an •go referred to • computer. and Drama ·Wms· trip when you have your J the resuJt was no l en- names on everything." couraging. Warner Brothers A1id Britis li THE LAUGHWNS started ~'::k:'.'"thus!asm foe "Bill y Top P riz e "Billy Jack" for American h be Tom Laughlin, w o can S Pla International. But wbeo the as explosive as Billy Jack, NEW YORK (UPll -The 'WUp ) 'S company started inquiring fired a broadside of lawsuits play that once was rejected for about the b.Jdget, the fiercely and accusations against Broadway has 'Ao-On the 1973 LEATHERHEAD, England independent Laughlin s but Warner Brothers. The dispute Pulitzer Prize tor drama. /AP) -The Americans have down filming arter three went on for months. Finally, The award for drama went come to town and the show is weeks on location. The pair an agreement was reached to Jason Miller for "That sold out. The play may be old made another deal with 20th whereby \Vamers would give Championship Season," a play but the audience loved it. Century~Fox then pulled out "Billy Jack" another try. ;,ibout the reunion or a high The mes.sage rece ived here because of "interference.'' THE FILM was brought school basketball team and its fr-0m New 11ope, Pa. about the Finally "Billy Jack" found back to New York and Los old coach. British show there wa s haven at Warner Brothers. Angeles earlier this year with Miller. 34 , so,ught to have it similarly enthusiastic. The fllm opened in New the ad campaign: "The most produced on Broadway, but it For three weeks the York and Los Angeles to tepid popular picture of our ~imc-'.' was rejected on grounds it Leathcrhead and New H-0pe reviews and slow business. This raised eyebrows, stnce ti w 0 u J d n • t succeed on theaters have swapped actors. But a peculiar Pattern failed to take into account Broadway. The play was first The innovation is a success, developed in the Midwest. "The Godfather," ' ' T h e produced at Joseph Papp 's said theater officials here. "Billy Jack" didn't open spec-Sotmd of Music" and a few Public Theater then moved to They now look forward to tacularly, but after three or other winners. Broadway's Booth Theater. similar exchanges with other four weeks it settled down to a The line was toned down lo: The play won a Tony award companies in the United steady pro!it. It played amaz-"The most unusual box office as the best Broadway play States, Canada and elseY.'here. ingly long runs, much longer success of all time," which earlier this year. "We believe this is the first 'than such Warner hits as "A may s11·11 be something of a Clockwork Orange" and Miller has written three one-time that two companies at "What's Up, Doc?" stretch. act plays and another off· our level have done a "We've 'spent ~ lot of Broadway play. He stu died at transatlantic swap," said Roz ·•r assumed that we had money and now we're the University of Scranton and 1-luggett -0£ the Thorndike opened with the wrong cam-evaluahng the re s u l ts . ' ' Catholic Univer~ity· He has Theater in Leatherhead, a paign," said Richard Lederer, reported Lederer. "Is. this the "cted in Shakespeare, O'Neill Warner Borthers' VP i n ? w " con1munity of 27,000 on the Creak picture of all time. c and O'Casey. Mole River in Surrey COUnty, charge of advertising and still don't know the answer. He lives with hiS Wife and 18 miles southwest of London. publicity. "But even if we !orgot about three children in the Queens The Bucks County 'Theater "THE FOCUS was on Tom 'Billy Jack,' it would conlinue borough of New York City_ ·Company is presenting Laughlin in a western hat, and like a slot machine. pouriflg _ _:_::___ ______ _ Thornton Wilder's ' 'Ou r perhaps people gathered from . out $250,000 in rentals f()I' the Town" at the Thorndike~ a 526-. ii~th~e~a~da~tha~t~th~e~p~ic~t~ur~e~w~asiii;a;.~n~e~x~t ~fl~ve;;;iiy~ea~rs;i;;;;."----··I , , sea t theater. ~ 11.1!0.l;~l.I. In New Hope, where the theater is converted from a Y!'atennill, the Thorn di~ e Theater group is staging Sheridan's 18th century play "The Rivals." Fourteen American players. including screen and stage star Dana Andrews, have come .to Leatherhead in ex- change for 13 from the Thorndike. The theater is named after its patron . veteran actress Dame Sybil Thorndike who started her career in the United States. The Americans form a permanent theater company with gue st actors, while the Thorndike puts a company together for a new production every three weeks. In Sunday's Family Weekl y: /iiml(V, ' ""~ - ! ~ ·~ J ~ • ,,,_ • • .......... ..,,i! ·-~­,T"'f...... ff:·~,,J t.l #•h6itr, i._f i ".';'1Jfl4•f M.H ' • '' ltl••••!de F<"'w'1 I I L.,,._ 51. 52S.l5U RIPU AMI ~JfS! 11.) UINIOW lllDGI ltl ('2.) GIMME SHllnl (l .J TWO LANI 11..AOCTOP I'! San Dl•10 fw1 , , I C•pl•tra,... Oll·••rn11 • • U Hiii! FIVE FINGERS OF DEATH (II DOHRMAN GANG ""' HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The success!ul "Shaft" motion pic- tures will be converted into a television series s t a r r i n g Richan! Rountree al MGM. U.A.. CITY & !OUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESOAY SOC:! IALL LAO llS & GOLOEH AGERS-OPEliU NO TLL 2:00 P.M. SanDl•eof...,., al l roe•ttu••I tSo.J 962°2411 l I D 0 "'wro" BE ACH l NTRA NCF '0 l lOO ISi! ~ 11 RJ~O It's Wacky, Kooky, and Wild "SLITHER" Atoo (PG) Burt Reynolds "FUZZ" Cln•ma Oalty (uc.S1111. A H11l.l 11 :4S Ill 1:00 a.rn. c"°'rt• l ron-TtllY S1v1t11 Jiil lr1l1nd ''THE l"AMILY" en"' E111'111'ood "HANO 'EM HIGH" 8Dlh I" C11lor !Rl Especlally tor Molhers: 10 Famous Women "Remember Mama" 8e~ch llvd, , So. ol Garlleot Giove frH•I• Sl4-6212 RAT(· KUNG-fUI FISTS OF FURY (II ?L~CHAllLES BRONSON fl:ED SUN ll'GI Dr. Glllnplt. IJ Mavle: "II-City CorrfWl11· rn Htpn'• KefMl ' tl•I" (mys) 'Sl -Pmlm Fo.ttr, I~~~;;;~;:;:;:;:;;~"""~ an. Mwtntum ''lllt Solid Gold Johll PIJl'll, ColllftGf17. 1- ~nt-" ·. (C) ,,,_ "'Slltf\tl ti fD lCET ALKtill '7l Continua to ra always miss her. Yet, there i.s &omething of Mr that has never l.cft me -her voice a.s!urin.g me thal it was all right and dial U would alway& be aU rigkt. And lhat helps ;,. those limes of life when I feel frightened. lm~rl•ID<i\w'ri le•t lt ll•d. •Harbor ll•d. 171·1162 JAA\l:S '~~N SIJ.l Y ~ELlE~AWt U" _., mldnl1h1. Ffldurtd llW"' (oom) '59 -Jlynt M1nsMd, Ktnnetll Mott. 119 Qllct Joli .... !Utt INt 001.11nu..1nit11 11:1sea..1111M (I) ..... '"-0 •-I -: tCJ C2lrl ll:JO II (f) CIS uto """' "1111 ... "'Wiik. o..i. h i" (com) '66--Cu7 ,_,. (dra) '56-P1tty Mcconntck. Gr1rrt, Jlm Hutton, S.1n1ntl11 [Uu. B IJI m JQ;117 Clr10ll ~ Ltt'I Mike I Diii g TIM f~pt!N m """1 • a rn t!l ai ""' • ..., " r.. ~ :r.' ttr1ll11111nt ''Thi Color ol Blood" (E h llc. kflton A 8r1Usfl lhrilltr In wtiich 1 ba1utt· (f) A6cla111 FlllllJ 1111 JOUf'll rlrl d1XOT111 !till her comp1nlon on 1 train trip Is 1 1:00 IJ (JJ Tiit W•ltlml (R) A WMl lll o:wnpulWYI 'Jlltr wtlo Ills 1lrt1&ty ablndons htf llttl• 1lrf Oft tM Wal· 1l1Jn nine women. tons' doorstep 11K1 John Wilton mt1 Ttll U.Trath 1ellld:1n11, dscldn to turn 1Mi1 IMlf to the coun'ly homt, until h• di .. 12:00 m Alfl'ICI HltdlCOcl ,,. .. nts c.M11 tile child I! dell 11!d dumb. 12.30 U Nm O @) m nip WlllOll Show (II) . Ph7!111 Diller Th• committee and 0 MtN: "Kist Illa, lMt llllr' Ray Cllirln f1111t l•lh) ·~ronr K1nd1t1. Cl) S.11 If W1stn 1111 "Thi Ltl· m Novlt: "011111 tf flft Petl- 1nd of M1rlt Tw1ln" CNI" (wtS) "57 -Alldit Murphy, D (})Ql llld _'_TI.., 111""""'- All J111t Metnori•" (R') A pollct l:OO (J) O D (f) 1'twl fltvttn1nt lnvolwd In I jewel ste1I-. !JI n TNI 1 Tirk! tn1 rln1 1Cddtnt11ly lUls 1n In· lonntr 111d "'nts mdeflcil to NU l:U 1J NtN: "'QIN Dir' (111m) '68 Pfl1 1ppeltl' to bt plttr. -Vidor M1tur1, Lill Heu. ID -·-G1 1t11o1•-.,-·-- Friday 1•m"lll _. , ... > ·~-"" H1tl, 0.111 AndrtWL l:Jld"""""' ..... (dtl) '58 DAmME MOVIES -Mcllo M~. Mlctllll \lodp.,.. J:IO (f)"1"1-" -(llol) .... 8 (C) .,._ , ... l -.r (drt) ~lllfJ Huff W1m1t 01111d. 'Ttl-ltont '""""' tlil "1111 W" W Coocl. (drl) ll:IO(J) "Tllo -...... (sd·fl) '!5 ·~ Hiiton. ............ f11t• -· J:JO D CC) "1111 T-(Ills) 'II -• 11tsl 11 Chllllwl" (td-fl) '60 Audit Mu~trr lliodlftd: Crawtri ..--r.., 1111,,.. · llitl8"CA ....... CWtlt'll-loll l:Ott ll(C) """ -- ---(lilo) '11>-("") ·-- i.. ~ 4:30())-·-- I R!SIRV!D !!ATS On Sale Dallr 12 'Iii ! MARLON BRANDO .ilL 'j>Bi1s @ ~~·United Arllsl' MON. lHRU 1HUR5. 8 P.M. fRIDIY 1 l 9,45 SllUROAI 2-7 I 9'45 SUNOIY 2-5 I 8 ALL SIATS M.'°'00'--: ... WKOAYS 6:45 SAT. & SUM. 12111 "CHiii UAOlll" "SIDUCTIOI or INGI" IOTH ruTUlll IAffD 11) iUri Jt1ynoldt-Dy1n ciiiiiGn "SHAMUS" IP'OJ Galdlt Hl-·WllTtll l!rH!ly "I DOLLARS I'" C110r {POI "PETE 'n' TILLIE" • "JOE KIDO" Color (POI 5•t. lo SIHI. 1111 & l p.l'l'I. "QODZ:ILLA VS. SMOO MONSTER" Pertr O'Toel•Sopllla """" A "MAN OF LA MANCHA" V "CACTUS IN THE SHOW" 8.trl In Colar! ll'G) ... . .. i . _., . ·• . . ' ... ~..-·· · ·' .. ~. 'T\lt ,.. ........... ,.., .... ,.,,_ PIWI SUM MIA STOlllS ,._ _, otW 1t1on. h1 OrOINJ• Co11My. IT MmT II GOOD! HI LO OWfRI ONI WUI OHL.YI IOVTN COAST llL.1.tA I THliATRll- 1•11 o: ... P'ry, 11 lfl•lll 11 .• (Mlt Mal, 1*-1711 LAGUNA SOUTH COAST TKEATltl-Cfftl Hwy, Llf'IM 8Mdl fH-lS'lt llAL llACH IAY THIATRl-M•ltll SI. ti llKHlc tMtt Hwy--Cll.US1 .. For a special Mother's Day feature, writer Alan Ebert has transcribed the recollections of ten famous daughters. Representatives from business and the arts share warm and tender memories from their youth. And they all pinpoint the contri· bu tion their mothers made to thei r success as women, as mothers and wives, and in the voca- tions they've challenged, Rising fr-0 m a variety of backgrounds and some, seemingly, overwhelming. odds, each of these women has achieved outstand· ing recognition in t he profession she's chos~n. And each attributes her ability to the strength 1m· part(1d by her mother's unique character, encour· agement and the standards she set. e AN AMERICAN SAMPLER -In this colorfully illustrated pullout-and-save section, food editor Marilyn Hansen has compiled a complete "Cook· book" of· favorite dishes from all over our country -a collection of America's most tried and treasured recipes: Alaska King Crab to Southern Shoofly Pie. . , e A DEDICATED DAD -The Minnesota Twins home-run· champion, Harmo~ Killebr~w, shares his specffic ideas for .comb~\mg the distractions that discourage family uruty. Learn how the super-slugger maintains his patriarchal Influence by gaining the confidence and respec.t of his chlldren. All Coming Sun1lay With 1'he I DAILY PILOT I {' ,I SLITHER !PG) PLU~ I ~'~Nil SINIT~I DIRTY DINGUS MAGEE (l'GJ l l,.c91n A••· w••I ol l{nott 527·222l S1nt1 An• r'••••1 "''' Ctt111men Aw1, 551·7022 S•nt• An• r,,, •• , .,.,, Ctt1om1ot A•t. S$&.1t2,. • • ' 'TweHth Night' Due UC Irvine students will preaent a production o r Sbakespeare's '• T w e If th Night" next week uoder 1he direction of a member of Shakeopearean Company. Brewster Mason, a visiting lecturl!r at UC! for tbe spring quarter, will stage the Shakespearean c o m e d y , which will play Tuesday through Salurday In I he Concert Hall ci UC!'s Fine Arts Village. Midlael Sloddard will take lhe role of Sebeatlan Ind Sanda Hall will play hll twin sister, Viola, wbo tllsgulaes herself as the youth Celano. . The roles of Me Oralno and Lady Olivia, both caught In lhe confUsloo caused by the lwlM, will be played by Bill Mlller and Jade Hubacker. Others· In the UC! cast \are Tom Walter, Don Harnllton, Stuart Duc,kworth, Jefl Addis, Steve Rotblatt, Bronwen OeD- too, Stanley Wlaslclt, Richard Bobb, Glenn Daniels, Bob Schnelder, Ted Koch, Dale Kranz. MJitbele J a e g e r , Gretchen Van Riper, Alexis Walker and Susan Woodruff. Sets and cootwnes for lhe UC! pniductlon will be design. ed by Richard Tri,lett, associate professor o drama at the university. "Twelfth Night" will be staged at 8 o'clock each even- ing wilh llckets available by contacting the fine arts box of- fice at 83U617. 'It Hasn"t Been Easy" Every thing Happens to Young Actor By VERNON SCO'IT friendly divorce. It only lasted said ii pald 14 an bour. So I HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) four months. stuck around for her in- " I talk. ed to her the other te · Sh a t g In Bruce Davison, the young star rv1ew. e c me on s a e day and she said, 'When we're kim t d Or "Willard," "The Strawber-1 be 1 a s PY cos ume an was disso ved may we can go ou ry Statement" and "Last to dinner.' trembling. She said she'd S u m m r , ' ' has found "So far my career has been never done anything like that Hollywood as perilous for go ing all right, I ju.st finished before. male newcomers as it is sup-'Ulzana's Raid' with Burt Lan-"When the record player posed to be for starlets. caster. But I did a picture blared out she s h e d A native of Pennsylvania, called 'The Jerusalem File' everything. And wow ! You Bruce is 25 years old, blond that was so bad lt was only never saw a greater nu de 1 and beset by minor but released on airplanes and in dancer. Better than Gypsy bewildering difficulties. Europe. Rose Lee. I've been dating "Right now I'm looking for "I hired a public relaUons her, but she's bard to get hold a place to live," Davison said. firm which talked me into ap-of becaU8e she doesn't have a "I've been evicted from my pearing at the Palm Springs phone. rented house because l cut a Rodeo. I was supposed to be "I fell in love with her. No hole in the back door for my grand marshal of the parade. problem. I fall in love a lot dog to come in and out. and usually end up pleading ' ~11'1' '11411 Sti ff l'llol• All in the Family Mama and Papa (Mike Duffy and Jennifer Higginbotham) watch as the kids 'J>Ul on an impromptu show in the Fountain Valley Communtiy Theater's. "Cheaper By the Dozen," closing this weekend. Youn gsters. from left, are Michela Farah , Brian Hamilton and 11-1.ichelle Colannin:oc.·c.'':.cu::.r,_pi:::ncegc:a:cs:.:u:.::cc_ke::.r_. _______ _ T_.,., M111 10, 1913 OAJLV PIUIT Auditions L~red • For 2 Musical,s It may be a little too early to be thinking about shows coming up in August and September. but tWo local theater groups are doing just that for their respective sum· mer musicals. Tryouls for lhe Lyric Opera production of "Annie Get Your Gun." to be staged in Se1>- ten1ber at Laguna Beach's Irvine Bowl, have been an- ( CALLBOA.RD) nounr ed for this weekend and next. while t.he \\'est.minster Conunwlity Theater h a s scheduled its trvouts for "Man1e" early in J 0 Wle for an August opening. Open audi1ions for chi ldren from 9 years through the teens nnd singers and dancers for lhe chorus will be held &iturdays and Sundays for the next t~'o weekend s for "Annie Get Your Gun." ''oung singers will audition from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday. with male and female singers for six supporting and 21 n1inor roles to be heard at I p.m. Sunday. A second audi· lion r ... adult sJncen la~ . May 19 al I p.m., with laking the stage at 1 ol May 20. Callback> and readlao .... begin at 3:30 p.m. all II* days. Singers and ._.. should bring their own 1 • Ao accompanist will .. ,...., vided. • ' The titl e role ''1 \\!cstminster's "Mame'' ... heen precast, wllh Dorla Alm scheduled IO do the -., but all other roles are ~ I according lo director West. Some ol the lop ....,.. lllC pa rts include Mame's ....... ages 10 and ea rly JOI. -V. ... Charles, Agnes Gooch, !lo tbl houseboy. Babcock the blllbr, Bearegard Burnslde doe ..... em gentleman and ;J others . AudiU°"' will be held .1Uat : lo 6 from 7 to ilO p.m. Ar j tors and singers and ,June t 1 fro1n 3 to 6 p.m. for da1¥.'et1 at the 17th Street· School a ud i torium, Wes~' Avenue at Hoover street. "J\.ian-ie" will open Aug. for a three-weekend nm1 Laguna's "Annie Get Your Gun" is S('heduled Cot a Sept. 7 opening, also for three weekends. Whatever Becam,e of Reed Hadler~ own house which is in the street, with me sitting on the ''La!lt Christmas my car got By JAY SJµRBU1T now is pu blisher of "Seven-1948 "'-Q. Who was lhe an-1951-Q. How much did the Answer two is that it was t8 same block, but l loanded It to back of a convertible, the guy wiped out in my own driveway teen" magazine. nounccr on "The Original Du.Mont Network pay for the first Western ever tel~ ''I'd like to move into my "BUT AS we came down the temporary insanity. 141 I : this girl. She's a very young on the public address system when this woman hit it and NEW YORK (AP ) -Dear An1ateur Hour?." ;~· Dennis first·-TV rights to an NFL from Philadelphia. 4 1, actress and I don't want to caned out, 1And here comes smeared it a ll over the wall reader: In keeping with our lN Tli.E_ interesl-ol helping James! . seen in_ 'the_ book_ cha mpionsJYp = _game? A . _ The _ re~~ oJ t~ y,';~~~==.,;;i evict her. I'll just have to · the Rodeo Queen." That's how liko peanut butter. It was a policy of alerting the public to innocents ward off the cries of ~longs1~e host Ted Mack, who $75;000, whl ch now barely (a) covered" in the liOok -:Q wait, l guess." my luck has been running.' Jaruinese impQrt. Lucky it threatening developments, be the t rivia freak, herewith are is holding an alto saxaphone. buys a minute's advertlaing equally full -• fa-•--~ B t k the ull r-advised that trivia freaks nov1 I h I r I 1· d Th [ "-h ~ ~-ruce oo ano r p on didn't land in my lap. a ew e p u ques ions an e. owner o ~ sax as time for such a game ; (b) fa cts and detail and it jszi't BRUCE BEC ... •1E a dog h. drink d I hed have a new weapQn with which TV h' 1 IO 1·d bed N • iso an aug . answers on is ory 1 e vanis . feeds a network vice preaident trivia. It recalls .bow mucb owner through P e c u l i !ll r "I'm having problems with "THlS wAs a fter 1 moved ~to pester you. you oVe r until you either can 1949 -Q. Wh o played Cap-for half a year. good there was in televisk1n'a1 circumstances. girls, too. I pchhick;edk u~h a to town from the beach. I had It's a nTehw paTper1bac~ J:look purchase the book or hire tfli n Video and why? A. Al 1952 _ Q. Who was the host bad. "l was somewha t drunk one beautiful girl hit l er wit a a one-bedroom place ou t there. called " e e e v1s 1 on someone to throttle the freak: Hodge. on ''I've Got News For You"? It's a handy remindef' ot night ," he explained. "and as I figure tl\at wouldn't rquit. s.he One day lhe breakers washed Shulman and Roger Youman. 1947 -Q. \Vho was Kyle 1950 -Q· Who and what A. J ack Paar. Q. Who wa s the how television has matured- came out of.a bar a girl was to1d me she was late or an 1n-away lhe pier next door and It covers the top TV shows MacDonnell ? A. A blonde h "Th Co ak h . appens on e n-only star on tile "Today" show l think ,.. 25 yean But 1~ standing at the door. She tervtew. I told her I'd t e er the girl who lived in the house from 1947 to last year in am-singer the book says was the -· .,. handed me the dog. wherever she was go1ng if we was terrified. So she moved in pie and occasionally acerbic first "sweetheart'' of TV tinental"? A. As the book puts who regularly ate bananas? A. primary value ii as a lelf. "When 1 woke up the next could have a date afterward. with me. detail . viewers. It doesn't elaborate. it, "suave actor Renzo Cesana J. Fred Muggs. Ask Daddy to defense booklet for combllttina l ill h d lh h She S 'd okay Th ho I ed It shows a picture of her murmurs sweet nothings to explai n If this is unclear. loonies who ask, ' • R I e a morning st a e pooc . at · "Unfortunately, she had :i c aul rs are earn 1953 Q Hadrey?" I named her 'Tr 0 u b I e' "Her oame was Olga. Really Great Dane. This time I decid-men : both worked years for preparing to smash a n the females in the audience, -. Who starred on because that's all she's been." a great chick. But when we ed to pack up and Jive in the TV Guide magazine. Vo.uman orthicon tuhe against the side thereby inducing sighs of ra1>-''Action in the Afternoon" and Just tell them, "•tar " got to her destination it was city. Let me tell you, il hasn't still is at the magazine as of a OC4 . She 1nay have been ture or u n c o nt r o 11 a b I e why is this show historically Racket Squad, 1951," .. Davidson sipped on a noon- day Scotch more amused than frustrated. the Purple Lion, with great been easy." managing editor. Shulman the first woman TV critic. laughter." important? A. Jack Valentine· watch them wilt. big signs all over reading,. ~~~~;_------~~~~~~;_~~~l_::::_:::.::::...::.::::=-=--=-=:_-f .=~=:_------1 -:;iiiiiiiiiiiil:iiiiiiiiiftiliiiftiiliiiiiimiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiii~ '·THINGS HAPPEN fast out here," he said. "I was mar- ried last May at the Hitching Post -that's a wedding chapel -in Las Vegas. But my wife and I are getting a 'Totally Nude Girl Dancers.' Ii Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse PRESENTS "GINGERBREAD LADY" by Meil SIMOn May 4.5 And 11·12 WUT loATl-OlANGE COUNTY 'FAIRGROUNDS ltttt _. NIWPOIT 141-1112 ,,,. '·"'· Mmlnl9ft U.llO.. FClt' RHrY•liol'ls au u+uoo, I 1.m, to J1M p.m. • 01'\9 .()f The YNrt 10 lett-L.A. Tim• "THE EMIGRANTS" '· · J'o uth Coast Repertory At'° (PG) A "" Mltllitll trom Kit'• "M•lllM' l!lrltl .. T .. m "IN THE MIDST OF LIFE" Laur9"c• Olivier "SLEUTH" Ollrln 11'"1111111 "'TH E FAMILY" (Ill • "HANN IE CAULDERU (Al Note Mort. thru Fri. Emlgranh 7:10 11...th t :JO ~ 1 PANAVISICNlf ~ CHARLTON HESfON . ~ EDWARD G. ROBI NSON e 2nd TOP ATTUCTION e 11K1ata1a · "They've come a long way since that $Ulllll1Cl' of~2! ~lf"'l'!Ol''~"'WC'i . . . l;t"' Opens FTlday, May 16tli, 8 p.m. -Tickot. Now 1827 NEWPORT BLVD., at Harbor ll'llO~li!lfl/lt-l"Jltlo"f """l»l S.WS.p 11 2 1,m. "MAGIC THEATRE" Clffn Ma't 27 STARS: LIV ULLMANN tlJ HAllln ANIKISON MaxvonSytlow 2nd HIT Ltv Ullmann JACK LEMMON J ULIET MILLS In "MAN OF LA MANCHA" 7:00 p.m. Fri. & Sot. 7:00 &.11 :00 ALSO !PG) A FllM STORY AS RARE Al> cactus 1n -the snow 9:20 p.m. (Ill TMllre tor SUllOl'I' KltedDll "BILLY JACK" The ~~C""9 II AV ANTI!" ' ' NOW LOCALLY! "FIDDLER ON THE ROOF!" 1 9lld t :45 p.m. Col•r IGJ -11 ~·· ,_._._. .• ,. Sl401UM ·2 .';!;, "' A •11e•_i:;t•.J•~·· • .. ,. -n~•,... $140/UM •J ·.;;: '" ..-....u.. • • '· ,, -.. ,, ·-:.:,· .... Sl40/UM ·! .·:: "' ..... 11., ·':..&"J ·-· "S....,n (G) I ••• "Flnto.1 ._.bow" (G) ... "Plck .. p 0. 101" Ill "Man Of La Mlnchli" (PO) '"Th• War letween Mtrt and W..,...... (PG) "TM Getoway" I,. ... "Lady 51°" Tiie .._,. 111 "Fltt Of IWy" Ill .. ' "Red S.'1 "BILLY JACK" _ .. ...... lWlt ,, , ' I .. _ ' :;····· cowa"o• ······: . . . . • . • ' ' : ••••••• •••·:11oa 0 0000.:: .t :·=~~·:·:-::.':.:~::. <ti ' ' . 7" EXCLUSIVE WEU<; THE MAD K/1fGOF BAVARIA. --... -... TRISH ~l(,11/,\VERE: ME LVI N DOUGLAS "ONE ~ I LOMELI !UM8£R" (PC) \ • • I I t • I ' I JI DAILY I'll.OT. S 1-..... 10. 1973 GWCNewspaper Takes Five Wins 1be Branding 1""1 and In preyloasly published sports Golden Weit College fealura. · • Viejo Ready sand s ~ c--were"'' down last 11urada1 i F pany will be the lint vlcllJns without a city penn!L Tbe of tile cily of 1"1M'I blq 00 trees, V-wldcb are IVll I B ty the cUltlllg -" -In the .)_... mile cib" · r or . eau wl~:·~~r.:-~~James :~ ... ::.i:.t leut fl,* Erlckaon said 'nlelday night s and s. developers of biJ 'office "will proceed" College Part, may be loraed A • • • against the !Inn wbidl ls said to replace 1he trees under CtiVI ties to 11ave 001 dow• t"° silk oak 1enm o1 the 1aw wblcb pro: and lhree walnut trees from a vldes for a maximum penally _... locatioo along H a r v a r d of a $500 fine ot six monthl in 1 Mission Viejo Beautiful Month has as Avenue. jail for each violation of the Comtracdon Firm CifRil ~ sludmta recently -.-lloa& with the otate booors, _, iiVhw.nla In state and the Columbia Sd>olastlc Prell uatioaal oompetltloo. Asoocfallon •nrded a !Im lls-olhcr goals the encourag~mMI ol ~uoltr Services dltec-law protecting trees larger residents to pu,.,.., envlronmentallfand '!tll'1''llll1lrady-iald the ·1nes than 3.5 lnChes brclam<W. ~ ecologically oriented acllvtties. Jp;~;;iiii;,i;i;;;;;iiiiii;,;~;;i;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;91 • The weekly paper and lta place ~le to the Bran-ding Iron ln natlGaal ...,.. De Portola School staged a paper drive on May I that helped launch the com· munity·wide oompetitioo. 1be students collected more than 38,000 pounds of papers with fifth graders at the top of the heap. . PRE • KINDERGARTEN RlGISTIATION C:UNIC staff ~ captured two pelilioe ol malJ.ln tnlri<>. firll place booon, a oecood L"lluna l!leoch Unified School Dlttrlct and thW place trophy at the recait Los Angeles coovenllon ol the Joumalinn Association of Community Colleges. The oompellllao f .. tur.d I b e pul>llcatlooa and -· of 70 community colleges in C811fornill. Finl place trophies were awarded to Unda Clrigllaoo, Huntington l!eoch. fur on-tbe-"11"1 uews cO.enge of a con- veutlon speed! by Bill Farr, reporter lnim the Los Angeles HIUlllngton Beaeh,in-edltorlal c:artoon oompeliUoo. A ...,...i place trophy was awarded the Branding Iron for a front page layout In the small college tabloid category. Lee Friedersdorl, C o s I a Mesa, sports editor for the Branding Iron in the fall semester, received third place NEW MANAGEMENT SPECIALS MEN'S SUITS .119 ... ~!:J~ 59" SWEATERS ,. SKIRTS ' ·CPU.IHI ea. •WIOE BOTTOM PANTS DRESS SHIRTS (OM HANO•"-Sl MILITARY Clvil Service & Uniforms 75~ .. 25¢ H, $1 ... PACIFIC PLAZA CLEANERS 8839 Adams HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-3183 ' 100°1. B. X. Members Governor Appoints Beach Man Milton R. Beychok, a Hun· tlngton Beac:h resident, I• one of five new members ap- pointed by Governor Reagan to -lhe C.Womla .Regiooal W.ater Quality Control Board for the Los Angeles area. The aluminum can recycling drive got WKlerway under direction d. the Mission Viejo Beautiful Committee. With the aid of Laguna Beac:h recycling center recep- tacles for aluminum cans were placed in locations throughout the community. The small green trash cans are at La Paz Plaza, the La Paz Medical-Dental Cent.er, Texaco Service Station at Avery Parkway, the St'andard Station at Crown Valley Parkway, the Marguerite Recrea- tion Center, and Deane Swim and Racquet Club. The receptacles will be at these loca· tions all month. ALISO CLINIC: MIY, 21 & 22; 8:30.11 :00 & 12:00-3:30 TOW CLINIC: MoY 29 & 30; 8:30-11:00 & 12:Q0.3:30 EL MORRO CLINIC: Juno 5 & 6; 8:30.11:00 & 12:Q0.3:30 No appointment is necessary, but if you wish to ba assured of completing the clinic with- in one hour, you may set a definite time by calling 494-8~. ext. 48, Call also if you have transportation problems or need further in- formation. Beychok, 50, of I 7 I 4 2 Courtney· J,ane, ls well-la'lown for his cn'Ucism of 1he Hun· TOP OF THE HEAP -Students of de Portola Elementary School tington Harboor lagoon-con-are atop the more than 38,000 pounds of newspapers collected for An anti-litter campaign highlighted the first week of activities. Students from the Mentally Gifted Minors program of La Paz Intermediate School picked up litter to beautify Eldorado Park and Jeronimo Road area. Brl119: dominium project. Mission Viejo Beautiful Month . From left in rear are David Jackson, He ls manager of en-·Valarie Pitkin and Bobby Jaoobs. In front are Janet Hammer and vironmental engineering for __ C_ary_:__A_d_ki_·n_so_n_. __________ ~·--------- Fluor Engineers and eon.1ruc- Chlld, birth corllflcale, moaslos, polio and DPT immuniution records. For. those entering this fall, necesury age is 5 on or before December 2, 1973. tors, .Inc., of Los Angele!, with an expertise in refinery and petrochemical plant wastewater treatment. Beycbok, a Democral, is also a member of the Water Pollution Control Federation. Telephone Psychic Discussion Employee The Public Is Invited REFLEcrIONS by I Reyn Sheff-er "All that I am, or hope: to lte, I owe to my anf'I rMther " Abt'ahlim Lincoln Lincoln said it for all of us .. , our mothers have given us all of"the good and worth- while things we.pos!IHs. No- where in this imperfect world do we find anything as perfect, true and stead· fast as a mother's love and devotion to her childicn. No toll is too disagreeable, no effort too exhausting for the mother who labors on behalf of her family. And so, on one day of the year, we honor Mothers. It is little enough to do for her . . . or her memory ... in the light of what she ha.5 done for us. Our friendly, 11ympathetic advice and counsel Is based on our years of experience in serving this community. Sheffer Mortuary is locally owned and operated as It has been since Its fou nding in 1927. LAGUNA BEACH 976 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY 494-1535 SAN CLEMENTE 1511 NORTH EL CAMINO REAL 492-D 100 OPEN HOUSE Gets Award Golden West Lecturers Explore Unknown SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL A Laguna resideat has been cited and awarded $100 by his employers at G e n e r a I Tel~hone for !:Us actions in saving the life of an 18-month- old boy. JIM MITCHELL, 3 I 9 5 I Sunset Ave., was presented with the company's La Cro.ix Certificate and given a check by R. Parker Sullivan, presi· dent of General Telephone of California. Mi tchell was credited with saving the life of 18- month • old Kirt Quast, 1434 Santa Cruz, Feb. 27. The inci- dent involv- ing the youngster took place at the Security Pacific Bank Laguna Beach, where Mitchell Forms," 10:15 a.m.. Di:. Marcel Vogel, research chemist at the Los Gatos IBM Jabocatory. -"Man and His Energy Fields in Health and Disease," 11 :15 a.m. and 2 p.m., Dr. Shafica Karagulla, president and research director °bf the Higher Sense Pe re ept ion Research Foundation i n Beverly Hills. -"Photographing the Trans- fer of Bioenergy at a Distance," 11:15 a.m. and 2 p.m., Kendall Johnson, the in- ventor of radiation f i e I d photography. -''The Transcendent Hwnan Potential,'' 4: 15 p.m., Dr. James Fadiman, a psychologist and s e n i o r counselor at Stanford University. was working on a service or-A FILM ON "Acupuncture der. Anesthesia" will be shown According to official reports, THE FOUR TOPICS and twice during the noon lunch a yo.ung woman came running s p e a k e r s , a r e : break. into the bank screaming for "Bioenergetic Re s p o n s e s Saturday's symJ)OSium is co- help with the child in her Between Man and p 1 a n t stkmsored by Golden West anns. The boy had apparentlylr~~=:iifiil~Piii!fiiim'-~fti!¥.!ifiji:~:,:;:;-struck his head and was 11 knocked unconscious. 2030FF TUX RENTALS 5030FF ALTERATIONS fO• Ml• & WOMI• I College and The S.01.1,_them California S o. c i e t y for Psychical Research, Inc· Dr. Vogel will reveal some of his investigation into !he relationships between man and plants showing that plants apparently respond differently to different persons~ JOHNSON, IN photograph- ing certain energy a u r a s around humans , bas fowxl. that the traditional acupuncture points correspond to photogra· phabl.e enefiY points on the body. 'Karagulla and Fadiman will both explore the powers within certain individuals to help others through p s y c h i c phenomenon such as faith healing and med ica l diagnoses. 31872 Coa,st Highway South Laguna Saturday, May 12 9 A.M. -4 P.M. Tours ell day of new surgical suites, new emergency service, x. ray and radiother~py departments, new nursing floors, special treatment facilities -all in· stalled es part of $I 0 mill ion expansion program. FREE PARKING REFRESHMENTS Everybody Welcome i • 1 VJHY PAY RETAIL FOR TIRES? for European and Japanese cars l1AELL1 CINTURATO '367 RADIN. Cinturatos were on th~ w111111119 .:;.,;, l.~ :;or.-.c twenty international rallies in the past year alone. Including the famous Monte Carlo of Monaco. So, why not take a hint from some of the world's greatest dri~ers, and put P1relli's on your import. BIG SAVINGS ON DOMESTIC CAR SIZES ALSO UH YOUI CllDIT VOLUNTEERS SUCKS LUUHU£D DI SHDUENED .~.~~!~ How PRICES START AT· .~1 WI HOHOr All IONAflH '••our. DISCOUNT 01 SAYllS CLUI Cooperative pr09rams with local volunteers and clubs bring patients the added dimension of communication and participation with tho out. side community. Visits by youth groups help patients experience the enthusiasm and iest of young people giving service to others. Yilhn Atw.n Weke .. ......,. MOMI c ..... ...._ H_,lt.I 15410 c ....... C.1ttm... Caphtr.o ..... 496·1716 SHDUEH DIESSES o• suns .~.,~.·~. How .. s11s COATS TAK£M 111 .'=~.~!~. How . 13~ THIS COUl'OH MUST •• 'l•l•WT•D "'™ TH• OAllM•Htl .t.t TH• TIM• THIY Alll LIJIT FOii ALTl!llA'TIOHS. VOID I, ,llli· St.HTIO At TIMI 0' ,ICl(UP ••• --.., -.. ~~-~-----.. --. ---COUPON GOOD THIU AUG. ·73, __ _ TAILOR SHOP 58llO EDINGER AT SPRINGDALE HUNTINGTON BEACH 846·0911 $33~~>ET 1U-1J SIZE MOUNTED .AND BALANCEDrREE PLANS J!.IST SHOW YOUI CUlllNT CARD AT TIMI OF PUICHASll FACTORY · TIRE DISTRIBUTORS 27601 FORBES ROAD. UNIT J LAGUNA NIGUEL, CALIF. 92677 .. .., b=================~~~~=~~~~;!~~~,~~l;t;l~~~!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!~ (71') 831·2!23!0!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 FROM Fash ion Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR ' (I I' I ·I .. l • 2-Tower • -·Capitol . Plan Seen SACRAMENTO (AP) - C 1111 or nil'• lilt-yOll'Old cl111164tylt ClpJlol, dtcl1rod Ill lll'lllqlllb bwrd, , ... lblndolmitat In flVQr Of I l , LIWllllkln IOI I look It ~an• !or tilt -bulldln1 ( BRIEFS ) """""""· Mor 10, 191J • • ), " • ' • --... ll'f 10, 1973 Research • • No Aid to , Pot Vsers I Grower Says Chavez ~All Throug h' , ~ ' I • J , . C.pltol News Sen1ee • 1 illo Wlllt the T~ aad old grope vi""' oo ~ Roberta contnct w!lb the growen. Fun4 ad ·a <lllirovets1al SACRAMENTO ..:_ IS Oelar wW '1\IU their pr.Jerence ranch near Fl11>9'0 la alao Roberts said the petltlool Farm Worbr'a """1. Under Chavez' empire cruml>llnc! known. , • 1111pected of beinC related to givea to him contained tbe 1erm1 Gf the UFWU oootracts, "Definitely," deolaru one ,the union dispute. Roberti slinatur.. of 1111 pen:ent of bla sro-t were required to con- ho 1..... WHAT !'Ill!' UFWU calls .a uya lbe ,vines, cut Qff slJ; In-emplliyes. ' tribute JO cOnls an hour foc • BERKELEY (AP) -"Now grape grower w •.....,. 1 ir•pe "atrllr.e" Is actually -a <lie• above the gr o u n d , Under terms of t h e • Neb hour worUd by each ._. r not I'"'•• In four-year cootract with tbe .,._Ip Gl ...... , •• ••alnat repre~nt a Jou of at least Teamster oontracta, the hue -w to the -K<nnedy fund, ....., m ., .... to ru Teamsters Union -an action •~wera who ~ -ry ·-dllngs for pot llDOl<en," says that precludes renewal of hli -UFWU '« .,.-tr..:...• , renew ~.000. ' (lowest) pay will ~be raised jain a d m In I 1 t ere d by uni It arehe ho' . ed t Ith Cha ' , ... -111 .. . ....._ .. ,.. A..30 •• and . ~ and-tbe union. a vera y..,. r w s e.•Pl!' con ract w ., lJ!V.~·--·""·-~CLt.:~.lle"-.IW .. BEB:rS· _ '. ·-"~'.Hie.-.;;:; .ed~~·mlllloni~:?;~;lif rylnf-to-bolote-a---diaease-llnited-Fann Worl<errll~u;-'~ ~--ha" grower John Kovacevlch .. Id ,. ~•-fund that wtll kill marijuana plants. Hollis. B. Roberta, head of left thesensenJ•~.-.ft .. "°1 .\.":et''"•• ... • . bealth and pension plans, BJ In -. ·--uu ~ _.. the Teamsters pr.esented them well ·.-is unemployment in-"But there are a lot of farm-the glJlnt Roberts Farms ~Arvin area or Kem County with .petitions signed b~ a ma· Surance. · GROWERS AUO have been ers in the Midwest who have located In Kem and Tulare has resul.ted 1n a rrumber , of jority Of their workers. 'lbe The ,expiration of the UFWU required to donate two cents !.dln..l"'"'•lll< these hemp plants cluttering arrelb-ln recent weel\s. . -petitiooa Indicated the wockers contracts ended grower con-ptt boz pi<tod; lo the Farm · ··" -........, up their soybean fields," said rNE"'S "''. •yszs) And the destruction last Wanted lo be represented by tributions Into that union's WIX'kers' Fund, which is under FARM TURMOIL Dr. Arthur Mccain, 8 plant\ "· ALlJ'LIJ ~kofaome2,600tbree-year-theTeamstersinnegotiating.a Robert F. Kennedy Medical tbecontrolofOlavez'union. CesarCMve1 • pathologist with UC's Agric:ul- 1ural Extension. ..I have no desl\e to wipe out marijuana, as such, just control it Rs a . , Marianna Cella, assist- ant ."Bunny Mother" at Playboy Club in Mc- Afee, N .J., gives blood on behalf of boy whose mother is bunny. Mus icians Make Hit In Events crop menace." YOUNG HEMP and mari- juana plant. appear Identical, he said, and both contain the same actlve drug-like ingredi- ents, although hemp contains much lower amounts. · McCain said he is studying fusarium wilt, a disease which clogs a plant's water conduct- ing tissues. If a strain can be discovered which attacks only bemp, tile fungua could be released on a soybean field and wipe out the weed. 1be research will a I s o show whether marijuana is suscept- ible to wilt. "I DON'T think the govern· ment could really control pot smoking with anything I've come up with," he added. "I'm doing scientific r e s e a r c h. People should understand my mission." counties, was one of the 17 San Joaqtlin Valley grape growers to Sign contracts with the Teamsters last week . He says, "Cesar's a 11 through." THE CONl'RACl'S cover from 5,000 to 6,000 ' ·farm workers formerly covered by UFWU contract!. A n o t h e r 2,000 workers are covered under T e a m s t e r contracts signed by Coachella Valley growers three weeks ago. The only batllegrqund left for Cesar's armies (wit h the exception of the secondary boycott) is back In Delano, where it all started eight years ago. UFWU's contracts with the Delano growers do not expire until July 31. But Roberts predicts Chavez will lose this fight, too. H~ says the workers in that area F • I arming Three mwiical groups in the Ho McCa ' 'd h .ca .. i..... u lfed s h 1 wever.. in sa1 sue . tw>wano--n 1 . c ~ o -resean:n ultimately Could help D1Strict ~ve won high ratings governments control illegal at music festivals in Southern cultivating of. marijuana. Students -. Honored California this spring. McCain, 48, said he bOcame Five students from Costa Mesa High School and ~ight students rrom l\1ission Viejo High School have been hono,red for excellence in agriculture. The San Clemente High intereS'ted in marijuana and School Band directed by ~mp af~er learning that fusa-' r1um wilt destroyed 25 per· Arion Emneier, won~ a cent of a hemp crop in Italy "superior" rating at the where the plant is used to Southern California Band and make rope fiber. Orchestra Festival and judg· ing at Cal State Fullerton. At the same festival the district's honor elementary orchestra won an "excellent" rating which is just below the ''superior" designation. At a sin)ilar competion held recently in Santa Imnica, Dana Hills Higb School's band directed by Leon Badham won an "excellent" rating in com· petition with dozens of other groups. The Dolphin band won the rating despite a handicap caused by the lack of seniors on the new campus this year. Gold certificates a'nd 'blue ribbons were presented by AFTER OBTAINING a fed-Security PaciCic Bank. The eral grant and a number of competition was conducted un- scientific and security clear-der the auspices of the .Future ances, McCain received a bag Farmers of America. . of seeds and began growing C.Osta Mesa winners are marijuana '8lld hemp in a cor-Robin Hardison, 1blue; Mari· ner of the wtiversity green· anne Jonas, gold ; Donna liipis: house. The plants, ranging in blue; Derik Werner, blue and size from seed.IIngs to eight Kevin Woodrow blue. in~hes tall, are locked in a ?\.1ission Viej~ winners .are i.. wire ca~e and. watered by an ' Chuck Giddens, gold ; Ralph automatic spnnkler system. Giddens, gold ; Marti Hen- Peering in at the 35 or so derson, blue; Cathy Lang, plants, 'McCain remarked, "I blue ; M"ar.y Stirewalt, blue; doubt these plants are worth Thomas st1rewalt, blue.: Dana more than a few bucks on the Walker, blue, and Sarah street." Wilson, blue. "' It'll get you more than you got before. From now till the end of June you can get America's best selling Whiskey For only $4.99 a fifth . • ~.; .. ~:: . " ·. ···::-:~· ·1· ' -• f • . . . " .. .' .. •·' ' .. " ~ 'J .r~ . c;. .. 1 ,.\,~l.-'o< =mum_.,,,,.c. ...., ............ . ' -. . .. .. , -. OR!Hf2 · M AT't ll.[E'S S . ,, ' ,....~ s•1a RTHOEASE 1 A fabulous buy! This giant 6-ft. wide by 7-ft. long Oftt>o king-6ize manress set comes complete with Mattress. 2 Box Springs, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus I A marveloua Ortho king! Featuring a rugged Tempe~Steel Innerspring for lastlng support. Complete with Mattress, 2 Box Springs, Orttio...Pak & Double Boo us! Superb quality Elegant touches like the smooth butto~free Scroll-Quilted cover. Comes complete with Mattress, 2 Box Springs, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus! ~•2.3995 Enjoy lasting comfort on thiaelegant Ortho king! With heavy-duty Tampered-Steel Innerspring. Complete with Mattress, 2 Box Springs, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus! --" *"8 URTHO EASE II Bedroom too small for a king? Here'• the perfect answer for more" stretch-QUI room! A great Ortho queen! With Mattress, Box Spring, Ortho-Pak & Ooobte BornJs! OATifO FLEX *15995 Step up to Ortho's extra comfort, In a sensatlonal queen--slze set. Wtth Crown- Aex canter for extra back support. With Mattress, Box Spring, O~ak & Dot.obla Bonus! POSTURE REST ~$17995 lncredl e luxury! Rich detailing Ilka thick Cotto~Felt filling for added cushioning. Complete with Mattress, Box Spi'lng, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus! ORTHO BALBOA '919995 If yau've alwtl)'S yearned for something a ltttle different ••• this la ltl A huge 7-tt. diameter round bed, "1th matchlf18 2·plece foundation PLUS Ortho'a ipedal Double BonUI: .....,MNOMd Top Sheet AND Altld lofloM 111Mt. TWINS or· FULLS '~} .N ./.:!! ORTHO EASE $58 - Al thle supet·low price every member of, thafamilycanhavatheirownOrtho ; ., mattress set -In yourchoicaoftwlooc fUll size. Mattress, Box Spring & Double BOf!.Usf ORTHOFlEX s.a· 9~ Chootethealzethat~t~J-yqui:need& -twin or full. EnjoylUChtou.cbeSof · elegance as Channel-Quilt~ ~rs • ventilated for Inner frnhl'IAll!R_ Mattress., · BoxSpringlOouble~ :. " .... -' $7995 POSTURE REST From Hs Fiber-Lock sisal padding foundation to the smooth Scroll-Oullled cover -this la superb quality. And it comes complete with Mattress, Box Spring & OoubleS.....I .· s9995 OR1liO HOTEL Toooedwlth a special woven fabric cover & featuring Oftho's Flanged Construction to prevent cover slippage. Deluxe . throughout! Complete with Mattress, Box Spring l Double Bonual THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN O F MATT RESS SPEC IA L IS T S ORANGE · SANTA ANA an d ANAHEIM ,LAKEWOOD ~ 2445 N. Tustin Ave. FOUNTAIN VALLEY 1811 West Lincoln Ave. -4433 Candlewood Ave. ' • I •cro11 from Of11tt• M1lll 16131 l'farbor dlvd. letw11" E11clkt eitd l,rookhur1t 'C•ndlewood Shops A11111u1t I ecro•t from lekewoed C111t1r) Piton• 617·0111 l•or11or of Edl1111r1 N1ri t• .tocfy'• • Ju1t int of FH Mert Phon11 6J4-41l4 Pho111: llt-4170 l'tto1111 776·2190 I ' -. • • • • • • • .• •. ,· DAILY PILOT PHOTI> IY PATllCI O'DONNELL -fASHIONS COUlTUY OF MONT90MllY WAID, HUNTINGTON llACH ' ' • REMEMBER .. I • . ' . ' ' • May 13th is Mother's Day! You'll find the perfect gift for your mother among the many suggested items in this section. Remember her next Sunday! DAILY PILOT ) • , l ' . ' • • ,•. " •' .. .. •' • ' • ' I ' I .. DAIL y I'll.OT DREW APPOINTME.NT Dr. Joan Orlondo Specialist To Teach Dr. loan Raiata Orlando of Newport Beach, a cardiologist lp<Clalb•t, has been appointed assistant pr o f es so r of medicine at th~ D r e w , Postgraduate Medical School ~ in L-Os Angeles. I Dr. Orlando also holds a \. concurrent appointment in the ;. -USC School of Medicine's ~ Department of Medicine and ii a staff physician at the Martin Luther King J r . General Hospital. She hu also taught at UC Irvine. VCI Plans • Lectures, Film Series UC Irvine's Extension pro- gram for the end of the month include lectures and films ranging from Ingmar Berg- • man's ''lbe Seventh Sea1,' to a lecture on !olk music. The schedule includes: WEDNESDAY, M1y JI "Chlrnolti..-aptvtlc A11ent1,'' Alan 1'"1lrhur11, Ph.O., a150el•l1 profnsor, o.p.artrrMPnt ol Ph•rm 1 colog y , Callfornl• Colllll• of Mldlclne, UC lrvlnt. P•rt ot 1 UC lrYlnt EJCJtn1IOl'f IKTur• 1.1rllt., "M<1Chlnl1m1 of Drug Atllon.'' 7-10 p.rn., ~ LKllll"I Hatt, MIC!k•I S11r99 I Sldg., UC 1rvl111 campU1. Slnol• Mlrn1111otr, u .so. "Und<lr1t1ndlno Movln: Analyllc•I Approache1 lo Fiim, (Fltm: -..The S.-..nlll S.11 (ltSll), dll"ldtd by Ingmar B1r11manl.'' Pllll Frllllf, Ph.D., a11lt-tant protnsor of English. ChaP<Nn CotltQI. L•1I ol a UC lrvlnt E><1tn1lon lacturl·l!lm 111'ln , 7·10 p.m., Rm. 100, Soc:l1I Sclanct HIU, UC /rvln1 (l mpU1. Slngl1 ldml11I~ $5.SO. ''TIX Pl1nnnng for ttl• Executlv1," Mlcl'Mlel Chrl11f1naon, LL.8 .• 1ttorn1y, Wlt11r, H1rpol1 & Ch rl 1tl1n1on, N~rt Beach1 P9nnl1 l(l1rln, J.C., 1uoe-rvlsor, T•• Department, pr1cttcln<;1 C.P.A. wit!! !m1t & !r111t. N-p0rt Be1ch. P1rt of 1 UC lrvln. Ext-IOll 1.cture -~. "Ettec;tlw R11!11 of • • e:r t:I. ========::a• 1 ·1 J -~ ~ • : • • OBter hlender '-dds o new dimension to her cooking.Try solods, soups ond. dtuerts from the 84·poge Spin Cook- ery cookbook that come• with It. I 0 speeds. Lorge 5-cup gloss conto iner. 29.99 Mlton egg eooke.f Pooches or boils eggs to your to.to preference outomotico ll y .. Pooches up to four eggs ot o time ; boils oight. Mom con cook ond serve eggs right ot tho toblo. T oflon Ii nod poacher. 22 .99 vo lue. 17.99 ehlnese wok Enioy your fovori to Oriental dinners ot home with Cornwa ll's electric wok. Cook ond serve right ot tho toble for o go urmet touch. Complete with-wok cookbo ek -ond dome cover. -24.99 Hou sowores , 95 • COfllOl'lll TIX Ind Fln 1ncl1 I ----------------------Probltms," 7.10 p.m., Rm. 174. Com· pufl'I" Sclt11<1 8 1dQ., UC ll'Vlne c1mpus. Slr1gl1 1dml111on. U .50. THURSDAY, Mly JI "NOl'!t'ltl Ind Abnorm11 HU!'lln SIX· Ull PrKlkH '4'NI Tllelr P1ycho-Socl11 AIPe(h," Don1ld w. Schafer, M.O., 1uocl11t cHnlc.111 prolftlOI" of P1ychl1try •rad Human BIHllVIO<", C•lllon'l11 Col. of Medicine, UC lrvlne. P1rt of 1 UC Irvine Ex1en1lon lectvr1 Ml'"ln. "5c"'11111c Medicine for Th9 L1y .... n: TM Genllourln1ry Sy1'9m," 7·10 p.m., Lectur1 Hi ll, Medlcal Sur111 I Bldg., UC lrvlne cam- pua. 5111111• Mlml11lon, U. 'The Kinch of Folk M111lc," hm HlnlDl'I. A.I ., folkllngt'I', 11 1uocl11e dl~tor, Allallon1 With School1, UC S.n Oltga. P1rt of a UC Sl11ewlde Ex- lll'i.lon IK!Url M<ln. "The Folk M\11l-()an1. P1rt II," 7-10 p.m .. Rm. 100, Soc:l1I Scl9<1C9 H11I, UC 1 .... 1ne campus. Slnol• 1dml1h.on, u.so. ''Wtiat 11 Th• srvre 01 The New P11nnln11 Procns'," Jahn Ch1pm1n, ,peirln•r, Chapman, Ph!ll!p1, Brandl and A1soclates.; Ed Haworth, p1rtner, Haworth & Anderson: Ken Rtynold5, pl1nnlnv director. Clly of Hunlln111on Beach. Part of a UC 1rvlflfl Extension lKhtr1 1erlH, "Th• Plannlnv Revolu-llon In Soolhern California: Wh.ir New Roi" for Local Govtrnmenr, 1111 DlvllO!l'lf", file Clllten?" 7-10 p.m. Rm. 100, Socl1I Science Hall, UC lrv!na c:1m11111. Single admission, $.I.SO. t Coastline Panel Suing Homeowner South Coast regional coastal .. conservation commissioners unanimously have endorsed the first Jegal action on their behalf against a construction project allegedly in violation of the Coastal Protection Act. The commission authorized the California A t t o r n e y General's office to file suit to halt construction at a singl e family homesite at 25253 1 11.falibu Rd., in Malibu. The commission staff con- tends the builder-owner, Harold Gordori, 111 aetiiany building up 10· ~t 5tJ>MAte units under a normal R-J permit on a lot directl y overlooking the ocean. Coast Student -Barna 'Degree C.tlilo' Allll RoP!IOrl of HUJI. Ungton Beach will graduate nert month with high honors 1""'1 Col State Loi Angeles, college ortlclals ha ve rePorted. She will receive a bachelor's degree In ooci<llogy. • ' save $8.00 over open stock corning ,t111iµ-tet set All Moms kMw obout ·famous Corningwore thot 'fO" coh freeze , cook ond serve with. Now ifs ltvoiloblo in two 0>1<:iting new pottorns .. plus th• original cornflower pattern. Set include• I , 11/2 ond 2-qt. soucapons plus 10" sk illet, •och with Pyrex® cover. ' 27.80 voluo cornflower pattern. 18.88 31.80 volue flo ral bouquet ond sp•ce o' life (shown). 22.88 .· .. • " '. 1prt111 lllo11orn ,, .. ,. / ilutterfly gold ----·· ··---.. , ... --"?IZ!Ziii* ••'If~ ,IJ~fli :Lilpl~ _.,.. ;:/" , __ . _ . ..:::::::.--·:: __ ....• ;----' --. corelle dinnerware with the corning promise' Heres dinn erware with the feel ond ring of fine china,· the eosy-core qualities of the fomous Corning reputation. •They promise to replace it if it breaks, cracks, chips or stains during two years of normal use. Choose a 20-piece servic e fo r four. Winier Frost White, 19.95 Spring Blossom Green, Butterfly Gold or Snowfloke Blue, 2 1.95 Housewares, 39. Mail or phone orders invited ----i~t19~ 8!111 t1IlnC19 'IlDIP<ID~ wlftt1r fro1t whit. CERRITOS ANAHEIM 444 N. Euclid 171 4} 115·1121 NEWPORT HUNTINGTON IEACH 47 F1thion hl•nd 171 4) 644-1212 7777 Edln9ff Av•11v• 1714) 19 2°111 1 ORANGE, MALL OF ORANGE 2100 N. Tu•ll" Streit 1714) 991 ·1)1t 500 Lo• C1ttlto• Mill I l 1 JI 160-041 I SHOP JO A.M. to 9:10 P.M. MONDAY' TH ROUGH FltlDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. t• 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5 P.M. I r I .. ,,,.,,.,,, 11'110, 197] NEW WENDY WARD Jol1yne Burch Pre-teen Modeling Plan Set DAILY PILOT ,1,1 JoLaync Burch, former f\1iss Los Angeles. bas been named director of f\1ont g omer y f Ward's Wendy Ward Model . +-I-""'' and Charm Program in the company's Huntington Beach retail store. The prog ram al the I-tun4 tington Center store offers courses for three major age groups: -Model Teen classes, which stress the int erests a n d lifestyles of junior and senior high school girls. -Crossroads to Charm, a course for girls 8 through l l which bridges the gap between lollipops and llpstlck. -Suga r and Spice. a charm and manners course for 4 to 7-1 year-old girls and boys. All three courses include a graduation fa shion show to which .friends and relatives will .be invited. Miss Bur ch's credentials in· elude eonsidcrable f a s h i on modeling. bolh ramp shows and photography, over the past lwo ycars. A Wendy Ward graduate herself. she is featured in the May issue of Teen ~1agazine -her third appearance in the magazine. She also is in rehearsal f?r a television show themed for a yo ung adult audience and slated for cable television this fall . "The Wendy Ward program was a great· benefit to me perso nally ," said l\-1iss Burch, "so I can recommend it with enthusiasm. Actually , it open· cd up a whole new world for me." The Mod el Teen tourse is a six-week program covering modeli ng, posture. po i s e . grooming, skin care. makeup. hair styling. figure control and wardrobe coordination. Crossro.:ids to Charm which has the approval of the Girl Scouts of America for a profi· ciency badge. is designed to guide pre-teens through the transit ional years. It covers grooming. skin ca re. posture. poise. table m a n n er s . wardrobe. and nail and hair care. The Sugar and Spice course teaches 4 to 7-ycar-old boys and gi rls the elements of eti· quette, table manners. in· troductions, posture, good grooming. self expression , and poise. ?\.1iss Burch pointed out that special programs also arc available for career women and homemakers. She explained that ap- proximately three m i I 1 ion young girls have completed Wendy Ward co u r s e s nationwide. "It's a proven prc>- gram and equal in content to many courses costing five to ten times more." she said . "Our main objective is to help each girl to know herself belier and to build self-con-~ fidence as we show her how to i1nprove her appearance," she J added. Truman Statue INDEPENDENCE. Mo . I AP ) Students a t Truman High School have begun a drive to raise $100.000 to $150,000 for a lifesize st a tu e or the school's namesake, former President llarry S Tru· man. Randy Davidson, presi· dent of the schOOl's Stu· :lent Council. announced the start of the drive on the 891h annive rsary of Trum an's birth. lie then made a contribution of S500 on the part or the students. / a. ' J I .. . " I L' • ' • • eou11try ruffles In erepeset® nylon by vassarette Vassorette coils the se "Country French " because they're chic yet deliciously unsophisticated! Mof'Tl will love them. All in pink or blue, sizes S, M, L. A. Imported Nylon French Clu ny loce yoke. Long gown, 18.00. Not sho wn: short version, I S.00. B. Boby dol l/bikini, 14.00. Fashion Sleepwear, 24 ~ANAHEIM Iii NEWPORT !·le sa id high school ~tudents throughout the n&tion would push the drive t~roughout lhe next 1Chool lenn. 4+t N. E11clid 17 141 SJs.1121 47 Ftd1iot1 hl•t1d 17141 "44·1212 il l ' ' } ' ' . ' body-liners of crepeset® by vassarette Cling-free underliners to shadow oll her sheers. In Crepelon® of Enko's Crepeset® nylon ... for the prettiest summer in years! Formal full length slip, bro-hiding strops, white with kice trim , 32-38, 9.00. Not shown: Doyweor slip, 6.00. Doyweor Lingerie, 63 HUNTINGTON IEACH 1111 Edl119tr A11•nu• 1714) 1•2-l)JI ; 11118 UPfM - . • mothers day issunctayl3 . may ., :l . ' ~ j' f ~ \ ,I lo ' • ~ ~. " ' 'I .1 quilt-trim traveler by gossard In bright oronge or keen green ! F•Jr on- the-go Mothers who wont their robes reo dy to pack ond wear short hours ofter war.hing. Zip-front wrop-up styli ng in soft nylon tri cot. Quilted to polyester fiberfill , nylon boded. Sizes S, M, L. 17.00. Robes, 51 CERRITOS • .. , . .1~1; ' "!' ,,, ·> ·l ... .... . ORANGE, MALL OF ORANGE 2100 N. T11ttlt1 Sm•t l7141 •91·1111 500 Loi C•rrltot M•ll 12111 160·0411 SHOP 10 A.M. t• ':JO P:M· MONDAY THltUOGH fltlDAY. SATUltDAY 10 A.M. to • P,M, SUNDAY 12 NOON to ' P,M, , ' ' ' ' • ( IWl.Y PILOT Police Seel lly JOANNE ll«YNOw8 Huntington Beach hasn't given tts John Of .. o.ity"" ,... Doe a number. Hls body, which showed • ~ Dec. 26, lour mea have been signs ol having been tortured and sex- ,_ In the westem 0ronp OOWtty· ually mutiloted, was fouad In the OOlllal ~ Angeles Harbor .,.. ond police hove dty April 11. 1J9 clues to their ldller'I kl<slUty. ~ve.s from five o,.ac!H fn. JOHN DOE NO. II II the murder •le· ~aUng lbe mutUatlon murders aro Um . that has led polic< to helleve there .. • Lin la in -Moore's body wu clothed, euept for shoes. Ther< WU evidence that he had been sexually auaulted, bul there were no post mortem cuta. Ht wll 11....ied. • . .. .. ...... .. .. .. -. Coastal Killing• l not even completely canvln<ed that a mlgbt be a link bolwoen the murders. His ~-'---j'~f,le'im~a~n~or~~~ol~mellii~"~mpooal~;;;i-~M~cked;;;~ up body wu found wrspped In re ble for the murders ve plastic OCllf In 1t•or11'1oc!lllW- more and more mocobre. •Ions the Termlnol llland Fmway and -John Doe No. 11 wu nude, and was killed in the oame way. Agolll Ibero w" evidence ol a sexual au1uJt, ud 11aome post mortem cu.ta on hll t11Uclt11" ac- oordlnC to Del. Brod Phelan of ~PD'o Harbor DM.sloo ..• -The HwiUnctoo Beach wu I - • A.s ..,. investigator uy1, there'• more In a trash bto In SUlllOI Beodt. they .doo't know obaUt the <:Mel than Investigaton from the po 11 c e they do know. departmen ts In HuntlnllOD Besch, Seal Beach, Long Beach and Loo Angeles and 11lEY DON'T KNOW, for Instance, the the Orange O>unty Shertlf 11y the are ideo!UUeo of throe vlctlml. looking for the common denominator that could cumect the lour men and point the tho lint Ol)e, Ednnl Denlel way to the killer Or ldllers. , a 20-year-old C...p Ptndletoo wi-body wll ditoovered In WITllOUT NAMES of three of the vie- . Beach, ~ been ldentlfled. Um1, these common denominators are next vlctlm, wbOle nude body waa bard to come by. Yered Feb. I cm the Terminal hland Some of the similarities a n d eway, la known u John Doe No. 11 by dlaaJmllarttlcs in the murder cases were Loe Anatle• police. pointed out by investigators. * * * * * * olice Seek Assistance ' olice Asking. Assistance ollce from Los Angeleo to Hwitlngton ach ire meeklng anyone who may know identity of three muUlatlon murder tirna. • victim who WU dlacoverod Feb. lying alona:alde the Terminal Itland eeway is described u a male ucaslan, between the age1of17 and 20. was s £eel I and weighed 138 pounds. e had brown hair and eye. and a mustache. Police said there are Identifying marka or scars on hla , He. ls listed as John Doe No: 16 by Angeles poUce. · Huntlngtoo Beach victim was t 5 feet 11 and weighed about 150. He d light brown hair and brown eyes and t.bought to be a caucaaian between the es of 14 and 20. HUNTINGTON BEACH John Doe d several home.made tattoos on his body. He had the tinltials "D.F.," a awaaUka, the number 13 on the left ankle and four doll whidl look like a spider on the left wrllt. On bit rla:bt ankle was a cross with a dot above each point of the cross, which police delCrlbe aa the "Pachuko sign." The latelt victim, whose body was hacke<l llp and -scattered throughout the Loa Angeles Harbor area and western Oran1e County, I.a 1llo a Caucasian pro~ ably between the ages of 17 and 25. He waa about ~ feet 5 and weighed 1~. -UJted as-Jdln Doe-No. 52, he had brown hair and eyea and a mole on his ieft cheek about two jnchcs from his mouth. Anyone with lnfonnaUon about any of theae men .. ahould contact his local poUce department, Det. Sgt. h1onty McKennon of the Huntington Beach police or Del. Brad Phelan of the Los Angelea police at (213 ) 831-9211 , ext. 321. found cloCl>ed, but ogaln Wllhoill ohoes. one theorv _, be that ll lc tlnu teere hltehltllce r s plC!lce d 11p bfl the killer. He had been sexually auaulled lllld mutilated u well u tortured and beaten. The couse ol his deoth hu not betn detennlned. -NOT MUCH CAN be detennincd about the last victim's death because of the condition ol the body. Police say they still have not found lhe victlm's handa or genitals. I.J.ke the other three dead men , there Is evidence that he had been sex· ually asaaulted. "We can't make any assumptloos in this case," said Det. Sgt. Monty McKen- non of the Huntington Beach poflce. He pointed out that one theory ii that the vlctlm1 were hitchhikers picked up by the killer. Another theory holds that they were homosexuals who were picked up in gay bars in the areas where the bodies have been found. "Obviously we're trying to check both theories, but it's tough. MemberS of the gay community are extremely wte«>per- ative because they fear police. They think we're going to keep a llJt of their names or 10mething. "HELL. IT-'S OUR job to protect them -if that's where the killer is findlng his victims -not make Hats and persecute them." he said. McKennon said all the detecUves have been checking out leads on the victims while al80 trying to pursue the Id Iler. The Los Angeles detectlvea, for in- stance, have sought the help of a psychiatrist In profiling the penonality davis·brown -Frigidaire . ' 3 DAY SALE Thursday, Friday & Saturday • May 10, 11 & 12 Cwt tnall dn1lo1lz1, ...... Illy. Tiit f rigld•lrt Tra1~ Caolp1eto< especially for MOM'S! BIG FAMILY SIZE 17.0 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR $ 995 • Huge freez er stores up to I bb lbs. • Lots of doo r sto rage • Completely Frost -Proof • Re'vers a • doors • J ust 30" wide LIBERATE MOM -from kitchen drudgery with a Frigidaire Undercounter Dishwasher! Combination of strong detergent and hot, hot water helps fight w:,,;:;..;.- germs. Super~urge washing action. Two wuh cycles. Dual detergent dispenser. 7.t>lade pulverizer sends soft food wastes down the drain. Fila 1tandard 24• cabinet oponlngt. l!aO)"lo- Jnatsl l. Door panel avallable in populor 001or1. Sot wllY 1ro worth the dltterencel II reduces normal houset\Old trash ta about one Quarter Its original YOturne. Won't operate until y()ij Insert !tie locklng key. Push button cootra!s, g11de·out collec;- tiofl drawtr: 11eeds no special install aUOn. plugs into normal housetiold currenL ' s1999s avis~ rown TELEVISION e STEREO e APPLIANCES e SALES e SERYfCE e SINCE 1947 2 6 l' ea rs of lnte!Jrlty &: De pei1dafJUlt11 COSTA MI SA e HAllOR ARIA IL TORO e SADDLEIACK VALLEY Dilly f .f , Sthlt4le., t 06 446·16•4 El f•r• ltoeill •t Fr••••Y IN•ri to s.,..Ottl Dtlly t -t , Sth1rcl•y f., 111.1•10 ==IF.~== MUTILATION VICTIM Pollce Seek Identity COASTAL VICTIM Ptun41 In Hunllntton JOHN DOI #16 Ol-..1Fob.16 ehoracter11tics of a psychotic who could II probably a juv"'1le -he had nevor All the Ups that come in, front local be cap1ble of the progressively more lhived. :-. hll detective. have been rffldents or other law enforcement agen- gruesome murders . checking with local llChool distr1cta, cles are being checked out. juwnlle prtlbaUon oWctrs and lbe "It's lq, alow work," McKennon said. But getting leads on the dead men's Callfomla Ywth Authority, which main-"We are &fven perts ol naD\ea or identities at the moment is the task on talnl the 1tate'1 jUvenJ.le correction nldmamN and. incomplete lnfonnaUon which the inviet1aaton are spending the foc!lltleo. eel then we hove to try and find the peo- most time. So fat tbe teletypes aent to police and ple, So far w11ve loclted everybody that Since the vlcllm whose body wa s hack· 1herilf11 departmenta throughout the we've been tlppM lnJaht be our John ed up has no hand.I, establishing hls Iden· 1tate have brought few . resulta, but Doe. tity through the normal invesUgative McKennon 18)'1 he'a following some of j•J coold bore you with the list of channels la lmpoaible. h!1 teletypet ind mall en WI.th phone names whom our murder victim isn't," McKennoo said that because his victim oalll. he said. ~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~ ~ Windsor :it-Windsor * Windsor :(.. Windsor ~Windsor~ .. 0 ... -c ·-a .)< .. ~ -= ·-a ~ ... ~ -= ·-a ~ ... ~ -= = ·-·a * .. 0 "" -= ··-a .)< • mi ttdsor Presents an exciting gift idea fOT 11iother . , .... ,. . , '• " ... ... ·: .; -~ .. :\\ : . l-; • 1.~· ... •''"' "'' '1,i; '.<.!.:: ·~. '(.; .'' .... '' . •. :~· ' " I • • • ... omwu• Su99eth • we ekender outfit fo r her in poly- ester powder blue or navy with print or solid blouses that we're sure she will love ... • l\l S·Ot • Use a Windsor Chal'fJ• Account -No Interest -No C'>arryf 119 Charl)e 2300 .ffARIOR ILYD. COSTA MISA HARBOR° CENTER e -· :I -\'\ 0 ., .J<. e -· :s -~ ., .)< e -· :s ~ ~ ., -1c E -· :t t "'J ~ e ... :s ... = "" :it- e -· :s -~ ., ~ e -· :s -~ ., ~ E -· :s =-~ "'J .J< e -· :s t -., .)( e ... :s s- "" '<lf' ._ __ ...... o .... fo .... D ... 111' ... A .... rc ... " ... •D ... ' ... ",,..cr ... 0 ... •' .... A ... u ... '" ... 0 ... • ... IZID_rv_•_,.,,_u• ... N ... c ... • ... 51 ... •v ... 1cc_'" .... 0 ... N ... • .... 14 ... •· ........ u __ 1 :i£. ,Windsor ~ Windso r :it-IUindso.r -¥-Wincilo r ~Wind.for ~ " ·r r • t I ! I I f °" s .. , .. €0•1t Hospital Marks 14th Birthday -~ J • The lourteenll\ birthday or SatUrolly'I cele'1rat1on coln- Sootb Coast com m u n I t y cldes with the birthday or Hospital will be celebnlted Florence Nlgbtlngale, t b e this weekend as 'a culmination famous nurse of the Q-imean of National H~ta1 Week. War who later became a su~ An open house and -toors or ce.Wul hospital admini.trato.r. tbe recently enlarged facility Other events of National will be-beld-rrom-10-a . .....,lo 41->i"'loopi"" ta~eek 1t C-C H p.m. Saturday. Include lours and lunclloons The open house and tours for civic organtr;atlons, groups are being co-hosted b y of ICbool children, and the members of the medical staff, press. the hospital stair, and the women's auxiliary. Several areas of the 163-bed hospital are still under con- struction. When CQmpleted. SCCH will have a capacity of 268 beds. Total cost or the present construction, the s e c o n d building program in t be hospital's history, is estimated at $10 million. A multi-level parking struc- ture, a four-story medical clinic, and remodeling of the existing structure have been included. College Praised GoJden West College been honored for its counting education by Orange Coast chapter, tional Association of countants. The college's business division was presented with a plaque which will be inscribed annually with the name of the college's outstanding account- ing student. Acquainting students early in their education with ae- SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL OBSERVES 14TH ANNIVERSARY Ma;re Areas Still Under Construction at South lagun4 Facility Interior remodeling has in. eluded installing complete air conditio.ning, three n e w elevators, a pneumatic tube system, an expanded laboratory a r e a , two new operating rooms, and addition of a seven-room emergency department. ting careers is one of the ma purposes of the Orange Coa t chapter, a spokesman said 14KT. GOLD OVERLAY MOTHER'S PIN Colored AuslriMI (fY't.111 81r1M1onn lot e.adl child°' p.lndchild • • • ~•111na uonn white Ain1ri.1n Cryst.1k. E:1:uy u.dit "''"' • 1tvct.nt occounll owoilob!. •up to 12 P110t111'11 to poy • &oti~A!Mri<ord •Mo1"r Chor911 • ''THE STORES CONFIDENCE BUil T'' !"'"'iii llfabllohed 45 Voanl !Ill I ' ' • • HAltO• SHOPPING CINTU JJM....., ..,._, I' CMt9 ..... HS.t .. S Ii•~•• l••rlt ,,,. , .... I i•-•• l111itlt1 fr-SS0.00 ~, ..... MSt.M l-41M s .... ' '"" .... ,, .... 115.ot . ' ThundaJ, May 10, 1'173 OAJLV 'PILOT 25 Student Guinea Pig Listens to Landers WE DELIVER EVERY DAY INCLUDING SUNDAY u)lis}tr~ to Mother~tfh love New ttft ... fot M•m. MW.... ,.... MMI otMr ...n ttowen ,.._...ty or· r..,M I••. r••'" .... .... 10.00 llG, ... · SILICTION of .... ,,.. ......... mt ........ ......._ M•-.U1..GloJ1° ..... ttw•••1•-. t.11,..-..... Sweet Surprise Her! FTD't Mtlif .... ••••••t I• ··-",_ .................. . 5-t ..... ......... •• ,.. U.S. or c-.de. .... 15.00 Give u& a call, we'll do the Te&t SEE-TH RU TERRARIUM GARDENS ............. ~ ... ..., .. ...., ... __ ..... _ ... _ .... 14.95 All M....,11 hJ pleltfl n4 ........... , ... ., .,...,,. De 'H411N1Nr w_,.•1 'VICTORIAN' HOUSES I H••••• ,._..,.hi wy lfY ... _. tellhlNI. N• .... ........ ,.....,... ........ -.... -3.79 HANDCIAmD CLAY POTS _. MACIA.Mr HAN•llS ............ ....,,'-ta. Dry .... , ....... ARRANGEMENTS T ...... ;I lfal IX .. ~ .... , •••••• ,94 .... .... ._...Ha..._, ....... ._ ...... -10.95 Not"1in9 Mate.hes fvfo-l'hers Love 1 But flowers CoMe Close ... Gifts from the Nursecy for Mom! Colorful PELARGONIUMS LMt ........... ...,,.,..., • ..._, .. c•*s wlN Hl'ely ...... _. 4" .... 1.25 ' "-ti ,., 6. 98 Beautiful ROSE BUSHES ow-... ........... ................ ,.... .. cwfertWr ..... •• -. ....... ...... ..... 3.98 """ -...... -......... w.... ... .. _ _. __ _ .39 - 4.29 ·- PHONE 546-5525 2640 HAR~OR BLVD., COSTA MESA .. h ·•U ,.. I • .Ill 0, 1 . Na-vy!Js Not the Sa111e Mechanic Lice~ing Proposed say"HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY"with I ~ FRANCJSCO (AP) -• lol\y lanauage bas bet n Tile first women saUors in watered down. U.S. Navy history aaslgned to Ha duty dressed like men and' worked like the men, but •fWr seven months on board the feminine touch has had its ef-rect. ln one oU~. there is a pink telephone. The captain says the men are neater, Alld the THE OF1'1CER or the day on the boopllal ship USS Sanctu-ary was Ollel Clartntt Johns, a Navy mu for 11 years.. Beside hlni s t o o d Seaman Chrilllne Peulis. II, her bloode halr tided behind her cap. Refreshing crystal clear i . I I" soft wa-ter-from,.......ou=-r -- own faucets at a fraction the cost of bottled water. HOW DOES CUUIGAN llLTllt.SOFl" WORK? A YllllUI ~tllell tf eMf> (Oil .nol t.11fttt1'1 r.Jl~ lllltd .... •-ed llf' (llilllfMI, wort , .. fllhu to so/1111 tnd li!ltr Yllllt W•let lll!Wltt(ltOlllly, "I voluotaerod..and I would egoln." said Miss Paulis, or Plttablqb, Pa. "We eacb hive our own job and we do Jt .. Johns added : "It's hem line aervtoa with women. They're dll!mnt and add oomethlns to the ship, ind they Jll1ll lllelr own ~weight." THE 15 WOMEN a re quartered In the lorewanl """ tton or the Sanctuary, the 400 ~-.... -alt.-S<lmrfi . loond living space cramped and, in eenenl, dlsUke sea du- ty, but others, like Miss Paulis, said they loved It. "It's no place for a girl," said Seaman Apprentice Debbi Metter, m, of Dallu, Tei. "The Nayy Is lanlastlc but ah.Ip life is bad. You're a guinea pig. ca~~. ~~ .. i~ Sunday Is Mother's Day would have to be tested and licensed by the state, under• We'll have l,OOO's of Carnations, Roses, Orchids, bill introduced by S e n . Anthony c. Beilell!OO (!). Corsages, etc. We will also have all the different Beverly Hills). plants that will be" All Dressed Up" to say "Happy t'AMERICANS WAsrE an h h f -..-.1e<1""13-b1Won 0 ,10 -Mot . e' Day." o,-Gome...see-.t e-ar:gesLco. ileC.::....-l-1 bllllon • Y••r on in· tion of plants & flowers anywhere. Gorgeous competently performed auto d I I d repail'!I," Beilenson said, "and Hy rangeas, Aza eas, Tu ips, an many more. one out or five fatal accidents If Mother is away-Let us send one anywhere by is caused by a mechanical derect." FTD ... Call 675-6291. We'll do the rest. Existing st.ate law, he said, "permits incompetent mechanics to represent to the public that they are experts and can properly r e p a i r automobiles." "You sleep on a 2~-inch thick mattress on top of your locker. The quarters are about lhe same for the men, but they don't have curlers, makeup and clothes." HIS BilJ.. would require the • IN A VASE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• state Bureau of Automotive THE WOMEN interviewed Repair lo develoP competency said they found equal job op. u,.1 , .. _,,, . examinations and testing pro- Portun.ity on ship and feel that cedures by next June. The the men accept them. Most of Prett9 Wfnner llcensing then would l>el>hasedl the men seem to agree. in over a three-year period, I "Everything has 8 e 1t 1 e d <;aria Tevault, "Miss ending June 1977, Beilensonl down, although it took a. lot of American Teen· ager,11 said. adjustment for some," said relaxes on car which The three-year period, hc1 ''Orange County's 1\-lost Popular Prod11ce and Flower House" NEWPORT-PRODUCE FLOWERS BY DEBRA Open 1 Days A Week 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. 2616 Newport Boulevard on the Penin1Ula rhone 673·1711 673·1715 675-6291 Seaman Jerry Neale, 24. she won recently a-said, would enable mechanics j "When you have women long with tiUe. Miss Te-who railed the test to bring "35 Years of Produce BONDED FR UIT SHIPPER "iVliere Quality is the _. around they have women vau.lt is f~esh~an ·at their skills up to passing level , r·,,ow How" FOR 35 YEARS habits and things they do have, Ind.1.a'.'.:n:.a~U:::n::_:iv:_::•:.:."'::'l::_Y:_· __ __.'.'.be'.'.fo"'.'":.' ::th'.'.e.'.'.fin"'.a'.'..I d"'.e".'ad.'.'.li"'.n•:_· __ ,.1 ----" ..... ...,..., ...... ~~="""""""'"""'"""'"""'...,"""'"""'O•rd~e~r ~of~t~h~e ~H~oi~is~e~" =~ the feminine touch. In certain ---- --------- RENT ·2~~~ MONTH Coll ond Soy • • • Wh\ITED OFFEIJ ''UY DUllfBAH MANr: CULLIGAN WATER CO, 534-2233 1911 s; MANCHESTER, ANAHllM ~llSION VUJC>-fL TORO I IAN CUMINTf U.GUNA MIW AlllA 130·3031 AllA 492-3213 "Ki.tchenAid -~~ , ,'-.. ' .~ 1\ t: 'l' () l\ y 1\ tJ 'l' II () l\ I z I~ Jl situations, the men have to be less rough." The Sanctuary. originally built as a World War 11 transport, was recom- missioned in November and ·the women were assigned to it on a pilot-program basis. "A LOT OF the guys are just friends," said Yeoman 3rd class Marita Santin, 20, of Akron, Ohio. "U you want to be treated like a girl that's what they'll do and if you want to be treated like a man they wUI." INSTALLED '$28995* PRICE Only INCLUDES: Nonna! replacement Jallor and KiichenAid Custom Dishwuher · •Front Panel Extra SALE ENDS JUNE 16 SAVE SPACE! New KltchenAICI SAVE TIME! TRASH COMPACTOR SAVE MONEY! . · .. Handy"Lllter Bln"n1. Otop In small items without opening the trash drawar. Crunches trash to lf4 of original vQ!LJme See it demonstrated today! Ch1rcoal Air Fiiter. Removes odors, doesn't Ju&t mask them Trlpfe Drl't Aini. Auures b1l1nctd crunching force. TJlt·Awty Trash Bttket •. May be used with or Wfth. Gut traah bap.: . r·w-·1·N··--A·---F·R·--E·E····;l:·;a:;~;:-:::;;;e:~::~:~::~;a·;:;::--: : ,!o:totes lis~l below •. w~ ~u ask the salesman to tell , : • CUSTOM DISHWASHER you how KitchenA1d ts built better-not cheaper. 1 : or. TRASH COMPACTOR One Dishwasher OR '1\-ash Compacter will be gi':'9n away ' 1 . a~. each store at the close of the Factory Authorised Sa.le! 1 r -your choice! · 1 ~••••••••••••••••••••• I ---------------------------------------· TV and APPLIANCES COSTA MESA e .... HARBOR CENTER e PH. 540·7131 2300 HARBOR ...... -·"-···~· Tile a 5x10 Room For $18.46 Complete! SOLID VINYL FLOOR TILES The finest flooring model luJCurtoos1y supple ond eosy to in1tol1, .f~is solid ~inyl lile will give a lifetime. of wear w;1h no 'wo.11.ing e~t! 12x 12 in. tiles. SELF-STICK OZITE ~~a~~~!f~lf~b~rs' 29( Thi ck foam pad · ding' 12xl2 in. tiles. ' DON'T PAY FOR WASTE! BRING UNUSED TILE BACK FOR A FULL CASH REFUND! fRll """''° 100LS! ~~· .. ~ Give Her A No-Wax Floor For s18.46 Complete FREE ADVICE! Experr help You a~v1ce to Projecr1 Pan Your ·-~-coLoa .0 HA••o• TILE """' "•!o ., .... . ·- Costa Mesa-222 i Harbor Blvd. 64s .. v 126 STORE HOURS OPEN SUNDAY -11 a.m.-S p.m. MONDAY, FRIDAY -8 a.m.-9 p.m. TUES., WED., THURS., SAT. - 8 a.m. · 5:30 p.m. ALWAYS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING L. Jff. Bo1d Zebra Will Bark When It's Upset Did you know a shook-up Rbra barn Ul!e a little q! Q. "What's the 'Spanish aw1nd1e'?" A. Ah, ~.,, tbe old border bunko fimmick. Say )'ou'rl! the mark. I n:i the ':Oil artist. I write you a letter, c1aiming ~ be a Mexican citizen of good re"'°'te. unjustly charged m ~bankruptcy case. I tell you that U.S. Customs officers are holding -my suitcase. containing Oli maYbe $251fGOO To redeem the claim check, I need is,ooO. So y~ send' m~ lli,llllO and I'll send you back $10,llllO. You wouldn't think anybody would fall for that ancient fraud, but many innocents sUll do. Many, many. ' Civil Unions Grow Solon Seeks to Spr~ad Mariml Authority Capllol Nowl - SACRAMENTO Remember the wonta of that song from "M.)'..Fall' Lady:" cooples wbo .. -to tie the -In • clvU. nlber thao cburcb ...-, baa crown coaslderlbty 111 ncent yean. mus, AaemblYman Allster "I'm getUng marrlad In the McA!is1er, a San Jo 1 e mo ming. ~Democrat and married father Ding dong tbe belts are gon· of five, has Introduced l•Jlisl•· na chlrpe .. :• tloo to ll&hteo tbe load for : judges called upoo to perfilnn \\lell,' you can fdrget the c.ivll marriages. jollity tJ1at was old Britain in McAlister proposes that the that coloriui rendition of cQunty clerk be designated a "'"'i-6eorge Bernard-S ha w 1 s cdmmtssloner-of--civil· mar- " Pygmalion." This is Ameri ca riages empowered not only to in 1973 and the only bells perform the ceremony but you're likely to bear on wed-also to appoint deputy com· cling morning are the ones mlsslonen who would have over the cowity courthou!e the same power. _,, elevators. 'lbe measure would apply AND AS FAR as it being "In the morning," if you want an only to counUes with popula· tions of 900,000 or more. dlance lhls time by virtue ol the fact that the problem otlll exlstJ," McAlisl• said. He aho noted that the mern· bershlp of Judiciary bas cbanred somowllat wltb -mem&ers ·Bob Bev<rlI (11- Redoodo Beacb), Bill Bqley (R.S.n Rafael). Ken Meade (D·O•k land ), and Dan Boatwright ID-Concord). "THE PROBLEM 111 particularly acut e in Los Angeles:-'' f\tcAtister says. The measure was introduced at the request of the Los Angeles County clerk. ''Thousand$ of couples each year, because of , interfaith marriages, lnablllty to qualify for a marriage within one church or another, or pel'9Jllll reasons, desire to have a civil ,.. QU!ENIE ly Phll lnterlandl "Wily would I want a doggl&blg? I wouldn'Het m7 dog eat this." Am asked wbat periodical inspired the phrase 0 cover girl." Had to be tbe Ladles l!Qme Journal, tbe first magazine In 'me world to change Its cover with each issue. Actre•s Ill early date with the justice or AND WHO might be BJ>" the peace, you and your pro-p 0 i n t e d d e p u ty com- spectlve spouse may have to missioners? According to stow away in the broom closet McAllster, anybody in the the night before to head of{ county clerk's office. One the herds of matutinal matri-could conceivably be married monlacs . by a secretary or even the cueJ1lOey performed by •r.-==============~ judge, justice of lhe r•ce or The median for tbose marriages that end in divorce is seven years. DIAL-A-TALE -In LoDdoo, you can telephone a cer- tain number to hear a slx·minute bedtime story. About Peter Rabbit, Reddy Fox, Johnny Chipmunk, Grandfather Frog, whatever. Costs the equivalent of about a ·nickel Ainerlcan. The poet olflce there started this interesting enterprise. •1 Sleep specialists say what you dream about shortly after you go to bed relates to what happened recently. Four hours deep into the sleep, when yoor temperature is slightly lower, you tet1d to dream about things of long ago. Then just before you wake up, your dreams pertain to current stuff again. THE HARD FACTS -The psych<llogy boys say tbeir studies indicate women di.!CUSS men three times as much as men discuss women ... It's the custom among Cana· dian Eskimos to n~me their sled dogs after departed fam- ily meml)ers ... If you want to discuss the game of check· ers in England, call it drau1hts ... No. 3 on that llst of most popUlar given names for men now is David . . . Eight out of every 100 bridegrooms postpone Indefinitely that wedding trip known as the honeymoon. Pickpockets of old England worked In pairs. one banged on a pan, rang a bell, blew a crude horn, and yelled outlandJshly to draw a crowd The other then zipped tbrougb the collected folk, gathering up the goods. Noises made by the first, as any good dictionary reveals, was described as a racket. And our Language man says that's how we came to refer to just about any line of crime as a racket. Address mail to L. M. Bo11d, P. 0. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. '92660. THE PORT O' CALL APPROACH • , . to a clever cover·up'. Tie beck or front over a top lf you like. 100% cotton duck in a glorious collectlon of abstract end flower prints, One size fits all, 16.00. Newport Beach • 3400 Via Lido phone 675-7110 For Advertising In OUT 'N ABOUT Phone Norm Stanley 642-4321 ~~~~~' Elizabeth Taylor, film· ing the movie "Ash Wednesday" In Italy, had bfen stricken with measles and quarantin· ed to her hqtel room along with her husband, Richard Burton. Later she returned to filming after the measle s paBSed. (ID MODEL 13003 Not that the institution janitor if they got a hold of the known as matrimony has ,proper materials and the com· become less worthy of our missioner WA! in a hurry to esteem, or that the epidemic • bury the backlog. popularity of non-contractual The bill was introduced back cohabitation has tarnished the in '71 but was killed in the glow of wedded bliss. lower house Judiciary Com· Marriage remalns a popular mlttee by a _slngle yote. pastime and the nwnber of "I give 1t a httle better other secular officer.' McAIJSTER says t b e couples who choose to wait In line for an available judge end up getting a two.minute ceremony lacking in dignity. The legislation ls pennl.!slve and requires the local board of supervisors to make an of· ficia l finding that conditions require the availablllty of commissioners of civil mar. riages. SAVE YOURSELF SOME TIME sttep TM IWfl4tM nm hr ... .._., ~. , .......... "'"' wi.t ... w.tl h• Ht' pNt .... ttee ef --•rt.I · · · •IHI re• ••',t M9t .., tenlca 5'.I.... BIDTIQUE , TM lttt I• Tew11l 14'7 "" LWo Ne.,......_11 67Ml10 SAU INDI WIDNISDAY, MAY 16TH. HURRY, SOMI QUANTITIES llMITIDI GREAT STEREO SYSTEM HAS 8-TRACK TAPE PLAYER, ALL IN RICH LOOKING CONSOLE • SAVE 21.95! • AM/FM-stereo receiver has separate controls for treble, bass, balance and AFC • 4-speed automatic record changer • 8'.track stereo tape player has automatic and manual track switching • Full range speaker system • Handsome console, MediterraMafl styling WE SERVICE WMAT WE SW! s alG.169.95 ENJOY· 4-CHANNEL SOUND ON AM/FM STEREO TAPE AM/FM-stereo receiver broad- casts. 4-channel, 2-channel, 2- channel tape player. RIG. 254.95 19998 COMPONENT STEREO SYSTEM WITH ROLL-AROUND CART AM/FM-stereo receiver. 4- .speed auto. record player; S- track stereo tape player. SPECIAL 129aa CAil HAS IACK POI llCOIDS, TAPIS MODIL 6210 OUTSTANDING VALUES! WARDS PORTABLE TV'S SPECIAL BUY! PORTABLE TV, 9" DIAGONAL PICTURE 00 Speaker is front s5s mou.nted for clear brigh! sound. UHF and VHF antennas. [ID Specllil b<iyl Ilg 19 " dia. portoblo •• ''' © Reg. 289.95.· 18" dia., color port., •2s1 ,ANOftAMA CITY iotlllt 1t rotca., phon. 89-4·l21 I • CANOGA 'Miit 1op1ng1 plaz1, phont 813·1000 • HUNTINGTON llACH 9d!n~ 11 bea<:h blvd •. phon. 714·19i!·Ml11 J . WIST LOI AHOllll 11 cleneg1 II 1111h 11., pMlnt 1138-1122 • .,...All lmplrlll II norwllk ~d .. pl'lont 1168·0911 • COVINA bltranCll 11 lln bemwdlno f1"W1Y. phOf'lt IM-7411 ~ TONlllANCl, del imo leshlon tqutrt, phone &42·11971 • I AN llll;NAflOINO ctnlr1I city m111, phont 71 4·8''·9231 '• MLllllTOM l'latbor M ~rtnOttl'IOtpt. phont 714•879·2'00 '• ~ .,..... ANA brlatol It 19\'efl\ttnlh, phone M7·el41 • LYNWOOD imptrlll blvd.11 ttllt, pflont.537·6000 • llOSIMIAD fOlff'MIO bNd. I.I Mn Nrn1tclino lrttway, p.hoM 673-3110 • ~-... .... MT...., i l Iii: SHOPWEEKDAYS9:30AMT09PM ... SATURDAY9AMT09PM ... SUNDAV10AMT05PM -..-· • \ ' ' ' '' I I l • .. • • , • ; . ~.. .. .. ..., ' . ·' ' .... • •• • ' ' ' • -WHITE ' ' i_ ~~--------~-·-"f'. • ' SAVE '2.09 ••• ClAI• INSTANT HAIR SEI IER OUR REGULAR 11.97 9ss Blg 20 roller set (6 1umbo, !O large and 4 small). 20 heating posts tor in· itant warm-up. It's the best selling half seller, llOW on safe~ IC -20 ~ rofd!;cl SAVE •2.09 ••• SCHICK MlmNG HAIR SE 11 ER OUR REGULAR 16.97 13ss Beautifying m1s!s protects hair & leaves longer lasting, mare lustrous curls. 6 jumbo, JO large & 4 small rollers. Heat indicator dot 71 LC SAVE '1.09 ••• PRESTO Mlmll HAIR SEI IER OUR REGULAR 16.97 Prevenls d1yness. split ends ard gives a last, long lasting set. 14 cdrlers in 3 sizes: in easy to use trivet slyle case. MHG-I 15sa SAVE '3.09 ••• G.E. 3-WAY HAIR SEI IER OUR REGULAR 20.97 ·set your hair with mist. cond1t1on~r or dry. With 70 rollers and 6 01 conditio11er. HC0-4. free Bree~! See store for details. 17ss OUR REGULAR 21.97 1 ' 88 3 in I custom care lla1r setter uses water, conditioner or dry heal With 20 rollers ifl 3 sizes plus 6 01. bottle conditioner. K300 S:Z03 ' SAVE '2.09 ••• SUNBEAM "FUIR" HAIR DRYER OUR REGULAR 12.97 1oss Sleek attache case style dryer with boMet and hair hose that .sto1es inside.' 4 way heat selec!lon: dries hair last. H014 ' SAVE 'l.09 ••• SUNBEAM SAlON TYPE DIR DRYER OUR REGULAR 13.97 4 settings lor exact heat con- trol. Large air volume lo< quit~ drying. Self contained case fnr portability. H0·39 12sa G.f. HAIR DRYER WITH BBK BEAm SET GIFT SPECIAL OFFER High ai1 volume dfles hair fast. Maneuverabl~ hood for comfort. Heal selector. free Breck! See sto1e for details. HOS!. 15ss SAVE '3.08 •.• SCHICK CONSOLETTE HAIR DRYER OUR REGULAR 19.97 Extra large hood accommodates 1umbo sne rollers. Sl ee~ ne·i11 S1yhng folds 1n!o halbox size. 4 1emperature settings. #317 1ess SAVE '3.69 ••• PRESTO MIST TYPE HAIR DRYER OUR REGULAR 28.S7 24ss Conditions & moisturi1es your hair as 11 dries. Beauhfy1ng mist fe.1+ ture and 3 heat selections. folds compactly. HDPM. Remote Control. SAVE '1.09 ••• EMPIRE 10 CUP COFFEEMAKER OUR REGULAR 6.97 5ss Brew coflee to the exact strengtb you ll~e. Bright avocado porcelain enamel hrush: automatic keep warm teatures. Big capacity. 1969-61 SAVE '1.09 ••• WEST BEND . 9 CUP COFFEEMAKER OUR REGULAR 8.97 S lo 9 cup automatic percolator with poppy Of llarvest gold finish. 490 watt heal eltment, detachable cord, alum. basket, stem. 11809-39 7ss SAVE '2.09 ••• SUNBEAM 12 CUP COFFEEMAKER OUR REGULAR 11.97 Brew 4 to 17 cups ot ctillee to per- fecticin -[yery time. Fully auto- matic operation and lees> warm teature. A¥ocado linish. APJJ gas . SAVE •2.59 ••• G.E. 9 CUP AUTOMATIC COFFEEMAIBl OUR REGULAR 18.47 15ss Immersible co!feemaker with mini- brew basket & peek-a-brew gauge. Avocado or Ha1vest Gold. With 3 lli. Malwell House coftee offer. Pl5HR-AV SAVE '2.59 ••• STAIM.ESI nm COFFH MAKEll OUR REGULAR 19.47 1 , 88 Sleek. conletnj)Ofary design, fully automatic coffeema~er. 1 pc. stain- less steel body with slay cool hai.- d~-lmmtrStbO. CM-9 • SAVE '1.09 ••• PROCTOR SRECTRONIC TOASTER OUR REGULAR 7.97 ess Adjustable heat control for all kinds- of bread: even reheats cold toast. Bright chrome finish. I yr. over- counter replacement warranty. 20612 SAVE '1.09 ••• WEBCOR TWO·SLICE TOASTER . OUR REGULAR 9.97 Heat selection bar for pastry and convenlem:e loods: itlso select tile wanted shade of toast. 2 yr. over counter wananty. 223-2 ass SAVE '3.09 ••• SUNBEAM TWO·SLICE TOASTER OUR REGULAR 13.97 1oss Sleek ultra modern toaster of gleaming chrome. Oial the color cllo1ce for toast as you li•e 11. Slim silholl!tte design. T IOOS SAVE '3.09 ••• G.E. DRUXE PASTRY smE TOASTER OUR REGULAR 15.97 Ideal for warming tClday's modein con¥enience food s. Automatic high hit return. Avocado or harvest gold lin1sh. 186AV/HR 12ss SAVE'2°1 ••• ,0AS~STER CHITllM Llrl ·TOASTBI Slim line ta~red toaster with 4 OUR Rf~ULAR 17.97 1· 5ss matc~ed healing elements &ftd Suaerlle• timer. Makes toast 11\d heats ..ew toaster foods. B 185 SAVE •3.09 ••• NORTHERN AIR BLOWER BRUSH OUR REGULAR 11 .97 aaa Warm air ~ent w1lh duecl10Dal grills het~s control cowlic~s & llyaway ha11. Styling brusti. comb & speed d1y1ng attachment. 1 1800 SAVE '2.09 ••• TONI MAi HAIR mLING BRUSH ·OUR REGULAR 12.97 Ideal for 1oday's wafl led 11arural looA. Thetmostat control prevenjs overheahng. Comb attachment and styling boo~let included. THD-2 1osa ' SAVE '3.09 •.• SCi~ICM MINI mLING e~v~ 'OUR REGULAR 15.97 Hew super powet mm1 d11er ore~ faster while stvhn~ more n3!u•ally. Ad111stable tentfleratuie sett·n~:. brush and 2 combs 3·i~ I} ~20 8 PANASOfJIC · CUSTOM HAIR STYLBl·DRYER " SPECIAL OFFER A professional style !lair grqom1ng apphance with thermostat control for cool Of waJm air drying. With carrying case. EH68 I 1495 SAVE 12.09 ••• REMINGTI'. 800 WATT HAIR STYLBI OUR REGULAR 18.97 High speed tor last drying and low sl!(!ed for styling & teasrng. lhefmostat prevents overheat!~~. With 2 combs 11rd brusll. Pf>600 81 §HOP WITH CONFIDENCE AT WHITE FRONT ••• !iATl!iFACtlDN GUARANTEED DR YOUR MONEY BACK I . . ' ..---~--..._, --===--=:7t TV & APPLIANCE MART HOt:fM: TV .·& APPLIANCE 'MARTS SEVEN CONVENIENT LOCATIONS ... in TELEVISION • MAJOR APPLIANCES• STEREO• RADIO •TEMPLE CITY • 11141 wtlITTIEl llVD. £111 11 SANTA 'rmuon • ES CHESTER MON.-FRI. NOON·! (WESTCHE Sl!R & LA 11· l SATURDAY '"d SUMDAY lfl/,!I to IPM f I ( . FLOOR CARE and SMALL ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES 1321 IOSEMOll llYD. 11 • '"''"''"' •wr .. ur 1911 so. srrUlVEDA J11t SI. 11 lA llJEIA •GLENDALE 114-115 SO. llMD I • I 810a8WA COi'JV~~l~I T Ct. :~;y 1::~ -3 ' < r { ' l I' a. a· .. '• 8 5 I ' '' • • SAVE Sl .0 9 ... WEBCOR PORTABLE HA ~D f~IXER OUR REGULAR 7.97 ~S il Ptiwer!ul motor &· tull ~11• l··J'•:rs ma~e qu1c~ W'Jl P 1•i i.: !' , .. ~ t!IOres. A~ocarli1 01 ~ .. 1.r l ' .. Z yr. overcoun!·r -oJ:r.'I/. ~v! :• SAVE 51.09 ... SUNBEAM ELECTRIC HPir D MIMER OUR REGU LAR 9.97 9as l1ghtwc1~tl!, well Odlanrtd fl,•~~r has powedul IT\()fo1 and J ~11t·Pd selector at !humb11p. full si1e t1e~1 ers eject tor clr•amnl( #fl SAVE Sl.49 ... G.f. 3 SPEED Hl·POWf~ l!J'.~D. MIXER OUR REGULAR 12.37 1' 88' Deluxe 11 I 1. "! mod~I Ill dVO- cado or 1. 1· )'.'·th ~In ~ mu atl , ' · .~~ •ull '.rJe chron·~ l 1;· " .,· PANASONIC 4 SPEED UELUXE HAND MIXER SPECIAi OFFE R 4a ~ Well balanced powerlul mixer has a speed tor eyery 1ype o1 m1x1ng job. Comes w1tl1 ca se tor m1~er a~d beaters. MK l24 ! • · SAVE NOW ••• G.E. DIAL l SPEED HAND MIXER OUR REGU LAR 16.S7 5a a Vanilble speed control knob lets y~ .dial tile cor1ecl ~peed for any m1x1~g Job. With drink mi~er. ##ocado or llarvest gold. M68 Thursday, Ma~ 10, 11173 DAILY PILOT .. ' '~~ ' r •HITE .FRONT DISCO~RTS MORE ~ ' NATIONAL BRAND APPLI AN CES WHITE ' THAN ANYO NE ELSE· IN THE WEST PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUNDAY, MAY 13 SAVE 11.09 ... WEST BEND SAVE s2.09 ... WEBCOR SAVE 51.09 ..• WEBCOR BEAN POT AND SERVEi BIG 8 SPEED BLENDER AUTOMATIC CAN •&11 OUR REGULAR 6.97 5aa OUR REGULAR 15.97 13aa OUR REGULAR 7.97 eaa ' Brown glazed electric bean pot for Mix, cllop, blend & .. hquely to make lh1s VefSa!ile ~1tchen aid opens cans or biking beans, ch1l1, stews. Or, pop i! m r.ew thing) 10 eat & dnnl ~2 01. ~nles 1n seconds. Cuts cleanly. Has till· lne o~en for favorite casseroles. Al~o container with 2 01. cap in hd . prool ba5e tor safety. Harvest gold Of doubles as an attrac11ve Sefver. 3299W # 505 In avocado or harvest gold. avocado. 2 year warranty, W-60 I. SAVE Sl.09 ... CERAMIC SAVE 11.09 ... BLENDER SAVE 11.09 ..• UDICO ELECTRIC CASSEROLE BY HAMILTON BEACH RECTRIC CAN OPENER OUR REGULAR 8.97 7aa OUR REGULAR 16.97 15aa OUR REGULAR 9.97 aaa ? ~uart capacity ela.t11c ca~si:role 8 pushbutton selections for rapid, Precision design~ to open all sizes is great lo1 baking, healing. Ceram-sure fire blend1n~. 44 01. conta1n-e1. cleanly & quickly. Special magnetic 1c pot with !id. rests on heat ped-avocado or harvest gold base. Sohd lid adds e.Xtra sa!ety. Oeco1ator av- estal. A handy ~1tchen aid. 2626·04 state motor. #6 l:t cado. 2 year warran1y. # 7008·02 SAVE 52.09 .. '. ELECTRIC SAVE 11.09 ..• BLENDm SAVE NOW ••• WARING FONDUE WITH FORKS BY HAMILTON BEACH CAN OPENER·SURPENER OUR REGULAR 11.97 gas OUR REGULAR 19.97 17aa lOW DISCOUNT PRICE 1oaa 1112 qt. londue pot 1s Teflon~ lined for Hamilton Beach 14 speed blender Fully automatic, mag_net holds lid: oon stick convenience. has separate co~s w1lh big 44 al. container single wheel ~mle sharpener. In heating ~nit and come s complete with plus extra 48 and 16 01. sizes. avocado. Co·22 ... 4 wood handle fo1ks. 5234-04 Avocado, Harvest Gold. 1686 SAVE 82.09 •.. 18" ROUND SAVE 83.09 ... OSTER SAVE NOW ••• PANASONIC GRIDDLE AND WARMER 10 SPEED 2 RANGE BLENDER COUNTER-STYLE OPENHI OUR REGULAR 17.97 15aa OUR REGULAR 22.97 ··a lOW DISCOUNT PRICE 12aa !deal for bacon 'n eggs, pancakes, The one & only Osteri1er with push-Popular counter style magnetic ham~urgers. grilled sa~dw1ches. button conllols & cycle selectors !id holder tor maximum ease. Dec- let Ion• coated atum. w/buffet han-lo do any blending tob la pedl'c-/ ora!Of COll}l's of avocado or harvest dies, halllly pour-off spout. 560929 lion. Avocado or gold:.i #8J'J° ,· gold. #MKI 11 SAVE sz.09 ... CROCKERY WARING PUSHBmON SPECIAL ••• DBJXE SLOW COOKING COOKER 7 SPEED DRUXE BLEMIER RIVAL CAN DPEB OUR REGULAR 71.97 19aa OUR LOW PRICE 2 4 95 SPECI AL CHECK Tiie fava1lte new way to cook -New D'/1ta-Bl!tld model with easy Autcmatic le~er •·power pierces'' OUR prepare lood in the morning, the to clean glus-~1tcher, cord storage can, cuts hd, shuts Itself off! LOW cook pot cooks it an day. doesn't in base. fn mcado or harvest gold. Push a button, ~eep a!! non.senat· need watching. 5 ql #632 #55·2-3 ed blades 1actory ~een. 7 I l PRICE FRONT cm ~Te1 "---'""1-.J I SAVE 13% ... MUNSEY 3 QT. RECTRIC CORN POPPER OUR REGULAR 3.97 348 ~J·e bawls lull o1 del1c•ou~ pu~coro minutes. lt's ~u1c~. easy & 111e1 ien~1¥e with :h1$ popper with ~IJsS top & removable co1d MP J · SAVE NOW ••• PRESTI 4 QT. RECTRIC CORN PIPPER OUR REGULAR 5.97 548 POil corn •n a Jilly with no sha~1ng or sluring necessary. AvocaOO tin- 1shed aluminum pot with gl ass cover. Healp1oof tiandles. CP4AW SAVE '1.59 ••• WEST BEND SRF ·.BUI IERING POPPER DUR REGULAR 10.47 aaa Mixes butter throughout the ker- nels for uniform good las!e. Shuts otf automatically when corn 1~ 1ully popped. 21864WA SAVE 11.09 •.• 5 QT. POPPER WITH TBlDN II UNlll. OUR .REGULAR 11.97 1oaa large self butlering popper with oon scratch, easy to clean lining. Top CA!!, be used,J~ servtr when corn is pcl9ped. Yellow finish. !1614-03 . ~ SAVE •t.01 ... P•PER BY HAMILTlll BEACH OUR REGULAR 13.97 11 aa ~!omallcal~ self butters c0t_n 1s it po,s. No.stick coating lor easy c"an-11ps. Bowl hd holds popcorn . for 1mmed1a!e servin~. I 500 ' S20J WHEN IT COME!i TO !iAVIN6 MONEY THERE'!i NO BETTER PIACE ID !iHOP THAN WHITE FRONT • ~C OSTA MESA ..... ' 3088 BRISTOL ST. S.n Diego FrHw1y at Bri stol ,. I A I STORE HOURS: MON •• flt. 10AM t o9PM SAT.' SUN. 10AM to7PM • • , ~-- ' I , l'iles S uit .c{ ' it ,w. ··;WM; UPI T9lephotp \Villia1n Newland,·a Mil· ~·aukee Army reservist, ~lain1s he was arrested illegally for desertion despite a 4-F classifica- tion and has filed a $7 50,0UO suit against the J..\rn1y. ---- Ca11adia11 01urcJ ~ Of(s Women ltEGINA. Sask. !AP) -The Anglican Church of Canada has becon1e the r 0 u r t h Anglican church to accept the prlncip!e of admitting women to !he priesthood. • The church's 26th General Synod gave overwhelming ap- proval this week to a resolu- Uon to that effect. HoWcver, ' an arncndment delayed im- plctnenta tion "until the House of Bishops has worked out a p<.11lern for the Canadian church th at would include an e<!ucalinnal process for the ch11n;h.'' ·~he nrinciple of women pril'st-> h<1s been accepted by the Anr!iciln r'l1urc h11s in Hong K6n\.'.i. \\ h1•re two \\"omen were orda1nrd in 1~7 1. and in New 7.('~1];1ntl :ind Burn1a. • -...... !-· .... ~· .... ,. !!...,.. Thund<y, Mot 10,1'173 , ... \ .. . . ... . .. . ... ' Traffic Headaches Get Fast Action ' ~ .• .................... _ ' ' " ,. .. .. Fa1nll11 Cfreirll ll!J Bill Keane • By WILLIAA1 SCHR EIBER people happy first and ask the The four-way stop sign was a recom1nendatlon by the phone or letter but one of the OJ "'-o.a11t '''°' su.11 cou ncil for endorsement later. reqlleSted by the Eastbluff Balboa 1i1erdw.Dts Association ~st ·ways to get quick actlon The normally slow-moving "We don't make ourselves School Parent-Fa cu It Y w1d made our ow~~'jgeations IS through b o in e owners wheels of city government are out to be experts who can. Organization • at 1 h e in· in hopes of reac1uny a com-uaoctnllotl.$. TTIO\'lng a little faster now in sulve lhe big traffic problems. ter1eCtlon of Vista del Sol and promise." · "It we know the (eeling of Newport 'Beach as residents \\'hich are considerable," ~id Eastblufi Drive. The group's weekly agenda tile entire grwp regarding get quicker and quic ker solu-Bener:court. "'I11e response and coopera· is long. Most of the reque sts problem11, we can work a good lions of nagging litlle traffic '"But \i·hile the major prob-tlon waa unbelievable." said are fr,om people worried about deal faster ," he said. ··we try headaches . ll'ms arc beyond our J)Ower, PFO President Karen Kovach. their o\vn minor traffic prob. to get to a request within the Within the last few 1nonths , ~'l' are very effactive in giving "That sign was in only 30 days Jcms. week between meetings." a quick pace by any standards pC'ople timi:l v answers to their after we asked for it through "When we get the big ones 'Mle committee meets every of government action. rcq u<sts and problems,'' Bet-the school district." 1hat are out of our range, we Tuesday at 2:30 in the City residents have seen : 1e11court said. The bike trail test was a make sure it gets sent directly fumcil chambe rs to gather -A new fou r-way stop The ne\'.' committee was suggestion by the cily's bicy-to the right place for action," evidence and take achon erected at a dangerous in· formed J::i:;t rcnr by City ·cle Trails Comm1ttee. Bet· Bette~court said. ~ Bet.tencourt says c v e r y t ter~tion near ·E 8-S·f'b: t"trt r Ji.-ia~a ger Ro!Jert L. \Yynn to-teneourt-uid they wanHo see-Bestdes B e-t.-.1.-e n-C-O-U...r t • +mee.lrng-opens-new-areas of • School . rc•spond quickly to n1incr prob-jus~ how useful a painted line representatives of the chief of concern l.lu1t the con1mitt ce -Final testing or painted li;Jns and to take the burden can be in establishing the police. the public wor ks diree-must try to clear ~p without medi an Islands near the ne\\' of acting on minor tra.ffic ci tywide system of bikeways tor and the city's traffic putting il hack into lthe lap of Roy 0 . Anderson School in tangles off the city council. under the proPosed general engineer sit on the committee the council. /J H arbo r V i e w H om es . So far. thC' response of the plan. and look at problem areas all "We art hopeful of solving ,,-, ll ""===~"' ~!l Permanent islands will be in-citv in cases of neighborhood "The Ba I boa Ferry at once instead of one at a all the thlpgs we get without ..r..:.::,~~, ~--------~ \ . stalled soon. t -;ffic \voes has drawn high turnaround is another close time the way it used to be. having to bother the council \!:..' ~ prai:,c lrom the people who cooperation effort,'' Bet· Bettencourt said the con1-wi_th it except at the end ," he ''Daddy, would Mommy like th is for her bathtub?'' The grottp is sol· _ dri~t reets every day_. __ 1_cn_co_u_r1_s_a_id_._"_W_e_ha_v_e_ta_ke_n __ m_i_tt_ee_c_an_be_a_p_p_roa_c_he_d_b'-y-s_a_id_. ___________________ _ 1Ji11g prflblenas Sf) fast t#1e Cit 11 Co 11 11 c II so111e· limes /u1s lro11b#e l'eepluy 11p 1vi1h ii. -Hapid <1nd com plet-e plan· ning for a new means of routing traffic onto the Bal boa Island ferry from the Balboa Peninsu la side. -Ins tallation of an 8--foot· wide, unmarked bicycle \vay by painting a strip along the curb of Dover Drive between Pacific Coa st Highway and Mariners Drive. 1t is a lest to see how well drive rs obey street·marked bike lanes. -Requests for improvement funds fo r bus stops in the city as a means of encouraging bus use in the cl!y. The new city agency man- dated to cut through some or the red tape normally sur- rounding minor cha nges or ad· ditions to the traffic system is called the Cit y Staff Traffic Affairs Co mmittee. According to Assistant City Manager Philip '.Bettencourt, 'vho moderates tbe panel's \veekly me-et i n gs ""ith residents, the group is sol ving problems so fast the city coun· ci l someti mes has trouble keeping up with it. t-le sa id lhe committee has been given the power to make Fi re Ruins Models for 70 Hearts SALT LAKE CITY (UPll - "It's heartbreaking," said Dr. \Villem Kolff. Kolff, who has been working more than 15 years on development of an artif¢ial heart, lame nted the destruc· tio n of his col!ection of 70 heart models by a fire at the University of Utah's artificial organ division th is week. 11e said that the blaze in· tcrrupted several research projects and caused more than $250,000 damage. SOUTH COAST PLAZA -. CO,STA MESA PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH MONOAV, MAY 14 GIVE MOTHER A GIFT OF ••• Music! . BRISTOL STREET AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY Quantities Li1nited I SUP@OPE.I STEREO SOLID STATE AMPLIFIER • Mi1n1tic: Phono Inputs • Stparate Bass ancl Treble Controls • $11110 Htacl phont Jac:k • Soph l1l ic:1te d Ovtrc:urrent P1otector for Ou1put • Transistors and Assocl1t1cl Ci1cu lts • Rlc:h Walnut·Gralntd Cab inet 49.95 R230 I SUPEBkDPE.I AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER • Balanctd Flywh11I Tuning • Slerto Htadphont Jack • Magne tic Phono Inputs • Stparalt Bass and Trt blt Conlrcls • Sifnal Sl1en11h Tunln1 Meter • FM Stt110 Indicator Light 7 9 95 • Ric h Waln"Jl·Gralntcl Cabin•! • You n eYer heard •t so g ood. REG . PR ICE 79 .95 You ne\ler heard •t so good. REG . PRICE 139 .95 R250 1 suPIOcarE.I AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER • Balanc1d Flywhttl Tuning •St111c Htadp hont Jack •Maln/R1mc11 Speak1r Switchin1 .Sepa1ate Bass and Treble Ccn\1ols • FM Ste11c Ind ica tor Light •IC incl FET Circuitry •Ceram ic Filler IF Tuntr Sta11 •Rich Watnul·Gralntd C1bin1t 114.95 You ne\I ~ he-a rd •I so good. REG. PRICE 199 .95 ~--~ ~-;:.~~1 ~ YORK STMPX -24 ~q-~·--. STEREO I' ··I -···. 1 _SYSTEM f 1\ 0 ~~ ~-~ --:· ~,with 8 TRACK \ :ful ~=.if r~ Jc ~ JAPE PLAYER ., · ·-·:-:-.. · . & SPEAKERS • Superhettrodyne Scli d Stal• Circuitry • St1110 Headphone Jack •AC Ccnvenienct Outlel • Phcn o Input Jacks • Tape·Out Jacks • Sliding Bass , Treble and Balance Control ~ • Automatic and Manual Channel Stleclo1 • Stereo lncllcalor light • AF C Leck 79.95 REG . PRICE 109 .95 Canon -Polmtronic LE so SD -1088 CABLE CRAFT HEADSE » A240 I SUPER§COPE .•. 1 SOLID STATE STEREO AMPLIFIER • St1r10 Headphone Jack •Main/Re mote Speaker Swilchin& • Tapt/Scurce Mon1tcdn1 • S1paralt Loudness Control •Bass and T1ebte Ccnl1ols • Ol1ttl·Coupl1d Two·Slage Phcno Prtampli lit1 • Switc:ht d AC Outlet •Rich Wa1nut·G1ained Cab inet 59.95 Y ou never h eard •1 so g ood. R£G . PRICE 99.95 J ] p,,~,,.~,.l l•em I >11~11"· .. n1 l•C '~'I '••t [_J I •'•V lo u•• •,•nri•~ '~'le~ opri Jl1on ''•' 1 .i•; ·'• !\ l.1· I T•;rw,,.~. '"'l oew.tlll Jl W "~ !te•;un"fy '"'·r><l"'·" 1r,o HI 00!1 H: • Jdt-). t .. •1•• ~"J"·I' 1<__..,,,.,,.., f•!.O lvr c•~rllenl oouml Q '·'"''V l l f••,~·1~ i.e., '""'"'r~nne, IJ'\•"· p~""o (Ir ~·cn~d Hush PuPPa!~~ -~ \ ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR a Q Q 11 EVERYDAY CAlCULATIONS O O 0. 1 IN TH[ PAlM Of JOllR HANO 0 0 0 \ • v ..... ,1. , •••• 1, ... ~ II • 111.r"""' Doti•,.,'''"! 11""" 0 • • • l"o l;pp""'"" IJ>lt., ---• A,Oo~1l<t C•.,•ln1 l11lu o -~ .,,. . ..... ,.1,,.,,,,..1.011•• '"""' 1,.1 ... , -'• • lOI'' >I (nl•J to~•'"' o ~ot!O<! P"'l>l•hlp • 0•""' Cllt<I 109.95 with CONTROL Be It Bach or Rock lhls stereo headpho ne will "Turn you on ". Ftaturlng Mane/Stereo switch and Ltf!J Rlghl channel vclumt eontrcl. "Hl·QUA LITY" al an easy to r11ch prlc:e . 9.95 /lore/co 1420 Ca rry-C order #2607 "' ''~'"' n f1,,tr·u• ,,,, r•IMn,11 J~,1.11 er '~""''~·. or 1>~,1d. I' ""· $J940 #2705 ' ' ~) . ~ ' "')' \ ~ -"'<:j. ' ' ' ' A• ' • Ju\t one of m11nv ltXtiling dvl11s 11v11il 11bl11 for Mothe.! Come in .ind \Se !he re1t. 15.95 :ltj;C.O E\i~R~C~ illl. VD. cc:;;;:. mc:::sA REG . PRICE 139 .90 brothei 408C ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR 4-FUNCTION-LSI Compl1l1 with AC Adaplcr, R1ch1r11abl1 Oalttry, and Carryln1 Cast • Ont Y111 Parts· Gu1r1iit11 • Multl pllcatlon • Mixed Calculation • Sublracllon • E1ttnd1d An swer Division • Add ition 99.95 REG . PRICE 129.95 BOWMAR MXSO Calculator COMPACT, HANDSOME, FUNCTIONAL DESIGN with BATTERIES & CHARGER The fifth funct ion: The new • key P.1ekag1d ccmplett with dtlu11 vlnyl case and AC ch1l11r 8 dl11t dlspl11 Full floatln& declmal REG . PRICE 15 .95 bfOthei Caltr_ofliC 812 ) • Ellhl·Di&ll lllumlnattd Dlsplay • Chain 1nd Mlltcl Calculatlons 1 0-2 Fl11d Dtclmal Cholct • Overflow Indicator • A11tom11lc Dl1pla)' Shut-Oii all•r Thirty Second• • Opllonal E•lta Pow1r Unit fer AC/DC Op111llcn • One Year F111 R1plac1mtnt G111rant11 73.75 REG . PRICE 99 .95 ~ CASSeTTe Magnetic Recording Tape Quaclrasonfc Hl1h Frequ ency/Lew No ise C120 39¢ 99.95 --· • PORTABLE CRAIG CASSETTE RECORDER with AM Radio, Battery & AC Operation. Audio Level Recording CRAIG AM-FM RADIO CASSETTE RECORDER STEREO SYSTEM with Speakers A&t.t. i 81W&t.t. , . STEREO $YSTEMS # 3450 with CcnHtt. Player ond Rec:ord.t $197.00 #3561 AM/FM st.,... ISR ..-cord choftttr with 1peolc· .,, cind stand. $170.00 8Ht£.HOWELL #335 0 ' \ . #JlSO AM/fM steffo wtff\ "•"'" aSR ,,.,,.,., ;. $162 00 traGlt plav-r cha1t9er, sp&alt• en altd ttoltd. • .\ • He's Not F~st -But Accurate Bv TOM GORMAN t>.n ... Piiot Sl•tl Wrll ... :rru.s Js .a_very_~elillerate l'lliumn. I'm typing- w1th, one finger which, for some reporters, is not unu~ual at all. . But I -grew up under the 10- f1nger system, and beamed with pride as my fingers--all of them -flashed across the keyboard with amazing accuracy. Well, this week I'm down to on-a finger. My left arm is in a cast, following surgery Monday morning. The doc put three pins in my thumb, which broke at the TOM ooRMAN knuckle in a recent car accident. I FEEL LIKE the black sheep of the newsroom. A reporter whose typing speed is 15 words a min· ute is not much good on deadline. l'm not a very efficient secretary, either. Open- ing the mail is kind of fun, though. I y,iace my left el bo\Y on the envelope, and run the etter opener up the slit with my right hand. The heavy manila envelopes are especially difficult. Another job of the newsroom secretary is to man the "magic boxes"-two telecopiers which receive copy sent from outlying offices to the main news- room via the telephone. I helped man the magic boxes upon my return Wednesday morning. :Maybe I should have stayed in the hospital. THE SECRET in operatin~ the machines is in the way you feed the eaper into it on this end of the transmission. Thats no problem if you're am- bidexterous. I didn't quite get the jlaper in right for a story being sent on deadline, and ~t jammed. -That's no \Vay to n1ake points with your editor. Ans\vering the phones isn't too difficult, al- though at least once I did get a bit panicky when three or four lines flashed al once. I don't think I lost more than one caller. The you wonder if maybe that caller had the news tip of the year THERE WERE problems just getting lo work, too. I'm a stickler for my morning shower.-We didn~t have any plastic bags 1big enough to cover my cast, so I had to content myself with dunking my head beneath the shower head. That's like eating the ice cream c one and \vatching 'the ice cream melt away. Getting dressed hardly bothered me at all, since I'm usually too groggy that early in the morning any\vay. But facing a pair of shoelaces was a trau-. matic experience. So I \vore loafers. The boss likes us to wear ties. So I woke up my wife for help. We debated for about 15 minutes on whether the tie went over, under and through or under, through and over. We finally got 1.t tied, and neither of us really cared that it was an inch loo short_ DRIVING DOWN the Newport Freeway one- handed was quite exciting. ~ had to content my- self \vith the slow lane which, I learned, is just as fast as the fast Jane at 7:45 a.m. I got to work 15 minutes late. I walked into my editor's office to report for duty. He looked at my cast. shook his head and peered at the ceiling. So I tackled the mail. the 111agic boxes and the phones. I started writing this colu1lln before the boss went to lunch. l-Ie's been back an hour, and I'm still typing. It's not that I can't think of what to say. It's just that lhese days I'm a very deliberate typist. 1 was cast for the part. • The best of everything in .•• JEWELRY SILVER eHINA GIFTS Remember, if it's from Howes . . . • • • it's a gift of distinction . B.n HOWES and SON IJNE JEWELERS FOR THREE OtN£RATlONS , 3412 VIA IJDD NEWPORT BEACH • 175-2731 LOS ANGELES • PASADENA SANTA BARBARA • HONOLULU PHOENIX • SCOTISDALE ) • •· .. UPI Tt11pholo Carries 81dlet Chicago Police SJ!(. Ro- bert KeaUn« talks to newsmen while still car· rying bullet. Officer wu wounded while re- sponding to radio call about suspicious man on roof. Bandage marks spot of wound. 6 styles -9 fabrics 36 colors- '~NI. y 1 PRICE TAKE YOUR CHOICE Th"""", Moy 10, 1973 OAJL Y PILOT :J J, Teapot Do111e Big at Ti1ne ( By United Prtss Jnternatlooal The biggest scandal ever in· volv1ng an American presiden- cy was the Teapot Dome af- falr during \\'arren G . Harding's admini stration. Like the \Vatergate incident, Teapot Don1e took Its nan1e front a place -In this case 9.321 nc~s of public lands in \Vyoming that under a 1910 law were set aside for use by the nauon·s oil reserves. quest. Fall was an old crony of Hardlna'1 who had been &lven Ille Cabinet ptlll to repay pollUcal debts . In April, um. Fill give lhe Manunoth Oil Co. a lease to the lands pennlttlng It to take and sell all Ille oil. There was ~eeret•l'fl of In· terior F•ll -d rel· attt>es l'eeelt>ed other oH lands with two other companies controlled b y Edward L. Doheny. . IN 19%0, Congress gave the 8.200,000 In l..lber• _secrelal:y~ oUho.Na<y~t"_,,_. __ In a U.S. S e n 11 e In- vestigation, It was !earned that Fall and some relatives """'lved $200,000 In Uberty bonds soon after the Teapot Dome lease was signed . There was evidence this came from a company set up by Sinclair. among others. Fall a I s o allegedly received. a $100,000 loan from Doheny which was never repaid. ty to lease the lands to private companies, if necessary. to prevent the oil from betng drained off by oil producers on nearby private lands. In ~lay, 1921. shortly after he becan1e president, Harding turned this authority over to Secretary of the Interior Albert B. Fall on Fall's re- ~ no competitive bidding and, as it was learned later. Fall negotiated secretly \\'ith the head or Mamn1oth, ~l.F. Sinclair. AT THE AA1E time Fall was allegedly negotiating on IN JN... EEllJIUABY, tit• r Harding's death, Cong re s s passed a joint resolution saying the contracls were against the publlc interest and made under circumstances of fr aud and corruption. Presi· dent Cal vin Coolidge \'.'RS ordered to bring suits In cancel tl:e leases and to br ing prosecutions. HERCULON OR GLOVE SOFT VINYL • " Thi! U.S. S..prcmo Court latu a,pproved cancellaUon or the leaats and said Harding's , executive order was Illegal. • IN TH E AF7ERMATU, Secretary of the Navy Edwin N. Denby, who agreed to transferring the C>il reserves to Fall , was forced to resign from tht cabinet. ' Fall was tried and convicted of aOO!ptlng a bribe in con- nection with oil rtserves at Elk HUis, Calif .. which were leased to one o( Dohen y·:i company. He was sentenced t ont? year in prison an . was fined $100,000. Both Doheny end Sinclair \\'ere tried and ncquittcd. ALTllOlJGll HE was never, dirt'<'tly blamOO for the scan- dal. Harding cn n1e under fire 1 for putting his trust in C'Qrrupt pcorsons. $ a· only 19 only $198 only $198 EARLY AMERICAN convertible sofa bed -beautiful looking, sleeps 2. MODERN convertible sofa-bed sleeps 2 in supreme comfort. Jrl':'" ft' Rivier•'s 9-pt. corner qroup ... 2 bolsters . . m11r-nuitl,.nt table .•. 2 mollrosse' ... 2 bo>< sprin gs. CONTEMPORARY convertible sofa· bed for today's moderns-sleeps 2. THE PERFECT GIFT for ·MOTHER'S DAY SAVE $60 ON llNGSIZE CONVERTIBLE SOFA 9·PC. GllQUP COMPLETE Tlu1 ultim•!o btd fot-••din9, wa tcki119 TV, rolaz/11g, rtcup•r• otinCJ or •'••P.i.,. SAVE' $50 ON QUIENSIZ! C<l•~lllrtll w1l~•1d ~n1cl1m<1n1, m1nrriN, ho( _,,.1,,., ·~e111 harmi. Also •••llel*I in 1luttn Sitt' (ll0".080") ...""::= ----·-.. -- " I ·- ' ' ' II Include" . • King Si.re Mattress&. 2 Sox Springs • 8eoutiiul Ouitlod s.dipf~d • Blonli.et.Heodboord' frome plu•., .2 ~tit• ah.on, °"e !101.-t,r. led , two prllowto1e1, 2 pillow•. · Includes: • Queen Size Mattress & BOJI! Spring • Beautiful Quilled Bedspread • Blanktl, Headboard & frame plus .. 2 kingslze Shetts, one llat-one titted, two pillow cases, 2 pillows. Riviera's TWIN or FULL 'SIZE MATIRESS & Box Spring includes Headboard and Frame FREE DELIVERY • FREE WARRANTY • FREE SET-UP! 3 . 75 INSllNT • !.'Ml'.u.'~ CREDIT ·. ff'JitilJ AVAILABLE L -. JIM thol '• r1""lr1d ;, you mu1! b1 2.!!i SANTA ANA BUENA PARK Y•"' of,.., wookio,. o C~if. dri•~• COSTA MESA LONG BEACH '""' ... OM,,""'"' ........ 3015 5o. Bristol 425 f. 4th St. 127 k. MefR 1531 Stonton Ave. lllO!oi' ttodlt conL 979.5040 435·6309 547-6519 127-4400 WEEKDAYS, 9:30 to 1:00 ~@_~nvgr!JQJ~[ ~~~jglists mu;:;:T~::::;::: f • • l • • I • • • DAILY PILOT \?.She Datejl Jly JOH WLER Oj .. Oltlar , ......... When Mn. Shirl !Urrtl hears news accounts or the Watergate ·a!lalr, her thoughts turn to tbe class ol 1942 at Santa Monica High School wlltre she 8iiil. John D. Ebrliehman were classmates. There was never any kind of romance between them. In • I • ,.. -• .... •,.,.~• ·11r lieh1nan· fact. she rem~rs that Ebrlichman never had much " ""'--'i.e==--'-'-JJilll"'*'"'I• ~Wl4>-h&-was '=""" always busy wilh campus- • I I l I I I I pollllcs. Bur MRS. HIRREL, who -now-lives-in-El Toro, feels she knew the ex-presidential aide ~ well as any of her World War 11 classmates. She was active. with him in student government, a fellow debater in foren.\ic league, and on the occasion of the senior prom , she was his date. "He was always so sel!- assured and confident," she recalls. "That was the main thing about him. Vt'e used to say even in high school that some day he Would be presi- denl. "Of course, now we have J.o , laugh a little. 'Jotfn finally got caught with his hand in the UPI Teltpl\olll 'ALWAYS CONFIDENT' Joh.n Ehrlichman cookie seems John." jar; v.·c funny if say. That you kne1v SHE DATEO HIM Mr5. Shirl Hirrel through to her date with him to the prom . He was very polite and pleasant . she said, IT JS FUNNY, she says, but he never even held her because in h.igh s c h o o J hand. Ehrli chman v.·as always aloof "'IT \VAS LIKE going out from the people around him, \\'ilh a priest," she said. above any suggestion that he As a result, she is not sure P 'z • -could do v.·rong. to this day why he took her to e lean, "He y,·as never a teenager that dance. "I was chairman like the rest of usl" she says. of the prom committee, and "IF HE THOUG HT the E le S '·I can't say that he ever sat he was always one to be seen public shouldn't know about ag et around and shot the breeze. with the right person," she something, I'm sure he'd try When he talked, it always had s<1ys. "I thought that might be to keep ·it quiet," she said. F S. • to bt' about something im· his reason . But on the other "He was always a person who or aving portant. like politics .. , hand, he might have asked me did what he thought was These attitudes ca r rie d even if I weren't prom right." SACRAMENTO (APJ -Therr.::;;;;;;;;;;;;--..i..i;;i;;;;.:i~;;;:i;..i..i~~~~i-~~~------ golden eagle and the pelican would be put on the state's list of untouchable birds under a bill introduced here. I Assemblyman Barry Keene (0.Santa Rosa). said his bill would make it illegal to take either bird capti ve or to kill them. TIIERE ARE only ·soo /I ~~~ golden eagles left i n California, Keene said, adding that a recent study "indicated) only one young brown pelican v..-as hatched in 1970." ON MOTHERS DAYASQNy; RADIO SAYS IT ALL '·It is important thal v.•e prcr vide some security to these endangered s p e c i e s to preserve them for future generations. This is an ex· ~~~~~~~~=;~~~~~~ tremely serious situation and one we no longer can permit to continue,'' Keene said. THE STATE Departn1ent of Fish and Game is starting a study "to determine the cause for the steady decrease" in the golden eagle population in the state . . , Plan Upheld SAN DIEGO (APJ -1\ sta te appeals court has upheld a redistricting plan drawn in 1971 h.Y San Diego ~ou nty supervisors, r evers 1 n g a superior court judge's ruling that the plan was inva lid. The 4\h Distr ict Court of Appeals ruled that Judge Robert 0 . Staniforth overstepped h i s authority \vhen he held th<1t the redistricting shifted too many voters from one district to another. 8F·11W 6f-1~WA 8FC· TOOW. Modem compact cobinet wilh pedestal base fi ts anywhere. Sharp strong FM or AM wit~ big $pecker. PU1hbvtton easy to use controls. Sleep rmer. l orge_ecsy-to<read illuminated numerals. $3995 BF-1 lW.She'B love it fer its hi·rise co bi net on a modern pedestal. And 1's full FM/ AM tone. Stands proudly In any kitchen or bedroom. $29 95 6F-16WA. Budget-priad FM/ AM portable. Des igned with motherly care in simulated leatherette and chrome. Operatesonbattery or AC. $2695 d avis®brown TELEVISION 8 STE,REO e APPLIANCES COSTA MESA Harbor Area 411 E. 5evntH 11th St. Dally: f .f ; Sot. f., 646-1684 e SALES e SERVICE e SINCE 1947 EL TORO • 1 Saddleback Valley··· I El Toro Rd. at f l'ffwoy I next to Saw·Oftl I Doll,: f·f: Sert. 9·6 1 837-3830 .. Utilities· Deposits Called Unfai~ Best Idea Since Shopping Carts ' . . Now you can do a week's shopping without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed shop· ping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. Actllal LISll Approxi!Nllt ly Tw~ Sl1• ShoWn Above • 140 separate printed items, plus additional spaces you can fill in yourself. Just check 'em off - 34 Staples 21 Vegetables 14 Fruits 6 Bakery Items 5 Beverages 19 Meat and fish entries 11 Dairy items 20 Miscellaneous Two-year supply (I 04 lists) furn- ished in convenient tear-off pad 'for just $1.00 (postage prepaid} SEND IN COUPON TODAY AND BECOME A SUPER SHOPPER , ................... . • • Fill in this coupon, clip and mail with $1 to: • • Pilot Printing Shopping Lists • • Post Office Box 1560 • • Costa Mesa, Californi:a 92626 • • • • . ········································ • •........................................• • • • • .. la,. to -, .. , Zip Code • • •••••••••••••••••••• DAILY PILOT FROM F 1shion Island Newport B each STEREO· SOUNDS OF THE 1HARBOR • t • • \J ( .. ' ' • • • • • I ! I I. ) ) • FA(~Ttll\Y AtJ'fll(}l\IZE on REGULAR MODEL DISHWASHERS and TRASH .COMPACTORS Replace ~-~~~ rour built-in dishwasher NOW .... . and Save! .... 11-.-..1i INSTALLED $28995* PRICE Only INCLUDES: Nonnal replacement labor and K~chenAld Custom Dishwasher 'Front Panel &tra SALE ENDS JUNE 16 SAVE SPACE! New KltchenAICI SAVE TIME/ TRASH COM PA CTOR $AVE MONEY/ Crunches tr~sh toy. of original volume See It demonstrated today! H1ndy "Uttar Bln''Jil, Drop ln small Items wlthout'opening the trash drawer. Chlrc:oal Air Flltll". R1mov11 odors, doesn't ju1t mask. 1hem. Triple DriYe Rim. Assures balanctd crunching forct. Tllt•AWIJ Ttllh •111tet, -M•Y be- uHd wrth or W1tbo outtruh • ·-·-·····---------------·----------------~--------------------. i WIN A FREE It'•En•y! Freedrawingticket.avallableatoachof lho 1' 1 stores listed below, when you ask the lllemw1 to tell : · · you how Ki tchenAid is built better.-not cheaper. I 1 CUSJOM OISHWASHE"R One Oii:.h~·asher OR 'J'fash Compacto"rwlll be 1lven a.way • or TRASH COMPACTOR at. each store at the close of the Factory Authorized Sale! I h . I ' I 1 -your c 01ce. 1 ~------------------------------------------------····--------· 90 C•y• Cash with approved crtdlt, Wt ln1t1ll • We S""'° fi](";~t . I. Mtlllbcr Of C•tl- 1 I !Hnli'I 1••9~•1 CO· e I J"" ,,.-aHr1tiv1 b11yin4 a p ~ 1 an o as ·~rEl:r:i: :::1;,,::.0,:::.~~; !!!!] 8t,,1Tlllf, Int. ~83 Glenneyre, LaCJuna Btaclt Phone 494·0506 or toll free-545·2691 Weekdays 8:30°5:30 Sat. 9:00-5:00 Who says all prices toda y are going up? This redu price offer is the buy or the yea r ~ San1e rich satin cover dee.p·quil led to S&alyfoam(a.•. Same Dura· Flex in11erspring and palenled extra firm foundaUo(i. Same everything that sold by the thou sands for much more. Take advan~e of thi s s~,:11::1;;~ QUf.F:N SIZE REDUCED' 60x80" 2-piece $Ill NOW OWLY $179.50 KIN G SIZE REDUCED! 72x84" 3-piece ,~t. NOW ONLY $249.50 Tnund.11. May 10, 1973 DAILY PILOT Bee Rustlers Loos e And Butterflies Tlireaten Invasion I Tim PICK OF -Punch I c.111111 -lllnloo . 8ACAAMENTO -There cutl, the -·· would be nothlq without them. m1a mJpat\on rtom Mexico eJpe<led to bit the Boy Area and Socramento by Moy 15. Department 1poke1mt1n 11y the lnltd Is "movlna with the momentum or a lO ·y e1r buildup" and h11 reached San Lu11 Obispo County. WU I Ume whoo I reporter could npoct IO open bll mall ft'om the VlrJous ai111CllJIUr1J •a•ocles end bo-hum thraU~ a bunch of reports on bl chick births. current pe1 output Rnd the increate 1.n the price of fertilizer. IN .4PIUL alone, D i D t --rt repcrted the theft of 118 boo colool11, llUlhlDI the total lot the year· IO 831; wbkb II men. than double tho Jlt ol ll3t year. In 19'11, tbel1I of hlvet totoled llS. HOUSEWIVES WHO use Evideotly._someone wilb U.. State Department. of FoodlOl A1:,rricullure put a bug in the ear of the public relations man to brighten the material or at least deal with something Je11 statistical. Tiie de_P!£!!!1eol notu ·!1'8!i perfumed delergen ta are cau· 1 ~ per vi;"°Tha "1"11 llonod that lne 1i\i terfly. louet repment 1 betkeeper'a which occulonally damages burden of fll,llOO. cropt, can a1so damage·sweet· On the practlcal levtl, amelllna laundry by landing .., department aleutha theorise lt and laying "egg 1na.sses" that tbe tblftl w 1 r • -Which hatch into tiny black ltlmulaled by an lncreue In worms. CASE JN poiul : The depart. ment notes a startling lrt- crease in California's central valleys "with a problem the Old West never hid to contend with.•• The problem, It tul'JUI out, is bee rustling. honey priou and 1 stronger Perhaps It's only a rumor de:rnlnd tot rental or ben for spread by the laundron1a t lob- polllnlladan purposel. by, but tht' departmi?.nt snys such a migration has hap- pened. the'lnrgcsl one In 1958. Henvy conrt'ntratlons o f Cyn thia cardul In 1965 and 1966, however, "caused traffic to be halted In some are/ls txocau se of reduced vi!rlbl!itv." Second case: Housewive1 In Northern Calirornia valley and coastal communities are being alerted to lhe imminent In· vasion of the area by the Painted Lady butterfly. Granted, it is difficult for the departn1ent to get away from statistics, but in these CAm.EMEN USED brands IO Identify their atoclt end pro- tect them from ru1tler1. Beekeeper• are faced with • problem (spealdni In tel'llll of bow many head of bees one Is ratlening for market) and need a oolution. The Painted Lady butterfly, known to .taxonomists and Latin buffa as Cynthia cardul. ..is Ja the fren.tled flutters of Beezness Abuzz In S tate's Hives Los ANGELES (AP ) - C&llforrii a beekeepers a r e humming a happy tune the&e days. A 44 percent increase ln honey prices last year and widespread use of bees as pollenators of field crops have made It a h~ey ot a busi ness. INCREA!ED prices have resulted from a sharp rise In demand accompanied by an equally sharp decline in sup- ply, explains Jack Park, pres!· dent of the 200·m e mber Californ ia State Beekeepers Assn. Unusually cold and wet weather throughout t h e Western Hemisphere during the past two years brought a sharp drop in honey pro- duction , Park said , and helped enable prices to rise fro m 22 cents a pound in 1971 to 31 cents In 1972. Presently, prices are at as centa and lnduatry spokesmert expect them to go even higher. . AND WHILE they make honey, beel can be rented to farmere to POUenate cropa. Bees-for-hlre are expected to polleoate l3DD mllllon in state-produced crops th.la year, accordlng to the U C Agricultural E J: t e n s i o n Service. The crops Include alfal(a, almonds, cantaloupes, c11eumbens and many other vegetablet. BEEKEEPERS u s u a 11 y place two or three hJ ves on each ·acre of land during pollenatioo. The pr o c e 1 s normally takes from one to six weeks, deperu!lng on the crop. Park says beekeepers usually received $6 to S7 per hlve -not a great deal of money, but, remember the bees are making honey while they pollenate. * * * * * * Liberated Man Wins at Vassar POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. (AP) -Men't Uberailon hu come to Vassar College, a 112-year-old former ill-women achoo!. Steven J. Hueglin won a runoff election by a S-l margln this week over coed Vicky Miles, 19, to become the flnt male stu· dent government president in Vas.sar hl!ltory. "lt1s no joke at all," said the history and political IC.lence major, launching his term with a plea for male-female parity among students and faculty. mol'.lO<:zy tbR.u sat:ur:<oczy mczy ;.1~ If that isn·t enough to intl butterf lies in a Jc\Y p!!opl\"S stomachs, it rcrhdnly ""nli"f be due lo a short:ige or 1hen1 . . WIN*1,000 Every Spring OR ONE OF 1,075 OTHER PRIZES For life or •20,000 CASH ... with a totll retail value of ovar S20,000/ Yes, besides giving away $1 ,000 every Spring for the Ifft of some lucky person (or ..... ............. -~. t20,000 in cash) ... Magnavox will give aw1V 16 Color TV consolel, 25 complete stereo component system.$, 35 black-I nd white par.table TV'1 and 1,00Q_portable radios! Come in today fpr.your official entry blank and complete ru ltl (no purchase is nece&&ary) •.. or you'may write for the offlcial entry blank and rul~I to Magnavox "H1ul In A Big One" Sweepstakes, P. 0 . Box 532, New Canaan, Connecticut 06840, Stereo FM/AM Radio-Phono with 8-Track Tape Player .. A1 beautlful to 11111 It is to hear, this compactly styled fine furniture Magnavox stereo value will' add charm to your home-while bringing you wonderful listening . Quality feature~ include four speakers that project sound from both sides and front, and an automatic Record Player. The customized 8-Track Player has automatic pro gram changer, contlnuouslplay, program selector and Indicator. Th ere's no add·on look I Reel in th is stereo valae and you'll en4oy the better Magnavox sound I Four styles. to choose from, too I And they're ali magnificently Magnavox. SINCE 1926 1865 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, 548-5131 i ®'@. Special, Fri./Sat., minia ture rose plants for mother wllh min im um purchase .recei pt Bullock's Fashion Sq:are I. 401 Main Street 536-7561 Huntington Beach Sales Only · 536-75& 1 UNITED Goldenwelt & Wamer STORES Huntln9ton Beach • . I OPEN DAtLY 9 to 5:30 FRIDAY 9 to 9 CLOSED SUNDAY ' • in Santa Ana Santa Ana/Garden Grove Freewa ys at Main ., ' • Sales & Service ~ 842-5596 l]t;n'IQUI ..................... ... l • • I • U DAil Y PILOT Thursdly, M17 10, 1973 This peasant embroidered 9:wn comes in blue & pink, and is of polyester cotton. $35. For Mom select from ... Slips, Pa nties, Bikinis, Gown,, Pajamas, Peignoir Sets. Veta's lNTIMATE APPAREl. WMtclilf P\111• • o17ttll.lrvlM PHONE : 642-1197 A Great G ift Idea For The Active Mother • • 1 ~~~t $ J..O OJnJ{ li{V J A SPORTSWEAR Westcliff Plaza, 17th and Irvine, Newpon Beacb,Califomia92660 •Y= FREE FANCY GIFT WRAP l+-tNEWt-\ HIGH f: ," ·:· I · DOME Rl!G •. t:M.n SALE $29.99 12"ELECTRIC FRY PAI BY ~ ' .. FARBERWAR~·E Something new has been added to the Farberware 12"' .Etectric ,,., Pan -for the t1ltim1te In "Versatility, it now comes With a Hi&h Dome Cover, extendins its duties to cooking li•rgtlf cuts or meat. Still the very finest In l11sting Stainless Steel beauty with 1n aluminum-clad bottom and F1rberware's "Perfect. Heat'' control - assures the tastiest meals every time I PORCELAIN ON STEEL COOKWEAR - $9.95 2Vt OT. SAUCE PAN ~ $10.95 I" COVERED SKILLET $13.95 5Vt QT. DUTCH OVEN ROASTER The elegance of CENTCJRl tableware Handsomest mug in town :J\.!ost useful, too! For coft'ee, piping hot soups, iced cold beverages. Exceptionally 'vhite and smooth ••• elaui· cally simple in design ..• and so easy to handle. Car- ries a 3~year guarantee against breakage. If it breaks, chips, cracks or crazes, we'll replace it free. $7.95 ""' .... , C:i 2'1:1 OT, Hl-PJIOFIL£ SAUCE PAN 511.00 the wt of 4 ~· I . . - <;>pen: Mon.-Fr i. 9.9 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 10-4 MOTHER 'S Love Our Jeans h wesTCLIFF PLAZA Storekeeper 142·7011 1one-stop' shoppi ng a.t its :fi nest! OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS MOTHER'S IMY-.2 Days Away IF MAMA GOES OUT OR MAMA STAYS IN PUT HER IN Tbink Mama It's Her Day THINK , \ ' WESTCLIFF PLAZA -17th & IRVINE NEWPORT BEACH Also At Tho Nowportor Inn LIFE LIKE ORCHID Fiii! ~~~ ~,z,_, AT ff~~ ~--- SEE OUR SPECIAL DISPLAY UNUMn'ED CHOICE VARIETY FOOD PAKS \ SPICE RACKS -TEA sm JAM & JELLY SETS & MANY MORE , sz:ts TO szs.119 I NATuRALIZER. M1tchtna H1ndb11 THE ClA//IC DOUBlE TAKE While on Blue -That's the Spectator look You love. Comfortable, Naturally Thanks lo Naluralizer's Exira Features. $25 1052 IRV INE AVE . 548 8684 Maybe ..• with Daddy's help you con give Mommie a ve ry important PreseA,t this year ' t CHARLES a ' BARR Wntdfff Plw, NtwPoft llfath, C.111'. • '" I we-!~ -_:11 MtriM A¥1Mt, "•lboll ltll&4, Ceill. • • I • • . I • • • -·May 10, 1973 DAILY '11.DT :JS • . eirdest iakers Backed to Wall: West to-Pl.ay · I I . 1.llS ANGELES (Al') -Ci>och Bill Shannan ol the Los Aalel.. Laken mUUoina bis Nallonal B a s k e t b a II Asoodatioo dub Ills the ability to crack La..kers, who took the mea.sure of New New York appears In strq physical ce~ odds oa the overall series. York +l a year ago. shape wUh·WiWs Reed playlng his best ol Tanighl's , game starb at 7:30 with "But we must minimize our mistakes lhree .....J '-he w~ the lll06t· anolhtr capacity throng ol 17,l06 In at- and tumovers and· do better 011 the valliable laJhe/Ulll plarolfs ol tlml. teodanoo. ·~.0.--itbehe'<>dds~me"t!IO"N boa • - -El'en.rbettcf.:11 •hgbt!y Jured-DiiYe-oe.B1'Diwe~suUered an ,injured... Sharman has his prayer and hopefully Dellus>i:bere wbi>se lhree-~t play• kneecap Tuesday nlgbt. \ JIALTIMORE (AP) -Bob Cool)' aat a storage lod<or and ahook his head. 'LTbal WU ~ wiordesl basketball e I've ever aeen,"·tamenled the U.S. eb alter hil squad lost to Russia 7U4 0 the rmat game or a six-city American tour Wedneaday. '"You might SlY they out.maybemed • • · The serlos, WO!! by fbi. Vnlted State,·f. was charactei-lzid by rugged, 'oll>ow "'inglng play, and the finale followed 11\i't pattern. '.'1'!1< referees whlslled 41 persooal fouls admt the Soviets, 40 agaln!t the Ailf;ricans Wednesday. Three U.S . ptajers and six RWISians fouled out, in· cl~ing the vl.slton' N.ekaander Sbalnev, woo picked up his fifth peraonal with 6:01 'I' ainlng in the tint half. I .,addition, -Swen Nater, the backup ce r from UCLA, was ejected from the gai).ie late in the second half for striking a~ian player. Russians Jumped in front 16-7 in t opening minute!, 'led by as many as IU ints in.the first half and were ahead 40;:f at intermis.sion. Yllf U115" (72) U110 .. Si.tel 1'4) · t JI T 0 JI T Slls 01-218~ 32-21 l 2·2 ' S.unden 0 Ml 0 I ll·21J-llM)t ltltof ' 2..ol 10 OIGrtg0rlo I 5-6 21 ""i 2 0.0 4 Heno...--4 1·2 9 riv II :M '· ~'1 2 0.0 ' K I ·1-t ·1 McFerlend 0 1·2 I ll!:d Ito ... \t• """' o H o Gchrov D o.t "f <Wt' 2 2-2 6 "'~n 1 2-2 16 8'rM$ · ' 1-2 t Shn OHOElrnore 21).24 •11 21 1~22 n Toi.11 2ii 12-11 "" , vl.-1" UniQn «I l2 -n .· nUed s111n l6 21 -" ; ouled OU! -USSR. 61lul'Ml1, Zh1rmulr.h1ne0Qu, Bol hlv. SMl11tv, 8elov, Korll lY•l uu,, Oxley, Jon , OIGr19GJIQ 0111 10ul1 -USSR 41 , USA «I r echnkal foul -USA, Niter · tllndante -12.248. • · odgers Await ' iants Series; quts~Qr.e Boes ihs ~·(AP) -Claude Os-teefl,-~".£0! .'Angeles left·hander who · clotifed for 13 hits including two e home runs by the Pittsbur_gh tes yet stiµ earned his lhird V'ictcify, following Wednesday night's 8-5 win: 'frhey _went from five homers in the (ii' game to three to two. One more g8i e and I think we get 'em." t-blt 14-6, lhe Dodgers still managed to lip the Pirates tor the eighth"thne in ' Dodgers Slate All Ga..,.. lft Kl'I 1'4t) Ma ' Pfttiburoh ,, Lot Alllltlal 7:.SS p.m. Ml 'n LOI Alllll'lls •t S.n F,.nd_ 7:55 p.m.. Ml 12 Loi Anoales 1t Sift Fr1nclsco 12:JO p.m. M1l ll Liit Al!otl" 11 Sin Frlnd~ 12: O p.m. ~la.st nine meetings with the defending cblmpions d. the NatiOhal League East. lj the games in Dodger Stadium the Pi$tes hammered out a record 10 home ru~ but Los Angeles still won two d. thrfe games. 1)e Dodgers, with five victories In thffr last six starts, return to com- peijtioo 1n the Western Division when thef tackle the flrsl place San Francisco . GilUllS beginning Friday nlgbl in ~estlck Park. The victory moved Los eles within fiy.e games of the Gianis. T Dodgers are 1dle today: Jllltlllvrwll (JJ lff A.llltfn {II •llrllrbf Hrllrtil CU1,cf 4120Ru111U,n 5111 ''*2b 5 1 l o •ucknt<', lb ' o 1 o Sa lll911.rf5123Moll,ll 3101 Sta 11,lf 5 110 W.Olvll, cf 1 o O I $.. rt1on, lb 4 1 2 2 Ferguson, c l 2 I o SI , 11 • 0 0 0 W.Cra'#!Onl, rf 1 0 2 2 alez,lb lOOOCey,lb •OOO He1:16er, 3b I o o o Lacy, 2b 2 2 o 0 M.Milw, c • o 1 o 0.1-., p 1 2 o o Dev Ho, Pl'" o o 0 0 Cl.itvw, p O O O o , c o o O O CO.rvty, ph 1 O I 2 8kt,p 201D8r..,..,p OtOO R ..... p 0000 ll~ph lDIO 8.,..,_., p 0 0 • 0 A.Of"'"• pfl I o 0 0 Glulll, p 0 0 0 D Titab at j 1' J Totlls 'll I 6 1 .. ,,,thbur;h • 100 020 --J . U. ...,.... 001 05lt '2lf -I RlllMll. OP -lot AnvtllS I. LOB -Pfl t, Liit A~a 5. 28 -8. Roberhon, W. wfonl. 38 -Garvey. Hll -larogulll«i (3), e . •.-rtson !JI. se -CH!191. s -w. Crewfol'U. SF t·~· Divis. 1~ H It Ill 18 SO ••• (L,1·2/ ' l 4 • • 0 =~ ~::::: G"'lfl 122211 Yort Knlcks llarting toolghl. The · odds are against hlm since the Knlckerilodren ol the Easl go Into the aelloul coo1eot of the Forum with a 3-t edge in the. best-of.7 final playoff aeries and need ooly ooe more victory to take the crown from the 1972 champions. '"Ibis team is capable of winning the next three games,'' Shannan says of hiJ he'll also have Jerry \\lest although . the •.'Ne '-1 TV "II wu swollen and hurting since I (01 All.Star guard aggravated a right kneed In tho fourth quarler, bul l had to hamstring strain in the Tuesday night capping a 33-polnt performance, beat the get back In," he said ol his return In the 103-98 loss al New York In the fourth comobocl: ol the Laken In Madisoo final minutes and hla winning shot with game. 1 Square Gardell 'l'aesday. 48 se<onds left. Both ol West's hamstrings ache but he Lo& An&elel. wu listed a three-point DeBusschere also proved a standout vows to be ready to stan in the Lakers' t8vorile at Las Vegas, Nev., for game defensively. holding the Laker1 Jim do«-die coolest. ]lo. I!, bul oo One appeared to be ac-McMilllan down Jn the scoring depart- 3-Time ,Olylllpian .; Shakes Handicap; Will Ska;te·in CM Laver's Rally Helps Maintain Mastery of Emo By GLENN WHITE Of tfM DlllY Pii.t Sleff It was once written, or said, or sOmething, that from little acorns mighty oab do grow ... lhal tbe ugly cygnet evolves into the beautiful swan ... that you shouldn't 1udge a gift by its wrair- pink. So those clicbes beld true for a little Hungarian girl who weighed only two pounds at" birth and who was still strug-.. gling for survival 21,2 years later. ,t DOctors ,Said she might overcome the genera~ physical weakness and stomach" problems Plaguing her U sbe could get more exercise· and fresh air. She was put-iilto ·acrobatic~, gym- nastics, swimming, ice skating "and' did other exer.cises. _'.'.ln __ skalillg L repieJlll>or_lllll>w!n. sticks -and other tbin'gs under people's skates so they'd trip. I was so small and quick that they couldn't catch me." recalls Zsuzsi Alrilassy, now 21 a,.nd· a very healthy, nonnal woman. She kept on with her exercises, then settled into the routine of ice skating Un- til she became Hungarian Junior ch4m- pion in 1961. , Three yelll'l later sbe was in the Winter Olymiic Games at lMsbr.uck, Austria. In 1968 she placed sixth in women's figure skating at the Winter Olympics in Grenoble France. And in the '72 Olympics at Sapporo, Japan, she was fifth in her event. Sunday ¥,II •be In Costa Mesa for a free . publi~1 e~bition at Ice Capades Cbalel, Adams 1and Harbor Blvd. The sbQw starq at 6 p.m. and will be ~peate:l, aiafu free, May 20, also at 6. Miss Almassy has recently come to the United States to skate for Ice Capades and she says she enjoys skating more now since turning profesSionaJ. "Amateur ru1es stop yoo from being yourself. You cah't wock any acrobatics into your routine, you have a certain number of jumps to make, etc," she says. "And as ian amateur, I didn't have anyone to help me. I .had no advice on what kind of skating dress looked best on me and it was so difficult to find ice to practice on. It was always so ·cold and windy outdoors -once in a competition wind blew me backwards while I was de>- lng my school figures. "1bere are no incblr ice rinks in Hungary so you can't practice year- round. I wanted to come here to skate and to learn and I feel that already I'm better than I W'bs a year ago because I've ]earned style." Miss Alma.say has hopes of someday teaching youngsters to 1ce skate. Her love for kids was reflected in her Hungarian farewell perfonnance when she skated with a bunch of children, aged 2-10. J Having skated in l118PY lands, before a wide variety of audien~es, she says each crowd is different and she singles out the English as being the I e a s t demonstrative of their appreciation. How does she feel a.bout international judging, which oftl!ll Is ~er lire for alleged political voljng! ' "They are always right .and ll>ey*'8J!'I be-<:hanged. Yoo should just lhlnkltl your mislakea and always try to ~e," she says. Her drive for su~L was more built -around her own develupwent and efforts instead Ii the pur" cWsire to win. "I wanted to win, of coutse~ But I wanted to be remembered for . way '1''1\aled," she reveals. .• · · HUNGARY'S OLYMPIC TEAM-ZSUZSI ALMA SSY. B y 3-tlme Olympian H orribk Misconception Of. American Manhood ... DALLAS (AP) -Rod Laver of Corona del Mar survived a shaky start and crushed Newport Beach's Roy Emerson 7-5, 6-2, 7-5 Wednesday night in the open- ing quarter-rlnal match of the $100,000 World Championship of Tennis. _ Stan Smith, the favorite for the $50,000 first prize, defeated young John Alex:- ander or Australia in the second match of the evening, 6-4, 6-2, 6-l. Emerson, who has not defeated Laver in three years and now has lost 12 con- secutive matches to him , jwnped to a 5-2 lead in the first set. He tumbled to the ground hard in the eighttl game and didn't seem to be the same after that. The 34-year-<Jl.d Laver came on strong and took the sel with a fourhand cross- court winner. The red-haired Laver. who has tennis' inost famous lefthand forehand, quickly -bi-oke Emerson's-serv.lef in the second set and so frustrated him that the 36- year-<>ld Emerson twice kicked balls into the stands . Emerson rallied in the third set, but the dogged Laver kept Emerson scur- rying about with a series of sizzling vollies and put the match away when Emerson dumped the ball in the net . It took Laver exactly two hours to polish off Emerson. M&M's Spark 3-1 Tri11mph _..:For UCI-Nine Jeri Malinoff had a perfect day at the ·plate with two doubles and a singl~ and Jerry Maras won his eighth victory of the year as the UC Irvine Anteaters baseball team defeated the University of San Diego, ~I, in action on the UCI field Wednesday. Mallnoff had doubles to drtve Terry Stupy home with single tallies in the first and fifth inqings and scored the third run on a hit by Rod Spence and an outfield error. . The .two doubles give Malinoff a team lead of 14 for the season and his three hits boosted his season average. to .359 with 40 rbl. He is one double short of the single season high for a UCI player held jointly by Tom Spence and Dan Coronado at 15. Maras pitched his ninth complete game of the season, one short of Ray Hum- phries all-time high of IO but a balk in the first Inning sandwiched between a single and a double, gave the visitors a run to avert a shutout. Friday afternoon' at 3 the Anteaters close out the regular season by hosting Cal State (Dominguez Hills) with Gary Wheelock (7-41 making his first ap. pea ranee on the mound .lo more than two week!. The Anteaters have woo 11 games in succes!ion and 19 or 21. UC l"M Cll 111 rll..-i MDllna, cf ' 0 I 0 Lyons. II Cle..,.land, 2b ' o I O eannl119, lb Stupy, c ' 1 1 O Sclltn1, rf MaHnoU, lb l l J 2 Marai. p Spenca, It 4 0 I 0 Tollls kort ~ l1111lnt• ' V. of Sa.II Diego 100 000 ODO -I all r II~ ' 0 0 0 4 O I O • 0 I 0• 4 D 0 D 3J ) ' J ' . penetrating, without prodding fr.om the audience. UC Irvine 100 020 OOx -J • • ' . ' . m<nt. 'Ille thlrd-)IMT loiward Colwnbia had only 14 polnlJ, """' Reed scored 21 poinl5, bul he acknowledged the Lakera· hoveo't qutl. They trailed by 11 eo(ly in the game. bul came bock-to ·juol a tw&11Qint-dellcil 1n tbt Dnal minute. OeBuss<:bere observed, "I'm not at all ccmftdent. l don't like to get ov~ lldenl In a siluaUon llko this. Anything can happen. '''lbat's a great team we're facing with greal players. Of course, I'd rather be 3-1 than I-3 but I won 't be 1-ppy wttil we win the fourth one." Angels Home For White Sox Aft er Setba ck C!.EVELANil (AP) -Milt Wileox us-I ed a new windup and a new fast ball.· The result : the Cleveland Indians won I 10-3 over the California Angels Wed- nesday with ninth i.nnlng relier from Jer- ry Johnson. The Indians scored four or their runs 'Off Rudy May. 3·2, the starter and loser, and five off Lloyd Allen, who followed May 10 Mav II MIV 12 ~v ll A11gels Slate Chic"° 11 C1lllornl• f"'-" 1'~"''1' hk"llO 11 1 lorn • hlCl'QO 11 11 tom I "'' ·~ l "!I p.m. I: p.m. : II·'"· ~·lay to the mound. The other wu scored against Dave Sells, the lasl of five California pitchers. California got Its flro\ run in tbe foorlh on a walk, hll batsman and a double b7 Bill Grabarkewitz: The-other two ~ in the seventh on singles by Ken Berry, Al Gallagher and Vada Pinson. The Angels open a four-game series tn Anabeim with the hlgl>-fiylng While Sox tonight with BUI Singer (f>-1) laking tbe mound against Wilbur Wood (7-2). H~wing Nolan Ryan g o e s against Slan Bahnsen Friday and Clyde Wright takeil on Eddie Fisher Saturday. May gets a rematch with Wood on Sun-- day. I Injured outfielder Frank Robinson ls slated to receive another examination j from team physicians Jules Raslnski tc>- day, but says the aggravated hamstring injury to his left leg is not serious. t "Our big concern ls Frank being able to play against Chicago," said manager Bobby Winkles. C1Hffn1la (JI Clevtfalld 1111 I a11ra1111 •llrllfW ! Pinson, rf j 0 I I W.WUllalTll, It 5 1 I 0 Val911liH, n ' 0 0 0 R.Tor,., rl l J D O Mccraw, lb l o o o Hlfldrl(k. cl J 2 2 2 ! R.Ollvtf', dh l 1 0 O Splktt, dh l 2 2 l f O.How•rd, ti • o o o Duncan, c 2 1 o D Grabllrlc.'wllz,2b l o I 1 8111, lt> 3 2 l l 8arry, cl ' 1 I o Ch•mbllss, lb 4 o 1 I Gallagher, 30 2 o 1 0 Dully, 11 :J o o 0 Alomlr, 2t> I 1 0 0 R.glellO, l'll :J 1 I 0 Kvsnytf', c 2 o o o Wfl«i~. p 0 0 o 0 Spencar, pri I 0 0 I J,J1;11m1on, p 0 0 0 0 Sl"l!henlOll, c 1 o o o R.Mey,p oo ;t L.Alltn, p t f I ear~r. p o o o 0 P1rr1noskl, p o o o 0 s.i11,p 0000 Total• n J 6 l "To1als JD 10 10 t CaUtornla 000 100 2oO -l CleY1land JOO +ID Olli -10 E -een, v11«1tl11t. DP -Clllfomll 2, c...,.. l•nd I. LOB -C1Utornr.· 1. c11veland "-29 - GrabllrlllN'llz, Splkn, 8ell, Hwodrlcll:. S -R. TO!Ta. SF -Htrldr1tlr.. ,. H • •• .. .. R.M4Y IL.l-21 ' ' • ' ' I L.Alltn 1·2/l ' • • I • hrbe• 1·1/l 0 • • I I Parre!'IOllll I • • • 1 1 "''' 1 1 I • t • Wiicox fW.2·01 • • ' ' • • J.JOlln-' • • • • • 0 . (W.3-11 .. Ill ll J J I 2 eyer 1·2/110010 I 00002 ~ -Culver 121. WP -OslNn, Rooker. T -. 2:21. Attendance -11.scw. And having wa~ 10De of her ex- bibi,tloos, l have to belle.e her "(bh will be acliieved. I · AAIAZlNGLY, Hungary had· -only one more .cQmpetitor in the 1972 Winter OlympiC Games than did Egypt. ln fact . the entire Hungarian Olympic squad will be making a public appearance in Costa . hfesa Sundfly and a week frotri Sunday. CLEARLY,' she needs more ttme here to get the proper perspective of such matters . It's Official: Anteaters I o. · 2 Davis Cup Pla)f er INTERESTINGLY, figure skater Zsuz.si Almassy IS the 1972 Hungarian Winter Olympic contingent and she'll be .. ' ' · .o Be Selected Todity EXICO CITY (AP) -Dennis Play Is to start FriJ.y on the clay RJ,ton, lhe non-playing caplaln of the courts or the Ra=Osuna Tennis WHITE WASH uJ; Davis CIJp tennis learn, wW -Stadium In the Chapul Sport Center. his No. I slnglOI player tod•v Yves Lamallre, M '1 non-playiug ~ caplaln, has been guardedly opl~Uc the draw Is beld for. the North llboul his learn'• chances 11nce he Jearn- AniOrlcan Zone finals with Meilco. ed Smith would not play. showing bcr wares al free 6 p.m. ex· 1"" draw, originally scheduled lor "Our chances ag*1nll them are jual blbiUons staled lorioe Capadcs Chalel, W~ay, was delayed a day becauae a about even-without Stan," Lamaitre aald. Adanis and Harbor. B~~h referee was lat• gelling to Mex-In practi"°' stocktoq baa looked belier She plfttd 5th In women 's singles al !COjCily. than SoJcmoo lbd deflteled him handily ;, Hilston has already named Tom In a lul~setle mo~tcli i..J &m<i.y, Bui lllc"72 "!lllleo,_m'!~ Goiman of Seatlle as his No. I singles llalston was not req to name his lull pl r· but bas not ci-n the No. l learn unlil the draw. FRIGllTENINGLY, MJss Almassy has pl. Ho. can ~ between Hlrold Gorman wu Iha by Smith taat molded a few conceptions a n d So on of Sliver Spring, Md., and Dick year bul, sln<e then, has picked mlscooceplicns ol America in tbe 10 n ol Port, Washlnllon, N.Y. Erik up a tremendoul ol International weeb she'• bem bere. Dillen ol San Ma~,"'CIIU., wU1 join el])erionce. . . ..J ' In doublos play. "It won~ be u """71wllboul Smith but Thal II, she lhinka American men are Stat .. IWepl Meslco 11111 I feel we can tllll win the aeries," super becoule, aet this: "I like the Idea wltll the -ol powerfQJ Slan llablon aid. that illeyllelp •with llou>ewOrlc, ~l lb. smllb wlll not be here this year, "'Ibey IJIPlftllUy don 'I realise U. bul and ano more hel}lllll to a woman than having pealed up the Davis CIJp to play Smith'• ablence and 'the pr~/ Ellropean men," Miss Almassy told lhlo In the World Temlll Qwnplooablp In ,Jlamlrel wU1 mab • WIK'ld of dll-column. nut weelt. \le....,.,,,, Lamaifre aald. l n-....,. ber words • IM.IN'H WMITI IOber, ' She says she didn't have time to date much in Hungary because of studies and skating. But she does have one comment .about European men: "You can't tell them what to do ... they all know much better than you." She speaks French. Russian, Gennan, English and Hungarian . Miss Almassy likes other things in America, too. "I like so much opportunity that you have. If you put your mlnd to it you can be anything you want, if you have a little talent," she adds. "I like to walk around and observe~ pie -how they dress, the way they walk and what they look like. But the hardest thing to get used to ls not being late. 1be 21-year~Td daughter of a universi- ty proCessor and an actress says getting used to the food here has been easy. The only dif£irulty? "What can be U-doughnula? ." I asked myael! when I first came and everyone was ta)klng about them. ''When 1 came to America I didn 't think I'd be accepted because l'm a 19'tl~ becouse that's tbe way It is in Europe' eveeytime you go to a new coun--tl1, • 11&t bere when I say to someone, 'I'm tram Huapry,' they say, 'J'm from -tile street.' " .\!Id with that casual and lriendly al· Utude, Mbs Alr:nassy seems to be at ease ,...,. me her family !i,!'.!'1• whleb is Jllll """* the Danube "'f"" from Buda. Roll Into NCAA Regionals UC Irvine has accepted an invitation to participate in the NCAA Western Regional baseball tournament followirtg notification late Wednesday aftermon but the site of the competition will not be determined until later In the week ac- cording to selection committee chainnan Don F.dwards ol UC Riverside. 1l was also learned by lbe Daily Pilot that Puget Sound University has been in· vited to participate and that the site of the 1973 tournament will be at one or the other location. ' "We have tentatively set the playoffs for the weekend of May 24-26 or 25-27," Edwards told the Dally Piiot. "We selected two teama by conference lelephoo• call this morning but I cannot release the names of the .schools until later after 1 have had a chance to talk to them." Edwards did nol deny lhal VCI was one of the two turns wllb lls OlllSlandlng reeord ol 36-11 and No. I raUng In the country. He was conct.med over the latent:SI of thef CCAA champ4onshlp chase belWten Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo), Cal Slate (Nortl!ridge> and Qal Polf <Pamooa>· 11That one may 6M. be ~ Lmtll late next week," he lndlcated. "And the Far Western Conference may not have a team in the playoffs. "We are not obligated to take a team from that conference and I don't believe they have a team with a record better t than .500 for the year, overall ." Indications were that the selection J committee favored Puget Sound as a site lor tbe tournament because the Loegen have been to Southern Ca!Hocnla the put two years but developments following '918 con!erence <•lephone call Wednesdo¥ may make a difference. II Is understood lhal the silo was selected at lhal time but complicall•n 1 developed alter the Loi!gers had .W- mltted their proposal for staging tbe ! event. UC frvlne 11-definllely ·lnlarested In holding the tournament on the Anteolen diamond and Is still a strong c:ontmdll- for otaglng Ille evenl. This Is the fourth successive -that UC! has been ~vlted to partlclpole In the western regional toumam<nl 'Ille Anttiaters are 1-6 In the three prevklua: ~ '"'\will be the favrio I ' - • -- r • • i ! ! .. • • • • .• Thursday, Mu 10, 1973 D•U1 ,llot Stall l'llolH -1 IUd'IM'd Kottlllll' GOLDEN WEST PITCHER DEBBIE MEYER THROWS A STRIK E TO SH ARON DIAZ. ------ Gabriel, Rant s . Still Ha sslin g ~-Over_.Contract . . > LOS ANG ELES r APJ The cont- plicated dealings which k·d t.o Carro!l Rosenbloom obtaining thL' Los AnAcl1•s }Jams became the ccfltral 1&sue W<liJY in ... quarterback Roman Gabriel's a!ic1npt to gain free-agent status. The 32-year-old signa l c.allez· filed a .. $5,000 damage suit agaln.'it the N;Hinn al ;J'ootball League team \Vednesday, asking .. for an injunction to prevent the Los Angeles Rams Football Company frnn1 asserting it has a contractural cl~iln on him. AtOOme y Ed Masry filed the ~11\t in Superior Court later snid th e key issues , are Gabriel's contracts and the current owners. . Masry said Gabriel signed four one- ., year contract! in 1971 v>'\th the team, f. then known as th e Los Angeles ~·ootball Rams Co. Sub!lequcntly. o\vner Daniel F'. Reeves died and the cl ub \Yas then sold to Robert trsay, \\'ho merged t he Rams intO the firnt Nlne-Tv.'o-Elcven Co. ' Irsay t hen allegedly swapped the asset! of Ni n e-T ,vo-Eleven !.o Rosenbloom for the al'!Sl·ts of Baltimore f Football Inc. and then R<lsenbloorn ·changed the Mme of the tPa tn to Los Angeles Rams Football C-0111pany. ~ Masry said, "f\laybe the Rrnns c1111 \t.'11 : me how 'Co.' go t to 'Company.' 1-:\ut I I have nothlng to lose by fil ing: lhe suit .'' Gabriel is asking $5.000 darna ~e:; for Jost earnings. And if he wins the suit against the team. he would !Jce0111e ;1 , free agent able to make a deill for ~himself, And, not only that , but the tc <11n :; obtaining him would not have lu } reimburse the Rams. { Masry, in filing the suit. noted th.it > Gabriel's contracts signed \~'ilh t!J e l form er owners of the teani had "nu-cul-" ~ clauses in them, rcquiri.ni; l;ubricl':i ec,,11· ~sent to a trade. :... A Ram spokesn1u11 said tl1L'rc woul<l~be ~:no lmmedia le con11ncnt on the l:iUit. .. ·---·--"' ~ • • '. Esta11cia Gir l Shines __ Jn Gy111nastics .Meet J·'.~:t:1nf'L1 I lirh frf'o;hm11n h'.yh• r:ny111·r "';-· r1·d a ('n~'Y !! 1::1 in h,,,. ~ll•'l'iallv, tl1 e l•11IN1u·1• bt·11111: a'! tli1· Lti11g fit>al·h 8CATS r:1~ily ourrla.~~ed ii .Jc11><111eS(' girls youlh te:irn \Vcdnt•'J1J,'\y nit;ht hf'forc 797 fans at J.'1111ntain \'1tll1·y llli:i1 Schoo!. illiss (i:IJ'llf!r ct1J1\t~ !hrough with 9.0s i11 FJ0(1r 1·xer c1:-.e and tlu· vatt!I hut slipped to !l.ll:i on thP l!nt·ven p;1rallt·I h;irs. PrriorrnancL·s :101d !:;cores w c re gcncra!1y <lisappoinling. especially by the .Japa uesc. Three uf 01cm hull sco res on the bars of 1.0, l.3j anJ J.6. Bench ou Tear PJIJLADELPl·llA -Cincinn ~ti's John llench ~!uggi:r! lhrl'c home runs lo tic a 1nJjor league record in a 9-7 N:1!io11;'l[ Lcai.tuP basebR!I victory over the J'hiladelp hia Phillies Wednesday. Bench's 1hrPe home runs. coupled \\'ith a rounr!-trippl·r his last at bat Tucsda~·. ('nahltd h·in tu t:r• tl1c rnajor league Jnurk V.'11h fou r hon1ers in four con- S('t'lltive al 11;11 ~;. ~le litttted 1n :-.t'V<'n runs, giving hiln 2!1 l'hl tor the se:1so11. Jfc's ulso hit nine homers. (;irl J'l:ivi11" . r· Y!JS!LA ,\JTI, \l11·i1 llt•:ipitc poss1l1le rev0<:at1un ul' its !.1111.: Lo·:ii.:11e th:1 rter Uy national hcadqu:-1r1 crs. \'p~ild 11U's youth lJ<JS<.'ball uruanizal11111 h:•·; dtt'id~:d to Jet C;1rolyn King, 12, pl.1 .v 1111h tl1c forn1e1 ly <.ill-boy group !his su111n1"r '111e a cl ion \\'t•dnl'.~,J.,v n·ver~cd 11 <lt•(·1!'>ion n1ade e<irl1l·r i11 1l1r 1vPck and ca111e a!'tt'r the I'll\' s.11d i•s rlia1nnuds 1rtH1ld not be ;1vail~1lile u11h·ss Caru!\H 11:1.~ u!lnwcd to pJ:iy · t':irulyn, 1vl1os1! al1i l11y n•pol'll'dV surp:.issc:-; 1hnt of 1nany or ht•r 1n:ilc ''01Jll1L'!'PHrt~·. is Joi 1akl' !he fj{']J tonigl11 . tor her fir.~l Killll('. "\\'e fe l l l\C ur~' do111g" iltl' illur~lly f'i,.;!11 1lq11g us IVl'll H.~ !h1• practical thipg," sa id league. president \Villian1 Anhut. New JC Ruling SANTA CRUZ-A' judge has ruled un- constilutional the etate junior college athletic recruiting rule that required students 11•ho attend a . school outside their home dist rict to sit out a year of ln- tcrcoltcgiatc sport!!. Sa nta Cruz County Superior Court Judge Harry Brewer said Wednesday in ruling on a case brought by Cabrlllo College here that the regulatlon was "like using a :;hotgun to kill a fly." He said it violated the U.S COnstltut!on and state Jaws glvtOg 18-year-olds the powers of adults to establish their own residen· ey. No Spring Ga.toe LOS ANGELES -There wlll be no final spring football game for, the University o( Southern California football tean1. 1vhich was ranked No. I last year and Msn't lost in its last 17 games. •• j 1'he 1'rojans figure to be nearly aa strong, if not stronger than last year, but in juries and athl etes competing ln other Spo!'l'! rJrornpted coach John McKay to <1nnounc!! \\ledncsday that he would simp- ly Jct Frld.iy·s workout be the flnal one until f<1JL "! don't need a final scrimmage this .vcnr ju:.t to let Allen Carter run and Pat ll:Hli·n Lhru\v," said ti1cKay. "I kno\\ \\.'hat they can tlo." China Tour Sl'l~!Nr:FII·:L D, f\1a)!s. -A U.S. b:1:iketha!t tecun is ~ organized for a 1h,·P1'-11•cl.'k tour of the PCople's Republic oi < 'hni:.i .starting .June 9, the Springfield 1 ·1 1ion rcpor!t d today. ---.. ·------1 B aseball Sta1idi ngs Eai.l /lh i~iuu \\' I. DL'l l'oi1 I.I II :-.Ji l\r;i ukt•1· 12 l.l C'lt'Vl'l:111~I I , , R:1l tirnort' " II j\p\V Yol'k 1·~ II llos ton hi " \\~st IJl\i~i1111 \/11 cago 16 " l\:111s:.1..; Cir.1· 17 II :\n ~t·!..: I I I.I ().1k!;111d II 14 ~1 innt•:..ota II 12 'feX'i1$ n II W~<l~r\<l~y·, Game~ (h·~,•',\ed \,. Jl"g"I' l O.iH~,,d •. l>~ll1n>~<" J, 10 •n"•nQ' OelTuo! •· Kan~a' (•IV 1 '·'olw~~~~~ 5 l 1«~• I N .. w 'l'or~ 1. tM''"""°''1 o aiuv ~"'1'~' ""necJule<I Tod1y'1 G•...,DS I '1 • !. c_;n .·IHI .ihO .·!·i~ ... .iC2 I ~ .41i2 '' .'11 7 I '~ .727 .li07 2 .!i-12 ' ,:)(][) s .'17R 51.z .:!!Jl 71.. Cievel,>r•d (tl<1r11w l·~) ~· fiu•lon I,,,.. or. n.~111,,d •Hon'"'"" ~;1 ~If,.,"''"" 1 Odlroir (COIP•'I•" 6·11 11 1(~11-... (•I\' ,.,,.,, "" ' " en t11110 IWO!l<I 111 "' lln111t I 'i•n~ • Only ~"'"''' ~Cl1'1Uult·d Fr1<1~v·1 O~m•• l\a1tln>0rn ill N,.,. Yo•k ( 1.~erana ~1 ~o ,,. • 1•;1w,uW~d al Dtl<1lll (1~••ora 11• 1. ·~-· """'c")I" ~I>'""~• (ilr Cllo.;"110 "! O.n~CI\ NAl 'Jl)NAI. LEAG UE Chicago I 'lttsburgh :--.:c\11 York ~lootreat 1 'hi lndelphi:1 St. Louis East Divi sion W L 16 1.1 12 II !4 14 12 13 J 1 15 6 20 \Vest lllvlslon S;1 n J.'riinciscu 2.1 JO I /uu~\011 20 I I L'1111 ·in11:1 ti Ill J I lhidj(t't'S 17 14 r\ll<illla 10 18 S;tn /)Jl'l::U l l 20 Wednt1d1Y'1 01m11 ~· L ~ui> 3, Sa" Fr<>nci~co 1 <Mtlnnall '· Phll1aelp/lla I l •,u1ron ~· Mo~lreal, P01tponfd n_.w Yc1~ 8. Jl!lnn!1 l Onclger1 8. f>lllsbU'i!ll ! Ch1r 1110 9, !1n DllQO 2 "LlU~bV J.11 (;,.,~ ua11111 ltl'tea11led. "rldll••"• G1111t• f,,1,1a;1e!P!>ii1 M (l'tltft~O 'o' ·heft! ft! SL LCY!I I ,, York ftf Pithbu•Mll ' tl!'1Jll ~I A!lftnld (m(lnnMI IT Hovs•on t_,.,owtrl a! San ~•lnCIKo Pct. GB .552 .522 .500 ) l,2 .460 2 ,423 31,1 .231 s1,2 .607 .645 2 .621 3 .648 5 .357 IO ~, .355 1l Girls Nab Softball Title, 3-1 ByHOWARD L. HANDY or r11e o.1ry ~Utt '''" Judy Metzler tripled to left centerfield to acore Peggy Mlkel&on with the Winning run in the ninth inning, then waited 40 minutes to jCOre an insurance marker for the Golden We s t College Rustlerettes softball team as they defeated host Santa Ana, 3-1 , in ,extra innings Wed- nesday afternoon. The victory gives Golden West its first Coast Division championship in softba)t a~d establishes coach Judi G·arman's RustlereUes a s favorites in the Southern California tourney beginning Wednetday at GWC. When Ml88 Melzler drilled the bill to left center to ecore the winning run, Santa Ana cenler fielder Kathy CUr<!o twlst.d whlle fielding the baij " and dislocated her hip. An am~ bulance was called and 40 minutes later the g a in e resumed wit h Mlas Metzler at ' ' thBlrd.b Ohl dr d bu t GWC'S PEGGY MIKELSON FOULS ONE OFF, LATER SCORED WIN NING RUN . ar er oppe a n ..:c,;:_::...:_.:..::_c_ __ __::..:_...:_ _ _:_c...:_:_:: ___ _: _____ ----------- down the first base line to bring her home . GWC pllcher Debbie Meyer, behind 1-0 from the firs! In- ~ nlng, forced the tying run across In the top of the 5eVenth. and _final. lnnlnJ oL_ regulation play. Mlss Meyer came to bat with the bases loaded and an opportu nit y to win her own game with a base hit_ Instead she looked at four straight . high pitches for a walk that forced Sue Lehman across with the tying marker. OOldt~ WHI 11) Ohltr, lb P•lmer, II Herm1n111n, 2b eurnwn. 11 l."'man, lb Howlrd, t Mlktl50ll, c:f Meytf', p Mtllf.,., rf ' Tol•l1 Gold&n w .. 1 S•nl• An• • .. •It r II l'ltl .. • t l i 0 0 0 .. 0 1 • • • 1 0 ' 1 1 0 • . 1 0 l • • • ' • • " 0 0 I . . ' ' ' ' ' . ' . •• For SoCal Spike F lnals · -c3-A-rea JC.Stars -Quality COMPTON -Golden West College's Ray Harris arid Jack McQuown and Orange Coast:s Tony Ciarel\i were the only area JC qualifiers in Wid· nesday's Southern California track and field prelims at Compton College. The finals are set for May 19 at Compton with field events beginning at 3 and the running event:J at 4. Harris qualified in both the Jong jump and triple jump with top efforts of 22-II 1fl and 4~2Y.i, He was the third top qualifier in the Jong jump and ' was fifth in the triple. The Golden West sophomore has the second best mark (t-1- 8) in the state in the long jump. Ciarelli qualified seveflth in both the shot put and javelin. He had a iteason best ma rk ot 50-3 In the shot -the fi rst time this year that he 's passed the so-root mark. And he was just two feet shy of the school record establlshed by Steve Bice In 1965. The qcc freshm an fro m Huntington Beach tossed the javelin 193-7, which was 24 feet short O'f the school record he set in last w'eek's South Coast Conference finals. il1cQUO\Yn placed third in his mile heat in 4:17.3, earning a trip.to the SoC.:J! finals. Orange Coast's Tin1 Rudy and Rick Desmet just missed quallfying in thei r specialties. Rudy ran a 1:53.6 hair mile in placing fou rth in his heat while Desmet · had a clocking of 22.0 in his 220 race -the same time as the second and third i::Jace finishers. • ~ ""' 4 '"' ~ . . ' Falstalf B~ng Ci;>rp.. Sc. tollm. Mtssoui;1. and other cltl~t ... --·~-.J.:;...,..,...._ _ _. ~--...-.... .... .-..~ \' I . '*••I ·~>•. I ._ ,, .. ,. ..,..,.._ t...o•••i.l,;.;:£1 • ' " • • • Thundar, Mar 10, 1973 DAJLI 31 M~sion Viejo Host,s Regio114ls Dana Hills, Cliecki ng C~st Area Li1iks Chargers Qualify Kemper Sparks Women Spikc1·s Mission Viejo Goll and Country Club wlll be the site o1 illeglonaI qualllying roond play fe< the U.S. Open with action tating place on Mon- day, JUDe t over 36 holes for approximately 90 players from the western area. Playen qualifying in earlier tournaments in H a w a l i , Washington, Oregon, CaJifomia, Arl7.ona and other western states will be com- peting for the rigbt t o partlctpoJe in the U.S. Open at Oakmoiit Country Club in Oak· moot, Pa. This is the final qualilying roond for the Open. In a member-blender better ball of foursome toornament over · the weekend, two teams tied for first place with 58. On dne squad were Rocco Paterno, Rudy Quarz, John Llewellyn and Henry Call. On the other were Wilbur Cooper, Bill Luehrs, Chuck Osborne and Dale Hahn. In third place at 60 were Richard Coppens, C h a r I i e Shau., Stan Sheldon and Gene Weems. Mission Viejo will stage its annual member-gues t event on ~June 2·3 with a partner's bet- ter ball ·on one day and a scotch ball sm-ing the second day. Edison and Dana Hills Hlgh Sclloor-surfing-teams Join section.at qualifying for the Huntington Beach Fountain U.S. Open witb pr a c t Ice Valley, San Cle~ente and rounds set Monday and the S6-P•clflca in qu alifying for bole, single day action on May Saturday's Orange C o u n t y IL cllamplomhipo in the waters Qualifiers at Mesa Verde off Newport Beach with action will be eligible to compete in starting at 7 that morning . the regionals at Mis.slon Viejo Edison won the third and June 4 in the fmaJ actioo final preliminary competition before the big one at Oakmont Wednesday with a n e a r - Country Club in Pennsylvariia. perfect score of 46 out of a lreine Cocat possible 48, winning seven of The top 4-0 n1oney winners oo the Western Tournament Golf Association tour will participate in the R i c b Martine-l Invitational tourna- ment at 1:rvine Coast Coontry Club May 23. The event willf!<ld the pros paired with club members· with a shotgun start around noon. ' 'The WTGA group ls nearing the end of the spring tquma- ment schedule with another JS-week tour being lined up for the summer months. Big Can"on Clark Booth is a top flight man from beginning to end and to prove it he scored a hole-in-one at Big Canyon Country Club recently using equipment of the same name. Booth scored his ace on the seventh bole, a 195-yard Utree- par, using a three-iron. the eight heat races and plac- ing third Jn the other. The Cllargers will b e favored 1n the finals with Hun· tingtOn Beach the only other team in the six finalists to score more than 40 points in the preltms. Actlo'n on Saturday in the Orange County championship meet will follow the pattern of the preliminary races with six surfing heats and two of kneeboarding. The winning team will qualify for the Southern California h i g h school championship meet to be held at Newport on May 19. From the time Davie Van Diuff won the opening heat, the Chargers didn 't let up. He · was followed in the victory circle by teammates Dan Rice, Gary Platt, Vince Cole, Gary Wurster, Des Whelan and Larry Stradley with Cole placi ng third in the second kneeboard race. Harriet Glanyille Nabs Title Harriet Glanville is the Seaclifr Country Club for Edith Wr ay (M~) with llclen women's ch amp\ on at members Qf the womeu's club Lindley (56\~). Eileen A1orrow Meadowlark-Country Club of this -ic. (56!>), Dorothea Eckhoff (a7) Hunti ngton Beach af t er In the championship flight, and Marybelle Weldon (57'h) defeating Helen A1oulton in the Cheri Thomas was the winner next in order. f!naJs. Joan Bauman won the D with 31 with Patty Schott-n· h · h .:o JI ed b Anita Appleton, golfer of the miller and Audre Etchison 1g t Wit JoJlfz fo ow 'I ma.nth, won low net honors in tied for second at 34. Eleanor Barret (61 ), 'Martha the chanlpionship night. U rq uh a r I (63). Billie First flight winner was Van· A1ackeJUie, Maxine Jolley and flight winner with 27~1: rollow- td by Elise Stipes (32) and ~false. Kata-t11J __ _ Alice llubbard won D night Yt'ith 33 with Car nellc Ken· ned}'. Ph}•llis Barne$ and lbe l\litchel tied at 34.. I '"issio11 \liejo ?ltembers of the lo.fission Vie-In the lirst flight, Barbara da Peterson with 29 with Gin-Jane Terhell l63\~l. Hanky was the winner with ny Lambert second at 30\~. jo Golf Club women's group Rose Erickson as the runnenip Shirley CUmmaro placed third (..'osta /tleso staged a three.club toun1a· and Corinne Richardson the with 31 while Aiae Finkle, h1cmbers of the Costa l-.1esa ment th.is v.·eck "'' h c re net victor . Al' A kl' and J 1· G If nd C t CI b ice c in u 1ene o a oun ry u n1embers could use any thrt.'i! Second flight honors went to Adams tied for fourth at 32. y,·omen's golf group staged a Joyce Theilman with Kelly In the second flight, Virginia foursome aggregate net score clubs in the bag but no 1nore. Geiger the runnerup and Kitty Stevens was first with 29 v.•ith tournament this week. Gross scores \\·ere not ?ltullin the net wiMer. \Vinnie Lindsay second at 30 In first place was was a reporlcd but rumor has i1.1har Doris O'Neill won the third and Roberta Andrews third team of Ann Van Cleave, Don-net victor Virginia Brarnsby night with Dottie O'Dell sec-with 31~. na Costello, Doris Ball and used a putter. an eight iron ond. Gaile Stinson was the In the third fli ght ii was Marion Voss at .295. nnd either a three or four net winner. Irene Pare first with 31 follow-.Serotid place went to Phyllis "'-'ood toJXist a net 85. In a low net tournament. ed by Nonna Pard and Stu Barnes, Vi Theiss, Su c A tie resulted for second Barbara Hanky was the A Dudley with 31"1:. Backstron1 and Norene Grady plucc beh\·cen Glenda Gu)· and flight victor with 66. Anita Air at 315. Bonnie Baker with net scores pleton and Harriet Glanville El Nig11e l Jn third •place. .or 90. tied for second at 73 with Field strokes was the name J\largaret Kumaga1, Errnn ------ Corinne Richardson, Ro se of the game for the women's Havens, Vonda Adams and Erickson and Dotty Mulligan club at El Niguel Country Club Betty Walthall at 319. Vi Sue Kemper finished first ln !he tl)().yard dash to highlight Orange C.... College's ml· rants in an I nvltat i onn I won1eo's track and field meet at UCLA last wt.'Ckend. l\1iss K('tnper clocked 11.3 in the 100 '"1d.lllleu:an • 17..Z w fifth pince in the 220. , -~-• OCC's Pat Shine was third in thl?-1 high jump (4·7) and lean1mate Jeru1nie Slattery \va s fifth (4-6). , C!}OWLIMG CHUCK 50ILLIARDS tied at 74 . in Laguna Niguel. Hoskins, Rosemary Skillion. In B flight it was Kitty In A flight it was Sarah Lucille \Vilson and Eleanor DON 'T G A M B LE Mullin first with 70 followed I Ingram with 47 in first place Greene finished fourth \\.'ilh a by Kelly Geiger (72) and followed by Barbara dePlan· score of 320. Harvey Ann Woolcott at 73. que (48): Betty Pine (50), In an odd holes tournament, 320/o PROFIT ON SALES Dottie O'Dell copped the C Barbara Thompson and Millie Hazel Webster was the A flight with 78 fqllowed by Johnson (511,7.). flight winner with 3 11 ~ y.·ith Ga ile Stinson (80 ) and Marian Elsa Wise copped the B J\1argaret Kumagai second Clea ll and Rita Mcintosh at flight '¥ith 49'h with Marty with 331h. 83. Turner (52), Stella Seaman Fran Lewis won B flight "'ith (53), Kay Horn (541h) and 29 followed by Ginny Stasko Virginia BI a c kc r (56) (31 ~~). Sybil Foster and Ann i It was a selective nine following. Yap Cleave with 34. tournament at J{untingtori The C flight winner wa was It was Eleanor Greene the c 1 Seaelifl PirtiCiHll 111 ff!e Wt'ftf. S.lfffl rrttef1M"i .. I!! A1Mrtc1. A '9f1«1 -Hrt ar .. JI Hme CASH b11$11tt•1 llOW IVlllible Ill ,..., are1. C""'fN"Y 1 ... tn· hilts ro11ru of U.S. Post191 Stam.,. m.acll .... 1. OM 111.1111111,.... •l11Mn lllectt. 1111 m.111 now llanclled lnlM>llfy ln Amtrkl. YOll tlmply '"'pply lllmPt Ind cDlle<t Proc:Md1. D£Pltl!"SSION l':ltOCl'L Hltrh atri111!11 ltr tim• ln~olvtd • .itDO nHdect fo lllrl tor w1rr111/.., -fOIWIPmtnl, 1K1- llon1 111(1 1!1mp1. For kK.11 01!1rvhtw. wrUe today, Include ohoftl' aum- INr. Write, ClaH/ffH Ill t•n. DaUr 1'11ol. P.O •••• U60. Cotti """"· C1111. '2126. Former Pittsburgh Pirates catcher Dave Thomas. now a member of the Mission Viejo men's club, scored a hole-in- one this week_ on the .194-_yar!f ----1ethh>le-usi:ng-a three iron., Big Canyon will stage a' m i x e d m e m ber-member c@mPi@WP even.!. on May 21. Witlr a Dboif"Sltotgun start for 120 entrants. S11rll111 •uultt ----------'-------'-------------_:__:__:__:_.c._:_:_ Ftr1l llt1t-1, D1v!d van Orvff (Ed.). 2. Ra~Clrlff ' IM)~. Bob ~letoff The ace was Thomas' seventh since he started playing the game. He scored two aces last year. Mesa Verde Mesa Verde Country Club of Costa Mesa will be the site of Vallel y Cage Clinic Set Youngsters in the Orange Coast area are invited to participate in the John Vallely basketball clinic which will be staged at Orange C o a s t College June IIJ..2>. Clinic sessions daily will be from 9:30 to 1 and they will in- clude instruction on defense, passing, shooting and team play. Films will also be shown and each youngster involved will receive a tee shirt and be covered by insurance. A fee of '35 per person will be charged for the five-day affair. For further infonnation, call 834-5767 or 675-6566. The next men's stag day af· fair will be held on May 31 and will be a two low balls of fQUrsome competition. Costa Mesa Members of the ii.en's club at Costa Mesa Golf and Coun- try Club 5taged their sixth an- nual member-guest tourna- ment over the weekend. On the winning. team at 143 (gross) were Gary Horton and guest Al Wells of Fowitain Valley Mile Square Golf Course. The low net winners were Ed Smith with guest John Moothart of Rio Hondo Coun- try Club in Do\\.·ney. They fired a 125. Grand opening ceremonies for the new double-deck, night- lighted driving range at Costa Mesa will be held Friday, May 25 at 9 o'clock. The annual member-guest tou:rnall},ent for Santa Ana Country Club memben will be staged ·on the weekend of May ll!-19. In June~ the big event will be the annual exclusives tourney. ( 01-l). Second lieat-1. Dan Rice (Ell.) 2. Bruce Maki (RA) J. Mlg11el Muno: (OHl. Tlllrd 1te.1t-l. Gery Plo&tl (Ed:I 2. PllLI John'°'1 (OH) 3. f.1rtdY Ke1rn1 !Est.). • Fourtll httal-1. Vloce Cole !Ed.J 2. Jeff "Keelln (E1t.l J. Jeff VailQvei (OHL Flllll l\tat-1. Gary W11r1ter (Ed.) 2. Mike Wefld {OH). 3. Oele Cart.r (Est.). S!~I!', lleal-1. Oe-. Whelan (Ed.l 2. Don :.cholt1 !Ml 3. Mlkr CrulkJll&nk (OH). K--..ri!s Savrnlh ht•l-1. Larry S1r&dl1y (Ed.l 2. Brad Cotwtll (M) 3. Mike Alhcr1fl IOH). Elgl\111 i'!e-111-1. 800 Walkins (DH) 2. Larry Llncotn CE1t.J 3. Vince Cote (Ed.I. T11m K-: l. Edison "6. 2. 01n1 Hlll1 36, l. E111ocla 211, (. M1Gnoll1 19, s. R1ncllo A11mll0!. 15, 6. Breii 9. Badminton Mini!& (11) (2) llllllll I NCi! ,,_ LH CMJ del. Cox (l ) 11..(, 11·7. Ml!chttl CMJ 611." Minter (L) 11-1, 11- 0. l!l1n--(M) def. Ashl!ng 2-0, 11-1. • Wllllam1 (M) dtl. MeyerJ 11-7, 8·11, 11 ·2. • Mlldg9 (LJ def. Sillllvan 1-11 11-6. 3-1. L1oce Il l deL Trelevm 11·9, 11·9. -.u YounQ·Benner IMJ del. Ev1n•·Good1U 15-1, 15-2. Slr1tirn-Cl1rk tMI def. St1ln-81Kke IS S, IS-6. r.,..1..,-TvrltY (Ml def. Cory-See ... s. ).2, 15-2. T II om p son ·Warnock !Ml def. R1tllltt.Jm·T1yk1r lS-1, 15-t . Rllclll .. H1Uff (M) Olt. C-.tY·Raf 15'"', 15-6. M. Rlegel-G. Rlevel !Ml clef. B1tr-rylllll-Tlllene IS-ll, lS-11. l Sports Since 1924 ea s BACK SPORTING GOODS PACK • FISHERMEN One of the best tackle shops in the West here . We are exper.ts ~ ~ GUN ·SALE All rifles & 1hot9~n1 15,o Off b e.pt lrewt1l"9 NIM Shofsheff AntlllO Save 10% HEADQUARTERS New goodies • '" now See lhenew • Geny Infra Red Stove. • Kelty Tioga hck Pack. • North Face Ch1mois Sleep B,ag. • Lowa Trail Boots. HEADS I NEWEST RACKET The fabulous XRI CUSTOM STRUNG with 11ylon with gut .... *3600 •39•s ·' &IZE LISTED! • • • • • Wt'll lubrk1tt. YMr cir and ell•-Mglne olt. l"r1c1t lrH:lud11 u11 II s 11uar11 ,, 11u1Ht1 oll. ------- • • • Yow c .. ·t Affotd To It...,. ·SHAKES and SHIMMIES --------.. : WHEEL BALANCE 878·14• C78-14• E78-14 • F78-14• G78•14 • H78·14• F78·15 • G78·15• H78-15. • • --- Bl•c:kw•lls plus F•d. Ex. Tax e Balance and Service WH ITEWALLS ONLY $3 MORE FITS MANY MODELS OF LTD, OLDS, PONT., MERC. Maverick. Duster, Rambler, Dart. Swinger, Nova, Ca ma ro, Chevy 11, Charger, Mustang, Flrebird , Special, Torin_o, Falrlane, F-85, Cutlass, Fury, Skylark, GTO. Grand Prix, Tempest. Polara, Impala, Newporl, Brougham and many morel .. SILVERTOWN BELTED • • • • WHEEL ALIGNMENT • ·--------· ·--------·· : 40,000 MILE 2 8 88 • ..... ~~S£.!RAK£ RELINE • BRAKE RELINE '"'": -:-.:.:~.~-:;:. ~~•::::. 2 9 88 • orsc ro1or1 Ind rMr br1k111 • • rorors m1tl!IMC1. tlllper1 fftllvlll ,, LIN ING I LI.IOI -ALL CARS • 1x1r1 «HI. • • -------•• ·---------• • • • • AIR SHOCKS RliCI. VALUE U2.50 DELCO LIFETl""i GUARANTliif MOST CAAS • DELCO & Hl-JA.CkfRS • VALUl!i Jli.•• BATTERIES 2495 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 30 • Wllh STEEL for slrenglh • With exclusive CUSHIONED STEEL• CONSTRUCTION Jar comfort Phones 646-442 1 540.4343 PER TIRE • With RADIAL PLIES for long mlleaga and handling WE HONOR ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS lat lay! COST A MES 'j· . ' HOUlltS l •. I'll. ... '·'"' MONtlAV tllnl "lltltlA't' SATUllOA't' • l ,1'11, .. s •·"'· f l ft you want ·1ch , you'll just h \Ve to rem~mbe . • • • , \ • • • r • OAILY PILOT What's Doing o .utdoors • • T1vt41J, Mo 10, 1973 JIM NIEMIEC Alamitos Harness Entries "' -~~ .......... ~llna ... bu .... cooled .................... .::i ... :z:..;,;~~~~~ .. n,•.,-,....-TtN .. oAY___.. ( f'I ~ off • bit, but w11:rt la •till Iota of ,lltT IACI -ON mUt. ,.>OU, ' ~~lace "''-',. Ute cout. A comlstel'lt bite OD bonito Clelrnlnt •II ..... Oalmlnt prlol woo, ......... 'Uf'M 11600. I bus, he •km&: by a few 1-.: barracuda and an ooculonal L.11111 Ul't9r <E". ,.,, 1ea bast la responalble for keeping party bolt pauengen ~:" ~ 1 1g: ~=.1-1 , lto/e O~andt J. SIMtftl ~ ~;.,.. • Art's Landing and the Pavilioo report upt weekday ~::;oc-~:'1D.'~Af111 i with lota of surfaoe filb A_,_ in the taeb. Boats are GIOfY• telne IL. OntotYJ SPORTS . . ' • Volleyball Program To Begin -m.111str1Uon r~-.11e-second aMual summer volleyball in· 1tructlon1l program in Hun· tlngton Beach wlll be held Monday, June 11 at Golden Wert College's gymnasium. ' , c U-. Kolflf'V l(lf IL, lrvne) . ~ nmnlnl ICOllUDg trip& lO the 1&laods and are returning with tlCOHD ltACI -OM mite. Pll(t. . • ed calebet ol IW'face and bottom feedtn, ~~ 1;=. • ' ""'*· I.ii-,• Harbor area ao&)en can toot toward a good yellowtail and 1t>111 .,,,. T••• 11t. Gordon! ~-bi •• ~ both ca llna and J1.111"11 Ill:. Wiiiie-i '!..... te ui;:Ye at ta San Clemente islands •· h•liltY 01.. Glllll•nl ; ~ the mm ls cut, if, 1quid can be made at the lllands. ~-=r..:'t:!:. 11~: ~1.,.1 ~ 1fl~ temperature will be the key to an early showing of yellows Mll'llr•• ,..... 1J. ••llfYJ Alamitos Harness Results. The program ls presented by the Oran1e C o.u n t y Volleyball Club in ronjunction with tbe Huntington Beach Recreation Dept. Chuck Erbe conduct. the program withl'1KliiNOTii1uet<iY"Y 1Tlliillli!"''lrnlimiNii1iiil!'m'"7"ii''"Rliilr-:--m,,rm...--mrn.,.;~ special advisors Moo Park , the1 ---------------------=-=-.:.:..:=..::::..:.::::;::::._:::::_::;::::::::::·~•Y':_. Korean Olympic volleyball .......... -11---lllllrtl 10. Ad!MfM11) ""'.-.U ~. Armlwo Htwfle (J. O'lrltl'I) -: •; • Meanwblle. Sin Dieeo-bued fisblng boall are fmding very TMlltD IM:I -Ont milt. PIU. · · ~t fllhl.ng at the c.oranado lalands. 'Ibere are large ~~"'.''1~1~1.:?"· 01 •m1111 price • :~ icbools of both yellowtall and white sea bass roaming around o. ... 11 CJ. 9,,...,, ~ ·~ islands, but for the past few days it bu been very hard for ~7~~ ~~ 11':i. 1(:1"""1 '• ~ppers to intercept the fish. s"""' Lu O.•n !J. si.minJ oa.i Sll~.r llecord tA. Wlnterl ', ~ • , M111k•I tt"'°WI' (0. O•llrdol ~ ' Marlin Pla9 Hartl Co Get e:m~ s111•rt (P. coi..,.,1n1 •. , ,,J H•I• Tllll'llT'l'I' (0. LlrMlllJ 'OURTH .... ,. -~ mllt. P11c1. TM Loo Pescadora' fllldllg cl1b rebmled to tbe barbor ., .. lllodlJ wttb reporla tblt bill flsldag Wll I Uttle lelt tbu ... lfllll'!I-Mort tUo II uglen joined Keltb Newman'• aanul trip • to Ille flea of c.ta bat were &ff<ted by Jett than Ideal marllD ·•+,..... llartoc t.e -II --Vlltl only 17 spllleblDI . ~~ .... pt boated. nm " down .. me uo flUi for u average year. -~Wpter eollllltt'a• were not teo ba4, bot did eoatribate earlJ tn .; 1 t11e weet to poor fllbi.11& coadltlom reported group member Dr. • 17~ ftaklet of Newport Beta. " W1Dklt:r a~ thlt rooster fishing was also slow and even . •~'8 pnllllc dolplala were playlq bard to &et· " Tiie -II •ullY Vf!rf productive dartoi tbll time of tbe ~ 1-ud Wlllller fell tbll !ltldllg would Improve wtlhll tbe nt1t ;r.r c!wple of weeks. Advuee reaerv1Uou ue mandltory 11 Rucbo -l'-'" Vtltl darln1 Moy, Jane and Into Joly and cu be made by i; eillllc Ill Newport -namber. ,. Ball Fl•hlng on Slow Side •II " 7~'~; only a .few utchel of spotted and bay baas, halibut and ·~ ore being token out of the harbor. Flthlng Is rated at ~~; ,(,est as slow but all~tndications point to a good season develop-1 ,.,:,<big prior to lbe invuion of the. aummer crowds. Check with ''! f.:::" Landing and the Pavilion for the latest bay fi1hlng condl.· ~~t. and bot 1potJ. {,,'l[ • ::~ I! Tr-t, Bas• Aetl1'e at Lakes l 'I "' ~:~1 ,1. ~·fj w..:r.::--b7 a little weuoaal weather, aaslen fllblng oar :·11 "'-' only fared overqe tb11 pat week. Winds 1ad ':ij ~-were ~ bat 1 wlllllln( trend ls predicted ~:o • fWllrmea 111Mdd ftDd tacreued actlo• for tbe next few ••• .. . : : t Jnllle II amllteDt for 1locked troa& a1 ls Anaheim t..ke, : :; Jj.1 1ntM Is lllo p.tn1 np 1 number of llrge cot!ltb, bau :i ,.. ......... ·, •. 1111 Bar Is prodlldq Mme nice Umlt cot<:bel of l'llllbow ~.. ~ for tllore ft:lbermm uln& 1.eke't, manbmallowt and sal· • ,JS .. 1111· Gobi of n1ptcrawlen ad wOfllll trolled behbtd Dave ~ f ~· trolls II also prodactlve for boWI averacfD& about 11/• '"P: ;\ • ~ for VIII, Wollllord and Irvine likes to give ap some ; ~ ped eat fllldag HOD. Al tbe water iemperatare coatbtue1 ~ : rtle, dte wlallterfllh wUI become very aetlve. Zeke11 Float'• ; ~ · ... jat latrodaced a ~ 1arllc flavored cheese bait which -)' ' ....Uy eollee tllole till cats .to bit wben Ibey are biding : w''l ...... ..__ --...&.. _, ___ ., ....... Bu• Tournament Slated " '~' . ; ~ ~ ... · 'lbe Western Biss Ftabing AlloclaUm will be sponsoring a , bus tournam<Jlt at LUe Mojave the weekend of May '!Ho. The heldquorten al the tw<><lay tournament will be at i:oltmwvod COve Marina. The contest IJ open to WBF A mem-·~lien ooly, but ln!IU'eltod qlen can join the woclaUon prior • b> eompetlnC for money, prizes and trophies. For more lnforma· · Uon phone (21S) 966-2410. Flv Fish School Set • '"~ For those of )'Oii wllo )lave alwayt wanted to, bat have never ·. ·~ 'E:ltbe time lo Jean to fly fllb ... n•w ts the Ume. The Fen· '. · ck n1 Fllldltl Scllool wW be c:ondoctlng one of Its flnal · ~ at Big Bear Lake Jue w. The school ls open to the ~-f•enl pabUc. '/. f!' 'l1le bulc coane ls deslped to IDttruct potential aad ex· ':;menced Dy fllbermen ii tbe proper way to handle a fly rod. ..-·f}'be coane II oder die bntraction of Frank aad Glady• Gray. ·•· h.dlvldual attention ls paid to each and every papil, and the ; ' 'Cverage Usllermen comes away with a great deal of knowledge . 1111 tbe art1of Dy fishing. · · · Bue camp for the two-day fiy filblng school It at the Logan· lta IAdge, located right on the lake. Anyone lnterelted should c0D1act tbe Fenwick scbool by pboae (711) 897-!lltll. Pistol C:hanaplo11ship on Tap • • The California outdoor pistol championship Is scheduled to iake place th1I weekend at the South Coast Gun Club'• new i-ange facUIU., at the end of Jeffrey Road In El Toro. • Top piltol I.hooters from California will compete to assure r 'themselves a place in the national shoot event to be held tn • . Phoenix ln June. ~ · • The sbootln& begins al 8 a.m. Saturday and~unday. .. . ~~? ·'~ • t. ·~ ~ ! ••• Area Sports Calendar I i: • 1"l PnMr" CMIY 111 C1•1mlnq •II -· TOP cl1lmlne prlCI "350. PllrM 11700. Dutcf\111 P•r.c!IM (E. St.w1rd) Dulchft1 Aml90 {G. S1'1'111Ck) l t'OCklff °'"'" (C. 90'/'dl EdofWood ArhlOM CJ. 81nnttl) D1f11 C"'9lc1 IT. O.Ml1) Olctu DllLm1n1 (M. Holl) Rllll'I' Or1tt1n !IC. Tllh1rl ,.... ....... Ml11 Meldow' IC. C1fnOtl9U) High T9mPO (M. Allbln) Pll'TH aACI -Ont m1i.. Trot. All a;tt. Cl•lrnll'lll h1ndlc1p be1Jc cltlmlng prlc.. MOOM1DllHIOOO P\lfM $3000. TOP ct1lmlflf prlct 110,150. Armbro lnvkt• {J. 81llrf) Plr• ltM Corp (J. 9""""1 TtrPOrt Pitt (J, Sherl't!ll P11t Prt (J. Mllllf') Two hi-I•. W1IU1m1) \'le Alllln IT. 81rt-) L1ttn Em PrM (A. Wino«) C11Lo1"' L&d !T, D9nnl1l SIXTH ll:ACI -OM "'111. Pitt. Cl1lmtnq 111 ~ff. TOI» cltlmlng Pflet MDS. PUrll SllOCt. Armbro JM11r {G. Slvlulkl Chllf Thotpt (S. 0-J And'/'I Eric UI:. Wllll1mll C1rll11 lllodlll'I' IG. LongoJ Good Gr11t11n (M. Aubin) Jo Jin (0. MrtoclulJ Liiiy A (E. Cobb Lincolns J1ml1 (J. 0'8(11n) Sl!VllNTH •.u1·.;.. On1 mile. P1c1. 8rHOll'1 1t1kM lor ' .,..r old•. PurM 175«1 tdd«I II 111 111rl. Gros• Pur .. "'" A·Potev Chuck {W. ShOrtl Mr. Doub!• D IS, 0.-l Std Sim (C. C1mpb1ll Jr.) Sltr Autl (L GrlQOl'V) AdlOI (J, l lghllllll) Rockln SIKkln1 IT. Dtnnl1> C'holc1 PrlmrOll IM Alll>ln) Short Trip P. Hl"t'dln Jrl Anctv1 Etiu (Ill. 811ck1n1n) 01rn Ditto (M. J-) ll:h'l'lhm C (J. Wllll&m1 ll•H1:H 11:Ac1--Ofle m111. Ptce . Cl1lmlng 111 1oe1. TOP cl1lmlng pric• lf~ll. l"IH'H $2600. WM ll:lcl'llrd (C. C•mplllll J r) John OM (J, a.li.yl Prttm1n1 Orelm fO. Holl) 111 of Gold tJ. McGr'9Qr) Ml1l1r Hot Shot tT. Olnnltl Jollt MH1m (J. Ujhlhllll Acl1~1 Geot (A. W1 ll11T11) Sco1tl1h Don (J. O'Brl.nl NINTH •ACI -One mile. P11ce Cl1lmlng •ti q11. TOP cl1lml119 price S60CIO, Pllfle 12'11D. Mister Brown {J. Llvhtlllll) Vlpsun Ste (\'. Dffomer) Orbit Min (P. H1)'dlnl Welcome Htnover {It. lllacklTllnl P11tl"9 Ore1m (J. Balle~J lund-n Leu (D. Cron~) 9111111'111 9Nlil (II:. lurgff.I) Howd'I' Ooll !J. M.rkwtll) AIM ·l!l~lbll Mt1s Amv Adlot (R. WIUt1m1J lrllh C1m (L. Bruns) Outrigger Race Set Saturday The. California Outrigger Association will stage its first race or the 1973 season Satur- day from Laguna Beach to Balboa, a distance of ap-. proximately 10 miles, with several area teams competing. Included in the area com- petitors Js the lmua club out of Newport Beach, senior state champion last year, along with teams from Newport Beach and Balboa. In outrigger racing, each crew has nine men with sis paddlers in the boat at a lime. Each uses a single poddla and complete• 13 stroke:I on one side, then switche1 to the other si de. Wtfn"'rt M•Y 1, 1'1t Ci.tr• Pill ,Ill.ST 11.4.c• -°"' m1l1. PKt. Cl1!ml11C1 •II 11111. P11rH llt.00. ltcl'i' CleH1 S !Tritt...) 17.20 1.20 S . .0 Mlgl'tly Soolt.h IWlllltml) 1.20 2.tO Pu~l1 LadV !Ht~d'") S.20 Tlmt -2.06. Aho rtctd -lullord 90'!', Catch M• Finl, Dlrll Sr.rnlilt. Banlt Star "· Stormy Dlfl1nc1. 12 E•acf• -I-I.WY Clt+ll S • l·Prw-111• UfY, Pllll 111.M, laCOMD 11.Atl -Ont mlll. PKt. Condition S YO & 11nd.er. PllrM JUOO. MIDl'll'I' Alm1hur1t 10'8rltnl l .20 2.IO 2.40 l:9yp1len •uller (C~l 11.00 S.AO Myrne Lobell !Aubin) l.20 Time -2.05 •15. Abo rtcld -Jettrltt. Lucv Lu, 8rtv1l1, JIC-IH Q111tUon. THllO ll:ACI -Ont milt. P1c1. t11lml1111 I ll lltlt. PlilfH 116llO. Fl1ml1111 Pink IO'Brlen) tn Error (Holl! •.e Our Piper Doll {G!N>WI) Tlmt -2.0I l/ .5 Scr11chld -Col« Cl'llnge. l.40 1.IO 2.40 2.IO ··~ Abo rlCld -WM Can O, Ginger M1rle, Peter 1tlch1rd, Ptn1lve Knlgl'IT, Po11r1111t ..Pick.- POURTH II.ACE -One mitt. P•ce. Ci.lmlng all a~1. Purse 51700.t. Fllt/ry lk'I' (Todd) 6.00 1.00 1.80 C1p!111 N (MOil 6.80 •.20 Wonderful Sp0t1 (Detomefl J,00 Tlmt -2.06 315. Alto rKld -Jud'/' RodrMl'I', We$lern lt1ldlr, l"lOIOn Poat, Brothlr In Law, Jiii Choice. FIPTH •ACI -Ont milt. Pl(I. Clltml119 Ill ""· PllrM 11100. CGU91n AM (hl!Nttl 6.60 1.20 3.00 Prldt Ill' EVYPI IDMomerl 7.60 ~.60 Chimp l ethll Lid'/' !St1w1rl) 1 • .0 Tlmt -2.07 2/5. ( Also rtced -G1'orge Wvnwood, Bon· rov Hel.n, Mockll'lll Or111m, Our Jwnltl, ll:Mdl "1111. SIXTM IACI: -Ont mlll. CondlHon 111 191'· Pllr$1 SUOQ. II/IOI• tmrlh {loyd) IJ.40 • • .O 2.IO Tot1I Prt19ht IWIUl1rn1) J.AO 2.AO Dutch HIU L«d fllllt'l'I 2 . .C Time -2.03 3/S. Alt.o rKld -81111ef' l ay, Counl P1rt1, Ancl'/'I Coho, 51'1V \'1rl1ty. Kiwi Av«ll. U llKll -•.•11'"11 lmllll .. 1·TOlll frtltflt, P* IMIA 1 .J lliVl!NTH RACIE -One mile. Pace. Cl1lmlne h1ndlc1p tll ages. Purse -· 11111 01vmpl1 IBllllY) 7.20 4.20 3.20 Erin l'rOll (\'alle!I Key) l .lloO 1.20 Brenna 9 (Miiler) 10.20 Timi -l .Ctl. AllCI rtced -I lg Red MICh!nl, MO!'I· lift.I, Pam Boy. J1lferM111 E•prlSI, L1rry Tlmt. llGHTM RACE -Ont m!le. PICI. c111m1111 Ill ••• PurM S'UIXI. H11rv Abbi ccronkl 7 . .C 4 • .C I.• P1e1nc Shafter fl ongol !O.«I '·'°' Armoro J1nlc1 (Jonn) t.l!ti Tl~ -2.06. Also rK9'd -A1lv1nc1, NHCI Kish, wtlH1 T Knl9hl. Baron B. A D1rn. IS l!aacta -l•Nllrt A* & l<Padfk Slllrtw, PIW Sftl.IO. NllfTM llACI -One mllt, Pact . Cl1lmlf1f 111 tgtt. Pw11 12000. Gr1tlfvl 81.u fOtsomtf) 33.20 10.00 6,00 Time Ftlghl !Cronkl S.60 J.60 Sibert Gill CH1ydtfll 4.00 TllTll -2.02 J/I, Also rKld -MklW•'I'· ltod v AdlOI, Uncle T111. llltlmort N, AndY• M!!11ll1 • U l!llctl -7-0rilltfU( 11111 & ,_ Timi PH1ht, P1lcl SJ&5.00. Net Scores Hiii Incl Mll'lllr Tennl• OM EM,111111 Ha,_. ON1111 llJ 11) ltlMrl 91J Cir.* LVn Atlrt0-D1rtvn Hyen1 (HO) lo!l lo t.7"1• J0Ms-Mll'c.61t laklr 7-4. t..1, Elol .. Ptrlllnt-Martlll N..ti (HGl de!. 8trMr1 Woolrk!Ol-ltl'Hrl Coll!ns ........ coach, and randy Sandefur. the head volleyball coach at car Stete (Long Beach) . Registration on June 11 ts set from &-11 a.m., 1·2 p.m. and 8-9 p.m. The program will run £r0m June 11-Sept. 14. Two novice a n d in- termediate girls sessions (12 years to adult ) will be con· ducted. 11le first ls set for Monday and Wednesday morn- ings (8:30-11) and the second Is on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 1-4 p.m. An · advance sess ion ror women is planned Mondays and Wednesdays from 8-10:30 p.m. and Friday from 6:30-10:30. The novice and intermediate boys (12--17 )'ears) will meet in one session on Monday and Wednesday from 1-4 p.m . and Tuesday and Thursday from 8:30-11 a.m. The fee ls $13 per month or $35 for the full swnmer. Those interested m a y register by mail by .seqding a check or money order,. ·along with their name, address. phone number, school, age and sessibn or sessions requested to the Orange County Volleyball Club, Box 5426, Garden Grove. Cawley New President Of Orcas Chuck Cawley has been in- stalled as the new preSl.de:nt or the Orcas skin and scuba div- ing club at the club's recent banquet. The Orcas take their name from a Oeet marine mammal related to the dolphin. It's an Orange County.based club and was organized in 1966 to pro-· mote underwater activities and diving safety and to pro- vide slcln and scuba diving enthusiast! an opportunity to meet other divert. The club meets the first Fri· day of each month for a brief business meeting. Actlvitles planned this year include 1everal beach and boat dives, campouts to Mexico and the San Simeon coast and an annual trash dive off Corona del Mar in which a trophy is presented to the diver who retrieves the most junk from the ocean floor. Addi ti on a I information regarding the club may be ob· tained by calling Cawley at 839-5986 or writing to Orcas, PO box 83114, Fountain Valley, 112706. Prep Golf JNn IC1rt-G1n Cl1rk IHGI dlf. Janie llltlllrtaM-1"11 OObbll a.t. 6-2. " Mtrtna CM) 121 Al\llM-im M..tlndl Mor$0-SIM MclCHYlf' c•c l Al Anai.int MV!lklp.al ' "' ... · Jlld'I' l'r1!G-Jud'1' Llflfdtll .... 11 , J11cob1 IMI n, dtf. Shel DY 11. "'4. l1ro fM) 75. r.Mf, Wllwn !II, 6-('I. Jvnlot VinlfT Kim CMI 16, de!. TunnlcUfle I~, 4-0. llt9M .. Id! l"I "'' ullfftnfti.. Ttvlor (M) n, di!. Collins 15. S-1. S nt 1t Ktndrtdl !Ml 71, (le!. Em«ick U ..0. p~.J,Ll de-I. Anti 7-S,:ti lo Wll~ (Ml 116. Gel. ~r!lner f~, J.1. P: cl."i't.'ti...Mceousl1 U 1o. i------------,, H . "°" H , I #" ,_f"'ler (LI Im U , -7-5, la1t 2 .. . , .. • .... 1er IL) LOii M, WOl'I 7.s. Iott 2 .. . G1111111n CLI U ,1 ... i ... 1 ... ~°'/:.i1{1d G.!r.'f i-1 111111 with Simo i,, '"°· 1rd , 7 .. ; abl 1nd NellQn ... • · B1Mb1H --CO.ti Mttl I CCllW\I dtl I Mir, ~ •deh 11 01n1 Hlllt, ''• MHllOIL• 1t l:dl_, E1l•ncl1 11 LOI • '~" Alt1T1ll01, S•nll Anl Vllll'!' 11 Pount1ln .. ,"'.'' v111tv, H1111~1111 1 e1ch 11 we11ern. " ,~, Mar1M It N H1rtJor, Antllllm al " • Wtttmlmill', I Dorldo tt unt....nlt'I', Mlttion vte!o 11 El Modtnl, Ortllll" 11 l tn C1tmente (111 11 ~:IS), Ctl llllt !DomlnGUll Hllbl 11 UC lrv!M (l l. TtlCk -WHI Cot•I 11:111'1'1 11 Fresno cote. SlddletJ,Kk, Gold.., W~IJI CIF AAAA prellms ti L1k1woocl HIOl'I 71 • As the race progre11e1, a power boat keept pt11ce With the three alternate peddlers. Switches are made a1 the race is 1n progress with three men going over tbe side or the outrigger away from the launch and the t h r e e alternates diving into the water from the other side and1i'";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;il In lront of the boat. . NEWPORT LEASES ..LIYfn Ind Mlvotk fl) won t ·l, '-1: ..... . '" ~' · ... : ' Ir tk·· OCC Gals " ~.~~ In Tourney '. ~ ~¥!:' ~~~~-<>rangeCoutCollege's ~;·).:)·women's volleyball team will ~I:.~ compete in the Southern ll'j, I Cllllornll community college ~ touraament Friday and Satur· ' "" 1day at Pierce Colle&e after .• llnlll!tng their rqular seuon 1'ltb vlctcrtes over Ful1erton. . OOC'a AA t<:am, btblnd tile . ,1';-~ of Tlnk& Heu and Mlchelle Polrter d o w n e d 1\lller1on, IS-12 and 15-10 while the A unit tripped Fullerton, · IM, lf>.2. Jeannie Slattery and '.ioA'\"" il'Alhtllaga 1t1rred for • Ille A llllOCl BG '-'i' ended with 7-3 :r • wtGI tile AA unit plac· ... .....,. la Ila division and M J. ....,. ftnbl!lng third. ,,. llllllllrn cal "'"'1><Y ,.._ •• t:• Pl1dly morning II 1 tald robin aff1lr. ._ _. teoms In each wll advanc e iin~s IOlllld -which nu11t:SO. Gv"'nt,llct -CIP tNM pl1'/'0ff1 (11t roundl. T"1nl1 -Coront cit! Mer 1t COlll ..... , Edlton 11 11\IClllOIJI, I.Of Allm ·IOI 11 l:•t.ndl, l'~f Vtlk'/' •I l1nt1 Ant Ylll1'!'1 N HlrtNlr 11 Merln1. WMlll'tt 11 "'""mi~ BMcll, Wltfm[Mltl" 11 Ma in, Hiil• 11 Lftlll'll lfft:ll, Uttl-.11'1' It~ °""!' Et Modin• 11 M.l .. lon Yh s.n c 11ns',T~rr·~ 1 .. 1 "J:1~~ ~(lMtl .~,~ tttft f~l 11 U( l,...ltlt It 11.ITI.). MIMIY !Mn 141 T1nnl1 -INllll l ...... twtMY 11 COronl ._. Mir. f1). Goll -ClfttvltW l ... ue flnat .. lrvlne L.lefl,tt flnal•. T...._Y !Ml'!' 11) B1Mtlolll -JC: Mellon Mmls. Tennl1 -lrvilll L...,_ twrMy, C~llfllw LllfW loi.rrnt\'. Goll --0Mtvt.lr l.Mg111 !11'1111. Gr-lkt -Cll' 1111'1'1 ....ia. T'llllnl'IY lMIY 1n TeMh -Cnslvlew L111111 !Ollrnt'/'. Golt -SvnMI """' lncHvldu1I pltVotfr; 11 Wtllllnl Hltf\. l1Nbell -SOC.I JC llll'(Clftl It Cl!'• r1t01. P"4!1y (MIY 11) 81111:1111 -CIF AMA, AAA, AA. A pl1yoff1 {!In! round), SOC1I JC p11vo111 11 Ctrrl!OI, NC region••• 11 UC l!"Vfnt ("'1!1tl\'9) • T1ml1 -Cl, pl•Vofft 1nn1 roundl. ov-.nu --,,p lndl•l•ual Pf#l1mt. CtflW -Wllt.rtt .. lltl 1t lttnlorG. Trldl -Cll" AAA flllllt a t LIQwood Hleh 0 p.m.). 11"'""1 IMl'I' lfl 11 .... 11 -MC•I JC MCtlon ftnlf1 at Cirri-. f'fCM rtfllorlll1 11 UC lrvlr11 {flfltetfW). Tftc• -kC.i JC n11111 11 ~Ion, Cll" M flftllt 11 Vllencl1 l•:JO fleld, 7:» run), CIP AAA fin.II 11 Cl'll~ (llOlll). lllf'Alll -toCM P'" dllmt!OM.lllPI 11 HtwpOl'I IMCh (t •.m.). Crew -Wflltr~ Sprll\lt ~t ~11rlord Each man swings him self 11.ocany ..-·& openlfltdl into the boat a! it COmel alongside. L••1lng •II Vehlcle1 A aeries of open ocean races 645 2202 Is plaMed illong the coa1t with • a 26-mlle race to Catalinal~~~iii llland later in the year, tbell ulUmate goal being t h t: Moloakl race Oct. 15 in Hawaii. Deep Se.a Fish Rep-0rt STILL ONLY $2.65 A MONTH Ev111 On Price Alone The 9\Q ·cAMP\N~ ' AMO · - BACKPACK\ NG lENl SHOW MAY \\thG·, l\2thOT ·~~ll l 'ft G'S PAR KIM WENZEL "FISH CREEK" SLEEPING BAG Collon 1hell, 100" double·pull 2lppor, tlonnel Hnlng. 899 RIG. 10.ft SAVI 2.00 COME MEET HAROLD KETCHEM · L fr G's EXPERT OUTDOORSMAN IN PERSON comping. !.couting, boc:k·pocking or mou~toineering; yoor• with the U.S. foro,try; Service; ocirv• membor ond odvisor to Americo't 1tou1ing orgonli.at\onl • ·Horold Kotchem lios owfKllth ol knowledge to shore! fRIDAY, MAY 11th· L & G OllAti'Ol 1955 N. TUSTIN SATUIDAY, MAY 12th·L& OSANTA ANA 3357 S. lllSTOL STlllT SUNDAY, MAY 13th· L lo G TUSTIN NIWpOllT AVE. AT FIRST s11t1n GRASSHOPPER STOVE · • 49 SINGLE BURNER ••• , , • , , ••• , • , •.• , , ••••••• , •• , • , , • , • 8 ~~~.~;! .................. : .................... 999 "EXPLORER Ill" SILVACOMPASS •..•...•••••••.••••••.•..•••••••••• 686 ENSOLITE SlEEPING PAD ...•.. , , .•• , •• , .•• , , •. , ••....••• , • , , • 411 VATIEN 11-0UART WATER BAG •.••.•..••.••••••• , •••••••••.•• . COLEMAN ~ .. ' OASIS TENT 9'x 12'fomily ~lze with lots of room for the wholo group. 3 windows. 9895 STOii HOUtll: llllON. THllCI ,tit. 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M.'' SAT. a SllJ'I. 10A.M. TOI P.M. LA MIRADA ORANGE TUSTIN SANTA ANA IHOl'PING ClNTE" 111S NlWPO!ff AVl .. 1......-.. lldto~c.tllol N. TUITIN at ,llllSTl'flllllT Phortl: S21·1111 rttone: 131· 1110 rl!ofl•: IJ2•1HI NOW, 4 ITOllll IN OllANOI COUNTY 33111.IRllTOLST~ I t M.cARTHUR '"0!'9: 117·JJ11 - ' : - • , .. Costa Mesa Prod~t Children Can Now Charge It '1-i+-'SACRAME:mL!lll' Ten-year-olds will be able to say "charge it, please," just like Mom and Dad under a special Montgomery Ward sales promotion. 11IJ!: SPECIAL ' ' c h 11 d I .s charge authorizations" will be good only through June 30 and are intended for 'Mother's Day and Father's Doy purehases, W&-ds ad vertising I ea fl et s say. "Think about it. It sort of makes a cttild feel -well, grown up -to say 'charge It, please,' just like Mom or ' -David Kishbauch, left) group general manager and Richard E. Bennett, ext!CU· tive vice presedent of International Tele phone and Telegraph Corp., examine a Sireno Action Bar Package, produced by ITT Jabsco Product.s in Costa Mesa. The unit provides warning lights, a sir en and a public address IUnit needed by emergency vehicles. The unit was on exhibit at the corporation's annual meet· ing in Kansas City, Mo. Dad;" a promotional insert in 'WW bills' to credit _card customers says. Jack Kane, Wards California public relations director, said the credit card program is the first one he knows of ·by any company allowing children as • ARTS FESTIVAL ~ MAY 12, 1 t(>5pm """~ on the CITY HALL LAWN Come spett.d the abtefttt.OOt1. itt. the ~utt.f E'lectronics ' Company At lrvin.e • Hycom, an Irvine electronic components manufacturer, is erec!lng a 25,000 square foo t industrial building on 3.8 acres of land located at t h e southwest corner of Deere and Armstrong in Irvine . Donald Shaw of Newport Beach is the contractor and Howard .Thompson & Associates the architect. John Sutherland of Grubb & Ellis Co.'s Newport Beach of· lice represented both buyer and seller, the Irvine Industrial Complex. Bank Slates Relocation Groundbreaking ceremonles recenUy signalled the begin- ning of construction f o r Security Pacific N a t i o n a I Bank's Lake Forest Branch in the Lake Forest Village Shop- ping Center in El Toro. young as 10 to use credit cards. "IT CAME up for discussion earlier this year, and we decided to go all the way rather than in a test market," Kane said. He said that means the offer is being made to 5.4 million Wards credit card holders na.t.ionwide, but that an emphasis is on California as "a good market." Here's how Wards officials say the plan works: Each holder of an active credit card account is being mailed two forms which they may fill eut in a child's name stating that the child may charge one purchase-ta-bis or her parents' account. Parents also fill in the maximum amount of purchase and a telephone 'number where the, can be reached. THE CHILD THEN may take the special authorization card along with the parents' Wards che'ge card to the store. 'Ibe child uses the credit card in the same manner as an adult, but surrenders the special authorization c a r d when the purchase is made. State Consumer A f f a i r s Director John Kehoe said the Ward's children's credit card privilege is "a new precedent as far as we know." He said be saw no objection to it so long as controls are as strict as Wards has imposed. UPI l •le!>holo A.B. CHAMBERLEIN BOAROS UP GAS STATION Ene rgy Crisis Put Denver Man Out of Work Joins Jobless Fuel Crisis Closes Station DENVER (UPI) -The energy cr1s1s put A . B . Chamberlein out· of work this week. He boarded up the win- dow in the office of his 'w11flitewashed gasoline station, locked the door and left behind a year of "trying to get regular customers .'' "I don 't know who 's to blame," he said. "I guess nobody is. I knew it was com- ing, but it still was a surprise to me, personaJly. I've been here since we opened more ·than a year ago." LAST FRIDAY, the tanker truck that usually delivers ga.soline to the Hudson Oil Co. * * * Gas Station Oosures Surveyed 2tt109 the music Ob the J\A.arritte CorrpCBatt.d,att ~ Jlftt ~how ft~tf.BaQQet, Branch Manager Catherine M. Polski indicated that an August target date has been set for the branch's relocation from 24301 Muirlands Boulevard to 23082 Ridge Route Drive, El Toro. "I DON'T SEE any prob- lems at the present time because of the s t r i c t guidelines they propose. But l think on the other side, one cannot just begin a blanket palicy of credit for under-18- year-olds when we 're so defi· cient in our schools as fo what credit means," Kehoe said. WASHINGTON (AP) ~ The Office or Emergency Preparedness announced Wed- nesday its surveys show 562 gasoline stations across the country have closed because of short supplies and another 1,376 are threatened. Darrell M. Trent, acting director of OEP, repeated his earlier assertion that any shortages will be spot in nature. outh CoostCR£pe11toft9 r -- I her Sunday surpril!C ••• Sunrise yellow seersucker check . Two button blazer with matchmg two pocket skirt accentetci with cotton drill sport belt . byY+.- @)~o@@)§@ 44 llllhion illlnd, newport C*1lllr 044·!5070 • Labor Panel Scheduled Labor and management will swap views on what "labor relations" are all about today at the Personnel & In· dustrial Relations Assocla· tioo's 16th Annual Conference at the Disneyland Hotel. Speaking !or labor will be Sigmwld Arywitz, executive secretary-treasurer, Los Angeles County Federatioo or Labor, AFL-CJO, and Gordoo Nesvig, director of personnel. County or Los Angeles will present the management point of vlew. Moderating the ponel will be management consultant, Dr. John Van de Water, president, Van de Water & Associates. "There is no area or the country where the driver is unable to obtain gasoline,'' said Trent in a statement. The shortages "are not expected to pe a severity to warrant ra· tioning by the federal govern- ment." Trent estimated the latest count of stations closed or threatened •with closing a<> count for 19 than one percent of the 220,000 gasoline stations in the nation. OEP said its survey was based on reports from i ts regional field boards. The total was an increase over the 342 stations closed and 9 3 o threatened in an OEP survey taken April 23 and released by Rep. Les Aspin (~Wis.) The OEP did not say how the closed stations w e r e distributed geographically or whether they were all in· dependent stations. STILL ONLY $2.65 A MONTH Even On Price Alone The DAILY PILOT Delivers The Most For The Orange Coast SUBSCRIDE NOW 642-4321 (Of ,.... t11t OAILt Pl~ efflce .. f0411 tllfllMt1a1ty1 . • .I , . - -......... ~ -, .. • ' t I -..... -.. • bile. When the pilot reaches h!f detttnaUon, he can disconnect the llrframe from the modlfle.d auto In two.minutn and drive 'off. FAA flight teeta ii'e ex·. peeled to begin soon at Point Mugu. -- rices Head to Biggest • in and Co. 1t a cost estimated in excess of $100 million, the !ltructure snatched away the height title by 100 feel from mE SEARS Tow.er has ~n the center of a continuing cdntroveray that began e.ven before the first bolt was I II" . . tightened June 7, 1970. Chicago : I ers teJevlsloo statlooscomplalned that the height of the structure 'm I would seriously j ffi p ft i f l&t A Bet a• AC me television reception by nwre ~ of La Habra! than eight percent of area t tall N a t I o na viewers. Several suits were or Datacbecker . filed to halt construction, but · ~j~t..nd cheekout all failed In the courts. ~ 80 Alpha Beta Six workmen have been kill~ .... •tt1, ed during construction, five of 11ken, director of them last moolb. Foor perish· l,'l]:ror Allllia Beta· ed in a flash fire that enguHed I d installation wllf one of the building's 102 y and the purdl1sa elevator shafts. Tile fifth fell tf about 500 elec-to his dl':ath the same week c lltera and electronic and the sixth ln October. e 80 dual-proceisor The building occupies 4.4 ~ BIALllK, vice pres!· 1ener1l' man•aer of ~t'i~'l"'i.IJ n 1 I Sillllconductor's dlvlllon, slild the ,. Beta order· Was for million and was "the ajor comlJlltmenl In the arket lndUllry ·for an c checkout system by n not lfflllated· wllh a nli"' man'.uflcturer." million square feet of space. Sears occupies Jess than 20 percent of the available office space and the rest will be leased. TELEVISION transmllllng' equipment will he Installed on the top Ooor for two &tatl"ons that have mgned aireements to broadcast from the tower. Russ Trade Concession Defended WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of Stale Wllllam Rogers told Congre,. Wed· nesday that failure lo grant trade concessions to the Soviet Union "would Jeopardize" U.S. relations wllh Moocow. He and Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz wert lead-off witnesses •before the Hoose Ways and Means c:ommittee as the Administration opened its drive for new trade lealsla- tion • • SHUL T'l PROMISES tough- mlnded bargaining to assure freer markeu for U.S. goods ., he recommended that Presideht Nlxon be given the broad negotlalin& powera that he requested. A radically changed world economy 1 Shulti aald, calla for a new trade and monetary system. ·~we have much to 1ain from thll kind of a new world eco<~, c system and much to Jose no system et all," Shulfi said. ' .. ew toorfist ' • ~Analysts P•ed _ Ox e:c_lndifkrenee I • • • • s. . . lli'JL y l'ILDI' 1 \ DAILY PILOT ORA~E COUNTRY , CALIFORNIA MAY 10 .nm MAY 11, 1973 FOLLOWING ISSUES WERE BEST AVAILABLE COPIES FROM THE .. PUBLISHER FOR MICROFILMING: ---... . . ~ ). • ·---------- I • ' , • • • • " .. \ I ' ' , Looking For omeone To Take An We're 00 At It • We'll eve~ pay the postage to ,get you · to give us an order. Get ready for some quick P.rofits by maillng in your order today. Put . . a hard-working DAILY PILOT classified want ad to work for you. USE THIS ORDER FORM USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES l TIMIS - S4.5l1 $S.80 ' $6.BD PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 I ' OR USE YOUR • 11 DI CHARGE CARD P11bll1h for •• , , • , , •••• , d11y1, b19inni11g ••••• , •••••• , , ••• , , , •• , ••••• Cl111ific1tio11 ••• , •• , •• , •• •, •••• , •• , •. , • , . , • , , . , , •. , • , , •••• , , . , • N•'"• . , ... , . , . •,, .. ' • • .. • • .. • • •· • • •• ... ,.,., •., ............ • .. . AIMrni •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••.• City ••••••••••••••••••••• , • , .••••• rtio" •.•••••••••••••••.•••• , • M•1hr Chirt• Nu'"ber ••••••• , , •• ,, , . ,, , E•plr•tlon D•t• , l' ,, .' •• l•11kA'"fflc1rd Number ••• , • , ••• , • , , , • , • • Exl,r1tlo11 D1t1 •• , • , , • , ' • 7 " TIMES TIMIS TIMU --- $7.40 $11.70 $17.70 St.01 $14.SO $22.SO $10.76 $17.30 $27.30 TO FIG-U•I COST Put only one word i11 ••ch sp1c1 1bow1. lncfud1 your 1ddr111 or p~o111 nu111btr. The coli el yo ur 1J i1 11 the e11d of the line on which the l11t word of your 1d i1 .,,Jt. 1111. Add Sl.00 pli11 J li1111 . l •frl If VOii d11lr1 4.111 1f DAILY PILOT lo• 11rwic1 with fl\1if1d r1pli11, _____ ...;._· CUT Hiii -,.UTl ON YOUl INYILOH. · · Clo111flod Dopf: • BUSINESS REPLY MAIL firtl Cl•11 P•r""lt Ne. 11, Cott• M11•. C1lifet11i• Or•n<Je Co.st DAILY PILOT P. 0 . Bo1 1560 eo.1. Mew. c.n1. 92626 • ---- ' ' • Or Give Us an Or.der by Phone at 642-5678, the Direct Line to DAILY PILOT ' Cl•11lfiecl ...... ~ J RElqLll ' I • Checking Signals Cpl. Marcella Abernathy, 27, checks maps with fel- low member of ot•henvise all-male Fresno Army Re- serve Noncommissioned Officers Acaden1y during exercise in hills nea r F'resno. She is the only \VAC in the 6th Army's 15 NCO acade1nies. For Napa County WASHINGTON !AP I -A bill to set up a National Recreation Area at Lake Ber- ryessa in Napa County has been Introduced by Sen. John V. Tunney (J)..Calif. I. who said the park could replace "sleazy development and inexcusable mismanagement.·· The bill, co-sponsored by Sen. Alan Cranston (0-Ca\if. I. would require\ the Interior (OUTDOORS) Department to develop and maintain the area for outdoor recreation. It would end management. by private concessionaires which Tunney charged "has resulted in exploitation and environmental degradation.·· • •. j e Vse Opposed POINT MUGU IAPI -Rep. Barry M. Goldwater ~ Jl- Calif.). says he's opposed to opening the Point ~1ugu lagoon arett for public use because or eoQtog1cal reasons. Goldwater said that the lagoon is the last untouched estuary along s o u t h e r n California's coastline. He said the area is a major nursery lfOWld for fish nnd a key fac- tor in the balance of marine life. The Tarzana Republican said he was opposed to use of the area for picnicking, cam- ping and other recreational activities, as proposed by Sen. John Tunney (0-Calif. ), and Rep. Alphooro Bell iR.Calif. I. e Park Proposed SACRAMENTO (AP) California's I as I undivided Spanish land grant would be considered for purchase as a state par k under legislation approved by a 2()..(1 vote of the Assembly \Vays and Means Commtttee. The resolution bv Sen. Joh n Stull (R-Leucadia f: "'ould ask lhe State Parks and Rccrea- Uoo. Department to study the OCC Slates Cetacean Lecture "Whales, ~pins and Other Mmoe Manurui ls:· Is the topic ror • dinner-lecture being pmented by the Orange Coast Oollep Mo r ine Techno!Otl)' Society Tues<lay at 7 p.m. 1n th!:! OCC Student Cenltr. Tho public Is lnvtted to at· !aid. Tk:tleU are priced at ""° and m ust be purchased bJ today. 11cket lnformatloo la avallalil• by calling 134-1&17 or ,..'!Im. Gaeat speaker lor the ev ... IJW la llro. Beml llelltls <# the • ~ Celac<an Sociel1· ... will -' llldol laUn • ... -· Ir1p to !earn--tqom bl Baja , Callfar9bl ,,,,.,. .... _..., .,.. Clllfomll .Gray ll'bale. feasibility of purchasil1g anu ( developin g t he 20,000-acre Rancho Guejito lands in San I Diego County. If the study determined a I purchase "·ere feasible, the I Stull resolution urges that I funds be sought in a 197~ statewide park bond issue. e f'ish"t11g Ott Cap itol News Service M ONTE R EY -The seaward portion of Point Lobos State RCserve-¥ i n Monterey County has been e))1ablished as an ecological prese rve and will be closed to sport and commercial fishlng beginning May 13. I The offshore area is com- prised of approxin1atcly 775 acres. 1 Some 250,CKXJ people visit the · reserve annually and its at-1 tractions include the rugged ! landscape created by the ac-1 lion or surf and wind on the coast. the many forms of plan t life. and the numerous species of wildlife that inhabit or visit the area. e Share Vrged SACRAMENTO (AP) California's state parks chief says he thinks the federal governmen t should pay for an estimated $9 mi llion worth of state property proposed for in- ~l usion in the Golden Gale Na- tional Recreation Area. William Penn f\1olt. director of the State Department of Parks and Recreation, also said he considers the "urban park" concept of the proposed recreation area to be "more political than factual." In an interview, f\.lott said 'he is unwilling to donate any more than what he called "California's fair share·· of the cost or the proposed federal park around San Fran- cisco Bay. e f'11ndh1g Aske d SACRAMENTO tAPI -A plan to use $'l50 million of California's anticipated $800 million budget surplus to buy state park and open space land has been introduced by Sen. John Nejedly. ·'The purchase of recreB- tiona l lands is an outstanding investmen t that will increase In value over the years and provide continuing dividends for the people," Nejedly said. The· W alnut C r et k Republican's meawr e would create a revol ving fuDd used by the state, cltles, counUes- and rtglonal park dl1trtct1 to buy land. • f'f'fle J'fshlNIJ C&pllGI News Service SAcJiAMENTO -s.nior citiienJ mtllt meet income and residence requirement• to qualify for frte fl s h I n 1 licenses regardless of 11 rt!Ctnt Chall8t In the law lowering the a1e al which -men may qOallly. -limlta lnl 1140 mootbly far ablCla pem and .. ·corrtinod for llllt1'led per-. A _, must bav4 lived !he atata ror nvc )".,.. l • 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 l • 0-'JLY PILOI 43 --------- Liftda Isle Wate rfront lleau!ltul, 11ew-4 bdrm ., 41'> ba. home oo !~goon. \Vi th _ livin& rm.. rw11lly rr~1.. lge. ~a1ne rm. or :>th bdrn1. . . , . . . $255,000. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Pl .. 1• C•ll: IOI(!\ I L 01 \II~ l BOR MS-in the middle or C.."o~la ~lesa. 'Tropical IDEAL HOM E '! ELEGANT pahns .s urround sctlulteo pool area. enclosed L ove I y landscaping 4 BEDROOM pal10 open.~ 10 your O\\ n paradise \vlU1 splash-;, I " ' {I I.' I ~~~::o,.~==~~i highHghts th is nice ! C:xceptional 2 - s to r y tng \Vaterfall and pond . 'rhe perfect place I •••• ,. •••• home. Formal dining I hon1e in !\·Jesti Verdi•. for entertaining. s~p::iratt area for boat, I BACHELOR PAD ri~m . Two.patios. Fire-I Large lot. Garden & <'amµcr or trailer. 3 Oclightful bedrooms, 2 FOR TlfE PA ltTIClll .. .AR !~lace. Rear I i vi n g 1 fruit trl'CS " J,ots of elegant balhs, )icparate laundry room, finish·· FIX UP AND SAVE $$1 ~INGLE _ A Gorwi'<lu~. 110• 1001n . New carpets . 1 rooin for ;i pooL boat &· t.•rl !!a ra_ge ptu~ n1a11y nHJre cxtras. Nothing to \l'Ol"k townhou11c. o~ 11ul)t•r-Picture win d o w s.• trailer. J b<lths. l•'ainil v do but 1110\e in 1111d live. Offered nt only big ~~ ove1·luokil~,r: a Forced air heating. roon1 . fireplace. Blol'k $49,950. \Von 't h-1st, call llU\1 . spacious h~ng rooni. :;hni.: Kitchen built-ins. Rea-fencing . F'orn1al din ing: 546•5880 carpels, \\ood pane I c d d f . d. I d k. I \\IESTSIDE 3 Bedroom Free· dom Home on large tree studded lot -needs Jlttle fLxin' and paint. Illness w11.l11, bu!ltln kltcht·n, dou· y or 1mme 1ate occu-roo1n. A l mo ern tt~ i- ble gar"J::e, used brick front, pancy. $30.500. b r k, en. (' o v c r c d patio. Opan Eves . 1~ baths and lots of extr1n1. 540-1720 , $42.950. brk 540-1720 At . $22.000. You must lltX' Gene ral -------General foe<eo s23,9so CALL &12-1rn 9:w21 ;:;151 Open Ev11 . 2955 HARBOR BLVD, ~-. ', ... HERITAGE COSTA MESA 540-1720 REALTORS Gener el Ge neral I •••••••• ·-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill O\VNER 111ov1ng. Ct·nlral air-<.'Ondltlonlng. 3 bdrn111, 2 bulhs. Shag carjX'1t;. Dining . SLIDE AND nn, bullt-i.118, disl11va1her. "~amily rin, Cor ner lot . brk HARBOR VIEW CARMEL MODEL THI S NEW EXCLUSIV~ LISTING " vacant ;1nd sellers \vant nction. 1\ttra1:tivc three bedroo1n hon1c. fee sitnplc lot pri('ecl to sell al $69.900. !-!arbor Vie\\' has the best l lome- o\vner's Association clues in the Harbor area -$5.00 a 1nonth for lovely pools and club houses, and large recreationally oriented greenbelt s . SWING SET $31.500. 97!>-ZIOO. Wtll Jove the targe block wall 0\VNER arudous. Neer Snnt11 fenced rear yard _ real se-Ana country club. J hdrn1s, <:all fi7:l-7225 tl U,._l()Uf. tj()M f. 3 baths. Famtly r111, forn1nl curily. Mom will fancy the dining rrn. u u 1 J 1 _; n 8 . &al'den kitchen, formal din-Flrcpla.t'il. H.eor Jiving rn1. tng room, separalc serviee Tile roof. Llkc 8 nl{)(lel porch with ¥.i bath and the ho b k $45 750 M0-1720 drainatic •Open beam ceil· nic. r ' · · ings. Dad will take to the O\'!'NER ll'8.11!1. Stupcndou" 4 REAL ESTATE SPECIALISTS. Unique SOLID VALUE Prtvate family room-den btlrn1. Custon1 kitchen. H h If f fl La omes as limited openings for sales indi-1 1 I'· 1 11 · h I with its own fireplace. ugc ain Y nn. · J'KC .;1ri.:1· · ,.•1 n 111u1 0111" 11·11 l>'"OUR king sized bedrooins pool, 111111 or decking. 3 viduals, knowledgeable in the areas of Bay-I ~ dutiu; :111tl J<'lrl'J!hil·i·. 1 pl.us 2 family baths. You 'll baths. 1-'atio. r·orn1al dining crest, Dover ,Shores. Lido Isle. The J->enin· r 1·t•Ji11 1•111111. Nt'w Hot \\lah•r love it too ... $52,900. C!"1a ~~1;!~~11..~~cu~lfu~: sula, Newport I-I eights. Irvine and Mesa l ll'1&11•1: 1' ·•lk 111 So:huols ' C. F. Colesworthy • iiiiiiiiitiiiii;;i;iioiiiii .... iiiiiil Verde. If you have lhe will a nd fill the bill. und ;-.hv1i1nnt;. L'ul·lll'-Slli· 1 GOLF COURSE ESTATE brk $55,£0). :WO.-lnc>. al . ~1rc1'L W"' Mainlenancr l Reeltori 640-0020 c67::.l~m Wood . Experience not required. Y1trt1. Spiu·t' ror BOllt Stor· ---WHY smLE ~ "h'. ·"· Im· S2",ti00. Cull 'QuiETC'O'RNER FOR A U~l6\UIF ti()u1F11:: ""'11o·~;NAND l a~!~~~" J,.~·2.!~. ON UDO USED HOME? "' RE~TORS ,._L~ SPACIOUS I :;';:;, •g_,;;,:'!':.f~ .:'":::: INTERESTING AND UN· Builder sacriticln&: h i 11'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!1!!!!i!iiii!!iiiiitiil!!l!!!l!!!llll!!!!!!!!ll••ITlu!! 111Jn1t· is d1·t1i1:nt'fl for of lhC' n1•w KUlf t'Ollf1W!. USUAL PllAN . Expandab le brand-n~ 2200 sq ft 41! family living _ huge living bedroom 2 bath home with Gentrll . 1 G. ~!!.'!_r• __ l -PARK -lh•' aL·livc fan1Uy. Larx<! Great ramily horue fcatur- room with large fi replace, wall-to-wall ca r Pet Ing -back_ ywl~f with many l'OO• ~a: hidl'f ·a-w~yll mutt>t at.itt. opena with sliding doon to thruout, drapcrle11, com-SOMETHING rl'n!iona caturei;, Counlry ""-·para e c., drens wlng. · pl<lcty builtln kit ch c n , 1 1y1.11.· l1Jl"ll•'I" kit1·hcn wi1h l'ttald1 qul\rter11 and Pon· private patio. Large up-HUNTINGTON . 1. . '·-fireplace. •prinklers, llt\\'I\, tloubh· nv\!n~. Dlshwa&her derosa party room. Owner stairs 1vmg area l'an ""' SPEC children's quarters or mas-re11ch1g, etc. Full pl'h:e IAL 14 BR + FR + DR ;rnd n1any Cuhint•tl;. ·I &'<I· !!.nx0~. TAKE ADVAN -ter suite. $,10,995. HURRY! C n 11 room11. 2•~ Huth:!. Fnmilly •A c.. Call 845-0303. !">31-7671 for de1al111 Ae-llnt . $4B 900 H.00111 <.1ntl Living Room PETE BARRETT $MONEY MAKERS-* IN * This hi lhe1 "Caslawicy" ;~~s c~~~~l"~opc~~Tii~ -REALTOR-I I horn PL Tit.ADE _ 5 units for land In n1ode . an " n1lant e-US! S41,500. Call uny· 642-5290 uny area, free & clear. COLLEGE hcau.Lilul." tustefully decor-1ln11•. 646-0555. I 01!1.\ I I Ol \O\ NtA,1n,.,·, ~ 1'"1X UP, profit! Duplex ate~I. lmmal·ulatc . <..'Ondltion SECLUDED UNITS --*-TRIPLEX-.--$22,950 . PARK u1~1li<' and ~!~~c, bealnd Thr~ 1 n ~.f Q I' ll iiiiii•iiiiiiiiiii•iiiiiiii•I TWO :1 Br. house11. Good nel 11r1ecd about ~ ow ot'I rooms. u e 1-:8.litside Costa Mesa. 3 2· "cash fJow". $29,500_ current replacement coi;t. P rivate Stri-et with lots or B<tnns .. 2 \\'iH1 1% baths; 5 UNITS $6l,950. Ltt 3 Br. 2 A sparkling 1.:lcitn v.·l'll niain. 1 ' ldcal Jot:alion, ni!ar ne-.v Voliag<'. EA!>TSIDE COSTA xlnl cond. Extra paridng. ba. house + 2 duplexei 00 talned 3 bedroonl, 2 bath tlt·mcnl:try school and park. M~SA . Bread and Butlt'r A good bu¥ for $64,500. 300. 1 Good 1 ho • PleaSf' rihone f>.16-2313 ror Un1ho. $33,500. Call anytlmt', MESA DEL MAR • ot. ncome. nie ivith forma l dining, arlrlilional info. 6'16-055."I. "arcl Walker Realtor family room, pool 11i:u.>d ' Lovely 4 bdrm., 1% bath!; ASK FOR BRUCE yttrrl and ins1rlc laundry on I 0Pf.N71L D. IT'S FUN ro 8E NICE• _.,,....._ tip-top co[ld. Lots ot extras. 83..1-0121. ~7414 a lovely tree ilned low trnf-~ -~ Poolsize 101. Offered tor • BONUS ROOM .-fie 11.ttet. 6T:Hi679. 1 , ·~~GAN REAL TY PLUS 4 bedrm'. 2~ bath•. ONLY $33,950 , 673-6642 67.>6459 cl"" '° ochoofs and shop· Nigel Ba. Hey THE REllL ESTllTERS plng. Only $32,950. NEW TRIPLEXES GINNY MORRISON & Assoc. DUPLEX IN COSTA MESA RE ' _!~~~~~~~ 3 Bdrin., l~ Bath •**** -AI:.TORS· REALTOR + 2 Churn1U11e <..'OH11i;:e11 ne;ir --_ HURRY!! LA CUESTA Vl::RDE HOMES in L.aauna Hills has 2 homes back on the n1arkct becl!.US(! of Cl'eftlt l't'jeclions. Both hav1· t1 t1>zy kitchl•n a.nrl (11n1ily room plus 3 BR's & :l BA. One ha. a fireplace. Quirk possession, cxccllcnr c.-onvcnllonnl tlnanctna: avall - alJJc. 2 B<h·m., !',, Bath *"'-M* llt05 MHa L"ONARDO I P•H"k & "'""·h. I-Bdrm., I DOLLHOUSE 1 1 Brlrm .. :I.~ Bath •v •Verde Dr. Eaat, ... ha. PllCh. Al11o·ays rcnlt•d, DU-H HAVEN ' 10'/n DO\VN *--* Co1ta Mesa DA VINCI I "'inlet ,i;, 11u1nmt?r./$52,500 ''-Call J'"IT\' lfordin Orange County ·*•••* 567--030 , Cnf!o 673-3663 673-0688 Ew,. MARINA 7J.I · ,;.i '012 A I t \Vould have loved this hOU8(!, -=::========I par men jliiiiiiiiilOiipeniiiiiiEiiviien.,l.;"";;,,,liiiiiii He could h11vc painted all 11's thl' one yoo'vf' ht>en i" Realtors 547-6791 of the ceilings! But you'd waiting tor. Sharp, clean HOME TOO BIG FOUR UNITS $1,500 DOWN nl'V<'r now It trom the Joveo/. and upgraded. Jufi:t fre>!hly 3 Bedroom, 2 ba.th.s, fire-exll'rior 11nd neighborhood painted outside. Pretty for onr !>t'r?IOn. but JIUll right Assumable 7% loan. Income place, !ll'W crpra: .• 2 car iiar. In \\'1lich i1's located. The sha~ eu rpc'ting and a gn:at rm' a fi1mt:~·. P "c "11 n t $600. Outlay $410. Small !mined. po811. $27,950. lo\v price of $31,500 reflects I big bal-.it yard, Oullltandlng owner11 f1tm1ly 1 .. a;n111o·n 1.."'ld down payment. Owner will IDEAL FOR the fact that lhls 3 bedroom, DELUXE 3BEORM ll N'R or wt-II kept home" l{One. \\111nr ..-tn ~t·ll 10 nice carry 2nd T.D. GUEST HOM E 1% bath ne€'ds a litUe clean· $39 ,500 11,·i!h heavy !!hake roof. r111n1h. 11h" ., luokul\; for C::::wMl\lH I\ li t Rcaltor1 64&-7711 3'.143 \\'estclitf Drive Open 'til 9 PM PANORAMIC VI EW- OF SOUTH BAY $115.000 l Bdr home, 3 balh, sep. quarters . b e Io w, huge 1nastcr au.Ile, ex. Jg. living room, la:. Fam. kitchen, many extras, a perf('{'f cntertalnment home. Ca ll Red Carpet. R ea l to r a 546-&;40 15 ROOM · k · SUPER 0 -1 ha 11 · 2 l't-hu1y deluxe reatllretl ror R<JI J\I , 81.'llruo1nJ>1, :l 5 Bedroom, 2 ba1hs. CI06<' to ing up 10 n1a [' 11 . •x:l t·r I n new. Hi> yl'ar buths, htll'lwood I Io I.Ir ii, shopping. $32,500. 847.0010. old home h1u1 !>t'auliful hand only $3.1,500. 847-601D. roally SllAHP. flan1-l<>-flnrt Roy McCardle Re•ltor oPE.NTJl t . 11-s FIA' ro Bf. NtC£1 ahttli!' carpeting, 1 a .r g e OPEN rit 11 •ITS RJNW BE N/CEi hon1e w 11 h hard-to--1100 1'!0 N port Blvd CM ma~ler 11ultl' with pnvetf' ~ll'. ~ P CE f I ew 548-7729 ., . . ~ 11lJi1f,rill ~:~~~~~ ~~~ o~fde pa~~ , RI o on Y $29,!fiO. * UNIYERSrTY-* ~ .fifiliHffiJ ~~~,~~· c=~.1aRe1~1~~: • co: rs . "4i>l!640. W WAL LACE PARK ,-,.,. Iha! Item under 150, U-y I . REALTORS Plush lnncl.'W·aplng, low nialn· t~e Penny Plnr her. I Sell Idle llem1> •..••. &12-5678 BIG 4 I --54Ml.fl- lenance, bcaulifulfy dee°'' Gonaral Ganarol MESA DEL MAR (Opt n E•• • ) ated adult occupi{'(I ttome. . n1n91 Many extras, 2 large B<..'<.1-This 1honu' ~ho1111· tlk1• a rooni::;, den, ilini ng, hurd 10 mndql. deep Hh/11( • rn111'1i v1• find single slory it.nd the br ick llrophu·f< hc11vy only one available . $45.500. MAC NA 8 lllukt• Ji'lof -J.iu·i.:t• kitcht·n c ALL 545-&424 Sou!'hC.0 with l~11llt·1n.~ Ranrh •tylu - ReaHm•. St-<> it • Call ltr(I Cal'pel , FIVE BEDROOMS ·3 BATH$ . $3B ,950 MANSION NEWPOR T LIVING RcuU orli, a46-K610. 5 + DEN + GUEST 3. H". · ..,.,,,ifulfy d.,;gned 1ntcr1or -hu~ muter -$65 500 huge wood·burntna !ii.. ' 11la<.."(' -prof~k>naUy land· AGENT 645°0303 ".""""· w"""lll ld>oot• A ''Attention Bullftra'' Five Unit Site! Old ho1.111e? Fix or tear down. Too good to mta at $17,950. Try irul}. onttnatloo! Won't la1t ! Aaent 64Q.8400, * 1' APTS. * , 2 BUILDINGS , INCOME $24,~ Out of Aro• Ownar AnY.lou1 FORTIN CO. REALTORS 642.5000 TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROU~H A DAILY PILOT WANT AD CALL 642°5678 shopping. ~r21 173.1 We111cllrf Dr., N.B. CALL 645. 7711 3 BEDRM SPECIAL $25,000 Lo\~ flo.,.,·n • Bia lot • Paneled !Ivins! rn1. k:ll11 nf mom tn .(tf'l"l"' -cxctll<-nt llnunclnit nv11ll11hlr • Hurry <111 'rhh1 ()NE! Ht'<.! Otrpitl, RrKllor11, -· • Beat Inflation OC!'llghlful 3 BR h:>mt. BUns, fpk, huxe U'\."t tkaded lot Ra.iAe your own produce!!! $1500 °"'4·n. Don'! walt ... call now! A;t-nt 66-3100, Dalty Plk>I \V1u1t i\d!I tu.ve ha.rpJnp. t:alnrr. LIVE W/THE PRESIDENTS Customized 3 BR In prestige Bii Canyon. 2 luxurious master suites, J>OOI al!ed lot. Fully landscaped. Q u i c k occur an cy. $96.500. Joyce tdlund 64U235. ( P37 BAY5HORE5 BARGAIN Use your imagination. remodel this 4Bll. 3 bath home. 157,000. Dona Chichester 642-8235. ( P36l WHAT"S NEW .IN BAYCREST? Ught, airy 38R home-FR-pool & patio. Exotic, planted solarium ba th in mslr. •ulte. $82.500. Jaoc F razee 64U!2.'l5. (P22i [Irvine I 101 Ooftt om. 141·1115 ll<U MalcArthut '"·1.100 $33,500 t.n.·1111•1 1 1•11 111111•1 !f't•1 .. l\n,"'ll I ltfl•l'L Th1-1 ~ liN1 nl!'.l111, 2 bltlh honu• !Ml• un nn I <t\t'rsirrd IC\•. R!'nuuruny lu,•pl ln11\1!t• I 0\11 -·~!11" IA lhr b(-11 \"lllUI" W1 11.- f)i.iCIJ.ldt' -tlun't m••ll 11 t'llll R r1l Carpet, flrallnr11, !o46 ...... T1k• f~trst dni" tn the' -w:::i" . .... tlllllY l'lk• 0...111 .. .i I Ad~ • C WAll<[H p, Ill lte•lhn su.M91 Opt"' f'Vf't SALESMEN---- AXXIOl':O: TO &A.rut ~11\Nt ·,· llif'Ktt ~11. bon- wi othfor fH• bmenL._, (',\LI. \il\N\', Ml~tn ! I i • • ' • • • • • I • l l • I •• l l . • l ' ' l ' . -·r. f ' • • • • • • • • • • . j I l • I • i ' " . . . ~ . 44 DAILV PILOT Tllundq, May 10, 1973 The Biggest Marketplace ori the· 0ranp Coast ~ ••••••• .500·52'4 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS i: I I , 1 J AutomlibilM ••••••• ,QS0 -990 loot\ A Motine Eqoipmont 900 • 9W ~,,,.,,, •••••••. 700 • m --"'w. ... m -ie "---· ••••••••• S'25'• 549 • • ,... and $upplM • • • • " • l:50 ..... . . .......... -••••• 150 ·199 • F"ll'IOl"ICitil • • • • • • • • • 200 . m ......i ••••••••••• 300 .. "' ......,. .... Solo • • • • • • lOjl • 124 lmt & fcund • • • • ••• sso . 574 Men:handd.e. • • • • . • • • 800 • 849 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad ( .6421 ·5678) One Cal I ServiCe Fast Credit Approval · . SdlOok ood """"""" ••• 575,·59'! -..w ..,.... •••. 600 . 699 llC11i4p0ilulion. ••••••• 9IS • ~ I I I ' • Gener ii _,.. .... General OUR 24T H YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provide DUPLEX -SOUTH OF HWY! Newly decorated & carpeted duplex -2 bdrms. each unit, \Yith garage for each unit. Convenient to shops & trans. $72,500 • DIRT CHEAP for $19,500. but cute as a button. FA ht. fireplace, shag carpet, and assun1c FHA loan. • TAKE ONE _,.. .... General ,Ge.neral • ,._,-.,../ ~<M-S-id ~ AlllASSOCIATES REALTOlS 2828 EAST COllST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF. 644·7270 * BUILD ON HERE * ... SECOND UN IT on this large corner lol. 2·bedroo1n house, carpet.s, drapes, fenced yard, in Newport Heights .......... •33,500. * SWIM IN YOUR OWN POOL * _,.. .... Generai SUPPLY LIMITED. DEMAND GREAT! General Costa~ ,- EXCLUSIVE "VA TERMS" EXOTIC HONEYMOON COT-ASSUME HEATED POOL TAGE on dioirable R-3 lot. VA. LOAN Huge family room, with -' $35,500 ""amed ceilings, ~. APPX 1/3 AC'l'E new carpeta, flagstone patio, Anyone can quallty, aeller I Probably the best value in waterfall, fruit trees, onl,y wUI carry 2nd TO with IDla1l the area, and only available $25 000 · down 4 ' at THE REAL ESTATERS. ' ' · Bedrooms, 2 balhl, Wxuriou:a large heated pool FANTASTJC "4 Bedroom, formal dining room. Covei:ed no:xt 1 cltr lnl 1"' bath, cul-de-sac street, patio. Buy quick, ii you're 0 a us m -grove. has CRV, $31,000. Better looking for lalye lot, and No streets to cross to reach hurry on this one. payments l~ than rent, • -; the gramn_iar school, B:nd THE REAL ESTATE FAIR can't beat it! CALL 842-93n. ,. • walking d'!'tanCe to high 536-2'lil BLUE POOL )•.': school and Orange Co a a t -· .._ • Coll•<"· Over '"ed 2 car PEACE & QUIET ONLY· $29 950 ' ' garage with room for work.' Large Two Stoi;y, 3 B'R, .2 Detinltety a fun oo'me flX' f!D. shop and you name it BA home on quiet CUidesac. tertaining ~ coverec:t Please phone now for an Immac cond. SUnken Liv patio and ·decking flllm>tmdl ''. · ·; appointment to view this rm w/UB fplc, low maint. beautiful 15' x 35• pool ' exclusive property. 546-2313. lndscpg. 2 Concret~ drive· Block fence 3 bedrooms, 2 • OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN 70 BE NICE! Wa)o'S • boat g~t~ • plus . . . 'baths, tirePlace. builtin kit- 4 UNITS -OCEAN SIDE OF HWY. minule of your time to know about this super sharp 2 story - 3 bedroom, finished bonus room "''ilh wet bar. 1'.1any, many ex- lras, 2~~ baths. So clean & sharp it "'ill be ·worth yuur time. . in this IB'x36' healed POOL. Great EASTSIDE location• Close to Wes tcliff shop- ping. 3 Bedroom, converti ble den, 2 baths, fireplace, plus ROOM TO ADD ON. 10% down -owner will carry 10% -2nd T.D. $39,500. Call for appointment. ~ huge 19x28 finished bonus chen with diShwa5her. One nn plumbed for 3rd bath. mile to beach walk to Great N_orth Costa 1'.tesa schools. Sellers ' purchued Homey atmosphere - 4 units on 2 full sized R-2 lots, overlooking expensive, individual homes. Lovely tree shaded courtyard-price $126,500 6 NEARLY NEW !-bdrm. u.•ils -Eastside Costa Mesa -handy to trans. & shops on Newport Blvd. Completely furnished -good income record. $95,000 Em/ and 7iR.a!3iv Ri . tJJno. 2407 E COAST HWY · CORONA DEL MAR · 675 3000 General General ****** * TAYLOR CO. * WATERFRONT-CORONA DEL MAR Luxurious completely refurbished 2 bedrm 2 bath "o\vn.your-own " apt. Rich cptng & drapes, beams, paneling, abundant marble & many fine appls. Adults occupied. Pool, great view, boat slips, sec. gate. $145,000. "Our 28th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hill s Road ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. ~910 General , General FOREVER VIEW-DOVER SHORES Elegant, lge. bay vie\v home: 5 BR. 4 ba. Comp. entertainment center around lge. htd. & filt'd. pool; locked wrought iron gates. $166,000. Lane! avail. THE BLUFFS -FOR LEASE Back Bay view. 3 BR 2 Ba. 5475 MO/lease CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytime 644-7662 General General TWO ON A LOT EASTSIDE FIXER T\\'O houses for the pricc> of $24,SOO onc>. Choit'<' Eastsidc> Ioctl· 3 Bedrnls. large R-2 lot, fan - t1on. Only $<10,000 Call Red 1astic potential, needs \VOl'k Carpel, Realtors 546-86<10 -priced ro sell -Call Red Sell Idle items now! Call Carpel, Realtors 546-8&10 642-5678 now! CLAS5IF1ED ...... 642-5678 General General WATERF RONT CONDO Beautiful panoramic view! Boat slip avail. To be so ld furnished. $150,000, Call for app't. Lavera Burns IRVI NE COVE 'S BEST BUYS 3 Bdrms., 2 baths, pool, view ..... $130,000 2 Bdrms., conv. den; rm. for exJ)an $119,500 Guarded area & private beaches. Edie Olson CHARM GALORE! Cape Cod -3 Bdrm., l'h ba. + lge. guest suite. Bright & sparkling. Lovely decked patio. Short walk to private beach. $50,500. MarY Harvey FRESH AS SPRING Outstanding 4 BR., 3 ba ., two-story. Drenched in sunshine. Has formal DR, FR. & large finished bonus room . $78,500. Gary Knox EMERALD BAY-WHITE WATER VIEW Tree studded vista. Steps to beach. 6 BR., 6 Ba., pwdr. rm_, lge. form. din. rm., hrkfst. nn., 3 frplcs., pan. lib., lge. play rm. w/ wet bar. Rec. comp. redec. Kathryn Raul- ston NEW LISTING LIOO BAYFRONT Lovely & immac. 5 BR .. 5 ba_ home on Nord. Panellng. Parquet floors, lots of <:harm plus room for large boat. $279,000 . Charlene Whyte au700' _..... Colctwell,Banker IEAlTOll - , loc. Woo t last • try $1950 larger home. CALL 842-9311. _. .. ::;:;,t.Bkr. Call 645<l646 tor COLONIAL • 10¢ could nlake yo u money on this home -just a phone call lo get the fefltures on this 3 bcdroorf'I, bonus. 6%% loan with LO\V, L 0 \V dO\vn. \\'"hy pay 7% 'lo lo 8'/i? Nice area, nice home, great price. $32,500. . * DELIGHT WITH THIS FOREVER NEW * Watch the boats by day and harbor lights by night from your living room. The ULTI· MATE in FEE ownership, luxury on-the- water li<'ing. 2 Bedrooms, 2 bath condo in prestigious CHANNEL REEF. Pool, securi- ty guard, boat slip available. CAL L FOR appointment, $95,000. * ITS YOUR MOVE INTO A LARGE FAMILY HOME * PRICE REDUCED-TWO STORY ... for the large family with a need for many extras. SEPARATE famil y room, 5 bed- rooms, .3 baths, LARGE kitchen with dining area, PLUS a formal dining room, two fire- places (1 in the upstairs master suite). Large fenced yard for lhe children . . . . $54,900- Newport Crest Condominium Homes, clusterfd about handsome courtyards, occupy one of tM few remalnina larte properties in desirable Newport Beach. Exactly rigflt for perma- nerrt residency or holiday home. Sundeeks, fireplaces, wet bars, Sun·Ute• kitchens, tuck-under double gar1ges. Heated swim- ming IJ<!OI, lighted tennis courts, saunas, thera PJ pool All ute- rior maintenance provided. A lastinr experief!CI In alorlous Uvlng! Two, thr11 &. foar bedrooms. BY O\.l·ner 3 BR on 65Xl35' _;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; TWO STORY comer. Heated 17X32' pool * JUST LISTED * 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, electric w/sHde, :lOX:<l' carport, lcitchen, d;"'washer, brick 14.'QJ' patio w/stce\ deck 2 BR. home on Eastside l' pl Bl k 1 roof. Rear yd blk fence & ire ace. oc ence, Ct:N· pool dbl fence. Ne1v roof & Zoned professional ered patio, pool size cul-de- w/w crpt. Nr. elem. school, G $27 ,5CIO sac lot. New paint inllde beaut. landscaped. All for eorge Williamson and out . Room for ·boat or nJ ,,. ooo 2432 s E Realtor 548.6570 camper. Real buy for grow. ~~.~ta· Ana Heights: ing family. CALL 842-9.Tn. 54>-2946. Prin. only. FORECLOSURE IRVINE RANCH 5 + GUEST This is garden living at its $291250 Best! 4 Bdrrns. imported &:lg;um carpel, 2 tiled AGENT 645-0303 baths, near park + recrea- tion center • Beauti!ul patio Built-in kitchen -owner l\1UST sell! Asking $36,000 Red Cal"pet, Realtors, TRl-LEVEL-$44,000 POOL TIME • ~om$65,495 UTILE LADY 54&-8640. Back Bay 4 BO, 3 BA, 3 Car garage, 3 Balconies, upstairs large den w/\\--et bar, 6<i:i assum· able VA loan, 251 PITI, 3 BR, 2 BA. $27,950. 8 yrs. O\vner will carry 2nd TD. new, lg fiO'x.100' fncd & , _ : Call BKR 645-6646 for appt. lndscpcl lot, beaut, J-I&F DESIRED Location. Mesa pool w/slide, lrg patio do you live in a shor? \Vhen you hear about this you'll know what to do. Exciting 5 bedroom, 1800 sq ft \v/carpeL~ & drapes thruout, FA heat. 9 Years old, for only ::. 131,500. . • COOL that's \\•hal you'll be this Summer \Vith your O\.l'n 3 bedroon1 pool home. Pool is healed & !iltcred, home just painted and ready for you to n1ove in. • WHY RENT payment on this 3 bedroom home is less than rent. Take owr VA loan at $200. a mo. Close to 1'.tile Square Park & shop· ping:. Large r e a I yard. Anyone can buy. Wm. McCabe, Inc. Real Estate 8740 \VARNER AVE, FOUNTAIN VALLEY * 842-4405 * Want ad results ..... 642-5678 General * PAY MORE? \\'.HAT FOR?-* within \Valking di stance to scb_ools and shopping? 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Has assumable VA loan-AU for only $29,950. AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES 'REALTORS . _ ••• , 644-7270 ;G:e:n:e:ra:l::::::::::::1 G __ •_n_e_ra_I~~~~~~ 'SKY BLUE HAVEN $23,500 You'll ~'ant IO see thi~ one, il's IJctlc>r thah new. The in- terior of this new home is so clean! It's heavenly! 3 bedroom, 2 baths down, large family room upstairs from Pacific Coast Highway, up Superior Avenue to Ticonderog1, and dlrectly to #IZ Robon Co>Jrt. Telephone: (71C) MS-$141 Siies Offkt opea dlilJ JO a.m., to 111nset. I \\IESTSIDE 3 bedroom home \vilh large enclosed yard,· new carpeting, n e w I y painted inside & out, and is a Like·Ne-.v Home. Submit your terms. \vi th bar~ fireplace. Ali MnrportCmt isiProtectofPldfic carpeted with . nylon shag. llC.,I Robert H G 111 "·-ati Corner lot with separate nc. • ri --OW. Newport at 32 x 40 boat or trailer area. General Contrldor Price only $41,500. Call Nov.· o 197J Pacific N.C., lite.. ~2·2535. Fai rview OPfNTJL!1 • IT'SFUNTOBE.N1CE1 ~n~~~~) i ~ ~ ~~ • ! ::::=::::=c::::::::=::::: I • • • • • • • • • 1,YESTCL IFF-DOVER Trees Trees Trees!;;;--;;:---;; New on n1arket • designed ' 1 DOVER SHORES for privacy freNlon1 ~1 A RARE YARD lull of trees space. Large' <1 Bedrm., fo~. including beautiful fruit VIEW ma! dining. large family trees plus a lo~ely 3 tM;d-Live on the ·Sunset Strip in kitchen. Xlnt ''U" shapc> room & oversized .family Newport Beach! A really honle surrounding a garden room home k>ca!ed ln Co.l· spectacular view from the for entc11aining. 3 car p;ar. ll~e Park. Ttus one , is beautifully furnished hl?me, A must to SC'C. For appoint. pr~ced at only $32,900. We ve the bay by day & by night, ment call • said enough, you better take all the lights of the city. A 00 E.17• FOR All a look. d cam a 1; c pool with 4 1 1 S4G-ll51 Open Eves. automatic '1iding root. 4 C M , . _ • . IRE.IS bedroom,, 31> bath,, tormal • • -dining room, paneled den. <&lfeb. HERITAGE Have somethinglyou \vant to sell? Classified ads do it well • call NO\V 642-5678. Genera l • -• REALTORS l ••••••••• Sell the old stu(f Buy tbe new Slllfl. General $24.5,0XJ. Furnished. REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 NEWPORT HEIG.HTS CHEAPIE' When can you buy a Newport Heights home at the best price ever? \Vhcn It's brand spanking oew! Wait til you see this one! Wow! Al $87 ,000 you "iU make the buy of the ycsr. 3 huge bedrooms with plenty of liv· ing rooms. Built for living and is it built! Presdgioul Newport Beach addres& Cell today for an ap- pointment to see, ~nn. BY OWNER 3 br, frplc, covered patio, new kitchen, 640-0166 or 640--02'l7. Balboa ISl1nd WATERFRONT lot, 50x80 wl?IJ' Boat Slip. 1'.take offer to Owner. 673-_,m='--- Balboa Peninsula DUPLEX-$79,500 2 & 3 BR., 3 ba. 2 fLPI. Modern & rcturbished 2~~ car gar. Act fast!! --GEM!-- 180° VIEW IOlll\I LOl\O\ ~· ! '1 ' u"') A disease that attacks when you discover that every third house on your block looks alike! REMEDY·: The un-tract, Corona High· lands and an extra sharp 3 bedroom home with pool sizW yard, walking distance to private beach. $62,900. tee. Cali 6~. Nigel Bailey . & Assoc. REALTOR QUALITY PLUS ~·/blUn S.B-Q, lrg. fonnl \."erde No. 2 yr. I:nmae. 2 !iv rm, din. rm, big kitch story, 2300 sq. ft. 4BR, 3Br\, 1v/bltin elec RIO, plenty of fam. rnl. Nr. Elem . & storagc>, big war d r 0 be Intermed. schl. Avail July. closets, w/w crpts & drps By Owner $44,950. 557~. firepl, fam rm. ' 1llage Real E st ~te MESA VERDE I' Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA, block waH yard & patio, quiet ,,z,••lJ _ ••• 0 residential area, lOo/,. down, - ( • .,..,) ~101 $31,000. * 962-8668 Fountaln Valley OWNER anxious. Spanish 4 BY Owni?r • beaut 3 BR, den, bdrm. Oose to schools & liv rm, din rm, 2 ha, SHOP shops. 2 baths. Dining rm. fplc, boat storage, tleJU" built-ins, d j sh was h c r , iwiaiticri, ili30i,950iii.i'36-iii7329iiii, iii! Family rm, !irelace. Rear Mr. Sproul will plan this big living rm. Nice yard. brk $29 950 duplex to please you! 3 BR., $32.900. 812-<;691. ' • 3 bath home. 2 BR., 2. bath OWNER relocated .. Lots of POOL-POOL unit. Drop by our office & trees. Good area. 4 bdrms, 2 4 Bedrooms, 2 be.tbs, Jovety see the plans. $102,500. (Be-baths. Family rm, fireplace. avocado carpets, drapes, low Coast Hwy.) Enclosed pat 10 . Gas hardwood fioors. Block University Realty built-ins. 4 yrs. 0 J d . fence, oversized Jot on Qlllet 3001 E. Cat. Hwy. 673-6510 Easy-<lll'C yanl. brk $37 ,500. street • hll8 everything. Call IWZ-4451. e CdM DUPLEX .-.,;962-'==8865~·="'""-o;o-;;- Anume 7% loon SEE-BUY·Movo Today TIBURON 2BR&den&lBRun!t LOW Down A""'" 1% loan. CONDO Walk to beach. $73,500 $269 total Mo. Payment. OPEN DAILY 1-5 ~t:ove In Today! Nice 3 BR. 1'.1ost in-demand Door plan. 2 BA ~-r lot N· "'l>l• 3 Bedroom, 2~ bath, two 513 ORCHID , \..Ul·1,.; • • .,.._ •' NE\VPORT MESA REALTY story. Large muter bed· Oceanvtew Realty 673-8500 642-&tll room, luxUrlous gold car- BY owner--Lusk H a r b or pets, lovely drapes. Ba1ck View, 4 BR, fam. qn., 21.i: Huntington Beach patio, 2 car ~09ed iar- BA, 2 frple11, wt't blir, ~U· 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, aire. It you are tired of cleaning oven, air cond, yard woric, fh~ la rftl tun HARBOR VIEW HOMES upgraded lhruout, prof. $215. PER MO. living. CAIJ.. -- JapanelC ld,.,... Catalina inc. laX•• It mahtt tee. $3!1). $28, 900. LOVELY MONTEGO MODEL 4 bedrooms, family ~oom, formal dining; carpets, drapes, super landscaping, covered patio, wood deck. LIKE NEW PALERMO MODEL 4 bedrooms, family room, formal dining, wet bar; up- grade carpels, floors. Perfect for your family. HARBOR VIEW REALTY B33-07 HOMES vi•w, $88,500 • ..,..._ tor >riovft ybu in, oellu ,,.,., VA NO DOWN . 3 Bed-.11, appt. aU other costs. 2 SR, 2 BA. 2 baths, bu11t1nt; ~ lRVINE TERRACE dlx adlt condo. New w/w won<abi• k11chen. formal Great family home. -4 Br1 2"' &liq crpts. Drps, 1rl kit dlnlng room, 2 car ~ NEW BE.ACH.FRONT-Ba, tam, din, uttl rm1, tM!W w/lll elec blUn appl's. New patnt oula1de. Lots of -crpt, 1enodcted kttc:htft.· SuP'i' clean Ii met. Gd. loc. 1rl!el; Walk to 1-"lft Points La Jolla, spectacular lwo La.tge.eomtT lot w/2 fena!d 'l'h1a: can not be equalled. Stiopplna. A chance to pt =· gt~~l .:cr:for!~ yard"· Prlndpab on I y , See today. the Jowest lnterW a\11.Uable. l<r u1. btachn>om w/fplc ,. ~1. o.m.r. 1, s.u ...... pun:llued - M.,.ican wt bAr olepo trom VERY SPECIAL, "'"'°· CALL 8CM451. ourl. 4 BR. 21> BA. Oull .... t .. hn" tMloot thb """1> ffl-4471 (: 1 Mf-llH di~ qua]ffy $119,0tll ttonaJ C..-H'8ftlands lwt-"'"J!~~'!!O!!!!!!l!'l~~ Will M. Allen Co. tm "'7 holnft aUll33 Dardltot«. "'v•'"•.,.. $1f -Camino del Mar, Dtl Mar. 4 BR.. tam nn din nn. ,..~' ,7.,. Ca. 114: '1!M16I (Coiled) OPDI SAT/SUN 1~ 81' Now-· -3 BR .l~ OWNER. BA. !!00. down Ill Veta, O<' Ir• • -.• ..a -$!B1. down .. -"'"" ltema >rill> -w DollJ Tba "-8" al "" aold. ~ all)'tlmo. O.•lfied, MMIGI. •• .&Q.57L S'X1TT REAL: Sltr'7m ' . • • HI -• Di It • "' '" "' tr Ct "' F R1 "" la .. M 10 c• "' " C( M ut " • " Fl ~ 41 "' M ., ta fil ta bl .~ c• .. b< i ] I'< IO M .. 89 Ml lo & Id Cf pl ho cl s. CJ lilt .. "' "' ta aJ • A OJ ' ,. !!! Fl ~ b •· h' 84' on u 2 Q' s: 01 ti l. B d n ~ Qi G R " b E f, ~ 01 " ! " F b 8 Oi 4 r F n .! 3 b I A ' - I =~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~n~-~-!' llof~lO~,~l~m !!~~~!· ~DAll.~Y!'!'L~OT~ i! -tw..-llil I -...... I~ I '~ ...... I~ I --·n•l 1 """"=" I~ I ,. ·· -·-le _ ..... 9UICK . I :!-;:'!""!!;;;;;;;;.....,;;;;;;;~_=_ ;;;;;_ l!ft.e! -Molllle ...... RMI I-lit ;Mo~·~""~ .. ~L~-~~~MO~l·~-~-~~Uflfu~~ .... ~~-~l~""""'~~"""""~~I~~-~ POSSESSION SECWDID IUQ ;jUR "" hie 125 . 1 -... ~ c911o -~·e" IMlll l ?'x,40' POOL 3 & femllY rm, 1!1 batb, : ... -...2....:...'111:.0 OWN N PORT D:;._~;:'f:.4= ~:~ 2ND TMt DHds MESA DEL MAR ~i:...-~ CU1$lot, pool· and fruit stone llrepl, w/w crot. 6 fl*! -· All OlalMd HllG lot, pri beach. Jacual, 6 "-tor JI.lo M Jot In !.qw>a. PRlVAT& FUNDS AVAIL. S Br. Clote ., C.M. Hltdl 6 Hat"· pr, ... tr ....... 01U1TOund Jovel>' drJ>s. loc. only II mlle to 11w windows. WlndJnr .. !'I poob. Puttln& areen. pOOl .. -Ally ""'-nt Dovll od>oola. $M. All< lor l400 Utll Pd. s BR, 2 BA. I 4 2% bath home, beach In choice Hunt. Bch.. lelds to fulh 1arden 6 toadl au ftll locahtd .in N&w· table A ao .btb. Adlts Only. . , .,, Jade Ptdc; npb' ~ w/dock · u · thruoul Ext...t•e ""''· ~'-"only '35.950. cl dllnil. Luse 11Wtr loom poet llollbla. POrlect tor no peta. $1S,500. Do Anza RMI llt1te Wantid 114 * Call '7M4N IKR. " -* 1525 . ·Belut. 4 + Den. J'rolc: use ol mlpon and tile. Im-CALL I. wllh -burnlnc !lnollc:o. '.J!!!n>e~~ lloya!M _ Wiale.i_1 NB_, ---s llEDROOM-t"baU..--dill pr -na1't.-1'11V -Jblo,..__,_ ;--eumA; &doil-.· ._.1'! &II ~. n._11T_ • O.t RETIRED man ,,_ to Ill' )'lld $Z!O bch . • tO'U lh•t enhance this '->me. -RED.UCED-tlJll · will be -,..m C11Ty lilllndJtC. ·Only SILVERCRl:IT. -:M """""""_,,,. 1-ne ttal Mwy w....-ISO, =·Calico~ e...,. Nli-VllW RINTALS C&ll today • New Ultlrig • 3 R00 ~ hanle tor your~ ~000. Call ... nn.. x 51 w:ierowdtd Ml)' OOl'Dtl', lltate. App-ox. $D:1 to .-t .. 500 ht or 2bd ~ iAKI and weekend.I or .,. _,. _ -'o'.U\'t'\u,t, 96MOJ. BED . M le ftrmal din-tamlly, $58,500. OICNnLt•ITIAMTO•NUi llght'flfOOd.utra..-...0.10 pw)M cuh. A18o mt)' be..,., ! DOllible, ~ vo..--.u - PRICE REDUCED Ing "'°"'+'"""'-. . .AS/i EXPANDQ Adult~ brtettStedln~aood WantlongtermU~ ·1~=.=--==-=:lmEBLUITS-Lo,.\y CBr, La Palma model, full.v ,,., ·--I s:.1 L." -· -project. Prefer 0....,.. Wilt•~ "'ft-.~· BUSINESS ..... Uve In thla 3 Ba. pool prMI. • yard RANGHO·LA .CU&STA· vroved, clooe., ->< _,6' DA. Oowily. Prlncipalo give Dally·-P.O. --· -.. 3 BR. 111 Bai-. maintenance $450 per mo. 1.<>vely comer Iot..betut1lully ~'!"!'"',;.,, ~ •PPI., show REAL 15"' .... e Call 40ll « as-174'1. ....~ Writ• Oalailled Ad Ooota M•oa. Ctllf. 112826 !300/mo wtr pd. -Mtable lat 4 ...., .,. •• 1n "'""""'· landscaped, IOW' malnten-~ ~ lftl No. w , D&lly PlJot, P.O. Morttat-, for studio ot small bullntu. s mo. minimum 01' 1J mo ance. Upgraded thnlOl!t. ROOM for BOAT 1190 Glllli>lyn It. ::::ZANT ~ Box-· Oosta Mtsa, Calil Tnllt o...ii 2'0 ·~'8 or iw&-n45. mu. IA-. Np pets. Avall Mirroted ~ ~~ Sharp 4 bedroom klcated en Oi-9473 w.o:ne Ill.CW ~ ,j Ga ' l BR:lal ~· ~~· 2 s.m. 11 3 5/26. 6tt Cl(C, tone areen ~·ag •-~-· c'->lce corner lot ideol for LUXURIOUS VILLA 51 · UT YOU"' MON crpt ~ -~ WATrn.rRl>N'I' • Priv. patio cathedral celln11. I Bed· boilt trail llrfck"tfre;c.liil "i;q "ll ""r ciw;;; 6 MAN ON ·• 9u1cl1 Cmh * P " EV Monrovia . 146-1145, .ldocklorupl028',..... room, 2albal thel'ect' 1~1d~che.n place:"°builth:·11< _!>albs. 2 prlvaey: oY.J..kinr mllea VACANT I bedrm, 3 b<th ....... fer Mt. 150 WU! buy your -All !~_ W100!'~ .. ~~_1'1 YOUlll SltHi2;6. boilu 11 t llnclBr, de~ llay, frt>lc. rocm::'· ~"' ' blodai to Edison Ht. Owner of beacbe•. marina A cando Ul50 sq ft w/mutu wtthbl ft. m...-'Call _... n w ..... -.. on we · t • _...., r \y . contmuowi: cle-= 3~· must •11. CALL 962-SSSL COaJtllne., t Tremendous alli1e 0 22' loll&. 1ormf dln, BUilDER'S AT?ENTION cub ISUS51 ' 9eCUl"ed2ndTNlt~on fount1ln VIOr/ =64"'>-<008;;-;;c:·:-=-.-~: Many extrasbe 10 • · k · 4 "'EDRM $25 500 bdrma., I batha. Seponto den ar lam rm, flretil In Choice --Twotln. Ap-~ o...,.,e, County reAG~eetate. IMMllDI •TE THE Blulb, bnnd new ' BR. , ures to acti. Wal to Illa • 1 ellttrtainlng center with fl'cJllt rm A Ira: kltcb. 2 car proved for 45 unita. SlGNJu.. MORro .i:. CO. "' 3 BA, pool A yard malnt. schools. CALL .968-4«16. Vacant for quick ~n. bar, located bealde Jae. bld. att pr, hute rec area w/ DANIA REALTY CO. <nC) ~106 OCCUPANCY eust: crpt Ir ~t, $600 mo. 1 1% 1ile bath, FA heat, w/w 6-filt'd. pool. A few of: the Olympic pool. Only $32,950. * &U-6580 * ~ C&mpu1 Dr., N.B. EnJo:i tbe easy We in this !st &: tut plus PX> dep, crpts, elec bltl.na; prage many extru are: central w/10% dn. 50 AC No ot San Francisco _ beaut. Tiburon Cond o 833-863.5. boat door. Flagstone patio control llahtin&:, wet bar, t If On blll W1beautlful Ocean lllOKIRS INC. "Monterey" model. 3d'l'°'BR"="'."on°"'w'"ai.r-,"'d'"UU,..,..--room- &: B·B-Q. Only $2500. down .trplcs., view patio areas; view, Call ed-2156 T?PRIVATE SCH 0 0 LT T I '=II! Bedrm, 2\.1 bl.th, wet bar, k den, 2% Ba, tt>Mil aourt. payment plus closlrig costs. freeway cloM! make• thll an ( -C I I Client seeking qulrten for ....... fwllnt air-cond. Xlnt concUUQn. swim poo11 be.ch lanilly CAIL 962-885L exoeptlonal bUf ti lllO,OllO 5S1•5111 · -J UJ•51H ommarc 1 ISi small, private, elementary Leu< Jllice ~per mo Inc. p0>t. Avall Sll5. y;, l'IN!ld. i --~ Property IChool in the Harbor Area. -recreation facilities, 87H334. . j(l)Y.(..... ..........,,.._ Ju1t on the Market C _._, Mar WU! cot11ld., lea.oe/l..,. HoUMI '•rnllhetl 300 larwln r11lty Inc. LUXURIOUS vu on -~. . _., llAM!oRVIEWHOME,CU. orona.... op-onlndlvidl!aJbomeor H14405 (24 hro) AnaaollCOW>e.U,.CBr,! "READ THIS" mo! model, rarclen cabana, Build to lull ., quaUlled what baw YoU· CALL General 6 BDRM on cul-dwac Just ba. Ganlenor. l<9t! mo, °" BROKERS INC. 494-5671 "4ff·1100 prof. lndlcp&, ro1e prden, tenant on vacant lot at JG1 SouthCo. Re&lton, 56-MM $XMl Lrs l BR. NI I tum North ot Mlle Square Park. $625 mo furn, 1 Small pet. Fill ...• 4 Bdrm + HOUSE of GLASS Loauna Nlauol prlYlte lotil 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba, ~~cn!:."'Wi~~ for APT Uni .. for lnveslment. ,.,.,,ic .... 2 ..: ybeacb: llownatalra hu I br, lrpl, y, le .... 1567--. _ ... __ _. • ._ ____ , tam. rm., v. rm., Commun-14 ·-"-bl Bier°' LocaUon: Newport Beach A I --•n• • utU rm Overal.ud lll'B&'e. • 30, Fam Rm + Spanish -.. -. HJat>. CONDO. 2 BR. 2 BA on GoU Icy au-•· pool. .....,. for cars a.-•. . Oosta -..... Unlta· ----teoced ·,.,..,. L&e Ill o!ect N_., ""'""' I P I • B • h ~alh celllnp, rouitto COlttle\ bltna; belut vu, ten-belt. Foe i...; by """" m.122S. pret.,..bly. <-30._,_!'!_u ~ i ~2 ~~· ~J' :" kttch l din nn. U-1n 2 BR -.,_ • 40' 00 • MC • adobe fireplace. Hu I e nta club. 10% ctn. $38.800. 169 500. 2l.10 Port Provence. 2 -ADJOINING lnoome Jll'OP' 1enerate net fl>ti.Na"*' n-$100 '.summ ~ 4 to·· haa lie ftnlahed bonus rm . 1rt yard, pauu, pr., " A" room, pe.tio kit-831-<1638 Wkiy 9-5 51SOO • A* tor ert:ies, cent. C.M. flS,000. come or have potential for br 3 Ba. rr:c ~ CdM 744 1q ft tncludtt 2 br' util paid, ttfl. Avlb. 5/6 a $27,500. wilh ""'8 fountain bar BEAUTIFUL 3 b' 2 ba I yr Tom H~!.i O< nltelY & owntr. &e-202016IU560. opeodahle lncomo. m.<Jl33 NU-VIEW RENT~S . dooeta, alnk, cu-: 6/1. $250. - UNBELIEVABLE BUY OF and view ot r a·m bl i ~I old borne. Full' vi.W of wknda: b'lll-4W7. Conclominlum1 673-4000 di.ms recreation atta.. Xlnt tor Jae 2 BR. Clean. Adlta. No pc~ THE CENTIJRYI ! . ~· Larp muttt ~te valley I: mountalnl. $37,500. Open m.. ll-5 Sat A Sun for HI• 160 e or family. $350 mo, ~ $250. Alto a 2 Br ~L $135. Just U.ted, )<Ou can't m•u l wi!h private ,,.th, Man-ma A1t 6 195-5688 CHARMING I lli] NllNJ!'!rt ·llHcll RENT or Leu< Option. 3 646-llm. 116-JOlll ?t1adern conveniences. 4 den views flowf,r gardens ' ' ' CONDO Park like IUI' n...... • S t a--qu~n l)drm'1. Huge paneled and ............. anl. Right out of Lido Isle· EaJiv An\erican home on -...M1.....:poo1 NB-3 BR 2 ... utlful 8luff1 BR,· liK BA. Condo. Bltnl, •n • ,..... ·-··, 'e11 lot. r-•--" ---~-• • • . . dlw, wahrldeyer, ntrta,1---------1 fam, rm. with mammoth "HOUSE A: GARDENS" * EXCLUSIVE * wood ..._....,_.,. • ....,. re-BA. $43,<XXI. Bkr. 673-5221. Small.er 3 Br. 2 be.., 1·1t,y. stove. New crpt le drps. Dbl QUIET ttrMt, S Br, 2 Bl. fireplace, overlooka fan· maa~. 6 Bk>citl to beach, ba modeled A Just like new. 60-3645. $315 Pa' Mo., yrty, $500 mo/ ear. Prtv Pt.tio $21!5 mo crpta, drpl, n.np 1: Nfrtc., taatlc 40' pool. Deluxe on quiet cu.1-de-aac amortl '00~·· ~~~ d~;o 5rn ~ 2 BR., 2 Ba., tamlly rtn. &: HUNTINGTON HARB 0 R lualn... IUllUDer. ~ ait 4 pm: · $!15 mo. MT..a1"93; MM815 bulltl.n kitchen. Bar. Full exclusive exec. homes. Un. Mqnltlcent. custom home. bobby rm., cov'd ~io, 214 PAClFIC CONDO. t,i blk to o,ertunl!y 200 3 BR., 2 be.. "Bontta," deluxe Unlverifty Pitk size dining rm., n I ce bellevabl.e price ~ $32,!IOO. SJ.70,000. , pr. plua area tor camper beach. Low down: 2l3: $500 mo/ytt.rly. Huntlnaten hach 1--....-.;;.· ._..-,.... __ I carpets, boat access with HURRY! JmpeCt today. or boat. $521,500, 582-293& ANIMAL LOVIRS BLUFFS RE.ALTY 6ff.ll33 e:.;;;.:.;; 3 Bl:>Aal ~ n~ • r separate 1~, near the BKR 96'l•SW.. RENTALS.· ~-m·er, Wint-CALL 4' 146·1.t14 DOG KENNEL, boUIJ. BR H l1" ti! pd • ~ •• /f -~1 G-·~" •-nl Park beach. .E-t .,rm •. NO GIM· ELEGANT 0' n woRLO _.. -~w ! Dupl•x•1/Untt1 lnC and groomtne Back l . OUle -.... u ' .. -, w •m-u n ·~........ Ml v. . MICKS .. JT'S FOR REALI ~ "' 1...... _........., . Hie 162 Bay • Best ol 'term• Alao CdM. I BR ~me .. r combo., cov'd ..... -· ... _ P8l5. .... c.u· eorly '96:h'l585 =ATE on qut•t drive. LIDO RIALTY llALTF . e CALL ANYTIMI e bachelor Unlta 11art1 IMS. !lo, flrepl, bltln1. Good 56><lll1f ~~~~netftre;~an~. 3377 ·V1a ,~rj,;,t. Beach Near ft••pert Pett Offlt• BF.A.QI DUPLEX '46-n21" Ive. 675-1127 Agt.. Fee. m-MlO. cond., nHr Edlnpr & Ce;O.iinifidiii1miiiiillliii"""~ii1---1 master auite with -SEE auper barhoi' vu Jun. ' Zoned R-3, 10% dwn, ....,,.,, HOUHI Ullfum. 305 Spr1....i.1e $261./mo. Unlurn. m tlreold• co...,...tlon """· 5 *JUST LISTED* bdnn. 2 ba, 1am rm. 1848 ::11 ~JI'°~·~ G•n•rol Call bale• H2-4471 or Cc;'°" M-;,-·;---·~··--·I BlgDedrooms, huge-sep fin The greatHt 5' BR. home Port Taaart, open 11.S S!!£! lBA, 2 br, · 2BA,' call Mn. 546-1103. ' l--'-------1 :;::'~~in. to='..~ :;_e~ ,,:../l'°c.n~" ~ Oceanfront Duplex 1" GW 615-4630 or 642-2800 3 lllORM, 2 baHI,-... 3 llDRDC!Mt 2 IN!hi walnut kitchen with all the now! 0n1y $132 500, Prtnc. only A&t 673-3012 Brom houM $215 per mo 2 c•r .. r, piOf, ...._. $25500 :!'~~t ~·1n3 = FU<IWa!ker'Reoltor . N rt Hal ftts B~~WNBe~.~2 ~lBA, eLlquorLlcOlfS.le RINTALI Bllln1: fl~pr-•• ~ w/ber .. color "· .., unusua1.' to fin~ a nice ganlens. Huge rambling lot Alk ""' John c.reJ.. ewpo 1 131,500. After 6, .~: • coin CINMn-lu•y Ai>li ln•tla Xlnt Cond. a loc. crofts rm, bllll1rd1/ home at lhi.s price. 3 Bed· with big boat rate. \'OU 968-'1287 7u4 * SPANISH * Caplatrono Beach. e Butcher lhop/Mkt Dupl••• AOINT HM471 or card1 . rm, puttlne roomi, clean ...... p1n1 Walk OWN mE LAND. NO ~'f.SfVE ~.2.'"'1rp"t 2 Swl• chaletw/SpenlJh motll. lntome Property 16' e lllclro Supply Inv Dn Holw 546-1103: Alk for Dale. green, MW arpto, MW to schoob and -·· 5 GIMMICKS. Just llsled, and °'"' w ·-· o. 3 BR. 2 ba, "'-m HOLLAND Buo. $1111 paint .. -· '321{,., l~I [ _ .... Hllftll""°" - lfll\l.\I I. 01\0\ , • I 1 ' ' 1 ;.' • . ' • . • l • ' ' ' • • ' ' , • ! l . t • • -• ' ' • • • Minutes to trwy. submit iJ~W:~ ~1,"1 ooty ~w..=rin ~ = ..-):1 ~ Ia<; yord, Dl!LUXI +PL&XIS 114Mll0 or 540--0608 eve. ~~· 1::~ eoeta M,.. 2~· 3 2 ~· ~·~· ~ mo, IKR 531.-, lerma . anxloua aeller. CALL · · $67,500. rnBol'ltt.vilROP ti) 3 Bl\(~) 2 BR (~) 1 BR 111i Oranae, Oos\a MHI (Pl dill "2',;;,._~ wlpool, C.M. uni., vacant. 2'1:;i;S57i-;;;·2;;.l...:lt.:.;•_· _____ 1 ~ $80" ~REPOSSESSIONS NEWPORT&J_tg REALTY * 642-7491 * • ~ '=. ~.::: ·~ eLAUNDll.Y c t cca _!_ BR baa all $145. A\ao 3 BR. II Tore I t --~ For WormaUon and location ·Walk to ahop'I a: • on HI COSTA MESA OFFICE rec rm i: pool. Kids/ pet&. I TOTAL CASH ot these f1IA"' VA oomea. BY OWNER OWNER. 3 BR. 2 BA. lam l~p;,.1 tacll Highway In Corona del --Costa M ... Newport Art. Fee. 9'19-30l. BRAND .,,. s BR.· 2 BA. MR GI,. take advantage of contact • Elegant 5 Bdnn, 3 Bath, rm w-FP, cul-de--uc, nu 'OPEN HOUSE 'Da.ily ].f).6 M•r. lde41l bu1lnt11 for Beach Hwttington' Beach. 2 Br. Condo. crpta, drp1, 11>': ·cUJJtte 'Ii·~ .,...,... low int...,. ' a .. uable. 3 KASAllAN = 7;i lrfr. :·=. ! lfstatioo drps, aHun1< VA ?%. 12132 s. Huter, G.G. hu .... nd and wlfo, Call $100 • Melor -Fun>. All Ba. pool • cl6b-. '1'111. . ..,,_ .. tlo,::PQOI i:m-por -'~~ Bedrooms, 2 batha, buU~n R • I E t t 9'2""44 etreet"ioca~' ~ 64&-l5l4 Sparllt1t1 lnv11tmlftl for detillo p ! T 1! util pd. Avail Ml. !W&-1405. month. 1111111 \• kitchen wilh dlshwaaher H 1 1 1 n. Cor BARRITT ' REAL TY 1110 • Nice 2 Br. Duplex. 4 BDRM $225 .-.. Sec dep. Hun1tl__, rn c ts drapes brick tlre: PURCHASE: OR l YR LEASE $l20,000. 67~21'1• S.n Juan C•platr•no p. ' Encl yard. Gar. Klds 6 pets~ + a"edit ck A ·ref.,· 85421 ;:.s.;.;;.: .;;.:c;;.:: pr.f: hi sunken '11vtnr room. 44>'. 211 ba, 3 car rar. 2 OUR IXCLUSIVIS 6•5"2 '42-4UI. Sl90 • 2 Br. -· -., 11owan1 Cir, -2i1R, 2BA. hlllnl\ cri>ts, drpr, 1 I hardwood noon. A real stocy, Nr. Beach, detalla TIUPLEX -111',000. Studio S BllDROOM 3 IATH EXCHANGE GIFT, Souwnlr lo Toy Store relrtr, lrplo, encl yord for lrvlM patio, pool 6 blue prlvL l charmer on cul-de-sac lot. call 968-0939 aft 4pm 2 BR. &: two 2-bdmul. Fun nn, 3 car pnp on beautitul Dalbo-. llland, lcidl A: petl. Gar. · ltue Sl& 1531-.n. j s.!ler transterred • rum. 3 Sl'ORIES. -" oceen 14 acre, 3 mlm. to Belt IW~Lol/wlll Be~ ' un1... no.ooo and 11 la )'oUrlf Good $240 • 2 Br. n-~. 3 BR. 111 BA. crp" drpr CALL 893-8533. lrvln• vtew. 'Bctrms .. ' bltlul $48.000. • 493-0038 ro':~ » U . Unill in season jl.Wt st:artb:wt 2'1'nl w/pr &: ?rs )'U'd, . 2 BR. 1 Ba. •••·•••••••• $2115 blt·lnt, .Rte room A paaL i LI DOS230R{!JJ TY Santa Alla · • 1tn~ Marine Ave~ 613-816 8 , CALL 8'5-0lll 2 BR. 2 Bttho ......... $325 $2!0/llO.' 5'7.f!91 llltr 1:AL ~· 54!H!6'11. . 2 BR, den, 2 bl, air CODd $215 ' ' GLAMOROUS YALE 33n Via Udo N'pl -2 YEARS .NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba. Sparllne lnv11t1M•t ICE CREAM " SANDWICH · LAGUNA BEACH omCE 3 BR. 2 ............. S2ll&lm 2 Br; -· dryr, .... Secluded garden entry and 6Ji.t3DD 1* VA, maey extras. Corp. PASl'RY. ~ _..tlon. ~ Ltsuna, Dana Point. 3 BR. 211 ba. .. sa110/3115/400 ~· = J.115. $1?.I tv.-o.story &lass windows ac· $33,900. Sandpolnte Tr. Nr. 6ao5662 Good oppor. J!!1 miente, Caplitrano 4 BR. 2 b&thl .•••••••••• $195 • &pm. f=~. ~ ::.~ ~: Minion VIII• ~31<,i;' Plaza. Owner e fixer Trl-plex Ji46.ml " 567-™S ~· ~=x.1·fvr'.=:: ~ ~r:;.';;.;'.'.~~~ Lae Nie' tts inside ba!cony 2 tire-BY Owner, 3 br, Alim Villa k Territ!.c trio! Houae plUll ESTABLISHlJ> Gardenlnc Pet ok. t BR., !am. rm. 2 bl!bl:; NEW, beaut 2 Bk. 2BA, no- \ pl""", formal dinJi,g, larae Condo. Plen B . Appnl Unlv1rolty P•r dUplex. Needs point •n ~ .. ••.~....-.cneta Mesa f190 _ -2 Br, .. tlo. pr, Turtle Rock 1ii!h .... $115 atop btqalow on loll close ts, lots ol storage and 837-00TI 3 BR 4 ATRIUM. poUlh but what a value at ....... .,., --8081. bltnt, ddld/pet. 5 BR. 2"9 ha. , ,,,,, $3151J95 coww. llr'fplact, wet bar, a park loc'.!atlon. $63,&KI and Newport luch Community Prtvileies. Prin $39 oot) Good spendable w1th Money 240 $275 • Block to Belch, 2 Br. We Havt Summer Rental1 prtv patio, SS75 mo. --- ' -==-= $78,950. Hl.gll.-«1...a·hlll, ocean view, custom 4 BR t BA, H&:F pool home, 3250 1q f t, rum· pUS l"D), aep laundry rm, Iorml din rm, 2 kitchens w/ alt uperadtd appl'1. One or a kind • plenty of privacy. A must to see. ExccU. dee· orotlng. )<OU own the land. clp&)a only. By ()wner. ~ ~. Call ,_, WILL lo Loi• ~':"::; ..... , relr1J. , red h·11 betwn 9 6 I: tit 5, '9f-2981. i .. ·. red h·111 B;~--~~~~.2~: 56>-8639. TRADE. Broker 66-MOll. 1 t TD L $21111 -NowSBr,2BaH-. I Minion Vlale 129,950. ,._; .. DANA rorm;1!,950. S 08 ns ~~bl pr. FllDIUy/ SBR, 2BA '°"""• •ncla&d tt· CUTE BEACH l --l[I l'I DupJu $55,950. UP TO 95% CALL 491-9481 REALTY :~ ~.=r"'ove"':.'•~{:; ' coTTAQE ™WEBBt>leX ft~ .. -·-~950. 2nd TD Loans * LANDLORDs * A ClomJlllll' With v•11on aw1m pool ... tvl. $Ziil. 9 doora to Ocean. Llrire ~• • ~•-· FREE RENTAL SERVICE Univ. Plrf< C.nter, Irvine .;830-0811~;;,.:.--,.,..,.--,,~ REALTY lf '6Z.4471 ( :::: ) """OJ A Company With V1lkm Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime, 562-'lSOO Office houn 8 AM to 8 PM ;.::. ·~:.,:::· ~ Molille 1tome1 ~~Ewt~i! ,-./~ t!:~ Lowest,., .. Oronv• Co. YEAR 'ROUND ~~~~~ i'owftiiOUle Untum. w outl N"'l w/w ~·-· For Salo 125 per mo. Own<r $87,500. Sattler M!f. Co. 2 bedroom + d"'. quiet Huntltllffn .... h 4 car -· In Id apt ....;.;;c..=;_..--- 1 • 1 5'8-a695. 642-2171 J45.0611 cul da aec ........ $21111.00 WALNUT SQUARE '""'' -· Mur.. Matar Home Rentas WANTED by private party 4-Serv!na lllrbor ..... 21 !'1'1· 3 Bedroom • bmd new 4 BR. 2\1 ba., .......... = 1 • ' BR. ---· 1\1 TDWNHOME =RT PIER REALTY 6 unita. Fix up-OK, -DON'T BORROW In CdM ............ S<00.00 l ~ ~ ~"i);,i""" .Ba. Bltna, cri>la, drpo,....,. Bio SUR * Plan "A" · the "'°"' deoJr. 673-2008 SALIS a LIASINQ Eventnp. 'TIL YOU CALL USI 4~· Spyal&a iiis,oo e1u11a, NJI. '. .... ".".~ .. SClli Ned patio. ~ * able home. 2 Bdnn, 2 Ba· LIK£ THE BWFf$7 lull aervlce taclllty Loll for hie 170 Borrow on your homa equity 5 8-tt ·~ 4 BR., bl, T.l\. llllla .. $115 '.'!!!" -n FRANCISCAN FOUNTAINS u,,....ded mar CllJ<l!lnl, Da Motor ff tor any &ood purpoae. Serv-v•-• ·-oo 3 BR. 2 ba., furn. ...... $400·1--A.._D_U_L_T_S-_L_l-.-.1--1 ... forma1 dining rm, sep-custom -· central a1r • llllar omes VIEW LOT 1n1 i... Ana•leo County tor -........... ... -· s BR. 210 ""' .... ~ .... SS!5 '""' t arate family nn plus t lar;e eond., custom · landscaping. EMERGENCY! Tranaferred Fabuloul View ot Bay II ovw ~ years and NOW ln ~ Lldo.lale tum.00 . 2 Br. 2• bL carport f250 bedrma and sundeck above Pool. owner muat rnoYt lmmedlat· 511 6800 Ocean. Spectac\Ur nJ&ht Oran1e C.Ount:)'I • . 3 Br. 2 bL Ill', $300 ....... This one won't last, 129.900 by ...,... " 551·Ulll e\yf MaJestlo ' BR. 3 BA, --""""~·==---1 time ........... Bu1ld """ sr JNAL MORTGAGE co. LANDLORDS! REALTOR hurry! Only 152•200· CALL . BROADMOOR • plua "'"''"" rootn. Sn,IOO. HEMIT Dream Home on lltltl tlO' x tn'1 l!66-0llJ8 we Sl>ecltl!U In Nowpm D~lexM 'um. ; 847-85.ll or 846-13Sl nrRTLEROCK <You own the land.) Attftc.. 10 x 45 1 BR w/covered 92' lot. Wtn caftllder yacbt 4500 Campus Dme, N.B. Beach e Coroaa del Mr.r e \ 1 2 1tocy, 4 br, 1ep. rlin nn. ttve "'1na. V. E. Howonl .. tlo on xtro. lrtr lot. Adlt In port. $67,lOO, m..l1K " 1-na. Our Rental Se~ Newp!lrt 8-h · IEWI ~23811~:.;E.~i: • }J~?i:~ &!!:~~i£ Dift~~~~: A~5~:i.~:R~ ~::11;:;~:: ~~1r:~~~ '~::,W;a1~2~ • , ~ --Mount1ln, o...rt (21') ·..,son 110 4 e:OROOM*,1241 2 D1y1 S.I 1900 N""ll DuplnM ulllllm. iJi LITTLE RANCHO MODiL HOME Alklnt $12,SOO "12 . VIKING lllDllly park, llllOrt 174 on thb large lot zoned for e BY OIVNER • (N-• ......i llotbwll 21xtl5, 3BR, lull &wn\nrl, CWSIPllD ADS I • t h heme about 2 L"'""' hach · llallooo li11nd • units there sits a cutdlttlc· 4 BR 3 BA + bonus rm, BALBOA BAY l'RDI', ,_Md nn. xtra lrg li>t. 2.14 VIEW Acr'as, nr Palm mll11 le the beach. ll!O _ 1 BR••. 2 bllao ~LEASE _ Wa-nt. Pitt. . " 2 BR "°""'· An)<O•• can parquet fin, mag crpt, ctN * 6JS.7420 *· ' maey xtraa. See ., apprec. =· l3IO Dn. C<l1ltract. FOR ACTION • • • Immediate HCVpancy. Blb>a, ..,;:;i. Small -New s er, 2 Bl. Ill aleo. I quality. Specull\onidrcaml pott2,_auto1 p rlpalsnkle~.~.. 188-2212. . ~·~$1100.~ CALL 642-5678 mt. per month.1m . Secluded 1 Br.~. J4211. 613-3131. ZIA Grsnd 123.500 161,ow. Princi 0 '"'' STIPS TO OCIAN Wanl Id rtlal" ..... 6'a-5618 ~-· -...... -rw•• AQINT, 146-4141 So. L1cUna-Bltoa, pr .. Canal. for PERFORMANCE 838-2616. 2.Sty. A·l'nme. I Bl\. 2 ba. tlcck. c"'o.-=~..,'91,..,....,Ml:-r---I . 847-3584 BIMna. Wille to baaoh, CONnl del Mar $Z!O • 2 BR, 2 BA Condo. Dbl • OWNER leavlno< ...... Ono ol L•t•n• INCll """~ .. !!!"~ "5.lllO. . • S@'O~~-f)-Cf}s· . • OCEAN Vu Homo. Fully ., ... On &oil ooune ......... NICE 2 Br -..... heh. • the bett. 4 bclrms. 2 bathS. CATWUUU RIALTY 1-' "fr1 ~ m&IJrt'd pool cleck tum Nlauel. Aval! June lat. RIO ·Mo. • Lalxe co"""'1 patio. Brick ... * 541ol2'0 * SBR. ~ 2 irpi.. Wuoor: NU-Vll!W RENTALS Call titer epm, 64M4!9. BBQ . 'Dlnln1 rrn. p , ' I ' ThaflnfriguingWordGomewithoChuckl• dryer,ttfi1r.Jcepr.Cpt1,~ "' -Huntl ....... rn dlahwuhet. 'Fa'mlly rm. ~= t 1 1 1 , ----'-~ ~Cl.A' L POUAN -----drpii. Liit ~mo. m-6&35 L .. ·-· Hlllo = rear living rm. bric 128,950. _ _ BEACXlN Bay n.tt -2 + O -ot tho -· -· RITAI L STORI gueat rm + IOI. -tor 2 1'"'''°"'' b'~ ' d •· 2 BR, 2 be. lrplc, P!'r. !300. NIW 2 lllDllOOM o\VNER boulht new borne. COMMIRCIAL -5:1' boats. dble pr, ttnall, Jow :"f0:0t~ "':jmpw:' .!x';. per mo. No pell or CNJdren. NEW World • 2 Br• den. 21 1 Bath tr!doMd ~ranee ~ 4 bdrmaFo, s J'~';'· OFFICE ~.,:'·Am~-D U E L A F i,'il ;::, ;;J: ~ 6 ~1n\'."~~~~ ~4~-~'J!~. ;;:_Ch~:~ ltlt~n ,.,;;; . COAST HWY. HARBOR V 1 e w lltM • 1 CMt1 -Leena N!luol 11untl;'B..ch. ~· built • Int 6 dbhwuher. 25• Front plus l·BR. apt. M-. C Ill', 2 Ill. FfR, -~=-~11o L • d .. _·view 2 D/R. ~ •tc 100 LARGE, lovtlY, m"1, ex· NEW Se1 Terr. townhoule. 3 zKT ace. ..... . arg Beaut. eoor '""'"" • uw.....-, • , • tr...' BR. 1 BA. ·-Uy Br,-.111 •• , balcony,, 2 ...,1., ta nn with oonveratton G&r. + 1tuc!k> 1n NIJ', Ex· ,;m-:.:;:=•=:-· ,,,......,,,..........,.,...., • ..... ft 'Pe.nonnuc ~.- pit. brk$49,900. MtHStl.I. ~anda_ble . U00,000 HAIUIORV!n-..311l',2 P 0 II 0 H i' rm. 1336 mo. MMm a dbl pr. .":~I ll•I OWNUt movful. Lota of W/~WW, f:llcfuret. J.nv,. ba. tam. nn. tlv. nnt dln I 7 p.m. w, ~ rec. ·1lv. ApmtrwteiW9'llllll ....... bdrma, a balhs. •n ~. 8 yn. thla ........ Jar, yd, ,. ... "8,500. I )~BR.~2~B~A,~·~-i·~d~hl~ru~.I ~be~·~~~h.-~~~'~1~5=";4~7 ;,8~1;;~;E:~·~;1 Foml4l rm, freplace. Fol'-Sl2S. • Bob Y°""' Ml ll03ll bloclc wait Ienco. Newly ""' w mal dlnlilg nn. Bullt·lnt. -644-2430 . OCIANPA&rt I I ~I • decor. $Ziil. -· Nwport hach Apto. l'urn. '60 =· 1:1':!nt, ~'.":~ -r:. SP'ICT A CU LAil lltlJ>lcx, o w o" I a I • n t t-ir-T_UT"""E.,' 1 __ srr-i· ml::.:..'!"' J:! ':M..11. SllalARPI blt-'~-~Bcl\., 2 ~Bl~~ Qenarol ... -11•owooo .. •111. 6lH2tl8 I I I I' A llnOll --h whet. 114M211, "1118611 ~-•• .. -......... "-""-;..;;... ____ , ">-.• • r BAYCREST-il>ltra OMn ~::;-~-:;:-~·~....., ewryliodyknowtwhootcredlt -~·-l330 Mo. n. SWmGER'S ~ ia. O~ER ........ Pool i.>m<!. S BR, 2 BA, w/oceon Yl<W, I ~-, I Ba~-h~,.. .......,. •-·-MESA VEllD!C 1'11 ....... 4 4 BR 2 BA FIR DIR a 4 1tdrml, 2 batha. D\nlnt atrium, le tormal din rm. ~~-• d'::.':. -,....·.... i h ,,.... and 'llnow -bn'I. BR. s BA. bltfta ~ner trpl • u • .....! ,., ;. ___ • month, on< "'""' Ill U·~-,....,._ tpl S d.claJ:i.-A --·-• I C H I $ Y P I .,. ~ u~ ' · c. ~~ n -·~· utilities, on lhc Clnll wtth mt, fU bu •~•· ,....... c, o1 ' -8jl . 115,IOO HI Mil 1--r'""T· ..;.,;;;.,.;O"-ir-l • e'lft"" &. ----' = -· mo. ' 841-6417 Ot' (l!Ul m-4121 . &II• tor 40' bool CU Patio Sbacle trffl, Im-tum. ..... . --I I r I ~ -,,,_ U~• ·~•n• I-~ .. ~ .. ~ • ma..ia.. co>ldlUon. b r k chn>rn<o, -· A I k h I ~tllo _. .., fl ... In tho --~ •~w~ ~rm, -~. "aubltue ollp !or 111.00 1 1.11,llllO. -· 117,lOO ~ Opon Doi-_..... ..__.,_._,._ -'-'-'"· -'· JOO --lt... "'P No. a i..io... .,..,., Aftll lPl>l'OX. Ma, 5 BR, I BA, F/R. DfR, ~ month. Bltr. m.'11111 ly *•~· * 15th. 613-4'!06 ynl. Pool prlYL llutor VU iillooa loland AllY'!'I 6% VA . •-nu: BIG ONE" BAY!!llORD • OWNER SMALL 2 Ill' -wlpr, limo. '511. l3W894. 3 1111. 1-..,_ oo -.;.:; C Bl\. cleft: blln -4 -· I BAtll J'unl4' E. Utlt St. 1163. lncld Pl 6 THE Blttlll -New J Br, 3 WATEIU'RONT, I BR. WI =="'" pol'k. -..,_ to din. .,... 2 1)11. -· !!:• -, "TTW ...... f45.-048I Ba. l1llllm> den; $415. Loua. -· _ ,,.,..plrl<I-., JtlY, t10 •l!IT MllT. BR. -w/pttt. U••-a -~ I BR. -..... M32 MMmll-. South Baytront. RIO CA" ... '"S ba., 'on -llldJna -S _, •• ~b••t N""'°' BIYd. $Ziil. tpt>. SILllU' 2 Bl\., I Bl, llbtlla. ~l BR W/BALCONT 1 ~~~7-:-d-~~·1-IO .-vhw -._11y_ l!i6W iw&-lllOI ~ All bl-lno. cup.,~ PIO. .-i,. Clll ,, u,. Jill! I ,,_ -· ~ ~~ •-aOCOn 700 YOtl'D llnd It In C>iiiiQ pool mi Mo. SG411T. -· ---Raid' -~--...... ...,,... ---:"'" --.·.=. -- -• l i i • t, I f J j • ) -_. ~. _,,..,. .......... ,_ . . J • ' yw • \ rn....ia1. May IO, 1973 ·!~I I~ '~""";;~··-.,,.,--;;,;!~;;I [ Aoon~nut0<Re« I~ [ _t_u.,. ... ll!l [ A-'p"'t-'1.-'-'F"-ur;..;n;;.. ____ 3...;;60 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfum. ~ trts1ructlon •• Apts., 0 '11ce Rent•I 4.a Socl•I Clubs S35 Schools & Sc:hools & .' 3atbo1 Peni"1ula Balboa Peninsul• Costa Mesa ~~-"_rn_._._,_u_n_1u_rn __ i_1_o __ F_u_r_n_._•_r_u_n_fu_r_n_._3_7~0 l ;;;;~::;;:~~~:;::;;;;;;l:::~-;-~-~-~~-,~~;;;;;-~';;..;;..;;.ll~~ln~1~tr~u~c~t~lo~n~•i__ _ __:s~7~S'.._li~n~1t~r~u~ct~i~on~1~--~57!5~j PRESTIGE LOVE WQRN OFFICES Dliu:ovPr Ol~Vf:RY -Costa Mesa $25 WEEK & UP BEACH LIVING e Sieoeptng Rro1n)C FUN & FUNKY • Homieketoping Houn11 I 60G \V Balboa Blvd. 3BR. 1blt. I • Ocean Vl('l\· AJIT~ fWO!.untatcs ok, $350 wun.1al BALBOA INN !St•. tall r-.trs. Gill, 675-4630 · EL PUERTO E~A - Fountalfi VlUcy, -Beiilull· PROFESSIONALS 'in a Neid ful new bu4dlng, growul of A1nalt1ur f.h1.tchn1akers. floor, 3,000 gquu.ro feet, (h~~t.w~ (213) 387-3393 \Vill divide lnto smalleor ,. Would To Travel You Like Work In A Agency? 150 h1nln l'trC'Ct j ur IH:Z-2l!CXI. Broker. GT.i-tl740 ! BRA.\!D New Oceanfront PINIClllK ll'tll ., Tf ITI UMI: •.. offices. 50c per sqUllre T I S40 root,----lncludeg e&rp&ta,-ra'!e drapes, an utilities, janJ. '11)-R~,-,-.-,-,-,ud-io_a_pt-.-.-k-~-ly·• tor serv1ce. Call Marilyn tw·n. Italian Riviern {nr FRESllLY furn duµlt-x, 2 1 (Ollfl11u1lniu111. 2 Or, 2 Ba. OR., 2 BA, fph:, lgc patio. I S-IOO/rno. \'ear J e a s e . &Cl"Ofil from ho:al'h. Avliil til 6t"r76'JI Junt' 30 at S:!W P.,.1' mo. 38-H-. -,-EL-,-.-,-,.-.1-.. -. -... -,-,h-&- 644·1517. j Bny. Like Nc11: $325/per r;. ... '00 t•ll l!~f~ ~"a 10 •l!f,,m, "''tn "'""''l.111, "~~tt J 1 ~1~""' ~~11111~ lo• )v~r ~ll·•~•Qu\ "'w I· or FOR BETTER· Q- Stovall {7141 832-5440. PortoUno) Refs. 49'.!-8988 mo.~3. Costa Mesa I 1----------Corona del Mar Casa de Oro ALL UTn~tTI ES PAID Compare before you rent Custom designed, fcaturin2: • Spacious k1h:hC'n ~·lth I/lo direct ligh!inl; e Sl!parate din'r. area e Home-like s1ora~t' ON TEN ACl~ES 7 b~G•IU.l'.D UIJllmtlll. :.-111 I t!~ ~k. l1om i 16~. lurn1tu1~ ...... 1A~''-1.ton .. 11 ooeft !I oo !-•-00 ?JOO f•ir~oc-.w I!(!, r ~''• r,•,,, l·hont; 54~ ?JOO. DELUXE APART MENTS , Air Cond • Frplc's -3 Swim- ming Pools . Health Spa Tennis Courts -Game and Billiard Room. • 1 Mi. to Beach e Sun Decks & UNION BANK SQUARE Ir--=------. ORANGE' I Lott Ind foind j[g) 2000 sq ft modern ollice bldg, \viii divide. All scrvices. !~;;;;;;;~~:;:1 Carpeted, panelled. 6 thp floor . Sacrifice sul>-!ct Iden! Found (free ads) 550 for insu rance offi~. Call ________ _, __ I (TI4l ~7-0039. SOMEONE out lhere lost this FOR LESS . big fatty -~'here are you? SPACE available, Co st a tr your lost cat is a fl1esa super--si:ze black n1ale 1\•ith .----------.!WALKER & LEE BLOG. \11hi!e paws. \\'hiskers, chin, lnvesti9:1te Our Shori Courst Taught By Orange County Travel Age nts •••• Class Convenes May 22nd 3 Nights A Week For 14 Weeks Call For Qualification Interview NOW l • Private t1f11!1os I Apt~. furn./unfurn. Lease O Closed garage 11·/storage I FircµlaC'e I pr!v. patios. • Marble pulln1a n l"'ools Te nn is Con~nt'l Bkfst. e K!nA·SZ Brlrn1s 91"--0 Sen Lan, C<tl\1 64 .. ·2611 l Bet.lrm. From $165 2 Bedrm. From S205 • MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE Patios • Carpets, Drapes • Loads·of Parking e Garages -Pool e Rec. Room 2790 Harbor Blvd, 11ai:bor at lll'Ck & chest -please 'Call Adams, 1'"'irst class dehn1:c 644--8685 suites including air .. 1nus\c, ],M~A~N"°'·s"'=o-.-,.-.-u-,-,.-t-c-h-. -1,-<1-;,-, car~ts, a~ple parking ~II Elgin 111a tch, ladies gold service. c;a.11 Gene Hill, ring ,vifh stones. Identify. 642'""°200 I 557--0136 Turned in later part 1972. OFFICE sP11":.> for rent. lluntingtou Beach Police Newport Beach, \Vestcllff Dcr,artment. Limited To 15 Students Airlines Schools Pacific • r>ooJ -Barhci.;uc>s . sur-4 ~fncAr!hur nr Coasl Jlwy/ i All UTILITIES P'AID I '& 2 BDRM'S. rounded v.·11h plush land· 2400 Harbor BloJd .. C.M. (7141 557-SO?ll 610 E. 17th St. sea ping. Adults. No P{·Ti;, LARGE 1 BH. $Ul5 JUST rt•d(•c. 2 hr, pool, RE1'TAL OFFICE 714/646-6505 Furn. & Unfurn. Avail. Santa Ana 543-6596 365 \V, \V1lso n 612-1971 LOW WEE-KLY RATES Executive Suites bl!ins, dsl11vhr, 2 patios, OPP.N 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM ntiu!ls. $225. 673-1418 eves. or wkcnds. More Room-Less Money oc="c~.~A7'-N ~v71c-"-.. ~N~c-,.,-be~a-c~h-.1 COME see a real garden Ne~·ly decorated 2 Br. real apt! Like living in a home ' I bit I · I ~''"" for $1 62.50/1\10. 2 BR, l~ 1959 MAPLE STREET, COSTA MESA Also Garages for Rent Apt. Unfurh. 36S area, 1,000 .sq. ~J .. sh¥P· ro=u"'°"N~Q~,--.,,197=0-cl~a-ss-,~;n_" __ call Gene Hill, 64---0200. Technical Education Center Business Rental 445 -p!casc identify initials. ------------I Blue stone. Vic. Garden 35 IT. OF oUice or store Grove Pa~~ -.. ,_.. . ~. ..-... ~. 7080 Newport Blvd. rp c, ns, poo pr1v . i>.IM.I. Lease Adults. 644-0810. BA. 2 prk'g places, priv palios & rec areas. Wilson 3BR 3BA, firopl, bltins. Gardens, on \Vilson St., w. \\'/acCC'pt si n g I e 11 or of Harbor. No child./pet. irontage, 145 E JSth St., • I C.M. Approv. 2000 sq ft. at FOUND: Vic. Bushard & 28c sq. ft. Can d1v1de. C.J.S. l\1cFadden, small golden Real Estate 548-11~. brov.'n dog, snlOO!h haired. N"!woort Beach Rentals Instruction Costa Mesa 642.261 I STUDIOS & I BR'S e FREE Linens e FREE Utilities e Full Kitchen fan1i lics. $365/?.10. 675-7977, 2283 Fountain Way East 409 l\tar igold, Cdl\1. 64&-2846 EXCLUSIVE BIG CANYON SEPARATE bu ilding + gar. ~9IO.S~l~t bark · Sc~ools & . Carpenter • llea!ed Pool e Laundry Fal'ilitiPS 2 BR. I BA, 2 blks to Little 2 br trailer, no pets, no Corona. Lrg pool. $220. Dys children, $130 util pd. Mr. Bnx.'k 546-1600, t>ves 646-1809 833-3227 --~-------· luxury Golf Course Apartments NEWPORTB~I $475 -$730 Phone 714/644.0509 Rooms 400 ATTRAC room w/ or w/o kit privl's. Business \\/Oman I or teacher. Non-smoker. 1000 sq rt panlg, crpls. ar1j ' 1nstruct1ons 575 husy corn e r. 64~2020/ GERl\1AN Shep/Dobennan:--------- 642·6560. mix, friendly, f cm a le , Ebronix OFFICE/Store nr. N'pl. yi:iung, us('(j collar, no la~s. Tutoring Clinic ------1 ALL TYPES CARPENTRY LargC' or l'>n1all. 536-1648 • TV & n1aid S<'IV avail. e f'honc Service $30 WEEK & UP e Studio & 1 BR Apts. • TV & Maid Seivice Avail. • Phone Servic~H!d. Pool • Children & Pet Section • $120 Monthly 2376 Ne\11por! Blvd., Ct.1 548-:.17'"'.>5 or 643-3007 Ari Good For $5 011 Rl'nf 2 BR, din. rm, rrplc, ne\v crpts & Urps. $28."l/mo. Cali 1\1r. Beals, 556-8790. 3 BR, belo\v h.igh"•ay, fir1>lc. stJ111dcck, gar, adults. $285. 67.1--1418 l'Ves. or wkends. l Alt $1 &"1. Close 10 park. Gar. Crpt. d111. Cal !1t1r. B<'als, 5j6....8790. 2 BR. $2G5/n10. Crpls, Urps, e 2 BR. Exti·a Nice-e Gar. Ci·pt, dl'J'· Call Mr. 2 Bn. Ne\v pnin!, crpt.~. drp", Beals, 5.':16-8700. pool, BRQ, lndrv rm. Nr.1 2 BDR1\1 !" . ho ' be •h Ad II $169 ! 'pa 10, garage, VICW, s P g. uc · u s. · 1 516 1 ~ Larkspw·. 646-2575. -~1-8475 or 673-<»1"17 * SUS CASITAS Co.ta Mesa FW'll Bachelor & 1 BR'S. --------- Mocirls Open Daily. Zl.JO Nt.'\l'JlOrl Blvd .. Ci\1 2 BR lrg $170. Ideal for bachelors, s1vim pool. ler· 1 race. Arl lts only. 1 9 9 3 Church. !">tff.-9633 RjjEAlIT. F URN 2 BR $175. It-ins, w/1\', Hid pool. i\c\u!ls, no pcls. (infant okl 642--9.)20 SMALL I Bil $135 plus drp, ut il rxl, avail tX>\\', carport , lndry. nr shppg & frwys. S.16--0451. * s1-tA"o"v~E~L~,~,s~-ro=o"'t,..., - • Adult..<> Poolside $1•15 up. e C.'hildrC'n dead-end st. 177 E. 22 nd St. Cl\.1 642-'.\645 2BR Avail June 15 -Sepf 15. Fully furn., Color TV, stereo \va~he r/d rye r, 91!l-1752, S2-1J NO DEPOSITS Lovely 2 Br npts w/a king-sz BR. On beautifully landscaped grounds. Gas incl in re nt. Child up to 3. No pets. 1,~ blk E. of 1-fa rbor. CASA GRANADA 400 r-.1errin1ae \\'ay 557-9559 VERY lovely :mn, 1 1,~~ Sl 75 or 2BR al $150. Spacious rooms, ni cc kitchen, carpet, bl"ick snack bru'. Private patio. Children \\'CIC'On1e. Only 1st monlhs rent rl:iquircd. 351 Victoria, Apt 3. HARBOR GREENS Furn. & Unfl1111. 1'~r $130. Bach, 1, 2 & 3 BR's. Models Open 10 'lil 7 pm. 2700 Petcrson \Vay, CM. nr. 1-iar- b6r Blvd. & Adan1s. 546.0370 1 BB.. Frplc. Bciun ceil. Patio. 1 ai!Ult. Util. inti. S-152. 642-8520 2 BR 1 '~ BA st ud io $175 plus C.,,77.--,~--,,,.,-,:--;;-""'c I (h-p .. avail M.1y 12 and 1 AVAIL NO"' -E/sidc 2 E r, BH, $140 plus dep. carports, 1 1 ~ Ba, pool, nr schools & Jndry, nr shppg & frwys, shop'g. No pt•ls. 646-0474. ~6--0451 1 BR .. clean, t·rpts, drps, gas C 1 G & ,~·a ier pairl. Ad11 1!s only, ~ ARi\11N 2 hr, 2 ha, no pets. Sl40. 540-9722 gardC'n apt. blt ins, $165. Also Avail J une ls!, 2 hr. 2 Huntington Beach ha httins. inc\d yard. No. East Bluff e DELUJCE e 3 BR, 2 BA A"t for lease. COR Channeltront duplex -3 Ir.1cld spac. master . suite, BR, 3 Ba, den, bltns, frplc, din rm & dbl &ll!age, auto 2 patios, gar, sm boat dock, door ·o~ner avnil, Pool & $475, yrly. 6 7 5 -o 1 2 o. Rccrea!1011 area. ~ 557_7969 • $287 • =="'·=-:.,.--=,,.---865 Amigos Way, NB PENIN. 2 Br., 1 ba. $250 Mw1aged by * BR., 2 ba. Nr. beacti $3.50 \VILLIAJ\-1 \VALTERS CO. MARSHALL Realty 675-4600 Cntrl Joe. $2'2.50 w k . 646-1979. FURN slecp'g rm, pleasant ptiv t>nlr & ba, mature cinployed gent or lady or elderly. Linens & wkly clean-up. 645-1361 LA GUNA BEA Cl-I . .. Employed peTSOn or stu- dent. Pvt en tr & bath, garden. Non sn1oker. $100. 494-5003 aft 6. Huntington Beach 2BR, 2BA. Townhouse, $285. --~~------Ad.Its, no pels, Call 649--0349 ROOMS $18 wk up w/kit $30 WAITING LIST OPEN for for appt to see wk up apts. Childrn & pet NEW Bayfront-priv Bch & ~ction. 2376 Ne~t Blvd, Pier 3BR, 2BA, $550 mo yr-CJ\-1. 548-9T:>.5, 64r3967. ly. 979-0631 or 644-4510. LRG roon1 . E. Costa Mesa. Post Office & depot.~ Sq. yic. Harbor & Baker. READING rt. $160. Agt &16-2·114. 540-90I5 SPELLING Industrial Rental 450 Sl\L\LL black & \Vhite nlalc MATH ::;;:,::;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;I dog, vie. Br is t o I & NOW LEASING l\IacArlhur, Santa Ana . 5..i7-744'1 Free Diar.,'flOstic Testing 979-1626 Huntington Beach FOUND: Sat. Ger man THE \\le! Canvas Arl Gallery NEW M -1 Shorthair pup. can to irlcn-18582 BC'aCh Blvd., 11.B •. 940 Sq. ft. & Up tffy. Vic. Beach & Mugr101ia: Oil Pnintini.: Cl.ass('S l·lan1ilton & Newilu1d 536-6107 963-29~ &46-0697 or 833.0019 GOLD \\'edding band. J\1usl ITALIAN leS..'>Ons . L'Onvc•n;a. ~~~"'"''.""~"'"'!~•I identify. .Found Vi c. tion, a I s u !ransla!ions M-1 1300 sq. ft, front office, Redla nds & University. t'ronch & Spanish. 49'".l·~: 1rg rear door. 1240 Logan Cosra l\fesa. 642-13.51 St., $180 mo. 646--j()33 days FfNNiioC", ~Y~o;;u~o~g-Y~o~,~~~s~h•~.,;.~Tnc~,~-• 1••••••••111- 646--0681 eves. 1·ier, Ma lC', Vic Corona de! 1 1 ~ M-1, 1680 sq ft. 1670 Placrn-J\lar, la.!.t Thu~---r·ri . Services and Repain tia Ave, CM. George \Voods. 67J.-:m62 . . NE\\', ronu:xf('l, frame • & finish, siores. offices & hon1cs t•tc. Custom \\'Ork. Licl'nse1l. 962-1961.. C.!ment, Concrete FOUNDATIONS -ArtL'itlc PlanlL·rs. conc1·ete & brick patios, etc. Lic'cl 644--0687. PATIOS, 111alks. drives. Sflw, break, ren1ove & replace ('(11l{'l'C\C. 545-8668 for CSL -S& T MASONRY Patios & \Valks , 963-1.11S5 PATIOS-PLANTERS All Concrete "'Ork. 894-3533. 1, 2or 3 BR Apt at the VILLA YORBA TAKE over Lea.sc; 3 Br, 2 Ba. 1 blk to bch. Couples or adults. $325. 67J.-5.167 Priv ba. & entr. Kit privil. Lrg yrd. $98 mo. 548-5998. 6T"a-l380/646-1l64, $175. FND Merl. szd W"t>Yish-!anl :miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~&~ d 1 h · 11 C:-ntractor ROOt.1 for rent. $100 nlO. 4001-H BIRCH NB green-eye <>ng :.ired cal. B b ·tt· 1----------1 \Voman, kitch privl., Balboa 4000 .,. fl. ' .:1.50• 32 4 0 11h Avt'. ·~ Na. rcissus area a ysi ing~-----.,.. '-"' Cdi\I 67•-fiS;)R -JACK Taulane -Repair lluntington Beach San Clemente Island. 675-1383, 541-8766. 5°,-0-.-.~g-.-----~455 YO I . .. . LICE~'SEI) DAY CA RE: rl'mod .. addit. 20 yrs exp. (714) 847-9672 LRG room, priv. patio, en-UNG gent!~ female dog, Licensed day cnl'c mother Lie'd. J\1y \\'ay Co. 547-0036 2 BR ,..., d bl . 2 Large 3 BR, 2 BA apts. trance & bath. Employed s r o RAGE bldg for poss. pa~·t Bra~lc. !-!Olden, ha~ a n openin~ for OllL' Eleclr·ocal pa.ti~_c.sl:S. ~ ~~:: P1~i lndry rm, nr beach, shop.. n1an. 549-3612; 530-6Z15._ household furnishin~, $30 J\-1a:v 7 vie. Leg-ion .~ Glen-child, ai;e l~ yr:; . 4 yrs.1 ___________ 1 Alabama, 536-0750 or ping, Bus depot. Children Summer Rentals 420 per mo. 21:-i Flo,ver St., Ci\! neyre, La.~una. 497-2800. F1 ni.:t:d yard, privale roorn F. L ECTRIClAN, licensed. 5484031. considered, no pets, no sum-"46-9136. F'N D ladies \va!ch near for nap, playmatl"S. ~·ill bonded. Srn<1.ll jobs, malot & mer rates $210. mo, 492-6852. MATURE, responsible eple, Rentals Wanted 460 l\1;irgucri!e & Coasr Hi\'Y· pony trai n. Hot luneht--s, repairs. 548-:l203. 5 MINUTES to ocean, 2 BR, A 1tvail "to house sit" 111/your ---------Cdl\1. Please i d e n 1 i r y snacks and TLC. \V£'Ck days bltns, D\V, closed garage, PF'u'·,'n. or Unfurn. 370 home during July & Aug. ?? PRIVATE SCl-IOOL ?? 67~-2060 only. Shor~ Crcst.'frat:L Bl'. _G_a_r_d_e_n_i_n~g------1 shag & drps, eves/wknds hl'f'en Ji han pol1 J A1 962-5605 I jiiijijjiiiij;jjiii .. iij;liiliiiiW r:•reJ. Newport area. Xlnt. Cli('nt s ecking quariers for 1-"'RIENDL y. ~1anx, Adult . r { ;i ~ ru~{ 1 ~ -Ex J> E RT J a Pane 8 e ref. Lon Wells, Phone (213) small. private, C'len1entary car. no 1a1t. short hair, tigl'r !ant a off Brookhun;!. 96.~-l.Ji I Gardener. Complete Yard 2 Br, newly decor. Walk In 726-8601 or 696-8029. school in the 1-larbot• Art>a. nuirkings. Ne1vpt Heights CHILD CAr::s in niy hon11'. &>rviec. Free estimates ocean. Encl gar. Bltns. $195 New MAMMOTH Lake Con-Will ronsidl'r lease/lease area. 645-5.166. dependa ble & rcliahlc. Chlld· rrlS-2661 nto. 53&-61fi>. N Villa do1ninium 2BR, 2BA, sips option on individual hon1e YNG n1ale rollie, lntcrsec-ren from :.! to 5. 546.<11-IJ. EXPJ..:!tJENCED Japanese $~10.1 NICE 2 BR in 4-plex, ewport I ge 10. pool, jacuzzi, tennis. rec or \\/hat have yoa. CALL lion of F'airvic1v & Fair Dr. . 1 Can-lencr. Comple!e yaI't'I ng .sty, cpts. drps, RIO, e Choice of location rm, $150wk, no pets, SouthCo Realtors, 545-S.12.J. C.!iit. \\'earing choke chain Builders n1a int cnan cc , shrubbery, encl gar, no pets 962-4522 e Tennis, Vollyball, Pool 213-092-2418. RESPONSIBLE n1iddle aged collar. no tag!\, 545-4522 \\-.,-L-L--b-.-1-1--.--. --. -.-treC'<>. Fn."<' es!. 645--0347 2 Br apt-$140 mo • Arts & Crafts CO RON A d e I flia r , c ou PI c. b u s i_ n e s s LP~C malc dos::. tan "ith ~nith'n"u1,,:,, .. °'1,0.,',.,' 0r_:_:,r £-:"XPEH .. Ja panese Gardener. Stv/ref. 646-2687, 557-983.1 • Billiards Waterfron~ Qn thf!o· ntain background . desire I o · b\fi.C'k 1ail. Black col!ai· (; 'E ,vu ... -1-"JR"° ~-..-u · l\:nn1v luJ1v. Trimming. e Giant Rec Jtoom with a beach. p<o nf.!. JBR·, 2BA, n1anage quality apt. bldg. in :~JG-1999 · _,('ne nncs, "' I-'"''· C I can -u n , S m a 'I I Irvine B · s " rl'al player p\ano open July. 673-2875. Ne11·po11, exchangc for rcn1. FOUND• D' _ us1ness ervice landscaping ~-3486. e Athletic program 0 I 1 to Sh Need 2 Bdrn1. forn., or 1 · 1amond . Rm-:;. -------2 BR, I n ha., air cond. $2'15 • Bachel'-&l&2 Bedroom ',~e• I ire 430 sublet. Pll0nt>6734 520 Ext. 7 plc>ase call 10 ident ify, BOOh1<EEPlNG & /\ci~unt-l:'.:XP. Japanese, rfi&in-BOB PETTIT "" ~ rM1'ard' 642-3356. · -t c n a n c e , c I ea n -Up. REALTOR 552-7000 Sl-tARE Apt or House & * \\'A~TED GAR1\CE . 1':'g Sei;·icl'. ~ystcms de-l .. ·u1dsca(X'. I-'rec eX t. Furn or Unfurn avail s A y E SS$ l! 0 1.l E in Costa i\lesa F'ND l\fale Bassett Hound signed for yo!1r bookkeeping Laguna Beach Adu1ts, no pc-t.A PARTNER Lie. Business 646-l73G Day" \lie £/side C.!\I . needs. F1~ Es 11 n1 at cs . $-l2-844218-17-943S Newport Fwy at Baker St. C II ~u.. .,0 14-9 ------~· --54S--0179 99.'l-4264. FIRST \'isi! Free. Aero LAGUNA estate living on acrrs of gardens. \Vide 714-557-0075 a .,,..... or""" 1 J\lALE 22 n('('{js roo1n 111 I"'. ~. ,..-;,--.,--.,,--.,..--~----====---Gnrdl.'ning Ser v. Main- NB Apt $8.'i incls. all util. house or apt. Oran~c. San!a "~':0· ;.ml. Coon hound pup TYPING h'IKIO'" & Landscapi,ng. ocean views. Lge., custom I ~!11!''1!!~~~!11!'~~~~ straight fem . to share Ana straight 64.5-&182 Paul 67~72~~c Balboa. UrgC"nt LTBRA OF'C. Sf..:RVICES li1i-l~IO s1.ia.s1ss BACllELOR s, 1 BR., palios, frplc's prh-. f!urag:('s - Di vidt>cl h:tlh & Jots o! closets. n.et·. hall , pool .t- IJO(il tah!C!S, snuna b11ths. Seo• for y11111'~Plr, 17101 T\:eplson Ln: 1 l hl k \V. or Beach, l blk N. nf Sla1er). C.M. 548-4471 or 979-0745 decorator apts. 1'~ rp I e s . , I: close lo beach. s~·imming Corona d PI Mo:r ATTRAC lrg. 1 & 2 BR apts. pool soon. 2 BR., 2 baths. 2 BR 2 ba r· 1 $250 Quiet area. Adults. no pets. Only 3 apts. at $450 to $650 • • 1.rp c, gar. · w/san1e. 6-16-9194, 833--3000 * 645-SS50 * 1 149 L t SSS ~--~ l:XPER. Japllnesc Gardener. ex [~ os .... ~---Carpet Se rvice Comple!C' yard srv. Relia. & \\1ANTED - 2 guys lo shr ~ d B neat. t•ri'e ('Sf. 642-4389. 4BR hse, ~·12 other. 1-I.B. .-'1"'C1K L.1brador. I\' h i '1 e JOHN'S Carret &-Upholslel'y Ge n e ral Se•vlces C11in laundry. $135 up. month t y, incl. util. per mo. 2 br. 1 ba yd, gar, r~IS-080-I. Considerate adults. 194-1653 $225. mo. Avail 5115173. area. SRO + ufit. 962-S66R ~------~ l' l{'S • ~·ray nn muzz c, Ori-Shampoo fr,.e Srorch. • •••••••••••! n:-:1lC', 2yrs ~lei. J\1issing guard (:-)oil J{1'l;1rdunr.~l. I 673-0934. Call 6:30 to 7:30 $11 0 • I Br duplex, nuITT·ied or your broker. & 6 R 30 ~·I a.m. · : p.n1. r .ic ay. \'¥"ANTED Fcn1alc 18-24 to ~i nc(' Sa t ni!e-8 00 v · D * YAQIT \VAXING * Sh.,,..,, ._, b' apt. Call 64'-•399 Announcemen t s 500 '· , '' : ~. . ic ~greasers S:. all colnr E _, ~ -----------1 Ne"port Shores. Fan11ly br1ghte11ers ,~ lO nli nu!C' 'xp. Quality materials med. bef 4:'.:ro pnl. WRITERS .ticarl hrokC'n. Re~·ard Plse bleach ror \\'hite carJl('ls. \\'ork guar. 979-1451 .... · Garages for Rent 435 1'all 54S.-2·121 Saw your money hy savin)'.( PRINTING _ Let us belp cpl. non-smokers, no pets. Laguna ·Hills No pets or C'.hild. A rips• & l'l'ference. ~x "" 17th. 548-0358 PANORAfi.1IC view of mts, 3 ,_C_o_s_t_a_M_e_s_a ____ _ 8-1:!-ill48 NE\ BR condo, 2 Ba, crpts, & 1 1 V 2 BR, 2 BA, dt-ps, drps, cncll patio, $245. mo. THE EXCl':ING Sn1a!l groups in n1y hon1e, LOST: JI.Tans black "'allet. me extra trips. \\lrll clu,.n you. Saddleback Printing & ALLSPACE i'o1. W. or Th claSSl's. fk.... Vic of University Park or living n ti., dining rm. & Gra ph ics. 83o-9386. '\ Sl40 -UL TRJ\ NICI:---:: Apt. 6 Pools. 4 iJnrdPns. S;1una, 'f ennis. P1°il'alt• pa l i o. Adult~. Ph: S 16--023:1. Laguna Beach I HR 0<.-ea n vi£'11• close 1o High schonl $lli0 n1 o. 49-1-4723 aft. ::P~1. ----Newport Be ach t·rprl!. Pool. BBQ. Gar. o:.o,, c.296 PALM MESA APTS Adulis only, '"' pets. 376 \V. ,JO<T""",, • • MINUTES TO NPT. BCE-I. 11:ty. Lido Isle FURN. OR l]NFURN. Lri.;. 2 Bil., crpts. drps, \VATERFRONT 3 BR, crpts, Unbelievably large apts, dst111'!>'1·, puol, quiet area, huge pool, Jacuz::i elect bll- arlulrs only. $180 free utils. di-ps, fireplace, dsh"'"·shr, ins, shag crpts. drps, sauna 616-12().1 garage. Lease. 6T;>-l()60 etc. Adults, no pets . * SHAD\. EL\IS-POOL Newport Beach SINGLES From Slj() e Adu lts Poolside $145 up. 1 BEDRl\1. F'rom 5165 e Children de1.id-end st. ~'Rent A Piect 2 BEDRM. From $185 177 E. 22nd St .. Ci\1 642-3645 of a Palace'' Unfurn Apts A·;aiJ Froin $10 Self Storage ginners or experi<'nct'd. '!\J rtle Rock area, 5/4. hall $15. Any rn1. .$7.50, Mini Warehouses Criti~ucs,: !ield. lrips.~ .s~1rlc Re\vard ofJcred for return couch ,$10. Chair $;i. 15 yrs. Various sizcs £rom S7.50/nio. sl101\s. 902-2213 aJtC"r ;i I M. of 1\·a!let \l'ith con!C"nt s ex-exp. 1s \1hat coun ts, not ~~~~~~~~~~=[ C('pf n1on('y in ract. Please melhod. l do \\'Ork n1ysclf. u lock it -u keep U1e key, I Good r C'J "IOI 0 24 contact L.H. Plait, 833-1679 re . ;J,, .,, • n site n1grs -hr. access [ No move in -No move out fcc Penooals I~ RE\\'AR D! \Vooden 1valki ng FOR ACTION .•• Security Par-rolled . canC'. lni!Lals on n1etal end. O~n Daily for Inspection -Lo~t Vie. of Victoria & DAILY PILOT Hamilton & Nc~·land St .. HB Pl3C'C'nlia. Lots of sen-CLAS SI FIED ADS 8.13-0519, if no ans, 646--0697 Personals 530 1tn1cntal value. 64&-4716 or QUIC K CASH THR OUGH A DAI LY PILOT WAN T AD $29.50 1)(·r \\lk & up. 1 BR. 2 BR .~· Bachi>IOL"S. Color TV, n1aiU .s1·1'V. pool. ThP :\IC"sa. ~1:-1 :'\ .. Nl''.l"f)Urt Bl., NB !l·H>-9H8 1 to $15 LESS. LA RG E-Eas1sicle l Br. $13(), You're right, they're under- 2 Br $1.iO. Crpls, r1rps, hltns, OCEAN and priced! 1561 r.Iesa Dr. pool. No pets. Singles ok. HARBOR VIEW (5 blks from Newport Blvr.!.) Office Rental 440 nit 3'30 wkdy• 63'1-Hn. 642-5678 -----------1 \VIG styl!ng. "·as $f.fi0. l"IO\v Pl.EASE hPl p me find t-;;:::::::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::::::::~I 1',0UR _ ofticc suite, prestige $3.RS. Wrglett_e sryh~g SlSO. "lloliit• Cnl" l\f . \Vhite, fl uf-11 Orange County airport area, Ca"c~de s!yl~ng_ 56.50. Also fy. .l.'l"l'Y patch nn hrad. too m uch spa ce for present c~e.ani_ng, s 1 ~ 1 11 g · con-!J 7 !J -6 9 '.i O , 6 4 2 -1 2 5 3 6Trl:'i7:: Bkr. 546-9~ ienanl, "'ant to sub-lea.'il'. d111or11ng. cut!111J{. One day RF:\VARD• Trader's Paradise 7.-~-:=oc-=--c-~ FURN ~t'W 2 RR J1up!L'\". 2 Jlr, gar sp<1.Cl', on Lth. Ad ul l~ no JK •ls. Yr Isl'. Rrs: Nl--:'.11 -I Units -2 Br. re:t l fut•nact>. Shm\'n by appl. Adult!<. Rl'f'S n •q'd. 673-01 19 2i:i1r.r1.':-;171:i or B u s: OELLTXI:: 1 br, gar. s!orage 21:11 I ll-·1 1~.0. l<1t·kl·1·. ,\rlults. No pet s. ---' '' 1·· l"'O r· '1 I "'" ""JG l t.: 2 BJ{ Furu nf)t~. !<1l'PS 1oi : _ .. · ·" ·• "· .. s "'tu""'W" > lx•ach, avii il 11n11· nr \v1nt1>r :! 13H. Adults, llO pcl s. BAY r:i1rs & for ~un11nrt· l't'ti!nls. M!-:ADO\\"S APT. 187 \V, 10-1 J:1th SL, 1\l .lt r,1·1·6S99. Ray 31. C:'ll. 6,lfi.---0073 OCl-:AN Vu 3BR fui·n . avail Ll:t:, quiet 1 Rr $140. Nr lmmed. nn :;nnual hasis. , Shllp~ ,v_ fr\\'Y· No pi'li;. 2872 3710 Scnshort>, tli~-41::56. l.u."alle. Apl 2. 557-1:,X·I -----2 RH f111i1 l hlu~·k--<l('CH11 L,\1--!CJ:; 2 BR. Like 11 IMJn1•~. $235 yr ly 11<lul1s no pcol.~ 12S 4GST lill-1:\-10 ;i,·J 6/1 1-'.n('I ~aragl' availnble. Call ti l:l-1636 ~-~-~--lfNFL:RN I & 2 BR Garden i\pl~. 1-'rplt', D/\V, priv t"URN Apt -A\ ii :\lny 1.Jlh. 1J.<1t10. S16:r-Sl!IO. S.i7-284 1 Sublt·aSC'2131t l 1 ~U,\ RC"fs ll'G2 1 1 d 11 •• , i '., trp1s, rps, > 1ns, 1'L'<(d. 1\1lu\1:-. No c·h1llln·n. P!~1·_ patio. No pets. S\55. Santa Ana no p1•t1'. Ph· 1\.16-1138. ."l;Ji-.iO.'\O. ,_A_p~t_._U_n_fu_r_n_. ____ 3_6_5 I SPAC. 2 RH, 2 BA, nr. schls. 1 sh'1p't! ,t_ fr"ys. No IK'IS. Genera l NEW BEA'H DUPLEX 304 Ko &lboo Blvd . 4BR, 2BA, $450mo 3BR, 2BA, 537Smo W1\\I C'rpt~. dsh /wsh. frpl<'!(, drps. wll.,h<>r/dry fnf'. g:ir. tt nnual ]t'tl'l('ll avnll. r11ll Mnr. Gfll 675·4630 or 642-2800 BrokE'r'. Ba boo Island $1~ ~10. 9i!)..0134. GROU:O.D floor 2 BR, patio. ne1vJy L'llllllC'fi ti.-draped. 6j8 Ct·ntt'r SI. Ap L C. 2 RR, 2 f{1\. cllx nilult apts. Pool. Util incl. $100. 324 E. 20!h, 615-4761 CLI-~AN l BR, c111!s, drpi;;, stve & rcfrig. no ('hlldrt•n ur 1x•1.s $1:'1. :'34-36?7 l BR, cnrpc-t~. r1ra, rcfnl!, dshwr, Sl ~O. J:>tn1 furn. 962-8936. 703 ~alin1ar. EIC"gunt apartments designed * CASA VICTORIA * with a l\'lastC'r's touch, su-1 .~ 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn. pcrb house security, exclu· s ive VersaillC's Club and Carpets, drapes, D/\\1, TV pool wi!h unique Aquabar, ant. Pool, etc. Come by & fountains and formal gar-inquire about our Mov~In dt'ns. 1\IJ part ot the South Allowance. 525 Vi ctoria St. Coast's finest aparbncnt at 1-Iarbor, C.M. 642-8970. con1n1uni!y. 2BR IB/\ furn $220 1 B~·droom/studlos from $195 2BR 1 BA unfurn $190 2 Bedroom from $305 Jjl E. 21st, C.l\1. l\fodcls open 9 A.l\1, ti! dusk * ~ * service. You've l:le<.'n to the ·-==·~,..c~·~--~-­~~~~9.1~~3;,~f~Pi~M, Call rest. 1101v come 10 lhl' hr.~t! LOST Trish &>tfer. 4 inos., Balboa \Vig Ccnlcr. 107 OrangC\\'OOd & Gilber!. GG. E.\'.ECUTl\k suites, in1-Pa lrn 675-2-l:H RE\Vi\RD! 64:Hi183 or rnt.'<lia!e occupancy, Coast VETERANS 1 ~83_3_·8_230_. ------l·lwy, al Ne\vport Blvd. \\'H lTE f b 11 l 1\n1plt• froc parkin g . Earn $4 .58 lo $7.00 per hou r _ • . enl. pug u • .os! 642-4644. guaranteed by using your :i/.l VLf'. 20th St. & l1;'1ne. FULL SERVJCl:; G.I. Bt~nef!ts while nt-C:\1. Ans. to '-1lNGTOI, lending Santa Ana College. REWARD ! 549·402'.I. Call no1v -L.DST G r r n1 a n Shortl1air l 547-9561 Ext 370 pi:1intC'r, female, ans\vers fo lines times dollars ~ Huntington Beach Westcliff Building Corn('r Weslcliff Drive & Irvine Blvd., N e ·\V p 0 r I Ht.'flch. Mr. H 0 WARD 2 LEON RUSSE-LL ··rroa'", vk. B•••had & r.nrfif'ld, 11.B. 96.'J..-1659 ------------------"'I 645-610 1. LA QUINTA HERMOSA SIAMESF. n1ale. fl ea and u "BREAD ,~ BUTTER" ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT From Ne"•porl Blvd., turn at llospilal Road ti block a bovC' Pacific Coast 1-Iwy) 10 i!U1rance. 00) Cagney Lane, Nf'"'IXlrl Beach, Ca. 926Q:I. TelC'.IJhOr1e; (714) &l'>-0060 LIDO Isl<>. 2 BR. 1 ba. Avail. no~·. $3:l5 Mo .. yeRrly P ENIN. Pl. 2 BR. 1 ba. Furn, or unfurn. $290 ?\-lo, yrly. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS l'O:r~ W i alboa 671-166) Spanish Countrv Estate Liv-FRONT corner suite -2nr1 TICKETS yc!IO\\' leather co I I a.r s , UNITS, C.l\.I., to trade for 20 Ing & Spacious Apts. Ter-sty, Coast Hwy. CdM. 2100 l'l'\\"arrl. Vic. l91h/Broor1~·. 10 30 units. Eqty. approx r aet'd pool, sw1ken KSS ~. ft, crpf, drps, air/cond, 1-'or SalC' C:\1 646-3705 SOJ,000. ED R 1 D 0 L E BBQ. Unbelievable Living. n1usic, elevator, fl r k 'g, Sat eve . l\luy J 2 _ $6.50 ca. BLACK m"'le-cat. \v/nra REALTOR. 64&Sllll. 1 BR. UNFURN $165 ~urity patrol. Can be ... l BR. FURN $185 dlvidf'd. 1''rom 37c sq. ft. 5-18-0869 cnllar & ht ... 11. S11nta Ana 5 S p k Sa 2 BR. FURN $215 ml E. Coast H\uv. 673-41:.l> * FUl~LY LICENSED * IIeili:"hls are11. R e 111 a rd . lar ar 11 J uan, "' 5.5i-5MG 24 x 60, bar. $20.000 trad(• ALL lITlLITIES PAID DESK space available $."'Al . • SPffiITt.J.ALlsr • . + cash for: Holll(' :{ br IV/ Adults, No Pets mo. \Viii provide furniture Sp1r1 tual re~d1ngs 10 am-LOST San1oyf'fl. n1:t.lc-, sn1l pool. i\pprox 2 3 ne. "r- (4 blks S. of San Diego Fn\'y at $.5 mo. :\ns"•ering service 10 pm. Adv1c(' on _nll n1at-tntoo nn bell y 1051, ans eluded nrea. Box 775, SJC. on Besch, 1 blk \V. on llolt a\·aUR.ble. l~rs Beach Blvd. lers. 312 N. El Ca1n1no Real, Kobl, Relvarcl, 979-1700. !{AVE ~. . 2 -to 16211 P.-k "d '··--) San Clem•nle 4929136 . ~ io.ast side br home ' st e: ....u...:. Hu•l l n~o-n .. ach. "" •321 " . REWARD '1 I I h 0 -tt (714 1 847-5441 " "' " e1: ~ 492-9034 -' • · " a e ns ~ er, \1agnolla St, S~.ooo priC'C 1 BR. Del .. ·xe. Adulr poolside 1617 WESTCLIFF 1 E R . I year, no rollar. 2C,!!!,.. Sl0.000 equity + cash. \Vant -3400 1~• = • 540 11 •,,A N: Auto su~gcs!lon. I! Frank. &15 ... ~I, 64 ... ,:101 Enl\lsirle !11eon1e unils Bkr. garden bungalo.,,.,. n e .. r • .. ,,.,. /;JI;! « mJ· · "'an cit"' ·-J I r · " A I k u I . I .. ;.ngc yo... . c. LM,"'r n -lmatlon. 7mo m.·lc. "0 4lt1~,. ocean. Frplc., lrg patio. 6 m P e Pr g ' 1 ' J t ti I I 11'., ...,.. " nu-B ~ N 10 4 n.s rue on, counse 1ng, cc· Vic. Bea-. n B•Y pools, sauna, tennis. $160. RLinlga ... ner o. · ture.s 515-2521.) •·6v __ ~79 ~AVF. 4 hr, 2 ba ho.me 8'" "°'"· 541-50,12 ,.~,, -~ M •~ o ""'~-'-'~=~~~----I PREGN1\NT? Thinki ng nb· , , '""'a PSf! . ..,.,.,...,, eq_ui Y· Newport Buch 600 Sq. 1',t. 01'""'FlCE w/klt &. orfion? l<no\v ttl1 thf:' riicls MIN/ArORE b1w 11 <lo;-(1(', 128.0!!0 ru·1Cf'. \Vant U}('X· BA, $155. ALSO 600 Sq. Ft. first! Call LIFE LINE _ 2,1 malC'. Rrea of "4th R11~llX>a. 'X'~fl1 ve IOI, acrC!Rg(', boat OCEAN VIF.W : fllO()('m, nll STORE $155, C.~f. 646-2l10 htll, S4l-552"2. ~B. 67S-1889 or 642-23.f.>. railer or !. Bkr. &16-4S.'l7. electric, <'.rpts, drp!I, bltns. QUICK CASH YOUNG COUPl.ES lfl-3.j t BLK. Shepherd. Young 2ll!t + 2 Studioapt~. P aln1 balL'Ony, pool. 1 BR .. furn &. Parties or meet cpl 10 cpl fC?mal(', Sat. 516; C_ollegc Pk Spring!!, nr shops & :\Chili.~ 2 Bl:t -FIRPLC, unfW'!l. Lease. Adull.JI only. ro-IJ '"Leah" 2 "pm. "''r.J.":144 area, Ri-"·ard .$.l. >J6..6325 TRADE cqty for smnll adults only. $200. mo. Call MaiTal Apts. 1510 W. Bal-THROUGH A ..... -o '"" .}. hot C M 646 3 9 211 / 8.t'l-8447. boa. N.B. (Il4J 675-4230. ALC'Ol-IOLICS Anonyroous LO~,. i::nllco ('at, 9 ~. old.. 1~' ·1 • ' Phont' 5(2..i2Jj or wrllC vie. Jl'l!!mlne & Scavi<'1v, 5'1.').34...(13 Lachcnmyer_ RE. 1700 WESTCLIFF OR. YEAIU.Y rental, dclux mn . DAILY P1t·or P.O. Box 1223, Costa Me.s.1. CdM 64HJWJ $800. ('(flllty In lot In J{nwoil 2 BJ?, I &. 2 BA. Blln ap-2BA, apt, fi'plc, dshJ••sh, SWINGING SINGLES You don't ncro a gun to to trfl!Je for llllflquet. art pl!a nccs. Pool. 6(2...4)274. pti pnl lo. 6T~l058. ~ .. .. "Draw F11.1t" when you objects. paintings, jt>welry. f-l.J.\VE "Bread & Buuer" Fou r·p\ex & Comm'! units in Lung Bch. Gd rent h:ist. \Vant Oranj!;e Co. residential inromi>. Bkr. 675-7225. L.Al<E Arrowhead, 3 BRi, 2 BA, flfln. home. CJ11e lo Blue Jay & Lake. Compl turn. fr1\r1c for income property, l.C'l"s talk. 548-8642. • LAND in Antelope Valley nr nu olri>0rt, overlooking :'ounlry Cjub & golf course. ,•,.Ill trad~ for ai'-30' 1'>at. 162·2661. !fA VE up lo 300 a~. wtll jividc. $400 nn ac, ol('ar. ~Vflnt h<>u!i{' in 1-larbor ~ :omm. or indnstrlal In Or- mgl' County. Bkr. &16-4&7. !!AVE 37 unn t..A apt.~· pie'< nr 6~1 llnl~ gross \v/ $150.<MXI .-.quJty. \Vant Jong run.~ cruiftina Wtbont, ml ~'-Th". Qrkr mm. M-1 Lot 'vlth 4 Br. hcxllrt. Costa lttesa. vii. $29,150. Tracie equity for Jot, tau. trnil<>r or ? ! ! LUX. R41.yfront, 2 BR. 2 B/\, WINTER, Summ<'t', Yrly. 1 WAN J A Call Leah 2-8 poi. 539-3122 plnct an nd in the Dall.v or you Mme ii! !loo 1llp avaJI. $425 nlO. yr-Anila.'JJ Re s, Bkr: 2IXl; HOUSE ll!lnl.lng! \\la tch the P~ \Vant Ads! Call oow 6i. "I''-" +"' . ...:lm:::· ::.· -----w. Balht>a • m.m. ------4--'--'0:.:P.:;;EN=-'-'H-"o"u;.:s;::E_:col=um:::n:::._ -t!:'-"6711. , •••:;l••••-=m....:c:..,.=::ac Capn Rralry . I ,. I ~ .. ' ' • '.1 I ' ' ' 'I j I i I I ! ' Tlllnlllf, .., 10, 197J DAILY flUIJ' I~~ ... I~!._ _i:._,,.._,,•_• ...... l!DJ ~[ ~r.~ ... ~,_~~,IDJ~I ~[ ~l~c~I ,:" ,~· ll~tlii\Jl:~1 ~611~~:~~fl~~·~atc~~1 ~!IIlJ~~,~~l~al~e ~·~~1[ll]i~!1 :~·~ '"'~'*~' ~~J[DJ~~,:~1 ~014~~· :i~ Help Wonted, M " F 711 Help w .nlod, M • , 718 Help Wonted. M. " 710 Help .......... M. , 711 .... ; w...,.,., M. p 710 IWp WllllW. M. p 710 Hole w~. M.,. 71~--. M ... 71 cleanupa. AP'l' Mahitenanee cple Apt Bl.TYER A11l1tant, ea:-ELDERLY man b' ~ GIRLS-GUYS LOCAL M•m1fac:tunr ~ Ma>t00.. uatmnt weed dirt Ivy. furn. Newport Cotti er perlencod pret.md, front elckup dellw:ry -· S lt.21 Tr-I -~ .-... -,.,, in lab. X-ay en_,,. !ndL.r. MT-1181. Per\n. Eloctrical ~I..,: ol1l<o apptannoe for_. """' wlc!>'1 .f!OOCI dri,...I Excit ... ~ O»m forlO a mull. Call 137-4nl er 6 El!C, ......... 32 llrt. per -OEN' Haullna: fi'<e/Shnib bing "'P· Write ... Oronge °""'IY -BecW M&Cll1DI! Too people with enth---· Ap ~ Salary h1m. Gar ( 0 Yd cleanup. ad no. 658.!. D&Uy t, PO dJatrlbutor. Xlnt be:nefltt. Servtce, M&-6221. penooaUUn! M• lie abM t.VN Cb&rae-~ 1 to s. commenaUn.te w 1th ex- .!!!. 511-Q!T, 517-. Box 1l60 ...... -· Calll APPiy s.s, 1509 E. McJ'od. -...Ot lo 1ee.. ~ JM ~__;_,~_ll!!ndl..oll.-11-.i pettcoce. Call 548-!Ta l~~~ffii/fil~vii::;t.rii 926211 don, Senta"""· IEIRWOOO.:llWT'l'&:RB--nort:la,-ltHie l· iiD:I ...,..lifiilYI TIM MiNll WOMIN 1 .. 27 ~•--• .. _ . · · tm Placentia, C.Jd. throughout U.lL\. No .,.. Elm to pU !I) oa1ary per -(Um haula A ... , ASSEMBLERS P--..... ~ -""""' ry. Two 111-. -a haullnJ. 541-lll!l. llGIHI .JN' .... ~ Exper-... -••P•~•• paid -lfthll,) mo. "1>llt,.. t ~ ··'--L°':'~ l haulin& by • training d_,.AU ' oalary ~: ~.:: ,.,_ -•· !tuck. Reu. Avti'alfe ran&• -·Top ICD CLERK ' <U&rant« · -Allor ......... ...,. $6<0 !114-1816 or 534-Z!GC. Mole It l'omole 1. NO k'EES. N.11., C.M., tion funrtll>ed. Rofunlecl T ~ of ~ I '."l:ul- lrvlno, o,_ 6 &A. Call UNITID CALIFORNIA --gUarOntoe:I. op r••• pay per mo. -• SK!Pl.OADER A dump ltuck • Trol--Sklllod Immodlataly. APPiy Mia H -· Call TSot ......... · Air :::r.. =· 148-'?i'ift e Competltlyt P•y • p p $ BANK thru Thurs, w~ ii.: ~te w/uper. Pro. National Guard 9'1&-1343. -' -· · • Imm..!, Openings ' • ' :mt Herloor llvd Motel. '15 -~ vtou ""'1r -.,, In Houteclunlng 500 N..-Center Dr. Cost• Me.. 10 am td 6 pm. APPb in per-milH.rw machines, latbn, • P P S ...... ,..... son. etc. ~Ult do own ltt·Ul)I A HOUSI OP CLEAN • • • Sulti:e~N.B. 546-2033 Gl"LS AND BOYS haYO """ toola. Pooltloo Floors, windowa, walla, car-24 Central Tower, On.Jlae, DAILY PILOT niutes avall-opm to male or temale. pets I; drapes, 7 Yra. area. ~ Newport Center Dr. 5'7-6446 Equal ()ppm-. E:'ftpkJyer abll" In ' Conine. del Mat. can For Appt. 64U324 or 646-2527. 111/C. Sulto 900. N.B. Equal Oppor. Employu Exp'D Ald f i'l»sldan Telephono Ko;th Ct-ol!s. fnduatnal R<iatlons Carpet CIHning 640-1970 Oph~ Duties In'. 64Ul21 between 11 AM and Needed Immediately -TJlists -Fl-C•re & Windows 24 Central T"""· ~ CAR WASH elude """"Ion, "1epbone, 12 PM. (714) 4M-MOI Dutch Malot Serv 5.17 150e 547-M411 lmmed employment ava.11. appointmentt bootkee,.,,. GIRL Frldo,y, divenllled 1B.ONIC e Clettl T-i.. 1-"''ii:T.''=:=O,:>i;''-' ...:;:.::·= for gen'I car wub help. typing from inachlne b dutle_s, typing, lite book· rr•• Dodlcalw<I CIHnlng 215 E. Commonwealth Apply lo -. 1D03S EUii tlon lnterviowi lo oelected k,..mg. High fas h Io n INDUSTRl!S • Sr. T~ * WE !lo EVERYTlllNG * Sulle F Fullerton Ave .. F.V. A 483 E. 11th St., appilcants only. Write tully manufacturer. eis-ruo. e T--1. 1st Rer.. Free est. 646-2839 870-1833 C.M. ' to: e , GIRLS wanted . tor Laguna. Be•ch ~ Xlnt H-Cleanlng Equal Oppor. Em,.,,,.... c•SH"IER Cl assmed Ad No. 636 t•l•phone sollcltlna. 16 6 Equal Oppor. Employe< • ·~rp T 1st By Day. Own TronsJ>ortatlon fl Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 up. • $ es * 83&-0648 * e ASllMILllll e "'""' M.,., Call> 9il26 Call 1142-8115 THE CALIFORNIAN RESTAURANT - Undo ....... lxpontlen P""'om Now ln'9rvlewl"I fw Mono11.....,; AiiPIY In Person U P.M. · MGncloy thru l'rldoy 1400 S. Herber Blvd., L•Hebro Equal Opportunity Employer Help Wonlecl, M It I' 710 Help Wenled, M & I' 710 PRESS OPERATORS ' For ftbaqluo • """" ..... -......... No_lal experienee requln!d, Al9D .-emblen a renerat plant worktn. Day I< Evenin& illlllt wodt In a clean, modern plant. Rl!JD'TIONIST • Comc>uter sales omce, ln1nt. Typtna 60. boovy pmnu, - RICll"TIONIST. 21-30. 1400 hr Mo. Hall days, Attracttw. M u 1 t drive. RNlty lxplorotlon 38 lnrine Ave, N.B. Suite 1Q&...A 9'J9..0036 Rntaun.nt NEEDED NOW! 1.M COMPLETE H O U S E 1st A 2nd illllft lo Sile<•-<>nnp County G.M. New EXPERIENCED induatrial GROCERY checker, ...... MACHIN'-VOLT CLE.ANING SERVICE. Firm. NJpt ,. ........ oC. Car Dnler needl 111 aperi-sewing machine operator. mature 'NOma.n for mediwn ..,.~ lnttant Pereonnel * 64He43 * !MS-:ll68 * leftd. No -'-·• .,.., -cubler. 5 d•YI week, Zig Zag & blind stitch to 1bt friendly mulc<t Must DAVENPORT Tomporaey Service CAMIRO MFG. WAITRl!SS, IXPlll, · HOUSEWORK b .... l!B Appl)o la~ uluy '° S5llO bued on ex-ll!W wet lllits. Apply Sea be able to work weekenda. 3848 ~-p ... Or., c-••• te 108 F'u~ a: p/tJ,me. Must be aw:r . y ...,. Potter A -°"'· .......... OutUno all -~.~ 825 w. 18th St. ~-A I ··~ E ~-H ~" --co. n . x:n·t~ arta. ~fa. Own tl'ansporta--·•-·-~ lo pl ~1.11. , ....,._ PP Y _.., · ~l wy, Set-Up Men N~"'l>Ort Beach 546-4141 Pleue appl,y at tlon. !.16-6801 AMF --·-ex~.ence re Y. Meoa. 8 om·U pm. CdM EQua1 Oppor. Employer 7'°1 CLAY A.Vii. FRY C , liXPIR. 26181 An "-111 -,.....t photograph U EXPERIENCED bookk GUARDS BROWN HUNTINGTON lll!ACH Full Time. M\mt bed..,, A • J•nllarl•I , San Juan ~ one available. Reply to Box eeper -· N~" c t -~ man CW,.. _ n-ch Bl·-•ust .,.t, Xln't .._..._ --. OFFICE cleaning, 11 c ' d , bonded. 1 Yn exp. in area. ~ or 6*-2527. Moaonry An -~ 11/F 635 I Dail P"~ PO -...,,..tary needed for bUI)' Full & P/ttme Pooltion> & SHARPE ~" ar .. ·~ . ~ -•• • ·--~ ~-F,qual oppor, ~·-no. c 0 Y ...,., aCC0W1tlng off l c e in open in Long Beach Ir Ou. A smo& lice~. Soult!. t Garfield) ·• ttons I: 1!6.1· * ASSEMBLIRS * ~ 1'60, Coota M..., Calll. Capiltrano Beach. D. J . Compton area• for qualllled Set·Up Men Tom Stamp Ford, $35 N. El An~ 0ppty Empl DllHWASHIR Electronic for permanent .,.~~. Atktnton .l Co. 496-1224. applicants who de 1 tr e Good wqes. Xln't CO, btne-Cln\lno Real, San Clemente. M/F O)'ft' MUlt bt neat 6 clMn. employment with small pro-C•1hler, p/tlme Salary opm. ateady employment. 18 Yn fits. Penn. stead)< employ. 482-1JJ7, Mr. Bear. 21, Dependablt. """'lve coExmpany .. f~ 145-10.10 ~ERlENCED, mature, al ago or dder. Apply .. mux'"t. '""NoahlltRD open!INCllgl. NURSlN Prod. Control PlK Apply In -comp ex. per .. pre ei·~. Cl•lm1 Adj Tme $667 medical reeeptionlft for penon,' 3l6 So. Lemon St, • G Sales Enirineier SW< 8!'~~=: ~ ~~ J:'~;: open. . Call Jaokle Newport GP. -"'"· ~Im. betwn 9am A Speclal\/u""er o;v. CRITICAl Warthoule Msr $lOK Surf & Slrloln lencft • ,_ lrontt. ATTENDANT graveyard Westcllll EXECUTIVE ADT Sterlin& seourlty 3U0 • H•rv•rd =~~ ~ ~~~· CUstomwork'Jflly.968-7865. s hif t. Dishwasher, day 1:r;F:Aa~A. SECRETARY Service. Senta Ana CARE F/C~eeper t150 ______ ... Painting & shift. Apply In per90n only, (Marie 1fi~~'ter) On«; etrl offtce, all leel'etarlal An F.qual Oppor. Employer. n4f546.6100 2131585-21.M Dental Frnt Ofc to ani ~ P•perh1nafng 4000 Hilaria Ylay, Newport 542-8836 akilla, prefer sonie book.-HAIRDRESSER·, w / 1 om e Eaua1 oppor, employer mi l Inven. Cleri< $460 ~~I d u:.. Fu~_dme21 ;.;.::; Bch . •eeplnguperlence.Mustbe foUowiJ11. Rec:ept s da.Y•. . NURSING 8ecnttu1e1 -.. ...,. .. '"" \l~ ..... ~ .• . No Wulf.. Auto CLERK TYPIST attractive. Salacy open. Call wk. Shampoo gtrl. l<in't MACHINI Exoc. Sec'y to !100 Apply 2-4pm, "' pllone *WALLPAPER* PBX BKKPR Immediate opening in our Susan 557-!>194 for appoint· working cond>. loca. Call OPIRATORI-s.c·,. "'ah to mo calJo. Jedroa, lllOO Brlltol Wbefl you call "Mac" • advertising dept. Requires merrt. for appt. 5'8-4179, PLASTICS R.ectpt:/Typllt $9) 0CM~·;,-;·,.,,,,,,_,..,,,....,.,.=::-I MB-1444 ev... ACCURATE tyvloK at 65 F /C BOOKKEEPER HARDWARE Sa.lea Clerk Clpen!nrs on all shllts tor ex-ORANG! COUNTY Eocrvw Oler 1711fl RN ll·T lhlft LVN :IJ.l llhUI. PAINTINC & repa1t 35 yn Openliig for fWJy qualllied wpm on Exe<11ttve . type. Property mgm1 firm re-Must know tooil & plumblng. por. opn 6 tn!Mes. Clean MIDICAL CINTSR Citric Twitt 1400 911 bod ooo--i.r. workmanship i\W''. Take girl in H~bor Area Pontiac writer. Will al., file & qultn exper bookkeeper to Muat have good personality lite work ln tnod.ern new K~ • Permanet PollUone. rood advantaae ot rny exp. Dea1er1h1p. M~t have rt· handle phonea. Some recent • handle CIR, 'cm, BlWn; 11 tor meeting public. Applf 1n bids, lhlft bont11 premJum POstnONS AVAILABLE IN: ~I ore, eon.tr S4l50 benetlts, Newport Beach 536-7Cfl6 cent local experience. 5 day ottlce exper. necessary. Ap-gen'I ledgerl· tot shoppina: person only. H.W. Wrisht for rute work. ~· tor ~:11 .. ~ ~?: Car AAst. Bkkf)r to $600 area. MM064 · week. Apply in penon to ply in penon. centers Ute typing_ Ottlcel Co. US Rocheatft', CM. advancement A xln t tr1ng-e -,.nit ..-ict · e ve e NIWPORT SE.U4S'I'RES.9. m\llt be ~~~N~~~-BUlineo"AvME.,,.R"ors. S TECHNICOLOR INC locatetI'nearOran&l!Co.Alr-Hoapltallty Ho1t111 beneftts tndudfna profit _Neonatal Inten&tve Cart PerHnMI Aeency exp'd. Must bt able to do 646--0977 646-1809 . t99 Kalmus Dr., Costa Mesa. port, Su~t resume of ex-S.rVlce ~-Unit m Dover Dr., N.I. ::.c~· malnt.' Day PROF. pa1n1:. honost work. PONTIAC An Equal Oppty, EmplO)'t!r ~ 0 & &:jlllYD 'frvt Mr. Abe~ i. iooklna tor """"'n 'to ~If~ In,.'~~·· -N •on at a I Intennedlate '42·3170 Producll, m~e..~ ~ reu I t/ xt '-A 2480 11arbor Blvd CLERK 'I'YPI~ · · Y, ne, Ca11t. welcome 1£ interview new Cal" lnJectlor Id' lnteml.ve Cart Unit c II Refs: sJma ·~1~1"';,;,, est. Co!la Meta 546-8011 4 hNI dally, 5 days wk, $1.50 ~. reskients Sa1e1 or ad-u~ !h1iP Ave .mg -Bum Unit =·"on' """""mo.::;--1 AUTO hr. Call 55~7 FIE:LD 1 .. 1allation garage vertltlng ...... helpM. Irvine lndue. omplex -1"'opiratoly Unit . Productlen Pl•nner SICll&TARY WALLPAPER hanging & COFFEE shop waltre9Sel. door opera.ton, Experience Must have car & typewriter. O>fta Mesa. -Intensive care Uhlt W•m.cl A~ l'll!ll:ll ~~[ f:t.'j;J_ Call Gary SALESMAN fi': ~· a!'."':; prefen<d. 6'2-3400. 547~ MACHIN -Emertency Room Dutt.a include ~ =mllly ._ pd•= Pt .. :er, Petch, Ropolr Need 1 •a I e s man, ex-Blvd .. " HunUngton Beac~. FOOD Service. worker, 't1r •,. ~"::J'~8• /J:j1 :"J>Ced ~ ISTS Teacltlna ~m,la Unlvc.,::r production orderlor, :nvon'. Solacy to 1625. Call Lfoda * PATCH PLASI'ERING =-:~;:;e ~n:;~t ~:i 963-4587 Call aft 4 pm tor =: fo:g,~. ·p.m. wlll tz!n. ~ ~do,,_ "'1n lathe A mW · ~~ ~ edllCaJ::· wtth =control, Dne ttd JUn-Ray, 1 S:, ~ Ptr- All types. Free ettirnates cart, Free &!mo, excellent appt. Good employee .. benefits, HOTEL Delk Cleric, must bt Good haWI °"':.. ixtlt:, Critical Care tut«tna. WtU • Is producUcm qost II-=.-c.k -' Call 540-"'25 working conditions, See Bud Costa ?tteta M • m 0 r i.a 1 exp on NCR .QM), muat be ~ ad· superviaed 1n servtce train-Umattna. ;;;:,_~''.-::"==:-:--:=..,. Ryder or Tom Aikin at COOK Hospital. 301 Victoria, ™· able to do_nlte ...ill twko_a ~ ...J-~ lnir _....Advanced 1ttp REXNORD INC Secretaly, p/Umo -Ir Plumbing NEWPORT E qua I o P po-r·t un-t t Y weeic:" Good -ao1ary benetlll . ~ appolotmentt available with ' R~ employer. Apply Jamal ca 1M, lll:Vllll D N approprlate exper. Calli. Speciall> :ra.t.ner o;v, -a.~:;i:ii;~~ter IMPORTS F.:,~': ~i~':,k. day ~~ :!. 613-81Zl. IWIRUR I C. RN Requittd. 3U~:i.H:~~ord Ole ~~~I! llOO :S::::;,;','.·~~~~ 3100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. Apply In Porron Shaklee produrts. 54$-1517 HOUSEKEEPER Special~Futener Div, c..rtc'n~-nc/546.s1oo 21Mll-21SI Lll Raindol'a ~ ~~ .. eompi.te Plumblna Av:':Ys ~~~e~O~~ ~~:~.~ 31~ ... i.H::•rd Ext.119T,640or336 EQua1 -· ... _ m11 548-nJr~·- PLUMB!NG REPAIR "Be Your Own loss" C'J/ ' It VARNISH MEN ~ =... IVOri<. ~ = n4MS-51DO 213,.._2!84 lD1 CHy ·Drtw Sooth Purcho111it Supervisor SEOU:TARY ·Part time. No Job too small E&m an income ol. )'OUl' own. Jh.e · needed hnmediatel)'. Top pay, bath, TV, paid v.cation. $70 fqUal CJP.PX'· empto.yer mil Oranae, CaUt. Supervlaes the purcha1e of CdM Real Eltate Dev. Co. -t * * 642-3128 * * tight in your own nelJhbor-lot top men. Contact Coast-per week. ~3560. . An ~tlve "U>PI* Is fQUfpnent for hn per dq, 5 dqt. Call hood. Be an AVON Repre. Rt al 1tecreat1on 940 W 17th MAID P/TIM:E Uon ..i-.-tbe IChool dJl&tct, and 67l--8f9'1 for appt. S•wint/Alterati'>nl sentattve. Call now: 1'aaer St Costa M ' • HOUSEKEEPER, full time, Call in pe~n Hunttrwton ac em_.,,._ ntaotlattl ltl'Vlce oontracta. Secretary, p/tf,,,. 546-5341 or 540-7041 ~"ii ·• eu. .mature. Beverly Mano t Shorerl Motel '21002 Ocean N "83 to S833 per mo. Call aft 1 pm 16GJ.T3 &: eus~T~~0.!!~ App't, BABY5mER _ Dependable =~-':,n~.t a 1 • HB 'Nlln ' RN-LVN-AIDI ~~ ~~ ~:~ SFX:tJRITY OFFJCER .. ,.n call ~336. 9-12 sitter for one 9 yr old boy 16 FHhlon l1lalld GENERAL (ABOR HOUSEKEEPER matuft MACHI . 11·7 A Olhor 1111111. Top pvt DlttrLrt Hlll Cltriaanta or full time openJno - Altorallons-442·5845 eve. hrs. 4 nite.. H.B. area. Newport Beach • c M 5 Pro4ol)lpe A -Molal. duly Jiii)'. lmmod. pa.y *"' Drive i.a.1on VS.Jo CallL for t.acuna llaech A Ora,.. Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. Own tranfilportatkln. 75c hr. Betwn 9 a: 11 am or 3 A: 5 prn Motherless home. · · C&pabfe ot tooling manu-Goar duty.Co u D t Y" 1 d e r.at71.' ' O:>untt artt.. No polkle 5.16-02'29 before l0:30 a.m. Eq I Oppor Emplouor Newport B-•ch da.y, W. Own t ran t, fact""""' u well.as___...... Intrvws. Moo-J'ri 1·5-......... record .. rethw Pft'ferftd. Tiie or blwn 3 &. 4:JO. ua ' ' .Cotta Me: 545-1M3, 833-?J62 type:-~ m~ 1.ftoot41e Nunes R.trblb'Y, n.a.N.o EITATE IALEI For appointment ca.11 CERAMIC TILE NEW 1£ BABYSIT/lite housekeep, l2 COOKS, OVER 11 Sant• An• INSERTER & Gen'! Mall~ Must have exp. &:: own toots. SM Hospital Rd., NB~(~ Nn ~~the 521-2010, Capt. Parbr. remodel. Free est, Small to 3:30 daily, waterfront Full & part-time. Daya A Or•n•e It Irvine help. $1.85 hr. Also.Pitney Top pay .I: frlnp: benefita. by Park Udo Bldl ) Worid'I &&rpl( and tutllt SERVICE Station 8dtmln jobs wtlcome. 536-242G. home In Huntington nights. • Bowd malling machine opr. EOE. 6C2-9956, 541).9954. powt.nc ,_. Cll'Dldlldon " lubt man. aper. pntd. ~~~~~~1 1 H.s.rbour. 3 Children, ages 6• C•rl'1 Jr. R11t. No Fees . Weekly Pl)'d)edc S.W.-3005. ACCURATE MOLD CO. with a nwtWC41' oC O¥B" JIXI Top pay 6 trtnp btlaeeta. = 9. 14. 213 , 59"-1691 or n4, Apply In ~. between 2 Day shilb, 2nd lhlll> and Insurance Apney Girl C213l -NUIWNQ olllcol and baootne I Full 4 p/ttmo avail. A1oPI> lj i t j 89 :>-6800 ~-· Khowledae of personal Una MACll!NlST mmber of our -Shell StaUon, lllh • lrvllle, L"'*1>11•1t 4 BABYSITTER, li\'e-ln, sum-pm & 5 pm at Carl'•, 2092 graveyard. helpful lrut will trtln. Mutt Secondary J4a.chlne ()pr STAFF Qub. Muld-mUlion dollar N.B. l~iiiiiiiiii. ... .; mtr only, room & hoard & Bristol, C.M. • p ,. s ~ t~~ ~r ~~ MtchaniCafly inclined. WU! a ~Free s"E"R"v°"1"CE=-s"ta"t"°lon-A°"tt"°et>c1'"'ant- ll salary, Balboa lsland, col-COOK~RELIEF • • • nCal . Insuran train on days for IWlng NURSES ICbool. tun or p/Umt. Over U. A~ ilob Wanted, Milla 700 lege ltud~nt pref., 2 glrla, 3 Exper. Apply in penon only, N83~ ifonua <.'Ct lhl!t. Xln't benel':lta. C.OOtact Utnt at.Lta . ply 'Brown'• Sheil, 990 E . SCRAM-LETS • 8 yni. 673-0416 aft 6. Alley w ... 8 , Z106 W. Ocean· 500 Newport Center Dr. "' ..,.,. _,., ,.. Employment ofc betwn 8 & =call V1rtlltla J-Cod! Hwy. NB NMl8l. ••• · BABYSmER needed, my front, N. . Suite 900 Newport Bch J•• 91"'" *II''" 'i 12, !.M. Cox Manul, Co, •t'D c•lll"IT 9ER~~S~~~-n, home, 2 children. Hrs 2 to 6 COUNTER girl wanted tor 641).lf10 Inc. 1505 E. Warner, 8.A.. ORANOI COUNTY " "' sra~"'.,_ .. • ......,. .... ,_ A'NSWERS pm daily. H.B. area . sandwich shop. $'.2!1 ptr hr. IRYINE PERSONNEL Equal Oppor. Employer. MEDICAL CENTER Rooltwa Ilk .. be oxper. Apply, 3Ull S36-<m4 Mon thru Fri, U-2. 113J..32!>1. 24 C-.1 Tower, Oronge ttD\,....C~I".''"''""' MALE A Female Help Immedl to Statt N lllAL llTATI liart>c:<, C.H. ~ · BABYSITI'ER for 2yr old 547-6446 .x.f\1~ ~"t\-I wanted. Kentucky Fried -Potltton! Avallable U1'H IALll MANAOIR. •-=:=-.,,Sta:=-._,...,.11,..•-ndan-,--,-t • ~ Feudal -\\1K>OP -Suite -Pi. Our home, 4 day wk, e Cross country 2l5 E. Commonwealth Frff & FM Po1ltlon1 OUcken, 693' h.S. Cout Hwy, -Empk)y from PM.a A N1ahtl ~ Oftlet needs manqtr !ltitM. ChtYron Station, I Phytic -WIFE 8: 30-6: 30. Nr Adams & Dr iver1 SU He F Fullerton Selet Mktn1 Ell&!' to SUK lAluna he -Comprehenlive p 1 y c h wtlh ~ ,._.. of Real Estate 30» rllrview, C.M • ~ A •mall town is where Newland . alt 6,30, 96<>1242. e Foremen 870.1833 Accnt/RE/CPA "'II lo l25K -MANAGl!R procram ' experltnco. Newport Bettcb SHARP GALS 1 ~Verrt>OOY knows whote BABYSll'l'ER !01' ~girls, 8 e Managers Equal Oppor. Employet Warehse Manag~ $10K EXPERIENCE NOT NEC -Univ. of Callt IMne are.s.. ~ comPIJI)'. Who tn 1ookfntr for P.erm red.it !!'I IOOd. and whose &r 11 ln Mo11. Verde e.rea, e Asaemblers Manapment Trne to $900 Join ll"O'Nint chain of IUc-atttllatlon Excellent OSIPOl1Unity tit !Id.me position in ~ WIFE i.sn'L 2'3CM! Mon·Fri. 567·7548 • Molden Exec. s.cr.tarles to 1711fl ceuful °'allil' County Car -Full A Part Time Poal!Qa pro!e91onal -"" Appl) B1Jn. Muat be -Cal APT.Mgr.21,iyrexperience. eves. e I ......,. GENERAL DictaphS«:retarles to$5'15 Wa~~!; pt~lt biu.':'! Available tnconftdencl,llDdmume tor ant. · in 60 unit family complex. BABYSITTER (permanenll n•....-.-·-'' Gbia Friday JSSO+ mec ..,.. a e, a ..,.. In •ura.&cal \mlll • Pedl., to Ousttled 1111 no. a c/o THE L-ooK Preftt CM lln!I. Refs. 213 -needed for Saturdays only. e Gel Repairmen ~ral Office to $570 lo tupervise help I: handle tnc aenera.1 ltt\llct. Callf. Dally PUot P. o. Box '1!!60, 644-6500 839-9802 8:30 AM -6:ll PM tor 2 All 3 Shtfta LABORERS Recept!Gen'I Ole to $500 CUltomttl. Willing to work RN requind, OJrta Mcii aw. au. o RUMMER, experienced ho 1e 963-4971 We WU1 Tta1n Inventory Control $e> long hours. $185. -azo. wk Dttector N Ina: -SHARP, attracttw pl Dffd· wants worlt. eAB"Ys. ~ needed. -" M•cGrovor Yocbt Corp. Asst Booklteeper to leOO to start dependlnc on Oonta<:t w.-al ~ RIAL llTATI! SALES ed to mM&P Ntwport u ·~~ .. ~ '"-~·· .. VOLT CAU. TRISH HOP~ bedta>ound. Rap Id ad· en•> ·~. "" ,_ N • -Office. N•t ' 842-9519 home, F.ast Side Costa 1631 • _.._..._, C.-. JERI WHrlTEMORE vancement, frinp beMCta, 101 etff Drive South NH It reu~ ewpn1 • plllftnl..'e, aOOrthand Job Wenlwd, Female 702 Mesa. -..cl aft 5. CUST. SERVICE Instant Per-I 488 E. 17th St (at Irvine> CM xlnt fuluro. Phone !or appt. 0nnce Calli un~W°IOR VilW trw -Hal. Houn . BABYSITTEJl needed. some Temporary Service 5uil11 224 642·141'0 (213) 947-1012 • · 3,30 Non thrtl Fri. lalory NEED help at home? We have aides, nurs es, ho u t tkpn. <.mnpanlons. Homemakers U p j o h n , 547-6681. PROFESSIONAL Domestic Service. Bach. Q rt 1 • Reliable-Bondable. 548-TI97, 61>-03lfl. daytimes Jor baby in my Local ma nuf. firm needt ln-3848 Campus Dr., SUlte 106 ""' MANAOER An afftrmative HOMIS $3.50 hr. 5'8-4114/548--'lUC home. Cdm. 644-4443. dlvH!ual w/sood typ ... tldlls Newport a.act. 546-4741 II",. """"' · ...,_. II; Wom~s Retail. ~ 'l'rs .. .,.... action employer Im Port Shelfleld Placa SITl'ER, rellabla, 5 doyo. llQI BEAUTICIANS - H.B. 1£ .t able to handle bu1y F.qua! Oppor. Employer JANITORS -Part time. In women'1 rn4Y to war. Newpa:rt Beach l3S.o'180 home. H.B. ares.. 1 aml S.A. Busy 1a.lon. Take over phones. Start $450. Call Eve ninga. Man &:: wlte Woman avtt SO years, Open-NURSES • ...,_ cc)y child. 847--3249 aft 6. cltent•le. Xlnt earnlnp. He 1 en Hay.., -· GENIRAL OFFICI teams. lrvlnt area. M & M 1no new Orange Co ...... LVN 1-; p/linto. N,._ REAL ~ATE-SMALL Auto parts .. nu1ac- Call for sppt 968-80aJ H.B.. Cour.al PefllOllJ)cl Aaeney, Inside salu dept. ot arowtnl Maintenance. 213: 333-6425. Aiily In pera'll1 Tues thnl Mele ll·l ,expw. pn('d, Qr.. SALESMEN an.., not work tum-W'lntl 1kt11 e d s .A. 97\l-3500 1lliO Harl>Ot Blvd., c.ar. co . ....ia lndlvldual w/pd JUNIOR SALl!SMANi ri!. Wllsoa'1 H-al dlrly 3-11, w1B train. 111-In the ~ma HW> nw:hl!Ut Id nm lathe mUI BEAtmCIAN needed part DAY wattrellel f\IU or part ftrtu'e ept1.tude lit tome typ. E ~ per eek Suede, 9844 Wilahtre Blvd., Verde Corri, Hoep, 161 C.. t t n It 0 n Be&chtroantafn eet. We bcve PllSd tmltdays, time, also booth for rent. tlmfl, over 21, w/food " lng sldllt. S&llU')' to $477. w!rldna after achoot w aad Bevft'!y HmL 2U/llMJ908. te:r St., C.M. MS-!11585. Valley and 1tt u.a train you! vacaUonlPa.i n ~r :U..~ 548-2412 or 545-61M = ~ Ooo.Joll1 Jqtr, ~~1 ::i :: on Saturdlyt prt1ng now Manqemeut tn1net .... ma· NURSES .w... 3 mo'1 exp. Call Phil Mc N a m • e • ~'l-for tntenitw or BEAUTY OPRS (2) DENTAL A 1 t l t tan t, 2790 Harbor Blvd., CM. custom1bers tor the Dally ~ Guo&:, J:ir::· ~;;liudo &eoJv ac;:4bli ~~E REAL ESTATE, apply at 151 Pftrdu..ot Pl. No follow-Ing necess. Comm/ atalnilde. 2 yr min. exp, Pilot. II 1a not a paJ>ft rtttame • · • -1•· N.8 . M~l"rt. S.S. F/c B"~ 1~· !In. St.•··· guarn. B"'Y shop. Call llOOd ..r·-Full ttm.. G.::~. ~~me'.°:pp1'',; route and does not Include 26.10 Wett lJnooln, Anaheim, SC.8044, RIAL ISTATE SALiS T I ... _ SOUclton ~v• '"" ~ &45-IOOO. !4$.4i51.t -,. ~-, ,..., dollverlet or mUectl~. Apt. 53. NURSE., Aide needed to. l'Rll LICINSI •a,.-~ ~v;~~enct. Own BEAUTY Operator, e xp'd, t.~t!i2; ~~~.:"J2;i ::.r~c:ie"'!:8 :i ~th Mre~tal ~.~ta~:n ~;: :Ov~Jia. ~t.in pn'IOn, TRAINING ~~&.,;~-':= Ht-«?hool fbi w t 1 h e s ~·It.housework k:r .......... Exp .• depend. able, Collom at 545-3850. W°'ANl'ED="'="-_-.p=-AJ<=T,-.,tl"'me'°' needed to take ovor D!NVl!R MINING CO. Calle Perlecto, San· J""" Hunttnrton Beach only. w/neat b&ndwr!Unc. wui 2 OFFICli OlllLS FilmOUll R<al Ettate Llct,,. ....-. Exe.Dent """""'" work ewninp, weekends. clienlele, xlnt opportunity. Now takinC appllcatlona tor Capistrano. Ph. 49'J-0Tll. Applf 110WI tsl.9641. tra.ln.. Appl)' JOOl'nl 1930 ins O:MirM now avaUAble job, ~ lN. Call fi5..2!0t. efttr e,oo ·PM Call 557-3986 w a It r e u e 1 , cocktail GENERAL Help, p/tlme Kitchen & . Ne ...... lilvd CM ' NllDliD thru Tarbell =.on. R: TELE:PllONE n ..... lowas PRACTICAL nune desirel 8 Blackl1'1 lcMityarcl wlll~ host e 'I e I • eves frQm 5pm on. Driwn Caunf1r Help MATURE p ~ r Ion b" ~... t :Mble ~18:1: ~~~~nt o--. !'.am ~tedt.,...'! :!:"' ~ ~i.1.o.~ -' d ho waterfront worken. Exper ca• h I er 1, bu• b o 11 1 I: KttchPn. Over 21. Appl)' 1>-·: ...i... t ....... U teltpbone ., .... _ ... ,. ,. • .._....... llVlllu .,_. . _. •u· "-3 .,...vale hOme u..,.. pretd. Perm. fltime only. cllahwuhen A I e ft er a In penon, Me n Eds, '10 E. Momt, Aftnl Or Eves .....,uan ...,... ·me home. Apply tn P~ whUe )'OU team.. Call Al tlGlble. 'Write O•ad"'d Ad Rel.,._, 494-47'9 eve. Trainees acceptable. Millt kltchen help. 11th St, Costa M"a <Salacy + l:lealo~ '""11 from )'OUr • YILLOW CAI CO. Sloan (7t4 > ~ on No &SI Daf4o P11o1, p O. l>lelo Woniod. M It I' 710 have :thOrt btJr A clean n7!:t9 W. lllth10 AMSt. }!!, CENERAL OU!ce. Typlna, • McDONALD' ~;C,· 9:=!0....._ U! E. 1at1t, O>cta 1:1... W-d• tnll m., , eoic 1511ti, Oo1ta -cam record. 2t.J4 Newport Bl , NB 0t: ween "" ... Ttlephont, Filing tic: Muit 635 W. 19th, C.M. ' ' ' . OiTtCE slrl put tm 1-U REAL ESTATE SAJ..U. 9D Accountl"I Office BOOKKEEPER . DISHWASHERS full um. be depenctnble, Salary open. LAUNDRESS. male. Mu• ~~ ~ ~.,;_~ ~~ type, ftlt, 'phont. p po; '1°~ F01lt,~ 1jT ~::;E::;L;.,E"P""u"'."'oNE=""--...,.... .!uperviMI the acoountlng D lib • ..htt. bftlta. 83J.20BS. drtve tn~ Appliy I n boo W'Otk. Xlnt Uvtna oond hour to atan; t r v In e, A • Senilce Beach Arll. Vadld =' d=t~ deD&rtrntnt ot Mlllt htvit ~nt tldfl1 ln all J 't ~ ~ ~ _; GENERAL Handyman tor penon, Glen H.s.ven Com. Ge~is ~htry Ca I j lnch.llt'J1&1 Pan: t'r't-J33S COMMCSSION. ~p ~ 1hlttl avail. c.11 MO-«n1 -•-•ooo ..... mo. phut'I ot bookk~. Fun ~ er, ' private pl'e1Chool. Perm., Hosp, 1566 Superior Ave., 9G8--00U . PART tlmt men. Day or TDIMEIN "-.. ~ O~~ , -.. __ CUil .. ____ I •• ..,., w....., _.. kwln& !'lard worldnt' office · · part Umt. M'ust bave own Na. , ~Kht..-.15"40 h n. wttkly. • ,,_'""'4 n. 'nU:S sy~:"'U';~ &\s~:~~ CallnLqtma, ~-app~L .Part~ DN'=~ ~ = ...... ~ LITE Ma lollltMCI •• ~ :p~ppt:-::: xtnl.CU. llalntenance, R.E. -~ .. ,tor. JONIS Tllll ~·lllV. Dlltrictt •. ~18 Cln11&n" A~ fcrw'T~ 4M-Hl3 Call ~ · , GIRLS & BOYS -lteeplOJt. F It Im • -l7'7 ...;.i,.rn. Ave 147-lZlll. llmlted mun~ o IX· Roq'o. -• Drive ....,.. Viel<> Calli -~ ID-U , 1"'"11-Apply in -. 'Ooola Me · l"RISIMAN perienced broke r • A e Tire Servlc• • • . BOOKKEEPER DOllXSI'IC Help Georl< Hunt. lldl con.. llolp. 1811 a a -to w or k In-e Rot 11 S.I ,....., !a61I. PART·M Allen Byland ~1-~111-l! GET YOUR F'lorlda H.B. M1~5.' MEDICATION Nune ~11 :30. In ln"ant prlntlnr c.nh!r. dependently. sc;...m3 a ~·-A.(P A AIR . Matuft -.an Ph·. •u·-. 54S-$4.1$. E. 16th St,. S.A. 541'<131» SUMMIR ~OI ' 91 Bid <0nv. ctr Perm Must have minimum l ,_. •• 1 !di • M2161li e Broke -at Jeut 2..3 )'rs. exper. :r .... NOWI LlV&-oln houaek~per. EX• posttkin. Gd 'Oen~ f I t 1 . up. on AB O\c:k 311) C. D. I: .x-I I! nem• · · · · 8&1 • Cbmm, co pd -..et:I Se1acy l400-$4i>C). Newport BOYS to ooll nowen. $1.10 DONtrr ...,_ -t11 nl!lht Daly DLt C<ilent _.,. '<'ot1<11tlo... -· liek Coml>lnatloo. Sb' ~ .. .. •\j>ply lit ..,_ Bch ~ hr .... honlll for Mother'• •hltt, female 25-45;.JPPlY In . r• ftvate iOotJI .• bath, color "WEt'A ft•op" lnstant PrlntltW .c,.w. Make Room For Daddy -Harbor 8Ml. ll'!a. · Day wk~. Aat 1~16. penon, MR. DONVl".135 E. . Must dnve. One child, . ""' 2G40 E Co8lt H• CdM ..• dean out I.he pra Colt.a Mii& rat Prollt It atialnod whon 1'1!-!>233. j,_ 17th St. CM S.n Ci-on'9 4fMGI 7, $300 mo. Dayl] "'°"' 14 lmlh ' MW , . , turn that junk lhto [j!!l!!!!O-""l~!!!'!!!"'•""!f't ~ :.:; Dally Piiot lfiiant Ma ha,. S.11 the old •Ill!. ~ ~1'1A Turn 111 lniO -wllh a Dll1y Pilot Cil!allled Need 1 "Pad"! Place u ad bAl'lltl ... Plot!-,,..,. otull. Cl:u1llled Ma • . • li4i!irii . XW.. CAu. Daf4o Pll6t S.11 Idle lltms ..... ,61M611 { •• . ·-·-· -·-~ . . DAILY Pll.DT Thul'SdaJ', Mar lv, JLm ;.I Liiiiiiiii.io1iiiiiiiii•=• ..:;;lfH~J I I -J~ iii! iiiii., 'iiiiirt •...._. ~I ., , • I~ l~-~iiiiiili•' siijiiil~~~;1I;; ·~...,::W:~,=~•;;l~;.;1:' .. _..,..~~1~=·1 ·-· M & F 710 Help WOftlod, M & F 710 Appll•-I02 Houuhold -~~~;;:;;;;;;;;;~l;;ll Mlocolljs-'s 111 TV, Rodlo, HI", loots, "-906 Cycles, lllkn, ' $\) - TOUCH UP MEN WELDER w/omamontal K-"EN'-'M-ORE--.. -,-,..-r,-dr>'<-r.1 °ii~.~':'n: ~ ~ e THRlFT-~LUX S-U6 Jl' anus C.wller, 1966, Scooters 92.5 1...,,,.. tn fll:lttlt.ua only I r on e x p e r , M I k e ' • $79 ea. Owr ~ wa*n, new stove boocHtO, new 11 bKk in Cott• Mes• I l973 RCA A: Ztntth televtaion told new 5167. Ha.rd IOp. SPORTSTER I etq1pu bit OC!ed ·.-_y Apply Mon thru Ornamenlal Iron Worka, dryen, refrl&' trom $39.95. rtUllt IO.P"'$20, a.hullers u x SCOOTS ·Dry cleamtna <:n1fa too A •tereo clearuce We. All T.S. Jt.O.F. Fath. Preaaure ror mow w!lGtg of chr0me. 'lbun. ' 1 725% J...&auM Cn Rd .. Lac M.>-0780. •n eaC'h, maple hdbrd, 2 hl&h!!r Come tn and avail. modela in 1tock le on water, i:ood <:Olld. Anchor Leu than l,IXKJ total mJlet, Columbia Yachts Bch. 4.94--631ti PORTABI~ Ma.vt&a' clothH tllte s1and1 & d re• 1 er uve! ! ! Coupona will be..out display. Priced leu than the winch, Item mom, ship sincf!o nu in 1971, Over $5IXX> 275 McCormick, C.M. WE NEED Sha k 1 ee t.~hite alJnost new $15. w/mlrrw-#5, pa bt-$20, lllftlunnw tn May. lB7ti flarbor. ~:!" ilth~3 )T P~ g:k. di~\Y 2if1~icm™· In blke, Finn 11eLUng prk.-e ~-·~ 0 Em / Oi1trlbuton1. No exp. nee, _,....,,.._, ha.ngl.ne lamp.45, ChJbe _JJUfl ~lft 645-7.ffl . _ • _Yt • ner. • _$3.500. For t.bole who want. &:6i.._ ppor p!oyer m r iurt-ambltkln. No layoff~. -s:soi.-vo. "''a"' C!tl &2biitil). touni:e'-tramn-.$1. e-a · • -----!lt'Mce. Free · 1VHF FlSHJNG Boet. 20 tt. GJ.al:I. the ultimate in a street I TRAINEES ,..~., 11.,.,1 NOW' ..,.~ .. aw .... IU-Fi--$10 ~t carrler-$5 DINETTE, leaf, 4 chn $35, color antenna w/an,y con-tron Inboard/Outbovd, l50 show bike call 644-6500 or ~. . Late mod. K8lllTIOft: wuher. bookalcolkcton c o m i ~ SUPPLY $40, S56. 6 drawer cheat llOle pu,rchue (ofkr rood hp. Oievy 6 cyl. Boat A: aft 6 call 6"-2342 to ~-\VHO WANTS TO WORK? 636-2840; 839-1778. boob. loola. CU bd d $27.!0, $.U. Wonder Hcne thru 31 May) ABC Color motor orlly uRd 3()() hn 1.:::::..;:..:::::_:::.:,;~:.,::~o:... Wlll train dependable ''"omtn DRIVE A CAB! MAYTAG Washer $150. Aqua loldlng t'OC, check~lier-$~: $5. Ladiet " men's bikes TV, 19046 Bro o le h u r 1 t Ba.it tank. dl!pth finder. MAY 7:KZ SALE to become plft.lllc injection CHOOSE y00r houn, "'Ork Frigidaft w/top freezer drps to tit 9• & &Hi' win-$24.95. TV1 $15 & up. 968-3329 & 9021 Atlanta SIS radiG. S3 6QO call FREE $150 RACE SETUP madding operalOn. Must tor )'O\lrsell, be your own St.25.. l)olb xlnt St&-~ aft 3 do"'S. 673--1266 Re t riKetaton, furniture, 962-55r59 Huntington Beach 63().tno or 633-W. · with any 'l3CZ MX&:Dnel"t haW! own car A be l\ble to boss. Mt>n or women. Can WASHER $40 d ~ $00 • rn.lllc. USED u~. stand entire ohlft I f he slightly hmwllcapped. tor both. • ..,_. lewelry 115 2560 Newport Blvd, C.M. RENT TO OWN 16" 1970 Hydrocwltt lnboard-necenary. Openlngs on 2tid Ne a t-Oean Appearance. Tues thru Sat outboard 90 hp Cortina OMC llhift $2.lll per hr to star1J Vt.'!, retired. Age 21 to 70. Call 644-1810 INDIAN JEWELRY GREEN shag carpeting, xlnt TV'S & STEREO out drive, cathedral bull. COAST 01'0 CYCJ..E and 3rd shift ($2.23 pt•r hr to Supplen1ent your iru.'Ome. BRAND new O'Keefe & )1er-Wholes•l•Dlrect from SPRING TOOL cond., 75 yda, $2 per yard, $10 walk thni windshield ~,,.,~AN BIMd CM 66-8008 start) Raise ln l:I days. Drive a cab 6 hn> or more a ritt dishwasher. White. $150. Reaerv•tlon, Be Inn aold organ $200. G.E. 1'"'reezer misc. Cst. Guard eqwpt.i;-=-"'p"t=v=· -"'--~~~~ 1 Apply 9a~llam or 1-:~ pn1 dny. Apply in person, 830-9110. ··• $30 Iron ••o ....,_,_ •-$1,TSO 675-5881 Joh • R 1-Cycles * Oran<>e Coast Plastics * YeJk'J;i.• Cab Co., 186 E. 16th .;:::;:,:::::::~------by Runnint S.•r, •t · er .,... • -._qi oi: ·' • • n I ac ··• ~ .. West 18th St. SL, Costa Mesa. ~~?~~t ~rp~ NAVAJO TRADING SALE ~~s.' c~-~· ba~~ ~~~ ~ ~~~~:!: =t 1W~riect F,!~1~2 =. iE~~l"::i~s~OR Costa Mesa, CaHl. ty. $8'.> pair. &14-4832 2432 Newport Blvd, Presbytenan Church, 15th Monthly Rentals Available 20 hp Mere. &: trailer "ith DESERT MOTO X TT TR.AJNEES, female, elec· tronlc usemblers, full lime days. start at S 1 . 7 5 . M>1l24!. l[P.J!,.. J C.M. St. & St. Andrews Rd. N.B. Open Eves. 50 4444 new tires. 1350. Call alter AccHsorles. V ~ullding Materl•ls I06 ==="'64"'2"°·725,....,,...1--== KIRBY Vacuum Dilltributar 7:30 p.m. 543-3691. Harbor at Wilson C.M. e SURPLUS BUILDING ROCfilfOUNDS, have 10,!XXI • in Costa Mesa-Will be hat>-STEREO: Jm, 200 Watt BOAT & nlOOrlng 18' Lyman 646-4655 or 646-'.2428 ~ · DI......... blood py to arrange a home Q\ladrasonlc, G a r r a rd need . ti · MATERIAL • l!XXl's of NEW -cts. nwne • >&~n demoMtration. Call 979-52'l2 model. systemlied au t 0 ~ J>&lll ng .& eng. 19n SL 350 llONDA. Top UNDERGROUND CATV Antiqut1 800 installer.s, exper. Trainee!! I ::::;:.;2'.:::..------ITEfl.fS! Doon, lwnber, p1y. niby. Rough fronl Burma & or 979.5469, turntable. AM / FM / MPX ~pair. Xlnt n100nng loca· condition. On1y 2,000 miles. wood alum sheetina: mold· Africa. All or part, 25e n MILLER FALLS Receive r 4 Quad Speakers t10n. 5 min to jetty. Best of· No dents. Perfect shape. ini", {vfndo\vs etc. ' Cl. -558-7275 or ~l, tape a.!ck. Was 1 e f i fer. Call J . Char. 673-3849 Never. been In the dirt. This BUILDl!·R$ SURPLUS -•,..v,..'"'-·=------100LS Mlscellineous 820 unclaimed, still brand new * 14' FIBERGLASS bike is berter than new. considered. 642-3260. '624 ANTIQUES w. eo..1 Hwy. N . B.. 10% • 40"A. OFF Telept'Ornpter, Equal Oppor. Beginning Moy 8th-10A.M. Employer Stock Reduction S•I• ~ARIAN Aas:istanl Oak c h airs, tab l es. for animal hospital, NB, 8 e crelaries, Westminster will train mature penon to clocks, chest of drawers, $450. Resume to Oassitied kitchen cabinets, hi-<:hairs, ad rio. 659 c/o Dally Pilot etc. Oosed Saturdays. 2406 So. Main St., S.A. DIMllOND stud pierced ear· %."Shock proot drlJI $8.99 _w_o_n_tod_______ in box and guaranteed. Orig Runabout, w/trailer .& 35 Save yoursell $250 or $350 Mon thru Sat 10-S ringl>, fiavd~. Appraised ~283_327 Chevy motor. price $400. Now $185. Cash hp Evinrude. Many Extras. off new price. Only l700. n4: 546-1032 $975, sell $350. Larger pen· 3/8" Shock proot Want to hear It run. or small payments. 893--0501 Ski, fish, enjoy. 646--0885 • 556-8597 • 1400 LIN. Ft of beaut weath-dant to match. $350. 558-ms drill • ·• •• .. •• •• .. $12.88 R(>asonable. 543-3691 aft TAPE recorder A.KAI M-8. 4 16' LAP runabout w/cabin, 19Il SL 350 HONDA. Top ered 1xl2 .MA1 ...... from old or 645-6301 eves. 7:30 PM track stereo C1'0SI field 4 cyl. Gray Marine eng. condition. Ordy 2,00J miles. -..... '6 'it" Reversing drill $47.00 Call al N d ts p~ ·" barn $1. ft. 673-l(M. ROLE.X Oyster pc-tual W led E beads $125. 545-8547 ter 5 p.m. Milke of. o en . 1C"11ect ..,,ape. ·..-A.ht 11n • uropean fer. 548-3793. Never been in the dirt. This Cimer•s & dale, just. ""atch. ll75. '&o\.40• Belt Sander •• $69.95 10 -~ b. cl ~ ~~ Equipment 808 __ 67"'-'-3-~7332'7'-----~ s~ icy e. u•.r"UUIN ~ * 23' FORMULA tr es h bike is better than new. M h" 816 3x21 Belt Sander •• is9.95 Twin Bed w/canopy 1 • water cooled, largest out· Save yoursell $350 lo $400 LE'ICA III F with 50mm ac inery 7'' Disc Sander .•• $79.95 6-15-3528 frM to You • ~352~ead, xlnt condition. ott ne~ ~85J>':' $650. Summarlt; 35mm Canon, TIRE Machine • Big 4 ~lodel Musical Instruments 822 P .O. Box 1659, Costa Afesa, 3545 E. Coast Hwy C.allL Corona del 1.ta r 6~2515 WAITRESSES GRAND OPENING Over 18. Full & part·Ume. Antiques, Laguna'& newnt 135mm Munchen $240. Ex-htark V. Winona Armature Super Saw ........ $84.50 3 Linea, 2 Times, $2.00 e 18' TROJAN, 185 hp, inbd BICYCLE SALE cellent condition. 545-9450 lathe. 615--0700. v. BANJOS, Guitars $20. up. ski boat. NEW 10 SPEED ITALIAN Days & nights. fine selection of carved Carl's Jr. Rest. furniture. Armoll'es, tables, Apply ln peraon between 2 chairs, side boaJi::ls, much pm &. 5 pm at Carl's, 3)9'l more. Every item priced at Brigtol, C.M. special sales price. Come in 'betwn 8 ilr: 4:30, M thru F. Miscellaneous 818 l ,.,., HP Router •••• $69.95 Electric Guitars from $59.50. ••••••••••! 548--0223, 645-4325 BICYCLES $59.95. Beach, Furniture 810 7/8 JlP Router •••• $54.95 Thunder Vlbratone $285., DARLING little puppie!'I, CLASSIC Bay Boat Nice 18• Bicycles, 806 E. Bo.100a an browse at 1515 So. Coast W~, exp'd. Ne w Hwy., Laguna Beach. restaurant. 21 or over. Ap- HELP! My folks took oft for an extended trip and left me with their furniture to sell. Only 2 Items left. Pair of matching orange occasional chairs. Tall back, no arms, very comfortable. A steal at $35..-.im alt. 5PM * AUCTK>N * Bandmaster reverbe amps be~le/poodle, 6 weekli old, So.Coast Lapstrake. $1995. Blvd., Balboa 675-7282. 1/3 HP Router · · •• $39.95 & speakers $565., Crovin ~~ng~or homes, 5.57-4071 646--0910 eves. BOB JACKSON 26" & ply in person Fri & Sat. 217 Appliances 802 FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. Amplifier $69.'50. 24• INBOARD/outbrd. Bait RALEIGH INTERNATIONAL MAY 11TH Crown Valley Niguel FREE F1uffy Kittens. 8 wks tank radio depth find & 24%" like new S2S5 ea. Alt ~~ide Dr., Ne wp 0 rt RECOND. APPLIANCES Repossessed, late model, like ~ Music Company 495-1780 old. Black & white, also trlr '63!J.-gJ82 er 6 546-9941 new, COLOR TV'S. Side by ELEf;f,RlC Bass, Brand new Calleo colors. 64~92'7 aft 5 · · .• ~ 0-" -'c':c==c· -----Delivered --guar. Dunlap's, WAITRESS exper. over 21, 1815 Newport, CM 548-7780 ~an & neaL Full or SJ.de "-~gerators. Coi'n Op-nd' Sl . pm. EXP. Yacht mlesman "'lltd. 73 YAMAHA 100 MX, never ~"' STA LUBE co 11on. New rings, Pro Estb N t b k Pho been raced S395 hit k erated Washer & Dryer, Di-• MO:tlel, will trade lor good WEIMARANER f e ma I e · P · ro er. ne ' cas a e p/tlme. Egg & A I e, REPAIRMA~has v.·ashcr, ~. Mr. Zimmer. electric dryer & dishwasher ELEGANT Baaett bedrm. Bet, wht & floral, dresser, mirror, .1 twin po&ter bed w:lth canopy, spread, nite stand, desk &. chair, chest with hutch, jamp, box spring&. mattress, like new, w;o. 548-2479. va.rui, Lamps, Bedroom Sets LUBRICANTS quality acoustic guitar call spayed JG.ilt'Wal.chdog, good eves. 494-2671 ~~7588-payrnents m n10. & MUCH MORE!! 541-9651. with kids. b"OOd hunter BERTRAM-25. Twin 120 hp _7'~:::'.'·=~---- WINOY'S AUCTION NON-DET Molor Q;I 66-2327 Mere. Radto. d.f. outrlgg<r. 1971 HUSKY MX, towored .••••.••••• 39c qt NU Ventura gUilars. Tiny 3 HAPPY "-alth kilt soft top l580(l. ~8-9816 alt 5. racing set up, new top end, blemish in ruUsh. % oU. "IC' Y ens, spare parts $600 best WAITRE••s A 1 ,_ $45 ea. 646-5848. · ~ ' exper. PP Y u• e DISHWASHERS, washen. peraon ~ W. Coe.st Hwy, NB "·•--••4 d...,.....,, reblt, guam & , , IJIC'\WIJ ."I!( p.m. 'J ~•~ 8 WAREHOUSE workman for delv'd . ~7620; 54&-52l · busy sail fabric tinn. Must Rent W•sher1/0ryers COME BROWSE AROUND 2075% NC".\'port Blvd. aa:ept tdpoi:adblllty. Will $2. Wk, Full malnt. Behind Tony's Bldg. Matl's. Costa Mesa * ~ UW" to I~. Call 645--m'iG * 639-lm * MUST move May 7th, best otter takes custom furniture 13' Marge Carson sectional w/curved mahog. tble to WANTED fit. Cocktail tbls, lamps, oil TICKETS TO painHng. !714) 846-10 17 LED ZEPPELIN Huntington Harbour EARLY AM. couch & chair CONCERT $150. Twin bed set $50. Please call Naugahyde cou ch &: 548-7881 A (X)f'fY(NtOff SHOflpjNC ANO SEWING GUtoE FO• THE GALON THE GO. loveseat $150. Naugahyde * For Cost Only * chair & ottoman $ 15 . EXEClll'IVE TRANSFER· 5*-3695 aft 3 RED! 3.5 YR accumulation, WET BAR. high quality antique furn, lOO's of items, brand new. Won on TV. glass library cases, gold Valiied at $450. Fanlastic leaJ china cabinet. 100 yr buy only $260. Must see. old oak rocking chr, nlso "'847=-45=7"4.-,--,.--=---I much junk! Sat/Sun 11}-5. D!N~E t s t 0092 Buttercup Ave. Foun-...,, •• se, r. se, For •n •d Jn Wom11n•1 World 0 -t'd "-2 t tain Valley. 1 blk NE ....... . .... "'ssers, pc. sec . couch, Spanish ,,:all unit, A1agnoUa & lleil. Coll Mory Both 642-5678, ext. 330 beds, hair dryer. misc. LOOK! Carpel San1ple sale! ~ Great for patch"·ork rugs· To Sin 501 Jiffy Afghan BEIGE living room suite super door mats. 100's to ll25. Walnut nightstands $20 choose from-vinyl, ceramic, pair. Lge table lamps $15 fabric samples too! Dream pr. 830-5595. come true for artsy-craftsy 9062 :~ SIZES U,lO Switch about these easy- sew separates for a sum- mer's '4'0rth of different, 1Jporty, rela.-<ed looks! Send oow. Printed Pallt'TTI 9 0 6 2 : Women's Sizes 3-1, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50. Siie ?.6 I bust 401 shirt 2 yardi 45-\r1<·h; tunic 1 5/8 yards; pa.nu 2'19 ,Ylilrd!f. KEVl:1'."Tl'·FIVE CENTS tar each pattern -add 25 cents lor each pattern for Air Mall and Special H&ndl· inl! otherwise thlrd-cl&M dellvery will take three weeks or more. Send to l\larlan'Marlln, the DAILY PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept .. 232 West 18lh St., NC!!w York, N.Y. tOOU . Print N.lME, ADDRl'..SS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NVMBEK. SEE MORE Quick Fuhlom and ci-. one Er ~ from our .simu--C.lalor. All Ooly !IOt:. INSTA!jT SEWING BOOK teW today, ft&r tomorrow. 'limrANT FASHION Jl()()K -Huntlntl1 o I la.chlon kctl. ;t. Hd a "P»d"? Plal-1! an 11d! type! Some furniture. Fan- PLUSH velvet sofa ·"' love tastic prices! May 10.-11 9:30 seal .. A1so H.E."RCULON sofa to 5P~f Royal Interiors 1310 •xr Lt .S., dqu&oen h,id::;,a~L E. Edinger, SA • n , con . qua. v•~9 BLUE couch & chall-"'' 2 LEON RUSSELL Blue/green lamps $18 pr. Sturdy walnut cnd·coUee TICKETS lbl•. SSO set. 837-7188 alt 5 HEADBOARD, red velvet, I gold trim, dbl, like ne\\', $60. 548-2479. * * CONTEA!PORARY 10' Sofa, dining table. chairs, buffet. Xlnt cond. &17-8900 ***SOFA & Loveseat, I never used, both for $1~. Usually home. 968-7910 SACRIFICE 8' couch. Xlnt co11<1. Best offer. 586-0309 For Sale Sat eve . May 12 • SG.50 ea. 548-0069 USED flshin~ tackle, rods & reels, litlE!s, tackle bnxes, tools, houS('wares, C'abinct hardware, and many other iten1s too nu1ue1'0US to nlen· l!{ln, All very reasonable. :162.i \\'. 5th St. Sanla Ana, 9::ID ro 6 Prit 1 block ort !!arbor Blvd. RIVIERA t<0fa bed . Y'RUMMAGE SALE $30. Call GTa-3003 alter 8pm. ri-ray lOih & llth NE'\V HERCULON Loveseat 9:3() to 5, St. AnrltC'l-1.'~ & Otair set $300., also other Presbyle1ian Church, 151h items. 831·1500. St. & SL Andrews Rd., N.B. DUNCAN Phyfe couch, needs SHOP S~11TH ~1-5. w/9" work, $30. Miscellaneous sa\v, 12" sander, 16 drill items. 835-1175. press & 16x31" lathe, 4" Garage Sile 812 jointer. pres.'ICr & sprayer, --''-------1 Cost $560. Sell $170. 642-7340 ~1ULTIPLE GARAGE SALE M1ty 11th-13th, 10am-6pm, Twin bed!'preads, boy s shoes .~ S\\'eaters, diaper hag, auto air rond, din set, bal' stools, ladles bowling ball, camper kitchen & Add a bright touch 'vith slools, childs bike seat, bike this multicolor beau1y. training ,vhls, excercycle, Cloudsoft warmth ls J11st guitar, & mauy many more! what you want on chilly. 232 Robin Hood Place, CM, dan1p nights. Use StTaps or 3 het a:Jth & Zlst, Orange & l'Olors to crochet strips in Santa Ana Ave. gaily tasseled atghali. Pat· tern 7448: easy direction!!. MOVING, MUST SELL: LA\V N DlO"'er , 36'' La"11n1astcr 7\~hp. riding mo"-cr. 6/:Hl700. AA'TIQUE SC\\ling in;tchine. 26" girl's Gitane Bike, dark green. Like new. 6'71".>-2482 after 5. ArEN '11 vinyl rcclhlCl' $50, LADIES Ill a 11 I e · t IV e ed s"'·ivet chah· l.W Both like lie\\', 121 E. Bay, C~1 MOVING to Apt. Frost free reCrig, lreezer, din. set., 2 rouchs ,l'.e. misc. items~ 510-5601 SE\'ENTY·FIVE CENTS ~rniture (110fas. beds, dfn. .for each pattern -add 25 mg set, end tablet!, clothes, cents for each pattern for toys, dishes, odd~ &. ends. Air Mail and Special Hand!· MAY U, 13 ONLY. 24691 EBONY TV ron1bo, albums ing; otherwise third-class Beigreen Pl., El Toro. of old rccon:ls. lge n'L8hog. delivery will take three 837-1753. , cedar chest, 1ge oak drop Alwoel ks Sor k~he SeD~~ GAR.AGE SALE : Kit· leaf tbl. 955 Post l«I., ~1. ce roo 8• chenv.·are furniture. ap... SECRF:rARIAL desk like ~1pf:1'eox1rt. ~~~1:! plllanccs, I used, lbl r I ck. nc1v Mela! w I\\' h I t c Station, New York, N.Y. g iw:wai-e. a~ llJtSfone. Jo'ornlicn top. Cost $3T::r-Sell lOOU Print NaJM. AddnJQ nwtors, etc. 2634 Newport ,1_100=96~2-<00~71 __ ~-- ZI Pattent Namber. ' Blvd, C.J'l.t. WATER Softe ne r, lteliner, itE ED L ECRAFT '72! fl.toVING, starts 5/12, 2 f{1111 sz. Llfetin~ lrbi:ls. Sell Crochet. knit, etc. ~ cribs t'ompletc, hj chair, cheap. 543-7581 24 hn. directions. 50c. etc. lamps, TV all ldnd! t>f 90 CASES of misc. oU 1td- tutut 1'tacrame Book. f.Usc., llal De la ware dltlvts. All ol'I pnr1. \Viii Brll:ic, fancy kmt!, pat· 5.li-80.U take -Oest offer! 54~ ten1!, Sl,00. l\tOVING, furniture, baby lnttant Crochet Rook -crlh &. rna\trei;s, v.Tought Learn b&, picturt>s! Pat· Iron bookcaites & mile. Fri, l~~ lnlitant Gi ft Book Sat, 19932 Providence Ln, -more than 100 gilt. c118=-=-... ,.....,-,,,..,.,....-$1.00. Thunday & >rlde:y COJ\fFRESSOR for sulc. Slip 2'10 wit, 3 n1011. old. Call 642-14]3 KlNGSIZE Bed, good, clean, complete. $50. 138 E. 18, CM 5"8-4485 OMnplete Afahln Boot -MOVING SALE $1.00. 'l'hunday &. l''Mday FUCHSIAS ,Ferns, Begnnl8ll 11 Jltf)' Rt11 Dook11 • 50c.. '123 Victoria, Costn. Meaa & baskets. n1uMi. to Sun . Book of Lt Prlst1 Af&ban.. SPRING Garage Salt. Somto XlO E. 20th, C.M . ~ 50c. Bntiques & bookt GU Stal COLOR TV RCA 21 $100. QalU Boot l -16 pattenq. st Cotta ~tl'S8. ' Freezer up--Mght 15 ct $35. SOe. " • · Love sc&t iOfa $50. 642-4782 l\tu.eum QllUi Book I -GARAGE SAl~E frl &: Sal 50c. Furniture, clolhlnjt & mlEN:. quut.. '"' ToU.)''11 Uvtnr • 2141 College Ave. C.M. b beautiful potlems. 50c. US!;,O BICYCLES All 1»es * 642-1212 "~fake Roon1 For O.drjy" • • • clean out the g11.rage ... tum Iha! Ju~ Into c11.sh with a Dally ~II 11.11ltled ed. CAii 6'12-5678. SUPER MOTOR OIL • • • • • • • • • • • 4.5c qt Mlrr!-VIS ·oh. .... 55c qt Competition ~totor oil • • • • • • • • • • • ""' qt 2 Stroke MOtorcycle oil •••..•••...•••. 60c qt 4 Stroke Motorcycle oil •..••.••...•.•• 55c qt BOAT TRAILER & MARINE Grease 1# Can •••.•• 6Sc 14 oz Tube ..•••••• 6.5c Grease Gun • • • • • • $3.98 1# Can Hand CleQJl(!I' with wall dispenser $5.96 1# Can Hand Cleaner ••••••••••••• 49c ,, TRUECRAFT SOCKET SETS 12 pc '~ Drive •. , •. $5.95 13 pc 3/8 Drive •• $11.50 13 pc ~~ Drive •••• $12.95 h!etrlc Socket Set 11 pc 3/8 Drive $3.89 LUMIDOR TOOL .CHESTS All purpose tool box $6.50 Two drawer chest $12.98 10 ora ... oer Rolla\.\>a,y ••••.••••••• $99.50 BLACK & DECKER DEWALT 8" Radial Ar111 Saw •••••••••• $109.99 10" Radial Arm ,.&.lv ..... ···f. fZ!9.95 12" Builders Saw $379.95 1" Disc Sander • • • $69.50 2 Speed Polisher , . Sl.25.00 -~----- WE ALSO STOCK Drills ond Tops Bearing• Roller Chain & Sprockets V-Belts & Pulleys Hole S•w• & Sow Blodos end G1n1r•I I ndu1trlal Supplies • 830 w. 19th COSTA MESA 645-7318 $35-$60. 642-3247. multi colored. Need loving Boats, Sill 909 Dave 493-8019 ., ' JOSE & Ram' concert homes. 64&-1796 CJ=;cal IA. $~. C2> BLACK kittens 8 W'ks, 1 30' TIRIMA!tAN 35% BULTACO 250, $150 1.i 1 F aned & i.--brlcn comp eted 1nclds plans, 3 673-4534 call 642-8412 • • we · '"""' • hulls. crossarrns, b e s t ----".:.:=---Office furni•11re/ Mother Russ. Blu. 642-776S materials, must sell. $1250 M H '""' BEAUTIFUL year old male cash. 539-1156 otor omea Equip. 824 San1oycd, loves kids, tree to COLUMBIA 26 MARK II Sale/ Rent 940 '13 EXPLORER 20' MARCHANT calculator with tape. Does everything. Paid $950, Sacrifice for $350. 536--6.190 EXEC n ·vl chrs $15-Z Sec ctn $8/32 Desks $2)/95 OU Sup! 861 W 19 CM 642-3408 Pi1nos/Or91ns 826 ORGAN HOBBY good hon1e. 642--0MS. Inbcl, dinghy, immac cond., PEANUT & M u g s i e , choice off shore mooring in adorable kittens, 6 wks,. Newport Bay. Priv prty. need hon1e. 64&-3573. Best Offer, 774-5596. Full . y Seit Contained, with 2 YR old n'Ul.le dog If. CATAMARAN_ 20 ft. B-Lion. stove. refer, wardrobe Dachshund h_ Terrier to Alum. & f1berglas, good tinted glass 8 ply f ' good home. 54;;.-6191 cond.; very fast; comp. visorg 20 oOo BTU~· snn- 4 MO. Fm!. Lab/Collie/ with harness, t ra 11 er . Pollution ~ntrol &: ~"!:i· ~pherd mi."<. Hae tmd, $895/offer. 645-1091 $7495 · shots. 64&8515. LIDO 14 Comp! w/traller ~~~~~~~~~~! $950. de Anza Bayside r Storage or call ( 7 1 4 ) plus tax &: Uc. Don't buy any r .gan. until 11~1 328-3469 10% Down. $104.75 per mo. you CM play! Non-players Pets and Suppllet JS SAILBOAT like new lOOO tor Ii.I mo. Cash price inc welcome to attend tree work . or besi offer! Tax & lie. $7976.75. Deferred shops. For Information pa 1 · n 2 ~· 84 ContaL1 : Tom Dieterich * 558-1397 * ymen pnce .,. ,vuu. · 642-2151 C1t1 852 C ALIFORNIA Catamaran ~t· 1! 75· On Approved ----------·I w/lrailer, xlnt cond. $450. '-'~' · ( 26585). Coast Music Service PERSIAN kittt:ns, CFA reg. Call 968-ll07 e Siles e S. · Newport Blvd. at Harbor Xlnt. qu~ty. $15-$100. Also INT'L 12 ft. ~ii boat. Good e Rent•l1rv1ce Cost.II MeA stud sennce. 892-2970. condition Sl?5. Call BUI at Dogs 854 1 _>!G"'53 __ . ____ _ BABY GRANDS Now save up to $1000 on cer· taln Ooor models. Other Grand P ianos from $729. These and many more at: W allichs Music City South Coast Plaza 540-2830 PUPPY WORLD, 100 MJxed 18' SAILBOAT EXPLORER OF Pups, also Irish Setter $50. Needs work $50. 847-8984 Basset $40. Alghan $50. * · a;• LUDERS-16 rncing Keeshound $50. Bull.Terrier, sloop. $2.000. Call 496-2130 HUNTINGTON BEACH T-<::up Poodle, Chihuahua, before 6 PM . Lab., Boxer, Shepherd, -6-. ---1-1--. -ho--.-11 Cockapoo. Open Eves. Stud 1 DAY Sa or in aut1fu 18801 Beach Blvd. S42-8803 Serv. 531-5021 s6~~·391800. , Call 673-9322 or HUNTINGTON BEACH MAGNIFlttNT Ebony 5'2" C ,,,._.. Antique AIWlan Baby ~..=~;;~Min~tne& Boats, Slips/Docks 910 MOTOR HOMES Grand, like nu cond. Must Very rell.'lOnable. Terms. <'JC. 35 . BOAT 11 0 · ._ __ Apollo, Pacesetter, Baron, Sacril this prize possession 64~223.i Mr s p. n Cn11.1,.. Jamboree, Roblnhood •t $785 ~°'300 . nel. $2. per ft. ~ or We've -t 'em at · ~ MALE Saint Bernard, 1 n10s. 979--0745 KEN""DON WANTED Piano, u sed AKC registered $ 2 5 O. walnut console. not too old 643-8393 aft. 4PM w~ry:D : New~rt Slip ?r MOTOR HOMES and in good condition. side tie for 21' sailboat. Wtll 640-l8S9 OLD English Sheep Dogs 1 share. 833-1828 70 ---~~~....,.,---~= k V hl Sho 7 N. Harbor, S.A. ~S • M h" 828 w s.. ei'Y rensona e. w B t S·-• & Ski 911 rei;ervallons for Summer ew1ng ac 1nes quality. AKC, 839-8939. •:;o:;:•:.;;;s;..• '°''...,....:;::;:_::...:.;;;;.._;..;..o1 MOTHER'S DAY *SPECIAL* Zig Zag se1\ing n1achine, chair & nice cabinet (neo.v) • ••••••.. •• . . •. . . ••• • $139.95. .!\Jany, good, used portables, starting price ........ $9.95. All Guaranteed Over 11 yrs. 1n Costa Afesa. Si ncere Se>.ving Machine and Vacuum, 1878 I-larbor • 646--9742 * TV, Radio, HiFI, Stereo 836 STEREO: Unclaimed 1973 Garrard model. full size turntable, AM/Fr.1 Stel'oo receiver, full range air speakers, lape deck nnd hl°'adphone plug in jacks. Brand ne\v in b o x , guarant~d. Orig price $190, now $95. Co.sh or sm;ill payn1ents. S93--0501 *SPRING SPECl,AL* Rebuilt-Picture Tube $85--21 '' or 25'' Color * 2 YEAR \l.1ARRANTY 1-110\\'. Phone ~fiss Bennet at TOY Poodle, white female 16' REGATIA with 65 Mere. ~ AKC, $ll0. •kl. clean SltOO. 960-1443 see -~,7~1'""'D~O=D~G-E--I Call ~2-l49 .::lo::_:a,,ppe.:".::':::'::•l::;e _____ 1 OLD EngLi•h Sheep Dog pup-1 ~~~~~~~~~1 TRAYCO pies, AKC, xnlt blood line, shown by appt. 962-7444 1 [i] FamUy \Vagon, V-8, Auto Tranc....,.tation I Tl'ans, Power, Factory Air COLLIE puppy, AKC, sable ...-¥• Cond, refer, tow mileage, me.le, shots, show quality.p ______ _,_ one O\vner, looks and runs $75. 49--1-!:19&1. like new (@;EIU). $3995 MIN, Schnauzers 12 wks old, Campers, Sale/Rent 920 AKC, 3 ma!es. Call 637-4518 '71 SIX pac cabover tor lm- ENGLISl-1 pointer puppies port track. SIDve, sink, 10~ Downplus tax: 185 &""lic. for sale it"ebo.'<. Boot roof rack, 10 • ·ON i:ier mo. 646-1792 sleeps 4. Like new, J,a75. or lor 60 mo. Full Cash Price ==,_,.-=--,,.--,---.-I offer. 49tHl23. $4197.75. of?terred payment IRISH Setter, female ,70 CHEVY price $5442.50. A.P .R. ll.76. $75. 962-0184 10%' 4 Star ~::::~r.~~: On Approved credit AFGHAN Puppies, ch, sired, p/s, p/b, sit, aJeepe: 6. · e Sales e Sef'Vic. blondes & brindles. $75. & l4350. or best oiler. 496-3T:>5 e Rentals up. 893-2655 or 894-9703 after 6 pm. Horses 856 '67 FORD '}I. ton camper EXPLORER OF special. a/I, air, 8""' cab 5 YR. Oki Appy POA gelding over camper. All aCCCSA. -rlbbon winner -11. real Perfect. $2000. !'BHJ7'23 beauty! Experienced rlder. , Call alt. 6 PM 846-6012. 72 vw Advonture camper. HUNTINGTON BEACH Xlnt cond. 22,000 ml, Priced HORSES Boarded, riding right. GT:r-2348 arena &: tralls. 4D77l Acacia , 18ll01 n--Blvd. In1-1tallation Available Jtice's Televl'lkln Se.rvlce fornterly Mesa Norlh Center 1 St SA Heights 64'1-5..'m 1970 ll \VEST\VA YS ca.n1per D<:"tich m.8803 . . . . on '00% T Dodge p/u, many HUNTING'ION BEACH extras, make otlC'r. 962--5756 1 Bl\'.k S. of Baker 546-6002 8oett Ind open 9-5 (6 da,ys) ..,...£QUlpment I I~ J Cy~les Bikes 1970 PACE-ARROW, 22' self S • ' 925 contalnl.'<f, generator, root 4 coot1r1 eng. ~Jr cond, roof deck CORY TV HA VE SEVERAL GOOD RECONDITIONED COLOR TV"S • 646-4114 • Boats, Gener1I . • w/lt1.ddcr, new crpta, drps 72 SUZUKI 400 Motocross &: upholstery. R track 1ten!O 900 $800 or ~t olfer. Call & many extra.a. Priced to 646--5818 aJt Spin. sell , 646-8402 9' HlGl-1 11)C(.'d tnnat.11..blc n' 1-fondll 750. good con- boat, noorboards & oars. dition, ~Teen, lo mileage. '7'2% ~· ESCAPADE Onl,y wed 3 times, $XO. Best of(tt. 979-4517 eusto'm, alr, alt utru. By 642-3776 after 5 pm. ''17 SUZUKI TS 250 Savage owner, Jllle or I r a de • 67'' MAGNAVOX Asl.ro9onlc WANTED: Yearround deck like new $600 Ft RM '. 494-2742. 161 Temple Hills slereo v.•/Al\t /F'M radio & space for ~hA:rp 3.l' Owens W-4274 Dr., Lag B. record 'forage $1.20. 2:1" fiybrldge cruiser. 2 1 3 : •70 ~~ YAMAllA -~n:.:.:.:,EXP~LO""'R~E"'R"""26""'."n.,.-nta,..,..1 --I Magriavox c n lo r Iv 793--0279 .uu 31000 I SI I $I 7 5 slrtet bike $325 priv. party. • • m • Pl ~mte con1ro · Boat.-, Maint./ 960-1383 6. Air, self cont. 15% oU 1st Service 902 '72 HONDA ~. mint -nd. 3 rental&. MCJ.-2886 ROBERTS 33.1X tape ·---------~ '" FOR I ~· W1 •·-recorda. Sanwi 1000 amp, 2 Many aoceS1;0Me1, $600, ren -nne.....,..,. Lancer 44 Apeakcn, Gira.rd 80111/MArlne 557-4071 all Spm. Sltept '6 air, .elf-contaJned tum !Able, $500. 673-7332 Equh>. 904 1969 BLUE Honda 50. Very ~ 10c mlle. Phone ZEN!Til cOlor TV, 21:', 1969 McCullough. 9 hp out· f!OOd ''"'<Utton. 112 5 · R t A Motor Home reniote control. X I n t board, elec atart &: gen. 6 5IJ6.-0996 alt 6PM. E1 Toro en v.'Orlclnii; l'Ond. S 15 O. Gallon tank, best ,otter. TR.Aru:tt for boe.t, motot't)'-for your V•c•t'°" 67:1-1052. O.nfortb O>nalr <ompo.". cle or etc. Needs worlt. $50. * 5314'00 * 23" TABLE model $40. 673-5209 841•8984. * RENT: :ir Winnebago Color TV, $85. 50HP Mere. Boftt engine, FOLDING a I um in um Chleftan. Slt-epe 6. Air cont!. 545-1645 xln't cond. Controls. tankai. n1olOC'c)'Cle nuol1', 1trong A Deluxe. 64()..0070. ZENM'H 23" portable 1V A-rust 11ell ~. EY ela lla:ht. $17., 49Ml64. RENT or 00y l4' Pace .\1'.'" \\'Ith remote control. Xlnl. ~· A i'OOd want a oJOd Jn. row. Very rea10nablc. ~ $40 ~. ct::Aiirnm wHI 11ell It! vestment. td w/xtrnt. 714! 5'6-441J. , ' ) :; f iiiii.:i'i~ ~.-iiiiiii .... ·~l§l~~;,·1 .... ---· ... ~~/ ' Motor "-• ~ Ill P.iiiiii!ii!;;; i Solt/Rent t40 Recrtttlonat A-,,_.. ~ 1ro,,,.. '711 A-, tT~~r;ted , 971) Autoo, U...t ftoA-UtM 9'0 I• '73 VIV VohlclM 9" •THE l'INllT IN MT MllCIDU llNZ VOLKSWAGEN CHEVROLET : ~D I :. t,tOTOR AH~= '71 FORD 1/4 TON ~·~.l~r:A'f.11: 'Tl nAT, 114 -hie, ,,72 MIZ TOYOTA IALI W.:1~ V,:h7 ::.:"In~~ LIK£ nu. 11169,' dr vinyl top, '12'LTD CaunlJY -~ I Full)I Hit oonlalned, -" CAMPER IMPODT SIRVICI e =--w/WI ~L , ... ~Toluot'·-AM/FM Radlo lo•.-mllc , p/1, brand nu tlm, lo Wan. auto, a&, Pia. . • Sleerina, P°""r Brakeo, SPECIAi,; Oo ,....rid a ,._ 11111 -;r'~ ..\. Call ~'';; ,3IOSL ...,. ""' Hlde-a·ll<!d an<t' Tubl• ~. mll ... •,.1Jle6. 83!-M lc>ock>d, 10,000 ml, . I Auto Tmt. •tove, ovon, with· 11' """ "' am., OPID 'llllO. ii •IO Cl>t. !lboo>Y -.,..u,.. .~~~SIW $1695 , CHRYSLER ~NO • Olt. ai;; =--~u;""g,.=: PARKWAY CAMPER filtThun. UI 9· 5al.lul ril'i'·111.~-.pt1pty, ~.~~= 1m l.ogllllQ Imports wtwhllo v1,,,1 top A'+'· • •we battery, ftre exit. V.t Auto Tram Powtr 'ft tap. bilbi.ma yellow, er 12,000 -t. oar. Can lt&lt. Au:&o. tr1•:s,ndkl, t.ct. alt 494-1075 1971 Ct.-..•er ~111~:... r11b1,.;_,. ~~; .~ ... ,. $6895 st"'1-Fae-Air O>od (po !Pa=-~ coll.,.. MMltO ·-c. .,.. ~ w w t•-tin\ "'JM " •·· ·~ _.,_ .... .,.....;, :,; ---1 ,,__ I'" -n ~IQ., "''19t · '67 \'\V t"'un1prr . At11/fn1 Newport .. --tow mlkaae. Clean &I a pin. .... .,.,..,. •• -• -..... w •• eng., Jim Siemon• Imports 1lui. CTEt100f1'°7l , stf'reo, neiv shock•. 11~11• lo ~T }-'ORD ConvcrtitW. 1L $3895 ... ......,.....,<=-.._ .... toHO ml '*1nt. cluteb. dllc. brief,, UOl ""'·"'11 $2563 nu, xhtl. oond. , I l .a 1 ~. 2 door hardtop. V3, 1uton11il,il' .i!WJ. ~v.·t<!· t1u10. Top $· plus tax &. lie. SS mpr. 1110/ecllr !llMn' ..,.... r t l l1IU1 1 S79 846-tln 10'% Down, 84 mo. at Sll2.62 CJliSAVERS _. 'Newport Be&cb JAVE NO\V M8-9821 trafll., actocy a r, riM 111, _>:.=cc''·-'-~=--~ . ~ AT '"' V\" CAMPER. Xlnl ·-·•. 'c""·ar.t,..., 5TIDLS. A "''" dean MAVERICK : , mo. Full cash price l'l340.10. " pl"" tax a, Uc. '.93 To>ota H·toii .... WOZllOI HONDA ' •~•• : Deferred Price $10,150.~. 10 ,u Down. SSl.H per mo , M VW ·Btttlt ••••• O:ZJmO EN'I'!i!! FROM?'LICAR:ntUR LWJ\I• \\'/pop top • tent. $2'~. $l 877 A PR 10 M. On Approv<'d lo' 6ll mo Cull Prloe 'Tl VW k ..... Boe11t IUICKI' e '71 Mt .... o lltnz D<IY• I 48 • 8 8 T T ; '"'·' 6.d11 : irom. =~~~P.~'. :~ ;y..o;:. .. :: =: '73 HONDA cmcs A~bL111~~.·~5 toYOTA -·voLv.o ,.,. 9 . "~:~ Bl•:.~j ¥;1r~~·~:.· · e S.lao e Service On Approved c red 1 t. •n _, .... 119C11L HONOA SANTA ANA ,.. IUWA wno • Ront.io lll55TlJJ. 301 W. W••-·540-7430 av,,..., ·Dtllvory 1981 Harbor, C.M. 6'11-\l30.l TOYOTA MERCURY i I • S.lao e s ervice can about Olll' Cell Anytl.,,. TRIUMPH VOLVO SALE! EXPLORER • Rental• !'REE Pl\IZEI * MUI04 * Huge Sovlngs '""! ,,,_,1"'·-C!:!:._~930.I 1969 Merc:sy 1 OF ""-LAS 1972 MBZ Tl\IUMPH 'Tl Tl\-6, Air '72 & '73 '!2 a .. .,,.,.,. Nowpo'1 , Show"'"''"""''· 'door~. EXPLORER W Condi~ AM·~ ltooni Cflnct :l dr. hi, p/a, w •Ulo !ran., factory ttJr. '.HUNTINGTON BEACH ALFA ROMEO ·rr GLAS. 1-GT. lo 350SL Strlpe ~ , ONLY "b, .,,., vinyl '"''· ,.,,.d Ml""'"''· po""' """"'·I '""" $3795 or Finn · · 12 whbt, ?-.lust 1n·ll. 11'••1 ort1•r rud~1. hcflh't". 1 llCZA. , : OF ALT'A' ROMl!X> •n GT mUeqe, xlnt cond. Make ~ML .it blue/blue i"ter. LEFT AT ov1·r IYhoJc11ale book htk~ $977 : , : Ul80'1 Beach Blvd. 842-8800 HUNTINGTON BEACH SPIDER, ~ Bn.nd-otter. aft 8, 552-8771 power-. AM/FM stereo. PRE-OOUAR It! C{11l K:l:l-3646. : HUNTINGTON BEACH new-Rotffw, Full l,,jactton. JAGUAR Air oond., m11& wbed1. Xlnt OEVALAUTION See Ir . You'll "'IY u • --l)t B M e ·--2lJ. one owntt car. 036Ft.W. COMET I e SAL ES e t••~ "' r "· ..,....., Jim SI.mono Import• PRICES! . · f\ l , • SERVICE • ~~~~~~~SJ46r°3 ESJ, t*:i_or l'lnn Qffer. '70 XKE Jaguar, silver 1301 Quail BEAUTIFUL '72 T'R6 oon-\V& make oVt·111ea1 dellw>rtc1 '61 1Uf4lt ~ • RENTALS • ~{.~. inlWI.. 2 Ir p 1,a cpde' Newport Beach v er t I b I c • . xlnt cond. See It • You'll Buy It t'Of.1ET :.! dr. J.111 -'62 INT. Scout, '66 32T Chevy -."'' 1oi , a , I , 83l-9300 AMIF'M rruho cQlette ~ l • nlileai:;e, good lirf's. battt•rr I VOi.ft ena., 4-\VO, a/c, r&:h, new radlale, Koni llhodai, Jo ENTER FROM 'MacARntUR pl~r. MJchetl'n' Ures. pseo -'411, tati4 &: *-'111 r·ovct'!i, S,:j\(l/bt-;t of· ~ winch, Wamer b u b 1, mt .. $3850. 96&-7551 Finn. Call 11.fh~r 6 pm for VOLVO !er. a.IB-2'267 1986 ll11rtli.1r, C.N. _ 3 overdnve, tow bar, tu\\ top •ii JAGUAR XJ~. sable 2IO SL CPE app't. 64&-7'65. ·n COUGAR XRT. X " • back oe•I. 11000, 813-1138. AUDI brown, ........ rad. CJrli. CJrli, owner, xlnt cond., 1966, ' .. _ •• 000 CONTINENTAL ''"'"· lo mllea ... "'" '"" '71 INTERNATIONAL owner. f!l!. 61W631. ~ wlbllc Int., auto, AM/ ~~~ ~fc~i;8Pe;iect. 1966 Harbor, C.l\f. 646-930.1 tullY loaded. AM I t1't ,.,...,..II Ii Ton. 4 ""1 'TO AUDI LS 100 am/Im KARMANN GHIA P'M, '""'vi h~/lonneau, Beaut oond. ln/oot. Below '72 VOLVO *MINT CONDITION* llereci. 1111 whttl, ~/at · HUNTINGTON BEACH drive. 4 1pd. V345, Pl~. radkl, atr, ,u,nnx;f, 4 Ar,----................. _....,._ auto tnna, · 835®1. bluebobk$1695.Ca.llatter6. 4 dr M'dan. SacrtNee m . 1971 M•rl< IJJ, loac1ed w/ Ina: & brake•. a.tr .. ~3s.1CI AC. 2S,OOO mL 673-Mn: 6*-3213 '69 ICARMANN GHIA, new '82 MERCEDE.S m-5 auto, ~7635 t.o.p. Pvt Pty 1J60.107j 1/1 6. el(tr1u1, fully equipped. Wh lie ctelux Interior A . 18801 Beach Blvd. 842-8803 , . IMW P&lnt . brak ti AM{FM, $5(11 or belt ofter. TRIUMPH TR4A '67 Good wi red lnt., white vtrcyl top. lime f::l'<'Cn wfbl•ck •I HUNTINGTON BEACH 71 IntematiOn&l Travelall "-See 'toe':rec. S:i o"7:: 642-ll69 aft 5 PM cond, Extras, mag 'wheels Avtot, Ultd 990 Low mile~. ~75() firm ! roof. Super buy at · 27, 'l'f{A\11..'.0 Ton. 4 wh. drive. 4 1pd. v. 4SS..'l346 Ask tar Phil, 87S.TIU ~07 call betwn 4 & 8 Call or i KI n a I · r ~· ui-· ''"''RER 3411, PIS, P/B, AC. 2Il,OOO SALES IMW L!AsE D MGB TR• N-' TL C BUICK pm only. 11<-;;1.i;n ""'k"""1 ~ -'" ml. m.25-10. Servl<e MAZ A • ooul • ' ' 'Ill I.INCOLN Cont'\. Ouk 'Tl MONTEGO, M)(Q " Zl'J!'pfff~~I:Efo\~U 'Rl V\V Bus Rock Buel)' 40hp T.ravelina Overseas thl1 sum· MGB '67 ROADSTER, Wire $450. 613-8282 '61 BUICK aray-blk vtn tnp. All pwr, Sb/p1, r/h, ~ w~~ VAN CON\C:ltSIJNS tipd, Crown body, $500. mer? We can arranae tor *Mazda '73 Rotary* ~ll. Chrome t.ugpge '72 TRIUMPH TR6 ttlt whl, all lthr Inter. A..t lx iJ!t, 1o m., beknr ·~11 , • Seivlce • Rental• 54a....8DM deUvery,ol the ,BMW of )'OW' $66 MONTH Rack, RacHo, Super Dunlop 847-5719 eves. 2 dr, V-8, Auto. Real clean • en&· nialnl. S@erb au.to. 13Z!O. ~aft 7. T k 962 choice lncl~dln&: shlDDinl: 38 MONnlS OPEN LEASE Radials, 86801M, S:l.396. or Body &:eln~~0R..'!111 &ood. $2.50. Pvt ply. $24.'Kl. 6tl-2W. •n MERC MO RE * Danmor Inc:. * rue • ~ pbone. Dellv..,. 11 avail-WW accept trad .. in• Finn O!l..... VOLKSWAGEN ~·~, • '62 CONT. Full pwr. "" oond, H.T. all pow. Low .. L 13301 lltu"bor Blvd., C.G. '71 DATSUN pickup w/alr a 10 in mott alJ. .toretsn CALL MR. ·FRY'8(2.f886 19'1 Buick Rlvler1 Gd tires, new hrka S400 or • Bffulll'Ull 98.1-llf'r, f>31"6000 oond.,_w-ge ~·heel1, 1ttp oountrleL , · ,L • • H -1 B h VW's · Full Powar, Fii.ctory air, hst otr. 548-1801. Noxt lo G.G. Datsun bumper & Six Pac cabo~r ~:~:en authorhea un . eac Am/Fm radltjl. Land1:1u lop. '69 MKllI Per1c.'Ct, $3899 MUSTAN• RENT my new ] 9 7 3 Camper. Sleepa four adult1. 850 North Be h Blvd La NEW & USIQ Low mlley_e. Make oUer. 8.13-JZW ex 285 ~'IDorado M.inl ~1 ob i I e ~:.xi~~r =r. ~ Habra ac ., _ MAI.DA 2 Big Loc1tl~n1 _ )1Uw3194 847..0100 eVeli & wkcnds. SHARP '65 Mui~ 2 "taopemcd.~k'"". 9~ 4 27· f'.1,1 po\'-·er, separate. 498--4],23, 879-5824 01' 522413$ OPIL 5 MINUTES l'ROM 1971 BUICK 8 pa11 Ellate CORVPft"r 1-1.T. 6 cyl aulo, -ftlH, " ~ ~ V"I bom I COSTA MESA Wazon. 19,000 mlle1, new 51 I 5 . cent eng. Look• a: rum w 1973 Dlsco\'ertr and Sundial '65 EL CAMINO 283 ell&'.. ~t out new ' FOR al '69 ()pe! GT lirea FM alereo, All .po~r. , good. $550. 536-3400 Motor Homes fqr 11en1, make 3-tbe pd., crm whl•. tu.ch rub-& l73.U Bit ch Bl. 842-tl88 paint, i:.u •. clutch. 102h~ 2114 E1, 31F,~3J S.A. Trailer PKO S~. 548-3123 64 CORVE'M'End. Reblt ena. 1986 H.T. 8, PIS, Rltlf, Bob umgpre Pon" ac, r, \onneau, new clutch, MERCEDES IENZ enc, mGl\. 644-759! .._ 'TO SKYLARK I b Inna. front ' . lull pwr. "' beet oiler. 892~1 or 638-2500 brkl, tune & Gabriel air .,_. o=• ~ ~'llon, 14 Milet No. of p, 1• Pl • AM·FM. H.T. Conv. Nu -j.,... SiM-0 i=::;;;=-.::,,,=:=;.:'-· -~ 1hocka $1000. 543-1862 aft. 8 u1"' .. ......., ....... Wo<.u So. Cout Plua) tact. •Jr, radio, under warr, Uree A brk• M8-4M& ~' or •, Trelloro, Trevtl 945 PM , SO USED beot otter. Call 83HIOO Rece ntly overl,.uled I,.,,., SHARP ,.;., 'Ill Ve< Stln& '61 MUSTANG Fa1t bo. 13, TERRY T-u.,, xlnl '!3 DATSUN PU, 1SOO ml. ROY CARVER, Inc. MERCEDES ~. 833-93!2 ""· !PM 15 MINUTl5 'ROM 12200· 962·U72. Ray Ji 4 pd loaded O.T. ! ood. Rill. Excell cond. AillllY ext~';... S600 or Cu.atom PfJ.nt, mag Whla, 234 E. l7tb St. '64 OPEL. New ttr;,, NM MISSION VllJO 100B: BUICK Specia.1 Sta War. ~1-ix1B pri, pfy. · · cond. SliOO/otter. beot oiler. 1163-481.1 aft 4 cult Int, wido Utto, old< Cost M -ON DISPLAY good, Muat Nll, 110 0. ARIA Privale P<I)'. Ong. owner. OLDSMOllU plpe1, tonneau co ve r' a esa 6t&-tTU lfttr 5 pm 442 SO RISTOL S.A Exceptionally clean. A/C + COUGAR • · ;~~VElrEZ!i:. Awn!,,., AM/n.!, mu.tl oe\\, $2800. LEASE A 5ba,g ~ei:,.Car PEUGEOT 1 S~20 ' ' many extra.. 971h1886. llalft • 8'moo I s.,,..., lhed, Air '°"' !14l>-2Tl5 between 8 and 5. I • CS.A. Frwy. Eut on liTO l\IVID!A •harp 0,,. '69 COUGAR. aulo lr11•1. OLDIM091La , d\tton.,. Colo• TV aerial, '&4 li TON ci..v,, Pick-Up, 1973 BAVARIA Ctmlftl In Ivery Doy '62 P!UOIOT 404 lit St. I! mL) l'lllOCPG I bri< 80-lm p/o, d\ac, braku, lac. &Ir. 1 GMC TltUCIC lully equlpt. >4S..'1!> m ..,., ..,itracOon, ..,., Ask About Our Unique Stmrool $l75 ~ l9Tl BUICK Umlted 4-<loo• °"""'• 11600. Pr\. pty. HONDA CAlll nibber;,_ many xtru. 18l\O. Ullcl "·r-•--L••M • c-monw-lth loaded! Xlnt oond\Uon ··~: 14T~ all 3 pm, ··-%i~...:ribl,:i:~.w~~~ 892-0ln att.r 6 pm CRIVllR llMW '.""Pi:.;' PORSCHE ""' -!3HllD or 644-:l!Oll ~ ·it.COUGAR iffirT, tuU pwr UNIYua11 J Ute S:llOO 6444259 ·ti F'ORO PU... 2!i0, air; Sal ... ServJco • Leaslnc Ho.use' of I-ports Moton Ltd. 'Tl l\IVIERA 12100 W/ok, xln't cond. Pvt .... l8'IO H-Bit.;,;:. I ' ' · r/h, .EIB. .f/S. 9-Mi ' 208 W ... lst-St..,...l Santa Ana ~ ~ --•!.-• lil6t PORSCHE Super 90 Immac. cond. Loaded, 68,C@ Sl.325. 96&-2884. O:>sta rrtesa , SHERWOOD-Tent "Trtt 1 Amerigo Camper.Sell 'COfll 835-3 71 6862 Manchester, Buena Park Ro¥11ter. Sllvt!r. MUlt tell. Santa Anl ml. 968-1896 ·70 GOLD EU:mtna\dr, new ''ft"-GOLD Toronado I 151!l. SI,,. 6. Xlnt cond. Priv. !6500, ll4lH800. CAPRI on Ibo Santa Ana i'rwy OnlY SUOO. Call wkdayo on-'TO VW SQUAl\EBACK CADILLAC 302 Bo" enr.; dloc .bral<eo, btdwd, under !8.000' I pa.My. 837-30l9. '72 FORD CourJer, all t x· ~7250 Jy,·BU-J382, uk tor Steve. Sunroof, st. AM I F M, 4"'ipd, xlnt cond, 8'7--3331 ~ 642-5225; cvc'8iyiitiiil;:1 , "Trailers, Utility 947 ~··"take ~er r::.'"'" or '70 Men:edes lenz '6"-9U E, TARGA, oll ver, 5 ra~al•, Coco m•"· xlnt DODGE 114412'15 I GARDENER'S equipment $2500. Call Rick, 2687 ~ JIM SLEMONS spd, mqa, plrelU., ™ ro · ·72 vw BUS · ·~~a~~.c:'m~~· ~':fl ... _... ...~ · ..... ...w.,. l.,·12i:,;.¥-CO"w'=s-,Toron,...--ado..,.--<H trailer "'ith 1001 rack 4 1867 Ford PtckuP,. long bed, ~ stereo, xlnt 5"-'585 Low miles, radials, AM/FM tilt &: lele&Oplc whl, crul~ '70 DART Swtrwer, pvt Piii'-·oepdonnl exec11tlve'1 ramp. $100. 557-tiOOL !1!: enc, real aood cond. call IMPORTS PORSCHE Tarp '68. Low st. Call 645-7830 days only oontrol, door lock• 6 way ty, auto, aJr, P/S; 21,000 Bell-oHer over A S I P 94• .. ~TUl2 MERCED.ES BENf mt. Xlnt cond. Muot oell. VW CAMPER XNL'll COND ~· "l•l•llld w/mat-ml. Vinyl , top. /fl<,• new. 49f~J'l"'',...-,,,,-=,,.-:::t uto e rv ce, arts 7 ltilj: CHEVY'~ck, %. ton. Nu BRAN -Cassidy, NMtllJ. ._,, .._... U er le inalch vin tp. U)95. 1161'•12184 , , . 'M LOI 88, Good · D NEW .. ~t1I'HOR.IZED -., )-...,.·or ucn• o er ,_.... PA~TS ONLY motor. Xlnt CO!'d· l900-•' 1 ~ & SERVICE · ROVl!R · · 675-1428 ~·· '10 DUSTER •JIM; lactoiy Depondable trana-t FOR SAL! CHEAP ><H2!i7. '73 CAPRI ·ee vw new """· new 'Tl ELDORADO Cabrollt • air, co1unm 1 Otft;lr. 11,na. !75-0700 From i95g SEDAN de Ville '69 TOYOTA Hilux 1A.r Ton, Immediate Oellvery Jim Slemons '69 ROVER 2Cm TC, am/fm, brakes,· good con.d. suoo. • u n roof a: Jeether top, s.M-7385. 1,!968;.;;ofw°"s'""'oE°',LC"7.1""'0l"NT;;:-:-•-,l: CADILLAC P.U. Truok, 1 ownor, 50,000 GUSTAFSON Imports '"°" riml, opare tire .. ,.. Call 545--0630 am/Im. 1loreo, tpe deck, F'OI\ llole; '61 Dodn o.n, air, PIS, Pill, l lO!ll.• Trtn1mission mi, 645-3447 aft 4, $995. 1301 Quail rler. Ne«ls clutch. '5()0 ,70 VW Station Wagon auto, air, etc. Mint gTeen & whlle. sWit n eng, $600. Good 839-S@I , , R•dio '54 FORD " to~, "''· $200. Linc:oln·M•rc:ury below BJ"'. Aoldng s1000. IWI. Good cond. ~1441 Pri. P'Y· 54!>3446. "''l"P"rtatton car . .34&-6734 lj(j8 ows <Mluo. I Air Condlllonlng Unit or belt offer. 64:>-2568 lll800 Beach at Warner NTS::acb Pvt.Pty. fi75..GU. or ~7901 '71 CAD SID OE\1 FORI P/1, rt:xi a:·aaars 1212 ~\h ~' St., 1!161 CHEVY '\I Ton pick·up. Huntington Beach ENTEi\ FROM MacAl\Tll\1R TOYOTA '61 VW Bug. ™ at•reo, $5000 + Tu & Lie 2'2'.Jm $500 * ~ 142-1144 * 121') m.5544 1970 280SE radials. Maey ...... l790, PINTO ·r.o Chevi 2 dr, 6 cyl, 3 »Peed. Ven• 963 "Homo of tho Vlklnt" &Jn. Me<dlc _ "--· TOYOTA SALE 'TOll48-96.16VW _°~~t -nd, ~llow 541.2253 ' 1971 FORD Good body. Runo, will oell WANTED CAPl\I '!3 . 2800 OOUPE, ocln wi\11 1uu·w,....-Jr w/blk lnt;"'~d\';i u...:~ etc. 'TO SEDAN lleV\lle, All LTD llflOUGHAM 1::.J~: lllcHhlft, whole car or .ell part•. 'Sl Radkl, C..:Speed, Radials, oond. AM/FM. I.ow 'mile-BEAT Sl275/best oHer. fi73-6266 ~r. vinyl top, guar. -. 548-33.tJi or PonUac. Good motor (389) #9600, $3583 or Ftnn Otter. ~ Can take trade G718ZS OAS PRICES! '8l QIERRY BUG I t 32,000 ml, 1 owner. Like V.i t~ · .;.,,=,,;;:~ & auto tn.n1. + rtar end, Ji~ Siemon• 1,,;porti lt71 COROLLA 2 DR. SlO'r1 h . • new ~:ot new. '4000. 813-3245 Pow~ ~·}"f _ PL QUTH body gQOd, W1U It'll OOtn· TICKITI TO 1301 Quail 4 tspd, radSo, 900CTO c it 13·:S ~~ '68 Cad Eldo, all ext ru. r....._. ,Btutt 1-...;.<.;• ;;.;..~.;;:.::..;;~.+1 plote ol WU·• CaU alter LED ZIPPILIN Newport Boach 1BT2 COl\OLLA 2 DI\, SUTT "' ne, ' . Very nice. lle•l off.,. Call 'MI1'8\".::,~,.I WHOA THiii 7,30 p.m, 1'3-36111. 8.13-9300 Au-atlc trans., radio, h.,.t• !i6 VW. -9! Bltlt ~'" • .. 4 POLISHED 8helb1 m.... CONCIRT ENTER FROM MacAll'l'H\JI\ • .!'!:.only t5Ull mu ... mEYY. Not runni"•· Beal olltr. • .. CAO. EL DORADO • Dll1c e1 ... Vllt)'l• l\ilol CJ PILLA I I F o 'd.Ply.DocJge-Amerlcan Pleue call DATSUN l14d urr> COROLLA 2 Oii. S2!IQ ll8l-IU9 $2911!. Goo<l cond. l\l>tol!l!)Jr llrooilbem Jntorlnr CompoUl\onl lW!ull', 19 I I ' ITS. 841-9949.altor 5 p.m. * l'orl48-CoTo81t )Only * ~~ ~to;; ,s::.:l\'.:i ..JI!!! Auto. tra;j'·· radlj,;,tecti1:!· '611 CAMPER. AMIF'?.I ,new • l!.IHGAA • 3!,000 Mil.. Qp(, l,,()ADED ' air, I NEW, 1'if; thru wfndow .DATSUN am'itm. stereo, show roOri\ w+w ret, ' th-el, $l300. After 5pm. '68 CAO. Sed. DeVille fully !hHroom Condition •ltet'tN ' brlkelii, au 1967-1972 F~ Camper, 1UJI SACRlFlCEl '72 Chevy nu, 12,000 total mlet, ClU CTE210061S0'1). lllli4. ll'mo-072S equ'd. Slrno. Vinyl t op 1 r f2'91 ltlW, i60 CIO, .4 BB4 1n ca-, 141\. W ·U'f\!, 9-4. l.D\I o! exlral, ~ NEW 1973 644-6500 or alt 6 call N&-2311 IAll ' ' '12 VW s,.,, lo mile .... CUii l1800. 6'15-2'133 67>-2872 ... al l"Mllr"M multlplex, . \ SLIGHTL'Y Ul<d "'ct o ry 'ITH14S PICKUP for appt. In lee, WA .,t, xlnt oond. Sacr11i>;e, '6' CAD Cpe de VIiie, xlnl DAILY P!llO'l' EMPl.()Y!;lil Ulopmlt, Jl"'.~"i.._~~ built enrtno hol•t 1000 lb lflll P'Ol\I) v .. J 11ew tire•. NO DOWN 1970 250C JRYOJA 675-7481. oond., Io mu ... "" \Ires. IWU<ING LOT -,.._, - cap. mo. &4MU6 Run1 ~. l~'l"t of· $68 23 lol' lvT air AM/J'M Xlnt 'f lt!ll "":· ~ b~, t "'\l' A>ld!!C $99ll, &4HT56 330 W ... ~ C:O.ta Mn& :'° we'.°'l:.'ii&.l~ ~;·~:l. ~t Int. IktM:O~, .tb~: cond. ~i. Lacll 1 cv. ~~~~:."~~ =~'. ~Ue~~493--0Tis, UJ ee ' AMARO Call M-.am Crttnm•n ROAOR R. 3A » I§] nu m,ap A tire1, $3000. A.P. · 14·34 · T98DLK. 42,000 ml, xlnt rond, $8915, '71 SUPER Beetle X1nt. • f0:4,121 • 11.'(f, wUh map, X1nt Aulliflr.. r:.\ 14)-1$41 • Jim Slemons .1m"'1• Call aft 6, 491-3>97, 4gs..m4, oond. 33.000 mi. Tape deck. '68 CAA-IARO, black, :\';;.OOJ Jl500 or bttt oltfr. 919-~ 1301 n. ... ~1 M&-8515 mi , new brakes, clutch, , l';ji;;jji;i;;ji;~ .. ~1'65 FORD lflndOW van, ~-'66 TOYOTA Corolla C>own , i"'1Uin• suspension Amer PJNT01 121QIJllUl WAGON, PONTIAC I I aarpettd, paniilld, '"5/of· Newport Beach Deluxe, fP'Mt tranlpolia. MOVING .must sell. 69 Bu•. m&p, II track sle~. s1700, Ar Oondtt$onlr-., Auto. -----..-'--4 1 ,•53 fer. Muat sell. ~ Mf..268S 833-9300 tton. llM. 846-95.14, nMUO. Xlrrt c ond . SlZJO/oUcr. 842--8860. Trani.,, Reio( 1\aclir, Radio, '72 OriNI l'rlx Antlqut1/Cl•olc• Autoo Wt...... 968 ENTER FROM MacAR'l'HUl\ Aok/Bud Myoom Mi-0\6.1 'ST C mrwx. ~-or Firm ft-·-~ , . ..,... 1973 DA'"UNS 450 SLC -PER 65 AMARO 32'1. 4 '"'""'· Oller . n~r ......... p 0 w" I . , , 1931 FORD Model A C.Oupe ~~ * •n TOYOTA Corolla, low VW CAM ' Xlnt cond. Mu.rt Sell! $1500 -' B1••kH, Ultwf\tt('AfrCOn • w1·55 Mere cnalnc, new \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR ALL MO.DILS ''THE tn..Tii\fATE SPORTS mUeuo, air, ISOOtbest offer fft.1428 or off.er 8'-1743 ..,.__,. __ Buf·ket ae111, AM.Ir . : ~r~10/i!~11ao19sob00,: II~!';:'; ~":~an, IN STOCK ~~o 06~y THIS 'il8 :1 ~~.:~~luxe. ·~ ~~ .. "."'~~· !:.;'. . CHEVROLET :h.~w'I)~~· ~,.. wb,..j., best ollor, 141-aner 8 & oe• us nm. BlilRWICK IMPORTS J im Siemon• Imports R A H, auto trano. Mlllt clean. Call 962-<llM · $4695 · wknd•. Y. BAUER BUICK · l .. 11. Belt offer, 493--0llll. 1970 Chev =~li'i:"~:;o=;;;,;:;;=;:::=-1 MUST·.,, •-etlliolc Pack· 1191$ Harbor Blvd, 333!5 C&ql\no Cap\ltrano 1301 Quai '70 VIV CAMPER, radi•u IllTO F0 D.Mavorick, 6 oyl., DAVID J, PHllL"S an!. &;I~. Make otter. Cotta Men Q'J9.~ San Juan Caplltrf.no Newport Beach •n TOYOTA Corolla air, !tad tlt'ff. Very clean, mtut 110li. Caprice WalJOn all deluxe Ioatu111,, autom., BUICK PoN7fAC OPEL. -• 4 MPOl\TS WAtITED 493-3375 or 831·13~ 833-9300 tlrea+ IOIXI cond. 42,000 ml. 1197--0:\02 ext. 25.S/557-3337 VM au1.-.-11Uc ~.,,, ''·lo"" lMl't, air. rudlo, ™'ntcr, etc.,. 546-1'75 49'J-879T, ~on ' 1 · ·n DATSUN plc'irup w/alr ENTER FOOM 'Mac.\J\TJWR S13llO fiqn. MS.iI88 "Llal" II in classified. Ship : "'" " " c ·z etc. J\..l merhenlr1tUy Ii: -=="-="',.;,;.;,,.,.=-'"I Rtcre1tlon1f 1 ~;a;= cond., lu;:e wh"1s, 1t.ep You'll find it in ClauU'led CiUilfitd Ad• •••.. ,M1-J6T1. to Shore-Rei;;11I !~! 64H878. ~1~ 7,f :~lni,:, 1 w~lte thruout, lo ml., new ttrea, I OR L ASE VahfclH 956 ··B'n I MAXXY TOYOTA bumper • Slx·P.a cabovtr • -1 • rn . r l'X erior, JCtra whl•. 11*· lBlue Bk 'T3 PONT1.ACS ' ·~ camper. 11 .. pti-fotno odu!IJ, black ntor\OI', l7JAFV. I~.) 1 ...,,.r, 49S-<.'ll! DAVI llOSS DO "-E . 188!1 -Olv-;. I ~ ~ $1977 '70 Dw H. Beach • Ph. 147-8555 ce~,, atove, ··~· rool ~ , ·n COUNTRY Sedan, r PONTIAC rack. $2Ui0. or el.fer. WW TAR GA:'llE'D1tje~ See It · You II Buy It owner, lrlicheltn Utt1, f\vy ""'" H ~ Blvd ., PICKUP l/4 TON CAI\ zonked Jlj.Ot need a tow ~pM!le: 4iMl23, ,/U .&'-,_. di)' .,1., hlch, .,.,.., u'""', -. • ar~, ., at '• with PILGRIM ~~mayt':~! 1:,~d. ~~ 'TG PICKUP, xlnt cond. CL\YJ.POWN utlA -f\1.,. Lai..:o 1 1 ilt whl. rack.Sawht 11•/hl\1 _ 67 Drl\<, 0 Costa lHesa *40. cib over CAMPER .e~io 18,000 orla. ml., c:u1t Int,, )( Yew0-"1~"""'-k: ""11 rh lUWA CiUIWI nt, pert cone.I. crlI, $269:i, • c;T iood enrta , ~~::;,;:;:;;;"==-:::==;: FIM atereo ' cutette deck T ,,._.,"•1,.lk•ten. Y ,· ~ YOLVft $31~74 headcr1, new 4-•p• V-8, Autq Trani, P 0 we r JUNK. CARS WANTED W/1Plcrl. 8lk vinyl niot' I: To dewlop m•ueoe for Frldey, ocr.,ii ''" ·MroRn 2 t!r. Full 1ilzt-trana.. MW llre1 4' rt , Factory Alt, Camper Spee-1 pny top SS for junk or IOflMAO: cover, duel e'Jl:ha\Ut nod'fl!Qrds~ng tonumbtn S.lS.26-37 [)f>luxc vs vinyl top fnc-$90U (IL' ll~I ofrtr. 5G7...-. ial, AUX Caa Tank, llOYI! Y.'l'CCked cars. 714/54T.ai5. system, mags $11Dl/bett ofYDW'Zodklc'*'hllgr\ I ~_!:'arbor, C.M. 646-9303 lory air, A~'f radi•>. P\I'~ Sh'., '69 PONTIAC Lc~JMf, Vcl\< ~~e~~cnCl~~~~·pi~~ vw VAN W/SUNROOF. otter &f£.8243 !~ · 1= :~~1 '117 CHEVELL~. 4 •pr!. brakrs, aulo. Ne1v radl.al clran! 11)1·~ or heft otki. '$3795 PAY CASH TO $100). '70 DATSUN lliOO Roe.dller. ,a~ ~ 6J NOi Bucket 11Cal1, n10$t1i, niblt tll'l'S, bntk(-s K· ihockil. l\ll\i ,,·J~ls. New ttrr+. '• e 979--3194 e 30M, Xlnl cond. Pd. Prty. 4V .. MI(..., cna $8.iO. 67J..7:i&l $19-15. 586-52!J9 aft 6, a.i;~ .. 728fi. . Autos, Jmportttd 970 ~~Ucr over $1 ,000. t' J ~ ~~ '68 l1-IEV\" l\o\'a, nir:-Pi'S. 'ii Country Squil't' sta 1v11~. L<J6.'1 LL9MANS. r & ·h, ai , plull tax I: lie. 0 1,._,,. 7Mttltwr 37To 670ff rn4llO. luw r. n~ll('Rltl', $899. 10 psn~. immac, 30,00J mi.. g-ood 1"0nd .• Jo'i_r•t S:U 10% Down for 48 mo. at We~ TOP DQu.AR tor '72 DATSUN 6·Pack •~ 31L.t 410... Pvl p;irty, .)48 3ffi9 · f)\1r str..; & brakes, air. tiJtcit! l.luys a.1()....5.R)O. '94.!12. Full Cfllh Price cle.n •port• can, paid tor Cab-Over Camper Dl1wce. 1:C ~ ..... ,..J:t::: '58 4dr Station Wa,on. nu sm5. 49~,_.i731, <W2-4.2o~. r,.16-9134:...._----..! $3987.~. J)(ofcrred pri ce or noL Many extras! 16,000 mt.. '". 4ls:" 1111.#r ~Int, 111 ru111 goocf, n'ngs, .71 1'.oni, Gtu LTD. ~pe. :ilr, ~c·rn. f'>1!1 PQ\\'et~, S4m.66." A.P.R. U.94. On moo ~ ;1=.. :j~ fiY..:r::.. 91;'J-63l'i.1, 1~ <tr bcltt offC'r. ~tl&c br k!I, p/t, vt•ry cle"n. vinyl Nlilf. Sl.P.00 . Approved Credit. (rni9011). 'Tl DATSUN 240 Z. Perfect 10tc:MWwt~!~--1•~ '71 CA 'llf J\1u~I ""II th!" 11·k ttnd . Con:tidcr h"Rdc:"'·==';;,,.;;,,. S • cond. Below blue book. Ph; ls~ !lC '!'• Air, pwr, a.m/tm, S2900. rl.l7~QMQ ;-;-69 PON'l'f,\C GTO 7U:O'.b • s.1 ••• ervict 640-0919 eves. ,;~ •11.='~ ~~:It. .. 114(HllA.1 . 1!171 Fc>RD Calaxl" 500 2 1111.. cloan. air, tw.i ode . • Rentelt '70 DATSUN l~RoM!ater ll~lortci Atliirod 71l1mr ·~ifl CllEVY 2 dr ht , aut~ DI' l1rd!p, fl1ll f 11•r.1 ..::.;:::,,,_..:~::>4"---~---< p it. mqt1 roU bar, bnkta, ~I~ I'/.,~,--. ~L lnlM. gon<l tran!lportat!Qn. o\r/tnnil $2.295. Cal Ron T BIRD EXPL:ORER TIME rOi.; lmma<. suoo. eu 9!J ,~ 12 sr.;. G~~,; "'"''''Y. 642-1000. • '68 DATSUN Pick Up. 1195. E,,.j Ii. 1Jt., '&I ll\tP,U.A, hl'\llp, alr, -·FFORl)G!lA'JD 1971 1 .. BfRD, 2 dr ~. , OF FOR ACTION , • • 3341 ~11111! Orcle, C.M. ~ """" ""'"· p/o, rndlo, xlnt cond. TURINO. t~ 16.~1 mu ... lull PWT, el , ' Call ~· ~"' ~~-::~ SZT.i. 8-12-48j(J •_&.t~~-am /rm stereo. Xlnt . t HUNTINGTON BEACH · DAILY PILOT 'TO DATSUN Wogon. xlnt on '1 S7Tol~ .,_ e '64 IMPAL>I .-1969 F9RD ~ '"· •:!9 cng, ph. Dr. Adamt. IU, teerlti~.~ !T. giw19oi u ~ 9 Pauenaer \Yqon Xlnt cord. $800 or nwke ot· 96:!~119. e\'CS ~ 1 1!8ll e ... ..ii Bf,.d. 0<U80! C' ASSIFIED A"c -~-=-="'==~ . ;;,... .,r:;,. I!\': 1100. Call -rec. r.o.::,1...:..,;:;::.:"12'--~--i ! Hn •;(;'f"1X B~ACll I -· ,.. , "'1' Al;' de111 Utt BEllllDAY lo .'°Cd IOI-1111 . 'Tl CllEVELU: .u"'""''· '6T FORD Sta. W111. F i lY l , t . • '' h"~ ... ~. , Nil Ill UI Doti'......,, , • •• ~ 151 Nftel air cond. I 124~ air, """ Una, aood .. 111.tnt ttL)cur f-.. , CAIL DAILT ynDf ~7.....-W. S?OI).• ~}915-1(29 WO l~I _ ..... _ ..... _ ...... _ ..... _.., .. EXPLORER OF . i!h\nh ]hnp1111~; +> • ' • ' • p '. ' • ' ,, • , "" - ' I ' TAK,E· YOUR CHOICE .11or10,1m , • - Saves Cash Outlay •.. Keeps monthly payments low while earning equity. Puts you in a new car every two years. WHI you be driving a new car 2 years lrom now"? Wllh Revolving Trad•back you can drive a new car e'Very 2 years, down payment waived and equity guaranteed. 'That's right. At Rex Ellsworth Pontiac you can trade for a new car every 2 years; without ever making a down payment. Start ell with a Brand New 1973 Pontiac, (check today's HIH'ftJ)les.) THERE IS NO DOWN PAYMENT. You pay only the mon\hly paymentt. In 24 months, equity it guaranteed, Then trade back tor a 1975 Pontiac, Rex Ellsworth wlll pay you ca1h lor your earned eqully and ofler to pay oll your maximum ~n end lease Uabi11ty less any deducl1on !or e11.ces1 mi1e1.or recond lUon· ·Ing costs per l"e!IY Blue Book. Whit aboul your present car? You can sell it to us, paid for or not. and • ~ get ca1h back ror your equity or use ;110 lower the Revolvliig Trade Back monthly payments. ... We ptedlct thal tkousands ol Orange County tanUlies'Will soon dl.;over the amazing benefits of Revolving Trade Back. 1973 PONTIAC VENTURA HATCHBACK AIR CONDITIONING VS TU RBOH YDRAMATIC ONLY 2S47 MILES LIC. 652GXC IMM~DIATE DELIVERY $2295 :~1~'E $75 Mo Mundredstalready have! • BRAND NEW 1973 PONTIAC LE MANS COUPE AIR CONDITIONING VS POWER DISC BRAKES TURBOH YDRA MATIC 2Dl7Ml2 I I 6652 IMMf DIATE DELIVERY :~1~l $75 1973 PONTIAC CATALINA HARDTOP AIR CONDITIONING POWER STEERI NG, DISC BRAKES VS TU RBOHYDRAMATIC ONLY 5452 MILES LIC. 651GXC IMMEDIATE DELIYlly $2 295-'~i~'E $75 Mo. r , Immediate Delivery $2995 FULL PRICE $75 Per Mo. 011 •PPr•ved cfY•• tor I mt1. C.sll prlc• lncl~lng 9• a UctnM U1t4.7J • .Jlltrrld Pifmtnl pr1<1 l1Kludl1111 •H tl- na11et chirtes S41DO. ANNUAL PEllCENTAOI: RATE 11.111"9 ~-.--... Air cond., a11tomatic, powar 1t~er., power bra•e1, radio, heeter. FREE COLOR TV. IXYE008) 57 99 68 Chev. Pick-Up l,4 ton, long bed, air cond., VS, a11tom1tic, radio, heeter. 171209J ) FREE COLOR TV. '1 499 • 63 Mercedes-Benz 22051 A cla11i.c beauty. !582GPXI FREE COLOR TV.I 51399 69 Chev. Chevelle V8. Automatie, power 1teer., r1dio, lltaler. (XWD- 518), FREE COLOR TV. 5999 radio, . •199 ~ 71 Ford Pinto R1dio, h11ter, buck1t •••ti. 121 ICCN ), FR EE · COLOR TV. ' '1191. I '• 69 ~lymouth·~ Wagon Sport Satellite. Air .co~d .. e utofri1tlc, power 1teer. ;,,, ''il'i'iiO R ~- SALES DEPT. OPEN 7 DAYS· 9 TO 9 801 SOUTH ANAHEIM BLVD., ANAHEIM e 533-3121 7 .. •• • • TOilay's Fbud N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 130, 5, SECTIONS, 74 PA&~-THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1973 TEN CENT~ " ' : 2 Lawmen Hurt in Beach-Mesa Drug Shootout 1 By TOM BARLEY l\lemolill Bolpltal oll!d•" u "recover-<>ruge o.o;;,IY Sherill's ilficer1 ;...ved identified as the gunman -Blair Daddoo Whittier and Los ..:Oceles led them to " ., ,... DelW .,..., "*" ipg' lltliUdorily'' .fram •~bullet WOlmd ln on the second of. two Pacific Avenue Alderson , 25, of that address. Orange County in a move to snuff out Two lawmen were felled by gunfire and jast below tbe heart. homes. Officers said Alderson was quickly what they said is a growing trade in the other memhen of a multi-agency Federal~ -t J:eslie Kenney, Lawmeo said information re<eived disarmed and hustl«I oil to Orange forbidden drug. narcotics Lask force were narrowly mis&-34, received trea~t -at the same "t'bile they were raiding .z,1saz Paeific in C.ounty Jall with s\x 9lber persons swept Multiple charges of possessing cocaine boopjtal for • woond ln~~ right knee the Costa Mesa orea -the aeetof is on qp in the raid , Officer. claimed they and selling the drug w.re filed against ed by whisWng bulieis Wednesday nlgbt and was allowed tQ returo home, after the boOndaey !i/>e, lh•I divides Costa Mesa sebed nearly two pounds of cocaine, slx other persons today awaiting court in a Costa Mesa-Huntington Beach area emergen¢y surgery. : and Jlulltlngtioo lStacb -sent them Federal agen,ts .today, valu~ the co-,action in Orange County Jail. drug raid that developed into a gm. bat-Both meD were victlml of a gun duel across the rod(I to 2301 PaCific. caine at about $20,000, basing the '1 They are identified as April Mai tie. that erupted when· a 20-member task That raid ended with Hoover and Ken-estimate on what the drug would.bring to Hutchinson, 23, of 117 36tb St.; Dennis Whittier police Lt. Bradley Hoover, 32, force in which federal officm Were back-ney on t!ie floor writhing in pain and the)r the illicit seller. Lee Whitson, 25, of 1312 W. Balboa Blvd., is reported today by Costa Mesa ed by Co8la Mesa and Whi!Uer police and compiilions moving in lOgrab the man Tliey said inforni8tion obtained in botb of Newport Beach; Michael William ' " -, ans Four Named ' ln$200,000 Vesco Gift NEW YORK (AP) -Fonner Atty, Gen. John N. Mitchell, tonner Com- merce Secretary Maurice H. Stans and two corpor•te officials ~'indicted to-day on charges <I ccnspirillg-to arrange a secret '200,000 contribution to the Nix- on re-eleclion campaigq last year. OUi<rs med .. 'def~~ in tbe lS-COUJtl lndlctment nl\lfl>ed by a federal &nPdbl~Y wore .-,I ~w Jersey ltepul leiiiiler, ~ L, lean, and · ~ 'L. V!l'JCO, ·ri, fom>er board ''~§lntematloa*l Controls Cprp, -V.etc:o • • • ;'Ille ·clonllloii; -~~--.. &S taler .ed lly1be'll'lxM'~lin- 1'11e .Hi "'"=I also returned u. ' Vesco aqot!>er $51), · which he con- tributed ope0ly , "i~ New Jersey calnpalgi\ commtttee, clOd by Sttln. FACfflG INDl<;TMINT Fofth'r ~(J MlfCholl Moort, 26. 22{)1 Pacific Ave.: Robert Anthony Con lorelli, 26. 2188 Pacific Ave.; James ~ JotNon , 22, 244 Knox Place. all ol COsta Mesa and Robert Klaas Wit- baard . 20, oC Buena Park. Alderson was booked into jail on tv.·o · counts of assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer. Orange County Sherirr·s officers inlend to Seek a ~mplaint naming all seven '. derendants from the district attorney t<>-' day. ' 'Ille gniid· ·Jury '·ltindeCI ·up ·the· In· dictment "tO U.S. Dijtrjat C<lurt Judge Sylvester J, Ryan, -exl'U'ed the panel without ·a date for further work. The oonsplracy charge, the first count in the indictment. could bring five years in prison and a $10,000 fine to eacb def en· dant upon conviction. ..... ~:-·. CIA's Schlesingei:,Tapped ' ' . ..,. . •~ •... , . ·f"tltt91W.._,,I._ INVESTIG.llTO~S PHOTOGRAPH SCENE IN SAN JUAN WHERE IOD't WAS FOUND AT FIELD FMI of Miio Victim Shfw in'Conttr'of'Plctiiro; l>Ath Calllll Stlll'Undotermined ~~~~~~~~~~- Supervisors OK New Fee Schedule For Parks, Beach T~o San /00,n Stud£nts A ne)' (ee sclledule for admission and · SherifPs and cotonef"s· irivliStig.ators lo- use of Orange Collfity beaches and parks day continued to seek the ideJJ.tity a·nd W8S: adopted by the Board of Supervisors cau~ of dea th of a man whose body was W'edne;j!ay.' . appilrenlly dumped at the edge of a San AB . -recommended by the oounty Juan C8pistrano com patch early Wed-HS~bori. . Beaches 81¥1 Parks Com-pesdeo':!~er's aides lhis morning said that mission, the new schedule includes a flat an autopsy failed to tum up any cause of $LO ~r £ear use fee goo.tfor, admiMion death on the man who appeared to be in to alt -but three county parks and his mid 20s and of Latin descent. beaches; a $3 a day fee . for bus 00-The next stage 'of the coroner's probe mission to the racilities; a $150.per day will be a. seriea o( .lengthy tovi~logical charge for commercial film making i!I tests to determine if any drugs or poisons parks and a $3 P!r day_ f~ for one-veht-may have led to the man's death. cle use of coun~ campsites during the 1be mystery surfaced at ·about 1:30 peak months of summer, •• '" thei ,_ The $10 per year flat fees tor parka~-· a.m. at1 two ~~t!i ·~ · r way .w beaches' would not be good for ~I l\larco' Forster Jiml°" High Sdlool notie- Beach, AIJso Beach Park and NitlJlel ed the bod,y u · Ibey w11!ied" tO achool Beach Park because of prior Ill· 1be site wu about ii!! .feet away from rangeni.ents with P a r k I Ii g con-Del Obispo Road and a few-huridted cesslonalres. yards. from Blue Fin Drive; The femairul were easily visible from the' highway. Blood was visible at the scene, but cor· oner's aiaes stressed that they noted no signs of "severe traum8" on the corpse. The John Doe victim wa s described as having medium-length, dark·black hair and wearing a marcon sweater over a White t~rt. bright · blue pants, a n d square-Iced shoes, 0 Investigators at tfit scene sealed off a wide area to protect anf evidence. The probers spent hou'rs trying to e·vaJuate impressions made by vehicle tires lri the soft soil. 1be body wlls lying on ·a .small triangu· Jar ·island surrounded by narrow dirt roads uaed u·1 aooei. to -Ille farmlands. n.ere was 1strong ~ation that the body may. hav~ beeii ,dwnped•aometime before. dawn. 'Mle new '3 per day charge for buses supplants .the current 50-cent fee "'1lch previously applied to can or buses, The board also authorized Harbors, Beaches and Parks Director Kenileth Sampson tb establish car and population limits for each campsite. Coast Invaded ·, A controversial proposal by residents of SuMet Beach who -want a $15 annual fee established to park overnight in the ne\j' county beach parking orea in the heart ol that conimunity was held Oftf unW Second Dislrlcl Superv!Jot David L, Baker could be preoenL 1be Harbon, 11eocbes and Parks Com· missli,m had recommended that thiJ • re- quest be denied, Parkln,g OD the MW lot will ht rneterod with a cllarge of 21 cen~ for two hours. Tiny 'Sailors of Sea' Float In ' ' . "Sailors al the ..0"· -tiny ocean apparently Jooe cootrol and n .. t into Dor.ting anlmals are making their spring shore, said glaUffer. Alter a few days on .~~-•'-, the IOUlb ·Orange the beacb they dry 'out, leaving a fraglie ....----.-..., skeleton behind. Coast. ' Varieties aloog the cout of Japan have ' Ac<onlinc to ..... cout watcbon, ar-$)lied Sails exactly opposite in design .rivalol1J¥sallonmeansummerl1nigh .. t<>'account for wind conditions just lhe Sailors al Ibo .., 1cr "by the winds reverse of'those on the PacHic ci>esl. sailon" are memberl of the genus t.ocal, oailors, Staufler reported, do velelle.-~ are football shaped, about sting, ~ ljle elle<t qn bumam is mini· • • De , the me al a silver dollar, with a tiny mal. •• Bus ~1eup Ill over saUlilliliitthelr1*cb: ~ ~rlOtl,. mistake them for !he • , Cltlngil of the Uny marine in-polaOciqul M.ll!Ml:War lidded Stauffer, DENVER (APJ -Some ao.ooo.replar_vmebrates t>ave been made In San _ '.rbouali.the t'll'D lliim&i. are related, lhey bus ridcl'll here are looking for ino@r Clltrnente, Laguna Beach and Newport ore not th& same, ride today after 475 bus drivm Md Bea.ch, acconlini to llleguords. Thore who baV. studied v~llele, he medlahics walked ofl tbe jOb in a coo-Laguna l!<ach !Jfegua>d Jim Stauffer said; agree that the Drat sighting of the tract dispute with the city-<iwned l)enver says;the Allon usually lollow the cur· enimais in tale spring means SUllUl1U Is Metro Trani!!. 1be walkout by membon renll and iigJlt winds alonl Iha high ,..,, ciooe at hand. of the Amolgomated Transit Union Is ••-They are llllQue lo 11111 their Alls are Stauffer said they usually make peeled to be 1 major economic blow to dttisned to iettliem ''lack" 41 desrte11 to anotber appearance in AugUJI durinC the traMlt compeny Which w• taioeD the left durillC .._. ~ --1 periods <I llJ'ong -iy -· Ind over by the city In l!IL When winds became tlrq, the allon then do not a-r until the next oprin1. )' ' ' • Mitchell was director of Nixon's re- election campaign until last July. Stans was chief fund raiser. The money was returned to Vesco after it was revealed that Vesco was under in- vestigation by the Securities and Ex· change Commission. Both Mitchell and Stans testified twice before the grand jury. Vesco is out of the country and refused to accept · a sub-poena, '.l)ie SEC probe resulted in tbe filing of a civil suit charging .mat Vesco, 20 persons and 20 corporations diverted $224 million in caSh and securities from mutual funds they controlled. Vesco, 37, hao a home in Boonton, N.J. but is believed to be residing in the Bahamas or Costa Rica. A warrant for his arrest has been issued. U.S. to Forego Mandatory Gas Rationing Rules WASHINGTON (UPI) Th e Administration rejected m a n d a t o r y guoline rationing tod-y.· but called on the petroleum industry to adopt a volun- tai;Y system for allocating supplies to customers . Deput~ Treasury SecNtary William E. Simon said the Office of Oil and Gasoline in the lnlerlor Department would retain VETERAN STATION ATIENDANT LOSES JOB-Story Pogo 39 the power to requJre suppliers to sell to customers if the customers can show they are "not receiviqg a proper alloca- tion of supplies." • Simon announced tbe voiunlary pro- gram at a hearing of the S.0.te Banking COOUnfltee, lie said OOG sent telegrams lo the ~leum industry -refiners, wholesalErs, d~stributon and jobbers - a:incing the Plan. , . plan· asks those suppuers to m'ake ava lable to· each of their custoniers the .. !Ile , proP'lrtlb~ of gasoline aa they received lief ore. shortages deve14ped, The pUrpose ts to make sure tn· dependent gas .stations, which oflen buy "branded" gaiol)ne and ,.11 It under their own labels, art not denied fuel and for<ed out of business. Suppller1 a1ao art asked not to char;e (See GASOLINE, hgo I) For Secretary of .Defense · WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on picked CIA Director James' R. Schles- inger as Defense secretary today and ad- (A)urt PostPones La:Wsllit Vital To Avco flans A further one-week dehly was Qrdered today in an Orange County Superior Court hearing of vital importance to lhe A.,·co Development Corporation's con· struction plam in the Sall Creek area. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner granted tile delay until May 17 when both sides in lb. dispute agreed that they needed more lime to prepare pre~l ~ocµments ~ insure that the army or wJtriesses sul>- poened for the hearing will be available. Grading by Avco workers in much of the Salt Creek development was halted when a lawsuit fded by the Environ- mental Coalition of Orange County chilrged the firm with violating stan' dards imposed by coastline protection Jaws outlined in Proposition 20. · Judge Robert P. Kneeland 1 .. t week lifted a small portion al th"\ ban pending the hearin,. The temporary restraining order he signed at the time the lawsuit was filed will,~bowever, remain In effect until nexl _,k, Judge Sumner decided, ' Growth Policy Meetings Slated Two· local public meetings have been scheduled by the county planning COOi· mission to discuss a population growth policy f'I Orange County, Input from · these sessions, the first or live plaMed on an aren·by-area basis, will be used by the commission to help form recommendatlOns to the Board of Supervisors on a growth pollcy. , At 7:30 p,m, Monday, citizens lrom the Saddieback Valley area aro Invited to meet wilh county official< at La Paz Intcnnediate School, 25151 Pradera Drive, Miu ion Viejo, Resldenll lrom the South Coast arta will meet at 7: 30 p,m, May 13 at the Ut· lie 1beatcr Auditorium of Dina Hills Hilb Scbool, ded John Connally to his While House staff •U a special ad Viser in ' moves to plug hole1 lelt by ,the Watergate sca~L Nl1on •also abandoned hi! "lf.. Cabi.µet" ~cep~ of .counselors ; ~ moled Wifiiam E. Colby to CIA dJ r, and named Pentagon general c<iw>1M!hl. Fred' ~rdl Jr, .:to hia Whi~ stall , u :l• .sJieciai • ooutisei"wilh·: ~ r~ponsibility in ~alters rela'tin& ~ · Wat~rkate':~esUga\ion.". ' '. p: :~ The lerles , of • • ictloris fo bo&ri!if l&is beleaguered'admlnJstraUOO were 'di.Sr.i&:. ed by Nli:on 'at a Cabi,het trieetinr, '.tia!n announced by press secretary Ronail:i.. Ziegler at a·Whlte House·news briefqli; (',onna:lly,. a politica lly savvy 'li~n who la.st week switched from the Democratic to Republican Party, will be an unpaid special adviser to the Prese" denl on both domestic and foreign af· !airs. fn the part-time job, Ziegler said, he will be on call to consult with Nixon dn a wide range or Issues. 1be Preoldeotiai decisiorul came· 10 days alter Nixon•a ei .... 1 '1des -H, R, Haldeman and John Ehrlicbman -and Ally, G<n. Richard Kleindienst migned amid a swirl of W1tergate developments. Nixon had nominated Elliot Riel\ardsOn (See' DEFEN~E, Pge Z) or .. lf e WM.titer Night and morning low ciOU<is and fog, hazy 'sunshine in aftel'- noon!. Low tonight in tow 50s, higb Friday in ml-. INSIDE·TODAY A ma11iacaL kill.er fl loose some10httt in the We.st Orange County.Weit Loa At~les area, expending the energtts of fivt law enforcement agencies witli _ littlt fn/ ..... tion to QO Oil, Stf" Page 24. .... ,,., . ::::: -..... -. Ctllfltlllt •I. It ci.tt1t1111 IWt, ,........,._. • CMla II .,_ c:i..., ... ,, ,. C,..._. 1S 1111nt ... --11 ..... __ • ....... , .... t....... ,. .............. , .. ,, :::..· tMt' ..... .., -; •• 111ot "taf'lll II W~ .... ' *""•cw1 14 WwlC INI ...... Uolfiltl 14 • • I DAILY PILOT SC Tllursdoi, Mii 10, 1m · ·nean i odges . Chat!ges 1 ' t ' I ' -> · Ex-aUk Clai"" ~~I orts ro Shut~8i'tn lJp :-.. ~ ) ' ' • ?wASuiNGTON (AP) -' Oult•d ---••lldln. . todloca: .. 'llloi.'llulllkl: •• .,,,.. ... . ~!ill cou.,.1 John w. Dean m ~,.._...toB=Jcimllalo-....... tflol'l ID lllDll,. ~ lllJ , uJd today there Is an unwUllngnw by doJ llid!W !ft*.-., Jl"llllllod ~ ~ aDd l.l'*J· ltlolia .... ' the Whlte Ho""' to accept the truth that "ll>e •..air WUf be brouibt to . bedl lllldi'ID ~me ll'om _, ,.,,about Watergate, and charged the"' ill an jualloe" Jn·the ocandal. (Picture, Page 4) relevant tnlonnation and """rds; a~ , .~.to abut him up and dlsa<dlt blrn. Dean lOf ~~ hive beeo dJlculiioot tempt, have -·made to lnlluence the .r. Hill statement, Issued through an ln-within the \\?Illa House the put lour lo handllog ol my leltlmoriy by the P"'"' •"1ermediary, came In the wake of publish-five niOotlll u to lloW lo end the ecutoro; restrlclli>os ha•• been placed ~ ..... ecf reports that Senate and Justice Watergate uiatttt, but these dJ.9cuaalons on the seope of my testimony aa It Department investigaton believe he has always ended with an unwilllngntts to relates to the Whl~ ijoose; and ,blltant • 1"' evidence linltlng President Niion to iceeii the truth IAlr ~t It .-nt. 'nlat efforU have beta made to publicly In-.~ •. the Watergate bugging °' coverup. unwfiµn-to a~ the jruth llill tlmldate. me.'' . • •'> ·~"!be ln!onnation contained in these prevails amoft1 temll who are affected Dean WU fired\by N11on April J'.>. He ~ lfurits is neither co mplete nor AC· by the truth." · · rubeequent)y placed documents into a ~ .. ~.cw-ate," Dean said, applying it to many He did no& name those he said are out safe deposit box and turned the keys over • to a federal judge. A hearing will be held · •. if if fr fr if if Monday on the disposiUon ol the .-. · docwnents. · '; '•·· .... :ge A .. n-d Nixon to1d a fl,OOD-a-plate Republican '.~~··~ --V'""• ~ campaign dfnnor Wednesday night , "I can assure you thal we will get to the bol-. ,. .. ,. Ell b 'B d' B f tom of thlJ deplorable incident." ~·· s erg ugge e ore bo;:1: ·~=\:~ ::1:.\<C'~ ~ ·-. determined to go forward toward that ... ,. ... goal .. ;:.. Papers Re· leased FBI y;v:.··:11~1nc.:'1::stthf~u~e~ .. ~.~ -Nl1on told the kickoff fUnd-ralslng event : ., . for the 1974 congressional campaign. But planners said the turnout was far below the number of contributors ex. pected and that the dinner' might gross little more than hail the fl.4 million usually raised in the off.year GOP, galli . · ... · ,. LOS ANGELES (AP)-The FBI has told · the judge in the Pentagon papers trial .. •!that Daniel Ellsberg waa overheard by .... ~tan "electronic interception" nearly two ··=,,ears before he relealt!<l the Pentagoo •" 1)al>ers to the news media, the judge '"-revealed today . .. . 11tis was the first disclosure that Ells-. " ' ' ·:::Buena Park Higl1 :~Drug Raid Nets · ·_'~~ine Suspects ' ,.. . Nine persons were arrested Wednesday : .. :lligbt by Buena Park and Fullerton police • .. -and char1red wi\h selling marijuana, u;p .. ·end olher dangerous drugs at Buena . .Park Hlgb School. :· ·POuce saki the arrests climaxed a six· "; 'week lnvesUgati:on involving drug aales oo tl)e high oclx>ol campw1. ..,,. Adulla lodge In the Orange County Jail • .,. Richard G. Bellamy, 18, of 1100 s. :·:·¥qoolla St., Fullerton; Lawrence L. ·"Key, 11, ol 72 4llh SI., Buena Park ; Stanlq K. Ndloo, 14, and Janice Elaine '. Nebon, 21, both ol 1M2 Gramercy St, Buena Park. '' .. ~y, who police said wu a former nt at the · high school, ill charged sale ol marljuana. Key, now a stu- •1dent at the acbool faces the same 1 ; Charges. The Nelaon couple are charpd 1 l \irilh sales -al dangerous drug& and I f l>°!ses!lon of marl}uana and drugs l f).. '. , 'tThe five juvenlles, Wr of them 1 1 tudents at the high school, are ~rpd l ith sale of marijuana aOO LSO. They 1 ere placed in juvenile hall. J, r i !bemente Women • l I [\Not Hurt Badly ' " j~n Freeway Crash : ; Two San Clemente women escaped Cterlous injury in a , spectacular traffic :fOllision Wednesday afternoon on the San :piego Freeway. berg, whose name did not surface public- ly until 1971 when he released the Penta- gon papers, had been under FBI surveil· lance long before that. U.S: District COUrt Judge Matt Byrne, apparently angered that be was never told this before during disclosure of wiretaps, ordered the Justice Department to find out how many times EUsberg was ''CIA WRONG IN EL LS BERG CASE'-Stot-y, Page 4 overheard In 1111111 and 1970 and If there a.re records of what wa.s overheard. NIIon may have alluded to the low turnout wben he said, "I sf!all always remember thill group tonlgllt - remember that when the going got tough you hung In there, '"Ibe finest steel has to go through the hottest . fll'e. And let me tell you, this room Is lull of the finest steel tonlghl" FromPqel DEFENSE ..• 'nit disctooure, appmntly ronsldered serious by the judge, delayed the start of legal arguments which have been scheduled on 4efense motions aiming to to succeed ' Kleindienst as attorney throw out the ~· general, leaving vacant the Pentagon He said the FBI report saya that at post which Schlessinger was picked to least one interception of El.la:berg was ac. fill. complished whHe the defendant waa at Nixon told his Cabinet he intended to the home of Morton Halperin, a fonncr maintain more direct communication deputy assistant secretary of Defense. with Cabinet members, Ziegler later 'nit judge told the government to find reported. out for how long Halperin's home was Senate Major Leader Mike Mansfield ur.der survelllance and whether the (D-Mont.), was tnlormed of the Sdlles- surv.elllance wu authorized by a court. Inger appointment in advance. He called He alJo demanded to know whether the nominee""a good man" and said he Halperin wu a White House adv15er _ 1 could foresee no difficulty about Senate pool he held In part of 1969 -when the conflrmallon. wlrtlapo began. Ziegler said the counselor role played Byrne said the FBI notice of the by three Cabinet members 0 will not be in wiretap came to him late Wednesday effect any kllgJt." The counselor roles from acltng FBI Director Wllllam were cruted by uecutlve. ~ thill Buckel!llaus, but that it noted the direc-year when Nisoil sent Qingrw'propooais tor himaell bad only been notified Tues· f<lr broad government reorganlzjlllon. day. Ziegler said the coonselor concept "will The judge demanded to know why be moved asido until the ~eglslntlon Is t~rq '*' l!J ~y\lrii gjvlng blm Im-passed.'' ', ' medjata ·IMW!nallon.od tlfe In-loo. Schlesinger headed 1liO Jowmment'• He al'!> ~emanded; to, Jinoir . · •PY. agency for less lllan four months wasn't tum.ti over to b!Juelf" ·: ·*· NllOn turned to him for the top the trial., ~ :~pool which Calllomla mllltonaire Halperin, a Y!H•"'5 ~r , !ht, -• Jr¥liiltrlalisl David Packard turned do during the trJal,,terVed" I to · this '->.:• WI! Ellsi>erg throuallollt Ille case. ·He 11 .a ·-, . !<searcher at !lie BroOlclngs IM!ltutlon In ~y, N~'• choice for CIA director, Washington. hU Urie ~.of el'J)el'lence m. m- Becauae i>/ the dlsclOIUre, !be Judie . ~ence ~ and served suice receaaecf court for poi b\Jur, o!"f~ u;. Is Ille. 'i>Y · Nea.<Y'• deputy director for prosecu!Ot to lmmedilltely p h 0 n e operaticm •. lie rejoined the CIA in 1972 Washington ·and get moro Information ·on al~r lour )'ears in State Department the wiretap. He · aald. the government poota re!atlnil to the Vietnam pacification should pro~ Ila fil"'! p far back as 1967 . progrBl\l. to try and find out If there wero any other electronk?'.survelllance ol ED11>erg. "If there were not logs or records " the judge said, "I want to know why noi." "I( there w~ and they are gone, I want to know • and where.'' Cem.ent ~er Taken in Dana , Scene of Disaster Three South Gate residenls were killed Wednesday when their light plane crashed into a field after take- off from Long Beach Municipal Airport. Officials said the craft appeared to have engine trouble be- fore it banked, hit power lines, caught fire and crashed . Killed were Harty Schlitz, 55, daughter- in-law Barbara, 27, and her son Harry, 8. Telephon e 'Ban dit Strikes Again, Hits Beach Eatery The phantom telephone bandit struck for the fifth time in less than three weeks Wediiesday night, this time bitting Far- rell's ice cream parlor in Huntington B\lach. . • I11 earlier heists the bandit hit a Foun- tain Valley market for $25, a Huntington Beach harnburger stand for $1,600 and a Costa"Mesa hamburger stand ror $150. In one case the suspect threatened a Ji. qu·or !tore ~Jerk in Huntington Beach, but never picked up the money. Police say they have no leads in any or the robberies. - From Page I GASOLINE ... independents more than their regular customers. If vital consumers -like fannens, doc- tors and police departments -are still le£t without enough gasoline, OOG may direct suppliers to sell to those customers. But such orden could not control the sales of more than 10 percent of the suppliers' total supply. The AdministratlOn's program spelled out by Simon establi!hed a list of priority customers who would be served first under OOG sales assignments. nte bandit, who sometimes identifies himself as "La Brique," fOllowed his earlier method of operation ·in netting between $400 and $450 from the restaurant at 16301 Beach Blvd., police reported. He called Farrell's shortly after 9 p.m. and sald be bad a high-powered r ifle trained on customers inside, polic~ reported. Test in Court Planned He demanded. tl).at money be placed in a bag next to a trash bin in the rear of the restaurant, a Farrell's official told pollce. The bag cf money was picked up before police arrived. r By Irvine Foundation The Irvine Foundation which holds oon· Court constitutional issues must be con- 2 Y V• tim• trolling interest in the Irvine tcompany sidered 1 . oung I C s and has been directed by the Tax Re!Ol'ITT .. ,A 111i~fllidl881 r to cllang'O the trust __ --, - -Act of 11969 11> !'MJmately roduce.-lill --~f 1fie°11 . .s;.-r~ Of 'Traffi•c" Cras' bl!tdlngs '\o" a m1D9r1ty 20 pefcent s11are, 7lrutrument ~ , ...... .,.,µnn, -~ ,dofu-ll will flibt the Jaw in court in order to · ment drawn by the late James Irvine - obey It. ' would allow the louiulaUon to meet the I '.')' • R J d Attorney for the San FrancJs<o.\)ased federal lnw .. ioq~ill uentity evea e charitable foundation , Howard Privett of The T ;,.:1 .... . . I Los Angeles, said in a pretrial bearing . ax ... ~onn ,. , req~ wo Wednesday In Los Angeles Superior things o! lolll!'\8 : reduction of Two Aqaheim boys who died Wed-holdlng · · I ~~ and nesday in a three-car accident in Garden 8 in sing e, ""'IOWnesse!I annual Grove were Identified today by the Increases In thO gifla to oharilies. based Orange County Coroner's Office. position Open OD percentages of the earnings of. foun- They are Todd Harris, 11, and Scolt dation stock holdingll.or other Interests. Heck, 5, both of an apartment complex at h Saddleback The requireq selling of foundation 234 W. Orangewood Ave. fl. l stock, Privett notes, viol.ates the direc· Investigators said the two boy s and lions of the late Irvine Ranch land baron four others were being driven to school in who wrote in the trust indenture a pro-a station wagon because tbe'y missed the A job as director of conunwtity in· vision giving the foundation "controlling school bus. They were students at Stod-fonnalion and services is now available voice" in Irvine Company affairs. dard Elementary School in Anaheim. at Saddleback College, Dr. Fred Bremer. Privett bas told the Daily Pilot it is his The accident occurred when the station the school's president, announced this contention the federal government may wagon driven by Freya Murphy, 31 , who week. \ not interfere with the terms of a private lived in the same apartment complex, l\.1elvin Mi tchell. current community trust. Hence the court suit, to determine collided with a refrigeration truck at the services director , ls leaving the post to the constitutionality of changing the trust : • Officers said Mrs. BoMie McBride, (3, :tf 1004 Avenida de la Estrella, was head· I :id south on the freeway near Avenlda ·Pico when she swerved to the right to :avoid a truck. This was !De first dl.oclosure that Ellsberg, wlue name dld not surface publicly until 1971; had been under FBI surveillance loog before Uiat. intersection of Orangewood and West teadl in the college's social studies instrument to meet the demands of the 1'le Orange County cement mixer gang Street, Garden Grove. The wagon then department. Deadline for applications is Tax Reform Act. 1 &truck again Wednesday night with the crashed into the front end of a car stop. June 1. Depending on those ruling~ au <r part • : ,'. Her auto plowed into a guard rail at :pie Freeway offramp, tearing out 20 feet :or the heavy timbers and metal. The car then began to burn, but the '.woman and her passenger, Harriet Ken· 'nedy, 78, were able to get out of the vehi· cle. : : 1be Kennedy woman Jives at 155 ~brillo. ·• She and the driver both were treated fbr minor cuts and bruises at San '.Clemente General Hospital, officers ~id. ' , ' . · OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT 'T1M Orll!IM CO.JI DAILY P'ILOT, wlll! ..tlldl It CIM'llllMd 1M N_,,.., ,It pi.elllt!M "° IM 0r•"9f c .. ,, P'ubli.Jllllf c.omp.ny, ..,._ r1tt .Sllloni ••• p,obllll'Md, MOllHJ lll<wOh f rljl1y, fDr CO.ft Mtw, Nnport 8-11, Hunllnololl BNdlfl"~lln Y•lleJ, ~ 9H(ll, lrvlN/SiddlftKli:; et'4 54111 C"'-i.t lMI J-CIPhl•-· A sing!• "'l!IO!wol .Sillon .. ~'*"-" .. "'"",.. ... """"',., TM prlnc.IMI llUOl!thlllfl plent It •t JJI Wftl B1Y Str..t, CO.hi Nt.w, Clllftmll, nl:N. Ro.,.,_, N. Wh4 .. ........,. '"" P'llolloMr J•cli R. Curl•v Vk t ""-ldlnl • 0.-•I MIMg., TMt11et K•••H Editor TI.011111 A. M""phi11• IMMtlnl Edi• Chtrl•• H. L•ot l ldii•r.I '· Nell Asllst8f!l """""""' ..... ... a. •••• Office l05 Nertt. El C••l•• ke1I, tl,71 --C.t• ~I Sit w.l ..., 111ttl N"""9'f hedt1 ms .. ........., -......v.,, tMlt.,.... ...ol: 11Vf-..cll ......... L.-e.ct11 m ,.,... ..__ Tll r· a1 17141 M2o4Ut Ct ... A ... M I I MJ·U71 .. Cl•••• .. Al ....... i.I , ..... 111 ~ta.+ut ~· ~ ~.,.. Cwt "'*'i.i.rna ....... . ,...... *• """"-"-"· .. W .,. Moi• ""n•dt '*elft ""' . ........ ..,,...,. _... ,.,. ......,.-~ ....... =.....cs.;==---i:..·= ~ __,,, W ""II ti.I • .,.....,, llfflltY ..,..., ..... ,,...., ·"'-------------' theft of a mixer valued by the owner at ped at the intersection. Applicants for the $15,000.a-year post of the 4,590~000 shares of Irvine comi)any $4SO reported to sheriff's 0 . fftce-In the Officers said the two boys who were must have a bachelor's degree or stock now held by the Irvine Fotlndation 'Dogs of Week' Fiml New Homes ... rldiqg in the front seat of the vehicle equivalent experience and a backgriiund might be marketed. Dana Point area. we~ thrown to the pavement and killed. and knowledge of journalism, printing, This stock equals a 54.5 percent con- Brlck muon WillJl.m Robert Selig er, The truck was driven by William publication and college community re la· trolling interest in the land deve1oPment 38, of 34052 caJUta Drive, told deputies Fletcher, 38, of Fountain Valley and the tions. and ranching finn with operations in the mixer wu taken by intniders who third ~ar by Renee Samuelson, 43, of h-1ore informB:tion may be obtained by Orange County, the lmperial Valley and opened his unJatcbed gate and took the Anaheun. calling the college. Montana. •1 Two Orange Coast families took "Be Kind To Animals Week" literally by glv- mg a home to last week's Daily Pilot Dogs of the Week shortly after their pic- tures appeared. equipment from the east side of his ' -~iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-ii;· ;;-~-;;-;ii-;i··i;;;;;;t home.· I It was the second mixer stolen this s • 1>tUda.f> f p U E . weekandthefilteenthreportedtheftthi• ee or S EED 0 E N year, 8ber1/rs records lndlcate. Both pure bred tri<olor collies were adopted Saturday morning from the Society fo< the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) shelter In Laguna Beach. One of the falllilles had children. "The worst way to vkil.ate 1Be Kind to Animals Week' is to allow a pet to run loose," Don Brown, an SPCA official, sa id. "Don't make your animal a nuisance, make it a pet." The collies were father and daughter. College ·Concert Set The Saddieback College Chamber Singers, directed by Donald A. Walker, wJJf perlonn for members of the Adult Recreotlon A.ssl>cllltlon of San Clmente at 8 p.m: May 25 at the San Clemente Presbyterian Cturch, 119 A v • n I d a Estrella. Oldest Subje~t Sex Course at Golden West? PSYCH HS may well become the most popular course at lllllllington Beacb'• Golden w .. 1 Collei•· But before it does, lnl5tees of the Coast Community College District -t to study the subject a hit themselves. 'nit subjecl of the ccurae Is .... Approval of the new, 18-week coune, wbiCh carries no prerequtsitea, wu withheld by trustees Wedne>day night 'nley said they want to study the course outline first. · · ASKED BY trustees what PsycbolOlf)I 165 (Human S..Uallty) Is all about, district Cbancellnr Norman Wataon replied, "It's not my ma of apedaliza· ·uon." - Golden Weal College Prealdent R. Dudley Boyce came to Wa!SOll's aid, e1plalnlng that, "This Is not reslly a new and emtrlinc lnteresl It's u old uman." Dr. Boyce then -bed the course as "a Vt')' tlmely thlzig," addlni that II would lnveatJ&ate hull\lll 1UU1llty from ptycl>OtocJcal, poyslo!Olical and IOCloJoi!cal polnill of vltw. • • I • Stainless Steel Fabric Care Tub • • s ......... •11tt,-Proof, c111,. ,,.., • ldeelfotollW ..... Fobriu • Lotts ttte UftthM oftheW..., · PLUS •• • a washable knits ieye~ s,..w_,......,... ,,,., c... ... it' t t• 'k*lt .... ,....,., .... . -... -..... .! ·Tl/II. CAN IUJ A --, ........... , lmO ... llN WASHU 1AMO DlYD fOI 1 Al LOl' Al , ·: ••.&111117• . ~lll'I -1 -=1~=1-sP-E-ED_O_U-EE-.~1.-1 e M cGraw-Edison Company b M sfon 90 DAY CASH WITH A~:i~:o .... ~ ~ 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown~ ._sa-1bone J4iml • I ' • . ' I -DAILY PILOT SC .L t Big~ ', "Nix · F" ht 1-~~~ . ig f !ftn D~vice . l' .1 ~N (AP) -The ( -··Bil 11ne ~ .. ' sold 1'lunday thOy Will DOI I .. y._ I he relased •OUlo 111m11n11 r.r tm i the Enviloamallal ' ""'""'· 't We com1111 IU'e the rtslr. of ' .. !deloy lo ··maklnf. the i necessary deci1loo1 .con-1 , ~ eqillpmeol for our .11175 ~ ~order to wait fer the . e of further timO..OO. . Tega! proceedings," I Illa Prooldelll -.nl N. \ ~lsleller to EPA's acting '• trator. I j Y FO.llD Ir told his ' ' ' ' \ . . lders meeUng . 1 n trolt uwe have decided not kolJOI< juciclal review of . the CHAVEZ ·CLEFT),-GE(!RGE MEANY IN HUC!DLE AFL.CIO.Ploclgec! ,1.6 Mllllon for Firm Workora ' 's decision." .• l~ ~p!anssa;. ~i·Cl(t . Pl~ge . y .Is the -In• for -• • ' l. i " =.1 f:1:ofEPA'• Chavez Gets $1.6 Million 1be EPA rela·xed the original 1975 emis&oo ~ anls after Gellenl M-. ~ American automakers -of a possible business cawtropbe if the a>mpanies iei'e forced 'to use catalytic liioverters on a u t o ·• na- lldo.wide. .,, .. , . WASHINGTON (AP) Cesar Chavez has received a pledge of $1.6 million from the AFL-CIO to aid his union's IS CHAVEZ' EMPIRE CRUMllLING?-P•se ~o .,.l'BE At.rro MAKEB.S.even ---------- 1, 1ltfacked the relaJ.ed stan-fight with the Teamsters lor 1 ~as ertremely severe last control of caiifornia farm f ~ and warned they migbt workers.' .I ltl!l-need catalytic converters "We will fight not for bidmwide. . · . Chavez, not for µnion, but for .I ' ·letter lo aotlng ad-· the Jani> worker's,'" said AFL. t« Robert w. Fri, cm rreSident Geoige Meany arned again: "We may. Wedo,esday after annQWl'cirlg ~ . to. use catalysts" on the pledge. · =~;" all of ·our IDTS f.'1\'11 Cole added that GM ~ have shown the sensitive -erters. whlch filter u- 'lilitisl gases through • bed of ,.eCious metal, are durable 1l!ld the cars are uhlbltlng 4riveebllity and fuel economy at least as good: u present cars. , ::t: HE SAID the money would help · ooordfriate a s t r ·j k e against califorrii&'table grape growers by ·Oiavez's United Fann Workers, Af'L..CIO. About 90 percent of the table grape worlcers were under contract to Q)avez'11 wlloo un- til the independent Teamsters ~uccessor. Sues " union signed up 15,000 former UFW members. THE UFW has no strike rund and is"oneof the smallest and poorest of the unions. Chavez says membership of the table grape workers is crucial to the survival of the UFW. Meany has called the Teamsters effort "union-bus- ing" and . promised to do "whatever is necessary" to keep the UFW alive. State Cars Cut Back Gas Useage SACRAMENI'O (AP) Acting Gov. Ed Reinecke told state officials Wednesday to try. to cut gasoline con- swnptim by a third during 1lle coming year. _,q!!!ty,. Presi<l.~nt · "It is time we t.oot seriously the warnings or an energy shortage," said Reinecke, a Republican !Wing In for Gpv. Jtooald Reagan, who is in New York. The st.8.te uses about 42 million g~s • of gasOllne a year operating a fleet of 18,4(!0 automobiJes and more than 'l ,000 other pieces ol gasoline- power equipment. ' I LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Ecoon-appointed trwitee of bankrupt and scandal- en Equity Fundlng Co!J>. <1' America has 111ed tbe firm's ousleil preslderit for 11 . . ' demahding·th8.noim ·Ills put salary and benefits. , suij Wednesday, again31 y-Goldblum .... llled in Disll'ict Court by Robert Loelfler, who 1s bi tifect ~um·s. successor .. '""' . . FEDERAL judge, who """ Equity 'Funding the giant phooy Jn. scandal was revealed, A MOTHD'S DAY !i" , THOU!Ol:IT ~mlT•U.NT,l ... wtfow do you best describe *in? All the songs that lli.1/e been written do not any express how wonder. tul she is. For, to each of ua l e is a something so spe- about our own mo~r rt nobody else's words can it for us. · ~ 1 one 1pecla.I attribute Mi8ve all other& bad tb be ...... It would. certainly have to be tbe"aeemlngly.tn-fin{ft cap&clty to soothe and 011 hflr dear ones when are Ill At ·utese tlmet never ieeOll to get tired' "i«os. and ii a1way1 riiht t41,e.r e with a comrortina: I. and your 11>edlc!ne. We der It ou!' privilege in pbormaey to help Mom. U OR YOUll D<lCl'OR PHONE US whet\ you· ·a deliYtt)l'. We wlll de· -. promptly without extnl ... , regarded .insurance executive from Minneapolis, to nm the company and tcy to straighten out Its tangled ,affairs. Loelller's suit charged that Goldblum'a compensations in- creased as \he firm's buSiness grew; bUt slnce so much of the business w a s fraudulent, · Goldblll!ll did dot really eern lhe-9jlllly, ~and bonuses be collected. · · brought in Loeffler, a blghly Goldblum's services as chainnan of. the board and president of the financial c:oo- glomerate thus • ' w e r e WO{'thJes,, and in fact po.sitivf.. , lY ~: to Equity l<'und- lng," the suit alleged. Al.50, l'iAMED d,elendanls in the suit were Gold~UIJ.1'• wife Marlene, The Bank of Americ8 and a BeVerly· HillS law firm. l.oeffler's s u I t charged all three are in possession ol large sums .of mooey rece·lved from Goldbluin, whlch the suit sald should rlghtlully be returned to Equity Fimdlng. Goldblum and eight ex· ecuUves of ,Equity Funding and a subsldlary, Equity Fun· ding Llfe .Insurance · Co., were fired when . sta)e and federll) authorltiet assumed control of -tbe <ionipanles;-/!. grand-illr)< ls llCbeduled'to filvestigate the cue. · · Reinecke told all state agen- cy and department heads to closely monitor gasoline usage of autos and other vehicles un- der their coolrol with the goo! or cutting g 4 so ll n e con· sumptim by a t(llrd. The guidelines would not ap- ply to tbe CaHfomla Highway Patrol's 2,000 cars or to other emergency vehicles. Reinecke c8lled for more stringenl tontrols on uae of state vehicles,· purchasf! of vehicles whieh get better gas mlleage and through "just plain common sense."· He also announced plans for a seminar May 14-15 in Saaamento on the ~eel energy crisis. Reinecke said the state's autos have averaged only about 13 miles on each gallon of fuel. · "There ls no reason why the state ca n n o t significantly reduce the number of mu.es its employes , travel and why it also ·canOOt pu:<hase more eccnxnical vehicles," be said. "Ca1ainly In light of today's energy crisis It Is worth a try.'' Northrop Bid WASHINGTON (AP) -The Air Force Thbrsday an- nounced an additional $50. 7 million increment in a · con- tract for construction of FSE Jet ll&ftters for U.S. allies. The contract Is held by Northrop Corp., of Hawthorne, Calif. i ' A areal many peol)le ft U1 for their bealth We welcome feQOestl de~t!rvl ~e anlS' PAllK ~Ibo PHARMACY ~h , ....... "*' ••. ""i ...ci; • 14•• !!$A I....-.: '1;1.-. • •r-Dal......., . Claims for F-310 Gasolioo Uphe'ld •. c.,IJin,TaUorand Shlmnoktr ' t Weitdll( Pl&P , • • $tot ..... ~ ltYtot. .... ion ~ WASHINGTON (AP) -An 1dnlih1'traUve law Judgel'llled · Wednesday that evidence sut>. m!ltecl in Federal Trade Com· mluion beorinp I h 0 W I CMvron paollne with F-310 mabs • .a ll!PlificOJ&. con- tribution to cloon air. :l'be' jildge ordertd dl•ml,lsal of an • FTC dtoeplive ad- vertlllng c:ompilint qalnat Standard Oil of Californta and bloaed the commluloo't Alo tempt tb require ~ 1abels !or guollne pump1 and advertisements similar to the warnings for cigarettes. The rejected warnings would have stated: "U1e ol lhla prod- uct Is bannlul to human health and welfare."'l'lle com- miS8lon had also challenged tbe claim that F-310 cub pollution by c1.-ning clirtY englnts. The otall auorney1 wllo argued Ille 2-)'<ar-old cate can appeal tbe ruling to the five- member c:ommlsslon. T h e FTC bod no --• on nut atep. I. \ • Costa Mesa Product David Kishbauch , left) group ~eneral manager and Richard E. Bennett, execu· tive vice presedent of International Tele phone and Telegraph eorp., examine a Sireno Actioo Bar Package, ~uced .bY ITI Jabsro . Products m Costa Mesa. The lmit provides warning lights, a sir en and a public address Wllt needed by emergency vehicles. The unit was on erhibit at the oorporation's annual ineet· ing in Kansas City, Mo. NEWPORT BEACH '\ . presents the 1973 annual ARTS . FESTIVAL ~ MAY 12, 1 to5pm "'% onthe CITY HALL LAWN Electronics Company At lrvi11e Hyoom, an lrvine electronic components manufacturer, is erecting a 25,000 square foot Industrial building on 3.8 acres of land located at t h e southwest corner of Deere and Armstrong in Irvine. Donald Shaw ol Newport Beach Is the contractor and Howard Thomp son & Associates the architect. John Sutherland ol Grubb & Ellis C.O.'s Newport Beach of- fice represented both buyer and seller, the Irvine Industrial Qimplex. Bank Slates Relocation Corne spend the aite1u,oon-in- the gun[ Groundbreaking ceremonies recently signalled the begin- ning of construction f o r Security Pacific N a t i o n a 1 Bank's Lake Forest Branch in lbe Lake Forest Village 6hop- ----'-"pliig center ih El "Toro •• 8ft1oy the mugfc 9b the vUa~rne CokpCBand,an 'IQ. J\:kt ghow ka~tf.IMQet. outh Coast<:Repektoky l Branch Manager Catherine M. Polski indicated that an August target date has been set for the branch's relocation from 24301 .Muirlands Boulevard to 23082 Ridge Rdute Drive, El Toro. (Peoplt{'.Quotes) makes nday FlltlBAY her Sunday surprise •.. Sunrise. yellow seersucker check. Two button blazer with matching two pocket skirt accentetci with cotton drill sport belt • byy~ .. Children Can Now Charge It, SACRAMENTO (AP ) Te~year~ldJ wU1 be eble to say "charge I~ p1..,., .. just like Mom and Ded under a 1pecial Montll"Merl" Ward Jales promotion. TBBSPECIAL' 'chi Id' 1 charp authorizations" will be good only thrwgh June 30 and are intended for 'Mother's Day and Father's Day pur<h..,., Wards advertising I ea f I et s say. "Think about it. It sort or makes a child feel -well, grown up -to say 'charge it, please,' just like Mom or Dad," a promotional imert in Wards bills to credit card customen says. Jack Kane , Ward> Calllomia public relations director, said the credit card program ts the f~st one he knows. of iby any company allowing children as young as 10 to use credit cards. "IT CAME up for discussion earlier thls year, and we decided to go all the way rather than in -a test market," Kane sa id. He said that means the offer Is ·being made to 5.4 million Wards credit card holders nationwide, but that an emphasis is on California as "a good market.'' Joins Jobless Here's how Wards officials say the plan works: Each holder of an active credit card account is being mailed two fonns which they ma'y fill out in a child's name slating lhat the child may charge one purchase to his or her parents' account Parents also fill in the maximum amount of purchase and a telephone number where they can be reached. 11IE am.J> THEN may take the special authorization card along with the parents' Wards · charge card to the store. The child uses the credit card in the same manner as an adult, but surrenders the special authorization c a r d when the purchase is made. State Consumer A f f a i r s Director John Kehoe said the Ward's children's credit card privilege is "a new precedent as far as we know." He said hg_.J§w_no objection to it so long as controls are as strict as Wards has imposed. "I DON'T SEE any prob- lems at the present time because of the s t r i ct guidelines they propose. But I think on the other side, one cannot just begin a blanket policy of credit for under-Ill·· year-old s when we're so defi· cient in our schools as to what credit means," Kehoe said. Labor Panel Scheduled Labor and management will swap views on what "labor relations" are all about today at the Personnel & In· dustrial Relations Associa· tion's 16th Annual Conference at the Disneyland Hotel. Speaking for labor will be Sigmund Arywitz, executive s e c r e t ary-treasurer, Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, AF[,.CJO, and Gordon Nesvig, director of personnel, County of Los Angeles will present the management point of view. Moderating the panel will be management consuJtant, Dr. John Van de Water, president, Van de Water & Associates. STILL ONLY $2.65 A MONTH Even On Price Alone The DAILY PILOT Delivers The Most For The Orange Coast • SUBSCRIBE NOW 642-4311 IOr ......... DAILY PILOT ...... ,.w ti hf) l ,,,....,, ..., 10, 1m OVER .11fE CO ·NASQihtlkuJwW•..,,,•.,.~t.J?71 ' I I l I I I . I I I I ' I • I ~ ----·-·---~--• • . . . • • • I -~ ' Th'Qhday'S:.GIOsibg ~Pri~mplete New York Stock Exchange List Reasons Offered . For M~~et Drop . NEW YORK (AP) -Sto<t market Pr1C!11 -linued to tumble Thursday; and analyata Dact;ample explanations for the decline. · They cited the umetlled <ODdlllolll In. Ille Yldeast, where price talD :J>oto 11111 w.,. companies and oll-produdftC <OuDtdlt ~ failure 11Dd fighting 1n-~.._ llalllld'cnai.<ill shipments to this coun\ry~ · They also spoke of ·IJ!• llOoring pi:lce of" l!Old. which reached record IO'!eil on fnrel111 bulllM markets, and the start of crucial labor negoUathiila between the Teamsters U.nloo and th~ lr!lckinf "~ dustry. ...., 1 ... AMr .. a • SC DAILY Pll.01' # ' I . • ! l • • '• .. • . '' ' ' ' " (. i ' • f . -. . • ·- • 1 • ' I . • • • • '1 f'' I' • I " I -.,., ' . ' . ' . l -. /' ,, . . . ' looking F-0r--· omeonl -; To Take An tder? We're ·oo At It We'll even PCIY the postage. to ;get you to give us ·an order. ·Get reacly for some _ quick profits by . mailing in your order toclay. Put a harcl·working DAILY PILOT classifie~ want acl to work for you. ' USE THIS ORDER FORM USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES _. . --. . 2 TIMES -. $4.lO $5.80 $6.80 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 OR USE YOUR • CHARGE CARD - • 7 12 TIMES TIMES TIMES --- $7.40 $11.70 $17.70 Sf.01 $14.SO $22.lO $10.76 $17.30 $27.30 TO FIGURE COST Put only one wo1d in e•ch 'pace •bo•e. Include your •ddreu or p~ont numbe•. The cot~ cf your 1J i1 .it the '""~ of !he line on which the 1111 word of your 1d i1 w1it. PMbli1h for , , ••••••.• , , d1v1, be9inni119 . , ••.•..••.••••. , , .• , , , , , •. , Cl111ific1tio11 •••••• , •••.••••• , • , ••••.•.•.•••.• , , • , , ••••• , • , .. , , ten. Add $1 .00 p!ut ) 1!1111 · N•rn• •••••.••.•••...•.••••••.• , •••••••......... , ..•...•• , ••• , •• Addre1• •..•....•...••....••..•••••••••......•....•..•••.•.• ,, .. City , , ••. ' ••••• , ••• , ••• , . , •..•.• , •• Phofte •• , •••. , .•.. , . , • , •. , •..• M1lt•r Ch 1r9e Number , , .•••..••••• , ...• Expir.tlion O.tl• •••• , ••• l•nkAmeric1rd Nu mber , • , ..• , ••• , • , , , , , , Exipr1tion D•t• ••• , ••.• e •tr"' if you de1ir1t 1111 el DAILY PILOT 801 1erwice with m1iled replie1. ----~·--CUT HERi -PAlTE OH YOUl ENVELO PE!------- BUS INESS REPL y· MAI L Fi"t Clau Parrnit No. 12, f oil• M•n•, C•liforni• Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT P. 0 . Box 1560 ' . Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 Cl•11ifi1d Dept: . ' , Or Give Us an Ord,r . by Phone . at 642-5678, the D.irect Li-1e to DAILY PILOT ; • . . ·Cla•slflecl Want· Acl . • 1 .-RESULIS ' ' , \ ' ) e I tE, R T NE lwo Doug for 1 gene Mc II mm> $12,0 def1'! their hBUll Th McK milli M< Bart -'J '"' -bar ol alco Tl reg< Con 1he quit "I bin< Che sen: um . 14, ... 1he sug ing driJ T Pia ask cas kin s hol a' go Sil thE an: do1 d~ in I "" al hi! wi ca sh Il< °' ··c lo· bE pl lh SE Al I • ~ 4 DAILY PILOT -* , Eccentric · 5 POW s Rip Peace Activists' Visits Remembers Two Bars l NEW YORK (UPI) -The regulars at two fashionable ban frequented by lloogll! S. McKelvy all had a good word for their late "great, brilliant, witty, generous and kind friend." McKelvy, a lS53 Yale graduate and a mimnna1re by-inheritance, had wWed $U,OOO to be used st the two bars "to de!flly tile cost of liquid refmhment.s for tbeit patrons, until such sums be et· bausted." The two young children f r o m McKelvy's first marriage got about $1 million each. McKelvy, a Pittsburgh native, died in Barbados, West Indies March 14. Some 'lust Hke Do•g to leav~ •nan t11 bind like t hb.' bar friends and his first wile said he died of liver complications from chronic alcobolis1n. 11IE MEN AND WOMEN who drink regula rly at Chez Madison or Gregory's Comer learned Wednesday afternoon of. the windfall. Th.e bar owners weren 't quite sure what to do with it. "It's just Jike Doog to leave me In a bind like this," said Frank Mcilvaine at Chez Madison. "The guy had a weird sense CJ!,humor. He got married a second lime but put off the wedding dale to July 14, BasWle Day. "We'll think of something to do with Ihe mooey, though. Someone already sugge6ted renting Yankee Stadium,, fil!... ing tM place, aod buying everybody one drink." There were no finn plans at Gregory's Place either. Nonnan Silver, the owner, asked patrons to sign a guest book in case he decided to invite them for some kind of McKelvy tribute. SILVER REJECJ'tD a proposal to hold open house with free drinks but with a nominal admission t'harge which would go to Alcoholics Annonymous. "He was a great guy, you know." Silver said. "But I used to needle him all the time because be never really did anything with his life. He could have done so much with his brain and money. "Yoo know, maybe this is his way of doing something, getting his name kn9wn in death. It's macabre." McKelvy's friends, and they ~ numerous Wednesday, described him as a fine person who entertained Javisbly in his Upper East Side town bouSe lilied with expensive paintings, good liquor, canned ratllesnake meat, e I e p h a n t steaks, tiger's milk and other delicacies. McKclvy's first wife, Mrs. Francine Dealey who remarried and moved to Darien, Conn., said her ex·husband was "a fantastic person who never got all the love and friends he could .have had because he drank too much. A lot or peo- ple took advanlage of him.'' She said she was an aJcoholic during their marriage but stopped drinking several yean; ago after joining Alcoholics Anonymous. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE O!livrry or th! Oaily Pilot is guarantttd "'-"'•J·l'rlll•J: U ,.., 0. llfl IMIYt rwr ~~· tY S:JO ,.m., (Ill lrMI Y"1' n,y wHI k 11 ... llthl It ,..... ClflJ ,,_ lilltll Wlllll 7,,. , ...... . S•t1..i1y tl!ll S1WM11y: If pu M Ml r«tlv• \1'11• <GPY ty ' •·'"· ~ly, M" • '·"'· Sun41y, Clll t"ll • ("l'l' wlll llto b,._,.111 ,_ Y•W. C•11l art '"""' ""Ill lt '·'"· T rlrphonrs ' Mtlt Ot•111e Ctunty ,,, .. , , . •O·•H1 Mtf"lllwtltl H1111tl1111MI! haul '"' Wt•lmlllsl1r .••. S*lnl h11 CltlMlll .. Cl!llllTt llt t Mdl, ~ J••~ c1,itrr1•, o-,..;,.,, *Ill L'I-• L..-M!W91 .... .m.+m .WASlllNG'IOI (UPI) -Fire fom>eT AtPerlcln pr1-t o( war hive told C..,...11111--u.s. peace•<> tlvl&lll, lncludlng -Jone J"ooda, fn. creuod their llll!erlng, damapd their monle and boaotod North Vietlwn'a detenq8wlloo to -the war. ID testimOay before the lloalo Internal Security Committee Wedntaday, the POWa descrlhed how lliey and otbera ,,_ tortor.d and otbenrist pressured by their cepton to meet with vlslUng U.S. antiwar sroupo.o 'Ibey llld tbal alter the vlalton left, ...,,. POW. were 11pvnlabed for devlatlna from the ap-prwed .,.tpt... - Familiar Pose ,,,. """ pilols -lour """ !lie Navy He llld ·11ie choir WU repeatedly ticked and one from the Alr Force -detcrihod out !nim under him. tllilr trutmeat 1'hlle speatlnf In "-' tfolhn•• Sll4 he and otbera wire ol proposed legtalaUOo to -tnvtl "programmed" to recite p re p a r e d by Americans to 1QY country at war with 1D1Wen to questlom from their visitors the United Slatta. wblch 'wtte approved In advance of the NAVY CMD!L DAVID lloflman ol San • meeUng. Diego llld he waa "penool]ly tortured CMDR. EWIN SHUMAN, who apent to meet 1 delegation tbal came to our !Ive yoars In captivity, said that Jn camp In February, 197%" -two moolha September, 1919, ho WU "tortured fairly after his plane wu shot down. bodl)r" beca ... he relu5ed to meet a Hollman said the North Vlelalme9e peace delegation. convinced him to meet with the delega-"OUr morale wu defillite.ly Jo....m by tlon by making him stand on a chair with Ainericano vlsltilJll North V1e1nom," bis hn>km arm tied to a ..nJng beam. Shuman said. ''.It Is my oplolon the Gilly President Nixon pledged Wednesday night at GOP fund·raising dinner that he would see that justice is ·don.e in Watergate case but vowed not to let scandal deter him from other goals. Applause (ol· lowed. Director Admits CIA Culpability in. Pro~e ,,, WASHINGTON (AP) -The Cenlra! ln~lligenCe Agency's director says the % WIS ill·advised i • ivillg technif:a! aict to highly.placed ~~te J:Iouse aides who'used it to commil a_ burg\ary. __ ;t.__ Faced with three conjressional pruQ_eS and claims that the CIA has violated the law that bars it from covert operations inside the United States, Director Jame& Schlesinger promises quick reforms~ (Schlesinger was selected today as se<:retary of defense ). The Capitol Hill investigators are look· Liza Paying Off Mother's Debts LONDON (AP) -Oscar-winning Uza Minnelll, in laldon for three. concert ap. pearances, told newsmen she needs the money -to pay off debts run up by Judy Garland, her mother. "I haven't talked about what ,,I'm doing, and I really don't want to go into details now but I hope to set things slraight for her," said Liza, ~tar of ''Cabaret." Miss Garland died in London in 1969, reportedly owing mooey in Europe and the United States. Miss Minnelli would not give figures except to say it was "a substantial. sum" which she has been clearing for more thao a yer. "People bad fooled mama · and ·taken advantage of her so often," she said. ing into charges that the CIA helped 'Vhite House aides burglarize the office of-Dr. Le#Q:.1 Eielding. a Los Angeles psychiatrist who had treated Pentagon Pape,. delendant Darnel Ellsberg. • SCHLESINGER'S TESTIMONY before senators Wednesday traced a scenario he said began with a July 8, 1971, telephone call to the CIA by President Nixon's chief domestic adviser John Ehrlichman. Sen. John L. McClellan (0.Ark. ). chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said the two men in charge of the CIA when it provided a White House aide ·wtth disguises, fraudu1ent identity papers, a camera and tape recorder will be interrogated as qulckly as possible. The men are former CIA director Richard Helms and ronner Deputy Director, Gen. Robert Cushman, com· mandant o! the Marine CorJ>s. "The most charitable thing you can say about this was that there was some carelessness," McClellan said after a closed.door Session with bis intelligence operaticins ~. a subcommittee of the appropriations committee. TIIE SENATE ARMED Services Com- mittee has called Schlesinger and other witnesses to appear before it Friday. And the House subcommittee charged with overseeing GIA J1ctivities also has in· dicated it may begin an investigation. Schlesinger did not discuss accusations made by convicted conspirator James W. McCord that White House pressure was put oo McCord and other · Witergate defendauts to Implicate the CIA in lhe Watergate bugging. Accord Seen For European Troop Cuts VIENN A (AP) - A joint U.S.-Soviet annOllllcement today signaled a break- throuih in l(lllg deadlocked ta1ks on an East.West conference on reduction of troops in Europe. The representatives or the two superpowers announced that the first plenary session of preparatory talks will open here Monday. Evidently some sort ( __ 1_N_S_H_OR_T_ •• _. _,,) or compromise made the joint an· nouncement possible. One source suggested that compromise had been achieved on several issues, in· eluding the status of M o s co w ' s Hungarian allies at a forces reduction conference. • Ramsey Clark Quits NEW YORK (API -Former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark says he bas left a local-law firm "to devote all my time to matters that I thought were important.'' Clark, active in the anti·war movement in recent years. said Wednesday he "wanted greater freedom" and would spend his time teaching, lecturing, and practicing some Jaw, mainly in cases in- volving constitutionaJ rights. • KissingerinLondon Fair Over 'Most of U.S. LONDON (UPJ) -Presidential ad- viser Henry A. Kissinger conferred today with U. Alexis JohMon, mief American oegotiator at the Stralegic Arms Limita- tion (SALT) talks, before muming meelings with Brltlsb 1 government of· ficlals. Kissinger and Johnson met over breakfast at Kissinger's hotel. Thunderstorms Touch Pacific Northwest, Florida • Rap BrOtDn Sentenced NEW YORK (AP) -Black militant H. v..s.s ....... Tl'l\llldtnlorft'lt rvmbl«I K"°'f K•I• twld ll"M' from IM ftlCltk Norttltml Ill '41W lnolMll •nd Flotlcll ledfy, llVI MMI of 1t11 NtttJl't t!!ICIY9d ·rtlt •!Id mt111 ... ,.,.,. Wfl'tdll ....-clock• 11 • f'llllft ,.... llollf' •I ()nwont, HID .. Ind )S "1,Cl.ll, If Rap Brown has been sentenced to S.t.;15 wu1 P1tm BNcll, Fl•.. 011r1no years in prison for his role in the anned , Th11f!OtrttOl'pu: WMMld•Y nlQM. bbe A twhter , ... , rlOC*I 11\rough • ro ry of a Manhattan bar and the trillM'lltrll In • llUllurtl IOI/th of Min-ultln of poti · he sbootou "''POlfs-St. P~ w........, (•uMd 111e assa g a ceman m t t d••'" GI • 5-'l't•r-olcl bo'/' •nd l11lurfll that foll~ hi• mothitr ultlc•Uy. · N1,. -· 11111WW .. ""' IOl'MOG Two endants received similar dHlroYM 1% of '1 tr•lt.n In lhe perk , 1n11 4'mlOld '""''· Two ~ fVnlll=I sentences W esday and the sentencmg =:. _.. •la"*' 1" untr•• Min-of a third was postponed to give his at· w:::.;" ,.,,...._::"~no!,~ Inch toi;ieys a chance to produce new Thi M1::t;3 v111ev: .,., so.Ad evidence. ~ t'•l11, •nd tN ffflloNI Wnlhfr Serv!CI f9Y!Mll lti hfW tl'l'll' Cr.ti KMdi.111 --W•td. Tiii flood-IWOlltn rh11r •is .. ,.P9rtno off'' ltlrouq1-l ltll ........ ,,on s~-·-d S!. L0!,11 dl11Tlc:t from Hlllf!INI. Mo.. .,.,...... •rr_. .. &e t~~~-111· Thi cttil Wll tirPKt9d WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (AP) -The c~ 5:i,1,\J1w~.:·1~· r~~,:.~ U.S. marshal who supervised the :,,1t'::~i'~11eotR!° Jr~:"?: W..~ government's confrontaUon with militant SK11on ot ""' tltY. Indians who ocCupled the hamlet or Coa•tal Wea the r Wounded Knee .ays It was., good a job H•rv tllnthlne lod•Y· Llllll Ylr1,l>I• I S -·Id be done ··-·--I h "'Irids nl•"' •nd rnom1111 "°"'1 11teom. ,.._. unuu e Ing Wflttfly n 10 ,, kn:oJ• 111 •tter· circumstances . ""'°"' IOd1y •nd Fr!Ny. ~h l«l•v 10. W Colbu I Id Wed c ... ,,1 twmo1••111r" r•noe '""" 56 ayne m o newsmen • to 1't. '"'_, """"'''"''" r.noe mm nesday It was a difficult policing pro-" tt'"7s. W•'-' 191'1\Plf•Nr• •1· blem, "but I feel the way we handled lt s .. n, Moo11. Tide• WIS successful. SICOIMf tll;h T~~.~~~ 5112 p.m .• ,, "There are several dH!erent way& a s.corw:1 1ow -;~ ..•.•••• 11 :ts p.m. 1.J confrontaUon of tbl1 type can be bandied. ,1,.. hlth •• ~~·.~: •:D5 i .m. J.• I will adm.it at times other ~YI OC· ,,,.., toot .......... 12:11 '·'"· o.s curred to me. However, I don t believe S«:OM 111g11 , ....... •;" '·"" s.1 v.·e could ut for a better IOluUOn than !Ji\lft attn 5:5' .,rt\, llf9 7!G f.l'ft. I.A 'I MOM 11 ... 1:,s.i p.l'I\. 11t1 i:as ...... we 1.wave. • ' people lh<)i lei in tbal counlry were Communlsts or C o m m u n i s t sym~ pathben ... Air Force C.pt. Larry Clrrlian o( Scollodale, Ariz., told the lawmakers ho was bit repeatedly when ho relu5ed to agree to tell a Women's Strike for Peace group that U.S. bombs were being aimed at civilian targets. ''THEY (PEACE GROUPS) gave aid and comfort to the North Vietnamese and prolonged the war," carrlgan aaid. He was imprisoned for five years and seven months. · Navy u . crndr. Tbomu Hall aald vlaitlng peace activists "definitely hid a demorallllng effect on us." Hall,' held captive for more thin ftve years, aald he lived with prlaoners who .... "pressured and tortured to ... delegations and in one instance they tortured a man for poor performance" before vis.ltors. ''These people wen allowed to ro~e over at wiU and make anti·U.S. statements • . . aQd they (North. VJtl. namese) thought these p e o pU i represented the major consensus 1n out country," he said. Poseidon Blown Apart Navy Missile Misfires Near Soviet Spy Ship ABOARD THE USNS RA NGE SEN· TTNEL (UPI) -A Poseidon missile fired from a submerged submarine -whipped violently out or control and blew apart and hit the Atlantic Ocean in full view of a Russian spy ship Md 200 guests of the U.S. Navy. One section of the errant missile plung· cd straight down , trailing a bright yellow flame , and splashed into the sea only four or five miles from this spectator· crowded tracking ship. A second piece cartwheeled into the ocean several seconds later. The incident happened Wednesday evenlng. A few minutes ~fter the failure , the Russian ship put a small boat in the water in an apparent search for debris normally expelled from the top ol the 1aunch tube when a missile is .fired. The sub and the Range Sentinel returned to part, leaving the Soviet vessel in the launch area. THE POSEIDON, key to the Navy's nuclear deterrent force, was launched on what was to be a routine tt>st flight from the USS Henry L. Stlmsoo about 30 miles east of Cape Kennedy. The Soviet in· telligence g a t h e r i n g ship, the Zakarpatye, met the sub and the Range Sentinel in international waters and stayed about a mile from the sub through the launching , Before the rocket was fired, the Russian ship me ssaged th.is v~ssel by flashing light and noted the anniversary of Y·E day by saying: "Congratulations on the day of the oc· casion of our joint victory over Fasci.st Germany." Navy officers aboard the Range Sen- tinel replied: "Great things are 'accm\plished when our peoples work together. May our cooperation in space exploration prove as fruitfuL " 11IE 31·FOOI' Poseidm, carrying a dwnmy warhead, popped out of one of the Stimson's 16 submerged launch tubes. ignited norma lly and roared into the cloudy sky toward an AUant\c targ!I area more than l,SOO miles to the southeut. But afler about 15 to IO -o( flight. the stubby black and white rocket wheeled off coorse. It appeared to recover, gained altitude and then began fishialling wildly, its brilliant exhaust spewing from side to side. Range safety officers at Cape Kennedy allowed the rocket to perform in this Cashion for about a half.mJ.nute aa tt gained a!Utude and distance from the Range Sentinel and the Soviet vesae!. Then, 57 seconds after launch, a radio signal was sent to the missile which detonated an emergency e x p I o s J v e charge and severed the rocket. Lebanon Troops Battle Gue·rrill,as Fto~ S-rda BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -LebanHI troops battled Palestinian guerrillas fn:m Syrta into the early hours today along a 55--mile front in the eastern Bekaa Valley near the border. a senior army officer said. He said the fighting stretched from the army's main garrison town of Marjayoun in the south to the Vicinity oJ Baa!beck, in tfle northeast. In many areas, including the towns ol Hasbaya and i!>chaya. villagers look lo the hills ·~ with World. )Var II rifies to support anny jets "and artU!ery at- tempting to repulse "a massive lnfius:" of guerrilla reinforcements from acro!s the Syrian border. the officer said. 'rhe nmnber of invaders from Syria was not known, but a force of 5,000 Palestinians came over during the fighting last week between the Lebanese army and the guerrillas . based in Lebanon . That force clashed with the army in southeast Lebanon, then return· ed to Syria after a cease-fire was react>. ed in Beirut. YASIR ARAFAT, the Utular leader of all the PalesUnian forces, made an 1n· direct appeal from his headquarten in Beirut to the Syrian government to pull the invaders back. In a message to the Damucus regime, UPIT ......... I n Hospital Cornelia Wallace, wile of Gov . George Wallace, lu!s been hos- pitalized after 'atypical' pap smear test. ~rs said later, however, there were no traces of malignancy. \ he sai d: "In spite of our hwntn and material losses, we have bandl(ed our wounds and accepted a cease--flre tn order to re...estabJiah mutual conftdence with sister Lebanon." The cease-fire ordefed after flghUna belween the army and the guenillu on lhe otitskirts or Beirut Mooday nli!)t and Tuesday appeared to be ho~ In the capita.I. One burst or gunfire was beard before dawn on Iasblooable Hamra streel Pollce said they fired on a car that ran throuijl a roadlilock, but the driver escaped. Beirut's lnlematlonal airport wu stlll closed. Airline sources said 22 planes hid been diverted to Cyprus in the past 24 hours and unloaded 800 passengers there. 29 Cambodian Soldiers Killed -Near Phnom Penh PHNOM PENH, Cembodla (AP) -Al· tacks oo government post · and ' south of Phnom Penh e k 21 soldiers, military IOUrCel . today. It was one o( the I r pnnmeal death tolls rtported In I lllOlltbs. Field reports Aid an forte Wedneaday ~overran a detachment guarding • b e tll mllea 90Ulh of the capital, killing of the defenden and WOWldinf five. Forty miles north of the city on IDghway 5, the Communllla made two assaults on government troops trylng to dislodge a olroog f°"'" of inlUrpot& '!'be command llld II of lta eo!dlers wen Idll- ed and 11 were wounded. Highway 5, the principal route from the rice bowl In nortbwesteru C.mbodla., has been blocked by Jnsurgeots for ..,.. than two months. '!be lit Brlpde secured about seven mllea of the ro.cl last week, but a slzable ltt'eteh II still held by the Communls!a, an~ rice con- voys are unable to get through. • IN 80tlTR VIETNAM, the VIII 0.. on Wednelday refused to acoept Mi civilian prlsCmen after 10 others adlodul- ed to be transferred demlnded to -under the Sar,on government, the Soulb Vletname. command reported. A meellng of tile Joint Military Como mlssloi\'.1 subcommittee on prlaotlen of war w11 called to atttle the dilplte, which could stall the alr"8dy delayed ex- change of clvl!Ian prisoners. A South Vlelnameae spokesman Uid II of the = POWt In the 111'11 boet ..-. the Thach Han River In Quang Tl\ pro- vince asked to rematn under petmbClt control, 11\d the Vlei Cone ...,.., .. > tallves oo the -t bonk o( the rfvtr "at ' mad" and r'efuaed to ...,.pl 1111J Of illo pr!aontrs. ( ....... llztr! •• ,, ;, - ,Wildlife Refuge . Qecision -Delayed By JACK BROBACK Of .... DllllY l'lklt lt•ff Orange County supervisors Wednesday studied the complicated 1ssue of the development ol a wildlire preserve and recrffatiOrt area m the Upper Newport Bay but took no action. Further consideration was delayed un · til a meeting of tbe Field Committee on the Upper Bay in San Francisco 0'1 May 25. Webster Otis, special assistant to the Secretary of the Interior and chainnan or the Field CommiUee, outlined the goals and actions of the committee since its for111atlon a year ago. He said 1,000 acres of the area has fish and wildlife which should be preserved and protected and charged that final responsibility for implementation of any plan rests with t'be Board of Supervisors. of the three islands in the bay owned by the Irvine Company. He argued that Ille determination of the future of the 1s1ands was most important to the whole determination of the Upper Bay pfOt:t !ems. Interior Department's Otis disagreed . He said an "in house" group in bis department cou1d make a good appraisal of the entire area and_ come within 10 perctnt of the real value. Krause contended that cost of ac· quisition of the islands, if desirable, should be a key factor in determining the economic feasibility for any plan for use of the entire area. Krause said determination of the ac· tual legal ownership of the islands would be part of the job of an appraiser. -• '-· Mq 10, 1973 s OAR.V Pltm: 1 I o.llY 'llot St.ti ,.... oth Sides Holler Foul ... ENSENADA. Mexico (AP) -From Mexicans came tales of long-haired, SCl'f8llling Americans a rampage, ri~ ping r ... extlnguishers from hotel ...us. urinating on carpets, lllcking and ·pun- -, holes in doors, throwing bo!!IeS. From Americans came stories of police piling people three deep into a jail \:ell and PoUring hllman excrement on them, of purported innocent bystanders ..,.pt off the streets, a n d of property 'COD· fiscated by officers and never seeri again. 'Ibe reports t'Ol'l:tinued Wednesday as this Baja Ca!ilomia coastal c l t y recovered from a wild six -hour brawl Saturday night in which SO pe1'90ns Were reported injured and 190 Americans were arrested. The recent decisioo of the lrvine Com~ pany not to :~r pursue litigation on the land exchange between the company and the county of Upper Bay lands bas speeded interest in resolving the various issues presented. He said the legal title, engineering and valuation tJroblems of the uplands to ~ acquired are for the most part different from those of lhe islands and that con· siderable time would be required to establish acquisition boundaries for the uplands. Laguna Tidepools lnsputed Police said four remained ln Jan Wednesday. Cite D. Darnall, 21, or Garden Grove, and Lindsey L. Greene, 18, of Seal Beach, were charged with assaulting policemen, and Patrick J. Sheridan, 19, and Thomas A. Garcia, 19, both of Carlsbad, were charged with narcotics possession. One disagreement cropped up in tbe discussion. St.anley Krause, county real property services director, recommended that an appraiser be selected as soon as possible to determine the market vaJue Krause said the county now owns an unquesUoned fee or easement interest in 642 acres of the Upper Bay larld, that undetermined prescriptive rights are claimed for the public for 383 acres and that the islands are about 104 acres. Hundreds of youngsters from Saddleback, lIVine and Newport-Mesa Unified School Districts con- verged on the tidepools of Laguna Beach Wednes· day. The low tide gave t he students a better view of the marine life for which area is noted. They are below Heisler Park. · About 4,000 yotmg Americans were in Ensenada Saturday for the end of a yacht race and the celebration of Cinco de Mayo. Juan Zamora, manager of the Bahia Hotel, told a reporter the trouble started shortly after noon when :the yachtsmen left and the "hippies" ar-I rived. ~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Saddleback To Feature Shakespeare The county official also questioned the Irvine Company's title to the islands which he said has never been legally determined. He added that there is disagreement respecting the size of. the islands and their location . The so-called Field Committee includes Irvine Scenic Highway 'May Begin Within'¥ ear' State Must Pay Pollution Cost SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state can· not order loCal governments to install an· tipollution facilities unless it is willing to pay the cost, says the Legislature's top legaJ adviser. "At first, the hippies just sat around the pool, drinking," he said. "Then more came until we soon had about 700 penons around t.he pool. •. One boy let out ayell, , and someone answered. hlin. 1'ben the . people were all yelling. They got excited, I and someone threw a bottle into the @ool. I Others started tossing things, too. : The works of William Shakespeare will be highlighted May 18 and 19 at Sad- dlebp.ck College when some 30 colleges and universities from throughout the na· tion participate in the annual Southern California Oral Interpretation Festival. 'Ille Fine Arts Divis ion of the com· munity college is sponsoring the two-day event, which will include individual, small group, and large g r o u p performances. Dr. Doyle McKinney, chairman of Sad- dleback's fine arts division, said special events involving faculty members from visiting colleges will be interspersed through the festival. Representing Northwestern University in Illinois will be Or. Charlotte Lee, who will present a reading hour ; and Dr. Wallace Bacon. _who_ wi!l . .di s~CJU....S.. "Problems J n v o I v e d in Oral lnterpretation of Shakespeare." The School of Performing Art s of the United States International University will present "The Taming of the Shrew ," directed by Wynn Pearce. Saddleback College will pr esent "Hamlet" directed by drama instructor Joann Bennett. Betty Garrett, an actress and singer. will be the guest speaker at the Saturday lWlcheon concluding the festival. Other noted guests and critics will in· elude Dr. Janet Bolton of USC. Dr. Leslie Coger of Southwest Missouri State College, Dr. Virginia Floyd of the University of Arizona and Dr. Alec Flett of Cal State San Francisco. Participants are expected f r o m Arizona, Utah , Indiana , New York , Missouri, and numerous Ca Ii for n i a colleges. representatives of the county, the state, ~ Goostruction of a scenic high\vay from the city of Newport Beach ·and the Newport Bea h thr gh the h"Us of federal government. . c ou_ ' It was formed a year ago at the re· Irvme to. Oso Pa_rkw~y .m the Saddl~back . quest of the Board of Supervisors. . -Valley may . begin w1th1n a year, Orange Otis said its st udies were directed County ?ff1c1als ~~re to~~ Tuesday. toward the protectioo of open space, the The s1x:lane d1v1ded h1~hvva_y would ~ protection or wildlife anU the provision of an extension of San Joaquin Hdls ~oad 10 recreation areas that might be com· Corona de! Mar that would tenn1nate at. patihle to the wildlife preserve goal the pla_nned Starr Ranch county park and He said an "in house" appraisal would the pr1v~te!t-<>w~e.d Coto de Caza ranch take six months and that the recreational above Mi ssion V1e10. areas plaMed must be studied in relation Plans for the highway. which would to their affect on wildlife. He a8ded that have a 250-foot·wide right-of-way, are a probable new Upper Bay bridge near being studied by the Orang ~ County Road ShellmaKer Island must also receive con· Department and major land cievelopment sideration. Cinns, including the Irvine Company, the Otis said !he Field c.ommittee shoufll Mission Viejo Company and owners of complete its work in the next six months the old Moulton Ranch lands. and would then be dissolved. The proposal was outlined Tuesday The interior department official also before Orange C.Ounty Harbors, Beaches stated that the three islands were the and Parks Commissioners by architect greatest natural resource for wildlife. John Chapman, whose firm is preparing Otis .also said that funds for acquisit~pn plans for a proposed amusement park on Qf_Jrv~e ~ands anU. for de \'.elopment of Upper Newport Bay in Newport Beach. t~e . w1Jdhfe-recreatlon areas were One commissioner, Frank Robinson of hm1t.ed. He said although there are man y Newport Beach, was sharpiy critical or J>?S~1ble sources. for fund s they would be the highway pr pos I 1r g ·t a d1fhcult to obtain. " " o a ca in ' James McCormick, of the California s~bterfuge by coi_nmercial elements to Department of Fish and Game said the bring freeway flraff1c t.o NewP?rt B~ach. Upper Bay is the most valuable wetland H_e says any freeway m the city will be a f ·1ctrf · · · th t t bitterly opposed rea or WI 1 e remainmg in e 5 a e. "" Proponents in~ist it will be ''low-speed" Thief Severs Hand SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) -Jphanes Christian Hess, 37, drove to the hospital, his left hand wrapped in paper on the seat of his car, and told doctors there a teen-aged mugger cut off his hand with one stroke of a 18.rge knife in order to get his watch . Doctors said arter surgery it was too early to tell if Hess would regain use of the hand. highway. Chapman said today his (irm is also preparing master pla ns for the owners of 10,000 acres of old Moulton Ranch prop- erties and the land surround Coto de caza. Chapman said the highway proposal was broached to Orange County Road Commissioner Ted Mcconville for the first time Monday. -~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "He was highly in favor of the .idea and told us money could be made available in next year's budget to put in the first two lands all the way from Starr Ranch to Newport's city limits," Chapman sa id. •• Dtlly 'Uot Sti ff Pfiiti Read.tt To Perforna Pupils of the Georgina Geer School of Ballet will perform May 12 in a "fttl<l concert at the San Clemente Com munity ClublJouse. Along wltb the dancers, young musicians studying wilih Austin Buffum also will perConn. ·The performers range In ages from 4 to 13. Jn fore- ground is Gail Elrnan . Behind her, left to right. are Kalie Jensen and Kristianne Koch . .... . ! GeneraJly speaking, Chapman said, the proposed highway would follow the southerly alignment of San J oaquin Hills Road. It woud run below the crest of the Irvine Hills on the inland side behind the city of Irvine, to El Toro Road then swing out behind Leisure World and down to the county's Oso Parkway at Laguna Niguel. Chapman said Oso Parkway will ex- tend through the Starr Ranch and Co to de Caza. Chapman said Newport Beach may not even have to be consulted because that end of the scenic highway is already finished -San Joaquin Hills Road. "This will do a great deal to solving . some of the destination traffic problems of the whole area down here," Chapman said. Newport Beach offi cials had no com· me'nt on the highway plan today because they said they have not had a chance to see the proposal in detail. Chapman said the road will be grade- separated, which means at each major road crossing there Will be a bridge over or a tunnel under the road . Chapman also poo-poohed Robinson's contention that the new hi ghway would force Newport Beach to build new bridges across Upper Newport Bay to handle added traffic burdens . Farmer R eally Sitting Pretty TAMPA. Fla. (AP) -Donovan Klppllnger bought a $250 toilet soat !IO that his father, a North Dakota vain fanner, can "feel like a millionaire -for 15 minutes a clay. tr The nqvelty bathroom fixture is made of transparent plastic, inlaid with 13 crisp $1 bills, half dollars, ~uarters and dimes. The father, Th.OOOre Klppllnger, :ollects coins as a hobby In his o~tive Heaton, N.O. Chapman claims to have verbal agree- ment from most of the major landowners along th~ r9ute1 including the Irvine Company, which is near completion of a master plan for 10,000 acres along the coast between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. He said the Ir vine Company and Mission Viejo Company were "lukewarm to the plan" but a spokesman for the~ Irvine Company said today they are more optimistic. "\Ve think the proposal is a desirable concept and is compatible with our plan. ning," the Irvine 'Company spokesman said. "The company will be reviewing this as it progresses." ----- ~islative Counsel George MUJl)hy after being requested by Sen. W. Craig Biddle (R·RiverBide), to study the ques- tion. Biddle said Ute opinion has "far- reacbing implications" for environmental quality control in California. Inmate Branding Told ODESSA, Tex. (UPI) -A cellmate. usipg razor blades and wire, and burning paper for heat, branded confessed murderer Johnny Meadows in a Dallas jail at Meadows' request, Texas Attorney General John Hill said Wednesday. "One boy started to take his pants ott, I but we had the police take him away. \ Then a big guy threw a girl into ·the ; pool." ! Zamora said he asked the youth not to ~ do it again but was shoved away. He said the youth then Jended off half a d01.e!J policemen who were trying to grab him, and the violence started. Americans rac- ed through hotel hallways in groups of six and seven, tearing and b r e a k i n g whatever they could, Zamara said. The hotel and Hussoog's Bar were heavily damaged In the melee. "We slept three men deep in shifts," he said. "I've had five hours' sleep in four days." Strike a note for the hearty robust look ,;. of .QoUntry English. A. C1 noPY S.cf $)49.00 B. U11gorio Cho1t $219.00 c. o, •••• , $479.00 F. Nl91it• St1"d O. Twin Mln"On, 11c.h E. Amoiro $159.00 BISHOPSGATE BY c. 115.00 t l 49.00 H.J.-GAI\f\ETT fURNffURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS • Open Moo., Thurs. & Frl. EYOs. I '.A lo 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA. CALIF. 646-0275 _,.'A • , ; , ' • I 1 7 ~. \ . . . ~ Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION I • • Today's Fhud N.Y. Stoeks .. _YOL. ___ 66_,_N0 __ ._ .• _3o_._s_SECTI ___ o_N_s_,~74-PA __ G_~~s·----::'---------------ORAN6E--..;.... __ co __ u_NTY __ ._c_A_L_IFO __ RN~l-A __________ r_H_u_Rs_o_A_Y._M_A_Y __ 10_,_,9_1_3 ______ ~---------TEN---CENT-=--s :! ' $1 Million Paripg io Balance Laguna-Budget ' .J . ;(. .. .. ~.,. . llJ JAN 'fOR'IU bade•t ,review oeuioo, .• decided to do 1\llt councR uked that llooe pn!Sellt °''"' -..., -. · ~ aboUt It. They dlrectod City hla :tlnaJ holaD<id btldl!et ~age to The Liiuoa Beach city budget pro-~ Larry Rose and.acting fll)a""' tbtn\ on Juue J'/. pated for the 1973.71 fiscal year la about director Tom Meade to sharpen their 1be prellmlnary ·estimates covered fl millloD out of balance, !he City Council ,pentjls and COl)le in with a. balanced .genoral qpecatllli • fµnds Jlllly. Not. in- learnec!" during study seSSioo Wedoesday budget. · · .· eluded, lo lhe·'re\oenue catetory, Meade nlgtlt. As things now slaiid, vartoos city strissed, were g~ Iµ funds from the Tbis means that department heads dej>i;rtnielll hove suggested spendlnf in state, ·the Jlgbtilif district, debt service have ~roposed spending that is roughly the amount ol $4.1 mllllon. ' • on sewer bonds. grant programs, the $1 mllliOn niore than the citY treasury Meade, however, reported the city will deposit. trust, and the Main Beach lease has to spend. only have $3.2 milllon to s)ieftd In tbese program. Councilmen, meeting in their first caWries of· general operating expenses. The total budget last year reached $5.6 an million. Meade said he could not estimate the total for this year yet. Meeting with the ,C()\lncil were the plan· . ning commission and' the citizens budget plannin& committ~. Rose and Meade both came belore councilmen requesting a dollar amount as a specific guide for their budget preparations. Rose said he was glad the city had asked for a balanced budget. "As you recall, previous councils have oot wanted us to present a balanced ' budget -they wanted to do that themselves. I didn't much care for that, to tell you the truth~" Rose said. Meade said the initial estimates ol what the city can afford may vary by IO to 20 percent fr<>m the $3.S millkln figure. He added that the $4.4 million In departmental estimates assumeJ that the so-called "enterprise funds ," such as rubbish, sewer, and transit services are self-smtainlng and that their rates may be ralaed. ans Two other a.ssumptioos entered Into the estimates. One was that a four percent hike In property tax , the ·maximum allo~·ed Wlder a new state Jaw (SB 901 limiting a local gqvernment 's taxing power, would occur. The other is that the figure do not in· elude any employe benefits from future negotiation. The figures could include new personnel . up to about 30 man-years. Rose indicated to the council that the (See BUDGET,-Pqe Z) I .. -c-Four Named --' . SPCA OFFICIAl:.5 CONTEND THAT SO(o\E I~ LAG~A. DON'T TAicE .L~ASH LA:"sr.l10il$LY · There Aro Frequent Compfolnt1 In the Art <;olony Tho! Doto Aro Runni119 t- Dogs Dave -Ruff Going Lagunans Complain Over · Leash Law Violations By JACK CHAPPELL Of 1t1t DelW l'ltet Stiff Ever •ince the first dog crept gingerlf out of the brush to curl up be!ide mail!• ancestors gathered round a fire, canls famillaris has provided his master with both . ple&aufe, and nQt a little ag- gravation. .. . In Laguna Beach how, dog's name is mud. • From Top of the World and Arch Beach Heiebls to the oc:eanlroot, from "north to aouth, dog is being called !!Ur and slurred tserore coffee table and coun· · cil bench alike. Two Law.men Wounded In Coast DrU:g Gunfight By TOM· BARLEY Of "'-Dltlr Pilot Stiff Two lawmen were felled by gunfire and other members .of a ·mulij..ageJ)CY narcotics task .Jorce w~ narrowly miu- ed by whistlmg bullet! WedneodAy nlgbt In a Costa Mesa-Huntington Beacb aru drug raid that developed into a gun bat· tie. force in which Cedei'aJ'offlcers were back- ed by Costa Mesa and Whittier police and Orange-County Sheriff's officers moved in .oa the second o( t)\'O Pacific Avenue hol1*I . Lawmen sald fllform1Uon l'<!ceived :while Ibey weno • ..nldlng 1188 Plle!JJc In tbe Co.'lta Mesa area -the sectOr is on (See Z-SHOT, Page Z) It appears that too many dogs are run- ning loose. There.are reports of unleased dogs harassing children, a t t a c II: i n g persons out walking their own pets and of dirtying beaches and lawns. 'ftle city ~C Laguna Beach cmtracts with the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA ) for en- forcement of the animal control Jaws. A series of meetings has been held between SPCA officials, Police Chief Joseph J. K~lly, city manager Larry Rose and other officials, to work out bet- ter enforcement procedures. And, the SPCA officers are finding themselves in the middle of those urging stlHe'r ei\forcement, 8.nd those on the recei vitig end_ • Don Brown, manager of the Laguna Canyon SPCA shelter.' said the main prob- lem is the attitude of dog o w n e r s toward the leash Jaw, and their respomibilities'to~ard fellow citizens. "Some of their replies to us ere that they ~t believe in the dog law," Brown said, adding that muy of' tbe persons who come to pick 'up'their anhnals from (See DOGll, Page Z) Whittler ponce Lt. Bradley Hoover, 32, is foported today by Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital officials a8 "recover- ing sotldactorily" from a bullet WOlllld just belOw theJieart. . Coast Invaded Fede<al wircotlcs agent Leslie Kenney, . ln$200,000 Vesco Gift NEW YORK (AP) -Former Atty. Gen. Jolm N. Mitchell, former Com· merce Secretary Mauriee H. Stans and two corporate officials were indicted to- day on charges of compiring to arrange a· secret $200,000 contribution to the Nix- on re~Jection campaif! last year. Others named as defendants' In, the 11;. coiiilt indie1-t returned by a. federal grand. lWJ'. w,re a -11~ •.lertey 'Repijblinn leodei, Harry L. Sears, and Robert L. Vesco, "SI, former board <:hainnan ol Internatiooal Gcintrola Corp. Vesco maile the donation, Wblch ,.., later returned 111 the-N-.campaign. The Nixon conunilleO alto returned to Veii:o another ~.006 !')lcb he con- tributed openlj; th)ough the New Jersey campalll" coniinltlee, bealltd by Sean. 1be grand jury banded up the In· dictment to U.S. Di.!ltrict Court Judge Sylvester J. Ryan, who e.icused the panel witOOut a date for further work. '!be conspiracy charge, the lint count in the indictment, could bring five years in prison and a $10,000 fine to each defen- dant upon .ponvicti~ . . Mitchell was ditector of Nixon's re- election campaign until last July. Stans was chief fund raiser. 1be money was returned to Vesco after it was revealed that ve;co was under in- vestigation by the Securities and Ex- change Commission. Both Mitchell and Stans testified twice before the grand jury. Veaco is oot of the country and refused to accept a sub- poena. 1be SEC probe resulted in the flling of a civil suit charging tllat Vesco, 20 persons and 20 corporations diverted $224 million in cash and securities from mutual funds they controlled. Vesco, 37, hai; a home in Boonton, N.J. but is believed to be residing in the Bahamas or Costa Rica. A warrant for his arrest has been issued. In Washington, the Committe< to Re- elect the President issued statements by Mitchell ·and Stans proclaimJng their in- nocence. · "'I'bere has been no wro:ngdoing on my part," the Mitchell sta tement said, "and, insofar as l know I on the part of any other person in this matter. I am certain that the judicial proceedings in this case will fully vindicate me and confirm the atunce of any wrongdoing." Stans' statement said : "( am greatly dismayed by the action ol. the grand jury. I have full faith and confidence in God and in American justice. I expect that when all the (acts are beard, I will be vindicated." Art-a-Fair Offered · Use ·. '\ Of Upland Firm Property Art-A-Fair, the traditionalist arm of the Laguna Beach art festival triad, has been offered the use of the Upland Industries property where the Csptain's House and the Moulton House fonnerly stood. Box of Manm·e Raises Florida Democrat's Ire TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -F1orida House Majority Leader Carl Ogden says . . he resents receiving a gift-wrapped box of horse manure at bis chamber desk. Ogden (0-Jacksonville), rooe 111 a pOinl of personal privilege W-y after receiving the packag'e with a nOte saying, "From the returning POWs and the minority party." Ogden earlier Wednesday ralaed the Ire of Republican legislators when he unsuc· cessfully . attempted to delay con- sideration of a resolution commending President Nixon for ending the Vietnam war and bringing home American prisoners of war. Jean Spiry, JJUblic relations director 'Of the art falr, tiled a request with the city for a temporary .use permit to ust the coutline site fr9m June t t~h September 15. : -. The lestlvol ilaelf will run from Ji#:13 through August 26. The estra time ~ quired for minor leveling, landoca~. , and construction of the booths, Mt. WY said. ~: Though the artists initially ~ 60 parking spaces on the<"site ftX--1tit parking a!One •. Ma. Spirj sild tht~y "·ould pare that figure Considera6ly • .::: She said the city alSo negated:,;$e PoSslbility of parking for the publi<:on the site, due to traffic congestion prob-- lems off Coast Hhrhway. The new site wfi1 alloW bootb space for 90 artilta, 30 more than the group .had planned for. 0 We've been swamped with applications,'' Ms. Spiry !aid. An earlier application by Art~A-Fair to use the former Sbell-.tatio1q>roperty ad· jacent to Main Beach Park generated heated controversy between city officials Festival Artl leaders, aad Art-A-Fair . spokesmen. , . The request was paaM by slim mar- gina in both ll>e planning oommlaiod and city council, but was late• wltlldtawn by the art group. · . 0r .... • • 34, teceived treatment at the aame hoopi!aJ for a wound i1J the right knee • and w&jl allowed to l'!lurn home after 1 emeri:ency 1tqery. · ,Both milt wm victima of a gun doe! tft ~ruplod ~ • 20-member task Tiny 'Saiwrs of · Sea' Float In Direcwr of CIA Picked by Nixon For Defense Chief Republicans thoogbl <Jiden's tactic was inappropriate because minutes earlier U, Col; Douglaa B. Petersoo, a former POW _ in North Vietnam, ad- dressed the House and received,.e stan· Weet•er· r rs~YUB LOOK, PA.GE 9 TODAY A concille briefing oo the United States' Skylab mlsalon appean on Pas• 9 of today'• Dally Pliol. Astm>aul! Paul Weill, Cblrle1 Cllnrad and J-"JC""ln embark M«ldly on a new kind of spaoe venture. 1 What will thl.! 21 daY> of their lives be Hke! The conditions - food , objectl ... and meano, rescue ~ and more>-are comed. -about -1jleniklor In orlllt. '~ I •• "Sailors ol 'the ae&" ~ tiny ocean apparenUy loee oontrol and D<>11t into flortlng animala are making their spring shore, said Slaulfet. After a few days on a We.ranee along the aouth Orange the beach 'tbeY di')' out, leaving a fragile ~ ali:eleton .behind. Cl>asl. . • " · Yal-ieUee aJon&· the cout ol Japan have b<cOrdlnl to -eout watc!im, ar-adapted ail• exactly oppooite in deslf" riyal ol the ulkJl dleln,...,,..,. ls ~i&h.. to acto\lllt fOf -COll!'ltions just the Sallon of .lliO -or "by the winds reverse ol. tfllloe on the Plcific cout. sallon" ..,, memben of the l<JlUI IAal eaUon, Stautrer reported. do velelle. 'lboy ..,, loolboll shaped, about 111Qc. but Ille el&# on hwnans iJ mJnl. the •ii< ol. • •Over ck\llar' with • llnJ mot: -• - sail fixed IO tbelr becb. M.tl1 -mlllak• them for the aiqs ol. the tiny -Jn. ~ Mln<>-War, added Stauffer. vertebrates have been made Iii !!Ill 'l'llallP the two anlniala life l'!iated, they <;le-le, Lapna Beach and :N""J"'I are aot the aame. Beach, aceonling to Ulquardl. 'lllOle who -lladlid ve!leie, he 'Laguna a..cb Llfep&rd Jtm Stauffer •Id, ~ \hot the 11.,i llghllng of the 11)'1 the IOllon lllUllly ·lollow the <Ur• anfinoli U.;iate oprlnJ mellUI summer ~ ren!J and lfCbt -alonl the bigh ..... cloao at band. • 111eJ ano lllllQlae lo.tllll tllelt aaill'are Stauffer said they usually make • delfcned lo tel tWi "Id'' II ~ to another appearance In August durln& the left darllls llaht ....... ly -· • periodo ol. ....... -erly winds. ana When w!nda become &ttong, the sailors then do not. appear unUJ the nest spring, • WASmNGTON (AP) -President Nix· on picked CIA Director James R. Schie,.. Inger u Defense secretary !Odey and ad· ded John CoonaQy to his White House .ataff as a special adviser ln moves to pllli boles left by the Watergate scandal. Niion also abandoned b.is "super- Cablnet" concept of counseloni ; pro- moted WUllam E. Colby to CIA dil'!Ctor, 'and named Pentagon general counsel J . Fred Buzhardt Jr. lo his While Hou"' staff as a special counael with "full mponsibillty in matters relating to the Watergate investigaUoo." 'f1le oerieJ of actions to bolster his beleaguered admlnlstrauon were dlsclos· ed bJ Nixon at ·• Ctbinet meeUng , then 8JUlOUll«d by p.-secretary Ronald L. (Seo DEFENSE, Page Z) • ding ovation . · Poppy Days Set In Laguna Beach Women with baa~el! of rte! crepe pop- pies will be oo the stree!J of Laguna O..cb May 18 and 19 for tbe annual "Poppy Days," a project of -the American Legion Auxiliary and Leilon- nalru. The poppies, meant to be worn In honor of all war dead, are made by hospitalized veterans who are givm a small rt:muneration . The Auxiliary In turn uses the money from the poppy sales to aid bolpitaliled and needy vetenms and their famlli ... -( Night and morning low cJoods and fdg , hazy sunablne in aner- nooos. Low tonig~t in low,iO&,.hJP Friday in mid-fOa. • INSIDE TODAY , • A monlacol killer Is fOOlt 1oniewhert in the W 11t Ora"Q'• Coimtu-West Los Angetu area, t%ptlldlng the en(f'gitt of fi111 law enforcement agencies toi"' , little Information to go on. Ste Po'a• 24. • • I ' l • -•' . "" .. - DAllY PILOT La U'IT ...... DEFENSE NOMINEE CIA'• Jamn Schloalngor FromPAfleJ ;DEFENSE ... ...... Ziq:ler at a White House news briefing. '' Qinnally, a politically savvy Texan .:.. last week switched from the ·.Democratic lo Republican Party, will be ·:mt~unpald special adviser to the Presi· ·clkt on both domestic and foreign af- Yltirs. ,. -,In the part-time job, Ziegler sai4, be ·.will be on call to consult with Nixon on a .. wide range of issues. ·;::_;,,. Presid<ntlal dedaiona came 10 4Ma alter Nixon's cl-t Bldea -H. R. ' .Ulldeman and John Ebrllchman -and Atty. Gen. Rlchaid Kleindienst realgned "Mmld a awlrl ol Watergate developments. :·:Nixon bid nominated Elliot Rlchardaon ;t•o succeed KJelndtenst as attorney -general, leaving vacant the Pentagon ·poet which Scblesainger was picked .to "fl)}, '.'"~lxon told bis Cabinet he intended to · Jilaintain more direct communJcatlon : ~tb cabinet members, Ziegler later reported. '•"8i!nate Major Leader Mike Manafield .,µ>:!ob>!.), waa Informed of tbe Sdlles- .~ appo!n'tment In advance. He called tbe nominee 111 good man" and IAld be !)OUld. foraee no dWlculty about Senate coallrmaUon. ' 74eller ll8!d the counaelor role played l/i three Cabinet members "will.not be In j.lfect IDI' lOO&<f." Tbe OOUD1elor roles . •e cteJJed by ~xecutlve ectlon this · ~ar when Nlxoa aent Con&rea• pro~s qr broad government ftlOl'ganiiatlom , :Ziegler said the counselor concept 1'wl1l be moved aside until the legislation is phssed." I '.:Schlesinger headed the government 's !PY agency for less than four months ~en Nixon turned to him for the top P,e!ense post which caJifornia millionaire pjustrialist David Packard turned down ~s week. ~: " ~ar Fowls Up .. 1, ~hicken Shop, Drives Right Jn, ' : !Things went "afowl" for a Laguna man ~ay when his vehicle rammed • gh the glass doors or a chicken tolclHlllt shop. : _:Police officers said the brakes failed on ~ vehicle driven by Emmett Johnson. 39-, or 570 Cypress, as he backed out of a parking space at tbe taco shop adjoining C:OI. Sanders Kentucky Fried Chlcken on (iOast Highway. :·,Two glass doors were knocked in and broken,. a showcase and soft drink Cabinet were pushed in, and a two..by- f9ur supported beam was snapped. J1image ts estimated at $2,000. No customers were Jn the chicken shop al .the ttme and tbe flying glass did_ not iJijure the 1wo startled employees. ' DAILY PILOT • • ThindaJ, MaJ 10, 1973 flBI Report.s _ ' ·Ellsherg Bugged ' . ~ ' . . Before '~apers·' LOS ANGELES (~P)-The FBI baa told the judge In the Pentagon papers trial that Daniel Ellsberg was overheard by an "electronic interception'' nearly two years before he released the Pentagon papers~to-tbe news media, the judge reVealed today. 11tls was the first disclosure that Ells- berg. whose name did not surface public- ly until 1971 when he released the Penta- gon papers, had been under FBI surveil4 lance loog before tbaL U.S. District .Court Judge Matt Byrne, apparently angered that be was never told tht.. before during disclosure ol wiretaps, ordered tbe Justice Department to find out how many times Ellsberg was 'CIA WRONG IN ELLSBERG CASE' -Story, Page 4 overheard in 1969 and 1970 and if there are records of what was overheard. The disclosure, apparently considered serious by the judge. delayed the start of legal arguments which have been scheduled on defense motions aiming to throw out the case. He said the FBI report says that at leali one interception of Ellsberg was ac- complished while the defendant was at the home of Mocton Halperin, a former deputy assistant secretary of Defense. The judge told the government to find out. for how long Halperin's home was ur.der surveillance and whether the surveillance was authorized by a court. He also demanded to know whether Halperlll was a White House adviser -a post he held in part of 1969 -wheo the wiretaps began. Byrne said the FBI notice of the wiretap came to him late WednesdiY from acting FBI Director William Ruckelshaua, but that it noted the direc- tor himself had only been notified Tues- day; The judge demanded to know wh y there was a delay in giving him im- mediate infonnation on the interception . He also demanded to know why this wasn't turned over to himself earlier in the trlal. Halperin, a witneSs for the defense during the trial, aerved as a consultant to Ellsberg throughout the case. He is a researcher at the Brookings Institution in Wasblngton. Because of tbe dlsclooure, the judge recessed. court for one hour, ordering the prosecutor to immediately p b o n e Court Postpones 4 .. , t ~ Eawsuit Vital To Avco Plans . ' ' . A further one,tleek delay was ordered today in an Or8.n&e Count)' .Superior Court hearing ol vjtal importance to the A"co Development Corporation's con· slruction plans in·the Salt -Cree~ area. Presiding J~dge Bruce Sumner granted the delay untU May 17 when both sides In lht dispute agreed that they needed more time to prepare pretrial documents and insure that the army of witnesses sub- poened for the bearln1 will be available. Grading by Avoo worken 1n much of the Salt Creek development w" halted when a lawsuit filed .by the Envlron4 mental Coalition of Orange County charged the firm with violating stan· dards imposed by coastline protection Jaws oo_tlined in Proposition 2Q. Judge Robert P. Kneeland -last week lifted a small fX!rtion of that ban pending the hearing. The temporary restraining order he signed at the time the lawsuit was filed will, however, remain in effect until next week, Judge Sumner decided. W8'bington and get more lnformatioo' on the wiretap. He said the government should probe Its filea as far back as 1967 to try and find out if there were any Other electronic surveillance of EUsberg. •1 tf there were not logs or record!," the judge said, "l want to know why not ." · "If there were and they are gone, I want to know why' and where." FronaPageJ DOGS ••. the sbeUer are "steady customers." HToo often lt's the excu.se that 'the children left it out,• " Brown said. He saJd some per:tOnS have their dog picked up twice a month - a habit which can become expensive. The SPCA charges a $2 OOarding tee for keeping dogs overnight after the first 24 hours. In addition , the city levies a $5 impound fee. If an animal is picked up within 12 months of a previous oc- currance, the impoWld fee the next time is 50 percent of the previous impound plus the $5. One woman recently complained that she had to pay more than $40 "or else they wollld kilt my dog. '1 • She was seeking help from an attorney. "The city set up an impound fee, which is to try and teach the habitual offenders a lesson," Brown said. "Some never learn." "We have tried every way p:isslble to show t?te public that it's also for the animal's safety," Brown said, noting that many animals are hit and injured or kill· ed by cars often in Laguna. "This seems to me to be what would stick in a peCowner's mind," he said. He said that after a dog is picked up by a SPCA patrolman, it is held for six days if it has no tag or identification. If It has a tag. the owner is notified and the animal Is held for JO days, If not picked up before. "Off.hand, I'd say nine out of 10 are claimed," Brown said. Jf the animal is not claimed, it is put up tor "adoption" in the cages to which the public has-access;-BroWifiild. The impounded dogs are normally kept separated in the back to keep prize escapees from beipg adopted before the owner can claim tlie prodigal pooch. Brown saicl the SPCA has no set time tba~ID animal !> kept. "We go by beallb," he aat.I, explalnlng that in the kennel situation that if a dog has not had all his shots, ~e frequently becomes ill quickly. "I've seen dogs stay here 15'.or 20 days. Nonnally he's held here W\til he's placed. But if we get overcrowded, we have to go through and decide which is suitable for adopt.ion and which is not. '"It's· a sad decision, but, we have to do It," Brown said, * * * 'Dogs of Week' Find New Homes Two Orange Cout families took "Be Kind To AniJllllo Week" llterally by giv- . Ing a home to teat week's Daily Pilot Dogs of tb~ Week shortly after their pic- tures appeared. Both pure· bred tri-color collies were adopted Saturday morning from tbe Society for the Prevention .of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) shelter In Laguna Beach. Olle of the families had dlildren. "The worst way to violate 'Be Kind to Animala Week ' is to allow a· pet to run loose," Don Brown, an SPCA official. said. "Don't make your anlrnal a nuisance. make it a pet." The collies were father and daughter. Two San Juan Students Find Body; ID Sough.t Sheriff's and coroner's in_vestlgators to- day continued to seek Uie identity and cause of death of a man whose body was apparently dumped at the edg~ of a San Deadline May 30 In Essay Contest At Saddlehack The deadj.ine is May 30 for an essay contest for students of Laguna Beach High School and Saddleback College BpOll30red by the Laguna Beach Board ol Realtors. Called "Operation Dialogue," the Jocal coolest Is part of a &tatewtde com- petition. The theme for the essay Is to be "Dialogue on MakiDg America Better." Each effort should be turned In to tbe of· nee of the student's .schoot, a spokeswoman said. One wtnner will be chosen from each of the two schools and will receive a cash award from the Board or Realtors. Atta judging will be directed by Fausta Vitali of Mark Gumbiner and Alsoclatea and Bob Shapard of Loo Padres Rellty. Top award In the state coolest Is !500, lo be awarded at tba state Raal Estate Aaoct1Uon CoavenUoa In October. ' ' Juan Capistrano com patch early Wed- nesday. Coroner's aides this morning said that an autopsy failed to turn up any cause of death on the man who appeared to be in his mid 20s and of Latin descent. The next stage of the C<joner's probe . 1 '\•ill be a series of lengthy tovicological tests to detennine if any driigs or poisons may have led to the man'sAeath. The mystery surfaced ii' about 8:30 a.m. as two student5 on ~heir way to Marco Forster Junior High,&hool notic- ed the body as they walked lo achoo!. The site was about 100 feet away from Del Obispo Road and a few-hundred yll\ls from Blue Fin Drive. The remains were easily visible from the hlgbway. Blood waa vixlble at the acone, but cor- oner's aides stressed that they nOted no signs of "severe trauma" on the corpse. The John Doe victim was deacrtbed as having medium-length, dark-black hair and wearing a marcon sweater over a white t·sblrl, bright blue panta, a n d aquare-toed aboes. Inveatlgators at the scene sealed off a wide area to protect any evidence. The probers spent hours trying to evaluate tmpreselons made by vehicle tJres in the soft !!OIL ~ The body was lying on a small triangu- lar island surrounded by narrow dirt roads used as access to tbe farmlands. There waa stroni speclllatton that tbe body may have been dumped oomeUme before dawo. • l • LEADERS HONORED-Community leaders and of- ficials of South Coast CommllJlity Hospital Wednes- day honored Adolpk Krocl!, Victor C. AndreWli and Dr. Vincent C. Carroll for years of service to the O.llY Plllf twf ...... hospital. In p!Aque presentation, from left to right, are honorary board member Harold Ekman, Kroch, Andrews and William Mann, board p.-esident. I Three Receive Awards For Hospital Service ' ('!. "The one thing that gave me pleasure in all these years is to call it 'the hospital with a heart,' " Adolph 'Papa' Kroch told a friendly audience as he received a reward for service to South Coast Com- Water Project To Start Monday F:or Glenneyre munity Hospital Wednesday noon in South Laguna. Kroch, a 20-year supporter or the hospital and former board chainnan, was honored along with Victor C. Andrews, the CWTent chairman of the board, and Dr. Vincent Carroll, a long-time prac-- ticing physician at the hospital. Harold Ekman, an honorary board member, presented the awards. " ·~~~~~~~~~~! FronaPageJ BUDGET .•• city departments needed an expression of ,;priority and empba6is" as they began the trimming process. He added that in addition to the assumptions Meade mentioned; the joint powers agreement of the newly-formed Aliso Water Management Agency !ASMA) could create a financial hangup I for the city. He said though the new water treat· ! ment program involving a number of ' local water districts, is to be financed by user charges, the city might have to i... 1 vest an initial amount that it ·won't get back In the current f18Cal year. "In addition , tbe rising coal ol everytlling Is going· to present the clty with fonnidable obstacles/' Ro 1 e predicted. "Our ~atioos are outnm- nlhg our income." · ' . Work will begin Monday on .replace- ment of the deteriorated Glennreye Street water line between Diamond Street and Alta Vista Way. '~As one who sat many years enthralled by your dedication on the board. I'm pfuud to give this honor," EkmBn said as he presented Andre.ws. . ~ Special guests at the luncheon included Laguna Beach Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney, Warren Bostick, fonner dean of the UC! Medical School, and Dr. Roy Burns, Mayor of San Juan Capistrano and a practicing physician at the hospital. Rose said the city's income Will exceed its expenses this year for the first time in several years. The present line, age 46, is subject to frequent fallures and high mainteoance costs, said Joe Sweany, general manager of tbe Laguna Beach County Water District. Construction will be ofulndled by the M. L. Kisling Company which ,... awarded the 151,300 contract. Installation of the new water line, said Sweany, will mean better service for both domestic and fire fighting purposes. Crews will work from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. !lohday through Friday durtng tbe tlrie mi>nth job "and will mske evory effort to mloirnh~ Ulconvenlence to relldents alon'g Glenneyre,11 sala Sweany. Sweany urged. any resident who has questions regarding the project or needs assistance during the construction perlod to cont~ct the water district office, 494- UJ.IL Replacement of the line originally was to begin in January, but was stalled until necessary pennili could be obtained from the South Coist Regional Conlef'.va~ lion Commis.!ioo. The environment impact report for the project was approved by the Laguna Beach Planning Commission In Jaooary , Sweany noted. Building Materials Worth $1,000 Taken Building materials valued at more than $1,000 were stolen Wednesday night from a Laguna Niguel constroction site, Orange County Sheriff's officers said. Deputies said the theft was reported by company president Howard Thomas Lane, 47, of 33865 Niguel Shores Drive. Lane told officers the materials were taken by thieves who must have UBed a truck to remove his property. "It's a pleasure to come here and get Joa! In the parking lot," Bostick quipped. "It's a sign of the fantastic changes oc- curring here.~' Burns coocurred. "Things are romlng out into the sunllabt-again /' he said. A two-and-a-half year construction pro- gram at the hospital bas dragged on through construction chtptge orders and deI111,1"at the new Prop.'}<) ~._.CO!ll­ nusm.on. iohn Weld, a founding ~ and past president ol the ~tat, ,save a brief wrspup of tbe 15-year history of ti. creatioo. "All I can say is the whole thing has been a miracle." he concluded. From Pagel 2 SHOT ••• the boundary line that divides Costa Mesa and HWltington Beach -sent them across the road to 2201 Pacific. That raid ended with Hoover and Ken· ney on the floor vttithJng in pain and their companions moving in to grab the man identified as the gwunan -!\lair Daddon Alderson, 25, of that address. Officers said Alderson was quickly dl!armed and hustled off to Orange County Jail with six other ~rson.s swept up in the raid. Officers claimed they seized nearly two pounds of cocaine. Federal agents today valued the co- caine at about $20,000, basing· the estimate on what the drug would bring to the ·illicit seller. They said iofonnation obtained ill Whittler and LOs Angeles led them Jo. Orange County in a move to snuff out what they said is a growing trade in the forbidden drug. "But can we do the same thini for a second act?" be aaid. Nine jobs were cut last year. But Rose . emphasized that tbe aame thing oouid not be dooe repeatedly. Some 25 new posi- tions were requested In tbe opeo-ended clty department requests. Approximately 65 pereent ol tbe city's operational budget goes to pay salaries and benefits. The size of the clly staff baa grown from 100 in 11162 to 187 preaenlly. Roae said tbe ratio of city staff to total populatloo baa dropped from ooe to evf!<Y · IOI cltttzens In 1962 lo oae roe evorv II In 1912. --~< Materials and auppu .. acccunl for ZS lo 30 percent of tbe operating budget,wltb capital projects claiming about 10 per- cent. The council voted to accept the recom- me.ndaUons of Dan Appleton, one of the members of the citizens budget com- mittee, to try a method of describing a program structure and how it works. Appleton said his method would make budget planning and program evaluation clearer and suggested its use on at least one program per department this year. Council members reiterated their re. quests to the board that all possible means of increasing existing city revenues and creating new revenue sources be examined. "We'd like you to also present us a set of altenui:Uves on expenditure levels and service· cuts," Councilwoman Phyllis , Sweeney said, . I Voting Bill Approved WASHINGTON I UPI) -Deaplte Administration opposition, a bill to allow every eligible voter in America to register by mail for feder~ elect!oaa passed tbe Senate Wednesday by a wide margin. Breaking a month-Jong fiibllster against it, the Senate passed the measure 57·37 and sent it to the Houser See~ for SPEED QUEEN \ ' Stainless Steel Fabric Care Tpb ' e s .... .,... l•st-rreiaf, Chip. Pr11.f· e 1 ... 1fM1111 W-'t_.. .. .. "'" e l.elts tfle LtfltlMe olllleW- PWS ••• a washable knits cycJ!t lpoclot -... -..... ,. .... ,., f .... ,.._...... ~ ...,. ,,_ M;_tll1• -AM ...... """" 'fOi' CAlt JUT A - -leillilt'.llfol • .,... 'fUllM 'WAtMR • I AND .. , •• POI ,,U•\.OW "'' .'3f91'. l==@J=j-SP-E-l!D_O_U ...... EE-N....:.Jll"'='J e McGrew-Edison Company Oivlelori 90 DAY CASH WITH A~:~~y:o i-fil 1815 NEWP_ORT BLYD. Downtown Costa Mesa-Plliiii 1 7 I I I I I . t -/ ., • • Saddlehaek T oday's l'bud N.Y. Stoeks .. "' VOL 66, NO. 130, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES ORANGE OouNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1973 ! ' TEN~' / • Nixon s Denie s-Li-nk to Greek b o-an i . '· ) . BY L. PETER KlllEG G~k lbipping company, Sun Lines, that Of .. 1>e1tr ....., ,..,, Nixon· said ii partially~ by Mar-~ Nli'on's brother, F. Donald riott. Nixon ol fit"porl Beach, today denied Th!) newspaper also QU1'4tioned the !tilt the Man:iott Corporatioo got a '10 r wisdom tn · the million loan from the Greek government governmen 1 graoting 1 1loan. becauae .he 13 a v)ce president of the '"!be fact that the vice president of the hotel an4 !hipping company. , fore!in company il!volvtd Is President The Athens newspaper To Vima Nixon's brother whli has twice violted disclosed.ctodaythat,a governrnent~wned ·Greece recenUy moy be interpreted by bailk recently ·granted the loan to the the President's enemies -as a special }. . • • l "' ! ~ favor to him aad coul.d be'.,_ agalnst hhn," the ~paper said. • 1be younger Nixon, ,who · 'vice •presi· dent for industry and community relB· lions for Marriott, confirmed that he bas made recent business trips to Greece. But be denied any knowledge of -or aoy responsibility for -the loan "if there was one." "I don 't even know about this loan. l had ·oothing to do about it;" Nixon told . , Driver Dies in Crask JloberfW. Lee.of.Huntiagton .Biach-crum.ct to death by tbe cab l!f . ~ rig Ibis mqi'nlng wbtn It ~ned off the Ban Diego -Freeway ~111 Mac- Arthur Boulevard and Jamboree Boulennl in Ir- vine. The 21-year-old Lee, 6901 Breeland Drive, was . I Historian Awes Viejo Residents With lecture By JOHN VALTERZA Of 1t1t Delly 'lllt Stdf A,n Orange county author end two El Toro natives led a group of Mission Viejo area bom<:i!wnera tllrougb the valley's colorflll ·past Wednesday night. 1 lli:a sense, the audience at the lecture at La Paz Intennediate School took an imaginary trip through an · area stripped or ilS past to maki way for thousands of ho!lses. Historian Jim Sl~per led the lechtte, offering delails or tbe old ranchos and adobes w~ch were the first hwses to be erected in the plain beneath saddle~ck M01..1Dtain. • Then Sleeper fascill&te:d the audience With tales of abortive efforts by land splclt!ators to build a . Clf)dh tlie: afei (See IDSTORY, Pagel) .. Toro Pair Sued -! H • • I Over Do g Bite An El Toro (<Sldent who claims t:Us ~ yatl'Oki daugftter was severly bitten by a neigbbor's•dog has sued the neighbors ~,ooo Jin Orange Collllty Superior Loren JC. Toomey, of 24791 Belgreen St. claims in the action that his little girl. Jean$i. Marfe, 'Was bitten May f5, 1972, by "Buster," a dog owned by defendant& Harold E. aod Elsie Fellows of 247at Belgrien St. TOoi\iey clellns tbe dog was known to b a v ~ a 1 vicloua nature and had bitten ottier people on two previowi occasions be/ore It attacked his daughter. ·SKYLAB LOOK, PA.GE 9 TODA.¥ A coneloe briefing on the United Stales' Skylab mission appears on Page 1· ol today's Dally Piiot. i ~lllooaula Paul . Weltz, Charles j Conrod an<I JOiepb Kerwin,.mberk - Milndiy oo a new kind of apace venJure. .Wbat will this za days of tbelr ~vea be llkef Tbe coodltioos - food, Glljocth9 and -ns •. moue ......, oncl more -are covei'ed. 1.Rftd about lol>oter themltlor In orbit. ' • llQutbb!IUDd on the l'l'OW•Y-~en Ille accident took plate about '1:15 a.m. California Highway Patrol of- ficers ale trying to deterinine the ~ause of the crash. Pryor Piekets Coun cilwom an . to Fight Lawsuit "Mother. Irvine" -Councilwoman Gabl:ielle Pryor -will doo what she calls "my private citizen tennis shoes" to picket the Orange County Welfare Office at noon Frjday'. Mrs. Pryor aod a group of women from the Colony Homes Club "Pixie Pl3J'lnates" cli~d care center, will pro- test a recent suit by the department of social welfare. ~ . The cOurt action .takes place ·.next Wednesday · but picketers hope to, point out the "mi!take" they ree1 1 baS been made in cltbJi a· "priy.a~ cointDunity a~iat,IQn for pr:oviding Pfi.vate care of children, by member mothers," Mrs. Pryor said today. "I plan to go to court, too, but. on Fri- day my motherly instincts ·lead me to join the Cokr'ly women in their cause," Councilwoman Pryor said. "I'm joining the pick~tlii.g 11a a'motber-and a priN"afe citben who happens to'believe what these women are doing is good for the com- muoltY and a benefit to society." . Mrs. Tmy Harkins and o t h e r s responsible for the formation of Pixie Playmates have been summoned to court Wednesday for ·a hearing to determine if their child care center violates state licensing requirements. The center, run by 22 mothers who all Me members of the Colony Club, serves 25•children, for two end a ball hours each morning from Monday to Friday. The Social Welfar~ Department claims that is a day care center and falls under their jurisdiction and may not operate without a licenSe. The mothers claim it is a community association actlVity no different than the Swim ·team, card club or other c!ubhouse centered activities. Wednesda~ night the Colony Club Board oi Directors continued their en- dorsement of the Pixie Playmate opera- 1 tion Whidl·some club mehlbers opp08e. It is believed those members who op-p(,&e the use of the club facilities by "the chi ldren prompted the county suit. County Supervisors Hear ·Residential Speed Gripe A group of about 40 Mission Viejo resldelll! argued before the Boan! of Supervisors Wedneoday for cloeure of their neighborhood street! because ol hellvy trafDc and speeding but rect>ived no immediate aatisfactJoo. . The supervbors ordered County Road Commlsskner Ted McCoovtlle to make a study of tevenl residential otreOta Ill the area and ccme back to !be bi>ord .witjlin 30 :,~~ ~i,tUO:ee1a were c1-! lllOt,.llte of mldenla ...,. quested It -0011 dump tbe tbroolh Lightnins Kills Six MEXICO CITY (AP) -Lllbbilnc struck f Im and killed all six momben of a J•mll1 atandlnc beneath !bi! btanciiit dUlllc • ~ pollc& aald W°*"""'J· 7lle bodlel ol two adults llltil lour dJlldfta IP'! Diiie .-14 I yaan m lbimd ,_, ecatlefW near a charred ttte ln Guajlmalpa, five mllea west or Meilco City. ' ' traffic onto other nearby streets. He said new roads W'lder cmstruction in the area would relieve traffic on San Andreas Lane, Montilla Avenue, Nac- come Drive an4 Rogue Drive in the con- gested area. · Residents <Oll)plalned that drivers us- ing their streer. aa a short cut to the Mission Viejo Sliopping Center on La Paz Road droVe at speeds Ill'' to 50, miles an """' eqdangerlng chtldren, pell and r.rctentS alike. ,,.,,. said tbO Road Department bad cdldllCted a trafllc count on tbe' ilfected ~'amlJOUDd that 3,714 cars used the .-eta In a gt"" II hour petlod. McQinvllle agreed that l,OllO can WllS more than enough !qr a reatdllltla 1treet. . ' 11.Jor Mldloel KeetM! ~~ Iha ol tha _. 4,000 can uilng tha stmtl cmty llO """' local resldenla. Ila Aid resldenta ......... lncemed by the lpeeden that aome ol them were foUowed to their homes and talked to. McConvUle aaid the 1tnela In quaUOI\ ...,. """"'J the first C01111n1cta1 IA Mission VleJO aod admitted lbat there wu 1 serious road planning error. j • the Daily Piiot this morning. "I'm a vice president of Marriott and Marriott does have interests in Greece, but I do not know ol any loan or any kind. I have no involvement in it whalsoever," he sajd. "And I can tell you the Joan sure as hell wasn't made because of Don Nixon," he said. "The press is trying to make a story out of. nothing. It's the stupidest thing I've tver heard of. I'm just an employe," Nlxon said. He said his trips to Greece "had nothing to' do with any loans." He did not say why he was there. however. The Greek newspaper said the loan was granted for remodeling the Aegean cruise ship SteJla Solaris. jointly owned by Sun Lines and Marriott Marriott controls 45 percent of the Stella Solarls, the newspaper said and Sun Lines controls tht other 55 percent. Marriott Y.'as set up In Greece after the ' military seized power in early 1967 and has since gained catering contr&ets with · International airlines using Athens as a supply base, the newspaper said. Nixon has been employed by Marriott for about three years. 1 T11e hotel chain Is scheduled to break l ground for a $10 'mUlion high-rise coo-. vention center in. Newport Center ne1t 1 week. • · I ans Four Named ln$200,000 Vesco Gift NEW YORK (AP) -Former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, former Com· merce Secretary Maurice H. Stans and two corporate officials were indicted tO:. day on charges of conspiring to arrange a secret $200,000 contribution to the Mx- on re-election campajgn last year. Others ·named as defendants in the 1~ count iodicttpent return~ by a federal gi:and jury were ii New Jersey Republican le•<ler. Harry L. sears, and Robert L. vnco.~37, former board chalrmin ill iniernatlobal Controls Corp . Vtse0 made the ~lion, which was laU:r returned by tile Nllon C1111P81in. The Nll<ln coinqi!. also J'fturned. to Vesco anolher "41,lllO which he con- tributed openly lhl'oUib tbe New Jer,.y campaign comi:nlttee, ""headed by Sears. The grand Jury banded up the in- dictment to U.S. District Court Judge Sylvester J. J!yan, w~ ucused the pone! without a date for further work. The conspiracy charge, the first count in the indictment. couJd bring five years in prison and a •10,000.ffne to each defen- _dant Upon convictiOD. , Mitchell was director of Nixon's re- election i!ampalgn until last July. Stans was chief fund raiser. The money was returned to Vesco after it was revealed that Vesco was under in· vestigation by the Securities and Ex- change C'.ortuJ!lssloo .. Bot_h Mllcllell ll!ld .Stans testUled twice before the graod jury. Vesco Is out of the country and refused to accept a sub. poena. ~ SEC j)l'Obe resulted In tbe filing ol a civil suit charging tflat Veseo, 20 persons and 20 corparations diverted $224 million in cash and securities from mutual flllJCls they controlled. Ve.sco, 37, hao a home in Boonton, N.J. but is believed to be residing in the Bahamas or Costa Rica. A warrant for (5ee INDICTED, Pagel) 16-year-old Held ' After Burglary. At Irvine Home " A loud bang from the garage of an Irvine man on vacaUon aroused lt curious neighbor Wednesday and culminated in the arrest of a 16-year-old boy on a burglary charge. Mrs. Jean Lind, told investlgatlng of- ficers she saw the boy-slip out of the side garage door on 17&12 ?t1ann St. just after she heard;the noise. Confronting the boy oo his activity, she said be iold ber he was looking for his Jost dog and forced tbe garage door to see if lt waa inside. ~ Police tearebed the area and, after locaUng the boy, took him to Juvenile Hall. They allege he kicked tbe garage door with his foot, breaking klclt and door jamb in the ·Pt0Ce'5. Two Teachers Cited ~y San Joaquin Board Marthl Peterson . a olxth grade teacher at O'Neill Elomentary School in El Toro, eod Judith Mayer, a teacher of mentally gifted students at La Pu Intermediate School, were named teacbe:rs of the year w cdn<tday nlabt. Nick DI Gufuro ol lhe Saddleback Ex· cbanie Club PIU9lted the awards to the two al lhe retlUlar -1ng of the San Joaquin Schoo[ Boin!. I FAC!Ns;. l~PICTMINT Former AG J\lllchell . Two Lawmen Wounded , .. In Coast Drug Gunfight By TOM BARLEY 01 "" Delly Plirlt llllff Two lawmen were felled by gunfire and other menibers of a multl..agency naroOtlcs task force were narrowly miss-- ell bf whistling buH.U Wednesday night in a Coota, Mesa-Huntlngtoo Bell<h area drug raid that developed Into a gun bat- tle.' - Whittler ·police U. Bradley~HOover, 32, is reported today by Cosla 1 Mesa Memorial Hospital officials as "reCov:er-- ing satisfactorily" from a bullet wound just below the heart Federal narcotics agent Leslie Kenney, 34, received treatment at the same hospital for a wound in the right knee and was allowed to return home after emergency surgery. Both men were victhm or a gun duel that erupted when a 20-member task force in which federal officers were back- ed by Costa Mesa and Whittler pallce and Orange County SberlU's Dfncer.s moved Bresnahan 'Not Push ing MC A.S Co nversio n Bid' Orange County Airport Chief Robert Breaoahan said today ht bas no plans to push for conversion of El Toro MCAS to a general aviation and c6mmercial airport. Bresnahan sa id earlier Ulla week he thouaht the county should consider purchasing about 330 acres of land around the El Toro takeotf pattern to "protect the future" of the airport from encroaching borne const.ructlon. Breonallan said today the county prob- ably wo u Id not pUrcheoe any Jan d around El Toro unleas It had plans to convert the facility to a general use airport. But the county has oo such plans at present, Bresnahan said. Tlla reason he suggested a J>05Sible purchase to the caunty Airport Commission this week was "It waa just a thooiht I hfd end l wanted to test It out!' Although tbe commlsoloo a(reed Tue>- day to consider his 1i~ 1 est I on , Bresnahan said today, "I didn't feel their reaction was very •tronc·" Broanahen was not available for com· ment oo h.ls ~ Immediately follow· ing Tueldey • meettnr. l • ' in on the second of two Pacific Avenue home.a . Lawmen said infonnatloo recel~ while they we" raiding 21811 Paciltl> Jn tbe Coota Mesa area -the sector Hi the bounduy line that divides -*" and ,Huatillgton, Beacj> . -ten( 1 ~ 8Cl'Ol!1~~to~_~fie. · 1 ·~~- Tllat raidJ.'!"OOd .~tyi .Hoover ~·X:t11- nefoit the ncioi 'wrtthmg in pafn ~rid~ companions ' mpvtitg in to grab·theolliln identified es Ifie &w>m"ll -Blair D~ Alderson, ~· of that addre~s. -... ~,; Officers said Alderson was quJdly dLsarmed aod hustied off to Oriqe County Jail .with six other persons !~t up in the raid. Officers claimed :Wy seized nearly two pounds of cocaine. Federal agents today valued the co- caine at about '20 000, basing the PSttmate on what the d'i;;g would brine to the tlllcit seller. They said lnfonnation obtained in Whittier aod Los .Angelea Jed them !<> Orange County tn a move to· snuff out what ' they said Is a growing irade in the forbidden drug. Mu!Upl~ charges of poesesslng cocaine and selling tbe drug were filed agaiMt six other persons today awaltJng c..ilurt action Jn Orange County Jail. They are identified as April Mai !See l SHOO', Pa .. II Coast Weatller Night and morning low cloud.~ and fog. hazy sun.shine in after- noons. !Aw tonight In low 50s, ltigh Friday in mld-«15. INSW J; TODAY A manfacol kUltr is looie 1oniewhere in the West Orange Cotmtv-West Los Angeles arta, e:tp<1illlng the 111'1'git1 of five law cm}orcement agencies with little information to gq on..~ $t1 Page 24. ' . IS ThUnday, May 10,1973 Nixon Picks CIA FBI Bugged ' ,# ~ Ellsbetg Head for Defense ~ar.Jie~" ·~"flASHINGroN (AP) -President Nix· ~plclood CIA Director James R. Sehl ... ' lll~r u Defense secretary today and ad· . d1il Jolm Connally to his White House -Mall as a special adviser in moves to p11111holea !mby 111e w~~1.. ·~!Hix.CE also abandoned his "slij>el-· Ca&IDeL" concept or COUDlelors; pro- -William £. Colby to CIA director, .cod· named Pmtagoo general counsel J . ~ Buzban!t Jr. to his White House $tf.ff as a special counsel with "full ~ibility in matters relatma to the 'Watergate lnvesUgatloo." · , . the aeries of actions to bolster his ~aguered administration were disclos- ~ ~Y Nixon at a C.btnet meeting, then announced by press secretary Ronald L. .Zitgler at a White House news briefing. .. -Ccanally, a politically savvy Te.1an "1!<> last week swltclied from the From Page l .HISTORY ... . , "well before the tum of the century. "~liecause El Camino Real cut straight tmh the valley in the days or the ~ions, the valley was always a col- lliful area, Sleeper eiplalned. ·• Ban<Uts came through frequently. •<:•we bad Juan Flores, nburcio Vas- ~ and aome said even Joaquin Mur- .r4t:ta rode through oo occasion," Sleeper ~d. ··lli!DCller bondlt .. well haunted the hllbiray tn his heyday. ·,,}le went by the name, "Six-Toed Pete." Much of Si<eper's dilcu&!lon centered qo. vljplettea about the valley. · Ja ,the earliest days al white settlement tht valley provided the lime which form- ed the plaster tor Ml1sioit' San Juan _Cap(strano and the old adobes. ·.;'!')le Umbers lllr the buildings came ~ !or their source on the Trabuco. , , ·1'ilt latter area obtained Its name ear· Jy .. Jn recorded hiJtory alter a soldier l·.r, om the Por1ola expedlllon I o s t a biilnderbuu there. ' '"Trabuco" is Spanish for such a .._n, Sleeper explstned. Alter the days of the rancllol, the oJley became prime fodder f o r _.iaton. And they ...,. a dime a dozen, Sleeper Slld. Botloolan Dwight Whiting, however. wasJbe granddaddy of them all. Z, the era of the tum of the century ting first tried to fi<>s the valley In L~' an altempt to ~te 4 com· mfllltY ol gentlemen f.armers, the ~torfan related. ·":A few settlers came, but few of tbfin vf?e gen Uc men," Sleeper said. ·· !~nitlal plantings of peaches, prunes, ap.. p~s and the like ylelded bumper crops at fitst. ~ubsequent years brought forth no htrVests at all, however. :<>nee the gentleman farmer idea flop-Jled, Whiting tried something new. ;Sleeper said the next venture, also a~rtive, was an attempt to make El T~ the Ostrich capital of the United S~tes. l'hlting apparently tried in vain to buy a ~ock of the huge birds from FuJJerton, bll:t the seller reneged. ~e ostriches were big business in tta>se time s, Sleeper said, because their ta11leatbers were prized by hatmakers. ;'lbe speculation finally gave way to s~p and crops compatible with the soil aQi climate. :And with the sheep and crops came farlners and herdsmen, many of them frOtn the Ba.sque country in Spain and France . Rose Noutary, a native of El Toro and dt!scendant of the early Basque settlers, discussed the El Toro of old for the "Dewcomers" 1n the audience. Joining her was Ra y Prothero, a long· time citrus rancher in the area. "People used to come from all over the county for the Saturday night dances at thf: ·social hall in El Toro," Prothero said. ·~.{Jut they tore the hall out some years ba:tjt: to make a great, big, expensive . ovtrpass." OU.N•I COAST II DAILY PILOT : The Or-... CM:lt DAILY PILOT, wllll 'll'Mdl- ' 11 combined "'-N..,..P,..11, It lllUlllllllM 1W , W.. Or..,..., , .. ,, Publllilllf't9 COn!Ptnr. s..,.. , ... tdltlan1 are .iflhed, Mond•r lllrouoh '. FrllhY, tor CM.la M-, NtwPOrt 8Hcft, • ,ttvnl11111ton 8Meh/FOU&illkl V1ll1y, L19un.1 • -.itch. lrvlne1Sacldl"'9dl Mid Sin cr.m.nll/ • S.n J111r1 C1pl1lr•1111. A 1lngl1 ,..,loNI '. 1111.nlln Iii tublfll!HI '-h1rd1v1 •nd hlnd•n. • t'fll prlnclpel 11Ub!l1lllnt plllnl Is 11 UI W~I : l •Y llrMI, Cost1 M-, C1llfotnlll, '~1'1. Rob•rf N. W1M '°'"ldlfll •11111 ""*'"""" J1c .. •· Curf1y Vici l>rt1 ..... Wiii O.W11 M""9tr 'Oiolftll k11wll •or..,. Tho11111 A. Mvrphino Monoltrw l!!OiW Ch1if11 H. loot Rlch1r4 '· Nall A,.ll!f11I M,,..llilt E411on ....... ; • C.... ~I )JI Wttt hy ltr.tt •, 1 H"""'1 tlKJi: ftU N......., -.Ult'Wlf'tl '• 1 Lll'UM aHCfl: tn "°""' A~ .•• "'-'IWllfoll hleftl 1711'1 •Hdl ...,....,., . . .... °""""""! ., HOl'1tl .. CHnllll •••• . flf ... I fn4J '42-4121 ' Cl ..... .Wuatl I I '41-1671 Democra0c to Republlcan Party, will be an unpaid Spect.al adviser to the Prest· dent on both domestic and foreign af. fair! . In the part-time job, Ziegler said, he will be on call to consult with Nixon on a w!ile range d .Jssues. 1be Presidential decisions came IO days aft.er Nixon'$ close!t aides -H. R. Haldeman ana John Ehrlichman -and Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst resigned amid a swirl of Watergate develapmenls. Nixon bad nominated Elliot R!chard.son to succeed Klelndienst as attorney general, leaving vacant the Pentagon post which Schlessinger was picked lo fill. NiXon told hit Cabinet he intended to maintain more direct communication with Cabinet members, Ziegler later re Ported. Senate Major Leader Mike Mansfield (()..Mont.), was informed of the Schles· inger appointment Jn advance. He called the nominee "a good man" and said he could foresee no difficulty aboul Senate confirmation. Ziegler said the counselor role played by three Cabinet members "will not be in effect any longer." The counselo r roles were created by executive action this year when Nixoo sent Congress proposals for broad government reorganization . Ziegler said the counselor concept "will be moved aside until the legislation is passed." Schlesinger headed the government's spy agency for Jess than four months when Nixon turned to him for the top Defense post which CaJifomia millionaire industriaJist David Packard turned down thi.s week. Ollby, Nixon's choice for CIA director, has three decades of experience in in· telllgence operations and served since as the spy agency's deputy director for operations. He rejoined the CIA in 1972 after four years in Stale Department posts relating to the Vietnam pacification program. From Pagel 2 SHOT ... Hutchimon, 23, of 117 30th St.; Dennis Lee Wbllaon, 25, of 1312 W. Balboa Blvd., both of Newpori Beach; Michael William Moore, 26, 2201 Pacific Ave.; Robert Anthony Contorelli, 28, 2188 Paclflc Ave .; James Lee Johnson, 22, 244 Knox Place, all of Costa Mesa and Robert Klaas Wit· ' baard, 20, ot Buena Park. Alderson was booked into jail on -tWo C<Mflltl ol assault with a deadly weaPon 00_. police orncer. otange C.""1Y ~~r~r·1 officera int!!'~ to oeek a complaint naming all - defendants from the district at~· io- day. · • Voting J;lill Approved WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Despite Administration opposition, a bill to allow every eligible voter in America to register by mail for federal elections passed the Senate Wednesday by a wide margin. Breaking a month-long flibuster against it, the Senate passed the measure 57.37 and sent it to the House. LOS ANGELES (AP)-'lbe FBI has told the judge In tile Pentagoo papen trial that Daniel Ellsberg wss overlleard by an "electronic interception" nearly two years 9efore he released . the Pentagon papers....to the-lleWI media,. tho judge- revealed today. This wu the first disclosure that Ells- berg', whose name did not surface public- ly until 1971 when he released the Penta· gon papers, had been under FBI survell· lance long before that. U.S. District Court Judge Mall Byrne, apparently angered that he was never told this be[ore during disclooure of wiretaps, ordered the Justice Department to find out how many times Ellsberg was 'CIA WRONG IN ELLSBERG CASE'-Story, Page 4 overheard In 1969 and 1970 and if there are records of what was overheard. The disclosure, apparently considered serious by the judge, delayed the start of legal arguments which have been scheduled on defense motions aiming to throw out the case. The judge post]iooed luriher action in the trial until later in the day. "It's impossible to proceed with the legal ramifications until the factual pic- ture is clear." Byrne said . He said the disclosures raise issues whlch "may precede" the importance o/ legal arguments. He said the FBI report says that at least one interception of Ellsberg was ac· complished while the defendant was at the home of MOrton Halperin, a former deputy assistant secretary of Defense. The judge told the government to find out for how long Halperin's home was ur.der surveillance and whether the surveillance was authorized by a court. He aJso demanded to know whether Halperin was a White House adviser - a post Pe held in part of 1969 -when the wiretaps began. Byrne said the FBI notice of the wiretap came to him late Wednesday from acting FBI Director William Ruckelshaus, but that it noted the direc- tor himself had only been notified Tues. day. From Pap l INDICTED ... his arrest has been tssued. In Washington, the Committee to Re- elect the President issued Statements by ~ll and Stans proclaiming their in· ·ce. "Tliere has been no wrongdoing on my part," the'Mitchell atatement said, "and, inaofar as I know, on the part of any other penon in tlµs matter. I ain certain that the judicial proceedings in this case will Mly vindi-me and confirm the absence of any ~gdoing." Stans' statement said; "I am greatly dismaye<l by the action of the grand jury. I have full faith and confidence in God and lQ American justice. I expect that when alI the fact~ are heard, I will be vindicated ." 'Watered-down' Sex Book Eyed by, Education Panel SACRAMENTO (AP ) -The State Board or Education was asked today to accept a watered-.down version of a text-. book on human sexuality that eliminates references to premarital sex and the Kinsey Report. The book , entitled "Human Sexuality,'' is intended for pupils in the seventh and eighth grades. The recommendations were made by a special review committee of the State Department or Education. The committee was appointed this year after board member Eugene Ragle of Auburn characterized the orig Jn a I version of the book as too explicit. Among parts .of the book recommended ror rem-0val was a page of drawings or birth control methods including condo ms, spern1icidal jelly and pills. The review committee said a rewriting job is "essential" to the book's receiving final approvaJ of the board. The publisher, the American Book Co. of New Y-0rk, said it would go along with the changes if it received a minimum order or 25,000 copies. Approval from the author w.ould also .be needed. The committee also recommended that masturbation be described as a "fre- quent" rather than "normal" sexual ac- tivity, · The Kinsey Report to w~ich the original version of the book referred is a 1903 study by A. C. Kinsey, W. B. Pomeroy, C. E. Martin and P. H. Gebhard entitled "Sexual Behavior in the Human Female. 11 The references to premarital sex, which the committee said should be elimJnated, include arguments for and against premarital sexual intercourse. Oldest Subje~t Sex Course at GoMen West? PSYCH 161 may well become the IDOl!t popqlar course at ·HFllngton Beach's Golden West College. · But before it does, trustees of the Coast Community Colleie District want to study the subject a bit themselves . The subject of the course is sex. Approval of the new, l~week course, whlch carries no prerequisites, was • withheld by trustees Wednesday night. They said they want to study the course outline first. ASKED BV trustees what Psychology 165 (Human Sexuality) Is all about, district Chancellor Norman Watson repUed, 11It's not my area of spedaliza· tion." Golden West College President R. D.ldley Boyce came to Wataon's aid, explaining that, "This Is not really • new and emerging lnlerest. It's as old as man." Dr. Boyce then de>Cribed the couric es "a very timely thing," adding that It would lovestlgate human sexuality from psychological, psyslologlcal and sociological points of view. • '"""' .,. lb~ "" INVESTIGATORS PHOTOGRAPH SCENE IN SAN JUAN' WHERE BODY WAS FOUND AT FIELD Feet of Male Victim Show in Center of P lc ture; Dealh Cause Still Undetermined Man's Death a Mystery Coro ne r's Office Fin ds No Ma rk 011 Sa1i Juan Victim -· "1 Sheriff's and coroner's investigators te>- day continued to seek the identity and cause of death of a man whose body was apparenlly dumped at the edge of a San Juan Capistrano corn patch early Wed- nesday. Coroner's aides this morning said that an autopsy failed to tlim up any cause of death on the man who appeared. to be in his mid 20s and of Latin de~nt. The next stage -0f the coroner's probe will be a series of lengthy toxicological tests to detennine if any drugs or Poisons may have led to the man's death. The mystery surfaced at about 8:30 a.m. as two students on their way to Marco Forster JwUor High School notic- ed the body as they walkecl. to school. The sit~ was about 100 feet away from Del Obispo ""Road and a few-hundred yards from Blue-Fin Drive. The remains were easily visible from the highway. Blood was visible at the scene, but cor· oner's aJdes stressed that they noted no signs of "severe trauma'' on the corpse. The John noe· victim was described as having medium·length, dark·black h&ir and wearing a marcon sweater over a I white t-shirt, bright blue pants1 a n d ! square-loed shoes. Inveatigators at the sceDe sealed off a 1 wide area to protect any evidence. The ' probers spent boor! trying to evaluate impressions.made by vehicle tires in the soft soil. The body was lying on a smalI triJr. tar island surrounded by narrow ~ used as accesa to the fannl . There wu strong speculation that the body may have been dumped sometlme before dawn. Irvine Planne1·s Stud y Land Use Of 32-acre Site Test in Court Planned By Irvine Foundation Irvine p I a n n i n g commissioners tonight will discuss possible land uses other ihan commercial for a 32-acre strip of property south ol the Santa Ana Freeway along Culver Drive to Walnut Avenue. The commission meets at 7:30 In city ha11. 4201 Campus Drive, and will in· formally consider alternate uses of the parcel. The property is owned by Bruce Nott. Commissioners recent1y voted t o establish a planned community zoning requirement on the property. It is presently zoned commercial. While some planners argue the parcel, if used ror conunerciaJ development, would be vaJuable tax base for the com· mercially poor new city, others have said they fear the property will be developed in an unsightly manner. The parcel is convenient to the Santa Ana Freeway:cuJver Drive intf:rcbange and would be highly visible from the freeway when the interchange is rebuilt. On the other hand. it is bounded by residential property on three sides, ex· cepting the seven-acre neighborhood shopping center serving Walnut Village from the comer location across Culver Drive. A drug store, Safeway Market, banks and olher shops recently opened in that Irvine Company commercial develop- ment. The Irvine Foundatie>n which holds corr tifolling interest in the Irvine Company pod has bee•·directed by·the-Tq Reform Act of .. 1969 1to ultimately rl!duce its holdings to a minority 20 percent share, v.·ill fight the law in court in order to obey it. Attorney for the San Francis~based charitable foundation, Howard Privett of Los Angeles, said in a pretrial hearing Growth Policy Meetings Slated Two local public meetings lpve been scheduled by the county planning com- mission to discuss a population growth policy for Orange County. Input from these sessions, the first of five planned on an area·by-area basis, will be used by the commission to help form recommendations to the Board of Supervisors on a growth policy. At 7;30 p.m. Monday, citizens from the Saddleback Valley area are invited to meet ·with county officials at La Paz Intermediate School, 25151 Pradera Drive, Mission Viejo. Residents from the South Coast area will meet at 1:30 p.m. May 23 at the Lit- tle Theater Auditorium of Dana Hills High Scbool. Wednesday in Im Angeles Superior : Court constitutional !ssues must be CU>-1 Sidered. A suit filed last year to change the trust instrument of the foundation - a docu· ment drawn by the late James Irvine - would allow the foundation to meet the federal law's requirements. The Tax Reform Act requires t\ro things of ,foundations : reduction. of holdings in single businesses and annual increases in the gilts to charl~es based on percentages oI the earnings of foun- dati<lll stock holdings or other Interests. The required selling of foundation stock, Privett notes, violates the direc- tions of the Jate Irvine Ranch land baron who v.TOte in the trust indenture a pro-- vision giving the foundation "controlling voice" in Irvine Company affairs. Privett has told the Daily Pilot it is his contention the federal government may · not interfere with the terms of a private trust. Hence the court suit, to determine the constitutionality of cha.ig1ng the trwlt instrument to meet the demands of the Tax Reform Act. Depending on those rulings all or (Jll'I of the f,590,000 shares of Irvine Company stock now held by the Irvine Foundation might be marketed. This stock equals a 54.5 percent con- trolling interest in the land devel!)plnent and ranching firm with operations ln · Orange County, the Imperial Valley and Montana. See 1>uldctf> for SPEED OUEEN Stainless Steel Fabric Care· Tub ;u ,all - e -· l o,,.,_I, C•Jp. ..... e ldffl lot oll W•hoM. ....... L..ttl rti.LlfwtWo ., ... w..- PLUS • · •• a washable knits cycle .,.. .......... ,. ...... ,... ,. .... ,., • .., .... ,Wet. • • .,... ,... ... ..... :::. =.. ':'"...:•:. ~·.~:N·:~n ANt Din& POI AJ LOW AJ '3691 ' l~lsPEED OUEEM.l•I e McG,..ew--Edison Company Olvl•lon 90 DAY CASM WITH A~:~~y:o ' !!! ~ 1815 ~EWPORT BlVD. IJlwntown Costa MISl-Plla~ • • 7 7 . -• • • . Dun~ingion Deaeh Teday's F lnal • N.Y. Stoek8 , . ODD ., • • ' : I : I .VOL. 66, NO. 130, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES TEN CENTS .. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1973 ' .. ~~~~~~~_...:...~~~~~--'-~~~-,...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' -~ , iTime Closing In on Meadowlark Golf Course By TEliRY COVJLLE Of "' DellY f'Het St'" .Time may be running out on tbe 50- yeaN>ld Meadowlark golf course in Hun- tingtoli Beach. The city has llllUI July 8 to make an of- rer on .the p·u r c base « Meadowlark. otherwise, It seems. the 96.~ golf club will be sold to a Beverly Hills developer, s. and S. fu'lstru<:tloo Com· paey, If S. and S. buys the course, city of- fiqlals fear, tract houses wil! sprout like wild weeds on the property. So ftr, the city has DOt been able to meet wtth the owners ¢ Meadowlark to even d1.9CUS! the possible purchase, and the.:lty Ital! has'not developed a method for producing the money for the $4 million price tag. . City Administrator David Rowlands admitted the picture is not bright at this point, but said be '-to.4evelop a list ol pooslble finaoclng methods by Moo- day. "We will explare . lhe possibility or county help in buying It, but so far we haven't held any real talks with county olficlals," Rowlanda said today. City councilmen have ~ in- dicated their desire to',.. lleadowlark remaJn a golf club .• but 1lle oounell has not taken any official action to autboriz.e purchase ol the """""" Councilman Henry Duke Is handling talks with the· owners.. He sai<I today be is disappointed !bit he and ·Rowlanda have not been able to get together w.lth the owners. 11rt doesn't loot Ute we'll meet thJs week," Duke said. "So far we haven't met with them so we can't really say Bullets · Fell Lawmen ·. Two Shot Making CoU$t Area Drug Raid . . By TOM BARLEY Of nit Dlll't Pllllt Sti ff Two. lawmen were fel.led ·by gunfire and other rnemben of a multi-agency narciotics task force were narrowly miss- ed by whistling bullets Wednesday night in a Costa .Mesa-Huntington Beach area drug raid that developed into a gun bat- Ue. Whittier-p>lice U : Bradley Hoover, 32, is reported today . by Coota · Mesa Memorial'Haspttal officials as "recover- ing satisfactorily" from a bullet wound jtiSt below the heart. Federal narcotics agent Leslie Kenney, 34, ttceived tr~atment at the same hospital for a wound in the right knee and was allowed to return home after emergency surgery. Both men were victims or a gun duel that ~rupted ~ a 20;member task force Ill 'Which ledUll ~ ....... bock- ed by Coota Mesa and Wbltder police and Oldest ·Snhjeet Se x Course at GoUlen West? Psych 165 may well become the most popular course al Hwilington Beao:b's Golden Welt College. :bu~ before 'it does, trustees of the Coast Couµnunity College District want to study the subject a bj.t themselves. The subject of the CQUrSe is sex. Approval of the aew, 18-week course; whicll catTles no prerequisites was wttbbeld by trustees Wednesday night. They sald \hey want to study the c0urse outline firsl • ASKED BY trustees what Psychology 165 !Human Se1Uality) is all about district Chancellor Norman Watson replied, "It's not my area of specializa: tioo." . Golden Wes/ College President R. Dudley Boyct came to ~-·• aid, explaining that, "This is not really a new and emerging interest. It's as old as man.'' Dr. Boyce then described the coUrse as "a very timely thing," adding that it would investigate human sexuality from psychological, psysiological and sociological points of view. Both Sides Holler Foul ~ 'Cinco ,.(f~ Mayo' Riot ,ENSENADA,. M~Jloo (AP) -From Wednesday. Cate D. Darnall, 21, of Mexicans cam«t tales of long·haired, Garden Grove, and Lindsey L. Greene, otreamlng Americans a ramp•&{. 'rip.· 14, of Seil Beach,, wel-e charged with Pin& fire exilngulshen1 from botel·walls , .,iaulting poUcemon,. and Patrick J. urinating o~ carpets, tricking and pun. . Sl1erldan, 19, and 1bomu A. Garcia, 19, dling boles m doors, throwing bottles. both of Carlsbad Were charged with J'rom Americans came stories of police ti . ' · pjling people three deep into a jail cell narco cs possession. . . and pouring human excrement on them, About 4,000 young Amencans were tn of purported innocent bystanders Swept Ensenada Saturday for the end of a off the streets, a n d of property con-yacht race and the celebration of Cinco fl.seated by officers and never seen again. de Mayo. Juan Zamora manager of the Orange ~ty Sheriff's officers moved in on the second of two Pacific Avenue homes. Lawmen said information received while they were raiding 2188 Pacific in the Costa Mesa area -the sector is on the boundary line that divides Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach -sent them across the road to 2201 Pacific. That rai~-egdfll ,wil!i, Hoover '!!Id l\en- ney oo the lloOr Wrflhhlg in Pain Utt llielr companions movJng in to grab tbe man identified as the ~-Jllolr Daddop Alderson, 25, of that address. Officers said AJdmoo WU quickly dlaarmed and hustled olf to ~e Cowity Jilli with ai• othl!r perlocti' swept up In the raid. Olliceiw claimed they seized nearly two pocmdJ of cocaine. Federal agents today valued the co- caine at about $20,000, basing the estimate on what the drug would bring to t~ illiclt seller. They said information obtained in Whittier and Los Angeles led them to Orange County in a move to snuff out what they said is a growing trade in the forbidden drug. Multiple charges of possessing cocaine and selling the drug were filed against six other persons today awaiting court _.action in Orange County Jail. • They are identilied as April Mal Hutchinson, 23, of 117 36th St.; Dennis Lee Wbllson, 25, of J.312 W. Balboa Blvd., both of Newport Beach ; Michael William Moore, 26, 2201 PacUic Ave.; Robert Anthony Contorelli , 26, 2188 Paoific Ave.; James Lee John.son, 22, 244 Knox Place, all of Costa Mesa and Robert Klaas Wit· baard, 20, of Buena Park. Alderson was booked into jail on two counts of assault with a dead1y weapon on a police officer. Orange County Sherifrs officers intend to seek a complaint naming all seven defendants from the district attorney to- day. Youngsters. Di!!lplay P roj ects at Mall Youngsters from 2 to $ yeara ol sge will display and, demonstrate their arts, crafts and 1Jclence protecta all day Satur· day al the Hlllltlngton Center Mall. The exhibits are all produced by !be parent participation nurseries in HM- tington Bea~ The'farioua nurseries will also ailoWJ>8~;}9 _ii_p:up their pre-school~~ progr~. 1l1e city • · · bas arso declaJed next week .. " eek of the Young O!lld," in hooo1\ol tile local fiurseries. what the city's position is." There are two prime owners, Gomer Sims, who lives next to the course, and Cecil Hollingsworth, who lives ln San Dl<f!o. It was Sims who forced a clause in the escrow with S. and S. that gave the city four month> to buy the .ci>urse. Holllngsworth reportedly ii lbe man most &l)Jious to sell. but he basri't been in contact with the city and is the primary problem in setting a meeting date with city officials. Rowlands and Duke both said the city ans . ' INDICTMENT RETURNED · For.,,.r-AG Mitehofl needs to know what sort of purchase tenns the Meadowlark owners would ac-- cept, before any specific city action can be taken. 11 lt would be difficult to finance an im· mediate cash proposal," Rowlands sakl. "A long-term payment would be much easter." Orange County Supervisors have said 25 percent of the co1,1.nty'1 rev111ue sbar· ing funds will be used for f$rk and open space acquisition and development~ A spokesman for Second District Supervisor David Baker said that adds -·-tHAlliED IN SCANDAL lll.CHinet ·~hlof Stan• Telephon~ pandit Hits ' ' Beach Eawry for $400 The phantom telephone bandit struck for the fifth time in less than three weeks W~y nlghi, \hiS tiine hitting Far- rell's • f,ce cream• parlor in Hildtlngton Beach. • The bandit, who sometimes identifies himself as "La Brique," followed his earlier method of operation in netting between $400 and $450 from the restaurant at 16301 Beach Blvd., police said. 'lbe phantom called Farrell's at about 9:1> p.m. and told manager James McNally that his partner had a 'hig)I· powered rille, and that McNally or his customers would be shot if i.nstructions were not followed. . • · He told lllcNally to place "an the money" in a bag and leave Jt ne:rt to a trash bin In the rear of the restaurant, police said. 1be bandit stayed on the phone, and when McNally returned be waa told, "Very good. You have done very wdl." l\lcNally waa told to stay by the phone for. five minutes. He called police Im· mediately, and when they arrived the bag of money was gone. In earlier robberies the bandit hit a Fountain Valley market for $25, a Hun· tingtoo, Beach hamburger stand for 11,600 and a Cotta Mesa hamburger stand for 1150. In one· case the bandit called a liquor store clerk' in Hunfhiglon Beach, but didn't pick up the money. · Pollce say Ibey have no leads in aay ol !tie. robberieS. Accid~nt Kills Huntington Man A Huntington Beach man wu killed early today when his car swerved Into an oncoming vehicle on McFadden Avenue, Huntington Beach police reported: Killed was Richard Amea Welsh, 42, ol 5021 Tasman Drive, [ollowing the IC• cident at 12:48 a.Ill. He. sue<:Umbed to head .and abdominal injuries at about 3 o'cloc~ thls morning at Huntington Intercommunity HospitaJ, a apolloaman.aid. PoUce taid Welsh'a small foreign car headed west on McFadden , crossed the center divider and collided head-on wlth a pickup driven by Jack Harold Grant, >&, of 1>332 La Salle Lane, HunUngton Beach. Grant was not Injured. The accident, which occurred on McFadden just west of La Salle, is still under investigation, police said. up to about $10 milUon over the next five years, -but warned that $10 million spread through the county doesn't add up to much money in any one area. 1 The spokesmen also said Baker's office ha.s not been approached about the Meadowlark situation and has no feeline about it at this time. The city was looking into the purchase of Meadowlark before the deal \Tith s. 1 and S. was•annoonced. No"'" city Officials feel they have been backed into a comer. and they still aren't sure what to do about it . Four Named In $200,000 : . Vesco Gift ~m Wlre Services NEW YORK -Former Nil1ln ad- mlnistraUnn cabinet members ·John N. Mitchell and M8urice H. Stans were ift.. dieted today en charges they aoulht to obolruct an lnveatlgallon by a federal agency in exchange for a aeerel 4*00,too cash oontrtbutton·to the Nil1ln ~ cam]llllgn. (Related -· Pap l) : 111e federal grand jury alao lndlc&d _ "ni+rier Jktbert L. Veta0, . .wbo mNe lie contdbutlan, Ind Harry .L. 5eln,:_ a former Rei>ubllcan leader <iMbe Neor Jerav Seni1', -teatllled eorller be delivered ti. . money to Stau In Walltlngtoa. Mltdlell, former allnnH!y _.-.], and Stans, former *"'141'Y ol Cot!uneftt, earlier testiliecl before the grand jury lti- vesugatlng the ccntribution by Vesm fu the Nixon campaign. • - Vesco left the country while the matter was under Jnvestla:atlon. • Mitchell at the lime aald be tesllflecl "fully, frankly and freely." 1l1e defendants were charged with oon- l!plracy, obotructlon of justice, and ob.UrucUon of a crlmlnal investigation. In additloo, Mitchell and Stans were ....,.. ed of six COUDll of perjury each. 1be OOMpiracy and perjury charges carry penaltleo of five years in prison a.nd $10,000 fine each upon conviction. 111e obolructlon charges carry penalties of five yeara In prison and $5,000 upoo conviction. In Washington. the Nixon re-electiOn campaign h eadquarters lsaue(t statements by Mitchell and Stans. Mitchell said, "There has b e en ··nO wrongdoing on my part and insorar u ·J know on the part of any other penon in this matter. I am certain that the judicial proceedings In lhis case will t.lly vindicate me and confirm the absence of any wrongdoing." Stans said, "I am greatly dismayed by the action of the grand jury. I have full faith and oonfidenct In God and in American justice. I expect that when an the facts are heard I will be vindicated. Not on ly was there no effort made by me to obstruct the SEC proceedlnp but the SEC did In loot proceed vigorously against Mr:-,.Vesco." In anollier development, changin( earlier Senate tesllmooy, the chalnnan of the Securiile! and Exchange Com- mission said today that he bad several (See MITCHELL, Page Z). 111e .reports oootlnued Wednesday. as Bahia Hole~ told a ..;,rter the trouble ~ltia ~l~o~: sl~s:r b;.t.Ji started shortly · after noon when the Saturday night in which 50 peraons were yacbtam"'! left aDd the "hippies" ar- repo~ lnjuied and 190 Americans wefe rived.- arrested. "At lint, the' hippie1 just sat iirolllld Police aald ' lour remained In jaU the pool, drinl<ing," he said. "Then more Dop Nixon Denies 'Link' Welidler Night and morning low clouds and fog , hazy aunsblne In alter- -· L<iw tonight in low 50s, high Friday In ml<f.«ls. -s kYLAB LO()K, ' PAGE 9 TOD AY A OOllChe briellng on the United Staias• s~ mllslon appran on Pace t ol y'a Dally Pilot. c:::,:au11 Paul Well&, Olarle1 and Joowb Kerwin embark Moaday on a new kind of apace Vt!llture. Wbat will this 21 days of their n ... be like! Tbe conditloos - load, abtocU,. and means, racue ltllltocf and more -are covered. a.I, -I II-. tbtmldor In odlill- came untU ire soon had about 200 persons around lbe pool ••. One boy let out ayell, and __ , tllll1'ered bUll. Then the people -e an yelling. They got e&cited, and oomeooe thtt'lr a boltle liito lbe pool. Othon ·llarled ·1481"'8 thtnp, too. "Ooe boJ alarlOd 1o take bll puts olf, but we bod the poUce like blm away. Then I big flllY tbreW I lfrl Into tl)e pool.'' Zomora aald he aaked the youth not lo do It 11aln but was shoved away, He aald the ,..th then fended off half a doaelr policemen who were trying to grab him, and the violence started. Amerlcam rac> ed through botel hallways In groups of llx' and _.., llaring , and b r e a k I n g ' whatever lhey eoald, Zlmara said. 1ba bol<I .... ""-I'• Bar l!Oft beavllY damaged In Ille melea. • "Wo st.pt three men deep In ahlfta," be (See ENSENADA, Pase I) I Athens Ne wspaper Reports Greek Loan to Marriott By L PETER ltl\IE(l ' Of .. °"" ""' 11tfl P-.i=' '1 brother, F. Donald •NIJGn of lloacli, !Oday denlod tbot ._ Mm tt ~lion eot a $10 mptiOn loan fron\.~t blioauio bl ta a vice of the hotol arid sl!IPPinfl . ~ AlllOQI ~ To Vlma dbcloaoO. today tllit a JOV'"'menl .. wned -.-Jy IJ'lmtd the loan to the Greek ahtpplng company, SUn Lines, that Nil011 said ;9 panlally-owned by Mar- riott. 1l1e ..... per allo qlllllllonad, the governmmt's wiJdom in ll'8Jll]ng· the T • loin. "'lbe fact that the vice prosldent of the foreign company Involved Is Pretident Nb:oe'• brother who has twice vbited Greece rec..,tly may be interpreted by the Presidebt11 enemies 11 a special favor to him and could be uaed against him," ttie nenp1pet aakl. 1l1e younger Nb:oe, wbo II vice pres!· dent fnr' Industry and community rela- tions !cir ManioU, confirmed that bo his made recent bualn. trips to Greece. But be denied an,y knowledge of -or any mponl!bllky for -the loan "~ lhert .... 6ne." "I doo't even !mow about thll loan. I had oothlng to do about It," Nixon told the Dally Pilot this momlni "I'm a vice president of l!arrloll and Marriotl doeo have inter .. 11 In Greece, but I do oot know ol any loon of an,y kind. I have no Involvement In It what.soever, u ~said. "And I can tell you tha loan sure as hell wa11n't made because of Doo Nb::on," he said. "Tbo ptt>S is trying to make a story out of nothing. ll's the stupidest tblag I've ever heard of. I'm just an employt," Nl•nn aald. He said his trips to Greece "bad (See DON NIXON, Pqe I) I • INSIDE TODA'\' A maniizcal killer it loose . somewhere fn the West Orangt Co initv-West l.Gs Angelt'r area, tzpending the •lleT!liu of fiv. low enforctmtnt ogendes with llttlt informatio1l to po on. Stt Paoe 24. .. I ' ,I DAILY PILOT 1 . H Thurtday, May 10, 197' . , D•llJ 'llet lllH PWt Driver Diesln Crash Robert \V. Lee of liuntington Beach 'vas crushed to .: death ba the cab of his rig this morning when it careene off the San Diego Freeway between Mac- .Arthur Boulevard and Jamboree Boulevard in Jr. tine. The 21-year-old Lee, 6901 Breeland Drive, was southbound on the freeway when the accident took place about 7:15 a.m. California Highway Patrol of- ficers are trying lo determine the cause of the crash. Board Studies Preserve No Action Taken on Upper Bay Wildlife Proposal -. By JACK BROBACK ot ftl• Dlllr ~lkll 11•11 ~e County supervisors Wednesday sluilled the complicated issue or the de.vdoPment of a wlld)ire pi:eserve and r~ion 11ea in the Upper Newport B{ur., but took no action. Fllrther coo.sideration was delayed un- tU • meeting of the Field Committee on t&'e~ Upper Bay in San Francisco on May ~1?~bster otis, special assistant ~ the ~ry or the Interior and cbatnnan or tilt' Fleld CommlUee, outlined the goal< and actions of the committee since its formation a year ago. lte .said 1,000 acrea of the area has fish al\(f wildlUe which should be · preserved al'l'tl: · protected end charged that final responsibility for implementation of any ptan rests with the Board of Supervisors. The recent decision of the Irvine Com- pany not to :JJ'lher pursue litigation on the" land exchange between the company ad the county of Upper Bay lands has speeded interest in resolving the various issues presented. . Ooe disqreement cropped up in tbe cttsawioo. Stanley Krause, county real property services dlrector, recommended that an appraiser be selected es soon u possible to determine tbe market value of Ille three !Jlonds In the bey owned by the Irvine Company. He argued that the de~inaUon ol. the future of the islands ,..,,. most important to the whole d~nninatloo ol the UJlller' Bay prob- 1eµi.. lhterior Department's Otis disagreed. lie . said an "in house" group in ·bi• dipartment could make a good appraisal 1 0£ the entb'e area and come wtthln 10 pfrcent of the real value. ~use contended that cost of ac- q'"8ition or the Jalands, if desirable, slkluld be a key factor in detennining the Huntington Fire . Qestroys Three -: Autos, Carport 'lbree cars and the carport in which lhey were parked were destroyed by fire early this morning in Huntlngton Beach. City firemen said the blaze began about 4:42 a.m., in the car port of a fourp,lex apartment unit at 17391 Queens Lane. near Slater A venue and Beach BoUlevard. fire Marshall Roger Hosmer said lhc f~ was apparently ignited by an elec- trfca..I short in one car, owned by William Palkell, who lived at that address. Jt took 15 firemen JO minutes to douse ti". blaze, Hosmer said. Total damage wu estimated at $11,000. No one was in- juitd and the fire did not spread to the a~ts. • OIAN•I COAST Ml DAILY PILOT , T"-Or1no. C0.1! DAIL V PILOT .,.!Ill Wlllch ' ls comDI~ "'' NltWl ·P•eH. h Pllblls.h.., b1 ; ~ O••l!IM Cot" P11bll1hlnC1 Compenw. &1111- , rlt. eodllloM 1r1 PV(lll1heG, Morld1y lt'lr0U9/I ' FrldtW, t.r Cotti Mttl, NtwPOt! llttcll, ' Hllflllntton lletch/,.ount•ln Vatlt~, L•t un• ' Stldl. ll'\llnt /S8delltbKk 1na San Cltmeri!tl • Sin J"'n C111hrr1no. A 1lng1t •l'lloONI eodl!IO!I le P\lblill!ed S.hlf'lllf' 11111 $vNHp. ' 'TM prl11Cl111I M tl1lll119 plant II It llC W.1t : 'hy Strftl, Cotti M-, C1ll'11rn11, t»». ' ' . ' . t . I economic feasibiLity for any p!an for use of the entire area. Kr1use said determination of the ac- tual legal ownerahlp of the islands would be part of tbe job of an appra!Jer . He aaid the legal tiUe, engineering and valusUcn j.<Oblems of the uplands to be acquired are for the most part different from those of the islands and that con- sidera ble time would be required to establish acquisition boundaries for the uplanda. Kraute said the county now OWlll an unquestioned fee or easement interest in 642 acres of the Upper Bay land, that undetermined prescriptive rights are claimed for the pubnc· for 383 acres and 'that the Jalands are ·about 1G4 acres. The county offlcial ·also questioned the Huntington Due Amphitheater By Summertime Hunti111ton ·Beach wlll gel Its own amphitheater lhll 1urnmer. Conltntctlon of the 2,500 to 3,000 seat racWty Wu approved Wednetday night by trustees of the Coast Community COUere D1'trlct. Under the tenns cf the a •1' Irvine Company's fitle to the islands .which he said has never been legally determined. He added that there is disagreement respecting the size cl the islands and their JOClllloo. The S<H:alled Field Committee includes representatives of the county, the state, lhe city of Newport Beach and the federal government. It was formed a year ago at the re- quest of the Board of Supervllors. Otis said Jts studies were directed toward the protectlm of open apace, the protection of wildlife anU the provision.of recreation areas that might be com- patible to the wildlife preserve goal. He said an "in house" appraisal would take six months and that the recreational areas planned must be studied ln rtlatlon to their affect on wlldllfe. He added that a probable new Upper Bay bridge near Shellmaker Island must also receive con· sideratlon. ,,.,.- Otis said tbe Field Commltlee should complete its work in the next sil: monthJ and would then be dilaolved . The interior department olflcial also stated that the three Islands were the greatett mtural relOUrCe for wildlife. otl1 allo lllid that funds for acqul1ltion or Irvine lands and for develop-I of the wlldllfe-recreatlon areas w e r e limited, He lllid allboulh there are 111J111Y pos1lble sources for funds they wollld be dirtlcult to obtain. , James McCormick, of Ill~ C.llfomla Department of Fish and Gai}e said the Upper Bay IJ the mo.t val111tile wetland area for wildlife remaininjj In the 1tate. . ·1· . . " The five-man panel agreed unanimou.s- ly to enter into a joint-powers pact with the elty 'ol l!illlUnston Beach to build the thaater on Golden Wf!I CoUeg.,, Huntington Beach will chlp ~t $12,000 ror landscaping, Whill' l!Olliil~ £" -·ll D. . will donate the lend .111d the fill def tor . UJ . ege 1Str1ct the foundation . l ·· ·· · college stud~~ .. wm do th•~ .. , •• 1 Resol".es Issue landscaping and mfb\tein the ih~~r.. . ,.. .. It will be locatid horth of tile .Golden West College Cooinit.inlty Center and east } 5 or the telecommunlcatlons building. A Over Oianne 0 600-space parking lot is immediately ad- jacent to Uie site. . Trusteea gave their endorsement to, the project after becoming· told the theater audience woold be protected from the prevailing ocean winds and that the Joud music would be contalned within the boy,•J. I Joint Meet Set On Unification A joi nt met!tlng to discuss unification will be held tonight between trustees of the Fountain Valley Elementary and 1-Iuntington Beach Union High School districts. Fountain Valley trustees called the 7:30 p.m. meeting so they could discuu plans for unifying their district by 1975 . High School trustees must agree with the Fountain Valley plan berore It can be pursued further . Trustees are also expected to discuss the creation of r i v e separate W1tfJed districts. as proposed earlier this week by trustees of the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District. Tonighl 's meeting will be held at Number One Lighthouse Lane, Fountain Valley. From Page 1 ENSENADA. •• said. "l1ve had five hourt' sleep in four days." From the other side, Bill Brower, 21, or San Diego, said police crammed 43 men in to an eight by 12 jail cell and poured human excrement through a hole In the ceiling. "J had been in town just two hours and was just walking on the street when they grabbed me /' said the shaggy-haired Brower. "It cost me $40 to get out. If I ever come back, it will be with 1 gun ." other youths said they were clubbed for no apparent reason and had to sur- render watches, rlnp and money which M'Mn't returned . A police spokesman said jallera gave receipts to reJ~alCd pr1mera, who were supposed to walk to a 11<arby police st• lloo and claim their property. But he 11id there may have been problems hecluse of the 1-barrier. Faculty n,presentatlves from both 0r8111• COut and Golden West College expressed satlsladioo Wednesday night with the administration's progress on clearing up the Channel 50 eoatroversy. But while reacting poaiUyely both Peg- gy Staggs, Golden West ·fa<;Ulty senate chairman, and Phlllls Ba!Dle, her Or- ang~ Coast COl!nterport, said further com- ments would be offered later. Meanwhile, they are reviewing an lnch- thlck admini3tration reply to·7• questions raised by faculty merpbers over the operation of the district's educatlonal TV statioo, KOCE. KOCE became embrolled in a con- troversy a mooth ago when teachen alleged they were not privile1ed to in- fonnaUon concerning the district's TV policy. Opening Listed On Commission There is one opening oh tile Huntington Beach Parks anti Recl'f!ation Commis.slon and the city councU Is seeking applicants. The commission Is re.eponsible for planning and controlling the parks In the city and for establishing a full recreation program for local residents. · All members of the ll·member com-j mlMlon are appointed by the city council. The commission has only advisory powers. AppllcaUons for the post can be ob- tained by phoning 536-5201, or writing to: the vehicle driven by Emmelt Johnson, tinrton Bea~ ~- Ball, Bat Drive Set for Valley A drive for Llttle Lell\J&"lpproved bits and balls is being conducted by !he South Fountain Valley Lit~• League. i..arue rnotl)en are a.sklnf perlOtlS to collect "Quality Seals" from package• or Scott brand paper product• that are redeemable for the bill and balll. The aeals may be depoaited at !he snack aliac:U located al Cor Sdlool, Flold "C" on Wsrd Stnet or the Senlor'a Field at Ille comer ol ~clid Street Ind Slater Av.mue. The drive will nm thnluah May, Ju~~~ear~! 'Bugging' O~E~~erg . • I . ' ' LOS ANGELES CAP)-The FBI bas told the judp In tllo PeDtaean J>'lpera tr1al that Daniel ElllberJ wu overheard by an "electronic intmeptlml" nearly two years before he released the Pentagon papen to the news media, the judge revealed today. Thll ..... the fin! dllc!CllU10 .that EUJ- berg, whose namo did Dot iuri.c. public- ly unw 11111 when· he releued the P"'ta- gon papen, bad been under FBI l\ltVell- lance Jo~g before that. Kalmbath's l'estimony ' • S~Ukd i I • ' J • ,_Wire Sor- N""11'!'f Beaqh ~I 11""'1. W. Kalmb6cli, PniiJdent 'NilOtl'I penooaJ lawyerT'Wllllii-aililng"21l tOp llepubllCan campolgn 0Uicia!1 callfd 14 teatlly before tho ' Sena.te'1 speclnl Wa~te tn-eslfW!ini l:OIDDliltee. · . ~h. wbo It! alleced to ve Ulld , his NtWiiort Center clfice Biid morby Big Cin)iOo Country Club to tllg!Mer·peyct!i for GOP spying 1ctlvlUes, w a s unavailable for oormnent.thla morning. U.S. Districl Co11r1 J~<IJ• Mil\ Byrne, appareotly 1111erec1 that be wu never told lhla before clurtnc dlJclocure cl wlrelspt, ordered the Juatlce Depertmmt to find out bow many timel Elllberf was - "He IJ out cl town :fll!IJanl avallable ! by teiephoae," AM ~. !!if penooal : --...,,.1ary said uu lllOr1llng, I Ka1mbldi 111t1 iop w~ 0am · 'CIA WRONG IN ELLSIERG CASE' -Slory, P ... 4 overhel!fd i_n 19e9 aud' 1170 and . If Ihm are rtcords of what was overheard. The discloeure, apparently COD$ldered' serious by the judge, dellyed the start of legal arguments which have been scheduled on defense motiom aiming to throw out the case. The judge postponed further action in the tria l unlil later in the day. "It's impossible to proceed with the lePJ ramifications until the factual pic- ture is clear," Byrne Aid. He said the dlscloeures raise J!sues which "may precede" the importance of legal arguments. He said the FBl report says that at least one interception of Ellsberg was ac- complished while the defendant was at the home of Morton Halperin, a former deputy assistant secretary of Defense. The judge told the government to find out for how long Halperin's home was ur.der surveillancti and whether tbe surv~µIance was authcrized by a court. He aJJO demanded · to tnow· whether Halperin was a Whlte House adviser -a post he held in part. of 1969 -when the wiretaps began. - Byrne said the FBI notice of the wir~tap came to him late Wednesday from acting FBI Director William Ruckelshaus, but that it noted the direc- tor him!elf bad only been notified Tuea- day. The judge demanded to know wby there was a delay in giving him im- mediate information on the Interception. He also demanded to know wby this wuo"t turned over to hlnuelf earlier in Iba trial. FromPqeJ MITCHELL ... ' I • I " convet&1tions wlth • 0Stans ibout the source or a f255,000 ~trllaltjon to ~­ dent lilfqn'i 1172 Pr'!J~ent~ campaljn'. G. Bradford Cook had told a Senate Appropriations subcommittee May 1 that ho talked with Stans only mce. ahout ihe money. Stans is one o! four perlODI indicted tn New York today oo charges of conoplring to 1UT1111e the """"'t deUvery ol Plll,000 of tbal quarter-mlllion-doUsr contribution to the Nixoo campaign. The !250,000 contribution wu made in two parta: The first, consisting of $200,000 in 1100 bW. wu banded over to Slans April IO, 1972, ind was not publicly reported. The other '601000 was made by check later In the campaign and was reported. Stans returned the entire $250,000 to Vetco Jan. 31, more than two months after lhe SEC filed a four-<.'Ount civil complaint against Vesco alleging that he and 41 deferidant! conspfred to loot $224 million from 1 rorelgn-bised mutual lund. Jan. 31 was more than two months alter Cool< said Stans began hll series of CODY;l{Sltiona with Cool< about the po .. J. ble source cl tho money. ~PMltl .... ""9 DENIES GREEK CHARGES Pre1ldent'1 Brother Donald From _PqeJ DON NIXON • • • nothing to do with any loans," He did not say why he was there. however. The Greek newspaper said the loan was granted for remodeling the Aegean cruise ship Stella Solaris, jointly owned by Sun Lines and Marriott. Marriott controls 45 percmt of the Stella Solaris, the newspaper said and Sun Lines controls the other 55 percent. Marriott was set up ln Greece after the military seized power in early 1967 and has since gained catering contracts with international airlines using Athens as a supply base, the newspaper saJd. Nixon has been employed by Marriott for about three yean. The bole! chain ls scheduled to breok ground for a $10 million high-rise con- vention center in Newport Center next week. 2 Young Victims Of Tra:f fie Crash Identity Revealed Two Anaheim boys who died Wed- nesday in a three.car ac:cident in Garden Grove were Identified today b1 the Orange County Coroner's Office. They are ,Todd Harris, 11, aod. Scolt Heck, 5,-both 91 on apartment complex at 234 W. OrB111eWood Avo. Investigators said lhe two boys and four others were being driven to~school in a sta\ion wagon because they mJsaed the sch9PI bus. they. were ltu~ .atJ Stod-dar~ Ele'1lentary School In Mahi!lln. The accident occurred 'When 1th~ station wagon driven by Freya.Murphy, ·31, who lived· in the same apartment cxmplei;, collided with a refrigeration truck Jt the intersection of Orangewood and West Street, Garden Grove. The wagon then crashed into the front end of a car stop- ped .at. the intersection. Officers said the two boys wbo were riding in the front seat ol the vehicle were thrown to the pavement and kllled. The truck was driven by Wllllam Fletcher, 38, of Fountain Valley and the third car by Renee Samuelson, 43, of Anaheim. Classes Announced In Special Interests A series of special interest classes, ranging rtom surfing and scuba diving to ballet and yoga, will be offered beginnlng May 14 by the Huntington Beach-Foun- tain Valley YMCA. Eighteen different procrams will be of· fered. Wonnailon on fees, dates and registration may be obtained by calllng the YMCA, 847-9622. on t11e 1111' o1 wt~:who will •e I durloa the,_.,. Jotuid ol'publlc lnp'tbat belln'-i TllUnclay, ' ~ illt In ordor of ~uled ap-' pearance, lnclud.,, . Roboi:\ Ode!, who worked lot the corn- mlu.e' for the Re-electton of the Presi- dent: Police SjJI. Paw Loper, who .,.. among the arrtstlng officers when the Watergate conspirators were caught Jn Democratic headquarters: convicted con- spirator James W. McCord: Sally Harmony, former secrelary to convicted conspirator G. Gordon Liddy: Robert Reisner, who -1<ed In the youth section of CRP; E. Howard Hunt, who pleaded guilty In the Watergate cue and later told a gnnd jury of Involvement in the Ellsl>erg burr!U7: Liddy; lfltch W. Sloan, trelllllm' of the fund-raising ann ol the Nixon campaign; Herb Porter, the com- mltlee's scheduling director; Powell Moore, a CRP official; Jeb Stuart Mqruder, deputy director of c:RP; former White House aide Charles Colson: John W. Dean, Ill, White House counsel fired by N I x o ri ; Kalmbach; Fred LaRue, a special con- sullant to former Atty. Gen. John N. Mlt- ... "11ell, director. of, CRP unW two -U after Watergate; former Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans, who headed the financial '8nn of the campaign; Mitchell; former acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray; Jolm D. Ehrllchman, who resillled last week as Nixon's top domestic affairs adviser; and H. R. Haldeman, who left his post as NI.I.on'• chief of staff at the same time Ehrliehman resigned. and Dean WU fired. Kalmbach bas also been linked to an alleged "aecret" bank account •t the Newpor1 Center branch of the Bank of America. . ~ Ho repartedly Qpt u much u $500,000 in the account that was supposedly used kl bankroll poliUcal spying and ea- plonage. Sena. Sam J. Ervin Jr., (0.N.C.), ' -, chairman ol the Watergate panel. ltld ' ' Hol!~ H. llaj<q_Jr., (R-Tem.),ranktng mjl)pri)y -· said the list cl wJt-nes!Of .1111y be altered aa the bearings proceed. '!be ~ly witneues are erpected to outline the structure and organization of the re-election campaign and the break-in and bugging at the Democratic head- quarter& -at -Watergate. ' 'Dogs of Week' Find New Homes Two Orange Coast families took "Be Kind To Antmala Week" literally by giv- ing 1 borne to last week'• Dally Ptlot Dogs of the Week shortly after their pic- tures appeared. Both pW"e: bred tri-color collies w~e adopted Saturdey momlng from the 1 Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) shelter In Laguna Beach. One or the families bad children. "The worst way to violate 'Be Kind to Animals Week' is to allow a pet to run loote," Don Brown, an SPCA ofncial, aaid. 11Don1t mike your an1mal • nuisance, make It a pet." The collies were father and daughter. See~ for SPEED OUEEN Stainless Stffl Fabric ·Care Tub tlitli • ...... .., •11tt-Pnef, c1111,. ""' e WeoffMellW_.... .. ,.,,,, • l.eolt th uom-..... w ... PWS ••• a washable knits cyclt ............ ,. ...... ,,... ,., ...... w tfl• ....... ................... _A __ ....., _ _..~ .. , • TOI CAN IVT A PUD 9Ulltl WAIHU AND ff'IU,pOI ,U LOW Al ~369" ltr"llSPEED OUEEN.l•I • McGrew-Edison Company Olvialon 90 DAY CAIH wtTH A~:C:.:0 !!I ~ 1115 NlWPORT BLVD. Dnnlftn Costa lllSI PM"iil4171 i I l • ' Thundq, M'1 10, 1973 il DAILY PILOT ~ S~hl~singe~ Defense Choice •• I •• I Nixon Picks Connally For Staff WASll!llGTON (AP) -President Nix· on~ CIA llirectpr James R. ~. inger·u Defense ......tar)' today and lid- ded JOhn Coonally to bis White House staf!' P.-a speeial adviser In moV.. · to plug boles left by the Watergate S<andal. N'aoo also abandoned his "super- Cabinet" concept of counselors ; pm. moted William E. Colby to CIA director, 1 and named Pentagon general counsel J. DEFENSE NOMINEE CIA's J1mes. Schlesinger Fee Scliedu~ For County ' Areas Okayed A new ree schedule for-admission and use of Orange County beaches and parks was adopted by the Board of Supervisors. Wednesday. As recommended by the county Harbors, Beaches and • Parks Com- mtssiqn; the new schedule includes a· flat $10 per year use fee good for ~dmission to all but three county parks and beaches; a $3 a day fee for bus ad- mission to the facilities ; a $150 per day charge for commercial film making in parks and a $3 per day fee for one-vehi- cle use of county campsites during the peak month! of summer. '!be $10 per year flat fees far parl<s and beaches would not be good for Sunset Beach, A1iso Beach Park and Niguel Beach Part because of prior ar- rangements · with p a r k i <ll g con- cessionaires. The new $3 per day charge ·ror buses supplant& the current SG<ent fee which previously applie<Lto cars or buses. The board al$<> authQrized · ij~bo~, Beaches and l'il'lls 1'.llre<!tor '<Killl\elh S&mpeon to establi!h car·and po~~llbn limits for each campsite . • ' 1 A controversial pl'Op9Sal bY residents of Sunset Beach who Warit a $15 annual fee .,tabli.hed ta park overnl~ht In the new county beach parking atta in the heart of that communitYi was held over until Second District Supervisor David L. Baker could be present. Tbe Harbors, Beaclles and Pam Com· mission bad recommended that this re- quest be denied. Parking on the new Jot wlll be metered with a charge 0£ 25 cents for two hours. Fred Buzhardt Jr. to his White House staff 'as a special counsel with "full responsibility in matters relaUn11: to the Watergate investlgatiorl." The series of actions to bolster his beleaguered administration were disclos- ed by Nixon at a cabinet meeting, then allllOllllOed by press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler at a White House news briefing. Connally, a politically savvy Texan who last week switched from the Democratic to Republican Party, will be an lDlpaid sped.al adviser to the Presi- dent on both domestic and foreign af- fairs . In the part-time job, Ziegler said, he will be on call to consult with Nixon on a wide range of iswes. 1be Presidential decl!ions came 10 days after Ni.i:on's closest aides -H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrllcbman -and Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst resigned amid a swirl of Watergate developments. Nixon had nominated Elliot Richardson .to. suceeed Kleindienst as attorney general, leaving vacant the Pentagon post which Schlessinger was picked to fill. NixOI) told bis Cabinet ht Intended to maintain more direct commuDieation with Cabinet members, Ziegler later reported. Senate Major Leader Mike Marisfield (]).Mont.), wu Informed of the Schles- inger appointree.nt in advance. He called the nominee "a good man" and said he could foresee no difficulty aboot Senate confinnatlon. Ziegler said the counselor role played by three Cabinet members "will not be in effect any longer." 1be counselor roles were created by executive action this year when Nixon sent Congress propoSals for ·broad government reorganizatkm. Ziegler said the coonselor concept "will be moved aside until the legislation is passed.''' .,..._ -• -l .lL . I. . SChltslnget headed Ille goftnl1ilent's spy ~gene~ f<f less thin !oar m~lhs when, NixOI) turned to him for the top De!eme post -.blcb Cllllomia mllliorialre induslriallsl David Packard turned down this week. · Colby, Nixon'! choice for CIA director, has tiree decades of experience in in· telligence operatkllll and aerved since as the spy agency'a deputy direci« .for nperatkm. He rejoined the CIA In 1912 alter foar years In State Department posts relating to the Vietnam podficatlon program. U.S. Rejec~ Gasolirw Ration, Calls for Aid WASlflNGTON iUPll The Administration rejected m a n d a t o r y gasoline rationing today, but called on 1 the petroleum industry to adopt a volun- tary ~stem for allocating supplies to 1 customen. Deputy Treasury Secretary William E. Simon sakl the Office of Oil and Gasoline .in the Interior Department would retain VETERAN STATION ATTENDANT LOSES JOB-Story Pego 39· the power to require suppliers to Rll to customers if the customen can show 1 they are "not receiving a proper alloca· tion of SUPPl¥!s·" Simon announced the voluntary pro- gram at a hearing of the Senate Banking Committee. Ile said OCX1 sent telegrama to the petroleum industry -refiners, wholesalers, dlstributo~ and .jobbers - lnflatwn ·Hits Ice Ci;eam Cone Anothi!r' ~ -ln-stltutioD .... i:llko ,_vlcllm to tbe financial ......,... OI the times. F ... years, ,iou """41 iet'thie lig· gest doable-dip Ice cream OOlie In town at Richard'• Lido -for a quailtr. Now.the pi1ce Is up to 10 cents. ' • store manpiger Joe P 1 y n e defends the Wllopping 20 perc<nl price hike on the grounds of quali- ty. "You like the taste of that?" he uked a reporter slurping at the sider bf • ~· "IV• the butterfat,• he uplalned reverently. ••we could cut that down and fill them with air lil<e oome •-do. but you ""'11dn't have the quality." 'Payne Md· even at IO cents, the s1oN! Is 'Iooq nmey tn -double-dipper cone it 1ellx. • announcing the plan. The plan asks those suppliers to make ava ilable to each o[ their customer& the same proportion of gasoline as they received before abort.ages developed. 'lbe purpo!e is to make sure in- dependent pa stations, which oltall buy "branded" guollne and sell It under their own labels, are not denied fuel and forced out of busihesa. Supplien aiao are asked not to charge independents moro than their -regular customers. If vital consumers -llke farmers, doc- tors and police departmenta -are still left without •11101111111-. OOG may dlrect _..... to ..n · lo thole Cll3~i illt -oNors ."""1d not contiol jilt ..... of more 1ban 10 petCllll of the 111PPlien' total supply. Court · Postpones Lawsuit Vital To ~vco Plans A lllrtbl!r..,..-1<deloy--- todl)' ID ID Orqe ~ SUparlor Court i...rinc of vital lmportenoe lo the "'"'" Dovelopmenl Corporalilll'• ..... slrudlon plans In the Salt cr..i: ...... Pnaldinc Judgo er-SuJmer .,.- the clUy until May 17 when both aides In !ht dispute agreed lhlt they needed more time to preparo pntrial document& and inalln that the army of wllnwes 1111>- poened f'"' the hearlnc will be available. Gradlnt by """ workera In mud! of the Salt Creek development wu halted when a lawsull filed by Ille Envlroo- mental Coalition of Cnnce °""'1!1 charged the flnn wlfli vlolatJnc aw;:. dardo tii\jloeed by ClOU\line ~""" lawo ouUlned In Propoclllon 20. Judce Robert P. lne<lanil 1111 -k lilted a small portion of·~ .... _. ... Ille-.... 'Ille~~ order he olgned at the time the laWIUit • .. filed will, honv!r, rmllin In effect until Dell week, Judge Sumner dec:lded. • ...... ..,. . ...., .... .. ... ·-Foundation· To Fight U.S. Suit . -: . •• •• .... The Irvine Foundation which bold& cm- trolling interest in the Irvine Company and has been directed by the Ta x Reform Act of 1969 to ultimately reduce tt1 holdings to a minority 20 percent share. will fight the law in court in order ID obey it. Attorney for the San Francisco-based charitable foundation , Howard Privett of Los Angeles, .said in a pretrial bearing Wednesday in Los Angeles Superior Court constitutional issues must be con· sidered. A suit filed last year to change the trust instrument or I.he foundatioo -a docu- ment drawn by the late James Irvine - would ~ow the foundation to meet the federal law's requirements. • INVESTIGATORS PHOTOGRAPH SCEl'IE IN SAN JUAN WHERE llODY WAS FOUND AT FIELD F•t of Male Victim Show In Center.of P lctuno; DMth C111M Stlll Undetermined The Tax Relonn Act requires tiio things of loundatioos: reduction ol holdings in single businesses and aMual' increases in the gifts to charities basett . on percentages of the earnings of foui1P dation stock holdings or other interests. ' The required selling or roundatior\ stock. Privett notes, violates the direC. tioos of the late Irvine Ranch land han!h·. who wrote In the trust Indenture a J>n>-: vision giving the foundation "oontroilhU( voice" in Irvine Company affairs. Man's Death a Mystery Privett has told the Delly Pilot it la, his~ contention the f~ral government mv not interfere with the terms of a priv~ trust. Hence the court suit, to de~ the ~nstitutionality of cha..iging the trust . 1 instrument to meet tbe demands of Ult. Tax Reform Act. Sheriff's and coroner's investigators to- day continued to seek the identity and cause of death of a man whose body v.·as apparently dumJ>:e<i at the edge of a San Juan Capistrano com patch early Wed· nesday. Coroner's aides this morning said that an autopsy failed to turn up any cause of death on the man who appeared to be in his mid 20s and of Latin descent. The next stage o[ the coroner's probe will be a series of l<ngthy toxicological tests to detennine if any drugs or poison! may have led to the man's death. '!be m~,.l!;laced at about 1:30 Dean Oaims Plot '' ' By Whi~ ltoli8e To Discredit Him WASHINGTON (AP) -Ou' t e d insidenlial counsel John W. Dean Jll said today there is an unwillingness by the While ilouJe to accept the truth about Watergate, and charged there is an effort to shut him up and discredit him. His statement, issued through an in- termediary, came in the wake of publish- ed reports that Senate and Justice Department investigators believe he has no evidence linking President Nixon to the Watergate bugging or coverup. "The infonnation contained in these stories is neither complete nor ac- curate," Dean said, applying it to many news stories about him. Nixon, in a speech to Republican finan- cial backers Wednesday night, promised that "the guilty will be brought to justice" in the scandal. (Picture, Page 4) Dean said "there have been discussions within the White House the past four to five months as to how to end the Watergate matter, but these discussions always ended wlth an Wlwllllngness to accept the truth for what it meant. That unwillingness to a~pt the lnlth still prevaill among some who are affected by . the ' truth.". He did not name those he said are out to discredit him, but said: "There is an ongoing effort to limit or prevent my iestlfying fully and freely. Efforts have been made to prevent me from obtaining reJevant infonnation and records; at- tempts have been made to influence the handling of my testlmony by the pros- ecutors; restrictions have been placed on the scope of my testimony as It relates to the Whitt House; and blatant eUorts have been. ma® to publicly irt timidate me." · Dean was fired by Nixon April 30. He subsequenUy placed documents Into a safe deJ>(,lt box and turned the keys over to a ledei'al jildge. A hearing will be held Monday · on the disposition of the documents. • N"uooo told a $1,000..-plate Republican campaign dinner Wednesday night, "I can assure '"'1 that .we will gel to the bot· tom of tblB depl ... able incident." '!be Pmidellt aaid he wu elected to bulla "• more peaceful world" Ind Is detttmloed to go forward toward that goal. "We're going to make the neit. four yean , beUer &ban the last four yean1" •Niloo told the kickoff fund-raising event lor.tht 1B14 colJiresslonal campaign. But planners said the turnout wa1 far below the number of contributor• ex- !"'Cled and that the dinner might grou !\ltle more than half the $1.4 .mnlion usualfyriliO<I bi the off•year GOP gala. , N~ l!>8Y have alluded to the low tumOUt ··When he nld, 111 shall 1lways i<m-this group tonight a.m. as two student:i on thei r way to Marco Forster Junior High School notic- ed the body as they walke<! to school. The site was about 100 feet away from J)el Obispa Road and a few-hundred yards from Blue Fin Drive. The remains were easily visible from the highway. on~~~aW:! ::~t t~t ~·!~~co~ signs of "severe trauma" on the corpse. The John Doe victim was described ,as having medium-length, dark-black hair and wearing a marcon sweater over a white t-shirt, bright blue pants, a n d square-toed shoes. Investigators at the scene seal.Ed off a wide area to protect any evidence. The probers spent hours trying to evaluate impressions made by vehicle tires \n the soft soil. The body was lying on a small triangu- lar island surrounded by narrow dirt roads used as access to the fannlands. There was strong speculation that the body may have been dumped sometime before dawn . Depending on thole ruiinp all or part, of the 4,590,000 lllllra of Irvine Company. srock now held by the Irvine FoundatloR- might be markeled. . This stock equals a 54.5 percent aio-· trolling lntere!t In the land develapment and ranching llnn with oper1llool In· Orange County, the Imperial Valley and. Montana. .•', Strike a note for the hearty robust look .. .of Country ~lish. '1/1 ""· CtllOP"f' a.cl I . Li119•ri• Ch.it c. o. •••• , $]49.00 D. Twit1 Mirror•. $219.00 ••ch $479 .00 E. Arntoir• $159.00 BISHOPSGATE BY $15.00 $549.00 H.J.GAl\l\ElT fURN11lJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Optft Moo .. Thon. & F<I. Eves. ., \ 11 ? <1 •' ' " : 'fv • . ' ,' ,• ·, ·. .. n:member that when tbe aolng got tough )'Oii hima In there. ''nie llnest steel hao to 10 thnlucb the hotteal Ore. And let me tell yru, this room ii lull of the finest steel tonlglll" 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA. CALIF. 046-0275 ,- •• I t' .~LY "LOT * Eccentric •• Remembers I Two Bars NE:\V YORK (U PI ) -The regulars at two ;tashlooable ban frequented by Douglas S. McKelvy all had a good word for ~ late 0 great, brllllant, witty, .• feDel'OUS and kind friend ." , ~vy, a 1953 Yale graduate and a 1-'-~,,.__iiinlwiidl·a1,.. -by Iriben'lince, liid willed $1J)loo to be med al the two bar• "to ~the cost of liquid relreobmetlts for tbeit patrons, until such sums be ex- baul&ed ti : 1be two young. dilldren f r o m McKM1T• fin! marriage gol about 11 . millJon eadJ. McKelvy, a Pittsburgh naUve, died in Barbodoo, West Indies March II. -e 'IJPt Hfce Do119 to leave malt fn ltfntl Hke tlafs.' ------------~ bar friends and bis first wife said he died of liver complicatiw from chronic alcoholi.sm. THE MEN AND WOMEN who drink ttgU]arly at Chez Madison or Gregory's Comer learned Wednesday afternoon of the windfall. The bar owners weren't quite """" what to do with it. "It's just like Doug to leave me In a bind like this," said Frank Mcilvaine at am .Madiaon. "The BUY had a weird ._cl humor, He got married a second time but put off the wedding date to July 11, Baatille Day. "We11 tbink ol something to do with the money, though. Someone already suae.ted ·renting Yankee Stadium, fill- ing the place, arid buying everybody one drink." . 1'bere were no firm plans. at Gregory's Place either. Nonnan Silver, the owner. asked patrons to sign a guest book in case he d,edded to invite them for some kind of McKelvy tribute. ~VER REJECTED a proposal to hold --house with free drinks but With a ncWninaI admission charge which would fO to Alooliollcs Annonymous. "He was a/ great guy, you know," Silver said. "But I used to needle him all the time because he never really did anything with his life. He could have done• much with his brain and money. "You know, maybe this is bis way of doing something, getting his name known in death. It's macabre." McKelvy's iriends, -and the y "''re numerous Wednesday, de9cribed hini as a fine person who t11tertalned lavishly in his Upper East Side town house filled with eipensive paintings, good liquor. canned ratUesnake meat, e I e p h an t st.eeks, tiger's milk and other delicacies. McKelvy's first wife, l\irs. Francine Dealey who remarried and moved to Darien, Conn., said her ex-husband was "a fantastl.c person who never got all the love and friends he could have had because he drank too much. A lot of peo- ple took advantage of him." She said she was an alcoholic during their maniage but stopped drinking several years ago after joining Alcoholics Aoooymou s. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtl!~try of tht Daily Pilot Is guaran tttd M ..... .,.F rld•P: II .,.~ d• Ml ~·v• r•~· ~ ..... , S:UI P·"'" c1U ""d ffUr c.,, •Ill •• '''""' •• JIU, C•ll• .,. ,, •• " unlll J:H J.m. S1tur•1y •IHI SuncllJ< If .,.., ff Ml rCttl~t Jtvr ~•PJ •Y f 1.m, Sl!V1'1h J, 1r I 1.m. Sv"4•Y, call 1n• 1 Ul'J win h '""'"' i. Y••· C•ll• art 11•.,. v~lll lf 1.rn. T t l,phonts Hwtllwe•I Mllfttlnflotn ltl<-tllf Wn1rnlllt11r lie C9-lt, Caltl•lt-ltK-, S..~ J••~ CtJKtT•111, o.... hlflt, s..tit lat••· L .. vn• Hltlltl •••• •n""2f ' Tilunday, Mu 10, 197J 5 POW-s Rip Peace ActiV;ists' Vis~~s •• ~· """' ., \ • ' , ~ l , WASHINGTON (UPI! -Five f0rrner American prisoners ot war ha\'$ told CongreSI that visits from U.S. peace » Uvlsts, Including actma Jane Fond&, ln- creued their 111fferlng, daml!ged their moral< and -led North Yletnam'• determination lo ccntlnue the war. - In testimony before the Houle ln"1'n& Security Committ.e Wednqlclay r the POW& described how they and others were tortured and otherwlJe presiured by tlteir captors to meet with vwtlng U.S. anUwar groups. They said that alter the villtors left, some POWs were "punished for deviating from the ap. proved script." Familiar Pose The five pllota -four from the Navy lltd one from the Air Foroe -described their treatment while •peaking In 1upport ol proposed legislation to restrict travel by Americans to any country at war with the Unlt.d Stalts, NA VY CMDR. DA vm Holfman 'o! $an Diego u1d be waa ''pmooally tortured to meet a delegation that eame to oor camp in February, tm" -two months after hll plane wu sbot down. Hoffman said tha North Vietnamese convinced htm to meet with the delega· Uon by.making him stand..OJLa.cbair...wlth his broken arm tied to a colling beam. ' . He aal4 the chair wu repeatedly kicked • -'" they let In that country ...,.. Navy LI. Cmdr. Thomas HaD Ill<! out from under him, CommW11$1& or Commun ls t sym-visltlng_peace activists "delln!te!y had a Holftllan aald be and Glben were potlilzersl' t de~ ellecl an t11.'' "pro-ed" to recite p re p a re d Air ,,_ c.p!, Lorry CUrlpa cl Hall, lleld captive for ....,. a.n nw. answers to questions from their visiton Scoltodale, Arllt., tOld lbe lawmaken be yean, aid be Uved wltb prtooaon who which """ •Pl"""_!!l__!p .advaoce oUbe wu bit repea!Odly --be reluled-IA> wore ''JlreuureO and torlttred io-oee mettflli. lcree to tell a Womm'• Strike for Peace deloptJom and In one Instance · llte)' CMDIL EWIN !JllllMAH: who spet1t group that U.S. bollllli Wm beJni alllled torturod a man for poor peiformance" five YWI In, ca11tMty, laid that in at civilian tarfet,. lief.on villton. Septamber, ltef, 60 WU "torlttred fairly l . "~people were allowed to COQte I badly" boeause;be refuled to meet a 'Tll!Y (PEACE GROUPS) gave aid over at will and mtlte anU-U.S. peace delegat!Olt. and comlorl to the North Vletnameoe _ statementa • . • and Ibey (Norlb Vlft. .: "OUr moralo wudeflnltoly Iowerod by and prolonced tlte -·" carripn,aald. n-)-thoochl tbese people Amerlcans vllllitlcJiiJJ'lhJ W......," wuJmpriloned alive Yem.And re-tecl__lhe-lllljao.COllMllllll in-oar Sbtonan said. "It la my opinia1i .t11a·m1y seven months. oountl'f,'' he aald. • ' Po•eidOia Blown Apirt Navy Missile Misfir~s N~ar Soviet Spy Ship ABOARD TIIE USNS RANGE SEN- TINEL (UPI ) -A Poseidon missile fired from a submerged submarine -whipped violently out ol control and blew apart and hit the Atlantic Ocean in full view of a Russian spy ship Md 200 guests of the U.S. Navy. One section of the errant missile ptung. ed straigbt down, trailing a bright yellow name, and splashed into the sea only four or five miles from this spectator. crowded tracking ship. A second piece cartwheeled into the ocean several secoo~ later. The incident happened · Wednesday evening. A few minutes after the failufe, the Russian ship pu! a small boat in tbe water in an apparent search for debris nonnally expelled ,from the top ol the taunch tube when a missile is fired. 'Ibe sub and tbe Range Sentinel returned to port, leaving the Soviet vessel in the launch area. -Russian ship messaged this vessel by !lashing light and noted the anniversary of V-E day by saying: "Congratulations on the day of the ~ ' casion ol our joint victory over Fucilt Germany." Navy officers aboard the Range Sen- tinel replied: "Great tilings are acoompliahed wben our peoples work together. May our cooperation in space exploration prove as fruitful." . ' ' "' "' THE 34-F'OO'I' Poseidoo, carrying a dummy warhead, popped out cl one of tbe Stim>on's 16 submerged launch tubes, ignited normally and roared Into the cloody sky toward an AUantic target .,... more than 1,500 mileo to the southeast. , But alter about 15 to 20 -of flight, the stubby, blaok and white rocket .me.led off course. It appeared to recover, gained altitude and then began fishtsiling wildly, ils brilliant emaust spewing.from side to side. President Nixon pledged Wednesday night at GOP fund-raisi ng dinfler that he would see that justice is don e in \V at ergate case bu t vowed not to 'let ~candal deler him from other goals. Applause fol- lowed. THE POSEIDON, key to the Navy's nuclear detment force, was launched on what was to be a routine test fligh1 from the USS Henry L_ Stimsoo about 30 miles east of cape Kennedy. The Soviet in· telllgence g a t h e r in g ship, the Zakarpatye, met the sub and the Range Sentinel in intematicml waters and stayed about a mile from the sub through the launching. Range safety officera at cape Kennedy allowed the rocket to perform in this fashion for about a half-minute as it gained altitude and distance from the Rallge Senlinel and the Soviet vessel. Then, 57 seconds alter launch. a radfo - signal was sent to lbe missile which detonated an· emergency exp 1o1 iv e charge and severed the rocket. Direct.or Admits CIA Culpability in Probe WASHI NGTON (AP I -The Central Intelligence Agency's , directot: salll' the CIA was ill-advised-m:--g tving-technical aidf~to highl y-placed White House •1atdes w~ used it to commit a burglary ..... ~ Faced wit h three congressional Probes and clai ms that the CIA has violated the law tha t bars it from covert operations inside the Unl ted States, Director James Schlesinger promises quick refonns. (Schlesinger was selected tqday as secretary of defense). The Capitol Hill investigators are look· Liza Paying Off Mother's Debts LONDON (AP) -Oscar-winning Liza Minnelli, in London for three concert SJ>" pearances , told newsmen she needs the money -to pay off debts run up by Judy Garland, her mother. "I haven't talked about what I'm doing. and I really don't want to go into details now but I lhope to set things str aight for her," said Liza , star of "Cabaret." , Miss Garland died in London in 1969, reportedly owing money in Europe and the United States. Miss Minnelli would not give figures except to say it was "a substantial sum" whidl she has been clearing for more than a yer. "People bad fooled mama and taken advantage of her so , often," she said. ing into ch arges that the CIA helped \Vhite House aides bu rglarize the office of Or. -t.ewis-Fielding:-a--bos-Angele~ psychiatrist who haQ treated Pentagon Papers defendant Daniel Ellsberg. SCHLESINGER'S TESTIMONY before senators Wednesday tra ced a scenario he said began with a July 8, 1971, telephone call to the CIA by President Nixon's chief domestic adviser John Ehrlichman. Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.). chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said the two men in cha:rge of the CIA when it provided a White House aide with disguises, fraudu1en t identity papers, a camera and tape recorder will be interrogated as quickly as possible. The men are fonner CIA director Richard Helms and former Deputy Director, Gen. Robert Cushman, com· mandant of the Marine c.orps. "The most charitable thing you can say about this was that there was some carelessness," McClellan said after a closed-door session with his inte.iligence operations panel, a subcommittee of the, appropriations committee. THE SENATE AkMED Services Com· m.ittee has called Schlesinger and other witnesses to appear before it Friday. And the House subcommittee charged with overseeing CIA activities also has in· dicated it may begin an investigation. Schlesinger did not discuss accusations made by convicted conspirator James W. McCord that White House pressure was pUI oo McCord · and other Watergate defendants to implicate the CIA in the Watergate bugging. Accord Seen For European Troop Cuts -VIENNA (AP) ~ A joint U.S.·Soviet- anoouncement tod ay sigqaled a bre ak· through id lorig deadloCked talks on an East-West conference ' on reduction of troops in Europe. The representatives of the two superpowers announced that the fi rst plenary session or preparatory talks will open here Monday. Evidently some-sort· ['-_I_N_S_H_OR_1'._ •• _. _.) of compromise made the joint an· nouncement possi~e. One source suggested that compromise had been achieved on several issues, in· el uding the status of Mo s cow 's Hungarian allies at a forces reduction conference. • Ramse11 Clark quits NEW YORK (AP) -Former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark says be has left a local law finn "to devote all my time to matters that I thought were important." Clark, active in the anti-war movement in recent years, said Wednesday he "wanted gnater freedom" and would spend his time teaching, lecturing, and practicing some law, mainly in cases iJl.. volving constltuUooal rights. •Kissinger in London Before the rocket was fired, the ) Lebanon Troops Battle BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Leballtse troops batUed Palestinian guerrillas from Syria into the early hours today along a SS.mile fiont in the eastern Bekaa Valley near the border, a senior army officer said. · -• He said the fighting stretched from the ai'!n1's main garrlm-town ol Marjp,youn in the south to tlte vicJnlty of Baalbeck, in . the northeast. In many oareas, including the towns of Hasbaya and Rachaya, villagers took to the hills armed With Wcrld War II rifles to support army jets 'all!I~ at· tempting to repulse "a '"""9lv.t Influx" of guerrilla reinforcements ~from across the Syrian border, the olfl~ said. The number of invaders from Syria was not known, but a force of 5,000 Palestinians came over. during the fighting last week between ·the Lebanes~ army and the guerrillas based 'in Lebanon. tttat force clashed with the ariny in southeast Lebanon, then return· ed to Syria after a cease-fire was .reach- ed in Beirut. - YASm ARAFAT the titulli' l....ier 1ot all t1te Palestinian' f~ mqi,im In- direct appeal from hil ·belilqUlrters In Beirut to lite Syrian government to pull the invaders beck. In a message to the oamacu regime, • ·he s8.id ~Joth spite of our human and material lo.sses, we have bandaged our wounds arid accepted a ~fire in order to re.establish mutuai confidence with sister Lebanm." The ce..e-rire ord~ alter lighting between the army and lbe guerrillal m the outskirts cl Beirut Monday night and Tuesday •weared to be holdbW 1n ·lbe capital. One burst. of gunfire was heard betoroi dawnj on fashionable Hamra st:reel Police said they fired m a car that ran lbrough a roadblock,' but the drivtr esciped. I ' Beirut's international airport was still clostd. Airline sources said 22 planes had b!!ed diverted to Cyprus in the past 24 hburs and unloaded BOO pa.sseng.,. lbel't. '29 Cambodian Soldiers Killed • Neai: Phnom Penh PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) -At- tacks oo government positions north and south of Phnom Penh have ldlled _19 soldlen, military_ sources re,Wled today. It was one' of the larger goverm:nent death tolls-reported in ....,,1 montha. I Fair Over Most •of U.S. LONDON (UPI) -, Presidential ad- viser Henry A. Kissinger coofemd today with U. Alexis Jol]nsoo,'cltie!_American negotiator at the Strategic Al1!ls IJmlta- tion (SALT) talks, before resuming p1eetings with British government ol· ficlals. Kissinger and Johnson met over breakfast at Kissinger's hot.cl. ' Field reports aaid an enemy force Wednesday night ovemn a detsclunent guarding a bridge 91' miles llOUth of the capital, killing 18 of the defenders and wounding five. Thuriderstorms Touch Pacific Northwest, Florida • Rap Broum Seuteneed NEW YORK (AP) -Black militant H. • T IAlt •• .. JllAMCISCO ., ,.,, ... ~-=-~;p ......... "' .. . I ,.IAtN lj~fe1PNOW ~ ...... ~MtoWt:tJ. •tow v.s. s •••• ,.. l hUlldentonn• r i.rmbltd Kt'Olt tetl· ftNd lrttl ften'I tilt ,Kiiie: Norttl'Nftl to N.w £n11l1nd t nd FlorkU todeJ, b.!'J mot! (If ltll Nllon ll'l!O)'td . ftli 1 .... mlkl wtt tllll". • Wlndt """ d odted If .0 f!lllH W hour •I Om111t, Neo .. •nd SS m.p.11. 11 Rap Brown has been sentenced to S..to-15 Wist Palm 8Hch, Fla., durlno years in prison for his roJe in the anned thul'lderstorrns Wednesdl\I nlqllt. bbe of A 1w1111r th11 rlDPtd thrOUilh a ro ry a Manhattan bar and the tr1ltel"~rk In • svbVrti south of Mln· lti of I' · the nt•polls·St. P1u1 WtdMldav c1ullld the assau ng a po iceman 1n shootout dNlh of • S·:rtt r<Old boJ •nd lnlUf'ld that followed • his rnolhlr crlllctHJ. • Nine w.r• 1n1urte1 •• tM to!'n~o Two co-defendants received similar dl llro\'t!d 12 ol 1 trllltrt In lht 119rk t Wednesda d the . •nd d•m•Otd °"""'· rwo othtf' l\Hll'ltl sen ences y an sentenc.mg cl°"'f:. wn •IOhi.d In unlrtl Mln-Of a third WU postpc:med to give his at· :!~':n=:,.::n.,,:.no!~ Inch tomeys a chance to produce new Ttlt Mlal1Jlppl V•lltv ..... tHFKI evidence. mort r1ln. tnd fht Ntlloflll WH ltltt Strvlc. rtv!Hd lit ~ .river cmt K tllelule OOW!IWll'CI. Tiit floodofWOtl"1 river w11 "l1oerlno Olf'' ~houl Tht • Op--••--S ........... s1. Loul• district from H•l'lnl~I. fi!o·r ~• _.'IVR Urr-• .-to Ct lro, tll. Thi crest w11 tWOICTIO 511~r\•.i,, fe.1. N.M .. st1tt hlohw1v WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (AP) -~ cr1W$ work~ wtdne~•v to rec~rin11 U.S. marshal who supervised the ., 11r1!ct'I 01 thl 11:10 Grand• to ~l9vt government' -~-tat-~th militant w<'lttr .roslon of 1 dlk• rn !lie north S •.vuuvu ton w1 Stt11on 01 11it citv. Indians wbo occupied the hamlet of Cnnstnl Weather Wounded Knee says it was :r, a job H•iJ suns.hint to111y. Lloht v1rltble Id be do b wlndt nlqhl •I'd !TIOl'nlng hou" btcom· as cou ne r t e 1no wt1ttl'IY 12 to '' k"lltt !n 1f1t>r· circumstances. . · noon• today Ind Frld1y. HIOh todl'( 70. Wayoe ~·burn told ne m w~ C0111t1t lt'm0tr1tvr1i ''"" ftOl'fl U \AX WS eft w- to 70. Inland lll'lll*l turtt r11111t from nesday It was a diUicult policing pro. SJ to 7s. water temperitvrt ,,, blem, "but I feel the way we: bandled it S11n, Moon. Tide• was auccess!ul. - SKond 111011 T~~.~~.~~v s:12 p.m .... ; 'n1'There ~ several dilrereot ways a Stcono 1ow .......... 11:2:9 p.m, 1.i co rootationol.tblr-typecanbehandled. First hloh .. ~~·.~~~ •:os '·'"' l.• I will admlt at times other . :-83" Ge" 111r" 1ow .......... 12:11 tt.m. t.• curred to me. However, I dUI t bel1eft SMOM "'"' .......... •:• o.m. 5•1 we could ask for a better IOlutlOn than Sun l !Nt 5:M t .11'1. lttt 1:4 '·'"-ha ., Moon ltMt 1:.u p.m ..... t :Ol 1.n'I. we ve. • Forty nilles north of the city on Higbw&y 5, the Communists made two assaults or.government troops trying to dislodge a strong force of insurgents. The command said 11 of its aOldiers Wert kill· ed and 18 were wounded. Higbway '5, the principal route from the rice bowl in northwe9tem C.mbodia, bas been blocked by insurgents for more than two -inooths. The lit llripde , secured about IOYen mlJ,ea of the rood I last week, _but a sizable stretob II still beld by the Contmunlltl, and rice oon- voys are wtOble to get tltiwp, IN ~ VIETNAM, tlte Viet Coog on Weclnolday reftJaed to accept MO civilian Pl-. a!t.r 10 otbe'rs ICbedul- ed to be --demanded to remain under the Salgoo government, the South Vietnamese oommand ~· A meeting of the Jolbt Mllltary Q)m. mlssloa's IUbcommltlee on )Xlsollen ol war was called to settle the dispute, which cqiild stall the allJady delayed ex- cbane of cl_yillan priaooen, ' A !oulh Vietnamese llPOkestnlll Ill<! 10 or the 111 POW• in lbe ltrll boot eroa1ng the Thadl Han River In Quin, Tri pro- vince "!bd to_. under -mnenl f<Xl_trol, and tlte V)el Coog rtpc Ml!I>-1 "'""" 911 the --cl tlte rlnr ''IOI I imld" imcl refUMd to .... ~ ot lhii I ~. ' ·~ . ' 7 · .. • 1 VOL 66, NO. 130, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES ENSENADA, Mezico (IJ') -From Melicans came taleJ . of .. lollf-hajred, screamlng Americans a rampqe., rip- ping fire extingubhen from hotel· walls, urinaUnr on carjets, kicking and pun- cblll( boles in ojoora1 throWlng ·l>ottle1.' From Americans came •toiles of police pilln( people ~ cfeep inlo a jail cell apd pouring ~rnan excrement on them, of purported innocent bystandera swept oil . U..• sb'eets, a n d of property con· fi.scllfd bf officers and never seen again. 1be'1 reports continued Wednesday as ' • •• this Baja California coutal c I I y reO.>Vered from a wild aix -hour brawl Sallp-darnf&btinw~bM~nooswere reported injured and 190 Americans were arrested. Police aaid foor remained Jn jail W~ay. Cote D. Darnall, ll, of Ganlen Gr9Ye, and Llndaey L. Greent, 18, of Seal Beach, wm ~ed with assau!Un( policemen, and Palrlck J. She(idan, tr, and Thomu A. Garcta; 19, both of Carlsbad, were charred with narcotics posaesaion. . ~ - • ORAN&i COUNTY, CAL~ THURSDAY, ·MAY 10, 1973 ' About •4,9119 ,.,..., Am~c:am ·were lo ""'eNda SatUrday tori lbe end .of • yacht .nee and> tllo celelnlJon of Clocq do Mayo. Juan Zamora, manarer of lbe Bahia Hglolo told a "l!Qrler the .tr®bie. starl<d shortly aflu DOOD when the yachtsmen left and the "hippies" ar- rived. • • "At first, lbe hlppleJ just ut around tile pool, 'drtiliq/ .. be flid. '"l'bOn mere came untU we 9000.b:ad .about W peraona around the pool. .• One boy let out aydl, and someone ·answere<J him. Then ,the people were all yeUinr. They rot excited, and ,....... tllrew a bottle into the pool. Otbenl started tosalng lll1nrs. too. ''One ho)' stilted to take his 'pants off, . ·'··· . blil we had !be pojlce take rum away. Then a big (II)' thttw a girl into U.. pool." Zamon said he asked the youth not to do u aaabi bl# was shoved a:r .. He said the )'Ojllh then i.nded off a dozen pollcemon who were trying to grab him, and the violence started. Americans rac- ed through hotel hallways in groups of six and aeve.n, tearing arid b r e a t i n g whltever lhey-coutd, 1.amara said. '!be hotel and Husaonl'• Bar ~ere heavily damaged in the meloe. "We slept three men deep tn ·shifts," be said. "I've bad five boun' aleep in four days." From tht other side, Bill Brower, 21, of San Diego, sald police craimned 4.1 men btto an otght by lZ jail cdl and poured human excrement through a hole in the colling. "I had been In town just two hours and • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks N TEN <:;ENTS was jµs t walking on the street when lhey grabbed me." said the shaggy-haired Brower. "It cost me $40 to get out. If t eveit come back, lt wtll be with a gun ." Other youths said they we re clubbed for no apparent reason and had to sur· render watches , rings and money which wasn't returned. A police spokesman said jailers gave receipts to released prisoners, who were supposed to wa lk to a nearby police sta· lion and claim t~lr property. But he said there may have been problems because of the language barrier. • • • an . ' . ans Greek Loan· Nixon Brother Denies Charge . By L. PETER KRIEG Of, "'9 o.lty Pli.t ltd Pre!id<nt 'Nii:oo's brother, F. Donald N'IJ:M .of Newport· Beach, today den'ied that the Marriott CorporaUon got a $10 miJl1"n Joan from the Greek government ~me · be is a vice president .of the bot<! and lhlpplnf company. The' Atheils -per To Vuna di-today J!ial a B""""ment-owned -recently ..._ the loan to uie * * * Kalmbach One Of 20 to Talk To Senate GrQup Fnm Wire Se"lctt Newport Beach attorney Herbert W. Kalmbach, President NIJ:on's penonal lawyer, will be amonr 20 top Republican campaign officials called to testify before the Senate's special Watergate .,,. vest1gatlog commltlee. Kalmbach, who Is alleged to ha .. used his Newport Center office and nearby Big canyon Country Club to engineer payoffs for GOP spying activities, w a s unavailable for comment this momtng. "He is out of town and isn't available by telephone," Ann Harvey, his personal secretary, said this momlng . Kalmbach Is In top Watergate company on the list of witnesses who will appear during the o~g round of public bear- ings that begin nerl Thursday. 'Ille list In order of scheduled ap- pearance, includes: Robert Ode1, who worked for the com- mittee for tho 11<>-electloo of the f'mi. dent; Police Sgt. Paul Loper, who was among the arresting officers when the Watergate conspirators were caug!JI Ill Democratic headquarters; convicted con- splralor James W. McCord ; Sally Harmony, former, secretary to convicted conspirator G. Gordon Liddy; Robert Reisner, who worked In the youth sect'ion ol CRP; E. Howard Hunt, who pleaded guilty in the Watergate case and later told a grand jury of involvement in the Ellsberr burglary; Llddy ; Hugh w. Sloan, treasurer of the fund·ralslnr arm Of the Ni1on campalgni Herb Porter, the com. mlttee'a scheduling director; Powdl Moore, a CRP official; Jeb Stuort, Magruder, deputy director of CRP; Jonner White House aide Charles Colson ; John W. Dean, Ill, White Ho... C01f118el fired 'by N t x o n ; . Kalrilbacb; ·Fred LaRue, a ...,ia1 coa- sultantllp lonllel' Atty. Gen. John N. Mit- chell; dhctor ot; CRP until two weea (loo KALMBACH, Paao Z) Slf.YL A.B LOOK, PA.GE 9 TOD AY A ~Ill brlelin( on the United Slatoa' Skylab mlalm appears on Page t tf today'1 Dally Pilot. -.ts l'aul Wdll, Olarle1 • ~ and Joaepil.J(erwin tmbort MOlldo1 GO a new klrid of """"' ...,_, What will thl• 28 days of their u... be UaT The condlllOOI - ood, oll~ and means, rescue Jlrlteg)' and mort -are ~. --lobller 1heraldoe bt . orbl~ T e'leplwne Fiend Hit,s Huntington Earery for $400 'lbO pbantooi'!_eleph\'O< baDdlt struck for the filth time In less than tbtte weeka Wednesday nl(ht, lhl> time bitting Fiii' ttR'• Ice cream pll'lor in Hunl!D(too Beach. 1be bandit, wbo sometimes identifies himself u "La Brique," followed his earli..-ibetbod of operation in netUng between $(00 and $4M from tbe restaurant at 16301 Beach Blvd., pollce said. ' ·The pii!latiJm 'oalied Farren'1 at about 9:15 p.m.. and , told manager James Ms/lallY that bli partner had a blah--rod rifle., and that Mdilllf or !Iii =--1d be allot If--.. no1 foilowed. He told McNally to plD "all the IDOlle!'" in a bo( and loave· 11 next to a trash bin in the reor Ill the restaurant, police aid. ,,,. E1111'!11 GO Illa pllaoe, and ""-nlamed ... ..... told, "Very IOod-ou.lll .. dooe....,. well." lkNaJb' -told to ltaJ by Iha plioill for 11 .. mnm. He called ~ lm- wdlate17, .Ind -Ibey -the bar ct maoey .... (Olle. ID eerller ~ the blndlt bit a Fountain Valley m.-for $1$, a H,... lillltOn Beach hamburger 1lland lot '1,1119 and a Colla Miii& hamburg• lltlnd lar 1150.-' • In aoe ..,. the -I <lilied a liquor a1ere clotk ID •ftuO!lllba -· but didn't pkt ap tilt ......,, • tbe~ .. '."'1---tn ~of • • • •· Four Named ln$200,000 Vesco Gift •• , ~ldest Su~jeet 8ex Course at Golden West? Psycli 1111 may well bocoma the DlOll ~ course at Hwilin&ton .Beal:h'• _. Weot Collep. llut before It does, b-of tilt Cout Community Colloge District want to llllllJ t1ie .. bjOCI I ' bit tbelmel .... Tbe loibloct of•llla coune Is .. L 1 "-I ti tht eew1 l•~k count, .hlcb carrlet no ')ll'erequiliiea, was w!tNliild by -w_, DlCbl Tbey aid they want to study the courae -ftnl AB!<ED BT -wllat Pl)'cholasJ '1115 (Human Sexuality) Is all about, dlllrld ~ Nonnan Walaoa rfpned, "Tl's not my area of speclaliza· tian.'' . • Golden Wiii CoDe President R. ~y Boyce came to Walaoa'• a'id, exp1ew,. Illa~ "This ls DOI reallJ a .... and •me!llnc Interest. It'• as old uman." Dr. Boyce then cletcrlbed the coune u "•~thing," adding that It would -,ate llumlll -lllJ hn I, JllYl(OkJSl<al and ~"'-' . . ,, • - INDlcTMl"'1' RITURNID Former 4cf Mllchell Two Lawmen Wounded In Coast Drug Gunfight By TOM BARLEY Of ""' ....,, ,. .. ,,.,, Two lawmen were felled by gwifire and other member• of a .multi-agency nareotics task force were narrowly miss-• ed by whistling bullets Wednesday rught in a O:>sta -,..:esa-RuntJn&'M*I Beach area drug raid that developeij 1J1to a gun bat· tie. ·• . . Whittier·police Lt. Bradley Hoover, 32. is reported today by C.OSta' Mesa Memorial Hospital ofilclals as 11recov~­ lng satlafactorlly" from a bullet ·WOWld just below the heart . .. Fedenl narooti<s •rent Leslle Kenney, 34, received treatment at the aaine hospital for a wound in the rtgllt knee and was allowed to return borne ·after Coast Students Present Artsy Ecological Show Hundredl ol Harbor Area students have proven that tras h can be beautiful. Using nothing but castoff materials, the youngsters have prepared an ecologi cl art show now on display at Fashl,on Island Shopping Cener in Newport Beach. . Displsy1 incl ude a model cUy made from empty cereal boxes, a atin can dinosaur and a six-foot diameter world globe with the conilnents outlined In trash. Newport-Meza achoo! offflctals say not all of the artwork• wert. meant to be symbolic but many came out that way he<ause of the reatrtct'ion"to industrial discardii. throwaway bottl.. and cans. newlp8pera, scrap wood, cloth and met.al and other normally uaeleu waste. • One of the worts on display Is a fish burping out a p!Htlc bottle and lhe slogan, 11We came to Praise OUr World, Not to Bury It." The first dlstrlctwlde "C.staway Cnmlval" will nm through Sunday at.the sbopplDf center. Judging was acheduled today and awardl will he presonled to the best works Saturday afternoon. Ten rrand prizes will he awarded. Five will ro to clalS projects and five for in· dividual best proJecll on each aae level. Second and third prl1.e ribbons also will be awarded and all partlclpanla will he given a certibcate . emergency surgery. Both men were victims of a gun duel that erupted when a !0-member task force In which federal ofllcers were baOlc· ed by Costa Mou and Whittler police 4111i Orange County Sheriff's offlcera mo1id In on the ~ of two Pactnc Avetjl(e homes. \ .:, ' . . ' i ' Lawmen saijt,, WoIJD&l!on. r,,cetiti:d while tbeY. Wt!'\ fiililliir 1118 Paoillffi!l . the Costa Meu alla -lllO ll!O!'.tor~ll.C!i the boundary line that divides CoSta M .. and Huntln(ton .Beach -sen t ~ acrou the.roa'd tO 2201 Pacific. ·- That raid ended with Hoover and Kefi.. ney on the floor Writhing in pain itnd i~r companions moWlg ht to· grab the man ldenUlied as Uie gunman -Blair Daddoo Aldenoo, 25, of that addrm. Officers said Alderaon was quickly disarmed and hustled off to Otanre County Jall with s!J: other persoos swept up_ 1n-tbe raid. Ollicera claimed they seized nearly two pounds of cocaine. Federal arenls today valued the co- caine at about fl(),000, basing the estimate on what the drug would bring to the illicit seller. They said information obtained in Whittler and ~ Angeles led them to , (~ Z SHOT, Pa1e %) Orange ~ .. t we-atJtier , Night and morning low clouds at>d. foS. haz,y IUDlhlne in after· noons. Low tonl(bt in low 50s, high Friday in mid-«ls. INSIDE TODAY A maniacal killer is loos1 soniewhtre in the Wtst Orang•-• Co&mtlf"West Los Anqeles area., e:rpending 111• e.,rg1<1 of fiw latD tnfor«nw ll aQ1111cl<1 with liette information to go on. See PaQt 24 . l , I ' . -- ~• WLY PILOT N Thund1y, Ml) 10, 1973 !•.~---------------~---,. Downzoni qg 1 '0osed Up' ·Tu Newport The door to major zone changes in Newport Beach is all but closed in the wake of strong City Council objections Monday lo proposed downzoning In the city, c.ommunity De velopment Director RJchard V. Hogan said today. -lrut<ed of tying-cbang .. lo the new general plan, Hogan believes, city plan- ners wW concentrate on posajble revisions in existing city wnes with an eye to making them work together more smootllly. "I don't think there will be any • subltantlve downwnlng In the city now," 'Hogon said. "That Is a closed doer. ' · · "Instead, we will probably work on • new or reviled standanls within the ex- • istlng :rones and conakier ways of reduc- ing the confiicts between them that have cause;d many of our problems," he said . Hogan said recent developments at Ci· • ty Council and planning commission ·meetings lead.him to believe the general •·. plan time element that used to be so crucial has been played down. Under state law, cilies have until June 30 to complete a general plan and make . their zoning conronn lo it. Planning com- . nllssioners have been meeting weekly for three months in an effort to do both at . •once and meet the deadline. "It appears what the commi.aloners . are saying now is io get the gerieral plan : . clone flrst and then tau the necessary action to make the zoning conform in tbe :. .best possible way," Hogan said. Assistant City Attorney David Baade has offered the opinion that the worst a ccurl could do u the city misset the : deadline Is to order It lo cootlnue lnaking , good progress. He said it Is doubtful any • punitive action would be taken. Some offidals also reel that the deadline will be extended by the legislature for another six months. It has • already been extended once from the · Of'lglnal Jan. I, 1973 deadline. · Hogan said he is fairly certain the planning com.mission will discuss the · · oouncU's dlctum on downwnlng at Its ,.meellllg May 17 and will probably go back to councilmen with a plan of action · by the May 29 council meeting. "It ls a little dllllcult to say right new ·, what will happen but I think the leut the oommluloo will do LI continue diJCUSling 0 •• 'l'e9iled ltandards in each of the zones, I I . ., u_, said. ··· lie said there are a number of conflicts .,IDll lnequllles between the various ZOil<• wblcb place certain restrictiOlll on development In me zone and no restric· tkllll m the same development in ~ another zone. , "I tbink commissioners will still con· : alder aome of the propooed parking, ' · helsltl and oquare footage standards we have been talking about," be said. He also admitled the possibility that . comml11loners will .. rtously llUdi aa . overlay of building design criteria t ot · would be placed on each zooe setting re- quirements such as open space and landscaping. Hogan said the montM of debate on . downwnlng -primarily In old Corona • 1del Mar and on the Balboa Pe:nimula - has served at least one valuable purpose. t · "There has been some real concern •.with density in the city and wilhoot all · the bearings and public reaction, the : ;commission and council wouldn't have : \been nearly as knowledgeabl.e as they are ':now," Hogan said. ''Now they know what the people think ." : Hogan said the downzoning argument · bas also brougbt together widely divergent members oi the general public .. 'who are now working together on possi· ble deru;ity alternatives in their areas. He was referring to Balboa and C.Orona del Mar residents who have been given time to meet togelher and come up with .ideas for preserving lheir neighborhoods. They are due to come back to the.com· · mis.!ion this summer. Pr opane Car Wins DAVIS (UPI) -A propane-powered car built by a student team from lhe Oregon University of Technology was declared the winner of a fOO.mile col· legiate, antismog rally. The winning driver ln the 10-Car field was Glenn Kl· Inger. ' ' I t OUN•I COAST M DAILY PILOT T1'11.0r•,,.. Co9sl DAILY PILOT. wlil<I wflld1 II Comblntd ,,.. Nt'Wl-Pnn , Is Pllbl!llled • .,. llM Of•~ eo.11 Pllblllll"'8 ~1''f. SciY· r1I• .iltlonl •re Pl,ll:lllllled, MOl'ld•V !l'lrougll Frld•'f, lot CCKll M1s1, Ntw?H! Bftt ll, HW!llnf... ••KIV'"-ll!n V111...,, U9vn1 flMd\. ln-1"'/~lttllldl •nd Sin (lf lMl'I'-/ S... J111n C.plstr-. A l ill(llt <etlontl •111on 11 PllOlhfMd .sanrns.l'I •nd Sundin. 1"n. pd nclplll pvOlllt/llng pi.nt ho II lJO WHI ··~ StrNI, co.ti ~ <Ahlom~. fKl'. a.Ntt N •. w.ti:1 P~MIPIJt>lilller J•tk It. Curley Vkt ~ end ~.1 ~.,..,. ni-•• KHfil ·-'"''"''' A.. Mu,pMn1 M1119tt ... £-ttvr l . '•t1r Kri11 N~ 1""11 Cll'f L:lllOr ........ .... °""- JJJJ N1wport l11l1'11ri Meill111 A44rt'la: r.o. 101 1175, t26•J --C..11 ~:»I W.I lt'f l lrttJ .......,. 9-"i m ..,., 4- ....,._.. a.ctl: lt11'S 9tW1 ........_,,. ... ( ........ 1 at Hw1fl El GM!• fl•I T••••111 f7141 '4Jo4JJI a ........ 11 rlsl I M2·1671 °""'""'· !!!" 0.-. c...._" f'Wllllfllnt ~-I""' """" ...... lllwlfl,..,., ........... ....... ., • ~'"""""" -.in ....... ,., •• ". wftlllvt Nlldal ,,.,. ..... " -----.. ._;.. _,.... ... •c.t•MIM. C......... .....,...._ IW tMT• aM .,_...., W -II II.II l'lllflllllyl .._..._,. f .... _.....,,._ Driver Dies i n C:rash Fer llppe r ••1 • • Wildlife Ref uge,!~i ~ , .. Decision Delayed : By JAClt.8ROllACK Of ""' o.llY """ ,,.,. Orange Coonty supervisors Wednesday studied the cunpllcaled lslue of the development • .C a wlldiife -rve and "TecrealiDlrlrt!r1Jnhe Up"'l(ewp0n Bay but tool: no action. JJOIS)ble aource• for funds, they would be · dlffJcult lo obtain. • James McCarmJck, of the C&llfomia Department of Fish and Game said the . Upper Bay Is the moot valuable wetland ,area for wlld!lfe In the state. Robert W. Lee of Huntington Beach was crushed to death by the cab of hla rig this morning when it careened elf. the San Dit!go Freeway between Mac- Arthur Boulevard and Jamboree Boulevard in Ir· vine. The 21-year-<>ld Lee, 6901 Breeland Drive, waa southbound on the freeway when the accident tciok place about 7:15 a.m. California llighway Patrol of. ficen are trying to determine the cause ol. the crash. Further cooslderatlon was delayed un- til a meetlnjJ of the Field Ccmmitlee on the Upper Ba,y 1n San .Franci1ce oa May 25 . Web!ler Otts, BJ>OClal asslatanl lo the Secretary of the IDlertcr and cbalrman of lhe Field Omunlttee, ouUined the fO&ls and actions of the .committee since lls formation a year ago. Judge Told FBI Bugged Ellsberg ' ' • ' ' Coast Invaded Tiny 'S ailor s of Sea' Float In "Sailors or the sea" - tiny ocean fio:Jing animals are making their spring appearance along the south Orange Coast. ' According to some coast watchers, ar· rival of the sailors mean summer !s nigh. sailors of the sea or "by the winds sailors" are members of the genus velelle. They are football shaped, about the size of a silver dollar, with a tiny sail fixed to their backs. Cltings of the tiny marine in· verte~ates have been made in San 2 Young Victims Of Traf fi e Crash Id entity Revealed Two Anaheim boys who died Wed· nesday In a three-car accident in Garden Grove . were identified today by the Orange County Coroner's Office. They are Todd Harris, 11, and Scott · Heck, 5, both of an apartment complex at 234 W. Orangewood Ave. Investigators said the two boys and four others were being driven to school in a station wagon because they missed the school bus. They were students at Stod· dard Elementary School in Anaheim. Clemente, Laguna Beach and Newport Beach, according to lifeguards. Laguna Beach Ufeguard Jim 'Slluffer says the sailors U1Ually follow the cur- renll and light windl alOllg the blgb seas. They are unlque In that their saI1' are de!lgned to let them "tack" 45 degrees to the left during light southerly winds. When winds become strong, the sailors apparemly lose c0ntrol acd float lnlo shore, said Stauffer. After a few day1 on the beach Ibey dry out, leaving ~ fragile skeleton behind. Varieties along the coast or Japan have adapted sails exactly opposite in design lo account IOI' wind coQditlonS\ juat the reverse of those on the P8clflc 4oast. Local sailors, Staulter reported, do sling, but the -effect on humans Is mini· ma!. Many persons mistake them for the poisoootl5 Man-o-Wl!I', add~ Stauffer. Thooih the two animals are relajed, they are not the same. Those who have studied vellele, he said, agree that the first sighting of the animals in late spring means summer is close at hand. Stauffer said they usually make another appearance in August during periods of stroo,g westerly winds, and then do not appear until the next spring . College District Resolves Issue The accident occurred when the station wagon driven by Freya Murphy, 31, who Jived In the same apartment complex, collided with a refrigeration truck at the ii>terl"'~91~f Orfniewood and West 9t~t,4 JJi' GJ1.rd The wagon then · craihed in!O e front end of~ iB . Over Channel 50 ped at the intersectlon. ·, ( ii{ , ~ "' Officers said tif two boys • · · Were -f ~1ty representatives from both riding in the frQiit seat of the vehicle <;>ranee Coast and Golden West C.OUege were thrown tQ the pavement an~ ·.t1Ued. expressed satisfaction Wednesday night 1be truclc was .,driven by . William with ~ administratioo's progress en Fletcher, 81, of Fountain Valley and· the clearing up ttie C2lannel 50 controversy. thlid ~ar by Redee Samuelson, 43, of But wlJlle.{'eacllng poslUvely both Peg· Anaheim. gy Staggo, Golden West faculty aenate chainnan, and Phillis Ba!ille, her Or· 3 Newp,ort Beach Major Artei:i~ . To Get Asphalt Newport Beach Public Works Director Joseph Devlin announced today three major arteries in the city will soon get a layer of asphalt sealer under a $19f000 contract awarded this week. Jamboree Road from Bayside Drive to Palisades RQad, San Joaquin Hills Road from old MacArthur Boulevard to Jam- boree Road and Dover Drive from Pacific Coast Highway to 17th Street will all get the smoothing treatment before July. The project consists of mixing fine rock dust with road oil and spreading it in a thin layer over the streets, Devlin said the process sinooth.s over rough sec- tions and fills in eroded parts or the as phalt. The contract was awarded to Ted R. Jenkins of Long Beach , the low bidder among five competing firms. City officials. said the work will be .done on a lane-by·lane basis and little traffic will be disrupted. They said the sealer is a quick-drying mixture and tr8ffic will be abl~ lO run on it in a matter or hours. F ro111 Pqe l 2 SHOT ••. Orange C.OUOty in a move to snulr out what they said Is a growing trade in the forbidden drug . MulUple charges of possessing cocaine • and aelllng the drug were filed against six other perSOM today awaiting court action in Orange County Jail. They are identified as April Mai Hutchinson , 23, of 117 36th St.; DeMls Lee Whitson, 25, of 1312 W. Balboa Blvd., both of Newport Beach; ~Uchael William Moore. 26, 2201 PacUic Ave.; Robert Anthony Contorelli, 26 , 2188 Pacific Ave.; James Lee Johnson, 22. 244 Knox Place, all of Costa Mesa and Robert Klaa s Wit· board, 20, of Buena Park. Aldenon was booked Into Jail on two counts of assault with a deadly ~·eapon on a police officer . Orange County Sherill's officers Intend lo Beel< a complain! naming all aeven de!miacu from the dlltrict allorney 10-da,y. ange'Coul connterpart, said further com- menb would be ofrered later. MUnwhUe, they are reViewing an inch· thick admirfstraUon feply to 74 questions raised by 'flOJ..lty !)1Cmbers over the operation of t h e district's educational TV st.ition, KOCE. • KOCE became embroiled In a con· troversy a month ago when teachers aJleged they .were aot privileged to in· formation concerning the district's TV policy. • . FratnPlffleJ MITCHEU ... he talked with Stans only once about the money. Stans Is one of four per...., lndlcled in New York today oo cbarl'S of conspiring to 8lTall(e the secret dellvery of $200,000 of lhal quarter.mlllkn>dollar contribution lo the Nixon campslgn. The $250,000 contr1but1on was made in two parts: 'lbe first, constsllng of $200,000 in $100 bills was banded over to Stans April 10, Im, and.,.., not publicly reported. 1'1le ottier $50,000 was made by check later in the campaign and was reported. Stans returned the entire $250,000 to Vesco Jan. 31, more than two months after the SEC filed a four~t civil complaint against Vesco alleging that he and 41 defendants c:onsplrod to loot $224 million from a foreign-based mutual fund . Jan. 31 was more than two months after·Cook sald Simi began his series of conver$8tions with Cook about the poss!· ble source of the money. Mexico Thwa rts Youth Protests MEXICO CITY (AP) -Several · thousand riot police broke up scattered atte1npts by young people to demonstrate on Mexico'• main boulevard Wednesday night. Several yoonplers were Injured and there were many arrests. Students from the University of Mexico and the National Polytechnic Institute had p!Jnned a dem0111traUon In !llpport of students at unlversitY of Puebla, where four studellll were killed May I IJt clashes with police. The Mexlco City government, claiming lo have lnforinaUon that , Communists were dlstrtbutlng anns among the students, banned the demonstration. From Plffle 1 KALMBACH. •• after Watergate ; fonner c.ommerce Secretary Maurice Stans, who headed the financi al arm of the campaign ; Mi~ell ; fonner acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray; John D. Ehrllchman, who resigned last week as Nhron's top dome.stic aUairs adviser; and H. R. Haldeman, Who left his post as Nixon's chief ol atalf at the same time Ehrlidnnan resJ.&ned and Dean was fired. Kabnbacb baa also been linked lo an alleged "secret" bank account at the Newport Cenler branch of the Back of America. He reportedly kept as much as $500,000 in the account that waa supposedly used lo bankroll poliUcal spying acd es· plonage. Sens. Sam J. Ervin Jr., (D-N.C.). cbalnnan of the Watergate pane~ and Howard H. Bater Jr., (R4 Tenn.), ranking ~ity member. sald the list of wit· nesses may be altered ~ the bearings proceed. . The early witnesses are e.tpected to outline-the structure and organization of the re-election campelgd an1 the bn:ak·ln and bugging at the Democratic bead· quarters at Watergafe. · . · Front Pagel DON NIXON • • • wu granted for remodeling the Aegean cruise ahip Stella Solarls, jolnUy owned by SUn Lines and Marriott. Marriott controls 45 percent of the Stella Solarts, the newspsper said and . Sun Lines controls the other 55 percent. Marriott was set up in Greece after the mi~ .Hized poyer In ~IY lf8i and has atnce klllned citerlng ccblrW wllh lntemat!Ollal airlines using Athens u a supp)y blse, the newspaper sald. 1 / Mao.I bas beeri employed by Marriott , for about three yean. 'Die bolel cba1n Ix !cbeduled to breek ground for a $10 mlllloo high-rise con- vention center in Newport Center next week. 'Dogs of Week' Find New Homes Two Orange Coast families lock "Be Kind To Animals Week" literally by giv· Ing a home to last week's Daily Pilot' Dogs of the Week shortly alter their pic- tures appeared. Both pure bred tri-color collies were adopted Saturday morning from the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) shelter In Laguna Beach. One of the famlli., had cblldren. "The worst wsy to vk>late 'Be Kind to Animals Week' is to allow a pet to run loose," Don Brown, an SPCA ofticial, said. 11Don1t make your animal a nuisance, make it a pet." The collies were father and daughter. He said 1,000 acrea of the area baa fish and wildli!e which shout~ be preserved and protected and charged that final responsibility for implementatioo of any plan rests with the Board ol Supervisors. The recent decision ol the Ir'vine ~m­ pany not to :.irther pursue Jltlgation on the land exchange between the company and the county of Upper Bay lands has speeded interest in resolving the various issues presented. One disagreement C?Opped up In the dlscussioo. Stanley Krause, county real property services director, reoommended that an appraiser be selected es aoon u possible to detmnlne the market value of the three islacds In the boy owned by the Irvine Company. He argued that the determination of. the future of the islands wu most important to the whole determination of the Upper Bay prob- lems. Interior Department's Otis disagreed. He said an "in house" group in his department could make a good appraisal of the entire area and come within 10 percent of the real value. Krause conterided that cost of ac- quisition of the islands, if desirable, should be a key factor in detennining the economic feasibility for any plan for use of the entire area. Krause said determination ol the ac- tual legal ownership of the Islands would be part of the job of an appraiser. He said the legal title, engineering and valuation problems: of the uplands to be acquired are for the most part diffemit frun those of the Islands and that ccn· siderable time would be required to establish acquisition boundaries for the uplands. Krause said the county now owm an WlQUestioned fee or easement interest in 612 · acres of the Upper Bay land, that undetermined preacriptive rights are claimed for the public for 383 acres and that the islands are about 104 acres. ' The i;9UlllY offlcial alBo questioned the Irvine Company's title to the Wands which he said has never been legally determined. He added that there is d.lsagrM:ment respecting the alze of the Islands and their localioo. The S<H:alled Field Committee includes representatives of the county, the state, the city of Newport Beac.11 and the federal government. It was fonned a year ago at the re- quest of the Board of SUpervlaora. Olis said !Is studies Wm! directed toward the protection of open apace, the protection of wildlife ant.I the provision or recreation areas that nUgbt be com- patible to the wildlife preserve goal. He said an °in house" appraisal woold take six months and that the recreaUcnal areas planned must be studied in relation to their affect on wildlife. He added that a probable new Upper Bay lwidge near Shelhnaker Island must al.so receive con- sideration. Olis said the Field Committee should ccmplete its work in the next six months and would then be dissolved. The interior department official also slated that the three Islands were the greatest natural resource for wild.lire. Otis also said that fwids for acquisition of Irvine lands and for development of the wlldlife-recreitioc areas w e r e limited. He said although there are many LOS ANGELES (AP)-;Mle FBI has lold the judge In the Pentaioq, pspers lrial that Daniel EU.berg was_.l;vemeard by an "electronic interception" nearly two years before he released the Pentagon papers to the news medh&, the judge revealed today . 111is was the first disclosure that Ells- berg,· wbose·name did not surface public. Jy until 1171 when he released the Penta- gon pspero; bad beOn under FBI surveil· lance long before that. • U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne, ! apparently angered that he was never l to~d this before during disclosure oC : wiretaps, ordered the Justice Department to find out how many times EYsberg was J --:::-::-:'.::::-::c-----=--· 'CIA WRONG IN ELLSBERG CASE'-Story, P•go 4 overheard in 1969 and 1970 and if there are records of what was overheard. The disclosure, apparently considered serious by the judge, delayed the start of legal arguments which have been scheduled on defense mot!onS aiming to throw out the case. ' 'lbe judge postpooed further action in the trial until later In the day. "It's impossible to proceed with the legal ramifications until the factual pie. ture is clear," Byrne said. He said the disclosures raise mues 1 which "may precede" the importance of legal arguments. He said the FBI report says that at least one interception of Ellsberg wu ac. ' ccmpllsbed while the de!eoaaDt wu al the home of Morton Halperin a former deputy assistant secrewy of Derense. The judge told the government to find out for bow long Halperin's home -was 1'1'der surveillance .acd whether the surveillance was autl't>rized by a court. He alBo demanded to know whether Halperin was a White Hou.se adviaer -a post he held In part of 11169 -when the wiretaps began. Byrne said the FBI notice of the wiretap came to him late Wednesday from acting FBI Director Wllllam Ruckelsbaus, but that It nbted the dlrec- lor hlmsell bad only been notified Tues-' day. 'lbe judge demanded lo know why there was a delay in givJng him im.. mediate information on the interception. He al90 demanded to know why this wasn't turned over to himself earlier in the trial. ' Halperin, a witness for the defense durlng the trial, served as a collfillltant to Ellsberg throughout the case. He is a researcher at the Brookings Institution in Washlnglon. Because of the disclosure, the judge recessed court for one hour, ordering the prosecutor to immediately p b o n e Washington and get more infonnaUon on the wiretap. He said the government should probe its files as far back as 1967 lo lry and find out U there were any other electronic surveillance of EU.berg. "If there were not logs or records," the judge said, "I want to know why not." "If there were and they are gone, J want to know why and where." See 1>lllda.P for SPEED OUEEN • Stainless Steel Fabric: Care· Tub u ·-·-.Qlp. ...... • t""'"'""w--.......... u...-..... w_ ~--. ....... .... ... ........ , ....... ,__ -" --........ Ao4 -.-., ___ , ...... t • YOU CAM l1IY A SPll D 9UllM WAIHl l AND ORYll ,FOi AILOWAI '36~· ltrJlSPEED OUEEN.·1111 · e McGraw·Edison Cb m peny Oivls1on 90 DAY CASH WITII ~D .!!! ~ 1815 llWPllRT IYD. Da1ntn11 Costa llesHhone-wml • ' • I• DAllY f'ILOT N -11londol. 11or ID, 1973 • Artists Com~te " 1'.At 5th Festival • ' . Beoch will again Ian the artistic creativity in the city witb the ftltb 8llllU8I City Arts . from the Women& Dlvlllm ol Ibo Newport Harbor Chamber o1 c.mn..e. When the !esUval beglll1 In 11111, the newly-formed City Arts Committee - looking for ways to give incentlve to local • I I Fuel Crisis Probe Set BySolons -. SACllAMENTO (AP) -The State A>,.mllfl' launched a probe Wednesday to ~ wbetber tho projected !uel cri!ls may be a ~ one created by the oil lnduslry. ' . hundred local artists will '"8Y works ranging from creative --lltdlo!ry-nrl!ne Oll-,>illhtlngs-.nd COr!F ele with olber top artistic talents !or IOO In prize money available thb year. · artists ~ develop a cultural beiitage or-too.:..dty 8CX.'Ol"diDt ~ ovnmlttM chairman Ladislaw Reday. Since lheo, Reday said, the committee has completed a study ol the feasibility o! building a permanent cultural ceoter in the city. That study is DOW in the hands o! the city !or !urtller analysis. ASSEMBLY SPEAKER Boll Moretti (!).Vin ~uys) announced the three-proog investigation al a news conference. sayihg lhat "so far, the 'fuel shortage' ha$ been used as an excuse for higbn' priced gasoline. ' .. TIU! CITY OF Newport Beach will ontinue to add to Its permanent art col- IC!lon by awarding up to !500 ID an:hase prizes to the top artworks on loplay ID City Hall and oo the !root -~ prizes will Include a llllO awanl • the best work by an artist under 18 . . Japanese Coed ' '!be cultural complei would house a small theater, a museum, a library and · multipurpooe meeting and claa rooms. Besides the art displays, wtdch:ril be open to the public from 1 to 5 p.m. with awards preseotaUon at 4 p.m. by ~ Dooald Mcinnis, the !eslival will be bigbligbted by entertalnmelll CID the green. 'Fopping Oat Recalls Attack [n Jury Hearing The u.s. Marine Corps Ban.d from El Toro will perform at I, 2:50 and 4:1> p.rn. and the Newport Hamor High School Midshipmen band will perform in -....._ between. , The Oilldren's Theater Guild will Workmen on the Hoag Memorial Hospital tower ..,.. now pouring concrete for the 11th ·and final floor at the new facility, which is due to be com· pleted in the !all. Crews are also installing large concrete window panels that will make up the facade of the 90·bed structure. perform the Dr. Se""' story ol "'!be SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -.Yoshiko Sneetches" at 1:3> and 3:1> p.m. and the l'anaka, the 24-year-ol.d Japanese st¥dent Newport Ballet Company will dance at 2 !tabbed with four different knives by a and 3:30 p.m. - m.dd-be rapist, has described the A short musical "In the Midst of. Life" lllliult in closed session before the grand will also be perlormed at 2:25 and 3:4> .,,,... p.m. by the n!llOwoed South Coast Tougher Fire Law .Urged Miss Tanaka, who appeared at the Repertory Theater ol the Hlrl>or Area. · Woaday evm1ng ....ion wearing a black · Besides the city and dlambe< awards, SACRAMENro (AP) -Tough stole ~ mu! o:Nlt, tesllfied for ball an other presentaUooa will be given by standardS designed to curb killer fires IOOr about the attack March 'ZI at her Mariners Savings and Loan, Downey started by smouldering mattresoes would ~ In the city's Nob HJll area. Savings and Loan, the Newport-Balboa be protected by legislation proposed by a PUlce have said an Intruder who !..,,. Rotary Club, Gleodale Federal Savings San Di~o Democrat. o! Oonsurner A!!alrs will back the Wilson bill because federal standards scheduled to go into effect June 7 are ''too weak. l want California standards to be the ones in effect." Id his way into her apartment stabbed and I.oen, Harbor Trave1, Mutual Sav-In an inter v le w Tuesday, l!lss Tanaka repeatedly a!eter she re-lngs and Loan and Unique Homes. Assemblyman Bob Wilson said his bill is KEHOE SAD> the 1970 legislature lected bis advances. She was bospitalil.ed The city colmcil tbiJ year budgeted an effort to head off replacement ol state pasaed a law requiring the State Bureau In criUcal condition with puncture $1,500 for the festival this year, which regulations with weaker feder81 ·st.an., of Home F'1rnishings to establish mat- state standards and will represent a newer · e>presslon ol lqislative inten~ thereby strengtbmlng the state'• position ,if there is • court test. "My lltmley11 aay we mq end up in a big court case because ol thb -wblch I wouldn't mind because I share WU.00'• fears about the federal standards," Kehoe added. i Wlllllds through many of her vital Reday said funded most ol the prepare-dards. · tress !himmability standards, which went orjins, but made a swift recovery and lions for it. into effect Jan. 1. But he added his THE FEDERAJ. regulations say a w, as released after 22 days. lawyers tell him the new federai regula-mattress passes the flammability test if WllMIN'S !'ROPOSAJ, is backed by t' h 'd the to"...._ Her only lingering sympton of the at-the California State Firemen's Associa-ions pus asi e · "6'""" state star.. three out of five of the cigarettes drop- ta<;k is a hoarseness caused by severe ·Burglars Steal $3' 0 tioo. It would require mattresses sold in danls despite his department's ob-ped on it !ail to cause the rnattresa to "-t --ds. Docto-declm' ed to all! jections. · bum, an Assembly staffer reported. "1l'Ull ......... •<> C · omia to withstand beat from an Wilson said his bill inCludes the new · · P~ct whether her voice will return to A N Lib open match or burning blanket without The state standards require a mattress normal t ewport . r ar y bursting into flame. to ·withstand heat from a match, candle liiss Tanaka has idenmied Iler . at· "I doo't like the prospect of kids and MuslllllS' Senten ced or burning bl&nket without bursting into tat4er tbrougb photographs as John P. Somebody heaved a roclt tbrougb the old people burning up in their beds flame, the staffer said. Bunyard, 13, a fonner·soft drink delivery side window of the Newport Beach Chll-because producing fJre-safe mattresses Recently fire officials in Los Angeles man currently being held in Mariposa on dren's Library in West Newport early doesn't happen to meet the convenience BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI ) -Nine Colinty conducted a test \\itere a brand- IQ\llllple charges of murder, kidnaping Tuesday, got inside and stole !30.in peUY of big mattress manufacturers ID Ibis Black Muslims acctJaed o! trav.llng to new lll1lttress which met the proposed and aasault with a deadly wespon. cash from a locked closet, police 1181d country," Wilson said. Louisiana to "take over ~ton Rouge and federal flammability standanls burst into l1ollce today give it back to the blacks" ...,.. sen-. l!,am<s ofter being exposed to a match, lmpe<tor Cllris Sullivan said Lib;.,;... told poli<e the building at "They can do i~ and they're going to teJlC1!d to Zl years in jail Monday 00 i1>-wu.oo said. , . MW Tanaka WU testifying before the 6000 W Qiast lllchway was locked Mon-do it ii they expect to cootlnue doing citing to riot coovicUooa. Dlatrid Judge '"Ibis wu a aupervi!ed demonstra· lur' mw so she could retum to her home day. IDvesUgators belieoe· the broakin lx!siness in California," Wllsm odded In Elmo Lear banded down the maximlJm . UOO," \W¥D aald. ''The variety we In. Tokyo to further recuperate. She plans occurred alter midnig!J.t Tuei!daY The a statement. sent..,..s to the Muslims In conilectlm 1llUally .'Ilea? allcut --which kill ll>come .back here next fall to complete thieves kicked in a ciOii.t door to iet to John Kehoe, !JoV. Roofld Reagan's with a Jan. 10, 1972, gunbattle ID a city ~~the elderly In ~I bet,l!udies m English at San Fral!!;isco -tbe__casb..box and.al.., !'lnsackedJllirary -~llffairs chief, said ID an in-street in which two la\\I .officera and i-, bolpltal pelmta and tenants ID _s_ta_~_._SUl_ll_van~_sai_d_·~~~~~~~f=lles:::;:..·~~~~~~~·_.:_~~_...:te~l'Vl~·~ew:..:::be~-M~sure~~lhe::_::Sta:'.:te~De~partm~~~~t:.._~t~:~~-~b~la~da~w~ere'.'.'.."kill~·~ed.".:_~~~~__:hote~-els~~and~nomlnl·bouoil."- r • . • ,·. ' • .. • WE'VE GOT .. IT. ALL . . " ' " • ,, TOG·ETHER . ' ' . California, with more lhan 13 million · mot_Qf vehicles, is ezpected to coosume some eight liillion gallons of gasoline this year, according to statistics in the state budcet- Morettl, a probable candidate !or governor neit year, said the only evidence be has seen so far of a gasoline and fuel ohorlage emergency t 1 statements of the oil comp an I e s them.selves. · ' 0 We DON'T WANT creation of some false emergency when an emergency doesn't exi!:t," MoretU said . He added he isn't accusing the oil com- panies of collusion, but said there are questions that need to be answered and that he will subpoena oil company rec- ords if necessary. "All we're trying to find out is 1f they are being straight," he said. Zoning Change On 32-acre Sit.e ~ Get.s Mesa Okay ~· About 3Z ...,,. o! property lo the ...i ol South Coast Plaza have been entered in the C:OSta Mesa General Plan as a medlurri density Zi>ne. This represents a departure from the existing recommendatlom of the plan calling for hlg!Hlenslty development on the two parcels. City councilmen ordered the change on a 3-2 vote Monday n!ght with Councilmen Alvin Pinkley and Dom RaciU casting the "no" votes. Paul Diehl, president of the Nartb Oolta Mesa llomeowners A-1atlon, which for a bout a year has been pushing for a general demtty cut north ol the San Diego Freeway, said he wu ploued with the deciSlon. Pinkley said he voted_qainst the measure becoule he ~'the ownen ~~~~..ru,:;~~ area ~ low-donl!IJ. 1 ' .. , .. • . ,,• . ' .. *THAT INCLUDES EVEN NEW CHANNEL 50, S,AN DIEGO'S 6, · 8 AND ·10 AND SANTA BARBARA'S CHANNEL 3 -'TOTAL TELEVISION' ' " ' • • . ' Yes, TV · WEEK now gives you a weekly summary of upcoming programs on Orange County's new KOCE·TV <Channel 50) •very Sunday, along with hour-by-hour listings of what's doing on San Diego's channels 6, 8 and 10 and Santa Barbara's Channel 3 <VHF Dstings also appear in the DaUy Pilot's ~ally televislon listings). With the help of our friends at TV WEEK, the DaHy PUot got it all together. Now Vt• offer read· en, especially those In the South Orange Coast area and all others on community c~s who can pull in an the signals there are in the Southland, 'Total Television', the most complete n~wspaper listing of television fare avaUable. .. .. " • Every S~nc{ay in 'V We ek-Every Day · in Daily TV Log ,, ' -~ ,, ' . I I I I ' l : t f r I -·------•' .. .. -~·---• • llC 1""81e Prodlletletl 1'weHth Night' Due '"""""'· ..., 10, 1m DAILY PILOT J f \ Auditions Listed For 2 Musica"ls It may be a little too early tloo !..-adult singers Is set for to bl!. thlnllin( about show! May 19 al I p.m., with dancen com111g up in August and taking the stage 1t-1 o'clock September. but two local May 20· • • UC lrYlne students will pmont • producllon 0 [ Shakespeare's ' ' T we I ft h Night" next "eek under the d.irectlon of a member or Shakespeartjln Company. BreW>ter Maaon, a visiting Jectlftr at UCI for the spring quarter, will stage t be Shakespeerean co m • d y , -will play Tuesday lhnlllf[h Saturday in t h • cmc.rt Hall ol UCl 's Fine Arts Vlllage. Michael Stoddard wUI lab Bobb, Gi<lul Donlell, Bob the role o! Seboltlao ond Sclmtlder, Ted Koch, Dale Sands Hall will play bls !win Kraol, Mldlel• J a • g • r , si.ster, Viola, who dJalul,.. G,.tcllen Van Riper, Alwa her.;eU as the 1Wlb Cesario. ~walker and Susan Woodrul!. The roles ol DuU Orsino and Sel4 and cootumet for th• Lady Olivia, 1JOtb ·caught ln UCI poductlon will be design· the confusion caused by the eel by Richard T r If 1 e I I , twins, will be payed by 801 asaoclate pro!essor o drama theater groups are doing 1·ust Callbacks and readings will begin at 3:30 p.m. all four that for their respective sum· days. Singers and daDOel"I 1 mer musicals. should bring their own mllllc. : Miller and Jade Rabacter. at the university. Others In the UCI caal ... ''Tw<Uth Night" will be Tum Waller, tm B•mlltoo. '1Ued at I o'clock each even- Stuart Duckworll1, Jell Addis, Ing with llctell available by Sieve Rolblatt. -Om-coolaellng the !!no arts box o/. too, Stanley Wlulck, Rldtard flee at -17. •it Hasn~i Been Easy~ Everything Happens to Young Actor By VERNON SCOTr friendly divorce . It only lasted said it paJd M an hour. So l four months. stuck around for her in· HOLLYWOOD (UPI) "l talked to her the other terview. She came on stage in Bruce Davison, the you ng star day and she said, 'When we're: of "Willard," "The s•·awber-1 ed t a skimpy costwne and was u dis.so v maybe we can go OU ry Statement" and HLast to dinner.' trembling. She said she'd s u m me r , • • has found "So far my career has been never done anything like that .L _ ~ ii Hollywood as perilous [O< going all right, I jUJI finished be!ore. All in t.n::: .. am fl ma1e oewcomers as it is sup-'Ulzana's Raid' with Burt Lan· "When the record player ~I<> be f0< starlets. caater. But I did a picture blsred out she s h e d Mama and Papa (Mike Duffy and Jennifer Higginbotham) watch as the Irids put Tryouts !0< the Lyric Opera An aCCO<npanlst will be pro-1 production of "Annie <A'!t Your vided. , Gun" to be slag!l!I in Sep-~ Th•. title role_ o l temf>er ~.t~Laguna Beach's Westminmer's ''Mame'' liiil-, !rvlne Bowl have beeo an-been preca.U, with DorilJ Alim' ' scheduled I<> do tho booors, ( c.aLBOARD) ~i:'f. ro1.J:.c'i! ~ -• Some ol the l<>p lllpporting nouncod for this weekend and next, while the Westminster Community Theater b a • !!!cheduled its tryouts for "Mame" early in June for an August opening. Open auditions for children from 9 years through the teens and singers and dancers for lhe chorus will be held Saturdays and Sundays (Qr the next two weekends for "Annie Get Your Gun." perts include Mame's nephl\w, ages 10 and early 20s, Vera O>arles, Agnes Gooch, Ito tha moseboy, Babcock the banker, Bearegard Bum.side the !OtJth. em gentleman and many others . Auditions will be held June 6 to 6 from 7 to 10 p.m. for ac- tors and singers and June 9 frOm 3 to 6 p.m. for dance~ at the 17th Street ~I a u d i to rium, Westminst~ Avenue at Hoover street. f "Mame" wil l open Aug. tb for a three-weekend nin, Lagun,a's "Annie Get Your GWl" is scheduled for a Sept. 7 opening, also for three weekends. A native of PellM)'lvania, called 'The Jerusalem File' everything. And wow! You on an impromptu show in the Fountain Valley Communtiy Theater's "Cheaper By Bruce is 25 yW'!!! old, blond that was so bad it was only never aaw a greater nude the Dozen," closing this weekend. Youngsters, f r om left, e.re Mlchela l'anh, and beset by minOr but released on aiJplanes and in dancer. Better than Gypsy Brian Hamilton and ·Michelle Colannlno, slurping a ow:ker. bewilderlns difficulties. Europe. R<N1e Lee. I've been da!ing--"'"'------------'---''--'::..._--------- ''Rlgbt -I'm looklDg !or "I hired a pabllc '"1allonl her, bu! the'• hard to get hold Young singers will auditiort from l to 3 p.m. Saturday, with male and female singers for six sUpporting and 21 minO< roles to be beard at 1 p.m. SUltday. A """'1d audi· a ~ to live," Davison said. rum which talked me into ap-of because she doesn't have a "I've been evicted from my pearlng at the Palm Sprtngs phone. rented -becaUle I cul a Rodeo. I was IUJlPOOOd "' be "I fell ln love with ber. No hole In the back door for my grand marshal of the perade. problem. I fall In love a lot dog !<> oome in and out. and usually end up pleading Whatever Became of Reed Hadle~?~ "I'd 1lke to move Inf<> my ''BUT AS we came down the temporary lnsanlty. own house which is in the street. with me sitting on the "Last Christmas my car got By JAY SHARBUTI' now is publisher of 11Seven-1948 -Q. Who was the an-11$1-Q. How much did the Answer two bl that it was the lllllljO block, but I loonded It I<> back of a cooverltl>le, tho guy wtped out in my own driveway NEW YORK (AP) _ Dear teen" ~gazine. nouncer 0.11 ''The Original lluMont Network pay fOI' the !irst Western ever telecast this girl. She'• a very yoong on the public address system when this wuman hit It and Amateur Hour?" A. Dennis !il'l!t TV rights "' an NFL from Pblladelphla. actrel8 and I don't want to called out, 'And here comes smeared It all over the wall ..ader: In keeping with our IN THE inlerest of. helping James, seen in the book championship game? A. The rest oJ the years evicl her. I'll just have I<> the Rodeo Queen."·'lbat's how like pemrt butt<r.-lt was a policy_of alerting the publlc to innocents ward olf the cries of alongside host Ted Mack. woo $75,000, which row barely (a) covered in the book ~ waJt, I guess." my luck has been n.uWng.' Japanese import. Lucky it threatening developments, be the trivia freak, herewith are is holding an alto sax.apbooe. buys a minute's advertising equlilly run of fascinallng Bruce took another pull on didn't land in my lap. . advised that.trivia freaks now a few helpful· questions and The owner of the sax hu time for such a game; (b) facts and detail and tt isn't an BRUCE BECAME a dog "· drink and laughed. have a new weapon with which answers on TV histnrv to tide van1'shed. f · ·~ t ................ -.1 eeds a network vice president trivia. It recalls bow much owner through Pe C·U 1 la r "I'm having problems with "THIS WAS alter I moved 0 ...,., ....... you. you over until you either can 1949 -Q. Who played Cap-for hall a year. good there was ln television as cfrcwDllances. girls, l<>o. I picl<ed up a to f<>wn from the beach. I had It 's a new paperback book purchase the book or hire tain Video and why? A. Al 19>2 _ Q. Who was the bost bad. · "I waa 10mewhat drunk one beautiful girl hitchhiker with a a one-bedrocm place out U:u~re. called ''The Te I e vision someone to ~ile the freak: Hodge. 00 "I've Got News For You"? ·'""t "he e~Jained, "and aa I !igure that wouldn't quit She One day tho broakers washed Stallman and Roger Youman. 1947 -Q. Wbo was Kyle 1950 _ Q-w~ and what It's 8 handy renlnder ol ._. • -r f . the TV -l..-1... A. Jack Paar. Q. Who was the how television has matured -came out of a bet a girl was told me she was late or an 1n-away the pier nei:t door and It covers top aiarws MacDonnell? A. A blonde hanno"'°' on •'Tb e eon.. only star on the "Today" show otmfl._ at the door. She lervtew. I !<>Id her I'd take her the girl wbo lived in the house from 1947 I<> last year in am· siuger the book says was the '~ I think -in 25 years. But Its banded me the dog. wherever she was going if we was terrified. So she moved in pie and occasiooally acerbic fU'St "sweetheart" of TV tinental"? A. AA the book puts who regularly ate bananas? A. primary value is as a &elf· could ha date ••·-ard · h d •· ·1 vi' ewers. It •-•t elaborate. it, "suave actor Reru:o Cesana J. Fred Jl!uggs. Ask Daddy to defense booklet fur cnmbeWng uWben I woke up the next ve a ,..,.. .,., · wtt me. ewat . ~· ,.Tnlaln If ,.,_ 18· unclear. looni •- She 'd ....... learned It ~-· -·-ol b murmurs sweet nothings to -r uu.;:i; es Wnu ask, ' ' R • e d morning I still bad the pooch. &al ~· "Unfortunately, she bad a 'I1le aulh>rs are Auuw3 3 pt._....... er Q Had.I->?" 11 1 named her "Tro ub le' "Hername.wuO\ga.Really GreatDane.'1'11istime ldecid-men: both worked years for preparing to smash an the females in the audience, ''A~--inth.eWboAl'~~anond ''' because Qlat'a all she's been." a great chick. But when we ed to pack up and live in the TV Guide magazine. YQWnan orthicon tube against the side thereby inducing sigM of raJ>-cuuu a.c1iuu11 Just tell them, "star ot Davidson sipped 00 a noon-got to her destination it was city. Let me tell you , it hasn't still is at the magazine as of a OC4. She ma y have been ture or u n cont r o 11 ab I e why is this show historically Racket Squad, 1951," and day Scotdl more amused than the Purple Lion, with great been easy." managing editor. Shuhnan _.::the::..::li:.::rst.::w.::om=an:..TV.:......::cr.::ili.::.c.::. -•__:1.::auC'gC:hte:::.:r._" ______ 11 _im::porta::::="t=1=A.=Jacl:=-V-al_e_ntl_·n_e-__ w_atc_h_them __ w_il_t. ___ _ frustrated. big signs all over reading,,p;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"il 'Totally Nude Girl Dancers.' 11 ~~~~~~~~~ ~~i:s wllf'·~~~::s;: "I ASKED£ Olga why. She Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse ried laat May ar ~ Hltchingll7;;;;;~~~i~1\I Post -that's a wedding chapel -in Las Vegas. But my wife and I are getting a PllSINTS "GINGERBREAD LADY" • • a..tM 1 ... '"TH• •AMll.Y" (Ill • .. MANNIE CAULDll" Ill) 1 ttti _. NIWPOIT 541·1152 OM Of The YMrs 1 D lest-LA. Times "THE EMIGRANTS" . (PG) ...-oi- "$LEUTH" · Not. Mon. ttwv Fri • Emlgr•nh 7:11 lleuth f :IO by tffll s1 ...... May "4·1 .AMI 11·12 WEST GATl--OIANGI COUNTY FAllGIOUNDS 11• '·"'· Admhllon ll.IO. Ftf' 1"9MNltlons c1U U4-Jlll0, I 1.m. hi S:Je p.m. . : ,fouth Coast Repertor)' A llllW M9llcit .,_ 5(1'."t ........ Eertlr"' TMM "IN THE MIDST OF LIFE" Opeo1 Frlclay, May 16t~. 8 p.m. -Tickets Now 1127 NEWPORT ILVD., at Harbor lllf9nMl'llnl•-..... •tloM '46-1~ "llLL T JACK" . . .. .. . ..... . 111 :::~:.·9·~:..~;·;,••t".",~1 · · ••• c.o••• .... 1 , • ., o.rso ''""" 014l' OlflnOI • .......... .-.,,... .. Ol~lr M • .. '""" Wfll ., MaxvonSydavv 2nd HIT Ltv Ullmann JACK LEMMON JULIET MILLS In The =Cr"'"4" AV ANTI!" "MAN OF LA MANCHA"' 7:00 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 7:00 & 11 :00 ALSO (PG) A J'IIJI STORY AS IAlll! AS cactus 1n -die snow 9:20 p.m. C1ll TlleltN for ..... y tc.:Mdul1 "BILLY JACK" ~·••t·~ E'OWAROS < I\ I \1 \ I I \ I f R ""'~"' t• ,l".IU ' ' •A. ._..! t ' "~' I NOW LOCALLY! "FIDDLER- ON THE ROOF!" 7 -t:41 ,. •. eo1... cei -.. ,. -~·,ti • STADIUM 2 ,'!Z, 0. .&•\1 "1 ''ltC":Jr• -.... -:..n·.t · STADIUM -!,-.:;_ ... A:!.ll'U I (.'l iL":i'.:JI' ... "Flolato's Ralobow" ( G l "The Slstll"S" IRJ ... "Pick-up On 101 " (RI "ne G .. away" !PG I ... "Lady Sin9s Tllo .. " .. !RI "Fist Of Fwy" (•Rl ... "Red Sn '' "BILLY JACK" _,, ...... IWllll .7" EXCLUSIVE WEEK ----· -•'"ANDREVIS · -PWMMER I M&lJli , Di 10 PX. Rm wm: LT. 2 P.M. I JUM...suN I HOIA\lYS ·1""-7·10 •.M. · 11IE llAD ADIGOF MlrARIA. TRISH ~~lkVERE MELVIN DOUGLAS "lllEnA lOllll.Y .-a• ' (PC) • I ' I - 1 I I I I 7 \ ·ans n • - ., Drtig Raid Nets S~ven . . Bullets -Fl:y ••• ID ,. • Two Officers Felled By TOM BARLEY 01 1M DallY 'llet Stiff Two lawmen were felled by gunfire and other members of a multi-agency nan::otlcs task force w~ D!lrTOWlY JDi.ss... eel b)' whlstllng bulleb Wednesday night In a Ceola l\lesa-Huntingtnn Beach area ctlupaid that developeci' into a gun bat· tie. · Wblttler police Lt. Bradley Hoover, 32, DonaM Nixon Denies Greek Loan tharge ' • SKtL4B LQOK, . , PA~~ 9 TOD4Y • ' . . A -bdeflns '"" the UDlted States' stylab mlaion appeon on Page t ol loday'a I>aUy Pilot. ,A.-i. Paul Weill, Cblrleo' Oonnd 11111 Jaaipll ll:enria enlblrlr r.i.uy on a ..,. kind ol space venture. • What will tbil u daya ol their llvea be lll<e! Tbe ~tlom - food, ob)eet!we llXI ....... - stnlfcy llXI -· -ace~ --....... lhemldor bi """" • ' - INDlc:l'MENT RETURNED Former AG MltcMll . ~l•sey·lfi:~~d _ 'Ul'IT ........ • · CHARGED IN SCj\NDAL Ex-Cablnot Chltf St1n1 .~oord Asked w Accept . , Q)des1 · Suhjee1 ·~Ji 4 1 ~ • • i ' . gex ~t>urse 'at Golde~. :Wes~~ ' . ,. ' . ~ ' ' . ' .J 4 • • •• • • Paye&· 11&' may well ~ the most. llOIJular eeurae at Huntington Beach'1GoldeaWestColiep. · I c.,•\' ·•· '' ' 8""~1t·does, -ol lhe Coul .~l:Y•llllJoce'J)istrlCI WIDt ~ Ibo iii5.leCf. blt lbemlelvtS •. Tho subjec\ GI; tM ClOllne 'll .... . ·,~ ti Ille.~ la.-!< eeurae, 'willeh;-m -uilltesi was .,...... liJ INll 1', •Ml> lliPt-They IOlcl Ibo)" -lo lludy the eeurae ) dutJlne if'lt. l # I ., ; , r r ......... ,"",. ' ' 1, • Alll:ED· 11\1 -Whll l'n'dloloo .Ml cHmnao. Sexuality) Is all about, ~ (ll'M ••'Na-Waiaon replied, "1t'1 DOI my area ol opeclallza· tida.11 ~i r.• I' -Goldm Wat'~ Presldtnt II. budioy eo,ce came to Wataon's aid , · flllkl r a tMa, ,.,,. DOI nan, a fl!!" 1111c1 emers&na interest. n·1 u old asmaa.~' · .. Dr. eo,ce tllell daorlbed Ibo cour1e as"• very t1me1y thlnc," addlnc that tt woolil lnvell!pte human 9'lllAlllJ ,_ PfYCll*llcal, psylioloiiCll and IOdll ... I palntl of. W.W. t t . Benefit Concert At Orange Coast Raises Funds Nearly $500 were collected during a special benefit COf!cert held at Orange Coast College for the wldow of a Costa Mesa explosion victim . The concert was spoqsored by the music depimJ'nenC to rilie> mO(iey fOr 1f>e Elmer ~rts·14erii0ffiil·l1'in!il!ll'be'lund was estatiilbed t to. liid ore Uiualc: du- .dent Nancy.fLeenerts' in · ooatinuing ber studies. . 1 Her, husband was one of· two-penoos killed April 2'dUring the blast at the El Mont&. Cl>emlcal Co. Mrs. Leenerta bu· been an OOC stu• dent since '19641 taking one and two cla.ssea ieacb semester, and · ii ICbeduled to graduate-in June . The concert, held Sunday, raised a total ·o1 $897.87. Donations are still ao- cepted by mail at the OOC Division of Fine Arts. .Bicycle Safety Mea.silres : VrgCd . WASHINGTON (AP) -The retail prtce·ot'a blcyele could ·1-by $4 to 15 because ol liew Alely llW>dardt pro. pooed by the Fond and I> r u g Admlnillratlen. FDA said Wednesday that the slan- darda, flnt ever propooed en the federal level , would help reduce the 800 dttths • resulting !rem an estimated one mUUen bike accldenls each year. . Bikes Intended fer use by cblldr!n Wider tbe age ol 16 woold be required t9. have front . rear and aide reflecton, ll0081ip peda1a and brakes capable ol &IOPPinl Ibo bike within 15 feet It 15 m1!e1 po. hour . Today's Flnal Four Named In ·$200,000 Vesco Gift From Wire 8ervlce1 NEW YORK -Fonner Nixon ad- ministration Cabinet members John N. A!ltchell and Maurice H. Stans were in- dicted today on charges they !OUgbt to obstruct an investigation by a federal agency in exchange for a secret $200,000 cash contribution to the Nixon re-elecUon campaign. (Related stories, Page!.) The federal grand jury also indict¢ financier Robert L. Vesco, wbo made tbe conlribuUon, and Harry 1.. Sean:, ta former Kopubllcan leader of the New Jersey Senate, who testified earlier he dellvered the money to Stans In Wa5btngt<:i..-• . -· · Mitchell, former attorney reneraJ, a!J!I Stans, former aecretary ol Commerce, earlier i..tllled belore the grand jury 111- velllgalln& the contrlbuUon bJ. V...., lo the Nl%on campojp. Vesco left the _,try while the matter was under inYMllgatlon. ! Mitchell al the Ume said he tesWled "fully, frankly and freely." 1 The defendants were charged with CCIII· spiracy, obstruction of justice, end obstruction ol a erlmlnal Investigation. Jn 1, addition, Mitchell and Slans were accu. ed ol 1lx counts ol perjury eod!. The conspiracy and perjury ~ .. carry penaltiet ·o1 live years in priaon and $10,000 fine each upon convij?llClll. The oboii;uetkU ch,arpo carry peoalU. , ol live ,..... In prtaon and is,ooo -,. COO\'~. -In'-1!~the-Nlxon-JM~ -· -- campaign bi1dquarter1 .Jllued 1 statemeob b)' Mitchell and Stans. Mltcbell said, ';There bu b ea n ·DI wroncdolng 111 my port and lnlolar' 11 1 know on the port ol any other person In this matter. 1 am certain that the Judlclal preceedlnga in this case will fully vindicate me and confirm the abaence or any wroncdolna " ' Stans aald, "f am greaUy dismayed by the action of the crand jury. I havU!!U. "-- laltb and eonlldeace In God and In ·• American justice. I expect that wben 811 the lacls are heard I will be vlndlcatecl, Not only was there no effort made by rri~ lo obstruct the SEC proceedings but the SEC did In laot proceed vigorously (Soe<MITCllELL. Page I) Fire Hits Mesa Trailer Park; Occupant Burned An early morning flre at a Costa Mesa trailer park resulted in second degree burns and medlcal treatmeot ol a 53- year-old trailer occupant. Fire Department officials said today that Walter Orton, 140 C.brlllo St., Space - 9, received bums on the neck and ear when fire broke out in bis trailer around 1 1:15 a.m. He was not hospitalized. 1be trailer, valued at $1,000, was described u 1 ~ loll. Firemen believe a cigarette tquched oil the blaze. Although the fire wu ooly a block away from lhe downtown Rochester Street fire atatlon, firemen said the trailer was fully Involved when they ar-' rived and could not save it. • Cout Weatlaer Night and morning low clouds and fog, hazy swisbine in after· noons. Low toolght in low 50s, hlgb Friday 'in mid-60s . INSIDE TODAY A maniacal 'kUln is lOOte shmewhtrt in the West Orange Countv-West Los Angeles area. ••P•mll•a th• """'¢••·of fi .. low 111/orcimmt ogmdo.! with little Information to go 011. Set Pog• 24. . ' O.llL V PILOT , c waie111•te Q11i% " Senate to Grill Aide Kalmbach • . ...... Wire Strvlcet Newport Beach attorney Herbtrt W. Kalmbach, President NlxOh'S ptnoaal lawyer, will be among 211 top Republican ca-'8n officials called to testliy before the Senate's special Watergate ln- vtsllptlng committee. KalmbaCb, wbo Is alleged to have uaed bis Newport Ccter olfke and nwby Big Canyon coontry Club to engJneer payolfs for GOP spying act.lviUes, w • a 'qftllable for comment tbts moml!lg. ''He is out of town and isn't available by telepbooe," AM Harvey , bis personal aecretary. l8id this morning. Kalmbach is in top Watergate company on the lilt of wltnesse1 who will appear durln« the cpenlng ...,nd of publlc hear· irigs that begtn next Thursday. 1'be list in order of scheduled ap- jitarance, includes : • Jl'rom P .. cil MITCHELL ... against Mr. Vesco." In another development, changing e'arlier Senate testimony, the chatnnan of the Securities and Exchange Com· mlssk>n said today that he hacf several c'onvenaUons with Stans about the iOuroe ol a 1255,000 contribution to Presl· dent Nixon's im pmldentlal campaign. G. Bradford Cook bad told a Senate Al>Ol"Ol>rlatlo111 subcommittee May I that hi ·talked with Sta111 only once aboUt the mOney. · Stans i. ooe ol four ptnolll lndlcted In New York todey on cbarCet of oonsplrlng Iii Irr..,. the -delivery of ll00,000 of that quarier-mlllloo-dollar contribullon to the Nixon campaign. . . ·"The SZI0,000 contrtbUUon wa1 made m two ports: The lint, consisting of $200 000 In $100 blllx was handed over to sui:. April 10, 1172, and w11 not publicly tepOl'ted. '!be other "50,000 waa made by cbeck later In the campaign and wa1 reported'. Stans returned the entire $250,000 to ·Veta> Jan. 31, more than two moo.tbs after the SEC filed 1 four.®Unt civil complaint qalnsl Veaco alleging that be -ti delend>nla conspUed to loot $2M ,mlJllon from a lorolgn-bued mutual :iw;s~ 31 wu more than two mon\bs ' alter Cook said SW1I btcan hlJ serle1 of converutlons with Cook about tile poosl- ble amire< of the money. •-Jlresnahan._ 'Not .. Pushirig MCAS Conversion Bi.d' Orange County Airport Chief Robert 11/Mnahan said today be has no plans to pUSh for conversion of El Toro MCAS to a general aviation and commercial airport. RDbtrt Odel, who worked for the com- mittee for the Re.-electtdn of the Pres!· dent: Police Sgt. Paul Loper, who was among f.;be arresting officers when the Watergate oonspirators were caught ln Democratic headquarters; cmv1ct.ed con- 11Plratoc Jama w. McCord ; Sally HUmooy, fonner secretary to convicted conspirator G. Gordon Liddy; Robert Reisner, who worked In the youth se<;tlon of CRP; E. Howard Hunt, who pleaded guilty in the Watergate case and later told a grand jury of in volvement in the Ellsberg burglary; Liddy ; Hugh W. Sloan, treasurer of the fund-raLslng ann of the Nixon campelgn; Herb Porter, I.he com· mittee'a acheduJlng director ; Powell Moore, a CRP offictll; Jeb Stuart Magruder, deputy dlrector of CRf.; fonner White House aide Charles Cot.on; John W. Dean, m, White House COUllM!I fired by NI x 0 n: Kalmbach; Fred LaRue, a special con- sultant to former Atty. Geo. John N. Mit- chell, director of CRP until two weeka after Watergate; fonner Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans. who headed the financial arm of the campaign ; Mitchell; former acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray ; John D. Ehrllchman, who resigned last week as Ni100'1 top domestic affairs advile<; and H. R. Hlldeman, who left his post u Nixon'• chief of atalf al the same time Ehrllchman resigned ""!i Dean WU fired. . Kalmbach bH llso been linked to ID alleaed "teertt" bank account 11.t the Newport Center branch of the Bank or America. . He reporttdly kepi u much u l!ll0,000 in the aocount that wu supposedly used to liozikroll political • apylng and ea- plonage. StOJ. Sam J. Ervin Jr., (0.N.C. l, chairman of the Watergate panel, and Howard.H. Baker Jr., (R-Tenn.), ranking minority member. said the list of wit- nesses may be altered as the hearings proeeed. The early witnesses are expected to outline the structure and organization of the rHlection campaign and the break-in and bugging at the Democratic head· quarters at Wat~rgate. JJetaUs of the political espionage and sabotage operation and how it was fmanced will be explored as the higher· ranking officials are called to testify . Kalmbach'• official post on the Com· mittee to Re-elect the President was assistant Finance Committee chairman, working directly under Stans. Kalmbach allegedly raised several million dollars lil(OOihoul the )l;Orld !of the 1972 cam· J'lll"· From Pagel DON NIXON • • • international airlines uslng Athens aa a supply base, the newspaper sald. Nixon has beeq employed by Marriott for about three year1 . Tbe hotel chain is scheduled to break ground for a SlO million high-rise con. vention center in Newport Center next \Veek. Q,-.. Sioux Ltttnres, . I Mesa !Iotary Hears Indian ~lig1at By IWDI IWW'lJO Ill ......... ,.... ..... When the EuroptaOJ "dllcoVlftd" Amerlea In tbo Ulh CllllUrY, DOI ODlJ' ..... they IUl1'illil tbol tbo ~ hid ( dcoe II flrtt, bul lbot they hid lllo · e1lablbhtd a perfect society . "They had ao probltml with ecoqlcal balan<e. Thty had learned to Olve with nature. They were DOI bothered by ulcer1 nervous breakdowns, or suicide. "And best of all wu that the !>dies did an the work. How could you improve on a situation like that?" Improve II they did -lor'1brw.bite man. at the upeme of the Indian. )far• rlet Moore, a Sioux Indlao! told the Costa Me98 Rotary Club Wednead(;. DreJSed In leather and beadpar of eagle feathers Moore came to tali about the other side ci the story, the story not always told in the history tio:oks., , He said there were once stx nullion In· dlan• in thb country but t h • t govemment·app!'oved genocide dW'ing the Indian Wan reduced them to 225,000. "The fact that they did not die teotifl .. to a lt1"9DC will to live," added Moore, 51, mln!Jter at an IJldtan Cbrlatlan center In Denver, Colo. But, simply be<ause they were the looera the lndianl "were ~ with military tom on reservatlonl, hopefully to die." :..11111' "'"' lllff ...... -' Ensenada: Both Sides Holler Foul ENSENADA, Mexico (AP) -From Melicans came tales of lona·hatrtd, screaming Americans a rampace, rip- ping fire extinguishers from hotel walls:, urinating on carpets. kicking and pun- ching boles In _.,, throwing bottles. From Americans came stories of police pillog pt0ple three deep lnlAI a jail cell and pouring human excrement on jhem. of pirported tnnocenl byst>nden swept off tile st~IB, a n d or propel'.!7 con- fllcated by officers and never 1eeD again. The reports continued Wednesdey as this Baja California coastal c i t y recovered from a wild six • hour brawl Saturday night in which 50 persons were reported injured and 190 Americans were arrest9:1:. Police said four remained in jail Wednesday. Cate D. Darnall, 11, of Garden Grove, and Lindsey L. Greene, 18, of Seal Beach, were charged with assaulting policemen, and Patrick J. Sheridan,, 19, and Titomas A. Garcia, 19, both of Carlsbad, were charged with narcotlca possession. About 4,000 young Amerlcans were in Ensenada Saturday for the end of a yacht race and the celebration of Cinco de Mayo. Juan Zamora, manager of the Bahia Hotel, told a reporter the trouble started. shortly after noon when the While other nations such aa Germany and Japan have fought with the U.S. Government and actually profited, the Indians had all their poae88lonJ taken away by permanent occupation, Moore !"inted out. 'll-lhink-most-ci-UB---in-our--livea-aWme time wished we were anything but an American Indian," he told the audience. FIND AN INDIAN yachtamen left and the "hippies" ar- -. -.-1~~· I MOOri~--,;rived.---- •pM•or ,...., " "Al first, the hippies just sat around Moore cited atati..tlca to prove that the Al11erlcan lndlan Is the moot diaad- vantajed rillnority l""'P In the country. Annual income for Indians on a na· tionwlde average ls $1,500. Tb e unemployment rate for Indians llvtng. on reservatkns ranges between 28 percent and 75 percent. '!be average educational 1e .. 1 i. fllth grade. The occupation of Wounded Knee has moved the Indian-problem into focus for the rest ol America and although Moore does not agree with the destruction .or property or injuries to persons, he said, "l'm 100 percent in favor of 'Ao'hat they're trying to do." Indians, he said, are not looking for a handout but the freedom to b e Amertcan1. He views them in a period « transition he hopes will IOorl end. Moore said history may ~e been bad to the Indians but "It is men like you who can change history." "Find an Indian," he pleaded, w_ith them, "and try to 'be a friend. Not aa a white man to an lndiao, but as an American to an American." ' Coast ln'7aded Tiny 'Sailors of Sea' Float In "sailors of the sea" -tiny ocean Dor.ting animals are lll4lt1nl their spring appearance along the south Orange Coast. ' According to some coaat watchen:, ar· rival of the sailors mean swnmer ls nigh. Sailors of tile &ea O\' "by_ the winds sa ilora" are memberi of the genus ' velelle. They are football .taped, about the size of a silver dollar, with a tiny sail fixed to their backs. Clllngs of the tiny marine In· vertebrates have been made in ~an Clemente, Laguna Beach and Newport Beach, according to Weguards. Laguna-lleach Lifeguard Jim Stauffer says the sailors usually follow the cur- rents and light wind! along the high ,..,. They are unlQue in that thelr aa.lls are dealgned to Lei theni "tack" 45 degrees to the left during light southerly winds. When winds become strong, the sailors appacenily lose control and Doat Into shore, said Stauffer. After a few days on the btach they dry out, leaving a fragile skeletOn behind. Varieties along the coast of Japan have adapted sails exactly opposite in design tt ~t•for ~ coildlttooa jun the rtverse of those on the Pacific coast. Local sailors, Stautter reported, do sting, but the effect on humans ls mini· mal. . Many persons iµistake them for the poisonous Man-o-War, added Stauffer. Though the two animals are related, they are not the same. Those wbo have studied vellele. he &aid, agree that the first sighting ol the animals in late spring means summer is close at hand. the pool, drinking," he said . "Then more came until we soon had about 200 persons around the pool. .. One boy let out ayell, and someone answered · him. Then the people were all yelling. They got excited, and 10meone threw. a bottle into the pxil. Others started tossing things, too. "One boy started to take his pants off, but we had the police take him away. -Then a big guy threw a girl Into tile pool." Zamora said ho-asked-tho youtlrn¢ to do if again but was shoved away. He nUI the youth then fended off half a dozen pollcemen who were trying to grab him, and the violence started. Americans rac- ed through hotel hallways in groups of six and seven, tearing and b r e a k l o g whatever they co.uld, Zamara said .. The hotel ond Husaong'• Bae were heavily dalnage4. In the melee. ''We alept three men deep in shifta," he said. "I've bad five hours' sleep in four days." From the other !Ide, Biii Brower, 21, of San Diego, said police crammed 43 men into an eight by 12 jail cell and poured human excrement throu.gb a hole in the ceiling. "f bad been lo town just two houri arid was jU!l walking on the street when they grabbed me,;• said lhjo .shaw·halred Broifir. '"n cOst ine· $40 W get O\I!. If I ever,,come back, It will be with a &iiii;"- Other . yoUtba aald they were clubbtd for & apparent reason and bad to SW'· render watches, rlngs and mQDey which wasD't returned. ! A. police spokesman aid jailers pve receipts to releued prltonen, who were supposed to wall; to a nearby pollce ata- tion and claim their proptrty. But be said there may have been probleml becauae of the language barrier. TONIGHT Ct:lftA MESA WATER DJSTRfCT - Rtgillal' meelinc, '17 Fair Drl .. , 7:30 p.m. ' ' "DEADWOOD DICK" -Coots M ... Higb Setiool drama production, May 10, 11, 12; L)'oewn, I p.m. Admiaaloo Adulla $1, cblldren so cents. UC! LEC'nJRE -'"The C\>mpjeat Kalli: Sin(er," part o1 .. r1 .. o1 Folk ~lcianl, Ill Humanities Hall, i ·IO p.m, Admlsalcm ·.,.so, . LIIRARY FILM -"ScoUand," fOr young adultl. 7:30 p.m. Free. · PlllDAY, IU,'l II 0CC DANCE CONCl!:RT -May II, U, occ Audltoriwn, 8:30 p.m. Admission $1.SO. HARBOR HIGH BAND CONCERT - The Midshipmen (stage b an d ) Auditorium a p.m. TRAVEL WITH LLOYD MASON SM!'111 -Peru, Mad>u Picchu, OCC Sciei>ce Hall, Frjdaya 7-1 p.m. "TllE GINGERBREAD LADY"-Ollta Mesa Civic Playhouse, Friday and Salur- dsy, 8:30 p.m. "IN THE Mlll5T OF LIFE" -South Coast lltptrtory, Friday th...,gh Swfday, g· p.rn. '"BETWEEN PARENT & CHILD" - Gestalt & other approaches, OCC Science Lecture 2, 7-9 p.m. MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -Fairgrounds, 8: 15 p.m. UCI CHORAL CONCERT -"Vespers" Fine Arts Village Theater, 1'1ay 11 and 12, !p.m. AdmlssfOn P:- T elepho1ie Fiend ! . . l ' Hiu Huntingwn j: Eatery for $400 :~' ·'!be phantom. telephone . bandit atruck ; for the fifth time in Jess· than tliree weeks Wednesday night, this time hitting Far- rell's ice cream parlor in Huntington Beach. The bandit, wbo sometimes identifies himself aa "La Brique," followed his earlier method ol. operation in netting between $400 and $4SO from the restaurant at 1!!01 Beach Blvd., police said. The phantom called Farrell's at about 9:15 p.m. and told manager James McNally that hi• partner had a high- powered rlfie, ind that f\icNally or his customers woold be shot if instructiom were not followed . He told McNally to pbce "all the rnobey" in a bag and leave it nelt to a traab 'bin· in the rear of tile restaurmrt, police said. The bandit stayed on the phone, and wbtn McNally relumed he was told, "Very good. You baVe done very well." McNally waa .told to stey by the phone for five minutes. He called police im-- mediately, and when they arrived the bag ol maney was gone. In earlier robberies the bandit hit a Fountain Valley market for $25, a Hun--' tingtoo Beach hamburger atand for $1,800 and a Costa Mesa bamburJler stand for $ISO. In one case the bandit called a liquor store clerk In Huntlngtoo Beach, but dldn'I pick up the money. Breanahan said earlier this week he th:,ught ' the county should consider pUrchasing about 330 acres of land aivund the El Toro takeoff pattern to ~·protect the future" of the airport from encroaching borne construction. Bresnahan said today the county prob- ably w o u l d not purchase any 1 a n d around El Toro Wl1ess lt had plBJll to convert the facility to a general use airport . Board Studies Upper. Bay Stauffer · said they usually make another appeacance In August during periods of strong westerly wmds, and then do not appear until the next spring. Chief Neth Sets Workshop Talk Costa !\-1esa Police Chief Roger Neth will be featured speaker Friday during the California Law Enforcement Warrant Of. ficers Association workshop in Irvine. Police say they have no leads in any d. the robbertea. Newlyweds Slashed Preserve Plan: No .Aetlon But the oounty has no such plans al present, Bresnahan said. 1be reason he Su.ggested a possible purchase to the county Airport Commission this week was "it was just a thought I had and 1 wanted to test It out." Although the commlsaion agreed Tues. day to consider his suggestion, Bresnahan said today, "I didn't feel their reaction was very strong." Bresnahan was not available for com· mcnt on his proposal Immediately follow· big Tuesday's meeting. OIANHCOASJ CM DAILY PILOT By JACK BROBACK Of 1111 Dllllr l'Hot lllff Orange County supervisors Wednesday studied the complicated issue of the development oi a wildlife preserve and recreation area in the Upper Newport Bay but took no action. · Further comideration was delayed un- til a meeting of the Field Committee on the Upper Bay in San Fr3J)cisco on May 25. Webster Otis, special assiatant to the Secretary or the Interior and chairman of the Field Committee, outlined the goals and actions of the committee slnce its formation a year ago. He said 1,000 acrea of the area bu fiJh and wildlife which ahould be preserved and protected and charged that final responsibility for implementation of any plan rests with the Board of Supervisors. TM Ori• CMff DAILY ,ILOT, wllll Wfllcl! 19 '*""""" t11t Jllrn.'rwt. It IM*IWIH .-, ._ ~ C..tl 'lltlllitllll'll C-..n'f, S.,... r1i. ICll!loM INI p.IOll)Nd, Mondl't lllroutft FriN't, fw CO.II MIN, frtlWJllOrl ... ell, H"'"llf!lfM •1Kllll'our>t1ln \llllty, LIQ!$ ._.,, lrYIMlhddlffl<* llld S..~ CllfNflltl llfl J1,19n C1p1ttt-A •lnlie r"lonll .:1111on '' 111111111Nd "ivr.n M'llll ""'*~ The prlncll»I ,.,.,.llfllrll p!lnl 11 11 nil Wnl • .., Jlfftf, Co:lll Miu, C.llfomlt, m:i.. t.t>tit N. W..d ,,. ......... ~ The recent decision of the Irvine \:.om~ • pany not to :Jrther pursue lltlgaUon on the land exchange between the company and the county of Upper Bay Janda has speeded interest in resolving the varlou1 issues presented. Cloe disagreement cropped up In the discussion . Stanley Krause, county real properly services director, recommended that an appraiser be selected es soon as possible to detennine the market value of the three islancls In the bay owned by the trvine Q)mpany. He argued thet the detennination ol the future of the islands v.-as most important to the whole detennlnatlon of the Upper Bay prob- lem!. J1ck I , Cutl1y \Ike ,,..IMnl IN 0-11 .M~ 'fhoM•t ICet'IJl ·-Tlt•1t1" A. M11r11hin• --a..rt •• H. Lto1 llcJt1'4 r. Nill ""'"lft' MMlltlllt ltllWI ---JJO Wett l1v Stt1et M•lll1tt A414,..,,·P.O. h• 1160, tZ626 --' .. ,.,.... ... I JI»~._.,_,.. ....... ~I Dt it-I A\IW>lff .._.,...,_ ..._r JJln hldl 81\ilt'HN flll CllMWI! 'W ........ II C.lflll\e Jl"! , ........ 17141 '42-4121 ca ,... M••••• ..... ,,,, ' ~""'· tm 0,.,.. eo.11 l"ut>lltlllrlr ~. ,.. -...,..., lllWtnt .... ,,....,. ., @!!:!*""*"' l'lttelrt -••l'sl 1 ...,. tftdlt ,... "' ...... .....,., ........ = ... M--~ ......... _-_ .... __,.J tJI... I .............. ~ ' Interior Department's Olla disagreed. He said an "In house'" group In his department could make a good appral9l of the entire area and come within •o percent of the real value. Krause contended that cost of ac- quisition or the Islands, If desirable, should be • key factor In determining the economic feasibility for any plan ror use of the entire area. Knuso said determllllllon ol the ao- lwtl lecal ownership of the islands would be part of the job of an appraiser. Re said the legal title, engineering and • valuation vroblem5 of the uplands to be acquired are for the most part different from those of the islands and· that con- siderable time would be required to establish acquisition boundaries for the uplands. Krause said the county now owns an unquestioned fee or easement interest in 642 acres of the upper· Ba'y land, that undetermined prescriptive rights are claimed for the public for 383 acres and lhat lhe Islands are about 104 acres. The county official abo questioned the Irvine Company's title to the islands which be said baa never been legally determined. He added thal there ls dl!agreement respecting the slxe ol the Islands and their locatioo. The ""'811ed Field CommlUee Includes rep~tatlves of the county, the state, the city ol Newport Beach and the federal governruent. It wa11 formed a year ago at the re. quest of the Board of SupervlSOrs. Otis saJd its studies were dlrecied toward the protectioo. of open space, the protection of wildlife aml the provision of recreation attaS that mlcbt be com· patible to tilt wildlife preserve goal. · He said an "in houM!'~ appraisal would take six months and that the recreational areas planned mll!I be·llludied In relation to their altect on wlldlile. He added that a probable new Upper Bay bridge near Sbellmaker Island must abo receive con- sideration. Otis said the Field Committee should canplete Its work In the ... 11 &Ix moatba and would then be dluolved. The Interior department oUlctal also stated that the three lxlanda were the greatest natural resource for wildlife. Otis also said that lunds for acquisition ol Irvine lands and for develllptnent of the wUdlJfe-recrtattorr areas w e re limited. He said although there are many posalble aourees for funds they would be difficult to obtain. Jama Mc:Connlck, of the Callfomla lleportmtnl of Fiali and Glllle said the Upper liq LI the moot valuable wetland area !or wlldllle rell\alnlng In tile state. t Bus Tieup in Denver DENVER (APl -some Ml,000 regular bus riders here are looking for another ride today after 475 bus drivers and mechanics walked off the job in a con· tract dispute with the city-owned Denver Metro Transit. The walkout by members or the Amalgamated Transit Union is ex- pected to be a major economic blow to the tramlt oompany which was taken over by the city in 1971. Registration for ·the session begins at 8:30 a.m. at the Airporter Inn. Luncheon will be served at noon. Other speakers include John L. Fran- cis, criminal justice specialist for the state Dept. of Justice, and William Poun- ders, represt:ntative of the state Attorney Genei'al's 'office. A panel and open discussion are scheduled to follow. MARTINEZ (AP) -.An undenherlff has testified that the newlyweda William Tidwell Is accused of murdering died when their throats were slashed and not from bullet wounds. James W. Kennon, GleM County undersherl[f, testified Wed· neaday al Tidwell'• trial that llthough Jay Taresh, 52, had been shot three times, death came only when hi! throat was slashed. See 1)uldaA> for SPEED OUEEN Stainless , Stffl Fabric: Care ' Tub ·---1.Clo!J-..... • , .......... w ...... ....... ·.• Leltt .... UhtfMe .. ... w .... PLUS ••• a washable knits cycle \'011-CWI -A 1nD fUllM W.ISHD -AltD "'11 POI .U LOW .U 136~' ltr°llSPEED OUEEN.j[IJj a McGraw-Edleon C:Ompany Oivlalon 90 DAY ' CAIN WITH A~:~D . 'W 1815: IWPOIT BLYD. Dewntawn Costa Me~ Pbline •