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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-05-23 - Orange Coast Pilot• . ' ' • -sex can Ill " • • • • J .. Two Phony B01~ .. r • t· ~-· ~ ' -. ' Thre?ts :Plag~~-;·. ;. I . " . '.JluntingtOn :.Ba~ .. I I • ~ -... ·~~ ,.,· WEDNESDAY' AFTERNOON, MAY·23, 1973 · WLM. No. 10.. 7 seettoNS," P'AOES ' -# ! quard · Top.pies . ·;. "\ ; J:.. , ' • ' · u .. 1 T.i•het9 A ·w.,st·IJfJlinnliw'bon<ll' guard soldier faints as Soviet Communist party .o!il~f LeOnid l Brezlinev and party (backiround) bid farewell to thf$oviet colony •o(Bo,1111:.fq)lowing the RoSS!an leader'& five-day peace and·trade·uiissfon tQ ·Wllst Gl!nnany. .. " '· -· ' ; ,. ' .! .. Irvine Moms I ' Gettin-g: Sex Tltteat Calls ; By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tt.. D.lllY Plltt Staff A wave of telephone calls by a man claiming to hold captive girls abducted from ."School and threatening harm if ~ir', 1n9thers fail to give him sexual favois is sweeping the Irvine area. Tbe phantom or the phone wires so far has 'proved harmless, although annoying to scores of housewives throughout the south county area and even into Los Arlgeles County. , .. ·Concern has reached such levels-that Delaine Richards, princii;>al of ·EJ Caniino Real School, sent home a MfeOtal bulletin this week spelling out cam~ policies on taking children out of school. "It has been reported that some parents have received threatening phone calls regarding their children while they are at schoolf' Richards noted. "If you ·receive such a: call, please check with the school first so that we 'iwf.'l'Vous' t;;allers . may check the classroom for your child's ' , Two:FakeBombThreaf,s ~ ' I • presence. "We do not knowingly let children leave school with anyone without proper identification," Richards points out. "We also do~give. out P,lwne nwnbers." · ~ .Police Defectlve Bob Lennert • er.infirms tbat, 15 to 21).. such ,calls have been rep<rted fO}:'IDally,. wbtlemany more were piobal>IY'isJ>o<e<I ey'8iplents. ', . • What we liay,e ii ~ ~ male !'\¥> "P gets his satisfaetiOn out · or calllnl · . · · , women, S8)'S Detective Lennert. •· , Q"~' ~AN · -, • • dtiman<ted tlµit ,ft0,000 in castt: I>(~ in a The calls -all made at random the ·~ ' · r "" . :,;..!.I..• bag · Jllld""PI~~ · beqi114· ~ lph:s facts show -have flooded the SOtf\ll ()"' · $,, , ,jiJI t.-AU~",l:\.I ; •Su~lbt1 s,ttlf:istree . county. ~P.f;\be .i>Jiantom telep,..,., The ·.-··,.IN' 'wacuajeil [l\!r · uie "W~re getting a lot in Orange 1~ 4'\!.M<f.8o.l.hst-s.t8.it\ot. .. caller rei>Ortecf'Jl·.bomb had planted and U>s Angeles counties," says Don Ji ,,~~1£.Toe~y · Q,f.ii · .. iilSide' tbe-1>1,iffclinl:· police s · ' MacDonald, a special agent for the . t;-~~ ~y~ , ,. 1 ~lr · offkWs ,1called ' Ucf: 'ir&-. Pacific Telephone Company. .1""" ' . -~.~~ • :1¥><1'1>;.t'l'll'~ll.1!« • · · "'ly.• Ai' tliourough th of •'.Ifie "We've had two in about two 11)011ths," '"" ~~ b»bags .. me <a ers ;I. "l"ises la8ed .to ,IJl\cov'f all~ (See CALLER..-1'111• I) • -a vend 'a ''nerv:ous','woman· .... K · Id · · . ' . ., -:.; ~· . , 1 . .,. , l'f'c ennon .sa . ..~:'i , -h ' l I ~/, f\t,lAteJ1o8 e81ler w.:M:ribeJ,.1.t ,a,1'' ."'11>e~·~~i6~.~4l!-mt~~ ~·~'' ; . "" ,111e_,!J~Jlt.t , :ct .issIFlED AD kind •. ~JI ; ~Wii,.,. "*-· oh 79QJ~""· 4 . r,tCJCen •:.; t,r.,t 1 ' .. -.. ~·\ .. '~' ' -'A •1-i&JI: " ¥tile' ' ltfllf<te'bbWO.t • I#~ ._ ' Tiie -µiriit·was made just' before up" unless $50Jloo inc was plaCed in BRINGS 'H A.PPINESS the I p,m. •c~ time at• tbe Bani< ol a bag and pot behind tJa Goodyear Ure AmerltJi jlljiiich a) 10121 Adams Ave. , store next door. '.1',1e caller~ ~ .. ~boU~}'r·~ No. b>mb lfU found .by police who •ip.y""""ld trY!ng to muu.Jhir ..... ce responjled to the3 :0'7 Pl!n . calh 'I' In both cases the re1 was notified. since bomb threats ai:e ·a federal offense, MCKennon . sa1d. · ; · '.q ne-le.gged Th~f? ' . A Dafly Ptlot. classilled advertiser is h~epy1because. he sold.di is car to the 1first person:·WtlO Caltl!<f. Her!'&W'-trrt'ad!rb:-1 PORSCHE '68 Targa -glass back window, 5 spd, AM/FM, white, exlnt cond. 32,000 ml. $4350. C.11 eves. (Phone No.) ' ORGAN mµ. (UPI) -A llar JO<?k ali 13 shoes from a ltOre display rack. Police said 'Tutlday th•t every sh?< was for a rl&flt foot. , "Both calls ,.ei: ... ic:ompletely pllony. wite kind ol'expdd. this sort' of thing to happen," he said. referring to new!I acc00ni. ol'th• ... ~des of the phantom telephone bandit. • The bandit baa netted more than 12,700 in the ~t nionth by vl¢lmlzlng seven The new owner is now happily drlv'ing his car. Maybe you could be a little happier by running a successful Daily• Pilot ad. The dlre<:t 'happiness' line - &U-5671. ' ' .. ' . • (See TllJ(EA'8, Plige II ' \' ' • ' \ •, ' . -, ... ,. ·-~ ' • I' •I Irrille Moans Get Sex Threat Calls • ron1 Mystery Man ' •• I Moih~r . ' '. ' . .. . ( . Accesiory iri Tof s Mrtrder A young mother who admitted in ufe c!ourtroom that she knew her little boy .waa dead when she told pollce he was mlf.ing plead- ed guilty TueSday to tjlargis of being an accessory to his murder. ORANGE COUNTY Superior Court. Judge Kenneth Lae heard the confession and sent·Sandy RAlckwood, 17, of Orange, to the Fron· tera Prison fOl' Women for a presentencing study. She will be re- turned for sentencilig Aug. 20. Miss Rocl<wood's report April 13 that S·year-0ld Todd Rockwood was missiJ\g froqi,jb., home she shared. with 4rry W11'fll" Cobb, 23, s'parked an .inten!fve seatth of the area by more than. 500 lawmen ahd volunteers. THE HUN.T ended when Cobb led ~lice to. a shallow grave 'in the Anaheim Hills area where ~e child s body was unearthed. Cobb will be arraigned May 29 in Superior Court on charges of r first degree.murder. It is alleged that a beating he administered led to the child's death April 11. ' ·---. Seeurlty Risks? British. Minisrer Qu.its Over _Drug-sex Scandal LONOON (UPI ) -Lord Lambton, a 'cover up or whitewash. government minister who resigned Tues-H~a1h will make a statement lo Parlja~. day night in Britilin's most explosive sex1 rilent on Thursda~ on the affair, go"'.ei-10 ~rlty and &ug scandal In a1 detade,. merit .officials said' .• They said there, c00fessed ' today he did so because of a · wOulll be no official oominent ilnUI lbeii. · "t:aSual acquainl'ance" with a call girl ·. l'..abor opposition members of Parlla· '#hose husband bied to sen. secret, .f{lent bQmbarded the t.Ov'emmenr with . photographs of tbem to•newst>apets. ~qWI for an explanatioo of·Uie .allega. "But there ha&been oo Sealfl\y .risk or lions publi,shed b)! Q1e West German , blackmail," Lamblon, 50, insisted in a magazine $tern. " statement handed to ne'wsrrien by a "This is' the sordJd story," Lam,bton political aide. said today in a formal statement issued Within hours, the office of Attorney by an aide in his Berwlck~Tweed con· General Sir Peter Rawlinson announced stituency. "All that happened is that that summonses aUeging i l I e g a. ( some sneak pimp has seen an op. ~esslon or dangerous drugs have been portwli~ ol making money by the sale of !&sued against Lambton. It said he is ... (See SC~DAL, Page Z) • •• . ; • ' -'· •l Flees~No ~ ·~ .. [ • Trace Vet ., . ~ ~ ' '·1' .. : I A sandy·hah'ed banlit who illitl~' asked for change for a 110 bill Oubod~· · gun at a teller Tuelday and ucaped wt , more than 1SJOO from a COsta M . ba1!k. . • I The 2:15 p.m. holdup at the Bank qt An]eMca,. 2701 ff.arbor Blvd., went Off smoothly after the ~, m·fo>JI llW'" man ordered a telle'r .. tO tum ove.r her money. l . ! "He walked lo, got the Jll(llle)' ancl left," said one FBI agent lod,ey. I "He walked out with 15,291.1!'," Ba!Jlc· of Americ• public rel.,Uon,, spokesman'. Jon , Wuhiag\Qll ,lal!I ~' pjllpolnt1'!1 the. !l"cise 11Tft0/l'1!; i.k•llJ • ;. • .1 Inve1tigators rQQed-.to1 •tlte. 'bank ·at r Harbor ·Boulev11rd ·and · Adams . ·Aventpt but (ound . 00 traPt <I ·the 1bandlt, wm qulck\y slipped outtbro\!g!i.a rear <\OOr. , The umde~tUled teller , confronted• dur-· ing the robbery which occurred while eight.persons wer:e present· said the gun-• m.B.Q ditplayed a revolver to show he meant business. Authorities did not di sclose int- mediately whether any personnel ac-ti~ated the bank's scanning camera to catch a portrait of the robber in action. The bank branch at lfarbor Boulevard and Adam'a Avenue is one of the more~ (See DOLDUP, Pop I) ' " or .. IJ• ' ' Weather Mostly sunny on Thursday, after the early mqmlng low cloucb , with little temperature change. Highs in the 00s at the beaches, rlfing. to the mid-'103 inland. Overnight 1ow11 in the sos . " . being charged wlftl•-possession or mclri-. . . ~ _, fuarut and ampbebunines: _ · \; , • "--"'\ s~l~~~~f.gf!'e~~~~~i:~ Brothels Oka y-INSiDE TODA:~ j(n vesUgaUng seft8'ti0nal · &)legations "•boot vice rini lmproprietles involving · No t St:m"· 1--w" ... government mtnistert and o t h e r " U&(J.I. 1 a. figures." It sald at least one other govemment minister is involved. VIRGINIA CITY,.Nev. (UPI) -S<orey . ™ LolJdan Evenfng· News said the girl County officials don't want any activities ; i" a,ija,ll<,tal!e.akl,.!Mlri;~!'..u.11 . . "~Jed .~A~le~-.~ .tile , , that a ·~ ctlllnfl\~lfer'liili6'lftr• · prvrief.i. <nt~l · oullide- tr\Ocl·,lo sen "lncrlminalinli ,phoWgraph•" ' legalized brothel•. ; of the girl and Lambtoo to a British 'M1e county commissioners have diawn newspaper for $25,000. . . up a proposed ordinance which wouJd ban 1 Lambton quit abruptly Tuesday night topless and nude shows, X·rated movies, ·~(or personal and health rtasons" as massage parlors a n d other se:wal 1 f.arll,ament widersecretary for the Royal stimulants outal,de hou&el o( prostitution. Air Force. . They plan to approve lt June 5. . G<wernment JOUrces said Prime Storey COUnty ·wa:s lhe first in Nevada , Mlnl!lter Edward Heath CM'dered an u· lo licen1e brothels, whlcb are legal in the .tiaustlve probe and no Watergat&.style state on a county option buts. • f Resp&ndin{l to the rtvt!'lo&ion ' 1 that the county's cl1ief g03 sup- plier mua& au the amount G/ ftut he co~ deliver, '1lperol.!0ta ordered au· department.I to Cur. tail t1onesttntiol gas use.· See stoT11 and other county newt :unf!lll•J.JQ .cmd Lj, " ·'' .. ti .•.• Al y_, ltrfkt I ~!-.. • L.,M. le.,. II ~ •11 leaflflt JJ.Jt MVl-61 """"' • C•ll~ I ... 119!w! Nlwt I C•,_t Ctnlll' I Ol'f!IM CMliitY 1•11 C.ltfflfftll ~ "'" • Cltll'" If SHftt 2'14' CrtM-111 W Of. Sttl111:!'Wnl l4 0.1ltl Nelktt. It StM-MMt,t tl »-1' I INI~ Pnt • Ttlt'mlMI • '"~"""' »-l1 '"""" ~ l'INMt 11•1t WHl!ltf 4 .... TM ._. lt """"'' 11.WS fN!' , Mwacwc • WDl'llll "'"" 4 -... ... '""""' 1f ,. '----------~-~ > · .. • ': • . I , , i.;, r r DAILY PILOT s WtdntSdar. May 23, l9i'J 'l(new Qff er Illeg~l' Caulfield Cite~ Loyalty to President W.ASHlNGTON (AP) -John J. caulfleld testified tcday that be knew it was illegal for him to offs-executive clemency to James McCord, but did it at)'way because be believed the offer <*flt• from President Nixon. .''It trussed my mind that this coo- ceivably was from President Nixon. 1 believed ii." the former White HOUiC aide said. CauU!eld lold S<nate invesllga~s he But he~ '.,r~· ~ 'Ulll knew lhe off..-ol clemency lo McC«d he had no -1 ar-Jedp 11141 ·11 1 -~--'-of j anyone bJ111er than ---was an I ega ~~U..., ustlce . counoel JCi*1 W, ileall. fil ~the McCord wu on trial at the time for oH President HWm i. .w.1..t rhatJ burglary, w._._, •• and compiracy in er. '. · • .,.,.-••-w•.. knew •liout,or au~ clemency the Watergate cue. fttt to any Watergate dld'eodanl.8. "What I'm saying to you, sir, is th.at CauUield dirput.ed one lmportant my loyally to the President of the United of McCord'• story. lie ae1d. McCord Sta!eo overrode lhooe coru;ldehitiooo," trying to Slay O•Jl of jail al !he time tJ11 - ,... ..... i .. .. SCAND~···~ ~ ;' "' .. ' : Ibo 11"'1 and -~~ "' :· !lOli*f~tl """"'_,.NII~:-~~>!.!.. I '1 .. bthlved w\tl:i ~~l'IW\1.J• ~ Lora' La!nbtoo added. "l must rtpeal :· lhlt !here has been no hlgJI life vl<e ring, ' no tec:Wity leak, no blacbnftll and, as far , u J -· no polllictan or any p&rty .. : remotely connected wll.h these events." : Stem said the alleged "vice aclncW'.' :· • ln•olved a senior Brllbh dlplmlal will! : ari!tocraUC family links and access to :: military -.is. 11 said l"l lrequenled : luxury brUbels in Paris, l.Gndoa, New :· York and West Germany. ; Aller Lamblon issued his st1leme11l. a · Stem Odito< In Hamburg said )lo ,.., !he ; man referred to In lhb ~ga.zlno's sloey. · Cauliield said. clemency oiler. we1ti ~·McCord hU "~ -t;r -ti -ti -ti -t:r 1f NIXON SAYS HE 'FEARED ' Some BrUJsh riew,P.~ deSCJibed die : Siem allegallonl as !he most sensallonal : in Britain since the Christine Keeler se1· : and·secur1ty scandal hit the beadlines.10 : years ago, involving former War ·· Secrotary John Profumo and nearly ICJI>" pling the government of former , Prime Fl.les on Hughes Seen said :0:1=u:7r::,0~~~~ on grounds that some guilty parties weren't being i:c05eCUted and were trying r false ly lo blame !he Central lnlelllgeoq1 ~ ~ B J _ Plot G l Agency, his old employer. as urgmry oa le~=~a::~;:\,.;:u,;o Senate'• He w~ asked by Sen. Lowell P. ' LAS VEGAS <AP) -\Vatergate conspirators may have been after ex- tensive ·files on l!oward Hughes, in- Quding memos purportedly handwrillen bj the billionaire recluse, when they planhed to burglariu his office, says Las 'Vepa newtpaper pubu.her Hank G~. · 'l don't think they were as much in-t~ted in the information we had on this' Democratic candidate (Seo . Edmund Muskie) as they were In the I!ughes COX'S BROTHER LAWYER FOR HUGHES-P1ge 4 documents ," Greenspun t-Old a news con- ference at the Las Vegas Sun Tuesday. '.'It's very possible that they were anx- ious t-0 recover thole documents." Hughes' name wu brought Into the Watergate epiaode Tuesday when James W. McCord, ooe of the men who broke in· to the Democratic natk>nal headtiuarters, told the Senate committee.. probing the affair that a Hughes plane reportedly was to be ~de available to fly a tiurglary team from Las Vegu to Latin Amen.ca after Greengpun's safe had been cracked. Jury Selected For ,Extortion Case; Delay set Jury selection ended late Tueeday in ~ Orange County ~rior Court trial of Westminster city officials D e r e k M'cWhinney and Tad Fujita, but there Will now be a one-week delay before opening argwnel'lta in the extortion case. ~ la.,,.... Jooeph Ball for lllc~ Mlf AtStotl-e forl'ujtta lord Jildge Jhn Flynn Jr. immediately after . lhe jury was sworn In th.al llleY needed a del ay until May 29 to dlipo9e of other business. Judge Flynn grant.ed tl>e re. qaest. Former mayor McWhinney, 40, and cl· ty planner Fujita, 34, are accused of demanding $10,000 from Mlle Square Park farmer George Murai with the threat that nonpayment would mean the loss of his lease at the Fountain Valley acreage. :1t i! alleged that Mural was pressured into paying $5,000 In cash and a further $4,000 in the fonn of a check made payable to a county's supervisor's cam~ palgn fund. FromPqeJ ·THREATS ... franchise businesses ln Hu n l ing ton Beach, Fountain Valley and Cotilla Mesa . A bomb explosion at a Huntington Beach restaurant Monday night was at- tributed to the bandit by police who believe he is trying ·10 show he "means business." No money changed hands. The aame restaurant was hit by the bandit several days earlier, when he telephoned his Uireat that if money was not placed in a bag and put outside, the person on the phone would be shot by a high-powered rifle. The Dandlt made off "llh $500. . OU.Mel COAST IT DAILY PILOT Tllf O'•llllt CHft OAllY f'IL.OT, Wll., Wflld'I la c.mii!Md 1t1t Nt-Prm, It Pllb11"'9d b'I' the Ol'•no• .Clilttl PVbtltl'llnv C"91Hf1Y ..... rut t<1111ctn1 1n publta"'-d, Morio.r ftlrouoll "tld1y, IOr C01!• Mt .. , N-rl lltadt, Hvn!Tn9ton llt.c:Plll"ounl•ln Vtllly, L~un• aNcll, lrvlMl'SoNctl•rt ll'>d S.n Clemtnlt/ S•n Ju•n C11>lillr1no. A alfler. '9111-• H ltkm 11 PVO!ttf*lf $11\vt"tMYll tnd SUl"<d1v1. Tnt prlnciPt>I Jlllt!ll ... 11'8 p!tnf It t i )JI) Wt.II ••1 S1tMI, CO.It M ... , C..ll!Otnl•, ,.,.,., "-•"-•rt N. Woetil "rttkl...t 11'111 Publltlwt J1cli A. Curloy Vl(I Pmldenl Ind 0.,,...1 M_,..- 1\0,...11 K••vl/ f'dllO• Tho111_, A. Mu1plii itt1 M•ne111nu Ed!!0< Ch 1N" H. loo• Jllchtrd r'. Nill olul"tn! M•nttlnt £dllct,. -C.01!1 M-: JJI) *-ti ll11y S+rttl NfWlllO!" llwdll WJ -N...-rf ktilevtN L......,. •ll(:fl: m '•nt ,.,.......,. 11\lftllrlOIOn'llMdl: 1rt7J lffdl "°"""''' $tft Cle!fttnle! at» Norri! II (ln'llN tMI , .. .,... (714) 641-4121 c ....... Ath•~ '42·5,71 ,.,_ t.MMI Afffl ..... fl ........ •.odl 492-4420 l'f"'I ~ or. .... Cl'IH'lh' ~""' l40ol2Jf c.....,.11111. ''""' OI'•• co111 ~Uth'"9 '°""'"'· Mt -ttorlft, lllultrt!ltoola. ldl.,,..Ltl rntl,... or •O•ttll•-'t ......_In ,...., 01 ~4'f WilllOlll t P«lfl Pll' nllltlrM t/11 CWY~ltld .,.,.., · l«Oftf tllU ....... w f l Ct»M Melt, Call""°"lt, '*"'"'"'" DI' "rrlltr a ,.S ll'llf!thl'r; w -11 f.J,lJ "*"""'1 mllltttl' dnti,..lllM t:lM ...,_ltitf. ,I • No burglary was committed , but Greenspun said someooe broke into his office and tried unsuccessfully to crack his safe. McCord has said the Watergate team bad heard there were papers in the safe linking M"'tle ([).Maine ), lo racketeer· Ing and that the racketeers could ex· t;rciae control over the senator if he had been elected President. But Greentpllll told the news con- ference the documents he had on Muskie "ab.tolutely" did not link him to organiz- ed crime and were not ''of sufficient significance to besmirch the character of a presidential <::andidate." He said the in- formation never had been published and refused to tell what the documents con~ lalned. Greenspun taid, however, the Hughes documents he has "disclose his game plans for the election of presidents, ol s~tors and governors" and "really tell a hiltory of Mr. Hughes' operation in Nevada. • .from the tint time he got here. "It must have been the Hughes documents they were ·after," the publisher said, "because they were going to use a Hughes plane to go to South A~ica and at that time Hughes was in Nlearqua.'' Greiru:pun said the documen ts had nothing to do with a $142 mllllon "slan<!er of title" suit he ha$ ~ against Hughes. The publisher seeks to release a lien Hughes has on 't,070 acres of Prop. erty Gree111,pun owna: near a Las Vega~s catmtry club: ' . ' . - I LA Man Arrest,ed In KUJ,naP.ing Of Young Marine Los Angeles police have arrested a man on charges of kid.naping a C.amp Pendleton Marine from a San Clemente oomer last weekend. Booked In Los An~eles on cllarges or kidnaplng, oral ropulallon and assaull with a deadly weapon was Joseph Reilly ol Loo Angeles . Reilly allegedly placed a knife at the back of the yoong Marine while he was standing at the corner or Del Mar and El Camino Real and forced him into a car police said. ' Afte r driving to Los Angeles. the suspect attempted to perform illegal sex acts with the Victim, police claim, but lhe Marine ...,.ped and called Loo Angeles police. Bail was set in Orange County by Judge Blair Barnett at $15,000. Reilly was later released from jail in Los Angeles by court order until a trial date is set. Welcker (R-Olnn.), ""'1t he mean! when he testified that he bad coosidered he was doing a "great service for the President" when he offered clemency to McCord. "It was a great hcn>r for me to serve as a member of. the President's staff," Caulfield said: "I had come from a rather humble bact;roond, a police of. fleer .. , f fell •ery atrongly about the President, extremely strongly about the President. "I was very loyal to the people I work- ed for. I placed a high value on loyalty. Now out of the blue I'm injected into this scandal. I'm being asked by one of my former superiors to deliver a message that I know to be executive clemency. I tried to avoid it ... " When Dean insisted that he deliver the oUers penonaUy, Caulfield .said, "I make certain judgments ... In my mind 1 felt that the President probably did know about it. Now· I'm going out the door to be more specific, and 1t crossed my mind that this conceivably was from the President. I believed it. I had to think aboul lhal . .IJld based upon all of . that backgroufM\ I believed 1 was doing something 1 for the President of the United states, and· I did it, sir." From·Pflf!e J HOLDUP ••. often-robbed financial institutions in Costa Mesa, appatently due to its loca- tion. , The busy boul\W'ard · intersection af- fords fairly quick acceu to the San Diego Freeway, in 'addition to heavy traffic in which a getaway car can become lost. Three years ago,, a motorcycle- helmeted bandit who smashed his way through the front door wJtb a Ure iron on two occalfom ·1n a three-month period robbed the same facility . A trio· of men later captured in Texas, convicted and serltnced to long prison terms for anned holdups In that state a130 hit the Harbor Boulevard-Adams Avenue branch 11,2 years ago. Officer Killed By 0'?1 Weapon OAKLAND (AP) -A )'Olll1g Oakland policeman was shot to death with his gun early today during a routine traffic stop, and police arrested a man and woman officers said tried to run them down. Robert Blan, 26, on the police force two years, wa!I shot in the chest, Jeg and back. He was fowid at 2:30 a.m. a block from the patrol car in which he had been riding alone. Robert E. Simmons. 28, Oakland, and Mamie Adair, 33, 13erkeley were booked for investigation of murder, police said. No Harass111enl Seve1i Governors Get IRS Audit IV ASHINGTON IUPI) -The lnlernal Revenue Service acknowledged lt is auditing income tax returns of seven state governors but denied the ex- aminations are part of any campaign to harass office holders. The 1RS said the audits Involve fou r llepubllcan governors and t h r e e Democratic governors and indicated It rega rded them as routine. "The IRS has not initiated any ex- amination program or drive to examine governors' retums," it sald in a state- ment. The agency said it was ,prohibited by Jaw from dislosing the names. Oklahoma Democratic governor, David Hall. sald~ast wt!ek his personal tax return -well as that of Oklahoma Secretary o State John Rogen -was under invesli lion. Hall said in ~statement that he felt the IRS probe ww "P.art of an effort by tile Nlxon Administ rlitton. to d Is c r ed I r' Den1ocraL~. Rogers Said 11t leost 15 Derhocratic governors were being ln· vestigated by the IRS. The IRS Public Affairs office said in a statement that the governon' returns un- der examination "were selected for audit W'lder regular JRS selection procedures." The agency has a number of method!! for pulling relums for a closer look. These lncludc random selection and er· rors in listing certain "unallowable · Items" such as too many dependenf.lllj. "The IRS expects to audit about J,6 1nHllon returns ln the fiscal year ooding Jtme 30, 1973, the statement said. Audits are conducted for the purpose ot Insuring that the taxpayers involved have cor· rectly applied t.he law and regulations i.n determining their tax .' The IRS said it determined seven governors' returns were under scrutiny after checking with its 58 district o!fices. Hall said his persona] returns for 1968, 1969 and 1'70 -the three years before he \vas elected to the Oklahoma state house -were being examined, . LA Coupcil Balks OnFodda Censure LOS ANGELES (AP) -A proposal lo censure actress Jane FOfl<ih. for her quoted remarks aboot returned war prisoners is going to .st.ay buried wlth a City ~l committee for the time being. I • Coundlman Arthur K. Snyder had In· troduced a motion Ma y 3 to 900Jd Miss fonda !or reporled remarks llull she thought some POWs were lying about being lortur.d in Vlelnam. The motion wa.s sent to the State, COunly Md federal Affairs C-Omrnllleo. Dul Snyder wanled lo call tile molloo back Tueoday, polnllng oul lhe council can do so when a referred motJon d!Mp- pcan for D'Q'e than two weeks. A c:ouncll deadlock of 7-7 blocked Snyder's callup effort, however. T1lc cornmJnee chairman, Tom Bradley, said his committee wlJI C(IO!jider the censure motion after Jt receives a report from a staff aide on what Miss Fonda said . I Ul"IT ....... ASTRONAUT CONRAD INSPECTS SKYLAB DEBRIS · CUTTER Will Use Device to Clear Trash Pro,n Troubled S1Mce Station Skylab 'Repair Crew' Ready for Friday Shot CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The coun tdown resumed and the Skylab l astronauts passed medical checkups tcr day for launch Friday in an effort to repair their space station and twn it into a liveable Mme for nine men this year. The. emergency sun8bades and debris- c!earing tools which ~ pilots will carry into space were Pe1ng flown to the spaceport this afternoon to be stowed· i.n the .a\bin .of their Apollo co~nd ship. Charles "Pete" Conrad, 'Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J . Wei~ completed morning-long p h y s i c a 1 examinations shortly before noon and doctors reported all was well. "1bere are no problems," said Dr. Royce Hawkins. "Everything is normal. They are in high spirits." v , . New $1.8 Million NCO Club Slated The countdown toward the 6 a.m. PDT liftoff Friday started at 5:30 a.m. It had been helled elghl hours alter tile W>- manned launch of Skylab May 14, when II was clear the elght·room space bouH oould not be oe<:upied without t ex· traordinary r~irs 1n orbit. NASA Administrator James C . Fletcher today established a board head· ed by Bruce B. Lundin, director of NASA's Lewis Research Center in Cleveland, lo investigate the Skylab failures . - Tbe counldown originally was lo begin Tuesday night bu! l4ljllCh officials delayed it nUM; hoUrs to coriserve battery power in lhe 22-story Salum IB rocket One of !he first ;operaliros today ,... to insall, ,l)je ti&lleries an~ check !he 111/'c!!fu~'s, •l"WICJl ,sysleJV. · . , · 'lJ>e . three aslroo4uls new to lhe spaceport· Tuesday nJghl and showed their oplirnism by pllolln{ !heir lwo white jets on a sharp maneuver airmen call a "ha.If victory roU" before landing. If the three astronauta can mend Skylab, they will stay up for 28 day1 to can-y out most of the medical, acientlflc Construction will begin in June on a and engineering experiments wigned to $1.8 million non-commissioned officers' the mission. There la sWI hope among For Pendleton he project leaders that two more three-man club at Camp Pendleton in Nort m San crews will be able to follow and ltay Diego County by McCann Construction aboard Skylab even longer. Company of Costa Mesa. Skylab is circling earth 271 mllea high Completion date for the new Marine every 93 minutes. Flight controller• in Corps facility is mid-1974. Houston, frequenUy changing Skylab's The new club wlll replace a number of position in relatioo to the sun by radio small clubs housed in buildings ·COO-control, have stabJlized the temPerature structed during World War II, a base of· extremes in t be station's main Uving ficiai said. area, which facea the sun, and in the It will include a l>anquet area and shaded forward secUon. ballroom, dining room and cocktail Mission control reported that ·the lounge. average temperature in the Jiving Located in the south mesa ol the base, quarters was 123.5 degrees today, which, it will be of low maintenance concrete a spokesman said, was "a sUght eleva· masonry and copper roofing. lion in the patient during the paat 24 It will serve staff non-commi.s.!lioned hours." officers only. However, temperalurEs in the cold McCann Construction was the sue-forward module were a slightly higher 35 M-Harold MacMillan. ' In his statement, Lambioo said "I had : a casual acquaintance wlth a call girl aJid one or two of her friends. ·' "But," be said, "there has been no·~ securily risk and no blackmail and never , at any lime have 1 spoken of any aspect "~ of my late job." 1 Lambton, who is married, has one son '( and live daui!>t<rs. . -'1 . Lambtoo said In his Ible~! PQllce . Informed hltn"Monday ,lhal llle . .,.JI &!!l's. husband had taken seem phot.ogriijh. and sold them lo newspapers. They ~•e ·· not been published In Brllaln, whereJlbel laws are 1trlngent. "They pel'lllslmily quesllooed me u to wbelbet J had been the iubjecl ·of blackmail," Lambton said. "I could odly " tell them I was unaware , of ·hla .a. .. istence. It 'l J'roM Page I CALLER... 'i ~ ~owport Beach Police Delectl•e· J Lavonne Kral. ,1 The caller -belleved to be a young man -apparently selects telephoiie ~ numbers out of the White Pages section ·' without any personal knowledge of tbe1• party called, investig111toi:s aay. -e of lhe vlciln)a wJme children ·· have been lhrealend by the mystery ' caller don't even have c b 11 d re n, authoritJes point out. _. Modern melhods of tracing telephone calls wtilJe !hey .,. still oomecled mate : 11 lncruslngly e..-f to trsp crank callenc. "Whal we're running lnlo wllh Iha clown lhough," saya Paclllc Telphoae · Special Agent MacDonald, "Is Iha! be • never caU. back." The · caller . never 1oes near the. rui.dence of the peraon called either, at , leut hued on what autboritlea know. , about b1m ao far. 1 They theorize th.al he experiences vlcortous .. xual lhrilla !rom crealing fear in !he part!ea called. .. • JI . Bp~g~, Hike Oppo11ed:; SAN ·FRANCISCO (AP) -A propoO.J': helure 'Gold91 Gato Bridge, directors 1o· rilse the lnll from~ cents lo 75 cents qn ~ !he historic, 1pon has drawn oppooltlat' from !he Marin County Boord o1 ' Supervbors. . Phone Strike Cuu Hotline HELSINKI (UPl) -A lelephoae workers strike put the emergency holllae between !he White H- and !be Kremlin oul of order toda7, bul a U.S. embuay source said backup 11Y•lem1 could be uted. The olrlke also cut all bu! lwo of Finland's telephone links to lhe outside world. In Washington, the Defense Department aald a backup radio- teletype channel runs through Tangier, Morocco, bypass in 11 Helsinki, for use if the 10.year-<.ild hotline is inoperable. • ... ;,• cessful low bidder at $1.836 million. degrees which "brings smiles to the G.:ro::un=db::r::e•::kin::' '.'!gc.w::i::ll:_be::_:J::un:::•::.:_:12::_· ___ _::ra::c.~es~of::_l:::h:e.'.fl'.'.'ig~h'.:l_,co:::n::lro'..".".ll"'ers~."-----'=========='====! .• • '- ,;' ;'\. ... MEMORIAL DAY .. " ,,. . ,, .~ . .. In honor of those who gave " MAY their lives that this would be •.; . " 2BTH " . a better world, we will be . " closed Monday-Memorial Day .. -.. JOHN HART . ·L¥NN HART '; •, HARTS SPORTING GOODS " ·- 538 CENTER STREET •" . ' ,, A 8'uldl11 wme c., ... fttdQ v ...... Of u.e Dolly Pilot Gol a prol)"1nf 1'~11t wril< Pol Dunn. Pat IDiU Clll red -·gel th• anawer1 and actton 11 o u need ~o JOlW fflf~~ Hu m gqv- emment itn.d 1' 0 u, qttel- twna to Pat Dunn/ At busfn<SI. !fail Your S""1ice, Orange Coast DailV Pllo~ P.O. Boz 1580, COl14 Meta. Ca., 92625. Include 110ur tt,ephone number. Cat BreedfHfl DEAR PAT: We have decided lo breed our female Siamese cat once before get· ting her spay,ed. J have studied breeding chartS designed to help determine colors and desired characteristics, but the tenns inbreedillg, line breeding and ool- crosslng are confusing. Can you explain these tenns and re!er me to a book that would be helpful in choosing a mate for our cat and cariog for the kittens? R.G., Costa Me11a hbreedlng 11 coatillual mating of members of the same or closely related •locks and line bt<ecllng ts lbe produdion •I desired cbaractertatlcs In animals by inbreeding through several successive pneratioos. lJDe'breedin& ls simply a form of lnbtttdlog. A breedlng of 1Qll"f:lated cat1 ls knon u u. out-cross. Wblle Inbreeding is used to amplify cer· ta.la ul1tlag cbaracterlllUct, an out-cross Is med to obtain whatever cbarac- terlsttcs .are desired, but lacldng in the line of the cat yoa are breeding. "This Is tbe Siamese Cal," by &large Naples, i8 a good reference book ·for Siamese cat owners and breeden. It ls available In pet ud book ·-- -'lflfla:lne Dela11 DEAR PAT: I ordered a gill subocription of Kids Magazine for my daughter last October. We did have a change of ad- dress, but I wrote to the magazine in· forming it of the change and that we had not received any issues yet. I wrote again asking why the subscription had not started after my $6 check cleared the bank. We haven't beard a word from the publisher. Ll\f., Ml11Da Viejo You may laave been wder the Im· ptt11lon you'd ordered a Cbrl1tmu gift subscription, bul none of the otdtrs received las& ,faU wCre Wied fer I\ leMt ~gbt weett. The magazine t.bea ktSt 11.i financial backing early lbb YO!" and no t1sue1 were publhbed for several months. PubUaber'• 1poll:ea1J1.an L)'DD Robinsea said the magatlne la HIYent at this tlme and May issues wen malled May 11. She asks subscriber• to be "pa. lieut" for at lea11t three more weeks to allow time for tblnklas1 mail delivery ln California. If you and D.J., Newport Beacll, another Kids Magllint subscriber with a delivery problem, don't receive your May lswe1 by the ftnt pert of June, let me know, tr write dlttdly .to Lynn Robfn!Oll, Kkh J\.fagu.ble, 11 W. 4%Dd St., New York, N.Y. 10036. About -'lemorfal Da11 DEAR PAT: Could you tell me wbm Memorial Day was first observed in the United States? I'd also llke to know why it is ca11ed Poppy Day and if it's true that some Southern states have special dates for lbcir Memorial D a Y observances. B.C., Newpm Beach Though no one kDows when Memorial Day, IOmetlmes called Decoration Day, origlnatcd, It b: believed to have been first obae~ed by gr1evinc Southern women dartq: the CIYll War. 'Ihey cho9e ~fay ii to decorate the graves of botb Unioa and Confederate sokUen, ac· tording to lbe World Boot Encyclopedb. Americans now observe tbb national holiday to honor those who lost tbelr Uves in all the country's later wan, lnchtdlng the SpanJst. American War, 1•1191; Wfl'kl War I, 1917·1111; World War ll, lMl·IMS; tM Koreaa War, 1'50-lMJ, .... the VletnailiWat, SIDe,e the eod ot World. Wsr I, M~y 11,. bal llOe'IH>1)~· od Poppy J>oY ~me o/ 1lle blltliiil roupt In the poppy fleld1 of France end Belglum. Memorial Day, no• celebrated on the last Monday lo May In most states, became a federal bolklayrfn lt'11. Maay Southern states seJ aside a day lo honor Confederate dead. Alabama ud Georgia observe April !6 ·as Confederate J\.femorlal Day; botb CaroUnu ob1trve May 10. Kentucky and Lo a t l a JI • celebrate it on June a, the blrlladay of Confederate Prtsklelt JeUU'IOll Daria. Girls Club Sto"!I DEAR PAT: A4 an inte~ Y<llunleer for tbe ltarbor Arft branch of. the Girls Club, I have a question for you. Nalional Glrh Clul> Week wQ oboerved the week of May 14, but no one seems to know anything about when the Glrh Club organization started. Do you? J.T., Cotta Meu The N1Uonal Glrlt Clab wn f<lunclod In 1915 by Mn. J. Herbert John-la Wottettt:r, Ma11. Besfnalag wkb ti claarttt members, tbe elab now ha1 ap- proximately 171 bl'llnthet from coast to cout. N1Uonal lteadquarwn are located •l 111 E. f!Rd St., New York, N.Y. The local Glrll Club WU 1tanod in 1114, became a meruber ol the oatlo1utl lfOllP ill 11'5 and bu a C&U'IUl memberlldp of 1,llOI gtrll. I o.uv Piiot si.11 Plloto s DAILY PILOT 3 . SaddlefJack College I ~ New Talk Policy· • To Be Tried Out By JAN WORTR Of ftM DMIY ,, ..... SMH For three weeks ne:..t fall, Saddleback College will uperiment with a different policy on campus speakers. The board of trustees unanimously ap- proved a pilot program prepal'e<i by stu· dent senator Tim Jansen Tuesday night. At the last meeting, the board voted to retain the much-debated policy but con-- Supervisors OK Advisory Guidelines sidered a suggested alternative rrom ~ student.s. First, u program follo'o\'ing the exisU~ rule -that speakers on both sides or a controversial issue be S<..ix.'<luled for the same progran1 -will be held . Then, a speaker "'iii be presented separately for t"'O weeks. After the experiment. Associated Stu- deot Body members will poll studenl.J. faculty members. and !he community for their opinion of the trial. A panel of two student and one ad· n1inistrator y,·ill organize the three pnr gr~ and obtain speakers. The choices will be approved by the boMd. ·rrustee Hans Vogel stressed to Jansen that the experiment would have no n1caning if the speakers were not coo .. troversial. " S~lpture Topples Guidelines for establishment o f Municipal Advisory Councils (MAC) in unincorporated areas of the county have been given final approval by the Board o! Supervisors. The lectures will be held during the college hour, a period during the week \,'hen no classes are scheduled. Col lege hour ha s been at 11 a .m: f'ridays this year, but students protesting the speakers policy and setting up college hour program said there were not enougb students on campus at that time to form a significant audience. UC Irvine authorities theorize vandals helped over- turn '$18,QOO sculpture by nationally known artist Tony di Suvero. Work known ·as ·~Nova Albion" has been on loan lo UC! since 1966 and been the subject of no little controversy since it was set up in a weed patch. ln background is the new administration· building under construction. Similar works by di Suvero sell for from $30.000 to $40,000. Campus spokesmen say sculpture will be rebuilt. Board members Tuesday approved two minor changes in the original guidelines. They call for an election upon the presen· talion of a petition bearing 10 percent of the registered voters of the area whose residents want to form a council. Polling forms will be designed to find out how many people attended each presentation, how many attended all three, and to ask for opinions on the cur· rent policy. UCI Prospects 'Slim' 'Mie other change allows councils to be Ct:Jmposed of five to nine members. The original petition requirement call- ed for petitions with 25 percent of the registered voters signing and five- member cooricil! on1y. Board members have objected to presenting controversial s p e a k e rs separately because they said student." would go to hear only the points of view they agreed with, not getting both side$ I Official Doubts Graduate Scliools to Be Added Robert Thomas. county administrative officer, said "I see the MACs as a cha.nee to reduce some of the disillusionment of the individual citizen and thereby add to the . legitimacy of the governmental system." of the picture. i Chances of UC Irvine having graduate schools cX. architecture, law ci' veterinary medicine in the ne3r future are slim. Dr. Joseph McGuire, University of California vice president for planning, told the UC! staff oounctl Tuesday that such additionaJ study programs are doubtful in the immediate future fer UCI. McGuire noted that the San Diego and Riverside campuses already have made requests for law schools, and prospects are not bright for any of the requests because of tight funding and a belief by many lawyers that there are already enough law schooJs in the sta te . Irvine's best bet for a graduate school would be in veterinary medicine. Another UCI spokesman said there has been local intetESt in a continuing educatioo center for licensed veterinarians. The proposed center would be nm through lbe Collei1e o1 · Medicine at UC!, IDd stalled by faculty members from UC Davis, wbere lbe state's only sohoo! of veterinal')' medicine is located. McGuire said UCI can expect slow, but healtJty growth in the near future. The $608,000 Suit Filed in Viejo Race Bias Case A Mission Viejo coo.pie, the real estate firm that bandied the aborted sale of their-h:me and two of the firm's employes have been named as defen· dants in $600,000 JawsuJt filed by a couple who claim they were denied the home beca~ the husband "is a member of the Negro race." Gene F. Md Sharon Speciale of 261'1 Adelanto Drive, Forest E. 01!00, Inc., and Olson employes Edward GrabowskJ and John Whlllingham are principal • defendants in the Orange County Superior Court action filed by Ruth E. and Harland A. Nk:kol.s or Santa Ana. Nickols and hi..! wile claim that they paid !500 In escrow lunds March 22 bot the Speciales refmed to consummate the sale of their s:ar.,ooo heme after they were inil'uf<d' liltp 'Iirueblng lbe -..act. . 'nie ~In~ sj>edtjfally ac:<:U!<!S F«es! E. Olion, Ini:. of fullowinl. "a l>Olicy and pncif<:e ol re!\Jsing lo sell homes in Mission Vif:jo lo persons the Negro race." r{amed u . addlUoaal defendanti!i In • law>Uil Illa! claims ~.ooo Inf ges in multiple causes of itet are Landmark Escrow Service, • and Certified Mort&agc Company, I 1985 estimate for student enrollment, he said, would remain at, 10,000 -a mark first listed in a UC study in February, 1971. O.lrrent enrollment is nearly 7,000 students. McGuire said that , the UCI was in a better position than some ol the other campuses because it has five un· dergraduate d i v i s i o n s , professional schools, plus the California C.Ollege of Medicine (CCM), a setup which promotes inter-Olrriculum study, while allowing for specialization. The vice president said that despite cuts in US system funding , completion of the new administration building is assured. The proposed basic medical science classroom laboratory building at UCICCM remains in question. Additional construction, however, would be limited, he said. McGuire said the situation throughout the UC system should itnprove as the financial and political climate changes. He added that a review board now studies ways to bring together fiscal and academic planning into programs which can be more effective with limited finan· cing. South Coast Council Set,s Dates for Seven Meetings The~ sauU: J Coast ·degiooal ' Zone rring, concentr~ting on problems 'in the Conservation Commission has scheduled Venice-Marina del Rey·Santa Monica its ne~ sev,m. regulf1' meetings, mostly area. in the Long Beam area. A report is due on how the commission The list is subject to change. Lengthy shooJd help formulate the coastal agendas Jtl.f! require continued permit management plan due in the legislature The task of in£onnation gathering, he said, alienates many potential citizen contributors to government. The councils would advise on planntng, public health, safety and welfare ln their areas. The advisory councils. made legal by a 19'71 state law, were first proposed to the board by Supervisor Ralph Clark who had received Inquiries from residents of the north Tustin areas of Lemon and Cowan heights. Recently lhe Saddleback A r e a Coordinating Cowicil has expressed in· terest in the !onnation of such a council for the Saddleback. Valley. Bart Spendlove, president of the coun- cil, said Tuesday that his organization approved lhe changes in the guidtllnes.. Anolher provllJOD, ·previllpjy, ~!ti!. call.s for the resldents of the arell to pay for, ~ co~t, of an .d~ion to form· the coW1ClI and elect ilS' ~~rilbers. Niguel Woman Sues Over Land Erosion ., Hard Drug Usag;~' lsn.'t Evident • ' ' At UC Berke1£y r. BERKEhEY (AP) -University .. . . . California students who surveyed campus heroin use hoping to document the need for a treatment center say they foundlfal less evidence of hard drugs than they ex· pected. ''Berkeley just doesn't seem to live up. to its reputaUon as a wild place," O.U,:. Dractwlk. 2Q, oiie of l"lv~ crllnlni>locY'. : student. involved In the piojtCt, s4' Tul!Sday. Ti.."~~--·--I lo,. randomly selected students and ret~ by 239 -h8d leA lbon ... •thlld,ol 'per-, cent ~ying Uley uaed herqin regut.lly. About 25 percent said"" t.hey--had ~ any barbiturates, amphetamines or L'SD .. Marijuana proved much more popular. with three out of four saying they tried it, at least once, and one oot of four clainr ing to use it about once a week. , 1 bearings on following Mondays. in 1976. The commisskm created by Prop. 20 -June 11: 9 a.m., Long Beach, per· Avco Community Developers, Inc .. and 1 1 has permit powers within the coastal mi ts. • an engineering firm hired by the com-N ) Suh D d ' zooe t,(Q) yards inland in Orange and -June 25 : 9 a.m., Torra.nee, permits. pany have been sued for $80,000 by a UC_ ear amage ,' Los An.g-eles counties. -July 9: 9 a .m., Long Beach, permits. Laguna Niguel woman who claims her All Loog Beach sessiom are at Harbor -July 19: 9:30 a.m. field trip; 1 p.m. home is eroding and sliding as a result of WASHINGTON (AP) -The Navy said Department headquarters, 925 Harbor formal meeting, Pepperdine University their negUgence. today the nuclear powered attack sub. Plaza Drive, Meetings set so far are: in Malibu, permits and probably some Mrs. Jane W. Zimmerman, of 29571 marine Sturgeon struck bottom Moncjay · -May 31 : g a.m., Loog Beach, planning. ' Kensington Road claims ln her Orange and suffered minor damage wbll~ permilS. -Aug. 6: 9 a.m., Loog Beach, permits. County Superior Court action that operating submerged off the Virgin -June 4.: 7 p.m., Long Beach, plan--Aug. 20: 9 a .m., permits; 8 p.m., negli gent grading and filling of Avro and Islands. 'Ibere were1 no injuries among . A-ctress' Tryst With Con Told LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actress Maria Della Malva, 42, said Tuesday millionaire John Alessio was allowed out of Lompoc Federal Prison so she rould meet ''him at the motel three or four times." The testimony came in the trial of AICMio's soo, Dominic, 31, charged with bribing a pris:ln official to gain favors for Allers&o while he was at Lompoc for ~ come tu evasion. A former Lompoc: administrator has been convlcted 0£ bribery. A1essio was recenUy re1eased after serving his time. Sevareid in Hospita1 NEW YORK {AP) -Television newscaster Erle Sevareid" is reported in satisfactory condition after being ad- mitted to the coronary care unit Qf a Queens boopital. The CBS news analyst experie~ abdominal pains during an alrplaM trip from Washlnglco lo New York Tuesday afternoon. planning in Orange County, tentatively Geol..abs, Inc., have led to the substantial the crew or 120 officers and enlisted me!}. • set for Huntington Beach. damage at her home. the Navy said. t ·: l~~~~~~~==~============i ' "-=6tifAii .. " i • TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRIES ~:.;.',. i'..t_•:A.:ait ':-o'ti•'91r. ..... DIAMONDS FROM THE SEA From Ute floor of the sea, oU the coast of Southwest Africa, gem quality diamonds are being recov- ered through use of modern dredg· ing equipment. ... COME SEE TliE . diAMONd SliApE·Up Sl2~000 Pad This unique 1Tlining m"hod 'vas initiated in 1962, 35 years after iso- lated surface diamonds were found on beaches near the mouth of Afri- ca's Orange River. This discovery led to massive sand-moving opera- tions to get at diamond·bearing gravels lying beneath thirty to sb<ty feet of beach sand. If diamond-bearing gravels were present on the beaches, certainly Some girli choose the classical round di•mond while others prefer the graceful marquise, the impressive emerald cut or the fluid pear shape. We h•v• iom• spec. tecular new styles in our collection juit made for these brill iently sheped stones. C0ast Stutknts Building House 111.y must also b• p~ent in simi-. Jar gravefs beneath the water be- "For Sele: new three bedroom , two balb heme In San JUID Capistrano, ,12,000." '1111> lto1 I fictitious adverthement or a IYJ>Otll'BJlhl«i enw lo the aatlng price. A l,JSO.oquare foot hooae being roo- otructtd by afucf<nta · In )he Capistrano- Laguna 8-glonal Oi:eupoltlobal Program (ROP) Is aet for completion June 20. loteresled clllzena can bid on lbe house a\ lbe dead mid ol Acjl)Chlma street, but tho new (}WMI' must rtmove It trom the scbool district property. Minimum bid ls 112,000. Local contractor Dtan Whitaker has been directing lbe project, but rtudtnll . . yond · lllose beaches •. This llleory ~ doing lbe irork, mcludmg carpentry · led lo Ille undcrwa!er dredging aod plumbinf. ROP coonilnator Jerry Copeland said system. thot Onnge County building hupector1 Original source of these river· mouth diamonds is thought to be ihe Kimberley mines. a thousand miles away, from which the dia· monds were swept down river lo the coast. on pttlodlc visits to the site have "ac> clalmed ilS quaUty constructk>n.'' Profits from the 11ale of the house Copeland said Is valued at $25,000 will go towards construction of a new project neJCt year. With continuing demand and ris- J.C. fiumphrieJ Je1v<'fer.1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA Many of the students working on the house will quallfy as a p p r e n t I c e carpenters and in other entry-level trades upon completion. ing prices of fine gems, we should CO"YE .. l!NT TEAMS 1 kA . d M Ch sec even more innovations in c the ,, "' '" m•"t•r -•1l•r •"J• For bidding instructions, call the ROP office at •96-J21~. ·~·•_rc_h_f_o_r_b_e_a_u_til_ul~d_ia~1~n~o~nd~s~·~~.!===='='=Y=EA='='='="='-H_•=S=A=M='='=O=C=AT=l=O=N===c==-,-=-=-=·=H-O~N=E~S-•1_._,.=~=-'=-=--====-=-~. 11 ) ) 1 qambodin i J1ombing l Continues • • Pi.,.,OM PENH iUPll -U.S. jet figbl;; today bombed and destroyed two Conimunist trucks while Uying in sipport o/ t*!eoguered Cambodian ground lroops on Route 5, fieJd reports said. Tbe reports said at least two Cam- bodtan troops were killed and seven 'ol·ounded in an attack by rebel forces in ('. IN SHORT ••. ) the tfea 35 miles north of ?boom Penh. whefe the government soldieNi are in- ~ forward in an attempt to clear the higliway. A( least 11 American F• Phantom and A 7 Corsair jets flew strlkes 1n the area fror6 la te morning on until mid-af- t~n. e j;JO Students Ousted vh.ww SPRINGS, Ohio (UPI ) Anti>ch College ofllcials attempted to tre¥: a month--Old campus strike today by G:pelling 30 studentJ and threatening 10 fh aetlvlst faculty members. Tlie expulsion notices went out after Dea(l or the College Ewell Reagin and other administrators tried unsuccwifully Tuef(lay to reopen school buildings that have been closed since April 20. A~t 20 strikers Jinked arms around the . buildings and turned away the ofic(als by throwing eggs. e Reporter Conl es•e• oi:TROIT (UPI) -Detroit Free Press reporter Ho ward Kohn, whose story on how: he was kidnaped and almost killed Friday night by a Presumed narcotics rigute appeared in Sunday's Detroit Free Pre~. said Tuesday night the story was untl"J.le as he related it, the newspaper said• today. Kqhn was suspended by the Free Press pen~ an investigation by a team of felloW reporters assigned to check out bis cont1icting versi.Qns of what happened. • Capitol WUI Emp t11 SACRAMENTO (AP) -Prompted by warnings that the state's 103-year.(lld Capitol might not stand up in a moderate t'arthquake, legislative leaders have ordered the building evacuated by Sept. IS. The order, issued Tuesday, affects both holl.9e8 of the Legislature plus the offices of the secretary of. state, treasurer. lieutenant governor, various legislative effices and the Capitol press corps. e Bla::e Controlled MOUNT LAGUNA (AP) Fire fighters have succeeded in cutting off a 10-acre brush fire be£ore it reached the top o£ Mt. Laguna , officials say. The fire broke out in heavy brush in the Oeveland National Forest Tuesday and spread slowly up the west slope of 6,2714 foot Monument Peak. About 100 firemen encircled the flames and brought the fire under control Tuesday night before they could clear the peak and start down the steep east slope, a U.S. Forest Service spokesman said. e Vo te Squeak• By S>,.CRAMENTO (AP) - A proposal to reorganire California's penal system and cut off state subsidies for local probation programs bas passed its fi rst legislative test without a vote to spare. The proposal by Gov. Ronald Reagan's Administration was approved Tuesday on a 7-6 vote of the 13-man Senate Judiciary Committee after warnings of critics that It would be "a backward step." Violations Fall Off SAIGON fUPI) -The Saigon com- mand reported a new low in Communist cease-fire violations today, 58 over the past 24 hours, but said it was too early to call the drop ~ignificant. It \\'as the 10,vest number of Communist altacks c.Ueged by Saigon in any 244 bour period !'i incc lhe Jan. 28 cease-lire. Violent ' - WASHINGTON (UPI) -~I' Nixoo bas dioclolecl for the liril time be bad ordored bi.s two top aides, H. R. , Ilald<man and John D. Erllchman, IO _, ,, !!>,':Five pn:oentalloo yet o/ how tile , limit the Watorp!A! Inv~ I He said be did It to · bi!llllY 1 sensWve "naUcmal security operationl" dent personally became aware ..of' the scope ol Watergate, It came as ~ details were unfolding daily in the televised Senate investigat.loos into the matter. Nixon aaid be was IIS\llng l1 to draw a distinction betwetn the Watergage affair and other legitimate DaUonal security operations and to counter ''80lllt d. the more sensational -and 1naccurate -of the charges lhat have ODed Uie headlines In recent days." • ' BUGGING LESSON -Watergate conspirator James McCord demon- strates for Senate Committee some of bugg111g equipment used on telephones at Democratic headquarters. ArchibaUl Co x Brothe r Howard Hu ghes Lawyer WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The brother of nominated Watergate prosecutor Archibald Col is an attorney for elusive billicmaire Howard llughes whose name has been linked for a second time: to the widening scandal. "!he mere fact that Hughes' name came up doesn't represent a conflict of interest," Cox said in a telephone in- terview Tuesday night from his home in Wayland, Mass. "But if there is something more to it," he said, "then I suppose J would have to find a way to isolate it or deal with it ap- propriately. '' Cox' brother, Maxwell, is a New York attorney who said he has represented a Vesco Surf aces In Costa Rica, Delays Retm·n SAN JOSE, Costa Rica <AP) Fugitive financier Robert L. Vesco has emerged from seclusion in Costa Rica and said he Would not return to the United States until a special Watergate prosecutor "gets his work under way." Vesco was indicted May 10 with former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and former Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans in connection with a $200,cro contribution the financier made secretly to President Nixon's re-election campaign. The financier. variomly reported in the Bahamas or Costa Rica since his~ 'in- dictment, was encountered in a San Jose hotel Tuesday night. "I reallv don 't want to make much of a comment ·now," he told a newsman. ''I'm piaMing lo !lay here in Costa Rica. [ don't plan to go back to the States until the special prosecutor gets his \vork under way.'' Raul Espinosa. Vesco's representative in Costa Rica, added: "There's a political si tuation there. and Mr. Vesco wants to wait until the investigation has begun." The indictment by a federal grand jury in New York charges that Vesco made the campaign contribution in an attempt lo buy off an investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission in- to th e financier's manipulations of Investors Overse;:is St'rvices, the foreign n1utual fund en1pirc built up by Bernard Con1feld. number of Hughes' interests for the past 12 years. tre said he was one of the chief lawyers involved in a lengthy 'battle between HugheS Too! Co. and Trans World Airlines, which ended last January when the Supreme Court overtul'ned a $145- mil\ion antitrust judgment a g a in st Hughes Tool. James W. MCC.Ord Jr., testifying before the Senate Watergate committee, quoted fellow conspirator G. Gordon Liddy as saying a "Howard Hughes plane" had been lined up to help a burglary team, escape after a planned break-in at a newspaper publisher's office in Las Vegas, Nev. McCord's testimony also indicated that the Ni xon re-election comlnittee may have conceAled a campaign con- tribution from Hughes. Archibald Cox said he was not aware that Hughes, who now Jives in London, has been a long-time supporter of Presi- dent Nixon and that his money has figured in the 1960 and 1968 elections. Hughes' name also came up during the trial in J anuary of McCord , Liddy, B. Howard Hunt and four other men charg4 ed with the break-in and attempted bug4 ging of the Democratic National Com- mittee's Watergate headquarters. Liddy and Hunt at times reportedly claimed to represent tlughes Tool Co. during trips around the country on txilitical undercover work in 1971 and 1972. Robert Bennett, a Washington public-relations man who handles some Hughes interests and who once employed I1unt as a writer, testified that neither Liddy nor Hunt had been authorized to use the company's na1ne and. said they did not represent Hughes Tool. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dfl1vtry of the Daily Pilot 1~ Quaranteed ~fltl•V·~•itl•.: II •011 tlO nor II••• , .... P•Pt• •v !:JO p.m .. (•II •nd Y011r ~Ol'V will ff bt0"91\I " yo11. C•lll l rt l•kofl llfllil 1::io p.m. 'i•turll•v '"" Sul'tel•Y> ti yow 4-flt! re(1l111 .,.. ... (OPV lly ' ...... S1!urC1y, or ' '·"' ~und1v. c•ll •n<I a copy win 111 Oro119f11 10 vo11. Cal11 •'• !0~1n unl•I 10 •.m. Mou O••nvc Counly ••••• , Norrnw11! Hunlln1l•t1 B11ell •ml W11lmlt1•lor ,. ,,,. JO•!llO Sin C1tmont1, Cipl1tr1no li.acn, S•n J111n Capl1!ra,,., O•n• Poinl, Sour11 l•9una, LlqUfll 1'1i9111I • ' Ol·(UO Weather Eases being c:ooducled by tbe CIA 1IOd tile White Houae and not to Impede brill(linC wroog<loers to jUJllce. . · But be ""'"'''!ed that some ol bis aici.t probably went beyond bis dlrectives and attempted to bide lll<gaI activities which Ibey and otbe1'S had undertaken in bis beball. NIXON ALJlO revealed Tuesday that he Was so coocerned about leaks of sensitive government secrets and ~C violence in 1970 that he SP" prov~ a plan allowing federal agents to break and enter premises but withdrew lhe plan because of objections from then FBI director J. Edgar Hoover. The disclosures came in an a.page statement jn which Ni:s:on admitted. - also for the first time -that other "unethical as well as illegal activjti~" were committed bf his supporters during the 1972 catnpaign. He firmly denied any personal wrong4 doing beyond a failure to be more vigilant in preventing them. ''NONE OF these took place with my specific approval or knowled~e,'' he said. "Th the extent that I may m any way have contribute9 to the climate in 'vhlch they took place,J .,did not intend to." He said be had no prior knowledge of the Watergate break-in, did not participate in and was not aware of the cover-up attempt .and did not authorize executive clemency or payments to any or the Watergate burglars to hl.Bh them up. NIXON IN CLEAR, • AGNEW DECLARES ORLANDO, Fla. (APl-Vice President Spiro T. Agnew says President Nixon's statement on the Watergate affair shows his "total freedom from any complicity or knowledge whatevet concerning Wa- tergate or alleged roverups." rn a statement issued Tuesday, the vice president said Nixon had been forced to "1veather an incredlble storm of personal abuse and innuendo" from persons who did not realize national security \vas at stake. .. That he was willing to do this is a tribute to tUs remarkable moral courage and devotioo to duty as President" I 1'1U1'B lllNDSIGB1'1 it is apparent ' tbal l.lbt><il!l lia ... pven more beed to tbe wa1!'lD3 ailiiais I received along the way about a Wateriate, ooverup and less to the~." He eeollrmed. ln P<fllapo ooe o/ bia most damliglllg admlso!ons ibal ooe ear- ly wanUng bad come from L. "Patrick Gray III, then acting dlrecto< «the FBI. Gray, be said, bad told him as early aa last July s -three w.eeks after lhe break-in and four months before the elec- tion -that some ranking NixoO aides may have been iovoived in the cover-up. "I told him to press ahead with his in- vestigatloo," Ni.ton said, but did not ex4 plain why he apparentlj' ignorod Ibis warning w1len be ·told newsmen six: week! later -on Aug. '1:l -that nobody then on his White House staff was involved. 11IE STATEMENT was the most com- He said it was based on his own recollectioos ol what be <tid and aaid dur4 ing the months since the JWle J7 break-in of ~ National Democratic headquarten and he promised additional respcmes · when further questions are r&Jed. 'f He said the truth about the Watergate affair should be brought out in an orderly. i fashion and he was lifting executive privilege to allow his aides , to testify freely in the case. He said he was so concerned. about the leaks of natiooal 1ecurity infonnaticn in the PentagQO Papers that he set up a special While Hoose unil beaded by Egil Krogh and directed it to fmd out all it couJd about Daniel Elllsberg's moUves and associates. • ·.>' Chief Aide to l\.issinger , ·~~ . "'" Briefs Thieu in SHio-on . ~:~ ~ ~"l Paris {AP) -Henry A. Kissinger to- day concluded a week-Jong series of talks \\"Ith Hanoi's Le Due Tho to revlae the Vietnam peace agreement and prepared to return to Washington to report to President Nixon. SAJGON (AP) -Henry A. Kissinger's chief aide in the Vietnam cease-fire taJks in Paris arrived 'in Saigon today, ap- parently ror talks with President Nguyen Van 'Mi.ieu on new truce arrangements. William H. Sullivan. deputy assistant secretary of state, told newsmen on his arrival that he will remain no more than t\YO or three days, and then proceed directly to \Yashington. "I am here to consult with our South Vietnamese friends on actions developing so far in coMection with those talks in Paris and to consult on where we go from there," Sullivan said. I Soorces here said they presumed Sullivan will submit ·for Thieu's approval a possible )Oint clarification of the Jan. 27 Paris peace agreement. · The South Vietnamese F o r e I g n Ministry said Sullivan came to brief Thieu on the talks Kissinger and be have been ho\Qing since last Thursday with Le Due Tho of the North Vietnamese Pol.it4 buro and Tho's deputy, Nguyen Co Thach. Despite an official blackout of the talks. there was growing belief in Paris that Kissinger and Tho have worked out some new arrangements they hoped would make the cease-fire in Vietnam ef"fective. There was no indication what these might be . Kissinger and 1'ho met for the sixth time today and Kissinger said he wwld probably relWll to Washington this even4 1 . 1ng. . THE WORlQ OLDESI WHISKEY PRESE•TS THE WORLD'S OLDEST MAL SUMMER AGAIN, EH? l'LL NEVER FORGET THE SUMMER OF '92 WHEN CHRIS COLUMBUS THOUGHT HE'D FALL OFF THE EDGE OF T HE EARTH ! BUT NOTH ING BEATS THE SUMMER OF 1608 J THAT'S WHEN THEY INVENTED BUSHMIL.LS, TALK ABOUT SMOOTH! THAT FIRST TASTE CONVINCED ME _______ ..__ _____ ~WHISKEY WAS HERE TO STAY! YOU PEOPLE ARE LUCKY. A GLASS FULL OF ICE CUBES, A COUPLE OF.FINGERS OF LIGHT, SMOOTH BUSHMILLS, A SPLASH l------------.._ OF COOL WATER ..... ITS THE BEST SUMMER REFRESHMENT SINCE THE ICE AGE. 'IOU SHOULD TRY A BUSHMILLS AT YOUR LOCAL INN. OR D0''Y0U CALL THEM COCKTAIL LOUNGES THESE DAYS? Wulespread Tliu1i<lerstor1ns Li1iger, Hoivever .. ,\ F•lr •~le' ortvall~ over l••o• D"'"'' 11• the Pl1ln1 "nil Roc~lts et1d •lonQ !he Gui! ./Ind A!l./lll!IC C0.~11 81!d In Ntw Enqltnd Stallt•~ r1l11 d"m~nHI wf,ltrn W41hlnatOt1 ll•lt •nll th• 0 .. kOIOJ Th• c .. lm ........ in ih~rp conl••'I to lurtllll.fnct T'u11d~y lh1t CI Ul td ttlrff detthJ Ind llvt lnlurlt • 111 l(en1 .. 1. Numtrou1 rwltr•" were src~I · ·~ Tt•t~ Okl,.~Om•, Atl"'"'''• y.,,,,,,1<~ trld 1<.tnh1t~v. !loll11orr1u It !! o !i••·lnen cover ntnr Lo! it.t1lm"~ In 1ootheou Colorodo, ond 1101111011 ~l•t hill po1irlded PcJ>I•• elu!f, Mo. A1 lhondtr~torl'T! "c!lv!lv d!fJlln(•hM ••rly todev, foci ro!le<i ovtr th6 ml(ldlt and nor1t>1rn Mlnl1<!1>of V111ev 1n" ea1I over !hp Otdo YllllV Ind lo-r Gre81 L•lr.•1 r~lon MeltlnQ '"ow In ihe Rot~Tes c11,1Mo11 MOt!umtnt L•~• nOl'lh ot Color1<1o Sp•l"fl.• lo PrtU t~lnll tit dam, 11•11:1 ~ ""°'1~ ocp.vr-td. a1nc1~11 1110 111.-.; .. m wei 1111 at>l~a't 1h•ouqh Nrlv m~ FIOOO wernlnQ! """''" ll(l~lf'd lor Intl Snulll .Plll!t> Rlvtr In the Denw• •r11 wn~r• 1ever~I brld!Jtl '°""" 1)10(-1'(! Tuesday Sul olllde!1 1•i(I !l>f~ wtrt hopeful the HOOd dan1ier woold (llmlnltll wlllloul 1erlous aemftQf. C•H1stal WPathPr Mo11!y 'lunnv toll~v. LloM Vltllbl~ wine!! nlont .onc1 mQNllnQ ho11r1 t>e-- c~lno w11terly 1) to 1' ~l'IO'll Jn 1f!1rn00111 IOGIV •nd T/lut1(l1y, High tOd.011, mid~. Coastal ltmPf•llU•tt r1no1 !•om SJ II) ~-lnl•l'd 11mnero1ure1 ••no-from 51 In 70. W1!1r i.m111ra111r1 61. Sun, ltfoon. Tide• WIDNES DAY Se-c:Olld l(!W 1::1<1 p.m. 1.1 T+IURIDAY ll(''' hlQ~ ,.,, ...... ~' Fin l tow l :'l ''""'.,i i Second ~lOh !l:JJ p.m. ; ~ !t1t~ low •: .. Am. l t BUSHMIU.S Jun lt!Mt S·•7 1 ..,, Sttl l :'J pm. Moon RI••• n .•6 1.m. Stl1 11:!1 • m,:._------------------------------------------------ ----------------------.. DAILY PILOT 5 I Californian Miss Arizona? Publicity !fr'!'!~~~~~~~~~~~ SACRAMENTO (AP) L«al olflelals " the Miu USA beauty pageant orpnlso- lioo .. , the relinJng )llW ArboOa USA b r<ally a California girl and probably biellgi>lo to bold the >.ruona title. Bui Sherry Nix, 21, third runner-up ln last week's Miss USA Pageant in New York. 54,YS she is a booa fide Arizona ri•ldml and has been foe the past eight' months. Mrs. John NI:< said w ..,......,. daul!Jltr .... 11111 In Now Ya<k ~ lo retum to Pbomix this week to resume wort u a model there. USA ooolelt, llid bo - lllal NI:< wu elJclble IO be .MlssANona. "I clooi think she was eligi- ble to run In Arizona, hut .. .,. mt Judi• and jury" be said. "But you can't be• resi. dml of ""' slates. Our -(Mrs. Martinelli) "°" her In -all the time. 1be way I look at the rules, she couldn't ba ve been Miss ArU:ona. ,, Get,s Trial R ewcated L{js ANGELES IAP) - Becluse of what the judge called ''massive saturation" publicity in the case, the murder trial of three youths charged with the ohotflun 1laying of a 4-y ear-old Hawaiian Gardens will be held Jn Northern Calilomia. D!IJy Coast Qffers • 63GuaranteedCertificates •· Satur-day Service • The·lnsiders Club Lut AIJ&uSI, Mias Jllls ... fa< the Mias Ca1lfO<"nl8 USA 11- ile and loot. Windng Iii, Miss Arizooa conteat , llJls April gave her a 80COOd ohot at lite Mlsa USA dile, and tbouCb Ille tnisoed lhe top Jl1lo Jn - -York, she did como In aheod MISS NIX,_ who was also of the gtrJ who boot her Jn the Mm Metropolitan Sacramento Miss California USA contest until resigning the ttlle In last August Carol Henoma of April, "commuted" between Artesia. ' Mrs. 1f1JC Bald her daughter bod been living In Phoenix with an aunt. She said abe was modeling In l'llomix and abo had eorolled lrlefly at the Uolveniity ol Arizona. The judge Tuesday ordered the trlal to begin J ~ ly l 6 in Red-.! City. On trial will be Dooa1d Alltelo, 2t, Oscor Hernandez. 22, and ~fichael Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% MAIN orFICf.: 9th & Hill, LO$Atl&e1es •623-lSM other OfHces Sacramento and Pb o en i. x New York oCficials ol the between 5eptember and April, Mias USA Pageant said rue. her mother said Tuesday. day that Miss N'ix bad su~ MISS NIX bad tried twice earlier to win the Miss USA COOiest. In 111'/0, she comptled In the Miss Calffomla, USA contest as Miss R fi'D ch o Cordova, and Jn 1971 aa Miss Folsom. Ramirez, 18. • They are charged w.itb the murder of Joyce Ann Huff on July 2 of last year in what one alleged participant said was a random shot as the trio was looting for members of a rival gang. Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. WILSHIRE: el GUMUCY PU.CE! JSIJJ Wll5hlre Blvd, L.A.• 388-1265 LA. CIVIC Cf.NTDt: 2nd & BroadWay • 626-1102 HUNTINGTON IU"ab Gov.Reagan Says Energy Crisis Real SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronald Reagan says California faces a "frightening picture" of energy shortages b e c a u s e environmentalists have short-circuited power plant construction. "The possibility of brownouts in California, as they've had recently on the East Coast, is very real . We may be having those," Reagan said Tuesday during a Capitol question-and-answer session with about 20 Sacramento high school students. Asked what the state wou1d do in an energy crisis, Reagan replij!d , "We m3y find out very quickly. There wouldn 't be an awful lot we could do." 11n IS A frightening picture, ,the energy shortage that faces us, he said. "So many people I n Califorma have concentrated so much on environmental protection there have been no power plants built. We won't let them build fossil fuel plants and when we build nuclear power plants along the coast, we're told we can 't have those because that might be a threat.and might hurt the ecology ol the ocean " Reagan said. ' NO MORE TANGLES SPRAY ON CREME RINSE 7 oz. 79~ ' ... ' ' milted five notarized statements supporting , h e r claim to be an Arizona resi- dent. "WE'VE GOT the certifica- tions, including Sberi;-•s own, signed a ed. notarized, and we're satisfied," said Herbert Landon, e.zecutive producer ol. Miss Universe, Inc., spmson of the New York pagearK. Carmel Martinelli, director of the Miss Metropolitan Sacramento Pageant, said she had almost daily contact with Miss Nix during the time she Ul'IT ....... RESIDENCY DISPUTED Miu Sherry Nix was certified as an Arilona resident. "If she went down there, she went by night," M r s . MartlneJU sald. 1'Most of the time she was here i n Sacramento." DR. LEONARD Stallcup, California direct.or or the Mia.. Last year, she anger«I of- ficials of Sacramento's Camollla Festival -n she quit as festival queen, to take the title of Miss Metropolitan Sacramento. Miss Nit is one or four sisters who have Won a total of 14 beauty titles in the Sacramento area in recent years. SD County Bans Sex Book our constituents," cotmtered auto, can be tonsiderred ·a~ Supervisor Lou Coode, who led normal' if tt is involuntary or opposition to simple renewal exploitive." Superior Court Judge Julluo Leetham already had put a gag order on the case -ap- plying to what he said news media ~d report as well as what pernons connecected. with the case could say. An appeals court struck down the portions relating to bans on the media. IN GRANTING a defense motion for another trial site, the judge said: "It is the rare person within Los Angeles County who has not heard of the present case and, in fact , not been exposed to expressions of opinion with respect to the merits of the case ... and there appears a reasonable likelihood that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had here." SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Planned Parenthood Associa- tion has been ordered by San Diego Coonty supervisors to stop distributing a comic book called "Ten· Heavy Facl, About Sex." of the contract. He said the "Two ways or avoid.Ing book "has certain bad moral .unwanl<d pregnancle" self .---------- Supervisors voted 4-l Tues- day to make withdrawal of the book a condition for a 6CHiay extension of planned pa'rent- hodd's contract with the coun- ty for federal family-planning funds. Another condition was the ending ol birllHlontrol counseling lo pers<m under 18 who are supported by parents or guardians. Supervisor Jack Walsh, the only dissenter, called the board's action "book burn- ing." "WE ARE HERE t o represent the moral beliefs of aspects" and some sections control or birth control." "encourage vi o I at ion of "Sex is cool when you arc CaUfornia state law." ready fur it. It is eveit no.rm al Walsh said county counsel to wait until maniage." Robert llelTey bas reported The ~ abo hM adviee oo that the book violates no state ·how to avoid verieral d.ISease laws. and outllnes birth control "Ten Heavy Facts About methods and abort.Im law. Sex" cootaim humorous draw-It waa. v.ritten by Dr. Sol ings wbkh illustrate such Gordon, identified as a pro-· statements as: fessor of family and child "Masturbation ls a oonnal development at Sy r a c u s e expression of sex for both University. A p I an n e d males and females." parentOOod official said 500,000 ''PORNOGRAPHY is harmless ... if porno is your bag, you don't have much of an imagination." "Any sex, hetero, homo ot copies of the book have been distributed to family planning groups across the country, and "this is the only area that they have · had this kind o I resp.:mse." Fraternity Goes Bare STANFORD IUPI) - Stanford University has censured a fraternity for a "rush" party that fea- tured five topless dancers, including one who v.·as raffled off to partygoers. ''The most charitable judgment is that the party got out of hand and that the JOcal leadership lost cootrol.," said Larry W. Horto1~ .. Art llnklclter Th• Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every- thing you need from the finest closed-door show- rooms at substantial sav- ings -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipment, sparting goods, draperies and much , much more. You can even buy cars at the '11eet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav· ings. The Insiders Club 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Mlnlmum. Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. also provides big dis- . counts on tickets to sport· ing and. entertainment events ••. plus a whOle list of free services: safe dePosit boxes, .money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate memberships en- titling them to all outside referral services. Ask about joining at any Coa'st of fice. Sil Huntlnaton C.nl• (714) 897-1047 SANTA MOHICA! 718 Wilshire Blvd.• J93.0746 SAN PlDRO: loth A Pacific • 831~1 Wl:ST COVINA: Easllend Shopplnl Ctr.• 331-2201 PANORAMA CITT: Chase & Van Nuy9 Bl'Yd.•892-1171 TAJUANA: 18751 Ventu~ Blvd,.• 345-8614 LONG •lACH1 3rd & Locust• 437·7-481 UST LOS ANG[US: 8th & SOio • 2M-4!S]O DIAMOND IAR1 328 S. OiarnD<'ld.Bar (714) 5Q5-7S25 TUSTIN: Urwin Square Shopptna: ctr. (714) 832~10 lA MUIADAI u Mirada ShOf"lnaCtr. (714) 52U7!1 SAN GA•RIEW Del Mer at Lis Tl.Ina a• 287-9!141 DallyHotn-9AMlo4PM All Offica. Exe.pt Civic Center, Open Seturdlys 9AMto1PM ASSETS OVER ONE llUION DOLLARS Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You ,. .. . Sun·ny ·day ~avings at Treasury health and beauty aids department. COPPERTONE r11 ~ SCOPE MOUTHWASH LOTION 4 oz. 18 oz. PEARL DROPS TOOTH POLISH 2% oz. 99c GILLmE THE DRY LOOK HAIR SPRAY 11 oz. CLAIROL HERBAL ESSENCE SHAMPOO 8 oz. BAYER BAND-AID CLEARASIL EFFERDENT DENTURE .. ASPIRIN 100'$ ~·C!'i ~69c no =r .... ...... ~-~ OPSI iiM.Yt:afto 9:30 ·SUNDAY10IO1 ·; I PLASTIC STRIPS OINTMENT TABLETS 70's .s9c - BA".Q-AID 1.2 oz. 40's 69~ 66c . . IUIMA PUIC Beach & OrangtthOrpe ~ MIW ,.., Chltsworth St. llYIUIOI 1520 Tyttr WOODLAND MILLI 21500 Vlctorv Blvd. IANTA AHA No. of ,South ~st Pl•ta lAltlWOOO C•rson St. reasury ·-llOre and toed aintet TOUANCI Sepulvecl1 and HawthOrne and P•removnt Blva. mtUIGI Garden. Grove Blvd, Ind M~r I ' '_.. ,, i"' ,. ... , .... .. ··-... ~ "" ,, .,..., ·';: .. . ' ., ., . : ••• " . ~ ' . :- r,> :- ' ' t.l ' "\ , ,. ' ' r • . -.. . . .. " ' ~t • " I I l • DAU.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Impact of Land ·Plan Plans bave been disclosed for development of 10,000 acres of now-virgin land stretching from Laguna Beacb to Laguna Hll!J and south to Laguna Niguel. Such irowth certainly will have a tremendous Impact on l!UlrOwiding communities. The land, now under five owners, once composed the vast Moulton Ranch. It is in unincorporated county terrltory. Project planners envision that they will house about 50,000 people in some 20,000 resldenlial units where now chaparral grows and catUe gnu. DeW!ed proposals for the development have not )"'t been brought before any governmental agency. lniUal public presentation is expecte~ to be ma.de. in June be- fore the Orange County Pianrung Com11USS1on. While plans are still in the formation stage, it is time for established communities to look at the lands involved and !tart asking questions about what impact the development will have on them; what is deslrable and what should be avoided. The spheres of influence drawn up by Laguna Beach and the Saddleback Area Coordinating Coundl arch across much of the lands, and Irvine's sphere of in· fluence stops just short. Those spheres established the communities' vested interest in the Moulton lands developmenl Laguna Beach for one has been extremely con~rned about main- taining its identity and separation from a tide of urban- ization. The communities should begin now to fonnu- Iate a stance in regard to development. pollution, public aervices and lots OI. new people. A unified position establi!bed early will work to the advantage of tlie existing communities whether Ibey de- cide to lil!ht, accommodate or seek modification in de- velopment . cl It also '!rill usist the developt! in providing a compatible project !lat will be a g neighbor. Rusty Water Solution? In most cities, the chronlc complaint$ heard from dtlzens in city council chambers center on high taxes. But in San Clemente there Is a different Issue which has repeated Itself with terrible regularity. It is the complamts by citizens plagued by rusty water. Llterally hundreds of local households ~re subject to the phenomenon. The water often ruins clothes and is literally unfit for cooking or drinking. Not only are the complaints commonplace but the excuse given by the city is routine as well. In order to cure the problem of iron sediment in water mains, the city dlust have a new water treatment system that catches the Iron before it escapes into the mains. In past years, the city's lack of funds for such a system -about $150,000 worth -bas been a valid excuse. But it is different Ibis spring. Revenue-sharing will yield nearly $300,000 next fiscal year and water quality is one if the issues which has top priority in the federal guidelines. · • -: Development of open territory ts something like tossing a rock in a pond; the resulting waves can pro- duce effects far from the development itself. Neighbor- ing communities need to look at impact of traffic flow, school accommodation, commercial considerations, a1r Councilmen today will begin studying uses for the new cash. One project -clean water -should gain a top priority. 'No, dear, they weren't on trial ••. they were the prosecuting team.' What Do These Have In Common? FNEY J.HARRI~ Reader response lo my recent "in-com· moo" q1,1iz was so_ large and affirmative that I'in posing another of the same (on- ly a littler harder) today. Each question consists or five names; what do they all have in common? A score or 25 percent is excellent: l. CaJvary, Maltese, Ta11, FyUot, and Celtic. 2. Argos, Boatswain, Diamond, Flush, and Toby~ 3. Saron, Sheng, Vina, Bonang, and Rebab: 4. Bayswater Road, Hyde Park Place, Oxford Street, Holburn Viaduct, and Martin's le Grand . 5. Dacia, Thracia, Mysia, Aquintania, nnd Lusitania. 6. Hotel de Bourgogne, Covent Garden, Abbey, Haymarket, and Cruger's Wl\arf. 7. Pavlov, Kipling, Theodore Roosevelt, Bertrand Russell, a n d Marconi. 8. Angel, Tugela, SuUterland, Glass, and King George VI. 9. Copenhagen, Marengo, Bucephalus, Traveller, and Rosinante. 10. Michael Arlen, Louis Bromfield, \V.H. Hudson, Marc Connelly, and Richard Llewellyn. 11. Akkadlan, Punic, Vedic, Cornish, and Frisian. 12. John Witherspoon, James Wilson, Matthew 'Thornton, George Taylor, and Button Gwinnett. ANSWERSo J. Different types of crysscs. 2. Dear Gloomy Gus How is it that there's never any money for school lmprov"ements, summer school etc., yet when a new superintendent is hired he can be given a whopping salary in- crease over the previous one? W.H.Y. OMM!Y 0.1 don.... .,. ..-..1~ llr ,.....,, ..... Mf -"IY reflKf ttte "'"' .. ,,.. ........... .... '"" "' NWt1 Ho ...... ., 8'11, D-.llY rll9t. Famous dog1 (belonging to mysses, Lord Byron, Newlon, Elizabeth Browning, and Punch). 3. Eastern musical instrumenlo. 4. They are all the 1ame thoroughfare, running through the heart or London from end to end of the city. (No credit if you simply answered "Lorr don streets.") 5. Ancient and classical names for countries and regions in Europe and the Near East. Ct Famous early Uteaters .. i~ France, England, ~Ireland, and thCJnlted States. 7. All were reel pi en ts of. Nobel Prizes. 8. Among the highest waterfalls in the world. 9. Horses belonging to famous figures. (The Duke of Wellington, Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Robert E. Leo, and Don Quixote.) 10. All authors (you get no credit for this answer) whose most fam.0113 works Included " " in their tlUes. The Green Hat~The Green Bay Tree,'' "Green Mansions," uGreen PaJtures," and "How Green Was My Valley.") 11. All dead languages. 12. All were signers of the Declaration of Independence (half- credit for this) who were not native-born Americans. Actually, there were eight, the other three being James Smith, lreland; Robert Morris, England; and Francis Lewis, Wales. Lib's Lesbian Concerns In this age of rising consciousness, not even a male chauvinist is likely to dismiss· women's liberation as a "lesbian plot." But the growing presence and in· creased militancy or lesbians in the "-'Omen's movement v.·orry some feminists, who fear that identilicatloo with the lesbian cause will alienate some straig~t women and di'}frt att~iMJtom other issues. . MOST feminists support the right or lesbians to e:tprC'SS their own sexuality. The National Organization for \'r'omen INOW ). at its national convention in Washington .-. February, adopted its strongest p~tlbian statement to date. It pledged to seek legislation to end discrimination based on sexual orien- tation in housing, employment, credit and finance, and clilld custody. Betty Friedan, NOW's f o u n d e r , recently, added a cautionary note. Using the wom'11's movement to proselytize for lesbi,¥llsm. she , wrote, Will "only subordinate the great issue of equality fo r wome:11, Ufe opportunity and changes that all women 8() desperately need." FOR SOME militant femlnlsts, les· bi1nism represents the ultimate com- mitment to \vomen's liberat ion. l•womcn 's liberation nnd homosexual liberation arc both struggling towards a common goal: A society free from defining and categoruing people by preference." says Kate Millett , author of Se:tuol Politics and an admitted bi!K!xual. "'Lesbian· is a Jabel used as a psychic '"capon lo keep women locked Into their male-defined 'feminine role.' The essence of 1hat role is that a woman ls defined in tenns of her relationship to men. A "•'Olnan is calJed a lesbian when she func· lions autonomously. Women's autonomy EDITORIAL RESEARCH is what women's liberation is all about." The lesbian, say the r a d i ca I s , personifies the liberated woman. As a totally female-0riented woman. only sbe can escape the male hierarchkal system. THE RHETORIC of female chauvinism could be the downfaU of the woman's movement, retorts Ms. Friedan. "Many women in the movement go th.rough a temporary period of great hostility to men when they first become corutclous of their situation. but when they start act~ ing to change their situation, they outgrow what I call the pseudc>-radlcal infantUism. But that man-hating rhetoric incre>singly disturbs most women In the 111bvemeat, In addltloo to the women It keeps out ol the movement" Barbara Buoncri.stlano, 1 member of the women's liberation group at CoJum· bia University, disagrHS. "I think it i.I 1 false hyPothesis that women are scared away rrom the movement by the Issue of lesbianism. Maybe certain women at a certain time will be tUJ1100 off for a UtUe whUe but I think a feminist is a fomlnist is a feminist." The split between the radicals and more moderate feminists over the lu- bi.an Issue probably wiU not do any lttsting damage to the women's move- ment. No major social movement can be totally unllicd in thought or public ex· pression. As the controversy over abor· lion made t lcar. women's U~ratlon is strong enough tO suwort a divergence of vlews. s Ellsberg Dismissal Ends Anticipated Test Government-Secrecy Crisis Remains WASHINGTON -The blow-up of the Ellsberg case bas created an internal crisis on government secrecy. In view of the fact, however, that the Ellsberg jurors ieaned toward the acquittal of tbe man who leaked the Pentagon Papers, the government is probably in a stronger posjtion to continue its c.\lrrent secrecy policies than if the case had not been dJsmissed. ' As matters stand ,,., ..... oow, there is no Je- gaJ challenge to the system of classifying government docu- ments as secret, no clarification of the right of the press to publish such docu- ments, no definition of what "stealing" publicly owned docu- ments means. And perhaps it is better that way. IN THE beglnining, the l'elltagon Papers case appeared to be in the nature of an historic First Amendment test to the right to disseminate publicly in· fonnation labeled by the govenunenl as top secret in the national interest. Dan.lei Ellsberg banded over to the New York Tunes the Pentagon's internal analysis of U.S. involvement in Vietoam whlch he obtained as an employe of the Rand Corporation, a private research and analysis concern under contract to the government The basic facts were never in dispute. Ellsberg and an associate Xeroxed lhe secret analysis and gave it to the New York Times which ignored the top secret classification and printed large parts of it. The government acted to reitrain the New York Times but failed ln the Supreme Court and then caused the in- dictment of Ellsberg and his associate on theft and espionage charges. Those charges were dismissed on grounds that lDtjustifiable acts by the Nixon ad- ministration before and during the trial so compromised the prosecution 's case that it could not be adjudicated. FROM 11IE VERY beginning of this case, it was hard to see how the public interest had been harmed by the contents of the Pentagon Papers. The analysis and conclusions in this historical study cer- tainly did not reflect on the Nixon ad- ministration, but had the effect of ex.- posing mistakes and misjudgments in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. So far as the Nixon administraton was concerned, the primary purpose of trying to stop publication and prosecuting those who obtained and released the shldy was to protect the government's right to hold secret national security inform.ation v.'hich, If released, mighf damage the na· tional interest. Few woul1 deny that the disclosu.tt of Vital national security information to the enemy in time of war, whether in the press or by secret contact, could damage the national interest and be actionable. But that was far from clear in the Pen· tagon Papers case. POLEMICAL and political arguments could be made that the disclosure damaged Nixon's attempt to negotiate a Vietnazp peace, or that the fires of dissent were refueled, or that the prin- ciple of secret classification could not be Comprom~. But immediate and mea su rable damage to tbe national interest was absent. What remained was the enormity of a trusted person in "stealing" government secret documents and hand- ing them to tbe press in Ute hope ol fw1her discrediting an unpopulsr war and bringing it to an end. It is probably better that lhe legality or such actions be left in a grey and Un· defined area than that absolute authority should lie with federal officials to ex· ercise prior restraint and/or post pmllshment for the dissemination of in· formation and docwnents arbitrarily labeled secret and unpublishable. THE S.UtE reasoning applies here as to the S<>-Callecl shield Jaws proteeting reporters from disclosing their con· fidentlal sources of 1 n formation. Reporters are better off to rely on the First Amendment fC>r their protection.'ln the definition of their privileges they may k:R""rights. Comparably, the government Is better off not to be confined too closely by judicial definitions of what it may classify as secret. And adverse decision in the Ellsberg case, which appeared to be in the making, could have severely damaged the justifiable c1assificaUon of seciet information. THE PUBLIC is certainly better off tha t such disclosures as tb:>se of the Pen-- tagon Papers be left .in a grey and doobtful area, to De judged case by ease with all due risks taken by those who in- terpret the law to their own liking, Recent experience teaches I b a t governments, however noble in stated . purpose, hide information which discredits them. Cases vary. lt is prob- ably just as well for those who would. leak information in the future not to know how far they can go, and just as well that the government not know precisely what it can hide. Volunteers Deserve Salute To the Editor: A salute to Orsnge Coast C<>llege VolUQteers. Are local taxpayers aware of this great group who beloog to the voltmteers? I JUST returned by bus with a lot of luggage 1 couldn't lift into my car or car· ry to my second floor apartment. I called the Welfare Agency for help. She asked me what I intended to pay. I told her it would take approximately thirty minutes that 1 would pick the person up and return him to his home. I thought $3 would be appropriate for this short job but I was told by the weUare employe that "no one would be interested 1n that small an amount of money". I called the Orange Coast College and in Jess than 30 minutes a clean 'cut, well mannered young fellow, named Guy, had picked up my claim tickets and brought my luggage up to my apartment. Th.is was his gas and his time. however, when I tried to pay him he told me he could not accept money and that this help was their contribution to the taxpayers for enabling tbem to attend this greal col· lege. IF THE taxpayers didn't have to sup- ply easy weUare and food stamps to a "won't woi:k group", maybe more could be done for Orange Coast College. GLADYS LEACH Funeral Foollslane•• To the Editor: In Ute May 1§1i.11T Pilot, under othe heading of "Let Tile Dead Bwj Tile MAILBOX Letters from re aders art welcome. Ncrrmalty writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condeme letters to fit space or tllmtnate libel is reserved. All letters mwt include signature and ~iling address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reas on is apparent Poetry will not be publlslw!d. so to speak, for the Bay of Pigs. I ask you, how much intell igence went into either operation? 'The CIA said at the Bay of Pigs that the Cuban people would quickly rise to support such a move. The FBI warned that they would not. The CIA apparently knew nothing or the Russian jet fighters that squashed the invasion attempt, although they were supposed to have agents in Cuba . THE SPY ship captured by the Koreans was Wlder the command of the CIA. Although during .world War II , v.·e b&i sell-destn:icting Muipment on all secret equipment and document cabinets, that ship had no means of destroying secret equipment and documents. Was that accidental or planned? We have bad a number of CIA men defect to Russia with secrets. It ts my opinion that we still have many double agents in the CIA. I hope that with the death of Hoover, the FBI doesn't sink to that level JIM BOLDING Dead?". on the question of who should have the ftnaJ. say over what happens to a person's body: the deeeased or the bereaved rt1atlvef, Robert E. Badham, Assemblyman from the 71st District, was quoted as saying: "I say I'm going to tl!at the funeral industry and have my body disposed of so it won't cost anything and 1 wsnt them (the relatives) to take Bird /tlortuary the money and have a big party, even if J wotl't be there." Upon reading this, I To the Editor: sent the following letter to Assemblyman It is a known fact that there are people Badham. in the Back Bay area who sit In their paUos with gWls shooting our ducks, ")N RESPONSE I say Jots of luck! We geese,,ete. bave ljefrd this (will you pardo1i"lf I say) T also know the Back Bay is a resting brag before. A!. a legislator known to op-place for migrating birds. The Back Bay pose funeral refohn on behalf of the con-should be a reruge and a sanctuary for sumer, il you had done the sketchiest birds; not a mortuary! homework you would know -there ' M. F. HARPER simply Ja.tn't no such a way to go in.. -,,...-~-~----------, ealllcrmr. . -_, -·~ "M one devoted to toking the 01.ANM COAIT Qj ~~~. ~~~Cl3G> ~ • foollshoess out of funerals, I suggest the secon4. best solution is membership in a non-profit organization dedicated to simpllcity and economy In funerals. •"fnuLE THIS could not q\Jallly., hav- ing my body disposed of so.It won't cost aQYll>inc, taking Utls 'otep could ssve ,,. ~ your flmily enough .for a good sized blast." DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weld, PubUshtr Thmn<>a Ke..U .. Editor Barbare ltfeibich Editorial Page Editor ;' . We.1 nv•TE \IOU 10 Fm> 'nlE lllRDS SAm's B1Ro Fooo 15'.PER UCl \ I MRS. ROl!ERT C. KUNZ, , Secretary Boo'NI of Directors. Trl£ounty Memorial Funeral Society l..UUigent? To the Edltoro ln recent yeal"'!, there have been a series ol eveni. that have Indicated that lhe Central lntelll1ence Agency is really not too lntell13ent. I WAS interested. to learn recently' that three of tht men who plumed and ex· ecuted the Watergate fiasco were three of the men who furnlsbed "Intelligence," I ' The editorial ,.page of the-Dailt Pilot .leeks to inform and a:tim\l.l&te- rffders by presenting on thl* peae dlvene.'commentary' on topica ol I~ t~st by syndicated columnists and ca.rtoonim, by provi(tlna a rorum fO'I' ttadm1' view~ and by prcsmtlnst "1.l• riewape,per's opln\om and ideu on CUtTent topics. The-edftoriaJ opfnk>ra ol the Dally Pilot aWt"ar only In 4he rdltoti.Al column 111 l.h~ top ot the pa.ae. Opinkma exprcMtd by 1~ cof. wruristl Md cartoonfnl and 18'tttt wrtten att tMtr OWl'I and no ~e­ pimt Of their vle'W'I by 'the Daily Pilot lhould be inf~ Wodnesady, May 23, 1973 r She Dung In and;ft'on Auto Maratlion Cont.est Meant Feet on iround, Hands 01i Car DECAruR, lll (AP ) -return the check. aged mu'r clWl.'5e the wrong BarMra a.es-kept both ~ "That's what I'm going to tartet w~ he au.acked actor feet on the ground and hung in do," Tayk>r shrugged. "I don't Petri' rfoole't 7(..year-old there. A3 a result, she won a .know what else to do with It." modatr new car worth $2,700 ln an en· * "She,'t'as ju~ walking up durance contest sponsored by CHlCOPEE,-Mass . (AP ) -the rdf,'' said \her husband., )'OWll boy, about 15 or 16, came across and tried to take her handbag away. She clung to lt and was knocked to the ground. A woman doctor in a car stopped, and the boy ran off." radio station WOOY . Roger Bra11U'd'1 act lo n s Patrtl O'Toole \ "when this She was one of ZS marathon spoke looder than word!. Hel--~----+i ---------------1 contestaots who were required recently had hi.! I a r y n :i to keep two hands on the car removed, and early Tuesday and both feet on the ground, the bandage fell oft Dust ap- except for a 15-minute break panntly was enterln& his Girl Page An outspoken young champion of women's rights took her place this week as first girl page in history df House of Representatives. Selcla Looper, 18, was sponsored by House Speaker Carl Albert of Okla- homa. She is from Heavener, Okla. Higl1 Gas Prices Not Likely-Aide twice a day. throat. Barbara hung on for 132 hours, outlasting all the rest - includlng a contestant whose pictu re in a local newspaper was recognized by police. He was arrested on a theft c:harge, for which he was wanted. "I think I won a blender once in a drawing, ibut never anything as big as a car," Said the tenacioos Mrs. Buesklng, 37-year~ld mother of one. SALT LAKE*CITY (AP) - Convicted airline hi- jacker RJcbard F. MCC:Oy Jr., got his money's worth out of Larry Patterson's parachute. Now Larry's suing for restitu- tion. Patterson said he loaned the parachute to McCoy last year. The latter used it to bail out of a hijacked United Air Lines plane, with $500,000 in ransom. Captured later, McC,oy now Is serving 45 years in federal prison. The FBI located t he parachute in a culvert, wad- WASlflNGTON (AP) ded and wet, and stored i\ that economy have gasoline to car-way as evidence. As a result, There is no cause for C1:1ncern ry out their business. Patterson claimed lhe chute is that gasoline prices will fise to mildewed a~ worthless. He SlMON NOTED there are · astronomical levels such as 7& sued in federa C1:1urt for $535 cents and $1 a gallon, Deputy forecasts that the price of damages. gasoline will reach 75 cents to * Treasury Secretary William $1 this swnmer and said, •·this BEND, Ore (AP) -Realtor Simon declares. concern is unfounded .'' Frank Taylor received a check Slmori. Chairman of the Nix-Gasoline prices in Europe, for $900,000 [rom the First Na- on Administration's Oil Policy notably England, Germany, tional Bank of Oregon. Committee, told a House sub-"After J stopped laughing, I ·u.e t d · -th France and Italy, are high comnu s u y1ng e wondered what I should do For 3 days only. OAIL f PILOT 7 energy Cr'·,· Tuesd that because taxes in these coun--lS ay with it," Taylor said. He even if the price of crude oil tries are so high, he said. "By decided to check up on the were doubled, the price of comparison, taxes represent check. gasoline wou1d go up by only only 30 percent of the price in A bank official told him a eight cents a gallon. He con-h U . ,, machine goofed in the process ceded gasoline prices would t e n1ted States. increase during this summer's Shortly after he testified, of mak.1ng out a 59 cent re- shortage, but said this would the Interior Department fund, due Taylor on a not · be nearly as much as released voluntary guidelines homeowner's insurance policy. I Wfire lowering our 1 already low prices on famous brand · f~.!t in some quarters. 'lfiioriiiialliiociiiialiiin~giiOlii·1iianiiiid~giiaiisoliiineiiii.iiiiThiiiieiibaiiiinkiiiiasiikiiediiiihilllii. iiiitoiipiileaseii~I DETAllJNG THE ad-1 1 mlni!traUon's steps to in- crease oil and gasolioe sup- pQes1 Simon also disclosed a list of suggestions for con- sumers to conserve gas and oll this year. They ranged from forming car pools to walking more to taking vacations by traln or bus. Sou them Simon droppec' strong hints that the 8dministration is leaning toward adopting a mandatory oil and gasoline allocation program this swn- mer to prevent s e v e r e shortages in some states and to make sure key areas of the Dool'I OP1n 12 noon -kends I. M9mor\1I Dly; 2 P.M. ...Wds\ft. AdrnlUlon: 11. 75 .ckllbl 71f yovn91t1ri JO to 16 Exciting development at JCPenney! Thru Monday onl· 119 _ Big 8x10 " color enlargeme from standard U.S. color1 negatives* or slides. (Also GAF and Fuji color negs.) ·ouer does no! apply to 110 fllm JCPenney / •• We know what you're looking td. Shop Sunday noon t o 5 P.M. at the follo~ng 1tore1: ' I FASHION ISLAN D, Newport Boach (714jf>4'4-23 I 3. H~NTINGT~N CENTER, Huntington Beach f 14) 892-7771. I I ./ I ' • 1 I . cameras. Now 1788 Reg. 19.88. Polaroid Square Shooter 2. Uses the new square formal film that cosls less than the rectangular lilrrl, You'll gel a perfectly exposed color picture in just 60 seconds. Now 1988 Reg. 22.88. Koda k Pocket lnstamatic8 20 camera outfit. The small. slim, and stylish camera. Takes big 3'hx41h color or black and white prints, or new smaller slides. Uses Kodak 110-size drop-in lllm cartridge. Features automatic rotated magicube, a used bulb signal and double-e)(posure prevention. Color corrected. sharp. 3-element lens. Outfit includes camera, !ilm, and magicube. Sale prices elfectl"e thru Saturday. Low prices on famous brand films . 146 Kodd°color Pocket Camera film . 20 exposures. 97c Kodacolor Pocket Camera film. 12 exposures. 129 Kodacolor CX 126. 20 exposure cartridge. 87< Kodacolor CX 126. 12 exposure cartridge. -·-~ ....... ..... ... Kodachrome n ... . ' " ... " . . . ' . . . . .... " ' .. ' . . .. JCPeriney 3eo Polaroid Type 108 color pack film. 209 Kodacolor Super 8 Cartridge film. 2 B9 Polaroid Type 88 color pack Iii,. !or Squareshooter camera. We know what you're looking for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the folloY(ing stores: • FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (11 4) 6'44-2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 892-7771. . J . -. ,I I ·.r • - J j· DAILY PILOT f I • ! By 1110!\IAS 0. ELIAS • : pressing ahead with the l largest land use gamble in • Southern California histor). j the Los Angeles Department ; of Airports this month paned the ba1fway mark in buyinJ prophty for an airport that · may never be built. Still al least 19 months away from definite word on whether it will be able to construct a proposed $'900 million "in· teroontinental airport" in the high desert about 63 miles due north of downtown L o s Angeles, the department has already spent $35 million and acquired 8.951 acres in the Palmdale area. • WtalltSda7, May 23, 197.3 Aide Named SACRAMENTO -Gov. Roo- ald Reagan has named An· drew G. Roberston, 58, as in- terim director of the stato ~1ental Hygiene Department. The appointment only lasts through July 1. Wfd~a1, May 2.3, 1973 PILOT-ADVERTISER 15 . Switch From Teaching to PR Not E~~Y By JOYCE t... KENNEDY Parachute" -Practical lact o£8cers of the local rtlatiODI would be most llkeJy l ~~:R.,:o;~:l~~rt wr:t: ~:r=~g~ll:~:= ~=terf«~~~~~ ~~; :v:!:~v!:.,~ beche.ltt of science degree in Nelson Bolles l'fen Speed PRSA isn't listed in the phone ot public rela.Ucl1s work. apeclal education. I am not in· Press, box 4310. Btrkeley, book, try locating ol!icers by Finally, rewrite your teresled in 1eachlng following Cllif. 94704: 1973; f • · 2 0 calling pubUc re I at Ions resume:. It's a disaster. Not graduatJon and would like to paperco\•er by mail ). departments of large com-on1y is lt u n attract Ive pursue work or public rela-Concerning your specific ~ panies and utillUes since their reproduced in "blue ditto," tions. J have tncl1.1ded a copy tercst in publ ic rel<itions, bav· but it does not sell you as an of my rea.11tne to give you an ing read your resume , I doubt ~ ) applicant. Further, you COin-. • idea of what 1 have been that you know what thi! field (a Corner mit the jobbuot1ng sin of tmng DEAR JOYCE: 1 am 14 doins. -C.D., Cleveland is all <bout. I think you're reer too many &Cf'OQJ!ftl that the yews old ; school ends at 2 equating it with "working Wj.th _ _ reader can't undcratand, pm, but I wouldn 't IJe able to FOR ALL m E students people" wittx>ut getting tnlo start working until at least !ho lll8Dlllactuttr ol the pro- duct in queatloo. It's """"""1 lbat BD OU1slde eoglnee<'S word counts mere with judge or jury than an engineer on the Dlm's payroll. Generally, a forensics engineer would w<rk as a consulting engineer when be/she is not in court. who have gone through four the gritty scramble for detalll. employes usu.ally are PRSA DEAR JOYCE: Wbat ls a 2::kl. Almost any time Oil years ol college as an educa-As practical suggestions, firit members. Or, you can locate forensics engineer? -P.A., weetenm though. I'm a good tioo major -and for the mount a crash reading prO[ officers of local chapters by Olive Branch, Miss. wocker. r understanrt I'd need Ruth Lembeck (Doil .Boob, I Dag H~ Plaza, 14 E. 47th St., New York. N.Y. 10011: 11173). Or, you moy find it al a bookstore ior 95 cents. It's a roinl-encyclopedia IQ help you gel starled. Send career questions to Joyce Lain Kenne<jy at th!!; newspaper. Son'y, bu\ the volume of ma,ll ma k es personal replies ifnpossl>le. r. GWC Student Gets Big Grant teacben wbo u t. about chang-gram to devour all the bookj\' .,mt.ire PRSA headq uarters at ... a minor's work permit. I ing career fi eJCQ -pick up a and writtei material you can 145 1bird Ave., New York, A forenslcs engineer ls any would like a good job but don't copy of "New Careers for find about public relatiom. ', NY. 10022. type of engineer ( c iv i I , lcoow how to go about getting Golden West College student Teachers" by BU~ McKee Once you locate PRSA of-mechanical, electrical, etc.) one. Babysitting has lost its Roy Neyman of Hunti..agton (Henry Regnery C.0., 114 W. AFTER YOU HAVE some ficers in your city, ask for an who ·bas the appropriate ,thrill. -A.B., Seattle, Wash. Beach has received 8 four~ lllinois St., Chlcago, Ill. S0,10; understanding of the areas or 'lldvisory conference with one technical expertise to sel"Ve as h 1 shi t the W b 1972; $5.20 papercover by work (such as writing, place-or more of them. Do not ask a court witness in product The next time you earn $1.10 year sc 0 ar P 0 e b mail). Also recommended : ment, special events and other, ~em for a job. Ask for advice liability suiis. Most often a from ballysitting, send for a lnsUtute of Naval Architecture THE PLANNED airport -- would play a key role in the region's air travel if it were "Whal Color Is Y o u_r_:•:.:ct:.:i v:.:it:.:i•:.:•:.:l •:.:t:.:ey_:to_oon:.:::l:.:ro:.:l:.:con:.::.·_:i;...whi..:.:.' c:.:h:....::•:.:re:.:•:.:< '.:.) _•:.:f _pu:_b_lic __ fore_ns:.:ics_:e_ag::_i_nee_r _1es_t_il_:i•:.:• _fo:.:r_n:.:•:.:w_,,g:.:ui_de:.:'_"_T_ee_oa_:g:_e-:J-:obs=" ::::by==in=G=len=Co=ve.=N=ew=York, built, handling 100 million passengers per ;.iear compared with the 40 million who will use Los Angeles International Airport when it r e a c h e s capacity. Making the Pa 1 m d a I e purchases a giant gamble is a lawsuit filed against the prcr ject by the conservationist ••. the project Is being tllntched with Interest around the So11th• land. Sierra Club. The miit has forc- ed the Department or Airports to make new studies of the planned facility's impact on the desert environment. Such studies are required under fe deral laws passed in 1969 and 1970, after the Palmdale site was chosen and land acquisition had begun. But the contract for the en- vironmental impact report, which will take 27 months to prepare. wasn't awarded until last summer. THE FIVE Los Angeles airport commissioners find themselves in t he i r un· comfortable position because of a year-old state law com- pelling public agencies to begin buying land rapidly, aflcr condemnation for a proj- ject ·gets approval. That law forcld the com- 1nissio n either t0 restart Its land acquisition pro.cedures last September -a process which had been halted when the Sierra Club suit was filed -or see the condemnation ordinance which authorized the purchases expire. Whether the more than $70 million to be spent on land turns out to be a waste won't be known at least unti l the San Francisco consulting finn or Arthur D. Little Inc. finishes its Impact report. WORK ON TllE study has barely begun, as Little so far has finished only the fir.st phase of the project -its "Outline and Work Program." a statement or what ground the impact report will cover . Mean~'hile. the project is being watched with interest around the Southland. That's because the Palmda1e pro- posn 1 is a key portion of the Southern California Regional Avialion System Study com- pleted last year for the Southern California Associa- .. tion ol Governments. Tflat study projected only t hr e e interconlinenlal·scale airports in !he JO-county regio·n st retching from Sa n Luis Obispo Coun1y to the · Mexican border for the years after 1985. TWO Of,. THOSE l'x:ist s - Los Angeles International nnd San DiegO's Lindbergh PfCld. The th ird \Vas Palmdale. If conserva tionists prevent use of the high desert for such a facllity, planners will look elsewhere. T"'·o other potential sites have been mentioned in recent .vears -atop the Chino Hills near the junction of Los Angeles. Orange. San Bernardino and R i v e r s i de counlics. and on the Marine Corps reservntion at Cntbp Pendleton nf'ar the Orange- San Diego co un!y line. JJ;fl.EO I CTABLY 1 en· vironmentalists in those areas have been adamant in op- posing construction of an 11irp<>rt in ei lher location. Yet . the regional Hirport study maintains one will be necessary, together with con· 11trucllon of a new "con· ttnental" airporl at Palm Sprlnp and conversion of !he military field.$ at El Toro Marine Corps A.ir Station in Orange County and Point J\1ugu Naval Air Station in Ventura C.ounty Into similar, • short-range field/ii. r l , 1972 FEElS LIKE VELVET -OUTWEARS OTHER i CARPETS . EASY TO INSTALL 29 > e 12"x 12" e STAIN RESISTANT c d e 100% NYLON PILE ~,., _N_o_w_s_A_LE_P_Rl_C_ED_ .. _._. _____ EA_. ~ NYLON HI-LOW 100°/o CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYL0N2 PILE. POPULAR NYLON Hl·LOW THAT 9 9 COMBINES. BEAUTY AND DURABILITY. MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM . s~a:R· NOW SALE PRICED • • • • 1»00 COMPARABLE RETAIL •••••• $4.99 NOW SALE PRICED, , • COMPARABLE RETAIL ••• $7 .99 • •·~·•·1•10 "•m• ... • <>• ~'"'""' •~<<o••to•• •o ••·~•,··~ o,,,,..,, ·~•.,•D•""~;·••• DACRON® POLYESTER ,:;; PLUSH ~~~t1 IOOo/o DACRON@ POLYESTER P!lE . RICH, yta l UXURIOUSL Y THICK PILE , . NEW ~~1 DECORATOR COLORS. NOW SALE PRICED L. COMPARABLE RETAIL ••• $9.99 Sets 't-~-ear e, N-"'-1 -:-ls. trans. 2.1 KODEL® m PLUSH SHAG SO. YD . INSTAU£D SAVE $1100 \ NOW SALE PRICED ... COMPARABLE RE!TAIL ............... $8.99 • 3D·IO·IO DAYS NO INTEREST• CONVENIENT CUDIT PUNS·Ml IMK TElllS lVAllAll£ • CAl.l FOi Fl££ SHOP·AT·HOll£ SE •NORTH HOLLYWOOD e WEST LOS ANGELES . e WHITTIER e CANOGA PARK ANAHEIM 99 LIMAL "· SAVI $4.00 e TORRANCE e WEST COVINA e HOLLYWOOD e VENTURA e PASADENA e MILLBRAE e SAN CARLOS e MONTCLAIR LONG BEACH 3008 Bellflower Blvd. 421-8934 .649 North Euclid St. 635-7674 I I' .. . • Rieh ~anines ·-· Dogs Live on $14 Million DEERFIELD BEACH, Fl•. (AP) -Five years after they inberiled a fortune, 74 dogs still stand between a wtiversi- ty and about $14 million. A veteriDarlan say.s some of the dogs could live another 12 years. When Eleanor Richey died in 1968, she left her estate of M.5 miWoo to 150 stray dogs she collected. over 15 years. Four of her relatives contested the will, and in im a court ruled lhal each relative would get five percent of the estate and the rest would go to the dogs. After the last dog dies or in 20 years, the money goes to Auburn University for veterinary research. BY 'l1IE TIME of the rul· lng, the estate had grown to more than $14 million. Dr. I.C. Frederickson, a veterinarian who cares {Or the animals at their 100.acre ranch near this F o r t Lauderdale suburb, said Tues- day 74 of the dogs are still alive. "I think we'll have dogs here for 10 years," says Frederickson, who visits the ranch three days a week to ex- amine the dogs in their private clinic. He said the youngest dog is five years old, and their number statistically increases the chances that some will be very long-lived. A B~ET HOUND that was 10 years old when Miss Rickey adopted it died last winter at the ripe old age or 18. To guard against another generation or lucky dogs, the animals are segregated by sex. A spokesman for Broward National Bank in F o r t Lauderdale, which acts as trustl'e for the animals, says the dogs ' money is invested in stocU and bonds which stress long-term growth. It costs about $17,000 a year to house and fe<d the clogs and pay the salaries or their t b r e e caretakers. UNLIKE THE happy mutt that romps with neighborhood children, the rich canine! lead a dog's life , spending most of their time In small, fenced runs. They get out for a bit of exercise each day. Panel Backs 4-campus Name Bill LOS ANGELES (AP) -A state college truatees com- mittee has voted to endorse legislation now pending in the state Senate that w o u l d change the names of four campuse.s, provided the bill is amended to give the trustees authority to make future name changes for the other 15 cam· puses. There has been much vocal opPosition at many of the col- leges and universities since the trustees changed the nam- ing system so that, for ex- ample, San Diego Slate Ccllege b e c a m e California State University, San Diego. However, until now, the trustees opposed changing the new name. BUT A BIIL was introduced in the Senate this session that would change the names of the state universities at San Diego, san Francisco, San Jose and Humboldt back to their original fonn except thaf they will still be called universities. It would be San Diego State University, for ex- ample. The trustees committee on gifts and public affairs, con- ceding that the bill probably will be passed, voted to sup- :~ port the legislation if it is ~= amended ;o give the board ,;: authorizatlon to make further .:--.. such name changes when a ,,. ' • campus so requests. ~ ; The full board was to con-=:,! sider the endorsement today. {; Crltics of ttle current college •!'\-and upive.raity names have :.~ argued that the titles are .... ~ unwieldy and that they rob J j each campus of its individual £.!· ~~~~~~~~~~~~i~de~n~ti~ty;.;;::::::::;;;;;;;;-/ :-- •· PENNY OWSLEY .•! •• ... .. •• .. .. · .. '. . ' ·:~ '•: '•: • ·' " •• :~ •• l'! .. ·:l •• t• .. •t :i . ' i'! ;{: .,. ,•! :.a.· .;~ ••• -. •, • •• •• .. •• ··-: ·ti ••• ·1· •• •• • ·'• ••• •• l-' . :.r . .( ~ ..... •• ~"" .~· ,., , .. • • •• t~· ;f?' ORGAN BUY·OUT! NOTICE We bouafrt 1n entire run of this new ucitinc or1an • ~AvEssoo Wt bou1ht tn tnli1e production run ol tllis popul1r modtl. Made by ont ol America's ilr1est or1an manulacture1s . Just imatlnt ... lull, bl1 catlledral sound coupled will! the w1rmth ol 1 &iaantlc theater oraan, capable ol producina such exclUna elfect1 1s the piano, vibes and Hawaiitn 11ultar. Come in, set it, plly It. You'll 11ree ifs !he console buy-of·tht·ye1r. Rag. $3495 Our Price $2995 USED ORGAN SPECIALS! • HAMMOND' Ml.Look. l;ke now ...................•... $6'5 CONN ' 101 W•I. Auto. Rhy ·Show Chord ....... .-$6'5 HAMMOND: Femous MI 00 Series ·······-·-········-· $895 WURLITZER, MDL ~lOO • w/L.,i;• ................•.. $195 WURL!TIZER, 1973 Model. Bit. ;n c1netto ........ $8'5 HAMMOND ' 2S Ped1I . El 11 con•ole ............ $1''5 WURLITZER' ~037 -;l k•¥bof!.~< •.... ~.,.. ......... $1795 HAMMOND ' AIOO Con•ole .,.i; . .f'r9v. Chy .... $1tf5 HAMMOND, Cl • wah 122 L.,l;e Spk .......... $23'5 HAMMOND' Bl · w;th 122 LHB• Spk ....•...... $24'5 HAMMOND ' Mod el R 124 • Full Con<ole ........ $2495 HAMMOND ' Model Hl82 -Dix. Con•ole ........ $3295 Fiii CLA55 LlSSONS TllMS PENNY OWSLEY ORANGE COUNlY WAREHOUSE EUCLID & SAN DIEGO FREEWAY 545-0415 fll. 10-t, SAT. 11M &: SUH. 12~ r======-··· ' · g.e. 17.6 f~roof refrigerator' 299.95 . I Zero degree f~ezer holds I 65 lbs. of frozen food. f\dd optional icemaker now or later. Twin crispers, rollers, separat~ temperature controls. T rode in your old refrigeratbr and save even more ! -~·~~ ··-.. ~~,,!~, . ff... I -._ ' ' .I ·-•t . -----·-'-···--·-··-· -·-----. / • • kltehenald andereounter d.lsh'll'asher 289.95 Price includes nor.,,ol replocement instollotion. Gold Seol hoovy duty motor, 7 pushbutton cycle\. 9 position ' upper rock, forced oir drying system. • for g.e. 2-speed 4 • applianees large eapaelty washer 199.95 Three cycles, including pormonent press, delicate and normal. Woter level ond temperoture controls, Filter· Flo wosh system. Motching eloc. dryer, 138.00, gos 159,95. / / ' / .• > ... ; \ ,.J!J -.. • maytag andereounter dhhwasher 319.95 Fe-otures full -size sprey erm s, large capacity, Micro- Mesh filter system, needs no pre-rinsing, quiet opere- tion, Moytog dependobMity. Normol replocement in· , s\ollo~on ova~oble ~t nominol cost. Mo jor Applionces, 80 '>\ Mail and pho ne orders invited. • • ,. ANAHEIM NEWPOU HUNTINGTON IEACH OlANGE, MALL OP: 0JIAN'9E CERRITOS 444 H. E11,lld 11141 SJS.1121 47 Fe1hion lal•lld 1714) t.44-1 212 7777 E .. illt•' Aveti•• 1714) 191-JJJI JJOO N. T111tl11 Str.et 17t4) ttl.t >ll IOG t...t C•olt .. Mill 12 11) IM-Mll SHOP i'O A.M. to t :JO P.M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5 P.M. • • •• ' !All.V PILOT I • ) OIWIGE COlllfTY Record For the Births Death Notices ARBUCKLE 6 SOl'f WESTCLIFF MORTUARY '· U7 E. 17th st., Costa Mesa Iii tllSS BAL:rz.Bfl\GERPN FIJNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 11:..1450 Costa Mesa lff..!4Zi • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI "34IS • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1705 Lapna Canyon Rd. 4!M-1Ml5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL P ABK Cemetery Mortuary Cllapd 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beacb, CalUornla l«,2'700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME '7181 Bol1a Ave. Westminster SU-35%5 • SMITHS' MORTUARY C%7 Main St. Hu.ntlngton Beacb -PUBLIC N0'11CE SUf"EIUOlil COURT 01' Tl4E STATI! Off CALlf'OltMIA f'Oll nt• COUMTT 01' Oll:AMG• NI A·1 ... t 7 NOT!CI! 01" Hl!:AIUNO Oir Pl!TITION FOil Pll:~AT• 01' WILL ANO FOil LIETT911;S T•ITAM&NTAltT ll ONO WAIWD) Supervisors Give Order , -~ .... ··~~....:>.:;·~·::-..i:.'~·;:..;~::..:.~ • County Vehicle Use Cut -- ' • \.i ·Gas Shortage B' JACK BROBACK Of .. DlillY ...... • ... wanted to know if there was said 1hat the county ba4 11108 aho be ln 8bort suppay soon." "Somegustatioolbavehad posalble be done to reduce any chance the county could engines u.sing gasolfn1e at Morris advised. He said con-their deliveries cut 70 per-gasoline coosumptioo by the SANTA ANA -Orange make a deal with Long Beach present including start~ ver1ion cost would be about cent," Clark said. •iwe are various departments and ' . County 1Upervi.9ol"!I TueJday which talked of plans to reline machines. The County Fire $700,000. lucky that our cut wai only 15 districts. "We might be cut 40 ordered aJI c:ounty department its own gasoline from city-Department, whlch will nqt be Supervisor Ralph Clark of percent." percent later, it oould easily beads to curtail non-essential owned crude oil. cut unless things get worse, Anaheim, who owns a service Clark added that 1r police get w0f1e," ~k stated . UR ol. \.~Its and equipment Qierry said that he had had ltll vehicles, he said. station, advised that the and .lire department! were He said ~ chainnan of the ~cut ·gqqUne ust. been informed that Long He said the possibility of guoline shortage was "real." alk>wed their full allotment it Orange County Transit 1'e ords-c..me on the heels Beach had as yet been unable changing to the use of pro-Thia wu in reply to some would mean that o l b e r District board of directors he of a revelation Monday by to find a refinery with pro-pane gas would be ccstly an4 critics who have charged that departments would have to had ordered a staff study of County Purcha!ing Agent duction time available to the might not solve the problem. the oil companies we re curtail their use more than 15 possible bus schedule changes Nathan Cherry that the coon-city. "Propane b a g a s o 11 n e creating the shortage to gain percent. to make it more convenient Charity ' .I I Rummage Sale SANTA AHA -- ,..... and """"""" IUOil ... ..-for • ,,._. ule by the Unit.eel ClnlJral Palsy Asaoclallon ol °"""" ' County. . The ll8le wW be btld J\lne, 1 and 2 at the 8S90Ciation's ~­ fices, S020 Harvard St., Santa ADa. Proceeds from 11111.oale will !upport activlUes_and.prO- grams for handica p p ed students. Pickup of the d<maled.ltem.s can be arranged by call}n& Mn. Teri lllil at 54W7IO, . ty's .!lllpplier, Union Oil C.O., Transportation Chief Morris refining by-product and may· ·_production adv&ntages. He urged that everything for workers to use the buses. had cut the fuel to be,-~~:......~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:......~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ delivered under the current contract by 15 percent. To meet thJ.s cut, which Cherry warned could become worse , the a up er visors ordered : -That all departments and special districta cut their use of gasoline by 15 percent or more at once, with the ex- ception of police and fire departmaits. -That tight control be en- forced on the use of com- mercia I credit cards f o r ,gUoline purdlase. -That the use of employe car pools be encouraged and that department heads support such pools for getting to and from work. -That the county purchas- ing agent assume aboolute control of rue! deliveries to au departments and districts to insure compliance with the new rules and to meet the IS percent cut. These orders, adopted by board were at the suggesti- on · or R.I. "CUba" Morris, head of the county's transportation department. Morris warned that further more drastic action may be neaeMary if the gasoline shortage becomes worse as ~ell it might. In such case, he suggested the use of car pools should be made mandatory and curtailment of gasoline supplies to departments and districts be very strict. Purchasing Agent Cherry outlined the cowrty's COfltract with Union Oil. It has 10 months to run. He said if the company further reduced its allocation to the county there woutd be no other alternative tban to boy gasoline on the open market. In waniing that the situation may get worse Cherry said that heavy tourist traffic in the summer months will be a drain on available gas sup- plies. OMrry said the coun ty has 62 agencies which used the county's master contract for their gasoline purchases, in- cluding 18 cities. Two of these cities have already been cut completely from the contract because they did not get their fuel sup- plies from tbe county under last year's contract. They are San Clemente and Laguna Beach. Cherry said the oMginal con- tract with Union Oil called for delivery of 83,000 gallons a month. This has now been cut to 71,000 gallons. Cherry said he has sought bids from other supplfers for a backup contract but was unable to get any. "One com- pany said they would sell to the county at regular prices." he said. "If we do this it would cost us plenty." The county pays Union Oil but 20.7 cents a gallon for gasoline under the contract. Federal taxes are not included in governmental purchases. CbeITy was asked if he thought the 20.7 cents pr ice would hold. "As far as I know, yes, but Union told me just a few weeks ago they would not have to cut our contract sup- ply and you know what hap- pened," he replied. Supervisor Ron a Id W. Caspers of Newport Beach ~ ~ = • OPfN DAAY 10-10; SUNDAY 10-7 THURS., FRI., SAT., MAY 24-25-26, 1973 \ 16-INCH REDWOOD TUBS 2-GALLOI PLASTIC WATIRll(i CAI 12"SQUARE or HEX SllPPll(i STOliES Charse li! ~"'"""'"d pknllc. 1'10-, "° look1. Vollow wllll _, Mp dooign. 1-fon.. dy tor ~ Uquid f.or. lili-..Chor!l"llt ,,.~·: ... .,23c "'.,.,.... ......... _...... tt...._ °' ~· .... E ... _.... a. KMART ® STIER MAIURE ·2..cu. Ft. 2 cu. ~. Wflltd lrM. Enrict.IS soil and ~ loins moistur&. 5-lb.* &ZAllA & CAMILUA FOOD ,~·:~::'.: .. 66( "'_ ..... _ ·~ <Ot•1 bc:ilont. ,,,. ocid ..,.,... :~~;O® \I Ea • LIQUID 1\\ IROI \ 1 '8 Gui. Size• Modi.........., for w .. -. ""' ..,;!,. $!ej>t )'OlloW .... -. """· ""bu .. ~ ·R- -5-lb. * OTRUS AND Strong, 1turdy ~cm1truction lo la~t for y..,n. e,pe(ially •uittd far !how favorite, lorger planh which }'Oii wi1h ta giv1 e~lra care. .!Y.~DO FOOD 25-lb. * DICH~ilRA , ,.,,.. '"""'' 66 ( Food & Insecticide §:3.f~ ' Ea. 3-Dnyi ]33 Only SYSTEMIC K mart's• own brand, Ri<~a;ichon· FLOWER dro food plus iron and lnsedlcide. ·--CARE 1 '7 .S.lb.' con .S.lb. • con CoMroh W(kir.g i~. feeds pl':f\11-... DELICATESSEN DISCOUNTS YOU CAN PAINTED "MEXICAI" POTS Try O!Jr deliciously fresh ond succu· lent ham sliced the way you like it. It's perfec1 for sandwiches or cold plates ot home and on picnics. c H.ALF POUND , ...,,. ..._.,. ... .. -·-....... - A ION BAG ''WHITE SALE" 78TO 88 Reg. Re!J. to 4.66 \ \ to 5.96 ASSGmD 1-GALLON LIVE PLANTS ~::: .. 73( • •• Sturdy, fiiatthy planh .ready for tromplonti11g. Choose fror11 Japan· .. Atdlio, BougainviMoea, Siar Jo5mi1141. s~ now. ASSORTED 5-GALlON LIVE PLANTS 2i5!2 5-lb.* KMART~ ROSE FOOD ,• • ~~;r· 66~~ Promotes larg1 Movtifvl ~~ and 1tvrdy it.ml. ·~~ DECORATIVE BORDER FEICE \ 36" By 12" 48~· ESllll of M,l.RILYN W£80RG R . I WINDSOR, 1lto kllOWll •• M.-.RILYN w. adio og ' WINDSOR, Dt<:ellsed. } >-' =ICE IS 14EllEBY GIVEN that ,•· , .,,._ , Styli'sh handbags and shoulder bags, in bright, summertime, wear·with·all white vinyl. Chic, fashionable trims and closings. C,,.ge it and save\ ~h:~<e 297 ••• Just In lime !or a beoulilvl iur11Mlf! liO•den. Choow lra111 ..Japo....._ Blad Pine, Ot.ond.r, ~"" -WI W. WINDSOR h1J llled 1'19re!n • -r 1 • 1 ltton for' p<flblM Of wlU ll>d f<Y B • 1s11111n(e at L1t11•1 re111m,.,11rv 10 Pell· IdS s l tl-r !Bond Wll~) reltrtnt t la which e 11 mad• tor lurthtr ~rllcul1r1. 111<1 Thal • tM time and pl~• of heiring IM ..ame 11111 tll«I at! for Junt n. ltTJ, at 9;00 1.m .. In the caurlroom 111 Dtpertmenl Na. 3 ol uld court, 1! 700 Clvk (..,ter Orlv' We1!, In the Cllf of S1nl1 .-.n1, C8tl1ornl1. D1ttd Mll'I 21. 1J1J, WILLIAM E. ST JOHN CllllnfY Cterk lllCHAllD T. STIC•~ UJH \le11h1r1 llMlltvlnl EM:lllO, C1/119'l!l1 tU16 T91: UUI 71i='F• All-r fer: f'etn•-r ..... ,, l"ubll1twd Or1119* CcNl•I Dilly Pilat, Mar :n. 23, n. 1m 1!•1·73 PUBLIC NO'l1CE l'ICTITIOUS •UllN•ss fllAM• ITAT•MIENT TN +ollowl119 pen.Gf\I •rt doll'l9 iw.1 ... 11 11: PACIFIC ENTEAPll.ISES, 1100 Weit eo.11 Hlghwty, ~ II I I ( h • C•tllvr11l1 '26'0 wuu..,., Scon M•~ .. noer, ~ a 1 J a.yNtre T er• tc.t. N~I flMc:lt, Cell!. t2'dO Rt1pll V•n Dorff ll1>9ley, 10U Lavrl• Ltr>e, '"" M_, CtUI. f2'60 Jtmtl Mor191t l_,,i. 4 t .... M••wuert,_ A-. C-dot! ,,,_.,, Ct111. r.liHO This butllletl 11 ~ bY • ~ti p1'1'*'lhlp, ' Wllllem kiotl ,..,.....,~..- Tb!I 1l1t91n .. t wtl fli.d wllll lrtt COIJ'll- ty C::11rt of Ck'•nt9 Cauntv °" AprH >O, 191i • SANTA· ANA-Bids will be opened Ju.ne 11 for the pro- posed remodeling of skull and chest radiology quarters and the radiology and pharmacy waiting ro.om at the Orange County Medical Center, Estimated cost of the pr0> ject is $2.8.400 Co u n l )' supervis9fs Tuesday authoriz- ed JoSepli' Smisek, director of bulldihjf services to process the bids. P alsy Group Seeking Help SANTA ANA -The United qtrebral Palsy AM<>Clalion of Orange County is calling (or summer volunteers. The association provides ac- tivities and programs for ban· dicapped students of all ages. TnfOnnatlon for volunteers can be obtaine6 from Mrs. Teri l!Ul1 S4&-5760. Fo r MllllOWll MU•An ·--_ ... _,, __ • ........ _ , .. _ ... ........ Cl ~· ":".:::t" --' --$AIMIU ... lllRHllN i:-==· ----t:==------ U ICAST11 ""~-·~' .... ~·~··-·- SAlll Q A -~--·-·-- Sold In Fashion Aocessory ~nt• · 10., •• ,,,. .... ('.... ... ....,, __ ,_ Sl"11 •I IHNKS ,,,,,. __ • MORO VIA "''".::...-:~- Sl•l VAtUY ,,,..__ • Charp ltl Thursda y 5-24-73 MEXl(AN PELIGHT ..... ON 11.7. Friday 5-25-73 BREADED FRIED .CLAMS 23 •w/TortorSOU(I • French Fried Palolot11 •Cri~~Slow •.Roll and Bui..r falUTOI _ .. __ ··--- TOH~ --__ .. - Saturday 5-26-73 GRILUD BEEF UVER ., • w/Dtlldovt Onto. 0ra.,., e W~lpped Po1910lf " • Butt•r.d o,_ Gtont,_. • ltoM end IN"*f. ~ ' ' ' ""'"' ....... ...._.. .. . ~~ ... ,.,_ VllTINIA ,,.. __ _ --- . ...... ____ , ... __ ' ' DAILY PILDT JJ Life Term $1.02 Million Available More Degrees Open UC~ Exteruhd ~niversity Extends Again Imposed In Slaying Co~t Citi£s to -Get Cmh ,,.. "larlely of dqT'H of- ferlnp pn>pOOed for U C !nine'• J!:lteoded University (El<U) -Oludy programs for people wbo can't en r o 11 fulhlme -ba• been upended. ~ ol lhe UC! Facu1ty Senate a p p r o v e d 5"«liJ new pa.rt..ttme study ~. Including a new ctogree program in biological sciences oppooed by facully of lhe UCl-Ollllornia College of Medicine. Acting m e d l c a 1 school dean Stanley van den Noori urged tabling of lhe biGloa deinoe program pend- inl further study by his tac!".fy. Faculty members ....,, IO!d thal tablinl at Ibis late da,. would kill lhe program, alnce II must be revt....i by UC of- ficials by month's end to be in- cluded in next year's piannlnt!. FACULTY ME M 8 E RS okayed lhe biology ExU pro- gram and the?e: other pro- gramso -A joint program in ad· ministration and t e a c h e r education leading to a master of sci<nee degree, beginning in the fall. -A masler of arts degroe in lhe leaching ol Spanish, for credentialed ~ also beginning lhls ran. 'l1IE NEWLY 1ppM1•ed pro- gnm1 were aporoved on a four-yW', pUot basis. EJU's llrsl pUot olfering was a bachelor's degree tn social ecology. The program in Social eoology also offers a master's brlailng lhe 10ta1 number of EIU tludy areas proposed !or lhe 11'13-74 year to live. On leamlng olhel' campuses were requlring a minimum 1<3idency requlremenl ol 24 sludy units eerned, Irvine faculty members took no ac! tlon on a suggestion that the UCI minlmt.im he raised to 35 units for E:rU students. i SANTA MIA -A 'l"man who -te:fly clubbed her mentally retarded b r o t b ' r witb a t~ball bat and then drowned hlm by' stuffing a garden hme down his throat was sent to state prison for life Tuesday by an Orange County superior OOurt Judge. Judge James F. Judi• r .. jected a motion !or a new trial for Mrs. Amile Dorothy., KraehlDl, 45, Garden Grove, and ordered the ma:limum prison term for the impasl.lve defendant. Orqe Cout dU.. will receive 11.02 mllllon ol a II.Ile Board of Equalliatlon cliatributioo of more than 172.! million in local sales and use tax funds for the Orsi quarter of 1973. The cities ol tho 1tate will Student Head FULLERTON -Den Meeks of FullerlOn bu been elect<d president of the uaodated students at Cal S t a t e Fullerton. BA TIERY/EUCTllC 9-llCH DIAGOIAL COMPLETELY PORTABLE ''FUN TV'' receive Ma.I m1Won and the c:ouoties ft.• mlllion Gf~ the lotal. In acl;bpcm, the couolles will receive lls.5 million for the CQUJlty local tramporl.lllon fund, and the San Francaco Bay Area llapld Transl! Dislrlct will ncelve $3.3 millloo. 1be IOtal ...,.....nta the third advance payment receiv- ed fir the Orsi -period. 1be balance ol lhe tu ..,..,,. will be distributed as "clean- up" ~ts to the local agenaes '1 June. Onnge Coast dl.slrlbUUonl lndude o Costa Mesa, $340,000; Fountain Valley, "51,000: 111"" .U.illCll, l·TIACll, 120 WATT IPP AM/FM/FM STEREO COISOLE Ul,IFM,IFM STDIO MUSIC SYSTEM '11 ' 88 ~ .;::::· .;':.'":".:: 0 17 7 '' J-~ -· 4-.,..d ........... ..;,i, .,,..,. .... ..,__ H;gh .,.n-11<• I lj O,.Jy NAt'M/fM ,_ rudio. """"'- lioflll WM COlllfOI ~-SICU30. A 9" diallO"ol "F"" SM" )'OU ...., ploy onrwll•"· ~p. critp block o..d """'• , .. 9p11o11. C-_....,. witll AC/r#d, rs or ~ ~ ll;N- . . ~o"""" lfyl. In wor..ut ffMlo Of forly "''".,icon In_ ... ~. AM/PM/FM •-1odio, 1-,llock loP" p1...,..., ..... phc>no, .... to.ti-. c-. <ompMlo w;lh t.o.r ... el >-'°P"' oM l0.•1teordl. 0.-_.,. ••• G,..,, p•ico. Sl(f).42/1(.S. 8 ,._\{EO ~01~~0 . . . ' ~!AIM· 011\'i 11·1!~ 0.11 100-WATIIPP AM;FM;FM STEREO MUSIC SYSTEM 11·7,~~ ~ ...-, ...... _,,..,....,..,......_,. ...,.., ..... ~ .......... '"-" ............ --.-....... ~. '""· .._ ...,.. ~ ,......,.,... ....... • ........ conl oM 1'2-ba""'r pctd. C._. It. 3M20K. 1-· . -. 1973 00(]5-LJO ' ~ I I • . ,,, JI/I 14-llCH DIAGOIAL COLOR TV --·~ .. I um~ J..Doy• 228'' Ooly , I C.-pod "' • _, ptlcil, but ~ • ,.._... t1.51» 25., DIAGOIA11 ...,,.....,.__,.,_..,,..,,_,.,.™""' 1iJ color. 0-...t VHF Nnino loo. W;go;t 1)'119 ...... IOO~ SOUD STATF~OLOR • =.~,;;;-•~,.. ,,....., "" " -::."::'.::::.":;~'.":'.~~9· 4· I "II I Z':4t111:1 ttl =----=-· :t; ::::' ~ i --·" •· --...... -12-llCH DIAGOIAL ==.r::..~-· "--·-~--PERSONAL PORTABLE J11s t Pl. Into •11 Clg It ou11er/'Y110 .,., ~. ·-t-: ....... 3-Dny• Only 84'' ~--~c: ~ • J Fndiucun:: ~""""""' .. -....... 17-CU. n 100.~ NO-FROST FULLY A~JUSTABLi SHELVES CUSTOM IMPIRIAL REFRl9JIRATOR-FREmR Wliirlpool-_i 2-SPllED, 3-CYCU l'ERMAIEIT PRESS Automatic WASHER ·-. SO. lOS AIKIW ____ ... .. , .... _ ... ---------·--·--.. , __ J-Ooy• 114 11 2-.-1, J-(f'l'Jo. wllll °'°' ~ I*'-,,_. 14.t 7.1 ,... -'-4 _...... S·-_,.,....,..., s..p.,. ""'·~ ....-. ~ .. Coi..t ...... mo. .... V.. .,_. K _,,. 0.0.f' Cord. 3-TEMP., 5-C~CLE PERMAIEIT PRESS GAS DRYER Chari• II! 17 4 JJ Jlnil doot _,. .. ..,...., No INfo (Of• ""' , .. ..,D• -· ,_ ~.. ,""""' '""""' 1-,..;.i... .. ··-----·'•'"' ........ "' ......... .. ,.......,. ""' di"""""" ..... ._.,. ........ 1roo.i • .,_, ,,.....,.,.. Coloro al"" ••ftD co ... ·-..... __ --.. -· 0 ,._ . ,_.., ~ ..... _ ''""' ,,,, __ ._ ·--------- tlnctoo Beocli. 1115 ,000 ; li"ilile, ...,., 1-Beocli. ts6,0DO; Newport B e a c h , '1'7,IOO; San Clemen l •, 4M,OOO: ll>d San J u a n capillrlno, 119,000. Orange OOUnty received 1135.000 of lhe tax lllld distribution and an addltlanal II million for the ORAllGE COlllJY ccunty local lralllplrlallon ...._ ______ ., fund. • Sentencing Scheduled In Giant Stock Fraud SANTA ANA -A Foontaln Valley man has been ordered to face senteoclng June 26 in Orange County SUperior c.ourt acUon that will close the file opened when be and six co- derendants were indicted by lhe Grll>d Jury in connectlon wllh an alleged Ill million stock fraud. Ralph Ernstsen, 14, ol 189113 Santa Clara Ave., will be sentenced to what could be a &"le.le prison term a f t e r pleading guilty to reduced charges of consipiracy in con· nectlon with the stock fraud scheme. Co-defendant H. C a b o t Jones, 61, of Beverly Hills, was cleared of all charges last week by an Orange Goun-- ly Superior ourt jury that returned to Judge Hannon G. Scovtlle's courtroom w l t b verdicts of innocent. Martin C. C&laway, 47, or Los Angeles, was similarly cleared by a jury and all charges agaimt Frederick K. Ryan, 47, of Los Angeles, were dropped in prelrial action . Finn I. Kosmo, 58, of Tustin, drew a three-year probation term after pleading guilty ~o charges of conspiracy. A one-- year prison term was suspend· ed in favor of probatlon when Gerald I. Kasaap, 41, of Montebello, .similarly pleaded guilty IO conspiracy. All charges again!t Merele T. Scl!roer, 45, of Orange, were dismissed when his Jawy,er moved for acquittal during his Superior Court trail. . All seven men were lndicted after an investigation that began when a Pasadena oom-- pany lna:tructed a New Yort baok to deJlroY surplus stoct certlficates bearinc the ClOfllo. pany's name. Police sald the cerlifk:ates were shipped to Kassap's bag plant for destruction but even· Bids Opened For Razing Of Old Jail SANTA MIA -New bids for the demolition of the old County Jail in Santa Ana are being called for. C o u n t y supervlaon approved the p~ ject Tllesday. EsUmated cost of removing the old building at 115 N. Sycamore St. ls $20,~. Bids will be opened on June 18. The old bulldlng, unoccupied since the new O>unty Jall was cornoleted in 1988, Is b e I n g dembllshed to make way for the extension of Civic Cen,.r Drlve West from Main street IO Broadway. Also due to be demolished in the next few months is the Hall of Records on 8th Street. tually found their way Into the hands fJf underworld figures who wed the stock as ~ lateral to obtain loans fro~ banks in the U.S. and Europe. Real Esrote Man Gets Tr ial Date SANTA MIA -Real estate executive Ronald B. Whitman ol Newport Beach bu been ordered to face trial Au.g. 6 on charges lhat be swindled homeowners out of more than '400,000 In I series of trust deed frauds. ORANGE COIDIJ"Y &lperior Court Judge James Tw1tt1r set the trial date for Wbltman, 47, of 1700 llllh St., OUwood Garden Apartments South. He is free on ball with pretrial ap- i)earances scheduled ror July 13 and July 2f> • Witnesses claimed In testimony that led to a Graftd Jury indictment lhat Whitman borrowed real estlte frc:m homeowners by glvinl lhem a down payment plua a cor- pofate note to secure the balance ol Ibo total purchase price. rr JS ALLEGED that after the original transaction cleared escrow, Whitman ob- Wned trust deedl a1almt the property end lhen falled to make paymeols on lhe lrusl deedJ. -holdlar Whll-man' 1 notes lOll: their properfy through foreclolrure1 the Oradd Jury was told, ln a aeries Of frauds adding up to ft°!Ore th~ '400,000. IT IS ALSO allepd ~t Whitman told homeownen, . real estate brokers and other parties in the m u 111 p I e transactions that be was co~ nected to the n1tiooally 1'noVln Ramada Ima Company. He ls ldenUl!ed in proo- ecutkn docUments as being linked IO Newport Really, Newport International Co<jl- pany and the International Develapment Company o f Newport Beach. Grant Given To UCI Prof Harry C.OUn Slim, UC Irvine music profe880l' on leave to the University of Chicago, llas been awarded a post-doctoral research grant from the American Council of Learned Societies. Dr. Slim will study "musical inscriptions in MedJeval and Renaissance art ." A lot of people r-' you. ·' -And, they need you right r-' Thae'1 a vital need for quallfted people of oil -In tlw dynamic medical and dental fteldll Learn it right! Southern California College of Medical & Dental Careen offers excellent cou,.... for 1'EJ>ICAL ASSISTANTS -DENTAL TECHNICIANS -MEDICAL RECEPTION ISTS -and - DENTAL ASSISTANTS. You get oupab' po0o fesslonal instructlon for an excillng futun In heallh care! Learn it fast! Theoe -·no--•"=--Crfmowl.llllda critical Information. You'n taught quldly. Ellldcntly. And, you go to """" -""" ' CALL 635-3450 · lloK"9ht.-!Vou'11 ........ --....i-,.... _,... i---r<all\I do ...... """' PIACEMENT ASSISTANCE RlR GRADOo\TES AT NO EXTRA COSTl ACCREDITm MEMBER. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION Of 'l1WlE & -ru:l;INICAI. 50t001,S, AU. PROGRAMS AfPROllED RlR llETEllANs: SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COU EGE OF MEDICAL & DENTAL CAREERS ~ BROOKHURST,ANAHEDI ' ------~------- ~. ' • . . .. ~) . " ·• ·~ . . . " ,• . ., -· I J% DAILY PILOT Wet Ones TOWElmtS llSIJll cllH·I' 011 p1 are away tnm soap H~ water. ---~ :.:9-v' ftill§i+I! ~ A lfilIJiil Place· To Shop! "Solo" Cups Dispenser witll JS -] OL 15c HIBACHI Joi.AUOSOl Medi-Quik cups. 111. lie FIRST AJD SPRAY ••• 98 Ant1set1tic foc minor cuts, C sunburn, etc. 111. 1.29 f!ms!:-!!i!l.'ililiE!!!= !ID!!lilffi!l!-..:tiii;pjjjj!j!i::filliliillliiiml!Efllilliiil:-lll". r, ~to~;~L D~.,~:-Vitami·n E ~ · Oil BEAUTY DISCOVERY !i ! 1886. Vitamin !I HAND l BODY LDYION ••• 8-0dy ~ be3uty wi~ ·a too ch 2 95 , ef Vitamin E. · 3500 l.U. 171> "· • Ii C H • ream u · · ~ _.. Use u_nder makeup or 2 95 II .. ~ ovemight.14,0001.U. . . ~· ..... 2tz. • !, JI . Vitamin E OIL 14.ooo 1.u. J t~Z,im~~,,~!!;~ill~,B,~"'~~,~~~ PRINCE MATCHABELLI "Wind Song" & "Cachet" ·SUMMER HOUSE 18 or. SIZE Drano REVLON Brings You ••• Pure Natural Organic Skin Care CONCENTRATED CRYSTALS Drain Opeaer _s,.. ... !'llllDU 69' LOW ,.Kt ' Arr id EXTRA DRY Anti-Penpirant Liebl Powder, Scut- ed or U1sce1ted. s.-.. !'llllDU J.99 IOW ""1 1.-39 "Natural Honey" DRY-SKIN MOISTURE LOTION 1 J oz. . or . ·-· "Natural Herb" • N4n»A -· . ~-' .......... !11 .. , -...__ . CREAMGEL Cleanser 13 oz. Gentle & Eflective. ~~;,';;.:.:~';/.:. EA. 2 a 45 7 or. SIZE Renuzit FRESH-0-MATK ~~ Upholstery . GARAGE FLOOR CLEANER 4gc . •• ,. 69c 2 flt. ~Cleaner I.Ill Y. Spray ..,,...-.: on foam. nnc ·-. .,,;4\~ .:..:.-M Mechanics . , -----WATERLESS 33c· tH I. I k HANDSUAP . ydrau IC ac ••1. 47e . 11'. Too 8 69 ~;::~11.15 • Oil Treatment DUPONT ••• for ideal oil • Trim Molding . 20 ft.vinyl 4 69 chrome • . Re1. i.41 • Locking Gas c,. Chrome 1 59 Snap--0n. "'· l.21 • • 'f~I tllickness. 5gc 111. Ile 15 IL Gas Booster ~ DUPONT •.• Reduces pollutants. 4gc R11. &le I u. Safety Flares OLIN ... For 15 minutes. w-..,, Mor 23, 1913 PILDT-ADVl:llTISER Ja CANADA DRY son bRINKS R111l1r 11 Sug1r Free It's S111111tr 011111 Time! Sleeping BAGS DELUXE Back Rest tor the BEACH "The loafer King" ..• Adjusts to your comfort! Natural wood frame wit~ striped drill 1 98 back and seat !lap . •• ,. 2:39 • •• 1MagiCubes •. · · For. all X type and Pocket 1 09 . · lnstamatic Cameras. lfl.1.11 PAK OF 3 o PLAY BALL :!':ER&BLACX SPOmNG GOODS PROPUCTS · Foam Ice Cttest ' -.. • . C0!1Wl •• ,J2Qt ' capacity. stv.1 nao- rlle. 111. lie WllST&HEAD 77c Sweatbands •• , ,1e Soft terry clolh. Keeps hands 69 dry for better grip. Keeps hair C ovtof the way & absorbs sweat. Meat for tennis, ~aseball, etc. 11. .. DOROTHYGIAY ANNUAL "Cleanse 'n Freshen" ~ SKIN CARE SALE 2-Minute Magic frw lhorou&b dee9 do"' 1 50 clun11ng. . R11. l501D IL • Orange Flower or Teltllre LOTION 10 or. SIU"" ..,. 5.00 11 ll. 3.00 Baby Magic BABYOIL ~ Ftr 1 "~1lckl1" tu! • 7.7c Ct19 lOW I'll(! Tube Socks · · · ... Plain white ..• the athlete's fav-5nc orite! Staysup neatly. R11. l9c .:J- Relines Gas and Acid. :!i1.79 ·1 19 • ea . 13 or. SIZE Aqua Net HAIRSPRAY Ckoese Y11r Favorite F1rmal1 NIW..OllT alACH -lot:> lrvM, W"'kllff l"ltr• HUNTINGTON aliACH -M l""' 6 &rookhvr.I HUNTINGTON lliACH -Sl'l!'lngdai. '-Edlngw liL TOl:O -707' lll:Ocid .. ~ MOM! \ \ . . Sr'C!IA:'ilENTO - ~-<fevlc<s lo red~ the ~ ·ol ' air pollutbl ha1!1! •n Installed on automobllol alnoe 1161 but there are few tnemanlcs or ~n Who have the know¥g• er lalent lo lmtalJ or 1SVice them., Now, there has .been a ·b<~ .'lrillcll will give ..mtemen tile undentanding and --bow lo properly care lac' vehicles-Me 'equip- ped w!lli ant1111!0li dev!cet. Motor' "Publication in New York has just released a 768- page, hard cover, manual which will permit dealer s e r v i c e departments, in- dependent 11\0<habl<s a n d service ' ataUon a~ants to lmtall, ,..gulate -and .. rv1 .. all ext at in g anti-pollution devices. CALLED THE "Emission Control Manual" it has been added to Motor PubHcaUon's well known library of service encyclopedias which a r e found in mo.st garages and service facllities. This book Is doubly Im- portant In Callldrnia since so much ~sis is being plac-- ed on clean air,:especlally from automobiles.·· callfomia leads --· J" _-.- ·j _w=~=M=!dl:::::y,~M=''~n=-.1~9~n~~~~~~D~~~L~Y~P~IL~DT__...._,J3:~~-;:;,M;N;.;,;~.;.,~. ~~ New Book May l!ut You to Sleep ~ (AP) -" lloctliiotet In Sumy lllbtlng a •eplea J11cb1 likes lo lllDC)' hlmaell a _....bumble bee tbe way in development ol air """"' from bloosom lo pollution .~ioo !llWS ana -1n dew)' meadows of tedlilquts. ' dawn. ' ' .l<xm'dinl( to Gilbert C.-'!be bclszlng, In partlcuJar, Maurer, vice president aM be finds most aoporific. general manager o! Motos ,~,IQ the Weot Cowilry l'llbllcatlom, .Ibis Is a'! •:f"W' , , of'~.P ~Uve«:fast r.:i-·· iUl<le" 8lid .. y'•' -,_ his :e;e;;;lal lo all medlaDics. • ' and ll$\JallY coru orr in "'We've felt there was a reaf lessitmie than anyone In the public need for a definlu.._ coogreptlon did. and ~·· merenoe Tben tba'e.. the suburban manual of. this type," Maurer hwsewife who tries to coont said "We've ·lmown all along aII the a's ln the Lord's that me of . tile problems with Prayer and the chap who em1ss!on control elev!~ c in-replay.° his l<>Ugbest goll 11aDe4 oo automobil.es is that, · match and seldom gets beyood if they're now proper\y servic-the fourth tee. 'Ibere's the ed and maintained, tbei simp-re\Jre'1 colonel wbo trl.. to ly don't do.the job inteolled. ,....U.all·the Kashmir pools he ".A!J a matter-of 'fact, an llft.. vtllted .be«inDing with a cer- p r o p e r 1 y m a in t It i n e d tain letter, the mathematics automobile with emission ~ don w~anesthetizes himseU trol devices may actually emit w i t h double acrostics, and more pollutants than a non-the Ubidlnou! tad who catalogs c on t r o 11 e d automobile," old boudoir conquests. Maurer .said. THESE AND hWldreds of INCLUDED IN Motor's Emisslon Control Manual are chapters explalnlng jilst wllat smog and air pollution really ls; why inotor vehicle emission control is really needed; tbe Chemistry of smog and air pollution; and a complete synopsis of a 1 l federal and state laws on 'the oubject. -- others w r o t e to London lltenry agent Hilary Rubin- s.lein when be lei It be known In a BBC interview that he was compiling a bedside anthology for insomniacs. "I was absolutely astonished at the respoMe," said Rubin· stein, an insomniac himself who tentatively has titled his work "Z..Z-Z.Z.Z." The idea for the book came to him one . -nJill£ and llU kept blm awake ev« since. ~ is a uotvenai -plalnl. yet' "' ijttle ' is kmwn l}>out Jt," ~ remarked be-celoapo in -t hiJ .Jlloomsbury alell!r. "It's IQ oceanography or outer 51*"; ...,,. of. the biue<t breaktlrougte will .,..,. in tbe O..t two decades. •"MIER.E ARE so many m)'tbs to be brushed uil!O: like needing etcbt bOlln ...,, a nlgbt, ahoolule ,.._... !or adull!; and tbo th1ng llhoat resting a mile after hmcb and walklng a mile after dinner, 49* adults bch r.rtrait With Ont Subject • . ' Held Over One Week By Popular Demand' Make fnne Stand Stll ... portraits are forever! . is all you pay for a 8x10" color portrait . children • babies • No age li·mit • limited to One Portrait pe• Sllbjecl , Two Porlraits •Additional Prints Available al Reas'onable Prices per Family no extra charge for handling and delivery. 99c* extra for each additional person in portrait. "Plus Sales lax HOURS, Daily 12 noon to 8:00 p.m. Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Sunday 12 noon to 4:00 p.m. Now through S.turd•y, May 26 1t the follow1nt S..n stores TORRANCE ~ERRITOS INGLEWOOD COSTA MESA ORANGE I Sears I PAsAoEN{ enENA PARK GLE NDALE LAGUNA HILLs ''-'"'·""""'""~·~"<o. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Yortr Money Back • • I • ..... LAQWOOO Clt'tlllJI St. ft Pll'""°""' 81'1111. IANIAAM Mo. ol ~ COllt PW.t OPEN DAiLY 9'30 to 9:30 • SUNDAY 10 to 7 I I \1tdnt~ay, Mlt 2J, lfi.1J Sex Book an Aid To Legislation? SACRAMENTO (AP) Many Calllornia sex laws are hand-me-downs •ifrom t be days of Henry VIII and Elizabeth l," a researcher for a compendlwn of the laws and lhelr history says. 'I ,...,e al teau• thought go.,ern- tne ret had reo bus i- n ess in r he be d- room.~ For example, it Is unlawful to send a delivery boy to a variety I.heater ;'or other place of questionable repute." ALSO, AN embalmer may Jose his lictnse for "using pro- fane. indecent or obscene language in the course of the preparation for burial" of a deceased person. Melody West Matthews, who helped assemble the list, told a news conference that many state laws "tend to reflect the religious traditions of the time when the government permitted the church to punish individuals for what it con- sidered sexual transgres- sions." Henry VIII, In fact, bo<rowed Crom ecclesiastical law when he made ;'bestiality'' a felony in 1533, she added Tuesday. MRS. MATmEWS said that when the church was divorced from the state, the church's sexual code nevertheless became embodied in the civil ~I laws of the Ul11ted states and California. California's sex Jaws , in- cluding history. texts, defini- tions and glossary , were · pretiented at the Jle\\'S con-' terence by the Berkeley·ba sed · Public Education and Research Committee <Jf California (PERCC J. Nancy M. Jewel. executive director of PERCC, said the book &tarted as a self-in- fonnation pro;ect. PERCC was established two years ago to provide research a n d education for p I a n n e d parenthood adivities. The book does not advocate any policies, Mrs. Jewel said . But As!emblyman Willie Brown ( D -San Francisco) thinks the book may help pass laws such as his proposed legality of any type of sexual activity between consenting adults. Shutterl>reg Great Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, usually the object of the camera eye, turns the tables and snaps a few shots while attending the Royal Windsor Horse Show in Windsor. ''I HAVE ALWAYS thought the government had n o business in the bedroom," he told the news conference. Thumbing throuRh the book, ----------1 one finds that "Contrary to common ~lief, artificial in- semination is not new. tt is aald to 'have been used as early as the 14th Century on horses. The first successful human insemination was ac- complished in 1760 by John Hunter. an English physician, on the wife ot an impotent man." As for bigamy, tt was not a crime tmder English common law but only an ecclasia!llcal offense. the bo.ok also says. F arm Trophies Rate Praise SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) - The Hanford chapter o f Future Farmers of America has won the sweepstakes trophy in the California state finals here capturing blue rib- bons in agronomy, farm power and machinery, and meat judging. Distaff Hints Liberation at Home WASHINGTON (AP), -An orglllllzaUon called Women'• Actlcn Tasklor<e eomprised ol Agriculture De- partment employes, suggeab tllat members begin liber- ating them>elves at home by trying the following : "Lei him start your day •right by making the morn- '"8 colfee and the kida' I~ belore 1o!Dg to work. . -''Tell blm your new -lar7 la ~bl .,.xy -and be'• single. , -"Interpret the dally stock mart;et returns lor him, -"Wash ball the dlsbel. ' -0 Tell him, 'Dear, you're ao lever -yoo think just just Ute a woman•." The advice was included ln the group's newsletter, "WAT'a Happening." Isadore's PRESENTS A Luneheon FASRION SHOW! -OF - Men's Shirt Styles and Fine Neckware AS UNIQUELY MODELED BY LEOTARD CLAD LASSES IN SHIRTS AND TIES FROM THE SHIRT SALE 333 E. 17th ST-COSTA MESA THURSDAY-MAY 20, AT NOON 333 BAYSIDE DR. AT PACIFIC COAST HWY-NEWPORT BEACH • SALE JDAYSONLY /\,II.AAA .. P,,,sh-but!on rever.>e control • ONLY $97 Reg. 109.95 Carrying ca.se or cabinet extra TERRIFIC! A SINGER' ZIG·ZAG SEWING MACHINE AT A REMARKABLE LOW PRICE The Fashion Mate• zig-zag sewing machine has the features to sew with the greatest of ease ! Straight and zi g ~zag stitches ... built-in· blinds!itch feature ..• exclusive filo.ger• front drop-in bobbin ... push-button reverse control plus quick- change snap-on presser feet. SINGER' ZIG·ZAG SEWING MACHINE SUPER VALUE • .,JUST $67 SINGER Model 177 Sewing Centers and participating approved dealers A Credit Plan to Iii your budget is available at Singer Sewing Centers. Many approved dealers alao olfer a111ac1ive credit terms. Singer has a liberal trade-in policy. we will apply an allowance on you r used se wing machine toward any new sewing machine you buy el Singer. For address of store or dealer nearest you. see the yellow pages unde r SEWING MACHINES 0A Trade mark ol THE. SINGE R COMPANY Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You Treasury latex wall paint Treasury latex house paint Spred" Satin latex wall paint Spred" house paint Easy to apply, dries to a smooth matte finish in 20 minutes. Completely washable. Easy cleanup with water. 399 gal. • Reg. 5.49 Redwood stain Enhances the' beauty of bare or prevlously steined wood. Penetrates deep for tough wear. Floor enamel Super tough Interior/ exterior glossy pro!ec- tlon. Ideal for porches, decks, stairs . Dries In 30 min utes. Weather and weer resistant. Easy to apply on siding, shi ngles, masonry, stucco. Warm water cleanup. 499 gal. • Reg. 6.49 Gloss enamel Alt ·purpose durable Interior/exterior enamel. Hard glossy surface. Sale for toys or furn iture. SPECIAL 2-pc.nylon brush-set 4~ wall brush end 1 Vz " trim brush. 1.99 1.99 4.99gal. 2.49 ~I. Reg.6,49 Reg.3,19 Drles In 20 minutes to matte-flat finish. Completely scrubbable, resists dirt. 3000 colors. Warm water cleanup. 599 gal. • Reg. 7.49 One-coat spray enamel 13 oz. can. Gives those hard-to-reach places a professlonar gloss finish. ONE COAT SPRAY Long-lasting velvet finish dries clea r:i in 30 rhinutes. Blister and mildew resistant. Clean UP.. quick with warm water. 6~gggal • Reg. 8.99 . ' ' 4-pc. roller and tray set 9" birdcage roller, sleeve, pan and 14" extension ht1ndle. 1.69 Reg.1.99 the • GIANADA HIUS 18000 Cllatswortti St •WOODLAND MlllS 21~ V1tt0ty Blw~. • •IVl•SIDI 3520 Tyttf e SANTA AMA 3900 South Bris!ol St. e TOllANCI Stpulveda and Hawthorne• LAklWOOD CMSOR St and Paramount 81¥11. e IUW PAii 8eacll llld0nlwd0rpt e 01.AHI Gia*" GrO¥t Blvd. Ind Manche:sttr Opt• w11klkly1 9130 to 9130; S..nt11y1 10 tt 7 ( ' I ' 157"2 .,, ...... • , ' • • ' • • 1.44 Beach towel buy Wrap up or spread out. 28 x 56 inches of water·IO\ling cott on terry. Great prints. 15% off girl's • swimwear 3to,6x, 7to 14. Now5.95 to 2.54 6.99 A. TI••or bikini Geometrie5, flora prints, abstracts, all in colorful acrylic. Soft-cup bra. 5/6to 13/14. ' 7.99 e. Lace-up lop bikini Ea!y-care acrylic in gorgeous prints. Lighlly boned bra top. 8 to 14. 5.49 C. Lacy cover-up A frothy while sunscreen in acrylic. Cotton collar. S,M,L 9.99 D. Dotty boy-short auit Sturdy, cotlon, fully lined. White dots, whhe rick-rack. Zip-back pants. 10 to 16. . Summer-things for everyone. Sorrie fun, some buys . G•I'• brown OJ whit• l11th1r thong,Sto 10 1( Wtdntsda:t, May 23, 11)73 DAILY PILOT .($ 1.38 ... Gift'• ... cer• knh-..:1-s1 ... 3tof .. 100% Poiyeoltf lhont In 1ummer solidi and p1ttem1. Nylon topa In aolkh: with conttutlng trim. 1.49 "Football" sl'llrtl Cotton/polyester in white with brightly colored numbers. S.M,L. 2.49 Boy"1 no-Iron fe•M Cotton/polye1ter In aollda and patterns. 8 to 16 reg. or allm. Husky sizes 8 to 16. 2.tt (Not shown) Cotton/polyester Short1leeve polos. 3to7.1.18 Cotton/polyester jeans, sizes 3 to 7. 1.99 3.99 P•lftil fll,. Jultt . Button-waist cotton Jeana In auortld pastel•. 8to 18. 2.97 A. Kntt tonk top An cotton In stripes and IOlldt. S, M, L, XL. 6.97 B.Duno.,.sm)MM Green, tan, cranberry,. brown bruahtld cotton. 28-38" wallt, 29--33" inHam. '1.88 C. Pocket poio lhfrt Combed cotton In great aolld colort. S, M, l, XL. D.~:.~l. Cotton denim In navy, white. 28-38" watst, ~"lnaeam. OHM DAiLY f lJO to f lJO e IUNDAY 10 tf 7 I,. IUINA PAIK Uti• 0r.,..,.,.,..,.toiuHca..,...1111 ........ LMl'WOO!CMIMM.&,•.m:iurillhid.OIAHOIGltdlft~IMl.nl,.,_...OIAHAMlttW D 10lltliMttlSt. W0001.AND H1US 2Ull Vlcb:"J IN4. lfVIUtDI :ism Tyler ~t. SANTA NIA·Ncr1tl Ill Sa.1111 C.opt'U --____ ,... ... ,• :; . •• ·~· . ' .. •,' ., . '. .. ,. .. ; - .. . • :. . . • ,t • t ., I' •. '!' ' ,. ,. f" it •• " • ~ ~· i~ . , ,,:.. ., '- ,~. ~ \ \ JI DAILY PILOT Artichokes Put Town On Maps INCIDENTAi.LY, the size of an artichoke ha s nothing to do with its maturity. The large ones grow at the top of the stem, the medium and small at the middle, and the tin y near the ba se. According to. Guiriato, the reason for the success of the Giant Artichoke's French fried hearts lies in his secret batter. No amount of persuasion could convince him that the world could well use good news of even a better batt er . Nevertheless. he graciously of- fered suggestions for eo:oking whole artichokes, plus some well·testcd pointers in prepar- ing the hearts. To cook: Wash and place '"hole arlichokcs in boiling, salted water to which has been added one tablespoon of vinegar or lemon juice for each quart oJ water. This holds the color. 1£ you like. add a clo\•e of garlic. two to three tablespoons of olive oil and a bay leaf or two. Allow from 20 to 45 minutes cooking ti1ne, depending upon the size. PACKAGED FROZEN hearts are available in mosl markets and are recom- mended. For French frying use any good proven batter recipe. or even the standard method or first dipping the heart~ in beaten eggs and then rolling them in lightly season· ed flour . Guiriato favors the ori ginal home method of pan fr ying in about 'f4 inch or ho.t oil and turning {he hearts as they near a golden color to the deep-fry method . lie says they are n1ore flavorsome. but frankly I cannot imagine• im- proving the subtle delicacy ol tho!e crisp, hol morsels, light· Jy salted and eaten with gusto. I • Wtdntsdly, May 23, 1CJ73 Wed...t.y, IUy 23, 197'3 PILOT -ADVUT15EA • QUEENIE Bad Shock May Cut Smoke! Intake , • I I u '· BUILDERS EM-PORIUM ,.. to• .... o .. !)f YO• .. •= tH<;,W&:lil c;o•ST g1v1s.c ... OPEii DAILY 9 A.M. JO 9 p;a., SAT. & SUIL 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. OPIN MEMORIAL DAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. e EL TORO AND COSTA MESA ONLY: (., ~ OPEN SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.e SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 24 THRU JUNE 4, 1973, OHL Y IST BIG WEIK! ,, .. :.;:,;:.;.: .. :·· AIR CLOSER' .... : .. · 'Willllill:il,·· ... ·.:.· ... ·.·· ///.. .. ·. :; BUDGETEER 10 LB. BAG BBO~RIOUETS Q ~ Just the 1hing for camping, bedch or .patio. Easy to.Jig ht and long burning. VALVOLINE MOTOR OIL Top quality, heavy duty motor oil in 20 or 30 weight, Do it yourself ond MJVOI MASKING TA .. E 3/4"x60 TDS. Handy masking tape for painting and for many other uses around the houie. Black & Decker· ~·GA~ON ROSES lll·BUD AllD BLOOM All the soft, \libront colors to choose from. Gutstonding double blossoms t~'~t'will bril)g oil the grace and charm to your gard.en. S ECIAL PURCHASE! -ILi QUAlfflTllES LAS1? 5/8" 60 FT. GARDEN HOSE All-vinyl garden hose. Coils easily iii. h6t"o r cold weather. All brass couplings. Be prepared for the hot weather! 2•• PECKYCEDAR 1"x12"x5' ~l : 1 /:1 Full-size boards, rough-textured for I making a rustic fe nce or /l separator for privacy. l:i Very ollraclive when f finished. 1 11 1,-----~ ! ~i ' WOOD TOILET SEAT SCREEN DOOR 7 1/4'' CIRCULAR SAW ltAKID lllAMIL-,,.,.-......._ . ' Features roll form frame construction. reinforced corne rs, push bar, knob latch a nd comes in 30, 32 and 36 inch widths. Price and air closer. includes oil hardware 99 Best general purpose saw you con buy. One horsepower, burnout pr<?fected motor zips through lumber with ease. It!"''\ Exclusive sawdust ejection chute keeps sawdust away from cvtting line. 1799 #60 I Available in white, blue ovotodp or "hot'' colors: Hot pink, hot yellow, • hot red, hot lime or hot blue. 87 . AMERICA'S GREATEST HARDWARE STORES AND HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTERS TUSTIN 1212 llYHll llVD. ...,.......,... 6711 WUTMHISTll AYL, 8UlllAPARK -YAWYYllWSf. . ILTORO. .MlnlOCU&a OllllUKll. Of llWPOIJ A.YI. AJIOLDllWISfST. AJUICOLIAYL ATa.TOIOID, ORAll I •n•m•••• LAllAllU ATllACllllWL PULURTON AT Ancaw11 ~ A••SA uwn•••••Ya. I' .i. -" • I . 0 1:14SLUTl11AAVL • m1w........... ~LCllUMAl ~ •LTmUT LONG BEACH e VAN NUYS •RIVERSIDE• COVINA •LA ClESCENTA •THOUSAND OAKS• SIMI• LANCASTER• CHATSWORTH ti It.ZANI. •UPLAND •SAUGUS •CHULA VISTA . ~ e REDWOOD CITY •GOLETA e VISALIA e VICTORVIUE • Glt>.NAD> HILLS• SAN BERNARDINO• CMIARILLO •BAKERSFIELD• HACIENDA HEIOHTSeSANTA MARIA •DEL AMO '· .. •SANTA CLA RA e CORON>. e ESCONDIDO• SPRING VALLEY• LADERA HEIGHTS e RESEDA •EAST L<>S ANGELES ~~~~ -= ) ._ • ....> ' . ) . . ' l • • I l ! • f l'ILDT...lDVi.A1 iSER DAILY ,,LOT J 7 Wrdnesd•r. Ma.1 2.J, iq73 -Wednfld:lr. Mu 23, l"il ) ' ' ~ .. At Stores Celebrate Grand Ope1Ji119 . -::-of Our New $tore, 3325, Bristol at MacArthur Blvd. Santa Ana l • con.<MLSA-m ll._ ,,. si. flOVWTAllt VAli.9Y-tJlllM ........ St, ., ,.... ••STMjNn••_., ............. ·., 0....... .... MUMlO••TOll ••AC~lln -..11 IN'll ... A.tllllh .......... , ~</·_.....}. ' cost,\ MllSA-l)(ll ...,.. ....... WJ• SL llOVlfTAIM VALl.•Y1•141 .._,.., lf¥11, .... e:•.... MUNTl•OTON SV.CK-IMl AMIN •t ...... lll'tl HUNTINGTON IUC...._..1 WI,_ """'" ........ , .. w ............ '"""' St. I L TOao-11 ,._ "' ..... .... •tt.t•T•••TOtt llACH-fS " .. " ...... CW!Mr GR N':D 0 P·E N ING SA LE o:~DWJ::N~~s~:~t5.c::rl~~~ · , ' • IN ALTA LOMA, CAUF. & LAYIEGAS, NIV. . ;.. ...__. •.--B-IG_81_99...1.---.0-E-S~A...,Lf'""""...,. . -i\~t\\\Y is a_Drug & Di~count Stora s .. rtSIJftt ..r111i ... 11., .J1oto,.1I . Q~g. 81447 Folding Bed &Mattress . ' Regular aac Insulated Hot and Cold Cups . ' SAVE$843 t '6°' i , _, ~1 · Inga at Thrifty. Slot._ up now for \ , , 1he holiday ohtad. !';:';;v, ."',"".,• ,· __;;,-.!! • Pack of 80-9 Inch Paper Plales ..... 79c froli'!e fold1"9 , I • .:;;:;:.;;;~~~~~~~;.::~~I bed with c:omf!ktohle 1 Yi" thic.k ITIClt• Ill tre1s. Perfec:t bed for e,,;,,.a gue11S, ccomping t1ip1.o We Bought 800,IDI to Make This Low Price Possible ... • :z.o .. ··&·8°. Tobi i a" d011't btim th!& llUft\IMf' 'ffllfth Coppertone. specicil aule prtc.1 · Bottle of 365 Full Year'a Suppl• •• @ft!> Vitamin C Multlpl1 Vltaml11 Bottle of 36$ 541. AINIOI I I c Orlsl11lly S1IHar Nit• M1rtl · ra .. the palfl of too much Ill.In with ecuy to appfr Unbum 511,... burf'l.Spfcry • thew11!1 1DDM1-9111 lemon or Otano• f lavors Sol• P•I<• s219 Pacltoged In beautlful NU-- J Q b 1 e apaoo t~for· _.,.... . - Qts.$100 Far Spark PIDgs ~ \ plugs In , Mat rangH fOf lftett cart. Gvatalfto .... , . .. ,, I " ,I I DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, May 23, lq73 r...u,ctrcu bv BHKeone " 'Cou ie I didn't think of toa sting it until AFTER I put the peanut butter on it." L. M. Boyd Nagging Woman Like Rainy Day "A continual dropping in a very rainy day and a content.ious woman are alike." No, our Love and War man didn't say that. But he won't argue the claim. After all, it's biblical. Proverbs 27:15. Latest statistical study of the average female model hired to show off new clothes in the department stores In- dicates het to be ~feet-7-inches tall and to weigh less than 115 pounds. It's also a fact the child of a parent who committed suicide is far more likely to attempt same.Jhan the average young- ster. :: Stewardesses say they almost invari- ably can idenUfy those airline passengers who themselves are pilots. Said passen· gen reportedly tend to exhibit a mild irritability. Not nervouaness exactly. But annoyance. Apparently, they don't much like just sitting there. They'd prefer to be up front in the captain's chair. It shows. JACK AND JJLL -You know that nursery ryhme about Jack and JUI no doubt. 'That started during the reign of Charles I of England, He levied a tax on milk, hooey and wine, sold in containers called jacks. Further-, he reduced the size of the jacks. They were half as big as the cootainera called gills. Some wise protester then came up with the ryhme to suggest that if the jack fell tn value, certainly the gill would tumble, too. Watermelon, fresh pineapple, cucumber and bananas, such be the grob most likely to make you dream, if you consume same just before going to bed. Or so say re- searchers at Ohio State University. Fascinating, if factual. QUERIES -Q. "\Vhere'd George Eastman get the tradename 'Kodak' anyway?" ' A. Just made it up. Said he liked the letter "K." So manufactured a word with two. Q. HWhat's the epitaph on Oscar Wilde's tombstone?" A. "And alien tears will fill for him pity's long broken um. For his mourners will be o'utcast men and outcasts always mourn. '1 Q. "Do men v.·ho live in the desert learn lo smell \Valer?" A. Sort of. They learn to smell v.•hal grov.1s around '-'Bier, anyhow. Were you av.·are a woman's skin in bot weather gives off eight percent less heat per square inch than does a man's skin? lt's her insulation. Iler subcutaneous fat, l'n1 told. No offense intended. young lady. Merely wish to explain why women remain com fortable in nimsy clothing. Address mail to L. !II. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Meat Hikes Revive Cattle Rustling Cl1rl•tl•n ld•nc• Monllur 1.trv!c• CHICAGO -Ri sing meat prices have revived cattle -rustling in the United States. e 1n Dodge County. Neb .• late last month. a band or dedicated thieves stalked their .prey -350 head of hogs valued at $70.000. For three days the rus llers posed as legitimate buyers, helping the Dale Snover fan1ily to sort and prepare the anirnals for shi p- ment. Then one by one. the thieves took the nine members of !he famiTy and thc hjred·hand host trussed them up. and lock hem in a truck. v.•hi\e they made off with the bacon. Nebraska officials say 1t is the largest ruslling caper eVC'r carried out in their region. So far, all but 80 head of hogs have been recovered fro1n sale hams throughout the slate and a warrant has been issued for the arrest of at least one person. Texas cattlemen r c po r t ·rustling le up 20 percent over last year. "Rustler& arc more sophis li caled : thcy·re gelling smarter and more mechanlz.. ed," states Donald C. King , general manager of the Tex.as and Sou thwcitern Catt 1 e Tial!«!rs Association. "1lle use of btlloopters in this state to rustle catlle is btromlng a common 80rt of thine. Wt can't prove d, but • I ' \\'e know it is happening." he says. Rustlers are a]S"O taking lo lakes and rivers 1n boats, he reports ,shooting and butch- ering animals as they come to the waler to drink. These "deep-freeze" rustlers usually take only tb,e expensive cuts of beef. leaving the rest of the carcass to spoil. •In Os ceo la . Io\va , recently. a rustler opened a bank account with $1,500, then \vrote a check for $11 ,762.06 at !he nea rby Lamoni, Joi,•:a. auc- tion market. He was out of the state '"''ith 36 head of cattle before anyone was the wiser. "Rusliers have discovered thal it's easier and more lucrative to .go out to a farmstead and steal some livestock than to hold up a bank or loan co1npany." states Dr. Elliott A. Butler. chief of animal industry for tov.·a's Department of Agriculture. The real incentive is that lhc thief gets 100 percent nr the value of livestock he steals, rather than 10 percent for tnosl stolen goods. "And he doesn't have to hunt for a fence to buy them. Almost any auction market is all too happy to have them:· Klng la1ncnts. From Vir~inia lo California. from Florida to Alberta. Canada, there is no doubt that animal rustling is big business and growing bigger. Just how big the losses are nobody 1~ sure . - ' Qur Qet·out·of -the-Jiouse SALE7.88 Drop-leaf folding table Reg.9.97 Walnut woodgrain top and bronzetone U-shaped legs. 5'x 2'. SALE 3.47 Igloo 1-gal. cooler jug Reg.4.47 . ' Tough, compact. Easy-fill wide mouth top. Recessed snap latches, nylon spigot. SALE9.57 Coleman Poly-Lite cooler Reg.11.97 . Lightweight. Big 38 qt. capacity. Thick urethane insulation. SALE 11.99 Thermos& cooler and gallon jug set Reg.14.99 Rustproof, unbreak- able~oodrlooking, too. rethane foam insulation. 55 qt.cooler. Not avall1bla at Buena Park Store Take along your favorite sounds 69.97 29.97 G.E.AM/FM 'G.E. portable radio and AM/FM and PS portable cassette 3ban~adlo player/recorder Get co · ous weath ~ecasts' Automatic end·ol-tape on PS band. shutoff. AFC on FM. Two-way =er.~ (Model #M8530) (Model # 4920) ' . ' • PILOT ·ADYflVISER l ' SALE4.n Folding anny cot Reg.5.97 Hardw6od frame, heavy·duty cotton duck cover. 2s~x·1e~x 1 s112~. SALE 7.88 Primus propane lantern Reg.9.97 Clear glass globe. Includes jumbo 15-hour disposable cylinder. SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE 4 DAYS ONLY. 19.97 / G.E. portable I AM/FM radio Uses batteries (not incl.) or house current. (Model #P4810) -I r 11 .~-~ or u .. ovr Tl-lt•r '1111° IUINA ltAlK Bea th & Orangett-«pe OIAHADA Htlll 1800 Chatsworth St. IMl:llOl 3570 Tyler TOll:IAHCI Sepulvtdl Mid H•wthornt LMIWOOO C1rt0n SI. 1nd PartlTIOUnf 11\111,. OUHOI G.trdln Grow ervn. and M•nGM•ltr WOOOLAHD HtLU 71SOO Victory Blvd. IAHl'A ANA No. ot South CN,SI Pla11 OPEN DAJ~Y 9:30 ta 1:30 -SUNDAY 10 10 7 - 1 . . ... • Pq Displde ·Police Unhappy Wi~ San Diego SAN DIEGO ~AP) -The ci- ty that call& Itlolf "Camolot by tht Bay" 118$ lllOlher, , ... haf.Y c1eslsnatl9o """""' It• po lcel!l<ll. . . Aboid ll• bQiJioordi -· ~··-, 8li'a DI , .0:Z. . ~ .... ,Ille.... \Ill Jllall)' poll<emel~ can·lnilftpot 'the -s· or tlie -Of-flcets' AMociatioo: "Welcoipe to Sen Di$- hol!le cl ~too u.nderpald CORI·,, save 36°/o on Scotchgarded • • • antique satin drapery fa~ric Just call and our trained experts will bring samples of Qur ''Super-Satin'' rayon-ace tate te:ii:tured an- tique satin fabric, right to your home. Jn 16 colors, it's all Scotchgard• protected to keep your draperies sta in and water repellant ... and looking like new. All 1hey'll need is ~n occasional vacuuming I Price is for an.84" minimum length'. What could be easier. 2 • 9 9 ,•yd. reg. 4.69 labor included custom fabric!> 11 SHOP-AT-HOME: for custom draperies, reupholstery and slipcovers. Calf rot.Jr nearest Mai)" Co .. ,'t.oll free. Thert!:'s no cha rge or obliAAtiori. Our experts ar,'w'ahing,1~ serve you • • MAVCC> may co. south co1st pluo, son diego fwy. •I bristol, S45-9321. PllllUC N01'ICB PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC NOTICE \ • I,. ' llAllY PILOT J9 PUBLIC NOTICE "• J.94S S.2*S ' ... .... '"' ,., 7.51 "'' ,,., '" ••• • ~· ' • IO DAILY PILOT 3 GIGANTIC DAYSI ' " ) WITH OV,ER .5·00 :. WINNI -. NEW '73 DODGE CHARGER This is one of the most pl)pUlar cars among the tconomy car buyers., .with lts full she comfort, sty I Ing convenience and is priced economically. OIDll YDUll NOW CAPllCI l door n!rd!oo, Y-8. ~u!om.il1t tr~n\· ..,,~1•0~. J)O'Nt' ~Tt>Erlf19. v1nvl 100. !octo•y &ir tonc!Lhoru~9. ltlT ~1ee1 1og 1.~·. r~io & neater. !Sl'f·BE I() $1788 '68 MUSTANG ""' 10!0. !rans., fllwtl' stffring rldio, tiea1tr, Lie ~o. XBRl66 s799 NEW '73 MEL-MAR MOTORHOME Mi~i-hOPTI(', flllly stN-Cll'lllilltd. ltNulilul home Gii "'*ll. • C». "· fffr~1tor. ' bWflft' slow, • qlrlt. diw: brlktS.Mllmllic Ir#& mis5ton, ,owtr slett"illi-IS.. Jl:J6$J IMMIDIAn DIUYUY $7188 ~" .. N , Beach :Qity AUUll llllll(t TO ,.1 .. ..i .... ~~ fttCi'll .. 'f& .,,..., "" ""' .tvtorMlic lrammissiltf, power sletring, l1clory •if COlldilionlng, rtciio & r.e1ttr, while sidewlll lires. lYZLll') $1288 '68 DODGE D-200 mKUtt •"TO/' Lonq ~ Pick ul). l~sfomt!b. V4!, ; ;!"*ed, lit~v~ ouTy 1fll•! r;ms. IJl~ilB I $1088 NEW 4 STAR MOTORHOME "Nlvring largt piclln 1illd Piding ~ • rrm.w.it $C1'l9ll. M" iftfefiw ~. )t gllkifl llulft , .. """ 1 ..... llM'Df· , Nlgt Sltfly """"" ~ !lrt &, rinl W1fKk inc-luding !lftl ~. f!Jll 1" fXl1'1 twm Ml'liorl & maltftuts. lZ ganon 9'J!. llM:, 1ir stioc~s. 10 gallon llol Wlttr htattt. .--- NOW Otl SALE AT BIG DISCOUNTS , .. For the sport minded family who want the best of both. The , loot of a 5')0rts car plus !he roominess and comfort of a luxury car. Order Now. This is the best-wagon on·tne market tOday. Loaded with , features you 'NOUICI pay extra· for on:,Other makes.· OIDll YDUIS HOW. . ' $ml.40111111tltll .. pril•IKW..lP1......_hhrM,.,_..llJb $216:t.U ........ fb. .._I .. mTJf"I...., ,_ 41_.91!' - .,,,.....111fii#fl*!Wlllt. iUIUI. PllCINl'MIUft '"'™- "Bff9bftp'' V.f, '~ Jr~s­ SIOI, ridlo &.-~. rtiwcl 'Mlilt ielltl' li1?1. Hirdlap. l~kX) s1411 '71 CHEV. NEW ~13 TIOGA MOTORHOME : TM! DoOgie Clli&is wlrh :MO Y·I t"ll;nt, i!IJ!Ofl'l1lii:: 1ransmission. pe,-,eo-br•te-5, wlf-<onlaillftl, crUhe (Y!rol. '° amp bitter.y, 6cu.11 .. '""•:gtrakifrl~·B·TIJ huler.-(Sef-.- 321698 NOW.SAVE 1000 fROM fACTOlt .IJSY IMMJDl~tE DELIVERY SelKt from rrany modtls wi!h !ht equipment tf'.il suits you. BIG Model wlltl i'Jtam&flc transmission, power stetring, powtf brff.n, wacious wardrobe. Bffu!ifut 1PllQinled ki!ci\en wiltl 3 bm'er srovt, forced uni! heat, deluxe ballll'llom, 90 .,_, batttry, screen OOOr •M 11tt1er 1vxvrlH (S.1'113) IMMEOIA\E DELIVERY ful!y·ltc:lory~pped. 811ABJXl(M063 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . $4488 s99a SATILlnl WAGON , ~. v.a. au1cm11«: trans- miuion. PQftf stffring,,IKtor,v air conclitl11nrn11. L~ggage rick. IV'NDA641 -~688 WDT(MI DIVILU LOlded. 6-wav l'(IW"tr ~11. power , brlkts. powtr windaw5. lilt wbetl. '$2788 BEACH CITY WILL GUARANTE. E.. . 1,noo% UNCONDITIONALLY . ;,u o ' I t • to DAYS Ol 4,00ftUUJ NfCLUDING PAIR & WOl IMolor, Tr1ns., & Re1r·Endl ~ 111¥~« MoCltl • ~ Silvtr Star gu1rantted fted Clf n bu'r with ~W 91J¥Mlee CMrS ttw',lmporll(ll.Mrking parts al vawr Gttr. . Yrs, we~I fft It MM!~ Im, bo1lt 111rts & libar. Giwll'llft sprlls out the Pro!KflCll Y,. irt'enlWtaexpectin high Ptrklrmance rnglnes Ind' sped trimml\slaiis. · •· • ! ' e . ·~··,.···· --. .. ' ·~ -' . l ' '"' . . . . . . •' . . . . ·:.NEW '73' DODGE COLT • . . . rNo ~~her.import offers aU·these features as standard·equipr'nent Ad'~stable . . st';r1ng column, flow thru ventil ation, frontttlsc brakes, 100 hpen!Jine1 hidden ' ". an en~, _plus. up~~ 30 n:ipg~•11.-touu NOW. . . .. • .. • '69 CHRYSLER . NfW YOl«"ll 1 DI. MAIOfOf' Factory air concfitionlng, Power seilts, /l(l#er windows, ~r fact. ~:il3Ii '69 FORD ICONO 1·1 00 . Ten Van, interior P<tOEied. 1:!1ifTXl $1088 '70 .Plym. Wgn. ,_ ........ VI. tviO. tratK . .i1r cOl'lditiCltlil'IQ, ~.tot~-.... flOlE~F $1'88 '\ '69 PPNTIAC ... wti•~ill lore~. b!ICktt seats. YYAI~ '7 0 FORD CUSTOM SOO v.~. automatrc 11.i~missio-n, P1Mtr i:~r.nq, tat tor 1 air colldi!ionirig. 161iCJLl s999 ·· '68 COUGAQ '71 IAVEllCI Rldio, Jwltr, wllite~M tiret, ~td. F«!tlry equir-nent. License ZY~ '67 vw • A speed tr111Ynissiorl, buck.ti will. radio & Jiej!er. !9'J1A8XJ I ..... . ~. . . , ·ss POlfTIAe ~ " .•. ,.o. .. ' v .. ,,A llllf'lf, ,;anuniuil:fl, Mlif~' radio, bUcllri seth. vinyl IWf. .(XWDUI! ' • 1 • - I - WtdntSdu. M1y 2.3, 1973 0-'ILY PILOT %J 'Angels'; Strea~,- . . Like Alomar's, ' Ends 11in ·' • •t ,l '~" (iuCAQ/), CAiif.~.A two-run homer by ., empt B~-"."""~ first in five years .: , -~pped 1~ tb(eeilame winning streak . for tbe Califon\la Angels who Jost 6-2 lo the White Sox.' Abo' caning to an end Tuesday was a 648-consecutive-game skein woven by Angels infielder Sandy Alomar, the seventh-longest in the American League and the 13th in tbe all-time list. "What can I say!"' commented Alomai, whose batting average of less I We're Playing Mo1·e Relaxed Says Crawford c~~cag9 . . ! t,, I • ' ... I th{li{ 1119 has tnade him 1oN his second bli!ie ~ to"Jlilly Grabar~"'!ilx. "It had to ·eod'IOoner or later, bot 1 didn't expect it to end1his soon. I wasrt't hitting much, Angels Slate A" Ofnwt .. kMf"C 11111 s:s.s o.m. 11 :10 ....... ''j.5 11.m_ 11 : s 1.m . . but•I felt. I Was playing in the field pretty well ... " The White Sox also got homers from · their power hil!ers, Dick Allen and Ken Hebderson. All of the roundtrippers came off Rudy May, \Vho sagged to 4-4 for cne season. , The Joss dro pped the Angels 1 1,~ games behind the \Vhite Sox in the first game of au extended trip. Seven c1·1·ors -three by California and four by Chicago -were committed in the ga1ne which the Angels had a chance of 1l'inning unUI the late i~s even though they n1anaged only three hits off <41 Stan Bahnsen. 6·3. who notched his fifth LOS ANGELES (AP\ -Davey Lopes consecutive 1\•ln over California . . entel'.td Tuesday night'S game ~alp.St Bahnsen v.•as toug h in Lhe clutch, allo'v- the san Diego Padres as the leading 'hit· ing jUsl t\\'o unearned ~ and dousing ter ' ·n.the National League, batting a cool Afi$els threats in the fifth. sixth and seventh innings. 1 ' ,. v ... , •• · ...... • • _ · : U .. I TtiWlloto .371. _ , . . The Angels send Bill Singer, 7-1, S!<N DIEGO CATCHER FRED KENDALL IS SY.ILL SPINNING AFTER GETTING P.LOWED INTO;BY RON CEY. CEY WAS OUT BUT LA WON, S·I Hls first t\\'O times to the plate the Los against C'hicago's ·Eddie Fisher, 4-3, Angeles Dodgers second baseman struck tonight. out and there were some remarks among· c1111om11 1u CMutS l'l 111r)lrW .. ,)1,., •• Sport~ in Brief ·' . ~· U.S. Ponders 11 th · £ d the 13,562 Dodger Stadium fans that the PlnMli'I. 11 . • 1 o o J1tir, r1 , 0 0 0 U er Or •-_ Id 1(111ny.,., < 0 o 0 .1 ~r•M· dl'.t so 1 o .. , bubble had burst on tuc ",.year-o · Grabllrll.'w"i.21:1 • o l t t>:Alltr1. Tb • 1 1 1 '.. ' • ' • roo' kle. ' F.Ro.bfilJoft. dll 3 0 0 l Mttton. 311' 4 I 1 0 . ~ ···~'/ ~.-. '~ · ,\ • EPSteln, lb '0 0 0 ~ ''"' 2 l 1 Pitching·~izzaiHou8 . " Indoor-P..Jay ·-" . I''" ;·_ . .s " O.· .. nl' I 6. lp~ k Buthisthirdtimetotheplate healrigl· ~;.W!;'°;r .. ~ !·:'1: =·~1• 11 ~ ~ ! : ~ •L. IC ed home a run and he did the same thing !..:'1t ~,' ~ ~ ~ : g~~~in•~•n, c ~ ~ ~ ; ~ ..J. ---• ---Wheffhe l>iUNt1'galnin-ttre·seventh-and--i:orlldr;t. c--1 o -o--o-...__ P .__, 0--0 l ,, ~ ---------]~'! tb _ ,..._ ..,76 mark Mccraw, II 2 b 0 0 CJ e game w1111·a N • R.May, p o o n o For Da'1s ·tup..': .t :'. In Indy Race :·: To 'Youngsters' Health? · "It was just fortunate.he" Lodpes 5;'1id T°i!:i~iornl• 31 1 3 1 Toi~~; 000 J:, !. / ." aftertheDodgers ·clippedt Pa res,.rl, c111cioet o.i1 001 Ofll-• ··~~~/·; '-. ·,~ ••h' d Do S t • · h't 't hi f E -811llnsen, Ori• 2, E1111lt!n, Pln!o(lll, J.-.... UI:' m n u ton s SIX· I pl c ng or M~ll. DP -Chtc1go l, LOil -Calltonll• 1, (Ill· P~DELFHIA "(AP) -The Davis INDIANAPOLIS (AP/ -There is no CUp ~allenge Round may be played at . · ! pari-mutdel betting in auto racing. but if ninhr·:and indoors ~r the first time. SAN DIEGO -Young baseball pitch~ .Bauer said' m~ than 100,000 little . there was, pole-sitter Johnny Rutherford ~ ~ ers who thrO\v curves and sliders risk leaguers suffeye,ql should.er strains last , · . Dodgers Slate AH O•rntt '" ~'I 1'40) S.n DltOO •T Los Alllleltt ~ YQl1l •I Los .-.ngeles N•w Y61'11r; 'at t°" Angeles NrN Yor11; 11 a. .a."llt"l.S 7;ll l).rft: 1:SS p,m, 7,~s p.m. t :ll p.m. WalftJ' Elcock. president or the United permanent elbow and shoulder injuries. year.· He sai~ ~~sters cari s~in l~ir would be no better than a 6-l:o-l chance to States Lawn Tennis Association, said says the San Diego Padres' team \,lhysi-afins by hol , daily and' pregatne \Vin Monday's IndianaPQHs '.500. • their fifth win in their last six decisions. Tuesday. cian. tbrow.iµg se$i9.Pif ¥ith their father,s, or· Some f.riendly ~ds-makers, iilcludhig The v~ry keeps them within two Elcock said the USLTA \YOUld hear "l~my,opiniononlytwopitchesshould by trYing tO us&'.-J.reights 811d other ex-one or two of 'the' part'1·c ,·pants I -·-' · build h · ~ames of first place in the National b''ds' for ,.._ December DaVI·s Cup be a I~ befOl'e.a·~ is·16 -the fast erc1ses to up t e1r anns. h 1 h . h • .,. ball cban • D I B Id t emse ves, got toget er tn t e Speedway League's Western Divlsion. matches ·~,J,.,,ev' eland, Las Vegas and and ge:up, ' r. P.au auer to "Pitching in. itself is <rtrenoous,'' "I'd ••-(B.ll G · fl '~r· (.;I a sports ,.1 med.icme serrunar Tuesday he said. "Work:~n the abdon7en and leg garage area Tuesday· and rated each never seen 1uu• 1 ne • th U S d f nds the eu· · ball • l)elore," '-s said. of the Padres'·· ·J e . . e e P m· night:. "}le shouldn't throw a curve muscles and Iea)e tlie ann Slone." : driver in l11e 33-car ~ing ficld. ~ , . would be on a syn~ic ~rface. before he's. 16 Qr a:_~l~er ~e.he!a p.~· -· If a little·league pitcher compla'U:Ui of a When t~ session ~~D 1972 winner fota~\1:~~~rio"~.!,.!t j~ef~~Y:. Elcock said a ruJt allowing'. the matches ) .,,,.,, .~ ·· ·.' ·· .' -'.t:t ·>/ · ' sore arm, his manager should noi allo\v Mark DOOohue and 1 lth place starter ·•· him I t·1 d h k x times up there. I just tried a little to be played "Indoors was-adopted last,.,. · to P ay un 1 a octor as ta en · Gordon Johncock had been made the co-hard I " Year. -·:. ' . ~ .: " . niad~.' I .Jj Brays, 1!'"6Fsaid~: '115 l ·fa'Jorites .at odds of 4-1."B<lbby ·Unser, Willi~ ~;~d.~ slugged home t\VO "ii the.;,;';'".1, S\ale\JJ f~~ .;;'._.,, · ; •r ~-' ane ans Swede savage, Gary liett.nbliusen and runs;onewllllamartirllothhomeruninto en~ ~.~)f'~&a'l ~,1 ~~' t'''· .. ·, / • • ~f· l•'!., ·i · AI Unser·"°'ere rated 5-I. · the right field paVDlioo, his second homer rowii will hav~eJo, be flaYt'.¥1 ~etime in , , • S Los1"ng' . -: farmer_. W~ Hilb .... baseball Surprisingly, the only · other" · driV!!r · of .f::: ~g· ers --~·""ed 10 hits ""''a inst n...i-ber," lf:«..:..;'k _ Said.· '.'An, d, of ':1 • • standout t.ddlo .sane Sfiuck out 15 ba~ Ji~ted itt 6..1 be. sides Rutherford was·four-""""'.... -~· ~VI: . ~ -r:: (he Padres -the 11th time in their last cour&e, to ~ thia availa~e to TV fun in lealing~ State to· a g:O win f.li):le W~er-A. J . Foyt. 20 games they've bad 10 or more bits . we' agai.nSt flbtball, .so 1 ibtnk there c p fJfil Brigham. Yomig UhifttSity 'in the The f~ters. taking into account For the month of May/1.os Angeles, as a is tt~1 : • . . we will switch the OaVis 9{J';• e o. wer. , --be ~·p'lft! OAI thla ellc~' payoff! for ~~d T~K~bi·~ ~~ilid'Jyt"~; .. c,!13rgel,. figill red teaqi, Js batting .'Sff1. .. ·-~·"•. ~ . t nestFn ~erence tit e. · e si in ~ ""r ' ... ,.....'6 spo Just on.g "We're .playing a ·Jot more relaxed Cup tlJ B!l9f arma andf,. lay at ,' " ·,. · • · , . . Ila ..., all the help he.needed he •nough to gel his Coyote-Foy! watmed ni"'"• 50 ~~~MJ..-!tbJji, r-.. 'ootbaJ_I ..... jfASHINGTON (~Pl -Tum MeMillen, ne •"" w n now." said 0-awfon:I. whose average &.., ,.. ~ u · ·iv 1 M land •-k !ball Arizorla' State exploded for nine runs up. I : jumped from .200 to ,290 during the in ..... ~&mt-No ," and see tennis· that ~r:---' ni\Tj!r:§.!"'f .Q ary r.n:is e in the fourth inning. Ru pertord, 35• ,from Fort· Worth, was month. "At the start of the season we n ':""-·..,.... i. .Stat-Im pltj'ed. ·in the tm Olympics, 1 .the fastest qualifier with a four-lap speed evening.:. .. \"ia)'S'h:'faresets t~ tJ.mted States losing ~-D s· or t98.413 miles per hour. were an anxious to show what we couJd qc9ck said he had not heard ·any its inte~b1Jnal doa\inance 'fit-basketball . _.1e ! · Igns But the odds·makers apparently toOk do. Now we're relaxed. It's_. starting: to f · ob 'ecti t · doo Da · Cup dunng· the n t fou y J ·show, ,too; on the field and at the plate. oretgn. J ans o 1n r · VIS ex r ears un ess B·""FALO' _ The" Buffalo·· Braves of into account Rutherford's rune lean years ....._ and · · ' chang d UI' 1 uis club can play the players know matches, and said the players should be es are ma e. the ·Natiobal Basketball Association an-in the world's richest auto race, tem-it." use4 to the facility since moot or them . "There is no doubt that we are the best nqmiced: today that basketball star Ernie pered somewhat by the fact that for his la1 bn:U ytjtb he World GbamP.t~ in , basketball in the world," McMPJ~ OO'kegorio.had agreed to contract tenns loth start he will mount the best car he P _,.LA~. , . , . ~·,• , ~~ . told· the Senate commerce C'.ommi~ . has ever driven. T""l'~ ·TJonjs tour, H' • ,._._ ·'J:ueM">\ '''But we are not thQqbt·lil;;,ji: ')'!II.-~ to Sl!1'1 a pact later t<>. The· bamlao.· me . 1-:11>•vl(I ·op .this tha~ 1 the International Lawn em.is the best ovef111feS. · ' ~, · defy or ~ morrung. year to become; ,tb:'"No, .1 driver for Fedhration probably would fuake all "We ,travel ~erseas and many call us· , Ernie ~·~ a· &-foot .All American guard Team McLaren. ·a BT it is h-b a·s e d , , . . he . from PfoYJdence, did not appear at a · . -ha · · fi · ·-plaY:ers ehgible for DaVIS Cup play. He t best team~ m the Untted States bot _, news o:>nference cal1ed by the Braves. organ1Zat1on t t \VOO 1ve straight Om-. e~ts the action in July at the ILTF often we are ]\ISt a gryUp of 18-and 20-. , . Am road raclng championships and l)as mOO!. ·mg in Poland. PresenUy, players pyleaayrers-0ld.~ playing a team of seasoned Posey Fined had one of its machines ia tbe front row at Indy three straight years. under ~tract t? Lamar Hun~ •. head of '"In the Oljplpies, we were a team . Rutherford started in the front row WCT, can t.·play m Cup competition. . whose avera~ge .wa,-20.,,e&D old and ., tNDIANAPOLIS -Sam Pose Y's once before. in 1970, but was felled by "1 am vetv ~happy to report,'' said wh<>.had been iay1.ng<ogetber f6r only a , Olamp Car Racing ~ten>!'ises Inc. engine trouble after 138 laps. His best EIOQCk, "that foi' tbe. flf:sl ~e s~ce few montlls,"' contined. "°We played a~ Eagle-Offenhauser was disqualified Tues-finish ever was I1t,tl in 1969; we'YI; had Open tenrus m the Uruted much ol9tr. Russian t~ who had" d~ as f!rst_ alternate for the May 28 ln· ' ".J see my friends.are -at. work again," States, all fronts are p ea c e f u I . played tog~ for !Our yea ts." ·' · clianapolis 500 Mlle Race. .Rutherford laughed When ·infOrmed of the Ev~ng is quiet, everybody will be "If we conGnue in this way 1 foresee The disqualification' was announced by ratibg sheet.' '"Ibey Can't.bear to look a plajing together." in ur/s Am .. •·i'.-..'s domlnatiOn 'm basket-· . the .~.S. Auto Club ~f\er it fined.the,~am sure winner ·in the eye." ball will be J~ .. said McMillen for. attempts at m~sr;tt>fesentah~ 'Ibe 1 • • action moved roOkie 'Tom Bigelow's F: h N A He made hi8 remarks on the <>peeing . • Vollsledl-Offy into the· fint' altemate's r. eDC et ·ce day of heariJ;!Ss on legislation proposing . 'posiUoo. , ch~es in J!le st!'\lcture <i aDUl\eur' ' Dick }{ing USAC director of com· · · 1· h ' spoi"W in the Unit~ Sto\Jie's; P.rtiCu111'rlY ,. peUtioo fin~ the team 'I 000 and-S tJJ ks,'.~ rimn'-S :· . ~e-!'"!"i.ble "I"•li\J/, .. f ,11"f<¥1<ra!-sports ,. ordereci 11 to.post '5,000 bo!1<f against any , I' Comnuss1on ;and a national sports.~ "fut1heP, ~ I/. JhiSrepresentation *1tJs'tAP) -Jeaq.l..Is llllilkif of devel0j>rn~f0\ll!d3Uon, · "~ ~testjlllh• ~.'" · "' France .downed Jell Borowiak of The hearlQss continue today with:.. u'sc'-. .. . .. .. . :,; 4'.: Bel'lceley H, 1-6 to<laY in first round play retred Gen. lam<s Ga>in. of Artl!ur _o .. · LeaiJs '. '' of ·~ . $135,000 French . tenl).is chant-Little Inc., w~ Jnte~t 18 the creation pio~'::.jp.'jn a lli&tch marked by a first-of the devel~ment fund, scheduled as . WALNUT •.i. The Uni...-slty of set ·1~. the first w1tnl$S. ~ Southern California held a five-stroke a~ : 11P&et over a µne call, the Frenchman Other proiJbsed witnesses include vantage'alttt 18 holes of'play 1\!Mday In sat1<1o·~ref· ~~ P!.•Y. caus~ a sportscaster Rowald £;osell; ,Clilfon! B. -Jhe third annual"l'rojan Goll Toumamellt 10..Min~' · terg.ip&n.·HaIDet eventuil}y 'l'£agan, execUftve ~~:et 1the Na-being played here on tM Pomona Na· w••)l>I! 'to.aoCept the 'call l!na· / tiooOI Federation dlil!i~·SCiilO!'Assocla·'-tional Golf Coone. . rea(imed play. He ·WOO each., the tie-lioos; Fred '.l!Jompson, the lawyer and•· Other-teams and scores: San Diego breaioJ 7-4,, . . • i ·coach . of,.~ ..,\loDJ!!. tratjt. .. t,:am.-,f>f State 728, Northridge State 737, USC No . . Borowla~ became the fll'St American .-Brookfyn; Ce(!ll Coleman, alhletic di....,. .i )eam q~!t..!'~ Jrvine. 743, Flll!erlol\ ellrhlnated among 19 entered in the tor ol the ·University of ·Illinois, 8lld State 7tl'li u:>oJ.u''l47,i tb;·Angeles iState men's singles. He failed to caP.ilalize on a Edwllfd SU$, preoident ol the Basket-,,. ·~J!:O~ille 15&, 'R~ Tllhjlild s..211ead in the second set. · ball A'ssociation of the U.S.A. / " ~·M. -! · i• .. • ~ ~ ·, ~ ~~ \~ "t\ loo'! • ' 1 ( •I , l t ;ft} ..... A , ., . • , · ., .. ~ : \J.f.~~~': ~*' ~ . .,t~.i , ~· :-,~'.!!t~~. ;"~·· I-~~ ~' •,. • '.,' fi® ANO~ (APl ,-> F~ttead• $75,000 ~ '~r, ··~·,;JM,. ci; .. ach • 1~ monlh and today came 1o a ~I ~ ~-l'lethro Md Lo& Angeles Yl•f,~rid ~a year~lj>n for -of l!Je mlol!!!-" . Ralruf , · ' Clirr!>U 8-~hloorn have publJli ap~nces ~~-~,have • l'rolhnl; ~. W11J fired Jam 24 aftp' two settlld . ' i''1,ti9 muuoo b<~IH>f-. madw 1S ila1111'.coodi. .. l . ,. ..... ol. nv .. yoir qonl,... wltll,,lhe coot!;li!lt..j!lll, ~ no on<!-is say!ijflhow 1 lie alao 'tsktid •1 '1rt d1mages !lams which sald Olily o"""r Den m~ tiioll!Y '18 1n,.oi"11:-~ lo/ loti ol reputation an! iaoa;ooo In · ReevM, who died APrll 16, 197~ could ~ .. '"'® •fired' ·l'l-othr61 eft~r punjtlvt datlia8~ • • ~' · • , l'tlieve blm. .' • · . . · 0ie·,11:amr.'P<~ a &-7·~ marli".Iasl ; rn a "slateri@lt4roe i. ·a clµb '•After ilosen~-·hlred Di!tl'oit LklN .. •i(it.·'"'-' 1"' be·-"~ pay 011,uu, ·-k·~ml.saidPrOtbro iioieahlociro Aililtant k""'"' to-'-'··· • .,_, ..lcb•a:-i::;;'~;fl~·ooo"': year.' • ~·r ;~v8r~vectt11elr t!JU~ 111.dJ!olb'. Prolhro nled the ';.T,' whldi~~·~ But th« •ult·l!W by 'fbe forinet<Or@n paifk)i "l!l"ed tbol ..etUemenl-'liiUreJ. .. t;,harfe th,! tile I.le"' ownefutftir:I>e!I-' State and UCLA head coach sought would not be disc!Oled." of the ooac~et' duties, fiurting morale of !400,000 Jn actual damages, including the "They talked two or three tlmes in the the players and coaches. S.n D"-9 Ill Lii Ar119'11 UI ••rttrlll ••rllrttl E.Hf!'MiidlJ, It 4 0 0 0 Loots, 2b t 0 l l Gn.rbb. ef f 0 l I 8uc;kMr, lb 4 0 1 1 LN,11 3000 1Moit,lf 3010 Ctllb«'f, lb 3 o I o PICIOAk, If 0 o O o Ktndall, c 4 0 0 0 W.Oavl1, cf • 1 1 O Morftlll, rl 3 0 G 0 Perguson, c 4 0 O 0 O.Th0f'rla1, lb 4 0 2 0 W.Crawtor.t. rf 4 I 2 2 Hiiton, lb 4 110C1v,lb 1110 Grell, p I II 0 II RllSsell, p 3 1 2 O M.tr1hall, pn. I o o o SutlOfl, o '-2 I o e , •Romo,.' p· II o O o . ff0&11$0n, p I)' 0-0 0 Tot1l1 31 l ' I Tol1l1 :lG S l~ S s .. n Ol'llQ (IOI 000 OGO -I Los Ai>Qltft' oro 110 20K -s E -Grubb. OP -lot ~•I• 2, LOB -Sim Diego 7, Lo. Angtl• 4, 28 -W, O.v!1, GrWb, Mott. HR -W. Cr1wtord (2J. ll"M1t•1t11so Grtll (L.J.4) ' ' l J o s Romo 1 4 2710 TroedilOll 100001 Sl.llton (W,5-J) t 6 I 1 3 ' I-ISP -by Grill (Mot1J, by Grllf (Cty), l)'f • Svtt°'1 !Grill). 'Time -l :lt. Atllllda'ICI -13.5'7. ci1go $. 28 -G•ll1;h1r, Mllfcln. Hit -f.tlfld..- (21, C. Brlnkm"n (1), 0 . Allm (9), $9 -Rtlcholrdt. SF -F. Robinson. II" M It R Ma, (L, ... 41 I t 6 'B1hn1en (W,6·l) 't ~ 7 T!mt -2:f(. AfttMlfKI -J,os'I. FV's Sheff llt .•• so . ' . ' . Gains Ber,Jh In Seeiionals NAPA~ Founlaln Valley's Dave Shefl v.'as among 14 golfers to advlnce to the sectional qualUylng ·round for pie U.S. Open Golf Championship alter two days of l~al qualifying at the Sllverado COuJ'J.. try Club here. Sheff shot a 74 'l\J.esday to go with an ~ round 75, and his 149 totAI rank· ed 1hlm filth among quallflers al the par. 72 6,6.19 yard layout. Mark Tinder, a 16-year~ld from lllonterey fired a 69, the best round of the tournament Tuesday, to tie for sec- Ond .among the qualifiers with a twa-- day total of . 119. . Tinder bogeyed the lirSt two holes, but then setUe<I down In play five-under par golf the rest of the way. Brad Lo1.8res of Saratoga came in with a 71 off a 73 Monday to top the Napa qualiners with a I«, and Steve Taylor of Carmichael fired a 72-75 fot' 147 .. Sal\• Franciscan Mike Butler was the only .. other Napa.•qualf1ier to top Sheff's Iota~ shootiilfi;~s ,ol 76-72. In other l!fgbllj!tits from the 1ix open Quallfying sites, touring pro Larry ZiOllt'r lod the Qualil.l'!'B ·wlth &•141 total at the Bellrive and WeslwOod ,Countty Clubs In St. LOO!s, touring pros BCib Barbaz:osa , Rod cur) and Do!ri 'IverM> shaiec!' medalist honors In AU-and pro V<rn Novak led the qualllltri with a 139 In Pi\iladelphia. ~ I •• • DAILY PILOT :GIRL DIYER , .SPARKLES &JO Miiier ol I rvlne earned I spot as an •lternote to the lnlernallonal age group dlvmg ctampkinshlps later thia, sum-- pitr by placing in the top ten lo.three events at the ~u na-Uonal age g r o u p cham- j>lonalllpo ..... Uy in --Mia lllDer flllished ... entb In tbtte meter diving, and eighth In bath one meter and ....,. . She total"'1 2S8. 90 poiDb off the three meter ~' and was awarded 268.25 c(f the OM meter board and 321.90 from the IO-meter tower. OCC Girls Nab ,Title Mater Dei Loses 1-0 Slab Duel ' In ua Tt1i1U"J1ey Loggers Boast Angling Showing Upswing Nifty Pitchers By ROGER CABLSON C1ear ski.ea: and w a Tm °' ..,. -... Niii ...,, weather usually meana better Mater Del lllJh'• qaeot fa< PUGET SOUND, Wuh. -and an eveo more imposing fishing. ~~""::""rd~ Wh"1 the Pudget Sound Log-I .II e.r.L And tbal's Just what hat>- Y a!lemoon at Golden ferl make their filth a(>-Like the other two entranta pened Monday and Tuesday West College as the No. 1 peannoe In the Jut oeven in the NCAA regiooals, Puget aloag the Orange Coasl. ....i.d Long lleBdt MlJlllran yean In the NCAA Western Sound ls making !ta fourth Dana Point, Davey's Loct<r Rams 111rvlved the nilty Retriooal baseboll tournament stralgbt appearanco but baa and Art's Landing all reported pitching of Jim Dean and the at UC Jrvfne Friday afternoon, good catches of barraooda, roomy conf1nel to post a l~ they will have two outstanding never advanced beyoOO the bonito, bass and halibut. triwnph_ pitchers wortlng for them. west coa..i lournamenl. At Dana W h a r f , a Tbe winners, champions or The Loggtlrs draw a first-'Ibo 1-oggm will play a """' spokaman reported 1 h a t the Moore League, pounded game bye ln the tbree--team ood game at noon on Satur-Tuesday's half-day b o a t the ball at times, but cpuld tournament that plls UC! and day agalnot the ftrst game brought in 41 legal-sited - come up with only tbtte base Cal State (Nortbrldge) in the 'lrinner and If all teams are 1-1 racuda, 29 bonile, six bass and hils against the t o u g b opening pme with the loser at thia Ume, It will be the luck one white sea ba$S wlllle defensive pl>y ol Mater !lei. !adng tho l.aggera at 3 o'clock of the draw !or a~ game fisblng near the San Onolre But one of those safeties the same day. for two d the combatants area. was a sinking line drive to Boasting a Jett and a right-Saturday aftemoon. "FWU.ng has been better in (l right field In the filth Inning banded hurler with e.r.a. Leading hitter for Puget the Wt 10 days here than it'• • by Jay Burkhard and the ball marks that woold be Imposing Soond ls l u n Io r second i bounced under rightfielder in any degree of competition, baseman Allan A!Jay who bu been in quite: a while,',. said the • Mark Stanbra's glove. the Loggers posted a 24-6 a .419 average and has hit five >~Tbe~~~; 1::..i.: ........... ; .._ ~ Burkhard ended up on third season record t.o gain their borne rum to lead in this ~ •w.iu.iJtS ,,,_ ~· base and mate John Navratil fourth straight plaYof! berth. de!lortment aa well . d<11e by tbooe on the o~ ' Orange Coast C.Ollege cap- tured. m ol eight divisioos to easily" win the Southern Calilamia JC women's tennis tournament last weekend at Mt. San Antonio College. occ liniobrd with 35 points IRVINE CHAMPIONS -:-Coach.Tandy Gillis' Corona de! Mar Sea Kings won the whtle Pasadena and Santa Irvine League tenrus title again and advanced to the quarterfinals of the CIF MoBi<a tied !or aecood with AAAA playoffs before runmng into 1972 CIF cbam~ Beverly Hills. Standing followed quickly with a Pat Cristelli, a jwllor r:lgbt-Other infield starters in-~t which leaves for Catallha :. sacrifice fly to centerfield and. bander, has a 6-2 won-lost elude Greg McCollum, 8 Ikiand every morning at 12;~ " Millikan pitcher Cory 1.ogby IJlarlt and a 1.58 e.r.a. But his senior at finrt baae with a .314 and returns at 4 p.m. '1 had all the cushion he needed. biggest asset ls a strikeout average; Robin mu, a Meanwhile, a D a v e y' • : 21. fM!rocCm lertJl. JohnR Gulip"ck, Jan Callne, Dan Gerken, Mi e Dale. Kneeling -Greg AJlila Smith and Cindee arty, 1m oss, eter Robbins. Jeff Dyer. W-d. OCC won Diviaion I ----'-'--~-'--"'-===:...::_=::..:_=-- The Monarchs of' coach Bob pi.tCh. He bas whiffed 90 ~ sophomore at shortatop with a Locker off'u:ial believes fi¥lng ~ Dookersley, Angoluo League posing batters in 57 Innings. .%96 mark; and Chuck Last, 8 •1¥iuld Improve if the bol ~ champions, had a runner on Greg Bemis, a aopbomcre senior, at third with a .3(1() weather kee}>ll up. •lft)gbi now i doubles, drl'uilng an LA Vall<J College pair,~. ~%, ~ 3. Aad teammates K r i s t i Brown and Ptggy Gradisber nabbed the DI-II title, d~ a FullertGn College duo, M, 6-0. Division Ill bonora went to OCC'• Babin Coster Md Tina Garf were victorioUs, M. 6-3, over a twoeome from Santa Moaloa City College. Team- ma~ Tony McAuley and T!nta Hess cap<ured Dlvwon IV, defeatlng a doubles team ·--fl'OO'l -Pierte, "3, 6-1. In singles pl>y, Peggy Switil won Division Ill with a• 6-3, M 'victory over Mary Duggan cl Pierce. And team- male Eileen Stephells defeated Patty Harner of Santa Monica, U, 6-1, 6-1 for the Division IV crow n. Jearri scoring -Orange ast 35, Pasadena and Santa ica 21, Pierce 19, El no I3, Fullerton 1%. third in each of the final two left--hander, bas a 7-Z record average. the weather has been jD. Sea Kings Suffer Net frames but they couldn't come carudatent and the fish dcln'& : up with the key hit. know whether to come' Out or • Dave Najera reached first Ant ' H hri not," he says. ' · · , : on a shallow single to center eaters . ump _es Two yellowtall " .... caught : iD the s!Itb and got tu third on -oot o1 Art's Landing Monday, • a nifty sacrifice bunt by Jbn fishing orr Laguna Beach. ·And ' Gardea and an infield out. Faces Northrid N. bass and bonito fishing are • singles side to carry them to Setback But Zogby forced the last ge Ille reported good also. • Artists in AA Fina"ls After 17-11 Victory By HANK WESCH Of tM Dtltr f'Ue+ Si.ff Laguna Beach High School 's temlis team rode a sweep in doWles to a 17-11 victory over v1sitlng El Centro Tuesday and earned a spot In the CIF AA finals Friday. Tbe Artists will lake Oh 'lbad>er School ol Ojah the Condor League champion and a victor over Bishop Diego in Tuesday's other CIF match. Laguna Beach's d o u b I es teams of Norm Bedell-Howie Pearsol., 1and Dan Jacobscil- Mark Jay shut our their El Centro opponents for 12 big points, and the Artists' picked up just enough rpolnts on the the win. batter to pop to him. Then in ''Fishing has been good in Pem;ol and Bedell were just the final frame All-Oran~ .Rar Hump~ies, U~ Irvine's • season with 12 straight general, but it's due to pick up short of awesome in nailing County . i nl fie ledd er .,~nJor t "'~nrungest pitcher tins season triumphs and a 37·11 overall in the next few weeks," ~ down 6-l, 6-l and 6-l, 6-l vie-A new strategy and a McElwa1n s amm a o}Jlr oo with an 11-l record and a 2.66 ecord an Art's Landing spokesman. tories over their El Centro op-change of faces meant little double to left field with one e.r.a., has been named to face r · 11111"1111AL •1Ac1t -.,. •l'llllffs: 34 , pctlellts. Both showed strong Tuesdar as Corona del Mar's out to keep Mater Oei In the Cal St-ate (Northridge) Friday . The Jene JX15Sible exception y.i1ow1111, , bltrr•ew6, 1 ri.u1111t. • and --·-•-serves, and Sea. Kmgs, !0<. the second running for a quarterfinals in sh rtst D SANTA MONICA -u •l>!ll•rs · ,, ..,,..,.""'!WI:: at noon opening round ac-IS o op an Hansen rock ~od, lO 1111,s, 2 lltllbut. ' power.M.. oyerlleads _as ~v stra1g_ht year, w~re OUlited berth. r of the NCAA West ho ba k . ·u bo sAM D••oo t111U111c1..i """ -m : dominated the net ind w~·-from-the CJF teMlS~playoffs, -But an infield .roller and pop Km. em W. se c is sh thering ~l'i\;.~l~!m!.~'.•·22r:'k'~ud•, ls : never in real danger of losing 22 1h·51k by. No.. 1 seeded fly erlded Mat& bei's chanCes Regiooal-basebaq_-toumament -hlm. from_ an. Jnjwy in. the r•~i1<f•~U.P~tto;-4t-r""~~~:J{,,!t{j -~ Bev.erly Htlls 1n matches and Dean, a Peoria, Ill. at UCI. · UCLA game two weeks ago. U ll•UDllT, 2 rock cod, 1 V..!Owf.11. · , , any set Coach Gary. Adams made Hansen is unable to start SAN l'l!D1tO -l.l •1111l•r5: uo c•11co • Bed II . , 5 t th played at Corona del Mar transfer, was cuffed with the he th' , b•H. ~ock eodftl cow eod," ..._ • e • a V' cen er on e High. loss although allowing only six t annourx::ement lS week Dave Lyons will move from r si•11'.iw1111:·1LI w11~':'' 9" '~~I·~ ·basketball team, volleyed well C.oach Tandy Gillis i"uggled base runners. with Jerry Maras (8-2, 1.5() third to short with freshman ''~i\r"o'ri~ cJ~V~ ~u.M •noltrt: -4o!l in both matches, and kept the . . e.r.a .) penciled in to start the Bruce Banning taking over at '°6'k'od El Centro players off balance his orderl.)tl\ 1~~d the d?tJbles,in M•ttw °"' 1'1 1, r ti rM second game -either Fri~ay the hot comer. wh111M!~~U.60201~l\~i'i.!!1~~~1ri:.-J with his .ambidexterous style hopes of t>Slrung 12 points with N11 .... , ss l o 1 o afternoon with Puget Sound 'or Clark Schenz, a senior, will wn, 201 nxt (;ad, 3 1 no tod. ol play. The helty -•or shifts · a sweep ~nd ~en pie.king up Gal'dff. ,, 2 0 1 o ""'":.A~~u P111t -.u •fl9ltr11 200 ~·.. enouJ(h ts th 1 t sttnbr1, rt 3 o 1 o Saturday at noon. open in right field against MORRO •AY ,.,...,.., the racket from hand to hand poin 10 e sing es 0 ,.,d.mo, 1' 2 o o 0 Gary Wheelock, (8-4, 3.03 NorthrJdge with Keith Br">d"""' 1&1.rock cod, s lll'.ID c«f. is~~ t:i d....,... ~ bo nd pall it OUL Am1r1nfhu1, lb l 0 D O e--3l tnglers: 3CI 11"41 cod, 360 rock cQd. ..,,.,. .... 1ng an ~11e s ~· a • hits But the strategy backf'•ed Mc:Elwe!n, 2t1 l o 1 o e.r.a .) ·wlll be the starter if the available for pinch· hitting du-DAMA wKAltf -25 •na1..-.: 130 rore•--d ~-ok th th .. Tlm~nt, lb 2 D o O A d h ben, 43 bltrr1cU<11, 'II bOnlk>l 1 hallllloll, 1w.i1 l)u es WI et er when Beverly Hills' No. 1 ecd•s, p11 1 0 0 0 nteaters a vance to a t ird ty . 1 wnllt y• 1>$15, 1 m1ck1re . band JI De 1 D 0 0 b . . The u SliAL IACH -il B<'151ltr1: ~ rtell: · doubles team Perr w · ht Mm,,,,,,','.· ,11 game Y w1nn1 ng one or both CI attack will be pac-co11 ' cow cod 1 hJUbut 1 bonito J d J b • y rig 1 0 0 0 •• .;.. -41 1ngl9": 1>$•••cvd•, 1«i a 'Y • an . a co son and Tony Clarice, upset Corcna Y1>11, ph i o o o ()f their opening J:Ontests. ed by Rod Spence (.370) and 11Dn110, 1 und bllu, 11 111n11u1, 2 wt111• meanwhile, . rallied. from a del Mar's duo or Dan Gerken Totals sc-~., 111111111, 72 0 ' 0 Adams revealed that he •Jeff Mallooff (.358). Spet'k..--e is "'=•tw;:01tT 1...,.., LIMl11tJ _ ,1 sh• 7 ky 5 viscttart-m the-fiErstl Cset-f~r and John Gullck 6-3, 6-4. Le Mlllltan 000 010 ~ ~ : would start the same lineup the starting left fielder and ;.n:~~'U r.:Ct ~~~~~'&c~tl~~.;./. ars Gain CIF Semis ' a -ory over entro s The score in the firSt set M•lff Dill 000 000 o-o ~ 1 that finished the regular Malinoff the first baseman. L.odl.rl -:>6 ·~'": fl bOnlto. 35 ith 22-6 Net Victory Grady Dutton and R 8 Y was lied at 3·3 with neither•-"=.C.::----=.:._..._ __________ _:: ____ .:.__:::::__::.:::_:::::.:::=::__ _ _.:':'.''!!'"!'.':"~"~·~~"..''.'.'~~'~"~·."D"..'.'.m'.:":'."~~~·· Cord<_>va, th~n came back for a team able to win. on its cwn 6·2 victorr in the second set. serve. After again breaking. Th~y easily handled El Cen-the CdM serve, Clarke finally tro s Ray Pritchett a n d won and the defending major ~rJes Veretto 6--0, 6-1 ln division champs were oo their .·FOii . CGURl·ER:THE tlMPORT By CRAIG SHEFF Of "" DtllY f'li.t 11111 Senior nm O'Rielly and Steve Marosi led wport Harbor High 's tennis am to a convincing 22-6 CIF AA playoff victory over iting Foothill Tuesday, set- up a semifinal match with rth Torrance Friday. Nortb Torrance u p s e t y-regarded Palos Verdes, 1n-12~ Tuesday. Friday's tch will be played at North Dm'1Ce High. 'O'ruelly, coach Pat Wilson's . 1 player, breezed to 6-3, 6- 6-2, 6-4 victories over a arlet of Foothill opponents. .And Marosl was even more vincing with 6-3, 6-2 and 6-0 ru before defaulting his final match beCause of a sore ankle. Wilson credited the Tars1 cverall balance and depth as · the key factors in tbe victory. "We played the same way as we have all year. We had a balanced lineup and we beat a good team. 1 was very im- pressed with Foothill," said the Newport coach. · ....,...., Har11or (12) Ct> '9o1Mtl Slttfl• O'Rl1ltv fftl dtt. W•lnbtr'll 6-31 dltf. Morton ,_Ii ~. Ovnt ,_,, dtf. Hlr· rllOll 6-4. Per!\ln1 IN) won &-3, 7·S; 10$1 141 won 6.0. Wlllmer {N) won 6.0, 6-'; IN ! 3·6/ won &-1. Ml/roil (N) won 6·J, &-2; del•ulltdl won 6-G. ' ""'"" ~fl'.JICOtlHn (N) fPllt Witt! l!nd• Mllt.r .. 1. 6.&1 de+. Grace·Thorpt 6•2, 6· 0. • Smtll-Jontt (N) 1pllt 6-J, 5·11 WD11 6-3, .. J. then· second match. way. . J~ ~as ~arly Gerken and Gulick battled 1rnpress1ve, displaying a fine back to down the visitors' No. array of yolleys an a deadly 2 singles tean1 6-4 and 8-6 overhe!'d 1n both ma«:hes, while senicr Greg McCarthey In Slngles, the Art1~ Jost topped Beverly Hills' No. 3 three of ~ur mate~ 1n each singles player, Alex Silva, 7.5, of the firnt two i'ounds, but for another point. The Corona when . sophomo!~ S ~ e v e de! Mar second doubles team Spalding notched a 6,.4 VlClory of Jeff Dyer and Jan Callne over El Centro's Ted-Whit-stopped Scott Alder and Randy comb. Harris 6-4 before losing to the sr...in T•Ylol' !Ll 1.,,.1 to P•t•cio w. 10.t 10 same pair 6-1. SPtitl' 2_., def Wl'ollcomo 6·3. 10$1 lo C~ IWll 122\11) 11v1rly Hllt1 fl.Md u stne• Sp.kiln; (l ) losl U , $-1, -""· •·1, Sc~"tld (9) de+. MeC1rlhey 6-,, McCl11n9 fl ) lost 7_., 1011 d•f11111, a 111t1'5on 6-0. Ron &-0, Robbins 6.a. los1 1-6, WtlfJ -..a. o.n111 (Bl won j..l, 6-2, 6-4, 6·2. Dotid1 (L) lost 3..6, u, 14. won 6.J S!IVI (I) '"' $-7, won j..2, '"3, .. ,. OM...._ BrO'WTI !9l WM 6-1, '"3, 7.5, 6-1. ll<Mll·PHrsol Il l def. Prllche!I· Doublft ""ff*"° 6-1, 6·1; def. Pvnori<ordov• '-Wrtghl'CIHk• (8 ) d•f. G..-ken G11llck 1, '-3. 6-3. 6-4, dtf. Oytr-Cellne 6.J, 6<1J. J1e0bson·J1y (L) won 6{1, 6·1; 1·5, ,_ A.dlff-H1rTl1 (Bl 10$1 44i, 611, •J>ll! ,. t. " 6-1 Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Chicago 23 17 New York 19 17 Mon treal 16 18 Pittsburgh 16 18 Philadelphia " 24 St. Louis 13 24 West Division San Francisco 28 17 Houston 26 17 Cincinnati 24 16 Dodgers 24 17 Atlanta 16 23 San Diego 15 27 T11tsd•V'1 0•111" Phllftdt l!lhlt 7, P111s1>vroh' Mon!rNI '• Chl«110 J, 11 ll'lnlno• $1. Louis 5, N-Yoril;' Sin Fr1ndsai·1, Allanla ) Clr1clnMll 6, Hotnto~' Do4Hrl S, k n 011.510 I TIMY'• G-H PcL .575 .528 .471 .47l .385 .35t .622 .605 GB 2 4 4 7'h 81,i .600 ] ~ii .585 2 .410 9 .3.57 11 ~i SI. Lavis (Fost"' l.) or 5olnk1 CM) •I Nffl' YOl'lt (5f!1ver S.21 P!!ls0\if11h !~ 3-ll •t Phllld9-IP1'11• (RulhVlft l·l or 8r•tt ,_I) CMe.tlO (Hoo!011 S.lJ ltl MolltrHI (TorrH .).51 S." Fr1nclw> (MC:OOW9'1 1·1) 11 At11111te (ltHd 2"'1 HOl/tlOl'I IWlllOfl 1 ... ) •I Cine.I,,.,_,., (81111ftfll.lm l·ll $an 01'90 ICorlcn• ~I -111 °"'"'" \Mttll•tmlh •)I T11ursll1r'1 011M1 Stl'I Fr1hclsai 11 Alt•nl• Ntw YoR ti Dttfltn ()n!y 91FNI sdltd11led. i AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Detroit 20 19 New York 19 20 Milwaukee 18 19 Baltimore 17 19 Cleveland I8 23 Boston 15 20 West Dtvlslon Chicago 22 13 Angels 21 15 Kansas City 23 18 Oakland 22 19 MiMesot.a 19 17 Texas I2 24 T"9d•V'• 0•1111t Cl<tv1l1nd 5, 8111\rnor• l Mllw•vkM 4, floslOn 2 Ntw York 1, Oflfroll 2 Min-I• t, ICl1\lll City 1 CMc-6, Al!Mtt2 Olkl-llnd 4, T•~N I T...,.. 0Mn• Pct. .513 .487 .486 .472 .439 .429 .629 .583 .561 .539 .528 .333 GB 1 I l'h 3 3 11> 2 3 31> 1011i c1 ... .i .. ~ (Wflc:w: )..()) II 1•111._. !Cuellar 1.sJ Mllwelllr." !Cl'ltmolol'l 0.U ti 8a&ton (PalUn 2·11 New Yorlc (P....._, HJ •I o.troll {Coftmtl'I •11 Altl'I• (Sl""r 7·1) tt C"lcaoo (l"lttltr '"31 IC...,MI City (8111b¥ $.5) •I M!nnnolt llC••t 5-f) Ttic.e1 {lnib&r1 0-4) •I Otrlll•nd tllu. :14) Tlwr .......... CJt..- M11w•vkM •I hston Ant•ll .. Ctl!CillOO C!tv91•1'1d tl l•IU!'Mnl NtW YOl'll; ti o.troll IC•nw1 CJIY •I Ml,_ll 0n1r _,.,,.,.. ldleO!Jltd, I ) I , GIVES mu :ALL THIS .::long 104" wheelbase ... big 'K-:t.5" x 62.2" loadspace ... roomycabwith 53.5" hiproom ... zesty 1800 cc. engine ... storage space behind sear ... whitewall tires ... brightfront bumper ... bright grille ... bright hub caps ... mud flaps at rear ... dual sun visdr-s ... dual armrests ... full , insulated floor mat r • ! SC Coach At Newport USC footbaU coach John McKay will be the guest speaker at the 8MUal Newport llarbor Trojan Alumni Club's football banquet June 1 a.t Balboa Bay Club. Tickets are available at $'7.50 per person. lnlettsted parties should mail their checks to Con Schweitzer, 2615 Alta Vista Drive, Newport Beach 92660. Tommy Walker is the master or ceremonies and all alumni, parents and friends of Southern California are in- vited. Reservations may be made by calling: Con Schweitzer 6#-1163, Frank Anderson 540-7106, or Warren Gibbons 546-9040. Robert J. Wigmore DID YOU KNOW lhat We hive re·· dueed automo. bile and home· owner rates. Call us for a quote. WIG MORE /Ill,. lll'l:S INSURANCE 2t5J Hldof llvcl . .Cotto Mesa 979-2555 Other Sunset Members Go ~long With HB Policy The recent hassle between Sunset League member schools involving the lluntington Beach School. District's newly adopted policy o( granting incoming freshmen the optiO{l or attending and competing for schools not within their regular boundary is over. Huntington Beach schools will go about their new way and the other league mem- bers will go along with It. Santa Ana High principal Dr. Joan Wilson explains : "If there are problems it would appear the schools within the Huntington Beach School ----------·~· ROGER CARLSON District ·will be more affected than we. "If they have problems, they'll be the most sensitive to it and the members have agreed that if they can live with it we can. '"lt's within the CIF rules." The option gives incoming freshmen Ii ving in anare a with an overcrowded school a choice to attend any other school less crowd- ed. It's based on students-per-square-foot· of classrooms. What it means is that Marina and Foun- tain Valley highs figure to lose some pros- pects, and Edison , Huntington Beach and Westminster figure to gain. Thus the football programs at Edison and Westminster may be enhanced and lhe bas· ketball program at Huntington Beach could become even stronger. Since fhe league as it now stands will probably be !round for orily one more year due to the releaguing scheduled for the 1974- 75 seasoo perhaps the rest of the loop figured why fight it? Coaches who figure to benefit from the plan have a hard time not smiling when coo- frooted with the question. The rest will be- come bitter as time goes on. The latest figures reveal 88 option requests to attend tlWltington Beach, 67 to West- minster. A total of 94 who would have at- tended Fountain Valley won't, &6 leave the Marina area and Edison bas a net of five students. * * * Laguna Beach High swim coach George Carey has called it qWts and is taking a )'ear off to toW' Canada. No replacement bas been named at La- guna Beach, but he's r~ommendlng Joe Collins of Long Beach as a 1oceessor. Tbe last three yean bas seen an unreal coaching turnover at Laguna Beach. * * * Add Corona del Mar lligh's basketball team to the list or 6'l teams in this summer's Watts Invitational cage tourney. Also competing from the Orange Coast area will be Marina and Fountain Valley. * * * An error was recorded In the publicaUon of the All-Sunset League baseball team a1 picked by that circuit's coaches. Huntington Beach lligh's Randy A111ts made first team at shortstop. He was errone- ously listed as a second team choice. * * * Dana Hills High's basketball team will compete in the Huntington Beach summer league-an indication the Dolphins are on the rise. Gymnasts P lace 2nd . ~1cQuown 9th In Steeplechase LONG BEACH -T h e. Newport=-Beacti--Qymnastics C.enter gfm team finished Sec· ond in a 12-t.eam rield at the Class Ill junior championship meet here recently. The Long Beach Kips team racked up li>.'1.60 points to win the competition, with the Newport Beach Center team totaling 150.35 in the meet for girls in the 12--14 age group. Leading Newport Beach was Karen 11all of Newport, \li'ho took .first place in the uneven bars 'vilh an 8.8 score. Miss flail iilso tied for fifth place in f!oor exercise \Vilh an 8.15 and ifnished ·-second in the all- round with a totiil of 30.70. Other Orange Coast area girls contributing· to the Newpoft total included Jani Smith of Costa Mesa and f\.1issy Johnson of Corona de! Mar. Miss Smith took fifth place in the uneven bars. balance beam and floor exercise and finished fourth in the al\- around while Miss Johnson tied for third in vaulting and finished in fourth place all· around. NORTHRIDGE -Golden West College's Jack McQuown failed to qualify for the state track 3,00>-mcter stepplechase Monday at Cal S t a t e ( Northridge) but had a fine time of 10:14.S. McQuown finished ninth in the race. missing the school record by 4.5 seconds. Team- 1nate Dave Lockman was 10th in 10:24. The top four finishers earn- ed berths in the state spikefest Saturday night at Bakersfield. • ..• Jn.,,,, .. 1, 1 .. ar ..:J, ...... DAIL V PILOT %3 Nevins Top 9 Area BasketlJall Teams •• - Bowler At Kona Los Alamitos' Glen Nevins fired a slltling 94.5 four·game series to jwnp Crom No. 21 to first Monday night in the West (hast Match Game Bowling Eliminations at Costa Mesa's Kona Lanes. Nevins had games of 244-24-f.. 222-:!S.I. Last week's leader -P..1att Bowcutt of Buena Pa:k - rolled an 827 series and fell to No. 2. The top Orange Coast area bowler is Mission Vlejo's Dwayne Hicks who is now In the No. 10 spot. Hicks fell from fifth with a 795 series. Two other area bowlers' in the top 16 include Laguna Hills' Fred Dougherty (12th ) and Irvine's Farrell Hinkle (13th). Nevins is an Elims veteran -this being h1s 12th tourney in 13 years. In the 1963 classic he fired a 300-game. The third session of the 14- week Elims is set for Monday night, June 4, with the 120- man field taking a break because of the Memorial Day holiday. l'OI.. •-* ...... ., City ........ P IM l . Gll'll NIWIM. Los Al•m!!OJ 1,71') 2. M1rt Bowt11ll, •wn• Plrk 1,74-1 l. Art JKkson, Lomll• 1,737 •. ll:on DI.tr, L• H•IM'• '·"' S. 0 111 TKlwinnetl. A11o1Mlm 1,712 • Jerry K~hl. G•rden Grov1 1,701 7. Bt11ny 11.U. .... G1rden. '"" I. Fr.cl Ber111t. Tutll11 1,6n t. DI.,. Fr1m1, Azusa l ,Ml II. bw•Yne Hlclfl. MIUICMI v1110 , ... , 11. Ed Goehrl1111, B1JM1 Park '"72 .IL ....... DOl.lfllltr1y. L1111111 Hlll1 l,,1l 11. P1rnll Hlnkll, lrvlM • 1.441 14. Irv Low'"' S.nta A11a -J,'62 15. TWTY Sl•lhll1 Lot A111e:I!$ 1,651 ''· Norm Hammoro, Garde1111 . l"W Olhlfl -20. RIV Bryson !Wntmln1l1rf 1.621: 24. Clydl!' Lacher (Dina Pol111) l.il7; 27. Bud ROSI (Hull• lln;ton Buehl 1.6Ur 4. John C1rlil~ (Fount1111 v1111-;l 1.575; li J1y Ou1111 CWnlm!nslerl 1.S70; SJ. George FlshH tHunllntlon Bnchl l ,SS9; 60. Oon CrouH rcosra Mn11l 1,557. In HB Summer Tourney Nine Orange Coast area prep basketball learns will be active in the Huntington Beach summer basketball I e a g u c beginning June 19. Action takes place at Hun- tington Beach, Edison and Marina high schools each Tuesday and Thursday night throogh July 24. The schedule: M ....... laldl L ...... J-'' At •.i-6·:JO -Edi_, vs 0.n• Hllh 1.'5 -NfWP«I H1'1Jol' vt CclM At """' .. ,.. &Metil •::JO -Hullflngton vs Foun111n v1111v 7:'5 -W•tml111h-1' Vt LlklWOOd Al Mltl!M 6:)0 -"'-'1"' VI E1l•ncl• 1:'5 -L• Qvfnt1 vs Wvllt J-11 ··-6:30 -CdM VI !-I Qvlnll 7:45 -Marl111 115 Edlton Al ltlllltlllllteol 6:30 -Foun191n V•lllS'Y v1 !\ervltt 7:'5 -Huntk19ton VI LlklWOOd Al IMrtna 6:30-01118 H!111 VI N"""POf1 H.trbo<' 7:'5 -E1t1ncl1 VI WH!mln1t1r J111t1 M Al ••IMMI •:JO -Edl1on vs WnrmTru11r 7:'5 -CdM VI l<ounl•l'1 Val1~y At H•nHnttDn S11cll 6:30 -l• Quin!• vs 0<'1111 1-1111• 7:'5 -Hunllngtoro Beach VI Servile Al Mlrtn1 6:30 -NtWJIO'I Harbol' Vt M&rlnl 7 :~S -Est1111cl1 VI L1kewood J11.-Jt Al ElflMMt 6:30 -LI Qulnla Vt Llkt""lD!I 7:45 -Dina Hiiis v1 Corona del Mer Al Hunllntt.., l1•d1 6:30 -E1!1ncl1 •I llt8WJIO'I H1rbor 7:1S -HunH1111lon BtlCh vs Edison At M1rt111 6 :JI) Wesrmlnst~ Fount1111 V1lley v 1 7:'5 -M1rl111 VI Servile July J At •.iMlfl •:lO -Edison VI NewPOrl Hlrbo<' 7:'5 -Eslln(ll VI L• Qvlnl• Al Hvn"ntl'llll '"ell 6:30 -Hun1l1111ton BIKh VJ Dina Hiils 1:'5-L1k1WOOd VI Founl•ln Vilify Al Mlrin• •::io -M1rln1 VI Coron• dt! INlr 7:'5 -Wnlmlnlllf VI S~ll• July 5 Al IEdli..n ,,30 -Edison VI Strvl1~ Binley Qualifie~ CERRITOS -Laguna Beach's High's Judd Binley improved nine feet in the discus with a toss of 169-4 Tuesday afternoon at Ccrittos College to qualify for the state high school track and £ield meet June 1·2 in Woodland. Al Ml<r1llfl J 6130 -E1r.nc11 w C-dtl ~ 7:4$ -MlrlM VI W .. trn.lllJIV ...... .,_ f:10.-(°"11111 dtt Mar n Edi.on 7:'1 -MIWPCll1 H•rOor VI S.rvil• At H•H1111911 •Nclil "" -I.• Oll/1111 v• Founl•ln V•ll•'f ''" -Hunllf!Qlon Bwcti n W.t1n1l11llltf . ........ •:JO -,..,,,rhwo Yl L1ktwood 7:.S -E'1•nc•• VI 0•1'11 Hiiis J11ty It At llllMMI •:30 -Edison vs Ltklwood 7:'5 -cor-c111 M•r vs ~111 Al H11111l11t* 9"<11 •:» -Hun"ngl'otl $Hdl VI Eit1ncl1 7:'5 -Fountain .... , ..... VI OIM HHl1 ......... ,,., -Wn!mlnsi., .,, N1wport H1rbor 1:.&S -Mtorlna vs L• Qulnt1 J111Y 17 At•dl-•,:~ ' )0 -llllWPCll1 111..-'ft L~· I 1:1s -EdlMn VI E•11nr.i. .' Al H11t11lh1ttM ... dr ' •.lO -5.,,,11, ... 0-HH11 '" I 1.U -Hllllll~!Oft llNCh ¥• GclM Al MMIM •·lO -\.1 Qul1111 "' W..tmJ111I• 7.U -Mlr!n• VI Founlllft V•llfV Jiiiy '' At IE•-6 lO -L1 Qulnll n Edi.-. ·I 1.45 -E1t•nr.l1 "' Fou1111111 V.U.y", Al H1111t1111.., •Mell •·)O -N-POrl H1rbor VI Hllll-llngloo 1.U -W111m1111t1r VI Cot-.... M" Al Mlrilll t ::JO -M•rlna VI DIN. Hiiis 1:'5 -L•k•w-"' ~tr¥1tt Jiiiy JI Al IEll- t :lO -EdltOll VI Fooni.ln V1!11V 1:.u -0"11 Hltl1 VI Wt1lmln1w Al HllOlfl!lllOll •Nd! •:lO -NIWPCll1 Harbor vs Lt 0\14 .... 7:'5 -H1111Un;ton llffcn v1 Mlrlnr Al M•'1111 • 6:10 -l!llllkll VI ~r¥f!t 7:1! -l1k.-ood Vl Coron1 dll Mir ,. •. .. ·:·. " FASHION J ISLAND NEWPORT CDNTCR P1ci!lc Co•1t Hlghw1y-81lwH11 J1mbor11 •nd MacArltlur ome • • • ' a Get behind the wheel of a Honda Civic and give it a whirl around the block a few times. You'll see what front-wheel drive does for cornering. What rack and pinion does for steeri ng . What 4-wheel independent suspension does for road-holding. Test drivi: thc.o,t_her economy cars and th6,new Civi€~ And drive your own conclusions. Introducing tke New · Honda Civic: MIL'E PER ALL BIG SELECTION-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! I • -' ' l N! ( D"1L V PILOT ~Santa Ana CC Winners .. ~ Ken Lewis (left) of Dover Shores and partner Bill ~ Blllnton of Newport Beach captured the 15th an· \: nual membef'"guest tournament at Santa Ana Coun·. ,: try Club last weekend . Lewis, of the host club, and ; Blanton of Irvine Coast Country Club, carded a net ,; 122 to top the field of 76 teams in the 36-hole best .. ball of partners competition. (Ric h Bassett photo) -f ' ~Banquets Honor ' •• ;: Area Standouts . ~; Multi-talented Steve Adams collected most valuable honors ~~1onday nigh! al Estancia JJ!iigh's_lMck and field .bon· -~uet · Adams starred in t h e ,hurdles and long jump for 'the .Eagles. · Special award wirmers : ~ Varsity Captain: lloward Bishop ; ·Most Valuable: Steve Adams; ost improved: Dave Parsel: 1 Most Inspirational: Mike ewell. Junior Varsity Caplain: Dave Ganoung; ·$· ost Valuable: Dan Prin- t eol!o; Most Improved: Rick Zcok. ,. Frosb.sopb 1 Captain : Dan Granite: -Most t"'IValuable: Ken Conner; Most n1provcd: Dave Gibbs. Co•ta /Hesu Junior Paul Desmet \.\.'as t med captain and shared ost valuable honors with IC.om Gollnick at Costa Mesa ;:ttigti·s salute to their 1973 r~ack and field contingent esday evening. Special award winners; Varsity · tCaptain: Paul Desmet; Most aluable : Paul Desmet and m Gol l nick: Most 1~ fmproved: Larry Falk e: Most ! )nspirational: Mike Holliday. I Junior Varsity Captain; Kevin Gallagher; Most Valuable: Rande ...._~wkinson ; Most lmproved; ;~ruce Sharp: 1'1ost Jnsplra~ ~ilional: Kevin Gallagher ., Frosh-Sopb ~: Captain: ToJY Ellis; Most "" aluable: Curt Eilenberg; ~1ost Improved: Tom Ellis; ~iost Inspirational: W a It ~Hiott. a Lug1111a B ea.-la ~ Senior Judd Binley and Jresh1nan Eric lluls• sh<'lred ~he Excellence Av.·ard Tues- fJ;lay evening at Laguna Beach r.fligh's sports av.•ards banquet ,jl<>noring the Orange League ~(!han1pio11ship track and field ~ean1. " Special a\vard "'inners : '\ Varsity '! Captain: Spike Atkinson :, .. . . ~ .. ~ GWC A thJetes i Gain Jlouors ~ \.fne Johnson ii;(yrnn~tics) . ..f.enry \l.'cigmann \tennis). f"ohn ?\-·linklcy (gal() and ,lClayne Bro\l'll (surfingl \Vere accorded llu~!!Pr nf the Yrar t.onors ~! ·rucsday night'!! -,yrfng sports banquet at Golden \Vest ColJC'ge. : ·Captain awards went to JMike Grimm (gyn1nsst ics), .. ~eYe Kasner (tennis), Browu f8urfmg) and h1inkley (golf), :· Morio Parker was selected ~ tennis tearn 's 1n o s I J•!ua.-'ble. , Colden West baseball and )!ack teams will be honored ~!gilt at 6:30 in Ilic college .,.nter. bllffa'11trCWW CK1t MM. Ct...,.,. ,._ t7141 .m.un 1717 '· ·~ ,,, AMMIM, Cll, Plltt "-• 11141 71MIOO Excellence Award: Judd Binley and Eric H u I s t : Outstanding Senior: Judd BJnley i. Outstanding Junior: Doug Casi; 0 ii ts fan ding Sophomore: John Carlson: Outstanding Freshman: Eric Hulst; Most llnproved Track: John Carlson: Most Improved Field: Darrell Driskell and Pat Gleason; 1i-1ost lnspira· lional: Karl Weber; High Point Varsity: Judd Binley: High Point Sophomores: Wade Binley: fJigh Point Freshmen: Dirk Pratley. Duaaa Hills Rick Joyce was named the most valuable junior swimmer and Dave Salas the most valuable junior trackmen in awards banquets for Dana Hills High school Tuesday night. Other swimmjng awards went to Dave Milosch, (sophomore), and Casey McCartln (freshman) while other track honors went to Marlo Alarcon (sophomore) Jack-Brown (freshman) and Stuart Holland (most in· spiratlonal). Saddle back Saddleback College's track and field, baseball and golf teams will be honored tonight with a banquet at Chandler's Restaurant in Leisure World. It begins at 6:30. llnlverslty Trojans athletes in track and field, swimming, tenni s, golf and baseball will be honored tonight with a sports awards banquet at Univer!rity High. Festivities get under way at 7 in the school cafeteria and Included in the program is the naming of most valuable and 1nost inspirational athletes in all five spring sports. Lag111u1 Bearh Laguna Beach High athletes froin all sports for the 1972-73 seAson \Viii be feted with a harbccue tonight at the school qund. Aciivity gets under way at 6. Opinion Split on New ·1c Rule By CRAIG SKEFP Jaws giving IS.year olds the this could definitely cause "SOme kids in tbe county °' tM o.1ty '"" ''"" powers of adults to establish some problems. mjght be moving around a The community college resi· their Ol'tn residence. "I/ there is a Jot oC recruit· lltlle bit. The kid from Tustin dence rule, recenlly niled un-Here are tile reactions or the ing in other districtis, our bas-b closer to Santa Ana or Or· constitutional by a Santa Cruz area JC footbaJI coaches: ketball and track programs ange Coast than he is to Sad- County Superior Court judge, could be dead because we have dleback.. On the other hand, will not change athletics dra&-HARTMAN -"Wide open no facilities. some kid that lives in ·the tlcatly in the tw~year col· rtcruiting is going to cause "How can you control it? Fullerton district might want I-, problems. It's the worst thing 11ow can you prove illegal re-.... e · that's happened In 20 years. c:ruiting?" to move to a smaller districi, That's the opinion of two Or It's going back to the way it knowing he has a l;>ette:r . the three cout area JC foot· was before. 'f UCKER -"Basically I'm chance to play. SIL\CKl.EFORI>-•·t don't think ifs a good nile. Jwlior c..'Olleges don't hav~ biC boost· ers clubs like they used to. ''It will be very interesting to . see what does happen, but we're not going to do 8llYjblng. I don'.t thin!! Y,OI!'~ go1g to • ftnd a wbol'881e movement of people. "A lot of schools will be helped by lh• rut.. For In· stance, if a school t!oe,m't have a q~'l"'erl>adc, tt might go find ooe. But I hope it won't be ·a wholesale thing." M.V Golfers Place Fifth ball coacties -Orange Coast's "What it means is that many against it because I think the "A key point is that you DickTuckerandGoldenWest's of the local schools vdll not colleges wilh the large booster may not recruit in someone GLENDORA _ Ora·n1e I be '·' k d crew oould muster was fifth i Ray Shackleford. playing with local .Uds. clubs will have the advantage. else's distl'ict. If a i comes placei by MlBsion Viejo's However, the third coach _ And the taxpayer in the local The guy that's going to get here he has to come on his Coast area prep golf pow s Crest e.w Leaone champs ~. district will be paying for kids hurt is the local athlete. own Marina, Estancia and Mission a- Sadd1eback'a George Hartman whose parents might live in "But JC athletics have "I. don't believe you're go-v· j sh t t . th . I orie troke off Claremont'.s f I ie o were u ou in eir a -fourth place ef'ort of 4M at I -ee s the new ruling could San Francisco. changed dramatically over the ing to see a drastic change in 1 ' ""' tempt to gain a spot in the Glendora Country Club set JC athletics back 20 years. "We certainly don 't have years and most schools don 't recruiting, but you will see , -· The jud.ge ruled unconstilu-the finances to go and recruit have the money to house some kids moving around for CIF finals at l·Iuntington I. Riverside Poly (399). 2. people from other districts. players like they used to. I one reason or another. Beach Seacliff. Chaffey (403), 3. ·Valencia Uooal a rule requiring students The coaches in Orange Coun· don't see any recruiting ploy "If I had to vote I'd vote Four teams gained berths in (405), 4. Claremont (400), 5. who attend a school outside t g t I I II b t 11·ke 1·t used to •·. · ·t" the 11·nals a•·" th• best an area M. · v · · (4fJ'I) their ,home .district to sit out 1 _.:.Y-;:~e:;;a~oo~g~r~ea~;w~e;::;;. ~u:;~::::::.::::::~:::::::::;=:a:g:•:m:s:t :' :· ============~:::":::::::::::::'":'~o:n=":l:O==·==;;;~ a year of intercollegiate ·~ri~; like using a shotgun to' SPECIAL ·VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY! s. habla Espana( kill 8 fly," said judge Harry WESTMINSTER SANTA ANA fU~LERTON Brower. He ruled that the tes· "' idence requirement violated 15221 BEACH BlVD. • PHl)ljE 893-8544 120 E. RRST sf. ~T CYPRESS• PHl)ljE 547-7477 1530 S. HAI llJD.• PllOllE 870-0700 the U.S. Constitution and state ,. ·:' · .' l'HRU FR IDA Y • , l:lO A.M-9 fl.M MONDAY TH'U FRIDAY •• 8:30 A.M-9 fl.M SATURDAY •.•••• , ••••• 8:JO A.M.-6 P.M. SATURDAY .(., ••••••••• 8:30 A.M.-4 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY • , 1:30 A.M-9 P'.M SATUIDAY •• , , , •• , •••• 1:3 0 A.M.--6 P'.M. SUNDAY •• , •••• , ••••••• ttOO A.M..-4 #.M. Witt Takes Cage Post By ROGER CARLSON Of th1 01lty P'lltf Sl11t Los Alamitos High basket· ball coach Wendell Witt will tulor El Toro High's varsity basketball team and serve as the school's athletic director the Daily Pilot has learned ex- clusively. \Vitt, a !\.fission Viejo resi- dent, coached Los 'Alamitos Hlgh's Griffins to the Irvine League championship in 1972. The Griffins advanced to the ClF AAAA semifinals before exiting, 65-60, to eventual champion Verbum Dei. Witt also coached the South AU-stars in the 1972 test at Orange Coast College, the South winning, 91-84. Witt's impending ap- pointment at the next Tustin Unified School District board meeting gives the new school three head coaches and an athletic director. Mack Moore (football) and Steve Farris (water polo and swimming) round out the cur- rent head coaching staff. f'ar· ris is also currently a Los Alamitos High coach .. Students and teachers will conduct their business at Mission Viejo High on a double session basis and home games in football and basketball will be played on the Mission Viejo HJgh, campus. CIF Scores In Playoffs Al.AA l•ffblll Lii Miiiikin I, Mlllr 0.1 II S!. Jofln aoaco 5, Or1n11• 3 H~-m1 I, No. Torrin'' s Loi A1tml!C1 n, L-•U t ArcMlll 9, S1~1nn1 ] L11!;1wood _., Cr11t1n!1 Valley 2 S1nt1 Monie• 5, Hawlhorr11 • Vllll P1rk •, M1gnoll1 D AAA llt .... 11 Et Stt;1ul'ldo $, Ch1rtl!1' Oak l Clbf'Ulo 11 , 111111op Mont11om1ry l c11r1m.on1 3, Sin t1rn1rdlno 1 Lo. AllOI 5, La Mlr•d• 1 Ktnnedy (81r1tow) J, P1clflc1 2 Edg1wt!Od I, St. 81rn1rd ' N.tl '· Lynwood 5 S1n11 M1rl1 '· GltnOor• 1 AA ltMMll G!aa1ton1 ~. w11nu! 2 Sanor1 a. Htmet l A l1Mtt1U L~th1ran 2, eru~ren l Buckley ), Carpinteria 1 AAA.A Ttnnls BevtrlY Hiii• 72\1, Corona Oal Mar "' S1mt1 MOiiica 1111'1, Santi Barbar~~·• North 'Torr1nc1 U'll, Pato~ Verde$ ,,. NtwDOrt H1r~or 22. Foo!~ill 6 AAA Ttn~ll La Gulnt1 11, Sin 01brlel I ~~f;~~d1J,~. Ts~'::'~:~,.e,a~l' ! M~rl<. Kep~I l!. C!oremont 10 AA T•nnl1 Logunn ""'~ 17, er C•n!ro 1\ T~&tch'r 14'7. Bl~hop Oleuo 1J', SUNDAY • , •••••••• , , , • 9:00 A.M.--4 P.M. SUNDAY ••• , • , • , • , •••• 9:00 A.M.--4 P'.M. ,... FLOTEX ANTI-FREEZE @ C~9,.~~~T AMTl·LIAI( fff.PfRIORMANCE OIL TREATMENT MULTl·PURPOSE GREASE WY JO USE CAIRIDCES rtn fltOfllT OI ltl.U •• A,, AllOlflO ...... NYIOH YOLKSWlGEll SEAT COVERS "~fl i' RIPlACE OlD OIL FILTER NOW. SfJIN.-ON OIL FILTER CARTRIDGES Clot..,-''t.'7J Min. '11·'1i ... ... ..,,. ..... .,,..,, h k• •s .. ·n -* ""'" ow.. .... 1i °"'· ,,.....,. •wn AllO fOl MANY O'fMll 'c:All NATIONA11Y ADVIRTISID • 7.35xl5 7.35xl4 7.75/6.70xl5 TUHLESS WHITEWALLS FR70-14 GR70-14 GR70-15 HR70-15 JR70-15 LR70-15 llll WIDE TREAD ••• RAllED WltlTE LETTERI 1---- 9 S HI 111 Cll 1 15 ftr VW'• F60-14· F60-15 4 Ply NYLON COIO/SUAIANTEEO 30 MONTHS• • ,.... ftol bl. Tu of $2.12·'3.~7 ........... ..,.. JO MONTH <::UARANIEE C78-13 (7.00xl3) E78-14 (7.35x14) f78-14 (7.75xl4) G78-15 (8.25xl5) G78x14 (8.25~14) \\ .l\JtED TYPE 6.00xl6 ........ . 6.70x15 ....... .. 70 SERES "THI 11o·ONI" WJIH RAISED Wlf1E_ LfTTERS 181~0-13 'lit cDti."111, _.-,'"""' 810 BOY Delco AIR SHOCKS COit Sl'lllNO. AIR COOL TIRE PUMP COMPLETELY AIR ADJUSTABLE BIGGEST STOCK IN TOWN "' IOYI SILL AND lllYl~I IHOCK AllOUIU IOI All MAkll AND MODILI bP PAlllNOll CAU, CAMJllU, n.tinoN WAOONI, LIGHT ftUCU &. TlAILIU. • H.,11 .. -lnteln ttnilg1'il l•¥t1 thik • c-11'9nlOlll for .,.,ylnt 16" NndltleM • lnfl•I•• In t«Ondt to l1v1I c•r INSTAilATION A,VAfLAIU 'AT AU. SrOlllS CUSHION FOi CAI Ol llll ------------- ( T I Champions To Clash Next Weeli Ten of the top sailboat rac- ing skippers in Southern California have been invited to participate in the Race of Champions sponsored b y Westlake Yacht Club, June 2. Westlake is an inland body or water located just north of San Fernando Valley off Highway 5. The lake is one of the fastest growing inland boating centers in t b e Southland. Soutli Shore Club Celel>rates Invited to participate in the three-race regatta are such top skippers as Bill Ficker. Roger Welsh, Argyle Campbell, Dave Ullman. Tim Hog an and Henry Sprague Ill, all from Newport Beach: Earl Elms, San Diego: Tom Leweck, Ca lifornia Yacht Club; Ken Weiss, Alam itos Bay Yacht Club and Tom Tobin, San Diego. Trophy presentations and yacht inspections highli8 hted South Sailing Club's annual Opening Day ceremonies Saturday. Following festivities at the Coast Hi ghway clubhouse, several of the club yacb.ts partiripated i" the boat parade by the Association · of Newport Harbo r Yacht Clubs. PUBLIC NOTICE R-lltllon 40-5·11 NOTICE 01" INTE NTION TO O'lil>ICATI! l!ASl!Ml!NT NOTICE 15 HEREflY GIVEN lhllf on 111e 151h clay of >My. 1m, th• 901rd <>I EdUUllOl'I of 1t11 NIWporl..MKll Ulllftld School 1>11trlct llf Or1r19• County, C•llfarnle, ~ .. • Rnolu!lon at lnten- tla.i toJ dedl~le an UMlnllnl ta c;llY ol c 1r111 Mfte, • munlclpjil corPOf'•llan, tor sir.Mt •nd hlghw•Y !l<l•pOffl• .aid •-..,.,.1 ta bl 1o1;1ttd over, on •rid .cros• porn.ii of tMt ,,.Id 1>1rcel ot 11nd locallld it t•n•g.,. Orlv. In ti.. City of CMt• MeM. A pi.1bllc "'"11"9 upon ti. ~Uon ot m.iting wc:h dldlc•ll"" '"'111 bl held 11 c ,,_11 MK1 High SchoOI Lye...,.,. ,'TM•! ... , ,.. F•lrvl•w ROid, Costa Mela. c.ilfornl•, on tne Slh dlY ot June, 1973, •• t~ llouf' of 7:ll o'clock PM. IW~"EOUCATION . Mll'JHM. ~Nii., •r. Oorllld E. Sm1llwoad c .,.k ot .. io 8aerd f!llllPt!ICI OranQI Coat ! Dilly Pllol May ~ 1"9 1596-13 PUBLIC NOTICE Dan e Captures Lead '.fn Soling Tit'le Race All of the invited skipper! have won top honors in various sailboat r a c i n g classes. Many of them have won world, North ..American and national championships. · Jack Swartz, commodore of Westlake Yacht Club, said the hUIBERON. Fr""-IAP) club has invited an equal num· "'I! ""·"'"' place. ber of big boat and small boat -1 Ussing Andersen of Dell-Andersen's start-to-finish skippers to compete in the mkk moved into the overall victory in the fourth heat over special races. lead in the Soling Clas.s World Heiki Blok of The Netherlands AH wiU race the new one-Y~t ~piooships Tuesday and I. Jensen of Denmark, man Cyclone dinghy, a 13-(oot by. ~g ·f:he fourth beat a~d coupled wi th his unexpected singlehander. The Cyclone was ~~~~,i~~ ---~Mi~-. ~~ dings to 26 for Jensen and 3.1 architect Frank Butler. Awdfalian J . aertram, the for G. A. Bakker of the In addition -to the featured winne11 of Monday'" third heat, Netherlan<is. race of champions, a full and-lhree other yadrts were schedule or racing for sltippers disqualified after a film eheck competing in the Sabot, Lido- FlcTiTioos aos•NEss showed they had crossed the Lido Shipy ar<l 14, Cyclone-Banshee an d NAME STATEMENT starting line too s 0 0 n . Coronado-IS classes will be T loJllowlng per.ons •re doJlng And ho '-~~ •:-•~'led "" .. ... men, w ·-~ Add S . held. f~,. s"v~;;•lN°C,.L~~"~~~ second, ·was raised to first S ervice Skippers and crews will be ~ LY, 16539 &r9okh11r11. Fount•ln -competing for the Westlake · c.i~.:=, 1111 EIHoor or.. Lido Shipyard ha s an-Cup, won last year by ~h.~1'· ~ Tvslln v111., nounced an electronics depart-Coronado-15 skipper De I , Tllflln, ~~nt. rn..i ment as one of its new Parker, Westlake Village. tM1MU •• condllciM b'I' • genet'•1 customer services. 'Ibe new Last year's i n a u g u r a I hlp. d lk Mic.~ H1 ... 1e1 .,,. ,,. c epartment will be known as West a e Cup Regatta drew S4 '111.:'•t.men' Wll !!led " ,,.,.,_ Wilbo EI~-· di . . t . f th h ty of Or•• county on M1y ~. 1m. """ .. viuCS, a v1s1on en r1es ram r o u g out "·"'121 f Wilbo I d tri So th ~-1·1 . ·.,...,, Or•ne-C01.i O•l1Y Piiot o n us es. u ern va 1 om1a. . "'4¥ ; 1"' n JO, it 1~1J.n Lido will have the services For further information on P UBLIC OTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE • ISLANDER VEEP Hank McCormack McCormack Namoo VP Hank McCormack, sales manager for Islander Yachts, has i>een promoted to vice president of the Costa Mesa manufacturing firm. The ap. pointment is effective im- mediately. of Wilbo Electronics at its the events, prospective en· disposal, including sales of trants are asked to call (213) new equiJXnent, installation 889-3930. Mailing address is and service by qua l i f-1 e d P.O. Box 309, Agoura, Calif. 1roarine electronic technicians. 91301. Boating Parley BuiUl.ers Meet in Anaheim ANAHEIM -Some 35 top boating industry executives will meet here Tuesday, as guests of the National Associa- tion of . Engine and Boat Manufacturers wh1clt is head- quartered in Greenwich, Con- necticut. Show, since it draws a heavy contingent of exhibiting manufacturers from the West Olast, received a lot of at- tention. A host of innovations will give this the country's biggest pubUc show a "new look" for its 64th ~around next January. Local Coast Guard District 11 Boating Safety chief, Com- mander Richard Rounsvelle, briefed those present on the Federal Boat Safety Act of 1971 whidl affects a 11 segments of the industry and sport, its involvement running from product manufacturing standards .to personal safety aboard. IC• 0" HON·RIS~ONSlllLITY .. _II "-"-17f glvtn that lhe un· 1 lf!ICI wlll not bl rftpl)lillbl• for •ny d ;nl•bllllln conlr•cl«I by enyant ot ~ mYMlf, Cl!\ or •ft.,. thll <1111. I 11 tllld d•Y of ~y, 1913. Roland Mayo.tte, president of Islander, said McCormack has been a major factor in the company's sates! increase bf over 300 percent' for the past fiscal year. Islander builds and markets 31, 36 and 41-foot sailing sloops. In 1972 the company introduced its 40-foot classic style motor sailer. This regional conference of the industry association, con- vening at the SheTa ton- Anaheim brought the groop's large West Coast membership up to date on boating business happenings around the nation and specifically on related NAEBM programs. In the chair was NAEBM Director Walter P. Rhea of Radarsonlcs Company o f Orange, arxl NAEBM staff members Frank Scalpone (ad- ministrative vice president), George Rounds (secretary). and John Gibbons (director of show sales) were present to field questions on the many association functions. Also under discussion at the meeting was NAEBM pro- grams to assist manufacturers in working with the new safety regulations and the activities of the Association's Marine Service Ciouncil which is work- ing to upgrade all segments of product service operations. R-ld S. Ayer1 16'10 N. ~acrflc Avt. Sunset 1Mc11, c1111. to7l2 ll\llil!Jhlld Or1nve COll1 Dilly Piiot. ,,.,., •· 24. 2', n13 11m-n I Before you leap into a career ... Talk to us al Farmers Insurance Group. You can keep the security of yovr present position while you train for a new end challenging career. free of charge. In !act, while YoU learn we'll be paying you lull commissions on ---.:.business you sell. Jump to ll1 Write or can t6dayfor full de ls Us. I l .. ED LANI 4tJO 01111,111 Dr!, •·~ ,oa· . NEWPORT BEACH ' I Phone 540.1834 .... 540•1147 • ' New York's National Boat LEASE ••• a Continental LEASE ••• Mercury Full Maintenance Leising .,. 'four Choice, Nowl 5 ~0-5630 ' • ·- WtdntMilJ, May 2.l, 1Q73 DAILY PILOT Introductory Special 1, On General 's New Smooth Aiding, 4-Ply P<>Jyester Cord Pc>Jy-Jet WHITEWALLS $ 90 for •Wide 7-rib tread design to deliver start/stop traction • Wrep--around shoulder for steering control • 4-Ply polyester cord body for smooth ride and durability Charge It l rEi •m At General Tire SIZE REPLACES REG. LOW SALE FED. EX. TAX PAIR PRICE PAIR PRICE PER TIRE A78-13 6.00-13 2 fo r $49.90 2 lor $37.90 $1.83 878-13 6.5CH3 2 lo r $51 .90 2 tor $39.90 $1.81 E78-14 7.00/7.35-14 2 for $55.90 2 or $43.90 $2.22 F78-14 7.50/7.75-14 2 lor $57.90 2 lor $45.90 $2.37 G78-14 . 8.00/8.25-14 2 lor $63.90 2 for $49.90 $2.53 G78-1 5 7.10/8.25-15 $2.60 H78-14 8 .50/8.55-14 2 for $69.90 2 lor SSS.90 $2.75 H7B-1 5 7.60/8.55-15 $2.80 J 1s-15• 8.00/ 8.85-15 2 lor $73.90 2 for $59.90 $3.01 L78-15• ' . 9.15-15 2 for $77.90 2 for $61 .90 $3.1 3 'A>•llUI• In whll•w•ll o" 811ckw1u1 S2 L•n P•r Tlr• Ml" cttl Cll: Sllc>uld our 8CIO f .o"'" 11111 or !Intl 1<1n 1hof1 Ou•lno lh ll , .. nl. w1 will honoJ• """ O•Olf'I pl•Ctd now fot lulu•• d1u,..., .i UM U '9rl1Md .,..-. Half Price Closeou---i- General GRABBER $ 95 • 3-Aing Whitewall • 4·Pty Polyester Gord while WAS $35.95 they last/ NOW ••• larger 1lze1 et compara ble uvlng1! Complete BRAKE OVERHAUL I. l1t5tclll NfW tteaTy dttt, th1l99 OR all 4 n..hl l . Rebuild tM c,ll11den" 111111 wllffbl 4. Inspect bf-all• ret11n1 . ._. A (NEQ.-,TIV! CAMBER) ~ FRONT END ALIGNMENT l. lfffd brekn -'"'fffiqjl I d11fy brake fl•ld, 5. T11111 gltcf tnl• oll 4 -dni-. 6. R•J>ock fro•t wllffl l1t91o ~ (POSITIV'li CMIBEIU ~ "'. We correct Ca1ter, Camber, Toe-In, Toe-out to 'your car man uf actu re r's apeciflca lions .... safety check and adjust your steerlnpl 1. AdJ1nt brokn 011d ~ eMM,."9'-llC1'Yr Pllll.,.. I. R,ood test yGllr ••t~~ ALL FOR ONLY. •• $' 95 M06T U.S. CARS '°l'i: b1a~1s 110 llllllulf•d> 8 ONLY 3 DISCONTINUED E78x15 :1:1:~.11 ..... $12~. G70x15 Black . s1995 ONLY Walls ...... ••· oN:v 77Sx15 Black s1oa5 Waifs ........ · ea. (TOE-OVT) • $ 50 Only ... TIRE SP ECIALS ! Al'l'llrle1n C•r1 {Carl wllll Air c~. 1ndlor !orslon bert ~,,., ,., .... CtmP1cl ON~~ F78x1S :.~c1:· ..... $15~ ON:Y 600x13 ......... $1~ ON~~ F70x1S f::1i1•: $18~ on Swedlund COMPLE TE CAR CARE SINCE 19S9 COAST GENERAL TIRE 585 West 19th Street, Costa Mes a 646-5033 540.;5710 HOURS: 7!30 to 6:09 Dollr I DAILY "LOT Welcome .Aboard • .. 'ay ALMON LOCKABEY . . """"' ... • •• l: Penache, a 40-foot ultra·light dilplacement , ll#t (ULDB) deJlgned and built by former New• port resident Bill Lee (now of Santa C1'11%) con~· ues to set the yachting world agog after her recent Iaonchlng on Monterey Bay. · • ,1 : Penacbe ..., dealgned and built for Roderic · P.;.k of Richmond for the expressed purpose of wliining the upcoming TrlllBP"c nee from Los Angeles to Honolulu. ' Even before her launching, Tnnspac Yacht . Clllb ofllclala took hurried action to levy a time allpwance ~nalty on the radically de!igned craft wblch weighed only 7,i!OO pounds and had a beam ol•l3Y.t feet. : TPYC abo considered barring the boat from the 2,225 mlle downwind race because she did not measure up to Transpac aalety standards. ' LEE, A 30.YEAR.OLD former Sea Scout from Newport Beach, told me before the boat was launched that Penache would win the Transpac, regardless of handicap-but he was careful not to speculate on how much handicap. He said be had no .reason to believe the boat was unsafe. . But since her launching, ominows reports have coine from up north ~arding both Penache's 1P90d and safety. Let's start with the speed first: Santa Mon*"-'lfegotta I -13 Classes -~ompete I l Uf"IT ........ ATLANTIC CHALLENGERS SH IRLEY HAYCOCK, BOB GEEDY HOIST SAIL But After 24 Houn, They Decid..t No Can Do in• Canoe Canoe r s Call I t Off Santa Monica Bay w11 •life with ....U tiottl Saturday and Sunday la caUromJa Yacht Club',1 Orie i>eslgn Jlea•tta dttw IM boata In 13 cia.e. Three -..... ol the Olympie variety with the Tornado catamarons dnwiDI! the largest llWllller ol -al la,· The ot\>tt. OIY.tl\plc classes were Soling anif 470. Winners In the Olympie classes were Bob and Diane Seaman, Malibu Y achl Club In CBYC; !3) Greeoo, CBY et, L loy d CAL-ZO II) (1) Poquilo, Bob IUstey; YC. ,Rl.lPDES-19 )0) -()) Conlllct, Roy W egand, SSSC ; (Zl No name, BW Simi, VYC; • 'Slap Shot' Wins Race ~~~J:8~~~~~88~ M'. LAUDERDALE, Fla.~ Ken Young, eve in Sollngs. Giant rookie Art (Snapper) Final reSu.lta: Norris of Miami, Fla., scored GEARY-18 (15) (I) Eli!, his """°"d major ocean racing Austin Peeples, CBYC: (2) win <i the year here when he drove 'Slap Shot", a -36-foot Imp, Milt Peeples, CBYC: (3) Miss Kelly, Jerry Johnson. Cigaretle with twin ~ h.p. PVSA; (4) Furious II, Bill fuel injected Mer cruiser Johnson CBYC engines, to ·victory in the 174- , · m.ile Sam Griffith Memorial P-CAT (21) -(1) Black.fins, race. Elliott Olson, CYC; ( 2 l Banshee, Ken Bartlett, ABYC; The first U.S. race of the (3) .Yellow Sybfnarine, Owen year for world championship Minney, SSSC; (4) Hustler ll, points and third Of the year on C le Q • A la • C • T the international circuit, the· 0Up Ult £ UtlC rOSSing ry Ted M..mer, eve : (c( M~s • nm over a triangular ' cooise Chris, Warren Miller, KHYC. from this city to Bimini back • DAY SAJLER (8) -(1) to a ligbtholise ctt·Miami'and NEW TOPSAIL BEACH, her she "would have to do community near Wilmington Tramp, Roger Mu r Ph Y • return here pro~ .a J)ig' suc- N.C. (UPI) -After a little some serious thinking" before Monday afternoon. SFVSC; (2) True Love, Allen · cess for Mercury Marine"'s more than 24: hours at sea, setting out again on the trip. The two had planned to Beausoit, SFVSC. combination Qf its hot 'new 600 most of it apparently spent Mrs. Haycock and Geedy, an reach Lisbon, Portugal in 27 MERCURY (9) -(I) Tilt, h.p. fuel injetted engines with sailing in circles and getting auto mechanic, left Ma.sonboro days, but had carried supplies Geor'ge Patterson, CBYC: (2) three bladed cleaver type pro- (3) Great Pumpkin, Hal Giedl, SFVSC. SANT AN A·22 ( O -(1) Dutch Boy, Oraot Wol'Cfff.er, SMYC. CAL ·24 (&) (I) Poltergeist, Bob Van J...on.. dingham, S B Y R C : (Z) Charisma 11, John Kuyer, SB YRC. CAL-25 (14)/-(tl Gt< With It, Harry Frank, CYC; (Z) Su· zanne. 4" Sberidan, SMYC: (3) Queit, Don. McPbenoo. PMYC; (4) Zephyrus, Roger French, PMYC. 410 (JOl -(I) No name, Dave Ullman, BYC; ( Z I Callidpsis, Al Smith, ABYC; , (31 No name, Bob Bainbridge, SllYC. ( , STAR (11) -(I) Rats, Evap. Daily, St. FYC; (2) Liberty, Bob Kieting SFYC; (3) Scram , Bill 'Gerrard, SBYC. SOLING (9) ( 1 \ Woomera, Ken Young, CYC: (2) Scramble , Marcia Bender. SMYC ; (3) Freyja JI, Jell Lyon, ABYC. TORNADO (23) -(1) Pacific Fox,_ Bob and Diane Seaman, MYC; (2) Merlyn, Sean Holland, MYC ; (3) Gorilla Milk, Neil Harvey, CBYC; (4) Gold Rush, Steve Harvey, CBYC; (5 ) ~p ElliOtt, NHYC. · As an unofficial entry in two races On Mon- tefey Bay (l'enacbe bas yet to measure) she beat other hot boats ao badly that skippers and crews started checking their boat& to see if they were dragging a bucket or bundle of kelp. It was noted that Penache's speed always came on the down- wind legs. ' In a race this past weekend, for example, Penache was 18 minutes behind a well-sailed Eric- aon·39 on a 251Dlle leg to the weather mark. But on .the 36-mlle downwind leg Penache caught and p.Ssed the E-39 and beat her to the mark by 28 ml'nutes! seasick, a man and woman inlet at the Wrightsville Beach for 60 days. Outa Site, Austin Lysight, pellers. have ended for the time being1---.::...:.::...:.::.... ____ _:.::._ _ _:_ _________ _:_ ___ ...:._..:...._.:_ _________________ _ their effort to cross the Allan· ' I CONSIDER NOW that the Transpae ls about 2 200 miles of downwind work. The only weather i•1 is from the start off Point Fermiri to the west end of Catalina Island. · . Winds for the Monterey Bay race were in the lS.20 knot range on both legs. Winds in the Trans· paa can blow as strong as 3540 knots in the mid- PiCific squalls and on the run through the Molokai Channel. ; Looking at the safety factor: In prelimfnary sU.bility tests, Penache was hauled over on her b8am ends and failed to right herself. Further, wben some 200 pounds was placed on her mast, she. showed signs of capsizing, according to observ- ers. ~ AS A RESULT OF those tests, Lee and owner Rod Park have reportedly added an additional 1,000 pounds of lead to the boat's keel to improve her stability factor. It is not uncommon for yachts to be knocked flat in sudden squalls. A convention- al yacht will usually right herself because of the h~avy ballast In her keel. , The consensus of observers after the Monterey Bly races -none of whom wanted to be ideJ1,tified: "If the damned boat will stay upright in the Ttanspac, she will be unbeatable." ' As far as is known at this point, Penache will be an official entry in the Transpac, but-may be assessed a time allowance penalty of some 16 hours over and above her normal rating allowance. Gram, Fenton Hailed For Boating Service Two longtime members of Balboa Yacht Cub w ere hodored for their service to yachting on the local, national an d International levels. Apdy Gram and Dk:k Fenton r e c e i v e d congratulatory resOlutions at the club's 49th Opfning Day Saturday. The resolutions were supplemented by ' congratulatory messages from the North American Yacht Racing Union, New \'nrk. Gram has been a member or BY,C for over 30 years. He served on the club's boa.rd of directors in 1947. Besides his work in BYC he has served the Southern California Ya{chting Association fSCY A) and the North American Yacht Racing Union (NA YRA ) as an expert on racing rules. He has been a judge in SCYA 's Upton Challenge race, Long Beach Yacht Club's c.oogressiooal Cup s e r i e s ; Califomla Yacht CI u b 's California Cup and St. Francis Yacht Club's Perpetual Cup Regatta. He is a member o r NAYRU's Appeals Committee since 1951. Fen.ton has also been a member of BYC for over 30 years and served as com- modore during 1948. His na- tional and international' ac· livlties include commodore or SCYA in 1948, vice commodore of Pacific Coast Yachting Associatoo (PCYA) in 1966; SCYA delegate to NAYRU from 1948 to 1966 and as trustee in the United States JntemaUonaI Sailing Associa- tion. tic in a l~foot canoe. Mrs. Shirley Haycock , 40, of Helper, Utah, and Bob Geedy, 38, of Manti. Utah , ran aground m their fiberglass canoe near here Tuesday evening, about 30 miles northeast o( their starting point. Boat dock operator . Brad Knight towed the craft into his dock near here and the two spent the night in a beach cot- tage owned by Harold Geedy or Wilmington, who had served as local host to the two . They declined to Ullk with reporters Tuesday night, but Knight said they told him they had problems with their rud- der and outriggers that caused lhe canoe to sail in circles. And Geedy, no relation ta the Utah Gf!edy, said the two told his wife in a telephone call that they .. got very Se8:1!1ick -that was Vie biggest problein." Mrs. Earl Rouse, who lives nearby, said Mrs. Haycock, a divorced mother of two, told Marshall Joins Crew Of Intrepid John Marshall, "'ho was a member Of bronze medal· winning U.S. sailing crew in the 1972 Olympics, has joined the crew being S:Clected for the }'ilcht Intrepid's 1974 cam· paign to be the defender of the America's CUp. Marshall, 32. crewed for Don Cohan in the Dragon com· petition during the Olympics at Kiel, Germany, last year. For the past year he has been a regula r crewman on Jesse Phillips' ocean racer Charisma in Atlantic cpmpetition. -He was a prominent skipper in the 5.5 meter Class when it was an Olympic boat. Marshall , who is a member of North Sails' loll at Stam· ford. Conn .. will be a member or Intrepid's afterguard and will have primary responsibil- ity for sa il trim, according to Gerry Driscoll. who ha s been selected to skipper Intrepid's third bid to defend the Cup. New Clinics Now Open COST A MESA-HUNTI NGTON BEACH . medical Undo,o 's un;que p'og,om ;, o sofe ond P'oct;cal • e method for the entire family to lose weight and Weight learn how to maintain proper weight •.• under "ttte strict supervision of Medical Oodors. ' '. --, \ f.e\luction Coll for inlormo11on Monday thru fndoy8 A.M. to 6 P.M. U NDO~:r ~EDICAL CLI NIC ~::~::;~~ •uCN 557 -1 89 l aaWPOIT llACH GARDEll GROVE LOllG IEACH PASADENA ORAN'E • 645-)740 534-2051 426-6549 796-2614 '538-23~5 ,_,,..,....... ..... U ....... MMI (t1tcio..t T1.att..-C"--11 f .... ,,. ......... II.It. ...... .. Ilk tuf. Pf•l•oi9...l l14t. WODDLAllD HILLS $HEIMAN OAKS WEST COVlllA· fillUITOll LA MAIRA ~ 347-5647 719-710> 962-34)1 870-9501 694-1029 ~ • __ ,,...., ~ ...... Oyt ..__ ,, ... ,.... .. ...... MW!r .. IWf. ,. .... .._. IUt. ...... MMlkel W., MHit• .W,. • Can you spOt . , . the camel Filters smoker? '"'" :. '':j'; Even atthe firemen's parade,. everyone seems to Jlave a gimrriicfl-- 4. almost everyone. Pick the one who LUU...~-~-.£..J.---LJJ.,__,,__, doesn't. 1. Sorry. Meet "Clean Ed" Mealmangel, discount diner owner. Gimmick: Leaves his thumb print in1he mashed potatoes. Smokes ABL'.s "Any Brand Left" in the ash trays:2:Nb. AnQ no. Tex'n'Tilly, icky-poo radio-TV personalities. Gimmick: If it moves, intervie111 it: They once even used a stethoscope,tQ talk to a mole. 3. Jerry Jibroni. Spends so much time setting up, he never see~ parade. Smokes cigarettes so super-long he almost needs binoculars to light I hem . 4. He's Tom Thump . .His basa drufn really1s a gimmick: Can't stand the noise, bul he likes lo wear It. Puts cotton in his ears and in hi$ cigarette·filters:-5;Right.tieenjoys the passing.parade, without any gimmicks. Thal's why he smokes Camel Filters. They're good lasting, easy and honest. His kind of cigarette. 6. He's "Sweeps" Streate . Hopes mounted police won't pa-. , • rade. But they always do · Fl ' ·: ! ;,.i. .. camel 11ers. c:AM rr.:L They're not .-for~ , < c:_'. , I ·(bUt .... , COUlcl H foryauJ. Werning : The · Surgeon GaneraJ.Has· Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous· to Your Heellh. \ 20 ~ ·1 .. ~IJ m~ nico1i11 ... per dgO'MIL FTC Roport FEa 73. • Computers Mai·ket Shoppers SAN FRANCISCO (APJ - Computeriiation is Abour to in- vade the supermarket and the results will be savings in money and time for sboppus, foQd distributors say. Everything from cabbag~ to steak will be marked wilh a strange series of lirJeS and numbers which in computer jargon would indica te the size ana contents of the item and the price. AUTOMATION consUltant Larry Russel told the Food Distributors of America 'COO· veotion here that the com- puter system could save ; retailers about '35,000 a yeer, 11e said the' computer would read the markings and relay the prices automatically lhto electronic t a's h registers, bopelully eUmlhaling those Jong checkOl,lt line waits. Better price marking on store shelves ,wilt alert fho~ pers to the cost, since the compu ter mar~gs will not mean anytbil!g in dollars. ap4 cents to most custorileis, Russell said. ''THE ODDS OF getting checked out at a higher price than you should be wilt be cut drastically," he said in an m.._ terview, EXCELLENT INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY Su<<ts1l11I cust~m m•11ufaod11rer o'i ewclu1lve spOrl• deflllnt hi f~tner ""° t1 brlc; m.wlllg lo Oraont• Co11111v trom T•xu. Need mldCll• fl" Hturn tor ujYn1lo11. •nCI perm•nrnt wortrlnt upllfl. li•cel)Uon•l trowlll ~ 1e11Haol. Full Cl .. a.111 !Urnl$h9'11 to wtl41.Utlaol q~\lli.d 01rty. Wrlte A4 #694 P.O. Bor 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 or Call (512J 9.7-3731 ' ~~-~-~--~ ~~~1 f'Bir~~,_ ~I • Hu11l in91011 Center •. 7711 Edlr>g~r~t :uo1i:"1.1:011 lle11c'1 ~ P,hone 6'f2·,Ulilf--'.VY\,-V CHAIN ·~ FENCE -- SEMINAR SPEAKER Robert l. Statton Sentlnar Set By Escrow Association Orange County Escrow Asro- ciation wilJ hold its third annual ed ucatiMal seminar Saturday, June 2. at Orange Coast College, according to J\ilama M)ller, president of the 300 member organization. Jack Lincoln , attorney at law, with a practice in Orange, will be one of the two k<'ynote speakers who will pive an address entitled ''Liabilities. the liitchhikt?rs on the Escrow Ride". Robert L. Statton, Vice DAILY PILOT 17 \I ~ rlrade'sll e ,Game OVEfl THE COUNTER{ • l 1npQrt,,.export ; lhiilh '.IJF o WuiUJe Prob~m 1-r....!~, ~~;:-:,:1or:,T:u...i:•r;:!· M1J:.!2!:i2· !:1'1 ::_ 1 .,_ T ltJ ..... lOY. •nM l"k l•""' ,... 'vtf ~ ~ By JOHN CUNNIFF NEW YORK IAPJ -'lllls I! World Trt1e Week, and as lhe United 'states observes it wlth speeches and dedic:eUops and the usual parapheroaUa or of· ficiaJ ceremony, it ~~, forget that trade Is also a deadly financial game, Events of · the pa~t few weeks und~e the stak~: The dollar was 11gain hit by • '. " FINANCE selling wave, ~ulatois fled curienCies ror gold, tbe-St&er market shimped. and . woild .. commodity market15 were s,lidJ to be nervous. ' ' "'~·---~--..----' I " ' <o 0• ~ •KOii l!'q ~ 4 1• .... Ill\. bring lts upenditures and ~ ~ ; · ~~ ...., ::n ~~ :t: l!IZ ~l·:::r\V oc ~:.t fi::i pt1menb lnto"equillbriwn. lro \,.,; I' 'i4 ::.. P.'.ft' '*~ ~l:::r. Mt ~t~ But~ ~ '" """"" -~ • ~ u Rlwl M> ra il''i "~ "" I!!. "j:.j y ,......-E otllW .a °' l ._. I JtoeO E• j1'i 3\:111 Trn O.iP -IS ---l•o.L.-r~-~ ..a ;.a._ tl•t"'"' -}tt Robrt Olt °" 12\lo Trn OU.. I~ I C' J W.U JO YUUU. ~ \ll ~ -.) Tht ouot.. 3 !2~ Rollins 9 ''"' 1414 Trnoh. F" 11~ I! , aame natlona makiQI tbt = ~;r~ lftC.'"'" H.rin E.;, " 11 R::: f:, , •-~01• ~~k... cs"' 1r" 1:..,,l W.-..1 l'ftA1P ftOt bi ~lo --:r-• '.,-=i:::t,.. ~IF-~ J~ 30~ Ru<kr Ph 11 1~ Vl\Art ~ m ... ~ "'f'-V 1 ' • I ,. ... i llh ... I Stow 22 ~ US Ilk Nt JV, bur the-~ of & ~ ~ •rlvn ,.. ' .... S..O. A~ '\It VS Trk L. J "" equWbri~ • surplus'; tr. ~~"' f!t~ ! I!~ Ae, f~ ::: ~~C'::. 1w. 1~ ~•\tie jt eaitiJd tb.rvw' thein 't Ms 1't ~ rn;;tt J{l~ = V90M Ho ' f"t:' = ..1...a..i. • Maw 'll1i· E:. c ~l'tt lt." ~ ... hi .=.31:2 ~:::co~ m 1L'1,, ·•. .,._ -~• r:'°' ·"' 'f(t SCvtt Inn UV. lt~t Ven $hck ~ JV: .., .. • ; ,_ A ~I Vt H-ii;; ~I. G 11 \lo 11"" Victor! St t l!, .. · 1eEu: ARE .. n1qwtt, .. ~ i:',.=~~~"' •;s1 1 Sc;,:::~ 1r"~~=1 5/: ~ ~··' ,.._ ,., . fH ti IS "nftor C lt l lff Wrld tt ,J Vol 5-1;{ UV.! fol' the -...w-toQ. yn ·~ '°" lildao W1i 1 :10~ Sv M•n:h 10\o'> 11\~ We-'I NG l~ 1114 · . ao..:~ ~·• AM AP" 11 1 ~ ,,,.. Mud 21\lo l' !v..,..itr 10 22 wao,i. Mt 1'~ , ....... United ~ .___.an A ArKrt 3'"' ''"' n,~.. ,,,~ ~1'4,, .v ... uo 2~ ll\'t W1xmt1 I JIM 14M41 ·-~ the~-. Atl'll!'~ Lb l~ r.:u n Cl"O ... , -.,_.Shell• Ci> 1•,;, I~ Wttlb "' '~ ..... ,.IJ enOl"mOQS "'~ m secw'tty Am Jltflf "";, ~ n 9f'I: ft • t -n• ~ 6''r n,, Weedon 1Vt l ol m'"'i.iC'h or the non-COmn\unlst ~:: ~ lt.i; 1?!! 1~:ml f 11\? ':"' 1:=~01$ ll ll :-'11 ~ l2'16. ii::,tl ud-•-~1 1-Nol Am Gr-N ,.'\? .JJ"" In •"w jV• •I~ 51~ "•P 15 1~y,· wit<'J pt 'rv! 1, WOL'l. "' DE pas oN•yeatl. AMlrc sv 1$\(o ~ nt ... 1' c' I .... I~ ~·v l 1 \lo Wit Publ 17\.'i 11 ' • "" .. ,, St 014 1 Iii Sn: H Ale HI tt WI,,! Pk'T 32\4 \,. Only hr Vletnam and JCotea, t: U:.'J" ~ n~ ~z= m 1r' S eM<lt. I 11~ r~ =~:mrdl ~ 1"'ir.:9 ', t but in Europe too t=.,., •r,•, 'la ·~· 1~1r~ 11t 1!~~ std """'s ''" u wusn H J '"' ' • M a result, U.S. ex-tnctr,,J lj"" l, : ~ c s-.. l StkN Brw 12 1s WI•~ PLt 1"' 'O " ALL mREE troubles are peoditures abroad have fer :W; t;t~ 1 ~ 1JU. ~=~T' 1f" ,1i; i::= ~~ 1r' ;= :~ L~ lr-~~' el ted to tr••• es-ially gest tr:adef, ~( t\.as become, in _.___. ._._ .1~.1------"ed A H '' '! 1(911 COM II I ~ El f '""' Wf'loht W ~ ·~• r a G\K', ,.. .. -CUfl~_l':~u ~ e.1.~ ~ ' 9.., 1 K.., o.te •~ ~ SwMr <:P 10 10"" KOl'l'lio: Cp, 1 A U.S. trade. A financially sound some respects, a weaker the inpm. The cdnoem over :?r~co1L' J~~ \!U ~We~~ 1~~t 17~ ~~~fr~ n! ~ t'~Tr Fc'"! ~ , . nation i.\ generally th!>uibt to trader than before. this wu lessened somewhat i rn ,,.. 1~1 Kev1t int '' 13" T•rnSN• 110•.~ 111'6 ZJon• v111 ,,..~ ·1 Th -. •a rd to :t!i •1.4 ICMS Ind 41'. 41"J be a successful trader. e by t be working thesis a wr lr.1' 111' !S1111• v1 12v2 14\~ unsuccessful trader is fman-rr RAN UP its first trade however naive, that these ex· '~Ft ii~ lf'l :<~1i' 1h"! 1~~ cially suspect be.Cause he nms deficit ~f .the century ~st penditureswere temporary. II~~ .... ~ r'40 nl4 ~:!."'p:: Jtz ·~ JO~ ••• , A~t,.,e up defioi.tst er IOU~ . year, with impor~. e's:ceedrng Proof the Unites'· States was \!~!.."t. lll' ti~ t:::~:1' ;,f"" ~ '.. And SO' Whe' n ~-United I exports· by $2:7 billion: In_ the ...... , ·-these' s!a me "••tt F ~ Lewhlr c """ ll\~ NEW YOA:K IUP1l -The 10 "'°'I ' "~ •~ f -did 3\.IU ..... .,.~, &,11Vleu llV. 12 Lary eoy 11 29 •cllve llodn traded on tha OTC maorQ • States' bl-•-•t tr·•-r of all, -,ua~ quarter o_ 1 .. ,., tt apo""".,." said was the ex· 11ne F ,.,,, ~· L'"'' Pl 11 11v. Tut11<1•v •• ~llPll9d bw NASO. • ---t rts b '""&""".., ' tl!-ln CP 6~ 7\lo Lj""Y H N J\\ St.ck V I ... ·-,.. ' the biggest fmancial force in manag~ . 0 ral3e expo . Y Lstence of a U.S. trade surplus 11" Ls 21 ~ L 1 c11mo 1 •~, • -.. • ~ the World' fal'ls to trade el-$2,l billion to $1S.34 billion. that Is .. --·of ... -.-.., :t: t~: l!'ll 31Vt I.Inc 8dst '"" 1 Mof'!lan AdhtV llOAOO 1!'.'4 l•'A-I·· ' -• .,..,._._.. ..,.I"'•.., lbb CP 1 f'ii Lion CIS• • ,..., Am Ell>"ISI 11.S.000 ~·'l'o ~+ l o fectl-vely or to k-p 1"ts B_ut_ imports rose "° $16.26 over ·~"· e-l""'"" ,.... lo Drm 13 13\.1 Lodi,. "'"" 50 A:•nk Oron 113.900 "'-tr.+ \\; ...... -·I""'-• A" ......ua 111» lrd Sons 21\~ 1714 Loews co 51\'t S4 eeu PrOd 15;600 27Vr 2t -2 economy under CO, ntrol or b1lhon. other e ........ ,11tures Pb Evn• uv. 11\., Ma.I Gi• 1,\., IS SOW11n Lil• CP I ~ Uht .. 1~ •I"'-' ~th Np, 17\' !! Ml RllV ~~ 5111 Penn Llt. 21\ :i\~ ,,,_ O'herwl,se convi··-~-world . And for those who long have renco 1 1lU 1~ M•Ut kt 37>.t :>11v.. Montoomerv sir '.ct. 2•v. 24"1 ft. ........ Ule' I k I ll'lll jV. Merit Fri 161,(, 16"' Aonlco Eaoola M N. 1 ~ i-'1>-of its strengtll, fear snN>!lds. viewed U.S.' :ln>d u .St rJa l BlJTLASryearthatsurplus .~~A~ ,.,., M••Y KY ""'16\llD111 Gen ~:;& 31 n + ·1 ~-I de shi "labl -•-• f · the N. !Kk.t>e 12 lj°" M< Cm<k .0 'l 8a11k1mer ~rJOO •1'4 •I~+ ~I i The fact is thaf while the ea r p as unassa1 e, evaporai.eu, orcmg txon uck•w rv. McQu•v 16\'> 1 v. __ Uru-ted States ·1s,by far the b"ig-consider , this: The f i r s t -administration to call for a 111J,~ A' W4 P.111 Z:~':in ~111 ll NASD ~o1ume lod•v 1.011,300; 6dva1*.: '· · --.. -• f al"-·win· C•rfl T•o 1J 2J:W. Merld In ~ ,,,.,6f6; dt<llnes 111; unclMnoed 17$2; lofal . quarter rise m exports new ,vuuu o t M ·• w1 C1p,t sow ~·• i• M'l'' Fr 1t~'• ~~ Jlu. resulted main 1 y from trading nations, scheduled to~=~ ~,il lll~ l,~ ~1r.11;~as ~i? ~~ 0 1 agricul~I shipments; the gtt under way this fall. ti:'~. Pi \l\,. l~ ~~~1F~: 1r' ~·4 t, Insurance P resident of Security Title lnsuranCe Co., will address the hmuu"'-"'1run.,9~~l ·M· :.t-c\"'~ ~"'t-:,-; '·Tllail a crock' or a dllelfdapi.'.""\,,_ uve< oe rise in imports mainly from The thrust of_ the us !fi" \o ~ S\~ Moi.11: in 31 s2 Gainers &. Losers • • 11'.1 ., 31i,r. :n ... Moor• se 2n • 21 '-------------industrial purchases. proposals is that trade among II~ er • 13..., 1s Morr1111 1t 20 1 1' I A ! "' •-t __,,_. I Ions ~ d ~ b 4.1.-l'lrl• Sec I M!tor Cl ~ 10~ New Yor11 IV PO -Tr. 'Pitowffta lltt • · a ... ~ "81~ ·!"'~ . Qr oat ~ma e uai'.r y 1.n1;: ui u A ~.'~,. M 1 °"'" ~ '~' ""°'" ,:r· stock• tr1e1 h•" 1111n«J t11e l· • • • 1 Woihl' trade~:wee1:·slws ute reductiona of tariffs and ~'"° lg:,t llU t:, ti:isJ ~ ~ r'~·-"'-' :-;s:1· ~=-i:.r-~'·• Robert H. Pyke, chairman qf the seminar, says that Westgate-qalif~a Insur- ¥lllp!iasis wUI be on· tW<l pa.net ance Co. of Anabe1m has begun .dis~ssion groups, to cover construction · or its ntw $1.1 .proble'ms in taking and proc· milliOn home ofrlce building in essing:s escro\VS. Newport Beach. · U.S. automt>tive indu.!try 1,S . qootas and other restrtctions =f 5~~ ir' ~\lo=: ~ 1~~ 1,1.1. "'~.~ ,:, ~9fltao. -~=.'."!~ ~{q dependent UPon un. Ports from a~-~ -•~•s """"• ,. ]\ • jl N9"hm 1Mf. 11'111 lctfferenca ttetwMn n.. -vi-ut r1. " aru-•· UUICll ro-• · I ~ s m Newll Co 11111 lJ orlc• aond the curfOl!l ,.ii'.•t bkl prlc:e.' • 32 oountries, that· the-i mood of the Unit~ ousn1 11•A 11 ~J'i:fa.,06 \J: l:i.: GAIN•Rs I (elephon-w· e .... eqwr' ed " Stal -that of lbe ff ded 1 co 11~ 11 f'H 11'1 1 1 ' · '-" ....,.. r 'SO eS 13 0 en rutch A: i"" ~ Nl~D ~ jl14 3l"4 l Fo1terGrt .2111 2lY,+ ! Up, SI., materials from 18 natioru$. gi.ant discriminated agaiMt ::.l,N1~Mi'1 i4~ ~11,(, N111::~ a 1 ~• 31"• 11111v ic1d .Oi6b •'14+ VP "· l" · ' • nl ~•I' '" Nordilr 211 211" 3 01nktr WOl'llk lh+ llo Vp li.t,J that 75 percent of newsprint is . by nahoni' that once were a.rt §:11 1,\11 11v. ,,.,., 1111G 94-'r ~ ' R1vna 1ndust 211+ \t vo 21 j• imported. , ,. wei:UI. t w ic. now, ti . a11 '" 31 1, "lu(lr .111 2 1~ 9 ~:u 1 ~1n1~~ ~+ 1 Vo 11 I Tb f: cost iS $7.50. f.(l r According to HanS C<o~feng, I . members and '$8.50 for non· companY.: presideqt., tpe two SAVE ON CHAIN LINK members which' in c I u des story. 56,000 square foo t IT JS-OBVIOUS-tllen that the Unit~ ~1's, despite its might, must -trade. And, because it is, the world's ·big- ge~ single n;l8f'~, the ttst of the world wants to see the United States trade ef- fectively. -• bu h' h 'ther ''' I 1~ NDl<lll Co '-' #Ill 5 Srvme1tr .!»ti 20 + l• "' lf•p _ ~·m -•c mer-r such Kls oa 1011, 1 Oekwd H ~ 7llt 1 L=rf, <:orl 1, + 1\t ~P, 't u u -....uuuu e-ttor In ~ no Oe.1n Or '9'4 .sn•.;, · ·· as. Jn Europe, or innovation l'i!!> AR ''~ •2~ oc"" e:. 11 :1' ,, 1i ~~:x G•~el 1l~f 1~ ~; t .1 al i:;:c lntt '°" ~· O<~r Mt S • 5'4 11 ACMAT oro I I UO .S.(j PROTECT FAMILY, HOME AND PETS registra tion and l u n th . building will the newest ad-* FAQRIC W .. EN Programs and regi stration dition at the 200 acre Newport 50010 OFF INSTALLED Irr WARDS ' fprll)S ' can be o~tained by Place . commercial ' arid, light ~ writin"• to Mary Jacobs , indU"Stry development. 'M>e i~ en-v~rlovs ftelgMf and qu•llllM 11 •lurCly, 10....m1!1f' f nce 11lvillil.-·1d • · -or .tr"" wn}'ko11e11 tabrl<. Wlr• 11brl< •• flOt·dlp .11•1 ntted tor u1ri Seminar Registra r, P.a . Box suratice bu1 ing pt'Q]ect lS a pret1e11on, • • -749, S a p t a A n a , 92702. joint venture of the Emkay •Gate1, pa1ts, topraU. flttl•IJI a11d hlstollotlo11 • •xtr•· ot illl' Registration be gins at 9 a.m. ;lopment Co.; and South regulor IPw prfces. Call 'for frff ti~I~ today! · and th'e program \Viii conclude t Construction Co. The '====W=O:::O,;:D=A=~=·=w=R=O=U=G=H=T=IR=O=N=~=·=·O=A=VA=;IL=·='=':::'·===::_::"l:_:_3 _::p::,m::·:_________ itect is Laiigdon & \Vilson. ____ i ___ _ ' In fact, one of the demailds most often repeated. biy trading partners of the United States is that it m:ust get its payments in balance, that i& .. ·and self-denl , as in Japan, am 'cf1 ff,." m: 8::11 .. L: 1i~ 1J 1j Pr11•0 roc1 11 1v. v11 ~T< have themselves became •"' Hd 10\1'1 i1 "lli FV .... ro • •~ 1 A:uckv P11rm1 it I i u11. ' ' giant• l~Asc, lf11 1li" ""11 Coet l5V. 16"" ls :i:M«l~c':i°Ti' L "'° •"' ~= :J r · al 32'.4 " "lt..-.t ·~ ,,,. 16 K•ll•U•b Lab l \lo -. Up .. Gen 1 ~~~"'NA ~., r,z11LtROttt PIL .2.4 11 I l\.!i Up BUT WHILE f ~ de "' ~ ZlV. te Crp 6\lo ,-., ll AUlad Ven 6 •Y, \'t /,j.O ) ' ree w8 may l '~, )It;..., ... O '~IL , ... lt CIMlll lildl.lllr ""' \lj up ' • O j'llo 14"1 ~ r "' • "" :10 CIM11net Comp 41' "" VP t I be the Ideal of many natlonB, 11k111 0 v. 3•r Paoce•r ll..., 3'"" H Am Arll Cr•tt µ;, ~· Up : ( ion 1.,~b ll\t :J.1\'o .,ltC Gaom 17 1"°' GRT Corporll 2V.+ 1"' VP l lbose ·tlOble thoughts Oftt!l\ 1K E• 31) Oit( Lum :M'\4 lSV. 2 Kustom Ellr11 71,)+ ~ IJp, , ·,; I Paoo :z.o;, 13 °1~ Brd ~14 'j4 Mdullne lntnl s + Vt VP I become submerged by self i~ 1 Nucel ~·1 5"• P•So •rd 1•1o 9''< s wuson HJ inc 12-14+ 1v. Up 11: • t, JI · de metlm narov c •'ilo l1;. Paon 0.:0! 1 11~ 11•111 · erest. ~ tra ~ es QU 0S&~ 12 1 ,,., P11u1 Rev ,,..., 1s 1.01111$ ,., me••• painful sacrlf1-s. Na--~ .. t'o 2''~ 'j1'-Pauley P ~~ 1'' I Ol11!t<;omp, Crl H-t\li ff t09 --" , ... u 5'·~ P'thl C/11 ""' lJV. ! Al11Pr1• 01te 1\li-411 If )l.3 -_ in_"""'""'rlion to the sacrifice. ',','moo ,•,1 13\:. 2•'h Pe1 H&H 1~v. 11·~ 5 R~•'O!L T.«IL i v.-" 1 ......::. ... 1 7V. P1G•tl. w ,,..., 19 ' 1moera1 Ld Iv ~ t t ;'ll Y"-"'Y" 11"• '' Pi!'tro Lw 7'"' 7V.. 4-P1v1ao~• ce1111 -1~ \'i 1-------------------------1 F11v1 Or11 6111 7•~ PlcN Sa~ l ~ 7 e1mn Hind 11 -$ ff • _, . ,, -~tf.{~e:llfwi~ !, CJi•r9fs·'an· · tionalistlc fervor seems to -iAft ,,, P~1,",' 1 9V• Pew 111 sv 11 11v. c1 A:ltytnv w1 ~ \4 ~-, ~lnor~t 12"" p~ Plnkrtn 21 n I C1pttqll11tl Air l'h-:t if )rl lr----------------... ------.. 1,.~' T"~l~ 21!? .tt ;::~ ,:i ,;r· ,~ 10 ~~ra~:tr~: If= ,. SEE THE l, 9"73 J~ NOW' •r: WllF 1t' '51'1 Pl1nd Mk 17(! IR'.4 11 vnlnl St<lnll 14-v.. t\I 2 F ~'-.. '~ 110,,, 1111"4 PO!>U •ro ~ 5'111 12 CIRltvlnw .lib l lt-2•Ao ·!(1 --' • ~!i:.1·;,; pJ 13~ ·~ .;,: 'l,. 'l~ ll ~:::.'i''I>~';.!: lit: ~ i1:0,,; l, -Charter·~-~ Accounts , -'Open a perso_n.al checking account at • . _our new Huntington Beach office on or before June 9, 1973'andyou will never pay _a monthly ·servi~ charge regar!lless of the _balance maiitla'.ined; aSking as the accouin-sr•ys attlw:-Blt!! a . Significant annual savings as : a <:;olden State Bank ·-charter Account. Extend'd .banking hours , _Fqr your convei\i~,~e will be open on an extended hour schedule through June 9. FOllliwi{lg;hourl·app/X ta lobby, Drive-in andWalk-upWindows.~. ~l \. 1 Monday thru Thursday, 9 :Olia.In. to 5 :00 p.m. Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00p.n1. Saturday, 9:00 a.Tni to l:OO·p.m. Be a Charter Acrotu\t·. · 'VisitoufNew Ac;colUlts-Dcpartraat~fOdW.t ... , . . I l • ' ' " • ... A)f,:.c.fi\i•, ,_.fiit 1011w•ftit1 fpr ell. Jp,in u1.f1;1r tao1ty tef,e1hme11t•. • l ~r'~f 41 ~~t . ·",N STA-PE BANK '. i&r · ~{I.Venue, Huntington Beach· (714) 842-8875 ' lrr , ~C.. ,,.M' Bell Gardens, Covina, Downey, Los Nietos, ,· ! \ ,, ~· ... ~, Pioo Rivera, South Go.tc, West Covina. • • 1 T~ •4 , , Member F.D.LC. · -.ooct ,,,.,. .. ·· , '1 ' ') .. .: . •• J • f PANfERA by deTomaso •.• imported for Ltncoln-Memtry. Italian coachy,·ork created by the brilliant Ghia Studios of Turin- Ford designed the 351 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four wbeel Jn .. dependent suspension:andrm4f-Ship engine placement. Five speed gear box, fully synchropized ••• .. PaJJtera ... i:tallan for Panther • , . TODAY! Personalized • I ~· Efflc:lent Order For You ... 11 or I FrJ.,,d' Mey be used on env.r~t• ••~return ad4rMS Jehels'. Al10 very htflclY •i identific•fioit l•bels for mar~in9 ~~nil . Items such es • boOl:s1 tecord1 1 phot 'ett. ~tbel1 itick on 9lli1 •nd .fn•Y bt u' 'a for matkin9 home canned focd items. ~ l•bels are printed wit~ 1tyli1h Vogue typ on f.ifte qu11ity,white· gum.,..d p•p•r • • ,,- "!:!:~,Gr.nt ~ /~:~ ,...... u u"" 11 """~l1f"G'e 1"-" 1,~,-. ,,.,, El t\'i O PSN ,Cer 11~11 11• «e· • 2flo-41" ~ '\eni e .,1,.., 25' Publthr l~li I'll 11 Fblna alNI l,._ • fl '<• ~ I~ j 'lolt 211.to Pvtn C~P 4~'t •"'II 1' WrltlMI ll .lJ 1 114-lV. 10 Kh 3 H Qon1r CP 1illilo 11" 19 Gll:l Cornpulr l -1/r ,,, roi Fd '"' t 'lo Q111~r th J~ 11'11/• 20' s~e..,.,~ inc 1 ...:. l'I I • l"u11er H 13 13\.'i Quee" r11 11 11~~ i1 111 AHi l11v •"'-'111 l''!T tink SH 9'1' 1()~/, Ael~r (p I t 22 C evTrAI 't wt 1\'o-\~ 6. !111:v c •~~ 71"o Aaoycm '' M1rk l~iim• ,,,,._ \'i §JI ,. lbrth 71"• 2'3 1711 17• 1• ln0.0r¥ 0UINI' 1 -114 f,7 rtlnk lS\11 '16 R•Vmd 1114 1''4 2$ lnll TlmtWllr ~ Ill f .\t{ ' -~-"""--- S •tedtlndl.1, Mt)' 23, 191J Dettta SalJpoenaed "' Ex-SEC Leader mobile phone --·--place U receive telephone calla In :rvurcar --·--........... ---·---No Coplt•J '""'1tmtMt Mo11tft t• Mo11th ~.~Jo i l••i• on~~Gf l'OU~ IY llA010711f1'110~1 SHIVICE ,.,, 401 s.s.m.Fo. S..NAllo 835-3305 r ' A LANCASTll CONTRACTOR complalll6d that the eight-page J.lstlna of state and federal liwa not only la con!ulfng but will Ylrt\laJly dou~• tho cost of t~e wort, from between 420,000 and $25,000 to about U0,000. A •late ofllctal who Hked to remain IDOll)'• mous called the IJJUnfl "crazy." " -f J. • 1 ... Stoc'ks:(;.yrate, End ~ith Surge NEW YORK (AP) -One stock market rally faltered Tllesday, but a second carried prices to their lint geoenl gain in • week. The avenges ',swung sharply upward at the opening, withdrew at midday, then surged again tn the afternoon in wHat anlysu described as primar- ily a tedmlcal reaction to the tailspin of the past two weeks . .. The market got Into a very, very oversold condition,'' observed Al.an R. Shaw at Harris, Up. barn &Co. Broken said the market's behavior continued to show the effects of cop.cern among investors over the Watergate case, international monetary uncer- tainties, and the domestic ~nomic outlook. .1111 .• 1m s.. DAILY PILOT -. Complete Closing Prices American Stock Exchange List --~· .10 DAIL V PILOT Wed""41J, M11 23, 1973 TV IDGIDJGHTS NBC O 8:00 -Adam 12. Officers Malloy and Reed (Martin MUoer and Kenl M<Cordl h•lp pre- vent the death of 1 6-year-old boy and tnck down a 13-yeaN>ld drug addict. ABC o 8:30 -"The Spiral Staircase.• A youn& girl exposes a mysterious killer in this 1946 mystery movie . Dorothy McGuire, George Brent, Elhel Barrymore, Kent Smith. CBS fJ 9:00 -Dan Au gust. Burl Reynolds' action·adventure series returns for the summer. Reynolds stars as a homicide detective on the po- lice force of a Southern Ca lifornia city. TV DAILY LOG Wednesdoy Evening MAY 23 UOIDD O!lil!!JEl!IGIJ- m9-8 lRpl lllHlllQ An&l!IS VI, White S0'.11 II Qrlc110. l1) lit S11111t O W1n!H De..:! or Alh• m n.e fllnbto1111 m""'"' ti} lift DulCI bl91fldl m HecllfPl4rl ltd1a G)TMta.pa l:.JO ({) ...,.. •• times D Mowle: (tO) ~, .. n1c 1utta11" (dr•) ·64--Mlchlel Connon. (I) C1S """W11ttr C1onklt1 0 HM Cut Wiii Tmtl ~ Mtn Ortffln Show m""'"""' fl1) Comm« EdltCltlon m Jo1nn1 Ctr10n Show fl') lto¥1l1 m Tiit frant Pl&plt m Uttlt 1t11e11• !:OOf)ffi O!!JN,., (I) Truth " t.naeqNntt1 (I) Untllntd WMtd 0 W1uir1 My Lint? m 1 Ltvt L11t1 El!I-· 1:001J ([l Din A111vat. A 11!11m of !ht 1cllon·1dYentur1 strles sl•nillf Burt R.,nolds n 1 homlcidt dtltctlvt on the police lo1ce ot • Sou!hern Ce!I· fOlftll city. m°""" fl) "1111 £I!J DEIUT J1111 WIYM (R) Artist/ wril&r Francoise Giia! Is 11'11 rue,! In tht fllSt of st1W1n·P1rt Mrin. m J1pn1M1 lan(Up Pro1ra• .. lOANm: m.,,_ f!I S1trtt SptKill "Bonnlt 1'1ltt and P1ul Butterfltld's Better 01YJ" U!) Muchld!A rt.lllan1 a!) D C1!1 de Ml l1rril 10:00 B £1) CHlllll (II) SuS1n Oliver pllys, a n1tlon11ty known photo1r1· pller who lll'llb C1nnat1 1 reluct1m !Mrt)' lo piotedint: htr boyfrlend'1 life wMn she rm1ls he Is 1 hl11I· ty publicized 1uthor of 1 flcllllous "blo~r1phy'' of one of the 11'1tion'1 we11!hlest men. 0 ®} m st.AflCH ''Short Circuit~ (R) C. R. Crover is 1ul1ned bJ World Stcurilies to slop 1 scien· t!flc 1enius from destroyln1 mis· sion eont1ol center. 0 (l} (I) tm Owen M1flhll\ ''five Wiii Gel You Si.:" (R) Ch1rpcl with ii«Jury. 1 lriitilentd loin Shirk vie· tim lllls the uturer's ttron1 arm m f Dnllll Df lut!nil @) !111,....nU Ntril ff;) WM11t, lllu l Oliy CD Muna min. (Ji.l Afk!on..:!01 de II Cofllunldld 0 MO'tlrl: (ziir) "Odd• ~ntt T .. £9 L11rs' Club lllOfrew" (d11} 'S,__..1rrr 8tl1lonte, al Spet4 Rmr Robtrt Ry1n, Shelley Wlnltrs. 7:SO 1J WKkJ W1fkl If loNU\11 Wl• : ~ .:,.e;:,1 tm Ernest Bor1nl111 111•1ts. (J) He1•11'a Hmes a!> Y•rietJ ~~~1!11H1;,;";u,:~.:, i0:JO n lfns from I ustd Cir d11ler. ht dtcldn llJ M11Gllt'1 Hlnpvt lo b\1st Iha etr d111trshl' by PIU· Ul) A!ltlt AP!llication of Ulht to _ ln1 11 1 utlslled custGmtr during form is \111 s~I interest of LA 1 live TV ltletlst. sculplins M1it Stephens. !ht sub· @ T1 Tin tlM Tnith jecl of !his doc.ume~1ry. (1) You hMd ftr It (E llPP1 Cosas Comt4y Sf/liu 0 MllllOll $ MoM: (t) (2h1) Cl:) Ntw1/S,Orts "BotlllJ a.r• (dr1) '53 -Al1n , Ladd. James Ma1on. 11:00 fJ 0 0 Cf) m GE) Ntw1 (fftl Wiid to111d011 rn rn ®I Ntws 8' 11111 Cir! g On• StlP lqond m Dr••"" fEl storefront "Compto~ Cammunl· (J) M1r1hal OlllOl'I c1tive Arts Ac1d1my" m Truth or Con11t111tneet m f011nt Dr. llld111 m Mft!1: "Tiit Purplt 0111(' (mys) fiD Thlt It Yrm Ute '6G-Barry Sullivan. Robert 811•1. (f)Adda1111 f11nlly a!) Cltud; JtllnMlll Nitt ltlt 1:00 IJ CiJ Son.,. , ... Cher (R) Jein 11:15 al) CiMllll 34 St1pl1ton ind Lyle W1gon11 1utst. D l1al m Mllll 12 (R) Ofllc1rs ll:JO D (JJ cas late Morie: (C) "Th Milloy 111d Rttd help p11~1nt !ht hpl'f It AIM A flt'ftl"' (ad'I') '66- d11th of a 6·ytlr·old boy ind trltl S1nt1 Btrrer, Ril• H1ywt1rth, Yul ' Violinist .S epping Out of Spotlight Season 's end I! a sad business al any time and there was eve.n more reason lo think so last weekend at the Orange County Phllharmooic Soclety..-1 final offering of the lm-73 program. For we learned at the UC lrvlne program deli~ by the Los Angeles Philarmonic Orchestra that concertmaster David Frisina will not be oc- Cllpying his first chair next fall when conductor Zubin Mehta and his ensemble come Ollt way again. The genial David will be there. let 1t be stressed, but his gifted violin will have mov- ed a yard or two to the left in the area that reeks, in the i.."ll· mortal words of Sir Thomas Beecham. "less of hair polish and more of elbow grease." THUS ENDS a first chair span of '1:l years and David's many admirers in the OCPS most delighfully marked the occasion witb e splendid pla- que recording that span of lime and noting, via president Don Ferguson's comments. that David joined the LAPO in 1943. Don also noted in an observation that brought ap- plause from David's many friends that Fri1ina has not missed one of the 50 Orange Coun ty roncerts presented by NATIONAi GfNHAL THIATIES NOW PlAYING RESERVED S!AIS On Sale Qaity 12 'Iii ! MARlON BRANDO .ltL 'J>Bi1s WICNT' •:'J · .., ..... u.o "THE CUSS Of ""'.o. ''YOUNG GIADUlTlS" W.DATS •:tS SAT •• SUH & MOM 12:1S "'CHiil llAOllS" ..SEDUCTION Of l~CA"" IOTM 'IATVll~ IAT1D !XI TOM BARLEY Music Box the LAPO in her term of service. Th.at kind or dedication speaks r ... It.elf. And ii Is good to know that this fine artist will be wtth us for at least three more years even if he is a little further out of his critic's line of vision. IT WAS regrettable Friday night tha t Don Ferguson's an- nouncement and D a v I d ' s response were almost in- audible beyond the first 40 or 50 rows of the capacity au· dieoce at UCL Apparently no one thought of providing a microphone for the occasion and it was necessary for those of us charged with recording these occasions to cull the details from privileged members of the audience who were within earshot of the proceedings. Don is a delightful chap at any dlstanoe but he was the first to admit that his vocal chords were not designed to convey his spoken words to the far recesses of Crawford Hall. ON TO TIIE concert itself \'lith this critic's choice of Gustav Holst's "The Planets" suite as the piece d e resistance of a program that · gave tq> a solid and splendidly delivered f i n a I e to a memOrable season. Mautro Mehta is an avid admirer of Holst's sadly neglected work and his regard for the British composer came through very clearly in four segments of the si.J:·movement work -Juµiter, Mercury, Venus and Mars. Jupiter and Mars, in particular, enjoyed magnifi· cent r.eadings under Mehta's direction· and it was good, strolling around at intermilr sion Ume, to gather from th e comments of a delighted audi· ence that Holst is much more popular with the populace than with the .programmers. A FINE reading o! Brahms' Third ended the program and the season with this critic con· eluding what he has always felt about the work -that its third and fourth movements are vastly superior to the first and second. Have a good summer , OCPS. You too, LAPO. And the best of luck to you, David Frisina. Chapin Taking Hel1n Of NY's Met Opera NEW YORK (AP) Sch4yler G. Chapin , acting J!'eneral r.1anager of t h e MetroPolltan Opera, w i 11 become general manager on Julv 1. Chapin, 50, succeeds Goeran Gentele, who was killed le st in a , car crash in Chapin, who had bttn Gentcle's assistant, has been ac~ing general manager since Gentele's death. C h a p i n immediately an· nounced that Beverly Sills. the coloratura star of the New York City Opera, will make 1975. in ~ossini's "The Siege her debut al the l\.iet April 7, of Corinth." AND "'Ffnlan•s Rainbow'" (GJ -... t·-~-'· ll. STADIUM ' I ;,,:~ ...... LIJ.l"Y..1 ll.lll.~ "Soyl .. t GrHft" !Pei I .... "Skyjacked" I PG l "Class of '44" IPG I .. "Last Su..,. er" I PG I "Tiie Gotaway'' I PG l .... "Lady Sings Tiie ll•os" ( ll down 1 13·ye1r-okl dru1 addict Brynntr, Mucello M1str0i1nnl, Om1r TM M;10::~~"r"' • U.A. cm ...... '°"'" COiUT CMfU.U-T\llSDAY We: I~"!' .MD ...... CR}UMI ........ °'.!"'-, .. P.M. :JJdo . . "W. M.ttltl ... /C. ,_., • •·,.n• .., ntL1 . .f" Clllll l:ntwMcl "JOI!: IUDD"' ..... ill c.Mrl (l"OJ M.11fl9 Sntifll "TRAVILS • WITM MY AUNT .. ""'-....... ,l POOLS" 8•1111• c. ....... l'O) 3C5i Via Lklo NeWJ>Ort Beach PhoM; 673·113:»0 At the Entrance to Fabulous l,Jdo Jsle EXCLUSIVE - "SLITHER" IS. • . A dellghttul wacky, zany comedy on. a great program with a great cast geared for great hol iday entertainment. • BURT REYNOLDS YUL BRYNNER IN ''FUZZ'' • HIGH l'WNS Dllml ill ~-­YOU'LL LIKE MY MOTHll TIM COIM'A'I' • lfMT1, WOILD'S OllATIST ATMLm111 t WHm WILDllNl55 '•"Dl•1•r....,.. •I ••-~ltu••I CS•.J ••1·1411 a,........., Dim HADY 111 PLU1' Gta.41 C. KOTf HOSP~~J- ,,. ........ 1 f , ..... , al I•~"' 51. ~·5·Jlll _. 10 -wMM Oii ·u· ""'T-1 CLASS OF '•4 (PG) -YOUNG GUDUATES l'Gl 1\11!..ftl.: 0PtN t t 5AT.-0PtN IJ llOOll • 0 ())(I) ED Pu11 Lyn6t Shn Shari!. "BHly Jack" (PG J Pau: ho1111 to ob!1ln a 1(1)1'1~S 1irl Q @) 1I'Joll11ftf' Cam11 Ptlylll1 1 ---'=======--...:.~~;;;;o~~~~~~=============-"'11~1 -....::'111111111111111111111111111111111111111111~~~~~111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111~_!_--------·----IS v1ullon repltcemenl for his SI(· Newm1111nd C111rll1 Ct!ias 1ue1t. r111ry. bill Howit Is be tttr q1.11lifled U Min In 1 S.ltet• for the job. m Trvth or ConMC1Utm1J 0 @ ({) Cil Whit Wtfld el ln· aJ Ptrrr M1ton l...Ul111111nt "Nllhl Tr1in to Terror" fE Htnllll!OS Cor1la The frly'Sltrt of I wt1m1n murder1d EJJ) Am1rit1 '73 aboard I last movlns tr1in. llHn1n a> Ch1111p1onshl11 Wrtdlln1 Wvnn ind David Steinber1 st11. U) JtpantH lln111111 Prt(TIM m To TtH the Trvtlt 1:30 0 @! g;, Nit Wed111d11 Myt-lZ:OO fJ M0\'11: (C) "TIN l1lt1rlc Caper" 1try-McMll11n I Wiit "Terriif (1dv} '66--!acques Sernas. Times Two" (R) Andrew Du1g1n m Alfrttl H1tchcod Prnt1b port11~s IA underworld llgUll Wh0$t 1Z:30 IA News 1mpir1 is lhrellt~d whe~ I Wit · m Mowit: "Mtplticnt Dopt'" nm 11r&es lo lest1ly 1111nsl him. (com) '.t2-Henry fond1, Lynn Sari. 9 Morie: (t) (2hr) "Thi Ditta 1!J Ptttlcoet JLmttiff f1dor" (draJ '70 -Christopher 6!0!'11. Yvtt!e Mimieux. 1:00 (jl DO (j) Nm 0 (])CI) fl)AIC W1d1111ll1y @I It TH111 Tliitf Movlt: (90) "The Spiral Sttlrute" rmys) '46-0orothy MtCulre. Ctorie 1:45 IJ Moril; HAJi~a K.11tllin1" (d11) Brent, Ethtl Btrrrmorr. ic:tnt Smllh. '.t8-Vivien lela;h. A yuun11 1if1 1xposes I mrsterious 2:00 m All·Nllllf Shor, ''Hullttr If tht killer who cannot 1cctpl physic1I Unknewn," "luilll'ffnt Pifls" drltcts in h11m1n b1in1s. m Min CrllflR Sltow Vikki tin, 3:10 ()Mo.ii: "fM Molt Pto'lt" (sd· Mic Divis ind P1ul Williuns 1u1st. Ii) '57-John Alar, Cynthia P1ltkl Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES ,...)0 O (C) "North to Al11k1" (adv} "60 -John W1yn1. Stewart Gran11tr. 10:00 (}) "Yotnrblood H1wU" Put I (dr1) '6.t -James fr1ncistul, Su· z1nne Pltshelle. O "Rl1111!11., ('lfrs) '49 -llenry Hull, Miry Btlh Hurhtl. ,~ U:OO 0 "1'11 Mo ""''"' (com) 'J3 _: Cll)I Gtln1, M11 Wtsl. "TH flMI· ,, tlladtll" (WtS) 'S.l-Wlllllm Elliott. 1:00 lb' (C) "M1rt ot Zorro" (1dv) '0- Tyrone Powt1, Ulld• D•rnell. J:JO O (CJ ''Tiit Co1rt Jm1r" (com) '5&---01nny ll1ye, Glyn!s John1. 3:00 (jl (C) "55 D1ys •I Ptlrl111" Conct. (lira) '63--Ch1rlton Heston. (!}ii (t) "Ser111nt ltyllel" (dr•) 'E9 -let Marvin. Brtdlord Olllm111. J:JO 0 "Cull lrttle It MonllftJ" (MS) '57-S1111in1 HaydM. 4:00 B (C) "If ..... Aunn" (COl!l) '62-Sandta Dee, Bobby 01tin. 4:l0 (I) Slmt IS IOAM listinl KOCI-.:, CllANNEL ~ Orange Cou nty's Ull~~ televi sion sleUon. KOCE-TV, ha!! sche:Juled the following special progranu today. Detailed listings of Channel so·s programs are carried in the Daily Pilot's TV Week each Sunday. 4•00 TIM 0,..11 Ctrt•um., Cllll"' !C) .. AllC't o! Ao-n<let Wlllcll 1111 ,.roted IM COMUmff•• lt~OOll 4ol ~·)O '"''"c c~"' cc1 l!!rJuc•!lon fOt ,,.. .. ttllool1rt lo tile tune or humor <111!1 '"'"It, 1:00 11'1•1'111 '"'"' fC! fductllOMI •lld t'l\11'1'<11 verlttv I« prlm1rv KhtOI (lllklr111. •~oo Tiie Of'IMI C"'-.itr Ct111n1 (Cl ''AIC"I of Aootlocl" Wl'llc1'1 lttl .. rot«! tlw Con1umt•"" llJJ>OQ 44 t·• Al M.. aftm (Cl "ffl· i telll(l<ln«" l"'°" ,, s.. llt.lll'IO W~y. Met 23rd, •I •:OD ... M, 1'00 IOULI (() nt•Ck Cutturt f.0 ""'"I 11•,k tO('ltl lu1111, ••thll. 1u111or1, pl•vwrlgllh, ••1 i.thlrlCI. 1:00 M<ltl~ TIMI!.,. "V1nn~ ,,1 ... 1(1 "Tile Or~'" ... r1 H -Dre.,,. !.O mini t ,00 A-rkl "1) ICI Ecalolllt tl R""°". SM:ty of tt'ldl"1dull c11!1..,1 -klllO to ool'll -Of t0d•r ·1 con. pie• orOIJtl .... 1 ('° ml") NOW OPEN 1155 BAKER ST. at FAIRVIEW COSTAlllESA ] • Orang• County's MWHI D9I TICO Is open •nd r11dy to HfV• JOU l • For TASTY TACOS, lunltoe and Tosl1do1, or DELICIOUS HAMSUAQl!RS, Frlee ind Sh1kn • FAST SERYIC! Ill •llher odr Drift Ttuu or ln1Jde P•Uo Oiltklg Noom • .. ind, YCNJr OrcMr 51 JPde to Ordtt. NOW OPEN • 1155 BAKER ST • .i FAIRVIEW, Co1t1 M- 7 AM -12 PM l . . MGM Presen1s "PAT Q~RAETT AND BILLY THE KID" · S1arnng JAMeS COBURN· KRIS.KRISTOFFERSON• BOB DYL.AN Ard Also Slarring JASON ROBARDS · Music by BOB DYLAN WnrJcn byR\JCXlLPH WUALITZER ·ProducedtiyGOROON CARROLL O.e.cted by SAM PECKIN~ · METROCOLOA · P(INAVJSION' A [!!l •. !!.1'1K 11• .. .:'!ij SHOWING NOW i%; . . . ..... :· • • • • D~W ... ~ft·D·•~r ,. ' • • • -------- : ORAN!;[ c::llD> llHIVl IN 1 !• •••• Hill&TJt& ••• •••• 11.e•·:1102 • •••• ........ #l'f ... r...M•.C:ffT ....... A l 1 S.ntll A,,. Frwy. M1r Ch1Drn1n 0r.,,... 5'7·&01 f • • I SING~ THE BLUES HELD OYER 2nd Big Week St•nlty Kubrick'• "CLOCKWORK ORANGE" .,. "DEALING" l1rb1r1 H•r1h1y loth Color I Jll 2ncl ATTIACTION ri1 AT All 3 CINIMAS 'Am DUl(f IN •. DAIL PILOT 3 J Moon' Thin ,. • • p ,, I ' First M~step forJ, ·Bo~danovich? There is no Qooc1 ~ 'Follies' Planned ForOCC SUIPIN• THAT UAftl YOU NIUN• .0001 "SEADREAMS" B1 LOl/ISE SWEENEY c~ SdMal ....... lenoke As a director, Peter 'Bogdanovicb has bad three home runs in a row -'Tbe Last Picture Show," ''What's Up, Doc?" and the little known but highly acclaimed documentary "Directed By 1 John Ford." Now he's at -bat again, with a new picture called "Paper Moon." The critical score. isn't in yet, but from Where f sit Jt looks u though he's struck oul. · ENTERTAINMENT ,,_.,_ ,.,,.,.._.. 11>1 a t.Jt Orange Coast College has1;~=~~~~~~~~ choeen the Broadway hit "Follies" as lts 1973 sumn1er mll!lcal. "Paper Moon" takes it.s title rrom that old '30's song \llhich ...., ________ _, Lollypop 10< Bogdanovlcbl8 quickly corrupted Addie. who ends up plannJna a bootleg gin operatk>n that lands them In jail and who doei: what can on- ly be described Af plinpl1111 to set rid of a Cf1111val q"""' (¥adelllie Kahn) whorii M..,.a bu-picked up along the way. Tat'um O'N'eal Is a fierce, Im- placable and talented little ac- tress. She b a good enough one to , 'create an aura of vulnerlbility around herself even when she looks toughest, smoking a cigarette in bed in her undenihirt. The OCC production, which will be an Orange county premiere and only the second version staged on the West Coast, will run four days, Aug. l.f, ln lhe coll.ege auditorium. -Drama instructor J o h n Fen.ace&, who staged the col- lege's 1971 swnmer production of "Fiddler on the Roof." will direct "Follies." Ferr.acca·s musical theater background includes productions of "Sweet Charity" at /the L a g u n a Playhouse and ·' Sou t h Pacific" for the South Coast Civic Light Opera. burbles that it't only 111 "paper moon shining o·v e r a cardboard sea, but it wouldn't be make-believe if you believ- ed in me." Shot of the Ulm's tiny, adamant nine-year-<> Id' heroine having her picture taken against a paper moon backdrop at a carnival. The IU,tle girl's name is Addie Log- gins, and it will al"'·ays be a J)4iper moon for her because tne film i.s about her ap- ~renticeship to a consummate con artist named Moses Pray_ Addie is played in the film by Tatwn O'Neal, the real-life daughter of actor R y a n Novel Bought RY AN O'NEAL seems to be O'Neal, who play1 Moaes 1 continuing the role he began in Pray. Her' role Is anti-Shirley · "The Thie( \Vho Came to Dl.n· Temple, to put it gently. ner" as the con artist with charm, this time rigged out in 'A FIERCE, IMPLACABLE, TALENTED ACTRESS' Ryan O'Nul, Daughter Tatum in 'Paper Moon' MOSES COMES to pay his a mustache, straw boater, and things to praise even in this duction designer Polly Platt is re5pects (with stolen fiowers) George Raft suit. At the core ideologically bankrupt picture. visible. And there are, too, at the funeral of .4.ddie's ,of Moses' affable character is ~le has shot it. as he did "The mother and i.s !!!addled with th e something cold, loveless, and Last Picture Show" in black some fine and dandy bal'k-up care of the always fatherless, mean that puts a chill on and white to emphasize the performances: Miss Kahn, now motherless child. He Bogdanovich means us to feel bleak, chipped, depths-Of·tl•e· "'ho was the shrlll girlfriend in I d h ff I h. "\Vhat's Up Doc?" belts out agrees o rop er o n is for or between him and Addie. Depres51oo atmosphere of the Since "Follies" centers on a reunion or old-ti1ne actors and ;ictresses in a condeinned Broadway theater. Jo~erzacca noted, the show will require a number of perforn1ers from ages 45 up to 70. Auditions will be held the week of June 18 in lhe OCC auditorium. car at her aunt's in Missouri, Moses is a paper moon, and Midwest. (It was shot in hard· quite a piece of acting as the then blackmails a local man this ls a paper film. Written edge style by Laslo Kovacks in carnival's pathetic "Trixie for 1200 about Addie's paren-by Alvin Sargent from Joe and around Hays, Kansas, Delight" and a n ° n -P'.,. Deal Clinched !age, and tries to fleece Addie David Brown's novel, It tries with local towMPOOI>le in the ressional actress from Kansas, of 1nost of that money by for laughs based on the cor-cast). Eleanor Bogart, looks like a HOLLYWOOD (UPI) packing her off on a train with ro,,ion of Addie's innocence Grant Wood painting of grief Columbia Pictures concluded a few dollar bills. Addie and fails, leaving only a Everything, from the '30's ·as a widow, with several kids a deal with Italy's Dino De Ch•rlton Heaton 1t•r1 u homlcl"e detective In the y••r 2022 In M•tro-Goldwyn- M•y•r'1 1\llpef'lteful "Soylent Green". Co-stors Etilw. G, RoblMO• Leltlt 1..,1or Yo111t9 Jo.,a. CettM demands he pay back every brackiiih, sad taste in its Utles to AdcUe's cloche and whom 1'1oses Pray preys on. Leurcntiis to d i st r i bu t e cent in a screaming scene In a wake. rumble seals, i,, perfectly in 'fhey arc real people in Charles Bronson's nev.· movie . HOLLYWOOD (UPI) sandwich 5hop, and ?l-1oses Because Bogdanovich is a period; the One, sure hand of Bogdanovich'scardboardsea. "The Stone tGllcr." Producer ~larlin Ransohoff taker her along as he \VOrks gifted direetor, there are Bogdanovich'S' favorite pro-IP";.;;;;;;,;;;;;;.;;;;;;o••--•••••-•·,;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;; GREEN bought screen rights to James off his debt. 'ijliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijall Houston's best·selling novel, ,He is J8 fiim.fiam man,1 1 "1be White Dawn,''. to be cllec~/ local papeT! for ColurnltuP1uu1ti.1>1cwnu ~~: ,f buth Coast Repcrtor}' filmed at Paramount Pictures. funeral$" and bilking the grlev. ROSS HUNTER'S MuK.i.J Pioductioti cf : ingii1fuilies with expensive 00 ~ O\""U]f.'m~m.r::I Bib · which be smilingly lies ~ LI l:.nl!~ . ' IJ'iU ha'I ', been ordered by dead l~;;;l~;:'~~i;;;:::::.11 wly S, sons, or husband8. It is N\usct.,BURTBACHAMCH-L""°lr\'HALDAWJ cl~rac{eristic of tbe film that '-":lMRYllJWlR/-:nsllllltl/"""":DWUSMl'llf co> : ' le, first disgusted with , EXCLUSIVE s larceny soon joins E NGAGEMENT ~ C£NTUA'I' 1 1 1 ?2'~ l\J.·ITJ enthusiastically, even up-DAILY 2:00 -'4 :<1s -7:lO-lO:OO ping the ante and suggesting fie~ ways to rob or cheat. a ,n• • • They'd never forgel the day he drifled Into town · A-1-,o~;\; I "TbeSOULoI (~y" ,. .. °'-~"~ <0 A.._ ........ ' D'lllVllLI IWT1ll NW la '""""* I) < O Wl\ffU '~ l I\ 1 \1 \ i I \ 11 I\ ' . . . . " r '' ' •' • J A ZESTY, Vlt~AHT HIW MUSICAL People oml It ... lnlllc)"Clr 2022. "IN THE MIDST OF LIFE" Audl•nce Acclalmecl! Fri. thno Sunday "THE CLOWNS" JPGI~ ! Pl111: A Slap1tlck Symphony of Mime, Music and La~htot Wednesday & Thundoy 1 SZ NEWPORT BLVb., at Harbor "THEY ONLY KILL THiii MA.STIRS" Ce11tl11. Sttt. & S.R. 2 "'"'' -na-ANDREW.5 · -·PWMMER -mtAlDHAYllll•,.,,-=.:=.-ID.J:ANl\ Mmte ~ I liim ftiil ltikunlllllD! l lie:.. ituomnP I . MONDAY THIU PllDAT • 7 & 10 ,,M. SATURDAY -SUNDAY· HOllDAYS -1-4·7·10 Class or44 (G) 2"' TOP ATIRACTION "THE YOUNG GRADUATES" (PG) WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS! THE MOaT •m&UTIPUL XU8XCJl.X.. LOYE 8TOR.Y EYER! T90PWC MOii ............ ENTER ONCE AGAIN A WHOLE NEW WORLD OF MAGNIFICENT MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT W•k Nlghl1 • 7 6 10 PM Sal·Sun·Hoilday1. 1+7·10 '" THEATRE " .......... ~····~ f_ O WARl.lS i l\I II\• I \II H '·"~'. '" .. 1 ..... ' • ... , • ' I • I ..stDNa" -POlTlEI\., IN "'"'m " IN RATED (G) • . , D.UNTON FORD'S BRAND NEW 1973 PINTO ' iao • .. cyl ,,..,,.., .. .,...i 2 DOOR SEDA 0 WITH THIS AD ONLY YOU MUST PRESENT THl.S AD AT TIME OF PURCHASE YOU CANNOT PAY MORE THAN \ \:BRA.ND NEW -1-9 3 "MAVERICK 2 DOOR SEDAN ~ troM., ·c.nf. lailu..., ly•tem. .tt. llllOW17.POi)1 Sl1 •99 TOTAL DOWN .. PER MONTH 320 CID, 2 Y.a cyl • .,..tne, c.llf. lMlu'-" Contrel ly1'9M, AM lod~, •lu:u r.u...,... 1reup, tlm.d t11111. (lKtlfl lllf6)tSJt •99 TOT~L DOWN PER MONTH N.1'MINT, O,A.C.. .......... ,,....,.,.,i. ..... -.,,..,.;.d,tu,'7JU... .......... .,.. .. .,,,.w41l ...... ~. ..,..~,,,.sm1.ui.1 . .i1~e-... ...... n._.K,...,,.._. .. ,.,...,..,._.,,._ .. •f .~,at.1& ~--n a-..·Afrl!IM '9CIHtMI un 11.~ -.B:AA·ND ,NEW 1973 :·'FORD LTD $ ·1 THAT'S llGHT FOLKS , , .$99 OVll FACTORY INVOICE PLUS $90 DEALElf PIEPAIATION, FACTORY tmNTION FEE, SALES TAX AND 11CENSE. THE FOLLOWING CARS APPLY ONLY: PAYMIHJ O.A.C. $tf II llt9I ... ,.,... SJLU 11 ..... -l')'lllt. IML-. 'n 1kMi1 & ... ........... 1..tf 1w 41- Wwrlll '1""· priceP51t illd. 1111 fi-.c. c-,.. ... 7~ licMM, ... 1t,...~ .. ,.1 ""_. priclk $174l2t i..1. •IM la. '11 "-NillUM l'llCIN'llill u.n II.~ BRAND N'EW 1973 LTD WAGON COUNTRY SQUIRE $, JS 1 CID 2 V v.1, air cefl4 . .,, r•~li•, cMM11i•M• 9re11p, WSW tlre1, tinted tl•ll, whtel ceY1r1. (3J62HIS406S) ' •99 TOTAL DOWN PER MONTH • LTDS •TOR.NOS •GALAXIES \ . 400 CID 2Y V-1, hea'I)' 4vty w1-\ pr1tsien. .ir cMll., light 9rou,, \ -.-i...c• f'WP• rod!.I WSW ' tir.S. 1.......-N<k, tlm.d 9leu, tk. (317651"122) 1Dlt ~ $99 TOTAL DOWN PAYMINT O.A.C. v.a, auto. trans., factory air condi tioning, power steering, power (disc) brakes, power windows, power sea ls, am· fn-: stereo radio, heater, whitewall fires, vinyl roof, tinted glass, wheel covers. Lik£ new thru out , . 205C RL 1971 CAPRI Cpe. 4 speed, radio, heater, tinted glass, dlx. in· terior, sharp silve r fin· ish. 379BRU $ 1968 CHEV. CAMARO H•rdtop. VI , power 1!1erin9, t•dio, he•let, wh ilt will tire1, tinted 91•11, whe1 I CQC,tt1, 'on1ol1 1hih, mtf•I· lie blu1 with blue buc~el 1e•h . IXGL194l $129 9 1973 MUSTANG MACH I Sptsrool, V·8, auto. tran s .. fac tor y air co nd ition ;ng, power steering, oow.~,r (disc ) brakes, radio, heater, .vinyl roof, tinted glass. . wheel covers, low miles, . amost new , sharp! .Save! Stk f 889A $ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • OFFER VOID A;TIA SUNDAY, MAY 27, 1t73 ----,,, ,.. -- 1971 MUSTANG 2 Dr. H.T. : V·I. auto. tra:, .• pow" steering, power !disc) s22tt· .:· brakes, ra<llo. heater, whitewall tires, tinttdalass, whftl covm.~ miles, one owl'll!r, bought new al Dunton Ford. 63909A PAYMlNT OAC. i dr. H.T. sj)t • .cpe, V.a, auto. trans., power steer·ing, radio, heater, tinted 'glass. Good mfles, light cream tin-- isR, like new.,1'5CDM. .. " 1.969 MUSTANG· Mach I . 1970 MAY CP ~:la~ :~k.a~~tt::a~~·je:;:,,s:'?'~~~~ s 1799 . w/black trim, tape deck, 48594 miles, one owner, · 'cyl., stick shift, rad io, --I M~---~~ $ lli?e'new. ZKH666 . tfteater, whlteWall tires, vinyl roof, tinted glass, / !~~!. ¥.~ .. ~~ .... ~~~ e1ir S'ial t~;.::::::: ~~~~; ::·.: :,:::·:~;;':~,~~;·~:,::'"1 ;;;: '~9, 9 ·1·9·1·0-·F·o·R·D-·l·r·o·· -~r ___ .. _. ....... ... 1972 CHEV Nova Cpe V-i, auto. trans., pcNier steering, radia, heater, s22·9 while.wall tir-es, tin ted glass, wtiee.1 covers, 18,596 mllts. Likt new. 707ETH 4 Dr. H1rdtop. VI , 111fo. trlru., f1 ,tory 1ir, powtr 1t11rin9, power b11 k11, r1- clio, h11t.r, white w i ll tir11 , •inyl roof, tinted 91111, wl\.el COVll'I, nitfallic CO!)· per with fewn top & inttrl or. (!]6749 ) 1969 ford Country Squire '1999 J~~!t~n .. f!~YBird ~a.nda·u. tO P•••· Steticin We9cin. YI, 111to. tr•n1 .• f•ctory air, pow•r 1t11rin9, pciwer br•ket , r•clio, he1t1r, whitt w•ll tire1,, ttnted 9l•1t, whe1I co.,er1, l1199e9• r•tlf, llght bliie with m•tchin9 inttrior. 1725GSXJ 1966 ·MUSTANG 2 Dr. H1rdtop. 6 cvl .. 1tick shift, r•dl&, he1t1r, white wellt, tint.cl 9111•, wh1el coY1r1, white with bl111e buck1t •••h. 1196EXX J . '999 air conditioning, po~er , steering, power {disc) $ 2 brakes, power windows, 1 power seats, radio, hea· I ter, whitewall ti res, · Vinyl roof, t inted glass, . whe~I cov.ers , tilt wheel, good' miles. 217AOR. l 1 WI lllLIM OUt DOlill PAYMaT Alll 'llUS 81 M llST. AVAILA:lli:il-:lf~Y::i::~~=-====:-. ' l I 1 1 • ' • • • • • I .. -·-.. • • PU.OT ..tovlltT1S£R N .. . .. LittJ ·Boost 60·0-Nutri-tion ,,'u ' • ~ ·•. ' . f; ._, j .! .. " • rj· , .. • :1 . ., · ... ~. ' . .,, . ' . . ' " • " l ; , ' j • . , ' • t _ " BE ANDERSON, Editor Wedi! w, M9r U. t_, hM Jt' . i Chi.ldren ·' . B.uy ' ' . A lpt of people say, "You tNt't teach tending the university's laboratory school IJy tetµDg." ~·._ ~ 1 were asked·, to watch TV ap<i'felat.e wllat nus, ma~ the ·llC!r/Ols, bl!I ~ things .they ~9bout11Wtrltitf), ·does !lot a Jrilh l<ll\f'llsl~· ' Alrilost, .an, ~ -4 ol tho 'leollet . "Thach ;by le "-Jt -'1)" what we,. tram ~i&is. And: &o:~ • televislOlllq Mi )I~~~ of the cbil~liere "true believed.'<'of . m ... tJn!tfni~ ffO'll? e D t a.r y What they lfeald. < -' . Sdxlol. The same ,researeh was~ucted at'··• Aiid • ~ •1141\ eiplalnH, PIOY 01CC011nt mkkity schbol. Here, 80 percent ol the for~ iieoi>l!•s poor eaUn& hal>its. chll<lren "truly belleved·wllal ,was said di Infonnttioiii droM medical ' authorities tbe,televisloo commttciab".was true." lrlliOates Uiot: 70 pe~. of the' com-The majl>rily ol th8 Sl<ldents were ~ ro~als rellifn&. to lll!!dloal"health are ~ tranqulli2e'8, things i n v o I v I n g no~ '\l:ue. t " geilrolntesttnal upset or "some kJnd of Rather, she told al.out 1illO people, something," as vitamins and oola. -1)' dlet~ns, attendl41A _a)'11l!""ium In another pro,.ct lfi the · laboratory , on.·olillriU....'ihnnMrecl &ii~tbt·Unlveralty school the cblldrOn i<opt .two.rats one of 'of· oo~T'8iid0 the, IlAiry ,Couooil\o!' which 'was 'given ' ''good 1.00" "llhlle the €allfonlia in Lo1 1 ~es, tht.16 com·· other was fed cookie ca~e · and other • ' me,r&it are, drawn .... w .......... ' i crumbs from c:hlldren1s W.cbcs. ' I l, ' ' '., • ' ·.n-'l'E8I' 1 · • ' • 'The !IJ1lt rat .JOOklld'.K®'f"lfter a few Children whom she dµcribed as weekJ In the experiment but the other "soph)siticated ll·and 11-year-olda'' at· "looked about as neurotic and mangy a& ' .• ~ l&1lod ~ while_ odWI have nevtt •ten a tlco. ·And die taatlng ~. 11 with an orange or mak1nj: butter, are sames as well u leaming ezperieoces f0< her children. 'Ibe Uttle Ideas plan ouUlnes three 1......, flJf ~F'S. all ol which might be rtpiated at dlf!er.nt tiJiies wlth dill""'!f foods. • . • · The p1m, provides ror the cblldtel> to id"1tilY a ·variety cf ~ IO Identify the " Iii! ori8i!ial (<rm or a 11..., procep~ God, .. inlik In butter, ·l!OO to ldentlly similar foods, u bnoad with tortillas and apples with onnges. "It's ,olten easy to think of preschoolers as Utlle adults,'' explained A1rs. Canon. "You really have to start at a very low level." PRINCIPLES The council's program is based on five principles taken from Jean Piaget's de'vclopmental theory: I. Cllildren need to manipulate things. ' I. Cblldreo'• 1aq..,. llld lbouldbe- s. Children should not be fCll'O!d learn materials for which they ale ""' ready. 4. Cllildreo need 9Cldal lnt0111<.ilon, · peers and adults. 5. Children should succeed more. ,,. • .S·l than they fail. • So. rather than just tell the child U..' an fJ~e ts. an apple, he is allowed 1 toucti. ta!te and smell It. And he gets tt plly a game with a "mystery box" w.· whi<b he sticks bis hand to !eel a bM( ~ and tell what it lo. i In the seoood lesson, he tl'ls to bQ> make tortillas, orange juice, butter anl .. other foods so he will see tbe r.iatimshll ' between the original farm and the J')l"06-1 essed form of the selected foods. His effort is rewarded when he .. j a11owed to eat these foods which al( often new and different tastes .•• bdt tastes which he probobly will be perienclng throughout bis life ol ea right. FY preschoolers (clockwise from top} David Cudworth and Jammie Osuna roll tortillas; Armando Salcedo watches cooking; Jimmy Buddingh, Joel Moore, Juan Arvizu , sample. Dally Pilot Photos by Patrick O'Donnell ··' •• I , Commercial Message I. you could find," Dr. Hunter said. They ·h3d thought Hie experiment woo Id result in a Chanp In the Children~ lunches. "We dldri'Hind one· diffrice," said the educNQr •• ~ ... MODELS And of thbee who believed in· the com- mercUllb\ he sa1d, the greaitert true belleva;t ftere lbe ooes whose parents U!ed tl¥' p/oduct. ntls led the educators to believe thal tor eff~tve nutrition educaUOJJ, they would have lo look at the children's model! and see what they are doing, which Is, she said, "mosUy the wrong thing." Ih addition to parents and peers, modela' ,,. ~ appearing In com· mercial1 . . . the sllm girl who eatl 1 "yummy" and then goes off Into the sumet wlUt a handsome youtig tn1n. FO.. 'thl8 mloo; Dr. Hunlir Aid, the first of four weapons In tellchlng for traruiler is to 8880Clate Lhe desired behaviOr with plWarit ronsequences. There would be ·no problem if ll child ate, for "e;Xample, a candy bar and hls "tooth · tell ·out. But the immediate eon- sequeoce of lhe candy is the taste of -t'Metne&s ··and lhe-tooth deca,-CC>l:nel further down the road. ' Candy d!ten is alloClAted with l'f:Wa~. ha ving the money to spend. feeling. good or wanting to ce!ebrBte. But good lood olten has poor a590Ciations. Vege«sbles, for example, are "what we have.lo eat or ·you cton:t ,get cake," the school principal pointed O\lt. REWARDS Sbe 1Nggetted · that chll,d,..,, be oom· plimenlcd when they are seen eating 'good ' foods. "'m\e problem is, vlttoei ts i:iot IUI, own . rewnrd,'' she said. "Seldom do we let ·told 'f"e're a worthy pttlOO· and Wi are doing 111& rl&ht thing." But she· oon· tended, "Ille approval of slanlflcant ' others tastes just as sweet a!J the sugar m a candy bar." ~ A second weapoo in her propo8ed wq of teaching is the similarHy ol the sin. tioo. wt.ere something is learned to ,. 1ituation where it would be practJced. Rather than hand the children propir loods In his school lunch program, * SU"'91ed the child be allowed to ~ from seventl offtrings in each food group. Then, she said, 0.0 child can ~, "I selected a carrot because I want It.' Thirdly, •he said the child -6e allowed to-pracllce what he learns:. "All ol us want to tell him to do It aid then have hlm go do it," Or. Hunter aald. "But we know habits in man are not formed that way. We have to give tbein time to grow and develop." And the last weapon In educatm. sbe aaid, Is Jofonnatlon. Without this lo bod< up Ille child's 1ctlons with a -,.. deratandlng of why the ......Dr m io they art, she said , "he's Just a wen. trained anhnal." ' I 14 DAILY PILOT Wf'dntsday, M11 23, 1973 School's Dream Comes Tru~ Mincy Arnold •nd Steve Hutson finish pl•nters, above, with Instructor Marv Magnuson. The reward: train trip to the S.n Diogo Zoo, right. students folded two tons as fund-raiser. Earl Lazear II doing expert acfl8or catting & halr dressing , •• EulbluU C.OUfurta &a1tblall VIiiage C..te1 1144-1570 I I it's malAe ~ for the ----LQQK of NATURE! The latest in Elura Capless Wligs All with skin-tops for natural looking parls. I. Lady Elura: Pet ite head size, short, simple or ele- gant look. 2. Capless Dana: fluff back, 1mooth top, curls & soft waves. ). Showgirl: Extra long, softly waved. , 4. Juliet: Smooth top, hits shoulder In soft, tumbling curls. 5. Fonda Shoq: Face-framing shag, not too straight, not too curly. 6. EJura Toppett•: Wear es ch ignon, fluffy wiglet or swept up. 7, Jennffft': Gypsy in soft curls & waves. 8. Revenlble Foll: Should•r length, wear es 9ypsy or smooth page-boy. 9. Raquel: Long p•g•·boy, off.fac• or with bangs. I 0. Pollr.: Short be sic look. Eura w CJI & hairpieces ffom ............................ $17.95 2500 Ent 17th Stroot WIG AND BEAUTY SALON Hilgren Square, Costa Met• .• By .uiJioN DEEllR 0. .... ,.......,, 1bere'• a kbxl J 1inagk about '• trala ride. -Espedally U U'I U., lint lime you've ridden on a train 8DCl.1 • the ~ of the line is ooe of the wO<ld'flarceat ..... Such a trip hBJ ~ dream of the stall of the TMJl (~ Menially Retarded) program l\'l'I )be Newport- Mesa UDilled Sd¥iol D!Jli'lct. Thirty-seven siudsltJ, along with teachers, teacher al.iies aP4 volllDteer pamiis, made the trip this year. To make It possible, explained resource teacher JoyC'fl Lyon, intermediate and senior stmrntl cunpleted several proj- ect. .ttnusb their wort tralplng !XO' gram. Beginning last September, the older students folded and bundled two toos of newspapers, completing the rint ton around Christmas, then selling the poper ID ao Anahelm firm. In the woodsbop classes, they as- sembled redwood hanging planter boxa and recipe holders, which they later sold. "The kids earned three quartets ol the cost of sending the whole school," she said, "It was a wonderful day for everyone involved. Mter the train ride we took a bus tour of the mo, vialted the children's 7.00 and then saw as much ol the z0o as we bad time fct oo loot. Then it was back lo the train for the ride home." Noting that the project had good sup- port from students' parents, the teacher explained that "some ol the children might not bave been able to make tile trip U we hadn't raised funds this way." Some of the students, she said, had never ridden a train ~ visited the zoo. For others it was a great repeat experi· ence. "The kids enjoyed meeting different people on the train. They talked about everything they saw on the train and the zoo. ''It was rewarding for the staff to see them enjoy ~ things as normal children would." The staff already is considering next year's trip -perhaps to Sea World or Marineland. "This kind or thing is very exciting for lhe children," she added. The knowledge gained in making the trip was reflected during the next d~y of school. Animals were a major part of the day's music program. "We were ·surpris- ed at bow miich they all remembered." The pareiils, she added, said they wou1dn1L haVe missed it. FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT IEACH FASHION. SQUARE SANTA ANA • HUNTINGTON CENTER HUNTINGTON IEACH SOUTH COA$T PLAZA • COSTA MESA I OVEIWEIGHT? I 56 U. LOSS IN 40 DAYS Und .. Medical Supervision at the Omega· Clinic HOURS: 9:00 • 7:00 • CALL FOR A~' APPOINTMENT II I COSTA MES. A ANAH•IM IAHTA AHA l"ull1rlon·L•H1br1 ' 1-T 11 A 150 W, L1H1br1 Blvd. 1Nt Nnpert 1664 W . ...,,.., .,.~ ui n .. vi (714) 87()..9347 646-1633 7IB,4141 547-6329 1213) 697-1791 • , Beach ·is Backdrop for Sunset Beach Festival of Arts Jeweler Carol Lee, dollmaker Judith Brown and glassblower Barry Hage ·display a sample of crafts 81.UlSet Beach artists ~·nd crafts- men will• offer Salurday1 May 26, from 10 a.m. lo 5 p.m. al the annual beachside art festival. Thirty-three artwork and a children's workshop. I Apology Furnis~ed, r » . Love's Deep-seated DEAR ANN LANDERS : I was not ooly surprised but disappointed when ·t read your statement that people in this day and age "''ho have extren1ely large families are "trying to prove something." Whai!l you consider an "extremely large · ."?Ten children? Eight? Six? Since d only ooe child, maybe you think 0 is "extremely large.' And how nice of you to have offered an explanation for t~ of us who ha\le "ex· trernely large" families. My husband and I appreciated that very much. You see, we dldn 't know why we had all these kids. Actually, we thought we loved chil~1 but according to you, that ne reason at all. I l )'qu owe an apology to the . s readers who look to you for moral support and guidanee and good common sense. You let us1 down badly witk 1that ooe. -WICl,ilTA PARENTS WHO LOVE TI!EM ALL •· DEAR PARENTS: You are right. My typewriter got ahead of my brain wbeo I pounded out that statement and I am sorry. My apologies to all parents of large families who "love them all." --~ ' ~ .. ' /··• ... I ed. tSbe v.•anted to tell me about the storm warnings she had heard on the radio and to be careful). Last night J said I'd be home at 10 :30. It so happened 1 met sonie people and didn't get home until 1 :30. She yelled for 30 mmu.tes. I fee1 that a 23-year-old girl shouldn't need to report to her mother if she decides to change her schedule. If .. y~ wt.lb ·me please pr\pt this let- W: .-DISTRESSED IN cmo.ao : DEAR CIUC: A %3-year .. ld girl should 9o1 need to reporl to b"er motber. Bat 1be SHOUW lmpw bow to use a telephone. Whal 1 am 1uueating ts lbat you 1bould have been considerate tftOUlb to let your mOtber taow when you changed your plans -etpecially 11nce she ll obviously a worrler from way back. Some young adlllts (both male and female) waot the comforls of mama's home and the freedom of living in a hotel, and it just won't "'ork. DEAR ANN LANDERS: What do you DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have two think of the following situation: Alice *"clwdren wider four years of age. When was married to Bob for 16 years. They ''le go visiting they know they nwst not had three children. Bob became involved touch anything unless they have with a young girl in his oUice. He divorc-permission to do so. I wish other mothers ed Alice in Mexico and married the girl. -v.oold do as much for me. That marriage lasted two years. The girl I'm tired of moving plants from the divorced .Bob for another ma n . sun-catching window sill. I'm exhausted (Younge"') The following year Bob mar· from whisk·brooming cookie crumbs out ried another young bird. He died three of the sofa cushions. I'm weary from months later of a heart attack. keeping an eye on my good ashtrays and Alice now refers to herseU as "a figurines and saying,"No, no. Mustn't widow." I'd like your comment. -touch." WATClflNG FROM TI!E SIDELINES 'Don't these mothers realize they are DEAR WATCHING: I'd say Alice bas being unfair to their children when they probably bad plenty of heartache ~ her fail to teach them respect for the pro~ life and she doesn't need more. U &be erty of others? Imagine growing up wants to call herself a wklow. I can't see thinking that everything within reach is that ti's any of my business. Or yours, all right to play with! either. What's YOUR problem, honey? The little ones are not to blame. They DEAR ANN LANDERS : I got married at 19, which was a big mistake. Six months later I \Vas divorcro and moved back borne. I'm DOW 23, have a responsible job and consider P!yseU reasonably mature. AU through' ~h school and college my motblr leaephoned friends and relatives looking-for me If 1 was 15 minutes late getting home. It was very embarTassing but there was nothing I could do to stop it. Once she called the Field Museum (l was there "'"ith a date) and had 'me m- Did , .. .. ~ n. M"97 w.·,. itlll 0,.. ... , .... Alw.ys 111"4 A 11tM s.kctlff ..... ~. .......... COAST SUPER MARKET Wt Dtlh'tf' Ytw P•rclll1MI 'lft',. ti c"'9l "Y"' ,r\er1 673-3510 1147 £.COAST HWY. only know what they are taught. But they are the ones who surfer from the lack or discipline -not their mothers. They are thought of as iU-mannered nuisances, and people hate to see tbem coming. YOu've dealt with this problem before but it could bear repeating. Please? -WHERE'S THE RUBBER CEMENT? • DEAR R.C.: l agree, tt'I worth 1aylag agaln -and aptn. I've also said that disclpll!Jt. Is a spedaJ kJDd of love. A mother wbo cares about her children •·Ill take tbe dme and expe.nd the energy. SALE! GEIST SPRING SEPARATES 1/2 PRICE THIS WEEK !Some Ann• Klein, tooll W•klt'f "•• 17tti & .... . ....... " ..... .. ' - • ... . a.~· ' "· ,. ~. OAIL Y PILOT ill T een's Predicament Who (or How) Am I? · · By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI! -The teen years •tt among life's IDCllt difficult. But lf parents lake the time. the years can 00 less fraught with fcuslra· tion for all. The teenager, given careful guidance and Wldentandlng, can grow into the well-ed· j~ed adult without such problems as drugs, dropouts, runaways and, if dress is a concern, look less I i k e Halloween every day. Remember. The adolescent is in a periOO of transition. shedding hi s childhood and beginning to a.11sume his role as an adult, says one guidance counselor. amlne the reatonS for hls beliefs, It is not enough roe a boy or girl to btllevt or diibelieve sometblng_ o n I y because bis or her parents do. A belief should make sense to the person who bolds it. These polnts are made in "Parents and Teenagers," a new publlcatloo ol the Public Anairs Committee. a New York-baled nonpn>llt educa- tional organiz.atkln.. Author is Margaret tlill, counselor and author o f several articles on education. cttild development and mental health. Mrs. llill cites a recent study in which high school studCnts y,·cre asked t h e si mple question. "\\'ho are you?" Uon, a aerue rJ. unlulllllmml1 • feeling of being trapped ..• overwhelmed by 1tbt confusion In th<! ... 1.. he Is upecled to play, the adolescent does not tell WHO he 15; he teII. HOfl ' he is!" • A teenager may OOJ11l>lalll. "My parents e1pect me to be perfect. They're always telllng me to act like a grownup, but they won't give me a cha.net to be grown up." ~1rs. Hill stres~ that parent-child communication I.!: of the es5ence. "Good com- munication in \'olves not only lislcning for the true 111eaning behind the spoken "\>.'ord but also'· listening "to what a person does," she s;iy.s. E\'en if the teen does not display outward signs of rebellion, he probably is going through a stage or sorting and sifting values. More than one third of the •---:::;:;::.======::::~ responses, !:t11e said. "renected / confusion. insecurity, aliens· Here ls y,·here the parent must be of vital help. l..A!t the young person kno"''1---~--:::-;;---::;;;.;;.] that it's all right to think dif- ferently from hJs parents and other adults. Help him to realize that an idea is not necessarily good because it is modem, or poor simply because it is old-_ fashioned. M • An idea is good i( it is •t> arucures ~THE BODY FACTORY !J OAKWOOD GAIDIN APTS. IDO llVINI, N.I . M•11. tllr• S.t.' •111 to 10 e111 W.d. 1.,., •:JO t• 7::10 TEEM & l"llO•L•M l'lGUl:•I ,.... W•LCOM• 'rI;nrr/1>t1> booths will feature propriate and erfective,& regardless of the era in \\'hich ty '@)01/,11, CALL 645-8616 SJ.00 ,_ ..._ .. r it \\'as popular. Help the teenager to ex· -. STARTING TOMOR~W IN NEWPORT ONL.Y. COATS, STROLLERS, STOLES, AND MUCH, MUCH ~OREi ALL MARl(El) OO•NN F'ROM OUR REGULAR STOCK. MANY ONE- OF-A-l<INO BUYS. ALL SUBJECT TO PRIOR SAL.E, SO fiURRV IN THURSDAY, FRIDAY, OR SATURDAY. MAY 24-25-26. "5K ABOUT OUR CREDIT PL.AN~. . . SORRY, NO L.AY-A.NAYS. FUR SAL.ON , DYED RANCH MINK COAT•••••,•••••••• $1197. NATURAL. el.ACK CROSS MINK/ L.EATHER COAT ••• •• •• ••,•••••., •• • $397. HATIJ RAJ... Al/TUMN Ii.AZ E"' MINK' CO AT•••••••••••••••••••••• $747. NATURAL. Al/TUMN liAZE* MINK CAPE:•••••••••••••••••,••••• $359, BLACK DYE:O BROADTAIL. PROCESSED LAMB STROLL.ER WITH NATURAL TOURMALINE* MINK TRIM •••,•,,,••• $439. SAND DYEO 13ROAOTAIL. PROCESSED LAMB JACKET••••••••••• $239 . 81..'CK D'fEO BROADTAIL. PROCESSE;O L.AM B COAT•••••••,••, o • $397. KATURAL.. RACCOON 'NITH LEA'rHER STROLL.ER •••••••••,••••, $239. NATURAL. FOX PAW JACKET,,•,,••• t • • • $399. •[ ....... ,.INI< llfU:tOEll1S ..,~,.•,., AU-.-u11s l--0.•U.w TO .J•IOW COU""'V ,,. OAIGI .. <>"" '""°"TlO ~U""· v· ' • ... .. · I I Mortltl I" Hv•nc• H• C9n"1<b ht CLASS FREE ; ' • IJRONA DELMA !'-'E\VPORT FASHION ISLAND SHOP ID:OO· 5:30 1, I ESTANCIA Karen Johnson NH HIGH Meredith MuMy Cd/ti HIGH Ellen Gerken • CM HIGH Janice Le1t1r Your Horoscope Scorpio.~· ~Get ~the ··facts GOODWILL ndustries· THURSDAY MAY 24 . ~ . .............. y-.,...... Pl4)' low Uy. -'""'"' coalldeo ~.Bi a\ienllve to aid rwr ca\lle bul ngulia bul llold oil "' ..me., Jndic:a-more U.U.. Subtle •l'Pr-:h tklat are tbat-)'ou .ere ~ p('q\'ff m o s t mnitructive . .J11 SYDNEY OMAIUI u ......... ~. u111e-.-,, Wli&t appear• • laolflY may ' r· ·~: AllJF.S (Mardi ll·April II): SOOllPIO (()¢ :u/ov; ~lj · JO!UallY have ~I·•~ , Stalemal< Is raolved. Yoo gel ·Combine m .. ;:·.·f.,_., .;11 .i . 'Ctltlon. Anotber Pllcou lo"" -1 • t: ICtk>n In areas whlch lwd been pul\IUll · ~ \TOb'ed. .. / oL ... ·...,. .W~ft vol. ' ~nnanl. Many who ,....,. pnoelicajllf. Mean& atrtye, for · 11' T O D A y IS YOOJI _. · ......... j4t 1,.. olraid . to ....-.. you now ¥'"P!' ~ ""'' !>< • r R TH DA y you -0( wltK· iii Of!"••- ·-n.ellrip. This la ell to 'itilbui!Utlc, but, knowledce . . • · I ~ ....,.!11"'8 Ii . the good and you are :....:.d be , ..... , •• ~ 11 and , melodious vo•ce, line ,.... ol. ~~ G!~~-·. lhe beneficiary. Friendahl1>il two-..,... -~· · Ci color, balanq alld harmony'. ~-· way llreet. Koow It: act like ,..pooc1 acconlingly. Get acll In December you II> through a -."'Ing. ::IJ,tt;.t:• you know It. from r<liable -ces. period of .oeU-discovery. In .'~ i;., -·at S•a-•ams (N -. J-you make new afuCJn " TAURUS (Aprll 20-May Ill): ~ •••~• av. -dJUerent direction . You ,.,. Goodwlll ;.l ndu1)roo1. Zonttans Honor Senior Coeds Strive for hannony, especially De<;. %I): WllllDgnea to aid •bout to ent<r per~ ol ailven-w' w11ere ramny re1a11oot are coo-S<erp1o 1s 11ne -but ii is not fur. _ and reward. '. 590 , • 19th St. ;';r';'! o.:..':"'!·~~ .. ~'.~ . ;~.t. ="~~ ,.._, I ' Cos~'. Mesa Give It and "'°"' -Ind the trip, spec:ial llltSl!lgl>, the Died rO_ u_.:~· u ·. t. ft ft .,_, . I<> .,,. lhoroup. n -venatile, ~·· ~ ~ more you give,· the better for · Sundr,, _..;. f .. • Ea ch month the Zonia Club of Newport Harbor honors a senlor girl from eacb, of the Newport-Mesa higb\sehools as Zonta Girl-of·the-a»rtth. ~lee· lion Is 'based on leadership, cltlzensh_ip, scholarship and service to her school. Al the end of the school year, ~ girls select the one they feel most qualified to be named Zonta Glrl-of-the-year r.and the recipieni of 1 J60 sav- ings bond. ESTANCIA A four-year member of the Swim Show. American Field Service, Spanish Club and Ecology Commlltee, Karen Louise Johnson al90 is a mem- ber of the PTSA and ls a life member of CSF. 'J'he daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony M. JohflS()n of Costa Mesa earned honors at entrance and the presidential scholarship at Ch a pm an College where she will major in biology. She also is lhe reci~ pient of the Bank ol America mathematics and i c j e n c e award. NJ! HIGH Meredith ?.1assey, dau1hter or Mr. and Mr s. Lloyd R. Massey Jr. of Newpart Beach. is student body secretary and president of the Girls' League. She also se.rved as chairman of the junior-senior prom and has been active In the Pep Club, Ski Club and served as Student Congress represen· talive. lo.Uss Massey plans to attend the University of Soulhern California "'here she will ma· jor in dental hygiene and minor In home economics. CdM HIGH A transfer from Blair High School, Wisconsin, E 11 e n Gerken is a school board representative and had the lead in "Carousel" at Corona del Mar. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. \\'alter Gerken or Corona del Mar served as junior class vice president, was an alternate of Girl s' State, a member of Madrigals for two years and was ranked No. 1 in Wisconsin in tenni s. Miss Gerken hopes to become a professor of Englisi) or pursue a Jaw career. S~ will study at Wellesley College. CM HIGH Student b o d y secretary, Janice Lester is a member of AFS and the Hiking Club. Her Hst of award! include the Bank of America for voca· tional arts, GA,\'s M is s Congeniality and E.l Moore. She ranked fifth nationally, second in the state '&Jld is the SPA AAU district i-ecord holder in the 00.yard hurdles. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Lester of Costa Mesa . Her future plans include . entering Orange Coast College in the fall and then transfer- ring to UCL She will pursue a career as a legal secretary. all. Ubra plJy1 key role. yoo make significant gain. • ' J • ~ ~ ' w,.---,.,..,-..,. ~ .._ Promotion is dUe. Dlvenijy! /JJY ~-. ~11.,.,.;;."· -----M=~:i-~2~~ i!~ 11f'1'~ ~~u!~:: ·s N:A-'ftr · y· "'o· ju· r .Dol-lar, within. You really do un· spendlng.taklngfinancial J . ~."9' .', derstand what ls best_...,..., is stock. You solve dilemma. 1660 OUJ«ll· AV£· ')t 8 "' to map Wolr&m and to fuilow Profit could result. · Gemlnt, cosr.A MllA. ·~ • U•VS, ,;; . !,ti"."• -.. ~~ Some 1gn••-h At'_..:..··~ ~y picture. ·wnte, advertise and s 1.111,;&nt c anges oc-. ' _ -,,,. It. , -·-range -~~u1e JS. m· Vtrco are apt tO be in picture. f ./' .. -:'I.I'"'!' publicize. Get mess. g e cur which provide direct o· OO"w· ILL across! benefits !or you. ll' AQuARJus cJan. 2.0-Feb. • 'ORE CANCER (JWle 21·July 22)o Check stock, invoices, in· ventories. Find out what should be maintained. what must be discarded. Streamline procedures . Take advantage of older p e r s on ' s experience. Don't permit pride to dictate actions . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ac· cent is on special agreements. 18): Gift, accolade, flattery -SJ . --·.L taln balance. You are riding a crest. Don't trip because of SPECIAL' wanting too much, too soon. I • Member of opposite sex does emorrs I care. Bui diplomacy is re-SPORTSWEAR quired. I PISCES (Feb. 19--March 20): Wcslclilf Plaza, 17th and Jrvine, Newport Bcach,California92660 legal documents, including -----------~~~~~~~~~~~ Coast Couples Repeat Vows contract which ll(Sul\s in wider au d i enc e;.....J.more customer!l. added s a I e s . Perl1)iY1hosc close to you to have their say. Then you gain valuable allies. MOULAND-KOEPSEL Dr. and l\frs. Vernon E. Koepsel'!! Newport Be a ch home was the scene of the marriage ceremony linking their daughter. Alicia Lou ise Koepsel and Wayne Douglas li.1oulend, son of l\tr. anrl Mrs. Douglas R. Mouland of !fun· llngton Beach. Officiant wa s the Rev. Roger Berg, pastor of the. Newport llarbor I.. u t h e r a n Church . Attendants v.·ere the bride's mother and David J. Mouland. The bride.! a third generation Orange lAWltian, is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orange Coast College where she \Vas vice president of Epsilon Delta sorority. Her husband is a graduate or South l~igh School. Tor· ranee, El Camino College' and Galifornia State University al Long Beach where he is doing graduate work. BARTEL-SLEMMER ' ' / ' ~ ICE SKATI NG WITHOUT 'VEAK ANKl.ES •No weak a nkles for beginners with the Ice Capades pro designed ice skates and unique leaching method. • Rent or buy Ice Capades skates at our sport shop. • Enjoy the thrill of skating In a few hours. • Gift cerUficates, In any amount, for lessons or ice skates .•• a gift of Hletlme value. ICE_ ~ f.\1':11111~ ~\L'-,~ lllSA YIHI SHOPPIN• CINTllll 2101 H•rbor 11,4 •• •t 'JW1rftt c.,,. ""'''· c.nf. •2•1' Tel. (714) 979-8880 ! MRS. MOULAND Paul 's Episcopal Ch u r ch . Tustin. The bride is the daughl er of l\1r. and Mrs. Frank C. Slem- mer of Tustin and her husband is the son of l\1rs. En•in F. MRS. BARTEL Bartl'!' of Burney. Attendants were 1\1 r s. Gregory \V. J-Ialley, Colleen l\·lullcn, Joyce Littlefair, Sarah Bartel. La\~rence A. Cripe. Paul and ltichard Bartel. Following a Catalina honey- moon , the ne\vlyweds will reside in Sant.a Ana. ST ANGER-LATHAM lo.1eli ssa Ann I..atham and Ri ck Gene Stanger were mar- ried in the \\'ildemcss Glenn, Mission Viejo with the Rev. Tom Warmer officiating. Their parents are t h e Richard G. Lathams of Mission Viejo, Mrs. Larry Gere of El Toro and James F. VIRGO (Aug. 2:1-Sept. 22): New deal occurs in area of employment. Your work becomes more exciting. You are able to be more creative. Health factors are involved : You feel stronger, more in- dependent. Leo will cooperate. Know it and take appropriate steps. LIBRA (Sept. 2:1-0ct. 22): Spotlight on affairs of heart. Your ability to know what others want and need is Stanger of Ogden, Utah. •----------- Maid of honor was Miss Catherine rutter and best man • was Wayne Olivas. • 'Mle bride, a ~th generaUon ~-.-\ Californian, is a graduate of Mission Viejo High Schoof and attended Saddleback and Orange Coast colleges. lier husband is a graduate of Bonneville High School, Ogden and also attended Sad· d\eback and OCC. They will resid e in Tustin. mQe ~lei§h HUNTINGTON MAllOUI Cl111D-V1nt-.Ac,n1erles HOURS: TU•S.·SAT. 10 Ill 4 ln•llH Tiii lNnlWI~ CMllr HUHTIHGTON lt:ACH 1"41 ALGOHQUIH 11 WAltNER ,...,,,, W Dp.,."NlSH EXPO To EL co ME FASHION FASHION J ISLAND NEWPORT CCNTI:R • FAS HION I SLAND SHOP 10:00-5:30 644-2800 NEWPORT , • I I ) DOUBLE OR TWIN SIZE MATTRESS or BOX SPRINGS $1995 ea. FOAM l F!ATHllll PILLOWS 2 ,., $349 $1.79 .... WOMEN'S DRESSES 79~. BABY MATTRESS s995 llG SILICllON TABLE LAMPS AS LOW AS $245 MEN'S SHOES $1 ~55 "' Please Use These · Bootlls In Your -~ Neighborhood Call 646-2479 For Pick up Service ' I; l . BERRY DESSERT WHIPP.ED INTO SHAPE Year Round Delights Berry Sea.son Thawed For the fun of it, make Cherry Berry SoufOes in small individual dishes -they'll delight guests all year round. (The dishes can be purchas- ed 'in most any department store or. housewares shop. Or spoon thl mlxtlll'e Into dessert dishes:) •. .. We sa,y all year round because 'this delicate, colorful dessert is made with frozen raspberries or stawbenies, and canned maraschino cher- ries. Add millc, egg whites, sugar and heavy cream to an en- velape Of wtflavored Gelatin and just wait for the mixture to chill in your refrigerator. As a f)rst step in preparing these channing little soufOes, sprinkle the gelatin evenly over the milk in a medium rather Ulan a small saucepan. A 2-quart pan has more surface area, allowing the gelatine to dissolve faster with better heal d'5tribution. Becau!e of the serum solids in milk, gelatin does not absorb it as readily as it does water. Let jt stand a few minutes to -soften while you measure out the 'other J.n- gredlents. While the gelatin ts dissolv- ing over low heat, stir con- stantly with a rubber spatula -gently and steadily, not vigareoisly. If y00 stir too. brisijy, loo.pe of ~ gelatin will be 1oB' on the sides of the pan and the gel content of the dish may be scanty. When the granules hate completely disappeared they are ready to begin the gelling process. Here's how to make the paper coUars that give the characteristic high-rise effect of a souffle. Fold foil into 2 thicknesses 2 inches wide and long enough to go around soufne dish with generous overlap. Attach to dish with tape. leaving collar al least an lnch higher than rim of dish. CHERRY BERRY SOUFFL&'! 1 envelope unflavored gelatin 12 cup milk l package (10 ounces ) frozen raspberries or strawber- ries, thawed 8 maraschino cherries, slic- ed and drained 3 egg whites 1/4 cup sugar 1 cup (%: pint) heavy cream . whipped· • · - In medium sauce.pan, sprinkle unflayored g~latin over milk; let stand until gelatin is moistened. Place over low heat; stir constantly until gelatin dissolves, about 5 minutes. Remove from heat: stir in raspberries and cherries. In large bowl. beat egg whites until soft peaks form: gradually add sugar and beat until stiff but not dry. Fold in gelatin mixture, then fold in whipped cream. Tum into 6 indlvldual souffle dishes with 1-inch coUars, or into a 1-quart souffle dish with a collar. Chill until firm ; remove col· Jars. Garnish, if desired, with whipped cream and berries or cherries. Plan Your Portrait Photograph with John Graham Warford \JtdntSd'1, Mi )' 23, l..,/J Foods Flavored Jletermllled lo dedicate yoor Show tltal mm In Medlt<l- meous l o )ow~ nneu countries have 1 Hey dJs!>ea fe< the sake of yoor low bicldmce of bear! dbeaoe. budget· and your family's 00.,.. oil la Ifie major fat of health? ~ ewyday normal m.t. 1b.ls worthy resolve doesn't ,P easy. Jne.xpen.slve way to mean you have lo despair of pr;.lde a iow..:alorie appetite preparing delicious, tempting a~ with vitamins is to and even exotic meals. Broil-iierve a salad of crisp greens. eel, bolled and bland aren't -· the value of the • your only options. .,.._ best by tearing them You can accomplish yoor · lnlo bltwhe pieces with your -· and health ob-flntlon. . jeetlves and still preserve -diem with • cfn!a-your reputatian as 8 gounnet ~ ti. olive oil and wme coot ~following a few simple = ~h~tes~= -gut • and less cosily than buying the Concentra~e on '· o o d s prepared kind. All you need is satutated with flavor ms~d ,. little salt, pepper and of fat. Learn to lean !1eavdy paprika. For an extra fillip, on herbs and condiments. toss in some celery seeds or Doo't be married to the old dill _ ~ tried and true com~~oos. And don't forego d~. 'Ibey also may be tnte. Do Nothing makes people feel tb1nlc m terms of unusual in-more deprived gredie11ts to complement the · protein.. FISB BAKE-FANTASY Consider, for instance, sur-4 pound red snapper or roundiDe a snapper or bass striped bass, cleaned and with sliced orange! a n d scaled tomatoes instead of the usual 1/3 cup imported olive oil green pepper rings. They'll Salt 8.nd pepper give the fish a new, dress.up 2 onions, sliced look, and your taste-buds an 4 cups cooked drained brown exciting experience. rice To enhance the taste of fish, 3 navel oranges, peeled and use pure, imported olive oil. It sllced Into a small sltlllet an4 AuW onioos untll llOft. 5llr In rice. Spread mlitun -'JI lldO a -baking pon. Pllm llJh on top of rice mll<blnl. Place orange slices a n d tomato ....,_uces al'OWld fish. S,.-lnlde wllh lemon )uko. Bake in a preheated moderate oven 1350 degrees) 10< 40 mimltes or unUl fish flakes. s.rv..s. SAVCY BEANS ,, % cans (I pound, t ounces) chickpeas 2 cans (15 ounces each) kldney beam ~4 cup Imported olive oil ~cup flour 1 cup tomato juice 1 cup chili sauce l/<1 cup each molasses and mus lard 1 cup c• ounces) grated low- fat cheese 6 pineapple slices 'i{r. cup flmlly packed brown sugar OF COSTA MESA a detightfut bud get saton where beautif"t hair stytes begin. PRICE LIST 1a1tr;1 ca.rte llw l ... Mllrl MONDAY THRU THURS DAY FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY P~ICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER Shampoo •nd Set ...................................... $2.SO Ir up Perm•nent W•v• ................................ 7.50 Ir up Tint .......................................................... S.50 & •P Bleach Touch-up ........................................ 10.SO Ir up Fro1tin9 .................................................. 14.00 & up Semi Perm•n•nt L•shes ............................ 10,00 hair cuts 11.50 1695 Irvine Ave. -Costa Mesa Corner of East 17th St.-Above La Cave Restaurant 645·1050 548-9986 Open Dlilty, lncludlnt Sund•y• •nil MMt Evenings adds a delicious, distinctive 3 tomatoes, sliced flavor and has the advantage Juice of 1 lemon of being a mooo-unsaturate Brush fish inside and out Drain chickpeas and kidney beans. Pour into a 9x13J:2 Inch baking pan. In a saucepan mix olive oil and flour. Stir in tomato juice and chili sauce. Add molasses and mustard. Stir over low heat WlUI sauce bubbles and thickens. Stir in cheese until melted. Pour sauce evenly over beall!. Top with pineapple stlces. SprinJtJel~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ with sugar. Bake in al: preheated moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for 35 to 40 minutes. Serves ti to 8 . which will not raise the blood with olive oil Sprinkle fish m. cholesterol level. side and out with salt aDd pep- Extensive medical studies per. Pour remaining olive oil • Try Saturday's News Quiz Eveeyday web ea few loaves • upside-do .Unlike a lot of specialty breads, new Millbrook Up-Side-Down Bread is really special.' Because we bake it upside-down. For good reason.' You see, after the dough has risen in the usual fashion, a special lid allows us to tum each pan of Up-Side-Down Bread up~ side-down.' Thatwa~ during baking, the flavor-filled • . yeast bubbles rise J~~ through the dough ;•· ~ "" a second time.' This patented baking · · process, along with lots offan11-freshcreamery butter and purehon~give Up-Side-Down fantastic eating qualit1es.1 ' l'f amely, a cake-like texture, a honey-combed crust and just a touch of sweetness.' Pick up a loaf of either white or wheat Up-Side- Down Bread next time you go shopping. It might turn your ideas about specialty breads upside-down. J Mil.I.BROOK UP·SIDE·DO\VN·BREAD It just maybe the/lnesl loaf you'lief!llerlllsledortoasted. ·- t. , • • ' • DAllY PILOT Yltdnnday, May 23, 1973 FLAMES ' Kindle LeaPnin~ Experiente If a groop ol Soothem Califomla foreJtln J.anauage teachers w1tnts to soak up a little culture and Factice speaking a different language, where is the a.atural place to go• A1exico. of cour!C'. Ensenada has been the specific de sti nat io n of Fl.AMES twice for a social and culturaJ achange trip and both were so jXlpular that a third mool llk•IY will be planned. 1be most ncent trip. over the Cinco de ~1ayo weekend, was the longest of the tv.·o. Jn between, a group of Me:r.:- kan le.achers a n d ad- ministratora were entertained In Orange County b y FLAMES. The group. an offshoot or FLES, a group of elementary achoo! foreign I a n g u a g e teachers, includes m I d d I e school teachers. Its full name is Foreign Language Associa- tion -Middle and Elementary School -of Orange County. MORE T~ACHERS Accordlng to F L A M E S president Fre~ Kuhn , a Spani.!h teacher at Davis Mld· die School in Costa Me:ra., the group was opened to middle schools because more teachers or that level were teaching language than in elementary school. Foreign languages in elementary school have been less popu lar since the Kennedy Administration, he explained, so there is Jess money available to fund language programs. 1be 100-member group also includes h.igh school teachers, doctors and pro- fessors, including one UCl professor of engineering whose wife teaches in a bilingual pro- gram. The recent Enscnada trip 1t1racted retired teachen, school administrators 1 n.d atudellts from a.s far away as Long Beach and Be'Orly Hilb. The exct\_ange trlJ)'!I were conceiwd by Kuhn, who spenl three years in Mexico on a mission for his church. He first tried lo contact school administrators in Tijuana bul received no answer. ''Then I decided to phone Ensenada," Kuhn said. ..The superin· lendent lhere was super· enthusiastic. He even made a trip up (to ea.ta Mesa) with his wife for a planning session." VISITED SCHOOLS fo,LAMES members first went to Ensenada in February of 1972. They planned the O\'ernight trip to coincide with a school h'Jliday so they could vi.sit Ensenada schools in session on a ~unday moming. Then in November a group or approximately 35 teachers came to Orange County for an overnight stay. Jed by Sr. Raimundo Beltran O Imo s ·, federal inspector or schools for the Ensenada district. They were to meet at 5 p.m. in the awltipurpo_,e room at Davjs for a potluck dinner and entertainment. Kuhn said, and by S all the VIP guests and members had assembled to vielcome them. Six o'clock came and no J\1exicans had arrived. Kuhn said Sr. Olmos had mentioned a motel in Costa Mesa as a la ndmark so Kuhn drove there and found a group of teachers waiting for Sr. Olmos, who v:as tra\'eling in another car voith more of the teachers. BACK TO SCHOOL 'fhey decided to go to Davis and wait for Sr. Olmos there. Kuhn asked the mutel clerks to watch for him, alerted the police and escorted the first arrivals to the dinner. Soon, Sr. Olmos arrived with • his rontingent and w a a escorted to Dav1.s, delighted that be bad beeo deemed irrr porta.nt enough to receive a police escort to the dinner. The second fl.AMES trip was ertended to a full weekend because those who went on the first trip thought it was too short a stay. To get more of a glimpse in· to Mcrican customs, FLM1ES members stayed with the teachers in the various "colonias·· or Ensenada. Nearly 40 made the trip, v.·hich included a tour of two schools, en tertainment by an orchestra and chorus of 70 students, a picnic of tamales, enchiladas and other Mexican food in Los Encinos (a canyon near EnsenadaJ, shopping and sightseeing. The American teachers were surprised at the au.Steri- ty of the ~fexican classrooms. "They are in need of many things -food. clothes, pencils. paper -just the basics," Kuhn said. "The rooms are just bone dry. There are no bulletin boards even." SMALL SALARIES He said the superintendent had told him there were "kids coming out the walls" they had so many sludents. Many of the students' problems stem from the fact that they come lo school hungry, he added. "Teachers receive an average salary or $160 per month llhey just got a raise) so many work two jobs." As a result of the exchanges, F'LAMES members plan to collect items for the Mexican students and either take them to Enscanda or present them to the Mexican officials when they come back to Orange Counly. They possibly will enlist the aid of high school and college foreign language clubs in the drive. But best or all, the trips have opened the doors to friendship between Mexican and American educators and offered the Anglo teachers glimpses into the Mexican culture. "Tl ls a good activity in human relations," Kuhn com- mented. "It offers so much in- sight into Mexican education, Mexican re.form, the problems there.'' of Mexican teachers and the challenge of Mexico. "It's a struggle down there." Discussing a recent trip to Mexico are (standing, left to right) Paul, Don and David Arthur and Fred Kuhn, with Marion Yale and Vickie Groskreutz (seated, left to right). ~·:;~Units Under New Leadership -P-'JH~ Medical Assistance Sent Overseas St. Francis PFA has contributed money fo r the con- struction of the Huntington Beach-Philippine Cli ni c to be constructed in the n1ountainous area of the Honors Bestowed Congratulating ca c h other are Atrs. l)ick Rowley (left) and Mrs. Bill French who receiv· cd Spring View PTO's highest awards. Parent· of-the.year and Teach· er-of·the'Year. Jlhllippines. The Rev. John Peterson discusses a 1nodel of the clinic with Ricky Fahilga and Jacque- line Chock. 1 EDITOR'S NOTE: A col· u.1nti devoted to Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Oc.ean View and Seal Beach School District parent- teacMr organizations will appear in the Daily Pilot each 10 eek. Information rnust be received by Mrs. Gilbert Trunbull. 5671 Man- gruni Drive, Huntingto1i Beach by 5 p.m. Thursday for publication Wedtiesdau. Fulton PTO Mn. Herbert Yomoglda President COMING UP: Unit will meet tomorrow night at 7:30. New officers will be elected and installed. Students w i J I Pace Slowing Down present their annual spring concert following the meeting. Kettler PTO Mn. Gory Wright President REPORTS: PTO constitution was adopted and officers were elected at the first Cans, Paper Collected EDITOR'S NOTE: A eel· ttmn devoted to Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach and Mission Viejo parent -teacher organiza- tions will appear in tile Daily Pilot each week. In- formation mu.st be r eceived by tlte women's department or J\frs. Cared Sm.ith, 1746 Centella Pkl.ce, Newport Beach by 5 p.m. Thursday for publication Wednesday . Bear .PFO Mrs. Robert Ballloger President ·COMING UP : Aluminum cans will be collected Friday morning, May 25, OD the school parking lol REPORTS: Board members voted to purchase a bulletin board ror t he main office, and to give each level $150 to be used for educational supplie:s_. Ea st bluff PFO A-trs. Eugene Kovach President Fashion Show COMING UP: Ann u a I mother -daughtef' fehioo show lwteheon Saturday June %. Assisting with the event are the Mmes. Lawren Rittenhouse, tickets; Dick Pickup, luncheon; George W. L<igan, fashions, and Al Douglass, decorations. REPORTS: Displayed in the school library are the new Atlas and stand which was presented to the school by lbe PFO. Mariners PFO Orval Holman President REPORTS: PFO officers in- stalled are Donald Kent, presidents; James C. Ford, Charles McGavran and Terence We I ch , vice presidents: James C. Ford,, secretary and James Wood as faculty r~tative. Larry Gudrun is treasurer. Mesa Verde PTA l\1rs. Davtd Chamberlain President Teens Helping Others F .. shion Show Teen·Angels, Teen·Aides and Junior Red Cross volunteers from the Orange Couti"ty Med.Jcal Center will present a Que<11s and T..., fashion show at It a.m. Saturday, May 281 in Ill< S.ddleback Inn, Santa AnR. HB Juniors • Huntington Beach Jwtior Women are coordinating dona· tions to complete t he beautification of Central City Park, Hunllngton B e a c h , which la expected lo optn to the public next fall. lluntington Beach Friends of the Library has contributed Proceeds will complete their SJSO and a donation also has pledge ror the purchase of M been given by Alpha Beta ant c n n a system f or market.$. Donations may be televisions, which they already ""Rt1l to the clUb at P .0 . Bo1 ha\'e installed in Pediatrics 2. l!KM, lluntington Beacb 92.847. . I ) REPORTS: Twenty eight tons of paper were collected realizing a profit of $486. Winning rooms treated to parties were Mrs. Sharon Waller. Miss Evelyn Winters and Mrs. Sally Stroble. Paularino PT A ~lrs-Paul Dumalo President OOMING UP: Paper drive from 7 a.m. to noon Thurs- day, May 31- St. John Aux. l\lrs. Harold Hameo President COMING UP : National Junior Honor Society certificates will be presented at the general meeting at 7:30 tonlghl. .. Mass and gradua· tion for eighth g r a d e students will be at 2 p.m. SWlday, June 3. REPORTS: Officers for the 1973-74 school year are the Mmes. George Taylor, vice president: Gerlad Walton and Robert Dube , secretaries, and E r w i n Keup, treasurer. • Victoria PT A Mr1. Tom Latcavisb Pffiildent CO~JING UP : Paper drive from 2 to 5 p.m. Friday, May 25. REPORTS : Members sponsored an open house receptioo today for Earl Powers, rellring curtodlan. Woodland PFO Mra. OUford Sbuyler President COMING UP: Annual talent show et 7 tonight in the multJJO'Pl)9e r o o m . . . Mother -daughter tea f o r 1lxth grade students and partnts 1bursday. June 7. • meeting of the newly formed unit. Taking office are the Mmes. Gary Wright, presi· dent; Robert Anderson, vice president, and Jay Wag- gooer, secretary. Gene Ponkauskas was elected as treasurer. Marine Vw. PTO Mn. Earl l\fonison President COMING UP: Father and son dinner is scheduled tomor- row night at 6:30 in Marina ' High School. Guest speaker · will be Keith Erickson of the l Los .Angeles Lakers. Price of tickets is $1.50 for fathers, 50 cents for sons .. _ Thank you luncheon for 1 volunteer aides will be presented Friday, June l, in the primary learning center. J\1rs . Dennis Frost. chairman of the event, will present a program honorinr teacher aides. Pleasant Vw. PTO l\1rs. aarke SWong President REPORTS: Newly elected of. 4 ficers are Mrs. James Jones, president: M rs_ ' Clarke Strong, Hobert Sha\v and Robert Vouga, vice presidents: ~1rs. Rog e r Garcia, secretary, and Frank Martinez, treasurer. Talbert PTO l\tn. Alvhl F11cller President COMING UP: Field day and dime-a-dip dinner will be sponsored by the unit Thurs- day, June 7. Field day is scheduled fro1n 9 a.m. to 1: IS p.m. and will take the place of year end parties. In use at the event will be the newly installed o b st a c I e course purchased by the unit. Dinner will be served in the lunch area lt 6 p.m. and guests are asked to bring a dish of their choke. Proceeds from the dinner will be used to fiMnce PTO projects, according to Mrs. Don Thledemann, chairman. Wardlow PTO Mn. Carl Bode President REPORTS: New offic ers elected to serve the tmlt arc the Mmes. Cart Bode, preSi- deot; James Crandall and James Emmett, v Ice: prealdent s: Edward Borowek: and R ob e r t Wyman, secretaries, and Jes1 Carranu, treasurer . • ... ~ ......... --. -. . ~ . . . JL't' l'._i,,, 39 Viva Napkins ~.:;.~-: Paper Plates ,d.:i'i:~ti;";" I. B-B-Q Sauce c~:::.& M,... Wright's Bread Mayonnaise ::.i. Beverages ~:~; Brlqu.ls O•a•k-Ha•d· wood Chartoal to ..... Pkg. Pl<g. 35c of 140 , Pkg. 68C of 100 14 .... 39c Btl. a •. •9c Jar ';a 7 Q, ..... , (plus deposit) IN OUR DAIRY CASE FROZEN FOODS ilBel-air Strawberries ·:.:-35' Shady Lane Butter "':." :.! 77' Lucerne Fruit Drinks ... -::.. ...... 55' Bel-air Corn-On-Cob ._ 4 .-.. 49' fl Bel-air Tater Treats ·:.-;: 25' Lucerne Cottage Cheese ;;; 43' Bel-air Onion Rings .._ .. ~ :.-; 35' ilBel-air Cheese Pizza .......... ~~ 55' Lucerne Dips :.:::~ ~= 37' •&iitii or Barlatue Suns-Skylark Pkg. of ·. I "'•• SPARKLING FRESH PRODUCE .............. Failfy Qto.lty Ideal For lunch Boxe1, O.llclou1 and Nutritious! lb. PINEAPPLES orP.APAYAS A Troplcol Treat! Your Choice each ••• SAFEWAY OR DUBUQUE CANNED HAMS 1= E~~~:D~~:ous $ 98 Canned Ham Today! 3 ~~·N . ' •529 ·4.1a. CAN ......... . 5-LB. CAN ......... ~6 59 8-LB. CAN ......... ~9 98 USDA Choice Beef Blade Cut Fresh Fryer Parts 7 -Bone Roasts Boneless Steaks each Sliced Bacon We•, Th lg ht er 9 °'"'''"icks.USDA.GrW'A' lb. 5c Fresh Lamb Chops Shovlder lllocl• Cut USDA 0.oKo lomb lb. s 12• er St•alu-USDA °'91uo fv11 Cent• Cut 11-nd• Wil .. n C..n IClng-88 t..tChuck-C.nt.,Cut 98( USOA.Cholc.Grocklhef s1•• SavorySntak.dfki.,.f l~. C lb. lb. 'kt· Fresh Beef Brisket Boneless Steak USOA. a.lc•GraO. s;.Min Tip IM,__,..lntCvr tit. s1•• USDA.Ot.ic•IMf Gourmet Ham $178 ::-i',:.."'MloOO"H ~ s 111 IO. 4-SllN. - . F k . .._.,.._ 1""·89• WI --, ... 93• ran s w. •• , u... ,... entn ....... ,_..., .... Pork Spareribs ..._ ..... i.i.... 99· Boneless Roasts -s....111 ... ( ... W.) n.. " !!?:::'."~~""' $131 Sm0kie Links ::;:. ·~111• lalnliow TNllt :::.:. ... .: 11" .._ Safeway Sausage ~ 98• lits of Shrimp ..:::::-' ...... 11" Center Pork Chops ~amily Steaks Bologna .. °::':."::::'., . ~ 65• Kosher lologna=:..=•121 ... '""""'"""'a..t $139 Cooked Shrimp·-:;:98' Kosher Salami:::::-;. 'l;;.'1111 l lbCuta-ld9CllP,., s1•• ""'""' " ..... "" lb. """''.....,'"'°""g'"' "· Cooked Perch Flllet';;;" •. 98• Hormel Bacon._,.,. ·~89' .BOURBON · Old Calhoun o·-~·99 16 l'roaf ,.,.,, BOURBON Ancient Age """' ... '1139 o.n- CHABLIS Italian Swisa Colony ,2 , 9 lwby, ftnlt, o.W Ha{f Gol'°" VIN ROSE ..... *I '' Boones Fann ~ ••• 95• la Mesa Burgundy .:'.i~. '1 52 • Look for these tags, They mark temporary extro SGYlngs all OYtr the store, Stock-up! • ICE CREAM Snow Stor-Greot for De11ert c BEL-AIR LEMONADE Fresh Squffted Aavorl ..... (oo FRESH BAKERY BUYS! • !!'~!!!!!~ .. ~~~!47C ""'"'Ii HOT DOG BUNS Ii FRESH DONUTS Pkg. 41 C Mn. Wright'• Pkg. 69C of TO Old Folhioned of 12 HfALTH & BEAUTY AIDS JD~ •Baby Shampo,0. .. 38( ...... ,.., 111. • !!.'!!.~,!~~~Y ·~: s1 sa Noxzema Skin Cream ... 881 Prell Liquid Shampoo ·~:· s 1°6 Secret Anti-Perspirant t:: 73 1 Breck Creme Rinse '..:: 73 1 Drink Mix 5c trett1-•.r.wcl•,.d ............................. rte,. 1~!1!'!t!:!~~e.5.?.:;:~~l:··79t Lucerne Salads ......... c7; 3 9c SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS ·"" • Spray Cleaner Fanta•t;k 22-<>•. 69" _.. All-Purpo•• A•rosol " Hou1ehold Container Toilet Bowl Cleaner Schilling Tamale Pie Playtex Tampons Pork & Beans :.::::: ,,... 59' ,,..,L .... _, 65 1 ... :lo SJ25 '::: 27 1 Avocados .~::::, Crisp CarroJs ~) PtkH !ff.cit.• Mti7 2'"26 In Lei Attpltt A °'9ftte Cotwltyjbwpt C.t•r111) e 1000 Bayside Dr., Newport Bea_ch_•_2_11...,l.....,..17th St, Costa Mesa • 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Laguna • 636 N. Coast lilvy., L~gu ~a ~each • 801 E. El Camino Real, San Clemente • Santa Ana Freeway at La Paz, Mission Y'iejo • • Wilson & Fairview, Costa Mesa '~~!~~-~~~~.'.~:~:.~: .... 9 9( t. I .. ' ,,, l ' . ; ' " • • I •• ' ' ' .. ' .. 'I " • !; .. I' ' •• " " '• " .. " ., " .. " " .. . l I ' ., • " ' ' -· 4!J OAll.V PILOT WedntSdaJ, May 23, 1973 S PILOT-AOVER'llS£ll <f, lfAYl•a•OI. MONIY aACll GUA•ANTU ON OUALln MIATI IVOY,IKI OF MIA TIS UNCOHDrTIONAUY GUA.IANTHD TO "-lASI YOU ... Oil YOUI MONEY WIU.llCHt~U'rlffUNDID Oscar M ayer Sliced Bologna ALL MEA' I -OZ. 6 7 c 11.01. 97 c ALL BEEF 1.oL 69c 11.oz. 99c TURKEYS ARMOUR STAR SELFIASTIHG ROTISSERIE 5 LB. TO B LB. AVG . 79L~ OiCAIMAYl l 1-U .ltG.Ol 11.0L TM,.SUCID , 1,. SLICED BACON ........... . 11 OSCAIMAYU 98 . ALL BEEF FRANKS LI c OKAIMAYll • 98' • ALL MEAT Wieners ... .L1 Prices Effective 7-FULL DAYS THURS., WEDS. MAY 241h-301h KRUSE SHANK PORTION LB. BONELESSROUNDSTEAK ... LB.01 .l9 BONE s 129 ROUND STEAK -IN ........... LB. D D · • CHUCK ROAST STA ra·llios: CEllTIFIEO IHF • II.ADE an c ' LI. CHUCK STEAK STATER BROS. CERTIFIED IEEF • GUARANTEED c LI. GROUND BEEF 'FRESH • DEUClouS ANY SIZE PACKAGE c LI. ! 6-TH RIB ,;; 6. 7-TH . ,. ROAST ST ATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF • GUARANTEED ~I ' $ 29· POUID . 1-STTHRU 5-TH RIB .... LB. Sl.49 LfAN•MEATY•PORK ~ 89 SPARE RIBS ............................. LB. HOOMIL ' 89' ALL MEAT Wieners .LI STATER BROS. aRTIFIEO BEEF• GUARANTEED 98C 7-BONE ROAST ............... LB. BHFSHOULD£RCUT 89C ROUND BONE ROAST .. LB. I s M>NIUSSSMOUlDllHlF f 139 ROLLED ROAST ............... LI TAILlll.A.ND 79' SUCED BACON ...................... LI STATOUOS.CUTIRIOIEff S 169 ' SIRLOIN TIP STEAK .... LI """'""'""--. 5659 CANNED HAM ................... •-~ LIAN .. TENOfl•GUAIAHTRO s 179 CUBE STEAKS .......... '. ............... " WlU DtMMID •LIAN A.NDTINDH S 118 T-BONE STEAKS ·················· LI . MOTA.LS WB.L Tl:IMMID ·nMDE• s 185 ' PORTERHOUSE..... . LI. IOHILIH s 129 SftWING BEEF ... u . IONE-IN GUA.IANTllD ' s 12 9 RUMP ROAST ........................ LI ........... s139 RIB STEAK LI. Hlf lllCVI s 169 CLUB STEAKS .......... -LI STATilllOSalTlF•DllD $ 198 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK " " r,. .. <i\•' f ,, ,;.;.· -~.1 1 , ..... \f •.. 411'.!ll I\~, BEECH-NUT BABY-FOOD ' ASSOllTED STRAlllED 43/• -OZ.' .L-. ~ ~ 1-t. ~'lieu. WHOLEll.#t 3ftc 0 C ORANGE JUICE ........................ 1.2<~~ -. RmED CHICKEN ....................... i.~5 1 89 ·' WIZARD . BAGG•S CHECll[R80A.RO fA.~S s329 W•TH P£ A.SA.NO MUSHROOMS 30c 0 TURKEY ROAST ----"'"' BIRDS EYE RICE ······-"" o· CHECKElllJOA.110 fA.RMS s309 91RDS EYE Wi!H A.lt.IONOS 38' TURKEY ROAST -----""'' FRENCH BEANS .. _ '"' CHECK£R80A.RO FA.RMS 5LIC£0 s159 91~05 [Y[ 10.0l 30c TURKEYW/QRAVY _,..o, PEASW/CAULIFLOWER ~ u QH.IOYIONUJP,AK 2 89' CHEESE PIZZA .............................. 1•-oi. OLl SOUTH A.550"'(0 s1o:a TRCli5WC[T 49' FRUIT COBBLERS ..... ·-··"' ORANGEJUICE ..... --· "o' CHARCOAL 49c Slll.=Ctl 49c LIGHTER .......... 32-0Z. l!f.COUMT JIFFY BAKING MIX ... . 40oz. 47' Cius BROS. JELLY OR JAM ::'~li~: ...... _ ......... 32.oz. 61' OFFEE QR[ IOA. . ,,Ac 00WNYfLA,ll{ 43' ONION RINGERS --·-· ""' IJ't.. FRENCH TOAST . --",,.o, BIRDS£'1£1NIERNA.TIONA.L 4"7t MRS rR1DAYS s233 I VEGETABLESm• -·-· >o" I JUMBO SHRIMP .... -. " • PLUM PRESERVES '""' ......... '" 52' 99c TOMATOES i:i,~g~·~-.. __ zii 26' ~~· FRUIT cocKTAIL OEC MO"' ..... z~~ 29' >-LI.CANU ... SCHIRMERS • DELICIOUS SALADS:~~T:o~r ................ 1 ~-:i 4S c HUNT'S WHOLE 2 TOMATOES ...................... 1.4.~c~~-I c DEL MONTE PEARS ~t.1~~'.~-~···· c'.l'~ 35' SWEET RELISH O"M0N1'-...... >2'0Z 35' DILL HALVES o" MON1' .............. 22'0Z 46' Cl/TRITE WAX PAPER .. "'" 27' PIERLUNG ;~~ .. ~~1:,, ... »oz 61' ' AMERICAN BEAUTY • WIDE AND EXTRA WIDE I 7 EGG NOODLES aoz C ~:1':&~1 ·'"oL 67' .......... PKG: SUGAR TWIN ~~~~""'" ...... 7. IJ.QZ 67' • Hw1LsHA1RE 48-MouNcE BJAR U R GER CHIPS 69c oBERTI OLIVES if.~n ~~·---.. m 46' NABISCO OREOS . . . . . . .. "o' 47' BAG 'N SEASON SCHICUNG POT 33' AOAST-Cl11C KEN --~!"KG. 'I CCANTOADINAOASSORKTED 30•0BSIZE CAON 0 K SAUCE 31 C BAG 'N SEASON ~;~~'i~~s ·· · ······PKG. 36' TREE-SWEET GRAPE DRINK .~ 49' KAVA INSTANT COFFEE --•·oz $1.03 LIBBY GREEN PEAS .. -----Z~ 25' ' WHITE KING LIBBY CORN l;'~8~U'~'s~i, . ·-c~ 22' WATER GIANT 4 s c CHEDDAR CHEESE :~~~~·~····-•oz. 79' SOFTENER -................ PKG. KEN-L-RATION DOG FOOD 2'·0Z. 24' , CLEANS AND DISINFECTS -7-UP 6 8ftc COFFEE STATER BROS . 93 . , ·GRAPEFRUll ~ LARGE FANCY DESERT SWEET ,' 8 POUND BAG ORANGES FANCY SWEET VALENCIA c PINE SOL SSC REGULAR .......... 02.oLCANS 7· • CLEANER ..... 15-0Z. HUNTSTOMATOPASTE ~:::: 1; , FDAB ETERGENT S 9 c GRANULARVAN1sH ............. o, 55' GIANT NON-FAT MILK 5~l~~i\'i':.r.. ...• 01, 11.19 ............ 4 FOR 5 1 LARGE FANCY CALIFORNIA k~ss AVOCADOS SMALL PANCY WASHINGTON ...... -................... PKG. CANTADINATOMATOSAUCE ooz..10' ~e.atdf, & i$'eaca: ..A • ..1 . t:!A --•-AJ FANTASTIK CLEANER REFILL _ ,,.0, 6r GULDEN'S MUSTARD i~ •. •oz. 19' 'ff nuu. ~· WHITE KING DETERGENT ..... ~''"' 59' BEEFARONI CHEF 9()'f.AR·OEE _ 15-0Z.. 36' MOUTH DRISTAN STYLE NU-PINE DISINFECTANT . -"" 51' SOUP MIX ~~~:~.i·~:~ ............... 2PAK 25' WASH TABLETS ... ,....... VETS HIGH PROTEIN DOG FOOD "' 15' K2R SPOT LIFTER O.OL T1' ,0, IJ.51 LISTIRIN I AHOllTIO GREAT BEGINNING DRESSINGS "' 23' $119 PACKA"OJ2' 47' RENUZIT ~P.'~~""""'·OL 63' \'!JI "' 89 C II« CRACKER BARRB. CHEESE ~I,,\':'_ __ ... 81' 11..at CRACKER BARRB. CHEESE ;;;:r_ ... 94' :~::~?~1 1~z. 47c MAr.ARONI & CHEDDAR ~4~~ _ _,,,,oz. rr --:11--A-=B--Rl""E--Zl--l-C,,-O_L_G_A_l _I ~-==.:::u=n=.::..-... ~ SALAD DREJSINO :.:~·:~:; ....... -•• 3~ ANTISEPTIC DENTAL CREAM TABLETS KELLOGG'S JUMBO ASSORTMENT .. ~. ar s 1 09 69' ~'.. 78• DRANO 0"1N o""" "OL 43' •0--, __ , " WETONESTOWELETI'ES 10.cr ar SBERLOTZMEOR BAAYSEPIRRCIHlllSLD PHAA111PPYYHLl0GSll Sl!OiDLBOWLCLEANER ..... """ 3' LIMEFABRICSDFTENER,"'rr""' "" 54' ~ 83' ~t.°' 25c :ig'°:'11 6~ LIMELIQUIDDrnRGENTs~r11•p,11' 110l 2f DUlllS BRlLO SOAP PADS OP.l , .. C~Gf !!.!!!• =-.. ... -........... -....... 3 LBS. 5 1 CARROrs ___ 2 ~~25' CAiiiii'UPis .... 27' 1 STATE. R BROS c"HEESE •••DOM WEOGHTS • PRICED AS MARKED 0 . -' .... ct PURINA cAT uTrm VARlm MBlli P RICEl EFF.a;. l~f.ULt DAYS • MAY 24th-30th ~ 0 _,' TOAST-EM POPUPS ASST ... 10-·0Z.. 3& . FAVOR• BONUS PACK ........... as.oz.. age SCOTT'S LIQUID GOLD ...... 16-oz.. 11.47 l~l SSC LIVER IV.-OZ.CAlll 14600 1o. .................... ,. ·101 W• N ... r11 Ito "'"'' c..t. .. ... '"2 ldl..,... ....... "-... ... .. J60J w ... s. ••••••• ,. '""'· ...... .. 1111 c111ap .... A ........... .,.... *J60 Nortti T•tl11 A.,...., ..... AH 1100 .... , Colll• ....... 0,.... IUJ .__...._ ....... WMhfllutef 34JO Wett UK.ta """"• Aitahelt1t 2610 1,..._A ....... S...AH 1210 Mc ...... A---. S-.. AIM ' 2164 Wftt ~.A'""-'"' 2110 Newport l tYCt., COltil M ... 11 75 lak.., S""', Cdta' M"• 14171 •ect Hiii Awn• Twtla 1421 J Ml"" '-"""• M l"• ., (l f11 (/\ 'ti r c U\ * I/) Q. >ICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS BAG OR 1 l( $-LB. UQ lie IHI. ua 4lc KIDNEY IA. * LOW-LOW PRICES PLL'S BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW 1-0W PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP CJ . -. • I . \ . I I 1 ) , • • ' ' ~ ~ I ""' '"' -----"' --...... ~ .... ~-... DAILY PIUIT 41 Chiles Spice Dairy Dish DoltyOltlwIDbeyouru-,1 _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ clamatl9a -,.. ... tuted.,,.. ________________________________ _ RAVIOLI DINNER lat I• or tale 011t. Ret. Sl.65 htcl11des 2 Meat lalls, $Qlod, Gorllc lread. (Limit J -tllph111 J/Jt/7J) I ".r! " I \ • • ...-r.i \, " .!;" .jl' I . . . '· 6/29' ~,·:~:~: BUNS R941. 6/l9j .HOM!. MADE -·~----1-1_9_ ITALIAN SAUSAGE ...... ,, u.. Mcoi'AieLLA '·cHEEsE 99!.. :J_) A "ACIAN 0£U. RESTAUll'AHT • e &AKERY-OROC ERY u cct e t ":=:x"' 8911 Adams at Magnolla, Huntington Beach, OM ., ....... "' Otll Oper1llOM In CtlltOl'"n\I. In Gtr11tn• ewer 11 ., ...... Now ""'lilt Hvnllnflon •Ndl, ~ounttln Ytlft'Y, CHI• MeU, Nft1119rt & 111 of Or11t911 Co1,1nty s 0 DAILY tM'30-NI. 10.t I RE HOURS SUNDAY, ... CLOHD MONDAY Ri ce is nice arid extra spicy when mold ed cheese and sour cream for Mexican buffet. • · tbls spicy dish. II Plet>IY of '°"' crum and Moolerey J~ • d>oese com- bine with rice and spice ln a btau\iful riQg that doubles aa in eritree or a al.de dish. u yoolre wptJCll about Wl- rnoldiog rings, thi• daleyland lpeclalty ia equally nice in a ~tty ca......ie. Mo ... Jack cheese melted on top adds a luscious brown crust. A touch <¥ bright red pi- mJento and green chili peppers addl colorful contrast and enough r.est to the subtle aour C2'Uffi and cheese to have you say "More, por favor !" The nutrition in this dish is a secret bonus. Dairy foods are high in top quality protein, vitamin A and minerals that are essential for bo.ne, teeth, and cell building. Have a South of the Border evening with colorfu l placemats, perforated tin cans with glowing cand~ inside, Hot Mexican Rice Ring, warm tortillas and an avocado and citrus tossed salad. HOT MEXICAN RICE RING 2 cups rice 1 cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese 1 (4-ounce ) can chopped · green chili peppers 1 teasPQOn salt 1 teaspoon pepper l pint dairy iOut cream V. cup chopped pimiento Cook rice according to dlrectiona on pocka11. Com· blne with remaining i:D- gredienbl. Spoon I n t o /!<Up ring mold, pocking firmly. Bake in 330 der.ea oven 30 ·minutes. <;ooi a ew minutes, IOQlen ......i edl"I wi!b a knl!e. . Cover wltb platl. Clr<lullY turn upelde down and llft oil .mold. "Gamiah platter II dHlred w!tb ponley and nd and green chili p 1pper1 . Makes 8 servings. This is highly seasoned. For milder flavor decrease amount of pepPer and green chili pe~ pers. ,_""' __________________________ , I '·I I I I I I I I I Worth 13• on two pounds of Mrs Filberts I Golden Quarters Margarine. 1 ~ I Mrsfilbens I -I TO THE DEA LEH: You ire 1u1ltorited 10 aci as our a11enl in ..,deemini: lllis coupoQfl'Q\lidcd n h11 Men acccplcd in,. bon1fidc lfan ... chon 1ow<1rd pur· cll.iltt o t11o·o pounds ol M ~. Filbert'.• Gol1l.:11 Qu~rtcu ~'3ri:1ronc. Mrs. F1!· bcn"1 wilrP•Y you iu r..:c value plus Jc llant.Jhn~ co~t. '" ac-cordanc-e wull 1hc 1Rrtcmcnt m•dc wull you. 1111d Ille rule~ und ~ndnoon,, apphcabtc 11lcr~H>. C<isll v•luc: 1120 or IC. J. H. Folbc:n. Inc. 3101 Sou1hwc~1~rn Bhd .. Balumorc. M•ryl•nd 21229. I I I ·---------------------------· I ' CUT OUT A SUPERmTION. ' I. 'l Save a lucky I3e and discover Mrs Filberts1Golden Quarters. The margarine invented by a woman. .:.-.... .... .,.., -... ..... -. ······-· 601 EAST BALBOA BLVO., BALBOA RE,RIGERATED DELIVERY SERVICE ' PHONE 673-8310 • IPICIAl.S .al TMUISDAY, FllDAY, IATURDAY. MAY 24, JS. U. HORMEL ALL MEAT WIENERS 1 Lb. Pac ( • KNUDSEN'S POTATO OR MACARONI SALAD 1 Lb. Carton ( LAURA SCUDDERS GIANT SIZE POTATO CHIPS Req. 73¢ a Pac ( A Pac. o,. t ..... ,. 61M , ... -1 o.,. • ...._ W•.....,,. t11e rttltt .. "•'' ...-llMI. o,." t •·•·,. 6:00 ,. .. -1..,.. w..t I Best Idea .since Shopping Carts Now you can do a week's shopping without forcJetting a single item! Use pre-printed shop- ping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. Ad'PI lllft A"""°lmtMly Twke SlJe ""'91 oUleYe 140 separate printed Items, plus additlanal spaces you can fill in yourself. Just check 'em off - 34 StaplH 21 V191tabla1 14 Fruits 6 Bakery Items S Beveraves 19 Mut and fish entries TT Dairy Items 20 Miscellaneous Two-year supply (I 04 listsJ furn- ished in convenient teer-off pad for just $1.00 (postage prepaid) SEND IN COUPON TODAY AND BECOME A SUPER SHOPPER ••••••••••••••••••••• • • • Fiii In this coupon, clip and mill with $1 to: • • Piiot Printing Shopping Lists • • Post Office Box 1560 • • Costa Mesa, Callfornia 92626 8 • • a ··································••••• I .... ' ....................................• . . . ' .............................. ·······• • • • .. ......... ,...c... • • ••••••••••••• •1• •••• DAILY PILOT -------- • ! • i I I • ' . ft DAILY PILOT , _ ----'==;_:;_--"-''---- Spring Treats Flower 1 f yolU' spring dinner menua can for elegant, airy dellerts, temptingly flavored with a drifting fragrance of real vanilla you may want to try either the Vanilla Daffodil Scuffle or a gosaamer-llght English Vanilla Applesauce Fool. Both of these desserts -for which recipes follow -are ethereal by defmiUon, IOl.lffle comtna: from an old world · which meant to puff up, while ·the English fool comes from the La.Un for bellows. Both llght and luscious. Either of these delectables may be made bolU's in ad- vance and refrigerated. While the triangles of gelatin candy make a channing and colorful garnish !or the Vanilla Dal· fpctil Souffle you can decorate It in other lovely ways - a scattenilent of fresh violets from the backyard, or the petals of a red or pint rose . Or, H you juat llke to half· close your eyes and con- centrate on that marvelous pure vanilla plus orange flavor, you'll never miss the trimmings. The Vanilla Applesauce Fool couldn't be easier. Inciden· tally, if you're counting cost or calories, use whipped Instant nonfat dry milk in place of cream for lightnes!I. In a chill· ed bowl whip 1/3 cup dry milk with 1/3 cup lee water until soft peaks fonn. Add l 1ii tablespoons lemon juice and beat until stiff. VANILLA DAFFODIL SOUFLE 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar, divided 2 packages unflavored gela- tin . Vt teaspoon salt 4 egg yolks 2 cups milk __ 2 cans (6 fiuiQ oz. each) fror.en orange juice con- centrate, thawed 2 tablespoons pure vanilla extract 4 egg whites 1 cup heavy cream, whipped and divided I packllge (3 ounces) lady I fingers , In the top part of a double boiler mix 1 cup of the sugar, gelatin and salt; set aside. In a small mixing bowl beat egg yolks lDltil light; stir tn milk. Add to sugar mixture. Cook over boiing water, stirring constantly, until g e I a t i n . dissolves, about a to 10 . minutes; remove from heat. Stir In orange concentrate and .vanilla extract. Chill until mixture is as thick as unbeaten egg white. Beat egg whites until soft peaks form. Gradually beat in remaining 2 tab !es poons sugar; beat until stiff bul not dry. Fold egg whiles into orange mixture. Fold in half of the whipped cream. Spoon 1/3 ol the mixture into a 2-quart serving dish. Stand a few lady fingers around the edge of dish, pressing gently into orange mixture and ar- range a few over top of orange m.i'lture. Repeat I a y e r i n g orange mixture and lady fingers, ending with orange. Chill until finn. Garnish w I t h. remaining whipped cream find fruit- Davored gelatin candies, cut in triangles, ir desired. Yield: 10 to 12 portions. ENGUSH VANILLA APPLESAUCE FOOL l package (3 ounces) vanilla pudding and pie filling mix 11/z cups applesau ce 3 tablespoons pure vanilla extract. t cup heavy cream, whipped Prepare pudding as label directs, using only 1 'h cups of milk. Stir in applesauce. (:over surface with waxed paper: cool. Stir in vanilla extract Fold in whipped cream . Pour mixture into individual parrait glasses. Garnish with chopped nuts, If desired. Yield: 8 to 10 portions. . Zest Added Interest.iJJg combination of favors. 1 package (10 ounces ) frozen chopped spinach v. cup finely diced celery 4 fiat anchovy fillets, cut up 2 lablespoon.s butter Pepper to tule ' 4 slJces bacon, crisply cook· ed llld Cl'lllllbli!d ' C'.<iok spinach,· adding the " ' celery and omitting salt, ac- •. , oording to package dJrectionJ; drain. '' Add anchovy, butler and I · pepper llld reheat. Sprlnkl' wllh bacon. Makes 4 serVinP• ' I ,~-:"You'll like the produce . " ~ be~eratAlphaBeta. FRAGRAltt > ·. . COACHELl.A VALLEY " RED STOC '" • FIRST OF THE SEASO CORN ON THE COB -GARDEN FRES 'A CUCUMBERS FANTASllC OISCO UHTS £V£RY DAY " © D'iirr RiFii."l'cups ~ 200-Coun! 8ot1\t ~BAYER ASPIRIN <§ llA'5AL"'sP~AY ~ 7.0.....Ce Aerosol ~MENNEN DEODORANT S..ete! • 7 0'-"'<f! Aoroool SPRAY DEODORANT s.01, Ant1.Pe<sp1.1w.r tt. .--=-... 1.°"""" liquid . 2 0.. Ct.OM MITCHUM .,.._..., ANTl·PERSPIRANT J() Q• • W,o~ Ho"<JIM FOAM ICE CHEST 6-P~. f°""' let! Q.,,,., 7k CJWl(llS -~ 60.C"""' • MulHpi,, .,.. t•on --~CHOCKS VITAMINS AIJ'HA Bf:T" OISCOUttT f>~IC[ 44• 121 87• 97• 99• 199 129 l '9 l '9 '~~~~~:~~~tits ~'"" l 59 ~ @ii8a;j·u;1J'e'AtrrR1Es 49• '.3 ©Liamo'oiiucHE 69• l "NEW" • By MISS VANDY The PRETTIEST Panty Hose PrettiHt on You ~ Your MONEY BACK! Ploi" Knit • '4 Sizes Assorted Col0ts Sheer to Waist ' \ )39 RIPE WHOLE WATERMELON •• SOLID GREEN CABBAGE FANTASTIC OISCOUNTS EVERY OAY p,.,l_ • 1 O...nte B<>•tlr CREAM RINSE For Blondes (ovP• God • [,,l;n~t BIG EYE ANO SHINEY SHADOWS Cov., Girl •Sine~ • lko""n AUTOMATIC EYE LINER r ,,,., r; .. 1 THICK LASH MASCARA ALPHA BET" 01$COUNT PRICE 68• 78• 47• 1 '9 .J 59 l 39 RED RADISHES FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY OAV llllPH" ecr" "'''"'" f>RIC( lB. ' ' RED RIPE , STRAWBERR ES • -o FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY BEAUTIFUL I': 11 GLADIOLUS t . '" -'"°"*Q~~t. ~+.1 _..__ MUMS . . j J\ ... FREE l EMON tEAF & ft~R~PAPU .,.~. ,- FAflTASTIC OISCOU~TS EVERY OAY r-' ~ .... 21• 68• <Sm. 'DisffiY'Asii'u • · 53, )iiOiiij' DETERGENT ' A•...,.i.d • Q :ncli DECORATED PLAYBALLS © iiArHR6iir.l 'Tissut """ 36• A""'eo • Med;vm Sit•• 4 Pock OVAL SPONGE ~ ~ey"<tld•' 8.(......,t 10"xl6M ~BROWN N' BAG 36• 26• 60• 38• 27• 38• ........ D.....,, 12-01.C... KERN'S PEACH NECTAll .... 33• @G°EeiiAii'ilrs'SAucE GEBHARDT; Sm CH~I BEANS 14• ©si£rriGlANT PEAS ' 34• <§ ~ATH0 oif'BEADS 69• <'8 w£rofli'S );i'(TOWELmES ~ ~i~ii~~~~:· """ ~ rJf f :f~~ii:~~ES 90~ . :-nra·'ii •• Our Growin' Is Showin' Again with Our New ~ewh1ll Discount Mlrkti Lyons at Peacfll1nd .....: "' lSfR'EEttANT ~ M~SllROOMS I @ii°'1'i'MuSHRO~s SM.II TAI COl.l(Cf(D D11 "U tAIAk( 1Tnl$ wt llstltYl ntl lllllT TD lffUK SM.U l'I CGMMflCIU KAUii DOUILI DISCOUNTS MIAH DOUlll SAVINGS AT ALPHA UTA Double Dhcounu or• e111tro IO¥ingt In odditlon to ow r•g11lor low d!KOU!ll prlce1. Ttiey ore mode poMlblt lit ~at, llW.d°-" ~ ... ~ ... '"°""'~with , .. ,.,,.., toftVJ ,..._, Oft to )'Oii . . .. . . . ' ~ ,~::.~· " ,., FANTASTIC .. , I I .- -. ~ .,. ........ .,... .. .. . ~-...... · -.. .. ... ·• ... . . . . . .... . . .. .· ...... · .· .. · ";• .· -..... " .......... . FRESH f~OZEN MEDIUM SIZE SPARERIBS ~BARBECUE FAVORITE" .... mcuri 11111 ;· •rc1...- SUNS11111r ~ FRESH FROZEN ARMOUR "LITTLE ROTiSSERIE" TUR.KEYS .. "REAOY·FM 1liE SAT- LEGS PINNED 01 WING TIPS . I/' REMOVED • ' . ' 7~2 BASTED WITH · , I CORN OIL · .. ('8 1fiJ/lllrlt'Jo1t1t SKINLESS 41 C .. • (8 ~ LINK SAUSAGE ~t . EA. ~ -LBS. j~. AAMO~VERIBEST •HALVES 148 ' BONELESS· OR THl~DS . . ] 1 • PQiK·'l;EG ROAST .• · · ... l~. • 1 • -7 WHOlE 1t.8• . z1PPEE . 101.0-0z. PKG: ' . · ~~ COR!t ·V..... 69C @.~RILU~ ... ~~""'.":88~ DO&l·tt ... , ' EA. ~ c: • . dj,m'iiit~J~31.JHllR..tiw'IW!I> ... fANH~TIC OISCOUN IS E1ERI' DAY M.f'IHA R(TA, "''""" ,, .. fA~IASTIC DISCOUNTS EV!RY DA Y <Ml'HAKTA """"'' ..... fANTA S'IC DISCOUN'S [~£RY D.AY '·@ ~ ""''" !!:.• ..... ,.. ._... '°"""".., c .._ MARlftllTEO -.... BRILLO SOAP PADS 1 27 ... ARTICHOKE HEARTS 41• 54• ~2«blce~ ~CRISCO ·Oil 57• (§ 38W."S'Auo 6-Pod c .... • 6-01.• c;,-• T•QPieal TREESWEEtillRINK >o.·p.,..._ SWEEIHEAIT . LIME BAR SOAP VEG LES ' wi'us BllQUETS · ~~. 10.0r•'-C...O'i ""'"" . 59• . . W/C SE .SAUCE IOO..-log ftc »u.. eag t1'I'. @SiMo'ii~~ ...... :; NON.SCUFF WAX r )14 ~-'CEllTl.E ';;r bRY I EACH 63· ....... _. MOH..fRl 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SAT. & SUll. 10 A.M. TO 7 P .M. . Gt...,~. 10.0.. t:C'\ L. s...e,.. P.a. • 8_aby LlrTIG 9eorwi ~ Whit• Sl'o. PU Corn • ''""''n · · · ' ~~~~~~~ ~CE 43• t:C'\ 111111 lim ... ...,.... 2 ~ riil~tois-5c t:C'\ lllnllfll • ,..,,,.,_ 25 '=1 TASTY TATEIS ~ ' 5.1S-Ouow. ~.,.,.. f-1 O• BRIDGFORD De111i·BDX 8ru• ; I 6 ~. c ..... R.og °' p;.t. •. ,'11,.,1, ALPHR Bflf ~EMONADE I~ Clune• CM• ... U. ' t:C'\ ll ~ "°". "-~ EGG01WAfFUS OUtd> Md. • i., l;,i,ti..., c.,,,.,.. • ,~ IMITATION ICE ·MILK 12• 42• 42• :15• I -62• 37• It-..; ~ •LrMltTl· l~C-1 ~SANDWICH BAGS @PiUNr Jule£ ~ t.lncftlWOOcl • 4,71-0L CM ~ UVEIWUR.ST SPREAD @ li(11.~66:S ..... JUMBO BOX COSTA Ml54-ntl MatW 1NL C011'A M•U.-MI •• 11"1 St, MUNTIMOTON llACK-tM; MllM NUNTIHOJOH tlACK-IMll N. _.. ff. MUNTIN9TOlill llACK-tllR ............. U.OUNA Nll.LS-UMI (allt .. lflo MllM POVNTAIN VALllV-Qllt W'll'MI' llVINl-11041 C11h1«, VIII""" "•'11 IOUTK I.A.QUiii 37• 1'NTASTIC OISCOIJNIS EVERY DAI 10.c.,..,1 • 12·0r. Cen MAX PAX COfFEE RINGS @) cucur.iiti PlCKW 64.0.. !lo!~• 4 . Vi:ir~ HAPPY DAY OllNKS ' @iito'bmG -··· ' 16-0unc•C.......... • •llMI 1£rf ; I~ Jar Roquefort .~lad Drassi11 lot 71'.c 25• 22c • llrHI 101 • 16.0o. .i.w ,. BIH Cb~ese ~lad Drmllll ..,- •t.nt• IETI • 16.0t. Jo-s• 1000 lslud ~la• Om1l11 ..,- @ AM'iiic'A.N""c"HEESE 63• ~ Lcind O'l.fllo:ft • 32·01. 11 • '=1 CHEESE . SPREAD ITAUAN DRY SALAMI J.Ol.Kf • SLICED • • 59' 6.0l.N:f • SLICED • • 1" •lr'll• am . 16-0 •. c-o;...., POTATO SALAD W/EG; :i.r M°Wr wltrlEis· °""'""""". 16-0t l'ixlaoe All MEAT WIENERS 39• ... 97· 99• OAILY PILOT @ Greek Beef's Grand In aJJ its colorful glory, this Grand Beel Moussaka look! like something out ol Greek mytOOlogy. It starts out with a poond and a hall of ground beef and a couple or eggplant! to become a lovely feast for six. A dish fit for the gods. YoU'll hanlly belleve your eyes when you see how easy it is to create. And you and din- ncrmate..! will be delighted with its navorful taste . There are many different versions o{ mou55ata. as it seems to be a favorite in several countries. T h t s dramatic version is baked in a mold lined with the deep put· pie skin or eggplant. Making it grand is the Jean e:round beer ·· filling -with more eggplant. onions and' seasonings.· A rich, velvety sour cream sauce crowns your creation elegantly. Like magic you have a cl'llsslc masterpiece. To expand on a theme, soft Arabic bread adm a Near Eastern touch. And &n in- teresting Greek salad com- pletes your lmpreuive menu. TOM salad greens with an oil and vinegar dress.lng -then embelli!h with crumbled feta cheese, anchovies, bl a c k olives, cucwnber and tomato slices. With a beautiful m~al like that, lhe gods can't heiJ> but smile on you! GRAND BEEF MOU!&KA 2 large eggplants, about l lf~ pounds each 11,, cup cooking oil 2 medium onions, chopped l clove garlic, m"inced I I> poonds lean ground beef 1 cup grated Pannesan cheese 1 Y" teaspoons salt 'It teaspoon pepper \.J teaspoon nutmeg I teaspoon basil 2 eggs, beaten Sour Cream Sauce Quarter eggplants lengthwise. Carefully cut off · skin In one piece from each quarter, Jeavin( v. to *-Inch flesh altached. Drop skins lnlo bolUng water and blanch about s mlnules unlll Ump. Drain well . Une deep l<juart bating dish with .tins, JIUl'P!e slde out, draping over t.p edge. Cube eggplanl fleslt (about 2 quarts}. Saute ln 2 tablespoons oil stirring oflen .untn lender, about JS mlnutet. ltem<We from skillet abd set aside. In same sk'met saule onJon and garlic in remaining oil un- W lllllp. Add ground 'bee! cooking and sllrrlng until browned. SUr In cheeoe, salt. pepper, nubneg, basll alld -· Stir In ... 1ec1 ~t. si-i mixture Into •kln-llried baking dish. Flap draped skins over top. Cover with eny re-malnlOi skins. Bate uncovered in 350 decr<e oven l hour. Cao! ,10 mlnulo, then Invert. carofujly onto rin1Jnecl serving ~II'•· Serve with Sour Cream Sauce. Makes I servings. Soar Cream S.uee Melt I tablespoons butler. Blend In 3 tablespoons Oour and 14 lelllpoon ult, Add II> cupo mllli. Cook, ll!1ning untrl sauce bolls and thickens. JO!t before serving, stir in one cup dairy sour cream. Cool Idea Is Baked The kid& 5hould lllie this! llEFRIGEllATOR GINGERBREAD 2 cupo sllted IJour I> leaspoon baking >Odo IV• leaS)»OOJ ginger Iii teaspoon cinnamon I> teaspoon allspice 1'lea5poollsalt ~ cup butter or marcuine 1 cup suear Zeggs \0 cup light mo1 .... 1 \0 cup butlennll): Slit logether the llour, baking soda, gqer, cinnamon, all- spice and salt . Cream butter and augar; beat In eggs -II a time. Add mol-and belt wen. Md dry lagredlents allemalely wllh IMltlennllli, betting WIUI blended. To .-. cover boWI tightly (first with • damp towel, !hen with Wt> paper Ued oocur.Iy with cont) and "°"' In I h t n!lilgtrator s lo 3 bout& ' Turn Into a greued 1oef pan (t by::! lncbel) and bote Ina led~-~ oven 1lQ!t t hour. Cool .., wire '"'* •boat 10 nimui... 'lllm oat of -...i cool completely. '• n 11 DAIL, PILOT l Dining Out's a Picnic If you're up for spending a awnmer evening listening to the strains of music in the park, you'll probably enjoy an ouldoor diMer there, too. Whatever the concert pro- gram offers -opera, rock or classical music -an elegant meal beforehand will certainly 8 dd a romantic note to the whole evening. How does a menu of Beer Stroganoff over rice sound ? Beer Stroganoff is prepared at home with strips of beef. onions, mushrooms and a flavorful SOW' cream sauce . The recipe also calls for a can of beer !lhlch adds a robust, wine-like fiavor to the l!lauce. This beef mixture is then transferred to an insulated container 8Dd carried to the park. BEER 5'11\0GANOFF t tablespoon salad oil 1 pound beef round, cut in strips 1k cup chopped onion 1At cup clove garlic, minced 1At pound mushrooms, sliced 2 tablespoons flour, divided 1 can (12 ounces) beer l tablespoon tomato paste 1k teaspoon lemon juice 1h teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon salt l/4 teaspoon dried dill weed l/i teaspoon pepper I cup sour cream Jn large skillet, heat oil ; add ·meat and brown. Add onion, garlic and mushrooms: cook until onion and mushrooms are tender. Sprinkle 1 tablespoon flour over meat and vegetables: mix well. Stir in beer, tomato pa s te, lemon juice . Worcestershire sauce: salt, dill and pepper. Cover and sim- mer 1 hour or until meat is tender. Combine sour cream and re- maining 1 tablespoon flour: stir into meat mixture . Remove from heat, a n cl refrigerate until ready to leave for picnic. Turn into ln- sulated container to transport. At picnic site, set up camp stove. Tum beef mixture into medium saucepan, place over flame on camp stove and heat thoroughl y. Serve with hot cooked rice and s 1 i c e d tomatoes. Yield : 4 serVings. From Italy Lazy Days Frittered When it's springtime in Italy cooks are likely to make yeast fritters that hail from Milan. For grownups the fritters may be served with coffee or muscatel ; for youngsters the fritters may be offered with milk or hot chocolate. SprinkJed with powdered sugar and served w a rm, these frittern have a breadlike texture that's chewy. They remind us of a Georgia specialty called, of all things, Tough Bread! MILANESE FRITTERS 4 cups un sifted flour 1/3 cup sugar 2 packages active dr y yeast 1 tablespoon grated lemon rind 1 cup milk ~l cup water 2 eggs, at room temperature I teaspoon rum extract Peanut oil Confectioners' sugar Jn a large mixing bowl thoroughly stir together 1 !/:'\ cups flour, sugar, undissolved yeast and grated lemon rind. In a small saucepan ove r low heat. heat the milk and waler until warm. Gradually add lo flou r n1ix· ture and at medium speed of electric mixer. scrapin g bow ! occasionally, beat for 2 minutes. Add eggs, rum extract and 1,) cup flour or enough nour to make a thick batter. Beat et high speed, S<."raping bowl occa.sionall y, for 2 minutes. Stir in enou gh ad· ditiona.l Dour to make a stiff batter. Cover and let stand at room temperature for 15 minutes. Meanwhile in a large heav) pot, heat peanut oil (enough ror deepfat frying) to 3i5 degrees. Stir batter before ~i ng . D r o p by heaping table- spoonfuls into hot oil and fry unUI golden-l>rown oo both Jides -aboot 3 minutes. Drain on absorben t paper. Sprinkle with confectioners' IU&ar and serve wanh. Makes J dozen. \ I •• Wtd•sdar, lay 23, 1973 * N PILOT ·AD\/ERTJSER 4 en ·the helplngS . are big, our d unts real help Whether you stay at home or plan to roam, Thriftimart is the store for families with more reasons to save. • ... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .... ~ ... ,,.,,~ ....... ......... Owt1tLLIE MEMORIAL DA~ 10 7 . pan MONDAY. MAY ;,a am Iii pm ,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,, •• .+ ..... _ ... ____ ~ Liquor Values! VODKA '"j '1 OR GIN d't 11 • • SWEET BIG EARS • • Fresh • • Corn ·• • • l~'I • .• • • •• • • • D TEN HIGH HllAAIWAtXD'$U f~00f $911 • • • • S1VJOHI llOUI M>N WH~KH \0 GAL THRIFTIMART'S QUALITY MEATS AT LOW PRICES! 0 ANCIENT AGE rn'""'M •~•.-wm Ill" tTIAIGHl llOUIKIH WKISK(Y I; GAL ~ ~ ~'?"': ~'1;· pt..,. ;fl1i!.!7!Wl"'Jllft" ·~>IV'~ • SPRING 8"81' ~ BEER ~,;~;· ·: : I'•·~ ,Jt""" .. ~'J:~~..lt!U~o.· *'"'' ender-Lee' Quality --· MS FULLY COOKED • SHANK HALF ~Q.T. SUNTAN LOTION ~'.1 1". J,~ll 11 Ill MINUTE MAID LEMONADE ••• :~;\!' 29': DICE CHEST -30 Quart ........ ,1111 < I . Delly Treats! Tender a Juicy RANKS D BREW 102 BEER •••••• ·:0:.":~ 6!11' D PABST BEER •.•••••.•• '!~'.':"~ 12 !'211 : D COORS BEER ••••.••••• ·:0:.':"! 6i'l'": BUTT PORTION or a"7e CENTER CUT $159: q PICKLE RELISH •••••••• '''":1:,t"'"49' o SCHLITZ BEER ••••••• , ;• ?': ·:~' 6 PI" ; WHOLE HAMS • • • • • I lb. HAM SLICES • • • • · • 1• ! o SHRIMP COCKTAIL. ........ ~~i0 351 ~ Cf' ~111'iUilU.111D1ici~Cw:> :-··,,,. ,S • • FRUIT ·:=,:::~"~"'<a 1 5'';-tlL"ttl FRESHFROZEN•SElfBAYSTINGS • .••• ,, ,,". "'"'1· • • e TURKE WINES '""::'~~;:··· ... :: -Rotisserie D ""' .,WL:'.".'.".';:;;:;f;;" l 'i~:?f RE~~~~i~ ~~~~PIT $ I . D BALI HAI '1~:~ ~"1''"11{"' '1'' • . . -' AND WING TIPS C:OlONY • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • o GILBEY's GIN •••• "i':o? ••....... ~"' '9" : if r· REMOVED TO B·B-Q D WOLFSCHMIDT VODKA •••.•.. "'.'~ 13" : J,':,_.:::. 6·LBS. •A. BOURBON deLUXE ~~;i,:~;s3~,?" ~ ,~x=~E~~~ $ 6 1 9 1: ?'!?i".':.~ ....... ~1~~ ~!u._..::.-......... .. • IHF SAUSAGE • • • • • • .. • • • • • • c u. llOIP'EIY llOCltCOD • • • • • • • • lL uoum SEA IASS" •••••••• f<.,..• r.,,. QO Ho•d' 24c ICE CUIES • ;;~; t•gl·~ ~>yl· v..,•~~..,·· ~/ 49 Rill I CH11S • • . C ... 98 -wa:TllAY 1.?'. C ll<do II"' -opo<ITOf>f'l"ll COOL WHll' • 0 1. 55C : VOU R CHOICE SGO,l2AN80NOD• STV::GEEF FROZEN : SLICED T an TURBOT ! BACON RIB ROAST FILLETS (SMAll ENU $1.51 lb.) ·~~~·11•• l.B. : CAM6:"EI • ' ! HORME L'S ! RED 1.8 • LABEL ' NORTH 81' ATLANTIC .LB. 2701 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa • 13922 Brookhurst, Garden Grove 1308 W. Edinger. Santa Ana e 5858 Warner, Huntington Beach • 23811 El Toro, El Toro • I • __ .....: I " -----.... --........ --.......... r •••••"'••~••• .. -.......... . • • \" PILOT-ADVERTlSER Wf'dnesday, Ma1 23, 1CJ73 OAILV PllM 'Merry' Role Tailor-made Lovable Heavy Typecast 'I'm not a coolc:, but I'm very much a ' By JOHNA BUNN beat. Stir cornstarch into degrees F. for medi um 1:: cup v.1at~r chops In baking dish, Cover, cold water until smooth, then dooeness. Serve with new 1.: bay leaf bake ln preheated 350 degrees BEL AIR -"I'm not a · ed ch add to saucepan, stirring con-pol.atoes and mini garden 2 tablespoons vinegar F. oven for one boor, cook. but I'm very mu a stanUy. Cook and stir until peas. Serves 6 lo 8. I tablespoon sugar To serve, ren1ove chops to COll&Wntr, as you can see," mixture comes to a boll. Allow 1.~ Cllp dairy sour cream serving platter; heat pan jovial Ed Amer said, rubbing mixture to simmer 3 minutes PORK CHOPS Dredge chop.s well in season-dripping over direct heat, add- his chest wtille drinking his (Or until thickened am cJear). IN SOUR CREAl\t ed flour; insert l whole clove ing sour cream, stirring until morning coffee. He sat in the Baste lamb with sauce, and in center of each. Brown lighUy mixture is thick but not boil- dinln r the ho h 4 large loin or center.cut · Se • r g room o me e continue to baste every IO to in vegetable oil; drain , place mg. rves "· aste to correct shan!s with his wife Nancy, 14 minutes l hr o u gh o u t pork chops in baking dish. ' sea90flings. Pass sauct> a.t side thelr three children and a roasting time. Roast Iamb for Seasoned flour Combine all remaining in· dish. Terrific served with menagerie of an i ma I s , l~ hours (or until meat 4 whole cloves gred ients except the sour whipped , sage· f I av ore d consumer, as you can • lncluding three dogs, two thermometer registers 170 Vegetable oU cream; heat slightly, pour over potatoes. cam,turtlesandtro~calfIBh. 1-~_:_..:_:::.:_....:.:;.::::::;:;_:~:.:_~__:::::._.~~~~~~~~_:__:_:.:.:_::::.:'.=:.~_:_.:__~:.__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- A huge teddy bear of a man, the two-time Emmy-winner is as funny and cbarmlng a "htavy" in real Jife as he is In his role as the irascible but warm-hearted TV news direc- tor on CBS' .. Mary Tyler Moore Show." He exudes warmth and his acerbic wit fades early, revealing very much the homebody, con- cerned with wife, kids and keeping up the yard. "Listen , my wife is a great cook!," the actor said proudly. "Nancy has a wonderful recipe £or butterfly leg of lamb (boneless leg of Iamb. slit open flat to resemble a butterfly) marinated in a pungent sweet-sour s a u c e . She's gol another specialty - chops baked in sour cream - that is ~t of. this world. And she's very good with roasts, my favorite being her seven- bone rib roast that melts in your mouth. "She tioes so much cooking and hai so many_ standbys, I've forgotten all of their names. She's not worth a damn at breakfast or lunch, but man, does she make up for it at dinner !," Ed said. A onetime All-City high sicbool tackle in his native Kansas City, Mo .•. Ed combats his beer-barrel figure with dai· ly joggllg and exercises. He watches his diet, but like Lou Grant, bis TV character, he's been known to down a drink or two. "We bought this house for the yard,., Ed said, and noted that N4llCY does as much cooking Outside as she does in· side. There are b r o i I e r rotisseries inside and out and a raised fireplace in the kitchen. Asner Js ambivalent about succes.!, but he's grateful bis family bas never had to know bad times. "These kids have an enomous amOWlt more than 1 did. I don't know if they 'll ht a great deal hap- pier or rmre productive than I am, but I say thank God for the good times, so my kids can have all this. Still, I'm never sure if it makes too much dif. ference . "I'm a worrier, a fretter, I'm comllllsive. I don't spend enough time with my boy. I don 't ere.le that special mo- ment for each chlld, because I spend too much time picking up sticks. NANCY ASNER'S SW EET-ANfl..SOUR LEG OF LAMB l butt«flied boneless leg of lamb, weighing 6 to 8 pounds in: cup pineapple preserves ~ cup vinegar l/.t; cup soy sauce y, cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon salt 11, 1easpoon liquid smoke 2 tablespoom cornstarch ~ cup cold water Put OOtterflied leg on rack of roasting pan; place in preheated 32.5 degree F. oven. Co mbin e pineapple preserves, vinegar, 60Y sauce, brown sugar, salt and liquid .smoke ill saucepan over low Manly Entree . alEESE, BROCCOLI AND RICE CAS.IBROLE 1 package ( 10 ounces) frozen chopped broccoli t cup mipced onion 1 tablespoon butter 1 jar (8 ounces} pasteurized ~ cheese 1pread, at room~111perature t can (10~ ounces) con· d ensed cream of mushroom soup, undiluted JfJ teaspoon dry mustard 3 cups cooked rice 4 hard ·coo ked eggs, quartered I CAD (3 .....,.) French fried onion [ing• Ololc brl!«x>li aocon!ing to pecuge dlrectlons; drain. Cook onions in butter unlQ !Oflened but not brown; stir In chee,. apread, then graduall' !he llOV\>: ,lttr In mustard and rict; fold m eggs. Tom ln1' a buttered shallow l.quarl baiting dish. Sprinkle wHhmloo rlnp. Bab In a preheated :iso- degree oven untU bot through -about lit minutes, Metes I to llerYlngL • , hing Su•er All Ralphs stores will be closed Memorial Day, Monday, May 28 Don't let your 3 Day Weekend be un-Super. Make it Super with tender Meat Master Meats from Ralphs, the Super Market with Super Low prices. FRESHNESS DATED MEAT MASTER MEATS .... 69 A IP£C1Al COMBIMATIOM OF ftALPKSGAOUNO IEEf ANO TlXTIJRfD SOY l"ffOTEfN. ''&Dl.GmdaA-Soultwm FPasb ~ye rs ............ .t RibSleaks ...,111d.cut Chllck Roast 2-21' 47 ....... whOle lb.• ...... u::o ... 1.39 ... 88 lffllolnCvt Bottom Sirloin Steaks .. 1.85 --CUI ~~~Chops Pork oast ~ .... .... ... 1.38 .... 89 Deldau• &mObci Fllftt' Cooked Ham =. ... ,85 Pork Should« Cut ~~k .. 1.15 Lamb Shoulder Chops lb. 1.18 U.B.D.A.~-F1'9.tl Lamb 5l10Ulder Roast ... 89 U.S.D.A. cttotce-FfHh Lamb Rib Chops .. 1.88 Fresh--- Pork Chops ... 79 R•lph1-Wlttl Pop-Up Gauge d 75 Fresh Hen Turkeys . 91 • 10. • YounQM••ty 85 · Turkey Drumsticks .... Momn-w1tet Add.cl 1 49 Boneless Ham .. , LHr-Smobd Fl1vor 1 89 Boneless Ham 11. • lffra-Cu1'9-12: ot. Pac:ka119 AAnollr Bacon O...Maytr-120&. PllOUQ9 Wafer Thin Bacon Hot or 1115d-1 lb. Roll Blrdfann Sausage OL ,89 .._ 1.12 •• )f.09 SEAFOOD DEPAFrTMENT AJnbn, llHt)' King Crab Claws Karo-H11t 'N Elf Breaded Shrimp lb, 1.85 ... 1.99 LIQUOR DEPARTMENT Laknh1r9 Gin or 8andra Vodka ftfth 2.99 Br9WM In Oregon-12oz.eua Aspen Gold Beer Kentucky Squire -88 Proof-Snl AO Straight Bourbon RonDonJu•n Imported Rum ~.95 ftfth 3.79 ... 3.59 .. ...• 87 ' Fresh Cot Stock ColorfUI Marguerite Daisies """'" .78 8•1utlful Mixed Bouquets """"' 1.27 Cak>rt11I carnation Bouquets ..... 1.27 DELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT AIMutorB1et Ralphs Weiners 12,. .73 R1lph1-Chvnk Style l 08 Monterey Jack Cheese .. • Hoffm.n-0¥11 canned Ham __ , ""· 8.59 Butt1nnllk or Counlry Styte Pil~ry Biscuits OIC•r M1y•r-Atl M••I or All Beef Franks Osc•r M1pr-AI M••t OI All Beef Bologna O.C.rM1y•rY1Nty P1k Luncheon Meats Hon,..aoct-.c Stick Safflower Margarine Lall• lo Lak1-Jack or Longhorn Cheese Al•x-XLNT Chili Brick ..... 11 1 lb. .98 ' 12oz. .88 120L 1.23 ,,.. .39 toz. .89 .... 59 DAIRY DEPARTMENT Welch'1-Chlll•d Grape Juice Drink :120L .53 Vlt&P•kt Orange Juice Mor. ,85 -1.88 C:t;;y;~um Ptanis ... 2.11 FREE LEMON UAF wtfH PURCHAH OF FRESH CUT FLOWlRI PRODUCE DEPARTMENT F,.1h Plebd-Y.ao. Peaches ,,.. ... 88 Fr11h, H1w1llan .48 Pineapple -CaJlloml• Avocados -.28 R9Cl. Rlpe-Whote> ~:~,... ....... 10 .12 CUcumbers -M•dlum 811• Tomatoes ,,..., .28 BAKERY DEPARTMENT WhH• I WM•t-IMdwkft or SpUt Top Ralphs Bread ti;;t~TuM ~.37 ......... 38 R1lph1-D9'lcktW Cinnamon Rolls ...,..,, .46 R1lph1-Hom•mtdei Ooodn••• Apple Pies r-.78 HOUSEHOLD VALUES Pl11tic-'1Wf1t eut-.N V1kle Ice Cube Trays -.88 R•v1r1 W•,.-Awoedo, Qold-2'h Qt.... a.• Whistling Tea Kettles - THIS IS RALPHS SUPER CENTURY 1873-1973 T•n•.,.ry IHIHe• Price. Ralphs Ralphs All Star Golden Premlllll Potato Fruit Ice cream ~.79 Chips · :::.49 Drinks Best Foods ";;;.27 Mayonnaise :.83 HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOOD PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS R.,_,orlllnt , .. 78 ---'"'· 39 Hem-Hot Dog or '";':; .33 Rt'-"•-t1Mtl Mn .... 98 Crest Toolh Past8 -. Pet Whip ... . Sweet Relish Whl18 Paper Plates .... . .... ._ ,.,,_ 71 Ml1K1te lll11d 1c~ .14 Sin Fem•ndo-S•l.ct Ill• ... 45 Colort ..... Ae ... rtltd COlorl-..... .11 Touch of SWeden ...... Lemonade Pitted Ripe Olives "" . Paper Napkins .... Anld-IExtrm Dl'Y ... 83 Olno01-Latptllll 11 " 65 BiMB,.M .... 39 .OOW.-,.., Dl~H n"' 44 Ant>-Perspirant .... Cheese Pluai . ... Baked Beans .. .. Liquid Detergent -· ,......_.,q.ln:lf 7c: 1.08 Relllftt-Rcmd• .. < 20 Chrl1 i Pitt• :.: .37 Wlllrd•.A•.orted ·-62 Psssssst Shampoo Orange Julee ... . Barteque Sauce />Jr Freshners -. FMIMt-!WpM Own ar1nd ,.oz. n BlnlMY•-Wlttl Onlofi llllCI ~ .39 81v1n S111-Vtv1 lllU.ll 11ol. 89 ~--AtWfted COlott _.._ 28 Balsam Condllioner bolt!• .• Mixed Vegetables Salad Dressing ...... Facial l1ssues .... 1"'9Mlr• c-..... 88 Aunt.,.11111111'1 .... 47 Gr••n Qt1n1-F1111c1t s11i. ".:; .25 DoN-""'"1edC:0-. :.2& Wipe 'N Olpe Wipes .... . Blueberry Waflles .. .. Sliced Green Beans BarSoap CoftdftlolMI' LOlloll ·-~ Emkhed-Pr• Cooked Morthertl-AAIOf'IM Coktr8 .::; 1.59 u,.-:: .47 lloz. 89 .... 81 Long&Sllky Com Soullle-Minute Rice ..... lblJet Tissue .... . Manufa1tur1rs SpeciDI .lllewan11. Hlllr Cob' Lolloft .... 1.33 ~WhiP ... ~ .65 A1aor1td Cuti & Pl-• .... 88 Dow-All'oitol C.I\ ·--78 LovlngCire Red & Black Uoorfce .... Ballli'Oom Clemler -· Prices ollectlve Mey 24 through Moy 30 @fQ> EVERYDAY LOH' PRICES HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOOD PANTRY FILLERS PANTRY FILLERS PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS --II I'-._ ... ---II .... --~ Q ... •.: .28 -Copperlot .. !:.78 CN•mPln ..:.21 Cann9dPop •.: .10 Wha1tThln1 •,,: .12 FNlt CocldaU Ch1rco1I Brlqu•tt ·~.n -·-::.as ................. _ .. ...: ... --•; .S1 ·--•.;: .A3 ~11-·-·---.: ... OIHmToothP1"9 Wo-=:.11 H1waH1n Punch Whole SwMt PlcklH Y1nlll1 W1flf9 WhH• Piper Platn ·--'::.n --· "',,: .2'1 _._. _ _.,_ ·.:,.11 ---"";;. .01 ,,,_ .............. ._ .... ~··-.:t.-sr ComacClpMlln CutCom CoftffRln91 Biby food Macaroni a l11f -.34 Ralph• Blaich -----ll•S.--~~--lMI-. 1-. •i..---, __ ... _ • .a. looC:Ubff .. ~.u Dog Food ~.: .33 Wll••tGtrm •:;.so Worchetttnthlr• Sluce -A1 <f'•"r Towelt ·=.aa =r..:-~= 1.02 ---::.u -----~.95 ·--·~1.A9 '...,... __ u-.. ::.-CftffM Plml Salad Oru1lng MIXH ... .u Shortening Instant CotfH . Uquld D•t•rotnt ~.uttw 1•: .79 a1· -• ....... U.tM. .... 41., ._ __ ..,.... ".: .21 ---•:i1M . ., . .,. ___ .._ ..... ti,.: .33 -·~ ..... llHbJRO-,..&11 Wholt Ktmel Corn ln1tent Cotf•• Doe Food Ch•rco•I Brtquttt -~=~:~c . .JO ..__ Ire . 11 Su ...! ~ .,_. ...... , ...... ..., .. .... kern•4 wrl 1 JPef'Low pnces ~- CIB'COll 49 ~ ".!:;. ·~ ... _ ... __ c...-..-~ ..... ..., ... RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 380 l 17th ST., COSTA MESA; 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER; lAGUNA Kn.LS, 24167'PASEO DE VALENCIA 1726117th ST., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM STORE HOURS: 9-10 DAILY. 9-9 .. I I ' . -.... . . . . ' . . . . . . ' ' . • I 4t OAlLY P!LOT Wtdnnd.ly, May 23, 197! Dividing Adds Subtracting ln ·centive By BARBARA GIBBONS "Half a loaf i.. better tbaJt none.'' Some aaggesUcmr. Have hall el. a p-l!ldlnner stead " one. lh1ve a ha.If-portion ol fee desaerta and snacks, low Does U wotk.! Of COW'le, It cocklaU, or make tt with half Save y-•r •-•••rt for 3 haU· crea1n .. or better yet, lowrfat ~ aubstitutes does. Add the looger you do it, llalf 1 pal of butter on your .... uc.,.,... · .1k. • pollto. Or use IOUt cream In-as much vodka or gin. With hour after dinner ... and slip lee inu only half as often. the better you'll get . Each day stead. Or sour hali·and-half. water Ol' aug.ufree mixer. At your TV·time snack! Go aU-oot with halfway ~JI' .. _buy more than you you 'll tind some new trick. to That crusty old adage can Make 11 half 8 potato. parties awllcb rronr potaio ftave your hamWrger on cooking. Cut fattening ill-~ eliminate those unneeded extra apply to summing, t oo , Half as much mayonnaise on chips to popcorn, or, better hall a roll .•. your sandwich on gredients in half. · .or leave Serve half-tlr.e portions. Buy calories from the foods you especially Jr you're a diet· your tuna salad. Or half-as-yet, celery atlqks. one slice of bread. Buy breait them out. Most recipes call for luncbeoo-slze mini p 1 a t es, love. And the extra weight will dropout who f a 11 s on fattening diet mayonn.11ise. Eat bed, Jamb and ha m on-that's half as thick. 100 n1uch shortening and three-ounce wine glasses and slip away, slowly but surely. supentrict regimens. use water-packed tuna i'tf ly half as often. Replace them Use half as much suga r in sugar, anyway. half-o..tp deuert dishes. Thlnk By the time you get where Calorically speaking. half a place or oil-packed (it's half with chicken. fish or veal ; your". coffee, or none, or no-Be a half-of( shopper, lo cut you want to be, your new way slice of bread is better than the calories.) they're halt as fattening.' calo~ substitute. Use skim calories! Look for jµ.lct--patk· s ma I 1 r EDminate leftovers or cooking, shopping and one. And better than none, if Save half your breakfa5t !or Have (ll)y hall as muCh milt. instead ot whole; or ed fru its, low-sugar ja:ms and ( 8 n d ~~ nibbl{n(J. eating wlll be so ingrained • 1ou've got no will po'l'o·er! 3 midmorning snack to eat in spaghetU or rice. Double up on evapOrated skim milk in place toppings, low-fat ·~lad dress· Cook only ball as much as that it ; longer seems like If you can't stay on a strict f 0 , h salad ; bav, e two v•det.abler in· of cream. ings and dairy products, diet usual. deprlva . diet. why not try a "halfway,_P~l~ace':"_o"'...:a'....'.'.'.''.'."''.".5'.'.·~----==--=:::.::..:.::.::...:.=:-!:::::'.=-:::..._::::..::;::::~-------=----'-..;_-----------------=::c.:....::.:F::_------------~:---- ~~?7~e~~·~~~;:~ YOUR OWN COMPARISON SHOPPING TESTS Will PiROVE •• OUR your goal ; it just takes twice as long ! But people who fail on all-out di ets never ge t there at all! Wouldn 't you rather lose 10 pounds in 20 week.!I and keep It off ? Or 10 pounds In two weeks, and gain back 15! Howeve r, you can t be halfhearted about your "halfway diet ," it needs the same e n thu s iasm and determination usually reserv· c(I for fad and gimmick ap- proaches. Here's the idea : You don't give up anything, you simply cut it in hair ... or replace It with something half as fat- tening. Berries Not Short In Supply 'ca I ifornia 's strawberries hold a promise of being the f~st quality In 10 years dut· !~ the unusually cold winter. This should be happy news fcj-consumers as the Golden Stale provides over hair of the fresh strawberries that enter trte markets. Last year over 300 million pounds or berries \\'ere harvested from 7.800 aqres. Harvest begins' in late Ffbruary, with heavy pro- dQction by April through the s$lmer montM and tapering off in November. BUYING TIPS 'when buying strawberries look for fresh, bright solid red cdlored berries. Quality ber· ties have the cap left on. tonsumern should plan to u!e the berries within a short p6riod after purchase as they at,e one of nature's fragile fruits in flavor and te xture. Berries need con s tJnt refrigeration. Avoid soaking the berries in water by gently rolling then\ into a colander shortly before sefving. Spray the berries gmtly with cool water rind drain. Strawberries are an ex- cellent source of vitamin C. Ol'le cup raw has 80 mgs. of C. 1.2 mgs. of iron and 55 c'llories. SERVING SUGGESTIONS Chilled berries sprinkled with s i f t e d confectionary sugar flavored with vanilla bean . Chilled berries marinated in a light simple syrup seasoned with vanilla bean or cardamon seeds. Vanilla. lemon and tapioca pLKldings garnished with slices of fresh strawberric>s. Cheese b I i n t z es wi11l slrawberries and sour crea1n . Salads and angel food cakes garnished wilh whole or slices of strawberries. Crushed sweetened berri('s pound cake and pancakes. Strawberry cream p 1 c. s t rawberr y 1ncringue. st rawberry mousse. Salad's Pickled PlCK.LED GREEN Ri'~ANS I pound snap benn<> cup boiling \Y11trr 1'1 teaspoon s sa lL 14 cup sugar ~/3 cups cider vinegar ·~ teaspoon mu stard se<>d ~: teaspoon celery seed 1/16 teaspoon lunneric ~ small onion, sliced and separated Into rings ash and top beans; cook in1 boil ing water wilh I teas- poon salt just unlil tcnd('r· crisp -about 10 mlnute!: dljlin. 11 a medium sauccpnn bring the remaining 1 :t teaspoon s011t , sugar, vinegar, mustard seed, celery seed and turmeric to a boil. Simmer 15 minules; add beans and onion; simmer S minutes longer. Cover and chill; allow to stand at least over night to devPIOp fla vors before serving. ~n kcs I ''l pinls. ' I CO,.Yltl0Hl ( UJI L .... , 11..-... IM. ·-•0 •11~ .......... ,.,.-...,._ "OUI f'lllCT PRO'fECTlON r'OllCT WAUHT&S lll"SI: l'lllCISTO 8flfRCTlVE fl!OMWfllHESOAY MAY 2lt0 THRU TUESDAY MAY 79Ttl, 19'3". •••c11 ••1 0•1cou .. r1D ••c•n-,., •. ,.&OI D &NOeOY••"MlllT COllT•Ol.LIO ITI MI FRESH FRYERS USDA GRADE A w;~.~~~~~y 47c U"CONO•T•O.,.l,LLY ~~~~~~ LB <CUT UP ,RYl.•l lk LI! 4' RIB ROAST LARGE END UNCON~~T~~NALLY s 119 •ONOIOJOll FL&VO• .1,NO t:IUALITY l• 1\M.l,LL I.ND I 11 Lil • ROUND STEAK BD•E-IN UNCON:~,~~NALLY s 119 IONDtlOJO• · Q!J&LITYANO J L.1,YO• LI !ION&L•SI 111.J 1,n LI ) GROUND BEEF ANY SIZE PACKAGE UNCONOITION&LLY 8 8 c • IONOtlOJO• QUALITY AND JL.1,VO• LB !Ll!AN o•. lf.IJ ... Lil T-BONE STEAK BEEF LOii UllCDNOITIONALLY s 111 IONOEOFOI QUALITY &"0 'L•VO!I LI OPOllTf•HOUSl ITl..1,11 111 Li l Low EYeryday Priced Deli Items! LADY LEE BACON ALL MEAT WIENERS • All MEAT BOLOGNA ~.~ , IL!ClO ••LI 93• ,,.ACKA'O[ • ., •••••• • ~o~~!.~9~.~r ................... L15 I 1' ~~!11~1!1~~.~LY IOND!O 11.•~ .L.5 137 ~o~~W~l~N~!~t~ .••......•......•. Lls 11' ~~~~J!E~~CHILI •••••• 11•,-01 PllO 6 7< CROSS RIB ROAST •••..• '"'"''"L:;~:~~~: 5 ) 19' $119 STEWING BEEF IONILllS ................... LI BONELESS COOKED HAM WNOl.l!Oc.u::L·~ 51 ~~ ~~.YCK STEAK .... -............ 93' OSCAR MAYER BACON$) 12 !.1.0Vlll .• 12-0Z PKCi 67 RfG.OllTHICKSUClO ••. 12·0Z l'KG 98 ~!t~I~~~ £.'!U,~E•~'.'~," 95' ~.~~~!'~!~~. WIE~E,~~' 97' ALL BEEF FRANKS , All BEEF BOLOGNA WIOO~Cllf1l1lO . • •• :1 -ll Pll:G 95 O'iCAl MAY!ll ....• , •••. 12-0Z l'ICG 99c ALEX-XLNT SALADS , WILSON CORNED BEEF POI.I.TOOR MAC.I.RON! ..•• ••••,• l~-OZ 36 I.I.Ill RlAOV "'An . l-1.1, 14-0Z l'KG $37 ' OSCAR MAYER TURKEY.PORK, BEEF .,.,.,, ,. 8~AUN'.CHWll.GU {l'IUB OR SANDWIC11 61 c TUlE RE.l.DV ME.AT!>. 1~1. 14-(ll PKG $3 ~l'f:EAO a.oz PKG SAUSAGE BONELE SS STEAK TOP ~·•LOIN s 1 'J U,.CONDlllON&LLY 10.,0ID Iii."· L ..... CUBE STEAK $ 59 4THl."IL1ClD ll·Ol .. llG1111'-LI PllG "" . . .. .............. " 1 OSCAR MAYER BACON $219 LINK SAUSAGE s 11, l "•C K\L•c•o ...............• •·L•"llD OICA• MA¥tl!I ................... l·l l '"110 SLICED BACON110RMIL D.l.t!IY ~.~!,~ .. ~~~.~ ....... it ;o-011'11• 6Jc ~.~~;o ~-~~-c~~~~-~-.~'.~.~~~L;::o 98' ~~~~ .. ~ .. ~~-~~c~~.!i~~ ...... Ll 79c ~~J£~~.~-~~~-~ ........ l~I Pll• 78~ '---------------------------------------------------------..... FROZEN FOODS CANNED FOODS :( .. 'y' -..:; •I. ' CHIQUITA BRAID C · BANANAS ....... 11 .. PREMIUM U.S. 10. 1 RUSSET 16 C POTATOES ~;:,~~· " FRE$H lllUSHRDOlllS ............ 84 ~. KEY BUY KEY BUY BIRDS EYE BEANS ............... .'~: 2B' o" TRE~SWEET DRINKS ... ".,:!;:; 49· B.B.Q. SAUCE MUSTARD VEGETABLES .................. '.'::;:;;';;'; 46' "'"" 3.7 c .,.+MOTTS APPLESAU CE. ...... ~:: 38' o" FRU IT CO CKTA IL.. ........ ~:0: 29• CHRIS &f'fm c .. ""'""5.' ~ WATERMELONS JUICY & {CUTS . 9<l8) 8< DELICIOUS . . WHOLE. LB FREsH sP1NacH ............... BUNCH 1 o· .-4 WHOLE KERNEL CORN ... .,::"O: 22' 23·0Z l n 0 :U.OUNCI "' """# _,,...,, .... ,.,.._,., ..... , .. ~~· .. ....... • " • ....... ...... "'"-.......... , ....... 1o .. . , ••• ._.,~ .............. i;.. ... , ...... i...... BIRDS EYE COOL WHIP .'.'~'.'.;:\~ 59' BUITONI ITALIAN FOODS ... .':~: 77• ..... ,. .. ,'" 1 ...... GINO 'S CHEESE PIZZA . .",:;69' PEPPERONI PIZZA ...... '~o'i~.;,97' JUNIOR CHEESE PIZZA .... ",;;~: 85' WEIGHT WATCHERS .......... :~~;69' ·-~ -· ...... 1 ... .-40RA NGE JU ICE ............ :·r;·;:: 49• LOW EVERYDAY PRICE BRIQUETTES "'"" 69c 10-11 '" PET FOODS TUNA FOR CATS .............. '.'.:~'1! 15• JONNY CAT CAT LITTER .... '.\!; 1.11 VETS DOG FOOD ........... ~'.~·:: 12' DAIRY PRODUCTS .-4RODS DRESSING ........ :·~.~~.~: 32' .,-4MAZOLA MARGARINE .... .':,~: 42' LADY LEE BUTTER ........... '. .. ~:;,:: 77' o"POTATO ES ......... '.':'.".".'.~.";: 22' . . DORMAN BLACKEYE PEAS ... :•,:: 23' FOfi ADDITION AL S AVINOS • • .M.J.8. COFFEE ....... '.'.~ 1.01 ~PEANUT BUTTER. .... ~,.. 64' FOREMOST ICE CREAM .... ,;:::,79 ·~ °"' ,,.., ... •·~ ...-· .......... i10.1or M.J 8. COFFEL ..... ~,~2.96 o"PRESERVES ........... ':'.".::.'.~:;:;;: 43• .,-4GRAHAM CRACKERS ..... :;;;:: 29· lNiTANTCOFFEE .. ~'! 1 26 JOLLY TIME POPCOR N ..... '.·~:: 23' NABISCO CRACKERS ·-67' NESTEA INST ANT TEA ... 1 ·25 SHASTA DIET BEVERAGES . .,.,: 12' DAIRY PRODUCTS CANNED FOODS PACKAGED GOODS HARVEST DAY BUNS:::::::::~.~.~ 33• ......... . CANADA DRY BEVERAGES.,~".:. l l' KEY BUY HOUSEHOLD ITEMS 0 "•l~ 0< M p !loo POTA TO CHIPS .............. '.':'.:,"."";:; 54' .,-4MINUTE RICE .................. ~i: 87' .,-4 GR ANOLA CEREAL. ... ''.'.',;~";;, 49' GENERAL MILLS CEREAL..:;~;;: 43' .,-4SC REAMING ZONKERS .. ,;:::; 34 ' MARS CANDY ....... "' ......... ~~o.~: 46' SUGAR SUBSTITUTL :::'.'.~:·:i~~; B5' LOW EVERYDAY PRICE PAPER PLATES i~~:~~~ 9.' c ~ ,AC:XAGI J t SWEET RELISH """"''"~' ye 22.0UIKI "' .A BLACK PEPPER ..... ~.'.'.~\~~ 35' ... SE ASO NED SALT. ............ :.:;: as· .-4HAWAl lAN PUNCH ... ':'.";;'.:",:,91' RAVIOll·O's ................ ~~~::-;~: 39' VAN CAMPS TUNA .... '.~.~'.~·;: 35· .rCRISCO SHO~TENING .... ~,: 1.03 ..-LOG CABIN SYRUP. .......... ~:; 7 ' o"SAND WICH BAGS .......... ~~; 50' .,.+TERI TOWELS ............... ~~·~ 34' .,.+JERGEN S BATH SO AP ...... '.:~ 9· ZEST BATH SOA P ................ '.':~ 22' SAFEGUARD BATH SOAP.: ... t:o:. 22' PERSONAL IVORY SO AP. ... , .. ::". 34' COMET CLEANSER ............... ~,:: 2B • LOW EVERYDAY PRICE BEVERAGES """"" IOA ....... 1111115 ~ 12-0Z CAN KEY BUY ALUMlllUlll FOIL IADTUI 2.3A 2ss11n f.-'. IOU HOUSEHOLD ITEMS LIQUID CLEANER ............... ;:: 7~ CALGONI TE ............. ~';;'~ 68" LIQUID SHOE POLISH ..... ~~~ 25' KINGSFO RD BR IQUET~ ........ '.\.: 87' QUICK FIRE BBQ STARTER .•. ~,:: 39' BEVERAGE • SPIRITS GOLDEN CROWN BEER .... ~~3.19 LUCKY GIN. .................... ~~4 .33 PINK CHABLIS WINE .... ~:::·~";;l.39 w ~Von de Komp's w AN OUTSTANDING VARl!TY OF FRISH UKIRJ GOODS \)f§Av•,loblo •< C•• ""'" wo!~ \IM de t!:O"'l"• 11J COLD POWER > !o~~!~~d!!!1••• •h"' ""' '" 7 2 c COMPARE OUR LOW EVERYDAY PRICES AVAILABLE AT DISCOUNT CENTERS ONLY ct'" colo11. gt t1 out dot! in cod woter •9-0L BOX PALMOLIVE 1DISHWASHER DETERGENT c~::!:' Goh doiht' hygi•nlcoll~ cl eon o!"ld leow11 4 2 c youi glosse1 ond 1ilverwore 1po!le11. '26-0 1 IOX 11it:l©UMSlj :i!Utrl:l :ij:illl~:1 1fi•ll 1!I 0 · tt;J ... Gybl.rl •-if,_.,_ K.,G"l'! { --VUILlNI ii' VAULlNI W""' '"" BATH BEADS ._[ 69 C to• doop•r ch~n;•, 69 C Frogronc• 1k •n \ .,. c!eon up1 )0 t. -•• ,. _ ~ io!rener•, 11.()L COPPEBTONE i L IYORIS t9.1 4·0Z. OIL or LOTION ._ MOUTHWASH W Promol•• o lo•! ~ Th<t g.ood-101!ing S J 13 ton, prot•c11 $ J 19 mouthwo1h-ond-I ogoin111umburn 90''111•. J'2.0L ' COLGATE TODT~~~.~!!,,, '1 SU & SKI LI PSIYER l•fl tub• I~ 3 3 C Oron'ile or 1peo•· 7 9 C 11 I ~ ;;~! ~o;:•, (,•. 1 ... .t;ybl.rl -G 1w· &OLDEN TAI TUBE _ ·--..,.· 77c 201 .~.,e BODY -ALL OEODORANT I c 68 c TA~~1~6,.0, IL foronypo•I 91 c ""'' nn n ol you. >..OL c-:n '01 S11e • BICTINE AERO~~~ ~!~~,~~~. ~'!,'!_DER S J 47 KITCHEN SINK SET D11h d101ner ond $16 8 mot Color1. JACQUARD BEACH TOWEL 1a·· ~ 56'" 1j ze; bdghl d1slgn1. STORAGE CHEST ld1ol l111 toy•. s 119 sundry ••ldom- u1ed 111m1. UNDER-BED CHEST Spo<e ,ovin'il tlor. s 1' 19 091 lo• blonk1t1, lin1111, etc. DANISH DESl&I ASITRAYS 99' :! s 12• :;:,;;~M..:.~:· SDLARClllE SPRAY --4 . ..0L SIOpl 1unburn po1n S J 68 ,...,., on11ont4r. A-OL ~---------' MOii THAN SU,.IMAtKIT A DISCOUNT ClNTll OffflS A VA· lllTY OF NON.l'OQO 111M5 FIOM WIAllNG A,,Alfl TO TOYS ANO GAIDfN NlfOS, Al MONfY. S"VING (\l(IYOAY tOW 'llCIS th1rt'1 1 G near JOI •MAllll"' • 110 S.. Sr.io (ollofO lh,, •11•1111"' . 170 W. I•'"""° A•o. A!\11A • 111 I Glo•t°"o $""' IALOW!lf 'All • 11'40 ••-• tt.•. CANOGA 'Al l • 1114 "'-••• A•t . " cov111,1. • '""'°"" 1~.,,i., <••. OOWllU · 1110 lif1111n• II•• GAIOlll GIOYI · tl07\ l•<lld \I GAIOtll GIOYF . 11017 /IOoqo~•o II. GllNOlll • lllS W. Glt oto•1 t!.d GllNOAU · 1000 S. (•nhol 1,0 Ml(i!lllHO ,All !JI ¥1 l •t fl llUllllllGIOll U•Cll t Oll I Plon•o 1.0 11111111111(;1011 llACM !HOC lol,. (~~• It · lAGll•A ttllll 1 .. 00.,.1,, t• lo '" LA lllll AOA II """''" "-•'1''"1 Ct•. · 1tOIWO OO • ltio•-•' \kt-I (•• IAWllOAll · lttl! \1 Mo.,.loo'"" 11,, llHNOI . ION1 '••lo A" llllWOOO . !Oil! l tlo••ic I •• l(lllG tlic'll · tilt I 1,,._, \1 I. IOI AllGltlS . JIC\ I l•oo•lin l •t JltOlllO~tA · tJJ Ill' """''""'"" 0.1., JllOllllllllO • I ll llo "'~•• llOIWAll llflt Alon•o II~ Olt11e1 U1!1 I (~1-• 1.0• ,Al.1.0llU 411 I Yillo \"'" \ill lll•UIOfllO 11111 Buol•• \t I SlllGlllllt •UI lot T••t l!.' \ill t10to ttlli nr~ 11 t.1.1111 1111 Jl)'t \o ...... 1 tAttll !OIO~l(I 1&17 \,.u\n 11•4 IOllTM GAit 1111 Jno1!0• llo4 UDOllOO IU(M 1111 l t!o lo II•• IOllAll(I · 1110 •otlll< C•1! 11., 1011111(1 . )l~O lot-'••'• 91,,, lUIUNGA IJllO l1t1•m 11•1. TU1'111 I Jll8 """''" A•o 1• ht \I, Wl\l(Nl1f!I · llCJ llo11t. ... 4. WIUMINllll • U0'1 ~111ttltlo I• WOTM lll\Tll • l'Oll W11i.liot1,, WM!lllll • 110\I i•+o ft A•I. Wllllllll . 11110 f. Wlilnlor l#tt4. WIUllUll('..1011 1111111 ........ WOOO\AllO Milli Ullt Ylcl..., ..... STORE S OPEN 10 'AM SNACK TRAY f,h over hump of co•. Plosric. GUMOUT CARBURETOR CLEANER R1mov11 gum, vornl1h. mol,Ture from fuel 1y1!111n. 99c "''" MOTOR CRAFT OIL FILTER l11ng-ltfe !Iller till mo•I Ford & Chry1ler cors. IPL-I r PENNZOIL MOTOR OIL Cu11om lormulated touvh film w/Z-7 odd!llv1. 30·W. 49c 1 PO UNO POL YE STER BATTING Snow while; id1ol fer pillow•, toy•. etc. 2-QUART FONDUE SET w/BURIER P•rf•tl lor !nlormol ond lomlly meol1. Pol, troy, lid or.d 11erno b11rn1r. Color1. Sl11e~ele11 polyeller lop with ICOOp ne<k It occented with !Ive button ploc:ke1 lront. A114rfid color•. S-M-l, -.. . . . -.. .. . . . . -. . . . . . .. . . . • w~. Mir 23, 197J OAtLV ·B~ausewe are true disoouitt. ·Every week : -.. ]' RETAIL FOOD PR ICE COMPAJ\ISC>NS BASED ON U.S. DEPT. OF LABOR , BUR~AU OF LABOR · STATISTICS ITE M LIST, IN MAYFAIR DISCOUNT ANO IN OTHER STORES. EFFECTIVE MAY 11TO15 No.of C~titor It.ms Discount Chain A 73 Discount Chain 8 76 Discount Chtih C • 83 Non-discount Ch1:n 0 71 Non·'discount Ch1in E 76 Non-discount CM1n F 78 Non-discount Ch1in G • 85 A II the supermarkets are try- ing to get you to believe that they have the lowest prices. We at Mayfair want you to be - ti~ve the same thing about our prices. The difference is , we prove it! We prove May fair prices are lower by making price-compari- son surveys, then publishing the results. But in making these s ur - veys, we don'l use a specially contrived list. Mayfair--and only Mayfair. so far as we know --makes regular Unit$ total S.virlgs At M•yfair tompetitor M•yfa1r .. 1.28 42.75 1.•7 S4 .56 55.98 1.42 58.83 61 .05 2.22 46 .97 49.20 2.23 52.58 55.87 3.29 46.38 51.59 5.21 58.14 64 .82 '-" price comparisons using the exacl same list the U.S. Uepartmentof Labor's Bureau of Labor Statis- tics uses--for measuring food prices as part or the cost of living. There are so many items on the list we don 'thavespaCetopublish them all here. But we are publish- ing the total price comparisons showing the actual cost of buying meat, produce and grocery items at Mayfair and at other major markets i n this area. These totals are the proof that Mayfair prices are the lowest. ,_ , ____ ___, [,.·1110:' PeacJies 0~~ '1' Mayfair ~st ~uJ}s in Produce Sweet Gor11, TENDER _ LOCAL .JOE. MusJiroolI/.S..EsH . SAVORY • 86Ls GuculI/.ber~R,sP. TENDER . LOCAL .17 E•. Gabbage SOLID HE•D .10 La_ Avocados 3 •o• 1 00 CALIFORNIA HAAS • BROWN ONIONS U.S. No. I ....•.• , • lb .• 25 CELERY T ende,.., Red B•nd .•• , ••· , 14 CARROTS Crisp Tender 1 lb. Cello B•g .••••. ea .• 14 RA~ES C,..i , Tende,.. ....... BU .• 10 GRE NONIONS S.l11d OeliW"1t ....... BU .• 10 WHITE GRAPEFRUIT 0111ef'1 G,..own 8 lb"f=ello B•g ...... e• .• 89 ORANGES C•lifomia Val•nc1a 8 lb. C•tlo B•g ....•• e• .• 98 RUBY GR~PEFRUIT Co•che11• V1lley l •,..ge Size ....••. 5 fo,.. 1. 00 OR A.NGE JUICE T ropicant Pu,..e _ 1/2 g•I. Bottle .•• , .. ea .• 89 MANGOS Gou,..met Delight L11,..ge Site ...•..... ea .• 49 MUMS F lo,..•I Ou11l 1ty 6" Pots .......... ••. 2.49 HOUSE PLANTS Assorted Y1,..itties 2 1/ol" Pots , •...• 3 fo,..1.00 MEMORIAL DAY FLOWERS M•yf•t,.. will feature a complete assortment of cut flow•,..s for Memor11I D1y . &trawberries LOCAL RED RI PE - 12 OZ. BASKETS ,, " , . • Uncle Sam helps us prove that Mayfair has lower overall food prices than other supermarkets. OPEN MONDAY Moot M111fair Marbts OPEN MEMORIAL DAY Chuc!l 8teak 8LAOE CUTS -WEL L TRIMMED Lamb ~egcB · NEW ZEALAND FROZEN U.S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED Mayfair ~st ~uys in Meat LEAN GROUND BEEF Fresh Ground Good So M1ny W•ys., lb. 1.15 BONELESS BEE F ROASTS Shoulde,.. Clod G,..e•t Oven Ro11st Rolled & Tied •••••. lb. 1.29 FRYER BREASTS Gr•d• A With Ribs Attached ••••••. lb .• 88 JIMMY DEAN SAUSAGE Hot o,.. Mild 1 lb. Rolls •• _ .•..• ••. 1.09 OSCAR MA YER BACON 1 lb . Vacuum Pak ••• ••-1 .14 12oz.W1fer-.••.••• e1. 1.14 CUT UP FRYERS G,..d A Tr-ay Pak .••. lb .• 54 Foste,.. f•rm Cut Up .•. lb .. St Rib Steaks BROIL OR BARBECUE • BEEF STEW MEAT Lt.n, Bonel•ss Cubes lb , 1.19, FAMILY STEAKS Boneless Shoulder- Clod Cut -G,..eat for- Swissing .•...•.... tb. 1.39 HOFFMAN CANNED HAMS 5 lb. C11ns .•••• _. , , ea. 6.66 SHR IMP COCKTAIL Se1sn11ck-4 ot. _ .. 3 fo,..1,00 POTATO SA.LAD A,..den • 15 oz .•••• 3 fo,..1.00 ASSORTED PARTY DIPS A,..den -8 oz ....•.•• ea, .39 LIVER WUR ST 6R LIYER I BACON CHUBS FarmerJohn-6oz .. , .ea .. 29 GREAT FOR BREAKFAST STEAK 6 EGGS • illl. ground Bet;! FAM1L Y PAK , 3 LBS. OR MORE - AllCM'eat Fraiiks WILSON CORN KING · ALL ME AT · 120Z. PKG. ' . LESS THAN 3 L BS., 88 ¢ LB. ~-----------' .11,. ' Mixed Fr~r Parts 3 HI NOOUARTERS WI TH BACK J FOREQUARTERS WITH BACK 3 '!\'INGS -NECKS & GIBLETS INC LUDED " ' . ' . n •• " ' , dl I f ,.. _______________________ .., .. , 11 ll This week'S "Best~qys in Groceries ,, H-.......................................... ..i ,,. Pork&' Bearis · : ·:· VAN CAMP'S #2 1/2 CAN .28 Popsicles12 PACK .49 Barbecue 8all,_£flr 11 oz .• 39 (;harcoal Briq'!.~!~ 10 LBS .• 69 PUI/,ch Goll.~!!~2!~2 GALLON 1.49 FoamGu~z s1 couNT .39 Mayfr~~! !!,.rs!R 8·PACK • 32 Orange -'r'!!~~T FROZEN 6 OZ . CAN • 25 Royal Occasio11. o/odka 80·PROOF HALF GALLON 6.99 DEL MONTE T,..opic•I F,..uit S.l•d #303 Can ...•...••... 37 DEL MONTE P•a• #303 C•n '., .23 DEL MONTE Tom1toes #303 C11n • -.•••.•.••.•.•. 26 8odaPop SPRINGFIELD ALL FLAVORS 120Z. Paper Plates 100 COUNT . LIQUOR BERWICK'S Gin -E1 tr• Smooth IO-Proof H1lf Gil. ..... , , 6.99 MILLER'S High Life B•er Econo Pack -12/12 01. Bottles or Cans ............... 2.29 8cott 1bwels JUMBO SIZE Potato Gflj.ps MAYFAIR DIP 10 OZ . REGULAR 10 1/2 oz . Prices Eff9Ct!v• T_hur~. May 24 thru W......,, May 30 . USDA Pood Stampo Welcome .. ~' " .1 l ' ! I ,,;. ' ' " '· ' ' • t .•• I. I H •i' •d T\ ,,j " " . ' •, " - !I! If r;. J.1~ ,IJlll .ullr_._~~:_:::_11, ..... C;..;:;.O.;:;..S T;;..;;.A __ M_E __ S.....,.A_•_...O_P ....... E N ....... 2 ...... 4-----.HO.;;..;;U;;...;;.R~S) ,, ' ur .. 1 '' 1••1) ~tr' 1 f ' • • • • . . . . . . . • 4&' 41 DAU.Y PllOT Wt'dntsd.11, MAY 23, 1 '973 ' ' Eating Dispos a ls Garbage News : ' . By DORmHY Wlll'ICI'. Q_llBSTIOliS Wt: ARI! file !resb lllllk and .....ity octuallylooltrackolbotfold lint bought them, ... will ll!CbU,.-ve. the lid ii theinelala(.lbecan.Thisgu otblcieriagt0win1lnlhe .... ASKED will k"'9 at last Dve dllys. Be they are. Would Ibey •WI be they1tov< " much food ·~ ~ and 1!hee I ,..... oo It, In tho-an would maile the lid Ami If the laller was the <19•, e>rage Couaty llome Adn.r sure to mx it in a clean cea-good? It's a good idea to .t up a it ,_mpa back up Does thJ...-bullet T.ltat the tomatoes would the tllm.Ht°"s cr.uld be Unate. "Who 1 .. the be:St (.,.. la vhl1r' Q. How long can you keep tainer -one that lw hid a A. 1f the cans show no &11n1• rotallon sy&tern with canned meao the tomatoes a re .not be unufe to eat. Tt.JS, the safe.st bet ls to (~ly?lS ls it lhe'Y91~ nonfat dry milk alter it tw soap and water wash, not just of bulging or lea.king the;;. goodJ so that you teep Usi!JB spoiled? HO\ftVef, wJ thou t a just throw the tomatoes away ifMp<>ser? • been reconstituted with a \&losing. tents a.re probably safe to eat. the oldest cans. A. In tomatoes. a bulged lid laboratory analysts you have unopen~ (or take them back ! :(;acbege disposers b ave water~ Q. We've had eome canned However, alter several years Q. I ha ve a can ol stewed could mean that gas was pro-no way of mowmg whether to the store), or boil them at made it easier for us to waste A_ Reconstituted dry milk goods on the s~tr in the pan· in storage they are not going lon'Ultoes whid1 is about six~ duced as a result of the in-this was tbe problem or least 20 minut6 before even tc»d. The uou~ food can be needs to be refrigerated just try for xveral years -I've to taste as good as when you months old. Instead ol being teraction of the tomatoes with whe~ the gas was lhe result tasting them. c:flirnedoutoC slght!IOquicUyj·.~~~~~--"~~.:_~_;_~~~--''--~~~~.:._....:.:c...:..:...::..:._:::.._....:.:~.::.::....:.:.:._~__;~~~~~-"----'-.:.__;_,.:_.:._~~~~~--'.:._:__~:::::_.::.:::..:::.:..:..::.=.:._::::="-~~~~~~~ we don't have to fee l .1 " abollt letting it get in the refrigerator. 'A' ~ey a few years ago ~Wed that families throw away an average of two-thirds of ~ pound oC food per person NS Call 579-MllO"' -el ---Coll -• "" ..• every day. <'l!'hllt's a lot or food especially in these days of high food prices. You don't think you throw this much away? Perhaps not. Birt check up anyway. TOO MUCH Do you tend to cook a little too much of some foods -like wg't!ables -and then when they are left over figure it's better to throw them out since tijey won't taste very good WJlrJ1led over? U this is yoo r JH31blem, perhaps it would be ~ to cook too little, rather ttldn too much of these foods . 110r do you keep leftov~rs, ¥has meal. figuring you will . stj"r~ly find a way to use them'! E'Xcept that you don 't get ari>und to using them until it 's tbcJ late? One good way to overcome this waste problem is to plan for the use ol. the leftovers when you make your shopping list and menu plan for the week. You don't do a weekly menu plan? If not, this may be why you have a leftover prob- lem. With a menu plan, you can decide ahead of time how left· over foods like r o a s t s . chicken, rice. spaghetti, etc. can be made into a second tempting main dish. 'Mlen you can buy the necessary in· gredients for the "second time around." LEFT OVERS For eumple, roast beef can tum into bot roast beef sandwiches On buns or into stew with noodles. Leftover pork roast could become sweet and sour port or chop suey. Leftover poultfy could . be combined Wlrtr leftover rtee-- for a main dish casserole, or be mixed with cream 90Up and become chicken or turkey a 1a king. · In lheae days of htgh meat prices, using the •1eK.tender foodl" Ute rice or spaghetti to strefd a. small amount of1eft· over meat is a good Way to ma our meaf go farther. n two meals instead of on re in your plan for meat. y can save out t h e ary portion for the sec- ineal -instead of scrv· of it and· then not bav- lefl ... ,. her'' wa, families was te r~ ~. · thrOOgh., poor food ..-age practices. F r e s h should be wrapped y (.so air cao circulate fll't"J them);.(or relrlgeralor s e and used within 3 to 5 ~to'lft'\ Cooked meat Id bt~y wrapped to kee it fl"Ot!f .dr)ting out. It sh d .be usid Within a few days: toO, 'forbest fla\/Or. Fresh frultl! and v~gej;ables ltiould be bought it! _quantities flltitthe family can use before thef get too old. Some fruits and vegetables like apples. oranges. cabbage and carrots keep quite well for several weeks in your refrigerator. Others. like strawberries and asparagus, need to be u s <' d quickly. It you have a problem with bread getting moldy, store most of the loaf in the freezer and k~p out oilly as much as the family can eat in a fe"' da ys_ \Vith just a little planning and thought v.•hcn storing food s. you can cut do"'" en waste and also stretch your food dollars. Pudding Proven JtASTV FRUIT PUDDI NG 2 C'UJ)5 butter1nilk: biscuil mix cup sugar egg I cup mashed banana a can (17 ounceJ) frui t Ii cockioiI, .... n <1re1ned .,;. cup firmly-packed light I '" brown sugar · )lz c up chopped (medium- 1 fine walnuts) ; n' a medium mJxlng bowl 1 r together Ille blseult mi. 6'I sugar. With a spoon, 6roughly beat In the egg, f na and fruit cocktail. rn into a buttered .square (~ by 9 by 2 Inche1). k:le wlt.ll brown augar and uts. YOIS YALllE MEATS We fHhtl'll USDA ~ Steers.I erctusMtr In ell our •tol'M. fBoN"ru ss · ~!,!'AKS1.11. • 1,.11111 To, Rond Stan .=.. ..:t.59 lllltlal Slrlel111lp Slah ".'l'l'i" ..!. 79 USDA CIIDICI Clbl llllkl ':" ..J.79 ruiDA CHOICE r !tJt.UCK ROASTS ~.,....,,_.0L1B.•· Beat-111 Ramp Roast '""ool':""' u.t29 Boael• Rood Roasts ...;.:,. u.1.39 Btnel• Fllllly Stub "c:i" ... 1.49 rn;;j;t;·-Lal !91 ~ .... ~:w•ro -••- USDA CIIolce Rib Slllb "'' ""'' USDA Cliel1:1 CM a.b ~ Raund Ball 1'11 llflll .-,., u.1.41 ... t79 u.1.29 Wlln1·111111111m HaIIlu~ ... ":r. u.1.89 Bonltsl Lii 0 Pitr1c ''=m-u.1.29 vw Ta•l1 Klq Bacon ~.J".i::" .t& f:i'A'Nc'Y'E ASTERN -rg: ' !.cru FILLETS " .'fo~ .: .. ~·~~~ .. ..__....~~ 1111 Soll Chlllets -;:~:',:' ul.29 Fresh Fllllls Ocean Pen:b = u.1.29 F11cy Dressed Wbltlng ~= ..... 69 Ju11bo Bnad1d Shri mp "l"..&".'l:':' 2.29 ~BAKEir) Vons Clk1 Oonllls ~'!:.mo .67 PIHlpple "Snick Clke" .:.'~'C:.:, .69 \""!:,,.., .. .,..;.,...,._,...._v.,_~,..... • J.! ',HOT DOG OR 33 1 ~~,Y.~C}ER BUNS0 ..... :2r....111:... .. -.~... ' .:. Fnnch Garlic Brad s~~ ~~r .59 HIM Slylt Cook111 ~ l~ .37 VONS CWSIC lRACK mT GREAT BEGINNING 8ALAOMIX --oorr .59 -...... .25 PARKAY MARGARINE ~ .35 Stock up on U.. bu)'I end tr... )'OUI' __ ... JohnalOIII Yog1rt ~ .23 Oh &or Cbta1 Pim ~ .19 Vona Cfllll MK :::=. .25 F11lsc•manns Marga~a1 ,.=tg,_ .55 ~~li~u~~:"fi:-1·7·-rr FLOR1DA'SFINE81" • . r I ' " .. 1U.'IZ'J!.;?;l!.wf:.f. ' 7\-CW\<nllt;;. Minute Maid Lemonade "=' .29 Union Ice Cub11 '"'"'~"':r.""' .23 Good Hamor Ice Cram Bars 6 :::. .69 .33 West Pie Gren P•s ADDT0"-1'1' .28 .............. Ors-Ida Onion IUngers """""" .61 P ... Cl<AGE SW111nn's Fried CIIlcken i:i 1.29 Ort-Ida Hash Browns "'F...:.'i:l'' .39 ( HOUSEHOLD ) _ _...NE=ED"""'S ___. 1bl Following ltemaare •YIJltbM at moat VONS M•rk•tt Miii a WDmlIIS ZOr1es ~~. .28 JaCl)llanl Baich Towels ..=-,, 2.66 1 Quart Flextalaer '"""~""" .33 Amlrican F11g :i~~m:~~r~E 2.47 VONS VALUE DELICATES~ Gourmet quality, outs tending vatlety pleasing prices. Monterey Jack ChHH = Vons Fresh Sal1ds = '~ .39 i =~:~[s'".~'·7···fi; ~ C£RllflEWICNICJRMf • ::J.~ ~~~··~..:...~~ Vo ns Sour Crnm Dips =.~"r. .43 "-S#.l."O J1111J111ld Cottage Chaase '::t,' .43 Oscar Mlpr Slnokle Uoks i=: 1.03 Oscar M1y1r Bologna'"~~.-.71 Oacer May1r Wle11rs :t.-=1~ .98 Vltlt our complttt liquordepartment lor en your btvertgt llHd&. MILLBROOK VODKA ""' IO llftOOI'" Ho OAL. M lllpl ~I Sptclal 4.49 Backl11•1r Mal Tai Mix '°".;,':"' .99 OallD Spanad1 Wine .:tt:. 1.99 KEO BRAND BEEfl:"' ~OPWIMX.MMI DOLE 'PINEAPPLE SUCE>' HAW .... JERSEYMAID ICE CREAM FACELL ROYAL TOWELS E-Z LITE BRIQUEI IS GROUND BEEF lllfLK PACKAGE 3-U!S. ~MORE FRESH CORN TEHC>al OOLOEN EARS BURSTlt<Kl WITH JUICE HILLS BROS. COFFEE CLOROX. BI.EACH I-I.Ill. t•l& 2.98 1.02 ::::.... .59 • YOISY .... GROCERIES Our NJtdlon and al:M •dd up IO Q __ .,,,... 11111 Frmla ~'l:."' .21 Sapr FmlM Raka ~ .39 Knit BBQ Sncl ~ '~ .37 U.bya Vlllila SHUii .:.. .27 Dtl Monti om Plckla =:::: .69 Del Monte Swell Rellsb '::'S'L°'!: .35 ~~~;,1P :t~s 1;;.:-11 Morshoun Salad Muatanl ~ .29 Smucker Ice cmm Topping = .32 Girard& Salad DrlSalng ~ ':Ii'.' .49 Our1cH Stvfled OllYll ':ll:r' 'I=' .59 San Fernando Pitted Ollvea .:..":I:.. ..47 . 1 ~~~~g0:'*" 1·~0E 1 1-0UNCEC~ EQOS.WYY ~ _ Hamllu11t1r Flx·IU === .43 I Sflell No Pnt Sb1p ..,.,J'i"'....,"""' 1.83 Fancy Farms Pirie a BMll ~"' .27 Motlllrs Fadp N'Chlps l';Z"~ .67 Rold Gold 'PrllZllS "' • ..:::!:'" := .36 ,VONS i;BEVERAGES 10' II ASSOATEa FLAVORI 12..QZ, CAN •• ' 6mn Giant Gren Bans Vou Mayolllllu .27 Vons Mind Nuts ""~..J\'.""' ·~ .B9 Orchld Paper Napkins ~-.59 KDol Paps ~~WIU. .59 Nt1tul'll'• bait del/Vlred lruh dtlly Jr'4111'---;_,,-: .. ~----~LARGE ·l·· AVOr-ADOS iWTWl"t' mi EA. • . ... Frsah Hawaiian Plpayas '=' ..... 39 Frall llrll i:):a1uts '"~~ .... 29 Frsall crta, CllC111b1n ,::;::, .... 19 ..HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLES -WUl&.AWl WT.OOUI Larp So•d Clbbl11 ~-6 -g, t.t..• '; F11cy 8111111 Mal1111• -:= ~.39 Fmh VllHCl1 OnlQll '1'1fl 8::-0 .98 . . ,, .... .... To moot lllopporl, Yllue....,. loW .,._tor qualltJ produell. 'llllt'a- vatue muna at Vona. EftfJ week we ad-epoclal Iow~on-In •II lour.ballC-groupo-moat a fllh; dairy producto; frulta and vegetabltl; and grain producte. But value allO mnns much mare to ua. When J911 1hoplntho...,,br1ghloriYltonllllfttol Vons, w. 1111n1< ,....11 1g1M 11181 M a ' place to got bolter vshM tor ,.... •hopping dollar, -11 the -.. , ... •upermarket In town. remu-e1 I BLIE CHIP STAMPS ol I Wml All'f GIOCDY PUICHAJI" I I , ..... U.-.1.Mtte f/lllllOW,hMdl I I CJ ... ~.:::-~.. VONS I ·--------------------... --il!Zhlll!ill if@ -,-, I SAVE with this 1 I covpon Oil I ! IVORY 22:li. 39 I tLtQUID • I •• OEIDtlEIT I I D ... ~.:::-:.=... VONS ·------------------~ a-••• 5;p+ U!QG§M••••' 'SAVE with this • I coupon on I INESTEA ! I 1cED TEA 24 ili_ • 691 I MIX I D ... ~.:::-;;,=.... VONS ~------------------~ '. JERSEYMAID l '" 7 · eu9 "" l=..~.-~ . ..,.....!...-.- 11111 Deterg111I ~":: 1.19 Rernolds A11ndtnl Fon ::~ .za €11UIR') Ellenlent Cleansing Tabs ~ Brylctllill Hair Dns&Jng '=' .88 .99 Foamy SIInlag crs111 .'ll:l;..'\":"&":.o .80 INCl...ltOl'jO' ; .. ~-,_-..-_v--. J~ .:PEPSOOENT S"" 'TOOTHPASTE ""' t~~N&Y':!,_or em·.-; • Barer Alplrtn Vlsl11 Ey1 Onp JIJ Cotton Balls POllf.uT .... OP 1'"'"-IOCOUNTML. fOA Ml"TID EVU I-OZ. l'LAITIC IOTTl.E WM'UMl .. THI "°"~-I'll . ' .5Z 7 DAY AD -===--~-...... • Ml==~-~M#fA--•llWflllrO Callm.I400fo<-~--1"· Call _,Hlol , •• 1.85 1.09 kc ln a preheated 350- ...,. oven about 40'mlnutes. J DJ 11 I .,, ill I 1Qu!'"' In pon Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntingtou Beach Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach 5922 Edinger Ave., al Springdale, Huntington .Bead! 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beac~ 17950 Magnoria, Fountain Yaney 1erve hot ; lertovtts may bt 34081 ttlleale<I. ) I ' Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro I r • . . . .•#··--#· "'••··· . . . .. . . . . . ... .,. • • DAILY PILOT 0 Stickler for Freshness? . ~ Carrots Stay Crunchy rllCIS IPNCl'IYI WIO., MAY 2:1 T._U TUIS, MAY 29, 1973 How do you Sf.l'Ve canota! Are you the raw carrot (Ype, or the cooked camit type -or bolh ! It's a fUDll1 lllln&.Uial people lend to --raw as nibblers and Joqet to serve them cooked, or vice versa. We have new Ide.as for using them both waya, and slnce carrots ·are a powerhouse of Vitamin A, you can't serve them too often. Carrots work well io ideas for wann weather dishes. A real beauty is Molded Carrot and Harn Salad. A truly delec- table gelatin dl>h, Ille bas• is smoottttextured with rnayoar naise 1nd sour cream. Shred· ded. raw carrot3 gtve it crunch and inte~t. Whether cooked or raw, carrots add color and texture as courses or garnishes. THOUSANDS OF ~ . . ~ ' OPEN •MlllALIAY ...r.;lf&Y21 unn l&Sm 111.,12"411. 111..U .. lllO ., .. ,. POTATO CHIPS . 20....,.,, 32-01 Bn. OCA·COL ~ THERE IS A MARKET 8ASKEtM.B. DISCOUNT FOOD STORE NEAR YOIJ • llllMU. JJ7tl.W..A.... • Mll'fUIYAUIY,tlltc.t.111 ... ,.,,.J1t1 S.A ..... klW. • IAIC&C&Oll •nmml\21J1ftt~ ........ 1221 w ....... ·T·· . ""8l'Oll. tJI •. ~ ....... ,_ ••••• , *"" I'" ..... '"· • SAi ...... , .. L ... , lb'-• llA~JtJl.l1NMS1. • ~llnl.. IJM1 "-"A... • •WNITllA~J111.._ltTi. • IMW,Stl S.......,M . . ...... ...... ,, ... c..._..... . ~CHn,1a10..,..a... • lllTllllUYWMl, IHUY•Ow .. Jt. • wmau.••.••·•'•"· • AITUIA, 117Ml.11Jr4SI. • ~wn.a111s............ • .......... at ......... ltd. • IAIT•=llll. ....... Sf. • llWlOWU. ltlJSS ....... ~lttL • Wiwcrtlll&a,,7711...... • Mf=L~A"tt. • l&lfA" flJJtf ..... M. •lllN ... NJl,Wkf#r"'4. •L\ ..... A.14ftt....... •PAUi ,JIMllwr.111 •IAITA .... J_J .. ~ .... •WIAllU.OIJtl,_.1.. •U.WH.J•t•l.Y .... '1.s •Paut l.WJf ...... 1-llcW-•' lftAll.t••tsY ......... • ClllKAP~JUJJ V. ..... 11. • l.MCAl•'tllJW.A..-"f ' • p~· ., li,....lh.. • *"U.11.1111,c.M'au•&M. -·~· 't7Jl ....... a... •twl..llllt............ .... ~· an. •IMTlme··· ...... .... • 1 ,,W..1 ~ti • LIMIUCl,JIH .......... lh4. • PllllA. WI tlWta... • 11Tlll II• ... _ • I ........... · •LlllC"'°'-JJlll.A ..... · •-''W ttM ..... In. •""' ,f ..... f §!' ,., .. ..._.... a\IM._.I............... • •t•tWAiiJ~t._1._........ • tmll~IJl 1; .... ..._ • tvtllA; 1:a..n... . • Lfftllllq,•••• ......... •· • =111.TtiiDM.tS.. • ... •c-.. ... • fJJ............... • LIS .... JSJt._..IW. • iWat.tJ)S.-S,.t..; • ..._ L-..IW. ~· • MJJc.MC.er • LIS&Wn.tHIW.ftWJt.. •Ill WM..,.,t ... W-1_. • ...... JJ41L.._, ...... . ... ,,1............. . _,,, . ., ......... ~,.;:,. . ................ -~.... . ""'"""' .... ~-·-• ....,. ... .,, ,,..,_,.,......, w.-N.JJIW,._...._.... •~IJtl. ... 1 I • • /, ) ' . Another "cool" Idea L1 Fresh 2 tablespoons chopped green Carrot Vlnall!"'tt•. Carrou peP!"'T In! cut Into 1.i-e strlpa and I cup llnely chopped ham ooobd jult unW cri1p-ttnder. Sprinkle gelaUn over water 'Ibis ts 10 important point in in medium saucepan. Place tht per{ectloo of the dlsh. 'Ibe over low belt·, stir coostanUy ..,nili are then chilled for several hours in a zesty until gelatin disiK>lves, about 5 marinade made with tarragon minutes. Remove from heat . vinegar and salad oil perked In large bowl mix mayon· with dill, fresh c h o p p e d raise, sour cream. orange scallions and a touch of Crea& lemon juice. juice, lemon juice, s~t and 2 tobl.,poona c:bopped ~ scallioDI 1t Place cam>ta aod .,,14' saucepan. O>ver: and over low beat 15 to 20 mlnu or tmUI carrots are tender. Remove from heat , drain. CombAne remaining ~·1 gredients in large bowl. ~ carrots and mix well. Cover and chill &everal houri. M.tkq, 4 servings. .,, CAR ROT MAYONN.\l!E ' Most people enjoy cri.!p raw dfy mustard. Stir ln dissolved vegetables served in various gelatin. OLlll if necessary until 2 carrots, pared and cut fii ways in warm vreather. A new mixture mounds slightly when chunks idea is to serve them with an dropped from a spoon. Fold In 2 radi!hes .i· unusual Carrot Mayonnaise carrots. scallions, green pep-v4 cup mayonnaise done quickly in the electric per and ham . Turn into kup 'l cup sour cream blend• or food chopper. mold; chill until firm. 'fo t teaspoon (resh lemon juiCltl serve. unmold and garnish Y.i te•"•nnnn salt , MOLDED CARROT AN D Id d t ~ with sa a greens an carro ~' teaspoon dried leaf tar-BAM SALAD curls. ~fakes 4 servings. ragon 1 envelope unflavored FRES H CA RRO T ? ~~ tea.spoon grated fresh, gelatin VINAIGRETTE onion o/" cup water Place carrols and radishes ~~ cup mayoruiaise 8 carrots, pared and cut in in container of e 1 e ctr i'C julienne strips blender; cover and process ~t' ~ cup sour tream 114 cup water 1·1 ¥• cup fresh orange juice 2 tablespoons tar rag 0 n high speed until finely choR;1 1 tablespoon fresh lemon vinegar ped, or grind in food choppe(1: juice 2 tablespoons salad oil Turu Into bo wl Add remaintng · 1,~ teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon salt ing~lenta; mix well. Covet' ~1: teaspoon dry mustard ~ teaspoon pepper and chill 1.mtll ready to 1erv6..1 1 % cups s~edded pared t teaspoon sugar " carrots ~~teaspoon dried ruu weed Serve with c uc um be r ..... z tablespoons c b o p p e d 1h teaspoon fresh lemon tomatoes, fndt or s al 141 scallions juice greens. Makes 1 cup. 1 , _ _:::::=::__ ____ =-------''--------'--11 " '" , I ,(f' . ,. -,, " . ' t~1 '" I, l ,,, " ,, '" ,, r •1P, "!h ,, >'/, ·i: ,, "' '" ,, '" ,'' '1 .. " ... ,,, ·' ' I ... ·-. - -•.•• -•Iii• I!:, I • ., .. ._ • • • '\ • I • • • I .. " ' . ' • • huMBLEWEEDS MUTT & JEFF FIGMENTS AIJN~ P-f'EJ.ll COl\PU~ ALLY 6EEAI TO BE THI! NEW~! NANCY. © "'. ; - ~@)@ IS H" Kltl>INb 1' ! II/Ii: BEEN OOIN<O A HAND Jal> ~-RR \'liARSI I'M GLAD WE DON'T LIVE •·(N . DANGERC><..$ TIMES LIK!!' THAT-. . ' '4? c, ARE 'IOU KIDDING? PEANUTS by Tom K. Ryan I S0ITTA DIG-'HAIL 10 THE CllJEF'! by Al Smith by Dale Hale '"'" ,.. . .,._ .... ,, ... _, ..,,. .. by Ernie Bushmiller • DDAY'S CBDSSIDID PUZZLI ACROSS Do• "1n1rpiW1ing 1i~=red ,...,. l OoddeNol l'.lf!ICf! 1 Nigerian na1h1e ; Var. llrolt of ver11 l(C!m eway llom l Cenulose P!an1s; 2 IO'jord~ "'' ;" . ~nhng ~n,imal's gait 23 Runs out of (fear '.l ""bec.111 "'1:-.gnty .... So. Lil'#r!lnCe, !Of 000 3 e~~ ·-- lducarion•I yroup Ai a fu1u re '""" 38 Sall wall!r -. Make'S unlit for d1inking . Plent wilh -'S Erin 48 f\lmiabed food ............ ·-50 W1tchful 61 Eauel: Prefix 62 C1\erldair day 11bbf. 65 Can,cablntlt membel'I 58 Title gl'lot• 60 Engl~h riV9f 61 Send forth 62 ··A Boll for ·-·· 63 Propel wtth torce 64 Kind of slod 65 T110cod 1t length: 2 ""'ord& DOWN 1 Titles 2 Corner; lnfo1mal 3 Tr&ilche1atr.1 4 Number S Bombarding 6 Bus stop 7 Touch 1911in.'lt 8 Mol8Cule: Abbr. 9 Vigor 10 Cortitin curves 11 Elmiations pu1 pln ™'irios 12 Estuary Female 13 Not .... 1111 1nim~ls. arranged J • ' \;K· • • ; 7 I (, " ' l'.4 •• ·•i " " " " YMtwdaly'a Puu .. SoNed: 19 Ur-defground 40 N. Amer. ""'orker Indian 22. Lobster'&egg 41 Bakery . man merchandise _ l . 42 Cor-fereni:e a. oud OOISe "3 81owery :ZS Apiary units product 27 P1epo&ition 28 George-; Frvnch no~1ist %1 Sheltered · horn the .... ind 30 CeremoniM I CIS 32 \lenlu1ed 45 Pa1riolic groop: Abhf. ~ WeslemUS plant 47 Existing 48 Part of a joint 49 Hindu social division 61 Srfi\Jg POf&Ofl 63 City on the Truck11e 54 Labrador 33 lriatl Sea land mineral body: 3 wordil b6 Dis1ance: 34 Act Prefix 57 Down·Urn1er 35 US uniYenity bird 37 Fisherman's b9 P1ofession1I purchase group: Abbr. I ' -ff; . " " 12 " > ... " " " ;f •.,, " "' " ' ~·"' ll " JO mi it n ,,,.. -~ ,, "1 .. ., • « .. • • • . I"' ' . N " -. ,, ' 1-1 - ~· " • " .. I I lJ " " ... -~ ., Li ~ JI" " " '·ii " " I= JUDGE PARKER I ·;··'· . ·~ , . , ... WE BOTH HAVE CARS, A66EY ! WHY DOH'T YOU DRNE YOURS HOME AND I'LL PICI<. YOU .. I UP THERE'? i MISS PEACH i ' ' ' . ! • DICK TRACY ,.f I , • ' Doours WOILD SALLY BANANAS '~"~~~. .. ,..w . "'-~ ?" V>) ~ IS u=at~. ontd ... GORDO ~~ ' !f:l!t '{()/) • /f!lW,J />I .srA.'!f $0"fbic. 12!&//T //l:laE, ~~ IN JS ~I#fP:' .45 CAN ~ RDUNI:? nio. WOli!J.O OP FJ..l.J>CT • • 5'-.:!5 MOON MULLINS C/>Slfi'R> ~ T.Al<E f>j ... .Mt:NIE, EMMA? ' ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charlie M. Schulz 'TlUS' C00.1111X11-1 Ot/T 1' l5E i<INO Of DlfflO!:.T by Harold Le Doux WOULD YOU 1EL1. HER THAT I 'Li. PHONE IN THE M ORNING, JUD()E ? T"t.WI' A"THUlt TO S'AY THIO OIWJOIAS ... : I ' l 1~' I, ,1,,1,' 0.0 ~ EVER STOP TO TMINK TM~ ARE OTUER ROOMS IN TMIS P\....ACI!., M«> COR'RIOORS, ANO MALLS TO CU!AN? POLl(CI A tit Tin ----·-• •• --+ .... ' •. I ' by Roger ""'4fleld by Charles Bars0tti "' . . (B)tttJ am r ~it r' . ' by Gus Arriola 'llJP~:: ~r 71/e Plmn; J:v&li!. ~,_.,. 8nwP. :ITON/ii r ~~J • , ,r, • ,.,,, by Ferd Johnson ·----.... --- l>fl.Ax,EMMf.- IF PWSHle11> WANTl'l>A liSAUTIFUt. WIFE, Hll't> H/>.'JE ~Et> A Be).UTJFUL l,.., WIFE'· "The trouble with gardening ts you have to do It In the kind of wealher you wish you didn't have to do anytlll8g." DENNIS THE MENACE '~.V/llSl»I S(S IF I \Ql'r 6> JM 00 IN A WH11£, I'll. LC6< MY SQIJQ'fJ1lS ~ .•. WIWEVER lltEY AA!! .• ' 1 Squid Zucchini Wrapped Makes we of a new product that may be kept oo the pan- try shelf. . . ... FULL QUART ~ ROYAL CROWN COLA FULL QUART •1 ·. PLUS DEP. ~5 . for ca1sco SHORTENING Ju. CAN IOX OF ZOO 2 PLY CRISCO OIL M PL. OZ •. WOOLOVE LIQUID ...... SOFT IMPERIAL MARGARINE _IMPERIAL DIET MARGARINE ················ ..... 55• 1 LI . IN 49• 2 TUIS "" 1 LI . IN 481 I TU IS MlXWELL HOUSE COFFEE • .. u•98• • Ll·CA•s21a I ' , . Memotial . MANNINGS "Custom fed" . . ' DAILY PILOT Sl , SHANK· HALP WEBERS HOT DOG. Ot HAMBURGER B~~~ 39c -: '. ' ..:. ·--. -• '' -,,:_ c ,, BAGGIES: ~a,:·:' ; ' .. In The Husk FREE . ' . . "' . ., :RIGHT GUARD "'i . $419 DEODORANT ,.;,p:CA• I ' . -. DIAL BALSAM SHAMPOO , "· o.. ,,_ .. _ 69' 11 .. 11i. 11 .ll .... ~ ...... DIAL ANTI.PERS Pl RANT tOs.A ....... C.. 8! •• BANQUET CREME PIES 8 INCH PIES LYNDEN FARM STEAK FRIES 2 LB. BAG * * * * *i, THE ALL-AMERICAN FAVORITE * * * * FllESH • BJUUi'il SLIC[D . BOLOGNA 89~ COUNT MICHAEL VODKA Prices Effective: EASTERN PORK SALE FARMER STYLE ., " I .. RAVJOLt. WJ'l'll ZUCCHINI : cups ollced l'UCCblnl y, lealipooo I~ ,. ..... inl . I 51llall clove tarllc, minced SPENCE.R s • TEAK 29 Pork Spareribs 9·8~ Thundoy thru Sunday MW, 24, 25, '26, 27 OPEN MONDAY MAY 28 10 · 1 Prices sub iecr to stock on hand. WE GLADLY ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS i ..::::::r,::'" butler or ' I ' i cans (each 1411 ounctsl beef ravioli In meat sauce Grated Parmesan cheese In a saucepan cook zucchini wUb Italian teasonlng and farilc Iii liuttu unUI tender. Enjoy ~·finest, with Mannings lfff Add ravioli; heat, ,lllrrtng oc-ROMERO'S · -ca:_~~~-lh Pa-'--rm•_••n., CORN · J'ORTILLAS' Makes about 4~ cups. Kids Like To • FRIGO 4 Or. -SHREDDED Ask A(Uly CHEDDAR CHEESE · . >' , . ·~ ,, ? • 1 Doz. Pack 4 Oz. Pq. Lean • N ·Meaty CENTER CUT RIB PORK CH-OPS l • • ' 1 COSTA MESA PLACOOIA ··~ l · . ~ . } 19th and Placem· 710 w. I .,,,-,,-.1•t.~ . ' ~ .. .. • r WtdntSdaJ, MIJ 2.3, )q73 w .. .....,., MOJ 23, 1973 PILOT.,t.OVERTISER Jf Grocery Specials! COCA • COLA 5 for s1 Giant :-12 ounce bottle1! Plus deposit ~ .._ _________ _. i ~f ~~.wBE~~~~·.,;1:! ·~ :~~~! French's Mustard . 39C Big 24 ounce jar goes so far~ Nabisco Snacks ... 39c Chipsters or ·Korkers for fun eating! Dill Pickles ....... 33c Springfield-regular or kosher-22 oz l MILLER'S $229 ! HIGH LIFE 1 Bottles or cans-twelve 12 ounce! · Wilshire ·Relishes .. 25~ Sweet,..Hot Dog or 'Burger 12 oz. Barbecue Sauce .. 25c . Springfield .•. regular or hot-14 oz. I ~!~~!'!'~~:~.u~~~~l~ o~,~~ I I A-1 Sauce · ........ 39c J Five ounce bottle (10 oz .•. 6.'i') ' ! .... ~~~~~~~~~ · POTATO 55c CHIPS Granny Goose, reg. or dip ..• 10 oz. twin pack ' Gala Napkins .... 29c Colorful prints-big. \60 ct. pkg. i Zee Towels ....... 29c ' Assorted colors or prints-big roll! Briquets .......... 79e Kingsford hardwood .. 10 pound bag. FRESH EGGS 59~ .. Extra large-El Rancho Gr. "AA''. Margarine r1eischmonn'• •• 49C Made with pure corn oil-I lb. ctn. Margarine 1m11t•i•I ••••• 49e 'rhe one with the regal I.ouch! 1 lb. All Detergent .... s 399 Save on the laundry 11izes-20 lbs!. Fire Starter ...... 29~ For sure rei;;ults ! Springfield quart. can. ' ft '• a very •Pecial day. and you'll be daing something to make it more mem?rable. Add to your pleasure by letting your plan ., begin at El Rancho! Featuring this week, all your needs for patio dining, party plans or picnic fare. On the boat, the beach or in the backyard-you'll be glad you started at El Rancho! EL RANCHO MARKETS WILL BE CLOSED MEMORIAL DAY 'IJDCBP . {.. . ,. . Make ~our coolr-0ut · <;u~. assured witli 'this tantalizing tender rib cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef! Naturally aged to make it'na'i1Jtally delicious' CLUB STEAK Rib cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef! .. ~ ' ' . • " ........ '""!'-""''·...;.~--.... ---.., LONDoa-· $ '1 s• BROIL 1b. ·Boneless. Rib cut .of choice beef! Fresh Spare · .Ribs LEAN! MEATY! 89~ Thinkin( of barbecuing? You couldn't do better than these~ Tender, with so much good eating! El lb.ncho Hens ... 10 to 14 lb. average wei~ht ... great for a holiday main course .•• no matter where you're plan - nin~ to enjoy it! LIVER 79 SAUSAGE ~b Real Braunschweiger! .• by the piece I GROUND BEEF s 1•!. Extra Lean! _ .choose bulk or patties! Split Broilers ... ~ ....... ~~~~~~--.. --65~ Young n1eaty fryers _ •. king sized for more goodness ... expertly split into uniform halves for broi ling or b.§rbecuing! Iowa Roast 8oneles..i;;-and lean-rolled leg or pork! Sliced Bacon ...... 89?. fo~l Ran cho's thicker slices! .. or choose Hormel Wafer Bacon ••• 12 oz ... 89' •• $149 lb Boneless · Hams1•!· Serve-Rite halves-avg. 4-5 lbs.(Hormel Cure 81 ... l.89 lb.) Sausage .......... 89~ Bird Farm .•• l pound roll ..• Regular, Hot or Sage. Fresh Salmons 1 ~~ Salmon Steaks 1 ~b~· J\ing-Salmon •.. for fine eating! Firm. fresh! by the piece. Fresh! Center cut from tasty, firm King Salmon! Fresh Oysters .... 89c ;;'ro1n v.iestcrn waters .•• 8 oz. jar. Fillet of Turbot .. 89~. From off the Greenland coast! Mahi Mahi ....... 99~ Delightful reminder of .Hawaiian dining! Cocktail Shrimp s1 9! Fully cooked for convenience! Fresh Trout., ... s13! Fillet of Cod r•EsH. s1°?. Mountain variety ••• ave1age 1-2 lbs. True Canadian Cod, ,for pleasure! Liquor Dep't Values# Holiday Times $ 711 VODKA ' Bottled for El Rancho-Half gallon Seagram's 7 Crownt499 Save 40' on the fifth at El Ranchof • · • st:a9 T equ1la ..•....... ·i· {I El Rancho's for Margaritas! QUarlt Beefeater Gin .... sl465 The famous one reduced 1.20 half.gal .. • Blended Whiskey $4 99 El Rancho's-86 proof! quart Holiday Times $888 Scotch Bottled for El Rancho-Half.gal"!! Frozen Fo9ds ' ' .. ~ ORANGE · ., .. s 1 JUICE · · · . •w, ,._, Springfield concentrate-6 oi: 1: (12 oz .... 33' ) ' Wal fies oow"' FLAKE •••• 15~ pkg. of 6 (French Toast ... 39') Lemonade ..... 2.tor z5c Minute Maid regular or pink ':'I 6 oz. (12 oz ... 25') Avocado Dip ...... 55c , Just thaw and serve! Calavo 7V. oz. Potatoes sH0En11NG ••• ,35c Ore Ida-heat and serve-1 1A lb, BUFFERIN 8 9c TABLETS Save on 60 ct. size! (pkg. of 36-69C") Baby Oil .......... 59c Johnson & Johnson's ... 4 ounce btle. Gillette Blades .. s1 19 Famous !uper stainless steel! Pkg. · ' Rapid i~have ...... 59c Palmolive shave cream-6 1,~ oz. aerosol ., d # .. ' " • Delicatess~n Specials Super Fresh Prorlutel .. -· String Cheese .... s 16?. English Muffins . 33c Gardoni1'1 fun food ! hy the piece Fork split easy warming-Bay's, 12 oz_ Baby Goudas .... 59c King Size Franks ggc Famous Kaukauna Klub .. , 7 oz. Rath's-for the small fry! 1 lb. pkg. ) r ' , , fr111hCnrn Large ears, with golden kernels bursting with fl avorful goodness! Compare the quality! FRESH! Cherry Tomatoes 29c Fresh .Pineapple .19~ Red, ripe, ready to use! 12 oz. bskt Mature Hawaiian fruit! Large size. Orange Juice ..... 49~ ":I Rancho's fresh 8Queezed! No additives. Green Onions .... 10~ Radishes, too. at this price! Bunch. Prices in effect Thur. through Wed. May 24 through May 30 Open daily 9 to 9 ... Sunda.y 10 to 1 No sales to dealers r ' ,. ' J 1 -. ' - •• -· M•y 2), 197) OAILV PILOT · • • " I I• ,, ' • "It'•· F•• Ce Be /\'lee to People" • ,. ' •, These ·Homes Will Grow On You Owning your o;.n home now makes tho fun.,.. more .ecure for you and those tittle members of .~our' famity. We invite you to stop in and Jet us show you just how good an investment of buying a home from us can be! Remember we ire the largest locally owned Reel Estate firm with over 100 professionals to help you every step of the way. Please drop by, we will be hap.py to answer any of your questions. BACK BAY MINI VIEW PARK HUNTINGTON $58,750 R·Z WIDE LOT READY FOR A TIEAT? 4 BR + FR + DR Secluded cul-de.sac propertl' ln prestl~ ·estate Price reducUon on the perfect family home in $48, 900 area of finer homes. Dramatic cathedral ceillngs CORONA DEL MAR Corona del Mar. No\V at Sl07,500, 4 bedroonu;, This is the "Castal.\·8.)'" model. an "instant hom£'- in living room with crackling wood-burning fire. 2~ baths. play room, dark room, study, sewing beautiful," tastefully decorated, in1ma.culate con- place, open plan family room, spacious garden room, \\·ork shop, large garage with storage for dltion inside and outside, and priced about $3000 view, formal dining room, 4 large bedrooms, and "rilh older 2 bedroom home. Can build apartment boat or trailer, access to private beaches, sunny belO\\" current replacement co~t. IdcAI location, gourmet kitchen with tireaklast bar. Peek-a-boo over garage. South or highv.ray. Easy terms. Call deck, d rea rn kitchen. all conveniences and near ne"· l!lemenlarv school and park. Please \·lew flf Y'i'-"'"[JOrt Bay. As;k:U8. about. the. interest-673-8550 for appoinllnent to inspect. VlE\V! ! Call no\\• to see 673-8550. phone 546-2313 for additional Info. ing P.QSsibll!ties for future 1ncreo..ses 1n vaJuc. r-r==============================================:1 Please c~ today, for an appointment to inspect this highlsr dCsirable proJ.M~rty. Call ~6-2313. PERFECTION H:cre it is. 4 Br: bcautiflilly dcrorated and land· scaped. Front and rear patios \vith lots of used brick. Plush carpet. Even the garage is perfect "'l\.h cabinels and \\"Ork bench. In the lovely 1'.1ea·oow"18.rk "area, it is ready to move in, relax and enjoy. $43,900. Call now 842-2535. MESA VERDE PACllEnER 4 BR+ POOL h-1esa Verde best location. 2 blocks to the Adams school, 1 block to thl' Country CIUb -Golf - Tennis -Swimming. NC\\' paint, lush carpets, 4 l11r11:e bedrooms -master 1ulte rigbt oft the back yard and tiptoe into your pool. See this today. Only $52.500. Call 546-2313. OLD DOG LEARNS NEW TRICK This started out a short time ago as an old 2 bedroom house on a lar,i"e lol The home bas beef\ rompletely remodeled. It has new plurlibliig, ne"w wiring, new everything in- cluding an attractive new )ook . ..At the rear of the lot a new building bas recently been <.'OITlpleted v•hich contains a fine 2 bedroom unit w1th marble shower stall and a nifty 1 bedroom ape.rtinent, plus a double garage. This is the first time ()Ul' new trick has been advertised so hui:;-y. Only $59,950. Call 646-7171. MESA VERDE £STATE I 4 Bedroon1, 2 be.th rambling one story, nestled on one ()f the largest lots in Mesa Verde, With access for the largest boat or camper and l'O()m for pool or your own football garne. This home is sparkling clean ""ith beautiful carpets and drapes. Covered patio. \Valk to schools and &hopping. $38,950. CalJ 546-2313. BUILD YOUR OWN NEWPORT HEIGHTS this "'ell located lot in Ne\\'port Heights. Perfect for famlly home. \Valking distance to all schoola. Owner will carry financing. Only $20,000. Call 646-7171. POOL GAME ROOM DARK ROOM and many other bonus extras that are too numerous tu mention. Gigantic master bed- room suite, garage \\·orkshop, covered pri- vatf.! µa.tio, ~rackJlng wood burning stone fireplace \vith gas log starter, family room. eat in kitchen. slate entry foyer. \Ve invite you to compare this Newport Riviera 2 s.tory for features and value at only $31.500. Please call for an appointment. 546-2313, VA TERMS WALK TO SCHOOLS 5 BEDROOM LINDA ISLE Dramatic, different stunning cu!!.lom bay. front home-deluxe beyond descrlption- Quality appointments throughout. New Jacuzzi~eparate formal dining room-- 3 ~ baths-private master bedroom with sitting room plus sun dock. Call for detaJls and sho\\•ing.. 673-85&>. ' IMMACULATE BAYCREST $68,900 One of the neatest, cleanest 4 bedroom hornes you will see. Dining room and 3 baths. Fet> land. For further inforn1ation or to see call 646-7171. - A RARE FIND But ,.,,e 'did it. Thl8 wonderful new 3 bed- roon1 in Corona de! Mar has clear ocean vi£>\v. S"·iss chalet designed \\ith vaulted ceiling in llvlng room with flreplace and "·alls of glass to enjoy the ·water view. Ex-pensive w/w carpet&-J baths. It's va- cant-move in right now. Price $110,000. Call 673-8550. SUPER POOL SUPER PRICE An unbelievable $32,750 tor this fttshly painted 3 bedroon1 2 bath home la almost impossible to Imagine. The owner wtll also pay S500 of your cost to purcha&e.-Hurry, this new listing won't last the "·eek. Call 842-2535. $26,950 Tutal price of thia 4 bedroom, 2 bath home with all the bullt~iru;. It's a.n ex· tremely dt'COratro 3 year old home within "'8.lking d!stance to the beach. rt could be perfect for you. CaJJ now 842-2535. WHY NOT LIVE .A· UTTLE \Vhy not Jive wher& your children can enjoj! the nelahborhood. Prlvnte club home witb pool for enjoyment. Large 2 story, 4 bed· room home with plush carpet. thru-out. Home shows and looks !Ike a mt>d~ home. A must to see at only $44,&'IO. Call now for more details. 842-2535. NEWPORT WEST 3 BEDROOM SOMETHING SPECIAL A most unusual 'I bedroon1 home in choicl' upper bay locntion. Hn.s n 2:2xl3 .<1eparatP. formal dlning 1·00111 -huge pa rk like rear yard 'vith tree shaded yard -pe.tlo -out- standing living room with corner fireplace. W/w carpets and drapes. All electric built- in kitchen. Many buUt-ln features through- out. Only $52,500. Jlurry. 67l-8550. INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE $32,000 Tu·o units: 3 bOOroom. l bath, I bedroom. 1 bath on a 50 x 150 lot \\·ith 4 garages that are stressed for unHs above. Seldoni does one get the opportunity to buy units for this price. They won't Inst. so call now for additional information. 847-6010. THE RIGHT INVESTMENT 7°/o LOAN ASSUMAB~ Is equal to a lifetime of toU. Your chance to own th!§ cute duplex In Corona del Mar. Front has 2 BR + Den. Ne\vly painted \\'/w carpets throughout. Spotless condi- tion throughout Large l bedroom over 2 car garag('. Only $73,500. No charge to &»· sumc loan. Hurry. Call 673-8550. HILLTOP HAVEN ' This view will last forever 1·0 the valley-to the sea High atop a hill \Vhere you'JJ. al"•ays want to be. A tri-level Mediterranean With Spanish style feeling Priced at 5125,000 See this home, It's m08t appealing. Call 546-2313. SHARP AS A MARBLE but it has a super sharp price of only S31,500, an unbeatable value. AU it v.·111 take is a little tender loving care to r~tore il.8 original beauty. All of the raw material is there. Lots or lush landi.:capJng, Iocatf'd in a pretty shaded l\l'ea, 3 good size bed- rooms and a big kitchen with family area. It even has sprinklers. Tak<' advanta&e of I.his price now! 847-6010. MOTHER-IN-LAW APARTMENT or entertainer's paradise or whatevE'r you \\"Snt to use thill big, big finished bonus room \\"Ith ~ bath and wet bar for. That's just the beginning ... It has 3 big bed- rooms, a large kitchen ""ith dlnlng area and it's close to schools, Huntington Cen- MESA DEL MAR 4 LUXURY UNITS $63,000 -$6300 DOWN gets you into a potential annual i:f'OU· 14 <,C i;pendablc. \Ve have an 80% firm loe.n comm! ment. Better hurry!! 646-7171. START OUT RIGHT OWN YOUR OWN ' This home is I\ 1)('rfl'ct starter for you. lt's im- mnculat(' In evl'1'y \\ay Jlnd located in a nice neighborhood. It has ;.\ t)cdro1:1ms nnd a family aren in the kitchen. i\lnny extras too: Air Con- ditiuning, fire alarm syt('rn, and a covert'd pat.iu to mentinn a fc~·. And it hae: a perfect "starter . price" of only S27,500. 847-6010. IT'S A WELL KEPT SECRET If there is a better buy in an executive ho~e-; than this one. ll.!! been reduced from $49,500 t8..,... $47.500 fOT a fast sale. It has everythlng from 'a huge famUy room \\.Jth fireplace to 4 very latJ"e bedrooms. A gorgeous Spanish e)(terlor on ,a large private lot adds to the desirability and charm. Call today , .. at thl.s price, It'll be gOnc tomorTO\\"! 847-6010. CHAMPAGNE TASTE BEER INCOME? FIRST HOUSE? This charming 3 bedroom and den home is walking distance to all schools with no major st.reel!! to cross for the c hildren. Se.· clu®d walled, tree ah.o.ded back yard v.ilh free form naptone patio. Premlttm car- peting and wall coverings make this a great value al S26,500. Why "'llit, call now 546-2313. 1,;;;;;:, Llve near the beflch, in the very popular Newport West. lmn1aculate, freshly paint- ed 3 bedroom home available for occupancy upon loan approval. Priced to sell &t only SJ4,900. 842-2535. ter end golf course. Unbellevable price of Aw, oome on and have a little taste of cham~ S36,950. 847-6010. ~---pro.gne, for a beer prlce! Big spacious kitchen hall This one Is JX'rfect for a yollng famiJ.J', 3 bed- room + family room, pool size lot located on quiet street, 11' block away froin a new park. Priced at oz\iy $36,450. Call toda~. 842-2535. .. .. " ' • ..• 2 l~D~90M HOUSE , R·2 LOT ~f ASSUME FHA LOAN Thls.~ta ~fL>sa hotJif' "ith ~ celling& and. hu~ ~k )'a.rd la an kleal itartPr home. Nete the.J"HA assumable loan + R2 rewning. Priced at~. ror details call 646-7171. ' PLEASANT AND PRODUCTIVE o ...... ,.., .. teh ............ ,,11 ..... .... ..... k Hftl ,,...... -4 predRri ... n..y Ny , • , ftle CMJtlf'ell .. tMM 1PJrtt -4 tiat c••thHI tnl .... .,. ttte twe lllMt 1.,.r. t9M ~ fef Mft CONSllTINT ,,..._ rhlty. .... _,. -Mn. .,..,.,., THlll'I IOOM AT THI TOP. •~•lr ....... 1 l1tt9trtty .. d hHlnlelM • r.s. Let'• ...... ,...,. ••U ,... ., ..... , ... This exqul!tlte custom Undtl Iale hotne has every- thing your most dlscrimlnatlne buyE'r could "·ant. Choice w11.ter front with pier and sllp. 4 bed· rooms. ~~ baths. No expensl 1pe.red on Interior rumishlnf(Jl . i-IUl{C ~eJ)ftrate miuter bedroom - \·le\\' -private l:Snth. Sundeck. U you "1lnt the vt>r}' bt:'st cull 673-8550. Price $278,500. lot~ of cliblnet space. U>\·ely nreplact':!J and shag carpeting in living room. 4 good size bcdroomll, .I% baths. Back yard hes a shurneboa.rd court. Freshly pftlnted end a shake roof. All this for ]O\V low $33,500. 847-6()10, NEW BALBOA DUPLEX Prime Nt>wport Peninsula. location. SpacfOJJ.S 4 and 3. Ot.>lu.'l:e features lrn.:lode. noor to celling brick fireplace. Lavish use of tile. in k:Jtcheiis snd be.ths. Walk In cl0&ets-open beam t'tlllng1' . Laundry area for eac!h unit. Steps to the bNdL $109,000. Call 64ft-7171. "It'• Fun to Be /\'lee to People" COSJ.'A M,ESA 27'0 ....... 9". '46-UU ' ' ' DIJNTJNGTON BEACD . 17UI Widi lllYd. 6014 w-. MNIJ5 147-60111 ' ' ••• CORONA DEL MAR nz 111-.1..tto 67).assa INVESTMENTS 2190 Horttc. lllft..· 5111te 201 ' c:-... _ 546-160t I , • OAJlY PllOO w.-. "'"' 23, l97J The Biggest Marketplace on the· Orange Coast ~ •••••• )Ql).S)4 I~,~ J, • • t • .950 · 990 ~' ~ "iMip11tO• 900· 914 ~. '1 •• ii. •••• 100-799 " .PAILY PILOT 'CLASSIFIED ADS You Can ~II It, Find rt, [ 642-5678 J One Call Service' Trade It With a Want Ad . . Fast Credit Approval MoWit .._ rot Sole . , • ru -149 ,.,._.,, ....... , .llS-~ ' ........ _. ..... ,.,., .... a.al £mrte G.nttol. • • • t ISO -199 ~nontial •• .. . •• J> • • • lOO • 29f ~~for Solt . r ...... ""'"". ' ~~i)c . •• 100 • 124 . . "'° -574 • • 800 • 149 ' ................. ~ ·~ral , , General OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provide ,·~Duplex-Ocean Side Of Hwy. f ,ewly decorated & ca rp eted duplex ... BR. each unit -with garage for each unil. .:COnvenlent II> shops & trans. $72,500 . Dramatic Duplex On The Beach .. Ji you like tbe beach, you'll love this loca-l tion! 2 BR. & 1 BR. units -both furnished. '11ee land -not leasehold. Well screened ~om the, public eye. $125,000 ;II = . 0.,.,.1 'fa</ and Bii ' ' ~ · . tJJW. 2407 f COAST HWY· CORON A DEl MAR· 6/S 3000 * * * * * ... •, TAYLOR CO. * .. ·1 . DOVER SHORES-$225,000 · Magnificent 5 liedroom home on picturesque ,I Galaxy Drive & includes the land! Really ; custon1 built. On a street-to-street site. Large '!·family rm , lge for mal dining rm. 4 lf.? baths '! ~ 3-car garage. Fully air-conditioned, Jux , '.Fptng. blt-iit vacuum system, miniature pool ·~w/jacuzzi & sun room off mstr bath. · . ·-~ ' ,:; 1 '0ur 28th Year" ESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors '.I 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road ·1 "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" • NEWPORT CENTER, N,B, 644-4910 feneral 1 _G_en_•r_a_i _____ _ ~[CALLING 4%Q. C.Q. I;; SPUNDOR IS OUR STANDARD F'EE ~ificent Vl~v fron1 lht." ON l!Oi\IE S1\LES. f1111tastle ru.~tom-!:91lf horn(• CALL C.Q. 11'ith hidden m:1..~1cr b«lroon1 G • f d [~ile AJld ~rparate 2 IM'<l-u1n ar ;rpoin K\JC'St hous•·. Gour1n1•t jkltehen and 1\'il1t·l'fH1ls ;11·1· REALTY lju.~t \y,o or llu· 111a11y •'-.;. Since 1946 Nnrport Crest Condomh1iu111 Homes, clustered about lllndsome courtyards, occu py ona of the ltw rem1lnln1 l111e propertias in desir1bl1 Newport Retch. f•Klly rla:h t for perma· nenl residency or holiday home. Sundecks, lireptaces. wet bars, Sun·Lil .. kitc hens, tuck·under doubht 11111es. Heated n im· minr poo1, li&hted tennis courts, saunas, lherapy pool Alt nle- rior maintenance provided. A l1sUng expo1ience In glorious Uv\ngi Two, t/lfe• • ltlt NtlnN111s. from$65,495 C.celltd _,,.,,._.,. - From Pacific Co1st ftl1hw1y, up Su perior Avenue to Tkoodtrcf•, ind directly to #12 Robo n Coort. Ttle11MM: (714) MU14l Siios Officl a,en dilly 10 a.m., IAI suMOt. 1tras. Pleasr 1·all ~:;li11111' t>r Downtown Coit• Me .. l~PET Er'BA RfRETT'11· l H~~~10R 642-29'91 ~~~=rt~~:~~~~::: ~ U/'OllVUI: Ii~ THE UL TIM,<\ TE DUPLEX -South o! the High\vay in old Corona del Mar there's a fine 3 bedroom hon1e that is sturdy, well appoint- ed, immaculate and ready to move in withoUt lifting a broo rn. Carpeted throughout, com- plete kitchen built-ins and the one bedroom over the garage apartment provides steady income and "'ill I.le delivered completely furnis hed. UN19UE HOMES OF CORONA DIL MAR , 671·6000 A llsth19 of P1ilto lrown ' I U~l()UI: li()Ml:S I l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!~RE~A~LT~O~R~S~!!ll!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~11 Gener1I General I~;;.;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;~== I 341 General General "OWNER CLIMBING WALLS" . . has bought another house; this is your chance -owner wants offer on this elegant, lge. bay view home; 5 BR., 4 ba. Complete entertain1nent center around lgc. htd. & filt'd. pool; locked wrought iron gates. NOW $159,000. Land available. AVAILABLE Carmel 1nodel, 1-Iarbor Vie'v l·Iomes. $72,000. CORBIN-MARTIN General ......,, . . • • • . -. • • )()0 • 499 Schoob und ll'll-l,uct... • • • S7S • S99 5¥W:.s cnt Rtipoi.-1 •••• 600· t/19 lrompoitotiorl. ...•.•• 91S -949 General ~·~A44t~-S.Mid ~ AHDASSOCIATES REALTORS 2828 EAST COllST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF, 644·7270 * SEE AND COMPARE in this two story, cu stom built, wi th many deluxe extra features. Open beam c~i.lings, fire place. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, GO\lRMET Kl'fCHEN, built-in sewing center and study. T\\10 decks plus 2 landscaped terraces. It 's a l'eal value at . . . $79,500. * ROOM TO BUILD- ... second UN IT on this large corner lot. 2-bed rooin house, carpets, drapes, fenced yard in Ne\v port Heights. . ....... $33 ,500. * DUPLEX -Corona del Mar Beautiful . _tree-lined street in Old Corona del Mar. BOTH DELUXE UNITS HAVE 3 bedrooms. den. fireplace. 2 baths, builtin kitchen, PATIOS, 2 blocks to shopping and schools. Choice location . . ....... $98,500. EASTSIDE 2 BEDROOM-$27,000 I A-RARE-FIND -especially v.•ith features ; like these -bean1 cei lings thruout, massive I REALTORS stone firep lace, large bedrooms, beautiful bath & a large fe nced yard complete with fruit trees . O\vner moving to Oregon and General Call Anytime MUST sell. Open this \Veek end. Call us for de.tails. MESA VERDE-HOT ITEM JUST LISTED, neat, freshly painted 4 & famjJy on a quiet strcel -I-luge enclosed, pooltable size la nai , no grass to cut only plants & shrubs to trim. First time on market and owner needs quick sale. Offered al $.18,950. ~~<""' HERITAGE REALTORS Gener1I 546-5880 Open Eves. General WATERFRONT CONDOMINIUM WITH BOAT SLIF' -New 2-bedroom. 2% baths. ready for occupancy. Full price ~7,500. QUALITY BUil T EAST SIDE CLEAN. SHARP 3 BEDROOM. hardwood floors. fireplace. enclosed patio, new carpets and fresh paint. Wide, corner lot -walk to shopping. Just listed at $30,750. ~~HERITAGE "' REALTORS 540-1151 Open Eves. -18_R_OO_M_ CAMPERS- MESA VERDE MANSION 5 + J)f;N + GUEST \\'rough1 iron rcnce prolcct.· ing huge logtate and park· like grounds. EumpcllII ar. 1·hih .. -clurl' featuring-rare l'ru/tsmanship and s!ainC'd glass 1vindo\\·s. Banquet for· rnal dinini.:. Step c!01\'n den 11•ilh C'l'illn!; high !irc place. Garden vic1y n1astcr suite 11·ilh 61h bath. sunda..i<. "BALLllOOM" y,•ith dance rioor. 2 hedroom guest house 11•ilh kitch('ll & hath. Great for enll•rlaining. Ca I J 645-0303. 1'111!1\I J_ Ol \O\ RF.A I f(IR\ * * A boat gate & roont to storl' your l'M1pcr or trailel' off the street. J\li.J1in1un1 yarr! 111ain!cna11ce . , & \1·ho needs a yard to kl"C'p up ir you SUMMER?? SWIMMERS?? have a ~l't'ational vehi(·Je? ' I>. • • .. Just 2 years ne11" Tlu-ccr·· .. in this 18'x36' heated POOl •. Great EAST· lledroofl'!s. atrium, ratnily SIDE location! Close to \\'estcliff shopping. 1·oi_1~1 1v11h cx~sc'd _hean1c1! 1 3 Bedroom. convertible den. 2 baths, fire- l.'Cilings, nia.s.~iv~ rir~phu·(' place plus H.00A1 'J'O ADD ON JON d & dellJ)(c bu11l-1n k1t<·hen. • . ·, 'IO O\VIl - A real b'OOdiC' ... s:i.'\,!fJ0. 1 ov.·ner will carry ior ,, -2nd r .D. $31 ,500. Corona del Mar Call for appointment. Duplex I ..., ___ .,.._~ HC're is home and income AUSTIN.SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIA'TES in this n1ost !!Ought arrer REAL TORS . . . . . . . 644;n70 area. Close 10 shopping, General ample parking, with an ex· --------- SPANISH STYLE rf'llcnt rcn!al !"('('()rd y;ilh - long tcm1 tenants. F:ach unit has rt11·1'f' s1n1cious l.lC'd· 1 EXEC. HOME rooms nnd l~~ balhs. built-[1Hcd lilc roof ovl'r spacious in kitehens, and separalc 1900 sq ft, 2 yn new 3 BNl- la11ndry areas. SllOll'TI hy ap. m1 hon1e wi no mnlnlenancc poi11tn1cn1. A great buy at ynrd, huge Jiving rnt 11•/ . , . . . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . . $82,500. floor·IO ·Ceiling fireplace. !or. C. F. Coleswor1hy n~al din rm. family rm, k1tch, brand new bl!s & cup. Realtors 640-0020 boards galore. Close to KID-SAFE POOL! b(.'a("h, lll'X\ !O golf t'1lUJ'Se. $43,500. C1\Ll.. today &15-7221 General WINNER'S CIRCLE See the!ii! tY.'O "HALL o~· FAME'· 2 slory 4 bC'd.rooin hon1es in North Costa Mesa. HugC" lots \1i1h recrealion vehicle storage areas. Both in1maPulate. Your choice at $33,9;,(l! , -t.. o 1913 1Klf.c N.c . •~(. General co: Ts . WALLACE i ·.-REALTOR--(fC_EA_N_V-IEW--"""' ""'""" l!:i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"',': ;G=·=·:'"r~a~I ;;;;~~~~~: 1',-642-5200 ft·11111 this ulr11ost nc1v ma- ~ ......... ~~._-,,_.,.._ I ,11•sti1• VIP fan11\y honll'. .,~$.17,~NO -MORE Sp:il'i(•US ll"dl"OOlllS, 2 baths 5y; o~ LOAN SOMETHING SPECIAL IN COLLEGE PARK i\o ul(·e1'S about th<" s1nall- fry hl'l"t'. Tiil' pool is Cl'OSS· j fi•n•:ed for thei_r !iafl'IY. and I ]oiads dC"ck1ng mt" Jo1v n1au1t. b<1ck yard. l-"ron1 lhr l!can1cd I REALTORS --546-1141- (0pen Evenings} " ' 1tVV--!111d t"\V1•ll1•111 111·t•a. You ~ 1·lftti. 4 ~·C'1·y cl.ean :l l)1'/lk•11 & 11·ork I ()\VN the land . .1-"ull 1irlcr l.!!.I W 0 :sho\I In l"\'Hr. 1~1•~ orl s,·,1,j()O. ~----·-.; 8"•11111, 2 h:ith. iv11h la1~C' JU'1va.cy "Ith t·h111n·l1nk f -I le11c1• around 1his ( h~rn1· 111111ly r111 .t, C''!ra !<hop ror ,,,~ honle! Pru:-e 15 !u 111 . "HH• . M11s1t·r-11f.!hl'·l l()usr," I , A lir10,:h1, 1'IH·•·ry kitch . fur 1 . . bu easy hn11nt'1ni.: Realtors C>\f..-7711 --c ---~-lh1' ;\lrs .. aiid a laz1'!'t' 1(>':.. A IX'autif~I 101\·nhousc In a "f..t.1-\F.R & LF.~ Hrnltors I 2013 \Vt'~tcllff ['lrivl' B 'Id , Cl t ~-.;· H 1 nhu· l'lrltphin pool I purk M.•!1111.11: !or only 22 Open til 9 P!\1 u t er' oseou /or Jhe kids, \\ln11lrl you ))r. * $29,500 * Asst~""IED 64~~ I S!•ll idle llt>nls ... tMl·:i67:-t $490. Moves. You In li1 •1'l· All i111'sc-f;·ntures 111 ~ llH. P~ BA, 2 Story 1rith 1 j G n r 1 S1•!1(·r pays 1tll l'OSts · live No. Ci>sta ,\k·~a fnr onlv inu1 JXll"rh, near 1'Cr cen!cr i:::::.:.::.::::.... ______ :..:::.:•:.:::•:.:•:::....______ 1·1·111 rrc1• '111 f'losf'-0f-Pi.r1"01\' S33 950 ,i;. JKA.JI. Dh!l' ~a1·., frc'-'""Y lllll ... llll .... 11!11 •• I in tlus atli'hctive .1 Bit, all l'!ose! Tn SC'C just cnU ;uhllt t:On1111uni ty. Sllll' prfr'1· ' • !16:1-51;11. I itll' aJI {'J.>1· kl1, l'US(ll\ drp.«., llLI\ i.hlll(' rrplg, ulyn11)it· llllitiilij,jlililliijltlf .. .-ilttll :.1tl' s11111Hn 111K pool, sauna .'i.:. j1n·u1.1i. Faula.<;111: vahn· $1~).uO, 1·11·0 .lJctlroo1ns !ron1 Newport at IVAN WELLS -BAYCREST Lots of charm in U1is 4 bdrm., formal din- ing rn1. hor11e. Bright fatn. rm. overlooking pool. :11 '.!. Da . Courty~rd entry. $87.500. Va- cant. i\lnry Lou J\<l arion BAYFRONT -FEE Spectacular vie\V tnain bay & mountains, ~andy beach -pier. c:arden at1nosphere. \Vest Bay Ave. near N.1 1. Yacht Club. $197,- . 500. Contact Bill Bents BUY OF THE WEEK ,.BASTBLUF'F 4 Bdrms. & den. Formal din- ing 'v/vie"' of gardens. 3 Full baths, Xh1t lo- cation. $67,500. Don't delay -call no'''! JJaul Quick S BE DROOM HOME 1\-lognificcnt Univcrsit.v J>ark ho1nc. has absolutely every desirable feature all ON ONE LJ·:VF.1. . just listed. $69,iloo. Coll ~ .. Chuck" l.A!\\'is TALK OF THE TOWN 1 All the beauty of pC!1:fcction . 3 JJdr1n . Lusk H.V.; lovely ga rden & stu nning inside. 1532 KEEL. Terrifi c price $M.UOO. Jim f\.1ull er CAPISTRANO RANCH HOME -Acre horse prop. 3-5 l~drm s. -private oads. Country at1nosphcre. Views. Pool·- O.rees -near n1arina & shops. Low as 78,950, Call George Grupe, ---Coldwell,Bankar 13U700 644-2430 ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. • Sll ,()j~t. F1lr"titw t~hum St. I ' 6'16-B8l l founfain Volley Co. 92708 (1nytimt) n4 963 -5611 962·44711r.::1546·1103 ... ..., ....................... ' I I Charle~,-GoodYiin_ 16 !•11!!.N!!E!!Rll!!!"!!"!!"'!!·. !!,•,,•,,.!!1~1!!s.!!. !12 Neglected-Giant 29452 V• Pl baths. Bont ·'-' l'illlll)l'I" ar· 1 S + Guest 2 Story 11ta aza crs!i. Di11lni.:: 1·n1, h11i!t-i11.'" $3 5 Laguna Niguel t-·1~plRl'e. Park·lil<~· y.i1·1I. 4, 00 You are lhl" ¥>i nner of l..111i.:•~ slflrni.:•' a1'l'll, hl'k 1-:xt·lusive rolling green hill· Oil<' !rel' pass SJl.!l50. ;~li:.'O. s1d1 .. , of '"Hack Ha.y." i\cl'ds Good /01· tt 11 hole cnrload O\\'NJ.:R le11v1n~. Jn i'Yh•s;i dt'l.-Orating, but a fantastic Ill any of lh!' Vl'rdc. 4 IM.J1•111~ .. J hnth~. vfllue. j l)('(h'OCl1n~. Hug<' PACIFIC TH£ATR£S •·ornuLI dlnini.: rrn, hu1!t-ins. 1itnc•h kitrl1cn ¥>'1th f'Bling f'i•n1ily r111, rlreplllcl'. llUKl', itrc[l. Po11dC'~a party room. (Sul . 1 U . lot. Bl'nutiruJ. lwk $'12.!l~JO. En!ertnlncrs patio overl >J l'l'.1 o stna 11crv1cc 540-1720. 111)! grern l;11vn, 10\Yering rha.rgr at lheatrt'I. Plrnsc 1•nll 6'12·5678 l''ll, 314 O\\'NEft aruoous. 1!:.ic)t<111t 4 ll'f'I'~. corrnl 11.nd 2 bedroon1 '" !'laim your ticki•t. tNorth bclrnl. llr_Pl\kfasl h 11 r. J..'llt'SI fal'ility. Brand new on i· .. 11nty toll·frce nunthcr is l·~rm11l d1111:u~ nn. dri·111n mnrl<C't. Better hurry! CaU ;,.10 12'20). k1tehen. ~ 11 111 1 I y 1·n1. G-l~i-030:J. NEW TRIPLEXES fircplat·c. Heal livinit rn1. Nrur th<' rihuu. brk l:'.&:-ioo. l.\J COSTA l\tt-:!'>A brk !!7~2::00. ~ Udrni .. 1"' 011th - ' "'"'"'· '" llon, OCEAN VIEW I Bdr111 .. JN. B11th H~ ; 1.>0\VN Orang e Counly Apartment Realtors 547-6791 ADULT DELUXE CONDO r1,)1H lhls nln~t 1l<:'11 1na· J\'5\i(' \'IP r:in11\y hOtfl('. Spnl·ious ill:•rlroon1s, 2 bath.~ 11111"1 rX{'l'llt•nt 11n•11 . You ()\\'N the land. Full J!\'ic(• $.""il.:.00. 0 WALl<ER & If[ Jn FountAin Vnlll'y:o; fine•! RcAHoni . &IG-7TU l.'flll1nlllll~ly • rwttr lll'\I' City 2043 \Vr.!ltrhlf Drive 111111. fl1odt•1 1111!1, )(II .~ ltl'.\Q ~ -0~1_!!._9 PM. y,•lth h11gr lx1nu" lhohbyl 1·01•111 ovrr J;.u'\(r ll<n1hlc HOME & BUSINESS J.:"•1ra.i.:e. Onl)' otJi:irllil' $30 .. iOO. '1 BC'droon1. 2 h:.tfhs, tlouhlr \V~LKER &. 1...El: Rl'Ul!v111, garaxe. $:!0,000 .• Best of 5'1!)-0022. terms. EASTSIOE MANSION IDEAL FOR 2300 Sq. ft. 4 BR, 3 8 1\, !or· GUEST HOME nv1.1 1lini1111, fl\ttl rn1 11lu" 5 OMroom 2 b11lhs Cl0$C to dNl. ~au1 In fa1nily fol'CC'• •t11MJ11plng. 's32,000. · Niie. Nuw Yt'nrR llt.'iv, ™•700 Roy McCardle Realtor full. prli·r . A'iSu111c 71~'1. ISIO N port JJlvd CM Govt loan, CaK 8kr 64.'l-fi6.46. ew .S.U.7J29 ·• · • Cl.A.l:;Slf,f:fl \VII\ Mii ii' 101!1\I I. 01,0\ '" REAi !()~I FOR THE SWINGING SINGLE $16,900- $136 PER MONTH Not " rondo. ·uli· &-tx>autltul • rte\\' cnrpetifli & !hi' furnishi 11~5 l'f'rnah1 1vlth this h()tnl', PC'rfcctly situate(! on n larJt(' lot A !hi' &:llnlen~ IU'1' lovely. WAI.J{f_;lt & LEE Renltors. 541HJ(l22, RESORT LIVINIJ every day ror $31,500. Bayside 'VillaJtt, l)Ce clubhouse, ~. beaeh, bo11t sUf>i. 2 llR, 2 Ba .. :HxM Mobile, 3 yr• old, wood aktina: 5hlllf(lf'I, heAut Ind~. immM poueuion! Owner. No. 39, 300 E. Coli.At J/11·y, NB. ,\ i.pru·kiing clC'an 11cll m11in· la1nrd 3 berlroon1, 'l bath llo111P 111!h formRl 1Hning, r:1111ily roo111, poril sizer! ynnJ and insid(> h1undry un a Jovel~ lrl'I' linr•I low 'traf· fi<' street. 6T:Hi679. ONLY $33,950 Nigel Bailey & Assoc. Tl EAL TOR OCEAN VIEW Iron1 th is aln10:-t rn:'ll' n1;t· jcstic VIP ra111Hy hon1e. Spacious b('df()Oll1s, 'l b111hs anrl e~eclll'nt area. ':l'ou O\VN tht• land .. Full prit.'C $.'>-'.500. C WA Ll<EH & Llt Reallors &IG-i711 20'13 \\'cstcliff Drive 0(X'n t ii 9 PM LAST YEAR'S PRICES! LA CUEITT A VERDE HOMES in l.aKUna !!ills hu 2 homes back on the nu1rkc1 because of credit rejections. Both hlll'f' a c'Ozy kitchen and fan11ly roon1 plus 3 BR's .I: 2 BA. One has a fireplace. Q11iC'k posst>sslon, t>:<cellent ronvcnUonnl financing avail- able. $31,000 & $31,500 Call J~ l lardln or JOC' Wilhite ii -1: 544-8012 l't•ihngs 10 lhl• USC'r! brick 1T.l3 Ylestcliff DT., N.B. llrepl: this is a rela.."\ing NEWPORT ISLAND F..as1s1ck home for son1r I lucky r:un1ly. PLUS a.t1sun1e Duplex. 2 BR., 2 ha., fam. a VA loan of 7<;. Call 10-1 rn1., frp!., sunporch & sun. day arul ]pl us slX)ll' and l!'ll I deck, priv. yard + lgc. J. you nlOl'l'. All for p n I y 1 BR. npt. iv/carport. Good HAWAIIAN LOTS S:l500 in Ainoloa, SS500 in Kulapuna 1 n1ile [ron1 pro- posed marinfl on Hlaek &1nds Beach. I N V !'.:ST NO\\'~ for info. Call $39,700. \ 011·ner's unit. $65.500. e CALL ANYTIME e Ca.11: 6i3·3663 673-8086 Evl's. 646-3928 or Eve. 548-9416 Lachenmyer Rea lto1 ' associated BROKERS-REALTORS 2025 W Balboa 673-3&63 =::1=::z==:::::--C::·::=:~:G;;,.;;e~n~er~•~l------..;...:.:.:;,;:c..::;:._ ______ l CATHEDRAL CEILINGS ' Tn1Jy a n1agnificent hon1e I situated in a lovely rcsidcn- llnl area near schools and !thopping, and only one mile fro111 ocenn. Ty,·0-storil'.'s of spnciou.11 elegance in 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, fonnnt dining and family roon1. Professionally land51:apcd \\-'ith a huge side yard. Sec to appreclate" $46,750. • COATS lo WALLACE REALTORS -FANTASTIC- Lute 3 lkftnn, 2 bath hom~ with ramlly/dinlng, pme room, l mM:eivt' tin-places and n dcc..'Or&tor'" dt'llght. Ju.'t liKled . for .11ppolnt· ment CALL ~4$-8424, SouthC!J 1¥11.llhrri., I MACNAB IRVINE -------""-------J' UPPER BAY Deli ghtful 3BR. 2 ba th home. La ndscaped patio. Owner transferred. $34,000. Gladys Russell 642·8235. (R23 i BIG CANYON CUSTOM VIEW HOME Thoughts for ll>morrow's living built Into this delighfully different 4BR'-pool & ja- cuzzi. Lois Miller 642-8235. (Ra) CAMEO HIGHLANDS-478,500 Beautllully appointed 3BR -2'h baths. 2.0x21 study. Fantastic kitchen! Ron Sher- man 64U235. (R29) CHINA COVE BAYFRONT Rare find -great family beach home on bayfront. Situated on 3 lots. 4BR, F R, la- nai, garden erea. Overlooks jetty. $185,000. Helen/Ken Hartley 642-8235. (fl.10) BIG CANYON FAIRWAY BUILDING SITE l.arge cul-de-sac lot on the fairWay. A buy at $62,500. Tom Queen 644-6200. (R27) ... [Irvine I M.c:n1b-lrvlne AMII) Comp•nr IOI Dowr Drtve M2-12SI '"' M1cArmur u.t·IZOO Hew,ort auch,C.l lfom/1121ta l \ I ' I ' I t , ~. 111.,. 23, 197J DALY P1LOT May 20-26 " RE AL TO R® I I~ 1~1 _,_ .. General General Corona del Mar Huntington 8eKh Huntington 8Mcft Irvine L11k1 For11t lake Forest 4-U For You EASTSIDE I NCOME HOMES 3 l!ickory, Ranch S t y I e Homes with llattlwood Floors and Shake flools! 4 Gai·agcs. Pride ol O\vner· ship • New Paint Inside and out. Ideal for owner-occu· pant, BUILD A TAX DE· DUCTIBLE EQUITY. Pri· vatc finant'lng. $5a,500. Call any1in1e, 646-<.\').55, PAINT • SAVE NEW DUPLEX -Great bay ex view plus extengve green \VESfSIDE 3 Bedroom l 'rce-belt -$100,000. Prln. 011Jy. BARGAIN dom HQn1e on large tree * ~9239 * 1 + studded lot . needs little Costa Melfll 4 BR + 30 den fi).in· w.id paint. Illness ";:;;;::;;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;I Din. + 40 ft pool, :;;~~~~~~~~;1;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;,1;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 $.1000 00\\'N = I Cos1a Mt>sa k>C'atlon. Shows: Tl BURON CONDO Architect's 0.Ught R L L lb st rash f11.11\' after cxper1M·~ ·•• MOST IN DEMAND Thi• tuxw·ioo• • bdm• .. 21; ~e if'~ """ loon '"'""· zonod n--1 .•. ba. Yale modl'l townhOU.SI! J"twlh!Jlfy to udd mol'V! ' Is light & airy in feeling&. 837 ... 161Or837-6%17 units. . • floor plan. 3 ~ has a dramatic 2 story gllliis 2~' bath VA·o stnry. Luxut· entry. n1e spacious room. Wrces sale only. • $23 ,950 * WANTED-Beach MESA VERDE $27,950 ious gold carpets, 2 car gar. feature tirepla.ce in both QUICK POSSESSIC>f!i age. Real tun 1jving. AsM&me master suite & living room. LARGE 3 bedroom, family room, vaulted ~· CALL st2Mal or lllghly upgraded plush car· ceilings. very private rear yard. Pretty gold PLUSH peting I:. fonnal dining shag. $41,950. room. $\iJ,OOl Includes the EXECUTIVE land COOL SUMMER FUN HORSES !! BUYER UNBELIEVABLE BUY OF . ' . llliO\Ved on this ~-acl'(> ... fol' extra sharp 3 TI-IE CENTURY!! BR ho1ne close to schools J 1· ed 't · • DELUXE GARDEN HOME ,\ lovely hon1e with all the convcnient'es one could ever desire. 4 bdl'rn., 2 !Ja. 10- cated on a f.."(llner Jot and close to schools. 5!!0-0222. $7.17 Thi.s is \Vhat you must pay every month for $1000. txir. rowed for 30 years at 7:U ~, interest This is today's a~rage cost of monl'Y when you buy a hon1l", and 1ve have homel> for sale where you can bor1'01v rron1 $::0,000 <30 x $7.17 a n1on1IU lo over $100.()X) (JOO x $7.17 a monthi. Sincl" n1uch of this is interest, let us sh01v you what this n1eans \n tax ad- vantages. all 6T;r 7225. RUMPUS ROOM Family Fun in Your F.:AST- SIDE 3 Bedrooni Hon1e + 38x10 RUMPUS ROOM con1- pll'te with Stone BBQ & Retrigeralor! Cozy C'Orner nestled among a Sl"lcct forest of shrubs and orange tree. Boo.t Storage. Zone R·2 -Maybl" )>ui!d income Home over aOOthcr garage? $32,9:-iO. 01\'n('r 1vill help fi- nance. Call anytime, 646-0555. ranch \\•ilh large clL<;tom ust 1st , you can JlllSS, & •hoppina, New ,..._.n Mod · 4 home, fenced corral PLUS ""' 0 ·--ern 1..'Qnven1enct's. I 1200 I shag carpet, alun1. cov'd. •"-n bdm>'. H""C =•et~ a J bedroom renta at . I ~..1 '"· s. -,...... TI.I J.atio. Freshly pain!=i. ·1h ~ nm. Custom home is va· Ian\. i·m, .,.,., mammou1 l''ireplact-, 'builtins, prime nook f "•nl • •"'"k possession, Will I'd b . 11 Iireplact-, ove s an-' ... area. uy it n1yse l ~t ('Xchange for bay-side du· if 1 were looking. $32, T::ill. tastic 40' poo · u.:: uxe plcx. builtin kitchen. Bar. Full I ' size dining rm,, II i <" e $65,000. cat-pets, boat access with VACANT & READY 531·5100 ( •M J 531 5100 separo.tC' storage. nl"ar the ""· • lx·"'h. E·Z '"'"'· NO GIM· Honeymoon Cottage 01\•ner anxious! Redecorated $1,250 down. Huge rumpUs 3 iJE.dm1 & fan\ily rm home roon1 v.'/frplc. Nice yard on huge corner Jot -l'IX>nl for \1i1 h fruit trees, flagstone boat or trailer, King.size ratio, All this + valuable covered patio & private R3 lot, for only $:5,000. !'FIICKS. IT'S FOR REAL! Call early 962-5585 101!1.\T E 01.SO\ '" RCALTO R S Bkr 536-2551 ~;:;'~.Quick "°''""'''"· U>w ' :*:""J~U~S;T~L~IS~T~E~D~*'.:\ ~~~~~~~~~ \ $27,250. COUNTRY ESTATE CALL 642·1771 2 BR. hon\e on Eastside POOL Zoned profl"ssionar $27.500 OVER V• ACRE Geor ge Williamson Realtor 548-6570 BY Ov.'Ilcr, sharp 3BR, on \Vest Side, Jri:: lot, fruit lt-ees, quif'l .street, princ. * MESA VERDE * only. $26,900. !f.>.1 Union Ave, 5 BR-F a mily Rm. &12-7'0l 3 Bath1 College Park Sacrif . Covered Patio 3 BR, fam rn1, 2 Ba, 2 fp, Near School• redec in & out, cov'd patio, 10% dn. $34, 750 ow n e r FORTIN CO. 979·5618. REAL TORS 642-5000 l -~M~E~S~A~V~E~R~D~E~ "SPECULATORS" Vocanl 3 BR, 2 BA, block wall yard & patio, quiet Fixer Cottage on huge R-2 residential area, 10~'" do\\'n, lot. \Voocled setting. $17,500. $31.000. * 962·8fi68 Chvner financin~ ... sub· ----------cl ot'dination QJ.;:! ·r11,0 to MESA Verde super sharp 4 chOOSe froin! Subnlil your Br + hunily rm, freshly iradcs. Agrn! 645-S400. painted & crptd. $51,500. By _c=o::.==_o~_o~-1 01\'!lel', 5'15-4!154 Back Bay BY OWNER. 3 br, lrplc, <'QVered pnlio, new kitchen, 6'\0--0166 or 64(4227. Balboa Peninsula TRIPLEX 3 & 2 BR. $1:5,aJO DUPLEX •.. , , ••••••. $57,000 BY O\,'NER, 3 BR, 2 BA. crpts, drps, patio, clubhou~/pool, close to schools. 56-80.18. ME.SA de! Mar, by owner, lg 4 BR, $39,500. II42 Corona La .. 979-1851 Custo1n 4 bedroom, 3 bath, Corning-\Vear c~ center, Trash ~laster; harchvood rloors. 4 Car garage, boat storage. Vie1v or golf ('()Ul-se. Maid's quarters in rear. Lot 210' cl('l'P· A lllUSI to see. $69.500. CALL 893·8533. NEAR ,NEW LANDMARK Cathedral ceilings, fully l.!P- graded, heavy shake. 3 Bed· rooms, 2 baths plus family. l'lnest area! Only $35,500. CALL 893·8533. WALK TO BEACH * Warm and friendly 3 BR 21,~ 'BA home, * Paneled & SolarJ'Ul Doored family rm. * Builtins, forced·air heat, * "Pride -of • ownership" Ho.ME ·v,·sa'on-LAKEFRONT ~story air conditioned home. Large master suite and 2 guest bedrms, also ,C d h 11 family rm & study. Gooa tern\s, now vac_ant. Over 2700 6<f rt of elegant Jiving. 4 Spacious bedrooms, 3 baths. OVCl'llized tam.Uy room, Super \1•et bar. Backed to tall eucalyptus. CA L L 842-+tll or 545-0458. • re i *':::OO~omos Hovo Prlvot. Club Memborohlp REALTY 22953 R ld90 Route Univ. Park Center, Irvine (Croll strMt, Muirlands), El Toro Ciill AnytiJne, 562-7500 Office boon 8 AM to 8 PM L•guna Nipu.I Newport Heights BROADltlOOR . CONOO. 2 BR, 2 BA on Go\! 1'URTLEROCK c.'Ourse, bltns, beaut vu, ten· 4 BDRM., 3 BA. lge liv rn1, 2 2 STORY, 4 br, "'P· din rm, nis club. 100,.;, dn. $36,900. ~ly, benn1 <'lngli in t-vcry 831--()638 roon1. Also nff. 2 BJt apt tam rm, fi'p!c, 3 ha, 3 car "70---70---------v.·/sep patio. $.~.500. gar, nr. S(!hools, parks & Lido l1le GH.Ul~B & ELLIS CO. po o Is . Lnd11cpd-spklrs. 1----------REALTORS Shown by appnt. $59,COO. 2 STORY BEAUTY 2863 E. Cst. l~wy. Cd~l POOL nME 833-2386. CUston1 4 BR, 3~~ Ba ho!ne on 675-7080 SMOG FREE IRVINE 45· lot. High cetttngs & to" """'"""''!l"!~""!"'"!!!\"' WHY LIVE IN SUNNY Immaculate 2 BR townhou,. ot gl•"'· Open & •paolm,,. * POOL * * 4 UNITS *- CALIF. W 00 1THOUT A In Walnut Square, air cond., Form~ C dining & d~e 5 BR, tam. rm., rec. rm .. by Ocean s\<le or hv.•y .• ~1 p L? 2 BA, $29,oo:>. Red CIU'J)et area. ar g8I'age. , · ·•::"":::~::'"','$49=,900=.·,;"'=2-..:"'°=--I Two l-Eklrm. ,., two 1. Ttealtoni. 833-I'iSO ;;; $26,750. 2 Bil, ~ll"ct bltin UNIVERSITY Park_ 3 BR )3ritt\ngham1lealtyl"-So;;.n.;....C_le_m_o.;.n_t_o __ -:-units. $126,500. .. RIO, dshwshr •. din rm, sep & Atrlun1. Exn·a yard, O\VNER must sell or lradl" Ii * 6 UNITS *'· fain lT!l, ?vers1zed dbl gar. Com1n. privl. Principals FEAUl:AS . unit occ11n \'lf'W Io I • • 1-B<lrm. eact\, EastslOO ' i:: i!f,ss~~g u~;a;~h~,~~~ only. By ov.·ner. ~2-96.19. ~~~V_ta-Ll~do~~~-6"'_>-0_121_ Inclu<lillg pion. $ 21. O O O. C0i>tll t.1esa. $95,000. & drps, xlnt J(lc. By Ov.ner l BR. 2 BA, pool Enioy This Summer 492-'8264. 675·3000 * * * & park priv. 21h Yrs old. Solidly huilt, bay1ront v.ifh We1tmin1ttr $27,9;;.r) l'~P. 3BR 2BA. [ml din $35,500 * 552-9'274 pier & Ullat. Spacious 4 Bft./ I .:.;~;.;:;;.;:;;;_::_ ___ _ rn\, 5ep tam rm. fpl, lrg llv Lagun• S..ch i>B.lhs. l Car garage. Sandy FOR GROWING rrn. FA ht, elect bltin RIO. beach/ocean vue. $225,000. fAMIL y plenty of storage, pantry, THE LIDO REAL TY Spanlsh Villa. This young :tlagstone palio v.•JB-B-Q, 3377 Via Udo, N'pt Beach \\·ell planned hoo\e of.fen1 heater/filter rn1, pool slide, VILLA * '73-7300 * lots of H~g space, lrg Liv fence-d & ldscpd, quiet "UP AT A VILLA, 00\VN ----------Rn\, Dining n.n1, eat tn street. * * * BY THE SEA,'' i11 the Newport Beaeh Kitchen, 5 BR, llec Room theme for this impo11lngl--~--------\v/prl office & a l car $30.000 FP. 4BR 2BA, xlnt Spanish style home. Located HARBOR VU J-lOhfES garaf(l!', Xlnt cone! In area. nbrhood, ideal for en· high up on Laguna's tamed Montego 4 BR, 1 story Sole R. E. Agents lertainillg, patio, ldscpd, Riviera coastline. DETAU,.. Sre VIP's goUing in Bt.r Can-963-fi621 fncd, x!nl design pool. ED MEDITERRANEAN yon from back ya.rd. Lrg:. oversized dbl gar• lrg [am ARCHITECTURE W ITH cul-de-sac lot. P r o r • ~ rm, 1.•r/\\' crpt.s & drps, bltin EXTERIOR OF' ROUGll landscaped, eov'd patio, ..... ..._ I ..,. range/dbl o~n, dshwshr, CHALK WHITE PLASTER. boat pad . Fantastically . ,.... xtra cabinets, close to Moorish styled veranda with upgra.dcd. Island kitchen. ~------~~.: everything. a view of the ocean far vaulted beam celling, Del I I' below. Piso Ul,c, foil p&per, all Mobile Homu Tri level floor pl11.n features 2 tinled 1laBS, pnl'd aaraa:e For •-lo 125 BDRMS. & DEN + GUESr w/WalJ of cabiQeta. lauhdry l -....;"-~-;c.;-----:-f6Z.4471 ( C:J 54WJOJ RM., ·OR gr{JOY. Masslw sink, and 110 much rnottl R ntal (W< realty mcan tt lltv. rm. Open Sat & Sun 1.S. Owner. Matar Home e s W/OCEAN VIEW, 6«-""l:lff TIMBERED CEIL I NG -*~OC=E=AN=~F~R~O~N~T~*- m HA\' ,\ lllc.\C'I! WANT BIG RETURNS at low, low rets1 A perfect iiet·UP for the fu· ture. Eight 2 BR slUCCO !tomes 20' apart. 10C:i'x300' M·l lot. JOO'x!OO' ):'ard in rear. Apts and honies on aU side&. A j.'ac:tory n1nn'11 paradise. Whittier Ave. at \\I, 181h St., CM. $107.000. ca~h to a 1or., loan l.'01n· mltment. owner 1nay 4.ake- n 2nd TD. A great tax savf.J and \VIII earn 11'1~ NNN equity. Piek up a act-up at niy oUice if you have money tQ Invest tor 110iid income, t.IARSHALL Realty 615-46CO A REAL BEAUTY 4 Corona del Mor Come sec this bcautitul 5 BR, 3 BA with fam rm .. 10',t Down, $39,950. Assume Fl-IA, no qualifying 540-2562 BY Ov.·ner, 3BR. 2BA, bltins, frplC', ut il porch, quiet st. 430 Esther. $32,500. 837-&117 nC'ighOOrhood * A Boat gate if desired * Sl8,950. Asking price TIED BY CRISS CROSS PAn'ftlSE APPROX. 1/3 ACRE BEAtlS, IN Atm!ENTIC rui\.W' BARGAIN SPANISll STYLING. 7,000 Sq. ft, of wood&: charm .MINl·RANCH SALES lo LEASING tuli service facility Danmar Mator Homes LYTLE REALTY ~ 583 W. ltth, CM ' - 548-MH 40 GARDEN,~ UNITS bdnn. hoine on a fantastic· ly large lot. Price ju.st re- duced for a fast sale. Phone us 586-0222. PRICE HISTORY Matt La.Bortle. our Orange ounty District Manager. owned his office tor alniosr twenty years before he sold to the Colwell Company, 11e has n\aintalned a record of all sales througl1 Multiple Listing Sl'Nice for years and years. If you \1·ould Hke ex- act figures on SB!es in your area goin.£: back in to the 50's . s i n1 ply call us. 67a.7225 or 646-022'1. LIGHT & BRIGHT Large corner roun1 ry style Kitchen with ~rve·thru lo bat"k yard. Raised Living Roonl 1vilh Cathedral ceil- ing and rofl ycllo1v carpet !hat is !Ike ne"'·· 4 Bedrooms, 21~ Baths. Fircp!acP. <Ith Bc<lt'OOm could be Fonnal Dining Roon1 m: Den. Every· one 'A'iil Jikt> the back yard for it is a real rel'realion area. llon1e is :l Y£'Rl'S ne"'· with a shake roof. llURRY ! $41,500. Call any I i n1 e, 64&-0555. DUPLEX· $66,500 SOUTH OF HWY. On prime "1\·lder'' street in "Quiet neighborhood." 2 BR .. J ba.. & 1-BR., 1 ba.: ].sty. Pictun>sque setting. Quality ronstructed & v.·ell n1alntained. Open beam eeils., heavy shake roof, dbl. closed garage. can for app't. to sec. EASTBLUFF Rlty, 644·1133 THE BLUE PACIFIC 125 ft. frontage overlooking the ocean. Build your owe dream house. CALL 8~·3443 18410' Irvine. Tustin 464 SERRA DR. Beautiful 3 BR .. 11)4 ba., in Corona Highlands. llighly upgraded wi1h ne\v plush carp., ne\\•ly painted exter· ior. massive stooe frplc. Poo\sizetl hJt with vi('1v of Catalln11. $62,500 & You O\\·f1 Ole land. MORGAN REAL TY 67:1-6642 675-6459 SIDE BY SIOE 2 Big. heautlful Ill'\\' duplexl'~. 60 ft. high corn('r lot, !l()llle vie\v, belo\V Coasl llv.'y.! 2 . 3 Bdrrn., :l balh honll"S plus 2 . 2 bdrm., 2 h;1th :ipts. \V(• have lhe plans. $102.500 Each Un ive rsity R,alty '.1001 E. Cst. J{wy. 673-6510 Call now· to hear aU its goodies. Fountatn Valley larwin realty inc. -----~---1 968-4405 (24 hrs) F .V. IST OFFERING Plenty of room for the kids to play around this snug well bit family home. Sparkling clean, forced air heat, 4 BR, Modern Square plan. 60xfi0 rear yard w/lrg pa.till-. Seller will help with the C'losing eost. for Pe11ormance 963-5621 OWNEll moving. Park·like yan::l. Fasnily rn1, formal dining rm, fireplace. Buill- ins. J bdrn1s., 2 baths. Cu.'>tom i11terior. brk $34,500. 962-137.l. O\\'NER anxious. Beautiful interior. Decorator's patio. Boat access. 4 bdrms., 3 baths. Dining nn, fireplace. llui\1-ins. Rear living nn. bl'k $41,950. 84.2-2561. O\VNER leaving. Rich panel- ing. Corked entrance. •1 bdrn1s.. fa. n\ i l y rm, fireplace. Rear living nn Built·ins. Numerous fruit trees. Large yard. brk $37,4.62. 962-8865. VERMONT FARMllOUSE. \Vhitc wood trim, huge old trees, winding staircase leads to master bednn wilh paned glass doors to 'ter· race. <I Bedroom, separate library. Kettle kitchen has view, and gas c opper builtins plus a cozy breakfast nook. Rambling rear lot. Olvncr m<lving to Sagus. BKR 962-5511 • • BUY FROM GOV'T No esc1u11• charges • do\\•n pay1nent Coming up soon ... low \r A CANT 1, 2, 3 and 4 bdrm house and CQndos. Let our specialists save you Lime and n1oney. GINNY r.10RRISON *** ·REALTORS· ../ * * 1!'(15 Mesa •CiM •Verde Dr. East, * -1-* Costa. Mesa ..... •* 567...ulO Enonnous Ponderosa living C E N :r E R FIREPLACE. duplex. $320,(0). room and family room, 4 W/W ~ts thruout. LIDO REAL TY 531·6800 l>edrooms. magnificent land-Central kitchen has RANGE. 3311 Via Lido N'pt Beach scaping v•ilh lots of fruit. OVEN, DISJ-lWASHER, & * 673--hOO * Try GI no down. Only opens lo DINl!liG AREA. If 11 ,-l()xj() MOBILE JI om e $36 900. CALL !168-4456. you have a flail' for the olde s·UPER HOT' w/10x30 Cabana bullt on, ' LA CUESTA \Vorld design, then you must . oov back palio, beaut see this cbarmina: bit of old Rustic 3 BR, 2 BA cltarmer. Jnd&cpg, lots of xtr3s. 890 Cui>lom quality at bargain Spain. Offered tor, Open beams, fplc, bltns. \V, 15th St. IPC 28, N.B. price. Spanish be a u t y . • $53,500 Newport Heights! Just "'" '~:o'.:~2211~=-====- Great home for young ex-BE THE 1sr TO SEE IT' leased at $34.950. Ww down -MUST SACRI1i1CE ecutive ~no entertains. cALL NOW FOR APPT.· OK! HUIT)'! V. E. 1-Ioward 12x00 ·n Champion. s~wn Large family room and for-MISSION REAL TY &. Co. Realton. 645-8400. br. Space 54, 19350 Ward St, null dining room. 5 Bed· gsa SO. COAST HWY.. BY OWNER l .B. 846-966.1 alt 3. rooms. corner lot, park-likl" LAGUNA Pvt beach, (Bayshores), 3 lOxSO 1 br. Moblle home setting. CALL 968-4456. Phone (714) 494-0731 =/!~ ~~Prl~ w/lOdJ cabana. XJn t concl. * CHOICE * ed to .. u. $57,7SO. 2591 1 ~Fu~rn.~!>l&-~76.12~~~~~ Laguu Homesltes Crestview Dr. 646-9079 or rnET to street lot in xlnt 6"-7311 ~ neighborhood. all under·l~-;To;H=E"'B""'L"U"F"F"S.--I . ~!:.a-I JI ground util.; house plans 2 •t:Y. 4 BR cond9. 1675 aq tt. . iiiiiiiilliiim incl., $9500, ln Nu ~ti.on many xtru. IN one of. Laguna's better $52,900. By oWner. ph ews Acrt•V• for sale 150 ='='='='~='='='='=''/ a.N!as; lge. lot. cloee In, \11 I &: wk ends. ~ or F I unobstructablc ocea.n & 640-0'228. Principal• on.ly. Oree Osu re COll.StUne views.. An exee?-lo;=='°"'~""..O..,;-=-'-:-~ tional bey at $22,000. CHOICE Vu, B,. Canyon lot VACANT RARE homes.ite in private ln Newport Beach, for aa.le BUILDER'S ATTENTION Choice location, Tu5tin. Ap- proved for 45 unlt11. DANA REALTY CO. * 642--6560 * oct'ardront community. Fan· by OWl')t?r, 11,100 sq ft, on Penn&)'lvania Dutch Cottage, tastic views. Hear ~e Burnllli Trtt St, $90,000. ph just redecorated _ BRAND v.•aves crash. Steps to pnv. 213-823-fiTtiG or 213-274-7()73 C•m1tery At1uma ble 7.2°/o Ln Prin1e Fountain Valley nrca. cloS(' to schools, parks, shopping centers. 2 BR, 21h BA To.,..•nhouse, cust drps, upgraded crpts, priv patio w/11:as BBQ, 20x22 fan1 rn1 v.·/~as fpl c. 2 c11r garage w1t•le<" door or)t'nrr, sauna, pool. t('nni~. tot lot. NE\V plush pill" carpet & beach. Archrt~t's house OCEANFRONT LOh/C!IPJ! 156 custom shutters. Floor-to. plW incl. ~.000. Duplex owner/ agent 1-.=:::.:::.;::.z.!;;:::...--..:.:;.;. ceiling roai·ing b r i c k WOODSY & private; on dead· 673-9266 1 BURIAL tot. Ocean viey,• fireplace in paneled family end street. 2 Lge, ocean·l-===-=c::C"'":-::".'.:"-Pacific View Mc mo r I a I lOpC'n Evenings) e room. MAN.SIZE Sl'UDY view lols with ·lots of 1ree11 Duplexes near the ocean Park. Private party. Call • \VTl'H LIBRARY. Copper & plency o! privacy. Both Mile• Lar110n, Realtor 673-6617 .. SOUTH BAY REALTY 962-~2 * 968-7171 eves: 968-100~ SPANISH HACIENDA Desperate owner nlust scl\ fmn\eri , 3BR, 2BA, like new carpcL<i, drapes, bltins. 5 min !O beach. Large 11·ell kept lot, fenced yard. $36,950. EZ _ Tern1s. for PERFORMANCE 847-3584 REPOSSESSIONS Kettle gourmet kltcf1en wllh for $42,500. *673--8563* Commercl•I all the lateS! featurPS. Tu·o FANTASrlC, large ocean· NEWPORT HEIGHTS Property 151 big l·anity baths. PLUS A front Jot, one of !he finest 3 BR. + 11ewing room. 2 Ba. I---'"'-..;. _____ _ o NE y EAR OLD properties in U1e Laguna f'rplc. Comer lot. Dbl gar. CORONA ll EAT ED, SPARKLING area, on a beautiful cove & Vacant, $44,950 ROMAN T ILE D SWIM· '"'"Y beach. Mu" ,.. to GE"'Mt---DEL MAR MING POOL W/A SIZZL-apprec. $115,00J. •• ING JACUZZI! Ov.'l'ler has -..i,___ 1610 W. Coaat Hwy .. N.B. priced the property .;· ~ REALTORS 642-1623 '""''"""' under market . . ~ * 2 UNITS * value for a \vet-kend gale. ~ Plug full size R-2 tot. ~' Bl11:. Build wtui.t You want on this rare 126' parcel. Good oor- ner locatlon South o f Alghwny. Call toda y ! 6~7225. ' • ' ' \Ve can wb!tlanUate P Ir L ' ngures on this on('. B.'1 w~ ' manage it. Beautltully malr'i : talned tn every respect: ; $495,000. Princlpa.l<t Only .. t Sparling lnve1tment Corp., 638-5662 *42 Units* CENTRAL COSTA $485,000 ' ~:~~~;LE~( Only 3 Left! Best renlal &reB. 1 All units have frplc's, dsHJ' .,.,'hrll, forced air heat. air/ oond., clost'<I garages. Poo' avail. Walk to shop'g, selilf & park, '·' Sparling Invest~ · Corp., 638-5662 «::'.; _C_A_N_N~E R V VIL LAG1'3 2 C·I lots ~1 11 blk fro111 ('ttllnery ~ aurant, nu hlgh·rii;es.~ \Viii sell separate or t er, Have house w1p1 Call o\\Tler. Ernie 646·5076 anytime. ' SIX UNIT -apart.men:t;•-.. 1 . .,.1 ocean breezes. ~pa j BR, l,. BA, bl!ins, c1·~. drp'd. 65' x 300', cl~· gramnw tchool. $10CJ0.~ L'Omc. Asking $125,000. • n1akc an offer. KING ll.E. 642-2222 e VETERANS e . 't>r tnfornlntion and location FULL PRICE S.16,950. NO : to ocean $97 500 or these 1''11.A. & VA home,s, GTM~IICKS, Call to inspect 4t4-51'11 '4tt.JIOO * ALS~ * TWO adjoining lnro1ne prop-:lnd;;;;u;•;l;;rl;;•;l;;P;;r;o;;po;;;r;ly;;j:;;I And il .starts \Vith a nf>\\l l-h'-'.atcrl la'x4()' t·ustonl pool, 4 t'Oi::.:ir!. Bkr 962-ffill 1 $ 000 erties, center C.M. $75,000. • ~~~~etin:;~~e~.~'~y"j~~'. bedrmti. 2 baths. Only KASABIAN O\VN.ER des~rate. Brick,'/, CHARMING . 3BAl~~e8Av~'RoP~· by ownt>r. 645-2020/642-6560 4 ACRES •~ B IG POTENTIAL ini:.: rm, log size rrplr, pvr ~~~l:E ~~~J~~~2~~AL Real E st•te 9624644 ~1'ought·iron ac~tits. 4 5 Units, localed Jn quiet. * 67J..J420 * Condominiums • , . ~ ~ ~a rd e 11 -pat ; o, doubl<' bdnns .. 2 baths. Di11i11g rm, woodsy area ln Northern ,,,,,;;;;.,=;-=:;-;-,.,'::= for ••le 160 ~ garage. Room ror adrliHonnJ BY Owner, 3 BR. 2 BA, lgc e FIXER UPPER e built-ins. Bont ace e 11 s. Laguna. 'l'hcse unit.II of'ft'f' SOMERSET model, Harbor ----------\\'toll localed 1..-orner. unit, only $.'l6.~. Plc1uw, finh;hcd bonu11 rm, antique J B<lrm IMlnie in xlnt area, Patio. Forced.nlr heat. brk potential for fu ture expan. View Home11, by Owner. 5 Assum•ble 7.2•/. Ln in<."on1e $1400. per n'IO, t NEAR COMPLETION one call at a tune. Agent. glass entry, wnll paper, 5~, outslentling schls., near $3a.ooo. 84&--0604. sion of pos.sihly 4 more legal BR. 3 BA. beaut decorated, Prime Fountain Vi)Jley area, potential • v.'il\ dlvidc. · Th.ls duplex Is a good invesl· GTJ-7311. GI loan, $35,!MXl, aft 2 pin Bead\ & Edinger. Zoned for units. A v.·ise inve11rment. fee land. $83,900. 64k').'W! 1 1 hool k prox Sl.25 sq. tt. ~)< men1 and now is 1hc thne 839-7895 O\\INER leaving nrea. Large Prime corner lot .with ocean c ... o~ 0 sc !I, par2"· Roy McCordlo Roe .<! tr1pll'.'<. Submit all tenns -rear yrd. Lovely decor. 4 N 1 Hj •ts liuvpplng ~nters. 2 Rlt, \' ~ lo purcha.:s(', ThNll' unil9 5 BR, 2400 ...... ft .• 211 b•. JI "1500 8476061 bdnn•. Family rn>. vlew.$119,500. •· IWPO' .. g" BA TQwt~. cust drps, 1810N$W1>0rt8lvd.,C.M.', will be trouhle fn'C fo1· ycel'$ bl DIV ~ts d f l Urry! -.v · · · · ~ dnd crpts pri ru>tio • 1 _,.. tns. • crp , rps, pc, KATELLA REALTY. H.B. 11rep1 a-. Dining rm. built· /. SEA BREm upgra · v ··~ S48-n29 ll' lo come. Phone 11.11 luuay 2 "2 ~ ~· <• " BBQ -2'2 I l .,,,....,..,,..,...,,..,,..illi,.\ story,...,•"""'· ~16 3 BH. 2 ba l ti ins. Nicely landscaped. brk 'l't '..h#'# w-.p.a , """ nm rm 1. ror mo~ In for n\ a t Ion . CdM Duplex H •--h . , sol ne oornc/boar r· S35,9'JO. 842-QiCIL V ..,,_, Plus view ol ocean & bfly ''"'gu fplc. 2 car garage 58G.o222. untlngton -c pie .. din. rm. Ill'. gar w t REAL E$TA':T£ ,_ t-•-1 11 w/elec door opener, saw1a, Lots for S•I• C\11e 3 BR 2 Ba front liouse door. gardl"n & lots ol trees. $23,500 FULL PRICE II"\ uvm UP« o.uD am Y rm. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;i1 YOUR HOME'S AD ' I OWNER moving.. Ek'nuliful n<t w Charmin11: 2 BR. 2 tiled pool, tennis, tot Joi. 11 1\'/fnl'd ptlv paf o & yard. tk'nne 4 bdrni. rrr11.!cd & Nr. Nev.·la Bl arner. 3 BEDRr-.t, 2 car gar. comer 1100 Glenneyre St. blthl'I. l"go. dining artl; SOUTH BAY REAL TY COMMERCIAL Ldf~ If you were n1arkC'!!ng your lmn1cd. ()(;Cup. 2 BR, 1 Ba Ultcn:d pool. F11o.mily rrn, $34,000. 1611.l lr))y Lil., lot near !IC:'hool11 u.nd shop. 494.9473 549-0316 frplc. w/heatolator, F .A.. ~2-:1002 • 963-7177 "t hOme lhrough Colv.'l"ll Prop-n"ar hou~l". xtra widt1 '2' 1 "-11 842--1'119'1 plng. Subn\lt your ternis. ••• OCEAN VIEW **• he.st. E:drll l•c. kltch~ I: eves: ~I On Newport Blvd. ·~ l"rti~.~. an accurnti:. i1't'll loL Call 6Th-69CO. d nltlg nn. w~pl11.ce. Bu t· -~L-l~T~T~L~E~R~A~N~C~H~O-CALL I In NeYJJ>Ort Beach ~ wrllten dt•f<c•rlptlon of your ER RACE lns. Shll.R cnrpel~. brk I 8A" 1~1· or 847 oe.1f New 2 BR. 2 BA, shl\g brktst. arbela, "'"' ._k·h1't ""1t"'1ry, CONOO -Park-Uke sur-with small shed j! homl' \\'OUld iippcru· ht•rl'. IRVINE T S42.!Y....O. 962-5.'"'66. on this large lot zoned or ,...,. -N """"' lhruout, large kifehl"n & birch Cj ne~bJGll: a bl · na. roundlngs--pool, NB, 3 BR, 2 2(J'i{. Down ,. i Over 120 Co\v.·el\ 5{1.lt'.sproplr Crei1t family home. 4 Br. 21,fi. O"''Nl-:R anxlous. Prcst\giou!I unit~ there 1111!1 a r.utr little l~I& dining room. bt.1llllAA, 2-car !iitrn. f'· · gara.g~ BA. $43,000. Bkr. 67J.-{>22l, $34,500 =,'.if:~~ la:r.~ii 'it ¥.~::~~~~7?o;' E~:~:~~,"~n:!fri· lr~ ~~~~:;~~:::·~; ~1·~; ( :~.:: :.·:I •M-7508. CA:L91~·,:; .:,41: Tr.~: 1~~:.~~" ~;;; HARBOR lll(ted wllh ALL tht Multlple nn. Formal dining rm, 847-3584 ~~~·: =-_ _ A ...-~ bepoolowl. "~~IN, pvt patio, ~~~~~. ~~(~n cv°!a~r~ e~=~r. 1st ofterl~. Co-1.y dellllCe kitchen. brk $65,000. PR.EsrJGE tract. 3 Br., 2 *CONDO 2 BR. $19.r.x>. NEW CUSTOM HOME .~~ oN'T'£\/- rnn.11:<' n Joan for you to eormr cotta~. 2BR. 2BA + 846-l3S3 . Ba. Boat dr, 5-%% usum-Avtlll now! F'rethly painted. 3 HR, 2 BA. family nn. for. N1•r NtWJ•rl Peil Olllt• Income P rop.rt y mll.kc n down p8yment on nu 1100 aq ft unit. 2BR. _UlA GOVERNMENT able loan. Jly owner. Ph. Call owner 637-'"J658 nud dining rm, Jie view'°'· * SPANISH * ~ _1.,. CM _ Six 2 "-,.,,.,. n.nothrr home now. • and & fr'plc. Top 11ua1 I tJ.. OWNED 846-5333 bltns gas forced klr he,t-~ U1 pcrhfll'>!lt"Venbuyyoo.r1ri fl($.~. 50 0 Po~l , •4BR 2BA.bcltcrthannow. FANTA5-rtc <I BR tri-level ''Mnke Room For Daddy" 11\i'. 'Ready to occupy. eon-Sw11111chaletw/S1JAnl9h:'tlf. w/encl gar. SS3> Inc per ,..,..,.,....,.,.,..,.. .. illi •nt •-n>e 1,~m ,....,, • I It 6#-illl or 646-9079 No closing ('Ollts • low down ,.._1 1 1 m ~ 1.....t 1 1 1.__ ..,._,,., tact (N.·ner/Bulkt~ Day~ 3 BR, :1 bA, remodel to mo. Owncl:'. $81,500. ~~ ,-rlV . " ~v.u 0 tl $21 2!i) ...., 01"11 ga On'! ..,.,,..w. ""'" • • . t:. erui OU iw .. --~ 83 1.516 83J..3332 23852 ptrt'tetk>n! Extra la:e. yard, "W·-A It & Rt!l\p" should no! 11ell. ~dOn't • SACRIFICE e ; ~ll'.iBA. 'onty $23 850 WOtt'hester u,, ~ ... tum that junk lnto cash w~ eci'rc1e: ' room tm-~I. H~f From ~9 to trn.sh Just prorni~. we dellV1!r! 2 BR.: pool, 2 car ear. CALL 9$8--4441 ' ' OWNER, 1ave SJ:JOO, 2 story. 1 with a Dally Pik>t CtmlUtd F 1 -·•1aur.. ust 6 .. ~ BALBOA BAY PROP. Turn ttll:'m into <".ash Call .n. 72'25. 64&-022'2, Jt.2 """-Only sse,;oo * c-R-lty I bed rm, 142.000. o.,,. ad. Call 642-5678. ~·· N•w • * 642-74'1 * CALL Doily l'llo! "81HJ22'2. 0<9Allvi.., R<al\y 6'13·8!i00 • ~·· -• &I~: Evet 61M6<1 _ """' · • ~ .1 -----v---,--''-. ~ • ,. • • I l c I ' ' • I L I .. - ' ;.1 I " IC A ' ' :·. ' { \ I . '. " . ' ( I . ; ' I F '. I " E " -~~ -" ' ... D ,. ' ' 0 ' 0 -- I <!: ' 6 ,. I 4 ~· 2 • " s ~ .. ' -, 6 ,• 7 8 ' WldMMY1 • ...., u , 1m • ~~~....:::-.: ;;,.:;J~~l [~r -Ill ~· J~~ll -f"':~ l~1[:. -----~J!1&~1~1iiiiii-iiiiii1wiiiiiii-~J~~ [ ---Jlt] I•-•"'"'~ lftJ l~..,,·--·w-llb~~~ L,r1 ,for, ~1;10:,... _ _;:.17::;0 I I-. Houw Fv"'lohod * Housa Uafum. • Ho.,_ Unfum. ~ A!>fo, Furn. 340 Afit. cm: 365 ,Apt. Utifutn. W ~lly 200 81lboo ,.n1 ..... 1o EXC~AIJtGE 1 -.:::ia;;;.:.:;~:.i...-..:::::: IL Pulukl -··' lrvl,,. c~. del ,,.., Huntington hlch a,.~ Lot/will take 6 unlo., NIW-2000 Mlrom• Dr. $2S WEEK lo UP ~=;;;..:;;::.:..;.;i_ :::...---l~===Ac.IT..:;l;.:;N;;;G:;;..._ Uunth11¢ton Beach. DISTRIBUTORSHIP Belboo LANDLORDS! 2 BR. 2 Baths ......... $321 e ~Rooms 2 .,:.; t'.,;,~.-mi2ss"f',!:;;. ~ I~ ro 0 n : IOC to 15 Unlu In Part ~ TI m P, retln.."Cf , You are UK' winnt-r o! "''e Spt>claliu lu N~ 3 UR. 2 batru ..•....... $215 •. !!_ousekeeVlpingARDorNtns 1'1r. Beals, !"J56.-81'90. O"' N r11nge ,;oun1y. 11 e m L -r t1 1 I r ~ d men or mu: free paq Beach e Corona dttl Mi.r e 3 BR. 2~ bu .•• $325/350/375 '-"'eun ew r s.,._rllng Investment wonien. CUBlom Swag Kil Good for a wt.Ole carload & Laguna. OUt Rental Ser· 4 !iR. 2~ ba .••.....••• S450 BALBOA NN 2 BR. $265/mo. Crpu, drps', lot Corp. t.ttks rt'11pon1iblu persont to IO any od I.he vice is FREE 10 You! Try We l-lave Summer Rentals 105 Main SI.Net Gar. Crpt, dtp. Calli Mr. l , 2 or l BR Apt 631-5'62 wvlce"hil<J:,,. U-~c .... u PACIFIC THfATRES NU-View? v"111"on 67>-87'0 Bew. 5!H'Jllll· • . at the • vu "'' 10 Laguna. 60xl00, a;:,:::, sw,. Kit, ~:q NU.VIEW RENTALS • c...-al Mor ~~~~_; = VILLA YORBA $23~3-1"13 alt 6 pm =-:)11~~ ~v=lng~~ (Su:~elO•~a:~ke 61M030 or 4&4-3248 ,-re' 'd h·111 BAotELOR apt, wry nice, $225/Mo. c..ll A.at: 644-7270 1~71~m~ 'll:a.nt people that want a Pleut' call 642-5678 ext 314 College P•rk $150. Mature adult only. C•t• ~ R•ndtn-P•rmt, good mUd continuing in-to claJm your ticket <Nortti ~Call=-="""=''-' :::615-=..:70:::13=----i'~~~iiiiiiiiiiiliim WALK TO BEACH 1 _.:0;.;•.:0VO.:.:;•:_ ____ l::;IO:;: ronie. Product reoom· County toll-tree number i. ~!.:. ~~~~5 ~~ Coit• Met. ~ N~ 2 BR. Opt/drpll, 8 n1"nded by the 1s ma 11 1,;'411-=:::12'l0::;1:.. . ..,.,~----OK. "'l-9134 • ,... REAL1Y dShw111ir, trpl. 205 15th. 2 1~ 11"\<tl acret btlWffn Csplstrano & ~ke Elsinore. $3.92.0-acre. S9'15 down p&.y• n"l£'nt. euy terms. $33.-322.1 u stneu Admtn atnOon. .N C d 0 "7"'9?17 Moderat~ tnvt'lltment. 100•,f Fountain VaTiey Coron• del Mlir A Company With VWon asa e ro · buy back guarantl!t'. Writi! -----'..:...----1 Univ. Parle Center, Irvine ALL UTil.JTISS PAID L•gun. 8HCh Mr. Btll \Vi-an, ~ 4 BR. fAm nn, pets • ldds 2BR -·-•-2 Call Anytime, 5.52-7500 Co bel _,,. ·~ ok s~ S onl · .... .,..., ..... ..,., aara&"e· Office~--8 AM to 8 P>f mpare ore you rent franldln A\'r., L.A . 900-t6 A~&il 6'i~\O~Sr Y· blk! to Llttle Corona Beach. .......... Custom des.J&ned. featurina: LAGUN'A estate living on (Include phone numbfor) $400 per mo. Summer. or FO . a Spacious idtche.n with lo-acres or gardens. WJde * I'\ • k C h * dgun• S..ch $250 mo. ~rly. Avail June R lease Uruver. Parlt, direct Uehling ocetJl views. la'., euatotn Reo1I E1t•te W11nted 114 ,,u1c as tnvfftment 2nd. 6t&-Olll. Lux. l br. 2 ba tv.>nMe .• Separate dln'g: atta PINECREEK decorator apts. F rp t c I .' \Viii buy YoW' ........... ..ru. All $205 • Util Pd. t..rg ocean-Premium GreerH>elt loca· e H Uk LIVES UP ... close to beach. Swtmming ...¥.-• ·~ Opportunity 220 * ~ Vu Horrte. Fully lion. CI08e to pools & ll'nnis. ome-e 1tnr8,ie ..-1 2 cash within 72. hrl. Call _;;.<.::;.;;.c;..:...:;.;.!... __ .:::~ front 11~udio, fantastic view. maint'd. pool, l Br, 2 Ba, 2 Be 1 d 1 1 . & e Private patkl& TO ITS NAME ., poo 9000. 2 BR., baths. £162..88.Sl BE A $:255 -Nice o! B~. ~~ view frplc, washer, dryer. relrig, atrl~r:i ~7ssJ. ove Y patio 0 Closed garage \¥/atora.a;e Over 500 tall trffs • • ~nli' n3 t ~pl~ .at ~-to ~ f. t "SPEEDWAY'' $~ n~~eptkic ii 1 B .St gar w/elee. dr. Crplil, drpl. . • 1'-1arhle pullnian a.nd 10 slrellms "1ith Considerate adulta. 494-4653 111~1 · · . · n r. eps Lse $500. 673-6635 L Be h J • KJng.sz Bdm1s "'·atertalls create a b k I to pr1v. beach. Deck. Year-•gun• ac • Pool Barbecues sur-rel In . 1 or your ro er. I It 3 BR, 2 BA, front house, -~ · . ax g ~tting or LARGE 1 bdrm bl SPONSOR NU-VIEW RENTALS f~nccd patio, kids/pets ok. $225 . 2 BR <-'?mp! re<icc. ~::;~. w1lb plush land-your spacious new ~· or Sunset Terrace, \' blk W:O BR()f(ERS INC. GT.l-4030 or 494-:tMS $325. S. of Hwy. 675-6900 Beaut. ocean vi~. Deck. Adu lts. No Peta. 2-bedroom apartment. S!Jlall beach. Panoramie ocean RESIDENCE or uni111 ~an Invest in the hotfe:.t sport in VICTORIA &h. 1 ·BR hse + LUSK 3 BR. den, 2"1 BA .. 3 $215 -N~ 2 Br, 2 Ba. house. LARGE 1 BR $1.8S pets ok. From $165. Funuture view. $775. ino. lllci. util . Juan, or Dann Point. P1·inc. Southern Ca I if or n I a -sep rm w/bath Oil 2 Iota, car garage. View. $500 Ocean view. 3 decks. 365 W Wll110n 642-1971 available. Models _open 9:00 Eve (TI4) 982-7821 only. Mom/late eve•, SPEEDWAY MOTOR · .... _ lease. Owner 499-3638 $400 • 3 BR, 2 BA, trplc, dl31 · . to 6:00. 2300 Fairview Rd., I -~~=-"''-"=---I 5'l 7 -4827 CYCLE RACING. Exper-v..,w tron1 patio, $250 )Tly. ,. I M . . gar, big yard. Quiet/nice. LOW WEEKLY RATES Costa Mesa. Phone: 545-2300. Mes• V•rde tenCf'd rider nf'Cds financial &12-1172. ....os • ••• NU-VIEW RENTALS Executive Sultn DELUXE I~ l backing 00 . Excellent advertis-Newport S..ch GOLFER'S DELIGHT! Stefl" 673-4030 or 494-3248 2080 Newport Blvd. APARTMENTS Dt:.X 2 &: 3 Br.,· 2 Ba.' Encl ng a promotion.a.I op. to M v rd Co try C t u_ gar. $165 up. Rental Ole., porlunlly. Bu1i.lneues or ln-esa e e un L 'd I I OI 11 ,.,...,,. Alr Cond -.Frplc's -3 Sivim· 3095 Mace Ave. 546-1034. 1Hviduals call for details. Club. Gracious & modem ..!....! 1 • 642-2611 ming PoolB • Health Spa - Ph. Steve, 675-3!m after ll. ~~P~IVAi: A~~ d f LAR. 1 br. Xlnt location STUDIOS & 1 BR'S ~~ C=s • GR¥1e and N,twport Be•ch YOUR RUstNESS DOVER SHORES pool. Lea!!e $.lJO mo. For frplc, priv. patio, 2 car gar, e r~REE Linens m. -i'Rent A Piece Bu1lne1s Opportunity 200 A1arine oriented ,fun-nwney 4 ba appt. CALL 5 4 S - 8 4 2 4 , i350. yearly. 642~ • FREE •. Utilities ~ =· ~~ f: of ·a P•l•ce" mRker in heart o( Newport. D~~g "nu. 'Ju~w 15~~~ Sou1hCo Reallors. Newport 8-ch •Full Kitchen "-..IEDITE-RRANEAN Wiiiiam DuRocher 9543 El Rey #3 Fountain V'•llty You are the winner ot one free pass End or 1st year showing A MESA de! M•• _ 4 BR. a Heated Pool. . . _ M SIM th' Th. •'l<l ug. 13th. A1axine WillianUi .... e La ~--l mon Y net. IS .,....m 642-8235 (R-:iO) Bltns, new crpll, new paint, CUST built hon;ie, overlook-u ...... ,. ~&Cl Jties . VILLAGE Good for a whole carload lo any of the PACIFIC THEATRES (Subject lo sn1aU service l·harge at theatre!. Please call 642·567ll ext 314 to <:ll'liln your ticket. (North Counly toll-free nunlber is 5'10-1220). e Liquor Store; $59,000 • Mfg Two Kinds • 3 Hou1es on 4 Lots •Apt. Rent•I 2 Bdrm HOLLAND But. SalH 645-4170 or MG-0008 eve. 1 ns Orange, Costa Mesa business investment has fncd yard 839 Santia Ing Back Bay m older see· • TV &: nuud serv avail. challenging ho r l z on s. Ref's. S290 per -mo. ~Y ti~ or Bluffs. Beaut dee -• Phone Servi.Ce Information by appt. only. Appt. 56-7359 nurro~ walls -crystal $30 WEEK lo UP THE BLACKBURN 00. ch nd I I 1831 Westcliff. NB 64:rl800 l 64~2~-82=l5-'--~~6~4_4..:6.=200:..:: 4 BR, 3 BA, llVerlooking w/~as e J~::. C~lg~ ~ e Studio & 1 BR Apts. Investment W•nttd 230 CAPITAL WANTED FOR MARINE OHIF.NTEO PRO- DUCT MR. MURPHY 533·0800 l BR. house , $145. Partially park, new w/w cpl, drps, fin draperies etc etc $600 a TV &: l\fald Service AvalL furn 2 BR $175. Also walk to d!\hwr, range & lndscpg. mo Year ie~' s#4ooo • Phone Serv:lce-Htd. Pool beach 2 Br & 3 BR He SJ50 n10. $100 sec. dcp. "AA· A-"~2 · • • Oilldren & Pct Section ' ' · · 642-3158 .,......-...,, • $120 Monthly singles or families. Ag t, * Nh"'WPORT ~'HORES * 237S Newport Bl d CM ~·e ... 979-M30. 2 BR house in court,_ cpts, I-STY. 2 BR, conv. den, cpl. 548-9755 or s6.3007 tiouses Unfurn. 305 drps, gai·., 2 sn1all children, drps, bltins. Patio. 2 car Ad Good Fol' $5 on Rent ---------no pets. $155. mo. 2077 gar. Avail. June 16th. $325 General \Vnllact', apt 6, 646-5:.!23 Mo., yearly lease * SUC CASITAS M;;:•;•;•;Y;;;l;o;;;L;o;•;;";;;;;;;;;2;40; ----------1 STUDENTS or Fantllies. 2 ·I BR, 1.sty. 1% ba, bltns, Furn Bachelor & 1 BR'S • Br ho1ne, $125. gar, fncd, Cp!/drps. Patio. Av a 11. Models Open Daily. kids/pets. Agt. Fee . soon. $32S Mo. Yrly lse. 2110 Newport Blvd., CM 1st TD Loans RENTALS 979--8430 CAvwooD REALTY54"'1290 lBR. i,.. tastefully •urn. NEWLY crpt'd & drp'd 2 BR AVAIL June 1st: CUstom worklng adults only, $155. UP TO 95% Apartments house w/gar. 1 child ok. No 4BR & fam rm, OD lrg lOOI El Camino, 546-5704 2nd TD Loans Duptexel pets. $160 per mo. 646-3786 cul-de-sac lot, rm for boat NICE 1 Br dplx. Quiet. Sep <;,;)o_..;.Hoo::":se:;,• __ fl< I or 56--0160. or trlr. Gardner pd. by garase!I. Employed adult .. $175-E/side, lrg 2 BR house. 1:50/mo lse. 556-8868 or over 30, no pets. 548-1021. lowest rates Oreng• Co. 43.°\ W. 19th St .. Costa Mem Patio, incl. gar. Arlult cpl, 2-4387 2 BR. Trailers, furn. $130 S•ttltr Mtg. Co. l!G4 S. Coast H\\"}'., Laguna no pets. :s'88 \V. Bay, CM. NEW Blu!fs 3BR 3BA, den mo. Util incl. No children AIR POU.lITION 642 2171 545-06tl (t>iccadilly CircusJ 645-1317. w/(pl, custm drps, crpts, no pets. 546-3855 or 646-lSO!I. GASOLINE SHORTAGES Se • ~tESA DEL MAR Sharp va-wshr, ~· relrig. Pool & LG TRANSPORTATION PLANS rving Harbor 11.rea 21 ~· COSTA MESA OFFICE cant 3BR, 2B,\, $ 2 g 5 . yard mamt. $47S/mo. Ph: l Br $100, 2 Br $17S, Ideal U.you k.ne\v what '4-oul.d bap-NE:r:o CASH? $1,000, or up Serving-Costa ~1esa, Newporl Avocado shags, Jack Peck. 64().-0209 or 644-(9)4 for bachelor, adults, S/pool. pen nexl you'd be able to lo $3,000, $10.000 and mor~. Beach, Huntington-Beach. \VATERFRONT N 1993 Church. 548-9633. k I' he $90 -FURN. Ba-helor w/ 546-0CJ62 -ewport Hun11·n-on •-·ch ma e a \vise investment. emem r Avco Thrlft for '-J land 3 B 2 Ba •· - W ha --0 • -ak a R I E 1 t •" coo'·'-g. All Util Pd, Car· 11ESA VERDE 4 bdrm 1;ke 5 · r, upper e ve a .,,vt""""' w m e ea s a e ...... an. Upon ''-'" ' du l No pets $295 I to you. Call [or appt. approva1, use the n10ney port. new. Avail. May 30th. $315. 5-J.7.Ss · se. $145-$165 (7141 642-2385; 646-2288 however you like. Also ask $130 • 1 BR. DUPLEX. Yard month. 67J-.4706 ' BACHELOR & 1 BR., patios, e about our u n secured for s1nall pet. SHARP! 3 BR, 2 BA, dbl 5 BR/3 Ba, lg F/R, DIR. 2 frplc's prlv. garages -Bort>er Shop• personal loans. A v co $140 -2 BR DUPLEX. Olild/ gar. D11hwhr. Condo. Pool. frpl cs, nu c rpt + drps, Divided bath & lots of Gocd, choice location. 2 THRIFT. pet ok. Garage. Rec ctr. $240 nw. 673-4891 comm. pool. $575. 673-4899 closets. Rec. haU. pool & chairs y,•it'h pos!iblli!y of 620 Newport Center Dr. $150 • 2 BR }IOUSE. Cbild/ LARGE 2 Br. Encl. garage 4 BR, 2 BA, FIR, D/R, pool tables, sauna baths. ;:i more. Owner leaving. Suite 101 f'at ok. Garaget Yard. avail 1 Child ok Call frplc. Harbor Vu Homes. See for yoUl'BCl f. 17301 Full prlct> $4500. ED Newport Beach 8.13-3440 SUMMER REN A'LS ALSO 642-1656 or B79-'797S • 644-5477 or (213) 792-4824. Keelson Ln. (1 blk W. o( RIDDLE, REALTOR. CAIH IN A 1-IURRY! CAU., 645-0111 . $490. Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). 646-88U 3BR, 2BA, family rm, 842-7848 · Borrow on your home. paid LAGUNA BEACl-1 OFFICE fireplace, fenced yd, quiet. EASTBLUFF condo, 3 BR, I----=°"'"'------ BEAUTY Salo". A""hei'm'• for or not. Use fund s to con· ;~-"'59 N w CM 21h ba fam rm shuttered $140 -ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 " '"" Sc1ving Laguna, Dana Point, .... :>. v • orse ay, · ' ' p I 4 ' Lovelleat! u nus u a 1 Op-soHdate bill!!, ln1prove your y,•1ndows, Lrplc, conun pool, oo s. vanlens. Sauna. . 1 horn b t San Clemente, Capistrano \\IESA Verde 1 Br., !am. rm. s·-mo. 6~'-7252 Tenn•~. Pri"ale pat Io . JX1rtun1ty or cash o[fcr. e, uy new proper y, or ....,., 1v ~ v 675-481.9 or TIB-4960 ror any good purpose. Con· $65 -SUMMER GUEST Cot-Adults, No pets. Adults. Ph: 846--0%;9. fidential, .fast service in 1age. Avail weekly. Comp!. Owner/agent 642-5000 HARBOR Vu Hms, Carmel, H II SMALl.. shop in nice area Furn. Adults. _ BR 3 Br., Fam. Br, 2 Ba, Near un ngton H•rbour ready 10 go. Quitting to go your home or our office. $IG5 _ OCEAN VIE\V 1 Br. :> , crpts. drps, bltins, else Pool $425. 64G-1'1!i8 k SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. to everything. Swint club ' . STUDIO condo, aCTOM st. bac to i;;chool. Ca I I : 1714) 556--0J06. Over garage. Crpt:s, drps, avail, $295. 54()-9055 2 BR. Horne. Stove,. retrig, from Beach. Firplc, bltlns, 613--0172or644--'\5~. 1-;i;ii.iiiiii.iiiii'-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. stove,refrig, . gar, n75 vacant, kids ok. co versat l It 1 • $1M -SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba. 1 BR house, mtddle age cpl. Agt Fee 979-8430 n on P ' DAILY I 2ND Trust Deeds PRIVATE fo~UN DS AVAIL. Any Amount * Call 675-4494 BKR. Fu " be rh A il No children/pets. ~2 dtx.1-=· ~~--~=---213-782-5959 aft 6:30 pm rn. ear a . va gar Sto• mo c:Au .<n~n HARBOR Vu Hms, Carmel, 6110 ~ .....,....,.,., Newport Beach •~ -f ' · · Sharp. 3 BR, fam, nr pool, ~,,_,·LOVELY 2 BR+ Den. ountlln V•lley • inc gardener. $475. 644-1791 Encl gar. Yard. Teen/Pet ok. 6 BDRM on cul·dc·sac just \\IODERN \Vaterfront 2 Br. SUMl\1ER RENTALS ALSO North of Atile Square Park. Compl remodeled W/rlf!\v CALL 494-9491 Downstairs has 4 br, frpl , dock. 673-4335, GT;i-2354. $29.50 per Wk & up. 1 BR, 2 BR & Bachelors. Color TV, mald serv, pool. The Mesa, 415 N. Newport Bl., NB &l&.9681. * LANDLORDS * util rm . Oversi7.ed garage & S•n Clemente u. F'REE RENTAL SERVICE fenced yard. l...ge all elect OCEANFRONT -Open June t'e.:::"•;:;•::•!.y_W:.:.;a;;;n:;.lod~.:.--.:25::::0 kitch & din rm. Upstairs EXCLUSIVE Palisades area, & July. Former owners More Room-L•11 Money COME see a real garden apt! Like living in a home lor $162.50/MO. 2 BR, 1 ~~ BA. 2 prk'g places, priv patios & rec areas. WiOOn Gardens, on Wilson St., W. or Harbor. No child./pet. 2283 Fountain Way E8!l 64&-2846 OCEAN Breeze Apts; _ Spac. ious 3 Br, sep lndry nn, S180. No pebl. Max. 2 chikt· Ml to 6 yrs. 2286 Canyon Dr. 642-2222. $165-2 BR. 11h BA. Studio on cul-de-sac. Prlv. patio, pool, crpts, drps, bltns. Nr. shop'g. Oiildren (lk. No pets:. 735 Joann St. CM. AITR.AC. new, lrg, l 8c 2 BR apts. Crpts, drps, bltns, Adults, no pets. $135 up 646--0176. VALUE -quiet 2 Br crpts. drp'S. dshwshr, poot'. Mature adu1ts. No pets $135. 2295 Pacific Ave. 548-6878. GARAGE apl, p r I me Eastaide loc, 1 BR unf\irn, $165mo. 675-4630, e v e s 646-1063 Owner/agent l...AR. 3 Br, 2 Ba, crpts, dras, Nr. OCC. Freshly pntd upstairs. $179. 557---0350. ' OCEAN and HARBOR VIEW Ele&ant apartments de•igned with a Master's touch, su- perb house security exclu- 11ive Versaille11 C!Ub and pool y,•lth unique Aquabar, fountains and formal gar· dens. AU part of the South Coast's finest apartment community. l Bedroom/studios from $195 2 Bedroom from $305 Models open 9 A.M. til duak ~ ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT From Ney,·port Blvd., turn at Hospital Road ( l block above Pacific Coast }fwy) to entrance. 9Q) Cagney Lane, Nev.110rt Beach, Ca. 92660. Telephone: (TI4) 64>0060 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on the bay I.ux)lry apartment llvina -· Iha ., ..... ,..,. joy $750,000 health spa, 1 """"""" poola, 7 !lghte<I tennis courts, plus riWea of bicycle ttaJ.ls, puttlnc, llhuf· fleboard, croquet. Junior l's from $189.50 tnonthJYi alBO l and 2--bedroom planl!I and Z.!ltory town hoU8eS. Elec· Irle kitchens, privat.e pa.de. or balconies, carpetlng dra· peries. SUbtelTanean Park· iI'll with elevatora. Optional maid service. Ju11t north of Fuhlon Island at Jamboree and San Joaquin Hlll.s'Road. Telephone CTI4) 644-1900 for rental lnfunnallon EXCLUSIVE BIG CANYON Luxur'f Golf Courte Ap•rtment1 NEWPORT BEAOl $475. $730 Phona 714/644-0509 THE NEW P.ILOT EXPANSION Funds _ Prof. 1'.h~ ~':11· 2 bathd!uuiJt. haa tge finished boltllll rm, walk to 1?each, Io v e I y Unit. S~ & $223 wkly. NEW 2BR IBA, carpels & P.tan Guar. 3 for 1 Retu111 Ln itchen. irep!a<;'l'. ble 744 sq ft includes 2 br, custom bwlt 2 br, 2 .oo. ~6'-'70,5-'5::::;:3,::L=~----drapes, builtll!S. $185. Roy 1st yr. Call Mr. Victor (TI41 ~~dcj~~~l. quSr-45 tr;:; closets. sink, cupboards. w/w cpl, dl"l!.s, frpl c, blfins, 0 C EANFRONT decorator McCan.ile Realtor, 548-1129 ~302 nionth. r('(.'reation art>a. Xlnt (or lgc $250· 496-l035 OJ' 998-3820 furn, 2 hr. Avail July. week· UNF. 2 BR. 1% BA. Adulta BAYWOOD APARTMENTS family, $350 mo. SSG-85.q7 Condominiums ly, 21 3:271-5088 only, no pets. $15()/mo. tn Newport Beach arc ORANGE Jl;IQNEY \\'anted. Secured by ls1 T.D. on prime Newport t.'<11n n1. prop. !{!tr. 67f>-6700 0 WALl<EH & UE .fOR LEASE, "F.V., 2 & J1 __ u;.."c.'..c"-'-"-· ___ ...;;3;;;20 2 BR furn 1-b\ock-ocean 610-C Joann St. 548-9573. -tt!W· The Mies office is BR Condos, encl 2 car gar. M ' I v· . $235 yrly adults no pets SMALL 1 Br. Eastside, Util ~n daily from 10 AM lo 20x2'2 fan1 rm, priv patio. 1st on 1e10 128 46ST 644-4340 av! 6/1 Pd. 1 adult, no pet. Yrly. 6:30 PM. MacArthur Blvd . Pool!!, tennis, s!luna, child JBR 2BA condo enclscd t-Apt. Unfurn. 36S $140-$145. 642{) 642-8520 & San JO:-A~u~555n ~Ills Road. play area. Sout h Buy ' ' a AITRAC I 2 ~n • Really, 962-3002, Owner tac gar, ~rpts. drps, d/~~·. new, rg Br, GRANVILLE Home/ Ap'·. Real tors 646· m 1 Mortg19es, 2043 Westcliff Drive Trust DHd1 260 Open eves 'HJ 9 l>!'.f COAST'S -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;:;;;;;;";;: 3 BR, v.·/1v shag, patio, FP, • Cabana Oub, Pac. Sands at Agent sel_f clearung ov.en, patio, ATTRACT -Roomy 2 Br. crpts, drps, bltns. Adults, no U> 7"=--~~~---1 swun pool pnvl. $250. apt. Jn quiet neighborhood. pets. $155. 646-0176 Irvine CC-Fashion Island Huntington Beach 830-0871 New decor. Bltna, crpts, UNFURN 1 & 2 Br Garden loc. Oubhouse prlvlp-pool. PUT YOUR MONEY R.141 1'1unste.r. Call 1213) TO WORK FOR YOU I 794-1077 drps, over dbl enclo8ed 1800 sq. ft. full main- 2 BEDROOM, I Bath, TownhouH Furn. 330 garage & patio. Rellpon&ible Apts. Frplc, D/W, ptiv tenance. Guard eat e. Earn JO•,-;, inlc1·elit on well· 1 -''-'-='------- 'ecurod 2nd Trust Deed• on QUICK CASH adults. 1 young child ok. No patkl. $l65-$l90. 567-2841· Privacy. Lease. Adults only, beautiful u P g r a d • Gener1I pets. $l7S/mo. SlOO deposit. l BR. Carport. Near shop-No pets. $550. 645--0183. leading Ora.nae County N!al estate. SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. ITI41 556-0106 THROUG f ed townhoute, inc. re-1 3 --8-R.;.__;-8---P--.---548-"8:11:.o;,=:::·;.__;______ ping. Utilities pa Id. 3 BR 2 b8 Nr beach ~~ rintrator, w a 1 h. uena ar , nr ::: $155/mo. 531-8508 · · · _.,., "d d ' h h frcewavs, schools, $ 2 4 o. S.lbo• Island "=='"='--"7-'=,_,---12 BR., Pc.ninsula · ....... $250 ·~· ryer, II was er. days, 558.8161. eves 645-762(). AITRAC 2 BR, frpl, patio, MARSHALL Realty 675-4600 Like new, good loca-l 'o=---'"i'-'-"-~u-,-'-r'-'--'"-'-"-co350= YEARLY lge n\Odem 3 Br. 2 ~~.; Adlts, no pets. $180. OCEAN Vu, Yrly, 2BR, lbe., tlon, $225. mo. Atk for up exes n urn. Ba. crpts, drps, bltns. 130 --A ~e 548-1674 cluplex, unfurn. S 2 7 5. $12.500 2ND TD payable $1%>. 4;;oo Camp"' Dr., N.B. H A M k I I J>('r n10. incl 9'i:O on 1 l"On1-ar e P GC8 I n1ercia1 acre near (lnraznp So. Orange C.Ounty. Value rlouble encumbrance~. Due WANT AD 642-5678 D•lt. 962-4471 Agt. Bilboll ltl•nd Pearl. 675-0l58 2 BR. $150-stove, reftig. 614-6780 or 64.2--3639 1 BR, patio, tplc, on Balboa cpts/drps, hid pool. Adults, Nh:W Bayfront-prlv Bch & 4PBREEDSRTOOIGEM, A21'R2 BEeAth, LEASE. waterfront. pier. Island, $210 mo. lncldg util. no pets. 645-8965 Pier 3BR, 2BA, $.550 mo yr· , New 3 BR. 2 Ba all elec. 673-6900 615-3920 ** SPACIOUS 2 BR, crpts, ly. 979-00.11 or 644-4510. pool. $350. per mo. $425. 673-3838, 214 Grand Balbo1 Peninsul1 drapes. $l40. Married pref. 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. Keith Snidor, 962 ••71 , ~Cs~na~I._______ 673-8145 alt 6. ''===="":~~===::=~==~=:;====::==:===== ._ ,-2 BR, 2 BA. Bltn appllan«11 . .... _. Agt. Coit• Meui N8e!ly 1decwa.'!1• upetairst 1 2 BR. Adults, no pets. BA"k Poot 642-6274. '"' eruie 1••Y, no pe s, MEADOWS A.PI'. 387 W. $© .{tl}.\ ~ tr BIKE lo Beach 3 !Br, $185 EASTSIDE 2 br shag crpts adults only. Ref req. $160 8a,y St. CM. 646--0113 Aptt., -0 ~ _ "C Q. 9 frplc, gar. AJso \Valk to dra, ttfrlg &. 'stove. $200: monthly. 673-5900 aft 4:30. $l40 up. 2 Br., 3 Br., 2 Bs. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 2111 yeRN. 15~,; discount l71•1l 830-86GO J.' }.:I 'V Beach, 2 BR, ulll pd, kids Call 6'15-1517 3 BDRM .. 2 BA, bltru, $.125 Pool, bit-ins, play yard. Tt I/ f , , W rJ G 'fL Ch -'-/ ok. A.gt~ Fee. 979-3430 A I J Costl Mell na n TlgUing or ame WI n a UO< e NEARLY new 2 BR homc,l;D;.c•.;.n.;,o_P;.coo,:l;,..nt;__.,.___ mo. v8' a,!i'.3;o, .~1996-c~M_a~pl~e._&l~~-381.:..-03-- 0 ' ) .,,,,, ~r C~Y "· POU.AN------Jll~ bR . 2. car gar. Nr. school 2 Bit, 2 BA. 25• Uving rm, C•pltlrono Beoch H_untlnf!.~" . Be1ch THE J..:XCITlNO PALM MESA APTS. li,flNUTES TO NPT. BCIJ. •cnra,.g• •nerJ. of th• .~ shv11p1ng. Avn.11 now. Call gtn•age & laundry a rea. $210 lowfi:fo~~of=~"";::'~i:. for appt. 213:431-96+1 mo. 494_5m wknds. 3BR, uppor, duplex, ocean 2 BEDROOM, I b•th, 3 BR. w/w shag, patto, FP, Huntington Beach \·u. $250 nw. Open sun 10-2. builtlns, fully carpeted. I' I~ Al' Y IL El N I I ~':8~1~'!!>er:aeru~~~\ 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I ~~~. &~1.u!4:3 ~1a ~-:;.~n g~i $1:1AlE: _ _ 7'1-1077 • NEW 2 BEDROOM Col'Ofla ditl M.r 962-4471 . 1 LEASE. 3 BEDROOM. 2 1 Balh, enclosed pvt garage I ~~iiiiiiii~iiii~iiiiiiim ~==~===~- I i . Bal.h house .. Cpt. Orapt>s, In duple:ic building. $195. per I 1 *MOVE IN TODAY* R U L A R I </ bit. lrni. Lln11t 3 chlklren ma. Al90 3 Bedroom, 2 SPftC. 2 A 3 BR. $149 .l $209. I I I I I .,.. 968-5877. lmth, $250. mo, Manager At ·a-: K1di. welcome. Pool. Gar. . . . Irvine 313 05\\·('g(l, 1-luntlngcon ~ •-a_• li361·A Keelson Lo (l blk l :;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;::;;:;;:;;;,I Beach. ~ --=!:~~ W. or Beach Blvd .. otf,.Slat. I -··--N 0 G l R I f •BR. 2\j bA ............ $43> ON TEN ACRES 2 BR, 2 BA, $210. Adoll ; I I I .. 3 BR. 21,t ba. OC'.llL"<C Apls. furn./unfurn. 1-<tM• PoolA'de Garden Bungalow. _ I Girls ore like pianos. When BluU., N.D. •••·•·•••• S475 r-------.~ Fireplace / 1'TIV. patio•. Near ocean. F'rplc. trg . . lhe , lgh h "BR 2 bt avaO l/l ..•• $3851 Ap•rtmentsf'Ol'Rt'l\l I m Pools Tennis Contnt'I BkU:t. patio. 6 Pools. Sauna. Tcn-y re upr t, t ey're ..__ 4 BR 2% bA n.va.IJ 811 •. $425 . . Y 900 Sea Lan, CdM 64 ·2611 n\1. ~ I L U 0 C A N 5:~,. 4 BR. 2 ba. T.I\.. HUis •• $475 .~-----~ {AfacArthur nr Cout H'Nl'' 2 BR. Newly decorated. Wo.lk I I I I IS 0 Comp11i. tftt thuc:kl• qcxMd to <X't'an. Encl &ar. Bll-Jns . • by Ill/Ing In th• mlNlng word 1A • .,,p:..t_a._F_u.cr_n. ____ 3.;.60:;.: 2 BR just rtdec. Bltns, $195/mo. 536--(1155. · · )'OU dl'V91op from step No. 3 t>.low. d11hwhr, 2 pe.Uol, pool. • * BR.AND N~ 2 Br, 81lbo.t ltl•na. Adult• $225. 673--1418 evei. or frplc, 11ar. Welk tC'I beach! • PRINf NUMBERED LfnERS IN • > Y·EARi..Y 2 hr furn. Ava.ii wknds. 410 21.at St., H.B. THfSE OUAR S June 16th. $250 mo. No~ll. NEW 2 BDRM, fAmib' rm, DELUXE 2 BR. drp/crpt. ~ G~~·~·~~~~f IHTEIS I j I j j j '" ~~~:~~E,l~"Bldg. ~~oi;=: Bal o a ~~r,·s':,r:~-mo. ~:rr:~BlllSt. Sc -. . _ . Unlversl~v Park, Irvine My dq II the Br.ST UAY to 3 BR ~~ lllway, lrp]c. LRG 2 Br. Studio~ l~ Ba. RAM-LETS ANSWERS .IN CLASSIF1CATION STR Days ss2.1000 Night• ""' •• adr bon't deb¥' ...-. -tar .• adulto 1215. s1s1.so1mo. M.......i cpl•. 1 ___________ :c_:.::__.:.:__:_:..=~=:::..:.::.:.:::.:.=-:.:....:.:_1:r:~-I ·ii today 64,___ ' · 613-1418 "'"? or wkndl. child ok. No pet._ ~· ' 1-1.JRN. on UNFURN. Un~lievably l&r&e apts , huge poo l, Jacur:I elect bit· ln!I, shag crpt!', drpc, a&W\A etc. Adults, no Pfltl. SINGL&C: From $150 1 BEDR~f. F'mm $185 2 BEDRM. l'r<tm $185 Unfum Aptt A·1all •Tom $1CI to $15 t~ESS. You're right. the)l're under· rirlced! 1561 1.1csa ~. 15 blk1 Lrom Nl'.!Wport Blvd.) !>46-9.'60 $140 & UP 1 BR. FURN. & UNF. You Bet ti's underprtced1 That'• why t'1ne Rpts. woo'I !Mt lon1t. Crpt11, drpg, 1tovt & refl'lg. l.Jlt11 or green lawn. Covered gar a g fl 1. Ad\tll•, no Pttl. :mo ~"\tller· ton Ave. (1 blk E. ot New· pl!l't Blvd. It. I blk. So. o, Bay, C.M.l 6U-86llO. 1BR .1BA furn $100. 28R IBA unfurn $1SO 151 F.. 21at St. c.v. ·-· 24 PILOT-ADVERTISE~ W"'-1, ..., 23, 197) OAILY '!LT ----J~ I ~-' ...... lf5J [ -... -J~[ ,,___ _ ....... _ ... ~l[{LJ I~! l~I -' ............... -, l:l:P.,••l _ ... _ -·, A!> .... Furn. or Unfym. Apia.. Gareg0a for RMI! 435Gar-for !lent 435 Pound (-edl) SSG ll<obyallfl!J Plumb~ 27D Furn • .,. Unfum. 37111--"-------~--------t'tlUND ,.... alltred m.i. _..__..._ ____ -· _..,.., .... '------ YARIOllS Sl'lrt' rDllll '$7 50/MO ,,.t, -otrlped, t SeUOM MATURE ,..... will ...,... L.R. IS PLUMBING Help Wonted, M & f 710 H.lp Wonf9d, M & f,7 CARRIERS NEEDED FOR DAILY PILOT ' CoatoMew Cost1 Meu u.w--1 nu..,.....-: • • ?.!obile Parle Coit• Mesa. for your borne "-Children Rtn)()dell I-Repoaln. Water &MMi34t. 0\.1:.iet p Ir 11 a e while )'OU vacadori. Xln't heaters, ~l•. fumatt•, cl&lm. No pets aJJowed ~ts. Ort\.W. 6l>-OST4 oc dsh\.\·ashJ't. 642-&!63 MIC & M.re! ~. RIA. Con1plc1e Plwnbb!i: EL PUiRTO MESA · : FOR -{__~ sett-storage r~.-, mlnl--¥1:~' > warehouse ··' ~ units l'OUND Siame~ t J t t en CHILD---..,.-----.-,-.-,-,-, Sonic<. vidnlt;y Shakey's pl 11 a dillcftn W yrs. old. ,_\)' PLUMBING REPAIR Parlor, Ne"''port Beach. homo, bot \w:dn, tim yrd. No job too smaU Contact Shake-y's tor ~ CM ~US! * * ~ '" * form&Uon 673-"11 BABYSrITING -tn,y bOme, S.wlnt/Atter•tl?nt Safe ot Al'9pace .•• ancl you hcwa the lce'f TRI-colored mttle Ba.uet experienced mother. Pttt. .,_,.,. • HOVKMOU11 (~_,. ...... ~···1 Hound wearing heavy bla.cll: :f:s 2-5 ~ CM are& on A1t9r1tlon--'42...SM5 ·ICWI• MIHlll ltMWIQl'f } ! leathrr '-':0118! 'A'ilh broken sa Dr. ~3085 Nee,t, accurate:. 20 )'t'&f'I exp. , itOl#IOI °' Ali "'"°' ! ..,, --~ : rope, vtcln1ty BolSR A CHil.D CARE tn m,y home, Tutori"I MAU OR FIMAU: MUST BE ID VIARS 01' AGE OR OLDER HAVE A Dl!Pl!NDABLE BIKE GOOD PROFITS! Ne.,...... ..... PJ 't a..,,._ I"' It. t. 6M It. CALL '42outl Aak for Gory Jorrett BET TEI ~ fenWe ld"ite;°':1:ust w~~ ;;.rr:u:: ~5:41i: to *lllK~te~e A!~t5 8;.~: Help W1nted, M & F 710 ' ~!Wanted, M & f 0 7~q I-'----· l·-··' =alf', H.B. 892-3840. depeodable A reliable, Qilld-__ ..;. _____ _ Vic. of Albert &. Ora.nee'. '*b)'mt ln her bo me 531-T968 ATTRACTIVE ~ to modtl t.L ' ., ......... ..,. ..........,_ 11•"'• ~ .._... Co••• Me•• Bet. Call ~·· BANK ....... ' •~ anytime. &17--.... privately J to hr"l'! per wk. • ' 1 ,_:-~~-Offo'c• Rental 9am--645-7551 "--~+ _ 440 ""'"-'""'"'-'~_,.--,-.,.....-, RELIABLE and dependable Day or evening. Great l)U,\. ADULT LIVING FND -Ora.rlgi! long ha.J.red baby&ittin: ln my home. [II] No experif'nce. Strictly for FOR LESS FULL SERVICE I 11•1 (·at. Vic. Marquerite & 642--1630 or 642-300 I I i I fun! Reply in confidence to Westcllff ~lldJng Plfsonala . Coast J-fwy, CdM, ?\faJe. CERTIFIED te&chen wlll . Lr; .. rcit . f ~SOX 10516, Santa .An.9., e 1 Mi. to Beach Corrwr W~cliff Drive 1' ~ aft 6 care for your chlld ln my Platform Secretary Sh & typlnw;. kJ)n" led!!:f' 111 R.t.:. l.'()mn1·1 & IL. lo.l.ll clocu1.nt>ntatiou . Pn~ lnf!: .~ Ht'<.·t>1\'\1ig Tl·llt•rs, O•ll<'<" t1o1n Teller. f."1111 <lr p/1 \n1c. l·:~p1o>r. nnly. Irvine Blvd., N c 1v port CLlJTO{ p u r • e with home. Sl7·C»J6. •Sun Deckt & $130 Beat'h. Mr. llowar d Person1ls 530 ~ptionilaues.19thSt. P1tlo1 &lf>-6101. ---------Costa Mesa, 5'8-9381 aft. Builders • Carpets, Or1pe1 & UP B"u-,.,.i-ne~,-,-=Rc-e-n'"te"'"l--.,.44"'°'5 VETERANS 1:00 p.m. ---------Crelg Dixon e Lo~ds of Parking ---------.1Earn $4.58 to $7.00 per hour ro""u'°N;,D~med-"lu_m_•_ma_,ll,_,..,...., IWD..J.. build or re Pat r 2179 Miner St. Job W1nted, Male 700 AUTO SALESMAN N~ 1 ••le smlln, ex- perienced, Sell BMC, Fri'· rarl, Jara:e Inventory of t1S<'d can, Free detno. C':.:c<"ll•~nt \\'Orkina: l.'Onditlons, Set! Bud Ryder or Ton1 Aikin at Cont1ct Mr. W1lsh B•nk of Co1t1 Mes• 979-4200 ALL UTILITIES PAID aranteed b .. 1..... anyth.ing YoUr hOme needs. C t u. e Garages_ Pool 1 & B RMS l Balboa Penin. 700 sq. ft. di-gu Y u .... '6 yuur female puppy, ''f.t golden Gene Ennes. 547.1838 01 • m.l• e Rec. Room 2 D ' • vided into 8 roon1s lots of G.I. Benefits while' at· r'!!trlever. VlclnJty Corona You are the wtnner of Furn. & Unfurn. Avail. wall space. Suitabl~ for art tending Santa Ana ())l.lege.d '"°'lo.,Mar=.;...o673--0363;oc~c...-,--l Bu1ines1 Service one h't'i! pl'lsa; 714/ 646-6505 ._ ________ I\ gallery, antique shop, at· Call now -SPAYED fem dQi, 7mos., --~· ------Good tor a 'vllOll' carload 1959 MAPLE STREET, COSTA MESA ch.Hect &. drartsman. Near 547-956! Ext 370 fox terrier mlx, wh w/blk BOOKKEEPING &: Account· to any of the NEWPORT IMPORTS Or Send Resu111r ·ro p. o. Bo.'( 2:180 Coiita. ~lt•Sit , Cn 92626 Al G Cannery Village, rent set I FUU.Y LICENSED face & ears, vie Arch Beach tng Service, 1,.vstems de-p••ClflC JHrlTRES '° oroge1 for Rent accorolng to tenant, remod·. * SP!RITUALJST * Ht" Laguna. <94-9815. signed for your "6okkeeplna 11 IJI 1:~:;:;;;~~~;11;~~~~~~=; 6~~[qOO~s. AIL 4:30 ph. S~~'.1~~v:a~~g!u 1~a~~~~~ FOUND Duck, 3 or 4 mos ~F_'reeEstiniates, !Subject to snlall service EquRI Oppor. E111ployt'r -312 N El C . Real Sa old. vie. Garf.ield & Ch'"'""e at theatre). I r ..... ~ I I~ 145 E. 18th St, C.M. Suitable • . amino ' n Magnolia. f-IB. Call 96S-{)88j C1rpet Service -.. 3l00 W. Coflst H\\)'., N.L'\. 642-9405 BAR M11ld -25 !o 3.>. Wt"Ckends for can1pus llL""er bar n'Staurflnt. Pr<'f1•r stu- dent. Sll-8191 aHcr 5 pm. A~k for owner. Ap1rlmen1s lorRent I~ R1nttis Jib for stores or <>fc"s. fa) 6f!4 CI em en t e. 4 9 2 -9136, bcf 8 30 aft 9 Plellie call 642-5678 cxl. 314 AUTO SALES ~ . . ,,-s/f, $190/Jno, (bl 362 st!, -"-2,..-9034 __ . ------· : am; pm JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery lo clalnl you1· ticket. (North F.>:per!('nce preferred, "'IH ~------' $100fmo. (c) 1069 s/f, PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con· BLACK fat puppy -curly Dri·Shampoo free Scotch· County toll-free nun1b(>r is consldrr sh.Rrp trailll'e. Ne~· Apts.., Furn. or , l••••••••••\S265tmo. C.J.S, Rea l fident, sympathetic blackfhaCir -male. North guard <Soil Retardants). f>.W-1220). car dt>alship oflers good Unfurn. 370 V1c1tion Rentals 425 Estate, 548-1168 pregnancy counseling. Abor· end 0 osta ?.1esa, Monroe Degreasers & all color RECENT L \' arr\ v e d co1nn1is.~ion and den10 plan. BARTENDER, EXPER. Costa Mesa "The 1'-actory" has Shops lion & adoptions ref. ,..w~a~y_. ~54&-44~~26~---= ' brighteners & 10 minute Japanese student 11·an1s job Good ro. bent>!i!s. Apply in NORTH Lake Tahoe Dollar Avao·J . Ideal for book•too-. APCARE 642-4436 Lost SSS hie ch l h.t · as live-In house boy to person, l\1r. Brad Bodoh. Top Pay. Apply In Pf'l"roll • • ~ ________ ..;_. J a or \lo. 1 e carj)C'ts. 1969 Harbor Blvd., Costa I Th Point. Modern 4 Br. 2 ~ leather shop, etc. Starting PREGNANT? Th 1 n king -Save your money by savin& share American fan1Hy lile. on)'. e Derby, l'.!62 S. El * C1\SA VICTORIA * chalet. '1eeps 10 .. Tenrus, from $110/nlO. 425 30th St., abortion? Know all !he facts REWARD! tor any in· me e:rtra trips. \V1ll clean 494-6005. Mesa. . Hris!ol, S.1\. 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unlurn, pool tr beach. Foe ~o (4lSJ N.B. 673-9600 firs!! call LJFE LINE -24 formation n:gardlng the ltv1og rm., dining rm. It Job W1nted Female 702 AUTO-GIRL FRIDAY B"A~\'S~JO=E-~l.-1,-h-,-,.-,.-,-d Ca dr 622-2lTl or wnte P · h 541 5522 dlsappearance of a large hall $15. Any rm. S'l.50, / EXPERIENCED "'ants vnung man Jh";l rpets, apes, Dl\V, TV Petersen. 65--K Redhill Cir-CdM. 17c:/ft. 2.4Mllloor x 3 rs, -· collection of 8 kin diving h ~o ,...__,_'"' ~" "¥-· ant. Pool, etc. Come by in-cle, Tiburon, Calil 9C93> HI. UDI. 675-7S5l (Z4 hr. YOUNG COUPLES 18-3S + gear. S....,lal Sam,._..n-Hall couc ,:!~ · ha....,.au-...,. J.01 yn. NEED help at home'!' We P/tlme. All deakl. Good w/pareni. lo.r sleady jO quire about our Move in N l 2411 c H & p · cpl 1 ...... ...,,,.. exp. ,,. w t counts, not have aides nu rses typist. See Mn. SlauahtPr, Including Sal &. Sun. N9' Allo\l.·ancc, 525 Victoria St. LAKE Havasu City, 2BR ~cArth ~ wy arties or meet to ~ spear KW\I & pttscrlption method. I do work myself. ho u 1 ekpn,' companion.a'. Mon thru Frt at O:lun~·ide long h&ir. Min \\'age to; H bo C M 642 -o ale home 1UOy tUm ~ ur, Call "Leah" 2..Spm. 539-mask, trom Irvine Terrace Good ref. 531-0101. Homemakers U p j o h n , Rambler, 12222 G a rd e n start. 0 -.. akle Jo""'lsh Marke•. at ar r, · · -o::r• · mile. trom' lake by d•~ or• 4BR 2BA houae, dbl gar. RELAXING MASSAGE home. 675--6270 Gard .._,. "~ NE\V 1 Bil F Sl!IO Unt: ..,, n.._1 l l C1rpenter 547-6681. Grove Blvd, en Grove. 2flKI Newport Blvd, N.B. ;j: . urn . week aft 5pm, 586-JM'.J Dli&lneu UJe a 0 wed · Ladies It couples only -prof. W!n' Adams It Ma&nolla HOUSE Cl..EANING, win· AUTOMOBILE exper. only BEAUTICIAN needed pa ' $170. Adults, no pets. 114 E,, Ren'tela to Sh .. "'" $225/Mo.. 604l2l. or (Mag. 'mature male. 642-7433 4-6 H.B. area, sml black male NEW ,.--'-! --• l s I :Dth St 548 0137 64G-4095. ire "NV 646-9666) • 11......n: • u-....11e • dows carpets shampooed need app Y -er v cc tlme, al!O' booth for rent. " · ; . SWINGING SINGLES dog w/wbHe cheat, cb1n & fimsh, ltOres, offices & call 'btwn 9 am ' 6 pm' cash:ler, bookkeepl.nl. Sill 548-2412 or ~lM Huntington Beach LOO~G tor a fe. room· ClTI'E ADOBE HOUSE, 1000 Call "Leah" 2-8 pm. 539-3122 trnt feet. Med. 1en&th hair. homes etc. Custom work. '96-1864 , ' open. Dean Lewi& lmports, BEAtrrY OPf't'B!or, clhmte~ I---'-------I mate. Avail June tat to aq ft, adjoining busy comer, I 535 $25 reward for return. Licensed. 962-1961. , · 646-9303. LA QUINTA HERMOSA thin 3 hr Twnhse. in a.ta Costa Mesa. 64.5-~20/6f2.6560 Socia Clubs 96Z-3101 GENERAL . CARPENTRY BABYSimNG, lite house-AVON SAYS 111-ef. Use Iron & blower. Spanish Country Estate Liv· Mesa. Pleuecall for inten;. lnduttilil Rental 450 ·-· FEM A L'E sta nd a rd AND REPAIR wodt in your home. Avail. A.-Employee benctlt11. Jot mg & Spacious Apts. Ter· days 833-&UO uk for B. LOVE WORN Schnauzer, s~. grey or • S7?)..6211 • able mpkendl only, please ''Be Your ywn Bo11'' Forrester Lld. 645'-5.1ro ' raced pool, sunken gas Peel. Dlacover DISCOVERY salt er pepper coat. J.5..40 · call after 6 PM 642-5697. Earn an income al )'OUf' owa. Boat Manufacturing BBQ. Unbelievable Living. SHAB.E Apt or Houae & NOW LEASING PROFESSIONALS in a rl.eld lbc. Name, Hester. Last C~e~me~n~t~,~C~on§:c:ret::•~~;J;He~l~;W;o;n;ted~~M~&~F;7~l~OI rla:ht ln your own neighbor· Cabinet lh>p ; 1 BR.J]NFURN $165 SA VE $$$ HOME Huntington Beach of Amateur Matchmaken. seen Pepgsua St. ln SA ' hood. Be an AVON Repre-llelpers, S.'Uldt>r!!. Tra!nces .1 l BR }>~URN $185 p R~ L c~~ ·~·1 Hm• •k3659 FOUNDATIONS -Artlsttc " sentatlve. Call now : Only U108e wtll1..,. lo wo~·k · · A ••~.:.n. le. ·suldness NEW M-1 Lftl. ~ • •-· ~ • Planters concrete It br1clc u•• 2 BR. FURN $215 Call 836-ll!M or ~1479 cn4) 83S-Q85 (213) 387-3393 LOST bl.ack & 'Nhlte cat, 81. tiol t LI 'd O!A~ ,..,,_ A Better Temp, Potltion MS-5341 or 541)..700 learn need apply. ALL lIT'lLITlES PAID 940 Sq. Ft. &: Up pa • e c:. c ......_.,,. ER .. _...__1 '.''ages & bmcflli. ! Adults. No Pets $75 will share 1lJY lovely Hamilton &: Newland 'PARTNER' INTROD. tered female. Last .een May PATIOS. walka, drivn. Saw, URGENTLY BABYSITI' ' M,:IJUU ... ~ ERICSON YACHTS ( 4 bl ks s. of San Diego Frwy quiet home in C.M. to reftn. 646-0697 or 833-0519 Pers:inal Service. Low Fee 6th, cameo ~ &!'ff. break, remove 6: replace children, Harbor V I e i ' on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt eel lady. Jjcl's. No smoking. 548-1479 or 836-.1211 Please call. REW l RD! coocrete:5'8-tl668 for est. School area, H.B. DI.Ya 540-8001 to 16211 Parkside Lane.) $85 wtpriv. bath. ~1195. NEW Bldg, ideal C.M. Joe, 675-3362. CEMENT A Block Work. NEE'DED =:rn ~02 :bi· Ph: BUSBOYS . Day & Nitf' Ex; f7l4) 347-5441 SINGLE LAD'{ will share nr. fnl.oy. w/ofc & heat hot FEM. Shepherd & Husky Wall, patiot, llfdewalka, etc. BABYS!Tl'ER-I-• ·~\ per. only. Apply In per901), 1 BR Del Ad It I ,.. lovl"iy home, CdJl.I, with wtr, 3 phB@ D) pwr, 10' I~ pup. 5 mo. old. White, grey, By hr. ()I' ""'b. 646-691!i ..; .. •-, Good _;;, r·,-~u·~,30 !5.1..,...Nlgucc11 •• eohouu~ry DC!ru.b •• ' · uxe. u poo s .... e SAME. Pvt bdrm & ba. OIH door, EZ entr &:: exit. J Lolt and r...r black. Flea collar. Vic. 18th "' ..... r-~ .w•uu ""' garden Frpbunl gal?~· nloe • 6r 67>-ttrl 1100 1q.ft . $155. o a ya •-,__ 0wne-~-11c• Contr•ctor • Typls.ts a.m. '& 2--6 pm, Mon thn& 1 ft-·na Ni,. .. al. ocean. c., ... ~ pat · s~ •~• -1417 "' ............. • .. s: ,.,,., • Fri in "'" botne CdM area .._.. .. .... ~Is. sauna, tennis. $160. APARTMENT to share. MaJe ,......,,...,, eve •H-· Reward! 60-2775 aft. 5 JACK T&ulane _ Repair • Receptionists li1S-8076'.,, · • Bt.IS BOY. Apply alt~ fo s.m..-0259. 22-30. 1 ~~·ft". Ocean view. UIOO 8Q 11· M·l apace, w/front CHOKER _.__.. of ........ la ___ .. _ .... II "" Refried Bean Restauran -~-Found (free ed1) 550 ~~ ~ ·~. -. ~ Y" ..... • ,.__ tori BABYSITl'ER, II e-ln 3 ' Newport Beach Own Br, Ba. Ulil. incl. $130. offices, lrg ~ar door, $180 w/gold elasp, vtc E 1 Uc'd, My Way Co. 547-oo36 .-..re el v ' 696 S. Coast Hwy., Laeuna;:• I--~-------! Cali aft. 6. 4!J4..SS.il mo. li'l!l Whittler St, CM, ---------Rancho. Reward. 644--2635 e children, :tlnt conditkllll. i OCEAN VIEW: modern, 811 • &16-503.l days, 6'lG-OOS1 eves ~: ~t!' ~ ~ eves. Electrtcal Keypunch Opn ~~ or aft. e, ~~l~ER TRAINEli, electric, crpts, drps, bltns, Office Rental 440 M·l 1300 sq. ft, front office, M. SMAIL white teddy •-ELECTRICIAN II -·' • u--Llll...... ~· "l I I I BR I & Pegasus C. 54&-7308 or Ut:&r. ' cen.....,, l1MI ..a BABYsmER wanted """ Fee ... d •' ha cony, poo. .. urn lrg rear door. 1240 Logan 675-1739 Lost 5/13. Reward! bonded. S1nall jobs, matnt &: A bly ... ~': Ell:abllahed co. seeks ~ unrum. Lease. Adults only. PRESTIGE St., $180 mo. 646-5033 days o ... ~ 1 ••• ,203 llttftl home, eves Ir: IOme "'AllO.M• 1 Ind! 1 1 . Bal MALE Jruh Setter vie O'U'""".NUI. repa "'· J'tO"'"ij • 2 i....-"_L 1 .,.. CIOlle nam e v. or x n t MaiTai Apts. 1510 w. . OFFICES 646--0681 eves. . -2 e PIX 0 uu3• aee• ".-.,.-1~ -~ 1 . boa NB (714) 675-4230 Newport Hetpts LOST pearl tnger ring. G1rdenlng ., peraton to bch. 53&--483f. • uun out:l~"IJ grea • · · · • Fountain Valley, Bcauti· Rentals Wanted 460 548-78$ Vic. ot Falhlon Island. vancement A: benefits. WINTER, Sumn1er, Yrly; ful new building, ground {chain hQoked to collar) Reward. 493-25M A Proff?&llklnal, unUormed In-..._ ~ybo~. vtneedc. ~acb~ ~~~.Lyon0enn' ~!1000e·nn'001, PF~ Anita's Rentals, Bkr, 200;, floor, 3,000 -u"-r-t, RESPONSIBLE adult wants MJNlAT\JRE n-I I I g-~·ntng •·am. Se-••• rwnm "Ma(noY11a,"''HB uc ¥VUll .., .,. \" B 1~ Bl d 6732058 ~ -· •• bl tal 1'"'ND: Med. large red·brown uo:age, em · .,...., "" ~ ... ,. I ' "'· a.....,... v • · · \\'lU divide into smaller reasons c summer ren male dog vie. Harbor recently had puppies. Vic only lg e11tates, apt A Personnel Service 536--0344 • ~ Agency of Irvl~ I ....... I~ Rooms 400 Mrs. John Dumas 1026 Sentiago Dr. Newport S.•ch You arc the v.'inner of one free pass Good for a whole carload 10 any of the PACIFIC JH~TRES <Subj~ to small aervl.ce chsl'J!:e Ill lheatre). Please call 642-5678 ext. 314 to claim your tlckcl. (North County toll-free numhcr Is 540-12'20) • SHARE Ad111t Condo. with owner. Pi'ivale room. Kitchen privileges. Color TV, Pool. $90 mo. 548-3738 alt 7PM ROOMS $18 wk up wtkil $30 wk up apli;. Children & pet l('ction. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM. a48-9755, 645-3967. ROOMS . S25 & UP. Over, looking llarbor & Ocean. \~ blk to ocean. 2500 Seaview, CdM. XTRA lrg room wrrv \n priv. all elec. home, CMta Mesa Eves & "'' k n d, 646-2042. ATI'RAC. m1, ba w/ or w/o kit pr!. Bus woman or teacher. Non smoker. Cnlrl loc. S95fmo. · 646-Lq79. offices. 50c per square July I-Middle Aug. or care lti--School, 54&-8377. Identify betlch. NB. Ph: 646-8806. lndcu"•'to"'m~~~~~· ~-~~· 17511 lrvlne Bl··,, Xl82 Mlchel90n Dr. I' foot, inc:ludes carpel!., for 'house, j)C'tS: exchange .....,....... ,....,... ,,"' a~ .. 'K ~ drapes, an utilities, janj. Salfor~•"'·:::.· .~38,.,,.Gncc,•.·.~·. collar. GRAY/blk/wht 3 mo. kit· (Il4) 531-#115 Tu1tln DAL.. Career Secre•ftries t . Cail M .. .., ..-" FND: Kitten Uni -yellow ten, male, Meaa del Mar, "A Frank M Neiton Co" •-••~ ESCR-OP'FICIR .. · or service. ar\lyn Houston, Texas 7 7 O ~ 5 , angora. Vic. Parking lot of Please call 5®-9136 ' · _ _.... "'" l l:'S~t~ov'!!al~l!'<"!TI"4'"l "ll.1"!~'!'5441l""''!'. ~I ~~~·!,t;<;J:,-E9'~-~--11·11 L. s l! B EXPER. Ja---r-~-..... Equal Opper. li'-'-·« , .., · 1 top 1quor tore, . · LOST small female Irish Set· r--ua.1vo: "!!'"'•m.!'"!111!'-B"•-'1!!1..,\lnd··~-• ~-~·• '··· ank Know how. Tr l mm ln a . u.u-•••-•··'"""~ ........,, SHARE beautiful 1200' SINGLE lad~ requires 1 Hr lll Fr furt Ave. tcr named "Tasha." Call Clean-up. Small landacap. Accountl"I Su-rvlsor ~tor Ohlwe Q:iun. ff. f I furn apt. Cdl\f. NB area. FNO: Off.white poodle mix 675-7973 Cdl\1 Area · '"'"' ~·""' -tu Top ·-•·-· o ice u ly corpeted C 1 ,,AA • 1ng ;:iuo-,,..au. Manuf. div Of. nat'l ~teeka .,,. -.....3 • , al .,......5565 aft 11 AM. Santa Ana Ave. & Pegasus LOST. Blktbrown Gcnnan and furnished. Great!:~~~~~~~~~ CM 54&7308or675-7739 She he.rd 1 v · EXP ER . American gen'l acctne S\IPY bu 5--M·.,-1 I CPA I · · · P ' ma e. 1 c : Gar dencr. l.falntenance, exper. with data proceM-Hil•• ••-or , nsurance, FOUND Labrador puppy. Victoria & Harbor, 64&9792. · I ~11 & I Sa I M uf R I I~ Cleanup & Landscaping. mg sys ems, c.°'' co· y IU'IS an , ep., or S1cre-~ts od Vic. · i\fesa Verde. Call LOST, Black female cat, Call 645-~. lectlons, employee supt'r· ••-,, tarial Service. Contact . •. 546-7308 or 6'5-7739, 1vhite paws, an"a Arch E.'XPER. Japanese Ga.rdener. visk>n, posting to gen'! Call m-1300, vet 264 Ginny 5514130. FOUND bike vi c in I I y Bcaciih.iiiin.iiwii'ii"'iiii· ii496-46>1iiiimiiii Complctt> yard srv. Relia. & ledger, & preparing payn>ll Equal Oppor. Emplo)ler 1617 WESTCLIFF Sandcastle & Se acres t, I iiiiiiiiiiii neat. Jo~ree eiit. 64i-4J89.'L tax returns. Resp. to dlv.l'i:=::i=::i=::i=-Announcements 500 Corona del Mar, 644-0079 controller. A1n't bendil.8.Ji ~ 1980. 1924, T:i& &. 540 sq. rt. IRISH Setter, nr. Bristol & l~-----~I~ Hauling Sa.llU'y r~ S6Q0.$800 mo. BANK A m PI e Pr kg. U t 11, James Forah1y lnstrucUon ~ --~-------For appt call Mr. Britt, Baumgardner No. 10 t , 2211 Tustin Ave. Birch, Santa Ana Heighls. -. ,...,.... GEN flaulina:. Tree/Shrub Cn4J 548-U44. ESCROW 541-5032 Newport Beech 557-0540 trim, Gar A Yd cleanup. Equal Oppor. Enrpk>y~r m/f OFFICE space -444 Old You 1tre the winner of 5 1f'ofA!:_L1giCor!'s 1"'°"pTI kgl"'c""M School• & Est. S3J-63TI, 557-6904. ACCOUNTANT. exp'd, for CLERK Newport Blvd. 3 blks No. or one [rec pass ouuu n rs ca ar ' · · LOCAL moving & hauling by local Newport Center CPA Coast Hv.)' 1. 3 drafting l1Tlll Good mr a \\'hoJe carload Friday nite !i/lS. 540-l049 instruction1 575 student. Large truck. Reas. firm. Mu!!t be CPA can· I< 1 recept. rm. All ror to any of the FOUND pregnant cat. Vic. -~ 534-1846 or 534-Zl64. dldate or CPA. Recent local l300/mo. Util Incl. 2nd tic PACl[:IC THr•TRES Santa E,.belle & Santa Ana ORANGE COUNTY 32• FURNITURE Van tor firm exp d .. Irabl•. Nu..,.,. w/ocean view, 5 4 8 -5 3 (l 0 J Ul Ave, Costa Meu.. 548-1729 VOCATIONAL local tum hauls &: een'l tton due to l(r'O'Nth. Salary e\le1. OLDER Great Dan~ 'l'RAINfNG SCHOOi. hauling. 548-1862. open. GU-6156 OFFICES AVAIL NOW. Vic !Subject to small service Brindle fem. Fnd Vic. Leirn Auto Tune..up SKIPLOADER & dump truck ACCOUNTING CLERK 17th St. C.M. 2-3 Rm suites, charge at theatre). Irvine & Mesa Dr. 557-7861 CLASSES NOW FOR!\irNG v.'Ork. Concrete, asphalt i\ggre&'!lve, young electronics cp ts, drps, $150 & $175. 1-5 Please call 642·5678 e:.:t. 3l4 FEf\1ALE Great Dane_ Vic:. Special smog class for sawing, breaking. 846-7110. firm has Immediate opening Rm. $300. ample park fn claim your ticket. (North '-'"A-la Ana & Del Mar. I -• ·nd· Id al Ith space. SJ.litabel Dr. Dent. County toll·frec number is f':~'ll. S49--0223 ml'Chanics YARD, gamge cleanups. or ,,.,arp I lv u w ex· Rltr. JI.fed Lab. Account, ;>44)..J.m ). Zl20 Placentia AvC'., C.?-1. Remove treei;, dirt ivy, pcrlence in varied account· Newport Center Branch We have 1n op.n- lng for on indlvid- ual with previous e.:periencit typing escrow documents. etc. 642.-1272 AL""LE'=v°'tA""T=E~onx-l,..ct7\"'-. 71,-~-. PIT bulldog, male, vie. Aliso Call Now 714/646-5065 Drivewys, grading. 817-2666. ing function~. Beach, South Laguna. Call Heuseclun1ng $475. to $525. per mo . Stirtinn 1 • I • r ~ PRESTIGE OFFICES guilt. Be hcalert throui::h Palm Springs, 714: 325-851'). Ebronix 892·5531, ~'estmlnster • New prof'! bldg, Fountain suggestivt> merlitation. Call commen1vr1te wit Valley, $250 per mo. illClds 545-2S29. WHITErran poodle, vie: Tutorinv Clinic * * LADIES -Need a hand AITERNOON yard teacher experience. reccpt. nn: r ecepl ··1:~~~~~~~ Harbor Vw Hill&. 64+-lUI READING w/llftin~. movif1.i, odd for ChrU!ti&n Prc·Sclv.lol. 4.-bs? Call San1·, 871-8900 C&ll 646-n17 answer'g service. Secretar-WHITE cockapoo pupp y, SPELLING ~f's. Please C11l Fot ial !IE'rviCt" avail. Ph: I II•l Fountan Valley area, MATH ALERT s1rl for seneral ol· Appolntmint 847-8989 or 962-8955. ,..,.._. 531 :rm Carpet Cte1n1::1,.. floe wort. Good typist. Ex· -Free Dlal[nOSIJc Testing Ftoor Care & WI I per. on 10 key adding Midne Bonds 3 RJl.f deluxe suite, aclj. ' SMAlJ.. black kitten with 979-1626 machine. Wllllng 10 learn • airport. Full services, Costa Mess 645-412-t EXCELL.ENCE IN Xlnt Housecleaning ..., ,. Rf1 '""" ~!fl .. no lease req. 217:l Personals 530 {vfAY 13th. lrlsh Seller. SUMMER DAV PROORAMS By Day. Ov.'n Transportation Market, 3433 Via Lido, NB Averqe range ~$750, l S. NO 1"EES. N.B., C. .• Irvine, Orange &: S.A. C Immedlalely. \' e P.P.S. Pacific Peraonnel , S.rvice1, Inc. ' 500 Newport CentPr Dr. , Suite 900, N .B. l 641)..1970 • 24 Central Tower, Oran1 c'I .. , ..... F;qual Oppor. Employer i ~ CASHIER ,1 ATTENDANT ; \Ve wltt train mature, wdlJ, groomed indlv. to work .U cashier in our new hli(h volume Coi n:Op .!!Crvice sta. Hon In C08t& ~fesa. AllJi shift open. Good s1ar1hw sat & bcneflt!J . Apply fii p('NIOl1, lx-tv.'ll 10 an1 & ! pn1 , 29'5 E. lilh .'Jl., Cl'f Ask for H.us.,. c:F.RA5trST \\'anh'<i . 2, M qt' ~-. Stmrord D. Bu..;ter. Inc. P.O. ~ 7, 8144 llv.•y 11.J, Niiand, CB 82Zl7. 348-0001 CH,\RGE or l"f'lit·f cook 1'11.'Cded for rctirl.•01t!nt hon\(', PleuSAnt 11•ork. X I ll I benefits. 54G-7005 CHECK HERE WITH Airporter 1-lofel & o.c. fiell collar on Avocado St, Dutch JI.faint Serv. 5.l7·1!50ll booklteec1-~. ·p1rc, .. ~c.,hlneL. IMdro. SEC644-0U R1113TY DuPont, Rm. 8, 833-3223 ALCOHOl !CS &45-8997 Enrichment Days, Beach * 83&-0648 * ROOM w/bu.th. Furn. or un· DESK 'I bl • Anonymous. ""o"''="--c---~-,.~-Days, All Day ~~un Trips, A NS WE RING Setvice furn. Kitchen prlv. space ~viu a e $50 POOne 542.-7217 or write FND. Shutters Coast HWY. Activity Days. K thru 6th LM COMPLETE 1-10 USE operator, C.011lft Mf'llll area. PACIFIC THE 108 KINGS 557...%!1 • mo. Will provide furnlturo P.O. Box 1223, CORta Mesa. 492-fi657 grade. ENROLL N 0 \V ! CLEANING SERVICE. Exp. rrel. or will train H~p. Order lles , • to Sl.90 ht ==_,.•"--,'-,_-· ·-c,-,-...,-::-c I at $5 mo. Answering serv1ce 675-4022. Pre-School All * ~ * 5(8-3068 * 5'1().ITI. Trainees •••.•.•• to $.1.(Xl 1j WANT lady for n11 & private available.17875 Beach Blvd. Year, hours 7;45 AM-6 Pl\f. M * * BANK Truck Driver 'Mec,h 0 ;~ .,.· Ba In lovely N.B. llOme. Kit l.funtington Beach. 642-432.l asonry _ prlv. Car nee. $75. >ts.<28R s OFFICE SUITE, l'llO'. Trader's Pa"'adr"se ~~~~~~~~ QUALl'l'Y mMOnry ~·"'· APARTMENT ,,,.,,.,, .......... •o t1.00 hr Guest Home 415 Crpt -air cond -PARK-I , Brick & block .,...8 11s. Patios MANAGEMENT Equ 1 J1:1nltors • .. · · ·•· ••· $2.25 hr ING. 18c ft. M·l Ind. Parle 1 ~ a apedalty. &1().-0m' COUPLES ONLY a Oppor. E:n1ployer Gcn'l lle\j)C'r!t •... to S:l.50 hr nr. Newpt Fwy k Edfncer s.v;c._,,... j MAJOR propet'(y lnvettment Tire &.:rv. MM···· $(i(ll) tno PRIV & 11eml available for nmbulnlory gue11t. Loving care&. nutritious mf'Rls. 541>-2562 Summer Rent1l1 420 CORONA dtl M°R'!' :l BR. family rm apt, furn. 1 blk trom on>nn .• June $2.00. wk. July thru Aug. $300. "''k 67'-3308 SECLUDED New P o r t Igland. Summer rental11, aYallablC' now. 673-6210, Mlkll'. (Zl3) 3T1-4640 collect. SUMMER rental, MISJtion Viejo, 4 f~R. romp. furn. 14 price to right parly. No smokcn1. no l>C'l•. 830-1921. LIDO I1tlc, 4 BR. 3BA, home July $l~. A1~. $1400, days 962-1356, l'WS 675-8166 SML 2 Br h~. 2 blks heh, Lagu11A. S.100/mo. June thru Sept. Connie, 4.1$-1391 NR ocean, A r.hanne.1, 31llt, l!IA. siio-im wkl.Y. Daya G'1S-A366. all $. 548-.1236 675-~1. I 1' nes Painting la rlrm now tntdV\ewtnc BANK Bartendt>r, <hlta 'i\>IC'M EXECUTIVE office fur ren! P1perhlnglnt couples for Mana.pment \V\11 Train ••.• · •• · $20 shill Trt1lnlna: Pro1ram. f.::X· PROOF OPERATOR Exper. Auto Sander $1Z wk In offices of Laguna CPA, t• Vernon Nlckels No Wa.tllf\Jt Ct"!lent opportunity for ad· t.ffdman-Plosllcs •• tJ.00 b1· ~~: ~nth. 494-9751 ; I mes 3273 Mlnneaota * WALLPAPER * vancemenl. No chlldrrn or UNITED CALIFORNIA -~ ... C M When YoU call "Mac" pe:U. 40 + year1. No f'X· BANK Counter Girls. Cinrs $L'f1\r OFF1CE SJ>h~ for rent. ott• esa 548-l-144 eves. perlence necel&!try, Call ror Nul"Aell Aides • , , • to $14') hr Newport Beach, \VestclUf dOl lars "i'ou l\'1' the winner or interview 11ppolntn1e111. Slx Monarch Bay Plaza f.'adory Trn" .. St $1.ll nr area, 1,000 sq. ft., M!lU'p, one free pll!l!I PAINTING le replllr, 35 yrs 8:5-2368. So. Laguna Typlsl•, 4&-:.o w.p.m. J.'50 Jn\) call Gene Hlll, 642--0200. Coo<! lo>r 11. whole cl\rload v.'Orkrnanshlp giJM'. Tft.ke A!Paysble Cl('rk. RApldly Girl f'riday , .• ,, , , . $2.25 fir GROUND Ooor w/storaze to any 01 thr ac:Jvantaae of my exp. l"JCp.ndlfl&' dcveiopment ro. 496-1237 Flf-cept-Pe~ ... •• • SllO Wk adJ. Balli wl•howtt, """'Id, PRfME commcrcl•I _,_ HAVE 24 ae. chnlc• l•oo on PACIFIC THEATRES sa&-?006. In N.B. """"' .. ..,.. I"· "'" '"1"" Clm Ahag crpt, ref'cJslnk. 1652 1 · • 3 ~ Van B"-n In Ro·v~d-cir. PROF, painter, honest work, divldufll thllt enjoys 11 vnric· F,qulll ()ppor. Empk>yt'r Nn 'l)tping ........ $2.25 hr N .... port Blvd CM ec'o -(!air comer, ;J .• acre11. r. L"I; "'" l!'l""lll "' I I t ·-· I k xj ' Oi 1 r beSk Bk"'" SI $2 75 ht --;-:.ioi'i'=''"'"""-·=':,.;-"c:cw & clear. Equlty, .$350,000. (U41)000l t 1 (Subj 1 1 U . M'R!I. nt f'X, u .... • ei;I. 1y o \l.·or. nt op-ic ... . OFFICE SPACE Trade for Beach area com• ' 'wa er, e cc., ga.'I. N' 0 llma lli·rvice Refs. 548-7159, 1l01'111nlly lo work w/an ex· Bank Note Tellf'r to $600 Bookkeeper ...•.••• t5SO mo Newport Bc~ch. Vuiout stte mercl•I or rt Tlf«t..4579. :~~~.~~~P Plea.~8~ij ~2~};ij~tr;!i . 314 Patios =~=Jl~tllff~u~~~ ~£ FINANC~!LP~IZARD? APEX suite!!, prim~""" atta.. Call~ ac. No. San Dltg0 Cnty OWNER desires exchang<" 10 ch\\m your ticket. !North WOOD l'allo Cove-, Crl•• mo to 1!8r1 Start )'OUr cnr~r here I msnqcr 615-.u.., l5 ml •• Rancho Call!. (val. "A ·-'t ...... ,...,...,. tn "'·11 for County toU-lrt'«l number is '" Beard Dl'vclopmenl Co ... .,, n-" height• ,·n ••I• ~ ""' ~·~· = ""·ml). C'°'' Lalllce, Caro' n , -•• "' EMPLOYMENT AGnl f'URNISHEO &: unfum. of· $\B> Pl!'r' ac) Wiii tradf" all l or 4 bl'. hou9l! In JluntlDK· --~------Structurelll. For App 1 , ~7434. won<ltrlW bank! ShArP & U1 fice aWl!!!J Easy acc@Slll, l'.>r part for O.C. property or ton Bch, ~a MC$t area. Baby1lttlng fl49..2ro4 The Good Guys. ATTRACTIVE lady, $3.00 fritndty tnctlv. ioogt1t. Call $$. & ~. mo. 2:U3 E. r. 548-5625 or 548·9710. C8.ll 2'13-869-8346. ' prr hr plus romm., full or Marlon Jl.fl\nn, 8..\3-1700. Alm 1~10-C rJe,vport Blvd. CoMt Hwy, CdM. 5'1&-3165. COMMERctAL lot 159x625 HAVE penional notf.'I & 8ABYS11'TJNG Anytime • ')'-.. 1er; Pitch, R'lp&lr pvt 1lmc. Perm. Work 11 .B. Fet Jobs. Dennis&: Oe..'\n\s Co~ta Ml"S:1 600 sq.rt. omCE w/llv'g from al IQ st. Close to 8tock a.pprox \ridue $23.000. L.l<.'tn~. hot mcala. al· --l\rtft. Phone 4 lo 6 PM for Personn~ ~ of Irvine, ~~~~ ... ~""~ qtra $1.55. Also «lO ~ft. Ontario Al.rprt & Frwy. :J to 10~ 1nt. 1 to 2'* peyt tenUon. Ph. 9ti8-0887 lt.B. "* PATCH PLASI'ERING * ttl)pt. 6.'lJ-ml. Chrt~lan ml MtchelMn Dr. ''Male Roi.Im t~or STORE. $15$. C.M. 64&-3tJ tlf'l\r. 1rade for ltu:om0 !or income pt"OP('rty, McCl\J Plt01'~F.$$10NAL t~hf'r All ~ll ~matew Stud~, 1326 M I\ S:: n O 11 a• Don't glve up tbe ship! .•• cle:tn out the ~a "Pad"? Place an ad! prop, o.c. 8JO.&t9S aft 8. :0, 1Utr. 84().(1985 Mr. Quinn. will CM'P: for chlklttn. Nik'• Anfl lm. "Llsr• It In clas1111nf'd Ship .•. tum t 1 t:!t Junk In ~ 90-ft. dm. wkend!. 961051. &U \die ltemt ........ ~ Clault~ Ad' ...... MJ-elml. to SlloT'f Rm.alb! ~ rib. Dl1 Piiot ,, • , ' -- "' .. . ,,.· . . ,,,, ., .. ,,;. ·.""I ,. -· 1:' .,. :J I• ·'" ,"):., .. ... ~, .. r,.,1 ,,;j: I ·'1!' .. J: .... J.", '• ~-, '.• /l'lt !' ,. ~. <'. " . .. ~ ·' 1.· . ,r· . -?r~· l'\'\ ~" (, ,. :-1 • ·~ ~·· • -•• J '. ~ • • 1 • • . I ft! . • .. " I .. . • • I , t• ' "'* ... -• ., .. . . .~ . ' • • ~ • ~ ~· • ... •• •• ' ~ ., ~ .. •'\. .. ' •r l ( r ' ,, 1 . ' J,f '"' • .. • . -p ... ' I~· ... ' • , .. ,. . . Ill ·,_ ·The DAILY · PILOT ••• Still only $2.6S a month delivered to your door seven days a week ' (Or Use Toll Free Number To Call The DAILY PILOT Office In Your Oran9e Coast Area Community> I I. • , I • 'I ' ~ I I " : ' \ I 'I I : I I ' . . " .. I ' PJLOT ~AoYElmSU: w.....,,...,.21.~m DA!l.Y Pn.or ' I ;'; -!I!!!!!~ DJ] I E •• J •• ![HJ f J I .,,, 7 llHJ I Help W1nt.d, Mr. f' 710 HolD WoMM. M & I' 711 = w!..t..., M & p TIO He1ii ........ M & I' 71 .JP Won!M, M & P t10 l[DJ1.;' ---·-' 11:1-~jlHJ~[-to-::ots_;-~lllIJ;.J1 .;;' iiiiiii""'•''"'""~~ Help W-, M & I' 711 Help Wo-. M & I' 1111ffle W1MM. M & P 110 Help Wom.I, M & I' 1 ' mJ I 0 ,, • • a e's ~INGbrL ~, 0:: FRY COOK, EXPElt. JUNIOR SALl'SMAH: Outbrd Milor _,_le "-mw. owned ad m. Depanment Slorti hll ~. Mlait a. dH.n • F.ani P>-.st> per ...-MANAGEMENT Summer or Slt'l"tDIDt'Ot. Mow 119 <Jo llally Piiot. P.O. 'J. W. Robl"--" l!la't -....i.. -ISlttt -and TRAINEE eo beaucu.t L• •• A~ BollC lSeO. c.o.ta Kita, Ca. N port Bffdt I: pay. APllbi, SWi A Sir· oa 9aturdl,ys pttina new rowheed. ~I ( 714 ) .nas. ew kMn. 51130 w; Co.at Hwy., NB .._ ..... n,.11., n. •• .....__ ~ ... __ la •t •~.-, · I ·' ~ • II ,.Q~ For FRY d)Qi( .. evenlQp. "l"W1 ~ ... ~ --..,,_ ·-\111.l"-" .. • -··-.... ;rhl~ h • pwm.wGt c•,...,.14;0 rtun.ty to ~-~ 5...n,;1 dotlt ~' ............. ~ n;. l;."'*. uaie,1 .... ;,:": p < • 2"d Cool<. _ .... •'I w•~uthod hoiisit ........... i.o... , -... ,-,;, ui'i.Jii· ,' • '~'., ~ . ....._. ~ l..aDei, 19ll2 '°""' and ~ . .,. -tbe c an ... .· ..... .._ ~1 lnou lw'll:o ....._ .. '2th lo-st .nt1ll °" p;od M Ex_.__. -~-dtllYls!<I. ,. ·A -Horl>or. U , -· ... '1IO 0 • .'.-1-· ·~ In& >O~ 'sOi. l , ••· ,--,,,"\ -:i.e. ~" We,_e..,...... l"l!l,q....uty, "'•oll<r,.,., l<e!Ji!ll' c.clttr Dr, N.IL gli\~ti'I'>._ ~II appllc•ntt m"'t bo -.u, mine • ·med>''<•. Timft •. , Calh•ll~""""in" -·°'""'-""4Soo lbloUIUQuewonr..,...._, -~-·m•~.·N.V.olil9h1dsoaloducallonlftd bo&n! ": ); M ' .. '.I\.~~-~ Gal Fri<la> to -II-S.ld: '"""· ..... 'A a chall~ 1',ARKJNG i:l~;c.tl a ~ wOnc .l'KOrll. >Januiact ~.1.,;., -1' Tlilljloo 1'1-;'lia ~ ODD$;'" ENDS " A~:~-~· .~ oppc:<tunib'. i' m:;,~.' .: FOR THOSE QUALIFlllll u~ .. Equal ' Oli!iA' '8>~:; ~~1?o~r~ , i £1= , We..,,,-.,. u tn, I ijioi I WE OFFBlt·THE FOLLOWING: CLERlf:T'iPIST ~ <I ~ur; ~~Kim Out. J. W. :-.dlrilual wlmin u .rn PAR'!"TlME I . 5DayWork W~t-NoCanvassing. Past u... ~J;.l 1o s,,,l'Mz = ~"'"!' .. ' ~1':. ~ = N._.t 8-=.,. ""!'~~~ N~w£i .. okUNTS 2. '10;000 to $12,000 Opfi°rtunity ..... Tli. l1SO llr. Buu,.., • ~· ;<~ f.'!", ~ ~lolf*'"'° Dr. ·' • 'Hu 0pen1ao lllr Salary will be In """""' . • " 3. Vehicle Fumt.lled, Al E~eo Paidz ~· ~·•It. Mun"'" 1 • ' • •· NEiiAL . """" w/..,,.r. " qualllfl . · 4. llp To 3 Weeks Paid Vacation 1st Year. * Socrot1ry,Rocopt. r wpm. F~ Cbct. ~ GE fro 5 Help, ~u~ SALESWOMAN cations. For cmsktera-50_!'·P.M. typuJK, sh pre-fer· 5. Top Fringe Benefits-No Investment SH. not ttq'd. Gen'I. re Me•a Ele'ctronlci DIAL A JOB' eves m !Pm on. ve tlon pleue RM resume n:u. 6. NoLayoU.CL____f\nportunity For Advancement estate expe-r. dt'sirable in Distributor Could lead to &: Kitchen. Over 21. Appty Experienced -F/tlme & salary hlatory to· -UNITED-•--vy active, p11l([ressive orfk.-e. 'JuU time Ii desired. 919-0U3 • in peraon, Men F.ds, 410 E. For Better 5PortawetU" . IF INTERESTED WRITE TO: For lntervlew- MomJna• pleue, Mr. Tuttle Liz Rolndor1 Agency 17th sc. Co.ta Me,. Claultled ~no. m CALIFORNIA JIANK BILL DONNELLY eau _.... a.ERIC Typist for ac-4500 Campus Dr, N.B. GENERAL Office work in ApPly in pel'IOD lO.S pm c/o DIUY Pilot 201 Avenlda Del Mtl" POST OFFICE 80X 3$3.S ORANGE COAST 00\Ultmg depc Qf """' 557-3401 re•t horn•. P/time. """' ~~~Pio~ P. O.ollo< ""° San O•rnente , ANAHEI~. CALIF. '2J03 REAL fi"jATE stract1on firm, located nr like older people. 646-61Ui. , ~ Mt!M, Ca. 9'JS21 492-5123 OR CALL 71•; 774-0330 Corona I 1.tar o.c.-.Mtn>ynexp. _ _,___ GIRL FRIDAY ti.iuat-OpporozEn>plo)oor -PLEASE INCLUDE: SECRETARY1 .. n·1 o!c !w plte call· Mr. PI t m • n Dictaphone Typist to SS50 Leading contractor net!dJ sett' KEYPUNCH Equal Oppor. Employtt' reeording studio. Good ore 833--8722 for appt, SWINGING OFFICEI motivated individual to run M . .&&INE' E!fGINE . . Ace-Education-Marital Status-Phone No. .Wlls, sh helpful. ShlpPlrc, a..ERK Typist. accurate Fee Paid 1 Kirt ofc. Atust have some OPrn .. TORS MIXllANIO PART 1lJne SaJes Gtrl· Deed· . 5 Year Work. History I n voicing i.ntemationally, t Y P 1 n g • good phone Famous co. seeks attractive aooounting exper. I: ah. l.M Must be Uper, A cuJTeJJh.cn ~ not nee. Call Flit; Telex use, good pOOne man- personality, under 2), 5 d11;y. I indiv. for front ofc spot. Cali Sotne construction exper. a, . -' pleasure 'boat Pl & dluel 6 Help Wanted M It fl 7101Hllp Wented Mi F 710 ner. Mr. Wallick, 979-2i00. $90, call 549-00.0 for in-Liz Blake, 83J..2700. Aleo pius. Se.la,ty to $650. CAll We are aeeltjpg exp er. engineS.: transrn!Miona, Olll· Pilrt Time OUlce Girt, Don ' ' * SECRETARY * terview 1''ee Jobs. Denni1 ~-Dennis Gloria Gra.f, 540-6055, Cout-keypUnch , o~~~ for drives. ett. HJ.rbeat wages 1he ~r. 39QJ.. ,:,.. • needed tor Newport Beacti e COU.ECTOR: Small unit Pe~el AgencY'~lrvine, 111 Pel'Pltid Agency, 2100 daytime&·""'°q:tgsllllt..fipin--fn. lndatry. Bn'lnd new ~Hwy, CdM. ~., .· J\e<!eptlonht to$550 Brokerage Firm . desk, credit or collection ex -a»r.2 .r.11ehelson Dr. Harbor Blvd,. CM. 12: 30 am on the Univac 1acllities at Sunset Aqtiatlc • Public Reh111oM ON CLOUD 91 Res p 0 n 1 I b I lilies lnc per. pref'd., but will 1rain DISHWASHER -Full time. GIRL FRIDAY l70l-lnO. We are wllllnk to Parle. call lit for appt. n4: POSITIONS OPEN p R F'ee Paid tr an a ferring securttin, right penion. Contact Mr. 18 years or oldt!!r. THE Mature, sharp. Srnall ofc. ~ 0~00nt~ ~ 846-4125 oc 213: 1592-IMS FOR NEW BRANCHES • • That's wheN.' you'll ht-when phone work &: filing, etc. Gibbs at 642-1443. COTTAGE COFFEE SHOP, Payroll, heavy phone, Some v er. t. e ey anytlmr. you land this heavt'nly spot ?i1Wlt be &hall> & wtlling to COMMERCIAL 562 W. 19th St. CM bookkeeping. fl42..626'1'. = ~~ ~ ~U: MATURE penon wanted to e Telltrs EXEC. LEVEL 1vi firm in nE'lv location in learn Insides of exciting TELLER DISPATCHER. Under direct HEALTH food store want! T-'--... Newport •-,ch. care for elderly .lady, C.M. e New Accounts We seek outstanding ~!es Orange Co. Attractive lndiv. business. Type 60 wmp. sales UUAi... -"""' 3-2, Mon thru trt $2 per hr. • Loan Proc. •··'y oriented lady for our Irvine ; sought! Ca/I 'NotTna Sands, &nd resume lo P.O. Bin We presently have a position supervision of transporta-full time penotl. Pl~ call Mn. Rose Reta. 5'7..2394 ~r 6pm. ~ office. Ideal for results , 833_2700 Also 'Fee Jobs 207tl, Newport Beach, 926ED. open for an exper. commcr-tion supervisor performs all Exp'd prefet'Ted, MS-9537 011enled, career minded, Dennis ·& Dennis Penonnei Attn: Penonnel cial teller. clerical work required foc * HELPER, metal l'lhop, for (;r4}a~~ent MECHANIC Savinp l l.o&n Exper. creative woman who like• to Agency of Irvine. 2082 SECURITY guards full or Please Contact t/\e operation of the !!Choo! 2520 S. Bl'tlftdway, Santa -Experienced in lawn mo"'·ers Prefd. Apply ln Pcraon. 'run her own show'. Thi!! is ltliehel.son Dr. p/time In Costa Mesa &re•-~fr. Newland, 836-3505 bus service & other related Ana GREAT WESTERN &: turf maintenance equip-Merlner'I S•vlng1 A a responsible . & dib'11lfi<'CI Phone <n4i Ml>-8.5n ext 13 BANK OF AMERICA duties as required. $579:-$70:2 Ho ME CONSULTANT/ -rnent. MllSt be able to oon1-Lo.en Alaocl.1tion position olfer1ng personal RECEPTIONisr, Mature or Room 223 3151 Harbor Equal Oppor. Employer !:~um':";:!hg a ~:le ~~ek CUSTOMER SERVICE For SAVINGS " pletely run maintenance 1515 WestcllH Dr., N.B. growth wf.&;_ Calif's fastnt lady. Take reservations, CM ' ' ~-1 • 4 Ca~ Villas in San shop. Salary open. Benet.its. 642-4000 growing -~porary lie.Ip Some typlng, no lh. Operate ='=' --~~---COMPANION -Prefer ~~!;let ~y:~s.J.c.b 00 I JQ.Q:Jl" C&pistrano. Exper 1418 N. Main St., Santa Ana Santa Ana. are•.. n~ Service. Xlrit starting salary Xerox cOpler. Simple book-SEMI retired man w/ widow betwffn ages Ave ibt•Irvfue. ~ preferred 'but DO~ neceuary. An Equal OpPt;y Employer ~7975 PJ\ES'fl4£ ·Newpon Beach + exp."· acct + comro +. keeping under 1upervision business exper. to dev$P SQ..60. Care for bed pa-·• · .. , Calf 639-1000 for ap-KEYPUN.CH OPRS MECHANIC .Exp-'d, o-wn publish4f of Chril'ltian audio auto &lloW. A loadW of ot CPA. 5 Days, l(.anHipm, maftagement service. tient-Jive in. Room & OOMESTI<; tletp-George polnbnent: . .., tools, 5 da.Y.s-Busy shop, productj. has key opeNng '1enefl~. Call Dot t I e, Wed -thnl_ 'SUn. ~ mo. =-=,,-=·,....,"""=-:"°'= Allen ·Byland Agency, 105-B , I Full or p/time. Prefer l yr paid imP,irance, 1 7 4 7 tor good typist with lig"bt S40-4450 for COOildeotial Send ~ 01.aal!k!d ad SERVICE Station tull Ume board, salary o p • n, E. 1£ith st., S.A. 547.;Qiss. Hosplta ity Hodell I recent exper on 029, ~ or Anaheim. aw.; 04_ bkkpg. Work ~-ith president appt. , no. 873 c/o Dally Pllot, aalkrnan &: mechanic M~t References required,. D~ Par1; nrne, Mg.le , . Service keY: to disk. WUI constder ~IC AA!istant for &:'execj>ta!f. Xlnt oppty ror TE~IPO 'Jl;ltfPOR.\RY P.O. Box 15&1, Costa Meaa , have 1erv. sta exper. A: tie 968-1931 1 or (eaiale over n. Clean Is loQking. for women to we!-~ who have SUCCCM-golf cowse Call for ln penional" &. spiritual groM)i HEU> Calif. 92626. q\l8J1tied in' all lubric&tion &: 00 ·cut, ecOnOmy car. 'MliSt £Mle '4 interview -ne..: ttSl-M!y completed a KP coune tervtew .M6n.. thrtl Frt, <;all .J M>l220 RECEPTJONISr tor animal minor mech. duties. Xln't C KS koow . Orange c 0 u n t y dents. Sales or advertl.slhg & can pass KP test. Good &W--0500 , · RAPltlLY growing ·boat co. hosp, N.B. })'! & Sat only. l'8r!11n&' p>tentlal. 2 Ope NI or pl,time. No Ion~ hair. 8.15-3140. exper. he1?fu!. Must have !~n'u~al. oonWd.$;~ S!til~-~: MEN ,· w0MEN , la..27 seelr.IJ exper. · NP Clerk. Send resume, Claaslfied ad avail. Apply tn penon Ca.rl I Jr, Rest. ELD~Y ·lady qeeds clean-e~ & f)'.pewnter. 547-3095. "'" eescma UR.'1:'11 Irvine 'Indus. Park" location. no. 639 c/o Dally Pilot, 10am-3pm, -Cercy Parham., Apply lll person between 3 tng ~n1 hel~ 2 HOUSEfCEEPER, babysit-live. Eam to-$342.31'.l a8lacy Per We ti · Phone 493-:45816, . P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mtu., Mesa Verde Shell Service, & 5 weekdays, Carl's, 3101 moms a week; ~ bel fer, lfve in, exp'd Ir refs lntegr•tecl 0.te Corp mo. while we teach >11\j a. 8 a.in REAL ESTATE SALES Calif. 92626. ll31 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Newport Blvd, Newport Bch. 6 prn " m!e. "Noiamok:ing, 3 children, ~7425 or ~ job aldJl in ElectroniCB, Mjt-3 SUCCESS CAREER RN f/tlme. E m e r II en c y SERVICE Station Sa&Hmen a:x>K for srnkll nursing jlr1 rm & b& &: TV, S day Kltcbc help 8·3&-1·30 THE chardcS or AdnPl!lalratbt. ha·"" New or experienced. Join the I Dept. ll-7 ,\ J:ll:30 1h.lft1. lull time evea. Ute mech. home tn Laguna, day 11hift, wk, loVely water fro n l PENG 'r.aiuna. After tnlning earn $46-«l •• World'1· targest and fattest I Xln't em~yee benefits. knowledge. Alao, p/thne ELECTRONIC N_..; Bch home, aalary UIN, Bch. n.r mo. lDr 2 ..i....-work. Mal . 1 ..... -..n1 ... -.. 1-Uo Co ~ t knd N t I 40 hrstwk. CaII for appt. ~"t"'"'' 494-1353 ..-_.. 1-.. strt 1-~ & grow .. ,. ... ......,e .... _..,,.... n ntact rgency ......,.p, eves & w 1. ea n~ ·~ -open, ~ Call TSgt Yoong, Calif: Air ~ • PP"'6 I ·~ ne•·-~ t r 300 B Roache b•• "'-M•aa A I ,~.,. Lodlos s. ~ Attondont Na~·• Guard -.... m4" oo negatives "~' • ·~ • 0"" · • ~·. ~·• pearance. ·PP Y "'°""• HOUSEKEEPER 'd 11e r-'"""-' "''"'.L.l'li), . · . • 1 ottices and beoome a ?i1emorial Hospital, 301 Vic-Ne~ Blvd. CM COOK, EXPER ASSEMBLERS Habla -panol, ' exp ' Prior exper. in spa pro-MEN needed in;ll.B .. F.V. ' · member of our Mllllonalre toria, C.r.1. &U-2734. EQual SE ·VICE tto' , tl ·•"t .. ~ ·-·-·-..,. """" ~ ay '"-· Frld:x o. • u IJ""' ....,,., ar portUn ty p1nv~.. !or -"·-sl"" al ~-u s~. T A pl · ""°"· l-..able in use of aulo ro·•e' ,, A~ 2\1 •-• -• ad l in ""'--_;;£ ....... .... ...,.,, .... op pay. P Y in person Housek .. -r, f/tlme wturtpool'"U5 &. &all.n&. Contact ,..,., ---~i-.~1.,~·~-, ... -.. PA · _Fie· MUTU L ve~s,_~ 1E~· ~ ... ·~, lsAl.ESLADY, 21-or oVer1for !Ion I: Mertz Rent-A--c&r ~ only_ The Derby, 1262 S.E. r-r-• ....,. ....... '"-.wi;, 700 Center Dr. guaran ~ ce ..... ,.'6 llC · dress shop no nilet. Send So Laguna. F/tlme, Bristol, S.A. Collins Ra.tho is now accept-549-306! Personnel Manager, NOW go~g ~A ~anned ewPQl1 Beach Excellent sales training. rc1ur:t)e P.O. 1~: NeWport job w/frlnge bendita. !2342 ROUTE SALESMAN BROILER MAN "".,,.,, "'""' cedure. Must be over 21, areator.......,;~new•po-Af49 IUXl.·l.2.wbn et·b M !'"mil"--doll Op 1 Em R ata n a et...-1 COOKS -neat & dependable, Ing applications for: IF YOU e e e Balboa Bay Club exp'anslon. f'l:eeC'! f?,x per. ~1-call Vl.rgl?la Jones S.ch, c,.iu. ~. Coast Hwy. over 21. experienced. Apply Are Y-0Uhg-Flexihle-Neat 12'11 W. Coast H1vy., N.B. !iniah ~ ~-Dla k er a . ~Qwc;ir£.t,::1!1~0)'.!!._ RED CARPET S~M&n.· m/f1 6E~l<~VJ~CE~gs~1a~if!~~3 in person. 3050 E. Coasl Assemblers Have prldt!! at worknwishlp LVN, I/time 7-~. Charge 5"0-2lll(i -CAM ' up mciatfily guam. u '& Lube Man. Elcp in( Hwy CdM Work without S1.1pervisi0b Nurse See M T ber .. ,... 1 .. ...,,,. R .. ltors "'tt , --""·'I • Have transportation ** * . · rs. a • NURSES nJl.!e, -.:. ., ..... eX· <jUll. No exp nee. Mr. un:, Top pay • .,. w "" put COOK-HSKPR, able to take Both Day & Nite Shifts We oner steady part-time H.B. ·Con~scent Hosp, per. pref'd. HWJtington uci··· n REAL ESTATE <~> 770-e5U Apply at SHEIL. 17th charge, Hseman will assist. Cleaning prestige homc6 1881 Florid&. H.B. Beach Conv. lbpllal, 18811 -SIJ.-,IS MAAAGER SALSSMAN ruU It .Plthne. Irvine, Na . ~ ~12t!I, nu home. Refs. Starting Rate 596 W 19th. CM Bet 11-1 pm 847"'3515 Florida, H.B. 811-3515. ResafC Office needs mA.naaer $2.50 hr + comm. 18 or SERVICE Sta. Attendant,. .,......._... $2.71 Per Hour L~-Charge &: Med.-l-llpm NURSE-LVN or RN, uper. wlyt 2 years of Real E!lta~ over. Call 1 0 • m -l pm f/Ume, days. Salary INDUSTRIAL (/time. Im~. H.B. area. in pediatrlcs & EKG -Test . e.'1'.perlence. Newport Beach ~1 A~pl)' in ptnoo,. I llpply In Pl'rson ENGINEER 842--5.;S;L F/time. Call 640-1650, Nan-11 a~. Expanding Company. W1lllam11 Texaco, 119 COUNTER Girl, hrs 11-7 Mr. .Best Cleaner's. 2939 E. Coast H\\'Y, CdM e Cross country Drivers e Foremen a Managers e A11emblers e Molders • Inspectors e G•I Repairmen All 3 Shitls \\7e Will Train MacGregor Yacht Corp. 1631 Placentia, C.M. COLLINS RADIO O h cy I Exoellont opportunlty lo' Superlor Ave, C.M. PACIFIC TUBE C · 85 an MACHINISTS NURSE Ps h" tri per ' professional growth, Apply SALES GIRLS SERVICE Stalkln Attendail 4311 Jamboree Blvd. imm~ opcni~ for anM In~ Must do O\\'n lalhe le mW p/time -~:.el c dept T chru·c,·a· n in confidence, Send raume full or p/time. Over 13. N •-h C ,.,.,,,~ duslrial Engutcer& · 1 "'2 setups & have own tools. u0~ Hosp NB to ,Oanlti. , 'ed ad·oo, 1138, c/o Full ti-•--, nl•-• D1yBrown'1 Shell, 990 ewport ueac , a. .,_ have a degree a n1 n. NITE FOREMAN • ._ ' ' · ..... ,,.,uR!! ""''" ai: COa. )Tl! exp as an Industrial Second"~ operation Nuraes , Daily Pikit, P. O, lb: 1560, Wee~.."' ~ NI• t Hwy. Nl;I 6tM131. Equal Oppor. Employer Engineer with a background Setup expe;~'d for notch-RN-LVN:AIDE Costa Mesa, caut. 9llG6. tioet °"°"' · · 'iTATEMENnct.ERil ~'"": ...... "'!"~ ... ~~I in work simplification or Ing, tapping, drilling, de-11-7 .l other shlfta. Top pvt •To;.$$$ REAL ESTA-Tl! SALES *•l . '\Ve are PtUentJ.Y}taktnc a Employment Counselor better methods syslems, burring, broaching & other duty pay. fmm~. P'Y . k>r • Ait lea5t 2 yrs t!!lec. exp FREE LICE .. SE .,., ,APPL'/ ~atlon& for ow:: state Well estab. hut rapidly ~·-plant layout, job eveJualion machine operations. floor duty. Co u n l y w 1 d t!! • ~d Irvine Co. I TRAINING HELEN ·o~•CE ,Window. Mutt hive ing aaency needs exper. In-& new eqWp •. justificaUon. DAVENPORT Intrvws. Mon-Fri 9-5. F&n'IOWI Real Dta.te lJcena-C ~ typing skRls. pleulna: div idu11I \\TIO can handle If you !eel you meet these Set-Up Men Lescoulie Nunes Registry, Call Immt!!diately ing Ccnlne now available ANDIE~ IOl\allty, able to worlt wi th .~ales & administrative' desk. qualifications, fotwanl a BROWN & SHARPE 351 Ifospital Rd., NB (Lob-• p p' s thru Tarbell Realtors. Free ( lJ)O; HARBOit, BLVD. public. lliJ::h earnings. Call Jean re11ume & salary require-Set U M by Parle Lido BI d g I Placem,.nt St!!rvlCe: .Free COSTA MESA., CA M NPI~.-~ .. ~" _...,, Bro1vn. 540-6055, Coutal menta to: I. W. Pa)'Tle, Per-Good w~. ~ea: employ-642-9950, 540-9954. • • • Training Program. ~ r. I!\\ 1111u., owor....,_ .it. Personnel Agency, Z790 liar-sonnel Manaia:er, PACTFIC inent. lst & 2nd ahlft open-NURSES AIDES. exp er. Pacific Per1onntl while yC1u learn. Call Al Sales Coordinator S9672 BANK OF AMERIC" bor Blvd., CM. TUBE CO., 5TIO Smith Way In.gs. pref. Xlnt "'oridng con-Strvice1, Inc Sloan tn4t 832-5'40. BLUECHIP CORP Equal Oppor. Employer CROSSING GUARD EXEC. SECRETARY St .. City or Commerce, Callf. dltions. Shifts. 7-3:l> & College educatt!!d indtv. w/ STOCK CLERK CITY OF IRVINE 90014 Excellent fringe benefits !n-3-11:30. Beverly Manor 500 Nev.rport Center Dr. REAL ESTATE SALES d 1 1o -'b Ex 1ro1 k $2.29 Ptr Hour TO STORE MANAGER equal. opportunity employer eluding company paid group Conv. Hosp., Laguna HUii. SUile 900 Newport Sch Res.ales in Ne~·port Beach 1 n:J!:J here! r;"'buiou.C: & ~~o• ~-A~': in per . 1 ,__ · ti ExciUlll? chalJenlfinli!' DO\l!ilion insurance. NURSES .,.w, -' 640-1970 area. ''"' & leniflc adv•-enl 1821 McG--A·-~~ i;i;;;:\c'!C:::'nr: J . w. ROBINSONS Industrial REXNORD INC '" !/time"' 7 1i.;;:: • HARBOR VIEW ~Calle;;.:;'~. ~... •• "' the JX>!'E'.l-bf 'erou~ni . Apply in person lB-S. N Specialty Feltener Div. H.B. area. • Prodf Control d. Mgr $:DK HOMES SJ3..2700. Dt!!nnls • De 1 TELLER guard. e· buic tunctiot1, No. 2 Fa-'lluon Jsl., N.8. _Urse 3130 W. H•rv•rd 2 OFFICE GIRLS Salea"Engineer degree $18KI 1829 Port She~ld Piaet" Peraoqpel Agency of Irvine, Beautiful modem bank of thi11 "lion is to fielp Equal Oppor. Employer . . . S.nte Ana NEEDED Dental Fmt Ofc to $600 Newport Beach 833-0780 2082 Michel.on Dr. IrVlne. Some exper. nt!!t!d elementary schoOI children Req s 3 yrs min. ~~per. 111 71' ~~5100 213 ~~ 2184 t ••=I 1l'k da"" on1" SALES rep. for small job 1 ~"-c~s safely at heavily I EXP'D Truck driver to manur. ro. Fam1~1er \I'/ .. ,.._. t -.x><J-Radio telephone dl1pt1tch Med. !mt o c .,..""' -J 0 <¥ for this h git paying _ ...... n t r ave I e d intf'r.rec:lions. n1ake Nursery deliveries. OSHA rerord keeping. equal oppor. employer m /f Must be 25. able to drive Jnven. Clerk $450 RECEPTIONIST ~~~k ~s~ ::W n?'{!c::~n:: SaJary to $500. Cati Und Guards ar~ needed rrom Minor truck maint. Call Blll ROYAL INDUSTRIES YEALPLPl:tJ; ~A'lnCO. =p1~~ist = AAA firm in Irvine complex. 557-1586 ~l~~Y. ~1~ Per 7:4.5 AM until approximately 9-5, -~on-Wed. 642-8686. IMACHfNIST l.l " b 4:00 PM. All necessary fXP·o wdmett-foi' late iv,p-20«l ,E. Oyd" Rd. • . 186 E. 'lGth, Co11la MPsa ~row Ofer $700 l:fandle usy phones & be SALES&: Installation. Full or ;;B;:;lv-;d;;"=Cll'-1"'. c;"'='::"-;;;;:::;:11 equipment furnished hy . the Ing (aft .10 ·pm) janll»rlhl 1:".,,,a; O~~~! ..... ,.r m/f OPENINGS foe Tr u eii: Clerk Typist $450 =~~ t!>e p~id~~1;.y~~ =. unr~ ry°':Fva=='. TELEPHONE Sales. W City of Irvine. Applicaoons work&. supervisian. 919-3652 ""f._. _.. • '""'Tr-DAYS Driver, Maller 4 .Receiving ~ to $600 Call lnte:rvtewi TUeL thru Frl from your own home may be pickl'CI up at the Clerk Start S2 per bour. Stat Typist $S6S $500. Linda Ray, H.lahest rommlsslmu. Ex Irvine Police [)('partment. EXPERIENCED Turrtt Lathe Dependable thtnkinc 1,n. Acctng Cleric $500 54().6(155, Coutal Pel'30Mel betw. 6 & I p.m. Home pe:rience n 0 t neceua.ry 1900'l Zee SI., Irvine, o' " INSPECTOR Sel2 Up Oporotor dlvldu•l• • .\pp1y in penoon. Gen. Acctng Clrl< lo $IJ50 Agency, 1190 HarOO. Blvd.,• W.ty View, 9092 Talbert, ""'5184 tu r 1 her in.tonnation Is LEGAL SECRETARY . J\.ton-Fri 7AM-3:30P~f 94-0 Legal Secretary $650 CM. . SuJte 9, Fountain Valley. *""-"yy="'p"l"S"TS~--needed contact Mrs. Joan active office requires legal 3 Yni recent expet. ln-proc-Mm. 3-5 )'Tl exper. 00 War-w. 17th St., c.r.1 Gal Fri Med Bckgmd $550 RECEPT~S EC'Y SALES, outce product. & G , ~·bt· In! "-!leC1'i'tary ex.per. in litigation ess, machine --~. ht ncr Swasey fype machines. Sec'y/Com:tr $650 Good ty · ·"'II l 1 mal'ktng Full or p/l!me » ..... tster for ununa, qu. 1c ormauuu ""~ Xln't ro. benJi,. & wo""i .... OPENINGS fOf' machlnislll &. G. A-··"ng Supv •ann ping ,.,.__. s P ea.san · · ·~ Cl •. ~"5238 & commerc1al matters, Sal-articles. Production & final 0:1 ......... drill t .... .. ... .,....... ....,.. ""'nmnallty. M~t -"'"· Women or retired men . zro a temporary job c .... "'"" · De nd lned conditions. pren opera ors. iap-FIC Bi,.... Constr 1700 .,., "''J"T Brl Red l PM today DEUVERY man for early ary open. PP. ent upon ins PP ct i an of mach malic Coll>. 1851 Kettering ,.N.,,EWPORT meeting I.he publle. Del gg11 lcor h !I) !lltills, exper. & ability to pal'ls. Xln 't co. benefit!! & Apply In Pe-n St I-"--........ ,,,,_. Webb's Newporter Inn, only, tmervws: 9-12 morning L.A. Times home h di ib'llty Pl · d' · '""" ·• ,,...,,..-, "'';r'VUl3\I -~,--..~-..~;--W Need AU dellv. route. Must have an e respons l . eas-~'Otklng ron !Lions\. SHUR-LOK CORP. Optometrist AJirt. Trne. . I Personnel Agency 644-1700. ext 55.1. S•lff Girl Friday orf\ce Sklils economical car. Over 23 yn ant office, Newpol'I Center. Appty ~f~ 1300 E. NQnn&hdy Pi. THE EYES HAVE tTI 1 • 3· Dov•r ~r •• ,..B, The fast~t-draw in lhe WC'11t . J Salary p I u 11 commts11lon, Equal Oppor. Empioytt old. No soliciting or col· 644-0023. 8 AM-ll AM Sa:a,ta Ana. FabuJou8 oppor. for pe~ 642-3170 •.. a Daily PUot Claaai!led good phone penonallty I hWe & Female lecting. \Vestm. -H.B. area. , ..... lI bllc N. ol ~cf'adden & looking far fulure! ·Wonder• Ad. 642--5673. lyplf1i: required. Wt!! nt!!ed We1ttm Glrl Inc. 63&-2924. ~ 1~~':~.lt t~~ SHUR-LOI( COrtr. ~~ blk W. ot Grand) ful doctor will train tn aif ·ie Eleph11JJt " ovtt-'Whfte' Elephant." over-)'OU l'IOYI! Call 979-JJU 4667 1\.facArthur Blvd. pEUVERY Men. permanent trial bal. MU!lt type, answer 1300 E. N~anctJ.t Pl. Equal Oppor. Employer phases! cau 1tlm CJ,_rk, lng your house? Tam running your house? Turn :'c;'rv"";"":::'-')'~-~~-~-I Newport Ileach . part time for early momlng phones, one gtr1 office. Hn Santa Ana 833-7700, Dennis &: Dtnnlt m into "Cash" .. _ tell them into "Cash" ... sell SARAH Coventry Jewelry. S4o-OJZ newspaper delivery to 8-5 dally, Send resutnt!! of (1 Blk N. of McFadden MACHINIST -genera I Penonncl Agency or Irvine, them thru a Daily Pilot them ttiru a Dally Pilot No Invest, dellv or collect. Equal Oppor. Empk>)tu homes ln Ne"'J)Ort Beach. exp, educatioa and slatt!! 'ii: Blk W. of Grand) machlnlst or lathe hand. D2 Mlchebon Dr. classified ad! claMltied ad! 89+-7733, 645-5946. TYPIST!Receptionlst, fo Mtlst have dependable car A Mlary needetl. w r It e F.qual Oppor. EmJMoyer Good company benefttll. ----Newport Center CPA ottice be rellable. pb ~2-4800 Clusined ad No. 674, Dally ~--...-........_ Disc. Instrument.I, 102 E. SECRY. R.E. Prior financiaJ/statJs DENTAL Sec'y, 1 girl office. Pl.lot. P .O. Box 1560, Costa ~v--.--.---~Eqer,~Oppa Mty~!19°p1<=: Secretarial position In actlV1! typln&: exp desired. PoelUo F;xper. necess. Send rewme Me&a, Cal. 92626. Realtor's office. Beaut1ful open due ta growth A to ClassU:led ad no. 871, clo EXPER. dinner ho u 1 e ~ PERSC>NNE1. MACHINE Tool Scraper, new afflcto tn Newport motkln. Salary ope n Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Watter _ Waitress, carvma, ttU.~a..&rc.._V""'V MaehinlJt & Hy d r tl Q 11 c Ce.nter. Congenial stall of 644-6156 ColtaMesa,Ce.92626. flambe. Apply 1351"t ~~-~..._, ~ha.MC.001536--8624 mJlture peM10nnel. A trontl;;i ... iiOi;;;;;;iOi;;;;;;;;;o;••tl DENVER MINING CO, Newport Ave, Tu>tln. If• f'Ell\PAID MAJD for !AGQ'NA REEF ~cel=~nvol:.'~'J UNSKILLED Those experienced In food &: t'OCktail1 ooly need appl:y. Il9 W. 19th St-. C.M. Between 10 AM-4 PM TIME FOR .ourcK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 64t-5f78 EXPER.. Re11&ura.n.t l:idfi. Child Eltt..-Er:w -~K MOT~. 30Ekl6' S. Coaat IBM Exec. abllltieL Real mper. Appl,f 1n pen!!O, 01lof ¥ecb:" l:ngr $1S1( Hwy., IA(Una Be a c h: =~~~~=· =~ = :!~ M<m:L 'A~• Ex, i~:"~fa:~'i'i~:SE ASSEMBLERS $2 pr hr to start. Merit O>mm/lnd. Loan Proc = ecuffft"Suitel, ml NntpOrl call Mn. Duhl . l'tliael. ~US. ~~~ lo $700 Blvd., COAi& Mesa. \Vesley N. Taylor Cn. 644-4910 n.orusr. min. 5 yrs. eXp Cost Accnt Clerk to $680 MAID -Full tline. Motel • w/treah flowers. Full time. Girl FM/Constr to $8.'!0 Apt, Hntg Beach. Top pay, designers freedom Secrttaries to $625 Call 536--0tll. 6'/5.0291. ' Aul.-..... lo $600 MANAGEll TRAINEE FOOD aervlces l!Ul>trvti!'Jl' li Rt!Qept/Dlcta~ . $EIX> Out1ttlnding opportunity to mo. Under g•ni:r•1 NP Clerkl ·to "75 ad~'40188~ po1l- 11Uperviaiob to be relJM)Dll-Scc'111 no sli' to $670 tkm la 30-9) daya. OUr cur- ble for the operation of the GirtJ Fridl,y lo ~ rent m a n a 1 e r_,, ~am School cafetmu to -.Wet A ~t to $500 $100041500 mo. MUlt have train perao ... to -In -to J:;IM) dire<! -..,,..-.. -· n!l110ddlnc . A rte. I P .. ""51ca. Call Mr. Newmu m.'2'l2 equl.... -$7!$. CALL TRISH HOPKINS MANAGER ...,.led, Small $891 per month. Send writ· JtRIU WHMTEMORE ~ club No . tx-ten tUUtOe (o Saddleb&ck 488 &. 17th St. (at Irvine) CM perjence ~· 53MOt1 Valley Unified School Sult• 224 '42-1470 Ma mont Trne $671 Db1trfct. 11'136 Sand-Cat1yon .. ..,. "",, •"ii• • nav-•.1.u Aw, Ea11t Irvine. •' 'W -• 'ti S.Ctet•ry ,..., You don't netd a &lJn to JANITORIAL work p/tlme. Wellcliff "Draw Fut" when you Exper. coopfe (m1uvwtte1 Pel"'IOfll'lel Agency ~ an ad In the D&U,y only. Plush otcs In Newport, \651 E. Edlnfler, S.A. PUot Want Ads! c.JJ now 1_op pay, 1t~ad)'. Call {'13) 1Matk rrr Centttl --.. 12!z4115. ~ su-91!31 •• I e S.cretarlt• e Typi1ll • Trne A11embler1 e Gen'I Leborer1 VOLT lntt•nt Personnel 'l'emponuy Snvke 3848 Ca.mflUI Dr .. Suite t<MI Newpor Beac~ MS-4741 F.ou-.l r."l<')()r. ;r:-...,~,y .. - SECRE'TARY· Prevlout secl'Ptar1al eXJK'1' r1:Q 'd. Some colle-ge pref'd. Skills _ 91 80 w.p.m. min . Type 60 w.p.m. $eofo PPrti.m- ntl Ma113aC"r, S.lboo B1y Club l2l1 w. Cout !fwy. 1111 Ftm1I• No FMo-Top $$ Call Jmmed\al4"1Y Weekends tncluded • P.P.S Paclf(c Por-1 S.rvlcea, Inc. soo Newport Cenler Dr. Suite 900, N.8. ii ").]9'70 24 Centr'tll Towes. Onnae 547-64<6 215 E. Commonwffllh Suite F F'uller1411 m.1833 ~ Opl"'f. Emp : j"' I • • • -.lll'f23,197J PILOT-AO'IUl!SER W~r. liq 23, 197J Y Pl~OT J[i] I lliJ IS lllil I lilJ I •d c l ' W.,lell, MA I' 711 Holp WontM, MA I' 710 Afrpllancu m I U-, t"""""' SIM Boots, -of 1------~- vt'l'mll<A!tY Aul&tanl "" animal tr:Mlpltt.1, N.S. \'lit! fn.in matun prrwl)n. SaJ"ry ..fll)eil1. Rnume to clu.<!lf,ied ad ,._,, 859 C/O Oatly rtlot, BEST BUY EVERI WOUU>,.... llU a 1cw1no e FISHING BOAT e 1-------- * AUCTION * "1>1,.,\llc,,_..,:;50maf<,. compaalon? I'm •15\\ n 40 l\.P """""""..., TRADEWINDB u••i ;;;;;;;;;~;;jj;,;;jjiijjil button bola pmtahle Schria.llur-, Pl?' th8 dot fior Tilt n:..11f1' ~e Whttl. tr&Ucr. ~ •to v e •I 1 FRIDAY 7:JO PM $17.50. you: ~ ct.Ya or s."J50 or bNt otter. ITI·!l52'1 fiber&l.uf ~; new tlrea. P.O. Box 1560, Colla Meaa, K•:N~10Rt; Waahl'r 6 yrt; Ca\tl, 92626. [ ~~ EltC1rlc °"" l l! yn., HOST!SSES • • •• Boch $%'.JO. can 844-m:l. Appl,y ln Perwon 'l ~===='-"'"-'=:...,,~-Alrporter lnn~otel MAYTAG wa.her tJ lb load 0 C ,_ .. l yr $75., Se&n dryer, ~V)I · · A .. ..,.,rt .. , Antiques 100 duty. 6 mo, f75. both white. l.!100 MacArth ' 67~7813 Nev.'p:irt Beach Dan Jone& 18=1:..:;0=:.,,E~~h-y-,-,-d-• WAlTERs.WaitresA('1 l:x1>er. 416 FemlNf Jtetrlgerator-Jo"'rccxr, small nq'd. 09.Y lt./or """'· Apply Coron. del Mar 1tze. O'Keete le Men1tt betwn 3 lr 5. Cyrano'1, 600 D \'vu arc tht-11.i nner of range, $-&8-4909 dj•wport Cenler ~'. N.B. <>ne ll'tf' plWI $80 t YR. guam, del • In1tall • Waltre1M1 liootl for • wti<>le caz1oa(1 Late. mod. Kenmol'll! wa&her. i\&11 c:r el dme. 11 or over. 1t1 any ot tht' 63&-28..0; ~rns. C:orl'• Jr. RHt, PACIFIC THEATRES WASHER • GAS DRYER »f'I)' in pmlO!l be!WN'n 3 Both tor S50. Call: -it.-5 ~d-.>'S. Carl's, 3101 •Subjec·t to UTUlll ~rvice • ~ * ~Blvd, Newr.:irt Bch. c/1argr at thentre). RECOND. APPUANCES AITRESS, eJrper. ovrr 71. Plctl~ 1·1111 612·5678 ext. 314 Delivered -IWU'· Dunlap's, (:lean It neat. Full or to claim your ticket. {North 1815 Newport, CM 548-7'780 t:.IM· Apply Egg & A!c , foun.i:v IOJl·free nun1bcr i! NE\VER Hotpoint No Frost 120. al().12'101. double door retr1g. $50. 9776 ,jjEtDER NEEDED Meylo Ln. fl.Ii GENERAL ,,, 11 It r 0 S F. MOVING SALE e DISHWASH ERS, wal!Jters, WEl..DER. f\1L':'ol 1ie able to rRIDA\' & SATIJROAY dryer11, rehlt, guarn & read blueprints. ][lyout \\lork 1\lay 25 & 26, June 1 &: 2 delv'd. 839-7620; 546--0218. 1: have atruc1ura1 ccrtiflca · Antiquities et Cla Oon.'l'h: M8·2106 for ap. 1683.'l Algonquin st. Bulldlng Matert•I• I06 pUcaHon. lluntln1to11 Beach * WEiDER. short nrc. One • Surplus. Bulldlng >'""exp. Z)2t) s. Broadway, ANTIQUE Early An1erlcan MATERIAL . 1000'& of NEW Sant& Ana Dutch OX'!n'Y Pine cabinet ITE~1S! Doors, lumber, ply. WHO WANTS TO WORK? w/llere<i hl·ti b It · l n , \\'OOd, alun1 sheetini, 111old· por"ttlaln knobll. In1urable Ing, window! etc. CJIOO~~A~. "-'Ork 11ppra!M!d vlllue $1 4,j(),. HI-Fl BUILDERS SURPLUS tor j.OU.rll!lf, be your owri no dW'gl'/Cabinf!t $600. ZDi So. t.1aln St., S.A. bot.I. Men or women. Can Private party. 64.')..{ll83. Alon thru Sa.1 10.5 be ~htly' handicapped. llAVJLAND China IFloraH 714: 546·1032 'f'e•t-C!ean Appearance-. l2-piatt aettiJlg, cry11tal . PLY\\'OOD. l/Sth VI.I, tttlred. As;e 21 to 70. l!temwRre, Barbara Dalton, l'tfahoitlU1)' $1.30 llhcc1. Sup*ment )'OUT incom~. Bh1que flgUrlnes. Bo .... 1'ron1 * 979-1454 • ~a cab 6 hrs or more a inlaid ma.OOg;any ch t-al . daY. • Apply in penon, Sacrifice. 497-1441 C•mar•1 & YellOw cab Co., 186 E. 16th 2 LRC. Blain glau window11, Equipment 808 ·St., Costa Mesa. 43":11:43" t.D. $150 ea. or best NEED /I G 6"•\I~ _ ~. "_ offe"' """'-""""" came ra w n· 'J ... ~vc· ..-• • ~-· terchangeable len1. 400rnm $2.~. Sal ·+ Bonui. 7lllO Aeellances 102 tele. leilll. le. Pentax, Nikon, Ed!~, Hunt. Bch. -etc. after 5, 673·1050. w o 1' AN ¥11 some Rent Washer1/Dryer1 ONE Plloto Blowup Camera woeta"lal. bookk~lns & $2. \Vk, F'llll ma1ot. w/12' track bed & 2-r· lens lrMllCtng exp to work F-UU. * 639-1202 * for silk screen \Vo r k. !B1f:~ at Leather Cypmy, 14 cu. ft. re!rlgerator. Frollt $1&-2860. Inc. aalaty y.oftJ be com· free, 4 yn, avocado. $149. ~~~-------1 te w I ex P &: Call 557 1519 Furniture 810 ablll Plae call 49;>.5~ -----'--'-----= bet ~. AUTOMATIC washer, clec· 4 VICTORJAN green velvet, ., l8-2S Mon~Fri, ti:tc dryer. Excellent con· lulled chain, $75. each. 40" · ' 11 "~ ._ d1tlan. $90. 646-5848. Round Vlclorian tab!<', claw • pm, • .,., n.-, Us Oo-Nt1I Rou11e. EXCELLI;NT Ma y tag feet, marble top, $95. !I' , 17th SI, CM wuhet. $100. Call after 3 Cust sofa, s:n'.). 3' Antique pm, 546-3695 green coffee table, marble ADMI'iiAL Refrigerator, top, matchg commode !Able hi•-t1onal -~\tio S75 ea. Game set , -! chn, ;;,, ""~-& 1.via1 n. $225. 6'1S--42l6 or 673-2173 have CUSTOM upholsterN chair, "· a CON't'(NtOO ~NG A fJfWINO GUIDE' fOR THE CAL ON THE GO. For •n ad In Woman'• World · oil Mory Both 642·5671, oxt. 330 Sew and Crochet! Two To Travel! conttnurus arms & back w/fabric skirt to floor. No "'OOd showing. Covered in imported Belge ·White velvet. Like new. $250. Prtv&te party. 6-1:>-0183 NEW condition · told & 11.•hite !Mlfa, solid birch Mr. & Mrs. dl'ewser 1\•/n1 \rror. 7 ft. long half wsll room divi der )'l,/s for aa:t . <lecorator flreplace w/1nan· Ile, 554--0142. MOV ING: Dinette !t't, de«kt. .,.,·aaher It. dryer, rup, dreu:era, guitar, accordlan, etc. 646-1843 llOLLAWAY frame, custom mattrea11, 6' x 30" . .$17.50. S1\•ag lan1p fixture $8. &1&.9721 BAR. swag lan11>s, chairs, ofl' desk, t a b I cs -1n B n y kill'hen. household &: cam· ping-ltctns. 640--01119 MA y llTH * NO <l1MYJ.0(5 w 56-t6n eves. or &1&52D8 Sips. 6. Good cond. ~ . REPOSSESSED, J1ke new, Over ll )Tl ln 0.U. Ml!M. ADORABLE kittenJ 6 wla., 2 . :53::;l:.;_..,.='------- Co!or TV'a, Stet"f!IOt, Maple 1878 •latbor. Ml-9'141. Sin-fe, 3 ma. ;tt'Y 'blk/wht. \VANTF.D: S0'9 70' Sallboat. MAJORWAY Dining Stl.I & Hutch DI· or:~ Sewlna Maehlnt A blk. null). Nffii kwe. SUJtable tor tnt. tamlly lov· Campen li: 9iei11 at fac- varui, La.fl'IP'. CcC.fee T6bles, Vacuum. 540-7604 · Inc· Wiii pay ca.sh. 173--3«11 tory prioH. 838 Wa<heno, Drymt • MUCH Sportlog Good• l30 DARLING nu. le Evu. ~c".M.'7-~=---- 1t10RE! l ,,,. bea,;e/poodlf, 6 ft~~ oiJ• Boats, M•lnt./ Cycles, Biko, WINDfS AUCTION cotF 0 ""'· M..,a....,, · -1tir .-..... so1~ S.rvlco t02 _.;.s';.;;. .. '"'""'"',..'-----new, Nlddawi Herltace aft 6 om oompl~e. (Mt $450. Std ,;::;;.='-~----UNDER\VATER hull cle&.n· BE A COME BROWSE AROUND $250. ,.,,...189, S1844t2 FREE homdno black ,,... .... in-..,..., and 201'\I Newport Blvd. 0 1!& PY· 3 moo. male, grayhound wvage, etc. "SPE£DWAf' Behind Tony'1 BJdg. Matl'•· ~p~ ~ ,r!!!~ mix. Healltl)', Io v ab I e. MS-1.255 Cosla Me'* '* ~ NO. 601-!tt, $12. 380 Ammo S3l--O.U5 &o-t1/MlirlM $5. M).500l FREE -scottie, female, E • 904 4 DRAWER RemllCfon Rand J GU AKC, sacrllitt to KOOd.1-""q"u_op:;,. _____ ..;.. lnveat ln the hottert sport In beigen~&lty p ew r it e r ~RN Bl&~a1me ho!11"· lovea children. Pl!R.OIASED U50cm ln· Southern Califot;nla _ de:1k, ~. ma1 c hln1 new) Se.~ 1 $35'. s.G-7361 \'t'ntory ot new' marine-SPEIDW~\Y t.fOTOR· SPONSOR 8Wlvel ch.air: (port.) Fire 49fr.412l a GERMAN Shepherd -Collie hardv.'att foe Mllboa.t1. No. CYCLE RACING. Expel"-. proof Door safe 18xl.8x17; · Combo. puppy. N~& Kd l·Z.3 winches & handles, leoced rider needs financial Maple kl~ seal, new 5 llP Johraon outbo&rd. $45. home w/lrg yd. Needs gd. stalnleS! 1tanc:":hlons &: mut uphol.: maple t•in bed Rttl lawnmower $5. care. Eves,~ tang•, -•pit hardware, baddna. Exct"llent advertia. / rln &-; t t SU-59U .,...... Ing and promoUonaJ op. "-' •P iJ mat, ex ra TO good home 2 km pup. geno.a cars & slide• -You portunily. Busineaes or in. length; itlass ~ white TV, Radio, HIFI, pies Mlxed 'breed Dox· name lt1?? A1l ltem1 priced divlduala call for details. wrought iron varuty table, Stereo 136 · ' for immed sale J.tinniey's 15x30 w/matching bench· ietrerrler h 1 e.b r o k e n . Shi ~-_;1 .;._ W C Pl!. Ste\'e, fi7r3085 after 6. -· ' 642--6818 p .... uturu ery., .....,, • st 3xa rol.l·a-dE'.k cant file; 5 •73 MODEL clearance 00 Hwy, Newport Be a ch , 1971 SL 350 HONDA. Top tray beige flip.up metal card RCA A Zenith TV & •tereoe. 1 0 \V K m & I 548.A192 Open Sun lQ....l' condition. Only 2,0CK> miles. file. ;j:i,;8. Avail Jone 5th Lowei1t prices ot the yell.1' at La brad or/Shep. pups. p 906 No dents. Perfect shape. Lady Kenmore d e I u x Orange County'• largest Potential hunters 494-9822 Boats, awer Never been in the dirt. This ~·asher & dryer, 2 yrs old, 11 ea le r . z en Ith 19 • • Laguna Beach 2 7 , 0 \VEN S CAB 1 N blk~ is bcttl'r than ne1v. hke new. 644-6133 Chromacoklr $349. 25'' COil· *CutMl Tnbbie1 in Town* CRUISER, Two 185 Jl.P. Save yourself $350 to $400 WANTED TICKETS TO LED ZEPPELIN CONCERT Please call :;.as. 7881 * For Co&I Only * SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS N>le remote $598. RCA 25" ' 6wb, housebroken engine~ ln excellent con· oU 1~w price. Only $650. Solid State coMOle1' from 645-8999 dlUon. Pl11nkNl HuJI. Larson -~~•=-;""";;:;;~859;.:.:7_•~~- $.-125. 19" Solid Stale $389. 3 3 1\IOS old Sainoyed mixed Shipyards has kept the John'• Racing Cycles yr pictUtt tube, 1 YT part• & collie. While, black. ean. "Dec Dee" llull ln Rood iiJIUL TACO * service. Cash 90 or terms. Affectionate. 64:Ml773 condition tuld in 1ta11 e d 9021 Atlanta., 1-1.B., 96l-!M9 engines. Sleeps 4 in v•ell iEA UARTERS FOR or 1oot6 Brookhurst, Jl.B. KITTENS, mixed colors, 9 kept mahogany cabin with DESERT, 1tfOTO X TI' 968-3329 \l.'ttk.s free lo good home1. head, :shag carpet and Accessories, O.lte " playful, 536-2358 galley. S.S. Swim· Step, Jlarbor at \Vilson, C.l'\I. RENT TO OWN D.R., Compa". Orly 14,750. ='"1;4G.<655~:::;:"•"r "'6'6-=2428~-TV'S & STEREO [B Finn. O\mer moving. ln41 \"AMAllA 90 Enduro. Good -... -I 49'!-7459 Bol'lt In Dana Point buy for the small lguys. $10 . Shp. Fork brace, high ri!le 'j;iiijjjiiiiijiiijiiiiiiiiiiii~ii;i~ '72 SABRE Craft 18' Conv. lern:ler, adjustable rear No Credit Check•No n.......,•it I hrdtp, 120 1/0. Ofo.1C under shockg. This bike is in'great ......,..,_ Pets, G.Mrat 850 50 hrs, all duh instrumenhi .......... ~. 0~ ~ ••~ Free Delivery . rreeo Repair t:. Co •a "'' . "'""' ~··· ..,.,..,. 1'1onthly Rentals Available ster::~ss,& co!~: a::;; BICYCLE SALE Nearly -Rural -Groin -Open Eves. 543 4444 ATTENTION PETS! paint Van!On trlr, Ideal tam NE\V 10 SPEED ITALIAN Unclad -GRAND Home away from home, boat for fresh/ult. Cruiae, BICYCLES $59.95. Beach Girl& are like pianos. \Vhen BEFORE YOU SEIL built just for you! fish, ski, ask'g $ 3 9 5 0 Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa they're upright, th t y' re I CllEX:'K US Boarding/Grooming 54fr2848 963-5067 or 56-4451 Blvd., Balboa 675-7282. GRANO. ' 0Ur trade in allowances an! 8 MALLARD Duckling:! 14' \VOODEN Runa~t. rut· •n 350 HONDA CL. Less DINETrE $25, loveseal $55, the talk of the town. Top 3 weeks old. $2.00 brd st.eering, controls in. than 5,000 ml, slight front chair $29.75 sm 4 drawer trade doll!ll"I on your old 548--8596 $1'70/best offer. Call Steve end damage. $Jj{l. CaJI desk $l0.7j,' Bdrm Nt, no Hi·f i gear no~·· Brina' in alt Dogs 854 aft 3. 646-589R 549-2nl mattr. $70, metal cupboon:I your med equip1nent for tllE! , $7.00, floor scrubber $4, de-a.l you never thought ~ e PUPPY WORLD e 20 rs S~~P F'u~J"; le~~ t~~n h 2 tricy~le $4.~. 2 wheeler slble. llARBOR 1Il~FI. 1780 100 i\11XED PUPS. Open 110; in('! trWP s'6 SOO~ MADE In llaly lilondij\ like new 10 spcl. w/Ambroslon rims, gwn tire,. center pole brake11 made by BaliilR. Cict"i Cran1e, Glanrobert. eranks &-; sprokets, Cant· bio.ne de railer, Xint. (.'OOd. $100 or best offer. 968-7203 S 7 .. 1 {), nt 1 ! l'. USED Newport. C.'M. 646-01.23. Eves. Irish Setter, Dober-&G-4280, 548-9383 USABLES. 2360 Newport STEREO: 1973 Quad System, n1an, Fox Terriers, Huskie,l~~=~~==--- Blvd, C.N., Tues lhru Sat. Garrard model, full aize Bull Terrier, T-0.ip Poodle, CLASS~C Foo. Coast 1 8 * AUCTION '* changer, 4 Quad speakers, Chihuahua, Lab.. Boxer, La.psi akl'. 6 cyl. ~auled ~& Fine Furniture &. i\ppJiRllCeS AucUoru; Friday, 7:30 p.m. Windy's Auction Barn 2075'As Ntwpart, CM 6a-86S6 Behind Tony'• Bldg Mat'l. !\10VING • must sell. Sean radial ann saw & shop vacuum, $100. M a y t a g .,_,,aaher 18 lb lo6d, 1 ~ $'15. Seara dryer, heavy itity, 6 mo $75. Contentp couc• ~. 67~7818 • 3 ,,.IO. old 8' De.luxe Gena Top Can1pcr shell !or plekup, perfect shape, original•cost l350. Chvner ucrltlcinj for $28.1. &16-6581, 4 pm-8 pm. POOL.. tahll', S?:i. Mahog. desk, S50. Vacuum cleanera, lire extinguishers, loon2e chair, rug&, misc. Muat aeil! 979-3109. AM /FM/MPX receiver, Cockapoo. S\VAP Shepherds eng. remfg. late 72. $nlO tape deck plug in jacks. tor '?'? Stud Serv most ~-c:..~-=------­ \Vas left unclaimed, still breeds. 531-5027. 24' lNBOARO/outbn::I. Bait brand new in box and \VE are 2 beautiful puppies tank, ;adk>, depth finder & guaranteed. Wa! $260, now loeing oor home. Rare Bed· trlr. 639-9382. $125, or tak~ over smaJI Hngton Terrier, L 0 v ab 1 e CLASSIC Bay Boat, Nice 18' pymnta. 893-0501 Cocker. Our owners want u11 So. ColUt Lapetnke. $199-5. *SPRING SPECIAL* to have a nice home Both 64&-0910 eves. Rebuilt-Plc1ur• Tube lovt> childn>n. ~ for 'bed, 16' flSl-lfNG boat ,vtth $8~21'' ar 25'' Color ~75 . for Cocker .. includ. ped. trailer $250. 3%HP mtr. YAP.!AHA 175 Enduro, like I ne"' with fork brace and ex· pana:ion chamber. Exc."f!llcnt running condition. Phone 83()-6697, WX\. ·n y A]l.WlA 360 Enduro, desert ready, I o "' e r e d fra.ine, new tires, never abul>'etl. 1'1ust sell, n1ake of· fer . &Mj..3573. * 2 \'EAR \\1,\HRANTY & nbhon1. 673-1683. \\'Orks iQOll $55. 979-1341 In11tallation Available i''REE 10\,·k m & f pups. 18' 'GLASPAR ln/outbrd, llAltRY QuiM lO spd, full Rlcc'! Television Sen·icc Dant AKC Lab Retr·Sin!:. Volvo engine, full canvas cllmpy, Phil \Vood hubs , formerly ?o.tcsa North Center Ger Shl'[J. 494-9822 Lag~-coven;. $1800. 8."1.&649R 1tft 6 Cosl $700, r:i \vks old, sell l Bick S of Bnker 546-0002 Cd company & proteclion, B t S 'I 909 SJ2.), 84fr.3.W2 opo~ 9'-5 (6 days) " also JXllentiaJ hun1ing dop. o• I , •• °"""""""-""=~-~~ '65 Honda, 230 Scramble r. STEREO: 19T.i'-240 \Va t I SAINT Bernard -male, '12' SAil.BOAT w/trlr, Wery cng rcblt, $12.i. f Garrard model, prof sized AKC, J yrs, good with irooc1 oond. $150. 495-1029, 675-3971 or 1>42..0072 changer. Jensen air ~hildren. Make offer. 29j9G Orinda Rd .. Son Juan suspension s p ,. 8 k er a, 548--9797 Capo. USED BICYCLES I AM/FM/MPX receiver, 8 AKC Dachshund pups, Xlnt LIDO 14, fo'ully equipped, ,\n Types * 642-1272 track deck, orig $410, now temperRn1ent, Champ blood cover 8: trailer, n1any ex· CZ 250 MX, nu Dec '72, used I $180. Was ltft unclaimed. line«, pri pty. Wknds or tras. ~1000. or be11t ofter . :1 races. super like nu. Still brand new in box and \vkdys aft 4pn1, 968--9332 ~4-521:\ 673-2828 or 547-2@)j gu8.t'allteed. Cash Ol' small OBF.DIENCE class to startSCI '""•OCK::'.':"'--E-,-,d-,-.vo-,-. -,-,-, pymts. 89~1 June al, \Vcd 7:30 pm. fibcrgla.11s .sallboat.,full race CLOSED circuit 'J'V «ysten1. Ne"•port Beach/Irvine area equip, \\ith or \\ilhout '72 HU11QVama. 125 CR Good .condition. S775 or best offer. ?I-lust sell 54.)...7216 Incl. camera, Ir IP o d , 5-\6-4928 Ne¥.'J)Ol't mooring 6«-~14 * 1971 Triumph n-oeville, monitor cables. $295. Also -TIJRE . ~• H llicrarter.• S-txl $ 4 0 . ~11Nf,~ Schn.auzcr, 1',ACT'ORY 2ttd5, Nap I c ~ 650 CC, $1({X). Fully &>If Contained. n1lle11, runs like 11e1v, drive this one 1o(lay. $4495 plu_" tax & Ii('. 10°/• DOWN $96.JS PER MO. low te st fo r 60 mu. }>'ull cash price including ta.'\: & lie. $4722.15. 11efen·ed p11ymcnt priCC' $62l).50. A.P.R. 12.59 (UBE· 891 ). ' EXPLORER OF Huntington Beach IS801 Bench Blvd. 842-8803 llUNTING'fON BEACH e SAi.ES e • SERVICE • e RENTALS e EXPLORER OF HUNTINGTON BEACH 18801 Beach Blvd. 842·8803 llUNTINGTON BEACH ILLNE~S i" fa111ily cames sale or 1972 Lusury Balboa llflotor I lu1ne. Pur<'h.ascd 9 mo A~o: Chevy V-8 eng, P/S, PfB, !l hower , l'\lonon1a1ic toilf't,, a l r lun H\t'l' .V C:>i !rns. Xlnl cond. Still under \\-;l.rranty. Priced to .~ll now at $3200. \\'ill ac· C'l'PI lV11• do1vn &. existing Joni; .lcr111 financing. 1624 Antiqu11 \\'u_y, Dovt"r Shores, Nel\'pol't Hench 642-9980 ~.· 11, 1\CO '.'I I •IVl·:RER ::T '.!:!' ('LJ,', f!NENTALS :.<tf i '1 111:&.JOYS \::, 1 ·r 1:-,,,.1:.~.l)NS Q ,•','• 1 i.::.: e Rental~ * Danmar Inc. * DOUBLE bed, box 11pring & 1na1l. 2 1vickcr upholstered BAH., s1vag lamps, chairs, ofc desk,t a 1>le3-m11.ny kitchen, hou~hot~ & cam· 11i n~ ilems. 640-0169. ESTATE SALE; Naiilral Autumn Hazr Mink Stole. Alter 6; 5.J2..9715 ,f ~91 beautiful AKC pedigreed SaOOl form $165. Also un· l-~=•"c'55""7-~1~485~'c,c*- female. 774-3106. finished ply\\1Xld dinghy $4:i. 1973 HONDA 'J,50 CL-I 23" l\1otorula, ;1.11 channt-1 color TV, 1v/nu picture tube xlnt oond. Sl50. 645'5982. &\INT Bernard pup p i":., ,.,~,.~,,,~195:::.._______ Immac cond. Lo 111i!eage 1:.; 'ii ' 11 ;11 l'<'I' B!vd ., G.G. .i..: 1.r~;oo Next to c:.r;. Datsun O uchc t ;i \'11Zy ha11d~onv' capt' 1.,.,·itll/1\.il houl ;, 1· rn openini;:~1 111 11('a1 c•1·1·r lh•· prince1111 top. p:1nls •II' ~k1r1 Prln1erl J •11t11'1·r1 tJ o '!Ii l\flAAeti' Sit,c'.ll 111 . I:!. l l, llo, 18. t-lalf Sizes 12' ~. \ P ~. 11)1 ~· 1s 1.,, '.41\v. 2:l'~· 1•1..t;i\:i.Jo; STAT'f: DKF.~'i SIZt;. 81;Vl:?IT\'·Yl\lt: ('f;NTS for e.cb pattern -add Zi emtJ for each pattern for Air J.lail aod Special 11andl· lnl; othel"Wt!e thlrd-clUI dttlJwiry will take ttfte' ,,,.~ or n10l"I". Sltnd lo &1arlan P.fartin, 1he DAI L'\' P[J.OT, -1'12, Pnll~m Oepl., 232 Wef'I 18th S!., NCI\' York. N.Y. Jt)'ll l. P rinl Ni\.'ltE, AOOR•:SS 1\ 11h ZIP. Rl7.Y. awl ~T\'t.t: NlJMBElt. ~EE MORE Qul ('k ,Fuhkml and cllOOl!e Ol'll" p9ttern r~ from our Sprlng.SUmmft" Cata~. AU 1liet1! Only SOc. INSTANT SEWING BOOK eew today, wear tomorrow. $1. INSTANT FASIJ tON SOOK llundrecla o l fashion tact1J-. SI. 1 F'ltt Profil Ill 11!111Jncd when you .ell thronith rr•ult-gtot· ti~ Dallv Pllo1 Classlnf'<t sofn'.'I. All $70. 979-6499 Miscellaneous AKC reg. $150. 1.100 14 Compl v.1/trailer $795. '* 496-1900 • t!F.RC1.'LON l"nfa k Wanted 120 lovl"!leat bf'nul. eond. fo.1ust _c..:,;.,;;.;.::::_ ____ = 557-7148 $950. de Anza Bayside NEW '73 SUZUKI SAVAGE s:u·rifi('('. 61...-0869 '.\11\TCJill"G sofas, g o Id velvet. $!10/both. Days !i lj..()fi Ml: !i7'.).. 7942 Evt!~. 812 WANTED BRAND nu General Electric OLD English Sheep Dog pup-Storage 01· call I 7 l 4 ) a> cc $700. Call 12" portable blk/\•;ht, 11-fust pies, AKC, xn.lt blood line, ;3:=28-:,::,:'J~::6:.9 ~~~--~ &12-36.'U sell! S80 ~l25.i sho\vn by appt. 962..-74-14 KITE 1000. Yello\v & white ~'URNITURE & CAR Stereo tape cartrid~ OOBIE. 6 \l."t'ek old puppy. hull. All attached equipment. APPLIA!'\'CES pla.vn, theft proof. Still in S15. Boy she'&· cute! 1l8 E. $6(XI. 6/,,..2300 1 PIECE OR A HOUSEFUL carton. M-1-8938. 18th 0.l s.&8-M85. CATAfitARRAN Sheanvater 547-5721 21" COLOR. CONSOLE TV, * AKC BEAGLE* 16'~' Complete w/trallcr. '69 NORTON 7W SS COM· MANDO. New clutch plate & tuneup. $850. 494-0050. MOTOR HOMES Apollo, Paceit'?lter, Baron. J an1boree, Robinhood \Vf.'vc gol 'cm at KEN DON MOTOR HOMES 10'1 N. 1-larbor, S.A. 55-1·0033 11LiN I~ bu~!.'.)· & cycle tires, $75. Good ~cll1re. "4"" "~" t"~~ \lo110111ali(' toilet, double * -* STUD SERVICE ··~· ~.,.~·~·~~,:O.~~· ,-,~--,,-I * ~ -* ' 21' II GE'T your motor home 1Dt ll!'d. fi' hi fl('abed, misc. ICE bo . ..: suitable for small "'""'00' VENTURE l>fu~I se · ·n:y,, HUSKY 400. 350'.) In· MemoriRI J)ny 1vkrnl. By ** '72 CB 4:lO ** LIKE NEW * * $800. * * CAU. 492-7156 * * ki tl:hcn11·a1'C, Jots of patio cainper. outside rack for Keeshound AKC, 8 mo's:(lid. Best otter Jr_ June 3 vtsted in engine & trans. owner '70 Patt Arrow, 72· l11r11,, tnisc chalr11. 11-fuch flpitre tnick tirf'. 642-3963 aft [ ![S $150. Beautilul dog. -M48 $750 or best ofter. 831--02;)7 all xlr11.s, roof & engine a.ir 111ore. 2•l:i i'1o.,.,"f!r St, Costa 5Pl\1. \Vct.'kends aft. JOAM Fr9e tt You Call 6'2-4ID5 HOBIE CAT 14 * 16" Boy'! bicycle; alll<l cond, generator, 8 trk fm ~l_•_w_._Sn! & Sun 9.j. OLD ORIENTAL RUGS. ~-------' SILKY AKC good colld. $600. • li7:>-m2 Men'1 10.«peed, 11lereo. i;lps G. S 7 9 50 . SUPER l'\tOVING SALE . all \Vilt pay G·IO';, more c¥h 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 female. S150. Boats, Slip1/0ock1 t10 * 640-0169 • 646-MO'l . n1u11! So: 1va shc r, dryer, than lop s payer.;. Eves. !liz..8717 ::.:.::;.;:..::;.;,;,:;:..:;.;:;:;;;;;...;.,;.;c 11970 HONDA SI..90 Scrambler 1913 DiJ1covercr and Sundial 1,1~"<'7.f'r1. stereo, lum~i:e· ~70 GERl\iAN Shepherd. Male -& SLIP avail. LB marina. Ju~ perfect condt .. like new. Motor llo111es for l't"nl. n1akc 1 1 r 1 c n l\'ll 1• e . !JUV"S, lL\PPINESS iJ a playful kit· F•male ·~ • •~. Good 1st-Sept. lsl. Wiil take up loS .~19~5~. ~!lli2-::,~7689=c~----reservations for Summer records, C'lc. 11·5 daily. 3197 ORIENTAL RUGS. Private I ' 8 k 1.0 ,_ .,...... oi: .µ.v ....,. bo '°" ••48 -l'h •1· I L RI I 1mly will pay cash for all en. ~· 1 0 "· \Vith children. 549-182'f "~ at. ~ 1972 JlARLEY· Da\'idson. 6j noiv. OllC 1• iss Bennet at ,\ !11 a\!uiu~ V( . , 1-'.l{t'U lla 54(}.168.'l -Bo)) l..cmQ"Pl'f' P o n : I a c , \ 1, -y, sizet1 . 6,f4..~i3'.!:6. BEAUTIFUL AKC Beagle BOAT SLIP n:. S70 per CC Li orig n11l('s, brand nu, 9200-1 636 ~ la ... · :. .. lh, -1th. 26th • i''REB Kl'ITENS * Puppy, 10 \\'ks, ntale. s;.o. month (no sails/ Ca 11 $ZT5. Under W&ITM. 644)..0172 It! "UU.J or · ·2500. I . I ~<' ~~.~~~ r~lh~~··t~~ :~~~~~~~J MDA",'.,INcCatlln1str~m•nt1nil.22 Jc~~111~2-~ack, I Sia.meee. • 833·1~ ,, c'~'~'~'~"~'c,.~.~~~s~1·--~lnl Bike, 6 hp ~E\q·u';P· E~f,1~rcr8 24~i1·/getu~1 ¥ -11\f' l\nirnal Care Crnlcr e Cci.n <' acco ian Harses 156 Private w·. Boat IP $125. 546-4653 . . , ' l'..'911 llA~tf'r, Garrll'n Grovr. sold rx'w for .$1200. Gooc1 \\'ORLD'S IJl.','fflcirt kit~&. I ;...::;.,::;;_ _____ .:;..:..:: Negotiable ~~~~2 rah'!«. no mileqe, ~ f'\.n B.:-f>~ condil ion. fo.fake o ff e r . tome with 7 loel, uled: to PART Arabian 31~ yr old, 213..592·5907/713-;!92.2311 Mobil• Hom•• 935 c~'=-='""'_,,,-.,-~--1 Htld ........ • • •:-OJo'A & Love~at, 968-06n or~. hlldren. 8 wks 83J...8ffi6 Id! tle bu -Rent A Mator Hor'l"tll nf'\'l'T' U8ed, tioth for Jl;}j, c . ~itS s~~t <;:~~!}'~ Ba::.:•:.t:.:•::.·..:S;:P;,;";.:;.::dc.":::...;:S;:k;..i .;,9_;;1~1 1 w " 40 PLYMOlITH. Xlnt . 1 1 1 1 Us ual I)• hon1c 968-7910 CONN TRUMPET AKC Cl>IUc, 1%! yn old, good k . 1 ·~ ~2-9'17 oonct. Comp. f1.1m., 1-BR. far your Vac1tkm PraC"lLC'D a1]( un for P ay · · w/chlldren. Son allergic. pat' inc U<n:U . .,., lf~~ Chris Cnl.ft SS runa.boul, Adult p&rk: nr. bH.ch. * 531-6800 * und going places all year! SQUl\RF.' ook ta ble. Old ., ..... 1~7~5~· -*=-~6~"'8237::::=;:.--I "ll 11~··-n .. n 3 y ~.~. •~ v • ~ h ti ·c-="°='=,,._~c;..~"---1 ni r I · • I O~fll F It / ' · "··· % A.vu:>, r uo;a .. ...,. ~· -o, ms • .,.any u ~ ::-LUXURIOUS M Vests or l'a lgan sv•cr1ter a~ iin1wu r N'Sl!lf'r. PH . ce urn ure CUTE"f8.bblt~. 1 wki old, 2 gentle but spirited. Call ,v/traller & sklt. Only 300 35' o tor • knit h•)[h ~!ylcs ('ilhl•r \\'ii,Y! 673-3085 after 6 Equip. 124 male, 1 female, milled ..... 1• Mt.er 5 PM, hr. aince MW. A reAl Motor "°""• Home. Custom built, SeU U>'t' bulky ~·um. hig needles .. ~ 644 54{l) ho . I $%0'.I Prtv Ply S•le/ Rent MO containl'd, Mnny extru. l•n" hoy~· 111111 sporl yurn for Miscell•n.aus 811 EXEC S\l'VI chrs $1~25 See en. 968-9589 · s \\'Piece. ' · Best ofter. (714) 7'14-8927 ).!lrl~' Pu!ll"l'Jl 7000• boy's chrs $8/32 Deskfll $20 /95 orr NE:ED J:OOd home r 0 r A.Q.1-1.A. 1959 chest nu t1c:"~"~-790""~1 --~---~ '72 EY•LORER • "Tl Ufctlme M H 23125' ;.ft:l·~ l·l I; :;iris' 2-12 1ntl. TYl'l':\\'lll'fl::H. n1a.11ual Supl 867 \V 19 Ot fi42·3408 Shellie, xlnt with chlldren. Rroodmart> \V/foal by Sier· MUST 5eil .t:i' Sabtt!crl\ft Ski ,. "plu.'>h" rr~· milca~ Ii portnlllr lnn.1: rar1•1a~r • !i~· p · /O Gr;}--201'.l ra Buck, bred to Jiggy Bar. boa1 , 8:i h.p. l\lerc o.b. 20' . p · t SJS..-0533 i-1·;\·t;'.\,.\·.1·1\'"; «•::"'1,·.~ ,.111,111.,. nnt' l'ihlJon. \\l/i·u~r. t•nos rg1ns 126 Ii~ ntot01· & lra!lcr. Grcal cond. -•• 11111ur. ri. ll Y· · · I I ll 11 2' rREE Puppies! She phl'r<I! "-12 ··~ MOTOR HOME ~l ~-fl lld ur t'uc· i Jill crn -ur 1 ·' Phnni· ;i!).i·lOO."\ l'\'C. Q 110RSE8 Uoarrled, riding "' -,"V(V ----1 "~ « •· 0 ay Cllmpl!r, l'Unls lnr t't1l:l1 Jlnltt•rn l11r --:;-------RGAN HOBBY To good 11,?~~~ •-1 I -1 A . 13' BOAT 40 h Jolwon I Co I I Jiu:k~. shock!, oven, boot, l\ir l\lail ;ind 1'f}Ccinl llantll· 2 lti\-.ts of :y1:llo1v.gold sh11g ......wi:l arena o.: r1u s. ~~· c11.c1a · P . , Fully Sci nta ned, du a nice and r lean froO, ~7-7~ ius;: otht·r.visl' 1hlrl'l·clas!I crpt ~ ,~· m11tchl11~ chi>s T\\'0 cute, p I A Y r u I ' St . S.A. lleli:-ht!I. &14-5307 eler:. start, ~ntller, hhls, i.i ()Vfn'hcad bw1ks, arincl1air DE LUXE CHl'EfTON delivery \\'ill ta.ke three fron1 ~R 11Jor-Vu IUll« home. Don '! buy any 1".Q:an until llOMELESS kitterL~. "'hlte ~fATURE boarders wanted. tllltll. JMA). 531H>.187 teats, dl8po&al hose and "'eeks or rnore. Send to 6-14-l!S.1 you can play! Non·playert ._ T -~old .,,A """'"' Box nan. I: all tac. Have carrier, root. rack &lld lad· _ _:R~cn:::.:;l.~27'::.;·~-::.::;.=;:::cND:;::_., I to ttend b'e work °' grey. ~I\• • ~........, t1et' All~ Brooks, I.he DAILY Triple dre~~f'r 'Ill/mirror, ~~~ comFore ~-• • titEE ~ Lonely ~lt· apeclal otter. 96l-8679 I j(rttl , 6495 17' LAZY DA%.E m '73 PILOT, 105, Needlecraft ent ry. prov. $.'l5, I r g •nvpt. uuonnation .....---.... II Qtr 11 -s Dodge. full)' istU o:im.tned. Dept, Box 163, Old Chelsea \l.'Rh.'rfnll "'/pump, J l25. Cclntact: Tom DMite.rkh ten. NHld1 ltomt. · 8 YR. 11' ,._...,....~ -· ••4" 71~7092 Stalkln, NC\\' York, N.Y. 56-617~ 642-2151 Dr/ O:JnttnentaJ. c .M ~Id. Eng. or wemm.J;iiiimiiiiiiiimiii::: , ' --1 k Jllfnpt. Alk'g WS. fm-1725 pl --• lie Tr1iler1, Trawl 945 10011. Print N'•me • ..,~ AUTO~tATIC GuagP Door Coast Mus ic Service FRc~~ to iood home, b RC UI ._ • ' 7~F_:~11g"r'r~~~'" ,72, OJX'rn'r. ll.l'i! p:io. Special· Newpott Blvd. at l!arboT lrlsh Sett~Uzis Camper1,$1le/ltMtt'20 10% DOWN Sfi.tAl.L CAR OWNERS . ~het, knit, etc. ~ lil11·('~I P r!re rvtr? Sl ~. COfll11 Afe• GER"' N She 2 11 r -... II• ,e] 3 AfO. old. 8' Delwce Cem for ~~04mo,S4. ~u~R .. uMhO:._,; .. , Lnnl''CTkJngTRAforlLEa IROOtliHlic' .CfJ!Mo; d\~ctlnrM ""-a ln!>IRll<''1 21.1-'30-795..'t • ...,.,,\ . p, yrs .Of• l ~~-~~;'•~";"';•;'"~~;"~~I 1:11 .. t-'" " Ml ' • JV<_·. • I BABY GRANDS j m!llt-, obedience trn1nNI, _ Top CamjW'r Wll for inclucllnll' tax Ir lie. $6822.'15. a full ih:e camping vacation :u .. b11H ~••crRn~ Bnok. STOVJ-., n~f. Ir lank i:v,~· I grocl \\'/Children. !l62'""18!l\ pickup, perfect ll h a p t'. Deterred payment price with the LadylJu&: -det.l&ned l .. i~lt". $\r~ic-y knots. pat· v111·u11n1. S:~:ilnk~ 1'~, \\Ill 1 No11· savl' up to $1(0) on ttr· 1 3 BEAUT kittr ns l< g-h-,-1,-" 900 ortgtnnl f'Oflt JD'.l, Otmer $9430.86. A.l:..R. 10.&I. (987· for amall can . Spedtll,y 1•~"1~· 1 · Ctnrl'lf't Ron\ '!"if~j~'·f' 1.~ r. 1 C~I t:iln noor 1nodt-ls. ()lhf'r I jtt))clen 2 gray' b:~ f'yt'~ i Bo•tl, Gener1I saciitldng for S 2 8 S. FLZ}. 11riced lhru May onJy, Sl)t. "'" .. n , -.,. 'J c:r11nd Piano~ fmn1 "729. I I ·, !16.Ho 6 • 646-6581. 4P~f-3PM. EXPLORER 49J.-OTU. 32981 Cnlle ~rft'C· f.t"aru hy plctuttA! Pat· 2 CLEAN Ort/l(l twin alie box TheSW"t •1MI tunny moN' al: 1113 f , em,· · 1 Don Perrarl 3 mo. old g• Deluxe Gem Top ' to. San Juan Capia!t!no t==iutant Gin Be(lk "MRlt f!8.~. $50. 138 E. 18th w.llichs Music City ~~RABLF.Je kiltcnll 1955 SMrlngton Pl•ce Camper Mell k>r pkkup, '6' NIMROD, Dunelot t1eh&. _ mom than lOO &lfta _ St. CM 34ff....4415 South CoMt Plata ~2830 ng tot' 675--7296 Newport Beach perfect al\ape, oriaina.l COit Of &lpa 8. Stove I: Ice box, Sl.00. WATER Softener, Refiner. You are tne win.Mr ol $350. Owner aacrtlielnl Sor 541-6592 Clomplete Alaftan look -lan1 8:Z. Lifetime frbii:ll. Sf'll HAMMOND organ, SacrU'I~. LAB/Irll:t:~r, 6 lll05. one tree pul =· ~ 4 pm4 pm. Tr1ller1, Utlllty t LOO. cl'!Np. 543-r;,81 it hrs. Immaculate Spinet with 4!)(· • ~. Good for a wtr;)le can;,.d • CAMPE1l Shell• for •'8 Hunt1'ngton " .... '"" ... ~~· • 50c. COUCH, $25. Baby ll•m.o & "" lncl~ .. , P"°""'· Only Kl'l'TENS ~-~ P'•c1'F1• ll'll'c THalEAlh•TRES or t'OOL ~All ...... • of U co-Al-~ BBQ, ci>RI• 115, TV' $675. R"dy to p I a y. * . '"~ 10 •-• II model1. ~1 Gnce IA .. , 8 h ~llt Book 1 _ l8 J)l.l'tetnl. Clotlllng, &~ ml1e. S49-1357 616-8889 dnv!I, 54~ eves .• home, all bll<'k. C n 11 Blda G, C.M. eac 50r~ CO'-IPLl·,TI, M't of hunk BRF:i\TllTA°KTNG Austrian 96S-7087 eves. ISubJ ct t a.JI · CAMPER Ir trailer rep&lrt °' Mwoeum Qallt Boot. 1 a bNls. good oondilk>n, St l. Buby Grand : ebony, :o.:lnt f2l Bl.ACK kitten~ 8 \\"k11, 1 r 0 am MNICI!! .u.pplle1 allO van ton-18M>I Stach Blwl. 3U-8Ml3 OOc. 54.>1-.11 \~·. Mnil. Sai·! $1t>. 968·4?.00. 1\1, 1 P', '\·ean~<l & h~ebl'kn. Plf'll~~ ~~~str:~. 314 vft'lloM. 85R \V, l8lh, C.M. ltUNTINGTON BEACll 't!Jl"11 for Today'• Lhrlnr • TJo:Lt-_;SCoPE; 6 in. rencc. BA.BY grand, Schumann. P.fothcr Rue! Blu 612-77r.s. In elaJm your llcll:et, (N_orth The tulett draw In th& Wtat. * ~969 BALBOA * 15 btauUful pa1ttrn1. 50c. 1or. C'lr r d!'h,., iOtJd as ne\\'. $700 or best oNer. Good con. ·* FREE KITTENS * Countv 1011-rree number 1~ .. a Dally . Pilot Ouslfltd Uke ~~.g:1 atr. P•l!ll••••••••••••••••• I S17) Nancy, :'>'IG--3193 P?if dllion. 494-39'23. • 3U.2i2S • !>40·12201. Ad. 6').5f%1. . '--==-"'==---Ad11. Mt-:iGTS SMALL CAl\ OWNERS . LooklnA' for ft roomy, com· pact troler1 llcad for a ruu size ai.niplng ve.cation with the 1..e.<tyhug • dNlintd for sm!lU Cftri-Specl.al?y Wlcl!d thru i'ofll.Y onl)'. s '.l 2 4 . m.oT\1. 32911 Calle Pt!rltt· 10. Sim Jumn C..~atrRno. .. J W!d.....,, M'1 23, 1'17J ---' 1§1 l --.. --- ....... llonol Vthlct .. 1§1 §]I _ ... _ Trucks XU:: fm,.rtJ 956 ~--~~-962_1""'°"~~'-""""'~-..,~~f'70 FIAT I""'.'.:-------'68 C..11EV. ·~ Ton wllh BMW '73 ~EWl'ORTER .. "!""' .... u. V-<!. otlck .... ~. radio. Camper !ihcll tuU,y1--------VAN pane.led Ir insuJat~. v-... 963 . .., CONvrec: IOOd condition, has only •-...ION • '2,0l)O mUes •"•· own«. !I Ton~;::<!. -Ste<t-1144-8874 ire. Dlac Brake;. Ven1 Stove. Jee Box, Wardrobe • dioette. $4395 WANTED ~0%'U.ri'N $19.27 PER MO. cw 72 montha. Full casf'I price including tax $$4615.75. Defernd. "!°"H , price $6146.M. A.P.R. 1 0. 3 7 c•~i. EXPLORER OF Huntington Beach · 18801 Beach Blvd. 842·8803 mJNTINGTON BEACH Trucks 962 LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA CREVIER BMW Sales • Servi~ • Leaaing {~ W. 1st s1.1s.nia Ana . 135-3 71 CAPRI HUNTINGTON BEACH' I 18881 BEACll BL. 847-855.1 TOYOTA AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE 'WE BUY CARS • HUllY YOU CAN STILL GlT A NEW DATSUN 110 AT THE OLD PRICI NEW 1973 DATSUN 240Z SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM ALL COLORS-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BUY OR LEASE ... BUY NOW DURING OUR ·: ' HUGE MAY.JUNE SAVING 1~; SPECTACULAR! : Connell Chevrolet 1 Your VEGA HEADOUARTIRS • 282B Harbor llvd., Cotta Mesa . 546-1200 ' ' • Spai·kllng tJOlar 1vh i I l' , auto1nat1c, po11·cr steering. a ir conditioning, bolh hard & soft lops. All accessories. Lo\v n1ilcagc. Call for ;1n appointn1cnt to see thii; ex· ceptlonally n1 a in In in <' dl-A-fo--N-.·-.,---~ Di s t inctiv<' Aulornol.Jil<',1-"-'c..· ---------1'-------------- I ~.~.!.~~~~!~~w;..... ___ 9.;l.;;0.;.A;..u_too=, -".;.;'"-"---_!!!! ':tl.j 1968 EL CAMINO: PIS. air cond, stereo/radio, tail(-, auto trans, fiberglass shC"ll. ,.,,_,,,.,. '55 DODGE ~. ton plcktJI 1225 • s.4-3417 • •gs FORD 1~ ton pickup, 352 V-8, 8 ft. beO, Excellent con- dition. 64S-19?i0 * '5.1 Ford Pickup V-8. Very good col\dition. $400 firm. 645-26>8 1960 FORD Pickup, Jong bed, £00(! eng, lxxly nttds a. little l\o'Ot'k. $3)). 613-7.\16 aft 6. '72 RANC'HERO , 500 n1odel, 351 VS, ho.t"Ve11t gold, wide tires, lo mi. $3650. 642-4176 BMW GOOD SELECTION OF USED BMW's 1971 BAVARIA 1972 BAVARIA 1970 2002 1971 2002 1972 2002 1969 1600 CREVIER BMW Sales -Scrvicl' -Lcosing 208 \V. Jo,;t St .. Santa Ana 835-3171 ORANGE COUNTY'S OL&pEST Y. TON Pickup, Chev. '5.l, iood shape. 327 motor. Call SfS..G.l after 6 pm. 1963 CllEV. PICK-UP Long bed. Good running con- dition. 548.-6937 FOR ACTION SALES-SERV1CE-LEJ\SlNG • • • OVERSEAS DELlVERY DAILY PILOT ROY CARVER, Inc. . WANT AD 2'4 E. 171h SL COl:ila Mesa ~41 CALL 642-5678 s.11"''•11,m,\ ..... 642-0671! Truck1 , 962 Trucks " 962 RECREATION TIME at CONNELL CHEVROLET e \1 TONS e ~ TONS e LUY PICKUPS e EL CAMINOS e SURFER YAH e LUY "BAJA" READY FOR IMMEDIATE DWVERY Connell Chevr.olet YOUR TRUCK HEADQUARTERS 282B Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1200 . • FIAT '69 RAT SPIDER I Road!lter. Or111ngr r"!lt'f'ior. I !Y0,\71 31. S.~14m. t6!l:).Bls. Dll'. I JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ AUTllORJZEO SALES & SERVICE Jim Slemons Imports : 1::01 Quail Nt'11·port B<-aeh 533.9300 $1399 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA I ~NTER J''ROf\.1. MacARTi!UR i\1 B "i(}--2:'..,0 Serl .. air, P/S, P/B, i\J\1/i''M. rn<!lnls, l~l BEAClf BL. 847·sa55 grt>a1 buy~ Pri p 1 y. HUNTINGTON BEACH 714 :;;36-\603 ___ _ Autos, Wew 980 Autos, New 980 CORT FOX Since 1934 50,000 Mlle Warranty Available On All Used Cars '71 CADILLAC Cl'I. DeVUlc. Fu! power & lenthrr. <346CZEJ 54695 '72 PONTIAC FIREllRD Euplrlt. Loaded. , I O\Vncr, IO\V mlh.•111,gr. !147EHTI '67 OLDS C\ITLASS Convt. Full power&. air. Very nice. Only {Stock •339) '67·PLYM. 4 DR. WAGON E:xttllet cond., lntttior like new, (YECG11) 5895 • '71 FORD CTY. SEDAN Power Steerlna: .l t>rak('!'I, 11fr cond., ratllf1, 111\V nlfl~8io:l', only l:J12CP.BI 52695 '68 V.W. CONYT. Yrl101v & black top. · 40,0QO miles, l ownt'r. (VTM878l '71 Ol.DS CUTLASS Like Brand New. 1 owner-Air A: All. (Stock •460) 5995 52595 PllCID TO MOVE Phone 645-4392 & 645-2397 465 East 17tfl St., Costa Mesa Harb r Ameri ,can I Jeep HAS GONE ~"Q\.l ~\.t TO THE HARBOR AMERICAN/JEEP HAS CUT THE COST OF BUYING A USED AUTOMOBILE EXA PLE 1 EXAMPLE 2 '68 BUICK E ECTRA 225 '70 DODGE MONACO Air1 l)Ower st ring, power brakes, vinyl roof AM /FM Stereo. WHOLESALE '137500 OUR PRICE '127500 '100 UND R WHOLESALE '69 CHEVRO ET IMPALA ONLY VB, power st ing, power brakts. a ir co ., vinyt roof. VI, auta. trans., air cond .• pt:;N;er steerif'\q , pcwer brakes, vinyl roof. WHOLESALE '170000 OUR PRICE *165000 $50 UNDER WHOLESALE '69 FORD 10 Pr.;~nge:r Wagon, i ir cond .. power slttring. power brakes, VI, a beautllul I owner cir. ONLY AT T ESE PRICES CARS SOLD AS IS FIRST OME FIRST SERVED • COME IN NOW ND DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED Har or American I Jeep ' 833-2440 1969 Harbor Blvd. 645-7770 COSTA MESA SALi GOOD ftLL 6 ,,M-SUNDAY MAT 27, 197i ~. ~ 1; .. .. -... I. I h 1 " , ':' .: ! -1 ' • • ~·-; .. : ; . ,· ' . I' " All CAii IUIJICT TO ,110• SAU, AND .,,.OVlD cuon . -------'.~~· I • • ... . ,. .• • GET OUR DEAL! DURING OUR MAY-JU.NE *SPECTACULAR* HUGE SAVINGS ON 1973 CHEVY'S ';e:-'ifl)nNTITTE~cAliiiRLMOS----:~iiiii~~­ • NOVAS ,. LAGUNAS , e CAMARDS 'q e CAPRICES e IMPALAS e STATION WAGONS e MONTE CARLO SUNROOFS e "COACH WINDOW LAGUNA" Connell CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1200 lllead Daily Pilot Classified Wed...,, MaJ 23, 1973 ---c l§J ='· -~-~-~,§]~· ,.~! ~-~-=""'~~~ ==-990 Abt.t, UMd ' 990 RlElllD 1===-__;~ ...,...C_HEY.,......., 1-0-LET,,___ CONTINENTAL DO~~ '70 CPE do vui.. oil ......... ------------------lllllll flll£BlRD "10. 1-llllONCO .• Whl dr. ..... 16-aaJe Q ' -'& ~ P/ .. -Etc. V-8. 3111000 ml, IN poln4 iiown-~ new drel, at.ate • P. • 'Ell OlEVELLE Mal\W. con· lmmac,, conct. See to ap-top, 8' Tacoma wbla,. ~J: ,\MIFM Box 366 Corona de! Mu. wrt, green wlblk trim, pftClate! $1400. 331.1314 or CAin tift.#, JitMtt Oaru. I with ~ ~ '62 CAD 4 dr. ll!dan, full ~·/F~. ~ ~PB~ bu~~i • , t»-&t90. b~ty IUIP-1tlult be lftlLi • .,....... -~·"· JIOO. or belt oiler. v ~ Fqli) ' ·~~ 441'.iaoo ~· " r...iLM>io.. aeata, low mllea. ery .. """'1 ~ «nuuoa, pow. ~ clean. $1300. or beat offer. '72 MARK IV '62 INTERNOiTIONAL Soout .~· M ~ '68 CAD. Sed. DeVlUe, fully ~ bet. 5 PM. V-8, autoniattc tn.nsmbmion, '12 RANCHERO 4 whl drive, wtworn bub A .. (.rJ._) Y eqp'd. Stereo. Vinyl top. ..... CARRYALL. 8 --. % radlo &: heater, powtt ttffr. 10 ~ -"• to ~~ Ir big tlrn~ $SX), ~ > .. : ...,,..,..., ' $180). 61?)..2n3 673-2872 '" ...-1. ... pow b-k ••···l IO ,~,u.....,s, au ., ~" • ' :It """-•.:.. · Ton, 350 V-8, radio, auto, ps, ... >&. er ... es, ..... .,. p, )!Ollfer tteerrlng JOI.WI' ditc '48 JEEP 2 YW drive, ~..,vy •• CAMA.10 pb, tl'nt dl!ICI, air, hvy duty air conditioning, white side-brakes, sttteO multiplex ene, tra.rwn &: rear end. ~ '68 CAMARO SS "396, air, vinyl top. Beautiful Car. Call~ eqp, stabilli.er, 20,fOJ ml. 14·all tlrea. ,j:,EHS). AM ; 'FM. mt n t . cond-m-.2289 before 6 pm. • .. $3500. &12-<11\!. GUSTAFSON C:rueN). HUI. MAVERICK ~ '69 c..\MARO, ,.Dow, auto trans. small v_., xlnt run- ning cond. $1500. stS--28$-t 1969 NOVA, 45,000 mi, pfll, .- ou U.... mag wh1'. $1215. Uncoln·Mercury NABERS CADILLAC ·n MAVERICK 2 DR. y.g, ~ ---------~~ CONTINENTAL 161<JOH Beach at Warne' eo.ta M,.. Int. Priv. party. "2--4U<. •: W'ltlngton Be~h 5«).9100 842-i844 * (213) 592-554t: '111 MAVERICK. auto, ndlo '69 CAMARO Z28 one owner, like new, make otter call 67:Hi237. "Homo of tho Viki-" '61 MUSTANG "°"' tires. xlnt cond. &01 :: ~~~-~---··~· g cyl .. 3 •Pffd stick, Radio, $1450. 551-Slll : :· '67 LINCOLN Cont!neotal. HEXeaCEterLLENT. MEOIANI• •--~: MERCURY . ; xl nt cond.·, all extra!. S1500. ....,.,.., ~'---------~·· '70 CAD Ccnl. A non-1---------645--4280, 548-9383' damage. ONLY 48,0001-: depreciating '.!node!. Ex· '68 CAMARO, P /s, auto., 112 MARK IV '68 C'ONT. Yellow wtblack MILES! Dl!W radiator 1970 MERCURY Marqul ceptional. Last Kettering vinyl top, tow mile~. Ex-V-8, automatic transmission, vinyl top. Fully eqp'd., 4 $550 •talion wagon, air, _R/t!-·' Cact. 673-5507 {I' 644-4839 cell. running condition. New fm radio, power steering & new tires. Xlnt. $1750. Call Jack at a 4 8 -0 4 6 9 p/W, pis, radio, $3900. ~·· CAD "lO DeVill!, full 'J>WT, tires. WUJ sacrl!lce for brakes, whlte s!dewaJI tires, 675-4600 Bel\1.-een 6 & 10 PM &41.l-1502 .•' · amffm !llertt. Leather, $1500. Call wk days between air conditioning, vinyl top, CORVmE PRIVATE PARTY * * '69 Marqull Colony stl'('l radials. Offer. Eve 3-5 p.m. 897-2472 J)(l\Vel' windows &. seats, 1957 Ford wagon $3)0/best Parle Wagon, Io ad e d I ·: 646--68.13 Wkdya '71-8850. 'TI CAPK.ICE leather interior. 1865ENS). -----~--offer. Good transportation! SacrWce $1600. 675--0869 -1972-COUPE'do VILLE Ak, "'"'· am/Im. $2800. GUSTAFSON '69 CORVETTE Mt.c. Cadllllc pans~ MUSTANG ·. * 846-8053 * STINGRAY Generator s10. 2 Starters....., Fantastic shaliJl*r gold with =~-'--""~~.,....,...,. Li_nc.oln·MerC11ry 11 427 each. Set of heads $35. 1---------• vinyl top. Bt'atitlfuJ leather LIKE nu, 1969 linpala, 4 dr 16800 Beach at WarneJ' 37,00) in es, cJ., 4 speed, Call Ron 642-4!Wl 1969 MUSTANG, V-8, auto,, & ~stry i~rior. Full vinyl lop, p/s, nu lire11, lo power ateerlng, power disc -~-'--~---~ radio/Realer, p/s, x l n powrr. Factory air cond., mileage. Must sell. 837-T.!315 Huntington Beach brakes, tact. air, AM/FM, '70 FORD Ga.la.xie · 500-VS-2 cond. $1495. 673-3690 1 tllt & telescopic steering, ,67 CHEVELLE-S~. 4 spd. 842-1844 * (213) 592-5544 wide du~~able con-dr Hardtop. R/H. Fact. air. ,67 MUSTANG 289 V8 door locks. So(! & serviced Bucket seats, magi, reblt ''Home of the Viking'' dltiOn? (1a.r.1zl. P/S-P/B .. Owner Mu 11 t cond $!00 Dr best Otter: here. 1852E$DJ\ I eng $8SO. 673-7564 CONT'L '72 Mark IV. Beaut .$¥66 ~ea.wig U.S. $1565. Call 0days 64&--4181 NABERS5444c'-ILLAC '69 E~lAKECamlo~iRr Cone.I, & xlnt cond. Low mi. Pvt NABERS CADILLAC '67 FORD Country Squire. '69 MACH I SACRJ!ICE ~ AU •• rr.c. owner. $6940. 847-tl.77. 2600 Harbor Blvd. \Vagon. P/S. PfB. Mr. 4 speed, mags, Io mileage, 1.600 Harbor Blvd. 675-6237 ~ ~~9M100esa R.H. Just tuned. S/B. tires SHARP! Ofter 6'13-«i07 Costa l't1tsa. ..,..,. 5.w-9ljl '69 NOVA $895. 839-9942 '67 ?.1USTANG, auto, 6 Jr 6 cyl, auto, pis. p/b, 37,500 • COUGAR •70 Country Sedan, 8 pass. $1000. or best oHer. '68 CAD. Conv. 'te w/Red mi. $1250. ~142 p/s, p/b, air. lugg. rack, 646-::B90 ~:~~~r inte . ~~1 ·~ Il't1PALA. Air. RJH. New '70 LINCOLN MARK Ill '71 COUGAR XR7. Super buy lite blue, 673-5811. OLDSMOBILE ' · t b ak ood co d at $3195. Xlnt conci. k> 1970 COUPE W... VILLE u-es, r es, g n . V-8. automatic transmissk>n, mileage, new tires fully '67 FORD Convertible. XL1---------'~ r $900. ~190. radio & heater, power steer-loaded. AM/FM stereo, tilt 500. Power, auto. Top con· 1971 OLDS. Exciting.Sha!~· Gold w.ith '"'~ CHEVElLE stat; 0 0 . & brak h. ·.L. dition $795 846-1323' bl k l t t h '" mg es, w 1te s1u...-wheel, p/sl.eering & brakes, · · · CUTLASS S ac VJny ~ ma c ing ···~o. v•SUck. P/S. Ruru wall · · ·• J t"-68 FALCON 'D xJ t lull I th F l I _,¥ ..-tires, VJnJ• Top, ea urr air cond .. deluxe tnrerior & ' ....-• n H-~~ ~. •"th only 10, ea er in .r. u .......... $285. 548--4967 . t . . d & h ~t book I •0.1.r; "''"''"t' '-I""' ., power, factory 1a1r cond., ,,•--~=~--~~ in enor, power \\'lfl ows ronsolc, lime green wfblack mec ·· ....., 0'!' a ~· miles. Beaut. llme s!erro, tilt & telescopic 64 CHEVY lm~.la 2 dr. seals,' air conditioning. vinyl roof. Call oMginal Call 546-7215 Fae!. air, f\JU power, steering, ~t.;.u1!12BEJ J.V -C~erylo!_="'=good"o'"';'o!'°-""_'',..'o-o"-· -$1007"7; !ZSN408) .• _.11119 O\\'lll'r n+557.~n .,..,eekd~s * 1941 Ford * inter., 1iport wheels. Imm ~ ::= lJ'ru-.....-~. Convertible ulnte. (OOl)EDA). NABERS CADILLAC 1972 tMPALA c"'t. LoadO<I, GUSTAFSON COUGAR XR-7, oxrell'"t 646--1786 art 5 NABERS CADILLAC 2600 Jlarbor Blvd. p/s, p/b, p/w, etc. $3600. Li"ncoln·Mercury condtion, low mileage '68 "67 GALAXJE, 4 dr. p/s, 2800 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mtie. ;,24-9780 aft 6pin. w/vinyl top, radio, factory p/b, R & II, good rubber. Costa Mesa 540-9100~ '68 IMPALA Wagon, blue, 16800 Beach at \Vamei-air, top-of-the-line interior Best offer. 545--3441 540-9100 EL DOR 'TI , Eaby blue, air, pis, p/b, new tires, Jluntlngton Bearh package. SZ700. 1970 CNTRY Sed. Sta Wag. 1 Sales &: Service white top. Lea~. Prime xlnt care. $lll0. 497-1145. 842-8844 e (213} 592-5544 ~--c:;ti.5655.=..:='-== owner. Clean. Good steel OLDSMOBILE CHEVROLET • • cond. 644-8494 You'll find it In Classified ''Home of thi: Viking'' Sell idle items ... 642-5678 tires. A/C. 673-5811. GMC TRUCKS ~,~0~1.'U~socl-..---A990""'A~u~t~o1~.'u'-soc1=>---;990.,.;caA~ut~ .. ~.'U;;::sod::;--~--;;;990..-I A~ut~os~,~U~s~od;;._ __ ~990.:..:.~A~u~t~os~,~U~socl"'----990--A-11t_o~•·~U~Hc1-· ___ ~990--A-u_10_•~·~U_sod~~--'-P90--A-u_t_os~,~~sed 990 HONDA CARS UNIVERSITY OLD ' • • J '' Johnson & Son 1 Would Uke To Introduce You To PETER PELEUSES and- PETER i: SA VS IT'S CiREAT! 2850 Harbor Blvd. Costa i\!esa 540- "12 TOP.ONADO, Vt'f'Y, ve Clean. All options, i strreo. Absolutely m u s sell! &»-m.69 '67 OLDS CuUas, ale, pl ptb, Need& short block body '>''Ork. $175 . .S!1&-«ll9 It's just grea~ to be abtt to MONEY-BACK GUARANtEE! offer such a nice group of used cars and ALL sold on our --Pl.NT~ L ~ ' '72 RUNABOUT -• IP ... Peter, "Salesman Of The Nation" in 1972, now General ~~,~~~..;;1t-s2100 Sales Manager, says that if for any reason you're not happy with your used car pur· .· PLYMOUTH 73 Plymouth Duster · chase from us, (within ~ 48 hour period), we will GLADLY void the transaction! It's tflat 8~~· b7.!~~ b~~~~~'.'"'~ '.'.;'! • Auto Trans. power' 11teering,· • simple! We feel-"'"'•· .h•••••. a1, """""°"' 1ng, still Ul'lder factory war! IF YOU'RJ NOT HAPPY, WE DON'T WANT THE SALE. rnnty,oo!y$~mtl•~ . f , PRICED TO SEU. ,nlR ''lHl GREEK" P!llUSES Get19f'a.l SCllet MllMIOtef '72 Mark IV Low milts. like n1w, .t.rttlt wt!!!• llnl1h, white le•IMer ln1erlor, Wlll!t l•nd111 1011, r1111y luwUr\I eq11lpped. lnc:t. lull pO-. 1111!0-temp •Ir cone!., lndl~lduel pawer tteb, AM/FM ater.o. lilt ,.,,HI, crulae cootrol, pwr. door Ioele•, e«:. Sold •»II t ervlc ed 11 JDl'tn>Olli. Stt 11. llrlV• It loday, (ll~EYZ} $ALE PRICED! '69 Lincoln 2 Door Sold new by ui, serviced by us. Light gold exterior with darker gold vinyl top. Fa ctory air conditioning, power windowi and se.it. Near new Redial tires. low mileage. lo4 ifYVJ '70 Mark Ill Burgundy finish with matching leather inferior, black Yinyl top. Full power, factory air conditioning, AM-FM stereo radio, locking group, tilt wheel. low miles. I S'4b- AGH I '71 Plym. Regent Wagon Fully aquippad with eir c.ond., & full power, driYen only 20,000 m;I••-l908DSZI $2975 SOME MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE SPECIALS ;~~·.:!~~~;~;. .. ~~~~~A~ .• Mx 2 DR. s2375 '71 COUGAR : ' .. lj "'Orangt Covnt~'.e Familv of Tine Ca,._~ l!orn• 01 Th• N•w Car , , , "Golcleot T011eh" ohhson & son NOW •. 1973 l i ... P I\ I '70 Mercury Marquis , 4 Door sedan. Ivory finish with bh11elc Yinyl top end simu· lated leather interior. Power windows & 6 wey power seat, factory air, AM-FM s+e:-::::, tilt wheel, local one owner c;ar serviced by us. ( 494AFY l $2675 '71 Cougar XR7 28,000 miles. Sold new by Johnson & Son. Serviced here elso. Factory elr, power steering & brakes, Metallic: blue finish with blue Calico interior & white vinyl fop. New tires. I 5b4CXV J '69 Pontiac Bonne'VHle 2 Door hardtop. Factory eir conditioning, full power equipment. AM-FM radio, vinyl top. l•17AGHI $,475 .. '6' Cadillac · . · Sedan D•Vill•. 65,000 ,;,n.,. ~-cto'ly •Ir, full power, Gr•c:i1n 9old with bl1ek'le1ther·int•rior ·1ftd "1riyf toP. • . A v•ry nice on• own•r c•r ~riyen only'l2,000 mil•s p•r ' y .. r. IXTAlS41 Nome Of 'The New Cer , • • "Gelole11. T•11dl" fii~ ' == . NOW •• 197l . LANDAU CONTINENT AL MOTOR HOMES 2626 HARBOI BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA MESA .. 540-5630 LANDAU CONTINENTAL MOTOR HOMES I '· '· I I I ~11 1.u 'i""' ll1"1t11' "ll'lfll • .a...;,;, ... ' '"' 'Tl SATELLITE Sehrln(. pf1Jm p/b, auto, a/c, 12, mJ, Orig. owner, wry clean. Less than used car deallef. would charge. R33-8Z43 \ '• '67 PLYMOUTH 2 Dr H.T, ' $5T:'i. Good c ondition. C-i2-:IC{l3 nr ;,;}7-3088 eve · r F'llr:\· J r1. ~I rond., . .!«>0'1 tire~. 1111 shocks, best ' offer, ~fl 5, 586-~36. ' PONTIAC '72 Grand Prix . Po1'.'er S· re ring. Po we r B1·11kPS, lilt wheel, Air Con<t Bue':ix seats. AM/FM, 17,000 mil~. R.&llye wheeij: (1::'111-"\VD ~. $4695 : DAVID J. PHILLIPS, BUICK PO t-i"'J'IAC OPEL, 5'44-1 97S BUY R LEASE '73 PONTIACS DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2480 1-larbor Blvd.. at F Drtve. 0.l!l . ~"'-' , '66 PONTIAC Tempest Wag. VS. Au10. -$275. 673-7413; -•!( ..... ~ T-llRD I:" ---~&& ____ .,. '67 T·BlRO 4 1lcSor ~· full pwr, nr:1/tm rad. . 557-1579. 'In T-BIRO. Full power, fl1rt OQnd. ~tu.st 1ell. beat ofMr. im-rn Don'! •'"" up the o!Upl "L"t" It bl clullf*I, Ship to Shon!~ ... - I I , --- TtlE CLOSa YOU LOOK. TIRED OF iisfiOPPING AROUND?I! AID llOW-.15 THE ~~.FOR THE BEST DEAL?'THEN SHOP NO MOREi OUR TIME To .•. EA' ... L'Y . CARS ARE NOT PRICED .THIS WEEK BECA\ISE WE • ' . BECAUSE WE ARE SLASHING PRICES ON . EVERY NEW.,CAR & " ARE PREPARED TO MAKE A DEAL ON A .. Y CAR IN LOOK ·us OVER! ~~,~~GE INVENTOR, _:. NOT JUST ~ SELECTED .. " tRU(K THIS~WEEK ! l SEE us FOR: . . . •• SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! NEW 1973 TORI NOS ON COURIERS-PICKUPS VANS-T-BIRDS NEW 1973 BIG FORDS 2 DRS., 4 DRS., HARDTOPS -BIG &1 SMALL FORDS! LTDS & GALAXIES CHOOSE FROM 29 s14900 CHOOSE FROM 65 LEASE A 1973 FORD LTD •SUPER VANS • ~RUISAIRE VANS · • MINI· HOMES 2 DRS., WAGONS RUNABOUTS s9929 3'MO~TH~~;N~:~:ASE •CAMPERS NEW 1973 MUSTANGS CHOOSE FROM' 111 NEW 1973 MAVERICKS GRANDES, FASTBACKS & MACH l 'S YOU CAN'T CHOOSE FllOM 15 BEAT OUR DOLLAR-f.OR- DOLLAR VALUES 'ANtwHERE ~· -. ~· ' ~ , .. --~ -~ ·-- FORD . II CHOOSE F'ROM 15 TRADE I~ $PECl~L5 • -.... "!"""" -.- -~--- MISC /IMP'TS '66 GALAXIE 500 · '66 PLYMOUTH 2 DR: H.T. UASE DIRECT FROM A FORD DEALER & SAVI THl MIDDLE MAN IXPENSE HARD TO F1ND USEI>! . l- . .. . '72 Y A•AAHA i4otorcycle wind1hield. IUOV075 1 '~' :~.lred~~h~~,~~~~0.,Sp~~r 1t1111ring, low MAKE m+le1 . (l7912HI 4 d oor:H.T:, radio, he11ter, 11utotr1alic. power 1teerin9, VB, good mil11. ! RRY · ]]1 ) $679 Radio, h,111~r. 11uto., power 1leerin9, s953 V.8, .tir cond., good mil111. ( F-CJ805) 250<:c. o .. ly 2600 mile1, 111ddl11 b1191 , • s499 t '6~ vw · FASTB ACK '70 VW Camper OFFER ! '71 PINTO 2 DR. ::~.:-~;~::·~·,,:c9:~·· ,,, •• ,,;., 512 9 4 '69 GALAXIE 500 T DR. H.T. .. VI, ""°"· ,f.,, • ., ·•~•• .. P"" ,,.,,;,,, '1683 .,invl roof, good mile1. IXSR92J I '10 COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON '67 PLYM. BARRACUDA NEW PAINT 2 dr., VI , radio, healer, 111,do., new p•i11t, low l'1ile1. IVVWlt29 l 5.898 '68 CHRYSLER New Yorker < Doo• H"dtop, 1,11 po••<. ,;, <••· s1 099 ditio11i119, la:d mil•1. !YCNS 11 l ' . '68 OLDS Cutlass Supreme Radio, heater, 4 speed, 9ood miles. !TBZ489 l I '10 TOYOTA WAGON s943 M"' II. ,.d;o '"''" '"'•· oh;ft,$1654 low mile1. (030CEKl , '69 TOYOTO ~ORONA H.T. Fully equipped, •uto. 1~iff, good mil•1. tXVFL7 t-I ,. Witll tent, good mil111, red, ~ 1peed. !,6tlCAG 1 '72 Datsun Pickup lmm•eul1te th1u-out, 4 •P••d, radicl,~heat ~r . !OtrEJC ! '. '69 Dodge Van/Camper CONVERSION. V8 , r1dio, h•1ter, •ulo., good miles. ( 112HIE I '70 Chevrolet 3/4 Ton MAKE OFFER Pickup. Ro1dio, heet.r, o1utometic:, V.11, s199 7 power 1teeriru1. good milo11 . flll8 1H ! '69 F250 Ford 3/4 Ton P.U. . s999 '67 MUSTANG H.T., : ~-· .. -· · , '65 CHEVELLE WAGON· "BIRD" LAND C•mpu ''"fi•I, V-1, ,.;;o, hut".$1866 ' eutom•tic. {l27•l'DI - I 0 ' ; '67 T-BIRD H.T. Loaded. ~ FBF51s4 1 ONLY 5 1199 ·n For~ FlOO Picllup ' .. Rad io; heater, 11ulo., power _.t~ering, '1 096 VI, radio, heater, 1uto., power 1t1111r- "'"vl roof, VB, good mil111. !VHC991 1 ing. INFZS26J SJ66 '67 T-BIRD H.T. $1198 v.1 , ,.;;., '••"•· '''"'"d oh;lt, •2399' Loadt.'Cl. jLJPZ662' ONLY :~~r1oai m•t•lv 15 ,000 mil••· 1214-: '67 T-BIRD 4 DR. $1197 '68 MUSTANG H.T. '70 CAMARO H.T. -. · 1"ndau. 1WAY"'' ONLY • '72 Ford 1/2 Ton P.U. R•dio, ;••f•r, o1uto .. power ,1teerin9, s1 262 VII, ro1dio, ho1o1ter , e1.eello111t thru-out, '·1994 .-.. -T--B-IR-D -2 D-.-. -------$-1 _7_9~6 1;,, V8, 9ooefmilo11. !WlAlf",rt1 .• IJOod "tni!o11 . IOllCKXJ • Landau. (WI'X597! . ONLY V It ••dio end ho1•t•r o1wfom•fe '2687 · , "" , ' • . _, _ G·o~d mil11. ( 19l02Li '. \ '69 T-8/RO LANDAU s1895 '71 GALAXIE 500 ._., . . .. -..,~· . . 112 PONflAC GRAND PRIX Loadod. l'69CPAI ONLY '70 T-BIRD LANDAU $2894 Loaded. 1G20DFCI ONLY '71 FOrcl' F250 3/4 Ton 2 •••• -,.,dtop, ••• ;., '"!'" ..... ~ s19.9 5 o1ir, powo1r 1+.o1rlng, v111vl r4to~ Good • milo1t. t-99t.CQLI .. .; ... ; .. , ......................... s39· , 99 1119, powo1r wl11dow1, vinyl roof, o1or, · . low mil,,, I 425EAEI • '71 T~BIRD LANDAU $3693 l11el. 9 'Ii' C1mper. v.1, •uto,, R& l WITH CAMP~R s4555 H, •ir, JpJit rim1, 9d. mi. !J S~. 74H) N11 '70 9 1'1' Hunl•r C.O . j y • Loadod. t9J4DCHJ ONLY . ~ '¥¢€' ____ ,,.,. ..... .., --·· · •• All •ale i:irfccs •f!ctOve thru Sun. M•Y 27, '19'3. ~ '· I ) • \ • • ' I OAILY PILOT WtdMsctay, M.11 23, 1973 1973 PLYMOUTH Gran-Sedan Pl.nrr of .xtr.1s lncludint •Ir con· dltlonl119. Sir. Ho. PP4JM)016ttl. OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE 1973 CHRYSLER ~::::.-:-::7-:f'\ NEW YORKER Sco\JN\ !lthD~~~ ~~Dw~n~tlf ••· 0' 1~::.~~ludl'ng ... ,,, llflirMf• :1400 Off Suggested Retail Price Str. ~o. CHU-T1C-14llJ.O SPRING CLEARANCE '70 PLYMOUTH 4 ooo• SEDAN VB, •ulomalic, ,,d;.,, h••+•r, powe r 1tee•in9 & br a~•'· W(S/W, •ir cond1- lio11in9. 1908ANGI $1495 '71 MAZDA RX2 ROTARY 2 DR. CPE. Rot••v 11ngin•. 4 1p•11d, , .. dio, healer, power brek•1. a ir conditioning, b11c~11t •••h. low mile1 . !210E0Hl '70 CHEV. MALllU 4 DR. H.T. VS, e u!o , radio, hteler, power 1le<!-r · ;.,g, air, ~inyl top, wl t/'W tirti. !936· AUN f '70 FORD MAY!RICk 0 cvl., radio, healer, ...,1,1w tire•. 1959AG(l '70 TOYOTA CORONA MARK II WAGON 4 cvl., "ulo. tren1., rtdio, he•l•r, w •'w tir11, eir. (608AWN '70 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON B•f~edere. Ve, •utomtlic, radio, h••'· e•, power •'••ring, W/S/W, roof rte.Ii. ! 446ASJ l • SPRING HAS SPRUNG. THE GR.US HAS llZ. ATLAS IS WHERE THE SAVINGS IS! '69 CHEVROLET MALIBU Z DR! H.T. V8, dlllOrnlllic, radio,1f't1•flr, JIOW<lf st1er in9, I/I S/W, air <;onditionin9, Y•nyl lop. l JJ I OLM I $1495 '71 FORD LTD 2 DOOR HARDTO .. VII, "ulom .. tic, ,..,dio he .. ier, power •leering & br .. kes, W S/W, •ir 11:ondi· tioning, ,,;,,vi lop. !SSSCMKI $1995 '67 MERCURY COUGAR Xlt1 2 Dr. H.T, V8, eulomet>c, radio, h11l'I· •r, power 1l<!erin., & bra ke1; ,.;, con- .diticning, leather inter., ~inyl top, (WXH'1'111 s1195 P•k•' A .. Ph.-Tax llMI Lk:tnH 1"41 ..... Y•lid 'Tll 10 P.M. St,tncYy, ,,..y ll, !tlJ. AH C1n Stitbl«I lo Prior Silt • I • And Get Out For More Fun! NEW Y2 TON PICK-UP SER. NO. 3HOCOCHl70766 NEW 1973 TRAVELALL BEAUTIFULLY EQUIPPED SER. NO. l HOHOCHl l2ll I NEW 1973 l/4 TON PICK-UP "CAMPER SPECIAL" -5 "GET 'EM UP SCOUT" HEAD FOR THE HILLS ••• THE DESERT ••• OR BEACH IN A RUGGED GO-ANYWHERE SCOUT P!LOT-ADVERllSER ft Get Up To JUST TO LET YOU K Now_ Especially for your . convenience we will be Open Memorial Do ' I 0 a 't"/ y, .m. ' I 0 p.m C II -• II or com •n , to see the e . . . "AlUs DEALS." PLUS TAX AND LICENSE OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE •p,u Don Not l•l•de C.mpw SER. NO. lH2COCHBl7598 P'tlK:ES AND DISCOUNTS VALID 'TIL It P'.M. SUN,. MAY If, Im ;. -: .. / • •; .. ... .. ' :· ,. .. ' f • " PILOT-ADVERTISER . WtdfW'SdAY, May 23, 1973 DAILY l'ILOT 8S WtdnttdaJ, Ma1 23, 1973 ..; ' '73 DODGE BRAND NEW ,,.___ ____ CHARGER 2 DQOl...(OUM full foc.tory tqulP"'ent. Order yours now. FULLY FACTO RY EQU IPPED s57 DOWN Low miles, used -(596HOE) IMMIDIATI DELIVERY . ' 5 1988 $6 7 M 0 NTH 567 is total down, 167 is total mo. payment. incl. tax. license & alt carrying s2211 FULL ~~;,~;::; ~Ji:~2~~~0~ TOUR CHOICE OF CUSTOMIZED INTERIORS $58DOWN $SSA MONTH PRICE license. Annual percentage rule 10.71 °0 '71 PINTO Radio, heater, deluxe interior and exterior (796FIA) '71 COLT 2 Door Hardtop, radio, heater, mag wheels. (6H23Kl5105846) ''71 VEGA G~T. fully factory equipped. Rally wheels, plus much mare. (447DJN) • $ I FULL PRICE $31.50 DOWN $31.50 A MONTH $31 .SO is total'"· payment $31.50 is total me. pymt. incl. tax & lic•nH and all corr"f1"9 charf•s on .,,. cndit for 36 mos. o.ferrecl poynw"t price $1176.66 Intl. tox I llc•nse. ANNUA~ Pl1C£NTAGE UTE 17.91%. . -. - IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $150~." '70 FORD RANCH WAGON VB, auto. trans., power steer ing , factory air cond. (181F-ZW ) '69 OLDSMOBILE ROYAL 88 2 Dr. HT, VS, auto. trans., power steering , vinyl top. Factory air cond., w/s/w tires (YUA543 ) '67 FORD YAN Auto. trans., radio, heater. Fully factory equipped. ssaa $.SI 11 ,_... da. ,,,.,,. $.SI /1 ,.,.,i -P1Mf'n• 1.-cl. tu, lkeftM I .U _...,.htfc'""'9es M ~· CNMf fior 42 -thL ~ l'P"· jtrin $24M IMI. tG• & nc.t.M. AHHUAl HtCINtJiol IAft t.~ '70 ROADRUNNER 2 Door, nodlo, ......,, 4 lpood -L. Y-l (IMZINOG124541) s9 FULL 6 RICE '· '70 PL YM. CUDA Y-1, -........ -tOlo'"'9. •l•yl ,_;, '.,.J"-.. ('2Dar) . 5966 FULL PRICE • '70 CHARGER v.a,....., trw., ,...., .....,, ....,, .., ._,., .&r ....... ,...., ·~ 1467~ •966 '' FULL PRICE SHOP . AND THEN STOP AND COMPARE '68 FIREBIRD '69 TORINO '70 DUSTER V-8, auto. trans .• radio, hea-S866 FASTBACK, V-8, auto. trans , $ 766 Rad io, heater, all vinyl in-S966 fer, powe~ steeri~, vinyl lop, Power disc. brakes, wide oval · ter iors plus full factory equip. factory air cond. (WUH087) tire , canary yellpw. f045CUW) (VL19COBJ17367) ' IULL PRICE FULL PRICI IULL PRICE ' '70 PLY. Fui Ill '68 COUGAR XR7 2 or. H.T. VB, auto. trans., V·B, auto . trans., power power steering, vinyl top, fac-$1 66 steering, factory air, vi nyl lop S866 torv air (993AVK) IWFL993J • . IULL PRICE IULL PRICE I • Ranch wagon, V-8, auto. • '70 FORD Wain trans., pcwer steering, radio,$ I 0 heater, factory air (181FZW) IULL ,. I '71 SATELLITE Sebring. 2 Dr. H.T .• V.f, aulo.S 1266 Trans .• radio, heater, power slee-r ing, factory air . · i607DJKI FULL ,llCE '69 DART V-8, auto. trans .• power $866 •leering, adio aod heal" . (79.48MU ) IULL PllCI ,_ • • .. .~ ~~ :1 ·A ''j. :J • i-' .. -· .•. . . : ·=: .. . .. ~I . ·• ... . ' . ' . " • . . .. .. .. •, . .. .. .. .. • . . . . . . . .. . . . • • • .. .. .. .. .. .. -. • • .. • . . •• . . . . .. .. • • • • • • l : •• • • • • • • .. . . .. .. . . •• .. -.. .. • • • . . -. . . ... . . . . • • • . ~ . ' ' ' . ' . • . ' • •• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . • . . • • . • • • • • . . .. . . .. .. .. . . . . . ... .. . ~: . t • •• .. • .. • . ·' • . • .. • ... .. .. • ·' ' • ' ' ' ' t Wed-. M11 2l, 1973 ·1973 PINTO A Speed, rear bumper guards, vinyl interior, bucket seat\, forced air heater, etc. JR10W18606' • BU.ND NEW ' ...... W ......... M"123,197J PILOT-ADVUTJSER 34 ----;c----=-::..:...:..;;:::__ __ ....:..:;::.:c_;__ -- COMPLETELY SELF CONTAINED " tory arr conc1111or11ng, power steering, VI engine, auto. trans., power I ' 6 9 Po.Q LLEl~. '"'° "'"'· 10< $12 8 8 power brakes, radio, heater, tinted ... k I · •·11 If (SGTAMl42216) . glass, wtieet covers. No. ZLH-451 .... a es, power S eerrng, ru Y se 1---.....l!:;;.;~;;:::;,,;=.::::...--~~""""""::--i containe<I, sleeps 4, toilet, shower, $ lnttrio<, light.,....,... .. , ........... ............. _,_,_ -· 1octune-. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IRA.ND NfW '73-MAVERICK IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 2 DOOR Fully CarPtled, vinyl trim, 2 speed wipers, deluxe bumper group, etc. {4'3K91L223830J • friger ator, undercoat ing. '6 8 '. H-Ev-$13 7 9 range & oven, etc. Gas/elec. re-r .... :;, '°""'"~'"'' "dio, ""'"· t ORDER TODAY. '6 9 IM~.A!~"~'''''"°' $13 8 5 ~~D t1on1ng, powef' steoer1ng, radio. he.,fer, '72 FORD VAN CONVERSION ----=--=-~-'"•'_"'"·-""'~-gl"'-'ZMZ~~~~~· • . '69 '69 p_OMP.§ [.~. VB, '"" POWer stlNlrlng & windows, factory air, etc. {YWT-718) FORD ECONO YAN Auto. trans .• long wheel baw. No. EJO.I09. $1388 VS. cruise·o-mati c, power steering & brakes, hi-ba~ seats, radio, heater, tinted glass. 70 amp baltery, R:r. dinene, overhead bed, stove, ice box, pressurized wattr. E24GHP19S8 °'~~!4.N ·~ '""'' $14 7 8 MAND '73 LTD WAGON 1--..._--"-:='.":-:-Fc -==-=------::---=-=--:--t-'M-M-ED-1A_rE_D_EL_1v_ER_Y __ .....; "fWcouNrRv sQu1RE ~!;i=.':::~~=.i '67 c1.1~v $1488 ELIV RY lllnfry, ~ rttt. $«111 lJ1651'*'-P1ck~p \ ~ampe:r•s1ieu VI, auto., radio, heater. factory air CV12236J ' 6 8 'A Q: v~""'' .. .,. · ''""' $15 8 8 air conditioning, ptN/er steering, power brekes, power windows. power seals, n1dio, heater, whitewall tires, vinyl xse166 ,.,.. PllC!OllT UST_. ' 71 f..Q.,~.P '""" ,,, """"''" $1 J 2 9 ing, power steering, radio, healer. ~~ND 1973 BRONCO $18 8 8 3,1,i TON PICK UP TRUCK IDEAL TRU CK FDR $ YOUR CAMPER .. ~ , . 71 f,Q@P""""'"'"'"'""' $2 3 8 7 !F25BRR4J112i • THUniDE 'RB. IRDS----1---'-''· "_'· "_'" --------'-I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY :: rint. glass. 11,AGR I' "OTIAWA""CAI OVfl CAMPER. • LTD'S . , ': )" '70 x~.~t@Q,"""······ $2388 ....... BNREAWN-D -=,13~oo!!"!!!!"'!RA~o $8.88 · .• , TOR\ 1 N' OS :,: 1 c.w., radio, heater, w/w tires, vin/roof, no DG E $tQ~t. ic!'bo•. sink. dlne!lt. ,urltinl. "" (lJM,411 ' ' t ~up ,., Ton 8 loot bed auto. fr1 ns., POWer steering, 14479K ., ... ' '72 M,~,~~YBX .. '" .. $3186 .... _ ... -...... -.-... ""'"' ~ rr<11ns., fcJClory air condllloning. power sturing, power brakH, radio, healer, llnted glass, (9SJOOT) • ' . • ' • t I ( --• • ' San Clemente Capistrano eo1110N *. ·* --~-., I . . • Today's FIDal N. Y. St.eeks l!CI Libbers CIOi1n ' . . ·signs of Change~. . By JOHN ZAU.ER Of ... Dll!f ............ Good looking women may not be ·whistled at as often as they used to be. A 1"""' lalller is seeking. ebild·wpport payment. trom bi.I ex-wife. Men ar~ not ashamed to wear their hair below their ' oho\lklers. Are these aiins that the country iJ edg- ing toward total equality between the -es! ~ 11 ·.,,.. !ltt. -11 repreoent a victory for·~eo? A ll'OUP ot women's liberationists holding a Women's Week discussion at UC Irvine TUeeday amwered yes to both questions. And Ibey predicted that the trend away from the traditional 1e:1: stereotypes will contkn.ae· for a b\g time. "I'D never see total llOcial eqUallty in . my lifetime," said one panelist, Joanne McKlm, a Santa Ana Colle&• teacher. "Even l!'Y· daughter probably wm't ,.. · it. It's going to lake a kl>g•boul, but we'll stay with i t as long as we bave to.'' "lt'a hard to put your fmger on exactly what's happening," agreed another panelist. Jade Bfnder:"But it's clear that attitudes are changing." The nm.arts were made at a panel called "For Men.-Only" -a chance for the males ol. UCI to find out everything they've always wanted to know about womeo.s liberation. Bui the 'event wu very nearly a bust because only two men ~wed up - a former studerlt riow a campus janitor and a newspaper reporter. Undaunted by the law tumout maybe everyone was watching the Watergate bearings on TV, one suggested -the ....,.,, reapaoded to a broad range of questlillls and camea on briskly !or nearl,y two bQun. , · "One ol the good IJilblls-ha~ now is tbal t.ermaJite ·~· .p ·~~· are not awlled ·fo ~ ~ · muCb," said Judy Uiete) e couMekJr ~· ,,, "I think people have liien made to ., • realize that WMH!n are human be.inp, not some kind of 'chick' who has only one real va1ue in life to the man who calls her that." In the same way, tbe group 1~, women are no lmger beiD& whistled at as much - a sign tb.aJ women ire con- sidered "less all sex objects and !pO{e as human beings," acconliog to MJ .. Bhlcler. The group expre5.!led entbullastJe ~ port for a man wbo is CWTtnt!Y ftabtiog a court battle to gel chllckupport :ru can Ill Red Crahs Exit? Mesa Bank Crustacean Quantity Reports Vary Loses Cash The invasion of beaches in San aemenlA! and Dana Point by tiny red crabe Is ''pntty much over" 0< u atrong -. ever today, c:lePeoding on who's talk- ing. A.Harbor Pab!ol officer al Dana Point said'he "lhlnkt there·are fewer here" but cooldo'l runy tell. ,-A ilaJI ~)e.. !Ueguard said the ,.!~glc' (~) erabs wllicti bqan arrtvi'n#·witb north-bound currents l~t 'Yeek ~·4ee111 to be dissipatma." crab&, which are adverseJy affecting fishing in some areas. 'l1le silver dollandr.ed marine animals may prove to be a boon to area fishing, however, if ooe theory is correct. To Bandit A Dana Wharf.Sportfisbing official said ·, state fish and game representatives think A sandy·haired bandit who initially 'big fish from the south will follow the food source· north to San Clemente area. asked for change for a $10 bill flashed a ln the )oog-run the lob61.er·like crabs gun at a teller Tuestt¥y and escaped with will be good for · sport fishing, he added, more than $5,200 from a Costa Mesa skepticism in hiS voice. bank.. . . No ooe really knows, he .sai~, w~n the The %; 15 p.m .. holdup at the Bank of Jl~ld the ''re!! carpet" oo·thei>each ii:" ·U>l!\.•iiol ll!1Dlly."' ' _}! alid •'llsb_airj~ oil tho ~ wlD l<l!'v1 .aod Wba,t !!!ell' visit will •-J 11lll ·., • ...;;. •. Blvd., . .,..t ·OU , m~ , ., J'!i'i'!tf'• attS<-""°'~ • ..__, , -"":--_.__,,_---+--. -~lliiall)oay _!a. _.....,, ltl"IPJIU'I gun-. ' ,• ~~ n\~fifwi'cf'De'~~-·~ '-"'~P~a&J ~~..1;" .... ~~ ' From Cleinente Planners A roQUee\ by Douglass-Pacific Corpora- tion to re-route Avenida San Pablo wltbin its ·PJ"esktenUJ.1, Heights development will be beard tonight by San Clemente Plan· ning Commissioners. A proposed revision to the once-con· troverslal ~re proje<;l east of the inunicipal goU ·coune also asks to in- ·crea.se the number of wtils per acre from 1.91 to 2.3. ' . 1be change suuesled io Ave!l!da San Pablo, a major entrance to the homes, 1ioulil'bewllbio lho tracts --·'!be C<Ellllbslon meets at 7:3!> io the oouncil cbombers al City Hali. Aho on ~·· agen4 are: . -Public bearing oo an ameodmenl lo : . Gardening Thief Strikes Again the wniDg onlioance which -id put all unctassltied lands into a new open space zooe. -Discussion of a tentative tract map !or a pn>p<>!ed one-lot condominium J>l'Oi- ect a1ieady under cooatructim as 60 apartment unit& at El Camino Real and Avenida Magdalena by Fairway Sea Views Company. · -Request for tentative tract map Cll a 92-unit, seven-lot ooodominium ~ at l(I0..150 La Esperanza across City Hall by Butler Housing Corp. -Proposal to convert the 18-unit Panoramic Apartments I n to con- dominiums at 420 Monterey lAlle by Byron Marshall. Crash Scatters $1 Milliori Casli Jn San Oemente PEAruseuRc. va. <AP> -A ;.~San Clemente p>lice are looking for a Trailways bus collided with an armored truck during a heavy rainstorm near with a green thumb or a new here today , killing the driver of the truck =,.:: u:! i:,u:. =tureean: and alrew~ abool It million over the ;1111 Clem-. blgbway, police said: . "'Ibo ·appoirenUy related rolda on ]Jltloa Gjles County Sherill Jolm E. Hopkins a1i11 blcicylrda toot place Ille' 'Mondw llld olllctn' set · up roodblocks at the _,... [y ~---"---'-• ..i .... , ~ , ond ~ au .traffic while #16-or ear ~~ -~r..r-r ~ truct'P~u.e: money. ,,alt.roi~JcCO<d ';,i .SS-~ s.D ~ · dr!Vet'.I ldenllty. was being Clmente rep>rted lrllaaing lour hanging wtU>beld pending notification ol next ot j;lants va!ut<I at 145 from bis porch and kin. Tbe bus.carried only two posoengen Y!lrd. ' • who received ID'll"" inJurl.._ ) A &lmUar theft of two fuchsia plants and a lawn stool from 331 ~ San Glemente was reported by resident 1Henrl ~ Vanrekom . He valued the items al 135. ·The largest take wa1 at adjaCeot m Camino San ClemenlA!, where t"6 -pl..tlc weav(pelio cbaira, two11DOll and one greon lllble' wllti 'giass lop were · stolen, police aaJcL 1 Qwnei' Geort:t! Christian valued the furniture at p:)O. · • . ~LAS~IFIED AD >lJRIN(~S HAPPINESS • • A Daily Pllot claas!lled advertiser Is nappy because be oold 1!11 car to the flm ge,.... who called. ""''1 lio'w the a4 rao: " PORSCHE 'Ill Targa -glUI ' bad< window, 6 spd, AM/FM, _;. white, ulnt cood. 32,000 mi. 14*, Call eves. (Phooe No.) {The new ol!ntr b now ba!IPil.Y driving · ~ car. ~ you coold. \e~ a HUit lialllllor by ...-·-111(1(.f 1-.VDo!ly ~d •• lfti!·direct '"-!>Plnea' line - ·1 C.ookiiig Champ .G. Ma~ .Walk.er ' ' Succ1unhs at· 44 ' man ordered 'a idler to tum ovr.r her ~-t~~~ ol ., _ _.,,,,. ' ~'......,. Jm'W"~ : p111po1nt1nc the preciae amoltDI c Investigators raced 'II>' the ~l at Harl>c>' Boulevard ·ml Adains /.venue but louod no trace ol lbe ·banc!ft, who quickly s!ipped out tkougb a rear door. '!be unidentified teller conlronted dur- ing the robbery which occurred while eight penort! were ~nt said the gun- man displayed a revolver to show be meant buslneu. Authorities did not disclose im· mediately whether any personnel ac- tivated the bank'!I ~nolng camera to (See HOLDUP, Page !) New $1.8 Million NCO -ooh Slated For Pendleton Construction will begin in June on a $1.S million non-commissioned officers' club at Camp Pendleton in Northern San Diego CoUnty by McCann Construction C.Ompany of Coma Mesa. Cmlpletion daJ.e for .the new Marine C'.orp6 facility is mid-1974. 'Ibe new club will nplace a nwnber of small clubs housed in buildings con· structed during World War II. a base of • ficial said. It will include a banquet area and ba!ln>Om, dining room and cocktail lo<m([e. LoCalecl ill tbe ~ mese ol the but, 11 ,llj be of lolr 'Jll&in!enimce concrelA! m8aonry and -IOdllng. It will serve staff norH:OrrurUSSioned officers only. McCarm. COMtructiao WU the sue· cessrul low bidder at $1.0& million. Groundbreaking will be' June U. • Fire Station Bi~ For Capistran~ Set Blda will be opened J.;;. ta !or the con- -ot tile ,,... Norlb Capistrano ~ .talion of the Orange County Fir< ~t. ' Willard Jordan of Colla Mesa u the ircllilect !or the atructure lo be located oo Puerta Real , 325 feet 1..-th of MArperllA! Parkway. Esllmated 001t Is l!M,000. " , Bello llp There Uf"iT~ For 2-year-old ~dd!e Richert of Philadelphia, Buttons, a ·six:foot- eighl clown with the Ringling Brothers Circus, st.a nds pretty tall. . c .USD Threatened Over Sehool's Water Source By FREDERICK SCHOEMEKL Of ,... n.jty ... let '"" The Capistrano Unified School District has been threatened with legal action if it refuses to voluntarily change Richard Henry Dana School from the Capistrano Beach County Water District to the South c.oast CcJunty: Water District. The suggestion a lawsuit might arise is made in a letter to CUSD officials rrom the law olftce or Rimel, Harvey and Loian, attorneys for the SCCWD. The . prollleJ1IS Co bock eeven years. whOn lhe elemenlal'y achool, localed at Z424l La Cresta DriW, Oana Point , was ccmlructed: At that mne,.the SCCWD was unable lo Pf'CMde water to the school due to lack of ilCWUta in the area. Scboo1 officials turned to tho Capistrano Beach district for water and have ~ receiving it from there for the past seven years. The South CoMt district -today ha• lines nmlfli Into lhe area around the achoo! and , b deman\llng the lacility switch to ill lf8IA!m. Tbe attorneys' lelter nolA!S that a aec- tlon ol the Calllornia CjloatltuUOO,.Jll'O- hiblll one mtmldpal -~.Crom pro-Yldlic um~ ·wltlilb the l>Wndarles of •UioiJier mtmldpal corporation which lllmlmM IUCh oervlcea and doea nOt cm-sent.•• I CUSD trustees this week received the request but voted to refer the matter to Orange County Counsel for a recom- mendation on what to do. Trustees also said they· want to see how the change would affect water costs for the school . According to the letter, the minimum water rate for both districta is the same. standing at 30 cents l:l't' 100 cubic feet of water. The lellA!r. prepared by Geo<ge Logan ol lhe law office, stales that the Chandler-Sbennan Corporation was (aced with the same situation and voluntarily (Ste TllllEA T, Page !) Community Group Meet Site Changed The Capistrano Beach Community Association meelJni TIJlnldaY will be at lhe Board ol Realty oll!ce at 211841 Comlno de Estrtlla, San Clemente. The locallon ol U\e 7:39 p.m. g ... ral meeting -prevloutly reporlocl In-correctly u 480 Camino de EalrOl!a. A new area geoeral plan ancf' possible rezoning are the-aaen(}a toj:>ics. payment! from his dlvoroed wife. i "U a man wants to lttep his ll:IO, '' said Ms. Binder. "that's a good sip that botb sexes are beginning to accept parental responsibility, instead ot leavinl tbt whole job to just one sei." Ms. Blnder said that If the woman ~ a high-paying job and Ibo man 1'U Sid·, died with child-raising COl\ls, It WU ""'1J lair" that the woman pay a pOrt of U.. (See IJBBERS, P .. e I> ' • • Government; Minister Forced Out LONDON (UPI) -Lord Lambton, a g9vemment minllter who reslRMd T\ies- dhy night in Britain's most expl01ive se~. security and drug scandal 1n a decade, confessed today he did so because of a "casual acquaintance" wilh I call g1Ji woo.. huaband \rled to 9ell secnt photographs ol lbem lo lll!Wspe~ • "Bul there baa been no lleCUl'llY ri.k or blackmail," I,a!llblon, 60, Im~ in • stateine!>t hudod to \It-It 1 po11l1Cil. aide. .. Wllhio hours, the olllce or Atl!fte7 Gener4).,Slr ~ ·ll'l'l'lin-·-. that . ~ allillnl' I ll'e I a I· _..mot cbq....,. drup,ban- llloied """"' . """"*"'· It aid ... b be111 \!flardd •1t11;11ir ,,... ., -. Juani 9nd am~ .. '!!le Evenlfll 8ta1lilord ol 1-al4 special agenll lor tllrae weeltl ha•• been I n vest!J•U"i &elll&tlonal al!eptlaas "about vice lina lm[ll'.Oprietlea lnwlvlng government mln1sters and o t he r figures." It sai,d at least one other government mJn1Jter is involvr.d. The London Evening News said the.girl is a black call girl named "Bet!Y'J,and that a man calling himseU her bUtaDQ tried lo sell "lnct'llnlnatlng pbotograi!iia" ()f the girl aad X..mbton to a Britlsb news:paper"tor #5,QOO. Lambton quit abruptly Tuesday nlglil ''for personal mid health re&IODI', u Parliament underaecretary !or the Jloral- Alr Force. Government IDUl'CeS said Pr J. me MlnlslA!r Edward Heath .CIOderecl &0' ... hauaUve probe and no WalerplMlyl9. cover up or whitewash. Keath will make a statement to "'11a-, ment on Tliund.sy OD t.be affair, IONE ... ment officials said. Tbey Aid there would be no official oomment unUl tbtta. ~ Labor opposition memben• a! ParUa .. ment bomborded tbe govmunent witb demands for an explanatkn of tbe allep;. lions published by tb• West Germall magazine Stem. "This is the scrdld story/' Lambton.- said today In a formal •ta-isoued by an aide in his Berwick«>-~ con· sllluency. "All that happened 11 thal some sneak pimp baa seen an ~ portunlty ol ~I money by lllo ale ar the story ·and eecre\ pboto[p-apbo IO ...papers at home and abroed. , "l behaved with creduloua atupidlty," !Bee SC4NI,)~ .... I) Oruge Mostly SlDlDY on 'I1Nrsday, after the early motnb\{ low clouds, wllb · little temperature change. Hliba in the 60s at Ibo beaches, l1alna to the mld-'ros Inland. Overnil[ht Iowa In the 508. INSIDE TODAY Rtll>O!ldlnQ to Ille r ... totio!I tllot d!< c01m1Y1 chkf (IOI rup-' plitt must e11i tht amount of f1<tl M """ d.u .. r, 111,,.maon ordned all deportm<nll to C1ir- ta.i1 1*0MIHntial gas ·ue. See Slofll mid othot counq, ...,., Oil PQQO~ JQ and Jl. ' ::: . --'"!! "' ............ ', Or .... CWlllY ,..,, ... "'"" . -..... i:lr.1--..._M ·--·-...: = . -----~ ... '--------'-~·---'-t' • • • ' ~Dirty' Literature Criticized By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot t1M o.11)' PlllM lttff "I would like to -bleep -bot t can't because I'm not a homosei:ual ." There were no bleeps Tuesday night when Mrs. Dorl' Allen accu.9ed Trustees or the Huntington Beach Union High School District of keeping copies of a _"dirty" poetry book in their libraries. ~. The Westmin.sLer malron, attired in a ~ biouse, whi~ skirt, and blue blazer, and wflile shoes with pointed toes, iJ. lustrated ber point by reading sample pauages. But Westminster High Principal Fer- nm Christensen noted that Mrs. All~. "1ith her shock treatment, had probably exposed more student! to the book than had seen it In all the years it has been on the library shelf. "It is recommended for t he !tJphisticated literature students only," he said, "and In the three years that ~t.re'\'e had It, it has only been used four ttmes." With 40 students in attendance at the board meeUng to be honored for outstan- ding acievemenll, Chriltensen observed, '1 think more children have been ei:· posed to the obscene language In the book tonight than have been in the past three yea.rs. ' Mrs. Allen, who identified herself as a member of the Citizens Committee of California, said the book was on the sltelv.. o! three of the dlstl1ct's bigb school libraries. Sbe did not identify the cltbens group further. Jn making her point, she read just about every four-Jetter word and !ft~'?Kical phrase from the "Young ~can Poetf," Interspersing the ear eearlng readlng with comments such as '."a .Reader's Digest of oriental sex prac· tke1i0 and "poems, gentlemen, poems.'' ; She also criticized the school ad· Jilinlstration at Westminster for the @.iblicatlon of a student s a t I r e tewspaper, Ye Olde Town Crier, listing IS Ott of the paper's articles, "Pigs Off Campus." Marty Trujillo, the Westminster stu· dent who edited the paper pointed out a pllle later thal the article deall witll the Rig• in the campus Cann and bad nothing to do with law enforcement. MrS. Allen's protest was interrupted by school board President Dennis Mangers who suggested that she cut short the readings and make her point. -"I'm sorry lf this is emberrusing you )fr. Mangers,'"she started to reply. ,, "C didn't say It W&.! embarra11ing, I just Mid you might want to get to the point o! all tbis," he ..Ud. At the cmcluston of ~s. Allen's i»'osenlat!Oll, Mangm ~d lber lhal the district has an establlahed policy for citizenJ to have what they-conalder ob- 'ject\onable materl.al1 reviewed by school o!ficlalB. Because the poetry anthology is en the 'lhelves at Marina and Edison High Schools as well as Westminster, trustees agreed lhal Mn. Allen could lnlliate the process at Weslminster High School and it would apply to the two other campuses 8s Well. School principals and district ad· ministrators were ordered to report their findings at the next board meeting. Mrs. Ailee's protest was backed up by Edmund Sheehan, an umucceuful school board candidate in. the April election who voY.'ed to bring more "matters of mutual concern," and the local chairman of the . dlizen's group. . Ashes of 8 Scattered LOS ANGELES CAP) -The &1les oC eight seamen. who would not let their deattl ashore drown their love of the sea. . were scattered Tuesday in the waters of · ~ Angeles Harbor during the annual Memorial Service foe Merdwaot Seamen. ReprcsentaUves or nine seafarers' unions and seven U.S. flag ship companies join- ~ relatives of t h e deceased in the service. DAILY PILOT 'Tiit Or•nN C..sr OA!L'I' l'ILOT, wlfh ""'I(~ It ~ nw N-·"rtH, II "10lllllM 11ov llw Ori .... COii! hlt>IW.1119 C-1ny, S- ••11 fdllloftl ... pyeflf!Md, M-•'f fflf'OWll Fr\ll•V. lw c .. r. M .... N...,..1 llffdo. "unllngloft a.lldl!l'-l1lrl V1lley, t,.avuna ""°'· lr-.illt/s.ddln.dl tnll ''" ( ........ ,,, S.n Ju1n C.pll!r•nci. A 11119r. reglor>l;I tell!~ I> .llfltll $11\o!WYI Ol!>d $<in(ll!". ,,. prlnci .. I p,jblitlltne plfnl II II U) Wet! ••v Slrfft, CO.II M•t•, Call""11f., '""· P.ob1rt N. W.H l'rt1 llttnl Mf Plllllltlltr J·~1i. tt. c.,1 • ., \11(1 l'rttld.,, ~ Otliwal IMMttr Th'"''' K11.,i1 l!dllOr Thvm11 J+.. Mwrphln• """Mtlnl EOllW Cli1rl11 H. lo11 lllldi1rd P, Nt!I AUlltMI M1NOlno Edl"'1 s. c .. -••• OMu JOI N1rlh El C1nr.I~ P.111, 92671 -.-Cbtll ~c lJO Wtll S.r Slfld N..,.,., "-fl~ :OU ......,.,, ...,......,, """"lnqltoi hflotft: 111JJ ._,_ ~ ...... d i._.,.. IMch: m FIP!'ttl A- Tll1r• 1 n1 11141 '4J:-tJ21 Cl•ifletl A~ .. '41-1671 ----- - Couldn't Bear lfp ...._ ____ ... S. I .agunans OK Sewage Bond.Sales I .. . v~ 1n lbe so.111 1.osuca s.ntlMY J1llN ~ ''"" ov.,..m.JmlnJ .,. • ito'la1 lo ~-o! '3 J!!llll9n .. b!!'dl lo apgnide w--focllitlel. M-r m..4 IJ1roUgl> sale o! die_, wUl-"41-Ill!'· -o! ilJe •• , psrtlclpollOd In . the -w a Ii r r.clarnallon Jlroill'am o! the Ali.oO W.ala' Manasement AgOllC)'. A poriioo o! lbe revenue also will be used lo replace a dela'loraling ..,..,. .line runalng from Ali.oO Beacb lo 'lbree Aldi Bay. Abolll 26 percent o! the 3,7'9 voters wilbln lbe aanitary district vot«I Oil Ille issue. Results were as follows : YES' 839 ( 16.2 percent) NO' 134 (13.8 perc<ftl) The meiuure required a two-thirds yes vote for pasaage. Sani1'lry dl..trict officials sold lbe -of retiring the bonds will be borne through increased connection fees to new users within the district. There will be no general taJ rate in· • crease to U3ers, they added. The measure W8B oppooed by Ille South Laguna Civic Assoclatioo, wblch charged irregalariUes in lhe eiectlon process. '!be association was critical o! placing OOth the AWM~ and sewer Une•replaee-- ment proposals togethe r. A West German honor guard soldier faints as Soviet Communist party chief Leonid I. Brezhnev and party (background) bid farewell to the Soviet colony of Bonn following the Russian leader's five.day peace and trade mission to \Vest Germany. Expamion of the waste treatment system, association offtclals said, will allow for increase populatloa am! higber costs for related services. About 12 million of the bmd moaey wlll go to AWMA coffers. The AWMA syslem, bo<Ud by aennl south county water and sewage agendes, includes ei:pansion of a nutnbef1Gf inland treatment plants, with reclamation of treated waste water for irrigation and ground wafer table recharge. pm-p>MS. Oemente Takng Police Reserve Applications Applications for the police reserve force are now being accepted by the San Clemente Police Department. Reserve officers are used to augment work of regular officers in all fields of as.signment. They are required to work four hours per week m-the-job training without pay, but are paid for otbett dutiea, inchtding beach patrol , parada and flatival securi- ty. After 60 hours of desk training, and a~ proval of the t;hlef of polf~• reServe of· ficers ere filn!l!hed w!lll' ~ uniform and code books, iiu1 n\Uit;ooy their own . . . weapon. 1 Applicants must i.. i..1ween'lhe qes of 21 and 35, U.S. ciUt.ens, of oorm&l vision and hearing a~.1 high school graduates. Males must be between 5'8" and 6'4" in height with weight in proportion. Female applicants must also ha?e a pro- portionate height and weight, although specific size limits aren't listed. Candidates are given a written ex- amination and in final stages, an oral in- terview, medical exam and psychological evaluation. A San Clemente police representative said in addition to helping the regular force, the reserve program is a good way for persons to decide if they want to enter police work. For more information, cootact the police department at 100 Avenida Presidio. Steering Group On Pool Program To Meet Tonight A new steering committee which will plan two new public swimming pools in the Capistrano Unified School Dislrict will meet for the first time tonight 1n district headquarters. Discussions on pool construction and uses b('giru: at 8 o'clock. at 26126 Victoria Blvd .. Capistrano Beach. Chairman pro-fem of the comn1itlet! is Bruce Deacon. head of the Parents on Pools Committee which won I\ campaign fo r a HI-cent special tax rate to finance lht' pools. Parents. representatives of I he districts' t'.l.'O high schools and recreation employes from Avco Co mmunit y Developers and ~11ssion Viejo CQ111µany 14.•ill IX' at l0!1ight's session. A joint poy,•ers agreemenl ~tween the county and school district set up the special taxing districL Oass to Start On Prospe1ity A four·1•leek class on prosperity will begin toniJ.thl at the First Church of Religious &icnct> in S.1n Clen1cnte. From Pagel SCANDAL ... Lord Lambton added. "I mwt repeat that there has been no high life vice ring, no security leak, no blackmail and, as far as I know, no politician of any party is remotely connected with these events." Stem said the alleged "vice scandal" involved a senior British diplomat with aristocratic family linlts and access to military secrets. It said he frequented luxury brothels in Paris, UJndoo, New York and West Germany. After Lambton;issued his statement, a Stern edll<r in Hambarg said he was the man referred to ill the magazine's story. Some BMtish newspapers described the Stem allegations as the mQJt ieasaUonal in Bri~ fii!ceJtlje C!lrlde •eelar '°"', and·seCuiJtY icini!al lill lhl headlines 10 year~ ago, invblVlllg former War Secretary John Profumo and nearly top- pling the government of fonner Prime Minister Harold MacMillan. In his staterp.ent, Lambton said "I had a casual acquaintance with a call girl a11d one or two of her friends. "But," he said, "there has been no security risk and no blackmail and never at any time have I spoken of any aspect of my late job." Lamblon, wbo is-married, has one·son and five daughters. Lambton said in bis statement police informed him Monday that the call girl's husband had taken secret pholAJgraphs and sold them to newspapers. They have not been published in Britain, where libel laws are stringent. "They penistenUy questioned me as to whether I had been the subject of blackmail," Lambton said. "I could only tell them I was unaware of his ei:- istence.'' From Page I LIBBERS ... child-support burden. A major part of the discussion dealt with the nature of future male-female relations if the y,•omen's equality move- ment continues to grow. ''As the traditional sex roles are wiped out." said Ms. Leste. sex preferences may go. too. \Ve may be headed toward a period of bi-sexualism. "I'm sure there will always be male- female couples." Ms. Leste added. "but I don't think everybody will think it's so itnportant that all rc lalionships be that \IJ:lV." ,;The whole conce pt of masculine and femini ne is weakening.'' agreed Ms. Binder. "But it all depends on your definit ions. If it is considered masculine to show ag- gressiveness, then you'd have to say women are becoming more masculine. And if you insist that it is feminine to have long hair, then some men are ob- viously becoming feminine. Weekend Hours Set for Pool Excess efOUerit will be dumped qt the Pacific Ocean via an oolfall line off Aliso Beach. Waste Disposal Condemnation Gets County OK Approval d. condemnation acUoo on 969 acres for the Mure Prima Detbecba solid wute di~ area north 1t:I. San Juan Capistrano Was given Tuesday by the Board of Supervbors. The condemnation suit is termed a "friendi1'' one t1f the 0"1"'f' f\!·'° Ian~, Jllncho 11111!11 \IJl)o cl'lllt 9 •" famlly requ'esldt t f« in'tdne purposes. The 969 acres are the larger pert of a total of 1,500 acres which will eventually be purchased for the new nluse station. Plans call fer recreatiooal me d the property while steep canyons are filled with refuse. Eventually when cut and fill operations are completed the entire area will become a regiooa1 part, ptannen said. F'rOtll Pqe J THREAT ... made the change. "The case has now reached the point where we must either make a voluntary conversion of your COMectk>n .such as was accom plished with the Chandler· Sherman Corporation or cause you to be joined ln the action," Logan wrote. The letter states the South Coast Coun· ty Water District will delay any further action until J\Dle 1 to allow a response from school district officials. MAY 28TH • I Acceuory in To~,,.!fur~r , ,_ . A yoaq --1'bo adlllltlld ID I.be courttoolll that lbt k.-her little boJ -llilc1. nm me told pollet be wu in!Jli.qg pleld- ed 1ui1ty Tuttday t.cb1•gu or beinl an occeuory to his murder. ORANGE C . '11.Superlor court Judge Kenneth Lie heard the confession aJUl·Jllll)lanal Bockwood. 17, or Orange, to the Fron· tera Prison for Wlllllilll. for a preoentendng study. She will be re- turned for sentenciD~"""' 20 .. Mias BoctwOod •.~April 13 that 3-year-old Todd Roc;kwood was missing from the -. ehe shared with Larry Wayne CObb. 23, sparked an intensive Nirch Qf the area by more than 500 )awnu;n and volunteers. , ... • . . THI HUNT ended )rb~ -Cobb led P-"llce to a shillow pve In the Anaheim Hill8 area,)Jh're the child s body waa unearth"'. Cobb will be arraigned May 29 in Superior Court on charges o! first degree murder. It is alleged that a besting he administered led to the cliilcl's death April 11. Mission Hospital Awards :·~ . . Funds to 7 Area Seniors . ; •• Seven Sooth Coast hlgh school senion have been awarded scholarships totaling $4,900 by the Auxiliary of the Mission Community Hospital. The scboiarshlps wlll be used by the .students to pursue educations I n medlcally related fields. The auxili ary had intended to present a Sl,000 scholarship to a boy and girl from both San Clemente and Mission Vie}o Hi(b Schools. But, because of the large number of appUcatlOn.s for the grants , lbree additional $300 awards were added. Scholarships were awarded on the basis ol grade point average and extra· curricular act\Yiliea indudlng c:ommunlly and social i_!lfolvement. Shandra Grunkemeyer a.n d Chang J. Jun won the $1000 awards al San Clemente High School. A life member of the California: Scholarship Association (CSF), Shandra plans to attend C>regon State University and study medical research in microbiology. She Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Grllllkemeyer, 139 Naragon, San Clemente. Chang wu a state scholarship finalist and plaas to study orthodonUslrY. He is the son o! Mrs. Joung Ja Jung, 25226 Via Piedra Blaaca, Laguna Niguel. Nancy KeaworthY and Mark Cangiano o! Mission Viejo Higb School also woa St,000 grants. Nancy bu served u a nuraes aid ~iaas to altend UC Irvine and eventually become a physician. She lB the daqllter of Mr. and Mrs. Fran!< Kenwortby, M602 Acropolll Drive, MllS!on Viejo. Mark, the aon of Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. ~,-:lml Marino Qrcle, lw been· aedve lll•bolll dmtcb and YMCA w«k. Ho pianf,lo atllnd.UCI and st.udl' ID be' pllyalclBJ\. Three Mission Viejo students were awarded lbe !300 scllolarsbip<. Marcia WyUe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wylie, 24881 Wintenrood F'rmRPageJ HOLDUP ..• catch a portrait of the robber in action. The bank branch ar Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue is one of the more- olten·robbed !lnaacial iMUtuUons In Costa Mesa, apparently due to its JoQ. ";,. bii.y boulevml Jnteraectioo ar- forda fairly quick access to the San Diego Freeway, in addlUon to heavy traffic in which a getaw1y car can become lost. Three years ago, a motorcycle-- helmeted bandit who smashed his way through the fron t door with a tlre iron on two occasions in a three-month period robbed the same fa cility. A trio of men later captured in Texas, convicted and seatnced to long prison terms for armed holdups in that state also hit the Harbor Boulevard·Adam.s A venue branch 1 Y, yean ago. Drive, El Toro, was one recipient. A na· Uonal merit commended scholar and· candy striper, she hopes to study bio-. medical engineering at Northwestern .. Unlverslly. Connie Beckman will use h e r 8cholanl>ip to enroll in a thrte year speech therapist course at Brigham~ Young University, eventually planning to work with autistic children. Connie is the · daughter of Mr. and ~frs. Fred ' Beckman, ~I 1.apata Drive . · · Randy Eekholdt will attend ~addleback. College next year on the scholarship •. before transfening to· Brigham Young. He bOpu to become a dentist. An athlete' and vice president of the student body in' high school, Randy is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Eckholdt, 24591 Spartan St. LA Ma1i Arrest,ed l1i Kidnaping Of Young Marine'. 1.()6 Angeles police have arrested a· • man m charges ol kldnaping a Camp. Pendleton Marine from a San Clemente-. oomer last weekend. Booked in Los Angeles on charges or kidnaping, oral copulation and ..,.ull witli a deedly weapon waa Joeeph Reilly of Los Angeles. Reilly allegedly placed a knife al the back of the yo.log Marine while be was stondllll'ablho comer of Doi Mar'81td El Qimlno ReaJ.ancl forced·~lm blto·<11cat;" polkle aahl1 I Aftd driving to Los Angel.,, the .. suspect auempled to perform ·illegal ·set' acts with the victim, police claim, but· the Marine ...,.ped and called Loi Angeles poUce. - Ball was l!<t in Orange County by' Judge Blair Barnell at $15,000. Reilly· wu later releia.sed from jail in Los Anlleies by crurt order unlil a trial dale· is set. · .. Officer Killed By Own Weapon OAKLAllD (AP) - A young Oaklanll policeman w&.! shot IAJ death with his gun early today during a routine traffic stop~; and police arrested a man and woman officers said tried to run them down. Robert Blan, 26, on the p:illce force two years, was shot in the chest, leg and back. He was found at 2:30 a.m. a block from the patrol car in which he had been· riding alone. Robert E. Simm9ns, 211, Oakland, and Mamie Adair, 33, Berkeley were booked, for Investigation of murder, poUce said. _ MEMORIAL DAY In honor of those who gave their lives that this would be a better world, we will be closed Monday-Memorial Day JOHN HART LYNN HART n~v. Leslie s. llarrold will conduct the '"'~hour session bf~1nning at 7:30 p.m .. for four consiecutlve Wednel;days. The class will cover how the teachings of Jesus Chri.<rt relate to financial and emotional prosperity. Tht San CJemente Municipal Poot will be open for recreational swtmming from I to 6 p.m. on weekends only beginning Saturday. Beginning July 2, the pool at 106 Pico will be open to the public from I to 8 p.m. daily except Thursdays when it wUl close at 6 p.m. HARTS SPORTING ·GOODS Rev. Harrold said despite .IP.s11s' humble image. he was "a prosperous 1nan." Jesus "'On: 11 scarnl~S robe, said Harrold, adding th:~t today's equ1vale111 wouJd be a $400 su11. !J'he church is al 141 f\.tlra 1nar \ Prlvete parties can reserve the pool from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursdays for a nominal fee , a city o!flclai said. For more information, oontact the city Parks and ~ti°" Dopertment. 538 CENTER STREET • I iB DAILY PILOT SC WodntSdiy, May 23, 197' Gold Increase Nixon Statement Aids U.S. Dollar LONDON (UP!l -The dollar gained ground In early trndlng In EW"ope Wednesday in response to President Nix: O(l's reaffirmation that be wlll rtmain In office. But dealen sakl the detnaDd for gold in- creased, reflecting diJtrust in Nlxon 's ability to govern ef. !ectlve1y. The British pound sterling dropped in relation 1'> the dollar and dealers blamed that on Britain's latest sex and Residents Cut Back 'On Power SAN ANTOmo, Tex. (UPI) security s cand1I . Lord Lambtol'I r e a i a: n e d 1:1 parliamentary und.,.·secr(!lr)' !0r the Royal Air F~ be<:ause ol llis asooclatioo with a call girl, but he said today se<Urity and blaclanall .,.... not involved. "WHEN A GOVERNME!i'I' minister resigns in those • ditions ll'• bound t~ have an ef. feet on the country s cumincy, though nothing Jike Watergate because ll clean breast ot things seems to have bem made quickly 1n the Lambton affair," said a sPokesman for the London Merchant bank af N. M. Rothschild and Sons, Ltd. The U.S. currency opened at 1 $:!.56 to ihe pound but later hr ched up 1'> $:!.5550, making the pJUlld cheaper to Juy agalnat Tuesday 's closing rate of 2.5615 dollars. The dollaf registered gains ct:i foreign currency markets in London, Frankfurt and ZUrleb. .Final Test Spurt UPI~ I -The company that supp1ies the nation's 11th largest city With natural gas has cut the city's supply by two thirds and . utilities experts predict a The Navy'•s SE&lOOB Surface Effect Ship has made its last test run on Lake Pontchartrain, New Or~ leans for awhile. Bell Aerospace has announced IN LONDON, the ctOnar that the 100 ton experimental crlft is on its way opened at $2.56 to the pound, to Panama City, Fla. for several months of deep 'i\ "catastrophe " in 10 days if up from Tuesday's clos!Jlg water and high sea testing. It exceeded 80 mph in rate of $2.5615. tests. j new power sources are not found. On the F'rankfurt exchange,--'-'-'-------------------! I The City Public Service ! Board pleaded with residents the dollar opened at 2.7430 marks but by mid·momlng had moved up 1'> 2.7500 marks. r ( v::~~ ;; th]~ . _ STOCK . [n Zurich the dollar apened betweeg, 3.10'25 and 3.1075 Swis!francsagainst Tuesday's cloo~ range ol 3.0990 and S.1040 francs. I amount of electricity used. .. '!be city began setting the • · ezample Wednesday by tarn· ing off all street lights, with the exception of t r a f [) c signals, an hour before dawn. Many focal businessmen prom· ised not to tum on their neon signs. Boise Cascade BOISE, tdaho -Boise Cascade Corp. Tu e s day reported that its previously announced capital program of $75 million for 1973 will be ex· pended to $115 million . John B. Fery, Boise ~ Cascade's president ancf chief executive oUicer, said the en": tire 1973 capital program will be funded from cash resources> within the company and will not require the assumption of ' .. new debt. N •tlon4' Steel SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The NaUonal Steel a n d Ship- building Co. Tuesday lald the keel of JO 89, 700 ton tanker, which will be the biggest ship ever built on the Pacific Coast. The shif., to be 894 feet Jong and 106 eet wide, is being built ror the Aeron Shipping Co. of New York, the oompany said. It will barely be able to squeeze through the Panama Canal. · Reader's Digest PLEASANTVILLE, N . Y. (AP) -Reader's Digest says its newsstand price will be reduced from 60 to 50 cents in an anti.inflation effort starting with the July issue. "This price decrease follows the ste8dy growth in news· ..,. stand sales," the Digest said Tuesday. The magazine, which originally sold for 25 cents an Issue, reached the 60-cent peak ~ in 1971. The price of gold was peg~ ged at $111 an oun.:;e in the ftnt of t.1rire<laily price set- tings on the London gold market, up 25 cents from Tuesday's clooing of $110.75. In Zurich the metal clianged hands at between $110.50 and St 12, compared to Tuesday's closing range of $100.50 and $!tl.50. B R l T AIN'S FINANCIAL Times newspaper said pressure on the dollar would continue until Nixon demonstrates he is able to govern effedively despite the Watergate affair. It said in an editorial that Nixon's latest statement on the bugging of the Democratic P a r t y ' s Wa.shlngtoo. head· quarters was his "last throw," The newsP'!per said the question of whether Nixon re- maira in office is less im- portant ·than whether t!ie United States "is to be govern- ed by an executive able to ex- ercise its authority for the next four years, or whether the leading nation of the western world is to be lame duck." Consumer Movement 'Essential' The chainnan of General Mills, Inc., said Wednesday that constructive con- sumerism is essential to the American way of life. James P. McFarland, speaking at Anaheim 1'> the International Assembly of the Council of Better Business Bure,us, d e s c r i b e d COft.. structive consumerism as the Transameri~n kind of action that "brings L O s A N G E L E s buyer and seller together in Transamerlca Financial Coijf. mutual understanding." a subsidiary of Transamerica "Adequate s e r v i c e ls Corp.. registered a proposed sometimes hard to find," he $50 million public offering of said. "Hig'hly effective modern mallum-term notes with the advertising, let's face it, may Securities &: Exchange Com. someUmes g e n e r at e an-- mission 00 May 14. tlclpalion that Is unrealistic. .'• The notes, which w i 11 Chronic inflation and im- mature from nine roonths to . proved education .status have five years from date of issue. focused people's minsd on the will be ollered on a con&lnuing cost o1 what they buy. basis for sale by Trmsamerica Financial Corp. direc:Uy 1'> lnvestor1 through it.s offices in New York and Los Nigel ... "ONE EFFECT ol all this has l<d to the modem phenom- enon which we call "COMWn- eri.sm,'' a movement demped to proted the buyer and 6ften calling for increased gov~m­ ment inlert"enUon in bwllness practices. McFarland said that In their Lower Vegetable LOS ANGELES (AP) - Housewives can loo~ forward ot lower vegetable prices this summer despite damagingly wet winter weather in the na· lion's !'salad bowl," California growers say. "Between the middle of June and lhe beginning of July production should get back lo normal, and we'll have some pretty cheap stuff," said Leslie Hubbard of the Western Growers .As.sociatiQn. But until July 1, prices are expected to remain at the high level$ th4t have prevailed all spring in the wake oC a -disastrous siege ol winter. weather in CaWornia. CALIFORNIA grow• 70 Per· cent of the country's lettuce, 78 percent of the cannlng: tomatoes, 35 percent of the fresh tomatoes, 90 percent of the broccoli, 40 percent of the LOS ANGELES (A.I') -Ttle food products firm owned by the san of U.S. Treasurer Romana Banuelos has been ordered to grant back pay and health and welfare program benefits to union workers who struck the plant in 1972. Edison Sets Preferred ' Stock Plan LOS ANGELES (AP) - Southern California Edl90r1 Co. has announc«l plans to raise $75 million through private pla<:tllilellt of preferred stock instead of a previously an- nounced play for a public of. ferinc of common shares. A company spokesman said Tuesday that application bas been made with the California Public UtillUes Commission for permlasloo 1'> ,.11 150,000 shares of cumulative prefer- red .stock. priced at $100 a share, to raise $7S million to be used to retire bonds and finance coost.ruction project!. mobile phone enthusiasm for a cause that is .---------------------- " --· place fl receive telephode calla 111rourcar • -----·--Ne C•plt•I l11v•,tm•11t . M-11tl. to M.Orrtl. ll•11t,, J.§ill 011.1•.r.1 rou~ n 11 11>111 II If l'~O~! "11\'ltt .. , 4015.s.toFo, ......... 135·3305 ·---,,.~ essentially good, tome con- sumer advocata s have mlsr.presenltd markttpl~ Incident.a and practtet1 to make tMm appear u ' m- t l co n SUmer lnduatrY·Wide praclkes 'fdlen ,the:y •re Isolated . Instance•, or • 1 doliberatefraud when they art understandable miata~eJ. • Bate Up-Stop Telegrams w Cost More SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The co3t of a West- ern Union telegram of 15 words or less within Cal· l!ornia will go up u a result of a Public UWltios Commission ruling . The conim!Mlon Tuesday pennltted Weatem Vnlon to lncruse the cost of such telegrams from t2.30 to $2.63 on June 15. The rullng will me.tn ab •ddlUonal U.517,100 1onually Jor the flrln. The PUC said tbe increase represenu.I a rate of .return to 8.1 per<enl which would rilult.in a return of 10 pe~t onconunon equity. , w .. 1en1 Union J.ut November bad asked for a n&te of ·~ per telegram, but the commlastoo re- jected \h• proposal • l • Computers t~ Aid Market Shopper~'· Trade's the Game OVER'THECO ~l .. forTUllday,Moy22.1913 Import-export Ratio Worldwide Prbbl.em /r"'"'v-- , ·~ ·r-·=-w "lllla ~. SAN FRANCISCO CAP! - Computer-Is aboul to ln- "ade the 1upermarket and the results will be savings in IMOt1' and time ror shoppe.rs. food dlslrlbulo!'S say. • • retail«s about SSS,000 & ~~· He said the com~ter would read tne ni.arklng.s Ind relaJ the prica aut-Omstlcally iqto electronic c a s h regj~11t hopefully elim1natiog tDOlll long checkoot line waits. By JOUN C1JNNirF ,., ....... , ,..,..,. ' . NEW YORK (AP) -'11iioll World Tra1e Week, anil •Ibo Unikd States observ'".jl 1i!lh speeebts and dedicatiqo) Md the usual paraphemlU:., el of .. flclal ceremony, lt ~CIDld forget. that trade ii "'"'altp a deadly financial game. 1-1.-l•M --A"--_ ___, 1~ 17~ T1'""" ...... u.. -..--.---1)14 14\6 T,.... DC '-IA --Cll"-1-"" 614 A TIMI! _.. paJmentl •....W -.-...-.wu. ,.._ MM Ttwtl; "" N I 21* 11 \lo Tran C11 \'' Ill But the demand ls easier ...., -• -~ Ex 31\11 31~ Trn 0..1' ~ 1f,.. ,. .... ' thin tbe IOladon. Same cl tbe ,) ~,... ::n:. ~ l~~ l?t: ;~°';: l!! 1: ••-naUonJ -...i.1-the ~ ~= ll:w Co ,_ 10"' Ul'll Cl'f.9't ll ll\.1o -·---= It-,..,,, 11 1:rv. lmkln ' !~ ~ d ~~ ~ be """"'" lo • ll\ldu'" "' It 1W. UnArt tnll1 .. -~ UU\ ...,........ ~-\II ltu.I Skw n mlo US llk Hf ~ bur the consequences of U.S. t _«M t!!! ~ ,~1'1 ~~1v11it!-I~ \lU 1 A.IX l•li'I G tf\6 ll"' Vktorl St <f 1t Everytblng from cabbages to steak will be marked v. ith a strange series of lines and numbers which in computer jargon would indicate the size J.nd contents of the iten1 and the price. AUTOMATION con.sultan! &tier "-price marking <Ji stort she Ives will alert ~.f"" pers to the cost, Jince the C()mputer markings wlll not mean anything in dollm ,~' cents to most C\lltotner1, Ru~sell said. "TH E ODDS 01' getimc checked out at a higher -pDce than you should'be will be cut . drastically," be aaid ln an tn- S~MiltAR SPEAKER Robert L. St•tton Senrinar Set By Escrow Associatio.n Events of the pa# few . weeb und erscore the ~q,;. The dollar was again hi_t..by a B<lling ,,...v~ speculat«t fled currenQes for gold, the rtoek "'f'"llel slumped, and world . • cohunollt,y markets were said f.IWICE egulllbrlum, or a surplus, ,... ~ittl. , R'" .,~ 1~ ~~ f14 r"~ll•Jo because lt could throw them y,.y a. Wf ., ~ I ~ tn •= JTt ~::,U~ JU 1t21 111q into deficit. iutllnt M\t NI llV. UV,"'"" Shett W. ·~ ""Ji! A ~~ 14\.'I !~ f9 =Ii 1"1120~ Vk:IM Sn 3't. '~l l.U:.I .=~ ... :: ~~·q'~ Lr:..!i :~ ;i~ ~~ ~ = ~w::.w;), u"' Il"' ~12~ ~s 1m 1 •• ,.; I --Unlted States 8S1UDled an A ArlCrtt 3"' Ji fl,. u 11 nl' 231'1 w111mn 1 TIM 10'!4 ...1-U11: • .,.,l!~l.• t~ n c;ro l\li ""'=" c11 1!\" 2~ W«iGw-R• ~ '•'\to,,1rw. enonnous role m the security ,._,,, pt "'" n eri ..,.. SMo .,.. ra , .. o( mJCb Of the non..Qxnmunist ~ F~ 1Fl t :t~gp 11't? 14~~ ;~ti• ~ ~ =~ ~ ~~ l!: \''I' rid ·-~--·t 30 --Nol ""' Gtw ,,v, :'J"';·1 1 .... u lSl't W$1al pt Ni ' WO UI ~ r-,,..._., AMl'f Sy lSV. ~1..'1.C'& I IKl"IY •1 IV. W$f P\1111 ~ ~ :I I 'only •Jn Vietnam and. Koru, ~~ U!T: TI"" I~ :l'i.ir l't i, =::,. 1 ~~ ;r,: :ri:"'rd, 1• itlo'i 1')111. but 'in ""'·--too .l.nhtusr (71<\ 47G Ji~ A r'Fr I 1~ StCI Reql1 14~ 1!1\ri Wibl! M j 1'\i l:Ri Larry Russel told the Food Distributors of America con· venUon here that 1 he com· put.er system could save tcrviev.·. c EXCfiUNT INVESTMENT OPPOlfi11iiij: · cHAIN FENCE ' ' Orange County Escrow AsSG- ~iation will hold its third annual educational seminar Saturday, June !, ~t Orange Coast College, according to Marna Miller, president of the 300 member organization. Jack Lincoln, attorney at law. with a practice in Orange, will be one of the two keynote speakers who will give an address en ti t I e d "Liabilities, the 11itchhikers on the Escrow Ride". Robert L. Statton, Vice President of Security Title Insurance C.O .. will address the group Oil ''Ti1'1e· Con<lifo ll!!><e ' Than a Clock Or ·a Caleift!ar'". Robert H. Pyke, chairman to be nervoua. , ALL nm.'EE trCJUbiei are related to ·Jrade, es~ially U.S. tnde. A finaDclally IOUDd J1.8lion i3 generally tnoueht tQ b;«! a successful trader. The unsuccessful · trader is ~ ci.ally su!ped because he runs up deficits, or I()Us. And ro, when th& United States, biggest trader of all, the biggest financial force in the world, fails to trade ef- fectively or to keep its economy under control or otherwise convince the world of its strength, fear spreads. The fact is that while the United States is by far the big- Insurance Mo\rt, ·set · · (lf the semina r, says , tjlat Westgate-California Insur· emphasis will be on two panel "ance Co. of Anaheim has begun discussion groups to cover construction of its new $1.1 problems in taking· and proo-million home office building in essings cscro\vs. • Newport Beach. The cost is $7.SO r o r According to Hans Coffeng, · .,, '· ' members and $8.~ for non-company president, the two SAVE ON CHAIN LINK FABRIC members which inc lud es story. 36.ooo square foot PROTECT FAMILY, HOME AND PETS registration and I u n ch.. build ing will the newest ad- •L * FAlllC WHEN Programs and regi~tratioo dition at the, 200 acre Newport 50"· OFF ' INSTALLED IY wi>.ilos forms can be obtained . by Place <Om'llercial and light CMON v•r1o91 "91t'"' ·1n11 qv1u1it. ., lf~rfV, iow-m•rn•""•IK• 1,1.,.,.b:td wri ting to Mary J a c o'b s , industry development. The Ur: ... ,,_ V\11~1111 f11r1c. w1~·111Hfc •• 1191-4lp .. IY•nliH lo( ••tr• Seminar Registrar, P.O. Box' stirance building project i!" a ""*"""' "' , . · 749, S a n t a A n a , 92702. joint venture of the Emkay •Cht\N. ,... ..,,.11, ~ ...i~IMtali.tfH ... extra"'"' Begistration begins at 9 a.m. Development Co., and South repkir k-wfprlul. CaM IOl'l,tr.e enfllMd• toclayl ' and the ·program will conclude Coast Construction Co. The '====w=°"=·='=A=N=D='W=l=O=U=°"=T=l=l=O=N=A=LSO==A=V=A=ll=A=l=LL=-==:c__ at J p.m. architect is Langdon & Wilson. "" ... u.,.., • . .l.nlltn 111 '\,l JU ~I:: (: I Stk N .1.19 21 Jt Wl11t Pk 3$ ~ i!'J.' M a result, U.S. es-, ... ~'j--!: JO!., 14 Kilvtr c SlltN 11rw 1t 13 w1.c PLt 19'11 "~ ,_,.. -"-" 1lr. '"!!Mk N S ~ 10'.li Wood Ltll i-. , It< -'-..ii-ii L.A. L.-~ • pendltures afroad have for ~~~ ~a 1, l~ IC'4fw0d 1• 1~ trve T~ 15 U'lt World sv 11 IV. •-•, w~, "I' UU ~"\lll1':, m aJJtmt ~ ... del eiceeded ~~ Hr 1k I' ~ ~ 1lv. ~ t: !~ 1: 1:~ ~= c': r' flo , O, IODl8 ~. a weatet I the lnC*lt. The concem. over Col• im 1,.,., IC ..... Fb 111\ '"" \Ulbo Fd ,,. ~ Ytllo ~rt ~ ~ trader ~.Jiefatt. A L.1. 1 .... -:-anewbat ~ 0sT;._: 1:~ l~ ~..,"c:;: 1J111 1nl ::!.".,.it0n0:nf~ z:=r 5fti si:~. 'Jilt -.. ~~---,,_ .~~WU ~""! . .~rel ,1,10 :w. nt 1t:1/s Ind ''.4 •Yo ,... by t b.e 1"d:tng thftil! 1:1;.d Wr 1,:it µ,1111 KMPI vt ltt't l'V. . rr It.AN UP lta flrat trade "---· ..... r .... •Mt-----'ifiF• 33'.4 "*' ,.,. 17 .... 1•\'i•I-----------., • · '""~yflr ""',,....' ~ ~ el'.• al L µ,v. IW. KrutOW 1"° 71\ JO llf ( A tf ........ ,~, '.tile <Wilµry lOat ....... lh.~ Were •---•>v iO ' Mff " KwOm " ,,.. t• O• f! toe ~· ~ .u...~r·· ~-ll-~..--.1 • ~llldll ~UV. LNd P.t nr. 7¥.1" ------------" ' 1ear, .illJtlW'i'!I exceeding Proof the United States was Rtl l' l6~ L111CA1t 141A ls r t" exports by"$2.f billion. In the . = ':. l! !' t::i:r c ~\') ~\') NEW VOit!( (UPll -The 11 "'°" -1'.1 I f. t .,.~-of 1973 It did .still stroog,. these I a m e •'fl~ fi'v, 2 L.trv a.v 2t Jt Kii..,. •tock& 1r1.-i on 111e OTC l'Nltk.t '"' i~ irs QIMLI Kl apologists· said was the ex· =in. I< ,y, ""' L= Pl 11 nV. Tvnd•Y •• 1111ppU~ DY N.1.50. manage to raise exports by istence of a 0.S. trade :surplus 1::r., ti; ,f'-f ti1 Ctim~ r 3,tt lt.clc v.i-•111 A111.-CM< ••'I $2.l billion ·to $15.34 billion ~~'Is •• ··-·of~. 1-r: (.': L~ l7Vt Linc iw.t ....., .w.r.1n~.1.c1ti111 120,..., lllli. 1•v.-v, · ' -1..1-. ' .... , .,..._..-> ~,......,....,. ~.. Co l ~Lion CIS1 ' 4V. A8I Ex11n11 115,000 M1'I ~+ 1-But imports rose to $16.26 over im....-.. excluding those orm 1 ll\'i Loc:t1t1 -"Vt JOY.I Rank Or'Oll llJ,900 "' tr.+ v. ' b·u· t"""""'• e n1 Sons jli.4 nv. L-co !i!\'I u "" PrMI 109.600 ~ n -J , J ion. 0~ .. expenditures eoe £vns 6"' !''"" M.S c;.. ''"" u ~'" Life co ";aoo l5'lli ~i q.• '' U~ . 1--N 1J1Jo I M•1 A.lly ,, .. 5~ Pfftl'I Liia U.600 nio ll'lo \le And for those who long have ~~ ~ 11-. 21,4 M• lckt 31v. 3114 ""'°'1~ Str ,1;200 2•"' 2'"" ~ viewed U.S. ind u stria I Btrr LA.Sr year that surplus l"~nks l~ ,..!"' 1~"' ::~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~ri:0 c!~111' "" ,'ii, ~f& ,',"!: ,n,-..++r .. : . 1 I dershi :.~"' . 1111e 1 t~ Me Cmck «r '' B1nk1rner .JOD "' '" '" " ea p as unasaa~e. evaporated, foccmg the Nll:on I .., in McQu•Y "'"' 11•.i. --• ' consider this: The first -administration to call for a ~ A1 W4 v. =~ ll"' ll NASD Y01111•11 tod1v 1.011.lOO: actvaowea ' ~­ quarter rise in exports new round of talks with~·~ lo: 23.w. =ltl'ldr ~~ 1~ ~ri-,,t de(llne1 1111 lll'ICNnaM i1n1 tot•I,,~' , resulted main I y from trading naHom, scheduled to :: ~11~l Ptt 1 !~ :llr~, ~~ g~ l 1 ' agricultural shipments ; the 1et under way this fall. '1 1! !• M~n F•b l'4 •Vo 1' •• rise in imparts mainly from 'lbe thrust of the u s "'"' co !l't 1f'% ::f.':/ ~~ ~r ~ Gainers & Lo•er• ind _,_, _.A__ .. r-'*" CP 3f.% ' Maoris. !!"" 'l ust1J.1U p1.11~s. proposals is that trade among l:~~~· ~ 7l\'i Marrhn • '' ' A !act ~t produced.. !.or nations be msde fteer by the 1 ,1 u "";11 '!1,. ~M °'~ S 1 ..::' .1'."'.~.':" .;, ~$, "' World•Tr;lde:-Weet ·sbows·the reductions of tarifh and ~ 1 11~=!lc,w;•->1" ~'l"ICl'1•111t•tlhl-r Dl'I , ,; • • • , l'°*·C~ 1 lfMI •• •Y '""Of d'llnot Dl'I TM ler U.S. automotive industry ts nuot.as and other restrictions -c • 1~Hlli~: ~...£!. 1~1,,,1111rk.i 11_...ovt.,. o. :~ .. ·1 • .,. oml r 2! ..... .... ... NII Ind P1re1nt491 ~ 1~ ... dependent upon unports from ,·a'ii:inlt each other~s goodJ, mwTI P ,, ~::.fi'mco lf.l l~'tfo ldflltl'itnef bl~ TM pnv1ou1 11r bid · ' 32 oountries that th ---· I the United 111111 ,. s r Hf GE lt\lo ltt\ DflCI •rid "" C\ll'"rlnl 1111 bid DrlC1, ' • e . . UlUUl.I, 0 ~!111 Co 1f.% 1 NJ !111 G 1&\l 16l'o OAINSU telephones we use required 48 States ls that of the offended rukti J. 6\'i ""' ~~1et ln • • 1 ,,_,.,Grt ., 23,,.,I 1 "' materials from 18 nations, giant, discriminated against o°:J ~nA ~~ ~1>A N111:!:: ~ ~a: ~l~ l 'o.111v~ Kldw,;,.m,, .4\lo 1 Up il:f ~ ~ that 75 t f · · "-h O.nlv M )'I\.\ t'I-Nord1tr 20 JOVt n Ir ...,, 1'9 ~ UPO lS.I " ol percen o newspnnt JS by nauvuS t at once were ~rt Ol"CI lAI 1!"" ~... NtG •~ "' ~ R•Yne ll'ldust 11._ ~ u 11.' '· I rted l. '--' 1..l...J.. '•I.A& II Del Ii NCNCtll Cp 4J 41\'h 5 Srvrne.ir .OSO 20 i 31'1 Up 21:1 ·I•' ' mpo • wea .. uu• W11'""'11 now, tll.l"" " G•11 l 32 ~111;1, 111 2 2"' 6 c11" Fln1nc:1 94 1 up 21. ' · f ml -·~'-eels O. 11 'l.tkwd H ""' 7v. l Mlrldl111 .Nd 5\1 1 Up 1u rom ecorµ> c merger ~~' ~ Jn ~ OcM1t 0r ..,14 j(!' L•ldvll• ~()(JI i2 i~ UD t·L· . IT Is OBVIOUS then that ' E · I" AA. 41 .,¥ Oc1an E• 11'4 12) t Unlvt GI >011 5V. "" Up 1.., ••• ~ 1 . 8S U! urope, Or lnQOV3 100 8:11 lnll WI 611< Ocr:f.r Mt 5,~ 5~ 10 Code• orp ll'h 1\'.i Up 15.0 the United States. despite its and self-Oenial, as in Japan, 81.~•cfs it•.1o tt:1~ ~ri L1tt 1~~ 1J l! ~~T ~rol 1! Jy. 8: 1tl';•·;l1 m''ght rn"•I trade And • themselves b e lam Hd 1~v, 1 ..... vv M 13 l....ck1r Pllrml 16 ! UP 14.3 1 ' ~ . • uave c 0 m e Bl" ' I ~ 21'1 ·~ F-ro • '" I• Am T1lecom11 1,\0+ "' Uo '':! ' bee.,_ It Is the -·Id's b'g · ts vr1 ~. 1• · '' ')pl! Cw t 15V. 16 u ElloMldlc11 sc 34 +' Up 1> .1 I ...,... nv. I • gian • ~j J'il4 lJ 'lr'"°"' '"'-71 16 K1Un l1b LID 3'4+ ~ Up lj 0 gest single mai-ket, the rest of LS::~,d~ ~· ~ ~~vr,,.A ~·~ ~ 1~ ~~!'i:L ·l! 11 :t lv. ~; lil the world wants to see the Blrr WHILE free trade may ~ 'M• jll'h Dill• Crp ,,,.. '~" C•mln 1n<1u1fr ;~i t? Up 1.1' •·' ovl• OB !"' O'J "1bst Br 6.11,ii 6~ 20 Clwlnnlll Comp '°"" Vt Up 11.1 1 United States trade ef· be the k:leal of many nations, unkln o '" JV.:~~ ff VJ ;a'~ 11 Am .1.r11 cr111 3'-""' Up 11.s ' ·i•". fectively. those noble thoughts often ~ 'i: ~ S1"" P'K"L~~ )ol'll, 1'1'1 H ~!~orrt'~~ ,.,., ~ 8: U:l ·•i''' I fa I f the d ---·-b ed b I' P•oo r~ 11 • llrd tY, ',, Mdulfnl 1111111 r~ ~ Uo 11 1 n c , one o eu ...... IU-3 beoome su rnerg y self In. Nucet '\I v.. •SO ero ''" '"" zs wit.on HJ inc 1~+ 1v. uo 10'.t i;• most often repeated by terest. Free trade sometimes ~!a.f. 1}"' ,ru ~=~• cr.'J ll\:t 11'h LOSe:•s · ··1 trading partners or the United means painful sacrifices. Na-!x:C~ ~ 2s~ 21.., ~:r~:'c:. 1Nt 1~ ~ 21~:'P0~1~ l~ 1l.! ;:1 States ·js that it must get itS' tionalistic fervor seems to rise !1r "~\i1: W7 '~ ,.:r.s'1 5..,Y liv. :f" ~ g~:lr~ ~ Jl;:. 2~ f9:l .,Jr~ payments .in balaoce, that is, in proportion to the sacrlfice F•rlon Et 1 •'•'"Pet M&H t6'h' 111,., s •Mt!•tan Tecti 1\4-v. 21:1.,,, •------------~·~-~---~-------·_,,..."" er 'kl P1tro LW' Wt 1 H'!l! ... IC•~ 1~ Vt 'J 1 l'l'YS 01"111 M t!A PltN $"IV 1 t • -,... 11--;:... S :f -~ O ,.,. ____________ .... ··----------.1 ~';'':~tn lf" 1 P=n 11 ZI Ct toUnl1 Ir II-'>-~ .D ,1, II j•I TxFl1t 211-'1 ~! .... 1: 1~ 1,._ lg i;,n i:~~ J..:: l ft:l• .'! ~F16~f&i:tvice Charges on : Charter Accounts Open a personal checking account at our new Hun tington Beach office on or before June 9, 1973 and you will never pay a monthly service charge .regord less of the balance maintain~ as long as the accotint stays active. Earn a significant annual savings as a Golden State Bank Cha tier Account. Extended banking hours For your convenience, we will be opm on an exiCndcd hoar schedule through June 9. Following hours apply to 4>bby, Drive-in and Walk-up Windows. Monday thru Thursday, 9 :00 a.in. to 5 :00 p.m. Friday, 9:00 a.n1, to 6:00 p.m. Saturday, 9:00 a.m. to 1 :00 p.m. Be a Charter Account. Visit our New Accounts Department tod11y, f Atlr•ctl.,•, 11••f11l 101"••n;rt for a1t, Join UI for fttfy i'tfr•tlnn•nh. GOLDEN STATE BANK • . __ , 6100 Wa rner Avenue, Huntington Beach· (114) 842-8875 Orhtroffi~in tJ~U Gardens, Covina, Downey, Los Nietos, No. Whittitr, Pico Rivera, South Gate, West Covina: Sinct 1947 Member F.D.l.C , \ SEE THE 1973 '!: Nowt Ff. w111F 1 1' 1 "' l"l1nd .Mk 11l~ u•~ 11 ·11111 S.Cl!\lt 2•1o-..., j•-2 . i . 2 • Fl~t1':. 11v, 11:v. ~=· 'c'! 1r" 1~ l~ Mr~':,~:.~ 1~~= 2~ 011 1.0· '" Ftlektr 11\'J 1l 'h Pl"Qf Golf 2$\o 3 i. 0own1 comm l~~ ,... Off 1i:,:~od PANTERA by deTomaso ... imported for Uncoln-Mereury. Italian coach\VOrk .created by the brilliant Ghia Studios of TUrln. Ford designed the 351 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four wheel in- dependent susPension and mid-Atilp engine placemenL Five spc-ed gear bo1', fully synchronized , , . "Pantera ... Italian for Panther ... Or111111 c .. 111f 1~1-1111/1 ;,,, (,,,,., ohnson&son 1~· -1 2821 HARIOR ILVD .. COSTA MESA • Mf.5131) 1000 ORDER > " -, 0 'eautlfal , YOURS ~· Stick-on LABELS TODAY! Ptnonalized • Stylish • Effident Order For Yoursolf or • Friend· M•y be \lsed on envelo~ 11 return 1dd,..11 labels. Also vary h1nay 11 identification libels for m.rlcing perron1I it'ems 1uch •• l:»ooka, r•corcl11 photos,· .tc. Ub11I~ stick on 9l.11 •!!d may be u1ecl1 for marking home unned focd it11m1. All' l1Hl1 •r• printed with st ylis h Vogue type oa fJn1 quality whit .. gummed p•p•r. f:r•b,~\ k,,.. i::Z Proqres 1• 1'11'1 u Trlloii ou G•• 1,,,._ '"' Off I"' ~rank El t~ ~ PSM C•r ,. ... 11.,._ 1' Keri ApP1rt1 ~ -Off l.S ••r.nzla 14 P11bllhr 1~ 15\ 11 Flvl11<1 Ol1md J;..... 'h Off 11·' .1• Fr end le 21 Vi Putn CaD 4~ '" 11Wrthngt111 .16 11~ l Vt Ott 1.J " I Fr1Kll A. 13 ' Qonlr Cit lfl 11~ 19 GRI Compulr 1 -~ I JI' Fr11i FdE 1\1 t it. QUlkr C"h lt\4 '°'~ 20 Spac1r1n Inc: 1 -Ito ) F111 .... H 13 11\'/ °"""' C1 11 11Vt 21 !JI Rt~ltv Inv ~ \'i l0.>,1 r FuM: $tt t~ 10'Jo tt1t11r Cp I t 21 CltYTrRllv wt 1111-\". "·O §!·~· c 6:V. 7\.'j RIY'C"I tl Mark 1vHornl 41/i-l't I lO.G 1 22'4 73 170 174 2' tnOIN Q-1 '-~ t .7 rf"k isv. l' Ravmd ll'A 1f'.1;. ZS l1t!I Ttmnlllr ~ 14 t.S ·J·l llr• .. ra-E-~m+ ... IMt~&F""'~W-0~6YtZZ:lllt .... IM .. i~i---------~ " .-~ .. • --4 .. ·- . - .w.-.,, .,., 2.1, 1'7J SC Wedn~y'~ Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List .. " WtdnesdiJ, May 23, 197) TV IDGIDJGHTS l • NBC fiJ 8:00 - Adam 12. Officers Malloy and Reed (Martin Milner and Kent McCord) help pre- vent the death of a II-year-old boy and track down a !3·year-old drug addict. ABC O 8:30 -"The S~iral Staircase." A young girl exposes a myster1ou~ killer In this 19'6 mystery movie. Dorothy McGuire. Ceorge Brent, Ethel Barrymore, Kent Smith. CBS fJ 9:00 -.Dan August. Burt Reynolds' action.adventure senes returns for the summer. Reynolds stars as a ho1nicide detective on the po- lice force of a Southern California clty. TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening MAY 23 i ~.., fJ fiJ fJ Ill i!!I a;) ID "'"' t:OO II (() Dai Aapst A 11turn or 1111 ldkln·•dWfltur1 uries st1"1n1 &rt Raynoldi u • homicid1 dlttCUw on tl'11 pollct fOfU ol • Southern C.1i· foml1 .cltJ. :' (})al""'' . . . d Anpl lntbtll Anp1s vi. Whit• Sot II Chlc110. Ci) Qt\ S111ait 0 W1ntld Dead If Aliff m Tiii f11ntstoMI 111 ....... fll•m. @!! D£1UT Jlfflt WIJl'lf (R) Mist/ writer FrtncolM Gilot II the 1ut!t In tht first (If Wlflft·P3rt ttries. m JaJ1H1:11 lln1U11t Pro1ra11 IE SlaflM fJJ 1111 Dulct EA1M>lfld1 fl!IHod-'*'C> l!l,.. .. _ l:lOA- m1m Cotbf : ,,. IJ) -· - : ·-' ('°) ' .... - m Stint s,.d•l "Bonnll llaitt and Ptu1 Butterfield'• B1tt1r Days .. III Mldlldla ttali1n1 ml D C.11 .. 1111 l1nil • (drl) '&4;-Mlcll11I CollnofS. CJ) CIS Ntlffi W11!1r Cronkttt IJ NM Cu Wiit Trml ail! llln Crtftb1 SMw m'""'""'" m c.111 • .., E.dl!Cltio• m JN11111 Clr111n Sift Q!)Mnelt (9 Tiit Frtnll hopll f 6' Litt!• Rutll1 10:00 l)i (() Canoll (R) Susan Otlvtr playS I Mlion1!ty kDOWll pl!O\Olfl• phar who finds C1nnot1 • relvct1nt party to prntettlli1 her boyf~end's life when shl revt1l1 he Ii a hltll · ly pub!lciuid author ol 1 llctlllous '0bi0Rr1phy" of one of th• nltion's wealthltst mtn. :, .. o mom•.., : • @ Truttl or C.~1tnw • (I) U!lbintd Wol1d' B wi..t't My Una? m,..,....., OJ I Dr1111 of h1nnlt m st.p1e11t11tt """ m WMtb, 111111 & °" @ritM111ta· a!fAfklonlCIK di II Cotl11nidld Gl)Utn' Clt1b l!l-- 0 [Q) @D SEARCH "Short Circ111t" (R) C. R. Grover Is 1ssl1n1d by World Securities to stop • scien· tilic renius from d11trO')'ln1 mis· sion con!rol center. 0 rJ) (!) ~ Ow111 Mantlall ''AYe Will Git You Sil" (R) rJl1r11d with periulJ, 1 fri1htened loin sh1r\ vie· t!rn kills th• u1urer's ttron1 1rm min. 0 MD'M: 12111) "Oddi Afalnd Tt- llllrrOW" (dra) '59-Harry S.l1fonte, Robert Ryan, Shelley Winte11. mm..., fi)LaMotlner• 7!30 IJ WldJ W..td 11 JGriatilln WIA- tl11 E'r111st Bor1nl111 rues1s. (I) HlfH'I Heron ml Ytrit!J' 0 Wiit Tiii Vil.ft' F'lthef Clb Ho .. When Har11 buys 1 "lemon" lO:lO D Wm , from 1 uMd cer d11l1r, he decides aJ Mtloff I Hlnput to bl11! 1111 e1r ·d11tenlllp br pass· tD Aaalt Appllution of llr!'lt to ln1 •s t utid!td cu1tom1t durln& lorm ts th• 1ptcial lntetuf cf l.A. 1 11'11 W tt1eeast.' sculptrn1 Anait Stepllen1, lllt 1ub· (IJ Tt Tiff nit Trut~ ject of 111\s documenl•IJ· (I) YIU llbd fir It (t) ll!>PJ Cout Comedy series 0 MIHion $ Movll: (C) (Zlu) IE N1W1f$portl - "Botany ,.,.. (dr1) '53 -Al•n Ladd. J1m1s M1son. 11:00 II DD @mm CE Nm l1ft) Wikl lla1dot11 (]) (]) ®) Nnn m TI11t c.111 0 Ont step Beyond m Dr•lftll Elil storefront "Compton Communl· CJ) M1nilla\ Diiien c1live Arts Acmmy'' m Tntltl or Consaq11ence1 @D foun1 Dr. Klld1rt I!) Morie: ''Tiie Purpl1 C.1111'" (mys) m Tiiis h to11r Lile '60--BarlJ Sullivan, Robert Bloke. Ei.)Md11111 f1111lly IE Ond »ttnson Mite Beil 1:00 II Cl) SOIJ17 •ltd Chef (R) Jean 11:15 m Clnellll S4 Slapleton ind Lyle Wauontr 1uest. 0 ®) m Adtlfl 12 (R) Olficus 11:3011 (I) CIS Lita Moriti: (t) "Tiit Malloy ind Reed help prevent the Poppy II Alie A flower" (1dv) '6&- dt1lll of 1 6-yt1r·o1d boy and tnckl S1nt1 S.raer, Rill Hayworth, Yul down 1 13·ye11·old dru1 1dditl. B1Jnn11,.M1rcerto M1stroi1nnl, Om1r 0 (})(I} EE) P111I Lpdl Show Sherlf. P1u'. ho~s to ollt1tn I Pl~! 1!11 0 l\C8 a;, lollnny tanon Phyl!ls as v1cellon r1plac1menl for 1111 Wt· Me..m11n ind Cllntie C.ll1s 1uest. 1et1ry, but Howi1 is btttar 11u1!ified O M•n In t suttc.sa for 1h1 job. m Truth Of ConMqullctl 0 CJ)@ m Wldt Wortd If [n. m l'eny Muon t111t1Jn1111nt "P01ht Tr1in to Terror" El) Hmn1no1 Cor1jl The mystery of 1 womtn murd11td ED Amerk• '71 1bo1rd • !1st movl111 train. K11nan @D C111tnplo111hlp Wrtstlln1 Wvnn tnd Otvld Stelnbt11 stir. OJ J1p1n1M Len1u1p ~fl'llll m Tt Till ffle Truth 1:30 0 \W. ml HBC W1d11ndlf Mp· lt:GO 0 M~e: (C) "TIM: l1llerk C.Jtr" tl~cMlllan & Wll1 "lerror (adv) 66--Jicoues Sernas. Times Two" (R\ Andrew Ou11an m Allnd HittPtcod: hest11b . ' portr.•rs an underworld h1ure 111hosel lZ:JO n Hews ampue is lhretlen~d when I Wit· m Mi:Mt: "'M11nific1nt .,.,... ness a1rees to lesl1fr •,t•lns1 him. (corn) '42-Htnry fond1, tynn 8111. O Movll: IC) (2hr) 'Tiit Oeltl l IE l'tttitoll J11•di0fl f1ct«" (dr1) '70 -Ch1\s!ophe1 Geoflt. Yvtl11 M1mieu1. 1:00 ~ 0 0 (jl Ntws O (})CllfiDAIC W1d•11d1r1 (lg)ltTlll111Tltiel Mll'lit: (10) "Thi 591111 Stlitc1M" (ITIJS) "'6-Doroth1 McGuirt. GtOlll 1:45 II "'°"41: "An111 K.1r111ln1" (dll) Br!nl, Ohll Barrymore, Kent Smith. '48-Yrvien leiJll, A 'tOUftl 1lrl uposes a m~lerious 2:00 m All-Nirtrl Show: "H11nt.r ti till killtr who t1nnol eccept Phrs!Cll Unkntwn,'" "Auiptaent Paris" defects ln h11men beinp. m Mtnr Crttl• SJtow Vikki Clo, l:lO 6 Mme: '11tt Mole hotm" (Jd· Mic Divis ind P1ul Wl1R1ms ruesl Ii) '57-)ohn Ag11, Cynthia l'llrlck. Thursday OAmME MOV:Es 9:30 O IC) "Nofl~ to A11s•1" (1dv) '60 -John W11ne. Stewart Gr1npr. st11d1rs" (wes) '53--William Eltiol!. 1;00 m (C) .,Malt of Zom" (1dY) '40- lyront Powtr, lindt D11nell. l:JO O IC) ''lite Court Jesllr'' (tom) '56-0anny Kaye, Glynis Johns. l:OO (fl (C) "55 Oa11 11 l'ellln1• Concl. (drl) '63-Ch1rllon H9'ton. If§' (C) "Ser1e1nt llyker" (dra) '69 -Lee Marvin, 8r1dlord Dlllm1n. 10:00 (3) "Yo1nfbl11cl Hewk•" Part I (d11) '64 -.i.mu lrancucus. Su· l lnne Pltshe11t. l :lO O ''G111 lettlt at Mollttl'IJ" (we1) 0 wll11flre'" (Wli) '49 -Henry '~7-Sltrlint Hayden. Hull. MtlJ Btth H111he~ 4:0011 IC) "II 1 M1rt Almlerl" (toll\) U:tO 0 "I'• Nt Anplft (C'Olll) ·33 -'12-S.nd11 Ott, Bobby D1rln. C111 G.11nt, Ma• w~t. "lht Ht• .t:lO (])Si• u lMM listiq KOCE , CHANNEL SO Orange County's Ulr~~ television station, KOCE-TV. has sche~ult'd the rollowing special programs today. Detailed hsLings or Chanriel 50"s programs are carried in lhe Daily Pilot 's TV \Veek each Sunday. 4:00 TM 0,.11 C"'"""""" CM!lftl IC! "AIC'1 &I AoitfW.lt1 Whlt;h llttl Prolttl IM C0111u,.,..." L"'°"' « 4::11 eltchtc Ctm .. ,.Y IC) Ed111 • .,ll0tt fw ,........choalffl IG lllt !UM of !llH"IOI' •l'ICI n>111lc:. 5:0I lff.t!ll9 S'"91 ICJ Etluc:lfloo\"4 and.mi.Kk•1 'ltrltly for prlfnMY lod!ool thlllfr91t, 6:111 n. Onl't C-« Ctlli.tf ICI "Ate'• Of A~ Whldl a.ti Pro-11<1 '"-~"U-.a •:• .. Ma• '""'" ,,, ··111- l'tOIOfll(•" Lttl<WI !1 S.t lhll119 W.ctfl9'day, May 2'.lrd, •I ~ 00 P.M. 1:00 SOI.ILi 1(1 ll lat~ (ulhll• {6(1 Mlfl) 119'k tOC;ll! lttutl, erllt lt, a\lf!IOft, pl1ywr1thh, art !t•l"'r~ t :OO M11tfr9'tu 'Tl\fflf"t "V1r.lty lllall" ~) • ..,,,. Or-ooon" Par! II -~ltOlftlfll t :OO Al'Mrlu 'PS {Cl &:<OIOOlC•I It~. Sl\lely 11'1 lfl(fl~IMI <llh- -loffll to \Olvt -of l«llY't '°"'" pl .. IW'GCll.,.1. l'° mlnf Violinist Stepping Out of Spotlight Season's end is a sad buslneM 11t any lime aod there w11s even more reaS(ln lo think ao last "-ttkeod at the Orange County Philharmonic Society's final offering of the 1972-73 program. For we learned at the UC Irvine program delivered by the Los Angeles Philarmonic Orches1ra that concertmaster David Frisina will no! be OC· cupying his firsl chair next fall whtn conductor Zubin Mehta and his ensemble come our way again. ,. TOM BARLEY Muaic Box the LAPO in her term of service. That kind of dedication speak& fcr it.self. And II ls good to know that thb: fine artist will be with us for at least three mo~ years even U he is a little further out of his critic's liDe ol vision. suite as the piece resistance or a program tbal gave up a solid and splendidly delivered f i n a l e to a memorable season. -----..-•r•n O'NMl ''TH~ THIEP WHO CAME TO OUOUi•" o,ot11 C. Sun "RAOE" l~lflC.itrlPOI The genial David "ill be there, Jct it be stressed, but his gifted violin will have mov· ed· a yard or two to the left in the area that reeks, in the im· n1ortal words of Sir Thomas Beecham . "less of hair polish and more of elbow grease." IT WAS regrettable Friday night that Don Ferguson's an- nouncement and D a v i d • s response were almost in· audible beyond the first 40 or SO rows of the capacity au· dience at UCI. Maestro Mehta is an avid adn1irer of Holst's sadly neglected work and his regard for the British composer came through very clearly in four segments or the six-movement work -Jupiter, Mercury,,l-r:;:':;;;:;;;:;;;:::;::;::;::;::;::::::::::::::::::::::~~~1 Venus and Mars. I THUS ENDS a first chair span of 27 years ·and David's many admirers in the OCPS nlost delighfully marked the occasion with a splendid pla· que recording that span of time nnd noting, via president Don Ferguson's comments, that David joined the LAPO in 1943. Don also noted in an observation that brought ap- plause from David's many friends that Frisina has not missed one of the SO Orange c;ounty concerts presented by NATIONAi GINlllAL· !HEATHS OW PLAYING RISIRVID SEATS On Sale Daily 12 'Iii 9 MARLON BRANDO .llL 'j>ii1s Wl .. 11 •:11- IAT41111 I IOI 1110 ''THE CLASS or ,, .. '·" ''Y,OUNG GUDUAlES" WllOAlS 6:4S W.f •• WH I MCIJI ll>lS "CHlll Llo\DlllS" • SEOUCTIOll OLllllGA . IOTM 'IATUll' I.I.TH> fl ) Apparently no one thought of providing s microphone for the occasion and it was necessary for those of us charged with recording these occasions to cull the details from privileged members of the audience who were within earshot of the proceedings. Don is a delightful chap at any distance but he was the first to admit that his vocal chords were not designed to convey "his spoken words to the-far recesses of Crawford Hall. ON TO THE concert itself with this critic's choice of Gustav Holst's "The Planets'' Jupiter and Mar!!, in particular, enjoyed magnifi· cent readings tmder Mehta's direction and it was good, strolling arowxl at intermis- sion time, to gather from the comments of a delighted audi· ence that Holst ls much mott popular with the populace than vt'ith the programmers. A FINE reading of Brahms' Third ended the program and the season with this critic con· eluding what he has always felt about the work -that its tturd and fourth movements are vastly superior to the first and second. l~ave a good 21 um mer, OCPS. You too, LAPO. And the best of luck to you, David Frisina. Chapin Taking Helin Of NY's Met Opera · NEW YORK (AP) Schuyler G. Chapin, acting ~eneral J,1anager or the Metropolitan Opera, w i 11 become general manager oo July 1. been Gentcle's assistant, has been acting general manager sirice. Gentele's death . Ch a pi n immediately an-- nounced that Beverly Sills, the coloratw a star of the New York City Opera, will make 1975, in Rossini's "The Siege her debut at-ihe Met April-'/, 'II Corinlh." Chapin, 50, sueceeds Goeran Gentele, who was killed last summer fn a car era.sh In Sardinia. Chapin, who had -"..t.c .. -... u.w. .. CINIDOMI 20:,:: '-·-""':!:..=U!.!.ll.11J.ILU -... ·····-:.:.'"lfT• SIAD/UM •3 .:::, " • W •:l'::..> -.. "~-.0·,1.• SIAOIUM ·4 :~ .. ...-w1~u:::n..11l!·-r'~ "So.nder" (GJ AND "Fh1San'1 Rainbow" CGl "SoylHt Gr.-" ... "Skyjacked" I PG I "Clau of '44" (l'G) ... .. Lost S11nuner" tPGl .. The Getaway" lltG I ... "Lady SlllCJS Tllo lluos" I R I Tit•~t ...,...., Pkt.,... M Ow :flin. "Biiiy Jeck" IPGI NOW OPEN 1155 BAKER ST. at FAIRVIEW COSTA MESA ' -• Orang• Countr'• ntwnt Del Taco lt open and re•dy to ltrY• you I • ForTASTYTACOS,Burrltotand Tott.do•, or DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS, Frln end Shakes • FAST SERVICE It ailhtr our D1tv1 ThN or inlkl• PllHo onmg Room • , • and, Your Ord« Jt Made to Orckf. NOW OPEN• 1155 BAKER ST. 11 FAIRVIEW, Co1t1 MoH 7 AM-12 PM lido . . . 3459 Via Lido N~wpon Be11ch Phont: 673·8350 Al the Enlr1nce to f"1buloa1 Lido Itle EXCLUSIV• - "SLITHER" 15. , • A delightful wacky, zany comedy on. a great program with a great cast geared for great holiday entertainment. lof.1-'l'IC~.qtjt~~'WllU" What is true of ·"Slither", is also True of. . . · BURT REYNOLDS YUL BRYNNER IN ''FUZ~'' • ' In the ~lty Ctnt,.. ~·lt7-G832 tw COHWl'f .. 115Nl'l'1 WOltD'5 GUAT15T ATHLmOI '-+ WHm WILDllNISS 1• Ja .. D<•l•'•Y· 1t ••-"u'"I !So.I t62·2411 ""'-Dtm~Y 111 P\US I Gio.o,I t. KOTT HOSP~I- 110U11 "' ......... Of 'O'" --· CLASS OF '44 I"! ..i... YOUNG GRADUATES lllGl Ml-Ill: 01'91 t ... , .... D"9f t1 !!!!!Ill .. -- ORANGE aml:P Dll tVE IN 2 Stnta A1111Frwy,11e1r Chlp1Nn °''"". 547·9011 . ·' ' --..... .. Lag1111a Beaeh Today's Fl••' ' VOL M, NO. 143, 7 Seci"IONS, 98 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1973' . . TI:N CENTS .~.------------·----....,..---·----------------------------------------------------------------------------.:....----------------------"""'\ IJCI Libbers Clu·i1n ·sig1JS ~I Change 9 ~ By JOHN ZALLER Of fM OIUY l"1'M S~ff 'Good looking women may nol be whistled at as often as they used to be. A yPUll8 father is oeeking child-support JllYft)ellls from his-ex·Wlfe. Men are not ~ to wear tbeir hair below lbeir ihOu!den. . Are these signs that the country b edg- h)g toward total equality between the Rte,:T And if they ate, does it represent a lictory for ~? ,, . School s1a-.tt1e A group of women'• liberationists holding a Women's Weet dilCUSSlon at UC Irvioe Tuesday answered yes to both questii>ns. And they predicted that the trend away from the traditional sex stereotypes w'lU continue for a Ione. Ume. "I'll' never see total social eq~ty iD my lifetime," said one panelist, JOanne McKim, a Santa Ana C.Ollege te1cher. "Even my daughter probably, ""'!'< see it. It's ping to take a loog baul, bUt we'll stay with it M long u we have to." • II I . . _Reev~s ·Rehiring OK'd by Board Laguna Beach school adlninistrator llbbert Reeves, fired twice by the Board of Education, will be rehired and given a¥1Uonal duties in a series of staff shuf · friton Q~its ...... r •;-ir-"'--, ~ In Drug-sex \ ......... f . A:lfe~h-nfi.T · ·~ .. ) ~....,!"~·" ,I ,!,OND9N (UPI) ~ Lord ~a ~t minister who re$llntd Tues-dl.Y nl&4\t in Britain's most elp1oe!ve sex, oeCur!ty and dr\lg scandal in a decade, confea&ed tilda)< be did so because of a "easdal acquaintuce'" with a call girl wtme huaband tried to sell· secret photographs of them to newspapera. ··'But '\here has been oo security risk or blackmail," Lambton, 50, insisted in a ~t banded to newsmen by a piUUcal 8"1e. Within hour.I , the ollice of Attorney General Sir Peter Rawlinaon lllllOUllCe<\ Illa\ aymmonsea alleging i 11 e g a I _.mm ol dangerous drug.I have been lal1ed qainst Lambtoo. It aald be is lil!lril charc<d --loo ol , mari· ,.... and JIDI~ . """ Evening Standard ol Loudon said agents for three week:J have been eatlpting sematlooal allegatloos 'f1Ce ring improprieties involving 1oftmm-ent ministers and o t h e r fifJres." It said at least one other pemment minister is involved. ~ [Andon Evening News said the girl Is a bllck call girl named "Belly" and thai a man calling himsell her husband ~ .. 5'11 "incriminating photographs" o( :Iii<! gtrl and Lambfon to a British ~~per for 125.000. Oes agreed to by trustees 'l\lesday in an executiv,e session. William Tboma5, school board presi· dent, said the board will take action Tuesday, during a regular meeting, ei;. teoiHni Reeves' contract for one year wben tt terminates the end of June. . . ' .P~y tl!e ·l>oal'd of .education on ·~•"lii<I .. Hi liim°"ll lilt. tor.hin! Dr. ~presenUyass-1 suJierint...ieot '°' lnstructloo. Stal! _j:hanges wtlJ move t he '¥'-~ . ~l!'llT--tato-'6-o-~· lll1si-~ until IM dioirict hires • -·Olflctr. The ocllool board vacated that office when It eccepted the resignation of Charles Hess, former a s s I s t a n t superintendent for business, who also was fired by the ocllool board, at the same lime majority Trustees "Thomas, Petrlcla Gillette and Gerald Linke dlscbargtd superintendent W i 111 a m Ullom. William Allen, acting superintendent, will remaln in that position tmtil Donald . Woodingtoo, bead of Colorado state -., tal:s ..... the LIJuna. Beech schools system. There bad been some d1scuss.lon of an interim superintendent's appo~ W<JOdlnston wW take his Laguna pool Sept. I. .. Trustees cited a "continuity factor" in retaining Dr. Reeves on the ad· ministrative staff. Dr. Reeves was not av.ilable for comment. South Lagunans Approve Sewer Bonds in Vote ~ quil abruptly Tuesday night .,, personal and health reuoos" u Vot<os In the South Laguna Sanitary J'' oment undersecretary for the Royal A& Force District Tuesday gave overwhelming al>' · (]Ovemment aources said P r 1 m e proval to issdance of '3 million in bonds Mtfttsttt\F.dward Heath ordered .att M~ ,ta upgrade waste treatment facilities. ~ttve piobe and no Wa~'t&slJ.16 , Monefnlaed throogb 8ll1e of the boods up °' wbltens~. • " 'tt bobllaoce the -of the district's th wUI mile aft•-m Plrlil-, . m..,t m Thund&y on the aifilr; govemi d~ · In the waste . w a t e r m<ot olfldala said. They said there redamatloo program of the Ahso Water ~be no official commept untU then. Management Agency. tabor opposltloo ~s o~ Parlla-A portion of the revenue also will be meit bombarded the lovemment with used to replace a deteriorating sewer line ~ands for an·expJanaUon <!_f the ~ega. runnlne from Aliso Beach to nu-ee Arch t'°'!", published by the West GCnnan Bay. T.'b S~. sor~ <lbry '"LamblOn' _About· 26 perC<llt o1 the 3,741 voters ~,;, l..t. in 8 fonnM .. ...r...0,,, ___ , ]"ithln tile /l#lltary dlsb'ict voted on the _,,...r-;Y . "-"P'-._~ lSSUe. Results were as follows: l!J;.il aide .~ his Berwlck-oo-Tweed con-~"139 (16.2 .J!elttot) ~~Y· All that hllppeiled Ii that NOi IM (1U ~) liiJlt sneak pimp baa aeon an Oi>' The measure 'requlr«I 8 two-thirds yee , 1 (See SCANDAL, Pa&• Z) vote for passage. ' Sanitary district olfic!W said the - CLASSIFIED A.D tf!UNGS HAPPINESS of ' rtlirlng· the ~ ·will be borne throucl> lncreued .a-tloo f ... to -useni within the district. There wW be no ...,-al \,t1 rate in- crease to uaen, they addod. The measure wa oppooec! by the South Pally Pilot claaalfied 1dvertis<r is Laguna Civic AsloC!atlon, which charged l]JaPY be<ause he oold hl.s car to the first irregularlUes in the eloctlon process. -who called. Here's how the ad ran: The 8,...1811oo waa crlUcal of placing : PORSCHE '68 Tara• -glass both the AWMA ape! 88!!'0( lln• repl4ce- • back window, & llPd, AM/FM, ~'"""'°"II together. . white, exlnt cond. 32,000 ml. Elplnllon I. of .,1J>e ,. ... , treatment , '43511. Call evet. (Phone No.) system, assoclatlon olllclill llllld, will • '!'ho new owner Is now happily driving allow -for -powJalloq ail\! blah« blr car. M«ybe ~ could be a lltU. coolo for ·related'.~' ' . bOppier by runn'11f a aucceplful Dally About Q mlllioo of the bond money will PllOt ad. Tiie dJnd, 'bapplnesa' line -· go I<> AWMA oollera. ~ · .,.. " ~ • · -'!'he AWMA mt<m, boclred by aevtO'ol <See S!WER, l!qe ZI ,, "lt's ~ta put your finger Ol1 exactly what's ba_peeoi:ng," · agreed aoother panelist. Jadf_Biniler. "But it's clear that attitudes are d)anging ... The remarks were made at a pane.I called ~·For Men Onb'" -a chance for the males Of UCl to fins! out everything they've always wanted to know about womens liberat,iOQ. But the event was very nearly a bust becallse only two men showed up -a former st_udent now a campus janitor and • a newspaper reportef. Undaunted by the ·iow -~t - maybe everyone was watcbij:ig the Watergate bearing.s_oa TV,• suggested -the womea respoQded ta .a broad range of questions and ~on ~riskly for nearly two hour& • "One of the iogcl tbiJl8S happening now is that terms like !chick"~'~d' are not applied to wwnen as udl~" uld . -·-··· ' Judy Leste, a ~~. .A-: ''l think people bavt · JJeen made (to .. , en: ·' realize that wunen are human beings, not.some klnd ol. 'chick' who baS' ooly one real v&We 1n life to the man who call! her that." In the-same way, the group agreed. women are no longer being whistled 111 as much -a sign that women are COQ· sidered "less as sex objects and more as huma.n beings," acixtrding to ·M!. Binder. The group expressed enthusiastic sup- port for a man who "ls eurrently figbting a court battle to get child-support ' payment.!I from his divorced wife. .. i "If a man wanll to keep hl.s 1m.;" .... Ms. Binder. "that 's 11goodsig:nt!ilt11te8i-l sexes are beglnning to accept ~ ~· responsibility. instead of leev\na: 81 ~ \Ybole job to ju.n one 19," Ms. Binder said that if tbe woma bid " a hi.gl).P,.Ying job and the maa·wu _,. L died with child·rai.sing costs-, ~ w~ •.a, \ fair" that the woman pay a P4ll't ef'Ab!ll: i lSee LlBBEJlll, Pa1e I) ·~ ~~ " ' .. i •• School Race . Most Costly · · Along Coast , The three successful candidates ln the April 17 !Aguna S.ach ochool boord elec- tion spent a total of $1,019 in theJr elec- tion campaigns. Of the sum, '$7,MS.a w1s spent by Schools '7!, which liacked the wlnnerl. Jane Boyd, Nonna!> Brown and MlcbOeI Sagar. ' , . tn addition, Mrs. Boyd 1pent-$t,Oft en .~ her campaign; Dr. Bro~ IP#1* '4l!l.i , and Slgtr,'spenl .ff'.l. ...'.!-' · '@ •. , Exelli<llng-~....,._.lt--l~~f!i~"'!'IJ!O~-,.-il from the individual cam~ ""'"'•· 1 the elecilOO of illt'tlne ~--· '8,019 -maijq il'lilli~~~ ClmfP'o cost aloni ·tbO Or.,., • ~~: •. p1 .... tf:~1lt,°J~=-!!\I' •''v~• =~ . . . . Pitoi>osALS PoR DEVELOPMENT OP SYCAMORE HILlS OUTLINED FOil LAGUNA".°CHAM~~r HoWard Milltr, Vice President of Newpqd lnvestment1, Tells Pl1n1 For Kty Art• I~(, ''-~ Developers ,:J 'Draw Sycamore Hills Aide Jiasts: c..,;eeribelt Gift . Piro Line' • By JACK CHAPPELL Of ""' .,..,, "" '"" An angry Howard Miller, vice presi· dent of Sycamore Hills developer~ Newport Investments, declared Tuesday that the corporation "bas gone as rar as we're goblg to go" in meeting en- vironmentalists' demands. Miller told the Board of Directors of the Laguna Beach Chamber or C6Jn. merce that the..corPQralioD-is leaving 70 percent of the hills acreage open, as a concession to conversatlonists and had tried to design a project "with something for everyone.'' The Sycamore Hills area is located between El Toro and Laguna C:fu.on Roads and oompriaes 5lll aCl'e$ o[ g virgjn jalld. ~ Sycamo,. HIJl& (l!Qject, now .be!~ tllo.1-S.ach Planniic Commi'8lon; wciu14 cle\"Olop a community , . . ,f" .• of 2,000 dwel..Uni units. Miller becaifte ·irritated .as Chamber Director Jiriies 'Dilley, president of · Laguna Greenbelt, 8JlJ10Ul1ced tbat th• Greenbelt would be ready to accept thf! Sycamore IDlls land ·as a . gift. Dilley handed Miller a bulletin from Nature'• COmervat1cy featuring an arll· cle on the · donation of 49,000 acres of Virginia swampland to the conservation group. c: · Dilley 'suggested that Great Lakes Corporation, owners of the land, could do the same apd that the Greenbelt would tun\, the Jarid over to the governmental body for public use. "t.guna isn't one of our favorite charities," Miller aaid.\"H they want to gO ·~ • charity, they bave 9ther charities !h'fhn go to. They.didn't buy thb 1"'111 kit Cbarllable ,.,._., .. Miller added. Bandit /lbbs Mesa Bank, Escapes Witfl, $5,200 A sandy·haired bandit wbO Initially asked for change for 11 $10 bill Oaahed .a gun at •teller Tuesday and escape'd with l1lO!< than 15,200 . from a Coofa JdelO bank. The l:15 p.m. holdup at the Bant of Amer!Cl, 1101 Harbor Blvd., went off smoothlY aller the slender, six-foot g\111· man ordered a teller to turn over her money. ~ "He walked in, got the montl and left," said ooe FBI agent today. .. He walked out with $:1,.2911.0S," Bank of America public relations 8pokesman Jon Washington said today, pinpointing tbe ~lse amount taken. Investigators raced to ~ bank at Harbor Boulevard and Adami Avenue but lournl no trace of the .bandit, .,ho quickly 1Upped oul through a !QI' door. The Wlidentllled teller conlronted ·dur· Ing the robbery which OOCU(red while elltht J!Of1oo1 were ptea<11t did the aun- mon diaployed • rovolver to show he ' meant business. Authd'rltles did not disclose im- mediately whether any personnel ac. Uvate:d the bank's scaMing camera to catch a portrai~·of1 tbe robber ia actioa. The bank braocb at Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue ill one of the more- often-i"Obbed · finlnctal iMtltutions in COeta Mesa, apparently due to ils k>ca· tlon. • The busy .. hou.levard lntersettion af· fords fairly quiet access to lhe San Diego Freeway, ln addition to heavy traffic in which a 1etaw8y car can-become lost Three years ago, a motorcycle- helmeted bandit who smashed hie way through the front door with a Ure Iron on two occasion.! In a tlu<&-monlh period "robbed lhe same lacW~y. A trio of men tater captured In Texas, convicted ind ·...,-to long prl'°" term.a for lmW!'d boldupt in that atate W<> hll the Harllor Boulevord·Adams Avenue branch 1\i years ago. ,, I • Miller sa..itl Greet: Lakes, witll whom 'Newport Investments has a p.u'chase agreement, has taken "a paper loss" of $2 million on the property since buying it Jn 1964. That iacludes original costs, irr terest, taxes and maintenance, he said. Commenting on conservation steps taken by designers, Millei;-said trails had been designed to skirt a deer crossing area and that several building sites had been moved to avoid "a breeding grounds for field mice, if you can believe that." MiUer said the development as planned was "a development that, frankly, we 're not crazy aboot .'' Miller bad confided during planoing commission l)leelings that if t ll e Sycamore Hills area were in Orange Coonty terrlk>'y, rather than an in- corpora ted portion of Laguna Beach, the land development firm would get the (See SYCAMORE, Page!) Mary M. Foster, Former Mayor's Sister, Succurnl>s Mary Martin Foster, slater of the late Laguna Beach mayor Wllllarn D. Martin, died Tuesday in a cmv-.teecent ·home. Mrs. Foster, who had lived mmy years in Laguna Beach with her late brother, was 84. Funeral services will be hiold Ol It a.m. Thursday at St. James Epl9oopa1 Owrch in Newport Beach. 1ba l!fi. Jdln P. Ashey will officiate. Arrangements are directed by Pacific View Mortuary ln Newport Beach. ~ Mr. Martin, former mayor, cowi- cilman, member of the Festival of Atts board of directors and many civic organlzation11, died· Marth 8. Interment for Mn. Footer will be In Raleigh, North C.rollna. The family baa l'llilleoled' -·l trlbulel to the M.,. Ma'ttln l'olter Memorial l'und at St. Jama Eplscopal Church ln Newport Booch. t , ' • • Roniild kreber. wn. WU1111m Tbomu fll, Ille liiCUiii t board -~ dent ,W!Jo placed wt, open! fllO, j campaign .. _ otatemenlo ...... due at jhe Orange County Rqlatrar o[ I Voters office by 5 p.m. Tuuday. · Neithe r Thomas or Sagar hid filed by the deadline. Sagar received a court 1 or<ler from Superior Court Judge H. War- ren Knight to file hiJ statement this morning. Thomas, who supplied bis figures to l the Dally Pllot today. did not lndlcate •'hen he would file his ezpeme Ila!& ment. The iaraeat slnc1e amount 8-.led by Scboolt '73 WU ff;71111 from a IUnclftller beld at tile Moa Point -of Dlolp. Other aubstantlal !lcbootl '73 ·..,. . trlbutlons Included M-L. Stelllie, $500; Toey and Donna llomelrllideo 1100; Vernon and Franne Blattmob; •oo! Ken and MaryAubuChm, $IGO; ~ v: Schryver, 1100; Margaret B!>lell, fJOO; Betty M. Holm, 1100; lleiln \V)lllaker, (See SPEND!NO, Pip Z) • Man Gets Life Tenn LOS ANGELES (AP) -Vernoo E Smiih, the ycunger brother ol a ~ acqwtted in the grenade killing ol two of- ficer1 in Vietnam, bas been sentenced to life in prbon on his coovlcUom. Of murder. Smith, II, WU aOCUled of fatall)' shooting John W. Men:er, IS, aud- ing Thomas Jocbm, :II, dar1llc • dnq: deol in south Loi Anplea lut yeor. J"!'luon survived tbe lllootlnc-• Oruf e Weather Mootly sunny on Thuraljay, alter the early morning low clouds, with little tem~ature cbange.~ln f r the 00s at the beaches. to the mid-70s inland. Oven\lgllt • in the 508. INSIDE TOD.(Y Re1ponding to t11.t rtoelation that the countv'• chltf goo·"'"' plier muit cut the 4ft'L()Uftt 0/ 1 .. 1 h• con dtlltleT, supmtlaon ordered all departments to cv,.. tail noncuctttlal pas v.n. Sff 1tory and other cOU1tt)I M1ft on P«QtS IO 01\d JI. Al Y-"'""""-I l.,.M, .. .,. II -..... Cl ....... 11 I CllWI' <*Mr I CllttltJe' ~ Ct""'-' • ,,.......,. . DMi• .,...,_ '" • ....... 1 ,... j ==-fflt :: ..., "'"._., 'II ...... ,... . . .... LlllllWI tf I I I I j • ' - ' 2 DAILY I'll.OT LI .Obstacles To Hospital By GEORGE LEIDAL or .. MIY ,, ........ Sevenl bunll .. remain before the 1.00-bed ... ch ... booililAI IUilested fO< con- struct.Im on the Uc Irvine campus by a ltglalative atudy paoeJ. becomes a reality. Dr. Stanley vati den Noort , acting dean ·or lhe UCl~mla Oollqe ol Medicine told. students ~. "We've made 'good progress wftll lllO Leplature. Now we lllWlt convince Governor Reagan's office and the UC Regent5 our plan is a good one." One other attcklng point related to the ~ ol '311 million o1 UC health sciences bond moneys b agreement with Orange County on the improvement of Orange County Medical Ceater and a Ioo.g tenn alfillatlon or other agreement between UC! and the county. While l:O milUon _,Id be sptnt for a cam]lllS boopltal Ind I! milUon for com- munity ·clinics, OCMC and county government wtl1 get llU million ol UC money if an agreeme:it is reached on . several key issues. Dr. van den NQort tdd studmts at- tending a atudent 'beaJtb oenter •dvisory . committee lecture, the major question to be reoolveil by negotiation with the coun- ty is : "Wio picks up the '9 million a year expeded deficit?" The community dLiia, the UCI teaching hospital and a smaller, county hospital staffed medically by UCI ( a11 It is now ), the actinJ dean said, would in- volve a "$45 million operational budget each year." Of thlJ IJDOWlt, $9 mllllon would be an annual del!¢t. "I'll gladly settle with the coonty so long as they pay $8 million or 80," van • den Noort quipped. Later In Ilia remarb, he noted the unlver.tty llguroo aboot $1.25 million ol the county's 'annual deficit at OCMC is attributable to the ' costs of medicaJ educatlon, but the -university also · CXSJtends it bu spent 'more than this amount ln improvements at OCMC since UCI-OCM moved to Orange Cotmty five years ago and af- filiated with the county general hospital. · The agreement with the county on the relaUooahlp of OCMC to UCI is critical to the UC Regeata ultimate approval, van den Noort suggested Tuesday. • · 'Ille UC Regenta have been burned , twice in county hoepltal taliiover deals Jn the put decade, van den Noort said. Costw:lse, the "track record i.m 't very good." Meanwhile, whlle legislators might in- clude the "°"~¢ UC ~et amounta in the overall state 1173-74 1 bodget, Gov. Reagan must be· cmvtn~ the items are worthwhile or be may blue penctl them from the budget. Administrative analyst. Vern T. Orr . must be coovinced II the $6.5 million bu~tod for the mecll04l achoo! -class- ,_ ll1d l~boratori•; 11te Ill ljllll)!m reoonunentled for lbe · SIO-bed cain- 1"" hospital (lo be ·~ In 15 mlliitl!I In private funds o1 UCl-OCM), the 12 mlllion for tbe comrrnmtty clinics and transportation network, and the $9.5 million to f'!duce OCMC from a 515 to a 315-bed quality emergency care hospital, all art to be spent this year. All the amounts except the one for the ,lint classroom buildlg for UCl-ccM 1 were set by the Joint Legislative C.Om- mittee on Teaching HospilaJ Siting. The committee headed by Assemblyman Willie Brown Jr., D-San Francisco, made the recommendation to the Legislature .last week. Only the funds eannarked f o r upgrading OCMC are "conditioned" in such a way that they cannot be spent un- til the county ~ campus agreement ill reached. • Fro• Pqe J SEWER ... south county water and sewage agencies. includes ezpqnsioo of a number of inland treatment plantll, with reclamatioo of I reated waste water for irrigation and ground water table l'flCharge purposes. Ezcess effluftit will be dumped in the Pacific Ocean via an outfall line off Aliso Beach. DAILY PILOT T11~ 0!'81\111! CM•I DAIL'( PILOT, wflft wtib 11 c-1-"'-M_...Pt'fl1, II lllllllllfted bl' flM Or1"9lf °"''I Putllbhlr!I ~)'. -..., '11M Id/I ...... •re ~. MMM, ~ Frid1y, ''" c.,.11 M-, Mtwpor1 IHCll, H1tntlngl011 ' llKll/F-ltlf! V1Uey, Uvlll\I e .. e11, i.,,in.1So4d1MiK11 .,, s.n ,...,,..,,,, ~11 JU6n ,.,.._,,,.... A lifllle r111'-wl ll:llllon ;, p1,ou..,._ 1.tt11rdl~ ..,,. S.-.vw. Tiit prlncil"OI l!Ublislllng PIMll r. 11 lJO Wftl 111~ St'"'• c ... 11 ""'"'• C11Jfllnli., f16a aob.rt N. W,911 Pr•"'-"' -PwblWwol Jtcok k. Curlty Viet Prw!d.11 tllll 0..W.I Mtl\lttr ll!om11 J(,,.,;i Ellltw Tl10fll11 A. M11tphint M ..... lflt l!ti,_ Ch1rlu H. leo1 aichtnl r. Noll .... llltM Mtlltolnt fdlltu ._ _"""" 222 F•r•1! ATenue M1Ul111 ..Ullr•sn r.O. lo1 .... 92652 °'""-""'' ~;"' """ ..., .. '"' .. .. ...,.., INcfl: US) .. ..._, '°"""''" Hi,tftf"*"" ..-ctl! lml IMdl ltulew1n1 IM °""*'II; Jiii 111«1'1 •• C.min. 111 .. 1 , ........ (7141 M2-4Jll ~lllM Al1•fl "9 MZ.1,71 ~.._.._.. o.,.,,..,." , ... , ......... ... c:.rrllfrit, 1'71. °"'""" C..11 ~ltlllftt ~. ""' -....... It"""-''--...... ..,. ...... .nwt...._ ........... _., .. ,~ ...,,... '-"'-1 .... .....,.. ., °'"'"ISM """"'· ..... deW ......... <Mf1 .... ~~-~, ......... .........,, "' -N II.I. !MfllNYI ""'"''" ........ llM ..... ......,,., • ur1 Ttl""'°" BeUf) IJp There 'Dirty' •• , Literature Criticized '· 1~ 87 JOANNE REYNOUJIS Of ... Oeffr '"" S&ll" ; "I wouJd like to -bleep -but 1 can't becallti Ii'm not a homoseiuaJ." There were no bleeps 'l'Uelday oJ«bl wben.Mn. DorlJ Allen accused ~ of the Huntington Beach Union Hlgb School Dl.trict of keeping «>pies o1 a "dirty" poetry book m their libraries. The Westminster matron, attired in a red blouse, white skirt, and blue blazer, and white shoes with pointed toea, U. lustrated htr point by reading aample passages . But Westminster High Principal Fer· ren Christensen noted that Mn. AlleD, with her shock treatment, bad probably expoeed Jtli)fe students to the book thin had seen it in all the years it bu beeq on the library shelf. "It is recommended for t h e sophisticated literature students only, .. he said, ''and in the three years that we've had it, it has only been used four times." With 40 students in attendance at the board meeting to be honored for OU\stan-- ding acievements, Christen~ observed, "I think more children have been e:s:· po!ed to the obscene language in the book tonight than have been in the pest three years. Mrs. Allen, who iden tified herself as a member of the Citizens Committee of California , said the book was on the shelves of three of the district's high scl»ol libraries. She did not identlly the citizens group further. For 2-year-old Edtli<! Richert of !'hiladelphia, Buttons, a six-foot- eight clown with the Ringling Brothers Circus, stands pretty tall. In making her point, she read jult about every four-letter wont and scatoioglcal phrase from Ille "Young American Poets," interspening the '*' searing reading with comments such as "a Reader's Digest of oriental sex prac- tices,'' and ''poems, gentlemen, Poflll!." She also criticized the acbool. ad· Brot11ers Plan Service Off ice In Laguna Beach . Big Brotbers of Orange County, the Oi'piilzlitiM to1le1p fatherleor1xiy3,-wili bring itS motor home office to Laguna Beach every Friday from 1 to 5 p.m. beginning thb week. 'Ille J10l'!abie otpce'will be otatiolled in frUll f11 tho1 Sooll!. Co!Py, ~ liervloe Center, 670 s. Coaot Hl&bway "'l" will be staffed by Tooy Bober, the Orange County coordinator for Big Brother services. The . service is designed to help those caught up in the "Laguna syndrome" - the situation in whlch the mother must raise a family on her own. The 1971 Laguna Beach Health Survey by the Orange County Department of Mental Heallh showed that one out of five families interviewed was a one· parent family. Boys between the ages of 6 and 17 may take part in the Big Brothers program. There is usually a one to t\li'O month wait for a proper match between boys and their "big brother." Further informa tion on the program may be obtained by caJling 497-1781 or 544-5773. From Pflfle J LIBBERS ... child-support burden. A major part of the d1Scussion dealt with the nature of future male-female relations if the women's equality move. ment continues to grow. "As the traditional sex ro les are wiped out," said Ms. Leste, sex preferences may go, too. \Ve may be headed toward a period of bi-sexuali~m. "I'm sure there will always be ma]{'- female couples," Ms. Leste added , "but I don't think everybody \viii think it's so important that All relationships be that way." '"The whole conCC'pt of masculine and feminine is weakening." agreed Ms. Binder. "But it all depends on your definitions. If it is considered masculine to show ag- gressiveness. then you'd have to say Y.'Omen are becoming more masculine. And lf you Insist that it is feml nlne to have long hair. then some men are ob- viously becoming feminine . "But yoo have to ask whether these masculine and feminine stereotypes are reaJly worth anything, or if tbey matter. People shou.Jd just be the best human beings they can wilhout worryJng about these stereotypes as much.'' However, both Ms. Lisle and Ms. Uinder agreed that. although equality of rhe sexes might bring the elimination or tradi tional sex roles. It wa! not an im • mediate cause of concern . From Pagel SCANDAL .•• ministration at Westminster for the publlcatlon of a student 8 a t l re newspaper, Ye Olde Town Crier, lis:ting as one of the paper's articles, "Pip Off Campus." Marty Trujillo, the Westminster stu- dent who edited the paper pointed out a portunlty of making money by the sale of liWe later that the article dealt with the the stOry ~and secret photographs to pigs in the campus farm and bad nothing papers at home and abroad. to do with J.aw enforcement. "I behaved with credulous stupidity " Mrs. Allen's protest was intemJpted by • scltool board Presldent Dennis Mangers Lord Lambton added. "I must repeat who suggested that she cut short the tbatl there hf.I been ~.high.life vice ring, -!"adings and_m.U:e he(__wJ,lrt, _ no !li!Cul117 Tesk, no bl.,lifiloi! aild, H fa~' • ~!'Di ~ U 1111• la embarrtl•~ as r know, rto politicie of any party i& Mr. Mangers," she started to reply. remotely connected with these eventa." "I didn't NY ft was embarrassJni, I Stern said tbe alleged "vice scandal" just SC!1d you~ht w~t to get to tbe involved~ Briu.t..ii~witjl _polnl d all thb,' Sllld. •.r.~'· adltit:N y ~-~.J ac t\ ! ~/llJe ' "'"''!'\"'' • mlUtlr)I : It said 'lleT freqi, ' ted preaentaliotl, ers \old her . lu:s:ury iirothels in Paris, Londoo, New dls.trict has an establltbed policy for York and West Germany. cltlZelll to have what they :conaider ob- Alter Lambton issued his statement a jectionable materials reviewed by school Stem editor in Hamburg said he was ibe officials. man ref~rred to in the magazine's story. Because the poetry anthology II on the ~~me British newspapers described the shelves at ' Marina and , Edilon High Stem allegations as the most sensational Schools as well as Westminster, trusteu in Britain since the Christine Keeler sex-agreed that Mrs: Allen could Initiate the and-security scandal hit the headlines 10 process at Westminster High School and. years ago, involving former War it would apply to tbe two other campuses Secretary John Profumo ar\(I nearly top-as well. piing the government of former Prime School principals and district-ad- Minister Harold MacMillan. mlnistrators were ordered to rt:Port their Jn his statement, Lambtoo said "I had findings at the next board meeung. a casual acquaintance with a call girl Mrs. Allen's protest wu backed up by a11d one or two of her friends. F.clmund Sheehan, an unsuccegsfuJ school "But," he said. "there has been no board candidate in the April election wbo security risk and no blackmail and never vowed to bring more "matters of mutual at any time have I spoken of any aspect cocicern," and the local chairman of the of my late job." citizen's group. Lambton, who is married, has one son and fi ve daughters. Lambton said · in his statement police informed him Monday that the call girl's husband had taken secret photographs and sold them to newspapen. They have not been published in Britain, whtre libel laws are stringent. , "They persisteriUy questiooed me all to whether I had been lbe subject of blackmail," Lambton said. "I could only tell them I was unaware of bis ex- istence." From Page J SPENDING •.. $100; Clay and Mickie Clai:ton, $100; Clay Claxton. $100; Association for Bet~ ter Citizenship or the Ca lifornia Teacher Associa tion. $249.99; Neal and Meredith Amsden, $75: Anne L. Campbell, $75 ; Frances A. Jensen, $75; Margretta S. Drake, $100; Keith Drake $100; Lyman and Claire Drake, $100: Sol \Veiner, $100: Pauline and Terry Kyne, $100; Lee and Truth French, $50: Francis Cabang, $150; Dennis Graham. S52: Bernard and C.1rol Breen, $50 ; Fred Cunard, $50; Mickie Claxton, $50; Doreen Richmond, $50; Barbara N. Painter, $50; Sanwel Albert $100; Howard and Rosanna Prestoo, $50 ; Helen Keelty, $50; Alice B . Macy, $50; Bernice M. Miller, $50 and John and Margaret Hefti, $50. Custodial Services Bid Get C!.<.nler Okay Bridge Hike Opposed SAN FRANCISCO (AP\ - A proposal before Golden Gate Bridge directors to raise the toll from 50 cents to 75 cent!: on the historic span has dra'A-n opposition from the Marin County Board of Supervisors. MAY 28TH Mother Guilty .. .. ~ '· . -·.Accessory • in A :!'OU!la molber 'tlbo admitted In the courtroom !bat 1he knew her lltUe JlOY ...... dead wbea she told police he '#fl missing plead- ed guilty Tuesc!M ~ charges of being an accessory to hla murder. ~ ORANOI~ JJupeilor Court Judge Kenneth Lae heard the contess!on .adli ~ _Sandy Rockwood, 17, of Orange, to the Fron- tera Prifon (Or Woine( fm: a pr&entenctng study. She will be re- turned for isente~W ,\u,i 20 lltlsi'lloc~repQrt April 13 that 3-year-old Todt! Rockwood WU l!lisslng fmn Ill• home she shared with Lan')' Wayrie Cobb, 23, aparked ~ lnleJlllve soarc!Jlor the area by more !bait 500 lawmen and ~HM ..... _ ', ' ' -·~;:_j'\ . . ·' -'i:Hl·tlliNT:ended when -Cobb led ~lice to a sballbw 1rave in the AiiAheliii llilla uea where the child s body was unearthed. Cobb will be arraigned May 29 in Superior Court on charges of fint a~ murder. It ls .U.ged that a beating be admiJ)istered led to th~ Chllijls 'death April II. t CUSD Threatened Over 1 .. School's Water Source BJ FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL or tM DlllY f'llll statt The Caplstnno Unified School Dittrict bas been threatened with legal actlon if It refuses to voluntarily change Richard Henry Dana School from the Capistrano Beach CA>unty Water District to the South Coast County Water District. The suggestion a lawsuit mighL arise is made in a letter to CUSD officials from the Jaw office of Rimel, Harvey and Logan, attorneys for the SCCWD. 'lbe sroblems go back seven years, when the elementary school, located at 24242 La Cresta Drive, Dana Point, was comtructed . At that tlme, the SCCWD w8s unable to provtCle water to the school due to lack of facilities in the area. School officials .turned to the Capistrano Beach district for water and have been receiving it House Sustains Veto on Budget Aide Approval WASiilNGTON (AP) -The Hoo.se t .. day sustained President NiJ:on's veto of a bill to require Senate approval of his top two budget aides . The veto to overTide the veto was 236 to Iii, er to abort of the ""!ulred two- tblrds. Eighteen Republicans joined 2 1 I DernocrW l'Ollllg against Nh<001 wblle the ~ldeqt i•iJJ!i<I IUJ>POrt f111Dl 167 Re~llc~ ll1d,,l ~!J. Nlmi' tbul won i test of hlil striliitb In Congress os bJs bacll:ers, fighting lo keep their power from belng drained by the Watergate scandal, kept the bill from becoming law. After Nil.on suffered a si.J:-vote loss in the Senate on the veto, Ho u a e Democratic leaders said they would have a tough thne rounding up the two-thirds mojority needed to complete the coo- gressional override process and force the bill into law over the President's ob- jections. Shortly before the House vote, Speaker Carl Albert (D-Okla.). told newsmen : "It Is going In be very tight, It ta going In be difficult." Plea Made in Fraud NEWARK, N. J. (AP) -Prominent New Jersey Republican Nelson G. Gross, indicted on a fraud charge in connection with Gov. William Ca.hill's 1969 cam· paign, says he is innocent of "wrong~ doing or impropriety." Gross pleaded in- nocent Tuesday to the charges in a federal indictment at an arraignment before U.S. District Judge James A. Coolahan. ,, ' from there for the past seven years. , ., The South Coast district today has !in"' running into lhe area arotmd the sc~l and Is demanding the facility switch te its system. 1be attomeya' letter notes that a see-- tlon Of the CAiifornia Constitution pro- hibits one municipal agency from prd- viding services within the boundaries of "another municipal corporation whioll furnishes such services and does not coq.~ sent." CUSD trustees this week received the request but voted In refer the maUief tO Orange County Counsel for a recom- mendaUon on. what to do. " Trustees ateo said they want to lee how the ebanee would affect water costs for the school. · • Acoordlng to the letter, the minimu~ water rate for both districts Is the sameL standing at 30 ceilta per 100 cubic feet ot water. ': 'ftle letter, prepared by George Log~ of the law office, states that tM Cha.ndler-Shennan Corporation was faced with the same siluatlon and voluntarily made the change. "The case bu now reached the point where we must either make a voluntary cmvenioo of your cormectlon such As was accomplished with the Chandlef'- Shennan Corporation or cause you to be joined in the action," Logan wrote. 1 'Ille letter states the So\ltb Coast Cou!>- ty Water Dlltrlct will delay any furtbet actJm until 'June 1 to allow a respooSe from school dtaffict officials. • ' 'f'~m Pllfll.' J -. SYG.\'M01m7:-. :'. ' . same· d""'1ty as !IO.omoor Corporati..; received on r,._nt projecls, 13 units ~ . acre. . .. Miller said bis development lncludt!lr only ·a amall I().aCJ'e axnmerclsl .ea dO!igned for arts and crafta lbopa, a coil' Yleooe market and mack shop. ·, He told the chamber commercial ~ of the land were re9tricted to avoia further oppooitlon from Laguna Beech. However, Miller noted that three maJQr shopping centers are on the dra~ board! for nearby areas. . He predicted that Laguna Canyon Hoed would be widened to four lanes betw"f" the Sen Diego Freeway and El Tori> Road U oot all the way to Laguna Besch and said that El Toro Rood ~-W8}' dedicatlOM indicated It would become a si:s:·lane tboroughfare. 09o Parkway rwming from the Star.r Ranch ana to the Dunes County Psrk in Newport Beach woold be redrawn 19 skirt both Rossmoor and Newport Investments projects and would pass through the Intersection of El Toro and Laguna Canyon Roods with a grade separatlon. " MEMORIAL DAY In honor of those who gave their lives that this would be a better world, we will be closed Monday-Memorial Day JOHN HART LYNN HART The panelists agreed that, as Ms. Binder put it, "We've all been conditioned lo certain things. and you can't just <;hange that overnight.•• A contract for custodiaJ services at the Sooth Orange County ReKional Clvlc Center in Leguna Niguel has been award· ed to Ed Building Maintenance foe $900 a month . HARTS SPORTING GOODS Ms. Llstt~ added, "We're not promoting this (bi-sexuallsrnJ at aJJ. It's not an 1iisue. What we're after ls freedom from the traditional stx roles for women who might not want to be housewivts." Orange County supervisors were told Tuesday that the firm was the lowest qualified bidder for the work . ' 538 CENTER STREET ' • \ - , . Saddlehaek \ VOL~. • 143, 7 SECTIONS, 98 PAGES ~ f,:Q(INT'f, CALIFORNl.t, + ~ !. .~ •• • • I' WEONESOAY, ~r 2i, 1973 • • : N.Y. Stoeks • ..• --.·ifc1 Libber~·.cli.ina ,.. . _, ...... -,.... •signs ol C~nfje" By JOUN ZALLER Of .. Dlitr .PW Stitt Good looking women may not be wblatled at as often as Ibey used lo be. A y'"'°' father Is ... ~ child·5upport pa.ts frou;t bis ex-wife. Men are not ~ to wear their hair below their &li:.ulden. • Me t-ligns !bat the country Is edg· m;;mian1 Iota! eqµallty between the ~And 1f they are, does it represent a Yittory for women? • A group or women's liberationists hol.d!D4 a Women's Week· discussion at UC lriine Tueoday answered )"' to both questions. And they pr<dicted that the trend away from the traditional sex stereotypes will continue for a long time. "rll never see total IOClal eqtiallty in my IUetime," ·said ooe panelist, Joanne McKim, a Santa Ana College teacher. "Even my daughter pn>bably won't see it. It's going to take a IoO;baul, but we'll stay with it as long as we have to." rv1ne Mesa Bank Loses Cash To Bandit A sandy-haired bandit who initially asked for change for a $10 bill Dashed a gun at a teller Tuesday and escaped with mote than $5,200 from a Costa Mesa bank. 'Tbe 2:15 p.m. holdup at the Bank of Alnerica, f101 Harbor Blvd., went off .n.ool!W after the oleoder, six.foot gun· • i!rJ!mll,.~iru'.J!l 'l!l!ll evi;r ber mooey. "He walked in, got the money and left " said one FBI -\odoJ, -"He w~ed out wfth lt:s(Jll." Bank of ~ public rela~ ipoltnn>e• Jon w~ aald todiy, P"'i>""!l'DI the pttdie amount taken. InvesUaaton taced to the hint at Harbor Boule.vard and Adams Avenue bQt !Olllld no trace of the band!~ who qliicldy slipped out through a rear door. The uniden~ teller ooofronted dur· ing the robbery which occurred while eight pel'90r1S were present said the gun- tjian displayed a revolver to show he meanl business. · Authorities did not disclose im· mediately whether any ~rsonnel ac- tivated the bank's scanning camera to catch a portrall or lhe robber in action. 'Ibe bank branch at Harbor Boulevard and Adams A venue ls one of the more- (Soe HOLDUP, Pqe !) Senat,e Panel OKs Selectio n Of Richardson WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Judiciary Commntee today approved. Elliot L. Rlchardoon's nominallon as at· tomey general. · <llalrman James ~and said the \lote was unanimous. , ~ aaid Ibey woold try to brinl! Richardson's nomination up on the ~ for confirmation later In the day. '1» objection o! a single senator would force a delay tmtil tomorrow. :Democratic Leeder Mike Mansfield 4id: "We'll try t<i take it up lata today." ,Republican Leader Hugh Scott, a com- mlltee member,.aaid in aclvance of the · committee -that be e >pected • ~re comm~ndatlon for Richardson's conflnnallon. • "The commfttee had a chance yester- day to contrast a thlllf and a Hanan! inan, and I think it will vote (or the Harvard man," be told newsmen. Phone Strike Cuts Hotline HELSINKI (UPI) -A telephone wocken strike put the emergency hotline between the White· House and the Kremlifi out of order today, but a U.S. embassy source said backup systems could be µsed . The strike also cut all but two of Finland's telephone Jinks to the outside world. In Washington, the Defense Department said a backup radio- teletype channel runs through Tangier , Morocco, b y p a s s i n g Helsinki, for use U the !~year-old hotline is inoperable. ll"Vine -G>uncil ~Pav ' t-' 7o F 01' Official lrvioe clty councilmen early today enhanced the salary or the man hired a year ago as human en ent director at $18,000 a year. Paul Brady, now known as t e city's "community services directo " was granted a salary increase to $20,000 a year. Brady also was granted ~ a month travel expense allowance which requires no accounting for miles travel- led on city business. 'Ibe rabe followed an executive sessK>n called at 11:40 p.m. TUesday night for council private discussion of pending legal and penonnel matters. Brady was the )one subject of the peraonnel session and councilmen took no action on litigation they may have discussed prior to adjourning to public session at 12:30 this morning. The review of Brady's job performance came si:i months later than expected, however, under a recent JXllicy laid down by the council, all city department heads henceforth will be reviewed annually. Brady was the second administrator hired by the council. Prior to coming to Irvine he had served with City Manager William Woollett Jr. in a San Gabriel V'1Jey city and in a private development corporation operating In Santa Barbara. Homeowners' Meet Delayed Two Weeks A meeUng ot the Lake Forest, l.akto!de, and Aliso Valley Homeowners -.iuled for loolght to discUBS proposals for a Saddleback Valley municipal ad- visory council bas been postponed. nie new time is 7:30 p.m. June 4 at the Like Forest Beach and Tennis Club. "It's bard to put your finger on exactly what's bappenlni," agreed another panelist, Jade Binder. "'But it's clear that attitiidet are cha.Dging. '' 'lbe .remarks were made at a panel called,. "Foi: Men Only" - a chance for the llllllea ct UC! to find out everything tbey'Ve. aI•ays · wanted to know about womtns liberaUon: But the eW!nt wu very nearly a bust because Mlf tw6 men showed up -a former student oow a campus janitor and ' a newspaper reporter, Undaunted by the low turnout - maybe everyone was watching the \Vatergate hearings on TV, ooe JUUested. -the women responded to a broad range of questions· and carried on briskly for nearly two boun:. • "One of the· f>Od things happening oow is tbit terms Uke 'd!ick! md 'broed' are not applied to women. as much,"' said JudyLe81e, "'~· , "I think -le have ·-·made to Irvine Moth.ers Receive Threats By ARTHUR R. VINSEL facts shoW -have flOO\led the south Of ~ o.llY f'li.I I .... county. . A wave of telephone calls by a man "We're getµng . · a lot in Orange claiming to )¥lid captive girls abducted apd L-08 Angeles counties,". ~y1 ! Don from school and threateninS: barm , if MacDonald, a special agent for the their mothers fail to give hill\ ·.e...i Pacific 1'Jephol)e Company. · , f&vors is sweellloi ~ lrvµte l!l'U· . "We~~ hw:lltf!o a~ "!O' l'DOiUbl/' realize that women are human beings. not some kind or 'chick ' who has only one real value in life to the mM who calls her that." In the same way, tht group agreed. women are oo lonier bejni l'hisUed al as much - a sign that "Women are con- sidered "less as sex objects and more as human beings," accordincto Ms. Binder . Tbe group expressed enthusiastic sup- port for a man who is curTently fighting a court battle to get child-sujlport Tbe ,.,·-;;,Q~wmt111·,.·· ... '. in~11. 10 ~ haa"'~_,.._, " L~·.....,i;. _ . ey , to """"' of liouseWivea tbrouplut tht I. . . at f ' - south oounty ~ "'!fl e~ ~ !-"" , Boadi ...taurallt Monday Dlibt WU a~ .I -. '• ' . . ~~ l¢i•k~l~-~t~id:i~r-~ ~.Rlclwdl, v •. of El ~ . . . " ~,,ldlool. ~~liilqlf a ·~ -..~. .• ~ buuewi"lblt nit~ out com~ . . • i;,' · uc1es oo tlllhg @lldten,ou1.o1 ochoOI. Secarl'ht .~last "It his been. re~eil that rome ~ nts have received threatening yhone · . areu.af=~ ::~!:i"hl'e they B-r,.tJ.S• .. ·h M1°nlS· .,. ""T Qui·ts "If you receive •ucb a call, please (, ' lit/ cheek .with Uie school first so that we may cbeclr the clas:sr-. lor )'OUr child"s presence. "We de not knowtnilly let children leave ecbool with anyone 'Without proper identification," Richards Points out. "We a1so do not gtve out phone numbers." IrviQe Police DetectJve Bob Lennert confirms that 15 ·to 20 IUCh calls have been reported formally, wblle niimy more were Jll')bablY-iol!!ond by recipieota. \Vblt we have 11 ail unknow1i male who gets his aatllfactioa out Of calling women, aa.ys Detective Lennert. · The call8 -all made at random the U~orm Grading System Approved A mail ballot of the faculty members at 'l.JC Irvine has affirmed the academic senate's earlier acUon to esfablla:h • uniform grading system including the plus and minus designations to the grades of "A", "B" and "C". Faculty vo ted 162 to 67 to uphold the show ol bands vote of the senate when slightly more than a quorum were present to vote on the grading policy on April 5. The mail ballot makes final the ex· tenslvely revtaed jl'idlilg aystem which ellmlnates C<rilln ll'l!f• clwificaUon in- cluding the option to tat, no grade io a course in which ·studenl9 r~ ,tfl9Y may improve their gr8de. by ft'peatlng lbe class. ' Over l)rug-sex Scandal LONooN (UPI/ -l<Ji,i Lambtl'Jl, a govemmenl mlollter wbo ruJgned TIJeo. day olgbt in Br!talll's moot uplosl\>e lie%, oecur11y and' ifrtlf .... c1a1 m. a ·~. conle..ed today' be' did ., b<causi! of a: "casual acqualh1'1nce" with • call girl wbote husband tried to oell secret photograpl!s of them to newspapers. "But there bas been no securlty ri!:k or bl~kmail," Lambton, 50, insisted in a statement ~ded to newamen by a political aide. Within bours1 the office of Attorney G<neral !)Ir Peter Rawlinson announced that tl1IRll!UlltleS alleging ii I e g a I po1sesman 'Of' daligercus drugs have been Issued ·llalrut Lamblon. It said be is being charged with _.ion of marl· juana. and amphetamines. The Eveoing Standard of Loodon said apedal igenta fur three weeks have been i n vestigaUog aenaatiooal alle1at.ions "about vlqo ring Improprieties involving govenmfent mlnllteri and o t h · e r figure1." It 1a1d at least one other government mh\lttel" is involved. The 1.-0ndcm Evening News said the girl is a black call girl named "Betty" and that a man calling himself her husband tried to a<ll "incrlminaUng pholol!raphs" of lhe girl and Lambton to a Brillah neMJ>8per'fQr '25,otio. Lambtoo quit abru~ly Tu~. night -.,~~-~~"·as 'fti~·.. " . " ~~,Royal Aiif·~. · _,. . . Bond ISs.ue Wins Council Backing Irvine city COW1Cihntn Tuelday ntght voted to . support in pr1nciple an estimated $20 million bond ballot meuure to be placed before Irvine voters by nat January. Councilmen voted to direct city staff to seek a conaultant to he.Ip . with the specifics of calling the election and the !lae, kation and cost estimates of parks to be P,l'OVided with the money. Y""1!y, ·a l)a"9n comml\teo incuding eo.aiclbn.,n ~ Qu~ey and Coun· dlwaln".an G~ene Pryor, tWo n'lember1 of the comtnwtlty services commlllion and one city planning commlulooer was eitablished by council directive. The group is expected to steer efforts toward lbe earliest possible date the bond measure might be set for election. Asked wbo the thief was, SCotl replied In an obvious reference to Daniel l'!lllberg, a defendant in ~!"tag.,. Pa)>en """'· that "he ,.....;..;.,. in the Uillence .. ~!I WI; 8 liltle.hocking lo r0e to ... 0 ' wl¥> confessedly purloined classlfled pt~nnaUon 9CtlDC as amicus ~ to the 1.uai~iuy Commluett'' Scott aakl. UCI Hospital;·.f Obstacles • • Remai·n CLASSIFIED AD ·°tiRINGS HAPPINESS ' A Daily Pilot classified advertiler is bappy becAUBe be IOld his tar lo the fint ~,_who called. uere'1 how the ad ran: PORSCJIB 'II Targa -gl.., bac1< window, 5 l!Pd, AM/FM, white, exlnt t'Olld. 82,0 ml. .-. can ..... (Phone No.) llbe new owner is now happily driving hlo car. Maybe you could be a Httle happier by ntnnlng a suC<eSlfbl Dally 'P,llor ad . Tiie dlrtcl' 'h'appliieri' line - Ul~71. -. •r •• ' •. 8y GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. "Dlllf ,11.t • ..., Several hurdl .. remain before the ZOO. bed toachlng hospital .suggested for con· •lnldlon on the UC Irvine campua by a leclslaUn lltudy panel becomes 1 reality. Dr. Stanley van den Noort, acUng dean of the UCl-Calllomt1 CQll .. e of 'Medicine told ttudtnta T\lieadly, .. w,•we-made good prosreu Wltb the IAcJilaturt. !low we muat coovince Gov<mor Jleaian's office and the UC Regenia our plan i. a ~one." ·, • . . Ooe otber ~ point related to tbe ipendlni of 131 million of UC bealth -bond lt!Otleyl ta ll)'eOmmt with Orange C9onlY on lhe ~ or Orqe O!unty Medical Center and a long term af!Ulation er other ._,...t between UC! and tbe 'lQUDt.\'. · 'Mlile Pl mllUoo -d be spent fbr a campus holpltal and " mlllJon {or com- mw'l.ity cllnlca, OCMC ud county I• government will get .IP.5 million of UC mooey il an agreement. 11 reached cn several key i&sUcs. Dr. van den Noori told studenta at.- tending a student bealt!i center advtaory committee lecture, the major quesUoo lo be resolved by negotiation with tbe coun- ty Is: "Who picks up the 19 million • year expected deficit?" . The community clinics, lhe ua toac:hlng hospUal and a smaller, eowt!y hOlpitaf staffed medically by UC! (•• It ii Mw ), the acting dean .said, would lo- volve a "$46 million operellonal budget each year." . Of this amollllt, Ii million woold be an annual deficit. "I'll gladly settle with the eowtty lo lone a. they pay 18 million OI' =~ van den Noori quipped. Later in hJa . arks, ho noltd 'BIO unlverilty r~ about $1.25 mJll"'1 of the <OU11ty • annual delidt at OCMC Is attributable lo the .. I COit! of ~cal ~ucation, but the university also contends it has !pent more than .this amount in improvement.I at , OCMC since' UCI-ccM moved to Orange C...ty five ,.an ago and al· fllt1~~lh, coqnty general bospilal. 'l1le a 1 lritb the county on the rela Ip ~c to UC! ta critical to the UC £,: ulllmate approval , van den Noori -eit«I Tuesday. Tbe UC 1·8-1> ha~ been burned twice In COUll\y hoepital takeover deals In the past decade, van ~ Noort said. COltWile, tbe "track record 'isn't very good.'' ' Me.anwbile, ""bile le&islaton might ln- cluda .the ~rnendM UC Budget •mGlilll!; ,in ·tha overall •taJo lt'll-74 budiel, pov. R.a,aO; muilt be convinced ,U.Jtem.. are tro.rthwhile or he may blue pencil them ~ the lJUdiet. Admlnlslfttlve analyst Vern T. Orr muat 'be comlneed If the 11.s million budgeted for the medical .Cboo! clal5- rooms and laboratories; the f.15 million recommended for the D-bid cam- 'JIU!I bolpltal (to be added to, tl"mlllion ln privete !uilds of UCl-CCll), , tile' II million foe the community clh!lcs aod troi/Jportatlon network, ""4. ·the 19.~ mlllloil to reduce OCMC l\'<inl, a 115 t o a ~If.bed quallty e!l)•raency ~.,. l\<lOi>ltal, .n ... · 1o be spent this )'<it': • . All the llltOUllta tl<Qt '!"'iO!I." !or the !Int cl••....,. bull<!la ior UCl-ccM were set by tho Joint LecJsl/l!lve' Conj. m1u .. ob Ttachlna lf"'!>ltal Sltbut. 'nit committee hoadti! ' by .oUM!i1bly\nan · Wllll& Bro'wn Jr., lJ.San Franclf<o, made the recammendaUon ta th& Lellalawre latt Wffk. . ' Onr, the funda .. nnarked Io r µP("dl"4 ."0CMC are "ccadlUonedl' la sud! 1 way that Ibey cannot' be apen\ un- til the county • campus aireetJltQt JI reacl>!I!. •• , ' .. ' payments from his divorced wile. i "If a man wants to keep his MO ," -.kl f\ts. Binder, "that's 1 good sign that 1*h1 sexes are beginning to accept parental respon!ibility, instead or Jeavinc the whole job to jll!it one 1ex." « Ms. Binder said that If the woman btiil, a blgb-paying job tlld the man Wlll ""'"') died with chlld-ralstna costa, It WU 1'M i !lilr" that ti. -PlY a pert "' .. (See UBBERB;'hp I) " -· . -· " e ': '/ ' ' ' Proposals Submitted To Council By GEORGE LE!DAL Of ,... DlllY "'"' Stefl • t' Irvine Councilmen received a propoeed ; 1973.-74 city budget early today wblch • would double the budget of the new city . during its first fun year of oPeratJon. : City Manager William WoolleU Jr. gave councilmen copies of the fl.' mllllon budget -'· The dr~ ,.W ba . •!Ud'fil In a ierlel' Of .-iam ~ next . .Tueoday evallqg,_· ___ _ The propoeal lricludes $DT ,000 \ti capltal lmprovel!WK pn>~ alnlldJ • ,by, <OU!JFllmoa. ""*' pto la '· - 00 ' J i1lii' 41riea-(lf J.. UC-' ... -..,. frelhwale mar.I! -... Councilwoman ' Glbrtelle •l'r1ot ond CoundJipan Hotuy QulalOY were -the city's '7S,OOO or men oommltment to · that $900,000 oounty project wilJ not .bo final until the budget 1s adopled, ni.,patr vowed they will continue to queetion the need for the roadway qurlng budael hearings. Botll haw· dted eovlm!meotat concerns as their reason foc opposing the project. After studyJng a .17.1 mllllon "llilopplng. liat" of olber capital Improvement pn>j- edl !0< roada and parks, eouodb1wn may have oth« views of tho priority of. Can).pu1 Drive. l\'09llett's budlet draft &bowl only I U mlllloo Jn clly reserves available to ~ spent on the '7. l ml!UoD lial ol road ao4 park projects. Councilmen haYO -tokl tho •city may not lncreue 1b tu rate as cilU JllU"' 1100 of a-· valuation. Slale '':!'I receolly fixed city tu ratel> Ill UMi amounts they were last year, Other general law cities last year emp}9yed tM previous full Omit of II per 1100 prop- erty value. With the continued 33-oent rate for citY provk:led services -poli~. parka, public w«u, planning and admlnlstratioo· -~y we. in Irvine collected from reai<ieofs ana lnduotry' lilll Ylela .. -•• , pe(:ted 15118.000 or only 12.4 J>S'<'lll of thli city's revenlle3. About 34.4 percent of $850,000 ~ revmues will come from ..i.. IHeo 4'1111 lected In Irvine, city Adminlatroll"I! Services Director ,.,... ~ said. The bulk of -taieo oome fJOQi (lloe BUDGET, Pap I) · j ,I o ..... j ,,. . ,! ' ' I Mostly ·sunny on Thundo~, l1le,r I the early morning low ~' with llttle temperature change. Hllbs in , the 00. at the beaches, r!allll to ' the mitl-70s inland Overnllhl li>w1 • In the 50s. INSIDE TODAY I RelJ)Ondlftll to Ille r~tion ' that the countv'1 ·chill fio, sup-' plier mun cut the amauwe o/ /~l ht can deliver, 1uJ)t1"Nor1 • ordtrtd au departmetltt to eu .... tall ft0nt11entiol oaa wt. ,., ' 1i~ and other coun~ ~ on Page•~ JO and 11. i •· DAll.Y PILOT IS War Victims Succored I : . Therapist at UCI ,Tel'ls of Treatm,eqt . • BJ . DOll80N . . '-ia'"' '"' lbq . ;• r!" • • , Uvod , ..i l<illllJI I« .'Ill! Medical 11111 ~ f« ionC. . !'1W k 1 WIT~ South v-""'1llanl maimed In lift -them.. • "\' . the war""' deoperattly lacldng, Dorothy Miss WeU... -lod 1Ut "win ovtt Weller. a ph~ theriplst who worked one million" d"1Uanl ha\le been 'Jeverefy four years in Vlttnam. S8l<I Tuetday. dllabltd. • Poor medical care Jed Mlu Weller's Ho~ver, she ~Id lhl' fOCU! of ihe group the Amerl~ Friends Service Quaker rehabilltatoo center was not ~ ~tteo (AFSC) to tBtablish a treat patielltll but to educm the South rehabilitation center "' Quacg Nat South Vletllamele In prwib<UCI, 1he malting of·,-· . Vl~m, the told student. at UC l~vtne. 4~n=.u:.m~eoter was staffed with 19 ?tl1ss Weller spoke to studerits as part Qlllken; today, four Quakers and 58 o.r Make Your Own Peace Week. a na-V1ttoamese operate the center. She said tlOOa,l week pronQ!ng worldwk1e peace. the four Quakers remained to protect the Prior to the estabUJhment of the center ctnler from lncunions from the govern-in July ot lW/, Salaoo had five ment. rehabUltatlon ceaten whfcti. served on1y lf South Vietnam had a responsible soldiers. Civlliau bad lo &o wttreated, g~ei:nmmt, the Quakers would ha•e she sald. left but the current "corrupt" govem- 'lbe typical pollen! at tha Quaker ~t ""'1id abolish or misUse the center center had ont or more amputat.lonl, if tbe Jett now she asserted plus aevera) ~t fracU>red -and St•,/ said t11ai although u.; rtbabllila· inlectlooa, ibe saia. She added that the lioo ""1ltr la the AFSC's ooly cun<nt mjurie1 were most ofltn caused by U.S. project the committee baa oent a bo.~bl and weapom. , represeOtative to South Vietnam to study We first ~1 to etta.bllsh a rapport the VJetnamese's problems and their with the people, she said. 'l1le Quakers · ·r s He will make recom-leamed the ~ge and avoided priori 1~ · .. & 9 military encl8v0 because the civilians n;:1~~ons to future AFSC programs, ' ·' 0111v l'1ltt 111n ,..,.,. were fearful of the American soldieni. s Mi~1 Weller said the Vietnam war is SPEAKS AT UCI 1herapl1t Weller "1 $4 Million List •hevlatndded. . .1. 1. In "a "definitely not over," and the Nixon ad-e amese c1~1 i.ans iv~ .n ministration has done a ''terrific prop- abeolutely paranoid aoclety. yet thell' aganda job" in convincing the public that the conDlct U resolved. Busy Wall Rare indeed is a day in spring in Irvine when hand- ball players do not pit their skills against Univer- •ity High School's outdoor handball wall. Courts attract players of both sexes in afternoon play and ' are sample of facilities I~e Unified School J?is-• :o trict will make available to city summer recreation program being planned by city staff. • " From Pagel Irvine Group to Review She called for Congress to appropriate money to international agencies, such as UNICEF, for the reconstruction of both North and South Vietnam. American agencia could not heed the reconstrue- tion programs because "Americans are detested over there," she said. Miss Weller asked the students to write to their congressmen and urge them to vote for re<::c>Mtruction progratn!. Mission Hospital Awards Funds to 7 ·Area Seniors HOLDUP ... . ' often-robbed financial institutions ¥\ Costa Mesa, apparently due to its l~·. lion. . s _Improvement Projects ' Frot11 Pflfle l Seven South Coast high school seniors $1,000 scholarship to a boy and girl from have been awarded scholarships totaling both San Clemente and Mission Viejo $4.900 by the Auxiliary of the Mission High Schools. But, because of the large 1be busy boulevard intersecUon Bf: fords fairly quick access to the San Diego Freeway, in addition to heavy traffic in which a getaway car can become lost. .• Three years ago, a moto.rcycl~. helmeted bandit who smashed hts way. through the front door with a tire iron <Ht two occasions in a three-month perio6 robbed the same facili~. : A ''shopping Ii.st" of per.ks and recrea- tional capital Improvement projects tptaling nearly $4 million will be review- id tonight by the. city of Irvin& com- ~unity services commission. : Commissioners meet at 7:30 in city hall to discuss the priorities on park im· provements. Councilmen next week begin huda;el deliberations and have asked guidance ol the community servJces ~on and staff in determbtlng lfhich are the most Important proJe<:.ta needing money during the 1973-74 fiscal ~ear. Among the project& on the list are: -A 20-acre community park in central lrvine costing up to $1.6 million provk1lng a commWJity center, pool and temis facilities. --Completion of a 7. 7$.acre part on l;md dedicated lo the city in College Park I ' . -Steering Group On Pool Program To Meet Tonight ~ A new steering committee which will plan two new public swimming pools in the Capistrano Unified School District will meet for the first time tonight in district headquarters. Discussions on pool construction and uses begins at 8 o'clock at 26126 Victoria . Blvd .. Capistrano Beach. ' Chairman pro-tem of the committee is Bruce Deacon, head of the Parents on :Pools Committee which won a campaign for a 10-cent special l_aJ: rate to finance ,the pools. Parents. representatives of l he districts' l \110 high schools and recreation employes from Aves, Community Developers and Mls!ion Viejo Company 'v.'ill be at tmlli:hl's se3Sion. A joint powers agreemait between the 'county and school district set up the special taxing Wstrict. OU.HQ.I COAST II DAILY PILOT TPlt 0•1"119 C-1 O.\tl,.Y PILOT, wtltl wlllti't 11 ~!noel ftM H-1·Prnt, i. ~ll111M 111' •~• o'~ c .. 11 flvblr,,.1111 Ctftiot11v. '-· ••''-.. unorn. .,. D!llll......_ ,....,,..,,, "''"""" Frl<h y, tor Co\!1 Mftf, MtwPOl1 •tKll. H1'"'i~I"" .... ,.,.~Olillttlt Y•llfY, l~ llMC". Jrvl,../Stddll!»dl ..,..·s ... C,.,,,..,!•/ St ft .J1110n C.pltl••no. .\ 1J1111lt ~(00\.ff ll<llllon 11 ~ S.l11nNV11 1nd Sundt11. "'~ '"1tot11MI PllbillJtJf!ll ol•nl It •! uo Wftl S1y ~"HI, COii• Mtw. Clflloml•, ,,.,., Rob•tt N. W•M Prftkl""I •NI l"t111U1Pltl' J1t-k R. Curl•1 Viet Prtoldff>t troll GlfWnl M•NOW l~Ol!'l11 A,, M11r p1"int M11119lng Ellltor CJ,,•rf11 H Looi Rit-ht•d f'. N•ll AS<o•Jll~I Ma1>1;11111 l!d110r1 COllA Mf-11 lJD Wt,1 111'1' $trMI H,..,l'Or1 Betch 11Jl ,.....,.,, lloultvffll L"ll~na S."th, m """'' .\WflYt "4""llftlj!,,., ll~h<PI; 11t7S .ff(fl a..tlttr.,d .. ., Clt1n..,i,: JllS Nor-111 El (Hnllll 111•1 , .. .,,..... (11 41 "4J-4JJ1 Cl.-n.4 A.t..,.... MZ·l67t S.. C'-tltw Al •IP•I c•s: , ... ,. ..... 4tJ-4421 (OJfly•IO!lf. lt1J. O••not' C:0.1• 'IAlllll'll!lf CO'l'IPll'lf, ,._ -t1t1i.., 1111111••1 ..... +l!fotlfl ,,.,.,. ., lld¥ .. 11t-ti tiw.i11 -~ bl' ,.,,...llt'MI w1t,,.u1 .. _... -· t11lu loo! ol .._,,_, -· he ..... ti•tt _, ... Pllld 11 ~. ,,,,..._ (1!lflDrlll•, "*'°'~Jen bY Ulll'ltr .,,., """"'"l/y/ lit' 1'1911 SJ.IS-"-1111¥1 mlY~ ... 1,.., .... 111' ... ~IMll. with Improvement& costing $188,250, and improvement of a 15,0 acre community park in University Park at a pouoble cost of .tm0,000. -Development of a 13.S-acre athletic complex in central Irvtne at a cost in- cluding purcbaat of land ($337,500) amounting to $5471400. -Llgtltlng al emttng alhleUc faclllUes is suggested 11.111 follow1: $45,000 for the Unfvetlf ty !Dgb -court&; $150,llOO fer flie UC Irvine muJu . .,.,_ ~•Id: $1J5,JIOO for 1he Ul)lversily lllgli looiball =\fll~:r llghtllt& tbe,\JCI nlf: Ill . Is p,t lnuuon of which a ~ tfle money mlgbt be allocated //.om revenue sharing funds, Community Service& IH~ Paul Brady aald. ., .1.. '!be novenue shariag list wlll also be revjewed lty lh6 ccmunt!Ol-1· lion( with agreements for park land.scape maintenance and sharing of fadUttes .with Irvine Unified School Distr:ict. Chairman Sally Miller is also expected to brief cornrnW.iooers on city council actions related to the proposed ~ million parks bond ballot measure Ufled by lhe commission. Scouts Pedaling To Aid Hospital A "pedal-a-thon" sponsored by a Corona de! Mar scoot troop will take place Saturday to raise funds for three scout troops at Fairview State Hospital. Community Hospital. number of applications for the grants, The scholarships will be used by the three additional $000 awards were added . sludents to pursue educations i n Scholarships were awarded on the medically related fields. · basis of grade point average and extra-child-support burden. ded 1 curricular activities including comm1.1nity The auxiliary had inten to presen a A major part of the discussion dealt and social involvement. LIBBERS •.. with the nature of future male-female ' Shandra Grunkemeyer and Chang J . relations if the women's equality mov e-Front Pnn1e J Jun won the $1000 award! at· San ~ Clemente High School. A life member of ment continues to grow. the California Scholarship Association "As the traditional aex roles are wiped BUDGET • • • (CSF), Shandra plans to attend Oregon out," aaid Ms. Leite, 11e1: preferences State University and stud y medical may go, too. We may be headed toward a firm! in the Irvine Industrial Complex research in microbiology. She is the period of bi-sexuali!lll. whose nationwide sales are taxable. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William f; Grunkemeyer, 239 Naragon, San "I'm sure there will always be male-The next largest income source or Clemente . I I les " M.! Lest dded "b t 1 Irvine is the state gasoline tax which is Chang was a state scholarship finalist ema e cou~ , . ea , u expected,_.to ~t to $f00,30(> or 8.1 per- don't think everybody will think it's" M oe .. • of tbe budget. TheAe funds must.be and plans to study orthodonlistry. He is ha all rtlatl~" h ,,.. the son of Mrs. Joung Ja Jung, 25226 Via important t t ~~ps be t at spent on road or blcyc,te trail proje& Piedra Blanca, Laguna Niguel. way." By area ol city -mment, the .,-· -Nancy Kenworthy and Mark cangiaoo "'Ibe whole concept ol ma.5CUUne and following are amOWlts budgeted this year ol·'6fissitn Viejo High School aJao wun feminine Ls weakening," agreed ~1s. compared to mts suggested foe-ftte $1.000 &{Mia. Nancy has served Si a Bi!?!!'.~· 0 ...... .__,.r.c-•. \ 'defiinltlons.) · f'71rp7 7ftLfiliCsca!SA •. Al-. 1 !,:,._ •,'l ~urses aid 8lld pl~ns to alien~ UC Irvine -u v • -.a~ru.:r uu O"OllI°' PtrB IOcM:etr !bl! .,-arid eveiltUally beCome 'a' phfSleian. She If It is OlllSldertd ma~e to show ag-WM $386,000 for a IO-man police force is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Frank greasivme!I, then . YOU d have to ~y rented from the city of Cost.a Mesa and Kenworthy, 24602 Acropolis D r i v e , women are· beconung Jll()rf: masculine. involving two fulltime patrol units. Mission Viejo . And il you insist that it is feminine to ' Proposed is $618 609 for 15 JDell and lhree Mark, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lo!:tis C. have long hair, then some men are otr. units ' · Cangiano, 26752 Marino Circle, has been vi~ly becoming feminine. coMMUNITY SERVICES : Arts, parks active in both church and YMCA work. But you have to ask whether these and recreation budget this year was He plans to attend UCI and study to be a masculine and ferr_Unlne s.tereotypes are $l22,000 and $223,407 is suggested next physician. really worth anything, or if they matter. year, exclusive of capital (building or Three Mission Viejo students were ~le should Jus~ be the best human landscaping) improvement!!. awarded the $300 scholarships. being! they can without W?.rrytng about PUBLIC W.ORKS: Engineering, Marcia Wylie, daughter of Mr. and these stereotypes as much: maintenance, bike trails 8 n d ad-Mrs . Paul Wylie, 24881 WinterWO<>d fk>wever, both Ms. Lisle and. Ms. ministration of public works was Drive; El Toro, was one recipient. A na- Buxler agr~ that, although C9ua~ty of budgeted at $l2S,gi.J tltiS year. The !igure tional merit commended scholar and the ~tea nught bring the elimination. of suggested for next year Ls $542,000. eandy striper, she hopes to study bio- tradit1onal sex roles, it was not an 1m-PLANNING · This year ~3 457. next medical eogineeri ng at Northll·estern mediate cause of concern. · • ,..., ' ' University. 1be panelists agreed that, as Ms. year, $306,34&. . Connie Beckman will use her Binderputit, "We'veallbeenconditioned CITY ATI'ORNEY : This year, $80,SOO, scholarship to enroll in a three year to certain things,. and you can't just ®;;"1~ ~: .n~~ .-i.:. 458 up to speech therapist cour se at Brigham change that ovenught." · Y '~. • Young University, eventu.aJly planning to A trio of men later captured in Texa!t c:onvicted and sentenced to long priS()t,. ter1ns for armed holdups in that state al so hit the Harbo" Boulevard-Adam:' Avenue branch 11,l years ago. LA Man Arrested: In Kidnnping Of Young Marine' ~ Angeles police have arrested. a ~ on ~i~ of kidnaping a Cam~ Pead.let.OD .Marine [tom a san. Clemente corner last weekend. · 'J Booked in Los Angeles oo charges ot ., k.idnaping, oral copulation and assaulJ; with a deadly weapon was Joseph Reill,r' of Los Angeles. . . , Reilly allegedly placed a knife Bl th!> back of the young Marine while he was standing at the corne.r of Del Mar and El· Camino Real and forced him into a car1. police said. 1 After driving to Los Angeles, tl)e suspect attempted to perfonn illegal sei: acts with the victim. police claim, but the Marine ...,. ped and called iA>I Angeles police. :· Bail was set in Orange County by Judge Blair Barnett at $15.000. Reilly was later released from jail in ~ Angeles by court ordet until a trial date is set. The ride was organized a n d coordinated by Eagle Scout candidate Eric Bowlus of Troop 330, and will start Imm the Corona del 'Mar Youth Center. The 15-mile course will run generally from MacArthur Boulevard to Jamboree Road to Main Street in Irvine. From there, it follows Swiflower Avenue to the Santa Ana River bike trail down to Coast Highway and back to Corona del Mar. From Pagel $63.555 next year. work with autistic children. Connie is the ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES: City daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bri"dge Hike Opposed purchasing, personnel and management Beckman, 26851 Ztipata Drive. functions were limited to $53.850 this Randy Eckholdt will attend Saddleback THREAT ... year. Proposed is $108,286 next year. College next year on the scholanhip, SAN FRANCISCO {AP ) -A proposal Harrington charts a three-meeting before transferring to Brigham Young. before Goldezi Gate Bridge directors to schedule leading to adoption of the city lie hopes to become a dentist. An athl~ raise the toll from 50 cents to 75 cents on business." No money changed hands. budget June 26. At present council budget and vice president of the student body in the hlstaric span bas drawn opposition The same resl.aurant W8$ Hit by the study sessions are set for May 29, and high school, Randy is the son of Mr. and from the ?1-larin County Board of The scouts will ride the course as many times as possible during the day and take pledges for the Fairvjew troops. The pledges will be collected between May 27th and June 2. bandit several days earlier, when he ~J~une;;;5;;;;and;;;;;l9;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;M;r;';· ;W;il;Li•;m;;;;;Ec;;;k;h•;ld;t;. ;24;59;t;S;p;art;;an;;St;. ;;S;u;;pe;r;v;iso;r;s;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;~· telephoned his threat that if mobey was ! - not plsced in a 6ag and·pat outside, the person on the phone would be shot by a high-powered rifle. The bandit made off with $:XX>. - lrvii1e Council Action Jlere, in capsule form, are the major actions taken Tuesday night by Ir- vine City Councilmen: PARKS BONDS: Voted lo seek a parks consultant to examine a possible $20 million ballot measure to be placed before Irvine voters by January. Es- tablished liai son committee o( councilmen, community servi ces and planning commissioners to guide eftort. SEX LAWS: Unanimously determined city attorney and councilmen have higher ptjoritie1 than consideration of ordinance1 regulating nude entertain- ment or massage parlors. Delayed rev1ew of proposed laws for 90 days. JOINT POWERS: Continued for study by community services commission and encouraged involvement of UC Irvine officials, planning of potential com- murUty buildings adjacent to elementary or high schools in lrvlne. INDUSTRIAL ZONING: Approved fll'!I noadlng ol 10th revision ol th< lr- vlne Industrial Complex planned community zoning law requiring me permits for all commercial properties in the 2,700-acre airport area industrial part. TREE PERMlT: Denied request by Rancb resident to cut down four large eucalyptus trtts in his backyard, pending revtew by council on June s of r~ posed lirm city policy inl<rprttln1 lftt cuttlq ban. No other permits wll be granted untU policy b set; COW1cllmeo vow. BIKE TRAILS: Delayed pending further budgeUng study, action on pro. poied appncauoo tor Ital< funds lo build north lrvtnt bike routes. UTILITY EASEMENTS: Responded favorably to Southern CaUlomia Edi· aon Comf>'lny's oiler of use ot power line rights-of-way ln Irvine for rea;ea· tional , tree form and other public mes. TRABUCO PARK' Denfed prop<>ted t.8-acre "citlun-bullt" park at CUiver Drive and Trabuco Rood and urged Dan LorU to work with community 1er· vices commission to determine "flt" or land use with futurt part pllll! and Onanclng plam, Including proposed bond Issue . MAY 28TH MEMORIAL DAY In honor of those who gave their lives that this would be a better world, we will be closed Monday-Memorial Day \ JOHN HART LYNN HART HARTS SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER STREET , ' 8 DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Impact of Land Plan Plans have been disclosed for development of 10,000 acres of now-virgiJl land stretching !rorn Laguna Beach to Laguna Hills and south to Laguna Niguel Such growth certainly will have a tremendous impact on surrounding communities. 1'he land, now under five owners, once composed the vast MoUlton JUtnch. It is in unincorporated county territory. Project planners envision that they will house about 50,000 people in some 20,000 residential units where now chaparral grows and cattle graze. Detailed proposals for the development have not yet been brought before any governmental agency. Initial public presentation is expected to be made in June be- fore the Orange County Planning Commission. While plans are still in the formation stage, it is time for established communities to look at the lands involved and start asking questions about what impact the development will have on them; what is desirable and what should be avoided. The spheres of influence drawn up by Laguna Beach and the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council arch across much of the lands, and Irvine's sphere of in- fluence stops just short. Those spheres established the communities' vested interest in the Moulton lands development. Laguna Beach for one has been extremely concerned about main- taining its identity and separation from a tide of urban· ization. The communities should begin now to formu- late a stance in regard to developmenl pollution, public services and lots of new people. A unified J)Olition e.Ubllibed early will work to the advanta~f tie existing communities whether they de- cide to t, accommodate or seek modification in de- velopmen It also will U!iSt the developer in providing a compatible project that will be a good neighbor. Saving Buried History One of the Saddleback Valley's greatest values may be the s""""ts of Orange County's past that have been burled in its ground. Unfortunately, these clues to human and animal eziltence dating back millions of years ago are being n>amed -!hl! time by bulldozers and lmmlneat de- velopment. Two _.ers at a recent lecture on Saddleback Valley g.Ofogy and archaeology disagreed about what ftlldents should do . to help. One speaker said persons should take fossils away from possible construction sites to "save parts" of history. The second said to call local archaeoloP.ts or universities to report sites, the mean- ing of which could be destroyed by removing artifacts. The second step seems more reasoned. Many cases jnvolve finds reqwring strict scientific data and ap-- proaches. -~--~-· . ,• ~~ 'ti ~t1Jti'.(~ \' • ) • • • i! Development of open territory is something like tossing a rock in a pond; the resulting waves can pro· duce effects far from the development itself. Neighbor- ing communities need to look at impact of traffic flow, school accommodation, commercial considerations, air But it might be even more important for county government t.o consider commissioning its own geologic- archaeological surveys of the. Saddleback Valley. Even with the cooperation of many developers, only 10 per- cent of the valley has unlocked its once-mysterious clues of what happened in prehistoric times. 1 'No, dear, they weren't on trial ... they were I the prosecuting team.' What Do Tliese Have In Common? ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Reader response to my recent "in-com· mon" quiz was so large and affirmative that I'm posing another of the same (on· ly a littler harder) today. Each question consists of five names ; what do they all have in common? A score of 25 percent is excellent : 1. Calvary, Maltese, Tau, FyUot, and Celtic. ' 2. Argos, Boatswain, Diamond, Flush, and Toby. 3. Saron, Sheng, Vina, Bonang, and Rebab. 4. Bayswater Road, Hyde Park Place. Oxford Street, Holbum Viaduct, and Martin's le Grand. 5. Dacia, Thracia, Mysia, Aquintania, and Lusitania. 6. llotel de Bourgogne, Covent Garden, Abbey. Haymarket, and Cruger's Wharf. 7. Pavlov, Kipling, Theodore Roosevelt, Bertrand Russell, a n d Marroni. 8. Angel, Tugela, SUtherland, Glass, and King George VT. 9. Copenhagen, Marengo, Bucepbalus, Traveller, and Rosinante. 10. Afichael Arlen, Louis Bromfie1d, W.H. Hudson, Marc Connelly, and Richard Llewellyn. IL Akkadian, Punic, Vedic, Cornish, and Frisian. 12. John Witherspoon, James Wilson, Matthew Thom ton, George Taylor, and Button Gwinnett . ANSWERS, l. Different types of crosses. J. Dear Gloomy Gus School teachers are demanding a raise -at the aame time achieve-- ment tests results show Calirornia students score well beklw naUonal averages in the 3Jb. Shouldn't par· ents start demanding results from teachers'! S.S. •"""" OVll ai1111M11i ,,. llllllilltttll .. ,.....,.. _. ,. Nt -rlty r.tlect ""' ,,._,. •I "'9 ....,_ ...... ,_ HI .....,, M O'-Y o.. O.llr ~1i.1. Famou.-Olop (belooging t-0 lnysses, Lord Byron, Newton 1 Elizabeth Browning, and Punch). !. East.in musical lostrument.s. 4. They are ·all ,lhe same thoroughfare, running through the heart of London from end to end of the city. (No credit 1£ you simply answered "Lon- don streets.") S. Ancient end classical names for countries and regions ln Europg and the !jear East. 6. FaJllQlls early theaters fn F'nlnce, England, Ireland, and the United states. 7. All were recipients of Nobel Prizes. 8. Among the highest waterfalls in the world . 9. Horaes belonging to famous figures. (The Duke of Welllogtoo, Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Robert E. Lee, and Don Quixote.) 10. All authors (you get no credit for this answer) whose most famous work.s included "green" in their tttlea. The Green Hat," "The Green Bay Tree," '·Green Mansions,'' "Green Pasture!," and "How Green Was My Valley.") 11. All dead Ui:nguages. 12. All were signers of the Declaration of Independence {balf- credit for this) who were not oative..f>orn Americans. Actually, there were eight, the other three being James Smith, Ireland; Robert Morr~. England ; and Francis Lewis, Wales. Lib's Lesbian Concerns In this age of rising consciousness, not even a male chauvinist is likelv to di smiss women's liberation as a "leSbian plot.·• But the growing presence and in· creased militancy of lesbians In the \...Omen's movement worry some feminists, who fear that Identification with the lesbian cause will alienate some straight women and divert attention from other issues. MOST fem inists suppart the right of lesbians to express their own sexuality. The National Organization for Women (NOW), at its national convention In Washilliloo last February, adopred Its stronge:Jt pro-le:Bblan statement to date. it pledged t-0 seek legla!atlon to end discrimination based on sexual orien- tation in housing, employment., credit and finance, and chltd custody. Betty Friedan, NOW's f o u n d e r , recently added a cautlonary note. Using the women's movement to proselytize for lesbianism, she wrote, will ''only subordloate the great Issue of equality tor wtmen, \be. apportunity and changes that all women 90 desperately need." FOR SOME militant feminist.!, te .. bianism represents the ultimate com4 mitment to women 's l ibere tion . .. Women's liberation and hom~exual liberation arc both struggling towards a comn1on goal : A society rree from defining and categoriJ.lng people by preference," $2)'S Kate t.1illett, i!luthor of Sexual Politics and an admitted bisexual. " 'Lesbian' is a label used as a psychic wea pon to keep women locked Into their male-defined 'ftmini(le role.' The eue.nce of that rote is that a\Jwoman is defined In tenn11 of her relationshJp to men. A ~·oman ls call~ a lesbian when she func- tions autonomously. Women'' autonomy EDITORIAL RESEARCH I! what women's liberation is all about." The lesbian, say the radicals , personifies the liberated woman. As a totally female-oriented woman, only she can escape the male hierarchical system. THE RHETORIC of female cbauvinfsm could be the downfall of the woman'• mc,vement, retorts MJ. Frtedan. "Many women in the movement go through a temporary period of great · host!Uty t-0 men when tfiey flrat ~OUI of their situation, but when "they start 1ct- ing to change their situation, they outgrow what I coll the pte11do-radlcai lofanU!iam. But !hi! ftW>.hatlog rlletor~c locreu!ngl)' dis-'mOlt _, lo the mov•>1•••~ in ~·to tbe women It keo[il out at the IDO'I_. ... Barbera Buooc:rtsuano, a member of the women's llberatioa group at Colunr bia Unlvenity, ~-"I think It Is a false bypothesfa that wunen .,. ecan:d away from the movement by the Juue of lesblanillm. Maybe oertatn -al a certain Ume will be turned oft tor 1 Utile while but I think a femlolat fa a femln!at ls a feminist." The spilt belween the ndlalfa and more moderate fendnllll over the &a-. blan wue probably wilt not do any lasting damage to the women's move- ment. No major IOCla1 movlllltl'lt can be totally unified in thought or public 6 - press1on . As the controversy over abor .. lion made clear, wopien'1 llberatico ii atroag tnough to support 1 clivergence of views. SB Ellsberg Dismissal Ends Anticipated Test Government Secrecy Crisis Remains WASHINGTON -The blow·up ol the Ellsberg case bas created an lntemaJ crisis oo government secrecy. In view of the fa ct, however, that tbe EllSberg jurors leaned toward the acquittal of the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers, the government Ls probably in a stronger position to coo.tlnue its current secrecy policies than if the case had not been dismissed. As matters stand now, there is no le- gal challenge to the system of classlfying government docu- ments as secret, no clarification of the right of the press to publish such docu· meats, no definition ol what "stealing" publicly owned docu- ments means: And perhaps It ls betrer that way. IN THE beg!nlnlog, the Peritagoo Papers cue appeared to be in the nature of an historic First Amendment test to the right to disseminate publicly in· formalioo labeled by jhe government as top secret in the national interest. Daniel Ellsberg banded over to the New York nmes the Pentagon's internal analysis of U.S. involvement in Vietoam which he obtained as aa employe of the Rand °"l>Onltion, a private reMarcll and analysis concern under contract to the government. The basic facts were never in dispute. ~berg and an auodate Xero1ed the secret analysis and 1ave it to the New York Times wh!Ch Ignored the top secret classificaUon and printed large parts of it. The government acted to restrain the New York Times but failed in the Supreme Court and then caused the In- dictment of Ellsberg and his associate on theft and espionage charges. Those charges were dismissed on grounds that unjustifiable acts by the Nixon ad· ministration before and during the triaJ so compromised the pf'0.5eCUtion's case that it could not be adjudicated. FROM THE VERY beginning of this case, it was bard to see how the public interest had been harmed by the contents of the Pentegoo Papers. The analysis and conclusions in this historical study cer· tainly did not reflect on the Nixon ad· ministration, but had the effect of CJ· posing mUitakee and mi sjudgments in the Kennedy and JohnM>o administrations. So far as the NJ:son administraton wb concerned, the prlmary purpose of trying to stop publication and prosecuting thoee who obtained and released the study was to protect the government's right to hold ,ecret national security information which , ir released, might damage the na- tional interest. , Few would deny that the disclosure or '-'1,. ll~t • vital national security information to the enemy in time of war, whether in the press or by secret contact, could dama~e the national interest and be actionable . But that was far from clear in the Pen· tagon Papers case. POLEMICAL and political argument.! could be made that the di.!closure damaged Nixon's attempt to negotiate a Vietnam peace, or t ha t the fires of dissent were refueled, or that the prin· ciple of secret classification could not be compromised. But immediate and mea su rable damage to the national interest v.·as absent. Whal re~ned was the enOrIQily 'l>t a trusted person in "stealing" g1Wemment secret documents and hand- log them to '1he prm lo the hope of further discrediting an unpopular war and bringing it t-0 an end . It is probably better that the legality of (rucHARD WILSO~ such actions be left in a grey and un· defined area than that absolute authority should lie with federal officials to ex· erclse pr Io r restraint and/or post punishment for the dissemination of in- fonnatlon alfd document! arbitrarily labeled secret and unpubUshable. nlE S.UIE reasoning applies here as to the »Called shield laws protecting r<partera ~rom dlselosing lbelr con· fidential sources of i n f o r m a t lo n . Rtporters are better off to rely on the J'lrst Amendment for their protection. ln the defm!Uon of their privileges they may lose rights. Comparably, the government is better ofr not to be confined too closely by judicial definitions ot what It may classify as secret. And adverse declslon. in the Ellsberg case, which appearM to be in the making, could have severely damaged the justifiable classification of. secret inrormation. THE PUBLIC is cert&inJy better orf lhat such disclosures as those ol the Pen--• tagon Papen be left 1n a erey and doubtful area, to be judged-oaee by . .,... with au due risks taken by thoae who tn.. . lerpret the law to their own llkJng. RFcenl experience teaches t ha t 1 governments, however noble in ltattd. purpG!ie, hide Information w h l c ~ discredits !hem. Cases vary. JI ii-prob' ably just as well fi>r those who Would leak infonnaUon in the future not to know how far they can go, and jw:t as \Veil that the government not know precisely what 11 can hJde. Volunteers Deserve Salute To the Editor: A salute to Orange Coa.!t College Volunteers. Are local taxpayen aware of this great group who belong to the vohmtee~? I JUST returned by bus with a lot of luggage I CO\Jldn't lift into my car or car· ry to my second Door apartment. I called the Welfare Agency for help. She ;:sked me what I intended to pay. I told her it would take approximately thirty minutes that I would pick the person up and return. him to his home. I thought S3 would be appropriate for this short job . but I was told by the welfare employe that "no one would be interested ln that small an 8Dl0Wlt of money". I called the Orange Coa:st College and in lesa: than 30 minutes a clean cut, well mannered young fellow, named Guy. had picked up '1Y claim tickets and brought my luggage up to my apartment. This W&! his gas and his time , however, when 1 tried to pay him he told me he could not accept money and that this help was their contribution to the taxpayers for enabling them to attend this great col- lege. • IF nm tupay&l'I didn't have to sup- ply easy welfare ind food stamps to a "woo't work group'', maybe more could be done for Orange Coast College. GLADYS LEACH Prau• for OU To the Editor : As recenUy reported in your po.per, once again the mayor of Irvine and the ' ~BOX L•,,.,.. "'-..-.n °"" ......_ llfwiMffY ................. """"" "'"" ......... "' ,. ..... ....... n. ""'' • ~ ...,.,.. ,. ltt --., .. l,,.llWf" llMt .. ......,...... All lft1tf't lf'lytt tn• C:llHlt ...... ht,.. .,.. 111•ltl.. ..,.... .... , - iM'I' ... wt"*tlll • .....,... " wtl'kl• ,.._ •• ...,.f911f. ~ wtlt "' ... "'41 ...... council member with whom he bas been most closely aQOCiated have gone on a tirade against something. Thil time they are after t~ previous planning com· mis!ion for approving a temparary use permit for an exploratory oil drilling rig. It is apparent that they have not bothered to examine the conditions which the comznJulon placed upon the approval and they have not inquired into the degree of enforcement of those conditions by staff. RA TUER thao Immediately reacting negatively, I would suggest that specific deolgn objectioM should be pas!ed on t-0 lbe current comm.l.sston. Council members who negatively react to pump- ing operations should oil be found rillght spend Ume comldertng the potenUai beneflt.s t-0 the Cit¥ of Irvine. We might have a rathtr signlfica.nt park and open space acquisition and maintenance fund should mineral ·ex· tractive taxes be levied. Beverly Hills has the lowes t tax rate ln JA)S Angeles County because its school dlstrtci has the lowe&t school tax rate {$3.20/100 vs M.99 for LA Unified). The reason Is an oil well on the grounds of the high school. Even With µus lqw rate. the district is recognlud as one of the belit 1n the cooo-try, • AGAIN, the permit lor the "'!>!oratory rig Is onl)' temparary; ln Im than 90 days now the rig will be removed and the 1lte restored. Aa ugly as It is, as I pt.II it twice a day I can ooly see the parts, the opon space, and the relaUvely low tu rate. I pray for oU ; 1 pray for Utt city. owned permanent open spect ; f pray for a city council which will begin takina a Quotes "ln world opinion Md ln world ef· Cectlveness, the United States Is me.11.sured by the moral Cinnness of lt.s public olllctals." Dwl1bt D. Eisenhower, lls& ' pos{Uve approach t-0 recognizing prob-· terns ·and implementing soluU.Oll.! which meet the need! and desires of the ' cilium of our city. ROl!ERT J. WEST • 'Big Brother' To the Edit-Or: Ha .. been following your account or a group of Irvine mothen who would like to ralle their own children without Wellaro Dept. meddling. For mothers to take tums tn caring for their collective cblldren fa fine , of course. But these JJJU:ents have taken the ad· dltlonal precaution ol blrlng another lady to span the full period, asaurtng con- tlnulty of supervision and helping the mothers who are there at the Ume. This 11 a crime? Ridiculoo.sl Instead of contlnutna: harassment (rom "big brother,'' they desene the respecl , and suppOrt of all of us. .,. TED ROSEllART Bird /tlortuaru . '• To the Editor: 1 It Is a known fact that then are people In the Back Bay area who sit Jn their pat.ios with guns shooting our duck.s, geese. etc. 1 also know the Back Bay is a resting place for migrating birds. The Back Bly should be a refuge and a sanctuary for birds; not a mortuary! M. f. HARPER OIANH COAlf DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wttd, PubU.htr Thomas Kttvil, Editor Barbara Kf'tibith. Editorial Pagt Editor Tht f'dltorlR\ ·Pl\iC or 1hf\' 0.\11 1'1\ot M:-eks to inJorm and stlmult-tl!' • ~adtn by prest'fltlll(I on ~his pqe dlvtrse commt>ntary on topi<."'I Of in- l~ll by syndlclt1td rolumnlJtt and cartoonists, by providin& a rorum lor Tt"IUfers' vit>Wt •nd by preser1t1na: this ncwa:paper's nplniorut and ldeu on CUJTPnt toplca. ~ ed\twia..I oplruor. ol lhe Dal!Y Pilot awr•r only tn the edltorlal c.vlumn at the-top of the pqe. Opinkln1 exp!"PDl!'d by the acriJ.. umntm and cartoot1.lste and Jettco ~:rlltts am their own and no fftdoe*"' ~nt of lhelr views by UN o.1b' Pllo< 1"ould .. w ...... Wednesady, Ml.y 23, 111'11 ' . - DAILY l'ilaT :Californian Arizona? Publicity Get,s Trial Miss • • t I. , SACRAMENTO (AP I 1-1 olftclall "' Ille Miss USA bo.auly Pl&<eDI CirpnlD· tloo W/ the reJcnlnC .Mlis Amoaa USA ii rUll) a ,Calllomla Pi .... JlrOl>ably inellClblc to bold the Arizooo title .. But Shen'y Nix, ti, third Ml!llleMIP in 1eol iffek'a ¥lu USA Pageant b> New Yorit. says .... Is. boo& llde -,..ldent and bu J>een for the past elgltt - ':'.USS NIX, who was al.9o Miu Metropolitan Sacramento until ftslgnlng the title in A~, "commuted" between SocriiMilq and P ho en I x between September and April, .!>er mother said Tuesday. t ' 1 Gov.Reagan ~ Says Energy Crisis Real SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronald ~an says California faces a "'frightening picture" of energy sMrtages b e ca u s e en\'ironmentalists 'lav6 short-circuited power planl construction. '"nle possibilit y of brownouts in Cillfomia, as they've had recently on the East Coast, is very real. We maybebavingdlose,'' Reagan ,said Tueoday during a Capitol .queo~ session ;with about ZO Sacramemo high oohool students. Asked what the stale woold do Jn an energy crisis, Reagan replied, "We may find out •f!rl qUlckly. There wooldn't be an awful lot we couJd do." "IT IS A frightening picture, the energy shortage that faces ua. he said. ·"So .many people j n Californla have concentrated so much on environmental protection there have been no power plants built. We won't let them build fossil fuel plants and when we build nuclear power plants along the coast, we're · told we can't have those because that might .he.a lhreal and misb1 hurt the ecology ol. the ocean," Reagan uld. . I NO MORE TANGLES SPRAY ON CREME RINSE 7 OJ.! 79c Mrs. J~ Nix •Id her --- daughler wu IUll In New YQrk bul plannod to n<um to Pboen1x lb.is week to remme work as a modtl there. LIA August, Mlu Nb: ra !or the Mw Calllomla USA U. Ue and loot. Winning tllo Mlaa ArUooa contost Ibis April gave her a secood shot 1t <he Miss USA Uile, and lhough she missed the top prize In New York , she did come In abeed of the girl who beat her In tbe Miss California USA cootett last August, C4rol Rermna 0( Artesia. New York offlciall tA the Mi.u USA Pageant lldd ~ day that Miss Nix had auJ>. milted live notarized statements supporting h e r claim to be an Arizona resi· dent. "WE'VE GOT the cert.Wc:a- tion!I, Including SbmJ.'1 own, signed a nd nolarlzod, alld we're satisfied," laid Herbert Landoo, executive producer ol. Miss Universe, Inc., sponsors or lhe New York pageant. Carmel hfartinelli, director of the Miss Metropalitan Sacramento Pageant, !laid she had :.ilmost daily contact with h1is.s Nix during the Hme she u .. ,, ....... RESIDENCY DISPUTED MIH SIMl'f'Y Ni• was certified u an Arlmoa .....Went. "If she went down there, she went by night," M r a . Martinelli said. "Most of the time she Wa.5 here i n Sacramento.·· on. LEONARD Stallcup, California director 01· the Miss USA -..t, said he doubtal Miao lllx wu eligible to be MlalArbona. "] doa"t think she was eligi- ble t.o run In Arbona, but ... .,. not judge and jury" he uid. "But you can't be a resi- dent of two states. Our Spon.b" (Mn. Martinelli) saw her in Sacramento all the time. The way I look at the rules, she couldn't bave been Miss Arii.ona ." Mn:. Nix said her daughter had been living in Phoenix with an aunt She said she 1o~:as modeling in Phoenix and also had enrolled brieny al the University d Ariwna . MISS NIX had tried twice earlier to win the Miss USA contest. In 1970, she competed in the Miss Calllomia USA oootest as Mi!a Rancho Conlova, and In 1'11 as Miss Folsom. Lui year, she angered of· flcials of Sacramento's Camellia Festival when she quit as festival queen lo take the title of Miss Metropolitan Sacramento. Miss Nix is one or four sisters who have won a total of Ji beauty titles in the Sacramento area in recent years. el.ocated 4J'S .&liGELES (AP) -~ o1 what lhe Judge calJ!il' """""1ve aaluralloo" publjdty In the case, the m•.'h1ol ol tbree yoolhs clurPtl -· Ibo abolgun ala~ ol a l·year·old Hawaiian GlltO<m wiU be held ill Nonhem C.lllornia. The jlJClle Tueoday ordered the lrlal t.o begin July 16 in Redwood City. OQ lrial will be Donald'. Antelo, 21, Oscar Hernandez, 21, and Mlchael Ramirez, 18. 'l'hl!y are .~ed wit!Y Ute murdtr '111 Joyce Ann Hui( °" July 2 of lUt year in what one alleged partictpant said was a random shot as the trio was lookin!! l0< members of a rival gang. • Superior Court Judge Julius Leetham already had put a gag order on the case -ap- plying to what he said newa media coo1d report as well as what persons com.ecected with the case coulday. An·appe·aJI court struck down the portions relating to bans on the media. JN GRANTING a defense molion for an()ther trial site, the judge said : ·SD County Bans Sex Book "I! is the rare person within Los Angeles County who 'has not heard of the present case and, in fact, not been exposed 10 expressions of opinion with respect tQ the merits of the case ... and there appears a reasonable likelihood that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had h!;fe." SAN DIEGO IAPI -The Planned Parenthood Assocla· tion has been ordered by San Diego County supervisors to stop distributing a comic book called "Ten Heavy Facts About sex." . 54.lpervisors voled 4-1 Tues- day to make withdrawal of the book a C<lndition for a &lktay extension o( planned parent· hood's contract with the coun- ly for federal family-planning funds. Another condition was the ending of birth-control counseling to persom under 18 who are supported by parents or guardians. Supervisor Jack Walsh, the only dissenter, called the board's action "book burn· ing ." "WE ARE HERE to represent the moral beliefs or our constituents," COl.R.ered Supervisor Lou Coode, who led opposition to simple renewal of the contract. He said the hook "bas C<rlaln bad moral aspects'' and some sections "encourage v i o I a t i o n of Californ41 state law." Walsh said county counsel Robert Berrey bas reported that the book violates no state Jaws. "Ten Heavy Facts A·bout Sex'' contajns humorous draw- ings which illustrate such statements as: "Masturbation is a normal expression of sex for both males and females.'' ••PORNOGRAPHY is harmless ... it porno is your bag, you doo'! have much of an imaginatioo." "Any sex. heteto, homo or auto, can be ~red 'ab- normal' if it is invotootary or expkJ(tive." "Two ways of avoiding unwanted pregnancies ; self ---------- control or birth control." "Sex is cool when you are ready for it. It is even oonnal to wait until marriage." 'nW! book also has ad\'.ice on how to avoid veneral disease and outlines birth control methods and ·abort.ion Jaw. It was written by Dr. Sol Gordon, identified as a prcr fessor of family and child development at S y r a c u s e University. A pl an n e d parenthood official said 500,000 copies of the book have been distribut.ed to family planning gn:M,tps across the country, and "this is the only area that they have bad this kind o f response." Fratern.ity Goes Bate STANfORD IUPIJ - Stanford University has censured a fraternity for a "rush" party that fea- tured five topless dancers, including one V.'ho was raffled off to partygoers. "The most charitable judgment is that the party got out of hand and that tbe Jocal leadership Jost control,'' said Larry \V. Horton. <Jrily Coast Qffers Goar.a -· Certificates -. . ' . • . • ... • ' • • ! -• ~.lat~MJ$ervice . • fhe··rnsiders Club " ) The ln&iders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every· thing you need from the finest closed-door show- rooms at substantial sav~ ings -appliances, furni· -ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at ·the ''fleet" price and mobile homes and motor· cycles at substantial sav- ings. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.()0%.5.13% Paubook. No Minimum. 5.75o/..S.92".k ;. One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. ' ~.00%-6.18% .Twotl>Flve v .... Certiflcall!S . $5,000 MinlrtvJm. UptDllO days loss of interest on amounts . withdrawn ~fore maturity on all certificate accounts . • also provides big dis· e<>unts on tici<pts to sport: Ing and -entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require· ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate memberships en· titling them to •II outside referral services. Ask about Joining at eny Coast office. MAIN.Qfftell 9th .s,-Jtut, Loi Anptes • 623-1351 other ofltou WIUHU1£ .t OAAtilatc:'Y PUCEt 3933 Wl~h'll Bh'd.. LA• 388-1265 LA. CMC CDn'Dt 2nd .Ii Bl'09dWI)'• 626-1102 HUHnHQTOH SfA'Ctt: 91 HuntlnltCMI Center (714) 897-1047 MHTAMONtcAI 718 Wlllh/111 Blvd.• 393-0745 --10th .. Paclflc • 831-2341 WUT_,..., F.asu.11c1 Shqpplnaetr. • .ss1-2201 PANCMWM CITY: Cha• A Vin Huya 81Yd. • 892--1171 TARZANAI 18751 Ventura Bl'td.• 545-1614 \.ONO HACH: 3rd & L.oeu5t • 437-7481 EAST LOS ANGl!UI: 8th &o S<ta • 266-4510 DIAMOHD IWt: 328S. Ol1mond.Bar (714) 595-7525 TUSTIN: larwln Sciuare ShoJipln& ctr, 1714) 832-6810 LAMIRADAz u Mirada Shopplna ctr. (714) 522-6751 ......... ..., Del Mar at Lat Ttmal • 297.Q941 Dolly Hotn-1 AM lo4 PM Alt--Clvk: Center, Opon- 9AMtD1 PM ASSETS OVER ONE BIUION DOLLARS Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You . ' ' Sunny day savings at rreasury · ' health and beau.ty aids department. COPPERTONE f /I \\~ SUNtAN LOTION 4 oz. SCOPE MOUTHWASH 18 oz. PEARL Dflops• lOOTH !!PIJsH .. 111111 Regular PEARL DROPS TOOTH POLISH 2% oz. ~ GILLmE THE DRY LOOK HAIR SPRAY 11 oz. CLAIROL HERBAL ESSENCE SHAMPOO 8 oz. BAYER ::==;;;;:::::;1 ASPIRIN BAND-AID PLASTIC STRIPS CLEARASIL OINTMENT EFFERDENT DENTURE \ TABLETS lOO's 70's ~BA;;,"·~?. .. A:tlD 1.2 oz. 40's .............. , OPEN DAILY 9:30to1:30 -SUNDAY 10 to 7 • ' ..._ ... ..,.,. _________ ....,...,,...,1171. IUINA PAIK Belch & Or'lnVfthorpt OUJIAOA ..... 1a O\lltl"#Orth St. •MntDI 3520 Tyttr WOODLAND HILLS 21500 VldON Blvd. IAHTA ANA No. of .souttt CO.st Pla1• WIWOOD Carson St, tou:•NCI Stpulvtdt Ind Hawthc!N'l Ind Paramount Blvo. OUHOI Garden Grow Btvd. Ind M•ncMsJtr I '' ., '• -· • .. . ' 7 -• • • . . ' B•ntin11ton Beaeh Fo • a N:v. St.eeks ' • 411.•1 • • • " • fl" V9L. ti>; ~o .. 143, 7 SECTIONS, 98' PAGES ' • • " ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY !3, 1973' TEN CENTS •Dir:(y~ Poetry Boo/a Bead to Council .By. JOANNE REYNOLDS Of the D-'IV Piiot S!.tf "I wooid like ID -bl""I' -but I can't becaijse I'm .bot a homosexual." 'l':here' were Do bleeps Tuesday n!Jht when Mr!i. Doris Allen· accused Trustees ol .lbl>:Hunlington Beach Union HJgll · Scliool ditrict of, keepinf COilie.i <I 'I ' "dirt1" poetey boek in tbeir libraries. 'l)!O :W~ matron, aHlted· in a Jed 'bkKJ.!ei• -skirt, 11Dd !bltle bliter, all<I' Mif~·~ . .wtth . inte<I t.... ii-• •' po " . . , . . . luslrat.ed, her point by reading sample passages. But Westminster High Principal Fer· ren Chri~n·.ftoted that Mrs. Allen. with her shock treatment , had probably erposed more.sllldents ID tile •book 1llen had seen IL in~'lhe Yel!!'S it~ 1-m the library sbeii. "It is ~nded for t h e sophlstlcated1l1terature' lludalts ooly," he said, .• "a4il' ilr'll!e, 111re..· ""8n' thit •• ~ /~~,\,: f1~. \." ,:· " ' " I , G .. ilt , JI . y ·-i I .'' l . A"ccessory-i1i Tot's . Murder . ' , .. . ... ' . A yQwig mother who'89mitted in tl!e coftrtroom !bat.she knew lier litUe boy wa$ dead when she told police ~e w~s· missilt~ plead· t~,g'1illy°i,'uesdll)'.,(o .chaJgOS •Of' beirig a~',acce~,Ylo his )llUrder. . · O{lANGE ·CPUNTY SUperior Court Judge· Ke,oiielh Lae beard the confessjon and,rent Sandy Rockwood, l 7, of Orange, to the Fron· · tera Prison. fo~ Wom~n fQI .a presentencing'-studY. She will be .re-. turned for sentencing Aug. 20. )'. •1 • · MiSs Rockwood'• report AJ>ril 13 tbat ·3-y~-<>ld Todd Rockwood was nlissing from the b-Ome·slie. shared with La1JY Wayne' Cobb, 23, sparked an intensive search of the area by more than 500 lawmen and volunteers. · "fH.E HUNT ended when Cobb led police to a shallow grave in , the Anaheinl Hills area where.the child's body was linearthed. •· Cobb will be arraigned May 29· in superior Court on charges or tirst degree murdeJ. It is alleged that a beating he administered Jed to the chlld's death April 11. · · I . ~ • C.Q:ittfield '.Admia; He . I . . . . ·j(~W.· QJfflr_ ~o~~~~l~.~~ ·.' ', .. ' _: '--1···~ft 1 ..... _ ~ :1 ...... ')/ WASHINGTON (AP! John • J . oiler. Pmldat NW.. baa denied thal'be O.Utfleld testi6ed toda' that be knew it knew about or authoriUd clemency of- "!P!. UJsal 40 fot bim to offtr GecutiVe I t.. w,.•-l-.l~--A-ts <l<mellCY .ra1nes M<;CoiG,tiiir'~ it ~ers~ acy ~ca.,.=~ -IUl)'W~. bel.'a!lse ..... •be™>ed the ~ ~,dJslN!e<Looe. ~ .~ comefl'ciin',,...sm;rt Niimi. • • o!·Mooo;e!oW. Ho~ M<!C!>id'- . "IV;Cl'OllS'ecl my. m!lid that lhls con· Nl""l' ·SATS ·.H"' ·~~ARED ceivably was from Prtslde,nl Nixon, I '"'"' ~ ""' believed i~", the lormer White House FoR·SECURlrY'-P~ge 4 aide said. Cat.Ofleld told Senate-inve&tig(llors he koew the offer ol clemency ID ·McCord lV'a& an illegal obstructicin or justice. Mcc.ord was on trial at the time !or burglary, Wiretapping and conspiracy in the Watergd' ·Cl!le· "What I'm Sayjng to.you air, is that Ill~ loyalty to the Presidept di the United Stdtes' overrode tbb«e ·cmslderaUons," Caullleld aald. Bui he repealed earlier testimony that he had no . ~ knowledge that lf!YOne higher than former presidential COlll\!ltl John W. Dean III authorired the trying ·ID ·•tay·out llf,Jail at the liine the clemency offers Were made. McCord has said h'e rejected the offers of clemency on grounds thaf some guilty perties weren't being p""'°"ted and were· trying falsely ID blame tjle Central Intelligence Agency, his old employer. · Caulfield teotil!ed at the Senate's 1elevi>ed Water~ bearings. He was asked by Sen. Lowell P. Weicker (R-O>nn.j, what be meant when be testified that be tiad caisldered he was doing a "~t terrice for ttbe ISee CAULFIELD, Pqe Z} IJouldn't Bear Vp A West German honor iuard soldier faints as Soviet Communist party chlef Leonid l. Brethnev and party (backJ{round) bid fareweU to the SoYletccolony at Bonn following the Ru.slan !eader'l flve.day peace 1nd trade mission to West Germany. ' , ' ' • I 've've hid It, it has ooly been used four time!." With 40 students in attendance at the board meeting to be honored for outstan· ding acteVemebls. C'bristensen observed, "I think more children have been ex· posed to the -language ill the book lonlflil lllan ·have been in the past thrie\. yeai'9. Mr.I. Allen, ·who identified herselr as a member of tbe Citizens Committee or Callfomia, said the book was on the ' shelves of three of the district's blgh school libraries. She did not identify the citizens group further. In making her point, ..she read just aOOut every four-leU.er word and scatological ~e from the "Young American Poeta," interspersing the ear searing reading with comments such a.s "a ae.der-'1 otaest Of oriMtat sex prac- tices," and "poelpl, gentlemep, poem.s." She also crtftclied ·the sobool ad- ministration at Westminster far the publication of a student s a t i r e n~wspaper, Ye Olde Town .Crier. listing as ooe of the paper's articles. "Pigs Off Cam~." Many Trujillo, the Westminster stu- dent who edited the paper pointed ot.lr fl little later that the artici< dealt with the pigs in the campus farm and bad nothing to 'do with 1aw 'enforcement ' Mrs. A11en's protP.!t waa lnterrupted by sdlool board President Dennis MM8ers w!to suggested that she cut short the re..:dings and make her point . "I'm sorry if this Is embarrassing you ~Ir. ~1angers." she started to reply. "I didn't say It was embarrasslnl, I just said you might want to get to the point oC all this." be said. At the conclusion of Mrs. Allen'• presentation, ~tangers told her that t~ district has an established policy for citizens to have what they consider ob- (See POETRY, Page%) Scandal Hits Britain ·Minister in Sex Caper Resigns LONDON (UPI) -Lord Lambtoo, a government· minister' who resi8ned Tues- day night iD Britain's i;nost explosive sex. securlly and drug scandal' in a decade, conlessed today be did so because ol a "casual acquaintance" with a ca11 girl whose husband tried to sell secret photographs of them to newspapers. "But thefe has been no security risk or blackmail," La mbton, 50, insisted in a statement banded to newsmen by a political aide. Within hours, the office of Attorney GE!ncral Sir Peter Rawlinson announced that summonses alleging i 11 e g a I possessioo or dangerous drugs have been issued against La.mbton. It, said be is being charged with possession of mari· juana and am~tamines. papers at hom'e and a broad. "I ·behaved wit~ cnodulous sltlpidity," Lord Lamblon added. "I must 'tepeal that there baa beeo l)O big!> ~ vice ting, nb securily leak, no blackm;Jifand, u far as I know, no pollticiari Of any party is remotely connected with these events ... Stern said the alleged "vic!e scandal" involved a senior British diplomat with aristocratic family links and access to military secrets. It said be frequented luxury brothels in Paris, London, New York and West Germany. After Lambton issued his statement, a Stern editor in Harqburg said he was the man referred to in the mquine's story . Some British newspapers described the Stem allegations as the most sensational in Br itain since the Christine Keeler sex· and-security scandal hit the headlines 10 years ago, involving former War Secretary John Profumo and nearly top· piing the gpvemment of former Prime Minister Harold MacMillan. No Thanks Councilmen Turn. Down Raise The EveJ\ing 5~4 ol Umdon sail) . •POU~AIN Valley city councilmen turi>ed down a $20.a-month speciaj,.,._j!. !11!1!!-:lwlf• '1--t-' ~ ~~~· , "11ighl,-votin1!1-2, lo,l'<!lll•in 011c.lhelr .pment.. tn.vlfil!Plltii~1 . ·~l·d!!! · I :< .• "! •( "•bout vi~ riD ~ ' • ' · • '.l'fie "'orlty ' · -It.would ratber.,.ait a yea;.,,heii they ~-... 1 1t ~11 I--~ '•f'toth .".~ wjJJ~grail a.-1 montb boost, since !It• cjty will fall lJl!o a =• m ~ h,i&liet'popdlilion .. t. · t • • ' · · government ml•islef ia involved. · Counci!ll>en-~!rll· seott, Al Holllnden lt!d.Jletnie Svalstid 'Ille llmtdoo ~·llewl salellhe !il1i voted"the·s~ ~do:wn. Councilmen Marviq Adler and Edward Is 1 black' ciD'gJrl'.~ "BeUY" and Just favored the iajmtdlAte raise. that a man t>.AOlna ~ her. huaband :m' ••' I • k tried 10 sell •1iDctiinlJOOIDi pbo\Ographs" "I l)ON'T S ..,e ffttse In changing al lhe'•boo work just for ol the girl and Lallt'litilii to a British $20 a month'.'i sa . Mayor ~qtt ··afler tlit meeting. 1'~ .would j113t as newspaper for $25,000. soon watt until netfyear;" Lambtoo quit abruptly 'l\iesday night Councilmen have the option of granting themselves a, five per-cent salary increase every year, but have not done so for two years. "for personal and health reasons" as J • • Parliament undersecretary for th• Royal NEXT YEAR'S anticipated salary hike will be granted when the Air Force. city's population officially exoeeds 50,000. Under state Law, council· haustive probe and no Watergate-style men in cities with populations of between 50,000 and 75,000 are per cover up or whitewash. niitted a' salary of $250 a month. · Heath will make a statement to.Parlia- ment on Thursday on .the affair, govern· ment officials said. They sald there would be no official comment until then. Labor oppos.itim members of Parlia- ment bombarded ~ government with demands for an explanatioo of the allega- tions published by the West Gennan magiu:ine Stern. "1bls is the sordid story," Lamb ton said today in a formal stateme(lt issued by an aide in his ,Berwick-on-TWeed con- stituency. "All that happened is that some sneak pimp has seen an op- portunity of malting Jll()Dey by the sale 0£ the story and secret photographs . to CLASSIFIED AD BRINGS HAPPINESS A Daily Pilot classified advertiser is happy because he sold his car to the first person who called. Here'a bow the ad ran: PORSCHE '61 Targa -glass back window, 5 spd, AM/FM, white, ~ cond. 32,000 mi. $050. Call ev.s. (Phone No.) 'nle new owner is now happily driving his car. Maybe fOU... oqWd be a little happier by running I auccess£ul Dally Pilot ad. The direct 'bappfness' line - 642-5678. 'P\ease Three Requests Postpone Valley Budget's Approval Adoption of a $4.47 million municipal budget for Fountain Valley was postpon- ed Tuesday night until June 5 by city councilmen. They said they want to take a closer look at three items. Following a »minute --cJosed-door ' . session, M4yor George Scott appointed committees of councilmen and city employes t.o Jook at : -A request by Councilman Bernie Svalstad that more money be spect on street median beautification. -A request by the chamber of com- metce far additiooal funds so a pro- fe'8ional coordinator can be hired to oversee the city's Halloween parade and beauty pageant. -A suggestion by Councilman Ed Just that city funds be Sillocated for Fountain Valley community theater. which is not now included in the budget. The theater is cuJTently funded by the ·Community Services Program through a federal grant. "There's nothing in our IQ.year budget for the theater," Just told the council. "I think we should address ourselves to that.'' The chamber request for more money was deJended by Steve ftandler, vice president of the organization, who said an upgrading of the parade and pageant is called for . He told councilmen a pro- fe!l..!lional consultant is called for if "for no other reason than we'll learn something from him" that can be used in later events. He asked that the Halloween parade be granted M increase from fl,400 to $1,700, and that the beauty pageant be given $750, $100 more than the past year. Median beautification ihould be ac- celerated ahead or what " pro}ected in the cily's IO.year •pendln& projection . (See BVDGET, Paio ti Don't Kill Me' ' Police Skiyi1ig Smpect's Plea Told .. • in T estiil]lon y Orange County ~berill's depuly Andy Romero today IDld • Superior Court Jury how defendant earl Eckstrom begged !or his l~e. in an e~ter that lmmedlJteiy followed Eckslrom's alleged lllaying ol two Los Angeles County deputlea. "I fired one srot from my ohot8Un and he reu near the fence.'' Romero testified. •"He held bis hands in the air as he lay on the ground and he told me 'please don't kUl me'." Romero told prosecutor Robert Chat- terton that he handcuffed EcltstrOm, took ony the defendant's automatic rifle and then turned to see what he could do for Los An(elcs 1herUl's deteotlves Cul wtlom and Donald Schnelder. both 40. He found SdJOelder dead on Ille porclt, ' I almolt ripped a.part by a volley of gOll. fire delivered through the screen door as tile olilctr, RUii In hand, klcked at the lrotJ! ~·Ecllatrom's home at 8351 Fuifu. St., MJdway City. 11ome;;; uid be (ound Wilson dying on the la'!", •hot io the cbe>t ·and bull09lui by a ·.teeand bunt Crom the same gun that r~lled Schnelder and which was pro-do~ and ldenl!Oed in court today as Eckstrom'• weapon. .• Eckltrom, 2.1, has pleaded Innocent by rdison of l,nsanlty. Judge William C. Speirs wUJ order the same jury to return . ror • aaoiey •!nil u the 11ight1y 00111. bo)'ilb defendant is found guilly on lwo OOUflla ol flllt dqree murder. F.ckstrom face. similar chargeti in L-01 Angeles County. He has been tentatively scheduled· to race·lrl.at ~re June fl. 1111 alleged lh&I ScJtnekler and Wilson tracked him to Midway C117-after F.ekstrom 'iltot .two i!r1s anil a man who trlef ID help lhe{D ID U.. J>&rklitc lot oJ a Cerrltot shopping center. Tbe man jnd one ol !he &Iris died. Romero tOOll] told ~ Jury thal he was assigned as the back\lp man !or W'll!cn and Schneider and be squat~ behlncl a fence Jut Jan. 4 to await the results of their attempts to fiush Eck~rom Crom theh<lm<!. "I beard about 10 ID 1$ shots near the houa," tl\O deputy said. "'!11en l heard another 10 shots and l eaw bullets hilting the rr•ss not far trom me. u .. ,,. ....... 'NO SEC.URIT.Y RISK' ' Brltatn'1 Lord J.o,..bhin · -_ _......,..,.......,...,..,.,._ ·1 ... Battin RequesiS Victim's Parents Pay hack M~re • I After 18-yw--o.ld Michael Hoffman 111 of Westminster was critically injured in a 1971 freeway accident, he spent more than six weeks in a coma in the hospital. Today he is stUl partially crippl .. and . suffering lrom •Peech lmpairmeitl. TO help his famil y offset medical ex-! penses, Orange County provided him with more lhati $17,000 from ila Crippled i Children's Services Fund in ·the Health J Department. . 1 Hollman'• family, with the help ol 1 private insurance company, DO'f pro- poses to pay 14,000 "that $17,GllO'boel. But Supervisor Robert Batlln <I santa Apa que~UOlje.1 that aueem<J!t Tue~. ! arguing that the .county should be reim-· bursed a larger amount. · . ' .. I think we ought lo get more," the Fir~t Distrjct supeivlsOr '!&id during a public meetl,ng. ' R<c:ords OD Ille 'With the Boord ol Supervi9ors" $.how that the insurance · CGmPftllY wiU give Hoffmau's .family only $19,()00. I About $4,750 of this must go to at-• tomeys who fought lo get the setUement. 1 Another $10,000 was earmarked to be put into a permanent trust fund to pay for the continuing medical and educational ' expenses or Hoffman, wbo,Js confined. to a wbeelcbalr and must attend a special · 9clml for the handicapped. t Weather Mostly suMy on Thursday, after the early morning low cloads, with little temperature chaoe:e. HigM in the 60s at the beaches, risb1a to the mid-70s inland. Q\lernight fows in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY Responding to tM rtuelatiooa that the count11'1 chit/ gas sup- plier must cue the atnoMnt of fuel he ca" ~liwr, supervisors ordered au ctn>artmtnu to cur- tail none11tntla:l gas use. See stmt and other county tiewi o-n Pages 10attd Jl . I j f • • j 1 l ' if. DAA.V PILOt H, FBI lttfss;alted ' • I Jed-lllllCllla revte....i by ldtool ofJW•I•. Called to_·:~Banks ,. .lf..-I Boelwe llte poelly antboloo la "' the lliolv.. at JWlnl aod !2lson Hip llcbooll as ...U u WestmlnlW. llWtlfa"' •.tr-I tha1 Mrs. A!lln could lnlt1aw Ute -11 WertmlNftrJll&b =:t;· It """'4 '0'iY lo Ibo two adior '" 'f"'. .. wn. .... -:.- •• By TOM GORMAN Of ""' Dtlty .. li.f lllff Two bomb threats, puhaps trlg:ered by the success of the phantom telephone Dr. Watson To Defend Meetings ' Or. Nonnan E. Wat.soo, chancellor ot 1he Coast Community College District, tonight is prepared to defend the .di.trict'• policy or holding -•t meetings. He will offer his remarks at 8 p.m. during a meetln' or the Board of Trustees at dJttrict headquarers, 1370 Adams Ave., C.Osta Mesa'. An item on the agenda relates to a Dally .Pilot edltorial qo..Uoolng the board's practice of scheduling WlaMOUDced .5ecret executive aesalons prior to each regu]arly scheduled board meeting. The edHorial al.so asserted that meetmcs during which trustees fullllled their rol<s u directors ol KOCE-TV ....,.. hot annwnced, u roqulred by tbe state anti aecrocy statute, the Ralph M. Brown .AC!\. 'In I wri1I"! report lncll.ldod In tonJcht's ageoda pectet, Dr. WaLIOn malnt•tna Jllat "-1 ...,Ions" have been held '&y the dlstrlct's board I« 26 Yell'& llDd "" echeduled one half hoUr before tbe board meeting. , He oilda that this hal been cb1e lo avoid having the audience "st.And by" '!¥hlle the board ls ln priyate session. The allegatloo concerning wwmunced :'.i'V meetings, Ille cl>anceilor malptalns, b "categorically untrue." There has only been one such meeting -oo Sept. 20, J 972 -and an announcement ol the ineetlng was . sent lo the Daily Pilot, .flan, with 30 other newspapers, ac- Conling lo Dr. Wallon. The Ralph M. Brown Act spectli., that the pubilc'• bosiness be coodocted In • publJc and .bins all secret meeUJ.11• ~­ <>epl under spe<ille dl'CU!llSlan<:es Jn. ·vu1v1ng pe.-.onnel mailers and pending 1' }jtJgatloo. • · The Brown .Ad requires written 'I notificatloo of special non-scheduled meetlng.,sent 't leo4! If hours bef"f'~he mee&fng to anyone ~ reqliests it. • It was asserted in the Daily Pilot -. editorial that there bu be«! oo nolifica· · 1ion of TV station meetings and that district board meetings are not being ·21 at the anrtqunced lime, as-· dat 'b the BroW. .>.ci; tiui at an lln~ri· ·no.nc · time before 'tl\e o!lidallY Schedoled I p.m. meeUng. From Page J BUDGET ... 'said Councilman Svalst.ad. "I don't feel at the present time there is MOUgh money being spent on this,'' he told his collegues. , He said be wantes a "chance to prove to the council that this can be done" in conunlttee discussions. Councilman Al Holllnden warned that his request should be kept in contest with the 1().year budget, telling Svalslad "You : can't treat this subject in a single fashion." Nearly hall or the balanced budget will be financed by a $1.15 property tax - the same as It has been since 1966, noted City Manager James Neal. The city also anticipates $630,000 in sales tax revenue. The bulk of the spending, $L75 million, is eannarked for public safety, including fire and police protection. Public Works, including parts and strett maintenance, is budgeted 16r $1 mlllloo. The city expects to spend nearly $800,000 more in 1973-74 than it did in the past year. OIAN•I COAST .. DAILY PILOT Tiit °'"* CM•t OAIL'f' PILOT .. 1111 ""'1<11 lo c.omb1 ..... 1ti.-Ntw>·Preu, LI Pllbllt.h.., tiY 11>11 Or1 ..... CNtl lllllllUohJ"IJ Col!INnY, S.pt- r1t1 lllH!om 1r1 publltP!lll, Mond1y 1hr&vQh Frld•Y, lor C~ll MtM, N"1:1(1•1 l!le1t1>, l'llltl!l ... I~ •tKl!/"Mll<llll Ytllt'f, ltaUM ll11ch, 1•¥1"'1/SMldl•bl<tt .,..i S1n Cll-mtnlt/ 51" J,,... C1pl1tr1.... A 1i..o11t •"'l!IO!ltl ... Ilion It "°'llhtd SllvrMra ..... SU!"4fyl, TIM prlnclswll Pllbll•hlll'J Pllftl I•., "° w11t ••v StlNl, Qt\11 Mft1, C•llto11111. fnlf., Rob,1rt N. W11d "'""Iii""' '"' ~, ..... J1cli I. Cu1/1y YM "'"""°'' tnd 0-.1r Mtllltfr Til011111 K11wll Edlltr Tli11111t A. Murph;,., M1n1tl~3 £<11!0I Ch11I" H. L.11 l ic:h11d P. Nill Aultt9fll ~l\aflfll EC1lllr1 r.,,,. c .... 111. w .. t o •• ,,.. c-.1r l!C111<11 H---17tfl -tl11c~ l•Nl1•1rod ,._,111i1; M*'"'t r.o. 1011 1t0, 'lMt --I...-IWOll m "OfHI A- C.II ~t -'t'!' hy '""' :!!T~~W':.1t1Tc•="':: , ........ (7141 642..CJJ1 a...... ....,. .. '4.Z·'''' •rw111 ,._. OrMtt c~ c-..-11 ... ...,_IJ.11 Clpyrlll!t, .,n,, er....,. (Cini Publlth"" ~y. Ho ..... ,.., .. ,, 111~11••1'°"1· ... IOl'MI ,...,,_. Ot llf,,.,l11-1t htrtl~ "'1¥ _. ~ Wlllloul IDtCLll W • ""'•"" If QIO'f'rlellt ...,.... ...... U.. ... ,... ... Id II c.tl• Mnl, C.11 ...... la, ~-tw CW•let U .it ffllllllfllt'I llr -II IU.11 ......wr1 mllli.n' -.ii.llNlli IUI """""''· .. ' tr.· bendll, wore dellvmd ogalnst a pair of Hantington Beach banks TUesday af. ternooni police reported today. In neither cue waa a oomb found nor the mont)'. placed Jn baas u the callert ,-•.,young boy and a "neno111" woman -bldorcktoc!. "'nle banka artn't going to go for thi s kind ol stulf," said Oet. Sgt. Monty McKennon. The flnt tbrtat •u made just hefore Ille I ,P>!h-cJastna tJme at tbe Bank of Ame'lc& 'braocb 1110121 Adam! Ave. The caller, dlecrtbed ·by police l!IS-8 "lO-y...,.W trJD>t· to mutDe his ..ice," demlnded.1ha\ ft0,000 in c&lh be put In a ba& lll\f plsicod behind a Ralph's Sopmuutet -tbe -· 'lllo', ltlnk WU OVllOllated alter tbe alltr ,.PQIUol,a.bomb had been planted inside the bt.1Jldlftg1 p:>Uce saJd. Sank olOclala called police Im· rned:lately. A 1.hourough search or the premlaea~lleCr. kl uncover the alleged bom!>~.M Onion .. 1d. . ·~~. "'·'• caller described as a jjDetvlU""·w9man" phoned the United Callfofala Bank branch at 7902 Edinger Ave. and said "the bank would be blown up" unless $50,000 in cash was placed in a bag and put behind the Goodyear tire store next door. No bomb was foond by police who responded to the 3:07 p.m. call. In both cases the FBI was notified, since bomb threats are a federal olfen.9t , McKennoo 111d. "Both calls were completely phony. We've kind of ~ this sort ol thing to happen," he said, re£ erring to news accounts of the escapades of the phantom telephone bandit. The bandit ha.s netted more than $2,700 in the past month by victimizing seven franchi~ businesses in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. A bomb explosion at a Huntington Beach restaurant Monday night was at· trlbuted to the bandit by pallce who believe he is trying to show he "means business." No money changed hands. The same restaurant was hlt by the bandlt several days earlier, when he telephoned his threat that if money was not placed in a bag and put oulSide, lhe person on the phone would be shot by a hlgh-powered rifle. The bandit made off with $500. . Expamion Plans At W esbninster .,. School Appfoved Huntington B<ach Union High School District trustees Tuesday night approved a $1,339,000 expansion of Westm.lnster High School. The work, to be designed by the Santa Ana architectural firm of Allen and Miller, will be funded out of the $2.3 million the district re<:eived for the sale of the 11-fid~·ay City school site. The balance of the sale money will be used on improvements for the district's 1 four other campuses . Included in the expansion project will be remodeling of the school's library, in· duslrial arts and physical education facilities . Plans for \vork on the other campuses will Ix! presented to the board later this year, school officials said. ~I prtnclpal1 and district mini!tratons were ordered to report the1r findings at the next board meeting. Mrs. Alloo'a proleait was backed up by Edmund Sheehan, an W\SUccessfut school board candidate in the April election who vowed to bring more "matters of mutual . concern," and the local chainn.ao of the citizen's group. Banait Holds Up Bank iii Mesa- Takes $5,200 A sandycl>alred bandit who initially asked for ctµinge for a $10 bill flashed a gun at a teller Tuesday and escaped with more than $5,200 from a Costa Mesa bank. The 2: 15 p.m. holdup at the Bank or America, 27(11 Harbor Blvd .. went off smoothly after the slehder. !ix-foot gun- man ordered a teller to tum over her money . "He walked in, got the money and left," said one FBI agent today. "He walked out with $[1,298.06," Bank of America public relations spokesman Jon Washington said today, pinpointing the precise amount taken. Investigators raced to the bank at Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue but found no trace of the bandit, who qolckly slipped out thrwgb a rear door. The onldentl/ied teller confronted dur- ing the robbery which occurTed while eight persons were present said the gun· man displayed a revolver to show he meant business. Authorities did not disclose im· mediately whether any personnel ac- tivated the bank's scanning camera to catch a portrait of the robber in action. The bank branch at Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue is one of the more- often-robbed financial institutions in Costa Mesa, apparently due to its Joca- tion. The busy boulevard interseclion af· lords fairly quick access to the San Diego Freeway, in addition to heavy traffic in which a getaway car can become lost. Three years ago, a motorcycle. helmeted bandit wbo cnasbed 'his way througlf the ffool door With t t~1rao on - two occasions ln a three-month period robbed the same facility. A trio of men later captured in Texas, convicted and sentenced to Jong prtsot. terms for armed holdups in that state also hit the J:larbor Boulevard·Adams A venue hras1ch J 1h YF8 ago. 3 Fired BART Employes Sue OAKLAND (AP) -Three former BART employes say lbey were fired after complaining about "inefficiency and unsafeness of the system." The three -Holger Hjortsvang or Walnut Creek, Robert Bruder of Pleasant llill and Max Blankenkemee of Mllpila!: -flied a Sl.3 million damage suit Tues. day against the Bay Area Rapld Tra'nsit District. They contended in the suit filed in Alameda Superior Court lha1 they ex· pressed "concern" over the train control system for several ~nths and finally took their doubts to a BA.RT dirl:'Ctor. They said they were summarily fired in March, 1972, by their supervisors on orders from General Manager B. R. Stokes. Senate Okays RichardSon In Fast Washington Vote BULLE11N \VASHINGTON (UPI )-Tbe Senate con· firmed this aflemoon the nomination of Elliot L. Richardson as attorney general ouly about thr« boon after he was unani- moosly approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Tbe vote was 8%-3. \\IASlllN (;TQN (AP) -The Sena te Judiciary Cornmittee loda y approved Elliot L. Rich<irdson's nomination as at - torney generJI. Chairman Jan1es Eastland said the vote was unanimous. Leaders said they woold lry to bring Jt ichardson's nomination up on the Communications Fair Aimounced A communications fair. featuring stu- de-nt art, creative writing, photography, book reviews nnd news articles will be ht!ld Thu~day and Frfaiy aClfe-sa View School in ifunt.inglon Beach. Jn addition to more than 85 student en· tries, General Telephone will se t up an 11ctivaled switchboard and the Dally Pilot will display the specific slcps In the pnr ductlon of a new11:paper . The fair. planned b>' Lynn King's 5eventh grade. communications class, will be held In the school's multipurpose: room from 8:30 a.m. to 2:3-0 p.m. Senate lor con!irmation later in the day. The objection of a single senator would force a delay until tomorrow. Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield said: "We'll try to take it up late today .'' Republican Leader Hugh Scott, a com- mittee member, said in advance of the committee vote that he e xpectcd a unanimous re commendation fur Richardson's confirmation . "The committee had a chance yester- day to contrast a thief and a J-larvnrd man, and I think it will vote for the H3rvard man," he told newsmen. Asked who the thief was. Scott replied in an obvious reference to Daniel Ellsberg, a defendant In the PentagQn Papers case, that "he was sitting in the audience." ,__ "II was a little shocking to me to see a man who conlessedly purl oined classlfied informatlon acting as amlcus curia to the Judiciary Committee," Scott sakt . "It was chutzpah," he said. "It al80 was ga!J. it was also indcccnl, it was also contemptible, and I don't like It ." The commillee reopened its hearings on R1chard.5on 's nomination y~erday afler Ellsberg contacted s om e Democratic members. Ellsberg contended ttmt Ri chardson at· templed to conceal lnformaUon about a break-In in the office of Ellsberg's psychiatrist tn September, 1971. Rlcbardsoo . tcsUfYing with un..,. customed vehemence, ••Id that his effons wtre directed toward m1ltmum dla.- clO!lurc rather than eny covenip. ' Valley Council A tion llote. ii capoule form . Is a .,.. ... .., ol a<tioo llUo '!Wmly Dl&bt by lbe roooala Vljloy CICI' Camell ' , BUDGET: Pdlq>anecl uolil J-I ... Ian ol I M,47 l!llllim • ....,., ltiitlJet .... llteal ltn-74. • . ", ~ IWAllY: Turned down, by a 1-2 "°"'· an option to -t them-~a 4!11 bops! In tbolr .-thl,y aalary . ' l!f]Lf: SQUARE: Asked for a federal ll'Ult to nnsnce half ol the dty'1 recreation complex:, which ii expected to to1t more than $1 million. Dev~ meut ol lbe site Is expected to begin about Oct. l. DRUG TASK FORCE: Agreed to participate In a proposed county wide narcotics tuk force, at a cost to the city of $567. Blcm.E LAWSo Endcrlled 1 re.soluUoo 11~ Ille state Legislature to modify the Callfomla Veblclt Code so that bicyclists Wiii have stale wide rules and regulations to abide by. RESl'AURANl'S: Returned lo the Planning Commi.uion a request lo bolid Jopos and Nauglu restaurants at the corrtet of Brookburst Street and La Alameda Avenue. Skylab ~Repair Crew' . ' Ready for Friday Shot CAPJ; KENN;EDY (UPI) -'Ille countdown resumed and tbe Skylab t astronauts passetl medical checkups 10- day for 'laWlch Friday .in an effort to repair their space station and turn it into a liveable home for nine men this year. The .emergency aunsbades and debris· clearing loola wltlch the pilots will carry into space were being flown to the spacoport this afternoon to be stowed in Ille eal>in of their Apollo command ship. Cbarlts "Pete" Coorad, Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin llDd Paw J. Weitz completed momlng·kmJ! p by 1 l ca I e:wnlnatloos shorlly bef°"' noon and doctors reported all was well. "There are no ;iroblems," said Dr. Royce Hawkins. "Everything is nonnaL They are in high spirits." The countdown toward the 6 a.m. PDT liftoff Friday started at 5:30 a.m. It had been halted eight hours after the un- manned launch of Skylab May 14, when it was clear the eight-room space house could . not be occupied without e1- traordinary repairs in orbit. NASA Administrator James C . Fletcher today established a board head· ed by Bruce B. Ltmdin, director of NASA's Lewis Research Center in Cleveland, to investigate the Skytab failures. House .Snstains Veto on Budget Aide Approval WASWNGTON (AP) -The llou8e to- day sustained President Nlmn's veto of a bill to require Senate approval of his top two budget aides. The veto to override the veto was 238 to 178, or 40 short of the :required tw~ thirds. Eighteen R<poblicsns joined 2 I & Democrats voting against Nixon, whlle the President gained support rrom 167 Republicans and 11 Democrats. Nixon thus won a test or bis strength in Congress as hls backers, ftghting to keep their power Crom being drained by the Watergate scandal, kept the bill from becoming law. After Nixon suffered a six-vote loss in the Senate on the veto, H o u s e Democratic leaden said they would have a tough time rounding up the lw<rthirds mojorlty needed to complete the con- gressional override process and force the bill Into Jaw over the President's ob- jections. Shortly berore the House vole, Speaker Carl AJbert (D-Okla.), told newsmen: "lt is going t.o be very tight, it is going to be difficult.'' The countdown originally was to begin Tuesday night but launch officials delayed it nine hours to conserve battery power in ttle 22-iltory Saturn IB rocket. One of the first operatloos today wu lo insall the batleries and check the machine's electrical system. The three astronauts new to the spaceport Tuesday nigh! and showed their optlmlam by piloting their two white jets on a aharp maneuver airmen call a "llaJI vtctocy roll" before landing. lf the three astronaut! can mend Skylab, they will stay op for 28 days to can-y oul moal ol the medical, scienUlic and engineering experiments assigned to the mission. There is still hope among project leaders that two more three-man crews will be able to follow and stay aboard Skylab even longer. Sk)'lab is circling earth 271 miles high· every 93 minutes. Flight controllers in Houston, frequently changing Skylab's position in relation to the sun by radio cootrol, have stabilized the temperature extremes in the .station's maln living area, which faces the sun, and in the .shaded forward section. Mission control reported that the average temperature in lhe living quarters wa.s 12.1.S degrees today, which, a spokesman said, w a s "a slight eleva- tion in the patient during the 1past St bouni." Aowever, tmiperatures in the cold forward module were a slightly higher 3$ d-•hlch "brings smiles to the faces of the flight controllers." Beach Str¢eni' s Balloon Takes 1,500-mile Trip The durability ol a llk:ent dime store ballooo cootlooes lo mystify school children in Honlinglon Beach Uleoe days, following the lalest fllgbl ol one Slldl balloon to an Iowa farm. The late.>! long distance balloon belongs to Michael llonniela, • fuurth grader at Kettltr School, -ballooon turned op at Alta Vista, Iowa, after being sent aloft fnlm Ille Hontlngtoo Beach school yard March 20. Michael, 10, son or Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Danniels, 21181 Breton Lene, received a letter this week from a Janner more than l,500 mlJes away saying be foond the ballooo on his field. His balloon was one of IM ~t aloft by a science clua, reports teacher Laurie And<r90ll. Earlier a balloon sent alon by Debbie SchmJdt Of Huntington Beach in a city- wide contest landed 1~400 miles away in Creston, Iowa. ,,,. Ulasewic~ I Messenger Role Told ! . WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Ono·timt New . Yori< City eop Anthony UlosewlCI told : S«\lte invesUgators today he acted fl! a· mesaenser for White !louie aide John J.; C.ollleld. and tr~ted ~field's: messag .. lo convlc~Walergate oon·'. tplnlot lames W. ~.it. : But Ula.sewlC2 indicated he thought· Mt'Cord and his fellow Watergate: burg~ were ~lhlng le~ than pro-: fessional . : A good wiretapper, be said, wollld bave; walllod into Ille Watergate "llke any ~ cen~ common-looking dtlun: f a'l d something In lbe right place llDd walked right oot. And that would have been tbti end of it for a lone time." ;1 He added, amid laughter, that ''nO reUred man In Ute New York City police department" would ever get involved in an operation Jike the Watergate, , "And lf he thou£ ht he had to, for whatever reason, he wouldn't have walked in with an army -that's fer sure." Ulasewlcz' remark, aimed at the five men captured inside the Watergate building June 17, 5ellt waves of laughter through Ille committee rooms. Sources close lo the investigation said Ulase"Wicz, in addHion to telephoning McConl with offers ol a payoff foc silence, was given "hu.M" money by Herbert Kalm&acb of Newport Beach, President NWlo's penonal lawyer. ·. 1bo money WU allegedly lo be dlstributed lo Walergate defendant& at designated pointa aroood the city. .. 1be sources aaid the paymecta were made lo Ille lite llorotl>y HIBll, who died last Dectmbtt ln a plane era.sh. She wa! the wife of Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt. '· Ulasewicz also coodocted pollttc~ spying operations, the sources said. In sworn testimony Tuesday, CaulOekl lold the ·committee that for three y,ear,s., st.artlng on July 9, 1969, Uluewicz was paid by Kalmbach and hls law flnn for .a varlely of "inVe6tigative funclions." 11\e sources said that Ulasewicz received up to $70,<m for bis activities, which rqed from a probe of Sei\. Edward M. Kennedy's Chappaqoidick ac- cident to an .investigation of a teacher reportedly harassing the Presidenfs <laughter, Jolie Ntxon Eisenhower, ~ Florida. · Caolfieid tutlfied that Ula.sewtcz worj;. ed under his tupervision on orden from John D. Iil!rllchman, tben the President's chief domestic affairs adviser, and fonner Whtie lloute COUJ150l John W. Dean UJ, I I -ni. -coolirmed a rlpcl!t ln.tlle W'8lllnillon Sllr·News 1 that Uluewics ailO lnvOatiiatad purported ties. betwoen Delllocrallc prelidmtlal catldldate Sen. Edriumd S. Muskie of Maine and COi'· porate polluters: Ille finances ol Sen. Hubert H. Hlllllphr.y (!).Minn.), also '" preoldentlal candidate In 1m, and 1n unspecllled incident involvt.ng Home Speaker Carl Albert. * * * Frot11 Pag!fl J CAULFIELD. • • President" when he offered clemency to McConl. ' "It was 1 greet honor fer me to &erve u a membtr of the President's staff,:• Caulfield said. "I had come from ,. rather humble background, a poUce of· ficer ... I felt very strongly about the Presid0r1t, erlremeiy stroogly aboot tJie President. "t was very loyal to the people I work- ed for. I placed a high value on loyalti'. Now out of the bloe I'm Injected Into this scandal. I'm being uked by ooe of my hcmer superiors to deliver a mesaage that f ltmw lo be ezect1Uve clemency~! tried to avokl it .•. '' MEMORIAL DAY MAY 28TH In honor of those who gave their lives that this would be a better world, we will be closed Monday-Memorial Day JOHN HART LYNN HART HARTS SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER STREET ' • ./ • ... I • ' i l l • I l \ \ r At Yo ·u·r · Service A Sun.t.y, WedoeldaJ ud l'r!Uy io"eature ,4l,~MY~ . Go1 "a pro1>t.m1 'rhtn 1'!'118 Pa& Dunn. Pal wtU cut red tape, aet tht Oft.!\On'J mitf' • action ~ o u need t ,o -1 IOI•• ine<p<i-. tfe~ in poo- ,e-mment and 'your quer- t~o/1.S to Pat , ,, Du tin. f A.t .• business. Mall Yo11r Service, Orange C001t Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mera. Ca., 92626, Include Vo"" '' £E~ephOM numb8r. , - ,;at Breeding DEAR PAT: We have decided to breed Wr female Siamese cat onice before get- ting her spayed, I have studied breeding Charts designed to help determine colors and desired characteristics, bul the terms inbreeding, line breeding and out· t'rossing are confusing. Can you explain these terms and refer me lo a book that would be helpful in choosing a mate for our cat and caring for the k.ittens? R.G., Cotta ?'ltua ' lnbrttding is continual mating of JD.embers of the same or clo&el,y r,elaled .-ock• and U1tt brtedlng Is the production ~f desired cbaract.erlsHcs tn animals by IDbreedlng through sevtral successive 'generations. Llne breeding l1 simply a 4orm of iDbtttdlng. A breeding of lalttlated cats ii known as .an oukros1. While labrteding Is oted•to amplify cer- iaiu existing characteristics, an oul-cross 4 used to obtaln whatever cbarac· terl1tlcs are desired, but lacking lo the line or the cat you are breedtng. "TblS is 'the StBmese Cat," by Merge Naples, h; a good reference book for Siamese cat '&wnert and btteden. It is available ~ pet end book 1iom:: 'JHaga:lne Dela11 DEAR PAT : I ordered~ gift subscription of Kids Magazine for my daughter last October. We did have a chang~ 0£ ad- dress, but I wrote to the magazine in- f.onning it of the change and thal we had 'not received any Issues yet. 1 wrote ·again asking why the subscription' had not started after my $6 check cleared the tiab~~~e)laven'I )]e~-'.\'1,'". ~ pu .._:un::r., ,. 1 , • · t.111., Minim! vleio ·You may have beefl under the Im· pression you'd ordered a Christmas girt "ftbscrlption, but none df ' ~ Mlders ncelve!d Jalt fall were flUed I* Bt11e.St .eight Weeks. The inei:a'ilrJe,1bl!b 'klsfl its .nna~lal backing 1earl1 thl1 Yi1'ir tit4 no tssues ''i'ere ~US.bed 10t Weiieral months. J.>ubllshCr11 spolitsihao Lr:• :ftoblnsoD liiid the magazlii:'e 'la "'olv~ at ·this time and '~1ay Issues •ere tbafted --May 11. She asks Subscribers tol ht "pa- tient'' for al least Lbree mdre weeks to allow time for tblrd-class mail delivery in Callfornla. If you and D.J., Newport Beach, anolber Kida Magazine subscriber with a dellverf pioblem, 'don't receive your May issue11.by the first part of June, let me know, or ,write ~Uy to" LyDn Robinson, Kids Magailne, 11 W. 4%nd St, ,New York, N.Y. ll03i. -About "lemorlal Day DEAR PAT: Could ·you tell me when ,.Memorial Day was first observed in the -ynited States? I'd also like to kno\v why · \l is called Poppy Dny and if it's lrue lhat some Southern statC's have special dates for their Memorial 0 a y Observances. ' I 'B .C., Newport Beach Though oo one knoll's when Memorial .. Day, sometimes called Decoration Day, •originated, It 1s believed to have been first observed by grieving Soutbem women darln&: the avn War. Tbey chose .ft1a'y 31 to decorate the graves of both ~nlon and Confederate ~. 11c- :f'ording to the World Boot Enc~a. :American• now observe this naUonal ·O:>Jlday to honor those who lost lbttr Uves ·ln 111 tbt country'• later wars, Including -ltae Spanish American War, 189trl8'9; !World War I, 1917·1918; World \Var .. U, ,,941-1945; tllie Korean War, 1950-lWl,.,~ ~be Vietnam Wat. Since tbe en•.ol-WOrld ~ar I, Memortal Day also his l9eb call-· <td Poppy Day because or the~~attles tooght In lhe poppy fields of France and ~lglnm. Memorial Day, now celebrated )>a the Ja11t Monday In May ln mO!lt )tales, hecam~ a federul holiday In 1971. ~any Southern 11tatcs set aside a day lo ~nor Confederate dead. Alabama and fGeorgia observe April 26 as Confederate ~e:morlal Day ; both Carolinas oblerve ~•Y 18. Kenlucky and L o a s I • a a ~~lebrate tt on Jane 3, the birthday ol Xonfedente Prt11ldent JeUmoa Davia. ;Girls Club Story • ~EAR PAT : As an lnterested volunteer for the Harbor Area branch of the Girls ~lub. 1 bttve a question for you . National k;trls Club Week was observed the week :Or May 14. but no ~ seems to know ~nythlng about when the Girls Club :Organization started . Do you? ; J .T., Costa Mesa • : The N11lonal Girts Club w1111 founded in ~945 by Mt11 . J . llerbert Johnson In !worceater, Ttla111. Beginning with IS -charter membe.-., lht! club now bas ap- ;>roxlmately )70 br1nebu lrom coaat lO .tou&. N1Uonnl he1dqu.arter1 are located :et tai E. IZnd St., New York, N.V. Tbe :local Glrl1 Club was 1l8rttd In 1954, !became • member of the naUonal group ~ 11$5 and kat • current mtmbenbfP of J ,000 clrls. 'I' • • • . ' - WfdnndlJ', May 2l, 197) H DAILY PILOT f l~ilthers : See New Gains-Two Men· l II)' JOHN z.11.LBR Of .. oeltr .... , ... Good lootina womcp ni., DOI be wbistled at IS olten u llle1 llOed lo be. A young lather i1 seekinl clilld-aupport parmF'ts from his ~-ttift. Meo are POt ashamed to wear lhelr' lWr btlow their .OOulders. ·Are th'5e oltplS tbat tbe."'1""lfl' 1$.e<l~­ lng toward total eqqaut~ 'between tbe sexes? And if they ar'e, dOts it represent a victory for women? Irvine Moms Getting Sex Threat Calls By ARTHIJR R. VlNSEL Of Jli. o.llJ Plllt Stiff A wave of telephone calls by a tnan claiming tO hold captive girls abducted from school and threatening harm if their mothers fail to give him seii::ual favors is sweeping the Irvine area. The phantom of the phone wires so lat has proved harmless, although annoying W soort.s Qf houiewives throughout .the south coonty area and even into Los Angeles County. Concern has reached such levels that Delaine Richards, principal of El Camino Real 1School, sent home a parental bulletin lhi! w..t spelling out campwi polici~ on l¥ing children out of school. "It bas been reported that some parents have received threatening phone calls regarding their children while they are at school," Richards no(ed . "If you receive such a call, please check with the school first so that we may check the classroom for your cRild's presence. "We do not knowingly let children leave school with anyone without proper identification," Richards points out. "We also do not give out phone nwnbers." Irvine Police Detective' Bob Leonert conflrnlS that 15 to 20 such calls have been reported formally, while many more were probably ignored by recipients. What we have is an unknown-male who gets bis ~satisfaction out of calling women, sqs Detective Lennert. The caJls -all made at random the .facts ltiow -•have {}olded the IOUth . btJ~H I , ~' • t •" "11 4 ·· "We're getUng a lot In Orange and Los Angeles counties," says Don MacDonald, a special agent for the P•cific Telep~e ComJ>MYL ~ "We'\~·-i~ IOOU~l!Y· l'IO!]l " add~' N'e~rt ach Police I>etec ive Lavonne K~. \ t The cal~r -.beUevw;l to be'i yob.rig man _: hpparfntly ielects telephone numbers out of the White Pages section without any perSonal .knowledg'1 of the party called, investigator• say. Some of the victims whose children have been thre.end by the mystery caller don't even have chi Id re n , authorltieii: point out. Modern methocjs of treeing tllleJllione calls while they Ire still COllO<Cted make it increasingly eaty IQ. trap crank callers. "What we're i:unDing into with this clown though," uys Pacific Te1p00ne SpeciaJ Agent MfcOonald, "is that he never calls back.'' The caller never goes near the residence or the perStln called either, at least based on what authorities know about him so far, They theorize that he experiences vicarious sexual thrills from creating fear in the parties called. Nuclear Suh Damaged WASflINGTON (AP) -The Navy said today the nuclear powered attack sub- marine Sturgeo11 struck. bottom Monday and suffered minor damage while operating :iubmerged off the Virgin Islands. There were no injuries among the crew of 120 officers and enlisted men, the Navy said. A ~ ol. 'llll'OG:Mll'J llbentionisl$ bol<!ini . w ..... •• lt'eet -al UC Irv""' ~ _...red yeo to both questtoos. • And tlley .,...tlcted that the trend away from the tlllditional sex s~ wUI coo"1me for a Imig Unu~. "l'tl ~ Jte total social equality in mY UfeUl'ne',•1 said one panelist. Joanne McKlin, a Santa Ana College . teacher. "Ev'i!' mi ilauibler pn!bably won't see It. rt f. galng to tek.e a long haul, but we'll stay Wftb Jf as long as we have to." ··11·s bard '°put )'OUf rlll&cr . exactly what's ~" • qreed uolhu pane1jat, Jailt B!ftljlr. "l!ul K's deal' lhal attitudes are changing.,. , The remarks were made at' • panel called "For Men OnJy" -a cbanoe ror the males of UCJ to find out everytblng they've always wanted to know aboUl woroeos llberaUgp.. BUl the event wp Vll'Y nearlf a bust because only tY.-0 men showed up -a ronner student now 111 campus janitor and Sculpture Topples 1 ne..,P.pu'T<poner. Undauated by Ille low tllMIOUI - maybe ev~ wu watcbltia the Waterpte beirlnP on TV, one suuestecl -the -""POlldod lo. broad ...... or quesUoat and can1oc1 on briUl1 tor neatly two hours. "One of the good thine• happening now ls that terms llke 'chick' and 1broad' are not ' a®lled to WO'IMn as much." said Judy tate, a counselor. "r think people bllve been made to UC Irvine authorities theorize vandals helped over- turn $18,000 sculpture by nationally known artist Tony di Suvero. Work known as "Nova Albion" has been on loan to UCI since 1966 and been the subject of no little controversy since it was set up in a Weed patch. In background is the new administration buil.ding under con struction. Similar works by _di Suvero sell for ftnm $80.000 to $40,000. Campus spd:kesmen say sculpture will be rebuilt. • • • • i..!Ju that •, ......,.n are 11.unan ...... not some kind ol 'chick' wbo lw Ol\IJ -!OaJ value in life to the man 1'bo calll fter I.bat." In the P'!'e way , lbe (l'OUP ..,,_i, women ""' DO loGCet lltlol wblltWd at as much - a sign that women are cc»- sidered "less as sex objects and men u human beings," acconflng to Ms. BinM.r. The aroup expressed enthusJ.11sUe IUf>' port for a mftn who ls cunently filbtlnl a court battle lo get cblld-aUpport payments from his divorced wife. ''If a man wants lo keep bl1 900 " uld ~ts. Binder. "that's a good sign thilit boOI sexes are beginning to accept parental respoosibilily. inslead of leaving the y,·hole job lo just ooe $el..'' ~1s. Binder said that If the woman bW a high -pay ing job and the man wa1 sad- dled with child-raising costs, lt was ... onlJ fair" that the woman pay a part d. ttie child-support burden. A major part or the discussion dealt ll'ith the nature of fUture male-femalf relations if the women's equality move- ment continues to grow-i-' "As the lraditional sex roles are wi~ out." said Ms. Leste, sex prererenCM may go, too . \Ve may be headed toward a period of bi -sexualism. • "l'n1 sure there will always be matt- female couples." Ms. Leste added, "but'l don't think everybody will think it's 1$' important that all relationships be th.It .... ·ay ." "The \\'hole concept of masculine anti feminine is weakening ," agreed MS. Binder. 1 "But it all depends on your definitions. · If it is consi dered mascu1ine to show ag- gressiveness, then you'd have to say \\'omen are becoming more muculine. And if you insist that it is feminine to have long hair, then some men are ob- viously becoming feminine. 1 "But you have to uk. whether tbeM I masculine and feminine stereotypes ~ really worth anything, or if they matte(. People should just be the best bumlh beings they can without worTYtng about tbese stereotypes as much." However, both Ms. Llste and MS. Binder· agreed that, although equality ot. the sexes might bring the ellmlnaUoo of traditional sex roles, it was ndt an Ir'?,- mediate cause of concern. · The panelists agreed that, as Mli:. Binder put it, "We've all been condlUoned to certain things, and you Can't juSt change that overnight .·• ' -UCI Hospital w Face Severol M-0re Obstacles Jury Selected For Extortion Hard Drug V sage ·' Isn't Evident ;~ l I! ' f\ .•• ~~1 D~!nx .~i_., :At'·uc··iJrirerey"' ~~1 By GEORGE LEIDAL or this amount, $9 million would be an Jury selection ended late Tuesday ln . , • ot .,.. Dall• P'llot St•n 1 def •t lhe Orange Count,y ;;i,aperior Court trial of 1 ' _!lnnua -ICI i I Westminster city officials Der e Ir. BERKELEY (AP) -Unlvmlty ff Sevihl,1¥'1'.¥0f !Jlpfij°befo?.\the JOO-"I'll gladly setUe .with the CO\llltY so 14cWhlMer ,and*'# Fujita l>I!\~ Callfomla iiodentl . -1111"1 Yee!~ bed te\b6ing lioS~lif W'ggested for coo-long .. thef pay l8 milllbn er oil," van 'f~' i.t<r; ~ ·• I ''-""l!d ldilt#-. e ~~ 'pse tilt '! ' · IJHd stMltltcn m the UC ~rvlrle ·campus by a den Noqtl qulppe4.1Later In his r;marks, cpenlhg arHum~nt In the ex~on Ca,IJe. !!It !~1t,im~l\I · ._•ii ~y lliitlid f•r legislative study paltel becomes a reality. he noted t'he ubitersfty n,JrMi abbut Deferute ' lawyers Joseph Ball tor leSs evidence or ard drugs 1h-·they ei- Dr Sta. nJ d N t ~" • d $1.25 million of the ' county''s annual McWhlnney and Al stokke-Cor Fujita told .. ,,_. · e.y .van en oor • a1,;~D&1 ean Judge Jhn '.Flynn Jr. lm-~'ately a11'er peeled, of the UCI Calif Coll ol "••• in deficit at OCMC is attributable to the uicw · omia ege .wu:Wc e costs of medical education,: but tlie the jury was sworn in that they ~ed a "Berkeley just doesn't seem to Jive Up told students Tuesday, "We've made university also contends it ~ spent delay until May 29 to dls~ Or other to its reputation u,.a wUd place," Dents good progress with the Legislature. Now more than this amoWlt in improvements business. Judge Flynn gr111trled the re-Drachnik, 20, one Of seven Crlmlnology we must convince Governor Reagan's at OCMC since UCl-CCM moved to quest. . students involved in the· -profect, II.id office and the UC Regents our plan is a Orange County five years ago and Bf· Former mayor McWhipney~ 40"-~ ci-Tllesday. ~ good ooe." fl.llated with the coWtty general hospital. ty planner Fujita, 3,, are M!CUleQ of The S'f.'Vey -wtikh wu sent, to 130 The agreemont with the COWl!y on the demanding 110,000 from Mile Sqliare l!ark randomly",.(~ Students and murned ' One other slicking pcint related lo the relationship o! OCMC to UCI i. crlllcal to farmer George Murat with ihf· thr..,1 by 289 -lesJ 11Ji1a> ooo llllrd of ! per- spending of $38 million of UC health the UC Regents ultimate approval, van that noopaymell'\ woultllinean the Ion Of ~ ce"' say tJ:!eY u9M heroin regularly. sciences bood moneys is agreemeot with den Noort suggested Tuesday. his lease at the Fountain Valley llc:reage. · About . percent'liid th'J' had taftn 1Dr"ange County on the improvement of Tbe UC ~eols have been burned It is alleged that Mural was pres.!IW'td any barb! rates, ampi)ttamblel or LSr;>. Orange Oxmty Medical Center and a twice in counfy h011pltal takeover deals in into paying $5,000 ln casb and a further . Marlj proved much more posiu!ar. long term affiliation or other agreeme11t the past decade, van den Noort said. $5,000 in UR fonn o{ a check made with three t d rour saytic they tried tt between UCI and the county. Costwise, the "track record isn't very 'payable to a county's supervisor's cam-at least • and one out of tour c:lalln· While flO million would be spent for a ·~giMoodu.'i:i' ~~iii!i;iiiii~~i!s'~iiiSi~iifirp::;at~gn~fu::;n::;d::;. ===========ili~g~1o;:;;~"=a;:bou:=t=once~=·~W>~«~k~. =::;;;;;;;; campus lmpital and $2 million for com· I~ :, ,_ munity clinics, OCMC and county GEM TALK go~mment will get $9.5 million of UC · . money if an agreement is reached on several key issues. Dr. van den Noort told students at· tending a student health center advisory committee lecture, the qi.ajor question to be resolved by negotiation with the coun- ty is : "Who picks up the $9 million a year expected deficit ?" The Commuility clinics, the UCI teaching hospital and a smaller, county hospital stalled medically by UCI (as It is (.M>W), the acting dean said, would io-- volve a "$45 million operaUooal budget each year." * * * TODAY by J, C. ·HUMPHRIES ' i ' ' " COME SEE TliE diAMONd $liAp\;•Up New UC Irvinei~Graduate t" • ;. ~: DIAMONDS FROM THE SEA From the floor of the sea, oU the coast of Southwest Africa, gem quality diamonds are being recov- ered through use of modern dredg- ing equipment. . " • • S~hools 'Unlikely' Now Chances of UC Irvine having gradua te schools of architecture, law or veterinary medicine in the near fulure are slim. Dr. Joseph McGuire, Univer&ity of c.Ji!omia vice president for ptamlng, told the UCI staff OOWlCI! Tue,,day that such addl~ study programa a~ doubtfal In the Immediate future !or UC!. Mc<Ju!re noted that the San Diego and · Rlverside campuaes already have made requests for law. ICbools, and prospect.s are not bright ror any of the requests beca-o( tight f\tlldll!c. and .. btllel by many lawyere that thece are a!J'eac!y enough law schools If' the state. Irvine'• best bet for t 1T1duate school would be in veterinary mediclne. Another UC! spckesman oald there )1a,IJ been 19"•1 interest In a condnumr tduciuon center' for liOcnsed veterin8rian1., The proposed center would be run ~ the CoU~e of Medlcint ~l UCJ,' ~· lta(lecf' by faeulty rftembcrs tron1"fiC Davis, where the state's only school of veterinlry medicine is k>cated, '1fcGWre said UCI can expect slow, but healthy growth in the nea r future. 'M1e . . ,. 1985 esti~ate for studeOt M~l, be said, Wou\d remain at lOjOOO 1:t. '"'• mark first. listed in a UC stu'dy· ln t'ebruary, 1971 .. oCurrent enrollmen~ is ~)' 7,000 studaits. • •. , • r "" Mc(Juire sqid that Ute UC! t In a ·bolter ptl\in 'than .MIJDe al•, other e1mjlu&el blcaust il · .. ~ ve u,o... tlt'11"'dtiat• d I v I & l o n • , 'ro(esetonal ·-1s, plua the ca!U9ptta College cf l4<llclJie (CCI>{), a aetUJ!'Whlcil, promote. ihleM:lll'riculum study, while allowilJi for · speclallutioo. The vtce president said that despite cul> In US sys"m funding, completiol\, of the new adm inistration buU<ling is assured. The proposed ·1>as1c medical science classroo m laboratory bulldlng at UCICCf..1 rem ains in questioo. Adlfitional Con11tructlon. hoy,·evcr, wou1d be limited, .tie did. Mc:Cuire s.nld the siluat.ion throughout the UC system shou ld Improve n the rtnandal and politico! climale changes. He ldded that a rtview board now studies waya to bring together fiscal and academie planrting into program1 which can be more effective with limited flnan· clng . • This unique mining method was initiated in 1962, 35 years after iscr lated surface diamond s were found on beaches near the mouth of AJri· ca's Orange River. This di scovery led to massive sand-moving opera- tions to get at diamond-bearing gravels lying beneath thirty to sixty feet of beach sand. If diamond-bearing gravels were present on the beaches, certainJy lbey must also be present in sirni· lar gravels beneath the water be- yond thoae. beaches. Th is theory led to the underwater dredging system. Original source of these river· mouth diamonds is thought lo he the Kimberley mines, a Ihousand miles away, from which the dia· rnonds were swept down ri ver to the coast. With continuing demand and riS· ing pr:lces ol fine gems, v.•e should see even more innovations in the search for beautiful diamonds. Some girls choose the classicel round di•mond while others ptef•r the graceful merquise, the impressive emerald cut or the fluid peer shape. We hav• some spec- teculer new styles in our collection just mede for fh111 br~lllantly shaped stones, J.C. fiu mph riej JetvPferJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONY[Nll:NT TEll:MS 27 YEARS IN THI: SAME: LOCATION l•11kA1nerl•.,,. -M11JM Cfl•tt• PHONE 141·1401 ' ~ambOdia ijorribing ; ) ltontiniws I PIJNOM PENH !UPU -U.S. ]el fig tfers today bombed and dtstroyed two c;<>Eunlst trucks while lly1ng in support of 1eaguered Cambodian grotmd troops on te 5, field reports said. 'Jle reports said at least two Cam. ~ tr.oo~, yittse._ killed and seven "'olflded in an attad by rebel forces in • ' ('+-j _1_N_SB_O_R_T •• _. __,) • lhl';area 35 miles northU Phnom Pehh. \vhth the gov~nunent soldiers are in- chi!fg rorwatd in' 3.n attempt to clear the hi1:tiWay. Al least 1 J American Fi Phantom and A7 ~air jet.a llew strikes 1n the area frorp late morning on uotll mid-af- ter'f"'n: , . e !30 Students Owted LLOW SPR!~GS, Ohio !UPI I Ant h College otOctals attempted to bre Jc a month-old canfpu,s Strike today by xpelling 30 students and threatening lo e activist faculty members. expulsion notices went out after De$\ of the College Ewen Reagin and oth. administrators tried unsuccessfully Tu~ay to reopen «hqol bulldlngs that ha~ been clos.d sin<e Xpril 20. ~t ~ ,{l~ti.kers l1p¥d arms around the~ buUdbfls and "\urned away the ofi<pls ~ ,.~rowjng eggs. l . ef eporter. Confesses TROIT (UPI) -Detroit Free Press re er Howard Kohn, whose story on ho •he was kidnaRed and almost killed Fri ay night by .. jftsumed narcotics figlf'e appeared io Sdli.da)t.!1 Detroit Free Pr., said~~ay:Ofghl.,the atory was ""[i·e as Ile rela~.J~ ... the newsp~per sa1 today. • hn was suspended by the Free Press pe~g an investigation by a team of feU~w reporters .auigned to check out bis conhi.ctins versions of what happened. e Capitol Wiii Empty SACRAMENTO (API -Prompted by warnings that !he stale'!I 100..year-old Capitol. mighl not stand up in a moderate earthquake. legislative leaders have ordered the builWng evacuated by Sept. 15. . The order, issued Tuesday, affects both houses or lhe Legislature pl us the offices of the secretary or state, lreasurer. lieutenant governor, various leglslatlve offices and the Capitol press corps. e Blore Co11trolled MOUNT LAGtJNA (AP J -Fire fi ghters have succeeded in cutting off a JO-acre brush fire before it rcaeh£'d th£' top of Ml. Laguna, officials say. The fire broke out in heavy brush in the Cleveland National fo,orest Tuesday and spread slowly up the west slope of 6,271.foot Monum ent Peak. About 100 fi remen encircled the flames and brought the fire under control. Tuesday night before ttiey could clear the peak and start down the steep cast slope, a U.S. Forest Service spokesman said. e Vote Sq•eak• Bu SACRAMENTO (A P) -A "proposal lo reorganize California's penal system a~ cut off state subsidies for local probation programs 'has passed its first legislative !est withoul a vote to spare. The proposal by Gov. Rorcald Reagan's Administration \vsis approved Tuesday on ;1 7-6 vote of the 13-man Senate Judicia ry Committee after \vamings of critics that it would be "a backward step." Violations FaU Off SAIGON (UPI ) -The Saigon com- mand reported a new low in Communist cease-lire violatioos today, Sfl over the past 24 hours. but said it \\'as too early to call the drop -signirieant. It was the loy,·est nu1nber or Communist attacks a lleged by Saigon in any 24·hour period since the Jan. 23 ceast-ftre. Violent Nixon Disclo·se ' "': He Limi d liiquiiy I . •oid·,Jt fo .. ~ See11r~ty WASlllN<mlN (UPI ) -Pnoldoa4 Nls& lu dilclooecl for the fut\ U.,.,)I, hod «dlnd hl4 two top aldes, ltlft. "'"""-IDcl Jalln D. )!:rllcllman lo llmlt the Watttsate In~ U. said be did It to proUlct 1'gbly Rnl!llitlve ''natidQal ·security operalklnl1' 11eiJ1i ClCllduot<cl by the CIA am the ==:-ii: .. ~ impede~ But be conceded !bat some ol biJ lides probably wmt beymd bis cllJ:ectives and attemp<ed to bide !&gal activities which they and olhen hacl imdertalten in bis btball. NIXON Al.50 l-5ed Tuooday that be -.. ClOllCUMd about . '"""' "' ....iuve (OV<mmfllt .....is and -le Wilence In 19711> lhel be. ap- proved • J>la!i allowing -agmts to break and ... ter pnmlJeo but "Withdrew the plan btca1111e ol ~from IJleq FBI dir-J. Edpt-. · . The dtsclosurea time ·ln an Si>o&• Blatem"1t In which NltO.. admltled - also for ·the !Im Um• -. that other "unethical al ·well u Ulepl activ!Ue•" were oommitt..i by bis s1JllllOrleTs during the 11112 campaign. • l'llJon ~ ~ .... ...,.. tllat his form« persoilal att ,llorl>ort Kalm- bail!i; .ol Newport Beadl,. raloocl mor.ey for the d<{ftOdalO. "I UNidffed It my respmsibllity to see that Jhe waterpte cue did Ml im- pinge adversely upon the natiooal securi- 1Y area," he said. "WITH JWoiOSJGHT, it i~ ~ppi;rent thal l abcluld,,. .. (lven'mo<e heed to the warning signals I receiv~ along the way about a W~te coveTUp and less to the reasaunmoe.." lie ·~ 1n'Tjierliapl -ol bis . most damaging admlssJOM that ooe W' ly wam.ing had come from L. Patrick Gray ill, then acllng director of the FBL Gray, he said; had told hilp _u early as las! July I -three w..U ilfter the break·ln and four months before the. elec- tion -that some ranking Nil:cn aides may have been involved in the cover-up. "I told rum to press ahead ~th his in· vestigation," NiJon said, but did not ex- plain why he apparently igno~ this warning wheri he told newsmen six week!i later -on Aug. rr -that nobody then on his White House staff was involved. ' . \ pi'e!JEmive ....,..tatlOO )'ti cl bow the 1 t personally be<amt awar• <I of. wate.rgate. It came as more .,.,.. unfolding dally In Ibo · Sena.~ invesUgatioos into tht matter. I Ni.ron said he was issuing it ao dr•w a distibctlon between the Wa~Oge .• ir and other legitimate nollGoal aeourlty operations and to counter •1'aclne fl UW! more -..atlonal -aJld lnJcairote -o1 the charges that have lllled the hoadlioe! in recent days." He said it was based oo his 0'"1 re«>llectiooa cl what he did and &aid dur-1 ing th6months since the June 17 break-in ' ol the Natiooal Democratic beadquarttn J and he promised additi(lt&l respooaes when further questiool are 'iai!ed.. . .• He said the truth about the Waterpte ' affair •boold be bn>ufht outJn an ordol1y fashion and he was lifting executive privilege to allow his aides to testify .. freely in the case. He said he was so conoerned'about the leaks of national seeurity infonnation in the Pentagon Papers that be set up a special White House unit headed by Egil / Krogh and directed it to find out all it could about Daniel Elllsbcrg's motivet BUGGING LESSON -Watergate conspirator James McCord demon- strates for Senate Committee some of bugging equipment used on telephones at Democratic headquarters. He flnnly denied any personal wrong· doing beyond a failure to be more vigilant in preventing them. "NONE OF these took place with my specific approval or knowledge," be said1 "Tu the extent tbal l may ID 8If'J way have CCEtributed to the climate in which they took place, I did not intmd to." 11IE STATEMENT was the most com· and associates. '!'/ f1 t V"' • . . 1( Chief Aide to Kissinger ,~ Archibald Cox Brother He said he had no prior knowledge ol the Watergate break·in, did n o t participate In and was not aware ol the coveNip attempt and did not authorize exeartive clemency or paynlents to any ol the Watergate burglara to hlllh them up. ~ B . f Thi . s . :'~'i!J ne s en, m mgon :·,;~J.q . ,. ··. Howard Hughes Lawyer Plril (AP) -Htnry A. Kissinger to-SOurces here said they prtsum<d WASlllNGTON (AP) -The brother of nomiriatcd Wat.erote pr ose cut o r Archibald Cox is ao attomeS' for elusive billionaire Howard Hughes whose name has been.linked fur a second time to the widenln·g sl!indal. · · "The mere fact that Hughes' name came up doesn't represent a conflict of interest," Cox said in a telephone in- terview Tuesday nigh t from his home in Wayland, Mass. "But if there is something more to it,'' he said, "then l suppose I would have to find a way to isolate it or dea l with it ap- propriately." . C-Ox' brother, Maxwell, Is a New York attorney who said he has represented a Vesco Surfaces In Costa Rica, Delays R~tuni SAN JOSE. Costa Rica (AP) Fugitive financier Robert L. Vesco has emerged from seclusion in Cosla Rica and said be Would ; not retum U> the United States until a special \Vatergate prosecutor "gets his work w\der way." Vesro was indicted May JO with fonner Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and former Qmmerce Seeretary Maurice H. Stans in connection with a $200,000 contribution the financier made secretly to President Nixm.'s re-election campaign. 1be financier. variously reported in the Bafiamas or Costa Ri ca gince his in- dictment, was encountered in a San Jose hote'I Tuesday n ight. "I really don't want to make much of a comment now." he told a newsman. "I'm planning lo stay here in C-Osta Rica. I don't plan to go back to the States until the special prosecutor gets his 1,1,·ork under way." Raul Espinosa, Vcsco's rep resentative in Costa Rica. added : "There's a political situation there. and Mr. Vesco wants to wait until the investigation has begun." The indictment by a federal grand jury in Ne\Y York charges that Vesco made the campaign contribution in an attempt to buy off an investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commis!lion in- to the financier 's manipulations of Investors Overseas Services, the fore ign mutual fund empire built up by Bernard Comfcld. day contloded a weet·long aeries of talks Sullivan will submit for '!Meu's approval number of Hughes' interests for tbe past with Hanoi's Le Doc 'Do to rtvlJe th~ a PoSSibJe joint clarJflcatlon of the Jan. t2 years. NIXON IN CLEAR, Vietnam peace ilveemont aod preparod 27 Paris peace agreemen\. He said he wa s one of the chief lawyers to return to Wa1btngton to re.port to The South Vietnamese F o r e 1 g n involved Jn a lengthy battle between AGNEW DECLARES Pr..tdent Nbl>n. Ministry said Sullivan came to brio! Hughes Tool Co. and Trans World Thieu on the talks Kissinger and he have Airlines, which ended last January when SAIGON (A P) -Henry A. Kissinger's been holding since last Thursday with Le the Supreme Court overturned a $145-ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)-Vice President chief aide in the Vietnam·cease-fire talks Due Tho of the North Vietnamese Polit- million antitrust judgment against Spiro T. Agnew says President Nixon's in 1f.aris arrived 'in Saigon today, ap-buro and ~'s deputy, Nguye~ Co Hughes Tool. statement on the Watergate affair shows pareotly for talk!: w1th President Nguyen Thach. James W. Mt'Cord Jr., testifying before his "total freedom from any complicity Van Thieu on new truce arrangements. Despite an official blackout of the ta1bl. the Senate Watergate committee, quoted or knowledge whatever concerning Wa-William H. Sullivan, deputy assistant there \VBS growing belief in Paris that fellow conspirator G. Gordon Liddy as tergate or alleged coverups." secretary of state, told newsmCJ) on his Kissinger and Tho have worked out some saying a "Howard Hughes plane" had In a statemeot issued Tuesday, the vice arrival that be will remaJn no more than new arrangements tbey hoped woold been lined up to help a ""'·--lary team president said Nixon had been forced to two or three days, and then '.........,._d make the cea!le-/ire in Vietnam effect1Ye. ...... 15 •'weather an incredible storm of personal t .. .,..,. .... escape after a planned break-in at a 1lbuse and innuendo" from persons who directly to Wa~. There was no indkation what these newspaper publisher's office in Las did not realize national security was at "I am hele to <!OOSlllt with our South might be. Vegas, Nev. ta.Ice Vietnamese friends on actions developing Kissinger and Tho met for tne slrtb McCord's -testimony also indicated s "That he was willing to do this Is a so far 1n connectim with tbos·e.talk:> ia time today and Kissing« said~ WQJld _, that the Nixon ~lection committee tnl>ute to his remarkable mOra.I·coorage Pa.Tis "'and 'to' Comulf on where we go probably return to Washington this even- may have concealed a campaign con· and devotion to duty as President." from there," Sullivan said. 1ng. tribulion from Hughes. 1..:::::-.::::::=::::::.___:_:._:._ ______________________ :.._ __________ _ Archibald Cox said he was not aware lhat Hughes, who now lives in loodon, has been a long·t~ supporter of Presi- dent Nl'fOn ~d 1\that his money haa:" J ligured ln•the 1960:and 1968 elections. Hughes' name also crone up 'during the trial in January of McCord, Liddy, E. Howard Hunt and four other men charg- ed with Ule break-in and attempted bug· ging of the Democratic National Com- mittee's Watergate headquarters. Liddy a rrl Hunt at times reportedly claimed to represent Hughes Tool Co. during trips around the country on JXllitical undercover work in 1971 and 1972. Robert Bennett, a Washington public-relations man who handles some Hughes interests and who once employed Hunt as a ~ter. testified that neither Liddy nor Huiit had been -authorized . to use the company's name and said they did not represent Hughes Tool. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dt!ivtry of tht Daily Pilot is guaran tetd M•nll••·l'rill T: II VIII 11111 -lllVt Jlllr ,,.,.,, •r J :)t '·"'-• c•H .illd v1111r '''' will IH t\"9111111 11 Jiii, C1ll1 Ire t1'1.1n ... 111 1:>11 ,,.m, 11""1!1J '"d ,_I J t II Yft et Ml UCl lV1 )'WU'• C•Pr ty • '·"'· J1111r1111•y. t r I 1.m. SuM1y, (Ill ..,II • c&py "*'• " "~•tM " .,. •. C1!11 1r1 11•1n wMil 11 '·"'· Ttltphonts M•ll Or1n91 ctunty Art•• . ..1.~n1 llilrlll-11 N11llfi1otf9ft l11c• •!Ml Wt1l"'ll!i•llf ..•. '*12» II" C.._,, ... C1ph!r1n1 lt~l'h II" J<tln C11t+ttr1M, Dllll ... llot, i"111~ L•tlJlll , L'-w"• NJtll'ff •..• ftl•UN . : . .b . nr1 ~wciltt;.. 'Olti ... ~WHISKEY PRESENTS IHI . LD'S OLDEST MAL SUMMER AGAIN, EH? l'LL NEVER FORGET THE SUMMER OF '92 WHEN CHRIS COL.UMBUS THOUGHT HE'D FALL OFF THE EDGE OF THE EARTH J BUT NOTHING BEAlS THE SUMMER OF I~ I THAT'S WHEN THEY.IJWeNTED alJ8HMll' 9, TAL.K ABQvt SMOOTH! THAT FIRST TASTE CONVINCED ME ..-----------------"'WHISKEY WAS HERE· 10 STAY! VOU PEOPLE ARE LUCKY. A GLASS FUL.L OF IC°G CUBES, A COUPLE Of FINGERS OF L.IGHT, SMOOTH 8U~ILLS, A SPL.~H l-------------... OF COOL WATER -.••• 1 IT$ THE BEST SllMMER REFRESHMENT SINCE THE ICE AGE. 'IOU SHOULD TRY A 8USHMILL8 AT YOUR LOCAL INN. OR 00 YoU CALL THEM COCKTAIL LOUNGES THESE DAYS? . Weather Eases , -. ~~despread Tlut11.<lerstor1ns Li1iger, However • ... "•l•OH•I W••l~ll ~11~1{1 IOtfCAU t• 1 Alll !SI J •74 · '' .. ..... , 0 Sun, Mt>0n, Tldfls WIOHISOAY St<,,.,d low 1:).1 p.M, t.t T"UllSOAY Ftr1! high , , f !17 '·"'· O., FltJ.1 low l ·S' I "'· ~.· St<ond hlcrh . .. . " n :lJ P·"'-f.O $"CO<ld low '~'' ., ..,, J,f BUSHMIUS SVll • ._ S·•7 '·""· Sth 1~Sl p.1'11. Moo<! l llH U· .. 1.m, S1fl ll:!f 1.m-------------------------------------------- I . , ,Californian Miss Arizona? Publicity • • ' ' . SACRAMENTO (AP) - Local d!ldal1 ol the -USA ~ P18eonl orpnira· tloa .. , tho n!IJ!lna ·--USA Is ...Uy '.a Calllornla llrl and pn-y l::llatJle lo bold Ibo Arlzma lllJlt. But · Sherry Nil, 21, third 1,,,,_...., tn last week's Mis USA Pageant In Now York, 5')'t she Is a bona tide AriJor1a •resident and bas been for the pmelghtmoiXba. ' ~ NIX, who was also Misa MelropoUtan Sacramenlo w\til ... ~ the ttU. In Apr11, "commuted" between Sacramento and P b o e n l i: bet-• S.plember and Aprll, ·her Jl:IOlher Aki Tueoday. : Gov. Reagan Says Ener gy Crisis Real SACRAMENTO I AP I Gov. Ronald Reagan says California faces a "frightening picture" of energy shortages 1b e ca u s e environmentalists ~ve short-circuited power rplantOOll8tructloll. '1be possibility of brownouts in California, as they've hl4 .-1y on the East Coast: ts vtry reel. We mar 11e bavlnl-." Reagan oalcl. 'IW.iay during • Capitol ---r....ion :~ ~ zo Sacrameoto high ~-· Asked _, the state would ldo In an energy crlsls, Reagan raplled, "We may find oot very ~. 'lbere wouldn 't be an awful lot we could do." ... JT JS A frtg,ht.enlng picture, the energy shortage that faces u.t, he said. "So many people i n Cali!omla have concentrated ao much on environmental protection there have been no Polfer plants built. We won't let them bu.lid fossil fuel plants and when we build nuclear power plants along the coast, we're told we can't bave dJose because that mJght be a lhreat and mlifrt hurt the ecology ol the oceai," Reagan . . I .,. Mn. John Nix aaJd be< ....... ......,. ... dauc!Ur WU lllD In Now = ::~to1o'%'m: w<irlt as a model then. LaJt All8Ull. W. 1llI no for the Miu Calllmlla USA d· Uo and loot. WlnoiQc Ille Mill Arimoa COll!<ll tllls Ap11 gave ber a second Ibo! ·a1 the Miss USA tlUe, and thollgb Ille mJssed the top prlza In Newi Yori:. she dld come In ahead of the glrl who !>eat ber tn the Miss Collfomla USA coolest 1ut Augutt, caro1 Hm-ema o1 Artesia. New Yon ollicials o1 the . Miss USA Pag ... t Nk1 TIJeo. day that Mlsa Nix had "'"' mitted five notari %td statements supporting her claim 1o be an ArbJona resi- dent. .,.WE'VE GOT the ce:rtlfica· lions, including Sberry'1 own, signed a nd notarized, and. we're satisfied." sa1d llerbert Landon, executive producer of Miss Universe , Inc .• sponsors of the New York pageant. Carmel Martinelli, director or the Miss Metropolitan Sacramento Pageant, said she )lad almost daily contact with Miss Nix during the time she UPI T.._. RESIDENCY DISPUTED Miu Sherry Nix was certified es an Arizona resldent. ''If she went down there, she went by night," M r .s • Martincll1 said. "Most of the time she Was here i n Sacramento ... DR . LEONARD Stallcup, California director of the Miss USA -Mid be cladiled Mill Nix ... •l!ilble 19 be Get,s Tria l OrllY Coast Qffers He~te& ·6~GuaranteedCertificates bit 1o run tn Artzoaa, but 1'°* M (APt . " :l.•.:-:.;·,;..· ___ ._, ~..;·_ • .__,;.· ___ _;,.:...---------- Mils -"I dool lhink !lie,.. eUgl- ,.. .... not judge and Jiiiy" be ~If/ wbal the judge' • •. Sa· .• ..ae.-..:c "ce Aid. "But yoo can't be a ....i. caJ."lnasslve saturation• ~ ' :... • II;' I FU~erv1 dell of two states. Our llU In the """'· the sponsor (Mrs. Martinelli) .. ., . mu~·1r1a1 of three ~ ~{ :1 .. ·. 16"' '. . ~d· ' Cl b her in Sacramento au the 't.:ltb ~ sfiotlm .: ; : .-• . . e ns1 ers u time The way I look at the Bia <it· .. .,..y~~r-oid " . rules. she couldn't have been Ha~ Gardeits will be ' '~-~ • -<:J'-....:...._-----~------ Mlss ' Arizona." held=~ •!¢hem C.llfornia. •· Mn. Nix said her daughter Tbit1 , e ~y ordered had been living in Phoenix · the~ IO begin July _16 l with an aunt. She said she was RedWootl Oty. On trlal will be modeling in l'lloenlx and also llonOltl ' Antelo, 21, Oscar bad enrolled briefly at the Hemandt:z, 22. and Michael Uni ·1 of • •-· Ramirez. II. versi Y ~ ~~. They •'!'" cbarged wtlll the MISS NIX had tried twice earlier lo win the Miss USA coolest. In 19711, she oompe;ed in the Miss California USA contest 8! MW Rancho Q)rdova, and in 1971 as Miss Folsom. Last year, she angered of· ficials of Sacramento's Camellia Festival when she quit as festival queen to take the title of Miss Metropolitan Sacramento. Miss N'ix is one of four sisters who have won a total of 14 beauty titles in the Sacramento area in recent years. munler ol Joyce Ann Huff on July 2 ol la4I xear .in _, one alleged p8rtldpont .. kl ,... a random sliol .. the trio ..... looking for members of a rival gang. Superior Court Judge Julius Ledham already bad put a gag onler on the ""5e ~ •II< plying to what he said news media could report ~ well as what persons connecected with the case could say. An appeals court st.ruck down the portions relating to ban$ on the media. JN GRANTING 3 defense motion for another trial site, the judge said: , "';I Llnkletter Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.1.9% Passbook. No ~mum. 5.75%-5.92% OneY-Certlfleote $1,000 MlnllTlllft. 6.00%-6.18% Two lo FNo Yeer Cert!flcates $5,000 Mlnlroom. Up lo 90 days loss of Interest on amounts Withdrawn before maturfty on all certificate accounts. MAIN omcl: 9tn Ii Hill, Loi Anltles • ~USl other offlol& WIWtlK at QIWftJtC't P\ACll 39.33 WllshQ atvct.. LA• 388-12$5 u.cmc -2nd" ~. 62!15-1102 HU.,,__ !'"" ............... 714) 191.:ia.1 ---711 WYlhh Bhd.• SS07.S ........... 10th & PacNIC • 831-2341 WU1'COYIKA: bltlend s~na ctr.• S!l -2201 l'AHOMMA CTTY: Cha•" van NU)'t eMS. • a-11n TARUNA: 18751 \lentura BIYd ... ~14 LONQ8EACH: 3rd & Locusl • ..:11·7481 EAST LOS ANGILU: 8th~ Sato• U6-4!l10 DIAMOND MR: 328 S. Diamond.Bar {714) 595-7~ TUm N: SD County Bans Sex Book "It is the rare person within Los Angeles County who has not heard o( the present case and, in fact, not been exposed to expressions of opinion with respect to lhe merits of the case ... and there appears a reasonable likelihood that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had here." The l.IJtlders Club: A new way fo beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every· thing you need from the finest closed-door show· rooms at substantial sav~ ings -appliances, fumi· ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. also provides big dis· counts on tickets to sport· ing and .entertainment events ..• pl us a whole !!st of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership re quire· ment for savers -$2,500 minimum batance. coast borrowers now receive as-- soclate memberships en- titling them to all outside referral services. Ask about Joining at any Coast office. Urwln SG.l.lllre~Qr. ~ (714) 832''6810 LAMllRADA: t11~~~Qr. SAN QURID.J our constituents," oountered auto, can be considerred •ab- Supervisc:r Lou Conde, who led normal' if tt is involuntary or opposition to simple renewal expkM.tive." SAN DIEGO'\'.\P) -The Planned Parentholid ABsocia- tion has """1 ·on1ered by San Diego County supervisors to stop distributing a comic book called "Ten Heavy Facts About Sex." of the contract. He said the "Two ways of avoiding book "bas certaln bad moral IDIWanted pregnancies: .. ~ ~-------­ Supervisors voted f..1 'rues- day to make withdrawal of the boo~ a condition for a 60-day _fxtension of planned parent· hood's contract with the coun· ty for fede ral family-planning funds. Another condition was the ending of birth-eootrol counseling 1o """""" under 18 who are suppcrted by parents or guardians. Supervisor Jack Walsh, the only dissenter, called the board's action "book burn· log." aspects'' and some sectiom control or birth control.'' "encourage vi o I at lo n of "Sex is cool when you are California !late law." ready for it. It is even normal Walsh said county counsel to wait until marriage." Robert Be:rrey has reported The book also has advice on that the book violates no state how to avoid vencral disease laws. and outlines birth control "Ten Heavy Facts About 'methods and abort.ion !aw. Sex" contains humorous draw· It was written by Dr. So! ings • which illustrate such Gordon, identified as a pro- statements as: Cessor of family and child "Masturbation is a normal development at Sy r a c use expression of sex far both Urllvenity. A p I an n e d ma!ef and females." parenthood official said 500,000 copies of the book have been ' ' P 0 R N 0 G RAPRY is distributed to family planning haim.Jess ••• if porno is your groups~ the coontry, and bog, yoo don~ have DlllCb of "this i.. the only area that !hey "WE ARE HERE to an imagination." have had this kind or Fra ternity Goes Bare STANFORD !UP[) - Stanford University has censured a fraternity for a "rush" party that fea- tured five topless dancers, including one who \\•as raffled off to partygoers. "The most charitable judgment is that the party got out of hand and that the local leadership Jost control," said Larry W. Horton. You ca n even buy cars at the "fleet" price a nd mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial spv· ings. The Insiders Club Oil Mar al Lu n... • 217"'941 DlllJHoin-tAllto•PM All°"""" Emptt:Mc ~.-.......,. 9Allto1PM ASSETS OVER ONE BILLION DOLLARS Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You ' " ]; •• ' ' . ' . ' I 'J• .. '. " .. aid. represent the moral beliefs ol "Any sex, hetero, homo or restxJ09e." -------------'--'----'----'--'-==------.'.:======'-----------------:.1 NO MORE TANGLES SPRAY ON CREME RINSE 7oz.. 79c ' I Sunny day savings at Treasu:ry hea·lth and beauty aids department. COPPERTQNE r1 \m SUNTAN LOTION 4 oz. 99c BAYER • I~ ::::1I ASPl~IN fu'o!!1C!M no t3· ..... ___ , lOO's SCOPE MOUTHWASH 18 oz. sac PURL DftOps• lOOTH ~ .. wunu Regula r BAND-AID PLASTIC STRIPS 70's PEARL DROPS TOOTH POLISH 2% oz. 99c CLEARASIL 1.2 oz. 69c w._ .. ,,,,..,, _ _... ___ ~--MoYa.1111. . I GILLmE THE DRY LOOK HAIR SPRAY 11 oz. 99c CLAl,ROL HERBAL · ESSENCE SHAMPOO 8 oz. EFFERDENT DENTURE TABLETS 40's IUINA PAIK Beach & Or1ngetl'lc>rp9 OU1MDA MIUt 1IOI Chltsworth St. ··~DI 3510 lyttr OPEN DAILY 9:30 lo 9:30 • SUNDAY 1 O to 7 h WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victor\/ Blvd. ~AHA No. Of ,Soutfl Coast PLtre l.MIWOOD ,.,..,,. St. t e reasury , ·-•5-<_and __ ondPor1-..tarvo. ~ Glrdtft. c;twe 8tvd. and Mtnc~ ' 1....Wsberdlood~ ' •' I ' -. . f --,-·-~ ~oast EDITION Teday'S" F1...J . • • ' . I • , • • • N.Oli,.!6, NO~ 1.-1, 7 SECTIONS, 98 P~G~S . . . . ' \ ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1973 T~ am5 :1 N N~Wpor . ~ Beed! li.oemea llo•e ttached ab JmpoUe io their aalary Cllb with the dty adm"olotntlon, their •tlomeY 1aid bill';· "'• . · 1" ·•"llitement llharply critical ol ... Ntatlnl ta<lle1 by the dty, lawy.r Stei>iien Silver said both sides have a.,_i lo n\¢[ation by the Ca!Uomia SlateOlo~ ~ice. ,.iw--~ lhe city ol unfair bar- . Jacll!:!j. ''nle city made "' a ~--.. ·~ Jt or leave it' Qffer," Silver . z . . . . . ' Nixon Men • c·~}?espvnded ·r o Th.reat' Jly TOM B~Y ,. .... Deltr ........... :.l veteran Brti1sb editor· Is sugg..ting ill .... artlcle ifveq pruninen<e by Loo- doo 't Dally ~ tbal the Watergate hQne and .tur1laf! were ordered for ''lpec!OI _,..ity reuons. • . ' Wte Hoose aides were responding lo re'uabie ttport.9 that the Cuban govem- mtlll liad "secreUy paid ~ million into [iemicr.i11c··P&rty flmds by a roundabout ...,1e. to help defeat Nixon Jn the ~lial electlon,". cla1ms ~xpress edl1« Ola-Pincher. 1 'Pincher claims be ~ed from "in· ~-circleB" that the O!biw ........ alarmed by the rapidly Im· I pliWiiig relations betfeon the Unlt..i St.tea 11'4 llussiJ ,fol~ · p,...ident ~ I =~lll:e.:i-~e:: DolhOtnitic Party might be !¥' boot I ~~ arti¢e goes ..:,. "~ lllis .' • ..,. J " ,wllallJ~ ... • ... • • l<ftlgn. -. 111. the i-.,_ detmnlned llnil oot it )t .... true." "Ate Pfe11¥Dt NlJm and his aideJ tallln( It .., Ibo cbln lo awid creeling a dlpl\llnolk lnddetlt which eilU!d sabo<qe lhe ne• relalionahlp bet .... the Unltal States and Ruista?" Pinclltt alb. · Ho dalml "It IA known that NJsoo llU&- ieolid lhat Raala sllollld cut Its support I« the Comm.unlit regime oo America's doorstep" ID l'<ltlm llJt the deal that sent V.st quantities d U.S. wheat lo au....ta. "so.iet leader Lemid J!redmev ii said ~ haft act.ed but the Information was -leaked bjl ,.··KromJi!i IWdllner·1o CUban ~ Ffdel . ca;tni who depends on Scmtt. wppori," the. article aoes on. "Castro'• immediate Teaction was to 'do.all· bt cOoid to get 1f11on oot and and ht llnew the Democra~c Party was ~tely abort cl. funct!," Pincher adds. .. Md ,\lll!'Eiiims editor cmcludes' "If ~ llOrY II true there is no doUbt that 'ol!l\Sil IUbltantialion c:ould bt mremely ~ to Bre;llnev whe II due to vjfjf tbe .United States fer fllrllier ta!Jlw oiil IDOPth." , ;~routs Pedaling :ro Aid Hospital · A "pedaJ.a·thoo" sponsored by a 'CQnma, de! Illar scout troo~, wUJ. take 'pilce Satur.iay to raise fWlCJ>. fO< -*""' llVol>o at !l'ilrvlew SUie l;loopital. The' ride. WU organized. ' • D d '!'IOl'dlnlted 'by Eagle SC!>"f ~ Eric: BowlUI of Troop 3311, and wJU atart Trom Ille O>rolia del Mlf Y oulh Olllter. ...._ '~ne ~ will n111 generally i""·· 1.1acArtliUr l!Oalevant lo Jamlidroe ~ to Mab! .Street In Irvine. From then it follo-·6unflo-~'!Oflue,to' lbt · 'Ana ·iu;;Jl bile ttiil·do\in tli Cout way mid baclt-to Corona de! Mar. · • '100ht.s Wtll rid~ 'ilie · Coone .. many llllles as poss_ible ·during t!le. day ~ tato l>led&8 f.11r lbt Fairview IJ.'DOps. l(bJ;;llleilaH'•wUf' be colleeted ~tween IAii'tnh-and Jmie 1. . ; CLASSIFIED AD • I 1J!dNGS HAPPINESS ; J. 'Ni illot dwlfied advertiser is 'bfJipy Woa1lio bt oold his car to the lint penon~bl)ed. llore'abowtheadran: . ' OORSCRJ; '61 T•l'JI• -glass ::l)ad: -· 5 aod, AWFM, ·' "Cthlte, ~e.111f cona. 32,000 ml. " fllll). Call ..... (Phone No.) , 1be .new ~r is now happily driving <N. Mi~bt yoo could bt a little by _nmnlng a suc«ISful Daily iG."llle direc\ 'happiness' llno -~ .· .. .. -.. ~ • r :..r ..:OM:!<. ke~eii Salary Talks Reach lmpa·~se· ' '. City Manager l!cA>ert L. Wynn today deoied -that was ao but concoded that talb Kive bdU:ed down to the point that ootside be[p-is being sought to selUe a v.wk: contract for the 1973-74 fiscal year. "We are perfectly wilting to negoti· ate," Wynn IOSisted. - Wynn •lso denied"' a· claim by Silver tb$ the city's chief negotiator, Adminis. t~t~e ~stant Frank Ivens, had ver· bl!lly.~·t\',;.a IO\lle~ v.;>icb was later ~ •1 hlgl\er al(l)lority. ~ -·-· .. ·-· -· . l.. • -~· f ' "Jvem and l Informally reached a gentleman'• agrtemeDt three weeks ago,"· Silver told. the Daily Pilot. ''He tOld me that be. woq:I just have to talk to some other people, "Then two dayi ago he came back and said he wasn't-able co sell the agreement to his people. He ~e back with the ortgin41 offer the city had made to us," Silver aaid. :.suver sa\d he, "presumes Ivens took the oiler to. the City CQ<mcll." Wynn ~id -Ivens did not bring any 41 f.'~e i•. the Sun :fh~~'} ~n '.PrfclilJlll little s~lllne of 1,1,ie_ ..,d .it S!'"'P<" like ~ood 14ea ip take It W1i9D, \l'here and, hoW YOU 'fuid Il Like this snoozing g~~~ did ~~ aft.moon on a bench in front or t)le •feft!s . 1"1"'61 a~the Balbo,, .Fun.Zone. "' Resident Renewing Suit I On Condominium Project Newpoct Beach resident Allan Be€k has renewed his court suit in opposition to the proposed condominiwn develop- ~on the site of the Balboa FUn Zone. In an amendment to his 1972 lawsuit ~k, .Beek ra;ses several 1 whidl he says prove the ci · _'illegall): """1 it approved "61 • lfil /uri zooe by high . -lbts lllOlllh. • ' 'lhirt '.,; 'tW. pOints the City QJanOU bn>te ill own laws," Beek said. 'T4t'.~ooe elae, the city has cer\ain ~ lhatl .... follow ." Ajl l<r Ml~ by Beek fm:ed the city ~ ' ~ _ ' 1 its action to allow on th! F.n ~· land when a Nd&e .. J;uled,,~ pro~t needed an en-~ hni*t "'•temeot. -~~1',lbt Cl\y "iiu.cn afilmted ils ;;·~~fl·~~ version . " ,..,,~ ..... -pc:o~. and this lime. ix:lUdtd an elivtrdpmentel impart stelepiiin(~RO/t of fta.ooosider~ . ll~~ .~'family ....,. tbe ~lluind !Mry 8dllcertt to the ~ 1aio iti>l>!eny, a11i-.IQ.J11e COll!ldl..,.. lial .. tlllWe ~: -'!'be approved 33-<mJl rpartment buil<!lnr II 35 lee! ·~u. Fctt <!lf!ll\llliqu rrom the citr'• as.1oat fiO!ch~ llnll~ the City Col.llcll must -tin in· CQwicilpian . ~la.ined ~ BERNARDINO (AP) -City QlupclJman NOl'Tis P, Gregoiy Jr. baa ret,iilned'bla oeat In a rocaD election In thO 5th Want. llftuMll today gave Gregory 1136 vol.., In Tuesday'• balloting loJe I« llanlY L.. Brown and 243 for Rudolph c. Agullar. vestigation to determine that it matches the scaJe of surrounding buildings. Beek p contends that this was not done. -The city has a moratorium oo development in residenUal districts of. the city. Althoogti tbe Fun 7.one is rur~ renUy in a commercial zone. Beek ooo- tends tbe moratoriwn applies to all nsidential criWction,JIO matUi' where 't " ,_,... , J JS fll\;Cllo~· • r ' ~ -Beel( aii;9 aays ''l>o ~·person is allowed to presently build units ex- ce<!ding a density ol 1.5 unltS per lol. The condominium .. develOpment i s ap- proximately 2.5 units ." .. ' Beek says he is not oage< to lry the new suit bec&Use of the hi.gh legal costJ involved. "I hlpl! that the C.O.Slal Cooservatlon Commission will do its job and turn doW11- the project. If U does, there wtlf be no need for the lawsuit. '1 The suit is now scheduled to be heard June 2fi. Air Noise Foes Set Meeting Tonight Airport. Action Associates, a Newport Beach group opposing expansion <ll Jet lraflic at Orange County Airp:irt, h"s scheduled a publlc meeting tonight to stlidy f150 million in pending lawsuits against the jell. 1be meeting, wlilch is an errort to make all the sulll by homeowner> and local govenunent.s more tibderetand.lble, will tat•~ o1 o.-~t\or mg11 School auditorium 11 :rill( ' -11 ~ ' offer 10 him -or to C'OWlcilmen. Ivens, reached lete this morning, said he never made any unwritten agreement "You don't make gentlemen's agree- ments in meet and conter,'' he said. He admitted that Silver had made an offer which he'd agreed "to take under advisement . "But I never told them I'd take some. thing · back for .somebody else to a~ prove,'' Ivens said. Wynn said his aide "baa COlllplete authority and respomibility" to negoti· ate a contract. Wynn said only if a total impasse is reached would negotiation be taken di· rectly to couneilmen. He said he didn 'l consider the talks to be at a real "impasse" at the present time. . "An 'impasse' is when you go to the council and say we absolutely cannot reach agreement,'' Wynn said. Sliver said the stumbling block., not surpris~ly, ~ money. "The ctly historically has had a poJicy Call ~irl, D!"ugs to pay firemen the average that nine olher cities in the com:ity pay timnen." Silver said. "Now, Newport Beach ranks at or near the bottom. They're battling it out with Costa t\1esa for last place," he said. Silver conceded that on an hourly rale. Newport Stach ranks somewhat high- er. but that city firemen are still below average. Silver said firemen finl asked to be !See FIREMEN, Page ll Minister • Ill Britain ' Quits • Ill Sex Scandal . ' LONDON (UPI) -Lord Lambttt>, a government ml:nbter who resigned TueS- daf nl~t io Slit.,.in's mo&t explosive au, security and .drug scandal In a decade, confessed today he did ao because of a "casual acquaintance" with a call girl whose huaband tried to sell secret photographs Or them to newspapers. "But there has been no secmity risk or blackmail," Lambton, 50, insisted in a statement handed to newsmen by a political aide. • :JI('' Def etidant'.s . .. ., . . Plea for Life Orange County Sherill's deputy Andy Romero today told a Superior Court jury how delendant Oarl EcUtrom begged for bis life in an encounter lhat immediately followed Eckslrom'• aUeged slaying ol two Los Angeles Cu.mt)' deputies. "I fired one shot Crom my shot.gun and he fell near tbe f~." Romero te:ttlfied. "He held his bands iii t1Je air u he lay on the ground and bi.told me 'pleaae don't kill mt' ... Rqmero. told proeecutor Robert Chat· tertOll !bat he babdculled Eckstrom, took away the defendant's automatic rifle and then tl.U'lled to see what he could do Co.r Los Augeles · iheri!f'1 delectlves Carl Wilson and Donald Schneider, both 40. lie found Schneider dead oo the porch, almost ripped apart by a volley of gun fire deljvered through the screen door as the officer, gun in band, kicked at the front door of Eckstrom's home at 835t Flight SI., Midway City. Romero said he found Wilson dying on the lawn, shot in the chest and buttocks by a second bunt from the same gun that felled Schneider and which was pro- duced and identified in court today as (See EKSTROM, Page Z) Corona del Mar Hill Homes Feel Power Blackout Al~ than lll!O ~omes in tbe bills above dxiia8 de! il!m-"'5'• blacked 001 by an earl)'·Jllor:ning power (allure today and at lea.st 100 homes were left without elec· tiietty unUI mid-morning . South~California Edison Company official.\ " ttaey still haven't traced tile cause.. the t :19 a.m. outage, so far attribt.lted to a short somewhere in the circuit aen;Uw homes south of Ford Road t;etween <old and new MacArthur Boulevards. .... "We bad ~ kind of system failure that caused theJ..ctrcuit to oiien up and eui the power.," said SCE public rela· liOl'lS otticer ~r( Burbank. "We man- aged to pick up a majority of the custom~ era~on other drculta by about 6 a.m." Biii tbe faUon \o.ft scores or homel in !be Harbor View Homea area, without electricity untfl neirly 10 a.m. A nunlbtr ol SCE 9&Vice trucks were on the acene from early rooming and at least one Newport Beach city truck and crew was on the scene. Ulliltles Enpteer Norm Fleece said this momfng the truck WAI used an IS 1..Wllary power eource to hep sewage flowing ·illto the city's forte mains. The Harbor View Homes sewage pump ltl- llon is electrlC']lOWel'ed. t' '• Within hours, the oCfice of Attorney General Sir Peter Rawlinson announced that summonses alleging 11 1 e g a I possess.ion of dangerous drugs have been issued against Lambton. It said he is being charged with possession of marl· juana and amphetamines . The Evening Standard of London said special agents for three weeks have been investigating sensational allegations "about vice ring improprieties involving government ministers and o t he r • .t. 't .•.. ·'··. ;. r •• .:. SUCCUMBS A'! .~i -; Good List.nor Oakden . Death Claims - Ver gil Oakden, 'Good List.ener' People uoed to come. :Uoo> miles around to lean ~-the ~r at Balboa Cleaners in Newport Beacli and pour their troubles lnto the sympttbetlc ear: of Verfli Oak~. ' ~ . · - Now I.he mI!ling, cooglniai man who made the Balboa Penlnjula his borne .11lnce 1945, is gone . .He dJed Monday at 8l, the victim <ll a heart altaek. "Everybody -kids, t.eenagers, young marrieds and Jlttle old ladles -would come to Verg w~ P>ef had problems," Neva, his ·wife o/. 33 years, tecalls. "He was the best crying towel in the whole com mun.tty.·~ ~ _ Mr. Oakden came .to Newport Beach after bJr years of service as a para~r ill World War IT. fW was an orlginal member or the famed &2nd .Air~ Dlvjsion, noted for its tenacity. in confltc\S like the Battle of tbe Bulgt. Mr. Oakden's Company "C" of the OOllth Battalion was the most h;ghly decorated unit tn the division for m-OSI of the war. He came <bome witJ> 1-silver star. bront.e star and lhe French Croix de Guerre 11T)Orig other medala and saw service Jn North Africo, ltely, Sicily, Normancty and the Middle Ea.ti. Mr. Oakden joined his wUe srter tbe war at the dry cleanillg bMittesa started by hJs bralber-in-law-In the early 1940s. lie worked al tit• ISO E. Balbott BIV<j. shop unlil his death. He was a charter member of the. Newport lltach Elt1 Lodge. a charter member of . the 82nd Airborne Msocia- (Ste OAKDEN, Pap 1) figure s." It said at least one other government minister is lnvolved. The London Evening News said the glr1 is a black call girl named "Betty'' and that a man calling himself her husband tried to sell "incriminating photograph!" of the girl and Lambton to a British newspaper for $25,000 . Lambton quit abrupUy Tuesday night "for personal and health reuoos" as Parliament Wl.dersecrttary for the Royal (See SCANDAL, Pare I) Gunman · Robs Bank: in Mesa ' ,. Of $5,2(}o A sandy-haired bandit who initially asked for chang6' tor a $10 bill flashed a gun al a teller 1\t ..... y and escaped with more than $5,200 from a Costa Mesa bank. The 2:15 p.m. holdup al the Bank of America, %701 Harbor Blvd., went o(f smoothly after the sJender, six-foot gun- man ordered a teller to turn over her money. "He walked in, got the money and left," said one FBI •aent loday. "He walked out with ~,298.08,"·Bank , o( America public relations 1poketman Jon Waahlngton sald today, plnpolnllnli the precise amount taken. Jhveatigaton raced to the bank: at Harbor BouJevard aod Adams Avenue but found no trace ol. the bandit, who quietly alli>ped·oul throUgh a rear door. The unldenlif!ed teller confr!lllted dur· ing the robbery whIC?i occurfed whlle eight persons were present said the gun· msn ~llplayed a revolver to show he meant business. , Authorities did not disclose im- medlarely whether any pel'IOllflel ac· livsted the bank's scanning camera to catch a portrait of the robber in action . The bank branch at Harbor Boulevard and Adams Avenue la one or the more· o!ten-robbed financial institutions in Costa Mesa, apparen\ly due to its loc•' t~n. • ~ · or ... e .t:eut Mostly sunny' on ~~y. after !he early mominc lOw cfouds, with litlle temperature ctiinge. Highs in the 60s at the ~cbe.s, riAing to lbe mid-'ros inland; OVernight lows in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY ResPonding ·to t1><. Tevelation t~t the eou~·, 'chief gas S"UJ> pher mwt cu.t.. tilt amount of f~L he can ~lfV'er, supen.risors ordered oll ,dtpcrtfricnts to cur- tail rioneftb\daL Qa1 ttse. See storv and.. othtr cou11t11 news '"' Pag., IO•na ll. ..., ... ..,,.,...... ... , 1,..M. .. .,.. JI ... 11... ... C•HfM'1141 S C•l'fff CWMr I ti.11tfl9ll .... ttfrllcl ,. c,..._-. • DNftl Melle" II 1"111119!UI fl•.. ' •llte<1•"'-' »41 ""'-' U •tf ,.., Tiit ._., '' ......... ~ .... lll!IMl"1 11 ' • . • • • • ;t DAILY P1UIT N • Not Legal- . Caulfield • WASlllNG'l'ON (API -John J. C.ulfield teotllied today that he knew It was Ultgal for him to qtfer eucutive e:ltmency lo Jame! McCord, but did it anyway because he believed the ofter Carne from Pruktent Nixon . 11It crosaed my mind that this con- ceivably W88 from Preeident Nil.on, 1 Mlleved it," the former White Hou~ -said. "Caulfield told Senate Investigator! ht knew the olfec ol clemency to McC«d was an illegal obslructic:l'i of Ju stlce. McCord wa! on trial at the tlme for burglary, wiretapping and conspiracy in che Watergate cue. "What I'm aaylng to you , slr, ts that fAf loyalty to 1he President of the United Statee overrode those oonsklerttlONI," Caulfield Aid. But he repeated earlier testimony that he'; had no personal knowledge that anyone higher than former presidential counsel John W. Dean Ill authorized the offer. Preside~ has denied that he knew about or authorized clemency of· t'ers to any Watergate defendants. r,'Caulfield disputed ooe Important part d,. McCo rd 's story. He said McCord was NIXON SAYS HE 'FEARED FDR SECURITY'-P1g41 4 trying to stay c\ut <II jail al tile time the clemency offent weno made. McCord bat said he rejected tbe of(ers ol. cfemency on ground! that ...,,. gullty perties Vdll'en't belng proeecuted. and were trying fabely to blame the Central Intelligence Ageocy, his old employer. '"1laultleld' "'9tlfled It the Senate'• lt!eVlsod Watergate bearlnp. ·-Re was aaked ~ Sen. Lowell P. Welcker (R-OJnn.). What he meant when he testilied that he had considered he wu doing a "great service for the hesldMi:" when he offered clemency to McCord. "••Jt was a great honor ror me to serve a!I a member of the President's staff.'' ci.ulfield said. "I had come from a ;!Kher humble background, a police or- fl'ttr ... I f'elt very strongly about the President, extremely strongly about the J1residenL • .__ "1 was very loyal to the people J work· ed for. J placed a high value on loyalty. NlfW cut or the blue I'm injected into this scandal. I'm being asked by ooe or my f{Jf'mer m.iperiors to deliver a message that I know to be execuUve clemency. 1 tried to ayoid it ... " ,-,;~,.~,~ j •4 Newport Mayor's Sott Succtunhs . . After Illness . · D. AJan Mc Inns, !IOI'!. of Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mcinnis and a self-em- pioyed avocado rancher from Carpenter-- ia, died today after a long bout with ,tlQdgk in's Disease. He was 26. · The younger h1ctnn is died early this I®rnmg at st. Jooeph's HQiSPital in Or- ange alter being rushed lo the special treatment ward there by his father Mon- day. 'Mr. Mclnnl s was a native of Rosh City, Minn ., \\'here the family liv ed UJ'!til Mayor Mcinnis accepted a Job with Northrop oporation In Anaheim. He is now a Northrop vice president. Mr. Mcinnis was a 196S graduate or Newport Harbor High School and start- ed attending college at Orange Coast O>llege in 1966. He is survived by his wife, Irene, his .parents and a sl1ter, Mrs. Marilyn Wynia. Servi ~ will take place Friday at l p.m. at Pacific VJew Memorial Park .C'hapel with buri a\ to follow at the cem- ,metery . Rev. Will am R. Eller, of Luth· · eran Church ol the~ .in Laguna Hills, will conduct the services. The farnib" has suggested memorial contributions 10 the American Cancer Society. • • OIAN .. COAST Ill l1tj!ij;1t.11 1"11• Ore.., C-1 OAIL 't !"IL.Cl, with '""'let! 11 corn1>1....i .. Hl'Wl·l"rus, 11 Pllbll'°"" W Ille Or•llO'f.l;Hll P\lllllllllflt C..,.....,y. 5-· <l lr edll-i re Pl#M~, -..cl•Y thr""91\ Frkl•v. IOI' (O)il MM-. ....,,.., 11 •• ,11. ttunl\fllllDn BtlK~/,1><1'11111\ V1Uey, L1911"1 8ffCI\, lrvlMl•addlM<tctl 11'111 Sii\ C .. IMnlll .J1" J 111n (lp!11r1no A 11"'911 r19lon1! ed!fkln It M ll•llld S..IUnll)'I Ind Surt•hr1. ,~. D"rtCI0-1 P11ll!l1~l"11 Pl•nl 11 el JJO w~,, ••v $••Mt, .C:••1e ~· C.Ul9rnl1, •~11. lob•rt N,. Wood p,.._ldtfll _,,. PllO~ Jeck 11:; C:.1J Ylct l',.._ldtfll tl'd 0 Ml"'"Ot' Thorn•• Ko1wU EOll'Or l blW'!ll A, Murph>11• JoA.•Mtl"' E•ltw L P1t•r J(,l•t ~ .. l(tl(JI)' l!.illl' ---JJ,J Now,.t. louf .. tt4 Melllat Udrt11 1,.0 .191 1115, 92661 --CO.M MllM: Al ""'' .. ,. S!•M1 UIUM ... (tl1 tlf JI-I A-H~ NIOI! 171171 a.di ............. SM o.-ttr JH ...,_, 91 (lomlM ..... ,~ ...... (7141 642 .. lJl a-NW A._Wltt '41·1671 eenrltflt. '"L Or•,,.. C..u l"lliltl.nlntl ~II\' ... ,.... .,.,..... l1"11tr•ll••· .. l,.,.i.t • -•tor .,. ....... ,,......... '*'''" mlf -._. ....... wltflDoll tPl(lll ...... ..... ""'"'~'--· lftllNil cll'M ~ ... MW II Coet1 ...... Coll"'"'\I, ~-W e•""" AU 1MnllllY1 "" IMll Q,jJ !Mf!llll•I "'41'"'"' ... 11 ... ,,_ .... l'!lflll'llJ'. • ' Acceuory in Tofs Murder A 'ouni mother 111bo •dmlUed Iii Ille courtroom that she l<nrt her !!o)' ,... dud wlleJl.ll\t 1411.d gcf: be was mlsslll& Jliead· - ed ~ lo chaiPi.tf'~ a ~ry IO hit l!!Urder. • " ' bRAHGI! COUNTY Sul!irior Court Jodge Kenneth Lao beard the con!..mon and sent Sandy Rockwood, 17, of Oran ge, to the Fron· tera Prison for Women for a pr.sentencing s!udy. She will be re- turned for sentencing Aqg .. 20. Miss Rockwood'• report April 13 that 3·year·old Todd Rockwood was missing from the home she shared with Larry Wayne Cobb, 23, sparked an intensive search of the area by more than 500 lawmen and vol\lnteers. THE HUNT ended when Cobb led P-"lice to a shallow grave in the Anaheim Hfl1s area where the child s body was unearthed. Cobb will be arraigned Ma y 29 in Superior Court on charges of first degree murder . It is alleged that a beating he administered led lo the child's death April II. Therapist at UCI, Tells Of Help to Vietnamese 81 MARCI DODSON Of tti. DttlY l'llet Stiff Medical facilities and supplies for South Vietnamese civilians maimed In the war are desperately lacking, Dorothy Weller, a physical therapist wbo worked four years in Vietnam, said Tue9day. Poor medical care led Miss Weller's group; the Amerlcan Frie nds Service Committee (AFSCI , to establ~h a rehabWtation center in Quang Nai, South Vietnam, she told students at UC Irv ine. Ml.ss Weller spoke to students as part o( Make Your O\vn Peace Week, a na- lional week promoting worldwide peace. Prior to the establishment or the center in July of 1967, Saigon had five rehabilltatioo ceater11 which served only soldiers. CiviliaruJ had to go untreated, she said. The typical patient at the Quaker center had·· one or more amputations. plus several burns, fractured bones 8l1d infections, she said. She added that the injuries were most often caused by U.S. bombs and weapons. "We first bed to establish a rapport with the people," she said. The Quakers learned the language and avo ided milil.ary enclaves because the ci vilians were fearful of the American soldiers, she added. Vietnamese civilians live in "an absolutely paranoid society," yet their fears are realistic because they have lived with bombing and killin g for so long, she contended. ·~war is a way of life With them." Miss Weller estimated that "well over me miJUon" clvtlianll have been se•erely disabled. However, she aaid the focus of the Quaker. rehabilitation ctmer was not to ~ ,~ bul ,to educate the South vJe~ In proslbellc.s, the making or artlftctal limbs. In litl7, the center was otaffed with 19 Quakers; today, four Quakers and 58 Vietnamese operate the center. She said the !our Quakers remain<d to protect the center from incursions from the govern- ment Jf South Vietnam had a responsible goveftlllltnt, the Quakers would have left, but the current "corrupt" govern· ment would abolish or mi suse the center if they left now, she asserted. She said that although the rehabilila· lion center Is the AFSC's only current project, the committee has sent a From Pf1f1e l FIREMEN ... pald the average of a total of 12 oth er cities. ''I don't know what percentage in· crease that would ha ve been," he said, "it would be about four -six pe rce nt now. We asked fo.r another adjustment next January to keep pace." SPEAKS AT UCI Therapist Weller representative to South Vietnsm to study lhe Vietnamese's problems· and their priorities. He will rn a k e recom- mendations to future AFSC programs, she said. Miss Weller said the Vietnam war is "defin itely not over," and the Nixon ad- ministration ha.! d~ a "terrific prop- aganda job" In coo\>lnclng the· public that the oonfllct ·is resolved. She called for Congress to appropriate money .to international agencies, such as UNICEF, for the reconstruction of both North and South Vietnam . American agencies could not heed the reconstruc- tion programs because "Americans are detested over there," she said. Miss Weller asked the students to write to their congressmen and urge them to vote for reconstruction programs. House Sustains Veto on Budget Aide Approval WASHINGTON (AP) -The House lo- dav sustained President Nix.on's veto of l" bill to requi re Senate approVil of his top two budget aides. , The veto to override ,ttie veto was 236 to 178, or 40 short o,( the required tw~ th.irds. • "chardson ·Confirmed ~~.·~nate WASRl!IGTON (AP) -The Senate Judiciary Committee today approved Elliot L. Richardlon's nomination as at- torney genera). C!Jalrman James Eas!land said the vote waa unanimoua. Leaden aald they would lry lo brin« Richardson's nomination up on the Senate for cooflrmallon laler In the dly. The objection c[ a •lnile senator would force a delay until tomorrow. Democratic Leid.,. Milie !.\l!>lfleld said : "We'll try lo take It up late !Oday." Republican Leader Hugh St!!Kt, • ...,,. mittee member, said iD a4Y~. of the committee vote that he e;Qeeted e. unanimous re c ommt'nd·atlon for Richardson's conflnnation. "The commit"" had a chance yester- day to contrast a thief and • Harvard man, and I think It w1ll Vllle . for Ifie Harvard man," ht told newsmen. Asked wbo the tbief was, 5'coll replled In an obvioul nilennce to Doniel EUsberg, • de[endant In Ille Pentagon Pa!><(S caoe, that "he wao sitting b;!. lhe audience.~' "It wu a little shocking to me to see a man who confessedly ~!olned cW.silied infonnaUon acting as amicu.s curia to the Judiciary Committee," Scott Wd. "It WU chutzpah." be aaJd. "It also WU gall, ll WU allo Indecent, ll WU also con~ptlble, and I don't Jlke lk" Tbe commltteo tOopened ita )learlngs on Rlchantaon'a nomination yesterday alter Ellsberg ccataded s o m e Democratic members. EUsberg cootended that Rlchard!OI\ al· tempted to conceal information about a break-in In t he office of Ellsberg's psychlatrist in Sept~mber, 1911. Richardson, testl!ying with unac- customed vehemence, said that his efforts were dlrected toward maxi.mum dis- closure rather than any cover-up. West N,ewport Group Studying Prop. 20, Harbor """""""'° 20 and plans fer a new harbcir In West Newport Beoi:h will be the main lopiCI <ii discusak>n Thunday at the annual membonhlp mettlng <JI the West Newport Improvement Alloci1UOoc """""'k "Bill" Bannlni Ill, ~live repmenllng more than li()O acra al!>Di the blulli behind West Newport, will talk aboot plaM for the West Newport Har· bot-from ltls viewpoint ., repmeutalive <i the major landowner In the area. The association, which Is open lo all residents <i West Newport, will also hear comments by Lido Isle resident Judy Rmener, a member pf the SOutb Coast Regional Coastal Conservation Comml&- .slon established by Proposition 20. She is expected to discuss the impect of. the coastal protection Jaw on property in West Newport and what the fuhn holds as far as development in the area is concerned. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. In the new West Newport Children'• Libr~, 6000 W. Coast Highway. Bridge Hike Opposed SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -A proposal before Golden Gate Bridge directors to raise the toll from 50 cents to 75 cents on the historic span .. bas drawn opposition from the Marin County Board 0£ Supe rvisors. Ul'IT ....... ''10 SECURITY RISK' Britain'• Lord Lambton F~mPagel SCANDAL. • • Afr Force. Heath will make a statement to Parlia- ment on Thur.sdc.y on the affalr, govern- ment o£ficlals said. They said there would be no official comment until then. Labor opposition members of Parlia· ment bombarded the government with demands for an explaoatioo of the allega- tions published by the West German magazine Stem. '"ntis ls the sordid story," Lambton said today in a fonnal s~tement issued by an aid~ in his Be..rwick~·Tweed con- stituency. "All lhai" happened l.s that some sneak pimp has seen an op- portunity ol making ~Y by the aale of the story and secret photographs to papers at home· and abroad. "I behaved will. credulooa stupidity," l.Drd Lambton added. "I m'l.fl repeal thst there has been no hlgh llle vice ring, no security .leak, no blackmail and, as far as I know , no poiiticlag of any party is remotely connected with these even ta:." Stem sald the alleged "vice scandal" involved a senior Brltish diplomat with aristocratic family links and access to military secrets. It said be frequented luxury brothels in Paris, London, New York and West Gennany. After Lambton 1Bsued his statement, a Stern editor in Hamburg sal.d bf! waa the man referred to in the magazine's story. Some British newspapers de!c:rtbed Che Stem allegations as the most sensational in Brita.1.n slnO!! the Cbrfltine Ketler ta· and·security samdal hlt the headllnea 10 years ago, involving former War s..,..tary John Profumo and neorlJ toy p~ the goverament ol ftlnner Primo Minlsler Harold ~cMlllan. ,, ' FromP.,el ECKSTROM. • • Eckstrom's weapon. Eckstrom, 23, has pleaded innocent by reaaon of insanity. Judge WUliam C. Speirs will order the same jury to return for a sanity bearing 1£ the slightly bull!, boyish defendant i• found gu!lty on twc counts ol first degree murder. Eckstrom faces slmilar charges 1n l.<>1 Angele• Coonly. He has been tentatively scheduled to face trial there Jtme 'rl. It is alleged that Scbotkler and Wllaon tracked him to Midway City after Ec ks trom shot ty,·o girls and a men who tried to help tbem in the parking Jot of a Cerritos shopping center. The man and one of the (;iris died. Romero today told the jury that he was assigned as the backup man for Wilson an d Schneider and he squatted behind a fe nce Jast Jan. 4 lo await the results of their attempts to flush Eckstrom from the home. "l heard about lO to 15 shots near the house," the deputy said. "Then I heard another 10 shots and I saw bullets hitting the gra ss not far from me. Chancellor . -:.. . ., To Defend Policies Dr. Norman E. Watson, chancellor of • the Coast Community Oollege Distri ct, toolghl l.s prepared to defend the district's policy ol holding secret meetlnl•· , He will offer his ren1arb at • p.'m.. during a .,..ting i of;~-.Boa&d ol Trulted at d!Jlricl, lliadq"""'I 1370 Adami Ave., Costa Mesa. , An Item on the agenda relates to a Daily Pllot editorial questioning lhe board's practice of scheduling unannouneed secret exewtlve seasioos prior to each regularly schedu.led board meeting. The editorial also asserted that meetings during which trustees fulfilled their roles as directors of KOCE-TV were not announced, as requlred by the state anti-secrecy statute, the .Ralph M. Brown Act, In a written report included in tonight's. agenda packet, Dr. Wat.son maintains that "penoilnel sessions" have been held by the Wstrict's board for 2.6 years and . are scheduled one half hour before the board meeting . He adds that this has been done to avoid having the aud ience "stand by" while the board is in privatfl session. . The allegation concerning unannounced TV meetings, the chance llor maintains, is "categorically untrue." 1bere has only been ooe such meeting -on Sept. 20, 1972 -and an announcement d. the meeting was sent to the Daily Pilot, along with )'.! ot!!er newspapers, ac-· cording to Dr. Watson. · The Ralph M. Brown Act specifies that the public's . bus.ines.t be cooducted ~ public and bans all secret meetings ex - cept under specific circumstances in! volving personnel matters and pebding liti ation. ~ Brown Act requires written nollficalloo of special non,scbeduled meet~s sent at least 24 hours before thtl meeting to anyone who requests it. It was asserted in the Daily Pilot editorial that there has been no notifica· tlon of TV station meetings and that district board meetings are not being coovened at the announced time, a:s man· dated by the Brown Act, but at an unan· nounced time belore the officially scheduled a p.m. meeting. 2 Rob.bers Miss $30,000 Gem . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Whlle looting a Union Squarfl area store of $400,000 in dlamoods, gold and expemfve watcbel, two robbera dteMed a , .....1anen missed the shop'• lllOll ••• pensive ittm -e $30,000 diamond, police ukt • • .Tha,thlefts-illioed eotrance Tuesday by fo.rctng, owner Gunther Zimmermann to open the door as he arrived, Zllll' merm81Ul said. Ztmmennann was struck co the cheek with a pistol when be aiowly opened the sale, they added. Plwne Strike Cuts Hotli1ie HELSINKI (UPI) -A telephone workers strike put the emergency hotline between the White House and the Kremlin out of order t.oday, but 1 U.S. embassy source said backup 1yalems could be used. The strike also cut all but two of Finland's telephone links to the outside world. In Washington, the Defense Department said a backup radi o. teletype channel runs through Tangier, Morocco, b y p a s s i n g Helsinki, for use if the 10-year--Old hotline Is inoperable. He said firemen also want the same educational incentive program given po- licemen. and other fringe benefit im- prove ments. Eighteen Republicans joined 2 I 8 Democrats voting agalnat Nls:M:, whilfl 1 the President gained ."1PPOrt ~in 167 r----------------------------------------"I Republicans and 11 Democn1ts. He said that original "demand" has been eased and now fi remen are asking for a six percent hike now and another five percent boost as of Jan. l, 1974. Under the proposal, fire engineers would gel seven percent July 1 and five percent Jan. J; captains would get seven percent now and 4.4 percent Jan. 1. Battalion chiefs would get eight per- cent now and 5.4 percent J an. l and dispa tchers would get seven percent July I and five percent Jan . 1. Silver said the "final" city offer is 4.5 percent for flremen and eng ineers, 6.l percent for captains, 6.6 percent for bat- talion chiefs and seve n percent for dis- patchers. Sliver also said that a reduction or hOW'S, won during negotiallons last yea r, but to take ef fect this year. is being used against the firemen. "They're claiming they arc giving us th!! big chunk and can't give us mu ch more this year," Silver said . A.! of July l, firemen'.!! working hours wUI drop from 58.3 to 56 hours pe r week. Frotn Pagel 'OAKDEN ... tJoo. a mernbcr ol the Ba lboa Improve- ment Association and an active supporter of youth groups all over the county. Besides his widow , or the family tnlle a1 !JOO W. J.Jalboa .Blvd .. Mr. Oakden is survived by two brothers and a sister. The couple had no children. Services \.\•ill lake place at Wesfc!i ff Mortuary Chapel Thursday at 2 p.m. The f1mlly has suggested memorial con- lrl butions to the Heart Fund. Nixon thus won a test of hJs strength in Congress as his backers, fighting to keep thei r power from being drained by the Watergate .scandal, kept the bill from becoming law . Alter Nixon suffered a six-vote loss in the Senate on the veto, H o u s e Democra tic leaders said they would have a tough time rounding up the two-thirds m .. jority needed to comple te the con-- gressional override process and force the bill into law over the President's ob- jections. Shortly before the House vote, Speaker Carl Albert (D-Okla.), told newsmen : ".lt is going lo be very light, !I ls solng to bo difficu lt ." 3 Fired BART Employes Sue OAKLAND (AP) -Three former BART employes say they were fired after co mplaining about 1'.lnt(liciency and unsafeness of the system." 1 The lhree -Holger Hjortsvang cf Walnu t Creek , Robert Bruder' of PftaSAnl Hill and h-1ax Blankenkenzee of Milpitas -filed a $1.3 mi llion damage suit Tut.s- day against the Bay Area Rapid Transit DistricL They contended in t h c suit filed Jn Alameda Superior Court that they ex· prPs.'led "concern" over the train control system for several months and nnell y tQnk their doubts to s BART dlrectllr. They sald they were summarily fired in March, 1972, by their supervisors on orders from General Managor jl, R. Stot ts . ' MAY 28TH M.EMORIAL DAY In honor of those who gave their lives that this would be a better world, we will be closed Monday-Memorial Day JOHN HART LYNN HART HARTS SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER STREET .. ! I I \ J • DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • • Tram rPlan for -Bal? Moving people and their cm. on and off the New- port-Balboa Peninlub is o.. Of the oldMt problems vexing Newport Beae~ city government. ·. It has been studJed to death. Wilbur Smith sug. gested an ocean front road in bis '4@,000 traffic study • decade ago. His "ork a hldden l.n oomebOdy's closet. Alan M. Voorhees, who i. doing the current $83,000 traffic study, apparently bas !brown up ha hands. ''That's the only traffic problem he hasn't been able to at least recommend a solution for," Councilman.., John Store di~closed recently. Through the years, any number of people have casually suggested some sort of tram •ystem might someday be necessary -and workable. The proponents were serious but somehow no one took them very seriously. Now, however, the city's planning staff isn't laugh- ing. They disclosed last week they are, in fact, making an in-depth study of the possibility of running trams to Balboa. They're also talking about banning parldnf on the • Peninsula, except by paid Permit. The idea, o course, is to make the pennits costly enough so they'd only be practical to permanent residents. However, the city's attorney's office said it would be ille~al to restrict public street parkl.ng after Pladnlilg Commissioner William Martin suggested it more than one year ago. Presumably Senior Planner Rod Gunn, the man who announced the city study, will confer with the legal de- partment on this point. He might also be wondering, as many are. why for $83,000 the city wasn't able to get the Voorhees Company to study the feasibility of a tram. eliminated any c:onsldentlon of a 22nd Street Bay crossing. Robert ldllum, a member of the Citizens Transporllt- Uon Plan Advisory Committee, said recently that the only potential new bridge would connect with 17th Street, or points south . Milum lndJcated that Voorhees ma y actually rerom· mend widening the erutlng bridge to eight lanes. The •!llY other key aspect of the $83,000 study deals with what to do tbout the Fifth Avenue corridor l.n Corona.clel Mar. There, too, pressure from neighboring property owners may carey more weigh~ lban professional opinion. The homeowners, of course, don't want the road, even though it would be a logical C<)nnector to a relocated l"acific Coast Highway wending its way south from Corona del Mar ta Laguna Beach. Still, the Penl.nsula, the Back Bay Bridge and down- 1town Corona d'.e'i Mar are the three major problem areas. It's bard to believe that for $83,000 we cannot get feasi- ble solution! for all of them. Mother Nattrre Still There Freak ocean currents and a tiny, free-floating crab combined this week to serve notice on Newport Beach that nature has not been banished entirely from our urbanized ocean front. The red crab, whlch has the appearance of a baby lobster, normally lives peaceably on the ocean floor off Baja cautornia. But a rare ocean current apparently brought the tiny creatures northward in droves, and thousands of them began washing up on city beaches Sunday morning. ·, It would seem fair and equitable that for that kl.nd of money Newport Beach should get more than a recom- mendation of where a new bridge conceivably could be built over Upper Newport Bay. -~ · Even in that regard, it seems p·olitics -for better or worse -is playing a big-role. The consultant has To those who have feared that a11 our groins in the sand and dumping of sewage and paving of shorelines would mean t.Jie death of the oeean, the phenomenon must have been vaguely reassuring. The sea, when it wants to, still can produce mysteries. 'No, dear, they weren't on trial, .. they were the prosecuting team.' What Do T hese Have I n Common? ~YDNEY J.HARBI~ Reader response to my recent "in<"Om- n1on·• quiz was so large and affirmative that I'm posing another of the same (on- ly a littler harder) today. Each question consists of five names: what do they all have in common? A score of 2.5 percent is exc~Uent: I. Calvary, Maltese, Tau, Fyllot, and Celtic. 2. Argos, Boatswain, Diamond, Flush, and Toby. 3. Saron, Sheng, ~!""BOnant' ariL Rehab. 4. Bays .... ·ater Road, Hyde Park Place, Oxford Street. Holburn Viaduct, and 1'ilartin's le Grand. 5. Dacia , Thracla, Mysia, Aquintania, and Lusitania. 6. Hotel de Bourgol(Jle, Covent Garden, Abbey, Haymarket, and Cruger's Wharf . 7. Pavlov, Kipling, Theodore Roosevelt, Bertrand Ru.1Sell, and Marconi. 8. Angel, 'I\Jgela, Sutherland, Glass, and King George VI. 9. Copenhagen, Marengo, Bucepbalus, Traveller, and Roslnante. 10. Michael Arlen, l.<luis Bromfield, \Y.H. Hudson, Marc C.Onnelly, and Richard Llewellyn. 11 . Akkadian , Punic, Vedic, Cornish, and Frisian. 12. John Witherspoon, James Wilson, Matthew Thom ton, George Taylor, and Button Gwinnett . ANSWERS: l . Different types of crosses. 2. N Ellsberg Dismis sal Ends Anticipated Test Dear Gloomy Gus- Government· Secrecy Crisis Remains . . School teachers are demanding a raise -at the same time achieve- ment tests results show California students score well below national averagea in the 3Rs. Shouldn't par· ents start demanding results from teachers? S.S. O'-' ow c"""-" .,. tllfMttlftlf n ,....,. and .. "' _,.,., nftftt ,.,. ¥1 ... •I .... ---· hlMll t'Mr HI -.. ....,,.,. 0-. D911y ~ ..... WASHINGTON -The blow-up or the Ellsberg case has created an internal crisis on government secrecy. In view of the fact, however, that the Ells berg jurors 1eaned toward the acquittal of the ' man who leaked the Pentagon Papers. the government is probably in a stronger posjtion to continue its current secrecy policies than if the case had not been dismissed. . As matters stand . .--._ now, there is no le- gal cha.11eoa:e to the 1 • • system of classifying .. ..~ government. dotu- Farrious dogs (belonging to Ulysses, Lord ments as secret, no Byron, Newton, Ellzabeth Browning, and clarification 0£ the Punch). 3. Eastern musical Instruments. right of the p~ to 4. They ar1o ~fl t h o a r.111• publish such l!o<:t>· '" thon>ugbfore, ~Uriuela 1111-lloott ments, no dellti\lion ; I · •. • .o of London from end lo 'end' <iMW <It· of what "stealing" publfcly owned dOCll;- (No credit if you simply &MWered 0 Lon-ments means. don streets..") S. Ancient and classical And perhaps it is better that way. names for counlrlea and rqloo! in IN TBE beglnlning, the Pentagon Europe and the Near East. I. FaJtP.ls Papers case appeared to be in the nature early tbea~n in France, England, of an historic First Amendment test to Ireland, and the United States. the right to disseminate publicly in- 7. All were reclplenlS of Nobel Prizes. formation labeled by the govenunent as 8. Among the highest waterfalls in the top secret in the national interest. 'o\'Orld. 9. Horses belooging .to f•mous Daniel Ellsberg handed over to the Ogures. (The Duke of Welllnglon, New Yori< Times the Pentagon's internal Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Robert analysis of U.S. invelvement in Vietoam E.1J:"'lu -::::J:r'! ~J 00 credit !Gr which he !Jbtalned as an employe of the this answer) whose most famous worb RanCl O>rporatlon, a private research Included "~" in their Utles. The and analysis ooru:em under contract to .. ~~ the governmenl The basic facts ~ere Green Hat," "The Green Bay Troe," and never in dispute . Ellsberg an "Green Mansions u "Gtten Pastures" associate Xeroxed the secret analysis aiid "How Green 'was My Valley.") i1. and gave it to the New York Times which AU dead languages. 12. All were llil>ers ignored the top secret classification 4JJd of the Declaration of Independence (half-printed large parts ot it. credit for this ) who were not native-born The gevernment acted to restrain the American.,,. Actually, there were eight, New York Times but failed in the the other three being James Smith, Supreme Court and tben caused the ln- lreland; Robert Morris, England; and dictment of Ellsberg and his associate oo Francis Lewis, Wales. • theft and espionage charges. Those cbargea were dismissed oo grounds that vital national security information to the enemy in time of war, whether in the press or by secret contact, could dan1age the national interest and be actionable. But that was far from clear in the Pen- tagon Papers case. POLEMICAL and political arguments could be made that the disclosure damaged Nixon's attempt to negotiate a Vietnam peace, er t b a t the fires of d.l.sseot were refueled, or that the prin- ciple of secret classification could not be compromised. But jmmediate and me a su ra b 1 e damage to the nalional interest \\-'BS abserit. What remained was the enormity of a trusted person in "stealing" gove~ment secret documents and hand- llli Uiem to,\U,e press in the 1-ol ~ dl~tlntl an unpopulaf' war !rid Minifn1 it to an end. • lt is probably better that the legality of (rucHARD WILSO~ such actions be left in a grey and un· defined area than that absclute authority should lie with federal efficials to ex- ercise p r i o r restraint and/or post punishment for the dissemination of in· formation and documents arbitrarily labeled secret and unpublishable. THE SAME reasoning applies here as to the 90-CBlled shield Jaws protecting reporters from disclosing their con- fidential sources of Inform at 1 on. Reporters are-· better off to rely ()ft the Fir.II Amend!nfJ>t for their protection. In the dennitloo 'of 'their privileges they · DM11 loae riib!a. . Comparably, the government iJ better off not to be confined too cloetly b~ judicial definitions of what It m1y classify as secret. And adverse declalon in the Ellsberg case, which appeared to be in the making, could have severely damaged the jw.stlfiable cWslflcatioo of secret Information. 111E PUBUC i. certainly better oft lhat such disclosures u tboae of the Pen- tagon Papers be left in a grey and doubtful area, to be judged .... by cue with all due risks taken by those wbo in- terpret the law to their own liking. l Recent experience teaches t b a i. governments, however noble ln ~ purpose, hide lnformaUon w b I c_. discredlta them. cases vary. It ta prob' ably l1ISI aa well for thooe who would leak "irirOrrnatlon In the future no't "to know how far they can go, and juat al well that the government not ~ mo.., precisely what it can hide. ' Volunteers ~Deserve Salute To the Editor: A salute to Orange Coast College Vohmteen. Are local taxpayers aware of this great group who belong tO the volunk-en? I JUST relurned by bus with a lot of luaage I couldn't lift into my car or car- ry to my second floor apartment. I called the Welfare Agency for help. She t.!ked me what 1 intended to pay. I told her it would take approximately thirty minutes that I would pick the person up and return h1m to his home. 1 thought S3 l\-'ould be appropriate for this short job but I was tOld by the welfare emplo ye that "no ooe would be interested in that small an amount or money". MAILBOX Letters from reader1 are welc011U'. Normall11 writers should conve11 their ?Ms1age.s in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eltmtnate ltbel is resert>ed. All letters muit include signature and mailing addres.s, but names map be withheld on r1qiust if sufficient reason ii apparent, Poetrv will not be published. also write, I would be very grateful. W!Nl'ON ASHTOM TM comm£.trlon's mail'ng addrr11 ;s P.O. Boz 14$0, Lona Beach, Ca. 90801. Ed. •Big Brot lter' To the F.ditor : Have been followln& your acoount of a JrOUP ol .Jrvlne mothen who would ll!te to raise their own cbtlclren without Welfare DeJ>!. tMddllq. Lib's Lesbian Conc erns unjustifiable act.s by tbe Nixon ad- minlstnltion before and durin~ the trial so compromised the prosecution's case that it could not be adjudicated. I called the Orange Coast College and in less than 30 minutes a clean cut, well mannertd young fellow, named Guy, had picked up my claim tickets and brought my luggage up to my apartment. This w11s his gas and his lime, however, when I tried to pay him he told me he could not accept money and that this belp "·as their contribution to the taxpayers for enabling them to attend this great col- lege. man·houn on the 'part of cithen groups, staff and officialll have produced a Ugh~ Iy controlled height ordinance, but the samo la not true of the equally important densllyordlnanCi. For motber9 to take turns in caring fat tbelr collective chllclren ts One, of coone. ''But these parenta hove laken the ad- dtUO!lal precaut!OD ol b1rtng another lady to "I'"" the lull period, auurtng con- tinuity of wpervtston and helping the qiolhan who are tbere at the Ume. Thia ·11 a crime? Rldtc:uloual Inlltld ol continutna: baraument from "bl& ~ ... they cle.oerve the respect and' support of all ol us. In th.is age of rising consciousness, not even a male chauvinist is likely to dismiss women's liberation as a "lesbian plot." But the growing presence and in- creased militancy of lesbians in the \\'Omen's movement worry some feminists, who fear that Jdentificatioo with the lesbian cause will alienate some straight women and divert attention from other issues. " MOST feminists support the right of lesbians to express their own sexuality. The National Organization far Women (NOW), at Its national convention in Washington last February, adopted its strongest pro-lesblan statement to date. It pledged to ,..k lejlalaUoo to end discriminaUon based m suual orien- tation in housing, employment, credit and finance, and child cwitody. Betty Friedan, NOW"1 Io u n de r , recently added a cautionary note. Ualng tile women's movement to prosel)rtl.te for lesbianism, she wrote, will "only subordinate the great Luuo of <quality for women, the opportunlty and cliangea that all women IO desperately need." FOR SOME militant feminists , tes- biantsm represents the ultimate com- mitment lo women's Ii be rat ion . "Women's liberatloo and homosexual liberation are both struggling toward.!! a common goal : A. :t0eiety free from defining and categorUins people by prercrence," says Kate Miiiett, author of Sexual Politics and an edmltted bise:rual. "'Lesbian' is a label used as a psychic weapon to keep W<Jmcn locked into their male-de.fined 'feminine role.' The essence of thal role is that a woman 1111 defined in terms of her relattanshlp to mtn. A woman is called a lr!sblan when ~he func· Uons autonomously. Women's autonomy EDITORIAL RESEARCH iJ what women'111 liberalion is all about." The lesbian, SB} the r a d I c a I s , personifies tbe liberated woman. As a totally female-oriented woman, ooly she can escape the male hlerarcbical l)'rtem. THE RHETORIC of female chauvinism could be the downfall of the woman's m<ivement, retortJ Ma. Friedan. "Many wome1 in the movement go through a temponry period ol great hostility to men when they Ont becclme oonteloul of thelr sl.luatioo, but when tbey atart act.- Ing to chang ,their altuatloo, they outgrow what f call the poeu<»ndlcal infanWt.tm. But tbal man-bating rhetoric lncttuln&b' dbt>Ra !DOii women in the movenl<rit, In •ddtlJoii to the· women it k<e1>1 Ollt ol lllo IDOYement" Barbara ~. a member of the v..-omen's llbentlcn lf'OUP al c.otum- bla Univentty, cltlqr..o: "I think it Lt a false hypothesll that -are acared away from the movement by the illue of lesbianism. Maybe certain women at a certain time will be turned oil !or a IUUo while but I think f lomlnllt II a femlnlst is ,. feminist, .. The spilt between the radical.Ill and more moderate feminlats over the le. blan issue probabb' will not do any last.Ing damqt to the women'• move- ment. No major IOClal movement can be tot.llny unified In thought or public eJ.- prsslon. AJ the controversy over abor· tion made clear, women'1 liberation I.I strong enough to support a divergence of views. FROM THE VERY beginning of this case,. It was hard to see bow the public interest had been harmed by the contents of the Pentagon Papers. The analysis and conclusions in this historical study cer- tainly did not reflect on the Nixon ad- ministration, but bad the effect of ex- posing ml3takes and misjudgments in 1be Kennedy and Johnson administrations. So far as the Nixon administraton was concerned, the primary purpose of trying to stop publication and prosecuting thole. who obtained and released the study was to protect the government's right to bold secret national security information which, if released , might damage the na- tional interest. Few would deny that the dllclosure of IF THE taxpayers didn't have to sup- ply easy wellare and food stamps to a "won't work group", maybe more could be done for Orange Coast College. GLADYS LEACH S lwuld R ecoiulder To the Editor: The quality of llfe in Newport Beach Is at stake. 'Ibis is not a doomsday forecast but rather a reminder that thousands af . W£ 1nv1-n; VOU10 FPD THE81ADS 5 Am'S BIRO Fool> 15'. PER IM .. -. OUR PRESENT zoning allows for In- credibly high densities : 26.4 units per net acre on Balboa penl111tfta e1elustve of tile point and 22.4 unJta per net acre In West Newport. U notbing is done, these figures will or course increase. Fifteen montha ago the city hammered out a policy statement !'tr the general plan which says ln part: "The city shall set aboolute llrnll.t m future popula«oo a.nd d'welling unit denlllUet." 1 THERE is still time for the city <.'OWlcil to reconsider any or all of the pllUVling atatra recommendations. Let them know how you feel. BARBARA EASTMAN F u1t Zo ne P rotest To ille Edtlor: Your editorial of May I!, "Up to the Commlaalon," expresses my concern for the poor decialon of our four Newport BeaGh Counci.lmeo on Monday, ~1ay 7, regardina the Fun 7.oile spot zoning. I woutc1 Ute to hav:e the name and ad- dreu of the Soulh Coast Regiooal Coasta l Conlervation Commissioners so that a format letter protesting the residential development er commercial property may be 111ent to. thtm. If you would prlnt the address so others sharing the same concern may Quotes "In world opinion and in world er- ftctl\•eneu, the United States I s mtuured by the nlOral firmness or its public officials.·• Dwl1bt D. El•tabtwer, ltsl \ TED ROSEllARi B ird Mort ury To the Editor: It is a known fact that there are people in the Back Bay aru who alt In their patios with guns shooting oor ducts, geese, etc. ~ also know the Back Bay ii • testing place lor migrating blrdl. The Bae!< Bay shoold be a refuge and a l&ltClllary. for blrd.!i ; not a mortuary! I M. F.llARPER DAILY PILOT Rol>ert N. Wrcd, PubU.h<r Thomot Ktft'U,.--rdito-r Borbaf1l Xrelbkh .Editorial P* Edftor I I I The edllortal ,pap ol ~ n.ily 'Pilot &e-ek• to tntonn and ltbnula1• I rndtn .by ~on thi• pq~ I dtverw.;commHJtary'on lopk .. ot tn. ttn!lt by iYndtcated colwnnlsla •nd I cartoom.ta, by providine a forum for rtaden' vlewa ind by presentlnr this I neftpl.per'• oplniom and kttas oo ~nt topics. The tdttorllll opirOonl OI the 0aUy PUot IP'P@ll' only ln the cdltorlal COiumn at the top o( the pqe. Opinton11 t>cpreard by the tW. umnl.i:a and cartoOntlt.W and lilttu' \\Tlten are Ult-tr owt1 ind no~"° mcnt of thtlr vlf"NS by the De.U:Y Pilot lihoukl be ~ Wedn811dy, May 23, llrl3 I .. _ ..... ,,, .. ,, DAILY PILOT ~alif ~r nian .Miss Arizona? Publicity . '· SACRAMENTO (AP) ;c.. Mn. John Nix uid her Local oll!dala ol the Mia daUjl!Ur WU sU1I In New USA beoutJ pogeant organtm-y bu _, __ .,. tloa "'I the rolglll&l& Mio& • ork t ,......_ to ~ f" -USA In ~' ~ lhlt week lo_""""l" C.lllomla girl and • woftc as 1 model tbete. lndlglllle to hold the Arbona Last AllgU!I, Miu N1s nn tille. !or the Miss CaUlmlil USA ti.- But Sherry Nl<, 21, third t1o and loot. Winoing the Mllo, ""-"'I' In Jul week'• Mill Aruooa coru..i thin April ~ llageam In N..,.. Y«l<, -&be Is 3 bOOa ride Ar1Z0110 P .•• l!er • ll<lC:Ond 5"'t It-~_ r..tdeot and has been !or the MISS USA tlUe, and thouab she put eight months. m1a&ed the top priZA> In N.,, MISS NIX, who was also Ml!a Metropolitan Sacramento until resigning the titJe in Apil, .. commuted" between Sacramento and P h o e 0 i l between September and April, her mother said Tuesday. Gov.Reagan ' Says Ener gy Crisis Real SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Rona1d Reagan says Calilornla laces a "frightening picture" of energy dk>rtages b e. ca u s e environmentalist.. have short-<:ircuited power >plant construction. York, she did come in abeld of the girl who heat her ID 1be MW Calilomla USA -last August. Carol Remona ol Artesia. New Yort olficlalt ol the Miss USA Pageant uld Toel>- day that Ml,. Nix had m b- mitted five notarize d · statements supporting h er claim to be an Arizona resi- dent. "WE'VE GOT the certilica- tiorn, including Sherry's own, signed a nd notarized, and we're .satisfied," 1aJd Herbert Landon, executive producer of Miss Universe, Inc., sponsors of the New York pageam.. Carmel fl.fartinelU, director of the Miss Metropolitan Sacramento Pageant, saJd she had almost dally contact with Miss Nix during the time she uSA-. llid ""_ G. · ets Trial Oq]y Coast nn-ers Miio Nh ... eli811Jie lo he R l.oca ed 'W .. ertificates M~ :W lhe WU ellg~ . e t e ~uara ble to nm In Alma. M • Lql;-•AllGELES (AP j -.w:·~ ...... -...,.. -:.-.....::..·~~~-~-------- "'""'""'Judi;• and jury"... --. ·ol -the judge •• '· • . ·sa .. ·• erv·1ce ' said. "But you can't be a~ calJM.-4 4 rnwtve aa 4 • • ~ .. dent of two ltatel. Our pub!Jdty~ In the case, the ,. ~ !. --•· c "-' ,., -------- apoosor (Mn. MM11nelll) ..... ~tho! t11:": ,. .. iJl':h , 1 · •d1 . 1.· Cl b !:.."n!°~1oo1t~ :l: 11a~ .t:..t., •• ,.~1d ~.1 ·•~I 1 8 nSI erS U • ·L~ "--ffa"91iaD Gardens will bo ~:· ~ ~ t uave uccu held b\tNoribern C.llfornia. - Mn. Nix said her daughter Tllf.jidge ~Y ordered , " bad been living In Pboeni% the lrliiflo begm \July II ,, with on aunt. Sbe oaJd llhe WU Redwood City. On tTiaJ Ifill he modeling In ~ and a1ao Donald Antelo, 21, Oscar had enrolled briefly at the Heniaodel. 22, and Michael Unlvenlty ol Arl2xloa Ramires. II. · Tbey are charged with the • ' Effecllve Annual Eamlnss 5.00".k--5.13% fasstwx>k. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% MAIN Ont«I 9th & Hiil, LoaAnltles • 6ZW.3S1 """'-WILIHIRI at MAllDCY PlACf: 3933 Wlllhlr• Blvd.. L.A.• 38&1265 .... c:me ........ 2nd& BfVMfWIY • 629-1102 MUHnM8fOlll au'Ctt: ~nss ~ had tried twice mun1er ol Joyce Aoo Huff on earlier to win the Miss USA July 2 of wt year ln what ooe UPI ·--est. In 1970, ilhe comp«ed alleged portlclpanthet aaid WU a in the Miss California USA random shot as trio ·Was contest as Miss R 8 n ch 0 looking for members of a rival One Year Cenfficate $1,000 Mlnlmun1: 6.00%-6.18% 91 Hufll1n8l0n Ceflter (714) 897·1047 SANTA MOHICAt RESIDENCY DISPUTED Mi11 Sherry Nix was certified as an Arizona resident. "If she went down there, she went by night,'' Mrs . Martinelli said. "Most of the time she was here i n Sacramento." Cordova, and in 1971 as Mi&s gang. Folsom. Superior Coort Judge Julius Last year, she angmd of· Leetham already had pol a fici315 ol. s a era men to • s gag order on tbe case -~ Camellia Festival when she plying to what he said news' quit as festival queen to take media could rep«t as well as the title of Mlss Metropolitan what persons oonnecected with Sacram<nto. the ease could say. An appeals Miss Nix is one 0( four court struck down the portions sisters who have won a total relating to barw oo the media. of 14 beauty titles in the DR. LEONARD Slallcup, Sacramento area in recent IN GRANTING a defense motion for another trial slle, the judge said: California director of the Miss years. Two to Five Year Certtflcates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of lntirest on amounts withdTown before moturlty on all'certlfteate accounts. also provides big dis· counts on tickets to sport· Ing and .entertainment events ••• plus a whole llst of free services! safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary serv1Ces. 718 Wllshlre Blvd.• 393-0746 SAH PellO: 10th & Pacltk: • 831-2341 WUT COYINA: f.utl9nd Shop91nc ar. • 331m1 PANORAMA CnYt ~ & van Nuys Blvd.• 892-lln TAltZANAJ 18751 ventuni BM!. .. 34S8614 LOHQBrACH: 3rd & Locust . 437·7481 EAST LOS ANOllfS: 81h,. soto • 266-4510 DIAMOND UR: 328S. Diamond.Bar (714) .595-7525 T\lm N: 0 The possibili ty of brownouts in California. as they've had recently on the East Coast, is very reel. We may be having those," Reagan said .Tuelday during a Capitol question-and-answer session with about 20 Sacramento high IChool students. .SD County Bans Sex Book "It is the rare person within Los Angeles C.OUnty \\'ho has not beard of the present case and, in fact , not been exposed to expressions or opinioo with respect to the merits of the case , .. and there appears a reasonable likelihood that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had here." The lnaklers Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its . membership card permits you to buy nearly every- thing you ne ed from the finest closed-door show- rooms at substantial sav.: ings -appliances, furni· ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. Membership req uire- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. coast borrowers now receive as- sociate menibershlPs en- titltng them to all outside referral services. Ask about joining at any Coast office. Larwln Square Sheppln& Ctr. (714) 83.2-6810 LA MIRADA: La Ml~da Shoppina ctr. (71-4) 522-6751 SANQU .. 10.: Asked what the state would do In an energy crisis, Reagan replied, "We may find out Vt!r'J quiokly. There wouJdo 't be an awful lot we could do." f'lr IS A frightening picture, the energy shortage that races ""· he said. "So many people I n CaHforma have concentrated so much on environmental protection there have beea no power plants built. We won't let them build fossil fuel plants and when we build nuclear power plants along the coast, we're told we can't have those because that might he a threat and might hurt tile ecology of the ocean," Reagan auto, can be considerred 'ab- ncxmal' if it is involuntary or exploitive.'' "Two ways of avoiding SAN DIEGO !AP ) -The Planned Parenthood Associa· tion has been ordered by San Diego County supervisors to stoP distributing a comic book called "Ten Hea\'y Facts About Sex.'' our constituents," countered Supervisor Lou Conde, who led opposition to simple renewal of the contract. He said the book "has certain bad moral aspects" and some sections "~ge vio l ation of California state law." tmWanted pregnaDCies : self ~--------­ Supervisors voted 4-1 Tues- day to make withdrawal of the book a oondiUon fOl" a SO-day extension or planned parent- hood's contract with the coun- ty foe federal family-planning funds . Another condttion was the ending of birth-control counseling to persons under 18 who are suppGrted by parents or guardians. Supervisor Jack Walsh, the only dissenter, caJled the board's action "book burn- ing." Walsh said county counsel ROOert Berrey has reported that the book vlola""' oo stale laws. "Ten Heavy Fads About Sex" contains humorous draw· ings which illustra te 8UCb statements as: "Masturbation is a normal expression of sex for both males and !em ales." control or birth cootrol.'' "Sex is cool when you-are ready for tt. It is even mrmal to wait tmtU marriage." The book also has advice on how to avoid veneral disease and OU!lirei bii:th control methods and abOr.uoo law. It Wll3 'Miltm by Dr. Sol Gordon, identified as a pro- fessor ol family and child development at Syracuse University. A p I an n e d parenthood official said 500,000 copiee of the book have been ' ' P 0 RN 0 G RAPHY is distributed to family planning harmless . . . i! porno Us ywr groups across the country, and bag, you don't have much of ~'this is the only area that they "WE ARE HERE to an imaginatioo." h&ve had thls kind of Frater1iity Goes Bare STANFORD (UPI) - Stanferd University has censured a fraternity for a "rush" party that fea- tured five topless dancers. including one who was rafned off to partygoers. "The most charitable judgment is that the party got out of hand and that the local leadership lost control," said L.:1rry W. Horton, You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav- ings. The Insiders Club Del Mar at Las TllnU • 287'99-41 Daily Houn-9 AM lo4 PM All Olfi<ff, Ela:lpt Clvlc .,.,,..., OpenSo1urc1115 9AMtolPM ASSETS OVER ONE BILLION DOLURS ..... ·-,,,,,_,, Try Saturday's News ~iz We Dare You I \ ',•' '" '. ' l I ' ' " .. '. .. ·, ,. •I •I aald. represenl the moral beliefs of "Any sex, hetero, homo or reeponse." -~~~~~~~~--'~~~~~---'-.:....::~__:...:....::.::::_::::_=..::.-=::::...::......:::c::::::..~~~~~~==============::::!'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-':' •• NO MORE TANGLES SPRAY ON CREME RINSE 7 ·oz. 79c ·.. . • ' , . " , Sµ.nny day ._savings at TreasurY :· health and " beauty aicts department. COPPERTONE I \\~ LOTION 4 oz. BAYER ASPIRIN lOO 's ~1 ttti 69c no ~· ...... ,,..· SCOPE 18 oz. Regular BAND-AID PLASTIC STRIPS PEARL DROPS TOOTH -POLISH 2'h oz. CLEARASIL 70's ·BA".Q-AID 1.2 oz. 69c ···~~ GILLmE THE DRY LOOK HAIR SPRAY 11 oz. ·' CLAIROL HERBAL ESSENCE SHAMPOO 8 oz. EFFERDENT DENTURE ' TABLETS 40's . 66c . OPEN DAlt.Y 9:30 to 9:30 ·SUNDAY 10 to 7 IUtNA 'MIC Beech a. Otangethorpe ~ HILU 111» Chef1worth St. IMll lDI 3520 Tyltr WOODLUm HILU 21$00 Vlctorv &lvd. IANl'A AHA No. of .~ q»st Pla:1 LAKIWOOD Carson St . lOIUNC.I StpulwQ ind HewthO;mit Ind P1rarnoont Blva . O&U•• Gtrden. Grow &IVd. Ind Manchester f _, . . -• --. • - • •":""9 -. -. . -· • I I l· . ' . Today's· Final • N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, N<;l. 143, 9 SECTIONS, 110 P~ES OAANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1973 c __ TEl'I c~s . - Keep · Yo•r EU@ · on . I By ARTHUR II. VINSEL Of ... o.lbr,.... ..... Rudy Malik keeps a special eye on his pris«ler1 aa .Costa Mesa City Jail duty officer on the quiet midnight to .a a.m. shift, when hmates sleep and the steel bars rarely rattle. He I< a registered professiooal hyp- nQti.st. ' from a mystery mu wbo cannot even be identifie¢ .. We had him in protective custody," e<plakls the 26-yeor...id palro!llWI, ad- ding tbe man was a tey prosecution witneu in a seosatJonal CMe and it was believed_1 contract bad been issued for bis murder. • fie lived as a gue9t ol Hotel Gray Bars [or weeks and the lwo me-ri got ac· S81I lolalilc, ~·bas de~elaped a p for use -of hypbosJa 1n policeWo.1< now beinf atudied by the city admlnialn\lion. . "So l invited' him <1ver to tile hou se after he·got out a little over a yee.r ago,·· he explaiJ;is. The q,sta Mesa C.rime Prevention C.OmmjUee:J: Officer for the Mooth of May leamed the ancient art, in fact, quainted. "I'd always Malik niastered the ability lo place others in a sleep.Uk~. tl'aDce and obtained hl< ll'Ofeosional crodenUals. foreseeing hypootlsui aa a tool 10 further his career · been curious ;lbout it," in Jaw enfoieemeht: :ft , • ·an .} 'No Blae~tnail' Minist~_r,. Quits In Sex Scandal 0 ... LONDON (UPf ) -Lord Lambtoo, a Within hours, the office ol Attorney government minister who resigned Tues-General Sir Peter Rawlinson announced day night in Britain's most explosive sU. tbat SUllUileDSeS alleging i I I e g a I leQlrlty and drug scandal in a decade, Possession of dangerous drugs have been confessed today be did so because of a is.sued ·against Lambton. Jf. said he is "casual a?luaintilnce"' with a call girl being charged with pmsesslon of mari· w~ :~ tried to sell secret juana and amphetamines. ' photographs of them to newspapers. The Evening standard of 1-<>ndon said "But there has been no security risk or special qents for three wee)f bf.ve been ' . , ·s ' -• "My Initial request is for a pilot iro- gram to be done and then evaluated for u.se as a regular thing," says the Texu- bom lawman y;bose university tnrlning was in mathematics and electrical engineering. Hypnotism -which allows people in trance to coocenlrate on a single thought, immune to any dlstractlon -is firwiing increasing appeal and application in the fiel d of law enforcement. "The coocept behind it woold Probably Tall Bandit Gets Haul A sandy·haired bandit who initially asked for change for a $10 bill flashed a gun at a teller Tuesday and escaped with more than $5,200 from a Costa Mesa bank. The 2: 15 p.m. holdup at the Bank of America, 2701 Harbor Blvd., went off smoothly after the siender, six-foot gun- man ordered a• teller to turn over her • be very acceptable to us." Police Oiief Roger Neth agreed today. "But we've got to U'kroughly evaluate it and make sure we touch all bases," He explained that one immediate pro~ lem envisioned is coordinating man- power shifts which would be neccSMry if Officer Malik is assigned to further develop the departmenl.'.:.l hypnot ism ~ gram. Local police have already used hyp- notism, as practiced by a cllnlcal esa psychologist. in the case ol Patrolman Steve Nash, 23 , who was ambushed by a gunn1an in Irvine last October. The entranced officer. whose cheek was grazed by a slug fired through the ""'iodshield or his patrol car. recalled the traumatic murder attempt in bone-chill· '1lg ~·by-second detail. lnvestjgAtors utilizing his crystal-clear account in addition to intelllgence in· formation eventually arrested Hessian tSee OFFICER, Page !) an Mother Guil.ty Accessory iii Tot's Murder A young mother who admitted in the courtroom that she kneW her tittle boy was dead when she told police be was missing plead· eel guilty Tuesday to charges of being an accessory to his murder. O~NGE COUNTY Superior Court Judge Kenneth Lae heard the confession and sent Sandy Rockwood , 17, of Orange, to the Fron· tera Prison for Women for a presentencing study. She will be re- turned for sentencing Aug. 20 . Miss Rockwood's report April 13 that 3-year-old Todd Rockwood was missing from the home she shared with Larry Wayne Cobb, 23, sparked an intensive search of the area by more than 500 lawmen· and volunteers. THE HUNT ended when Cobb led P-"lice to a shallow grave in the Allaheim Hills area where the child s body was unearthed. €obb will be arraigned May 29 in Superior COUrt onicl!argea of first degree murder. It is alleged that a beating he administered 19<1 to the child's death April 11. b.~~~~tl,"hand~ ... ~.·!ft4,~·.a ' 1:~·,;,':!-llonl&.t~; , -~-' ~~~'i"aideandili! !O '.~.mij! Dy ~~~~ -----'---"-----·~=~=~l·t~• . •' s~~ate ;()kays Ricl1ar'" C 1. J:t. ' ld ·'1~-~-~·~f* ~a,.~ !.., " ... !,,. ' • -• " •hrfeM!lab>t'I raCid to ' tht ',bink al ' -· llu.ili~le : ! 1s'11<b _. -· *· Bftttin R~•ests Harbor 'Bocilevan1 and AdaJm·A•'!Jue . ~~~oo1c~~1J:.s..~~ v· ; · -~~ . · :~;,~;.i=~~=!:ho . In Fast Washingt' on Vote Knew· Offer '' Not Legal WASHINGTON (AP) -John J . Caulfield testlfled today that he kllew it was illegal for hlln to ofter executive clemency to James McCofd, but did it anyway beeause he believed the offer ", came from President Nixon. . '.'ft croosed my mind Jhal this COO· ceivably was from President Nlxoo, J believed it," the former White House ~de aald. Caulf~ told Senate investigators he of 1lie g1rl and Lamliion lo a British ICtim~s -P arents The unidenUl!ed teller confronted dur· newapeper for $25,000. • ing the robbery whlch occurred whlle Lambton quit lbnlptly Tuesday night p B ·ck M eight persons w~re present said the gun· "for ~al and health reasona" •IS ay a, ore man dl<pJayed a revolver to shoW be meant busl.neSs. Parliament undersecretary for the Royal · ' , AuthoriUes did not disclose im- Alr ~-. . After 14'-year-old Michael Hoff,!03J1 III -·M-A' .,..,._, mediately whether any pe1M,1WR:a ac- Heath Wm mate a statem@.t to ~lia-of. Westminster was critically. injured in tlvated the bank's scanning camera to . i\ 1971 freeway accident, be .si>ent more catch a portrait of the robber in action. ment 00 3'bursdi.y 00 the affair, eovern-tba'n mir· weeks in a coma in the hospital. The ·bank· branch at Harbor Boulevard meo.t +ala: said. They · saki there Today be is still partially crippled and and Adams Avenue is one of the more- would be )lo of!lclal oommenf unlil then. suU•"'""· from· -.• Jmpalnnen. t. often-nbbed financial institutions :,,in Labor . ~1~ mem•-~ p Jis -~ ·~ Costa Mesa, apparently due to its 1toca· ~r~ --•• ar • To belp• Ill> !am Ry olflel medical ex-tlon. • ment bombarded the government l'dth penses, Orange County provided him 1be 'busy boulevard interlecUon af· demands for an explauation of. the allega-with more th*1 $17 ,000 from Us Crippled fords fairly quick access to the San Diego tiOllll published by the West Gennan Children's Services tuod in the Health FreeJiay,.iq aq~ to heavy traffic in magazine Stem. DOperlment. which 1 ~~car.can become JOit. "This is the sordid sto-," Lambton Three Jean ago, a motorcycle- BULLETIN WA811111GTON ltil'l)-'lblSenlCe eon- flnned 11111 If,.,_ tlie oomlnldoa of Elliot L. Rlcbardlo• •• •ttcll'lley general ..iy .--hoan Iller ~e WIS aDIDi· moastr ewove« by the l!aate Judiciary Cobtlilttlu. Tbe vote WU tz-3. WASffiNGTON (AP) -The Senate Judiciary C.Ommlllee today •f>P!"'ved ~ Elliot L. RlchardaOn's nomination as at- torney general. · Chairman Jame. Eastland said the ', vote was unanimqw . Leaders said 'Ibey woold try to bring Richardson 's nomination up on the Senate for confirmation later in the day. 'Ibe·obJectlon of a single senator would force a delay until tomorrow. Democratic "Leader Mike P..fanslield said: "We'll tr>' to Jake It up late today." Republican Leader Hugh Scott, a co~ mittee member, said in advance of tht committee vote that be e ipected 9' unanimous recommendation fair Richardton11 confirmaUOo. ... . NIXON SAYS·HE 'FEARED FOR SECURITY'-P1ge 4 ., Hoffman's fanuly, willi the help of a belmeled bindit who smashed hil way said today in a formal statement iuued prjvate iuufaDce compai.y, now pro-through ttie•front dOOr with a tire iron on Mesa Councilmen Ena.ct . Another Sign Morawrium "The committee had a chance yee:ter, 1 1 day to contrut a thief and a Harvard , knew the offer of clemency to McCord was ID illegal obstructioo of Jl!Stice. McCord was on trial at the time for burglary, wiretapping and conspiracy 1n the Watergate caae. ~ - •"What I'm saying to you, sir, is that Jhy loyalty to the President of the United Stites overrode those considerations," Caulfield said. : But he repeated earlier testimony that lie bad no personal knowledge Jhat -~, t~ !«mer ,preoidenUal .. ,..1.ro1m,w. Delli w ~ Jha offer. ~Nixon has diiniod 11111 knew abqut or•autbafiud.;c, ~~ !ers 10 11\Y"W-..ie ~ cauHJelil cllsputed, One imporlan pelt of McCord'& olorY, He aald McCord was ltyin& 10 ataY out of jail at the time the clemeocy<iHerl....,. made: MCCord has laid be rejected tile offers of c1e....,cy an grounds that ooipe ill!lty ~es Wll'll1 'I lielng proseCWd arid wett trying Cllsely to blame the ,!;entral lntelllg~ }.geocy, hil old emplO)'er. • · ' caulfield ~ at the Senate's televised Waw&•\e bealinp. , • • He was ukea by _sen. LOWtll ' P. (Seo CAULF'IEID, Page I) ' .CL#SJFIED AD JJRiJvGS HAPPINESS •. . • A .DiUy Pilot danified sdvtttlser is happy becauoe he 10ld hla car to the lint person who called.llere'a how.the ad ran: f>oRSCHI!: 'M Targa ~ glass ba<:I< window, $ spd, AM/FM, whlt.e, ei:lnt cond. 32,000 mi. fl*, Call eves. !Phone No. I , The new owner ls now happily driving his car. Maybe Yll'I could be a lltUe ~appl& by running a succeaslul DaUy 'J>!Tol ad, The direct 'happiness' line - 142-5&78. by an aJde in his Berwic.k-oo-Tweed con-poses to pay $!,000 of that $17 ,(loo, back. two occasloiis in a three-month period sUwency. "Ali that happened is that But Superlis-Or Robert Battin of Santa r.obbed the same facility. (Sree SCANDAL, Pqe Z) Ana questioned that am-AAment Tuesday, A trio of men later captured in Texas, 00 ~ convicted and sentenced to long prisot. arguing that the coUnty should be reim-terms for ilnned holdups in lhat state burse<l a ·larger amount. also hit the Harbor Boulevard-Adams -Air Noise Foe& Set '1 thliik we Ought to get more," the Avenue branch 111.i years ago. Meeting Tonight First District supervisor said during a public meeting. Records oo file With the Board of Airport Action Associates, a Newport Supeniscn show ~at the imurance Beach group opposing expansion ol jet company will give Hoffman 's family onJy Inf!:"' .fl .<>tu&• County Airport, has $l9,000. , IClioil!.w.t l.,pu111fc meeting tonight to , About f!,'150 ol this must go to at-erilt' millioll In pending lawsuit. '--" """ fough~ to get the setUement. ~· Jtls· " Anolber,110,000 was earmarked to be put ' a>oiilai.111lldr is an effort to make ..into a -I tru.\ IUpd to pay for ' all the Bulla bf bomeoimers .aJ)d local the contijminJ modic1I Ind educational guvemmmta more midentaodoble, will' espensa of Hofbn&n; vd>Q la can"'10d to la~e place it tlie ~-Harbor lllgb a whedchair and muollottend 1' special School 1adlloriam at 7:30. school for the Jiandicapped: • ' Arabia, Egypt Agree BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Saudi Arabia and Egypt have concluded a secret ~e{epse pact that may result in more pressure on the United States to adopt an even-handed poticy In the Mid- dle East, the Beirut magazine Al Diyar teported today. The treaty also provides lllal Saudi Arabia woold go to war agail1.st llri.el if fighting breaks out anew between Egypt and the Jewlsfi state, Al Dlyar wd. ,~Please Don't ·Kill Me' . . J ' .~~~~· Sla~ing Sus pects Ple°: ToM in. Testimo11y Orange oi>uiily Sherill'• ~,Y Aridy lllMat ripped apart by a l<olley ol llBI Angeles County. He ha•.been tentatively Romero 10dt)f IOld 1 SUperior ~ Jtn1 fire delivered through t)ie ocreen door scl>eduled 10 !.,,. Jrial there June fl. how delfndanrCerl Ecbtrom l>Wed foe ,.. lhe Cllflctr, Jlllll in band, l<kked at II is alleged lllal Schnelder and Wilson Itta llfe tn an encounter that ~atety the front door of Eckstrom'• borne at tracked him to Midway City after followed EciolU'onl'1 all<41ed sJiylng ol . 8351 FIJihl St., Midway City. Eclutxom 1hot two girl• and a man who two Los An(elel County deputlel. . R<lmero said he IOODCI Wilson dying on tried to bAlp 'tbom In ~parking lot of a "!fired ooe shot from my lllolcun and the lawn, shot in the chest and buttocks Cenitoa shopp1n1 cent.f. 'Ille man and he fell near t!ie fence," Romero tistJBed. by • -d bunl from the same gun .... or the S)rls died. "lie held hls handl 1n the air as ill 11)"00 that fell<d Schneider and which ""' pro. Romero toda/ told the Jury that he was tho g<Ol)nd ad ill told me 'pl .... doo'I · 1duoed and Identified in court today as .. igned . ao tbe back\lp Dian for Wilson kill me\" • ' • · Ei:l!iiboo1'1 ,,..poc1, • ind ScbotJder and be squalled behind i 11.moro loll!' pfoleculor ~ CJ!al' 1 "I Ecbtrom, , bill plPdocl lnnocont by -l'ehce las\ Jan. 4 to await the results of lertm that lie llanclculfed Ec~m. toot r.._ of lnunJly. Judie William C. 'iheir allenlpta 10 nldh Eckatrom from •-the dtt.ndut'• llllomatt~ riOe and Spein will order. tbe Ante jury 10 return lhe home. then tm:qed lo-whit' he"""° Id do !« for a sanlt7 ilelrinl If the lliiJ,tiy built, "I ~ about 10 Ip U lhota near the Los Ancelet aberlff'• detectlvea Carl boylth delendan~ is found guilty on two hotlst,", the deputy ,aid. "'.l'hen I hoard WUaon and ~kl Sclmelder, bolh 40. count& ol ftnt degrte murder. snOl!leMt ibOt. and ! saw bUJle18 lllWng He l<Nnd Sclinelder dead on lhl pt!l'Oh, l!:t-tici!s similar .,,.,..._ln•Los the 1)1'1111 ool far from Jbe. ·, • ' ' ... . ' Another sign moratoriwn went into ef· Ject throughout Ooot.o Mesa today. It forbids the enctlon of all new 1igns except thoee. meeting certain emergency crilerea and those which cooform to the standards ol a uew sign ordlnance being studied by tjty officials. The rnor'atorium , enacted as an emergency measurt by the city council Monday night, will romaln in effect !0< six m<l!ths. It is the third moratorium since November 1972 when ctty ciiuncllmen ordered the drafting of stricter sign con· trols. The initial moratorium periods, both 10< 116 els)'>, served to develop the new sign law. Altboogb a first droll ol lleW ordinance has now Ileen made public, it baa become embroiled controversy. The new moratorium is expected , to allow a soon-to-be-appolnted council com- mittee to !ltudy the ordinance propasal and recommend chanles before it beccmes a law. ' . 'H eimskringla' Canceled at OCC William Purkiss, dlrector of the Orange Coast CoUege drama productioo, "Helmsl:rlngla or The Stooed Angels," says the show has been c:ancel«J. The play, originally sd>eduled to begin a ~y run tonight, removed from the playbill "due to circumstances be)'Olld. our control," &ct'Ot'din& to Pur- klas. No .further Information was available from the college today. '!be nut production on the OCC schodA!e is Stephen Sondheim's recent BIOldway mualcal, "FoUlet." Tbo ploy Is scheduled Aug. l 10 4. man , and I think tt wUI vote f<ll° the 4 Harvard man," he told newsmen. Asked who the thief was, Scott replied In an obvlws reference to Daniel Ellsberg, a ,de!endsnt 1n the P .. lagoo Papers case, that .. he was sitting in the audience." "It was a Utile shocking to me to see 1 man who confeuedly purloined clas&ified infonnation actJng as amicus curia to the Judiciary Committee," Scot£ said. "It was chutzpah," he said. "It also was gall , it was al9o lndecent t tt was also contemptible, and I don't lite tt." Orange Mostly ....Y'"' '!'flunday, afler the early morOfDa JQ.w,.loucls, with little tempea:atute .d\IDae. Highs in the 60s al the \leaCbeS, rising to the mld-'IOs JnJancl. Ovemigbt lows in the 505'. ·-· -.... INSIDE TODAY • Responding to tM TevtlotiOfl. that tM CO\'MV'I cli.ief gas stiP" plier must CMC the amount of /u,sl he can deUw:r, auptTVi.!or.1 ordtred all dtpa:Ttmlnts to cu,... toll nonesse11;tiol QM ust. Stt 1toru and oiht·r coiintu ntws <lit Pogu IO a!ld 11 . I ' i • .. • ' ----·· • t • ,.....t..:o.:.All;:.;.V.:.Ptt.=o.:.r __ c.:.._ _____ w.:.-.::.:.:.::::'· ~., n . 1~13 - ·,To Defend ' Po licks Dr. Norman E. Wat.ton, chanotllor of the Coast Cbmmunlty College Dl4trtct, lonlght 11 preptu•d to defend the district'• policy of holding .ecr<t meetings.. He will oller bla: remarks at I p.m. d"llni a . meeUna of the Boud of Triisie.. .:t ~ 11eldcjµann, l37l) Adqims ~Ave., Costa Mesa. An Item on the agenda relt1~ to a Dai~ Pilot editorial queaUoning the bolrd'1 pr~clice of schedulln( llll8llOOW1cod secrtt exfCULive aesslons prior to escb reiuJarly aclloduled board meeting. The editorial alao asserted that meetings during which trul\eu fulfllled their tOlu u direct.on of KOC:E-TV were ~ 8MOWJced, u required by U>e atate anli-aecrecy statute, the Ralph M. Brown Act. In a written report included In tonlgbl'1 agenda packet, Dr. Wat.Jon maintains thft "pe.rso0nel &e1siol11" have been beJd by the district's board for 26 years and are ~uled Qne half hour before the boOnl meeting. Be ad&o &hat Uti• bas been done to avoid laavq tilt audleace "•land by" while the bolrd b ln private lleS!lion. 1'be 8l!elilioD "91'COmlng Ull8IUIOIUlced 1V meetiQu, the chancellor malntalna, is 1'categorfcally untrbe .'' 'Mlere ?Las only been one auch meeting -on Sept. 20, 1972 , and an announcement of. the Jl\iMting was sent to the Daily Pilot, with 30 other newspapers , ac· o Or. Watsco. pb )d. Jl{own Act speclll~ that the public's buslne11 be CIXIC!ucted In pujjUc &lld bani all """"'! meetings ex- cept, UDder apeciflc circumstanc9 in· volwirii peraonoel mattera and peoding lltliation. In,. . ·Brown Act r<qulres written notification of lljpecial non-scheduled rneeUnga aent at least 24 hours before the flll'Olin&Jo llJU'Olle who r<questa It. II w.. asaerted ln the Dally Pilot edjl.Qrial that there ha! been no notifica- tion ol TV statloo meeUngs and that di&bict board meetings are not being cc:jj.v~ at the 11nnounced time, as man· di.led by 'the Brown Act, but at an unan-n&unced Ume before the o(ficially ICheduled 8 p.m. meeting. Mesa Pre-school • Remains ·Under Orders · to Close · . ' The C.nlen-4 Pro-scl>ool ol Costa Mesa t<i!ar rOmaim Wider orders to dlsoon- tihue its claseea despite a renewed plea from teacher-owner Joyce Remsen. Costa Men councllmon Monday night unanimou8.ly derued Mn. Remsen's re- quest to appeal lbe order when she Called to show up for the hearing. Earl ier this year, Mrs. Remaen was told she would tiave to disband classes at !\ff' 250 W. Wil&an St. facility in June because tier zoning varlance had been C8D.celed. •('.ouncil revoked her zone exception pennit after hearing complaints from nearby residents alleging tbal the school represents a threat to the residenUal cl,_aracte" ol the neighborhood and that the noise of screaming children disturbs elderly people. Mrs. Remsen's request for an appeaJ wu baaed on "erroneous infonnation" which 111ppo!<dly had been circulated In tfie neighborhood prior to her variance hearing. : But because she did oot appear at fllonday's meeting lo explain the nature df that information, councilmen ordered lb& appeal d..Ued. ~ridge Hike Opposed . ' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A proposal liefore Golden Gate 1'r1dge directors to rlaise the toll from 50 cents to 75 cent! on Ule historic span has drawn opposition ftom the Marin County Boe.rd of ~pervlsors. OUNal CC>.Uf CM DAILY PILOT Tl'I• Or•• CM1t DAll.Y l"ll.OT, Wlltl ~l(lri .. ~ "" ,._.,,_, "' ............... ll'lt Or~ C.0.J1 ,.,_.19ftlr!I eonw-y, 1.-,. rtl• -4Hlono _,. ~ ~y 911'911111 ~rld1y, for-0-11 M-, .. ......,, 9Mdl, H1Mll11C1-I NCl'll""OWIMll'I V1INy, L~ 8.-dl, INllW/SMd!tWdl •nf 111'1 Cl9!Ml'lt1/ s.., Ju.n '-111r1... A •!Ml• •1tUIMll -111ion •• lltlllllll«I S.lllf'd•Y'J *Ill' SUllH'fl. T~ pr~IPlll ,WIW.lfll plMf ~ ti U1 Wftl ..... Jtf"ffl, (Mtt Miii, C.llflWTl!1, fM2'. ltbtrl H. W1M II",.. ... "' 11\d P'Wllll'lw J•tk •· Cvr!9y "'le• "'"''""' ...a o-r11 Mtf\t9ft' Tho1t111 K•1•ll Edi!&> 11itMtt A. M11rphit11 Mltllto~ lldl19r C111rl11 H. l101 lithtrd I', N1H A&lllttilit ~ llllt•• JJO W1,t l1y Str11I M•llll'll NU'NtJ:',..0 . l o• 1160, t2621 iillo.. °""" ,.,,,.,.. ... t )ii) """'9<1 ~ •• ,.. ~ -..tll 22t ........ , ... _ H"""llrltlM 9tldl: IJVJ aetdl ....._,.. s.n C..,_,.: llU ,..,_ II c.tMw It .... T ......... 1714} 141-4J11 Cl_.... ~;MtW., M2·1171 CopyrilM, ,.,,. °""'" c....i "*"""" ~. .... ~ ....... llh ... ll'trlllM. .. """91 mtttw ., ........ ,..,.,.... "'""" _, .. ~ ""'*'' tjNelll1 Ml'· ........ ti ~""' ..,.,.. ..,..... dllU ,_,... ""' et C•• """'' CtU,.,,,lt. khai.tlDtl W Off.., tJM lflllllff'll'fJ 1n1 !Mii U .IJ mlfllt!1'1'1 rnllllW'f' •""""'~~ ... ~. Caulfie~ ~Mess~er' --Ex-NY • I awman Blasts .Bugging W ASHINCTO!'i (UPI) -~ New York Clly cop Anlbooy Uluewlo told Senate investigators today he acted as a messenger for \Vhite llouse aide John J. CauUield, and transmitted C.ullleld11 messages lo CCll•lcled Waterpte con- spirator Jame. W. McC«d Jr. But Ulasewicz indicated he thought McCord and bis fellow Watergate burglars were something les1 than pro- fessional. A good wiretapper, he said, would haYe walked into tbe Watergate "like any de.. ..,nt, common-looldng clllun; la l d somelhilli ID the riSl>I place and waited right out. And that would have been the end ot it for a long time.'' He added, amla laughter, lhet "no retired inan In lhe New York City potlce department" would ever get involved in an operation like the Watergate. "And ll he thought be bad to, for whatever reuoo, be wouldn't have FrotnPllfleJ CAULFIELD. • • Weicker (R.COOn.), what he meant when he testified that he had considered he was doing a "great service for the President" when he offered clemency to McC«d. "It was a great honor f<r me to serve 1s a member of the President's staff," Caulfleld aaJd. u I hid come from a rather humble background, a police of- ficer ... I felt very strongly about the President, extremely strongly about the President. "I was very loyal to the people 1 work- ed for. l placed a high va1ue on loyalty. Now out of the blue I'm injected into this scandal. I'm being asked by one of my Mmer superiors to deliver a message that I know to be executive clemency. l tried to avoid it .. , " walked in with an army -that'• for 1ure." Uluew1ez' remark, almed at the five men captured Inside the Watergate building June 17, sent waves of laughter through the committee room!. Sources close to the investigaUon said tnasewia, in addition to telepboojng McCord with offers of a payoff for silence. was given "hush" money by Jierbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach, President Nixon's personal lawyer. The money Vt'h allegedly to be distributed to Watergate defendants at designated points around the city. The sources said the payments were made to lbe late Dorothy Hunt, who died last December in a plane crash. She was the wife of Watergate consplratot E. Howard Hunl Ulasewkz also conducted political spying operations, the sources said. Jn l!IWOl]} testimony Tuesday, C3ulfitld told the committee that for three years, starting on July 9, 1969, Ulasewicz was pa.Id by Kalmbach and hJs law finn for a varlety of "investigative functions.'' 'Ibe sources said that Ulasewic'L received up to fl0.000 for his activities, which ranged from a probe of Sen . Edward M. Kennedy's Cbappaquidick ac- cident to an investigatiou of a teacher rel)Ortedly harassing the President's daughter, Julie Nixon Eisenhowe'r, in Florida. Caulfield lestilied that UlaseWi.cz work- ed under his !Upervision on orders from John D. Ebrlicbman, then the President'• chief domestic affairs adviser, and former White House counsel John W. Dean Ill. The sources confinned a report in the Washington Star·News that tnasewiez also investigated purported ties between Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine and cor- porate polluten; the finances of Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (0-Mfnn.J, a1so a presidential candidate in 1972, and an unspeciried incident involving ilouse Speaker Catl Albert. O.ltr ll"lkot .,.., ,.... ENTRANCING HOBBY Jill Off1«1r Mellk FronaPqel OFFICER ... moton:ycle gang chieitaln Leolle Peters, row serving fi ve yean in prism. "Everybody can be hyjml!Jed to a certain degree," .saye 9fficer Malik, who foresees its U3e" 1n department tralnlng courses aod memcry relnforcemeot techniques. ~le is not likely~ to use it to calm any belligerent prisoners. "There are quite a few dif(erent ways to do it , but the aubject has to be somewhat receptive." Officer 'Malik says be is mo5t suc- cessful when -be juat gels a J>1n011 to relai:, then induces them,, I.mo a trance state almost wilbout tOOr tmo,ledge ol when they cross tile lnvlalble ltne. During his career of five years, Ofllce< Malik hos worked the patrol divl&!on, servln(. as front desk officer, alao handl- ing crime scene investigation involvtn& camera and laboratory work. * * * * * * · He is, in addition to a registered hyp- noti.st, a licensed swimrnq: and ICU~ diving instructor but be and wile Pam, 1vho have a daughter Deirdre, 2, expect a new baby to keep them busy in November. Files on Hughes Seen As Burglary Plot Goa! LAS VEGAS (AP) -Watergate consplrators may have been after ex· tensive files on Howard Hughes, in- cluding memos purportedly handwritten by the billionaire recluse, when they planned to' burglarize his office, saya Las Vws newspaper publisher H a n k Greenspun . "I don't think they were as much in- terested in the informaUon we had on this Democratic candidate (Sen. Edmund Muskie) as they were in the Hughe s COX'S BROTHER LAWYER FOR HUGHES-Pas-4 documents," Gret!:nspun told a news con- ference at the Las Vegas Sun Tuesday. "It's very possible that they were anx- ious to recover those documents." Hughes' name was brought into the Watergate episode Tuesday when James W. McCord, one or the men who broke in- to the Democratic national headquarters, told the Senate committee probing the a ffair that a Hughes plane reportedly was to be made available to fly a burglary team from Las Vegas to Latin America after Greenspun's safe had been cracked. No burglary \\':JS committed. but Greenspun said someone broke into hls office and tried unsuccessfully lo crack his safe. refused to tell what the docwnents con· talned. Greenspun said, however, the Hughes documents he has "disclose his game plans for the election of presidents, ot senators and governors" and "really tell a hlJIJory of Mr. Hughes' ,ope .. U... ill Nevada. • .from the first time he got here. "It must have been the Hughes documents they were after," the publisher said , "because they were going to use a Hughes plane to go to South America and at that tlrne Hughes was in · Nicaragua." Greenspun said the documents had nothing to do with a $142 million "slander of title" suit he bas pending against Hughes. The publisher set;ks to release a lien Hughes bas on 2,070 acres of prop- erty Greenspun oiw11S near a Las Vega! country club. House Sustains TONIGIIT <X>AST COMMUNITY C 0 L L E G E DISTRICT BOARD -Regular !Meting, 1370 Adams Ave., 8 p.m. UCI SURVIVAL THEATRE -"Cycle Three," Fine Arts Village <X>NCERT Hall, May 23-26, 8 p.m. Admisa:ion fl. TH URSDAY, MAY :U LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Stories and film, 10:30 and 11 :30 a.m. LIBRARY FILM -"Nature's Half Acre," movie for all ages, '7:30 p.m. COSTA MESA SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -Community Recreatlm Center, 12-3 p.m. Typewriters Stolen At McNally School veto on Budget A burglar used a hammer Tuesday to smash a rear glass door at McNally C.00- A ' d A } tlnuation High School in Costa Mesa, I e pprOV8 carting off two electric typewriters worth $1.000. police said. WASlflNGTON (AP) -The llou8e to-School ollicial Albert T. Ferrarrl day sustained Presldent Nixon's veto of" nolified authorities ol the break-Jn at the bill to require Senate apP~val or his top special s!udl.es ' campus in the downtown N~port Firemen Rap City ~•IM I -llmnen h.,• rucbed Re ldmltted that su .... luld made u an lt11p1,.. In their salaiy talb with the ol/u which be'd agtted "to take under city ldJpinlstntUoo, their atlonley llllll advllemenl today. •jBul I never told them I'd lake .90rnt- 1Jl a statement abarply cr!Ucal ol ne-thing back for aomebody else to •P- go(lallng iactlcs by .the city, lawyer ...,,.., .. lvms uld. Stepheii Sliver ,.Id both sides have Wynn 11ld bla aide "bas complete agn..d to mediation by the Call!ornla aulborlly and responslblllty" to ntgl)tl-sta.te Cooclllallon Servlct. ate a contract. Silver accused the city of unfair ~ Wynn said only if a total' lmpU.se I! •lining tactics. "Tbe cllv made UI 1 -·~-• _,,, -~"'''-bo IU!ID di-lftnat -taia lt or leave ll1 ol!er," Sliver ·-0 -~ -• ....,,..,,. '"/:iy Manager Robert L.. Wynn today ~: !id~~lhe talb to denied that was 50 but conceded that be at a rul "impasse" al the present talk! have bogged down lo the point ~AJ. 'impasse' b when you go to the that out!lde help ls being sought to settle -··~.-n and say we at>.olu~y cannot a work conttact for tlie . 1973-74 fiscal L~u year. . reach qreement," Wynn said. "We are perfectty willing to negoti-Sliver "Id the stumbling block, not , ate," Wynn inm,ted.. surprislngly, is mooey. ~ Wynn a!SC> denied a claim by Silver "The city blstorlcally has hid a policy · that the ctt1'1 ctl1ef negotiator, Adm.Jnl&-to pay fire.men the average that nine traUve A.s..11tanl Frllllk Ivens,. had ver-other cities in the oounty pay firemen," bally agreed to a settlement which was Silver said. , ' later rejected by higher authority. "Now, Newport Beach ranks at or near "Ivens and I informally reached a the bottom. They're battlinJ it out with gentleman's agreement three weeks Coat.a Mesa for last place,' he said. ago,'' Sliver t.old the Dally Pilot "He Silver C'Ol'lceded that On an hourly rate, told me that he would just have to tat~ Newport Beach ranks somewhat hlgh- to some other people. er, but that city firemen are still below "Then two days ago he came back and average. said be wasn't able to sell the agreemen~ Silver ta.id firemen first asked to b&. to h14 people. He came back with the paid the .average of a total of 12 other orlgbial offer the city had made to us," cltJes. Silver aaid. "l don't la>ow wbal percentage ln- Sllver said he, "presumes Ivens toot C'l"eUe that wOu.ld have been," he said, the offer to the City Council." ''it wouJd be about four-six percent now. Wynn sald Ivens did not bring any We a!ked for another adjustment next• offer to him-or lo councilmen. January to keep pace." Ivens, reached late this morning, said He said firemen also want the same he never made any unwritten agreement. educational incentive f,rogram given po- "You don 't make gentlemen's agree-!icemen, and other ringe benefit rm: ments in meet and ronfer," he said. provements. Plione Strike Cuts Hotline HELSINKI (UPI) -A telephone workers strike put the emergency hotline between the White House and the Kremli.P out of order today, but a U.S. embassy source said backup systems could be used, The strike also cut all but two of Finland's telephone links to the outside world. In Washington, th~ Defense Department said a backup radio- teletype channel runs through Tangier, Morocco, bypassing Helsinki, tor use if the 10-year-old hotline is inoperable. He said that or:iginal "demand" has been eued and now firemen are asking; for a six percent hike now and another five percent boost as or Jan. 1, 1974. Under the proposal, fire engineers would get aeve:n percent July I and five perceat Jan. 1; captains would 1et seven percent now and 4.c percent Jan. 1. Battalion chiefs would get eight per-1 cep.t now and S.4 percent Jan. 1 and d1SJ>!itcbers wouJd get seven percent July'l and five percent Jan. I. · Silver said the "llnaJ" city offer is 4.5 percent for firemen and engineers, 6.1 percent for captains, &.6 percent for bat• talion chiefs and seven percent for dis- patchers. Silver also 84id that a reduction ot· hours, won during negotiations last year. bot to .. ie effect Utis year, is heln( used· against the firemen. ''They're claiming they are giving us this big chunk and can't give ll! much more thia year," Silver &aid • Ao ol July I, firemen's working hours will drop from SU to 56 hours per week.: Skykib 'Repair Crew' , Retidy for Friday Shot CAPE KENNEDY (UPIJ -The countdown resumed and the Skylab 1 astronauts passed medical checkups to- day for laWK:h Friday in an effort to repair their space station and turn it into a liveable home for nine men this year. The emergency sunshades and debris· clearing tools which the pilots will carry into space were being flown to the spaceport Utis afternoon to be stowed In the cabin of their Apollo command ship. Charles "Pete" Conrad, J)r. Joseph P. Kerwin aDd Paul J . Weltz completed morning-long physic a 1 examinations shortly before noon and doctora reported all was well. '"ft)ere are no problems," saJd Dr. Royce Hawkins. "Everything js normal They are in high spirits." The countdown toward the 6 a.m. PDT liftoff Friday started at 5:30 a.m. It bad been halted eight hours after the ,un- manned launch of Skylab May 14, when it was clear the eight-room space hou se <X1uld not be occupied with9ut ex· NASA AdmiJ;Ustrator James C; Fletcher today established a board head_. ed by Bruce B. Lundin, director of- NASA's Lewi3 Research Center itt Cleveland, to investigate the Skylab failures. The countdown originally was lo begin Tuesday nlg)lt but launch officials delayed ll nine hours to cooserve battery' power ln the U-Story Saturn 18 rocket.- One of the first operations today was tq lnsall the balterles and check tho machine's electrical system. 1l1e U..... astnJoauts flew to tbe spacePort Tue>day night and showed their opUmlsm by piloting their two white jets on a sharp maneuver alnmn call a "hall victory roll" before landing. McCord has said the Watergate team had heard there were papers in the safe linking Muskie ~ D-Maine), to racketeer- ing and that the racketeers could ex- ercise control over the senator if he had been elected President. If the three astronauts can mend Skylab, they will stay up for 28 days to caITY ou t most of the medical, scientific and engineering experiments as!ligned to the mJsslon. There is still hope among project leaders that two more tttree-man crews will be able to follow and stay aboard Skylab even longer. two budget aides. area. saying nothing else was taken. The veto to override ·Ute •eto was 2.36 fpiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _________________________________ _, to 178. or 40 short of the required two- traordinary repairs in orbit. But Greenspun told the news con- ference the documents he had on Jllluskie "absolutely" did not Hnk him to organiz· ed crime 3nd were not "ot sufficient significance to besmirch the character of a presidential candidate." He said the in· format.ion never had ~en published and From Page l SCANDAL ... some ~neak pin1p has seen an op- partunily of m11king money by the sale of the story and secret photographs to papers at home and abroad. "I beh<ivcd "'•i!I. credulous stupidity," Lord Latnb!on \ldcled . "I mllSt repot1t that !here has been no high life vice ring, no security leak. no blackmaJl and, as far as I kn O\\', no politician of any party is remotrly connected with these events." Stem said the alleged "vice scandal" involved a se nior British diplomat with aristocratic family links and access to military secrets. IL Mid he frequented luxury brothels In Paris, 1 . ..ondon, New York tnd We!t Oermany. Alter Lambton issued his stAtcment, a Stern editor in Hamburg said he wa s the man referred to Jn the maga zine 's story. Some British newspapers described the St.em allegations as the most ~nsntlonal in Britain since the Christine Keeler se.x· and-security scandal hit the headllncs JO years ago. ihvolving former War Secretary .John Profumo and nearly top· p!Jng the government of former Prime Minister Hsrold MacMillan. thirds. Eighteen Republicans joined 2 I 8 Democrats voting against Nixon,. while the President gained support from 167 Republicans and 11 Democrats. Nixon thus won a test of his strength in Congress as bis backers, fighting to keep their power from being drained by the \Vatergate scandal, kept the bill from becoming law. After Nixon suffered a six-vote loss in the Senate on the veto, Ho u s e Democratic leaders said they would ha ve a tough time rounding up the two-thirds ni ... jority needed to complete the con· grcsslonal override process and force the bill into ~a1v over the President's ob-jections . Shortly before the llouse vote. Speaker Carl Albert (D-Okla.), told newsmen: "It is going to be very tight, it is going to be difficult." 2 Robbers Miss $30,000 Gem SAN FRANCISCO (API -While looting a Union Square area store of $400,000 bl diamonds, gold. and expensive watches, two robbers dressed a s workmen missed the shop's most ex- pensive Item -a $30,000 diamond, police said. The thieves gained entrance Tuesday by forcing owner Gunther Zimmermann lo open the door as he arrived, ZJrn. mermann said . Zimmermann wu struck on the cheek with a pistol when oo slowly opened tbe safe. Ibey added . MAY 28TH MEMORIAL DAY In honor of those who gave their lives that this would be a better world, we will be closed Monday-Memorial Day JOHN HART LYNN HART HARTS SPORTIN.G GOODS 538 CENTER STREET -I • ) \ ) ' • Law for Bike Lanes Wbell the bi<1cle wave hit the nation, Costa Kua was ooe of lb• llnt"'dti .. lo copy the European Idea of ruen:llll part of the road for lhe exclUJiW! ""' of pedal • PUJllPOl'S· The one and only .,,..on for establlsblng these traila was to protect the bicycle rlden from u essenU.Uy hostile environment of can, trucks and other vehiclu. But although the tnils proliferated, the bicycle riders using them did nol The painted-on lane mark1n~ frequently are willfully ignored by both blke riders allj! by motorists who use the empty ..,,.. as convenient right turn lanes. A newly passed Costa Mesa bicycle ordinance ,!!UU the threat of police citation behind the formerly ' sug· gested'' regulations. From now on it will be unlawful to ride outside· a bicycle lane if one is provided and to ride a bicycle on the wrong side Qf the road where there is no lane. Addi· tionally, motorists are prohibited from entering bicycle lanes. .... Incorporation of these common·sense safety rules into a law which provides misdemeanor punishment for violators was long overdue. Bonds Need Support Leadership of-the Costa Mesa campaign to pass a / $6.5 million park bond Issue fmally has been placed in the hands of lli~hiy capable residents. Despite this roster of luminaries, the new Bond Steerin~ Committee will have to exert considerable effort m the coming months· to make the September election a success. Just being on the committee won't do . tee "111 have to 't'Qrll douhl¥ bard to p!fset this obstacle. Fw1.ber difficulties are poSed by the fact tbl5 will be Costa Mua's first bon.d election and that the com· mlttee members ate therefore short o~ experience with respect to campalgns. lle>,llng wlth a public that ls sometimes apatheUc about civic affairs, the committeemen will have to uae aU avaUaill8 msoureea lo motivate voter interest on the. open space quOlllOll. · !'Or th ... ~ns, the Bond Committee deserves aU the support park-mlDd..i citizens can muster. All Costa Mesa resident& have a significant stake In creation of new parb and Open spaces which will IDU• the enUre 001D1Dunlty a better place in which to work, play and live. Safe W11ter Fun '. Aquatic sporl5 from )'.!IChUng and pool-paddling to surfing are &1Dong quaUties of life that make the Orange Coast one of the best coasts on which to live, especially In aummer. . And an essential element of having fun in the water ts having sufficient skill to be comfortable and safe •l •hatever jl is Qll6 is.do1ng. • Agencies offering· swim programs this year include Ute Cbsta Mesa Department of Leisure Services, Orange Coast YMCA alfd Boys' Club of the Harbor Area, along with private membership swim clubs. Warmer weather even means a st~~up in educational and therapeutic P.ro-. grant1 for patle,nts In the pool at Fairview Hospital Classes offered run from small boat handling to surfing, aquatic drill, water ballet, lifesaving skills and beginrung swimming for infants not even old enough to walk. · • ' •• • • • • One of its major tasks will be to overcome the built-in inertia of the 4 to 1 City Council vote which authorized the election. Split votes historically have had a retarding effect on bond campaigns and the commit· Registritton times are now being announced for most o{ these programs. Some are free and none calls for more than a moderate fee. Signing up for one or more is a good investment in physical health and safe summer fun. 'No, dear, they weren't on trial . , . they were the prosecuting team.' What Do These Have In Common? ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Reader response to my recent "in-com- mon" quiz was so large and affirmative that I'm posing another of the same (on- ly a littler harder) today. Each question consists of five names; what do they all have in common? A score of 25 percent is excellent: Dear Gloomy Gus School teachers are demanding a raise -at the same time achieve- ment tests results show California students score well below national averages in the 3Rll. Shouldni'par- ents start demanding results from teachers? S.S. O'-Y 01111 a e 1111 nb -_.If... IW ,...... ....... Mt -rtty r-fttd ... vi-..... -'"'· s..-Y4'Ur Hf _... hi GIMnW Gvt. D1lty ,.Htt, J. Calvary, Maltese, Tau, Fylfot, and F~ c,tOg, (belGnring to Ulysses, LOrd Celtic. Byron, Newton, Ei?iibeth Browning, and 2. Argos, Boatswain, Diamond, Flush, Punch ). 3. Eastern musical instruments. and Toby. 4. They ar~.all .the. ••)pe 3 Saron, Sheng, Vjpa,;Bonaq~ "!l!i ~~~'Wio~~ Rehab. \l ;:!, • (No credit li )'Oil simply ---l'llil& 4. Bayswater Road;1.u1Qe ~ar.k Place, don str ts tt) 5 Aocl t and clusleat Oxford Street, Holbto1l Viaduct, and eel • · ~-~-• .:..... '" •t 1· • 1 G nd names or coun"'" ... s ~ ·~"'!!' "' n ar Ins e ra · EurO and ille N EUf.)!I;.' ·~ 5. Dacia, .Thracis, ~Ila, Aqulntanla, _ ,,!'"thea'·-!near~---.,E....,..,. and Lusitania. ~ar.,,. ic.i•. ..i-a:R....::, ....., .. f 6. Hotel de Bourgope, C.ovent Garden, Ireland, and the '!J~led &ates. ' Abbey, Haymarket, a~ Cruger's Wharf. 7. All were rec;1p1ents of Nobel Prizes. 7. Pavlov, Kipllnt1;, Theodore 8. ~ong the highest waterfalls in !lat Roosevelt, Bertrand Russell, a n d '!orld. 9. Horses belooglng to famqas Marconi. . figures. (Tbe Duke of Wel~too, a. Angel , Tugela. SUtherland, Glass, Napoleon,· Alesand~ the Great,. ROba1 and King George VI. : E. J..eee, and Don Qumote.) 9. Copenhagen, Marengo, Bucephalus, ~O. All autbon: (you get no credit for Traveller ' and Rosinante this answer) whose most famous worM · ' · · included "green" in their titles 'Ibe 10. Michael Arlen, Lows Bromfield, G H t ., "The G Ba Tree" W.H. Hudson, Marc Connelly, and .. ~ ~· . ,, ... ~een p~',, Ri chard Llewellyn. r~n anst0ns, reen .. , 11. Akkadian, Punic, Vedic, Cornish, and How Green Was My Valley. ) 11. and Frisian. All dead lan~es. 12. All were signer• 12 . John Witherspoon, James Wilson, of the Declarahon of Independence.-(balf· Matthew Thornton George Taylor and credit for this) who were n,t nativ~ Button Gwinnett. ' ' Americans. Actually; thue were eight, the, ot¥rf .. ~ being James Smith, Ireland; Rbbert Morris, England; and, ANSWERS' l. Different types of crosses. 2. Francis Lewis, Wales. , Lib's Lesbian Concerns In this age of rising consciousness, not even a male chauvinist is likely to dismiss women's liberation as a "lesbian plot.'' But the growing presence and in- creased militancy of lesbians in the won1en's movement wprry some feminists, who fear that identification with the lesbian cause will alienate some straight women and divert attention from other issues. ltlOST feminists support the right of lesbians to express their own sexuality. The National Organi.µtion for Women (NOW), at its national convention in Washington lut February, ,adopted It& strongest pro-lesbian statement to date. It pledged to seok leglslaU<in to .end discrimination based on suual orien- tation In housing, employment, credit and rmance, and chl1d custody. Betty Friedan, NOW'1 f o u n de r , recently added a cautionary note. Using the women's movement to proselytize for lesblanilm, she wrots, will "only subordinate the IP"'at lswe of equality for w1111en, the opportunity aod change5 , that all women ao desperatsly need." FOR SOME milltant feminists, les- bianism represents the ultlm&le com· mitment to women's liberation. "Women's liberation and homosexual liberation are both struggling towards a common goal : A society free from defining and categorWng people by preference,'' saya Kate Millett, author or Sexual Politics and an admitted bisexual. " 'Lesbian' Is a label used aa: a psychic weapon to keep \\"OIDCD locked Into their male-defined 'feminine role.' The essence of that role ls that a woman Is defined In lerms of her relationship to men. A \\'oman i1 called a lesbian when she runc- tic-is autonomously. Women's autonomy EDITORIAL RESEARCH Is what women's liberation is all about" The lesbian, sa) lhe r a d i c a I s , personlfies the liberated woman. As a totally fema1e-oriented woman, only she can escape the male hlerarchlcal syljem. THE RHETORIC o1 fomale cbauvlnilm could be the dOwnlall ol the woman'• mc,vement, rdortl Ma. Friedan. "J41ily women in the movement go "-through l temPoraty periQd 'ol great hostility to men when they tltat become coiitcloul.of !J>eir sltuation, but when they t\art.act- mg to change ~·their 1ttuatkln,r. they outcrow what l'Oan tho poeudo-r1dlcat · infantlllsm. But that msn-bating rl>otorlc lncmud111ly di!tull>I mosf -In the movemen~ ll"addilloo to the women It keeps out d. the movement." .. Barbara BllOdtrfatiano, 1 member of the women'• llberlttoli gtoup 11 Colum· bla University, ~. "I thlnt tt ii 1 false hypolhesil that women are ocll'ed away from the movement by the lsoue cif lesbianism. Maybe certain -II I certain lime will be turned off for 1 little while but I thlN: a feminCJI ii a femlnm 1J a feminist ." The. 1pilt between the radlcail and more modmte feminilll over the ie.. bian l.wle p..00.bly wtll not dO any llltlng dam are 1 to the wwneo'• move- ment. No major 10Clal movement Can be totally unified In thought " public ex· pteSJ\on. Al lhe controversy over abor· tlon made citar, women'• liberation ls strong enough to IUPJIOrl 1 divergence of views. c Ellsberg Distnissal Ends Anticipated Test Government Secrecy Crisis Remains ..:;, WASHINGTON -The blow-up of the Ellsberg case has created an internal crisis on government secrecy. In view of the fact, .however, that the Ellsberg jurors leaned toward the acquittal of the man whd leaked the Pentagon Papers, the government is probably in a stronger position to ~tinue its current secrecy policies than if· the case had not been dismissed. As ·matters stand now, there is no le- gal challena:e -to the system of classifying government .. docu- ments as secret, no clarification ·of the right of'the prest to publish such dOCti- ments, no definition 4 .• ... ol what "stealing" publicly OWDe\I docu. menta means. And perhaps it is better that way. vital national security information to the enemy in time of war, whether In the press or by secret contact, could damage the national interest and be actionable . But that was far f1Dm clear in the Pen- tagon Papers case. POLEMICAL and political arguments could be made that the disclosure danuJ:ged Nixoo's attempt to negotiate a Vietnam peace, or t b a t the fires of dissent" were refueled, or that the prin- ciple of secret classification could not be compromised. Bat iuunediate and m e a s u r a b I e damage to the national interest 'lt'as absent. What remained was tbe enonDJty of a trusted person in "ste~' g9vemment secret documents and hln""d- lag them to, the p...,, In the hope ol fur:tbe~ ~ting an unpopular war an"d''litthgtnl'-it to an end. "" lt is probably better lhat the legality of (rucHARD WILSO~ such actions be left in a grey and un- defined area than that absolute authority should lie with federal officials to ex- ercise pr Io r restraint and/or past . punishment for the dissemination of in- formation and documents arbitrarily labeled sea-et and oopublishable. THE SAME reasoning applies here as to the so-called shield laws protecting reporters from disclosing their con- fideotial aqurces of i n f o r rJ\ a t i o n . Reporten are better off to rely on the Finl Amenilment for their protection. In tjJe definlUoo ol their pr!vllegea they #'! lao,e riabts. I ' •Oorilp11r11Sly, the government·~• better 4't not to be confined too closely bf judicial definitions of what It ma7 classify as secret And adverse declstOll in the Etlsberg case, wblcb appeared to be in the making, could have aeYerely d@.maged the jusunable classlncaUon 06 secret infonnatloo. ~ THE PUBUC la certainly betler ol/, that such disclosures as tboae of the PIQo' tagon Papers be left In a grey a"4 doubllul area, to be judged CA!e by caso with all due risks taken by those who inl terpret the law to their own Ukin1. , Recent experience teaches * b a' govemments, however noble ln ltlttitf purpooe, hide lnfom11lloo w h Io- dlscrtdlts t-. Cases vary. It ii prob- ably JUI! as well for ~ who would leak 1!formatlon In the -future ·DOI " know tW>w far they can &O, and juat N well tli_at the government not · kh0"4 precisely what It can hide. ( IN ,'!,'llE. begininlng, the Pentagon P~ case appeared to be in the nature of an historic First Ammdmenr•test to the right to disseminate publicly in- formation labeled by the govenunent as top secret in the national interest. Vo·lunteers 1Deserve Salute: Daniel Ellsberg handed 011er to the New York· Times the Pentagon's internal analysi.s of U.S. lhvolvement in Vietoam which be~Wned as an emplqy.e ·ol tbe Rand O:lrporation, a private research and ana1ysis concern undet contract to the govemmerit. 'Ibe basic facts were never In <fisRute. Ellsberg aod in associate Xero:led the secret amt}ysis and,gave it to the.New York Times which· ignored the top secret classiflcalion and printed large pans of it. The government acted to restrain the New York Times but failed in the Supreme Court and then caused the in- dictment of Ellsberg and his aasociate en theft and espionage ··charges. ·Those. charges were ·pjimlssed on grounds that unjustifiable acts by the Nii:on ad- mlniMralion before and during the trial so compromised the prosecution's case that it could not be adjudicated. FROM THE VERY beginning of th~ c~. It ·was hard to see how the pubUC interest had been hamted by'the contents ol the Pentagon Papers. The analysis and conclusions in this historical study cer- tainly di<j not reflect on the Nixon ad· ministration, but had the effect of ex· posing mJ.stakes and mistudgments irr the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. So far as the Nixon administralOn wa• concerned, tfie primary J>UlllO<le ol trying to stop publication and prosecuting those who obtained and releasF tbe-1tuclf was to protect the govemment'8 ·rlsbt to· hold secret national security informatlcm which, if released, nligbt damage the na- Uonal interest . ' FeW would deny that lbe disclosure of To the Editor : A salute to Orange Coast College Volunteers. Are local taxpayers aware of thls: great group who belong· to the volunteers? I JUST returned by bus with a lot of tuggage I couldn't lift into my car or car- ·ry to my second floor apartment. I called the Welfare Agency for help. She ::.Jked me what I intended to pay. l told her it wJ>Uld take approximately thirty minutes that 1 would pick the penon up and return him to his home. I thought S3 would be appropriate for this short job but I was told by the weliare employe Jhat "no one would be interested. ln that small an amount of montiy'1. I called the Orange Coas;t College and in leas than 30 minutes a clean cut, well mannered young fellow, named Guy. bad picked up my claim tickets and brought my luggage up to my apartment. This ..,_was his gas and his time, however, when 1~tried to pay him he told me he could not accept money and that this help wa1 their contribution to lbe taxpayers for enabling lbem to attend this great col· lege. . IF mE taxpayers didn't have to sup- ply easy welfare and food stamps to a "won't work group'', maybe more could be".done for Orange Coast C.OUege. GLADYS LEACH lntelllgent'i' To the Editor: 1n recent years, there have been a seMea o! events that have indicated that "· ' '~ . ,. - WE 1nv1TI! liOu 'IQ Fem THC ftRDS SAm's BIRO FoOo 15' PER il.o. ' --: ........ . .· -... ~ . . . . . ' . . n• -;1J14 PUNCH [ .... -1.. ..... ~ .... 1 _B.._o_x....1-._..J Leflt'" fNlll """" .... .,.._., NlnMll' wrtttn Mwlcl CM"9' ...,. .......... -_. "' ..... Tllt "9ltt ,. ,..._ ~ " fl! NI«' ... 4111mlMll llllM .. ,..._.._ All i.ttw. -tt 111- chlM ......... ,. •Ml iMlllllrt "*"" Mt re•- 11'¥11' .. WI,.... • ,_II n MttlCMlll ~ II ..,. ..... PMtrY ... Mt ............. the Central Intelligence Agency is really not too Intelligent. I WAS iNe...ie<I lo learn buy that three ol ll!O men wbo pialmed And U• ecuted the Watergate fiasco were three of the mMl who fumlahed "intelligence," 10 to speak, for the Boy °' Pip. I ask 1'JJ, bow much t•IUgence went Into ellhiti oporatlon? 'l1ie CIA said at the Bsy ol Pigs that the CUban people would quJckly rise to support such a move. The FBI warned1 that they would not. The CIA apparently knew nollring of the Rus.9ian jet fighters that squashed the invasion attempt, although they were supposed to have agents 1n Olba. THE SPY ship csptured by the Koreans was under the ccmmand of the CIA. Although during World War U, we hau self-destructing equipment on an leCl'et equipment and document cabinets, that ship had no means ol destroying secret equipment and document!. Was tbat accidental tr planned? We hive had a number or CIA men defect to Russia with secret&. It la my opinion that we rtlll have many double agenta In the CIA. I hope that with the death of Hoover. the FBI doesn't Binlt to that level. Ju.t BOLDING " . Fireman'• J'leto To the Editor: In regard to the story about the C:O.ta Mesa Fire Department contrO\'ersy. (May 161 ! am ooe ol the nine firemen who left ln 1969. I OlD NOT leave the area as Mr. SOnabal claims, mr did mo1t of U8 who left. I left because of the haraum-ellt that ls claimed by the nremen. ~1r. Sorubal claims I.he merit !)'Stem la laif, however, T had . a1 others have had, my merit review downgraded on ~lflc orders to my captain from Chief 1'.tarshall. 'Mlls means you cannot get a promotion unles.'1 he wam.s you to, regardlesS d the test. Durin& the time I Wll -.,, there ' were several occasions of men .be~ pu.sed over fer prbcnotlon even ~ they were top on the list. This hardlf seems like a lair aystem. I AM NOW a fireman on another department and I -k with four othet ex-Costa Mesa firemen, aod they all lefl ror the same reuons. Mr. Sorsabal and (]tlef Marshall doo't thlnlt they have aJ11 problems? Bird Mort•"1"!1 ' To the Editor' ' It ta a known f..i that there are people In U.. Ba,ck /llY llU wbo all In their patlbo with llUDI •ltootlnc our ducks, geese, etc. I ! atao tnow Ille Bacl: Bay ta ..... 11ng place for'mlir•ting birds. The Bsct Bsy llhould be a rtfuge and a sanctuary for bln!s; nOt a mortutcy! M. F. HAR~ Quotes "In world opinion and 'in wodd cf· fectivenen, the United States i 1 meuured by the moral firmness or iU public officials." Dwlgbi o. Elsea bower, 1151 "The stewanhbip of public officers is a sertowi and pend trust ... Frank!ID D. Rooaevtll, 1131 OIANH COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrl N. Weed, PublUht:r Thornoa Kttvfl. Editor Barbare Krt:ibich .Editorial Pa(le Editor The Nltor1Al JMlP of the' Thuly Plbt aeeu to inform and stimW..tf' retlden by prHCflting on this l*al' divtrsei"tommentary·on lopkw Of ln. tft'Ht by g)<ndlcatffl rolumnills and cartoontst:a, by provldinr a f<rUm fer readen' views and by prnmtinc this newspaper'• opinions and kleu on cuinnt top\e&. The tdilorlal oplnlon!t of Ow DIJty Pilot appear anlf in the tditorlal column at tM 'oP ol tM pq:e. Opinions ex~ by U. ~ urnnim Md cartoon!N l.nd leue: wrlt1n ~their own and no+odoc• mmt of 1hclr vlt"'>'W by the D&ll1 PUot lllhaukl bt tnferml. Wednesady, May 23, 1973 . ' -. • DAILY PILOT C. lif ornran-Mi~s Arizona? ~ublicity • -. SACllAMENTO (AP) - 1-i """""'" . of the MIN II&\ lleolll7 NMnl orpnlza-liia ..,, the retcnlQc Miu -USA la rttlly Callarnla lltl Ind probllllly ID'IJClNe lo bold the Arbon& w.. JiiA sfier.,. Nix, It, dlircl -la !alt Week'a MJaa Uio\ Pageant in ,New .Yort. -•.11 a booaJlde Arboal ruldent and hu been for Che J)llttllbt-. ,. :tlDl8 NIX, wbo wa. · allo -loklropolllan Sachuneolo untll resllJllnl the MUe in AP'U, ."commuted" be&ween Sacnmm!o and P ho en I • --Sept,omber and Aprtl, lier -said Tuelday. ! Gov. Reagan Says Energy Crisis Real SACRAMENTO (AP ) Gov. Ronald Reagan says Calllom.la faces a "frtghtening llicture" of energy sllortages be ca u 1 e enviromnentalists fla•• --power lj>lant qcmtructlon. 11Tbe possib i lity of bro!inouta ln Cal~ornia. as they've had ......Uy on the East Coast, is -very real. We may be having diose, .. Reagan l8ld ri-tay during a Capitol ques~r se&!ioo. -about 2118acrammto high li<llcJOI ltudem... ' • .A.steel. what the state would !lo lo an energy crisia, Reagan .~ "We may find out 'veey quickly. Then> wouldn't bo m awful lot we could do," "IT 18 A lrtgbtenlng picture, lhe energy lllJo<taile ~-faces ua, b8 said. I "So many people i n Mn. John Nix aald 11111' dlu&bter was still in New York but pa ..... lo _,. lo _lhil_lo_ wort as a model rJ\ere. Lal August, MIM Nls l'lll for the Miss calilomJa USA ti- tie and loot. Wlnrq tlJo Mloo Arizona com.ot dlia Ap1I gave her a aeoond shot at the j MIN USA title, and thol,,i. lhe milled 'the lop prize jn - Yort, ahe did come ln alleod of the girl who beat her in the Miss Calilomla USA 00111tt1 Jut August, carol llmoma of Artaia. New y "°' "1'idali of the MIM USA Pageant aa!d 'flleo. ' day that Miss Nlx had sul>- mitted five notarized statements !Upport.ing b e r claim to be an Ariwna resi- dent. "WS'VE GOT the cenlflca. lions, including Sherry's own, signed a rut no!Miud. and we're satisfied," said Herbert Landon, executive producer of Miss Universe, Inc., sponson of the New York pageant. Carmel Martinelli, dlrector of the Miss Metropolitan Sacramento Pageant, said she had almost dally contact with Miss Nix during the time she i · 'Oets Tria Q .i ,.,!! -_ .... r>l'li. USA -· llld .. doubl«! 'll!Y l>OaSl 'lV 'et'S Miii Nb: -elJilblo '° be R klcated ~~=.~ Ul8 ~G~ (AP)~ ·JP~~arQ~ ~·-Certificates we're not Judi• and jury" be -· of what the judgo Sa .. , ,;.g'~ rv·1ce said. "But you can't be o real-called :;;'muslve aaturatloo • · 1..UI~ dent of t ... ttatel. Our J>UblllilY ~ the ..... thO -,,----=---.,.· ;;.--...:=!'""-------~~~~:::r =::1th:,~:~ i/ 1-:. -~ 11,1e.lnlldets Club rules, she 00..ldn't have l>ttn Ha"""" Gardeo. will be ....,'.""""-:-ol'::'"'-'----------- Mlas Arimo&." . held Ii) flortbern Cal.U~ " Mrs Nb: Bild her daup!or' J Tbojl\d&e Tuelday ordered bad been ltvlng In Phoenix the ,~1;1<> begin July 16 In with on aunt. She said lhe was RlldwOod City. On trial will be modeling 1n -and ai.o Dooald Allle!o, 21, Oscar bad .....Ued brlefly at the Heroobdez, 22, and Michael Untvenity of Arbooa. ~.;,;s.ch:lrged with the ~·<y I EttoctlYo Annual Eamlngs · 5.00%-5.13% ,,,,..,__No Minimum. 5.75%-5.!12% --WI' Hll~ Loi~ •623-1351 '""""'"'* Wtl.IKIRIE al mitAll!RC"I rt.ACEl 3933 WI/shirt 111¥d. LA.• 38&-1265 LA.CMC-2nd. ~. 626-1102 HUHTIMln'ON IUcH& MISS NIX had tried twice munler P!,JQY<e ,Ann Huff on -~-w wtn ••-~-USA July Z of'Jast year in wbal ooe ==r "~ ~-alleged parttotpant said was a .,, ,_ coolest. In 1970, olle compeled --•-bot in the Miu Californla USA 1a.i-...:11· s as the trio was Ono Yw Certilla!te $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% 91 HuntltlllM c.n.-(7l4J 197·1047 SANTA llOfrUC:A: RESIDJ!NCY DISPUTED Miu SMrry Nix was certified u an Arizona resident. "If !lie went down there, she went by night," M r 11 • Martinelli said. "Mom of the time she was bere i n Sacramento." contest as Miss Ra n c b 0 looking for members or a rivaJ Cmlova, and in 1971 as Miss ga11f!. Folsom. SUperK>r Court Judge Julius Last year, she angered of-Le«ham <llready bad put a ficials of Sacramento• s a:ag •<rder on the case -&J>- Camellla Festival when abe plying to 'what be said news quit as fe.!Jllval queen to take media could .report as.well as the title of Mlss Metropolitan what persona coonecected with Sacramento. the case could say. An appeals Miss Nix is one ~ four court struck down the portioos sisters who have won a total relating to bans oo the media. of 14 beauty tltles Jn the DR. LEONARD Stallcup, Sacramento area in recent IN GRANTING a defense motion for another trial site. the judge said : CaHfomia directer of the Miss years. Two to FMI Yoar c.rtJflcates $5,000 MlnlrnJm, Up to 90 days km of · Interest on amounts withdrawn belont moturlty on all awtiflcate accounts. 718 Wlllhll'WI BM:!.• '93G74CS .......... 10th 6 PKHlc • 831-2341 -.. ... crm Chale & Vin Nuys Blvd.. 192-lln TAllW!k 18751 Venttn Blvd.• 34$8514 ..... _ 3rd .. Lacust. 43'7·7.tBl ................ 8th iii Solo • 2e6-4&10 DIAMOllD .... 328 S. Ollmond.8-r (714) 595-7~ rum"' SD County Bans Sex Book "It is the rare person within Los Angtles County who has not heard of the present case and, in fact , not been exposed to expressions or opinion with respect to the merits of the case ... and ~ere appears a reasonable lilf'elibood that a fair and impartial trial cannot be had here." lbe Insiders Club: A new way to beat Inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every- thing you need from the finest closed..cfoor show· rooms at substantial sav.: ings -appl iances, furni· ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. also provides big dis· counts o~ tickets to sport· Ing and ·entertainment events •.• plus i whole list of free serviceS: safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership requlre4 ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borro\)'Srs now ~Ive aS6 soclate memberships en. titling them to all outside referral services. Ask about joining at any·eoast office. Larwln $QUIN Shopptl'I& ctr. (714) 832-6110 LA MlltAOAI l11~i'll'l."m"""' °"· SAN DIEGO (APJ -The Planned Parenthood Aseocia· lion has been ordered by San Diego County supervisors to stop distributing a comic book called "Ten Heavy Facts About Sex." Supervisors vOted f.1 Tues- day"' make withdra""1 d the book a condition for a 60-day extensioo of planned parent,.. hood's contract with the coun· ty for federal f;amj)y-plamlng funds. AnoUler condition was the ending of birth-<00trol counseling w persong under 18 who are supported by perents or guardians. our constituents," countered Supervisor Lou Conde, wtio led opposition to simple renewal of the contract. He oaid the book "has certain bad m<nl aspects" and some sections "encourage violation of California state law." Walsl! said ooonty counsel Robert llerTey ..... reported that the book vlolat<s 00 state laws. "Ten Heavy Facts About Sex" cont:aJm humorous draw· ings which illustrate such statements as: "Masturbation ls a normal expression of sex for both males and females .,, auto, can be considerred 'a~ normal' if it is involuntary or exploitive." ''Two ways of avoiding unwanted pregnancies: self r--------- control or birth control." "Sex is cool when you are ready for it. It is even normal to wait until marriage." Fratern,ity Goes Bare The book also has advice on how to avoid veneral disease aAd outlines birth oontrol methods and abo!tion law. STANFORD (UP!) - Il was written by Dr. ~I Stahford University has Gordon, identified as 8 pro-censured a fratemity for f ol a "rush" party that fea· essor family and child lured five topless dancers, deveJopment at SY r a c u s e including one who was You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav· ings. The Insiders Club IAN GABltlBJ Del Marat Wfllnat• 287-«Ml Dlllty Houn-9AM ta4 Plf All Olli-. Ela!>t Civic ..,..,..., °""' _..,. 9AMtalPM -· -·""- ASSETS OVER ONE BIWON DOLLARS Supervisor Jack Walsh, the only dissenter, called !he board's action "book burn- ing." University. A p Jann e d raffled off to partygoers. T s d ' N Qu • "PORNOGRAPHY l• =zthr~il~t5 ~~~;~·0's~J~!~r£1. ry atur ay s ews , iz hannJess •. ·• if porno is yoar groups across the country, and the local leadership Jost l _) '" ·" ... .. ,-. .. ' I • ... : ., -· . ·• • ,, , I 0 " ' .. ~ ,.• • " ' ,, ,.,, d "' ii " ., ' c ' ' " ... ' '" ~ ,) .; CaljfOmla have concentrated IO 'much on environmental prOloction there have been no .,...... plants built. We won't Je( them build lo•sU fuel plants and when we build nuclear PoWer plants along the coart.; \{e're told we can't have U>ose becaWJe that ml8fU he .• lbreat and might hurt the ecology of the ocean," Reagan Aid. bag, you don't have much of "t!lio is the only area that they control," said Larry IV. We Dare You 0 WE ARE HERE t 0 an imagination." have had this kind 0 r Horton. • I ~----~-~~~-re...:...pn!Sell-..:=t_the__:_moraJ__:.:...:.bel=i=ef=•=•=f~-"=Any::.'.-~'°":::_·~hetero==.:::...· homo:::::::...•:r__:r: .. ~poooe::::·~"~~~~~~-'==================~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~---·~: ,, NO MORE TANGLES SPRAY ON . CREME .RINSE 7 oz. 79 _c • • I ~ ' • • ... : ' ... ' ' ,, -. S.~_nn.y ·4'Y ,;_~uJngs. at . Ti-e,asury : . ' \ · I • • • • he~lth and beauty aids department. COPPERTONE fil \m SUNTAN LOTION 4 oz. BAYER • ASPIRIN lOO's fu'!·cioi 69c no ~· .............. SCOPE 18 oz. Regular BAND-AID PLASTIC STRIPS PEARL DROPS TOOTH POLISH 2% oz. CLEARASIL . . OINT!t\E 70's BA".Q-AID 1.2 oz • . -' . 'fl.::: ~.,.. '" -.'.59c · 69c . : t GILLmE THE DRY LOOK HAIR SPRAY 11 oz. CLAIROL HERBAL ESSENCE SHAMPOO 8 oz. EFFERDENT DENTURE • TAil.OS 40's 66c OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 ·SUNDAY.to to 7 . ' IUINA 'AU Beach & OrtnotfhOrPI HUMAI MIU.I 10 CMttwortfl St. ~:mo T,,.,. WOODLAHO MtUS 21.SOO Vlctorv Btvct. SANTA ANA No. of .Sou!ft q>tst Plaza LMIWOOO Canon St. · reasury '. .. TOUANcl Sepulveda and H~ and Par.mount erva. QMH11 Glrdfn. Grwt BfVd. Ind Manchester I-SICl9 andlootl'-.. • • I , I ' " ... ': . '' '.' "• i ,• . . ... ' . "' " • . , ,, " ' . .. ·! .. ' " ' • .,• . ' ,,• .. • . .. I ' l 1 \