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1971-03-05 - Orange Coast Pilot
' • ,. ... • • ea:mst.ei-s . a .e . , ' ' . ·~ied Beeause·ILo"e Bini FRIDAY AFTERNOON, .MARCH 5, :1971 VOL. ... NO. U. 4 lldtOfrt l, G: l'Allll ' , ' ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • Laguna Narcotics Sweep Nets 30 Police Harassed Mesan Gives ; Up: After Showdown By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Some -standing exposed to what 01 '"-o••IY l'Hat 11a11 could have been a mass murder spree Screaming defiance and frantically -. taunted and heckled shotgun-armed loading guns, a Costa Mesa man finally ~ officers crouched under cover. surrendered to quiet police coaxing The drama began at 3:20 p.m., with 'Thursday. only seconds before they fore-a report or a man shot at 3013 Coolidge ed a showdoWn. Ave .. and a man with a gun at 3002 A crowd of 300 mill ed around the Fillmore Ave., one block away: tense scene. ignoring orders broadcast Victim John W. Golden II. 23. of from a circling police helicopter to move Phoenix, Ariz., is listed in satisfactory back. condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, with a .32 caliber bullet wound Judge Screens Hartelius' Girl's Story By TOM BARLEY 01 lht 01lty ~119f S11tf Orange County Superior Court Judge James F. Judge has decided that much of the testimony to be offered by Dr. Ebbe Hartelius' shapely blonde mistress from Costa Mesa will have to be screened at an evidentiary hearing from which the jury will be barred. He reached thal decision Thursday night after a torrid afternoon session in..which 27-year~hLReba Vaughn~con· stanUy tangled with defense attorney Matthew Kurilich in three hours of ob- jection-riddled testimony. It broughl 'from the slight attrm:tive witness the confession "I lied for him (Harlelius ) because I love him" and the angry retort to Ku rllich: "Hey, if I wasn"t a lady would l tell you something.'' She was frequently warned by Judge Judge. that she mUs:t mwer only the quesUons ,p~t J.Q hCr and K~ilich also came in for the judge 's angry feprl· mands for questions that were promptly ruled to be immaterial and irrelevant. 'One such question appeared to be designed "to prove that Mrs. Vaughn married a Newport Beach policeman In Mexico. Deputy DisLrict Attorney Alphonsus Novick·s prompt objection prevented an answer . Judge Judge ha s decided that when the trial resumes ~1onday, the ~orning r.esslon will be devoted to the evidentiary bearing. The jury will be reea lled to his courtroom at 2 p.m. that da y. The jury will be asked at the conclusion nf what i! expected to be a four to -... six·wef!k-trial m rule ·on the· 50-ye&r-old physician's g u i 1 t or inrl\lcence on char11:es of arson, bribery and insurance fraud. 1. lt is alleged tha't the dapper d~Jar. whc> b: currently divorcing his w~ IS.. HARTEIJUS, Page !) that collapsed one lung. He still sprinted a block, trailing blood, on the one remaining respiratory organ before collapsing. Paul E. Weaver, 30. of the Fillmore Avenue address where the JO.minute con- frontation occurred. is In city jail. booked on charges of assault with intent to commit murder. New .charges may be added since some Items in Weaver's arsenal -lined up along a wall ready for use -are listed as stolen, according to police. A police helicopter cruising over the Mesa North triplex development when the reports came ln directed ground units to the scene. Patrolme1 John C. White, Robert E. Arnold and Gary Barwlg arrived almost simultaneously to find a second bloody victim pistol-whipped-in the fra y, lean- ing against a car. He pointed to the front triplex unit and S::aJd_!_h~sus~ had run inside. Getting no response to orders to come out, Arnold and WhUe gingerly opened the unlocked door and entered, guns drawn, but the home was silent as a tomb. Sudden sounda overhead sent them behind a bar at the foot of the stairs for cover, with a full view of the shadow of a man with a gun. The sounds were bolts of high-powered rifles and shotguns being loaded. ijte ·flatrolmen realized·, 90.0iey·1gain ordered < him tq drop ths wea~ and s~rrender. "'You'll take me out of here fei:l first before I'll do 10 to 20," the Santa Monica Hospital steam engineer scream- ed back. By this lime, backup patrol units ~ere, parked at crazy angles in the crowded cul-de-sac adjacent to busy Baker Street · and the curious crowd swelled. Office.rs Arnold and White kept up a constant, c8!mlng stream ~ con- versation, as Patrolman Jobn Stoneback -who joined them inside -passed word on out by the moments. Weaver, reportedly trYtng to make surrender deals the , patrolmen hid no authorlty to accept, 1tubbornly relu,,ed to surrender.'ieading. to an order for- tearga1 raced to the scene by Lt. Avery Smith. A shootout appeared Increasingly like- ly. Officer Arnold, who only 1l:r houri IS.. SHOWDOWN, Poge !} V •.• ·~····· of :Shooting· ' -'-'-- DAILY PILOT Pllolt llY llkh,IN kOl'llltr ATTENDANT ILEFTl TAKES PULSE WHILE RUSHING SHOOTING VICTIM TO AMBULANCE In Cost• Mesa, John Gold~n of Pho.nix T•kei'Bullet in Chest; He'll Live Phoenix Given Teamsters VP Arrested Death Sentence, Remains Calm On Counterfeiting Rap Gary Harold Phoenix of Costa Mesa was sentenced to-death ·'thursday for a series of raJl:CS and kidnapings in which the husk~ bachelor beat and in-- jured several of his victims. WASHINGTON (~Pl -An in· ternatlonal vice president o( t h e Teamsters Union and five other persons were arrested by Secret Seryice .Agents t'oday after being namecfin an indictment ' Outwardly calm and composed -a. that charges them with conspiring to demeanor he maintained through his counterfeit mone)' and food and postag~ sta mp!. ' seven-wee.k Orange County Superior Atty. Gen . John N. Mitchell aMounced C-Ourt trial -, he offered no reaction that a sealed indictment had been return· to .Jup.ge WUli~ fo#urr.ay:'li, pro-, I .ed against the sir men in ,U.S •• District nouncemeut ,oi,Sf.Pt~e, •• .,. C(ourt in Newark, r.{ . ..t. T~\u'!day. · As'.1' l)llrl ' ot the llle.ged compii-a-fy, .Peputy tP)lblic Defender Rodetiick Ric· the defendanµ..intende;d.to buy and sell cardi withdrew hU motiona.for r,educUon About ,250,000 in couri£erre1r··mcine.Y, the of sentence and a new trial shortly indictl¥nt said'. before Judge Murray ordered Phoenix, Named in the indictment was Salvatore 29, to be shipped to Sap QuentiD 's Death Prov~nr.ano, ·intemiUooal vice president Row within the next 10 days. of the International Brotherhood of Team11ters. 1be U.year-old resident of ting to buy and &ell $25u,OOO in counterfeit Federal Reserve notes. approximately l50 and 1100 Federal officials said Provenzano is the brother of Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano, 'once a top lieutenant of Teamsters leader Jameia R. Hoffa. Anthony Provenzano was rel eased from FederaJ prison In Nove mber after serv- ing four years for extorting $8,600 from a transportation company president. SAivatore Provenzano, Faugno . Bnd AndreUa were arr~sted today arid held for ·a tfalT liearffig before' a U.S. magistrate .. Angelo, Carlton and Fried;_ inan llad been. arrested prevlO}Jlly.: Friedl. : ' man · ai'id Carlton were rreea on soo;ooo : ball each and Angelo on ~000 bail.! . ' California lnvalf ed Phoenll'r appeal against the sentence Hackensack, N.Y., is )also president of la scheduled for bearing by the California the Teamsters ;Oint Couricll No. 73. B V • J ,;, Supreme Court. No date has betn set Also named defendants were Armand y· arlOUS ll8eC~ for dilcussion of the action. Fau~no 56, of EngleWood Cliffs, N.J.; SA:CRAMENTO ,(Ufl) -CaJlloraja hl5 Phoeni.t was convicted on 30 of 33 Thomas Andretta, 36, of Hasbrouck been invaded by· the boney locusL. pc>d. f I hi Heighta, N.J.: ·Stephen Angelo , 39,. of borer, lhe · ·i-.... rted ·meaty•"•', ·the e ony counta w "ch allea;ed that he at-"~ NJ w ea 11 '3 f "'""' -. .:JQ..aucus. . .; ayne r on. " . o 11>rniJ101 bagwcrru and -~ · jwtiper' tacked nine women in a 28-day period North Tampa, .Fla.: Jack Friedman, of webworm. last summer. Several of his victims West Paterson, fi.J, All these pests found their Wl)"l'-Vlto testlfied t."Jey Were tracked by Phoenix Each of the six defendants is charged the. state last year, the California at night, dragged by lhe physical culture wlt.i conspiring to ptlnt counterfeit Agriculture Department reparted Thurs-· txpert IDto hll whltl"Thunderbtrd auto Federal Reserve notes, postafte !lamps day. The agency's 1 Insect •identilfers. and atibjected to 1 ni"'hlmare of bcattnn, and Department. of Aarlcu _ture food ., taWesl .39,09t'•timens in Callfotnla· •. e ... coupons. • In 1970 -a 17 .percent jump ~ over• rape and amtal perversion. The lndlclmenl accu,.,es them of plot· 1969. ) • • Thousands Jnfirugs . Confiscated In a 'sweep that began · at noon Thurs- day a'ntl lasted until after midnight. r,aguna Beach police and state narcotics officers arrested 30 persons on grand jury indictments for alleged narcotics offenses. • The arrests followed a three-month Investigation in the. Laguna area during which undercover agents claim to have purchwd several thousand dollars worth of drugs from suspects ranging ln age from 18 to SO years. Most of those arrested face charges of sale of dangerous drugs including LSD and heroin. The grand jury indictments were hand- ed down on Monday and the arrests were made by three Laguna and five state officer5 following a Thursday morn- ing briffing in Laguna. The operation was directed by Sgt. Neil Purcell, head of the Laguna Beach Police Department's speci8\ enforcement division and agent Jack Leavey or the State Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement. Most of the arrests were made In the vicinity of South Coast Highway and Cleo Street in taguna Beach, known as a gathering place for youthful longhairs and a center of narcotics deal- ing in the Art Colony. Before the night was over, offiCf!t's also had ranged as far afield as Sin Clemente, Costa Mesa and Hawthorne lo make individual arrests. Almost all those arrested were "In- volved" in. the use or aa le of heroin, Purcell claimed. Most of the "buys" which Jed up lo the grand jury indictments were made (See SWEEP, Page Z) Oruge Coa1t 1''enther lt won 't get My higher·than 83 degrees_, whether >:,ou'fe on tht l roast ordrlVInr lhlan\l. Satuflloy. ' Gusty winds . will prevail undel" sunny skies. , . . . . . INsm,: TODA" Neville !ifarriner wili N ' ' 1 g~tst Lecturf:r at. the Oran"'~ Cottrrty Philharmonic Society'1' free preview Wedneaday. ·See today'.s W cekender •. lottift.t ,, C1llltr$ l , , Ch«~lnt ti' J Cllltl'*! ,,_., Cilnk• u cnu ... 111 u 0.Jll , MttlcM , It Dlvwu1 • 11 • ldlltrllt ,." ' 'lllMC.. -1-t .,.,.tc:tH • II """ UMtrf I~ M1llM~· • ' Ml"lt•,Llct~MS 11 ( .. ,-' . { • I ' -· ! I • _..._, l'ILOl s l'NM Page J SHOWDOWN • • .. before told a re~r the scrnl-hwnorous rampage of a monkey Wednesday was bis wildest case slnce 1956, when he joined -ktpt talking. W, lhnll\, WU dry. Topics raogtd from name and are to We&ver'a family and the fact they ml Olhers could be hurt il he cooUnutd lo l>old oul '!'be eu.pect cried back he bed a rilbt to protect hJJ home. -~ outside lilt apertmeot -It.a eecond floor wlndows ominously CW'• lllned -DettcUve s,t. Jack Calnoo pr<pertd lo fire I leargao ahe!I. Downatain, !J. Harold Fischer had 1llppod Into the triplex hlmaelf and w., waiting for the sound of Calnon's shotgun. "I was going up the stairs and try lo lob one in before he could duck ll"lto a little bathroom. I know the layout. My father owns a couple of them," he explained. "You have to hit them hard and fast with gas, so it saturates the room," be added, Weaver, bowevu, had heard the talk of teargas. Dropping hi5 gun -one of sii: loaded, cocked ud lined up for siege -he came down!ltaira witb bLs hands up and the long process of unraveling details Jay ahead. Weaver was taken tn for questioning, while police confiscated about a dozen high-powered weapons and interrogated seven witnesses direcUy involved. f"r!du, March 5. lfrl • OAIL Y ,ILOT Slllf 'httt The pistol·whlpping victim, known only as Carmen, about 20 to 25 years old, had vanished and is still sought. "We're not e1actly certain what was Involved," Lt. Fischer said today. OFFICERS WHITE (LEFT>. ARNOLD INVENTORY ARSENAL Collection of Guns, Ammo Found in Suspect'• Apartment Witnesses agreed an argument oc- currtd involving Golden, who oc· c~ly v:lsits bis parents Jn the Har· bor Atta, and his acquaintance ~Of sev· eral months. Pronaise Shown nu..ts of a flltllght brought the pair outside, alter which they fMnler<d the residence and the shot wu heard moments later. Nation's Jobless Totals Golden ran to an apartment, burst through the door and collapsed, rasping on hi! own blood. Tal{eSeco11dStraightDip Highlands Group Urges 'Yes' Vote On Route Ballot 'Ibe COrona Htghlands AssoclaUon's board of directors hu unanimously ncommended a ''yes'• vote on both measures in TueSday's Pacific Coast Freevtay election in Newport Beach. Tile first proposition is an initiative that seeks to rescind the agreement with the state on street closings along the freeway route through Corona del Mar. The aecond is a charter amendment that wouJd require referendums before the City Council could sign any such agreemenU: in the future. Gerard Van Hoven. chairman of the assoclaUon'a Freeway Committee, said the board based its recommendation on the inJUatlve on the fact that the agree. ment may influence the pending Newport Beach traffic study. "'?be board feels there can be no true, honest study on lraffic as long as we are tied to t h Is agreement," be llid. Van Hoven said the alfirmaUve charter amendment recommendation is urged because "for a question of this magnitude sufficient documentation on traffic needs should be available to the people before it is decided. "There should be no difficulty in educaUog the people enough for them to vote an It," be &aid. The Corona Highlands association is the second homeowners group to take a public stand on the election issues. Earlier this week the Newport Heights Homeowners ASIOCiaUon unanimously recommended "no" votes on both measures. 01A11•1 COAlt DAILY PILOT ...., ....... ---· -·-· HNI ......... •-•w.., s. a11a1•• OAANCM1 '°""' PUILJSHING CON#Nf'f R•Mrt N. W ... Prw,_.t .,.,. f'llM""" J1tli: R. c.,,r.., Vkll ,.,..._ en; 0-11 MIMiiW n .... ic.,.,n ..... 1N••& A. M..t..T111 -.-elnf &:11• Qaikt H. lH1 llllth1r4 P. Hltl ~' MIMI'"' bl*"' -C.• MIMI -Md .. y lwtet ,.,...,..,, a.di! -.. ...,.,. ...,......., ~ '-di:. nt ,_,A- ltlm'ltinlfl'll a.dlt. tM I-it ....,... ... 1M ~ -...... II CMrllnt ~ .. WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Joblessness declined for Lhe secand straight month in February, dipping to S.8 percent of the nation's work force, the Labor Department reported today. Although the decline was concentrated among teen-agers and persons seeking part-time work, Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson said the figures "continue to show further promise·• of overall improvement in the nation's employment plctu.re. The national jobless rate reached a nine-year high of 6.2 percent in Deeember. It dropped to &. percent in J anuary and Hodgson said the two-month decline ''is ind eed heartening." He said it shewed "the economy is moving in a fa vorable direction," he said. A total of 5.4 million persons were cut of work in February, the same as in January. However, after ad- justment for seasonal v a r i a ti o n s , unemployment declined 185,000 during the month, with the rate dropping from 6 percenl to 5.8 percent. The S.8 percent rate Is identical to the rate recarded last November. The jobless rate for adult men was unchanged at 4.2 percent and for married men at 3.2 percent. during February. 'lbe jobless rate for persons seeking full·llme work also remained essentially unchanged at S.4 percent. However, the jobless rate among teenagers dropped sharply, from 17.6 l'rom Page J HARTELIUS. •• 22 years, set fire to his offices at 2345 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar, last April 9 and tried to collect on the insurance policy. Novick alleges , that Hartelius hired Jim Blevins, Reba Vaughn's brother, to set the bla.z.e and he alleges that the doctor paid Blevins in Reba's presence to leave California and settle in Arizona when local investigators stepped up their probe into Hartelius' activities. Blevins and his sister are scheduled to go on the witness stand in Monday's evidentlary hearing. Mrs. Vaughn testified that she lied for Hartelius throughout the police in- vestigation of the Corona de! f..1ar fire and during the physician's preliminary hearing in Harbor Judi cial District Municipal Court. Free on parole from her conviction and jailing on narcotics charges she firmly stated in her soft Southern drawl: "After all that ma has done to me and It's a Jot I stJll love him." Hartelius. who had been watching her closely, looked down at the counsel table on hearing that statement. Mrs. Vaughn claims that Hartelius persuaded her to seek hospital treatmen t 1h.J didn't r~ally n._eed .t_.o..keep her away from various caurt hearings in(o the arson-1ml bribery charges; An-d·-..she states she has been threatened wlth death If she testifies against the phys i· cian who shared her home for more than three years. She said Thursday that she finally decided to tell "the.whole truth" when Judge Byron K. McMiiian took her into his chambers to que1tlon her on the threats she had received. What Mrs. Vaughn told Jud ge McMIUan led the jurlst to cancel Hartelius' bail and put the physician in Orange County Jail. Judge McMillan has refu.ttd to divulge 11-1.rs. Vaughn 's statement$ to hJJp. Judge Judge restored the doctor's bait before the current trial started following Kurllich's pf'Qte1t that he could not adt- -quately ~present the· physician l( be were held in custody. percent to 16.7 percent, while the rate for part-ti me workers fell from 9.2 per- cent to 8.7 percent. Since the jobless rate hi t 6.2 percent in December, actual total unemployment has increased slightly. But it is nonnal for this time of year for the jobless rnte to rise, resulting in a decline in the key seasonally adjusted reading. The February jobless figure was still far higher than the figure a year ago \\'hen 4.2 percent of tbe work force was without jobs. Total UJlemployment was almost 1.7 mlllion higher last month than a year earlier. The unemployment rate for whites, which had increased steadily since late 1969, declined from 5.6 percent in January to S.3 percent in February. Average hourly earnings of rank-and· file workers on private payrolls were $3.34 in February, one cent higher than in January. * * * Wholescile Price . Rate Registers Whopping Climb WASHINGTON (UPI) -Wholesale prices resigstered a 0.9 percent increase in February, biggest one-month rise since July, 1953, the Labor Department reported today. Coupled with a 0.7 percent rise in January, the figures indicated that in· nation continues to plague the economy despite a year·long business slump. Wholesale price increases generally show up later in highe r prices at the consumer level. The department announced a llttle more than a week ago that on the basis of preliminary figures, t h e February increase was 0.8 percent. 'The complete figures now available indicated the jump was even higher. 11og prices soared more than 31 percent in February, prabably indicating sharp boosts in pork prices at the butcher shops this month. Cattle prices rose 13 percent during February and livestock prices on the average were 16 percent higher. Overall, pr ices for farm products rose 4.6 percent last month while prices for processed foods al'ld feeds advanced 1.3 percent. The Wholesale Price Index f or February rose to 112.8 percent of the 1967 average. That meant it cost $11.28 last month to buy the same variety or v.·ho\esale goods that could have been obtained for $11.18 in January, $10.97 a year ago and $10 a little more than three years ago. The induslrial commodities prices ln- creas~ 0.3 per~cent .. in February, the .. sam~ an10unt as re~rted-earlier, That flgU:re is considered more· significant by many economists than the more volatlle fann products prices. On a seasonally adjusted basis, the wholesale price index rosl! 0.7 percent in February compared to the 0.6 percent increase reported earlier. 2 J\1cn Electrocuted HESPERIA (UPI) -Two men were electrocuted Thursday when a drill shift they were near louched an overhead power line. • 'killed ,,were. Evereu Hart, 78. Adelanto. and Ralph J. Roeder, 19, Hesperia, an employe of the company using lhe drill to cle~r out a weli at tbe Buckhorn 1-"lsh Jlatchecy. Viets Near Laos Huh Reds Mass 1Tanks, }lissiles for Big Fight SAIGON (UPI) -MJllfary •pok"""n sald today the Communists had CQO- centnted m1Nile sltea and masaed up to 50 tanb for the defense Of Sepone aealnst a force of 2,000 South Vietnamese troops closing in on the Ho Chi Minh traU roadway hub in Laos. Onnmunlst groundflrf'. five In Laos and Me in Quang Tri Province across the border, with a loss of one crewman killed, one wounded and low-mlssing, According to command fij:ures, 48 U.S. choppers have been destroyed in the campaign with a loss of 40 dead, "46 wounded and 7.8 men ii.sled as missing. Uoofficial reports rrom the front have told or dozens of heliCoplers badly damaged in the operalion. The U.S. Command also disclosed that 10 hellcoplers were shot down Wednesday instead of the seven originally reported -· the greatest single day loss since the Laos incursion began. Field reports said 2,000 South Viet. namese troops had driven to within three miles and perhaps within s i g h t of Sepoae, main objective of the 25-day ottenstve atainst the trail. The South Vietnamese troops were fannl.ng out around Sepone after being flown aboard U.S. helicoptel'3 into land- ing zones blasted out of the jungles by 15,000.pound bloc t b u a t er bombs parachuted from American transport planes. Fighting Rages :ht Turke~ · OverSearchf or l(idnapers The blast from the big bambs ripped away trees and foliage and created lan- ding zones the size of football fields. Military' spokesmen said U.S. aircraft had been fired on by al m.iJsile1 around Sepooe lo what was described as t he first major Communist use of Soviet-built antiaircraft rockets outside North Viet.. oam. )Mllltary sources Wd North Vietnamese commanders had pulled at least two armored Ulllts, each with 25 tanks, into a defensive circle around Sepone, a town 'II miles inside Laos where the Communists were reported to tiave established a major cammand center. The 2,0ClG-man South Vietnamese force was leapfrogged west from positions oloser to the South Vietnamese border over the past two days. "I think they can see Sepone Ver/ clearly .from there," a spokeiman said iD placing the force within three miles of Sepane. . The lint major battle ll1<IODld Sei>one wu reported Thursday when a South Vietnamese infantry battalion or more than 600 men fought Communist forces t na three-haur fight and reported killing 42 North Vietnamese six miles southeast of Sepone. South Vietnamese lo.!Ses wete placed at three killed. There was no indication of the number of Communist troops in the Sepone region or whether the Reds had abandoned the junction an French colonial route 9, the axis of the South Vietnamese drive into Laos. But heavy fighting was reported elsewhere in Laos. Some military observers had predicted the Communists wauld put up their heaviest fighting of the campaign to save Sepone. a road and supply junction where mountain passes from North Viet- nam enter Laos. The South Vietnamese said they had killed 821 Communists in fighting between 6 a.m. Wednesday and 6 p.m. Thursday and lost 36 dead and 248 wound- ed. In heavy fighting today and Thursday night the South Vietnamese 1ald they killed 80 more to put the toll at 901 North Vietnamese dead,-with 44 South Vietnamese tilled and 261 wounded. The U.S. C.Ommand reported the loss of 11il mere American helicopters to l'rom Pagel SWEEP. • • in the Cleo Street area, known to narooUcs officers as "junkie corner," Purcell said. "In recent months, the officer asserted, 1'the area bu been literally taken over, with dealing going on quite openly." Last week the windahield of Purcell's car was smashed with a board while he was making am1t.s in the area. On the same day aWcer John Saporito was a'saulted on the nearby beach and on another occasian an ofrtcer•1 private car was stoned as he drqve through the area, aceording to Purcell. LOOK FOR THE UNUSUAL FromHrnredon's M&J& ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) -A force or 5,000 Turkish troops and police seized the campus of the Middle East Technical University (METU) today in a four hour battle with students but found no trace of four kldnaped Americans fa ced with e1eculion if a '400,000 ransom is not paid. Turkish authorities said at least one student died in the battle in which the students hurled bombs and fired pistols. Fifteen students, a Turkish officer and a soldier were reported wounded. The soldier and two students were reported in critical candition. Disarders spread to other parts of Turkey and anti-American and an. tigovernment demonstraUont flared in other p_arts of Ankara. lnfooned sources aaid the rlght·wing, p r o ·A m er i c a n government of Premier S u 1 e y m a n Demlrel might have to impose martial law. A group calling itself the "Turkish Peoples Liberation Army," a leftist ex- tremist group, kidnaped the f o u r American radar technicians Thursday and said they would be executed if a ransom of $400,000 was not paid. They moved up the execution date to 6 a.m. Saturday (11 p.m. EST Friday). President Nixon, speaking Thursday night at his televised news canference In WashJngton, was asked if he thought Turkey should negotiate for release of the airmen. He said he would not make that suggestion · and that following previous similar cases the United States would leave it up to Turkey whether to negotiate, having in mind their own internal circumstances. The four Americans \\'ere identified as Airman l C Richard Caraszi of Stam- ford, Conn.; Airman lC Larry J. Heavner of Denver, Colo., whose parents live in Maysville, W.Va.; Airm an lC James M. Gholslon of Alei:andria, Va., and S/- Sgt. Jimmie J , Sexton of San Angelo, Tex. Turkish lliitudents spurred by leftist Church to Host Lecture on POW s The-plight cf American saldiers listed as missing in action or those who are prisoners of war in Southeast Asia will be discussed 8 p.m. Wednesday, March 24 in St. Michaels and All Angels Episcopal Church, 3233 Pacific View Drive, Coronal del Mar. Mrs. Wally Clark of Newport Beach, whose husband, Air Force Lt. Col. Stanley Clark, is missing in action, will speak and show a film. She represents the non-profit organization, Concern for POWs Inc. of Tustin. The program ls open to the public. A anttful commode in Loui1 XV aey!e. Magrii6cently arved from tol.id cherry, it~'• )6Mi i Ma wide and >7 inc:M high, and <OUld wtll clqant •-• for any fioe room. c.ornc tee t entirt F-olio 10 collec- tion, for,..-... lU1' fO Ind dio•Onc ... ),;..;.'JC """home noodL • • elements have in recent years staged rountless anti-American demonstrations in protest against American policies in Vietnam and because of resentment against the fact 20,000 Americans and dependents are stationed in Turkey, a member of NATO. At Izmir, the big U.S. base on the Turkish Aegean Sea Coast, ei:traordinary :;ecurity precautions were clamped 011 American facilities and p e r so n n e I . Turkish sourcts said many American servicMJ.e n had started proceedings to send ttieir families home. The confronta tion between the students and police began at 4 a.m. when military and police forces arrived to search for the kidnaped Americans. Five kidnapers were involved and one of them captured by police said he was a student at METU. DA Pushes Suit To Put Firehouse On Auction Block A county-state lawsuit that may lead to the sale by auction of the contro versial Firehouse Bar and the Costa ,,_1esa lavem's contents will be debated Marcb 2.1 in Orange County Superior Court. District attorney Cecil J1 icks filed the action ror himself and the state Thursda y with the argument that tavern owner Raymond Rohm has permitted frequent violations of the slate's Red Light Abate· ment law. Rohm, 26, of Costa Mesa, already faces Superior Court tria l June 7 an charges o[ conspiring to present lewd and obscene entertainment. Dancer Cynthia Louise Drey, 23, of Tustin, faces tbe same charges and the same trial date. Mrs. Drey"s husband, Norman Weis Drey, is one of four defendants named in the Hicks' lawsuit. He is alse a. Firehouse employe. Hicks' demand for a prelininary in· junction against the tavern will be debated by both sides before Judge Robert Banyard. He will be told that more than 21) (If the tavern's female entertainers have been booked in recent months for alleged lewd and obscene conduct. More than 100 pages of testimony by police officers and investigators are attached to the Hicks lawsuit. The Costa Mesa City Council this week unanimously decided to revoke tbe tavern's business license in view of fre- quent police action aga inst the bar. Hicks has taken similar action to sUC· cessfully end the operation of two Santa Ana bars charged with providing lewd entertainment. Both bars and their con- tents were disposed of at a sheriff'• auction. Hcnre<lon j-i~ l . . t • ,. 7 I 11 ' ............ . .. , B'1ntington Bea~h .T.oday~s Flnal • ~.Y. Steek8 . EDITION VOL, 6'4, NO. 55, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 197 1' TEN CENTS Turk Units Battle Witl1 Students ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) -A force C1f S,000 Turkish troops and police seized the eampus of the Middle East Technical Universi ty (ME1'U) today in a four hour tlattle with students but found no trace of four kidnaped Americans faced with execution if a $400,000 ransom is not paid. Turkish authorities said at least one student died in the battle in which the students hurled bombs and fired pistols. Fifteen students. a Turkish officer and a soldier were reported wounded. The soldier and two students were reported in critical condition. DisOrders spread to other parts of Turkey and anti-American and an. Ugovernmenl demonstralions Oared in other parts of Ankara. Informed sources said the right-wing, pro-American government of Premier S u I e y m a n Demirel might have to impose marlial law. A group calling ilself lhe "Turkish Pooples Llberation Army," a leftist ex- tremist group, kidnaped the f o u r American radar technicians Thursday and said they would be executed if a ransom of $400,000 was not paid. They moved up the execution date to 6 a.m. Saturday (11 p.m. EST Friday ). President Nixon, sneaking Thursday night at his televised news confere nce in Wash ington. was asked if he thought Turkey should negotiate for release of the airmen. He said he would not make that suggestion and that following previous similar cases the United States would leave it up to Turkey whether to negotiate, having in mind their own intetnal "'Circumstances. The four Amer!cans were identified 11s Airman IC Richard carasti of Stam- ford, Conn.; Airman IC Larry J. Heavner nf Denver. Colo., whOse parents live jn Maysville, W.Va.; Airman IC James M. Gho1sion of Alexandria, Va., and S/- Sgt. Jimmie J. Sexton of San Angelo, Tex. Turkish students spurred by leftist elements have in recent years staged countless anti-American demonstrations in protest against American policies in Vietna m and because of resentment against the fact 20.000 Americans and dependenl'i are stationed in Turkey , a member of NATO. , At Izmir. the big U.S. base on the Turkish Aegean Sea Cnast. extraordinary security precautions were clamped on American fa cilities and p e r s,c n n e 1 • Turkish scurces said many American servicemen had started proceedings to send their families home. The confrontation between the students and police began at 4 a.m. when military and police forces arrived to search for the kidnaped Americans. Five kidnapers were invclved and one of them captured by police said he was a student at METU. Winds to Slow Ove r W ee kend; East Shive ring Gustv winds expected tonight will diminiSh by Saturday night, the National Wealher Service predicted today. Small craft warnings along the Orange Cnast remained in force today due to gusts from 15 to 30 knots. Warnings will probably be lowered late Saturday. Winds along the coast will shift to come from the north tonight al fr om IO to 2.1 knots before tapering off. Hi~hs tomorrow will be near 63 after Tows tonight of 42. Patchy clouds are expected to continue although it will be generally sunny. As Southern Callfornlans began to en- joy relief from the stront winds • of the past week . the East found wintry blasts particularly uncomforJable. They brought ·snow tn amounts from eight: to 26 inches to many northea stern areas and piled it lnto formidable drifts. Tra velers warnings were posted from Pennsylvania lo Ma ine Thursday as northwat winds from 25 to 4fl mil~ 11n hour. blo"'·lng and drHting snow and freezing lempeatures howled with the 1torm. Frustrated snow plow drivers reported roads filled In with dr ifting snow jl.lSt as quickly as they were plowed . !Schools near Albany, N.Y. housed stranded commuters. botels in Montreal converted dining rooms into dormitories, •irports in New York City wcrt sealed off by snow and President Nixon ha d tn cancel • trip to Rochester, N.Y. after 11 inches of snow fell there. A 79-mlle ttretch of Upstate New York 's meln traffic artery remained clos- ed today due to drifting snow. -·· . . CITY CLOSING LIO ON OLD CHEMIC .... L JOHNS Thl y've Beon Sitting on Huntington Avenue Lot Since 1965 Officials to Close Door On Old Beach Outhouses By ALAN DIRKIN Of ""' Gllllf ""'' ll11l Qty officials In Huntington Beach are hoping to close the door Monday on rolling outhouses. Officials charge that the portable johns have been cluttering a rleld on Hun- tington Avenue since 1965. Th ey are not going to sit on the problem any longer. Legal action is being pressed against the owner of the chemical toilets, Aernest Sigala of Tustin. The ca se will be aired in the West Orange Cnunty Municipal Court at 9:30 a.m. Monday. City a1torneys have twice before pro- secuted Sigala withoul suc~ss. He failed to appear at hearings in June, 1969 and October 1970. "'If the city wants to get rid of them, then I'll move them out," Sigala. who operates a chemical toilet business, said th.is morning. "The city can have them -or I'll hlove them lo another one of my yards." "Tha t's what \\'e are after." responded City Attorney Don Bonfa. "We are not interested in having the man suffer a penalty. We simpl y want 10 take them away at his expense ." The outhouses are in a field between Clay Avrnue and 17th Street on Hun· tington Avenue. Sigala said that he did not appear in court in the past because he was in the Navy. Sigala made it clear that he feels he is being discriminated against. "The city is discriminating agains t outhouses really," he commented. "They don't like them. but they sure like to use them . They can 't open a park without ()ne, nor can any construction job be done without one. "In case of a civil emergency. such as an earthquake disaster . city hall and the police department could not operate wilhout them.'' Sigala is being . prosecuted under a zoning ordinance. The pr()perty is in an industrial zone. "When I first put them there. they met the zoning requirements." Sigala said. "But then they changed the permit· Not for Kids ' fed,~-·-ioilmohig mo.i"'--a sneak attact_~· • _ , _ Sigala agreed tblt. M-has not movtd 1ny of tbe io~ta t-or I yetir. ; t The city believes it could get a lot more down on paper against Sigala. Jn addition to violating a zoning law, Bonfa said that the johns are an e.yes<lre and a danger to children. "They are a public nuisance -an attractive nuisance, you could say," he added . .,Bonfa also pointed ()Ut that a recent police report indicated that a. nine-year~ ol d boy had become locked into one of the johns and had to be freed. Whatever solutiOn is 'reached on the proble m, it will be cold comfort to nearby h<>meowners who have .wanted to see the chain pulled on the johns for several years. 17,000 to Enter Army in April Draft Lottery WASHINGTON (UPI ) -The Pentagon said today it would draft 17,000 young men in April , all of them for the Army. It was the fourth consecutive month this year that draft calls have totaled 17.000, bringing the four-month total for 1971 to 68,000. During the same period last year, 69,500 men were. drafted. In the first third of 1969 the. total was 126,600. A Pentagon spok~man said th! late.st request would be just enough to provide replacement for men completing their Army duty to maintain the Army at its current strength. Selective service headquarters said all draftees during April would have. lottery numbers under 100. That has been the highest Dumber since January. ' Phoenix Must Die Me~a Rapist Gets Maximum Penahy Gary Harold Phoenix of Costa Mesa was senienced to death ThW'sday for a r series of rapes and kidnapitigs in which the husky bachelor beat and in· Jured several of his victims. Outwardly calm and CQmposed -a demeanor he maintained · through his seven-week Orange · County Superior Court trial -, he offered no reaction to Judge William M u r r a y ' s pro- nouncement.cif sentence. Deputy Public Defender Roderick Ric· cardi withdrew hi! motions for reduction of sentence and a new trial shortly before Judge· Murray ordered Phoenix, Viets Near Roadway Hu1J In Laos SAlGON (UPI) -Military spokesmen aaid today the Communists had con- cenlrated missile 1ites and massed up to 50 tanks for the defense of Sepone against a force of 2,000 South Vietnamese troops closing in on the Ho Chi Minh trail roadway hub in Laos. Field reports said 2,000 South Viet- namese troops had driven to within three miles and perhaps within s i g h l of Sepone, m~in objective of the 2>day offensive against the trail. The South Vietnamesl!: troops were faMing out around Sepone after being ~~lij~a.:~ J5,00l).pound .;b loc.kb.u-1-Lt~ ~m~. porachl(ted 1l<llo American :' lransport pliilei. : • ' ' . :I'll• blast lrolj1 the big bombs ripped away trees and foliage and created lan- ding w~s the size of football fields. Military spokesmen said U.S. aircraft had been fired on by 20 missiles around Sepone in what was described as t h 4!: first major Communist use of Soviet-built antiaircraft rockets outside North Viet· nam. Military sourCes said North Vietnamese commanders had pulled at least two armored units , each with 25 tanks. into a derensiv! circle around Sepone, a town 27 mila inside Laas where the Communists wl!:re reported to have established a major C<lmmand center. The 2.000.man South Vletname.ae force was leapfrogged west from positions closer to the South Vietnamese border over the past two days. ''I think they can see Sepone very clearly from there." a spokesman said in placing the force within three miles of Sepone. The first major battle around Sepone was reported Thursday when a South Vietnamese infaotry battalion of more than 600 men fought Communist forces t na three-hour fight and reported killing 42 North Vietname~ six miles scutheast of Sepone . South Vietnamese losses were placed at three killed. There was no indication of the number of Cnmmunis t troops in the Sepone region or whether the Reds haci abandoned the junction en French colonial route 9, the axis of the South Vietnamese drive il)to Laos. But heavy fighting was reported elsewhere in Laos. Some military observers had predicted the Communists ~uld put up their heaviest fighting of the campaign to 1ave Sepone, a road and supply junction where mountain passes from North Viel· nam enter Laos. ~. to be shipped to San Quentin's Death Row within the next 10 days. Phoenix's appeal against the sentence is scheduled for hearing by the California Supreml!: Cnurt . No date has be.en set for discussion of the action. Phoenix was convicted on 30 of 33 felony counts which alleged that he at· tacked nine women in a 28-day period last summer. Several of his victims testif ied they were tracked by Phoenix at night, dragged by the. physica l culture expert Into his whit! Thunderbird auto and subjected to a nightmare of beatings. rape and sexual perversion. Police Harpssed It was testified during his penalty trial-that Phoenix, the assistant manager of a Huntington Beach heallh apa at the lime of his arrest. had been convicted of rape charges at the age of 18 and committed to a Kansas reformatory. The jury was also told that he sexually atklcked a Hpuston, Texas. woman whUe he was on pa'°le from the Kansas prison. Phoenix's sister. Mrs. Sandy Lewis of Garden Grove, was in court Thursday to witness her brother's sentencing. She told newsmep she will hire a "first class" lawyer to handle her brother's appeal against lhe death senteoct. Mesan Gives Up After Showdown By ARTH UR R. VINSEL 01 11!1 Diii~ 1'1111 Stiff Screaming defiance and frantically loading guns, a Costa Mesa man finally surrendered to quiet police coaxing Thursday, only seconds before they forc- ed a showdown. A crowd of 300 milled around lhe tense scene, ignoring ord~rs broadcast MAKING . HIS POINT. : Nlx~n on Indochina, P~g• . 4 U.S.· Orders Safety Devices On 1974 Autos WASHI NGTON (AP) -The Depart· ment or Transportalion, denying a re- quest of auto make.rs for substantial delay, ordered today that 1974· cars have safety devices that automatically protect front-seat occupants in head-on crashes up to 30 miles an hnur. Under !he department's final rule on so-called passive restraint s a re t y systems, 1976 model cars will have to be designed to protect all car occupants from any injury in a 30-mile-an-hour crash wh ether head on, from the s1de, or roll over. The anouncement by Secretary of Tr311sportatlon John A. Volpe culminates months of dispute with the ca r industry. All manufacturers except General Motors have contended the front -seat devices are Impossible to provide before the 1975 model year. from a circling police helicopter to move back. Some -standing exposed to what could have been a mass murder apree -taunted and heckled · shotgwrarmed officers crouched under covert The drama began at 3:20 p.m., with a report of 1 man shot at 3013 Coolidge Ave., and a man with a gun at 3002 Fillmore Ave., one block away. Victim John W. Golden II, 23, of Phoenix, Ariz., is listed in satisfactory cooditioo today al C:O.l& Mesa Memorial Hospital, with a .32 caliber bullet wound ~t COlla.P}e.d OR! Jun&. He Jt1lI sprinted a b!Oct , trailing blood. on . the one remaining respiratory organ before collapsing. Paul E. Weaver, 30, of the Fillmore Avenue address where the JO.minute con- frontation occurred, is in city jail , booked en charges of assault with intent to commit murder. New charges may be added since some Items in Wea ver's arsenal -lined up along a wall ready for use -are listed as stolen. according to police. A police helicopter cruising over the Mesa North triplex development when the reports came in directed ground units to the scene. Patrolme11 John C. White. Robert P:. Arnold and Gary Barwig arrived almost simultaneously to find a second bloody victim pistol-whipped in the fray, lean- ing against a car. He pointed to the fron t triplez unit and said the suspect had run inside. Getting no response to orders to come out, Arnold and Wh.ite gingerly opened the unlocked door and entered, guns drawn, but the home was 1ilent as a tomb. Sudden sounds overhead sent them behind a ba r at the foot of the stairs for cover, with a full view of the shadow of a man with a gun . The sounds were bolls or high-powered rifles and shotguns being loaded . the patrolmen realized, so they again crdered him to drop his weapons and surrender. "You'll take me out of here feet first before I'll do 10 to 20," the Santa Monica Hospital steam engineer scream- ed back. By this time , backup patrol units were parked at crazy angles in lbe crowded cul-de-sac adjacent to busy Baker Street and the curious crowd swelled. Officers Arnold and White kept up a constant. calming stream of con- versation, as Patrolman John Stoneback (See SHOWDOWN, Pa11 ll Oruge Coast Parents Want .Sex €on-r.se Volpe modified only slightly an e~rlier order. The eHective date for front-seat systems, for example, was postponed from July 1, 1973, to Aug . 15, 19131 to coincide with model yea+ chnnglov!r. Vo I Q e also_,dropped 1,he ~artier re- quirement for rear.seat, passive pro- tecUon in hcad-<in collisions set f o r July t. 1974. Instead, he said that begin- ning Aug. 15, 1975. meaning 1976 model cars. passive protection from ·all kinds of crashes up to 30 miles an hour will have to be available· for all car Weather It won't g any higher than 6.l degrees, w~ether you're on ~th• cOast.~bt. drlviili:' Jill.and, Saturday. Gusty winds will prevail under sunny skies. By TERR'\' COVILLE children. 01 111t 0111y 1'1111 111tt Mrs. Wilhelm also requested a fl!:w Some parl!:nt~ have asked for An ex· minor changrs in the. dist rict's current panded sex education program in the course -titled Family Life -which Fountain Valley School District -for was just expanded from one evening parents only. session to three. for boys and thelr "There has to be. 11 v11st, extensive fathers. sex education program and It should "We'd like to know the parenlt· can b:e.long to t~ pa,renLf." Mis, ~an Withe fin • p~ ID)' program ao we bow 1.old trustees of 'the. -d:sti;lct. Jlw.rsday • what ;Will be\ asked before we take our night. children," she 1aid. "We need a course for us, IO we The district bas nffered a one lecture can take it back to our children Jlld course on . family life •for the pa1t 1iz answer their questions." years for fifth &i'ide thrOush eighth , She_ waS. iugg$ing that-. the di.strict.. grade students on a voluntary bull~ set up t-vening courses for adults, using in the evening and with parents at- medical and clergy volunteers lo explain tending, . sex educ1tlon 1n modern terms go the This year dJstrlC:L.ofOclals baye....ad~ed . parents can communicate with their dl.scusaions on IOci1J-emoUonal atUtudu -. of sex and venereal disease to the stan· dard lecturl!: on biological factors of sex. Al the suggestion of several parents, district officials moved the biological '.discussion ahead of_the venereal disease lel:tllre. · Trust ff WlJHam · Ctane explained the dlstrict's atlltude. ,"We're . not trying to usurp the role or rather, mother 1 n d family : only supplement. it." "'Mle. staUstics on venereal disease are frightening ," Mra. Francia James, a trustee, added. "They are. worse than adrut statistics ... _.. , Board Chairman Harold Brown assured : Mrs. Wiiheim •and other parents in the. aud!'T:~· ~at t~e d~trict w~ld ~nsider In ~t sex education tttles. ( occupaf!lS. . · Fedttal safety officials believe auto make.rs will employ so-called air bag1 ltl ml!:et the requlretrient.s. Other !devlcea being considered to meet the 30-milt-an• hour standard include ne\s, blanketS and ext~nslvt rushlonlng interior• • w I t b energy·absorbing material. A tront.seal "llr , ~ag •. for eu mple; would ·open out of the dash boa~d and automatically lnnatA to cushfon· oc· cupAnl!' when '!lcttronlc devlcts sense • crash. INSWE TODAV Nt villt A1Grrintr will be guest ltc&urer at the Orang« Count11 Philharmonic Socitty11 fr et prtview \Vedne1da11. See today's Weeltender. 11111,,. ' 11 t111,.,_;1 ' tlltetlln IJp 1 c11ul!IM .,_., t11111C1 U ,_ u DMtll Mttlc" 1f OI_,.. lf •••*1•1 ,.... • Phllllll ... -" A1111 L111ftn II M1HM• • Mlttll" Llc1~M1 It ,....- ' • II l 2 DAllV PllDT H Friday, March 5, 1971 Valley MarlM? .. . ' f'ro111 Page J ' -. SHOWDOWN •• Pair Held • Ill Ho:ldup .. . '... who Joined them huld• -passed ~'Ord on out by the moments. Weaver. reportedly trying to make oumnder deall ·the patrolmt• hid •• alllhoclt)I -to llCCeP~ i1obbornl1 rellllOd to surrender. leadlog to an order ror teargas raced to the scene by Ll. Avery, Smith. -VllllJ poUce p1allllCI to me armed robbery charges today against two men caught in a short auto chase Wednesday night minutes alter the rob- bery of 1 local market. The men were stopped -along with a 17·year~ld juvenile -by a police patrol unit on Brookhurst Street shortly after bandits took $175 at gun point from the 7·11 Market at Slater Avenue and Ward Streel A .38 caliber revolver was round in the car when police made the stop. T-~. II, a clert at lho mamt told police two -w"'"41 bis l10N about 10:4111.m., Wodneada)', pointed the gun &nd made him npen the cash register. They took $175 · from the cash bor, then walked outside, Cooper told police. As they left, store manager \Villiam Fallon, 48, drove up, spotted them run· ning to a car on Ward Street and gave chase Fallon followed the three men -a driver was waiting for the pair -to DAIL'f l'IL01 JlllGI• ,, T1rry C1wUle LESA MISEL, 14, SHOWS HER OIL PAINTING Portrait of Paul McCartney Winner in Fountain Valley Student Artists Display Works at District Office Student artist,, in the Fountain Valley School District have put 125 examples of their work on display from now through Wednesday in district head· quarters. 'The youngsters were all top com· petiton: in the district's annual art festival. Categories include paintings and drawings; callages, mosaics and stit- chery; and 5Cl.Lipture. School trustees honored the SO top Winnen at Thursday night's meeting o( the board of education. Dan Dolan, principal of Cox School, was given the district sweepstakes trophy becau.se his school had the most winners. The art display is open to the public any weekday at district headquarters, Number One Lighthouse Lane. First pla~ winners in the paintings and drawings category were : Emily Stewart, Cox School; Scott Sells, Cox School; Debbie Armstrong, Wardlow OUH•I COAST DAILY PILOT OllAHOE COAST l'Ull.IPllHG COMl'AN\- a.111h1rt N. W11' l't•lllMI Ind Plltlllllltr J.,1r. l. e.,.r • .,. Vlcct ,,......,, Miii a ..... 1 Manaeet fh111111t1 ICtlYir fflttlr. T$i1ft'l11 A. Mwpfiln • ~'"' fdllll' Al111 Dirlr.tn w•r °"'* COUlltY l!lftJror 1<lh1rf W. 11!11 Aulllcllto Editor H•"""tt" lheclt OHk• 17171 l11ch l 111l1w1t4 M1illftt Ad411u1 P.O. l 1x 7,0, '2641 School; 4 sa Misel, Harper School. Top artist! in e-0llages, mosaics and slitchery were: Paula Fleming, Cox School; Debbie Ishikawa , Fountain Valley School; LW. Halliwill, Fountain Valley . School. Best sculptors were : Karen Pull, Gisler School: Kent Wehner, Fulton School· Kathy Harmon, Nieblas School. ' Indian Culture Fair Scheduled At Edison High ''Art For Fund's Sake," an Indian culture fair, will be presented this Satur· day on the Edison High School campus. The exhibit, scheduled between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4i p.m., will feature graphics, oil and water colors. batiks, prints and candles. All proceeds from the sale of items will be donated to Americ3;, Indians. Also to be shown are art works or intermediate. and elementary school students from the Wardlow, LeBard, Eader, Lamb, Patterson, Dwyer, Gisler and Edison campuses. Entertainment will be provided by the ''Banda Noqual Indian Dancers" who will do a routine of authentic Indian dances. Charge for admission to the fair Is 'l5 cents for adults. and SO cents ror children and students. Those under 12 are admitted free. Wanlll' A_, don two 1141 -~w "'*'". '°""111n V ot~Uill wltll Ill-lt:d .p.mr and lle\'0-.w -walllq. Pollet sald the three men gave up wllhout a struggle. Mark · A. Merritt, 18, and Kim A. Cherrie, 19, both of Garden Grove were due in West Orange County Municipal Court, Westminster, today for ar. raignment on the anned robbery charges. The juvenile was turned over lO county juvenile authorities. Beach Bank Employe Hit ByFraudRap A Huntington Beach bank employe was one of three women amsted today by District Attorney's investigators on charges of defrauding the Orange County Welfare De partment. A Santa Ana Municipal Court ap- pearance is being set for Mrs. Joaephine Rodriguez Bertucci, 24, of 1108 Acacia St., accused or falsely c:lalmlng more than $1 ,100 in Aid to Families with Dependent Children fwid. Investigators clairn Mrs. Bertucci told welfare officials that ber husband had left home leaving her to support their one child. They discovered that Bertucci, a machinist, was living at the Acacia Street address and had been sintt July or 1970, they alleged. Officers said Mrs . Bertucci was draw- ing $148 a month from the county welfare department at the time or her arrest. Also arrested today in the wake of a mounting crackdown on welfare violator! in Orange County were Mrs. Johnna Meadors, 28, and Mrs. Josephine Katherine Oldaker, 33, both of Fullerton. Both women, like Mrs. Bertucci, are accused of false!)' applying for welfare funds with the statement that their husbands had left home without providing liUpport for their families. Investi11ators allege we l f a r e ap- plications in all three inltances were ''full of false information and data" and had involved at least a two-week investigation into each incident. Y ou1ig Hoopsters Meet in Beach For Big Tourney DAILY l"ILOT S .. 11 f'l!lll DETECTIVE BLAYLOCK ESCORTS SUSPECT WEAVER TO SQUAD CAR Curious Cause Police Almost 1s Much Worry Laguna Narco Raiders Net 30, Big Drug Haul In a sweep that began at noon Thurs- day and lasted until aft.er midnight, Laguna Beach police and state narcotics officer• arrested 30 persons on grand jury indictments for alleged narcotics offenses. The arrests followed a three·month investigatlon in the Laguna area during which undercover agents claim to have purchased several thousamrdollars worth of drugs from suspects ranging in age from 18 to 50 years. Most of those arrested face charges of sale of dangerous dn.J!:s including LSD and heroin. The grand jury indictments \Vere hand· ed down on Monday and the arrests were made by three Laguna and five state officers following a Thursday morn· ing briefing in Laguna. The operaUon was directed by Sgt. Neil Purcell, head of the Laguna Bepch Police Department's special. enforcement division and agent Jack Leavey of the State Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement. ~lost of the arrests were made in the vicinity of South Coast Highway and also had ranged as far afield as San Clemente, Costa ~1esa and Hawthorne to make individual arrests. Almost all those arrested were ''in- volved'' in Ute use or sale of heroin Purcell claimed. ' Most of the "buys" which Jed up to the grand jury indictmenls were made in the Cleo Street area, knov•n to narcntics officers as "jw1kie corner" Purcell said. ' "In recent months, the officer asserted "the area has been literally taken over' with dealing going on quite openly." ' Last week the windshield of Purcell's car was smashed with a board while he \Vas making arrests in the area. On the same day officer John Saporito was assaulted on the nearby beach and on another occas ion an ofricer·s private car was litoned as he drove through the area, according to Purcell. Hoopsters from various Southern Cleo Street in Laguna Beach, known Cal ·r · ·1· 1 H 1. as a gathering place for youthful Lifeguards Get Swimming Te sts 1 orn1a c1 1es converge n un 1ngton 1 h . Swimming tests for summer lifeguard Beach this weekend for the Fourth An-ong airs and a center of narcotics deal-nuaJ Boys Basketball Toumament. ing In the Art Colony. jobs on the state beaches will be given The Recreation and Parks Department-Before the night was over, officers at 9 a.m., Sunday, on Huntington State sponsored tourney is scheduled for Beach in fr ont of the Edison power the City Gym, 17th and Palm Street plant. both Saturday and Sunday. Litter Bags Placed More than 75 lifeguard prospects are Leading the competition are all-star expected to e-0mpete for 30 openings teams of 4lh 6lh and 8th graders from In Offi·ci·als' Cars on state bea ches from San Diego to the Cities of South Gate, Pico Rivera. Bolsa Chica State Beach. A shootout appeared increasingly Uke· ly. Officer Arnold, who only six hours before told a reporter the semi-humorou! rampage of a nlonkey \Vednesday was his wildest case since 1956, when he joined -kept talking. His throat was dry. Topics ranged from name <1nd age to \Veaver's fam ily and the fact they and others could be hurt lf he continued to hold out. -~ The suspec t cried ba ck he had a right to protect his home. 14 Maneuvering outside the .apartment - Its second floor windows ominously cur- tained -Detective Sgt. Jack Calnon prepared to fire a teargas shell. Downstairs. Lt. Harold Fischer had slipped into the triplex himself and was ~·aiting for the sound of Calnon·s shotgun. "I was going up the stairs and try to lob one in before he could duck into a little bathroom. I know the layout. My father owns a couple of them/' he explained. ! "You ha ve to hit them hard and fast 'vith gas, so It saturates the roo m,'' he added. Weaver. however, had heard the tallC of teargas. Dropping his gun -one or six loaded, cocked and lined up for siege -he came downstairs with his hands up and the Jong process of unraveling details Jay ahead. ·-! \Veaver was taken in for questioning, while police confiscated about a doze11 high-powered weapons and Inte rrogated. seven witnesses directly involved. i The pistol·whipping vic:lim, known only as Carmen, about 20 to 25 years old, had vanished and is still sought. •·we're not exactly certain what v.·as involved ," Lt. Fisch er said today. Witnesses ag reed an argument oc- curred involving Golden, who oc· casional!y visits his parents in the Har· bor Area, and his acquaintance of sev· · eral months. Threats of a fistfight hrought the pair outside, after wtiich they re-entered the residence and the shot was heard moments later. Golden ran to an apartment, burst through the door and collapsed, rasping on his own blood. Church to Host Lecture on POWs • The plight o( American soldiers listed as missing in action or those who are prisoners of war in Southeast Asia will be discussed 8 p.m. Wednesday, March 24 in St. Michaels and All Angels Episcopal Church, 3233 Pacific View Drive, Coronal del Mar. Mrs. Wally Clark of Newport Beach, whose husband . Air Force Lt. Col. Stanley Clark, is missing in action, will speak and show a film. She represents the non.profit organiiation, Concern for POWs Inc. of Tustin. The program is open lo the publlc. Rolling Hills and Huntington Beach. Anyone who will be at least a high Action is scheduled to begin at 1 Litter bags have been lnstalled in school graduate by this June can take s n· h p.m. Saturday between Rolling Hills and all Huntington Beach official city cars the three-part swimming test Sunday ta 1g . ter Crashes South Cate and at 2:15 p.m. between to help keep the e-0mmunity clean. without prior application. Pico Rivera and Huntington Beach. Both City employes have been asked lo The test includes a 1,000 met.er rough BONN {AP) - A flying Instructor are 4th grade divisions. use the litter bags as a reminder to water swim, an 800 yard run . swim . run, and his pupil were killed today near In the 6th grade dlvblon, Pico Rivera other cities. Littering the streets is also and a 400 yard sp!'int swim. Bremen in the second Fi04G starfighter meet..'! South Gate at 3:30 p.m. and a misdemeanor and subject to citation For further information on state crash in two days. It was the 131st Rolling Hills meet.s Huntington Beach 1_a_n_d_f1_·n_e. ___________ __cli:.:f•::oguc.a..cr.::d:.i:.:ob::s_:P:::h:.:on::e:.:s:J&.38tl7::_:::.~·-----:.o:_f :th::•:.i:::•ls:_:W::e::s:.t :::G:::<r.::m:::':::"c.Y.::h:a:,.s :lo::st:_. __ at 4:45. Pico Rivera meet..'! Rolling Hllls at 6 p.m. and South Gate faces HunUn11ton Beach at 7:15 p.m. in the 8th grade division. The action will pick up at 11 a.m. on Sunday with finals in the 4th grade, 6th grade and 8th grade divisions scheduled for 2: 45 p.m., 4i p.m. and 5:15 p.m. respecUully. LA Petroleum Firm Named in Stock Case WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Securities and Exchange CommWlon has accused the Occidental Petroleum Corp., of Los Angeles of Issuing {Ilse and mlslead.in11 earnln11s reports for 1969 and 1970. The commission, in a suit filed Thurs· da y in U.S. District Court In Los Angeles said the company camouflaged som~ financing transactions to appear to be l~nd sales and improptrly recorded pro- fits from the transactions. LOOK FOR THE UNUSUAL FromHenredon's M&J& Ilenredon f-tr'""~ • • • 0--l .. UN ••d'll 2;ZZ fOl'l!'f A.¥tnlllt Ctifl -., ill Wtll ••• , $ft'W Hftllf'f a.tdl: s.l» HIWS!lllrt &11111~1,. ltn t1tmtrm11 as Honri El Clm!M a"I Adu·lt, Students A graceful commode in l..oui.s XV sryle. Magnificent I}' a.r~·ed fro~ aolid cherry,jt is l6~ inchu wide and l7 1nchca high, and could wr:IJ }>( the r:lcgint acer:n t f~r any 6cc room. Comt: Rt the entire Folio to ccllec• tJon. (or )"OU aft NR to 6nd that oot uqui;itc. piece your borne 11tt:d&. DAll.Y l"ILOT, tllllll wrildl 11 C'DllWlntill ttit N_......_ II fl'llllWI• ll1lly ~ .,._.. ll•r 111 ..,,,... ..,tltN 1111r i......,.. fMdl. ~ Sted'I, C..I• ,,,,..,, "_,,...... "'°"' .. _,..,, \ll lltf_L .. ft c......., Ctlllt"9M .,,. ...... , ............... - "lllMll •1t1M.. 1"r1Mi..1 '""""' ....... .. e1 m w .. 1 .. , 1rrw1, co.ti ,..,.., t.1., •••• 1714) '41-4121 Cl•lfW Mwetttsht '41°HJI • -0 .. Parents 01i Other Side of Fence About 80 parents of chlldren In Tam- ura Elemefttary School in Fountain Val- ley will be on the other end of the rep<>rt card this month. They're going back to school to learn the conceptJ of New Math. For six nlghl.I in March and April, Mrs. Deloria Flint, a learning coordlna· tor at Tamura and expert on New Math , will be at the chalk board describing the way children le arn mathematics UJ.eie days. "We're working with Ille Coast Com· munity College (Golden West) District" Robert Sanchls, an assistant district SU· perlntendent, explah1ed, "Math ls lht first course we'll try, but other subjects may follow.'' Mn. Flint's lecture salary will be paid by the Coast Comm unity College District as part of their adult education system. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7td 111111/fJllerl. ~ NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Weotcllff Dr., 642·20l0 OfiN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH Profe1slon1I Jnt•rlor Oesfg,,ar• Avallabl~ID-NSID 34l North Cout Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 l'tl111 T•h Prw MMt .t 01.,. Co•llfY 140·12•t -4rs the first of whet mey be several adult education programs offered at schools 1n the Fountaln Valley School District. Elementary school districts can't offer adult education courses, but by agree· ment with the junior coll e11e district, they can offer thelr"lchools and te1cher1 tor ad ult education. Sa.nchis said more adult lectures 1erle1 1. _ _:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-may be set up lA the near future. \ • • • • I ' ,. I I I , ~\ I " ,.. ,..,. ,..~ ... U.S. Indicts Five . . Teamsters VP Held • in Counter feit Case WASHINGTON (AP) -An In- ternational vice president ol t h e T'-amsters Union and five other persons were arrested by Secret Service Aa:ent.s today after being named in an indictment that charges them with conspiring to CQunterrell money and food and postage .stamps. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell announced that a sealed indictment had been return· ed against the six men in U.S. DL!trict Court in Newark, N.J. Thursday. As a part of the alleged conspiracy. the defendants intended to buy and stll about $250,000 in counterfeit money, the indi ctment said. Named in the indictment was Salvatore Provenzano, international vice pl'f:sident of the International Brolhf;lrhood of Teamsters. The ..,_year-old resident of Hackensack , N.Y .. is also president of lhe Teamsters joint Council No. 73. Also named defendants were Armand Faugno 56, or Englev•ood Cliffs, N.J.; Thomas Andretta, 36, of llasbrouck Heights, N.J.; Stephen Angelo, 39, of Secaucus, N.J.; "'ayne Carlton. 43, of North Tampa, Fla\ Jack Friedman, of West Paterson. N.J. Each of the six defendants is charged with conspiring to print counterfeit ' P1•0111ise Sliow1i Federal Reserve noles, p:istace 1llmps and Depanment of Agriculture lood COUPolll. The indictment accuses them of plot- ting to b~y and ae:ll appro1lmately $250,000 tn coWJterfelt llO and llilO Federal Reserve notes. Federal offlclals aald Provenz.ano ls the brother of Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano, once a top lieutenant of Teimsters leader Jame!! R. H"offa. Anthony Provenzano wa!I released from Federa1 prison in November after serv- ing r~ur years for extorting $8,600 from • a transportation company president. Two County Engineers Face Apollo Theft Rap A pair of Orange County aerospa ce engineers have bet:n indicted on in- dustrial espionage charges, stemming from theft of a life-sustaining component aboard Apollo spacecraft. Authorities allege they ga ve the oxygen system and data about it to a rival company they joined after quitting the Torrar1ce firm that developed it. Donald Beem, 37, of 520 Brethaven Place, Anaheim, and David Jacobs, 26, of 15660 Tustin Vi\lag' Way, Tu!ltin, were indic ted by the Los Angeles County Grand Jury Thursday . .. Each is charged with theft of a trade secret , while Beem also faces a grand theft count, !iince one of them was allegedly confiscated from his home. The item is d'slgned to sense dangerous gases within the Apollo moon ship's oxygen system. Investigators said Beem and Jacobs worked for Tylan Corporation. of Tor· ran ee, until last summer when thty joined an Orange County firm. Nation's Jobless Totals Do It Right Second Time In Second Straight Dip \VASHI NG TO N (UP I) -Joblessness declined for the !lecond str!light month in February, dipping to 5.8 percent of the nation's v•ork force. the Labor Department reported today. Although the decline was concentrated among teen-agers and persons seeking part-time work , Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson said the figure!! ''continue lo show further promise" of overall improvement in the nation's employment pict ure. The national jobless rate reached a nine-year high of 6.2 percent in Deceriber. It dropped to 6 percent in January and Hodgson said the t¥10-month decli ne "is indeed heartening." He said it showt<d ''lhe economy is mov ing in a favorable direction ," he said. A total of 5.4 million persons v.·ere out of work in February, the same es in January. However, art er ad· just ment for seasonal va r i a ti on s , une1nployment declined 185,000 during the month, with the rate dropping from 6 percent to 5.8 percent. The 5.8 percent rate i!I identical to the rate recorded la1t November . The jobless rate for adult men was unchanged at t.2 percent and for marritd men at 3.2 percent during February. The jobless rate for persons seeking full-time work also remained essentially unchanged at 5.4 percent. However, the jobless rate among teenagers dropped sharply, from 17.6 percent to 16.7 perct<nl, while the rate for part·time workers fell from 9.2 Per· cent to 8.7 percent Since the jobless rate hit 6.2 percent in December, actual total unemployment has In creased slightly. But it is normal for this time of year for the jobless rate to rise, resulling in a decline in the key seasonally adjusted reading. The February jobles!I figure was still far higher than the figure a year ago v.•hen 4.2 percent of the work force was without jobs. Total unemployment was almost 1.7 million higher last month than a year earlier. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI') -Thoy played taps at Harry McKemie'1 grave, just as he wanted. The rifles cracked in salu te. The honor guard folded the American Flag and handed it lo the weeping widov.·. But it was a!J 10 days late. McKen zie, 91, a veteran of the Spanish American War of 1898, died Feb. l9, a few days before his death, he told his wife Felisa he wanted to be buried with full military honors. But at the ceremonies Feb. 22 in Holy Cross Cemetery, there was no military honor guard, no firing of the fina l salute. no taps. His widow was desolate. The funeral home said there v.·as a "a breakdown of communi cations." t-.1 cKenzie's niece, t.1rs. ConchHa Anoran, took it up with the Army and her congressman. And so on Wednesday, the family gathered once again at graveside, v.·ith a seven-man rifle squad lrom the Presidio, the honor guard, the bugler. They did It right this time. Just like Harry McKenzie wanted. OPEN HOUSE 1 :00 P.M. TO 6:00 P.M. SUNDAY, MARCH 7th, 1971 VISIT THE NEW PACIFICA HOSPITAL A UNIQUE AND MODERN 80 BED ACUTE MEDICAL FACILITY FOR THE ORANGE COUNTY COASTAL AREA. FOR THIS ONE DAY BEFORE PATIENTS ARE HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY TO SEE THIS MOST ADVANCED HOSPITAL. ADMITTED, YOU BEAUTIFUL, MOST Guided Tours -· .. FJvr • POIJrrfT! SHOPFl1NC 'ClHTtlt ~ACIFICA T.HE HOSPITALITY IHOSPJTAL 11792 DELAWARE STREET e HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNjA 926'8 e TELEPHONE 171~1 8~2-06 11 -- TELLS OF 'DRAGON LADY ' Vietnam Veteran Castle Trip by Schmitz To Asia Sought Rep . John G. Schmitz (R·Tuslin) will be asked lo take a trip to Southea st Asia lo show his concern for America n pri!loners of war and men listed as missing In action. Mrs. Joan Carlos, manager of l.he Concern-for Prisoners of War, Inc. office In Tustin, said Schmitz will meet with families of POWs 4:30 p.m. Saturday. They will uk him to go to South Vietnam and..Laos "lo see what's going on and to get more involved in the POW situation." C":..: r:LOT :J. Brothel on Base Ex-colonel Tells Of Vietnam Vice . WASHINGTON (UPI) -A relorm- minded former colonel hi!! told Senate investigators he ordered the inner doors removed from a m!ls!lage parlor on hla base lo keep a beautiful "Dragon Lady" from turning it Into a 400-glrl brothel . In colorful testimony before the Sen!lte Investigations Subcommittee Thursday, retired Col. Edmund Castle related how he struggled to clean up the shady, slipshod service clubs he inherited along with hi!I command of the Long Binh, Vietnam, Army post in 1968. He al.so said he saw no reason why there should be service cluba complete with drinks and danc ing girls in a war zone in the fir!l1 place because "the more a soldier drinks in a c o m b a t zone. the more troubl e you have." Castle blamed the ''shocking situation'' he found at Long Binh on former Brig. Gen. Earl F. Cole, who had been deputy chief of staff and in charge of clubs and post e1changeJ at the huge head· quarters base. Other witnesses have teitifled Cole was deeply involved not only with un scrupulou:1 businessmen who provided slot machine!!, liquor and other good.! to the clubs but also with club managers who were indicted recently on corruption charges. Cutle, shipped home with severe wound! and a Silver Star after an attack on Long Binh in February, 1969, said it was Cole who authorized a beautiful Vietnamese nicknamed "The Dragon Lady" to build a steam bath and massage parlor on the base. But C1stle said "the Dragon Lady," a "Madame Phoung," had more 1m- bitiou!I plans for her $150,000 to $200,000 pleasure spa. Castle said ~tme. Phoung had planned to stslf her bath house with 200 - ma!lsewes and another 200 girls to sit !round and drink cokes with the sold iers." "I knew she had an awful lot more • than sitting around drinking in mind,'' Castle said. "We had so many clubs they .could get drunk before they got there. So I got rid of 200 of the girls and ordered the doors taken off the massage rooms. "You'd go in there and see the boys, they'd be lying there i s naked as jaybirds with the girls massaging lhem. But they couldn't do much else, because we had the doors (removed )," Waving color photos, Castle said that "the Dragon Lady" unveiled four bronze statutes of nude girls in provocaUve poses on the front of the bath house. "And this on an Army base!" Castle said ... I don't see too well, but t didn't have any trouble making these out. "I thought, 'Oh, my god, if Time . or Life or somebody sees this, we 've · had it' -and then my wife knowing how I like steam baths ... " ; "I let her know she had two hours : to get rid of them and that if she • didn't, I would remove them personally -with my own battle ax. She removed the nudes, replacing them with dragons." So far as he knew , he said, his efforts to keep the bath house from becomin& a brothel succeeded. Mme. Phoung wore perfume JO strong Castle said, that "J smelled that g:i ~ long before I saw her .• .I coulctsmoke -. cigars in my office for a wl!ek , and - she could walk in and clear the air." Fish Mercury Kills Whales Sart Clemente Island January Death Site A Navy scienlific team In San Diego says a high level of poisonous mercury -presumably derived from fish in their diet -was found in 28 pilot whales which beached themselves and died on San Clemente Island. Concentrations of up to 23.9 paru of the poison per million parts of liver tissue turned up in autopsy tests of carcasses from the incident Jan. 7, the Naval Uffliersea Research and Oevtlo~ ment Center said Thursday. A limit of five-tenths of a part per million in fuh for human conswnpUon ha s been se't bjt fhe Food and Drug Administration. There was specu\!ltion by some ecologists at the tlrne of the mass beaching that it was • mute protest by the mammals against man's pollution of their environment. William E. Evans, head of the Naval center's marine bioscience division, said the whales died of stranding not from mercury poisoning. He said it was clear that the poi!IOn must have come from their diet. "They had to get mercury somehow," he said in an interview. "They are obvlow:ly getting mercury from the fish they eat." Scientists say thl!I also !!I the source of mercury found In contaminated tuna and swordfish, both predators dependent on a diet of smaller fish which con- centrate the mercury in their bodies as it moves up the ocean food chain. Evans said the stranding of the whales, which ranged up to 16 f~t in lenct.h end 1,800 pounds in weight, might have resulted from t h e ir follow-the-leader habit. He said pilot whales often beach themselves when one or more herd mtm· ber!I become confused and head for dangerous &hallows. "A variety of factors contribute to such confusion," he sl'lid, "including darkness of the night, absence of surf, tide conditions and misinterpretation of the whales' own !iOnar signals ." at/antic music announces a •••• STEREO CHOICE SALE! Take Your "C HOICE" Of These "CHOICE" Components To Create Your Own "CHOICE" System I Choose From These Famous Name Recelver1, Tu•ntablH and Sp .. ka"I SPECIAL SALE ·PRICED 1-WEEK ONL YI Your Choice -any 5 piece system SAVE AS MUCH AS $123.021 • • • 541992 SHERWOOD 57100. New•1t I 00 wett FM/ AM Receiver w/welnut cest. ................ $209.95 GARRARD SL7l-B with ADC 240 XE, b11e a nd cover. ••••............ $152.45 UNIVERSITY Ultra 0'1. Fine 1cundin9 boo~1he lf1 from University, ................ $179.00 • OR HARMAN·ICARDON llO, I 00 wetf AM/FM rectiY- er w/walnut case. ................ $216.90 WITH OR WITH DYNACO A-25 "Top-R•t•d'' 1 way 1pe1 ker1. ................ $167.to "(.. . M A R A NT Z 26. ~O watt, R.M.S. AM/F~ rtceiver. w/welnut fin ish metel cebinet. Reg ............. $216.00 ,•v DUAL 1215 wit h SHURE M75E and wal nut b11e. OR • ............... $154.40 SOUNDCRAFTSMEN LANCER 95l5-2. Luga 12 inch woofer for powerful b111 plus horn tweeter. ................ $19'.00 • atlant1c music 44i . 17th St., Costa Mow. O""I' Sund1y1 12·5,.sotu•daya 9-6, Da ll y, 12-9, Cloood Wodnoodaya Dual/Ganud/Shuro/T He/Fisher /Hum•n· Kudon/Pickuing/Sherwocd / Alte c/Muontz Who•I edalo/Soundcrolhmon/Sony /A. R./8ota k/Mclnto1h/Scott / JBL/Empiro ' • ' I r - ·. • • Wlclts Viets Hacli It-N·ixon · Speedy Pullout by .4mericans Major Goal 'We do not spy on civilians! ••• and kindly ~peak into the medala!' It's ESP To Rescue By DICK WEST • 4 WASHINGTON - l have in my files -' a moldering clipping that contains a ~,timely excerpt from a 1969 issue of J1 Psychic Magazine. : Jt reported that the Air Force was !; considering de velopment of extrasensory ... 'perception as a back·up communication ·~ system for astronauts in event of radii> ,~-failure while they are millions of miles ;i from earth en route to other planets.· :f As far as I know, nothing ever came :: of that project. I hope, however, that ~ the Air Force-has not · abandoned-the ;, idea entirely. For, in view or what happened during the recent false alert sent out by the NORAD system. Jt appears that ESP may be our best chance of getting some advance warning of a nuclear attack. " MANY OF the radio and television , .stations that were supp(ised lo go oft ~~ the air during an alert failed to do ·"'so. rither because they didn't see the :•·NORAD message or didn't believe iL ~ r ~.841 ·:1. f; ( ' 11"1:. . "·' ,. .. ,,.:~e ·'I(, 1,·:.: l" 1 mni!D im'frIEm l • l Si;Je ~· Although the system has since been changed . to prevent any more alerts from being transmitted accidentally, •. there is always a chance that something }· might go wrong. "' Hence the need·to augment the system ,. with ESP. Suppose. for example, an employe of :·. a radio station looks at the teletype machine and sees a report that another country's missiles have been launched in the direction of the United Slates. As he reads that bulletin he also would be receiving telepathic vibrations .. sent out by NORAD's ESP control center j in a secret bomb-proof cave in the Rocky Mountains. .. "I have a feeling this is the real thing," he would say. "Guess 1 had .. better take the station ofr the air."' :· THE ESP back·up also v.·ou\d be a "'· bl essing to those of us who barely watch television or listen to radio. particularly during the morning hours when the false alert came over the wires. As soon as the telephathic waves reached us. we would experience an extrasensory impulse to tum on the set. thus receiving the warning in time to drive to the beach and slick our heads in the sand. The most important function of the ESP system. however. probably v.·ould occur after the auack was over. By that lime. presumably, most of the radio and TV sets would be destroyed, along \\·ith the stations themselves. But. thanks to telepathy. we ·would l still get the all.clear signal from NORAD 'and sense when it was safe to crawl out 'from under the bed. -UP1 W ASIDNGTOl'I (UPI\ -President Nixon said Thursday night the invasion of Laos has proved the South Vietnamese Army can "hack it" and insured con· tinued withdrawal of U.S. troops. He said his goal remained to get all Americans out of Vietnam "as soon as we .can." During a sometimes emotional defense Clf his Indochina policies at a televised news conference, Nixon abo declared the United States has considered no plan to support a South Vietnamese invasion of North Vietnam. "None has been considered and none Is wider consideration," Nixon said. But the President said he did not rule out the use of air power "against military complexes on the borders of North Viet· nam" if he concluded actions of the Hanoi regime endangered wilhdrawing American forces. Miked about statements t.y South Viet- namese president Nguyen Van Thieu about a possible attack into North Viet· nam, Nixon said he would not speculate on what position Thieu might take in the future ''in order to . defend himself -the right of self defense -in view of the fact that he is being attacked." Nixon contended the three-week.old South Vietnamese thrust into the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex in southern Laos. backed by U.S. air power, has "seriously damaged'' North Vietnamese military capabilities. Re quoted Gen. Creighton W, Abrams, U.S. commander in Vietnam, that the drive already had Comumnlst truck traffic by 55 percent on the trail. • While there was "hard fighting ahead," Nixon said, the decrease in traffic meant "that those trucks that do not go south will not carry the arms and the men that will be killing Americans." Nixon said that during the current operations the South Vietnamese "on the ground by themselves" bad taken on the best units the NorUt Vietnamese could put into the field. "General Abrams tells me th a t in both Laos and Cambodia his evaluation after three weeks of fighting is that to use his terms 'the South Vielnamese by themselves can hack it' and they can give a better account of themselves even than the North Vietnamese units." While the operation has been in pro- gress. Nixon said, American troop strength in the war zone has fallen by 10,000 men. "Our Vietnamizalion program is a suc- cess and can continue on schedule and. .. ". CANADA'S NUMBER ONE SWINGER ENOS BACHELORHOOD Pierre Trudeau, New Wife M1r9aret Get ~ail of Rice Pre1nier Trudeau, 51, Takes 'Bride, 22 VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) -The 22· year.(lld dau shter of a veteran politician has ended the long bachelorhood of Canada's Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau. Trudeau, 51 , and J\targaret Sinclair were honeymooning today at a ski resort north of her home in Vancouver. They plan to return to Ottawa next "''eek. The nation was stunned by the fan- nouncement late Thursday night that the couple had married at SL Stephen·s Roman Catholic church here "in a quiet ceremony attended only by ·members of the two families. Trudeau met Miss Sinclair in Tahiti three years ago while both were on vacation. She is the daughter of J\.1r. and J\.1rs. James Sinclair of Vancouver. Her fath er is a longlime power in the Liberal party. a former cabinet minister and a member of the Privy Council. The bride's mother, who is two years younger than the prime minister, said after the y;edding, "It wasn't sudden. They gave a lot of thought to it." Trudeau had dated Miss Sinclair fre- quenlly, but the public did not suspect a romance . Much more altention was paid to his inCrequent but widely publiciz· ed dates with singer Barbra Streisand. The prime minister flew to Vancouver from Ottawa Thursday a ft ernoon , ostensibly for a skiing vacation. Nothing more was heard of him until an aide called The Canadian Press late in the evening v.·ith the announcement of the v.·edding . Trudeau·s brother Charles 'vas his best man and one of Miss Sinclair's four sisters, Rosalind, was her bridesmaid. Snow Backlash Hits East Cold, Winds Whip States; Rockies Front Buildi1ig California l "f UMITIO l'll:ISS IMTlll:MATIONAl Soo.lth•rn Ctll!ornlt w.o mo111v 11lr todtv, with "''l•ble cloud•. 1tro~1 1u11\1 winch •nd caloer ttm..er11utt \. The lot Anttlet 1•t• wa1 motl!"f ,I.I.,.,.,. with 1tr-1u1tv w;nd1 tnd c:ool•r ttmHrt ll""· T061"f'I oredlcltd Cl\llo; Ct Mltr hlth W•I 6), (OIY\Nfftl w ith fhur\dt'l'J ff, ~itllt'• low will bor'" n. ... TM,.. .. , no "'' lrlri.!lon In t111 ltn An!Hltt ltsln wlth m•tlmum N-Ir/tit 1wrt1lr19 eboul .O! ••rt1 .,,, mlllloft 11trt1 (ti 11r. Vl1lb\ll!y w•• Uml!t'CI to ~ flvt 1"'5 tkllll mlle1 dU• to h111. &e1cl>tl wert Mt!IY cloo;dv wl!h chol>Pt' Mii Ind ..,,,,"II winch IS to :11:1 m!i.1 Hf' hou• 11 tlmt1. Mt•· lmum rttdln11 Mlf to d~rte1. MounT1ln1 '"°''Cid \ltrt.b,. daud1 ..-1th , ttw .c1111rld 1h(lwtrs 11M1 ,_ l!urrltl 11>11 nor!llwnl winds IS to JCI "'coll. Hfthl w...-e » lo ~!. 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" ~ • .. we trust even ahud of acbedule usum- ing that there is more progress in Laos,._ Nixon said. The United States is acheduled to cut its forces in South Vietnam to 284,000 mea by May 1. NI.Jon a.aid be intended to make an announcement about further American troop withdrawals in April. Asked about the possibility that up to 100,000 U.S. troops might remain in Vjet- nam at the time af the 1972 election, Nixon refused to speculate about the numbers. "As tong as thert are American POWs in North Vietnam, we will have to main· tain a residual force in South Vietnam. .. Nixon said. "That is the Jeut that we can negotiate for. U !ar as our goal is concerned, our goal is to aet a.11 Americans out of Vietnam u soon as we can -by negotiation U possible." Nixon said there bad been a "drumbeat of suggestion" from some television com- mentators that the Laotian operation would not work. He said there bad been the same kind of commentary dur· ing the Cambodian operation last spring. But he said the Cambodian venture had reduced U.S. casualties and led to a reduction in U.S. forces . ''. . . I should point up that that's exeacUy what this administration has done," Nixon said with emotion. "We've kept every promise that we've made. We have reduced our forces. We have reduced our casualties. We are going to continue to reduce our forces and we are getting out of Vietnam in a way that. Vietnam will be able to defend itself." Questions at the news conference were restricted to foreign policy issues. Nixon also said : -The United States will not .impose a setUement in the Mideast. The United States will make sliggestions but will depend upon the parties concerned to reach an agreement. The United Slates "'will be there" to see that a balance of power is maintained in the region because if the balance changes a war could result. -Sen. Stuart Symington (D·Mo.), fired 4'a cheap shot" when he said presidential advise r Henry A. Kissinger had usurped the duties of Secretary of State William P. Rogers. He continues to consider Rogers "the chief foreign policy ad· viser." -An American "Two Chinas'' policy is a "moot question" becau: ! Communist China has refused to respond to American overtures for normalization of relations. Nationalist C h i n e s e ap- prehension about an Americari change in Policy "is not justified." -He 1s optimistic about "eventual suc· cess" in Soviel·American talks aimed at limiting strategic nuclear weapons. Ul'l"ftltMle• 'THOSE TRUCKS WON'T GO SOUTH, LEAD TO AMERICAN'S DEATHS' President Nixon Reports Saigon Forces Gaining Upper Hand In Mideast Crisis Big 4 Near Agreement 011 Cease-fire Proposal UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP ) -The Big Four U.N. delegates are reported to have reached considerable agreement on terms of a communique they hope will revive the Arab-lsraeli peace talks and prolong the Middle East cease-fire, due to expire Sund ay. But after a 21h·hou r meeting at the Soviet Mission Thursday, •·a number of points of difference " remained, according to a Western source. Indicating the urgency of their task, the ambassadors of the United States. Britain, France and the Soviet Union scheduled another meeting this afternoon at the home of the British envoy, Sir Colin Crowe. It is the first time four delegates have met two days in a row in two years of sessions on the Middle East situation. U.S. sources were hopeful that the four would agree on the communique today. In between the formal sessions. COO· sultations were taking place on one of the thorniest issues -whether there should be a direct reference to pr<r longalion of the cease-fire or an appea: for ''continued exercise of military restraint" The latter wording was used by U.N. Secretary..(lcneral U Thant last month in a report on which Egypt baset: its agreement to a one month's extension of the cease-fire until March 7. Diplomats said the Soviet Union was finding out whether Egypt would accept such terminology again . Some sources indicated the Egyptian response v.•ould be positive only if the con1muniquc sharply criticized Israel's refusal to commit itself to a "'ilhdrawal from all Arab territory occupied in the 1967 wa r. The United Slates is understood lo be against any direct reference to Israeli v.•ithdrav.•at. President Nixon said Thursda'y night that his government will not try to impose a settlement in the Middle East He told his news conference: "We can make suggestions. . .but we are going to have to depend upon the parties concerned to reach agreement. •1 SPRING TRUCK LOAD EVENT • MANY VARIETIES AVAILABLE FOR SPRING PLANTING! c PER PACK THRU SUNDAY ONLY! GARDEN CENTER • .. FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY Newport Beach .... •' ' _, AL~S~S~~~· .. I I a . . ........ .. .. ~ ~--..~ . -, _____ -·-- DAILY PILOT EDJTOBIAL PAGE Clinic Support Grows Support appears to be &rowing for the tree clinic that "'iJl open in downtown Huntington Beach around ~astertime. lt is a wanning kind ol response. \Vhile It would be nJce if drug abuse, venereal di· scase and unwanted pregnancy cases and inadequate t1ervices for the poor did not exist, the fact is they do. Nevertheless, the clinic would still be a contr->ver· sial issue were it not for assurances that It "'Ul bt oper· ated on a professional basis. Volunteer• wh o keep the J~elp Line phone counseling service going stand behlnd the clinic. Forty doctors are signed up to serve and as many counselors. People "'ill not crowd the clinic-to be lo- cated In a modern office at the corner of Fifth Street and Olive Avenue-but "'ill be given appointments. The sponsors abandoned a proposed location on Main Street \\•here there "'"as serious opposition. The supporters of the clinic have earned a chance to prove it can work. Their success will depend on bow well they are abl e to keep their promise of having doctors. and not patienls. run it. • T'vo Good Education Mov es The Huntington Beach City School District recently created a new administrative position -director or lipecial education. It was a long needed improvement. District leaders are acknowledging they have to supply more than just the three R's for a satisfactory education. The new director will coordinate such pro- grams as mentally gifted classes, and special training for the educationa1ly handicapped. district made a second good move. Ther. appointed Mr!i. Pepper F'i lls. principal of Perry Schoo , to fill the job. h-lrs. Fitts has already been doing the work on special education and she can move into her job with no loss of effectiveness. Both decisions -creating the director's post and appointing Mrs. Fitts to It -were sol.Jnd. 'fhey should be only the first of more to come in the area of special education . 'Yes' Vote Merited Next Tuesday, vole rs living in thP Huntington Beach Union l.Jigh School District "·ill be asked to ap· prove a 69-cent tax hike. Despite fluctuations in the econo1ny, the DAILY PILOT is convinced their request merit~ a '·Yes·• vote. Approval of the measure \\•ould mean a rise in taxes from the present Sl.39 level to $2.08 per $100 or assessed valuation. •· To vote "No" \\'OUld plunge the dt;tritl into Cinan· cial disaster and ensure i mediocre edu<·atiunal pro· gram. Talk Backed With Ac tion The recent appointment of a college student to I.Jun tington Beach's Recreation and Parks Con1mission and one college and five high school students to the Environmental Council is a commendable change in administrative approach. While constant lip service is being p<iid IJy others to the capabilities of our youth, the city council. \\ ith these appointments, has backed its talk v.·ith action. ' "'""l ~~- One or the prime jobs will be organizing the type or progran1 the district will have and trying to win state or federal f u n d s for it. A program for the mentally gifted -with state help -is the first expected to be launched next year. A f't er creating the directorship, trustees of the The city \\'ill certainly benefit from t.he fresh ideas these new members of the "establishment" are sure to generate. H 'WHO AM 110 A~Ut WITH ALL THE EXPERTS?' f)ri gins of Sor1ie Words . 1\-lay Surprise \\le haven't had a word.quiz for quite av.·hile and the mail is running heavily 1n favor of another. Today ,,.;e'll deal \Vlth the origins of some common words , \Yhich may surprise you : J. \Vhv is a soldier called a •·soldier." and \•:liy is the 10 .... •est rank in the Armv called "private" when lhey have less ·privacy than anyone? . 2. Why are !he solemn cere1non1es of installing a Presi. tlenl in office called an "inauguration." :4nd \vhal has it got lo do \•:ilh birds:' J. How did the g a m e of "dom i- noes" get its name. and Y:hal conne<:· 11on does it have ""'ilh prayers? 4. The "acme" of something is now its highest pitch of perfection: but originally it v.·as parl of "''hat sorl of medical diagnosis? S. SPEAKING Of' medicine, v;hat rlread disease is named after a character in a 16th centu ry Latin poem, which bears the title of the disease? 6. \\'hat did a .. broker" originally brea k? 7. llO\v could the play"'·rights of ancient Greece have been c a 11 e d "athletes." when they had nothing al all to do y,·ith sports? 8. Speaking of plays. what \\"ere the ('arliest ··melodramas''? 9 \Vhat docs a "thrill" ha\'e to do \\ ith our nostrils? 10. \Vhy \\'as "prestige·· al first not 11 complimentary "'ord? ANSWERS: I. "Soldier '' co1nes irom the Latin, meaning "a gold coin,·· for until modt rn Dear Gloon1 y Gus: r Just got lost behind another cloud of black smoke from one or lhe trucks of a well.known rubbish service. Csn •t anything be done sbout it? -V. E. S. f~it 1t1t11r1 refl111t rv<lltn' vltwa. ,.., ~llM'11Y fllfM If IM lll Wllll,..-, Stfl• '"'" HI _,,, .... ,., Iulo D•llY Piltl. times most soldiers y,·ere p a i d mercenaries· a "private'' is a man "deprived" of rank and dra .... 11 from the deprived level of the (.'(Immunity. 2. "Inauguration" comes from the ancient Roman "augurs" who studied lhe night& and habits of birds snd predicted for new rulers y,·hat tht: future held in store for them. 3. "DOMINOES". invented by two French monlu, was called so because the winner of each game signified so by reciting "Dixll Dominus. Domino Meo,'' the first line of the Vesper service. 4. Early doctors divided diseases into four periods : 1rcbe, the beginning :~ anotasls. the increase: acme. the state of utmost violence: and paraeme. the decline. 5. "Syphilis" was the name of a sht:pherd in the title of a 18th Century poem by Fracastoro. and the first sufferu of the disease named afltr him. I. TIIE FIRST "brokers" broke, or broachtd. "'ine casks: gradually the namt wu applied to marriagH>rokers, pawn. bro k1r1 and eventually stockbrokers. 7. "Athletes" were anyone "'ho "comptted for a prize." 8. "Melodrama.f' wt:re not n v er l y sentimental but simply plays "'ilh music "melody." 9. ''Thrill" m~ant "to pierce :" the .. nosthrll," or nO.!ilril, ls the hole "pierced" through the nose. I O. •·Prestige" ._. .• , appl!ed to magicians and jug1ler1 who deeelved and deluded pt:ople. Restore the Incentives At some date, distant in the future. human demands on the earth's stored-up resources. such as petroleum and natural gas. will inevitably out.strip the supply. A lot of people think the day or natural resource shortages has alre~dy arrived. Jn truth, there are short.ages or threaten· ed shortages or petroleum and natur"I gas. but they have been ron~rive.d by the arbitrarv al"t.ions of leg1slat1ve and regulatofy bodies. rather than by natural attrilion . Such is the conclusloa to be dr~"·n from the findin gs of 1311 geologists \Vho reported to the National Petroleum Coundl on the' "FUlure i'etroleUm Province! of the IJnitl!d States. , •• " THE GEOLOGISTS" report h; a facl- f1llecl. tSO-page documtnt Among other thinAll. II s.1ys that lf reCQvery of oil and ciis rrom known reserves can be stepped· up froin the present 32 perctnl to 60 percent, lhe United Stale$ would have an ultimate petroleum potential of m billion barrel1 or oil, t,543 trillion cubic fett of 1as, and 49 billion barrels of natural Ch liquids. Prtsent annual domestic pro- duction l! now about 1.2 bllllon barrels nf oil and 20 u11Uon cubic fee l of gas. The report further estimates tt111t M percent of the discoverable oil and 66 perct:nt of tht discoverable gu remaio to be found . lt breaks the U.S. lntn 11 regioru. None of these regions, including Alaska, has been adequately erplortd. JMPENDlNG shortages. p11.rlicularly of natural ga~. havt betn foreseen by petroleum industry spokesmen for many years. And Ult ll)luUon, a11 they hnve long pointed out, lies In the restoration of in· ctnth'tS by our lawmakers and reRula- tors that will encourage the risky bu!ii· ness of t1rrying ~ the starch for na. turt'a v1st hidden rt1etve3 of oil ind natural au. Bii Geol'fe --------1 Dear Georgt: 1 dnn'l like to dance. Girls think 1'm ihy, as a result. They try to bolster my confidence. They stt out In dark parked c1r1 with me wh!le other guys are danc1na. I'm net shy. What can I do about lhlll CASPAR Otar ajp1r: You can COJl)'l'l&)lt that ~ystem lM Hll a beek &n it, for optnera:. ' .. - Olde•· People Should Tell How They Feel atad ll'hy Let Young People l(now. They Care To the E<liior: In your guest editorial. "Attitude Wins the Job," (DAILY PILOT. F'eb. 251 you printed a letter supplied by the Success l\fotivation Jns!itute or \\'aco, Texas, and "''hich you said h:id been "'rillen by an employer lo a rouog man he had rejected for a job. lie wanted to lell the boy why he had hired another teenager instead . nne who wore polished shoes and a necktie. and who had made the effort to find out "'hat the CQmpany made. He hired the boy because of his attitude: He v.·anted the job badly enough to \\'ant to impress his prospective employer. Tlt E Lt.11'ER WRITER \\'ent on to lell the unemployed teenager tha! m:iny employers "·ere nol "with" a lot Gf things, and some of their ideas seemed antiquated , but if he wanted their pay checks. he had better tune them in. Perhaps if more older people IQOk the time to talk to young people, to !ell them how they feel and why, and to let them know that they care. \1'e might be able to narrow !he generalion gap a little. CHANCES ARE good thal the you1g man who got !his letter made a mu ch better impress ion on his next job in· terview. I plan to save the article for my own children . because I want them to know that some people do care. FREDITH LAUB Agnlnsl SST To the Editor · You and I are the Intended tar'J"els of a '35tl.OOO piece of SST public relations propaganda. Full page ads \\'ill urge you 10 support a project which \\'ill l I ) contribute to air and noise pullution; (2) subject us to damaging sonic booms; (J) cause stratosphere contamination destined to play havoc v<'ith our weather; 14 f expose passengers and crew to radi&· tion from solar flares. and ~5) increase the depletion rate of our world oil reserves. The Concorde. the Anglo-French ··ss·1•·• cannot be. ope rated economically. ac- cording to a Time of London reporter. Why should billions of our tax dollars go into such a damaging project? Do you want your congressman I'.> support It? EVELYN CAY~IAN P11 r if11 Ifie Air To the Editor : The thought ramt: to me lhal I h11.ve nol seen anything in your paper about cleaning the air. I mean purify actually, J suppose. Let's gel on the ball, if possible. and get the public thinking about insisting that every contract that ls let , to a contractor. to bulld a house, school, public building. factory or hospital. tie., be tqulppcd-wlth a bollt In 11lr purlfleor- ion system or some cerUficd type, possibly a type that has yl!t to :ie designed and perfected . GRAJ\'iED, S0:\1E progress is btlng made to cut down on bad air, t!Y.iugh "''e are revolving in 11 polluted itt· mosphere of the world 's m1klns, I Germany and lLIJy have worae thin C1llfomla ) but progrtss la slow! While we wait for tht experts In the various fitlds to come up with workable solutions to rid us of some of the bid 111ir out.side, Jet's get on with cleaning up the Air "A'e have inside. I noticed a hospital window open to the out-of-doors recently and thol.ijl'.ht that surely. In a ho1plt1l, we 1hould ~er 1ht1t patients were not madt: to breathe the oulslde contamlnatlXI air. .. .., .... ~. .. \ • Mailbgx l.ctterr frorri readers ore 1oelco111P. Normally writers 11hould co11uey their 111essuues i1' 300 toorcls or ltss. The rig/!! to conde11.se /etttrs to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· 1ers ntust i11clude signature and mall· iug addrtss, but nanits niay be with· held on requ.tst if itufficient ,.easoJI is apparent. Poetry will not be pub· hshed. IF ALL THE houses and other buildings in Los Angeles were now equip- ped "'i1h air systems. that pumped into a purifier, and on into the houses and building!!, the air from outside al· 1nosphere, imagine lhe great amount of impurities we would be taking out of the air and exhausting a much im· proved air back outside to furlher reduce the total pollution. Such purlrlers could work with the present air condlllontng, used to heat and cool and filter, which are at present in use seasonally. People "'·ould soon learn to stay indoors 1>1•ith doors and windows closed when the s1nog was bad and still enjoy outside o:i smog.f ree days. R. W. HEARD flfn1or lo Red CroKI To the Editor : Disney land is to be highly commended fo r the honors they bestow on their community "'·ith their a11I1ual Community Service Awards. IL is heartwarining to see an enterprise such as Disneyland, \\'hich receives much from the community. return lo the com· rnun lly their appreciation in such an outstanding manner. \Ve at the American Red Cross were sreatly moved by the Disneyland com- mittee choice as Lop recipient. \\1E WILL CONTINUE lo do our very best in giving lo our community the service for which this honor was bestow- ed. We thank Disneyland and the people of Oransc County for this most-coveted honor. Please come visil your new Red Cross Center at 601 N. Golden Circle D:-. in Snnta Ana . MRS LOUIS M. f\lacMILLA:'i Chairman of Volunteers Orange County Chapter American National Red Cross l\'e11a1I re Selll11g To the Editor '. For the lasl six months I have bttn reading more and more thal the various school districts must have additional rf'venue in order to provide lhe services that are essential for the proper educa· lion of our children. Representatives of the school board are very quick to state \vhat will happen if the increases are not approved by the people. That is knO\\'n as negative salesmanship, which has never in the history of this country been successful. THE WAY TO get people to increase their own taxes, particularly in these limes. is by a positive sales approach, This is accomplished by showing EX· ACTL Y "''hat the present income is, and EXACTLY WllERE it goes, the additional money that is required. and EXACTLY WHERE lt will go. Jf the people are convinced that the school board is honest. sincere. and that 'heir requests are legitimate. a tax iocrP..:1se "'ill be passed by an o~·erwhelming n1a· jority. THE SCAllE tactics thal they are presently employing are sure to continue defeat of the required tax Jncrea!ies. Maybe that Is a good reason why the above approach is not used. It may be that the school board system is as fouled up as the welfare system and polillc3 ln general. Jf that be the case. then the people should know this so they can take lhe necessary stt:p5 such that the economics of the school system is readily understandable to the average layman. FRANK ~!OHME lllt, R1111 Vlcllm-<1 Cat To the Editor: It happened Sunday, Feb. 18. A cat. hurt and helpless. in the middle of the road -what do you do?? While riding home that evening, my roommate _ and I saw a cal running about In the middle of the street -we thought at· tempting to cross it. Well, he stopped righl in front of my car and didn't move (I pul out my hand lo have the cars stop but severnl drove right by ) he was frightened and as I looked at him J thought his head may have been ser\'ed. I gol out of the car and went lo !he little animal !people honked even though the .v had seen me gel out of the car). The cnt 1vni; hadty hurl, ap- parently the viclim r f a hit and run. so I wrapped him up in my coat. A boy stopped to help me carry him lo the side.,.,·alk . A FEW ~Ut-.'UTES later the police came tone apartment dweller had call· edl. \\'e got a blanket from the same pe<>ple who had called the police and then the police took the cat to the animal hospital. Finis. In \ITiting this letter. I am not trying to jau it up or make it sound dramatic in any way. This is just how it happened. I feel so sick and sad that a person would hit and run. others would still drive by, even honking while they had seen me getting out of the car, and Only one driver offered to help out {this is out of about 10), Can you believe it ?? There Is something lo be learned from all of this: I. Keep animals In or leashed. 2. Please, if you hit an animal. DON'T hit and run . 3. Don't be afraid to get invo lved. KARYN RINGER Hardest Criminals to Reform Jumping to conclusions: musician. or the "boy next doar ." lf the boy next door lum11 out to be a steady·wocking plumber, of course, they The hardest criminals to reform aren't mu rd ere r 11 or safecrackers but "paperhangers"--those who make a. career of passing bad checks. AJmost 11s soon as they are released from prison, I ; can still live in clover. j they often borrow a pen and start writing to acce pt free: meals and small bribes their way back behind the bars again. for overlooking minor law violations. An old-tirner is a guy who can The custom is so widespread th11.t among remember when Ole cops It Is traditionally 1'1!ferred to as . I ambition of every "fair loot" or "honesl graft.'' railroad man Jn The joys of modern office hfe pall 'Arrierlci,. sttmtd to on some girls when they discover It .. .::. ~ i :. ,,' bf to own a S-Olld Isn't nearly as much fun learning to 1told·rlng~aet with-a-program a computer 11 It Is to program -·' -\ 1-big red ruby. 8 hu11band. Appearances ara An optimist Is a fell ow who tries !IOflletlmes decelv· to borrow rnoney from the &UY •t the ./ ing, but not in the next desk on a Monday. . case of any woman over 40 who throws away her muisklrt ro fa\'or or we11riog the new style "hot pants" 1Ji public. Any-smart stcretary soon learns that !hf' btost w11y to kef'P a temperamental boss from raising cane is to sugar him up. l\IOST occurATIOSS ha ve areas of morn! blindnt:S!i whlch enable their memberld(I do a wrong thing v.·ithout ftt:l \ng bad ebout it . The usu81 excuse I,,, .. If 1 don 't the otht'!r fellow will -so "·hy shnuld T ht a sucker?" It is thl!i iillltude which pennits many policemen \\'HEN YOU EAT In a home in which a dish of toothpicks is prominently placed on the dining roorn table, you know one thing about the masttr of tht house: he may not be the neighborhood fa.shlonplate--but at ltast he 's not henP«ked. fl \11 some lime now si nce we've re1td of a choru! girl runnini;i oH and m11rrying a millionaire de 11plt' the stodgy protests Qf hls -t0eially prominent parenlt. The lel!'.end that chorus girl!! usualty v.·e(f rich mtn rs one of the oldest myths In show b11sln!~s. Aclllall y. they usually w Ind up hitched lO a stagehand, a band ffARELfPrED PEOPLE rarely hum \l•hite on the job, but Jhey like to sing in the bathroom-just like everyone else. You'rt: probably not the executive type If you 're so dumb you have to put your fool in your mouth before discover· ing you've got a holo in your shoe. --·--Friday, ,_larth 5, 1971 Tlie tdltorio l J'l-0!'1' o/ the Dailv Pilo' steks io inform and stim- ul.ate readers by prettnting thi.s ruiwspoptr'.s opinions and com- men!Qr11 on topics of intere1t and .significance, by provi(Ung a for um for tilt t%p,.tssion tJf our rtadcrs' opinlon.s, and b!f prest.niing the diverse t.ritw- point.t of informed obseruert and .ipokesman on topfci of th• day , • Robert N. \Yeed, Publisher I I I L • '. '• ·• 11 l-1: ,. " ,. ,. ,. ,. 1: ' ' ,. i r ' ' AJaotJaer Looms QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Nixon Halts One Railway Walkout WASHINGTON t UPI ) - Presldtnt Nixon Th u r a d a y blocked for 80 days 1 strike scheduled by R a i 1 w a y Signalmen, but negotiations Nixon Asks $2 Billion Urban Fund aimed iill preveritlnJ a welkoot by another union's 150,000 train crew members remained stalled. Contract talks b e l w e e n railroad managemenl and the United Transportation Union broke off briefly early Thurs- day after 15 hour1 of con- tinuous bargaining, resumed in late afternoon and then recessed after three hours un- til Friday moni.ing. Clyde Lane, chief negotiator for lhe trrU, and chief management negotiator John WASHINGTON (AP) P. Hiltz agreed there had been President NU:on 1 s k e d no significant change in the I '.!i.!::.!::::!~~"'-'::ii:.!:!..::~:O:~:.::!::::!!::!:!:;:::!U Congress today to approve 1 bargaining situation in the lil $2: bUUon (tvtnue-&harin& fund past 24 hours. ·"Yield? Who has that much control!"' for urban development -one Assistant Labor Secretary --------------------i that he said would not strap W. J. Usery Jr.. I he any current efforts such as govemment's top medialor in the model cities program. the 17-month-old dispute, ·said Nixon, in • special messa.ge, the UTU had not threatened also proposed that the federal a strike. and "we feel no government set aside an extra action will be taken (by the $100 million a year to help union ) as long as meaningful states and local goVernpients neR"oliations are continuing." upgrade their skills in long-He emphasized that the Apollo 15 Mission May Be Best Ever UTU had made no com· range planning, budget mitment lo rtfrain from strik· CAPE KENNEDY, F' la . and James Irwin, outlined decision·making and the ing. President Nixon is Je~ally (AP ) -Astronaut David R. mission objectives Thursday coordination of com PI e x po"'•erless to prevent a strike Scott. commander of Apollo · for the workers, who gathered rrlday M.arcli 5, 1971 DAILY PILOT S ON THE MALL AT FASHION ISLAND development activities in in the case of the UTU. in the cavernous assembly many fields. After a breakfast with UTU 15. says the moon mission building where Apollo !S's .. --------------------------------------., "CIUea would be ab1' to President Charles Luna. Use<y next summe< "prnbabl y . will Saiurn 5 <OCket is being check· POLICE HELICOPTER spend th.tlr money as they told newsmen he was no more be the greatest scientUic ex-ed. see .fit," he Said, "provided optimistic about a settlement ploration ever carried out by Apqllo 15 is to be launched Y 'II h d d h d f . I I only thll they used it for than he was Wednesday, when man ." · July 26 .toward a landing in ou see t e newest, most a vance met o o po ice pa ro . comm unit Y development he sai d the situation , "does "With your help.'' Scott told the mountainous Hadley-Apen. Newport Be ach 's latest fully equipp ed helicopter II land ot purposes.,, not look good... 1,000 member! of the Kennedy nine region of the moon, 9 3 0 The remaining $400 billion President Nixon a c I e d Space Center launch team, several hundred miles north .• the north end of the mall at 9 :30 am and be on display hrough • would be distributed by the Thursday to block a strike "we'll bring back enough data of the land ing sites of Apollos Se<:retary of Housing and scheduled toda y by the 11,000-lo keep the scientific com· 11. 12 and 14. out the day. The pilot will be on hand to tell you more about Urban Development. largely mt>mber Brotherhood or munity busy for 30 years. The Scott said he and Irwin f to makectrtainthatnocom· Railway Siinalme n . He vastly improved scientific wouldland fro meastto we st how "Airwatch'' helps to protect your commun ity. Toke-of munity would receive Jess ordered a 60-d ay cooling off returns wi ll be a I m o s t and would have to "pull our time j 5 4 :30 Pm, fe<l eral money under revenue-period, contending the nation overwhelming." feet up to go over an 11 ,t)()O. sharing than un~er existing faced the loss or essential Sc 0 11 and his two foot mountain just \Vest ol Oisp!ayed by the City of Newport Beach Po lite Deportment transportation service. crewmales, Alf red M. Worden the targeted site." ~=======================================~ prorrams. Nixon would &et the "'--------------------.. b;illl9n by combining funds now available under separate pro- grams for urban renewal, model cities, water and sewer grants, and loans for. the rehabilitaUon of old bu1ld1ngs. 132 Killed In Detroit Gunfire Pot Cuts Sex Dulls Urge, Doctor Says RENO, Nev. (UPI) -l\larijuana can make a 35-year· old man 70 years old sexually, contends the president-elect of the American Medical Association. Dr. Wesley Hall said a continuing Aro.tA study leaves "very little doubt" that marijuana smoking dull s the sex urge both in men and women and causes birth defecls v.•hen used by women late in pregnancy. Amendment Meet Asked WASHJNGTON (U PI ) - Ten state legislatu res have voted to ask Congress to call a constitutional convention to write an amendment guaraateeing the states a share of federal Income tax collections. 10:00 RADIO CONTROLLED FLYING An exciting demonstration of radio controlle d aircraft featur· ing the latest in control equipment. Plane s ta xi to position fo r to ke -off, become oirbourne end land-while lhe pilot slands on lh e groun d! These models fly from 60 lo 90 mph while they perform a series of a erob atic maneuvers , Flying demonstra- tions will lake place in the parking fol adjacent the police he licopter, norlh end of the moll. De monsfrotion by Orbit Eleclronics, Son to Ana , Californ ia DETROIT (AP ) -In the first 6.1 days of this year, a rect>rd 132 persons "·ere slain in this city -most of them by gunfire at the hands of friends or family members, rather than in street crimes. Hall, who said he has been besieged with telephone calls since a !o.1onday speeah on marijuana 's ill efrects, stu ck by his earlier statemenls Thursda y. •'\Vith increased use there is a lack of sex drive.'' he said. "It results in a man who may be 35 chronically. be- ing age 65 or 70 in respect to his sex drive. Th! .Council included New HafnpShire on the list of stal'?s ':::====================================== having taken final action, bul l r By pollct estimate , Detrolters possess as many as half a million handguns, the bulk of them illegally. "t don 't think the average person realizes ho w im- mediate murder really is," Police Commissioner John Nichols said at a news con· lerence Thursday . "Women also are affected in that they do nol desire sex as much as they would under n~rmal circumsl<:inces, and there is enough evidence now to substantiate it." Hall, a Reno doctor "'ho wi ll hecome AMA president in June. said a continuing study by the Aro.1A committee on Alcohol and Drug Dependence gives strong support to his concl usions.. But hi!! conceded a pericctly controlled scientific study of marijuana's effects hasn 't bet"n made and lhat it will Lake "three, five or even 10 years" to gather the informa· tion. "At least one out <>f 10 children born lo mothers who ha ve used marijuana within three months of giving birth will be defective mentally.'' Hall contended. By reducing sexual drives, marijuana also can cause a lo.55 <>f self-confidence, the doctor said. since the New Hampshire Senate .has not voted on the proposal, the list of states actually numbers 10, not 11. SALE WATER LILIES Pacific Goldfi1h Farmt 14842 Ed w•rds St. Off !IHI It~ Dlttt 1'._1y •I o.lfN WHI IMI •MM. WESTMINSTIR 19J.7155 "People seem to be playing out their roles in life through violence. \Ye've ha d countless people who. because of a real or imagined insult, grabbed \""==================~~========~[ a gun and killed someone. · Friends and relaUves kill each <1ther." _l HOWAREYOU PROGRAMMING YOUR LIFE? Comput•r experts frae ly 1dmit that what comes out of 1 computer Is only as a:ood 1s whit's put into it In th• first pl1ce. Hive you ever stopped to think how much your own life ruris on the same b11is~ The kind of thought you put Into your life dete1mlnes what you 1et out of it, This is whY~.Outl.hlnkin1 is s..o importlnt JhouS1nd1 hive found tllal cohtroPin11.helr thinldna is not 1 m.tter of eJCercising human wlH but understand· ing end uslhe their God · glven ri&hts to order. h•pl)lness, and 1 sense <>f purpose. Hetr Nathaniel ft Whit• of TM Chrlstlen Scitnca Board of Lectureship dis· w11 th11 subject 11' • free pu bllc' lecture entitled "Whet Gontrofl Your Thou&htr • CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LECTURE s.tllf'4tiy, N.rc• 6. I , ... 51COHO CH UICH ., CHllltlf, ICltH,llT II .. 11'6Clllc \llN 911\'I C....."!M•r 1" ~\". Prites ~rctl\.t~QQ t 34&1 'v'td U.~o in. Newrort 'Bect.ch.. 673· 4~1 .• '' 11:00 12:00 2:00 ALL DAY (9:30 to '5 pm) MATTEL SKY RIDER CONTEST Kids, 7 lo 1'2! Here's your chance lo win FREE plones. Mott e! will show you how lo fly !heir new Skyri ders from 11 to noon . From 12 ,30 lo 2 pm yo u con co mp ete for pri zes for the longest dis· lance'. aerobolics and longes t flighl. Lois of pr izes ••. don 't miss lhis! Skyri ders will be in lhe Stage Court area-center of the moll. Oe monslro tio n by Matte l, Inc., Hawthorne, Ca liforn ia GLIDER FLIGHT Ma rk Smilh, Nol ion al Radio-conlrolled Glider Champion, will pil ot his plane from the Siege Court oreo. The croft will soar from th e lop of lhe AVCO fin an cial center bu il ding a s Mork puls it through a series of loops, spins and stalls before the 6' gl ider lands in Sloge Court. Mork soys he con land th e pl one in his hand! Demonstra tion by Mor~ Smith , cour1esy of Model and Croft Show, Anaheim, Co!ifarnia WIRE-CONTROLLED FLYING Th e famou s Co x flyi ng leom will amoze you with their ability os lh ey perform a series of a erobolicS, dog fights and fancy fly ing in lhis demonslration . This aclivi ly tokes ploce in Stage Courl. Demonstralion by Cox Mfg., Sante1 Ano, Colifotnia AVIATION DISPLAYS Jerry Bird ...•••••• , • Captain, 1970 U.S. Free Foll Team -Skydiving Exh ibit Cox Manufacturing •• , , Wire-controlle d model oircroh . and model rockets Or,a nge,Caunty Radio Control Club •••• , •• , Mod el rodio·controlled a ircraft competing for $100 in prizes Orbit Electronics •••••• Rad io-controlled a ircraft • ·~ "'"'•I• "1 lt1C '-••:~••It••'"•"'~"'• loot. • . . ........ r...... -• \ ..,,, ....... ,...,.._~ ..... ~men • • ~ BEA ANDERSON, Edi tor ! • ' • • l • • l . I ' •• ... Pr .. •w. Mllrcll ,. 1tn M ,.,. 11 Partici pants Hono red City Graced With Beauty . Recognition of business and civic organizations making outstanding contributions to city beautificataion will be a part of the fifth annual kickoff luncheon sponsored by the \Vernen's Division, Huntington Beach Chamber ol Commerce. The no-host luncheon will take place at noon Wednesday, March 10, in the Fisherman restaurant. First and second place trophies and certificates for honorable men· lion will be presented by Mrs. Jake Stewart, beautification chairman. A program on ecology with an emphasis on its esthetic values will be offered Jiuring a panel discussion moderated by ?t1rs. David Carlberg, elected ci!_airm.an of the Environmental Counctl !P_P..Ointed bx_ thJLCity_council. Appearing on the panel will be Mayor Don Shipley and Golden \\'est College students John Appel, Barbara Pettit and Ross Landry, members of the school's Ecology Club. Appel, club president, also serves as community information com· mittee chairman. ECOLOGY IS BEAUTIFUL -Stress will be on the beauty of our surroundings when the Women's Division, Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce, sponsors its fifth annual Beautifica tion Luncheon \Vednesday, March 10, in the Fisherman. Feeding ducks which abound in Talbert Lake are (left to right) Mrs. Jake Stewart. chairman, :ri.trs. Doug Loughmiller and .l\1rs. Winn l\1acEwan . Letters inviting all community organizations and businesses to send a representative to the meeting already have been mailed, and the public also is invited to attend. Tickets for the luncheon are ,2.50 and reserva· tions may be obtained by calling Mrs. Charles O'Donnell, 536-7582. or Mrs. Pat Downey, 536·9598. Key Unlocks Trunk/ul of Now and Th en Fa shions Bygone eras of style will be recalled for Golden Key members when the group entertains women in· terested in the Child Guidance Cen ter of Orange County · at a membership brunch Tuesday1 March ' 9. Read y to greet prospects at the 10 a.m. mecl· ing in Lake Park Clubhouse are (left to right) 1t1rs. Cy Peterson, Mrs. Meryl \Vinans and 1t1rs. Norman Weaver, membership chairman. Charm Course Builds to a Cool and Classy Finale Picture-pretty will be sixth, seventh and eighth grade Fountain Valley girls when they put th eir charm school lessons to practical use during a tea and fash- ion show Saturday, March 13, in the community . center. Learning the 'techniques of dress, hair care and nutrition are (left to right) Tina Murphy, Tina Chavez and Larene Edlund. The course is sponsor· ' cd by the Woman·s Club. ., Hostess Burns When Guest Has Her Cake and E·ats It ,Tee ... '. ' . . t-. . .... :~ . ~ . . ' • ....ti ~. ... ... -. DEAR ANN LANDERS: No\v that t am pulling my problem down on paper it seems so petty J'm ashamed of myself. Bul I dCI need an answer and I hope you will oblige. t love to cook , and I'm an outstanding pastry chef. J take pride in preparing ANN LANDERS • loolced like. Two weeks ago I was in lhe cemetery visiting my aunt's grave. I accidentally saw this boy 's headstone. a compulsion lor which there Is no rational basis. The experts say such Mb.avlor Is caused by guilt which may be totally unrelated to the 1ltuallon that has you hooked. If this urge to visit the cemetery dally persists J 1ugge5t you dlacuss it wltll a tberapbl ·:"~ we are responsible because il was tn our home . I do not agree wilh him but I admit I AM uneasy. What i• your advice? -SHADY SlDE OF TH& STREET 111 the food for my dinner parties. A planned to se rve by candlellght and friend of mine (I'll call her Hilda) is Hilda was ste.allng my thunder. Of course pretty good in the kitchen, too. I suspect , when she arrived with the cake I knew she is competitive with me. J had no choice but lo serve it. ll •0:..." Last night when Hilda and her husband spoiled my evening. arrived for dinner (lt was a small party Am I wrong to feel this way ? Do _ only foul couples) she brought along I ~ou think Hilda committed a faux pas, You did ._,raclous thing, however , by serving It. Too bad It spoiled your eYenlng. lt 1bouldn't have btea lbat important I was drawn to it like a magnet. I relt such a deep sense of sadness I caMOt describe it. I have returned to his grave every day since. Something makes me go. Yesterday J decided to stay away and J was a nervous wreck all day. J had to go to the cemetery after supper. Or course I didn't tell my folks where I was going. They would have thought I was crazy. In ract, l'm beginning to ink maybe l am a little nut.!. Ca n you tell me what is cau1ing thi1 strange behavior and_ what I can do 1boul lt? -JEFFERSON CITY, MO. DEAR ANN LANDERS ' A l>-year .. ld girl has been baby-sitting for us for several months. 1 made it clear that site was not to entertain anyone in our absence. Last night my husband and I returned (rom a party earlier than we had planJWI and we caught her wlth a yol!ng man . : -: in a vtry embarrasslng sltuai~- DEAR SH ADV : Since you made ll clear lo the &irl .nat she was not t' enterta.La 1•est1 In your bome, you art not -..es pons Ible lor whatever might resal1 from that encounter. Don't ien bet mother, bat do get uotber alUer. -: ... "The Bride's Guide," Arm Landefit: booklet, answers some of the fN!1!t freqyentlY. asked questions a bo~ v.·e<ldlng1.' To receive your copy o( "!.~ .comprehensive guide, write lo Ant\ Landers. in care ·of the DAILY PILO.r. enclosing a long, self-addressed, atam~ enve lope and 3S cent.! In coln. -:i • a "surprise"-a huge, JWgg angel-food t or am l overreacting? Help me sort cake beautifully decorated wtth orange -1th\s oul In my thinking. -FOl\.T i icing. It really \Vas spectacular but I LAUDERDALE Q. resented it. . ~ DEAR ~ Q.: JIJlda should not. haYe -Here I had '!pahl ti iot of time ·. irurprlsed you. She should bave asked preparing crepes suzettes which I In adv11nce If ahe could bring the desKrt. -· DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am 19 years old. My problem Is one I thought would go away In ttme. But instead 1t is getting worse. When I was a freshman in high &ehool a boy tJcncw wn: killed in an autofnobile accident. I hardly knew him and to this day J do not remember what he DEAR ·JEFF: You ore grlpptd by My husband saYs ~@' :iiiould tell her mother. He insists that if the girt is )regnant a!I a result of that seS&ion, • •• -. -. ·- ' --. • • J:l• DAILY PILOT . ............ ~' ~ .. ~ ·~ , ~ , ft, • Betrothal Announced By Former Harborites Mr. and ~1rs. Robert Jev.·ett Voorhies of Pompano Beach. Fla .. former residents of N11wport 8 each , have annow1ced the engagement of their daughter. Lei I an i Germ ain Voorhies to Robe rt C. PayWn. son of Mr. and ?i.1rs. Donald Payton of Reno. Miss Voorhies, a I 9 6 6 Children 's Home Soc i e t y debulante . attended Arizona State University and ~1ary ?i.1ount College in Boca R<alon, }"la. She is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and now is a stewardess for Air Californie. Her Hanel! attended the University of Nevada and served with the Marines Corps in Vietnam . He has just been appointed station manager for the new San Diego branch of Air California. A June \\'edding is slated In Newport Beach. Th e nuptials are being planned to coincide with the 48th wedding annlversary of ti-tiss Voorhies' June Dote Set LEILANI VOORHIES Bric:lt-Eltct "' grandparents. Mr. and 11rs. l J ames Daniel Germain cf J Newport Be.a.ch. V Freemans Tell News Mollica Louise Freeman will beccme the bride cf G. Dennis Paul during June 26 rites in St. Gregory's Catholic Church , Los Angeles. .. • Open to Public I~ '1 Concert Previewed In just over a year , the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra has generated enormous enthusiasm and established itself as one of the ltading orchestras' In the country. The man considered responsible for the development is Neville Marriner, a master of the chamber music genre. He 'vill appear be· iore Orange County music lovers during a Jree concert preview lecture \\1ednesday, March 10, at 11 a.m. A native of England. he founded the Academy of St. Mart in-the-Fields in Lon· ldon. and the London Strings recordings ha ve won him wide accl.1im. He '"ill discuss the music of Mozart, Schumann and Ligeti that is to be played by the Los Anieles Philhar- monic Orchestra during its S1turday, l\1arch 13, concert at UCL The lecture is the first in a series of fou r music appreciation programs planned by the Orange County Philharmonic Society. ~Iarri ner's presentation '"ill take place In the Ed· \Vanis Theater, Fashion Island and is open to the public. Future lectures "'ill be delivered by Or. Golin Slim, April 14; Dr. Raymand Kendall, ?.1ay 5, and Harold Gelman , May 19. • Visitor Greeted " f l l ·:w;HISTLES TO WORK -George Pappas was pro- ~imed Boss-or-the-year during the 33rd annual Bosses' Night Dinner sponsored by the Newport Harbor Business and Professional Women in the Mesa Verde Cnu ntry Club. The "vinning letter was written bv Mrs. John Palen {center) and l\lrs. Joseph Hamil wis named Girl·of·the-year. Tbeir betrothal was announced by her parents. Mr. and Mrs. John P. f'r~man. during a party for relatlves and close friend s in their Los Angeles home . Among guests was George F. Paul or Huntington Beach, father of the benedict-clect. ~1embers of Harbor Star Chapter S68 Order of the Eastern Star are making ready for the official visit on Tuesday, March 9. of Deputy Grand Matron ~lrs. Carlton Young ol San Clemente. Gardeners To Discuss Geraniums ?i.1rs. Fred A. Bode J r. of Escondido will d i s cuss geraniums and pelargoniums for mf'mbers of the South Coast Garden Cluh at 2 p.m. on \\lednesday, March 10 . , ,. ~· ..,,, . •, •. " " Peering flt;!":":r , ~ .: &AF ARJ TROPHIES were front and center as big game 'unter Ed Quinn and Mrs. Guinn (who also hunls) hosted 1' cocktail party prior to the ~i:ecuti ve Dinner CI u b 6'eeting in the Newporter Inn. ~Quinn, who gave a slide iJesentation of lheir African nfariA at the meeting, and his wife welcomed the Messrs. (nd Mmes, Tom Channell, .{Ohn Macnab, Sam Garst, 5obert Hyzdu, Ray Simeral, Qr. and lt1rs. John Bullis, Dr. afld Mrs. Gwyn Parry and Dr. and Mrs. Ben Fr'ees and tJ;leir guest. Mrs. Helen Baiz.er Qil Mariposa. ' ~eads Bow " 1n Prayer · ::churchwomen United of (;aguna Beach joined wi1h nlillions or persons around the <arid in a World Day of R,ayer today in St. Cath- tline's Catholic Church. ~:women or !II faiths in 25.000 c:dmmunltie.s in thi! country Mid 160 groups on six con· tlhents participated in the spiritual observance. :Mrs. s. S French wa~ di.airman of the da y, assisted bY the Mmes. Silas Chaney, PhUlp Hopkins. A. K . Biinawitz Jr .. Leigh Hawkins. ...;d the Misses Dorothea Giasoe. Ann ~1aguire. L.1ura ~etta and Henrietta \Vay. Qpera Followed By Supper A gatherini? of L~T!r Operal patrons 11.nd fncnd!i \\'1!1 fol\ov.' t be \\'inter Fe~t ~v a_,~1 ~ormiince or ''I PaghacCI I on Sunday. Mar ch 7. 1'hP nperii w11l he ricrfnrmed <1t 5 p.m. in Laquna ~oullon ' Plavhousl' "'ith 1he ~1al hour and. ::.uppPr 1n lintel ~a~una .: Partv plans . :'Ire bf:1n11; l'!r·I rang!d by Mr . -Sldn~1 Johnston. members h l P chafrman. . ! ri1embers nf the board "'111 be ho5ts. incluthn~ !he Mf'~srs. j and Mmes. Winfield Sh1r11s.,I ~10 r g an . Cut hl'rbertson William H1nwood. H. Je.An Bedtll . James Afi!ncw. Rnbert Linderman. and Lt r o YI Barthnlome"'· Other director11 g re t I In a guests will be Dr. And Mn. uater Ludlow. Or. 111nd Mrs. stanlt:V F.ichstaedl. Col. and ?i.1rs. W\ll1 im Brug.ere, and the t.tmes. Edith S m I th-. Adrien Pelle.lier and Maraarel Conra~wope. STARS I SydlltY 0 l'll•H" 11 '"' el It\• / -·Id', tree! e1tNilot • ''· Mi 1 celv"'11 i1 e111 ef the DAILY Around George Pappas Hailed As Boss-of-the-year ~, Miss F'reemar1 is a graduate of Immaculate Hearl High School, Los Angeles a n d attends Marymounl College on the Loyola University campus. Work of the cha pt er members win be exem plified by off•cer~ during the JI p.m m~ting in the Newport Beach ~1asooic Temple. W or th y Matron Mrs. Martin S!eignrr will preside ever initiation cf new members. ~1rs. Bode, a recognized authority in her field. will ad- dress the l(roup in the Three Arch Bay C I u b h nu s e , ~·lembers iilso arc asked to bring treasures or trinkets as 11 contribution lo a silent auc· tion "'hich will begin al I p.m. Also accepting the hosts' hospltality in their Laguna ~ach home were Miss Mary Lou Hopkins and M is s Stephanie Myers. Also a It end i n g the di nner party which marked thei r silver wed d i n I( an- niversary were Mr. and tifrs . Robert A. Burke of Costa 11esa. l! was ii blend of Laugh-in and the Academy Aw.ards in the Mesa Verde Country Club when Newporl Ha r b or Business and Professional Women hosted their 3Jrd an- nual dinner In honor of lheir bosses. Recipient of the litle Boss- nf-the-year was Grorge Pap- pas. finance director of Newport Beach. Presentini: him with an enaraved silver tankard wa s ~!rs . John Palrn. } who wrote the \\'inning le!ter ''He always came lo work whistling." Mrs. Joseph Hamil. chosen as Girl-()f-the-year for her et>n- tributions to the success of the club's program s, recell'ed an engra ved silver 00"'1. Club membe rs entertained their bosse~ and husbands Ydth a skit, Laugh-in style. following the awards presen- tation. MONICA FREEMAN To Sey Vow1 Ta lk Stresses English Post Her fiance . an alumnus or ~lli1er Dei H i~h School. is a senior at Loynla , where he Is a member of Delta Sigma Pi business fraterni t.v. He will be commissioned as an officer in the Air Force following his graduation. Mrs. Rex Albright i s refreshment chainnan and ti-1rs. Arnold Ar ff is in charge of rliniiig room decorations. Emblem Club Coming up en Marth 17 will be a Homem.akers Luncheon The Elks LOOge is the set-at IZ p.m. in the temple. The ting for mc::-ti ngs of the Slarbright Club, with ti-1rs. ~!rs. Charles L. Fra.ncis, hoste::.s chairman. will be assisted hy the Mmes. Clifford S. Tinsman. Carl Bull . B. Bowman r.lendel. Robb Scott, Nlle15 \Velch and M. H. \Viley. Star Club Cavalier Chapter .. Q:llqnial Emblem Club 21ll nf Laguna Melvin Ham m or k as Siar Club will meet at ?:SO The honored couple Y.as married in Rockrord , 111. and has been Costa Mesa resi denls tor 14 years. They have three sons. Thomas. Richard and William who all Jive 1- California. DR. AND MRS. Frederick Grazer of Newport Beach are touring the Orient following his participation in a plastic surgery congresR In Melbourne. Kochino Council Organized Dames xvri Century will Bea·ch. Mem bers gather lht. c:hairman. will h.ast the event p.m. on_ \Vednesday, March discuss the Lives and Times first and third Tuesdays at with a St. Patrick's Day 10. in the Laguna Federal Sav- or Our English Ancestors 8 p.m. theme. ings and Loan building. following a 12: 15 p.m. lunch 1-l mmmmms==============='======;;;;;.--- on Tuesday, March 9, in the D 0 G $ H 0 W Old Brussels re s t 11 u r a n t . Laguna Beach. New Program Forming Mothers and daughters in-or the Peaceful \Vate rs Natio n M~s~eF~:~g~~~~s~.r~i~ln~~ti~~ UITj llA fASHlll St,IARE Or. Grazer also fulfilled a speaking engagement In Penang . Malasia . The Grazers plan to return on March 20. le.rested in joining the new of Indian Maiden s, is headin~ 1,000 years of ancestral ac-the organization of the Foun-tivity with stress on social MARCH 6 - 1 0 A.M. Kach ina program sponsorec11 _~tia1;·n;V;•;li;•;y;g;ro;u;p;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;as;p;er;t;s.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;!~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~. by the Young Men's Christ ian AsM>Ciali on of Westminster- Fountain Valley are invited to ."!ltend an organizational meeting lomorrow . Longe\'l i ty Stressed How to Enjoy a Longer Life will be the topic when the Newport. Hitrbor Exchangettes gather on Wednesday, March 10. in the Balboa home of Mrs. Inlight Gick. Co.hostess ror the 11 a.m. affair will be Mrs Rober! Turner. and featu red wj]I be a yo ga dem onstration by Bharati of the Yoga Center of Costa Mesa and a lunch of natural and organ ic foods. Designed for girls from age 9 and up. the program is similar lo Indian Maidens ex· cept emphasis is pli'ced on trips. homemaking and other i;:kills which would appea l lo old er girls. The meeting will lake place in G!sler School between 9 and Ill a.m. On hand to explail'l procedures will be Mrs. Merlin Heyen and the Kachina Coun- cil already formed i n \Vestmlnster. Mrs. Jack Noack . princess B. D. HOWES IS HAVING A SALE i B.D. HOWES and SON FJ,£j£WLLLAS FOA !HA££ Gt,tkATIO'S l/[lrORT El l.C~: ;u v.a Lido. 1;5.1;31 . . 6th Anniversary Sale now in progress at all stores! •tl0T'$ 9r11I ltt lur t~ _ ~~~~~~~~~~ ·- I I ( \ I . \ \ ·- 117 • • • .. ~ Fo1111iai11. Valley Today'• Final N.Y. S•lu . ' VO L. M, NO. 65, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C_AtlFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH S, 197 ( JEl'I CENT$ Turk Unit s B:attle With Students ANKARA. Turkey (UPI) -A fon:e of 5,000 Turkish troops and police seiied the campus of the Middle East Technical University (METU) today in a four hour batUe with student.s but found no trace of four kldnaped Americans .faced with ex~utiOn if a $400,000 ransom is not paid. 1\lrkish authorities said at 4east one Mudenl died in the battle In which the 11tudenl.s hurled bombs and fired piJtols. Filteeri student!, a Turkish officer and 1 soldier were reported wounded. The goldier and two students were reported in cMtical condition. Disorders spread to other parts of Tln'lrey and anti-American and an- llgovemment demonstrations Oattd in other parts of Ankara . Informed sources said the right-wing, p r o • A m e r i c a n goyemment of Premier S u I e y m a n Demirel might have to impose martial law. A group calling itseU the "Turkish Peoples Liberation Army." a leftist ex· tremist group , kidnaped the four American radar technicians Thursday and said they would be executed i! a ransom of $400,000 was not paid. They moved up the execution date to 6 a.m. Saturday (ll p.m. EST Friday). President Nixon, speaking Thursday ni&hl at his televised news conference In WashingUln, was asked if be thought Turkey should negotiate for release of the airmen. He said he would not make that suggestion · and that following ·previous similar cases the United States would leave it up to Turkey whether to_riegotiate, havioe in mind_Mleir cwn lnternat circumstances. · The four Americans were l~tified as Airman JC Richard Caraszi ·of Stam- rord, C.Onn.; Airman 1C ~ J. Heavner of Denyer. Colo.. w.hmle parents nye in May1ville, W.Va.; Airman IC James M. Gholslon or Alexandria, Va ., 'and S;. Sgt. Jimmie J. Sexton of San Angelo, Tex. Turkish students splVfed by leftist elements have Jn recent years staged coun4ess anti-American demonstrations in prote·st against American policies in Vietn'am Md because of resentment against the fact 20,000 Americans and dependent.! arc stationed in Tw:key, a Jllember of NATO. At Izmir. the big U.S. base on the Turkish Aegean Sea Coast. extraordinary seeurity precautions were clamped on American facililies and p e r s o n n e l • Turkish sources said many American servicemen had started proceedings to send their" families home. The confrontation between the students and police began at 4 a.m. when military 1nd pOlice forces arrived to search for the kidnaped Americans. Five kidnapers were involved and one of them captured by police said he was a student at METU. Winds to Slow Over W ee kend; East Shivering Gusty winds expe<:led tonight will diminish by Saturday night, the National Weather Service predicted today. Small craft warnings along the Orange Coast remained in force today due Lo gusts from 15 to 30 knots. Warnings will probably tie lowered late Saturday. Winds along the coast will shift to come from the north tonight at from 10 to %J knots bcrore tapering off. Highs tomorrow will be near 63 after lows tonight or 42. Patchy clouds are expected to continue although it will be generally sunny. As Southern Californi•nJ began tq. en-_ joy relle( from the strong winds of .,the past week. th4 East found wintry bl8su particularly uncomfortable. They ·brought snow In amounts from eight to 26 inches to many northeastern areas and plled it into formidable drifts. Travelers warninii:s were posted from ·Pennsylvania In Maine Thursday as north•·est winds from 25 to 40 miles 1n hour, blowing and drifting snow 111nd freeilng tempeatures howled with the 1torm. Fl'Wltrated snow plow drivers reporled roads filled in with drifting soow jU$l u quickly as they were plowed. Schools near Albany. N.Y. houied 1tranded commuters, hotels in Montreal converted dining rooms Into dormitories. aJrport.s In New York City were sealed off by snow "nd President Nl1on had to cancel a -trip to Roche11ter, N.Y. after 12 Inches of snow fell there. A 79-mlle stretch of Upstate New York's msln \raffle artery remained cloa- td tod•Y due to driftlna snow. I -- \ ' Phoenix Must Die Mesa Rapist Gets Maximum Penalty Gary Harold Phoen~ of Costa Mesa was sentenced to death Thursday for a SH!es of rapes and kidnapings ln which the husky bacbelor beat and in· jured several of his victims. Outwardly calm and composed -a demeanor _ he maintained through his seven-week Orange County Superior Court trial -he offered no reaction to Judge William M u r r a y ' s pro- nouncement of sentence. Deputy Public Defender Roderick Ric· cardJ withdrew his motions for reduction of sentence and a new trial shortly before Judge Murray ordered Phoenix, Viets Near Roadway Hub In Laos CITY CLOSING LID ON OLD CHEMICAL JOHNS They've 8M1n Sitting on Huntington Avenue Lot Since 1965 SAIGON (UPI) -Military spokesmen said today the Corpmunists had con· centratid missile sites and massed up to SO tanks for tbe defense of Sepone against a force of 2,000 South Vietnamese troops closing in on the Ho Chi Minh trill roadway hub In Laos. Officials to Close Door Field reports said 2.000 South Viet.. namese troops had driven to within three mi"s and perhaps v,"ithin 1 i g h t of Sepone, main objective of the is-Oay offensive against tbt: trail. On Old Beach Outhouses The South V\etname&e troops were fanning out around Sepone after being By ALAN Df81\IN ... ot tM DellY l"n.t Stiff Citf officials in Huntington Beach are hop.int to close the door Monday on rotting Outhouses. · . Officials charge that the portable johns have been cluttering a field on Hun· tington Avenue since 1965. They are not going to sit on the problem any lon.ger. Legal actlon is being pressed against the owner of the chemical toilets, Aerncst Sigala of Tustin. The case will be aired in the West Orange County Municipal Court at 9:30 a.m. Monday. City attome~s have twice before pro- secuted Sigala without succe ss. He failed to .appear at hearings in June. 1969 and October 1970. "If'the city 'wanls to get rid or them. then I'll move .them oul." Sigala, who oJ):erates a' che111i cal toilet business, said this morning. "The. city can have .them -or I'll move them to another one ot my yards.'' "That's whaL we are arter." responded City Attorney Don Bonfa. "We are not interested in having the man suffer a penalty. We simply want to take them away at his expense." The outhouses are in a field between Clay Avenue and 17th Street on Hun- tington Avenue. Sigala said that he did not appear in court in the past because he was in the Navy. Sigala made it clear tha l he feels be is being discrimina ted aga inst. "The city is discriminating agai n~t oothouses really," he commented. ''They don't like them. but they sure like to use them . They can 't open a park without one, nor can any construction job be done without one. "ln case of a civil emergency . such as an earthquake disaster. city hall and the police department could not operate without them." Sigala is being prosecuted under a toning ordinance. Tbe properly is 1n an industrial zone. .. When I first put them there. they met the zoning. requirements,'' Sigala said. "But lhen they changed the permit· Not for Kids . . flown aboard u..s.._iieucoptt.r.sJ>!P,J!nll-~ t.,j -. vt•tll°'!,l . .i!if~!\'ifl ..,..:J,I''" · ..-.-...~~' ofdi8'.$,fP,~ a s~eak attack. . 15,tlOQ'pound -b lo c kb u 1\f~ t: liombt Sigala a~ that 'he has not moved parachuted' front ·~1"1transport any of the toilets for a year. 1 .. pldel. · · .... . ~ •. ; The city believes it could get 1 •Jot The b1asl from the bl& bc)mbi tipped more down on paper against Sigala. awAy trees and foliage tfld~ fz.Utid i&n. In addili.on to vioJ~ting a zoning law, ding zones the size of foottiall"~lds. Bonfa said that the Johns are an eyesore . tf: and a danger to children. Military spokesmen said ~· •1alrcraft ''They are a public nuisance _ an had been fired on by 20 missilt.s· around attractive nuisance , you could say.," he SEpo:ne in what was described: as the added. · first riiajor Communist use of 'Sdv\et-built ~onfa also .poi.nted out that a recent antiaircraft rockets outside North Viet· police report 1nd1cated that a nine-year· · old boy bad become locked •into oOe nam. 1 • of the johns and had to be freed. Military sources said North•vtetnamese Whatever solution is reached on the c~mmanders had pulled a'l least tWo problem . it will be cold comfoh rto a~ored units. each with is tacks. into nearby homeowners wbo have wanted to see the C~ain pulled · on uie . johns a defensive circle around . Se pone, a for several years. toWn' 71 miles Inside Laos where the 17,000 to Enter Army in April Draft Lottery WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon said today it would draft 17,000 young men in April. all of them for the Army. It was the fourth consecutive month !his year that draft calls have totaled 17 .000. bringing the four-month total for 1971 to 68,000. · During the same period last year. 69.500 men were drafted. In the first third of 1969 the total was 126,600. A Pentagon spokesman said the latest request v•ou\d be just enough to provide replacement for men completing their Army duty to maintain the Army at its cWTent strength. Selective service headquarters said all draftees during April l\.'OUld have lottery numbers under 100. That has been the highest number since January. Communists were repclfled to have establlshed ·a major command c:enter. 11>e 2.000-man South Vietnamese force was leapfrogged wesl from positions ;:-loser to the South Vietnamese border over the past two days. "t think they can see Sepone very clearly from there," a spokesman said In placing the lorce within three miles of Sepone. The first major battle around Sepone was reported Thursday when a South Vietnamese infS:ntry battalion of more than 600 men fought Communist forces I na three-hOur fight and reported killing 42 North Vietnamese six mile! southeast of ~pone. South Vietnamese losses were placed al three killed. There was no indication of the number of C.Ommunist troops in the Sepone region or v.·hether the Reds haO abandoned the junction on French colonial route 9. the axis of the South Vietnamese drive into Laos. But heavy fighting was reported elsewhere in Laos. Some military observers had predicted the Communists would put up their heaviest fighting of the campaign to save Sepone. a road and supply junction where mountain passes from North Viel- n·am enter Laos. Parents Want Sex Course By TERR\' COVILLE Of lllt O.llY l'li.t fl•ff Some· p&ren t.s have. aSked lor an ex· panded sex education program In the Fountain Valley School District -for parents only. "There hlls to be a vast , extensive sex education program and it should belong to the parents,'' Mrs. Jan WllM!m told trustees of the di!lrlct Thursday night. "We need a course for \lll, 90 °"·e can take it back to our children and answer their questions." .... ~e Wis sugg~Ung that the district set up evening courses for 11dults. using medical and clergy vol unteers lo explain AU education ln modem terms so the parents qn commijJ\icale with the ir • - children. Mrs. Wilhelm also requested 1 few 111irior chang~ in the district's current course -titled Family Lile -which was just expanded from one evenln1 sess ion to three for boys and thelr fathers. "We'd likt_ to know the parenll can pre-screen' any program so we know what will be asked before we take our children," i;he said. The district has offe~ a one lecture ctiurse on family life for the -past 111 years for fifth grade thratzgh eighlh grade students on a voluntary basts in the evening and with plr8nta at• tending. , This ~ear district offlclals bave lddtd discuss ions on soclal-emoUontrltUtllftil -.. .. of sei and venereal disease to the stan. dard lecture on biological factors of "'· At the sflu;eatlon of several parents, dlltrict officials moved the biological dilr:ussion ahead of the venereal disease lectur1. Trustee William Crane explained the district's attitude, "We're !\ot trying to usurp the role or father, mother a n d family: only supplement It " · "The 11tatistics on venereal di&eaM are frightentng ," Mrs. Francis James. a tn:istee. added . "They Vt worse Lban !!nil ·st•tl•ll<f"'' . • Board Chairman Harold Brown assured Mr" Wil~m. and other 111rent11n' th• ll~di•"I"! tha\ tho district would conslder u 1d~ll kt oduca&c series. • ·-• 29, to be shipped to San Quentin~11 Death Row wil}\in the next 10 days. Phoemx 's appeal sgalnst the sentence is scheduled for hearing by the California Supreme Court. No· date has been set for discussion o( the action. Phoenix was convlcted on 30 of 33 felony counts which s\leged that he at· tacked nine women In a 2.8-day period last summer. Several nf his victims teslified they were tracked by Phoenix at night, dragged by the physical culture expert Into. his whitt Thunderbird auto and subjected to a nightmare of beatlQ&s, rape and sexual perversion. Police Harassed It wa.< lestifiod during his penalty trial that Pboenll', thl aul.stant manqer of a Huntington Beach beaJlh spa at _ the lime of bla ·arrest, had been convicted of rape charges 1~ the age of 11 And committed to a Karuas reformatory. The jury was also told that he sexually attacked a Houston, Texas, woman while he was on parole from the Kansas prison. Phoenix'• e:iater, ·Mn. Sandy Lewil of Garden Grove, was in court ThundaJ to witnesa her brother's sentenclng. She told newsmen she will hire a . "first class" lawyer to handle her brother's appeal agaln!t the death sentence. Mesan --Gives Up After Showdown By ARmUR R. VINSEL 04 1119 Dally l"llM Ili ff Screaming defiance and frantically loading guns, a Costa Mesa man finally surrtndered to quie~ rollce coaxing Thunday, only seconds before they forc- ed a showdown. . A crowd of 300 mill¢ around the tense acene , ignoring ordera broadcast Ul"I T........_ MAKING HIS, POINT . Nlion on lndDchlna, Page '4 U.S. Orders Safety Devices On 1974 Autos WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Depart,.. ment of Transportation, denying a re- quest of aul.o makers for substantia,1 delay, ordered today that 1974 cars have safety devices lhal automatically prot~ct front-seal occupants in bead-on crashes up to 30 miles an hour. Under lhe department's final rule on ~ailed passive reslralnl safely systems, 1976 model cars will have M> be designed to protect all car occupants from any Injury in . a 30.mlle-an-bour crash whether head on , from the side, or roll over. The anouncement by Seeretacy of Transportation John A. Volpe culminates months Of dispute with the car industry. All mahufacturers except General Motors have contended the. front.seat device! are Impossible to provide before the 1975 ·model year. Volpe tnodified only slightly an earlier order . The effective d~te for front-,~t systems, for example, was postponed from July l, )973, ··to Aug. 15. 1973, to coincide wtth model year chnngeover. ~ v o I p e also dropped the earlier re. qulrement for rear-seat. passive pro. tection in head-on collisions set Io r July 1. 1974. Instead , he said that begin- ning Aug. 15, 1975. meaning 1976 model cars. paisive protection from all kinds of crashes up to 30 milts an bout will have to be avallabh! for 111 car occupants. Federal safety o{ficials believe auto makers will employ SO<alled air bags to meet· the requirements. Other devices being considered to meet the lG-mile-an· hour standard include 'net.s. blankets and extensive , cushioning interiors w I t h energy-absorbing ma~rl1l. ' A front-seat air bag, for ex,mple, would opeh out of the' dash board and auklm3ttcally lnn11te to cushion oc>, eupanls when ~lectronic ·dl!lvlces aense. 1 crash. - from a circling police helicopter to move back. Some -standing exposed to what coold have been a mass murder spree -taunted and heckled shotgun.armed officen crouched under cover. The drama began at 3:20 p.m .• wltli a report of a man shot at 3013 Coolidge: Ave., and a man "ith a gun at 3002 Fillmore Ave .. one block away. Victim John W. Golden ll. 23, of Phoe~!x, Ariz., la list.ed in satiafactory conditian tt>day al_Colta Mesa Meqwrial ·• H'!<Pilal, with 1 .32 caliber .bullel wound that collapsed one lung. · lie 111.J 1print.d a block. trailing blood. on the one remaJnini rupiratory or1an bef'ft coUapling. Paul E. We.aver, 30, of the Fillmore A venue addreil where the: JO.minute COD-· frontaUon occurred. Is In city jail, booked on charges of assault with intent W commit murder. New charges may be added slnce some Items in Weaver's arsenal -lined up along a wall ready for use -are listed as stolen, accor?in,s:. to police. A police helicopter crui1lng over the Mesa North tripl~ deve.lopment when , the reports came In directed ground units. to the scene. Patrlllmen John C. White, Robert E. Arnold and Gary earwig arrived a!most simultaneously ,to find a second bloody victim pi.stol-whjpped in the fray, lean- ing against • car. .lie painted ~ the front triplex unit and said the illspect had run inside. Getting no response to orders to come out, Arnold and White gingerly opened lhe unlocked door and entered, guns drawn. but the home was silent as a tomb. Sudden sounds overhead sent them behind a bar at the foot of the e:talrs for cover, with a full view of the shadow of a man with a gun. The sounds were bolts of high-powered rifles and shotguns being loaded, the patrolmen realized, so they agaln ordered him to drop his weapons and surrender. "You'll take me out of here feet first before I'll do 10 to 20," the Santa Monica Hosi>ital steam engineer acrtain- ed back. 'By thi.s time. backup patrol units were parked at cruy angles in the crowded cul-de-sac adjacent to busy Baker Street and the curiollS crowd swelled. Officers Arnold and White kept up a constant, calming e:tream of con- versation, as Patrolman John Stoneback (See SHOWDOWN, Pqe 21 Oruge Wea tiler n ...n·i ·1e1 int•bfcbe• 111ao a df!'grees, wbelher you're: on the coast or driving, inland, Saturday. Gusty \l(inds will prevail under sunny skies. INSIDE TODAY . • -NeuiUe Marrine1' wiU be guest lecturer a£ the Oro"a«" Countt1 PhWtarmonie S~t11'1 free preview Wedne.sda11. Su todav'• w ""'tu!"· • ') I IMVl•t P.M Mw1111I I'_.. I ftallMlll M ... W °'"" c_,., '' lt"t•11t•Rh h.JI ,,...... ....... . '""' , .. ,. INdl MM'tlllt "' TttrthlM ti --... w...... • W--"•.,.. '1·1S . ., .. ""' ... w-- , . I • .... \. •• Jl'I' PILOT H Friday, Marcti 5, 1971 Valley Market Pair Held • Ill Holdup F1lllllDI Vllle7 poUce plllmod to !De armed robbery charges today agaimt two men caught in a short auto chase Wednesday n1&bl minutes after the rob- bery of 1 local market. 'Mle men were stopped -along with a 17·year..old juvenile -by a police patrol unit on Brookhurat Street shortly after bandits Look $175 at gun Point from the 7-11 Market at Slater Avenue and Ward Street. A .38 caliber revolver was found in the car when police made the stop. Tclmmy C<loper, II, • clerl< al the nwtel told pollco two '""' dllered hlo lfon about 10:'5 p.m., Wedneaday, pointed the gun and made him open the cash register. They look $17; from UM! cash box, then walked outside, Cooper told police. As they left, store manager \Vi\liam Fallon, 48, drove up, spotted them run· ning to a car on Ward Street and gave cha!e. Fallon followed the three men - a driver was waiting for the pair -to DAIL'¥ l'llOY"l'holt ., Ttrll' Ctrlllt LESA MISEL, 14, SHOWS HER Oil PAINTING Portr1lt of P11ul McCartney Winner in Fountain V1lley Student Artists Display Works at District Office Student artists In the Fountain Valley School District have put 1Z5 examples of their work on display from now through Wednesday in district head· quarters. , The youngsters were all top com- petitors in the district's aMual art festi val. Categories include paintings and drawings; callages, mosalcs and stit- chery; and sculpture. School trustees honored the SO top winners at Thursday night's meeting of the board of education. Dan Dolan, principal of Cox School, wu given the diltrkt sweepstakes trophy because hia achoo! had the most winners. 'I1le art dil'play is open to the public any weekday at dilltrlct headquarters, Number One Lighthouse Lane. First place winners in the paintings and drawings category were : Emily Stewart, Cox School; Scott Sella, cox School; Debbie Armstrong, Wardlow OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT OMNCE '°AST PUILISH UIO COM,J.My ~ob1rt N. w,,, Pneldenl' 11"' ,.llbl!llW J••\-~ Cur(.y' Viet Ptt11Mnt .... ~I Mt,...., n.,,.,, Ke•YI( ...... Th•"'•• A. Mu'111il11f ~ .... 1•1"' Al•1t 01,1111 w.t cir.... c-ty •• ,. Alb•rt W. letet Attkitla EdlftN' Hntt...,...._•Offk• 17175 ····" ••• 1.,.,, M11n111 ~'''''' P.O. l1a 190, t2•41 °""' ""'"" School; Leia Mlsel, Harper School. Top artists In collages, mosaics and stitchery were: Paula Fleming. Cox School; Debbie Ishikawa, Fountain Valley School; Lisa Halliwlll, Fountain \'alley School. Best sfuJptors were: Karen Pull. Gisler School ; Kent \Yehner, Fulton School; Kathy Harmon, Nieblas School. Indian Culture Fair Scheduled At Edison High ''Art For Fund's Sake," an Indian culture fair, 'YUi be presented this Satur- day on the Edison High School campus. The exhibit. scheduled between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., will feature graphics, oil and water colors , batiks, prints and candles. All proceeds from the sale of items will be donated to American lndlans. Also to be shown are art works of intermediate and elementary school students from the \Vardlow, LeBard, Eader, Lamb, Patterson, Dwyer, Gisler and Edison campuses. Entertainment will be provided by the HBanda Noqual Indian Dancers'' who will do a routine of authentic Indian dances. Charge for admission to the fair is 75 cents for adults, and SO cents for children and students. Those under 12 are admitted free. w.amtr Avenue, doWI two aide atneta and COi to -uni wlln a FOllDlaln Valley police unit with SCI-Ed Parker and Officer Dave Brokaw wu watuqg. Police said the three men iJa9e up with:>ut a struggle. Mark A. Merritt, 18, and Kim A. CherrJe, 19, both of Garden Grove were due in West Orange County Municipal Court, Westminster, today for &l"'" raignment on the armed robbery charges. The juvenile was turned over to county juvenile autbor itie.s. Beach Bank Employe Hit ByFraudRap, A Huntington Beach bank employe was one or three women arrested today by District Attorney 's investigators on charges of defrauding lhe Orange County WeUare Department. A Santa Ana Municipal Court ap- pearance is being set for Mrs. Josephlne Rodriguez Bertucci, 24, or 1108 Acacia St., accused or faJsely claiming more than $1,100 in Aid to Families with Dependent Children fund. Investigators daim Mrs. Bertucci told welfare officials lhat her husband had left home leaving her to support their one child. They discovered that Bertucci, a machinist, waa living at the Acacia Street address and had been since JuJy of 1970, they alleged. Officers said Mrs. Bertucci was draw- ing $148 a month from the county weUare department at the time of her arrest. Also arrested today in the wake or a mounting crackdown on welfare violators in Orange County were Mrs. Johnna Meadors , 26, and Mrs. Josephine Katherine Oldaker, 33, both of Fullerton. Both women, like Mrs. Bertucci, are accused of falsely applying for weHare funds with the statement that their husbands had left home without providing support for their families. Investigators allege w e I f a r e ap- plications in all three instances were "full of false information and data" and had involved at least a two-week investigation into each incident. Yof1:1tg Hoopsters Meet in. Beacli For Big T our1iey Hoopsters from various Southern California cit.iea converge In Hul'ltlngton Beach this weekend for the Fourth An- nual Boys Basketball Tournament. The Recreation and Parks Department- .sponsored t-Ourney is scheduled for the Cily Gym, 17th and Palm Street both Saturday and Sunday. Leading the competition are all-star teams of 4th 6th and 8th gradera from the Cities of South Gate, P:lco Rivera, Rolling Hills and Huntington Beach. Action la scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. Saturday between Rolling Hills and South Gate and at 2:15 p.m. between Pico Rivera and Huntington Beach. Both are 4th grade divisions. In the 6th grade division, Pico Rivera meets South Gate at 3:30 p.m. and Rolling Hills meets Huntington Beach at 4:45. Pico Rivera meet& Rolling Hills at 6 p.m. and South Gate faces Huntington Beach at 7:15 p.m. in the 8th grade division. The action will pick up at 11 a.m. on Sunday with finals in the 4th grade, 6th grade and 8th grade divisions scheduled for 2 :4~ p.m., 4 p.m. and 5:15 p.m. respectfully. LA Petroleum Firm Named in Stock Case WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The Securities and E1cbange Comm!saion has accused the Occidental Petroleum Corp., of Los Angeles of iliuing false and mlsleadlng earnings reports for 1969 and 1970. The commlaaion, in a suit filed Thurs- day in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, said the company camounaged some rinancing transactions to appear to be land sales and improperly recorded prir fits from the transactions. LafUlll l•c1'11 J22: ,..., ... , AVtnW C.• .MtM1 --w., ...... flfllt ~ NtwPll't llecl'l1 DD Ntwpon ... ~ S.11 CMmlrl!t; lGS Hortll l!I Cll"llllt Jtlll Adult, Students I Parents on Other Side of Fent:e About 80 parents of children in Tam- ura Elementary School in Fountain Val· ley will bt on the other end of the report card this month. They're golng back to school to learn the concepts Of New Math. For six nlghll in March and April, Mr1. Deloris Fllnt, a learn.Ing coordina- tor at Tamura ind expert on New Mtth, will be at the chalk board describing the way children Jiarn mathem1t1c1 these days. Jt's the fir«t of what may be several adult education programi offered at 1Chools In tho F01111taln Valley Scbool District. • "We're working with lhe Coast Com· munlty Coll'le (Golden W"t) DIJtricl" Robert Sanchis, an assistant district au· perintendent. explaiRed, "Math is the first course we'll It')', but other tubjects may follow." Mrs. Flint's lecture aalary will be paJd by the Coast Community College District as part of their adult education system. Elementary school di1tricta can't offer adu lt educaUon courses, but by asre~ ment with the junior college dlJtrJct, they can ofler lheir schools aod teaclie.rs for adult education. Sanchls said more adult lectures aerlc1 may bt set up ia the near future. - I I • • DAILY PILOT Sllff l"Htot DETECTIVE BLAYLOCK ESCORTS SUSPECT WEAVER TO SQUAD CAR Curious C1use Police Almost as Much Worry Laguna Narco Raiders Net 30, Big Drug Haul In a sweep that began at noon Thurs- day and lasted until after midnight, Laguna Beach police and state narcotics officers arrested 30 persons on grand jury indictments for alleged narcotics offenses. The arrests followed a three-month investigation in the Laguna area during which undercover agents claim to have purchased several thousand dollar:; worth of drugs from suspects ranging in age from 18 to SO years. Most of those arrested face charges of sale or dangerous drugs including LSD and heroin. The grand jury indiclments were hand- ed down on Alonday and the arrests v.·ere made by three Laguna and fi ve state officers following a .Thursday morn· ing briefing in Laguna. The operation was directed by Sgt. Nell Purcell, head of the Laguna Beach Police Department's special enforcement division and agent Jack Leavey of the State Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement. Most of the arrests were made in the vicinity of South Coast Highway and Cleo Street in Laguna Beach, known as a gathering p\ace for youthful lon11hairs and a center of narcotjcs deal- ing in the Art Colooy. . · . Before the night was over, officers Litter Bags Placed In Officials' Cars Li\ter bags have been installed in all Huntington Beach official city cars to help keep the community clean. City employes have been asked to use the litter hags as a reminder to other cities. Littering the streets is also a misdemeanor and subjecl to citation and fine. LOOK FOR THE UNUSUAL From Henredon's · Mei& also had ranged as far afield as San Clemente, Costa Mesa and Hawthorne to make individual arrests. Almost all those arrested were ''in- volved" in the use or sale of heroin, Purcell claimed. Most of the ''buys" 'Yhich led up to the grand jury indictments were made in the Cleo Street area, known to narcotics officers as "junkie corner " Purcell said. ' ''In recent months, the officer asserted "the area has been literally taken over' with dealing going on quite openly." ' Last week the windshield of Purcell1s car was smashed with a board while he was making arrests in the area. On the same day orficer John Saporito was assaulted on the nearby beach and on ano ther occasion an officer's private car was stoned as he drove through the area, according to Purcell. Lifeguards Get Swimming Tests Swimtning tests for summer lifeguard jobs on the slate beaches will be given at 9 a.m., Sunday. on Huntington State Beach in front of the Edison power plant. More than 75 lifeguard prospects are expected to compete for 30 openings on slate beaches from San Diego to Bolsa Chica Stale Beach. Anyone who will be at least a high school graduate by this June can take the three-part swimming test Sunday Ydthout prior application. The test includes a 1,000 meter rough v.·ater swim. an 800 yard run_ swim. run, and a 400 yard sprint swim. For further information on state lifeguard jobs phone 5J6..8807. ~-A gnceful ~ode in Louis A"V stylt. Magnificently i tat\'ed from solid cherry, Jt is l6K incl~s wide and'/ "' inche1 ftlgb,. and could well bt the elepnt accent f~ any fint room. Come au the entire Folio 10 col lee .. tJon, for you are run to 6nd tbit one exquiJito piect your home needs. Fron• Pagel ' SHOWDOWN •• i.r • :_ who Joined them Inside -passed word on out by the moments. Weaver. reportedly trying to make nrre.oder deals the patrolmen had no authority to accep~ stubbornly refused lo surrendtr, leading to an order for teargas raced to the scene by Lt. Avery Smith. A shootout appeared increasingly like· ly. Officer Arnold, who only six hours before told a reporter the semi-humorous rampage of a monkey Wednesday was his wildest case since 1956, when he joined -kept talking. His throat was dry. Topics ranged trom name and age lo Weaver's family and the fact they and others could be hurt if he continued to hold out. • The suspect cried back he had a right to protect his home. .. Maneuvering outside the apartment - Its sec<1nd floor windows ominously cur- tained -Detective Sgt. Jack Calnon prepared to fire a teargas shell. Downstairs, U. Harold Fischer had slipped into the triplex himself and was v.·ailing for the sowid of Calnon's shotgun. •· 1 was going up the stairs and try to lob one in before he could duck into a little bathroom. I know the layout. My father owns a couple or them,'' he explained. '·You have to hit them' hard and fast with gas, so it saturates the room/' he added. • Weaver, however, had heard lhe talk of teargas. Dropping his gun -one of six loaded, cocked and lined up for siege -he came downstairs with his hands up and the long process of unraveling details Jay ahead. " .. Weaver was taken in for questioning, ' while police confiscated about a dozetl high-powered weapons and interrogated · seven witnesses directly involved. -..c The pistol-whipping victim, known only as Carmen, about 20 to 25 years old, had vanished and is still sought. "We're not exactly certain what was involved," Lt. Fischer said today. Witnesses agreed an argument OC· curred involving Golden, who OC· casionally visits his parents in the Har· bor Area, and his acquaintance of sev· eral months. Threats of a fistfight brought the pair outside, after which they re-entered the residence and tbe shot v.•as heard moments later. Gclden ran to an apartment, burst through the door and collapsed. rasping on his own blood. Chm·ch to Host Lecture on POWs The plight of American soldiers listed as missing in action or those v.·ho are prisoners of war in Southeast Asia will be discussed 8 p.m. Wednesday, March 24 in SL Michaels and All Angels Episcopal Church, 3233 Pacific View Drive, Coronal de! Mar. l\trs. Wally Clark or Newport Beach, whose husband, Air Force Lt. Col. Stanley Clark, is missing in action, will speak and show a film. She represents the non-profit organization, Concern for POWs Inc. of Tustin. The program is open to the public. Starfighter Crashes BONN (AP) - A flying Instructor and his pupil were killed today near Bremen in the second F104G Starflghter crash in two days. It was the J3lst of the jets West Germany has lost. Hcm-edon fi~•.Jl;i. • • • I .. DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE 7111111111/.,rl, ~ NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Westcllff Dr., 642·2050 Ol·EN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 INTERIORS Prof•••ional Interior C.1l9nars AV11i1blo-AID-NSIO ' I LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 •• , 7 I • . ' .. -· ' NeWport Beaeh I · ·Today's F .. al ,VOL. 64, NO. 55, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES DAILY l"ILOT SI.ti' ,.,,.,_ ·DETECTIVE BLAYLOCK ESCORTS SUSPECT WEAVER TO SQUAD CAR Curlous Cause Police Amiost 11 ·Much Worry DAILY P'ILOT Stlfl l'IMM OFFIC ERS WHITE IL EFTI, ARNOLD INVENTORY ARSENAL Collection of Guns, Ammo Found in Su1pect's Ap•rt.rnent Judge Screens Testimony Of H artelius Witness By TOM BARLEY ~ltness the confession "I lied for him 0t "'• o.1tr l'llft •1111 (Hartelius) because I love him" and Orange County Superior Court Judge the angry retort to Kutilich : "Hey, if Jai;nes f . Judge has decided that much I wasn 't a lady wouJd t tell · you or :the leslimony to be offered by Or. something.'' Eb1>t Hartelius' shapely blonde mistress She .. wAs frequently warned . by Judge rrom Costa Mesa will have to:be screen·etf> Judg"e~~thal she mt11t. amwe~ .only~ the . at-lao evldenliary hearing from Wtiich -quesllO!'s put-to ~ a~ Kurilich .als~ the; jury will be barred. came 1n for th.e Judge s angry repri-se reached that decision Thursday mands for q~est1ons ~at wer~ promptly nttHt after 11 torrid afternoon session ruled to be 1mma~r1al and irrelevant. i~,which '27-year-old Reba V11.ughn con-o.ne such question appeared to be st;inuy tangled wilh defense att.Ortl~y ~s.igped to proye. ~a~ ,.,1r~. yaushn Maftbew Kurilich in three hours of ob-~arr1ed . a Newport Beac~ pol iceman jecUon-riddled testimony . . 1n Me;iuco. Oe_pu!y District At~or~ey lt brought from the slight attractive Alphonsus Novick s prompt ob1ect1on preve.nted an answer. Newport You th Hurl As Auto. Overturns A Newport Beach youth· .escaped serious injury Thursday night when his ..car went ouL<of control on Irvine Avenue, struck the center divider and overturned. Police said Patrick 1'1arke\, 16, of 1730 Bonalre Way, was traveling south• bound ntar the center lane when he lost control of Ute auto. ... ,._ ·- Judge ,Judge has decided that when the trial resumes Menday: the. morning session will be.devoted .tn the evidentiary hearing. The jury will be -recalled to his courtroom at 2 p1rq. that4ay. , The Jury .will be asked at the con(lusion of what \~ expected to be ' a four to six-1tcek trial to rule on the SO.year-old physician's g u i I l or innoc.enai.on charges of arson, bribery and insurance fraud. lt Is alleg~ that the d1tpper doctor . who Is currently divorcing h\s wile of !See HARTEUUS, Pa1e 11 _. _ ORANGE· COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH ·S, 1971 TEN CENTS , Defiant .Gunm.an N·ah·h,ed ' ' Mesa Police Capture M.an in Tense Showdown By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI IN O.llY ,lllt Sllff Screaming defiance and frantically loading: guns, a Costa Mesa man finally surrendered to quiet roltce coarlng Thursday; only seconds before they forc- ed a showdown. A crowd of 300 milled around the tense scene, ignoring orders broadcaSt from a circling police helicopter ta !flOve back. Some -standing exposed to what Attorney Says Newport Must Okay Cultists Newport Seach "has no legal basis for prohibiting the Hare Krishna sect from carrying on religious solicitation activi-- ties in the city.'' City Attorney Tully Seymour said today. In a written opinion prepared for the city council meeti'ng Monday. Seymour &aid the stet has complied with all re- quirements n«essary to obtain a reli· gious solicitation certificate. The opinion. in effect, informs the council and City Manager Ha rvey L. J1urlburt that a solicitation certificate must be issued "forthwith" and if it b not, the sect can begin its public solicl· tations without OJte. Seymour saill however. there-mar· be recourse against ·t~· .... if lt"'~Jolettr an}:_ laws or ordinances once ft begins lls 1101ici1ations. Under existing practice! in , Laguna Beach. where the group JtOW parades the streets, members of the sect 'boldly approach pedestrians and motorists, ask· Ing them io buy a copy of their maga- tine. Seymour, in his opinion, says. .,The fact that the city cannot prohibit solicita- tions does not mean the city ls powerleM to act in the event that such activities l'tre conducted m a manner that causes a public nuisance , unnecessarily inte r· feres with traffic or disturbs the public peace." The sect, officially known as the Inter- national Society or Krishna Conscious- ness. first applied for its solicitation certificate il'l Newport Beach Jan. 21. · Issuance was delayed as the city's solicita tion ordinance requires .applicants to furnish documentation of their legiti- macy. · · Seymour said the ordin ance. which was complied with by the group, "goes as far as the law allows and that any attempt by the city to prohibit religious sollci· tation or to vest discretionary authori ty lo rleny such a permi t with the city marl· ager or the City ·council wou ld violate constitutio nal guidelines laid down by thP U.S. Supreme CourL City Manager Harvey ~. Hurlburt sald toda v he has not issued th'e certificate pending revie w of the opinion by the city council Monday night: Girl From Ward, Folks Reunited Valerie Jane King, the 19-year~ld girl who escaped from the psychiatric ward al Riverside General Hospital two weeks ago, was reunJted with her parents Thursday afternoon. The reun'ion came al the Mdnsion Messiah. 2051 Newport Boulevard, Costa Mesa, where Miss King had been staying since early this week. Ed Smith, director of the house. said he saw an article in Wednesday's DAILY PILOT that'· told ot tht M!arch ... by Mr. and Mrs. Walter 0. King !or the.ill drug- dependent daughter and Wormed poUce ol her whereabouts. could 'have been a m8!1.!1 murder spree -'taunted 'anCt heckled shotg\in-armed officers crouched under cover. The ·dra·ma began at 3:%0 p.m .. with a nport. of a rp.ar. shot at 3013 Coolidge Ave., aild a man with a 'gun ·at 3002 Fi~ore Ave., one block away .. Victim John W. Golden 11. 23. of Pboentx, Ariz., Is listed in satisfactory condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, with a .32 caliber bullet wound tl).at collapsed ooe lung. Buttoning Vp He •b.l 11>rinled a l!lock.Jralling blood. on the one remaining respiratory ori;an before collapsing. Paul E. Weaver, 30, of the Fillmore Avenue address where the ~minute con- frontation occurred, is in city jail, booted on charges or assault With intent to commit murder. · New charges may be added since some Items In Weaver's arsenal -lined 'up along a wall ready for use -are listed as stolen, according to police. Newport. Beach patrolman Lee R.oberts~surVeys peyote· buttOnSl'lbliC'e 3.llege· they fotlnd e~rly lhis ·morning in a car on Balboa Island. ·.Two J"Qen. in i the .c'ar, iden_tj.{ied by poltce· as Charles Marx,, 21. Phoenix, and Charles w. Jor~ensqn. 24 .. Fligsta.(f, Ariz .. were jailed on · .sus- picion of pos&issing d,An'&ous drugs. Peyote buttons curreQ.tly·bring aboot SO cents each on illicit ·drug (Tlarket. Poljce said there wei'e • about 2,000 of the blllicinogens.in the bag. Fighting Rages in Turkey Over Search£ or IGdnaper s ' . . . ANKARA, Turkey (UP!) -A force of 5,000 Turkish troops and police seized t~ campus of the Middle East Technical Uniyersity CMETU) toda)' in a four 'hour battle 1 wi~h st~deiits b\it '. found rio ·trace of four kidnaj>ed Americans fa~ with execution if a· $40l'.l,boo ·ransom I! not paid. Turkish authorities said at. least one student died In the battle Jn which the students hurled bombs and fired pistols. Fifteen students, a Turkish officer and a soldier were reported wounded. The soldier and two students were reported · in critical condition. Discirders spread to other parts of Turkey and anti-American and an· tigovermnent demonstra,tions flared In other parts of Ankara. lnfot't'!led sou rces said the right-wing, pro-A'tn er I ca n government of Premier s u I e y m a n Demirel might have to impose martial law. • , ·, .. A group c.llli/lg. !~ell ' the:' ''TUrklsb Ptople5 l:.iber_ition ~Y,", ·1 leftist ex- tremist ·group, kldnaped Ole f o tf r Avi~rican , radar teclmici~ Thursday ' ' and said they ·would be e:s:ecu~ If a ransom of $400;000 was· mt pa.id. They' moved' up the execution date to . 6 a.m. Saturday (tl p.m. EST ,Friday), President Nixon, speaking ' Thursday . night at , his teltMscd . news cbnference in Washin~ton . was aSked II ht thought (See TURKEY, Page %) Highlands Group .Urges 'Yes ' Vote On Rouie Ballot The .~rona Highlands . Associ~Uqn 's board of directors has unar\imously recommended a "yes" vote · oh both measures In Tuesday's Paclfk: Coast Freew,y;election·tn.NewPX\~c:)..... .... The first pro!)OSition iJ; an· Initiative Strapped~ Saved f 1.ha~ raeeks ~to· reecind . the •1ree,nent with. the state on .street ~!Mings along the freewa~ route lhroogh COrpna de! Mar. The second is a charter amendment tba,t. would z:eguire referendums before the City Council could sign any 111ch agret.rnent.s kl the future. , Cera.rd, Van Hoten, cbairman of· the a530Ciation's Freeway. CompJit~ ~id the· board based its · recommendation on the initiative: l?fl . the fact 'tl\Al. the ,a gr~ ~ent may influence lhe. pendina:. NeWpprt To t's Surprise ~ide Ends Happil y t Katherine Vaughn, 2800 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach, carefU:lly atrapped ·her :J.year~d grandson. Darren. Into b.i.s shoulder harnegs whe.n they go\ ln her car to go to the store. She backed the car Out or the garage, then climbed out to r:lose the OYf!rhead door. She turned back, In time to "!let the auto roll down the sloping driveway onto Cliff Drive. acl'Os! the ltrttt and thtn • • doWn a. SO-foot' emban.C:ment. fllppfng ov~ at tht 'bottom of tbe ravh\9. · Despite her 62 years. Mn" Vaughn hurried to the wrttkage, the screama of Darren penelr.aUna: lhf.,Al&rl., itfW-OOOn silence. She founit him miiacutously uMarmed, other' than a slight· cut on hts 'forehead: P~lee said the shoulder harness almoat c:ertalnlf ll•ed his life. Be.ich traffic study. . · . "The board" feelll there cen ·be . no tru~ •. honest st4dy on traffic ~ . ldn1 as we art tied to. t h l s agfeement," he aaid. Yan Ho\ten s1id the 1rfimtatl•g chatter amendment reCommenda,tiori 1is urjed ~a use .. for a questtorr of this magnltaJe sufficient documentation On °ttaffic fteeds •hould be ayailable to lhe people before 11 la decided. ., ·• A, J)91ice heli~ter cruising over the Mesa North triplex development when. the reports •came · in dlreded ~ unlU toi the scene .. P.atrolmett: John C. White.' Robert, E. Arnold and Gary Barwig arrived almost siniultaneously to find a second bloody victim pistol-whipped in the · fra11 le:an- iD'g a11all).st a car. . · · He pointed '°· the front triple. anit (See SHOWDOWN &< II Witnes ays Calley Gunned -- Woman Do~·n FT. BENNING, Ga. IAPl -Lt. Willi.am Calley Jr. gunned down a woman Who approached him with hands uprais:ed 1ri ~urrender, a witness in calley'.t murder trial testified today. · And another witnesS, an intelligence oUice:r who overheard one or the brief. tngs ~y was given before the March 16, 1968,· infantry assault on the Viet· na.mese village of My Lai, said tt was normal practice to ca~re prisoners for inter~ogatiop . He sa'ld no. orders were given to 'kill noncombattanl wonien and clUldten in the .attack. Calley, 'l1. is · charged with kllllna: 102 civilians in My Lai that day. . 'f;he .sii,,ollictLjucy_ in Calley'• trial alsO wis re'a~ a portion of·a-st.iteinent ~ta.kn ... from one:.--or-·eaner'I plat.Oon me111beq; by lhi Army's Criminal _lnre~UgatiQn Di'1sion. ' Tbe 1tatemt.n~ wa,.s taken from William C. Uoyd •. a grenadier in CaUey'a platoon, •ho later denied ht.ving made It. . ·The portion of the ,statement read to the jury -and foUowed latel-'by the judge's Instructions that it must be disregard~d for any purpose other tha n to determine whelher Lloyd was lying -said : "Yes, there was a ditch at the edge of the village and there were a lot of people there. We. coUected the people and brought them to the edge of the ditch. 'Mien, Lt. Calley ordered us to p9t him . In the ditch. . • .then when all the people were in the ditch, Calley ordered os to kill the people. "Tbe. machine guns fired a burst and wounded all the people, but didn 't kill all the p8ople.-•. there .were grenades thrown into the: ditch ... when the firing was over Ibey '1\'ere all dead." When .be testified Dec. 15, Lloyd denied having made the statement. The pro- secuUon brpught in · today's witness, former ClD age11t 'Reese R. Cash, to say that he took the statement from Lloyd.· Judgi! Reid. Kennedy'reminded the jury that Lloy,d had not admitted the fact.!! in the statement from the witness stand and that ·the jury may not consider it as evidence tha' "U . <Alley committed any of those acb." The witneu who testified about the shooting.of the surr~n.derlng woman was Thomas W. Tµrp,er. who had been a prosecution witness on Dec. 8. Turner said tie and some· other soldiers were in a' pos"ilion n 0 r t h of a ditch where Calley is charged · with killing 70 Vietnamese men, women and children. "As he approaehed us, a young Viet· namese gii'I also 'apprGached," Turner said , "She had 'her hands in the air and Lt. Calley shot her and she fell over in the rice piddy." · 0I'llJll(e . ""'·weatller It won 't Bet any hlgher than 83-.:- d eerees. whe~ you're on the coast or drivlnc lntand, Saturday. Gusty winda will prevail under sµnny sltjes. · · INSWE TODAY NevlUt . Marrintr wiU be ou.eit '1~CtJ.1rer . at the Ornftg• County Philharmonic Society'• free prevteW Wtdnesda11. Sea tod41l1 .Wtektndtr 1 ,• I I ·- 2 DAllY Pll0 1 N Frld11, Marth S, 1~71 Viets Near Laos· Huh Reds Mass ~anks, ~f~ssiles for Big Fight SAIGON (UPI) -MWtsry 1pok.,men said today the Communists had ton· centrated missile sites and massed up lo 50 tanks for the defense of Sepone against a force of 2,000 South Vietnamese troops closing in on the Ho Chi :r.tinh trail l'Oldway hub in Laos. Fie:ld reports said 2,000 South \'let· namese troops had driven to v.i thin three mlle1 and pe.rhapg within si ght of Sepone, main objective of the 25-day offensive qainst the trail. The South Vietnamese troops were fanning out around Sepone after being Oown aboard U.S. heliropten into land· Ing iones blasted out of the jungles by IS,000.pound b I o c k b u s t e r bombs parachuted from American transport From Page 1 HARTELIUS. •• 22 yean, 1et fire to hi.I offices 1t 2U5 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar, tut April I and Irle<! to collect on the lnlurance policy. Novick allege1 that HarteliUI hired Jim Blevins, Reba V1u&}tn'1 brother, to set the blaze and be alleges that the doctor paid Blevinl in Reba'1 presence to leave California and settle In Aril.ona when local investigators stepped up their probe into Hartelius' arj.ivities. Blevins and bl.s sister are scheduled to go on the witness stand Jn J\.fonday·s evidentiary hearing. Mrs, Va111bn IA!atifie<I lhat olle lied for Hartellm throughout the police In. verUgatioa of the Corona del Mar fire and during the physician's preliminary hearing In Harbor Judicial Dletrkt Munlctpal Court. Free on parole from her conviction and jalling on narcotics charge1 :ihe fJrmly stated in her soft Southern drawl: .. After all that man has done to me and It'• 1 lot I still love him." Hartelius. who had been watching her closely, looked down at the counsel table on bearing that statement. Mrs. Vaughn claims that Harteliu.s perruaded her to lffk honiital treatment 1he didn't really need to keep her away from various court hearings into the lrlOI\ and bribery charges. And >he ltatea: she bu been threatened v.·lth de&tb U she testifies against the physi- cian who shared her home for more than three yearit. She laid Thursday that she finally dedded to tell "the whole truth" when Ju.d&e _ByrQn K. McMillan took hei' into his chambers to question lier on the tbreata 1he bad rt:eelved. What Mn. Vaua:hn told J udge McMillan led the jwitt to cancel Hartelius• ball and put the physician in Oranae County Jall . Judge McMillan hu refused to dJvulge Mrs. Vaughn's stsi.men11 to him . Judge Judge restored the doctor'• bail before the current trial started following KurWcb'1 protest that he could not ade- quately rtpruent the phyaldan if he were held In custody. From Pagel TURKEY .•. Turkey should negotiate for release of the aJrmen. He aald he would not make that 1Uggestlon and that following . previous slmllar cases the United States would leave It up to Turkey whether to negotiate, having in mind thelr own internal circumstances. 1be fow-Americana were Identified u Airman IC Richard C.Vaszi of St.am· ford, Conn.; Airman lC Larry J. Htavner or Denver' Colo.. whose parents live in MaysvWe, W.Va.; Airman IC James M. Gholslon of Alexandria, Va., and S/· Sgt. Jlmmie J. Se1too of San Angelo, Tex. OIANll COAST DAILY PILOT fUHOI COAIT PUll.tlMING COM,ANY ' Re\iwt N. w,,4 p,.._ldtr!J IM PWlllfm' Jtck L Cii,.:,Y pl1na. the blut ~ the bla bombl ripped away trea and follaae l,Dd crut4ii:I fan. cllnf zoneo Ille llze of football fleldl. , :P.111ltary spokesmen sald U.S. aircraft had been fired on by 20 missiles around Sepane in what was described as t h e rirst major Communist use of Soviet-buil t antiaircraft rockets outside North Viel· nam. Military sources said North Vietnamese commanders had puiled at least two armored units, each with 25 tanks, into a defens ive circle around Sepone, a town 27 miles inside Laos where the C.Ommunists were reported to have established a major command center. The 2,0CJl>.man South Vietnamese .force DAii. Y 'II.OT S!IH '"'" Ke11 Gal Mrs. Dorothy Palen displays key to clty she received today in honor of her 25 years of service to Newport Beach. Mrs. Palen is secretary to Finance Director George Pappas. Fel- .low employes also gave her a gold watch at surprise cere· monies conducted when 1he arrived for work at city hall this morning. Hanoi Claims Marines Prowl Off Her Coast TOKYO (AP) -A Hanoi broadcast said Saturday four U.S. landing ships with 1,500 Marines aboard had ap- proached close to the North Vietnamese coasl in the southern panhandle "ready for action." The Vietnam News Agency said "all the while ships of the 7th Fleet kept cruising the Tonkin Gulf. Fourtetn to 17 6UCh ·ships are spotted regularly there. Jn addition the Unlted States also dis- patched four landing ships with helicop... ters, annor and 1,500 U.S. Marines to the nearness of the coast of Ha Tin h. ready for action ." Ha 'Nnh lies about 110 miles north of the de militarized tone. VNA said the Hanoi cha rge ~·as con- tained In a communique issued Thurs- day by the North Vietnan1 ''Commission for investigation of U.S. imperialists' war crimes'' allegedl y committed in bo th 1.0nes of Vietnam in Febru ary. The statement charged "three com- mando shlps assauJ ted a fishing flee t. killing two fishermen. wounding four other!" on Feb. 10 in North Vietnamese coastal waten." wu leapfroued wut from poolUooa c1o.er to Iii• South · Viet.name• bcrder over the put two dayo. "I Jhln\· they c1n "' Sepone very clearfy from there.'' a spokesman Sard in placing the force within thrtt: miles of Sepone. The first major battle around Sepone was reported Thursday when a South Vietnamese intant.ry battalion of more than 600 men fought Communist forces i na th ree-h6ur fight and reported killing 42 North Vietnamese six miles southeast or Sepone. South Vietnamese losses were placed at three killed. There was no indication or the number of Communist troops in the Sepone region or whether the Reds ha<i abandoned the junction on French colonial route 9. the alts of the South Vietnamese driv e into Laos. But heavy fighting was reported elsewhere in Laos. Some military observers had predicted the Communista would put up their heavlest lighting o! the campaign to save Sepone, a road and 1upply junction where mountain passes from North Viet- nam enter Laos. The South Vietnamese said thty had kllle<I 821 Communlsta in flghllnf between 6 a.m. Wednesday and S p.m. Thursday .and lO!t 36 dead and m wound- ed. In heavy fighting today and Thursday night the South Vletnamue said they kllled 80 more to put the toll at 901 North Vittnamese dead, with 44 South Vietnameae killed and 261 wounded. The U.S. Command reported the loss of slx more American hellcopter1 to C.Ommunlst groundfire, five in Laos and one In Quang Trl Province across the bordtr, with a loss of one crewman killed, one wowided and four miaalng. According to command flgurea, 4S U.S. choppers have been destroyed in the campaign with a loss of 40 dead, 46 wounded and 28 men llstt.il as ml1slng. UnoUlclal reports from the front have told of dozens of heUcopter.1 badJy damaged in the operation. The U.S. Command also di.lclosed that 10 helicopters were shot down Wedneaday instead of the seven orillnally reported -,the greatest alngle day Joss alnce the Laos incursion began. Phoenix Given Death Sentence, Remains Calm Gary Harold Phoenix of Costa Mesa was sentenced to dtath Thunday for a 1erie1 of rapes and tldnaplnp in which the hwty bachelor beat and in· jured several of his victims. Outwardly calm and composed - a demtanor be maintained tbrou1h his seven-week Orange County Superior Court trial -be offered no reaction to Judge William M u r r a y ' a pro- nouncement of sentence. Deputy Public Defender Roderick Ric· card! withdrew hb: motion.s for reduction of sentence and a new trial shortly before Judge Murray ordered• Phoenix, 29, to be shipped to San Quentin's Death Row within the neit 10 day1. Phoenl1's appeal against the sentence ts scheduJed for bearing by the California Supreme Court. No date has been set for discussion of the action. Phoenix was convlcted on 30 of 33 felony counts which alleged that he at- tacked nine women in a 28-day period la!t summer. Several of his victims testified they were tracked by Phoenix at night , dragged by the physical culture expert into his white Thunderbird auto and subjected to a nightmare of beatings, rape and stzual pervenion. It was testified during his penalty trial that Phoenix, the assistant manager of a Huntington Beach hea lth spa al the time of his arrest, had been convicted of rape charges at the age of 18 and comm ltled to a Kamas reformatory. The jury was also told that he sexua lly attacked a Houston, Texas , woman while be was on parole from the Kansai prison. Phoenix's sister, Mra. Sandy Lewis of Garden Grove, was in court Thursday to witness her brotber'a sentencing. She told ne\\'smen she will hire a "first class" lawyer to handle hu brother's appeal against the death sentence. IVIW ~ ~ o:-91 ~ "•"''' J(, .. 1r 1•11w n ...... Ao. al1r,hl1• ~Mt;.w Ecll ... L,. ,,._, Kti11 ,.....,_, llfdl C1tJ ••nw ,.. __ _ Laguna Narco Raiders Net 30, Big Drug Haul lJJJ Htw,ert ltul•¥11' M'trfl119 .Y''"': l'.O. h• 1171, f266) °""°"""' CO.It ""--= • Wei .. , '"'"' "'"""' .. du m ,_.., ""'""' ~ -..01 17111 11...:a ..... llY.,. "" ~ • ,... 11 ·CtmlM 11 .. 1 I tn a s~·eep that began at noon Th urs· day and lasted until after midnight, Laguna Beach police and slate narcotics officers arrested 30 persOns on grand jury tndi!:tmenta for 1Utgtd narcotics offerues, The arruta fqUow~1 :j ~-raonth._ lnvt1UgaUon In the Laguna area dUrlng which undercover agents claim to have purch11td geveral thousand dollan worth of drugs from suspects ranging in age from 18 to 50 ye1r1. r---.;rost of those arrtsted face charges of sale of dangerous drugs including LSD and heroin. The grand jury indictmen ts wtre hand· ed down on fl.fonday and the arrests were made by three Lagun • and five state office rs following a Thursday mom· Ing briefln( In La(Ulla. The operation w1s directed by Sgt. NtU PurceU , he1d of the Laguna Bt1ch Police Dep1rtment'a 1peetat enforcement division and egent Jack Leavey of the State Bureau of Narco tic-Enforcement. ?t1ost of Ole ar11111 ~~r• Jlllde In • ' the vicinity of South Coast Highway and Cleo Street in Lagwia Beacb, known as a gather1n1 place for youlblul longhairs and a center of narcotics deal- ing in the Art Colony. Before the ni&.ht wu-over, ollicera also had ranged as far afield as Sin Clemente Cesta Mesa and Hawthorne to mace tndlvldual arrests. • ... Almost all those arrested were "In- volved" in the use or sale of heroin, Purcell claimtd. Most of the "buys'' which led up lo the grand jury indlctment1 were made in the Cleo Street area, known to narcotics office n: as "junkie corner," Purcell said. ''In recent months, the officer asserted, ''the area h3s been literally taken over, ""'ilh dealing going on quite openly.'' Last ~·eek the windlhitld of Purcell's car ~·as smashed with a board while he was maklna: arrests in the area. On the same day officer John Sapar1to v.·as auaulted on tl!Ynearby beach and on another occasion an officer'• private car was stoned as ht drove lb.rough the area, according to Pur~ell. • ATTENDANT (LEFn TAKES PULSE WHILE RUSHING SHOOTING VICTIM TO AMBULANCE In Co1ta Mesa, John Golden of Phoenix Tak11 Bullet In Ch11t; He'll Livi ~~~~~~~~~~- Ex-attorney Makes Plea For Atkins From Page 1 LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A former defense lawyer in the Tate·La. Bianca murder caae testified today that he felt defendant Susan Atki ns should not be sentenced to death. (See related story, Page 4). Ri chard Caballero, Miss Atkins' attor- ney, said she was promised bi the dis- trict attorney's oHice that ahe would not be subject to the death penalty if she told the truth before the county grand jury. Caballtro said she did tell the jury th e truth even thougb later fili11g an atfldavi t slating she lied. The jury returned murder indictments against Miss Atkins, Charlts Manson, Leslie Van Houttn and Patric ia Kren- winkel, all Of whom were later found guilty of murder i11 the kllling of fivt persons at the hom t or actress Sharon Tate and the slaying of grocer Leno La- Bianca and hls wift Jn August of 1969, Caballero said he thought Miss Atkins "substantially compiled'' wi th terms of the agreement with prose'cutors. The attorney was the 24th defe!lle wit· ness called in the peulty phase of the trial whicb. beaan nine months ago. Newport Police Discover Peyote Newport Beach police arrested two Arizona men on Balboa Island early t~ day after alltgedly finding a duffle bag filled with about 2,000 butt.om of peyote jn their car. The two men were ideot.illed by police as Charles Mar•, 21, Phoenix", and Charles W. Jorgenson, 24, FlagstaU. They were booked into Newport City Jail on suspicion of possession of dangerous drugs and are to be analgned Monday in Harbor Judicial Dillrict Court. Police Sat. Leo Konkel 11aid peyote buttons currently are bringing about M> cents apiece on the illicit drug market. The drug, a hallucinogen, ii more com· monly found in ita derivative form, mescaline, Konkel said. LOOK FOR THE UNUSUAL FromHenredon's M&JJ SHOWDOWN .. and said lbe awpect had run inside. Getting no response to order• to come out, Arnold and Wbile gingerly opentd the unlocked door and entered, guns drawn, but the home was 1llent as a tomb. Sudden aoU.llds overhead sent them behlnd a bar at the foot of the st.airs for cover, with a full view of the shadow of a man with a gun. The 10unds were bolls of high-powered riDe1 and shotguns being loaded, the patrolmen realized, so they again ordered him to drop his weepans and surrendar. "You'll take me out of here feet first before I'll do 10 to 20," the Santa Monica Hoapltal steam engineer scream· ed back. By this time, backup patrol units were parked at crazy angles in the crow ded cuHie-aac adjacent to busy Baker Street and the curious crowd swelled. Officers Arnold and White kept up a constant, calming stream of con- vtrsatlon, as Patrolman John Stoneback -who joined them inside -pasted word on out by the moments. Weave r, re ported ly trying to make surrender deals the pat.rolmen had no authority to .accept, stubbornly refuseJ to surrender, leading to an order for teargas raced to the scene by Lt. Avery Smith. A shootout appeared increasiagly like· ly. Officer Arnold, who only six hours before told a reporter the semi-humorous rampagt of a monkey Wednesday was his wildest case since 1956, when be joined -kept talklng. His throat was dry. Topics ranged from name and lit to Weaver'1 fanilly and the fact they and others could be hurt if he continued to hold out. The suspect cried back he had a right to protect hi!I home. ManeUverlng outside the apartment - lta second floor windows ominously cur· tained -Detective Sgt. Jack Calnon prepared to fire a teargas !hell. Downstairs, U . Harold Filcher had slipped into the triplex himself and was walting for the sound of Calnen'• shotgun. "I was goina: up the stairs and try to lob one in before he could duck into a lllUe bathroom. I know the layout. My father owns a couple of them," he explained. "You have fu hit them bard and fast with gas, so It aaturate1 the room,'' he added. Weaver, however, had beard the talk of tearga1. Dropping bia gun -one of si1 loaded, A e,noolli1 aJlllPllOd< m L<Ni1 XV otyle. Mig11ih"ntly ;~ c.md lrom oolid chmy. it;. 1•~ incO.. wide~!' 17 lnche. hi&h. and could ... 11 be rhe ol<pnt .- far Ill\' 6oc room. C:O.. • Ibo..,,;.. Polio 10 ool t>on. for YoU an. Mt co W dm ocw nqu;.n:. piiKc YoJtbomo- cocked and lined up for siege -he came downstairs with his hands up and the long process of wiraveling detan. lay ahead. 4.iJ Weaver was taken in for questioning, while police confiscated about a dozen hlgh-powered weapons and interroa:ated seven witnesses directly involved. ~ The pistol·whipping victim, known on11, as Carmen, about 2Q to 25 years old. had vanishtd and is still sought. "We're not exactly certain what was lnvolved,0 Lt. Fischer said today. oot Witnesses agreed an argument oc.. curred involving Golden, who oc- casionally visits his parents In the Har." bor Area, and his acquaintance of 1ev~ era! months. 4 Threats of a fistfight brought the pair outside, after which they re-entered the residence and the shot was htard moments later. Golden ran to an apartment , burst through the door and collapsed, raspin1 on his own blood. Police siid today that whi le so me curious neighbors complied with ordera to dispe rse, others jeered and heck.led, creating a groteque, circus·like at. mosphere to the crisis. One said if the barricaded suspect chose to open up on officers and th1 throng, it could ha ve been a mast murder. He likened the situation lo that or Charles Whitman, who sle w a score of people from a tower on the University of Texas campus before being killed hlmseU. ''It was a heavy scene," he remarked. Winds to Slow Over Week.end; East Shivering Gusty winds expected tonight Will diminish by Saturday night. the NaUonal Weather Service predicted today. ' Small craft warnings along the Orange Coast remained in force today due to gusts from 15 to 30 knots. Warnings will probably be lowered late Saturday, Winds along the coast wJIJ shift to come from the north tonigh t at from 10 to 23 knots before tapering off. Highs tomorrow will be near 6.1 af~r lows tonight of 42. Patchy clouds are expected to continue although it will be gener ally sunny. DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE 7tJ 11111 :'" NEWPOlT IEACH 1727 Wottcllff Dr., 642·2050 DHN PRIDAY 'TIL ' , - INTERIORS Pr11f111lonal fnttrfor LAGUNA BEACH Dtsl9n1r1 Avalloblo-AID-115'" • :J.45 North Coad Hwy. 494-6551 .,. · OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 • ·~- I I I I \ I • G Freeway .. Vote Yes, Stop the Freeway'' say the orana:e f," .. ters-a.nd Newport Beach voter• next Tuesday m &bl accept that simple slogan as an answer to one of the sorest issues in city bfttory. In the lace of this hlfbly emotional campalan,. lhe DAI LY PILOT submits th1 the five city councilmen wh o signed ballot argument& aralnst lhe two proposiUon s have, in the long run, a more logical. more productive course to.. pursue. • They say-and we axree-thet the 1dml!tedly rodl· cal action of dlsruptinf long-accepted channels of authority and operation will not, in the long run, re- sol ve the black cloud of worry over freeway 'routing. Such action is partic ularly unwise at this time, they • point out, when Newport 11 ju1t undertaking a long· - overdue. total analy1ll of its citywide traffic problems and their solutions. In the bEst interests of Newport's future. the DAILY PILOT recommends i "no" vote on both itf:n1s on next Tuesday's ballot. Poisonous Dema goguery The frequent·verbaJ excesses of Newparl Beach City Coun('ilman J-low1rd Roger1 have, for the most part. been ignored or dismissed as overly spirited outbursts of the moment. But Rogers mutt be challenged for slanderous ar· cusations he spewed forth at a Freeway F'lghters' rally this week. He ridiculed Mayor Ed Hirth, vilified three distin - guished cltl7:ens who have served as mayor and vice mayor of their city, and questioned the integrity of rive or his fellow city councilmen. In the process, he attack· ed the DAILY PILOT as well, but th1t Is to be expected. A community's newspaper always presents a large and handy target for politicians. Rogers spoke from a prepared text, so his bitter ::i nd :;;arcastic attack could hardly be attributed to just an emotional outburst from a spirited persGnali ty. Referring to former Mayors James B. Stoddard Orig ins of So1rie W ords May S urprise \\'e haven'l had a word-quiz for quite 3\l'hi lc and the n1ai\ is running heavily in favor of another. Today we'll deal v;i\h lhe origins of some common ~·ords, u.·hich may surprise you : 1. \Vhv is a soldier called a "soldier," find \1·liy is the lowest rank in the: Artny called ''private" when they have lrss pri vacy than anyone? 2. Why are the solemn ceremonies of installing a Pre!'li· dent in ofrice called an "inauguration." ;111d \\•hat has it is:ot fl\ do 1~i1h birds ? :J. Ho\v did the J: fl 111 e of •·domi- nvcs·· ~ct its nan1e. and what connet· I ion dot's it have "·ith prayers? 4. The .. acme" of something it now its highest pitch of perfection ; but ori~inally it \\'as part of what sort or mPJica l diagnosis ? S. SPEAKING OF med icine, what rlread disease is named after a character 1n a 16th ce ntury Lalin poem, "·hich bears the title of the disease? tL \rhat did a "'broker" originally br eak? i . l!ow could tht play"•rights ot ;inL·1e11t l;rcece ha,·e been c a 1 I e d ··;i1hle1es." \\'hen they had nothing at Bil to do with !!ports? 8 Spcakin.I! of play!. "''hat wtre the (':'l rlicsl ''1nclndramas"? !; \\"hat dOC's " "thrill" ha ve to do \\il t1 our no~trils? 10. \Vhy \\"as "prestige '' II co1nplimcntary word ? ANSWEHS: at fir st not l. "Soldier "' conics from the L.atin, meaning "a gold col11," for until modern Dear Gloon1 v Gus: just got !oat behind anoth er cloud of black 11moke from one of the truck.a of a \\'ell-known rubbillh service. Can't anything be done about it'! -V. E. S. Tllil IH tvr• •9ftectt rM41"'9' ¥141•t. Ml ft~h1lrUr llllN " "'* lllWI•••.,. '"'"' ,..,.. •" -" ,. •-r .... CU Hr l'li.t. limes most soldiers were p a i d mercenarlt1; a "pr ivate" is a mitn •·deprived'' of rank and dr awn from the dtprlvtd level of the community. 2. "Inauguration" comes from the: ancient Roman "augurs'' who studied the fllghll and habits of blrd1 and predicted for new rulers what the future held in atort for tbem. t. "OO~tlNO~S'', Invented by two French monks, ~·as called so because the winner of each game slgnlfied 10 by reciting "Oit.lt Domlnus, Domino ~fto," the first lint of the Vesper service. 4. Early doctors divided dl.seases into four periods : arcbt, the beg inning : anotasls, the increase: acme. the state: or utmost violence ; and par•cme. the deelint. 5. "Syphllia'' w1s the name of a ahtpherd in the title of a 16th Century poem by F'racastoro. and the llrat sufferer of the disease: named 11fter him. I. THE FIRST "brokeni" broke, or broached . wine casks ; gradually the name w•s applied to marrlage-broktrs, pawn -br o ke rs and eventually stockbrokers. 7. "Athletes" were anyone who "compe ted for a prlu." a. "Melodram!'ls" were not n v er I y sentimental bu t simply plays ·with music "melody.'' 9. "Thrill" meant ';lo pierce :'' the "nosthril," or nostril, is the hole •·pierced " through lhe nose. 1 O. "Prestige'' was applied lo magiciens and jua:glera \\.'ho dece ived and deluded pOoplt. ·R estore the Incentives i~orial liquids. Prt1ent arinual domestic: pr~ ductlon Is now about J.2 billion barrelli 11r oil and 20 trillion cubic feet or ga~. The report further e1timates that &a percent ----' .... - Issues: NO and Charles Hart and to former Vice rtta yor Hans Lorenz. he c-.ll ed them ,;snakes emerging from the era.ss or some agricultural preserve . . . a tidy trio .. , {v.•hose) sinister scheme failed." He called Mayor l·Jirth a "medicine man ... "'av· Ing a great sheaf of letters an d lea ds us to believe that through some mystic process they are the panacea ... " Because live of his fello\1• council n1en disagree 111ith Rogers on the t"'O freeway-related issues coming up 'fuesday, their n1otives "'ere held up for question and pla ced parallel to '·the vested int<irests." Certainly no one wou ld challenge Cou ncilman Ro gers' privilege to ha ve opinions on the free1vay i!sues and to express them . Bu t his righ t to heap abuse on dedicated citizens who have served Newport Beach is one that must be challenged. Rogers 1nay not have been follo,vin g city govern- ment \Vhile talented Jay Stoddard and dignified Charlie 11art were mayor or l''hen spunky ~tans Lorenz \vas rouncilman and vice mayor. I( be had. he would poss- ibly appreciate the record o( leadership and dedic1tion they gave to their community -and hope that some day he will have served "'ell enough to match it. But Howard Rogers certaJnl y has been around Ed Hirth long enough to know that this fine gentleman is devoting virtually every ounce of his energy and talent to the city he loves. And Howard Rogers has no rig ht to sneeringly refer to Mayor Hirth as a "1nedicine man • , • waving a great sheaf of paptrs." Further, Rogers seems to lack the 1nental accom- n1odation to admit that, like him, the other count'il mc n have a right to express a viewpoint on the freeway ini · tiative/relerendum. They should not be subject to un· dignified slurring references for following that privilege. In council sessions, Rogers' sometimes inten1perate remarks have embarrassed both the audience and his fellow cou ncilmen. But they have been allo"'ed to pa.~11. This time, nothing less than public apologies are in order. ~ .. -~ . • , ..1-.1 ~~. 'rbere should be no plat'e in the public life or our t·ommunity for that sort of poisonous, gutter-level demagoguery. N 'WHO AM I 10 A~£ WITH Alt THE EXPERTS?' Older People Should Tell How They Feel and Why Let Young People Know They Care To the Editor: In ~·our guest editorial. "Altitude \Vin.~ the Job," (DAILY PILOT, fi"eb. 2~) ynu printed a letter supplied by the Success tl-1otlvation Institute or \Vaco, Texas, and ~·h!ch you said had been written by an employer to a young man he had re jected for a job. He wanted to tell the boy why he hfld hired another teenager inatead, 011e who wore polished shoes and a necklit'. 11nd who had made the effort to find out what the company made. He hired the boy because or his attitude: ltt wanted the job badly enough to want to imp ress his prospective employer. THE LETTER WRITER ~·ent on 1o tell the unemployed teenager that mAny employers were not "with" a lot r,f things, and some of their ideas seemed Antiquated. but if he ~·anted their pay ch€'Clul, he had better tune thern in. Perhaps if more older people tonk the time to talk lo young people. to lell them how they feel and why, and lo let them know that they care, \\'e mig ht be able to narrow the generation gap a little. CHA~'CES ARE good that the you'lg man wllo got this letter made a much better impression on his next job In· terv iew. I plan to aave the 1rtlcle for my o~ n children. because I "'ant them to know tha t some people do care. FREOITH LA:.J B K eep Be ac-/1 l'id ble To the Editor: We feel the Nr.wpurt Beach City Coun- cil should be commended for voling the emergency ordinance which prohibits the islluance of building permiL, ror structures more lhan 35 feet high wllt\in the boundaries or the proposed Jo~·er Ne ¥.•port Bay Civic District. In addition. we cong ratulat.e them for propoaing the new district. By stopping long enough to take 11 look at the long range implications of high rise blocking out publir view and accus. They are truly refleclin.11: the expressed concern or tho1e I he y represent. THJ:o; NF.\\'PORT TOMORROW study lf!aVC!I little doubt lhal lhe citizens in Lhi11 community have as their highest priority lhe maintenance of a "scenic cit y.'' Pressure from developers and the pros- pe ct of "additiona l revtn!U! wl!I no d11ubt increase. Therefore, we urge the council .. , .•• lll"''ll"''" • :J ' L J,t!!tte rs from readers are tet'!lcon11. Norn1al!11 writers sl~otdd conuey thtir n1e.•~ages in 300 words or less. The rig/It to conderise letters to fit space or eh1ni11ate libel i.t rtstrved. AU let· Leri must include signature and mait- ing address, bt1t nomt s moy bt wit/~· lttld on. rtques! if suffic:U!nt reMon is appart'!11t. Pottry will not bt pub· li.thed. lo remember that tht "unorganb.ed\ public'' is depending on them to keep the beach visible and available to all cltltenl!, not ju!t those who can 11fford waterfron t re~lde11ces. MR. and MRS .• IOSEPH ROSENE R 1l11al11st SST To the Editor: You and I are the intended ttrgtl! of a s.15cl,OOO piece of SST public relatiofll prop11ganda . fi"ull page ads ~·Ill urge you to support a project wbl ch will I I I contribute to air and noise pullutlon ; f2J subject us to damaging g()JllC boorru: (JI cause 1tratosphere con tamination destined to pl•y havoc with our weathe:r; I 41 expose passengers and crew to radia- tion from solar nare1, and (5) increase: the depletion rate of our \VOrld oil reserves. The Concorde, the Anglo-French ''SS1"' cannot be operated economically, ac· cording to a Time of London reporter. Why .should billio ns or our tar dollars go Into such 11 dam11ging project.? Do you want your congressman to support it? EVELYN GAYMAN 1'11rlf11 lhe Air To lhe. Editor: The thought came to me that I htvt not ~en anything in your paper about cleaning the air. I mean pu;ify actually, l suppoae. Let 's get on the ball , if PoSsib lt, and gel the public thinking about lnslatlng that every contract that Is let, to a contractor. to build a house. school, public bulldinR. ractory or hosplt1l, etc., be equipped with a buill Jn air puriflcat. Ion sy1tem or some certified typt, possibly " type that has yet to b .. designed .!Ind perfec ted. present air conditioning. used to heat and t:ool tnd rlltcr , which are at present in use seasonally. People would soon lea rn to 1tay indoors with doors and wlndO\l'S closed when the smog was bid and still enjoy outsid8 on smog.free days. R. W. HEARD U1111or lo R ed Cro .. To the Editor: Di1neyland Is lo bt highly commended for lh1 honors they be.!tow on lhtlr community with their annual CommunJly Servlce Award.I. It Is he1rlwarming to see an enterpri!e. such as Dl11neyland, which rtcelvt• much from the co mmunity, return to lht com· munlty their appreciation in 1uch an outstanding manner. We at the American Red Crms wer1 1re1tly moved by the Dl.!lneyland com- mittee choice as top recipient. WE WILL CONTINUE lo do our vtry beat In (living to our community the service for whlch this honor was bestow- ed. We thank Dlsneyl•rid and the people or Orange County lor this most-coveted honor, Please come vi8ll your new Red Cross Center 1t 601 N. G<llden Circle 0;-, in Santa An11. MRS. LOU IS M. MacMILLAN Chairman of Volunteers Or.11nge C-Ounly Chapter Amtrlc1tn National Red Cros1 1\'egat.l ve Sellh19 To the Editor : fi"or the last 1111 months I have been reading more and more that the various school dlstrlcl11 mullt have additional revenue in order to provide the services that art essential for the proper educa· tlon of our ehlldren. Representatives of the Khool board are very quick to 1tate what wllt happen If the increases art not approved by Utt people. That J~ ktlown as ne11atlve salesmanship, which has never ln the history ol th.ls country bten 1uccusful. THE WAY TO get people to increase their own taxe8, particularly In these: tlmes, la by • po1ltlve sales 1pproacb. Arm y of Idlers •' This Is accnmplished by showing EX- t\CTL Y what the present income Is, and EXACTLY WHERE lt goes, lh1! addlliontl money that is required, tnd EXACTLY WHERE It will go. lf thti people are conv inced that the school board Is honest. sincere, and that •.htlt requests art legitimale. a tax incrt:ase will be passed by an overwhelming ma· jorlty. THE SCARE tactics that they are presently employing are :sure t.o continue defeat of the required lax incre!llie~ Maybe that is a good reason why the above approach Is not used. Jt may bt that the school boRrd aysttm is as fouled up as the welfare system and pollUca In general. If that be the case, then the people .!lhould know thiJ so they ca n take the necessary 1teps such thtt the economic! of the school 11y11tem I.~ readily understandable to the average layman. FRANK MOHME ffll., Run \llethn-n Cat To the £di tor: It happened Sund1y, F'eb. 18. A cat, hurt and helpleu, in the middle o( the road -,_ .. hat do yau do?? While riding home that evening, my roommtte and I saw a cal running about In the mlddlt of the slreet -we thought at- tempting to croas it. Well, he stopped right in front or my car :and didn't move (I put out my hand to have the car• stop but several drove right by) ht wM frightened and as I looked at him I thought .hla head may have been served . I got out or th!! cir and went to the little animal [people honked even though they had see n me get out of the earl. The cat was badly hurt, a~ parently the vlctihi or 11 hit and run. 110 I \vrapped him up In my co1t. A boy stopped to help me c1rry him to the sidewalk. A FEW MINtrl'ES ltter tht police came <one apartment dweller htd call· ed ). We got t blanket lrom the 11mt people wbo had called the police tnd then the police took the cat to the animal hospital . fi"lni!. In writing thi1 letter, I am not lrYlrtR to jau it up or make It 110und dram•tlc In ~·ny way. This II Ju1t how It hsppened. I f I so sick and tad that a person ~·ou hit and run, othtrll would 3Ull drive by, even honking whlle they hart seen mt getting out of the car, and only one driver offered to help out fthls Is out of about 10). Can you believe it?? At sonic d<1te. distant In tht future, humnn dcmnnds on the earth's stored·up rrsources. such as petroleu m and nalurfll gas, "'ill inevil:lbly outstrip the supply. A Int of people think the day of natural reMUrce shortages h111 already arrived. Jn irulh, there are shortages or threaten· e<! shorta~es or peiroleum and natur ul Jla~. hut !hey hnvt been contrived by the :irllltr11ry .iclion11 of legislaUve and rl'J.!UIHtory bodies. rnther lhan by natural 1111ritinn. Such is the concluslon to be drawn from-t~e findings of 135 geologists \,.ho reported lo the N11tlo nal l1etroleum Cuuncil on lhe "Fulurt Petroleum J1rovinces or the United States .••. " or the dl11coverable oil 11nd 68 percent or ... Utt discoverable gas remain to be round . Quotes {iHANTEI), S01\1E progres~ is being made lo cut down on bad air, lhough "f are revolving In a pclluted at. 1nus11hs re af the \YOrld's maklna, j Uermany a.nd 1taly have worse than Csi llrornla ) but progrtss is slow! Prea• Conunenta ' There la something lo be learned from all of this ; 1. Ksep anlm11.ls In or leashed. 2. Please. if you hit 11n animal. DON'T ~lt_and nin. 3. Don't be afrald~to 1et Tiii-: GEOLOGISTS' report is t fficl· filled . J80-p:1gc docum,nt. Among other l h ln~~. II sn~'s that if recovery of oil and 1111s rrom known reserve1 can be ~teppe<t. up from the: preaent 32 percent to 60 pt.rctnt, the United Statea would have tn ultimate petroleum pnttnllal of 432 b\lllon btrrels of oil, J,MS trillion cubic fttt of 111as, and 49 billion barrel~ ol natural au It bre1ka the U.S. into 11 regions. None of th.e1e:.rt«lon11, Including Aluka, has betn , , Sena' OOwns !I e 1;,-c t;.0 ~ J t in· adequately explored. ittum~ntatlon .' tte~nlclaa JOurneym~n, 11\IP~NPING shortages, portlcularly (If natural 1a1. hive betn fore1een by petroleum lnduatry spokesmen for many years. And the aolulion. al! they have long J)Oinled out, liea In the re1toration of ln- rentlvel! by our lawmakers and regula- tora that will encourage the risky busi- neu of ctrr)llng on the search for na- turt'1 vaat hidden rewves or on and natural 1u. ' lod111trltl Ne•·• Rev~• Sunnyvale -"In the e11.st It'! har<ler to get to kno\'/ people. bul when you get 10 know them you know them well. Here yo11 get to know them fai;t, but maybe you on- ly know the ou ter person.'' llrrman Skin, L.A., on Sen. fulbrl&bl'• "flntl Solutloa" for J1r1d-"At the rllk or depressinc Sen. fulbritht beyond all endurance, it must be pointed out that lsr1el has no lnttnllon of committing suicide voluntarily." B11 Geor1e --------• \\'allace John1on, J\.fayor of Btrktley. an 1l1yln1 of policeman -"Hett la the u!Hmflle hyprocrlay -tht cry of 'off I.he pigs' by lbo1e who deplore the term 'Rooks' for Vietnamese, by black men who re~ent, the 1erm 'niggers', by r11dlca1~ "'ho profess lo lovr. mankind but whn h3!e 11nd c1tn .l it} a neighbor ~Imply bec11u.~e he is a 'pig'.'' Dear Georat: I don't like lo dance. Girls lhink I'm .shy, u t result. They try In bolster my confidence. They H\H out in dark ps rktd cars with me 11hllc other ii;U)'~ are da12clng. :~T.il)Ol lb~" can I do •bout CASPAR Dear Ctapar : You can cop)'ri~ht lh1I 11y~tem .., and Jell a book on 11. for optners. \Vhlle we wa it for lhe experts In the v11rlous Uelds to come up with workable solutions to rid us or some of the bad :1ir outside. let's get on with cleanlng up lhe air we have lruilde. I noticed " holpi tal window open to the out~f-doors re ccnlly and thought lhat 1urel)'. in a hO!l pilal, we should !!ee lhat pallents were not made lo breathe the oul!lldt contemlnated air. 11" i\tC THt: hou:;es and other bulldin(:s In Lo~ t\ngclts ~·ere now equi~ ~d wilh air systems that pumped into a puririf'r, and on Into the houses and buitdinJl!ll. the air fl'filn outside at· mosphere. imagine the great amount or impurities "'e would be taking out of tht nir and cxh11ust1ng a much lm- pro vtd nir b1.ck outside to further reducs U1e lota l JlOITution. Such purifiers could work with the ~tetatrle IA. JeUeno1 Par.ta• 'l'lmt•: 11Lel'1 take tbe deadbeat.I and the moochers orf lhe rellt!!! rolls-let'• de- mand that every ablt-bodltd person btl required to get oft hll dtrrlert and e1rn hla keep; 1there tre too many of then1 (we wert wont, In my youth, to c111l them bums) who find U more profitllble to rel11i1 and 'let George do it' than to hump thtmstlvcs at honest •·rork-for their Ilk. 'labor' ls demean ing. But wh•t about George? Th at poor 1uy tnd hl1 contemporarle1 are goin~ to rold one of lhe1 t dtys, then what i! 1otng to happen to the arm y of ldter!ll who htve been living high on lhe hog tt the e1pen1e or Geot(lt's labors?'' ' ~ Odes11, Tt111, Amrrlc1n : " ... al· lt mpll to l!glalate honesty and fal rntss In the msrketpl1'CI" :irf inferior to another old pr inci111e, lhRl thr deitlrr in shnddy good~ \\1111 A"CI nut of hu11lnts.~ ror the slmplc reAson th11t hls cu5tomers will disappear." · involvtd. KARYN RING ER --WWW- Friday, March 5, 1971 Tl1t editorial paQe of the Dail11 Pilo t 1etks to inform cft(l 1tim. tdate readtrs b11 prcsentlng thia riewspaper's apinions and com- mtntary o-n topics of interc1S and significance, by proufdtng a furu.m. for tht erpressfon of our reader•' opiniom, altd b11 presen&fng tltt diuerst trlew- poirl lt of lnfortntd obst:,,,tr1 n11d spokesme11 on topiCI of Chi fa~· Rober! 1'I. Weed, Publisher -------- I .. - ..t.notrier Loo1ns 'Nixon Halts 011e Railway W al~out WASHING TON (UPI) -aimed at preveRting a walkout ~sident Nixon T 11 u rs day by another union 's 150,000 blocked for 60 days a strike train crew members remained scheduled by R a i I w a y · stalled. Signalmen, but negotiations Contract talks b e l w e e n Nixon Asks $2 Billion railroad management and lhe Unlted Transportation Union broke off briefly early Thurs· day alter 15 hours of con- tinuous bargaining, resumed in late afternoon and then recessed after lhree hours un- til Friday monling. Urban Fund Clyde Lane. chief negotiator for the UTU, and chief WASHINGTON (AP) management negotiator John P. Hiltz agreed there had been QUEENIE lly Phll lnterlandi .. .·. ,.. President Nixon a 1 k e d C<lngress todaY to approve a $2 biWon revenue-sharing fund for urban development -one that he said would not strap any current efforts such as the model cities program. no significant change in the L~::.::=:.==='-"'~~~=:=:=..;;:::;;!!!!:~::~J bargahiing situation in the Nixon, in a special message, also proposed that the federal go\•emment set aside an extra $100 million a year to help states and local governments upgrade their skills in long- ran ge planning, budget decision-making and t h e coordination of c o m p l e x development activities i n many fields. "Cities would ht ab!~ to spend their money as they see fit." he 1iaiil, "provided only that they used it for c o mm u n i t y development purposes." The remaining $400 billion would be distributed by the Secretary ot Housing and Urban Development, largely to make certain that no com· munity would r~ive · less federal' money under revenue- sharing than under existing past 24 hours. "Yield! Who has that much oontro1?"• Assistant Labor Secrelary ____________________ 1 \V. J, Usery Jr., the government's top mediator in the 17-month-old dispute, said the UTU had not threatened a strike. and "we feel no action will be taken (by the union) as long as meaningful ne20Uation s are continuing ." He emphasized that the UTU had made no com- mitment to refrain from strik- ing. President Nixon is legally powerless to prevent a strike jn the case of the UTU. After a breakfast with UTU President Charles Luna. Usery told newsmen he was no more optimistic about a settlement than he was Wednesday, when he said the situation 'idoes not look good ." President Nixon a c t e d 'l'hiirsday to block a strike scheduled today by the 11 ,000- member Brotherhood o r Railway Sign a I m·e n . He ordered a 60-day cooling off period, contending the nation faced the Joss of essential transportation service. Apollo 15 Mission May Be Best Ever CAPE KENNEDY , F J a. (AP) -Astronaut David R. Scolt, commander of Apollo 15, says the moon mission next summer "probably will be the greatest scientific ex· ploration ever carried out by man." ''With your help." Scott told l ,000 members of the Kennedy Space Center launch team, "we'll bring back enough .data to keep the scientific com· munity busy for 30 years. The vastly i m p r o v e d scientific returns will be a 1 m o s l overwhelming." Scott and hi;<; two crewmates, Alfred M. Worden programs. Nixon would get the $2 ..--------------------. billion by combining ~s now J available under separate pro- grams ·for urban renewal, model cities, water and sewer grant,.!, ~ Joans ~or. the rehabilitation of old buildings. Pot Cuts Sex Dulls Urge, Doctor Says RENO, Nev. (UPI) -~larijuana can make a 35·ycar- old man 70 years old sexually , contends the president-elect of the American l\·ledical Association . Dr. Wesley Hall said a continuing AMA study leaves "very~little doubt" that marijuana smoking dulls the sex urge both in men and women and causes birth defects when used by women late in pregnancy. Amendment Meet Asked WASHINGTON (UPI) -I Ten state legislatures have voted to ask Congress to call a constitutional convention to write an amendment guaranteeing the states a share of federal income tax collections. 10:00 -. frld,,y, Marth S, 1971 DAILY PILOT ON THE MALL AT FASHION ISLAND An exciting demon stratio n of radio controlled aircraft featur- ing the latest in control equipment. Planes taxi to position for take-off, become airbourne and land-while the pilot stands on the ground! These models fly from 60 to 90 mph while they perform a series of aeroba'tic maneuvers. Flying demonstra- tions will toke place in the parking lot adjacent the police helicopter, north end of the mall. 5 132 Killed In Detroit Gunfire Hall, who said he has been besieged with telephone calls since a Monday speech on marijuana's ill effects, DETROIT (AP) -In the stuck by his earlier statements Thursday. The council included New Oemon,tration by Orbit Electronics, Santa Ana, California Hanlpshire on the list of stat<?s ~======================================= having taken final action, but r first 63 days of this year, "With increased use there is a lack of sex drive," he a record 132 persons were said. "lt results in a man who may be 35 chronically, be- slain in this city -most of ing age 65 or 70 in respect to his sex drive. them by gunfire al the hand s "Women also are affected in that they do not desire of friends or family members, sex as much as they v.•ould under normal circumstances, rather than in street crimes. and there is enough evidence now to substantiate it"' By police estimate , Hall, a Reno doctor who will become AMA president Detroiters possess as many in June, said a continuing study by the AMA committee as half a million handguns, on Alcohol and 'Drug Dependence gives strong su pport to lhe bulk of them illegally. his conclusions. ··1 don't think the average But he conceded a perfectly l'Qnlrolled s"ienlific study person realizes h.o w _i"!; of ma riju ana's effects hasn't bet'n made and that it will mediate murder really is, take "three, five or even 10 years" to gather the informa- Police Commissioner John tion. Nichols said at a news con-"Al least one out or 10 children born to mothers whn ference Thursday . have used marijuana within three months of giving birth since the New Hampshire Senate ha:s not voted on the proposal, the list of states actually numbers 10, not 11. SALE WATER LILIES Pacific Goldfi1h F•rm1 14842 Edw•rd1 St. Off lllt l1n 0 1 ... ~l'MWIY •I CO.N• Wnl tllll StlH. "People seem to ht playing will be defective mentally." Hall contended. out their r<iles in 'life through By reducing sexual drives. marijuana also can cause WESTMINSTER violence. We've had countless 11 loss of self-confidence, the doctor said. ltJ .. Jl SS people who. because of a real""==================~~==~~~~~~~! or imagined insult, grabbed 11~ a gun and killed someone. 1'~riends and relatives kill each I other." I u~ HOW ARE YOU PROGRAMMING ¥CUR LIFE? Com.euter experts 1ree1y admit that whaf r:omes out of a computtr is only as aood as what's put into it in the first place. 11:00 12:00 2:00 MATTEL SKY RIDER CONTEST Kids, 7 to 12 ! He re's your chance to win FREE planes. Mattel will show you how to fly their new Skyriders from 11 to noon. From 12,30 to 2 pm you can compete for prizes for the longest dis- tance, a erobotics and longest fl ight. lots of prizes ... don't miss th is! Skyriders will be in the Stage Court area-center of the mall. Demonstration by Moltel, Inc., Hawthorne, Ca lifornia GLIDER FLIGHT Mork Smith, Nationol Radio-controlled Glider Champion, will pilot hi s plane from the Stage Court area. The craft will soar from the top of the AVCO financial center building as Mark puts it through a series of loops, spins and stalls before the 6' glider lands in Stage Court. M.ork says he can land the plane in his hand! Demonstration by Mark Smith, courtesy of Mode J and Croft Show, Anaheim, California WIRE-CONTROLLED FLYING The famous Cox flying team will amaze you with their ability as they perform a series of aerobatics, dog fights and fancy flying in thi s demonstration. This activity takes place in Stage Court. ' Demonstration by Cox Mfg., Santo Aoo, California AVIATION DISPLAYS / Htve you ever stopped to think how much yeurown •~"""...,"""' _lift cups onrthe samt ~Jisr · The kind o thooaht you put lnto:your lift determines· All DAY Jerry Bird ........... Captain, 1970 U.S. Free f.all Team -Skydiving Exhibit • wh!tyou aetout of it. This is why ~r·thinking is so lmportinl. Tho'usands have found th.It controllinl their thinkln1 is not a melte' of exercising human wlll but undtfstand- lng end utlng their God· civen rights to order, fleppinets, and a stnst of purpose. Heer N•th•niel R. Whitt of The Christitn Scitnc• Boe.rd of Lecturts~fp dis· cuss this subJect in a free publle ~ture entltJed "Whet Conttol• Your ThOll&JJIZ" • CHRISTIAN SCIEHC£ LECTURE w.,w,.1.._.. "'J , ... lSdHI• OIUIKfl Of CM•IST. tcla•TllT "" ..... ¥ .... 9rttt ---- (9:10 to 5 pm) 34b1 'V1d U~o in. Newycrt -Seel.Ch. b73-451o - •• , Cox Manufa·cturi'ng •••• Wire-controlled model aircraft • and model rockets Orange County Radio Control Club •••••••• Mod el radio·controlled aircraft co mpeting for $100 in prizes Orbit Electronics •••••• Radio-controlled ai rcraft Alt, ••• to 1110 c..--·~,. ......... ., .... l•t, r ·I 11 I \ I • I I I \ l ' I I ' I I ' . : I ' • I I I I 1 · l . I i . J . ' 1 1 l I ·-. _ .. _ . ._ ~ .. ---.. -~--·~ .. ______ .... __ . - Given Big . Push :~ • • A SHOT OF ENERGY -Boostlng the volunteer pro- gram at Hoag Hospital are Candystripers who will launch another year Satµrday, ~larch 20. Miss Dawn Rosenfeld (center), new vice !chairman receives a Candystri·pers Open New Term Accepting the leadership of Candystripers dur· ing a candlelight ceremony will be l\fiss Karen Od- neal, newly elected chair.man. , Ceremonies will be conducted Saturday. March 20, in the Conference Center of Hoag Memorial 1-los· pita], Presbyterian. Assisting the new chairman on her board will be the Misses Dawn Rosenfeld1 and Cathy Lan gston. first and second vice chairmen; Gloria Somers and .Joyce Urban, recording and correspond ing secre· taries; Jennifer Watson, treasurer, and Gillian Sy· monds, historian . · Luncheon keynoter \viii be Dr. Ronald J. ifi· hordin. head of the ne\v mental health unit at the hospital. "booster shot of energy" from ltirs. C. R. Johnson, advisor, while assisting is Miss Karen Odneal, new chairn1an. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Frltl•~• Mart~ 1, 1'71 N ~tit n Raising funds for Orange County Child· ren's Hospital will be members of the Punch and Judy G u i 1 d, Costa Mesa. Plans are under wav for a Swine Into Sprin,g dinner dance. to take place Fri· day. March 19. in the Costa Mesa Country Club. Festiviti es will be~in with a 7:30 p.m. soci!ll hour and music for dancing \Vill be provided by the Harmonaires. In the party theme mood are (left to right) Mrs. David Bourke and Mrs . hlirshall B. Stamper. \vho hope to push the guild over its funding goal. Crittenton Benefit Deck Stacked For Charity Sweetening the kitty, which is used to support the Florence Crittenton Services in Orange County, will be the funding event ar~ ranged by the Crittenton Sea Circle, Junior Auxiliary. The benefit, to take place at 9:30 a.m. T~es~ay, i\1arch 30, in th e Balboa Bay Club, will include a program on color coordination, a brunch and an afternoon of bridge and other games. Underlining the "s"'eet" th eme wil l be table centerpieces of candy.filled jars. Speaker will be Miss Diana Vance who will present a talk on the effective use of color and how to use s t v I e and fashion to create an integrated wardrobe. A graduate or UCLA . Miss Vance majored in interior and dress design. She has \vorked in the fashion field for 23 years. A1rs. Robert Curci, benefit chairman is being ·assisted with arrangements by Mrs. Philip Anshutz, A1rs. John Ralphs and Mrs. \Villiam Burke. SWEET SHOP -Filling jars with candy for table centerpieces are Oelt lo right) Mrs. William Burke and Mrs. Lyman Belz. The decor will be used at a benefit Tuesday, li1arch 30, given by the Junior Crittenton Services in Orange County is striving to open a ~ounseling center for unwed mothers. Auxiliary of the Florence Crittenton Sea Circle. · ' . . ·Hos_tess B.u.r.n·s-When Guest Has l:ier Cake -and Ears-·lf :fo0 -. . •' , • • 4 DEAR ANN LANDERS: Now that t am puUing my problem rlo1Yn on paper it seems 60 petty l'm ashitiued of myself. · But I di need an answer and I hope )'OU will obUge. I Jove to cook, and I'm an outstanding pastry chef. l take prlde in preparing all the food for my dlMer parties. A friend o( mine (1'11 call her Hilda) is pretty good in the kitchen, too. I suspect she iJ compelilive with me. ANN LANDERS ~ looked like. Two weeks ago I was in the cemetery vlslling my aunl's.grave. I accidentally saw this boy's headstone. 1 was drawn to it like a magnet. I felt such a deep sense of sadness l cannot describe It. I have returned to his grave every day since. Something makes me go. Yesterday I decided to stay away and I was a nervous wreck all day. I had to a:o to the cemetery after supper. planned to · serve bY candlelight and ' Hlldf was stealing my thUnder. Of <:09rse when ahe arrived with the cake I knew t had no choice but to serve It. lt spo iled my evening. You did the graclou1 thin&, boweve~, by '1ervln1 It. Too bad It 1polled your evenlag. It shouldn 't have beta tllat liftportant. or course I didn't tell my rolks where DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 19 years t was going. They wouJd have thought old. My problem is one 1 thought would J was crazy. In fact, I'm beginning raUonal basis. Tbe experts say 1uch behavior Is cau1ed by pllt wblcb may be totally unrelated to tbe situation that has you booked. If this urge lo visit tM cemetery dally persist. l suggett you discus• it with • tlter1pbt • ' our home. I do not 1gree with ICm but J admit I AM tmeasy. What ii your advice? -SHADY SIDE OF ~ STilEET · -·- DEAR SHADY: Slice Y°" made .- clear to UM alrl &Ht lite w11 110t :w, DEAR AN N LANDERS: A t5·year-old entertain guests In your llome, 1ea .ti girl has been baby-sitting for us for not respon1lble lw whatevu mlgltt reail' several months. I made it clear that rrom that tncounttr. Dol't tell W she was not lo entertain anyone in mother, but do 1et uotlter titter. : our absence. List night my husband : and 1 returned from 1 party earlier "The Bride's Gulde," Ann Landlri • Last night when Hilda and her hU'band arrived for dinner (It was a small party -only, four couples) she brought along a "surprise"-a bagf:, 14-egg angel·food !" .. cake beaull.fu.11,Y decorllted wfth orange ~ . lcing. It really was spectacular but I r resented ii, ¥Here I hid spent a lot or time preparing crepes suzettcs which I Am J wrong to feel this way? Do you think Hilda committed a faux pas, or: am I overreacting? Help me sort this out 'Iii" my thinking. -FORT LAUDERDA~E Q. DEAR Q.: HUdi 1lrould"'ftGt ilave surprised you. She sbollld have asked in advance If 1be could brtng the dtsaert. go away in time . But instead IL ii to lhink maybe I ..,jJil a. litUe nut.&. getting worse. Ca n you tell me what is causillg thi11 When I was a freshman In high srhool strange behavior and what I can do 8 boy t knew Wls 'killed In an automdbiTe fl about It? -JEFFERSON·CITY, MO. than we had planned and we c1ught book.let, answers some of the ~ ber with a young man . . . in a ... frequently asked que5tiona ab o'.u very embarrassing situation. · weddings. To receive your copy of uy My husband says we should tell ber comprehensive guide, write to motller. He insists thal If the girl is Landers. in care of the DAILY pfi.br.; pregnant as a result or that gesslon, enclosing a k>ng, &elf-addressed 1laint;l we are responsible becau!e It was In envelope and 3S ctnta in coin. ' accident. 1 hardly knew him and to DEAR JEFF: You art gripped by this day I do ·not remember what be a co1npulslon for which ·there Is no ·' ' . • ' -~, • • •• r I •• £t DAILY PILOT • . ' ' - • Betrothal Announced By-Former Harborites Mr. and Mrt. Robert Jewett Voorhlet of Pompano Beach, Fl1., former residents ·of Newport B e a c h , have announced the engagement of their daughter, L e i I a n I Germain Voorhie!I lo Robert C. Payton, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Donald Payton o( Reno. Miss Voorhies, a 1116 6 Children's Home Soc i e t y debutante, attended Ariwna State University and Mary Mount College in Boca Raton, l''la. She is a graduate or Newport Harbor High School and now is a stewardess for Air California. Her fiance attended the University or Nevada and served with the Marines Corps in Vietnam. He has just been appointed station manager for lhe new San Diego branch of Air Callforn ia. A June wedding is slated In Newport Beach. The nuptials are being planned to coincide with the 48th wedding anniversary of Miss Voorhies' June Date Set LEILANI VOORHIES Brld•Elect grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. ~ James Oanlel Germain of Newport Beach. Freemans Tell News Mo11ica Louise Freeman will become lhe bride of G. Dennis Paul during Junt 26 riles in St.. Gregory's Catholic Church, Los Angeles. . . . " ' c~~;~t .~:~:~w=· Chamber Orcheltra has generated enormous enthusla5m a..,d stablished itself as one of the leading orchestr sin the country. The man considered responsible ror the development is Neville Marriner. a master or the ch1m bl!r musk genre. He will appear be· fore Orange County mu!lic lovers during a free concert preview lecture Wednesday, March 10, at 11 a.m. A native · of England . he rounded the Academy or St. lffartin·the-Fields in Lon· don . a.nd the London Strings recordings have won him wide acclaim . He will di,11cu11s the music of Mozart. Schumann and Ligeti that is to be played b}t the Los Angeles Philhar· monic Orchestra during its Saturday, March 13, concert at UCI. The lecture is the first in a series of lout music appreciatiollj programs planned by the Orange County PhUharmonic Society. Marri· ner's presentation Will take place in the Ed· wl!ds Theater, F~hion Is land and is open to the public. Ji'uture lectures will be delivered by Or. Colin Slim. April 14 ; Dr. R.aymand Kendall, May 5, alld Harold Gelman, May 19. Visitor Greeted WHISTLES TO WORK -Ge-0rge -Pappas was pr .. claimed Boss-of-the-year during the 33rd annual Bosses' Nighl Dinner sponsored by the Newpo rt );(arbor Business and Professional Women in the lfei.;a Verde Country Clu b. The winning letter was· written by Mrs. John Palen fcenter) and !11rs. Joseph Hamil was named Girl-of.the-year. Their betrolhal wa:\ announced by her parent~. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Freeman. during a party for relatives and close friend~ in their Ln:\ Angeles home. Among guests was George f'. Paul of Huntington Beach. father of the benedi ct-elect. Members of Harbor Star Chapter 568 Order of the Easl~rn Star 11re making Gardeners To Discuss Geraniums t.1rs . Fred A. Bode Jr. of E.!iconcfidn will d i 11 c u s s geraniums and pelargoniu ms for members of the South Coast Garden Club at 2 p.m. on Wednesday , March 10. . •, •. -. Peering SAFARI TROPHIES were ~t and center as big game hunter Ed Quinn and Mrs. Q~nn (who also hunts ) hosted a :.cocktail party prior to the E~culive Dinner CI u b mttling in the Ne1vporter Inn. 9uinn, whl) ga ve a slide presentation nf their African sa:lari.!'I el !he meeting, and hi5 wife welcomed the l\tessrs. and Mmes. Tom Channell , John Macnab, Sam Garst , Robert Hyzdu . Ra y Simeral, Dr. and Mrs. John Bullis, Dr. and Mrs. Gwyn Parry and Dr. and Mr.~. Ben F'rees and their guest. Mrs. Helen Balzer of Mariposa. Heads Bow ln Prayer Cturchwomen United o I La£'.una Beach J o i n e d with miljions of persons around the v.•orld in a World Day of Prayer today in SI Cath- erine's Catholic Church. Women nf all faiths in 25.000 communities in th is country and 160 aroups on six con· Linents participated 1n the &pirit ua l obserl'ance. lt1r~. S. S. F'rcnrh '"a.~ chairman of the day, assi~lf'fi bv lhe Mm es. Silas Chanr~·. Philip Hopkins. A. I\. Boiiawil.z Jr .. Lr igh Hawkins . and the Pi.1is11rs Dorothe11 Glasoe. Ann t-.1agui re. Laura Manetta and Henrietta Way, Opera Followed By Supper A; gilherinR nf Lyric Opera patron! and friends will follow the Winter fe !l t ~v a .. I, performance of "1 raghacc1 on ~unday. t.iarch 7. The opera will be pcrformrd l 111 5 p.m. hi L11JtUnA ~nulton Playhousr "'ilh the 1lnc1a\ hour i and supper in llotrl ~~11Run:1 . Party phins a.re be1nR 11r-ra11~ed by Mrs ... C. 1'l~n~y Johnston. m em b e r s h 1 p cha.lrman. ~1ember:i; nr thf' bo;ird "·ill be hosts. includirut thi> fl.1e~1'rs. and Mmes. Winfield Sh1ra!l, M 0 r g 11 R C u I herberl<:.on Willi11m Hinwood. H. .lt'an Bedell .. l;imes Agnew. Robert Linderman . and Lero Yj B11ttholomrw. Other threct11n gr e e t I n g pMts will be Dr. and Mr!'. Lesle.r Lud low. Dr. and Mni. StMlev Eichlitaedt. Cnl . 3nd MrJ. Wilham Bruggf're, And the Mmes. Edith S m I l h . Adrien Pel!10t1er and M11rgare.I Conrad SwJlpe.;, " STARS $y41rtt¥ Om•N" ;, trtt el th• weiU'• ti•tl •1t1e1e9t11. ~11 (:el111n11 11 ertt el th• DA ILY PILOT'S t•ttl ft•tw ro1. Around Also accepting the hosts' hnspitality in their Lagtina B!!ach home were Miss M11ry Lou Hopkins and M is s Stephanie Myers. Also attending I.hf" dinner party which marked their silver wed d i n Jl. an- niversary v.·ere Mr. and Pilrs. Robert A. Burke of Costa Mesa. The honored rn11ple v.as married in Rockford. Ill. 11nd has been Costa Mesa residents for 14 years. They have three snns, Thomas. Richard ar.d Willi11m v.·ho all Jive in California. DR. AND i\tRS. Frederick (:razer of Newport Beach are Louring the Orient following hii; participation in 11 plasllc surgery congre si1 in Melbourne. Dr . Graur also fulf.illed a spea king eni;::agement i n Penang. M11lasia . The Grazers plan to return on March zo. George Pappas Hailed As Boss-of-the-year ll was a blend of Laugh-in and the Academy Awards in the Mesa Verde Country Club v.•hen f\1ev.•port H a r b o r Business a n d rrores~ionBI Women hosted their 3.1rd an- nual rlinner in honor of lheir bosses. Rec ipient of the title Boss- nf-the-year was c:eorge Pair pas. finance direc.tor of Newport Beach. Presentini;: him with an engraved illver tankard was Mrs . John Palf~n. v.·ho \vrote the winning Jetter "He always came to work v.·hisll ing." Mrs. Joseph Hamil, chosen as Girl-<if-ihe-year for her con- tributions to thr succe.~s of the clu b's programs. received an engra\·ed silver bowl. Club members entert.ained thri r bos.,cs Rnfi husband s v.·ith R ski1, Laugh-in style. follov.•1ng the av•ards presen- tation. Kach ina Counc il Organ ized New Program Forming ' • • MON ICA FREEMAN To Say Vows Ta I k Stresses Eng lish Past ~1iss FreemaR is a graduate of Immacul ate Hearl High Schoo!, Los Angeles 11 n d attends Marymount College on lhe Uiyola University campus. Her fiance. an 11lumous nf Maler Dei High School. ls a senior at Loyola. where he ii; a member nf Delta Sigm11 Pi business fral.emily. Ht will be commissioned as an officer in the Air Force foltowing his graduation. Emblem Clu b ready for lhe official visit on Tuesday, M;irch 9, of Deputy Grand Matron Mrs. Carlton Young ol San Clemente. Work of the chapter members win be exemplified by officers during the 8 p.m meeting in the Newport Beach M11.~onic Temple. W or I h y Matron Mrs. Marlin Steigne.r will preside over initiation or new members. Mrs. Bode. a recognized 11uthority i11 her field , will ad · dress the group in 1hP. Three Arch Ba y CI tl bh nu s e . Members "lso are llliked tn bring lrea~urr~ or trinkel'I 11s a contribution to A silent auc- tion which will begin at I p.m. Mrs. Charlei; L. Franris, hostess chairm"n. will be Is assisted by the Mmes Clifford refreshment chainnan and S. Tinsman. Carl Bull. B. Mrs. Arnold Arff is in charge Bowman Mendel. Rnbb Scnll, of dini ng room decoratioru;. Niles Welch a•d M. H. Wiley. Mr.~. Rex Albright Coming up on March 17 will be a Homemakers Luncheon The Elks Lodge is the ~el-111 12 p.m. in the temple. The Star Club ling f11r mcetin,11s of the Starbright Club. with Mrs. Cav;ilier Chapter, Colonia l Emblem Cluh Z'll of Lllguna Melvin Hammo ck as Star Club will meet al 7:30 Damei; XVII Century will Beach. 'Members gather tM ch11irman. will host the event p.m. on Wecfne~dav. March discuss lhe Lives and Times first and third Tuesdays at with a St. Patrick's Day 10, in the Laguna Federal Sav. of Our English Ancestors 8 p.m. theme. ings and Loan building . following a 12: IS p. m. lunch 1-liiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiii=====================;;;., on Tuesday, March 9, in the D 0 G S H 0 W Old Brussel~ restaure n t . Laguna Beach. The program. presented by UITi J\lj fi••ffl91 1-·•1v Mothers and daughters in· ol I.he Peaceful W11ters Nation Mrs. Fred C. Ross. will outline .... 'llllf"Wft Et lerestr.d in joining the new of Indian Maidens. is heading 1.000 ye&rll of ancestral ac-MARCH 6 -1 O A.M. , . lhe organization of the Foun· livi!y with !!tress on social K;ichtna prngr11m sponsored ta~·n;;V;•;ll•;y;g;r;°"~P~-,;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;;;';';pe;c;~;-;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;·;;;,;~;;;,;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~-by the Youn!'( Men 's Chrii;h;in - A.~socialion nf \\1estminsler· Longev ity Stressed Fountain Vallry are invited lo 111tend ;in organizational m<'Pfin~ lomorrnw . 6th Anniversary Sale now in progress at all stores! Hnw lo Enjoy 11 L-On~l"r Life will be the topic when the Newport Harbor Exch11nRl"tlt:\ ~ather on Wtcfnescfa~. Mar ch lO. in the Balbn11 home of Mrs. Dwight Gi ck. Cf)..hostess for 1hP 11 a.m. affa ir will be '°1rs Robert Turner, and featured will be a yoga demonstration by Bhar11ti of the Yoga Cenler of Cost.11 Me.!la and 11 lunch of natural ·anrl or11:anic foods. Designed for girls from age 9 rind up, lhr prngr;im is simil;ir to lncli;in Maide ns ex- C'f'pt empha sis is pl11ced on tnp~. hnmemak1ng and other 1'kl1ls which woul d appeal lo older girls. Thr 111ce11ng v.·tl l \akt plaee in C\slcr School between 9 aon 111 a.m. On h11nrl to exp!ai11 prncrdures v.·il l bi> r-.1rli. Merlin Heyen Rnd lhe Ka china Coun- ri l iilrc:uty fnrmed In Wei;tminstrr. Mrs. Jack No11rk. princess B. D. HOWES IS HAVING A SALE i B. D. HOWES and SON El~L Jf.\\'!.LtRS TOR THP.E.£ Gt~LRATIO~S NE!PORT snCH: '4i1 Via Lido . s;1-1;,1 IN VELVET ISLleirrzy HIGHER:. . -. I I ' • 7 i • ' Costa Mesa Today'• Fl•al ORANGE COUNTY; .CALIFORN.IA . ' , I t FRIDAY, MARCH -5, 1971 TEN CENTS VO~. 64, NO. 55, 4 SECTIONS,. <42 PAGES J • es.a rama: unman, -. • ----CAIL't.1'11.0T Stell I'"'" OFFICERS WHITE (LE FT), ARNO.LD--INV~N~O,RY #-RSENAL Collection of Gun s, Ammo Found1 Tn ·S~1p'4;K't'1 Aparlment . . .. . \ Gary Phoenix Mi1st .Die ' For Rapes, J(idnapings . ' . . Gary · Har()ld Phoenix of Costa. Mesa wa1 sentenced to death . Thursday for • series of rapes and kidnapings in which the 'husky bachelor beat and in· jured several of his victims. outwardly calm and compose(! -a deMeaTtor he · mainlalntd through bis seven-week Orange County · Superior Court · trial -he offered no reaction to . Judge William M u r r a y ' s pro- nounCement of sentence. Deputy Public. Def~nder Rodei'ick ~c· eardi ·withdrew his motions for reduction of sentence and a new trial shortly before Judge Murray ordered Phoenix, 29, to be shipped to San Quentin's Death Row within the next 10 days. Phoenix's appeal against the sentence Is scheduled for hearing by the California Supreme CourL No date has been set . for discussion of the action. Phoenix was convlcli!d on 30 of 33 ~elony counts which ~lleged that he .at· taeked nine women In a 28--~ay -pe~1od J~st summer. Several of his v1ct1ms testified they were tracked by Phoenix 1t night, dragged by the physical culture expert into his whi~ Thunderbird .aw.to. and subjected to a rughtmare of beatings, rape and sexual perversion. lt was testified during his penalty trial that Phoenl1, the assistant manager of a Huntington Beach health spa at the time of his arrest, had been convicted of rape charges at the age of 11 and I Or~ge (;oaat Weather ..... ,.- It won't get any higher than 63. degrees. whether you're on the coast or driving Inland. Satunl.ay. Gusty winds will ·prevail under IWUIY skies. JNSWE TODAY Neville Marriner will be piust Lecturer at tht Orange Cou-nty Philharmonic Society's free preview \Vtdnesdoy. Ste today'i Weekender. ""vlM U.M MijlU.I 1'11111111 I Hit .. •I H ... 4-J , 0-(-'Y 11 •• ntt tl•Jt • ., l'tl'ltr • ·-• 1 .. 1. 119Ck M11'1111t .., TtllYllkMI ,, Tllttll" f).14 Wt41111w • W-11'• IMwt 11·11 committed to a Kansas ·reformatory. The.JUfY was also told that he s.exually attacked 1 Houston, Tex"as. woman while he w'as:Orr.par6Je.froin the Kansas prison. PhdeniJ's sister, Mrs. Sandy Lewis of Garden Gro~e. was in coui't Thursday to" witriess her biother's sentencing. She told · neWsmtn she ·will hire a "first clas5" :lawyer to · Handle her brother's appta1;ag~inst the death sentence. Ammunition Test Gun Stolen in Co sta Mesa A Costa Mesa Industrial execulive told police Thursday that someone has stolen one of his quality cont~ol testing ir.· slrumenls. Charles L. Farnau , is ammunition manager or a company located at 1602 Babcock St., manufacturing automatic cartridge reloading equipment. He said !Omeone swiped a $137 Ruger pilstol with convertible .357 magnum and 9 millimeter barrels from its hiding place. • • ·Tellse Showdown Af te.r Shootin,g • ••• ) .. ' • ... ' ~ . 1 ! J ' , , By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 IM DlllY ll'lltl Jl•lf ·Screaming · defiance and frantically loading glins, a Costa Mes~ !'nan finally surrendered to quie~ police eoaXing Thursday, only seconds beTore· theY forc- ed a showdown. A crowd of 300 nµU~ aroµn~ . the tell!le ·scene, ignoring ord,ers broadcast from a circling polke,helicopter ta move back .. ·Some --: standing exposed . to what" could bave been a mass murder spree -~unted , and ~ck,led shotgWl-armed officers crO;Uched under cover. The drama began· at 3:.20: p.m .. with a report of a ·mar. shot at 3013 Coolidge AVe., and a man with a gun at 3002 Fillmore Ave .. one block away. Victim John W. Gcllden II, 2.1, of Phoenix, Ariz., ls listed In satisfactory condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital; with a .S2 caliber bullet wound tbat ,collapsed one lung. · He stJ,J sprinted a block, trailing blood, on the one remaining respiratory org·an before collapsing. Paul E. Weaver, 30, of the Fillmore Avenue address where the 30-minute con· frontation occurred, is in city jail, OOoked on charges or assault with intent to commit murder: · ' -· ' , • OAIL'l'.f'ILOTlt.it ,.,.... DETECTIVE BLAYLOCK ESCORTS SU.SPECT WEAVER TO SQUAD CAR " • • Cu;ious Cauw~·Pet ice · Almost as Much WMry New charges may be·added-aince some Items in Weaver's arsenal -lined up along-a-.w&ll..ready.Jor_ u,e ~ .jlllfdc-__._____ ..... -1 ~ ----.-.~.~:~-,~~-~_,,-~-~~11111 ... ~s;=-f:de~.:~ Jitd}ge's:~i~e:,is ·r e~timo.ny • r ~ · ...., unMa.to Uie.JCCe. _ . ~ -, J Youth's 8eare1i· : P•trqlo:ijtl ~ ·~--;'{.~(,,__ · ~ · · · ·-,---· For M"'sa wor'· _1~ :i:~an'!.<r:rr/~·~~ '"!.'cO:: :1=: o· . '1·.na· ·_f '.t'.ri j~. :;~,g-.w.· .-i·i ;.;, ,.s· s ~ '.K victim plgt6hwbJpped in Utt 'fray,· Jeln-P ff 'f9' I a,t:;i hJg against a ct/. . . He pointed to 1be front triplex wllt E d T • 11 aruhald the Jl\ISP<CI had run IM!de. , · n s rag1ca . y G<tt_lng no.~ponse lo orderj ·1'> com• A SpanisfJ-speaking Youth's · bunt for work ended tragically overnight at a Costa Me~· ~to cle.!!J!!P. shop, where he was to go on the }ob at A a.m. today. He Was f6urid ·dead of' apl)Menl ac· cidental carbon mono:iide poisoning when Roy Bates arrived at· Bates Detail SMp 467 E. 17th St.. to open up. Detective Norm Blaylock said thl! vie· tim. 20, evidently· ha·d no place to stay so he retUrned and • fOOnd i way to enter the premises for the night. He got into a customer's car. starting the engine and heater but apparently not realizing how quickly the lethal fumes would accumulate. Coroner's deputies said he Is from the Los Angeles area, but withheld iden· tification until · his fam ily c<>uld be notified. He was last seen alive · at 9:30 p.m., when another shop employ~ dropped him off at a nearby . Jack-in-the-Box stand to eat. Nixon Cancels Trip WASHINGTON (UPI) -?resilient Nixon has canceled his trip today to Rochester, N.Y. because of a snowstorm which snarled road and.airport facilltie... -,,,., .... • out, ·Arnold and· White ·gingerly . opeded \he unlocked door and entered, guns drawn, but the home wai. allent aa atom~ _ . _ Sudden sounds overhead . sent , them ~ind . a bat al the fool ·of the ·stairs for cover, with a full view of tbe llhadow of • man with a gun. . . The SOUrJds were bolts o! ,hjgh·pbwe.red rifles and !lhoij:um being" )~ded, the patrolmen realized, so they again qrdeffil him to drop his weapon~ and surren~. "You'll take. me out of here feet first before I'll do IO to 20," the Sinta Monica Hospital steam engineer scream- ed baCk. By this time. backup patrol units were parked at crazy angles in the ~ded cul-de-sac adjacent to busy Baker Street and the curious crowd swelled. · Officers Arnold and White kept up a constant, calming stream of con· versatlon, as Patrolman John Stoneback -who joined them ihsfde .....: passed word on out by the mom.enls. . Weaver, reportedly trying to make surrender deals the patrolmen had no authority lo accept, stubbornly refused to surrender, lea din& to an. order fOr teiirgas raced to the scene by Lt. Avery Smith. A shootout ~ppeared increasingly like. ly. Officer Arnold, who only siz hours !See SHOWDOWN, Pap Zl . : By TOM BARLEY Of tlM. °"" ."'~ tlltf Orange County SuperJor Court·Judge . JiimeS F. 0Judge 'hU -decided that much ' . . ' of , the testimony to be of£tred by Dr. Etibe. Hilrteli~' lhl~ly bTonde riilstress' from Cost.a Mesa will heYe to 'be SJ::reened. at in tvldeiltiary beartn,. from which the jury. wUI be ba,rred. , , · He reached that .decision. ,TburJ4.!IY night after a torrid ·afternoon session In which 27-year·~ld Reba Vaughn con- stantly tangled with · def1:nse attorney Matthew Kurllich in thret hours of ob- jection·rlddled testimony. It brought from the· slight attractive witness the confe~ion ''l lied for him (Hartelius ) because I Jove him'' and the angry retort t.o Kurilich : "Hey, If I wasn't a lady weiuld I tell you something." She was frequently . warned by Judge Judge that she must an~wer only tl:ie questions put t-0 her and Kurilich alsO came 1n for the judge's ·angry repri- mand."! for questions that were promptly ruled to be immaterial and irrelevant. One· such question · appeared to .be designed ·to prove that Mrs. ·Vaughn marrie4 a Newport BeacJl ROliceman In Mexico. Deputy Dlatr:ict Attorney ,Alphqnaus fiovlck'•. pniJllPI objeclion prevented an 111swer. Jud11 Judge bu. decided · ttiat when the ttlal reStJmea Monday, the morning ~ss!oh will ~ devoted to the evidentiary h·eatlnk. · The jury will be recalled to his ·courtroom at 2· p.m. that day. The jury will be asked S:t the conclusion of what is expected to be a four to 11,.wee~ trial to nile on the 50-year~ld pl!fSiCian's g u 11 t or · innocenCe on charg'es: of arson , brlt)eiy and in!uranc.e fr.sud, • tt i:i: alle$td that the dapper doctor, who _is currenUy divorcing his wit~ Of 22 years, ·set fire to his offices at 2345 E. Coast 'Highway, Corona de.I Mar. last ·April 9 and tried to collect on I.he. in.su.ranCe policy. Novick alleges· that Hartellus hired Jim Blevins, Reba Vaughn's brother, to set the biaze aftd 'he alleges Uiat the ~octor p8id Blevins i,; Reba's presence to lea ve California and seUle in Arizona when local investigators stepped up their probe into Hartelius' activities. Blevins and his sister are scheduled to go on ·the wilneu stand in Monday's evidentiary hearing. Mrs. Vaughn testified that she lied fo( ijartelius throughout the police in· vestigatiorl of the Qfrona del MarJfire and during 1.he physician's preliminary hearing in Harbor Judicial District Milhicipal CourL Free on· parole from her cofl'YlcUon and jailing on narcotics charges she (See HARTELIUS, l'ase Z) ' Stndeut Pr&test Crash Prompts Protest Rally . ... Concerned, with hlzardo}ls conditlo~ ,...te11µon .to:f~ctors in .the strftch1 •, car. ,on the narrow •. curvy road s~lng-thil~ . .anci_pediistrtari r.oute .lo and from cam· cadlws about 150 Eatan~la High School .._,. '-1tudeiits 11tagi!d. ·a_ constrqctiv.e protes! ~· · . 'rally ·tpday. , , ' The route Is also a heavily used tlnk · They were succe~fu,,ln .attracting at-between busy Adams Avenue and Pia· .'. ~e~tion to.the. problems qn, Estancia AV~ cenUa Avenue for crosstown commuters. nue, perhaps too 1µcc~SBful. . City officials emphasized the dangers . · Cathe ring ,at Swan DrJve -where two wbe1 it was opened two years ago, but . cl;assmates w.ere killesi seren ~ars ag~ •r:t ·st~ett in widening It by state own- t.tie IJ'oup erected a giant warning ba• erShlp ol land on the east side and UU- ner· ov·er the roadway. gatlon over private ownersh1p on thl A passing garbage truck nearly tore .westerly side. down .the sandbag-weighted sl111 w~n . 'A ·number of accidents, from fender it dipped momentarily wblle achool .busts benders to fata'lities . have occurred . liauity cle,red it. . . . since. Strat,ay inclu..dfd c011't1oual use o{. a Claire Arbuckle 14, of 2002 Maple, St., j ~Uow-mar~ed crossw11Jt a~ the poi~t ,al\(t Edward ff.ernandez, I~, ol 2183 N., Where the road nan"Ows, f\n1Hy ~ckin,a: tional Ave., ~re kilJed last F:rlday il!gnc up 7:~ a.m. commuter .traffic. . In: a headon colllskin at the rally sito . "Okay," Police Lt. Jlm '.Green finally Miss Arbuc'kle's brother Pal1l, 17, re· deelared, strldlngi I~ ·street aft:d'lli· mains In criLical con11tion at Hoag.Me· n1llhg In end to the de'mOnstrilUon. • morial Hospital with ))rain lnju:,1 as a : I f • ~IL~ ... ~,, J..t-""""' CALLING FOR CARE, STUDENT~ RALLY' WHE~I TWO CLASSMATIS DIED "Stop," :he added wavin1 •ailing ·traf. rei;ul.t. · fie on through. . 11 • Unsafe $pee1 wrts aur:i3ctc.,"4. bui CJI· W1fi-HtWI ~.S WHllM .. r 19'2' • .. • Bt(ora Cl111, 1 G1,y Crowd Giv ~ Motor11t1 • rim •minder • • ( 1 S~udenta orga11lzed UM! event to call al· See RALLY, Pa~e t . . •• • r • ' I Friday, March S, 1971 Viets Near Laos Huh Reds Mass Tanks , ~lissiles for 8ig Fight SAIGON (UPI) -·Mwtary·spok-no ... --u.s, btUco¢4ra. lnlo land-Mllltory-llld N.ru, Vletnameoo said todoy tbe Comm-bad Co... In& ...., blaMI out ol the lunatu by commamlon had .wted al leut two centrated missile sites and massed up f&,OOl>-pound b Io c kb u 1 t • r bombl armorad Ullltl, t1cli wllh II lanb, lnlo lo SO tanks for the defense of Sepol\e parachuted from Alperican lrllllport a defensive drcln .-. S.pooe, a against a force of 2,000 South Vietnamese planes. town 't1 mlles lnsldt Laos where the t.(oops closing in on the Ho Chi Minh The blast from the big bombs ripped Communists were reported to have trail roadway bub in Laos. away trees and foliage and created Jan. established a major command center. Field reports said 2,000 South Viet.. ding iones the size of football fields. The 2,000..man South Vietnamese force namese troops had driven to within three Military spokesmen said U.S. aircraft was leapfrogged west from positions miles and perhaps within sight of had been fired on by 20 missiles around closer to the South Vietnamese border Sepone, main objective of the 25-day Sepone Jn what was described as the over the past two days. offensive against tht trail. first major Communist use of Soviet·built "I think they can see Sepone very The South Vietnamese troops were antiaircralt rockets oulside North Viet· clearly from there,'' a spokesman said fanning out around Sepone. after being nam. in placing the force within thrte miles 1Jf Sepone. The first major battle around Sepone was reported Thursday when a South Vietnamese infantry battalion C)f more than 600 men fought Communist forces i na three-hour fight and 'reported killing 42 North Vietnamese six miles southeast 1Jf Sepone. South Vietnamese losses were placed at three killed. Fighting Rages in Turkey OverSearchf or Kidnapers ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) -A force of 5,000 Turld!h troops am! police seized the campus of the Middle Eut Technical University (METU) today In a foor hour battle with students but found no trace of four kldnaped Americans faced with execution if a $400,000 ransom is not paid. · Turkish authorities said at least one student died in the battle in which the students hurled bombs and fired pistols. FUteen studenta:, a Turkish officer and a soldier were reported wounded. The soldier and two students were reported in critical condition. Witness States Calky Kilkd Helpkss Woman FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP) -Lt Wtlliam Calley Jr. gunned down a woman who approached him with hands uprailed in surrender, a witness Jn Calley's murder trlnl testified today. And another wltneu, an Intelligence officer who overheard one of the brief- ings Calley was given before the March 16, 1968, ihfantry assault on the Viet- namese village of My Lat, ,said it was normal practice to capture prisoners for interrogation. He said no orders were given to kill noncombattant women and children in the attack. €alley, 'IT, is charged with killing 102 civilians In My Lai that day. The siJ.~fficer jury lri Calley's trial also waa read a portion of a statement taken from one of Calley's platoon members by the Army's Criminal JnvesUgation Division. The statement was taken from Williarn C. Lloyd, a grenadier in Calley's platoon, who later denied bavlng made It. The portion of the statement read to the jw-y -and followed later by the judge's instructions that it must be disregarded for any purpose other than to determine whether Lloyd was lying -said: "Yes, there was a ditch at the edge of the village and there were a lot 1Jf people there. We collected the people and brought them to the edge of the ditch. Then, Lt. Calley ordered us to put him in the ditch. • .then when all the people were in the ditch, Calley ordered us to kill the people. "The machine guns fired a burst and wounded all the people, but didn 't kill all the people ••. there were grenades thrown into the ditch .•. when the firing was over they were all dead." \Vhen he testified Dec. 15, Lloyd denled having made the statement. The pro- secution brought in today's witness, former CID agent Reese R. Cash, to say that he took the statement from Ll ·vd. • ORA.HQ.I COAST DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST PV11ll$HIN!:i C'OMPANY koD11t N. w ,.d ,.,.,, • .,, encl Pu~u.- J1dc R. Cvrley VI,. l"rbklrnl Ind Gener•I MINIOW lhom11 K1 1Yil fielllOt Thom11 A. M11rphino MIMOln; Editor Ch1tl1l H. l•o•• Rid.,rd I', Nill Awlt"ll/ M1"1t9lng IEGl10fl Coat• MesG Offl'• JlO W11t l1y Str1•t M1ilin9 Aclclr•1s: P.O. Box 1560, 92626 OtMr Offl<n , .... , ... tn•> M2-4J2t . c1 .. ,1fll• "'"'1ftl .. '42·••1• Cocit•iO"I• lt11, Of"•* C1J1t Pullill1"!11f Comi>inr. Ito MWI ttor1el. llll11tr1ri..,,, «1Uorllt "'111tr or 1C1YtMIM-'I ,_,.1111 '"'' bo 1~111'ed11¢1!11 w!triout spoc; .. I per-,,,rw.liri 11 C*PT'itlll ......... ' • kitor.d <llH JIOlill ..... Ill If Ntwl*'f lt!KftlM Incl Celt• Mn•~ C.llfol"lllo. 11.*M:rlpl 1t1 ~•rTW U.U INll;tlt!lp: W ll'ltll U .1J '"°"llllrl f\\lp11rr OC1t1Mllofll. S:.2S n'IOftlN'f, ' Disordert spread to other parts of Turkey and anti-American and an· tigovernment demonstrations flared in other parts of Ankara. Informed sources said the right·wing, pr o ·Am e r i c a n government of Premier S u l e y m a n Demirel might have to impale martial Jaw. A group calling ltseU the "Turkish Peoples Liberation Army, .. a leftist ex· tremist group, kidnaped the f o u r American radar technicians Thursday and said they would be executed if a ransom of $400,000 was not paid. They moved up the execution date to '6 a.m. Saturday (11 p.m. EST Friday). President Nixon, speaking Thursday night at-his televised news conference in W aahlngton, was asked if be thought Turkey should negotiate for release of the alrmen. He said he would not make that .suggestion and that following previous similar cases the United States would leave It up to Turkey whether to negotiate, having in mind their own internal circumstances. The four Americans were identified as Airman lC Richard Caraszi of Stam· ford, Conn.; Airman IC Larry J. Heavner of Denver, Colo., whose parenls live in Maysville, W.Va.; Airman lC James M. Ghol$lon of Ale.undria, Va., and SI· Sgt. Jimmie J. Sexton of San Angelo, Tex. F rom Page 1 HARTELIUS . • • firmly stated in her soft Southern drawl: 11 After all that man has done to me and it's a lot I still love him." Hartelius, who had been watching her closely, looked down at the counsel table on hearing that statement. Mrs. Vaughn claims that Harlelius perJUiided her to seek hospital treatment she didn't really need to keep her away from various court hearings into the arson and bribery charges. And she states she has been threatened with death if she testifies against the physi· cian who shared her home for more than three years. She said Thursday that she finally decided to ~ll ''the whole truth" when Judge Byron K. McMillan took her into his chambets to queStion her on the threats she had received. What Mrs. Vaughn told Judge McMillan led the jurist to cancel Hartelius• bail and put the physician in Orange County Jail. Judge McMillan has refused to divulge Mrs. Vaughn's statements to him. Judge Judge restored the doctor's bail before the current trial started following Kurilich's protest that he could not ade- quate ly represent the physician i! he v.·ere held In custody. Fonner Attorney Feels Atki ns Should Not Die LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A former defense lawyer in the Tate-La Bianca murder case testified today that he felt defendant Susan Alkins should not be sentenced to death. (See related story, Page 4). Richa rd Caballero, Miss Atkins' atlor· ney, said she w~s promised by the dis· trict attorney's office lhat she would not be subject to the death penalty if she told the truth before the county grand jury. Caballero said she did tell the jury ilie truth even though later filing an affidavit stating she lied. The jury returned murder indictmenl! against Miss Atkins. Charles Manson, Leslie Van Houten and Pa,tricia Kren· wlnket; all of whom Were later found guilty of murder in the killing of five persons at the home nf actress Sharon Tate·and·1he slaying or grocer Leno I.A· Bianca fDd his wife in August of 1989. Caballero said he thought Miss Atkins "substantially complied" with terms of the agreement with prosecutors. . The attorney was the 24th defense wit· ness called in the penalty phase of the trlal which began nine month! ago. 2 Men Electr ocuted HESPER.IA (UPI) -Two men were electrOcuU!:d Thursday "'hen a drill shaft they were near touched an overhead power line. Killed were Everett Hart, 78, Adelanto, and Ralph J. ~Roeder, 19, Hesperia, an employe of the company using tbe drill to clear out a well at the Buckhorn F~h Hatchery. I· There waa no indication of the number of Communist troops in the Sepone region <Jr whether the Reds haci abandoned the junction on French colonial route 9, the axis of Qie South Vietnamese drive into Laos. But heavy fighUng was reported elsewhere in Laos. Some military observers had predicted the Communists wou1d put up their heaviest fighting of the campaign to save Sepone, a road and supply junction where mountain passes from North Viet· nam enter Laos. The South Vietnamese said they had killed 821 Communists in fighting between 6 a.m. Wednesday and 6 p.m. Thursday and lost 36 dead and 248 wound· ed. Jn heavy fighting today and Thursday night the South Vietnamese said they killed 80 more to put the toll at 901 North Vietnamese dead, with 44 South Vietnamese killed and 261 wounded. The U.S. Command reported the loss of six more American helicopters to Communist groundfire, five in Laos and one ln Quang Tri Province across the border, with a loss 1Jf one crewman killed, one wounded and four missing. According to command figures , 48 U.S. choppers have been destroyed in the campaign with a loss of 40 dead, ~6 wounded and 28 men listed as missing . Unofficial reports from the front have told of dozens 1Jf helicopters badly damaged in the operation. The U.S.· Command also disclosed that 10 helicopters were shot down Wednesday instead 1Jf the seven 1Jriglnally reported -the greatest single day loss since the Laos incursion began. Hanoi Claims Marines Prowl Off Her Coast TOKYO (AP) -A Hanoi broadc8't said Saturd8y four U.S. landing ships with 1,500 Marines aboard had ap- proached close to the North Vietnamese coast in the southern panhandle "ready for action." The Vietnam News Agency said "all the while ships 1Jf the 7th Fleet kept cruising the Tonkin Gulf. Fourteen to 17 t1uch ships pre spotted regularly there. in addition the United States also dis· patched four landing ships with helicop.. ten, armor and 1,500 U.S. Marines to the nearness of the coast of Ha Tinh, ready for action." Ha Tinh lies about 110 miles north of the demilitarized zone. \'NA said the Hanoi charge was con- tained in a communique issued Thurs· day by the North Vietnam "Comn:iisslon for investigation of U.S. impenallsts' war crimes" allegedly committed in both zones of Vietnam in February. The statement charged "three com- mando ships assaulted a fishing fleet, killing two fishermen. wounding four others" on Feb. 10 in North Vietnamese coastal waters.'' Firms Indicted For Elaborate Report on Smut WASHINGTON (UPI) -Three com· panies and four of their officers were indicted today for mailng ao expensive, unauthorized artd elaborately illustrated version of the report of the White House Commission on 0 b s c en it y and Pornography. Included are full-color photos of natu· rat cand unnatural sex acts described by the government as obscene. Attorney General John N. Mitchell an- nounced separate indictments were returned by fede ral grand juries In San Diego and Dallas. Mitchell stressed that the Justice OepartmenVi actions in ~nr tbe tn. dictments werr not related to the pornography commis!ion or i.ts findings. which President Nixon authorized rtle.a,s. ed without comm'tnr.-· ~ · · '" ~ · Tbe offlclaJ commission report, running 656 pages, was issued last November. tt ls available from the government pr(n.. ting office at $!.SO a copy. It simply contains textual matter without pictures. A 352-pqe unauthorized venion sells for $12.50 a copy. lt Is a large book wlth a red, white and blue cover emblazoned with a large gold eagle. The official report carries the title: 1'Rtport of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography." The unauthorized version is tiUed : "The Illustrated Presldenti11t Report of the C.Ommission on Obscenity and Porno1raphy." The Indictments wm· based on federal la\\·s prohibiting mailing of obscene materials -not en publlcaUon of the book ii.self. ' . ~ ... ~ DAIL'( PILOT P"oro b1 IUch•r~ Kmltr ATTE NDANT (LEFT) TAK ES PULSE WHILE RUSHING SHOOTING VICTIM TO AMBULAN CE In Costa Mesa, John Golden of Phoen ix T1kts Bullet in Chest; He'll Live Firehouse May Go Up For Auction F ro111 Page 1 ' A county.state lawsuit that may lead to the sale by auction of the controversial Firehouse Bar and the Costa Mesa tavern's contents will be debated March 23 in Orange County Superior Court. District altomey Cecil Hicks filed the action for himself and the state Thursday with the argument that tavern owner Raymond Rohm bas permitted frequent violations of the state's Red J..ight Abate- ment Jaw. Rohm, 26. of Costa Mesa, already faces Superior Court trial June 7 on charges of conspiring to present lewd and obscene entertainment. Dancer Cynthia Louise Orey, 23, or Tustin, faces the same charges and the same trial date. Mrs. Drey's husband, Norman Weis Drey, is one of four defendants named in the Hicks' lawsuit . He is also a Firehouse employe. Hicks' demand for a prelinlnary in· junction against Ute tavern will be debated by both sides before Judge Robert Banyard. He will be told that more than 20 of the tavern's femal.: entertainers have been booked in recent months for alleged lewd and obscene. conduct More than 100 pages of testimony by police officers and investigators are attached to tbe Hicks lawsuit. The Costa Mesa City Council this week unanimously decided to revoke the ta vern 's business license in view Of rre· quent police action agains t the bar. Hicks bas taken similar action to suc· cessfully end the operation of two Santa Ana bars charged with providing lewd entertainment. Both bars and their con- tents were disposed of at a sheriff's auction. Roofing Firm Sued For Smog Violation OAKLAND (UPI) -A roofing com· pany goes into Superior Court to reply to a smog board request that it be shut and fined. The Bay Area Air Pollution Control Board contends the Lloyd A. Fry Com· pany has been cited more than 200 times in seven years as a major air polluter and should be fined $160,000. LOOK FOR THE UNUSUAL FromHenredon's Mel& SHOWDOWN .. before told a reporter the semi·bumorous rampage of a monkey Wednesday was his wildest case since 1956, when he joined -kept talking. His throat was dry. Topics ranged from name and age to Weaver's family and the fact they and others could be hurt iI he continued to hold out. I ""'·1191 The suspect cried back he had a right to protect his home. Maneuvering outside the apartment - its second floor windows ominously Curr tained -Detective Sgt. Jack Calnon prepared to fire a teargas shell. Downstairs, Lt. Harold Fischer had slipped into the triplex himself ilnd was waiting for the SOWld of Calnon's shotgun. "I was going up the stairs and try to lob one in before he could duck into a little bathroom. I know the layout. My father owns a couple of them,·• he explained. "Yo u have to hit them hard and fast with gas, so it saturates the room ,'' he added. Weaver, however, had heard the talk of teargas. Dropping his gun -one of six loaded , cocked and lined up for siege -he came downstairs 'vith his hands up and the long process of unraveling details lay ahead. Weaver was taken in for questioning, while police confiscated about a dQze!l high.powered weapons and interrogated seven witnesses directly involved. The pistol·whipping victim, known only as Carmen, about 2{) to 25 years old, had vanished and is still sought. "We're not eiacU y certain wha t was Involved,'' Lt. Fischer said today. Witnesses agreed an argument OC· curred involving Golden, who at· casionally visits his parents in the Har· bor Area, and his acquaintance of sev- eral montlls. Threats of a fistfight brought the pair outside, after which they re~ntered the residence and the shot was heard moments later. Golden ran to an apartment, burst through the door and collapsed, rasping on his own blood. • Police siid today that while some curious neighbors complied with orders to disperse. others jeered and heckled, creating a groteque, circus·like al· mosphere to the crisis. One said if the barricaded suspect chose to open up on officers and the throng, it could have been a mass murder. He likened the situation to that or A gnietfulcornmode in Louis XV tty1e. M.agni6ccntly ~ cuved from oolid cherry,;, it )6K inchea wid~i/ >7.inch.. )iigh,.and could well be 1bu~guit1 · ' for any fioc room. Comt RC the tntirt Polio 1ocoll tion, fcx >""' art turt to find thot -aquioi1a p"" ' )'OUr heme~ - Charles Whitman, who slew a score of people from a tower on the University of Texas campus before being killed himseU. "lt was a heavy scene ," he remarked.· From P agel RALLY .•. ifornia Highway Patrol officers are still investigating. A cir carryiag the teenagers went oat of control shortly before midnight, CQl• liding with Fire Department ·Battalion Chief Ron Coleman's emergency squad1 · car en route to a fatal fire. Chief Coleman is listed in good condl· tion at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, following surgery on two broken legs. "We understand the situation," said rally spokesman Mike Johnson, 17, re· garding the right-0f·way problems and the emergency call crash a week ago. He said students intend to follow through by installing individual warning reminders along the roadway. "Fix the street. fix the street.'' some chanted, as a Costa Mesa municipal work crew pulled over with parked J» lice cars shortly before 8 a.m. classes began. Only they proceeded on, to sweep up ashes and debris of bumt-0ut flares from last week's tragedy. Ugly, swerving skidmarks remain, a longer-lasling reminder. Winds to Slo w Over W ee k end; Around County Gusty winds expected tonight will dimi nish by Saturday night, the National Weather Service predicted today . Small craft warnings along the Orange Coast remained in force today due to gusts from 15 to 30 knots. Warnings "'ill probably be lowered late Saturday. Winds along the coast will shift to come from the north tonight at from 10 to 23 knots before tapering off. Highs tomorrow will be near 63 after lows tonight of 42. Patchy clouds are expected to continue although it will be generally sunny. .. .. DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXEC -HER ITAGE 7td11111 " NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WHtcl lff Dr. 642·2050 O>EN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Profou lonal Interior LAGUNA BEACH O.tlgnon Avollab!o-AID-flSID 1 345 North Co11t Hwy, 494·6lll OP EN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 .... , ......... "' -c-. .... ,,., ~ --· ..... ,, ' I ~ I I I I DAILY PO..OT EDITORIAL PAGE The East Side Study Interest and concern are a:rowlng In certain qu1r~ ters over the lmpllaUona and purpose of Costa Mesa's East Side Study Report. Like some issues that co1ne down tbe pike-Ne\\" port Boulevard in this case-things mia:ht eet out or hand if perspective is lost in emotion. Organizing as a potential combat force. busineS!\'. and residential property O\vners in the 260·acre area are also collecting funds for war if it comes to that. IL could be they're more worried than they need be . On Tuesday, councilmen and planning commission nlembers will vie\V the area -bounded by Newport BouleYard, Orange Avenue. East 19th Street an d '-fesa DriYe -on a fact-finding and inspection tour. Most of them already know the area well and some. like Commissioner H. J. "Jimmie" Wood, helped build it. On Thursday, the ne'v East Sid; Propefty Owners Association wilJ meet with them to swap ideas and con· cepts about the whole package. This type of exchange is vital to good ~overnment at an y level, particularly in city organization, to en· courage understanding and public desire. The property owners, as a body, :seem to be against the East Side Study Report. which projects multiple high and low density residentiaJ zoning. "We don't v.1ant it," says Chairman Bill Hoffman. ov.•ner of a rental business on Newport Boult:;vard. )·et so1ne observers are mystified because of the non-binding. guideline-only nature and quality of the document dating back two years in preparation. For example: -It rezones nothing in this older section of Costa ?itesa, primarily comprised or sin~:e family homes and some still-vacant parcels. -It shut.! dou•n on commercial enterprises along the strip or antique shops. beer bars, motels, saunas, gar· ages. lau ndromats, service stations, liquor stores, bar· bershop-gunsmith-book binderies and other firm s. -It is merely a projected vision or how new df!· velopment within the boundaries of an old. chaneing sector probably should eventually con1e. ba sed on cur· rent trends. -It u·ould !\till require customary public hearings before planning commissio n and city council to change any individual property's zone if requested. -It is merely a method of guiding the decision· n1akers -one aspect of a planner's job -and they are bound by elertive office to listen first to public \Yishes. \Ve haYf. in the current situation, ill the elements of a good exercise in exemplary community &!!airs, in· Yolving citizens and their elected leaders. We also have among the property oy.•ners affected, a councilman capable of exerting more influence and Y.1ith more channels of public expression than the rest. \Ve also have a year to go before the next council election, y.•hen he is likely to seek a new term in office. representing all of Costa Mesa. \\1e hope the campaign isn't starting this early. We also hope that the city planning staff and plan· ning commission explain clearly its intentions. And that the property owners in the area are willing to listen- '"ithout assuming that city hall is out to depreciate therr inYestments. • ' . c Origins of So11'te Words May Surprise Dear Gloomy Gus: Olde•• People Should Tell Bow They Feel ~nd Why \\1e haYen't had a v.·ord-quiz for quite awhile and the mail is running heaYi\y in favor or another. Today we'll deal with the origins of some common words, 1,1·hich may surprise you : I. Why is a soldier called a "io.ldier .'' Rnd why is the Joy;esl rank 1n the Army called •·priYate" when they haYe Jess 0privacy than anyone'? . '.!. \\'hy .are the solemn ceremonies of installing a Presi. dent in office calle d an "inauguration,'' :ind \\'hat has it got to do with birds? :J. Ho\v did the g a 111 e of "domi· nor~·· i.;et its name. and \\•hat connec- t ion does it have 1.rith prayers? 4. The ··acme" of something ls now its highest pitch of perfection; but nrig 1nal!y ii wa.~ part of what sort o( medical diagnosis? S. SPEA KI NG OF' medicine. wh;it dread disease is named after a character in a 16th rentury Latin poem, which bears the title of the disease? 6. \Vhat did a ··broker'' originally break., 7. 1-1011· coold the play1,1·rights or ancient Greece have been c a 1 1 e d ··athletes." 1.~1hen they had nothing at all lo do 111th sports'.' 11. Speaking of pla~·s. 1,1·hat 1,1·ere the r;irlies! ··mclodram;is··., !!. \\'hat does a "thrill"' ha ve to do 1\1lh our nos1rils:' 10. \\lhy was ··prcsl1ge·• at First nol 11 c;ompltrnent:iry word? ANS"'ERS: 1. ··Soldier" comes irom the Latin. meaning "a gold c:oin," for untll modern ~tisery Is 1,1·atching those people \lo'ho demon.!Ltrate food choppers in lhe alores throw away all that good food. ~'hy can't It go lO families that need it? -\V. J. N. fJll1 ... !Wt• '9fl•tt , .. ,.,.. ~ltw.. <Ml .. ettl&tlly ,,,.M 91 I... ......,.,.... $en- '""' ,.i -ff Iii G-t 01" OIU• rll•t. times most soldiers were p a I d mercenariu ; 1 "private" is a man ''depriYed" or rank and drawn from the depriYed level of the community. 2. "Inauguration '' comes from the ancient Roman "augurs'' \l'ho studi ed the nlghll and habits of birds and predicted for new rulers ~·hat the future held in store for them. t "DOMINOES", in vcnled by 11,1·0 French monks, was called so because the \\'inner or each game signiried !lo by reciting "Di:iit Dominus, Domino Meo," the first line or the Vesper serYlce. 4. Early doctors diYided diseases •Into four periocl.!L : arcbe, the beginning : anot1sl5, the increa1e : acme , the state of utmost Yiolence : and paracme. the decline. S. "Syphili!" was the name or a shepht!:rd in the title of a 18th Century poem by Fracastciro. and the first sufferer of the disease named after him. S. THE FIRST "brokers" broke, or broached, '4'ine casks; gradually the name 1,1·as applied to ma!'riage-brokers, pa"' n ·b ro ker 1 and eventually stockbroker~. 7. "Athlete•'' 1,1·ere anyone 1,1·ho "competed for a prize." 8. ''Melodramas'' \11ere not over I y scn!imental but simpl y plays \l'l1h mus ic '·melody." 9. "Thrill" meant "to pierl·e :" the "nosthril," or nostril, is the ho!t! "pierced" through the nose. 1 o. •·Pre.!Lli le'' wa! applied lo nl!ll!ich1ns and juggler11 who deceived and deluded people. Restore the Incentives At some date, distant In the future, hun1:tn clcmands on the earlh"s stored-up resources, such t1s petroleum and natural gas , 1,1·ill inevili'.lbly outstr ip the supply. A lot of people think the day of na~ural resource shortagei has already arrived, In truth. there are shorl.ages or threaten· rd shortnges of petroleum and naturul c<1s, hut they hn\'e been contrived by thr. arbltrnrv 3Clions or legislt1li\'t: and rri.:ulotorv bodies. rather than by natur~\I :i1lrilion . ·Such is the concl usion to be <lniwn frorn thr f\ndin,:ts of 1:\5 geologisl!I "'ho reported !() lhe National P$troleum_ t ·oun<'il on lhc '·future Petroleun1 Provinces of the United Stall's .. , ." TllE GEOLoGISTS' report Is .a rart· filled. ISO.page document. Among other 1hinJt~. It ~11~·s that if recovery of oil 11nd Jtll.~ frflm knO"'n rt!'!erves can be stepped· uri from the present 32 perce:nl to 60 percent lhe United Slates would havt 1n ullimRt~ petroleum potentlal of 432 billion bl!rrels or oil. l..S43 trtllion cubic fttt of £•S, and 49 billion b3rrel1 of natural a•s liquida. Present annual domestic pr()o duction is now about 3.2 bllllon barrels of oil and 20 trllllon cubic feet or gas. The report further e~Umate11 lhlll !'15 pcrtf'nt of the discoverable oil an<l 66 ~ri.:1:1 1t u( the discoverable ga~ re1naln lo be round. It breaks lilt U.S. inlo 11 region~. None of these regions. in<:ludh1g Al;u1k11. l111s OOen adequ1tely explored. l'fPENDING 11hortages . parlicularly of siatural 1as. have been foreseen by petroleum lndwtry spokesm~& for many years. And the solut ion, a11 they ha ve lonR pointed out, lies In the restoration er in- centives by our lawmakers and regul•· tors lhal will encourage the risky busi. nes.<i of carrying on the .earch ror na. lute's Y11t hidden reser ve, of oil and natural 1a..s. Jadustrla! New1 Revk• Dear Geor~e : 811 Geor1e --------• 1'm not shy. Whi t can l da 1bout 1 don't like lo dance. Gi rls thlnk I'm shy._..Js 1 result. They try to bol"'Jtt'I'-.; my confidence. They ail out In dark parked cars with me whlle olher (U.YS are dancln.i. ' •• this? CASPAR Dear C11p~ • You can copyrl!hl that 11y1te.m and sell a book on I, !or openers. Let Young People Kno·w They Care To the Editor: In your guest edito rial. "Attitude \\iin! the Job." tDA FLY PILOT, Feb. 251 yn u printed a letter supplied by the Succes!I Motiva tion Institute of \\1aCo, Texas, and 1,1·hich you said had been written by an employer to a young man he had rejected !or a job. He wanted lo tell the boy V.'hy he had hired another teenager instead, one "'ho v.·ore polished shoes and a necktie, and "·ho had made the effort to find out v.•hat the company made. He hired the boy because of his attitude: He 1,1•anled the job badly enough to ·~·ant to impress his prospective employer. TllE LEITER WRITER 1,1·enl on lo tell the unemployed teenager that many employers 1,1·ere not "with" a lot cf things. and some of lheir idea~ seemed antiquated. but if he "'anted their pay checks, he had better tune them in. Perhaps if more older people llJOk !he time to talk to young people . lo tell them how they feel and why, and to let I.hem know that they care ,. \l'e might be able to narrow the generation gap a little. CHANCES ARE good that the you'lg man who got this letter made a much better impression on his next job in· terview. I plan to saYe the article ror my own children. because I want them lo koow that some people do care. FREDITll LA :JB .1'g11i11st SS1' To the Editor: You and I are the in tended lart:eL, of a $351.l.OOO piece of SST public relation!': propaganda. Full pagt' t1ds will urge you to support a project which 'rill 11) contrihu1 e to air nnd no ise pu llutlon; 12) subjet·t us lo dan1aJ:{ing sonic boom~; !ll cause st ratosphere conta1ni1u1tinn dcstinNl ro play haroc with our weather ; 141 expose passengers and crew to rad1 a• tion from so lar llRres. and l~J inrrease !he drpletion rate of our ~·orld oil reserves. The Concorde. lhe Angla.French "SST'' C"<innot be operated economically, ac· cording lO a Time of London reporter. '1'1hy should billions of our ta1 dollar., RO into such a damagi ng project? Do you ~·ant your congressman to !IUppnrt it? EVELYN GA Yl\tAN 1'11rif!J ll1 e Air To thr. Editor: The thought camr to me thal r h11ve not seen anylhing in your riaper about c·lc:.1ning the air, I mean purify actually, l i;upposc. Let's get on the bal l, if possible. ;ind i,:ct the public thinking al.lout inslstinJ.: th<it every contract tha t Is let. to a cont ractor, to butld a houst', schbol, public bullding. faelory or hospillil , etc., be equipped with a built ill air purilicat. Ion system of some certified type, possibly a lype that has yet to be designed and perfected. GRA~iE:O, SO~lt progress is being made to cut dov.·n on bad air, though 1,1·e .are revolYing In a polluled al· mosphere of lhe world's making, ~Germany and Italy have worse than California ) bul praRress ii slow! While we wait for Ule e1tpertl In the various fields to come up w!Ul workable JO!utlons lo rid _us of some of the bad air outside, let's get on wllh cleanln& up the air wt haYe Inside. I noticed a hotpltal window OPfn to Ille out~f-doofs recently and t~U1l1t that surti)'. Jn a hospital, we should sef' that patients wert nol mAde to brcalbc.i.he...oul.tldc conlamJnttted sir. -. .. Mail.box ' ' .... l.citers from readers are welco1ne. Normally writer! 1hould convey th4'!ir 1ne3soges in 300 words or Les!. The right !o condense letter! to fit space or eliminate libet is reserved. All let.- ler.t must include sian«tttte and mail· ing address , bttt name! may be wit1t· h.el d on request if sufficitnt reason i.~ apparent. PoeltJI will not be pub· Lish ed. ' IF ALL THE houses ;ind other buildings in Los Angeles were no1,1· equip- ped with air systems that pumped into a purifier, and on into the houses and buildings, lhe air from outside a1· mosphcre. imagine the great amount of im purities 1,1•e would be taking out of the air and exh11usting a much im· proved air back outside to further redu ce the total polluti on. Such purifiers could \\'Ork with the pre sen t air conditioning. used to heat and cool and filter, \\'hich are al present in U!le"s.e_asonally. __ People ~stay indoors 1,1•ith doors and willdows closed when the smog was bad and still enjoy outside on smog-lree days. R. W. HEARD llmwr 10 Red Crou To lhe Editor: Disneyland is to bc highly commended for the honors they bestow on their com munity "'ith their annual Community Service Awards. IL is heart1,1·arming to see an enterpri~e such as' Disneyland, which receives much 11·om lhe community, return to the com· munity their appreciation In such an outstanding manner. \\1e at . the American Red Cross wer e grca!ly moYed by the Disneyland com· miltee choice as top recipient. WE WILL CONTINUE lo do our very best in giving to our community the: · serYice for which this honor was bestow· ed. We thank Disneyland and the people or Orange County for thls most-coYeted honnr. Please come visit your new Red Cross Cen ter at 601 N. Golden Circle D~. in Santa Ana. ~1RS. LOUIS M. MacMILLAN Chairmen of Volunteers Orange County Cl!•pter American National Red Cross Negative Selling To the Editor : For the last six month5 I haYe been reading more and more that the various school districts must haYe additional reYenue in order to provide the serYices that are essential for the proper educa· lion or our childr en. Representatives of the school board are very quick lo state what will happen If the increases are not approved bf the people. That is known as negatlYe salesmanship, which has never In the history of this country been .!Luccessful. THt: WAY TO gel people to increase their own t;ues, particularly in the~ times. i.! by a positive sales .approach. This is accomplished by showing EX· ACTL Y what the present income is, and EXACTLY WHERE it goes, the additional money that is required . and EXACTLY WHERE it will go. If the people are conYinccd that the school board is honest, llincere, and that •heir reqursls are legiti n1ate. a lax inc:re:.ise will be passed by an OYerv,,helming ffid· jority. THE SCARE tactics that they are presently employing are sure to continue defeat or the required tax increases. May be that is a good reason why the aboYe approach is not used. It may be that the school board system ill as fouled up as the welfare system and pollllcs in general. U that be the case. then the people should know this Jo they can· take the necessary steps Juch that the economics of the schoo1 system is read ily understandable to the average layman. FRANK MOHME Hll, Run \llcl.1111-a Cat To the Editor : It happened Sunda y. t,eb. 18. A cat. hurl arKI helpless, in the middle of the road -what do you do?? While riding home that evening, my roommate and I saw a cat rwining about in the middle of the slreet -we thought al· tempting to cross it. Well, he sto pped right in front of my car and didn 't moYe I I put out my hand to haYe the cars stop but several drove: right by) he \\'as frightened and as I looked al him I thought his head may havr been serYed. I got out or the car and went to !he Hllle animal lpeo plc honked eYen though they had seen me gel out of the car). The cat was badly hurt, iip. parentl y the victi m of a hit •nd run, so 1 "'ra pped hlm up in my coat. A boy st opped to help me carry him to the sidewalk. A F'EW Mll\'UTES later the pollc:t came lon e apartment dweJler had call· ed J. \Ve got a blanket from lhe same pt0ple whe had called the police ind then the police took the cat to the animal hospital. Finis. In writing this letter, I am not trying to jazz it up or make it sound dramatic in any 1,1·ay. This is juiil how it hAppened. I feel so sick and sad that a person \l'OUld hit and run. others would still drive by, even honking while they had seen me getting out of the car, .and only one driYrr offered to help out (this Is out of about JO). Can you be lieY t it?? There ls something to be learned from all or this: 1. Keep animals in or leashed. 2. Please. H you hit an anlmal. DON'T hit and run . 3. Don't be afraid to gel involved. KARYN RINGER Hardest Criminals to Reform Ju1nping to conclusions : The harde!t criminals to reform aren't murd er e r1 or salecrackers but "paperhangcr5"-those who make a career of passing bt1d chel·ks. Almo~l a~ soon as they are released from prison, they often borrow a pen and start wrtlinr !hei r way back behind the bar5 again. An ol<l-tlmer i5 a guy who can remember when the ambition or eYery r1llto11d man )n Amt°rlca 1ttmed to be to own a 110lld gold ring set with a big red ruby. .. ?-~ ' ;t!_.A \'~·· . ./ Appearance• are sometlmts deceiY· Ing, bu t not in the . c1se of any woman over 40 who throws away her ma1lBkirt in fa vor or wearing the new 1tyle "hot pan~·· In public. Any smart secretary soon leams that the be11l way to kttp 1 temperamental boss from raising cane is to llUg1r him up. l\IOST OCCUPA1'10~S havt areas of moral blindness which enable their n\t:mber! to do 1 wrong thing without feeling bad about It . The usual excuse i.~. "If I don 't lhe other feJJow w\11 -..w why should I ht. a sucker?" ti Is thl~ 1tUlude ¥o"hlch permill mal'IY poMcemen to accept free meals and smalT bribes for OYerlooklng minor law violations. The custom 11 so wtde!Jpread that 1111ong cops Ii Is tradilionAlly referred to as ''fair loot" or "honest graft." The j9)11 or modern ofClcei ur~ pall on some gfrl11 wl\en -they · d scv\ier lt isn't nearly u,, i:nuch tun Jeamlng to pfogram a computer as It Is to program a husband. An optimist IJ1 11 fellow who tries to borrow money from the 1uy it the next desk on 1 Monday. \~HEN YOU EAT in 1 home ln which 1 dish of toothpicks Is prominently placed on the dining room t1blt, you know one thin& about lhe mister of the house : he may not be the neighborhood fashlonplate-bul at least he's not hmpecked. ·it 11 to me time now since \\'C 've read of a chorus &lrl running off and marrylnR 1 mllllonalre dcspile the stodgy prOtf'sls of his socially prominent parents. T~ legend that chorus girls usually \vea- rich men Is one of the olde~t myth!! in ~how bus\ne!s. Actually, thry usually wind up hitched to 1 1lagehand, 1 band musicia n, or lhe "boy ne:~l door."' t f the boy next door turn5 out to bt a steady-work ing plumber, of course, they can still Ii Ye in clover. HARELIPPED PEOPLE rerely hum whilr on the job, but they like l.n 11ing in the bathroon1-ju!Jl like everyone else. You 're probably not the executive type II you 're 110 dumb you haYe to pu t your foot In your niouth before discover~ Ing you've got a hole io your shoe. -----iiiiiiilil-- Frid a y, March 5, 1971 The editorial pnoe of the Dai/11 Pilot seek$ to i11fonl4 and stim.- ulatt reader1 b11 presenting thfs newspaper's opinion.s and com· n1entarv on topics of Intere st and significance, bu providit1g a forum for 01t erpresaion tJf 011r renders' opi11io111, a-11d bv pre3e111ing tl1e diuerse vit19" poi1iU of Informed obstrvf1'1 a11cl spok(!PJe:11 on top{u oJ tllf dau. Robert N. Weed, Publisher •• 1 . j I I l I • ' ' ' " ' ' .. • . .. . . . Jtno'tJier liootns QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Nixon Halts One -~· ··;y· .-• • ... Railway Walkout WASHINGTON <U PI) - J>restdent Nixon T h u r s d a y blocked for 60 days a strike acheduled by R a i l w a y Signalmen. but negotiations Nixon Asks $2 Billion Urban Fu1id WASHINGTON (AP) Presidtnt Nixon a s k e d Congrw today to approve a $2 billion rtYenue--sharina: fund for urban developmtnt -one that he sakl would not strap any c,,,1Ttnt efforts such u the model cities program. Nixon, in a special message, also proposed that the federal government set aside an extra $100 million a year lo help states and local governments upgrade their sltiJlg in Jong· range planning, budge t decision·making and t h e coordinalion of c o m p I e x derelopmen t activities i n many fi elds. "Cities would be able to spend their money as they see fit," he said, "provided only that th ey used it for c o m m u n i l y developmt:nl purposes." . . . aimed at preventing a walkout by another union's 150,000 train crew members remained stalled, Contract talks b e t w e e n railroad management and the United Transportation Union broke ofr brleCly early Thurs. day after 15 hours or con- tinuous bargaining, resumed in late afternoon and then rece!sed after three hours un- til Friday monling. Clyde Lane, chief negotiator for the UTU. and chief management negotiator John P. Hiltz agreed there ~.lid been no significant change in the 1 '1!.~~::.!=""-'"'-'::£!::!..=::,o:::::..;:;;:::;:!!::!;!:;~:i.J bargaining situation In the ~ past 24 hours. "Yield? Who has tba.t ll)Uch control!" Assistant Labor Secn!lary --------------------'-I W. J. Usery Jr.. the government's top mediator in the l7·month~ld dispute, said the UTU had nol threatened a strike. and "we feel no action will be taken (by the union) as long as meaningful neeotiations are continuing." He emphasized that the UTU had made no com· mitment to refrain from strik · ing. President Nixon is legally powerless to prevent a strike in the case of the UTU. After a breakfast with UTU President Charles Luna, Usery lold new!lmen he was no more optimistic about a settlement than he was Wednesday, when he said the situation "does llot '®k good.'' Apollo 15 Mission May Be Best Ever CAP E KENNEDY, FI a . (AP) -Astronaut David R. Scott. commander or Apollo IS. says the moon mission next summer "probably will be the greatest scientific ex· ploration ever rarried out by man.'' '"With your help." Scolt lold 1,000 members of the Kennt.dy Space Center launch team, •·we'll bring back en.ough data to keep the scientific com- munity busy for 30 years. The vastly I m p r o v e d scientific returns will be a I m o 1 t • overwhelming." and James Irwin, outlined mission objectivf:s Thursday for the workers, who gathered in the cavernous assembl y building where Apollo JS"s Saturn 5 rocket is being check· ed. Apollo l:i is to be la unched July 26 toward a landing in the mountainous Hadlcy·Apen· nine region of the moon, several hundred miles north of the landing sites of Apollos ll, 12 and 14. Scott said he and Irwin would land from east to we st and would have to "pull our feet up to go over an 11,000- ) 9:30 F"rlday, Marth 5, 1971 DAJLV PILOT $ : • ON THE MALL AT . · FASHION ISLAND POLICE HELICOPTER You'll see the newest, most advanced method of police patrol. Newport Beach's latest fully equipped helicopter will land at lhe north end of lhe moll al9:30 am and be on display through· out the day. The pilo t will be on hand to tell you more about how "Airwalch" helps to prolect your communily, Take-off time is 4:30 pm . The remaini ng $400 b1lhon would be distributed by the Secretary or Housing and Urban pevelopment, largely to rnake c~rtain that no com· munity would rteeive less federal money under n.venue· sharing than under l!xisting programs. President Nixo" art e d Thursday to block a strike scheduled today by the J 1,000. member Brotherhood o r Railway Signalmen . He ordered a filklay cooling off period, contending the nation faced the loss of essential transportation service. foot tnountain just west of Displayed by the City of Newport Beach Police Deport ment the targeted site." ::======================================= Scott and his two crewmates, Al£red M. Worden Nixon would get the $2 bill ion by combining funds now .--------------------. ava ilable under separate pro· grams for urban renewal, model cities, water and sewer gran~. aP1d J oans ~or. the rehabilitation of old buddings. 132 Killed In Detroit Gunfire Pot Cuts Sex Dulls Urge, Doctor Suys RE NO, Nev. (UPI) -J\olarijuana can make a 35--year· old man 70 years old sexually, contends the president-elect or the American Medical Association. Dr. Wesley Hall said a cootinuing AMA study leaves "very little doubt'' that marijuana smoking dulls the sex urge both in men and women and causes birth defects when used by women late m pregnancy. Hall , who said he has been besieged with telephone DETR• OIT (AP) _ In the calls since a Monday speech on marijuana's HI effects, stuck by his earlier slatcmenls Thursday. first 6S days of t1m year• "With increased use lhere is a lack of sex drive," he a record 132 persons were said. "It results in a man who n1ay be 35 chronically, be-- slain in this city -most of ing age. 65 or 70 in respect to his sex drive . them by gunfire at the hands "Women also are affected in that they do not desire or friends or family members, sex as much as they would under normal circumstances, rather than in street crimes. and there is enough evidence now to substantiate it." By police estimate . Hall, a Reno doctor who will beco me AMA president Octroiters possess as many In June. said a , continuing study by the AMA committee as half a million handguns, on Alcohol and Drug Dependence gives strong support to the bulk of them illegally. his Cooclusions. "I don 't think the average But he conceded a perfectly controlled scientific study person realizes how im· of marijuana's effects hasn't been made and that it will mediate murder really is," take "three, five or even 10 years'" lO gather the informa· Police Commissioner John tion. Nichols said at a news con· "At least one oul of IG children born to mothers who feren~ Thunday. have used marijuana within three months of giving birth Amendment Meet Asked WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ten sta te legislatures have voled to ask Congress to ~all a coostitulional convention to write an amend ment guaran teeing tht states a share of federal income tax collections. 10:00 RADIO CONTROLLED FL YING An exciting demonstration of radio controlled aircraft feat~r ing lhe la test in conlrol equipment. Plan es laxi lo posilion for toke-off, become a irbourne and land-while the pilot slands on the ground! Th ese models fly from 60 to 90 mph while they perform a series of aerobatic maneuvers. Flyin g demonstro· lions will take place in the .parkin g lot adjacent lhe police helicopler, north end of the mall. The council included New Oemonslrotion by Orbit Electronics, Santo Ano, Co lifo1nfo Hampshire on the llst of states ~======================================= having taken final action, but P since the New Hampshire Senate has not voled on the proposal, the lis t of states al'tually numbers 10, not IL SALE WATER LILIES P•cific Goldfi1h F•rm1 1'4842 Edw•rds St . Off ftM llR oi.,. ~-•Y •I llkllll• Wnt 11111 l11H. 11:00 MATTEL SKY RIDER CONTEST Kids, 7 to 12 ! Here's your chance lo win FREE plan~s. Martel will sh ow you how lo fly their new Skyriders from 11 to noon. From 12 ,30 lo 2 pm you can compete for prizes for the longest dis· lance, a erob atics and longest fl ight. Lois of prizes. •• don 't miss this! Skyriders will be in the Siege Court·a rea-center of lhe mall. Demonslrotion by Mattel, Inc., Hawthorne, Ca lifornia GLIDER FLIGHT "People seem to be playing will be defective mentally," Hall contended. out their roles in life through By reducing sexual drives. marijuana also can l'ause WESTMINSTER violence. We've had countless a loss or self~nfidcnce, the doctor said. 191•7155 people. wb-0, because of a real,'-,,==================,,,,I~=~~~~~~~~I ; or imagined insult, grabbed 1-= a gun and killed someone. 1 Mork Smith, Nation al Rad io-conlrol led Glider Champion, will pilol his plane from the Stage Court a rea. The croft will soar from lhe lop of the AVCO financial cenler bu ilding as Mark puts it th rough a series of loops, spins and slalls before the 6' glider la nds in Stage Court. Mark says he can land lhe plane in his hand! . t . • • Friends and relatives kill each other.'' HOW ARE YOU PROGRAMMING YOUR LIFE? Computer experts freely admit that what comes out of a computer is only as good as what·1 put into it Jn the first place. Have you t ver stopped to think how mueh your own llfe runs on the same basis~ The kind of thought you put Into your life determines what you 11et out or lt. This is why your thinklni is so Important. Thousands have foun~ th.at controlllna their th lnklna: 11 not • malttr or exercising humtn wiR but understand· ini and using their God· l i'len ri&hU to order, happfn1s1, and a se('ISt of purpose. Hear Nath1niel R. Vlh1t1 of The Chrislian Sci.net Boe1d ol Ltcture1hlp dis· cuts thil su b}tct In 1 free public lectur1 entitled "What Conttoll Your Thou;htl" CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LECTU RE ,.,.~., ......... J , ... SliCOllD ( .. UllCM Of' c1111ur. SC11"tltf Jltt t>Kll M. 'View Ortlt UrtM illl Mif" • -• 12:00 2:00 ALLJlAY (9:30 to s pm) • Demonslrotion by Mork Smith, co urtesy of Model and Croft Show, Anaheim, California WIRE-CONTROLLED FLYING The famous Cox flying team will omaze-~you wilh their ability as they perforn> a series of oerobalics, dog fig his and fancy flying in th is demonstration . This aclivity takes place in Stag e Court. De monslrolion by Cox Mfg., Santo Ano, Ca lifornia AVIATION DISPLAYS Jerry Bird ••••••• , , •• Captain, 1970 U.S. Free Fall Team -Skydiving Exhibit Cox Manufocturing , •,.Wire-controlled model aircrafl and model rockets ~ Orange County Radio Control Club •••• , ••• Model radio-controlled a ircraft competing for $100 in priz es Orbit Electronics •••••• Rad io-conlrolled a ircrafl -- . • l 7 • • • Saddleha~k VOL 6'4, NO. 55, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES Reagatt, Dtae? Dedication Set For Water Plant Dedication rites -quite possibly led by Gov. Ronald Reagan and Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke -for San 'Clemente's new, nonpolluting water reclamation plant wiU be held April 2. Councilmen this week selected the slate af state officials over Rep. John G. &hmilz of Tustin, who would have been available later in the month. City Manager Ken Carr offered the alternative to the council this week after admitting that months of attempts to round up prominent national figures for the dedication had bogged down com. pletely. "There was just no way to get federal and state dignitaries there on the same day," he said. President· Nixon was the most sought- after choice for the dedication, but secur- ing a President for dedications 15 nearly impcssible -even in San Clemente. Ca rr did not specifically name the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, but the two men are expected along the South Coast area on that weekend for another major dedication -that of the new San Onofre State Park. Conceivably, the two officals could swing by San Clemente for dedication of the sanitation plant here as well. The $2.6-million facility eliminates the pollution of outfall sewage dispcsal . '-Instead. new equipment treats waste water in three stages -producing usable tnot to drink) water and a fine, neutral ash (cremated solidsJ. Efflue nt water soon will be sold to the state for use as irrigation for freeway landscaping. The remainder is used on the city golf course or in settling basim to stave off salt water intrusion into underground water supplies. 'Teamsters VP Arrested On Counterfeiting Rap WASffiNGTON CAP) -An in- ternational vice president of t h e Te amsters Union and five other persons were arrested hy Secret Service Agents today after being named in an indictment that charges them with conspiring to counterfeit money and food and postage stamps. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell announced that a sealed indictment had been return- ed against the six men In U.S. District Court in Newa rk. N.J. Thursday. As a part of the alleged conspiracy, the defendants intended to buy and sell about $250,000 in counterfeit money. the indictment said. Named in the indictment was Salvatore Provenzano, inlernational vice president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. The 43-year-old resident of Hackensack, N.Y., is also president of One Bidder Vies For City Land Bids advertising San C\emenle"s first city hall, police and fire department and city yards for sale on the open market have drawn a blank. the Teamsters joint Council No. 73. Also named defendant! were Armand Faugno S6, of Englewood Cliffs. N.J.; Thomas Andretta, 36, of Hasbrouck Heights, N.J.; Stephen Angelo, 39, of Secaucus, N.J.; Wayne Carlton. 43, of North Tampa, Fla.; Jack Friedman , of West Paterson. N.J. Each of the six defendants is charged with conspiring to print counterfeit Federal Reserve notes, postage stamps and Department of Agriculture food coupons. The indictment accuses them of plot- ting to buy and sell approx imately SZMl,000 in counterfeit $50 and SIOO Federal Reserve notes. Federal officials said Provenzano is the brother of Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano. once a top lieutenant of Teamsters leader James R. Hoffa. Anthony Provenzano was released from Federa1 prison in November after serv- ing four years for extorting $8,600 from a transportat ion company president Salvatore Provenzano, Faugno and Andretta were arrested today and held for a bail hearing before a U.S. magistrate. Angelo, Carlton and Fried· man had been arrested previously. Fried- man and Carlton were freed on $50,000 bail each and Angelo on $25,000 bail. . . ' • ' • • • ORANGE COUNTY,.CALlfiORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1971 l . I • a1 s • . . ; ,. I j • Spring Has Sprung Blossoms of spring appeared early at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills Thursday with a 65-pound baby zebra born at 4 a.m. on the 500-acre game preserve. The first zebra born in Orange County, it wu named Irvine after the Irvi ne Ranch . The mother is a four-year-old Grants zebra from Masai Country in Easl Africa. Clemen~;·High _ _, .. Play Held Over ' For Matinee · San Clemente High School's production of "The Sound of Mu sic,'' playing to sellout crowds, .will be presented in a· specia l held-over ' matinee Sunday af-· lernoon in Triton Center. The prOduction ~ heralded by sC~I officials as the most 'su~fUI In the school's · hi"story ·-is &Old o~t for its two scheduled fin3J performances Friday and Saturday nigh;tS. · , · But Director ~ich&rd , Moe said the matinee has beeq added to accommodate . the ove rflow audiences. All tickets to the Sunday performance will be $2.50 and flCl .reservations wUJ· be · taken. Advance purchases · are available al lhe studeQl activties office or at the box ofrice Sunday before the 2:30 p.m. performance. The production marks the first time that a professional sound system and riser seating have been used for a stu~ dent drama project. Perfonnances of the popular mwical by a cast of 60 singers and musicians already has yielded hefty profits despite the $2,000 investment in the sound and seating system . Menns'"Beefed -'.f+p .. . . . ' afet,erias Get ff ambutger, Pizza Chefs In the San Joaquin Eleme ntary ' ~hool ·District, tired of throwi ng away cold, stale broccoli , have decided to replace : it with tacos, hamburgers and pizza. . , 'The · switch in cafeteria menus is part Old County Jail Escapes Death, Will Be Sold The old Orange County J ail, vacant for more than two years, will be for sale soon. according to Stanley Krause, count'y director of Real Property Services. Thought certain to be demolished al one time. the old jail escapes the wrecker's wrath because it i:; just south of the proposed new curving alignment of 7th Street, to become Civic Center Drivt \!{est. of an economy move lo beef up a food services program that conti,nually loses money. "'We 've decided lo limit or remove eiltirely gri lled cheese sandwiches , meatloaf. corn dogs and broccoli," said Miss. Sara Timlin. food services director. ;,.We're going to repfilce them With 11 more frequent menu of hamburgers, ti!cos, piv.a ·and other foods that get . a~ gobd response ·• ·Schools also will be featuring ice cream for the first lime. Most ice cream bart sell for 10 cents and t.ht district makes a profit of 5 cents a bar. · lee cream will be eaten in specific areas to control litter·. from wrappets and sticks. "Ice cream \111 nutritious and I know the response will be great," said Miss Timlin . "I'm also very optimistic about . repeating the · popular menu items in the cafeteria ." She admitted that a wide va riety of menus pleases adults more than it does children who are happy to eat ham- burgers once a week. "We just can't afford to have food that reduces cafeteria participation," she said. But another chunk or city property had a last-minute bidder who probably will end up purchansing the industrial lot . Ban on Firewo1·ks Sales A casualty of the street project is the U.S. National Bank building at 8th and Main Street. The city of Santa Ana has asked that the county put the old jail and another piece of property on Sycamore now occupied by Lhe county parking.. garage. She emphasiz.ed that each meal will still be a balanced, nutritious Type A hot lunch. And it will sti ll sell for 35 cents. Councilmen this week learned that the old city hall and yard complex has had no takers since going up for bid last month. But local realtor Addie Belle Hunt sent a last-minute offer at the city council Trieeting Wednesday for about $30,000 to purchase a lot along Aven~da la Estrella in the city's industrial district. She is the only bidder thus far , and If no others emerge within two weeks of last Wednesday, she will be the new owner. Hinted for Saµ Clemente The days or the traditional July 4 safe-and-sane fireworks sales in San Clemente seem almost over. Councilmen this week froze the usually routine permission to allow firework..s !!!ales in the city to four -killing all chances for more service groups this year to Jaiwch fund-raising fireworks sales, earller this year, however. "With the economic situation being what it Is this year it'1 reuonable that the manufacturers Will be trying harder than ever to stimuJate local groups to seU fireworks. There would be just too many stands," be said. This building will be demolished to make way for the new street and the bank plans to build on the north half of the property and a section of the present 8th Street. The parcel which the bank will purchase boasts 8,000 square feet. Krause has sent out a form "Notice of Availability" to all county departments regari:ling the former jail but it is dc.ubtful that any department will want to use the old 4-story structure built in early 19008. . ..,-· , .. Trustee Robert Dameron .s t a t e d ·Wedne5daY' that he woukl like · to see food prices raised a nickel. Rex Neri.son, Assistant Superintendent for Business Services" has argued that · a· raise in price would cut cafeteria participation. "We feel these two steps -the , lee cream. and the popular eliqiination of unpopular lunches -will reverse the trend and make up our losse!," said Nerison. Since September tht food. services pro- gram has lost approximately $5,IXXI . and has been a sore point with ·the · board el truatees . • .... •. LO-acre Rezone Eleari11g Slated And after agreeing unanimously· to limit the number 9! sel~rs1 counciqnen unofficialfy agreed that after July 4 they would exhume the fireworks matter for a pcssible blanket ban on sales and use of the pyrotech nics in the city A request lo rezone 10 acres of land limits: once earmarked for a medical center If the ban is enacted, Jhe city would in San Clemente will come up for a be the third Orange Coast municipality Vets Get Okay for Park city council public hearing March 17. lo ban tht sale of the items. Tile app\ic11tion -turned down by Newport Beach bans 11ale. but 8 3-2 vote o( planning commissioners authorizes use in some sections. Laguna last week -was set Wednesday for Beach also has a ban in effect. hearing in two weeks. The ban was considered. councilmen Specifically the owners in escrow of said~ because of several fires started I the acreage across from the civic center last Independence Day season by seek garden apartment z.oning to replace fireworks. Several extr•mely graye sltua- the "U nclnssified" rating now-on the tinns arose .as well fmm R,ranb puJled land. • on unsuspecting residents -some elder~ Original :ttining allowing land use as Jy. .-... 1 hospital lapr;ed. Mayor Walter Evans 11aid the ffe!ze · The land has remained graded, but on the number of sellers stemmed from unimproved for lhe past several year• the expected rasb of requem thl11 spring. after Jll&ns to develop • hospital there Several veteran's organiiaUf>ns and withered. • other service groups won permission The South Coast Area Boys Club will have. to look beyond Old Plaza Park in San Clemente for a site to hold a carnival, but the clty'11 VFW (Xllll will be able to use the park Jor Memorial Day services complete with 'gunfire. CitY. Councilmen lhit week agreed that the park -surrounded by ·reti<I..- -W\lUld ·not be' suit.Ible. for the ~th group's major carnival. Thal organiza· lion would have to rind another ·1ite. But Frank Naurtez, commander of VFW POil 71'2. won permission Wed- nesday night for the .Memorial day • observance from 9 a.m. to noon. Three · •• • J: rounds of gunfire would be shot In memory or fallen servicemen. The park -Jong an object of C{)ncern bY · neigbborsi 1«0d eou11cllmen -sit! so close> to horrie5 tb!t noise from c11rnjyall and 1~ like ueate.11;1 nullance. • La8& year'• Boys OIU b· carnival was held· tbett' amid cdnlirtuing complaints by neighbors. t · Last year's Boys Cl~b c41'J1.ival was held~the~ amid conlinuh1g complaint. by neighbors. . Councilnieo decided to forbid tilt use or the J)ai'k thi8 year. Tilt • I Fiesta I• Chriltlanlta, con!· ... t plete with parade and weekend carnival, 11till will be conducted at the old ov1J park, flowever. · • · · the ~ of ihe facility alao was denJed recen(ly ·.to . .or: Carl .&tclnute ' for a victory :-\o ,V~nam marCh 1 and .rally. The furore lasted for weeks befOre the firey minister 1ett1td for an alternate locatioo. , . ,.._... J One of the ou"lspoken opponehts to MctnUre 's "patriotic rally;· for fightlna: men was Naureu, who tQld councilmen no out.side groupt should be. allowed ... of lbe facillll' far major catl\ertnga. Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS / Thousands In Drugs Confiscated In a sweep that began at noon fturs- day and lasted until after midntght, Laguna Beach police and state narcotics officers arrested 30 person.r on grand jury lndictment.s for alleged narcotics offenses. The arrests followed a three-month. investigation in tbe Laguna area during which undercover agent! claim to have purchased several thousand dollars worth of drugs from suspects ranging In age from 18 to 50 years. Most of those arrested face charges <1f sale of dangerom drugs including LSD and heroin. The grand jury indictments were hand· ed down on Monday and the arrests were made by three Laguna and five state officers following a Thursday morn- ing briefing in Laguna . The operation was directed by Sgt. Nell Purcell, head of the Laguna Beach Police Department's specia·I enforcement division and agent Jack Leavey of the State Bureau of Narcotic Enforct:menl Most -of the arresta we~e mad~ In the vici nity of Jioajh Coutlllgbway and Cleo Street In LllUJ>.I Beach. known as a gathering place for , ycul.hful lqhalta and a center of harcotica deal. inl In the Art Colony. Before tbe ni;bt wu Offer, _<1fficer1 also had ranged as far afield as San Clemente, Costa Mesa and HawthOme to make individual arre.!lts. AlmO!t all those arreli'ted were "fn. volved" in the use or sale of heroin. Purcell claimed. Most of the "buys" which led up to the grand jury indictments were made In the Cleo St~t area. known to ' narcotics officers as "junkie C{)rner," Purcell said. ~ .. bi recent months, the officer awrted "the ,area has been liter a Uy taken over' with dealing going on quite openly." ' Last week the windshield of Purcell 's car w.as smashed with a board while he was making arrests in the area. On the sa me day officer John Sapo rito was assaulted on the nearby beach and on another occasion an officer's private car was atoned aa he drove through the area, according to Purcell. Doubl,e Slaying Suspect Dead Special to tlle DAIL V PILOT RIVERSIDE -Cecil F. Hunt, the man cha rged with kJJllng hls wife aAd the 1969 president of the Orange County Youns Republicans, died Thur11day' of a small caliber rifle bullet he fired into his head afte r the double killing Monday. He was 31!. He was charged wi th murdering Jame:t W. Nash, 40. of 1601 W. Flora St .• Santa Ana , and M~s. Betty Hunt, 39, at the Hunt home IA suburban Meadowbrook Investi gators said Hunt who suC-: cumbed ~at Rlverside Coo~ty General Hospital, ~ame enraged due to a tri· angle rorn.ance. Oraage Coast It won't get any· higher than 83 degrees, whether yotfre on the coast or driving Inland , Saturday. Gusty winds will prevail under awtny skies. INSWE TODA V Ntuille Marrintr wilt be guest lecturer at the Orange CoU'nty Philharmonic S1'det11'1 Jre~ preview W tdneS'da11. Sec toda11'1 Weekender. INflH • 11' ' Mtvln U-14 C1llfwll~ t , ._..,._I flllltfl • CltMltlllt u, 1 fttfltl'lll Nnn .. ci.,.,,... ""' 0t-t11tt c-" ,, Ctl!lk• " .. "'""'•" 114:1: c'"'~ .u '"""' ''""" • ONlll Nttk.. It SN(!• • 11>11 ~ ,_ Dltwt" 1t lltdr M•rtltti M 1*"'411 hH l Tt"•"'-D 'IMfoft .. , """"" '"' ~ ll WN!lller 4 ,..,. ~ n •-II'•,..... 1i.u M4119"l ' w.,. ...... • .. """"'" lk"" .. 11 _......., "'" ( . . -. -.. ' ' . ' --~ .. ---· ... -...... -.. • . . ' . • -• . • .... -·,.. ~-• • • -. • • . I I I I ·f • % DAILY PILOT SC frld11, MW 5, 1971 Police Harassed Mesan Gives Up After Showdown By ARmUR R. VINS~L Of "'-DlllY r11t1 Sllff Screaming defiance and frantically loading ll1Mi a Costa Mesa man finally aurrendered to quiet poUce coaxing 'I1unday, only seconds before they forc- ed a ahowdown. A aowd of 300 milled around the teDle scene. lgnorlni orders broadcast from a ctrcllng police helicopter to move back. Some -standing exposed to what could have been a mass murder .spree -taunted and heck1ed shotgun-armed officers crouched under cove r. The drama began at 3:20 p.m., with Bid for Music Program Gets City Study A plea for the reinstatement of an tnstrumenlal music program ln the San Joaquin Elementary School Dlltrict was made Wednesday, but with lltlle en· COUJ'ICemct. Mrs. Joanna Ramlm:, representing the Mission Viejo High School M u s I c Boosten, asked the board to consider the music program fO( nett year and added that a questionnaire is being c::lrculated through the di!trict to measw-e inlerut. Trustee Philip Bradfield said the board "ould consider the program during budget study sessions but had eliminated the program two years ago because of more important priorilies. "We have to provide programs that are going to benefit the most children,'' he !Aid. The Boolters' request w a s ac- companied by a written proposal 1pelllng out bow a progrun could be reinstated C>ver a two year period. It would bring music into classrooms cm a regular balls and would help ac- quaint chlldren ln grades four, five and six with beglnnlng theory and rhythm, too.ette aesaiom, recordings, films, and f;OllgJ. These young1ters also would be in- volved In choral perfonnancea and would have the opportunity to aee outside in- e:trumental groups in school or during • lleld lrlp. Seventh and tlghth graders would begin strings instruction and would continue the woodwind, brm and perCUSlton Jn- muctlon the district provides. If time permlu.d qualifled !ntmnedlate school students would participate in an i!l" termediate level of instruction and aa- vanced tralnlng would be available for those who excel. During the second year the Instrument Instruction would be Introduced to fourth, fifth and siJth graders. The music theory Introduced in the first year could r~ch some yt1unger children U time were available. Mro. Ramirez told the board that 111ch a program would not only tnrich the elementary acllool curriculum but also would enhance tlie high school proll'•m by providing trained musicians for band, -· and choir. Board awrman Gratlan Bldart told Mn. Ramirez that tile board will again consider the music program aod will be interested in the results of the qu~ tlonnaire. He added that he could make no promises, however. 'The University Park Parent-Teacher Organization and the C a p I s t r a no Highlands Homeowners' Association both have requuested the reirultatement of the music program. .. a report of a man shot at 3013 Coolidge Ave., and a man with a gun at 3002 Fillmore Ave., <ine block away. Victim John W. Golden 11, 23. of Phoenix, Ariz., is listed in satisfactory condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, with a .32 caliber bullet wound that collapsed one lung. He still sprinted a block, trailing blood, on the one remaining respiratory organ before collapsing. Paul E. Weaver, 30, of the Fillmore Avenue address where the 30-minute con· frontation occurred, is in city jail, booked on charges of assault with intent to commit murder. New charges may be added since some Jtems in Weaver's arsenal -lined up along a wall ready for use -are listed as stolen, according to police. A police helicopter cruising over the Mesa North triplex development when the reports came In directed ground units to the scene. Patrolmen John C. White, Robert E. Arnold and Gary earwig arrived almost simultaneously to find a second bloody victim pistol·whlpped in the fray, lean- ing against a car. He pointed to the front triplei: unit and said the suspect had run in.side. Getting no response to order• to come out, Arnold and White gingerly opened the unlocked door and entered, guns drawn, but the home was silent as a tomb. Sudden sounds overhead sent them behind a bar at the foot of the stairs for cover, with• full view of the shadow of a man with a' gun. The sound.s were bolts of high-powered rifles and shotguns being loaded, the patrolmen realized, so they again ordered biJn t.o drop hi1 weapons and fiUITender. "You'll take me out of here feet first before I'll do 10 to 20," the Sanla Monica Hospital steam engineer scream· ed back. By this lhne, backup patrol units were parked at crazy angles in the crowded cul-de-sac adjacent to busy Baker Street and the curious crowd swelled. Officen Arnold and White kept up a constant, calming stream of con· versatlon, a1 Patrolman John Stoneback -who joined them inside -passed word on out by the moments. Weaver, reportedly trying _to make surrender deals the patrolmen had no authority t.o accept, stubbornly refused to surrender, leading to an order for teargu raced to the scene by Lt. Avery Smith. A shootout appeared increasingly like- ly. Officer Arnold, who only six hours before t.old a reporter the semi·humorous rampage of a monkey Wednesday was his wildest case since 1956, when he joined -kept talking. His throat was dry. Topics ranged trom name and age to Weaver'1 family and the fact they and others could be hurt if he continued to hold out. The suspect cried back he had a right to protect his home. Maneuvering outside the apartment - Us second floor windows ominously cur· tained -Detective Sgt. Jack Calnon prepared to fire a teargas shell. Downstairs, U. Harold Fischer had slipped into the triplei: himself and was waiting for the sound of Calnon's shotgun. "l was going up the stairs and try to lob one in before he could duck into a little bathroom. I know the layout. My father owns a couple of them," he explained. "You have to hit them hard and fa st with gas, so it saturates the room," he added. Weave r, however, had heard Ute talk of teargas. ATTENDANT (LEFT) TAKES PULSE WHILE RUSHING SHOOTING VICTIM TO AMBULANCE In. Co1t1 Me11, John Golden of. Phoenix T1k•1 Bullet in Chest; He'll Liv• Wliol.esal.e Price Rate Registers Wliopping Climb WASillNGTON (UPI) -Wholesale prices registered a 0.9 percent increase in February, biggest one-month rise since July, 1953, the Labor Department reported today. Coupled with a 0.7 percent rise In January, the figures Indicated that in- flation continues to plague the economy despite a year.Jong busineM slump. Wholesale price increases generally show up later in higher prices at the consumer level. The department announced a little more than a week ago that on the ha.sis of preliminary figures, t h e February increase was 0.8 percent. The complete figure• now available indicated the jump was even higher. Hog prices soared more than 31 percent fn February, probably indicating sharp boosts in pork prices at the butcher shops this month. Cattle prices rose 13 percent during February and livestock prices on tbe average were 16 percent higher. · Overall, prices for farm products: rose 4.6 percent la st month while prices for processed foods and feeds advanced 1.3 percent. The \Vholesale Price Index f o r February rose to 112.8 percent of the 1967 average. That mean\ it cost $11.28 last month to buy the same variety of ~·holesale goods that could have been obtained for $11.18 in January, $10.97 a year ago and $10 a little more than • three years ago. The industrial commodities prices in· creased 0.3 percent in February, the same amount as reported earlier. That figure is considered more significant by many economists than the more volatile farm products prices. On a seasonally adjusted basis, the wholesale price index rose 0.7 percent in February compared to the 0.6 percent increase reported earlier. Pro1nise Shown Nation's ~obless Totals Take Second Straight Dip W AS!ilNGTON (UP!) -Joblessness declined ror the second straight mooth in February, dipping to 5.8 percent of the n1tion'1 work force, the Labor Department reported today. Although the decline was concentrated among teen-agers and persons seeking part-time work, Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson 1a1d the figures "continue to show further promise" of overall improvement in the nation's employment picture. The national jobless rate reached a 11lne-year high of 6.2 percent in December. It dropped to 6 percent in January and Hodgson said the two-month decline "Is indeed heartening." He said tt showed ''the economy Is moving in a favorable direction," he said. A total of 5.4 million persons were out or work in February, the same as in January. However after ad- justment for seasonal v a r i a ti 0 n s ' unemployment declined 185,000 during the month, with the rate dropping from 6 percent to 5.8 percent. Burglar Suspect Wanted in South A drifter. whom police describe as a "professional burglar," is awaiting extradition on a San Clemente burglary charge in New Orleans today, but despite a $50,000 bail tag be probably will never stand trial here. '111e 5.8 percent rate is identical to the rate recorded last November. The jobless rate for adult men was unchanged at 4.2 percent and for married men at 3.2 percent during February. The jobless rate for persons seeking full -time work also remained essentially unchanged at 5.4 percent. 1-fowever, the jobless rate among teenagers dropped sharply, from 17.6 percent to 16.7 percent, while the rate for part-time workers fell from 9.2 per- cent to 8.7 percent. Since the jobless rate hit 6.2 percent in December, actual total unemployment has increased slightly. But it is normal for this time of year for the jobless rate to rise, resulting in a decline in lhe key seasonally adjusted reading. The February jobless figure was still far higher than the figure a year ago when 4.2 percent of the work force was without jobs. Total unemployment was almost 1.7 million higher last month than a year earlier. The unemployment rate for whites, which had increased steadily since la te 1969. declined from S.6 percent in January to 5.3 pereent in February. Average hourly earnings of rank-and· file workers on private payrolls were $3.34 in February, one cent higher than in January. Church to Host Lecture on POWs Authorities in Dallas, Tex., have firs t bid on the extradition or Thomas Dean The plig ht of American soldiers listed McMiiian, 30. as missing in action or those who are The man is wanted there for dozens prisone rs of war in Southeast Asia will of alleged felonies, including assault on be discussed 8 p.m. Wednesday, March a police officer, an alleged rash of burglaries and robbery. 24 in St. Michaels and All Angels McMillan, wanted in connection with Episcopal Church, 3233 Pacific View a $1,250 residential burglary in San Drive, Coronal de! Mar. . - Judge Hears -Phone Call Recording Taped telephone conversations be- tween a Laguna Nigue l man and thfl Costa Mesa policeman he allegedly tried to bribe were played ba ck today for Or· ange County Superior Court Judge Ron· aid Crookshank. All four conversations 1,1,•ere recorded by Costa Mesa Officer Gary earwig ln his home April 2 and ~ and the prose- cution maintains they prove its poiot. Samuel Rosman, 27. of 29351 San Briso Pl!l,ce, allegedly tried to persuade offi· cer Barwig to accept $10,000 for fram· ing a Laguna Beach man by planting drugs in his car. The allegedly intended victim-Char- les Dryer 3t, of 1645 Sunset Ridge (>rive .:..was to 'be a key prosecution witness against a codefendant in a grand theft case. Eugene Road ondo, 44, of 2422 E. 22nd St., Newport Beach, and Rosman arc currently on trial charged with conspir· ing to bribe a police oflicer. Dryer and Rondondo had been jndict- ed earlier by the Orange County Grand Jury in connection with theft of thou- sands of dollars worth of liquor from Orange Coast night clubs. Dryer has been cleared of the latter charge and it is expected he will ap- pear as a prosecution witness against Rondondo who is hospitalized in Las Vegas . The ailing businessman will go on trial next Monday. facipg Deputy District At· torney P.fartin J . Henegahn a net testi· mony of chief DA's investigator Eddie Banks. Today Banks played tapes of conver- sations in which Rosman's ability to ob- tain a large consignment of drugs lo planl in Dryer's car was discussed. Officer Barwig was to make a routine traffic stop of Dryer, authorities say, then pretend to find the stash of depres- sant drugs, arrest him and thus dis· credit his anticipated testimony against Rondondo. Superiors were immediately notified by Office r Barwig of the alleged plot to frame Dryer, leading to the counterac- tivity ending with arrest Of Roadondo and Rosman. Capo Rotarians Back Greenbelt The San Juan Capistrano Rotary Club has given its verbal support to the Laguna Greenbelt in a resolution passed by the group. The document. presented to Greenbelt chairman James Dilley by Rotary of· ficials, states the club "resolved to en- courage all citizens to join this organiza. tion in dedicated and compassionate service" to prese rve the open space• of the county. Dilley pra ised the group for its support, saying the backing of every organization tn Orange County was needed in the effort to maintain the open land around the cities . "There are so' few areas lert to preserve in Orange County as civllization crunches on," Dilley said, "and time is running short ." Helicopter Makes E1nergency Landing Clemente Feb. 8. was arrested by New Mrs. Wally Clark o( Newport Beach, Orleans police in an allegedly stolen w~ husband. Air Force Lt. Col. N • C I T cac earlier this week. lXOn ance S rip San Clemente detectives said the case Stanley Clark, Is missing in action, will A Marine helicopter made a ''precau-here Involves the theft of jewelry, a speak and show a film. Sbe represents WASHINGTON (UPI) _ President tionary landing" in an open field near pistol and cash from the home of Mr. the non·profit organization, Concern for t-.'ixon has canceled his trip today to Irvine Boulevard and Browning Avenue and Mrs. Charles Herald, 242 Avenida POWs lnc. of Tustin. Rochester, N.Y. because of a snowstorm Thursday afternoon, was repaired and _1E_•_P_la_n_a_d•_· ____________ Th_• .:.P_".:ll'_am __ is_o_:pen __ 10_1h_•_:p_u_bl_ic_. ___ w_h_ich_s_n_ar_le_d_<_coa_d_:_:.•nd.:..:.•:.:i~rp-0:.::.rt:.:l:::ac:::i::lit::ies:::. on its way back to Marine Corps Air Station, Santa Ana within one hour. The twin-rotor CH-46 landed at 3:30 p.m. because of a control malfunction, a Marine Corps spokesman said. There were no injuries or damage. Henredon f<t~ DAllY PILOT O!tAHCJ~ COAST PUtllSHIHO CJ:JM,Nf't l•Mrl N. W•-4 '"''""" .,.. "*"'"' J1a• l. Cllffrt Ylte ,,,...,., ..... o-.t MtMflf' Figl1ting Rages in Turkey OverSearchf or IGdnapers LOOK FOR THE UNUSUAL I • • 1\•111•1 1e ... n ..... 'Mle111•• A. M1re\l1e Mlftllllll 8411tw Clt1rf11 H. L••• 1Jdi1'4 P. N4W Mlitw ~Int lari.. ..,_ __ 222 hr .. t A1't'fl•• s.. er, ... , o..... JOi Norlti E ·c1111;ft• J.111 ..... -COilt MM1: -W.t It, ,,,_ ........ .._.1_" ........... IWI .... ...,;"""" ...... 11111 ._.. loull'itr4 !».ll.Y l'IUJT, 9tfftl •ldl It~ tfrle "--""-. ........... "'"' ~ '-4•~ .. ....,. .. ~ ... ~ IMdl. N~I Mtdl. ~ ..._ "-dint*! aeM1,. ,_...._ V•flet', ltti C""-ttf ~ ....... .,,. ~!Wt«. .... """ ----"".:::''::.:'.""' . ..... ..., ..,.. ' Tai pt I ,,,., MMm Cl•ll'IM AIM1 f I '4Wl11 S.C ....... All• ti •1 TaltJ ... • ·~· ....................... ~ t•···· .... "" ~ "'·· ~ c.r ....... . ~ .... -.......... .-.-. "'"""' --.. .....,,,........ ...,. _, ............ ..,,,.. ..... ,... ......... .,....., ..... . ..... c .... ,...,... ...... ,...,,..,. .... :s t= =·-::=:--..,·.:re -11",1r 1 .a1twy ......,.._, ..........,.. l ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) - A force of 5,000 Turkish troops and police seized lhe campus of the 1.tlddle East Technica l University (METU) today 1n a four hour battle with 1tudents but found no trace of four kidnaped Americans faced with execution if a $400,000 ransom is not paid. Turkish authorities said at least one student dted ·1n the battle in which the stuaents hurled bombs and fired pistols . Fifteen students, a Turkish officer and a soldier were reported wounded. The soldier and two students were reported in critical condition. Disorders spread to other parts o( Turkey and antl·American and an- Ugovernmtnt c!emonstralions nared In other parts of Ankara. Joformed sources said the ri ght-wing, p r o - A m e r i c a n government of Premier S u I e y m a n Oemlrel might hsvc to Impose martial i.w. A group calling Itself the ''Turk.lsh Peoples Liberation Army," a lcfUst ex· tremist group, kldnaped the f o u r American radar technicians Thurtday and 1aid they would be executed If a ransom of $400,000 wu not paid. They moved up the exec\JUon date to 6 a.m. Saturday (11 p.m. EST Friday ). President Nixon. speaking Thursday night at hjs televise~ news conference In Washington, wa1 111ked If he thought Turk ey should negotiate for release of ( the airmen. He said he would not make that suggestion and that following previous similar cases the United State.s v.·ould leave it up to Turkey whether to negotiate, having in mind their own internal circumstances . The four Americans were identified as Airman lC Richard Caraszi or Stam- ford . Conn.; Airman lC Larry J. Heavner of Denver. Coto .. \'lhose parents live in" May•v.ille, W~Va.i Airman lC James · ~f. Gholston of~ Alexandria.' Va., and SI· Sgt. Jin1mie J. Sexton of San Angelo, Tex . Turkish students spurred by leftist elements have in re cent years staged countless anti-American demonstrations In protest against American policies In Vietnam and becauae of resentment against the fact 20.000 Americans and dependents are stationed in Turkey, a member of NATO. At limit. the big U.S. base on the Turkish Aegean Sea Coast, utraordlnary security precautions were clamped on Ame:rlcan facilities and per 1onne1. Turkish sources said many Amtrlc11 n servlce:men hi d started proceedings to gend thtlr families home. The confrontation between the students and pol ice began at 4 a.m. f.iben military and police forces arrived to se11rch for the kidnaped Americans. Five kldn1pers v.•cre involved and on~ ofJhem captured by polife said he was a student 1t From H mredon's Mei& A gracerul commode in louia XV 1ry1e. Magnificently arved from ~id cherry. it is 16M inchu wide and ~7 iochu high, and could wtll be the tltpnt at.etnc /' for any fioe «nn. Comt lt't the entire Folio 10 tollec- t;on. ror you art Nre to find that one tiquilitt piece your home .ceedt.. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEi: -HERITAGE 7td11111 NEWPORT BEACH 1717 Wt1tdlff Or., 642-2050 Or EN"fRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH ProfHslon1I lnt•rtor Ot1lgn1r1 A•1 lloblo-Alo...:NSIO 345 Norlh Cot1I H>n<. 494~51 OPEN FRIDAY ''TIL 9 ..... ''" """' "'"' .. ~ c..., ••1·1161 . .., .. MET U. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ' I I \ \ l ' I ' ' \ ' \ ( I ( l - • ' • ------.. .._ Lagoa•a Beaeh Today's .Fl•al N. v.-Steelill EDITION . VO L 64, NO. 55, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE colJ}ITY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1971 TEN CENTS Pottery · Line Recalled After Death of . Chil-d A Manhattan Beach pottery manufac· turer has rung up the biggest phone bill in its 35-year history following ntws reports that lead poisoning from a pit· cher in one of its dinnerware lines may have caused the death of an 18·month-old child. MeOox Potteries Inc. is recalling its entire Tempo pattern of dinnerware a.s '* * * Drug Catch a result of U.S. Food and Drug Administration tests indicating excessive amounts of lead in two colors of glaze used in the line. The FDA tests were conducted arter the Feb. 6 death of the child, Lucas Rosenthal. in a Philadelphia hospital. Public health officials said the death was caused by lead poisoning which Police Reveal Suspects' Names Of the 30 suspects arrested in a sweep by Laguna and state narcotics officers Thursday and early today , 21 were charg· ed with sale of illicit drugs. Those held on charges of selling in· elude : David Lynn Lowery, 22, transient, no occupation, charged with sale of LSD. MJcbael Hutchins, 22, transient, no oc- cupation, sale of LSD. William Richard Miiler, ·21 , Vacation Village, no OCCU1>1tion. p~ot-LSD.- Rlchard J obn Miller, 21, Vacation Village, no occupation, sale of LSD. Peter Bradford Ber1lund. 21, Vacation Village, no occupation, sale of LSD and heroin. • Michael Gene May, 19, 996 S. Coast Highway, no occupation, sale of "speed." 1'homas Uoyd Parker, 33. 1223 Laguna Canyon Road, no occupation, sale of LSD. Doon Charles Swanson, 22, 696 So, Coast Hwy, no occupation, sale of LSD. Kim Nils Maieyl 18, 741 So. Coast Highway. no occupation, sale of LSD and hashish. Daniel Joseph Banas, 18, %741 San Juan, Costa Mesa, student, sale of LSD. Clifford Ellis Kaplan , 20, 2li03 Calli!! Comerc io, San Clemente, student, sale of LSD. PbWip c. Jenks, 35. 21412 Laguna Canyon Rd., Technician, sale of mari- juana. Donna Lois Speck. 26, 214.12 Laguna Canyon Road, librarian, possession of marijuana. Ramon Ramirez Al bldrei, 50, 1530 W. 7th SL.-Sant.a Ana; cook, &ak of heroin. . , • S]!loey Nor'81 L,ule, 21, 985 So. Coast Highway,.no occupation, sale af LSD. . Jerome Charles Rynda, 19, 534.7 W. 124th St., Hawthorne, student, sale of LSD and seconal. John Michael Nottenkem per, 20. 696 So. Coast Highway, student, sale of LSD. Larry Wayne Guetbe, 22, 696 So. Coast Highway, artist, sale of heroin, Charles Tbomas Yates, 19. 741 So. Coast Highway , no occupation, sale of LSD and hashish. Ricky Patrick Bawer. 19, USf\.fC, Camp Pendleton, U.S. Marine, sale of LSD and hashish. Richard J. Jerrils, 19, 900 Sea Lane, Newport Beach, student, sale of LSD. Teamsters VP Arrested On Counterfeiting Rap WASHINGTON (AP) -An in· ternational vice president of the Teamsters Union and five other persons were arrested by Secret Service Agents today after being named in an indict ment that charges them with conspiring to coun terfeit money and food and postage stamps. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell announced that a sealed indictment had been return- ed against the six men in U.S. Di~trict Court in Newark. N.J. 'I1lursday. As a part of the alleged conspiracy, the defendants intended to buy and sell about $250,000 in counterfeit money , the indictment said. Named in the indictment was Salvatore Provenzano. International vice presklent of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. The 43-year-old resident of Hackensa ck, N.Y., is also president of Orange Coast \\'ea Cher -' It won't get any higher thaft\63 degrees, whether you're on the coast or driving inland, Saturday, Gusty winds will prevail under· sunny skies. INSIDE TODAY Ne ville Ma rriner will be g11e5t lectu re r at !he Orange Co lrlllJI Philharmo•k Societ11'1 free preview Wffinesda11. See toda11's Weekender, ~~ ... "''; CllKlhtt U• J Cl.ulfltll 21·41 C-k1 U Cttt1'"'11 ti 0..1~ Ntllcn II -" Mltwttl ,... ' ,..._, ... -" Allll '--'"" 11 ..,,.,..,. . MtPrlji" Lk:tnRI 11 M1¥'1n 114'4 MUtual ,_,, I NetltH/ NfWI .. , °"..... (-"/ ,. llfll-11111 ll·b lt'h'll ,-Wlw I s,.,.11 ,.,,, lleC:k M•riletl l•t~ TtlffllolMI ~ U '""""" , .. ,4 w .. IW 4 ........... 11.11 ...... "'"" ...... ~ W'ttlttllftr ,...,. . ' . the Teamsters joint Council No. 73. Also named defendants were Armand Faugno 56, of Englewood Cliffs. N.J.; Thomas Andretta, 36, of Hasbrouck lfeights, N.J.; Stephen Angelo, 39, of Secaucus, N.J.: Wayne Ca rlton. 43, or North Tampa, Fla.; Jack Fried man, of West Paterson. N.J. Each of the six defendants is charged with conspiring to print counterfe it Federal Reserve notes, post.age stamps and Department of Agriculture food coupons. The indictment accuses them of plot· ting to buy and sell approximately $250,00> in counterfeit S.SO and $100 Federal Reserve notes . Federal officials said Provenzano is the brother Of Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano, once a top lieutenant of Teamsters leader James R. Hoffa. Anthony Provenzano was released from Federa1 prison in November after serv- ing four years for extorting $8,600 from a transportation company president. Salvatore Provenzano, Faugno and Andretta were arrested" today and held for a bail hearing before a U.S. magistrate. Angelo, Carlton and Fried- man bad been arrested previously. Fried· man and Carlton were freed on SS0,000 ball eacb and Angelo on SZ,000 bail. Laguna n Gets Post With Alumni Group • ' J .. A LagWla Beach.ma·n'bas been ~d executive vice president.-of the 45 .... --'!: member Cal State Los Angeles Alumni Association. ' Gary Peacock, of I 195 Temple Hills Drive, is a 1962 graduate of the school and an official with Smith Jnternilional of Newport Beach. Peacock will be charged wit.Jl ..6he overa!L man.ag:tmem or the 21-member board of directors of tM association. may have come from a blue Metlox Tempo pitcher in which the child's mother kept his grape juice. Metlox sales manager Ted Ball $.aid he had received c.alls from every state in the nation and in turn had called radiQ titatlbns throughout the country following an initial broadcast identifying ru -' ~ the suspect pottery only as Poppy Trail dinnerware. "All of our dinnerware is called Poppy Trail ." Ball said today. "and there are 40 different patterns. The only one we a~ recalling is the Tempo pattern which accounts for less than two percent of our sales." Tempo, he said, is made in five dif· • a1 • . ·-. . ' • 1 ! •• ferent solid colors wilh no design and a rough, brownish outside finish. About 2.5 million pieces of the pattern have been sold in the Ii> years since It was introduced . So far only two glaze' colors, blue and beige, have failed FDA test s. However, Ball sa id , the firm will take back any pieces of the Tempo line, which includes cups, plates, bowls, pitchers and serving dishes. Metlox is one of the largest pottery manofacturers in the country. Its din· ntrware is sold in major deparlmtnt stores in Orange Qxmty. The stores will takt back the pieces of the Tempo pattern, a &pokesin.an for one -.said. s et DAILY ,II.OT 1!11/ ....... Thousands In Drugs Confiscated In a sweep that began at noon Thurs- day and lasted until after midnight, Laguna Beach police and &late narcotics offjcers arrested 30 persons on grand jury Indictments for alleged narcotics offenses. The arrests followed a three-month lnvestlgaUon in the Laguna area during which undercover agents claim to have purchased several thousand dollars worth of drugs from suspects ranging in 1ge frorri 18 to · SO yean. Most-of those arruted· faef: charges of · sale of 'dangerous drug1 includin1 I.Sp and heroin: 'I1le grand jury indictments were band· ed down on Monday and the arrests were made by three Laguna and five ataU! Olffcers fo1lowtng a 11tursday morn- llll brlering In Laguna. ' The operation was directed by Sgt. TRAGIC FRIDAY CRASH .KILLS 83-YEAR OLD SOUTH LAGUNA WOMAN Dr iver of Car Also Injured In Accident on. L19una11 Co1st Highway N~il Purcell, head of the Laguna Beach PQllce Department's special enforument division and agent Jack Leavey of tht State Bureau ol Narcotic Enforcement. ~~~~~~~~~~- Driver, 82, Hurt Council Adopts Weed Abatement Despite Remarks Weeds -normally not generally belov· ed by society -had a champion Wed- nesday when the Laguna Beach City Council was holding its annual public hearing on the weed abatement program. Auto Flips in Laguna;· Crash /(ills Woman, 83 1tfost of the arrests were made in the vicinity of South Coast Highway and Cleo Street in Laguna Beach, known as a gathering place !pr youthful longh.l!:irs and a center of narcotics deal- ing in the Art COiony, ~ Before the night was over, officer11 also had ranged as far afield as San Clemente, Costa Mesa and Hawthorne to make individual arrests. ' 'Almost all those arrested wert "in- volved '' in the use or sale of heroin PurcelI claimed. ' Resident Bill Leak. who has recently beco me the proponent of many causes, told lhe council the advantages of weeds are often overlooked by weed· abating government bodies. He said the wildly growing plants not ·only hold the soil, preventing erosion, but a 1 so manufacture .oxy~en. Leak criticized the city for starting its weed abatement program so early in the year. noting if the weeds are removed now. mar'iy more will have grown back by midsummer when the possibility of brushfire is most severe. Ci ty Manager Larry Rose answered Leak saying the city · was following the same schedule it had in past years. "If we waited until May lo start," Rose said, "there is no possible way the project could be accomplished." Another resident, Carl Lindstrom, also questioned the council about the advisability of removing weed! f r o m areas where erosion is prevented by their presence. Lindstrom said he owned two lots in Arch Beach Heights where city Y.'orkers had posted notices saying the weeds would be removed , but he added that if the weeds were abated, the soil would erode. ' L Leap Off Cliff Fails to Kill An 83-year old South Laguna woman was killed this mornicg in Laguna Beach when the auto in which she was a passenger flipped in rush-hour Coast Highway traffi c and came to re st on its top. The elderiy woman was pronounced dead on arrival at South Coast Com- munity HospiLal. Her identity wa:s Marine Pleads Guilt y in Buddy Killing Plot A Camp Pendleton ftfarine who killed his buddy by mistake in a bizarre plot to escape duty in Vietnam has entered a plea of guilty to involi.ntary manslaughter Sao Diego. Jerome Quinn. 23. of Los Angeles, \viii be sentenced on the charge on March 25 in an lncidenl which began as an intentional mutual wounding. It ended In unforeseen death. Quinn admitted firing a bullet into the shoulder 91',hlt. buddy~ Pvl Eldridge Chappell J[., after the buddy bad. fired one Into Quinn's groin. Each had planned to ·wound the other to escape duty in Vietnam. The shot which Qu inn fired, however, struck a borie, "-hen boWiced lnto Chap. pell 's heart, killing him instantly. An unldentiried South Coast woman The shooting took place near Camp failed in her attempt at a bizarre suicide San Luis Rey last Nov. 18. early today In a dive off -the clif(I r· Slle'tlt afler"the incident the wounded a~ye Dana Harbor. -.. I 'QuJan tcJUdtt help "from•authoritles. wM 'Neither the woman's·111e nor addl'ea ' ~, M .. JOkt. .. them u n Iden ti Ii e.d ~ 1v11ilable t.hil m0f.11Jng. · , .moioreycllsts IUfprised the two Marines • 5!1erlff's investigators said the w.oma'n.1 wi •. a~rkened roadway , 1nd i began drovt to the end of St:rett of the Gokleit *"ling1' l Lantern shortly after 1 a.m., left I Later, Quinn allegedly admitted · the note on her car, then vat.iJtea over the story wa a hoa1. steep bluffs. . J I The -dead boddy was 20 ')'tarsi old A reliC\Je squad of Doheny vohmteerJ', -4'.Jl@n'e Q_f_r]ew for.It city. • • firemen rescued the bittered wlmar\ Tf)&ttl)ootings occurred several days from midway down the blU.UI. ..befor• two Gls , were scheduled to Alda al Soulh C-1!oipli.t ;i(4 l)f \•·l!J!'<Ol!l~...,f. . the victim suffered fra~ture1 _1nd Otblt Sentencing i.n lhe c:ase will fak~ plact 1ever1 injuries. la Sin Diego Superlo• Court. • . -' .. .. .... -....... • withheld pending notificati on of next of kin . The .dr iver. of the auto. Floyd Oewit.l Warick, 82, of 30802 South Co~st Highway was seriously injured in tht 7;45 a.m. mishap and is in satisfactory condition at the hospital after being treated for cuts. Police said the tragedy occurred when Warick sideswiped a parked auto while northbound on Coast Hig hway near Nyes Place. He lost control of the vehicle, "l officers said, and the car jumped onto the curb, striking a utility pole. The vehicle then flipped onto Its top, crushing a portion of the roof and pinning the occupants inside, police said. Fire units were dispatched to the scene as a precaution in case the car caught fire while ~ trapped victims were being removed from the twisted vehicle. Rescuers spent a frantic ten min utes prying the occupants from the car and they were rushed to South Coast Com- munity Hospital. Warick's car came. to rest in the slow lane of traffie blOli!.ktng motorist.a on th~ir way to Work. Efforts by pol~ to keep the cars moving were further hampered by curiosity seekers slowing to crane their neckJ at the smashed auto. Antique Show, . ' . S~e .Scheduled Most of the "buys" which led up to the grand jury indictments were made in the Cleo Street area. known to narcotics _officers as "junkie corner," Purcell said. "ln recent months, the officer asserted "the area has been literally taken over' with dealing going on quite openly." . ' Last week the windshield of Purcell's car was smashed with a board while he wa s making arrests in the area. On the sa me day offi cer John Saporito was assaulted on the nearby beach and on another occasion an ciUicer'1 p11ivate car was stoned as he drove through the area, according to Purcell. Old County Jail Escapes Death, Will Be Sold The old Orange county Jail, vacant for more than two years, will be for sale soon, according to Stanley Krause, county director of Real Property Services. ~ught certain to , Qe demo~d; al one ttine, the old jail escapes U>e wrecktr~s wrath becaUSe~lt""ll Ju11t-800\Pi of the proposed new curving allgrunent of 7th Street, to become Civic Center Drive West. A casualty of the street project Is the U:S;-Natlon"at Bank building-it Ith and Main Slreel. The cl!Y of l!o/.:"' Ana bas asked that the county put · the oJd jail and another piece of property M Sycamore now occupitd by the county parking garage. Thill b,lilding will \>6, tlemolillw:d to • · •· '' , •• · make.,w,ay ~tor the Qe.W ~e.1 1~ the ' An i<•bl~I aod tale of anlfquts wll~ bank plan.o lo build on the north holf be held by, dealen £rom C.1.llforn[a_. of the property and a section of U.. Wlscon,,in and Arizona the weekend OF n,rtsent 8th Street. March s. 6 and 7 in the · patio -of Sao l.'.1119 parcel which the bank will Juan Capistrano's El Adbbt rest11urant . ~r:'chase boasts a,ooo square feet. Sponsored\by calendar Antique Shows. r Krause has sent ouka form "Notice the event wUI be the first eVer held of Availability" to all rounty deparbnent1 ln the mi&SiQn community. reeerding tbt former · jail but it ts •'Hollr1 are f!<im l, ~ 10, p.m, March -~blflll U!41 eny departmen\ wUJ wen\ I and 6; noon \O' 6 p.in, on March • \0 .... 1he old"'H\O,.Y lllructure bulft 7. In e11ly tllOOS . -• . ' • .. • ·- j1! GAIL V PILOT SC Frld1.7, M11Ch 5, 1971 Pol-iee Harassed --- Mesan Gives Up Mter Showdown By ARTllVR R. VINSEL Ot .... °"" f'Net llltf Screaming defiance and frantically loadinl guns, a Costa Mesa man finally s\U'J'tDGUed to quiet police coaxing Tharlday, ooJy seconds before they fore· td a abowdown. A crowd of 300 milled around the tense scene, Ignoring orders broadcast from a circling police helicopter to move back. Some -standing upoaed to what l'OUl.d have been a mass murder 1pree -taunted and becJtled shotgun-armed olficet1 a-ouched under covtr. 'lbe drama began at 3:20 p.m., with "" a report or a man shot at 3013 Coolidge Ave., and a man with a gun at 3002 Fillmore Ave., c.ne block away. Victim John W. Golden II. 23. or Phoenix, Arii., Js listed In aatiafactory condiUoo today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospilal, wiUt a .32 caliber bullet wound that collapsed one lung. He sbll sprinted a block, trailing blood, on the one rtmainlng respiratory organ before collapsing. ' • DAILY' ~ILOT .. llfle llr 11:1,~rd ICNflltf' Judge Hears Phon e Call Recordin g Taped telephone conversations be- tween a Laguna Niguel man and the Costa Mesa policeman he allegedly tried to bribe were played back today fo r Or- ange County Superior Court Judge Ron- ald Crookshank. All four conversations were recorded by Costa fl.fesa Officer Gary Barwig In hi s home Apr il 2 and 3 and the prose- cution maintains they prove Jts point. Bid for Music Program Gets City Study Paul E. Weaver, 30, -of-the Fillmore Avenue address when tbe SO.minute con· frontaUon occurred, is ln city jail. booked on charges of assault with iiitent to commit murder. ATTENDANT ILEFn TAKES PULSE WHILE RUSHING SHOOTING VICTIM TD AMBULANCE In Co1t1 Mt11, John Golden of Phoenix T1ke1 Bullet in Chest; He'll l ive Samuel Rosman, 27, of 293fil San Briso Place. allegedly tried to persuade offi. cer Barwig to accept Si0,000 for fram. ing a Laguna Beac h man by planting: drugs in his car. The allegedly intended vi ctim-Char- les Dryer, 31, of 1645 Sunset Ridge Drive -was to be a key prosecution witness agairut a codefendant in a grand theft case. A plea for the reinstatement of an !Mtrument.al music program in the San Joaquin Elementary School District was made Wednesday, but with UUle en- couragement. Mrs. Joanna Ramirez, representing the Mlssio_n Viejo High School M u s i c Boosters, asked the board to consider the music program for next year aod added that a questlonnaire ii being dreulated througb the district Io measure interest. Truslee Philip Bradlleld aaid the board wot•ld con.dder the program during budget study aessioos but bad eliminated the program two years ago because of more Important prlorititl. "We have to provide programs that are going to benefit the most children," be aaid. The Boost.era' reqUe!l w a a ac- companied by a written propoaal spelling oUt bow a program could be rtlnstated over a two year period. It would bring music into classroom• on a regular basis and would help ae- qualot cbildrtJJ In grades four, five and siJ: with bqbmlng theory and rhythm, tooette aealOIJI, recOrdinp , filllll, and aonp. f These youngstera alao would be In- volved In choral periormlnca and would have the oppcwtun!ty to aeo outalde In' 1trumenlal groups in school or during a field trip. Seveoth and •lghth gradul would begin 1trlngs inltrucUon and would conUn~ the woedwind, braa lod perawlon in- 1tructioo the dlatrlcl provldea .. u time permitted qualllied intmnedlale llCbool otudeoto would partlclpele In an 'ln- lermediale level of instruction aod ad- vanced trainiog would be available for those who e1cel. During the second year the lnatnnntnt Instruction would be introdue<d to fourth, fifth and sixth graders. 'Jbe music theory introdllcod in the flrat year could reach '°me younger children If Ume were available. Mrs. Ramirtt told the board that such a program would not only tmich the elementary school curriculum but allo would onhan~ the high lchool program by providing trained muslclana for band, --andcbo~. Boen! Cl!alrman CraU1111 Bldart told Mn. Ramirei that the board will aglln comlder the lllUllc program and will be loteruted lo the r..wt& of the qu ... tiomWre. He added that be could make no promilea, however. The Univeral.ty Park Parent-Teacher Organization and the C a p l a t r a n o Highlands Homeowners' AasociaUon both have nquuested the reinstatement of the music pr<>gr1m. DAllY.PILOT OlANC'io:! cc.uf PUI LWtlMO CIJMrNrt l•Mrt H. Wt~ ~ ...... 11/itr' Ju• L C.14., Vlcl9 ....,..,. ... ~ ~ n.,.. •• ic,,,u aduor n. .. ,, A.. M•r,\!,., Manlflftl ,flllior Cli1rft1 H. LHt 1Jditr4 '· Ntll AUfMI .._.Ina lclli.r. i...---212 FwHt A'l't11111 S-Q 1&0.. ,. l OI Nd El C1111h1e ~t•I '"".,, °"" OM.# c.tft Mtit~ -W.I ..,, tntt ....,.,. a.dl1 Im N........,. ... ....... ........... a.dli IJWJ lttcJI .... ..,. New charges may be added since some ftems in Weaver's arsenal -lined up along a wall ready for use -are listed as stolen, accordlng to police. A police helicopter cruising over the Mesa North triplex development when the rtports came in directed ground unft.s to the scene. Patrolmea John C. White, Robert E. Arnold and Gary Barwig arrived ·almost simultaneoo!ly to find a second bloody yictim pistol-wh.ipped in the fray, Jean· mg against a car. He pointed to the front triplex unit and sald the suspect had run Inside. Getting no rtSPonse to orders to come out, Arnold and White gingerly opened the unlocked door and entered, gwis drawn, but the home was silent as a tomb. Sudden sounds overhead sent them behind a bar at the foot of the stairs for cover, wttb a full view of the shadow of a man with a gun. Tbe l501ll1dJ were bolto of high.powered rifles and shotguns being loaded, Ute patrolmen realized, so they again ordered him to drop biJ weapoos and sunender. "You'll take me out of here feet first before I'll do 10 to 20," the Santa Monica Hospllal steam engineer scream· ed back. By thls time, backup patrol units were parked at ttazy angles .tu the crowded cuJ..de.aac adjacent to busy Baker Street and the curious crowd swelled. otncen Arnold and White kept up a con.st.ant, calmlng stream of con- versaUon, as Patrolman John Stoneback -wbo joined them Inside -passed word on out by the momenta. We.aver, -rtportedly trying to make lurrtnder deals the patrolmen had no authority to acoep~ 1tubbornly relli!ed to surrender, leading to an order for teargas raced to the scene by Lt. Avery ' Smith. A ahootou1 appeared lncreulngly llie· ly. Officer Arnold, who only six hours before told a reporter the semi-humorous rampage. of a monkey Wednesday was }tis wildest case since 1956, when he joined -kept talking. " His throat was dry. Topics~ ranged !rom name and age to Weaver's family and the fa ct they and others could be hurt if he continued to hold out. The ~pect cried back he had a right lo! protect his home. Maneuvering outside the apartment - its second floor windows ominously cur- tained -Detective Sgt. J ack Calnon prepared to fire a teargas shell. Downstairs, Lt. Harold Fischer had slipped Into the triplez himself and was waiting for the sotmd of Calnon'11 shotgun. Wholescile Price Rate Registers Whopping Climb \YASHINGTON (UPI) -Wholesale pri~ registered a 0.9 percent increase in February, biggest one-month rise since July, 1953, the Labor Department reported today. Coupled with a 0.7 percent rise in January, the figures indicated that in- flation continues to plague Ute economy despite a .year-long business slump. · Wholesale price increases generally show up later in higher prices at the consumer level. The department announced a little more than a week ago that on the basis of preliminary figures, t h t February increase was 0.8 percent. 'The complete. figures now available indicated the jump was even hlgher. Hog prices soared more than 31 percent In February, robably lndicaling sharp boosts in por prjces at the butcher shops this month. Cattle prices rose 13 percent during February and livestock prices on the average were 16 percent higher. Overall, prices for farm products rose 4.S percent last month while prices for proc~sed foods and feeds advanced 1.3 percent The Whole.sale Price Index f o r February rose to 112.8 peTJ:ent of the 1967 average. That meant it cost $11.28 last monlb to buy the same variety of wholesale goods that could have been obtained for $11.18 in January, $10.97 a year ago and $10 a litUe more than three years ago. The industrial commodities prices in- creased 0.3 percent in February, the same amount as reported earlier. That figure is considered more &ignUicant by many economists than the more volatile {arm products prices. On a seasonally adjusted basis, the wholesale price index: rose 0.7 percent in February compared to the 0.6 percent increase reported earlier. Helicopter Makes Emergency Landing Promise Shown Nation's ~ohless Totals Take Second Straight Dip WASHINGTON (UPJ) -Joblessness declined for the second straight month in February, dipping to 5.8 percent of the nation's work force, the Labor Department reported today. AlUtougb the decline was concentrated among teen-agers and peraons seeking part-time work, Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson aaid the figures "conlinue to abow further promise" of overall IJ!lprovement .tu the nation's employment p1cture. The national jobless i rate reached a nine-year high of 6.2 percent in December. lt dropped to 6 percent in January and Hodgson said the two-month decline "is indeed heartening." He said It showed "the economy is moving in a favorable direct.icn," he said. A total of 5.4 million persons were out of work in February, lhe same ~s tn January. However, a f ter .ad- JUStment for seasonal v a r 1 a t I o n 1 , unemployment declined 185,0CXI during the month, with the rate dropping from 6 percent to I.I perceot. Burglar Suspect Wanted in South A drifter, whom police describe as a "professional burglar," i! awaiting extradit~on on a San Clemente burglary charge m New Orleans today, but despite a $50,000 ball tag he probably will never stand trial here. The 5.8 percent rate is identical to the rate recorded last November. The jobless rate for adult men was unchanged at 4.2 percent and for married men at 3.2 percent during February. Th~ jobless rate for persons seeking full-hme work also remained essentially unchanged at 5.4 percent. However, the jobless rate among teenagers dropped sharply, Crom 17.6 percent to 16.7 percent, while the rate for part-time workers fell from 9.2 per- cent to 8.7 percent. Since the jobless rate hit 6.2 percent in ~ember, actual total unemployment has increased slightly. But it is normal for this lime of ye ar for the jobless rate to rise, resulting in a decline in the key seasonally adjusted reading. The February jobless figure was still far higher than the figure a year ago when 4.2 percent of the work force v:as without jobs. Total unemployment was almost 1.7 million higher last month than a year earlier. The unemployment rate for whiles which had increased steadily since lat~ 1969, declined from ·5.6 percent in January to 5.3 pereent in February. Average hourly earnings of rank-and- file workers on private payrolls were $3.34 in February, one cent higher than in January. Church to Host Lecture on POWs .Authorities in Dallas, Tex., have first bid on the extradition or Thomas Dean The plight of American soldiers listed McMillan, 30. as missing in action or those who are ..The man is wanted there for dozen.. prisoners of war in Southeast. Asia will of alleged felonle!, including assault on be a police officer, an alleged rash of discussed 8 p.m. Wednesday, March burglarie! and robbery. 24 in St. Michaels and All Angels McMillan, wanted in connection with Episcopal Church, 3233 Pacific View a $1,250 residential burglary in San Drive, Coronal de! J\.1ar. Clemef!te Feb. 8, was arrested by New Mrs. Wally Clark of Newport Beach, Eugene Ro1dondo, 44, of 2422 E. 22nd St.. Newport Beach, and Rosman are currenU y on trial charged with consplr· ing to bribe a police of!icer. Dryer and Rondondo had been lndict· ed earlier by the Orange County Grand Jury in connection with theft of thou . sands of dollars worth of liquor from Orange Coast night clubs. Dryer has been cleared of the latter charge and it is expected he will ap. pear as a prosecution witness against Rondondo who is hospitalized in Las Vegas. The ailing busi nessman will go on trial next Monday, facing Deputy District At· torn~ Martin J. Henegahn and testi- mony of chief DA's investigator Eddie Banks. Today Banks played tapes of conver· sations in which Rosman's ability to ob- tain a large consignment of drug! to plant in Dryer's car was discussed. Officer Barwig was to make a rouUne traffic stop of Dryer, authorities say, then pretend to find the stash or depres· sant drugs, arrest him and thus dis· credit his anticipated testimony against Rondondo. Superiors were immediately notified by Officer Barwig of the alleged plot to frame Dryer, leading to the counterac- tivity ending with arrest Of Ro11dondo and Rosman. Capo Rotarians Back Greenbelt The San Juan Capistrano Rotary Club has given its verbal support to the Laguna Greenbelt in a resolution passed by the group. The document, presented to Greenbelt chairman James Dilley by Rotary of· ficials, states the club "resolved to en- ~oura~e all c~tizens lo join this organiza. t1on 1n. dedicated and compassionate service" to preserve the open spaces of the county. D.illey praised.the group for its supPort,. saymg the backing of every organization In Orange County was needed in the effort to maintain the open land around the cities. "There are so few areas left to preserve in Orange County as civilization crunches on," Dilley said "and time is running short." ' Orleans police in an allegedly stolen car earlier this v.·eek. whose husband, Air Force Lt. Col. N" C J T "I was going up the stairs and lr.Y to lob one in before he could duck into a lltUe bathroom. I know the layout. My father owns a couple of them," he explained. San Clemente detectives said the case Stanley Clark, is missing in action, will lXOll a nee S Ji p A ?i.1arine helicopter made a "precau. here involves the theft of jewelry a speak and show a film . She represents \VASHINCTON (UPJl _ President tionary landing" in an open field near pistol and cash from the home of Mr. the non-profit organization, Concern for N" h "You have to hlt them hard and fast "ith gas, so It saturates the room," he added. Weaver, however, had beard the talk of teargas. Jrvine Boulevard and Browning Avenue and Mrs. Charles Herald, 242 Avenida POWs Inc. of Tustin. ixon as canceled his trip today to Th d I E I d Roe.bester, N.Y. because of a snowstorm on it!l way back to Marine Corps Air w .1c snarled road and airport facilities. urs ay a ternoon, was repaired and lls.:.p_a_n_a_•_· ___________ _:_Th::•'.:..!'.P':_::'":gr'.'.am:'.'.'..1~· '..'''.!'.P"':"'...".to'..'tll:".e~pu"'b~l':ic:_. ----"~h~h~~~~~~~"'.:~~~ Station, Santa Ana withln one hour. The twin·rotor CH-46 landed at 3:30 p.m. because of a control malfwiction a Marine Corps spokesman said. Th~ were no injuries or damage. I Fighting Rage s in Turkey OverSearchf or l{idnapers LOOK FOR THE UNUSUAL Henredon I"<~ •• ANKARA, Turlo!y (UPI) -A force of 5,000 Turkish troops and police seized the campus of the Middle East Technical Unh::ersity (METU) today in a four hour battle with students but found no trace of four k.idnaped Americans faced with e.xecuUon if a $400,000 ransom is not paid. Turkish authorities said at least one 1tudenl-died "in the batUe in which the. students hlirled bombs and fired pistols. FiJteen students, a Turkish officer and a soldier 1tere reporttd wounded. The soldier and two studenb were reported in critical, .cQlldJ_tion. DtsordJ§ sprettd--to other parts of Turkey and anti-American and an- tigovernment demonstrations flared in other parta or Ankara. Inronned sources said the. rlght--wing, p r o .. A m e r i c a n government or Premier S u I e y m a n Demirtl might hive to Impose martial Jaw. A gn>11p calling lt.oelf tho "Turkish Peoples Llbera\ion Army," a leftl~t ex· trcmlst group, kldnaped the four American radar technicians Thursday and uld !My would be executed If 1 ralllOm of $400.000 was not paid . 1bey moved up the execution date to I a.m. Satur<lay (II p.m. EST FrldayJ. the airmen. He said he would not make !hat suggestion and that following previous &imilar cases the United Slate! would leave it up to Turkey whether lo negotiate, having in mind their own internal circumstances. The four Americans were identified as Airman IC Richard Caraszl or Stam· ford. Conn.; Airman IC Larry J. Heavner 0£ Denver, Colo., whose parents live in May&v!lle, \V.Va.: Airman IC James f\.f, Ghols1on of Aiexandrfa, Va., and S'· Sgt. Jimmie J. Sexton of San Angelo, Tex. . Turkish students spumd by leftist element! have in re.cf:nt years staged countless anti·American demonstrations in protest against American policies in Vietnam and because of resentment against the fact 20,000 Americans and dependents are stationed in Turkey, a member of NATO. At Izmir, the big U.S. base on the Turkish Aegean Sea Coast, exb'1ordinary security precaution! were clamped on Ameri can facilities and person n e I. Turkish sources said many American servicemen had started proceedJng1 to send their families home. From H rnredon's Mel& A ~cefu.I COltlmod< in Louit XV scytt. Magriific<T\dy c.ar~'td "from t01id chtrry, it is 36>i·ii1tht1 Wfde and ~7 inc.hes high, ;ind could well be the tltpnt aa:en1'' . __for a~y §ct rocm. Come stt the: cnti~ folio 1ocolltt.• tion, for )'OU l rt fUll to 6nd thJit C1D1 IJ;l'htt..itt • -)'Our bane nee4, ,_ pl<C< DEALERS FOR: HENREOO N -OREXE~ -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1721 Wtttcliff Dr" 642·2050 DHN FRIDA~ 'TIL ! INTERIORS Prof111lon1l lnlarlor LAGUNA !EACH 0.1lgnar1 Av1l11blo-AID-NSID 3-45 North Co11t Hwy. •94-.ISSI k.-~ -OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ... President Nixon, speaking ThUNday night at hls televised news conference 9'fll Washington, -asked iL ht thought Turkey ahould negotiate for rtlease of The con rrontation belween the studenl.s and police began at 4 a.IT\,owhcn mllitary and pollct forces arrived to search for the kldnaped Americans. Five kldnapers were Invo lved and one of them captW'fd by poheb aaid be wu a 1ludent.. at ME'rU. • .--Tell "-Mwt tf 0,.,,. C.., 140.IJlJ • I I I ' ' ... l , 7 • -•• San Clemenie Capisirano VOL 6'4, NO. 55, 4 SECTIONS, •2 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA • Today:s Flaal N.Y. St.eeks FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1971 JEN CENTS a1 .s e Reagan D1ie? Dedication Set For Water Plant Dedication rites -quite possibly led by Gov. Ronald Reagan and Lt'. Gov. Ed Reinecke -for San Clemente's new, nonpolluting water reclamation plant will be held April 2. Councilmen this week selected the sl ate of state officials over Rep. John G. Schmitz of Tustin. who would have been available later in the month. City Manager Ken Carr offered the alternative lo the council this week after admitting that months of attempts to round up prominent national figures for the dedication had bogged down com· pletely. "There was just no way to get federal and state dignilaries there on the same day," he said. President Nixon was the most sought· after choice for the dedication, but secur· ing a President fur dedications is nearly impossible -even in San Clemente. Carr did not specifically TI8!fle the Governor and Lieutenant Govunor, but I.he ~wo men are expected along the South Coast area on that weekend for another major dedication -that of the new San Onofre Sfate ,park. Conceivably, the two officals could swing by San Clemente.. for dedication of the sanitation plant here as well. The $2.6-million facility eliminates the pollution of outfall sewage disposal. Instead, new equipment treats waste v.·ater in three stages -producing usable (not to drink ) water and a fine, neutral ash (c remated solids). Effluent water soon will be sold to the state for use as irrigation for freeway landscaping. The remainder ls used on the city golf course or in setUing basins to stave off salt water intrusion into underground water supplies. Teamsters VP Arrested On Counterfeiting Rap WASHINGTON (AP) -An In· ternational vice president of t h e Teamsters Union and five other persons were arrested by Secret Service Agents today after being named in an indictment that charges them with conspiring to counterfeit money and food and postage &tamps. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell announced tha't a sealed indictment had been return· ed against the six men in U.S. District Court in Newark, N.J. "Q1ursday. ·As a· part of the alleg ed conspi racy, the defendants intended to buy and sell about $250,000 in counterfeit money, the indictment said. Named in the indictment was Salvatore Provenzano, international vice president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. The 43-year-0ld resident of Hackensack, N.Y., is also president of One Bidder Vies For City La.1ul Bids adverlising San Clemente"s first city hall, police and fire department and city yards for sa le on the open market have drawn a blank. the Teamsters joint Council No. 13. Also named defendants were Annand Faugno 56. ol Englewood Cliffs, N.J .; Thomas Andretta, 36, of Hasbrouck Heights, N.J.; Stephen Angelo, 39, of Secaucus, N.J.: Wayne Carlt.D, 43, of North Tampa, Fla.; Jack Friedman , of West Paterson. N.J. Each of the si.i: defendants is charged with conspiring to print counterfeit Federal Reserve notes, poslage stamps and Department of Agriculture food coupons. The indictment accuses them of plot· ling to buy and sell appros:tmately '2511,000 in counterfeit $5ll and $100 Fede'tal Reserve notes. Federal officials said Provenzano is the brother of Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano, once a top lieutenant of Teamsters leader James R. Hoffa. Anthony Provenzano was released from Federa1 prison in November after serv· ing four years for extorting $8,600 from a transportation company president. Salvatore Provenzano, Faugno and Andretta were arrested today and held for a bail hearing before a U.S. magistrate. Angelo, Carlton· and Fried- man had been arrested previously. Fried- man and Carlton were fr~ on $50,000 bail each and Angelo on S:ZS,000 bail. DA.1\.Y "\\.OT lllfl l"llfle Spring Bas Sprung Blossoms of spring appeared early at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills Thursday with a 65-pot,1nd baby zebra born at 4 a.m. on the 500-acre game preserve. The first zebra born in Orange County, it was named Irvine after the Irvine Ranch. The mother is a four-year-old Grants zebra from Masai Country in East Africa. aemente 'High - Play Held Over For Matinee San Clemente High Scho61'• production of "The Sound of M\ulc," playing to .ellout crowds, will be presented in a special heJd-over matlnet Sunday af· temoon in Triton center. Th< production -herolded by school officials as the most successful in the school's history ·-ill sold out for its two scheduled finRI performances Friday and Saturday nights. But Director ~ichard "oe said the matinee has been added to accommodate the overflow audiences. AU tickets to the Sunday performance will be $2.50 and no . reservation& will be taken . Advance purchases are available at the student activties office or at the box office Sunday ~fore the 2:30 p.m. performance. The production marks the first time that a professional 80und system and riser seating have been used for a stu- dent drama project. Perfo~anc~s qf t~ popular musical by a cast of 60 1fngen: and musicians already ha1 yielded 'hefty profits despite the $2,000 investfnent in the sound and aeatlng system. ' Cafeterias Get Hamburger; Pizza Chefs In the Sin Joaquin Elementary School ·District, tired of throwing aw1y cold , stale broccoli , have decided to replace it wilh tacos. hamburgers and pizza . The switch in cafeteria menus is p1rt Old County Jail Escapes Death, Will Be Sold • The old Orange County Jail, vacant for more than two years, will be for sale soon, according to Stanley Krause, COuhty director of Real Property Serv-.icl!s. Thought certain to t?e demolished at one time, tl\_e old jail escape.s lhe wrecker's wrath because it is just south of the proposed new curving aligrune.nt of 7th Street, to beeomt Civic Center Drive West of 1n economy move to beef up a food services program that continually lo~es money, "We've decided to limit or remove entirely grilled cheese s a n d w i c h e s , meatloaf, corn dogs and broccoli," said Miss.Sara Timlin, fbod services· director . "We're going lo replace them with a more frequ~nt menu of hamburgers, tlicOs, . pizza and Oth·er . f9Qds that get a' good response.'' ·schools also Will be featuring lce ·cream for the first time. Most ice cream bars sell for 10 cents and tbe district makes a profit of 5 cents 1 bar. Ice cream will be eaten in specific areas to control litter from wrappers and sticks. "Ice cream fs nutritious and I know !he response will be great." said Miss Ttml.in. "I'm -.1so very optimistic about repeating the popular menu items in ttie cafeteria." She adm_itted that_ a wide :variety of menus pleases adults more than it does children who are happy to eat ham· burgers once a week . "We just can't afford to have food that reduces cafeteria partici pation," she said. But another chunk of city property had a last·minute bidder v.tio probably will end up purchansing the lndustrial lot. Ban on Firewo1·ks Sales A casUalty of the sti-eet project is the U.S. National Bank building . at 8th and Main St reet. The city of Santa Ana has asked that lhe county put the old jail and another piece of pro·perty on Sycamore now occupied by the coupty parking garage. She emphasit.td that each meal will still be a balanced, nutritious Type A hot lunch. And il will still sell for ~ cents. Councilmen this week learned that the aid city hall and yard complex has had no takers since going up for bid last mon th . But local realtor Addie BeUe Hunt sent a last·minute offer at the city council meeting \Vednesday for about $30,000 to purchase a lot along Avenida ta Estrella In the city's industrial district. She is the only bidder thus far. and If no others emerge within two weeks of las t Wednesday. s.he will be the new owner. LO-acre Rezone Hearing Slated A request to rezone 10 acre111 of land once eat1Tlarked for a medical center in San Clemente will come up for a city council public hearing March 17. The application -turned down by 8 3-2 vote of planning commissioners last week -was set Wednesday for hearing in 1wo weeks. Specifically the owners in escrow of !he acreage · across from the civic center geek garden apartment zoning to replace the "Unclassified"' rating now on the land . Original zoning allowing land use as a ho!pital laD.W-Jl. nie land rias remained graded, but t1nlmproved for the past several year& after plans to develop a ho:5pital there withtred. ' • . . Hinted for San Clemente The days of the traditional July 4 safe-and-sane fireworks aales in San Clemente aee.m almost over. Councilmen this week fro:r.e the usually routine pennission to allow fireworks sales in the city to four -killing all chances for more servic.e groups this year to launch fund-raising fireworks sales. e1rlier this year, however. "With the . economic situation being what it 'ls this year ft '• reasonable that the manufacturers w!U be trying hanler than ever to stimulate local groups to sell fireworks. There would be just too many stands," he said. 11iis building will be demolished to make way for the new street and the baillc plans to build on the north ha.If of the property and a section of the present 8th· StreeL · The parcel which the bank will · PJ.lr<;llase boast.a 8,000· square Jeet. Krause has sent out a funn "Notice of Availability" to all oounty departments re1arding the former jail but it is doubtful t}lat any department· will want to use the old 4-story structure built in early 1900s. Boy• Club '1'urtted' Dawn Trustee Robert Dameron a l a t e d Wednesday that he woi.ild like to see food prices rsised a nickel. Rex Nerison. Assis~n~ Superintendent f9r Business services has argued that a· raise in pMce would cut c1feteria participation. ·"We feel these two ateps .-the ice cfeam and . the . popul~r elimination of unpcp.ular .lunc!)es -will reverse the tl'end a'nd make up our losses," said Ntrison. .Since September the food services pro- gram has Jost approximately $.S,000 and has been ·a sore point with the bo1rd of trustees. • And after agreeing unanimoualy, to limit (he number of se.Uers, councilmen unofficially agreed that art.er July 4 they would ex.hume the fireworia matter for a possible blanket ban on sales and use of the pyrotechnics in the city limits. If lhe ban is enacted, the city WO\lld be the third Orange Co1sr munici"'11ty lo ban the sale of lhe items. Vets · Get O'kay for · Park Newport Beach bans 11le. b u t &uthorl:r.es .use in .ome 1ectloru. Laiuna Beach also his 1 ban In effect.. The ban was considered, councilmen said, because of. a,everal fire& started last Independence D•y aeason by fireworkl . Several extremely grave 1llua· lions arose a~ wtll from pranks pulled on unsuspecting residtnta -aome elder· iy, Mayot. Walter Evans said lht freeu on the number. of 11eUer1 aternmed from the es:pected rash of requesll this sprine, Several veter1n'1 or1anlutlon1 ind other • service groups won permission The South Coast Area Boys Club will have to look beyond Old Plua Park in San Clemente for 1 aitt to hold 1 <:amlv1I, but the clty'1 VFW post wlll be able: to use the park for Memori1l Day servlce:s complete with gunfire. ' City Cowldlmen 11111 week •lreed 11111 the pork -'11m1unded by resld<nces -woukl ·not bl: aultablt for the you.th group'• major camlv1l. That or11Dlza· lion woo Id have to find ·~ 1i1A But Frank Naurto, cOmmander of VFW Ptlst 71t2, woo permf1sion Wed- nesd1y ni1ht for lhe Mf:mori1l day observance from 9 1.m. to noon. Three l .. . . ---......... roundo; or gunfire would bt shot in memory of f1Jlen HrYicerMn. The pork -long an objtd of concern by •nti1bbor1 Ind · councllmtn -sits to close · to homes that noile from ' 1 c•Jlivals and the·llkt create ·1 nuisance.. Last year's Boys Club carnival was . held ·there amid continuing comp\1lnta by neiJbbon. List year'• Boys Club c1rnlv1I wu held !her< aml_cl.,<0ntloulng .l»flllll•lnt& by neighbors. • Counc1lmen decid'.d to forbid 0\8 use of the park this year. The-11ftDUal Fteeta 11 Christianila, com- • plete with parade and weekend carniv1I, 1l1U will be conducted at th1 old oval }iirk: hoW~ver, , The u,. of'llle f~llity •!Jo.,.., denied reeently · to . D'r. Carl Mclntl~ for a· victory in Vietnam mmh and rt11ly. the furore luted fur weeks before the flrty minister settled for an alternate locaUon. Ont of the outspoken CU:!PoOOlt'-10 Mcintire'• "patriotic rally" for flghfing · men was Niureti, who told councljmtn ne> out.aide groups should be allawed use of the f1clllty for major 11thtrln1s. • I - Thousands In Drugs Confiscated In a sweep that began at noon Thurs- day and lasted until after midnight. Laguna Beach police and state narcotict officers arrested 30 persons on grand jury indictments for alleged narcotics offenses. The arrests followed a three-month investigation in the Laguna area during which undercover agents claim to have purchased several thousand dollars worth of drugs from suspects ranging in age fnim 18 to 50 years. MOiSl of those arrested face charge! of sale of dangerous drugs lncludin& LSD and heroin. The grand jury indictments were hand- ed down on Monday aild the arrests were made by three Laguna and five state officers following a Thursday morn· lng briefing in Laguna. The operation was directed by Sgt. Nell Purcell, hea'd of the Laguna Beach Police Department's special enforcement division and agent Jack Leavey of the State Bureau of NarcoUc Enforcement. Mosl or lhe arrests were Made ia the vicinity of SOutb 'Coasl RiibwaY and Cleo Street in Laguna Beach, known as a .. 1athering place for youthful longhairs and a center or narcotics deal· ing In the· Art Colony. Before the night was over, officers al.!IO bad ranged as far afield as San Oemente, Ciosta Mesa and Hawthorne to make individual arrests. ·Almost all those arrested were "in- volved'' in the use or sale of heroin Purcell claimed. ' Most of the "buys" which Jed up to lhe grand jury indictments were made in lhe Cleo Street area. known to narcotics officers as "junkie corner '' Purcell said. ' .. Jn .recent months. the officer asserted "the area has been literally taken over' with dealing going on quite openly." ' Last week the windshield of Purcell's car was smashed with a board while he was making arrests in the area. On the same day officer John Saporito was assaalled on the nearby beach and on another oceasion an officer 's private car was stoned as he drove through the are11. according to Purcell. Double Slaying Suspect Dead Special to the DAILY PILOT RIVERSIDE -Cecil F. Hunt, the man charged with killing his wife and the 1969 pres.ident of the Oranse County Young Republicans, died Thursday of a small caliber riOe bullet he fired into his head after the double killing .Monday. He was 39, He was charged with murdering James W. Nash. 40, ·or 1601 W. Flora St., Santa Ana, and Mrs. Betty Hunt. 39, at the Hunt ~me i11 suburban Meadowbrook. Investigators said Hunt, who sue~ cumbed at ruverside County Genera.I [lospitll!, became cnraa:ed due to a tri· angle romance. Coast Weather ll won't get any higher lhan Q dtgrees; whelbtr you're-on the coast or driving inland, SalUrday. Gusty winds will prevail under sunny skies. INSmE TODAY NtlliUt Marriner will be gutst ltcturtr ot lht Orange Count11 Philharmonic Socitt11's free prtvicw Wtdnesdo11. Stt today's Weekender. SN lint IT c.u,.,,.11 r Cl'leckl11t u, ' t Clflnll!M 11·4? ~ Ct,.k1 U c,..n_.. u OMfll Nttkff t• Ol'l'WCM 1• ••11trtt1 ,... ' "lfllna .. , .......,.,. ' lt A.IMI Lt!lftfi II ....... ' Mtrrlt" LlcitllMt It . . IMVI.. U.24 M4'1!HI 'fflft • N1!1'111I N-Wi Ot-111 .. CW.I\' 1• lt•t11tr1•ll ti~ SrMe Ptrtw I SWtt 14-t• Sttdt •Mtltth M '"'"""*' tJ, 7'1ttltn tWt ·-. WllMfl'I. Ntwt. 11-lt• W.nl N.-. W Wffkllllllllf" t"'5 ' l ' I I I ' _:__\ 1 I I l • I r ' I I I I ' '' ' • J DAil Y PILOT SC f'r~. Mardi 5, 1971 Police Ha rassed - Mesan Gives Up After Showdown By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... IMllY ,lltl lllH Screaming defiance and frantically '°'-ding guns, Iii Costa Mesa man finally surrendered lo quiet police coaxing Thursday, only secondll before they forc- ed a showdown. A crowd of 300 milled around the tenae scene, ignoring orden broadcast from a circling police belicopttr to move back. Some -standing exposed to wbat could have been a mm murder spree -taunted and heck1ed shotgun-armed officers crouched under cover. The drama began at 3:20 p.m., with Bid for Music Pro gram Gets City Study A pita for the reinstatement of an Instrument.al mualc program in the San Joaquin Elementary School Di.strict was made Wednesday, but with little en· couragement. Mrs. Joanna Ramirez, representing the Mission Viejo High School M u s I e B~ters, asked the board to consider the music program for next year and ad~ed that a questionnaire is being clrC'.:lated through the district to Jne.lS\lre interest. Trustee Philip Bradfield said the board would consider the program during budget study sessio~ but bad eliminated the program two years ago because of more Important priorities. "We have to provide programs that are going to benefit the most children," be !&id. The Boosters' request w a s ac- companied by a written proposal spelling out how a program could be reinstated over a two year period. It would bring music into classrooms on a regular basis and would help ac- quaint children in grades four, five and •lx with begtMmg theory and rhythm. tonette seS&iOM, recordings, fi.lw, and &angs. These youngsters also would be in- volved tn choral perfonnances and would have lhe opportunity to see outs.lde m. 1irumenta1 groups In school or during a field trip. Seventh and tlghtb graders would begin lllrlngs In.structlon and would continue the woodwind. brass and percussion in- etructlon the district providee. If tlme permltted qualified !ntemiedlate school students would participate in an in. tennediate level of instruction and ad- vanced tralnlng would be available for those who e,;cel. During the second year the instrument lnatruction would be introduced to fourth, fifth and mtb graders. The music theory lntrt'.lduoed 1n the first year could reach rome younger children if time were available. Mn. 11amirei told the board that such a program would not only tnrlch the elementary school curriculum but also would enhance the high school program by providing trained mualclanJ for band, orchestra and choir. lloanl <llalnnan GraUan Bidart told Mrs. Ramlm that the boa'd will again coralder the music program and will be interested in the results of the ques-- tionnaire. He added that he could make no promises, however. The University Park Parent-Teacher Organization and the Capistrano HighlandJ Homeowners• Association both have requuested the reinstatement of the music program. ... a report of a man shot at 3013 Coolidge Ave., and a man with a gun at 3002 Fillmore Ave., one block away. Victim John W. Golden II, 23, of Phoenix. Arit., ts listed In satisfactory condJUon today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, with a .32 caliber bullet wound that collapsed one Jung. He still sprinted a block, traillng blood, on the one remainlng respiratory organ before collapsing. Paul E. Weaver, 30, of the Fillmore Avenue address where the 30-mlnute con· frontaUon occurred, is in city jail, booked on charges of assault wlth intent to commit murder. New charges may be added since aome Items in Weaver's arsenal -lined up along a wall ready for use. -are listed as stolen, according to police. A police helicopter crufJing over the Mesa North triplex development when the reports came in directed ground units to the acene. Patrolmea John C. Wh.ite, Robert E. Arnold and Gary Barwlg arrived almost si multaneously to find a second bloody victim plstol·wh1pped in the Cray lean- ing against a car. ' He pointed to the· front triplex unit and said the suspect bad run inside. Getting no response to orders to come ou~ Arnold and White gingerly open<d the unlocked door and entered. guns drawn, but the borne was 8ilent as a tomb. . Sudden aow>ds overhead sent them behind a bar at the foot of the st.airs for cover, with a full view of the shadow of a man with a gun. The soundJ were bolts of high-powered rifles and shotguns being loaded, the patrolmen realized, so they again ordered him to drop hia weapons and surTender. "You'll take me out of here feet first before I'll do 10 to 20," the Santa Monica Hospital steam engineer scream- ed back. By this Ume, backup patrol units wel'e parked at crazy angles in the crowded cuJ.de-sac adjacent to busy Baker Street and the curious crowd swelled. Officers Arnold and White kept up a constant, calming stream of con· versation, as Patrolman John Stoneback -who joined them inside -passed word on out by the moment.s. Weaver, reportedly trying to make l!IUl'Tender deals the patrolmen had no authority to accept, stubbornly refused to surrender, leading to an order for teargas raced to the scene by Lt Avery Smlth. A shootout appeared increasingly li~e ly. Officer Arnold, who only six hours before told a reporter the seml·humorous rampage of a monkey Wednesday was his wildest case since 1956, when he joined -kept talking. His throat was dry. Topics ranged from name ?nd age to Weaver's family and the fact they and others could be hurt il he continued to hold out. The suspect cried back be had a right to protect his home, Maneuvering outside the apartment - Its second floor windows ominously cur~ tained -Detect.Ive Sgt. Jack Calnon prepartd to fire a teargas shell. Downstairs, Lt. Harold fischer had slipped into the. triple.I htrt\self and was waiting for the sound of Calnon's shotgun. "I was going up the stairs and try to lob one in before he could duck into a liUle bathroom. I know the layout. My father owns a couple of them," he explained. "You have to hit them hard and fast with gas, so it saturates the room," he added. Weaver, however, bad heard the talk or teargas. DAILY PILOT""'"' ~r lllclll,. 11.M~lt, ATTENDANT tLEFTl TAKES PULSE WH ILE RUSHING SHOOTI NG VI CTIM TO AMBULA NCE In Co•t• Miu, John Golden of Phoenix Takes Bullet in Chest; He'll Live Wholesale Price Rate Registers Wliopping Climb W ASHJNGTON (UPI) -Wholesale prices registered a 0.9 percent increase in February, biggest one-month rise since July, 1953, the Labor Department reported today. Coupled with a 0.7 percent rise in January, the figw-es indicated that ln-- fiation continues to plague the economy despite a year-long business slump. Wholesale price increases generally show up later in higher prices at the consumer level. The department announced a little more than a \li'eek ago that on the basis of preliminary figures, t h ~ February increase was 0.8 percent. The complete figures now available indicated the jump was even higher. Hog prices soared more than 31 percent fn February, probably inclicatlng sharp boosts in pork prices at the butcher shops this month. cattle prices rose 13 percent during February and livestock prices on \be average were 16 percent higher. Overall, prices for farm products rose 4.6 percent last month while prices for processed foods and feeds advanced 1.3 percent The Wholesale Price Index f o r February rose to 112.8 percent o( the 1967 average. That meant it cost $11.28 last month to buy the same variety of wholesale goods that could have been obtained for $11.18 in January, $10.97 a year ago and $10 a little more than three years ago. The industrial commodities prices in-- creased 0.3 percent in February, the same an10unt as reported earlier. That figure is considered more significant by many economists than the more volatile farm products prices. On a seasonally adjusted basis, the ·wholesale price index rose 0.7 percent in February compared to the 0.6 percent increase reported earlier. Promise Shown Nation's ~ohless Total s Take Second Straight Dip WASHINGTON (UPI) -Joblessness declined for the second straight month In February, dipping to 5.1 peretnt or the nation's work force, the Labor Department reported today. Although the decline was concentrated among teen-agen and persons seeking part.time work, Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson said the figures "continue to show further promise" of overall i~provement in the nation's employment picture. The national jobless rate reached a nlne·year high of 6.2 percent in December, It dropped to 6 percent in January and Hodgson said the two-month decllne "ls indeed heartening." He said It showed "the economy is moving in a favorable direction," be said. A total of ' 5.4 million persons "-'ere out of work ln February, the same ~s In January. However, aft ei; ad- Justment for seasonal v a r i a t I O n s unemploymen~ declined 185,000 during the month, w1tb the rate dropping from 6 percent to 5.8 percent. Burglar Suspect Wan ted in South A drifter, whom police describe as a "professional burglar," is awaiting extradit.ion on a San Clemente burglary charge 1n New Orleans today but despite a $50,000 bail lag he probably will never stand trial here. The 5.8 percent rate is identical to the rate recorded last November. The jobless rate for adult men was Wl(hanged at 4.2 percent and for married men at 3.2 percent during February. Th~ jobless rate for persons seeking full·tlllle work also remained essentially unchanged at 5.4 pereent. However, the jobless rate among teenagers dropped sharply, from 17.6 percent to 16.7 percent, while the rate for part·time workers fell from 9.2 per. cent to 8.7 percent. Since the jobless rate hit 6.2 percent in December, actual total unemployment has increased slightly. But it Is normal for this time of year for the jobless rate to rise, resulting in a decline in the key seasonally adjusted reading. The February jobless figure was still far higher than the figure a year ago when 4.2 percent of the work force was without jobs. Total unemployment was almost 1. 7 million higher last month than a year earlier. The unemployment rate for whites \.\.'hich had inc reased steadily since lat~ 1969, declined from 5.6 percent in January to 5.3 percent in February. Average hourly earnings of rank.and· file workers on private payrolls were $3.34 in February, one cent higher than in January. Church to Host Lecture on POWs . Authorities in Dallas, Tex., have first bid on the e,;tradit.ion of Thomas Dean The plight of American soldiers listed McMillan, 30. as miJising in action or tho~ who are The man i! wanted there for dozens prisoners of war in Southeast Asia will of alleged felonies, including assault on be discussed 8 p.m. Wednesday, March a police officer, an alleged rash of burglaries and robbery. 2~ in St. Michaels and All Angels Mc1-fillan, wanted in connection with Episcopal Church, 3233 Pacific View a $1,250 residential burglary in San Drive, Coronal del Mar. Clemente Feb. 8, was arrested by New Mrs. Wally Clark of Newport Beach, Judge Hears Phone Call Recordll1g Taped telephone conversations be- tween a Laguna Niguel 1nan and the Costa Mesa policeman he allegedly tried to bribe were played back toda y for Or- ange County Superior Court Judge Ron· aid Crookshank. Ail four con\'ersntions were recorded by Costa ~1esa Officer Gary Barwig In his home April 2 and 3 and the prose- cution maintains they prove ils point. Samuel Rosman. Tl. of 29351 San Briso Place, allegedly tried lo persuade offi· cer Barwig to accept $10,000 for fram · Ing a Laguna Beach man by planting drugs in his car. The allegedly intended \'ictim-Char· Jes Dryer, 31, of 1645 Sunset Ridge Drive -was to be a key prosecution witness against a codefendant in a grand theft case. Eugene RoJtdondo, 44, of 2422 E. 22nd St., Newport Beach. and Rosman are currenUy on tria! charged with conspir· ing to bribe a police officer. Dryer and Rondondo had been indict. ed earlier by the Orange County Grand Jury in connection with theft of thou- sands of dollars worth of liquor from Orange Coast night clubs. Dryer has been cleared of the latter charge and it is expected he will ap. pear as a prosecution witness against Rondondo Yrho is hospitalized in Las Vegas. The ailing businessman will go on trlal next Monday, facing Deputy District At- torney Martin J. Henegahn and testi· mony of chief DA's investigator Eddie Banks. Today Banks played tapes of conver· sations in which Rosman's ability to ob- tain a large consignment of drugs to plant in Dryer's car was discussed. Officer Barwig was to make a routine traffic stop of Dryer, authorities &ay, then pretend to find the stash of depres- sant drugs, arrest him and thus dis· credit his anticipated testimony against Rondondo. Superiors were immediately notified by Officer Barwig of the alleged plot ta frame Dryer, leading to the counterac- tivity ending with arrest of Roadondo and Rosman. Cap o Ro ta ria1is Back Green belt The San Juan Capistrano Rotary Club has given its verbal support to the Laguna Greenbelt in a resolution passed by the group. The document, presented to Greenbelt ~irman James Dilley by Rotary of- f1c1als, states the club "resolved to en-- ~oura~e all c!tizens to join this organiza- tion 1n dedicated and compassionate service" to preserve the open spa~ of the county. D_illey praised .the group far its support, saymg lhe backing of every organization In Orange County was needed in the effort to maintain the o~ land around the cities. "There are so few areas left to preserve in Orange County as civilization crunches on," Dilley said, "and time is running shorl." Helicopter Makes Emergency Landing Orleans police in an allegedly stolen car earlier this week. whose husband, Air Force Lt. Col. N' C I T I ixon ance s r 1·p San Clemente detectives said the case Stan ey Clark, is missing in action, will A ~1arine helicopter made a "precau-here involves the theft of jewelry 8 speak and $how a film. She represents \VASHlNGTON (UPI) _ President tionary landing" in an open fieJd near pistol and cash from the home of Mr. the non·profit organ'·ation, r-nce'n for N' h I I Boul d M h ... ""' 1xon as cance ed his trip today to rvine evard and Browning Avenue an rs. C arles Herald, 242 Avenida POWs Inc. of Tustin. Rochester, N.Y. because of a snowstorm Thursday afternoon, was repai~d and Esplanade. The program is open to the public. h' h on its way back to Marine Corps Airl-'--~-----------....'.'.:..!~~'.'.'..'.:.".l""'_"'.~'._!".~::_ __ _:w~•:oc~s~n~a:'.''l':ed"..'.'ro'.'a~d~a~nd~al~rpo~'~' f~a=ci~li~ties. Station, Santa Ana within one hour. The twin-rotor CH--46 landed at 3:30 p.m. because of a control malfunction, a Marine Corps spokesman said. There were no injuries or damage. Henredon r~• • • DAllY PILOT OlAHG:S COAST PUILWllNO CCMr ANY a:eHrt N. WeN ,.,.....,., ltld ...... Jtc\: R. c.tf.., Vke ~ """' o.. .. M1N1W Fighting Rage s in Turkey Over Search£ or l{idnapers LOOK FOR THE UNUSUAL • • lllem•• Ket•lt E•Hw 1"111•• A. M•rtililH ~ .... E•r1W Ch1rf11 H. leo1 llc.li1r4 P. N~R ' Anliitn1 MMllllnt llllltwa .., __ _ 212 For•1t ATt llV• S..C.._...OMM 305 No1U1 El C•111l11.e l 11I """ Ofllo4I Co•hl Mtu: »t w.:~.::r Strwt i.llWPOl'T 1-.cll: JS» leui.vtM ttulllllll'!ft ... 1111.J ..... .... •• " OAIL V PILoT, wnt1 wflldl h ............ N-..~,eu, la ......... 111111\' --...,_ •• , Ill ..... , ..... ti .. ..,. ue.-...... Meww1 lltd\. C.t9 Mi.a. Nlfll~•lli• t..-ctt. ~'-"'Ill Vtlf9¥', S.... a--w c..pi.i,_ .... ~ ..... -"" .... '"""" ..itlan., Prlrlc.lMI ""'-..... .... .. II· »t Witt • ., lit#!. C.. #MM.. T8'11k1• C7141 Ml"4JJ1. ct_.. AIM"el I MJ..N71 !.-C ....... Al fl• I Jhl T1t11• 111 4tJ"""4• i.,.. ..... Al l qxwtz1•1 , ........ 4ff.+466 °""""" 1m, a...... C.•t ,......._..., ~'I'. ... -,..,.. llMM,,... ..1,.,141 "'*""" W f#oll11-ol• ....... fM'f .. • .... "' • ...., ....... ,... llllM• "' ~ ...... ._.. ~-....... "" ., N.._.. letdl -Cll .. -..-C•llfenlllo. ·-~ ., ""'"' ~---"'"'' w ,,,..,. ..,. -IN'f'I ~ .. ,.. ..... iltM -""'• • ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) - A force of S,000 Turllih troops and police .. ized the campus of tht Middle East Technical University (METU) today in a four hour battle with atudtnLs but found no trace of four kldnaped Americans faced with execution if a $400,000 ransom is not paid. Turkish authorities said at least one student died In the battle In which the studentl hurled bombs and fired pistols. Fifteen students,.-a Turkish officer and a soldier were reported wounded. The soldier and two student.s were reported in critical condition. Disorders spread to other parts o[ Turkey and anti-American and an· tigovernment demonstraUons flared In other parts or Ankara. Informed sources said the right.wing, pro·American government of Prtmler S u I e y m a n Dtmlrel m!ght have to impose martial law. A group calling ltseU the "Turkish Peoples Liberation Army," a leUist ex· treml!t ~up, kldnaped the r 0 u r American radir technicians Thursday and sald they would bt eiecuted if a ransam of $400,000 was not paid. They moved up lht e,;ccution date to 6 a.m. Salttrday (It p.m. EST Frldaf). President Nixon, speaking Thursday nlaht at his televised news conferenCfl in Washington, was 1sked if he thought Turkey should neg6tlate (or release or the airmen. He said he would not make that suggestion and that following previous similar cases the United States would leave it up to Turkey whether to negotiate, having in mind their own internal circumstances . The four Americans were identified as Airman lC Richard Caraszi of Slam· ford. Conn.; Airman lC Larry J. Heavner of Denver. Colo.. whose parents live in Maysville. W.Va.~ Airman IC Jame!! M. Gholsion of Alexandria.\.-Va., and SI· Sgt. Jimmie J; Sexton ot San Angelo, Tex. Turkish students spurred by leftist elements have in recent years staged countless anti·American demonstrations In protest against American policies in Vietnam and because of resentment against the fact 20,000 Americans and dependents are stalioned in Turkey, a member of NATO. At Izmir, the big U.S. base on the Turkish Aegean Sea Coalt, extraordinary security precautions were clamped on American facilities and p e r s o n n e 1 • Turkish sources said many American servicemen had started proc:tedlngs to send their famllles home. The confrontation between the students and police began at 4 a.m. when military and police forces a.i::i:tvcd to search for 'the kldnaped Americ:ans. 'Five kldnapers were Involved and one of them captured by police said he was a student at METU. ' ' FromHenredon·s M&J& A gractful com~ode in Louis XV style. Magnific.mtly carved from_ &Ohd cherry, it i" l6}~_inchca wide: and 17 inclSta high. ¥td cQ,Uld ..,,_II bt the ~ltpnt-acccn&j' f~ any 6oe room. Come «e tht entire folio 1ocollro- lion, for YoU an aurc to find thit one nquWtt nitU your home necda. •· DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEC -HERITAGE 711111111 "· NEWPORT BEACH 1727 w .. 1.1111 Dr., 642·2050 Oi·EN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 • INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH Profaulonal Interior 0.1lgn1rs Av1ll1blo-AID-NSIO 345 Nerth Co11t Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ~ t..a "-..... If 0..,. Centy 14f.12•t ... f f ' t I • 8 DAILY PILOT SC Friday, March S. 1971 lfloney's tfo1·th ,.., ____ ""'-='l"'T':: •.....-:=.,,.,,='-="""-""' ____ ,, Cl1a1·ity Giving OVER THE COUNTER • Rec[Uii·e s Proof R) S'L\IA PORTER II~ Ct aOO<ll tn wt~ t"' •K•fr(~ 1~11 IU!f ti .-m. k:l l If you lake 1ten11zf'd ded 1c 11ons for ch a r l tab I econ tr1bulloll.!i and a TreA~ury ex ::imln1ng agent cha.l!enges and d1sallo"s all or part or your deductions fc r cash con tribuUons '.1.hal should you do? Jn 1970 the Ta:.: Court came up with some dec1s1ons 11hlch you can use To .start 1111h 1r vour dcduc lion is based ma1nlv on cash contnbu!lons nr gifts of used propcrl) <1 n agent will ask ) ou to prove you ga1 c the :uriount of cash you claim sind the va!;e of the propertv you gave If your only proor is your Ol'on statement that \OU n1ade the varlous con tub 1!1or o; n1any agen1s \1111 <1rb1!ranly c1 ! }Our con tr1but1on deduction to $50 to $100 for the year tr }OU claim substantially more and are 111lhn~ to fight 11 tourt consider thts you are e11!1tled to deduct a reasonable estimate or con tr1but1ons dUrtng the )ear e en if )nu do not ha1e 11111 ten proof lo supparl everv dollar \OU cl.:um The kev 11111 be 1our <1b1hty to persuade the T1easurv or courts thrit your estimate 1s reasonable 1n view of sur r ou n ding ci rcumstances and the courts are more 11 llhng than 1'reasury ex.amtners to con sider an estimate reasonable F'or instance one laxpa,er deduc!ed S540 for tontnb 1t1ons tn one cht rch ~GO to another S:> each to Bov Seou!s Girl Scouts and Red f ealher and S215 fnr 1ah1e or eloth1ng anrl a crih g11 en lo Good11 ill 1 dustnes The Treasury slashed this S830 to $52 The taxpaye r 11ent 10 Tax Court 11 here on the basis of his testimony it 1vas dee1ded that he had g1\en at least $S40 lo churches and the three $a contr1but1ons for a total cash contr1but1on or $555 It reduced his deduction lo Goodwill to $2~ because of h s lack of proof of the prop- erty s value -a tot<tl deduc hon of $580 or more than 10 lime~ the S52 the Treasury 1\as "'lhng to a11o'v In a similar case the Treasurv cut a taxpayers $768 claim for cash rontributions to $104 for lack of proof The Tax Court allo11ed h m lo deduct $500 or almost f11 e 1 000 s OF Oil rAINTINGS WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE orEN TO THE PUBLIC 50°/o OFF 1' I [ ED NGER S ... NT• •N" P~o"e 1lS ll~ ~ OE.o\LE~S WANTED UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPEN SATURDAYS ... , . Prices J1unp Mll \VAUKEE -Al I s Chalmers Manufac turing Co raised pr ces by eight perC1?n l on centr1£ugal and axial con1 pressors Rotary compressor pr ces 11ere raised 7 pe1 cent ENROLL NOW' MON THURS FRIDAYS 17141 540 $211 S• Coos• Pioio 10 5 PM 10 6 r M loccrt•d In Cotto Mno I PSYCHo"cvBERNETICS I WEEKEND WORKSHOP MIH'llt Coron• Conlt tl'Ct Ce"ttr-llkl • ..,..,,.,. Mlr<ll U U E" fl mtftl L mltt'd H M STOLTE Ci l 121111111-1&11 er 41111 '7).JJH ~~~~ c Newport Beach Cablevision 2624 w Coast Highway 642·3260 Watch Jwo Vital Programs COAST FREEWAY -WHYl f, doy Mu<h 5th 8 00 p m • th rty m nute rev ew every vot•r should se• C ... c lead•r Roy Woolley relat es the h ,tory of the Coo11st Fr•eway t SPEAf( OUT -Monday March 8th 6 00 pm State ments from 1'•1t Pre11dent Newport Beecli Chem!er of Commerce ettorn•y Cherles Curry en d • stete mtnt from V ct Meyor Howard Rogers S•e these •xclus ve Newport Ceblevn on Ch annel 3 Edison Nan1cs New Paul w l\fana "Cl' " GENWAY LUSf A NEW '71 GUllD PllX P01VTIAC DlALERS SYSTEM .... ·~"'" 9rwl"1'-t •• ,._,. u.este 111 ....... LE'ASING l ls i.w ls S12'i.t5 •· . . . ,., -======;== -BO~ LONGPRI PONTIAC 1n.uS1 ., •'• l•OO 13600 RAOI llYO, WUTMINStlR CONTACT, NU o~wsoN TROPICAL FISH Ptc f c Goldf1•h Ferm• 14842 Edwerds St Oil 111t Jtll ()feet ,,.....,,, •I 0.lf'9_ .... •l'MI .. 1,. WESTMlliST!R HJ 715S I • ·- Complete-Ne,v York Stock List ,.... "" tM1 J Mitll L.a9 Ci.t Cllt • , I I , " I : I l • • Fr1d•Y, M~rth 5, 1971 DAILY PJLrll 7 CHECKING •UP• Two Vie For Tiny Lost Boy Mai1son's Maste1·y In Deaths Cited DOG SHOW unA ANA PASH••• s••AIB MARCH 6-10 A.M. Husband in Dark SAN DIEGO !UPI) -For a week, a little 2-yW-old boy found wandering I n a 11upermarket would not tell aut horities at Hi 11 c rest Receiving Home hls name. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Qiarles Manson's powtr over his followers combined with thei'r chronic UAe ef LSD enabled the cult leader to "make them into robots " and could conceivably pro1ram them "to go 111ut and ki!J," a pr o m I n e n t psychiatrist testified Thursday. When Wife Leaves He was called "Johnny ," since John Doc sounded too formal . By L. M. BOYD A TEAM of scientists in:ii!ta their atudie.s or servicemen show a married soldier's beard grOws faster when he's on furlouih than when he's on duty .••. THE MARK.ET RESEARCHERS say drinkers hereabout,, have been putting away a lot more vodka lately. 1ttore beer. too. They don't know why ..•. THE STATISTIClANS ligurt about 30,000 wives a year nationwide run away from homes without even bothering to say goodbye to their husbands. THEY'RE NOT CALLED bobby so1ers anymore. Just Engelbert Humperdinck they act prttty much the way they acted 'l1 years ago with Frank Sinatra. Except they don't faint. Now they strip off their scantie.s and throw them on the stage. At least, that's what happened recently. Suppose somebody's hiring this claque of 1dolescent strippers? U so, that's bad. Very bad. B&ST OF THE crane t1perators are women, il'1 said. Preswnably, because women have better depth perception than do men. The Carrier C-Orporation reportedly found this out during World War JI . They assigned women to run their 20-ton cranes. kept them on tholse jobs after the surrender • . . . I F YOU'RE an ulcer patient, it's not just your daytime attitude that afft.CU your midsection. Dreams in your sleep can stir up trouble. too. A n d nightmares can be: fairly dangerous. Or so reports a Calllomla doctor. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "You said it's more dangerous usually to step on the brakes at 30 mph than at 10 mph. Why? A. Brakes are more apt to er•b at 10 mph ••.. Q. "WhJch Is heavier. cold water or hot water?'' A. It's heaviest at 39.2 degrees F. Gets lighter as it g e I 1 warmer. And as it gets colder than that, too • • . • Q. "Including Alaska and Hawaii, where 's tbt geographic center of lhe United States oow?" A. In Butte CoUnty of South Dakota. HOW RAPIDLY HENS lay eggs depends to some degru on their frames of mind. And their frames of mind ls af. fected markedly by what they hear. Like music. Rig up a tape recorder in a hen house to play concerts for them and they will respond, that has been proved. Chicken farmer Eric Weston of Plaxton, England, did so. He got the best egg production with the mambo. Chickens really go for the mambo, evidently. IF YOU WANT to buy fireplace wood in the midd le of Manhattan, you go down to the delicatessen and pay about Sl a stick. That's another reason the ladyfriend and I did not lin&tr overlong thereabouts • • • . WHAT'S HAPPENING to the divorce ra!A! anyway? Jn the last several months It has gone up to almost 50 percent among the · recently married. Will check further and report. AVERAGE . STUDENT leaves school after 11,000 hours in the classroom. Thar1 what the slide rule boys figur- ed aut. A sizable investment of time, what? Yet coMider this. By graduation, that same stu- dent has put in 15.000 hours in front of the television, they say. Yo ur questions and com- ments are 1oelcomed and will be used in CHECKING UP wh erever poss ible. Ad- dress letttrs to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Bo:r. 1875. Ntwport Beach, Calif ., 92660. Today, he has two identities. A Los Angeles man was thwarted Thursday in his at- tempt to cl aim the little boy he said was bis son after police received a call from 11 Santa Barbara woman who said tM boy was h e r grandson. Henry Covarrubia. 42, ~n auto mechanic, identified the boy as his son, Esteban Federico Covarrubia . 2, whom he said was kldnaped six months ago in Tijuana. Police said Irene Anderson of Santa Barbara c a 11 e d minutes before a Juvenile Coui't hearing In which the boy was to be officially turned over to Covttrrubia. T h e woman said her daughter. Rena Kahn. and her grandaon, Mark, had come to San Diego last month and she had not heard from them since. The FBI. which entered the case because of a possibility a kidnap victim had betn transported across .an ino terna tional boundary, said it was checking out both claims. It refwed furl.her comment. Or. Joel Fort, author of the "The Pleasure Seekers" and a founder of the Free Clinic in San Francisco, told the penalty phase of the Tat.e- LaBianca murder trial that Manson's influence: over hls followers wa.s the most im- portant factor which led t• the seven :slayings. Fort was called as witness for defendant Leslie 'Van Houten and said her use of LSD and the use of the drug by ether members o! the ''Manson Fam i 1 y ' ' un- doubtedly swayed them more to Manson's ptrsonality. Manson's attorney, Irving Kanarek, then asked Fort. "are you telling us a school tor crime can exist?" ··rm indeed telling you that , although the way you're put- ting it is 1 rather absurd Sni per .Amok In San Diego SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Three can were hit apparently by San Jose sniper fire during a 15-minute period in southeast San Diego Thursday night , police said . C H• Additional police unitl were amp·us It moved into the area , but the sniper was not immediately B M I located. Persons in the cars Y e ee struck by the bullets were not injured, police said. SAN JOSE (UPI) -Two,1fiiOiiiOiii'iiO'ii0~~~-.. 1 policemen . were hospitalized WAllHOUSI SALi' and 13 1tudents ttrreated KOi CARP Thursday In a melee which began as a protest b y ectilogist.s aga inst Stand1rd Oil recrui ter1 on the San Jose State College campus. Campus police tried to block pickets and a 5cuffle broke out. Two demonstrators were arrested b u t when c i t y plainclothesmen arrived to pick them up, aeveral other youths tried to 1et them free. H1.111t ship ...... ! ff eelGrflJI 1wlmm1,,. l•w.~ • mull !Of' 111 Alllfarlu.11 From '150 Pacific Goldfish Farm 1..U .... ,.. St •• W•lmhtll.,. Off ll'lt $4111 r>itQe l"r ..... V I I Gclkl.,,lttll a. 101 .. ...nu A message of hope for those who were left out because we couldn't get them a Volkswagen right away. NEWl'ORT l!ACH Chick Iverson , In<. 445 E. CoHt Hwy. (71 41 6734900 Our sh ip come in. Yo ur loco I authorized Volkswagen deo ler hos a good .se lection of models, colors and option al equ ipment to choose from. And if he doesn't hove exactly what you're looking for, he con probably get it in a day or two. So ;f you 've been wa iti ng for the right time to buy a VW, the ti me hos come. + ,_,.. .. ..... .;.1 ilicd In case you forgot what it looks like. • SAN JU.-N CA"STRANO Bill 'tatos, Inc. 32152 V1llo Rd. (71 41 4'9·2261 HUNTINGTON BEACH 1'11rbour Volhwegtn 11711 Be•ch 8oul1v•rd (714) 142-4435 e ve r simplification,'' Fort replied. ··Minds of men are Indeed molded Jn totalitarian :sncieties or by totalitarian in· dividuals. LSD can make a person more malleable , •. more easy to program. An obviously enraged Manson then s houted. "There's two of us who knows he 's ignorant -that's me and him. He don't know what he's talking about." Mate Wins Death Suit LOS ANGELES (UPI) The fami ly of a woman who died alter • six-incll Ion g scissors were lefl in her body following abdomioal surgery accepted a $110,000 settlement Thursday from Los Angeles County, Mrs. Margaret F. Craig ent ered Harbor G e n e r a I Hospital, a county facility, last Sept. 14 to undergo surgery and following the operation at which time the scissors were found in her sto mach. • FREfE TAX RETURN PREPARATION · DEPOSIT $5,000 -to a new or existing savings account at Pacific Savings and / rece ive FREE preparat ion of your personal Federal and State tax returns. Some peo. pie will save $200 to $300 or more in accounting fees. Of course, this offer doesn't •· apply to corporati on, partnership, business or similar returns. -' PROFESSIONAL -qualified tax counselors will prepare Your personal returns ' and make sure that you receive every possible benefit under the tax law. Each return will then be triple-checked for legal and accounting accuracy by highly.trained spe- cialists. All work is done in the priva cy of your Pacific Savings offi ce using the trained personnel of Skousen Tax Service, Inc. The Skousen firm, started in 1946, is the second largest tax company in the United States. They currently employ over 3,000 counselors and have prepared more than 1,000,000 tax {etums. · WORK GUARANTEED-by the Skousen Tax Service, Inc. Guaranteed Accuracy. Returns are triple-checked tor accuracy of mathe- matics and reprodu ction. If the company makes an error result ing in any penalty or interest charge, they will pay this penalty or interest. Guaranteed Protection. If your return is questioned by the Government, / they will handle all the details at no. charge including representation at an audit , conference. -I BRING OR MAIL -the attached certificate to Pacific Savings when you open or add new funds to your account so that it can be validated. At the same time, we will set up a specific appointment for you to meet a tax counselor at a later time most I convenient to you. PLUS -you get a FREE Safe Deposit Box, seivicechargeFREETraveler'sCheques up to $2,500, FREE Collection of Notes, FREE Notary Se:vice and FREE Financial Counseling. AND -your deposit earns 6% per annum in a two year Certificate account-5'%% per annum in a one year Certificate account or 5% per annum in a regular passbook account, all compounded daily. REMEMBER -to qualify for this free offer you need onlyto make your depos it and get the attached certificate validated. If you have an ACCOUNT ELSEWHERE, let us have your passbook and we.will transfer your money to Pacific for you. Offer good until revoked but not beyond April 5, 1971. SO HURRY -make your deposit TODAY-or call me, Rick Jack, Manager, at 540-4066 or stop by our office for more infonnation. Pacific Savings and Loan Association SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET, COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92626 --------------------------------------------------------- THIS CERI IHCATE G0oD FOR ~IV87" TAX RETURN PREPARATION .. ' l • , ' ' ( M1cAnF 20b M•cOonald M•cktCo 30 MICY "H 1 M1cv,!,l 'JS ~= s:l J:U Mtt11SoG1" w Ml'Q ft Ch 60 MIOQftWI• 1 10 Millon< l 10. M1nhlnd 560 M~nDOw 12 Miii Hin J 2 MA'°'O 90 MtlX 111 I 2 M1 •h 160 Ml Ct>r .IO Ma aor DI A2 M• 1mont M1Mdl7CI Ma fonUI n Ml t n 270 M~ 01111 C•m Marr Oft IOI Ml 1hFd I Cl MartnM 1 o M vl<IC110 SO M11co Co 21 M~llln It 12 MIQtY Fe M~1Mut JOo Ml l•I 10 MtvOS .6(1 MIY 0 P'f! 80 MIYtl'O« St> MIYSJW 50t> ~Yl8 I 0. MCA nc: 60 McCord I 20b McC orv I ;io Mc C 111 ~.JO McC.rorv6PI ' McO. mtt o MCClanlkl Cp McOOnO ..ioo McGEd 1.0 McGrwH 60 Mc GH llfl 10 McG ti t'IGll Mc nlv 1 60 Mcle1n IOI! Mclouth s MCNt 10 Mettd Co p I Mtod plA! H Mtad Piii to Med\11.C I 2Q Mlit Co MefvS~ .10 MtlY Sh pf ~ M-•~ Ce> Ml ctnS I .cl Mt\'1:~ 2 :10 Meedh1tl Me-. Pit 10 Mu or ltl.lO ,..,.NOT 111 Me1 a Mel'I 2 MGM Melromd .JO Me li"llf J fO MGIC tnv 10 Mich G1 Vt I "\'" Tub9 MC odo !tit Md(onT 11 M dSVI 1 02 Mdd R 1.cl Mdwl 0 ' ~l\f1i°:d B M nnMM I IS M nnPL! I IO M U f\(11 2 'G MUllY Jll MoP1c A S MP Ctm 60 MaPullS IOb MoblO 240 Moh11 110 MO~wlc DI I Mo l'bd Mt Mo YO P't2 SO Mon1rch 1e1 M-.m Ind Menoni: 1.59 Mon oEo .60 M~11n l IO Mona1111 2 7.S MonlDOt 118 Mani -I •I MDNVM 2Jo M«K MC(O Mo 11nJ22 Morie Sh IS M t nv SSlr MorNor tel Mo oro • .o M/Fut s to MSaTT 136 MSl. Incl AO MY~I ngw Mrpt,y(o I 1'J M P111n ~5,I MuphO 60 Mu rvOh to l 1i.t H .. \-------------, tlwb I Mltll L• c-. c119 Tl\11 -+-u 1~-111 ~-1.~ ll~ l Stocks Strong In Heary, Trading NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks (lo mhed strong Friday 1n the heaviest turnover 10 almost a month Volume soared to around 22 000 000 shares from 17 350 000 shares traded Thursday ShorUy before the final bell the Dow Jones Industrial Average or 30 selected blue chaps was up 6 44 at 897 60 Standard & Poors 500 stock m dex sho,vcd a gain or O 96 ~t 98 88 Of the 1 660 1s sues on the tape I 027 pomted higher while 394 re treated Although a good portion or the demand spilled over from Thursday s session rnarket senti1nent al so was buoyed by a labor department report that Job lessness in February dee I 1ned for the second consecutive month d1pp1ng to 5 8 percent of tho nation s work force Occidental Petroleum \Vas among the da ys' most heavliy traded issues, but it came under sell mg pressure • "' .. ''l ~ • ,. •M 1* • • 'II " " '" " m " ' . "' ''" .,, ,,. ,. "" , .. '" .. • • • "'' .. ,,. Uv. ~ •• • .. ... • , .. "' .. . , ' . Ftld•Y March 5 llf71 SC DAILY PI LOT 9 Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List Sal.. Net (Ml I Hltft Lew CIOI• Cl'lf s.... "''' !lllllt I Hitft Llw Clttt (hg S1i. N• 01e11 I Hltlt U. C .... C1tti r I I • For The Record Marriage Licenses Dissolutions Of Marriage Flletl Mlri::h 1 J1mf1. 9f'v•rlY J, and (Unnv C. H..,.,.nandu. Oawn M.. '"" L....,.....C• (, Gu•• Fr\H11 •nd D1vld J . Pavano. P1ul1 J. end Jplln J. "''"""· Ol<.1• Allen ana GT•dYI MfdOll l inlewood, 8•!1• J. 11'1d ci.1rlt1 H. ScMc•t•, JOM'p~ln1 •""John FrKlttlck Frf'ncl1. Mlc1'1e1 0 •nd ll1rb1r1 L .• NQfTllY''°"'tn, \ltfdVf l-lt...,ld Ind Ml•Ol'I K!..,...t , Ann E. 1nd ll lll<IY S. J<>«l1n. "lvln fl 1nd llot>trUt V. ~•u•I•, 1ton1IO H 11\d E11ln• A. Y1ndtll. Jmlmv 0 . •<Ml Gi lt 1'. McNPll, LDftftlt M1r1ln Ind Donni Mar>e WOOIM!Y, Emf'ldt l . I nd C:.letlfl E. HMvelln. Oalot~ 1nc1 Emery Sam~. Gullll1um. lvM>e ''""' 1nd 01vid llldYtd O'Neil. L1rrY D1w1d 1"11 M1u•ttn C•tll<lr1no Ali.n, Su1..., 1!"11 John H. &u~v. SlllrltY G. 1no M1r!ln E. McCIPll1nd, J 1n1! A!lc.t 1nd llOMrl 11\cl'l••d Polll. M1-. Mll<lr.O 1...i 11..-olph Frink Comer, flet,., Jean 1!>d JI"'" Ectwt"I '""'"""· J1nlp!lf' S. t nd Sltol\Pn E. Drnlh Nolire• DUDLEY Ge"'o~ ll. Ot;dlev. !loll G•l•N O', NrWPO'' llr•C" o.r. "' dtl!ll. M••<l'I •. Sur.,vt'd by wot<t. Pe••ll '''"°""' Gfl!•at McCoulrv. "'"*"°,, lle•cl'I; "*" •••""· to"~. RecU1!I011 of !II• J1:011rv, Sut>d1y, M••~ I, l ·:lCI PM. Rtaul...-M111. Mon· •i.v. 11 ,.M, ball\ •I SI. Jo1cMMI Ce!"· 1>11( (l'lurtll. P1clllc View Mor!uarv. Cl· rrc•oro. M.1111.TIN Olv'd ltt M1rlln. Tl'lrK Vt•• O!ll 11111 of M• 1...i Mro. Wlvl>f 1i11r11n, of JU!l ll•ook"urlt .O,vt .. Hun11ntlon llt1tl'I. O.tt ol 1111111, M•rcn ;, AllO ourv!ved ~ two 11r11tl>e<1, 1<11 end Gil M.,.lln; ,,,..,... "'"'~'· M•I. ,llllce I Mlrllft 1nd Mr .. Sed't LUll'lt'f". F u...,rel ur'f\Ctl, S1tur· CIY, " AM, (l'l"'c~ of ·~· N111rlnt, •1U G•rt!eld, H....,H,,..1on lltocl'I. IMor- ment," P1c1tic v1-~111 P••-· 11111 (•I• M••• Mortu1rr, D1r.cto•1. ---- ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 417 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 646-4888 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del !\tar t.. OR 3M50 Costa Mesa ...... Ml. &.l4Z4 • BELL BROADWAY l\tORTIJARY 111 &rol;dway1 Cos.ta l\ttsl LI J.3433 • lofcCORMlCK LAGUNA B&ACll MORTUARY 1'7" Llpna Cuyoa Rod. ·IK-tlll • PACIF'IC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Morlu•l"f Qiapel J511 PadOe View Drtva Newport Beat;ll, CaUforaJ1 64+17• ' . PEEK FAMILY OOLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1111 Bola A.._ Wntnalnl<r .. 191.mr • • SMITHS' MORTUARY ., "'""' 114. e .. u.'400 8udl - Experts Say U.S. 'Turns Corner' By TOM BARLEY Of tM DMIY f'lllt ll1H Wottnd Up Talkers Get 'Red Light' SANTA ANA -A person appearing before the Or~nge County Board of Supen11sors who talks lo long will gel lhe "red light." Supervisors have adopted a recommendation that a light be installed on the lectern \\'here people stand lo address the board. At the end of five minutes the red light will go on. signalling an end to the talk. The idean is part of a pro· gram offered by Richard Ruiz , executive assistant to Supervisor David L. Baker \\"ho presented a series of sug· gestions for streamlining board meetings. Ru iz headed a committee named for that purpose by the board. Cliff f r a z i er , self·sty\ed president of the Orange Co un· ty Taxpayers Association. ob- jected to the I i mita ti on . Frazier talks to board members more than any other person. Other changes in agenda procedure offered this week by Ruiz include: . -A deadline for agenda items for Tuesdav at $ p.m rather than Wedilesday at fl p.m. as at present. -A consent calendar of Items of a non-controversial nature which could be lumped together for voting. There ~·ould be no discussion unless requested by a board member. -Off agenda items would be barred from action. -Minules of the board"s ac· lions will coritain brief nar· ratives of proposa ls acted upon. No such descriptions are presently included . The signal light plan Will ,.., teke• effect next week-, but 1he balance of the recomme.n· dalions were held two w~ks fot further study. lOCAL No' 11f11r n1w1p•1!!' t1U1 t.011 .,., •• 1v1ry if1y, 1beut w~li~ fOfllf flll [11 ·~• Go r11l1r 0 ,tft91 C11tl th111 tt.1 DAILY ,llOT. ROD & REEL SET Req. 11.87 I DAY ONLY • Ill Econo·my \ l . Choose nylon. nylnn/ satin. polycstrr/1'.'0tlon i:tylMI 32·48; ~hl)rl, avl'ras::r. Sn\"r al h: m11.r1, NOW SKY MARQUEE " ........... , .. , .... 1.i1 wit• ~1alJfy, tfle ,n.u... •f ,-tkl(IMlll .. 95 IWMr-M"'l'io ..... ..-.t .,_ .. .......-...1 .. -4!. .. -C.1t11ry. QMll· flff ,.,.. .. will IM!ft tttf 4f!perfHlty te ltM# SJl,Off ~·f'MI .. ., Alrcr•ft·l111•l1"-' I T""'""'' wltli "''-"I loc ............ Int .cco11•H. tf ro• rletire tM fl-lei 1'11blllty wltti tll9 , .. fllOltC.• of Ftyl1t9 Ad"'"-'-t wri .. loa #JI, Poll, Piiot, JJO W, loY St .. C0tto M•M· Our R19. 8.67 I DAY ONLY Early-An1crican·i nspir<'d. bm\\"Tl drln·~llltt' -!lf"l I! nvrn11rof fnr n\'t'll·lO·l11.blf' s<'rv1nir t>ft.SC'. lrn•h1df"! 4 rnch: 7" 11nd 10" plates: 6" fn11t11, 11nrl mus::s. • 1 I 1 I I Ex-colonel Tells Of Vietnam Vice WASHINGTON IUPI) -A reform· minded former colonel has told Senate investigators he ordered the IMer doors ll'I T ........ I• TELLS OF 'DRAGON LADY' Vietnam Veteran Castle Serrano Adobe Open House Set An open house will be held at Lake Forest Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. .al the Serrano Adobe, repuied to be the best preserved of any historical residence in Orange County. The quaint old home, built by Don Jose Serrano in 1845. is now owned by the Occidental Petroleum Land and Development Corporation , developers of the Lake Forest housing community. There will be no charge . The home. still furn ished with its an· lique Spanish furniture, is located on a hill overlooking Lake Forest and was one of five built by Don Jo.!e Serrano removed from a musage parlor on his base to keep a beautiful "Dragon Lady '' from lW'lllng it into a 400-t:irl brothel. In colorful testlmpny before the Senate Investigations Subcommittee Thursday, retired Col. Edmund Castle re.lated how he struggled to clean up the shady, slipshod service clubs he inherited along with bis command of the Long Binh, Vietnam, Army post in 1968. Re also said he saw no reason wh y there ahould be service clubs complete wilh drinks and dancing girls in a war zone in . the first place because "the more a soldier drinks in a c o m b a t zone, the more trouble you have." Castle blamed the "shocking situation'' he found at Long Blnh on former Brig. Gen. Earl F. Cole, who had been deputy chief of staff and In charge o( clubs and post exchanges at the huge head· quartel'3 base. other witnesses have testified Cole was deeply involved not vnly with unscrupulous businessmen who provided slot machines, liquor and other goods to the clubs but also with club managers who were indi cted recently vn corruption charges. Castle, shipped home with severe wounds and a Silver Siar after an attack vn Long Dinh in February, 1969, said it was Cole who aulhorized a beautiful Vietnamese ni cknamed "The Dragon Lady" to build a steam bath and massage parlor on the base. But Castle said "the Dragon Lady," a "Madame Phoung." had more am· bitious plans for her $150,000 to $200.000 pleasure spa. · Castle said Mme. Phoung had planned to staff her bath house with 200 masseuses and another 200 girls to sit around and drink cokes with the svldiers." "I knew she had an awful lot more than sitting around drinking in mind," Castle sa id. "We had so many clubs they could get drunk before they got there. So I got rid of 200 of the girls and vrdered the doors taken o(f the massage rooms. "You'd go in there and see the boys, they·d be lying there as naktd as jaybirds with the girls massaging them . But they couldn 't do much else, because we had the doors (removed )." New Uair0 d1> Charles 1'1anson has restyled his hair. The 36-year-old hippie chieftain shO\l.'ed up at the penalty pha'se of his murder conspiracy trial in Los Angeles Thursday with a beard and a crew-cut. For more on Manson, see Page 7. -on his 10,000 acre ranch. Waving color photos . Castle said that "the Dragon Lady" unveiled four bronze statute! of nude girls in provocative poses on the front of the bath house. I During the open house Sunday, hostesses will be on hand to explain the historical features or the picturesque dwelling. To reach Serrano adobe residents may take El Toro Road inland "And this on an Army base!" Castle said. ''I don't see loo well, but I didn't have any trouble making these out. 1 and turn north on Trabuco Road. Direc· tional ~lgns will be J>OSted ror vi1itors' conven1 rnce. "I thought, 'Oh, my god, if Time or Life or somebvdy sees tbis, We've had it' -and then my wife knowing how I like steam baths ... '' ~ OPEN HOUSE 1 :00 P.M. TO 6:00 P.M. SUNDAY, MARCH 7th, 1971 ' VISIT THE N~W PACIFICA HOSPITAL A UNIQUE AND MODERN 80 BED ACUTE MEDICAL FACILITY FOR THE ORANGE COUNTY COASTAL AREA . FOR THIS ONE DAY BEFORE PATIENTS ARE HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY TO SEE THIS MOST ADVANCED HOSP IT AL. ADMITTED , YOU BEAUTIFUL, MOST Guided Tours FIVE W !JOINTS SHOPPING; • CEf\ITElt PACI rte C'OAST W'f. ~ACIFICA : -THE HOSPITALITY HOSPITAL ..... ' .. " . "' 18792 DELAWARE STREET e HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA 92648 e TELEPHONE s DAICY PILOT J Fish Mercury Kills Whales Sari Cle1nente Island January Death Site A Navy scientific team in San Diego says a hl&h level or poisonous mercury -presumably derived from fish in their dlel -was found in 2S pilol whales which beached themselves and died Oft San Clemente Island. Concentrations of up to 23.9 parts of the poison per million parts of liver tissue turned I.IP in autopsy tests of carc8!8es from the incident Jan. 7, the Naval Undenie• Research and Develop- ment Center iiaid Thursday. A limit of five-tenths of a part per million in fish for hwnan consumption has been set by the Food and Drug Administration. There wu 1:peculatlon by game ecologists at Lhe time of the mua beaching that It wu a mute protest by the mammals against man's polluUon of their environment. William E. Evans, head of the Naval center's mar1ne bioscience division, said the whal.es died of stranding not from mercury poisoning. He said it was clear that the polaon must have come from their diet. "They had to get mercury somehow," he said In an Interview. "They are obviously getting mercury from the fish they eat." Scientists say this also Is the souret of mercury found In contaminated tuna and swordfish, both predators dependent 4 Lagunans Among Top Winners in Media Show Four Laa:unans were among , nine top award winners In the Laguna Beach Art Association's current juried show, Media Explored II. Taking $100 cash awards In the exhibit, which drew 450 entries from as far away as New York, were Laguna artist! JUI COoper, Herb Grlswol d, James War· ren and Andrew Wing. on a diet of smaller fish which con- centrate the mercury In their bodies 11 it movt1 up the ocean food chain. Evans said the stranding of the whales, which ranged up to 18 fett In length and J,800 pounds in weight, might have rtsulted from t h e lr follow-the-leader habit. He said pilot whales often beach themselves when one or mot'!; herd mem· hers become confused and head for dangerous shallows. "A variety of factors contribute to such confusion," he said, '1including darkness of the night, absence of surf, tide conditions and misinterprttatlon of the whaJes' own sonar signals." Auto Burglaries Probed in, Laguna Laguna Beach police are lnvestlgating two recent thefts in which merchandise valued at about $700 was taken from a residence and • parked car. Officers said a thief entered the home of Lore Sachse at 1139 Noria St. through an unlocked door and removed a $350 color television from Its table In the bedroom. The burglary occurred during the day while the homeowner wu at work, police said. A second theft was reported by Marshall Lefevor, of 1160 Jefferson Way. who told police his parked car had been broken into1. Authorities said the auto, parked ln tne 900 block of Baja Street, had been left unlocked and an unknown suspect entered the trunk by removing the back seat of the car. A camera, clothing, a teMls rack.et and a spare tire, all valued at about $250, were removed from the auto, police u.id. Laguna Seeking Funds for Buses at/antic music announces a •••• STEREO CHOICE SALE! Take Your "CHOICE" Of These "CHOICE" Components To CrHte Your Own ••cHOICE" Sy1t1m I Choose From TheM Famous Name Rec1fv1r1, Turnt1blH ind Spo1k1rsl SPECIAL SALE-PRICED 1-WEEK ONLYI Your Choice -any 5 piece system SAYE AS MUCH AS $123.02 ! SHERWOOD S7 I 00. Newe•t I 00 watt FM / AM Receiv•t w/walnut c.a••· •1<1· -·-·-$209.'5 GARRARD SL72-B wilh ADC 2'40 XE, base and cover. R19 .•........... $152.45 .... +' -,·•· ·-~.-..._. .. ~~-' . j , " . ' . . ' ~ ~ ~· • 1ol·~ •. n· -~ UNIVIRSITY Ultra 0'1. Fin• sounding boo~sh•lf1 from Univ•r1ity. R19. --······ $17'.00 OR HARMAN·KARDON 330, 100 watt AM/FM rec•iv-•r w/walnut c•s•. R19 •............ $216. to WITH OR WITH DYNACO "-·25 "lop-R1t1d" 2 way 1peak•r1. R19. ·······-··· $1'7.tO M A RA NT Z 26. 40 welt, R.M.S. AM/FM r•ceiv er. w/walnut finish metal cabin et, R19. ···-·····-$216.00 DUAL 1215 with SHUii M75E end walnut .bate. OR R19. ·······-·-$154.40 SOUNDCRAFTSMIN LANCH"95l5-l. U.r9• 12 . inch woof•r for pow•rful be11 plus horn twt•l•r. R19. ···-······ $1H.OO • atlantic music 4-45 E. 17th St., Cotti Mt11. Open Sund1yi 1:W, S.turd1ya 9-6, Diil.y..12·9, Clolld Wodntad.ys Du1l/G1rr1rd/Shuro/T He/Fisher /Horm•n· Kordon/Pickoring/Sherwood/ Altec/Moronb Wh1rfed1lo/Sounder•ft1mtn/Sony /A. R./Bozo.k/Mclnto!h/.S.cott NBL/Empiro -. ··-... _____ _ I • I - . • • ' • • .. • ( ' ' • ' ' J l •• .. '" M< -•• ... .. , •K .,.. .. '" •• M mo '" ... '" m• Cm c c I 1 I l ... ) 1j UAIL\' fllOT i ,,.: ... y, r.l .... ~:1 :l, • • Viets Hacl{ It-Nixon Speedy Pullout by _4mericans Major Goal 'We do not 1py on cioilians! ••• and kindly •peak into the medau!' It's ESP • >- To Rescue By DICK WEST ~ \V~H,1.N.GTON -I have in my files .!ft moldering clij>ping that contains a ~imely excerpt from a 1969 is.sue of fsychic '.Magazine. 1 It reported that the Air Force was >considel'ing development of extrasensory ~rception as a back-up communication llystem· for astronl.iut.5 in event of radio j1a1Jure while they are millions of miles jfrom earlh en route to other planets. r As far as· I know, nothing ever came :or that project. I hope, however, that ;the Air Force has not abandoned the :idea entirely. : For, in view of what happened during Jthe recent false alert. sent out by the !NORAD system, it appears that ESP 1may be our best chance of getting some :advance warning of a nuclear attack. Z· TtlANY OF the radio and television j~tations that were supposed to go off jthe air during an ·alert failed to do so. either because Urey didn't see the t.NO.RAD message or didn 't belie~e it. 1 ( ':fhe ' '. I [!..ll qp l1/1'tI'JElJR ' -Sia. I I ! Although the syitem has since been l changed to prevent any more alerts : from being transmitted accidentally, J,there is always a chance that someLhing ''might go wrong. -i. Hence' the need to augment the system !'With -ESP. ·· Suppose, for example, an emp1oye of ~a radio station looks at the teletype f,.Jnach ine and sees a report that another : country's missiles have been launched ; in the direction of the United Stales. • As he reads that bulletin he also : would be receiving telepathic vibrations "'sent out by NORAD's ESP control center ~:in a secret bomb-proof cave in the ! Rocky Mountains. ~ "I have a feeling this is the real l thing," he would say. "Guess J bad J better take the station off the air." ! THE ESP back-up also \llOUld be a 'blessing to those of us who barely watch · televi!rion or listen to radio. particularly !, during the morning hours when the false ·alert came over the wires. As soon as the telephathic waves l reached us. we would experience an extrasensory impulse to tum on the 'set, thus receiving the warning in time : to drive to the beach and stick our heads in the sand . The most important function of the _ESP system, however. probably would 1 occur after the attack was over. ~y ·that time. presumably. most of the radio . and TV sets would be destroyed , along i with the stations themselves. ~ But thanks to telepathy, we v.·ould ? .1till g1et the all-clear signal from NORAD ·and sense when it was safe to era...,·! ! out from under the bed. -UPI WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon said Thursday night the inva,.sion of Laos has proved the Soulh Vietnamese Army can "hack It" and insured con- tinued withdrawal of U.S. troops. He said his goal remained to get all Americans out of Vietnam "as soon as ¥-'e can." During a sometimes emotional defense of his Indochina policies at a televised news conference, Nixon also declared the Un ited States has considered no plan to support a South Vielnamese invasion of North Vietnam. "None has been considered and n~ne is under consideration," Nixon said. But the President said he did not rule out the use of air power "against mili tary complexes on the borders of North Viet- nam" if he concluded actions of the Hanoi regime endangered withdra~ing American forces. Asked about statements l:>y South Viet- namese president Nguyen Van Thieu about a possible attack into North Viel· nam. Nixon said he would not speculate on what position Thieu might take in the future "in order to defend himself -the right of self defense -in view of the fact that he is being auacked." Nixon contended the three-week.old South Vietnamese thrust into the Ho :/ • • ' • Chi Minh Trail complex. in soulhern Laos, -backed by U.S. air power, has "seriously damaged'' North Vietnamese military capabilities. He quoted Gen. Creighton \\', Abrams, U.S. commander in Vietnam, that the drive already had Comumnist truck traffic by ~ percent -0n the trail. "'bile there wall "hard fighting ahead," Nixon said, the decrease in trafric meant "that those trucks that do not go south will not carry the arms and the men that will be killing Americans.'' Nixon said that during the current operations the South Vietnamese "on the ground by themselves" had taken on the best units the North Vietnamese could pul into the field . •·Genera) Abrams tells me that in • both Laos and Cambodia his evaluation after three v.·eeks of fighting is that to use his terms 'the South Vietnamese by themselves can hack it' and they can give a better account of themselves e\'en than the North Vietnamese units." \\'hi le the operation has been ,. in pro- gress. Nixon said, American troop strength in the war zone has fallen by 10.000 men. "Our Vietnamization program is a sue .. .cess and can contin1i1e on schedule and 1 ... •' ' """ . -. CANADA'S NUMBER ONE SWINGER ENDS BACHELORHOOD Pierre Trude1u, New Wife Ma rgaret Get Hail of Rice Premier Trudeau, 51, Takes Bride, 22 VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) -The 22· year-old daughter of a veteran politician has ended the long bachelorhood of Canada 's Prime Minister Pierre E\Jiotl Trudeau. Trudeau. 51, and Margaret Sinclair were honeymooning today at a ski resort north of her home ln Vancouver. They plan to return to Olla...,•a next week. The nation was stunned by lhe an - nouncement late Thursday night that the couple had married al SL Stephen's Roman Catholic church here "in a quiet ceremony attended only by members or the two families . Trudeau met Miss Sinclair in Tahiti three years ago while both \\'ere on vacation. She is the daughter of Mr. and f\trs . James Sinclair of Vancouver. Her father is a longtime po...,·er in the Liberal party, a former cabinet minister and a member of the Privy Council. The bride's mother, who is two years younger than the prime minister, said after the wedding, "It wasn't sudden. They gave a Jot of thought to it." Trudeau had dated 1'1iss Sinclair fre- quently, but the public did not suspect a romance . Much more attention was paid to his infrequent but widely publiciz· cd dates with singer Barbra Streisand. The prime minister flew lo Vancouver from Ottawa Thursday afte rn oon, ostensibly for a skiing vacation. Nothing more was heard of him until an aide called The Canadian Press late in the evening with the announcement or the y,·edding. Trudeau's brother Charles was his best man and one of Miss Sinclair'!' four sis ters, Rosalind , was her bridesmaid. Snow Backlash Hits East Cold, Winds Whip States; Rockies Front Buildi11g ·California PR(Y\EW Of NOAA Nll\OMll WEATH[PI: SER._IC[ TO J: OD A .M. EST J -' .. 11 Temperatures Coiutal Motl"' Cluf 11'11111 \Ul'lllY tofff, l l•llt Ytrlll!lt wl!Mh ~ll!l'lt •NI mornl,.. Ila.it\ bte.<lfl'l!n1 Wftl fl l\OflhWH! II 10 20 •11111 In 1llf"'°""' toclt1 •'Id ioll~r!ln. Hi.ti todtY :SJ. 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MC1M ltlN' 11:0' 1.m, kll ).M 1.m. • .,.UNIT•D l"llllS INTlllNATIONAL Ttm1>er1!urt1 l r>d l>rl'tlPlllllaf> fllf I~• 71·i'Mlu• Hrlod encllnq 11 I 1.m. lJ.S. ~111111nary ... lbtnY "llNoutr<IUt '°'!ltn\1 Blll""l'-'11 11.otie .... ~ fhJfl•!o ClllttllO Clncl"f\111 Cltv.i1,,., CMU1t Del!v•• O.trolt Htltnl H~ulv ln!ll1n1P01lt l<tn111 City L11 V"'' M"""llJ1 Ml1m1 Mllw.utcn LOS ANGELES (UPI) -~-1ftd New OrltM\t 11~• wll'ICl1 whip-''"''' Ntw New Yortt Emilend lrwl U1>tlllt New York IDCI•~ Olil11'10m1 CllY ~· !Ill t>l(lt!1111 or I llCIM•lul 1!orr1'1 0m1111 tr11t tttl -hi two flff 01 tnow P1lm Snr1n11 POl11flMI, MllM. rKtl..-.d II lncllt• Phtllclelfhl• -4 1noot Ol.lf•.,. I tb·l'lour P4'•IOll, P'-"'I• Tiit t!Gfm ll'rOUtlll llu•l•~lon. Vt, Plt!Jl)u"'" • 111111 ,...., • hi ll Ill "'°"' -brlntlM Porll111d, Ort ll'MI wlrt!V't lioltl II Ill lnchti.. "" ltfflf Cl., ll'ftt•I durlnt '1'111 ttruurr. 1t11141 U1111wtl cOlcl tlttt"lftf II '"""""" ltlt.llmond, VI 11 01111, l1llth1nn. Fl1 .• h10 • low St Lou11 01 ,, 0"'"' 11\d Jlc.lilOfwill1, Fl.I,, i1Jt Ltltt CllV nte.,.dH 11 Sin Olwe ...11111!\ol• 1torm ..... bl.tlldJ .... WI~·~ Ftfl'ICIUO lllt (tt\lfll ltpckltt 11111 tM...,IM !II tlftlf 11>9 1!1!1c111I tfllfllt. North l.ollt 'SllOltM N~h, •KtlY ... _,. 1M-cllifl .... I l"-•fl'lt! Jl~-"OUr -11111 '"" °"'11t• fKO<OH Wtthl,,..loll lftr1t. WlnnlHt • Hl9'1 Lew l"re< • ,. 70 Jll S1 )5 ~· " . " . " " . '' " . " . " " " • • . " Jr ,, " " ... ,,, .. ... .. ,. 17 ·'' J7 ,, " " . " . " 11 51 " . " . U ,_ .IS : ~; '°'I " y JI 11 .11 " . " ~ ol.\ 31 11 ,. . " . " •• 71 ,. lt . " U •I ... .• , ... 11 J) .u n IS 1J Ji • • " u ~ we lrust even ahead of schedule auum- •ing that there is more prograa in LaOI/' Ni.ton said. The United States is.achtduled~to cut Its forces in South Vietnam to 214,000 men by May 1. Nixon, said be· intended to make an announcement about further American troop withdrawals in April. Asked about the possibility that up to 100,000 U.S. troops might .remain in Viet• nam at the time of the 1m election. Ni.ton refused to speculate about the numbers. "As Jong as there are American POWs in North Vietnam, we will have to znain.. tain a residual force in South Vietnam," Nixon said. "That is the least that we can negotiate for. As far as our goal is concerned, our ' .goal is to get all Americans out of Vietnam as soon as we can -by negotiation if possible." Nixon said there had been a "drumbeat or suggestion" from some televisioo com- mentalors that the Laotian operation would not work. He said there had been the same kind of commentary dur· ing the Cambodian operation last spring. But he said the Cambodian venture bad reduced U.S. casualties and led to a reduction in u:s. forces. " ... I should point up that that's e.1eactly what this administration has done," Nixon said with emotion. ''We've kept every promise that we've made. We have reduced our forces. We have reduced' our casualties. we are going to continue to reduce our forces and we are getting out of Vietnam in a way that Vietnam will be able to defend itself." Questions at the news conference were restricted to foreign policy issues. Nixon also said: -The United States will not impose a settlement in the Mideast. The United States will make suggestions but will depend upon the parties concerned to reach an agreement. .The United States "will be there" to see that a balance of power is maintained in the region because if the balance changes a war could result -Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo.), fired ''a cheap shot" when he said presidential adviser Henry A. Klssinger had usurped the duties of Secretary of State William P. Rogers. He continues to consider Rogers "the chief foreign policy ad· viser." -An American "Two Chinas" policy is a "moot question" becaut: Communist China has refused to respond to American overtures for normalization flf relations. Nationalist C h i n e s e ap- prehension about an American change in policy "Is not justified.'• -He is optimistic about "eventual wc- cess" in Soviet-American talk! aimed at limiting strategic nuclear weapons. 'THOSE TRUCKS WON'T GO SOUTH, LEAD TO AMERICAN 'S DEATH S' President Nixon Report• S•igDn Forc11 Gain ing Upper Hand In Mideast Crisis Big 4 Near Agreeme11t On Cease-fire P1·oposal UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) -The Big Four U.N. delegates are reported to have reached considerable agreement on terms of a communique tbey hope will revive the Arab-Israeli peace talks and prolong the Middle East cease-fire, due to expire Sunday. But after a 21h-hour meeting at the Soviet Mission Thursday, "a number of point.s of difference" remained, according to a Western source. Indicating the urgency of their task, the ambassadors of the United States . Britain, France and the Soviet Union scheduled aooLher meeting this afternoon at the home of the British envoy, Sir Colin Crowe. It is the first time four delegates have met two days in a row in two years of sessions on the Middle East situation. U.S. sources were hopeful that the four would agree on the communique today. In between the formal sessions, con- sultations were · taking place on one of the thorniest Issues -whether there should be a direct reference to pro- longation of the cease-fire or an appea! for "continued exercise of military restraint" The latter wording was used by U.N. Secretary-General U Thant la st month in a report on which Egypt basec its agreemenl to a one mont h's extension of the cease-fire until March 7. Diplomats said the Soviet Union wa! finding out whether Egypt 'vould accept such terminology again. Some sources indicated the Egyptian response would be positive only if the communique sharply criticized Israel's refusal to commit itself to a withdrawa l from all Arab territory occupied in the 1!167 wa r. The United States is understood to be against any direct reference to Israeli withdrawal. President Nixon said Thursday night that his government will not lry tn impose a settlement in the t\iiddle East. He told his news conference; "We can make suggestions .•• but we are going to have to depend upon the parties concerned to reach agreement." SPRING TRUCK LOAD EVENT J MANY VARIETIES AVAILABLE FOR SPRING PLANTING! THRU SUNDAY ONLY! . ' • -,.__ - GARDEN CENTER FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY Newport Beach • ·' - c PER PACK • 0- a! ' st n .. pt an he l's al he In eli ht In st. an ·_ng 1es • ' • r . Another Loo1ns QUEENIE ly Phil lnterlandi • DAILY ~IL" • I f "' • • + ... 1 t f rldjiy, Mirth S, 1971 Nixon Halts One Railway Walkout WASHING TON (UPI) - President Nixon T h u r s d a y blocked for 60 days a strike scheduled by R a i I w a y Signalmen, but negotiations • Nixo1i Asks $2 Billion Urban Fund WASHlNGTON (AP! President Nixon a s k e d Congress today tc approve a $2 billion revenue-sharing fund for urban development -one that he said would not strap any current efforts such as the model cities program. Nixon, in a special message, also proposed that the federal government set aside an extra $100 million a year to help states and local governments upgrade their skills in long- range planning, budget decision.making and t h e coordination of c o m p I e x development activities i n many fields . "Cities would be able to spend their money as they see fit," he said, "provided only that they used it for co mm unity development purposes.'' aimed at preve111ting a walkOOl by another union's 150,000 train crew members remained stalled. Contract talks b e t w e t n railroad management and the United Transportation U!Uon broke off briefly early 'l'hurs- day after 15 hours of COO· tinuous bargaining, resumed in late arttrnoon and then recessed after three hours un- til Friday mor11ing. Clyde Lane, chie.f negoliator for the l.ITU. and chief management negotiator John P. Hiltz agreed there had been no significant change in the 1\11.!:!::::;~:=.!""£::,!::~::,:=~==:::!!~!:::!:l..J bargaining situation in the " past 24 hours. -~ield?"Wbo has that much contro.J:!" ,/.Sslstant Labor Secretary--------------------} \"ii. J . Usery Jr.. I he ii:overnment's top mediator in the 17-month-old dispute, said the UTU had not threatened a strike. and "we feel no action will be taken <bY the union) as long as meaningful neeotiations are continuing." He emphasized that the UTU had made no com- mitment to refrain from strik- ing. President Nixon is legally powerless lo prevent a· strike in the case of the l.ITU. After a breakfast with UTU President Charles Luna. Usery told newsmen he was no more optimistic about a settlement than he was Wednesday, when he said the situation "does not look good." President Nixo" acted Thursday ta block a strike scheduled today by the 11,000- member Brotherhood a f Railway Si11:nalmen. He ordered a 00-day cooling off period. contending the nation faced the loss of essentia l transportation service. Apollo 15 Mission May Be Best Ever CAPE KENNEDY, F I a . (AP ) -Astronaut David R. Scott. commander of Apollo 15, says the moon mission next summer "probably will be the greatest scientific e1- ploration ever carried out by man." "With your help ." Scott told 1,000 members of the Kennedy Space Center launch team, "we'll bring back enough data to keep the scientific com· munity busy for 30 years. The vastly improved scientific returns will be a I m o s t overwhelming." Scott and his two crewmates, Alfred M. Worden The remaining $400 billion would be distributed by the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, largely to make certain that no com- munity would receive less federal money under revenue· sharing than under existing programs. Nixon would gel the $2 .--------------------i billion by c.ombining funds now Amendment Meet Asked available under separate prc>- grams· ror urban renewal, model cities. water and sewer grants, and loans for the rehabilitation of old buildings. 132 Killed In Detroit Gunfire Pot Cuts Sex Dulls Urge, Doctor Says RENO, Nev. (UPI) -l\.Iarijuana can make a Ja.year- old man 70 years old sexually, contend! the president-elect of the American Medical Association. Dr. Wesley Hall said a continuing Al\.tA study leaves "very little doubt" that marijuana smoking dulls the sex urge both in men and women and causes birth defects when used by women late in pregnancy. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ten state legislatures have voted to ask Congres11 to call a constitutional convention to write an amendment guaranteeing the state11 a share of federal income tax collections. 10:00 ON THE N!At l AT FASHION · ISl:AND' RADIO CONTROLLED FL YING ... ; . .,. ,. . 4~, An exciting demonstration of radio ·conlrolied ain:raft feaflri..' ing the latest in control equipment, Planes toxi to position for to ke-off, become oirbourne and land-while lhe pilot stands on the ground! Thes e models fly from 60 to 90 mph while they perform a series of aerobatic maneuvers. Flying demonstra· lions will toke place in the parking lot ad jacent the police· helicopter, north end of the mall. . ' ' .• l ·' ~ t ! .. ·. ,';• .. DETROIT (AP! -In the first 63 days of this year, a record 132 persons were slain in this city -most of them by gunfire at the hands of friends or famil y members, rather than in street crimes. Hall, who said he has been besieged with telephone calls since a 1'1onday speech on marijuana's ill elf~, stuck by his earlier statements Thursday. "With increased use there is a lack of sex drive," he said. "It results in a man who may be 35 chronicaJly, be- ing age 65 or 70 in respect to his sex drive. Tile council included New Demonstration by Orbit Electronics, Santa Ana, California Hampshire on the list of lllatesl ~======================================= ~';.;:g ~!•n;::.,•1 ~'!,";;h~~! MATTEL SKY RIDER CONTEST By police estimate . Detroiters possess as many as half a million handguns, the bulk of them illegally. "'I don't think the average person realizes how .i":; mediate murder really 1s, Police Commissioner John Nichols said at a news con· ference Thursday. "Women also are affected in that they do not desire sex as much as they would under nonnal circumstances, and there is enough evidence now to substantiate it." Hall, a Reno doctor who. v.·ill become AMA pre sident In June, said a continuing study by the AAtA committee on AJcohol and Drug Dependence gives strong support-to his conclusions. But he conceded a perfectly controlled scientific study of marijuana's effects hasn 't been made and that it will take "three, five or even 10 years" to gather the informa· ti on. "At least one out or 10 children born to mothers who have used marijuana within three months 0£ giving birth wil l be defective mentally," Hall contended. BY reducing sexual drives, marijuana also can cause 1 loss of self-confidence, the doctor said. "People sum to be playing out their roles in lile through violence. \Ve've had countless people who, because of a real or imagined insult, grabbed II,,==================" a gun and killed someone. Friends and relatives kill each other." Computer experts freely 1dmit that what comes out of• computer Is only as good as wti11t's put·lnto it in the first place. Have you ever stopped to think h"ow much your own tile runs on the same basis? The kind of thought.you put Into your llfe determines what you gel out of it. This is why your thinking is so important, Thou unds have found tNil controlling their thinkln1 i• not a matler of eiiercising human will but understand· ing and using their God· given rights to order. happiness, and a sens• of purpOse. H,ar Nathan iel R. White of fhe Christian Science Board of Lectureship dis· cuss this subject In • '''' public lecture entitled "What Controls Your Thouaht?" CHRISTIAN SCIENCE lECTURE S•"""1· M.c~ 6. J ,.-. ilCOMO CMUl(M ... CMllllf, ''''"""' .11 .. PM'Mlc View IM\'t ~IM!Mt' - Senate has not voted on the proposal, the list or states actually numbers 10, not 11. SALE WATER LILIES P•cific Goldfish F•rm1 14842 Eclw•rcls St. Off flHo 1111 Diet' ,,.....¥ •I .,. ..... WMI ... ltllf. WESTMINSTll 193.7155 11:00 12:00 2:00 ALL DAY • (9:30 to S pm) Kids, 7 lo 12! Here's your chance to win FREE planes.Mattel will show you how to fly the ir new Skyriders from 11 to noon.from ' ' 12 ,30 to 2 pm you con compete for prizes for the longest dis- tance, oerobati.cs and longest flight. Lots of prizes., •. d0n't miss this! Skyriders will be in the Stage Court orea--centef'of th e moll. Oemonstrotion by Mattel, Inc., Hawthorne, California GLIDER FLIGHT Mork Smith, Nationa l Radio-controlled Glider Champion, Will pilot his plane from the Stage Court area. The craft wm soar from the lop of the AVCO financial center building as Mark puts it lhrough a series of loops, spins and stalls before th• 6' glider lands in Stage Court. Mark says he can land the plane in his hand! Demons,,alion by Mork Smith, courtesy cf Model and Croft Show, Anaheim, California WIRE-CONTROLLED FLYING The famous Cox fly ing leam will amaze you with their ehility. as they perform a series of aerobatics, dog lighls and f!lllCY flying in this demonstration. This activity lakes place in SIQge Court. Demol'lstrotion by Cox Mfg., Sonia Ano, Cofifornio AVIATION DISPLAYS Jerry Bird ...•••••••• Captain, 1970 U.S. free Foil Team • -Skydiving Exhibit _ Cox Manufacturing •••• Wire-controlled model aircroll and model rockets Orange County Radio Control Club •••••••• Model radio•controlied aircrolt- competing for $100 in _prizes Orbit Electronics •••••• Rad io-controlled aircraft ••• , ., '· --- I I ' ' •I ' • a \ • •• G DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE • The The latest request for a better eension plan for public employes in San Clemente now 11 at least a year old. Jt is entulna: the second cycle of negotiations over wages and benefits with city officials. And thus far solution to the strong demands for a better system stlll seems far off. San Clemente1s workers-primarily the publi.c safe· ty employes-want a shift to the state-administered PERS (Public Employes' Retirement Sy5tem. It is a plan oper1ting amid ereat acceptance in scores of Southern California clties. Laguna Beach, for .example, has used PERS fo r years, and employes and department heads alike en· dorse the plan. Councilmen in San Clemente received the request last year, but decided to offer private industry a chance to milch the PERS plan. ?.!any tried, and the "winner'' of the private con· test turned out to be tbe carrier of the existing retire· ment package--0ne cited by employes as totally inad· equate. -..._ • San Clemente city employes earn wages among the lowest in the countv-for civil servants. Their chances for helfy r1ises this spring seem slim. They should receive better pension benefits. Return of the Swallows The birds which made San Juan Capistrano famous "'ill arrive again this spring amid parades, pageantry and ?ifexican music. Question Golondrinas Parade ?lfarch 19, followed by carnivals, d•nces, dinners, breakfasts and a colorful two-day pa· geant on the mission grounds. Thousands or visitors come to the colorful common· lty each spring for the festivities, yet many South Coast residents may never have seen the elaborate reception for the little birds. It is a specta cle to see, indeed. For very little expense. a famil y can enjov two davs of the area's heady history-usually under "splen· did weather. Don't miss it. Parade Is Now Too Big Sponsors of Laguna's Patriots' Day Parade might do well to consider an earlier cut-off date for entries next year in the interest of keeping the event a little more manageable. Interest in participating in the parade has grown as such an amuing rate that it threatens to get out of hand if allowed to develop uncontrolled, in addition to placing an increasing burden on the organizers. From a miniature affair with a few floats and mar· ching units parading through town for less than an hour, the parade has become a huge undertaking, in· volving literally thousands of participants. Unfortunately, Laguna's streets don't lend them· selves too well to lengthy parades and there "'ere many delays this year. The e ve nt also was burdened with a mixup in judging for the huge a"f•Y of trophies. ' ' ' I Community leaders .• the San Juan Fiesta Associa· lion an d officials at the mission itself join hands each spring to present one of the most colorful w~ekends in California ?.1arch 20 and 21. Hundreds of entries join in the annual FiesU lu ~lanaging a big parade-is no easy job. but per haps this one could be made easier, and more effective, by the simple expedient of keeping it smaller. $ <S •~ ... ~~,~~· 'WHO AM 110 AF.3UE WITH ALL THE EXPfl<l>?~. Origins of Some Words May Surprise We haven't bad a word-qui.z. for quite awh ile and the mall is runnin1 heavily In favor of another. Toda y we'll deal y,•ith Ult origins of some common word!, which may surprlse you : t. Why is a soldier called a "soldier," and why is the lowest rank in the Army called "private" when they have Jw pr ivacy than anyone? 2. Why are the solemn ceremonies of imtalling a Presi.- dent in office called an "Inauguration," and what has it got to do with birds? 3. How did the a a me of "domi- noes" get its name. and what connec- tion does it have with prayers ? 4.. '11le "acme" of something 1J now tls highest pitch of perfection : but originally it y.•as part of y.·hal sort of medical diagnosis? i . SPEAKING OF medicine, what dread disease is named after a character in a 16th century Latin poem, which bears the ti tle of the disease ? 6. What did a ··broker" originally break? 7. How could the play\\Tights ef ancient Greece ha ve been ca I I e d ''athletes," v•hen they had nolhlng at all to do y.·ith sports? a. Speaking of plays. y.•h1t were the earliest ··melodramas"? 9. What does a ·'thrill" ha ve lO do wilh our nostrils? 10. Why y,·as ··prestiee" at fir st not a CQmplimentary word? ANSWERS, 1. "Soldier" comes from the Latin, meanina; "a i Old coin," for until modern Dear Gloomy Gus: I just 1ot lost behind another cloud of bla ck amoke from one of the trucks of a well-known rubbish aervice. Can 't anything be done about it? -V. E. S. Ttli. tN!wl l"tfltctt ,..._ ¥iew. Ml ~ .... "' ... ~-· &...-,.,,, "' _.,. "' ..... , •n. EltllY Plitt. times most soldiers were p a I d mercenariea; a "private" is a man "deprived'' of rank and drawn from the deprived level of the community. 2. "Inauiuration" comes from the ancient Roman "1u1urs" who studied the fiigbts and hablla of birds and predicted for new rulera what the future held in atore for them. s. "DOMINOES", invented by lwo French monks, wa1 c1lled so because the winner of each game algnilied :so by reciting "Dil:it Domlnus, Domino Meo,1' the first line of the Veaper aervlce . 4.. Early doctors divided. diseases into four periods: arclte, the beginning: anot.111, the Increase: acme, the state of utmost violenct: and paracme, the decline. 5. "Syphllis11 w1s Uie name of a abepherd in the title of a 111th Cfntury poem by Fracastoro. and the first sufferer of the disease named after him. I. THE Fll\ST "broken" broke, or broached, wine cask.s; aradually the name was applied to marriage-brokers, pawn-brokers and eventually stockbrokers . 7. "Athletea'' were anyone who "competed for a prize." I. "Melodrama.!" were not o v er I y sentimental but simply plays with music "melody." 9. "Thrill" meant "to pierce;" the ··nosthril,'' or nostril, is the hole ''pierced" through lhe nose . 1 0 . "Prestlae'' was appl ied to magician~ and Juaslers who deceived and deluded p<Ople. Restore the Incentives At some d1te, distant in the luturt, human demands on the earth'• stored-up re5(1llrces, such as petroleum and natura:I gaa, will inevita bly outstrip the supply. A k>t of people think the day of natural relOl,D'et ahorlages has already arrived. tn truth, there are 1bortage1 or threaten- td shortages of petroleum and na:lural gas. but they h11ive been contrived by tbe arbftrU'Y· •ctlont,, ~ lefi•LRUve and regulat.ory~iet, rather I.ban by naturl}J attr1Uon. "Such If the ·con~!Uslon to .tit" drawn from the fiJ'ldinir;of 135 geologl1ts 111•bo re.ported lo the N1tlonll Petroleum councll on the "Future Petroleum Pro\'lncel of the United Slates .••• " THE GEOLOGISTS' report Is a fact. filled , !SO-page doroment. Amon'a other thinga. it aa ys that H recovery or oil and cas from tnmrn tttervet can be atepped- up from the prutnt S2 percent to 60 porant, lbt Unlt<d Sl>lM would hive an ultlmlfo ,......_ poc.nllll of m bllllcn beJtt11 "' .a t,MI ltllllto cubl< 1 .. 1 ol .... llld • bhJiOO bunlo " ..... 11111 l . ' liquids. Present annual domestic pnr doction .is now about 3.2 billion barrels o( oil and 20 trilUon cubic feet or 11s. The report further esUmatea that M percent of the dltcoverable 011 Jnd 6& percent of the d\.lcoverable I~ rem•ln to be round • Jt breaks the U.S. Into II f~&16n.!I. N(ine of lhese re1lons, lncludint Alaska, his been adequttely tiplored. IMPENDING shortages, pirticularly or natural gas, ha ve bttn (ort1etn by petroleum Industry. spokesmen for many yeua. And the 10lutlon, 11 they have long polnted out, Ilea In the rtstor1Uon of In· centlvu by our la¥i'mtkers and re1UI•· tors that will encoura1e the risky bu.~i· ne.IS of carryln1 on the itlC'Ch for ns- turt'a vut hidden ruervu of oO and natural au. •• Geo"9e --------1 Dur Georp: •. I doo 'l Ub to U-Otr!J tllblk I'm Illy, a1 a mWt. Tiley ll'1 to bolJtir my ...-.. •. 'Illar 1\l out .. darlr ,.,w ..,. •!lb me..,.hlll -_.,. 4.....,, I l 'm not shy. Wllat can I do about UIU? .... CASPAR Otar Ca1pu: You can copyrlJht th1t system 1nd ttll • book on \~ for oponert. Older People Should Tell How They Feel and Why Let Young People Know They Care·: To the Edit-Or: In your guest editorial, "Attitude Wins the Job,'' (DA ILY PILOT, Feb. 25) you prlnted a letter supplied by the Success Motivation Institute of Waco, Texas, and which you said had been written by an employer to a young man he had rejected for a job. He wanted to tell the boy why he had hired another teenager instead. nne who wore polished shoes and a necktie. and v•ho had made the effort lO find out what the rompany made. He hired the boy because of his attitude: lie wanted the job badly enough lo ~vant to impress his prospective employer. THE LEliER WRITER went on to tell the unemployed teenager that many employers were not "with" • lot or things, and some of their ideas seemed antiquated, but if he wanted the ir pay checks, he had better tune them in. Perhaps if more older people took the time to talk to young people, lo tell them how they feel and why, and to let them know th at they care. v.·e might be able to narrow the aeneration gap a little. CHANCES ARE good tha t the young man who got th is leller made a much better impression on hls next job in· terv iew. J plan to save the arlitle f1>r my own children. because 1 want them to know that some people do care. FREDITH LAUB Treat Tl1em Dumanel11 To the Editor : We. In Laguna are In a unique posit ion to be or re al service to youth Not only youth of Laguna , but youth from many parts of the country. As you are well av.•are. there is g re a t restlesS11e1s and moving about th e roun· try by many of our nation's youth. These young people are not going "home'' just because we refuse to acknowledge their existence or we harass them. Aiost of these youth, both boy.t t1nd girls. come from middle and upper middle class families -familif.S like yours and mine. In many of the fan'lllles communication has broken down and youth either choose to leave or are forced to leave. It i1 my r i rm opinio n that humane caring and willingness of "establishment." if you will. to com- municate v.·ith them must begin. I SHUDDER TO think of the reception my son or daughter y.·ould have should he decide (for whatever rea1on) U111t he had to leave home. to find his w1y. if he should arrive sick. cold, or penniless in Laguna Beach . Can you imagine lt! Tbtrt Is no. legt1Jeiplace to sleep (exrtpl tn•the jjill) -.no·Sl.lvation Army, no Y~!CA or YWCA racilltits, no hostel. no mi1slon, no church that offer1 even 11 one-night emergency aleeptna place. It's a $1 5 fine. or 24 hours In jall for sleeping in a car or on the Mach. If 1 youth is arrested for Illegal \odglng and must go to jall (becau!le he has no money) he is aometim es not fed, he b: fingerprint«!, photographed and generally treated as 1 crlmlnal. There ls no place 1 youth who Is reall y hun(l'J can even get a bowl of aoup {ueept at the Ktlana templt), nor Is there any public ahower in Lapna, tven for a fee (and you'd be surprised how often t am 1ske<I if I know where .omeom can get a shower). Letters from te4dets ate welcome, NormaUt1 tcriters should convey their messages in JOO word& or Less. Tl1 e righ~ to condem e letters to fit space or eliminate libel i.s re1eroed. Ail let- ltrs must include signature and mail- ing addres1, Out ncme1 may be with- held on requtst if Slffficie nt rewon is apparent. Poetry tDiU not be pub· ll.!~<d. ti these wandering youth will find their way back into the main stream of society -yei, and even adopt our mores and standards. But those who do, will cer· talnly do · It (U we continue on our chosen path) without any fond feelings toward us and our organizations. 'Ti.!I true that we of Laguna have a bigger burden to carry than many other cities of this country; but I believe it is lime we consider the opportunity lo serve today's youth, as well as to recognize: the: problems they create for us . WHAT IS IT I propose? l suggest "'''-begin to discuss what we might be able to do that Is Chriatian and humanitarian to meet some: human needs. I would be happy to meet with any one or any group lo explore possible ways to do thi1. I do not have ·a proaram or an ultimate goal In mind. I do see an opportunity to serve if we care. MRS . KENNETH A. MILETTE Cordlall11 Settled To the Editor : t would like to p:.iblicly announce that the: easement di.!lpute with the La guna Beach Boys Club, which you reported on Jan. 15 and again on Jan. 20, has been cordially and equitably settled. IL is my hope th1t the friendly asaociallon will be instrumental In bringing about improvement in the canyon area. "-iy thanks to the board of directors for their positive: vo te in this matter and the: friendly response from lndlvldual member a. PAUL WESTBROOK A9al"1t SST To tht Editor : You and I are the intended tlf'ieb of a $3~.ooo piece or SST public relations propaganda. Full page ads will urge you to aupport a project which will (l) contribute lO air and noise _pullutlon; (2l subject us to damaging ionic boom$: (3) cause stratosphere contamln11tlo11 de3flned to play 'havoc with our weather; ( 4) expose passengers and crew to radia· lion from Milar nsrea, and (5) increase lhe depletion r11ite of our world oil reserves. The Concorde, the Anglo-French "SST" cannot be operated et"Onomlcally, •c· cording lo a Time of London reporter. \Vhy ahould bUlions of our ta1 dolla rs go Into such 1 damaging proj ect? Do you want yoor congressman to aupport It? EVELYN GAYMAN PKrlf1t lhe Air 1 PDl.\fi.Y BELIEVE that prete ndlns _ To the Editor: there are no lealtlm•te heeds or ebooaln& ,,,e thought came lo me th•I I hsl'e to belie\'t th•t thtst kldl are "no 1ood" not setn anything In your pMper about is a 1r1v1 errer and poor rtuort, buldts., cleaning the air. I mean purify actually, to turn from them .• Ultimately, or courst, J 1uppost . • ·e:11th of u~ mtt'\t find our own v.•1y Let's get tin the ball. If fXISSihle. lffa- and J_ believe that a grtat percent.a• cet the public thlnk:Jng 1boul ln.slstlna that every e-0ntract tha t Is let, to a contractor, to build a house, school, public building. factory or hospital, etc., be equipped with a built in air purificat- ion system ol some certified type, possibly a type that ha.s yet to be designed and perfected. GR.Al'liTED, SO~tE progress Is being made to cut down on bad air. though ~·e are revolving in a polluted at· mosphere of the world's making, (Germany and Italy ha ve v.·orse than Cali£ornia l but progress i.s slow! \Vhlle v:e wa it for the erperts in the varJou! fields to come up with workable solutions to rid us of some or the bad air outside, let's get on 11dth cleaning up the air v.·e have Inside. l noticed a hospital windo w open to the out-of-doors recently and thought that surely, In a hospital. we should see that patienls were not made to brea the the oulside contaminated air. IF ALL THE houses and other buildings in l<ls An~eles were now equip- ped with air syste~s tllat pumped into 1 purifier, and OE\. into the houses and buildings, the air from outside at· mosphere. Imagine the great amount of impurities v.·e would be taking ou t of the air and exhausting a much im. proved air back outside to rurther redu~ the total pollution. Such puriners e-0uld work with the present alt conditioning, used to heat and cool and filte r. which are at present in use seasonall y. People woUld soon leam to slay indoors with doors and windows closed when the smog was bad and still enjoy outside on smog-free days. R. W. HEARD Do11or to Red Crou To the. Editor: Disneyland 11 to be highly commended for the honors they bestow on thei r community with their annual Community Service Awards. It ls heartwarming tG see an enterprise such as Disneyland, which receives muc h fro m the community, return to the com· munlty their appreeiation in such an ·outstanding manner. We at the. American Red Cross OA:ere greatly moved by the Disneyland Cilm· mittet choice as top recipien t. WE WILL COT'll'JNUE to do our very best in giving to our community the service for which this horior was bestow· ed. We thank: Disneyland and the. people of Orange County fqr this m<Mll-coveled honor. Please come visit your new Red Cross C~l'\_tet ·al 60l _N. Golden Circle D:. ,ln Santa Ana. • ~ • MRS. LOUIS M. MacMlLLAN Cha irman of Volunteers· Oran11e County Chapter American National Red Cross Ne9ath:e Sellln9 To the: Edito r: For tht last sir monlhs 1 have bee n reading more. 11 nd more that the varibUs school dlst rict1 mll.!11 have additional rev enue in order to provide tbe servicu that are essential for tbe proper educa· tlon of our chlldrtn. Re presentt1tives of the achoo! board •rt very quick to stile what will happen U the. incrt:asc~ are not approved by the people. That Is known as negatlvt saltsmanshlp, ~·hlch has never t!l "the blstory of this country been successful. THE 1''AV TO gct peoplt lo inCrea~e thei r own taxeli. p1:tllouh1rly In !Mse times, is by 1 positive Jales approach. This is acco mplished by showing EX· ACTL Y what the present Income is, and EXA CTLY WHERE it goes', the additio nal money that is· required. and EXACTLY WHERE it wil l go. If tft! .. people are convinced that the school board is honest. sincere, aOO that '.hei~ requests are Jegitirhate, a tax i11cre3M" will be passed by· 3n overwhelming ma: jority. · TUE SCARE tactics that they 8re presently employing are sure lo continue defeat of the required tax. inc~eases.' Maybe that is a good reason Why I.tu!' above _approach is not used: It .'mat· be that the school board sys tem is~ as fouled up as Ult \\•eua-re "!f!it!nt - and po litics in general. If that be the case. then the people should know lh ii so they can take the necessary steps such U1at the economics of the school system is readily understandable to the average layman. FRANK MOHME llit, R1111 1'ic lim-9_ Cat To the Editor : ~ , ,..., 'I It happened · Sunday, Feb . 18. A. cat. hurt and helplt!ss. in the middle o( the road -y.·hat do ·~u do7?• While riding home that evening. my roommate and t saw a cat running about in the middle of the str~t -w~ thought at- tempting to crO!s ·it. wen, tie stopped right in front o( my car and · didn 't move (J put . out my hand to have the car• ·stop hilt severa~ drove rii;ht by) he was frightened an d as ~ looked at him T thought his head may have been served. I got out or the ca r a/Mr -went to the little ·animal lpeople tlOnked even though they had see n me get out of the ca r). The eel was ba dly hurt, ap- parently the victim of a hit and run, so I wrapped him up in my coat. A boy stopped to help me carry him to the sidewalk. A FEW MINUTES later lhe police came (one apartment dweller had call· ed L \Ve got a blanket from the same people who had called the police and then the police took lhe cat to the animal hosp ital. Finis. In Y.Tiling this Jetter, I am not tryin g lo jazz it up or make it sound dramatic in any \\'ay. This is just how it happened. J fttl so sick and sad thRt a pe rso n would hit and run , others would sti ll drive by, even honk ing y.·hile they had seen me getting out of the car, and nnly one dr i\'er offered to help out lthi.~ is out of about 10). Can you believe it?? There is something to be learned from all of thi.~: 1. Keep animal.~ In or !"asher!. 2. Please. if you hit an animal, DON'T hit and run. :I. OOn'I be Alr aid to gtt involved. KARYN RINGER -----Friday, March 5, 1971 The editorio l page of flit " Daily Pi/QI s~tkl to in form and st1m· u/ate rcadtrs by prese1UinQ this newspaper'1 opinions and rorn- mc11 tar11 011 topics of infertst inid sig11ifican r.e, bv provirlir1g a forum for the expression of - 011r rtaders: op1n1o"s , Ol\d hy prt'$tnli11 17 tht diversr vi'tw- pnftltt of f11forrftcd ~obstrVl'r.t nnd spokesmen ~n lopir.s of ilie da11. · Robtrt N. Weed, Publlsbor ' DAILY PJL&T 7 CHECKING •UP• Two Vie For Tiny Lost Boy Manson's Mastery In Deaths Cited . DOG SHOW UITA AIA FASHlel ll•IAIB MARCH 6-10 A.M. Husband in Dark When Wife Leaves 11 L.. M. IUY:D water «_hit watlr?" A. It'• A ~·of ..ieat11t1·1n1im h<avltJt at. n .2 d•rreta 1'. flltlr ~ el 11tvlctlllOJI Geta li&Jtwr .. it 1 • t a -a maJrild solditr'• wamm. And ·u it ,.., colder ...,. amn fullr -ho"• than that, t.o , , , , Q. fllrlolotlh tllan " wllea' be'•· "lftcludin1 Alaaka an«,Hawall, iuly. • • •• -.......... the ...... pblc ,,.,,.., ~==-=: MY clrjnUn of the Unittd Statti -!" 11' 114\1• been putt1111 A. In Built Cattoty of South '11 i.t _. \loaka lataly. Daknla. 1*<, too' 'J'1My doo't BOW llAPIDLY RENS l!y w~y . . . . T II E eua deptnda to '""" d'I"" ""'1CIANI ftlUU about Oii their framea ol mind. And .• wtv11 a year l'litiOGwide their framu of mllld ii af- •w.Y "°'"' -•llliout fected markedly II>' wllat they "'llellMl'llll !Al atJi 1~• hear. Like music. Ric up a the lllubufl, · tapt r-dar In a b6n houa• nlru: NOT (Al.LED to play. co~ for tht.m and y -lll)'llllfl. JuJ! they l\'IU rOJpond, that . !las ~ Hum~ tlley been pmtd. Chicken farmer f0111y Mudl Ille way they Erk WUion ol P I I 1 Io n , ST·Jlan ... •Ith Ftank Enaland, did ... Ht Col the tn. El"'!" tlMy doll1 bQt •II produ<tion with the N..,. llloY llrlfl l!ff lllOlr mambo. Cl\ICkW really 1• lo111114• Mii threw" tMift. on for the mambo, t:vidtntly. llai•· Al lua~ thi1'1 wllal IF YOU WANT to buy ''==' neenUy. Slippoi< fireplace -la tbe mlddla !ii '• hi.Ml 001 cle,que or Manhltt.an.. Y'Kl 10 dawn --alilppara? If 11, to the dtli<attsaen and pty I'• ~ VOf'I !lad. about II a slick. Thlt's Of TD c r In e another retlOn tbt ladyfritnd on -it'• and I did no1 llncer ••erlonJ ly, baca11JO t!lereabouta . • • . WllAT'S Ila•• llattar dopth BAPPllNlllG to the divorce .ti,lj!ft tllan do "*-'Ille rata anyway? Jn the lul Clerpontloll.,.,.rlAldiY. IOvtral monlhl It has ,,.. t/da. Cllll durlnl World up to almOll IO puelnt amo•1 ar·n . '!My UllrnH wOl!ltn the recantly married. WW run. their »-ten cranea, check further and rflport. thMn ••-joba lllA!r AVERAGE . STUDENT 1 ~r . • • . 1 J' itave1 achool after 11,000 OCJ'J& &I\ ulctr '*titftt, it'• tioun in~ cllwo.m. That'• !VII your dayUme atUtud< -Whit the aHdO ·rw,; boys fili\lr-• fifeela ytlll' mltlaectloft. ed out. A mabk inveatrnent ol ' in y-. ~p can lllr time, what? Yat c:onaidtr thl•. .trtdlili:, t66>. A n d ly sraduatien, that amt 1t~ can b4o fairly dtftl ha• put In u,~ hour• -· Or 00 .. ,.... a IA lnlnl el the taltvi!lotl, tlley 1i'ii1&ii~ii · aay. r;i IUVICE -Q. your qu<!llonl mul com- Y-.a _.. il'• more 4lftll10US TMftt.I or• totlcomtd and ' lb atep ... !lit brWI toil! bl uitd i• CHECKING » J!1J1i1 t1w1 ti lt mpll. UI' IDher•ver 1)0Uibl<. Ad. • A. irWI ate _. dr•11 lltt.r1 to L. M. Boy<!, I&° frU at 11 Mpli , • • • 1'. 0. Bo: 1175, NetDJIMI -•1t'NtJl ii N•ier, cold Jrte1', Celi/ .• 12*. SAN DIEGO IUPll -For a w .. k, a Uttl• i.year .. ld boy found wandorlll( I n a 1upermark>I -.Id nol loll aulhOrJtiea at Hi 11 c r 11 t J\ecf:lvlna Home ·hll nllM. Hf: was calltd. "Johnny." 1lnct JGlln Dne ooundad i.o formal. Today, be his tWo identities. A Los Aftltle1 man wu thwarted 'lburlday in hi.I .it- lem]ll to claim the little boy he aid .... !Iii ... liter poltct received a call ftem. a SIQla Batllara woman Who Hid the boy wit h • r .. -. HtnrY Covarrubia, 42, u. auto mtchantc, idenlified tht boy •• hts: 1m, · tateb&n Fedetie6 Covam.iMa, Z. wbom ht uid w11 • tldnaped lk mernthJ. aao in Tijuana. Polk:t old Irene Andtl'IOll et Santa Barbar• c a 11 a d minut.u before a J1Jftldle eowt hea.rtnr tn "hich the boy WIS tfJ ~ offk:iaJly turned over to covarrubta. T h e woman said Mr dau&hter. !\ena Kahn, llld her &rudlon, Mark, hid ...,. to san Di<I• Ian month ind she hid net heard ftmn tlMm 1itltt. The FBI, which entered the C:UO lleca-of a PoQlbUily a kidnap victim had hHfi" trauportH aerou an ifl. temationll boundlr)', said it was chettitlf tldf boll'I clalftu. It refused fllrllltr comment. LOS ANGELES (U Pll - Qwlll Mal\Ht\'S ptwer •Ytr Na followers combined wlth Ute.ir chroftic UH •f ~0 Mablid tile cult leader to "ft\lb tblm bite ~beta'' and cculd condlv•'1Y pro17am them hte 11 tut altd kill,•• a pr em I a • n. t p1ychiatriJi lellilled Tbunday. Dr. Joel Fert; auther el the "Tbe ·Pleuurt: Steke.rs" and a feund6r ef the. Free Clinic m san l"rancilc:o, told tho penally pli.., el the' Tale- LIBi&Dca nwrdu trill lhat Muaen'1 infl\lenCe Mer his foUewen wu \he mest im· port.ant facter which led te tht aeven 1layin1s. Fbrt Wll caJ1td IS W ltntas fer derendant 1..t1U1: Vin Heuten and II.id bu ust et tm •nd Ibo ... o1 the dnlr by etber member• er the "M1nsen F a m 11 y 1 ' un. dOU~y . 1wayed tb~m mere tt Mauon'1 personality. Man90n's attorney, lrvl"I Kanarek" then asked "ort, •·are yeu ttUinl us a •th~I fer crl!M can exiJt?" "I'm inaeed tellin& yl"tf that, altheuth the way you're put. tin& it is a rltber 1bl1U"d Sniper Amok In San Diego • SAN DIEGO·(UPI) -Three CU'I Wtrl l'lit 1pparenUy by San JftC!.D aniptr lira dllrinl a IJ.millute u..... period 1n aouthwl San DJeao Thunday nilbt, poli<e Hid • Ca Hi Addlliollal polloe units "'10 mpus t moved Into the arta, 'ut the anl.per w11 not immtdiately B M I klclted. Persona in the cars Y e ee 1tnick by the bullell were not iftjured, police 1ild. SAN JOSE CUPIJ -Two,1jiiiiii~~~~~~-.I policemtn wer< holpitali!id W.OUll SALi and I! 1tudanlll armted KOi CARP Thunday in a molee Which be&an IS I proltit b J ecolo&bts atainJI Standard Oil recruittn on the San Jeat Stat.a Q,lJe&t campus. Campus politt tritd to block picklts and a .cu~ bf'Me out. Twe demo111ttittn wve MrUt.ed but wbM city plainc:kthtsMen 1trived to pick thtm up, a veral other YoUtha trlad In aet -frat. M.... 1111"'*" ti etltrful .wi.ni~ ,_,, I ll'Mltt IM' Ill ..,...,1\1111, $ ... ,,_ I VISIT I.It PttM ......C._.. T-. Pacific Galdfish Farm ,..., ... ,. ............... &ff ~ • .,. &ilflo ~*"Y 11 . .,.....,_, .... , .. - A message of hope for those Who were left out because we couldn't get them a Volkswagen right away. NIW'°llT llACH Chic• l\'9tlt11, ""· 44i I . C•ut Hwy. '17141 '1M9al Our ahip cema in. Your local autherlztd Volkswcgen doolor has a good .. lection of model•, colors and optional equipmont to ci..os. from. And if he doesn 't h""* .. oerly what you're looking for, he con ~ob..bly ~I ittn a doyortwo. So if you've been waiting for th& right ttma Ill buy o VW, the tima has "°"'*· · ... _YI"' f.,..i whet it ltob lib. SAN JUAN CA"STUNO Iii Y ata1, Inc. i2H2 Valle 114. (714) 4"·22'1. • HUNTINGTON tlACH · Htr~aur V 1.11•t•n 11711 .... h ... 1.war4 1714) 14M43S • • ever almpliflcaUon ,'' Fort replied. "Minda of men are indetd mot4td in totalitarian aocietlta er by t.ot1litari1ft in· dtvlduals. ~D can make a person more malleable • , • more easy to program. An ob'f'..iouSly e n r a g e d Manson then ah outed , "There's two of us who knows he's Ignorant -that's me and him. He don't know whal he's talk.in& 1bout.'' Mate Wins Death Suit LOS ANGELES (UPll The family of a woman who died after als·inch I o n g scluors were lelt in her body following .abdominal surgery 1ccept.ed 1 $110,000 settlement Thursday from Los Angeles COunty. Mr1. Margaret F. Craig entered Harbor G e n er a 1 Hoapll•l. a county facility, last 8'lpt. 14 to undergo surgery ind following the operation at which tlmt! the scissors wt.rt found in her stomach. FREE ~rAX REY .URN ~.PREPARATION '. DEPOSIT $5,000 -to a new or existing savings account at Pacific Savings and • receive FREE preparation of your personal Federal and State tax returns. Some peo- ' pie will save $200 to $300 or more in account ing fees. Of course, this offer doesn't . epply to·corporatioo, partnership, business or similar retu~ I' PRUf"'_,.rESSIONAL -qualified tax counselors wm prepare ~ personal returns ' · 81111 make sure that you receive l!Nef'f possible benefit under the tax law, Each return ~ will then be triple.checked for legal and accounting accuracy by high~ined sp&o cialists. All work is done in the privacy of your Pacific Savings office using the trained personnel of Skousen Tax Service, Inc. The Skousen firm, started in 1946, is the second largest tax company in the United States. They currently employ over 3,000 counselors and have prepared more than 1,000,000 tax returns. · jf • WORK GUARANTEED-by the Skousen Tax Service, Inc. · Guaranteed Accuracy. Returns are triple-checked for accuracy of mathe-~: matics and reproduction. If the company makes an error resulting In any penalty I or interest charge, they will pay this penalty or interest. · Guaranteed Protection. If your return is questioned by the Government, they wr11 handle all the details at no charge including representation at an audit { conference. i' BRING OR MAIL -the attached certificate to Pacific Savings when you open or add new funds to your account so that it can be validated. At the same time, we will set up a specific ·appointment for you to meet a tax counselor at n later time most / convenient to you. PLUS -you get a FREE Safe Deposit Box, service chariie FREE Trav~ler's Cheques • up to $2,500, FREE Collection of Notes, FREE Notary Service and FREE Financial ·· Counseling. AND -your deposit earns 6% per annum Ina twoyearCertificateaccount-5*% per annum in a one year Certificate aecount or 5% per annum In a regular pessbook account, au compounded daily. REMEMBER -to qualify for this free offer you need onlyto make your deposit and let the attached certificate ·validated. If you have an ACCOUNT ELSEWHERE, let us have your passbook and we will transfer your money to Pacific for you. Offer good until revoked but not beyond April 5, 1971. . SO HURRY -make your deposit TODAY -or call me, Rick Jack, Manager, at 540-4066 or stop by our office for more information. Pacific Savings and loan Association SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET, COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92626 -----·--------------------------------------------·----- I, • I l . I • • • • I • I i t • ' • • • ' • I 1 ~ I II OAILY PILOT s rrlday Marth ' 1971 ltlo•aeu's tt'ortl1 Con1plete-New York Stock List Cl1ru·ity Giving OVER THE COUNTER a..,_i.ll~t lnltt••U•I" '"""'~ .. t..,..l....,19tJ t -""' !'Nit! NASO l'•ICe M .,., inclllC• •ti• •r m•l'll~llo m•l1lillw11 •r '9nlllllultA. ... ft ... IMl.1111• W., 0-W. C-• 5f'.:t 1 Hltll ~ CllM 4':. .ul\ "lit. NASO L1st1ngs for Thursday, March 4, 1971 ..... s t hi $•lilt IMI 1-.r11t NY 1 1114..J Kit~ L .. (-(llt ll•WMIN> 1 llUo MT d~ M<llrr Mot Requi1·es P1·oof _,......._ ... ""-,'1'' ,,.., :.=~ "'· ~ :: ... ~.·~. 11 t \°I ::::'J ... ~1 .. NEW YORK IAP Al' ''1. -In• IC IOwln'I) o I. I,,,, l it I.MN I W ~~~ 2 :& ?l ::~ ~~ :f! + \'I 11:w-:·~ ta A(m1Mkl 1b 11 " ., , ~'g :j: 1 11e1 Ol>o • ,, • 1 'l••t "'<l1' 1~ 1 1>:Sowm •n n J1., ..c Gra • ''• 111111( 1n •, •. "'l~iE• .Me 10 •• ',I" I' 1" \o "'-""'"' , iw I J<.A ~ w .... u.u, w<k Ml ~ 1. "'en \JO~"· I\( ltOt J1. ~•.llCIMlllli 1(1 "'i!'• 11-1\-lt Ill Ea1lll By SVI \IA PORTF R (II Ull•llw•ll<I Wilfl lfll Rttltrcft tM1 1111 •I Amtr1C1l If }OU la ke 1t1 m1zed deduc lions for cha r ltnb l e con lnbulions and a Treasury ex amhung agent challenges and disallows all or parl of vour dl'duct1ons for cash ('On tributlons whrll should you do' ln J970 lhe Tax Court can1e up "llh ~onlE' dec1s1ons v.luch ~ou can use To sta r! v.1th 1f your dcdt.r Iron 1~ based n1a1nly on cash conlributlons or gifts or used property an agenl will a~k \OU to pro\e \OO ga\f' the amount of cash you c laim and the 'atue of the property 'oo sa\!e ff )our only proof t;t; )our ov.n slaternent that ) ou made the \ a rious con t11bullons many a,.!Cllts .,.111 a 1bl!ranh cul \our con tnbutinn deduc 11on lo $50 to ~100 fnr the \e~r U you cla1n1 s ubst<int1a!lv more and arc \\ 1ll1ni:: to fight 1n court consider this )OU are en\Jtled to deduct a reasonable es!Jmate of con tributions during the year e1en 1f \OU do nol ha\e 1\nl ten proof to support everv d ollar }OU claim The ke1 \\Ill be \Our ab1l1tv to persuade the Treasury or courts tha t \our estimate 1s reasona ble 10 \1ew or sur rounding circum stances and the courts arc more "1lhng lhan T reasurv examiners to eon sider an estimate reasonable For instance one taxpayer deducted $540 for eonlr1but1ons to one church $60 to another Sa each to Bo\ &outs Girl Scouls and Red Feather and s21:, for value of rloth1ng anrt a crib g1\ en 10 Gooclwt!l Tndustnes The Treas u r y .slashed this $830 to $32 The taxpayer \lent to Tax Court \vhere on the basis of his testimony 1t was decided !hat he had given af least $540 to ehurches and the three $5 oontrtbut1ons fo r a total cash contnbut1on of $!>55 It reduced his deducllon lo Goodv.11! lo $25 because or his lack of prool or lhe prop- erty s value - a lota• deduc lion of $580 or more than 10 Umes the $52 I.he Treasury was v.: 1lhng to al\ov. In a s1m1lar case the Treasury cul a taxpayer s $768 cla1m for cash contributions lo SI04 for lack of proof The Tax Court allowed him lo deduct $500 or almost hve ------- I 000 1 OF OIL PAINTINGS WHOL£5All WA•£HOUSE OPEN TO THE PUILIC 50°/o OFF l•lt E ED NOEii SANTA INlo ~hoftf 11~40I OEALEltS WANTED UNITED STATES NA TIO NA L BA NK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPEN SATURDAYS . " MON THURS F•IDATS 17141 540 5211 S• Ceost Plar11 •• 10 S PM 10' P M LocoPed I~ Colt• Mno H M STOLTE ].l. • I> 1 •v I" • '' ud PP )/\• :Ill ~ llOfl Ill I U U l A II Un ~U• )I o AOO .i' ,lOu 119 JJ ... JJ\o i .. rMMI 5PP ~.I :n.1'"p~~r:, :1:::-" I'm'' tl1c Tre~!lurv s fi gure C•• ••1 Ann P'I!• 1. co1•c f!\t counlt 8~n iQ,!((111 Lt) Ob\ louslv )OU W!ll be betlcr tnsur•AC• &. 1""111 Ald111 e.1 11 11 Ii QW 11 J1 •J. .. -lu 11 P l loo 91o\1M 11..sl I I fl M<:CiM 1-., no AOll'lr1I I• W 11 11 -\oii "I M 5P DI JV. 5"""-vdo 11•o lJ lv11t C11 Jl o 31•o •11 11• •1••9;.. S lhr'ollt 1Bol1 Aetn1L1• 160 Jn*\ ss~ j/loT'-hP,,.uT J 41 •I IA.,..~ iv l .... l\o -1¥11 Int IJ n:i. ;c,, Wot Ult 16 5 Envtl 21 UV, A.ift<ll pl a • "' .II ffl• h• p Cl UP I k lflnl >lock• Al co L d Of( 1f }OU C<fll p8V by ClCC Btnk 1n<1 l u>I A I Tw. w }\ A!CC eel !I sa m.J90 !y u IJ 50NE T1I 1' l «I 5 lrkL .,.,. 001' ·~u~rrt Co ,,1 I lo 10" O'I. n •1 ,, NW ,, •• h Al c.. ~I 1• n "''' CP J~ j \'I w Ot(p 1~ ll'M nlv A. ,.... • .. "" Inc '°'* !O la\o l!ocF~ll .1j 1 . l I Au" Sc ~{ 1 ~ n<I NUC~ '19>l 111. w EliVG I II p Pe,,,. n 1l ~ Al•"'•OCI l'Ot:i 151 Sl ~ ~ Jl,. .. ~ nrli Cr•h D h 111 B611CP S ' A ~ llt>' und g{'l receipts ut v. ere 111 11 sv1 10..., !',:,A tt1 1: .. ~ ' R••d r.t ~ ~ 1 nl<>r nc '"-f< ;ov 11 C11 U\o lJ • Ii Ind ~ )0 A PrG pf(.)5 1115 111 llS -I "t lCfi <vl>f ' • 10 o Ba~e ?1 n nto D so ' 1\.7 >PIKe<"V ' , 5\• 1111[ G U l1"1i A t P.ot 1'09 It 1)\\ ~J 1~ + Vt nrl1Ct1 P•ill I I h1Ernp 5 J l'lo. ;u,A YA II\ the situation 1m1ts you o 111v' ek 1D 1nv. AIOI crm 'J•l"tBo p,.; 1 • 1"'nlr•d J'" Ji\o,ttn<hn 21 ~l"ll'I 1 D 1 i~o A.J 1oci11"rrn 1J 4•1 •h •h 1>oma1 SO .~ ',' ., •• ",'m ", .. ,", : ,",,} n1 COl!t 10~ II 11<1 Af'll I JI n~ Dus ... , '" ' .. A)<tO"'I 1• ll 4J ,, 42\.o i ~. ~·om• 1>f s unruceiptt'd cash contr1but1011s ~~;~ r~ ll~~ ~ ::nn'Gf(l a "d th" Treasurv 1s arbitr ary uv, 1111h • l•~· Am "'~•" " "" \'1 Nllnk J!\• 26, Am cm~ ,.. nl m n 3 ~ l~, ,11n HPd l I~ :U anc1 5~ Ito.< 2<1i,.. A • Gas I It ti 17 l•h li\o \<Ii l\tyl ' 60 ,th 1'!! ::1,Z~ R ,j ~,:'I n ml G '!~! 1,°', ',',',"••' •,•,r ~?\" ~~~ •,~~C!.. '" rJ r,~1 ~1:~roe1n1;,1 ~ti ~!~ 2t u~,~ +1~ Cl~~~ ~: 11 o H>o B•u n I 52 $1 on! llWi.h _. .,...,. .. "'' ,.._~ •· "' lnG ·-1 1 II•>'•" 6 11 n Lel1 c Ulo lJkS~bic T1 '" l~i ta1ron 1"41 1~ -·•n1 "" Jl H 1)19 lllN i:: P j~ tJ 91 >, Beft~rn Jl ).4 n Nulr I 1)1o 24 .. ugd1I F I I 11 , NadlW P 2l 21 '> A lean Al11m 1 I~ 1110 """ 21"' C.E P 4 J! ,,, flff n• F 11 ,, , "I Sy1 SI~> 31 ... \UP9r El ll\~ ;All.Na!" Bd 14~ U'M Ako5t11>d lll ~• ll :Kl, '.l(lh t"" lnMl•c 1 olQ 9>t ~ Bent IJ 9 11 1 o • on ti I' 19\o TI ME 0C a .. JY Atal'd 1 • l\4 A HllO•i lClr 11 Jt"" 27\o lllo + \oo ~F ft 1 IO 1cn1cmbcr the Tax Court will Fldui1"(~t•~t : E ELP~ consider reasonable estln1ales IMl~11r1a11 Am r; ss•. s.• Be . t'ol .. ol$ • $<)Vt t 301, 3 lo T1m11• '" is:i Niii\ NG 16. 14 ,, A l/.l'l'IL I .119 ,•,$ ll\1. 12' 1~\.11 + 'h II n$vc Li2<1 '' '" ' • o> N OO"O"" < > , I 1 Tant f Jj JI IJ iN~I Tr V~ l~ Al f9 Cp 20t \)\fl !)lo Ill.. + \\ C IV Inv AAI COIP 6\-6'1. Am Fwrn b ased on 1alid testimony AFAP s JI l? A Gr~~' h bl AID Inc 9l 10 \A Mfdlcp If \OU make a c arlla e ,t..1ts nc ,, '~""' T•lv ''' 1 ~n ''" lll'IO" 111 •, lo iNttlb Rt \ll'I U Allf'!ILl.ld I~ 1• Jt>o lj\<, , ... -T\ooCltvft~ ffllJ ~.o ,a, ~~~PM.;; 1~.J:Qn""w~ (\, ! l •Ylor IN ... •l!I'> t!Qnl w ' "" A le-eLw Pf, ,.10 •tl\ AJ\, 'l +\to llYln p))I f d f AYM Co f tltJ Am Wttd cnn1r1buhon o use urn1ture AD4' 1, n , l 1•n11<111, J o • 8 •~ XIII 11-1, '" l~mtt F 26~ 11 I K ll P~b 6 1 MtlrJt•n t tltJ A ~PW I Jo Uloo 2J o 2 'Ill 1" :a,, llv 5trf I I I I Acylhn ?• l Anlottll II c ot ung e tc } ou no on Y Admit 1t l'"I""~·~ •~ Iii ti II r r~ 1 1,., 1am10 v 10.., 11)>.o T111tm p 111 11s N1ll1111 M 17\,. fl A'"° en Q 1116 n 271111 21 .,-"'C/:'t: ~, '.m"° ·~--0 8 ~" ... :Ill ~1 • I th Fen 30,. Jl,. r,1.crn s·~ • HlllF II 11\9 11\t ::1~,. ~ ~: : tl~ :e . /1"" + ~ It~ Cllf I Ill rllUSl prove that )OU made ~~dJ''Ji0~1 1s. • 11,11~~~n 1';1 tpe contr1bulion but a lso how m uch the property you con t\o 1\ 11 .... ue El l 1 •~O\hn M n , n • V Corn 10\1 I\ ti! G•t l' '> 14\0 AllleO PrJ OI •i 19,. llto if" _\lo C evEt ti L24 t•• It lloul.,. C 1~ I D (p 1\'o lo le,.,..nt 71 I?'-' 1lc1t P "" 'Ho A I ec:tSI 1 .00 ... &J JJ\l J2h 31 +I Ciev Plt11 :: 1 ~~ li : a~· <~~r ''tr U': ~: ~~~ ~... ~ ::~ ~~ n: ~ ~11r::~r..: ' 41 ~\! 5~11 ~!;;~ :t It ~~~xl"J~ tO ',••,•,•,• '" ,<, ,',',•, <• >'O oO -> 21\o Tiit•> Co lo 1-R' stn Pub Hlo )1\, All 1 Cll .o;.a >O> >> O\O, li:: < C1111t1P -' 1 tr1butcd v. as then worth for !hr.it is (!ene ra tly the amount or ou• <.'Ontr1bl.H1on For this purpo.st' j'OU must try to keep a t least muumum r ecords In chopµ111g a taxpayers claim fnr $~fi0 to SISO thl! Tax Court 111 1970 said that tf the charities do not gne either ;ppra1s als or detailed receipts for the contributions the tax p ayers should at leas t keep a contemporaneous record shov.1ng the quan!1ty a brief descr1p11on and the date of their gifls to ch a r 1 t a b I e orJ:anizalrons which could be ackno\\ ledged by nn agent or 1he rec1p1ents A s a n11nunum makC' this sort llf hsl 1n duplicate and ha\e II s1gnNI by a representative or the charll} Tf }OU re a volunteer a nd \\Ork \l i1h children on behaU or a charitable organization )OU surely have lots or out-of poC'ket expe0$es -buying ad 1n1ssion t ickets snacks etc for the kids aod yourself Under a Treasury ruhng 1n 1970 vou now get a tax break \OU C'an deduct as a charitable contr1but1on the portion of your out-0f pocket exoenses ror the child or children allhough not vou1 nv.'11 portion Under the 1969 Tax Reform Act Congress said you cannot gel a deduction for con tributing rent free use or orn- pcrtv lo a chantv after Julv 31 69 but d you gave 1t before Aug 1 1969 ~ou \\ere entitled to a charitable deduc lion for the pr operty s renlal va'Je Lest year the Treasury TC\ trseO its long standing con trary n1!tng a nd conceded that )ou can lake a charitable deduction for rent free use or propert) given before Aug I 1969 1( lhere was a legally enforceable conveyance of a prl'sent interest 1n the p~o pertv under lhe law of the 1ur1sd 1ct1on 1n v.h1ch the pro- perty 1s located If 1n a pre\ 1ous vear you j!_ave a cbanty rent free use o f proper!' which m eets lhts test and did not take a deduc lion vou ca n now c laim a refund based nn thts deduction -assuming the tax~ble }l'<lr has not be<'n closed by U1e s tatute of hmllallons Prices Jun1p t.11L\\ A U KEE A 111 s Chalmers Manufactunng Co raised pnc es by e ight percent on cenlrifugal and axial com pressors R otary compressor prices v. e re raised 7 " per· cent ENROLL NOW1 FOR NE XT PSYCHO CYBERNETICS W EEKEND WOltKSHOr' Mlllltt Co ....... Coftft """ CoMtr-L•~· Arn1wt11ad Mirth ri.11 E11,.,I mtnl L m ltd c11 uui JIG.WI or 11141 •n 1n1 Corporation Farminu 0 Increasing ~ ;9\o lO~ f tiny I• I 'o ""iNllA SIU 7'.t 1h A t QIAut llO l6 1S_: J4a0 1 CNA Fl,,'j' SO ~ ~',, ~r: 1~ ... ~i'!~<:,:~ ll\1 n .. ru ... G• §ft "'H"498t 11\ot u Alolw p Ct.., ) 11\io 11:\i l CNA ~Al •• ll•u\1' o, 1b o11 o llt Gr" 4 4 )fol £Let 5 ~l1 Nttlll\d 4•~4S\Atoe 1J(r 169 U'A '3 ~i~Coeil SI Gll flue~~ I• 1• 1v~m • '°' ''•< Coa ' '" 11111 wn ~~ ~ Atnals...! 1 40 l 21~ 21141 '21loo Ci1SG1 pll 19 Buc~ty I. I .~e•r T 1~1 J1>;, r ntA G lt!1 19 -~II Mii 21 14 ~ ~~;"'~, ..lf... '\ 1,1. 12 .. 121.o • l>UCCI) I y a11n,, <P • •,<ten<' ("p 11 , n <nin 011 1• 1~1 lie PL. n 1 n:i.; E •w Jn,, 2~ tl\i 00:1 Blltl N a ....... p s ll ll'o<t l'*" )• Jttltlll.oti H 5 Sl:. owrll L 79>.oltl•~'H"rJ.O 10 4J Q \} ~ ... ol•P• 1-40 (I( ~ • ' l.Cl'I Am ,, ,,, Jflto Pd JI ' JI. •d w 'E 1 . n. Anw~ oi~~ ,~ ,ii'A .:.;\ tO'll~ = ~ 1~"~ :~ ~ c.. "5 11 B .. ~, twa .tl)\o 41\o ft di. J ... ' "•lol'>I IN :II\ 1' AA rFll1r 811 •1 SS:it S<I"-!J" l l\<o om .... RN fnll<!a I I I <tlY Sv~ l"11l0' •In O': \~St tdny E J ~ l•Ah!Ar111 il(I 115 ?l 1•~ \ ololntll 60 C1110n M 1t n 1<w!• E II 11"'''""' Fd .... 10 Zlon VIS 1•·l~A81k'V Oki 54 :n 11~ '\\\\-""'"' lnd r~ ~M B 11J 1' <tvt F h 11'11 17 A Bu1<111 2.JO 11' 4/ o 41 41 Coll tn o>li 25 r " M l>P 1• ~· l(tY•• PC tl.o 10 ' Am c.,, l.10 IJl "~1 •)lo 4J .... -I. 115 I 4Qtl C~p ~o I • I <no 1n J • '~ __._ 1. Can Ptl Iii 21 21Vo Jn t 21>.t + 1, es J>I 1 <,•,o:cnC >,• 1 ( ~ CP 6~ 1~ A ClllnllO I~ 21 ll~o j1""-~ o uPct Or Can d ; I <ev1 Cus IS 1S ~ A1'18Ckll 1 20 11' ?f>.o 1' t + ~!cir In 1111 60 C"p n A S S~o~nOJ £1 ,, 4 o Am Cetnt<> I 1 1 ll,o I• ouGot 111 '. ' ' ' _ "•Knall vc1 JS li >... MUT UAL ',',','•'•"' 01.'9 l 10\o 1• • -• olSoOll 1 JO -c~ r. '° { .. L•nce ·~ la 3' , d .., 141 JSl't JS :uit :t crnti e" 1 ;o Ca•t NG I ,,,Land R., ••• s .. !:;'1s1~~r1\o! 11l ~Gt: i~~ W:+t:lmbE r,fllD WASHINGTON (UPI! Only one pen cnt l ions commerc1aJ nf thC nd Cov o~ C 5 • Lin~ Wd IOo 10 ~ Am Du1Ve•I 11 9 9 1'" c:::~~lvr1o farn1s arc~:~ e~L~~ '; 1 1;1~ ~=~:~o~11 i;:: 1;~ FUNDS ~~~~~{i\,~ 1li ~~ H~ HE +~ !i~iE:'9 ~b BI th hAll(~ ~ ' lf•u G 1• I AmE~p Pf om D" 60 run by corporations u e llfttl o 6'' &•o ew ' BF 11 i "' 11n1 o111 " •• ~ -11~ om~ 1111 n t •-CCOU"t<.hm ~ 1 11oLn Bc•U 1 "'11 AGAll Fd 440 II :HI~, :lli\t 2&'>-\lo OS corpora e opera....,rs a " Ches •~d 1 , 1 h.lqun c Jh 14 A Gen1,,. la 1J1 11>..1 ,1. 1•~ +,.. ~PU c f9r a boot 8 percf',n\ Off all sales ~~j·~~~! ~: > ~•~1 ~loli<ll~ 1~ ~ 1!~ NEW YD~~ IA;l NN t 92 10 n :m==~l= 1ii u~ li~: iit :; ~~~~Mgll~J, lfy co1nn1crc1a arms a c~· " ., 1;D '' v"'" c 1, 24 ~ -T~t 10 1~w no q""" P oo • u j &2 Am l'toi11 16 110 n • 11"" 3•'• ,~ + " c':'~Q 1 flll, '° I h ~ II p I I 1ni .... d GEi IS s..,. 11 lo~ ... nol ,~ toy s oclt \Y-1 ~ .. Am In~·' ~ ~s 1'~ " c i' ' governn1en survey s O\\ s c 1 t ~· 0 J , , •• a, " , ,..... J'b rh• N11 r,,,. A"«I· s.11u • " , u .., M..a ca1 12 •1 J~\1 l-1 l4 , , ~ 1~ " I d ti c ~ A ,., ,... @' '00 0•, 0 , ~tlcn ol ur ti~• \la Py 11! 1, A A M~l.C..I," ~ ,~. Jl 1 JJ 3l'~' t ~ ~ 00",t.• •, Fina a1a on 1c s urvev c , 1 u B ,, ?l 11~ R v >t , 1 •• R 15 30 A.,. ...... °" ,, 1 • , _ W" based on farm numbers 1n 'c • ·"•• ~,, ',',, ...,!.!!: c '; 1 1:"' ,d,,or'llf'i ~ wto 1u. ~1"e1 e~n ,: °' 21 t9 AH1~G•• 1' o ?~! :11,: i~ • 31~" 4.,. ~., :;;'l:-d~1 1•2'J'5 " ·~ MO I 11 ,,.. wi;~rl It• •Y I 11 111 Am hOIO & ...... IV. .. r.. ,, ,·· !°" Fd PIO~ 1968 W.,, made pubhc 1n a r1~ n11 " 1 ::.• , a ' 1 ccu d n1v• Df'Pn J Hrw:ocll. 1 u 1 s1 A RtiDv o... llS SI • ,,, '!lo °" F h• , "' CUnlon O ) , • ., rcwr lll.l. ll _. r, d !II U) or bo\<gfll Joll"s n 11 on 41 Am S.11 n & lllri 17>,, li"' ~l ._ en (1':11n11 brief arlic!e 1n a magazine cow c~ 1 i ;1 , .. 1 LP 1J n , 1JJ<~1 "u \.dv. "' _ Funcb Am ~ha 600 " 11 30 > ,,, , • co..Ni tG 1 u C091r Co $1 • <9 ,1 ' " ,·~~. a,,•, APOiio LO 01 11.CS A Smell I 90 ~1 lS • ~"-,1 -O , Coru Powu 7 published by the Agriculture re 1 "' r 11 1 v.couv ,.. 31d A•-Cu• 111 1111 1, 111 1.mSoAlr 10 ss a1o ....-.. lj;o..Pw 111~50 Department Econom1c~~nrs , ~·\~<,,\~ 1!t!J~:~~':.i1y i.,~10,i " cu. e2 1tao21MJ !~~~t"111 ~;:... ;lt'! ~~-1.,~:/~r ~'6o Com Sto... ,, 701 llf<llrn J91't ,jQ G-u-" '~ I.. CUI 8 • 137 9 ll A SIG pt• 7S .a] ~ ,,.. ....,,, -h C111111c:; 079 Research Service the Farm rom G •1 1 'Ill! <11 1n 19\<o ,,,_, ln<llM • 11 'SI Cui Kl 1 'IO • u Am 1!f•11 a 111 1a ii • 2s • -1~ ConH Corp 1 d A k dlh CornTP~Z••11' .. _ '" Jllo l \too IMur tllll'lf.SCUllU SliS6'Al&TWI 60t lO'llo>-.l~+•c1CppfAJ.SO In ex spo es man sa1 erorn "''~ o 11 o\dl• w 19 2'J :\GvJ,. SJ.I fas Cu1 SI lt»2ll4A.., T&l160 MO"'' 4&\o '*''•+""'cicoofe1.so rull ' ••al report would be ~.~.•,iv 1• 1s,,~.~.•.,C6 1>.. ti i11,r1"" Fd •1~10"' Cui Sl JOS6lljl)Awaiw~ 60 20 tll\ ll\t n.,. Con•Mt.t lCM u1 , ,., ""' 1 0 l .... AUHlarcl 7 oll I 09 C\11 Sl 7 9S I 60 AW pref l 2S tl'IO 17 U JI Con! OU l.50 bl h d I "eeks Crno Cn 11 • n \lol<11 GT 19 2'J "litre t7l t73 Cui M 411 526 Am Znc • 1•• •~ I• Con1 s11 .IO pu1se1naew" rmpn ~111 t':.r 5Cl~51 0 •1Am F ri.UPollr 3 111 11Ameron6C 120in u 20 .+~~Co..1Trll0 Prehm1nary repor ts on cor c,,,, ,'," ," •, • v.11 Mu• ""' 15>;, ""tit..itt 1c a1 11 IA nkkb 1 u • 14 Amf l•k 6Ca I• 1& ts•• 16 ., I• 11111• ot Dita ~" • \lo l :W.l1 '>Aplle Fcl 111 JICIKnlck GI 9ll>ID69AMF ln<90 9! 30 1 30'9 )O!o\-ocll!Un SO po rate farm operations 1n ?2 c,,., ,• ·'• ',' ',', vci"!' c;~~ ~· ,. ,, •mc1P 6 1' 114 L~no• Fd '51 11t Amr.tt IC n1 la -w , 1-.. -rln 1 40 ~· ~ iS\oo U •m llu1 l JS 3 61 ex Gr1n t SI 10..D AMP rw; ... 1'11 62'-o 6H• IJ-l -1't Cou11t, TR slates WCI e published tn 1968 r,,_n!r•n' ' .: ·1~ :: ~1 11.., Am D~I " lD II.I 11 .. I~ RKh IS 66 111 AmnPgh IBg • ' ' t -I CoooT P!I 1S ._ " II -11o •mEnlv511S691~ny j14112AmPf~Corp J1119 oll o 19o +ICope1n<1l:ro and for ?fl additional states Coe"" • Jl 1110 lhcn ,,, 1 Arne• E•Preu ~•e Slk 5 6' 1 n Am•tar 10 .a ll\J :ia :ia~, + (loCcppRaP Mb COPS 5 6,V!o<!Sc 1'-1 C.iop t 117•1~Lltnv l&<l1!1Atr\ilpt)65 ''llo !l .... Sl .. +1 CopwdSll 1n 1969 1 he fina l report in ro1m Yr 1• • V.Mw~ ~ 7S 4 " lncme 9 •l o J L nc N~T 10 14 1114 Am<r•• a! 61 s ,.. t i• 91, Coo-ln!~ll 01~ add'tlon to nat'onal totals In f',"',''c. :• ,1~ ~.~.•,c:ii 10°1v rn·~ 1es ''5 Ll"g 4la Am$1ed 160 11 30~ lOto JO'>t ,corGw 1508 • ., O • 1 "-S11et 9 09 Loum , S6•1el Am" 11 •l l•o I • ! ., lo CowltJ Co.., th th Cu!(h ~ 7• 7•\loooP S 1,1,._ S!ock t16IO~ Anaconaa 1 JOO :10 > 19 ; 1CtuBdcs JO <:lude d figures on e ree ru f t F 1 ~ \Ion n n I( H\~ U\I• •m Grtll 1; 10 l l2 c,~n111 JO' in JO n A"'" Hock , •I JO~ '.Ill-. 3o1 o -i• CPC nt 1.10 elf CVl>e•C 1.&o\loae l• 2l •7J,,.Arn lnw $.&IS.61 •Pl I ll.J1A/\l'.Ofp!>vc1 al:J0 14 2'J~l0 +C ent lo(lb rema1n1ng stales -a i ornia Oane Lb' ~ • 10 • v.1vrr w1 s , "'Am Mut tu 10 1? Mui u 5 H JS And c1? l 20 i1 ~• •O ..01. -, c edF n n n At k ndH D611YM 10 11 ..... ,,,M •• , AmN Gtn J lJJl,ll.U11'11rolltJl]IMANclltP15 •110llSV.1nl -'11CockNl1611 as a a aw a u D11a r~ ''• o Vlo c .,11 16l'I 16 ~ ,.,1noo-c.rouP '"'°en• 1., 11• 9 s1 Aoc:oO nt •1, •,~"'-l-''', •,,,", c, ~.,,•,',/.!', The r eport Said a total or Dall Oes ,st:. ~' \loue et 10 ll»O IP I I .tO t ,, I'll! n un1v1ll APL Cor1 • ._ natt I"'~~ 1.._ )? • .,.,., P" p 3,, , rwtll 11 j311"1 V.-l Gttn l.t9 Ut APL D/ 1 °' l 20 20 20 +-"'1•cwcor 4111 13300 ra r m1ng corpora\LOnSDllltPc< •'I B ~\\ve lE l;l ll' l ntm~ l.S l tJ Mll lSIChUit!I CCJ APLp 1153 1 l'l 'o 11• 111 rcwftCQrk lla oln " ? ' 7> 'ICC n<I S~ !• Fd Inv t OI 911 Fr~ ll& 911 ARA S~t 106 j1l19~1111,o 1?9 • + W. wnZ&I 1 XI v.:ere found tO be Oper a l1ng00,',"•" ,, .. ,05\Joll~ a0 C lS 11 ~ V•nl 01~•"-.•f lnd~p 6 1\ IO?Arcta l)JQ ll 1t>1 I • t~o CmZ D•211 ' , ... •~1ron • IJ S 21 l\\llaa 1115 n.-.. Arca I N DI I I JIL< 3'~• 11 • CT~ Co 11 ill in 1968 not counting grazing Di!lu• c~ 1~ • x • ",',"o•oR • A~~ t>ouvn•o~ ai• inc u 21 1662 A th Din 1 '' ·~ 41.,, •111 + ~ Cudthv 9ll'I DKc•tn 9,9. ,, u,. F u~d A sn 1ttv.11uGhUll1l1J A•zPSv1GI 3'211.lo,1 •21•.+hcudhYDl12S assoc1at1ons Rnd 1nst1tut1ons Oek b i1 I .. •I "H°'" c 4 • • • Fun1 B 1 Gl In •• Tr u " lS.60 Arlan• 0 S1 lU in 0. 11 I + • Cu 91n " nt hl ~ 1 • •Ila! Lb ::111,, •, ~°"' s ode 6 J 1, •,, .,.,11~1 1 .u , u ~, !O,',,lvOY 6)7 1l • 12lot. l H• -,,., Cummfn U This \\3S a little unde r I per 0e1 C•nT 1 •• n i, 11111 Mtd .... 5 c • 1~ .. ~ 211 " it 9"' .,_ cunn o..., Cl@! ta '' , .,.,. N Pa ent 15 , " ~ 11..b'ioo " 1 .., t .. V..ll•tr1 U '9 \J j9 •rrnt D1 l 10 1J lt"i> 2! • '!'• -•curt n W oQ cent of !he I 6 nulhon com new .... t s 5". "~' s..:1t 1 >o 11 llaYrcll. 1 •1 t ?1 ldA Mu S.41 11• Armr Pl4 1s ~100 61 • 'i, ' !uiie H iO h th Dam ( Io• 'l~t Show J l Btiton 1&1MU IU OOllY CP 112'JlllJ A mU 0. ,0 lll ll~o .'.lll\o :Ml'>-!-0 YtlOP 190 merc1a[ larms-tOse\\L 01111al An 1 1..,_Na Sv• , l•Re'lr.nt t•111&Yooollvs IJ,.14U ,t..•mct11tls 110,. 5t !'I vpruiMn 2 I 1 $2500 o,..nrn • t l\IEn Gr i• 1.,.,8.,kG1n 1•2 1n .,.F Fd 1.11t.5t •mRu t to Jlr,.. ~r ~l10 :;,.;cv11<11sMwl a nnual sa es o or more o s.c nt • , ~, "'J N•r C:: 1, , ~RI•, "d • ~ 1.u 'AiF GI" s.s1 1 02 h o coo-a " 17 :io~ l"I 0 l"ll.. _ ,1 ' l d for 1968 O•cn J n 11 O'Wc~•ll F 29 JO Bondi!~ 651 111 us Gv 1Dl210llt ~~ •• "o"", ,'-llS 71,. ')' ~ ... ~ -es 1ma e Ooculfl 1.., 1 • ..,fis A •J ,, 11~on ~1 11'0 £><1'-\\1 °"1G 5.U ill~ 1v 5'4 ,,_, Catlfornl9 led the nal1on Jn flnldsn L IV ~· r!s 8 •• 4'1 Boll F'dfl 11ol011 .. U Omt11 10:U11A~llpfJ41! 171 {1 r~ t .,. 01n RIYf' oo .... JJn ~. s 1 ,. NG 11 I ..... flOi on a.L~ ' UI srir .. ll.54 ll.!6 Cl'* 10 ... 4\:1 •t'n "" c.. .... c. I u the number of farming cor ~~~no~:;~~. Eur 0 1 1. J,BrwnFd 1 11 ~10.,.u1 '"' 1911 1 9'~dso l~b , J2 ll JJ -.. g1rr1n<1 lOI> th I 673 Flor da Du~, 00 • 9 w N•IG 10 • IOh Bulloc-Gil~ n ~EA Mu! 10 i5 10 n ,_.,., Tra~o JO 11 , 12 11 1 at ln<I DI 2 poral10nS WI I Ooo 00 '', '' 'IW PuSv "0 l:Jlo Bulltk II ~ ~I II Ind 10.IJ IOff A!hl-1nd II 11"1 16 11•~ +l Ott Procu1 , " c 41 •I> Cinclll lt'lf111'1! 81 Sto;l,lr Ser AllCvEl 1:16 I~,., 2•• 2•'--,o.ycoCp 111 "as second with 1213 Mon ",',,,P':."t ,;~/;'..,. e:r'"-~ • ID~ 01~1d ln 11• 1111•n 1111111.s.., Ricnic1 2 :io1 611,,.. 66,,. 11h+1"0ey1n1-1u0 !ll h d th 7._,. ..,, "-I M -JO Na!W ~ 10 ... 111"> Bond SllS 551A Reh o!JlS iJO SI SI !I -l~DAv nPL 160 tana was listed I 1r WI .,, "'>'•In •• I • .,.. ~v ·; 10\co NV V"I llhlWlll Dlvlcl 4 4i 4 fl All RICI\ pf l I Ill 11) Ill .. ! ~ DPL DIA l lj \V1scons1n fourth with 532 and ~~~ ~a~ ', •• 1j ' ~~ ~ :~~ ?a : 21 ~G,~dFd ~ ~ 1~ .~I Grwt~ 9 '° to 11 Al Ren p11 ao ~ ~j' • ~~.: ~~ ! ~",. 8!'eL:•~0 31'° El Pa~E• l J• 1• )I Sh~r ~ S\lo,l•t>~m• 1114 •~1 i.!co~k ~~~:~://!!ct::: 1 110 3,1 J•. 31, • Dtml P I 11 l dahof1fthw1lh ~88 "MSv t 1 1'~ P kan 161 11 C11>U nv 111111 Stoc~ l?ttD6ATOlnc 08110,11i.. n 11~ •"loDt Mn!f l lo I t th d f lh Ede Be 0 '"' 11>! c lf'<" 6 ...... CI D I ~., •I I (l!o Ntl G •h '1110 OI Au 0. p "" RI ' I I • + •• Oe I• Air JO r\ea r y wo Ir so e 1n F Nllt'. 11 • ~ -, ,, M•• '• 5 cen1 s"• 1151 J 69Neuw Cet 610 6 61 A~torn Da ~ la 5J'1 SJ SJ. t •oDtlfc tn COfporated rarms the reporl ~ ·~~ol ~I '.! o' ",,'" >• 11:• ll\lo C"•nn n11 F "d$ Netiw F<lt 10 49 10 '9 •u1om n "d 10 ' I I I ' ..., Di!nn MIQ '° '" 2!,: 2;"" ~~n SI I: ': l~ ~ Ntw Wld JJ 01 o JI Avto COIP n l~o! 1~ 1~ I + \'> g:~~~~~I po! s aid v.c re fa m I I Y cor ~m~~no 1 1~, 1~1: ~:c.1NA n ,~ .,,,.. ,, 5 ,, • n N1rw1on 1s" it 11 Avco Cp ~ 61 •o , ..ci 44 , :! ,~ Denhlll~lnt 1 porallons which often do not Enf•'lv c-~, 1e •en' ar ss., ~ 1ncn-n 1 '" ~ J~ N ch sr o 1l 24 u 11 ~~· P~~ ~0 ,11 31 l? ._ l'l• o De•t<o pt A F"~ "v R J ''"" Gam 1,, 20 51>1tl 112 I 11 Ne e1s 15 rt 11 ' Avntr Int 4,. 13 11 11 "-> O<! 1co pf B rit the USUal picture or a Enlw SI S '>akco Co ~ ~ j~ CfM~' Gr P.o )Cngnll I 4J I :U AYMI pt1 SO i 61 ft?, 65 I ·~ OeSolo nc 4CI O l 20 Fcsolt '••ncol .1 C~~~ !l~1b!~?~f!IFnund l ~i;,;~AvonPOl 10 1RJ91 <19 9.,~7,0t!Ed•l40 corporate (arm ny ~"~r'Jc' 1,"1,"'••"011 0 3,3\li ll'•n! IJn e 7 51 01 Fun<1•SOoJe•1~0 1 111 1l6 I 11~ 11 g::~3g:~;g n1•1ccnlofthe total\\crecon "~''"'' • ?·~·w or 14 15"' ~" d • v.n•JJnewrns1soo1100 0e~1t ,, ,.~ Ft>A f~ o ~·~ H 1:•1i:;: Sptct 9t9100<J Ntl llOOlJOO -B-DtFlnen '4 trolled by groups 0 r ~~b Cffo, ; 11 \ ~= ~:::, ~ n • DI</ c-nerncl 11~Iv11 01>11fnn 1 01 180 BabC•W 50 415 ~ nv. 31, ~ •t g 1m1nt1 1.ao unrelated1nd1viduals Fab f k 1 . J\, • "~•n 11,,,o.1ocoF~n.,it,.1 .,. ~~ 5~P< ~IM :0 ~~,1~~11.~DllT 1s 1• 11 ~ 30 , tt 1o.o-"g :~~s::cm!• F• "'1¥ 1n 11 '•u•v P 6 • 1 Fun<! 1 Cl1'01 ec "Sal C.E 11? )(fl lJ\io 17"" ll\'o +-.. 1S 0101 o The 13300 corporate fl\rms i:ca ~" 1. 1•, •v~1 e 11• 11,,.. r.r v n •JO 6riP•ce l'nd I D} ''°e1..,.,r Pvn• Jl 11 lo>o 11 + Dctepno..e o\1ned or rented 60 n11lhon ~~·o ~ ~. ~ ~:;L:J,, 1: 1!:: ~~~';' :'5 1~;:~~~ .. ~v ;*H:::n:rc~r'?u J 1:ii. ~ ~ :;-,~081ti.:.~ ~ti r I d the '~\<10"1. lllo.. >""'"' T 11 1 71 1\>Col Gtlft lttSlti!•loo "" ,,,,,,,,e•Alll>fN'f l 11" 45"lo,,. :+.~ 191!~1 EQUlo acres o an repor F~t 8011 • ,,:; 66 • '•"" P~e l ,.,, rams B<t i 09 s 11 • Sa<1k Tr 11.1 111 1-1 •Jlo 1o1 + ,, 8 1111111~m .er noted The averasc SIZC per ',',,', ... ,.. ,: •• ~t! :..,o•ww, , •• 2Sl'o Cw lh A8 1 OD l grl "' • Ill 1•.11 atrMl 'Jll r7 •Sl'i '5\'o ~,,., "' llllno Pf ... 1 -...... ,~ Sl 9 CW !f'IC 17'1'1Plnt S• 119'1 11929ard c-Rnl "5) S1 s,._., gmonC'i16• 'arm was 4 fll J acres -nboul F1PM1 un 7 71 ·~ o 1 ,, ~l.., Como A~ 10 0310 w ion En• 1 s1 111 81, c int IC • lll'o u lJ • + • 1.,,.,, n l'll FIPM WI '. ) ""et D r p IJ•~ U\'t Carn '<'I • !I ' .. Pion Fnd u 01 I] !l B6$k nf7 jl) 12'J ll"1 ]I 'o • ~ -1 givt •Ind ll eoghl l1mc_s the amounl or,'-,,wril'A 11 ,1,,,~h Sub ?l 'Ji~Com118d 9Ji 1DO,'lon nv 101111tllll!t M Miil !O It o ll o ll'-0-• YMl!f!O:lcl Pn ~~ ID• 10Y1 rll'!'" Fd t '° 10 8.' ~ 11r1n 12 91 14 !I lloTet Ml pt 1 1• Jl • 2'1't 2J' OrPe-'.Ill land O\\ ned or renled by the ~.'!. w' ,c~ '~ 1 i ·~ ;:,m " , 1" '°'"' ~ • oJ • 14 ;c:f Funds e,n, n<1 10 16! 111. 711 Jl:it -11 O..mtM111 10 If .., ~1 '1 l 12'1J(o~tod IJ'lll1"" Grw!h 2S1!'2S15 81rhln Pt2$0 1 6f' .. .,. t9 -1 g::FllCI 29<1 '1eragecommerc1a arm ,'~, 'o'• ,,•,,,', t~u~;; 11 13 ~ronot tn 11J1 1111 N Ea 10061Dot 8,.,~,hLb ao 6• 56> s.i. !}'"+ • ne" 44 h ~ ,., 11 /JCo•I "'' 8"'1 IM N HM JI011101eaaTL•b 11 !O 11 ... ,, ,,,_ ~DDtlc Cp 31 Other data from le ~urvev l'!l'mo ~ "• 0" "4to: 10 tO\oc~n• r.h ••11001 pro Fund 10501oso 8•vk c 11 ~ , 10 , ''• 10•+ ~DDrr D!lvtr ••-••ed that a tottle over IU ~:'~..,Grnl 2j,'S• ~~~PM , 1~ Ct.> 10 11 '11!91Po Pon! 7CM I04 &Hr1 ... 1 • ,,., " "n +YIDDve•Co 15 '-'\/ Frn1<1 Cn t • 1 a Gnll J: 4 '$~~Y~C!io~ 1lfl 1!~~ rovdn! '-92 S.3811 .. 1 Fd1 I 1• :Jt\-o Je~ lll'• + ,eower.m 1.60 ""rcenl -slightly over I 300 r tnk n E 1 1'"" ud "' n ~. .,._ C•n woa1 7 0, 1 69 \Id Svl 10 5' 11.$6 Beat Fdt p1 • 2 lDOl'll 100\'t 1oov. +l l'i Orivoeo J 11 o·" \ h d t: tQ Et l--. J ~ullS NfA ?1 • 11 ~p /r~ M ~9 03 19 Ol P\lln•m Funcll llf"I F plJ l"I) I 'IO • 'IO\io to'-& +4 gr;~~f~ l: -or the corporate arms a " "d <~ l ~ur. s NC 11 n 0eit ... ~•e G•ouP EQu 1 1 11 1 30 Bf<:l<mtn !O •l Jt • JI " :11 • .. to 0 .," 0,8 , I I 1$500000 f r.111 CmQ '• '"ull 11 1 0 I ~ 0,..,~1 rim l'' Gf<l l H ll1S 4' BKrOctr: lO 101 41 1 •1 •1 o-1 DrtvluiCt> ! Iola sarso per arm c:,~ ~, '" "•ruePe 1 1 ,., 0~,.., nnuJ Grth 10 161!ID11tte~A 15 11 ll' 1s 1 H o + •outePw 1111 h h I th Garln~I ll 1! R t ?I 11' f•l1• l5ftOJ ncom 11ttOSBfechCk 1 n 1, 1i 11 -Du-•Pl lO nr 1ger A quarter O e,,~\ ~. 16 ~· Oll:"C"n s . 11000Qcowl!Jl 53, nve-.r 1u 1ll8f1t0Pe .SOb tl 11 11 11 1s•ou~enl675 r hd I thl.OOIJO.GovC.'> ~ t ~"OC 1o1Hlo"l•• 10001<.19\11~ 114 1 90 8ed~160 l?l>ll 11 1 Du~Bd1?ill a rms a saes 11 e r. • 1 ~· "' 6 6 1 °',~' c-a IJllll l'• v""~q 615 1 19 a,.111noH Mii) l~ "• 24"1o 's +1• Dun~" ~t to-$100 ()()(I cate.,orv however !l,' •,·,,' ,' • ,' •,J~!qe~v•l'r 10 • DY>., •• t. IJ ~~ 11" Re•• • 10 R• 11 ts e~ 1 How &o 11 '' • •1 ~uPon• ?Sq " ?J ?J'lo c~ on3.11ow~•~ '! n1 e fl 1-6 l~ oo ee I In co" 65 l o 11 11'14 + • dut>on t ~11 !O On a regional bt1s1~ the C.1fo~ s S"-~~~~~ f1 71 ,~ .. r., 0011no1s.:n .. 1r 16'°1105 eern• co 10 ~ 10 J:.: ~ , duPon1 ntJ SO 'ur''y 'ho''erl "Ofpurate ,',,','w ,~'''IR:~,~ Cr> o 01 Gw111 11&71J &5Scu<11dor Fund• e,e~~ 'l~ a ~~ !S S}•'.;. Ouo L! 166 ._ r. • 11 R , ~~vm r., , 19 nc n ~ 0 6 IA tn nv un~v~ I • ~ r> 0 1, SI 1 n 51 '> > Ouolt •o 1 " '' 77 ~o•t oo ., Seel JJS JJSI Bf.nt CP ~ l O l ~t Ovmo ~d firms 1n the mountain sta!csuo~ C•c 11 ·~~otori f Q? • i ~< l l ••1 89 u 611s 61 Bfn~t p!!IO 1t9 6 '''i' o.nam Am "~cc! L J ? Qttct rp JI ll•i::b~ 1'W S~? Cm s 01110118entl!1'll J.O l II 11 Jj 1 \\ere 1hc bigges t in tri ms of~~d"f :· 1~:~'PcF~ ,: .~ r. Sc uo1 ·~sec~\y Funii-g:~~uit'11so 11j~ 1:, 3i ••+-•e~qePk ~ a c rcnge nveraging 11 43 3uv!EF •'1'1 '7 "' ~""Pu l•oU••~::'r" 16 J~111r, i-;qulv J4&l1•e~nqu'''I' 91' 1r' E~icoCo90 <'oh(n8 e•;io~<lF,••d\OL 61 ()6 1nve,r IOJtlOBek~vl>llo S•11 o 11 EeitALn acres a)llCCe GraOll St n 1? o ob!n M • ,, ~ oc,f : ~. 0 U r• 1 6 195 Bel~ S! 1 20 215 1 • 1 • ? E~t G' o1 """ 1' ~oiton • !•F.<ll(~ 11'9SIS~ec Am OJJJ052 B o Ttwe•60 llO~li •I :f 1-1 Eii1Utllol0 G ofn .... 1 ' )1 ~OU'' Cc Jn. JI' .,, p " •• 4 1• ,, St>etS 1~ 11 17 n Bl9ck Ok II 16 I .., '°1 t '"'I Ee1tcodak )fl rnf Q" 71 11 ~a"'•" In "1•0f~ 1 1n~•l ~J>enl G ii 15' 97181.iorJQl\n ii '' lP<o 11 E•lonY11.io C.•evArtv 1• 1•'1 ~11, ~Tov ,, lJ ~.,,. p o oiaJS,,~m Fd 109'10 t lBll•sL•u'l 1 '111 111 '' -ICalonpfllt Newport Beach Cablevision r n~• f' J ' Ml ~ l , ~ F\d Otll 7 19 ~~ar Ap '(t 61 J1 IJ E! ockHR J6 •J 73 • I) 7J\1 -'It l!:ch n Ml 5? ?~~,l)(l~n ! • I "'~" 0~1 1 , 1u, F ~~ v Gr~uo s~ Dean u IO 11 .er g1u~ Bet~ ~ 10 i~ ~~ ~ ~ , ~l f<~• aJ 11 H nr R u ,u, r~nn E •: ~ ~~t ~~l1ll:~g~~ Fund~l51019e~n:co :o 191 1l 17 ~ )J ~ ! ~il~B\8' I ..,~,It~ I~ •• I '"'° In ' 1 Et~t• 1J9•1~?l CIPI 961105!8-ohC~t 1Sb 1•9 45 j4 ···-~EIKI •1soc ]\1au·l"C l" Hn•cd F )10l'•'r ~''""' t 1111<< nYtJI 11l n t11BOn<llnd l l~o11.l •'rio •°"'EIK<10t • ~-~rt Jc~ H •••'0 •on•,,,, Fnt1 ISOllSG lfU\I t :JOlDOJ·B·--··,.11 'a11 ,,,,! t EMemMill ,. ~·c .. ~~·"II''~~. n~~ ·~'ll•ts'!'nB '~5•1S ...-n ttl) .. 11 17 EMM~9Pt l I h I ~~C;CA~~ -! ~ ~~~0,.! 1 ·, .... !.•lam 1 41 J~lJ-n• In~ •l01005R:~~~ 1.~ ~' r:~ ?r'? n .!. ~ji~.i'c.!-, P au \\ Ric artlson ias llootim c ~ 1•~r1e "' ,, ?J 1 ·~ ''~1 l6 U1,w1nv Gr 190 1o111Bo:sEds 114 11 :11 lP• ll"' 111 1 1 .~P lH J~di so n 1\a111 c~ i\cw 2624 w Coast Highway 642-3260 Watch Two Vital Programs COAST FREEWAY -WHY? F-r day M•rch 5th 8 00 pm • th rty m nule review every voter should 11 9 C1Y1C laader Roy Woohey rel.ates the history of the Co•sl fraew•y ' ~ SPElK OUT -Monday March 8th 6 oo•p m State ment1 from Patt Pres1d•i\I Newport 8etch Chtmber of Commarct •tlorney Charles Curry .a nd a 1t•ff• ment f rom V1c1 Mayor Howard Ro9ers Sea th••• 11.clui Ye Newport-pro9ram1 C ebl1v1s1on Chtnnal 3 ., bee'! n''n"d diS\rO•l ffiOOOSOf~~~.•,, •.,',',,.~,-C,-," I~ t f'ln•ec~t Proo ;ov• Inv 1J SO U ll!l0$Ed otlU r:IOJ17i l 11 l!ll f-Mild JJ• ~ -.~ ,.. , s I> 0 •nrn • 1 '~SPKtl 11l 191 eovrr5 lftC I ll~ Uo 1Jl•-'~ rnuEI 1 1• In f So''ttlem Cat'fornl' Ed'··n ~-~ C.I IO II .en:.Hn 1 :"""'1 ~ ~ i ~1~•Frrn Gt 'IS • IS Ban I A "' m 10\a '. 100. + •• mEl Df II'° .,.. .;.(n""' •l" 1 u•·~~ 51 '661'6Ne QQSI JOD.1 ll 61 601 ,....,_ ErntrvA•F I •·0 II t t fJe h ~, F v o n • t als ~&~men Fund• II• 11 MY :io JQ1 Mr 6!"' U I'• Em~3•1 110 .....,mµany s Ull 1ng on ac r111~ DI 'IJ 0 1• •m Ind J t• j 11 B •IMv of I 11 .. ~ " ' 111 ~ EmpOIJI I" {)1sln ct accord in" to J ack I~ ,., ,,., 1., ~ 11 0 ~ •Ho F ' " 1 'II 11 • Pet •lr 10J n • 1~ 11 • .. , ... ~ ,, G•• "' All t~t... cmlHad r.. "~'~ '90 ID lJ F due: 1 07 115 6d'wv Hee I 16 11 ) "°. 41 + '• ~· t>M n 00 K 1ml' D1v1s1on ~1anager "'hun<lt<ft 1001 rst ~ •~ • ,s1e~ Rot 11'11, aawvH• orJ 2 '90 n 1, 111 ~-0 neM ~''~ ncfl>t lor111(1std~slqnattd!tlwhldl J:1t Na1 1~!'7 1181 1tto1tto 0a~wvG0",',', JI l!"' l5 lJ.,-i. .. n1111 11u1 ~ tl''hardS-On f o ronert y r" ,.~ ,.o0 .~1l c1P OP •as tos uy,,u n l'~ 16 1!+' •~11G1 J-JO 1rt1•adedl~lOsh1rt 1Dll1P>Ctc1rrltdr1•t Con 6 ~•oc~ 1•tn1402B...,wnCo 31 0 1 IO~o 1 • "-E...,!Lfe.-ID!I dis trict manage r at ll ~nford 1~ ht 01v 1oeNos • e ·~~ ... 1 •••• r • i: ~ •" su..., ""' 1nv gwn~~ 1"°~ \! ~.': ~·· !J. .. = t': ITB'fnf 11R ed I I I C "··II r-1~ u ~ ~ 9/ • s' G< ~ i 11 191 B wn u '91 '"' 2J • 71 • + ~ iwu1r1 :iii SUCCe S {I C lflr< 3ffiJl"'-' un 111 Olhtrw ,, ~fn !IM !el P IJI rd ( , ••I 4 (6 Sum I 1050 l '>I B ~M~,_, ~ -\J ii 251;, "" _ \l Hf•lnl l 10 who has bet n assigned 10 e~lr• lbl dlKl~reo • P~ d 10 h • 1~11 F"G'~~ 1 c. ,lllJ,0,6 ~· ~~~ <.• ~ !~ 1~ ~ e:!.i~ co 1u 1l \ ii.. lb• -"-u 1M """ Yt~ no ff9'/ •r •tt (Cl plVrnfnl on tn(Q • lJ l l St TM RAD u 95 14 s s,~~.'~."'J llJO, .,,,. '11• •• _, ·~"·"',', ':il l ... d1son s C'orpor ate orfu.:l' 10 M 1 en 1.,1 1a 29 10 n ¥"¥ ,. "" ~ .ioccvmu atlld d vldt,,.,1 !d) Pt d l•sl ~,,. 1 10 5 1 ~ 1~~::.0 ~ l 13 , tlll R~~t'Fo, "'1 0 190 '"-"'-"' -\io t Yi 1111 Los Angeles YHr If! cA h Piii! ilCKk 1911nn1111 ~o~n In 0~01~ ffrnp c.1 l•to'l&H Bu ov&~ oD ?: ~~ ~ ... ~.. 1~~1"'/?9 Rlch<1rdson his a bat helor ~•• ptu1 ttcek dlvldll'!d1 l~l <Ntd 1hl1 nNTC ~~1 .,,row MR s oi st Bun•• Romo Jl6 lt"o 1 ~1 '\' 1" •1n1Pfd to '·O '""' G ·~T•~C•ol$61'7Bunllli!D!1 ~1 !:9Jt1~'1''~"'•~11DIU Or arts (le.,,..,e fron1 1°CLA YPr-!eKt d .. c1eno om ec1 Pl!' .... n •H T••v Et> 10121rM Bu lndl-00 136 " •' "' '-obe-• "° "'" _..., cent n ''"'' P1 ld 1111 •••r (kl"'' J" ~\'~ Ji Tu~w F<I 11~ u12 surr\e• JI~ ?J' d ~l..., u •. 1 F•jf1i'~ .Mb During Wo1 Id Wa r 11 he SCl'V cfl'\t i. 11oek,. 1•11 111 111tt111;rC1J11C'I".-.. ~ fll'fl"~t 1o i \l l?~hi (;1 l.h ;1,10 !lurtNor l'I n 'l ~· \1\ ''1' , ~• Cit'!. t• vtr1~lt or rtorttAli,r 011 in '-'Pll•I l'°uM<11 Inc G 0 tvm !nc •Cl • •l llurndv ~~ 1 1 \oi 7' • 1 Po , m )!ff cd as a n;ivti;ator In the US 11 ,1,llUtlOni 1., ••-<ll•~"d' 1-..u ,.,,,c ,,01"" nn Mu 1o)S1t2'J 11 ... '~' 110 •io 11""1er. 11 +11 Jrmont 1 Air I Orce wn-IU~ecl Cwll WlrTlnl1. "Poo;' 1 " I •S Un hi un•v• Bu.ii U" v ! 1) ~ U ' l ' -\~ f el! .... r1 I d n ~ r Uft (Ill ~vc (. " -C-~•,m, ',,',"•~~ R 1 ds Ill,. '• c-f .... "-" iet I "'I nl B10ld u IJ U.11 •· ·~ ICl.'lr 011 ~ 1\11< '" Fl!ACIONS f)ln1ir..-4ftl ov!io.IAt >ur~Am ••"Nel l"" i'u 1 .. {lbt!C11'0 U~'l~'#~-1'1f:~•:•lJ."111 lnnt ondthe\rda11ghtcrStacey flQu 1 1ttratt1on1 .. :nndu 111 1,,.,1c•te1 G••Ntv tltlrno1 u~ ''"' 101111Ds!"f'~c~ <w:! ;: 1'• 1 , 1'•-;:: ~1=1.~ 1 ~ it -.c\dc al 1610 t ~!t1la,a Lane lo QwJM t "'ure " tnic!11111 In "'"'' OI g~;, ~~' ; ;1 /~, Wn!M IJ" 1• OJ ! llh"n~,;,.... 4?; 16 • 11 ;. ! ~ i '" ',,.., '°' ow"' !lll'UIO •• trec!IOA In ""'"' G ... ~ rs"" Un ted FuA<blll ampRL~ •} ,•, ' ' < ,•, =' ·"·~~!!. ', ~. llunl lnglnn Bc Hch 'fh('1r son Isl 1<>l-nt +11 .. •l•trKllDnl11ltttn11 Aff• F en '" ~~~"'Gr 1~,.1~~ amQ So a ll JI • ... .-.. ~ II f l) tndltll•t loolowl,.. I~. lf'ac:lloll II' Fn ft tQ ,c ~., Con It>( II Ill !ft) l~~ 'l>:(' l : '11? ,1 • 6, •• r· -. "=~~~ ,, C raig I!! fltlcnding L'O ~ge in '" •••"* 'l~o';,.1l '~~~ ;,. 111(°"" 1i111102c8 ... 1R 110 ! '" .1•1 11. IF P~c \nu N th rn C•llfornia ·-~~ .. .,..,.~. -,. 11> 1n<1 ,0 1• l'll n !.(C en r 11 1 s1 c.n c B<K1q ii, n• a •e<11>ao d !~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::===~...::·~·:·::~:::::::.. __ ...::..;11r~-~ ..... ~~~;~~~~~~~l ,. . (" ,~ .. ,, .. , ....... . • 10•7 C•rb Ull 1.50 , 111. 61·· .1.. Ffd$ •• 6(1 ------------ur.,. ~on ur<11 C•~ 1~ 102 C•r It 60 ,,. l9 I 1• r-11• a, "< 10:: 1 11 l !•iV•Ufl' Lne Fd Cl D PL! l•I 11• !'' ~I' n• -••MDe~ISI · I SALE Glh I l1 p 0 V• l n 6 ~I 1 50 C•fD l<'[ I 6C )I J • ~~ J \ti ...;lnr'I Dr¥ "" ~ 11 , 1 ncom j 1! ! n Cetr erCf,,M ,r,1 l!' l• .. ~ -,"~•!_~P .. ~ Ir Fd lll.6 76' SDI SI S61 120C1r DI .,....,.o GENWAY PONTIAC DEAURS SYSTEM LEASING LLUf A NEW '71 GltAND PRIX ,,,,, f • , ... , llMll•t •• 'l~V. ,,.,._. -'I ,: I .~, ;;,;..__ --------L _ .... - 14 1110"'" (~OtlD lh llASl TROPICAL FISH Pac f1c Goldfuh Fermi 14842 Edwards St H\~ l'"' 1~'11~'11YAl,f$ iirl 161•'6)~~~.l.S!:. J i~.i!~ f6 1 'fltOdM !«I '"•J~ "°' I., l"9lv1ne tit 101 1u '-•fltC-k ~ 11o1 1•'1 ?f 1 1' i:ro "° e 1 1t 1' • v•nQd • 71 '10 C• erT/ I JO 111 •"'-.e1 '' "-' """" al~ Ht. I•• 1 J1 ' 11 v~• IP>Ct" • '' J JI cc1 0 0 11 ,., 1 1 0: .. '""' \ eo .. M•n l,•11~1~\l(-nt IJ9 1•s cc1m 11!11! • ,.,. ,, ltl 11 0F1IC~•I UI 1ovr• ... n '' l "' W• s In •Ill ro "° (Ko Corti ~ "" J), 1 ' 1 ~!IMll !!t , '>I ' ~t 1 .. I il .-.~•ft Mu 11O'l1' n ce ane~c 1 )I ,,.._ 11 ~1 , -1J'"•111o<11 f I) G 0~11 "'ttl llt1ll Grouc (o ·~ rlA' J,11 ) •• > 4! al F~!NCllY ) Ii ;, Vf ~ ~""~•I Eolllr ? 041 Jt '1 ~t1to !ft\ lO 1~1 "5 '~ u•, 1. "'F= ~ i ·~ r•Y,• l¥tt1 uno• en! l'ov 11;a ~1 ~1 ,'~.~ t~~hltP!<d 1 It"' ,,r 1 11 Mo•o 1~1,11 141 "" H\!01" • '"" ~~ ~1 k , " f. ' ~·v• I l!.'1;1'V • ,, C..nl tLI Sa 11 ,, ' 11 ?!'· -l'l,· .. ·r."' " •• " I"'~. Cm PS l 'IC • Jf' 0 '"'• ... at $ 2995 It"'".,~ 1 ,,, wei• 1 •ll)tJ •r .,, 1 10 11 ~ ;r '° 1 l'lfftTkctt l Inn ft l' /1 ,.'VJ 11'117_Jf,?:ft1Le£1 1 1J l', '"• n' I .. ""'"' .50 As Low as 1 • ••· Gtl ld•ft "'''1 ..... 11.-.., "Bi .,, ,.,1 "'"°r •• , o u ~•sw,, 11 06 • 0 .~ .. ..,"~"~PIA•• .,... I,..,.,.,. 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KldOt (o .IOI > JI, 1l ' , • • • ' ..... "~1 .............. ::1 ........ .,, .......... .,,,,. .. ,...: ........... , \WI.I M1-U.. a. 0. ~~~~~ M k Hi h j•laott !;J' ..... '"· ~" +.. m~ et g er 1i~~it.1o t~ f!:: ::~ :: +1~ i:tl"111~0 ~ It:""==~:-"" ht H T de l:~~" Co n., ......... +" eavy ra mg 1~=·~.--111 ~ l~ ~~ t ~ 1•1ex t·1; 1'11 271t. 2' • 27 :+:1 tmol• U ~! ·~-'" II\ t•nlltCO I n -~ M ,. -u. T=::~~ :rt n1~ 1n1 n u + ~ NEW YORK (UPI) Tut<o lAO ' ..! 11 \ 11 11" + \~ -Encoura111ng economic T••;'" 'i' ,.. '"' ll 2•111 .+-1i~ d • T T J: J.~ 111\ ~t: + ri news turne the stock market sharply higher tn 1::.~·f~ 1 1~ 1~ 2~~ l:~ 2~ + ~· stepped up trading Thursday T:~i'~';, f '.J.: r,\'lo tti.. t?:! ... -:. After some early rnornmg dr1fU ng the Dow f:~ ~iii ~ 1•1 ;1~ n • ;:"' .._,," Jones Industrial Average was up around 9 points r',','~°"r•" '! + at 891 23 near the fmal Bell Standard & Poor s -I ll<a 16!,., 1610 ~=i.,1~ ,, ~l • ~ ~ = t SOO 11tock index was ahead O 95 at 97 90 Tllon'I ll'ld •0 J1 U~ Jl~ ~ ! + ~ Of the 1 665 issues crosslng the tape advances t:::it;J,r.. ll' ~ :1, tl"" 4"°' + tt led declines 955 to 435 A volu1ne of around 17 Tl C•• I'.~ "l :t: : ~ 51~ =+~ 000 000 shares was up from 14 680 000 shares lrad ~JZ~"f~ 1 ! 2• ... • ... ...~ ed \Vednesday Tl/Tlll;tfl 1~ ".J lI~ ll~ :m +" Closmg prices included AT&T 45% up ", t;:,~~·:z;-.. t1 ...... + l"'i '"IS Todd I~ I 1'0 l• •n• ,, ~ 11v. + •, DuPont 137o/, up 2 Ford 6811 up ~ General Elec-1-... ', ' .. " 11 lJ\ii 1•~ u + .. ool ..... 1sJ 10 :rt\o n • +"' trlc 109% up 1, General Motors 81 % up 119 , IBM Tr•MCo t0 -s ~~ ~ »TO + •• Jr•111 u 110 11J '° "'i' .,v,_y, 340~ up 31\ Ri!'ubl1c Steel 27 '1'-off lie Southern .... w .1.11 I :U • lJ • JJ , Tr11W.t.lr ol 11 10 . ifl, 10, + 110 Pacific 42% up Standard of Jersey 7711, up 2'A , TrnwF(ll .at 4 ni<. "1~ 11~ + ' Tex 36" ~ d U S St I 31~ h d l.:~~· ~ 1~ ~~1, ~ti ~ -~1 aco Ye up 711 an ee 78 unc ange Tr•'*, n• ",lo,', \r~ ~., ~~ = ::1 • .,., •• ., • .., • ., .. ,.,.. ..... .,., •••• ., ••• ,.. il,:Z!~.°" '° U Y, U\\ + 1' Tr ..... lro tot t IS 17411 IN Int. -~ SouNG11 1 .i u 11 U"' Sf"' !ll'rlOrW 10 !" n\'t •II~ 0 '-' + ~ ;.rvi,.1,.1 2S •,• ''" ,.. ,.. t • ·-· ·-' • I ""''"IJ 2 «) " '"' ,.. "'' + ~Oft 1 21• "" -,.. .., t.i '' U\~ •J~+'ri 1twW1r l lO l :l'2 + Tr Oii "'1SO 1 nv.. l~t; rn, ilt 'I"" :Ill S7 7•!i 1•14 1•v. 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"I .~,",.t_.1r,Dldt, 2 :l /Jt~ 2 "' "±t: ~~.'19 :J~ ,:,, 'i~ ,~~t ,tt :r,,co~o 7J u ""' »'1+~~u"""'!1·~~• lll ft"" J1 ~~ +t~ IPl\lcltnt 6' l) 100, lQ) 10 .... -\lo ~~::: :, 4ll 16 tt' tt" ,,.,. -\o U11 Pl• 91:1 tt f.i! r, It = l~ ~::~ 1.e"" ~ ~~ ~~ ff~ + \-o ~;frDll Do"<l sf tft: n" u .. +\, 8~~f·~~ n l " ll 't )I 1 11rrt lt IO I II~ 11~ 1,\:, + ~ T Un PK (p 1 lH Uh 2•1;i. 1Sh+i4.fltul(h lloO •I •1• 41 ~ •1t'"-- -Vnl"Klli 410 ) 3'ti. ~ Mt -~. lor<h Ir A II o t ~ t•o + T11t lrG 60 1 • 1)11 H ll o + Uft!ollam 1 tO Mll'Ch 1911 OAlLV PILOT \ I • • l • ! l I • ' I l . • I T I : I I ! ... • . . . . 11 I ( l tic tri an di: de ll'i In up yo lit •• pr r• "' an ~·c is ~·c Ir< ar Ir: $1 m ;n ar re " ,, ,, d< Ix th _, in ci " Tt si d• to ll s' ~: a h •' c h tt I I t r ( I • ti ,, • ! • • ! d For The Reco1~d Marriage Licenses Dissol1ations Of Marriage Flied M!ll'.11 1 Jllmf'!, 8•vfrly J. •f'J 011nn1 C. He•n&n~" Dawn M, 11.-.d L1wrH>Ce C. G11v. Frll'Oll 1nd David J. Pa~11no. P111l1 J,•11nc1 J<>t>n J. 8•~ton, Oki• Allen and G11dv1 M11rlO!'I Littlewood. B•rtv J. end ~llarlf1 N •. Sclllcker. Jo,eolllne 11nd Jolln l're-derock Frencll. Mlcllael 0 . and 811rD1t1 L. Nommff>"""' Ue•dv~ Harold and Melon Kin~, "'"" E. and R1nd1 $. JO•d11n. P.lvln 8 . •"" Robertle V, F11uri&, """"'" H. """ E!•ln• A. Y11rn1e11. Jmlmv p, 1nd G< A.. MCN~111, Lonnie Martin 11ncl OOl!n• M11•lt Wool•~"' Emrld• L. •nd Gl•nn E 1-<orv•!ln. Oo!o••• 1MI Em••• S•murl Guolll1um, LvnM Ann •no 01v•d P ic~1rn O'Noll, L•rrY Oevld al><! M111reeo c11111~<1ne A t•~n. su.en •""John M. !lulav, Slli•lrv G. And M11r1in E McCIPll~rnl. J•n,1 Alice •n<I Robtrt Rlcnard Poftl, M••• Mlldrtd ""d llu<iolph Fr•nk Co...,••· 8tttv Jean 1nd J•m"' Edw••d Tnelsen, JaniPlil' s. """ S!fi>nen E. DPotla Notices DUDLEY G~<>f A Ou<Hev. 1l6l G1lo•V Or., New1>11rt 8e•cn. Dolt o! <:lt •m, M••ch i. Su•vlve.i ~· w•le. Pe••I: site>"'"· Gf'>l"lf M!CP11\~¥. Newl>0'1 fir•ch; !WO orond· sons. ll•<ot••'On o! !he Ro~••V, Sund••· M••<n /, I !Ci PM 11...,uiom M•n, Mon· dov, 11 AM. bolh •! SI Jo11<!<irn• C•th· oroc (llurcn. P1ci!lt Vltw Mof!1111••· 0 1· M.lRT!H Dal/id Lee M11r!ln. lh•H yeM old "°" ot Mr, """ M ... l'l1vne Merl'"· o! ?IJSl er-r!V"I Ave , Hun!lng!on !ltacn. Dolt C>! <1e11ln, M•r<!< i. Al'<! •11r~lve-d b1 \wo o•ol~tr>. Hol end Gil M•rtln; gr111<:1- rnntt>eis, Mro . .lh<• I M••lln ond Mn • Se<1ie Lu!lle'. Fun.f'"I 1e•v1ct1. 51t11r· ' """' 11 AM. cnuorn ol the N•111rlnt, 113! GM!ield, 1-iunl<~g!on f'le~ch \>llft• .,,.,,1, Pati!ic Vltw Mtmorl~l P•••· e1l!l (o~t• Mest Mor!111rv, Dlretlo,.. '. AR BUC KL E & SON \VESTCl.IFF MORTUARY 427 E. 17th SI. Costa Mesa 646-48S8 • BALTZ ~10RTUARIES Corona del ~1ar OR :\4'50 Costa J\fesa ... !\-fl. 6-2424 • BELL BROADWAY l\.fORTUARY UO Broadway, Costa l\.tesa LI 3·3433 .r ·~·• A-fcCORMJCK LAGlJNA BEACH MORTUARY 11H·Ltpn• C&11yon·Red: 4K-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 15411 P•cillc View Drive Ne wport Btacb, C•Ufomia Ul-f1ot • PEER FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME !Ml Boin Av<. w......wltr ... ~ • SMJTllS' MORTUARY C7 Mabt SI. Hunllngtot1 Rt.ad - • Experts Say U.S. 'Turn·s Corner~ • Ill Econo~y By TOM BARLEY "You can't expect labor to ''We have-lo· get the public anlayses of 1the financial and proved stock market and the NOW SKY MARQUEt: " .... ,,.,, .... •••i.t•· 11el1 wll• 41•llfy, tt.e prl•ll• .. .r p1Mtlcl,.tl11t1 • •••.,•ll11tn. I• the .. -•t · 111,..,..k ff..,.hJ .. Medi• el the c .. tury. 9Mll• tlM ,.,,. .... wl ll a-. tile •pport•11lty t• 11 .... SJJ,DOO ucufff hr Alrcnrft..f4•lp11MN1t & Terrltery, wit• .. tlonol loc•I ..,,.,..._ 1119 ecce111t1. Ii r•• llltfl,. the fh1onlol 1tablllty wltll the ,.. lllCIK• of "'"" Ad..,.bl .. wtlN lox lflJ. D•llr Pfl•t, JIO w. tone down their demands in stil'red up on this serious mat· stock market situ at Ion s discernible beUel in and out I th. such an economic climate,'' ter or lnflatkin," Reierson said revealed portents for what of business communities that SKY MARQUEE OJtANGE -Two 0 IS Jlooper said. "But what they Reie.rson called a ''moderate recovery is on tM way. nation 's leading economists and the government and all "Most economists are very uptum rather than a stµlrp Both men agreed that any 1'=======================:! 01 111t Dtll~ ,1191 S11fl loy St., Cnhr M.s•. predicted here this week that of u~ sh<luld bear in mind disappointed that govemment and expl6sive recovery." slrong government mo ve st: the U.S. has "turned the cor· is the effect that thils ac· crrorts in this direction have He pointed to the "Oood toward curbing the in fl ation ner" in its long battle with cclerating inflation is ha\'ing done nothing lo ensure an an· of moneg" that is finding its spiral are unlikely. the rnost sustained recession on the people who have to nual growth that can be way into the nation's savings ··Remember," Hooper com. of the post war years. live on pensions and fixed in· limited to about 3 percent." and loan institutions, a steady mented, "1972 Is an election Attend the Church of Your Choice Regularly But the road back to cornes." But-both men agreed that consumer index, a visibly im· year." economic stability will be'.-""'«'."'.:__ _________ _::_:::_-=:::..::::::_.:'.':.:::::__::::::___::.::::::.:::_.::::.:::.:...:__:::.::::::__::::_:..:_:::_ _________ :_ _____________________ _ e-qually Jong and .hard. and l r-----------------------------------------------------,--------"'.".'."'.".'.:'.'."."'.".'.:'.:'.'.':'~'.:'1 studded with potential pitfalls ~§Z$:;;~V.¢~;~::'?'.<;,,:;;.-:x.':!!-~%--~~:;~~-::~::x-.:;:.;.."'{;.;-;x.:.~*;=i· that could dt:lay the expected • .... recovery, financial experts ~.;.~ DAILY 10·10 SUNDAY 10·7 · Lucien O. Hooper and Dr. Roy 0 I ~ L. Reierson told a cepacity s t n y . audience at the Chapman A...W..4'1.S. ..... C.. ............ 111111111~c-..i.. ......... ~ ~~ a Co~:i~~~n~o~~~:p:~~~m~ore COSTA MESA ONLY 1J.~ ..... ~« - optimistic of the two speakers, forecast a gradual iflcrcase DUB~ E a IS~DU II in con,,mcr confidence in the a ' . . . . ~·. ~ . months ahead and a grad_ual strengthening of v.•hat he described as a "yo-yo stock market." '!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The chairman of the An1crican Bankers Associa· tion's economic policy crnn, niillee warned, however. that a great deal will depend on the Administration's handling of a mounting inflation and the role that future strikes might play in any atmosphere of recovery. Both Speakers were critical of the Nixon administration's switch from l'iharp anli·in- flation monetary conl.rols to more I i be r a I expansionist policies. Hooper, senior vice prcsi. dent for Hu tton and Co .. CO'O- demned the ''hig h ly in- flationary maneuvers" of the Nixon administration an d reminded his audience drawn from the Orange County business community that the ''economy has never been handled with such a heavy hand." He predicted a national unemployment rate of about 7 percent by the end of June and labor troubles "Lhat are inevitable in the light of a government. tha~ is actually sponsoring 1nflat1on. Wound Up Talkers Get 'Red Light' SANT A AN A -A person appearing before the Orange County Board of Supervisors who talks to long will get the "red lig ht." Supervisors have adopte.d a recommendation that a light be. installed on I.he lectern where people stand to address the boar.d. Al the end of five minutes the red light will go on. signalling an end to the talk. The idean is part of a pro· gram offered by ~ichard Ruiz, executive assistant to Supervisor David L. Baker who presented -a series of sug· gestions f or streamlining board meetings. Ruiz headed a com mittee named for that purpose by the board. Cliff F r a z i er. self-styled president of the Orange Coon· ty Taxpayers Association, ob- jected to the 1 im l ta I ion. Frazier talks to boa rd niembers more than any other person. Other changes in agenda iJrocedure offered this week bv Ruiz include: ·-A deadline for agenda items for Tuesday at 5 p.m. rather than Wednesday at 5 p.m. as at present. -A consent calendar of items of a non-controversial nature which could be lumped together for voting. There v.•ould be no discussion unless requested by a board member. -Off agenda items would be barred from action. -Minutes of the board's ac· lions will con tain brief nar- ratives of proposals acted upon. No such descriptions are presently included. 1'he signal light plan v.·ill take erfect next week. but the balaACe or, the recommen· rultions were held tv.•o weckS for further study. LOCAL No oth•r "•w•P•P•' ltlh veu mo••· •"•'Y elty. 1bout w~,11!'1 t"i"' "" i" th• Gr••'•' Ort"CJ• Co11t lh•11 th• 0.AILY PILOT. I 1 4,' . ;;~ ~ ~f· ~- I I ' 17·GAL. COVERED PLASTIC TRASH CAN Our RfCJ. 1.57 1 DAY ONLY 97c Great for home. izaraj!l' or cottage'! Llghtwl'ii;:ht yet durable', avoeado plastic trash can has snug· fi!lini:-covC'r to prevl'nt accidents. Convenient Gillette " ,·.... . ..• ~ THE DRY LOOK Req. 1.12 74c Dry con trol kel'ps hair neat-looking all day. 7-oz.• Llmi1t6 q11•nlUy ·~•I • ROD & REEL SET Req. 11.87 1 DAY ONLY 8.96 Pnly Pt:ik M<l rr1'I, r fl111hinrd \\ith thl.' 3MO 6·ft. rtid. i'll:ikrs r -.:crllrn t nu lfil for l'ny an~lrr. SNAIL ' & SLU~KILLER 1 DAY 4c ONLY KODAK CAROUSEL 1 DAY ONLY 1.78 the lov.·est price rver on Rol.o Trays. Fits all Kodak Carousel projectors. Has 80-slide cepacity. ., , Re9. 2.87 1 DAY ONLY.. /-~~,.~ Choose nylon. nylnn/ satln. polycstcr/cntton stylt>s. 32-48: ,;hort, avrr!'l.g1'. S1tvr al K MOTOR I DAY ONLY O"' Req. 8.47 1 DAY ONLY OIL 3~~ Lustrous.finish chromf' cooker·fryer with cook• ing well and fry baskci. Anchor Hocking oven· ware JZlass cover sl'als in flavor, protects from . ~. . .. • ' . ii ~~1til1 .l% . .._ _ _,:::;-: · 2200 HARBOR BLVD. ~i7;~~·a~~COSTA MESA Harbor ,, i I ~ i ~1~. .. ·~ POLYNESIA BECKONS -Committee members (left to right) Miss Ann Metzleur. Mrs. Eleanor Christensen and Mrs. R. W. Broe stand prepared for the \Vinter Festival Lu au on Wednesday, March 10. Using a Polynesian cave for a setting, the luau will fea· lure Hawaiian mu sic and fare as well and danci ng and entertain· ment by the Lahaina Luna troupe. Volunteers End Year Topping Dollar Sign ~!embers of the Auxiliary of South Coast Community l·lospital aren't co ntent to rest on the record. Having retired a $100,000 pledge to their "hospital 'vith a heart'' during the annual installation luncheon this week, ou tgoing president Mrs. Jack ~1 . Lyons revealed the group has undertaken another $100,- 000 pledge. The current payment combined with previous pledges made duri ng the auxiliary's 12-year existence bring funds raised to a grand total of $275,000. apart from thousands of hours of volunteer se r- vice. The good ne\VS \Vas revealed following a luncheon in Irvine Coast Country Club. During the afternoon. officers gave a summary of their activity of past fiscal year and turned over duties to the ne'v board. Installed as president of the 540·member organization was Mrs. George \V . \.Volf. Also seated on the board by Daniel Brown , hosp ital admin istrator, \Vere the Mmes. Arthur E. Bri ggs, vice president, and Roger DeLoach and Charles 11 . \.Vingler, secretaries. Other new office rs include the 1t1mes. Leland Peart, volunteer chairn1an; Jack L. Graham, treasurer; James Van Rensselaer, gift shop; 1t1ont ?w1cMillen, membership, and Thomas J. Fletcher, public relations. Rounding out the board are the Mmes. 11elen Pratt. news letter; Lyons, Silver and Gold Chapter; Terry Chastain, Las Madrinas Chap- ter; Robert de Ford. program. and ~1iss Frances Christeson, parlia- mentarian. Spe~ial guest at the luncheon ";as Stanley Opplegard, assistant administrator. The auxiliary, in addition to numerous fund·raising pro- grams, has supplemented help to paid professional employes by giving 48.000 hours of volunteer in-service in 1970. , AN ADDED MILESTONE -Signing off a $100 ,000 pledge to South Coast Comm unity Hospital and accept- ing a second one are (left to right) th e Mmes. Charles II. \Vinglcr and Leland Peart of San Clemente, and Mrs. ~men BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 • '"' n Undercover Party Luau In Grotto A Polynesian cave under the Surf and Sand hote1 will be filled with exotic music and fare as party-goers gather for a \Vinter Festival Luau on Wednesday, March 10. Casting a true island atmosphere over the even- ing's festivity, the Lahaina Luna troup will provide background music for dining and dancing as well as a floor show. Dressed in authentic costumes. members of the company \vhich ha s appeared on television and toured the country will perform the fire dance, Hawaiian and Tahitian dances. A varied Polynesian dinner will be served at 8 p .111. foll owing a social hour under the guidance of Dr. and Mrs. Zachary Malaby, chairmen. Assisting the chairmen will be the Mmes. Andree Davidson, Craig B. Ketchum, R. \V. Broe, E. W, Reed, Eleanor Christensen, Jean Kelli ch, Phil Dennis and Lois Renney. Also on the luau committee are the ~1mes. E. M. Johnso n, William Roley. ~1argaret Gottschlich, Eliza· beth Hailwood, Miss Dorothea Glasoe, Miss Ann Metz· leur. members of the Masters division of the Chamber of Commerce and city council and Pat Kelley and James Tatum. Tickets at $4.50 per person which include dinner, dancin g and the fl oor show, may be purchased from committee members or at the Chamber of Commerce in Laguna Bea ch. deorge W. Wolf of Laguna, new auxiliary president. The officers were installed this week in Irvine Coast Coun try Club. • • • Hostess B.urns When Guest Has Her Cake and Eats -It Too . ~ OEAR ANN LANDERS: Now that 1 am putting my problem down on paper it seems so petty I'm ashamed of myself. But l do need an answer and t hope you will oblige. t love to cook, and l'm an outstanding pastry chef. I take pride in preparing all the rood for my dinner parties. A friend of mine (I'll call her llllda) is pretty good in the kitchen. too. t suspect she is compelitive with.me. Last night when Hilda and her husband arrived for dinner (it was a small party -only four couples) she brought along 1 "surprlse"-a huge, 14-egg angel.food cake beautifully decorated with orange lcin&. It really ·was spectacular but I resented it. Hert I had spent "' lot or lime preparing crepes suzctles which 1 ANN LANDERS planned to serve by candlelight and Hilda was stealing my thunder. Of course when she arrived with the cake I knew 1 had no cho ice but to serve it. Jt spoiled my evening. Am J wrong to reel this way? Do you think Hilda committed a faux pas, or am I overreacting? Help me sort this out j n my thinking. -FORT LAUDERDALE Q. DEAR Q.: Hilda should not bavt iurprlsed you. She should have asked in advance if she could brine tbe dt11er~. You did the gracious th ing, however, by 1ervtna: It Too bad it 1poiled your evening. It sbouldn'I have been that important. DEAR ANN LANDERS: J am 19 years old. My problem Is one l thought would go away in tbne, But instead it is getting worse. When I was a freshman in high school a boy t knew was killed in an automoblle accident. I hardly knew him and to this day 1 do not remember what he looked like. Two weeks ago 1 wa:ri in the cemetery visiting my aunt's grave. I accidentally saw this bOy's headstone . l was drawn to il like a magnet. l reu such a deep sense of sactness I cannot describe It. l have re turned to his grave every day since. Something makes me go. Yesterday I decided to stay away and 1 wu a nervous wreck all day. l had lo go to the cemetery after supper. or course I didn't tell my folks where I was going. They would have thought I was crazy. In fact, I'm beginning to think maybe I am a little nuts. Can you tell me whfl is causing lhi1 strange behavior and what l can do about it? -JEFFERSON CITY, MO. DEAR JEFF: You art gripped by 11 con1pulsion for whk:h there 11 no rational basis. The ei:perls aay such behavior ls caused by gllllt which may be totally unrelated to the 11tuatlon that has you hooked. If this urge to visit • the cen1etery dally persl1t1 I suggest you discus• U with a therapist. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A !~year-old girl bas been baby~ittlng for us for several month!. 1 made it clear tha t she was not to entertain anyone in our absence. Last night my husband and l returned from a party earlier than we had planned and we caught her with a young man . . . in a very embarrassing situation. My . husband says we should tell her mother. He Jn slats that if the girl Is pregnant as a result of that session, we are resP?nsible because It was in our home. l do not agree with blm but I admit l AM uneasy. What i• your advice? -SHADY SIDE OF THE·. STREET DEAR SHADY: Since you made Jt : clear to lbe girl that the wa1 not 1• : entertain guests In your home, you. are · not respanslble for wbakver might result , from that encounter. Don't &ell .,lttr' • mother, but do ret another 11tie.r. • "The Bride's Guide," Ann Landers· : booklet, answers some or the most • rrequenUy asked questions abou t : weddings. To receive your coPy o( thil : comprehensive guide, write to Ano : Landers, In care or lhe DAILY PILOT .: enclosing a long, seJ£.addressed, stamped : envelope and 35 cents in coin. : <,}z DAJLY PILOT ""'11 • HISTLES TO WORK -George Pappas was pro- Cl a.imed Boss·of·lhe·year during the 33rd annual Bosses' Night Dinner spo nsored by the Newport Y Harbor Business and Professional Women in the • ~ ~. ~ ~ ~ ~ Peering ~ SAFARI TROPHI ES were :::; fronl and t!!nler as big game :J hunter Ed Quinn and Mrs. •• ~ Quinn (who also hunts) hosted ~ a cocktail party prior to the ~ Executive Dinner Cl u b ~ meeting in the Newporter Inn. ~ Quinn, who gave a slirie '$ presentation of their African '-safari! al the meeting, and hl8 wife welcomed the ?\1essrs. ~ and Mntt!s. Tom Channell, ~ John ti-1acnab, Sam Garst, Robert Hyzdu . Ra y Simeral, "" Or. and Mrs. John Bullis, Dr. ~ and Mrs. Gwyn Parry and \: Dr. land Mrs . Ben frees and ~ their guest Mr1 . He len Baiz.er ~ of Mariposa. l: Around Also accepting the hosts' hosp itality in the ir Laguna Beach home were J\.1iss Mary Lou Hopkins and Mis s Slephanie Myers. Also attending the. dinner party whirh markt'd their silver wed d j n g an· nivcrsary were Mr. and t.lrs. Robert A. Burke of Costa Mesa. The honored couple '>'all married in Rockford. 111. and has been Costa Mesa res1den1s for 14 years. They have three sons, Thomas, Richard and Willi11.m who all Jive ill C.1lifornia. Mesa \'erde Countr~v Club. The winning letter was \Vfitten by Mrs. John Palen (center) and ~1rs. Joseph Hamil y.•as named Girl-of-the-year. George Pappas Hailed As Boss-of-the-year lt was a blend or Laugh-in and the Academy Awards in the ti-1esa Verde Country Club when Ne .... •porl Ha r b o r Business a n d Professional \Vomen hosted their 3Jrrl an· nual rllnner in honor of the ir bosses. Recipient of the title Boss· of-lhe-ytar was George Pap- pas, financt' director 0 r Newport Beach . Present inR him with an engraved silver 1ankard wa s Mrs . John Palen, who wrote the winning letter "He always came tn work wh istling.'' flfr s. Joseph H11m1I. chosen a5 Gir l-of-the-year for her con- tributions lo the success or !he cluh's program s. rrccived an engraved silver bo'>''I. Clu b members entertained their bosses anfl husband s "'ilh a sk1L Laugh·1n style. fol!o'>''1ng the awards presen- tation. Kachina Council Organized Betrothal Announced By Former Harborites Open to Public Concert Previewed Mr. and ~1rs. Robert Jewett Voorhies or Pompano Beach, Fl•., former residents of Newport B ca ch. have announced the engagement of their daughter, L e i I a n I Germain Voorhies to Robert C. Payton. son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Payton of Reno. Miss Voorhies, a l 9 6 6 Children's Home Soc I et y debutante, attended Arizona Slate University and Mary Mount College in Boca Raton. Fla. She ls a graduah! or Newport Hatbor High School and no"i is a stewardess for Air California. Her fiance attended the Ur.iversity of Nevada and served with the Marine! Ulrps in Vietnam. He has just been appointed station manager for · the new San Diego branch of Air CalUornla. A June wedding Is slated In Newport Reach . T h e nupLials are being planned lo coincide with the 43th weddin& anniversary of Miss Voorhies' June Date Set LEILANI VOORHIES ~ Brid•Elect ;1 grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. , James Daniel Germain of Newport Beach . · ' '· In just over a year. the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra has generated enormous enthusiasm and established iL~elf as one of the leading orchestras in the country. The man cOnsidered responsible for the de'velopment is Neville. Marriner. a master of the chamber n1usic genre. He will appe~r be- fore Orange County mugir lovers during a fr ee concert preview lecture \Vednesday, March 10 , at 11 a.m. /\ native of England . he founded the Academy of St. btartin·the-Fields . in Lon· don . an d the London Strings recordings have won him wide acclaim. He will discuss the mu&ic of Mozarl, Schumann and Ligeti t~at is to be played by the Los Angeles Ph1lhar· monic Orchestra during its Saturday, March 13, concert at UCI. The lecture ili the first in a series of four music appreciation programs planned by th~ Orange County Philharmonir Society. Marr1· ner'.s presentation will take place in the Ed- wards Theater. Fashion Isl and and is open to the public. Future lectures will be delivered by Or. Colin Slim, April 14: Or. Rayrnand Kendall, 111ay 5, and Harold Gelman, '-1ay 19. \ L I Freemans Tell News Visitor Greeted Gardeners To Discuss Geraniums ' • MONICA FREEMAN To Say Vow• Talk Stresses English Past Monica Louise Freeman will become the bride of G. Dennis Paul during June 2S rite5 in St. Gregory's Catholic Church, Los Angeles. Their betrolhal was announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John P. Freeman, during a party for relatives and close friends in their Los A n geles home. Among guests was George F. Paul of Hunlington Beach, father of the benedict-elect. f\1iss Frttma~ is a graduate of Immaculate Heart High School, Los Angeles a n d attends Marymount Cnllege on the Loyola University campus. Her fianre. an alumnus of f.1a!er Dei High School. is a se nior at Lnvola. where he Is a member 'or Delta Sigma Pi busine5s fraternity. He will be commissioned AS an officer in the Air Force following his gradu11lion . Emblem Club Members of Harbor Star Chapter 568 Order of the Eastern Star are making ready for the official visit on Tuesday, March 9, of Deputy Grand Malron Mrs . Carlton Young of San Clemente. Work of the -chapter members win be exemplified by officers during the 8 p.m meeting in the Newport Beach Masonic Temple. Wo r t h y Matron Mrs. Martin Steigner will preside over initiation of new members. P.lrs. Fred A. Bode Jr. of Escondido will d i s c u s s geraniums and pelargoniums fnr members of the South Coast Garden Club at 2 p.m. on Wednesda y. March 10. P.1rs. Bode, a re cognized authority in her field. will ad- dre~ the ~roup in the Three Arch Bay Clubhous e . Members also are asked lo bring lrf'asures or trinkets as a contribution to a silent auc- tion which will begin at I p.m. Mrs. Cha rles L. Francis, hostess chairman, will be t s assisted by the f.1mes . Clifford refreshment chairman and S. Tinsman. Carl Buil. B. Mrs. Arnold Arff is in charge Bowman ~1endel. Robb Scott, of dining room decorations. Niles Welch and ~1. H. \Viley. ~1 rs. Rex '.Albright Ulming up on March 17 will be a Homemakers Lun cheon The Elks Lodge i5 the set-1t 12 p.m. in the temple. The Star Club ting for rrr ~·;ngs of the .Starbright Club, with ri.1rs. Cavalier Chapter, Colonial Emblem Club 211 or Laguna Melvin Hamm o C'. k as Star Club will meet at 7:30 Damrs XVII . Century will Beach . Membe rs gather the chairman, will host the event p.m. on Wednesday, March discuss the Lives and Times first and third Tuesdays at with a St. Patrick 's Day 10, in the La~na F'ederal Sav- or Our English Ancestors 8 p.m. theme. ings 11nd Lot1n building. fol lowing a 12:15 p.m. lunchl----;------======================'=;-- on Tuesday. March 9, in the Old Brussels restaurant , Laguna Beach. D.OG SHOW ~ t ~ Heads Bow DR. AND PtfRS, Frederick Grazer of Newport Beach are lOuring the Orient following his participation in a plastic surgery congres11 in Melbourne. Dr. Graz.er also fulrilled a speaking engagement I n Penang. Malasia. The Grazers plan to return on ~tarch 20. Mothers and daughters in· of the Peaceful W11ters Nation M;s~eF~;~g~~~~srr~i~~~~~li~~ UITA AIA P&.~Hltll SfPllARH terested in joining the new of Indian .Ma~dens. is heading 1.000 years of ancestral ac-MARCH 6 -1 O A.M. New Program Forming ~ ). .;; In Prayer . . the organ1zallon of the Foun-tivity with slress on social Kachtna program sponsored ~a~in~l'~a~ll•~y;g;':°":P;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~a;s;p•;c;\s;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;!~;;;;;;;;~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ • ~ Churchwomen United o f '!:" La:;una Beach j o i n e ri with - •: 1r.i lJinns of persons around the :: '>'·or\d in a World Day of ~ Prayer today in St. Cath- ·: erine·s Catholic Church. Longevity Stressed ~ Women of all fa iths in 25.000 ~ communities in this ~ountry <: and 160 groups on six con-How to Enjoy a Longer Lile ~ tinents riartiripa!ed in the will be the topic when the S. spiritual observance. Newriort Harbor Exchangettrs ~ f\irs . S. S. French "'as gather on Wednesday, March ~ chairman or the da y, assisted 10. in the Balboa home or ,-; bv the Mmes . Silas Chaney, ri.1r.~. Dwight Gick . · K Co-hostess for the JI a.m. ·6" Philip Hopkins. A. . · affair wlll be ~irs Robert ;: Bonawitz Jr .. Le:i11h Hawkins, Turner, and featured will be -t: and the ~1 \sse:s Dorothea !.'.: Glasoe, Ann Maguire. Laura a yoga demonstration by :: Manetta and Henrietta Y.'ay. Bhar<1ti of the Yoga Center or Ulsta ~1 esa and a lunch ~ _. of natural and organic foods. ~ Opera i tJ•~~~ ffi 1J ' Followed by the Young Men's Christian ----- Associa!lon of \Vestminster- Fountain Valley are invited to attend an orKanizalional meeting lomorro'>'·. Dt"signed for gir ls from t1,11:e 9 and up. the pror;:r11m is similar tn India n Maidens ex- cept emphasis is pl11ced on trip!I, homemaking and other skills which would appeal lo older ,11:irls. The meeting '>''ill lake placf' in Gisler School between 9 and 10 11.m. On hand to explain procedures will be ti-1rs. J\.1erlin Heven and the Ka china Coun- cil -alre11dy formed In Westmins1er. ri.1rs . Jack Noack. princrss i ii ~ ~~h•=~~~~:~,.\ B. D. HOWES t_ patrons and fri ends "'ill lnllo"' ~ tne \V1o ter Fr s 1 ~v i1 .. 1, -t ptrformance of "I P;ighacct ~ on Sunday. ~tarrh i , t The opera '>''ill hf' pcrlnrml'd 1 ~ "' 5 p.m. in La~un;:i ~toullnn t PlR ytiouse '>''ith the ~orial hour t: and supper in Hnlf'I l.a~una. \. Parl\' plans ;irP hc1ne; ar-t rangtd by ~lrs. C Sidney t" Jnhn5ton. m emberJShip 1.. chai rman. ~ ~iembers or the board \\'ill ~ bt h05~· inclurlin111 he ~1essrs . j ~ 11nd Mmes. WinfiPhi Shira~. ~ Mnriian Cuthf'rbrr1~on t \Vil\iAm Hinwnod. H .Jean 3: 8rdel1. James A~nP". Robrrt ~ Linderman. J11nd Lero YI ~ Bartholomew. t" Othtr dirtttor~ g r re t l n g ! guests will bf' Dr ;inri f\1rs I Lester Ludlo'>'·. Dr. l'lnd Mrs Stanlev Ekh~t:irrll. Col. and Mrs. Wil!i3m Rru KJEere. and •. the Mme!I. f'~dilh S m I th . ~ Adrien PelltliPr and MArKaret Ulnrad S'>''OJK'. STA RS $v11111'" o"''" ;, 011• •'' 1h, •orllll'• tr••I •1110111,•n. Mi1 ~•11111111 iJ e11• ef \,~• DAILY PILOT'S 9•••1 lo•l11r•1, IS HAVING A SALE B. D. HOWES and SON Fl:\t JE.\\'E.LE.RS f OR !HRE.t GE.~E.RATI O~S i NEWPO!T BE \CH: m1 Via Lido . 61l·l;;1 • 6th Anniversary Sale now in progress at all stores! IN VciVfT ISLlli!fTl.Y HIG/IEIC. ,, • Cinderella Crowned ... _.-.. -....... ~··· ..... August Wedd ing Planned Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Nagle o{ Mission Viejo have announced the engagement o( their daughter. C or n e 11 a Gerardin Nagle to Terry Michael Rhine, son of Mrs. Juanita Rhine of Massillon. Ohio, and Jack T. Rhi11e of Bolivar, Ohio. 'Miss Nagle at lend ed Ramona Convent In Alhambra and is a graduate of Bishop Amat High School, in I.a Puente. She attends Sad- dleback College. Her fiance. c;,irrently serv- ing in Vietnam as a oorporal in the U.S. Pt1arine Corps, at- tended Jackson Memo r i a I High School in Massillon and Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond. The couple will be .wed Aug. 21 in St. Nicholas Catholic Church, Laguna Hills. Park Tour Scheduled Plans for a tour o f Tlie first of three "Cinderellas" to be crowned during Disneyland's Cinderella r ,tival, \Vedn esday through today was Mrs. Frank Davis of Stanhope, Iowa. \ 1siting her brother, Charles Story of Santa Ana, Mrs. Davis found a kings' ransom in gifts during her first visit to California. Westminster ~1emorial Park were announced during a meeling of the h-1idway City Woman 's Club. ~1embers. their husbands and friends will gather at 3 p.m. Sunday, March <14, in the clubhouge prior to em- barking on the tour. Sound of Opera Music Fills Afternoon Air Fun and enlcrt;iintnent will be the order of the day for n1embers of the Opera League of Laguna Beach as they gather in the home of l\1rs. Richard \V. Henniger at 2 p.m. on Tuesd ciy. March 9. ~1rs. Stanley Eichstaedt will conducl a short business 1neeting and report on the success of the recent home tour. followed b y en· tertainment arranged by )1rs. C. Sidney Johnston. Baritone Mike l\tcCormack of the Lyric Opera Repertory Company Y.'ill sing excerpts from •·La Traviala." "La Boheme.'' and "Die Flcdcrman." Pianist Timothy Troy y,·iil accompany the singer. Mrs. Robert H. Crowell and her committee are in charge of arrangements assis ted by Mrs. \Vales Wallace, dessert chairman. Members '~ill begin their second bridge marathon on Monday. March 15, under chairmanship of l\1rs. Pcll!'y E. \.\'rigkl. Assisting with the fund-raising series will be the ~1mes. Robert Burns id c, Thomas Harris. Leroy Rosser, Edward R. Nell and Donald \V. Hulbut. Women interested in joining the marathon are asked to find a partner and call Mrs. \Vright in Laguna Niguel or Mrs. Nell, Laguna Beach. June Wedding Date Selected by Co~ple 1\1 r. Pearce and l\1rs. Paul E. of Huntin~on Beach VICKI PEARCE June Bride Sorority Ritual have announced the engagement of their daughter. Vicki Pearce to Lawrence L. Sherman, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Sherman of Las Animas, Colo. A June 4 wedding in the First Baptist Church, Santa Ana is being planned . J\1iss Pearce, a Huntington Beach High School graduate, is a junior at Ottawa University, Ottawa. Kan. where she is working toward her BA in e l ementa r y l'ducation. Her fiance is a graduate of Las Animas High School and Ottawa University and now is attending the Central Baptist Seminary in Kansas CiU'_: Planning to become a youlh minister the future benedict is an assistant minister at the Presbyterian and Community churches in Rantoul, Kan. Jewels to Sparkle The Garden Grove home of Mrs. Jack Elliott will furnish the setting for two traditional rituals when Beta Alpha Xi $)'1apter of Bela , Sigma Phi sorority meets on 1'-1onday, . March 8. Featured 111 the 8 p.m gath~ring will be the ritual of welcome and the rilual or jey,•els. ' Traditional ritual call,t and punch will be served al the conclusion of the regular business meeting. F/IEE On Saturday. March 13 al 8 p.m. the group will travel to Santa Ana Skate Ranch for an evening Of roller ska.ling. There will be a pizza supper to follow in a Garden Grove restaurant. TOPS Mermaids TOPS r.fcrging Mermaids meet at 7:30 p.m. every Thursday in Woodland School. Costa Mesa. PHONI 642-2851 ,Oa lt:SlaYATIOM ORGAN CLASSES '-•• ""~'"" .... NM ll't-.,.n .... HID THOMPSOM, win ... tHclll11t lltl .... tit!"' .... Ottofl Clo.1 Ml'ftlocl •t COAST MUSIC, MONDAY 7:JO r.M.' t r.M. COAST MUSIC 1835 NEWPORT BLVD. (11 Harbor) COSTA MESA JULIE BLACKBURN June Plans Blackburns Tell News A champagne party for close friends was the occasion when Mr. and ~1rs. Robert Blackbum of Costa Mesa an· nounced the engagement of !heir daughter. Julie Lynn Blackbum to John William Vaugha n also of Costa Mesa. - The bride-elect is a graduate of Estancia liigh School and attends Orange Coast College. Her future husband. the son of Mrs. Maurine Vaughan of San Diego, graduated from El Cajon Valley High School, San Diego. A June 26 wedding is plan- ned in the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church. 'People' Topic Club members also are col- lecting personal items for vic- tims of the recent earthquake and an assortment of combs, shaving needs, tooth paste and brushes and powder will be delivered to veteran's hos- pitals. The group also collected trading stamps in participa· tion with a district project to acquire a bus for crippled children. Lunch Speaker Urges Eaters To Think Th in Comments on good eating habits and fads and fallacies of dieting will be aired by a San Diego Gas and Electric Company home economist for members of the South Coast Christian Women's Club. The presentation entitled Think Thin will be gi ven followitig a 12: 15 p.m. Jun· cheon in Ben Brown's restaurant in South Laguna on Tuesday, March 9, Nursery care will be pro- vided for preschool children in the United Methodist Churches of South Laguna and J\1i ssion Viejo. ReservatioRS, at $3 may be made with Mrs. Ed Lorr or Laguna Beach. Mrs. \I/alter Ellis of San Clemente, or Mrs. B. L. Rice of Laguna Hills. Culture Tips Container gardening wilt be discussed by J\-1iss Sylvia Letherman, writer, lecturer and horticulturist, when the Costa l\1csa·Bay C i l I es People will be on the pro-Branch, Cali fornia National gram when Pi Pi Chapter, Fuchsia Sociely meets at 7:30 Beta Sigma Ph i meets in the p.m. Monday, March 8. Huntington Beach home of Visitors are welcome to al· l\1rs. Jim Nadon at 8 p.m lend the meeting in the Tuesday. March 9. American Legion Hall, Costa Presenting the program will ;='='="='=· ======== be Mrs. Don Walfo.rd, and l\1rs. Harold Proctor of \Vestminster, cohostess , will present a program on Awareness of Blessings. -<ii~ J"':-l«t'. "fllnl:S"'l ~«cl".) ~l' ~\iY.tion. The DAILY PILOT- The One Thet Cares )4if VIA LID& NIWl'O•T •IACM '41>-4111 .. Friday, M.11n:h 5, 1q71 DAILY PILOT J,'J Your Horoscope Tomorrow Gem .ini: Curb Impatience SATURDAY MA'RCH 6, 1971 By SYDNEY OMARR Los Angeln Mayor Sam Yorty says one of b.ls great frlenda Is Manly Palmer Hall, a pbllosopber and astrologer. Tbe mayor, although not an astrologer, does know the rudiments of the subject and haa erpressed Interest ln II. A formtr governor o f California. Goodwln Knight, kept • file or horoscopes Ln bis office. Theodore Roosevelt kept his horoscope mounted on a chessboard In the Wbite House. ARIF.5 (Mar<'h 21-April 19): A contract which holds up dealings on basic Issue can be altered. Consult individual with experience -a n d authority. Some rules can be broken. Display spirit of ·independence. TAURUS (April 20 • May 20): Some persons who nag and persist could c r e a t e unheall.hy atmosphere. Refuse to be drawn into whirlpool CANCER (June 214uly %2 ): Emphasis is on what impedes progress. You get the facta. Money ti ed up in l!Uga'tion may be key. Competition comes strongly into trame of experience. Th o r o u g h ap- proach is needed. LEO (July 23-Aug. %2), Situation is fluid . Move with the tide. Flexible attitude ia a neei!ssity. Accept changes. Keep communication I I n e 1 open. You could get message which sleers you an profitable path. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. %2), financial situation could be somewhat erratic. F a m i I y member Js Involved. Encourage social contracts. Knowledge is increased through widening of experience. Come out ol shell. LIBRA (Sept 23 • Ocl 22)' Unorthodox approach w t 11 impress those in positions or authority. Get rid o( cllches, hackneyed methods . Take a chance on personal abilities , convictions. Standing is due to rise. procrasllnallon could prove expensive. Get down to basics. Frills, pro.mises can wait. SAGITI"ARWS (Nov. 22· Df-c. 21): Friendly approach. with regard to finan cial commitment s h o u Id be adv(>Cated. Forcing methods could backfire. Get rid of loose ends. Finish what you start. Spread influence. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ): Money invested in special project could de m a n d attention. Be sure that others are carrying their proper 'share. Check agreements. Be aware of fine print. Mate, partner needs reassurance. AQUARJUS (Jan. 20 • Feb. 18); Thrust o! motivation now seems to be in connection with projects, persons at a dlstance. Unique studies, subjects could provide answers. Written ma. terial proves beneficial. PISC'ES (Feb. 19-March ;G): Some press ures are remoyed. You have greater freedom . Put ideas to work. Member of opposite sex provide1 inspiration. Obtain hint> !him Aquarius message, Recoghlze your ow11 foibles. ' EXHIBITION F~ AND SALE "" lAGUNA BEACH ART GALLERY 307 CLIFF DRIVE LOWER GALLERY SATURDAY, MARCH 6 12 NOON tn 9 P.M. SUNDAY, MARCH 7 10 A .M. tn 5 P.M. O!ACMI., BASlltl. ROIMUl.T, DAUMIElt & MAlf( OllEIS AR1W1GED Bf ~....t ~ of dissent. Take one thing at SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): a time. Finish what you start. Task which has been ignored, Base actions on logic. delayed must now be given Ul~ll: attention, Further ROTDI GM.1.ERIES Blln....-.111. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): ''!'m~Miiiii!:iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiijil You want to obtain the bestlJ ·~~~--and you may be impatient. 1,00CI'• 011 OIL PAINTIN•S WHOLISALI WAalHOUSI Key is to study various ideas, OPIN TO THI PUILIC possibilities. But don't be in so•'o OFF' too much of a hurry. CUrb '~ tendency to be extravagant. '" 111, I . IDINOlll. SANTA ANA ...... ,,_ iYiouiicianiiwmi·i.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii0i1 i.i"iillS WANT•& • • • Everything Goes WE STILL HAVE I LOTS AND LOTS OF Trees, Azaleas, Junipers, Shrubs, Plants, Garden Supplies, Fixtures and tools SAVE AT WHOLESALE PRICES AND LOWER! • NO PHONE ORDERS --- • CASH AND CAR·RY - - - • BRING A TRUCK OR TRAILER AND SAVE! • •• . .. DOORS OPEN DAILY Sam to Spm ORANGE COAST NURSERY 380 W. WILSON ST., COSTA MESA 646-3996 I I • . . '. . . . . . . . 14 IWl.Y Pi•OT F'tlday, M1rch 5, 1971 Louis' Mind Schmeling Fights Still Loom • Ill 'NEW YORK (AP) -Joe Lout. recalls •ividly lnddenLI leading up to his second tlOt qolnlt Gmnany'1 Max Schmeling bdbre World War II. "l Wll Invited to the White House." tbe Brown Bomber said today. "'The Prealdent -Mr. Franklin D. Roosevelt -fttt-my arm and said, 'These a re the kind of muaclts we need to beat Germany'." J..ou1a. now SI, one or the mott popu)ar of all hea'Vywe.!ghl champions, swi only a slight parallel to the second Louls· Schmeling bout and the big multi-miilion- dollar lij:bt Monday night between Joe t"ruier and Muluunma~ Ali. Like the Schmeling flghl, this ont, too, is supposed to have a deep social significance that raises it above the level of an ordinary cbamploruihlp battle. "It wu different then," explained Louts. "It was the free world against ' the Nul wwlcl. "Hitler had come into power, and he was talking about the superior race. As • black man, I was supposed lo be an Inferior race. And lt meant a lot to Hiller and Germany far Schmeling to beat me. "I don't know when I have been more keyed up for a flghl"' The date was June 22, um. The site wu New York. Lflul.a, who by his own Bruins in Swim Lead Bruins Face Crowd Goes Wild Cal Threat; For Carr in Finale Tribe at SC ' The ebeera started wlten the game ended and kept up for more than 15 minutes. It waa a dramatic finish to Austin carr•1 regular season college basketball career at Notre Dame Thursday night. Carr, one of the country's top collegiate playen, threw in 31 point.I to pace the 16th-ranked Jr1sb over Western Michigan 110.79. This a:ave him a career total of 2,~. a Notre Dame rtCOrd, and the capacity hometown crowd of 11,MS in South Bend, 1eve him a tremendou5 standing ovaUon. Carr and Notre Dame will play in the NCAA championship tourney starting - March 13, but his varsity playing days on the Irish home court are over. e VSC Bollh 2nd key points \\'ith a second, a third and a fourth to score 136 to 109 for the Trojans and 77 for the Indians. Sophemore Steve Genter raced to a Pac-3 record in the 500-yard freestyle, winning in a time of 4:32.56, under the lirted natkmal collegiate record of 4:33.2 by Mark Spitz of Indiana in 1969. However, John Kinsella of Indiana swam 4:31.20 in the Big 10 championships Thursday night . Barry Townsend and Paul Becks~e hazy swam 1-2 in the 50-yard frffstyie for the Bruins as USC's steve Tyrrell ~Id flnish no better than sixth. ToWO: send was clocked in 21.M and Tyrrell in 21.83 in a near blanket finish. e Swift Clocking By THE ASSOCIATED PRE&'! Ansley Truitt, the S-(oot-9 California ctnter who made ortgon's Stan Love look like just another player a week ago, heads into UCLA's Pauley Pavilion .tonight for a game against nmnero uno. UCLA 'a Uip-ranked Bruins have Jost only twice on their borne court since It was built in 111'5 and if the Golden Bears ·of Berkeley hope to score an upset in the Pacific:~ game, it figures that Truitt will have to do a man-sized job. The Cal guards mie:ht be rated an edge over the Bruin tandem. Beara Charlie John$on and Phil Chenier have averaged 13.6 and 17.6 points per game to only 17.2 for both of UCLA'a starters. combined. Bu.t the Bruins are awesome on the front line with senior forward Sidney Wicks the dominating ractor. It Is felt Truitt must btlp neutralize WW for the Bears to have a·chance. admiulon hgot lbe hflll tnocbd out of me" by the beetJe..browed German in 1936, battered Schmeling into sub- mission in the first rowid. "The whole fi'ee world . celebrated," \he Brown 8o11lber said proudly. He said the Ali·Frarler fight has a special signifiance also because AU is re&arded as a symbol of realstance to the war in Vietnam. "But I.here is no question of a superior race ln th1I light,'• he addtd. '1Both men are black. All is very popular for reuons other than hi! stand on lhe war.'' Louis, who looks trim and fit after a aerJe.a of illness, predicts a victory for Frazier because he says Ali has been slowed by a 31Ai year layoff. "Ali is a bit like Billy Co."Ul, the man I fought In 1939," the Brown Bomber uld, "although Ali is bigger and stronger. Coon wu very fast. But t s 1 always said, 'You can run but you can't hide'." Schmeling: will bt one of many sports and &how bus.tness guests honoring Joe at a TeatimOnial Dinner in Las Vegas May 14. Vice President Spiro Agnew ii honorary chairman. "I had two good fights with Schmel· Ing.'' Louis said, "but he was a nice guy. I always liked him." SANTA MONICA -The UCLA swim· ming and diving team survived electronic Urning faU1.1m Thuraday night to emerge after ooe day of the Paciflc-3 swim champlonahlps with a 27-point edge over rival USC. Tbe Bruins won two of the five events. as did Stanford, but UCLA captured ADELAIDE, Australia - K e r r y O'Brien captured the 3, O O O -me le r steeplechase at an indoor track meet Thur!lday night in 8:2t.O, an Australian record. Last week, as the Bears were stunning Oregon, 103-72, Truitt held the Ducks' tough Love to m rebounds in the im· port.ant first half, when Cal ail but won the game. WORLD JUNIOR WELTERWEIGHT CHAMP LANDS ONE TO THE CHIN. Add Goodrich To Laker List Of ID-fortune LClS ANGELES (AP) -When Jerry West went down ln a heap at Buffa)o, his teammates waited 18 houn to learn he'd be out the rut of the season with tom ligaments. Then some hardy Los Angeles Laker fans said, "Well, there's always Gail Goodrich. He might take the Lakers through the playoffs." Or he may not play another game. Lite Thursday it was learned the former UCLA guard was suffering 1yrnptoms of mononucleosis; IL will be at ieast 11 hours from the tlrne of that announcement until the Liken learn if both their starting cuardd: will be wt for the year. If so, it means Willie McCarter will be the No. I man in the backcourt for the Lakers. It also means forward Keith Erickson may be forced into the bacicourt with rookie Jim McMUlian and vtteran Fred Hetzel alternating at the other forward po!l . There ls also a bit of optimism around the Laker office at the Forum that injured Elgin Baylor, trying to come back art.er a heel operation, may be of some value. He's titting weights and eettlng hls legs ready for pos.sible duty during the playoffs. "Right now," said the depressed Goodrich, "I have nG energy at all. The doctor said he was fairly certain I've got mono but we won't know until we gel the lab te sts back." • • I It was the third rute11t time ever In the event and only two seconds slower than his own world record. Only two weeks ago the Aussie ran the fastest two-miles ever, indoors or out, with an 8:19.2 time tndoon at San Diego. e Long Beach Ahead LONG _ BEACH -Cal Stal< I Long Beach), boasting nine Olympic swimmers and divers, won all five events Thursday night in the Pacific Coast AthleUc Association swimming and diving ftnals . Meet records were set in three of the events including the 5 0 0 • y a rd freestyle in which Hans Fassnacht posted a time of 4:37.34 battering hll old mark of 4:41.10 set last year. In the 200-yard indlvldual medley, Gun. nar Larsson was first in a meet setting record of 1:55.81. "lbe old mark was 2:00.4 set by Hans Ljwigbtrg or Long Beach last year. San Diego State's Larry Helland was SfCQnd with 2:00.99 and Bob Silsbe of University of Paci fl c wa s third in 2:01.14. ScorHlg for the fint of three nights was : Long Beach 151.2, University of Pacific 127, UC Santa Barbara 87, San Diego State 60, Cal State (Los Angeles) 39, Fresno State 33, and San Jose State 18. e 2 More in NIT l\'EW YORK -Massachusetts and Providence were added to the f I e I d for the National Invitation Basketball Tournament Thursday. leaving 11 berths remaining for the 16-team tournament which opens March 20 at Madison Square Garden. e Dodger Ll11e11p VERO BEACH, Fla.-Manager Walter Alston named his starting lineup today. for the Los Angeles Dodgers' spring exhibition opener Saturday here against the Atlanta Braves. Claude Osteen, Joe ~foeller and Jim Brewer will share the pitching, each expected to work three lnnlngs. Bill Russell will lead off at short.stop. Wes Parker will be at first bast, Bill Grabarkewitz, at second, Steve Garvey at third and Russell at shorl The outfield will consist of Rich ie Allen In left. Willie Davis in center and Willie Crawford in right. Duke Sims. who was acquired from Cleveland during the off· season, will catch. e Nasta•e Whu HAMPTON, Va. -Topseeded Ilie Nastase of Romania brushed aside Richard Russell of Kingston, Jamaica, &-3, 6-2, Thursday_ nlg~t and advanced , to the quartE!l'rtnals of the U.S. Indoors Tennis Tournament. Nastase's victory wa1 In one of four second round matches that completed the lineup for Friday's tingles quarter· finals. Hiroshi Kobayashi Belts Mexican Chall•ng•r Ricardo Arr•ndondo on W•y to O.cision Win. Stanford brin11 hot Claude Terry down south for a game with Southern California, like UCLA 22-1 but lhird·rank· ed na tionally. lf the Trojans hope to win , they must stop Terry, the fine-shooting 6-5 guard who last week acored 77 points, more than any Indian in history over a twtr game weekend. Terry is also hitting 81.8 percent of his free throws and averaging 24.6 points per game. Washington is at Oregon in another Pae-3 game. The tx>st Ducks boast the Ptc-1'1 No. 1 scorer in Love, who bu tut for 26.S points per game, and ranks fifth in rebounds at 11.6 per game. In the only other Pac.a game of the night, Oregon State hosts Washington State. Then Saturday afternoon, WSU Is at Oregon for the week's regional television conteat and that night, Stanford is at UCLA, Cal is at USC and Oregon State hosts Washington. Free Fishing 01i HB Boat FREE Fishing, no lie! Huntington Beach Sporlfishing Landing will Inaugurate a new deep sea fishing landing this weekend with three free trips being offered to lucky anglers who make early telephone reservatiom. Carl and Bob McCullough will host Huntington Beach city ofricials in the inaugural outing Saturday rooming then turn the SO-passenger boat over t.o the public for three additional weekend runs -one Saturday afternoon and two on Sun- :lay .. For a spot on the ~foot boat that was recently purchased from Oavey'1 Locker. call 5 SI -9 7 7 2 between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m, A total of 150 anglers will be given free passage on the boat lhal has a full galley and rent tackle aboard. Indiana's Kinsella Sets S'vim Mark NCAA Agent Reveals How It Happened "All hell ls breaking loose." That's the statement from Larry Kerker, chainnan of the Western Regional NCAA college division selection committee after the We.st Coast was outvoted by the national committee in !electing teams for the Western, Regional basketball tournament in Pugel Sound, Wash. March 12-13. Prior to this week, two teams had been selected for the event -Puget Sound (22-4) and San Francisco State College (16-10), Far Western Conference champion. UC Irvine, led to believe that a vicUiry over UC Riverside Saturday night 'ft'ould give it serious consideration, was also left out In the cold by the national decision that pla ces Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo) in the tourney. UCI is currently 15-10 on the year and defeated SLO Saturday night, 75-71. But reasoning or the national committee was that UCl lost twice to San Fernando. a team the group felt didn 't qualify because of a 14·12 season record. UCl and Valley State chances went down the drain \Vednesday when tbe NCAA national committee held a con- ference telephone call. "1 only have one vote and the f i n a 1 decision was unanimous with exception of my dissenting ballot," Kerker told the DAILY PILOT. "I recommended we wait u n ti I Saturday's games are completed to pick !he fourth team and thet San Fernando be named as the third entrant. "other members of the national group then began to point out that teams in their areas had records or 24-2 and were. not selected for the regional events. "\\'hen I recommended San Fernando, that's when everything hit tile fan. "They told me they just couldn't lake S:in Fernando with its record,'' Kerker said. Kerker explained the entire San Fernando situation to the committee and COLUMBUS, Ohio -John Kinsella, was still turned down. The same situation Indiana Unlvenlty's freshman sensation, exists in the Far Western Conference broke NCAA and conference records In where Sacramento State has the best the 500-yard freestyle Thursday night overall rec6rd (Hl-11 ) but finished second as the . Big . .'.feq_ oJ>e!led it§ three-day 'C' Jn the _:s:l!'Nuit. , . swimming meet. -Seattle Pacific: (15-9), apparenUy on Kinsella, Sullivan Award winner from the strength of a win over Sacran1ento l~lnsdale, Ill., stroked Ohio State'! 25a St11te, WU given the fourth berth. yard pool in 4 minutes and 31.!() seconds, Cal Poly's overall record (16-10) was JJlarting the defending Hoosiers on an given prcferenct over a CCAA cham· antlelpattd rout pion.ship by San f"ernando (14-12). Champs Bypassed San Fernando Numbed After Snub by NCAA By 110\\'ARD L. HANDY 01 1M O.llY ,ll1d Staff Numbness has set in and the grave Inequality of the situation is slowly bringing a rise in tempe rature for San Fernando Valley State College basketball coach. Dr. Jerry Ball. The symptoms o( his illness have not been fully diagnosed but those on the outside say it is a case of NCAA·llis -a dread disease that strikes at college division basketball coaches and teams every year at this time. VaHey State was shunned by the NCAA national committee to select teams for regional tournaments March IZ..13 des- pite the fact it won the California Col· legiate Athletic Association (CCAA) bas-- betkall title with a 7·1 record. In place of Valley State, Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo) was selected even though the Mustangs finished second to San Fernando Valley (6-2 in CCAA play). "Here's the thing that is so amazing to us ," Ball told the DAILY PILOT : "UC Riverside finished third naUonallv last year, strengthened its club and st iii finishfd fourth this season~ Yet, the people on the selection comm ittee can't be convinced that our conference is strong enough to se nd the championship team. "They chose San Francisco State and tt had a 5-9 record outside or the Far West Conference. Sacran1cnto State had the best overa ll record in the state {18-3 ) and finished second in the con- ference. "If they arE! going to take the second pl ace team down here because of such r ecords , why aren't they consistent?" Still in a state of shock from the disappointment tha t is eating the hearts out of the Valley State players a n d coaching staff, Ball continued : "I can't figure out if it's politics or lack of education on their part. The problem is that the people closest to the situation do not h a v e a say in the fin al decision. "Instead people who are never closer lhan 2,000 miles to our team are making these selections. "I just wonder if they wanttlie btlt teams or tbe teams w)t\I the be1t posstble records regardless of opposition. "'I feel that I have to start capcelling games we already have scheduled for next year. \Ve ha ve to start playing people we think we can beat. "I don't think this is the way an athlet ic program should be run. When a national committee can dictate the teams you are going to play, something is decidedly wrong. "One member of the national coin· mitt.ee told me he felt they didn't feel qualified 10 evaluate the strength of anybody's schedule. But the handbook says differently. "I feel like our kids have been sho1t changed. One of them put it lo me this way and J guess it just abou t sums up the si tuation: 'I thought \\'e \\'on, bul I find out that \Ve Jost'." Ball, still boasting a high temperature, added : •·1 am really sorry for the kids. They have been sitting around here and wondering why. We"ve never made it be(ore and we bave usually been the set'Ond place team in the CCAA. "ln the past our conference champion has always been selected." Asked if San Fernando 'vas con- templating any further action, Ball stated: "We've done about everything that can be done. Apparently ·we have the full support of the people on the west coast including Cal Poly (SLO). 1'Thei r athletic director asked the TIA· tional chairman what \\'Ould happen 1[ they refused the bid and he ~·as told that the committee Wt!Uld swing a team in from another region and definitely \\'ould not invite us." In checking the San Fernando record, Ball points out that his te am had upgrad- ed its schedule to play 11 university division teams during the past season. "We won three of those games an d lost two others by one point. We los t to Santa "Barbara by one in overlimc and played a close game with Cal Slate (Long Beach) down there. "At Fresno we were seven up 'vith thr~ minutes to go and then v•e "·ere boated out of it." The. lone CCAA loss was to Cal Polv and Ball feel s his 'Pla yers had thc{r worst game of the season in lhat one. ''\Ve llad thim down by seven with SC\)en minutes to play when the only kid hitting for us dislocated a knee. We beat them up there. 80-74." Doral Open: Contrast of Emotions Ball also pointed out that Valley St a1e had defeated Loyola at Loyola and had beaten university division Idaho Slate. second plt1<ce fin isher in· the Big Sky Conference. MJAMl (AP) -Arnold Palmer is disgusted, Jack Nicklaus ii 1till playing b.st y,·eek's tournament and Gardner t:Jlcllnson held the lead today going Into the second round of the III0,000 Doral·Eastem Open golf loumame,it. "I got so dlsgusted with my puttlng t \et It affect the rest of my game," Palmer said aft.er taking a thret--Over-par 7$ in Thunday'a firtt round, putting him well back in the pack. IOllY NICHOLS l>ISTRESSED "I played pretty weU." said N;ckaius, Ml•M Shot Oft: Yth ·Dots· It·• dl.<rW!cr o1-1ui weelf1 PGA nation a I championship. "But l had a couple mental lapsea. I g1ieS1 I was sUll playing"the PCA." He bad a 74. And Dk:ktnson, a hardened veteran or almost 20 ytats on the pro tour who ii 1t1'mpting to battle his w.,. out of a year.Jong slump, fc>u&:ht wind and cold for a four-under-par 6& and a one-stroke lead. "It's one of my WOT1it driving rounds ever." said tht leather-faced llttle 130. pounder. •·r just hope 1 kttp putllng like thlt, I know I can start hitting t.hf: ball again." D\ckifl!C)n, tilt 196& winner of this event. held a one-slroke lead over five players tit<! lll 69. They Included Ted Hayes, Canadian George Knudson , Gibby Giibert. lfomero Blancas and Bobby Nichols, a former PGA champion now a club pro at Akron, Ohio. Young ,Brien Allln and J.C. Snead, winner of the Tucson Open two weeks ego, had ?Os. .....- South Alrican Gary Player was still in contention with i 72. but U.S. Open champ Tony JackUn of England &hot himself out or lt \\'ith a 77 and mllj' have trouble making lhe cut today when the field Is cut to the low 70 players for the final t11i·o rounds Satw-day and Sunday. Defending ch3mpion Mike Jilli had A 74. ~1a!ters r:h Ampion Billy Casper and , 1970 leAding money winner Lee Trevino are nol competlflg-. "We are trying to keep and maintain some degree of dignity in our progra1n and play as many tough teams as \1 e can but apparently this isn't the way they want you to do it," he summarizes. The numbnei.s ham't tW1M!d to paralysis and Ball doesn't intend for it do so. But what steps he will ta);~ to re:mrrlv the IMUal disease haven't been lu!l v comprehended with exctptlon or 11 thrcnt to lighten the SFVSC schedule In the future with teams from Podunk u. . ' -. .. . -.. ~ . -" ' . . .. ... . . .. Frldlf, ti'mh 5, 1911 • DAILY PILOT J 5 UCI Now 9·2 Anteaters Rip Redlands, 4-2 Erickson's · Hit Ignites Kings, 3-2 -4/tMlt Pa!.wtA, •tm••tliawar -t Final Relay for Sea Kings Rocks Huntington, 60-58 Bf HOWARD L. HANDY Of n.. 0.11'1' 1'1191 Sl•H Dennis Nltholson with a nif- ty bit of relief work by Greg Pennington, pitched UC Irvlne to a 4-2 baseball victory over Redlands University Thursday afternoon on tho Anteater dia· mond. Nicholson was In command all the way but when he \Valk- ed the flrat batter, struck out the next and had another reach base on an error with Area Prep, JC Tennis Summaries J1tftlor Vt'111'1' Slft11n Hlll\tlfttt.-Cll\'11 CU M11no~1 Miiier IHI d"I Goodt tM) t·l1 dtl K•11111 (Ml 6·1. Arkl~ (H) won 6·2, 6·1. IC.Immel (H) won 6J. WtJI (H) def Br•v CM) .. l. D<lllOln ku1ke·S!1n!on CHI dtf 8r1"r-Good" !Ml .. 5 ... ~, Mt ul·W1rntr (HI dtf Jtftkln1.St tl0 !M) ....... 0 f'rtill·ltl'll EdilOR IUI UJ u ~1411 J1111lor V•rlll'I' Wt TTt!I (111 f1J) 1!11111C1:1 J1111ltr V1r111y E.ll1nc11 v""I 111'11 Hlln!lntltR 5 n11t1 Wade CEJ dtt Ark"I (H) .. 1, 6-l, Home11t.i (f) dtf Wtrn« (H) "~u~.?~11 !El lieO Mt\11 !HI •I: "'°" 6-l1 IOll 1·6, MtllhtWS !fl 1o,1 IO wnt IHI 1·6. 0.1, 00Uh1n Mc011Hi .. Grol~11l1 (EJ Clfl. Sliver· l 11U"' OH l_J, •I .~ Oer11b4Jtlth-Chrl11m1n !El IOI! ill k.u11k1·Sl1nton lH) ...., •1, V1rllf\I CdM 111 .... 1 1111'11 111m1 Hllt1 Sl11tln Mm ... !Cl def. c--:rJ .. ,. HUOP. .... 01Y11. •I. Moot\tv, ...,, Over (C) lost 3_., IOI! , ... ,won. ·~at'is ICI lo:;! 3 ... 1<1, J ... WOii •ttwl\ (CJ IOSI J... 1... l .. , won .... DO\tbln N•lntr 1nd Verm1Jnd !Cl !Itel W1lktr 11nd WIHl1m1. 1·1: won ,.,, Clef. Abt and Sw1tford !SJ, •1, •1. l(llltft<' 11nd Ru1Jell CCI loll , .. , , .. , !ltd 7·1, wvn 6·1. J1J1>lor V1rlllY Clr0fl1 •t Mir Ill (J) S~llft1 Hiii• SlntlH $hoem1ker !Cl won 6-4, i.J. M<Clrl~ !Cl. IOll 1 .. , won 6-3, Allrtd !C), lol! 4-11. U . C1rP11iltr (Cl, won 1·1, lot! 1 ... 0ou•111 Gulick tncl Dalt ICI. loll U. -,.~1kew 1nCI Hurhtr (CJ, """' ·~ 1011 .... Ortntt: Con! In Ul kll Oliff CLl'I' l lltllH Ro~!ll {Dl lltl, Fritz 1$) '-2• 1·1 Frt1IC111 tSl .SOI. Ciro !0! t.4, t~nn1nv~tm CO) !let. SdimHr11t !Sl t:n:: (0 1 dtf Thrt n (SJ 6·J. f>irHIOn ISi del. Win!er1 f") l•l, t~1hwelmer 10) def, Flortll !S) 6-0. .. , °"'''" cu~nln9f\1m '"" ROHttl 10\ oe. sc~mer111 1nd Frtrlct11 is o·l. .. , Ciro 1nd Emor'I' 101 Cltf l'tltrSOfl oM FrU1 (5l &-], 1·' ' S<hw~lm01' .,id Wl,.fttl !01 dt . w11111nvton al\Lll Thrtt !$l 4'3, 6·4 two away in the nlDlh, Pen- nington was broQght in. Pen· nington proceeded to strike out the final batter on three pitches. N I c hol!on's performance gives him a 2.() record with his next asslgrunent against the USC Trojans at Bovard Field Tuesday afternoon. UCI is now ~2 with Qc. cidental College visiting ln'lne for a doublebeadtt Saturday beinning at ·12 o'clock. Then it's a home-and-home series with the Trojam, Tues- day at Bovard md Friday on the Anteater diamond. Tu!:Sday's game starts al 2:30 and Friday at 3. Thursday's victory o v e r Redlands found Nlcbolson in charge from beginning· to end with exception of the faurth inning when the Bulldogs scored both runs. F.or Irvine, Bobby Farrar wo rked his: way on base in the first as the Jeadoff hitter, stole second and scored on a single by Jeff Malinoff. After Redlands went ahead 2·l, Dan Hansen garnered a double to open the fifth and scored on an error as Jack Tedesco attempted a sacrifice bunt. Nicholson contributed a tri· pie and scored the g<Hlhead run an a single by Farrar. The final run was added in the eighth on a triplt by Tom Spence and a single by Mike Saska. aM111L•n1 .. • • "" H1•1r!I, 15 ' • ' • Wlllltmt. 1b l • ' • Morl1n, t • ' ' • M1u1e"r, rt ' • ' • ~:9'.'fb lb • I • • ' • • e1ti1r ••· ltl • • • • F1J!mtt, ii • • ' ' • .., 80111, cf ' • • • S!ruxneu, D~ • • • • Flori. o• ' • • • Scnum•tntr • ' • • • Sailf, p ' • • • Rrotl1 ph ' • • • " ' • ' UC lrvl11t f•I "" .. • • F1rr1r. If ' ' ' ' SYkl>l'I, J11 ' • ' • Grt..,wtv, 'II ' • • ' ~:~~·1~b • • ' ' ' ' I • $tMtt. rt ' • ' ' Ht1'Hft, I.I • ' , • TeOeKO, cf ' • • • ~111. ti ' • ' • fllM, < ' • • • NICll<>ll<ll', p ' ' ' • Prnn\refPI!, 1 0 a • • Tott1 2' • • ' kw• •r 1111111111 • ' • Rt0!111C11 .. "' .,,.., • ' UC lrvlnt ·~ "' ....... • ' By ROGER CARLSON Of .. Oelb ... ,..., • One thing about Corona de.I ?i.tar lll&b's catcher Mark Erickson, be isn't particular who be picks on. The junior Sea King Jet· terman tried Ws balling eye on four different Sunny Hills High pitchers Thursday a(. ternoon, reached first safely in each instance, and slammed a slngle to center field in the seventh inning to produce the winning run. When he was through dusting off Gary Carter's first offerlng in a reUef stint, coach Tom Trager'• host Sea Kings bad a 3-2 non-league baseball verdict jn their pocket after nearly letting it get away. The vistt.l.ng Lancers bad come back with a pair <>f tallies ih the top of lbe final frame to knot the count against starter Dave Vilas, v.·hose shutout string was end- ed at 11. Corona came back strong in the bottom of the stanza, however, with Keith Samuel! delivering bis third hit or the day with a stinging double to le!L lie was era~. however, an a fielder's choice, but John Palmer kept it alive with a single to center. That prompted Sunny Hills' strategy to bring in Carter, the faurth Lancer hurler. But Erickson v.•as equal to the occasion and stroked the first pitcti_ to center for the. winning marker, scoring pincbrunner Scott Parker. ,_ .. ~ UJ • •• • "' !'"'lit/~ 1• ' ' ' ' ''"· • • • • tllll/>OP, II l • ' • Ptr'ltr, or • ' • • i· Ptlmer. cl • • ' • ti~ t: ( • • l ' P,..:.!r~~ rf ' • • • ' • • • Joh,,_, II ' • • • Ktrl. )b ' ' ' • Vll11, o ' • • • JohnJM, 11 • • • • • TO!ll1 " ' I ' SYllftJ HU11 ~2) W1!'-:t,, ff • • • Tvler, f ' • • ' 8•jl· er ' ' • • Ar er, lb • • • • ~·'".r· ... , ' • ' • tit , H • ' • • V1rw, rt , • • • Ootn, 1'11 ' • • ' KIY, 211 ' • ' • Cul¥•r. )b ' • • • M~row, P • • • • SI mon, c l • ' • Ac frlftl/I, I • • ' Mor1les • • • ' • Mon1~tTl', 3lo 1 0 ' ' T111• '" 2 l ' IC«1 ., lllnll'ltll • • • ·~· HUii .. .. ,_, ' ' '"' '" "' ,_, ' ' Tiie blcbwillil shouJa PRllfuce I full coilinl of your bll musdes 1nd muf..,m control of tho cfub. In other words, you should seelc 1 bislllouldor turn and a short becmring (SN moln Ullllln!~. Never feel that you must make 1 lo"I mg. This only loads to looSe wriSts and losa ol club con· lrol .(smallor illustnitlon). lhe modern pr<>flSSional usually makes 1 full 90" shoulder tum, yet seldom rOIChos a horizon111· clubshlft position during his baekowing. At tho top you should feel temlon ICl'lllS :111ur back and down your loft side. Your honda end wrists' shouJd feel ''.frozen" to tho club Itself. .. 0 tt11 MAn. ...... .,.,_ ·PUT POWER BACK INTO '!'OUR SWINGl-wtltth het, of Atl'lold P•lm1r'1 lllllltrattd booltltt, wr .. $hots •nd F.irny Wood1," Send 204: and • Mtf«ldrmect. .._.. .....,. to Amold P•lmtt, In eara Of~~ fttw2'111P"'· - Pirate, Gaucho Nines Drop Baseball Verdicts Thursday just wasn't the day for Orange Coast area junior college baseball squads • F1rst off, Orange Coast College's Pirates scored nine runs in a visit to Aft. San Antonio. But the host Mounties were able to amass all of their runs in the first three innings for an 11·9 victory. Meanwhile, coach D o u g Fritz' Saddleback Gauchos ended up on the short end of a 6-1 count while invading the Mira Costa Spartans in non~nference hostilities. Mlr1 Ct rtt H) ... PolJISI. rt J D Ad tm&. ct 4 l Cl\IH, •1 I I VtlltY, lb 1 o, 1t~io:: /f' : llur~t. If 2 i,' Wl~ton. )b l Ht!Mlfl, C J I Pct1non, o l a Tottll 311 6 SC-r.y lftftiftfl . "' ' ' f ' . ' ' ' l J : : . ' ' . StCld1.0.ck Mlr1 Coil• . ' . 010 000 000-t S I 010 GOO 2211-4 1 0 SB Spike1'S Lose, 96-49 SAN P.1ARCOS Sad· Postel Pitches, Bats Eagles to 1-0 Victory The Pirates of coach Barry Wallace, who were slated to meet powerful Cerritos on the Falcons' diamond toda y, got. their offense off the ground too late at Mt. SAC. The Mounties picked up their grandiose amount of tallies in the. initial three frames by parlaying three home runs, four walks and a hit bat,,man into the 11 runs. dleback College receipted for a 96-49 track and field reversal Thursday afternoon in Mission Conferenct action. The host Comet;, won 11 of 15 individual events to easi- ly outrace the Gauchos. John Fletcher won the javelln for the visitors with a 18().2 effort while mate Rick Geddes sped to a 22.4 clocking in the 220. By CRAIG SHEFF Of 1111 0•• J'l .. I lltlf Estancia High's Jim Postel did it all Thursday. The Eagle pitcher not only tossed a one-hitter at invadlng Huntington Beach, but also singled in the only run of the game in a 1-0 victory. The lone run came in the second inning. Cal Shores started the rally with a single, but Jeff Zelsdorf's ground ball back to Oiler pitcher Bill Shubin forced Shores at seeond. A ~·alk to Tom Johnson kept the rally alive but a strikeout followed immediately, putting the pressure on Postel. He promptly spanked a line drivt into right field , plating Ze!sdorf with the only run of tbe 1 hour and 42 minute Wt. Postel bad a no-hitter for five and two-third Innings until opposing pitcher Bud Schlagle slammed a solid shot into center field to end tbe suspense. The Estancia rigbthander had things so mucb in control that only two fly balls were hit to tbe outfield by the frustra ted Oilers. Postel also helped his awn cause with six assists and a pair of putouts. He also struck out two and walked just one. Estancia could manage only four hits off a pair of Hun- tington hurlers with two o( the Eagle safeties being o( the infield variety. Shubin started for I h e Oilers, but when he ran into trouble bt the second Slagle came on lo do a yeoman 's job in relief. Steve Schoettler started on the mound for the Bucs and lasted only one inning while fellow righthanders M a r t y Quisenberry, Bob Bailey and Steve Valbuena completed an almost endless pit c b i ng parade for the losers. Steve King slammed a two- run homer for Orange Coast in the seventh inning. Saddleback got its only tally when Doug Mitten singled Jim Campbell home in lhe secor:d slaru.a. The Gauchos host Palomar when action resumes Tuesday. Ort l!H CNlt OJ Saddleback's next track op- ponent is Riverside CC Mar. 12. J'lllll'l•r INI 1"1 Sltl4fl•1<- 4.iO rtl1y -$tcldltb1ck, oil.I Sllot IUI -I. Stints fl') 2. O•ltnt~ (Pl l, Mtnh1U ISl .... v. Mir• run -I. ltrkln (P) t. MCF1Cl-dtn II')), WH!li' CP'J. 4:70.2 uo hlth 1>11rdlt1 -I. l uu Cl') %. wrui.ms rJI l. Mtlloell (,.J. 16.1 440 -I. MltlLllr (SI 2. EOMr IPI ). CuN\!119 II'). 11.r 100 -I. Hlll\t CPI 1. Jtci<IOft (SJ J, Gtdelt• 1$). t .1 llCI -I. L1rtlln fl'I t. McF1Cldln IP) l. lord 11'1. 1:5'.I 440 I"'· l\urClln -I. Smllh {P) 7, L1r"n1 Cl'J 3. Cummln. CPI. "·' Hfth lump -1. Htrlltrl (I") l. 0 1<lly fl') l. StmutllOfl !Pl. 6>2 no -I. Gtddt1 tSJ ,, Hlllll 1111 J. Jtrtwn IS!. 'H.4 " ''I LOllfl l!Jmp -I, Wllll1mt (SI 2 . O o Hurchl" ll'l J. Ml!l0<k (P'I. 21·4V. .. ' Piii, d S O ; i (pJ,';~r:;u;;.. ~·st~~ ... CSI 2. Ltwl• I 1 Polt w1u11 -I, 1111111 IPI 2. AIWOOll O O IS) J. l1011nko ISt. l'-4. 1 1 l·oTillt -I. Wtlltr !Pl 2. Mt Ftddln I O IP! J. Ptl!tro1111 (S). U :DJ.J I 0 Mlle rt !•r -Slddltbtck. J:71.T 0 0 Trlolt lumt -1. Hlll<hln (Pl : : '· Wlllftml ($) ]. M•ltock (P). 42·1\~ 0 II Oltcw1 -I, 5tlnt1 IP) 1. 0.Jt'°"I' Cltrk, 20 J 2 P-11. 30 J 1 HIWM, ID ~ J L11vr. 11 J 1 Kint.If J a MtHellY, If l I a1mlrt1. r1 l G Snvder, c 4 a ScnotrUt r 1 o Qwl1tt1t>t<ry, p l o Bt!ltY. P I 0 VIJbW'l\1, ., o O MARCH SERVICE SPECIALS Slagle pitched the I a s t four and a third innings, allowing just two In fie Id singles. He struck out four and walked three. 'To1111 'i ' IS 1 • tP) J, Mtrlht ll {SI. l~I Ml. S111 A~tonle C111 1b r " 1111 1 l 0 0 ~ ~ l ~ Golf ResuJts 1 0 7 I J 1 I O Vl!ltln( Corona dtl Mar's Sta Klngs reeorded 1 victory tn the final eYtnt-tbe mile relay-to chalk up a eo.s& decision over the :Hontm,ton Beach Oilers Tburaday in hi(hllgbting area prep track .and field dual meet activity. Jn other dual meets, host San Clement. stopped Bolsa Grande, 30-46 ; Java d Ing Edbon swamped Los Am11os, 81-4.!; Foothill dropped Costa Mesa by a 73-53 count and El Mocltna clipped the bosl &tancla Eagles, 61-59. At Huntington, Corona broke a ICbool: record with a 44.4 f40 relay mark while Sea King sprinter John Miles tied a scboOI standard wilb a 10.0 100 clocking. HunUngton 's Steve Picklord v.·as a double hurdle winner. Tony Hoffman had San Clemente's best mark of the day With a l:Hi pole vault effort to equal the best mark of the young season in the Orange C.oast area. High hurdler Dave Powell (lS.8) led Edison's charge while mates S t e v e Tim- merman (49-7\i:) and Steve Kurty"' (1~91>) dominated lhe weijfhts. MU!tang Bob Gol lnick reeorded a 4:23.$ mile mark while mate Brad Borden flung the shot $.I'f.i. Estancia's sopbomort speedster Bruce Girasole Ooo and 220) was his team's only double winner with 10.1 and 23.3 clockings. The Marina·Long B e a ch \Vllson track and field dual mtet was reported Tuesday in the DAILY PILOT with Wilson wlllning, 60-SI. However, a reversal on a judge's decision in the pole vault has resulted in a 60-58 Marina victocy instead. C-• "' M1rvYJ~'.,uo NW!!~ 100-1 M11e1 IC'lj· Te1U C 3. Fltuo IHI llu tcheo rt(O(dl, IM• IV.O :126-1. C. To1t1 (Cl 2. Mll11 ICI J, Fl•rro 04l. Tlrnt: U.11 4.o -1. MIJttH /CJ J, LM iCI J, Voskif'o IH). Tlint; SJ.J --1. llDM (C) Z. Anclttl°" !Cl >. "/"'fll IH\· Tim.: Z:oo.1 Ml -• MIJ U111 IHI ll I.Mm (C) '· ~-"~· "~· " ·I > ,._'I· vldsotl IHI , Deoy !Cl J, H IH • lrrteiJ~2 120 HH-1, P'.TJiM C~J L WIN n;lro" ~~tlH~~I;:: 1c~ 2. w11t c I.,·•tf"'"U-11.c~-o::-=.:M.,. (kllool rKOl'CIJ. l'!lt: 41..t T~l: ~'r-1. CorMI .SOI M11. HJ-I. ttoo.. (Cl 1. Ktnt (C) 3·L"}'~l'.1"Jr.!· r.:11°"~.' t~owtll.1 UO J, F•"•r IC>. Oh Ill«'; ll·2Vt PV-l. Andt>Cfn (HI 1 l"r9ne11¥11i. fHl 1 Von (Cl. "'loll!; 12 ... $1"-1. Or.I Int Oo t. CJt ttlU (H) I. J. TOIH (Cl. Olllt-ai: Sl•J, <-• •1 ~ "ll. fQl Mt;111'-'" 1.ft;/· MUlt" '''ll l. IU_.r (HI '· 1:'!~1"',,mi.~H lfH1"'i'. 1°K1-HO 3. NtKlnMY CCI. Tll'flt; 1-1.2 '60-1. "1~\~u CC) 'uAnw•• IHI J.1~r. ~moqtrr:: ~~~~2. Dtll MY (Cl~' ~~l~CI, ll'lld.i : .t 1. 01born !Hl J. Anion 1!f!~1m1; l.J UO LH-1. 'C11IN1 1CJ J. Gltnl'IOn lCl J, Ro!~wtll C!. TJ.,,.; 14,1 MO llelt v-1. Hunlln1ton l t•<I>, Tl~: l1u2 HJ-I) M= fCI t. TraMrt !H t '·\'1-'r •1::i:•:1:1. S.I CHI '· 1:11~'<" (C l . ~ltllfff\I m. DldtlKt! 11·1 . V-1, Hout~ r (HJ J. It m• SP-1. lolllj CCI l. Gtr11 (Cl 3, Mltt.11 Cl. 0 t1111Cl~ 4-11 Ctnu •1 Mir \U) l•Jl 111111nt• \~I, Wll-Cl J, ... ,~., I) 3. U"'°HblUWI (C • Tlmt; 10.t. 1._I. WltMn ICJ !. Ptflltr IHI 3. 9«n. IC), Tlmt: lf.2 J.50-1. Pont IHI 2. Hllftllbrl ftd (CJ 1 Vtlnt CH). Tlmll!; l ;;JJ, 111G-I. Fronk 11'1) 7. Sdllldll !H) 1· 1%~4!_~~.T~;_;i.•iH1 2. 1'0!11 00 t. Nloc;l'rwllr CHI. Tlmt• U,f HO l:tlt¥-1. Cor..,.. .SOI Mfr, Tl_, o aJ-1, Fltkntll CHI 1. 0-Ht,. (Cl l. Mco..e.n 1c1. H@1or•: s-1 LJ-l: lltrner IC 1, Mohr 3, NIKhWll( (HJ, Dh!rric;e: 11-0 PV-1, Cowden (H :l. Mol!r !Cl 1 AnCIH'btro (H) IH), Hth!l>I: f.t SP-I. Mlnnt ICI 1. Gul1nen (C) 3. ll:Obel"ll !HJ, OlllllKtl 411 ... .... fty Sin Cltmtftl• ilfl 14'1 Stt11 OrtlMll ltl0-1. Fr~• 151 7. Morr!t 11) 3. Lf'lln1on (SI. Tlmt: 10.4 220--1 , M<Ktnlle (ll 2. Fr'rt' Ill J, Mortin (8). Time: 2l.7 441:1-1. Morgtft (II 1. A.nCltrt (SJ 2. 8rtd1f\1w (SJ. Tl,...: 13.1 --.1. Gtrclt Ill 2. Ktri<'r (Ill 3. S1r,..n1 18 1. Time: 2101.• Mll-1. Pt!tt fSl 7, lllltlll<k Ill l. 81tcli (ll. Tlmt : ':11.! l·Mlt.-!. Smlll>tM (81 t. />.Vtr !IJ J. Nol11 (81. Tlmt : f :,1.7 ll<'wolutoonory ne,.. "P"'"'")nol me!hod• '''<'on 0"1nqr C ounly' N o I L•ncol~ Me1cu•v d,oler ""*oft<"' l"''"'Y u~tlu)•11"d "'' wo<» or P"C<!l ,o,..por<ible •n lh~" c~c,qrd hy "•• << H<1 l101, and oth<t n~n .prc•olo:<d •rpg,. <<'~'''' '>< Y•<r b, "Pf><a~I· mrnt ~O•<l> V'>U l u11f\,,., "m<" o~d "'Oft<¥ Zelsdorf collected a couple al hits tor the Eagles, who ran their uason mark to 3·1. C1rco11n, <f McManus, II lltrn••· lb Et1r1oa. Jb Htrllt, 2D Poner, rf B•llff. c F ltulmmom, 11 ~ltld1 •• ; ; I ~ no HH--1. Pt!tf' !!I ,, E.U!t (I) .,_IMfl Wt1! IUI 1111 C\lfrtH 3. Ouvtll (SJ. Tlmt : 1'.I 8rown (GJ dft. Gont1l11 IC),. n-IS 111'.1 Lli-1. Mor•ll !SI 1. Stf'ft\1111 REG. $4.75 OIL CHANGE CALL fOI .AP'POINTMINT TODA.Y I ,,, REG. $35.95 TUNE UP lncludi119 "'"' co"91"1•r, polftt 1 I 1p1rk pl1J91. J u1I $27os CALL POI Al'POINTMIHT TOD.All SANTA ANA LINCOLN MERCURY !301 NO. TUSTIN AYE •• SANTX ANA 547.0HJ '"WE APPl~CIATE TOUI IUSINESS" -~ Estancia was scheduled to rel.um to play today, hosling Newport Harbor. Huntington is idil! until Monday when It bosU; Hs own tourney . HUflllntlOll •M<ll It) •~ r " 1111 VIII Aml,lforl, 11 1 0 0 0 fii~~,"·dl'-1• 1) 0 0 0 0 g Dtele<-. t ' (I 0 ' Fu1~1m. II 2 I o o l~:!!;,, )tirf i g g : p.,r•,. ltl ~ n O ~ Sl1tle, ., J I 1 o v~.'l:'1t1 2~g~g lllt"Clt ~l r ., nl l1 : : : ) g .:, g 3 0 I 0 J I 1 a i , ~ • ! • ' " . . "' • • ' ' . ' • ' • Tot1b l I I I ? ' 0 0 J] 11 10 10 Stort '' lnnhttl i;eorM IGJ dtf. Genci•t.H (Cl .. •>tl I;::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;=;! S..llb (Cl dtf. l>tt'rt IG), U ,II EIClrhM>t 101 ,,_,, VllKfftl lC), 1) ... o·~~llf Co111 x.i 630 300-t 1s l Mt. S.... M io•"'> ltl ODC1 GOK-11 ID 2 SttN1••ct1 en li':!1i:'.1\~11&1r' dtf~#".,.!Cit 1"!':.N .. • ack'°l 211 , ' • , lldtlltffclr 144/ {II) U'll"'•ftltr-Wellm;.otlltr Cl Ott, Mfnd011 !J•I, ,.u ""' l'r1111 !II 0.1, W1lli;"1 ISwJ, )'9-16 t GrttdlMr ''' Oft, "-Clwl, . .... I M~tr1 ill dtl' Frtndl (Sw), ll·n 0 C1111!1 IS) llfd 1Cnl1!"' llW), ..... D G1l11 CSw) lltl. JN.tlll (SJ, ..... i--- 0 .... 'p ' • • H111n . • ' • • Smllfo, c • • • C•mP6ft\, Jib ' ' ' llOVlf, lb ' • • Ml!ltn. t t ' • ' Boll• .. rl ' • • 111tklklw , d ' • • GOLF TIPS ll.. s<.rt lllC"'"'" I .... """ 01 .... -f'••dkt II ftlt •• , NEWPORTIR INN PAR 3 GOLF COURSE SI.OD wftlt tWI ._. .... -,.. I I ~•et, u ' • • Hv.'r' If ' • • ' • • 0 ti$ " ' ' UC l1·vine Golf UC lrvlftt 1111 f4)) Ct1111No llullt "- C~1mbt:rl!n , IUI dtl, Sltw1rt (Cl, n.,, TI11Jt111 lC1 ''" """' ·on. ,..,, KtH~ ICJ lltf. 1~1111 /Ul, n." Gu~·m ICI llltt. A!ltn (Ul. 14·11 •criW1<11m.t1tt1 CC) Cit! • .._.., CUI, SK .IE RS 5.0%. O~F ,,. . Pflt~ (Cl Ott \11110111 IUl. 1t .. 8tst len: F1Jl!tr1&11 \I, 1.1(1 I • ON ALL CLOTHING Layaway 'Til Payday 'DICK WJLSON 8EllVICE NOTE I TENNIS BALLS ~LSON F()RD OF HlfflTlNGTON BJt tCjj, DICK WILSON WIISON FOR SAYS< $3.00 OFF ANY SERVICE CHARGE OFSI OORM OREON YOUR CAR, REGARDLESS OF MAKE!"" SALES 18255 BEACH BL VD. HUNTI NGTON BEACH PARTS & SERVICE DEPT. OPEN MON. THRU FRIDAY, 7,30 a.m. lo 5'30 p.m. PENN. 76 HO \VHITE OR YEU.OW $2.00 ACAN SKIS GREATLY REDUCED .:.~~.:'.!:':"~~~~ 10 am•6 ;m IANKAMERICAll:O MASTER CHA1119E THE ROARING FORK SKI AND TENNIS SHOP DANA POINT 34141 COAST HWY. 496-1'21 t111.. ''"" rs1. TirM1 ttJ 4lf llt le.,...I, k9 (ltmfllt.. TllM1 ... Miit ltti.r-1, iklM Gr....ot, llml: 1117,, HJ-I. ltn'Y fll !. Tit bl,...... McGtr..,. !II ttMt S.-11 !I I. Hl91\tllf: .f.I U-1. Jtmu.it (11 ,, M(Oll'f'f Ill l. Olttorll Ill, 0111-.: 2l•l'h N-1, Hof'llM" 11) 1. S.rtN.Olf llJ I, 119 rtl/nl, Htlt/lf: IM 1 ..... 1. Hel'Nl'ltl'IOll fl) 2. Gtdnev (11 l. O't'llt llJ, DL•l111tt1 41•10\'o Ohc111-1. 11-...0 !ll 1. lwtmtort (II 2. H-11111(11. O!el•nc. 12'-2\'io ... ............. t .. I IOI SH °""'"" 100-1. ·-~ Ill t , WttJ:tl Ill J, Zlm.rnlr !El. Time: 11,t nt-1, WllHI Ill 2. l tllTIVtt (IJ J, Zlfrllll4t llJ. Tll!W: :IS.I ..0-1. P'ltld'M f8l I. lltlw- (t.l l. 0,,.,,.,.. (I t. Tlmt: f!'1,1 1m-1. llt11 Ill 1. Ir-ill J, H1._.1 It). T~; l :•,, IJO I. SteJ-. ll) 2, Cr!J! (ll 2, tlllrCI, Tlont: :llll.l no 1. Cru& 111 1. s1ar11t1 111 l. ltl Ill. Tl!'M; I'-' -lttil'r-1. 80IM Gr1nelt, Tl1111: 1:41.J HJ-I, Dldct'f !SI 2. Gtlhtffl (SJ J. Forr1'r Il l. Ht1-!11: "4 U -1. ltD111T10•1 Ill 1. Ftnt tl tll J. Avtr (SI. Ol1lt1Kt; lf.11 PV-1. 5-roult (SI 2. no MCond « tNnl. Htllll\1: 7<1 1 .. -1. Kull1> Ill f, Hflltr\on 1$1 J. Ct ,,.!1111 fl l. Dl1t1nc:t ! 41.JI'> Ollcvt--1. KllM Il l 1. Nldlolt !SI J, H11lt11011 (SJ, Oltl11'C.•: 102-1 CN II~ Clt111t1111 CMJ 011 ..... Gt tllllt 100-1, Sc~rlm !$1 2. BIO~/> ISi J, C1rlf1 181. Tlll'\e: 11.J 1ta-1. 11ow11 est f. Htll'llrtch tll l. Mor1lft CIU. Tlmt: 10.4 ut--1. Mo•••~ (81 2. sc~111re rs1 J. Tovn' tS), Tl,..., l:•.t 1.11()-1. A1•CltrM111 !SJ 2. ltl~tl!'I (SI l, L1mtl CBI. TlrN: l •U.I 120 LH--1, li111lno1t Ill 2. Lint (S) l. Ctr!'-: Ill. Tlmt: u .2 ..o 11:111r-I. lolM Gr111dt. Tlm1: ••• HJ-I. achrtm !SI 2. fletn/>01n ISi l, Wlttl'llUH (I ). Hti.111: ,_J LJ-1. Mor1tn Ill 2. Grttnltw (SI J, l1tllncourl (II, Dl1l111«: 11.JY, l'V-t. sorault II) 2. llO llO>nCI er tlll,d. Ht klM: 7·• SP-I. S<nr1m UI 2. Klr!Kh !II J, E11trtm !SI. Olll111C1: U-4YJ ¥ ... lltr •1t1ed• Ut Ht\ II -100 1. 01r•NI• En 2. sw.~•iv tl!MJ t. Lld!lle 11!1. i t: to.I m -'L Glr•IQJ• 1. !••••Iv ~Ml l. lellll !E). lnle: '1.l -I llClll lEl 1. 11"1<11> l !: Nl~iii.~ M}Ef"f.''NS:i!i IEMI ll11:11'~1 \~MJi..~!!l''cJi.t1.1:t YCll1r. j'MJ J, ll'OWll 1\!M~lf1mt-. l:tt..4 ·Miit -I. l loct ( Ml l. :snt.,.,,,. ~I J. 8rown IEMJ. Im•: 10;14,t HH -l. Wt11011 EMI 2. nttn (EM) J, Cole (f; • Tltnr: ~:o· LH -I, E1"l~1 !EM! 2 . ~tllOll ~EM) 3, Wltl1tr1 tEM), .Jo'"'k,~~y -1. E1ll11Clt. i i,...: ~j~ ltt 11¥ -1. E111ric;l1. 1'11111; ~'f-!, I. lll~tlCll (EM) 1, Wiii!•~ (EMI l. Gretn I I, Htltl\I: 64 • )J -1. Lldd1, ~El 2. Grover IEI J, Glr1tol• (E)( t1l•nct: 1'.t V -I. H1~1 Ii 2. IU11t11!_. liM) I. McKt ....., tEM), H.ion1: ~ .. - 1. rY (EMJ 1. Dennl1 ~~I olf-1o.14 mr r-"d) l . OltOll , Olllt.flel: SO.I~ ·r· -1. Mewr'I' (EM) 2. Mllr.rd \EM 3. l11rll!u1 llEIA), l)l1l11Ke: 4-1 ... •1t11M:11 CUI tU~•L '°'*u ~Ml 3',·src:r.~, "'·l1Jw,ArJ~""' -, AUIHIClll M) J· llttrM;t; till 1. IC--., I l. T l'M: 15.3 I J. WllMlll Ml. Time: 1 ·~..t -I. K11~r tEl t . .ll1!11n -1. Plk• tl '· 8Ktll!<!llow01' Ml>" 11•.., . Tll!M: 3:41.1 na H -I WlvtlY (EMt 2. Rlcntr•son !EM! a. lloltt tEJ. Time: 11.t 11'0 LH -I. ltldl....tM!n IF.Ml l, $w1vt1¥ (EM) 1 Crvt !El. Time: "' UO lllt111 -I, El Modtnt. T11T11: ~l'"·.!_ I. Cook (EM/ 1. Tr111rw,111 ~Ml l , Kt,,_., EMI ... tllJhr . ~ -I, C"* (EMJ 2. SIOdcf•rll n >. Nt t111re1. oi.1111e1; 11-10 V -I. Ch[111nln ~Ml 2. Gatrtck jl!M l, Nt "i'CI. Ht r: t.4 ,~,P MIJ.. •·,,. T~1.1 litt'tic•~~n• 0 • y• -, ltt~I I M\ J. Medfn1 I 11 l. v1,. Rll•r IEM • OJ11tnc.: CN •11-11 llMI C4Wll •I Mtcltflll YfMl l. J.i "'~"1\•~',~1~•= ~c'.ilor 1~ -1. ~.!'. E 2. B!l'rtmt n ~Ml>I L;'u"r1rz';n IE Tlmt: II ,, -• \turftun ( J /· Btl~m ... M~ ~ It H~tl (t ll\Lll Finl ,If.:.. r1'~t~iei: !fM! 2. tkr"y Mt), lleNrCI (EM), T ITll: l:~'·' H -1. A.dlm1 IE) 2, ....,.._II llM) l. LOYlnttr IEI, Tlt114!: 14.1 U0 11•1•~ -I, flltlKlt. Tln11; ... H~ -1, Conl•t (E) 2. ltlct>trd1 c Ml ), Jenstn tEMJ. Htlftlt: 5-4 l -1. ~d•m• CE/: 2 r:w1nt \ \o 3. MlddeJI Cf"M. b1111nc': •1 -1, St1nltt!W CEMI 2. Combs C Ml). Brown tEM)f.Jktft hr, ~~ S -I. Jovct II 1. Htw!tnd IEMI 3. Homlt"1' Ml. OJl111Kt: ..... ON f~i.. l"J CJl Lit A#ltff 11»-I. Oll'Gn !El 1, Lee11cl4i lf l l. G1n11 IE). TllM: 10,f 116-1. LIC1Kle (El t. Glt1111 !El l . GalVI lfl. Timi : 2•.7 '46-1, Tl,rllnl !El 7. C•9"nt IE.I 3. Gtrnm-11!1, Tl"": l :Jll.S 1m-1. llttd IEJ, ). H*" IEl 3. "-e fEJ, Timi! 3,34_, 120 HH--1. P4JUf !El J. SW- IEI J. Wlkltr (fl. TTl!M: ll.l 121 LK--TI• I« llrtt btfwlefl MfM IEI Ind Ptul IEI J. Wlllltr IE), TlrN; !LO uo Rllt"r-1. EdllOI\. l11M1 1:11.f HJ-I, Troictlt IEI 1. WllMll fn tie IOI' third btt-n l 1rlftldil (IJ tml NtwlWIUM (E). Htl11'>l1 5-4 lJ-1. TroxtU (l!"I f , Gl""1 (I!) ], 0.IRlo !LI. Ollltnct! 17..) PV-1. E~l,dt !El 2. VNrct (I) ~ tl>ltd. Htlol>I: f.O $P-1. JfMlngl (El I , Meln!Yr9 IE) J, Mtrih 11!'1. Ol1lt11Ct: 4l'4 Dl><ut-J. Mclntrrt Ill) 1. Olll'1ol•• Ill l. Dlmtron !LI. OllltnUI 10)~\ll '" 1•11111 (Ml IU Lit A•• 100-1. McP11tr10n (El 2. autl\t~ !El J. Olchtrt !El. Tlmt: 10:7 ll0-1. ll:ut,,.rrotd (I!) t, Mcl"Mf1Cllt IE/ J, Olelltrt !El, T11'M: 1tJ ~I. LlnClrolh (El J. Dt'l'lllltf (El J, ICOJC•~ (LJ. 'Timi: l:U .7 1120--1. y,,._, IEI J. McOtlwM ff) t. Slolr~btrY {E), TI~I J;Jl.7 no LH-1. Goto 1e:1 2. G••I ca 3, John1Clll fEI, Tl""' 1~.r 4411 RN"r-1. EClllen. Hco 11-. HJ-I. G. lrown IE) '· J, lrllW!f IEI I . Nld!of1 IEJ, Htr.hr: J.J LJ-1. G1U !El 2. Mc"lllAon II!) l . G. tllrown tlll, Ol1ftn<li l•J PV-1. Blllhtl (I!:) 1. NIMll fl) 3. Horllldil !LI. litl1hl: M SP-1. 8!11tlow IEl J. Mol'ldo (l!J 3. c_,.,obtll CE), Ol1llr>e:t: ... TAKE A SWISS INTO A DIVE TODAY ., RO LEX 'rhe Role)( Oate·Submarinftr feature$ 30-jewei self~inding 'Swi11 .ch~onometef"'movtment. Rug ged Oyster case gua ranteed to 660 feet•. Eil\/fpped with timHlapsed bezel and date indicator, to get you out of anv dive you're in. On time. W ith stainless steel case and bracelet, $265. With 18 konit gold case an~ braotlet. $1,275. "When ~ ... crown •nd Ct'VIUll ar• int1ct. .....,..Acu.tl """I""' ~ .. ,......, ..... ~ ... M9•ttr O.rte.• .... SLAVICK'S J"-elm SI~ 1917 It FASHIO N ISLAND NEWPO RT BEACH -644.IJIO Optft Mo n. and Fn.1 10 1.m.to·fl :lO p.m. I • l • .• •• .. .. . "~ .. ·. ,. • .... ....... . -.. .. • • • DA.IL Y PILOT Friday, March 5, 1971 ,....._ -· ..... ------.~-.. _, ........ NOTICS 01' I lil'TIOM IM TIIC u.&.11 .,. ICVCIA•ll ,.. ........ ALCOHOLIC' . . . . .. . ' LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ... "" NOTICI! TO Cltl!OITOIS 5Ul'!ll101t COUIT 0 ' THI ST•TI! 0 1" (,i.Ll,Olll•llA ,0111 TH E COUNTY 01' OIANOli Ne. A .... 14 Ellllt of JAMEi E, CltUTCHFtEL~. l>K••Y'<I NOTICE IS HERE!IY GIVEN "' IJM. crtclllOI• ol •hr •blr.lt "''"" '-'"' "''' 111 IMt\OI'• ne~lnt clollms ,,,1 .. 11 thf 1eld cHcfl:l"'nl lrf tMYlr.-1 to Ill• "'"" w llll lht nrc..swr~ \lllY(htrt. 111 tt>e frf!ct of tt>t cle•!. at 1111 ellov• tnlllttO (O<ltl. or to 1uutnl lfltm, "'I"' '""' ,,.ceu1r1 •""'"'''~· 11> ,,,. .,... a~rtlllflt<l •t mt o!llct II! tnrlr atlO,n•V•' COOKSEY, SCHUMAC HER. COLEMAN, MINVARO & HOW•RO, 05 Town lo NOTICW TO CONTllACTOllS C..,n1ry Ro.~, Or'""'' C1lllornl1 tfllU, wMcll 11 !h• plat• or bu,lnf\I ol lllt Stiled P-.lt wlU bt received •I undrrilon.a In 111 "'""'" 1>1•!1tlnm1> ,.,. e>lflc1 ot Ill• Sl•I• Hlt~IY IEntlnHr, lo '"' eSl81t or 1•ld OKM!fftl, wltMn Roorn •• Olvl11Gn of HIO~IYI l!ullcllno, IOU• moMlll 1!1•• '"' llfll 1>ubllt•HOh 120 South S11r!nt Strfll, Lo• Anetl•1, 01 11111 notice. Ctllfornl1, unlll 2 o'clodl p,rn. on M1rcll Ct!tll f ibru•ry ?•. 1911 H. lt11, II whk h llrtw ff'ltv will ~ THE FIR~T NATIONAL ,;iDHc\Y -Md and 'ffd h1 11._.,, 1 o! lllltll( 1114 ~lldlno, for ~lrUCll(w. on St.r~ OF ORllNGE COUNT'!', hl1hw1~ In atcOfiltnc• wllh !I'll apecll!u· 1 ,.~lional l\ln~lll!I 111CKl.i•on. llono lhtrdor1, to ~kh 111«111 rtle•tnce llY: R. E. o,;,.k~orn II m«lf, IJ '9Uow1; ' " Or•-'-"'· In lllod ,..,, CO•!I E•KVIO• ol '"" w II"' M111, beTWMn 1.0 milt 'l(lljlh 1nd me tll<l¥t n•rn<'<I OK..,eoi! o.«nUt nart+i of l rlllot SlrHl-P11!1&dH COOl(Sl!"'I', SCHUMACHIEll , COLEMAN. llOld (01-0r1..SS-J,,/R!l.OI, fre«WIY kl MINY.&RO & HOWAllD •·'91• bt comlructed by 1rMllftt i nd .,..,Int US Tow• &. Count,., llHd <•tTl,.ICATI' OP IUUNDI with _.tiind ce""""I conc:re~ ovff Ort,,.., Clllf. f2w.I LEGAL NonCE "tcTTT1ou1 NAM• u.NM trNltd "'-••· i nd 2 b•ldtn Tel: 54J·Jlll 'l·------:c:::-::=------I TM ulWllr'1ltMd doM cert!"' lilt h hi bt canlfnlet9d. Att..-ntY• fot l'•tcUtot 11 Cllldlldlnt I bv1ll>lin tf m Atnlfol llcts .... .......,1,... "" lhlt enH... PuDll•lll!'d Otl"9f (1)111 •Al. *' W1~. H....,-t ...,~ C111twn1.t, ft"4. work dtutlbtd lltrtln. M1rdl s. 11, lt, 16, 1911 lltOTK& TO ClllOJTGll ...,..,.., '"' nc1111cu firm "'"" of Pllii.. -1ne1Uon1. ""' PfOPOl••l--------------- IUf'•llOI COUltT ·Of' TNI llANCHO CALIFORNIA f'IOf'EllTll!S fa.rrn1 !or Dldcllnt IN• proled can onlv LEGAL NOTICE STAT• 0" CALIPOllNIA IM llwlt 11111 firm h tM!~ of bt obt1ln.-I 11 "'-offlu of the $1attl -----'-'-~~C------- SUNSET LEAGUE WRESTLING CHAMPIONS -left -Doug Roberts, manager, Tom Meyerett, Tim f'Oll TMI COUNTY 0" tl\t followlnt .....-. wh.e n1nw In Hlt~WIY l!ntl-. Public Wort.I e u11c11 ...... OIANll tun Md P'-icl l'I rnldenc. lt ao fol'-': $Kram1t1tD. C1llfotnl1, 111cl m1v ~ '-tCM1' \\'esmin s ler 1-l tgh's l.ions captured the 1971 Sunset ~1ack; Jeff Noon, And y Lass~ Kent Galloway,· "'· A•1Uf s,_,_ c. H-.ina. n1 Am..,_ w.,, -11 11w ot11~ of tnt s11t• Hiohwav cl!11T1,..1cAT1 c,.. 11uuNEs• . I 1· r ) r d M Lar 0 • R' k M t J b s ch l!rt•I• .i MAll.Y FillAMCEt lllOWM, "-'&Nell. C1lll11t11l1 nuo Entl-11 Sacr-to. I nd TIM! Olttrld ,..ICTITIOUS NAME . Leagu e h t e. Knee 1ng r o m e t -Ran y as t e r s. ry vers tree.., JC as ers, o n uter. coa ak• MAAY i<1AHC1:1 w1Lkl'NSON, D••• i<•b.....,., ,,, 1,n IEnelllffB ,, 1..o1 ...,,om •. San Fr1nc15a1, Trie unc!era1vnec1 ooe• c•:•\•v ""' 15 N' 'I E lk' B bo M b 'I J rr C a st ooJ Gen Bob C o ssarek 0.Clliltd. Sflllhtn c. Hol*ln. • ..-""' dlsl•ld In wllldl -work conducll~ I bu1lnn.s 111n II lllvet1•de el JnS, 0 em rl a . e ror~ e. e • NOTICI! IS HElltE•Y GIVEN h 1t!t 111 .. flt CallfDl'n .. Lo. A,,.tl• C111,1nty• b i!luittd Drlw. N•w1>11rl lle•<ll. Calllo..,,11. und•• r~enton. Dan A lmazan . G e ne Lande r s. Standing Jro m cntlltorJ -' tlll 11\oV• llamtd nced9nt On ,.._,.,,..,, '24. 1t71, Defore m.. Tiit o.Nrtl!llftl ol Publlc wortu. In""' ~(llllOU1 llrm ,.,,_ of SURFSIDE: - _:::.c:__:_:::_ __ :::.:::_c_c_c__.:_:::_.:_c_ __ c_ _ _:_ ___ -'O ____________________________________ ltlllt 111 _._.,, h1vl ... d 1l1t11 1e11ntt 1 Hot•,.., l"u.Dllc In and for tald Slflt accordinca wll!I Tit~ \II of lflf Cl'<ll Pll.0,.ESSIONAL 5Ct<OOL5 ind t""t s••d IM ""' ffc..._.,I ... rl'llllttcl h nlt Pt•IOllll"' 1011t1rtd Stwlltn C. HoPkln;, llltllh Act of 19'.I (71 S!1t. 252) 1nd firm II cornDOltd ol tht IOllDWl"f person. Checking Area Golf El Toro The v.·omen 's golf a ssocia· lion at E l Toro g o lr a nd coun- try club staged a three low net of threesome tourna ment recently w ith a te a m com - posed o f ~1 rs. D a v id F itzpa trick, litrs . Joe W ailers and t.1rs. Jam es Ganser win· 111ng with a 22'l. Second plac e wenl to M rs. f:loyd Haxton, t.tr.i. Lee Silva alid Mrs. Lee Meadows wilh 2!5. Third place of 228 went to ~·lrs. Bruce Coote, M rs. Kenneth E a rls a nd t.-trs. William C a uthen. F ourth place we nt lo Mr&. Len Saks. Mrs. Alton Butckle and Mrs. Russell Stoneman wltb a 231. Low net of the month award ~as won by Mrs. Lee Silva wj th a 215. El Nl911el ~!ore than 80 assistant pro. ressiona l g o I f e r s from lbroughout Southe rn California partic ipated in the SoCal-PGA sponsored m onthly tourna- ftle nl al El Niguel C ountr y Club in Laguna N 1 g u e I ~enlly. ~Jerry .Linde ll o f Alondra Park wa! the "'in ner with <a·o ne -under·per 71. ~ Rtclt Divel. El Niguel: T e rry ;iJTlall. Virg inia CC : Bob Swartz, Dia mond Bar : ,Mike K oric h. Brooks ide: and J ac k Gi!mer. Sepulve da cc a u lied for second with 73. ,,Dic k Hall a nd John Mc Namara captured th e partners bes t b a ll tournament recently w ith a net of 61. ~1r. and Mrs . Irwin Ke e .wo n a mixed best ball tourna· meni with a nef of 64. In juries Hit Rustlers CIF Tilts "'""· 'wfth ""' ~•utrv \ltllJCIWI, In •-19 ..,. to bt tlw "'..,. whcltt flll Rttul1tloM ol IM DeP•rlmtnl of Wl\ost 111mt In lull I nd Pii a> •I resldtnce 1119 ciftlCt ti 1111 d •rk l'I IM _.,.. ,..,.,,.. 11 a•ibKl'lbMI ID lf\l Within In· Commerce (15 C.F.ll ., Plrl l l. l<1Ued ls I> followi: enllllld Cltllrt, el" hi 'r"-them, with JIQlll'ltlll lllO •cknowlldtld iw ••Klrltd puriu1nl ta lllCh Ad, llerebY natll!M Ligia M Bullier. 1634 Sk.,llfk Lin•, 1111 MCMll,.,, Y1Udl1r1, !ti Ill• flll llllW. 1U blddtl') ff'llf II will iHlrmlliYtlv Newport lltacM. Ctlllor~!•. undtnl1flld 11 thl otflct l'I hlt'Atttml'J': (0,FICIAL Sl!ALl lnw re ff'11! ""' ((lnlr&cl 1nterl!'d lnlo Daltll February 10. 19n JOSl'H I. AHCEllSON, ... N. Ml\n Frink C. Hlllltsmt" Po<nulnt to 11111 tdvtrt!ttlMnl will ~ Llt ll M. lluhlet $1., Sulla '°2, Santi AM, C1Hlornl1, Noter~ Publle<1lllornll aw•rd~ to t~ 1Dwt1l rtsPOnSlble bidder Stale cl California. Oran~• Countv: w~kh 11 tllt 1l1c. l'I bv1lnn1 l'I Ille Prl>W:IN1 Ofllcl In wlthltllt t1lsc1lmln1tlon on lht oround On Ft br11arv IG, 1911. b'lcre m•. undertllnacl In 111 1N1tltr1 P¥11!n!,,. LDll Antlln coun"' of rac1, color, or 11111onil orloln, 1 Not~rv Public In 1nd. !or 1~ld S!~tt, to th• 111111 ,, •• i. cltctdt"t· wlthlft M~ C9mmlulon I MOlfltl Minimum Wlttt r1t11 tor 11111 prcled 11e•son1lly IPPfl'"d L•AI• M. l ulltot lour month• 1tt11" !ht fin! 1t11DllC1lltft Aui . n. 1tn 1, or&dtltrmlned bY the Sttrth..,. of known lo me !o be tne H rJOn wno1• cl 111\t flDllc:t. T·1l'24 Labor art l tl for111 In 11\t sPKial nam. It subscribed lo lllt wlH•ln ,,.. D1ttd ,llltr111ry )2, 1971 Publlshed Oni"'I CDIJt 0111~ ,.llDl provltloru. If there k 1 difference llrumenl 1nlt &cknowleitg~ ~l>t t~ecuted Tllomao D •• ,....,. Mirth J, 12, If, 26, 1'71 4M-n IMlwHn tht minimum w1ge rites !ht s1me. LON C l!llKlrlDr orldetttmlntd bv TIM! Ster~.,., of Llbor (OFFICIAL SE-'L) For Cage Playoff Tilt Tonight Hy CRAIG SllEFF 01 m. Dan, ,11o1 s1111 G olden West College 's basketball team, c rippled by injury and illness and d isturb- ed over a sudde n c ha nge of events in the regional pair- ings. hopes to regr oup in time for Saturday night's title with Compton College. 'Fhe match is set !o r R io Hondo College at 8. Coa ch Dick Strick Ii n 's South ern C a Ii for n ia Con · ference c h ampion s have been h a rd hil b y a series of ailments th e past two weeks \'fith the situation being c om- pounded Tuesday nighl w he n the Rustlers learned they were to face Compton -not Barstow-in the playoffs. Four of the Rustlers origina l five starte r s have been h it by inj ury or illness. T he lis t includes: forward Brian Ambrozic h (str ained knee I: guard R ick Ba rnes rmono nuc leosisl: forwa rd J im Anderson (painful tooth); and center tit ark Dekke r f jammed U!.umbl. All-league To Kniffin Rick Kniffin of Maler Del H igh Sfhool w as accorded fir s t te am All·Ang elus Le a g u e bas ke tball honors as selected by the c ircuit coac hes. All·A-lu1 Ltttut l'lrtl Ttllll Htllhl CllU 6-J J•. 6·3 Jf. 6-J Jr. b·l Jr. •-t Sr. •·I 5r. ~.J Sr. '-0 Sr. 6.tl S•. ~-6 Sr. Ambrozich, s idelined the past two weeks, will start. But a cc o rding to Stricklin, the Rustler s ' top rebounder still is limited on his movement and jumping ability. •·He is impro\ling every day, but bec ause he is taped up so much he is r es tricted. "R ick (Ba rnes ) is definitely out with mononucleosis and this hurts u s more than a lot of peoplt realize. He wiJJ be very h ard to replace. We w on the championship playing as a te am and in two games without him, we have nol played togethe r .'' Ander s on, the team's third leading scorer with a 17.0 average, is c u lling a wisdom tooth and it's coming in wro ng. "He needs oral s urgery but he's going to wail until afte r the p layoffs. Right now he's in constant pain," says St ricklin. Dekker, the 6-10 frestunan, may have a bone chip in h is right thumb but that's not certain yet. And reserve guard Curt Carlson. wbo slarted against the conference all- s l.ars. has been out a ll week with flu. Thus Stricklin is uncertain of a starting lineup. One thing is for sure -the Rustlers' le ading score r ( Ch r i s Thompson) is healthy, S lricklln ls not disappointed in playing Compton but be is d issatis fied v.·ilh the sudden c ha nge in opponents. "When \\.'e played lhe all· star game v;e ran against Barstow 's offense and defense. And we also "'orked two days this week g e tting ready for B a rstow. Then all of a suddeo we're play ing Compton. G BEA H -The CIJI' .i 111'1 Wiii .i t11t 1brlf LEGAL NOTICE ancl th• pr1~1lllnt w111 ri tes det1rmlned R~ tt. C111tH\ ,. ,. ball r1· N1mld dKHtnl by the Oeo1rlm1nl pj Public Work• Nolarv Public. Catltorn•t 1\.1\l'LI\ basket quarte 111als JOISPM 1. ANDllllON. tor 11m111r c1111111callon• c1 labor, 111e Pr+nc1011 0111c1 In to . 'th ... N. M•lfl 11., 111111 ..S llWIOLUTION IN. 71•14 Contractor i nd his 111bcon!raclort 1hill O''""'' Count~ get Under Way night Wl S1lll1 A111, C1'"""'la. A ••SOLUTION Of' TMW CITY COUM· HY not l1tH thin the hltllt!r Wale MY Comml,.lo.1 E~Pirfl . • Tth 1MJ"441• CIL 0, TM• Cl'f'Y 0, COITA MISA, r&Jt S!'Pt u 1971 8 pair o f confronUfbons at Atlw111• fw W•tntlr CAllllOllNIA, O•CU.lllHO ITS IN· ,~rw1nl to SKlleft 1110 o1 ~ L1 bor PuD11sl'led • or,"lle (OUI 01llf Pll~ Lo Publl~ Or1nn GMll 01lhr ,llDI TWNTION TO OltD•ll TMW VACATION CoOt, the 0-rtmenl 1111 l $tt rl•lned F.i>ru,rv U, lt, l• 1nd M1rch 5. ng Beach Arena. ,.. ...... ,.., '' 11141 Mardi s. 12. lt , o, AIGNT O, WAY AT TNI 1111 1en1r1t Prt v1rn.., r111 01 waoe• un Jlt·n ltn 441.71 IOUTMWl!ST COflNll O" MAlllOll In Ille countf In whldl lM _,Ii 1,JC-------------'-- Qr ange County represen-::.r.~ . .uo AND '0 " D • • 0 ' A ta Dt c1ont, '° Dt 1s 11.1eo1 in '"' LEGAL NOTICE tative ~rvite, runnerup in the LEGAL NOTICE n.. c 1"' Council o1 111e Cit¥ c1 D•irt,,..nt "" Publlt Worio. Dlw!slcnl-------------- 1----=,..,,,_==,-"°=---·lc.t' M-. ... he -w '"°"" llf Hltl\WI~• Pllbllf•llon en!llled Eoulp.. P~OOJ Angelus League, collides with fDllOWI' r ••• """" •1111•1 llll'tl And GeMr•I Pl'evi il-CEITl,..ICATE 0,.. eustNl!"SS. CITY OP COSTA Mn• SECTION , 'nit Cit¥ Councll "' the Int w ..... ,.,, d•l!CI ,..Klru1ry. Jtn, FICTITIOUS MAME No. 2 seeded a nd undefeated OllAHO• COUNTY, Ull,OANIA CllY ., Cort•' Mtilll -herlbf dKt1rt Dtltd Ftbrlll '"I 1, lt71 The undtrsloMd dots ct1tl1Y ... ~ NOTICS IN\llTINO 1101 1'-lnt1t1tlon to Vtt llt lllDll ct<ll!n OEPAllTMIENT OF cOnductlno t bu1ln•11 at '.IOI~ ~ODtlawn Cre,scenta Valley in the 9 NOTl(i! IS H£•1•V 01\llE M ""' rltlth"' WI¥ for ., .... , ~,,_, dt1crlb-PUBLIC WOlllCS Ln., Hunllr>aton l!Ncll. Ctll!Ornl•. wl'll•~ stlllld ,,_1111 Wiii lie ra<tlvld 11¥ td II folklwl· DIVISION OF HIGHWAYS !~o fodl!louJ llrm neme ol 11. J. l N- O'CJOCk wrapup after T orrance ,,.. Cllf cl '°"' M ... I I "'' offlC<O AbtMon "''' 11nd Clllfl"l!lld within J. A. LEGARRA TERIO ltS ltrld lfttt ••kl u .... !1 comPDle<! and La S J h I 7 30 cl !ht Cl"' ClerlC at ""' Cttv H11I, "'-follDwlnt 61ttcrlplleft• Sltlt Hlv~•Y Entlllf'l!r DI lh• follGW/n~ Hnon, wtlo1t n1mt erna C 3S a ; • 11 Fii~ C>rlYf, Cotti Mall, C1H'-r!IA, lttlnnl"' ii 1 ,.01nt i i the 1n· ,.~bll1htd 0.1nH C<111! DlllY Piiot, tn luH and place al Ntldtnc1 It ,, The b ] f th AAAA 11nlll tlll t1911~ of 11 :00 1.m. "' Tl.11$c11v, Mri«flon el Ill• c1t11tirll111t "' Harbor FtbrU•fY 2' 1nd MM'dl s, 1'11 370.71 10110w., a ance 0 e Mirth lO. lf11, II whfdl fll!W 11\ey flOul1Y1rd 120.00 1 .. 1 Wlfll I nd Pon. Rudy J. Tro•Clllt, 10161 Hooe!~WI quanerfinals resumes Satur-wrn ti. """""' ,;ibllclY •nd ,_. •IOvd c11ro11 strNt 60.oo IHI; th.,•c• wuttr· LEGAL NOTICE Ln .. ttunllntton 11e1th. • . In tllt Countll Ch1mlMt1 fpr 1~ i lOfl• 1111 c_.,lt •llM ot P~rotl O~!td Ftb. 11, 1911 day night With No. J seeded ' U It N I I H I N G A L L LA I 0 It • Strffl 1 dltt1nct o1 111 00 1 .. 1. lt11•1Ct NOTICE O" ,UILIC Ml!AlllHG Rudy J. Tro•cl&ir V b . . MATl!l1ALS , f!:QUl,MeNT , S .. , ''' . ' ' < •t' 0 C er um De! meeting Warren ........ , •• TION AND SUCH OTHEll OU rY Plrl. with the' ctnltrl nt •• ,..Otl! THE CITV COUNCIL OF ~ta!e c ~1 !ornl1. r1<10• ovnly: • • • of Harbor flcut1v1rcl 1 dlllll'ICI of TME CITY O" 'OUNTAIN VALLIE'!' On Ftbrvf•Y 11, 1911. ~lort ,,,,, (7:30) and M O r n l n g S j de FACILITIES AS MAV II! lll!:QUIRl!O ~.00 fett to 1 pplnt on 1111 Southlr.., NOT1CI! 11 HEREBY GIVEN THAT • Notary Publlc In 1"'d lor Hid 5t1tt, • FOJI; THE CON~TIUCTION 0 'F lint cl ,ondt,.,.. Strlll p ld pain! on Tuetd&y Mtrch 16 1971 t i ~rion1llY 1oot~re<! Rudy J. lr,,.cl&l, matched with Pasadena (9). MASONIV WALU AND GAT l!S AT bt!lll ff'I• true ,01n1 of blolnn1111 1 1·00 p M 1~ 1111 counc1i Ch1mbers k""w" to ,,.., to be lht oerion who•• Orange Coast College is the TYEWINKLI! I" A• k MAINTIENANCE ttltft« 1lono 1 11..... r" n n 1 n • c'uy Hiit.' 1c200 Sliter Avenue. Founl•I~ n•mt 11 1ub.crlbed 10 !hf wl!Mn 1 ... • 1 • AllD, • Soulllet1ter!v to I oolnl on th• W11lt rlv V1tt1v. C11lfcrn!1, lhe (!"' Council will •lrument i nd 1c~nowled9rd h1 e~ecu1ed site of Saturday s noon tele v1s-A 111 ot .,11n1, •!,•clt!c111-., l!' ... d 11111 ot H1rbor t1oul1Y1rc1 11ld PD!nt llold 1 11t1bllc M1r1n1 on !Ill! 1o11ow1..,. 111• uime. d (ch ) .) AAA othlr CDlllfld dOcumt ml m1r ~ Dltn1 JO.llO 1111'1 from Ille Ct Mltr1!111 1. A,..111ft ,l11111int C°"'ml11lon A(tlon (OFFICIAL SEALt e anne game tllntd II tlll ollltl of th& Cl"' Cl1.rk, ol ,ondtro11 Strttl; llltnct Norllltrly tetl1'1:11"9 Zone (hantt 131, Prtcl•e JE.O.N L. JOl!S T between Katella and [)oJ 11 Fair Crlvt. COlll Mn1. C1lllornli, tlon9 .. kl Wnl1rl~ lint 1 dl1!1nct Plan 111 bY G.l.A. Development lllot1rv Public · C•l1!or<1lt u_, I cit-II of Sl!J.00. A c.lllrte flt J.00 feet 10 fll• ~lnnlnt ol 1 Company. Loct!ed $011thw••I corrotr Prlndo&I Ot!lct tn Pueblos of Goleta. llf 11 .00 will bt m1de If ll1nd11d 11¥ cuNtd 11111 h1v!nt A r1cllus of 11.00 of L1 Al1me<11 end 11rDC1ch11t1!. Or1ntt County K.tell. 'torm.d to th. mtll. PLEASE MAIL SE ,. A It ATE fHI CDMIW SPYt~wt1l1r1Y1 lhenc'" 1. A.C AtchttKl11t1I C1ntrll OnrllY MY Comrnl•11on E•DOf"1 CHl!CK,. 110,,. 111d curvld tlnt to 1 PDlnt ?1111 T~!1 A·( Archllectvr•! March 7. lt11 Crestview League title and Etch Did Wll DI mid• 11'1 111• •r,-,1 .., the Soutl\tt'ly nn1 of 1'oncl1ro11 Control Dve•l•Y Zent would be •Polled Pvbll•~d Ora~ve C~)I Oil·I~ r 1101 , f llfm lild in tht m1n111r 1rov! Id n Slttel 11ld pplnl btl"I n.OO IHI DYtr It 13l0' Wid t ccrridor I~ FebfUI N 1l, 19, 16 ltlO MlfC~ !, ha!l since knocked O ( Charter 11\t conlr1ct don11·J11nl1, i nd 111111 b9 Wtfl••IY '"""' 1111 n nllrllne ar Htrbor llrODkhutsl lrom the nor!~ Cl"' Llmll• 1t11 oll·ll Oak 1 ~ 74) No 3 seeded Los ~nlld bv • certtt!ld ., ci.tiir, 1 floultv1rc1: ff'ltnc1 wnttrl r 1I01111 t1lcl LJ,,., to tht 1<1ulh cnv Limits Lint ; 1------------:C.-- ;i;r • • dlKtt or I llkl bond ltlr nDI ltU $0Ulllerlv ".,. 10 t d!ihn« ol J.00 1 1320' wide ~rldo• alont 511!e• LEGAL NOTICE ~00 di(67-M(~)and SI n ::;;," m~O:: ~.:' ,.• ;;.•~1~1 ,,°',= ~~ "~:~~Ult ,,:}nt to cl ~~Int.. :re;=~~~ i! :~~~; '!°'nd w:•\~1-------F-;;n------- mar TIO · Mts1. t trt of Lei S. 1!1ocll F ol F1l.,,lew wldt> ci:irrldor alono Wirnlr trorn ,..ICl'ITIOU' 11 US I N f SS N.&Me The other half of the AAA NOTI CE IS ,..UllTHElt GIVEN thll •• "'°""' "" • mt, 11\ereot •ecorclK lht west (lly Llmltt Line ID the ST.&TE MIENl • • • 111oe Cl"' Counc:ll of 11id CllY 1111 In &DOk 2,. 1attS '' 1nd ts ot 11sl Cltv Limit• line, seuuf1nals will take place h1<1tofo<• 1st1blltllld • ,, .... ,m,. rltt Mlu:tlllF1tOU• MIP•· r..cordi ;t Los 1. &wll'IM Llllt Atofttt uouth SIOt :114! toHowlr>a Ptr:wn " doontt t •1°n•>1 • h S) t R' ff do 11111 Ki it llf """"' In 1ccor,1nct with An"ltt Counl'I' ti W•,...r •v-_ Propose! to IS. ton1g t ( a 10 on law, hi bt .. Id In "" can1ffucllon SECTION 2. 'MDnd•V· "'' SH'I di~ I Jl1Dll1h • bullet!"' H!hlc• lln1 IC' ROllEll.T GREIG e. ASSOCIA11E5. 00! College between Righetti and llf ""' t bow tnlllltd lmP,.._,,llJ'!I. cl .... ,u. ltn. ,, Ill• llo<lr of J:XI .ou•~ al "" 11lllmltt toVlh rloM C1mous Drive. Sul!I 661. Nt .. DOtl B@tcn. • • Tiii! 11ld r1t1 •M Kiie Wl l ldOPttcl p.m.. In lh• Council Chtmbt• I I lfl.t of WIY u.... tor Wt rne• AY•nue C11Uorn1•. . giant killer Bellflower. by 1111 CllY Council b¥ ll.nolutlon NI, c,,.p, Miu Ci"' t<tll. 11 Fair Orlwt , trem E11Clld lo tho S1nt• A"' River, Robert N Gr•la, 1a1n s1n11 Anl SoCal Nine In 8-2 Win RIVERSIDE Dick ,.11, on thl 1hl div of O.C1mbtr. Cotllt Ml$l, C1llfarrtl1, (1 herMIY fl~&d TM norlh 25' of !his 60" wide Av~ue, Sln!t An• 1'1'0, Ind 11 on fllot In "-offk• II ~ time Ind OllCI fer ..... int .... rd Would be tl!ltl'Vtd "" De1\fllflc•· Th•• bu11neH I> Mont CO...,llCl'rd by cl TM CllY Citric 91' Mid CllY. TI11t all iertan• lnffrnltd In er ebltcllng llon •• 1 scenic ca'riclDI' t klna II\ lndlvldu1! u ld rtl• 111d .c1le 11 Mrt ln rife,,... te the or-Id vacallorl Warner A11111ve. Robert N. GrP •O lo tnd .ciooltd tti 11111 llClllCI U "'°"911 SECTION !. T~t C.llY M1n1atr al 4. f''°'OSld lndutlrlll ll"lllllltn1 -Publlsl\ed O'~na• (QJJ•I Otilv Polo! full'!' 1nd corn•ltltlY otl torlll lltrtln, tfll Cl"' cl Cost1 Ml'll It ht r1tno 'rooo.11 lat ntw compr-n.lvt Ml Fet1,111rv· 12, n . 26, •nd M1rc11 i, lfll ind thll u lcl Kilt. I S 1bltd 11¥ cllrttltd ID cause not!c•1 of II" u ld Zonlnt Ord!n1nce to rtP!tce tne P•· J1S.71 i11d lnolullDll, 11 m1d• I 01r1 of PfOOOffd v1c1t!on to bt cl>f\MllcUO...a1Y l!llnt reoul1llon1 contained In Ch•c!er thlt notice 1w rtftr1t1n. '°''" 1!-11td 1lrlp of l1nd 11>1' 21.«I of the Founttln V•llev M11nlcio>1I LEGAL NOTICE Thi Contr1tlor 11'1111, In lhO 11 11111 fin (10) lllYS btlor1 lilt dtlt Codt. ~ 111trform1nc1 al ff'll work i nd Im· of 11lcl he1,l11t. S1ld F10!lce1 sfl1ll ~ Th,1e m•lltf\ ire bel"' 11rcceso!lt'l---------------- oNtVJmenl1, conform lo Iii• Ltl>Dr Cod• paal&d net more thin t~rH hundred e11r1u1nt to lht Pl1nnlng Lews ol Ille P·•~ll DI lht . Stilt of C1 Ulotnl1 Ind tllllr !JIXll hit! IPtrt, but In F10 event •hall 511!1 ol C1llfcrnl1 (Gov'!, Code 6S.000 CERTIFICATIE 01' l!USINIESS llWI DI "''" Stilt tr! C1nfornl1 1ppllclblt 1111 !111n !hrtt (ll nolltel ~ POtltd. at Htl.1 9nd tht Foun1aln V1 llev Zon<no FICTITIOUS NAMIE 1111,..1c, wlth !ht t•notlon onlV of 5ECT10N 4. Thi• •euilutlon shill bf Ol'tdln1nce. The Zoning 0 '111n1nce. Zon1"' Tht UP'Mlt.rtloneit do Cff!llY lh•~ ,,.. wtl'I v1rl1llona is mtV lie retiulrllel •ubllthtd onc1 lh th1 Or1n91 Co.st M1111, •nd E.ohlblls are on Ill• in conauclltta 1 butlnen a! 11111 ll•ocll~urt~ Ufldtr "'' IPICll l 1l1lllln ,ur1u1nt la C1l1Y PllDI, 1 new111111er ol ltMrll !tie Plennlnt Ot!oartmen! and ere SI., Fountain vallt•. C•lllorn1i, under wll!ch 11f0Cffdlnl1 l\tflNndlr 1rt l1k1t1 clrcul1llD11 1rlnltd ln fl\1 C!"' of Cosll av1ll1ble for PUbtlc lnsoK!lon end et· 1114! flctUl<lUt firm name cl THE FLYING 1nd whlc~. ll1Ye nol bttn 1u11trllldtd Mn1, Ccun"' of Or111t1, S!1lt ol 1mlnat1Gn. BARON 11•d lhl! 1•ld !lrm 11 co>rnooi•d by the i NtVftlonl ol lf'lt Ltbor Code. C1!1fornl1, Tho1e deslrlnt lo tettilY In lavor of the follcwlng Pe'!on1. who~ nftm•• l'rl ttrtf'ICt lo llbqr 11\< bf t lVl'll _,iy ,ASSEO AND AOOl'TED thll 111 41Y er ln DPDOllllon lo t~ pr-ui!t will 111 t•Jll ind Place ot rnloen<e irt at In !!It m1n..., 1rovlcl&d by l1w. DI M1rt~, lm. bt t lY1tn 1n ODPOtlunltv la do 1<1. to!!c..,-No bid .i.tH bt can1!d1rfd urolass llOBEllT M, WILSON If !Ufl~tr lnlorm•llan It desired. "11U Mallhl!W p ind Mtrlht H L d 11 ii ma<11 C111 • blink form f\lrnltlltd MA'l'Oll 01' THI! CITY m1v ton11CI 11\t PlaMlnt C~atl,..,t<1! 9•16 El Ville. Av•, Founti•n v11::.."" ' Orange League "'Tha t has to be disap. poin ting to me. We s pent time getting the kids mentally p repare d for Bars tow and here "'e are preparing for another team .'' Si.,.ertsen and Tom Higgin!! didn't allow an earned run and Ted Harper (3-for-5) drove in five to lead Southern California College of Costa Mesa to its first victory Thursday over host California Baptist College. 8-2. Harper hsd a pair of doubles and a single while Randy b' Iha C!"' tr! C•ll Mft1, I nd 11 OF COSTA MES.A 11 961·2'2( Ind refer to 1114! tboYe Oi led Jan. 1!, l~ll . midi In 1c_.i1nc1 with Ille pr""1tlens AnEST: II.mt. Matll>ew p Lron1td o1 lhl pr_..I rt1t11lrtm"111. IE ILEIEN '· ,HINNEY CITY COUNCIL OF THE Mirllll H, Ll'Qnara l!lch b16dtf' muot be lklnstcl and Cl"' Cltrt of the CITV OF FOU NTAI N VALLEY Stile of CalU0<11!1, Orantt Coun .... · 11.., pr .. u11illtd It ... ulrld by l1w, CITY Of' COSTA MIESA Cl"' Cler~ On Ftbrut"' 11. 1911 bPlatt m• Tlllt Cttv Ccuncll Of Ille Cl"' of STATE 0" CALIFORNIA M1tJ' IE. Colt • Nat1rv Public In and tor 1tld St•!t: C.a•on• o•t Ml• C.e!tl .Yt•I Ed•...,. Lt=1 A!am!IO! "W19"Dll1 Founl•i" V1Uev Eu•nc11 Sa. V1tle• Ed•!Ol~ Ln Al1ml101 r.,,,M~ln Y11lf> (Gron1 d•I /11r Moone!!• (11,)1• Mt•f ~l•"C IO SA Vl!ltY Wrtl!l•~t YJrtltY Fou!lfaln VtlleY Ett1nc•1 Cotti MIH ""'" Coron• aet Me. M1ttnoll1 LOJ AlMTlt!Oo SA V•ll'• w ' ' • • ' ' • • w " ' • • • ' ' ' w " " '" • • w " " • • ; • ' w ' • s ' , ' • 0 ' • ' ' ' ' ' • • ' ' ' • • • ' ,, " ' ' ' • • • " " .. ' ' • s ' • ' " " ' • ' l • ' • ' T • ' i ' • ' 0 SPf>llrl V1ltnci1 Orll>ll Lff"'I 111111111111 .111";" v1r1i•• IEI Oor•do Std!lltl>IC~ Lavuna lltlC~ I!••• \111on(!1 II rel Laguna Befell El Co•a~o Soroo•• S1ddleb1c• $oll0•• ''" Et Da•&llO V11tntl1t laoun1 lle1c~ ~1Ctdl1t11Ck ~Ofl s.cl!lleblc~ V1le!'ICl1 EJ Dor.ao ll•e• Vtiffttll 510dl1W(); s-·• El Dorado ''" 111•etb1ll .l"1t:Mt Ltll MI fl'i~•ll J""kot VtrtllY w • ' ' • ' ' w w • • ' w ' ' ' ' ' ' ' , , • • • > • ' Cage All.stars .&ll·S&uHI Cull Canl1r•11Ct "lrll Tffm ,.llvtr Ctll111t ... ••• .. , .. , ~ "· ... ... "· .. FOPma, Ctrrl!o1 Sc;llldl" SC Mtu MtLemore. San 0 111/0 Cllldl,~. Fuller!cn Cr1l9, Cttrl!ot S·ll Sg, s1c•r.cl r,,.,. Ct'>OOn. Ml, Sin An!Dl!oO 6·1 So. Abtrta;. Fullerton S.!! Fr. Elllt, cerr1101 H So. G1ll1Q111r. SO M''-4·1 So. ll•rt. F11llf!l'IDn f·! SD, Mn! yal111ble o>\1ver-Foom1. Co.ell ol V••r-Jlm l(Ullntl_.th !Ctu!toJ), Costl MIM ''''"'" tht .1,111 !'(! ••IKI COUNTY OF DllANGE I}, Publl11>td or-• Coast Da•tY Pilot, oen.on•llY •PP••rf'<I Ml!lllfW p l...,,ara 1nv or •II bids. ('ITV OF COSTA MESA MlfCll s. lt n .U.71 Ind M4rlhl H. Leonffa -nown lo .... 01Nid: Merell 1, 1971 I, EILEEN '· PNtNNE'I', Ctw Cllrll ID be Ille 1>trtcn1 "'"°~" ...im•1 1•1 IV OllDEll. OF THE .CllY ot ll1oe Citv of Cnlt Me11, i nd tx-ofllcla LEGAL NOTICE wbscr!hed !o the w•tMln 1n11tumenl 1nd Anderson v.·as 2 -f.o r -4 . Sivertsen, H a r p e r and COUNCIL OF THIE CITY OF Cltrk of the Cl"' Counc11 al 1111 C•tv 1e~r.ow~1ed !l>tY t~Kutto Int 1emt , COSTA Ml!SA. CAL!FOfllNIA ol Cost• Me11. ll•rtby ctrllly lt\1! COSTA MISA SANIT.All'I' DISTlllCT {OFFICIAL SEAL) Anderson aJI played basketball and reported late. E lll!IN P. ,HINNl!'I'. 1111 l bolll •fld toreool"' lluo!lrllorl No. OllAHGI COUNTY, c.-LIFOfllNIA Jun L Jobs! CITY CLE•K OF THE CITY n ·l l, WI' duly and r111ularlv PIH.ii NOTICE INVITING •tD'S Nolarv PuD!!c . C1 h•ornl• 0 " COST A Ml!"SA, CALIFORNIA tfld 1dODll!d by the Cl"' Council "' HOTl(E IS HEREBY GIVEN tll•t l'rlnclp•I Ollitf tn "'" Bo1ti1e. H H't"ccck. '' Hl;t lnt, lo.Jo $1vtrl•en. P·1b t11rper, d 01Jund. c Anc11rso11, Ji Rlngneu, lb Trenton. 2D Jolln•on. 3b c11-.. Ctt •• ' ' • ' ' ' ' • • ' , • ' • • 0 ' . ' 0 Totals • • Sc.rt h 111nJn11 Publlthtd Or1,,.1 Cusl Cally 'llot 1111 Cltv of Cosl1 Mil•• •I I r11ular ~11ltd o•OOOl•h will De re<:•lved bY 011na1 CC11ntv ~ rtol Mt rclt 5, 1e, lt71 ., .. n mHll"' Plllcl on !ht h i d•Y of M1rch. !Flit C!lv Cltr~. on De~all o! the CO•!• My Commission E•D""' l 0 1'71. MIH S1111t1rY Ol1!rh;1, I I ner cfllc• Mi re/I 2. 191l O 0 LEGAL NOTICE IN WITNESS WHE•EOF, I h1v• In l~t Clly Hall, 11 Ftlr Drive, Costa PuDllJ/lfd O••n9e Coil! D1fly "11111, 1 t h1rtvn1, ttl mv l'l•nd &/Id 1fll•td lllt Mffl. Cilllornil , un•U Ille flour of 11:00 Fet>ru1•V 11. 11. 1,, & Merell S, 1111 2 O Sell 11' lllt Cll'I' DI C1>al1 Mna, lh\t 1.m, on tht 1r.cl diy of Ao>rlt, 1971. JH-11 l 5 RllOlUTION NO. 71·11 lne dlY of M1rch. 1t11. 1t whlcll !lme tn•Y wll! !>! ODtned !----,..,,---------~ I o A llllOLVTIOM 0' TN ll CfTY e.oulf. EILEEN P, f'f.tlN,.E'I' Pub!lcly and reed •loud In 111, council L'EGAL NOTICE 7 1 CIL 01' TMI CITY 01' COSTA MISA, Cl"' Cl1fk Ind ••.offle!o c~1mbet1 !or FU RNISHING ALL LABOR I 1 CALllOINIA, DICLAlllH• ITS IN· Clerk DI 1111 City Council f1f AND MATERIALS FOR THE CON ·l-------,,.,=,------ 0 0 TWHTION TO 011011t TMI! \IACATION !ht Cl"' DI (Diii Mui 5TIUCTION OF SANITARY" SEWER P·•OJOJ f O 0, A P'O&TIOH OP LO'!' tt, ,AllVIN Publlall.i! Or1not COlll Diii¥ Piiot MAJ,. IN NA TIONAL A\IENUE, OAK CERTIFICATIE OF llUStNEIS 11 I ,AllMI, LOCATID ON MAll&Oa Mir~ S, 1t11 lt1·71 STfllEET .&ND FEO EllAL AVENUE FOR ,..ICTITIOUS N ... ME &OULIVAllD PllESIOE NT PUMPING STAT IO,., TM undersi11ned dot'! terlltv ht 11 ••. ,,__ ,·_,,,.,. " ·-,,_ LEGAL NOTICE canctvcli ..... I bu1ln••· •• Ml r . !1tn. """ ,. _ • .,. ,,.. " of A 1et of plans. 1ptclfk •rlon• •nO SI,, (ast1 Mesa, C1lilornla, 9761~ ... ~. ' . . So (II CoTl99f O!I 003 '.101-1 11 J (1111. 861>1111 000 (110 010..-2 ' 0 Cot!• M1151 -oci ~relW rtl&lff 11 01h1r conlr1d clocllme~ls mev II! ob< "'"'T' rollOWI: ,451 fllned 11 the off!ce of Ille Cl"' Clerk l~e ilct11fou1 firm n•me of OONA'S SECTIO• •. Tht Cl ... C-•ncll of !M u_, I cltOOlll of 11$.DCI. A thlt<•t tnd thlt said firm II ccmoos!'ll ol ... • " -ClltTll'ICATW OP IUSINll l S 0C Ill be I Ille lo!lowlnl 1>er...,., w1><11o lllmt In • • Cltv of (Mii MtM ~ ..... ibY dtel1r1 P'ICTITIOUS HA.Ml! ol 1. w ml!le I htnd1ed lw lull l!ld alice of fMIOtnct 1, ~I lollowi· Ill ln!f!'llllOft It YICt lt lllDW certain The \lndtrlllned doet c1rllfv ~e 11 rntlt, PLEASE MAIL S IE p A A A T E Edwird J. P•mtr.' 11'11 lltiOlllll • Mtllb al WI ¥ !tr slrttl Plltl>DteS d•K rlb-cDncluctlnt I bullnttt 1t 210l''t W CHl!CK5. Or .. El Toro. Cetl!ornl1, t7UO. L. ld M folloWI: CktlJI ,..ronl. Ni!WPDrt lt•ch, C1lltornl1: E.cll bid •h•tl be m""'"" ll'>e prDOOMll Oet..:t ~tl>ruarv 10, lt71 •• • A Potllon ol !llt """" lj ttet undtr "'' llctltlOUI firm n1m1 of AUNT form I nd In ""' "'"'""' fOfOYlile!I In EOw•rO J , P11m .. ol tht ••II 2SO IM• of !hi north MAfll.THA'S ICE CllEAM PAil.LOil 1nd tht contlt l clccumenh, ancl S~lll ~ State o1 Cilllor"ll. Or1nor Coun!Y ', • J l trn DI th' IMJ!h ' Kfff llf "'-' llld f!rm 11 corn11•Hld ., tilt ICC""1P1nle<1 ...... C"'l!lild or <t•hl•r'• On Ft bru1rv ID. 1911. ooto•• ..... ..II ... ~-lo Lot )f, F1lrvl-F1rm1, In ""' Clty follow!"' ""°"' wfooH 111me In full dltcli "' 1 bid bond for not leu 1 NOl••Y Pu~hc ln •"" !or ,.,d ~•alo • ,...... fff Cosl1 Mtu, M "'°"'" lft I m11 11'1' 111~ 11 ,_11dlftct Is 11 '9llow1· lll1n IG .. <>l tht tmounl of lllp bid II Machine 4 Drum• 1111r..,t racDf"dM tti llotlt I, ,..., J11n11 • Wtllict 15JllO 'Tualin ml!lt 01v1ble ta "'' CCKll Mna 51n!11...: :'r"'"',: •<>0•11'""., E,~wa•it J Pi.,,•r t -.1 21 fl d flt 0 C .., \I .N 1t T '' ( llloml District """"n me o .,. Olt\on WlloJt ',. 0¥ffh•ul 4 '#Mel Cy lnt1erl SE,CT"•oM• '> . .!~!w. """ ... "· 5"1 Dll•'",.',w,.1v o.171.~nln, • '· NOTti:E 15 FURTHER GIVEN lllal ntm• fs •utncrlt>IG lo 1"• W•'•·~ ...... M.' U-'.-' -'. ' ,....._ , ••r • Nl'"I , ... ' 0 , 0 lntlrumenl 1nd -c~nowlfdgpa ~t ''''"''' '• • I ft II cl Aarll, 1'71, l l the lllur ot 1:31 J1mH It. WtlllCI rnt Oflr o lrKtor1 ot !Ill' Ca~llt ine ._....,. ''""" In tht C.uncll CllltmHr at 1111 $1111 of C1UIOrl'lll , Orange Countv: Mn1 Sfn!ti<y Ok!rkl !'111 ~rt!Clore (OFFICIAL SEAL) , • Cttt• Mt!l.I Cl"' Hi ll. 11 Fl lr C•Mr. o" Ftbrv1rv 17, 1'11, before m•, Hlt bll511ed I D'l!Vl lll'"I ••I"; • ..., !Call l11 rt1~·· J S~ePPll'd CMll Mei1, C1llfDrnl1. Is Mr"' ll•td 1 Nof•'"I Pl/bile In end tor eild Slllt, cl ••1t1, In 1ccord1nct wot~ •aw, 10 No•trY Public , • II !ht flfl'll Ind pllf11 ""' h11rl"' lltl'IDl\111¥ ·•-•ad J1mn •• W1llt ct bl' Dlkl In 1111 C6n!tructlon DI ,~. $lat• Df C1ll lor11i1 111 11t•10111 lnl1r1sttd In ar ab!Kllnt known 11 "" ta bf !ht per...., •hot<' 1bDYe •nl\llelt lm1>'11Ye"'enl1. Tll~I ~11.<1 Pdncloil onict 1" • It fllt 1••-111 v1catlon. nlrtw 11 111ii.crlbtd ta tht ""flhln ••Te I nd ic1te w11 l!ICPlf'<I by •~• o range couni... SECTION l. Th• Ct"' M1~111r l'I llllltnrme"I I nd ld<,_ltdtH ht tJ.KlllH ,•.M,;: of ~lrK,!:"I bY Rnolutlon Ne. My (""1'Tl1'.,on ~•Dir"" ll;rttlVltW Ltl.Uf lnktll11ll Jur>11r v,,.u, w il • ' i w '• • 1111t Cl"' at c .. 11 Mtw 11 lltl'ltw tllt """· on e "'~ dav al Dtcembt• M•• 11, 1,n St IM"cn• In cllrt<ftd la c1u1t nDllC .. l'I !!It 11ld (OFFICIAL IEALI lfl'D l lld Is on fl~ I" Ille ofllct ol T·lllll Mi!Pf 0 ,, J l, • .,._114 v1,111on to be COMllC\JD\f!lv lltbt H, (1.,.nl Ille Aatl1!1nl St crtll'"I, T1 Felt Drl~e. P~b•lslled Oran<;tt CotJ! Otli• c '•"•'•"•' • ~ totltd i i.nt tlld 1trlti .i llt'lll for Notary ,.ubllc. C•lllvrlll• CDJll MeH, Catlfor"l1. Tll1t uld ralt FtbtlllfY 1', ;6 •nd M•• 11 '" 1 -.! ' •I • • • II IHI! llNI (IO) GIVt btleN "'' dlle Pr!nc:l1111 Ottltt In 1nd 1(11• 11 ,,.,,1n roferred TO an<I 1911 c 5 \}, l Bl1~011 Amoi ~ 1b -• of ti1d ~••rlne. Stld FIOllCtt ihl ll bP. Oflnoe counlY •a~ttd tn mis notice •• thovah f11llY .l!O." 1 Sl, P1vl l fl • • -Itel "°' mort ff'li n ff'lrt'f hu""" Mv CornmlUlon IE'Kll'9t Ind COll"P"lely sel for!~ ~e<tln, and LEG 1 ~1 Antllll'IY 10 o nooi ft•t 111rt, bvt 111 rio tvtnt shi ll StfotemDoo• 14. n n 11111 11ld 1c111. •• 1d>CP1tc1 bv $lld AL NOTICE i S.rvn~ ! j • s,tt-4022 or Mt-22.U ' 1111 t111n l~fl! !SI nollc1s be'°'""' llubllshm Or1n11 Coos! D1!1y ,1101, •tJOlullon. II "''"• • 01rt n' thl• l------~-------- 1 floa•or Off .... ~····· .. ••••••••••••• Sl!t'TION •.' T~ll Jtl'llll;!Mifl lhill bif f1tbnll(r If, M, ~~). n , lf71 )6,_11 no!lc. by r1l.rtntt. • P·.O!.Jl ... - "'"''' w ' • • • ! • ' w " " ! l • " " • • • ' • • l l w • • • • .. ' • I ·: --~·-:~·_::~~~·~·--~'~m;;";;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~!~·;;;·~1;;;~;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;;;;;~~;;;;~~;;~~~;;~~~~~~~~1~!1:::r~a:;7~,~~:::ri:·:,·~?.E LEGAL NOTICE :-Ef::n~F':~:~· .:h~;; ::= J;; Tllf c::.,:.t~:~~~!" ~:.~~N:::v ... l ) Mttl. (tun"' el or1111,, Slife O'I' er 1111 ltltt DI Ct lllornlll Ind other conduCll"9 1 butlne~a •t p o 80, j (1Ularnl1 &All .st llWI Df Hid Sii!,, IPD!!Clblt lll~•eto, 50) $cul~ Laqu~•. C11ltoq111. 11naer ,,,. I UNIVERSITY '$Alff a. OLDS MOBILE•"GMC-HONDA ,AISlci ANO AOO,.Tl!D 11111 Ill fr+' MOTIC• TO CRWDITOlll wllll tllt u«~llon 1111'r ot~lldl Y1rl1t1Dnt tlctfllout flntl R nl m• bf A¥!'lll("-N I StllYICl "Mtl"Cfl, 1t11. -su,.••1011 COU•T 0, ...... .. ,,,.v bt rN vlrt<! under Ill• -cl11 WATE~ BEO co •'Id '"•t ~·la •1 .... t ~ llOIEllT M. WIL&ON ITAT« 0' CALl,..OIMIA ,Oil 1l1tvl'H puri.u1nl ID w~lt~ Orottl<llntt It (DITIPO•f(I 01 !ht !ollow,no ~trtO~•. ,1 IS GOING TO MIVI< of 1ttt Cll'I' TMa COtNolTY O" OIANOI ~Ortll~ '" llkfn tnd wlll(h 111v1 wl'IOlt n1m11 In lull •n<I PIH O ol "I al Cot•• M111 l'M. A....U no! btfn woerwotd bto !flt Pl"DYltlom ras!d...c:e ert ,1 totlowi: AniE'STi E$fllt of MAit'!' LOU l51! IAfllK(lt, al IM Ll bor C-. 'r•lt f!llCf to l•DM Tlmo!t'lv W. Jo11•~. 'l' Mll •m•r S! < "QUICK SERVICE'' EILEEN ,., "HINNE'I' •ho •-•~ LOUISE IAIKIEll, 1111!1 bl t lvtn 11111.., In lt\t m1nne. Ltt11n1 Be.c~. Ca!!tornle . ' City Cit<~ 11 ~ Dlcfflld. _..,... bv llw. Attlll' D &row~. Jr , •ll Mll•m.~r ' > Ctl'I' al Cotti Mell NOTICE II HEltl!IY Gl'l'Eft It 1111 Tiit tonlr1ttor oftlll uw-only un· St , La011n1 l!e&tll, (l llfornt• TO BEnER SERVE YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS ITATE 0 , CAll,..DINlA 1 Cfldltor• cl 1111 •Wv• n&med c1tctc1tn1 rMlklllclllrtd m11trl1I• 1r0du(td In !hf Vidor G. 11,,,..P, •'.l4 M•l•mer ~1 ' GOUNl\I 0 ,.. OIANGI! thtl I ll Hl'IOf'<I ftl vlftt tllltnl "lllllt Unlltod Ila~ 11111 lll!llY menull(lyrf(I LIOUN &.ote~. C•!llrtnli , · • • C TY O )A IM 11tloil llfCldtnl lrt r1111lrld 19 flit ,,,1"'111t ""1'1tfot¢1Ur..., In 1111' Unit"' Oiled 'ot!rv•.,, 11 1'JI 10 • I ,.. COSTA Ml5A I """"' WAii 111t M«tlll'Y YOVClllf'!., In !11\ft, lllbsl1nll11!¥ 111 frO!fl '""le<l111 Tlmolll w j ., COMPLETE LUBE SERVICE IN ONE HOUR '· """" ........ v. '"" , ...... -..... ,.~ ....... ~ -... ""'"' ....... '" ~ """ • .... :::·, 11 !If ""' Cl"' .,, Cttlt MtMI• tfld t•4flltla 1t1tlltld court, If It .,_1t nl llltm, "1111 "''-'lf!Ct ct lht conir1d , Vl(IOf G 11•-n' ' Cit!'• .. Ill• ('I.... c-" ., tl\t CllY ""' llt(tulry vwclltn. ,. "" II'" NO Did INlll bt -ld•l"fCI uni•" S!l!f al C1lo!Of .. 11 Or1"9" C~u I T of COiii Mttl, """"" ct rll"' ""' dt,..ltnld II lht 9ftl(t "' hi• 1ttcn'ln"; II II """' on I bllftl( lorm W.n!Jhtd OP Fl'br\llrt 'u 1•n ;;./ TO START THIS 0,,, WI ARI 0''1111HG A flll tl:loVI 1nd torttohw Aetll\lllClll NI. CLAUOE E. YOUNG, ,U Wert T~I,., lw !ht CD1!1 Mfll l1n111,., 0!11r1tt , ,.011,.., Public lft. lrHI j, ~,. ..,. o n ·ll, "I•• dlll'I' •nd tll'Ulefl'I' """" s1,.1, &1nt1 A111, (1111~"1' ,,m , w~k~ •1'141 1, "'"' In KCCrll•nn w11~ !l•t p1r10nelly IPl>l&'fell Tln>e•~v ·~o 5'11' I FREE LUBE '""' •d•ltd 11¥ lht Cl"' Cauncn "' h lht Illa or lMIMlt llf 1111 undtr1l•ntd "°"'l•lont ol lht .,_., •eoulr•,,.,.nts ,o.rt~it I) Brown J• lfta v ,...,..., 0 t1'11 City If Cttl• MHI 11 I 1"Ullr IM 111 ll'tl lt.r1 11rt1lnlnt to 1111 eit1lt l!lch •kklt< mull bt l!ttntf!d ind &~n •nown ~ "" 1~ ~ '" •Clo• (;,, 1 ~II,,. htlll °"' 1111 !JI dev tf Mlrch. ct .. ld dectdent, wttlllft twr """'"" 11.., ••-•!!!ltd 11 •Huf•"' "' 11w, wt>cu ..,.,,,tt 1,1 '""'<"~d' ';"'"~"" O W ith 0 11 & Pllt Ch ' -M th Of M • • 0 •fl..-tt>t flrtt 111~1!(1llon l'I It'll• "811«. Tiit ... ,. el DlrtCfDrt of ,.,. Co.11 wo!Mln l....,t,uni•nt Ind •c~ wl e ·~• c ., ilftfl ., .... on .,," IN WITNl!SS WHl!lll!O • I ~.... Ot!H Ml~ I, lttl Mfll Slft!llf'll Olst•ICI tt~r\lft 11\f roof\! ••tcu!t(l l~f ·--1'1(1 l'OOl"ll '"'• 1 SERVICE HOURS : 7:30 to 0 5:30 MON . thru FA.I. CLOSED SAT. &: SUN. =fati. :;_ "~1:' .':'":.;~ =~ :r: :::~ ~"':;*J~'!," '°D'!/:: :;;,.:;; ;,",:;:''• !OFFic~~~·~1 J.,.,... 1. lnd d1~ of Mi rth, 1t11. lllt '"'°"' n•me<I de«dlftl J•n• At11t l, Notf"' Publl(.(,111o•flll I 2850 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MUA """ '· '"'""" ,._. •• , '· ..... ''""'"' ·····~ "'"""' 0 ""' '" • City Ci.ork 1nd t• 111 W"t Tllln llnttl (IV OltD(R 0' !Hf: O•-fl , ( ~• I 9111(11 Glll'W It ffle S111t1 AM. (Jllfttflll fl1tl t OAfllO 0" C!lll!CtOllS My (9"'.:t"ti~n f•n"' • 540 9640 Cl"' C111ncll l'I 1111 T'lh 1111...,1 OF THE COSTA MESA S•pt, n 111, ' I • Cll'!' "', .. ,.....,.,,. " A"""'..,._......... SAN,ITA}IV DlSTltltt. Pubntl'llo °' ..... f' I'! 0 lli.. ... ,,. ..... ·.•.- 0 • ........ ,,. ... ,,. .................................. ,,. ... ,,. ............................... (' llvltlhhtCI Ortnte -l:Mll Dtlf'f "!Jet 'ublhllM Oft"'i C...rt ID1llf "llot, "ubll•"*' Ot1ni1 Cuti 0.11¥ "'l'I~ l't ll•u••Y u 2i Ind" M ... I, ,. 11 "'· • ~ .. 111n Jilt.n Mardis. u . If,'" "" $11 M•l'1:h J, .. I"' .. ,.,, lJ11 • .,,~ , P,' JO 11 • ' • • • ' ' • • • • " • • • • ' • • • • • ' • ' .t'etrel Sweeps Aussie Clinches Ton Cup Crown AUCKLAND. New ZtalAnd rAP) -Australia ha~ 1111 un· breakable hold on the One Tori Cup yachting trophy. Although one short race in the five-race serle.!! remains. Syd Fisher, already with two vict ories. cllnched the crown today when hP. brou•hl his ..Stormy Petrel acros., the finish line nf lht 270-mlle fourth race 57 minutes •ht1d of the pesent Cup Holder. Chris Boutaid , in the New ' LEGAL N011CE "·lstl FICTtTIOU1 I UIUU!11 NAMI ITATIMIHT '" tollowtnv o••IOtlt '" do!,.. '""'"~· ·~= NEW"OllT CEMTl!ll OllTHOfll!"OICS, "' How'°rl Ct11!tr Orlyt s.,,11, '~· -N-llOrl ... ,11. C•llt.,11!1 "'" Jl1'1M •• •m 511111 •• ClllYOI, '"' w. l!mbaHY Av1 .• A1111'1t!IM, C11/fi.r1111 '2111'11 Jl mtl I'. (lllYO~ 1>11~11 ...... Or Int• Ce11! Dllly !01\~t M1ft ll J, 11. 1', 7'. lfll '11·11 LEGAL NOTICE " ,., ,ICTtTIOUt I UllNlll NAMI STATIM•HT '" !11!111wl111 1>tr!Ont "' d11ln1 11'111n•H •~: LA VISTA. MOTEL. 7'3' S. !I Ctmlne llool St n Cl~mtn!O. C1ll!11rnl1. Htl'n ... ErntJI Morllnfr, ,,,, • " C•ml"" lletl ... Cl-•nle, C1llf11•nl1 Tlolt butlf'll'u " ii.1 ... t&ndU<tJl!I •• t n IM/vldu11. Hfl~ M1r!lnt1 '1lhll~d 0•01111 i.e.atl "" Pl Int "'•rr11 s. n. it, ''· 1111 411·71 LEGAL NOTICE 1'·1HI ,-ICTITIOUI •UltHllS N.&MI ST.&TIMINT Tiit lclltlWl!lt Cfr$&n It dllll\'f butl/1111 .. KEMPLEll PSYCHlit.TlllC MIEOICA.l C.llOUP. Q N-wi>Go"t Conte• 0•1••· ·~--1 ~•••"· Ct lllornlt , 1.-wln Ktm11i.<. M.0 , "" Tullln, . """"''""' f!t1cl\, C1llf11•nlt . • Tii i• bo.l•lt>es• " "'"' conductl!'ll •• 1n l11dlvldutl, •' Irwin Kemp!~r. M.0. Publh~ed O•t ngo C1111• Otllv "'"'' ~-""'''" "· " ... Ml 'Cll •• "· "11 JTl-71 .. LEGAL NOTICE . 1'1Jll l'!CT!OU1 I USIHl11 H.&MI ST.&TIMl!NT "'' !olll>W!t>e "'"611 1, d11ln1 bu1l nt1• .. 0,1.NA. M-'lllNA INN, :loll 11 C111•t Hlel!wt Y, Otnt P(l[M, (till. llollo!rt Elllt llt ltnn~tm. l•lll C1111t Hl111w1v, 01n1 P.int, Ctl11, Tl\11 bll1lntJI ,, "'"' ,_utll'CI •• •~ lndhrlllu11. lllllllrt Eu1tM L1n11h1m Pub!l~d o, ..... c .... , 0 11tv Pllel Ftkwvt rv " ... Mt tch '· "· "· 1971 .,,.,, LEGAL NOTICE P-4N1S Cll!Tll'ICATI •• •UUNlll, l'ICTITIOUI HAMI '"' 1Jndt••l1ntd .. c1r111v 11\tv "' f<!nducllM • llUt lMJI t i 60S it.Hen ••• •• !1nl1 ..... C1lllo•11!1. unllt• • • lfclltloo.a firm ntml of J & J MAIUHE <M 11'1t u" ll•m h com PO Md ~ '"' fnlieWirt<I '""""'· ·-· 111m•.1 '" .. , '"" PllCl t •• •t 1ld1nc1 ... .. loll11w1 : John Howt•ll N1c1.,, 11111 f!orblr .!t,. W1•tmln1!fr. lllllW!n F111vd Jeuff, 1t'9l w11kf!1h Ln .. Hunllntrlt111 le1c1', 01!1<1 Feb, U, 1'11 JOl'ln How1r11 Ntc•v llotlf>•I Ployd J IHH !••I• 111 C1!1!c•nlt . Ort n&-Coun!v: "" Fobru1rv "· 1t 11, b1!er1 ••• • Not Arv Public '" •"" !()!" ••Ill 511\f, P-•ffll'l llY Aee11red Jot-n How_,,, Ntctf ... llOl><!•I Flllvd JtlHI k,.,wn " •• .. .. ... P•tMlt'I -.. n1mt1 -1u1>1crlbt11 " '"' wl!Mn 1n1lrument ... 1cknowledoed th1v ''ecuted '"' ,,m, {0,-f<ICt"l 5E-'Ll MAllV IC . HENllY · Zealand yacht Wal Aniw.1 . Fischer's triumph c a m e alter making the beat of dead calms which added almo~t a day to the race • and after outmaneuvering tile N e w Zealand yacht Young Nick, which had led for much or the distance. Fi!cher's 893-4 poi n I ~ put him well ahead of bis nl'arest competitor. The fifth race is worth onl y 171.~ more points to the win· ner. Goran Undbtrg, in his Vic- toria, wnn third place rnr Sweden, 63 minutes behind the leader. Although lhe next series is almost certain to be sailed in Australia, Fischer. a Sydnev construction million- aire. ·has !!tormy Pt tr e I up for s.1le. "She wa:ir a means lo an encl." he said today. But he has another boat -his ~a.root Raga Muffin. which is generally regardecl 11s the top oHshote racer in the world and will lead the Australian team's three !mats to the Admirals Cup series in F.nizland in Au~st. Fischer said he will pro· bably build a new one·tnnner to defend the nez:t Cup series. Underdog Wins Race NASSAU. Bahamas ( AP l Unheralded Running Tide . a 60-foot Sparkman and Step- hens-designed sloop owned and skippered by J a k ob lsbrandsten of Oyster Bay, N.Y., blew lo an easy cor· reeled time victory in the 1.iiami to Nassau ya chl race. American Eagle with At!an- 1..l 's Ted Tumer al the helm was across the finish line first Tuesday, but Running Tide came out the winner when corrected times were figured Wednesday. American Eagl.e. the con· verted 12-meter sloop that, swept last year·s Southern O;cean Ra c i n g Conference races, dropped to fifth piece on corrected time in the 184· mile ra~. Running Tide trailed the Eagl!. by only five minutes in actual time. David Steere. Dallas, Tex.. and hs 55-fool. aluminum sloop Yankee Girl came in second on correcled time. Bill Ficker Top Speaker At Meeting Bill Ficker. the Newport Beach architect who suc- cessfully d e f e n d e d the America's Cup last fall , will be one or several reatured speakers on a JlalionaJ CT>n· ference and exhibition on marine recreatinn and con· servation at Long Beach March 11-14. The conrerence is known as Ocean '71 and will be held at the PiicHic Terrace Conven- tion Center in Long Beach. F'icker 's subjecl will be 1.1a· jnr Trends and Future Use nr Recreation In the Ocean. He will speak on the second da y of the conference, Mareh 12. Other speakers on the con- ference will be Dr. Glen Eizstrom, chier divi ng officer, UCLA and president of NAU!: Dr. Clarence Gunn. professor nf tourism and recreation . Texas A & M University: John C.. Carlisle Jr., American Fisheries Society : Hobie Al- ter, president or Hobie Surf. boards and Coast Catamaran, and M. J ean-Michel Cousteau, president or Living Sea Corp. Panel coordinator will be Dr. J. R. Needy, head nf the Depnrtment n f Recrention M a n a .c:ement, Sacrament<: State College. Girl Tours Mexico City Chris M. White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter White of 1827 Sandalwood Lane, Newpnrt Beach , re c en t I y toured the ~1exico city of Oax· aca as part or a U.S. 1nter11a- tional University fie ld trip. Miss While. a sophomo re at Universidad Tnl.ernacional de Mexico. in Mexico Cily, Inu red the historical towo as well a~ nearby Mizlec ruins at Monte Alban and Mitla. The Harbor High School graduate formerly attended USJU "s Cal ifornia Western Campus in San Diego. No!•rv Public • (1llle•nl1 "•lncf1'1t 0111<1 In Or1npf Ceunly ,....., Comml1~1.,., Ex1i•t 1 Nev. ''· un l'ubllll>ed Or1n1t Cot U Otllv "lift! '''"''""' H tM Mtrc1' J, tf. 11, 1111 437.11 LEGAL NOTICE British Ol ym pic Star Getting Set for 1972 T·fllll HOTICI TO ClllOITOll SUil'lltlOlt COIHIT OP THI ITATI 01' C-'Ll,OllNll. '01! THll COUNTY 01' OIAHtJI No. A 612H E1l1t• of ETIENNE Mil.THEii§ t kt !.T!llNN!. l,\MIEllT M .& TH I II 5 . D•ctt!Od. NOTlC.E 15 HEIEf!Y GIV EN I~ '"" c•ffllln,. el !hf tbov• 111mHI dtcl'Cl•M lhtl 111 n1•11~1111 ntvl"' clllm• 1tiln•I 1111 11111 decedtnl or• '"ul rtd tn !II• !htm. with !ht ntc1,.1rv ...euchtr1, In tn~ oHJct of th• ""'" ef !hf t !>ovt •nllllHI c.ou•I. or to 1>rt1tnl lllf..,, with 1n~ net.eu•rv "°"c~tr1, 1e 1~1 on. llt'lftntd ., 111 NOrlh l rot CIWIV. St n•• Ant, Ct lllornlt . wl\lth !1 lht P!tt f er ~uslnt" 111 the un~tr1lt""' In 1 11 m1ll1•I Otd1ln!11I IO !lo• ••t•lf ef ••Id decedent, wl!Mn four ""'"'"' t lltr th• flrtt eubllc1111111 of 11o11 ne!lc1. O•ltd F•bru•rv '· 1911 M1rq1rtl F•t11cl\, E••culrl~ el !lot E•l•to el th• •Nov• "'"'.., d•cta1n! NOlL G. CONW.&Y Jllf'lfnt' 11 Ll"lf 111 Htl'tl'I lrwfW•' ltftlt Aftl, Ct lHtrftlf "1t1 'f1l .. 1'1-: JU•Un AtlorM• t.r l •f'tWlrh: Publll...., Orl"lt Clltll 0.11' il'llei 1'•"'1.ll'l' n. u. H i nd M•rc" J. 1171 "'·" LEGAL NOTICE P·1'16 lflCTITIOUS I Ul lNllSS NA/Ill STATIMI HT Tht l11Uowln1 Ptrtelf' h fOlnt b\11IMH t s . ,\ILE Mil.tNTIN ... NC£ CO,....l't.NY, 7'11 Oupe.nt O•lv1, ""lllf., C11ilo•nl1, '"'~ 111<.1'••0 Schlrrl'lnlr. )1\J f!t•n Or!.,1, lltUllA ····"· C•tlln•nl1. tHJI Tl'll1 btJ1ln1u It belnt c-ucted llv •~ lrld!Vldu••. Rlc/'lt'11 Sc1<11r1oo1r Ftbrutnr It, ;t ind Mt rtlo J, 11. Pubtl•""' Or1n1• Ceil! O.llv il'llO! ''" 17'·11 LEGAL NOTICE IA• MU NOTIC• TO CllOltOllJ ,Uil'lllUOa C0Ua 1" 01" tMll STATl 01' CAl.1,0IHtil. ,0 11 TNll COUNTY 0' 01,1.NIJll Mt. l.-U4U f1t11t 111 A, 11\ll TON GllFIEN. •I<• ALVt.H Mil TON Gitt EH, Oecoo1td. NOTIC E 15 H!lll!IY GtV!H IO 1"- rrHll'Y~ of >ht 1bevf 111mtd dK.ilent 10.at 111 ••rMfl• 111vln' d tlm1 1111"'' 10.1 11kl dtctdenl "" tMUl•td le lilt 11'\f,,,, w!lll ll'lf ntecU.f rY ¥OIKll,rt, Ill ll'lf oll!<I Ill Ille (lt •lt 111 Ille tllllvt tn!lli..! cou•I. or 1e 1•ti1n1 I~•"'• wltll '"• 111<1111nr vouch1n, to II•• .,,,. "•r1lt~ 11 lllt •Nl<•I •I lllf 1tlfl,,1t•• COOl(S[Y, SCHUMACl'llil, COLl!MAN, MjNY.&110 I. HOWAIO, 111 l•Wll 11'14 t.1111,.,. 11111, Or1rtt1, C1tl!Mnl1 t1 .... """'c"' l• 1iw 111e1 " 11U11M11 11 Ill• ........ 1.:-111 .~ ""•"'" 1.r11l11l~ It l!W fllt l• 11 •tld decl'd,.,I. wltl'lln '""' .... ""'' '"" ll'lt ""' ..ut1k1!\9n 01 ·~11 111lltf , lltltd "'"'"'"' ,., ,.,, N. KATHllYN Oll[EN ErKUttl• ti !flt Wiii el !Ill •1111"' ..,mH fft~ (00KSIY, SCNUMACHllll, COLIMAN, MINYAl!O • Mow••o IH T-111111 CMl'llrf .... Ort fttl, Ct!lfll' It f1UI .1111 tU.lllf - l.t11rr .. ~ "' llKYlrlJ "Wll,nllf o--..... C1111t C1ll¥ 1111111, ~\1t~l'I j , J1, 11, u . ttn •U·'1 •• LONDON IAP) -Rodney Pattison. British naval orticer whn won a sailing gold medal in !he Olympics al Acapulco, Mexico. is gelling ready fo r an other crack at the Hl72 Olympics with a new bna t and new crewman. This is news of interest to yacht smen every w here because experts throughnur Europe rat.e Pattison as !.hf' best Flying Du t c h m a n Hel msman in the world . Superdocious. Jn which Pat- tison won the Flying Du1· chman event in Acapul co. will be ineligible fo r international C<lmpetition by tne time the 1972 sailing Olympics at Kiel. Germany come around. After thiR yf'ar she will no longer conform tn the newl y approved hull rhape ror Flying Dutchman Class boat~. So Patti.son. 27. has a new boal under construction whic h he plans lo call Superdoso -the Spanish equivalent, he says, of Superdocious. wh ic h is an obscure English word meaning ultra docile. He chose the n a m c Supcrdoso to commemora.t e his Ql..ympic triumph in a Spanish' spea'king country. Pattisqn. hes split with his Olympics crewman I a i n f.-lacDonald·Smith. He h a s s~nl a year searchin,it: for a new crewman and says he now has the right mao tn Nich Davies. Patti.son and Davies have been winning in Superdocious in European yachting tvents. Wh•l 1r1 the qu11ities need· ed for an ideal crewman1 Pat· tiSlln sums it up like this : "Determination to w I n , ability to crew, experience. .1s 1 first cl•.~~ helmsman, ('Or· reel height-weight r a I i o . 1thleUc. unmarried a n d likeable." P1ltlton u.ld M1cDonald· Smith had all the.st qualltlu. So has Davies. "Nriw ll'5 a questi<in nf building up the same team spirit a ~ J had with MacDnnald·Smilh. Pa ttiM>n will soon have to snlve a personal problem - to decide whether he should conti nue wi1h hi s naval career or concen1 ral f' on sailing . He says he can·\ do bolh. "Friend s tell me I should settl e down now and l.ry to become an admiral."' Pattison said. "But if I did that I would hav e to concen1rate on my naval career. Racing is Jn my blnocl and I want to give my 1i n1e to th al. "The trouble is th:i t all my success in saili ng is due to the Navy. They have madr, it possible for me to lake lime off and race. They can ·t he expected to go on doing !hii t indefinitely.'' Pattison has been criti1.ed by Bri tish yachti ng of ficials for going abroad to race. "They say I i.hould race in Rrilain 1n ,11ive other British yachtsmen a chance to im- prove against mP." he gaid. "But how can I keep up my slandardg agains1 poer com- petition'.' For the kind nf challenge I need I have to go to lhe cnntin cnt." Naviil me.n have not made grt81 helmsmen in th~agt'. There's tn old !laying 11mong- British yachtsmen that the three most useless lhingg in a sa ilin ~ r.raf1 are a whee tbar· rnw. an umbrt!lla and a naval officer. Patli!'inn set out lo prove lh11t 11dege wron g. and tht'j Brili!!h Nav y ~et out tn help him prnve It . In 11170 it gave him leave to visit 1 dozen rnuntries. winning FI yin g Dutchman rices and lec- lurinl( . "J've got ln make up my mind "°4'>n whether to devote. my lire 10 lhe N~vy or to ricing, .. Pattison said. Listc:ning to him talk of his ptens fnr winning 8 gold medal with Dllviu Jn 1972, It ~ee:mt pretty plain wh ic h w1y he \4'ant.!. lo go. DAJLV PILOT ,' 17 : Schafer, Pu1aski Win Titles Wayne Schafer of San Jua11 Capl~trann and Rolly ~·Pulaski of Balboa took top honors respectively in the Hobie Cat· \Ii and Hobie Cat-14 regatta at San Carlos, Mexico Feb. 13·14. The Hobie Cat Midwinter Reg~ua drew 62 entries and capped a four-da y event sailed in generally light winds and \\'arm Mexican sunshine . "F un Shakedown j Cup Skippers W ar1n Up Sa ilors Jn the CongrtMional to st:t"; the boats rrnm shnr1t. Cup match ricing serit s at A second major lnnovatlo"' Long Be.ach March lft..20 will came with the announct mtnt h&ve R chance to do some rtg~Ua typt: sailing _ juRI that SAIL M11gazi nt, pu bli shed for drill. by Boston's lnsti\ute for IJie The sponsoring 1.fng Beach Advancement nf S11il ing. will ~~;M Ya<.-ht Club has arranged a host form t"r Congressional Cup 12-mlle ocean ra~ing type Champions at a "Crimson coorse ror the Conaressiona l Cop aspirants' the day before Blazer Table'' al the post-race the match racing &els under troph y presenta1ions Saturday wa y. \ night. March 20. at LBYC. The race has bcE\fl termed Host will be Phi l Th urman , a "fun type shakedown '' Jn \\'est Coast district s11les which all of the 10 skippers menage.r for the public11tinn. ~ will race against each nther Champions in the annual {/,, at the S<tme lime . match raci ng classic earn a e v IA the Con,it:ressional Cup ac-replica of the silver rtophy, "P tinn each skipper 'tl.'ill race deeded 10 LBYC by the U.S. J go• to b.d after 'Mission lmpc:.11 ible' Jeffy ;igainst t'\'ery other in H series Congress in l96f. and a goes ofter 'My Three Sons', Dolly oft• 1ArnTe' or two-bnat match races thal di s t 1 n c t iv e c rim s or and I hove to watch the l•l o•clock .. , Fun races were held during a tw«Hlay prelude lo the weekend competition. Festivities included a Friday fish fry and a Saturday niRhl fiesta to s o f I en the com· peljtive ten sions from each day's events. wil l comprise 45 individua l yachtsman 's blazer decorated news for homework J 11 matches over the three-day 1,1•ith a specially-designed ----------------------- pc{niod1.he shakedown race all Congressional Cu p crest. The Winners selected from the best five positions ror the six events were : blazers have beC<lmc known I 0 boa I s w i 11 st a r I informally as "the m n ~~ t Ung the Ngrlh American Henry Schofield of A11mito.s si multaneously in a one-desjgn covet ed items of haberdashery ''acht Racing Union as Prince Bay YC of Longe Beach , Bob class-type ocean race• in all sailinu." f w 1 B I h · ". d' 1· h .., o a cs nw ft'lalc racing Mosbachtr of the Tes a I 111sregar 1ng ra ings •Or an· Contest.ants for the right to HOBIE CAT· -Ill Wayne Schafer: 12\ .Joe Neale. San Diego; tJI Rnn \Vegnicre, Pacific Palisade:s. dic11ps. wear onlv the ~evcnth blar~r champion ), .John M. Odenbach Corinthian YC of Houston, The r11ce will give skippers ever crcfited are Charles E. nf Rn chester INY ) YC Patrick O'Neal nf Larchmont and crews a chance In prac-r.1organ Jr. of St. Petersburg frepresent ing the Yacht Rae· ~NY \ YC, Hal McCormack or lier tacki ng and sail handling (Fla . l Ya cht Club. Tom ing Union or the Great Lakes San i-~rancisco YC and Greg und er competitive condtllons, Pickard of the host Long as Richardson Cup cham-Booth or Honolulu Y C arcording to Bob Graham, Beach \'C, Dr, John Hennings pion ), Bobby Burns or Calif· lrepr~senling the Haw a Ii HOBIE CAT-14 A -11 I Rolly Pulaski. Balboa: i2\ Bill Butler, Dana Point : (3) Leon Gardner. La Canada. general chairman. of St. Petersburg (represen-ornia "'i'C or Marina drl Rey, Yacht Racing Association. The course wlll Include a1--m0ii0ii0ii0ii0iir=========--=========--=;;;;;;- DOG SHOW HOBIE CAT·l4 B -(I I Terry Neale, San Diego : ~2 ) Randy Hatfield. Long Beach: (3) Ross Mackinnon, f\.1an- hettan Beach. HOBIE CAT-14 C-Il l BOO Buck, San Diego : 121 Tom Stone,.Mission Viejo : !3) Greg Clark. Woodland Hills. thrce or four mile be11t. A ''rum type'' trophy will be presented to the 1,1•inner by Rums of Puerto Rico. The race will start at 11 :JO a.m. Wednesday, March 17 v.·ith the finish at the Long Beach Marina . opp o s i t e the SANTA AllA PA..,Hlel StplAR8 MARCH 6-10 A.M. clubhouse to permit specla_lo_r~s--==== Get 2\l these exclusive Jct~Air 11 fei.turcs: ·r\\•in tread traction desiii:n. Long-milea(lC Durazen tread rubber. Curve Control shoulder dcsie:n. 1'11'f-Ch1Y..,....il'ly ...... -l11T1llltr-T1m1'f1l-VW • .,. 77S x!S -F71x!S WHITEWALL TIRES • CADILLAC • LINCOLN e CHRYSLER • BUICK L71tlS-•OOrlS •15115 $2995 ,., •. T. 11.llO COMMANDO ""' XT TIRES ... ··~ This week only at GENERAL TIRE FRONT END ALIGNMENT crooked wheela rob your car of maximum performance, ride, ateer- lng and t ire wear. We correct caster, camber, toe-Jn, toe-out to your car m11nulac1urer's 1peciflea- tlon1, end safety check and adjust your 1tee_ring. IO. rs, G70' Tl , H70 x IS HEAVY DUTY -DEEP TREAD TIRES FOR RECREATIONAL VEHICLES WE HAVE THEM TOYOTA· DATSUN PINTO· FALCON OPEL· VEGA ' Original Equipm•nt TIRES LOW MILEAGE USED TIRES LOTS OF NON-SKID TREAD Somt Ustd Rad ial Tlr11 Don Swedlund U. S. INDY MAG WHEELS SET OF 4 fOI D-C HIYIOLn-"'LY MOUTH DATSUN-TOYOTA SIZZLlR VALUE 3·PIECE WIND 'N RAIN SUIT HOOD • JACKET • SLACKS $199 SET •Wind Md 1a1ftf1tt10f • H11h·VtS+b1IHy heivy du!} ~-lie VW-PORSCHE MG IMPORTS TIRES Whitewalls JUST $1595 l'.11.T. 11.11 EXPERT WHEEL ALIGNMENT TIRE CHAINS PASSENGER & CAMPER COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours: 7:30 to 1:00 Dilly PHONE : 540-1710 ~646 .. J .033 I I \ I J ., 1 l JI DAILY PILOT Board OKs U.S. Gra11t For W 01·kers Orange County supervisors Tuesday approved a plan lo use $375,000 in federal money to hire, train and promote disadvantaged workers. Personnel Director William C. Hart said the approval would be forwarded Io \Vashington and he expected favorable action because the Deparltnent o( Labor had already sanclioned the pro- gram. The program is designed lo bring 100 new workers into county service and promot.e another 50 workers no \V employed at minimum pay levels. Those hired under the pro- gran1 would become full time county workers such a s 1nalntenance and would not be fired when the federal grant ran out. Hart said. The new personneJ will not fiJ; new positions but existing vacancies and future ones. Federal fund s "'ould not be used to pay the new trainess but for an I 1-ma n ad- n1instrative staff. space and equ ipment requirements. off- lhe-job training programs, necessary medical expenses and initial transportation and child care expenses. The fed er a I government favors the program, Hart said. because it will help meet a national program for employ- ing the disadvantaged, help upgrade those employes whose salaries place' them at the near-poverty level. ease public manpower needs. and develop Jong range changes in a merit system of employment which tends to exclude the disad· vantaged. Antibodies Discovered In Fetus? LAS VEGAS ( U Pl) Research has revealed tha1 a fetu s produces its ov.·n ~ tibodies to fight diseases con- tracted before birth. a medical researcher reported. Dr. Jon V. Straum fjord Jr., research s up erviso r at J\1ilwaukee General Hospital. said that previously doctors believed the fetus did not pro- duce such antibodies. The new knowledge \l'!ll tnablc doctors to treat the fetus by adm ini stering oral n1edicatl;'.ln to the' mot her or through blood transfusions. "These antibodies, knov.·n as "Gama-M ." have bee n isolated and ca n no\I' be used in laboratory tests to detect the presence of infectious diseases." Straumfjord said during an interview. Slraumfjord. attending a na - lional pathologists meeting here. said he and a team of n1edical researchers were perfecting tests designed to reveal early signs of · virus or bac!erial diseases in the fetus and new born. He said more than one perce nt of the infants born in the Uni ted States today had infectious diseases. .. rrld~. March 5, }q7J Maps Show Arab Territory • ID Israel TEL ll,VIV (UPI) -Tourist war. mak • "maximum" and " . maps p!inted by 'the govern-Such maps reOect the·· ' • m · n'imum'' wlthdrawals ment these days show -l9rae\ permanence Israelis from without endangering ·th e as including the whole of Arab Prime Minister Golda Meir security of the Jewish $tale. territory captured in the 1967 on down have attached to Tha t the Israelis have gone Middle East war. Israel's occupation af Egypt's in to the map-drawing phase. win a total Israeli pullback. Fo~gn Minister Abba Eban Sheikh. the Sirtal posltion ,con-The Israelli seem to be wll Be.fore the 1967 war Eg'yptian re'cently said Jsrael cert"inlY trolling ac"cess to Israel's ing to withdraw rrom the Su tr ·i 1 would not give up annexed "back door " port at Ellat. Canal and frorn part of th oops were 40 mi es rom East Jerusalem, the Golan That leaves tbe West Bank S(nai, thereby 'Q.rei\king off t Tel Aviv and Jordanian forces Heights overlooking Israeli and the rest Of Uie , Sin11i military iocal ·point of I had posilions within 12 miles settlements, or Shann El· negotiable. Arab-Israeli ~flict. The small print in the cor-Sinai Peninsula . the \Vest something they refused to do ner says the maps are drawn -.~a~k. of the .Jordan and untiJEw. could signal a new according to "cease-fir e lines. Syria s Golan Heights. tum n the que st for Middle June, 1967." There is no gray Now new maps have come East ace. of the Israeli seacoast. .--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;======================1-lsrael will never allow such a situation to exist again. All its poli cies art based on the desire for "secure" borders. DOG SHOW SANTA ANA 11ASHlttN St~IAltl<~ MARCH 6-10 A.M. area to show the occupied into existence, the work of What are these maps likely regions. Neither are there a government c o m m i t t e e to show? The DAILY PILOT- Tops in Local Sports lines showing lhe frontie rs as assigned to outline boundaries It Is obvious Egypt, Jordan they were beJore the six"(lay to which Israeli troops cou1d and !Syria are not going to • BERE'SBZG iwETAL VZL· ZNGS .... So the car is out on the street because the garage is lull-up with kids bikes. garden stuff. and just plain 1unk. One of these rugged metal buildings can give you back the room without a big addition bill. You put it together yourself. everything is included to set the building up on your base. (After you get the thing together take three days out in the desert to recuperate cind sort out the As from the Bs and Cs.) 6x8 FEET 6x10 Advertised specials good thru March ~O. 1971. And if we catch any of' you going to some other place, it's out with the voodoo doll and pins. agaa FOLDING TUB ENCLOSURE ' I 1 rrµ~~__,2887 ~ nice looking thing to make your bathtub into o shower room at the lea1t possible cost. (0 £ course. you could stand the tub on its side and pul a shower head at the top.) ROOM DARKENING SHADES Not just the regular plastic shade, but this Cl'I• makes ii nice for day sleepers (or late sleeper1 li.ke Mark.) Reg. l.S1. 3 FOOT KWIK BRICK 9a8 12 SQ. FEET Cover the wall in while. red. or ontiqu..d realistic brick. It Murphy carried this kind ol brick on the bod, he"d still be dancing on St. Potrick's Day. 50 FT. PLASTIC CLO'l'HESLIJ(f; OkaY lo hang clothes on. tie down the camping gear. or ti• up tbe smart 8umlin9er kid next door when he trie& to horbecue the cat. BELLFLOWER 17 )26 Wc"><irulf J Blk No11h 01 AM<"dO Blvd !2131 TO 7 2721 37c " . . -t -• -' . • ' " -" . --'> • . ' ; ll~ 1J ','A R1 1dJ . ' - " • • .. '' , • - 6-FOOT TABLE AND BENCH SET Redwood 11tained deal we usually get lf.87 lor. And if it wasn"t pre-season we'd still 997 get it. Even then it was o: bargain. (Ses you!) 17 FT. CHAIR WEBBING 16c You can get it in colors a nd weave up t>omething creative or weird. depending on how your loste goes. Why throw the old choir away? Then ogail'I, why not?) IO-FOOT FOLDING WHITE FENCE 97c Th• J8.tnch height keep' most dogs and Huie kids oul of the planters, except a Bull Mastill ond my ratty kid. Lucky you. I don't live next door. CARBIDE TIPPED EDGER BLADES 77c I know you're careful and don't hit the &idewalk or rocks much and still the blade wear• oul.111 a in't made of diamonds. you know. ' ., ;, CAISON ' • ' . ,' :-' .. ~., .... I . , .. 20t~ E Car-.on ' ~h•f"1ft W1lm1nqlon ' • and Alam!l'da 12 13)-437·0~~1 I ~ . , . ' ' . REDWOOD BENDBOARD 3c LIN. FT. Bend it gracefully lo compliment your exquisite landscaping. (That remark is about vs ridiculous as a nudist wearing a mufller.) - FAUCET MOUNT HOSE REEL 688 Beats tripping over it all the time. The hose, that is, not the reel. Attach in seconds and enjoy for years. (Anybody who enjoys o hosereel is sick!) GRASS SHEAR Stamp ed metal. I can see the big guy whacking these th ings out of his forge right now. Super sharp. ond thal's better lhan regular sharp? FLOWER OR VEGETABLES · · '-~t:EDS 5~r.c A fi ne lime to save money. plus enjoy th 'l lhrill of growing things you rself. Choo ~~ from doi:en& of llower or vegetable varletiet, LA MIRADA ..... , •• ,41, ., • i2e41 v .111 .. v v ....... • • . Sou!h ol lmp.-11al .. ,-.. 14• 'i2l i~4 I ' L/l'.11 ~23 7tl70 · . ., .. "., .. ~ ...... ' SILK SCREENED PLANT-ON PULLMAN 4487 Walnut or While finish. Choice of colors in lhe marble top. And. are you ready America ? A faucet, (Am J in the right store?) 23xl9. FOAM BACKED SHAG CARPET 497 SQ. YD. 6 FT. WIDTH Funny. this carpet really is prelty cushy. Comes in 4 colors. See it in the corpet stores. cut the price by half. and it's the same stuff we sell. WALLPAPER 50% OFF Jock the Ripper isn't dead. He's the guy t hired lo hang my wallpoper. (Boy. he's got a funny squore muslache.) We'll show yo11 how lo hang lhis lovely stuff yourself. filly million lights we sell and the Greol One gives me one I've never seen. I won't lie. 50 take a chance. see ii on display. (Amber or Smoke). HONTINCTON BEACH l<ll~l 8r00W.hur"1 (_~"'"'"' c! Gnrh•-ld und B1.;..:,11hur"I ,7j 4; 9&2 '~fil • • • . ...... .. A' •,~ .. ,,, IMll, MM1:1t 5, 1971 E .K DER A Complete Guitle • • • Where t• go • •• HILLOCK MINCER, CHRISTY SMITH, LINDA SMITH REHEARSE SATURDAY'S BALLET Benefit Ballet Program Set Newport Group Gives Two Perforniances at Lyceurn The Lyceum theater at Costa Mesa High School, 2650 Fairview Road, Costa f.lesa, will be the site of two ballet performances to be given by the Ne wport Ballet, March 6, at 2 and 4:30 p.m. 'I'hc company v.·iU present variations fr om classic ballet. "The Chinese Dance" and "Four Swans," both from The Nut- cracker; two original ballets -"Two Dances for Four and Three" with mu sic by Prokofiev, and "Dress Rehearsal" \Vith music by Francis Poulenc. Two additional numbers to be per- formed have been choreographed by Shanne Cano-"Amoeba Oh" to the mus- ic of Corelli and "Merry Maneuvers," music by Scarlatti. The Newport Ballet , which is under the direction of ti.1ona Frances, is a member of the Pacific Regional Ballet Festival Association. The Regional move- merrf'llh'es the young dancers an op- portunity to perform on a semi-pro- fessional basis while staying in their own communities to complete their academic work. It acts as a ladder between ballet schools and pro fessional companies. The Association is a national organiza- tion with five branches covering the. United States, Canada and Alaska . All of the company members are oon profit units and the work is done by \'O\unteers. The host city for lhe Festi\'al each WEEKEND Ell INSIDE •'EATURES Friday, ~larch S, 19'7 1 Before you make any big decis-' Ions on where lo go and what to do for relaxation and entertain· ment, check the Guide to Fwl. You'll find il on Page 23 today. Stan Delaplane Fonda al HarUord Cba'mplon5 on TV Padua "Theater Out 'N' About Gulde to Fun Page ZO Page !t Page zt Page !t Pages !I-!! Page !3 Page %l Page %3 Page %3 Page Z4 • Page 14 Pa11e IS year pays all the costs for putting on the event an d since: lhere is no box office money coming back to the performing companies, each must raise its own funds for costumes and al· tendant costs to them. The artistic director of each company donates her time, talent and facilities to prepare for the Festival and works T,vo Children's Ballet Stories Due at Lagm1a ~ Two JX>~ular children's stories can be seen in dance form on Sunday, Marcil 7 when the Laguna Beach Clvic Ballet Compan y presents its third "Ballet for Children'' program in the 1970.71 series. Prokofiev's "Peter and the Wolf" and "The Encltanted Toyshop." with' music by Joseph Bayer, will be performed at "the Festival of Arts Forum at 1:30 and 3:30 p.m . Reservations may be made by calling 494-7271 or purchased al the door on the day of performance, if seating is available. Tickets are $2 for adults and $1.25 for children under 12. Festiftl. Forum is loca ted at 650 La!Jllna, Canyon Road on the Festival of Arts grounds. Filin 'Looking Good' Stars l{ohe1·t Blake "i..ookin' Good'' Is the final title of MGP.t's previously titled, "Going All Out." starring Robert Blake, Charlotte Rampling, and Olristopher Conelly. Produced by Bruce Geller and directed by Leonard Horn, the original screenplay by Geller and Eugene Price concerns a Texas auto mechanic who tries' to make it as a bigtlme stock car racer. closely wit h a guild v.•hich does the fund raising and administration. This ri.tay the Festival will be held in Pasadena and th e program scheduled for this weekend will help to provide the funds necessary for the rompany to perform in the Pasadena function. If any additi onal funds arc raised Ibey will go into a scholarship fund. Tickets, $2 for adults : $1 for children, may be purchased at the door or reserv- ed by calling 642-4068. Sympho11y ctor To ~ Neville Mar~! er, British·born con· ductor ot the '~ndon-based Academy of St. P.1artln-n-the-Fields chamber orchestra, w:lll the guest lecturer at the Orange County Philharmoni c Society's symp~y preview on \Ved- nesday, March 1..°f,~t 11 a.m. at Edwards Theater, Fashion Island. In lhe fall ol 1969 li-1arriner, whose recordings or i" iamber and baroque music won him me and many awards for excellence, ·as inviled to become the music dlr · and conductor of the newly formed Los Angeles Chalnbe.r Orchestra. --*lttartfner -accepled lhe in- vitation, The o~~a found him to be a meticulous sctl>lar, a cool-headed no- nonsense type1 ii conductor with high artistic standards\ P.1arriner will sdpn return to this coun- try from Eng~ in order to direct the Uls Angeles ,~amber Symphony in a series of sprin!_ performances begin- ning on March lii lie will take time out from a demancifng rehearsal sc hedule for his Orange Coupty symphony previe\Y lecture oo March lQ when he will discuss works by Mozart. Schumann, and Llgeti that are to be ~formed at UCJ on the evening or March 13 by the Los Angeles Phllharmoolc Orchestra under the baton of Gerharp Samuel. ~1arriner's lecturf, and the three that will follow on Aptil 14. li-1ay 5, and May 19. are lree an(! open to the public. Those attending need oot attend the evening concerts that follow. A speeia l invitation is extended to all music students in Orange County high schools and colleges. The series is offeMd free as a public ~~r;~cea~'r~~: ~~r.sth~a~~:s u~~~ have made their Newport Theater available for the fouf morning lectures in order that all who \l;ish may attend. Cl1amher Music ' Concert Slated A special concert ol chamber music "rill be presented by Orange Coast College ri.tusic Department Sunday, "-larch 7. The concert will be. held al 3 p.m. in Music Studio No. I and the. public is invited at no cltarge. It will feature the OCC Symphony String Ensemble and the South Coast Chamber \Yinds woodwind quintet. Music wHI include works by Vlvaldi, Swellinck, Corelli. Arnold and J . S. Bach. Orange Coast College is located al 2701 Fairv iew Road, Costa Mesa. DP O&car Vole Amate11r Race on TV Television Log Gulde to Movies Opera In Laguna Comte• Filmed entirely on locations in and around Dallas and Atlanta, the film marks Blake'! nrst film since h\s critically acclaimed performances in Truman Capote's ''In Cold Blood'' and Abraham Poloiisky '1 "Tell Them WIUI• Boy ls Hert." TOYMAKER CHARLE:$ COLGAN HOLDS DOLL KRISTI MOORHEAD • What to tlo • •• NEVILLE MARRINER GUEST LECTURER AT SYMPHONY p'REl(l : ·::~,- . #;;,· ' ,. . Pl1ill1a1·111011ic Set at U~~ -~ ---'"-~ The Orange County Philharn1onic Society will present the fourth concert in its current se ries with Lo.~ Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra at UC! Crawford Hall, Saturday. ~larch 13, 8:30 p.1n. The orchestra will be conducted by Gerhard Samuel. associate conductor- elect . who has chosen : Overture, Carnaval Romain by Berlioz; Symphony No. 41 (Jupiter ), Mozart ; and Symphony No. 2 by Schumann. Gerhard Samuel, in the relatively short span of ten years, has achieved a position of ex«llence in his field . During that period he has transformed the Oakland Symphony Orcheslra from a non-pro- fessional group into a highly·JX>lished organitation of international renown. His performances are constantly making nev.·s. because ol their excitement and high standards. This is reflected in the tremendous growth of the Oakland au- dience -from 4800 in 1959 to 90,000 currently. The Cabrillo r.1uslc Festival. which he founded in 1963 and a:inducted for six years, attracted nalional attention \Yith its extraordinary programming. in· troduc tion of new works and the performances uf such works as Haydn and Rameau operas . As musical director of the San Francisco Ballet he has lnter111issio11 CONDUCTOR SAMU (~ .,, O:.• ... lriumphantly led that organ~·:-; orchestra in almost every stat.;•ie: c nation since 1960. •"" ~ ; Tickets. $4.50, are on sale , :.a ' j_hc Orange County Philharmonic of!i~ ?II W. Coast Hi ghway, Ncwporl Bca(1, 92660, phone 646-6411. Student tickets arc 12. Mar y Eastrnun Bringing T aleu.ts to Const Theater • ' I .JI ~lY PILOT 1 Monterey In Spring By STAN DELAPLANE ~tONTERE, .. ·California -It 's spring now alohg blue ~1onterey Ray. 1'he fieldi; are gre.en fmot the win ier rains. and the first golden poppies afespread like patches o! butter. H's a place to come blh'k to "to sharpen yer ~'ils." as the old lady says in Shaw's Irish play. ·• J drove over on a clear day. \'ou could see for· eVer the gray·freen fields of artichokes. An~ every fiWnhouse had a sia:n: ''Fresh-picked Artichokes Fill' lialt." * \Vhen I was growing up here. Monterey was an Italian fisherman's town . It smelled of fresh sar· dine! and home·m•de red wine and a:arlicky pasta. Now the three towns -Monterey. piney Pacific Grove, artists' Carmel -are bustling business towns. s : 'They are connected by an eager Cham her of cshimerce and great concrete loops of over-and· uM!er superhighways. There are a dozen first-class hotels and more restaurants. IThat's good.) And more people than the Peninsula ca n hold. (That's bad .) ·;1·,Still. for a nostalgic weekend. 1 must return each spring. To smell Pttonterey aa:ain on Fisher· ?Wen's Wharf and al ong Cannery Row. And tn wa1k among the Monterey pines beside the Mediterran· ean blue sea. ·11;» * 1~; "I have 1 ye1r to write. S.ver1I questions 11Mut l..,n1 in GrMC•: Do yeu think w• (a f1mlly •f four) <1n •Uve there <h•tply?" •• _.,, t never look a house in Greece. But it's ont of the inexpensive countries for a tourist. So I'd a:uegj it was cheap to live in . * Exampl•: I stayed at the Afroditi. best hotel on the ~land of Mykonos. The nudfe for two was Sl 7 1 day. including three meals. That was the BEST ~Jew room with balcony. ;i;.;:.Jn back of these plush rooms. there were sina:le r.ofti:ns with dormitory baths. 1 ran Into a British ~ine man who was slayi ng there for $2.50 a day. ::-,·. * ··:~.:"'Should w• try to find 1 houH in Athens? Or ire the l1l1nds bitter?" .~then:i1 is smoggy and mua:gy -the smell of .'-•-~line around t he big squares. makes you.r ey~s •. ~r. The islands have clear air, but I think Id • ,w;:tock-happy. They are desert dry, and the dry· : ~-gets into the people who begin to look like '. illoJ<.led G.re~k olives. The villages are tiny. The -~.Jlage d1ff1cult. \Vbo do you talk to~ Li think somewhere ~ut of Athens. There's • : : running down to the tip of the Peninsula at >lion where a great white temple ruin sil~ i>n the · ~ ~Somewhere between Athens and Sounion, i1 '. ill::an. ;., . * ·: :~S' ""Do you think we <ould tr1v1I •round the ·'... h Isl•• by tr1in? We don't lilii:e to try th1t left· : -drive." . : ·• ·~Lot or good . trai.n connections a~oun~ Britain. : : • OU can buy a Br1tRail pass -something like : Eurailpass. unlimited travel for a limited period nf 'ijme. The British trains I rode were on the crummy : ti1cle. The linen headre:i1l covers needed changing. :-'nte floor needed washing. There's always some : ~ "kt,nd or labor trouble on these trains -they're Gov· : ~ taiment operated. It's not TOO bad. But don't ex- : · ~· something like the Swiss trains. :N * : §§::"Can you 1u19•1t • good jewelry stor• in Mtx· '• ·~!l'!:i:lty?" ; ::;. ..... : ... J like to shop next to the Hotel Del Prado - first on vour left as vou come out the doors onto Avenida ·Juarez. Not Cheap. but good designing and good selection .. 4,, J!:Ood buy in Pt1exico is an alexand· rite set in gold. Thi!ii iii; nol the true alexandrite. it's a Swiss synthetic. But it picks up the color changes In the same way. A handsome thing in a ring. They do ii "'ell here. . • . • • • • • . I t ~ I l . • . • . • . * " .. , . where to buy 1 watch In Swih:erl1nd?" \'ou get diz.zy window-shopping watches. shop after shop. flfost of them sell the name brands: R~l'ex . Movado. Piaget. Patek-Philippe. and so on. lf-J get one !or a !riend. I ~o to Gubelin -.o;hop.o; l ~all big 1owns. An d I buv a Gubelin house nan1e Wttch . Fine designing and you don 't run into a n like it. An expensi ve house. )'ou get what you for. * ~ For Boy Meet ' Girl -1600.000 under·30s hold passports) -the best meetinjt'. place i:a: the beach. For towns ~·ithout a beach. there's the sidewalk cafe -near American Expre.o;s. \Vhere money from home comes. you know. Check the cafes and you'U find one with a lot of Coke bottles on the tables. That's it. * "I would llke to t•k• • hous• for a few months in M.xico ... ". '· Don't try to rent from long distance. Go there. • Get a hotel. Go J,OOK. When you talk about rentals. you and the flfexl· ..... can renter are talking a different language. A four· bedroom house doe.c::n't me.an all the bedrooms are furnished: Two bath:i; doe ... n'l mean they both work. If UNTER'S BOOKS " THI WIST'' ,!NIST IOOKSTOIH fOI 120 YEAU-SINCI 1 Ht . • ' ' • . Loc:attcl At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA Phone (7141 543.9343 H ,100 loeks ' Pop~cks .., J2,000 URutHI Gt•.tlftt CeNs IAIGAINS GALOlll OPEN El'ENIJ\'GS 'TIL 9 P.,,I. Hartford Lines lTp Top Stars From Page J9 INTERMISSION ..• ... Henry f'ond1, Carol Burnett, George Kennedy, Eli Wallach and Anne Jackson -are the stars already set for the ne.w Spring subscription series or plays at the Hunt i ngton Hartf ord Thea tre in Hollywood. The new season opens April 7 with Henry Fonda returning in tht title role in "The Trial Of A. Linroln." \Vhen this play was first tried out in the East last year. it created such excitement lhat Fonda selected it as his next lheatrlcal venture, which pro- ducers Zev Bufm an, Claire Nichtern and James A. Doolit· tie will present es an all -new production. The title •otwithslanding. ''Lincoln" is 1 rontemporary play t1king the form of a mock trial In which the Great Emancipator is pitted against 4, descend1nt nf those he il'eed . II will play through May 1. HENRY FONDA Stir of 'A. Lincoln' The third attraction of tht!: series will be a recreation of tht Ben Hecht-Charles MacArthur comedy "Twen- tieth Century" starring the noted husbaod-wire team of Eli Wallach and Anne Jackson. George Abbott, who directt!:d the original pro- duction, h11s bee a persuaded to stage thi s version, the dates of which will be announced "'°"· Whi!e the fourth and final and bltt.kouti from the wrillop ol 11lirl1t Jules F•lf· fer and Rl ta the original music of Glenn WeM.'Otl. The Feiffer revue btt•me the "Mother Earth" of lb time, playing Wt!:ekends for eight months and takinl another two-month stint In Hollywood 'a Horseshoe Theater. One triumph w1s followed by another when "Luv" open- ed the following se1son and ran another hair year. But after three. Jr.ore shows, in· teresl began to dwindle. and the the1ter was boarde.d up permanently. A1lSS EASTitlAN HASN'T exactly been id le Jn the in· tervening years sh e dire.cted a production of "Deer Friends'' for en Independent An1heim aroup and staged "A Thousand Clown&" for the new Aoa-Modjeska Players,.1lso in Anaheim, last 1e1son. And she's been 1tudyin1 for her m11ter's degre.e In drama •t Ctl State Fullerton while teaching an acting workshop for Ana-Modjeska. It is the. educational side of theater which particularly interests Miss Eastman . act. In lhe second act, aom1 new punch lines ha ve been added to WMlencore the g11 m11terial. "MOTHER EARTH" lS g<>- lng places -probably to Los Angeles when Its Costa Meaa run expires, probably nol until May. And lhere are even rumors afoot of a New York production. The pouibililies seen llmitless. So take another big bow, Ron and Toni , along with drummer-photographer Ken Shearer whose contributions of both sight and sound are outstanding. And a big hand for cast members Elaine Bankston, Saundra Mathews· Deacon, Michael Douglass, Sandy Marino. Je.ff Mitchell, J1mes de.Priest, Mimi Smith and Cameron Young. along with musicians Steve. Headley, Bill Katt and Bill v o n Ravensberg. lf "Mother Earth" goes lo New York , it won 't be a first for South Coast ReP!rtory - Ian Bernard's "Chocolates" e1me.d that distinction. But it will easily be the theatrical event of 1971 as far as Orange Coast theatergoers are con· cemed. Co~hita Aguilar Mi ss Aguilar wears headpiece of Tehuantepec in her role in "Lunes del Cerro'' at Padua Hills Thea· ter near Cl aremont. The Musical production will run through April 11 with performances Wedne,. day through Saturday. FOR INFORMATION DINERS FUGAZY TRAVEL 2075 S•• JHq11l11 Hll\1 I~. N•wp•rt S..Ch 644-4600 AND RESERVATIONS One nf television's most versatile and viv a c i nus performers. Carol Burnett, and the Academy Award-win. 11lng actor, Gtorge Kennedy. will star May 6-29 in the Neil Simon trilogy, Plaza Suite." Thi! Doolittle production. to be prese.oted exclusive.Jy at the Hartford, will mark I.he first play in which e.ither slar his appeared in Los Angele!! llnd will be directed by Danny SimM. attraction of the series has not been finalized , two of the plays under consideration are Mary Chase 's comedy classic. "Harv~y." starring the First Lady of the Theater, Hele.n Hayes. and the award-winning "Effect Of Gamma Rays On Man-Jn-The.Moon Marigolds '' starring Lee Grant. "I would like. to see a col· leae-level course on com muoity the.aler operation," she says. "There should be more of a liaison between collea:es and the rommunlty theaters. At Cal Stele I worked out a cl1ss study for community theater dynamics on the adult ~!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!! education level ." Information about season tickets may be obtained by cal/in& 2ls.462-666e. Channel 11 Schedules Me.i:nwhlle. Mary Easbnan Is buiying herself with the practical applic1tion of "eom· munity theater dynamics." And for Oran1e Co 11 t playgoers, many of whom ire sti ll unfamili1r with her work, this will be &ood news indeed. In-Depth Look at Two 'MOTHEt EARTH' REVISITED -The second lime around, South Co11st Repertory's ph e.n omen a 1 Heavyweight titleholders lo defeal at the hands of both. musical "Mother E1rth" is Muhammad Ali and J o e Comments from man • on even more enjoyable than the Fta7.ier are the subjects of -the street interviews are alS<l first. One reasoo Is that the. • special Me I r om e d i a featured with the final slate-re.vie wer doesn't have to Television new documentary mtnt from a genlleman who bother with taking notes and entitled, "The Cha mp's whtn asked by Povich who analyzing the production ; he. GoMa Win." to be shown would win the fight. answered ctn relax and enjoy it. Saturday night. March II at ''The champ's gonna win it." The Ron Thron50n-Tonl 10:30 on Kli'V, Channel 11. The special is filled with Shea rer origi nal revue hasn't Tht 60-m i nu t e color many of the idiosyncracies slackeoed IU pace an iota presentation will feature an that hn-e been a part or the in-depth look at both colorful, rontrove.l'!ial A I i. since il opened two months ago to a standing ovation from undefeated champinn.!I on· the i n r I u d i n g his famous lhf' first of a suece"ion of Pvt ol their heavyweight predictions. poetry. a n d championship fight at T\ew confident claims or victories. sellout ho uses. 1n fact, It's York"!! Mad ison Square Ali ha5 returned to the ring evtn brighter and bouncier, (;arden. The !ihnw Ydll be afte r being forced out of !he .!1aliric1l sword sharper rt:peattd on Sunday. March righlin& for th ree y e a rs and the. beat -which really 7, followi n1 the L. A. Dodgers becau~ of his refusal to be makes tht 1how -crisper Gamt. drafle4 based on his religiou~ and clearer. · At th M' · t · · It's not entirel y the same Joe rrazier is reC-Ognized views. e 1am1 raining by the World B 0 1 i n g site nf Muh ammad Ali. Povich show Iha! opened early in A.!lsn c iatinn as the talks , with Ali and h is January -it'ii; better. One heavywe.ighl champion of the mana1er. Angelo Dundee . impressive addition is the new world and Ali bas ntver reall:-i Roth are confident that Ali song. "Sail On. Swee I had his previously-won title '>''ill beat Frazier, but they Universe." :ntroduced only taken 1way fr om him in the dnn'\ discount the fact that last week and drawing the ring, So il will be a., unu l!ual "'iiiiFiirii"ii.ieiirOiiisii•,.tii'"iii"ii"de..,feii•iite<l,.... Oiiiihiiieaii'iiieilsiit .,• .. ppiilii'";;;'•'•oiifiitiih~• iifiiir,.sti l te11t of "cha mp" again~1 1• "champ" for the fir!!t time RESERVATIONS FOR PRINCESS CRUISES ;, th• hisu>ry ,, oo•i,g . I HUNTINGTON HARBOUR Sport. comm'"talor M•"ry' TRAVEL AGENCY Povich nf WTTG New s '"' Ti.ti' 1o••Dw•lk si.to'"'"'• c1Nt11 M!tromedi11 Television i 0 UMs •1teM111lfl 11 ..... """''"..., Ka- Washington. D.C., visited the;'::::!!!!!!!!!!!!!!7!!l!!4-!!846-!!!!!!13!!3!!9~!!!!!!!!!!!!2!!t!!J.!!S!!'2!!·!!IO!!t!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!l~:I traini ng camps nf b o I h 1; figh ters , gathered interesting film clips on prtvious Fights nf each. verbal ron fronta tions at tht sig n ings and inter viewtd their managers. Povich a l~ talke.d w it h .Jimmy Ellis, who '>''!nl do'>'·n1 F THE VILLAGE WEST FINE ARTS AND CRAFTS CENTER DILS-WATER COLORS-POTTERY From $2. to $2000. 7tl L.,i1111• c ••••• •••d . ,,.. ,.n.1.,. •••·tltl J SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER ~ •·;'. ~ l; . _, .. • • ,• ' Tn11 w111th•r h 9oin9 +o 91+ nlc11 (You wouldn't b1l ieve it tod1yl After •II ..• a it C1liforni1l Wh•n thi1 h1ppen1, 1verybody will we nt to 90 SWIMMING, YACHTING, FISHING, pley 'f;iOLP:, TENNIS •• , or iu1t sit in the 1un. Don't worry mother, you'll h1v1 tirft•, too, wh•n you shop her1 ind u11 th11e r11dy· m1d1 fr11h produc1 it1m1. e R11dy M1de To1s1cl Gr••nS1l1d e T •Co Shr1dcl1d l1ttuc1 FLOWllS • .,, .,..,11 e R11cl y M•d1 Coli Sl ia w IY P\.OWlll e C1rrof or C•l•ry Stick1 DHIA e P•elecl O"ion1 or Pet•fo•t e Fo il Wr•pp1cl Pot1+0•1 -Oic1cl On;on1 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • WI WON1 RUN ,OUT '. LAST OF THI SIASON a IMAL\. ·SOLID a THI' W ••• I . • • • • • • • •. I sw1n . JUICY • ICEBERG •. Bunch Csrots • •.Navel Orall<JeS • LETIUCE • Or Celery ,, • u 5 1.00 • 11 • 9c IUNCH • US. • CIA. • a 1..IM'l'r.il ·l.·11.-• LIMIT·6 j l.tMIT. 1 0' IACH WITH THIS COUPON a t WITt1 THIS COUPO~ a WITH THIS COUl"ON .. • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS IXPIU MAICH 10, 1'71 Th~u• r•1t•ur•nt1 d1m1nd th1 fin11t for th1ir custorn1r1. Th1t'1 why th1y f11° tur1 NIWPORT fllOOUCll ,P1troni11 th 1m! The ..... Decks, N1wport 811ch: ~ll1y Wnt, N•wport l••th/ Tiit Stuft Shirt, Newport B11c h. "Orange Count11'f FtUt!st Growtno Product Orgianf:ation" @> N~W~ORT PRODUCE (1 Opn 7 ays • Weelr 7 e.m. te I P·"'· 2' 1' N•.t:rl lool ... rd .. th• Peol.,.lo ·-671-1711 •7W711 471-•ltl "3S Ytt1r• of Prod.ct Know How" "Whert q11alit11 ~ the Order of th< Home"' TO WILL WISHlllh A~I WI IDITINO TO YOUlt IPICt,ICATIONlf . . tJ:f' ·I r.: ;: ~ct a pcrlect ;•acot;o, gomg ·A,d ;;min; Si.y,~t ~:;~~:·!~~;~ ;, :,: ·~ ( · i resort, country club, discotheque, and health spa bct"'et:O here and Acapulco. · ...,_~ 1'.i'"·.; Take a getting-there gcta'>''ay. l.et your octan \iew cabin do the. traveling. ::~,i:_, ~ (.:-.·: ~o bails 10 pack or unpack. ?\o reser\ations to come unreserved. Play your ~---<~ t ~;~· ·1 way in Javish comfort '>''hile 247 doting Italian crew members pamper you with ;:~-·1 c;:~,:~ continental !ervicc. 1. • ~.. ! )·our days are ad\'cntu rou~. your nigh ts are romantic. You'll swim, sun, dance, ~'t/11··' r· .· ~; enjoy four gourmet meal~ ·a day, a ~ho'>'·boat's complement o( live >·:·~:;' •·' . • entertainment. movies, deck games. a gala social calendar, Md delightful ~: .. :,· F' .:; new friends. Fare incl udes round·lrip transportation, stateroom, all meals, ;~~':· ~ :;. and C'ntc.rtainmcnt. . ~r~· /":,~: And then therc"s 7'-fcxico. Puerto \'allarta and Mazatlan on the 7-day cruiits. f~l· !~_ ... : ... ~ On the 11-day trips, it's 'J'nur yacht-like crui~eship "'tracting the jet set"s .. ..'t~; •· t: ' "'1' tl'"'.ol·, ~!_,~:. cn,•iou5 eye.sin Acapulco Bay. On the J'S and 1.wlay cruises, yo111U-atso .:;.? £~ .~ :(icsta in ~1anzanill~: . .. . ~, ., i. f: · >_ 1'a ke a "'cck. Take l\\·o. 'fa'ke a Princess Cruise to Mcxifu for ~11- ~·. ':f. 100 ~0 pu revacaiion. ·:~:4' ~~ ~· ~f ; Call yo"' travel ag'"t or Princess Cruim~~~~)-~8~:_~~~-------_,$;~· iii',·~,; 7, J 1, 13, 14-day cruise5 from R11dy \.·111tt CrulM". SrieciaJ sue1t ~nter· t·fs_ {~ ' Los Angeles ~a11;::i.i ~J~o 4-part 1nvestm<n1 Hm1nar. I~~ ··. Mar.8,19, ·r "C · F ·Ch 1 ··hi !'}. .1 2 9 26 ' ninals ru1w. 'a1unn1 ar cs .31.' u t, ~ · Apr1 , • , crcacor of "Pc.anuu." Spcc1t l lectures, I~~ May 7, 14, June 4. filn1i. April 2. (,t S42S"' to $1395 BridpCrultt. Accrtd11cd ACBL 1oumamcnt ~~ under direction of Ruu Goode. April 9. ~i AJso 3 and +.night Party l , ~:srs Phctop11ph1 Crul.M'. Futurin1 Peter .~ Apr. 23, J\1ay 28, Junt 1. Gowt1nd, Lecture demonMrltJOOS. April 26. 1 .,. ~'.~~ ... '.:.:~••'l•Ol<OO ••m<"'''P :~~-~ •• ~~"' ~,· Tht ;\f/V ltaha I\ of ltaliat1 Rt,1~try. I ~::.':-:::::.:~==~'.::':..~~~;.a:•::.: I , • I J I ) I fridl1, M"'h S, 1,71 M --o ..---DAILY PILOT _tJ . " ' N WEEKENDER OUT ' ABOUT By NOR/II STANLE ¥ ORANGE COUNTY 'S RESTAURANT , NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE Stag Cl1inese Casino For all o( today's dazzling buildings housing swank restaurants, there's still something kind of s~ial ~bou~ establ~hments .dating back to an earlier. time lJ1 our lives. Call 1t nostalgia or what you will, ~1e welcome the occasional change that finds us dining in :a place where we might ha\le had one of childhood's first lessons in proper table manners. {I As it happens. we \\'eren't tutored in etiquette at th~ ~tag C~inese Casino in Newport Beach. But our v1s1t to this dated. old spot one night last week brought back memories of similar places \vhere such could have happened. ALL SO FAMILIAR As youngsters we were frequently packed off to Chinese restaurants -an action that produced two lasting results. ln the first of these we acquired an unshakable Jove for the food while the other fashioned an enduring image of the characteristic atmosphere. From Durango, Colorado to San Francisco, th~se places remain very clearly etched in the mmd's eye. Perhaps that stems from the child's first brush with eating that suggested the unusuaJ. i! not exotic. \Vhatever. the distinguishing sights. ~unds and smells linger and recreate a specific time that. although vivid, is long gone. Since, in many ways, to step into the Stag Chinese Casino is to turn the caJendar back to that era, the experience always causes us to engage in a - bit of reminiscing. For all appearances the late '30s or early '40s have come to life again. NO FRILLS There are no modern embellishments in the plain tables and booths used for seating. The simple decor is highlighted by nothing more than several RESTAURANT l" FABULOUS DINNERS e ATMOSPHERE SERVICE e MODESTLY PRICED • NEW POLICY DANCING NIGHTLY STARTING 8:00 P.M. -SUNDAYS 6 P.M. TWO GREAT BANDS "THE "THE NATURALS" TOPS TRIO" With Gr•1t Dane• Music 'rom The 40'a. 50'1, 60'1 Sl"ECIAL IEAUTl,UL SUNDAY BRUNCH 10:l0 TO 2:30 31106 COAST HWY., SOUTH LAGUNA Re1•rv•+ion1 •99-26bl Reio!( with UJ •• , en1oy your fol'Orile cock101I ... luncheon or d•nner loo~ out upon the ~eo 1n Bu!h1m~' FRANC ISCAN ROOM Lut1cheori everyday eJ1cep! Sundoy from 11:00 o.- Doririer ~erved uni.I 8:00 p.m. Moridoy ond trodoy mI~IJfl MEXICAN RESTAURANT "Fi111ll M1•ic•11 Cwi1i11• 111 Or•111• County" Yblt 011r M• Aitoce L ..... ENTERTAINMENT W•dn•sday thru Sunday By LICHO PEREZ "EL TROVADOR DEL CAMPO" Mo11ffy -4 TMtffy KIDS FIESTA DAYS ffff Pop, lu Ct9•111, 1a11.-.111 OPI N 11 A.M. -1t P.M. SUNDAY 1'HIU THUISDA T 11 A.M.1'012 r.M. •t i. & SAT. S47 W. 19th ST. COSTA MESA 642·9764 Food To Go • artistic murals on the walls depicting birds, trees. 1nountains and a dragon . Un!ortunately -at least to our notion -it ,.,,on't be possible much longer to enjoy the charm offered by these old-fashioned surroundin;s. Changes are coming up. So you'd better get to the Casino in the \\'eeks immediately ahead if you "'ant to indul~e in a little recollection of bygone days be- fore the innovations are introduced. TO BE REMODELED During a chat \vith the restaurant's amicable OY.'ners, Harry Yee and his son. Herb. \Ve learned they plan to launch a remodeling program in the near future. \Ve appreciate the fact, of course. that progress through alteration is a natural order. But even while extending our best wishes for the under· taking. \ve told them "'e '''ouJd be sorry to see the pres~nt long-standing scene disappear because of our sentiments. If you must have fancy and elegant decor to relish your egg flO\\'er soup. the Casino as it stands nov; y,•on't be your cup of Chinese tea. But it's our feeling you'll miss a lot by being so stuffy. GOOD FOOD And in the matter of food you'll be missing a great deal more. Because the Casino's offerings are right on a par with the best to be found in the posh pagodas of Cantonese cuisine. Although the restaurant offers five family style dinners. the one tabbed at $2.50 per person is prob- ably the best house buy. You'll receive soup. almond chicken, chicken cho\v mein. egg foo young. barbe- cued spare ribs. fried fresh shimp. fried rice, al· mond cake and tea. The other family style dinner are priced be· t\\'een $3 and $5.50 per person. There also are tv•o special individual plates offering a complete dinner for $1.95 or $2.25. Real Cantonese Food e1t here or take home. ST AG CHINESE CASINO 111 2 ht pl.. Newport Beach ~jtaura,j· POOl~d · e11d AMERICAN CUISINE TROPI CAL COCKTAILS CONNIE COMPELL AT THE PIANO IAR W9CI. e11d T1111r1. Nim ~OLYNESIAN SHOWS-FRI. & SAT. 1961 ADAMS AVI. l.t M .. 11oli•I HUNTINGTON IU.CH 968-5050 NOW! Donrhag Nightly 111 ' The Lott11ge ,1 BALBOA PAVILIDll ,, , " I II 'DAlLY DINNER SPECIALS $~!15 ALSO SERVING BREAKFAST AND LUNCH DAILY •OO MAIN, B'll;)IOA PE INSULA I 171'11734833 A LA CARTE ITEMS Amo'ng?tearly 70 a la carte items on the menu, dishes recommended on the basis of previous samp- lings include the sweet and sour pork. $2; Chinese pea chow ~~k, $1.75: almond duck. $2; subgum rhow mein, $1 .85 ; shrimp with lobster sauce, $2 .25; beef steamed rice Canton, $2. By ~·ay o{ \'ariety. on our most recent visit "'e turned to the Casi no's combination plate dinners. There are 12 of these ranging from $1.50 to $2.50. The first of our t\VO orders in this department \vas for No. SJ that offers barbecued spare ribs, fried shrimp and fried rice. The second. No. 12, provided fried shrimp, sweet and sour pork and fried rice. • Both plates '"er~ ·e:yed "·ith gusto right dO\\'D to the last grai:~. The s"·eet and sour sauce on the pork "'as especially note,vorthy. and co ntained large. delicious cubes of green peppers. onions and pineapple. 20·YEARS AND MORE Setting something or a record fo r more than 20 years of continuous operation in the area. we feel the restaurant like\vise remains consistent in offer- ing good and modestly priced Cantone$e food . tllany regular customers date back through more than lwo decades to the founding in 1949. A tab at the Casino \\'ill to'tal out surprisingly lo\V for the quantity and merit of the food. For that reason it has built a deserving reputation as an ideal spot for economy·minded families. Stag Chinese Casino is located near the Ne"'· port pier at 11 1 21st Place. It's possible to enjoy the entire menu at home too by simply phoning in and picking up you r order. Hours of business are 12 noon to 12 midnight, Sunday through Thursday, and 12 noon to 3 a.m .. Friday and Saturday. ~ tlie FLING ENTHTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK * HAP HALL DUO MON .. TUIS.-WID. ~ * Larry Lake Singer Guitarist ~ wltll Jt!IR 11 .. .,., .., ••u TNr, ttlrl S••· For Early Risers and late Player• Open Daily From 6 A.M. to 2 A.M. Rear-Mesa Theater s:"uEl:E Cost1 Mesa 145 l. 1M S•. J11tt off N.wi-t lho4. SEAFOOD CONVERSATION Ev"'yone Is talklnt obout our dell· clous stecund clams oncl iglant ( 16· ZO 02. I AustraliClft Lobst« Tolls. CASU AL LUNCHEON FASHION SHOW DAILY Enletl•inmenl J Ot11ci11o; HAPrY HOUI MH. • ffl. 5 t• 7 •·"'· wltll H•rl 4'Mll'TtQ IANQUIT fACILITllS 317 PACIFIC COAST NWY. HUNTINGTON llACH CLOSID MONDAYS Rt1 tr~1lion1 Acceplell 5J6-25SS FINEST SEAfOOD AND OYSTER BAR IN THE SOUTHLAND 630 LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675°0100 Jn Japan. ~ .. crup i< the symbol o£ welcome. At )'amato, Newport Center, we welcome you to the enchanting e;1pcrienoe of dining in serene splendor. Superb cuisine, idcluding steaks and butt"rfl y te1npura shrimp, teriyaki, suld.yaki. sba-bu sha·bu. Luncheon from 11 :30 to 2:30. Dinner (an extrema pleasure) from 5:00to10,30. Resetvations booored. WORLD FAMOUS JAPANESE RESTAURANTS it Uftlltfttll 00 Fashion blaod, Newport Center San }'rnncis<o Century Plaza Hotel, L.A. • • I Fi sh 'N' Chick Late last summer we made the acquaintance()( r. a brand new type of fast food operation in Oran&e•: County. Nov.', nearly six months later. we've had ., occasion to confirm our liking for Fish 'N' Chick in, .. ; lluntington Beach. .. Further. our visit the other day pointed up one C>f those little facts that should ha\•e been evident , before the realization came. Namely. if you slay; a\\•ay from any spot around here for half a year. the . likelihoood is very strong that it will be quite differ· ent when you get back . .. . ' . " .. , ' '. ' "' Fish 'N' Chick eroved to be no exception to th e general rule. A maJor change had occurred in t1lA'. variety of rood that's offered by this take-home,~., eat·in operation. ; ,0·• MENU EXPANDED , n•r Principal menu items are still fried chicken and1, fish and chips, but the bill of fare has been greatly expanded. While most of the ne\V items are usually · associated with lunch time eating. they are al!lt; mainstays for those people \vho frequently have to~ partake or a quick evening meal. ~, .. Leading off these wares are the great Ameri· can fa vorites. hamburger and cheeseburger. ;;s cents and 65 cents, respectively, And we can re{>Oril they're mighty good seeing as ho\v they constitutetl, our initial samplings among fish 'N' Chick's latest offerings. "1. . . ·. ' Other additions to the menu Include gri11e(f ho t dog. grilled cheese, tuna saJad, chili dog. chili size, ham 'n cheese on rye, egg salad, chili 'n be.lift$',': an d chiliburger. An_ order of delicious French fifed> onion rings is available for 35 cents; a mixed green salad, 45 cents; and a \Veig ht·watcher's diet plate, 95 cents. ' )~• Continued on Page 22 NOW APPEARING T11et4ey tltn s.tur4oy JOHN SHERIDAN SUNDAYS THE REFLECTION TRIO l"Nhll'IAt Carol Summerfield * LAGUNA :;. ,y.,., FLEUR DE LIS :~~···"· COCKTAILS ' ,_,_ HORS D'OIUYlllS 5.7 P.M, Ol"l!N 15Y~N 0.t.'l'S 1460 S. COAST BL VD. LAGUNA BEACH 494-lOn 111111 PAllllNG IN llAI . VISIT THE NEW ''0'' Apptarinig Nl9htly Tu ncloy thr11 Sat11rclay THE MURCHISON COMPANY JOE'S orENING MARCH 1 S-IUDDY ROHNER Serving Dinner Seven Nights A Wee~ FEATURl!l'G STEAK e LOBSTER Lun ch Daay Monday thru Frida y 843 W, 19th STREET ·'· . . ' ... 'i .·: ... 1111 Tito Yisto Shopp/119 Co11ter l -, COSTA MESA 646-0804 • VISIT THE ALL NEW ... .· ': __ SWISI ~\\ ettAbETi "' NEW MANAGEMENT -DECOR -MENU!( ~ AUTHENTIC sw~s & GERMAN CU ISINE i SELECT AMERICAN ENTREES ~ WORLD-WIDE BEERS AND WINES ~ . ' I! LUNCH • DINNER Daily 11 a.m. to I 0 p.~ Mon. thru Sat. -CLOS ED SUNDAYS ~ -SJM:(l1I Busi nessmen 's l unch -J 414 N. Newport Blvd. · NEWPORT BEACH ' 646°53 I : j 'I I :· ~ •. · ~"' O;\lLY PILOT Now-tfUNTINGTON LANES n DINING ROOM ';!\OPEN 19582 Btach Blvd. ,., ADAMS) HUNTINGTON BEACH Now Serving Nitaly S-10 p.m., Sund1y 1.9 p.m. PRIME RIB lllTRODUCTORY OFFER -~~~ ~~'.\\, Bring Thi• Coupon Good for 50< Per Per10n Save 50' PER PlllSOH _o__ __ TREAT.J'OR RIB LOVERS ! -THE VOLCANO "10USE EXTENDS A S~ECIAL OFFER ON ITS FAMOUS HAWAllAN RIBS SUN. & MON. NITES Complllte Hawaliaft Rib DINNER FOR ONLY $3.75 Bring The Entire Fam ily For A Festive Aloh • Evening New ttlni Set., M•ctl 11 ht ti.. TIKI LOUNGE SONGS OF CAVIN f,..rn the ltl•rwf of Maul IAN~UET FACILITllS 1400 PALISADES RD. Lee.... • n. .... ., 11111 COSTA MUA 157·1416 trr·ar.p c..., Airport PUBLIC GOLFING IN A COUNTRY CLUB ATMOSPHERE i!i Sho'lecliffs Golf Couue e Proudly Announce::. The Openinq of Their NEW RESTAURANT ANGELO'S AT THE SHORECLIFFS for,.,1rlv M~itr1 'd l M1111q1r Tower• R1•l11.1r tnl, L•91111 1 811ch Fe1turin9 DELICIOUS :oALIAN CUISINE e STEAKS LOISTER e SHRIMP FASHION SHOWS ly M .. ,;.r·, F•1hion1 of Mon••ch 8•v Mon. & Thu• •' I 2 Noon - Ake Ope• for lllAllFAST I LUNCH 1 DAYS A Wl!!ll TO THE PUILIC , E~""L ! _.., .. ! y _,.,..,. I I "" I . µ.....:~ . --. -- 50 I AVENIDA VAQUERO SAN CLEMENTE . 492-4608 WEEKENltER Continued from P•g• 21 NOT A FRANCHISE Under a single O\vnership a!1d manageme_nl, there's no franchise connected with the operation of four Fish 'N' Chick spots in Southern Calilornia. In addition to the J~untington Beach site, others are located in Glendale. San Fernando and Pasa· dena. Aside from the ne\v menu items, if you haven't tried the house specia1ties they provide good rea· sons in themselves for dropping by the local estab- lishment u·henever possible. These distinctive fish and chicken dishes offer deci dedly fresh variations on old the111es, SPECIAL BATTER Preparation of the chicken stems from the old school of SOIJ.lhern deep fried cooking. It is not pres· sure cOoked and is dipped in the restaurant's own special batter. The fish, too. goes into a unique batter and is carefully selected Icelandic cod. Both are offered in portions ranging from a small snack to a jumbo or super box -at prices extending from 75 cents to ~5.49. The course of introductory conversation with the ne\v 1-luntington Beach manager, Kathy Sanson, led to one of those discoveries labeted "it's a small world." Turns out that some years back the ex· tremely personable Kathy was an employe of the DAILY PILOT's classified advertising department. A resident of Huntington Beach for the past decade, she was born in Chicago but has lived in California since she \Vas less than a year old. Prior to taking up her new post, Kathy managed the Pacilis Sands Cabana Club in her home town. OPEN SEVEN DAYS Open seven days a \Veek. Fish 'N' Chick is located at 9041 Atlanta, corner of ltfagnolia in the Lucky Discount Shopping Center, Huntington Beac h. Hours Monday through Thursday, 10 :30 a.n1. to 7:30 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 10:30 to 9; Sun· ~~07 --- Fitte llulln11 C11isi11 e Cocklulb OPff Daily -5 P·"'· ta 2 a.rn, CLOSED MONDAY 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY FINE FCOO AN O ENTERTAINMENT 21 ll E•1I Co11I H i9hw•~ Coron• d1I M •1 Reso"atlont 673-8267 DANCING • PIANO BAR CLOSED MONDAYS DON JOSE' N01t' APPEARING THE SENSATIONAL LEE RAMOS TRIO Direct From Mexico City Enchileda 1nd Taco .. _ ............ ,. $1.35 Chili Relleno · Enchilada ... , ......... $1 .50 Ser•ed with 11.ic:e, l eaM, To1taditct$ a11d Sal1a FINEST MlXICAN FOOD AT ltEASONAILl rRICES e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adams (1t Mlgnoli1) Hunt. Beach 962-7911 ~PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT . c,Airporter G]nn • 'Hotel ' SINCE THE OLD DAYS MEDITIRRANlAH DINING tlOOM Captain', Table Coffff Shop Cabaret Cocktail Lo11nt• en1~rt•onn>t11I •wf D•~con1 Mntll'l9 al'l4 l•1~11et ....... 1,11;7011 ~f ,\!',\HTHllfl IH,\'O J\F\\'Nlfl/' H~:.\Cll. l'Al,lli • ... ' ",. ' . """" " ' . OU ·T 'N ABOUT Gow·met Caterer What happens on those nights when you de- velop a sudden hunger Cor breast of veal Milanaise but you don't feel like going out to a fancy rest&ur· ant? \Vell. a resourceful food entrepreneur in New- port Beach has come up with the perfect solution to your quandary. The gentleman in question is personable Mario Lefranc, \Vho recently opened a one-of-a-kind (to the best of our knowledge) operation in these parts. Known as Lefranc Gourmet Caterer, Mario's unique establishment offers a dazzling array of epicurean dishes for the gourmand to eat at home. READY TO GO All items are packaged, ready to go, and come complete with warming instructions when it's neces· sary to apply a little heat. Most are available at point of purchase in the shop although some special dishes require one day notice for preparation. Mario's credentials more than qualify him to set up a spot specializing in true gourmet fare. Prior to undertaking his present venture, he served as the chef at Chez Cary in Orange and at Le Saint Tropez in Newport Beach . ~ FAMILY PROFESSION Born into a family of French restaurateurs in Dieppe, he \vorked at his profession for 20 years in Paris before coming to this country. For a period of time he also held down the chef's post at Berlin's well-know Maison France. ~1ario arrived in the States in 1963, sponsored by Rene Verdon, a personal friend of two decades standing. At the time VerdOn was White House chef for President John F. Kenn~dy. ~ One of !\fario's proudest possesions is his 'in· scribed copy of Verdon's best selling book, "The White House Chef Cookbook," published a few years back by Doubleday. FIVE CATEGORIES Basically, the offering at Lefranc Gourmet Caterer are broken down into five categories. These are hors d'oeuvres, seafood, poultry and meat, sauces, bakery and dessert. Tl;lose we sampled to savory delight in the sweets department included caramel custard and Bavarian mousse, 50 cents per cup, and several small French style pastries, 35 cents each. Others include rnoka, rum or chocolate cake (serving six to eight persons), $2.75; petits four (see-or glaces), 15 to 25 cents; gateau Frangipane (serving four), $2.50. ~ HORS D'OEUVRE$ Hors d'qeuvres include quiche Lorraine (serv- ing four), $2.50; riUettes (potted pork); 75 cents; cold duckling pate, $2.75; giant escargots {genuine Burgundy), 30 cents each; chicken livers, 75 cents. Take it from us, the snails are out of this world. SEAFOOD Quenell_es of salmon, at $1 .BS leads off the sea- PRlllCE lt!Wes l'WIEAA Herme Hancock Former pianist with the Miles Davis Band, Herbie Hancock, is appearing in Newport Beach at th~ Dry Dock this Friday -Sunday at 9 p.m. A mat1· nee performance also is scheduled for 3 p.m. on Sunday. Alternating sets with Herbie is singer Bobby Bushard. food list followed by filets of sole bonne· femme (for two), $3; bouillabaisse (for two), $5; lobster thermidor. per person, $3.50; shrimp Ne,vberg (for t\VO), $3.75, POULTRY AND MEAT In poultry and meat, all for two persons, there's chicken Burgundy, $3.50; chicken curry Madras (the delicious selection we tried), $3; duckling a !'orange, $7.50; lamb stew jardiniere. $3; and, at $5 per person, beef Wellington with truffle sauce. Bordelaise and orange sauce are priced at $2 per pint. The ta b for a baU pint of bearnaise is $2 and a half pint of Hollandaise goes for $1 .80. ~· Lefranc Gourmet Caterer is located at 149A Riverside Ave., just off the Coast Highway behind the Shell station, Newport Beach. Closed Sundays, the shop is open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., 1t1onday through Saturday. sunday snunch na.m. to 4 pm. !FM~ 3801 E AST CoAST HIGBWAT CllllONA bEL MAt, CALlFOllS'TA PRO!'IB: (714) 675-1374 TO PLACE YOUR AD IN OUT 'N ABOUT PHONE NORM ST AN LEY 642-4321 TEMPLE GARDENS QflNGst:Restuuront LUNCHEON & DINNER DAILY Visit Our RICKS HA COCKTAIL Featuring Exot!e Tropic.al Drinks BUFFET LUNCH 11:30-l:iG Monday thru Fridoy 0'fN ll:lt 1.m. • 11 ,,m. Sun. tllt11 111u"- H:JI •.m. · J 1.m. Ftl. •!Ml Sat. TSOO ADAMS (1t Harbor} COSTA MESA 540·1937 S40·1923 RESTAURANT SEAFOOD ... STIAKS l11t .. Wt<I., Thvr. OIM!I 4 11m Fri., Sat., Sun. 0.,... 11 1m CClo1t<I M-•rs) ftESTAUUNT Continental Cuisine Cockt1ll1 Serving Luncheon and Dihncr II~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Afonda11 through Soturda11. II SAKTA AM-.: 159n HJIW ™· tJl.1no (1 blodo "·" (diftpl) NIGHTLY AT t :OO P.M. SUNDAY MATINEE 3:00 P.M. -.t ·-s.1. & M..-: t p.M. , """' JIMMY VANN 9UA1Tn . LUNCH • DINNER COCKTAILS EXQUISITE HORS D'OEUYRES ( ~ BooN UoCKS 3333 W. C..st Kwy. New,trtletclt 842·429& OH THE U.Y AT M .UCHES Closed Sundays l.LLIY WllT PRESENTS Th e Senset'ion•I TONY FLORES Gult•rist/V~.,~ist , Polk,'C)1l1lco l, Sp•nish TUE. THRU SAT. FIATURIN40 DINNERS In th• S.11 Frtncitca Mtnn1r IA.Cl OJ. LAMI STIAIS e SUPOOD S TO 11 NIGHTLY Drht\ I• tM huty of WINTll SUNJm AT COCKTAIL TIMI IUSINIUSMAN'I LUNCH 11 :00 TO 5 SATUROAYS LUNCH OR BRUNCH ll TO S OrlN mtY DAY O" TM& OCSAN AD.IACIHT TO NIWIJO•T II.ACM Pllllt 2106 W. OCIAN l'llONT NIWPORT llACH 501 JOTH ST. kESIRVATIONS NEWPORT IEACH 675·0100 1l'e Serve IJ.S. Prime Eastern Corn-fed Beef Excloaltely, Persoiudly Selected And Aged In Our Own Cooler A Tlaret Ge neration Family Tradition -Est. 1921 LEE'S __ COFFE~ SHOP DINNER SPECIALS S.rnd ,S 10 9 P .M. Nlg•tly MONDAY THRU THURSDAY All You Can Eat $1.25 Mondey -Spe9hetti Tuesday -Salisbury Steak Wednesd•y -Chicken Thur,dey -Swi's Steek With Choice ol Soup or Salad Dinner roll and butttr FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY PRIME RIB . . . . . . . . . $2.49 Open 24 hours, 7 day' • week 1902 FlARBOR COSTA MESA I • • ¥ otir Guide to Fun - 'I Pagliacci' MARCU 5 TRIP TO NORTH POLE -T-Planetarium at Santa Ana Coll•&•. 1530 w. 17th St., Sanl.a Ana, 11 having a aer1 ... ol public ahoW3 eoch Wed. at 7:15 p.m. and Fri. 1t 7 p.m. lhrough Man>h 5. The current allow b "Land' of tlie Midnight Swt," a almulalcd journey to the North Pole. Showa to cotnt Include, "Easter and Our Calendar," March 17 .. April 2: "2001 B.C.," April 21 to A1ay 7, and "Shadwos in Space." fl.fay 19 • June 11. The performances are free but ruerva· tion.s are requested. Phone ft47-9561. MARCH 5 cHOfR.sVMPHONETTE CONCERT -The Calif. Lutheran College Choir and Symphonette of Thousand Oils w1U be beard in concert in the Newport Harbor Lutheran Clurch, 798 Dover Drive, Fri., March 5 at I p.m. Dr. Robert Zim· mennan will direc'.!L Admission by free-will offering. MARCH 5-7 WINTER FESTIVAL -The Laguna Beach \\"mitt Festival will present a craftsman's fair and art exhibit daily from noon to dusk at the FesUvaJ ol Arts Grounds. 650 Laguna Canyon Road. Other events include lawnbowling touma. ment, surfing tournament, variety show. ballet for children, Lyric Opera Concert and an artists .ball. The Festival rurui: through ~1arch 7 with something going every minute. MARCH 5-7 HIGH SCHOOL EXHIBITS -Varied work of Huntington Beach High School District will be shown in the mall at Huntington Center, Edinger at Beach Blvd., H~tington Beach, Pi.1arch f>.6. It will include m~lc groups, drill teams and scholastic workshops from lluntmgton Beach, Fountain Valley, Edison , Marina and Westminster High Schools,. A USAF T-38 will be on exhibit March 5-7, It will be a full sized model modi.fled for display purposes -with one side shown as a trainer and the other side an attack version. MARCii 5-7 RECREATIONS VEIDCLE SilOW -The Trailer Coach Association will stage its aMual Recreati003:l Vehicle s~w 11-farch S • 7 in the Anaheim Baseball Stadium, Anaheun. Hours : 10 a.m. to IO p.m. daily ; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sun. Admissioo: adults, SI.SO, children, 50 cents. On exhibit, motor homes, travel trailers, campers, house boats, van conversions and boothS will myriad accessories. MARCH I NB BALLET - A ballet program will be presented by New- port Ballet March 6 at 2 and 4:30 p.m. in the Lyceum 11ie- ater at Costa 1'.1esa l:Ugh School, 2650 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Included will be variations from "The Nutcracker" and two original ballet numbers. Ti.ckel8 $2 for adult!, Sl for children, may be reserved by calhng 642-4-068 or purchastd at the door if seating is available. l\IARCH 1-1 MISSION ART DAYS -Old Mission San Luis Rey will hold Mission Art Day, P.1arch 6 and 7 a~ the Mission on IDghway 76 three miles inland from Oceanside. Paintings, wood car- vings, metal work and fabrics from early days will be on display. The public is invited free of charge, Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to S p.m.: Sunday 11 :30 a.m. to 5 p.m. ~fARCH 7 OPERA PRODUCTION -"I Pagliacci," in a shortened version, will be presented by the Lyric Opera <::ompany, 1'1arch 7 al ~ p.m. in the Laguna Mou1t.on PlayhOuse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road , Laguna Beach .. Eno:ch Sherman, tenor. and Constance Crane, soprano, will sing the. lead· ing roles in English for the Repertory Com~y. Tickets. $3. available at the box office. Dinner f~llowmg perform- ance, at the Laguna Hotel . $3. Reservations: 494--0790. 1'.1ARCH '1 LAGUNA BALLET -The third in a series of "8:81.let for Children" will be presented by the Laguna Beach C1v1c Bal- let Company at 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. in.the Forum on the grounds of the Festival or Arts, 650 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. ''Peter and the_ Woll'' and "The Enchanted Toy Shop" will be performed. Tickets, $2 for adults and St.~ for children may be purchased at the door, or reserved m advance by calling 494-7271. 1\fARCH I TRAVEL LECTURE -Lloyd Mason Smith will hold trav~l lectures, presented by OCC, in the Esl.ancia High Sc~l Audi- torium, 2323 Placentia, Costa Mesa, on Mo~day ~verun~s at ·-1::W. The series is on "Islands of the World and 1s des1~ed to better inform the public about them. Lectures are illus-- trated by color slides. No registrati<l!l. f~ ls required. The March 8 lecture will include the Phillppmes, New 7.ealand and New Guinea. Plu1 This 2nd GREAT FEATURE ~. llllot Go•l4 "I LOVE MY WIFE" pin "BURN" (R) wttll M.&HlnMff on the Peni nsula 673-404I Opon 6:45 p.m. • Ill Laguna MARCH I· I MENom OPERA -The vocal puformance class ol Fine Art.I Dept. at UCI wUt preseht Gian-Carlo Menotti's one act opera, •"fbe &1edJum," at 8:30 p.m. in the Vfilage Studio Theater, March a and 9. No charge. MARCH II FOREIGN FILM SERIES -The South Coast Cinema So- ciety is showing a series of foreign filma, in the Forum on the FesUval of Arts grounds, 650 Laguna C4nyon Road, La- guna Beach. On March 10, "Crazy Quilt" (1966) underground comedy by S.F.'s John Korty will be shown, also four short films by Canada's Norman McLaren. MARCH 10 CONCERT PREVIEW -The Orange County Philharmonic Society sympbJny preview will be held in Edwards New· port Beach Theater in Fashion Island, March 10 a~ 11 a.m. The public Is invited to attend free of charge. Neville Mar· rtner Brttish-bom conductor, wiU be guest Ject.urtr at the event' and will discuuss the works of Mozart, Schumann and UgeU which will be performed in the Society's concert to be held at UCI on March 13. One need not be going 'to at- tend the concert in order to attend the preview. A special invitation is extended to all mwie students in Orange County high schools and colleges. other Marriner lectures will be held on April If, May 5. and May 19. MARCH II OW MOVIES -"The Twenties" will be the first of three evenings of old movies to be presented by th"e Newport Har- bpr Art Afuseum in the hall adjoining the museum at 400 Main St., Balboa. March 11 at 8 p.m. Clips of great 11 fllms including "Son of the Shiek." "Phantom of the Opera and "The Jazz Singer" along with great stars of the 20's -Ru· dolph Valentino, Nonna Talmadge, Ramon Navarro, Mary Pickford and Charlie Chaplin. Tickels for the series are $5 for Museum members. $6 for non-members. Studentll $5. nie second and third of the series are scheduled for March 25 and April 8. MARCH 11-25 STORY HOUR. -A story hour for . pre-school children will be held in the Mariner's Library, 2005 Dover Drive, New· port Beach, each Thursday at 10 a.m. The C.O~ del Mar Library, 420 Marigold Ave., Corona ~I Mar will hold a story hour for pre-schoolers every secood and fourth Thurs· day of the month at 10 a.m. 1\IARCH ll BRASS RUBBING - A demonstration of brass: rubbing will be presented by Grace Shumaker at the Orange Y.W:C.A., 146 N. Grand St., Orange. March 11 at 9:39 ~.m. A. hlStory of monumental brasses in England, the location of interest- ing brasses, their significance, and a display of rub~ings will be covered in the lecture-demonstrat..ion. (Baby sitting service available ). For addition information phone 633-4950. MARCH ll SPAGHE'lil DINNER -The Newport Harbor High Schoo1 Booster Club has set !ls annual baseball spaghetti dinner for March 12, 5:30 -8 p.m. in the school cafeteria. 600 Irvine, Newport Beach. Tic.kets. $1, available at the schooJ or call 548-9708. Season kick-off game with Coron~ det Mar High School in C.Osla A1esa Park, following the dinner. 1\tARCH U • 14 UCI CONCERT -The University Orchestra of UCI, under the baton of Peter Odegard, will present a concert in the Village Theater on campw at 8:30 p.m. Friday, Ma~ .12 and again on Sunday, March 14. The free concert will in- clude music of Mussorgsky, Brahms and Varese. l\1ARCH 13 OC PRILHAR.l\IONIC CONCERT -Gerhard Siµnuel will conduct the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra when the Orange County Philharmonic Society presents Its fourth con· cert of the season in Crawford Hall on the UCI campus. Sat- urday, March 13, at 8:30 p.m. Musi~ by M~ Schumann and Berlioz will be performed. Tickets available at the Society's office, 201 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. If seating is available some l.ickelll will be sold at th~ door. Adults, $4.SO, Students, '2. For reservations phone 64&-6411. PORT THEATRE 10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS e alST PICTUltl • alST ACTOlt-o.otp C. Scott e IEIT DlltlCTOR e llST STORY and I MOltl NOMINATIONS MOVIE MJ1N08 FOR !WtENTB AND • 'VOUNO PEOPl£ rlN ........ .,,,,.,.,. ,, ,. ""-,.,_. ...,., """ ....,...,.,.,. "' -c""""Ml.....,ltl&W.~ OUR CUSTOMER: ., ·, ® 11t Pl UIDll l' .otllltTtl '"" 1111111...,""' 111 Cl'tJI" "'"1} ........................... ... a115-s----•· ... .. -... --·-- A mM». basically tradltlonal from bis button-down days at college, but wbo h•• moved beyond. A man alwa.yt ahead of the trends. A fNhton tnnuence without really trying, who dn_.I for hie moodl a.od Im .... Friday, Marth 5, 1971 IWLV PILOT ,Ii Readers Pick Scott ' • • ' • ' Amateur Drivers Will Vie Geor1e c. Scott, tbe rtluc-be selected on the basb: or tam dragoa or the current the reason he gives for his OScar rice, ii ruMblil an etay selecUon ~f the "Best Motion first to tbe unofllcial "Oscar Picture ol 1'70," elusive ''Otcar poll" i newspaper In the Orange Coast 1rea. Some 400 of tbt nation's lop amateur road , racing c!rlvers will Cilmpel.e for toP honors in "Nine Hundred Crooked Miles," a sports program Special slated for telecast on .KHJ·TV, OWnel 9, March 11 at 9:30 p.m. The ball hour film covers the major races in the tw«Miay event of "Tbe 1970 American Road Race of OAmpions." H-::!i:i al Road, AUanta, the ARRC is a brand new 2.6 mile race course with 11 turns, eight of which are totally blind to the drlvera. Since drivers are untamlllar with It, t b e course represenll!: a challenge which breeds a bigb degree of respect for the potential dangers. The ARRC is billed as 11the only meet in the world where so many drivers can gather lo test themselves and their ca rs.'' Twenty one classUlcaUons of racing cars .re there representing all kinds of machines from the Formual V's to the '21),000 unlimited cla.ss-, lntemaUonal contenders. '·Nine Hundred Crooked Miles" is the story of lhe pet>;:le wha mpond to the chaUengt of drivers vs. driver v!. track,-and It examines tbe rea!IOns why drivers are ~ev\lled to the demanding skills of auto racing. Throughout the film, the viewer experiences the prl!ssures of Cilmpeting in this "01!'!':'1Plcs" for cars and drivers. Car-mounted cameras capture 1 driver's-eye view of the track-giving viewers a fell of the straightaway speed and careening turns, The pressure is there. The intense rivalry between teams and individuals is there. nie road rating story ls there. A1 story that tells why men seek the grutlling challenge or driving "Nlne Hundred Crooked Miles." Crane Guests Derby" being c o n d u c t e d Ballot and complete l.o- among its readers by UH! DAI· fonn•UOn are published dally LY PILOT. lo tbe DAILY PILOT, the es· AD ballotJ man be mm,. and dellvertd to tbe DAILY Pll.OT by 5 p.m. on Monday. Marcil 29, to be vaUd. Scott, who has told the Mo-!i~=;::::;:;;;r;~;;;;::;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;~!li!iiiilf:i Uon Picture Academy he doesn't want the award for which be bu been nominated, bu 50.7 percent or the early votes caat In the Best Actor category In tbe DAIL V PILOT poll. His nearest rival in Orange Coast voting 11 Ryan O'Neal, atar of "Love story," with Friday Evening Morning 19 percent. MARCH 5 MARCH I Otber votes In the DAILY '"'811tt-Jo<oJDun""'. 1:2581"'""""' PILOT poll aeem to Indicate B DIC ••••lcie TOlll -"'· 1:J1 9 ._.. ,_.... It's true that "everybody loves 1J flit -llllw G111Sb: Sfl•rl JM&._..., ._ .... a love story." Uwk. Do-. l.nrb. Joh• llJbtn, DQJ (l)IDT....., _ Ali MacGr1w hu polled SS.9 Ml11t .Bill S111ltll 11d c:o.lmst &all m lltlnd Lol.llM RWctL percent of the (int batch of [1Ml1ln. m,.... ... #211.Ul reader votes for her wort Jn D "TAMMY AND THE J·:tOIJDdr"•lNMmi "Love Story." Sara Miles of * MILUONAIRE"I ' o QJ (1) m-1 - "Ryan's Daughter" baa only DEBBIE WATSO~lor D n. --22.2 percent of tbe vote to 0 Sil O'Ged Mtwit: .,..., l9d GJ TISI a. I ,.-.. date to put her in aecond' tM Mlllitulrt" (l'Ollllnct) 'SJ-1:00I)18 (I) llp .... , ...... Place for Best Actrus honors. Dlflbbl• Wibon, o.m. ,.,.., 8eoftt g ..._ A •-tt' ai-j 1-"Pt fwltll. Timmy btcomn I l«fltary DID?ll m....,•11•11•1 ctor .x.v s v~ .. ere, a • of • mlllionairt, i.....w , w. llnl ton," ls running a close secood D Did V•• .,_. 0 @ - to "Love Story" in the BesL mat nllWMel · Clli•ll HMr . a_, "*""' ~ "" -Motion Picture category. In CD ~ CJ) SW Tnt ,..... (•d¥tfltln1} '53-loltl ..,.., early voUng, DAILY PILOT flll M.rrllltM Donn• Rtld. readers have given "Patton'' IBFWlw F••llJ G)TIM" .... , .. 30.l percent of the .. votes l:W--~ wm a:tS OClmpll,... ag~! 33.l wcent for Love ll!)Lll""' , .... -ColMlt l:JOll9ctltDY111 ...... Story. «B 1PLM flllwl HnthorM/CrtN. G) a.ot IWI Tbe straw vote ls part of 1·15... ...... m..., a naUonal poll-flnt of its Uo II c:..iw c-. a:U a...,....., ....... kind ever attempted-co-mn. n,lq ,._ t:GDllSCJ) .... I ...... sponsored by several area • ,..,.,,,.,. lt4at ...,. newspapers across tbe nation El Wtdlll R•/.._.. e QI (I) ID DJ .... and by tbe Movleland Wu IE'-' ~ g MtM .,...... {Moad•., '6' M_useum of Buena Park. El~~ -ou" .ll&llf. Though the outcome ol the l!l oil . D IHl CD ""7 t.111 - balloting by moYle-going 7•1: .::' .!. ~rill~. ID·A.ll llMll: .,._. ,_. ~ newspaper readers will have G n.t'• My llMl ma) '51 -:. M~ Jed no effect on the selection of II Q! Cl) t LM L1cJ : I~( ~ the rtal Oscar recipients, the OJ....... llJ-;:, ..._ voting will result in the eJMU .,~,.....,. presentation of a special GI Olrhl .. Uftls .._. m ,_.. 1.1t1M1 trophy to the stars and the Ill"' '-"'.:1.., uo CJ 11.l "'* - picture selected. === OQ7J (J)1"' r 1 ti • d:•• The wa:i: mu1tt1n-a W i 11 J;JO IJ QI()) n. llllnl Guilt Ln 0 ...... : "SH Anlil" <-tin] ,. present the special awards to Arr• pl•p • 1.,119, ht•rl speeltllst '45--(rrol flpn, Nub Slnltll. '" winners selected from among who •tin m1ntment 11 tllt holpl-CD....,..: '111t ....., c." : official Academy nominees. 111. tRtldltdultd) (m)1t•rr'J '5'--Ntl "!Chet : The museum also will cast am Mlcll C..,.rnl '1lM Hoa· ti"""-11 """ the winning stars' images in t11t." Vlt10llt tlld Wind 1r1 1tn0nt lO:OD 8 ft (I)_. I .. ...... .; wa:i: and put them 0 n hOtlll'fi ltktn In • dllln& b•n• Cl 9 Cil m H. .. ....... .: permanent display in the robbery 1tt1111P1 bJ 1n lnf•lllDlll D ~ W Net .... Stars' Hall of Fame at the 0111!111. Edniond 0'8!\ln au.sta. II) LIM I.Ari Buena Park museum 8 ~ ll'llll• t'llW SCM•· lO:JO II 9 (I)""'-t11•1taa.t ·. ult• ll\llltl Include Lou RIWll. John D QI (I) m Htfl C-.. , The stars will rec~1ve their Suon, UIJo Tomn11 tnd Dr. Wl!lia111 1,...., awards at a Stars Hall of A. Nolen. 8 1i11M: -r• ... "' ,_.. Fame Awards Banquet in D ~Cll EDDI ,,...., llllCl (lll)'Stll'J) '4t-Urlbltfl Sola. 0. Hollywood. CJ Mlllal $ llhrir. ~ DulJM. One newspaper-reading vol-Altl..., (4rlfM) '64 -.limn D m>(l)ar "'* er will be selected by· judget Shwtr1, llldltt4 Wldmtrl. 11:001J Q11 Cl) Malt'• ...... HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Bob to occupy 1 place of honor m TrWlll • C.1111•-B QJ (I) II' Mil ... Crane of "Hogan'• Heroes" at that banquet and 1Jso le> GI lilfiitl: "IM IM .....-(dt•· O @l])IWlr - , and Gayle Hunnicutt will guest ttceive a week's vacation for 1111) '41 -Mokl Shetrtr, a Mlllr. "Clllrl' 91 ,_ .. star in a roman Uc segmen* two to Mexico City o r ID a.... JO .,.. (WldWol) 'U-Guy 1.-. r of televlsion 'a ''Love, Honolulu (wlnntr's choice). J:SS== •....,... ID"'* ....,. ..... ( .... J Americao Style... That national wlMer will l:CIODIDJ (J)fD"-'1 1 .., p,.. 'S,_,tllf M•• ------=----------------I-"Thi UnknOWft ftctor." Im PSlll.t ...,._ Pick Your Own m•• '""' '"" ll:lOCJ@ (J)e-m 11ncw1.., "'• 11 ~ on.....,..,. A docu1111nt1ry on Hcw1 SChOol In @ (1) l.wrr ltet .... fl Lllldtrdl1t, F11.-tn innov111Yt ID M1111 • ..... ._.... 'Oscar' Winners public K11oD1 •nown rot lb 1uut11 Afiemoon In rnoti'l.Un1 pupllt. l!)Urlq IMk 1%:0CllJ9(JJIU.,.. : 1111.1 ... _ a~ .. ,_ -•..,: USCii)l.Jldll Un s.mlrtMI Ctf"""" II,....... i l:JO 8 IB (I) Wf lltfllll Slln Rots rortw •1111 Tt11 NMllt .. : The DAILY PILOT, fn cooperation with Butna Park'~ DU (j)&'I..._ tf •II• tM tet!Oll. Movieland Waz Miueum, offera readtri a chance to pa.rti· e0 :~-n. ""1rtrfle ,,. Dt!J,--,-·• ;· I cipate in nationwide balloting to seltct popular winners in 1.W1.V"" e the ''01car Derby." Week's vacoUon for two in M1%ico City "1 Keith b1c:om11 dltplf COflClfl'lld m ....... Or Hon.lulu o-' a ... 1,,ce of honor at th1 St4ri• Hall of FatTU! wlltn • tt11 itlllll• nported to bt ll> Dr.-" II - '"" /JOU 1 1111. 09tflttH' '* Lturlt tor • A.ward! Banqiut in HoUf/WOOd .await the. national winner. date U:JOllal(l)Til ...._ Vote now by filling out and clipping out this ballot: m THE !lilh DIMENSION m• =-(~"~" .... . ______ --- - - --- - - --- -i *SWINGS with FROST Wiii Go" ~ tDDewW ffllf ._ Guub •rt · -Tiii Flttll Dhnenlion, VIQ.I Ctrr, Ind ID .,.a Alt1n Slltrmtn. 1:00 II IHI (I)....., I .... Afark an ''X'' in the box which appears tn front of your selection. Vote for only one person or film in each category. Please be sure to complete the 25-word statement 1t the end of the ballot and fill tn your name, address and phone number so you m......, "' .,,., " .. ,.. -c.t•-"' I t:ID 8 CllJ ()) CIS fridtJ' Mloril: "TIN tilt n. ~IO Wit M .,.._, fltltlll: .... " "'-Ar (com· '°"' PIM ff'Ofll hi• s,rtnp, CIC. can be contacted it you win the prize trip and ban· quet invitation. All ballots must be returned (in 1 person or by mall) to the DAILY PILOT by 5 p.m. 1 on Monday, March 29. Beat Ac«>r 0 MELVYN DOUGLAS for"! Never Sang For My Father" O JAMES EARL JONES for "Tbe Great White Hope" 0 JACK NICHOLSON for ''Five Easy Ple<ts" O RYAN O'NEAL for "L<>ve Story" 0 GEORGE C. SCOTI for ''Patton" Belt Actre11 0 JANE ALEXANDER for ''Tbe Great White Hope" O GLENDA JACKSON for "Women In l;ove" [J ALI MAC GRAW for "Love Story" o SARA MILF.S for 0 Ryan's Daughter" O CARRIE SNODGRESS for "Tbe Diary of A Housewife" Best M~tlon Pleture of 1970 O "AIRPORT" (Universal) 0 "FIVE EASY PIEC.ES':,(ColulJlll.!A), 0 "LOVE STORY" (Paramount), 0 "M' A 'S'H" (20th Century FoX) 0 "PATTON" (20th Century Fox) WHY I VOTED FOR THIS PICTURE (In 25 words or Jess): •••.•..••...•.. · • • • • • -• • • • · ............ ' ......................... ' ....................................... . ................... ' ................. . Name , .....•••••.•.••••.• Phone •.•••••. Street Address ........................ .. City •.••••..•.••••.•••••••.• Zip •••••••• ,., ·-•s1 R-~rt W•IM D ...,._: "IW " ,..,..... (llf. _,,, -"""' r. I '51 ~ ----0 Tiit fqttlw Ytn 1111) -,.., ....,. , a IJ7) CD GD nn l trt P11•t. m._, ........... QNADnl.,_W "MMltttrrat." R1pt1l St1 Tu11d11 ~ -e :..~ = llslln1 •l 9 PM. llM Mllllllll" li)JOllllndt• -· ,_ ll!MIJtm,M1fn11N11lllt lltMlwl/ G)Udt ll!Ahlt 4t Ml .... m-•-' l:IOOl!ICDl!l"' "' ..... Ill--1=.'i=..., Dool l:lOO~IHIJn.-D ... Me ftlfln: ~ • EC..... • .,..... OM" (COl!llldr) 'U-Mllftd1 ltr· ll:llDUCIJ. .,.. ..,... 111, Sldlllf' JlllllL "TIN Lat....,. • •le s ... (drtl!ll) '6().....Clriot ~ !imm mu...-""' 81 .., __ ..... .,, .... ,.... m1ce11e ----Ill_..,, 1:.--t:(OIJhlt(tT,.._ IN118°"""-=~~-............ ms. .. • 1111--. 1111•--11:11BB(J)IE... U>l/hlll ,... ~ .... -2a1111211.4• a a CiJ m""" w.11. '"""'"· B """ - -uo ID n. "'" -om-m--.-c-iu-e Mm; '1IM ..,....,. (d,.!111) Robert T.,tor U.,. .-. , '64-Dld toprdt, Sartl'I MH•. '. m ~ a',_. m CtClltl ,_..... USC ft. Sttn· lord. l •PI 6111,. J:OO II,.....,,......., 8111"1..,_ · D_,_.,._ 11-e ucu ...... ucu Bruin• '"' Mn W. • ..._. i...e.t ..,.. tnd .1111111 ftf'lfttlne. n. Unlw. of C.I. letl'l. TtpM. m Ctittt , ... tw 11CM ... 11:15 m t1111 .. 14 piontlllp lllfll. ll:IODlllJ (J)•., ,,.., ll!l-1-l - DU(J)ll.l___ 1--fl!Vlll tulll " llostll&. n. 'II ..... am llkl Clwtl sv1ar "" ... . y..er. ....... :u= ... ~·-l:l58--(11Mlll1111) '17~ Mltdlelt. J:JI tl:IO 9 """' -,. ., ._ U BUICK.J'RCSENTS <-'II . .,.......,.. '""""· *CBS Gdlf CLASSIC U:U m AK-lllpt Aw. ....._..... :u !': :-' .:;"_. llltt :... :"' tlll .. ait 11 llltrt Co1111n "" Ort. WlllWl1b C S. l:tOB.._ -....., '* Anll" ""'· (...,_ ~"" """""'· D Im CIJ m l'lo -t• Tiit $60.GI» .....,. 0,.. ,_ DD""' 1111per'ilt L111t1 111 ,....._ C1t111. r -- - - -- -- - -- - - -- - ------2:300-""'"' -<-I IDlllll _ ...,_. '4~IO Mn Ctmtt. • C1rM1n ...... MaU ballot to: "Oscar", c/o DAILY PILOT, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 •:11m ........ use ... st....,., •'-" • ..... T• .-lltfJlll "'111t. tltll • ...._ • ~· ' -----~ ~ l •• • -• • • • • • • • • 24 OAILV PILOT Friday, March 5, 197 1 Vour Guide to Movies Hardhats and Establishment Make Up Editor's Nott : This mov~ gujdc is prepared b~ the films commitue of Harbor Council PTA. 6-lrs. Nioel Bailey is president and 1tfr1. Bruce Nordland is committee clwinna11. It fs intended as a reference in determining suitable films for certain age groups on d will appear weekly. Y o 1i r views art solicited. !tiail il1em to lifo- vie Guide, ca re of ·the D"AILY PILOT. * ADULTS Bonnie and Clyde : True story or two bank robbers and killers in the Southv.•est during depressi-0n days. S t a r r i n g DUSTIN HOffMAN' , "UTTlf 816 MAN" . PaNMsion•Techuicolol• ~..., Chief Don George • Foye Dunowoy \Varren Beatty and Faye Dunaway. Cwtcb %% CR): Film version or novel about bizarre ac· llvities of World War ll bon1ber squadron ca ugh t between batlle fatigue and an over-ambitious Colonel. Aclion takes place off coast of Jtaly. The Diary of a M a d llouse"-Ue ( R): The dis in· tegration of 'a New York mar· riage. Garrie Snodgress plays the bored housewife, Richard Benjamin is the pompous bus· band. Five Easy Pieces (R): Son Rachel Stars HOLLYWOOD !UPI) Ra chel Roberts, former wife of Rex Harrison will play a leading role with William Holden in "The Wild Rover" for MGM . of wealthy musical family leaves borne to become itinerant work~r. Lives con· tentedly with cheap waitress, drinks and brawls wllh new hillbilly friends . Fools (R): Love drama starring Jason Robards and Katharine Ross . Story of a May-December romance and a jealous husband. Set in San Francisco. I Love My Wile (R): Break· up of a Romeo's marriage. Elliott Gou1d, Brenda Vaccaro and Angel Tompkins. "Joe" (R): Joe, a crude factory worker, and h Is wealthy executive friend , BiU; share hatred of "blacks, liberals, welfare b u m s . • • Violence erupts when Bill's daughter becomes enmeshed with sex and drugs in Village hippie environment. Little Fauss and Big Halsy (RJ: Professional motorcycle rat ing film starring Robert BAWDY COMEDY-BITING SATIRE FRI-SAT WED-THUR , . . 11~• 1'011>1"9 v1111•v1 IHI\ "-1..A TIMES Moliere's "THE IMAGINARY INVALID" tvl• " .•. lo\'l"I, l!Yely, tn!1r11lnl"ll .. , Cl/\ <~•rm "°" 11111 ol your IHI." -LA TIMES NEW musical revue "MOTHER EARTH" IOI OFFICE: '4 .. 1lil 01 All ~GENCIES OU.NGE COUNTY'S PIOFUSIONAL THEA.TIE ~do MIW•C)jl;f II.I.CM -•I IM•~ ... -I•"'"'-U•• h'9 -ot. U )SO AT THE ENTRANCE TD LIDO ISLE Eve .Sltow Storts 1 P.M. Cont. Sat. ' s.11. Froin J FREE PARKING EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN ELLIOTT GOULD -MARCIA RODD DON SUTHERLAND In Redford and ~tlchael J , Pollard. Little Munler1 (R): Elliot Gould stars in black fantasy of urban collapse. Directed b.)' Alan Arkin of "M•A•s•H.'' M*A-S•u (R): Irreverent comedy about the Mobile Army Surgical Hospital during the Korean War. Elliott Gould, Donald Sutherland and Tom Skerritt. The Owl and tbe Pussycat (R): Barbra Streisand and George Segal star in film version of Broadway comedy. Prostitute • with • a -heart • of • gold theme. Patton (GP): Film portrait of the World War II general known as "Old Blood and Guts'' showing him both as a man capable of intense pro- fanity and a brilliant war strateg ist. George C. Scott is Patton. Karl Malden plays Gen. O'mar Bradley. Tbe Statue (R): Story of a male's preoccupation with the size of his reproductive organs. David Niven. That Cold Day in lhe Park IR): Sex-starved sp in ste r locks 19-year-cld boy in her home. When he wants free to join pot-smoking sister a'nd boy-friend, spinster imports prostitute to keep him happy. The iinport turns out to be a lesbian. Sandy Dennis stars. Wedding Night (GP), Wh<n Irish bride rears pregnancy and se.x, her new husband, frustrated, looks elsewhere. MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS Bullltl IGP): Steve McQueen is Bullitt, a San Francisco po Ii c e detective assigned to protect a Chicago mobster needed as a key witness in a Senate crime hearing. Robert Vaughn co- stars. Burn (GP): l\'arlon Brando stars in story of oppression of Blacks and revolution in a Caribbean sugar colony. Buth Cassidy and the Sun· dance Kid IGP): Legendary friendship between the most infamous and amiable of Western outlaws who nee the country, and take Sunda11ce 's bored schoolteacher-mistress to Bolivia with them . Bank robberies and gun fights antidst humor and pathos. Burt Bacharach m u s i c a I score. Cheyenne Social Club (GP): After the Civil War , a Texa s cowboy inherits a bordello in Cheyenne. James Stewart. Henry Fonda and Shirley Jones. Dirty Dingus l\feGee (GP): Frank Sinatra as the dnuiken, fun-loving cowboy who robs his old pal. Friend (George Kennedy) retaliates by getting help from nearest town, con· 'Pagliacci' Slated In Laguna Sunday The Lyric Opera production, ecutive director of the Lyric ''I Pagliacci," performed by Opera. Film 'Joe' sisting of an Army camp and a brothel. Co~edy. Little Big Man tGPJ: Dustin Hoffman stars as a 121-year· old gunfighter in this "better white.than-Red1' story of tbe legendary American West. The Longest Day t GP): Historical drama of the Allied invasion of Nazi occupied Europe. Shows the heroes of D-Day In both their military and personal side. Stars John Wayne and Richard Burton. Love Story (GP): A Ii MacGraw and Ryan O'Neal star in romantic. bitter-sv.·eet fable of today 's college youths and the generation gap told in their own language. Erich Segal wrote novel from his script. The Professionals (GP): Millionaire hires four gunmen lo retrieve allegedly kid· napped Mexican wife. Western drama of rough pursuit in i fexican desert. Lee Marvin and Burt Lancaster. The Private LUe of Sherlock llolmes (GP): Robert Stephens and Colin Blakely star as sleuth and his pa l in story of the famous detec- tive's private life. Ryan '• Daughter I G P J : Robert J\1itchum and Sarah Miles star ln a love story set in Ireland. Trog (GP): Humanoid monster, dis cove red in English cave becomes threat lo community. His caretaker, anthropologist Joan Cra~·ford, and fellow scientists attest to his research value. "Trog" runs wild, kidnaps and kills child. Wulherlng Heights ( G ) : Emily Bronte's classic tale of the melancholy-tragic Jove affair of Heatllcliff a n d Catherine. \Vild moors of Northern &ngland a century ago are the setting. FAMILY Aristocrats IC): Disney car· loon feature. The Boatnlks (G): Disney comedy !Urned in Newport Beach about the Su n d a y sailor. Stars Robert Morse. Cromwell JG): Epic story of Eng1'i,nd's Oliver Cromwell, ';The Citizen King," and his struggle to overthrow King Charles !. Stars Alec Guin· ness. How tbe West Was Won (G): The setlling of the West. presented in five episodes wiU"t an all-star cast It's A Mad, 1\1ad, !\tad, ~tad. \\'orld (GJ : Comedy with a moral about greed. King of the Grlulies (G): Walt Disney film about the life of a grizzly b e a r . photographed in the Canadlar. Rockies. J\fy Fair Lady I G l : Cinderella story of Cockney girl who is transformed into a lady by an aristocratic pro- fessor. Rex Harrison and Audrey Hepburn star in this film version of the Lerner and Lowe musical. Tora, Tora, Tora (G): Jtc. creation of events preceding Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. Dual view ef the event treated more as pictorial h i s t o r y than establishing causes. Wild Cbuntry (G}: Story e~ pioneer family who moves west and braves the hazards of Frontier life. D i s n e y feature, scenic background. * The letter immediately of ter the title indicates the 1'aling given the picture by the Motion Picturl Code. The Code And Rating pro- gram may be found on one of the motion picture pages. Ryan Signs HOLLYWOOD \UPI) Robert Ryan signed to play a supporting role in the mo vie version of Jacqueline Susann'• ''The Love Machine". "THE LITTLE the Repertory Company will Eugene Obe r will conduct top oft the Winter Festival the orchestra for t h e in Laguna Beach this Sunday.. per for mance which is The slightly shorter version presented in English. Patricia ~·ill feature tenor Enoch McQuade is responsible for Sherman and sop ra n o the costumes and the special Constance Crane in t h e banners have been created by t ----------------------- leading roles. Homer Greathouse. ~~liliillJ ~·"°" ........... (()\!•Mil.>. -.... 1101 .... ._ _____ ., __ , __ 10 ACAD.AWARDS MOMS. intlu1f IN MISSION Vl~JO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO . GEORGE C. SCO'n' A•C0.-•.0~l.1'••oo SA" DI[,() n"' ~! <·~PAZ !Ufl'>Olf ~ ~o ~"90 00 KAIU, JIALlllll\' 20th ee..1,..,.ro, "'""'" JAMES EARL JONES . o JANE ALEXANDER · · rirn "The Great ~ eoior White Hope"~ EXCLUSIVI ORANGE COUNTY INGAGIMINT IN""" ...... ,. ... INS1',Ut C•NTt:R ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE BEST ACTOR·'°""' Eo1 ..,.,., ACTRESS· Jone Ah~xander AIM Tvtt Mo.'9•4 i• ~·z•1 (GP) ••. "~~~';!!vl"!"a!! ~';,~! ._.. TEN BEST!" •.?·•-· • HUNTINGTON •L&COH BEST ACTRESS -orrie Snodgre11 "diary of a mad housewife' -~ Jason ~ Robards Katharine Ross 1- ~I ---NOWI AT BOTH CINIMAS --- MURDERS" "IMPECCABLE PRODUCl10N ... '""""'""'" filmdom's 1re1t entertail'lll'ltnt films of the 1olden days..• -llO:COf,IC( ''TOUCHING ••• UNFORGmABLE F.'°"' lOVE STORr' ~ ALL \ -lrolAY MANN,. FABUlOUS LAS VEGAS MAGAZINE '-PfBW _,,.. _____ L __ ANNA CAl.llR-MARSHAll TlllJTHY OAlTlll •'"-·-ID ...... H!l~•\'J!'I ....... .. ·--.... --"&000 TO lOOK AT ... bnirtlful!y multd tone. make i seem e1rthier than the 1939 version." -l .A. n 1ro11s Wftl<d1y~ 7:U & t :U ~-?:\,, • , 1,,6:n, •= n, '°' n Miss Crane singing the role "I Pagliacci" starts at s of Nedda "·ill be remembered p.m. in the Laguna l\1oulton by Lyric Opera patrons who Playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon saw her last year in "La Road, Laguna Beach. Sunday, Boheme." March 7. General admission Guest stage director. Robert is $.1. Rogers says, "Enoch Shermanr::===========I has a lusty. forcelul stage 'p""•c~'x"w·~·,·c•ocK• ~,· presence and his vitality and powerful vo;ce make him an BOOKSHOPS l f exciting performer and an II I C · · th TIU CITY ' unu sua Y s rong an10 in e a.an~ • 17141 lJ9.7700 production. Velma Sun is ex· sourH coAsT •lAt• °""" SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH Largest Selection ot Tropical Fish & Supplies in the area. Now 2 Locotfo111 '11 W. WllSOM, COSTA '!ISA Cllff F l !l'VIN ltd~ 54-"'I toll Allaftl_H....,!lfttl-.i a .. dl "' .. IU To11lr. .t 6:'° 01111 10:15 Co110 Mei•• (71 4) !l~·21rl r .. ~...,, JUNIOR MATINEE SAT AT 2 P.M. AND "THE VULTURES" -111111!' JaEATTW All Seats 7 5c l:lltilUHA~ I[~~~~~'!"'!!. I ElClHNIE -~ olld of 1:10 011ly Sll:Vf. MCOUf.fN AS ~l)ULUTT' r:::* HEY KIDS1~1 I lit Pol Show, S.hndoy, 1 :JO IE•ch11lv• Or1n9• CGUnly ll"llt tlMlll "FIYI IA.SY PllCIS" E';Jrdvt'" 0rt"11• CMfttJ' E11t-t•-nl HlYAN'S DAUGHTER .. ••• Offlc• o,.... 12 ,._ • f ,.M, Dl'Uy SMw11"'" Mtfl. ""11 nun. -I , .M. ,!1, • S•t. • l :JI ... M, Mtl~ I.ti, · SllOI, • J ,.M, "CIBWIDU comedy! THE OWL AND THE PUSSYCAT Is high entertalnmentr' -4 ... ATOUllllOMlf '~"' ( "TllE noFEss10N1LS" I ••(M 'Puuytot" ~ 111 a.30 p.111. "P~tnioMI$" tll 6')0 & 10:30 lt-111. 8o:c Off11:• Oplnt. S.JO p.m. SMw ot .. 30 P.lfl -~ -~:;-... Co-HIT AT MISA "THI Pll't'ATI LIFI OP IHllLOCI HOLMIS .. llMIW.. ..... 1,.., ,,, ... 1 , ..... s11.,,..., c.~11-,.,'" • ,,,.., kn41t¥ e.i.111111fft 1 .. 111 I 11.111. new han9.teni b •nk1m11ic1rd e m11l•r c;h1191 1 f11hion i1l1ncl, 11ewport <o•nt•r 644-5070 1 A(1demy AW•1'11 Nom1n111..,1 AU MtcGr1w • Ry111 O'N•ll "LOVE STORY" (GP) S..n, -Tll11r1.-6:DCI • 1:11 • 10:00 P:r1. •Sit. -'·I · 11 • 12 p.m. All Color Sllow : "'NNEH DINOSAUllS lltUllD • TNE E411tftt•• CCU 1 lllu• e Jt111 Cr1wt1n1 • 0'TROG•• IGPI . r •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• __ ..., -~----· All C1llr Sllow "'NMfM DIMOSAUJIS llUl..ID TME l"AlltTN" 101 ,1111 • Ja.1 Cr1wt-nl "TllOG" CGPI ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUNTAIN VALLEY ORIVE·IN -..... , ... • -... MJ.Z411 111 C•11< f'1'9mlfl11 f.wg11111,.111t UIHkr U M1111 &1 Wllll P1r111I 00JOf" Cit) 11lu1 e S1!111y °""n11 (lltl "THA T COLO DAY IN TMf •A•K" ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All C•lor IE~ci<lllVI 0r1 ..... 1 .. s11awi,..1 011•!1n tllolf.,..n e C11Dr '0LITTLE 1 10 MAN" IG•l lllul • J•mn Slt Wll1·H111ry ll•nd• "CHEYENNE SOCIAi.. CLUl0' (OPI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 10 ._C•cltmy Aw•l'Cll N•IT'll111tlln1 Gtort9 C, Sc11t e C•llr "f'ATTOM" '"" • All s11r C.•t e ·c110r "'TMI LONGEST DAY•' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;;..... ) All CMr IE•<l•ol•• Orl-111 SMwl"I .. '.• l ,_ U""' 11 M111t le Wllll f'•rtttt ,. .... ••STATUl"llll SU.JJJJ Ill'" • kcl>nd C1i.t 11Nho1'9 "WIE0011>10 NIOMT" (Of'I :11111111111111111111111111111 - --------- __ ., .... II I --An C1i.t F•111ily f.~t..,1ot1-1 -· All Sl•r t.11 -"IT'S A MAO ~--.... . l•,·~Slt 0, MIO, MAO WOllLO" (01 SJ.to Ph '""' • AH lllr C11/ "MOW THf WIST WI: WON" w, ... '"'·"J" .... ,~ WARNER ORIV! IN , .. DICK TRACY I ' )-~ ' " TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF ·---........ ._._...._ · JUDGE PARKER '1~ WE DO M,t,VE TO M.A.NC:i . .A.ROUND HE~E. C..A.t..IT WE- PlAY A GAME 01'.= GIN? ARE Tl-leR_E ANY O.RDS AROtl_ND ?' YOU MIGi-iT LOOK JN ™AT TABLE DRAWE!<? NEXT TO YOUR GIAIR ! '/// ///~)' RING . I DOt.fT 5EE ANV •• '[DAILY CROSSWORD •• ~byR.A.POWE•I ACROSS 1 Intertwines 6 Inc line 10 Tortoise's _opponent 14 Br ing to bear 15 Tropic al 'fiber 16 SIQgle 17 C'afm ll Being in effect 20 FJ•td l• eltirr;es tl ~isy · sleeper 22 Pro ·-··: ·· TemoOl'a ril y ?3 Sired 25 Set of drums 27 Kind of -• swea te r 3o Female anlm~I 31 State : Abbr. 32 Ex tent )4 Less •'. comr11on ~8 F'acts 40 Automobile '42 Kind of I tty '3 Unab le lb act AS Maverick '.41 Air • t.odr for •t · S1n Antor1 !0 '48 Aeronat.1tlc.1I •',• Eng1nee1s : !~Abbr. '10 •. Slu~ber ~ .,,1l1tS " ' ' " I ~ ~ '• ' - ., ... '' ' ' S.Z King of Scotland S!i Norse epics 57 Hindu goddess of splendor 58 Fis hes from a bnat 60 Pr e·wedd in !J event 63 Re9ion of China 65 Relatln!J to: S.llllil 66 City of Italy 67 Hora ce···-< • US educator 10 Shatk 68 Cinema : ll Santa - Informal 12 Bird •bq Arrog ant lJ F ragr~nt person oleores in 70 Beg inning 19 ProtPclivt 71 Fourth sh eathing estate 21 Prose DOWN narratives 2• Light carriage 1 Mai>lt ··-lb ·-·and 2 Spindl e carrots 3 Oerrions tra!e 27 Muslim ha coy j!ldqe satisfaction 28 As11onall t ~Deleted ·-·-- 5 Sebac eous Sh epard qland 29 Art sub1ects inflammation )3 Plateau "6 Circus VIP: 35 Tending to 2 wo1ds opp ose 7 1970 actively Osaka event 3& Alaskan 8 Warn ing governor signal 37 Becomes 9 Satellit e degen· of Neptune erat e ' ' ' " "' 3/517 1 39 Member of a Sem itic peop le 41 Wants !lrgen\1y 44 Comb part! 46 Showed the way ~9 Plays the uke 51 Man or the cloth 5Z Acute Inflammatory disease 53 G1eatly: Archaic 54 Nova Scotia cape 55 Thre e Greek goddesses 59 Cable 61 Bird : La ti n 62 Letters 64 Vehicle 65 Electrical unit; Abbr. Friday, M•rth ~. 1911 DAILY PllOT U By Tom K. lyan By Al Smith • !~ r•- PERKINS MISS PEACH Ll'L ABNER >:.O<I"° c/i'r. "' -i1T1-1 ~" v-~~ o' ' SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS 1.er'S S!!IO. '!Hl:!j IS 'fHc OIURCJ-1 ... 'IHIS 1<> '™" sreei>l-E- YOU1RE LOOKIN' AT iH' BeST SS~VICS IN ;ow11, MOON. -OP!!.~ 1\le t>ooR ~~D see ALL. 1'Hi!. l'!OPl.I ! 0 0 By John Miies By Mell ... llC.TI-4Ult, ooes TJ.llS MEAN WE I-IA.VE /\NOTHElt SEASON OF i#fCX, MAT T~ OVEll·G!Cf>WN, /MPENET/lA &E WE.EDS TO 1.00K FO!lWA!i:P W? MAYBE . ~~·5 NOT CfXJNT OU/l CJ./tCXENS 8£~1lE 7lil!Y HATCH. ! ; I ! • STEVE ROPER BUT, DAD! Lll(E I TOl.D 00\.lY, SHE MIS'UNOERSTOOD/ t KNOW ~ ¥.WLP..rT 1'1N TO KEEP eOPE.I(' FROM PuBL15Ml"1G - PICTURES"· OR ANYTHll'(; !LS!/ I CM EXPLAIN -· D1i:i!K /-9UT THOSE PHOTOS COULD-UH- Rll/1, UP NI 1"""'™>11' j BUSINISS 0£<.L/ I I ""'"""""'"'1 1 By Saunders and Overgard ~ OllrSIDE TllfiHOMiO!rl'lAN!- 'fA WAWT I SHOULD KEEP 11/f MOTOO RUHNIM', PIJGGY r RIGH'T/ ME AA' WLCLL P\JLI. TME JOS/-·IF THE FUZZ COMES' PAST WHILE 'NE12E IM TME~, 'tAJ('E OFF AAO Cl_RCLE THE~ 81.:0CK .. I By CharlH M. Schull WAAI' IXl '<tl<l 11\l~K, LVC~? ~OUR et.oco ><!6/S!:5 l'«OIA8'..~ UP,.. FIVE COOS, PLEASE ! l I I t ly Al Capp o" ('\ . no'! t• no .,,. .., .. . .pl-rd! ~ ---l.t~~~ ~~M-motQ. BRlWi•~uQ P~ :t DID rr / ... :t DIC>'1MllS ISi Tl-I! CMU"GH". 0 tHI mANGI WOti..1> MR.MUM . By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johll$Clll By Roger lollen DENNIS THE MENACE • I I \ ' •, I ~-rL~s; . t: ff RYS LER I PL YM 0 IJT ff I I /ff PER IA L · Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ·OF NEW 1971 C.HRYSLERS & PLYMOVTHS • ARE BEING SOLD WHY? BECAUSE OF LOW, LOW PRICES THE FABULOUS ALL NEW ~ ~ -~ CRICKET FOR '11 SER.• 4141 JIR076190 ONLY. ATLAS S!RVIC! DEPARTMENT WELCOMES AND HONORS ALL CHRTS· L!R CORPORATION VEHICLES REljlUIRING SERVICE AND WARRANTY WORK, REGARDLESS OF WHERE CAR WAS PURCHASED. WE HONOR MASTER CHARGE, IANK·AMERICARD, CARTE BLANCHE, AMERICAN .EXPRESS AND DINER'S CLUB. NEW '11 BUSTER $ ONLY 3 BLOCKS SOUTH 2929 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ph. (714J 546 -1934 OF SAN DIEGO FWY MONTEREY VI, •11iom1lic , r1dio, h11ler, power sl11rin9 & br1k11, air tondi· tio11in9. ( 7Z44H6051- SI I '$795 '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA COUPI VI , 111lom1lic, r1di o, h•1l•r, pow,or •*•••· ing, whil1 will lir11, • i r conditioning, ITURJ45' ~395 DART 270 WAGON A11+om1lic tr1111mi1· 1ion, 11dio, h1el1r, wh it1 wells , r11lly cle•n· 1947CQS J '66 BUICK WILDCAT VI, 1ulorn1tic, r1dio, h11l•r. power 1l1•rin9 I br1k11, 1ir condi· tionin9, ¥inyl lop. !TIG355) SEDAN VI, •ulomalic, r•dio, he•ter. pow•• 1!111i119 . br•k11 • 1111 • win• dow1, ,;, c.onclitio11in9, !TSJ506l '68 CHEVROLET CAMAllO Autom•:ic, r1dio, h••'· I•, powtr sl11rin9. (WJT l5ll GALAXIE SOD VI , 1 utcm•lit, r•dio, he•l1r, pow•• 1l•1rin9. IRPR7'17 1 '68 MUSTANG 2 DOOlt HARDTOP VI. 1 ulom1!ic, r1d io, he1l1r, pow•r 1i•trinq l br1k••, whit• will tir11. !XRCt.751 DART 270 4 dr, 11d•n. R1d io, h•1l1r, 1 uiom1tic, whit• w1ll1, 1xc1llenl ccndilion. !SVU7801 '69 VOLKSWGN. .f'A5TIACK Fully 1ulo..,~tic l••n1· rn iu ion, rtdio, he1!1r, !111100155)) • • SPIDER ROADSTER 4 1pe1d, radio ind healer. !XEZ870) '68 PONTIAC FIREll RD COUPE VB, 1ulo,,,1tic, r1dio, h•tl•r. power 1!111•· i119. 1ir co..dilionin9, ¥inyl lop .. tVRY'1431 l'OLARA 2 DR. H.T. V8 , 111+om•lic, 11dio, h•tl•r, powtr lie111 in9, 1ir conditionin9. I SIX· 2lilil '68 DODGE CHARGER va. 1ulom1tic, power tl1erin9 & br1k11, 1ir conditionin9, vin.,[ lop, 1ter10 lip•, (VHV058 ) SQUAREIACIC Sun Roof, AM-FM r~ dio, he1I••· !T PC710) '69 MERCURY MONTEGO MX VI, 1ufo,,,1tic, 11dio, h••ler, power 1t•••· ing l br1~•1 , 1ir con· ditionin9. IXTJ'10til VALIANT 2 00011 li cylind•r, , ••dio, he•i•r, 1i• condition· in9. IWCP150) '69 OLDS 91 LUXURY SEDAN Full powe<, f1clory 1ir , tilt • t1l11copic whet!, AM.FM sltr•o r1dio. IYYX2071 FURY SEDAN VS , 1uloM1tic, r1dio, ~e1l1•. power ile1rin9, 1ir conditionin9. !XJN. 4•2 ) '69 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER Pow • r 1l•trin9, br1k11, window1, dtr• •o l1p1,' l1clory 1ir condilionin9, vinyl lop. 1CM2 lK'1CISSb. "'s3195 • -I' . .• \ 'rtdaJ, M1rch S, 1971 DAILY PILOT Jf DICK WILSON SAYS: IT IS OUR CONSTANT GOAL TO OFFER THE HIGHEST QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE FREE 7 DAY TRIAL EXCHANGE .FREE TELEPHONE APPRAISAL FREE CREDIT COUNSELING Buy one of our advertised used cors ... drive it for ·7 doys and if you are not completely satisfied .• ; trade it toward on.e of the 200 used cars available. BRAND NEW 1971 3DOOR RUNABOUT 1971 $ . . FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DEUVERY AT WILSON FORD OR IF YOU PREFER OlJR EASY TERMS Use the equity in your old car to make the down payment on the new one -Paid for or not. • Short on Down Payment? • Little or No Credit?• • Overloaded with bills but still need a Car? CALL 540· 7780-842-6611 • Short time on the Job? CALL 842-6611 '63 ~~~;?.~,~~~.~.~.~ $388 FUlL . PRICE 6 7 ~~~~~?,!.~:.,,.) $488 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. (F10ARK62572) 64 TRIUMPH T.R. Roadster $488 4 tptM (YYA-122) ..... 6_5_~_e_,~c_.?_~_,?_!_2._?.~_ .. >1) ___ $..;5_8 ___ 8-r 64 ~!.~~~!~.~USTOM 67 ~~.~~ .. ~.~~~~!~.:~ ...... .,. $,. 0 G 1-~....;;;....""-"-"-'1 _______ ....;;....;;....-..., - --·---ITM __ ...... • ... • ....,. _______ lll ____ lll_ ... 61 INTER. SCOUT · 4 wa...I Drln wltti •nl..,_ '67 ~.~.~.!~.~~ .. -,,.-....... ,,_$988 ll-ll•7ll 1----'"-·'-"'-'·"-"'-"·-"n_."_._21 ____ ...... ......., '69 FORD SUPER VAN $E · · 1c ... 11 .. 1-•. ~~!." 71"' V·t --.. 6 7 ~~~~ ~.!4.~!'~i~!!.'!.. $1 o s a· 1---~·'~, ... ':' .. :" ..... -:-:-~:':'·· ~ .. ~ .. ~· ~~;;;;;;;· ~~~,;;;;,,---,68 8rc 1/2 TON PICK$ CAMPll SPKIAI, YI Am. tnn.. cnfMI c•t..(ISSlU) 165 k tti. 1oto1 o_.., ~ onc1 $65 i• the '°'°' "'onthly poym•n' 1nc1ud~ •• )I, 71 ~.:ind o:iu $2 0 8 8 II finonc• chorlil•• .:in ap.,rowd cr..iit fM 36 rno:inl+ls. Oefe"..i poyment pri<:e 11 $240.5 Including o:i~ ~ fU -..:• chorgn. to••t. '71.li<:erue or if you prefer to poyccnh, full co1h prio;e It S20.58.9S Including aalet .... 7""°"'.·'""w""'" Price ANNUAL PEICENTAGI IATI 10.M% BRAND NEW 1971 51998 FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY AT WILSON FORD OR IF YOU PREFER OUR EASY TERMS $68 TOTAl $68 TOTAL DOWN MONTHl Y PAYMENT PAY'A!NT lb MONIHI $61 it the to:ito:il do:iwn poymenl ond $61 i1 the -I monthly payment lncludin9 loll, '71 lic:eme ond ol• ftn0nce charges on opr,•o~•d ~redit fo:ir 36 fY1onth1. Q!:fefred payment price II S2516 jncluding .:ill I~ llOnce cho'liJ•S. la•••· 71 li<:e111e or II )'(Ml ptefer tQ pcry co1h, full co1h p~• 11 $215'.fO i..cluding t0fe1 toic. 71 li<:•"•e.(1 "!Ul5"~3) AllNUAL PEICINTA E IATl 10.75% ........ ,,,, MUSTAN G $2588 2-DL MARDTDll FULL PRICE #1FOll0170002 IMMIDIAn DRIYUY aUMDMIW1171 $2388 TORINO · FULL PRICE 1 u2n116114 IMMIDIAn DfllYUY 69 !.~~?. .. ~~~!.~~'"'''·"11'' $ J 488 t!Hhr. (IXY222) '68 !~~~.~!~,~.~~~"'1'''""$1488 rNf. (24JACf) '68 !~.~!!~.C vl,E ~~J '"· '"''· $1588 Power Steer. l•ndou Top. !WT Y912) '69 CHEV. IMPALA $2288 CUSTOM COUPE v.•.~ '''/•n.Alru"'''· P1wer 1tHrl .. , Ylllfl ,.. • ITTI-1 IJ '69· !.~~.?.~!.~.~?.!.~~ ........ $2288 lr•b1, P1w1r Wl1f•w1,L11f•1111f. ' .(Dt:SM) .. .a -, '69 T--BIRD lANbAU $2988 f•ll P1w.,'iM:l141 .. hctlty 'Ai~ P.t•" . StlirMI ·WW· S..h · lniku, T•~776 ~ . II. I Complete camper package equipt. with stove, sink. icebm. dinette, queen sited bed&: much more. No. 0011247. & 3/4 TO N FO RD Pl I .. ft· 'f:e Ford eqpt. with 300 cu. in. engine, cwt.om cab, nd.io, beater, heay duty camper equipment. ( 182000) $co. J.ETE CAMPER PAC&.4.fl.E FULL PRICE NEW '71 PINTO POPULAR· 2.DOOR MODEL fully'"""' tqu;ppod'$6248 with ditc brok11, rodio, Whit1wolls, ett. MO. NEW'71 LTD -2DOOlllAIDTOP ·. FACTOIY All (OllDITIOll ' :·::=·.!l..-..: ¢ 1 24 ... lintM ..... 'MW-.., lewlls. MO. .. l \ • I I • DAltV PILOT Friday, Marth S, 1971 Everyone Hos Somethin9 Thet Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Con Sell It, Find It, Trode It With a Want Ad Very Specl•I Home 2311 Tustin Av•., N.B. BE FIRST ltlij~~I Custom buUr, roomy 3 i.-ci. rm, lge kit. 1\1/bl1n&, oombi· nation dining & rec roo1n, lgt-• living nn w/frplc. 2 Full baths. Experu!ivt' crpt1, d11>1. Heavy shake roof. Beautifully la.ndscapPd back CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCHURE OF CURRENT LISTINGS IRVINE TERRACE Open for inspection for first time! Spacious 2 bdrm luxury borne with 21h baths. Perfect Come 10 1033 ~tariners Drive for a preview showing of the plans for our existing new models now under con- struction. They'll be ready to move into in June, ~autilul and big • Ir 5 bed· Mn!. 4 &. 5 baths, family rooms large ~gb for pool table1, oversized master beclrm suites • and all with outstanding Views. MACNAB -IRVINE Serving Newport Harbor since 1954, twenty- five experienced residential salesmen with over 270 years of service. OCEANFRONT l . 2 Bedroom. 11.:! bath, beamed ceiling ... , ............ $ 59,500 2. 4 Bedroom. 4 bath. playroom. On sand ............... Sl69.900 3. 7 Bedroom. 61.t.! bath. pla)Tm, super vie\v . . . . . . . . . . . . $399.000 Carol Tatum UNUSUAL, HANDSOME HOME OPEN SUN. 1·5 at 1219 SANTIAGO DR. For the executive f~mily man. 22x22 magni- fi.cent sunken family rm., separate dining: view from all 4 bedrooms. Lush landscaping $89,500. Chuck Lewis WSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS , For those who wanted the beautiful 4 bdrm .. 21h bath model ~ome & were unable to pur· chase one. now is your opportunity. Still in model condition with that same top view. $85,000. Kathryn Raulston LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS OPEN SUN. 1·5. 1233 KEEL DR. 4 Bedroom view home on fee land -elegant decor. Fam. rm. w/wet bar. formal dining. Bike to beach & schools. $74,500. Harriett Davies OCEAN VIEW -FEE LAND See this 3 bedroom -family room -dinin g r oom home. Located on gorgeous canyon in ; Corona del Afar. Great family home on Cul· De-Sac. Just listed at $69.000. Bud Austin OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1 • 5 Huge 97x120 lot \rith pool & trailer park· Ing! 4 Bedrooms, den. dining room. Lanai with w-bar! Could be grandmother's room or billiard room. Reduced to $65,000. See it at 1538 DOLPIDN TERRACE. Bill Comstock WOW! WHAT A VALUE Here it is -the one you have been "'ailing for! 3 BR., 21h ba. Gigantic ram/rec. room. ·large swimming pool. formal din. rm .. 2 fireplaces. $58,500. M. C. Buie WALK TO BEACHES. R-2 Owner's 2 BR. upper apt. has small view or bay. l·BR. lower apt. Room to add 3 car garage & apt. over. Convert existing struc- ture to single family. $55,950. Cathryn Tennille A GREAT FAMILY ROOM Plus 3 BR. 2 Ba .: an inviting home with priv. pool &-Jacuzzi -plus all Universitv Park Association activities: owner's moving & ready for action -asking ~48.950. "Chuck" Le\•lis BA YSHORES-OPEN HOUSE You are invited to inspect 2532 Circle Dr .. Sunday afternoon. CI o s e to 2 private beaches & yacht basi n. Asking S48.500. Mary Harvey SOLID COMFORT-$44,950 Perfectly kept home in Eastblu!f. 3 Big BR's., 2 ba., sep. formal din. rm., Jge. kitch. plus lge. eating space . Family room. wall of bookshelves. frplc. Park · like yard. Only $44,950. Hurry! Art Gordon ''THE BLUFF" FRANCISCAN Model is the best priced three bedroom. three bath \vith a vie"· \\'e have. It is clean, vacant and ready for you. $42,500. Al Fink YOUNG EXECUTIVE HOME Beautiful 2·slory 4 bedroom. 21,~ bath. A·l condition. Bean1 ceiling. air conditioned. 2 patios. Professionally decorated .. f!\ real bar· gain. Walk to beach. Only S39.~00. Mary Lou hfarion CORONA DEL MAR OPEN HOUSE 400 HELIOTROPE (near Baysi de Dr.\ Tm· maculate 2 bdrm. home: 1ar'1:e liv. rm. w/ fireplace: 48' fronta~e \V/lr!?. yard for bldl?. unit. Short walk to shops & beach. SUNDAY 1·5. $39,500. George Grupe NEWPORT BEACH •3 BR. J3,4 ba. Real "Doll House" 4 BR. 21fl ba. \\'/beamed ceilings '4 BR. 2'h bt. -A great location 4 BR. 2lf.i: ba. -Elegant decor pelle Partch $29.500 $39.500 . S44.850 $44 .900 CHOICE WE$1CLIFF · , BuildinJt si te. Ideal location for a home or your choice. Lot contains approx. 10.000 SQ. fl and level: 2 street fronts. $25.950. llAlT)' Frederick OPEN SUN. 1-5 VIEW 1207 PORTSIDE. Broadmoor. CdM. Let me show ~ou this 4 BR. 3 Ba . home. Eleiant .Uving will be easy. Near shopping. be•ch & excellent &ehools. LaVera Burns 133-0700 644·2430 Coldwell, Banker SSD NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.11. ~·ard k pa1lo ror en1er1ain- 1ng $32.aoC>. Attention Veteran' N'o d<n\11. Eastslde 4 ~ Mn!, 2 ba. Lge li\;lng rm., fenoo:I back yard. Obie gor.. o\\'ner transferred. Submit all otters. 0 n I y .m.:ioo. Lachenmyer Realtor 186(1 Newport Blvd., CM CALL 646.3928 or 545-3483 MESA VERDE PICK ONE Beautiful homes -Beautiful area -Take ~-our pick: I-Super sharp J + Fan1. 3o clean 11 squeeks -$31,:ik!. Z-C.Orner for boat t trailer plus 4 BR & f'am Rm - $29.930. 3-CuJ df' sat -Quiet area. 4 BR + Fam Rm-S31.:.00 f 4-Separate )1asrer Bdrm plan. 3 BR + Fam -1 $28.750 -FHA/VA OK. .i--Golf course area -Large masler sui1e -4 BR - flu.l:'e Fam Rn1 -S37,::.00. JorlA/VA OK. Dlal &1;,..nJO:: roREST [ Ol~ON "' Ri A l TOP S 2'l99 Harbor, Costa l\te&a HOMES ON WATER 550,000 TO $500,000 HARDESTY REALTORS 67S.286' "lnuf\7"6e: 3069 MADEIRA Clean "Cottage" 3 Bedrm Quier Slreet Nr Schools l'ey,· Paint In & Ou! Nrat Patio j•,,..o Loan Only $33,j()Q DRIVE BY!'. ')ll,S<i"\ "1~' '.)?,alt~ 546-5990 -2 BEAUTIFUL-1 NEW DUPLEXES Balbo;1 Peninsula "Poinr• in every detail .. , .................... $62.500 439 AVOCADO Open Sun 1·5:00 LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT 5 Bdrm, 4 bas, liv rm, formal din rm, lge Jam rm & mstr bdrm. All have beaut water vie\\'. 4-Car gar & lge ct-yard patio. Plus 2 b~rm, 1 bath apt which may be rented. Pier, slip & sandy beach make this Lido's best \Valer front buy at ................ $260,000. TRl·LEVEL ELEGANCE I 4 Bdrm, DR, FR. In fact you'll revel in the spaciousness this prestige home offers. On ~0~u~~~~~e:~ -~· ~~~~-~~. ?~~~~.s.'. ~~;~ 20251 CRAIMER Open Sat.Sun 1-5:00 CAPE COD ON CRESCENT BAY Attention whale-watchers, surf-riders, sun· bathers! Beautiful 5 bdrm water-oriented home. Pegged floors, cedar closets. Excel- lent condition. Fee land ............. $185,000 WALL OF PRIVACY A\vay from it all~ 3 Bdrm sparkler. All the reasons for wanting a home! ........ $41 .750 2039 IRVINE Open Sal-Sun 1-5:00 CORONA DEL MAR Spacious 3 BR near ocean. Beautiful wood paneling & gourmet kitchen. For the dis- criminating buyer. View of ocean! $87.500 216 POPPY Open Sun 1·5 :00 CAMEO SHORES -$175,000 Ocean view ! Custom built 4 BR & den home '.''/formal J?R, 5 bath~ & powd rm. Lge wet bar. Beautiful pool with huge cov. lanai. GOOD "BROADMOOR " VALUE Ranch style 4 BR, Cam rm & formal dining. Convenient to community pool. ...... $62,500 2612 LIGHTHOUSE Open Sat.sun 1-5'00 CALIFORNIA CONTEMPORARY Exciting design featuring glass & wood. Cus- tom 3 BR bit 21h years ago. PRIME Corona de! Mar location nr beach ........... $84.900 228 GOLDENROD Open Sat 1·5 :00 BAY ISLAND -$160,000 An older 5 BR home with loads of charm on lovely island. Pier/slip, tennis ct & pk. LINDA ISLE -$250,000 Rich elegance in this glamorous 5 BR. Cam rm & formal DR home. The finest in smart & expensive decor. Air con. Pier/slip. DOVER SHORES J.iurry to see this beautiful 4 bdrm & den home. Formal DR, 31r.z baths & ideal kitch- en. Gorgeous view! .................. $99,500 1600 ANTIGUA Open Sal·Sun 1·5 :00 DOVER SHORES -$105,000 Brand new home! Dramatic 2 stry living rm, 4 BR. study, garden rm w/wet bar & formal DR. Island kitchen. 3 car garage. 410 MORNING STAR Open Sat-Sun 1-5 :00 CHOICE LOTS -PRIME LOCATIONS DOVER SHORES & BAYCREST 90' Front, level fee .........••..... $ 27 .500 104' Front, level, corner. fee ........ $ 28 000 85' Front, level, corner. fee ........ $ 28:500 80' View site. level, lease ...... , ... $ 29,500 75 ' x 180' VU on Galaxy, lease . , .... $ 39.500 57' Front. pier & slip. lease ........ $ 53.500 BEAUTIFUL LINDA ISLE 56' \Vaterfront. Lease .............. $ 69 500 45' \V aterfront. Lease .............. $ 73'.000 45' Waterfront. Lease. Plans incl. .. S 75.000 108' Waterfront. Lease . . . ... $107.000 EXCLUSIVE SHORECL IFFS Ocean view. Fee simple. Plans •.... $150,000 ·"Our 26th Ye1r" 3 BR. 2 Ba. 111 t'<IC'h duplex WESLEY N A apt. J "'''' '" """"''·I . T YLOR co .. Realtors Largl.' patio a1-r11. for 10..,,·en. 21 11 San Joaquin Hills Road "A /ltust See'' for buyers NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 This is your opportunil,y to I select your own co.lors & custom details. Our "Show Room" Is open daily from 10 Al'1 10 5Pi\t. Come see the ne11,·est and best in luxury living in Dov. er Shores, Ivan Wells & Sons WARM AND COlY! If you are looking tor true value in a really nice ho1ne this is for you. !rs a. greai 3 !JC!droom 2 bath home near Harbor Shopping Center. Cosla l\1esa, Lovely shag carpels, b!tns & !ireplace enhance the Interior. Out· sldt> there JS a 130' deep ]o1 11,·ith detaC"hed garage & COVl't'€'d p a t i o. OH! A SHAKE ROOF, TOO! As li!!IP as S1350 down pay. I ment at a "/a. s l years" price of SZ,,jOO, COATS & WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pen Evenin9l) HARBOR VIEW OCEAN VIEW Enteria in your friends for. mally or informally in this terrific 4 bedroom home with formal dining, family room kitchen nook, 21,s baths and much, much more on sand dune for only .. , $72 ,500 673-8550 HARBOR VIEW HOMES A beaut. 5 BR. home; "·et bar, ]ovcly shag cptg., self. cleaning 01•ens: ready to move info! $59.jQQ -Includ· 1ng the land. CORBIN- MARTIN FINER HOMES DOVER SHORES VIEW "Family Enjoyment Center" large enough for pool table & game table, with wet bar. Quiet, non·traveled ..street. 4 bedrooms large formal dining room, breakfast area~ step- down living room, 3-car garage. $89,500. BAY AND OCEAN VIEWS Exciting custom built home. Secluded patio, 8:11. the amenities for comfort and gracious hvmg. 3 BR. FR, DR. $89,500. 1014 Santiago Dr., Dover Shores. Open Sunday 1-5. HEAVENLY KITCHEN W/FIREPLACE House beautiful from the smooth ceilings to the polished cabinets. 3800 sq. ft. of warm & cozy glamour. $125,000. Offer. "VI EW FROM THE TOP" Turtle Rock Hills. Enjoy 3 bedrooms plus ~onVertible study or 4th bedroom, large fam· ily roo~. ~an the large pool, jacuzzi, play area. f1rep1ts plus 3-car garage. BEACON BAY Private beach -tennis -18 foot boat -all this at your front door in Very Special Bea· con Bay. Charming living room, family room. garden room, two fireplaces. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, a real Newport Beach Way of Life. $73,000. •38 Beacon Bay. Open Sunday 1·5. BETTER THAN NEW Call to see this immaculate 2·story traditiona1 home on a beautiful cul.de-sac. Everything !or · ha~py f~mily livin g. Large floor to ceil- ing brick fireplace, raised hearth. Family room, dining room, 5 bedrooms 31/2 baths se\ving room, covered patio and even ~ children's play home. A one' owner home. 554.000. 2421 Sierra Vista, Ne\vport Beach. Open Sunday 1-5. FROM $19 ,000 TO $46,500 BEST BUY IN NEWPORT BEACH First time offered. This immaculate & beau· tifully decorated home has everything for care.free family living. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, family room. formal dining room. Beauti· fully landscaped gardens with room for pool. $46,500. 2300 La Linda Pl. Open Sunday 1·5. WEATHER PERFECT TURTLE ROCK 4 bedroom, 3 bath family room home. 2400 sq. ft. Steps to pool, park & tennis. Very close to ne'v schools. Owner very anxious. $41 500. Call 67&-3210. . BAYSHORES BEST BUY First time offered. Deluxe 2 BR, 2 bath home. PRIVATE BEACH. Lovelycalhedral beamed ceili.ng. Mod. kitchen, self-cleaning oven, A-1 refr1g. Washer, dryer. thick shag carpets. drapes, elec. gar. door. VACANT BARGAIN PRICED $36,500. 2461 Crestview Dr. Open Sunday 1·5. Hope Gerrie 67&-3210. THE PRICE IS RIGHT And the time is NO\V to see this young 3 bed- room . family room home. Smart decor 00.. nus room "'/spot lights for pool table i7951 Butler, University Park. Open Sunday 1-5. WEEKENDER Ideal beach home. 3 bedroom condo. next to pool. Close to beach, sbops, hospital. No need l•R•E•A.iLi.T.iOi.RiiS ... ..i.644-ii.;7.ii6'i02 lo worry when you lock-up and run. $32,750. Enjoy Ele«Jance I GRANDMOTHER'S FARM This house jus1 ivraps i1s Couldn't be more invi ting than this charming r han11 about you. Beau11ru1 Early. American Country Cottage on a neat 3 BR. 2 Ba. PaCescttcr tree-hne~ cu l-de-sac. Beautiful landscaping Ho111e on ol\f' or the fine st surroundin g an inviting pool & covered patio i;tl't'ets in :\1esa Verde, Call s.14. YC assumable loan. $30.250. 2632 River- for appt. $37,500. side Dr., Costa Mesa. Open Sat. & Sun. Roy McCardle Realtor TRADE OR SELL 1810 Ne111J0rt Blvd., C.;\J. $! 548-7729 9.000 equity in Beautiful LA COSTA COUN- p,..l•niog "Tho Po;,,··. * * * * * * * MAKE A DATE . Ori\·p by llm •'-1629 EAST Balboa Bh'rl. S82.500 Each. :<GC-'e'-n,-,-,-., :._:_ _ __::.o__~G'=-en_e_r':.a~I -....!~-~ To see 62~ Ramona, lnine TRY CLUB improved Jot for Income/Invest· ment. Property -Ne'A'J>Ort Area. Dial Hope Gerrie 67&-3210. Contact JO§{'J>hinr \\'ebb Terra.re. Cd:\f. 2 Bdrms., Balboa Real ESlfl l(' Co. I dt'n. pool & VIE\\'. SPOT. MACNAB -IRVINE iOO E. Balboa 81\'d .. Baltxm $ 129 G month POOL TIME LESS PERFECTIO:'ll, 67l-4140 673-3596 Ev•• i 3 Bedr. + Oen I Easy ma1nt., great !or rnter. ,\pp'l. only. ! 675-3210 642-B235 YEEUUK ,-.-.-LllX'(I 111th ~"natural brick tainin,i:: trom fan1lly nn to CURT DOSH, Realtor • • • plantt>rs + a brick covered I pool + 3 BR, 2000 liq. fl. 1080 81yllde Drive 901 Dover Drive Newport Beach Unmt>ntionably dll'ly, 4 bed· patio. ~n!ry hall leads to I hon1e : Jlt'rf("(.'I cond. Open 642-6.Ji:! Eves. G7l-346S rm!\ on large comer lo!. extra sized rooms thru ou1. &in. 1-;i, 2'l30 Heather Lane, 1730 \\! Coas H' , .-mvwv--------KL~ gprinkler sY!llem on timer, I Built·ins including a dish-! N.B. or call tor appt, · t igh"ay with a "'T'Crl of a family v•asher, Assume 51 ,r; ~pr. JEAN SMITH, RLTR COOL POO room 17x33, Sacrificed price loan. Open till 9 P)l 540.1720 1 400 E. 17th S!.. c.~I. OPEN SAT & s L + G•ner•I General ~low,,,,,,.,,, AJND SEL' TARBELL 2955 H bo ,.,llll UN 1'5 ,..._ __ '"" J BR. 2 BA ·-• ~ . ~ ar r ~ ~in.~ ~~ E" WILL P\" GI --------I 2682 ELDEN, C.M. hom . . 1 . J 't. ' 1 AU.. G I EASTSIDE 3 BDRM em pnme ocatJon, ird- Retirement In Corona del Mar Al a price \'OU Clln afion:I. Ol("('k lnro thls cli.annfnf' one hroroom home plug in. con1e. Call now for an ap. po1ntmcnl 10 ser. ~ SUYER.S C1..oslNG cogrs, •n•r• Gener•I . · wd tlrs crpts & ~1 huge! i\lak~ an otf<'r. Cuie older honie near Coun• 32x2fi p001. Neetl.11 !!Om; pain! L•rwin Realty, Inc. try Club & Golf course. hrrl-1 &your green 1hu1nb. O"·nen; 21:.62 Brookh111·51, 11.13. "'d nrs. r!Jllc and many f.n.11t transl. FP $i4,!t30. GI or 546-5411 anytime SHORECLlrrs trees. lO ,ri °?":n or f1L\i Fl!A terms. Ca.JI 847-1221. rr VA term • AllK\hg, • " ~ h $24,soo Anli\n'lll\"11\ $32,900 673-1550 VACANT Enjoy the frltndly charm of thia )O\'ely 3 bedroom. 2Li bath. \V("stclin home, A pleasure to g~· you. Arnold & Fr•ud 3.~ E. lith SI . C.~t. 646.nU OPEN SUN. 12-4- 5205 Bruce Cr•K•nt Lido Sandg, lmmac .. d~oor ator'1 homt'. N~,_,, paint &: \\'allp111pcr. J BR., 2 batN. Prlv, con1mun. 1\·lpool pri\ .. ll~s. l Blk. to ocean. 134.000. Newport lleoch Rulty 615-1642 Anytime 3 BR., 2 ba .. beach key. Fee 319 Driftwood -$62.500. Open House Sunday 1·5. BEACHES· BOATS Bayshores by the beach. 4 Bdrms .. 4 baths. Top location. Reduced to $74,000. HOUE SHOW REALTORS 3535 Eu! C...t Higbwey Coro... ckl II ar PERRON 642·1nl ~ Shorecllffl 3 BR-. -inu Beach Blvd., 11tgn Bch ',O T HE REAL '."" ESTATERS Lgr,. own yo u r own lot. ()ptn 'til 9 p.m. BNlch key. Cdi\t btst Joc;a .1 --=o~O~V~E~R~S~H~O~R-E~S~ I -u=='"""'-"~;:;:;::;;;::; tlon. $62,500. v ·e ho ll4B Sa . YOU'LL BE AMAZED Home Show Realtorl 1 "' me, ntlaJrO Dr. No cuh, ve1~rans . not one , A ........ . 11 Best buy • 1pac. 5 BR. 4 ba. cen1. le"' do"'n 10 other in- , rn"'11•1r OUlt'huntinii:" Adaptable Ooor plan lo• r.~·, L" ,... ___ , Jt Cd'I \'rstors, Buildfr only buill ..,._,, .... .....,.,, "'>"·• ' couplo"' •-. •--n .•. N••·ly 7 67'7225 "CO'" ........ 'V home, like this. 3 bed· -~===~===--1 dl!'COl'ated, By .... L -.000. •~ rooms. family room, modern EXPERIENCED Biii .Grundy, Re•ltor. kitchen, In the medium 21J's, R~ale. Ca 1 l Uiralnt;, 833 Dovtr Dr., N.D. 6'l2.Q CALL &lj..2710, Wfslclitf Peraonnel w I k & L '"'""· l0'3 \\"""'"' °'·· REDUCED $5000 a er ee N.8, Bayert'st By Ollroer! Vacant 3 br,-2\i ba, Uke nf!W. S!'ii,000 * BALBOA COVES* 67~7'JS4 Waterfront home w/aUp Jor 30' boat.~ Br, l~I ba. Sell id!~ Item• nowl FORTIN CO. ~ 642-5000 Call 6-t~ Now! 2W3 \\>' eJ!CliH Drive 6Mi-77J1 ()prn 'lil 9 PM I.fut RIUlll I~ ju.gt & phQnc rail •wt.Y -642--5671 • '• .. -.. CALIFORNIA CONTEMPORARY Custom bit. EASTSIDE COS. TA MESA, rambling bOme completely fenced in \\'i.th block walls and wrought iron gates. J..arie Uving Rm. v.'ith open beamed t.'eillng&, Three bedrooms, two baths, Dining room and electric BIN Kit. Fenced oH heated and filtered Pool. Only I $29.500 \\ith GI OR rnA TERMS. Evenings Call 646.4579 WHISPERING TREES AND OCEAN BREEZE l\Jagnificent pine trees real- ly aCCt"nt this sharp New. pon West J1ome. C Bed· rooms, 2 baths, corner lol, room for boat and trailer. This paradise for kid.s ls only one mile to the beach. New listing. No down t'O Vets. $32.!rJll. JO-. COATl ~WAtLACE REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • CUSTOM BUILT 4 BR-FAM. RM. *' Big 80xl1.o Jot • back bay '"'' * Delightful neighborhood among expensive homes * Professionally landscaped 1vith full sprinkler S)'91em • Separate utility room * Automatic \\·ater saltentr * Spanish tile in entry and large l'irep\ace v.ith raised hearth. * All this for .$49,20() * Ir you see ii . yoU'lJ buy ll ;).Kj.2313 \to · THE RE.l\L \"-ESTATERS "Pl •, ', ' • -8-RUSTIC Cute 2 bedroom home v.·ith large fam ily room. J{UGE lot. Raised brick hearlh Jn living room. Fittplac~ I< BBQ in family room. QUICK OCCUPANCY, U you arc searching for that "OO:JN. TRY ATI10SPHERE," THIS IS IT! Only $32,000, CALL 6Ta-4930. •~'co.I -1 IUQI "'"'IH·•UI UP FOR GRABS This 3 bedroom and a bath. west of Harbor Blvd. has a VA loan of $15,80() that any. one can take over subject 1 to Sl27 per month. T h e Price? How docs thls grab I Wal1k;r c& Lee ' Reallors 2790 Harbor Bh·d. al Adaim :tt5.{H6.i OPf'n 'Iii 9 P~t LIDO WATERFRONT APTS.·320 LIDO NORD $140,000 Price \\ith 7% lst T.D, 6 Beaut. furn. units: 6 car garages lI. util. f'OOm. 80 Jo't. on s\\1mmlng beach. \\'ill consider trade Jor boat or muimum ~.OOJ lge. 4 BR. hoUse. Bill Grundy, Rltr. 833 Dover Dr., N.8. 642462'.I Newport Beach $34,950 ~lariner.4 School, perk, llbra. ry & \\'estcliff rlaza. near this delighlfUI l BR & den, :! ba., MartJor lfighlands hj)me. KitchC'J1 w/ Bl l\A 0, BBQ. & D\\', an · 1iaJn!Cs1 stttl. Call ?.tr. Harris, South -~!l Rf'al Elllllle, 54:>-8424. DUPLEX + LAND Tu·o 2 bedroom units with garages between. Roota Jior four ~ units. Alley en· "'"""'-Only""·"'°· 646-7171 '0 THE REAL '"-ESTATERS POOL • $27,950 40 Ft. L""ll Beautif\11 park like atma5- phf~. 4 bedrooms, l bat.bl, family rm., natun.I birch kilchfn. Open tll 9 P~t. 5'0-Jl'lO TARBELL 2951 H1<bor VACANCIES Cod mo~ Rent your hou1e, apt, store bids-, ot<. .... ally Pil<>l - CIW1fle<I' ad. ( l Frldiy, ,.~h S, 1971 DAILY PILOT .. I [ General Gt nerel Gentril General I Coron• del Mir 1 1;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:; eWANTCHARM?e ,iiiiiiiiiii I~ I ]~[ I~ [ l~I -....... -....... _ ....... Co!lne 1ee thl1 2 BR R ll ~ ~ I. fl I (I /) -% "DO LLllOUSE" o.,. ol..inda ..Jdle B BAY & BEACH REALTY, Inc. :;ta~i~~;s~:~,d~r;t·0~~ ele arr~fl ea l'I 22 Y e1r1 of Service $39 900 Ope Mt" Sa l f PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES In The H"bor Aru ~~ •. ,,:,PM . ..; Naro.:... fl'l!:Jen :J SHOWN BY A~POINTMENT C.1". CAMEO NEW LISTING NEW ON MARKET WATERFRONT-$59,950 26 Linda Isle Dr ive Choice 3 bdrm. & family rm_ on park·like Lovely duplex, North ot Hwy, FUN 3 bedroom, 2 bath home \Yith large Decorator furnished . 5 Br. 5 bath home fac· lot w/completely enclosed pool. Attractively 2 BR. & 1-BR. Good cond. living room & covered patio. Best bUy on ing Harbor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna. Ready decorated. $58,500 Tenifle ttnlal arem. Shown the water, pier & float. for im 1ned. occupancy. \V/dock . , $200,000 4 UNITS BALBOA by app't. only, Ottered tor •3 Balboe Coves, off c 0 a 1 t Highw•y 53 Linda Isl• Drive Splendid incon1e units in top cond ., fully i~~GAN REALTY Open S•turd•y & Sunday 1·5 Home on lagoon. 5 BR ., 4lf.1 ba .. \Y/4 !rplcs., furn., always rented. $62,500 67~6642 67$-6459 jacuzzl.i tub, hd&wd . flkrs., sep_ liv. rm$.7,5d000in. BAYCREST BEAUTY Cost• M.1a rn1 ., nm. r1n . br fst. rm. . . . . . l , , Bd h b & TOP CONDITION -New Ustlng .. r1ns., uge family r1n. W/\Yet a1· 92 Linda Isle Drive frplc. Poolsize lot , great for kids. Owner will Beaut. 5 BR., 4 ba. home w/formal din. rm. consider trade for sm<i.ller. $62,500 & family rm. 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway. EXCEPTIONAL CdM DUPLEX OPEN HOUSE 2116 La Salle Sunday 1 :30 to 5 e Vacant & sparkling 4 BEDROOM, large family room + pool! ?i.1eant for busy family living. Huge kitchen with dining area, separate office or dress~ ing room near pool. Newport Beach, $58,000. Built-in gun cabinet & bookshelves. $145,000 HARBOR HIGHLANDS Custom bit. w/view, in best area. Really 107 Linda l5le Drive deluxe 3 & 2 bdrms .. 2 baths each. 4 En· 5 BR. 3 baths : fam. rm ., form . din. r1n. 2 closed garages. $79,500 1 • ~lost popular family plan LARGE roomy home -ideal for active • &:Pante master bedrm faml';·. S bedrooms + family room & din· Fplcs., Rm.,lor pool. Dock. By appt. $145,000 CAMEO SHORES NEW LISTING Wltlg ing room. Large yard for pool, dogs, or any 1 • Boat . door to .•I~ yard outdoor hobby & recreation. $65 000 Wate rfront Lots No. 44: 108 1'""'1. on water . . . . . . . . $107.000 No. 76 : 3 Car garage. Reduced to , . $ 77,000 Beaut. Jge. 4 bdrm., pool, family rm . \V/ great view. An exceptional home for $97,500 I e Family rm, hv1ng rm.. I ' I laoe =all PMlo. S.10.500. COSTA MESA -INCOME NEWPORT HEIGHTS -$165 MONTHLY PETE BARRETT RLTY 1 $685 A MONTH -little management, prop- For complete information on •II homes & lot5, pl ea5e cilll: 3 B~rm., redecorated & sharp. 12 x 28 Cov. patio. Assun1e lge. 6% IJO loan, no cost. $33,950 642-5200 erty & business, only $55,000. Adjacent to future freeway. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR · Office Open Saturdays & Sundays 675 • 30oo TREES-TREES TREES ' PETE BARRETT REALTY 833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 I 1605 Wollcllff Dr., N.B. General General Quiet tree lined street in Har-& 642-5200 ::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~::;;;,;;~~~F-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~· bor Estates. N&tional 1.ward I '!J!!!i;!!,..!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!![!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!I -CAMEO SHORES \\'inning floor plan featuring . , General 1 General 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, General General Spacious ocean view home with lovely tropi· I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;= and spacious family rm & l------------------- cal garden & pool. 4 Bedrooms paneled den Freedom DO WE HAVE dloing. Coroer lot with boot * * * * * & fireplace. Formal dining room & cheerful A CORNER ON storage. Complete -~·ith. * kitchen. crpt,s, drps. bilns. Available Home BEAUTY? now at $28.9;'AI, no down VA Att te R It No, bot W• '"''have • booo. or k>w dOwn FHA. Call en ion ea ors $21,000 ty on a corner. Good Costa ~0-1151, Heritage Realtors, $89,500 AVOCADO GROVE 514 Acre ranch with fabulous homesite. tn exclusive estate area on private road past garden gate. "'"' loc•tioo. Walk to '°"'" '"'·' SOUTH COAST REAL ESTATE Located 0 " lov('hly Arbor schools: 3 bedroom, 2 bath, ---ls pleased to announce the opening of their $45,000 -LOW DOWN Strcel. \Vlth a uge back carpeted. Lo\\•er 20's, aU yard and a garag£'. Owner terms. FIXER UPPER second office at 1500 Adams Blvd., Costa :;"l·P.1.STrel •. I ~~ tf!rms. \\'!JO'S Walker & Lee Lender haa repossessed this Mesa on April 1st, 1971. This office will be LINDA ISLE -BAYFRONT A simply beautiful ho1ne with 5 big bed· roo1ns, for1nal dining room. Expensive ex· terior landscaping & spacious bayside sun· deck. ,. VU.I s ~rm. 2400 sq, ft. 1.lesa located on the ji!round floor adjacent to the Verde hOml'. Needs major main entry of the multi·story professional Newport surgery • Jender says cut building. •• Fairview ~ \\'estcliU Drive 6-t£.n11 Open '!il 9 Pr.1 *A-FRAME* Rway at price. submit \Ve are presently !ieeklng 8 experienced and YOUR bid. Low down pay. professional men or women (brokers or as· $157,500 646-8811 (anytime) 2-Sty. beach home, xlnt cond . 3 BR., l~ ba. 2 car gar. Bltns. nr1v cpts. $33.900 ment. Don't delay, call Heri. sociates) to staff this exceptional location. tag(' Realtors. S46-588'.I. Should you be contemplating a change HARBOR LEASE /OPTION lopen eves .I please contact Al Black at 545-8424. Imm". 4 Br., "'P' to°''""· FORECLOSURE 2\1 Ba. Only $300 per mo. BONUS PLAN TO 84 % * * * Buy this Hille hOme on 20,790 1•?/$.)00 option money, Pri~ ror quick salt. Now sq. ft. of good ten-a firma CAYWOOD REALTY vacant. immediate posses.. * * * in East Cos1a Mesa. Add six 6306 w. Coast Hwy., NB sion, nice residential a~a. I =---:;-------:-;--;c,--:--::,---;--- or seven nntaJ units and 548--1290 l BR, all b!tns. ne1v crpts & Dover Shores Huntington 8•ech COMPANY REALTORS . let the tenant5 pay off the more. Low down, FHA; no I '.0'."'.0-='-C:-""'."::O--c::---: ---------- m oMgog•. Prioo ;, 1"7.500 $28,500 down, Gt. OK. Cao Roy CAN'T ollom no,., '"°'"' BITS Of SPANISH and sclier 1vi11 take a back "Spanish Charm'' Gault, Heritage Realtors, compare Eastbluf[ bayfrt. 11eat to builder. CALL .C Bd. -Family rm. 540-lJ5t &i.ve S30,00D. 2 Sty. 2 tpl. GIANT 4 BR $28 500 Walker & Lee A, d•ligh1'"1 "P'r;ooco. Spae. mANSFERRED. 3-4 b' hm '"o<lock. Ow~' £41.14:,0. • r 1ous entry ha!J, dining rm.. Jrg lam rm, xtra v.'ide iol, Ea5t Bluff "SINCE 194S" 673-4400 Real1or• I 4 bdrm., picturt' l\'indows. less than J ~ old. Nr I:::::::---:--;-".'"'-:::-- Z190 Harbor Blvd al Adams Park II~ yard. Open till 9 Catholic Sehl. S.C. Plaza NOT a condominium. Vie\V General General 5'15-o.16.i Open ;til 9 Plot p~r, ;;40-17'21} & airport A11sume 67'v VA home on blu ff over bay HoM'""E-A-nd""°'B'"u-s""1'"N-E=ss ---------·1---~~-==c----TARBELL 2955 Harbor loan to qiJaJ_ buyer. cosrs Jes..~. 2 Sty. J Bd. SUBURBIA PARK $30 900 l.ifi;..-T.li;;;(I ____ j ,~""'-"'.:'1.".95.9~. 7-'--::::,.,--,,,,;; l b&. 25' rec. rm . 2 fpl. Your opportunity ro Ji\'e in 1 Balboa Island i\fesa deJ r.far, 0\\'1\er, ,veil Sundeck. O\\•ner 644-1450. an exl"elle nt t 'OUR BED-SPANISH No Down GI kepi 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, Fount•in Valley ROO~t. l.,.,.o ba th hoine .and R Z BA 4 bedrooms, huge fam ily OPEN SAT. 12-4 on O\-er 10,000 sq. ft. cul-de-1 -...,.,,...,="°"~"'.'::"0':,,,.-oPc-ra1c your business front 4 8 • room. \\'ilh rireplace, ('ntry 330 LINDO ~ac lot. Prof. lndscpd & "FOUNTAINHEAD" th is large corne r lot rirar Bcauliful, one -story Span-hall, dining rm., new cari>et-Graciou~ 2-story home on 2 decorated. Hrcfli,•d raised Super sharp. -1 BR trp!c hoinc modern shopping center. The 1sh Co!onia1. Custon1izcd ing, bu ii!-ins. natural \\'Ood lots w/bay view; close to floor, luxury crptd, l';HA on I&: cor Jot, Rm for boa1/ hon1c is 1n excellent 1.'0ndi-thl"OUghout by the builder's kitchen cabinets. First lime NJl.Y.C. & library, 4 [.gr. 5%'%. $33,900. 54&.5891 lrlr, xlnr lndscpg, 12x40 cov rion and has a lurgc sales cons1ruction superintendent on the market. O\vncr trans-BR., 2 ba. with slud10 apt. On..n House Everyday pmtio. Clase to i;<:hooJ, llt'W room. Prl!sent owners a r e for his 011'n home. Sltualed Jcrred. Open Ill 9 Pl\f. 0,., ••p g•r Lg• patiO· •-d I '" · · .... ' 3 br on immense ocean virw shag crptg, rps, "'ater no1v o""l'll!in.1: an antique on a corner Jot with room S40-1720 trui1 "'''· ~".500. 1 .. ~ ~ lot. Cul-de-sac, JOI!! of trees. ~o 1cner. shop and are leaving the 1 for boa t/trailer. Located in TARBELL 2955 Harbor Newport Beach Realty J24,950. l040 Linden Pl. C.llf. Ellis·Schrader Rltrs . area. PrJ(:erl 111 Only S:.!6,."iOO I l'h?ict'. 1nuch -in -rlt'mand * BALBOA * * 67;).1642 Anytime * Owner. Days: 5484192; 192·6606 fo1· quick sale. Call us n-O\\' nr1g hbo. rhood. f.Iust sec to St•ps 10 b•y. ,·, BR., "''"!. I ;::".".c:c-.7';.-:.,,----E "2 1122 l==°"c-c=""=c-c:o: I Corona del M•r ve.!: "" -· BLDR'S Sacrifice-Span. sfyt• for <1'1!>filn!n1cnr ro sec. appr'CC1a1c rhc beauty a.nd furn. Dbl . oven!:, 2 refrig ., ==='7.=:;;--;,-'7.= S39 90o l' DUPLEX $31,500. tnc $3780. nu custom 4 Br. $32.500. t').l ra. feature~! · · or "'asher/dryer. i\lany extras? PARSIMONIOUS 2 BR. Stv /ref&:, cp\ / drpi;, i1soo dn . Loaded \V/ xtra.•. showing ca1! 5'1&-2313• $63,950 POINSEnlA gar, ·patio. $3150 dn. Open Shake~. Frpl. Cl-pt throoul. Call: 673-3663 675-8886 Eves. You 'll REALLY ,i:c! your Oatly 2238 State Ave . Sprnkln. lndsepd, fncg . Evening!! Cail Sl&-4579 $21,000 associated BROKERS-REALTORS 2025 W BGlboo 673-366) SWISS CHALET SPOTLESS $24,500 I no down payment 4 Bd. + Family rm. easy to qualify No down Term5 Srncll 1he pines -As col!y as 1f H 1vcrc hidden in 1hc Alps. Ankle deep carprli~ even 111 the counter k1 1chcn. 3 big bedroom! -t'amily room -Li\•c outside on la rge 20x2o patio encircled 1 by well kepi g rounds.• Sc!)()Ol.~ -College & Shop- ping -Close. Onl.v $31,jO(). 1 1-lurry, dial 64 5-0303. You c:a n buy this nice homr or assume 5~1';0 apr. loan even if you don't have a VA and have P11yn1cnts of only rtigibltity. 3 BP., huge trer.!I, $123 a month. Large room s only 2 blks to !!hopp'g, Op-thru out. 4 bdrm, family rm. por1u n1ly for the investment No down GI. Open til 9 p.m. buyrr. 546-1720. Nichols Real Estate TARBELL 7955 Harbor 546-9521 1 .. -J ' .. "'(1(0~ NO DOWN TO VETS 11J?O Oo"·n 10 others. .11.rge 3 bedrni 1v/hni.•d floors, bltns, 20x20 rumpus room , block "'all, cncJQscd rear yard. VA appra ised al . , •• moncy'i; 1\IOrth in this ~mart 64:J-40JS • 10223 Ph ea 1 ant Ave , 3 BR. 2 bath horn!' on R-2 Dana Point ~7-0380 cornrr -build an apartment ~H'u-n'°tl'n-g7to-n-.B'e"a"c;:-h-- ovcr ihe garage 10 help the 1 _4_B_R_-G __ R_E_A_T_V_I E-W-"DEANE" POOL pal"!imon iousnes~. $41,500 Un iversity RHlly ASSUME 51/4°1• LOAN HOME 3001 E. Cs1. Hwy. 6iJ.6'3JO ll you are looking for a great GREAT VIEW!--family home on quiet cul-de- sac only 1 mi. from harbor_ Of harbor & ocean. Aur. split then see this ont. Heavy level home on R.J 5100 sq. sha~ roof. firtplacc. load~ fl lot. Ideal for~ apt, unirs, of closet space & beautiful S200,000. 2.JOI Ottan Blvd., vie1v. NiCely Jandscaped. Cd~1. By app't. only. Good financin.i: $32,000. Bill Gtundy, Realtor POINT REAL TY Call : 6-12·4620 34156 Coa.11 H11,•y., Dana Point Broadmoor Beauty 1n4J 496-5323 4 Br, 2~~ ba. formal din rm, Dover Shorei Once in a v.•hile you get to liCe a homt' like thii1. Jt'g jus: btau!HUI! A 3 bedroom 8.-f11.mily room, most tastr- fully decorated. Lovely free lom1 healed & filtered pool \vith therapeutic pool for re- lax ing. Br fir.oil in line. $45,950 147.7535 \-QTHEREAL \'.'\. ESTATERS ' I ', * EXECUTIVE VILLA EntertaiMr's paradise w/ -C•°'•=O;cPoo.E"N~M;;Ao;RC'6;=&~T"'•"•'° I pretentious vie I\', Deiux O\.,.rier. Nt \\'JX!rl \\'est, I~. 5IXXI sq ft of custom ilesign 3 BR. 2\t BA, din rm. features In th is 5 BR. 5 blt-inll, 2 level_ Walk to 2299 HARBOR. COST A MESA $24,600 P•rron Ian\ rm. frplc's . llv & mas- IC'r hr, olive ~hag. prof. decor & lnd scped, xtra lrii; J car R:&!'. blln jfas bbq, hugr pa tio surrounding fin'. pil. Le.ts than 3 yrs old. 01\'nl'r $69,500, 644 -1041. 642-1771 b11. 4 cmr garragr home bch/1chl. 5~~'i~. $36.450. 1:~:::::::=:::-:::::::.;;::.1 ;\=V•='l=l~M~.l~p~>";;:;;"=";;;;;!l!=:::64~2~·56=1~8.'..;:;1~16=9~,500==.=54~8-=72ol;;;:9=.::::;::::;::;:;;.!,:;9=122:::;M~•~h=•=lo::::;::;:;;::;:;;:=;:::;;I 20x37 Anthony Pool. 3 bed-3 BR CONDOMINIUM -BACK BAY CUSTOM SPANISH STYLE {ka u111uUy krpl 4 Bcril"O(lm ., b11.111 home with l:iri:c f fa mily ronn1, pl11sh 1:arpc1 -\ in-:, spa rklln'! bHn k1tcbc>n. and !:1 n111.~liC' covrrrd ~1110 with nialislvr s1onf' BJ?Q. 'S:i'l,!'l~ill -;1~~u1nr low 'intf'r- r.~l Jo:1n .-.1· f'l\AfVA NO n()\\i'/ Trrm~ :i\ail:iblC'. Cali ;,_ij.S.IJ I, I VIEW I Love The Back Bay \\1d~ blul' ll'l<y & 1\ild birds In your b.~rk )llrrl. Coint" ~I"(' rrnn1 hll l?l' ~undrrk. 2 SI~ 3 Bd. :; 13.., 2.i' P.t>c. rm. 2 fp!. Lo1~ of glass, Owne r ti+l-11~. roonis. 212 baths, 111 r g e In choice sectio n of i\1onti - 1w111s, Jots of storage, w~lk cello, completely rcdecorat- ln closets an~ a beautiful ed including new carpel!! . \\!lr1n stone _ fittplace plus Prittd below nia~el. Act 11. 1311~ J0x.:i2 ~,.r;c<' PA-fast on thl~ 011('. l1n, Assume a 5,1111 loan. $lO SOO ;ts.:oo. &t~mt PERRON • 642-lnl REPOSSESSIONS Sparkl,ing clean tiomcs, 9>mt --=F~L°"A"'G"'P"'o=L"'Ec=-1 "'w11 pa;o1..i • ..,,..1..i. z :, 4 & 5 bdrms. Some with FOR SALE pools. FHA-VA conv. terms. $35,000 from $17.000 to $40,000. -llul, of couri.e, there la " Collins & \Vali. Inc, cM.rming 11irc(' bedroom, ~dams Ave:. 962-5523 111·0 hath, delightful hOme J.M.C. Construction Co . •tlnchrd. Includ ing a family builds Gold r.1 e d a I! ion room. Jarze patio tnd three Homes. ~2-5527 1·11r 1:ar11.g('. in a rw:w nel11h- lxirhood 111 16th Placr and Tu~tln Avenue. A two 11ory, rorrier lot, C'harn1er. By O\\•ne r 6'16-·16.".8, t-,S~H~A'R=P--ANAHEIM INCOME II By owner . 1 br, Mrat('d pool, 11tANSf ER J z furn. bachelor uni~. Clm;e Jj(t' indoor· outdoor f11m rm, YOUR PROBLl-:r.1 to f\Ct:lln & shopping In Nc11t·-t:ltc hltn~. frpl c. l\Tany t'X· to Sl'f.C.IALISTS po rt 131>ach. $28,000 • yo u Ital. S30.~. Llbrn.J tctTl'I~. Pro,,.rly Management ov.·n tilt 111nr1~ 776.1767. Real Estate I Georg• Willi•mson 1'c"u"s"T"O"'M,,...F"'o=llRCJ,=c.-.E"X"' SlEPHENS & KAYE Rtaltor ChOlce N11wpor1 Arts . S7'4.000 &lJ.OJ1l ANVTJ:-.1£ 1 673-4350 64S.1564 Eves Rm 2"11, ~l. 1\fack 551.8700 S©~lA-l!:tt,ffa~; The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle I 0 U l I R I ! A minlmr asked a nervous ~_,,,_.,.l-ln1r-rj-1 ; bridegroom, "Wllt fhou toke •. -~-~-~~--~-~ 1his woman 01 1fly lowful r---::-::--,,.-'.:"'--. wedded wife?" The groom I• Ir ii R ,~ El w I ·I 'om~~:.·;..~~~ ..... by ffl!lng In 1f1r9 mhllno wotd1 • you ~lop "°"' •• No. 3 below. :e PR~~~s~sJ5~\~slfTTflS JN I' r I' r r J C) u~\?~f1'~N~~E unm . I · I J J ] I SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 Spanish wallr.cl Iron gate court,.vard e111ry. 4 klnR-si Ztd bedrooms. 2Y.. balhs. \Valk-in closel.11. Vaulted cellingi;, J\1assive family room with rrackling fireplace. Large gourmtt kitchen. Laundry center. Patio. 3-CAR GAR- AGE. Play yard for the kld1. Only 3 yrs. old. I.ow down. ~1u111 see for yourself at this low, low $28.500. J-luny and caU (7141 -962-Sr585. lllRfSI [ Ol.\O!\ "' l?E A L1"01?S 19131 BrookhW"St Ave. Hunt.ington Beach Cheaper Than Rent Is this super Rharp 3 bedrrn 2 bath TownhOuse. Prime 11.rea. Priced right. $20,950, Large Jiv. rocnn, new 1v/w !hag crpts &. drps. Nc"•ly painted lnsidr.. Lergl! patio & pooJ privilege~. ruu price $20.950. Gr or ~11A terrns. Olli &.17-1221. 17141 Beach Blvd,, J-ltgn Sch Open •ti! 9 p.m. COUNTRY CLUB A wide expan.sr or greens across from 1his deluxe 4 Bedroom, 2 bath In tip-top con1!Hlon. -Jclached 2 c&r garagr, extra large yard tor hoa1 or !railer "'l !h alley f'nlrance -Jui;t 136.9:>0 - Can he seen anytime. Phone 842-X>l.i. i-Q THEREAL \'.'\. ESTATERS BELOW MARKET 6'/ii VA $21,500 assumable loan. 4 Bedroom 2 bath, elec bltn ~range A o e.o, dish- washer. large living room with frplc. family room, dln- 1~-are•, _ov~niud ~ rooms wl1h large master, w/w upgraded crpl!I & drp1, fenced & JandlJCaped, patJo, dble gara~. your terms, 11ce todlly. I' 1ll,1ge ReJ I EstJte '62-4471 C ::::1 MMIOJ _,------... -&Mit'.#P Splciou11 3 bedroo1n corner homt-Ill F11A or VA 1enn1. t xctllent location for a~ ping. sc~Is & i'n!e1V1.y1, PeC:lfic Shores Realty .\36-B89,I Eves: $.16-3240 BA YCREST SPECIAL 4 Bedroom, sep dining room, pool, $81,M>O . Open House Sun 1·5 1I05 Glenwood Lan Santiago to Ashford La .. left lo Glenwood EXCELLENT LOCATION 3 Bedroom, 3 bath, separate dining room, family rm w/fireplace, k.itchen carpeted. Low maintenance landscaping. Quiet street in Baycrest. $62,500. BIG CORNER Large 2 story, 5 bedroom with pool, separate play yard for children, out or state owner. $79,50-0. PARK LIDO Condo, 2 bedroom, 2 ba, frplc $28.750. ROY J . WARD CO., Realto~ 1033 Mariners Drive, N.I . 646-1550 Dover Shores Office Open Houses THIS WEEKEND 1.., thk ~ 41rect.ry wltti ,.. tWt ........ • Y•• t• a..-11111tt1 ... Afl tlle lecetl-lhte4 W.w .,. 4-:rii.H hi ......... ...,... "" .....,.... .... _ wMr. lit tffq"& DAILT PILOT WANT ADS. ,_,. .. ltl,,fitt .,.. k1Mt fer MS. et t. r.t •r• •,.N te ll1t &11111 , ... ,. .. t1 ..... "" ····--· Prltl1y. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedroom) 606 Narcissus Ave., Corona del Mar 673-7872 !Sat & Sun 12'4) 400 Heliotrope. Corona ·del Mar 644-2430: 833-0700 !Sun 1·5) 439 Avocado (Irvine ·Terrace) CdM · 644-4910 (Su n 1·5) 246 I Crestvielv (Bayshores) NB 675-3210 (Sun only) 12 Bedroom & F1mily or Den) 2536 Crestview Dr, Newport Beach 548-4617 (Sat & Sun l ·5) 2532 Ci rcle Dr (Bavshores) NB 844·2430; 833-0700 (Sun afternoon) 123 Via Zurich (Lido Isle) NB 673-7420 (Sat & Sun 12-5) 13 Bedroom) 2039 Irvine Ave. Costa Mesa 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 216 Poppy, Corona deJ Mar 644-4910 (Sun 1·5) "*2632 Riverside Dr. Costa '1fesa 675·3210 (Sa t & Sun) (3 Bedroom & F1rnily or D•n) 906 Alder Pl !Eastblulll NB 64 4-2430: 833-0700 (Sun 12:30·5:30) *2230 Heather Lane, Newport Beach 648-3255 (Sun I ·5) 1795 1 Butler. Universit.v Park 675·3210 !Sun only) 38 Beacon Bay, Ne \\•port Beach 642·8235 fSun only) 1014 Santia20 (Dover Shores) NB 642·8235 !Sun only) 5861 Price Dr, Huntington Beach 842-2535 $27 .90-0 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 5892 Padua, Huntington Beach 842-2535 ' (Sat & Sun 1·5) (.C Bedroom) 330 Lindo, Balboa Peninsula 675·1642 (Sat 12-4) 1022 Westwind \Vay (Dover Shores) NB 644-2430: 833-0700 (Sun 1·5) 218 Via Quito (Lido Isle) Nll 875-5200 !Sat & Sun 1-5) 1032 Santiago (Dover Shores} NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) (.C Bedroom & Family or Den) 1219 Santiago Dr. Newport Beach 644-2430: 833-0700 (Sun 1·5) 1233 Keel Dr (Harbor View Hills) CdM 644-2430: 833-0700 (Sun 1-5) 1536 Dolphin Terrace, C'.orona del Mar 644-2430: 833-0700 (Sun 1-5) * 1805 Glenwood Lane {Baycrestl NB 646-1550 (Su n 1·5) 2848 Carob (Eastbluffl NB 673-8550 543,900 (Sun 1·5) 3823 Sandune. Corona de! P.1ar 673-8550 $72.50-0 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 20251 Craimer (?\1eredith Gardens) HB 644-4910 ISa! & Sun 1-5) 2612 Ll2hthouse IBroadmoorl NB 644·4910 !Sat & Sun 1·51 1606 Anti2ua (Do,•er Shores} NB 644-4910 !Sat & Sun 1·5) 410 i1orning Star (Dover Shores) NB 644·4910 !Sat & Sun 1·51 2386 Orchid Hill Pl (Back Bay) SA Hgts 642·8235 !Sun only) tt505 Morning Star (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 2300 La IJ nda Pl, Newport Beach 642-8235 !Sun only) 10312 f.!oniter, Huntington Beac h 842·2535 $34,850 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (5 Bedroom & Fa1T1lly oi Den) * 1033 Mariners Dr (Dover Sltores) Nil 8~6'1550 • (Dally) 15-00 S•nti,go (Baycresl) NB 842-8235 -• ·(Sat & Sun) 2421 Sierra Vista, Newport Beach 642-8235 !Sun only) **11 Lin da Isle Dr (Linda.Isle) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) (6 Bedroom! **260-0 Bayshore Dr. Newport Beaeh 548-7232 (Sun, noon • 4) DUPLEXES FOR SALE (2 Bedroom) 2238 Slate Ave, Costa Mesa 645-4058 ..... **w ... ,,.., * '* • ,... .... w .. ,,, ... • , N Olli. V PILOT Fr!dlJ',' MMtlt 5, 1971 l~ .:.I -_..--.J~~~J;I ... -.. ·• .. -~l~~.1 I l[i][ -llil I ---l~I l~I l~ .__I __ ,_ ..... ___,]~ Huntf,,gton 8eadi Lagun• Bea~ Newport &.•ch Acre•g• for 1111 fSO Monty te Lo.1n 240 HouMt Unfurn. 305 HoUMS Unfurn. 305 HoUMS Unfurn. 305 Duplexes, Sa $tU A ... II ·~ ALMoSr "'-""-;--'!iEEOS TEENAGERS GOVT LAND IS ac. Write 1 t JD l Gontr•I Dano Pelot --------Furn. or Unlurn. ve ,,. ~ 'IU~n I Swttpinr ocean vit-111· home; Cornmun\1y p)Ol, clubtioust-l.l\nd Parka11:e. US.'i Ar· s oan __________ , __________ Npport S.•ch t:UJlom bit, ~ bdrmll., 21i & pi,ittlng ii:r·tcn \I 1tb thill , m""·head, San &rntrdino, NEA'RLY new, 2 bedroom 2 FOR h!ll@ S BR., <11td, dtp1, B'EAUi-u;·ui. custom home. I N•wport Beech J Br. Only $18 ,QQQ LbA's, li.:e l~v\Jlj. Ii: d!n1nc lmrnac. 11idul1 ocx·upie?d 31 C•. 2 d7~JlNTERES!'D L bath horn.. F&f"M•I dlnln1, 'ft~~: 2 !i:!':,;.~:'!8~~ 4 Br, many extru. Adul11. LGE. 2 BR. 11, ha, frpl. m1~. lntrt'l'311na; f1repla~. In BR., faml!y rm. l'M'ln1c, ·Lge. Apfirtments for silt 151 n oa n carpets&. dr1;Pt1, fin,placc, Rl'fl. .2212 Mtr1a.rtl Or. Furn. or unf. $225--235 mo. ,\!'@ yoo A handy man~ rin·' ).'.Int nth:hborhood, cl~ 10 hrtmi1. & hUJ:t encl. pRtiO 1~ Port Abbty, NewJ>Ort depo11tt, 491Hi201, 492-8360. 540-6716 or 'Sun ct.II calltct REALTOR 642--1000 ish 1 room 11.s 8 SR .. play !<:Mtl~1. Lgr. ~ x, l~ htd. 1n11 kcs this ll i;r<'at nome tor LIDO ISLE • )lust sacrifi«, Termt baaed on equity. 8f!11ich, 644-~HJ. Open Sat. Eest Bluff ~'~71~•~·~·~-:c:::.: _____ 1 -~ ·---·--- 1·m .. thu~ l'ltl., ('It. ?-1aff'r-" flit dA. pool 1'!''1:;.ly dcjckh II r1unlly "'Ith te-enagers. 6 beach AP~;., ~!I furl.en. 6 642-2171 545-0611 ,,, Sun. 2 to 5. • LEASES • \llATERFRONT 3 BR. -4 Ba. I l i~I , i.\IS AN' thrrr. nNn nl()(i. area. rt>a g LI! v.· t ~9 ~ C&l i:&riigt'. '' oan. ase Se I H ho 21 Jo"REE Rental Book-Drop in THE BLUFFS home, nf'wly t?dec. on u.o-I a..--nts forRll'll in1111y t-X lra.:1. $6.1.000. De.La~cy Real Estate land to yr. 2018. OWner . s "'tt"li •Mo' rlr area C yrt. dy beach. Sl.000 Month "--~--···----~ ern C'harn1. l.Argl' mom1. m 6-12-4097 da.)'ll .. er ,.... o. and Browse . We have pleo-2 BR. 2 Ba, DR, \!U •••• S290 I"''' Gn1nd "'''· .. ,.,,~ "1, •••••••••• 1 L.u~h t'lll'Jlf'ltn1:. ~rklin11: °l!~ 2828 E. Coas1 H")'., Cd~l . 336 E. 17th Srteet iy. \VALKER It LEE, Y ..,, -•1 •I•-. ,,·1,·h"" • oth .<1••h· ,-.::1.-_-.. ... ..,, '1 h"h.7 614-7270 14 Very Charming Units, Reahors, 2790 Harb o' 3 BR. 2 BA. trl·lev .,. , •• $350 c,.~R~E-SH~=°'~· _::.:_--,-'-' "',, ,.,, ~,.41 oocl l 1· P 0 :IRR.lhba.2,. ......... $350 1 Decor2Br, Ba.Apt F .,. i~h 1!!NI floors. RNHlat ~so coaSI' .....-( ~ (l('A io n. nnc. nly. c h F I Blvd. 111 Adams. ·~ frpl te t t 1225 1 • urn. - ehllt1rtr1u:·rrd d1nin• lu'f'a. ,,__-~,"·,=~· PRIVATE ROAD I o-.~·nrr 1144...oois. as ast , 3 BR. 2~ ba. 2·•ty ...... S3M '1 ps o "'arr. ;,, ----------1 --C 1 I 3 BDJtitf., Family rm., p&l'lc 4 BR l B11.. Pool .•..•.•. $425 ALA Rentals • ~3900 General St••nt'd rulrrorf'd ~lnss. 2· Jnun11c. 3 BR. den, din. ~~ omp merely• 1 lat & 1nd Trust Defft Ilk~ yard. Costa Mesa. Kid! SUmmer tum, hOmti av.U. VACATION Yr md. 1 Br. ;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o:;,I !'ar pra11r. BM.I door. Walk 3 balh ho•nr on 1 .. 1'. fP111.._..., roper SI OK, brk, $200 a month. NO Stv/relr, kids & pr~. $130. 10 M'h(')(\I~. Jog 1o bf'nrh. t * EMERALD BAY * Jot. l.i1h1 airy rooms, man1· I FREE APPRAlSALS FEE. ~1720. f ALA Rt'ntals a 645.3900 • * * + Lo•·. lo", do\\n. Better B)' O\\net, &lrly Cali!. 2 8r. cured la\\·ns & bca111. gar· CHAfu\llNG La&una. Beach Costa Mesa lnv•.tm•nt 3 5-t El Puerto Mesa Apt• HurT'). DI.II iTI4• 96~-~. 2 Ba .• 2 frples. Dbl. gar. dens: dbl. gar11ge> ·" iil'lop, i stores-~ apt. on .Cout H""'Y· 541-7711 anytlm• d~~ nn~. ~uil·t-'~ ...... ~. -~ * PARK WOO 3 Br. 2\T + * • * TastefUil>· d.ecorat.f'd. Sunk· .usoc. pool & putung gTeen. j tot 80 . X .105 lo all~y. $390..,. .,.. ..... Ba, Crpta, drps, bit-in&. 1 Bedroom Apt1, en \i\·1ng rm. & dining rm. Best buy In area. $&1.,!IOQ. o"~r v.'ill finance at 7.5~. Mort1•1•1, r.;: a month. NO FEE, ii '-F1ttplace. sm. 642-8797. On (.'O(Tl('r lot with ocean CaU s12.~ for arp't. I RBro,ker. Trust DHCl1 260 ·ewpon:, 50-l120. •1 Santa AiMli HeiQht1 $130 &: up incl. u1ilttil!!. Also . 24 H . b B'fl G d R It t-a onomics C.Orp. 6Q.6100 , 1 MAN 'S DOMAIN-Yd Jor furn. Pool • Recreanon '1Pw, r. ~rotecuon '" Y 1 r un y, ea or 14 . y,· . . Jo"OR 2nd ll'U!ll dff'd loans • ~I. Stv/refr, cpts. $00 2424 V111a Del Oro Sl'ot 2 BR. Ac for 2 hone• assoc. secur1t) guards. fin-0 x 2'70 d, City of kiodl ll l'o1r. S. ALA Rt'.ntal! • 645-3900 ' Nf'wport &1ch 644-1111 20'!71 Acacia St. $1."iO area. Quit-I Environment. PSI pnv. Mach, pools & ten· PANORAMIC VIEW ~tanton. &lTOS! from l'K'"' 1~ Y ca yen, 1 673-2:59, f'Vt'S 671-5723 OH 11J'ffl parking. No Olil· nlS ell. $72,500. SM•·n by ol jelly s, main channel. 3' 600 unit dt'\'Plpmt $52.000 6 ~ a.ftrr ti pm. • 1 REALLY NICE 1 Br ) 4 BR. f11m rm, fenced. View. dttn, no peis. J913t Brookhurst ,\,-e. lluntinglnn Be1u:h 11pp'L Call 494-8886 af1er BR., 4 ba. honte \V/formaJ : "'' terms + subordination. ~tvlrel, cptldrps, t>ncl a;ar Aval! M~r. 15. $400/mo lllt. University Park !>:30 P.l'wt. d' d .. 2 f I I Sullivan, Bkr !>IG-4429. I ' I~ $115. ' Refs req d. 64+-1627 , I 1958-1961 Maple Ave. B na in. rm., stu ~-rpcs, H<uestorRent ....a. ALA Rt'nlal• • 6i·3000 • , ""'SHEAR REAL TY EME1tALD BAY "·et bilr. Ne1Yly red~r.1 Condominiums TIC' .> Hunt1nt1ton Beach 4 BR •.••. 1 ,....,"' Costa Mru 847-ts07 Ori sandv bf:;ich. $169,.lO(l. for sale 160 - 1 SPACIOUS 2 Br. Stv/refr 11 • "' ..-.nu Y rm ·· ·' ......, I ~~~~~~~~~~I ** ANNOUNCES Charn1in~ "'ht1e "'111rr vie"' :b.Xll Bav~·ide Dr By app't. I rid, encl gu. Kids. Sl•5. 3 BR, 2 i BA Tnwnhou~. 3 BR., tam. rm .• din. rm. i HOLIDAY PLAZA 0 I f N Offl I home· optn bf-am living .. . I LAZY LIVING H . h ALA R.t'nta.ls • 64:>3900 crp!s drp~ It all bltns 2 Turtlt Rock .......... $325 Dr.LUXE Spaclou1 l BR pen ng o ew ce . · . , . Bill Grundy, Rea tor , ouses Furr'11 eel 300 I . car iar, st.p lndry rm .. j245 3 BR, le din. rm ....... $325 17931 D Bea ch Blvd. 1 ni '.' m!ISSl\e s\Qne frplc., S3.1 Dovrr Dr., :\'.B. 6-12-4620 3 BR 2'-~ BA "'i!h cuitom G I I tAMILIES \\it-lcome. PeU ...,r mo. 4 BR or 3 BR 1 4 BR 2" b•th• ••01~ 1 furn apt $t1S. HP ... ted pool. . d1nu1g rm. panelrrl oonvf'rl. ' · enera ok 2 BR C/D tncd d ,... ' ·• 71 ........ ..,_ Ample parking. No children Huntington Beach d . "bd' ·ludC"d . CllAR!\llNG tlC'arly new 3 rrpis. drp~ & fully <'nclosPd Sl ·-· ' Y -1-den. l'it b1. crp11. drps, I . no pet'. 1965 Pomona, ~!otf'llp Bra.~ht'llr. Broker li:n'. JTJ,;'_s .. St'l p,a bdrms .. 2 bflth~ & fa1nlly privacr pa tio. 2 Car gar .. * EASTSIDE * Ai.f· RPnhlls • M;rJ900 stove Sr retriJ'. S210 per I CM e\·C's: 968·1178 T A • ta rm. Larjte k1tc:ht>n \\•/elec.I xlnt are&, a real buy at _ . . . mo. South Coast Rt-a l l ~=~=~~==~-·I Ooranil i\lrl..l"y p,·r:1 : !~··t:in . ~rner _ sso~1a s tilin:1. Lovely lll'\lo" carpets. $2-l.9,j()! ~ ~ncludf's all u11J111es, !ITEPS co oce&n 3 Br r ar. Ei ta!e,. ~perty Manq._ +DELUXE l & 2 BR'•· Furn Eleanor Bakt'r l'\'r!i : 833-2053 I UOJ N. Coa,,1 H"~ ... Laguna Stone frplc. 3 Garai;:~1. ele-c. f Larwin Ra•lty, Inc NEA r 1 Br. 8ungalo~·. frpl, kids & pet&. $230. mPnl Div1110n, ~5-8424 or unturn. Bltn1, Crptl, __ 494.1177_ Anytim• door. ~~ this before you 21562 Brokhursl. J{.B. • Choice Joca1!on. Av1ll now. ALA Rentals • &63900 VACANT house lor lte by rlrl'>!!, pool, i: 11. rd e n• . CUSTOM 2 STORY j GREAT buy. S..19.500. 546-5411 anytim• BLUE BEACON RANCH Site. yrd. Stv/ttfr. ownt'r, Mwly paintf'd 3 Br, I "SINCE 1946.. NASSAU PALMS tn E. H'ugp citrus ll'et' fill('(! lo!, WEEKENDER GRAHAl'ot REALTI' &16·2414 ?OPl'I AR \1onfcello split * 645·0111 *' Cpt/drps. Kids & pr~ S145. l~ BA, bltru. drps, cprt. ~l \Vestrrn Bank Bldg ~~,L, CM, &i:Z.3645 or 3 bedrm, J ba. beaut r rptd.1 ~t-ilr \'icloria Bt'al"h undt'T· * BA YSHORES + 1 Vt'l ~od 1 · 2 ~2 de AduJ; ALA RPntals • 64~3900 fnrd._ By M.'hOols. $225. call I Unlvenity Park 6 "· d~. ~!I bltn~ 1nelurl~ pa!'s. \'1t"''. Jo" mainr. 1. &:11 .Ruy !c.tion. Ree~&: ?x,i ~~ciliry. *Walk To leach* Corona del Mar , 846-05l2 or !J92...157-4 Days 133-0101 Nights CHATEAU LAPOINTE T\ ~ :-.:o rlov.·n Cl or FHA. I Bdrm. plu.~ room for ex-$32.500 $22 . .'lOO. Oii·ncr. s..ll}.l4St. $130 • Neal 1 BR Duple... I !3 BR, 2 ba, bllN, irplc, I DELUXE furn 2 Br. 1pt. Prin'd at 11.ppra1sal. Call pamion. sr..ooo. Anr11c1L\'i' 2 RR k <1en. hn· Patio. Singles okay. MOVE I fenced yd, gar. CIMe to Pool. CIAAt" 111 shops S160. g.i;~;. . ~GLt.::-.:O Rt:.\l. t:s"TA'l'E mat'ul~tf'. ~ Crcstvit'~ Income Pr0P9rty 166 TODAY! H20~E \V!TH P~TI0.2 br, brh &: st'hools, Chlclm/pe\ ok 1 ·I BR., 2'-T baths · ....... S400 1 Adulls, no ptl~. , 318 Thalia, LaJtUna Beach D~ . .()pl'n Sat &. SUn.. tlJI I COSTA MESA BLUE BEACON I or si~g~ ;ti.:, ~!~ ! Rers. S225 mo. SJ:S..9612 , Turtle ~k 4 BR, \'ll •• ~5 I l!Ml Pomnnil Avt'., C.'.\I. S'ilf'W 49~8098 ~t call frank James Rltr * 6450111 * -440Dah.I' VERY nice 4 BR 2 ba l:\BR.,2,,barhs ........ Sl5(1 CUSTO?i-1FURNITURE • l -5-IS-4617 TRIPLEX • ia. , . 3 BR 2 ba Jam rm S340 • • I J • Opf'n For \'our ln~pE'Clion --I CLEAN 3 br lue eJec blttns Cpts. drps, Bltns, Frplc. · · · · '' RENTAL. 5el' ad clai;s l1D '•• 't11n Sun .• '.\lar. 7. 12~. A SptC· BALBOA COVES I Th" t'losest )'OU c11n come to Costa M•s• 2 Irplc, i undeek. Nr: Schi Cov'd pa!!o w I b bq, 3 BR. 2 ba. home ...... $325 • Call ~81 .. I 111rul11 r OC'f'11.n .\·1ew 5 BR, ~ WATERFRONT . I living for fftle alter an inlt· E>t.'TRA sharp 3 bedtm. 21 & shp'r. 531~ A1t -t:30 1 Girdnt'r, 1255 mo. !162-6222 (i. d h•118•lboe Island BUILDER SAID l Bt\ ~om~ at 581 Dunnegan I rim~ lo::-.~ BR. 2 ba. single ial inv~stmt>nt o( only 20~~ bath & fa mily. Crpts. 11rpt, "kdys. • 4 Br, mo. DNlpeS, fl'nced . . . re I I Dr. f or 1nlorma1\on. sin'). Ne"IY dtt"Or. Fenl'E'd dO\\·n !approx~\ is this bJtm .r. JuJJy furni~ht'd OC 1 yard glll'lgl!. Neu ocean. 2 Sty, 2 Br, den, 2 Ba. "SELL'' •n• ~~"* d 30 r ·-I .,. =.NI • • 1 EAN Kde of Hwy : 3 Br ~~" n~.... A ,., Im ·" y I I .,,,.......,.~'" Y, · t. ""11.t 5 tfl. ~a • ...,.,, \\"t"tl JocArrd 1vestside trl· NP11.r Sn. Coast Shopping hou&e $775· 1 Br 2 ba. .1........., · va mcu. ear 'I St' One lf"f!~ 4 hc<lroon1. :t hillh~. 3 U!\ITS. nr11r h<>ilrh. o~·rwr 8111 Grundy, Realtor plex. ThrcP roomy 2 Brd· Ct'nter. Avail for lrue ai 1 Iron! housr's265. · · J BR hse • w/w thn.lout. REALTY S285. nr unul June 19, S250. fa.mil~· mom "'ll h lar11e brick uys vii. r\rt"d S~0.000 11.,wn 1'.l3 Do\·r.r Dr., ~.8. 6.fl-1620 inom u1u1~ "'ith r.eparatt-only S2j() .. month. C11.ll 1 ~lorgi1n Rlty 675-6459 evPll dispo1:"1, drpr;, patio. ~o. Univ. Park Center, Irvine _ 5 _ 73-.12 __ 4 _ 5 . _______ J f1M"plaC"f'. ronnrrly a model tn handl(', 4!H-9659 Bmker }'11\"E fA.\llLY HOO\lE gara~es. h11rri"'ood floors 540-1151, Heritage ReallDrs, 13 BR 2 b . pe111. Call 962-8578 lor Info Call Anytime 833·0820 ATTRACTIVE 2 BR. uppf'r. home only 11 block frorn Laguna Niguel Good J:IPiJ:hls aff'a. 3 BR anrl pr1v11.1e patil"l IJ"l'as rx· lnp{'n l'\"('S.) I elPc'ioreM~.l~~~~pt~~: 3 BR. 2 Ba. Bllns. Cov. 1 P11.t\o, garai:t', u ti l ltlf!s . beach. H11s that Calif. ou.t· 1 & f11.m1ly rm. 2 Rath~. 1.fuge I rcllcnt for the o"'nf'r occu· Huntlrigton Beach nf ""'Y· SZ15 lse. 675-5992. I p!ltio, decorated iniide Ir I 3 ~R. 2 ., BA._ ~ge bonw; Malurt: 11 riults, nn P" 15 · Sl.80 door 11,·1n1: indoors. It' BY O\r~EP.: 4 + 1 br. !;l'parate n1astt>r BR . 2 pant. out. n11 Gosh awk, 536-234:. room. Pool priv11. -}"l'Ar!y. 1161~ Ag11te. OPEN bf'cn appri11sed bv YHA for 1x ba home on land!cped FT-pie!-. St-n·1ce porch ; I $41,500 BACHELOR cattage, Jurn. 3 BR. 2 ba . unf. S295 JUie. SJl!:i/mo. • &l.r2996 LITTLE I!l11nd Culf! l B1t only $35,750. ~6-2313 or ' 101~ Con1pl p,·1 pool, <."O\·;o,r~ 1:ara~e on al!('y, Pnclosed I \V11lk 10 beach. 151. last .I.\ HAva!I. April 1st 2 b(;-BRh US~~~';"· l%L blk 10 •Houses Furn. or y,·intrr S14.i. uiu paid, Yur'. g.i2.z-.,.,i;, 'patio ildj to hnust>, fully ~d. $.15.000. security ftl'. ~'16-1617. l ome Sho\v Rlfr. 67>722> Re~~ ·~0· e a se. Unfum. 310 I \y OK. 673-TI711 , .crp1Pd, 11\1 bltn~. e~bin GRAll .. \)1 RF.ALTY 6·16-2·\l-4 Laguna Be•ch 3 BR. house So. ol h\\'f, · · IDEAL Jor 1 adult -turn pla,,r111 abo\'(' dhl i;ar. Vialk SALF:. 011 ncr, ;-. ,. "por t . , , I 2 ba. ~I cond: S300 mo. Irvin• N-,.,port BNch 1 br, frtilc. No pets. Yearly 10 1THEREAL \'"\.. ESTATERS In srhl. 10 \tin. to och. tRlurfsl 2 RR sp!I! !('vtl 1 ARTISTS HIOEA\\A\ lea.w. t\o ~ts fi75-8i11. ·[ ••70 incl utils. 61!>-2915 '" . " J" '" ...... "';oo '"'o -~,, I 3 · · 1 BDR.\1 I 8 · 1 I NEW 3 BR. 2 BA, crpts, e ADULTS PREFER.RED e .., S:11J,. · -.;..,..,, .. al pm. Spanish home 1·ho11·e grcl'n· CHOICE · · urn. u 1 I· "' C I ~. I d htd l ' ..:_c:::_:....:. __ _:_:....:.__o__:_I "-I 1 · 26 ~ 0 I k1tch liv rm y,·/20 rt os a JTI9Sa rps, comm. poo & 2 Br. 2 Ba. Gar ......... sm B•lbolt Peninsula TOWNHO-USE-Lido Isl• ,,.. , vie" . .:iuu. vs: LAGUNA ·· · · · rtt lncl. Pre.ff'r family. 3 Br 21 balh •"o.r.1---=------ 1 6--12-4110 j.:\r~ &: "·k1id\: <.-ell & Nonh lis;::ht. St-eluded S2ti0.17662!>1a n ch e att'f , . " 11 •••••••••• _,., • S25 WK-OCEANFRONT Choice Location Prime Lido Nord 6-U-497j: Pnnc1pals onl). j APARTMENTC' patlo .• ~ll'V.' of pounding DESIRABLE 8.'!3-8210 3 Bs,'1·.,, 2 1"', :,·,new cpt&, drps127• Lovely Bachelon 1 _ BR. 2.J Bt'd -P. b I I !19 ·~ surl u.AJ ~o HOME \ .... .... ... ·1 • room~. J l, bil. pa tio, ··,,Bio··, 'p,,~·,·n· ~"~ e, '·,11;.~·""" BA YSHORF:.S . Opt'n house ~ untts jU!t corn~eted. i, Good. Rt'al ·E~;ate 494.751s l Br .. 2 "'· opod. d'P•. lon:ed Laguna Beach REALTOR 548-69fi6 Maid "'e"'6;,7~· ~~00101.eUtil. 2 c11.r )'.:iU"ili;t', pool, dase 10 • . • ...... · • ,uuu. Sun. )tar 1. noon to 4 P:'-1 . . ~ 1 ,...,.r bc11rh hke l'IC'"·· Prictd to T ip of Lido Isle I~ "a1t'rlron1 u n d Pr h~Ot k ~ · andy ~ach at • STUDIO COTTAGE "* 11.ir heat. Gllrb-<lisp, bit.in~. 1 LGE BR 1 sm BR trpl Duplexes Unfurn. lSO I BR. YParly. $160. Incl utli. 1rll. ' &aut. ~ BR., 5 Ba, home 2 s'll\0.000 1()lYJ ea', ~lwtt Dr. \\ ood'~ Cn\'I'. ~parkhn11: pool FURNISHED 1 p11.tio. garagP, wattr fUrn. lgr pa tin, ~pld, 1 blk 0ce&n: General 319 Ft-rnando SI. Ca 11 C<1lhns & \\"alt~ I lrplt's. :JS fl. "·aier l:rontage. ~-~r.~ . and ('OOlA"t~untty_ recsre auonh AVrl!.i;tic studio co1tl111r Il l I Adults only, no Jl"IS. nr SION'~. S193. 497-L\211. fin..:'>80.l 88-13 Adams A\" llB !lfi2.· .. 123 Room fnr large boat si.ips ('('ntrr. r11rt1\·~ panis icroria Reach. A I "'OOd RATE REASONABLE . 2 BR DUPLEX :----------~~...:......::,~-·-~ ~ _ Pnr~ $.¥Kl.<nt. · 2 BR. 2 RA. 2 11ory 0t'l'an ".l"("hlll'C!Urp ~.000. G«N:t paneled, ~k_Ylirhts. frplc. 1 Acrn!'S fmm Country Club Laguna Niguel Crpts, drp!, stovP, g=: 1 BAotELOP. ;.pis, util paid, HARD TO B6ELIEVE Bill Grundy, Rltr. V1Pw hom<'. 3 ~Ts old. 1 f1nanC'1ng &\'aJlablt>. Phone ,Sllt5 ~tonth 127'.'l :\1c~a Dr.• Ph. 548.4i706 14 BR. J1ml l y iardener. Arluh!. M ~ts. :~ ;l~d.a mo. JlO E. l.,.ro\"t'h~~ii ~2~~nclled i<:;.:: Dov('r Dr .. !\R 6-12-462() ~:!r'.067~~;·~-i ;:16~~9.1~i'. I ~2Jl3. )1~SSION REALTY 494..(1731 , 2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crp~li, rpts~dra~s, builtina, vi:':: SI65. 20SS Tustin Ave. Co!la lam .rm .. crpt.s. drp•. pauo. LOVEL y LIDO ISLE CHAR'.\IING htll!idr home Lido Isle I drps. stu\'f' .. relr1R", Q\nrt ~ca~l'-0¢ion $2%. 830+3992 Mesa Corona del Mar NP\\'!\' painted' \".\ fllA 123 V ia Zurich ""'''ie", l\"e\\·port Hts, S an. 41, ba, "'a!erlronl tropical utting for adult:1 Lido Isl• Newport Heights • BACHELOR. clo~t to · I 0 S /5 11 S J.tS-7~3 ho /I k I I._ .., rd only. 1 blk In IO~ Sl60-belch. Pr\v patio, refri&, t~rn1s. pen et un. • __ _ ml' .,. 1 _oc on ·"" •~0 Sl6!1Jmo. ~30 ' 3 BR , crpl'rl, hi tin•, patio l·BR., unf. Adults only. t\o HAFFDAL REAL TY l..;if"lol"e 2 BR. + drn, 2 ha.. sw.-rs. 2 BR. 2 ha. rlen. OFFICE BLDG. . Slj()Q Ylonth j I ,,, trpl. l.A!ASI'. Adhs. $300. pet!L. Closf'd gar. $113 hnl p!!llt'. CaJ1 5r ...... 3079 . &t2·ll0:, E\"I"~· ~>11-:!-»6 Frplc. Patio. S1~ps 10 bay. Corner 101, f_,1r11~. )lake '1 . ......, .,_,,,.. Bil! Grund.v. Rl tr. 60-4620 3 BR, 2 ha . Cpl~ .l drps, 673-4063 or •213) 62!}-2808 730 Tustin, N'pr. Stach Costa Me11 1:.:..-= __ _::. _ _:;c:_:.:.c;j ·-:..00 · ff A 6'11-llq· · f'I income #ON,_, Newpor! Hrs al?a 2 car · ~:CO CASll 10 f'~1~t.uli: j·l.~~ S..>1.. · 0 ~r Y. nwn('r. · ;, , Single t('nan1 "AAA"jNewport Be•ch I pragP, apacP for' trlr &: , Mesa Verd• Duplexes, tHA loan nl SJ,, 300 pa)ithle .. ~AL.BOA BAY P~OP. Un1vers1ty Park 1 Prit'~ S270,000 3 BR. 2 BA. OCEANFRONT. boA!. F11mily only, $2.iO. t Furn. or Unfur n. 355 REMARKABLY a1. S1 ~7 fll'r mn, hu\ ~ 1h:~ ~ \\ · Ralho!I. :-.'B !iil.7420 ReLur~s 10',. on c~s~ In\". aviul Iii June Irtih. S2:iOlmo. 642-€737, 5.i7-7627 1 SPOTI.ESS 3 br 2 ha. & 1 • UNREUEVABLY lo~el) 3 BR condo. *REDUCED* WE'RE SPECl"LISTS \\. R. Dt.:BOIS I'."C. Call sft 6 pm 111 tltl-ll&I DARLll\'G cou~O'r 2 BR fam 1.:is6 ~!yNJ""·-... ,.,,. 1 1 Balboa Peninsula 1 EXTRAORDINARILY 11o"f\\·11.~hrr rlr.,.t"r J"f'[r1~ -"' 54· 7166 ' -e ' · ' . ,..._....,, "" . BEAUTIFU[,, lrplc .Cpl~ ~ rli'.r• · c.~·_-176 · i lmm~c .. " BR., lamily rm. \\'E LIVE llERE -\\"Jo: • • .r • San Clemente lam. rm. firepl. p11.ttl:1. A''ail mo. 499·1901, 496-3949. GOOD SELECTION · · '-' _ 4J t t. Lot ~trrrt.io-\\'ORK HERE_ and ror tlw 4 t.::-.:rr:-. 1 yr old. Cornrr pool S215. 642-3645 0 r 1. 1 . 1 1 Val D'isere Garden Apt1 Bl'\' 1.lh"E RF.:\-r: I strttl. By app't. only In t, 1·3 BR, 2 t:IA, trplc: YEAR-round J~aM-4500 sq. 67:...604-4 I Newport Beach rar Y or wintrr rt-nta 9 Adults DO pets l Rt'rlrm Tn nhn Pnol •M -_,. pas1 3 )'f.'ars, ha'"" SPLC· ? 2 . I / .. h _,. Bu. rr \\'hill! R.t'allor. Pul!i"" O'ree~. \\"&\er!aU , '1· U!>t'. • .,..,.,,,"" IALIZF.D l.n 1ht' sh<>11·1ng ('{ .-2 BR, BA. l nicely t. llC' hou~lslauuing 2 Br Duplf'x Ga...,•e ~o 2901 N Bl d NB 67~ ,.,~,. u"" "' • Tl'nni~ Clubhf>u)o(' I. n " LI 00 REAL TY I NC. furn. 'l BP., 1 BA. 4 pvt '"i('v.·. Priv111e e ommunity ...... ,,· ''"''' · ...,.;1-.,.· :...3 •BEAUT. mod, IOl\'nhousP. S pt. ,. " ·. .rn>JU 1tream, flov.·ers everywhere d . proper11r.< !o r SAL~ ,r,,; .... ...... •I N ft_ ch • (1\\·n. ,\'-cu·ne J'•';. rnA JJn Via Lido 673-7300 C"MT c . \f. $765. mo. inc. 1Cyprt1s ~hn res / Soin \\'. ""ilson. 548-28J2. Br .. 2'2 ha, frplc., patio. ewport u.a i 43'pool,ttc.room,billlards, Bkr. ~ - 0 P-EN- 5 .-T-/S-UN- 1 - 5 -Lt:ASF. Ln !hl! irnnlN:halc $69 !t'.f'! P. 0. Box 212, Cd:\t Clt'mt'nlP. Four lf'\'f'i~. four c.-u• . I Pool. 2 Car g11r. All bltns, BBQ's Sauna, Jum .. ullfum SPACJOt:!' ~am. 'r" f' • "' . , • art'a. \\"(' hA\'c a tine sele-1:· beflrnoms, 11, BA th I . ...,.RP East.side, 3 btdroom. I carp, draPf's. Lse S28j mo OCEANFRONT 3 Br. 2 Bit. Singlrl, l BR, l BR + dc.n: galorl'. 4 BR. 2 \.a. ~I 211 Via Quito ~'.~;,~~~~-s ~~·~,tl~b~ 1z 12 r.11r~;!;~2AR~IE~s('~, 12 p:aller1A. family room. 8 Sl40 ptr month 411 m-4710 or MG-5091 tum. S300 Month. A\•aiL :i BR. From sm. Sre ii! V1•1a, Frplr, 2·r:\r i:ar. l Bdrnis. 3 harh~. l)1n rm Tl'RTI..E ROCK .~ kn o 11 ciiragt's, 12 pa nos. Income studio r urn i ' h rd or ill Fuller. Rtallor 546-0814 Pvr~/wlmds. April l!I. Pel! OK. 2000 P1rsons Rd., 642-8670 bltni;. cr;il!f ~l .7:i0, Gnod :'unrlf'f'L>K·.Ess.=i.00'\RE. •LTY '"fir:1! hllnd"' lht--inan) ad· St9:16/ mo. S25.CO) ®"'·n. othrnr1~r. Si.JOO nnclude! 2 BR duplex-Crpu &13 BR. Mn+ J.at dorm or\BAYFR0:-.1 2 Br. 2 Ba. Betv.'t'enHarbor&Ne\lo'fJOrt. tf'rm~. S-42-5.1.,J WA R "' (ht.iwr. &li>-4430 assn. due5 and i:irrtenf'rl. rll'llpes. Sto,·e k ttfris'. I studio, :2 ba. Nr beach. $295. unr. $26.l on least'. 2 Blk N. 19th. vtLLA Piu~ifil· rorolio, 3 RP.. J336 Via L;i'S.~i":rl Beach ~~~~~~D of~~;;~~~~ LAG &h, 3 unils, nr h('arh. ~~~a;.~.TI4l 496-5113 or PrPf. 11.dults Sl70. 64~1158 644-5049 or 673-32ll I Irwin, ReaJtor 67:'l.fp()6() ~51~5~5~.~ScH~A~R=P~l-B=R-.-1 11, bil, rornl"r \,.,1, nr r-:n l, \\'p shi1ll tofosidrr ii a rt'al (h111C'r s:\~~ ~tll. ;"\etcl _ Heated Pool. Adults, DO pet,, n'('l'f'll.U('!n::il 111.1:1. S27'{{l M••• Verde 110.000 rl'lwn t<1 handl• Hous•s Unfurn. 305 ~ r ~~ r;: -1 ltf'en okl. "2.~.~ pr1\·1lr1:" In ('{'ll~tlll 1v1th ynu l!!!:I • · --' '" ""«.i Ownl'r. 962-!IG3ft al .\~YT!\!~: in an cffr>rl 10 49+-~9 Bkr General AP41•l<nfnfs fOfRtnl ~ AP••lmenU I01'"9flt Ap.i•t•neo15!0<Rent l!!.!l l * n; k $..1."'i!O, [)o"'" . 6:\i, r.;.. )oan . ...... .. •'T' "'' ptr \Vee 1J p lrv' ·no hko nev.·. 3 h•. <•m. \'acant ~'"" .vour hn\151ni: 1H•Nl,. -Lots for Sale 170 I --, --· --·· -w/kitchrns. S2S J)f'r week \\"t:'P.fo~ lll'P.F..: TO ~ER\.L * RURAL * I A :\.10 S:-$.(lf(I. FP. ~~1901. 4!16-3949 \.OU! A U f 365 I U f up pts. ' TEL, 54S-975S. O\\"l\ER Tran:'>lrrre-d. :'>iusl 4 CE~1ETE.JlY lots. Blue icozv t Bedroom CCltl&&P on pt. n um. Apt. n ur". 3'5 Apt. Unfurn. 365 •Apt. Unfurn. 365 NEW LISTING ~('11 n('1•ly d«'or 3 br on Spruce srcuon. lf11rbor Re~t l \., 11.crP. Loni hair line. $150 N ~ft-ch N port ft_ ch N B ~ A )!rmorial Park S 7 O O. •"Cl .. 1,1 ,..,._. • u.• •w u.• •wport ........ , Newport BMch "l111b 'l\0!11 !. ttally C'h<1Lrr 3 BR. l ba. t•ul.(jl'-AAC. ~.>-871'2 -· " " · >UJ-30~' BLUE BEACON to1o1.·nhous.c. Bf'ilU!. ~ h il g carp. L;iii.::e pitll() & rlt>ck· if'!&. Shon \\!I lk 10 srhonl~ ~ nnr l'hnlr'f' for y~ur ~mil~· A o.n ly S.36.~ 1:\0..l'OI:>:G ttlf' I 11 rlrl ~ (ired hill Rl:"illt)' linh-. Park Ct'IHl'r, II'\ Int' Call Anyt1n1e ~..O..~ Newpo'' Beach • ACRE FOR llORSE' * 645-0111 SCADS • SCADS 20271 Aeaci1. Santa Ana H15. l ___ =~~~--*-' I ~~· •13 _,,,,,,.., * Would You 613-a1"1.3. -- -'l l.l'n llor Income Units Galore '"SINCE ll).ffi-;-,- Sl"p t S lnr the BE.-:T seltt· lltln in the' beach area. 1st \\'r&tf'n1 Sank Bldg. RDR\1!'. PRICES U111vrrs11> P11rlc l • bacn. Sl2 soo Days BlJ-0101 Nights l • 'l S~i'~'\00 1 _ ---3 BR. 1·\ Ba . l yr o11116 sint;l~~ .i II ptt ob,y. Nict l . 2 S·'9.!i001--------~tU<"C'O homr at 3.-.,00' f'll!\"ll-3 Br. -R11. S3tl .. arh. or SIM. 2 • 2 s19,!Gl [Mi uon nr K1ni::'.s c11nV(ln BLUE BEACON J. '} tl A\-aill S.l9.50Jj ) $lj.000 f'r "ill tr.1.de '1or * 645-0111 * 4 , :iOcPttnfront ~.500 1;;;;;;;;;;;;~=~ local property. Also 1\-J A.! I . 3 B<i~ tmnt $210.000 il\·a1L ~~1-IS60 3 REDROOi\I. 2 bl.rh, p.tio, e 4 BR HOME ---------1 S2lO pr. month Ol" lt!Uf'. Q\\·ncr, nr. rll'll PlN'M'tl('r 6 1,1n:ts,iL!UR \\'Hrr:~.tnl Acreage for t•I• 150 R eal Estate Want.cl 114 sro cll'llnlng 1ecur 11 y 1 ··n.. r .. oc•··. '""" " • RE.\LTOR o; . ......,. HOMES NEEDED .,,..;,, """''" •"" ' CPt. drp•, prnl. lnrl~Prl. lam p.m. a~k (<1r 0..n Lee or ~l """''?Or\ B!vrl · :-tB BUILDERS :M>.!M91 .. ,,, rm. F'\1\1 prl('f' Sl.\:.00 Lo\\' n dn. Call for t:pp1. RU-!1.100. ]-BEDROOM r "' Act'l's in ('llclu~1vp iu't'a f·or rrAn~fef'l'ts, \\:e are the * Alone On Lot * ... Mn.LIO~ s 11.&w ~fu-;rur; 1-+..-·DUPLE·X rtfte._ for dtovclopmrnt nf eS· (''l(cl11~1 'l' ;:tgrnrs fnr a. na ., t Mme. 1\U1lf' RoMt H.iU~ 4 . 1 ptnsl\'r hon\C'5. Porlf\'ln nf j Oona\ ®rpot'atiatt: ~ lbcal 3 BR, ~~ pr~. Huet:i RR, 2 Ra • t'A:\I A:. Jr.di). t.h·e 1n \11;<ury 1n lh ~ lavtt.h fll'llJM"rty Is a1N"ai1y parlli1lly I a~nl bt'tCltt you li•t·847 ·1!612. ya':1 K • '-Ptl• welcome. Walk to s.choGl fl\'l'rlnnk 3 Wrtinm homf', ThPn ttn! dt'\'tlopf'od u1!I> 1111 Ctff·~Ue S17;, mr.. UCI. R) fll~Tll'r 6 .itJO !hr ttuplr-:. I blotk t('I thr in1pmvrnil'nt~ LllC'!uding 1 ~ BLUE BEACON L•gun• IM•ch 1 ~1~c~~1~, t:k.~:=::~~: flll'°f'd !ll"N't!'. AA 11erHo are f"inanci.t / •I* 645·0111 * ,...,._, P•"".tently plantM 10 produr · . 1 BP. · j remodclf'd II< 11h top' quality inii: clfnis. l..Ql'lllM rn Unf' of j · rollllif' util pd ••.• S75 n1111rr111.ls. Pr'i~ Si6,950. Ri\"t't'Slril''s best Vlf'\\ arttas . I BR hom" furn .... :, $99.SO &.t&.7171 for onlv Sl.6311 ptr 11.~'M". Su~ Business , j2 BR C.\J. 1n1 pe1 O~ .. SJlO Early al1forniA ~t~lt 3 hf"d. m•t )~r iermr;.. r·or hinhtr Opportunity 200 13 BR \•1can1. kld1 OK .. $130 room. 11• bfllh hume. \\"tUI(' Inf . ~ BR \llr, kid91pl'll OK $11(1 nier \iew, nie l!JJtry wilh ormation, pltase call R.E. JI ,\ ~IR L: R GER 11and . 2 BP. ho h 1411 Knnx 'ti llA X ' Br.h Ar I Didc ' rv ranc ...... S =~ "'~t~Lot~P"0~1 E c kh off & Assoc., Inc. J.~\~JY'~)'!: ·6~·E\"t's. STAR.LET n6-7330 ...,. .. ,._,,-,.--..,-. ----1Sti·l671 Ever; ..,,.,_nib .).18...~ M.'-!!.\l LANDLORDS. OWNERS -.1'0d 1hruou1. Built·in kt1ch. * W•terfront Home * rn ...... ER • •"th d ahv.·1thf' '"·11 I I G.\RDl-.:..\'1'."G Roi.cit . ~"Ul u•· TY 1\lA."\AG!:RS en '1 1 r . ...,_~. P ie r &. Float GRASS \.Al.lf:'', CAWJ.' rrrni too\\1'Mo t-d ~""; r P' \\'e ,.,111 ??fer ten&11!1 to you AO I ... BR. 2 bt. llwtc p!lllO & '.\lust M'll .I\) lll'rt'•. J!f'IOI \·;u 11~1m & ~ llK'. s1~: r~ nf ~ • ' . MIJ\)' O i,,("" n.imoos rm. Only W ,OC(l, quartrr1n~ fll"ll"n!Lal, i·ht :mt" de11n.ble It.null on our "'1 "' ''A Fu H I" T .... ...... •• " ' ..... ,111 .... 11•1. REAL Est·•·re n ouse 11nor ..... enimrntn Si-~ pt>r .... ,.. '"'" oo prm• "''hi . Xb• 9UICK CASH ,\LA "'"""'-• 6'S.3!l00 1I Jcrm• ;» . ..._,,,, THROUGH A * 2 IR $120 * $31,900 • ~~"~~: DAILY l'ILO'F· i...., 2 -l!vlll'"· j WANT AD S-. CttiJ\! o~ll)'. VAciJ;'T. Banin ltrnlty BLUE llEACOH ~lt1n1. $'9.MG ' S17-4.0CO. JO'."f-:S ru;AL1'\' 1i'il-6Z10 square ~ b11ents ANNOUNCES THE AVAILABILITY OF TWO AND THREE BEDROOM UNITS FOR ADULTS DESIRING TO LIVE AMIDST BEAUTY BY THE SEA IN THE PRESTIGIOUS WESTCLIFF AREA OF NEWPORT BEACH ••••• ·-FROM $230 For lnlorm1tlon telephone Mr. Robert M. Buckley, M1n1oer •I (714) &45-0252 or write to Th• Office Of The M1n1ger, M1rlner Square Ap1rtment1, 1244 lrvln• Avenu1, Newport leach, C11iloml1 92884 I 1190 Glr:nDC)T't: St . * Oce1nfr ont Hom • * "4-llij;l !>l!Mll!).ll a..,,..,.. .,, .. ..,, ,,,,,Jnp, 2 IA~ labuloo1 ho~ f J BR. 2 Ni., t"fto. Nu.st «t BR, -4 BA, dtr\ lamUy rm. '" llppf"f'I'" $62,!QI, ~ nn. 0\\ nf'f 494-23.19. ~I \\' Balboa, !'\ B M~~ ~~~~-'---·--~-~~~-642.s611 * 645-0111 *I ~-~~-~~--'-~--'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- •• • Frl~, Marth S, }q7l DAIL V PILOT S l Aptt. Furn. 360 Apt1, Furn. 1.,,--~-----Cott• Met• Newport Bea ch 3'5Apt. Unfum. Newport BeKh Apts., Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. MS Apt. U""'m. 3'I Apt. Unfum. Newport Buch Apt. Unfurn, 370 Huntington Beach Cotta Mesa I Huntington B••ch Huntington Beadl * 130 UP * CHAR.:\1ING 1 Bd fireplace, FAIRWAY 1 BR, crpts, drps, retng., 1-:::=="================I GlANT 1 & 2 BEDR00'1! >Int p on 1 n'" la foe. HARBOR NOW YOU CAN AFFORD bltno, 1135 mo. Incl util. 1 • Gorgeous, pa.rk-l.lke setting. Employt'd adults, no peu. 1 Also 1 BR Studio, 2 ba, ola Q !JJ. Cl•"<! ganog" for ma>-A"il Mor 7 til ,,..., 15. VJLL.A APTS. NEWPORT BEACH ,.frig., bltM, "'"' ""'"· • / ! imum security. Quiel s~t. 673.-2123 TOWNHOUSE $145. Trade\rinds Realty Utn a ermo~a Adult!!, no ))!ts. 2 0 2 0 I 'oc=EA=Ne7.v"· --,U,-,,,-71°'B"Rc I 2 I. • BR' E . '750 000 h Ith I b •-7 I 7 &17-&u. F II · iew. 1>5tn · • s n1oy ,. • ea c u °' spa; poo s, Casual estate li"'•g. Enter '· Qw'nta ffel'> U er ton Ave (Harbor to Bl'A'n N'"'~rt & B&lboa. 2217 u-...1....-near "1ilson t · rt B b I l 2 B • Al 2 * FRESH AIR ·~ ~ ll 8 h So ..... Ptivate paUo. pooi • indiv, n&a"Ullf, enrus cou s. ac e or, or rs. so -, 1 sh Im b •-stro tree-.,_ay, Nt en . unlil 2 blks 1 adult. Rent ttasonable to laundry fae. 2 BR, l\~ BA STUDIO story townhou ses w/ 2 or.3 BR's, Elec. kitch-Walk J blk s. h mosa s u green a osp etre ~ .xi. of ev,.port B!vd. &12-8690 pern..,.nent responsible par-Orang TOWNHOUSE. Slto/~o. s 10 ac ! lined walk ways to your ap • -* BONUS.-$70l-*-I ·~'Y_· ~c~,1~"~73--054"=-~'c-·~~-Near e Co. .iJrpll't A: e Heated pool-Adu1ta only ens, private balcony or patio. From $175. Beaut, big 3 BR ap1. w/w ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED ucr. AduJta only. Subterranean parking, elev, maid service. c-•, d-bltn• ,_,, u I $150 F $180 FOR NE\V TENANTS * •?·.WEEK & UP* 122 e No pet.Adj 10 ¥hoppirll: .,. ' .,.~, e '"" 1 BR. n , -urn. Quiet & seclud"d 1 B .. fu .. n ':-1ESA MOTEL 20 Santa Ana Ave. Full·line food market, dry cleaner, beauty refrig. $22.5. No pets. 5J6.1n 1 :Z BR. Unf. $180 -Furn. $210 • • .. ~. Mn:. Joachim, Apt 3-A -salon within complex. 7 beaut. model apts. * $140 * •-1 d f · bin l' Nr So. c. Plaza & Ff\\)'s. h.itchen, TV's, maid aervice. 546..6215 SEACUFF Ml.nor Apta. 3 Spac. iu.-. pans, ecor. urnts gs; ive Pool.Adlt!f.Sl40m1nusbonus Jfea'ed pool. 64&-9681 liiiiiii!iii"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiii Bache:klr. 1 &: 2 BR. 1\' "am to 6 pm daily, other times by appt. ASK Aboutoordiaeountplan! within romantic setting w/fun or pnvacy. 2831 S B BA. 1137 = •1r11 t 'll\ • Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rds. N. of 2 BR 1 d bl 1 k BBQ' / . ri slol, DI. 1 BR. furn. apts. Ulll incl'd. HARBOR . .,.,...... '""'· _. move: · . crp s, rps, ins, car. Terraced pool, pr , sun en gas S w · , 1n aJJowan-+ Fashion lsland. 714: 644-1900 !or leasing info. ~ 125 M f All d & F BEAUTIFULLY clean, No children or pet.s. 2405~ '"' reg. "°''" ove·n owance. seculded seating compL w/Rama a oun .. Boch•lor, 1 & 2 BR ''" !6th SI., N.B. """"' :f.""~~~ d'r..' ~~~ PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS 725 Utica 5.16-><<1' lain. Pool. Crpts, drp!'. Adults. ON BAY, near Lido, 1 BR. TOWNHOUSE Placentia Ave. 548--~2. 2 BR, 1 Ba, Dishwsr, refl'ig, * Colot co-ord, ~it w7 indirect lighting. The l\! on t ere Y Apts, apt. Boat slip av a 11. IYW~l~!.SOSO)Nf!G~ARiiilDJ!ENfi<"IAPT(jij'Ss~.1'!'~!!!'!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!![!!!!!!!!''!!!!!!!1/!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!1 Cpt~·Drps. .Natural beam * Delux• r•ng• & ov•ns * Plush sh•9 crpt9. 17M_2.,-20018"1". =,,....,..._,,,,...~ $185/month. 67~50 2217 Harbor, ne:ar Wilson 2 BR Unfum. Ne\lo·J,y dee. Apt. Unfum. 365 Cotta Mesa celh~, patio &: • pool, nr * Bonus storage space * Cov. carport * DELU>.."E 1 BR .t:1 ° "'s°'R.~Oc<,..c--,.,,,,..=n--t.--..,lil~J-"""-le 2 BR, 1 BA TOWNHOUSE. New cpn:/drps, SP a cl-::-..,..-:-,.------· I·---------hospilal Quiet, View. 17676 * Sculptured marble pull/.nan & tile beths Bachelor apts. SJj ""'kly & 1·11 S'°"/ Ut 'l pd All on 1 !loor. $125.$135 Costa ••-sa LRG 2 B SI d' 11' b Canieron, MZ:5192 * Elo i11nt rocraat;on room. ::i 1 • u:i mo. 1 • grounds. Ad.Its, no pell. """ r u Kl, ~ a. 8EACHBLUFF Apts '9uRNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY up. Furn. incl ut!I. J\1onthly Adlts, no pets. 673-8088 • Healed pool-Adults only Sl40 / mo. 2283 Fountain iijiiiiiiiiiiiiiil dreung rm, palio, pool. $150 F te1ms avail. 998 El Cam ino. ~B"'A~=f-~~o---cc--.,E,-,,,.l· I• No pets-Adj to shopping w E <H bo •·-\V NEW NEW & $160. 2925 ~iendoza NEW 2 BR, 2 BA. dishwash· Blk fro m Huntington Center San Diego 546--0ljl .._c ., pi-.v, hOjlle. mp, N ch'ldre: ay . ar r, •w·n . NEW 1 ~==~~-----I , man. priv ent, deck, vu. • 0 1 11 on \Vilson), 2 BDR.."1 shag crpt drp!!, ers, ~I. pal.io. 8'Z3t ~!lis. 1'"'rwy .. Goldenwest Colle.l?e. $25 Per Week & Up s12:; f~S-3684 642-5m. MARCH * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR's. Fl.lrn lirepliu:e, patio. 1343 Baker 842-8477 or 847·39J7 San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on BACHELOR & 1 BR. ~IOBILE home 1 BR fly or unturn. Bltns, crpt~. VILLA CORDOVA St. Call 531-2399 WALK TO BEACHll Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to -.• TV&. maid serv avail. furn 'd incl linens & Move-In Bonus drps. pool, gardens. NEWLY redecorated studio, WVELY NEW 1 .rt 2 BR's. LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 847-54411' 450 Victoria, C'.~1. dish\\"are, $12.J mo 646-4065. 1 mo's Free Rent NASSAU "PAUotS, 177 E. QUIEI'..SAFE 2 BR, l~~ ba, nr shopping Cri>ls, drps, dshwashers, I BR. $125 -2 BR. $140 l BLK ocean. Furn. 2 Br. 2rmd St., Of. 642-3645 or 40 Unit Adult , _._,,_hoo_l•_. _l_l65_. ____ I7_5.1 __ 1:;:-:-o709=P"a!m'""-c•=":-7-·395-;·c;1= Apt. Unlu•n. U f $•• • II 1 • 365 Apt. n urn. Pool. Bltns, crpts, drps, no garage. Yrly. lease $185. ~ mov•1n a owance ~. Apartment Complex: • WALK to beach, deluxe --------- children, no pe ts. 32W E. mo. 207\~ 33rrl St., NB. 2 BR. f"ROJ\t $155. COf.t-e NEWLY 1 & 2 BEDROOMS D•n.a Point t & 2 BR. Sil'> +. No Newport Beach Newpor t Heights 17th Pl. C.M. 5.JS-2738. DUPLEX l·BR. furn., 1 blk. :LETCOZEYLYFRAEMDIECLY' CLUNEANITS, DECORATED Enter1aining will be a pleas. s""'PE"'CT=A-C_U_LA_R--oe-,-,-,f-m-tl summ.er i220ncrea,ses. Royall --,B-R-, -,2-B-A-,--fr-p"'l-c-,IN --IC_E.;_2_B_r-."P"oo"t-.-S-u-nd-,-,.-.I FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. ocean. S150 Yrly incl util. No CoNV. LOCATION. VILLA QUIET 2 BR's. Gar & Pool. ure, Decorating this lovely, view, 2 BR. 2 ba. lito\'l', Hawaiian. 1 th 51 • H.B. redecorated, ow, s240 nio. Bltns, <:pt/drp, adlt.a, no E xceptionally nice! pets, adlts. &12-1272. Crpts, drps, Adults only, no spaeious BPI will be a joy, refrig, cpts Ii drps, $225. $150 -VERY spacious 2 Br. Adults, nr Hoag Hospital. pets. nso. M2-800.l, 642-8006 2110 N I 81 d CM MESA APTS, TI9 w. \Vilson. ., ... ClllA'I -• ~A;al b' ' &37-5..170 st!Jdio Bpi. Small children ewpor v ·• 2 BR upper. \Valk to beach. 6., '"'l. pets. * ~ "'~ ca ine space lmmed occup, 642-4387 or I San Clemente ..,,.~ •Lock guage w/ 1 stor ok. 17674 Van Buren !...ant', $30 \VK • 1 per, \II/ kit $250 Incl util. Yearly, Avail * $170 * s g M2-1TI1 . -"-'-------$35 l\f ·d 1-'IV 3;1 2l3 1 447 9443 1, • e Bm ceil e Lndry e Patios East Bluff HB. DELUXE z BR 2 Ba.. . a1 ser, 1nens, · -. P•rk·Like Surroundings 3 Br, 1,11 Ba, patio. bit-Ins,• DW/displ •Huge gas stve: CHEZ ORO APTS VIEW, 2 Br, 2 Ba, frpl , • ·• ' & tele. Sealark l\fotcl, \VATERl'"RNT, 2 BR, l ha, QUIET. DELUXE ~ts, drp&. Ask about our • Special MUndproolinc elee kit., enc gar, \'talk to bllins, dshy,•hr, rec. room. 2301 Npt Blvd. &l&-744;i furn \\'/util, Yearly, $27;i. 1.2 & 3 BR APTS d1&L'OUnt plan, 88(1 Center e Deep 2 color shag NEWPORT BEACH S:~v~!lan~f&!:. B~~=: ocean & bay. Adlts, no pets. Adul!s only. SIM. 4sz..2259• e 1 BR. Heated pool. No 3601 Finley, 833-1134 Also FURN, BACHELOR St. 642·8340 carpets, drapes Villa Gr•nada Apts, dryers. 536--8038; 536-2727 Yrly. $26.'>. 575.5397 , pets. Crpls, drps. 126 l\Ionle Newport Heights Prv patios * Hid Pools 2 BR 2 ba fitt pl f/a ht. GAS 1z WATER PAID Four bedrooms with balcon. 2 BR apt • W/Y.'. drps, bltns, 673-1990. Vista Ave. 642-5790. Nr st-.op'g * Adults only bit-ins, step dn !iv rm. Mo. to Mo. From $140. !es above & ~low. Graclowi disposal, laundry i;pace. No LG. 2 BR studio, ll~ BA, QUIET, studios Sll5, 1BR's, CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlts, MARTINIQUE APTS Cpts/drps \\'a.lk-in clo~t. 2323 Elden Ave C.'1 living & quiet .wrroundh1g pets. ~24578 for Info crpts, drps, bttns & D\V, $125. No chldrn or pets. 2no2 """i· Lgs k1Nt;BS!~s11~1-im Santa Ana. Av.. Cl\I 1200 sq . ft. Gar. $155. (Near Back Bay) for family with llliildrf'n. Near Hoag Hosp. Sl90. 2135 Elden Ave, Cllf, see 4 l E. 8th t. . .......-. "" Adult!, no pe~. 675--2018. See l\f,,..., Ted Woodheair Near Corona del 1-far .High S50 moving allow. New 2 A t 6 l\fgr. Apt 113 646-X42 &• School, F>'-plo-•. ,1 •--& Br from $135. Cptsldrps, 642-4387, st2-1TII. mgr P · NEAR be: a ch & stores. New .1. .1..1. --'" "" " """. A I U I 365 ~,, bull I Id •-'p1· bltru;, fncd palios, play * LARGE 2 B-2 •-$14.G 1 BR. $175 -2 BR. P. n ur n. 2 Br & 3 Br apts, Crpts, f. n tc • ..,n ap iances. area. 846-7277. " utl, Util pd. Pool. Garden Liv-Generol FROM $135 drps, frplc, pvt patios, Sal 11.15 AMIGOS WAY 644-299l l---'-"-------cpts/<lrps, bltrn;, encl gar, TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT ing. Adlts, no pets. 740 \V, Gas Heating • Built-ins to $325. 316 :r.targuerlte. Coldv.·en, Banker & Co. Laguna Beach patio. S175. 5'1S-3708. }8th St., C:\1. Water included 67:>-&172 or 213: 797-2300 HACIENDA HARBOR Managing Agent 541-522:1 DUPLEX 2 doors from Bl·h . WANT AD VEN DOME 1 & 2 8.d·ooms • NEW DELUXE • OCEAN VIEW. Lrg Bachelor 4 Br 2 ba up-r. gar .. crpt. I 642-5678 NICELY Furnished 1 & 2 • 2 BR, l ba duplex, E-side, & l BR apt•. Cpl•, d-•, ~ Carpets and Drapes /d bl · I 3 BR 2 B ·,.., drps. Yrly SJOO. 642-9'.1~2-Br. Trailers. SlJO & up. J:\DfACULATE AP'J'S! crpt rps, Ins 1 n c Quiet Adult Living • A Apt for lease. Incl bit-ins, patio. \Vll.lk'g dist. I 132 \V. \Vil.son. 5-18-9;i17. ADU Enclosed Garages. dshwshr, laundry, gar, spac. masler suite, din rm to town. 100 Cliff Dr, Apts., Apts., AVAIL noiv 1 & 2 Br. furn. FAl\llL~T.S:C~on Pool & Recreation Room. c~ildren OK $155. 644--4416 ALL UTIL. PAID & dbl garage, auto door Laguna Beach. 49.\-5498. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 1 Furn. or Unfurn. 160 West Wiison e.es 646-41M opener avail. Pool & Rec, I-~--------Pool, rec rm, gd location. Close to shopping, Park 642•7373 ' 1 & 2 BR's. $150-$170. Shag M•s• Verde No pets or children. *Spacious 3 BR's, 2 ba 1 ----=~-·---ISTUDIO ~ Br. New cp~, carpets, bit.ins, encl gar-area. ------- 646-.i824. * $130 UP * drps, Pauo. Closed gar, 1\J ages Swimmin ... Pool New. • S:ti5 • 2 BR. New cri:it. drps, closed * Sy,im pool, put/green GIA.."l"T 1 & 2 BEDROOl\1! Ba. Nr shop'il;, Adults, no Iy d~r Beau ... r landscpd 865 Amigos Way, NB gar, near sbop'g, . Adults, $67.::.0 BACHELOR Apt :r.1an * FrpJ, Jndiv/lndry fac'ls Gorgeous, park·like setting. pels. Sl-". 643-351.3. Adults, ~ pets.· · ~1anaged by s14-G43-l5la only. 132 \V. \Vilson. Call 1845 Anaheim Ave. Closed garages for max-TO 0 S 'VTLLIAi\.t WALTERS CO. no pels. a. 54S-9:i77. COSTA :l\lESA 642-282-1 * WNH U E * 241 Avocado e 646-0979 N rt 8 h imum security. Qu iet litreet. 2 BR 11' BA t d TOWNHOUSE • Owner's 4 ewpo eac Sll:i nto, l BR, All ulil paid, .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Adulls, no pets. 2 O 2 0 ' ~ ' crp s, rps, B B -•-- p . N 1 f pat io. Adults. SltiD. 134 E. r, 3 a, ~ 2 Br, 21~ EASTBLUFF vt pauo, ew Y urn, Fullerton Ave (Harbor to "! lod L ~'"l7'8 2 Bo. Poli·"". Encl & a r , I Q · =--•~ ,.,,.9 "e y n . .,.,,,.. Br st!Jdio-Pvt patio, encl ..,.. I Bdrm 1 •-opt All bltns Adu ts, u1e!. ,,..o-vaJ . Boy th•n So unto'! 2 blks 67o;_"""~ · ""'· · · • · "'· l~l ba, crpt11: I drps/ ...... ~.,,, c•-t•d dro-d F"rpl 1 DUPLEX 1 BR . fo'" or RENTAL FINDERS So. of N•wport Blvd.) HARBOR GREENS ·~ • ~ · '· f h . Q . .,, ~~ bftm. No, CM. $165. Adulls. Y''" old. $175 Mooth. un urn. near s op g. u1ct. Fr•• To 1.andlords ,,.....,.,.,... GARDEN I.: STUDIO APTS 549-0433. Fountain Valley No..:i~orcats.54&-2720. G dlx I'" 2 B 816 A1\tlGOS WAV "'"'"" 645.0111 LR apts, ]..,, r, &ch. l , 2, 3 BR's. from SUo.l·.~L~R~G~l~B~R-.-,-.-t.-Al=l---w Newport Be•ch Newport Beach Brand Spanking New In Beautiful BACK BAY 1 and 2 Bedrooms Furnished and Unfurnished Adult Living 370 IATI"RACTIVE E-slde Studio SHiO 3 Br. 2 Ba. Hid Pool, '""" p w c 1\f .... 3 BR, 2 BA. Condo. 2 car ; ; •1uosO 0 apt. 2 BR. 11; BA. POOi. 4JJW.Jfttl,C•tti M ... Nev.'ly dee. Play yd. Cptd ... ,w e:te:f'";On ay. ·1 • crvts, drps, tile It. paint. garage. Pool. $2'l:ilmo, Call ;; ;; No pe!s. &16-66IO. !!!!,==-----·I Drps. Bltns. Patio. Child. 546-0370 Bltnsi c:s/mo. 546-4)l5L 536-7723 after 5:30 pm. ._•WP ••r a., .. 8 .lbo. P .ninsula ok. 2 BR. Toy,·nhse. l'~ BA. 998 E ino, C.M. G d G * Dishwa sher * Stove and Refrigeralor l j * Shag Carpeting (4 exciting colors) \ * Sound Proofed P I. 1 I ild k •· t LGE od 2 ar an rove WESTCLl~F ·-•-2 br, 2 Dana Point 19981.fapleAve. 642-6344 a 10, e 1 o·. "opes. m em BR, 2 ba,1---------, -· 2 BR. lrplc, balcony, :nJ 2214 College Ave, '646--0627 $150. 5'5"-1882. l 0 4 8 ·A New crpt. nr schools, Bllns, EASTGATE AREA Cle11.n, be, CID. frplc , pa1io. SINGLE, TV, pool, pets ok, E. Bay. \Vinter rales $173 ........................... ~'=1,,iss=io_n_.,.--.,..,-.,.-,.+,c:'c:'"c:":::':::'·c:l::;165""'-"='"-,c:l:c4!•::;·:..._ 1 spaciouii 2 BR J ~ii BA studio Artults. $170-$1 80. 1601 $2;i & up. \\"kly. Dana mo, Yrly $225 mo. lnquire * BRAND NEW * NEAT, clean crpteci I br 2 BR, l~i ba, Cpts, drps, apt. Pllllo, crpls, drps. elec Bedford. Also new garden :l\iarina Inn, 3-IW Coast No. C, 673-1521 of 548-7771 \\'/gar, $110. Back Bay patio, No pets, ,s175 1110 incl kitch, laundry racilitit's. 2 br. 2 ba, CID. frplc, Hwy. 2 BR unturn $200, 2 BR LA COSTA API'S, 1 & 2 BR. area. 280 Del l\1ar. GE util. 5"8-880l. \Valk to shopping. Nr fry,y, dishv.•shr. A<lulls. 10 6 5 EXCEPTIONAL 1-2-3 BR., furn SlS.J, includes ut il. Yr-Bl.tns, sY.·imming pool & gar· 1-9568 I=~.,-=-=-=~ Sl60 mo, 12092 Bailey. JrviJK' acf'OS!'! trom Coco 's. 1 & 2 ba. Open, C'urdova 1 RH 507 E Balboa age. All util pd, $150 to $170 -====--~~1$100, 1 Bdr. Dlx, Bit-ins. 897-SIH2 S195. 642--0239. at Olinda. O\vner. Ph. s~i-Gssor, ' ' mo. Adults, no pets, * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. CptsfDrp111 Pri, bale. Gar. 354 Avocado, C;\f. 642-9708 Contemporary Garden Apls. like nu, xlnt Joe. 962-4180. 492-122:i. Patios, trplcs, pool, $145 - Huntl.ngton Deach Corona del Mar $160. Call Sol&-5163 2 B~. comp! crptd & drpd, * FREE ====---.,."""=I bit-ins & dshwshr. ln :dnt BEAUTIFUL FURN. APTS. RENTAL SERVICE ATTRAC like: r>e:w 1-2 BR. Joe. 64&-529t S1."ll65 Qu''1 · 1-Lg pool, cpts, drps, displ,1---------~..,... · 1 , pnv. pa 10. -Costa 1'1esa • Huntington utl pd 1884 l\fonrovia. IT'S A breeze .• sell ~ur 2 y,·ardrobes, frplc, dre5sing ~-v Beach e Newport Beach 54S-0336.' items wi th ease, u~ Daily rm, locked scp. gar. Pool. 'Q. 1-2·3 BR APTS. Pilot Oassified 642-5678 Sauna. Rec rm. NE\V 3 Br O\Vnl'rs unit, Irplc, · Ask about our DISCOUNT A t Huntington 8e•ch 1''0URPLEX, J BR, 2 BA, D\V. !rplc, im111ed occupy. Childr•n W•lcome $22i. Adults, Inq. 4.150 A rmmac. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Studio Patrice Rd. 642-438 7 apt. 4-plex. Priv, palio. &12-1711. C.,ru:, dr"PIJ bltns. Lrg play -WE=srcL~~f~F~,_.,,~B-r.-.-,~lt-.. -no- area. Cul-de-sac st. No pe!S. pets, cpls/drp!!, bllns. 1728 17871 Bell Circle. 842·3677. 1 Bedford Ln. $17;i. 54&-753.1 * Billiard Tables *Pool * Large Recreation Center Occupancy in March RENT STARTS S 155 Vista Del Mesa Apartments Tustin & Mesa Drive 545-4855 • 17301 KeC"lson Ln. (1 blk \\', an bltns, shag crpts. drps, P s., · 01 Beach Blvd. on Slater). ON TEN ACRES PLAN. Call 636-0220. 1·losed garage. lmmed. Oc-Furn. or Unfurn. 370 or Unfurn. * 8tl-7S4S. 1 & 2 BR. Furn. & Unfurn. 2 BR. 1 BA. Garden Units cupancy. :>4:>-2321. , Apts., I Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Apts., 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Huntington Be•ch Fireplaces I priv. patios. Sh t d d h h -Huntington Beach Huntington Beach Huntington B•ach Huntington Beach DELUXE Bachelor Units • ag crp s, rps, s .,.,. r, J\'E\\' spacious I & 2 Br. Pools Tennis Contn1'1 Didst. · L. ·1· 1 1 -nr==;;~-~=::;=====~==::.~::;::::::::::;:::::=.J[?::==;,=7;:;==iii[riii:;~~i=)ii-I \Valk to Ocean. Util pd. patio, ...,am cei ings, rp c, Bltns, crpts, drps. gar. lm-900 Sea Lane. CdM 644-2611 ...,..__,, Eld• "7 0062 • ~ LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 gar. 'V>N n. "" · med. occupancy. 545--2321 . ,., " (:'-.IacArthur nr Coast Hwy) alt 7 pm & sun. Sll>a/mo. '" ' "' FURNISHED Bachelor apt. :; Lg Br"s, 2 Ba, ne:w cpts, b" • fj SlOO/mo. 2 Br. Unfurn Apt. Stove & drps, no pets, childre:n ok, ~ ~ ~""' * Call 646-2687 * Coron• del Mar refrig incl'd. Gal'agC', Pool. Avail now. $1&;;/mo . :>4:i-7245. '"1 \liil"WV'J 1----'"--'-'--'---1• _________ , All ulil pd. Adlts only. no ••• $' -..\: ' ~ • ' · . Laguna Beach FOR lease l Br, furn. Ocean Vie w. Ot>ck. Adlts only, no pets. S250 mo. Uhl. 499-2865 * COROLI DO APTS * 2 Br. studios & street levels, S18,j &. up. Penthouses $220. Dshy,·hr. frpl, dbl carport. Pool. 673-3.17S Lido Isla FOR lease, delx. all elcc. lge, ne1v 1v/a vie1v '.? BR, BEACH: Apts. Furnished l I BA apt. All blt-inll incl BT •. & Bachelor. Garage. dishwshr, dbl. gar. Adlts S200, $22:i. $2.)(). 32U Nord. only. 673-6992. TI4: &12~7 With just a call, you can 1-BR . apl. \\'alk to beach. sell it all! Place a Dally Gar11'!P ,\ctults onl~. Pilot Classified Ad. Call BROKER 67:1.:l:zoo1 1ircct 6-12-5678 TODAY! Apt. Unfurn. 365 1 Apt. Unfurn, 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 --·-- ~llL.At;ICA \._ NE\VL 'I" dl'COr 2 BR, cpl!i, • • ' ~ pets, 1.1gr. No. 9, 383 \\1 • .. bl 2 i·'M t . S ut'P5. tn!'!, -car 1:arage, • .· mosp WIJ'°n. I. 1160 6'3-<"9 ~ . 0 -' ' LIKE NOTI-11:"\G ELSE! -~----·I llliiii" Large, clean 2 BR, Frplc. QUIEi' 2 BR. crpls, drps, Ad ults. Near DCC. hit-in~. Adlts, no pets. Sl2.l. , • l::~~:~~ ~n.'.? C~fR. 2 S::.1~nl. W /\V cpL~. drps, ,i Ccoso bll -in rAn(!"e. Adults only. r Contemporary Garden Apts. N"o pcl s. 3-18-42l:i Patios, lrplcs . pool.1 -~~=~.~=~--1 Sl4:>-St60. Call 546-5163. LRG-QUIET·CLEAN "THE GABLES" $165. 2 BP.. 1 ~~ BA. GE kitch. 2 BR, i·~ BA \\"/ gar. $1,j(). Adl1s. E·!!'.idC', Cl\f. 548-6t32 Adlts. Cpts. drps, fncd yd. Daily Pilot \Vant Ads have 2437·0 Orange: Ave:. 636-41.Xl Mrgalns galott. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn, Fount•in Valley Fountain Valley ~ i • N stAU: I"• NOfMIM& V8LL8V P8RK .C/,l/S APaRTmeNTS fO~ FAMllleS WIT~ PRt·SCHOOl tlllD~n AtCReo11eo PRt·SCH92~ ON 01", CROUNDS d.B<Deoom -F~ lb0 :t S<OfOOfll "1QOeil APf. ·Ffom 175 ;l. l!eOROOlll 10WtlMOUSe -165 1125'-tO.C:UCLIO•fOUNTlllN V"'urf 540-4185 - • I I 3! OAIL V PILOf FtldQ', Mvch 5, 1911 r .... ,_,,,1·_:_~J~ I ....,_. ...... I ~! ... t.. I~ I -· l[j] I ... ~- 1.Af';;';•; .. ;...,;;.;~~~Af'~h;; .. ;. ;;;;;;;;~:;;:1:0ff~l;comi!Riio;nt;o~l-~~ .. ~j;;P;orson;;;•~l;1;;;;;:~530~ Found (fru ad1) 550 , _.;F.;u;;m,;;;.·.;.•;.r..;U:;n.;;lu.;.;.rn~._3;,;l_o __ F_u_r•-·-•,,.r_u..,n_fu_r_n_._3_7_0_1>"0R Jmmedia1e occupancy FULLY UCENSED * · \VllITE Samoyed lluik;y Vic • · In Oranfj• Count)"• mo.t Renowned Hindu Sptrl~t ''The: R Ii n c h ' ' a.rta. 1 ;N;;•;;w;;;;po;;i;rti;:iB;ie;ia;ici;h;;;;;;;;;;;;;N;;e;;w;ipo;;;;r;;t~B;;;;H;;c;;h;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l lovt'ly garden comm'I com-Advlee 011 all matttl"!I. 832-53!M l 8 l• pie.\. Co1nm'I proleu. 4r: Love, Atartiage, BW1iness BLACK Lab malf' wear!rig n1ed lcal ti.lits, In San Juan Re11.dl~t given 7 di,y• a n lie V~c Huntington Beach FOR S135* Olympic ,iie pool-8illi1 rd1-S1un11-T1nni1 pro 1hop--Color TV loun9.-H11lth Clubs- Indo or 9olf driving r1n91-P1 r+y Room-Full time Activiti1' Dlr1clor. Bl::ALJT IFUL APARTMENTS' Singles, I & 2 Hedroon1s. futnished or unfurnished. Caplstrar)() adj lo Bank of t1.'e<'k, 10 a.!11·10 pm. 530--0123 America. 8J5..8(J3j 312 N'. El Camino Rea!, I--~---~--~ Sa Cl 1 J>'ULL grown tl~er s.!ripc BEAUTIF'UL .1 room oftice " emen e • n1ale cat round in Me11a suite \vlkitchenf'tU!. Ideal 492--9136• 4n.<m& Verde. ~9-1791 for 11.rcht!f'cl, l n s u ra n ce WRITERS FOUND: l\llle Slameae \•ic: 11.il'nt. reallo1·, elc.. On Novels, 1extbooks, research · N e Van Buren & Austin C.M. htonrovia Sr. 111 . • "aper•. Expert editing & re-[~~~~~;;;;~~~;;~~~~~ $350/S:x>CI ~r mo. 64j...()770. vision. 111 yr, profesaionill/ 1 ~-==-·~-~-~-~ LARGE, alcy orfi~ Y.'/amall academic eirprr, 499--3526 }'OUND: Dacluhund, male, · ff' & b th vie Paularino & f alrview. pri_\·.a~e 0 1~ • ·SINGLE? WIDOWED? When You Want it done right ... Call one of the experts listed below!! lllll Job Wanted, M•le 700 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Bodice -ln1pcl -Lurid - \\'rltcr -I \VILT A n11n1sli'r asked ll nerv· OU~ bridegroom, "\Vilt I/IOU take this \\'on1an ai; thy Jaw. ful wed(Jcd 111fe?" The- groom \YlLT .. , sta1n111ered, "I RE.!\SON.>\BLE RENT": Singles from $135. 1 J~edroo1ns fron1 Sl55. 2 Bedrooms from St25. Lo\r 1110\e in charges. No lease req'd. uuhues furnis hed SlJO mo. D ' _,1 A.. 1., C.M. ~7-3032 1..aguna N\tuel nr San Diego tvorc-..,.,.er l • FOUND: Siberian H us k Y, fwy. 8Jl-l400. For a self explanatory mes. Jo'eb. 9. 63J..«i02 PAnT time 11·01·k. Retir~d. Exper. llpl . house 1nanagrr. \Vrire Ctassilird Ad No. 87, .=;;jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjmiiiiim I Daily Pilot. P. 0 . Box 1:-.60. ;einting & Cos1a ~Ir .s a , California. Gardening Models Open Daily 10 am to I pm. DESK SPACE "'',i.:..';,·~·r.:,::,, JOS No. El Camino R•el f''OR ladles only,~ maaaq:e Lost SSS Babysitting COSTA MESA PROFESSIONAL.. Prurung, trtt \\'ork, sp!'inklers, aera· t1on. pests. disellM', wt>ed control. Clean up jobs. Terms. Crorge, 646--~3 p h • 92G26. •per anging e ADV. ARTIST e SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOO GARDEN s,,n Cl•m•nf• special $j. lTut Buch LOST, i"AY cat w/eye In-PRE.SCHOOL fection, wearin1 Oea col-lStt. & ttlonrovia, ~' day + tar. Vic: 11.th & lrvtne, No \Vasting * WALLPAPER * One-l\tan Ari Dept., la)'(lut, JUus., paRle up, l& yrs. ('X- per. H. Simrns, 232 LaBrea, Laguna Beach. <l!H-Ojj7 Aparlrn••nt~ tJu~r for s1ni;:ll' P"OPl!"I lr1·11:r & 16111 714 : 64.S.OSSO Apartment$ t rl'M>rt lh'in1t for ~inile ol married adulul 16th bl\\·n Irvine I. Dover 714 , 642.a17D 492-4420 Blvd., H.B. MT-9213 to;[\\'PORT BEACH Civic DANCE leuon1; Latin I: Reward. k\i: 644-2292, PM: IuU day sessions. Planned Ce11ter, 300 ft to 1000 ft. American. Introductory on:-675-6935 program, hot lunches. Age, • S t I I 2·6, t 6:l'.l A,\f.6:00 Plot. Ant\\'. ecre ar a · er S.Cperhr.67J..TI85 STRAYED er lo••. b•-w·o-y m co !PARE 64'• 6i" 1601 " •v •-v. • U ~ ..-.o:io Sprinklen, Rototilling, Seed i;,.. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. male poodle, d au I ht C' r er 8J&.5237. & Sod La"·n~. Lic'd Conlr, e LANDSCAPING e \Vhen you call "?.tac" 548-144~ 646-lnl GOOD fast ,t· rlf'ut partner \\"anti tt>n1porary er parl- time \\'Ork :'l-18-6801 j NE\V offices, 17!77MS. .... ~~ PhOne a42-7217 or writt to heanbrmu;n, RE \1/ ARD, I CH==R~IST=l7A~N-,-00-17h-,,-. -w7;-11. 1 ""''""' Bl. Lo\\'t•t rents ........, P. O. Box J.m Costa Meaa. 588--1.265 days, 536-3571 afL '(;:';'"";:;::;::;::;"""""""';~'i.;:;:;"""""'"'"""""""""l,•~'~213~, ~,.....~~!5~=~=7 1:~..::=:::'=::=::c:':"c::: 4. babysit. Uly home. Fenced JOHNSON'S GARDENING IApt, Unfurn. 3'5 ,ApTs., T h U f 335 yard. L unch<'s. IYard ca~. clean-ups, 1----------Furn. or Unfurn. 370 OFFICE for rent-333 E. 17th own ouse n urn. LOST or mi•sln1, small Pomona/\Vilson arl'a. C~1 p)aoUng, s pr ink I er s. LESCO Painting Contractor Int/exl 2 Story speciali!t. Also. ac coust. c"Cil. spraring, Lie & ins. &-1:-,...2399 HOUSE PAINTING-Average $35 per room-Exterior also. 10 years local . References. Justin * 673-4476. Job Wanted, P:em•lt 702 EXPERIENCED coll<"ge SIU· dent av~il. ;\larl'h 5-Aul!. J5 !or lull tirnr office work. Shorthand 100 11·pn1, typlng SS \\'pm. 673·2622 all 2:30 Santa An• ---.,.--.,---1 St._ C.r.t ~"\u·~ighed, util BALBOA BAY CLUB female Pekingese. It la n & 50c hr. $11.j(I wk. :J.lS-139j 962-203j -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;' H:~u~n:ti~n'J~to:n::...:B:•:•:<~h::.._ __ f(jpaiF1dF.~"°c·E64_~-;;-!47>J •. ;.;:;;;;;w 'IE'IBERSH!P "OR SALE ivht, Re,,..·ard for her -·-1----------• n r ~·~ •978 M_ATURE, reliable. Ref's. AL'S Landsca1iin". T r ee VILLA MARSEILLES 0 FF' I CE w I ucretarlaJ * <=•<> '""! * recovel'Y . .,,..,,_.. " EXPER p · I t & I LIV E AT THE BEACH! service for renl or lease. ""O'-V'tO '1.0~ST=,~v71o-.-07f 7La-,-,-"-, -. fined yard. hot JullC'hes, removal. Yard r<'modcling. . amter, n er. BRAND NEW ,. 1 BR S"·g •rpt d"'~ " pay. super\'_ision. 17th J,, I Trash hatllinn, Joi cleanup. Exler. \vork by hr. Xln'l t 1~Pll' · '"' " • .,..~. Call 54l)..39.l3 Ad•m<. H.B. P"PPY, f-m•I• J "o • 0 f' o· k r · Id' H SPACIOUS CASA PLAYA A 14th " rv1ne . .,..O"""ljlg. Repair sprinklers. 673-1166 re s. 1c r 1e ing, un· AIDES }'or conv1alcr;cencc, elderly carc or family care. l~o1nemakers, 541--668\. I . -pts, CORONA DEL l\1AR l[gj blk \\'/bro\\'n lee\. Name tington Beach, 968--4()6j. & 2 Bdrm. Apts.. k\\alnui.:)36...8367 I "Cinco."CaUaftti.536-lZ2ri RELIABLE won1an \\'ill EXPERT Japanese Adult l iving ----------1! A-2 Room ott!ce ~acei lffl and FCIUld babysit eves in your hotTIP. gardener. Complete &&rden· PAPERHANGER, flock, foil, Furn. & Unfurn. Newport Beach avail. O\VNER • 673.6757 Days 213: 595-1661. eves ing service. Free e st . vinyl, guar., estimates, the thsh11·1:1sher -color roord1n1\. BACHELOR k l br apts. liDO NE\VPORT BLVD, NB 613-3296. 64;)...()3.tj, Hangman ' 54 7-j 8 4 6, I 11 1• 1 ) ed appliances . plush sna. 1'r Ba.v. Eves. 67>7176 or •ON THE BAY • Found (free adt) 550 lnttructlon Jl ~ J BABYSIT n1y home. Mesa CLAC7.ll~'N,.-c-•,....,-7&-c-.,-.,,~,7o-,-,~,.,c. Schwart.: Enl>loyn...nt . ,. I f ' I •" --6'17~:>~2464~~·~·---='"'~1~-5032~~[;:~;;;;;-;;::::;;".:::;-;:::;: [ " 1 ,t 1 c· hi h JI ,. • d CUST0:'\1 Pa""'" Hangin"•· in· 1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;1 C"arpc1 • c 1()1l'C o co or "1-""-"' ,.., FOUND SJ i :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:O~iiii.; ue . · ar, any age we comt'. 1g au ng. • x p • ...--.schen1N • :! bath.!: • ~tall ----1670 SANTA ANA AV E, C~I amese cat, •cars Xln't play facil. ho! lunches, Reasonable. Call 543-9735 rer/exter. painting. Save en Santa An• .,. ..,... ,. 11 '~-_ 11 on ea.rs '1 one in middle :<tt 7991 I H 1 W t d M & F 710 ~ho,,erll . rnlrrored \1ard-__________ 1r rom JIN • • ......: ..., • f b ck Baclt Ba S h I & cert. teacher. 549-0776. EXPER. Ha\\·ahan Gardener paper . ....,,-· I e p an• • robe donrs • irxhrecl light. LAS PA LOMAS lii:'>-246-l or 541·5032 ~n ~Id· Back a~ a~~ CJn:r~ctions 575 1 CHILD Care my mine. rales Comp I e.te Garden l ng PA INT l NG: Hon cs I. -------in~ in knc/u.•n . breakfas1 APARTME.i."\'TS Business Rental 445 Ml-&f.13 ah .4 j _... to suit. you. Pre-Schoolers I Service. Kamalani, 646-4676. guannteed w or~· L1<''d. ~ bar. huge pri\'Ble fen<'ed ' Brand nf'W from Sl40 . ,. ·'FOUND black male Border! AIME pref'd. 54:-,...1~. lcAROEN se rv ice , main-Local ref's. Call 67:>--57.W Liz Reinders pa!io • plush landscaping • & 1 BR. furn.·unfurnis.hed SUITES avaih1.ble, i\fe 1c .... Collie· vie Back Bay , BABYSliTI:-lG by hour or I tcnance. clean-up, secdin& aft;;. 'Personnel Agency bnck Bar-B-Q's · lafi:e heal· \\. 1 t h dish"·a.sher. Heated prolessiona! bldf, l 1~12 Ne"'~r\ Beach. Call i I SC S ,,·eek, any hours ITIY home. rte. Call 892~ DUTCH Boy quality serv. I ..150(} Campus Dr .. N.B. ro pools & lanai. POOi ,t,, lanai. Cfonu-al ill.JI &;ach Blvd, ~.B. Parking: identity. !>48--433i, PAC.IFIC .... 6-1.2-7316. FREE est. Comp! or partial S38 avg rn1 . Delux 2 coal.5. Cali For Appo1nlml'nt 3101 So. Bristol St. heaong l: air-conditionin" Air c ond . Heat l n& I Day & Night Clas:.ces ENERGET C 1 . & 1 Llc .. in.s. 962-5385 Gilmore. I __ J4&.2_ll8 __ • & '-" ., ~ ·~, · Ca-tin"' Janitorial 1erv \\'HITE roy poodle male.. -... 3 ,,~..., ' I young n101her 81'1'fl ma111r . c eanup. P~ ~Ii N. of So. Coa~l Pla:tal Gas "'"er pa1 . ..-11\'a e • .,.. ..... . ..,... ...,......, I ·It b b kl Bak L If G d · &I' -1· PAINTING/pape1"ino, 18 >TS ~------' Col hoi h Inquire Suite 1. or call Found Vic. Broadmoo.r tiio E l ith St Sanla Ana \'-L a )'Sl\ \\eC' Y er ... ar en1ng . ..-.i:i .J ·-.. Santa Ana pa 1011.. or c Ce ' ag 50-57'1..-I. hornet Turtle Rock area in · & Fairview area jj7-S952 CO:O.IPLETE yard Care. in Harbor area. Lie & ACCOUNTING CLERK PHONE: 557-8200 l"lU"JK'Ung . !Moine 1133-3796 I NEIVPORT H . Lr Cl 1 h 1. b bonded. Ref's turn. 642-2356. Ex"pd in all phaser; of ac. <•-•• A-• ·L•n ....... STORE bullding or office for •· PIANO LESSONS eights area. g eanup, lras 1 au ing Y . I .,...... " ~.., .. ;ooo · b 897 2'17 •I' =3" PAINTI:-\G, professional. All <.'Ounflng, !hru gene r a CAN 'T BE BEAT t •-11·~~1 \\'••"&••A"•. tease. xlnt Harbor Blvd BLACK puppy w I bro\\' n Your home. Ce r 11 f I e d yard, sand box. Balanced JO or mo. -" · ,,.....,," ~ d · I h I I h ...,.,, "~ ...... ., • 11'ork guarn. Color le ger Ina aancr, n I c :\'orth 01 Souih Coast Plaza location. JlfKl !IQ. ft. Cl'pt'f, mkfs en Canyon Ams Dr., teachers. tllusic Systems. j lunch. Xln't care. 64J.Z754 Gardening Service specialist. G46-70Sl; 5-1.1.1441 Rc<il Est<ilc <lrvrlopn1cnt s rNGLE STORY DieRU & Newport Freeways. or eve~ LI 8-2698. seekers phone 49-l-24.l2. VIRGO swim school !es.sons • 968-0l8.l • INT &. Exler, Painling. resu1ne to Box 15011 , San· Sliopping Center & neu San air cone\, 132j/mo, 6-12-8060 Laguna. 0 1'.'Tler or pel !lfr. Hathco<'k, 646-1368. I Builders by £'xpt"rienced Japanese Jield. !:ialal'.V ClflCtl. Send South &a AlnlOSjlhrre C'.on\'enienlly located oorne.r APT & OUlce S200tmo. 800 B:LA~K male puppy. "'hi f~el ti months lhru adult. Garden BRICK, block, con c tf" t e · 1· Hauling ~~~;. ~~~c1;e~~Soo~ yrs ta Ana. 2 BR. _ 2 BATH \Varner & Brisrcl. sq. fl. 2376 Ne"'-por1 Blvd. possible Shep and Lab mix. Gro\'e & Balboa I ~ J, carpentry, hoUS<" leveling, ~~:;:;;~.:;;:'.;'.'.~"-"7 1 """""""""iiiiiiii ... iiiiiiii' t:irpe1:o1 & drps c:-.1. 5.Jll-97j,j. Vic of Balboa Pen n. s.:;s..2.)5(). I all types remodeling. No TREES trimmed. topped. Jsr CLASS Painting & ASST BKKPER Air Conclillo1W'd I~ 673-{1296 EXPERIENCED Te a(' h c r job t~ small. Lie. Coner. Lo~s .. garages , c Ir an e cl, paper-hanging. Inter/Exler. r.1us1 havr niach1n<' payroll Pl'l\'ate Patl01' R~ntals ,,. Industrial Rental 450 7 Ktys on \\"ire rini found needs studcnis. Ae<.-ordion, 962-694.J Pa1no11~ etc. 'lcu na~e H, 1'~ree est. 5-15.3459 pxper. Payroll \<\XC'S, quar. HEATED POOi.. . in South Laguna about 3 Plano on Popular, Classical Carpenter \\'I' do It . an Y 1 i me· PAL'l'TING/papering. 18 yrs IC'rly l'eturns. A 1P. Typini::. Plenty ol lawn SMALL UNITS \\"erk! a~o. 4~115 theoi;·. ;;.i:-,...1s11 · Reasonable. fi..1.).-0788 _ in Harbor area. Lie & MISS EXEC AGENCY Carpol1 &: S1orai:;c Rooms 400 COSTA MESA FOUN'D J.1-71 Siamete mix-NOW'S THE CARPENTRY YARD, Garage cleanups. bonded. Rel's furn. 642-2"...56. lll DDf:~ VIU..AGE . . S9:J. "~167. Per J\lonth turt female Vic. Atlanta f· r.n~OR REPAIRS. :-.;o Job trees dU"t i\'Y removal, skip Plaster, Patch, Repair -110 \\'. Co11.s1 H"J' .. NB &1&-3939 C.-\RDEN APTii. COLLEGE or ''t1rk1ng girl lmmed111.te Ocrupancy Sch. 536-7450 ! TIME FOR Too Sn1all. Cabinet in gar-loadtr, backnoe. 962-874;). 1 1 ~~~~~~""~"""' ?:.00 South Sal~ _ ,-BalbOll Isl, s~r Id! & 1V New_ 6:1Xl IQ. ft. unit, lllU1 & 41i J\tO:-.O'THS G. Shep mix· I "UICK CASH agts .t: o I ht r cabinelS. 1 WILL clean out your garage' *PATCH PLA~ERING ATTRACTIVE s.W :'>Tana:::"r Sanla Ana v .,,.1&.l.>..:J rn1. trlt. $6.l/mo lo up. \Vh1tt1er, 110.Z!O po \\·er, turt Found in Dover Shore .,. 5-lj.Sl1ii 1f no ans1\'Cr leave or alhc ror ~alvagl'. Lile I All types.~ es~ates 10 \\Ork days a1 )!other·~ , li7:;....;:613. _ plenty of parkifl&. area'. 646-5180 5 THROUGH A nisg. a l 64&-23i:l. H. 0. I _ haul in£;. 54,11.--193~. 1 CaJI 5-J0..682.:i Saloon, Laguna. -19.\--132-lj al1 .,...,.,..,..,..,..,..,.._!!!!_ t"GR~ room in pnv. home See: Robert Naures..' Ritt. E DAILY PILOT Anderson. H.-\UL IN'G, gen'l cleanup, PLASTER, -Patch. R.m . 5. Co,;ta "lei;a; Kitch privil CDl!lll. i\lew. stz.148.5 81e~~!: \~~~ st;~:.tte,,~ RE.'10DELl.1\"C & Repair tree ~erv. Handyman. Reas. Adds. Neiv work. tree A-T~T-R-.-.,~CT-tV-E-.-.,-,-m-,-,,-. -"-,-,.1 Ap~~·:n. ar Unfurn. 370 ~ l".r OCC :H9-HIG1 NE\V bid&, J,lM.17'28 .i;q Jt. So. Santa Ana . ~1320. 318 1 WANT AD [ Specialist. Con1m'l. residen-&1&-::iMS. est imate~. a.1;)....1588 aft :; sales. Sat !· Sun only. Ten- 1----------l * SJj PF.Tl "c,·k • up Nr Baker "-F&irview. 1 tial. Paneling. cabin e Is , TRASH & Garage cl ean-up, P lumbing nis Affair. 61.\.-0J!j. General 1 1v/k1tchens. $L per "'·eek yr. lease. Sullivan, 540-4429. * * ! niarlilc. forn1ica. &H-ij98. 7 days. SlO a load. Free A.\lBULAN'CE DRIV.cE=R~f7•cll ' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; A "O~L ~·•9·-· * * * * PLUl\IBlN'G REPAIR ·up pt.5. •u •""' · ......-•.],,) f.O~U.IERCJ.AL-INDUSI'IUAL I \\'OOD produclion part:<;, f'St . Anylime, '5-lS-:C31. lin1C', singlf', 111)1 under 21. J No job 100 small P.00'.\t lor rent in pvl ht:>me, 5()1)...1500 5q fl. 13c to 12e t'llbinr! \\Ork. hot1! carpl'll· \\'ILL HAUL YOUR JUNK • 642·3128 • E.-.:p pref. .;.1s-~~j6. j rmpl lady p~l'd, pvt bath. .. San Clemente 49&-1840* try, lj.IQ..-.)219. ~220 $j A TRUCK LOAD I A mother seek1n;::: loving carr J..»-239-1 c.~t. R I w ,_, ... c t s I C11ll 61j....()(i:l:1 Roofing for !S !TIO. old baby in .my 1 er. unfurn ........ SJ~j.OO 00·L\' . enta 1 •n --T d , Pa d• arpe erv ct I BP fu Sl4950 •R ,f, to \\"Orkin& ra er s ra 1se ' l '.\IOVl:-lC. Garage clean-up LEE Ro..ifing CCI. Roolilli: of ho1nr duf' ro 1r1np. hack • rn ··········· · , ,rnt!eman. kitchen priv's if RELIABLE cou ple ,,..·ant one I Diamond Carpet Cleaning I · Injury. Cd:'-1 ai'ca. Own Bachelors Funushcr! ,r,. li1e hauling. Rcasonble. a! types. Recover, repairs, I desi~. 962-28CM. ti) bectroom apartmen t Al'h size room $8 FreC' estimate5. 64J.1602 rool coatings. Lie/bonded trans. 6i~i.i9i'.:. from Sil; P. · & · lall · 'co -. LI.EGE or •mployod .,·rt. near beach icleanl f\\1o , ,. nes ..epa1rint ins arion~ Inc ·47 642 72?2 A"IO ') RR apts Sli5 n10 " Housecleaning s e · · -· , " -• OK . kitchen .t pool privileges. beds, ~AU&U~I & S.::ptember. Jo'ree Est. G~J.1317 T. Guy Roofing. Oral 2 SALESMEN • 1~~mo. nr OCC. Si~. :M:>-&t<i Tel. 114: l:11-96SJ or 977 Ctm•nt, Concrete QUALITY !\la1m f°)(pl':rt8 D1re('t l do mv ow11 \\'Ork 1:'\ccd 3 con1binauon ne"' & •• <AL'.NA -~., N B ..... Ri\'enndf Dr . Pa.Im t ,· rnes personal ca 0 rf' ol 0 co~·rn 'J & I &-l:>-2780 548-9590. u~cd atllo salesn1en. Excel-S•;"I ..,... ux room, ' · · Spring~ ee CONCRETE fl e JACL"ZZ! AVllil Iii Jur-e ljth __ 2 br ru L. ' · · oors, !'!'Sid. propt'rty, Free t'SI. Sewing/Alterations lent C'onimission ,S, den10 t or un rn rwuse or patios, drives. sidew·.il!•s, r.r bl 492o·10 I ho 1 I 1 & 1 di !Jlil '.\lesa Dr. s.ultil An11 • 67l-4i77 * · esona r. · .:i . pan. sp1 a iza ion · ne · I'""""'"'""'"""""""""""' -~-==--~-~-1 a.pt. Employed lady &: 9 d 11 !!labs. Reas. Don &\2-,l!jJJ. ~fGHT ;00,,;,.n'. ,.,,,0,,1 cal. BE\UTIF''L room fer male 0 ars 1-HOUSECLEAN ING: Respon-r "' " ----I · v ' >T old liOll 1'i lh no pets. CE~tE:O.:T \\"ORK. no job too dt~igller's bikinis Sl0.95. SEE AL TETREAUl T $31 a \\'ttk. color rv. 1100 ........ a.I b ~ible, eff1cienr lady ~2.50 hr. Cost• Mesa Approx mo.•~'='""' Y sm11ll. reasonable. Free ""'.::.'l6. Brini;: your maltr i al. SALES MANAGER •----------[ .i.terro, pool , N.B. &t>ll-43. l\lar. 26. Referen c e a . I E 1 If SI fl "·" ·-•0 °"!. =~ 6" '009 1LRG I &. :? BR. apts. 10 ='ICE room, close to UCI. 548-~7 aft fi pm or Sun. -~s im .. · u 1""· ,,...,.....,., .J. \\"OliLD I 1 k" to do .,.._., · HARBOR AMERICAN min lrom college, ocean !-p\1 entni.l'IC'I", balh, 1an.ge, l\IAnJRE cple. ,,..·ants 2 Br. Have: I~ acres. Ntva. Have '6!1 Cad. .i;edan ne PATIOS, "·alks, drives, in-h 0 u sec 1 f" an in g . o\\"n A LTERATIOl\S, restyling. 1969 Harbor, Costa Mesa <.'Otild \\"&lk lo shop"g. Has ~l!"n -only. 1133-1306, 833-fi401 ,,•-. h•. ,.r. Isle er da. lree ~ cle1.r. eQ S40 per Villt; lac1 &Jr fulj llhr inr I stall neiv_la\\·ns. sa"'·· break. transportatilJn. 82:>-71 14. Expert filler. Top ref's, BABY<::.JTIF:f: r · · I "'~" a~ \~ant .... _ ~1 1 •·it P"". padd·-· top. A,t,· remo\·e.;)4~forest. i\".B. area, 6.t&-2104 Call ·, ·•· mauie "'0-laundn· fac. carpon l: PCllJ -PRIV ho N'pt Beach penn Pe1m & ref Collect • : ........ "0 o.: '" ~. cu :'ilen Cleaning Service ""'" Call. I m~n .! l'l1klrn. my homP, Rtnt h'Om S'13Q..Sl5J. Ask E ·1 ,.me ... = \fo.•lh · ...... ~·~-· homt, TD's or'.''.'? ~leyers, J.''.\I stereo. e!c. \\'ant can1p. BRICK, block & stone. l>llrk. af1C'I' .~rhl $: a!! dav sunl· 1np . m . ~. " , .. -..n till 67~ ,. It 1 C 11 1 Carpets. \\'indO\\'s, 1''loors etc. I . about our 1iscount. l&-16 ,,.. er or similar. 83J.93Ql rt'I' rs ma I'S. a ( 1 EUROPEAN dressmaking 111l'r, ()11 n trans, Irvine, PlaC't!nt>11 ~l~r Apt II '.NS-3684 64.2-..i22l 2 CAR Guaa:e in Costa HA~E . 21 9.'iG-393~ Res1cl. ,r,. Cor11n1c'l. 548~11 1 all 1.-ustom fittC'd, Ve ry ~.'\-,.16!'1S 6,cs·-=-• . · Vacation Rentals 425 i\1esa. To be used for : . ri·•vel lra.llu, Sevr.ral Small Lots Cho'ld Care Ba) & Beach Janitorial bl 673-1849 =====-----,,. ..... ,, ....... .,e. Call Tern'. The l!elf cont. Lake Elsinore I c d n rea."Ona c. 1 . · · 'BABYSITTER-Ille hskpn;;. _ _ _ _ v•-RAO rpl5, win O\\'S. oors etc. Alt t' "l lB4S BAY MEADOW APTS, EASTER & Summer. 3 BR Real Esta.~n 5-iG--2313 T E for: ll' ~ilboal. 'frad, for Cclor 'JV O~ILD ciu·r bal. nical~. Lg. Rr~. & Conlm"I. &16-14'-l era ions --• 3::'.0 P.\l-.e Ar1,v l'\·e cla:ly. &· 2 ha, \\'alk to bch & \\'AN'TED! 1 BR unturn h~. C1.U or Tru51 Oet'd I .icl. Tran~ c:-.t 8 r ~a. 1 HOUSE OF CLEA~-Neat, accurate, 20 years exp. L 1 v P 1 n Io 11 1 , Fu J 1 Rrllm <.'t'.lllnt-s. lldllC'hllg. pni•. poo_ l. \\ld.Y or monthly. 114: Pr-I C.,, f. Sintrle V.'Orkini * &-19-2206 *-* 51S·3144 * ., Tiit r1n1C"-:-\um1ncr. tii:l-110t ~ ~•o """'t " . .,. 6-16-IOS!l, fi..lo-1158. I Con1plete House Cleaning 1 JN!.l!Oll. recrrallon !aci.IJUt'S. -~-~-'~-lady 642-8521 alt 6 A.'IPHIBIOUS CAR, A·l H 3 BR f ho e· I &12 r.~2~ BABYSITTF-~R 11•11n1rcl rrHa. I S 1 .,. ave: um me ig Contractor ...,., .. VC"rne, The Tile .'Ian* I wom•"· ~'d 0,,., ,: "''''·· All Adults. no IK't~. .. Rentals to hare -Misc. Rentils 4'S cond. lifust see to beHe \•t , Bear SJ0.000 eq SS400: \\'ant: 1 T ~ ' * 2 BR. from $lb.I * 0 f 1 \Vorth $1800. TRADE FOR C M ho TD' :\!\' \.\' rt home ncome ax Cusl. 1vork. Install & ttpairs. 011·n rrnn~p. Hu ~1 Harbour 1 R 2 roomatf's ema e ar, ' otor nic. S or · ay, qua 1 Y --,,.--.-.---.,...-No job too sml. Plaster arra. 121:',i ~!'l'l •• ·.·-1. . tl'd P 1 & ·ba horn~ • n::xCED •totqe a.tta. !are model big car or older ;;? repa~r. \\"alls. ceiling, floors S i'ley Tax Ser i'ce ' ~ ~: \\' Bay :'1 tb111·n Harbor 1111 " . v rm . NB oil surla.~; Costa ?.Iesa . Mercedes. ;,.a&.J869 llt~·crs, 673-67.'.iG t'tc. i\"o JOb too small. m V patchi~·,,7""1'9"'7."1~,~ ~ho205v.·er 1 6A8Y:-<JrrfR-:-E·-,.-"-,~,,~,-,. .. SI d , N pnl''g!. Close to bch . . . Call "' "281. --7813. ~·-""~" "' I repair ~ -.:i .,.,,,....,, . d I'' . k :~e"1inr1 " . '• rni . &1:-,...J.;}4l aft 5 pm ............., :11;1.: H 8 · b" td .,,..,...._..,, "" ir ans. serv. 1 · a.v • ..,, .'lus1 1111\'f' rrf's. of 19th SP. ome.r. uame•scom in . TRADE, NE\VPORTABl.E ROO:'ll li.dd·r T l e 13th \E,\R LOCALLY • CERA:'>IIC 1tle ne1\' !.· Q,.,, !ran~p n rtatlon C,\LL S4&-0J7J ROO:\t:-.tATE needed to Cl cor-l bldgs, Costa P.tesa, SCUB A CO~tPRESSOR. ,.._ .... '. 1 ~~ns., LI· I Qualified • Rt>aso11ab!e remodel. Free ei:L Small ·.1-.-IJQ~ · · • . . -----share 2BR. 2 BA apt. FP S68'.\t equity S47i\f. FOR ror LARGE OUTBOARD :;vns .. '.'cuon.,~ing e•'1°ry or \\' .. .\. s~ULEY I JObs ,,.C'l~me. 5 3 6. 2 ~ 2 6 .1-8. 8 .: =~-=----- "EXC?TT:'\G fur11 1 BR apr J Balboa Is Iii Junf' Ftrn l II ~] OUT.STATE or Cal. bldg on ~IOTOR . ~-i99j 1 842-7887 •. E~Tun., pans -ayout. C 11 d Puhl A , 5J&..SSS.J I A \.'>IITE:R!romn. eve& $\'.'.:"~ P..i <1,.ek llOOI, Crpt~. 6~. · ~t• ac:re~. O\\"NER &\&.85.)S. after :i p~f. S-li·l:ill lj.l')t>·~1,1 e an ·tile cc;'.~~ T S .t· \1k <'llrl!\, I nlrirf' f'h1ld. rln1s liltn• "·tll.. in ro"" --\\'A""fX · "'·kc · f •·• • ) me re• ervlce · 'I"> l11r -111. :)68.6127 art I. . ' . \[Al F./lf'malf' or :ouple 2 \\"ant Hi [)osert Calif oul to.2 BR ····1· C'f St!' •, f ......... Li ....,,. . a.au. na:5 0 I ,, ... E 1~1n. r \I ,\l~!t91Q . • . t: - . •• • ,) " I all l\"ll"'~. Ltt P.oohng Co. Central Bu~inrss Se.~'1ce .. I TREES. Hedges. Top. Trim. B.\R\'SrITERiiecctl'd~2:::0: f'\f'S b!" n :. J· f; ~~~ 1~;;.1~~~ Penn. SlOO. Announcements 500 ~-~:!,e·oo:'i:~th:i :~a;~~ ~ ~~. ~~ f~:~::~b~r:; C.~1.· &12·i22'1 frC'f c.•1. eTHE TAX ADVISORS cut remo\·ed, hauled. Ins. ;. :111 Y1•ur ho111r or rnine. * LO\"ELY. I~ l & ~ BR ! d' · P. od r Pl"rn1. olf1cc-P.ea' Ra1es 6t2~ Big John. :O.pt Elrn1 S.·h n1,1. -,\~.fi!l:i'i I' . rd LA.DY to .i;ha.re lo\·ely 1. Br \\'ALTER Burpss In c . $41.\f. F .P. $68.~f inc. 1445 this af"!'a $T.>-Ul:-.t l 01\Tlt'r Ad LIJo'.15 * :.t'nl ~ 111h .:i2S !'u. N'ewllOl'I B\\"d. ---_ ---~-ccc-· I =~nf~n~a~~· 1h92 ~~n~i;: apt. C:-01. "'Isa.me. l\r 0CC ~ledaltiOn Builder ha.!! con-mo. ()9.·flf'..r C.J.f. 646-llSSS. carry 2ncl. Agt :>49.0218. 6~~·1ck &*Sons, ~~2170 Opposue Hoag HoSJ!ltal Upholstery BEAUT\' Oprr 11/C'hentc.h~. lnr Harhor•. Ir SD FN)'. 50-8729. •trucled 2 duplexes at :116 Two 2-Bedrm 2 BA wtrtrr.t * * * .. • },or Appl. Call &6-0400 • rlC'X, lir• Rent or Clln1m G ~-R nt 415 O&hlia. Cd:-.1 '1 a. ~1ed~1Hon condOs w/•li~ appro:t 4'~( Lic'd Contr. Remode!ino;: LTC L'phOl~tertr ~ Qua!\\)' 6l2·23i1 ~.B. 1~ sq ll Ii;; 2 Br, l1i ba.. •rag•• TV.-e re•idence a.t um f\lar1nen .' -4:JAt..rr0'.\~ATIC PISTOI.. ~ Arld ilions, Plans La\C>tl t Gordon N. Warren P .A. \\'Ork. Anthony's Uph .• BLUE-DOLPHIN. u!l rn1 for \•l\/dr. patio, f'Ok motcr hOmtJ, trailer, Dr. N.B. eq., for 12 uC~tls. round~ tired. Value SS:i Kiul ~. f\endall' }lS:l~\lf Sincf' 1951. 67~5 Sen·icC'. &l2-).S21 N,6. llO~l'ES.' .\pplo •• r cplldp Sl6j ;')"'6-8688 J'radt> lor comparable "''eap. I . _ . I , · · · · hna.1, t't!"-1652 Npt Blvd. OI. @ 12131 m.5863 eVt's/\Vk~• on . .HS-Ot~. Furniture SKOU.sEN Ta'C Servi~. ~·our , :uil \:1·1 Loc!o. :"\r1q1t Bl·h l BR unr. s1::.·1 mn U!1I pd 'J &l:?-2821, 64.2-5106. ---I I home. ~'111npl 11.udll pro· ---- f 't .. di Hav~ l~ acre "'OOded ar.,. STEEL lnm~ uttlltv. trail. FGR;\ITURE ;;;1r1 '"''"'. '"Y l""l•Oo '·•"-1 .. ,"" ,.,,.L. "'"''' DOQJ\:l.;:Jo.~,P~~H. \lu.•l be r'\• Br. urn, .>.• A t!l, l'IO Jlf'1 ... ·\\'.-\/\'TED: Garage 10 tf'nl I-• •at"•~~ \l'•ol ,.,. '' m ""' '" I l*l'!rn•"'\I ''' l~kk••p'"I i1•i.-. fr · 642 ·~s &On ...... , ' '""•"'IN. · er, used onlv 4 Jtint~; \\·111 "\"{'rngr chnir nr ~ker.1 -1 -1 ' "~· '" " ~ nlrr :->I •. • Vlr· 6lh & \\'. Bay, Balboa. Pickup or tUlq Of ,equa.I i'l"aclf' far s fll. rOr 4• X !Jlt• 111ripp("d $a. 642-.1"4'.'i "' '* ron ng ~· • ' J'und1unet1111 I~. !::;,i.l11ry Cpcn. "" Huntlnlton eacft ~ * 6~111l * ·-• I lt•at•I• 1•-u -·1 p!a l[j] ·~"'-• 613 •~. • l)lckup bffl.. • General Services tRONtNC. my home SI fir ·' P ..... rt' rcLt.i..... n. I ~ -P..ACE G•ra.&"eS. & ~r I • ......,., Ph: .'t-18-180.i + mending. Peacock Jn sur:1ncf', 401 ON BEACH '• [ ",'m"_·olo'1"°"",. 642-6391 until 6 ,.,.._. Have '67 Open Road I ton R1veoefanh'OnthomeCam. RESPONSIBLE ivon1an "·/'1 Call 54$--Ull GlcnnC'yrr, La~1n;1 Beach. ~e:iioo.;<ieOniY:-' l;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii;;;;~~I children de~irts 10 care lo I lfl~·lO.ll.7 Mr<t. H111dlcy. thUsis mount <' • m Per. bria (N. cl ~IOtTo Bay\, . _ r • IRO:\'ING Sl.l'.i Hr. • 1 Bdrm s10."il G.\R,\GE-Stontgt ottl)'. \\"ant \ate~ ton Pickup, cleAr, \\'ant Oran"f' <'Oa-'' hon1r dunnl! ~ summ"r BRl:-\G O\\'N HA:\GERS 1ioo--iili1o:E PER.('xpcrd, r,,.. Bd ' ....... fro ..... ,,... A•·•ll•bl• ·.•t•-h 4. p I 5-'!' ·• mo111hc '"" 196· I 1 10 f' • 2 rm • • ...... m ~I . Call 1197~ ... er~ • . -C&t or*. rn.Q09 .. home l}t d11pl~'t. Riel\ard I . . ~ ·,. . • 61."i-32l j * tn11 r not \Jll( er f\l't' it * 3 Bdrm .............. $31S lnrin. Realtor 6':>-fr060. Hu~bancl BU<t). Call .\IOll~c IRONI~G my hol'l'le $l..2.l ~r I 1:0 Pl'Al'I, B ~I ho a l sl. Funtllure Available Offic. 'R•ntal 440 NAN'S SMART SET Rave: $5500 2nd T'D + .-:--1,. II" " ,. I ~j..-08£'0 af!('r 6-Repatr h · 's · · h 6'3·2091 Zl3-~l-21SI, ~"I!" tit<' 11 ..,, _ rff Buitd-...<:.erv )lo<I Thing~ 1 r r ing 01\n a~rs I -----_ Carpets-drape1~iS111\aMhrr SiJPJ:;R..OEl.UXE QUAUTY 3407 £. Coast Hwy cuh. \\'A..\'T: C to 8 uni~. JU'ld tlear. Tradl' ror Ha r. 1 1 ~t:>-i<. SOOl\J\F.EPF:R Jteat.ed pool-.saunu-teMLS l·l-3 room, up to 3.000 IQ, Cerena cMI Mar Prtfcir Com ;\lnL FoMln bor are, hOm". (Ir t"Ond o-G•rdenlng Janitorial 10 kf'y 11.clrlrr. l~pr. tte mom-ocean vlt\\s fl oltlet •ulte•. Jmmtd. oc-Co. 1111.C "'estclltr OT., mlnium. or !'7•" AL'S GARDEXL\'G QUICK CASH _P~:;~11'.~~h \Olt't. &IJ.5200 paU01-ampl,. parlun£ CUPf.r.c)". ~ Couricy. e Shampoe & S.t $3 NnllC)rt Beach. MJ.j(M)) * ~ • ror g:u'dening I.· s ma 11 SP,\RKJ.1'; .Janitorial. \\'in· ! Hl.:'\80\ ~ rnr nt>\\' f1prrittinn &curhy i;uttnis. /.lrporl trvUw Comm~ Every ThW'ilda)I. t'riday I; Sa.llboal \\·anted, rtbet;lll.' ll'nci•<"1lllU\S: ~en·itec, cit.IJ dO\\J. 11oon. et-pis k ron1rr 0 G l n1cr\\f'11~ :'-lnlltl, \T11n-h S!h l HUPNATCINIFGICTON ~'1~r1~~.~~:~rao::=~ Sarurday. ~r ::i." i1·~1:;:e~:;~: !te:~~~ ::~~s ~~n~~ ~19.5CM~"';~sa~e~~1f ~·!~nupt'o~ '~!:l·t~~~~:~~ TH R U ff A ~?:/11~·~:n r.11 ."t~ ~;'·~~-Ii~ San D\t-lfO AN P1 1-"""'YI· A.sic Fer l ill .,.,i th 1hore moonna O:\IC 1 O, ilcl. fi~h. !I pu< · Shon'"'. \\'e~trhff. .-0072 0 --•• CASl!I ER'e•--1 711 OCEAN AVE., 11 .B. UNCRO\VDED P ARRJNG 67a •2135 &13.lJM . S.l,T~ !'Ir' tradt lor Cal ~ * LANDSCAPING_*_ P•inflng & DAILY PIL T f>,1H t11nf'. i::rnrr'\I me. tT\41 5JG.1m LO\VEST RATES S..S.2"m. Paperhan•1'ng rl!"11<•I '''"''''''" ,,_ W / 717" OUP t D N T S!reamllne all a.lu.m rn.il~r N'r" 1 • 11 n s, ~prinkler~. • " .. "~ cilc nren 10 •111.e pm Dall)' I 'lM"r m&r·~ • on r. i •xt o ! Tra<W SlG !II . El cl 3 d lks rbo WANT AD 10\dlr' rl"th1nc \Iott '0 \\'fWAtlt \\IALT£R.~ CO. Rm. I , Nf.,,'POf'f Btach Anlhon)'"I Shoe ~pa ir 21' f\\in. crptd. imnitC, n eq 1n 11 ~ rains, \1'a , a rs. pa· YOIJ SUPPLY TifE PAlN] ~>I" ca.UJ, BAcr:.sTREl:T. 1 .. ..,.,.-..,.,.,.....,~.,. lw-.3223 Courte~ tn Broktn 1d1t p.k nr Santa BArbara. BR, 1 b& hou~. tl'nlf'd at UM. !rnrt's. Lle'cl rnntr, 1; \\°ill p.lrit any rm Sl~' No. Zi r-.-hion l~I.. N.B. 3-8-r:-soo/up. p1111o. Pool DESK SPACE PIA.'<:IST IO\llhl by dn.l.m· \'aJ..-Sm. \Vant prop 1hts Sli'O Pf'r mo FOR rrte ,. )Ts toe. t'XP . .>:;i.i.l~ lnt / e~ter. Free i:st <13 )T•I __ Children ok. lnq~ reot.J m1t/YOCaJl•t lo form com. area und Sl0,000, Box -4.». d tar lot or !IOllnd TD. I 'Mle ·•Yellow Pal?f'l.,..--Ot ' c;..t.. Al'° t"!lf1W>nler y,uric, 642-5678 1 ClllrRCl l ORGA.,,-s.\US bonus flO\\r :\IOllA !\Al 222 Forest A venue fl&. \\'rill oa~•lrled Ad No. Cole-ta. Ca. 93017. Broktr 6-t6·8226 cla~1lf1M •.• 64~-5Gj8, I 11.n~ kind. S.IO-il).t6. '1.\,~ . °'-'1n<\n.~·ra1r P!J\I" &: A.pl•. l'\AAl tllc..ru M l Ln , B h $;1 Oa1ly Pllor, P.O. Bo.'I! Plf'!'IL'l'l!'.111' L;t" r.~1Tlll"ry, 1; lllk t-~ l)f llrarh. off Loguna eac 1·-00. Co!IA ~1,. .. a, Cahl. * * * * * * !\'t:1rror.r or.GAN~ •••.• .. t'" .•-. 2' I 61·, t."•"• 1;11rl 11'h1 '•il-~Qlt i ~ · " . .,, ----··------ PALM MESA APTS. , .. . Are You Letting Cash Slip Thr~h Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! 1. Stove 29. Bicycle J7. Electrfc Tr1ln 2. Guit1r 30. Typewriter 51. Kiiton 3. Biby Crib 31 . Bar Stools 59. Cl1ulc Aute 4. Electric Saw 32. Encyclopedia 60. Coffff Tablo S. Camer• 33. Vacuum Cleaner 61. Motorcycle 6. Wisher 34. Tropical Fish 62. Accorcllen 7. Outboard Motor 3S. Hot Rod Equipm't 63. Skis 8. Stereo Set 36. File Cabinet 64. TV Sot 9. Couch 37, Golf Clubs 65. Workbench 10. Clarinet 38. Sterling Sliver 66. Dl1mond Witch 11 . Refriger1tor 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-Kart 12. P ickup Tr uck 40. Bedroom Set 68. Ironer 13. Sewing Machine 41. Slid• Projector 69. Cemplng Treller 14. Surfboard 42. Lawn Mower 70. Antique Fumltun lS. Machine Tools 43. Pool T1bl1 71. Tepe Recorder 16. Dishwasher 44. Tires 72. Sailboot 17. Puppy 45. Piano 73. Sports Cir 11. Cabin Crui1er 46. Fur Coit 74. Mattr•11 lox IP1• 19. Golf Cort 47. Dr1pes 75. lnboord Spoedlloat 20. Barometer 48. Lin•ns 76. Shotgun 21 . St1mp Collection 49. Horse 77. Saddlo 22. Dinett• S.t 50. Airpl1ne 78. Dirt G1me 23. Ploy Pen 51. Org1n 79. Punching 111 24. Bowling 8111 52. Exercycl• 10. Baby C1rrl1,. 25. Water Skis 53. Rare Books 81. Drums 26. Freeier S4. Ski Boots 12. Riii• 27. Sultc•H SS. High Ch1lr 13. Desk 21. Clock 56. Coins 14. SCUIA Go•r These or any other extra things around th• houM can bt turned into cash with a DAILY P.ILO.T WANT-AD so Don't Just Sit Theref DIAL DIRECT --642-5678 DAll.Y PILOT 3~ II['-_"_ . ...,._.__,1[ii) [ _... l[Il] I _.... llml '-_L· ... _··-·· __,l[Il] I .... •.• I~ l ~~~l~~~l ~~~l ~---~I Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & P 711 Help W1ntH, M & F 711 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Furniture 111 ee SALESWOMAN ee * WAAD S£CRt'l'ARY * e FRY COOK e Expemno<d, ..,.... mlndod Exp'd ., 111•otUtt/9outh Cout CAR SALESMEN We nffd 2 eXPtrif:ocfd nt• fuJ.I time to work into Aulltant Mq. Conu;nunlt) HOllptttJ, S1872 car aalesmen imm!dlat'"'"! APPLY IN PERSON in fine ladles clothlrc cbaln. Cout Hwy,, So l..q"\Ull WHY BUY FURNITURE? c.v App ly I n per1011, *llll ••tl56 Full compa11y benetit1, Paid BACKSTREET No. 15 "'"'tion•Somaplan.D<mo THE RIGGER ' * WAITRE~S-DINNER lo Flexl~lol plan, Ooaed Sundays. Ntar F&ahlon IiL N.B. HOclSE Elp'd-fbod a: ltent mo. to mo. wtdl beach. No Jn'Kll! NO. 16 FA!HION ISt..AND St.lfl coclrlaU. • I da wk. Inter. IW!. Purchase Opfien llLL YATES NEWPORT BEACH MANAGEMENT vltw• 9 to ll ""'"· SAM'S Iod . ll•m m•ctloo SALES SEAFOOD, 1cm Pacltlc 24 Hr. Dely, VOLKSWAGEN FRY COOK Ol'PDltTUNITY Hwy., Huot Bch. CUSTOM ~ van. Road ?.-!e~~ ~'rr' ~:·~~for an articllla.te Ptr'IO(t wi" WAJTR.ESS, exper for din-F'urnltvr• Rent•I San J1&an Clplatrano ply .tp pef'IOn, creat op-JnltiatJ.ve Ud iqaNrlt)i. to bt?-Onr 21. Part time, !il.7 W. ltth, C.M. 5'8-MSl m~/ftMS11/491-mt portun!i)i LVr'Y'• Golden \lo'Clrk independently wttb eVM Coltwn• wpplled. Ap-Ariaheim 7Tt-28'.IQ lbc.ame-"-..;.:.1olalilt,:::.:::.=11e=':.d.:lor:::.=_..,:::..-I Chlcken, cor. Btad\ Blvd. •tronr. 1u,pport from mrmt. ply in pa'9Qfl, Btrliner LaHabca 69t-370I Aulat to owner, Top A1.aJ)t 6: frxUanapolla 'H.B. A national Cll'ftJ'lilatson 11 Rtttaun.nt, U!82 Beach I ONLY cn11htd velvet tot& + 612 1 'coo="n""""1.,-'711"r..,..bo_m_•_w-.. -,-,.,i in search of a m\U"l'ied Pt.I'·' _::Bl;:.Yd:.::;..:8;:;·8;:·==~--Ii chair 1e1, llke new $US. • ""'· -' oon with a aood odlleatlon '" *. WAN'"ID * -_,, p -·•i !or ntan:f.,.. 1irl. Ph : nd / ~.. ba -r I only • crushed velvet 90fa ... J..o.C,.nri. • ersouau e woman -o .,.,.. a or .... Inna C F--__ _._ __ ,_ -·I •• · •• 1 with ;JUO-Uu• alt t pm.. __ .. car n-.-.1i.: .. I: ch.air aet, good cond, IU. , 11.·uu en]Oyl ue fig ~I~====-----! Who it tcJODOl!rit»l!Jr dt.lturb. , 5'I pie; Part time work, flex •lAIRSTYUST and rnanicur. ed own tl'nl tool1. . ·5646 1 only-8' Spani1h 10fa A hn. Apply in pel"llOn lit needed, tuU time, call love 1eat, IOOd oond $Ml. • Tl?.fE UFE BOOKSTOltE T' Diil.Qt 988-432l Th' • 2 only • l ' sofa ti: chair im or • · 1s 11 a career oppor-1rtt, $4~/set urr, 188.J ~~~ = * HEAD WAITRESS-6 Da tunily in a dynamic Harbor Blvd, CM. S48-9'57 wit. Dinner Howe. Penn. field -creating and ESTATE u.le: TI t tan y I ·. -·------ Coco; 2131 W•stcliff Dr. Ntwport Beach lntavitwa 9 to 1l noon. mee!ing challenie1 Ant'-.... IOO .11hades Incl matchlnJ: pr, SAM'S SEAFOOD 16271 dally. 1 -;..:;.·•~~;.;o ____ .:;;.: old din rm tbl & 6 chn, Paclftc Hwy. Hunt, Bch. --~1QUE •• ' 8 I _, d Al,.. Fl'Arnet, sppclaJ w ... nu UITf! 11.vuu reslM!r, HOUSEKEEPER, live in, A Wary plUI 1Ul14tud.J .... Cha.Ir e&nq:, wicket· bronzewan! table tettina: I I c&re of toddler, It housekpa:: comm. to a qua1Jfted pnt0n Inc. tum rtpalrs. The Loft mi8cell. 377 Ramona Way, Newport a.tea. 67!)..1438. leadinr to a perM&nent Mle• Amiq\lc1, 33l1 E, Cit Hwy, 0>11a Mesa. HOUSEKEEPER. live In or mvnt. c~tt. CdM tTM911 l l=LLN=~t~SS~m-,~,,-,-.. ~,-...,-.,-,·i· I • motherlt11 home. 3 &hi All lnqu!riH and lntervitwt 1000 ANi'IQUE mov ie ty to Rell all 10 roomf , e I US BOY e chlldrtn. Ua..3!15 lrvlne. will be held In strict con. posten. Caplstr&DO Antique of near new 1\1ed i 1. ' , 9,3 pm, 5 dl.Yt a wk. HSXPPR/BABYSITitR fide~. Stnd rttW1'1e to Bex Show, March 5, 6, 1. El furniture. Cheap example I' APPLY IN PERSON for ttaeblr w/2 1ehool are #1077 Santa Ana. OOil, Adobe Re1taurtnt black naur . .ola Ir Joveual 11,!!l]i~iiiii!iiiiiill• I children, March thna June, 92702. RECrANGULAR. trunk, 75 never Wied $IBO. (213) t'OOKS _ Mutt lmow lood achl da.)11 only 25 hrs wk Equal oppor. emplr, M/F )'tan old .ps, 925-3622. soups &: uuces. Hours g $M. M/ha.ve own tra111p. SARAH Coventry nteds tl. ~ '"1 -ca"N°'L"'Y'°·S,..-pc--wb~I -.~=blk am to 2 pm, 1-fon tbru 962--7503 aft 6:30 °" pt Hme help. No in-Keynote dinelte set, like Fri. All holiday• oft, paid HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. ve1tme.nt. Will ~. min Appll1ncn I02 new $49. 1 only-7 pc Spanish medic1l insurance, 2 wte.ks Georre Allen Byland Afncy ace 20. 530-1407 i: SU-90&6. KENMORE auto \\'asher 6 dinette set, like new $59. vacation . Call &3l-8fi66. 106-B E. 16th, s.A. 547-0395. · matchlnc dee dryer, Xlnt 3 only-5 pc new dinette selli, (.1JSI'ODIAN De.ys tor serv SEAMSTRESSES eond, $10. Guar & dtlivered. $3.i set. U'fT, 1ss:; Htrbor contractor. Countie• fintllf 3 Immed. open.lop mUJt be 5'6-8eT2 MT-IUS Blvd, er.it 5$-94S7 bldi, gen'l cleaning exp. fill"'. Po\\>t.r 1ewinr ma.-* _cAJi drytn & reblt ORTHO'S bt.st full atse only. Southco. 546-5322. ehlnee.xprr req'd.CaJJNow! wuherl $l'i0 Will del bxsprlng &: mattreu, 1 yr e UJSHION CU'ITER e 9 AJ\f 'tll 9 PM. W/fUtr,' Matr ·Chg. ?o.laytaa old. \VIU include 2 Nbl ot w1u train. Apply in. person, ORANGE COAST rtpalrman. 531..aa1. atwta, l elec. blanket, Joh.amen It Christensen 898 EMPLOYMENT WHIRLPOOL auto washer A: quilted •P"'ad l mattr p.d. W l'th NB AGENCY $100. ~1072. . St., . . ru dryer, Both xlnt cond, ;;;--,,,,-,,,,,.--~~-~1 l~ Broad"''IY, C.l\f. &!rt.nu $60 each. Guu Ir delivered. n 1lle box •Prin111 A: .msu, --------- Coco~ :Ja~~ion 546-8872 &47~115. heavy duty !rame--clean. ~ ~ !ECRETARY..JR, N~rt ' . Solid ifahor hi-boy, 5 SERYICES~ Beach a.rta Typt a) SH GENERAL Electr J<' drt:\\'f:t'I Drexel, mod china 90, knowlt<ti-t of pn•i. of-automatic wuher wl.lh mlni cabinet, slid. class dni, $ US .i;, 17th Cat IrviM) C.M. fie• procedun• rtq'd. Send buket. Exeell•nt cond. $45. dra"'·eri belo $75. 54G-4826. '42~1470 ' ret um• to: BOISE :-;;;,,:;;;;;·==""'=,,.-- CASCADE Residential Com-e rnJ6mAmz Cold Pantry JANITOR p/time. Apply rnunltle1, 9841 Airport Blvd. ntrtrtrttor, IMMACULATE Harrll A: Frank, C.M. Mall Suite 100, Loi Anftlt1, OOND, $150. MS-1687. fl J J at 10 AM. Alk for Bobby. Callt. Attn.r Pel'll:IMl!t e LATE MODEL UPRIGHT Jdlan ~ No ph. call•. SECRE'i'ARY • Elrperi~ FREEZER, $80. LVN-3:30 to 11 :00 relief ~hlft. reqUlred. Call 64:l-<$2 for •833-9109* r.fOVING mil.Rt Mil al 1 furniture and bouRe h o ld good1. 11ll Talbert Ave. Apt No. 17 A, H.B. AQUA Couch w/mttch chair $100, White N•v1-mar triple df"l'ssr w/mlrror $7J, C!.lll e\'rB 842-2369 or ~1853-Park Lido Convalesctnt appointment. CHESl' , Type freezer, $50. • DISHWASHER Center 642-M441's"•"'°m-cl~C=.,-.-'od;..u-cf_o_r_E=~-u~l-p 11 cu ft relrir., $2a. LIKE new, twin btd corner LVN-11:00 to 1:00 relier. Appllc•ll•ns Entin.er •Call &4~7167• group w/table le lamp, Apply In Person 71 1"11hlon lslond Newport Bt1ch Park Lido Convalesctnt We a're a llited mlll\ufacturer BRAND new ru bit-in itove, quilted coven A: bolsten. Center. 642.-8064 at Diode le J/C assembly avocado, Magic Chef, $250.1 ,,•~71.-469=71_. -----~I MEDICAL SECRETARY for equip. Have opening for en-:;P,.-hc.' -'54-'ll-_.27=59'------I' SOt"A, ntver used, qullt&d South Laguna 1pecialist. g\netr w/11tron1 backarnd Furr.lture llO floral , acolchparded ~. • • • 499-~ * * in manufacturlnr tnglneer-==--------?o.1atchinr: loveseat $ 7 5. "' I 53>-"" * 00 YOU WANT A MEN over :n wanted tor ina: in semi co uctor ndus-PVT party must aacriflce ===------I STEADY PART run: early AM auto rouk. Mu1t try to ~nically support houw full of be a ut. DREXEL maho1aey pogter, 1 JOB? lntereatinr survey liv• W. of Huber. 141--8979 our u.les orpnllation in SpaniJh/Medil. tum; 9 · bed, matching curved-fronl type job from home. NO M 0 I e I ma Id a, E X· Weit Some travel -L.A. gold velvrt tofa &r loveseat, dre1ser Ir. hanlin&: mirror. SELLING. Write bri!fly to PER.IENCEO ONLY. A>J>ly uea 5ocation. Send re1ume Kifla-u bdrm set, Game $1611, 6T"';r2153 -·-------- ClauWed ad No, m The In perw>t!, Colt& Mesa Inn, to G.T.J. Corp., Dix Ent i· 1et, Hi-back velvet cu=sro=~M'°-m-ad"-,-.,.-... -~bed~. Daily Plklt 330 w. Bay, CM. nttr. Div .. 1399 Loran Ave., decorator chain, Den I' blk lramei, any price. Colla Meia, Calif. 92626, NEED MORE MONEY! Colta Mffa, 92126. na\JI. mfa le loveseat, 5' Call 67>1954 ..i .. .i .. n .. _ .. _ VICE rocktall table w/match!na ., .... ,. pnune num....-r. join the auceeu sroup. Sell SER Sta. Pump Isl. at-commodes, lO' 110ta • gt'fll!n 01rage Sale •if DENTAL RECEPTIONIST Shackle.e products to home ttndtnt. Lube mim eirp. & gold • Imported Belgian Dtik only. Dental exp, nee, &: lndu1by. Full or pl time pref'd. Not under 20. CdM. cut v!lve.t, Plctuf"l's, lamps, GARAGE Sale: Antiques, In.., actl'I rec., aome Sat'a, u.lea po1lti0t11 now Gptn.i,".::""'=ll2=~-=-,,-,~ 1 etc, All le111 than 3 mo Furn, Beddlng, S 11 v • r, Frlnat: btn's, H.B. art11, Intere1ted? Call 4~ !Eit1J1CE Estab'd. Fuller old. Deiperate. I/&J0-.33'77 Cry11a1, Fur, Brick-a-brae, Call lam-6pm, 3f6.35.IO. NURSEJtYMAN vcpu-. Seil· Bruah rte, ~175 wk. to l ONLY • comp! lO pc BR 1'-fnn,y Items. 1519 Bonnit e D !: NT A L ASS , f, inf, • pn'l work. 1t., alto pt. time ~715. RI, walnut Un!lh $85. 1 Dune Terrace, OIM. 615-3679 dWraide, Experienced 5'6-tm4 TE LiPHONE advettlSlng only-5 pc Spsnlsh BR wt, GARAGE SI.le, Sat &: Sufi * 6f6-54ll * PART time. trainef!a HS or from our pleuant N•wpon pecan finilh, like new $129. 10.5; Many Items to cl'ioolle * DRIVERS * Coll. No exp nee. The Zoo olriee1. Hrly wqea. Morn-A110rt. nlte stands, In good Imm. Appliances, ?o.1' Is c. Re1taun.n.t Cout Hwy A jna or eve. thll"tl, 645-3030 cond, $7 ea up, As10rt. dou-furn, etc. 778 \V. llltb St., No Experience McArthur.' 33, Mr. Madrid hie headboards, s2 ea. urr, 1 "'c"'""'•=M-'-"-'·-"""'=:o91:.c2:..._ N I PART TIM'E, on-.call relief TELEfiHONE SOlJClTORS 1M5 Harbor Blvd, CM. DANTSH couch &: chair, eCeSIClry. cashier. 1221 W. Cout Hwy. Exp cnly, Top $$. No sell-~5'=ll-~9',C;77-..,..-.,...--Rad io a ma leur1 com· Mu1t have clean Calif. driv. Newport Betch. inf, work at home nl: CUSTOM 110fa & chain-ponents, Hallicraller SX.28, Ina record . Not under 25. PBX Antwerlnf Strv, mid. 737-3007 & 213: 165-8525 Herculon up hlstr'd. Beaut Games, Toys. 2845 Tab&ro Yl!LLOW CAB CO. nlaht ahUt. Sttady work, TILLER NEiDID dual bednn ut, lin1er1e ~P71.;,,07C'".M""."""".,...~~- 186 E. 16th St., C.M. full lime, SJ&-&118l Savlnb I: Loan needs a1rl che1t, Herculon uphlstr'd GARAGE Sale : Refrlr .• ECG TE oec. chair, color 1v consol furn, book$ Ir. mi1e. 452 CHNICIAN -South PROFESSIONAL phone Who b; matllh, ambllioui, 25", end ttbles, ch e st i\tendo111. Ttrr., CdM. Sat Coast Community Hospital . mllcitor -Dana Point S&n and able to meet the public, w/book shel\'tl, 2-add'I !iv Sun 19-Sl. 31172 Coast Hwy. So Llfuna Clemente, Capl.ltrano 'atta. It you are, we may have a rm chairs • new uphlstry. ""="°"'"",,.-.,.-..,--:--1 4~13ll ext 356. Work In your own home.. permanent position for YoU Top qual &: cond. M2--l253 MODEL'S Garate le CIOSf!t •· t d I · ,_ p•-u a l•ll•r 1w •-n·· Salf'! Sz 6·16. l\llac. Items. pc:, ea ln -"'•· uul'll • n "' 2 ONLY • 10 cu fl lei! 1135-1465 betMtn t :OO Lm. clerk. FrinP.e benefits, aood 10AM-5PM. Sat. sun, Mon. EXEC. SECRETARY Sat.ry Open. Ct>nstr or R.E. expl!r. ttq'd. Work f(Jr Pres. k V.P. 181\1' Exec. Good 1kill1. a.nd noon. working conditklna. Starting hAnd dr. White rttrig, xlnt m Diamond. 81.lboa Island. cond, $.iO ea. 1 only . IO sala.ry deptnd1 on previous cu ti. right hand dr. wht NEWPORT P1rsonntl Ag1ncy 133 Dov•r Dr., N. I . M1-Jl70 Purch11l"1 A1ent working experience. We will Admlral tttrlf, xlnt cond, SlOK. 5 Yn e)CJW?. In tltc./ traln. $&!. 1 ohly . JO cu rt right mfunr materlal.1, Colt aav-WORLD SAVINGS & LOAN hand dr whl Gibson rttrig, ings, local firm. m.utanc. 292 S. Coast, La(luna Bch. lllr:e new $75. UFF, 1885 .. .... "'ii :W'PoR';'''· USED CAR SALESMAN ".,...,, 81""· CM ........ ,, FRI-Sat-Sun lit to 4 GARAGE Sale, Antiques + lot. of rood buy1! 14 Be.aco111 Bay, N.B. 673-1648. AJ7I' & GARAGE SALE e $100 TAKES AU. e 619 Geneva, H.B. I' Gold/yellow aota, good ll•t"x"',.•d!!l!RE,..t":E•P"'r'"1o"N"1'"ST•• I .!.•rosonMIDAttftNcyl A iood opportunity for the rondlt~, pa.id $210, sell $50. SUN. Noon on. Furnltuf'fJ' • -• over r ., . , 67J-.0205 many mlBC Items. 3320 Typ1ni. lite po 1 t I nr . '42-Jl70 right man. Apply in Pf!l'IOn f ,,,=~=· =~=-.,.,....~ Stariew, CdM. 675"-3530 ?'tewport Besch arta. Salary !!"~~'""""O!!'""!!!!!!!!I HIDE-A-BED, $30, pat lo ==--,c-.,.-,C-',..::"-~I optn, 2 RM furn apt. In Cd'! In .... *'~N 11all0bl•.· .. ':""""',396 t il'On cl'lairs l\fJSC. household & mt1rine W_, ..... .., ... ad N li6 " ~ .,........ itf'ma. Sat & SUn 1015 West ••lt ..... uh .. .,.. o. e.xchanae for servlct• of 21.00 Harbor Blvd 6'5-0«.6 Daily Pilot, P.O. Bmr 1560 woman In ovtrsulnr elder-· BAft 1tool1, beds, antique1, Bay Ave.., Newport Beach. Co1ta 1'-1e1a, Calif. m ly couple 67S-0621 * WAITltESS-iXP'D cott. table It much more. SAT & Sun 10.5, 301~1 Onyx, 1 EXP'D EXEC Sttn!tary, *RN and .NUfiSES Not under 21. NO PHONE 64)..gjfl. Balboa J1le; Mite. hoUsehold c areer 0 p p 0 rt u n t t y . Experienced AIDES * CALLS. Apply In penon, 1 SE=t:,l;,:"l,:;G;..,Y~oor-~boa-t!~"U.~t-" ~c,,10,_1-hl~"";,·..,'-m:'°c-"''-'--'~~- Eltabllahed 1 t c re tar I al • S49-306l • Surfli:Slrloln,5030W.Q)alt -.1th ut • .1ell It fut. nan, Dally Pilot Want Ada baW serv!cr. Send Resurne: ~~~"]d!.::o'~~~:J=H~wy~.,~N~.8~.=====;:.'.;~P~llot~ruutlltd.~~~~~~~8~J~"""1~~"'~'~"'°"~~· =;;;;:;-J Write Clu11tied ad No. 79 ~rtAIL Mer nt.c!td for O.Uy Pilo!, P. o. Box 1560 OJ'ltnillnc retail outl!ta for Chit a Me1a, Cl.I if.: ~26 111 baulne.1s. ~Ul. EXl''D IN-STORE drapery i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J Saif'lpt!r!IOn. 5 da.y Wf!k, \hd 'thru Sun. Sub11tanU&l company-new location open. ire. n41W..UU EXPER. man to \\'Otk 1n Italian Deli, Sa.m'1 ltalltn Matk•I, 1909 Ha.tbof' Blvd. c.~1 .. 548-7822 EXPERIENCED G e I co a I reptir MacGreaor Yacht Corp. 1631 Pl&ctntla, C.M. TREE Ritt l BO Balboa 11! In exchange for a;d rook'g &. 1d company. R.et!rtd widow wd 1hr hm wl older .,'Oman ·who doe1 not need pay, Employmenl et.ewhtre no barrier. Ref'1 rtq'd, 675-7273. DAY BUSBOYS 12 to 2 lhlft DAY HOSTlllSIS 11 l'O 3 shift 5 DR)'R • Mon, thr\I F't1. * Apply * 3 to !t pm tor lntv. !!'a W. Adam.s Cotta Mesa --------- I . ' c • ' .. "' .< " ~ 11., '" I', :. 1,,. 1 .... ' .. I ' ' I .-,. I ~ ' ' !. ,I ll ' ,_ I ' ' ' J• " ' I I !. 11 .. I I I n . ' i ' ' I: ' l I I I i I • • . . ' - -•• .i • .., ,._; .. .. ·~ -1 .. -.. I ' ' I , • • . ·-... r . I .. .. . • . . • • T I . . . . -· ... • . .. . ' .... ' -.. ' . " f' • • « • I ' .' ' ' . . .. o s° • .,./. • < I ... ,.;7,;1··,~.:,.1···--··1 I •:•r ·~ "" .' ' .; . ··: . ' : .. , . '' : ' ' ,., . . ~ ...... . ·. . . . . . . . . - ' ~ .... •-. . -.. ' . . . . , . . -... -. . • .. ,· ... ;-.. ,.. ( · ·. · • Looking For Someone ' . . . .. . lo Take An Order? : .. ' .. ' We~re .Good At It ' . . . - . ,. ' ' . -· . ' . ; , :-. . . ~· . . .. ' ,. ' . •. '. ·1: . . -• . . '. . . . .. . We'il. :4've" .. ltay th• P••.t•ge 10· get you to give us an order. Get • • 1 ' • -• • 1· •• . ' ' • , : ' ' I '. ' . . ' , . . , '.. , t"•~dy · ~r · •••• • .,l,k ··p~fits by inalllng In your order today. Put a ,,brd·working DAiLY ;~PtLOT ~lassiiied want ad to work for you. . . . • • • - . .: ~l. • ___ .;,. ... --. ·-·-·------..........!-. . .. . ' .·. . ' ' .. I . .. .. ' . : ';· ' ... . ' .. • .. ' ' . . , .' '. .. -.. .. ... . : ' .. ' . USE .. THIS .ORDER FORM -· -;.:... ·: .S SHQ.,r'. °WOllDS , MAKI! .ONE UNE--N() .. AD--WS THAN 3 UNES .. I 2 . 4 7 12 TIMU nwn TIMU Tl Md -.. . . '4.50 $6.10 $10.65 $15.90 ·'j • $5.10 $1.21 $13.10 $20.10 '"· -• ···l---'-l-"'.o.;.....~1•---1---11---1---1 " . . ' I . $6.00 ' .. . . '.PAYMENT ENCLOSED O · SEND Bill 0 " Pul.lhh fir.~ ........... .,,, Mtl1111i111 ••• ·••• •••• •••• •• •• • • •• •• •••• • • • Cl111ific1tio1 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , N11111 •. • •• •• •• • • •• •• •• •• • •• , • ••• ••. • .o' •• • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ...,,,,,,. .••••• i •••••••• · •••••••••••••• ~ •••• : •••••••••••••••••••••• Cit., ••• •• •• •• •••• ,. •••• ••••• • • • • Photie • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • $9.76 $15.55 $24.30 TO FIGUU COIT Pvt enlJ ene wonl in oech 1p1t e 1bofe, l11dude Jell, eddr111 or phone 11umber. The toll ef yeur 14 i1 et the end ef the li111 011 which the l1rt word of '1•11r 1tl ii writ· t111. Add $2 .00 erlr1 If '1•11 tl11ir1 1111 of DAILY PILOT 10:1 11rYic1 with m1i11d , .. plilt. ------,...--·CUT Hiii -PASTI ON YOUI INVILOPI ---- • IUSINESS REPLY MAIL ... ""' es"' r.wt Ne u. c.rt1 w-, e.m ... 1e . . . . . Or•n1t C°"st DAILY PILOT l' .. O. lix· 1560 Coete MtM, Calif. 92626 ' . . . . .~ -. ~ . . .. -I ~ . •. ... y " . . . ' ' ' ·Or<: ·Giv•. ·Us an· '.Ord-er by Phone ~ • I • • ' ·At .;612~,5678, The Direct Line t·o . .. . . '' . . f ·I . I ·,, ,, ..... '\ .... ,., I( ,, ~' (\ : • ·l ' •• • J.o J., .. 't .. ,,,, .. ' 40 ,_ ~· ~ . ,. • • I ... • . .., DAILY PILOT ClasslfleCI Want Ad RESULTS •• • ~ ' . ·~-1 :~ • . --...... , ----=-L .. .~ • .. • 1 ' Friday, Maf(h .5. 1971 ~.-. . ' e~~~ ... P,l.L~= r .... ~v.. ·.JJ I -~ ..... I~ I ~~ ]~I ~·~ ·.J!il I ~~~~1 G,.,...~•-•_1_•_S_•_l• ____ a_12.1 ~lscell•neout 111 Ml1cello1neou1 111 ~foRr00~dio, HIFf, ~~ b~;~ ~:i:r for [)qg1 • • 154 ao.ta, S.lilf fOf Cy_cl•s, BH~es, 1 • , ..,.~~~ _t;" LIDO lale, rn .l Sat only, WIG' 0 P.1FGR nteds ·~.,;; 1'tAPLE Dtsk $.'iO. Kenmore 136 ScwraJ cam1 of Jood clean 2 YR. old female Jri&b Setter VICTORY n (C,. ,153. Bil Scoeter1 • ' ''25 '40 ti'IEVY•delu4:dr ..!A. .. ' lo.-t. c>id ·alngle side for taxes. Must liquidate aulo. washer $50. FenderM ·-,-G-N-A-VO-X--'IV--w-/U_H_F-,1 meat &reue for Qp mak· ttady tor breedlne. needs work. Ste at --• VerYfclrin • .t.,_~dt!.~ ttrord&. Coll~tor'a items, entire sleek of "·Ip, falh:. amplilier, make offer stereo &.-record player Ing 0 r whatever. ~ ·Ba,yshores Marina. Make ~ cond., S&I.•. «-.trade .~ Patio furn, Crlb. 01 d cascades le wi&lel.I. Syn-615-&31 contb. XJnl l.'Clnd $1T5. 642-98d6 3/6 • SCHANOZER PUPS-Rare ~fter over \5oo, ( 213) TH• \ liberal:• dv.n. · •"G·l'IY. Ctiinese brau. Clothlne. tturtic & human hlir pletta. Ml1c ellantou1 673--6716 BEAlITlFUL Shepherd/Collie blacks, male 'at a t u d , 3&2-3081 e~a. 1 6"o-l~ · 11 ~~~~. J e;:;;:;.' C~!~~~ ~~~~ ~~b~ !u!; Wa nted 120 '70 RCA color TV 24" female, abou1 15 months. groomll\i. 846-0839. HOBIE Cat w/trlr, l . yr. HONDA Dure 19W1,., i fii items, Sand'A'.ich &lass cup dedlne<I'. 539-2129. Mr. Kelly •SEAL.POINT Siamese kit· $300. .Very friendly .l trains easi. e IRISH Setter puppies AKC old. Xlnt oond .. Moving o/of ''ftllEDLA' , -... , " ,68. DUN[ .. DliM.· -~ p!a!es. Old lace, Paintings, 9764 Chapman Ave., Garden ten'f,' $l5, 8 wka old. Call 893-4943 ly. Wants companloruihip of registered. ' atta, must sell Imm, $975. g~Jt Books, Sport yak boat Grove, Call 962-0088 20" l\tagnawx console, blk adults or children , * 968.6927 * 6U..5356prefeve. w/oan, + much mi&c. 214 SEUJNG OUT. Everything WANTED I & wht, Good cond, Make 548-3388 3/6 AKC German Sheph.erd pups. '70 ERICSON 23. WeU equip. ~~ f~ Via ?dentone. goes! 5().~0% ott . Franklin YOUTH BED offer. 54&-7U6. 3 ~O ducks, Male Rin-Tin-Tin blood line. 6 peel, xlnt cond, Sips .f,, NEW-USED.SE.RV: GARAGE Sale TV's, stove, old cash reglstt'r, • tw6-34n e 21" TV fl!, also 21" TV and fem e laylnz eggs. wks. 837-5-UT. w/sllp if desired . · " ~m furniture; baby ihfaterseats, misc,Joodies, ' $75. Uoth in xlnt. cond. Water i.lxl feed crock e~LEGA?{l' Afghan Pups, 2131792--872.f.: rl.rLn.l"l.r'I furniture; trail bikes; old & ne .w ALTA Mu~ico111natrum_,,nl22 ~67>-~~l1~63.~·~._~~~·~~~'.f•76~!""1~~3 ~~;;:~~~ A.KC. BJacW: masked 5llver. COLUMBIA 26 Ma.rk1--..,·,;-~-.,=-~--clothes all sis; rabbit NOUVEAU, 105.5 N. COf.SI TO good home;• bla·ck 9'2-6956aft4. II-Custom lnttHor, zlnt 1 -:we Take . hutch; laampstl!r cage: CB Hv.'Y 4.guna Beach. WlJ'RLITZER Spinet piano, ' Dobenn1111 shepherd male, cond. Pto.1esa(o nally . radio, 23 channel & antenna, 49'i.9915 Houfs 1~-ii daily ' fJ ~eyboard. Spotle55 walnut I 111 8 mo's, all s ho ts AKC "[.al)..2' males: 1 ~eRllow, ma.intalne4~ $57-698L · ·· MolfJ.rc.ycles 221 * A.UC · finish. Must lite. $475. . f"m to You 96i,.2564, 315 1 black. 9 wkx. eax. ·. . , I' T de f ~~:!~:b~~. ~· 4-B ' TION * ~21 FREE to good home, fenced 64&.347B or 548-3&12. ·~o~~~-~~;f.~N.~'.;."~~ · 1 f 3 1,:,, GARAGE Sa.le, 5th, 6th & Fine Furniture PIANO & Voice le!S<lns, fully yard lovable white female Horses 156 avail. ~l · · · ·· " ~D ,t';..~" I 7th, Leav lna: s t ate . & Appliance~ credentialed teacher, Free l,2 DASCHUND, % Chi· German Shepherd, 8 mo'a. RANCHO R-alldo, 1752 11! ,'VE"'fl'PRE. sleeps ·,t; •11'11.t""~; TES , HOU~hold & , misc Items. Ailetlons Friday, 7:00 p,m. lesson every 3rd mo. huahua, young female, 89T-9413 aft 2 PM. v.o bea'd sink ;i ~, I' Good washf'r & color TV Wi'ndy's . Auction Barn 54D4757, brown, very affectionate. To Orchard1Dr' Santa Ana Hu. , '. ~p, $1599. Call .V .... KS ' 'GEN " ==--"=~----good borne, 540-233.1 3/5 MOTHER 1., Manx cat w/6 New management, box ~· , V~ , antenna. 20311 S.W. Birch, 2015% Newport, CM 646-8686 DRUl\1 SET, Comp le I e . ""=--c.,--=-...,-,, I baby kittens, beautiful, to stalls w/attached .corrals, KITE lOJ!;, , ~ ·eond, com· $2852 ,v . t~d · Santa. Ana His. Behind Tony's Bldg, Mat'!. Sacrifice $115. Excellent NEED good ho~e fenct'd yd iot.d hame. &t0-2333 3/5 Io(·Inro call: 549-19:J.1 plete racing gear, cover, San Juan ~lstrano NEW washing· machine & condition, all accessories. ror lovable ·white ma1e stan· < ,10 bid v_ .__. 1 -~ doll -.arus 3374800;493_..5111499 :mt SELL or trade; '55 Chev. 54S-5148'eves or "'eekend. dard pooi:!Jle mix. 548--0813 1• • .,. ....,age pup, ~ E;GISTERED Mustangs, y,.... y. ~ _ · · m v dryer, both $180. pkup, '54 Olev Stake, tent or 836-4493. 3/8 m~le, 6<1.5 ... 3862, 2104 ge11Ue Sorrel mare, good D--1. s1•-1"'/·D~-910 1968 HODAKA lOOcc 5 spd, GraDex camera, equip, trlr, 15, camp trlr, . both GUITAlt', Gibson,• Lea Paul Willaee, C;M. 3/5 sbow horse, xJnt gymkhana. ~ • .,, ~lo ~ ',dUal pli.ig racing head, ~~;n ,!::~P~M i':.~ sll cont'd, pwr tools, chaln f:t~~· :;e;~n~~~O~e ~~~:.~,fbo~rr:~~ HORSE fertiliter, 20381 S.\V. Fllly 2~ yn;, gtten broke. 15 TO 2.S W. Mlpl .• ~,n. i~rted ~polished, eXp&n saw, i:oot lbl, lrg "'8.ter free to &cod home. Cypress, S.A. Hts. 3/8 545-1357 Robbi. for po't\1!~ ~t&. PrlVJ~ c .~mb, . tia.ni for:Jai, Avon GARAGE Sale: Sat 10-5. pump. 536-26&3. Office Furniture/ 551_1128 316 liiiiiiiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiim Pinto Mare $350 lagoon. Wa~ ~ ehfc. avi:\L ~9 : r nm, iGerhng rear 1'urniturt, front thro,v l·SL""YM""·"G"Y'°'M",-xt°"o"'t.-ro-nd""'S=35,.-, Equip. 824 Perfect trail horse Bayside Villai:e, !KIO E. !hOc~s. fut + chrome. power mower. patio f'urn., girl's bike Sl2, GE iron new 1--;...; ______ PUPPIES, 2 lovely maJes, 1 llEJ Call 645-4388 Coast Hwy, NB m-.5928 tools, 18" loom, mi&<: items, $lO, Singer port se,,•:lng OFFICE furn for sale or 8 v.•eeks. Shep/Collie/J,.ab.-Pets Mid~·. ~ SLIP available, up to 20',l,500'="'ec"""VE=ux;=i"E=t =ie:""'Thrux=--. :nlSl Cblima, H.B. 536-4750 mach SJO, chest of drawrs take over lease parments W~t ~o~~nd a fe~/6 '°;mmmmm;:~~ -~R,1~~!i:~ql t:.1~..:i .f.~2 near Lido. Call tOll, new. t:lutch, tires, CLOTHING, play pen, infant $18, h1ixn1aster $25, C.Orning of complete fufni;:hingi>. ya · · I ,,.~ * 'M)....5175 *...,.,., * 61~50 * brakes, puton and lower v.·&lker, rollaway bed, youth coffee pot $15. 646-~9 eves , Steel room dividers, sheJv. BLACK, 'miniature Poodle, Pets, Genero1I 150 38' Slip, fr5/m0. Privste ~ncl, Pur~t's delight and bed. 1m2 Santa Rita F.V. ing, storage bins, desks & 2 years old. House tra\nE:d, Li•atock 858 bath No 2 Bal~-"-·e tn perfect shape. Best offer DRAFTING table desk type, v.'Ork table•. Ideal for •.:.e to _,.,.,,.ibl• horn·.. . , """ """'v • , 1950 675-5954 M h• 116 ,_, 1 ki d u" ..... ~ FOR sale, pet chickens, N.B. Call 6-••'i. ' over • after .f, •e 1nery me...,, oc ng l"a\\'er& on Architect. 36 mo lease w/'JJJ >;.~1-1179 •./S BANTAllf Sale All colo•. & ;;:::;:--;:::'::;~~"';'-;;;:;-;;;;-1 4.;!~-c~c.-c=~~~ •· h 'd -~ · 'ddl ""' ducks, cages & l\lanx cat. .. ~ P m uvt SI es &nu in mi e months rtma.ining. 493-115.1. sites. 10 al $1.10 at $1.50 · · ~;" DRILL pre SB on stand adjustable top with swivel 2 . MIXED puppies small Must sell this wee k . 8o•t1, Speed &. Ski ti I '69 Mach Ill $400! Great! $35. combination table saw, chair, all good condition $75. CA L C UL AT 0 R Totalia breed. Very affectionate and 540-2333. 2612 S. E. Mesa Dr. Upper JR' CHRIS Craft runabout New t I res, ex tr a 1 • sander iTlnder, jig sli.w 549-0530. Largomarsino, model 8381. lovable. 3-3~~ mo's. 1 male 1 'LA~R~G~E~eo-l~orl~ul~Q-,.-.-,~1~2;~.1 ~~B~ay~~~~~~~~ lnbrd. Fa.st. Xlnt c:ond. $795 Ted-Hacienda Hotel, 1289 S. some accessories $40, phone 12 Digit v.·ith tape. Top . I female, 968.8051 3/6 hf'auliful 16" s i Iver firm. Owner at 1319 Coa.s~. Rm 112, Laguna Bch. 962-5063, 19361 Brookhurst, Re~~:,~~LI~~ cond. $350. 61a-6060 NEED good homeS for 1 Arowana $25. 841-4941 I bl and I~ Baker/Apt A,' C.M. cat1 ~Ct'-: Honda-SL 350 $650. '69 1P· 83 H.B. · a in a am· 30"x60" STEEL Desk 4 long hair !abby Persian, 11----'-'------I kint '"!.""'ment. "'Ji 54&-970T dav_s ~y •. .Uk_ for HOnda MJnl. ,Trail 50_ 1.L'iO_-_. WANTED: 2 or 3 spindle moth hiountain, Sips 7· Fire-dra:wen incl file. $65. Call black female and 1 tabby -o __ "ll~'-------1.14-I . .._.. -1' Tom. J, ,-• 3040 C1~\.e1and Ave CM, drill press, must be xlnt pl, etc. U8-$20 Per day. 6T5-1666 ; male. 9 mo old. 548.9'39 3/6 '-;iiijiiiiliiiliiimm::;m~ 16. 1970 Tl''•-HuU ·n "1 hp 55T-6134. ' 5.11 3374 day' ---------.,..-TWO Purebred SiP-·.s. 2 mos. • cond, reasonable. &-5, SR • · ·. ===~--~~-" Engineering. S42-8384. =R~EST=.~E~..,~,-,.~Sw-ed~,-0 -So~tt' Piano1/0r9an1 826 TURKISH Angora: wht6 mo old. One male, one fem., General 900 Evinrude, New custom trlr, YA..\fAHA 100 twin cylinder, lffO CORVAIR' 1 Make Ofter J 546-7817 Afttr c fM · '.! '61_ V\V_ ...... _.... A'_;(l!!l _ end S7S, tire• A whll,li:ir vw·Bua ss-•&. ...._ ;'" DUNE SUGGY V-W. ~ old male kitten. Needs ex· xJnt pedigree. AKC Reg. FUN AFLOAT xtras. $2375. 549-D752. has expansion chambers & HOOVER portable washer, &•rve, slicer, grill, deli CLEARANCE ceptiona\ home. 546.7308 3/8 Interested parties only, runa good. Only $150. Art ~;e~;-~o~~esea~.t~1~:C'. ~~~~· 1~1:~e~:~ri~~r:~~ SALE 3 r.IONTH old female puppy. pll'!ase. 646-{)142 or 548-1022 Twenty Foot Skip Jo1ck Boo1ts, Storo19e 912 5 pm: 962-8197 . Trucks "°"'82 64"4-8093,.C.O'=·=~--c-"-~ Part German Shep. =333~~E~·~17.,,'h=St~._C_M~."='--~ADED 111 '1' D,.fencedxtoragefw '6& YaiJ"UlhaJ11)m~1Drcycle. · "'2 C.all Ewa. t wetilendl · ........ ~ = 0....r 100 'Plano, & Orgal>s ~ 0•10 3/6 ST BERNARD AKC -··' • Bay . •·-t i I ~ ·-JIM ~ -· NS IM '69 oatsu'1t'•'1C' .. tap' .;,'·'.i CHARTER 1• •-h'p ·~ d I · ed __ , JUO"""~ • • reg, '··'"'". l for crulsl"'"', · uua. o campers. """' per ,..,...,. 1 ·~ll • NEWPORT Beach Tennis Sa 1,~ Nn m~'°8' •' """'uce or unm · ...... e. 4 l\fo, old pt Be a g 1 e. Beautiful markings, 11 \\'ks. Ocean fishing, Water skii~06g.' foot, per month. Call PORTS, t17 W. Warner, Club membership for sale, ve """'• e\vport c Buy Now & Save! N ed 1 1 · & 64" """n Santa Ana iun2512 ' T · c I b J · 1 Ado,able 2 male,, 2 !emale e s ove. at ention You buy the boa, t, you get ~. _ • ~ · W•'lh 4&'' p~···o11.,,·~1 rea. sonable. Aft 6, 548-S103 en n 1 8 u am 1 Y Open Daily 10 tll 6 t ·1 ~ 673-7 -•3" membership, All 'Privilege&, Fr: 10~ * Sun 12•5 & mother. 64&-077~ 3/8 ~~r $"""'. 646 or Jhe Newwrt Bay sllp too. l9f6 NORTON CHOPPER er. dlr •. see,. ,11,.,_, DELTA 36" 'Vood Lathe, $415. 644-2281. COAST MUSIC \VH:r Shepherd/Collie, 1 yr ===-,---.,-,----., $5900. By Owner &164638. [ l[i) MAKE OFFER !!!!! lra(YNW ... ,.287~) ,wiJi .~1'.rfe~MiP~·; complete Sl65 or best offer. old . Shots & been wonned. FORCED to sale because of 14• FIBERGLS Fishing Boat, Tramport•tion r.h 675-2J4.9 or 673-0321 r · Call 548-8046. FRIGIDAIRE Imperial, NEWPORT & HARBOR travel, Beaut golden, blk ml S ~ black, 16',· XJnt cone!, S:T5. Costa Mesa , * 642-2851 833.5535 btwn 9 am/8 pm 3/6 r -Lha A 10 .w.4raller. lOHP Mercury B .. A, . cc., Excellent con-ty Call s46.sDG .... Ml1cell•neou1 Ill Old l\1angle works $10. Elec 4 l\fONTH old Australian tps, sa. pso. · mo outbtd •eng, Best olr'. dition, muat.ncrttk:e. ~-· 2 ~· ORIENTAL Royal Sarouk lav.'Tlmower, perfect $40. SALE Shepherd mixed pu Pp Y. ~J50, AKC. Orange 673-S583. Co1mper1, Sale/Rtnt 920 54S-1487 . DUMP. lRUCK l 64fi-.9ro6, 548-8519 Practice organs • 2 manual., 546-T308 3/5 ---------14' \VOOD BOAT MobiJ•·Home1 . 9l5 ]9tS i ' ' xln't c:ond., 11 x 14. $150 32 pedal. Allen, Baldwin, DACH S H UND CAMPER · See "&t -n.ou • .' Pilot':~ or best otr. 637-'153. MAMMOTH MNTN. Artisan, Wurlitzer & pi"". GENTLE, loving 8 wks old pup s' decked, sacrifice. S45. CON.TEMPO ~-, !===~~---~ M b'I ho b' I """ miniature, AKC, Black & * 847-T362 * 330 w,.t,'sr.;. .. Stnet ~ NE\YPORT Beach Tennis 0 1 e me & ca in, ncome Tenns & trades. Newport mi.xed pups, need home 1----------...,,. Club Membership $350. property,~~~~ trade. Organs, 645-1530. badly. 64&-1042 315 ~~/~01~.ahogany red . Boats, Mo1int./ CLEARANCE SAL£ °':":;a.a ~ . ' Call (!} 8TI-'436. C C AOUL T lo male ba.,et hound. Sorvico "901 • • COMMUNITIES ' 8, Black naug. Kita, never DECORATOR'S Chinese Rug, PRA Tl E Register AKC Needs love. AKC SILKY PUPPIES , ~ , , • . . Mn. Cimlnman \ I ORGANS 530--0153 3/8 8 wks, ful.l ol fun & loVe. 2~Colleg~stu'dents, >.:lrit'work 'La.rge selection Pre 'Tl . 60-4321 · used. ;100. been in slorage for 25 yrs, ----. A1nt pedigr-ee. -Will st>ll as hoel-cieaiUng $3.50 hr. Campers ~ow Sia.shed to -• J..AGUNA_ HlLLS; 1970 FORD -%,'"Ton~ !Zl3) 925.3622 llke new. Sun. only 9 'til 3. Prices you won't believer .f, 14 x 6 Chevy nms. 3/8 pets or for show. 548-4951. 613-4051. s49 OYll 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. Van •. 5 mo~ eld.·Aufo'.'~· SLATE pool table, 8'x.f.', used 516 Seaward Rd., CdM. l \VARD'S BALDWIN 51'UD 0 IO :5'~S-ll5~-0:79'~----~!! liif'i<iiiiGiE'$if'j;Uoj;r;;:-AXf. ---------ACTUAL (Corner of Moulton ·Pkwy) n. ••• buttoo nd;o, .•·i~, ::: PEKINGESE puppies, AKC. Boat1/M1r1·-F'CTOlT P-O dult ·+... ..-...... '""' 1 month. $300. Call alter. GREAT Books of I he 1819 Newport Blvd, 642-8484 . FR 1 EE C:OC:k·!·poo pups abou~ ,REAL BEAUTIES. G "'ks .... "' '"' ge a commuruv-, air. 302 V-l._1 MUil MU ' • 5, 544-5Ul Western W~rld & ~mpton's HA?.tMOND, Stiinway, Gii weeks. 536-4592 3/a old. ~-~ l;~uip.· ~· · INYOICI adjacent to Le ia.ure mfll! 53&-3046 .. ·. . 1 FIGHT POU.t.rrJON & earn Encyclopedia . Like new, Yamaha. New & uSed YOUNG adult kitties all col· * * 830-3183 * * MERCURY outboard · and SHOWCASE World. Beautiful aurrourjit. '64 FORD % ton , pk:kuPi ·money !or your club. Ardyth cheap. 546-4731. pianos ot mOst make.a. Best ors. 546-730&: 548-0813 3/4 AKC L•··· Ap•• Pup,, · DEALER inp, all luxury appolpt. oo 3 ~ ·r~ OLD El . k t t h . ,....... ""' Mer<:ury cnu~r props, in-FOR menti, pUttlng areen, bobby 8 eyl F1 . •aou A:-, l Pesek, 54S-9409 gin poc e wa c es buys in So. Calif. at Schmidt sr. Augustine grass, sod cut Champ sired, Top qual.;ty, strumen!S. Jack Cole seats Heavy !'ear' qrinp, J WE ldan-Buy-SeU a nything. S»-S45. Old 11ickey Mouse Music Co., 1907 N. Main, & dug. 646-2258 3/6 Adorable, Shaggy, Little with bases, single le ver con-ELDORADO CA?.IPERS shop,, much more, xlnt cohd. $750, 5f+.-OMI · ~' ~--i Pawn & Au•t•'on. 0,26 watch, 1,lhp compressor $60. Santa Ana. 1 1 7141487 ~~..... lrols, cables, inboard <71>• THEODORE CALL 830-3900 1, .. 1 GMC ~-k .''p M •Wlol. ......,, .... "" 543-5618 STEINWAY Grand 11800 1 WVABLE ~fa nx cat peope overs. -.,;1<1i .• tanks, ·windshields, fil ROBINS FORD •SANTA ANA U'I .r:n: "" .,. ·~ NeWpOrt Blvd, &f2.84(1(), needs home 494-6692 3/6. WEIMARANER, ma I es , 4080 w FIRST sr s A. brand new ffrt1,. N.tta'y •a 25" PROFESS. trimme r INVALIDh patli;.,~t lifM\ Hbo~elr. (cost $5000). Shown by appt. 2 FREE Cockapoo,, 2 mo's AKC, ch line, 6 wk, shts, _N_E_w_. -"~9--05.10---· ----2060 HARBOR BLVD. FAMILY. commun1i;' ~bun. clutch. Dependable. ~; w/atlac · ,.,,.,. o 1 e only . .f.94-5861.. d t h t h Bo I " 906 COSTA MESA 642 0010 • M&-11T5 · I , lawnmov.·er, yard vacuum, comm 0 de chair s2:;, old. 962-2870 J/6 wrm . pe. n, s o • a 1, F"OW•r · dance of rec~atlon for chil. util trailer. Misc. 64S-.3333 962-6116. STORY Spinet Piano, Fre:ich YOUNG Siamese male gentle 644-4459N "'°E"'w,....1"9-.,....,c-,-,-\1-0-,-.-,-.-n '66 Dodge Crew 6 dren, nr. Ed. schools, abOp. '65 CHEVY ~ T. ·P:V. V4. DINETTE table & 6 chair!, PENNCREST 3()" electric Prov . .$62;). loves everybody. 54!Hi664 l/6 PUPPIES 14 Germa n runabout w/Trail-Rile h''Y plnr, priv. club house. r/h. 11000~; ... ; ~l O'.>st Sl50. Sell S6j. Single stove. Slightly used. Owners l----"-1-77-S-_3'8_-_7-- 8 -28 PALM trees . various sizes Shepherd, 11 Husky 7 dty trlr. $1T50. 549-0165 att &. Camper-Special Pickup. !PAI CALL 839-3880 bed $20. 644-MQ3. manual. Timer. Beautiful _s,_w_int..;..M_•_c_h_i•_•_•___ U-dig. 64~R 3/6 ~':::i',"'m~~n.pe~:. $5 each. '70 Zl' 'CRUISER, 210· HP, ft bed. :Automatic, power Bo!ui:..;yoturh~ ~mhoobl!:e mhoomv,e '70 ~· ~ Ton·.f.~:.;'. AITENTION! $1 BAG SALE $65 case, no checks. 962-6403 """""==-::-;-;,,-=: 1-~===='-="'--~-.. """• Cyl, r/h, tool box ,, ll!'oiiiirl I". P ,1 1810 PARK AVE Store, Reat•urant, SM ALL female ca l, 1~~ yrs AIREDALE terrier puppies, Of\.1C, 1/0, Tandem Trailer, sLeedring, ,oow•hr brake~4• 000alr in fo any one of our rack. ~1335 · ... :, , . """ ·" ·· · SIGNS, sho-<:ards, poste;-r;, Bar 132 old. 494-3100 ber 2 pm 3/6 9 wks. Pvt pty. Champion full covers. {TI4l ~2 con ., ra 10, eater, ,. , "OP.EN" parks. COSTA MESA. &12-7850 windows, trucks, low price. mlles. Will handle ll' camp-NOW OPENll 'GR noo, top cond, MW~ sired. 545-1058 14' ALUMINUM boat, 4 inside 4 ,ouf, le nU'ti. I-A · RIFLES & shota:uns for saJe. Morn or eves. 962-2881. 2 Stainless steel sinks, sieam-Fo. RESULTS you can De-=-~~~~-~-· r seals, full (lotalion, Xlnt ~r. (V36083J •• $l.f.50.•5"T-718I '. ~~ 2871 Bayshore Dr., N.B. FULL set Scuba -uip. US table salad counter w/com. 'lboroughbred Boxer Pups. cond, $175. 96&-9384 ~ ~ t ""1781 67" o~on ~.. ' alk · Ir' pend on, Call the SU-pet'-Reasonable. '58 FQJtl) y!. .. 1 _..,,. ,.; .,_.. or ~. Diver's. $380 new, sell for pressor, w ·ln re igera. THE BEST OF -·· ...... ·-· BEAtrrIFUL Persian carpet $1fil. 673--0412 tor w/compresso1· & doors, S ~ les man . .Daily Pilot r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"-;7;;"";;1;-42<h;;;;;;;;;;;-l;Bo::;•:;"::;•:.;R::•:•::;l:'../.:C:::h:•:,rf:_':_r.;9oa= 2 BOTH WORLDS tram. Good shape. •$515 '!' ""=""°'==""=.--,·I & A ul · b d Champion bred Shepherds lOO Harbor Btvd. 645-M66 otter. ~1017 · for sale. Persian 01vner. DAILY PILOT DIME _ A range. ns unn, rea Cla.sillied 642-5678 -pl.ace 32' 1\vinscre1v Chris, fully ~.6~8~VW~~-C~A--E~rFor a beautiful home Jow · · • " 1 642-2372 after 5 Pl\f. _LINES cost you just pe~ mixer, mlsc. 494-1451 • 6 wks old, ready to go equip'd. Fish.ing or Cruis· MP R maintenance and archiiecur. CAMPE,R"~~~:••,Cbiy j for best results! 642-56T8 nles a day. For be.st results! 642-5678 ;your ad &-cllarie it! * S3l-42Sl Ir Ing. 54S-24l4. * DELUXE SUNDIAL ally impressive desla:n See "-Blr-T, ,4, .p:pd ~WJ..U, 'I l~~~~~~~~~~~~~"'.::'::"::'::::""=~~~:':'~~=~'.":=:-::=::;;=:;::;~;:::::::;::;:::::;:::= SJLKY fem. non· shed -~--------1 . the excltini new •"Village xlnt cond .WOO. ~ ~.~ 1 1 . USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE.'. odode" pup• $8.;. Boats, Sall 909 * L•k< new. Now 11"' House" by Lovitt Mobil• '65 a..v Pi<kup, •ix, i ""'· 54;).Sl.16 '69 COLUMBIA 28. D11.yi;, pa\V wide titts. Systema on display now at radio, M,t.r;.&•· bed: d"1\ . * LAB. PUPS, black AKC Ir Lo~w miles. new eng. BAY HARBOR good cona:.~;-..?'IZ~.·(. I 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES ehamp ""''· hunton·t><t,. ~57~~\3;.';'.;~ n4 * *.J~:,:1 ~;: ;~,:; * MOBILE HOMES '62 Ch•V, % .., p.iJ, 1-----,------r----,-----.,..-----,---.,,--;----,----,,-----$60. Ph : 962-5737 ~,~l.~V~E=N"T=u~.R=E=.-s=L~E=E=P=s-.~. =~~-=--,~~·1425 Baker sr. Calta Mesa w/Suvls 'body . •lfDIL 2 4 1 12 ''rn=rs~H~Se-,-,.-,-,-u-p-pi~.,-.-A~K=c head,;lijt'1er. loadsof FOR sale: "Sports I~lner'', Jt11tS.ofS.D.FwyatHarbor 5#-MlTor ~m:· JI TIMR TIMIS TIMIS TIMll chanipion lines s125. Call extras!!·* S3l-083l * * 30" high all alum. Camper 714/540-9470 ,62 ,.ORD % TON."p ij .· shell. Over-all length 102", . , . • "' 1 =64='-=2903~~~-~---PC 32' SIOOS,,. race· equi1f d. Fits wide bed pickup on1y. 24 x60 P 0 ND.ER 0 S ~. F·UlO •-$509 , , OLD English Sheep Dog pup. Top cond, l:W:icl. zgi l\1agnolia ldscpd, cement patio, big ·* 96U981 * . pie~. AKC, beaut. marked. ft_ ~'IJ * · porch wt outdr crptg, in '57 CHEV plcllup w/liti'n.i. $~. 842-~3 ="""='°' 8' CAMPE~, 2 beds, l;:;:e bea~t. Greenleaf Pk, 1150 le bint' .. $750; ~Pb: M&!"'24ij $<4.50 $6.80 $10.65 $15.90 I I $S.IO $8.21 $13.10 $20.10 $24.30, AKC male Beagle, 2~~ mo. 135, CAPE COQ CAT BOAT cupboards, ice box. $400 or Whittier, C.M. Spe 18. See (9-S PM) · 18', fbrbls.1'21.3)"834-lMJ, best ofr. 549-0501 Thurs & Sun ' e 23' ALBATROSS-'67 OPEN ROAD, chusls 8 x 32 M&s~rbuilt. 10 x Auto L'!'t! ·., ·;, 'f 1 1---~·1-~~-·1-~-~1----·1----·1----1----1 ·----1 $6.00 $9.76 $15.55 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND Bill 0 ,.,.Ii.JI fe, , , •, •,,, • • 41yJ, litti11"i1111 • •• • • • • • • • • 1 • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • :ltuifictflt11 , , , ·" , • , •• " •••••••• •• •• ••• ,,, ••••• •• • •••••• , •••••••• H1111t • •.,,. • •• ,, ••• , • , , • , • , • , • •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A'''''' • i • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • '' • • • • '· • • •' '' '•''' ' ' ' '. '' ' ' ''' '' 10 FIGUlll COST '"'' 9nly 1n1 ,..,,,j i11 11~h 1p•c• •ho••· l11clud• your 1dclrt11 or pho11t 11u111htr. ~ht co•t of yo11r td i1 tf tht t11d t f fht lii1t tll which fht lt•t we rd of your td i1 wrlt~ ttfl. Add S2.00 t~lrt if YIU d11lr1 1u1 ef DAILY PILOT It• '''"ic• wllh ll'ltll1oil' rt· pli11. w/C11Jtbrd, $500, 645-11128 mount, SeU c:ont. Will lake 24 Cabana w/extra ·bttth. ' CQS• , " · Miniature SC H NA'UZER1-~S°'A'°'!L'°'BO=A'°'T""'W°'A"NT=E=D'°'J,-P/U trade. 673-6809 C.Ompletely furn, $22 $0, A NE\V"l9T11 ,.. poppies, AKC ~g. 7 wks. NffiOD '68 CROWN CAPRI 64~Zl59 PIN' TO· . "'* Call 644-2411 ** FIBERGLAS...;; :?2' lo 28' , • 833-11\1!1 • TENT. E>ctrao 10x"1' deiua mobil• hom•, $50 '00 -• ENGLISH Springer Spaniel r--~~=~=~--$295 * * 646-5943 setup ln nice adlt pk, see • '"tw•' ' Pups, Champion AKC. Call SABOT #912 --'----"'"'-'---I to s.ppreclall!. Aft $ Ii <31 ·mo.) ~, 842-3223 ' $12.j * * 646-594.1 Cycles, Bikes, wlmds: 54S-289T. open end Scooters 925 8xJ5 ROADLJNEJt..l bedrrn, ·RENT HARLEY DAVIDSON lull hath. . A .::NT~01"1 CHOPPER $1795 *** 540-7258 Call !J68.1335 '70 • 24' x 60' Mobile hmo. $4 DAY '. \ llEJI .... .,. -llEJ * S4!j.86:J 2 * . ' Hondo1 Mini Tr•ll 50 M/aell $4000 btlow price. AKD Dogs 1.14Dogs 154 Good cond 11"1. 673-7267 Mov'i· Comp! w/all nu 4~ MIU' • I I I I · I I I a I I I I I I I I I I • HONDA Trail TO, 90 carb, turn. 5.1fr.2.J9". PUT A t.rn'L!: City .,., ..................... ""' """ """ .................. • @ • ... PROFESSIONAL • MX h•ndle ban Good eond 10' x IT-2 BR tuntlsbed. .J<ICJC IN YOU!t [-----------C.UT Hiii -PASTI ON TOUI INYILOP'I -----·------,,,,. .. ~ Extras. C&ll J~. 644-5704 ' $2500. !Jn:t ·1 t..' · · · .. -: ~ .~ GROOMING : ·10 suZKU .. m Hudly-... M *H 6..._ • ·-™0 •0112~.. ' ; • ' 'j • ••• ,_. IUSl·NESS REPLY •MAI L ""' Cl• ........ , .. c.tlt ....... Cant..11t Oren9e Co11t DAILY PILOT ~-r. o. lox-1560 Cottw MeN, Calif. -92626 Clatsfflotl Do,if, ' --# • .. • .:. ed . Sacrifice $350, or OF· otor ome1 7W ft ltNS rvKU ., 1 . : . " '£-l AND • FER. 675--0367 30' '.D00CE, .1..,..., JOO% IO<lo ~·m.vu.,;.. J (~ BATHING • ·69 7 numpb, """""""-11"" ,.e11 c.owt1t11 •• '.5 ..o tnn•. co:too"r.-SA c jff: .\ __ • ·o·F Al" · . ·• oi:..belt-oUor, ~"o11er lfilOOJ.,..01r ~· • . • • l,.~ .,,,~--L <PM --Au1e . •'~ 1 ~ BREEDS • Gl.RLS 10 SPEED Trailers, Travol MS .. • ·' • - • -' • L""· New, • • -646-697616' TERRY Tr&~'l:ralltl'. .~~~ND.~~ L1, • .--~Tlt~N~<OU~P!'!:OI!:'"----. ~.-."'""!I • ""'· S.U-lalneil. • ~ ~~ UJ u.vn-1 ,.$2.aif k.tf ~ • '~ _'HONDA CL 90, 1.'.700 <Utt hjJ;h Ex cd1. s_7is0 RADIO , , l • :::' .:i UU VJ · mller, 1howroorn "' condition · ' · JtAJ>IATOJt• 1 ' I .. -HKI I 12SO. 846-505ll 13' TRAILER.'(13 Lo!loy .i,. WINOSHIEtt>'~"l. • HONDA MINI 50 a,m;:~c~~r-~· MUST' Dt~~ : Cockapoos .................. $10 • 'l'HOltOU•Hl•ID CHAMPAGNI : PoodlJ Pups ................ $40 • • • • • ALSO OTHll PU" .ADORABU PET SHOP 113 IROADWAY, COSTA MD.l (AT NIWPORT ILVO.) -442-4111 -... 534-3185 - Extra $150. 646-5943 rr-·s TH' IS' ~ • • 20 ' T ra·vet Trail er , .<:.l1' •-. .. .v • '6."i YAMAHA 250, 011 1,,. aluminum, In aood shape. ~ ~ jeetlon, ~ 5-8pd, Xlnt. cond, ~or best o«t r . 494--4658. J'OR. AS'Poilft'MEN"l"t' : .:~i.:a=.:·:~~:Wtc:r Trralt.r1,.Utllity .947 ~ (* • 150 CC. Very !ow milea1e. 14' Tandem :Trt1ter Jt&U>Y 'l'()l.T.AKDAWA~ • $150. S40-552l With 4 ~. Alt aletl wtJis. EXCE:l.lZNT COND~ r: "lO~ MAlCO 400 Uke new, ed OONtnictlon. ~" 9t4ll!I lst CAl.LDt mrfSp • never raM, .sfioo or best deck platlnr. ·Will sen· or ,. &a.mt · ' · • offer. 54~2684 trade for plclrup. 3166 ~cUf. FOR APf0~1 , • 1'7Q NORTON _ 750 S Com· (Mtta Vtfdtl C.M, t NEED a a» ., . ., ~ • ms.nd6."Xlnt <.'Ont!, $1200. Turn untdtd Items U'lto quick ~GINE "' ,. '" • 1 1 • * 642-1169 * cash, call 642-5671 ,,.~ ~ .... 1 • OPIN MON • .SAT. t 10t t• 6 P.W. ·············~··· .. -. • • ' • ' • • t •• . . . . ;II DAILY PILOT Friday, ti'l•rch 5, 1971 SWING INTO SP BING BUY AT WINTER PRICES YOU WILL NEVER DO BETIER! $1,000,000 INVENTORY ALL PRICES SLASHED! Immediate Delivery e Bri ng The Family -Test Drive Buick Today• You Auto Buy Now! BRAND NEW;_"""""~ 1971 BUICK SKYLARK $3388 All .. rkH Elficll~e TII"' Merdl 1'1!1. Plus Tex A l lclftH BRAND NEW 1971 OPEL 1900 2·DR. WAGON H:D. .coo ling, ti11le 0 d •••• I .... '"''· 52389 w1ndsh1eld, .... ,.w ' {5494125141 St~. No. 024]3 1"1111 ta & UcellM. COUPE. Y-8 engine, turbohydre- metic trans., power str., power brakes, radio, heater, smog emis~ion control, w-1-w tires, t int- ed windshield, deluxe wheel covers, protective body side mouldings. 14333712 111538 ) ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWE'ST GMC TRUCK DEALER GMC TRUCKS-NOW HERE (U.ltGE SELECTION TD CHOOSE FltDMJ 1971 G·MC '!2 TON v.a, tinted gl1u, he•vv dulv •••r •prin91 •nd su\p1nsion, c:hroon• bumpe1 , 11111 lo•m 1e1t, •mp fr'•ler & oil 91uge, 1-tone p1 int, vi"vl inl•rior. 1725721 !Ell 421179l6l. s2995 value in used cars Prlc:n Effective Thru Su11d11y, Morc:h 7th, 1971 '67 OLOS CUTLASS WAGON Y·I, 01110., rodlo, Motor, power llMrlng, $1488 power brok•1, b«ll•11I co11d. Lie. No. YIS999. '66 AMBASSADOR Cesto111 4·Door. v.s~ auto .. radio, heoter, $988 loctory air co11dirlo11ln9. 40,000 octuol mflo5, I owMr orlgh1ol, Lh;. No. SAIOJ7. '65 FALCON 2-DR. Deh.ui:e. A11to., r•dlo, healer. 23,000 orl9lnol mites. Lk . No. NCB761 $888 '67 OLDS CUTLASS i DR. COUPE Y-1, outo., rodio, heoter, power 1teet"• 1111). Uc. VEY'l 54. '68 MUSTANG Rodlo, hHtor, stick shift. loy ttils as -rttol•ecl ortd so••· Lie. No. 101501 '67 DATSUN 1600 ROADSTER $1098 $1388 4 .,.ed. ro41o, hooter. Speclol wtteeb $1288 Kl rad1. JJ,000 mlln. llfy thl1 .,,. m •• lftllved i IOft'. Lie VLCl JO '66 OPEL WAGON 4 ipeed, radio, heater. Sl\orp & clean! Llc No. TAX065. '68 V.W. BUG 4 spe•d, rodlo, hffter, 13,000 mlle5. [3 to c;hooMI. ~-~~~~FROM '67 PONTIAC FIREBIRD 2-DR. H.T. 326 Y·I, aulo., radio, lleote•, power 1tHr· i119. Lie:. VJC3J8. '66 OLDS CUTLASS H.T. Y·8, auto., radio, heotl!'r, p~w•r steering. Llr.. No. RV"l 14 $1598 "67 PONTIAC FIREBIRD 2-DR. H.T. J20 v.a, auto., utdlo, heater, power 1t"ri119. Llr.. VJC3~8 $1598 "70 DO~O~G~E~V~A~N~-------- Y·S, ct11to., radio, heater, 14,000 ectuo1 mites, Ito!. of worro11ry. L"ol •w-. 11..,.., uwd commtrclally, Lie. 760ZSF PHONE 894-334.1 SALES OEPT. HOURS: Mon. thru F ri. 9:00 a.m . 'til 9:00 p.m . Saturday 9:00 1.m. 'til 8:00 p .m . -Sund1y 10:'00 1.m . 'til 7:00 p.m . PHONE 531-2450 15550 BEACH BOULEVARD, WESTMINSTER AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY - •P o .. o o •oo•o ""'• :J"J •• WE PAY TOP CASH for us!'d cars & trucks, Jmt can ua for tree estimates. GROTH CHEVROLET 1964 AUSflN HEALEY 3000 Mark Ill. 4i seatu. Re:uonable, H.B. Ml-7636. BMW 'fi7 Merer.des Benz Zl:l Oie~el. air cond., A:0.1-FM . automatic, sharp car, UOP 811, $219.i. JIJ\I SLEJ\10NS l1'1PORTS, 120 \V \Varner , Santa Ana. ;..t&-4ll•t '70 Mercedes Benz 280 SL '67 l\.tercedes Benz 250 S, C "--d . autonu1l it· AJ\1-FM, a i r oupe '""""' ster, automat1r. _ _, : 11,,1 -nditio" Ask for Sales Manqtt 18211 Beaeh B1vd. Huntin&ton Beach 847-6087 KI 9-3331 po ttt , A" fM 2 C()nu. ('Xce .. ., , 1J710 llACH ILYD. wer 5 ring, ··•-i • UVZ '426. JI:\1 SLEMONS IH ) to choose lrom each a1 I WE PAY CASH 1193-7566-: :r-6824 17295. 972-AS1'1 . Jl ~t 1~1PORTS, 120 \V. Warner. NEW-USED-SERV. SLEMONS Jr-.tPORTS, 120 1 Santa Ana, ~U4. FOR YOUR CAR • Largest Selection of Nf'w & Used BMWs • Southland's :P.lost P.Iod· em Service Facilities \V. \Varner, Santa Ana. MG I l.n.PVl.n.I 546-4114. ~'10;;'-:>i,1'C:reed'=,-,-, ""Be~m-280 SL -~-----. ---~' Coupe Roadster, air rond., ..,..._.----..-CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828. Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 546-1200 • Complete Stock of BMW Parts e Ovene8.5 Delivery Specialists Buy Or L1a11 At e FIAT 850 SPYDER e XLNT COND. $1120 .•• 494-6339 JAGUAR po101er ~leering, Al\1-F:O.I , • THINI 903-BZH, s 6 9 9 :i . JJ:\I ''M,.&'' ' SLEMONS ll\IPORTS, 120 W. Warner, Santa Ana . 546-4U4. C. BOB AUTREY TOP DOLLAR JAGUAR '69 MB 230, "'w ""· """· ;''fRIEDLAH"""'"' HEADQUARTER l\1ichellns, air, am/fm. lm· Utn I s mac. $4100. 54g....3355, 1Jlla l lACN CHWY ••• '°' CLEAN USEO CARS 1860 Lona: Bee.ch Blvd., Long Beach Phone (213) 591.f721 Closed Sunde.y The only authOrized JAGUAR VACANCIES Cost money' &93-756& e 537-6824 dealer in the entire Harbor Rent Your house, apt., stor~ NEW-USEO..SERV. See Andy Brown THEODORE ROBINS FORD Area. bldg., etc. lhru a Daily Pilot ~ Qimplete Classified ad. ~1 s~~~~~E Autos, Imported 910 I Autos, Imported 970 : 2060 Harbor Blvd. Co•ta Mua New '71 Datsun DATSUN PARTS 642-0010 1600 OHC, P ickup with camp. BAUER BUICK IN COSTA MESA LOOKING for a car trom er. Sale price $2099 dlr. private party. Eittter Ford, C• PI.521452270) Will take Chev. Ve.liant or Doc11e 4 car in trade, Will finance dr. f\fust be in good con-private party. Call 546.8736 dltlon. 65 or 66. Will pay or 4M·68ll. 234 E. 17th Strtet ~~769~~11 ~1rs. Humphrey '69 DATSUN WAGON 543-7765 1..:::::;;Th;fPO~R~TS~l~YA~NT=E~D-You'll really like thi.A car. '60 JAGUAR MARK II Orange Counties Just like llf:W! 4 speed. dlr. Sedan, automatic, radio. hea1. TOP $ BUYER R & H. (YWT917) Will take er, BNJ530. Bil.L i\IAXEY '?'OYOT A a trade or linance private $975 18881 Beach Blvd. party, 546-87J6 or 494-68U. - H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 '68 DATSUN WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS 4 Door. Automatic, air cond. Ir your car is extra dean, dlr. tWQT TI4) WW take see us first. trade or finance private par. BAUER BUICK ty, Call 546-8736 or 494-Mll. 234 E. l?th St. DOT DATSUN Com M'"' 548-1765 WANT late model ford van. OPEN DAILY 6 cyl. no junk, please. AND 675-5954 after 4 p.rn . SUNDAYS lllm Beac..b Blvd. Autos, Imported 970 Hunthwton Beach Harbor American 646 OJ61 1969 HARBOR. COSTA ME~A '66 XKE yel/blk, AM/FM, crm wire whls. lmmac cond. Trans'd, make olr. Must sell. ~1185 & 5.10-6197 'W XKE Roadster. l ownt'r. 41 ,000 miles. S2199. Lie No. 1"QS22o. 673-8222. LOTUS AUDI ~-"'"-1781 __ °'_""""'_· ___ 1 '66 LOTUS Elan Coupe. Jm- 1-,.,..--=-=,-.,..,.--'65 Datsun Wagon rnacu!ate. Vellov:lblAck. 'JO AUDI 100 LS Low milcag•. S2150. 6TH169 4 spe-ed. dlr. Real Niu! r.tust HCrifi<'! Wilt tndo or""· MERCEDES BENZ 4 Door Sedan. Black with ance private party. 546-8736 beige Interior. Immaculate! or 494-Qll. '67 Mercedes Benz 230 SL =~~------1 Coupe Roadster, automatic, Only 714 actual mlles. (874· '64 Pickup, rebuilt engine. power steering, special this CBY ). f\tust sell for taxes $:lOO k _, 1119· TUR ~ BILL YATES "" ··~ ' '· ~i. or offer. 496-2079. JIJ\t St.EMONS lt.1PORTS, VOLKSWAG·EN 120 IV. Wamcc, Sa"ta AM. Save your car • !t's nor 546-4114. I 32852 Valle Road far! Just reach for your '65 Mercedes Benz 220 San Juan Capistrano "1·"~/49"5lll<9'·~l ho , call il Pilo Diesel, automatic, A.'f-Fl\l, .,., ''""" ,,.... .... u P ne • Da Y t Jim Slemonl\ Guarantee. The faslest draw In the West Ci.assified. MZ-5678 Char&;e Z\VH-313, Jlt.t SLEJ\10NS , .. a Daily Pilot Classified. IMPORTS, 120 \V. Warner, NO DOWN PAYMENT On Approved Credit Choos• from • L•r1• Selection of Gre•t U1ed Volkiw•51en1 for E:.:•mple .. , '65 VW SEDAN .............. . Rt dio l Heeter INOY0041 '66 VW SEDAN $499 $899 '66 VW SEDAN -...... . ........... $999 R!d io I H11+1r fS A8 !99l '68 VW SUNROOF SEDAN ..... $1299 R.dio I H11!e• fWHl9D&l '68 VW STATION WAGON _ .. $1499 R.dio & He•ter fXEV45 71 -·- HARBOUR V.W. Authorized Sales & Servic• 11711 BEACH BLVD.-&42-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH Ad . 642-5678 your ad-today! Santa Ana, 546-4114. ....~"'l'~""""""'!!!!!!"''l""""~'""""""""!!!l!I Autos, New Ji: JOHN CDNNILL Top Value in its Size! ..... "No Gimmick1, No Give&w•v•. Ju1f 21 Yr1. Ho"e1t 5elli"9 All FOUR MODELS NOW AVAILABLE AT CONNELL CHEVROLET OYER 50 VEGAS TO CHOOSE FROM Named Car of the Year 1971 MOTOlt TREND Best .Handling Car .in A1n erica Rega1·dless of Price ltOAD & TU.CIC ... Finest Out Of Comparison T es ts of the Six S111all Cars BRAND NEW 1971 VECiA 2 DOOR SEDAN CAii & DltlVfll DllDlll TODAY IN YOUR CHDICI OF 10 CDLDllS ·-2828 HARBOR BLVD. • • COSTA MESA 546-1200 ; Friday, March 5, 1~7 1 DAILY PILOT 37 I~ I .......... 1§1 ~I ~., .... ~ ...... ~J§]~M 11~1 ~ ....... ~ ... ~1~~1 ~[ ~ ..... ~ ....... ~I~§] 1 1~: Aut~ ..... ~ .... ~'J~§l~1 ~1·~Aut~ot ... ~-~l~~Q ~1 1 ~ .... ~ ........ ~.~]~~~ :;;;;' ·:"'""'~""~,~~;;'"'' 1 ~A;u;to;s;, ;lm;;po;r;to;d~~9~70 Autos, Imported 970 Autos1 Imported 970 I Autot , lmporteG 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Impor ted 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Import.cf Autos for Sii• MG 970 OPEL VOLKSWAGEN 'fi6 l\IG With Sunroof. Recent o ve rh a ul. :\lust sell. 67a-89i0. OPEL PORSCHE TOYOTA TRIUMPH ....,V:-:-'.0::-::L""l<-::::SW~A""G'°'EN..,-j VOLKSWAGEN • '69 Opol Kodett, xlo 't '"'"'· NEW '70 911T TOYOTA NEW '71 -:,:07:-1-:S'°'P"'IT::::F:::IR::::E::::S::-'69 VW BUG I '66 VW GHIA '68 VW Opel '68 Kadett 2-dr. 11""· NO DOWN NOW ON DISPLAY zrc,., Yellow. •1th 81,ck 1'"''" DOUBLE CAB PICKUP MGB 67;;..2347. E111crald green Y:ith bla<'k VEU 08-l l--=====--1 iealhea· intei·ior. A'.\l /F:il. Cnn1e in for 11 !t'st dri\·e! $1599 Lop, new valve jnt> XNHG:t · • .61 MGB GT • LESS THAN H.000 MILES PORSCHE Lot> mo"' •91101018'2. PAYMENT F RITZ WARREN'S CHICK IVERSON $1199 $l7'9 GOOD SHAPE $1:.00 '"""'· ,.,,,., h'""· v'"yl I BILL YATES SPO RT CAR CENTER I v SON CHICK IVERSON *., 536-?266 * * I bucket _seats. See & 1drive to '66 912 $69 Ol MONTH* 1110 !'.:. lljt St. S.A, 5-!7.{)7&1 YW CH CK I ER VW 1---------i 11pp1't'Cl1il$c.112o2R2363~1. VOLKSWAGEN · Opt•n dally 9.9: closed Sunday al!"l·30ll Ext. 66 nr 67 YW ::1: nio~. Del. pay 11ri,·r ---.------,=--1 519-30:n E..'xt. 66 or 67 OPEL Dark Gr!'cn 11•Jt.h Black inter. 32852 Valle'Ro1d S~·lit·l.::O 01• ca.~h p r 1 , . ., 'U-1 TR!U'.l!Pll. ne1v lil'e5, 19711 1-l ARBOR BLVD. 549-3031 E.-:1. fi6 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 1or. Al\1/Fat, 4 Speed. Sau Juan Capls!r11no SZOOJ.jj. inr!. Tnx & Lie shocks, han ,t· Lop, $350 COSTA il lESA 19jQ HARBOR BLVD, COSTA l\tESA '68 Opel Station \\'aJWn. run~ 1vC'll, \V\IK 76.'i. $850. JI:\! SLE.'.'110NS !~!PORTS, l~IQ \\' \Varner , Santa An&., :).l[i..-1111. ~~~l~ .llUTHQlllZEO OE4l(R 2600 HARBOR BL.: AN Y Day is Uie BEST day to n1n an ad! Do n'! delay •. call toda)', 642-'i618 Berns witJ1 ease, use Daily COSTA l\l ES1\ j.10-9100 Open Sunday • ~.~64~0~P~E~L~KADET $300 970 . Pilot Claisllied. 642-5678 Autos, Impo rted B. J. Sportscar Center, Inc. Aut horit ed Fi•f Sa lei & Servit;e FIAT EXECUTIVE CARS With New Car Factory Warranty. 12,000 Mile Or 1 Yr. All fully fac tory equipped including radio and Radial Tires. REG. NEW 1971 850 SEDAN $1395 REG. NEW 1971124 'S' SEDAN :;: 710881 $1695 REG. NEW 124 SPORT COUPE Fut! 11 moi/12,000 mi. w•11 •11ly. l to cl\001• f•om. 0 11ly ~.940 mil •1. AM r•dio (:12949~) ••low•• $2595 NEW CAR TRADES '69 '67 150 SP YDER A:'-1/f''.ll 1769 AGBl ALPINE ROADSTER nrau tiful blur. r\c1v top, fl&l-1. (i05 VST J Bill Jones' $1195 $895 B. J. Sportscar Center, Inc. Authori1•d Fi•t s .. 1es & SerYice 2833 Harbor C.M. 540-4491 1NOS421) Real Nice! S.'l1-4800/493-45U /499-2261 • +T.0 .P 612-%97 a lt 6 '' ----------COSTA L\1E ~A A.P.R. 14.~4~r. ~e1·1aJ Nu. -~------~~·~~'=~'~--I V\V SQBCK '67, xJn't cond. BILL YATES '70 911 T 1J.IJ17. '66 TRr Spitrirt". hrd & sol\ VIV Van con\lf'rt<'rt to c11n1pt'r WANTED reblt el\ij. $l..J!IJ. VOLKSWAGEN •on approved r rcd1t t(\lltU!a11, mll bar, radials. IJ~ Sun Di1:1l. Ell'I' 1'1'rhi::, B'!I M T $!lXl. $.IS-3660 qucen-s1z<' bt>d, rte. :\la-;:. I'I! pay to!' dollar for !'OUr 9611-5789 32852 Valle Road Exrcul1ve car. i\lany exlras.1 I ~xey oyota • '60 TR-l $Jj() e \1hls, h1i:: llt'f's, Spf'!"i1l.l VOLKS\VAGEN today _ Call '63 VW, Rtblt Engine San J uan Capislrano dlr. .\(us1 ~f'f' to appreciate. JAASI BEACl-1 RL. ~17-R.)5~ Good bOdy _ nrrds raln1. Cor vair engine. Only and ask fllr Ron PinclJGt, $550. 536-3344 837-4800/493-t511/.t99-22fil Call l'nn Tanner 842-.!.!li. HUNTINGTON BEAC H rn~ine repair 51S--2fi:tl ~>.000 n1i ~in(•e l'On1plrte ~9.30Jl Ext. 66-67, 673-0900. ,70 PORSCl'E 91, ~,, PO R SCH E 911:~ $2197 ---n'build. Chas~1s Is I\ '.i9, ,.6.9 VW FASTBACK VW BUG ',)..; l'RIU\IPll TR-3, !IT. bu1 11r ha\'e $j()[){l 1n1·r~tf'rl 217 AG r 1967 lmn1ac. Orig. 0 11ncr. 5 Targa · Silver, 5-bpd, n1ags. 19iO TOYOTA CORO~~\ SED Nt>w piunl, rrc l'nJ:' "'Ol'k. ;'lh1_,t 1'(e ,t-rl rh·e to Ill'-\'\VD 117 $1699 Spcl, an1/fm radio, niag Bhtupunkt rad io. $12 :JO· RADIO. l!Ei\Tl::R. Rr~1 olfC'1'. r:\'f'. ~7Jit p1"ec1a1r. .$:.!SCIO lirm. 1499 $1299 11hl~. healed rear \llndOI''· a.J&-si!Ol lLlndal s-a l•kriys. I AUTO:\lATIC. DE:\IU #7826 'l HIL'.\IPll Sp11ftre J\lk Il l :\lonrovia, NB. 6-16-4·1j5 c ~ '~C K IVERSON CJ:JICK IVERSON \.-,.000 mi's on lll'W cog. TOYOTA l Vrry ~hllt'P ITrl \1/11·ht top. rl11>s onl>· VW "1WVI. {j\.j) 496-1200. I ALL 19il'S l.S STOCJ..: vw ~ J'ild lO Sl27.l. li~t}..3,53.j .,, 912 TARGA. Xlot ·01,d, BJLJ, MAXEY / .'.'llKll CORO:'\,\ . lCORD.LLA T h •oo T" l l!lS-1 \1\\1 B1.a ; \\Jth rnd:o, :>-IS-3031 J::xt. 66 or 67 549-3031 Ext. 616 Ol' 6'1' uo ... nump ..,.. ,.. 26.000 n1i on new motor. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. $-MOO. Rl'd 11•/blk inter. " Good c-onrl • $1;.() $ti!JO 9ii2-2:6j 670-2027, :>48-3389 I l e.o.n ewtA • 6~:1-Si16 • • COSTA l\IESA COSTA J\IESA I T OIYIOIT IA! -. TOYOTA ------I ·o; VIV ['mpec. Xl ot rood. "°·;1"R"'E""'D-;-\'\;;;cVc-;Co,-om"',,..:::,:-. r"Clg:;-.hf -,6-6_S_Q-UA_R_E_BA_C_K-1 '63 Porsche Super ' VOLKSWAGEN I Tl'nl 1n1"l111IC'rl, s1;00 or best off 111" boat, $3350, 11;i.vr I Cpe. Bahama yello\Y 11'ith blk lWJ BEACH BLVD. I ' offrr .·~1&-1003 s:i00. :A3&-9153 dy~. 536-1222 interior, A:\t/Fr.t. ch1'0n1 e Hunt. Beach &47-8555 ! l%6 lhirbor, C.:'11. 616·930:: ·.,.,-,-V-\\-, !-1-,,-,-,-,-. p_r_>_"l_Jl_l_!_ln '!iii V\\' su"'r.-. '°'h71,"r"k 1n t"r. e\'rs. \l'hee!i1, recent en ii: in e I ml N. ol O:>aat Hwy_ on Belt BEST BARGAJ;\IS rll•!ivers, Tc rnis a\'ail. l!J.lj ~ki rk, mrru! sunl'f, xln t "66 V"' Squsreback, good P>.'W98J '68 C ff di c o:-.11:: ~E F: OUR j Hai·hor Bh·rl, C.:'\I. 646-9·148. ronr!. $8j(l, j'.:&-.268:'1._,,__ cond. S9:.0. Private party , $2399 orona ar op SELECTION m--.,,VIV ROaTAIL I c,11 002-S l9.\ .,.. '63 V\\I Sqrbck, .'.'lhnl l'Olld, =~=o~-~__,,--, CHICK IVERSON TOYUTAS $GOO or bcsl Q[fC'r, Call foi· $.17.i '67 V\V-Xlnt cond thru-out. Loaded Black landau top. J ;m Sl•mons Imports e 544-34 17 e SOO'.l. Call after 4: 30, · r!rtails 67~540.~. VW Au1om11tic, radio. hra ter. 140 W. Warner '66 Bu". 1i>blt en.R"tne, nril' 646-1286. A:111r t.t Exlnt. cond. Sacrl· fice ~ \\111/ fin, pvt. pry. dlr. (RFJ 781 ). Cali Pat 540-3100 aft 10 ain. '70 V\V BUS: Stil l uoder war· ran!y. X!n'1 rond. ;2850. 546-4528 ari 6 pm. II I r.<: Y\\' Bu~. Xl11l l'Oflrli11011 "' '-,1o. 3031 ~ .. '· ~or 67 <Vl\IN 7!Sl Tak!' snia doiwi. Sant a Ana hrk~. s~:.n or offer. Call SUNROOF l96S V\l'-In1n1ac. '" "" ~ \V 1 " 11 I ~uru,,nr. s21;.o 1970 II AR BO R BLVD. i I ftnanC'c pvl. ply. ~a Ope n Eves. & Sun, ,'J.IS. \ 1~7 .i 1.l-;S1-0, 540-6fi711. GHIA Conv. ·ss. auto, radio, Perfect fnr sun1mcr. All the lnw mi's. 1 n11·nl'r. Very COSTA MESA aft 10 am 491-7jQfj or 5'10-3100 54~!25 LEASE A NF:\V '71 To~ota '66 TOYOTA Corona 4-dr.1 V\\' '6'3 Bug, sunrf, Jn nil's. extra~. i\Jus! 11rH, 5'1·"-1092. Sharp. SlG:"iO. 673_.i_oo:;.:."·c._,=I 1968 VW BUS xlnt t'Ond. l\lui.t srll best '6.) V\\', ne1v pio11nt hat brk~. ·s.q VW, Sunroof, AM/Fl<;[, -,62 CABROLET for only $~9.98 mo. with jut.t ilulo. Good cond. ti\ 5: $1750 '* '* :>-l~-~·12 1 ofr. Af1 6: 61;r2~'iG. Snow + •1;r!r lit't's. Xlnt Auto, Ne"' ronrl , $1650. 599.96 + Lir. al0-7707. art 5 pm: 5'Kl-5.i6j Blur 11 i!h Bur.:undy interior. BILL l\IAXEY TOYOT A --------- 1131RL0 1 18881 Beach Bl. 817-8555 HunHngton Beach DAILY PILOT for · a ction! Call &12-36i8 &Save ! '69 VW. r.eal Clr:1n Lo mi's. \Vholrsa1e, $l33j, Ca 11 673-2271 '69 V\V Bug, Xlnt conrl, Nc1v corid. S875. 6.i2--39'l6 * 6.i l--6027 * \\'ht 11·alls, brk~ ,{· tuneup. c191i=°"V1"v"°",-odo-,-,-. -,~tic:"k-,,h"i"°lt, '6.'i V\Y, rebll rng, n<'W quali- Otht'r xtras, $1450 ca~h. R&H . Call 536-7916 lD an1 ty paint. Lei's talk price. 54~72RI. to 5 pn1. 64.2-3518, 64Z-946.1 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN Autos, New 986 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 °A.,,u7to:-:s-, "N"'•c-w:----.99() 'AC-u7to"'s", 'i:N"e_w ___ "9BO l Autos, New 980 328:>2 Valle Road San Juan r:apistrallO 837 • .iSOO/ 49?...i·, 11 I499-2161 Spe~ater '~7 Carrera GT E.'l(ceptional l'On<l. r~tremely rare. Reblt en~. b I u e w/black in!, <'Onlinenta! radial tires. Laguna Beach 4!»-4672. '69 9l.1S Po1'Schr, Al\!.f\I, prired below I\ ho!e~:i le $5695, YYJ 438, J l.'.'II SLE- fl'!ONS Ji\.IPORTS, 120 \V. \Varner, Santa Ana. ~114 '63 Porsche SuJX'r C p am/fm, ehrm 11·hls, 13.000 n1i'g on eng. $1600. 5.l'>-8~.il '64 SC, like nrw. niust !>C'e. D>ll 646-91 1:-i afl G 1956 PORSC HE. Body & en~. xlnt. Neil' rrans & <'lutth. $1150. i\1ust M'll. 5,;7-6.'lSl PORSCHE '67 911 S Ta t•ga . yellow, :<lnt 40:'\I mi, priv. p1y. i\lake offer. {71~) 87~1531. DRIVE AWINNERI MERCURY LEADS THE MILLER 500 All THE WAY • FROM A WINNER SANTAANA SALE! 1971 DEMONSTRATORS! BIG SELECTION OF All MODELS! '71 COMET 2 DR. AIR r-=:::::::::---~CONDI 980 Auto1, New 980 LINCOLN-MERCURY LEADS ORANGE COUNTY SALES ALL THE WAY 1>02 v .R , a irco nd., a u to. ~ra ns .. P"''r. steer .• radio , 1in1. ~lass. <l lx t rim, con\'. 1i roup, ext. decor group. and more. (5 l7?0R) COltlET For "71 Li11c oln Mercury's All New Sub Co1npact BRAND NEW '71 COMET 2 DR. b Cy/., rod io , healer, white sidewoll tires, full y foctor y equipped. Seriol '#I Kl I U532849 1h 8ett1r """11<.1 C1r1 ! 1 FULL PRICE JOHNSON & SON • LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e .COUGAR ~ 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA M E~A 1961 FORD T-Bird V-!1, Aulo. frons .. llltlo!Y 11ir tond11..,.._ ing, power ~tl!f>l'•ng. po..,er bro~es, 111- d io, heoi.r. whitewoll '"ts. t1nud glo~s, whee! covers. GfW 189 1964 BUICK Skylark $J95 Ds C ti Sp Cpe 1966 MERCURY 1968 OL • u ass • ''"'olOlp.(po.V-8.ool<>.t•~•. $1095 V-!I. outo. tnm~., loc tOr"1 oir ton-$2095 joc lor1 oorto11di1io11mg,power dthoning. power ~ll!f>l'lf'9, power \tt e .. ng, rlldio, hooler, wtl•l~ll (d•!it) brokeh rod.o. lleoicr. "'~'-'"c'I. v.nvl roof. 1m1ed glO\h """e 1ewofl !ires, vin~~l •;•~o1~»~•0;";'=..::.::..=:.::+•~""'~''~'~"i"~'~'~"~9~7 4j:"(:;.;;:-----g\o\s, wl>eel to•en. WVG 9~9 1viera 1965 PONTIAC Conv. ~~~Jr~~=~ $2595 11·8 IPJIO l!'an'$ .. ~S!H'lnq,mclio, $595 .,, ,,.;., (di><\ ···~· ,.... '"'""· """~" ''" "'"' ,,~ .. h(!l)lef, whi1ewol1 tin\. ¥iny\ rool. ...tieel covt!f\ Sr~ 71191 hn!td glO\\. wheel ro•erS. VGZ ' 1969 MERCURY 1968 vw $1095 ~T!d·~i~'.:;:~:~ $2895 4 spt'l'd. rod ,o, heoi~r S S4 111V dio. heater. whilt woll hreJ. ••nvl roof, h"ted glos\, wtieel co•~J. XU ---1969 FORD 4 Dr. 2 2 $1995 pe . \l.ft.11u10. tran\~ lix!ory Oof ton· V-!1, oufO. 1n111s .• l«rory uor con-$ l &9 5 ditioning. power itffri~. POW~ ditioninc;. Ml ~· p0wer sit!•<· (di~) brokes. rodio. heater·. wlli- ing, powll' (61"') broke\. rod!O, t1woll tiftli, vinyl roof. !11\lld hfotlll', whi!ewttll ti1es. ¥ir1yl roof. •'".l. wheel to~an. XSX 576 ~~ ;1au. wMel co•tu. SAW .... , • ~--~0-lliPiiil!E ... N"'llS_.U_.N_..DA YS 1966 . . FULL PRICE '71 MARQUIS "'·"' lppw,, >l•,d;""'"l.fMh. $4969 windows, outo lrcm1, auto lernp control 1111' t ond, lill slf, AM-fM ster-o, belled w,w, ond muth mor• (Sl021111 , ....................... ,. $6428 72 1em, full power'. oir, ~ula: spee.d cooll'OI, till 1teel'l11g, Moe:hel111 rod,. 11l til'11, vinyl top, ftont lw•n emf!. . I r.Mlf • .11111604 '71 MONTEREY 2 DR. H.T. ,,,.,; ... ; .. ,,,,.,.;,,, '";" $3926 84 bro~11. o•r, decor group, tinted glots.# 521>319 I I I I I . ' ' 38 DAllV PILOT • A-. Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN _V_O_LK-SW_A_G_E_N_ 'S2 VW BUS SUNROOF Lorge Selection Haro to find model, immat'U· Of VW Campers, late, reccnsmgitle NUVi67 Vans, Kombis. CHICK IYERSON Buses, .New & Used Vw Immediate Dtlivery 1970 llARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '69 V.W. BUG Jta.dio, slick. lh"\VA660) $1299 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA l\IESA 5-16-1~ '64 VW BUG CHICK IVERSON vw Ms.3031 Ext. lll3 or 6'7 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COOTA ?.IESA '68 VW CAMPER * DELUXE SUNDIAL * Like new. New tiger paw wide tires, * Low miles, new eng. * $2500. Pvt Party now 399 * 645-2633 aft s pm * $799 '66 Volkswagen Fastback, ra- CHICK IYERSON ' vw d10. \'ery clean, UJS 367, $893. Jll\I SLEl\10NS I~t PORTS, 120 W. \\'arner, !tl9-30n Ext 66 or 67 Santa Ana, ~114. 197b HARBOR BLVD. ·6l V\V Bug. Cherry oond. l~~~CO~ST~A~>_IBS~A~-· I •·:i.1ed. BI u e.'' Chrm Daily P ilot Want Ad.s have po rs ch e r\ms, tape. bargains galore. ! Headers. $750. 592-5474 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 VOLVO BUICK • CADILLAC VOLKSWAGEN '70 BUICK '68 VW SEDAN '68 VW BUG $2896 Buick '69 Riviera Cpe.1--....,.:----1 LEASE A NEW '71 VW $51 .89 Per. 1'1o. + Tax AT BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/ 493-4511/499·2261 '67 V.W. BUG Radio, stick. Sure nice. l'FGN tl~) $1099 CONNELL CHEVROLET $1200 full price VTS-007 NO MONEY DOWN <OACl $1299 $48.69 Per Mo. CHICK IVERSON (36 Afo. OAC) Lie, YXR '79'1 VW lnlt'rest computed on 12 % 549_3031 F,,xt_ 66 -0r 61 au!omoHve discount rate, 1970 JjARBOR aLVD. v.•hieh is equivalent to Zl.2Y. COSTA MESA annual percentage rate de-1 ;:::-;-;:;,--.-,,--..,-,..,.--,.,, fcrred payment price is '67 V\V dlx.., bus., fact/reb\\ $1753.Q.I including all Inter. eng., late '69, R/H, $1450. est. All taxes and license or 1 ="-''~'ty=., ~53&-=l~68_7=--~ if you prefer to pay cash, the '66 V\V BUG, Xlnt cond, full price is only $1289.00 in-New tires, wht wired In- cluding tax and license and ter .• $975. 675-2027, 548-3389 not one pellJly more. VOLVO BILL YATES 1970 VOLVO 144 SEDAN RADIO, HEATER, AUTOl\tATIC, DEMO #1871 NO\V IN S'fOCK 1971 lflE 4 SPEED & AtrrOMATIC, 164 SEDANS Overseas Delivery Spec, .De.oil LW!iA W VOLVO Factory Air Conditioning LE SABRE cusr~l\i[ Vinyl lop, lU.U power, full ~ Dr. ll.T. VS, automatic, R& vinyl strato seata, tilt steer· H, pav.·er steerlfl&' & brakes, ing, ~tereo multiplex, SJ)Ort Jacto~! air, lacta1-y Wll.rran. ·wheels, every xtra & very ty. l3.17ADN) low local miles. (X'Jll167). $3795 $3666 BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th St. Costa ?.1esa 548-776j '70 BUICK ESTATE ~1!~,~ AUT.,ORIZEO OEALLR 26Ck> HARBOR BL.0 COSTA J\tESA 1966 Harbor, C.l\I. 646-9303 \VAGON 54().9100 Open Sunday ---~==--~. V8, automatlc, P.S., P.B., ra. e BUICK · dio, heater, factory air, 9 '66 Buick Riviera automatic VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano -,....,.-...,.------pa.ss. factory warranty. Low A.'1-Fi\I, powe~ steering, ~ '64 BUICK LeSabre, 42,000 mileage. CZBEl32). sharp trade-in, $1495. SBR 2828 HARBOR BLVD. 837-4800/493-45ll/499-22til mi's, 1 owner, air, xtras, $4795 099. Jll\I s LE l\1 o N s tHIHll xlnl. $925. ~2057 11'.IPORTS, 120 \V. \Varner, 'VO .. LVO' •o; Bukk Wildoat PIS, FIB. BAUER BUICK S.nto Ana "'6-411< C'OSTA MESA 5'16-1203 '61 KAR:.'1ANN GIUA: Bile '68 VW, 1 owner. 26.000 mi's, cocoa mats, wh ite-wall v.·/white conv top, ~bit eng, Extremely dependable trans. $475. Eves 494-1380. tires, auto trans, like new, ~'~1""~·~s.1&-"""'1~011~""',-,""'~['vw~~.~u~s-.-,-,"'-cl~,-.-,~..,,~ide '70 V\V BUS: Still under & out-needs mechanic, $350 v.·arranty. Xl nt Cond, i2950. 01• offer, 445 Oak SL, Lag. 546-4528 Aft 6 p.m. l Bch. 49'H848. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 PllV. At' rond. Xlnt rond. CADILLAC $1360. 642-403.1. 234 E. 17th St. "FRIEDLANDER" ·64 BUICK Ri•t•ra, full pw1-. °'"" "'" "'~776'1----.---- tttso •1•c11 tHWY. 1'J air cone!. I m mac u I ate . '65 Buick Special lost some Cad. '68 893-'rrl66 e 537-6824 Sll50_ 644~248 looks but runi1 good V/8. NEW·USED-SERV. '63 BUICK SPECIAL Ne1v tiI't!s & battery. Good -=-·--..-.. Excellent condllion $475 radio & heater $550. Ph. Sedan de Ville ........_....._ e 833·0:>96 e 645-2466 v.·eekend~ only. Autos, Ntw 980 'A_u_to-,-.~N~e-w----9~8~0 . Autos, N8w 910 F'ACl'ORY AIR CONDITIONlNG Vinyl padded top, tapestry interior, tull pav.·er, signal seeking radio, new rires, absolutely beautifUI., (YCN- 867). $2999 ibe4 ~CADILLAC AUlliORIZW DU.Ult 2600 l-IA1RBOR BL., COSTA l\tESA 540-9100 Open Sunday CAD. '70 SEO. DE VILLE Jo~AC'IORY AIR CONDITlOi'\l lNG FULL LEATIIE."R INTERIOR Full power incl. door Jocks, tilt & iclescopie a;teering, vinyl top, stereo, locally driven jewel. (()'EADY). & priced to sell today~ $5888 ~1!~L~ ,t,UTttORlZCD 0£AUR 2600 HARBOR BL.0 COSTA ?>1ESA 540-9100 Open Sunday • • Cad. '69 Seti. De Ville FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING Full LeaU'ICr Interior F\rll power, padded top, cruise <.Xlntro!, stereo, door Jocks, sentinel, tilt &: tele- scopic steering, pre m. Vogue tyres! 1'1osl •v~ry dlx. extra. (Y\VfUIG.l) $4444 ~1!~~ Al/THORlztO O(ALlll 2600 HARBOR BL.1 COSTA .l\rESA . ;>MJ.9100 Open Sunday • '68 CADILLAC • ; I------;;:------I Brougham, Has everything • including Sl.000 ane aWfler CAO. '69 CONVERTIBLE mt!". Cu ;, tn """ ""w condition. Unconditionally FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING Full power, all leather inter- ior, tilt & telescopic steer- ing, sleI't!o, loaded w/extras guaranteed. (065BZV), $3599 CONNELL CHEVROLET ( YNE399), COST A MESA 546-1203 BRAND NEW 1971 PONTIACS ON SALE NOW & very Jow local miles. I 2828 HARBOR BLVD. $4444 • ' . . Cad. '69 Cpe. de VIiie IN COST A MESA NEW 1971 PONTIAC T-37 COUPE Fully factory equipped including standard safety features, seat & shoulder belts, head rests, big 250 cu. in. engine, heater, fo ld s•at back latches, padded visors, backu p lights, fiberglass t ires, cloth & morrokide interior, self adjusting brakes, outside rear view mirror, anti theft ignition, etc. Order in your choice of colors today. DAVE GOODWILL ROSS USED CARS '66 PONTIAC '68 CHEVY II Vf'ntura 4 door J.l.T. VB, automatic, Automatic. radio, hea ter, po1ver radio, hl'all'r, po"·er Bteering, air cond. 1rt:Y980J steering. (WXG96ti} $1188 $1588 '69 PONTIAC '70 OPEL GT Le 1'1an11. Automati(', radio, heater, Automatic, radio. hrl'ltcr, il'SS than Jl(>l\'er stl"ering. (>O\\'l"r brak('s, !ac· 10.000 miles. t555BQHl lory air cpnd. lX¥C316} .. $2488 $2788 '69 VOLKSWAGEN '69 TOYOTA ' Sedan. Automatic transmission, .... 4 speed transmission. vinyl roof. ra- dlo, heater. !ZVL.8951 dio, heater. (XTS343J $1688 $1688 1.Al.f "RICE1. ll"l"EC1'1VI! T RU IU"ICIAY, MARCH 7, lt1! • OUR SELECTION OF NEW 197l's IS TREMENDOUS! COME IN TODAY AND MAKE YOUR MODEL, E9UIPMENT AND COLOR SELECTION. TAKE DELIVERY IMMEDIATELY. • SERVICE DEPARTMENT OPEN 7:30 to 5:00 P.M. Mondoy thru Friday. CHAUFFEUR SERVICE And RENTAL SERVICE AVAILABLE AllA"45 A¥t. ~ • : S.tH &ir&C JWT. IAl(lR A'l'I'. 2480 HARBOR BLVD. At FAIR DR. COSTA MES~ 5.46-8017 SALES DEPT. HOURS -Ol"IN 1 DAYS ~ WIEK l :JO A.M. TO 'fioo l".M. DAVI lOSS PONTIAC 546-8017 1111 Miles South of Sin Diego FrHway ~1!~,~ AUTHORIZED DfAlfR; 2600 HARBOR BL., OOSTA i\1ESA '540-9100 Open Sunday Gold with gold padded top, gold tapestry interior, fac- tory air cond., full power, lilt & telescopic steering, slel'('(), door Jocks. (059- BQO). • $4333 L-4.S t90 .. CAD '67 SEDAN DE VILLE Full po\ver, air cond., !cat.her interior, vinyl top. (TWN. ~1!~~ "" ,f,UTHORIZED OU.Ult 2600 HA'RBOR BL.. COSTA MESA 5'19-9100 Open Sunday $2595 HUNTINGTON BEACH • • Chrysler-Plymouth CAD. '68 '69 Convertible, Io ad e d , CONVERTIBLE $-i200. Can finance, priv. FACTORY pty., San Clemenle 714: AIR CONDITIONING 492-2800. ··-'l-'.:::,,c::;:=~~=~~ 1 Fu11 pov.'er incl. door IOCA:o, * CREA.\! Puff-1961 Cad. rilt & relescopic steering, Sedan DeVille. 1 owner. See stereo, Sentinel FUI.! leather l\lgr, 3ut \V, Coast Hwy, interior & ex~ptianally NB. ~==~~--,=="' I nice inside and out. (\1RD-* 1967 El Dorado. PRIVATE 5.J2J PARTY. Call a.\6-128.J $2888 1963 COUPE de Ville. Xlnt after 6 ~Al C cond. $950. (714) 557-1736 ib ii • 1970 COUPE de Ville by ·~C.6.Dllt.tc pvt party, $51&1. AUTHORIZEO O(AWI * 673-4698 * 2600 HARBOR BL.0 SELLING Your boat'! "List" COSTA 11ESA with us .. sell it fast. Daily :,.10-9100 Open SUnday Pilot Classified. 642-5678 I • Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported NEW 1971 $1966 DATSUN 96 H.P. PICKUP The Number l Selling Import Truck Plefd Of ffffw.,. COlttt 011 'I' to 25 mlln ,... talloR Olld Jooci l'FOYeR Nliobll/ty. NEW 1971 DATSUN - MORI HO.COST IXTUS w,1, • ..ii ,; .... ,;..,. .1...,, ""'··-·~ ""'' •••. ,, .. , .......... r.r~ ....w .... ,;,." """ • )._..., ""',., .. , ... _, Mel11tol11Mt 1'1le Hi9ltett Stolldetft of AoNMetift M9rett..dlllitt SANTA ANA DATSUN 970 ' 2201 So.Mtlo, S111t1 A11e • PHONE 546-4880 • Friday, Marth 5, iq11 DAILY PILOT 39 , I 1;.;[ _ .... _ ...... ,.]~~~-~./~I _ .... _ ... M;;"" ;;,;;l§J;;w .;m~_ ..... ,;;;;M"•;;;;;;. ]§J~w l 1.;m _ ... _ ... M-_ •• .-.;:-lb~w~ 9'0 Autos, UMd l~ I Auto1 for Sill 990 Autos , UMd FORD l§J I l§J .;;;I ;;;;;'"'""';;;"~;;;;!§l~I ,. Autot, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, UMCf '90 Aulff, UMd '90 Autoa, Utod 990 i--C-.A-D-IL_LA_C_1--C-H-EV_R_O_LET__ CONTINENTAL CORVAIR COUGAR FALCON FORD FORD • 1968 EL Dorado. LOADED! $3800, 673-3301 nr 673-25-11 '66 IMPALA '69 Continental ' . .;·c..;...,·M0""' 1E1oai.; '69 c.._.ar . .ir '°""· ·..teyl ---.oo-r-ALCO--N--1-:rafoRD WAGON M k Ill Auto, $299, $10 deliven, lop, new tires, lo blue book, GOOD CONDITION $75 Falrlane 500 6 pass. Automa. ar I Ternu avail. 19-tS Harbor $2300. can alt 4:30 pm -• 833-0596 • tic. power atttr1ni. radio, '68 SHELBY 6.T. T-BIRD '67 LANDAU : 'j. CA MARO 4 Door Hm:!ll)p, V8, automa- ric, 11ir rond,, power ateer· Ing. IR'IV 0471 '6TCAMARO. Blue w/hlk 1n1. $l 095 327"" 1pd. SZ700 invest~. Full power, tauh.leu Rolls Blvd., C.M. 549-3163, FORD all' con<:!. Fil'l4! car. 181795A) Royce trade, Factory .... ·ar. '61 CORVAIR '67 COUGAR. Air. recent $1999 ""'Y· \XVW91'\ compltfe $60 .,,,._,,, j ""w tll.._ Good '69 ECONO van, 2>.000 mL CONNELL CHEVROLET $5895 96S.7:l86 after 5:30 mi!f"agr. $149'5. 897-8174 eves Stml camper canversion & Automabc, po1ver steenna. ratiio, heater. Low, tow mi.lei! (XCT 141\ $2195 LUXU1UOUS 2-0R. HARDTOP FACTORY AIR CONDmONING ' Aok $12'0. 536-2995 HUNTINGTON BEACH CHEVELLE , '66 CHEVEl.J.,E SS 396 Chrysler-P~mouth .t speed, bucktt 1 ea Is, 16661 Beach Blvd 540·51&1 po l.itractlon, tachon1etet. ' ev.1,11, m"""'"'" by CHRYSLER ROY CARVER & .,.,·kndJ tape. 4600 & T.0.P. 53&-9fi06 2828 HARBOR 8 VD ROLLS ROYCE CORVETIE DODGE ·si FCRD Su""' .v" 240 COSTA MESA \,,:1203 1 2!125 H11rbor Blvrt. 6 cyl, auto Econohne f·100. '--------- •Co"' "'" """", '59 CORVETTE '69 CHARGER 500 1~1"'°-==· "-=-"""~768'-----1 ~hl.i~"',!~' sm0~~o~ 1961 \VlflTE Cont 1 n I" n ta I ·~:~RD1 >'tloe.irlane 500.1.Good red. New brakes, clutch. 16661 Beach Blvd. 540.5164 look~ like ne .... and n.uu. Hardtop Coupe, Aulomatir, VS. factory air, automatic, .. ..,..,por a n car, S 50 or Lo ml. 3 • spd, VB, P /S. good radio & heaier. Nict! (PJ..Z. powrr .stH1"tllJ' & brake1. ,.m,,•,k,_•;;;0"1";--'.,· c::"':-;.."".2988::'::.-:::=l ~iw,.~1c".1s,;::'.··:.______ '69 FORD WAGON HUNTINGTON BEACH Chrysler-Pijmouth Full power, swing • a • w.,. steerin&:. auto. tnni .• nd., hit. Almoat ewry del~ l extrll & less than 32,000 ·1 carefully dnwn k>c&I mtlta. j Ab§Olutely ahOwroorn treah iru1de &: out. f0CYM7), Comp11ny for man11er SALE PRICm M~nn. 1-~,,,_~~~~~-'69 NEWPORT SJ?~~ 2801. <YVA !>161 Be.low \Vholeu.le '62 FORD Van, new tires, •59 f'ord, Xlnt <-"Ond, Country sedan 6 pu1. Auto- 231 Cabr1llo (rrar) Co.st& $1095 Blue Book. low miles, beat oUer, 417 $250 or Best offer mltt1c, radio, P .S., air cond, CHEVROLET J\itsa $2195 7th SI., H.B. * 642 ..,. * \Von't la.It Jong, (YVK527) '70 LINCOLN , 4 D•, '"· ...., _ _,_, -$1299 1, _A, 1---------12 Door Hardtop. VS, automa-'61 IMPALA 11c. po .... ·er sreenng, vinyl 1,JAllel/4r I~ HUNTINGTON BEACH '65 FORD LTD, 4 door, one 1970 Ford v8n E-axl V-8 Gl\T•be~ ~·~:~.,':;~~~-· 67~'.: 2100 ""''" 81,d. 64><M66 ow""· mil• .. • 3'.IXXI, w/b '"'°· Rid!, 15,IXX\ mi'•. Ph: CONNELL CHEVROLET .A.~CAOILLAC Cu1tom COllpl'. Auro., radio, top, radio, heater. 1099CUJJ '62 Lincoln (.'onl'J Loaded-Xlnt cond. $.i5() *** 673-62717 vinyl top, power w/b, Vep' ft.i>l+i6. A~ Ot:.t.LDll 1062 CORVETTE 327 • • Ch I Pl 'h """· S851J, 962-8550 .:.;:.:.:.;:::,... ___ _ r.pttd • tllpe -l\111ny extras, rys er· ymQUl '&I Gal11x!e 500 XL. rS/PB, 2R28 HARBOR BLVD. 2600 HARBOR BL., powl-r 1tet>r1ng. 11r cond. $1995 \Vhi!e v111yl roof. Beauli!ul super sharp. Adull owned. 1966 Ford Custom for u..h1. l!Ulo. Xlnt cond. $395. Ph: COSTA !\lESA 546-1203 COSTA MESA l\fust ~ll~ Best offer 16661 Beach Blvd. ~.51&1 Air cond. ~. call 673-6919 692-6053. -.~-=~~~ 541).9100 Ope.a SUnd&y 64~-4393 y1· nr ;,.i24'G4. . 196.1 Ford. 19;;.i S cyl. e an 1me. 1966 Coronet 500, 2 Or. 68 FORD Custom, ale. p/s, Chl')1oler. For sale tor parts ..... '"· HUNTINGTON BEACH $1999 • CORVAIR '68 Corvette Coupe, Mint Hrdtp, V-8, auto, alr-conrl, ROUTE Sale&-$130 wk to '•t. r /h, Xln't cond. $1295 or 646--<i76l. · ~Cf!EVY==.-,,,7070Im""""""•-::-•-.""dr;-, '62 CORVAIR en&ine runs cond, Alr, FM tape stereo. rftdio. p/s. Recent vitlve Take ov eatab Fuller Brush brst offer. Ml-5'48. , 60 FORD GALAXIE 14,000 mi 's, S2750, Pvt ply. good ln!rrior/Ex1er1or good mags. Stt lo appreciate. joh. Runs good. Clean. $695. rte In Laguna. Xlnt pt time lIOUSE Huntin&? \Vatch the &IZ..1011 or 6#-M!M aft 5 CONNELL CHEVROLET Chrysler-Plymouth 2828 HARBOR BLVD. 10061 Beach Bh·d. 5-10.5164 980 SlOO or best ofler Ms-861.i. Aft 6: ~-1-0465. 64;M029. wk AliO avail 542-7573. OPEN HOUSE column. $200. 494-5922 pm COSTA MESA 546.1203 Autos 'New '63 IMPALA-1==· = --m--m--m--m--980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 2 Door HArd!op. VS. l!Utoma- tic, P'>"-'er l\lerring, radio, heater. <HBr 363) $595 HUNTINGTON BEACH Chrysler-Plymouth 16661 ~E'h Blvd. ;,.m.:;1~ '70 IMPALA 4 Dr. Sedan. Gold \'Lily[ roof, starlight bronz nrw ('()lor, auto .. radio, JlO"''rr steering, air cond. Thill go~eou~ car i.s a rea.I hart:11in. (ADN774) $2699 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2!128 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA fl.1ESA :>-1£..1203 '68 Malibu Wagon 9 Pa~5rnger. F"u!J pow,,r -f.- 11ir c:ond. dlr . .lmmacula1e! $169:; full price, (XJJ 17>-ll Ca.I] 49-t-77·14. '70 NOYA VS. autom1tllr, power Stf'tr· ing. dlr. Loaded. iCVE3691 f'ufl prier $219.1. Call 4!l4-7744 -.,DKING-SWOOD- 9 ~ss "'Aiton. Au1oma11c. R&H, po1vtr steering_ IU>:· 1:age rack. air. Ltiw, 1ow miles, 3.)() cu. In. V8. (j17- AZVI $3799 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-1203 '6.l Chevy \Vgn 9 -ti ll .~ s , fNP\V411' Air, SlO drlivrrs, Trrn1s 11v11il , lo mi"s, Xlnt shape, M6-9448, nr see at 194 j Harbnr Blvd, C.ri1. '64 IMPALA WAGON full po10.rr. 11Jr conci., 10."idc OVAis, cllr. f:\\\18567) Full price S49:1. Call 49-J.774<1. --,69 IMPALA 4 Dr. Srdan Autn r11d10, power steering, 111i-con<:!, R@aJ sha!"fl car. rYOS5'121 $2299 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVr>. COSTA ~1ESA :.16.]20.l '6G T:\lPALA 2 rir sen, iiuto 1r11n~. f11ct~ air, full p11'r, 327 V..S, ln nil's, O('w lirl'S. $1400. 536-632:. '64 4-spd, floor ~hilt Impala, 327" rebil :\1unc1c lrans. 644-0052, lti<k !or Doug. 613--0817 Aft 6 pm. 'j7 CHEVY, VII, auto. 4-rlr, 53,000 oriit ml',;, $3.ill. 5irf' al 175 E. 21st St, or ell.II M:.-5696 'S,j OfEVELLE ri1alibu SS V8 hrdtp. 38.900 mi's, PIS. 1utn. R/H, 11.·/sfw. 615-4819 ·i;g CHEVY ri1alibu, auto. 6 cylinder. Xlnl ~nd. PIS. 830-739.l "64 CHEVY Impala Super Spon, $8.ifl or ~st offer. 673-5136. 111 43rd St., NB. '6.i CHEVY 4 rir eclAir. Nted~ body work. Meehan xlnl, "'1tk~ c ir. 64)-809.1. '6.i JMPALA SS. 4 1peed. rif11gs. Gen. susp. Hrade.rs. Less eng. 673-1017 a '56 WAGON e 4 t1r. G cyl. 3 spri. $12:1 FIRM :>1~1690 1965 MALIBU wuon v.s. AT, pwr strg, '71 plarrs. S50D • • • 494-88&4 '67 IMPALA WAGON !J pusenger, Automatic, ra· dio, hc1tter, po..,·er 1teerifla:, air cand. ITUN786) $1999 CONNEll CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MLSA ~6-120.1 ifOfEVY 2 dr Imp&la 327 tna;. $600. Call 893-4!}.l3 '61 CHEVY Sta \Vq , li cyl 1tanda.rd tran1. S :J 5 0 . !§.9'15, -_.. ............................ ,,.., .......... -~~~~~-~- WE SOLD MORE USED THAN ANY FEBRUARY CONNELL CHEVROLET. '70 IMPALA 4 Dr. Sf>dan. Radin. au!o- n1atic, P.S .. n{'\\' vinyl j:old . rnof, .c:nrgeous bronz.r star· light color. Air cond. R~lll clas..~ in anyone"s front yard. t391ABJ) $2599 '70 CAMARO 2 Or. H.T. Lo"·· lo\v mile.s. car likf"' r\r11·. Radio, auto- n1atic, P.S., air cond. 1317· AZ\r) $3199 '69 IMPALA 4 Dr. Sedan. A11 lomellr, (JO\\'er stttrini.:, air rnnd. Stronj;" car. Ne\v car condi- tion. iYOS542J $2299 1968 CADILLAC BROOGHAM 4 DOOR SEDAN Tl1i1 h,1 te De lho "'e1l bttu· +ilul t<!I' iPI ,It cf Colifornie. Vinv! •ccf, 1tardu.+ o;ir••n "'•· l1llit lini1h, <11! power, AM.FM lltreo, pow•r deer lock1. c!i. "'•i• air '(.Onditicnir1o;i , 11.000 cne e1wn1r hi1torv, fu lly 9111,. 1niettd 10 dtyl lOO't. en porh & ltbor. Your nei9hbor1 will b• i•1lo111, The price h11 to be dirt ch•tp. (06SB2\IJ '69 CAPRICE 4 Dr. JlT. Vinyl roof. P.S., automatic, 35fl ru. Jn. VS. air cond., radio. fJO'l'!'I' brAkcs. Nier. right mile!'. 100-µ, .c:uarant('e parts &. labor 30 days. tXJZ446J $2699 '69 IMPALA cu~1om Cpr. 2 Dr. TLT. 'f\1·0 tnnP hro111e &. beii;:e, auto-- n1Atic, radio, P.S .. air cond. OnP car!'ful 0111nl'r. 21,840 mil""'· faclflt'Y ""'At-rRnty to 50,000 miles. (YDJ960) $2599 '68 CAMARO 2 Dr. l-1.T. Radio, 6 cyl., 5lick. Hey dad. ~et a gentr· a lion car hr re. I UQZ718) $1699 '68 CAMARO 2 Dr, ltT. Rad111, llO""'er ~ff'p1·111;:. automatir, aeL a look hr1c. !VCL9061 $1599 '67 IMPALA WAGON 9 pA.SS. Rlihl m il,.~. rii;hl prier. Air. P.S, radio. ltutn- malic, luggage rack. ITUN· 7861 $1999 I CARS LAST MONTH IN THE HISTORY OF '66 CAPRICE 4 Dr. Sedan. Ne1v vinyl roof. Air, radio, po ..... •rr steering, nice. New color. Lots of prid(' here. tTBJ806J $1499 '65 IMPALA S.S. Buckel seats. co!lMlle, radio, po.,.,·er steering, automatic, (SRD4lll $1099 '65 MALIBU Cou~. Automatir. power steerini:::. radio, Ina.els of miles here. CNNF'868l $899 '64 IMPALA WAGON 9 pass. Real nice car. Po1ver steenng, ~ automatic, radlo. (NWA788\ $1099 '67 MUSTANG 2 Dr. H.T. VB, automl!Uc, po.,.,.tr &teering, radio. Sure deserv~ a look. IVC.1704) $1099 HEY!!! WE HAYE 5 El CAMINOS WE HAVE 19 BEAUTIFUL PICKUPS Yz ANO ~ TON Th• 1"o\I b••11til11I ~ ton I'"' Ch•"V w•"· A11torn•tit, VI, with • br•nd n•w Su" Di•I ,•rnp1r 'o~w•riion. LOOK HERE v.,1 . lion (.Oftlint up. Ori•11 ond ~•ndle1 tiko o 1l1tion wogon. I llo9 122 0 ) '64 FORD WACOON Fairlllne 6 pass. wagon. Au· tomat1c-. power steel'ing, ra- dio. Sure a good one. tPRC· 8931 $899 '65 MUSTANG Conve1 lible. Po.,.,·er steering, rltdlo, ltutomatic. LOOK ! (JKU075l $S99 '69 FORD WACOON Ci pasr;. Country sedan. Air, , powtr r;tcering, radio. \Von't la1t at this price. fYVK394J $2299 2828 HARBO'R BLVD. ~·cosT A" MISA ' SHARP CARS THAT'S WHY! RIGHT PRICES THAT'S WHY! PEOPLE WERE TREATED LIKE CUSTOMERS THAT'S WHYI OUR CUSTOMERS DIDN'T Smt.E FOR LESS THAN A 100°/o GUARANTEE. ON ,AltTS AND LAIOll fOI JO DAYS I ,- '68 FORD '67 COUGAR '68 OPEL WAGON · 2 Dr. HT. Jladio, heater, au· Falrlant 6 J)a$5. Aulomatir, flOWer stct>nni;::, ai1· r•)nd. Full tOO'Ji, dralcr .... ·arran1y. (81795Al 37,650 niilcs. tomalic, ltir cond. 37,610 Kadette 2 Door. Radio, m 11, ~. \Veckcnd special. (Vl-IDti351 $1799 speed. This price shockl!!r. <XSR104 I $799 '67 FORD '69 PONTIAC , foeb"d 2 D•. \IT, Pow" 69 v ,W, BUG Custom 500 4 Door sl>dan. Automal.Jc, rltd1n, po .... ·er steerint;. 11uto., radio. Air 1teerlng, au· cond. CUDU-cond. Vinyl roof. 29.000 036) mileli. fZDT981 l $899 $2199 Radio, stick. (WCf;268) $1199 • t ) I I l ~- ' Friday, '-1arch 5, 1971 \ 40 OAllY PILOT Autos for Siie 1~1 1 ~ .. ~... l~1i c_[ -'""''_~ .... _,J~ I Am .. ~s. ]~ l ~;;;;m~1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;=1~~~1 Auto1, UMd 990 Autos , UMd · 990 I Auto1, UMCI 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used ,990 Autos, Used 990 Autot, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 , __ J_A_Y_E_Ll_N __ 1 MUSTANG MUSTANG '&.l :'>IUSTA;~G Fastback V·S. '67 MUSTANG '69 JAYALIN • VS. radio. ht'&l<'r, fully lac. tory equipped. tXES 913J F:tct. air, au!o. 1rans., p11.·r. '.? Door hardtop. Au1om11.tic, .!il('l'r·g .• R&H. Xhll cond. radio, po1ver steering. IVCJ. s201:;. s-1&-~?.i; I iCH1 $1695 e '6.~ Grrrn ~IUST;\NC $1099 CONVT. Rill. Pl> & '"" CONNELL CHEVROLET 11~1ns, $1150, ~.~914. I HU"TINGTON BEACH Chrysler-Plymouth I '!;~~ I '70 1'1 )6661 Beam Blvd. j.icJ.5J!J.I 351-l slang faslbark-perfcct 2828 HARBOR BLVD. l-or app! eall COSTA MESA 546-1203 &I 1·8900 UST'ANG 1.~.000 mi. '65 Mustang Convt '""· Xln! ("Ond. All . Jim 5-ID-41)63. ,\uromarir, radio, heater. LINCOLN )~ · '6:1 l\1u '66 YEL.LO\V Lincoln Cont"] I nei~· tr stang ti C)'I. 3 spLt. l (:;.JC 181 ) ans. gen. reg. clutch, $839 2 dr Jo mi"s Sil2.i 6 • Call ~.h'i016 "6.i CO j )...J()ti. ex-i ~ ~ r lh. NV. Auto, MERCURY <'f'plton ,....,. ally sharp. $ 8 j 0. 2100 Harbor Blvcl. !J.lj.0-'66 / .66 f>.1ustang Convt ' l. L'STA~G "68 i\I p/b, Jjl}..2j8 atr-<!llnd, " 2+2, pis. $1600. Call '66 COLO:\'Y Park Stn 11gn, lQ....poss. rae air. tull powrr. Clean, $1450. &12-4305 ·srA!\G 289V-S stirk, -'6S i\lti MUSTANG """· cronomy car. fine rond :\ 1/sell S11 9i .-~18-!i007 'STANG GT. 302 4 GT. IDLR870~l \\'ILL TRADE ~~~H Ai~YTHING Of \',\LUE. Xlnt shape, ''" at ls.lj llarbor Bh•d, C:\1. OLDSMOBILE ' OLDSMOBILE OLDSMOBILE I 1969 PLYMOUTH PLYMOUTH '66 STARflRE '';!) OLDS Sto wogo,, All i SPORT SATELLITE I powl'r, New brakes, $200 ' ~ H _1 f 1 1 or orfer. 536-870~ Two-door· sedan .•. fl.895 uuur an.1 op. a~ ory ll. r 318 Cu. In., 2 bbl. Engine oond. Pull po\\'er, vinyl roof. PLYMOUTH Automatic transmission !SLY &&SJ Po ..... er steering $1195 Air conditioning HUNTINGTON BEACH 1969 PLYMOUTH ~~;;,~·~\,~" '"ll'"' Chrysler -Plym outh 10061 Beach Blvd. 54(1.51&1 '67 Otdsniobile Della 88. ' OOor. hard top, automatic. factory air, radio a.nd heater, \'inyl roof. UJD 136, $1295. JL\I SLE:\IO:':S I:\1- PORTS, 417 \\'. \\'arner, Santa Ana, 540-2512. '66 4-Dr Cutlass Su preme • P/s, auto, air. Nice family car, $950. &16-1165 '60 OLDS 88 Fact air. All elec. Xln't cood. &1l-584j. 64&--1275 a!! 5. SPORT SUBURBAN 3 Seat Station Wagon $2,395 ::&3 cu. in., 2 bbl. Engine 1\uton1atle transmission Po11i·er steering Power disc brakes Power rear "1ndow T ilt lill'ering wheel Air coodi!ioning License YPT l.l7 Ex{'('llen1 condition 40,000 miles See at the DA1LY PILOT, 330 \\'est Bay StrCf't, Costa l'tiesa, ask for ?.targaret Greenman &12-4321 Excellent condition, See at tbe DAILY PILOT, 330 \Vest Bay Street, Costa ~fe.sa. ask !or Margaret Greennian 642-021 '69 PLYMOUTH GTX Radio, heater, automatic, power 6teering, f)O"'er disc brakes, \.'inyl top. Only 19,000 mile~ w I t h factory "'arranty. CA'VH8181 1969 PLYMOUTH SPORT SUBURBAN 3 Seat Station Wagon $2,595 3S3 cu. in., 2 bbl. Engine Automatic transmission Power steering Power brakes, disc front Po11.•cr ~·indows Po11i·er seat Automatic speed control Power rear window Air ronditioning License XSS 453 ExeeUcnt condillon, 41,000 miles See at the DA ILY PILOT 330 \Vest Bay Street Costa ~lesa, ask for ~fargarel Greenman ~2-4321 '66 Belvedrre 4 dr. Gd con- dition. S62:i I. L oader!! lm· '63 OLDS Scd. A/C, pis. a OLDS '6( lo nil's, p/b r/h auro !rans. Pvt I tires, 2 dr, xlnt. $600. "'w $2495 ROY CARVER ROLLS ROYCE • 962-7898 * alr! $169j. 83()..7j41) Daily Pilot \Vant Ads have 2925 Harbor Blvd. Sell the old s tuU Buy the PLYMOUTH 1969 PLYMOUTH . CUSTOM .SUBURBAN l Seat Station Wago~ $2,095 318 cu. In .• 2 bbl. Engine Automatic transmission Po11i·er slee-l"lng Powrr disc brakes Po11er rear 11i•indow Air condi!ion!ng LicenSe YPU 441) Good condition, 50,000 mi. Sec at the DAILY PILOT, l~.o \Vest Bay Street, Costa Mesa. ask lor l\largaret Greenman PLYMOUTH '69 Suburban Wagon J seal, factory air cond .. V8, automatlr, po1vrr i;teerini;:. tY?P 5-171 $2195 HUNTINGTON BEACH Chrysler-Plymouth lli661 81.'arh Dtvd. ~,I0.5161 '68 Plyn1ou!h Roadrunner ·126 llcn1i, +.spd. larh * !lti2-0091 * '68 SATELLl~TE -i 642.4321 I Door. \'8, au1oma11c, po"·er .~====~~~I slct'1·1ng. rad i o, heater 'jJ PLYl\IotrrH 2 dr, black, t\VVG 728 ~ orig cond! 19 mpg $200 or $1295 Trade. &15-4687. . "w HI TE ELEPHANTS" HUNTINGTON BEACH '"m"'"'"" "'"' 00,,.. Chrysler-Plymouth "Cash", .sell them tbm lfl661 Beach Blvd. "67 GTjOO SHELBY. l\'e11i• 428, '68 :\!LI 4-spcl, :..rra n~ar mJgs. Uan-el ~1860. si.1-2113 a'.:..2 ~I nia!:\ll Call 612-:-.1678 ,i;, Save~ _ /For bes t result<;! &12,.i678 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 ply.' ca11'5~,l-1029 I Call &J6.34TI Autos, New 980 Autos, New bargains galore. 980 Autos, New 980 I Coata Jl.Iesa 546.4444 new stuff Autos, N~ . 980 Autos, N-.-w---~98=0 Daily Pilot Classified PO-NTl_A_C __ Autos, New 980 --------·I BAUER BUICI{ IN COSTA MESA ''SPECIALIZING IN OUR SELECTION OF NEW '71 BUICKS IS OUTSTANDING! ·UALITY'' RIVIERAS -ELECTRAS -SKYLARKS -BIG WAGONS -WE HAYE 'EM ALL! OUR SAVINGS ARE AT THE HIGHEST RIGHT NOW! SHOP TODAY!! OPEL HEADQUARTERS SHIPMENTS ARRIVING DAILY! BRAND NEW 1970 OPELS MUST CLEAR IMMEDIATELY AUTHORIZED JAGUAR SALES-SERVICE & PARTS! LARGE SELECTION OF NEW & USED JAGUARS TO CHOOSE FROM! WE LEASE CARS PRESTIGE CARS AT ALL MAKES & MODELS EXAMPLE: NEW 1971 BUICK SKYLARK 2 DR . H.T. Fully equipped including VS engine, •utornetic, radio, heater, power steer- ing & brakes, factory air i;ondit ioning, wh ite welh, t inted glass. -PER MO. OPEN .. END .. LEASE \J}AUEl{ WAGON V8, a11 tomalie. P.S., 1'.B., ra- dio. hr atrr, fal·tory air. 9 pll~~. factt"lry ,,·11rranty. Lo,11 n1ilca;;1•. ( ZBE-1321 '68 BUICK SKYLARK CUSTOM 2 Dr. 1-1.T, V8 aut:omafit, R& II, /lO'Vrr slerring & lfrakf"'S. fn c ory air, vinyl rflOf, buck- ci... scats. LWl:;E"l97) SENSIBLE PRICES CUSTOM Full f'O''"cr. flV'lory air con- di!ion1n~. A~l-f:\I sfrl"ro ra- dio. \•in~I 1·oof. fa1:tory "·ar- ranly. t 79-1Af'B' '69 BUICK ELECTRA 22S ·J Dr, H.T. VS, 11.utomatl<', 1111\l"<'l' slrel"ini;:: ,(i: bra1'e11. rl"tory air. vi nyl roof. rac· to~y 11·a1·ra11\)'-(VXJ1373) $3395 VS, 11.utomatic, radio. h<'A I· er. po"·er strl.'rini:;-& brakr~. factory 11 ir . vinyl roof. low n1ilr"-. Factory \rarranty. i0i4BS\\'J '69 FORD TORINO SPT. ROOF VS, automatic, 1Xll~l' 11tc~r. in11 & brakr:r:., Aill-F'r>.1 ra· dio. fectory air. $2495 BUICK.1N COSTA MESA BVICK·OPEL-JAGVAR 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa "SPECIALIZING lN QUALITY" 5 4 8-716 5 WE LEASE CARS ' BONNEVILLE 4 DR HT Lo\\' mileage. VS, automatic, 11 u ,,. r r st erring. \)()'' rr brak<'fi, faclory air. (VCL- 9·18f '65 CORVETTE 2 tops, 3'27 VB. 'I !tpc<'d. m- dit:i, hca1c1·, onJy <10,000 n1ilcs. tSll6729l $1795 • ' '70 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX powrr steering po11·rr 11•[n. do"·s. factory ~1r. vinyl Top. t'aclory l'."a1Tanty, Black \Vith sandlt•11·ood rop & lncer. ior. tl68AfZJ $4195 ROY CARVER ROLLS ROYCE "'923 Harbor Bl1'd. Cosla !\lt'sa .'.>46-44-14 '6S PONTIAC WAGON 9 pass. caralina. '15,000 one o"'nrr n;ulcs. P.S.. auro., R&JI, air l'Ond. Sure nice. (H.PJ3411 $1399 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2i!28 H,\RBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ::i-l!i.tZO:: '69 PONTIAC CUSTOM Z Door hardtop. V8, automa- tic, powrr stcerin~. (Y\'VT. ti:jjj $1995 ROY CARVER ROLLS ROYCE ~'923 l111rbor Blvd. 54&4 14-1 '67.~Fl=REB=IRD'- f{ardtop. Excl'llcnt rondltion. dir. Full prit<' Sl·l'.19 Take 1<1nalJ rtu11n, <ZR\VS8{!) \\'ill fJn. pv1. ply, Call :H0-3100 or ·19'1-7j(){i an IO an1. ------==-~=' '68 FIREBIRD 400 Poll'PI' ~let i ng-, vin~i top, pop- ular-4 speed. fYQFl21 J $1895 ROY CARVER ROlL5 ROYCE 29'1.i Harbor Blvd. Costa fl.lesa S.J6.4,l-1·f '68 2-<lr BonllC'villc har:Jtp, l-uu po"·er, Jn c l ud in;; Aill /Fill 1· ad Jo, Ne11 c alibralrrl po l y~lass prl'm1un1 !Ires, Xlnl t·ond, Orig 011·nrr. SlS9i Res: 49H121. Bu~: l\!Jol-0768. '69 FIREBIRD 350 FactOl1' i11r. 1urbo hydrania- \lc transm1ss1on, po 1v c r s1eer1ng, only 12.000 n1ilcs or 1his rxprrsso bro"'" fine car. tOliAFXl $2695 ROY CARVER ROLLS ROYCE :!92j llarbor Blvcl. Cos1a J\!r~a J JG-1-14-1 196:'! PO:\'Tl/\C Lc:\lans, pl-;:, p/h. CLE/\/\. SSOO. Call !lfi2-.;lj j_ ~R.-;cA'"'M""B;-;LE""R--1 Hl6~ RA:\1BLER \111.i:-011. fi c-~·1. s lick. Good rond. S32:i. S-17-8-IOJ '61 R/\~)l~B7Lf~:l~l ~,-, ,-,-,,-,·I \\'af:'Jn. "6.1 Rambler. Ori;t. 011·11f'r. i\lakr orfrr. 61-t-4190 STUDEBAKER '62 DJ\ YTO~A 2-rlr hrrltp, VS. 4-~P<I . hurk. ~rars. lires 4 n10 old, $230. 616-1912 T-BIRD 1956 T-Bird Classic IJ.1rdlop 1\itli tlflrt holrs. full po11ri-, au1on\a11c, <'on11ncn. t~I ki1. €An1uy Y"'llOw: 1'fus1 be &•en. 4,J\\:R l48i $2195 ~~ 2100 Harbor Bll'd. 6t:i-0166 '63 T-BIRD, t\\"l/\:12il Air A Black 8"a11ly! $295 ft11i priN', .Slfl drli1<'r<i. Trrn\s 1tv1t1I. 1913 Jlarhor Blvd c:-.1.... · ./ "6"1-T-Bnlri ./ Has E1tl')thin~· (~ rontliHon $6()1) 6i>-61:'.ll '61 T·BIRD ('On\'~roMil. $jn<) or ll('~I Orf<'I". 6j:-.JlJ2 nites, &1~~1jJ d)~. '60 T-BIRO~--t n11r. A 'C, ~ cond. SJXI. ;...1,1.6ljS l')r R~6-!1i!.lfl ~-T·BI RD-:-go.11!-n~ conrl !'>hiu·p lonkini;:. Ca.JI :it:,....m::i-1 Friday, March 5, }q71 DAILY PILDT 41 ,____, • .-----Sensational NEW 1971 VENTURA II 2 DOOR-OlDll TOUl CHOICI OP COLORS NOW + TAX & LICENSE STYLISH VENTURA II • ·The newest addition to Pontiac Motor Division'• 1971 lineup, the Ventura II, is built on a I I I-inch wheelbase with an overall length of 194 inches. The new compact is offered in both two-door and four-door models. Standard equipment includes a three-speed, column shift transmission with a 3.08 axle ratio, self-ad- iu•ting brakes and a 250 cubic-inch, six -cylinder eng ine. Plus at no ex· tra co st Bob Longp res exclusive 3 year, 36,000 mile warranty. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST SELECTION OF 1971 PONTIACS 1971 PONTIACS · BRAND NEW 1971 LEMANS T·37 BRAND NEW 1971 FIREBIRD ' 250 c ubic inch •ngin•, E71•14 t ir••, d•lu•• tf••ring $2671 w h••I, •ndur• front bu"'p•r, p1dd•d d11li, p 1dd.d t un witou, 1•11 b .lti. b1ck-up lighh, 4 WI'( h1111d fl11h1r, d1y & ni9hf mirror, wind1hi1ld w11h1n, du1I t p1•d p1r1ll1I wi p•r~, 3 v••r/36,000 mil• w 1rr1nty. OltDll TOUI CHOICI Of COLORS NOW -----IMMEDIATE DELIVERY----- 1970 PONTIAC CLEARANCE SALE 1970 LOW MILEAGE EXECUTIVE and DEMONSTRATOR CARS HUGE DISCOUNTS • ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST AND FINEST SELECTION OF PONT/ACS • 1970 PONTIAC GRAND PRI X 400 cvb!c Inch V·I 1n1ln1, Turbo•l!ydr•"'•ll• 1r1n1ml1110n, AM rldlo, Ult 1lffrl111 Wllffl, 11.1111 II Wllffll, ltchlry 1ir condlllon1r, 11r1111u top, powtr wlnclr#t. l>J: 111 91111, PllW9r 1IH rlng, powtr dlK brtktt. A1ur1 blut, "''ttll- lnt lnl1rl0r. Trut luxury. (4t111Q) $3995 1970 BONNEVILLE FOUR DOOl HARD TOI" 4H CHIC klcll v.. '"fill.. tuttoo hydr1m1lk tr1n1mluilll. f1etery 1lr cmdlllelllft', l1M11 "'' •--•I AM·f'M ''''-· ,..._ 1lffr1n1, lllWlr brtktt. -ll11ted tllH, wtlllt WIU 'Ir .......... 111-..r wlftdewi. ~,,,., Gi:.Hn wltli ""klll.., lallrlor. Uted. IZSJ4'11 $3495 GARO EN 1970 VENTURA TWO DOOR HARD TOI" 400 cubit Inell v.. 1ntln1, lurbo hf1fr1m1tk tr1n1ml11l•n. AM r•dlo, ht1l1r. l1c1Gry •Ir tondlllontr, pow1r 1IHrl111, llftll'd t11U, Wllllt 11<11 wlll Ur11, •II vlnyt trim, Sl1rr1 .,.11ow, Salldl1 lnttrlOr. Uucl UJlAK5) $3495 1970 CATALINA FOUR DOOlt SEDAN 400 cllblc Inell v.. 111tln1, turtloo l'tydrlmtllc tr1n1ml11lon, llt llrf 1lr t....SlllOMr, ptwtr 11-lnt, pow1r ff1kn, llRll'll 9t111, AM redlO. Mlltr, Wflll• tkllWlll nrn. lttlMI If IKIOrY w1rr1n1v 1w1lllbl0. Mint T1111111111w, m1tdllnt 11111119<". U•ed. CCJI Nll $3195 I FRWY. FRWY. ... -" 1970 PONTIAC TEMPEST TWO DOOll HARD TOI" EcoMmy 11• cyllndtr 1n11n1, •u!om•llt '''"'' minion, llnttd 01111, whit• •ldt will '""· Hlddltll 1nttnn1. V1ry low mll1•. Sltrr• ytlfOw, Gtld lnl1r10r. UMd. UOllll5Hl $2295 1970 TEMPEST TWO DOOi HARD TOI" JSO cubic Inch v.1 ...,1,.., 111wer llHrJnti. Ntl"Y dllty Uotr .,,.Ufllld Hunt J tpd. trtnt- mln ltfl, AM r1dlCI, tlnlt<ll t11H, wtllll 11d1 Wiii !Ir". Lii•, llw 111111•. Uted. (MtC,NI $2395 1970 CATALINA TWO DOOR HAltD TOI" .ao cu~lc lncn V... 1119ln1, turbo hydr1m111c tr1n1mlnlon, l1dory 1lr to11tllllon1r, AM r1· dlo, h11l1r, tinted 11111, powtr i!H•lng, pow· tr br1•"• Wll!t1 tkll will tlr11. lll1l1ne1 ol 11chlry w•rr•nrv 1v1111bl1. UHlt. (17JlllOHI $3395 1970 TEMPEST FOUi DOOl SEDAN no v .. 1111rn1, •tr.tmllk tr1n1.,,1ui.n, powor ttHrl119, AM ncilO, .... !tr, wft llt 11111 Wiii Orff, Tinted '""• lldory 1lr conclitlontr, L•w. lew mlltt, Altll llu., l lKk lnttrlOr. UHd. !ntlHAI $2595 1970 PONTIAC LE MANS T.37 Two door li.nltop, lc011omy 11• cyllncltr - 11n1, 1utom111c tr1rtllml1110f1, llnled 11111, w11111 11111 will llr11. Sltrrt y.lltw, Gold Interior. U1ed. ('NISH) $2295 1970 LE MANS SPORT TWO DOOi HAlD TOI" lvcklf Ifft., CtMOll. ..,..,. llMrlq, ,eW'fr -••k"' AM rMIO, t.mry 11" ctndlllonlr, ''"" ---llrdr1m111e l•1Mml111M. Mii....,. 11.W, Wll119 r 111111111 '-'· UMCI. (J1lAD') $3195 QUALITY • SERVICE. • SELECTION • DISCOUNTS " •. .,.41- ONOPRE . . 13600 Beach Blvd.-Westminster (Beach Blvd. at Garden Grove fwy.) -Call 892-6651 , or. 6~~-2500 l I . . . : •• .. •• •• •• •• •• •• • • •• •• KICKS THE STUFFING OUT OF HIGK PRICES! ---- '911, ... ~ wi" 1 •00 e.c . .-.,1 ... ,.. • ., IYM..,__. 4 ... "°"""lulo11, lileatfi' l Hfr9tt.r, 111•19"1 "dlNCt- •lr" ...tllotl .. t'(ltelll, wh1chhleld ......... 111-Mck Hfety ~et ..,.., ROt bt4'9, • -• frottt Ir '"'· ,..We4 ritor Ir ..._ lock! .. ,,_,1 .. c•I•-. Mck•p llthb. Business ls Good At Theodore Robins Ford! · The Reason ls · Simple ~:~MUSTANG NEW 2 DR. HARDTOP SAVE V -8. bit ti,..., A·T, P-S, P.di""· ""· $53990 air, T-glass, whl cvrs, Hi bkll, etc: -(1445191 . ' -- W"'tkr !;.3742.00 Ollr Price $3202.10 NEW 2 DR. SPTS. ROOF SA VE 351 Y-8. hi bkts, bit tires, A-T, P· $ &I steer, P-discs, radio, dee il'P· T-ilass. 576 whl cvrs etc. (131869). W-stkr $3911.25 Our "rice ~334.74 • N~vs.2h, ~!. ~,~;. ~~ .. ~~-SA VE discs, rad, console, mag whls. compet $66525 susp, instrument grp, 4 spd, Hurst shft, etc. 1111775). W.,tlcr $4290.25 Our Price $3625.00 N~V8.2P-~~·._:.~~,~~T-bkts. SA VE bit U...,, tit""''· A·T, AM-FM, oon-$150·1& sole, Pwindows, spt whl cvrs, T -glass etc. (102430). W.,tkr $4784.75 Our Price $4034.59 ~:~ RANCHERO NEW RANCHERO SAVE Emission control system. E7Xl4 tire&, $68. 388 A?t1 radio. (1191311. W-stkr $3396.82 0.r !'rice $2712.94 N~vs.11!~~~~~~ .,s.e~ ••. SAVE power disc brakes, radio, Unt. rlass, $88863 H.D. susp. (115648). W-stllr $4284.06 Our Price $339S.43 MADE IN AMERICA, IY AMERICANS, ~ .FOR, AMERICANS I FULL PRICE ~:r' TORINO New 2 dr. Hdtp. Brough. SA VE 351 VS, A-T, bit tires, rad, vis grp. $ 91 p.s, P-discs, air, rear wind defrost, 717 T·g_lass, d lx wht cvrs, etc. (134411). W-stkr $4534.20 Our Price $3816.29 New 2 dr. Hdtp. Brou9h. SA VE 351 VS, .A·T, blt tires, v111 grp, P-S. P-$ 62 discs, alt', rad, whl cvn, etc. (J24· 681 ·~· . W-stlcr $4421.25 Our Price $1741.73 ~ NEW GT 2 DR. HDTP. SA VE 351 VS, 11pt roo r. rkr pnl mid, hi bk bkts, A-T, bit tir~. P-S, P-discs, air. $76290 Al\1-FM-slcr, console, T-1:Jass etc. (119129 ). . w .. tkr $4813.25 Our Price $4050.35 NEW 4 DR. SEDAN SAVE 351-VS. AT-. bit tires, P-S. P-discs, air, rad, T-glass. whl cvrs, bdy mould-$60529 ing etc. (103052). W-stkr $4008.25 Our Price $3402.96 N-~~ BRONCO N~,.~~?o~.~?bu~,~~OHtt SAVE pkg., 2 skid plates, lt.D. 1lrr11, spare $64127 tire carrlrr, R&H, free running hubs, H.D. rad, H.D. bat. (C6685J. w .. tkr $4436.27 Our l'rice $3795.00 NEW BRONCO WAGON SAVE VS. rear bench st., bucket sts .. H.D. 26 pkc.. skid plates. H.D. tires, spare $707 carrier, R&H, free runnlni:: hubs, tl.O. rad. aux fuel tank. (89548). W-stkr $4707.22 Our Price $3999.96 MUSTANG SALE 20 to chOOM from. '65 thru '70 models: Coupn, hardtops, convertible ond 2 + 2 Fastback1. Some with 4 speeds, also aJr conditlonhtcJ and automatic models. 1967 MUSTANG HARDTOP Fully l1clory •qu ipp1d incfodinq 1~dio, h11 l1r, good mil•s. !XTJ6lll OUR PRICE $1196 '65 DODGE DART SEDAN 6. aufo., R~H tRffi121). • JUST · ARRIVEb! PINTO RUNABOUT The Brand New Little Car That Opens A New Daar To Big Car Luggage Loads. READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~;,w FORD NEW LTD 4 DR.' SAVE P-¢sc, bit tiTt'S, 400-VS. A-T, P-11tr, ' ~. T-Glass, elec elk, radio, etc. (130-$86300 W·stkr $4924:00·0ur Price $4061 .00 NEW LTD 4 DR. SAVE 400-VS, A-T .. radio, power str .. disc $86200 brakes, 1tir, tint. glass, vinyl roof, elec. clock. fl.'10883) W-stkr $4924.00 Our Pile. $4062.00 New LTD Brou9. 4 dr Hdtp SAVE P-discs. bit tires, 429-VB, A-T, P-11tr, 11ir, radio, T-glass. dlx str whl, whl $90011 cvrs, nylon cpt, etc. 1103503). , W-stkr $5069.75 Our Price $4169.64 N!r'v.f~~T.b1 ~~1? ... s!~!N •. SAVE discs, air. radio, T-glass, whl cvrs, $74595 nylon cpl, etc. (100964). W·stkr $4343.75 Our Price $3597.80 ~~ F100 PICKUP NEW F· 100 STYLESIDE SA VE VS. 11mp & oil gaui;:es, radio, reducrd sound level exhausl, G78x15 tires. $74359 {85158). . w .. tkr $3438.88 Our Price $2695.29 N~!,1!.." ~~Oen~~~?i~ •. xi• SAVE amp & oil gauges, tool box, cruiso-$95389 matic, opt. vacuum bomter, AM-FM stereo. P.S., G78x15 tires, etc. (0651). W0stkr $4150.20 Our Prlte $38'6.31 LARGE SELECTION . 81h ACRES! Row flpoH Roi" of Beautiful N em Cars it nil Trucl« To Plclc YOllR'S From! ~~f T·BIRD NEW 2 DR. LANDAU 429 VS, A·T, P-S, P-discs. vinyl tp, bit tirM, tilt steer., P-seats, air-auto temp cntrl, R )Vind de- Jr®t, P_:!ln,cn. (100014). W-stlcr $7378.00 Our . rice $6025.54 • SAVE $]352 N4~~8. ~T.~~; .. ~~,i~~T!~n-SA VE terior. vinyl root, tilt steer, 11ir •. $115078 T-gl.,,, ,P-wmdow•. bit "'"• "d, aute brk rel, etc. 1111706). 'tV-sttl:r $6561 .00 Our Price $5410.22 N,;wvs.2A-~~:.,~~~~:i;,0~.. SAVE ~pee interior, vinyl root, bit lirl'1", $117908 l1!t strer. llir, T-glass, P-windows, etc. 1111578). W-stlcr 5'609.00 Our Price $5381 .90 N,~~s.2A-~~:s.~!~~~~~n-SA VE terior, bit tirt'S. tilt steer, alr T· $114170 J,:"IB.ss, P-windows, rad, vinyl tp, "'· Jl064:l5J. . W-stkr $6158.50 Our Price $5216.80 I • oj t ................... N~ F-2so cusroM SA v• St~ lrs1dl' P.U. 360 vs. 3 spd .. 1-1.n. F &: R r;pri n~~. spl~t rims. spare tir~. $76087 1<au1<cs. chronlC mirror.;. R. D. rad1-· atnr. (Slk. #00031 ISOJSJJ W-stkr. $3838.77 Our Price $3077.90 N!,~ ,:,2~ vf ~!!~~. ompc. SA VE •1>eo. orniw., P.Dim, '"· AM -fM$109100 stereo, P.S., 2f> gal. tank, spare tire. (80951 l. W·1tkr. $5415.97 Our Price $4124.97 Many to chOose from. '.65 thru '70 Models. Sport roofs, formats, 2 door & 4 door hardtops &~SH!on. Full po"Ver, air conditioning. Wo'1'anties avaUable. EXMlfLES: 7 TO ~HOOSE FROM 17 1970 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOORS (7) Color 1•ltclion, fully ••condilion1d, qood mil11. VI. 111!0., P.S., hrt. So,,.1 w/ttGioi. City of Co1!1 M111 111111•lur"''l104121) ( 10412&! fl0.tB25) ( 105124) l 1053241 1104127) I 1051211. OUR PRICE $1696 "67 FALCON SEDAN 6 cyl .. R&H. automatic. new paint-Good miles CVDE231 ) "65 MUSTANG V8, auto., P.S .. radio. htater. r NNY023 J '67 V.W. St;IUAREIACK Fully Pquipped, R&H, 4 speed. (TRK266J '67 PONTIAC $1296 LeMans 2 dr. H.T .. V8, "66 FORD WAGON Country Sedan. 10 pass., VS. RUio .. P.S., R&H, air cond. ! S\\'G2391 ~196 "68 RANCHERO P.U. $1796 VB, auto., P.S., R&H. factory air. Recond. Good miles. (TI 121DI '65 FORD WAGON Country Sedan. VS, 3 speed. Priced "68 TORINO 2 DR. H.T. $1496 to ""· Good mil.,. -\ (219905) · 2 Dt. H.T.·Orig. thru-out. V8, auto., _______ ...,____ PS., Fact &.i'r, vtnvl roof. {RGV62:i) auto., P.S., R&H. air cond. (VEP174J. "70 PONT GRAND PRIX $3796 2 Dr. H.T. R&H, auto., air, P.S .. \.\•arranty avllilablt. Good miles. (993BSWJ "66 PLYMOUTH Satellltc 2 dr. H.T. VS, 4 speed, R&:H. good miles. (SBY581 ). "70 MUSTANG H.T. V8, auto., R&H, power steering, factory air. Fac-tory warranty available. Low miles. (498AGDJ. ~t"/it;\}i~rs .. vinyl l -6-.5--M-ER_C_U_R_Y_P-.A-'!K_LA_N_E----~$~8~9~6= $2696 '67 MERCURY COMET $996 ··6·3·-COMET 522 METEOi · CycJont. 2 Dr. 1-1.T. V8. auto .. P.S., R&FI, good R(!Canditioned VS ('ni:: .. rt'built miles. <TX1'655) auto. I rans, R<, po"•er stttr1ng. (FLY518 l. . "70 .FORD LlD s3296 2 dr. H.T. Arpx. 14,000 · milr.~. VR. au1 d. P.S., R&H. " ' ' vinyl.roof. air. ·warr. avan. 1975BEM) "68 DODGE CHARGER VJ!, Rulo., P.S., R&H. arrx. 13.000 miles. \Val"r. available. (XEW984 l .. •• SALES DEPT. HOURS I .o\M To t .PM MON·FRI I AM To6 PM SAT I 0 AM To 6 PM SUN I hit l'r1C111 Q.1114 fir 1J ,...,.._ c..r. hlllld ..... ,., ..... PARTS-SERVICE HOURS • 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUE-FRI I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS f •