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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-03-19 - Orange Coast Pilot7 -· ------ • Poliee Use TV In Nabbing iMedie ,ft1Jees Stricli.en On Sex Charges Girl to Hospital • DAILY PILOT ~Ollll e1ze * * * 1oc * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAltCH 19, 1971 \IOL. '4, NO. U, 4 Sl:CTION1, '4 l'AOrl Candid Ca111era .But Subject Didn't Smih • .. .._.... ' WASHINGTON (UPJ.) -A 52-year,.ld doctor has been charged with tile atttmpted rape of a drugged patient af~ police observed the alleged attack on a pll!lted closed circruit television system- Thf: alleged assault took place Feb. 25 while Dr. John t.. Avery was mak· ing a house call on a ~year-old patient at her suburb&n Montgomery County, Md., .apartment. Judge Calvin R. Sanders Thursday ordered Avery. held for ·grand Jury ac- tion and released him on a •10;000 property bond. · According to testimony by County Medical Examiner Belden Reap, Avery gave the woman two injections in the arm. She last consciousneu in two or three minutes. Reap said Avery partially .undressed the woman, "finally pushing her back pnto the couch." Two police detectives signaJed by Reap then entered the apartmertt to make the' arrest. The stakeout was set up in the woman's apartment as a result or an in· cident with the same doctor earlier this year. On that occasion she allegedly sought to determilie from a local hospital what cauud her to loSe consciousness after he administered medication to her. · · The camera, which measurtd 4x6x2 inches was planted In a shoe box on 1 table ln the efficiency apartment. Reap said the two detectives did not watch the allq:ed assault out .of "modesty." Senate Committee Vote s To Re store Funds for SST WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senat. Appropriations (',ommitt.ee ignored. House repudiation of federal financing of the 1upenonic transport (SST) today and voted fundl to continue development of the controversial plane. The tJ..5 committee vote meam the l!lsue will be fought nut on the Senate noor. probably next week. Heavy pressures from the airline Industry. the White House and orgilnited _labor were being eserled on the plane's behitlf. The House voted 215 to 204 Thursday ,,. Cout Weather It'll be 1 weekei'ld In write the follµ back east about-sunny skies .after midmorning. with tempera· turts ranging from 72 locally to BZ in mid..county. INSWE TODAY Thert U a 11niqut art ga llt:T'fl In Nt:wport Beach whlcli 'hol04 scu~ptu re a$ 1/ each pitce were « jt1cel. Rtad nbout ic in th.ii week's \Veekendl!!r. ... 11.. n Ctlllel'-.I• • Cll.e.tlftt Ut t Cl111lfltf n .44 CMMc1 11 c ... 11..,. 1s 0.11~ Nelk" II Dt¥1f't" 11 hl1'9rlll ,..,. 6 l'lltlllll l'to'1 MINk"°' U Alllll.IH!f9n IJ Mllllltr f MtrrlotM 1.11:..,Mt 1f ,.....,i., )1·1' Mllfvlt 'llflfl. 71 NlfWlll Ntw1 4-J 6r•llff t..lllf1 11 ."'"'lllltl Holl s,1 ... i. ... n.r ,. a,em ,.,,, Sten ,_.nett Jt.tt Ttt.¥11-.. It TMl!trl Jt•!I' Wntfltr • W..M'f NMrt ll•U .... Ml ...... '" w........... u.• against spending any more government money to develop two prototypes of the faster. than. sound transport after March 30, when present authorization ·ends. Emerging from--the hoW"long. closed 'Appropriations meeting. Sen. William ProXmire (0-Wls.), leader of the Senate fiitit against the SST, told reporter!' "now we'll go back to the ooor." Aslt.ed if ,the prospects for eliminating flll"ldJ for the SST were good. Pro1mire sak!: "We hope IO, we don't know. It's very close.·• The Senate defeated a proposal to continue funding the SST project late l{lal session ,by a narrpw margin, ~ut 0Ji1rfil2ents of the project cautklned that th~ w Senate line-up might re.verse l,he Ho e action. Republican and Democratic leaders of the·Senate agreed today the House vote Thursday dims the chances that tile Senate will vote to keep the project alive . Democratic leader Mike Mam:fielff told reporters the SST ''doesa't look too lively at.the moment." Mpliblican leader Hugh Scott udd the projttt was "not e1aclly advanced '' by the adverse House action. Both leaders made their statement!: prior to the Senate committee actloii, however. A White House aide said Preaident Nixon waa "naturally dl.sappointed" a~ the House acUC>n •killing 1 $13' million appropriation to continue the project uni ii June 30. But the .11lde 1ald, "the President is · hopeful tbal the Senate will re.store the funds for the prototypes.'' Sen. William Pronnlre ( 0 . W t 11 . ) , leading the battle agalnst the plane, ceutioned mpporter1 "the SST 11 1UU very" much 1llve." fSHSsf', Pa1e %l • n '. War-weary Vrets Back From Laos SAIGON (UPl)-Another 1,CKXI batt1e- "'1eary survivors of the rapidly shrinking South Vietnamese task forct in Laos flew back tod11;y to Khe Sanh , leavia& fewer than 15.CKXI men inside Laos, military sources sakl. Khe Sanh itself was attacked tw ice today by Communill artillery and rockets. Jumping from U.S. helicopter s, the !IOldiers kissed the ground and embraced buddi~. tears 11treaming down their dus- ty. grimy faces. One of them 11ald1 "We had been fighting for lix weekll In Laos. We would rather surrender than light any more." There was no official report tt>?t the Laotian incursion was coming to an end. but field reporUI said 20 South Vietnamese anny trucks pulled away from the Ham Nghi headquarters of the operational command near Khe Sanh today with furniture, radios and ~quip­ ment. A spoke!tnan called the move •·rotation" but declined to elaborate. Spokesmen in Saigon admitted the sharp reduction in troop 1treagth and said no South Vietnamese bases re. mained north or French Colonial Foute 9. once the axis of the drive across the Ho Chi Minh Trail. At one time Lhe 24.000 men in Laos manned fire support baees and 1an~ing rones north and south of the road. Ten such basea have been abandoned . Field report!: aaid American helicopters brought out the. 1.000 defenders o( Fire Base Brown today. Brown. 12 miles inside Laos was the westernmost ARYN position after ot'.her evacuations· Their farthest point in· Laos now ii Firebase A Luoi, 10 miles along Highway 0. The base has been under attack for several days. The farthest penetr11llon wu Sepone . 27 miles inside Laos. Conflicting reports on the Laotian cam- paign made · it diffjcu1t for observer• in northern operational bases and !..i Saigon to explain clearly what was going on in Laot. For e1ample, field report.I sa id Brown was evacuated toda y bul 1 South Vietnamese spokesman in Saigon said battle report!! were recti\·ed rrom there as late as noon . The Saigon sf>okesman told cor- respondenUI at the daily briefing that 2.000 to 3,000 South Vietnamese troopi had been pulled out of Laos In lhe past 48 hours, reducing Saigon'• com· milment across the border to about 18.000 men, Field report.a 1a.id 1e·oeral thousand other troopa nad been removed without announcement and !here were !Set LAOS, Pa .. II • • r1son a Ill " 'I ·- ' . • • Bis Just Desserts • . # • t i ' -.... ~ ~ ' . i I ..j ' \11'1 ,,~ The ta.rget was creamed. Rely Schmid of St. Louis sticks out his tongu ~ to ""Sample the fruit of his labors' after volunt'eering to be a target for pie throwers at the Moolah Shrine .Temple's circus kickoff party to raise funds for crippled children. · Co sta Mesa Officer Races Stricken Girl to Ho spital A Costa Mesa policeman raced gtavely Ill baby to a hospital today, after hi!: mother , and fatfter stopped al 1 radar traff~1peed · chee;kpoint to aik directions. Officer John C. White ordertd Mrt. Sheena !dl!n, of 3087 Platte Drive, lnto h\1 car end aped three miles through ru11h hour traffic to C.OSta Meu Memorral Hoopltal. Physicians checked Zella T. Eden. 2'1. and delermlned tha t she cOUld be . ! ' a tr1n11ferred to Hoag Memorial Hotpltal for care by her family doctor. Hoipital spoke•men listed her tn auarO- ed condiUOll •nd under obse"ation thls morning. · The baby's mother told police 1 she wa1 afraJd the convulsJng infant had obtained poison or 1otten Into aome type of medicine. Hoeg Memorial Hoapltal pediatricians said later they were uncertain wb111t was et lault, or whether It m11ht be a natural lllneu. , I ., .... . ' Pen Victim Stabbed 13 Times FrGm Win Services VACA VILLE -Vlolenc.e plaguln&' the state prison system erupted her e again at the California Medical Facility, with one convict dead and another from Orange County charged wllh his murder. Only three of Neal H. Baalke'1 10 years on an assault with a deadly weapon conviction remained when he allegedly murdered a fellow inmate Wendesday. He now faces the prospect ot life behind prison walls. Horrified fellow convict!! and 11taff personnel watched Wednesday as Lloyd R. Jarrett was knifed 13 times in the prison's main corridor. Baalke was identified as the assailant, but the brutal stabbings Md the reaso!ll behind it remained under inve!ligation today. A prison officer l&id today racial con. tlict that has marked violence in other facilities -prtmarily San Quentin and Soledad -was not a factor. "Both men are caucasians," he said, ''The matter ii !till under investigation ... A complaint charging Baalke with Jar- rett's murder was Issued Thursday bf Dmrict Attorney Tony Vellante. One of Each For Marriage SACRAMENTO !UPI) -A bi ll requiring appllcanls for a marriaee lice]\R to . ,obtain • doctor'• certificalt: officially stating their Sex was introduced Thursday by Assemblyman Alister McAllster (0-San Jose). "This bill 13 neceM&ry because . there have been e<;casions whe.n county clerks have been unable to determine. by mere visual observation, the llU ol a m8.rrlage license applicant," said McAllster. "Occasionally an applicant wUl masque.rade •s a• member of the opposite sex." He said "all of our marriage, property and inheritance laws are based on the premise that a vaU4 ·marriage can e:tist -only belwetn persons of oppo1ite auea." ""J'his bill will make certain th•t marriage licenses ara nOt Im· properly ISBued by lnld\terteru;t to peraona of the same au.•• • I I ~ 'OA1l Y PILOI Newport Has -First 'Visit • By l{rishna ' llJ' IQ.jNNE llEYNOLDS . or.• Dtlrt Plle1 Sltff KrbluDa, ~ousness came to Newperi'.:B..m Thurtday. Two "'!l.ttroD-n>bed member• of the Lag1111a e.a<'h ~ 1'ell&ioua cull hand· ~ Ol1t lltira~~ 1n the Newport Pier b~· "'"' and In the Via Udo shop, ping area. They accompanied their solicllltion with chanUng and cymbal playing. The O'OUP'• appearance in Newport capped a minor city hall controversy during which ci1y officials sought fruitJtssly for a means ol dtnying tbe cllanl!Dg and · alnglng cullilll a permit. for soliciting In thtir city. City Manager Hal'\ley L.'Hurlburt sign- ed the certificate March 9 after Clty Attorney Tully Seymour submitted ~ opinion ·that to de.ny tbem a permit would be a violatfoll or· tbeir CoNutu4 tlonal rights. OfCicialiy known as U\e International Society of Krishna Consciousness, a bona fide religious sect, the cult has been active in Laguna Beach for over about a year and a half. Their public appearance.ii: w.ually feature chanting, drum and cymbal playing, as well as the sale of reading material about their Hindu beliefs. Merchants in Laguna Beach claim the commotion created by the men disturbs their customers and hav! sought to h•V1! their pefmit rescinded. Their appearance in Newport Thursday apparentJy caused little commotion and police noted they Jogged no protests from businessmen. PB.Mersby watched briefly or took a pamphlet and then moved on. Bminess in surrounding stOres did not seem to be affected. One of Thursday's soliciters, who ask· ed to remain unidentified, said they were surprised at the good reception they had received. "There is a great hunger in Newport Beach. The people want to turn away from materialism," he said. "We will come back probably Friday or next week with all the boys," he added. The indication w8.9 that while Newport residents were willing to accept the literature, they were not as quJck to donate to the cult. 'fhe expansion efforts of the Krishna sect have not been limited exclusively to Newport Beach. They have applied for a permit to solicit in Costa Mesa also. Car Agency Fire Loss $100,000 Fire did an estimated $100,000 damage to a La Habra automobile agency Thurs- day. Destroyed in the blaze at the Richard Werren lifotors, 910 E. \\'bittier Blvd ., were two customers cars, tools and office equipment. Firemen said the fire was started by a faulty office heater and burned out the service department. Labor Party Soars LONDON (AP) -A Gallup Poll today ahowed the Labor party 12 perctntage points ahead of the Conservative govern- ment in popularity. This was an increase of 4.5 points In the past month. Gallup said the govemmenrs popu larity had been hit by the unsettled economic oullook and rising unemployment. ou1••• COAST DAILY PILOT Hlllltl .. t:M ..... --.. Oas: ta OIANGI COAST PVllllHINO COMPANY l •b•rt N. We~ Pr•~! 11'1d P'ubll.,.,.. J1cl JI. Cvrl•T Viet l"mio.it 111111 c;IMl'11 Mtfltttf' n.011111 k 1t'l'it Ed(IOI' 111-•t. A. M11r,1i~~• M ..... ltie &di.,. Chsrl11 H. l10• l i1h1r4 '· N.ll NfllM"I MIMtlnf lclllW\ ....... (Mtl """"* .no w.r .. ., ltr'ltt filft'llD\"t 1 .. c11~ :am "-' tou~rtl UOye,t a.di: m l'-1 A- H1111tltlfltoll ••di: 11111 hid! levlf'l'e,. s.n ci-i.o •· Ntrtll El tltnln9 !U"I • Friday, Mmh lCJ, 1971 HuffaPuffa Bruce Peek, 13, oC Tamura School, puffs away on his tuba during live· ly performance of Dixieland melody entitled "Tailgate Concerto." Bruce was one of 60 young musicians who performed for Fountain Valley school trustees Thursday night. Ex-patient Testifies Against Psychiatrist A former patient at Dr. Harold Day'.s Capistrano By The Sea hospital in Dana Point testified Thursday Jn Orange Coun· ty Superior Court that the psychiatrist warned him he would be put ''under r estraints" if he tried ta leave the facill· ty. Charles Willlams, 31, of Long Beach, told the jury in Judge R o n a I d Crookshank's courtroom that the con· trontation occurred in late August or 1965 when he and his wife told Day the psychiatric treatment was worthless and should be terminated. "I told him I didn't think we were nuts and we didn't need to enter a mental hospital," Williams testified. He explained that he and his wife Barbara, 29, consulted Dr. Day about their marital problems with no orlglnal intention of entering the hospital. _The complaint filed by the couple asserts that Dr. Day had strait jackets in mind when he allegedly intended to prevent them from leaving his hospital Williams testified that he was give.n- 1 "special shot" at a time when bis ttlatlves were about to visit him and when he was demanding that he be allowed to leave the hospital he entered voluntarily. ''I mnt back to my room and then I blacked out," he sald. "When I came Fro1n Page 1 SST • • • "On the noor of the Senate the division on the Jssue has been very close," Prox· mire said. "It Is possible that the House vote will give us just the advantage we need to win, bul victory against the SST is far fr om certain." An informal UPI poll of the Sena~. completed just before the House voted, backed up Proxmlre's assessment of a close vote, whi ch will come probably next week. The poll sho.,..·ed 48 votes against future funding of the SST: 45 supporters or the jetliners; two Senators leaning for the project, three against; and two absentees. lo J was surrounded by fellow patient.!, doctors and nurses.'' \Villiams and his wife seek $650,000 In damages from Dr. Day on their malpractice charges. They claim that f\.irs. \Villiams' subjection to electro- shock treatments led to a stroke and left her crippled. The attractive plaintiff wore a brace on her right leg in court Thursday but it produced an attack from defense at- torney \\'allace Reed who told the jury that Mrs. Williams did not wear the brace "when she participated in water likiing and snow skiing." He described Williams as • • 1 pathological liar" and defended Or. Day as a psychiatrist who operated according to •·accepted standards of psychiatry in the community." 'Deposit' Suspect Of Cost,a Mesa Faces New Counts New robbery charges today faced a Costa ~esa man jailed 11 days ago after .,41'1egedly depositing proceeds from anA'it ,000 market stickup in the same bank that issued it. Complaints charging Robert J. Clemas, 21, of 2070 Federal Ave., Costa Mesa, with three more counts of armed robbery v.·ere being sought this morning. He is accused of Dec. 17 and Feb. 24 holdups at the same Tic Toe f\.farket, 1913 Pomona Ave., near his home, ac· cording to Detective Jim Blaylock. Clemas is also charged with a Garden Grove liquor stou holdup, in addition to the Bargain Basket robbery of March 5 that led to his arrest. The suspect made a $1,000 cash deposit the following Monday at a Bank of America branch three blocks from the robbed store and a teller recognized the neatly bundled cash. C1emas also lived only three blocks from the market robbed of $11.000 and only a short dista nce further from the corner store struck twice in two months. Potted P.lant Clirist1nas Tree Idea Squelched CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) -"There wasn't anything real unusual about the guy,'' a police detective testified. ''exC«'.pt he was standing there hitchhiking with a five-foot marijuana tree over his shoulder ." Well. yes. admitted de!endant Kerry A. Luchsinger, but there v.·as a perfectly innocent explanation. He was just taking the pol plant ho1nc for a Christmas tree. Luchsingu. 24, said he was plying his trade as 1 termite uterminator at a St. Petersburg house last Nov. 27 v.·hen he spotted this copse of shrubs ln the back yard. Being fresh home from military service In Vietnam. whe.re marijuana is plentilul and grows v.1ld. he recognlzed the shrubs for \\'hat they v.·ere. fl y,·as getting on toward C'hrilstma1 Ume. Other folks "'ere lugging home lhe' traditional pines, \\~y not be dil- ferent? Why not make an ersatz Chri.~:tmas ltte out of a properly trln1med pol plant? SO be uprooted a five-footer, flung It aver his Moulder and started thumblni a lift on a main thoroughfare. A car with two men stopped. "What's that you got there?" asked one, helping Luchsinger and hi.! load Into the automobile. •·Marijuana," said Luchsinger. "I'm taking it home for a Christmas tree." Grateful for the lift. he snapped off a piece of his shrub and offered it to one of the men. Wh11t h11ppen"'d next was enough to shake your faith in Santa Claus. The two men Jn lhe car were plainclothes detecllve.s. They placed Luchsinger under arrest. Luchsinger pleaded guilty Thursday to a charge of dispensing marijuana. Pen- ding a prestntence investigalion. Circuit Judge Ben f . Overton allowed him to return to bis job with the exttrminating company. No charges were brought against the owner of the house where the pot ph11nts grew. An unsuspecting middle aged COO· pie, police s11id, tltey had hired some hippie-types to do repair \\'Ork some weeks before Luchsinger plucked bis Christmas tree, and the conclusion WA• obvious. I •• Cat1ap Wiped Out 400-600 Perish In Peru Slides IJMA, Peru (UPI) -A maS!ive land!llde sparked by heavy rain fell inlo a mountain Jake in northeast Peru Thursday and ensuing floods wiped out a mining camp with heavy loss of lite, police said Friday. "The number of deaths ascend Lo ap- prontnately 400 to 600 out of a total of 1,000 miners," a regional police spokesman said. A spokesman in Lima for the Chungar :P..fining Co., which operated the camp, said It had "practically disappeared" under tons of water. He said SO lo '10 miners had been hospit.allzed in nearby towns and villages. The company spokesman said the disaster occurred about 9 a.m. Thursday when the rains dumped a hillside into Lake Yanahuin, in Pasco Department ISO miles northeast of Lima, forcing lake waters out of their banks and burying camp installations under ton.s of water. The spokesman said he had been in contact v.·ith the camp just before the disaster but that its radio transmitter had subsequently gone off the air. He said the Peruvian-owned mines produced about 240 tons a day of lead and copper. A police spokesman from the 2nd region said local police and miners from nearby camps were engaged ln rescue work throughout the day and night. Ad· ditional police reserves were dispatched to the scene from Lima· Government authorities said details of the tragedy were still sketchy because of the inaccessibility of the campsite on a mountain ridge . They said the camp was a good eight to nine hour car ride from Lima and that previous communications with the area had been maintained through the mine radio, ap- parently "''ashed out. Early reports indicated, hov.•ever , that camp offices, plants. warehouses, shops and other installations all were sub- merged. Injured were being sent to other mining From Page 1 LAOS • • • were less than 1$.000 there now. Khe Sanh. the big American helicopter base 12 miles inside Vietnam. was hit tv.·ice today by Communist gunners in their most accurate attark in four days of shelling. 'l'he guns. spparenUy firing from close to the demilitarized zone (DMZ) a few miles to the north Jobbed about 30 shells into Khe Sanh this afternoon , some hil· ting inside the perimeter and wounding at least one American. Another 3{) rounds hit the base shortly after nightfa!l but there was no report on casualties or damage. Field commanders said the 1.000 South Vietnamese infantrymen based al Fire Base Brown had been flown to Artillery Base Delta I, nine miles inside Laos. camp hospitals in Hua ron an d Lapamarca, officials said. All of the campsites border on Lake Yanahuin which is in the Huayllay District o1 Pasco. Four Nabbed .,.In Holdup Of Marine Four young San Clemente area men face charges of armed robbery today for allegedly picking up a Marine before midnight Thursday, driving him around, then robbing him of $5 at the point of a toy gun. The four were arrested shortly after midnight after patrolmen recognized a van described by the holdup viclim. After the victim. John Arthur Garcia, conrirmed the van's identity, officers said they made the arrest near a motel at 2435 S. El Camino Real. They recovered the loy weapon as well. Those booked on suspicion of armed robbery are Charles Randolph Tuttle, 21, of 30643 Calle Chueca, San Juari Capistrano; James P.1ichael Jenkins, 20, of 203 S. Calle Seville; Gary Martin Hagerty, 21, of the same Calle Seville address, and Robert John Norman, 19, of 331 Calle Pescador. All but Tuttle are from San Clementi. Police said Garcia told them this story: The Camp Pendleton :P..1arine had been hitchhiking along th'e 2100 block of S. El Camino Real at 10:37 p.m. wheo a yellow and white van pulled alongside and he accepted a ride. After driving toward the Margarita gate of the Marine base, the driver of the van turned off and began traveling on several side streets. Garcia quoted several of the occupants as saying he was in danger . After Garcia began to protest, police related , the driver of the van pulled onto the 100 block of Calle Junipero . As Garcia exited two young n1en grabbed -tiim; another pulled a gun. Garcia pulled free. but two others grabbed him a few yards away. • Fullerton Cyclist Killed in Accident Philip Degarston. 18. of Fullerton. was killed Thursday when his motorcycle struck a car and slid under another near the entrance to the Hughes Aircraft plant in Fullerton. Police said the cars \vere stopped at Warburton Way making a left turn to the plant. Degarston was dead on arrival at St. Jude Hospital. Ho1pltallzed Louis "Satchmo" Ar1nstrong. 70, the famed gravel-voiced singer and trumpeter, is in cri- tical condition in New York'• Beth Israel Hospital with a heart condition. Story, Page 5. Nixon Requests Emergency Funds For Quake Loans WASlD.NGTON (UPI) -President Nixon today asked Congress for emergen- cy appropriaUons of $265 million, in- cluding $242 million earmarked for Joana to help rebuild earthquake-damaged homes in Los Angeles. The President's siining of a request for a supplemental appropriation for the small business administration was an- nounced by Rep. Barry M. Goldwater Jr. (ft.Calif.). Goldwater said he and Rep. James C. Corman (D-Calif. ), met \\'ith White House officials to discuss the need for the funds and l\ixon had signed th1 request after the meeting. The meeting, Goldwater said, was at- tended by SBA Administralor Thomas s. Kleppe, direct-Or Caspar Weinberger or the office of management and budget, under Secretary Floyd Hyde of the Hous· ing and Urban Development Department. and Gen. George A. Lincoln, director of lhe Office or Emergency Prepared· ness. Up to $2,500 of a loan under the SBA 's emergncy loan program may be forgiven under existing Jaw. Loans can be made for up to 30 years, with paymenls on principal deferred up to three years. Sl1errill Has Arrived For tlie first time, this exceptional line of upliolstery is now available on the we st coast. Sl1er• rill, one of the finest producers of upholstery in the country offe~s you a new experience io viewing qua lity furn iture. An unparalleled selection of styles and fine fabr ics are coupled wit h cre~smen ship unmatched in th is price category. If you are in need of upholstery. be sure to view this exciting collection of moderately priced, qual ity furniture. A Ted von Hemert excJu .. sive. DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXEI: -HERITAGE NEWPORT STORI OPIN ,AIOAY 'TIL t 7Nl11111 NEWPORT BEACH 17::17 WHtclllf Dr., 6-42·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Profe11fon1I Interi or Oesf9ner1 Avallablt-AIO-NSIO LAGUNA BEACH 34S North Cout Hwy. 49~551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 I l " I • \ Dnniingten Beaeh Today 's Flnal N.Y. Steeb EDI TION • YOL IA, NO. 67, 4 SECTIONS, 44' PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 197 1 TEN CENTS Budget Calendar Work Seen Soon. in District By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI lfl9 DlllY ,lief Sti ff Others would co;ll the impending finan · cial'crisis in the Huntington Beach Union High Sch.ool District a disaster. But not Jack Roper, the new superintendent. who bas been on the job since Feb. t. "l am optimistic toward the future and I feel very successful in my career. I have always been a winner ·and 1 would like it to et1ntinue that· way," Co1nmittee Vote s Funds For SST WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate Appropriations C.Ommitttt Ignored House repudJation of federal financing of the -1upersonic transport (SST) today and voted funds to continue development of the controversial plane. T.he 13-5 committee vote means the Issue will be fought out on the Sena~e floor. probably next week. Heavy pressures from the airline industry, the White House and organized labor were being exerted ro the plane's behalf. .. The House voted 215 to 204 Thursday against spending aiiy more government money to develop two prototypes of the faster • than • sound transport after March 30, when pfesent authorization ends. Emergj.ng from the hour-lopg, closed ApproprtatlOns ineetlng, Sen. Wl!liam Proxmire (0-Wis.), leader of tbe. senate fight against I.he SST. told rcporterl •·now we 'll go back to the qoor." Asked if the prospf:et.s (or elimina~ng funds for the SST were good, Protrntre gaid: "We hope ·so, we don't know. It's very close." The Senate defeated a proposal to continue funding the SST proje~t late last session by a narrow margin, but opponents of the project cautioned that the new Senate line-up might reverse the House action. Republican and Democratic leaders of the Senate agreed today the House vote Thursday dims the chances that the Senate will vote to keep th! project alive . Democratic leader Mike ~fansfleld told reporters the SST "doesn't look too lively at the. moment." , . Republican leader Hugh Scott said tht project was "not em~tly advanced" by the adverse House action. Both leaders made their. statem~nts prior to the Senate committee action, however. .d 1 A White House aide said Prest en Nixon was "naturally disappointed:'. at tbe House action killing a $134 m1lho~ eppropriation t-0 continue the project .untiJ June 30. But the aide said. "the President Is hopeful that the Senate will restore the funds for the proto~ypes. '' . Sen. William Proxm1r~ ( D · W 1 s . ) , leading the battle against the plane. (See SST, Paget) Girl Stric ken By Myster y Bug; Vall ey Fund Set A special fund ls being opened in Fountain Valley to help a 12-yur-old girl stricken with a mysterious illness. Tina Kysella, a seventh . grader at Tamura School. has been in a coma sinct Thursday morning. She was rep<rled in "extref"lely ~ritic~l" ctin· dition this morning 1n the 1ntens1ve care ward of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach. Neurosurgeons have been called in but have oot yet been , able to make a diagnogis, ·a medical aide said. Tina is from a family of six children who live at 17451 Santa Lucia St., Foun- tain Valley. Her father, William Kysella. ts a heavy equipment worker but has been out of work for three months. according to Mrs. Allison WeS!ler, a member of the Tamura School PTO. Mrs. Wessler said the PTO. lhe Foun- tain Valley Women 's Club. the Jaycees, and the women's division of the chamber of commerce. were rallying to raife fundg for the child 's medical expenses. "We are getting a wonderful response.'' MNi. Wessler sa id. "But we understand that the bill will run into thousands of dollars and that there is no ineurance." A special account in Tina's name hits betn opened al the Bank of Amerlca branch at 17430 Brookhurst St .. Fountain Valley. Donations •lso may be Jent in care of Tlna Kysella Fllnd, Tam\D't School, 17340 Sanl.3 Suzanne, Fountain Valley. ' the.graying educator said with a sm.lle. The problems facing the district which encompasses 52-square miles . five camp.. uses ·and. one continuation high school, appear overwhelming. Voters turned down a 6kent tax measure earlier thi.S monUi. Th.is would ha've raised the $1.39 ratt to n.08. Instead the rate will drop July 1, to 8~ cents , the maximum allowed by the state without an ovUTide. Roper esl:imates that th.is will mean lopping Butta. P,tiffa S4 million off the district's •t t mllUon budget in order to balance it. , As a result, some of the district's 500-plus teacher• may be let go. Classes may be cut back, as well is busing and special programs. "In the future I see bringing back the district ln terms of Its financial throes and from ita communicatlve pro- blems:, both internally and externally," &aid Roper. "I see bringing the public back into the fold." • DAIL'r li'ILCT , ..... .,.T.,,.,. Cevm1 Bruce Peek, J·3,, of T~ura School, puffs a~ay on· his t9ba during.liye- ly performance of Dootland melody entitled "Tailgate Concerto." Bruce was one. of 60 young musicians who performed for Fountain Valley school trustees Thursday night. Witness Presents Alibi For Hartelius at Trial A Costs Mesa hospital nurse testified Th~sday in the Orange County Superior Court arson-fraud trial of Dr. Ebbe Hartelhll that the physician'• blonde mistress called ~nd asked her if she had ordered rnedical records renecting the doctor's presence at Ule hopsital last April 9. Mrs. Emily Ryan quoted Reba Vaughn as asking her "are you going to fix them?" and told defense attorney Mat- thew Kurilich that she immediately assured Mrs. Vaughn "l'm not going Super Granny, 108 I R !) M E (AP) -Maria lmperiali, Ille womap Romans call Super-Granny, celebrated her 108tb birthday today with 1 feast and in good health. "I am not through with life yet,'' &he said. Sbt bas 21 rreat-grandcbildren. to perjure myself -I wouldn't do that for my own mother." Mr.!. Ryan !!laid the records reneet that Dr. Harteliu11, 50, treated a patient at the Beverly Manor Convalescent Hospital from 8:30 p.m. to nearly t p.m. Kurilich say.! they punch holes in the prosecution's argument that the doctor planned the fire at his Corona de\ Mar offices that night and he further claims that Mrs. Vaughn's -telephone call was an attempt by the C<ista Mesa woman to remove a valuable alibi. The prosecution alleges that Dr. Hartelius asked Mrs. Vaughn's brother Jim Blevins to set the fire at 2345 E. Coast Highway as part of the doctor 's plan to destroy what are described u "highly incriminating patient records." Blevins, 39, hu testified that he did burn the office and he has also told the jury that he helped fake the theft of the doctor's car nine days earlier (See HARTELIUS, Pafe I) Lal!lt week, the 38-year old auperi.n· tendent tlltnUy witnessed a l4f..name lottery which determined the Hniority of those etnployes who may not be rehired next year. "Many of our teachtrs do not realize that admlnistrators were affected in the same way. Tbe drawing included counselors, school nurses, paychologists and even the vict-prlncipals •. The only reason the principals were not included is bec•use I.be district has no prt- bationary principals." Probationary emptoyes. according t& Roper, are those wbo have lest than three years of l!lervice In the district. While .the exact number of lhoae wbo may be dropped from the rolls next July Is not yet known, Roper said he would c;real<! a ·subsUtute pool to offset their losses. "We would 1ive t1ur teachers preference in this pool and they could probably work full time by subsUtutin& at the different campuses,'' he explained. Within the next month, Roper said the board of trustees would begin work on a budget calendar to determine e~ actly what would be-cut from Ule budget and the dollar value of each individual slice. , Under consideration are reducUon. rl the school day to five periods with an optional sixth period, an Increase in the student-teacher ratio. cuts in (See ROPE~. Paae J) Ballot Turnabout Anti-flouride Leader Changes Mind By ALAN DIRKIN ot 1111 Dl llJ l"llet lllff George Lindegren; l~'ader cf the anti· fluoride petitioners that prompted Foun· ta.in Valley to call J. special election ()TI nuoridation · Jltne s: today assailed the special vote as ."a wanton waste cf money." Lindegren had welcomed the election when it was set Tuesday · night, but today he changed his position and said the issue should go on the ballot in the' 1972 general election. He ·delivered a letter urging the council to defer the question to the 1972 eleetlon to city hall today. Mrs. Mary c.ci\e, city clerk. today estimated the cost of a special election at between $5,000 and $6,000. "There's no emergency for fluorida- tion," Lindegren commented. "Therefore we are in no hurry for It to come up before the general election. We feel time is also on our side in that the citizens will have more opportunlty lo weigh the matter from the ecological atandpoint.'' He was referring to recent conuntnll from Dr. Jack McKee, an erivironmental health engineer with the California InsUtute of Technology, Pasadena, wha indicated that water in Souther II California generally had enough natural fluoride in it that increasing the level may not 'Produce a significant im· (See FLUORIDE, P11e ll Valley School Khe Sanh Attacked For Crippled .1,000 Weary S. Viets 'fd1fiet'Booi · :., ·B~t~r~r.ro~LaosBattle Official; of the Founloin vau,y ~hoPl ' DiBtitct ·t r• wrltLni letters \Oday to 11 ... ~ . 1tate a<naton in an ~ort lo .hurry SAIGON (UPll-Anolber 1,000'bettlO- up funds for to:nstruction of '& crippled wear)' 1urvivorg of tbe1'1ptd)y 1hrinltln1 children's achool. SOutb Vietnamese task fora ln L6oi: Mike Brick, district superintendent, flew back today to Khe Sanh. leavirtg told school trustets Thursday 'nlght, that fewer than 15,000 meri inside Laos. an emera:enc;y bill L9: npw . in the hands: military sources slid. Khe Sanh, ltl!lelf of the state Senate Education Committee WU attacked twice today ·bY CominUnist which could release · bond money for artillery and rockets. special schools. Jumping from U.S. helicopters , the "If it pas1e11 the aenate and ~ldiers kissed the ground and embraced the governor's signature. we think .we'll buddies, tears streaminl down their dus- eet money for our achool,'' Brick 1ald. ty. grimy faces . Onfl of tbein said, The school he want11 to · build ls a "We had been fighting for six weeks $1.1 million combination elementary In Laos. We would rather surrender school and orthopedically handicapped than fight any more." tcl_lool . .It could serve 1.20 handicapped There was no official report that the children and 3tXl_ other children. Laotian Incursion was coining· t.o an . The orthopedic school would · include end, but field report.'! !!laid 20 South e!ght classr~ms designed for han-Vietnamese army trucks pulled away d1capped children and. 10 standard from the Hain Nghi headquarters of c!_ass~ooms. Educators ~ill use the com• the operatiOnal command near K_he. ~anh b1~at1~.n to help handicapped children today with furniture, radios and equlp- m1r with norm~! youngsters. ~ ment. A spokesman called the move The school w1!l also !~Jude a medically "rotation" but declined to elaborate. gtaffed out-p~t1ent cl~1c for the ban-Spokesmen in Saigon admitted the dicapped children with the medical personnel supplied by the county Health Department. Orthopedic youngsters would come tG the school from all five elementary school distric~ within the Huntington Beach Union High School District. Youngsters from the Newport-Mesa Unified School District also wouJd attend the schoool. Plans for the 1ehool recently hit a snag when state officials ran out of money for special schools. Block Firing Range FUJI YOSHIDA . Japan (AP) -Riot police today hauled away dozens -of fanners blocking the ro:ad to .a U.S. Marine firing range al the foot of Mt. Fuji, Japan's sacred mountain. Trial Delayed For Hunting ton Man In Search The arraignment of a Huntington Beach man on charges of grand theft. forgery and conspiracy bas been delayed while the FBI gearches for a miSllitig Newport Beach sfockbroker and his wife. JUdge Eugene Langbauser of the Cen· tral Oran&~ County Judicial District Court set April 21 as the new date for the arraignment of James Shipley, former vice president Of Work! Financial Ttends. 1harp reduction tn •. trobp ~ ... Siid no South Vtetnamest base. r~ malned north of French C.O\onial Routl t, · once the &Xis · t1f the driVe acrost the Ho Chi Minh Trail. At <me timt the 24,000 men in Laos manned fire s1:1pport bases and landing zone!! north and south of the road. Ten such hlaea have been abandoned. Field reports said American helicopters brought out the 1,000 defender• of Fir& Base Brown today. Brown, 12 milea insi~e Laos was the westernmost A"RVN r.:sitlon· after otJ\er evacuations· Tbeir rthest point Jn Laos now is Fireba!itl A Luoi, 10 miles along Highway 9. Thi base hils been under attack for several '!'lays. The farthest perietraUon wu $epone. 27 mile! inside Laos. Conflicting reports on -the Laotian cam'.. paign. made It difficult for observers in north'ern operational bas~ 81ld ~ Saigon· to explain clearly what was going on in Laos. For example, •field report.a said Brown was evac_uated ·today but; a 5-0uth Vietnamese spoke!lman in Saigon said batUe reports ,were received from there as late as noon. The Saigon gpokesman told CO?• respondents at -the dally briefing thii.t 2,000 to 3,000 South Vietnamese troops had been pulled out of LaM In Ute pa.st 48 bour1. reducing Saigon's corg,- mltment across the border to ab~t 18,000 men. Field reportg said several thousand other troopa-bad been removed without announcement and there we.re were less than 15,000 there now. Khe Sanh. the big AJ\lerican helicopter base 12 mUe.s i.aslde Vietnam, was hit twice today by Communist gunners tn their most accurate attack in four days or shelling. 'The guns. apparently firing from close to the de.militarized zone (DMZ) a few miles to the north lobbed about :m shells !See LAOS, Paae I) Homeowners Air \Tiews He Is being held on $150,000 while the search conUnues for Mt . and Mrt. Joseph Dulaney, who were also involved with Shipley aod the investment firm. Inve&tigators hope thal when court aclion Is launched agajnst Shlpley. 38, of 16951 LoWell Circle, they will be able to place him in the courtroom with Dulaney, 37, and bis wife, Marlene, 31. The couple faces identical charges. Oraage Hu1itington Council Orde rs Hearing on Gooe y Dump Homeowners who have blamed the Ste,1erson brothers' mud dump for of- fefllive . odort In southeast Huntington Beacti will get . a chance to air their complaintg to councilmen Monday nighl. The city council will hold a public ~aring in the Edison Hl&h ScbOOI caleterla at 7:30 p.m. to determlne whither a public nuiltanct eslsLs. The hearina will be conducted at an adjourned meeting of the council which will i.Jlow the councilmen to order a civil action against' the operatoni if suf- ficient evidence ii pr!'sented. City Attorney Don Bo]lfa. who will handle the ta'kin( of deposition! from homeowners, has Indicated that the coun- cil could call for the Steverson• ·to abate an alleged nu1sance. Joaeph Stevtrson, who operates th• 39-acre dump behind the Southern California Edison Company gtaUon with his brother Corl. uid today that he would attend the hearing. He also wUI be represented by altorney William Carllon. 1 Steverson algo reported today on It· tempts to clean up the dump -used for ihe deposit of rotary mud from oil well drilling operations at H11milton Avenue and Magnoli$1 Street. His men have been using a spr.y, co~sistlng of dried bacteria cultures. In efforts to clean the ooiina mass or crude oil 1nd mud, 80 feet deep ln parts. The spray i$ being t0ld to (the Steversons by Gerald. C1• . .8awtt Inc. of Orange. Tbe firm clalnu thAt the Uny bugg wlll e3t •II dead org11.nic mat· ter, includina the oil. and leave behind water tJ'lat can ht dr'ained off and a highly organic soil. Steverson said that the total cost of this program would· be S73.000. It It believed ffie cleanup would take a y'ear. "We have been doina it in 1tages. '' Stever5on ·commtnted. "We have three ponds ()Ut there. Ont Is 1howin1' good rt.sultl Already." The city council h•s Jlready rtcelved 1 300-name petition 'charal:n·g the dunip is a daneer to chlldrtn as an attr1ctiVe nul!an« and a health huard ~use of the odors. The county . Air Pollution Control Di>trict, tl)rough the distlicl .altotney:• QUJce, alretdy has flled ad iclion aaainst. th< Slev'!ton• chlf'glni tl)at • .. l"'bl\c n\tlsanc' -existed Jan. t when wiitu, from an oll refinery were alltl~Y left 11 lbe dump. A nationwide hunl for the' Dulariey1 he1an eight wee'ks ago when investigators learned that the eoUple bad been seen in Dulaney'• birthplace of Flora, Ill .• altec thelr rttum from W~st Germany. The Dulane.ya went to Europe in Oecember, 1969. An investigation of the now dtfunct World Financial Trenda complex in Laiuna Hills and Seal Beach revealed apparent frauds o! mOre than '3 million, authorillet claim. _ P'BI ..agents are confident Wday thlt they are clo1iq I.be~' a on the Dulaneys Who were. i,!1Yt!lti tP,rl saY, · 1eet1 just thrte week• •IO in lor1dO. Inv1stlg1£on blilleVt that mMt than 300 .lnv.e11tor1. UtenY of tMJn reaidettt! qf Ille .LtlJ.,. WorJd . relirew••l. com· munlties in SUI lie~ and Lal'W Hill• wert defrauded by oper1to'r11 6f tM World Financial Tttllds orftnluUon. . ' ' ~ . . . • Weather It'll be · a weekend to wrilt tht folks bac:k east~ about-sunnY skies after midmorning, with U:mpera- tureg ritnging from 72 locally to 81 in mid-county. INSIDE.TODAY There ·u • ulliqut art gc1Uu11 in Nt.wport Beech whkh show& •rculp,Ur4'! M if tach piecl! were 11 ;t~t. Rend about it in thil wet.k'J Wtckrttder. ·• ' . • • l I ' I ' 'I J :J ~y PILOT H Frldfly, Marth 19, 1971 I Candid Camera ·But Subject Didn't Smile WASlllNGTQN iUPll -A II-year.old doctor hu beta chu1ed with t1>e atwnpted njll ol a dnllied paUent al1U pollce obMtVed U.e all'led atlack on a plMted cioted circuJt television systtm. The alleged assault took place Feb. 2$ wltlle Dr. John L. Avery w11 rn&k· Ing a house call on a 20-year-old patient al ber auburban Montgomery County, Md., apartment. Judie Calvin R. Sanders Thursday ordeffii Avery held for grand jury ac- tion and released him on a $10,000 property bond. According to testimony by County Medical Examlntr Belden Reap, Avery gave the woman tv.·o injtclions in tbe arm. She IOBt consciousness in two or thrff minutes. Reap said Affry part11lly undressed the woman, "finally pushlna htr back onto the couch." Two pollct detectives signaled by Reap then entered the ap1rtment &o make the arrest 'Mle stakeout was set up in the woman's apartment as a result of an in· cidtnt "'Ith the same doctor earlier this year. On that occaskln she allegedly 90!Jihl to determine from a local hospital what caused her to lose consci-Ousness after he adminislered medication to her. The camera, which me1sUttd 41611 inches w1s planted in 1 shoe box on a table In the efUclency apartment. Rtap said the two del«Uves did not watch the alleged aasault out of "mode1ty." Krishna Sect Soliciting Alms in Newport Beach By'JOANNE REYNOLDS Cl tlll Diiiy 1'1191 St1fl Krishna Consciollaness came to Newport Beach Thursday. Tv.•o saffron-robed members of the Laguna Beach based religious cult hand· ed~ out literature in the Newport Pier business area and 1n the Via Lido &hop- ping area. They accompanied their solicitation v.•ith chanting and cymbal playing. The group's appearance in Newport capped a minor city hall controversy during which city officials sought fruJtleasly far a means of denying the chantlnf and slngl.ng cultista a perntlt toe soliciting in thtir city. • From Pagel ' FLUORIDE • • • J?rovement in the prevention of tooth decay. • The ,Environmental Council in Hun· tlngton Beach contacttd Dr. McKee for his statistics ... on nuoridauori.-after -the ~•ironmental group was asked to study \he question . • Mrt. Mar1aret Carlberg, bead of the Environmental COuricll, explained itclday tblt the group wouJd not mike a recom- mendation on fluoridation to the Hun- tington Beach council, but would simply 1resentl eVidence that ml1tit not have ~n t corisldertd when t6e council •ulhoriled fluoridation in 1 t-l vote Aug. 17. Uespite his position today, Llndegren's 1roup had tried to collect enoup tignatures In Fountain Valley for a il>ecial election. , After the signatures were cerWled, ~Y fell 113 short of the 1,47' (15 rcent of the registered voters ) needed a special election. Then percent were uired to put the quesUon on lbe neral election ballot. EThe council dec ided Tuesday night, wever, to call a spttial election with ncilman Ron Shenkman commenting t the petitioners had "done their pk." •1The only councilman to oppose this w:lian was John Harper, who bas always 91posed tbt. Fountain Va11ey council's fllproval of nuorldaUon. He said the 11atter could best be h1ndled at the if72 genera] ,election. :JI'he question to be put to voters June l:fwill be whether the city council should tsve the power to add fluoridea to local llµplies or whether the action should fast be .submitted to lbe electorate. I ou•• ,co4at DAILY PILOT OltAHOI COAST PtllLl~lltG COMPAH't •·Mr+ H. we., '....w.nt ..... ~ ...... J•ck " c.,f.f Viet '1a1Hi!t ... ~ ~ n."' •• 11: •• .,1r ltlW. Tll•flllll A. M,,,.\ri;itl I ,,,._,Int •"tw i Al•it Dlrkf11 I ~I Or•nta C-tt t41tor • • • Albe rt W. lala1 A1Mtillo EdhW • """""',.. --~ 0"'-1 17e7& lt1th l••l•v•r• •M1lll111 Acltlr•••t r.o. ••ii: 1•0, tl~I • ' OtlNr Offll• • LlfUl'll I .ell: 1n ,.,., A- C.II ~I m ~,"•t llV St,_ • N""""" 19Kll; DA fl..--1 lou:Wtt'f • 1111 o.n.i,., as. HtrTh ll C.mlM a.I ! -. • • - • City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt sign- ed the certificate ~farch I after City Attorney Tully Seymour au.bmitted an opinion that to deny them a permit would be a violation of their Con.slitu· tional rights. Officially known a.s the International Society of Kri!hna Consclow:ness, a bona fide rtllgious a.ect, the cult has betn active in Laguna Beach for over about a year and a half. 'lbeir public 1ppear¥Cf:s usually feature chanting, drum ' and cymbal playing, 11 wtll 11 the sale of re1ding material about their Hindu beliefa. Merchants in La1W11 Beach claim the commotion cre1ted by the men disturbs their customer• and have llOUlht to have their permit rescinded. 111eir appearance In Newport Thursday apparently caused . little commotion and police· noted they lO(ged no protest! from businessmen. Passersby "Watched briefly or took a pamphlet and then moved on. Business in 1urrollndlng storea did not lffm to ~ affected. One of Thursday's soliciters, who ask· ed to remain unldentWed, n id they were. surprised at the good reception they had received. "There is a great hunger in Newport Beach. The people want to tum away from matertaliam," he said. "We will come back probably Friday or next week with ill the boys," be added, 'Ille lndicaUon was that while Newport r.uldtrttJ we~ willing to accept the Uterature, they were not u quick to donate to lbe cult. The expanalon efforts of the Krishna sect have not been limited ei:cluslvely to Newport Beach. They have applled for a permit to 101lclt in Costa Mesa also. V alfey Trustees Ask $62,000 For Program There are 51 children at Gisler .and Fulton element1ry .schools In Fountain Valley who walk, talk and look like the other children -but they aren"t. These ~2 youngsters are educably men· tally rttarded. (EMR). In most schools they would be placed In isolated classrooms, guided by special teachers who would bend down to their level to push across v.·hat sma ll knowledge they could. But at Gisler and Fulton they are put in regular classroom!, tllty mix with normal kids, they do normal work. If special help is needed in a subject they get it from the learning center. Thursday night, trusttts of the Foun· lain Valley School District agreea to ask for $62,000 in fed.er1l funds to push thl1 program into Its third year. "The idea is to allow them to mix with the hope a different, normal at- mosphere will i m p r o v e their performance," Robert SanchiJ, an aS!is· tint district superintendent, txplalned. In reading alone. the EMR kids Im· proved by one full grade last year, whereas they would ha.ve Improved by only three or four months In the l.solated class, Sane.his said. And their social actions improved too. "I visited these schools," Trustee Shella Meyers said . ·~And very seld()m can you pick these little tykes out from their claumatea. Ifs marvelous." l'rom Page l HARTELIUS. • • under Dr. Harteliui' dlrect!on1. Kurlllch put • mentally retarded witntss Jnto the box Thumlay to utabll.sh that Reba V1ughn ordered Blevins to tlke the doctor'• car. The 21-year~Jd wltne11. who w1s described in court u having a mental a1e of aeven, ftstlfitd she was pttJent whtn Mrs. V1u1bn told Blevins to take the auto and that "Jim got mad because ahe hadn't left the keys Jn the car." The trlal before Judge J11mes F. Judge resumes Mond1y. Kurl\lch e:rpects to end his defense or Dr. Hartelius Tue.sdty. ' Irvine City Petitioning Set to Roll Proponents of lrvine c i l y hood will launch their incorporation petition drive wlth a break.fast rally Saturday at I p.m. at the Airporter Inn ., John Burton , chairman of the Council of the Communities of Irvine. sponsor' of the incorporation 'tirive, said more than 100 persons are expected lo attend and participate in petition circulation. Signatures of 25 percent of the property owners -who must represent 25 percent of the (otal asse$Sed \'aluation -are needed. The petitions must be submitted to the County Board of Superviso,·s Vlilhin 90 day.Ii, Burton said, to complete this phase of lhe incorporation process. What may have been the biggest hurdle in the CCI 's drive for an incorporation election was passed last month when the Local Agency Formation commission ( LAFC), on a 3 to 2 vote, approved the incorporation move and established the boundaries for the 18,000-acre city. 0-'IL 'f P ILOT llllt 'MN TALKS ABOUT DISTRICT School Chief Roper From Page 1 ROPER • • • salaries and supplies and the reductioo jn personnel . MASCO, SGT. MARTIN BLACK OISCUSS LEGALITIES OF ESCAPE In S.11 Be1ch, There 11 No E1c1pe From the Law Upon presentation of the petitions, which ask that the election be scheduled, the Supervisors must do so after con· ducting a protest hearing. Burton said his CCI is hopeful that election will take place in July; however pending litigation filed by the city or Tuatln over an agreement between the Irvine Company and Santa Ana (see separate story) may cau~ delays in that schedule. ··All of this affects our student.a and I v.'onder ho'v the universities and col- leges \Viii lake that. Our accreditation ma y be in jeopardy," Roper surmised. The superintendent cited the district'! Southla11d 'Houdini' Gets past failure to communicate with th• public as a possible reason for voter rejection of the last tax measure and the t\\·o preceding ii, Reprimand F1·om Police SST Jlrona Page l •· 1 v.•ant to communicate better with the people in this district. l want tho district to re ff ct the community, Dot to have it dictate lo them from a throne. And one of our maia concerns will be how to communicate everything v.•e do to the people," he said. Escape artist D. D. ?-.tasco has drav;n a reprimand from Seal Beach Police Chief Lee Case for his efforts to pcrfonn a •·otve to Death" off the cuy·.s pier Saturday. A certified letter dated ~larch 7 in· formed Masco that "The City of Stal Stach will not allow you to use any facilities under our control," including the pier and the boat docking facilities. The letter. signed by the chief, added that the act was not considered in the best inlerest of the city. "This is ridJculout. rve never heard or such a thing," Masco said this morn- On of re Beach To Open Easter For One Week SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A money- short Department of Parks and Recrea· tion announced today that a new st.ate beach will be opened for one week only Easter week to raise funds for future development. A spokesman said Ult unprecedented action is being taken because the depart- nl.ent lacks funds for capital develop- ment. San Onolre Blu1fs State Beach. in San Diego County, has been part of Camp Pendleton Muine Corps base. It was leased to the state for ~ years by the Marines at $1 a year. Jt is a three-and-a·haU stretch of virgin ocean frontage. All types of camping except ttnl cam- ping will be allowed, because camping will occur on the pavement of old highway 101. The one-week opening is b e i n g sponaored by the State Parks Foundation, a private group which donates funds far development of state parks. Camping fee~ will be. $3 per night. \\'Ith day use fees $1 per car. Funds will go to the foundation, which hopes to have the beach fully open this summer. Only chemical toilets and garbage cans will ~ available, but campers will ha\•e to bring their own water. No lifeguards will be on duly. The department says up to $17,000 may be raised Easter week. Hippie Bandit Sought in fl eist Police today sought a gunman with shoulder length hair and a headband who held up a Huntington Beach service i;tation late \Vednesday nigh!, escaping \\ith $.124. 'The man. about 18, 8Jld v.·earing a green fatigue jacket appt'oached Bob's Union 76 at Bolsa Chica Road and Heil Avrnue about l lp.m. and flashed a short·barreled revolver at lhe attendant, police said. Ofifcers said the gunman then .scooped up three money bags, inscribtd "Bob".s Union" and fled in a car . Hospital T1·ansfers Elvis Presley's Bed NASHVTU.E, Tenn. IAP) -Enter- tainer Elvis Presley, underaotng hospital tre1tment for an eye infeC"tlon. bas been movtd to an area of the building which is "more easily guarded :' a hospital spokesman says. The hospital has been deluged with telephone calls, flowers and callers at- tempting lo convey their get-we.II wlshes to the singu, who entered the bo&plt.al Tu~day • ing. He added that he would per!onn his 2 p.m. jump -bound by two handcuffs and 50-feet of chain -on schedule. Police restrained the 3 2 ·ye a r • o Id ''Houdini" from jumping off the pier last Saturday after he had failed to gel a boat from which to perform his stunt. T\-iasco said he would board a boat in Long Beach and perhaps return there to avoid a confrontation with the law. ''Jam sure that it's awfully dangerous, but I'm sure that I can do it," Masco !laid about his dive. ··Houdini never did anything thi! dangerow. When he jumped off his bridges be only had one pair of handcu1· fes" and dhe pair of leg irons. And he had a safety rope to boot!'' Labor Party Soars LONDON (AP) -A Gallup Poll today showed the Labor party 12 percentage points ahead of the Conservative govern· ment in popularity. This was an increase of 4.5 points In the past month. Gallup said the government's popularity had been hit by the unsettled econoi'nlc outlook and rising unemployment. • • • • cautioned supporters "the SST is still very much alive." "On the floor of the Senate the division on the i.slue has been very clO!e," Prox- mire said. "It Is possible that the House vote will give us just the advantage "''e need to v.·in, but victory against the SST is far from certain." An informal UPI poll of th«!: Senate1 completed just before the House voted, backed up Proxmire's assessment of a close vote, "''hich will come probably nei:t week. The poll showed 48 vOtea against future funding of the SST; 45 supporters of the jetliners; two Senators leaning for the project, three against; and tv.·o absentees. From Pagel ' LAOS • • • into Kht Sanh this afternoon, som~ hil- ting in.side the perimeter and wounding at least one American. Another 30 rounds hit the base shortly after nightfall but there was no report on casualties or damage. Field commanders said the 1.000 Soulh Vietnamese infantrymen based at F'tre Base Brown had been flown lo Artillery Base Delta J, nlne miles inside Laos. "The Huntington Beach Union High School District ha! always had a good image v,;th the profession but not always \Yith the public." said Roper as he outliD- ed his reasons for coming to the dislrict. "Some years back it gained the repula· tion for being one of the most ideal school districts in which to be employed. It had a high salary schedule, nice schools, good teaching staffs and a strong . base for a good image. And it projected that."' Roper, a familiar figure in Orange County educational circles, served as assistant superintendent vdth the Tu.still Union high School District before assum· ing his $30.000-a-year pnst in Huntington Beach. He has also suved as deputy county guperlntendent of schools and a 1 superihtendent of the Saddleback Junior College District. One of his concerns will be to make the public image of the district conform with the professional image. Some changes already are being made. He has been at work in decentralizing the administration of the five high schools. "The principals of the achoolt should have the freedom or organizing !he functions of their particular achooll as they see fit," he said. Sherrill Has A1~rived For the first time1 this excepf ionel line of upholstery is now avai lable on t~t west coast. SHer- rill, one of the finest producers of upholstery in the country offers you a new ea:perienee ir1 viewing quality furniture. An unparallele d selection of styles and fine f1Drics ere coupf.G with' craftsmanship unmatched in this price c1tt9ory. If you •rt in nefd of upholstery, be aure t• view this ta:citing collection of moderately priced, quality furniture. A Ted von Hetnert ea:cfu. sive. DEALERS EOR: HENREOON -OREXE~ -HERITAGE NIWftOltT ITORI OfllN rAIDAY 'TIL t 1td 111111/.,,/, '"' NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wo1tcllff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Profenlonal Interior 0.1l1noro Avolloblo-AID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH a4.5 North Cout Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 • Birrlaer Bema Trustee's Speech Prompts Clash By GEORGE LEIDAL ot 1t1t o.I~ 'I"' Slttr A speech which linked the Orange ~ty Education Department's Sup- plementary Education Center with ao. called collectivist inllltration of sehools sparked an argument among c:oUnty school board members Thursday. the federally funded center was criticized by Dr. Joseph Bean, a former Glendtle school trwilee, who was lnviled to speak by consuvaUve 1"1\emben oI the Orange County Board of Education. Following Dr. Bean's remarks, board member Donald Jordan of Garden Grove asked if Bean is a "lecturer for the John Birch Society.'' Bean replied that he is. Dr. Dale Rallison trustee from Santa Ana, countered with an accusation that Jordan was attempting ' ' c h a r a c t e r assassination" by bringing up the Birch society. Jordan responded, "I think that remark Is out of place, here. After all, you are a member <>f the John Birch Society and I think people should know the motivation for bringing this man to speak he re." ~llison replied, "What's wrong with being a member of the John Birch Society? \Vhy is it so terrible that I belong to such a soc iet y? Does that make my remarks unLrue, or unreliable, Clr blackened?" Rallison asked. The debate v.·as closed Cln the request ()f Dr. Bean \Yho clarified that he sp<ike lo the John Birch Society "along with many other organizations." "The John Birch Society is against co~unisls,'' Bean told Jordan. "IC you are a communist or a communist sym- pathizer, I'd be glad to meet you in a public debate at JO me other time," Bean said. During his _ speech, Dr. Bean charged that the Pro1ects to Advance Creativity in Education (PACE) centers, such as Orange County's Supplementary Educa· tion Center. are foisting humanistic, behavioral change curriculum on school dislricts. In his 70-minule speech· Bea11 outlined v.·hat he described as lineage of col- lectivist thought in American education rrom John Dewey to sensitivity training ad vocate Dr. William Glasser. He quoted the Supplementary Educa· tion Center director James Freda as having t<lld a UC Irvine class that federal education's aim v.·as to rid education Judges Rebuffed In Their Appeal For Bomh Scan Orangl!! County supervisors have turned down a request by Superior Court judges to bu y two metal scanning devices to help spot persons trying to carry bombs or other weap<ins int<> courtrooms. The vote was 3-2, with Supervisors David Baker of Garden Grove and \Villiam PhlUips of Fullerton nn the minororily. The total price or the two scanner1 was listed as $7,931.95. However. the judges merely proposed a lransfer of existing funds lo make the purchase. No new money was involved. Supervisor Ronald Caspers or Newport Beach said he knO\\'S l\\'O judges who carry firearms lo work. "They v.·ouldn't be able lo get int<> their own courtrooms,'' he said during Tuesday·, discussion. Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim called lhe purchase unne cessary. "I am 9.'illlng to take my chances u a public office holder," he said . Supervisor Baker sa id it was the firs t ~tep in tlle protection of a $14 million <:our thouse. "It v.·ould be money well spent." Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa Ana joined Caspers and CJark in rejectiIJg the proposed purchase. or concern about "religion. race and Reds." After Bean's ta lk, Freda said the. three Rs quote was drawn from the book "ESEA: The Office Clf Education Administers a Law." la context, the quote. referred lo the three battles fought in erder to bring into being federal aid to education, he said. The county board changed it.s mind about applying for the 1971·72 grant a month ago, after several local school superintendents testified aOOut the value of the center to county schools. At th.at time, Rallison abstained from voting and encouraged Dr. Doris Araujo to sv.·itch her vote to allow app lication for 1971·72 funds for the center in exchange for the Dr. Bean speaking dale. Following Bean's appearance Thurs- day, Rallison and board member Roger Anderson of Huntington Beach attempted to disapprove the 1970...71 allocation of !unds lo the center. 'llhey dropped the issue when reminded the board had granted approval more than a year ago. Nixon Asks Quake Loan For LA Homes WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon ~Y asked Congress for emergen- cy appropriations of $265 million, in· eluding $2t2 million earmarked for Joans to help rebuild earthquake-damaged homes in L<>s Ange les. The President's signing of a request for a supplemeatal appropriation for the small business administration was an· nounced by Rep. Barry M. Goldwater Jr. (R-Calif.). Goldwater said he and Rep. James C. Cclrman (0.Calif.), met with White House officials to discuss the need lor the funds and Nixon had signed the request after the meeting. The meeting, Goldwater aaid, v.•as at. tended by SBA Administrator Thomas S. Kleppe, director Caspar Weinberger of the office Clf management and budget, under Secretary Floyd Hyde of the Hous· ing and Urban Development Department, and Gen. George A. Lincoln. director or the Office o! Emergency Prepared· ..... Up to $2.500 or I loan under the SBA'.s em ergency Joan program may be forgi ven under ex isting law. L<>ans can be made for up to 30 years. with payment.. on principal deferred up to three years. One of Each For Murri.age SACRAMENTO CUP!) -A bill requiring applicants for.a marriage license · to obi.a.in a doctcr'a certifie1te officially 1tating their sex was introduced Thursday by Assembl yman Alister McAlister (0-San Jose). "This bill ls necessary becau.se there have been occa.sk>ns when county clerks hive been unable to determine, by mere visual observation, the sex of a marriage license applicant." said McAlister. "Occasionally an applicant will masquerade a1 a member of the opposite sex.'' He said "all of our marriage, property and ioherilance laws are based on the premise that a valid marriage can exist only between persons ol" opposite sexe1." "This bill will make certain lhat marriage licenses are not im- • properly issued by Inadvertence to persons of the same su." rrlOI)', Marth 1,, lffi H DAIL"'f '1lllr ;J Catnp Wiped Out 400-600 Perish • In Peru Slides Bis Just Desserts The target was creamed. Roy Schmid of SI. Louis sticks out his tongue to sample the fruit of his labors after volunteering to be a target for pie throwers at the Moolab Shrine Temple's circus kickoff party to raise funds for crippled children. Toilet Disaster Averted By South Cou11ty Accord By PATRICK BOYLE 01 ,... 0.111 l'li.1 11111 To avoid Jocking the lids down on 7 ,000 toilets in the South County area, the SCluth Laguna Sanitation District has entered a "sludge burning·• agreement \l.'ilh the city of San Clemente. The need for the agreement arose recently when a $14~,000 sludge ln· cineralor at the district's Aliso Creek sewage treatment plant broke down, AlthOugh the district has two such machines to burn solid waste from the area, district manager John S m i t h is worried tile stcond machine could also break down. whlch amounts to about 3,500 additional customers. From all or these homes. about 2 million gallons ()f effluent daily is pro- cessed through the district'• sanitation plant. The liquid effluent is given secon· dary lreatmenr and pumped into the ocean while the solid matter is strained off and burned. This process le aves several tons of 1Judge to be disposed of daily. "We're really ttiping we Won't hale to haul ii down to San Clemente," Smith said. "It could be quite expensive as it "·ould haw to be complttelf eac!Oled in tank trucks." Smilh said the Inoperable lncinerator will probably be repla~ with a less expensive model. UMA, Pe ru (UPI) -A maa.1ive land!lide sparked by heavy rain fell into a mountain lake in northeast Peru Thursday and eruiulng noom wiped out a mining camp with heavy Jou of life , police said Friday. "The number of df:atha ascend to ap- proximately 400 to eoo out of • total of 1,000 mtneu, •1 a regional politt spokesman said. A spokesman tn Lima for the Chungar Min ing Co., which operated lbe camp, said it had "praclically dlaappeared" under tons of water, He said SO to 70 miners had been hospllallr.ed in nearby towns and villages. Countian Held in Stabbing From ¥t'tre Senlces VACA VILLE -Violence plaguing the state prison aystem erupted here again al the California Medical Facility, with Clne convict dead and anothe} from Orange Coonty charged with hls murder. Only three of Neal H. Baalke'1 10 years on an assault with a deadly weapon conviction remained when he allegedly murdered a fellow inmate WeDdesday. He now faces the prospect of life behind prison walls. Horrified fellow convicts and ltaff personnel watched Wednesday as Lloyd R. Jarrett was knifed 13 times ln the prison's main corridor. Baalke was Identified as the assailant. but the brutal stabbings and the reasons tJehind it remalned under investigation today. A priSCln officer said today racial con- nict that has marked violettee in other facilities -primarily San Quentin and S<lledad-was not a factor. "Both men are caucaaiBDs," be laid. "The matter is still under invesligaUon.'' A complaint charging Baalke with Jar· rett's murder was issued Thur!day by District Attorney Tony Vellante. Records at the , pritoD, · prlmarib' for physically or mentally ill tmnaiu and considered • minimum JeCUtity facility, showed Baalke was committed Aug. 26, 1.9651,lrpll\Or•nl!A;~unly. , . , No ittord coulH be louod by dll!r!ct att<lrney's personnel in Santa Ana t.o indicate Baalke's home town or the nature or his 1965 assault case. The company 1pokesman 1 a I d tM disaster occurred about t a.m. Thursdaf when the rains dumped a bUl!lde into Lake Yanahutn, in Pasco Dt~mut 150 miles northeast of Llma, · fortlnf lake waters out of thelr banka ancf burying camp lnstallationa: under tons of water. "The spokesman said he had bten in rontact with the camp just before lht disaster but that its radio transmitter bad subsequently gone off the air. Ht said the Peruvian-owned mines produced abciot 240 tons a day of lead and copper. A police spokesman from the 2nd region said local police and mlnen from nearby camps were engaged In rtscue work throughout the day and night. Ad- ditional police reserves were dispatched to lhe scene from Lima· Government authorities said details o{ the tragedy were still sketchy because ()f tbe inaccessibility or the campalte on a mountain ridge. Tbey ·said the camp was a good eight to nine hollr car ride from Lima and that previous communications with the area had been. maintained through the mine radio, ap-- parently washed out. Early reports indicated, b<lv.·ever. that camp offices, plants. warehoule1, ahopj and other Installations all were sub- merged. Flag Def ender's Role Disputed SAN DIEGO (AP) -The president of the AMoclated ·Students at San Diego Slate College has protested to the Freedoms Foundation over its recent award to BllJ Pierson. The foundation cited 'Pierson, then a San Diego State football star, for whal it said was his defense of the America-a flag against demonstrators on the cam; pus last May. , "We believe that If you had 1eces1 to more complete information you might not have seen fit to honor Mr. PierlOl1 as you did ," Mike Boyle told the f~ dation in a letter made public Thursday, Pierson did not foil a plot to tear OOwn the flag , &yle asserted, but ltOR- pe<J 1, group pJ. stu!lents. wh> . wain.a lo lower II ' to hlli 11111 in """'°" of the students killed at Kent St.ate and Jackson State Colleg~. "lie did not , deltqd Ibo fl•l ln>l1I A screaminf lnob.'' Boyle Wd, 'ddinf that with his letter he was enclosing "statements of persons: preaent who will testify to that fact ." "When you art working with mechanical equipment," Smith said, ''anything can happen. Our two in- cinerators were the first ones built and they had a Jot of bugs in them." "Although most of the problems have been worked out," he added, "things can develop overnight." atlantic music ANNOUNCES If something did happen to lhe second machine, Smith 1aid, the sanitation district would be faced with what could only be described -at least in print -as a "massive problem." To allow for such a developmtnt, the district recently agreed with the city of San ·Clemente to burn sludge at the city's sludge incinerator. The "urgency measure" calls for the district to pay Sl.000 a week for the burning service. "We just entered the agreement to be ready to haul sludge to San Clemente i( we have to," Smith said. "We want to be sure we can dispose or it wilhOl.ll polluting the beaches." The sanitation district serves the South Laguna area's 3.600 d~·elling units. Jn addition, the district has an ag reement with the "Moulton·Nlguel Water distrlct to handle a p<irtion of their sanitation, • Africa Corn Barred WASHINGTON <UPI I T h e Agriculture Department has refused to allow 980.000 pounds of blight resistant seed corn from _Sout~ Africa irJ!o the country because 1t said the corn might contain a mildew disease whica could afflict U.S, corps. SONY'S newest • • The Model 640 ThrH-Motar. Three-Head Stereo Tape Deck I At A Remarkable New Low Price I Here is Sony's first low-priced three-motor deck. The 640 shares many professional features with the remorkable 650: Die-Cast Tape Guide and Head Block Mounting Frame, front panel Sound-on-Sound and Echo Controls, Microphone and Line Mixing, and a Record Equalization Selector Switch. All transport functions are solenoid- operated with unique piano key • Potted Plant controls. The 640 offers high-per· formance and GT styling. This is the recorder which will reoffirm Sony's position as the leader in th~ three-motor tape deck market. lowest price ever for a SONY l·head and 3. motor professional stereo tapedeck. Ul'I Y•INl'lt111 Bospllall:ed l..ouilli '·Salchmo" Armstrong. 70, the famed gravel·volced singer and trumpeter. ii;; in cri· I.teal condition In K .. York's Beth Israel Hospital with a heart condltion . Story, Page 5. Christmas Tree Idea Squelched CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) -"There wasn 't anytlling real unusual about the guy." a. police detective testif ied, "excepl he was standing there hitchhiking with a fiv~foot marijuana treti over his &houlder. ·· Well, yes, admitted defendant Kerry A. Luchsinger, but there was a perfec:Uy innocent explanation. He was ju.rt taking the pot plant home for a Christmas tree. . Luchsinger, 24, aaid he 'trN Jllytng h11 trade as a termite e%termin1tor at a SL Peter1burg hoo!t last Nov. 27 when he spotted UU. COPlf: ot ahrubs in the back ynrd. Being fresh home rrom military Rrvlct In Vietnam, where marijuana Is plentiful and grows wild, ht rm>&nlud the ahrubs for what they were. 1t was getting on toward Chriatmas time. Other folkl were lugging home Ille traditional pines. Why not be dif· ferent? Why not make an ersatz: Christmas tree out of a properly trimmtd pot plant? So he uprooted a five-rooter nung It ovu hia llhnulder and started th~mbinJ a Ult on a main tboroughtare. A car with two men stopped. "What's that you got t.here?'' aske d ?ne, helping Luchsinger and his load into the aut<>mobile. "Marijuana," said Luchsinger. •·rm taking it home for a ChrislmllS tree." Grateful for the lift. he snapped off a piece or his shrub and offered it to one of the men . What happened next was enough to shake your faith in Santa Claus. The two men in the car were plainclothes detectives. They placed Luchainger under arrest. Luchsinger plead~ guilty Thursday lo a charge of dispensing marijuana. Pen- ding a presentence investigation, Circuit Judge Ben F', Ovrrton allowed him lo return to his job with the exterminating company. No charges v.·ere brought against the owner of the housr v.'here the pot planls grew. An unsuspecting middle aged cou· pie, police said, lhey had trired some hippie-types to do repair work some week.!! before Luchsinger plucked his Christmas ttte, and the conclw.Jon was obvious. 369" STOP! before you buy ,any records! Our prices are the LOWEST! LIST OURS OUll LIST ' Iron Mountain Depot $4.98 $2.59 Friends $4.98 $2.59 • {John Hartford) !Elton John) Love Sta~ IAndy Wll l1m1) $5.98 $3.29 The Cry of Love $5.98 $3.29 IJlml H1ndrlxl ' The Johnny Cash Show (Johnny Cash) $5.98 $3.29 Butch Cassidy !Sound Trock) $4.98 $2.59 atlantic • • music 445 E. 17th St., Cost• Mtu. Optn Sundty> ll-5, Soturd1y. 9-6, D1ily 12·9, Clostd Wadnt1d1yo Dual/Garrard/Shurt/ ADC/T uc/Fisht r /Sony /Rtclilintor /Humon-Kardon ,, Picl1rin9/Sharwood/ Altoc Lansing/M 1r1nh/Whorfedale/Soundcr1ftsmon Miracor<I/ A.R./Bo11l/Mclntosh/ Scott/ JBL/Emplro/Dyn1co/8oso. r • • \ °I; f • DAILY PILOT •• I .. ~ps ~~Going Through "'· ~The Channels 7.· ., By THOMAS A. MURPHINE 01 "'9 OtllY "lltt ll•H GE'M'ING THE MESSAGE: Scientific folks from the University of Southern ~-aa.Jlfornia have been out prowling around : 'the Santa Barbara Channel recently to ~fee what they could learn 1bout oll :.fpills and ocean currents. ·a The prowling, as a matter of fact. 1 has been going on ror two years now. '''On d e of the ways the USC folks hope _to track currents in the channel was to launch 15,000 watertight envelopes ~with the hope of following them and i°thus charting the ebbs and flows. ! Lamentably, I car1not report how well rthey made out in all tht charting. But ;Thursday Dr. Fc.onald L. Kolpack, chief researcher of the USC project, reported 1 that 1.800 of the 15,000 envelopes laun· •ched were washed ashore, found by the public and returned to good old SC. There was also a comment card inside teach envelope to be filled out by finders. Some comments included: , -"I found this card because I was .lbeachcombipg and goofing off when ·I !should have been at work ... " I -"What's wrong with you people? The California Penal .code P.robibJti littering of our public beacheB. • ... ~ • AND FINAU.Y, there was on@ card that complained strongly about a tlny "'·eight which was included in tht en- :yelope-to, provide flotation ballast. r -"I· tri~ to use your wasbtr in a candy machine. It didn't work. Ntlt time, send a smaller washer.:." Obviously, the USC scientific research team learned th.rough its tw~year effort a heck of a lot about human nature ud response. · It remains to be reported if they !learned anything about ocean currents in tbt Slnta BJrbara ChaMel. * 1 CONFIRMED CORNER: It w a i ~redicled in this comtr the other day that a lot of verbal exhaling was likely still to come this session from the legislative halls of Sacramento. Just to give you one example, comet now· the Senate Governmental Organlu~ lion Committ~ which rejected a propoul to limit California governors to two tenns. Defeat or the two-term constitutional amendment prQposed by Senator Arlen Gregorio (0-San Mateo), came after Committee Chairman Ralph Dills (Do Gardena) asked in rhetoric: "Why limit an Earl Warren, a Ronald Rearan or a Hiram Johnson? Would you want lo restrict someone like Morflli, Moscone or Hugh Flournoy to only two turns , .. You know, its seems that Dills was taking an awful chance asking questions about that many politicians in just two sentences. He could have touched off a debate that did last all day. * END ITEM·: 1 understand Utt Republicans have now issued a handy guide and glossary of terms to their tpeakers who will appear on colle1e platforms acro11s the nation. If he gall into trouble, all the GOP 1pokeqnan --hi&... to do is whip out the handy guide, bide it behind the podium and flip to the right page on how to handle the collegians ln a given situation. Example of one GOP daffynitlon : "A hassler -same thing at a bomb-0µ-ower .. Oh yes, Mr. Speaktr~'re off to a great start Frld17, Marth 19, 1971 E:lr•t since Tracce ·Egyptians Fire ~ On Israel Planes By THE All80CIATED PJIESS Egyptian antiaircraft euna opened fire on Israeli plana ioctay for the first . time since the Middle East cease-fire .-.. began last August, the official Middle Eut News Agency reported in Cairo. Keeping Watch Thursday was the first anniversary of the overthrow of Prince Nordom Sihanouk. Cambodia troops with U.S.-made M16 rifles still patrol !he streets. Although the capital was quiet, sharp fighting took place out· side the city. Strike-hit British Ford Offices Ripped by Blast LONDON. (UPI) -A tlmebomb ez. ploded in an office building of the strike· bound Ford Motor Company today. Police ·evacuated the Cafe 'Royal near another Ford establishment afler a bomb scare. Police said no one was injured when the predawti blast from a fused bomb .ripped through the buement of the lt. •tor)' steel and glus Thames House housing Ford· oUlces in llford, 10 miles east of London. The explosion blew in a basement door and shattered nearby thop windows. In London, police cleared the Cafe Royal of a lunchtime crowd minute.a after an anonymous caller said a dynamite bomb had been planted in the restaurant. The establishment Ui next to the Regeht StrHt showrooms of the Ford company. Police searched the restaurant but found no bomb. "We have just got Ford and we will do the re.rt later," a woman 11ld Jn a phone call to the British News Agency Presa Association. The woman said she was from the "Angry Brigade," a group police blame for explosions at homes of aeveral government ministers. Ford plants have been closed by a strike by unions demanding higher pay. Henry Ford JI, president of the Ford Motor CO., visited Britain last week but rtfused to intervene. But he said Ford would make no more investments in Britain because of the nation'• 11bor Wides 7t .. a lottery for who t11llu . longeit, us or problems. It is such l1bor strife which the con· servative govtrnment of Prime Minlatet Edward Heath hoped to ease with its proposed industrial relations bill. More than 1.25 million workers struck Thursday to protest tbe bill. It w a• the biggest strike in Britain in more than 40 years and trainmen, power workers and teachers said they likely would be the next ·to strike to protest the antl·Slrike measure. The anti.,trik& bill is in its final stages in Parliament and e:rpecttd to become law by summer. Heath again denounctd such strikes in a speech at a dinner Thursday night in Sheffield. · "One man's strike becomes another's redundancy (layoff) notice." he said. "And all this for lhe lUIUry of a poJiUcal 1lrill:e. We now have the opportunity together to bring to an end a ud amt shabby period in our national life." Nixon to Attend Thomas E. Dewey Funeral in NY NEW YORK (UPI) -Flags were lowered to half staff at city hall today as hundreds of dignitaries, headed by President and Mrs. Nixon, and other persons were scheduled to attend funeral services for the late Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. The Rev. Dr. John B. Coburn was to conduct the 4 p.m. (EST) service at St. James Episcopal Church with the a.uis:tance of the Rev. Dr. Ralph Lankier, pastor of Christ Church on Quaker HilJ, Pawling. Burial will follow in Pawling where Dewey maintain'd a country home. Dewey, a three-lime govtrnor <lf New York· and twict unaucetasful Republican candidat. for Prtsident, died of a heart attack Tue1day in Florida at the age of 68. · The two Israeli planes -identified u Phantom jeta -apparenUy were not bit. 1be agency saJd the two aircraft intruded over EgypUan poslUon1 at Port Fuad at the northern end of the Suez Canal. The cease-fire expired on March 7. The Etyptlan annou.ncement coincided with a report ln a Beirut newapaper that E1Ypt bu indicated to the United States that lt will start shooting again Russ Slwcked By Ousters From Mexico MEXICO CJTY (UPI) -Mexico's ex· pulslon of five SOviet diplomata Thw-aday night was "the most seriow act short or a break in relations" betwetn Mexico City and Moscow, a Communist source said today. He said the move took the Soviets completely by surprise. The expulsion order was issued 72 hours after thf! gover1Jmenl said it had smashed a subversive plot by Mexican gutrrlllas trained in Moscow and North Korea. Jt also followed Mexico's recall of its ambassador from Moscow for an indeterminate period. Foreign Minister Emilio 0. Rabasa did not relate the expulsions to the alleged plot, and refused to aruiwer all questions from newsmen on that point. He said the presence of the five diplomat! "is not acceptable to the Mex- ican government and, consequently, it is the desire of the Mexican government that they abandon our national territory in the shorttlt possible time." He did not say how soon that wa!. Anti-Communists, including a diplomat who defected here last year, persistently have charged that Moscow's embassy in Mexico City U a center for Soviet subversion and espionage in Latin America. The Soviet embassy declined comment on the expulsions. One Communist IOUrCe, however, 1aid the action was "completely unexpected." He said the Ru.sslans bad expected only that Mexico would file a protest. It was "the moat serious act of reprisal Mexico could have taken, abort of break· Ing relations," he said. Ordered to leave were Soviet charge d'alfaires Dmitri A. Diakonov, first secretary B<lris P. Kolomiakov, second 1eaetarles, Boris N. Voskoboinikov and Oleg M. Netchiporenko, and Aleksandr Bolchakov, whose tltJe was not given. Queen to Reinstate Honorli to Hirohito LONDON (AP) -Queen Elltabeth JI will reinstate Emperor Hirohito of Japan to the oldest and moat exclusive order of knighthood in the world - the Order of the Garter, diplomatic sourtes said tOday. Informants closely coMected In arranging the emperor's state visit to Brittin next October next said the queen will announce the reinstatement during the vis:it as a gesture of go6d will. • ili&ddrn Ji WI fMAG • along the Suez Canal any time after March 24 unless the stalled Arab-Jsraeli peace talks get moving. Al Nahar's Cairo corr.espondent, Fuad Mattar, wrote that the warning was given in a letter President Anwar Sadat sent to President Nii:on ahortly before Sadat announced that Egypt would no longer subscribe to the ceaae-fire. Egypt, Israel and Jordan have cM· tinued to observe a de facto cease-fire along the borders, but Mattar reported that Sadat's Jetter declared a 17-0ay "period of grace" March 8 through March 24, to give U.S. diplomatic efforts another chance to bring about "tangible progress toward a peaceful solution." In Washington, Secretary of State William P. Rogers had a scheduled meeting with Foreign Minister Abba Eban of Israel over U.S. efforts tn modify Jerusalem's terms for a .stl· tltment. Rogers wants lsrael to withdraw from all Arab territories seized in the 1967 war with an international peacekeeping !orce to guarantee Israel's .security. In Jerusalem, Deputy Premier Yigal Allon indicated no softening in Israel's poa;ilion. "There is nn substitute for a peace treaty and secure borders which we will be able to defend by ourselves," he told a meeting of t.h.e Labor party. Such borders, he said, were vital to ward ofr "a lightning, decisive war against us.·• British Troops Hunt for Bombs In Irish Autos BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - British troops today halted more t.h'in 400 automobiles in the most intense cam- paign yet against extremi11ts in Northern Ireland. The search of cars be1an after terrorists bombed a ahrine of the Irish Republlcan Army (IRA). The troops set up roadblocks at every majpr route into Belfast as part nf a stepped-up drive to bolster Premier James Chichester-Cl.ark's hard-pressed government. Border areaa also were aub- jected to increased attention. Army spokesmen said the check en Bella.st traffic was the biggeat ever undertaken by security troops. As the weapons searches began an explosion rocked a Republican Garden of Remembrance in the Carrickmore District, 45 miles west of Belfast. It was due to be opened Monday by Nora Connolly O'Brien, daughter of Republican leader James Connolly, executed in 1916. The e1plosion blasted a 15-lnch crater In the garden, erected by the Irish National Graves Association in memory of the Irish Republican "ll'mY min whet died in th.e 1920s. ' Chichester-Clark told parliament a few hours before that fresh troops would be brought in to "tlgh~n the clamp" on extremists. The only way tn get rid of them is to make it "too hot to hold them ," he said. The reinforcements will Increase the number of British troops ln Northern Ireland to 9,700 and was the only ge11ture the premier made to his critics who demandtd he 1et tough against ex- tremists. "It is the nonevent of the year," said rightwing le1der William Craig. "It <lnly underlines the end of the present government.'' "Clark must go!" a crowd of 4.000 Protestant! shouted outside parll1ment. "Cl1rk rnust go!" U,ITllN!Mlf LOSING A STAR? M•I· Gen. Koster Army May 'Bust' Generals I nvolvell In My Lai Case WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Army has recommfnded that Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster and the general who auiated him in · commanding the American Division involved in the alleged massacre at My Lai be disciplined and pouibly demoted. Koster. 51. resigned as superintendent or the U.S. Military Academy at West Point last year after he was charged with covering up the alleged massacre of more than 100 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai by a unit of his division March 16, 1968. The charge! were drop- ped in January. Brig. Gen. George H. Young Jr., 50, was his assistant in Viet- nam . Army sources said Thursday Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the Army chief of staff. had recommended that Ko.!lter be reduced in rank to bri1adier general and Young to co Jon~ 1. Westmoreland commanded all U.S. troops in Vietnam at the time ot My Lai. It was not known exactly how many men faced disciplinary action. At one time , ·25 officers and men were chtrt:td either with committing crimes at My Lai or of attempting to cover up the incident later. Charges have, been drop- ped against all but five of the men. Young told the Chicago Tribune earlier this week that he had received a letter saying th.at Westmoreland had ordered that he be demoetd to colonel, stripped of his Distinguished Service Medal and that a letter .of reprimand be placed in his file. Young told the newspaper he had bee.n Informed he wohld have a chance to rebut the charges that he was guilty of "substa11.dard performance of duty." He said he was told he could answer in writing and in a personal appearance before Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor. The general said he would do both because he considered the actions unfair. "More than eight months after J wa.!J declared innocent I am bein& sentenced," Young said. Hospital Warns Man He's Expecting Baby LEAMINGTON, England (UPI)·-Alf Rnberts, a 52-year·old night porter, open- ed a letter from the Leaming Spa Hospital and got a shock. It told him he was expecting a baby and invited him to the antenatal clinic. Later a hospital official apologized fcrr the clerical error whith had mixed up Roberts' appointment for a knee ex· amination. i i ... 7 I f_ a the Pari1 Pe11ce crowd!' Nixon w1s scheduled lo fly here durin& tht day with a delq1tion including it- torney general John N. M itch t l 1. secretary of state William P. Roger1 and Sens. Jacob K. Javita and Jamtl L. Bu.cklty of New York. Warren 80~ Lauds Youth ' Winter's Fury Not Spent Former High Court Chief Remini-sces on Birthday WASHINGTON (UPI} -Fnrmer Chief Justice Earl Warren turned 80 today. with praise for the naUon's young peof)le ind a warning that conflict of interest . p<lSes <lne of the greate11t evils to the government of the republic. W41Ten added that when he wa1 on the bench he never felt free to play the stock market because the C9l)o alomerate nature of many bu.slne.ues made it impossible to know when a con1lict Of interest might pop up. Midwest Lashed by High Winds; Rain, Wet Snow Fall California ,. Coastal i u11,,... whll v•rl•bl• t ltlltt lelll'f ... :lllu"'8y, Mid 1M1I fwll, Hltll tt- 111, n. C"ll•! '-''•"-'rt• ra11tt ......, $.I .. M. Wt1tr •M>•trttu,.. Jt. lnltnt iem-•turt• ''"" lrn M kM. Nttn, "'""'"· Tllle• italOA't' 'lrit ~l•h 'lrl l Iv# ,,,., lllth i1'1r1! 1, ... k c.w 111111 SIC~l\CI It• 1t:l11 ..... f .1 '·'''"'· 0 1 fl TUI: DAY t -1,U •·"'· •-' 11 :t01.m. 0.1 ''" • m. 1.l •:" f ,11'1. ,,0 "lrit l\lfl\ .. 1·• • m, '1 fllr1t low . , ll:a t .fl'I • ..a.t •I<•"" 11111\ ••• , ''"'·"'· ,, '9eONli IOW •••••.• , • 11 : ll lo.m. J.(. .. Temperatures I, VtltTID 'lt:ISI ll•TtJt:NATIONA.l TM'IH•ltliftl lllf 1rtcl•1!1HOn tv t!!l l+IMl.tr Mri.9 -Int 11 ' •,m, A,l .. n1 AllMl .... tf'OllUt Aktnlt Aow_~nrttt !IGllftft llul!tlo (lllCl90 C lnc:l"~aH (ll'YlltM Diii•• Ot!l¥tf Mltfl llW ,,I<. " " '' 2S u t1 .n . " " " .. " Jt ~ 1.1' n " ·• . .. .. » '°' .. " White-haired, grandfattierly and looking healthy, Warren reminisced about his epochal years on the ·court and said the colle1e seminars he has been con- ducting since his retirement have renew· ed his faith In the young. "In the main," he said in an interview in his Supreme Court of[\ce, "our young ~le are far more knowledgeable about whal't going on in the world than they were in my d1y as a yeutb, They are more concerned, motivattd to play a D•I Mftlnt• o.tro!I F1trt1..i..1 H-tulu lnfll"l .. 111 Jun6tu 4 tt " " " .. .!I .rw•r( .11 , ,.-• '<•,.. .. Cltv lt1Yt••· Ltult~lllt M-~lt Mlll'll M!twtvlt1 Ml~ ... 1 .. 111 NlW Orltl ~I N""' YWll Oki•..,.,.• (11¥ Ofl'l1h1 '•I"' &ltl'1,.., 'hlllffl ... 11 '"°"'1" ,!,.....,.,.~ ,t!'htllf. O••. Jl1,i. Clttt .. M Sttrlfl'lt~!t St t,1111, Stll I.•~• Cll'I' s.~ OltM S•n '••114111~ U..111• " tl ,lJ • 31 .1• ,. lt .n '2 2t .Ill . .. It 11 .11 '' lt •• n " }I )1 1.:11 U )1 ,It 1> .u .n " . " n 11 11 .n ti SJ ,, .. ,. ~ll 11 ll? ·°' . " 31 ,, . " ~ ,, " .. ... • n ~ . M " ... "l like young people. Thert are 1 few destructlonista. But I 1Ull think the majority of t.htm are aooc1. forw1rd- lookina: young people who want tn lrn· prove things," he added. Looking 1t the natiott't judicial aystem , Warrtl\ Hid if a man has a way of llft lhlt demands mOre money than a federal Judce makts "then he can't arf01d to be a judge." ''There lrt certain things that people can 't do if the1 are 11oina to be in certain positions. It's thf: ttmt with cabtn6t poa.Jllons. If they can't affard to take the job, then °'ey sbouldn't take It. "A eonfllct ct Interest ls Ont of the most evil thln•s In &:bvernmtnl today," HAS FAITH IN YOUNG E1rl W1rren o" llrthd1y he said. ''tt should bt of tr1mendou1 concern to the citizenry of tht country." ' • Of his years oo the court Wttt~n aald be was disappointed that school dtsecreaation had not progreued futer but he is not frustrated. He added that he was happy to have served the court at a time when the moat controversial problenu camel up. And he o!fered"thete thouf!'lt• on tbe difference b e t w e en polltfca and law: "l Uppen to have had years 1n both fields. When I was in political life I reallied that politics ls the art of tht pos8tble, as IOlft~ one has sa.ld. YOO have an ideal but you compromlle 11 )IOU go along in order to make Pf'O&ress • . • IJ'ld you hope that the lime may come when your ideal wlll be achieve'fl. "But when you are dealing with the judlaial proctss and with con.sUtutional princlplea, you can't say you will be 11UafJed with establishlng a llUle of the principle today &nd maybe some time <those who benefit) will gtt all of it. Yoo sl.llnd or fall on the princlplet you feel govern the situation. ''If a deciaion rails to conform to the wishes of th• public, that i1 iuit one of the haurch you assume whe:n you enter the realm of the judicial proce.q." l QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Snow, Bain High Winds Lash U.S. Minsection By United Prtss lntern.atlopl "It's the typical lion and lamb dea1 Jn spring weather." a Hastings Neb,. policeman said as snow and winds or 100 miles per hour stranded motorists a n d cverturned three traller homes. cars blockinc all road1. Muy Mason City re1ldtnt1 fllre str1nded for tht niaht in Del Moines where: tl'leJr team played In a high ocllool baste~ ball tournament. DAILY l'ILIJ & Governmettt Sifts Record.- Train Car Case Probed LA SALLE, ru. ! APJ -Ollie< omploye at the little eya." , Gove m~nt lnvesttgators rail line In north-central 'Richard Spr1g1 of the task 1ifttd the rerordt of a tiny Illinois said the cars sup-force refused to speculate . oa Illinois r•llroad IJ'ld an even poJtdly wtre the proptrty ol tht pos1lble implication of smaller mystery COlllJ'l•ny to-a mystery company which oraanit~d crime, but Aid day in an atten'lpt to find painted on new ldtnti!ylng W.Wotk will b.Jve lo be d~ out how more than $1 million marks and leased them to in other anias of the country•• worth of Penn Central freight othtr railroad!. to determine whether 1imllar can dlsappeared. A U:S. at· FBI aaenta seiud the &Jtuatlons exltt elaewbere. torney said the cars •P-r~rds of the La Salle line Bechtlf: said a federa1 artnd parently were stolen . and of f\fagna Earth jury ln Pbiladelpbla. whfre Jo~eph Cinotto Jr .. general Enterprisu, Inc., w h 1 ch the Ptnn Central h•• Mad· But the lion appeared lo prevail as the snowstcnn plowed through the nation's midsection today. Si:r towns in the Omaha Public Power District were completely without power Thursday night. Some 600 to 700 farm houses were without power and heat In 10 to 2a. degree ~ather near Ord. Neb . Power officials said repairs would be difficult until the winds subsided, Satchmo in Hospital After H cart Seizure manager or the La Salle & rented a one-room cftlce and quarters, would begjn Jookint SunalftCounty Railroad -1 M>me •bop gp1ce from the in.to the caae Wednesda y i nd trelgbt-cnly line with 1 mere r1llroad. would caU In records frcm IS mlles of trackage -termed An FBI spokesman said other firms . BecbUe did not the disappearance "a terrible aientl were cbteklnt for Jdentify the other companies. mistakt." pos1lble vlolalions of the He 1aid no arrests had been U.S. Atty. Louis C. Becbtle federal lntentate transport•· made. adding that be did not :5·/P "Th&t's very good, but I don't see how an imita.tion of w. C. Fields u. roinr to Uk• the ~Iden' minds off the st&te of bu1in.e81. Ride of Terror Bandit Holds 2 Hostage ORLANDO. Fla. (UPll - "~1y god, please go awa y," the woman·s voice pleaded over the police radio to pl.trSU· ln& officers. '"I want to see my husband and children again." Mrs. Lily Th on1pkins, a sav- ings and loan association ~lier. and her boss, Ralph Hasner, were taken hostage Thursday by a shaggy-haired gunman who robbed the firm and ned with them in a stolen police car. place. Just wait. Don't w<rry about it. They aren 't 1oln1 to go free ." After t"·o hours of riding. the gunman spotted a green Cadillas and used the stolen car's police siren I.a for~ the vehicle to stop. He freed Mrs . Thompkins, whose son is a Highway Patrolman. and thl!: driver of the Cadillac. Perry Bernard, Parkin, Ark., but took HasMr with him. Hasner later was released unharmed in a wooded area and the officers finally cap- Even the whetls of govern· menl ground to a halt as power was cut in the state capitol ln Lincoln. About two to four inches of snow accumulated in the eutem part ol the state. but drifts and blowing snow drop- ped v!Cl blllty to near uro. Traffic In western Iowa was 1t a stafldstlll as the storm moved In with sleet. freei:ln11 rain. ice and snow. "We'rt socked in tight ," a Mason City policeman said early toda y. ''The snow plows can't get out until visibility eases up." Cars wen! halted a t Hampton. about 28 miles 80Uth of Mason City, because of poor visibility and ataUed NEW YORK !UPI) -A spokesman for Seth Israel H06pital said today ja.u arti&t Louis "Satchmo" ArmsltonJ was resting comfortably and ''responding to treatment" for a heart ailment. Earlier report1 had sald ~!i•t the gravel-volctd tr um~ et player was in critical eon. dition after being admitted Monday to the hospital'• in· tef'lsive care unit. The 70-year-<>ld mu~ielans's personal physletan, Dr. Gary Zucker, said Armstrong had not had a heart attack although he had been suffering from a heart condilio" ror some time. Armstrong. who rose from the hand icaps er beinJ born in poverty in a New Orleans shack to become 011e ~: America·s fo r ema s t en- tHtalners. renown e d throughout tbe world, wa~ arJ. milted to Beth Israel only Cost Overruns Cited tured the bandit when his ca r WASHINGTON (UPI) tecbnolOi Y· of Phl.ladelphla reporte d Uon of stolen property law . know whether criminal pro. two days alter cornpltting a Tbunday that 277 Penn Cen· and the fraud by wire law, secutions w'*1ld ruull. two-wetk engagement It the tral Railroad cars \llnisbed He said 27 cars with Penn "Everything is sketchy and Waldorf A1torl1. since early 1970 afte.r being Cenlral rn1r~ngs painted over incomplete ," be said. One Of lmltated by untold musi-diverted onto the La Salle bad betn touod in LaSalle's the dl:etchy elementa is a firm cians ana 1ln1er1, Armstronr track1. He said the cars ap-yardl. know• as Diver g if le d produced thousand s of parently were stolen 11': The Federal Talk Force on Properties, mentioned in coart reeords, appeared in 1cores switching <lperations. Organized Crime bas joined documentl filed when the FBI <l( moUon pictures and played "I really don't know what the ~nvesUgaUon and a cbtained search warrants · ttt in nlahtcluba and concert halls ha ppened." siid Cinotto. "I railroad sourc:e said. "There Inspect lhe: LaSalle rallread In the weatem world and really can't say any more." Is more there than m@.et.I tbe premises. behind the iron curtain. _:.::::::...:.:::::..::.::....::::.c=:.:_ ___________ __.: ________ _ In 1969 he was warned by doctors to slo w down alter a ntar-fatll coll•pse in Italy. T h t lrrespreasible "Sat. chmo" told the worried phys!· clans: "A lot or people live according to Hoyle . Bu t Hoyle'.11 dead -I live ac- cordlnt to Louis Armstrong ." SALE WATER LILIES Pacific Goldfish F•r~s 14142 Edw1rds St. Driving around in the patrol car. the gunman warned police over the car's radio to stay clear. "Back off." the gunman uid. '"If you want the hostage alive, cool it. I'm going to blow this guy's head off if you don ·t pull them off. Get them off my back and I mean it.., was wrecked after a chasl!: The General Accountini Office The post said it obtained l~=========~I on Interrtate 4. He suffered (GAO) has discovered that d f GAO' Ii minor facial lacerations when an a vance copy o • WISTM!NSTIR HJ-7105 Patrol cars kept away, but fl()liee kept the flei!!ing car under surveillance r r o m airplanes 11nd helicotpers. cost overruns on 61 weapons 8, 1 d " · ·u ( the car hit a tree. The 11mount ~page s u y, acqu111 on o syste ms have reached $33.4 of money he took was not billion so far, the waihington major weapons sygtems." determined immediately. Post said today. The GAO, an independent The FBI charged Vitalius Malinauskas, 26. or Altamonte The G A O b I a m e d watchdog agency und!r the Springs, Fla., with bank rob-"deliberate under!stimatlng, control of Congress, said the bery. unanticipated d@ve\opmenl major weapons systems in· Hesner, branch manager of difficulties, faulty planning. itially were advertised to cost the American S1vings and poor m an a gem e n t, bad S&l.6 b\lilon. By June 30, 1170, Loan Association, said Wf'ltn estJmatlng," inflation and the the Penta1on e1tim1ted the NO. 1 ON THE COAST Your Hometown Newspaper 11 The DAILY PILOT "You don't think I'm that much of a fool." said the l\lftman, wearing a false mustache a n d sunglasses. 'Tbe planes are all over the the gunman ente.red his 1 _d:'"'::":'~:'•:._~•~1~p:l•:it~~n~e~w:._~<~O<l:_:•~t~l~l1~7~b:ll:li:•n:·~~~~======:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ establishment and began wsv- in& a pistol. "All I could see w11s how big the barrel of that gun was." Agnew Charges CBS With Distorting Facts SOSTON {UPI) -Vice President Splro T. Agnew said Thursday accusations of distortion leveled at the Pen- lagon in a recent CBS. TV documentary could just as ~·ell apply W the net~·ork It.ell. Agnew said the CBS ne.,.,•s documentary ''The Selling of the Pentagon," broadcast Feb. 23, failed to observe the adage about people living in glass houses throwing stones. The Vice President quoted the CBS script as saying. "nothing ls more important to a Democracy than the free flow of information. Misin· forynation, d is tort ion and propaganda all interrupt that flow ." "It is the CBS television.'' he said, ''not the Department of Defense that leaves much to bl!: desired in ttrms of the free flow of inform1tJo n." Jn New York CBS President Frank Stanton called Agnl!:w ''mistaken." SUnton said •·nie Selling of the Pentagon" has bee n praised b y "dlstingulahtd Americans from all walks of life. It has bten criticized. But we believe that it Is an important 'and valuable job or journalistic invest111tive reporting." VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS PSYCHOANALYZED BY JACK BIDWELL • , , Chance. &-"" If you have •Ver ca.r!l!:ned your Yolks· wa&en up tht alley b!· hA.•!en the Lid(I Theatrl!'! and Bid,,.·!ll"s t.lf'ns ~11nll you ha ve al ready ~n analyz:td. You ha ve ~en ~1 ud1ed to Iii! the moil ct1re-frt'e of all tnd i\'ldu11.l1. Deep down you 11re a little snooty bf'. cau~e you kn0""' yQu belong to an eHtl!! 1rnur or crPI· tl ve ptople. It i~ under· ~lood that you can drrnr· 111te your Bug 11.nY''·11y you llke becau!lf" V-Dub111 rt 11.C• ceptabte In an~· attire! You snob the guy in th• Cadil· lac before hr h11.s 11. ch Ancr to look dO\\'n on you. Wh,11t dOl!!S he knc1<v 11.bou t bf>lnii: an lndivldu.'11 ... l!:'l"rPpt how m.l!ln,r tncl ividuals ha vf' C11dl!l ae1. An,ywl.)'. bP.1111 a crea. tlv,., resourttful pe r!!on you t:•n lmmed\Ately ap-prrciatf' m11ny more thine~ In lifl!'! than the unfortun111te man in thr C111ddy. You 1'rr ablf' In 1111kr 111 hl'lslc.slly ui lv thlni 11nd Adorn it \Vllh your own innov11 tiona 11nd ~omehO\I.' makr It cu1io -Cadillac& are just born bP.11uttru1•:• Of ro11rsf' "'htn It comf'I to u vln i:: mon ry lh11t !s ynur .tl'lt(\altv. Tha t Is ~·h@re all my rr~ psycho\· ogy comts ln. l am havinz an eccentric aalt that It going to attract au people of your nature. In fAct. lf1 bound to attract all the Ferrari, Lamborghini and Cadillac owners alllio. You can "'cogniR them by their heady @yes and they may com@ inconJ.to in their ne!ghbor"s Y'!l! SO YOU HAD BETTER GET HERE EARLY be{inning Satur· dav morning, r.turh 20. \Ve "·ill have a huge tt:· 1rctinn of Ot111n1gatl!:, Di!!V• nnshirr and Top 0 ?-tart Suits up to $145 now S40. R11.tner Spc'.lrtcNt.ts orlainal-1y $70 now S~5. You wtll pay for any modest alter· al inn!t in<'urred. Also, yl'JU mla-ht removt your ba<'k seat be<:aullif' It. dorsn•t end here . Wr art i?"ning to have: thrtr bAJ'. gain tablf's ... StO. f-4, And it respectively. What ~·nu are 2oing to find on th,.se 111.bli!!' will astound Yl'Ju ' Jant:i:f'n Sweat!n.. Cnrhin Drrss Slacks, Bllt. \Vf'll Slacks-SlO. Gant, Enro, HanR"·T"n and Hath· &\l.•&y Shirt. 14. The Sl ta· bl! Is for bht df'all only 1.t1d ynu ml1ht ~ 1hocked hy what you find on It -enm,. 11nd u.~? Nr)(t ..... ,,.k, Jack Bidwf'll psychotn11l rz@1 the Man In the C•dillac! JACK BIDWELL 3467 VIA LIDO In NEWPORT BEACH 673-451 0 I If you do, you 'll be glad to know there are 58 places in Soutt!f?fn Cal ifornia to get help. The 58 off ices of Southern California First National Bank. We've been improving our loan-making process so much we have it down to a sc ience. aolJTHiRN CAUFORlllA In fact, we can arrange yo ur lo an in a matter of hou rs. And the inte re st will be at low bank rates , instead of the other kind. RRST NATIONAL llANK • ~!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'!!"!'!'~COSTA MESA, 230 EHi 17th St., 642-1 660 HUNTI NGTON BEACH, 8899 Ad1ms Ave., 962-3377 -171 22 Beech Blvd., 847.,6tf I ... • DARY PU.OT EnlTOBIAL PAGE .'The ~ Teacher Cutbacl{s ·' II may be legal, but is it really fair! Th•t was the question teachers, administraton. parents and principals asked last week when 'the Hunt~ lngton Beach Union High School District held its per· sonnel lottery. · Administrators pooled 249 names in a cardboard box and drew Jots to determine the seniority of first, second and third·year probitionary employes. The names not only included , tea~hers but also assistant principals, nurses, psychologists an d counselors. The lottery method. provided for by the California Education Code, gave each of the 249 persons an equal chance at a good .number. But it is incredible to think that school authorities would consider them all equally qualified. · District officials assert the five campuses may neve~ ~ Jose any of the teachers who drew lots last week. But iY they do, they stand to lose some good ones. Selecting names by chance make& no allowance for a teacher's experience, his enthusiasm for work or his capability. The good teachers as well as the poor are eliminated. Teachers may be created equal, but what they ac- c::omplish through the process of education and exper· ience may make some more equal than others. The irrationality which underlies the lottery method is not the fault of the Huntington Beach Union High School District. Local administrators had the option of either selecting the lottery, or an "alpha ,system'' by which the names of those staff members to be dropped fl'om ·lhe rolls are determined alphabetically. Both are [or Its !allure to Htablish a method whereby teachers are evaluated tn terms o! merit. Then, when a:taU cul' are to be considered, it wou ld be much simpler to keep the strong teachers. It seems that a method of evaJuating teachers on the basis of performance Is long overdue. Study Session Change Item: Fountain Valley City CouncjJmen wiU no ton· ger hold study sessions prior to regular council meet· ings, but include them on the council agenda. Two reasons h ave been offered for the change in style. First, councilmen can take official action on mat· ters which previously were up only for study session dis- cussion. Second, councilmen felt the ,public was not suf· ficiently aware of nor responsive to study sessions and that the public should know what happens during them. On both counts councilmeO have made the right decision. Often study sessions have reached a point where decisions were made but action had to be delayed two weeks to be put on the council agenda. The public can also benefit from the study session! by learning what thoughts and what information is be· hind many of the decisions made. Councilmen realized that even though study sessions are open, the public is generally unaware of them because no action is aUowed. equally absurd. ' The finger must be pointed at education generally By making their studies a part of the official coun· ell meeting, Fountain Valley's legislators are not only meeting the letter of the law regarding the public's r ight to know -which they had done anyway -but are fully meeµng the spirit of it. Tbe winner a11d still heavyweight champion of the U.S. Senat.e. . ' H State Must Provide More Equitable Distribution of' School Funds Educational System Should Not Depend on the Voters To the Editor: Our educational system should not and musl not depend upon the taxpayers' support at the polls. If this change demands a rewrite of the state. con- stitution, then this should be undertaken. Our standards of education must not only be maintain~ but.,' hopefully, im· proved.· To lower our .ita.ndards in this day and age wlltn education is more essen'tial thin ever tsefote is urithinklfblt. Jt is also unfair to upecl citizens struggling with a fixed income to vo&.t lhemselvea more t.Ues e~n for a 'fi~l issue such as education. Though J wonder if we have considered just how much more of our tax dollar would be spent on policing and punishment if our young people are occupied with school oruy half of each day. THE STATE MUST provide a more equitable distribution of funds to ttie districts. I understand that in the state of Hawaii , f\IJ:lds art· clispensed equally to each district regardless af the wealth of that dlsti'Jet, thereby insuring eacb and every child the equal opportunity guaranteed by OW' constituUon. Why could this not be 1 part of our future planning for the :state or California? Pl ease act now to do what i:s possiblt to remedy the deplorable practice of putting our most important consideration -our childun's educaUon -at the mercy of the polls. MRS. M. L. CHAFFIN What'• Ahead Now? To the Editor : tt's your school, Charlie Brown. Your folks did a COP.OUT. Which sets you up to becoming a DROP·OUT. Not all the folks are guilty. Just the 50,000 or so who couJdn't be bothered to get out and vote al I.he last :school tax override election. It wouldn't have taken many of them to swing the result. Just a thousand or !iO. But maybe they were too busy watching the boob tube. SO WHAT'S AHEAD now? CUts all around. Classes. teachers. athletics, sports, coaches, etc. Edi.son had a great football team last year. They went all the way to the top. That was a great day at Santa Barbara when they gave Lompoc their lumps at the ClF playoff. Will there be more such days? Forget it We may not even have the buseJ to carry the team. Double sessions seems a certainty. Thal means the kids getting out Clf the second session may find themselves aoing home in the dark through long dmrted areas. Potential victims of a53ault. Not • very nice prospect. CAN WE DO anything about il? We can. Another school ·election is bound Dear Gloomy Gus: n-olec:ltd to the cKJc ~uncll are not 1u&om1tJctllt ~ with unlimited po...,.., TbeY haw: only the right to repreaent the people in the t.ranaactlon tA. c1\y buainess. l have yet lo bt omf,Jnced lh1t my chUdren·r; dentll bUltl'i ts the ctty'1 bw:lness. -P. E. M. ""' ... ""'. "'lt<tt ......... ...... - -.Ml'lly --.. ... ----· "*"' ,.., .. """'" ........ , ... 0111' ....... to be set up soon. When U comes don't let yourself get shortchanged. Make sure Mom and Dad get out and vote. Also lbe fellow ne~ door and the man across the :street. You got an upset but don·t cry. ORGANIZE! SAMUEL HAKAM St!hool Que•tlons " .1)1,/Jlo.Edl!o" rn the field of education 1 believe it wa:s a technique of Socrates to ask qu.y~loos as a means of passing a mes- ~ate. Maybe it still works. Is it not true that if the recent tax meas~ had passed, that if the various achool districts were totaled. elementary apd high schools, we would be paying more D)Oney than many other wealthier areas in California that have unified school districts? If our area is broken down the way it is into more than one school district could it be that money can be solicited more easily. and that it also may be apportioned unequally? Do each one of these school district.'! haft: their own management staff? Could it also be that people against school tax measures are not really the vilains ' they are made out to be and that they might not be ao concerned with the amount ot the tax as the misuse? rr BAS BEEN intimated that my tax money would not even pay for one yEiar of education for a grade school student and that money is supplemented from other sourees. Could someone ex- plain these other miraculous sOurces? Are they not possibly the result of various other forms of taxetion upon the people? Could it be that you would have in our local elementary school an empty room lliled with shelves boasting 4000 volumes while another school ap- proximately two miles away was holding classes in the hallways until a new school under construction was finished? Could there be the possibility tbat cutting costs in the education area is not tolal!y solved by mass cutbacks in personnel? Do schools have people in the form of purchasing agents oo lhe various levels? Is the material required for our schools competitively purchased? WRY 00 WE NEVER have any money left over from the lax overrides when admittedly they asked for more than required and then have to have it again when the override expires? Why are students used in voling cam· pa igns and would the lnOuence begreater upon them than even the family can exercise? Are the children put up front in a scare campaign? Could our schools be run on a bilateral b8sis of educators and businessmen? ts our school a business for the purpose of 1tumiftg out educated childreri? Are educators qualified to manage a businus? Are schools i;ometimes extravag3nt to spend their bUi!gets in order to qualify for the Qme amount the nc:rt year? · l:low ,is it that tax lssues for local tchool;i; can be so vague in what the: money Is for and then not be spent far that intention anyway? RONAI.ll A. DAVIS, WJl Bluk ruesday To th< Editor ' From all pointa of view, tht Huntington Beach· lh'IJon High School District was onct one of the finest distrlctJI in the etate. Thia dots not appear true todey. The school district has enjoyed a high level or resptct and estffil'I in the com· munities it has served. The district has coped well with rapidly increasing •tu· Lettert from reader1 are welcome. Normdlly writer.s should convey the i'r mes1ages in 300 Word.s or less. The right to condeme lette"'.-' to fit space or eliminate libel i.s re1trotd. All let- ttf1 nimt include signature and·mait- lng address, but names may be with- held on r equest if sufficient reason Is. cipparent. Poetry will not be pub- l ished. dent enrollments and the attendant shortages in space and funds. Following Black Tuesday, the situation has greatly changed. WHEN I CAME to this district last September, I did not know the extent Clf difficulties that we would face. I have constantly been educated to these problems and am amazed at the high level of morale that is shown on the part of the students. faculty and staff during these most uncertain times. 't is indeed my hope that the Board of Trustees will see fit to offer again to t.he public the oppcrtunily to determine the quality nf education they wish provided for our communities. I . t CANNOT believe Utat the public which bas fostered and encouraged the highest quality of education in the past now wishe! to provide only a minimal educational program for their children and those children of their neighborhood. From an educational standpoint, it is lrlipossible lo avoid the bleak view into the next school year as things now stand. But the situation ls not so simple a:s the possible loss of student activities or bUJ!ling, oV?:rcrowded classrooms, short school ctays and other factors that have been discussed recently. These aspects are tO be determined wholly by · the Board or Trustees. nIE FACTORS that relate to long term damage will perhaps outweigh the suffering of one year of an anemic or skeleton educational oflering. Consider for a moment the great length of time necessary to recover frClm just one year of a greatly weakened system. Many of the outstanding teachers who cannot be retai!'fed will seek and find teaching positions elsewhere :;ince outstanding teachers are al"·ays In demand . But B1t 6.,orge ---· Dear George : I just wanted to "'rile you a lt!ttei: of heartfelt thanks. For years I went around worrying that people thought I was eccentric. Then 1 started reading your column. J 've completely quit worrying about myself -now 1 go around worrying I.hat people think YOU are eccentric. CURED Dear Cured: Yeah -you may be cured, b\Jt many more tcstlmo.1lals like THAT and l'm going W be pretty sick. Dear George : Aa ot1e of your fans J \loo'OUld like to know how many chapters there are to your book on Sideways Thinking. K.B. Otar K.8.: There·1 only one chapter, K.B. -but, boy, is this a tall book! would they care to come back two years from now during better times? Will the student:s who will have survived one year of an impotent educational prClgram eve_:rJuJJy recover? WILL riHE STAFF juggling and re<:1rganizalion stimulate our m o s t outstanding counselo r s and ad- ministrators to seek e m p I o y m e n t elsewhere? The communities will suffer a severe disaster if we are to proceed ioto this bleak future withoot talting,jnolher look and malting another attempt to :stimulate our educational system. I cannot believe that the citizens want the school system they voted on Black Tuesday. ROBERT MALOTI' ROLLE Frozen Purse Strh1gs To the Editor ~ The people ha\'e spoken aga in! This is democracy-thank God for it! And on that same principle I would like to put forth a few ideas. The "yes" vote in the Huntington Beach School Tax Override Jost again by a margin of only 562. Where were the good parents when their children reall:Y needed them? None of them would knowingly deny the children food if they were hungry, counsel if they ask for it, !and sometimes if they don"t). They don't denY them their allowance, their funky c!Clthes. their gasoline money-but they are denying them their chance for a better life. THE PUBLIC HAS now hit the syn· drome o[ automatically voting •·NO'' Why? This district has had com· paratively little vandalism. The majority of the students are sincerely trying, and even the few who aren't should not hold back the majority. These are our children-our future leaders and our hope for a better tomorrow. The parents didn 't lose the decision by not wishing a better education for the children. They lost it through apathy -the "let George do It" thinking. Well, George bas as many problems as they do . He is tired, too. So the voters who are more interested in freezing the ir purse strings simply went out, voted en masse, and pinned them to the wall. THEY DON'T SEEM •lo tomprehend lha t by putting out a few eitra dollars ' each year for education they can easily save themselves 10 times the sum that it would take to support the added welfare participants and those in cor- rectional institution!! who would not have been there had they had the proper education. ' The food bill increases each month-we don't :stop eating; our gasoline bill goes up--we don·t stop drh·ing: the price of housing goes u~we still don't live ln a tent; lhe price of clothing goes up -who goes naked except the nudist? DOESN'T TT follow, then, that if the J>fiCe of education g~ up, we should nol stop educating? Our children ha ve lost tht decision twice. Will we let them down a third tlme~ For Cod's sake. lets unfreeu our br&inll and realize that their only hope for progres.~ion. and thereby a better Hfe, is through a better education . Then, for our children·s sake, get off nur froten assets and do some.thing about IL SYLVIA NEWSOME For ~lodlfled Dn1t To the Editor : I vltw wilh gre~t alarm the IDO\'ement .,·!thin the community, and particularly within oo.r own school, to undermine the confklence in and minimize the ef· fectiveness of our educators. C refer to the movement which you repor,ted-on. in your paper in recent editions concerning the implementation of tl'!e ' modified day scheduling for students at Nieblas school. A group of parent:s calling themselves "Concerned Parents" is trying to halt or impede th.i.1 program liy saying that the educators will use the time rescheduling for their own advantage and that the changes will be harmful to the children. MY VISITS TO the school have shown me the spirit of cooperation between members of the staff, and the children appear to be happy in their learning situabon and knowledgeable in the sub- jects they've studied. School test scores are high and problems are dealt with in an enlightened manner by staff members. The success of the school in these endeavors would seem to indicate that our teachers are professional pe<>ple who are well -trained and who work earnestly at their professions. They find difficulties in coordination efforts, however, an d need addition.al lime in which to l•:ork as a group planning, coordinating and introducing new materials to staff. THERE HAS BEEN sufJicient parent information on the change, and the ma· jority of parents have 'expressed ap- proval. This small minority. however, has chosen to voice dissent on the part of "Concerned Parents.,,. They present no new information lo substantiate their objections and their arguments break down to a personal dislike of the plan. Since they in no way represent the majority opinion. and they present nn valid arguments on the subject, I suggesl that their objections be e<1nsidered in the light of what they are-the personaJ opinions of a few individuals. I further suggest tha t we indicate our confidence in our educators b y wholeheartedly endorsing the modified day rescheduling at Nieblas school. MRS. MORRIE E. ROWAN OU Editorial Rebutt.,d To the Editor: Your recent tdilorial entitled "An Oil Severance Tax ?·', includes some f1ctual information : but, also. includes im· plicalions wh ich 1 believe should be ' clarified. Your editorial presumes a critical need for additional revenue by the city of iluntington Beach. Though enco\lraged by Uie DAILY PILOT, the Chamber of Commerce and recommended by the city council's :system and da'8 pr<>- cessing committee, the city of Huntington Beach has not yet taken any action towards preparation of a master tconomic plan which would include long. range planning of operating budget~. capital budgets and revt:nue souroo.'i:. Such a plan is an absolute must to determine if. how much, and from what sources. additional revenues for the. city 11re needed. BACKERS OF AN oil tax choose to point only to those cities in which such taxes ha,·e been levied. This would imply that all citiei; having oil production also, h11ve an oil barrel tax. Actually out of 34 cilies In Odlromia in which oil Is produced. only tO hAve an oil tax. The teAdcr i~ left with the impression that 1575.000 i~ the total tax paid by the industry which benefit.~ the local community. This Is only that port.Jon of taxes paid which go directly to the city. Additional laxing entitles such llJ elementary, high school and junior eol· \ege school districts receive laxes paid by the industry of over $2.5 million per year. Converted to cost-per-student. taxes paid by Signal Oil and Gas Com- pany alone provide educational facilities for over 2,000 local youngsters. In ad· dition. the state of California receive.I over $3.5 million per year from royalties paid on crude oil produced at Huntington Beach . This payment goes directly to the state tidelands fund which is restricted to: uses directly benefiting all of tbe citizens of the state of California. YOUR COMPARISON of Huntington Beach revenues to Los Angeles revenue is equally misleading. You imply the major contribution to the $2 millio n revenue of Los Angeles is an oil barre:l tax. The largest portion, however, is attributable to the $2.52 property ta:x rate in the city of Los Angeles as opposed to the $1.45 tax rate in the: city o( Huntington Beach. This very high tax rate, when applied to the assess- ed valualion of the oil industry in L<is Angeles, generates $830,000. Bonus and royalty income amounts to anothe r $8\1 ,000. 'I'he oil barrel tax for the 1969·70 fiscal period amounted to only $267 ,000. YOU SUGGEST the greatest factor which favors a severance lax is because oil is a natural resource and as such all citizens should benefit from it. Thi! philosophy, taken literally, would suggest you favor nationalization of all natural resources simila r to recent take.overs of private property by Algeria, Chile, Bolivia and other socialistic countries. This philosophy is, of course. in direct conflict with the economic structure of our country. Expanded only a little, it could unclude all industry-even yClur newspaper, whose principal raw material -trees and forests -is certainly a natural resource. I Ai\I A HOi\fEOWNER , living in the city of Huntington Beach, as well as a businessman. I agree that ta xes are 1 real problem . I do not agree that lhe way to solve the problem is by arbitrarily placing additional and inequilable taxes on business and industry until they can no longer provide jobs and livelihood for the citizens of our community. Other business will certainly receive th& message-industry is not wanted in Hun- tington Beach. The solution lies in realistic planning which take.!! into COO• sideration the total tax structure and the saturation point at which business and homeowner alike can no longer bear the burden. C. E. WOODS C. E. ''811r· \Vnod.s is a public ,.elatio11.s reprcse11tallve of Signol Ofl a11d Gns Co. and activt in cornmunitJI affair., in Hu11ti,1gto11 Bcacli. Editor --~-- ~'riday, March 19, 1971 The editorial poge of Hze Dail y PJlot seei.-.~ to infoMn and stim- 11latt 1·taders by presen ting ih/3 11ewspar«r's opi11io11S and com· r>ientary on topics of intere.~' ond significance, by providing a forum for the e:-pression of our reodtJrs' opinion.s, and bfl presetiting tltf. divcrte view- poinu of informed observers and .spokesmen on topic.s of ti~ dou. llobert N. Weed, Publisher - ' ' BEA ANDERSON, Editor " ,..,. n Past Styles Take Stage Members of On Corps and their guests will trip the light fan· tastic back through the ages of fashion during a luncheon meeting to- morrow in the Huntington Seacli!f Country Club. The noon luncheon will be followed by a presentation of styles from past periods by Mrs. William Butler of California Costumers. Santa Ana. Models \vill be members of On Corps, and featured will be authentic costumes. In addition there 'vill be special surprise costumes representative of various holidays . Also scheduled to take place is the election of new officers for the auxiliary which helps to support the Huntington Beach Playhouse. The On Corps helps in the Many projects of the playhouse and the community. Since their inception two years ago they have initiated a "First-nighters" program for playhouse openings. First-nighters, many of the regular theater goers. enjoy seein& familiar faces and the camaraderie at the opening of each of the plays presented through the season. To make each opening something to remember, members of the On Corps host a champagne reception and serve hors d'oeuvres follow4 ing each presentation to allow the audience and cast an opportunity to mingle and become better acquainted. TRIPPING LIGHTLY -A unique fashion show will be presented when the On Corps, Women's Auxiliary of the Huntington Beach Playhouse. meet for luncheon tomorrow in Huntington Seacliff Country Club. 1t1odeling authentic period costumes which will be presented are (left to right) Mrs. Nicholas Mose, Mrs. Ellie Lie- be ck and Mrs. Dennis Smith. In addition to costumes through the ages, surprise costumes r epresenting holidays will be shown. The next reception for First·nighters will take place at the open4 ing of "Rashomon" on Friday, April 16, in the playhouse barn. Additional information regarding the First-nighters or the. On Corps may be obtained by calling Mrs. Bobbie Murphy, Huntinaton Shores Motel, 536-8861 . Brigh_t Horizons Alluring ' FIRST TO ENTE R -A glittering crown and festive precontest activities will be among many attractions in the Miss Huntington Beach Contest sponsored bv the \Vomen's Division, Chamber of Commerce. Trying on the crown is Miss Candi Cople Oeft) first entrant, assisted by her mother, htrs. Robert Cople. Like the proverbial pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, vision!'! of a glittering crown enhanced by preconlest festivities y,•ill attract entrants to the Miss Huntingtcri Beach Contest. The seventh annual pageant ts sponsored by the Women's Division, Chamber of Com~ merce, and directing overall activities wil be Mrs. John Inninger, Application blank!'! already have been placed in all area high schools and colleges by division member!'!. To enter girls mu.c;t be between 17 year!'! of age befrn-e April 25 hut not more than 26 by Aug. 31. They must be N!Sidents anrl attend !'!Choo! or work in the city. First social affair scheduled for cooteslants b; a mother and daughter tea which will take place Sunday, April 25, iO the Community Methodist Church. Jiuntington Beach. Chairman of the tea is Mrs. Raymond Morehouse. She will be joined by officers and board members of the Women's Division in gretling the guest.s at the 2 to 4 p.m. event. Mrs. Morehouse will open her home to contestants for a sy,·imming party a n d barbecue between 2 and 5 p.m. May 1. The. contest will lake place May JS. Serving on the contest com- mittee, in addifion t o. Mrs. lrminger and 1'-f rs . Morehouse, are the Mmes. Ed Rubio. tickets; Russell Riley, decorations: Henry Knack, prizes . and Ted Bart I et t, publicity. No ·Stolen Bases . Allowed During Candy Sa le Providing the "frosting" for Little League play will beCthe results of a candy sale taking place in Hunt· in.gton Valley beginning Friday, 111arch 26. and con· tinuing through Saturday. April 3. \Vhile Officer Jim Dahl stands guard, Chris Kimpton contributes his share of earnings to 111rs. 'Dean Hamlin, prui· ... dent of the Little League Auxiliary. Funds ral!:ed will be used for ne\v baseball uniforms and equi~ :: menL ~ . :j • Farnily Appia use Guaranteed to Bring No Curtain Calls ' -• . -' DEAR ANN LANDERS· f\1y little sister 1s only 5 years old. She l1as 1 fanta stic memory and can repeat a poem perfectly after hearing it oqly once. Sissie can count lo 200 and recite the Pledge of Allegiance. She know~ every commercia l on TV and can act them oul just Hke the performers. J can vouch for the fact that Sissie Isn't bashful ·and will perform for anybody. What I "'·ould like lo find out from you is if anyone can use her eommtrcially. My parents know I am wrjling this letrer and they are 1n favf>r of it. -SIS'tER OF A SMART ONE DEAR SISTER: \\'hat you are asking Ii; how your famtly can make some money off your llftlt tlste.r'1 erctptlonal intelligence. ~ly advice Is to forget It. ANN LANDERS Supersmart kids are obnoxious v;hen they are constantly pushed 10 perform. Children their on age dlsll.ke lbem and adult!'! find such exploltalion ap- palling. ~1oreGvtr It glve1 the gifted chUd the wrong CT1nception of learnlnfi:. They crow up believing that the principal reason for acqnlrlng knowledge Is to show off. DEAR ANN LANDE1'S · Why do you J!r!nl letters from girls who have been seduced and abandoned and cootinue lo give them the same outmoded advice? Instead of saying, "I told you so," why not say, "Good riddance!., \\rhat exactly are these ninnies com- plaining about'.' Why would a girl WAJ\'T to marry !iVCh a skunk~ It bums me up when I read weepy lellers from nitwits who beat themselves publicly 1n your column because they went lo bed \.\·1th a buy. hoping it would bnng them the ultimate prize -marriage. Then to their horror. the rat 5aye - "Sorry, I can't marry you. )·ou were too easy." Any girl who had an experience like I.hat should thank her lu'cky stars she didn 't save her virginity for her wedding night, THEN find out what the ·guy was like. Wouldn 't it be terrible t.o marry a jerk like that and have him question her purity because she didn 't pass the tests In the 1914 medical books? Shout halleluja. girls. A new day Is dav.'tling. -LIBERATED DEAR DAWN: What's your beef~ I'm with you all the way. DEARN ANN LANDERS : You missed a great opportunity to help a lot of lonesome \\'Omen. I refer to your reply to "Solo," the widow who made fnur telephone calls. In an effort to get A couple to come to her home for dinner. , One friend said, ''Sorry, my husband is drinking again and if you servt c0ektails he'll be drunk the whole weekend. I can't take a chan~ ... " If that widow i.hinks SHE is lonesome, she should have had a heart·t.o-he.art talk with that lady. No one is more lonesome than the wife of a drunk. I know because I've been married to one for 30 years. I never know when or IF my husband is coming ho m e for dinner -or what condition he 'll be in when ht gets here .. Granted. both the v.•idow and lhe v.'ife of a boozer have a hard time, but they could help each olher sharing 1 few sociable hours. Why didn't you tell her? -MARRIED & SOLO DEAR ftt.&.S.: Betau1e I didn't think of Ii. But I'm 1lad you did. nanks for wrlttnr. CONFIDENTIAL TO BORED, UN>'. FULFJ!.LED AND NE,ED TO BE NEE°': ED: Ye!, I have an answer for yoa.. .. Write to Closer Look, Box tC..: Washington, D.C. 20013. There iJ a.: desperate need for teacher1 ot tbe ~: dicapped . Hete la a splendid OJll)Ortunlty~ to give -and to receive. • ~ ' Give In or lose blm .•. when a l'lf: ai\·e1 yoa Lbls line , look eul! For -: on how to han dle the 1vper H'I ultsm.-._: theck Ann Landen. Read ber book!·: "Nec:klng ind Pettln1 -What Are : Llmlt17" Send your rtqu'est io ; Lander1 In ca re of the DAJ.t.V PJl.Otii ~ enclo1lng 50 cent~ In coin ind 1 ..,... ;:. stamped 1elf·addre$Atd envelope. • • '- -- .~ --DAllV ~lLOT fridiy, Martll 19, lt71 Horo ~cope: Pisces Face Facts LANS SOARIN~ -Huntington Beach Chapter emt,>ers of Delta Gamma reflect buoyan t theme of ~roaty's 98tb annual Found«s Daf· J_teunion, en- •. tiUed Soaring Into the Seventies. Anticipating lunch· ~ •,· DORIS KEYES ~·~ ~ To Say Vow1 !~ ~< t'uptials ~lri Offing ~;!An early Ju1y wedding ts ~ plamted by Doria Evelyn ~u ud James. Ru&sell ~ whose betrothal has Ileen announced by Mr. and Mrs. William s. Keyes of Costa Mesa. pareol3 o( the ~-bride. Studen ts Announce April Day Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Dixon of Costa M e s a announced the betrothal of their daughter, Donna Dixon to Don Fredriksen during a family gathering in their home. Among .guests were t-.1r. and Mrs. Lawrence Fredriksen of Costa Mesa, parents of the future bridegroom . Others attending were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ricard, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Dixon and Mrs. Caroline . Th a y e r , grandparents of tbe couple, Mr. and Mrs. ·J1'ord Brown and Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Lumpkil!. 'l'he bii~ is a graduate of Costa "'"' High School and her husband is a graduate of McN ally High SchooL They both 11ttend Orange Coast Collego. . An April S wedding In Calvary Chape1, llanta Ana, ts planned. Fli ng Springs SATURDAY MARCH 20 Sarprtda1l1, many A r I e 1 udwt lack 1Mer cobfldenct. nts aplaln1 tbelr occuklnal bluter ud altow of arTO&aoce. C. pooltlve leve~ Aries II ertglul.ladepeadeat,a u&aral bmovaior. On nes:aUve plane. Arla tafftra pug1 of aelf-doabl. h . II lmporlut for memhen ol 11111 oodllcal olp to ackteve baLaace Ww•n amcuee ud bamWIJ. ARIES (Mareh 2l·April It): Impetus shown ln career area, you take dellnit< llep to fulfill ambltloo. Gain cooperation of family members. You will need ,llO!ld emoUonal aqpport. Cata li1Ja Ce remony Planned Wagners Tell News Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wagner of Costa Mesa have announced the engagement of their daughter, D o r 1 n n e Wagner to Vlad Ghiulamlla, son of Dr. and Mrs. Radu Gblulamila of Albany, N.Y. Mlss Wagner is a graduate of Estancia High School and Orange Coast College. eon get.together on Saturday, March 20, are Oeft to right) the Mmes. Fred Lawhon, Thomas Tullar and John Pagan. The Huntington Beach Chapter will host the gathering in the Airport.er Inn. Her flance, an alumnus ot California State College at Long Beach, earned bis MS degree at the University of Montreal and is studying for his PhD in Albany. They have planned a May 21 weddin& on Catalina U:land. 98th Annive rsary County Delta Gammas Soar Into Seventies Monday Meet ing Musical Singing and instnunenLal · mmic will fill the air Monday, Getting close to the century mark, Orange County Delta Gamma chapters w i 11 celebrate their 98th annual Founders Day Reunion on Saturday, March 20, in the Airporter Inn. Mrs. Roger Weninger of lluntington Beach is chairman for the gatherin~ themed Soaring Tnto the Seventies which will begin with a social hour at 11 :30 a.m.,,followed by lunch at 12:30 p.m· Program Combined A joint business meetina will get under way at 1 p.m. on Sunday, March 21, for the Fleet Res e r v e Association Branch and Unit 175 of Oranp County. The guest speaker will be March 22, as Newport Harbor Mn. Claire Wolff, pretldent~ Senior Citizens and their elect of the Blind Children's friends are entertained at 7:30 ;,. Center, founded in L 0 1 p.m. in the Senior Citizens · ~ Angeles in 1938 by Delta Garn· Recreation Center, Newport l ma alumnae. Beach. The center is noted for its A luncheon is planned on Cradle Club, through which Thursday, March 25, for mem-i\11! medical specialists ready blind hers .onlr, to be given by babies for the nursery school the Home·idakers Club, Inc. program -also undertaken Card playing will follow. at the center -and counsel parents on proper training for Members also are an- t.heir blind infants. ticipating an Easter program Seven SO-year members will following the April I business ··1 be introduced at the Juncbf<ln. meeting. A hat parade with r , when Huntington Beach Delta Gammas will host 'the Santa prizes and choral music are , Ana, Saddleback, FuUert~ on the program, and past Anaheim and W h I t t I e r pres.idents will be honored chapters. guests. Emblem Club Planning Officer Installation There will be a no.host din· ner following the gatherine in the Staff NCO Club at the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Station. Huntington Beach Moose Official visitors will be Mrs .. Lodp wUI be the scene of Alice Mann, s o u th we s t the 15th annual installation of regional president, and r. E. officers for Huntington Beach McCulley, national vice presi-Emblem Club at 8 p.m. on dent. Saturday, March 20. ,i "'' ._, t; l <.;.f;t_ ·i . .... DORINNE WAGNER Mii'_ Bride Raggedy Ann Don't argue with superiors. TAURUS (Apr!l IO-May 20): You m>y be dealing with the abstract. Me.ans appearances cowd be dece!•lng. Look beyond th• obvlolls. Com- municate with one at a c!i>tance. Reteale aelf from senseleu restrictlonl. GEMJNI (May 21.June 20): Money situation lmprovet. Resourcu ioortue in value. You can get down to pracUcal WUe1. You know where you stand -and what to do about it. Ht.eel voice of experience. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Lie low. Find out what is being done and why. This is accomplished by 1 h r e w d, WKlbtrusive observation. Let others set pace. Don't try to force issues. Legal matter is highlighted. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Stress crtative approach. Ac- cent greater originality, in- dependence. Capricon in- dividual could play significant role. Romantic 1 n t e r e 1 t 1 dominate. Maintain. a e 1 f • esteem. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Hunch proves accurate. One who aided you in past could make reappearance. C h i I d could pose problem. Be fair but firm. Steer clear of one who i! an apparent lmow·it-all. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Actlvlty increases a r o u n d home base. One linked to you emotionally or 1 e g a 11 y becomes aeU-aaaertive. Main- tain aeme of humor. Family member needs a good laugh. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-llov. 11): Accent on sbort joun>e)'I. ldeaa which need addillonal development. Some relaUv~ neighbors may take pu,gnacioUs stance. Be aware of line polnta. Qiecl: dJreo. tion1, reservations. SAGl1TAIUUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Be ready for change, special messages, C<ltn- municatlons. Share knowledge. You will learn by teachlng. Get together with GemlDI in- dividual. Pool resources. CAPRIOORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): What was hidden is ex· posed to light. You find out what bas been oceuring behind scenes. Family members ~ involved. Clandestine activity is emphasiied. You w i 11 understand. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Obtain hint from Caprkm'a message. Much that occun may be obscured from vlew. You will have to read between lines, study fine print. A void tendency to f o o l yourself. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on friends, hopes. wishes. Carry out plans. Don't hesitate because of secret fears. Older individual ls favorably impressed. You could receive needed financial backing. To fine! oul wno•s lllek., for nw h'I rnaMY •rod 1ov1. orar s~.,.., Omolrt'J DOC*l9t1 "Secr.t Hinh b' M<ln Ind Women." $ol1ld blr!hdllle •nd 50 Cllllff to °'""' Mtrologr $Krwh. ti. CIAll. Y f'ILOT. 80!< JUO, Gr11rld Cintra! '1•· Ikon, NIW York, N.Y. 10017. Dons Array of Raiments Miss Keyes and her fiance J>oth are graduates of Costa Mesa High School. She is a ktudent at California ~esslonal School. .. ;· Her ftance, son of Mr. and r,ln. Glenn W. Lusk of Cosbl ~esa, rtcetved his AA degree II electronics from Orange Coast College and is serving In the Marine COrpl at Fort Members ot the 524 Club of San Clemente ace making pl~ for . the annual Spring Fling fashion show and dinner at 6:30 p.m. Oil Saturday, March 27. Fashioru; !or alt members of the family will be presented in the San Clemente Masonic Temple under the ' direction of Mrs. Howard Monk, general chainnan. Guitarists to Perfo rm Musical Date Noted Mrs. George Babbitt, supreme junior past president of the Supreme Emblem Club of the United States, will be installing officer. Mrs. Carl Sharpe will assist her, To be seated as president Is Mrs. Guy H. Cannon. Those serving with her will include lhe Mmes. Art Whitten, John E.arley, Dean Hedden, James Greer, Gilbert Davis, Tony Caracciolo, Oscar Eidem, Skip Floyd, Sal Caracciolo, Walter Bennie, Joseph Schlereth, Michael Weninger, M: ax Boren, Chester Smith, Lyle Vones and Arthur Bishop. Raggedy Ann will be the heroine for Orange County Alumnae of Alpha Delta Pl, who will collect funds to aid the Hope Haven School for Retarded Children during their annual fashion show tomorrow between 9:30 and 11 a.m. in Bui· Jock's, Santa Ana. Mrs. Robert Harturiaa reads about the adventures of the be- loved symbol of childhood's love and friendship to Suzanne (left) and Christine, who will join other youngsters to serve as hosts and hostesses at the benefit. (icrdon, Ga. . ~ They will exchange vows in Che Prubyterlan Church of Cbt Covenant. COsta Mesa. :Sweater • • iCo mes Clea n '· £!.1ibtn washing a turtleneck *eater, open the collar so tills can penetrate to get .U the layers clean. !'When nearly dry, fold It b3ct m place and tuck a twist of tissue inside to help reshape the collar to It& original con- Reservations may be made with Mrs. Fred Croucher of San Clemente or Mrs. Carter McGregor, Dana Point. Parents Club Guitar music wlU b e featured when members of the Cameo Philharmonic Associates gather In the home of Mrs. John Dillon Wed· nesday, March 24. Performing for the pro- gram, to follow 1uncb, will be Jordan CaMady and John Childers, Estancia High School students. Their offerings will include American and foreign folk songs, country a n d Western mmic, B r o ad way show tunes and modern ballads. preside over the business meeting. Cameo Associates work in the Philhann011ic of· fice, preparing the mori,thly society news bulletln for mail· ing to all women's committee members. Committee members will be joined by their husbands Saturday, March 27, for a cocktail buffet in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Store. '"""· Orange Coast Ch apter, Parents Wilhout P a r t n e r s sponsors a pancake breakfast the last Sunday o( each month in C.osta Mesa City Park from 9 J&.m. to 12 :30 p.m. Wally Richards, chairman, w l I I answer questions regarding the public "rain <1r shine" event at 54U700 or 542--9685. Mrs. David Lang w i I 1 In charge of arrangementJ for the aMual party att Mrs. Store, Mrs. JOOn B. Parker and Mrs. Ira Smith. ' • • ' .. \..Patien ts Ridin g High New Bus Contributed An etght-passenger van to transport patients to recrea- tJooal activities on and orf the bocpital grounds has been contributed to Fairview State 'Hoopltal by Eta E p 1 I I o n ~. Epsilon Si&tna Alpha IOl'Drily. ~eys to the v~hicle were pr-.led to Dr. Anthony N. TOCA> by Mrs. Eric Lundquia~ pre~dfnt ol the chapter. The presentaUon culminated two and 1 .ball )lean of effort by the aeneral membership In oollclUnJ, colJe<tlng and aorttni food coupons. Slnca the project w I I 1tarted in 1968 by Mrs. Lun<f· quist and Mrs. 0 av i d Chandler, then chapter i;iresi· dent, 372,666 food coupons were collected requ ir ing several thousand hours of work by members. 1be balanct of money re· quired to purchase the va n was raised by the group'! tin· nual fireworks bOoths and two diMer dances. Serving as chairmen for these projects were Mrs. Chandler, Mrs. Joseph Cook and Mrs. Rober1 Bartol. Mrs. C. William Kuhr, who now resides in Oceanside, headed the coupon drive prior to Mrs. I.undq uist. Among the many com~ 1nunity organiiaUons who sup- ported the chapter's drive for coupons were the Red Cross, junior and senior women's r.lubs, Alr Foret Mothen, church groups, girden clubs, senior citizens' groups, Scout and Campfire organizations, mens service cluba , mobile home parks, ve teran s ' organizations, women's aux. illariu, the business com· munll,y and many lndlvidu1tls. I ' Slate Prev iew Waist Watch er s Xi Epsilon Psi Chapter, TOPS Waist Wat ch er s assemble every Thursday at Beta Sigma Phi will gather 7 p.m. in Circle ,View School, at 8 p.m. on Tuesday. March Huntiogton Beach . CUSTOM f'ITTl:D FOAM DllSS FOIMS EXACT DUPLICATE 01' YOUR l'IGUJIE 'IT f'ANTJI IAllAIA GAI DNll 1Jf·553J 23, in the Costa Mesa home,;~=~====== of Mrs. Donald Richardson.,1. Mrs. Frank W. Reed will preside over business and ill· troduce 1 proposed slate of Speake r Nam ed officers. Dr. Edward Taub will be ~iiiiiii,i~~~~iiiii~~il the featured speaker when1~ Jewish Family Ser v Ice Associates gather at 7:30 p,m. Sunday, March 21, in the Republic Federal Savings ' building, Santa Ana. Topic will be current Attitudes on Drugs, Sex and Youth Revolt. 1,000'1 OF OIL PAINTIN•S WHOLISAU WAllHOUSI OPIN TO THI PUILIC 50°/o OFF 1ftt •• I DINGIJI, SANTA AN,t, ·--DIALIJIS WANTID . ' new for 1prin9: c••u•I flares ~•n••1111r:c1r4 e Jllt•f•r chtrt• 7 f1,~ien i1l1111f, ntwperl Cfft1r 444-5070 FINAL 2 DAYS OF OUR SALE i B.D.HOWESandSON FIN& JEW£LERS FOi\ THREE Gt.~ERATIO~S NEIWOAT BEAOI: 3412 Via Lido· 675·2731 I/ I ( 7 7 fJ " . - ~ Fo tai -~ .. Valley ·'-.. . EDl!IO N T oday'J: F•••' • • VOL 04, NO. 67, 4 SECTIONS, 4.i ·p~~ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY,'MARCH ' 19,.197>1 • TEN ·CENT$ .! j ... ' .. .. . -.. ,.,. , Budget Calendar Work Seen Soon in Distl-~c\ ' . By RUDI NIEDZIEISJ OI 1M ~ f'JW 119ff Qther1 would call the impending finat1· ci1l1cri1is in tbe Huntington Beach Unkl11 High School District a ~aster. · But ·not Jack R,oper; lht new superintendent, Wht has · betn on the Job since Feb. 1. "I am oplimist'ft l~ard the future and 1 feel very successful in my career. I have always been a winner and I would like ,it l,p continue lb.at way,'' Committee " . Vote s Funds Fo1· SST WASHING TON (UPI). -Th< Sena lo Approprja:tions Committee Ignored House ttpudi.tion of federal financin1 of. the guPersonJc transport (SST) today and voted funds to continue developm>11t of the controversial plane. the 13·5 committee vote meant the Issue will be fought out on the Senate floor , probably next week. Heavy pressures from the airli~e industry, the White House and organized labor we~ being exerted on the plane's behalf. The House voted 215 to 204 Thursday against spending any more government money to develop two prptotypes of the faster -than -sound transpOrt after March 30, when present authorization ends. Emerg.ing from the hour-long. ~~ Appropriations meeting. Sen. WilUJnt Proxmire (D-Wia.), leader of the Slftatt fight qainst the SST, lflld reporter• •·now we'll go back to t.M noor." Asked' if the prospects for tlimfnating funds for the .SST were good. Pl'Ounire said: "We hope so, wt don't tnow. It's very close ." The Senate defeated a proposal ta continue funding the SST proj~t late last session by a narrow margin. but opponuU of the project cautioned that the new Senate line-up might rt1verse the House action. Republican and Democratic leaders of the Senate agreed today the House vote Thursday dims the chan~11 that _the Senate will vote to kttp the pro1ect al ive. . Democratic leader Mike Mansfield told reporters the SST "doesn 't look too lively at the moment." . Republican leader Hugh Scott said the project was "not exa~tly advanced " by the adverse House action. Both leaders made their. state~t.s prior to the Senate committee action, however . • A White Houst aide said President Nixon was "naturally disappoint~:·. at the House action killing a $13~ millio~ appropriation to continue the project .until June 30. But the aide said, "the President Is hopeful th11:t the Senate .~I restore the. funds for the proto~ypes. . Sen. William Proxmire f D -W 1 • · ) • leading the battle against tbe plane, !See SST, Pa1e 2) Girl Stricken By Mystery Bug; Valley Fund Set A 1pecial fund ls bein& opened In Fountlin Valley to help . a 1~-year-old girl slricken with a mysterious Jllness. Tina Kysella, a seventh grader •t Tamura School. has been in a coma gince Thursday morning. She wu reported in "extremely critic~\" con- dition this morning in the intensive cart ward of · Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach. Neurosurgeons have been call!<! in but have not ye! been able to make I diagnosis. a medical aide said. Tina is from 11; family of six childrt• who Uve at 17451 Santa Lucia St., Foun- lain Valley. Her father, William Kysella, is a heavy equipment worker but b11 been out of work for three months, according m Mr1. Allison We.ssler, • member of the Tamura School PTO. 1'1.n. Wessler said the PTO, the fOUl)o Wn Valley Women'• Club. tbe Jayctta, and the women's division of the chamber of commerct, were r1llylng to rallt funds for the child 's medical expenaea. "We are getting a wonderlul retp0nae.'' "'1n. WeS!ler said. "But we understand that tbe bill will run Into "tbousandl of dollar! and that lh4!re b no Insurance.'' A special account ln Tln1'1 name bu bten opened at the Bank of America branch at 17430 Brookhurst Sl, Fount1ln Valley. Donations al.!IO m111y be ll@D\ in tut of Tina Kyatlll Fund. T1mur1 School, 17340 Santa Suzanne, Fount.in Valley. . ' -. . ' the irayinf educator uid with a 11m.lle. .nie.pi"cibJema tai:in1 the .diatrict which eacompaue1 5Z-aquare imile1, five camp- lWI .. am! one continuation high achoel. aPJ)ear overwhelming. ¥oteri , turned down a 6kent tax measure~ earlieri thit month. This would !)ave' ~led the $1.39 rate to $:.~. Insteld ·the rate will drop July I, to' SS.. cents., the maximum 11lowed by Uie .•1t.aU without · an override. Roper e11timata that thil will mean IQPping l • ' S4 million off the diltrict'a 114 mtlllon budiet La order .to.balaoct it. As a result, some of the d.ialrict'a 500-plus teachers may be let ao. Classea may be cut back, aa well as busing and special procrams. "In the future I .see brin&inl back the district in terms of flt financial throes and from its communicative pro- blems, both internally and externally,'' said, Roper. 1'J see bringing the -public back ,into tbtl fold." Lall wm. the 38-ye11 -cld auperi.ft. lendent ailenUy witntued a. 14,_nlme lotiery which determined lhe seniority or those e.mployes wbo may not be rehired nut year. "Many of our teachers do not realize that adminislrat.ors were affected in the same way. The drawing included counselors, school nurses, psycboloaista and even the vice-principals . 'lbe only reason the princlpal11 were not included ii because the rdistrlct ha1 no pro- bationary principals.•• PrObationary employes, actt1rdlnJ lc.'I • Ropt-r, are those who haV~ less· tbail. three years of service in the district While the exact number . oJ tbose: who may be dropped from the rolls next July is not yet kn~n. Roper s~id he would create a · sub!litute' pool to offset their losses. "We would give our t e.a ch er s preference Jn !his pool and they could probably work full time by substitutinJ •t the different campusu," be-u:ptainett Within the .out . mo~U.. Roper. 1&111 the board of trus(.eel would • wort 011 a budget · calendar to · determlrie _q. aclly wb&t would he cul f{om·lllo budllt and the dollar value r1f each mdivldull slict. . . _ ~ Under consideration are. reduclion ·ti. the achoo! day to f.iJ•. pe"odl wltlt an optional 1ixtb period, an incre ... in the student-teacher ratio. cu.fl la (~ ROPJ!.R, Pap I) . - Ballot Turnabout. Anti-flouride Leader Changes Mintl, 1Bruce:fcek, 13 .. of Tamura School, 'pulfs away on his tuba during Jive- ly4>tf{oripance of Dixieland melody entitled "Tailgate Concerto." B~ was orie of M young musicians who performed for Fountain Vall.)" school.tr\istees TI\ursday night. . Witness Presents Alibi • .. For Hartelius at Trial A ~ Mesa hospital nurst testified Thursday in" the Orange County Superior eoUrt 1110n-£r1ud trial of Dr. Ebbe Ha:rteliw 'that the physician '• bkJnde ml.!tres.s · caUtd and asked her lf she had or~ered medical records reflecting the doctor's •presence at the. hopsltal last April t: . Mr1. Erli.iJy·Ryan quoted Reba Vaughn as ulting ber "are you going l-0 £ix them'"?" .. and told defenae 1ttorney Mat- tllew· lturilicb lba1 she lrnmedJately issuredl Mr1. Vaughn· "I'm not 1oin1 Super Granny, 108 R 6-M.£ (AP) -Maria lmperiaU, the woman Romani call Super-Granny, celebrated her 108lb birthday today wtth 1 a le .. ! one! In ll>Oll health. "I am not through with life ye!," lbt said. Sile bu 11 guat.ll'llldchildreo. to perjutt myseiI -1 wouldn't do that for my own mother." Mr.!. Ryan said the records renecl that Dr. Harte.Ji us, 50, treated a patient at the Beverly Manor Convalescent Hoipital from 8:30 p.m. to nearly 9 p.m. Kurllich says they punch holes in t.be prosecution's argument that the doctor planned the fire al his· Corona del Mar offices that night and he further claims that Mrs. Vaughn'• telephone caJI was an attempt by the Costa Mesa woman to remove a valuable alibi. The prosecution alleges tha.t Dr. Harteliua uked Mn. Vaughn 's brother Jim Blevins to set the fire at 23-15 E. Coast Highway as part of the doctor'• plan to destroy what are described u "highly incriminating patient records." Blevins, 39, has teatified. that he did burn the office and he has also l-Old the jury that he helped fake the theft ol. the doctor's car nine da ys earlier (See BAJtTELIUS, Paae ZI By ALAN DIRKIN OI 1111 01!1Y 'llel 111" George Lindegren. leader of the anti- nuoridt petitioners that prompted Foun- l4in Valley to call ,a special electipn co fluoridation June 8, toda'y assailed the , spe~ial vote as ''a wanton waste or mdner." Llndegren had welcomed the election when it w,as set Tuesday night, but toda y he cpanged his position and said the issue should '10 on the ballot in Valley School For Crippled To ~ BoeM . -Official& OI ~.,ountaln .Vallty,$di0ol Dlatrlct -wrllhia lellin' _, to 11 state senat-Ors ln an 4!ffort to hurrY up funtn for 't"Onltruotioh of t Crippled children's .school. · Mike · Brick, district superintendent, told school·trultees Thursday niabt,•that an emerge~cy bill ls now .~ the bands of the stale Senate Educatiol'I Committee which could releise bond money for special schools. "If it P,a•.ses the a Mate &pd, get! the governor'• signature. wt think ~e'll get money for our school," Brick said. Tht sc hool he w~t! to build is a SI.I . million C1>mbinatlon elementary school and · ortbopedically handicapped school. Jt coultl 1erve 120 handicapped children and 300 other clllldren. The orthopedic school would Include eight classrooms designed for han- dicapped children and JO standard classrooms. Educal-Or11 will use the com· bination to help handicapped children mix with normal youngsten. The school will also include a medlcally staffed out-patient ,clinic for the han- dicapped children with the medical personnel supplied by the county Health Department. Orthopedic young.'!tera would come to the school from all five ~lementary school distrlcU within the Huntington Beach Union High School District. Youngsters from the Newport-~esa Unifi'ed School District also would attend the schoool. Plans for the school recently hit a snag when 1tate officials ran out of money for special achools. Block Firing Rauge FUJI YOSHIDA . Japan (AP) -Riot police today hauled away dozena of farmers blocking the road to J U.S. Marine firing range at the foot of Mt. Ftljl, Japan's sacred mountain. Homeowners Air Views · · Hunti'flgto.n Council Orders Hearing on Gooey Dump Homeowners who have blamed tht SteverllOn brothers' mud dump for of· rens~ve _odor• in aou!hta1t Huntipgton Be\ch will -aet ~ chance to alr thtir complaint& ta councilmen Monday night. , The city council will bold a public hearing in the Edilon Hi1h School cafeteria at 7:S> p.m. lo deWmine wbtthe:r a public nuilanct e1.i.ata. The beaiin1 will be conducted at a• odjourned -11n1 ol lhe oouncl1 which will allow the councilmen to order 11 civil KUon agalntt the operaton if 1uf- OcitDt uklenct ls preRnted. City Attorney Don Boofa, who will hondlr' the taking of dep'osttlons from homeowners, ha1 Indicated 1bat the coun- ell·muld call for the Stevenom to abate an aileged nulllnCI. Joaepb 6llvtrl0ft, who operJtes th1 JS.acre dump behind the Southern California EdiM>n Company station with )tl~ brother earl, said today that he would attend the hearing. He also will be represented by attorney William Carlson. Stever&On al.so reported today on 1t.- ltmpt1 lo clean up the dump -uHd for the deposit of rotary mud from oU well drilling operations at Hamilton Avenue and Magnolia Strfltt. His men have been using 1 spray, c:onsisUng o( dried bacteria cultures. in efrorta to clean the ooiing mau cd cnade oil and mud, 80 feet dttp In parts. The spray is being AOld ta the Stever11ons by Gerald, C. Bower Inc. of Orange. The flrm c1•ttna th11;l the tJny bugs will eat aU dead org1nlc: m•t-- ler, Including the oil, and leave behind wal.tr Lhat can be drained off and a hlghl:it or1anlc soil. Steverson uld that the total cmt of this Prosram would be f13,000. Jt iJ believed the cleal'fttp wou:ld take 1 Jtar. "We have bean doing it ln ita.ges," Steverson cotnmtnted. "We have thtee ponda OU!' !her•. One la ahowid&." t[OOd rtSUJta 1treadr •• , . Th< dly <»ilncll hu aJrudy TOCOlved a ioo-name petition charginc lilt dlllllP 111 a danger to c:trlldren as an attradlft nulsance and 1 health hazard became of the odors. The county Air Pollution Colltro1 '" District, through th• dlstrll:I a~)"• office, all'tady has filed an actlan :aaa1Mt the Steversont chargtna that a public nul11nce e1bted Jin. I when wutn from an oil re.finery were 1Uq:edl1 left at the dump. · ·-! ' the 1972 general election. He delivered a let~r urain& t.be council to defer the question to tbe 1972 election to city ball loday. Mrs. Mary Cole, city clerk, today estimated the cost of a special elecUon a.t between ~.ooo and M.OCXI. "There 's no emergency for nuorlda· tion," Lindegren commented. "Thtrefote we are in no · hurry for it to come up before ,the general electiOn. We feel time is also on our 1ide in that thi citizens will bave more oppottwilt1· to Weigh the matter from tbe. ecWoskll standpoint." · · • He was referrin& ta r~l commenta from Dr. Jack McKee. an environment.a.I hea1th · engillft.r wilh t~ · ·~ Institute of Tecluloloa •. Puadefta, who indicated that water in So u•t be r n California 'generally had·enouch natwal ntloride in it that increasing the level may not produce a &Jan.Weant · Im· ·· IS-FLUORIDE, P•C• 11 Khe Sanh Attacked 1,000 Wear y S. Viets :·fl etzirn -ro m LaosBattle ~· . ti,'!!.~.~~ , .. ~ BAIGON (UPll'-AllDUIOI'' tlllil'b weaey turvlvora of the rapidly a11r·" South Vietnamese ta.!li forct lb. · lAos· new back today to Khe Sal1h, lt•virig fewer than 15,000 men inside LIOI, military aources 1aid. ·Khe Sanh ' ltaelf was attacked twlct today by' Communist artillery and rockets. Jumping from U.S. helicopters, the aoldlera klsaed the ground and embraced bucldle1. teera streaming· down their dua. ty, grimy. ractl-One of them iald, •·we had been fighting for 1lx week.!I ln Lao1. wi would rather aurrender than fight any mor~. ·• There was no official report that tbf Laotia n incursion wu coming ' ta an end. but field reportl 1ald 2o South Vietnamese army true.ks pulled away from the Ram Nghi headquarter• of the operational command near KJie Sanh today with furn iture, radios and tquip- ment. A spoke1man crlled the move "rotation'' but declined to elaborate. - Spoke.amen In Salaon admitted th1 Trial Delayed F or H untington Man In Sea rch The arraignment of 1 Huntington Beach man on char1e1 or fl'&nd tbtft, ror1ery and conspiracy baa been dela yed while tht FBI se.arches for a missing Newport Beac.b stockbroker and his wife. Judge Eugene Langhauser of the Cen- tral Oran1e County Judici1l District Court set April 21 as the new d;ile fOr the arraignment of Jame1 Shipley, former vlce president 0( Work! Fiaancial Trends. He la being held on $250,000 while the search continUes for Mr. and Mrs. J()!epb Dulaney, whO were also involved with Shipley and lhe>lnveatruent firm. Investigators hope that when court action ls . launched agalnst Shipley. 38, of letl51 Lowell q.rcle, they will be able to place him in the courtroom with Oulaney,,37, and his wife. Marlene, 31. The couple faces identical cb1~1~s. A nationwide hunt for the Dulaney1 began eight weeka ago when lnvestigat:m learned that the couple had been sun in Oulaney.'1 birtbplic:e ·of Fiora. Ill., after their ntum from West Germany. The Dulaney• went to Europe in December, 196t. An tnveatlaatton of th& , now det\ult1 World' Financial Trtnds complex in t..guna Hiila anCt se.il Beach revealed •pparent fr1uda ol mor9 than ~ mUijon, oulhotldet claim. • ' FBI' agent.I ere conUdeut todly ·that thty. are. closlni the rkl& on the Dulaneya . who were. 1nve!ti1at.ota say, teen just thrff wttU aao tn Colorado. Jnvf:1t11aton bitllevt1 'that more UID IOO lnve1tort, many oC them resldtnti: of th' LelliJre World ·retirement cm'l\- muniUt1 in St1al S..cb4nd Ll.guna Hll11 wlr~clefrluded by operot<>r1 ol.!llt IVOfld r1n ... 1a1 Tt•nclo or1ululloo. hrp ·...i~ ~~ ... ..id • no . Solllll Vlewmese M1e1 ,... m.alned north of french ColoCtl,al &ott 9,.· once the ·axis of tht hive 1aoa the Ho Chi Minh TraU. Al one llmf the · 24,000 men in LaM mannt!d firi 11,1pport bases and landing zones north and south of the road. Ten tueh buet have been abandoned. Field report.!!: uid American helicopt.,. brought out U,. ·t;OCO deleiiders':o! Fil'I Ba'.!le Brown today. Brqwn~ -12 milef inside L:aoa wu the westernmost ARVJt position after other. eyicu~tl~nS· 1beif farthest point in La.ca now Is Fireball A Luol, 10 mllea al9ng High~af 9. n. b!:se has been · unde~ attack for-averil da ys. The larllle$1 ~alilm woi s.p..<, '11 diiJu Inside Lp.. . • ConfliCting reports on thtl Lioti&d cam- paign made it d.iffk:ult for ol>9el'Vert: In northern operaUonal buQ and .ta Saigon 'to explain clearly what WU COin&: on in' La.01. For example. field reporia aaid Brown wu e..vacualed today but a South Vietnamese 1pokesm.an in Saicon said batUt report.a were received frorp there 11 late u noon. The Saigon spokesman-told eor. r~pondent! at the cb.lty brlefJpl: thlt 2,000 to 3,000 SOulh Vletomeia tr00p1 bad been pUlled oUt of Lloa In the past 48 houri, ·l'ffuclnl Salaon'a com· mitment atrol!I ~ border ta about lt.000 men. P'tetd 're)'Xll'ta 'ai<t several thousand other troopl 11ad been remcwtd without announct.meal .and. tberi were were less than 15.000 there now. • Khe Sanh, the bi& American helicopter base 12 mil-e.! inside Vletnarn, w11 bit twi~ today by Communilt gunners • their most accurate Itta.ck in four days of &belling. · : Th< guna, tppartnlly firlnfl from ., .. to the dtmilitar~ J.One (DMZ) a fw .. n .. to the ...!Ii lol>l\od •houl 30 alMlll (See ~06. fop ll ' -1_ • • • • Orufe. : "1r•adter '!I'll bt a weektnil 'to wrllo tht folks back east ·•boui-lwwY 1klu After mlclmorninf, with le1npett• turea rll\lfng fiOI!!, n· toc.lly to a ln mid-counij. _... , · INSWE 'l'OD.t.Y : Thtr~ ir p ~qt1t m1 ~i,r,· '"· Ntiopor1 Btach-tiihich 1hoio1· rctdptu~ OJ if mdi... ,,,Uct..-10trc: a jtwel. · Rtod 'abOat it in thti "'"k'•.'Willt<llil•ifl . : ••. """'"" ,, C.ltftnl• • CllM*i.t u.. ' ' c........ ,. ... C4Mlc• ,. ~-:·+.:.. tt -II .................. ' ,~_____... •n ·---,. ... ...,_ " ... _ . ~ Llc.itMI It I ' I \ ' ;J .OA!l.Y PILOT H FrldaJ', M•rch 19, 1971 Candid Camera • . : -But Subject Didn;t Smile WASHJNGTOfi (UPI) -A ll-yUMtd cloctor bu -chaqtd with the atlempted··rljlt of a dn!lied patient lflor pellet obHtVed the olle(ed attoct on a planted cloaed cireuit televlaion system. The alleged as.quit tOok place Feb. 25 wblle Or. John L. Avery wu mak- inc a house call on a 20-year-old patient at her IUburban Mont,omery County, t.fd., apartment. "t-1Judge: Calvin R. Sanders Thursday ordered Avery held for grand jury ac- Uon and released him on a $10,000 property bond. Accordfng to testimony by County Medical Examiner Belden Reap, Avery gave the woman two inject.ions in the ann. She !oat consciouaness in two or I"" three minutes. ,-Rf:ap said Avery partJally undressed the woman. "finally pusbini her back onto the couch." Two pallet detecUves 1ignaled by Reap then entered the apartment lo make the "1T<St. The stakeout was set up in the woman's apartment as a result of an in· cident with . the same doctor ea1:ller tlUs year. On that occasion she allegedly sough~ to determine from a.ktcal hospital what caused her to lose consciousness .. aft.er he admjpirtered medicT'Uon to her. The camen, which meuured 4J:et2 inches wu planted in a shoe box cn ~ 1 table in the efflctency apartment. Reep said the two detectives did not watch the aDeged as.11ault out of "modesty." .. 'Krishna Sect Soliciting " Alms in Newport Beach 11)' JOANNE REYNOLDS bl IM O.llr ""· lltft Krlahna Omscioulnes. came to Newpor&-Beacb .Thursday. Two·. saffrol\-robed members of the Laiuna Beach based religious cu1t hand- ed out lit.erature in the Newport Pier buslneu area and in the Via Lido shop- ping .area. They accompanied their solicil.aUon with chantlng ·and cymbal playJn&. The group'• appearance 1n Newport capped a minor city hall-controversy during which city officials sought fnll.Ueuly for a mew of denying the fllumtil!J and linglng cultllll • permit !or llOllcltlni ID their clty. From PGfle l FLUORIDE • • • prove'1J.ent in the prevention or tooth 4ecay.' The Environmental Council in Hun- tington Beach contacted Dr. MoKee for his statistics -oo nuoridaUori-after ~ the fttvironmer'ltll lfoup was asked to study the question. "'Mrs. Mara:aret Carlberg, head Of the l.nvi.remnental CouncU; explained today· tlllt tbt group would DOt make a recom- mendation on lluotfdaUon to the Hun-. !f.:'!1°n Beach council, but would simply i;..~..:ltm Jh;~"'""'me·..,~.~':il· iulbomed nuorldJUon In·, t-2 vote A111. fl. Despite his position today, Lindegren 'a oup ~ bad tried to collect enough aturea in Fountiln Valley for a ial elecUon. After the signatures were ce.rUfied, fell 113 short of the 1,479 (15 ent of tbe registered voters) needed special election. Then percent were ed. to put the question on tbe meneral elecUon ballot. Ee council decided Tuesday nlgbl. ever, to call a special tl«Uon with cllman Ron Sbenl\nan commenting that tbe peUUoners had j'done their •ark." t The only councilman to oppose this *1.ion was John Harper, who has always posed ~ Fountain Valley couqcll's rovat of fluoridation. He sal~ tbe ter could be<t be IW!dled al the general election. The question to be ~l to voten: June (will be whether the city council lhould Jlave the power to add nuorldes to local '1PPlies or whether the action &llould qrst be submitted .to the electorate. . l DAllY PILOT o..v.oa COAIT P\llL .... IM COMl"AJt'I' ••Mrt N. W~el ""'*"' .,.. ...... Wllr J,, .. I., Cvrf•Y' Ykl ~ 11111 °"*91 .......... T11•111•• r,.,,r ...... TJio11111 A. MvrphT11.-._..,. l1lllw Al•11 Dfrll" .,., er... CWlty ,.,., AINrt W. l1f11 "-"'° l:flrtl' " ............... mn.. J7•75 &.1cl. leu1,,,14 1 M•iJi111 Ai.141•u: P.O. l1ir; 7f0, '26'41 °""' °'""' l.....,. ._di: m "or-' ,.,_ CO.le ,...; DD W .. 1 II~ S!rwt f.l..,.n a.on sm "--' te.11 .... .,, 1M 'ltl'Mn"; aJ tlortll El C.mlM lll;MI I City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt sign· ed. the certificate March S after City Attorney Tully Seymour submitted an opinion that to deny them a perm.it would bf: a violation cf their Constitu· tlona l rights. Offlcla.lly known as the International Society cf Kriahna Consciousness, a bona fide religious sect. tht cult hu been active in Laguna Beach for over about a year and a half. Their public appearances wuaUy feature chanting, drum and cymbal playing, 11 well a1 the sale of reading material abou t their Hindu beliefs. Me:rchaats in Laguna Beach claim the commotion created by the men disturbs their customers and have 90Ulht to have their permit rescinded. 'nleir appearance in Newport Thursday apparenUy caURd Utile commotion and police notecl they logged no protest.I from busineasmen. Pas,,ersby watched briefly or took a pamphlet and then moved on. Business in 1urroWlding rtorea did not 1ttm to be affected. One of Thursday's solicilers, who ask· ed to remain unidentified, said they were surprised at the good reception they bad received. "There is a great hunger in Newport Beach. '!be people want to turn away kom matema.liam," he•aaid. "We wlll come back probably Friday or next week With all the boys," be added. The lndlcoUon wu that while Newport retldenll were willing to acctpt the llter•ture, they were not as qulck to <k>ftlte to the cult. The expansion efforts cf the Krishna sect have not been limited e1clustvelt to Newport Beach . They have applied for a permlt to solicit in Cotta Meaa also. V all.ey Trustees Ask$62,000 For Program There are 52 children at Gisler and Fulton elementary schools in Fountain Valley who walk, talk and look like the other children -but they aren't. These 52 youngsters are educably men- tall y r.tlrdtd IEMR). Jn most schools they would be placed in isolated cl&.ssrooms, guided by special teachers who would bend down to their level to push across what small knowledge they could. But at Gialer and Fulton they are put 1n regular classrooms, they mix with normal kids, they do normal work. If special help is needed in 1 subject they get it from the learning center. Thursday night, trustees of the Foun- tain Valley School District agreed to ask for $62,000 in federal funds to push thJ~ program into il! third year. "The Jdea is to allow them to mix with the bope a different, normal at • moaphere will i m p r o v e their performante," Roberl Sanchls, an assis- tant dlltrlct superintendent, explained. In reading alone, the EMR kids im· proved by one full grade last year, whertas thty would have improved by only three or four month.s in the isolated class, Sanchit said. And their social acUons improvtd too. "I visited these schools." Trustee Sheila Meyers sald. "And very seldom can you pick these little tykes out from thelr clas.smates. It'.s marvelous:• From P"fle 1 HARTELIUS. • • under Dr. Harteliua' directions. KurlUch put a mtntally retarded wltnesa Into the bot Thursday to estab!Jal) that Reba Vaughn ordered Blevlnl to take the doctor'• car. Th• 21-year-cld witness. who was described in court u hivlnr • mental •&• of aeven , te1tlfled 1he ,,,.q pret1ent when Mr1. V1ughn told Blevins to t4ke the auto and that "Jim got mad because •he hadn't left I.he ktys in the car.'' The tcl1l before Judge James F. Judge resumes Mond1y, Kur!Uch expect.(" to end hU defell3e of Dr. Hartellw Tuetday. DAILY r JLOT llllf l'llet1 .. Irme City Petitioning Set to Roll Proponenl.5 of Irvine c it y hood will launch their incorporalion petition drive with a breakfas t raUy Saturday at a pm. at the Airponer Inn. ·John Burton, chairman of the Council of the Communities of l;vine, spon90fs vf the incorporation drive, said more than JOO persons are erpecled to attend and participate in petiUon circulation. Signatures of 25 percent of lhe property owners -who must represent 25 percent of the total assessed valuation -are needed. The petitions must be submitted to the County Board of Supervison within 90 days, Burton said, to complete this phase of the incorporation process. What may have been the bigge.st hurdle in the CCl'1 drive for an incorporation election was passed last ~ when the Local Agency Formation commission <LAFC), on a 3 to 2 vote, approved the incorporation move and established the boundaries for the 18,000-acre city. TALKS ABOUT DISTRICT School Ch ief Roper From Page 1 ROPER • • • MASCO, SGT. MARTIN BLACK DISCUSS LEGALITIES OF ESCAPE In S.11 Buch, There Is No Etc1pe From the Law Upon presentation of the petitions, \\'hich ask that the election be scheduled , the Supervisors must do so after con· ducttni a protest hearing. Burton said his CCI i! hopeful that election will take plact in July ; however pending litigation filed by the city cf Tustin over an asreement between the Irvine Ccmpany and Santa Ana (see tt:parate story) may cause delays in that schedule, salaries and supplies and the reduction in personnel. "All of this affects our students and I wonder ho1v the universiUes and col .. leges will take that. Our accreditation may be in jeopardy," Roper surmised. The superintendent cited the district's past failure to communicate with the Southland 'Houdini' Gets Reprimand F1·om Police SST From Page 1 public as a possible reason for votet rejection of the lasl tax measure and the two preceding it. "I \\'ant to communicate better with the people in this district. I want the district to refiect the community, not 10 have it diet.ate to them from a throne. And one of our maia concern! will be how to communicate everything we do to the people," he said. Escape artist D. D. Masco has drawn a reprimand from Seal Beach Police Chief Lee Case for his efforts to perform a "Dive to Death" off the city's pier Saturday. A certllled I{!tter pated March 7 in· formed Masco 'Utat "The City of Seat Beach will not allow you to use any facili ties under our control," including the pier and the boat docking facilities. 'Jlle letter. signed by the chief, added that the act was not considered in the best interest of I.he cJty. "Thia ls ridiculous. I've never heard or such a thing," Masco said this mom- On of re Beach To Open Easter For One Week SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A money. short Department or Park.s and Recrea· Uon announced today that a new state beach will be opened for cne week cnly Easter week to raise funds for future development. A spokesman said the unprectdented action is being taken because the depart- ment lacks funds for capital develop- ment. San Onofre Bluffs State Beach, in San Diego C-Ounty, has betn part (lf Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base. It was leased to the state for 25 years by the Marines at $1 a year; It is a three-and-a-hall stretch cf virgin ocean frontage. All types of camping ucept tent cam- ping will be allowed, because camping will occur on the pavement of old highway 101. The one-week opening is b e I ii g sponsored by the State Parks Foundation, a private group which donate.s funds for development ol state park!. Camping fees will be $3 per nigh t, with day use ·fees $1 per car. Funds will go to the foundation, which hopes to have lhe beach fully open this summer. Only chemical toilets and garbage cans will be available, but campers will have to bring their own water. No lifeguards will be on duty. The department says up to $17,000 may be raised Easter week. Hippie Bandit Sought in II eist Police today sought a gunman with shoulder length halr and a headband who held up a Huntington Beach service station late Wednesday night, escaping \\"ith $324. The man, about l!, and wearing a green fatigue jacket approached Bob's Union 76 at Bol!a Chica Road and l-Ieil A\·enue about 1 tp.m. and Jlashed a short-barreled revolv!'r al the attendant, police said. Oflfcers said the gunman then scooped up three money ba11s, inscribed "Bob's Union" and fled in a car • IIospital Transfers Elvis Presley's Bed NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP ) -Enter· lalner Elvis Presley, undergoing hospital lrtatment for an eye Infection. ha s been moved to an area or the building which is "more easily guarded." a hospital spokesman says. The hospital bas betn d1!Juged wilh telephone calls. no~·ers and callers at· tempting to convey their ge:t·v.'ell wishes to the sinat,.r, v.·ho entered the bo.spltal Tuesday. ing. He added that he would petiorm his 2 p.m. jump -bound by two handcuffs and SO-feet of chain -on schedule. Police restrained the 3 2 • y e a r • o 1 d "Houdinl" from jumping off the pier· last Saturday after he had failed t-0 get a boat from which to perfonn his stunt. Masco said he would board a boat in Long Beach and perhaps return there to avold a confrontation with the law. "lam sure that It's awfully dangerous, but I'm sure that I can do it," Masco sald about his dive. "Houdini never did anything this dangerous. When he jumped -Off his bridges he only had one pair of handcuf· fa .and one pair ot leg iron&. And he had a 14fety rope to bootl" Labor Party 'Soars LONDON (AP) -A Gallup Poll today showed the Labor party 12 percentage points ahead of the Conservative govern- ment in popularity. This was an increase of 4.5 poinl.! Jn I.he past month. Gallup said , the government's popularity had been hit by the unsettled economic cutlook and rising unemployment . • • • cautioned supporters "the SST is sWI very much alive." "On the floor of the Senate the dJvision on the Wue bu been very close," Prox· mire Wd. "ll is possible that the House vote will give w just the advantage we need to Win, but victory against the SST la far from certain." An informal UPI poll of the Senate, completed just before the House voted, backed up Proxmire'• assessment of a close vote, wh.lch will come probably next week. The poll showed 48 votes against future funding of the SST; 45 supporters of the jetliners; two Senators leaning for the project, three against ; and two absentees. From Page l LAOS • • • lnlo Kilt Sanb this 1ftUnoon, some bil· ting inside the perimeter and wounding at least one American . Another 30 rounds hit the base -sborUy after nightrau but there was no report on casualties or damage. Field commanders said the l ,000 South Vietnamese infantrymen based at Ftre Base Brown ~ad been flown to Artillery Base Delta 1, nine miles inside Laoa. "The Huntington Beach Union High School District has always had a good image with the profession but not alway1 with the public," said Roper as he outlia- ed bis reasons for coming to the district "Some years back it gained the reputa· lion for being one of the most ideal school districts in which to be employed. It had a high salary schedule, nice schools, good teaching sta ffs and a strong base for a good image. And it projected that:' Roper, a familiar fig ure in Orange County educational circles, served as assistant superintendent with the Tustin Union high School District before assum- ing hi! $30,000-a·year post in Huntington Beach. He has also served as deputy county 1uperintebdent of schools and a a superintendent of the Saddleback Junior O>lleie District. One cf his coocerns will be to makt the public image of the district conform \\'ith the professional image. Some changes already are being made. He has been at work in decentralizing the administration of the fi ve high schools. ''The principals of the schools slwuld ha ve the freedom cf organilinl the functions of their particular achoolJ as they see fit," he said. Shem:ill Has ~~ri\Ved • For the first time, this erception1l line of upho11t1ry is now available on the west coast. Shir· f rill, one of the finest producers of upholstery in the country offers you a new erperitnce in viewing qual ity furniture. An unparalleled selection of styles and fine fabrics ere coupled with craftsmanship unmatched in th is price category. If you are in need of upholstery, be iure to ..-iew th is e1citing collection of modera tely priced, quality furn iture. A Ted von H1mert exclu. sive. DEALERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE HIWPOIT ITOll O'IN PlllDAY 'TIL t 7al11111 NfWPORT BEACH 1727 We1tdlff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN 'RIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Profeulonaf Interior LAGUNA. Bl'ACH 0.1ignen Avolleble-AID-NSID 345 North Coelt Hwy. 494-4551 OPEN fRIOAY 'TIL 9 ,._., T.il '-llllt., OJ_,. C..., 14 .. ll•• I I I • Ne E 0.1T 1-0 N ••• , ,.oda~• F••.•I N.Y. Stocks • VOL. 6-4, NO. 67, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES , r OUNTY:~·C>J.IFORNIA • RIDA'I', MARCH 19, 197 1 TEN CENTS • Senate Unit Votes Funds For SS T / WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate Approprl1tioos Committee Ignored House repudiation of federal financing of the 1upersonit tr,nsport tSST) today and voted funds to continue development of the controversial plane. The 13-5 committee vote means the lssue will be fought out on the ~nate Door, probably next week. Heavy pressures from the airline Industry. the White House and organized labor \.\'ere being exerted on the plane 's behalf . The House voted 215 to 204 Thursday against spending an y mor11: government money to develop two prototypes of the faster -than. sound transport after March 30, when present aulhOriiation ends. Emerging frotn the hour-long, ~J~d Appropriations meeting, ~n. Wilham ProDnire (0-Wis.), leader of the Senate fia:ht again.st the SST. told reporters "now we'll go back to thl!: floor ." Asked if the prospr:cts for r:liminating funds for the SST were good. Proxmire aaid : ;'Wr: hope so, we don't know. It's very close." The. Senatr: defeated a proposal to continur: funding the SST project late last sesskln by a narrow margin, but opponents of the project cautioned lh~t the nr:w Senate line-up might reverse the. Housr: action. Republican and Democratic leaders of the Senate agreed today the House vote 'T'hursday dims the chances that _thr: Senate will vote to keep the pro)l!:ct alive. Democratic leader Mike Maosfi.eld told reporters the s.ST "doesn't look too livt:ly al \be moment." Rept.ibllcan leader Hugh Scott uid th• project was "not esa~ly advanctd" by tht adver&e House action. Both leaders made their statemen\J, prior ta 1hf: Senate coIJU11ittte action. however. A White House aide gald President Ni.Ion wu "naturally disappofnttd'' at the House action killing a $134 million appropriation to continue the projec~ until June 30. But the aide said, "the President Is hc~)l!::ful ,that the Senate will restore the funds for the prototypes." Sen. William Proxmire ( D ·Wis. ) , leading the battle against the . plan,e. cautioned supporters "the SST 1s still very much alive." "On the noor of the Senate the di vision on the issue has been very close." PTox· mire uid. "Tl is possible that the House .· vote '•"ill give us just the advant~ge we need to win. bul victory agamst !Stt SST, P11e ZJ Theater Becomes Ad Agency Soon, Sa y Pla1mers A use permit authoriz:ing conversion of a former theater into an advertising agency office building was granted by the Newport Beach Planning Commission Thunday nigh!. The theater, located at 281~ Villa Way, had served as the first home of Orange County's biggest production company, South Coast Repertory. f.iore reeently, it had been the borne of the ill-fated Open End Theater. Jn granting the use perm.it., the eom· mission acted over the objections of the planning department staff. which had cited a lack of off-street parking. The commission did .!ilipulate that its approval is conditioned upon the agency, owned by Donald R. Adkins of Cost.a Mesa . obtaining an aii;reement for tight off-site parking spaces. The commission again postponed action <1n proposed revisions to z:oning regula· lions governing all forms of residential and commercial off-street parkin& and continued -for two weeks consideration of a use permit for a branch or the Harbor Area Boys' Club in Eastbluft Park. In other acti on. the tj>mmlttion ap- proved: -A use pennit sought by Land EvoJu. lion Inc.. of Santa Ana to allow a two-Unit second story ap.1rtmtnt ever a commercial use at 332 Marine Ave., Balboa Island. -A use permit amendment eouiht by the Balboa Bay Club to allow UM construcl1on <1' a galehou5t and office and a pergola as part ol previously.ap- proved espansion of the club's indoor 1ennis f11cilily on East Highway. -A divialon of one lot al 2001 Court SL and 209-4 W Octan Front ltlto two lots reque~ted by Verne E, St.rang of Llguna Hill!. -A one-year el"lension l'lf the teotltiv« map for t.he Holstein Company'a Ea.at· bluff development northweiit of tht later· aection of EulbluU Drive and V'tst.a de! Oro. t ' ' ·--: . l(he Sanh Attacked .. 1,000 S. V iet,s Return Fro1n Laos : SAlGON (UPI)-Another 1.000 battle. •·eary si+rvlvor1 of ~ rapidly shrinkin& South Vlelftamest: task force in Laos new back today to Khe Sanh. leavlne fewer tMn 15,000 men inside La01, . military aourcea said. Khe Sanh itself was attacked twice today by Communist artillery and rockets. Juriipillg fti:im U.S. helicopters, the soldiers klMtd the ground and embraced buddies. ·tears streaming down their dus- ty, grlmy faces. One of them aaid, •·we had been fighting for six wetks tn . Laos. We. would rather surrender than fight any more." There was no official report th'at lb• Laotian incur5ion was coming to an end. but .field . reports said 20 South Vietnamese army trucks pulled away f~m the Ham · Nghi headquarters of the operational command near Klie Sanh today with furniture . radios and r:qui.,. ment. A spokesman calied Ult move "rotation" but declined to elaborate. BIKE RIDER, kRISHNA MEMBER HOLD DISCUSSION In Newport Beach, A New Con1cJou1ne11 on the StrHts Spokesmen in • Saigon admitted the 1harp reduction In troop strength and 11aid no South Vietnamese bases re. mained north of French Colonial Route 9, once the axis of the drive across the Ho Chi Minh Trail. At one Ume the 24,000 men in Laos manned fire .;support bases and landing zones north .and south of the road. Ten ~uch bases have been abandoned. ' l(rU;hna ·Sect Soliciting Ai~ i~, .. ~ ewp,o,rt~ Beacli .. Field reports said American helicopters breught ou.t the t,000 defenders of Fire Base Brown today. Brown, 12 mile! in.Side. Lao1 was the westernmost AR~ f!OSltlon afte.r other evaeuatiops· 'IMtr farthest point in LaCHI now Is Firebase A Luoi, 10 miles along Highway t . Th• ba~ bu betn under atta.ck: for several day1. The ftrtl>tft !l'~JJr )i9 • ....... ir·1il!Jis !Hide IA!K, teooiCtin1' riporl! on Ibo ~tie cam-pafin ,,,.di · 1~ dtincult ·ror otiservm in nortbem" operational bases and in Sllion 1b nplibt clt11ly lobtl"i! ... ~ on In Laoo. For eumplt, !itld ~ . Bf JOANN~ llEYNOLDS Of ,... ..... ...,. J1att Kri!hria Ccn5ciou!fie91 lame to Newport Bu~h Thuraday. Two saffron-robed members of the Lagtina BeaCh baStd ~ii&ibus cull hand· td out literature in the Newport Pier busines.! area Intl in ·the Via Udo sho.,. ping area. They Acrompanied their soliciJallon . with 1cfia.rtinr ·and cymbal playing.. , . · · . The 'group's appearance in New?'>rt ca.Pped , a minor city Mil controv~i-sy dunng which city officials ' sought fruitlessly for a means of denying the chanting and singing cultist. a permit for solicitin& in their city. CdM Subdivision OK'd by Newport Plnnning Panel A 232-lot subdivision of what will be- come -~,000 to $&,000 homes adjaceot la Jtar9;or View Hills in Corona del Mar was a}Sproved by the Newport Beach Pia.Ming Commission Thursday ni&ht. Known as Spy Glass Hill, the tract eventually "'ill ha\'e mo r r: ~an 400 homes.· according to a spokesman for John D. Lusk and Son!, developer ot the project. The firlt phase ,-ill be b.oilt on t t 1 acres that was part of a larger 1nnna. tion to N&f?Ol1 Beach knoWtl 11 Harbot Vid Hills section four that was com· pleted irl Iltcember. 1lie deveitipment is localed northtJ11•t ol• thO in.._uon of San Joaquin Hilh Road and Marguerite Avenue and will include one ~· element1ry st'hool 1itt. It ia on Irvin« Company land. A Lusk spokesman said construction ·u btg1n 1mmedb1telv and hopefully rst hom~ will be ready tn m . Board· to Find Sll.perilJl.end eµt A Scref:ntn1 committee Wruch will aeek applicant.a for the Post of supe.rintndent of the Newport·Meaa Unified School Di.t· trict hat been apPointed· by district tru«ttts. ' Corlrid "Btiner, ra&ilty member d. the ClirtmOnt·Grad\laW School, ctaremont MeJt's eonege, wlli head the committee. Joining him will be kenneth C. Peters, superJntendtrit or the Beverly l:Wls Uni· fied School District Ind Dr. Ferd Kie- RI, auperintl!:ndol of tht Sin JUAn Uni· fled School District. Sacramento. The men will prej>,are a Ust of 1ppll· cants fOf' selection by di1trlc1 trustees. The bo.ard d edUciUon offlclally a.c- cepted the rtaign1tlon Of SuptrJntendeftt WiUiam Cunniagham Tuelda,Y. night. He la tes!grilng te"becmni the 'nkutfve 11tc· rttary ol the newly formed A.tsoclatlon ol califorala School Adminilb"aton 11 ol July I. ' • City Manacer Jt.arvey L. Hurlburt sign. ed Ill• ctrtificale Marci! I eltor Oltf Attorney: Tully S.Ymow-•ubuiilted Ill opinion lhat to deny them a perm.i t would be a violation of their ConsUtu· tional rights. Officially knOwn as the International Society·of Krl.sbna Consciousneu, a bona fide relij:iollS sect. the cult has been active in LaiWllj · Be:ach for over about a year and a half .• Their public appearances usually feature chanting, drum and cymbal playing, as well as the sale of reading material about their Hindu beliefs. Merchants In Caguna Beach claim the commotion created by the men dist\IJ'bs their custo~1 and have sought ta have their permit rescinded. Their appearance.in Newport Thursday appuently caused Utile commotion and police noted Ibey Jogged no protesta from businessmen .· Passersby watched briefly or took. a pamphlet and thtn moved on. BU!ineSJ in su.rTOUnding stores did not seem to be affected. One ol Thursday's 10liciter1, who ask· ed to remain unidentified , said they were surprised at the good reception &bty had received. "There is a great hunger i.n Newport Beach. The people want to turn away from materialism," he said. ''We will come back probably Friday or next week wil.b all the boys,·• ht added. The. indication wu that while Newport re1idents were willinJ lo aeeept tht littrature. they were not 11 quick te donate to the cult The expansion eHort.s of the Kriabnl aect have oot been limited eiclusively to Newport Beach. 'l'bey have applied lor a pennlt to solicit in Costa Mesa a!Jo. Gun Range Bl ocked FUn YOSHIDA. Japan I AP ) -Rlet police today hauled away douns of farmers blocking the road to a U.S. Marine firing, range at the foot •f Mt. Fuji, Japan 's sacred mountaln. Mes a Contractor Loses Bid By Decimal Point A misplaced decimal point Will cost a Costa. Mesa contractor a $123,000 con· tract in Newport Stach. The Newport city council Monday will be asked to award the bid for the 32nd Stmt widening project to E. L, Whitt Company. Inc., of Orange, the second !oW bidder -at $128,JM: R. W, McClellan antf Soiu, Inc. today withdrew its bid of 194,503 for the road work after discovering that jo its cal· culalionr, it had put the cost of 1 traffic signal at $3,250, Instead of $32,5!)0. Public Works Dirtctor JMeph. T. Dev· Jin l58id ••with this price corrected, Mc-- Clellan's total bid would be $12.3,8", which wou ld still ht the low bid. "Howeve r," he said, "it is not pe.rmis· 1\b\e to correct errors of th.is type alter lhe b1ds art opened." Oe.vlln said 1 total or five bids had been received on lhf! contract. The highest, $145.~. came from Ly. nam-\Vbod Construction Company of Cor· ona del Mar. D,evlin said the new low bid 11 approx. lmately 12 percr.nt over engineerin1 esU· m111~s of. $114.MS. . . Reconstruction of the 8(1G..foot 1trek:h, from Newport Boulevard to BaJbna 8o~l· evard, which lnvolve.s widening the ro1d fr6m 20 feet to S4 fee.t , wUJ be completed by late July. The road. now one--way, will be.come fo:ur lane.s in lwo directions. with park· lnR: allowed on both side.s or !hi!: llfl'eet. The work will be funded throus:h sev- eral different aecou:-:.S, includlru!: $80.000 In city (as ta'.'{ fuf'lds, $49.000 from the county Arterial· H\jlhwav Fhiancinr Pro- grl'llm, and the remai11in!' from miscel- laMOUS accounts, Devlin said. Hippie tBoax • Trio ·et.aim1 euphone ~s hut.down' SAN Fl!ANCISCO (UPI) :.. T h r eo hippies, awed by their success in a mall telephone gag. took them5tlves 11er!ou• ly today, 11aying they planned to shut down the country by tlelng up telephone.a. They claimed that their hoax. in which 20.000 phony bills were mailed out to San Fra.nciacaM, was "ttle first lime "' in hittory" that the uae of lhe mau medl1 hss betn put in the hands of "tbe peoPle." The Masers called MW.!imen ta a nna conftrtnct and 1.nnounctd they would have more schemes which would culmtn-- 111<! In a collapse of the stock markC!t lhroup confuolon caus.d by t<lephont tleups. ,But the perpetratol'i conceded t h t y Nd already betn qeusUoned by postal lnlpectoTJ_ JJbo tJid they would bt iD- . \I · ~~lr operation further. e group said I\ pltnoed to l~wide !<~"chaos. 'Ii. ,000 reclpienla of the bllla Jm. mediately rushtd to tbei:r' telephona and called the number1 listed on the duMin& noticn. The telephone. numbers 1ctuaUy Wtrt those of a newspaper, a bank, two TV at.111tlon1 and police headquarters. Pbonea were tied up for hours. said Brown wa1 evaCualed today but a S0u~ Vletname.se rpokesmarr in Saigon sRld battle reports were received from there u late as noon. The Saigon spokesman told air· respornle~Ui ~t the daily btiefinC that 2.000 to ~.000 South Vietnamese troops had been pulled out of Laos in the past ~ hours, red,ucing Saigon's com· mitment across the border ta aboul 18,000 men. Field repoi'ts aald aeveriJ lhollland other lroop.s bad been removed without announcement and there were ~·ere l~ss than 15,000 there now , Khe Sanh, the big American helicopter base 12 miles tnside Vietnam, wu hit· Rally Slated twice today by C<iminWllsf iunl>era Ill their mo.st acCurlte 'attack in four da)'.i of !!ihellin1. · , ' 'Mii!:' guns, apparently firtnr from closi to the demiUtarlzed zoDe (DMZ) a few miles to the-nerth lobbed about 3IJ ahelll into Khe Sanh this · atttmoon: eoine. hi.., ting inside the perimeter and woundinl: at least one.Amerlcan. A.nothe.r 30 rmmd1 hil the but llhorlly -alter. ntlhllall but th'ere wu no report on casualtie. ot damage. Field commander• nid the 1,000 South Vietnamese Uitantryr:De.n bated at nr. Ba" Brown had been Down to Artillery Baae Dtlt.a 1, nine mUa inaide t.aot. , Irvine to Laurich City Petitioning. Proponenll of lrvine c It Y h ~ o d will phase of the. incorp:oratjoa p~~ . lau.nch their incorporation ~tltlon drivt What may have been .the bllJe~tlnirdle with a breakfut rally Siturday af I in . the CCI's drive for. ap. lricorporatloa p.m. at the Airport.er IM. el1ctiori was passed last month · wbe1 John Burton, ch~irmJn o{ lht: t;:ouncil the Local Agency Format.ion commlaaion of the Ccmmunlties •of Irvin'e, aponson ' ILAFCl, on • 3 to 2 vote, approve.d of the incorporation drive, u.id more the incorporation mo'le and established than 100 persons art ei pec'ted to i tttnd th~ b?un.daries for _the 11,~~cre. city. . . Upon P""nlahon al tbe petltlons, and parUclpate in petlt~o~ clrcula~ • -.:-.wbich·ask that.tbt 'tlectloq be IChldvled1 ' ~ ~12.1 •. ·lillpervilo!a ,._, ...... ., .. .,.,. ownm -Wilo muit ...,...n! · duCllng a protest hurinc. al tbe tolll use#ed' . .;ajuaU.. -ale Bur!qn oald Ilia CCI ii hope!ul Ulal netded. · elediol will Li\~ plaoe Ill July; -.,.,. tho . ,.utIQns m\lftfi!••• · ted..:~ ~ lltilltloll }ill<!!Y tbo,,cl)Y of tht Codiity l!oard! ol '"21!fl.1! 'l'lllliii ~over H 1~ llill:tiii tho IO day1, Burtoo laid, '·~ tAti ?mlO .Company ind Santa Ail. · Costa Mesa Officer Races Stricken Girl to Hospital A Costa Mesa policeman raced a aravely ill baby to i bospltal today, alttr hla mother Md lather. stopped ' . at a radar trlJfic 1~ cbeclrpolnt to ask direcUolll. · ' Officer John C. White ordered Mrs. Sheena Eden, of ~ Platte Drive, into h1I car and sped. three miles throulh rush hour traffic to Coata Mui· Memorial Hoopilal. Physicians checked 7.e.l.la T. Ede:n, 2-ln. and determinkl that aJle could 'be transferred to Hoag Memorial Horpltal ror care by her family doctor. Hospital spokesmen listed her in guard· eel condition i nd under observation thia: mornlng. The baby 's mother told police. she was afraid the convulsin& Want ha~ Newport Blaze Injures Mesa1i In A part1nent A Coat.a Mesa man II listed ltl 1ood condition today at Hoag Memorial Hoepltal after he suffered second and third degree burns on hlJ face , hand.I and legs during a fire in Newport Beach. The fire was one of thret which broke out in Newport durin1 a period be1lnntn1 at noon, Thur1day. · • Investigators said Andrew Russo. of 276 cabriUo St. wu inifred-when a cmnpressOr u1ed 'UI .sprat'4acquer U · pl<ided, l1~ttlnt Uie','ltnbh. '. Tht uplolion cau.sed ibout $1,000 dam1ge to the · a~tment at t 1l9 E. BatbM Boule\tard "w'bere Rudo •at worklnr. · The other t"" lire• both oecumd ln rt1Lturants. An estimated $2.IXKI damap was dooe. to Hank's Ocean Front Caf1, m W. Ocean Front, •hen a fife rt, In Ill• kitchen 11 7 un. this _.inf. . , 'F'iremen said no· lnjur1's were nporttd ln UHi blau which WI 1P9tft:DUy iOUted bY. faulty refri1erator wlrlnc,.. Dama1• wa1 ne.gllglble fl'Ot'l1 a cre111 lire which hfL the kitchen of tbe JoQy Roger ree:t1ur1nt, 203 Merine Ave., Balboa taland 1t • p.m. Thurld•Y· , Fiftmen aa14 the fin wa1 t1tinpilbed by restaurant employtJ btfora it sprtad beyond the 1tove vtnt where It started. obtained poison or aotten into IOml type ol mtd.icine. Hoag Memorial Hospital pedia.tr1Cian1 raid later they · -were. uncertain wbat wu at fauft. ot whether Jt might bl a natW-aJ illne.ts. Officer White was cont.acted by' Ult Edeni 1t a a.m .. parked near the busy intenec:Uon of Bri.!itol Street and RQ. doJpb Avl!:flue. • Uaing red · light. and 1illn, he """' through · heavy canunuter traffic ' to Newport Boulevard and three miles on the mercy ml.!iaion. Soviet Anny Troops On Move in Germany BERLIN IAP) -Sizeable Soviet army troop movements were reported 111 Ea1t Germany eaily todiy. ·~ ' Truck drlyers . toJd .J>Ol~ce they .uw l!IOO to t.000 RuMlan trucks "rt.b troopa beading from 1lerlin nortbtasl toward Hamburg. Incre1sed troop mGVement.t bave betn repol'ted recently, 1;tparenUy in connection With annuaJ 1 p r i n I maneuve.rs. Weailler It'll f>o .a wiiO~end · lb ·wr1i. the folb back eaat 1bout-sun!ly sktes . after. mldmomin1, with ttmptra· turu ran1in& f.rmn n locally to u In ml<l-<ouJllf. -" ' . INSmE TODAV · :Tl:trt.u 9 Vlriqoc ort ~ bt-NttopOrt Beach. 10hieh. 1how seulr>Wr• 41 if tach pt1c1 tHrt a jtwCL Rrod about it in thii 1Dt1k'1 Wetkcndtr. -.. c .. ,..,,... • CllMlllM U. J C'"llfl.. -~ C9Mla It c-.... 11 c.~ IMlk• o DI-." t1 If ... ,.,... .... ' l'llM.a ft.fl -" A.1111 L.....,. It l!Mm.:. • M•"'""t.k .... tlt ,L \ ~'C ~JLY PILOT H By Witness U.S. Laws Hartelius Alibi --" .... -'Not Excuse' Heard at Trial Fo1· Newport .\ Costa Mesa hoapital nurse testified 'ftlursdaf ,in tbe Oran~e County Superior ODwt araon-fraud trial of Or. Ebbe Hartelius that the physician's blonde ~· called and asked her ii she lifd ordered medi cal records reflecting t,_. doctor's prtsenct at the hopailll Iii~ Api11 9. •llfn. ll:allly Ryan quoted Reba V111&hn as uking her "1re you going to flt tbem?" and told defense attorney Mat· t.be,w Kurilich that she immediately al&U'ed Mrs. Vaughn "I'm not going t4 ptrjure· myself - I wouldn't do lhl.t r~_.my own mothu." Mrs. Ryan said the records reflect taat Dr. Hartellus, SO, treated a patient it-the Beverly Manor Convalescenl liQlpltal from 8:30 p.m. to nearly 9 p.m. . .j(urllJch s1y1 they punch holes in the l;lippie Bandit Sought in Heist ~lice today sought a eunman wllh shoulder length hllr and a headband wlm htld up a Huntington Beach service •llilion .,,.. Wedn<aiJay nllht, eac1plng with $324. The man, about 18, and wearing a green fatigue jacket approached Bob's Union 76,at Bolsa Chica RQ.ad and Heil Avenue about 1 lp.m. and flashed a abort-barreled revolver at the attendant, polioe Wd. OfifcerS said the gunman then scooped up three money bags, inscribed "Bob's Ul\!on" and fled in a car. ' Four Youths Held .. . In Bar Shooting Four yOUtha were arrtsled in Santa Aila Tlntndoy after they allege<lly fired fiVwhOt voUey into an alter hours beer bar from which they had been ejected earlier •. 1be u)itoir which fri&htened 100 ~en In the Datgy May bat, 4524 W.. B6111 Ave., wu witnessed, by patrolman Martyn Currie who had park· ed nearby. te pynur,4 ~ car co~l&inlnl Ill• ~our f thl lo ldiradden ud Euclld 1vonut1 w ere they ~ere ceptured. He found Ute suspect weapon nearby. It had been rted stolen last October in a Midway rob~ey. sled w.re Richud Nl.t, II, Gilden ve ; Bruce Lovelady, 19; Jeanine bertson, 20 and Edward Halbjorhus, 1 all of Westminster. • • a From Pqe J SST •.. • ta SST ii far from certain." !n informal UPI poll of the Senate, cfiplettd j~ be!ore the Houae voted, baked up 1>roxrnlrf"s assessment of a cllM vote, wbkb will come probably n&t week. ;ii. poll -......... aalimt future fillding of ·the SST: 4S supporters of ~ jetlinm; two 6enll«I leanln& for t4 project. Uni q&intti and two •liten ..... .. . • ~ OIANtol COAST· DAllY PllOT • • ~d'AANOE CQl.ST PUM.fSHfMO COMl"AHY e ••kft H. w • .4 '.J: Pr•?411'1t _,.. f'vllbfler J••k R. C'11rf.y Vice' hlalllll'lf 9nlf .._., ~ • • • "' • l'•Mll J(,.,Jf l•llw :t' L P'tltf Kritf 9 Hc'#JIOrt ••<11 Clly fdlltl' : ,...,,,... ..... OHk. • 1)11 Newp•'t l•ultYlr-4 ~M-1lli11t A441u1: P.0. I•• 1115, •266) a O.W OM.. , c-9• Mll•i -W.1 •• , .,,,.., ~ l..,_ a.an = , .... , "'""""' t. """""'.., at9t"I 1117fi attdl ....,...,.,. ti S.11 '*"""'' al Horlfl II C..mlnl A..i ·-, ' prosecution'a arrument that the -doctor planned the fire at his Corona de! Mar of£lces that night and he further claims that Mrs. Vaughn 's telephone call was an attempt by the Costa Mesa woman io remove a valuable alibi. The prosecution alleges that Dr. ~tNpOrt Beach cannot use federal en· vlronmentll Ieglllatlon as legal reuon to void the Pacific C'.oe11t Freeway route agreement, City Attorney Tully Seymour said today. • HartelJ.Us uked Mrs. Vauahn's brother Jim Blevlnl to set the fire at 23~ E. Coast Highway as part of the doctor's plan to des troy what are described as "highly incriminating patient records." Newport Adding Fire Protection In an opinion prep•red for Mondly night's City Council meettna;, Seymout cites laws barring expenditures of U.S. tax dollars on freeways crossing park land - as the coast freeway does - but points out the state has not yet committed it&elf to asking for feder1l money. Blevins, 39. has testified tha~ he did burn the office and he has also told the JurY that he helped fake the theft of the doctor's car nine days earlier under Dr. Hartelius' directions. lt may look a bit block-like at the moment but structure on Jamboree Road behind Irvine Coast Country Club will become Newport Beach's new Fire Department headquarters. New station will add a new sphere· o! protection for Eastbluff and Upper Newport Bay area. Park Lldo Apartments can be seen behind new station. The council Monday \llill meet to map plans for upcoming negotiations with the state precipitated by last wtek'1 rejection of the accepted route in a special election. Kurilich put a mentally retarded witness into the box Thursday to establish that Reba Vaughn ordered Blevins to take the doctor's car. The 21·year~ld witness, who was described in court as having a mental age of seven, testified she was present when Mrs. Vaughn told Blevins to teke the auto and that "Jim got mad because she h1dn't left the keys ln the car." The trial before Judge James F. Judge resume! Monday. Kurillch expeds to end bis defense of Dr. Hartellw Tuesday. Newport Man Jailed in Assault Case One Newport BelCh resident is in ja.il on charges of 'ssault with a deadly weapon and .a second is in Hoag Me- morial Hoe;pital following a Thursday night fitht in Corona de! Mar. Boolc:ed on the charges is Gary Lee Fetterman, 23, 1950 18th St, In good con- dition at the hospital is James M. Rogers, 23, of 709 Acacia ·Ave. Police reported that Fetterman and Rogers and Rogers' companion, Steph- anie Gore, 24, of the AcaclA Avenue ad- drfrM, got into an argument over Fetter- man's dog at about 9:30 p.m. Thursday outside of Rogers' home. Dtlrlng the 1rgument, Fetterman al- Je1edly ltrtick Miss Gore, and w h e n ROger1 attempted to intercede, the sus.. pect auertedly knocked h i m to t h e ground and beat his head against the pavement. Offioen said the same· series of even~ wu nPortediy repeated when: Mis1 Gore attempttd to fo for help. 'Ecology Store' Talk Set Tonight ·. Coast Citizens To Aid Families Wlio Lost Teens Friends and a Harbor Area service club are pooling their efforls to aid two families who each Jost a teenager in a tragic traffic accident 17 days ago. One is solely supported by a workina: molher .and the otber had no insurance covering hospitalization and death of their son. Claire Arbuckle. 14, of 2002 Maple St, and Edward Hernandez, 19, of 2183 National Ave., both Costa Mesa, were killed and two other teenagera injured. Miss Arbuckle's brother Paul. 17, re- mains in serious condition at Holl.g A1emorial Hospit1l suffering brain in· juries it was inltially expected would prove fatal. "His specialist is hopeful now. He can see signs of improvement," says Mrs. Mary Jane Jones, a close friend of the Arbuckle family. Medical · insurance will cover a major share of hospitalization and care, but Mrs. Arbuckle, an industrial .assembly worker w i th eight children, hasn't worked since the tragedy. "They didn't have too much and the money from her salary has stopped C<>mlng ln," says Mrs. Jones. The Arbuckle family came to Coita Mesa from Glasgow, Scotland, 13 years ago, where the husband and father sUIJ rtmalns with two .aons. Learning of the family 's plight, the Newport Harbor Ei:ch1nge Club Board o( Direc;tori pledged SIOO and uraes further member contribution,. Club officer Cal Stewart, Ne~'port Beach Parks and Recreation director, says an yone de siring to aid the Arbuckle and llernandez families can do so throu&h the club. Funds may be sent to P.O. Box 1022. Newport Beach, designated for that humanitarian we. Southland 'Houdini' Gets Reprimand From Police Escape artist D. D. Masco has drawn a reprimand from Seal Beach Police Chief Lee Caae for his efforts to perform a "Dive to Death'' otr the city's pier Saturday. A certified letter dated March 7 in· formed Masco that "The City of Seal Beach will not 1llow you to use any facUltJes under our control," including the pltr and the boat docking facllities. The letter, signed by the chief, added that the act was not considered in the belt interest of the city, "Thls la ridl~ous. I've never heard of Buch a thing," Masco said this morn· ing. He added that he would pertorm his 2 p.m. jump -bound by two handcuffs and 50-feet ot chain -on schedule . Police restrained the 3 2 • y e a r • o I d "Houdini"' from jumping off the pier last Saturday after he had failed to get a boat from \vhich to perform his stunt. Masco said he would board a boat in Long Beach and perhaps return there to .tvoid a confrontation with the law. "I am sure that it's awfully dangerous, but I'm sure that I c1n do It." Masco said about bis dive. ';Houdini never did anything !hi~ dangerow. When he jumped off his bridges he only had one pair of h1ndcuf· fea ind one .pair of leg irons. And he had a safe~y rope to boot!'' Onofre Beach To Open Easter For One Week SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A money. short Department of Park! and Recrea· lion announced today that a new slate beach will be opened for one week only Easter week to raise tunds for future devel opment A spokesman said the unprecedented action is being taken becaulle the depart- ment lacks funds for capital develop- ment. San Onofre Bluffs State Beach. in San Diego County. has · been part of Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base. It Hospital Transfers was 1ease<1 to th• state ror ,, years by the Marines at $1 a year. Jt iS El • p J B d a three-and-a-half stretch of virgin ocean Jn lhat election, residents by a 6 to l vote asked the council to repe1l the accepted route east of Upper Newport Bay through Coron.a del Mar. Councilman Donald Mcinnis had asked for Seymour's opinion on the federal aspects or the issue on the eve of the special election. Mcinnis had pointed out the freeway, as planned, would cross the Harry M. Welch Memorial Park, al.so known 11 Newport Dunes, at the mouth of the Back Bay. · Firemen Rescue Stranded Cyclist Firemen from South Laguna and Laguna Niguel were summoned to help rescue a motorcyclist who rode over. a bank in Laguna Niguel Thursday af. Urnoon. Edward Gene Perkins, 29, of 26701 La Sierra, Mis11ion Viejo suffered a neck injury and lacerations when the cycle he was riding tumbled down an em- bankment near the end of Niguel Road. He ts reported in satisfactory condlUon at South Coast Community Hospital. An engine crew from the nearby Niguel Fire Station and a re.!lcue team from the South Laguna Fire Department were called to the scene at 3:45 p.m. Battalion Chief Richard Pilkington loaded the firemen in his pick·UP trUck to reach the injured man who was given emergen· cy first 1id and carried to a waiting ambulance. VIS res eys e frontage. A!I types of camping except tent cam· L h p S NASIMLLE, Tenn. (APJ -Enter· ping will be allowM, because camping a 01' arty Oars tainer ElvJs Presley, under10Jng hospital will occur on the pavement of old treatment for an eye Infection, hat been highway 101. LONDON (AP.) - A Gallup Poll today moved to an area of the building which The one-week opening is be Ing showed the Labor party 12 percentage is "more easily guarded,'' a hospital sponaored by the State Parkll Foundation, points ahead of the Conservative goverft. spolc:esman says. a private group which donates fundll ment in popularity. The boapltal has been deluged with for developme nt of state parks. Camping Thill was an increase of 4.5 Poinls telephone calls, flowers ind callers at-fees will be $3 per night, with day in the past month . Gallup .said the tempUng to convey their get-well wishes use fees $1 per car. Funds will go government's popularity had been hit to the singer, who entered the hospital to the foundation, which hopes to hive by the unsettled economic outlook and Laguna l.l'f:I market managers have been invited to hear how a San Fernando Valley market chain switched to "ecoloay preferred" products in a program to be Presented 1t 8 · 30 tonight in the Festival Forum theater by Pro-en· vironment-people (PEPJ. Tuesd1y. the beach fully open this summer. rising unemployment. Lewd Phone Can -:-----------'-'------------- The program will feature the story of AJexanders Markets, reportedly the first major Southern California chain to go all out for eeology by pushing environmentally sound products ranging from non-phosphate detergents to meats paclc:td in biodegradable containers. Also feat ured will be UC Irvine ecQ}ogy profe11sor Peter Aplltatt, who will .!!how a series of films on environmental sub- jec:t1. The pro&ram is open to the public, admluion rree. Fullerton Cyclist Killed in Accident Philip Degarston, 18. of r~ul!erton, v.·as killed Thursday when his motorcycle struck a car and slid under another near the entrance to lhe Hughes Aircraft plant in Fullerton. Police said the cars were stopped l!lt Warburton Way making 1 Jeft tum to the plant. Degarston wss dead on arrival at St. Jude Hospital. Suspect Pleads Innocent to Raps William Howard Wall of Corona del ~1ar hes pleeded innocent to charges that he made 13 1ewd phone c1lls to Harbor Area women. Wall, 19, who police assert made the obscene calls Under the name Bill Jack&0n, was arrested Sunday by Newport Be1ch police · ~·hen he went to the borne or alleged victim for a date . Wall was bound ovef by Judge Donald Dung1n in H1rbor Judicial Dl!trlct Court for a meeting with Orange County Medical Center psychiatrists who will report to the court on March 22. At that time consideration wlll be given to reduction of Wall'! $8,250 ball. A pre,·lri1l hearing nas been 11cheduled for April l $ in the Municipal Court. If the youth pleads innocent to the misdemeanor ch1rges at I.hat time, a jury trial will be held April 2tl. Candid Camera ... But Subject Didn't Smile WASHINGTON (UPl) -A ~2.year~ld doctQr hall been ch1ratd with the attempted rape of a drugged paUent after police observed the alleged attack on a planted closed circuit television system . The alleged aS.!lault took place: Feb. 25 \\'hile Dr. John L. Avery u'as mak· tna: a house C!lll on a »year-old paUtnt 1t her suburban Montgomery County, Md., ap11ttment. Judge Calvin R. Sanders 'Mlursd11y ordered Avery held for grand' jury <JC· Uon and released him on a $10,000 property bond. According to te stimony by County f\tediC'al Examiner Belden Reap, Avery gave t.he woman two lnJectlons Jn the arm. She lost consc:iouaneu in two or three minutes. Reap ~aid Avery partll1lly undressed the '\'Oman . "finally pushing her back onto the couch." Tv•o police detectives signaled by Re1p then entered tht apartmtnt to make the arrel!t. 'Mlt atll.keou' was set up In the woman's apartment 11 a result of 1n In· cident with the same doctor e1rller thl~ year. On that occasion aht allegedly eougbt to dttennlne fl'otn a Joe.al lmpital ~·hat C'1used htr to Joie consclousnNI alter he administered medlcatJon to her. The cemer11, which measured 4x9x2 inchts wi~ pl11nled in a shoe box on 11 table In the effldMcy ap.trtm,nt. Reap said the two detectives did not watch the •lltgtd 11111ult out of "modesty." ~ ' Sherrill Has Arrived For the first time , th is exceptional line of upholstery is now •v1ilable on the west co.rt. She~ rill, on• of the finest producers of upholstery in the country offers you • new experience in viewing quality furniture. An unparalleled selection of styles •'f fine fabrics art coupled with cr1~sman1hip unmatched in this price cate9ory. If you are in need of uphol1tery, be sure to view this exciting collection of moderately priced, qutlity furniture. A T td von Hemert 11ch.r· sive. ~ . • DEAlERS l'OR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NIW..Oll:T ITOll:I OPIN ,RIDAY 'TIL I 7ed11111 N!Wl'ORT llACH 1727 Wfflcllfl Dr., 642·2050 D,IN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERJORS 'rtf111lon1I Interior Dotigners Avoll1~i-ID-HllD I LAGUNA llACH U5 North Co111 Hwy. 4944551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 • QUEENLE By Phll lnterlandl ........ ~,~ .•. ·-Snow, Bain High Winds Lash U.S. MUhection By 1.JnJted Prt11 lnlenaatioaal "lt's the typical lion and lamb deal In spring weather." a HasUnes Neb.. policeman said as snow and winds or 100 miles per hour stranded'. motOrists and overturned thrff tra.iltr homes . 8ut the lion appearl'!d to prevail as the snowstorm plowed through the nation's midsection today. ""' blocllns all ""'da. Many Maaon City rtaldtttlt wet• 1trande4 for the nl&bt ln Du Moines where their team played !n a hl1h lcl!ool bait~ ball tournament. Satchmo in Hospital A ft,er Heart Seizure 6lllV •11.n & Gover11ment Sitt• R~eord• T1·ain Car Case Probed ,1 I LA SALLE, Ill. (AP) -Oflk• •mploytl •I tilt Utt!• ey•." I Go v e rtlftl<nt tnv.,Ufoton rall lln• I n nortll-«!ntral l\ICl!Md s~Jd; o1 tllo i.JJi .ut.d u.. rtcor<h of a ti~ nuno~ lald Ille car1 lllt> IOl'CI re!Ulld t4 _.iatt""' Dllnoll railroad and an evM -dly wera the property of Ille pouil>lt lnlpllcat!Oo i6! tmaller tny1tery company 10-a my1ttry company whicb or1an1Jed trtme, but IP! day Jn an •ttempt to ffnd pa!nl<d on new ldtntlfY!nJ "work will !lava lo bO dfdt out how mori than 11 million matlcl and ltued tbem to 1n Olbor arau'<>I ui, t<lw!t"" worth ol Ptnll Central tretaht other rtllroadl. io dltermJne Wbetblr 1im.Uar cm d!Japptared. A U.S. at· FBI aient! 111zed th• 1ttU•Uo111 e111t ellewbire. torney aald tbe e1n •t> ,...,.da of tbe La Salle line !ocbtlo 11Jd a Cldetol rfUd p1renlly wert 1toltn. and of M•rn• E 1 rt b Jury ln PhUadelpbi.a, where Jotepb Cinotto Jr., 1ener1l !:nten>d••· Inc ., wb I c b the Pena Cectril bat ~4· manqtr ol the La Salle I: rented a one-room office and . quarlm, would be&l.n JM !urUu County Railroad -a IOme lbop 1pace from the Into Ute cue Wednnday freJ&Jrt.-Ooly line with 1 1n1re railroad. would ~Ill in recordt f('ofri l6milllottr1ckage-termed An rit ~ke1m.an llld other finnl. Bfc:btle did 1 ~ tht db1ppearance "• terrible 111nta ww checklna for !denUfy tbe~r COril)lntd. mist.Ike." PoUlble viol1tiont of tbe He 1aid no ll'f'tlt.I hid bMn U.S. Atty . Louis c. BeebU• ledual lnitnttle lrllllportt-madt, •ddhli lhaL be did 1IOI of Philadelphia r I'! p o r t e d t~n of ttolen pro~rty law know whither cr1minaJ prO- "That'• very food, but I don't ... how "' lmlt&t!on of W. C. Floidl iB (Clnr to take the •tocl<holdera' mind! off the lt&te of businMI." Six towns in the Omaha Public 0 ower District were completely •lthout p o w e r Tbur&day nlgh.L Some fiOO to '100 farm houJe1 were without power ind he1t in JO to 20- deeree wtathtr near Ord. Neb. Power officials 11id repairs would be difficult until the winda iubtlded. NEW YORK (UPI} --A two days tfttr C<tnplttint a Tbursday that 277 Pinn Ctn-and tht fr~ud by ~ire law. MCUUON would retult. spokesman for Btlh llrael tw~wHk enaacement at the tral Railroad cars vaniabed Ht uld 27 c'!• with Penn "Evtryth.Jns 11 &k!tchy ~ liO!pital said today Jau &ttiat W1ldotf Aatorla. since early 1970 after being Ctntral markin&I palntfd 4Wtr Incomplete" bi 1114. One of Louis "Satchmo " Armltroni Imitated by untold musl· diverted onto the La Salle bad been loutld ln La.Salle'1 the lktlcllf tlemerttl iJ: a firth was resting comlortably and clan• ans 11naer1, Armatronr traclu. Ht said the cara 1p. yards. . ,. lmowa ., DJ v •·rs It Jed "respondin1 to trtatm.ent" for produced thou a and a of pa.rently were slOlen In The ,.edei4f Task Force on ProperUu, mentiontd in~ a heart ailment. recor::1, appeared in 1COres 1wltchln( operations. oraanl14tt ·~ bu joined documents f1.led wbtn tM 'JI Earlier reporta hid II.Id that ot mod on pictures and played ''I re.ally dM 't know whit the in'vestiaatlon and 1 obt11lled se.arch warrants to the gravtl-volc6d tr um Pel in nl1htclubl and concert balll happened,'* si id Cinotto. ''J rilJroad fOW'ct aald, "There lnlpect Ute. LaStlle railr6'd Hide of Terror Even the wheela of govern- ment grou11d to a halt is power was cut In the state caplt.ol ln lJncoln. Ar>t.ut two to four Inches ol snow tceumulalld In the eattim part of the lllte. but dr!lta and bl..rin1 anow drop. pe.d vlclblllty to near zero. player was in crlUctl eon· In tht we1tern world and really can't 11y any more." Is more there tflan metll the premlaia. dition alter beln1 14fnltttd behind the iron curtain. ,.--..:.... __ ;:_..:.._ ______________________ _ Monday to the holf)it1!'1 In-In 1969 he wa1 warned by tensive care unit. doctors w 1IOw down after Bandit Holds 2 Hostage Traltfc In western Iowa waa at 1 atudatJU a1 the storm moved In with aleet, freezing rain, ice and snow. The 70-year~ld muaicians'a 1 niar-fatal coll•pae ln Italy. personal physician, Dr. Gary The lrretpreaalble ·•sat- Zucker. said Armatrona had chmo" told the worried pbyal- not had a heut attack clana: "A lot of people live although he had bten 1uffertn1 acco:-dln& ti> Hoyle. 9 u t ORLANDO, Flo . !UPI) - "My god, ple1ge 10 away ," the ~·oman 's voice pleaded over the police radio to p1.1rsu- lng officers. "I want to see m.v husband and children aga in." ~trs. Lily Thompkins, a sav· lngs and loan associ ation teller, and her boss, Ralph Hasner, w~e taken bO!tage Thurlday by a shaggy.haired gunman who robbed ttte firm and fled with them in a stolen police car. Driving around in the patrol car. ttie a:unman. warntd po!ict over the car'a radio to st~y clear. '·Sack off," the gunman said. "If you want the host.age allve , cool It. I'm 1oin! w blow thla 1uy'1 head o f If you don't pull them off. Get them off my back and I mean II. . I Patrol c11rs kept away, hut police kept the f\el'!lng car under aurvtlllance f r o m 1lrpl1nes and hellcotpers. "You don't think I'm that much of a fool ." !lid the gunman , wearing • false mustache a fl d sunalasus. "The planes are all over the place. J111t wait. Don't ~ry about It. They aren't goln( "W~'rt socked in tight." a Muon City policeman said early today . ''The snow plows can't get out until vi!ibility eases up.'' from a heart condition for Hoyle'• dead _ I Uve ac- some time. cordlna to ·Louts Armstrona." lb 10 fret-." After two houri of rhtin,. the gunman spotted a green Cadillas and used the stolen car'a police siren lo force lhfl vehicle to stop. He frf!td Mr!. Thompkins, whose son is a Highway Patrolman, and the driver of the Cadillac, Perry Bernard, Pari:in, Ark., but took H1.sner with him . Armstrong, who rose from ,,...,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,iiiiJI the handicaps of belnf bom 11 in poverty in 1 New Orleans s ALE t1hack to become ont of Amertca·1 (oremo1t en. Cars were ·halted 3 t Hampton, about 2.3 miles !Olllb of Maa City, because of poor vtslbWty and stalled tertainers, re n 0 w n e d WATER LILIES throughout th• world, w11 ad- Hasner later was rele!~ unharmed in a wooded area and the officers finally cap- 11\ilted to :8etb taratl only Cost Overruns Ciwd P.acific Goldli1h F1rm5 1042 Edw1rd1 SI. tured the bandit when hit ear WASHINGTON (UPI ) -tec.hnoloey. was wrtcked after • cht1e The General Accoontinr Office Tbe J)Olt aatd It obtained! I~~~~~~~~ on Jnttr1tate 4. He 1ufrent1 (GAOi ha11 dl11covered that an advance copy Of GAO·slt WISTMINSTER HJ0 7105 minor facial laceration& when cost overruns on 61 weapons the car hit a tree. The amount 84-pa•e atudy, "acqull.IUon ofl sy!tem.1 have re1chfld '33.4 of money he took was not billion 110 far, the W.tishlnfton majcir weapona ayatlml." determined Immediately. Poit iald today. Tht GAO, an lndep&ndf:nt The FBI char1td VitaliuA: M1llnausk11. 28, ot Altamonte Th "e G AO b I am e d watchdoa a1ency under the Sprlnp, Fla., wlth bank ro~ "deliberate underestimating, control of C<mirtss, aald the b@ry. unanUclpated development maJor weapon• 1yatem1 in· Huner, branch manager of diffleulUes, faulty plannlnf, ltlally were advertlaed to cost the Amerlcan Sav1n11 and poor man a I em e n t, bad SU.8 bl!Um. 8y June ao. 1170, Loan Association, atid ~ft ealimitlnJ," Inflation and the tht Pent11on eatlmated the NO. 1 ON THE COAST Your Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT the aunman enttred h Is dt&lre: to e1ploit n e" COit at f1 17 billion . eet.abllahment and began wav-.::.:.=:_...::._;::::::.:_:.:...::...-==..:.:..:.::.;...:::::.:::_ __ __;:========:::.------------------------------ Ing i plt1tol. "All I could tee was how bl( the barrel of that 1un w11." Agnew Charges CBS With Distorting Facts BOSTON IUPll -Vieo President Spiro T. Agnew said Thuraday accusatlona of dlatortlon leveled at the Pen. t.a1on In a recent CBS-TV doeumentary could just 11 well apply to I.ht network ltaell. Agnew 1ald the CBS news dO(ument.ary "The $elling of the Pentagon." broadcast Feb. :U, failed to ob~erve the adage about people llvinf In g\a11 howe! throwing stones. The Vice President quot~ the CBS script as 1aylng, "nothin1 ls more important to a Democracy thAn the fm flow of lnform.tiUon . Mlaln- formttlon, d I! tort Ion and propaganda all Interrupt that flow." "lt is the CBS taltvt1!0ft," he said, "not the De~attmtllt ot Oeten1e that le.vu much to be desired ln terms of the Cree fl 6w of lntormauon." ln New York G8S Prealdlnt Frank Stanton called Aan•• ''mistaken.'' Stanton aaid "The Slllln& or the Pentaaon" hit b ten prois!d b y "dl•U•auuhad American~ from all walkl of life. Tt hl!l been criUclUd. But we believe that it is an tmport.ant and valuiblt .JO~ of journalistic investiaativt reporting." VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS PSYCHOANALYZED BY JACK llOWILL •.• Ch&J'ices are I! you hl\'f: ever CUHned your Volk•· wa1tn up tht alley bf:. t"·een the Lido Theatre IJ"ld Bldwtll'1 f\ten1 $ho., you have aJready been analyzPd. You have bffn 1tud!M to bt the mo1t care-free of all individu11ol1. Deep do'A·n you ue a llltle 1nooty M- cau1t you kn ow you belonc to an elite 1rou p or C'rta· tJ ve pe-oplt. It t1 under- 1tood tl'lat you can dtcor-ate your Bui:: anyway you like bfcauat V-Oub1 &rt ac-ceptable In any atttr~! You snob the I UY In the C111dll - lac before he hat I ch11nce to look down on you. Whit d~g h~ Jtnow t11bout b>'fna IU1 indlvidual . except how mAn¥ tnd lvidu.ll! ha ve Cadllh1et . Anyway. bflnr a crl!'a- tlve. re1ourcelul perton you can !mmf'dlately ap- tir'l!t latl!' m11n.v more thinn in lift' than thfo unfortunatt' man ln the Clddy. You are ah!!! to ta/(f ll bA1!ct11lly u,,,. thing 11.nd Adorn it with your ri1vn lnnt'l1·1ttion1 and tom,how mike It cul« -Ca.dll\ae1 a re Jmt born bf'IU!tl'UI''' Of rf'IUr•t "'hf'n 11 comf'• to 111.vln c mC'lney •ha t 11 your ~N"r\a1!1• Thil l t~ ..-here aJI my fl'f'fl P!YC'hol- oty oomfi in. I un h&vtnt an ecetntrlc 1alt tM.t It 1otnr to attract all peOf)}t ot your naturt. In fact, ft'• bound to attract all tllt rerrarl, Lamborthlnl. and , Cld11lae ownen a lao. You can recotnltt thtm b)' th~lr beady tye• and tl'lty may come lncocnlto tn thtlr neighbor's VW! SO YOU HAD !rTTER GtT Hl~t EARLY bttinnlnt Satur- day morntnr. Mlt('h 20. We wlll hav~ 11. hua~ 1t- ltt1ion or Dean11•te, Dtv-on1hlrl!' and Top 0 Marl Sult• up to flCS now $40. Ratner 9Portcoall orialniJ - Jy $70 now S25. You w!ll pay for any mod1111t alter· · atlonl lncurr~. AJ.10, you mtrht rtmovt your back seat becau1t It doe,1n't end her~. W• are JOtnr to havt thrff' hlr-aatn tablt~ •.. SlO. 14. And 11 resJ'*tivt l.)'. What vf>U I.re S?-olnt to find on ih"~" 11tbles wUI •atound you ! Jantzen Swea ten. Co rbin Dr,.ss Slick.&, Bll t- '"~11 Slack• atO. Gent. EnrCI. HanJ·Ttn and H1th· 1111wav Shirt• 14. The Sl tl- ble '11 for bft deals only and YC'.111 rn itht bl •hoektd by "''hAt f l'lu find n" !t -eom@ and' 1ee:1 NeKt w~~k. J~ck '$\d\\-tll iitYth~n-.Jyzes lht ~fan I~ 11'1!! Cadillac! JACK llDWILL 3467 VIA LIDO In NIW~OAT llACH 673-4510 If you do, you'll be glad to know there are 58 places in Southerrl California to get help. The 58 offices of Southern California First National Bank. We've been improving our loan-making process so much we have it down to a science. llOUTHERN CAUFOMIA In fact, we can arrange your loan in a matter of hours. And the interest will be at low bank rates, instead of the other kind. FIRST 111Ar10NAL IMK ·· ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!.'l COST A MESA, 2 lO Eaol I 7th St., 6-12· 1 MO HUNTINGTON SEACH, 1899 Ad1m1 Ave., 962·3377 -17122 !Heh Slvd., 847"68f \ I I I I I ' ' I r I I • t • • • DARY PILOT EDITO.RLU; PAGE Nader's ' ' Major stories with.br>Jl&t Co!fl-daltl!n .. are Sttn olltn in the nation 's news me,dla these days. President Nixon. m&kes announcement& from the Wostem White House. Gov. Ronald Reagan pays Wi bom· age regularly. Sen. Barry Gllldwller and '9thera prom· tnenl in naUonaJ affairs also make news !tom the Har· bor Area.. Con.sumer advocate and ecology crusader Ralph Nader generated the latest local dateline Wednesday. He proposed at Orange Coast College -for the flrtt time in Calilornia -formation of a st.tewide stu· dent agency to attack social Ull and problems that deep- ly concern them>through .the courts, legislative lobbying and economic pressure. · · He outlined a program of 800.000 community col· Jege students eath contributing $1 to $3 to provide funds for a potent organization similar to Nader's Raiders, with aJmllar aims. Some business exe.:utives and even some students may disagree with Nader's program, which has had some success in Oregon and Minnesota. But one thing emerges that i~ undeniable: he offers young eeople a clear alternative to dropping out or turn· ing theU" backs in frustratiofi. Evaluating Candidates Voters in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District will be given the opportunity to meet the candidates seeking election to three openings on the seven-member board. The Association of University Women and the League of Wonlen Voters are jointly sponsoring a candi· dates' forum a\, 7:30 p.m., March 31, in the Estancia High School Forum. • Alternative • 1uch tn opporlunlty to hear all candldatea Is particularly meaningful. Running uno_pposed for the seat from which James W. Peyton i! ~tiring is Donald E. Smallwood, a Costa Me!4 attorney. He will re~re4ent voters in area one. Incumbent ·Mrs. Manan c. Berg ... n of Newport Beach is opposed in trustee area thtee by Donald T. Bull a businessman from Costa Mesa, Incumbent board president Selim S. Franklin, a Costa Mesa attorney, is opposed in trustee area six by Herbert H. Stricker, a sales representative from Newport Beach. As in the past, the DAILY PILOT will present back· ground information on each candidate prior to the elec· tion. Help for OCC's Winners Orange Coast College's speech team this year has a record to be proud of. They have v.·on every tourna· rnent they have been in, and recently took fifth as a team in a field of 80 four·year colleges and universities. In that same tournament, the OCC debate team of Bill Landers and Mike Miklaus won first in that category. The team bas been invited to compete in the nation· al championships in St. Louis April 12-17. If they gO, it will be strictly a do-it-yourself project. The team has to raise the money. So far they have held rummage sales, swap meets, candle sales and car washes. But they are looking lor projects. They only have the rest of the month to raise t he remainder of the $4,000 they need -about $1 ,500 more. • In light of the resignation of Supl William Cunning· hllll, the /lpril 20 election i! particularly important to the continued quality of the Newport-Mesa schools op- iration. • Clubs or organizations which can help provide a project students can do to earn the mo n e y. can call 834-5714 of 834-5725. They're not asking for handouts. They want to earn their way back to St. Louis. So· far they have earned the invitation the hard way, by beat· lng ever;:one else. Whal's happening on our campuses today? Some very fine things. "The wiDner and still heavyweight champion of the U.S. Senate. . ' Since all district voters will decide on all three races. Hard-'li~s Replaced by Pra911aatists Red China Now in a Thaw? W~GTON -Olinese Premier OIOU Eft.lal'a dramatic ·•bit to Hano! • 1dds new maiace to the rumblings that Red· .china might intervene in Laos a.s Ute did ODCl9 before-in Korea. In the past, the North Vietnam~se have ·bnUlted to bring the Chinese too deeply .ltDIP. the Indochina confiic.t. Now tliey an t(llJling ·Oll!lnlY to Peking.for ailpport hl"'case the aDlac:l ·~Jatioo ln • 4oa•becoiieo criJJ. .. has been in the other direction tOward the Soviet frontiers. Although Peking hu deployed a large force in South China. these divisions apparently haven't beeil' reinforced or put on alert since the Laoa lnvastao. Neverlbeleu, Uie -THE U.S. ESTift.fATE is that a thaw, llltional' tntelli~ rather tban a new fruze. is begiMing estimaie, tth i'eh to davelop in Chinese-American relations. g u i d e 1 President The hard-liners have been replaced by Nixon' di.!counts the pragmatists in many .key positions In danger of ChinflS6 ~ek&I'· The American sectjon of the intervention. Th I s Chinele Foreign Ministry, for exalnple, . secret ~ent 'is based up th~J bu been taken over by a professional h1 telligence available to .,ibt 11.S. Here diplomat who is more realist then doc- is the reason!Qt: ~1'"oplimistic trinain Maoillt. There is cautious op. tStimate: i. timiml that Washington's fr I end I y , . overtures to Peking may brii;ig a positive -THE NORTH Vi~ are reluct· response. ant . to inc~ ~Ir ~ce ~ \ -The warnings that preceded Chinese Peking, wh)Cli would }Je1ghten CbiJiete Jnvolvement in the Korean War weN influence cNir\tbeir affairs. 'J1!.i.s wOUld ' tu more omlnou.s than the current wam- also upset Mqicpw wlilcb has fumiSbed ·"1iogs over Laos. There is little doubt most of N~ Vietnam's milit,yy Jn Washington that China would send hardware. The Ha,nol rulm tiJve alwi'.yz -VOlunteen'' to stop an outright U.S. tried to wat.k a dtlic~te U1htl'9pe: betweei. 1DVasion of Laos or North Vietnam, but Moscow and Peking. TheY also havel)..'t ·:tio,. such operatiOfl iJ planned. On the overcome the ancient Vlelnal!Jete .COlltrary, U.S. troops-9re. pulling out dJstrust of the Chinese. 'lbe U.S. view,-of .Vietnam. therefore, 11 lhat the Hanoi threat I.to • • involve tbe10tinese in ~ina ii· a ., IFllROUGHour the U.S. military in- blufL · Wfvement in Indochina, Washington and -There bu t.D no 1lgn, cf military feting have had secret understandings. movement hide OllDa toward •tbe American and Chineec diplomats have lndochina bordu. Indeed, tbe movement .been in constant eommunicatm 1n Warsaw. They have managed, in each crilsls, to bridge the great gulf between the two nations. True, the Chinese diplomats have been rigid as steel beams. Often, they have spoken less for the sake of the llstening Americans than for the dogmati.813 back on mainland China who read the transcript!. One participant has describ- ed the diplomatic encounters to us as "not so mucb 'ne.gotiating as like listening to Radio Pekiilg." Still. the formal talks and informal confacts have cleared u p misun- derstabdings: prevented miscalculations and provided a clear channe.J of com- milnication. 1 • THE LATE President Kennedy , for ln:oitanct, asked the U.S. negotiators to de!tVer a waming at the Warsaw meeting in March, 1961, that the U.S. would intervene in Laos with military force unless the Chinese permitted a cease-fire. The Chinese brought back to the next meeting word that Peking y,·ould accept an international guarantee of Laotian neutrality. For the moment at least. this ended the Laotian crisis that had the \\'orld on tenterhooks in 1961. \Vhen ex-President Johnson began bom- bing North Vietnam, he sent assurances through Warsaw that the U.S. had no designs on the territory of either North Vietnam or Red China . This was delivered at the Feb. 25, 19M. meeting where U.S. Ambassador John Cabot emphasized the U.S. didn't intend to destroy North Vietnam nor to invade China. Trainin-g College Pre.sidents Stanford, Harvard and ell sorts of colleges and universities have recently acquired new presidents. The question in tht mind of every thinking American Is' "Where do they come from?" The answer, of course, is The Irma N. Mortcri.ss Academy of Co 11 e g e Presldentry and Flying Trapeiists. The Academy held one of its rare ope; houJtJ the other tlay for parents of pros- p e ct i v e students. Dean Griswold Grommet, the beo- klved head of the Institution. kindly lel'Ved as guide. "TIDS. FRIENDS, began the Dean, "is our Admissions Of- fice. All candidates are carefully screen· ed to detenntne whether lbey have the rare qualiUe1 it takes to brr: a college prnldent today, ' . Friday, March 19, 1971 I • The edllOriol JIGQ< of U.. Doil¥ P.ilot •<4< IO fllform and ,i;,,.. ulau rndtn 1>11 pr<smdog 11111 MIOlpo~ opfwi0nl-41:d ~ TMntaTJ cm fOpiu of 'niau& and lipnfJkonoll;b~~ o. 1, fOMlm for ~ PJ)T<niolt> of •Mr nad<r1' iOPI'~..... Glld bJ pre1entitlfl tht dfoct'ie iiie»- poln!i Of lnf......S' ob,.....,. ond ipok<S""" .. lof>f<i of Ill• <1ar. Robert N. Weed. Publlsber . ·- Art Hoppe our School of Elocution. Listen! " ' A babble of Indecipherable aoun~ J en'lerged through an open window . "We like to say," boasted lhe Dean, "that all our graduates use not only words you can't understand, but w h o I e paragraphs you can't under&tand ." "Now the candidate crawls through this litUe door here, crosses that hlgh wire there over the tank full of piranhas, solves the four-dimensional chess pro- blem on the other side Jn five seconds and, if su~ssful, i.<1 welcomed by Mr. Phission Chips -the gentleman th!re with the boots and whip. "The purpose, of course, i~ to test the candidate's physical agility, sense of balance, mental dexterity and will- ingne55 to stoop to conquer -all absolutely essentiaJ qualities in a college president these days." "WHAT'S THE MAN with the whip do ?" asked a puzzled father . ''Mr. Chips," replied the Dean, "tests their Pl880Chism. Now then ... " "J:'he. group wis suddenly surround~ by a horde or students in tattered attire holding forth cupa and bowls and crying plteouSly, "Plew, air. can you spare a dime?" The Dean, smiling proudly. dis-patched each •ith a Cuff and a kick . "Our Elementary Begging Class," he ex· plalned. '"Here at the Academy we try to ln~b'll the: proper beggarly spirit, ao ustful tn •pproaching wealthy alumni in liter lift. Oh, look, wt1 re In luck!" A "8nder younc man tipped pa~. ~ by a howling mob of his fellows. all thn>wfng rocks and botUts at him without success. ''TIL\'l'S YOUNG Horgan," aald the Dean 9dmiringly. "Ht's~ been ck>cktd around the Qt&ad tn 2:52 -1 IChool m:ord. Wt'rt prtdic:tlng not only a brilliant Cll"ffr for llorg11n. but a long OM-Naw on your left 11 1 class in Basic Kocrt llntyin& ind on your right A boy moped past, shoulders hunched. "That's poor Merriwell," whispered the Dean sadly. "He cracked under the strain and Jost his nerve. He's now studying to be an aerial acrobat without a nel." A MOTHER asked if all students got jobs as college presidents on graduation . The Dean frowned. "Last year. all but one, he said. "It was that fool kid, Horowitz. He forgot everything \\'e taught him. Instead of declining vociferously al first v.·hen the Trustees of Sk11rewe University offered him the job of president. he eagerly said he wanted to take on the challenge." "What's wrong with saying you w11nt the job?" asked a parent "'ho hadn't been listening. "Good Heavens!" cried the Dean in surprise. "If you were a trustte would you hire some kind of nut ?" Dear Gloomy Gus: Why don't counselor!! at Jlarbor Hlgb inform college-bound :ttnlon of the 'cf4ita nttded for application before more see doors closed due t.o poor guidance? -A Sh/pwrttktd S11ilor f~~ l•hlr• ~IK11 ,......,, VltWI, Mf ft-NrllY ..,._ .. ttlt "'--· .. ,... ""' HI '"*"" • GIM"lr 0MI. DtJW Jtlttt. N Learn to Ask the Right Questions The first Je550n to learn when you grow up is that if you don't ask the right questions, you won 't get the right answers. It's surprising how many grown-ups never learn Uris -so they keep asking the wrong questions, and keep getting unsaUsfactory ariswen. One of the biggest wrong question& today is: ··why all the violence and agitation and dlsre- gard for legal pro- cesses?" You can't get a sensible (lr meaningful answer to a question like that. You have to back up and ask a prior question: " What makes people and institutions move?" And the usual an- swer is: ''Fear, shame. and publicity." FOR 20 YEARS and more. it has been an open secret that colleges and universities were poorly run on almost every level; little was done to change them until the student! began kicking up a fuss. Then the net!d for chan~es was hastily and tardily admitted. Why have government agencies, at every level. suddenly become s o .solicitous or the public's rights and needs, when these same right! and needs have existed unsatisfied all along? Because people are making a lot of noise now, and demanding action instead of words. Why are necelj<Sary reforms made only after a catastrophe, and rarely before? After the plane crashes, aft.er the mine collapse11 after the theater bums down, after the patient dies of neglect? WHY DO INSTITUTIONS a n d e!tabllitlments refuse to Jilten .to reason, to calm wordl, to legitimate complaints, to quiet appeals? Wby do they aJwaya wait until cataslropbe: strikes, or rebellion threatens, before taking steps that lhey then admit "-'ert ''always necessary"? These are the right questions we shoUld be asking: How do we make our in· stilutions more re5pon:oiive? How do we restructure our establishmet1,ts so thal they will take preventive measures In time. and thus make agitation and vio- lence unnecessary? In sbort, how do we get the people in power -anywhere -off their duffs before the fuse burns down and blows them off? A DECADE ANO mort ago, I went around the colleges lecturing and predic· ting what would happen there if nothing changed: the students cheered, the teachers shrugged, the administrators booed. But it all happened. beginning at Btrkeley. and getting wor~. The same is going to happen throughout cur nation's prisons and penitentiaries if essential reform~ are not made now. And when the convicts riot on a scale we have not Sttn before, we will again ask the wrong questions, and 1gain Ttlakt the reform!, and again too late. ' Quotes J11me1 Scbwabachrr. Jr., S.F. conrert sln(f:r, en need for pa~Jc musical perform1nce1 -"All this music and sin~ing ls a trip wilhout drugs ... it does aomethlng a poverty program can't do ... Jt knocks do~·n all the barriers.·· Education at the Mercy of Voters To the Editor: Our e<lucational system 5hould not and must. not depend upon the taxpayers' aupport at the polls. If this change demands a rewrite of the state con. stitufion, thee this should be undertaken. Our standards of education must not only be maintained but, hopefully, im· proved. To lower. our standards in this day and are wbai education is more essential th~ ever before is unthinkable. It is a!Jo unfalt to expect ciliuns struggling ~th a fbed income to vote themselves more las:es evea for a vital issue such as education. Though I wonder if we have considered just how much more of our tax dollar would be spent on policing and punishment if our young people are occupied with school only half of each day. THE STATE MUST provide a more equitable distribution of funds to the districls. I understand that in the state of Hawaii. funds are dispensed equally to each district regardless of the wealth of that district. thereby insuring each and e\•ery child the equal opportunity guaranteed by our constitution. Why could this not be a part of our future planning for the state of California? Please act now to do what is possible to remedy the de plorable practice of putting our most important consideration -our children's education -at the mercy of the polls. MRS. M. L. CHAFFIN 'f11Jm1tlle Sad Sack •' To the Editor : So far , I've read three Gloomy Gusses complaining about people tying up police and fire phone lines with "non-emergen· cy·• calls after "obvious earthquakes.'• One, from "Harassed Dispatcher." sug· gested that "if aU they need is reassur- ahce, let them call a frien~ -jf they have one." • Another Gloomy Gus. E.V .. referred to such people as "Infantile sad sacks'' and n.id they "should be Arrested and fined." While I did not call •the poll et: altar that "obviow earthquakt," J must pot myself in the class of "infantile sad sack$" because the tho~ht cettalnly did crGSS my mind. In t;ct . I think it's 1 perfectly natural ~action. Not necessarily wise, perhaps, just simply natural. BUT THE TONE of the p!oomy Gusses Is more frightening than j8n earlhquaJ.:t.. They show extrcm" inlo~r11oce or their fellow man and his wea[Oesses1 whatever they may be. So for Haralssed DispatctTer, E.V. and all you other models of courage y,•ho are irritated by us infantile sad sacks. I quote Sophocles: "Every man wi\1 fall who, though born 1 man. proudly presumes to bt 11 superman.°' If you supermen Y.'ilt forgive our infantile behavior. y,·e s.ad sacks will of course forgive your egotism. P .s.: E. V .. you sounded downright na~­ ly. Put 1 little love in your heart! Hara~ Dispatcher: bone up on your .~pelllng. you ever-91>-grossly misspelled tyi ng, tielng. ELIZABETH LANGE S 111111r1er Su1111~r To tilt Editor : The DAILY Pll~OT (Jlrttl salt. edition) hit An all-time low on Wednesday, March 10. 1971. The picture of tht Awtrallan "Summer Sunner" belongs in Playboy M11g1iint. ~ _..,,,.., ~.j ,i, -t "' }141Uhq"' ' , ~~ • • ~ lttttn ''"" rt.IHrs .,.. wekto111t. '"""'"' wrll•rt lllwMI ,.,."' lll•lr mu.a111 Ill JM wvft ., ltn. TM rlt~I M CMllilflM l*tttn N Ill tHtt ., 1Hm1111!1 UMI II r--.otll. ~II i.ttll'll .... 11 I,.. duM lltMIUre ..... ft\IHIH ""''''.. ""' .. -. ""' M Wllll~t,. tll '"11111 ii Mllklefll ,__ II •-rtfll. '""" wn1 Mt M "blltPIM. -and not on the front page of a family newspaper. Thil little parade of so I l · s e 11 pornography has been goina: on t6r months in the DAlLY PILOI', but the picture of Liz Freeman is most certainly on the verge of hard-sell pornography. CLARA M. EVANS A Job Well Do11e To the Editor: With much sorrow and deep regret y,·e read the DAILY PILOT headline: dated Mar ch 11, which stated "Hurlbw1 to Quit in Rift." Th is is a man who ba cked. supported and elevated the city of Newport Beach during his six years of service as the city manager. ~1r. Hurlburt was never too busy to attend local and out of town community and association meetings and gatherings, \\'hich were numerous, to acquaint the taxpayers and citizens of situations: !n- volved and discuss current events and problems that were related to Newport Beach. The city manager answered ques- tions with logic, sincerity and knowledge, and was always present when called upon. He gave or himself, and his personal time, above and beyond the call of duty. SPEAKING AS A resident or Newport Beach for over 10 years and as an active participant in civic events and activities. we appreciate the dedication. inspiration and hard work of this man. Perhaps the city council members should take a. hard look at themsel ves for putting such 1 tremendous pressure on the city manager and pushing him to a point of no return. I am writing on bebaH of many people of Newport Beach, who have all had pressure at limes, but few such as this. TIUS PRESENT situation in Newport Beach is unbelievable and intolerable in a democracy where loyalty, trust and perseverance are treasured with the utmost of value. We have Jost a great and most respected city manager, and Ne\\•port Beach will feel the loss. Perhaps what has h11ppened could be c,alled "dirty politics." We don't know the answer, yet. We wish lo publicly thank Harvey L. Hurlburt ror a job well done, and 1n our opinion, It will be difficult, And perhaps impos~ible, t.o replace him . PATRICIA DOMECQ .---B11 George ---. Dear George · If West dealt and pas.9ed. North bid a blue chip and East saw and raised a spadt, should South lake " hit on 16 \\'ith fivts-back to back? PYMJ Dear PYMJ: I think you must ha ve m~ con- rused with the chw editor. I'm a lovtlorn columnist . t I am. J am, J am~) So ,g!l itl lorn. f\lean· time, don't speak to 1trangers. Through the Looking Glass ' 6men BEA ANDERSON, Editor ' ~ ... u DAILY PILOT PllN _,. ...... ~-• ., WONDER.LAND WORLD -Spring fashion shoppers who wan t lo travel "lh_rough th~ looking glass" tomorrow mor ning may find themselves tn the m1raculous world of the Newport Assistance League's Junior Auxiliary v.•here discarded clothing turns into a profit for community service. Previewing a Spring Fashion Fling \.•:hich will take place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the League ~ Shop are Oef t to right) Doug O'Donnell and Joanne Goody. League members and their children will be modeling appropriate wud-.,..' robes for Easter. • ··--.- FINISHING TOUCHES -t.1rs. Linn C. Willi ams, hostess for the National Charity League's annual Associates Garden Gal lery Coffee puts final touches on art work she is donating for the benefit of the Ne\vport Beach chapter's John Tracy Clinic Demonstration Home. Looking over her shoulder is Mrs. J . Bennett Miles, who is in charge of coffee preparations. Boutique's the Thing for Spring , ;. ·~·-. -·! It's going ~n ~ abursl wtth daisies, and hopefully Coffee Brewing Artistic Treasure Garden-galleried Artistic treasures \Vil\ abound v.•hen Associates of the Nationa1 Charity League's Ne\\'por t Beach Chapter present their annual Garden Gallery Coffee on Thursday, ~1arch 25. An array of paintings donated by member!' are of parlicular in· terest for lhe event. \\•hich \Viii take place in the Lido Isle home of Mrs. Linn C. \Villiams. beginning at 10 a.m. and concluding at I p.m. f\1rs. Frederick E. \Verder is chairman for the philan thropic ef- fort. \r hich also will feature a silent auction -Japanese style -of an- tiques. stitchery, pieces of gros point and silver. The John Tracey l)emonstratinn 11ome in Costa t.1esa, supported by the chapter, \\'ill benefit from the proceeds. Other co1nmiltee members for the day inc lude the Mmes. John R. Bishop. auction: J. Bennett r.files, coffee preparations; Ha rry E. Campbell. painting exhibit; Joseph H. Arnold. \Valter J . Cole and Clay- ton Rose. telephone committee, and \~/illiam B. Tritt, pu blicity. Those artist·members whn are donating their \\'Ork include the 'P.t1nes. \\'Ulian1s, Jame.!i f . Gable. J. Robert Feeney, Do nal d D. Ander· /\On and James J. Eymann. be an annual affair. Daisy Patch Dally i~ !he spring-v lille of e boutique sale planned by lhe Mesa Verde Committee of t h e Orange County Philharmonic AssociatiO'TI on Thursday. April J. There \.\'111 be a half-hour preview before sa les com- meo~ at In a .m. in the garden entranct's of the Costa Mesa homes of Ors. John Granzella and Schuyler C. Joyner. The focu.c; for lhe ~ale, 1,1iiich v.ill continue unlil 2 p.m., will be on hand.crafted items and appropriate Easter gift.~· ~1r.c;. Oa\'id Schweit1.er is bou· tique chairman. Chairmen a5Sl~ting ~1rs. Schwelt1.£'r are the Mm-e.~. Jack Brennan .Jr., crafts coordinator; .lames n. Cutler, .c;ales; Granzella and Joyner, cn.~lume~: ,Jule C. Marshall , refreshmcn!!'.: Honald f\.1i!ler, me r ch a n d is in g : 0. G. Rose 11 in i. consignments; James \\'. Peyton , culinary art~: Curit!! Healon. r.hecking ;ind packaging : Ro~rt ~foore .Jr .. hostess coordinator, and r-.t L. Carrico, publicity. Proc('edS rrom the event y,•ill support free yout h roncrrt.s, ~anfs~n·<1id ;:ind !hf' con· t1nuance funrl or the Orange County Philharmonic Saclet~. ~lrs. Carrico is tak in g lickcl reservations at 545·2620. OECJSION TO OAll Y -Member~ or 1t1esa Ve rde Committee or Orange County Philharmonic Society !left to rightl the ~1 mes. John Heying, .Jack Bren- nan Jr. and Robert Campbell find early selection or lx>utique items irresistible for their Daisy P.atcb. spring benefit planned on Thursday, April 1, frotit ~ 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The focus will be on Easter lift&·. and hand·crafted wares. ·• . ., ., Family Applause Guaranteed to Bring No Curtain Calls ,. •. ' • DEAR ANN LANDF.RS r-.ty htllr sister l!'i only $ ~<'t1rs old. She l1a!'i a fantastic nlemory and can repeat a poem perfectly arter hearing it nn:y once. Sisi::ie can counl lo 200 and rrr.1te the Pledge of AlleiianCf'. She knol'l'S every commercial on TV and can act them out just like thl' perrormers. I can vouch for the fact that Sii::sie isn't bashful and 1.1 111 perfonn for anybod}•. \Vhel I \.l'OU\d like lo find out from you is 1f anyone can use her commerci ally. My paren~ know I am v.•rillng this lrtter and they are 1n fa vor of ii. -STSTER OF A SMART ONE DEAR SISTER: "'hat )Ou are asking 111 how your hnJlily c•n make snmc mooty nrr your little sister·~ el:ctptlonal intr;ll lgtn<'t. l\fy adl·lce Is to fo rget ii. .ANN LANDERS Supersmart kids ire obnoxious when Ibey art constantly pu 11bed lo pertorm. Chlldrr;n their own l!l(e disllkr; lbtm an d adult11 tlnd 'uch r;:rp\oltatinn ap- pallin g. l\loreove r It glvt 1 the a:lfted child tht' wrong concepllnn of learnlni. They grow up belltvlng lhal tht principal re1111on for acquiring kn owled1e Is ID show Dff. DEAR ANN LANDERS· Wh y rlo yo•I print letters from girls 1o1·hn have bel'n seduced and abandoned snd continue to give \hC!.m the same outmoded adv1<-"'" Instead or saying. "I toht you so," why not say, "Good ruldance 1" \Vhat exactly are thesr; ninnies com· plaining about? \\'hy 1o1·ould a girl \\'.\NT to marry such a skunk? II burns mr; up when I read weepy letters from nity,·its v.·hn beat thentsel ves publicly 1n your column because they went to bed with a huy, hoping 11 1o1•oulrl ::iring them !he 11ltimale prl7" -marriage. Then to their horror. I.hr ral :i1ays ...... "Sorry, J can't marry you, You werl! lf)fl easy " An .v girl who had an <"Xperience like rhal should thank her luck y slars she didn't 5aVe her virginity for her wedding night , THEN find out what the guy "''a!'I like. Wouldn't it be lerrible tn marry a jerk like lhal and have him question her purity because she didn ·1 pass thr: 1ests in the 1914 medics! book~~ Shout halleluja, girl111. A new day 1s daiA•nlng. -LIBERATED DEAR DAWN: Wba1'1 your beef? I'm \\Ith you all the w11y, OEARN ANN LAND1':RS: ''ou m1sscrl a li!'.reat opportunity to help a lot flf lone~ome women. I refer lo your rrp!~· to "Solo," the widow who ntade f11ur :('lephone ralls, in an pffort lo get " couple to come lo her hnme for dinner. • One friend sairl, "Sorry, my husband 1s drinking again and U you serve cocktails he'll be drunk the whole 1o1·eekend. 1 can't take a chance. , . " If that widow think~ SHE is lone!01ne. !'he should have had a heart-to-heart talk with lhat lady. No one il more lonesome than the wife or a drunk. I know bftcause J'vt been married lo one rnr ~ years. 1 never \now whi.?n or IF' my husband Is coming home for din ner -or what COllditiot(l_ ne·u be in when he gets here. Granted, both lhe widow and lhe wife of a boo1.er have 11 hard lime, but !hey could help r:ach other sharing a re"' ~i11blr hours Yi'hy didn'l you tell hrr? -1'-1ARn 1En & SOLO DEAR M.&.S.: Becaust I didn 't think flf It. But I'm ti:lad ygu dkl . Tbaok.1 for wrlli111. CONPlDENTIAL TO· BORED, 111{. FULFILLED AND NEED TO BE NEEi> ED : Yes, I have an an1Wer for yOit, \\'rilr; to Closr;r Look, lkl:r t1 Wa~ington, D.C. 20013. There IJ despetale nttd for tr;acher1 of the dicapped. Here is 1 splendid opportunlti to give -and to ft!«ive. ~.: Give ln or lose him, .1tffl • Pi gives you this lint, ~eat! For d,. nn bow to handle the tuper p:r aalt1m.1.; cbtck .l.nn Landen. Rr;ad W ~ "Necking and Pettine -What Are •-' Limits'?'' Send your requt1t lit A• Lander• In care of the DAlLY Pu..ot enclosing 50 a nti I• ce~ and 1 1..;. 1t1mped 1ell·addrt1std eavelope. -: ' .. I • . -· :l' t .f OAILV PILOT .. !ioLANS SOARING -HunUngton Beach Chapter ,;,:~embers of Delta Gamma reflect buoyant theme of rorlt)"s 98th annual Found..-s Day Reunion, en· {jlUed Soanng Into the Seventies. AnticipaUng lunch- OORIS KEYES ;;,, To Say Vows :: .· iNuptials tiin Offing l.,', Students Announce April Day Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Dixon of COllta M e 11 a announced the betrothal of their daughter, Donna Dixon to Don Fredriksen during a family galberins jn their home. Among guests were Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Fredriltsen of Costa Mesa, parents ol the future bridegroom. Others attending were tifr. and Mrs. Fred Ricard, tiir. and Mrs. W. G. Dixon and Mrs. Caroline T h a y e r , grandparents or \he couple, Afr. and Mrs. Ford Brown and Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Lumpkin. both attend ange Coa!t • .. eon get-together on Saturday, March 20, are Celt to right) the Mmes. Fred Lawhon, Thomas Tullar and John Pagan. The Huntington Beach Chapter will host the gathering in the Airporter Inn. 98th Anniversary County Delta Gammas Soar Into Seventies Getting close to the century mark, Orange County Delta Gamma chapters w i 11 celebrate· their 98tb amt'Ual Founders Day Reunid'n on Saturday, March 20, in the Airporter Inn. Mrs. Roger Weainger of Huntington Beach ls chairman for the gathering, themed Soaring Into the Seventies: which will begin with a social hour at 11:30 a.m., follO'Wed by lunch at 12:30 p.m· Program Combined 'lbe guest speaker wilt be Mn. Claire WoUf, prtsldent- elect of the Blind Children's Center, founded in Lo 1 Algeles In 1938 by Delta Gam· ma alumnae. The center is noted for its Cradle Club, through which medical specialists ready blind babies for the nursery school program -also undertaken at the center -and counsel parents on proper training for their blil1d infants, Seven 50-year members will be inlroduced at the luncheon, when Huntington Beach Delta GMU?W will host the Santa Ana, Saddleback, Fullerton-- Anaheim arld Whittier chapters. Horoscope: Pis·ces Face Facts = SATURDAY MARCH 20 SuprtafJiJly, maoy Ar I et utile• lad hultr confldence. Ttl1I ap!l1u Uie~ oeeutonat blu&w ud sbow ot arrocuoe. O. poatttve level, Arla la ertctaal, tndepe•deat , a utaral bmo\'ator. 0. nepUve plue, Arkl 1alfel'I JJUI• of sell-doubt. 11 11 Important for members of tbt1 sodllc1I slga to achieve balance between amsuce ud h1Ul1illty. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Impetus shown in career area, you take definite step to fulfill ambition. Gain cooperation of family members. You w)ll need solid emotional suppo~. Catalina Ceremony Plonned Wagners Tell News Mr. and Mra. Kenneth Wagner of Costa Mesa have announced the engagement of their daughter, D o r I n n e Wagner to Vlad Gbiulamlla, son of Dr. and Mn. Radu Ghiulamlla of Albany, N.Y. Mlss Wagner is a graduate of Eatancia High School ud Orange Coast Colle·ge. Her fianee, an alwnnWJ <i California State College at Long Beach, earned his MS degree at the University of t> Montrtal and is studying for "~ his PhD In Albany. ' ... They have planned a May l 21 wtddiq on Catali,na Wand. DORINNE WAGNER May Bridt Monday Meeting Musical : Singing and instrumental ;;'<t'' music will fill tbe air Monday, f~, ::.: March 22, u Newport Harbor #jr: Senior Citizen! aJld their ~l • friends att entertained at 7:30 ~~ -~~ p.m. in the Senior Citizens ~· ""' RecreaUon Center, Newport , <) Beach. A luncheon is plaMed on J Thursday, March 25, for mem~ f, ben only, to be given by the Home-Makers Club, Inc. Card playing will follow. M-embers also a r e an· ticipating an Easter program following the April S·business meeting. A hat parade with prizes and choral music are on the program, and past presidents will be honored guests. Don't argue with superiors. TAURUS (Aprll 16-May 20): You may be dealing with the abstract. Means appearances could be deceiving. Look beyond the obvious. Com· municate with one at a distance. Relea11e self from semeless restrictions. GEMINI (May U.June 20): Money s.ituaUon improves. Resources increase ln value. You can get down to practical issues. You know where you stand -and what to do about it. Heed voice of experleoce. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Lie low. Find out what is being done and why. This i.s accomplished by s b r e w d , unobtrusive observation. Let others set pace. Don't try to force issues. Legal matter ii highlighted. LEO (July IS-Aug. 22): Stress creative approach. Ac- cent greater originality, in- dependence. Caprlcora in- dividual could play significant role. Romantic interests dominate. Maintain 1 e 1 f • esteem. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Hunch proves accurate. One who aided you in past could make reappearance. C b 11 d could po5e problem. Be lair but firm. Steer clear of one who is an apparent know-it-all. IJBRA (Sepl 23-0cl 22): Activity increases around home base. One linked to you emotionally or I e I a l l Y becomes self-assertive. Main- tain sense of humor. Family member needs a good laugh. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No•. 21): Accent on short journeys. ideas which need addtUOnel development. SOme relatives. neigbbor11 may take pugnacious 1tance. Be a~are ol fine points. Check direc- tions, reservations. SAG11TAlllUS (No•. 21· Dec. 21): Be ready for change, special me1sages, com• munlcations. Share knowledge. You will learn by teaching. Get together with Gemini in- dividual. Pool resources. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): What was hidden is er• posed to light. You find out what bas been occuring behind scenes. Family members are involved. Clandestine activity is emphasized. Y<Ai will unde('stand . AQUAlllUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Obtain hint from Capricorn message. Much tbat occun may be obscunld from view. You wW have to read between lines, study fine print. A void tendency to f o o 1 yourseU. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):. Accent on friend~, hopes.. wishes. Carry out plans. Don't heallate becau.e of aecret fears. Older indJvidual ls favorably impressed. Yo u could receive needed financial backing. r-~ early July wedding Is planned by DorU Evelyn , es &11d James Russell 1~. •• , whoae betrothal htts been announced by Mr. and ~· William s. Keyes of J:oeta Mesa, parents of the future bride. The bride-to-be is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and her husband~· graduate of McNally High col. They College. An AprD 3 Wedding In Calvary Chapel, santa Ana, ta planned. Fling Springs A joint business meetin& will get under way at Z p.m. on SUnday, March 21. for the Fleet Res er v e Auoclatlon Branch and Unit 175 of Oran11 County. There will be a no.bost d.in~ ner following the gatherln& in the Staff NCO Club at the Santa Ana Marine Corps A.Jr Station. Emblem Club Planning Officer Installation f. Miss Keyes and her fiance Jioth are graduates of Costa ).iesa High School. She is a #ttldent at California Profesaional School. :·Her fianct, son of Mr. and Mn. GleM W. Lusk ol C05t.a Mesa, received his AA degree .la electronics from Orange Coast College and is serving In the Marine Corps at Fort Gordon, Ga. Tbey will exchange vows In the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant, Costa Men. :sweater ·comes Clean When washing a turUeneck ~ater, open the collar so iuc:W can penetrate to get all the layers clean. When nearly dry, fold It back tn plact and tuck a twist cl tiMue inside to help reshape the collar to its original con- tour . Members of the 524 Club of San Clemente are making plans for the aMual Spring Fling fa!hl.on show and dinner at 6:30 p.m. 011 Saturday, March 27. Fashions for all members of the family will be presented in the San Clemente Masonic Temple under the direction of Mrs. Howard Monk, general chairman. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Fred Croucher of San Clemente or Mr11. Carter McGregor, Dana Point. Parents Club Orange Coast Chapter, Parents Without P a r t n e r s spomc>l'I a pancake breakfast the last Sunday of each month in C.OSta Meaa City Park from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Wally RlclwdJ, chairman, w i 11 aD1Wer questions :re1ardlng the public "rain « shine" event at MJ.8700 or 542-966&. Official visitors will be Mrs. Alice Mann, southwest regional president, and F. E. McCulley, national vice presi· dent. Huntington Beach Moose Lodge will be tbe scene of tbe 15th annual installation -0f offktrs for Huntington Beach Emblem Club at I p.m. on Saturday, March 20. Guitarists to Perform Musical Date Noted Guitar music will b e featured when members of the Cameo Philbarmonlc Associates gather in the home of Mrs. John Dillon Wtd· nesday, M11.rcll 24.. Performing for the pro- gram, to follow lunch, will be J~an Cannady and John Childers, Estancia High School students. Their offerings wUI include American and foreign folk songs, country an d Western muiic. Bro ad way show tunes and modern ballads. Mrs. Dsvld Lang w 111 preside over the business meeting. Cameo Associates wort in the Phllharmotic of. lice, puparlng the moothly aociety new• bulleUn for mail· ing to all women'• committee memben. Committee members will be joined by their husbands Saturday, March 27, for a cocktall buffet in the home of Mr. and Mn. John Store. In charae of arrangements for the annual party are Mrs. Store, Mn. John B. Parker and Mn. Ira SmJth. Patients Riding High New Bus Contributed An eight-passenger \'an lo transpcrt patients lo recrea· tional activities on and off the holpltal Ground& has been contributed to Fairview State Jlofplta! by Ei. E p 1 11 o n Chap\er, Epsilon Slgm1 Alpha oororl17. Keya to the vehicle were prelelli.d to Dr. Anthoay N. Toto by Mn. Eric Lundqullt, president of U>e chapter. The J>T*lllatlon culminated l wo and a bl1f )'tin o! effort by the 1coeral memba1hlp in oollclllng, c:ollect!Jll and !Orting food <OIJponl. Since the project w a 1 ·1 started in 1968 by 1otr11. Lund- quist and Mrs. David Chandler, lhen chapter presi· dent, 372,868 food coupoos were collected r e q u I r i n g several thousand hours of work b)' members. The balance of money re· quired to purchase Ule van was raised by the group's an- nual fireworks booths ar>d two dinner dances. Serving as cha.irrnen for these projects were ?.frs. Chandler, Mrs. Joaeph Cook and Mrs. Robert Bartol. Mrs. C. William Kuhr, who now resides in Oceanside, headed the coupon drive prior to Mrt. Lundquist Among the many com- munity oraantiatiom who au~ ported the chapter's drive for coupons were the Red Crou, junior and senior women·s clubs, Air Force 11.tothen. church groups, garden clubs, !lenior citizens' lfOUPI, Scout and Campfire cqanJuUons, mens servlct cluba, moblle home parks, veterans' organizations, womtn'a aux· iliarles, the business com· munity Ind many lndlvlduals. Mrs. George Babbitt, supreme junior past president of the Supreme Emblem Club of the United Statu, will be installing officer. Mn. Carl Sharpe will assist her. Raggedy Ann Dons Array of Raiments To be seated as president ls Mrs. Guy H. Cannon. Tholse serving with her will include the Mmes. Art Whitten, John Earley, Dean Hedden, James Greer, Gilbert Davis:, Tony Caracciolo, O!car Eidem, Skip Floyd, Sal Ca racciolo, Walter Bennie, Joseph Schlereth, Michael Weninger, Max Boren, Chester Smith, Lyle Vories and Arthur Bishop. Raggedy Ann will be the heroine for Orange County Alumnae o( Alpha Della PL who wil l collect funds to aid the Hope Haven School for Retarded Children during their annual fashion sho'v tomorrow between 9:30 and 11 a.m. in Bul· Jock's, Santa Ana. Mrs. Robert Harturian reads about the adventures o( the be- loved symbol of childhood's love and friendship to Suzanne {left) and Christine, \Vho will join other youngsters to serve as hosts and hostesses at the benefit. Slate Preview Waist Watchers Xi Epsilon Psi Chapter, TOPS Waist Wat ch er s assemble, every Thursday at Beta Sigma Phi will gather 7 p.m. in Circle View School, at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, March Huntington Beach. CUSTOM l'lnlD FOAM DRlSS FORMS EXACT OUl'LICATE OF YOUR: flGURE FIT l'ANTSI IARIA•A GARDNllt llf·5532 23, in the Costa Mesa home ~~~~~~~===~~~~~~~~~~ of Mrs. Donald Richardson. I_. Mrs. Frank W. Reed will preside over business and ht· troduce a proposed slale of Speaker Named officers:. Dr. Edward Taub will be ~iiiiii~ii:i~~~iiiij the featured spaali:er when II ~ Jewish Fam.Hy Service 1.00D'• OP OIL PAINTINGS Associates gather at 7:30 p.m. WHOLISALI WARIHOUSI Sunday. March 21, in the OPIH TO THI PUILIC Republic Federal s a' in gs 50°/o OFF building, Santa Ana. Topic will ,.,, I . IDIP'IOllt, SANTA ,IP'l.t. be current Attitudes on Dru.p, ,....,.. llMMI Sex and Youth Revolt. a1AL1•s WANTID neW for spring: c:11ual fl1re1 l.1r1l11111rlc1r4 .. M11kt 11h1rt• 1 f1rhlp 1111114, 111wp1rt e111f1r •••·1010 FINAL 2 DAYS OF OUR SALE i B.D.HOWESandSON FINEJ&WW!tS FOR TKP.tt Gt.~&l\ATIO~S NE\IPORT BEACH: 3412 Via Lido • 615· V31 I ' • ' 7 \ 7 -. -· f;osia M~s.a Today'ir ·l'hi•I EDITION -----. • ' VOL. 6'1 , NO. 67, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE 1c01iNTY, CALIFORNIA -r-·-·- .. FRIDAY, M.4.ACH 1'9, 191 1. .TEN~ Senate ui1it Votes Funds For SST WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate Appropriationi; Committee Ignored House repudiation of federal financing of tbe 1upersonic transport iSST ) today and \roted funds to continue development of the controversial plane. The 13-5 committee vote means the Issue will be fought out on the Senate floor. probably next week . Heavy pressures from the airline industry. the White House and organized labor were being exer~ on the plane's behalf. The House voted 215 to 204 Thursday against spending any more government money to develop two prototypes o( the faster -than -sound transporl alter March XI. when present authorization ends. Emerging from the hour-long, closed Appropriations meeting, Sen. William Proxmire ([).Wis.), leader of the Senate fight against the SST, lold reporter!!! •·now we'll go back to lht floor ." Asked if lhe prospecl! for eliminaling fWldS for the SST were good. Proxmire said: "We hope so, we don 't know. It's very clo.!le." The Senate defeated a proposal to contfnue funding the SST project late last iession by a narrow margin, but upponents of the project cautioned th.at the new Senate line-up might reverse the House action. Republican and Democratic leaders of the Senate agreed today the House vole Thursday ·dims the chan~s that _the Senate will. vote to keep the project alive. Democratic leader Mike ~tansfield told reporters the SST "doesn't look too lively at the moment." . RepubHcM leader Hugh Scott sa1~, the project v.'u: "not exactly advanced by the adverse House action. Both leaders made their statements prior to the Senate committee action, however. A· White House aide said Pre.!lident Nili:on was •·naturally disappointed" at the Hou11e action killing a $134 million appropiiatlon to continue tht project until tSee SST, Page %) Mesa Contractor Loses Bid B y Decimal Point A misplaced dt!cimal point will cost a Costa Mesa contractor a 1123,0IXI con· tract i"' Newport Beach. The Ntwport city council Monday will be asked to award the bid for lht 32nd Street widenin g project to E. L. While Company. Inc., of Orange, the second )ow bidder -al 1128,36$. R. w. McCltllan and So11~. Inc. today withdrew its bid or 194.603 for the road work 1fttr discoveririg that in its cal· cula tions, it had pul tire cost of a traffic a.ignal at SJ.250, instead of $32,500. Public Works Director Jose+>h. T. Dev· tin said "with this price corrected, Mc. Clellan·.!I tot.al bid would be $123,85.1, wbich \.\'ould still be the low bid. "However ," he said. "it is not permis- sible to correct errors of this type alter the bids are open ed.'' Devlin said a total of five bids had been rPceived on the contract. The highest 1145.53.S. came from Ly. nam-Wood Construclion Company of Cor- ona de! Mar. Devlin sa id the new low bid Is approx. lmalely 12 percent over engineering esti- m,11tes of 11 14.565. Reconstruc!ioo ()f the mfoot stretch, (rom Newpor1 Boulevard to Balboa Boul- evard. which invt>lves llidening the fl)8d from 20 fef't to 64 feet. will bt completed bv late July. ·The road. now one·\.\'ll Y. will becnmt four lanes in tWo dlrtctions, with park-· In~ allowed on both sides of the street. The \~O!"k will bl': funded through sev- t.r1J different. accounts, inclut'iinii: $80,1)1)() In cilv i:;as tax f1 1nd~. $40.000 from the countY Arterial Hilrtnvav Financinii: Pro- ii:ram. and tht remainln,q from misce/. lanMUS accounts. Devlin said . Barefoot Bandit Gets Petty Cash A barefoot burglar who kicked ln the door of 1 RoOs Royet auto agt.ncy esc1ped with $391.26 in petty c•sh and 1 &Ort foot . Police wt'rt di.spa tched to the Roy Carver dealership. 292.11 Har ho r 8oufev1rd. Costa Mesa, at 9 a.m, lod11y, alllr 11alesmen discover~ lhe break-in. "Thtre were quile 1 few bare foot. iirints in•lde,'' s11ld Oetecllve W11yne Harber Jndlcaling • thorough search of the premi.'!le:. for lnot. ' I r BIKE RIDER, KRISHNA MEMBER HOLD DISCUSSION In Newport Beech, A New Consciousnts• on the Street• l(rishna Sect Soliciting Alms in Newport Beach • /IY .!,O~.,f..~.?."P$ • J.Jii.~~~k~H,"'~n ; KriShna , Omsclousrtesa came . f4 Attorney Tully Stlinoar · 8Uhmittecl ·an-- Newport Beach 11uirsday. ' opinion that to • dtny them 1 permit Two saffron·robed members ef the would bf: a vlO!ation l)f their Con11titu- Laguna Beadi baled 're.tigkrus cult hatid-tional ·rights. ed 'oUt literature 'In ·th! · Ntwport Pier Officially known 11s the International busineS11 11rea an~ in lhe. Via Lido shop. Society of Krishna Conscious'1ess, 11 bbna ping area. "They 8ccompanied their fide religious sect, the cult has been solicitation with chanting and cymbal ;ictlve in La'guna Beach for over 1bout playing . ' a year and a half. The ·group's appearance in Newport Their public appearances U$·ual1y capped a minor city hall controversy feature chanting, drum and cymbal during which city official.<; 1ought playing, as well as the sale of reading fruitlessly for a means of df!ylng the mal6ial about their HJndu beliefs. chanting and singing cultists a permit Merchant.~ in Laguna "'Beach cliim the for soliciting in their city. commotion created by the men di!turbs 'Deposit' Sus pect Of Cost,a Mesa Faces New Counts New robbery charges loday faced a Costa Mesa man jailed 11 days agt1 after aJlegedly depositing proceeds from an $11 ,000 market stickup in the same bank that issued it. Complaints charging Rober! J. Oemas, 2L of 2070 Federal Ave .. Costa Mesa, with three more counU of armed robbery were being. sought thi.!1 rr.oming. He is accused of Dec. 17 and Feb. 24. holdups at the same Tic Toe Market, 1913 Pomona Ave., near his home. ac- cording to Detective Jim Blaylock. Clemu is also charged with a Garden Grove liquor store holdup, in 1ddition to the Bargall! Basket robbery tlf March $ that led to his arrest. The ~t made a $1,000 cash deposit the following Mondly 1l 1 Bank of America branch three blocks from the robbed store 111nd 1 teller recognited the neaUy bundled cash. Clemas also lived only three block.!1 frnm the ma.tketi robbed of 111,000 and only a short distance further from the corner store struck twice in twe rnoaths. !heir customers and have sought to: have their permit rt!Scinded . Their appearance in Newport Thur1day apparently caused little commotion and police noterl they logged no protests from businessmen. Passersby watched briefly or took 1 pamphlet and then moved on. Businesa in aurrounding stores did nol seem to be affected. One of Thursday's soliciters, who 1&k· ed to reIDBin unidentified, said they were surpri.!led at the good reception they had rec.eived. . "There i.!I a great hunger in Newport Beach. The people want to turn away from materialism," he said. ''We will come back probably Friday «' not week with all the boy11, •1 be added. The indication was that while Newport resident.!; were willing to accept ·the literature. they were not 1s qulc.k to donate lo the cult. Tht t:cpansion efforts or the Kriahna sect have not bttn limited ncluslvely lo Newport Stach. They have applied to·r a permit to M>licit in Costa Mtu lllo. Gun Range Blocked FUJI YOSHIDA. Japan f AP) -Riot police loday hauled away dozena of farmers blocking · the rdad · to 1 U.S. Marine firing rM.ge at the foot tll Mt. Fuji, Japan's sacred mountain. Hippie ·Hoax ' • !. Trio Claim Telephone ·'S hut.down' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Th rte hippies, awed by their success in a mus telephone gag. took themselves seriout- ly today, saying they plaMed to ahut down the courttry by lieing up telephonts. Thty claimed that their hoax., In whi ch 20,000 phony bills were mailed 001 to San Francl.&cans, wa.!I "Ule. ftrat time In history'' that the use of ~ mu.!I media has betn ptJt In the hanru of "the people.'' The hoaxers called newsmen lo 1 news conference and aMOunced they would hl\•e more .!lchemes which would culmln. ate in a collapse of I.he stock market •• • through confusion ca~ . by teler*K>ne tieups. But the perpttrators conceded f h,e y bad already been qeustioned by paetal inspector! who said they would bi Jn- vtsligiting their operaffon further. The hippie group a.lid• tt planned &o cre1le worldwide telephone chaOI. The 20,000 recipients of tAe bllll im. medlalely rw.hed to their ttlephonta t1nd called the numbers listed on .the duMin1 notices. The lelephnne numbers actually were those of a new1p1per. 1 bank. twl) TV 1t11tlon~ 11nd police kt.adquarters PhoM! Wt!re tied up for hours. , l(he Sallh Attacl{C.d 1;000 S. Viet,s Return Fto1n Laos · SAIGON (UPl)-Aoother J,000 bato .. weary survivors of the rapidly ahrinkifia: South Vil':tnamese lask rorce in Laos flew back today to Khe Sanh, leavtna: fewer than l~.ooO men inside La~. milit&ry sources aaid. Khe Sanh Itself was attacked lwice today by Communist arlilluy 1nd rockets. _ Jumping from U.S. helicopters, .tht. M>lditrs kWecl the ground and embraced buddies. tears streaming down their dus- ty, a:rimy faces . One of them said, ~·we had been fighting for six wukll In Laos. We _ would r1ther surrender Irvine City Petitioning To Begin Proponenls or Irvine c I l y h o o d will launch their lncorjioration petition· drive wilh a breakfast rally Saturday-1t I p.m. at tDe Airporter Inn. John Burton, ·chairman of the Council or the Communities of Irvine, sponsor11 of the incorporatiOn drive, said more than 100 persons are expected to attend and participate In petition circulation. Signatures of 2S percent of tht property owntis -who must represent 25 percent of· the _ total .t.53eSsed valuation -are n@eded . The petitions must be submitted to the County Board · of SuJServiso)'s Within go. d;IY• •. Durio• ·''!d· I~ :eomJ>1•\e ihia ~tllt.ltf¥iW<li Wh•l mrj hive been tht bi11tlt Slrdla ln1 the cct•1 · drivt ior an lncorpor1Uon tlecUon was passed lu:t month: when the Local Agency ·Formation tCommis.1ton !LAFC ), on • 3 to 2 vi>tt, Approved tht Incorporation move and ·established the boundaries for the 18,000.acre. c'tty. Upon presentation of the pelitions, Yt'hich ask that the f:lection be scheduled, the Supervi80rs must do m after con· dueling a protest h_earing. Burton aald his CCI is hopeful that election will takt ilace in July: however pending litigation filed by the city of Tu.!ltin over an agr~ement between the I.rvine Company Ind Santa Ana. Onofre Beach To Open Easter For One Week !ACRAMENTO {UPI) -A money- short Department of Psrk!I and Recrea· tiion announced today that a new state beach will be opened for one week only E111ter week lo raise funds for future development. A spoke3man said the unprecedented action i.!I bting taken because the depart- me~t lacka fundJ for capital develo~ ment. San Onofre Bluifs State Beach, In San. Diego Cour'lty. has been part of Camp Pendleton Marine Corps baae. It was leased to the 1tate for 25 yean by the Marines at $1 a .year, It is a three-and·a-hall stretch of virgin oce.an front.age . All lYJ>eS of c.amplng exc~pl te-nt cam. ping will be allowed, bec1111se campina: will occur on the pavement or old highway 101. The one.week opening ii" b e i n I sponsored by the St.ate-Parks P'oundaUon . • private group which donates· fund!!! for development d atate ~kl. Camping feu will be $3 per night,' with day use fees II per car. Funds will 10 lo the ··fown:lttJon, which hopes" to hive the 1>¢adf fµll y open this summer. Only c.hemlcal toilet.! and a:arbtige earu: wUl be· 1v1ilable, but campers will haw to brl,n& their own water. No lifeguards wtll be on duty. The department says up to _$17,(0) may· be raised E,asttr .... 1. Fullerton Cyclist ' Killed in A·ccident l'llliip n.iarstoii.'1f.·~r Ftlllertofl. wu killed Thursday when hl1 motorcycle struck 1 car and slid under another near the entrance to the Hughu Aircr1ft plant Jn Fulltrkln. Police slld the cars were stopped 1t Warburton Way m11king a left tum to the plant. Deprstnn wn-dead 611 1rrival 1t Sl. Jude Hospital. l I than figbl 1ny more ... Tliere w.:s no official report that the Laotian incursion w11 coming , to an end. but field · r.eporta saJlf 20 South Vietnamese army trucks pulled awiy from ~ H_am Nghi-headquarte"ra ol the operatiq,ial comn:uind near Kile Sanh today wlth furniture, radios and equip. ment. A spokesman called the mctve "rotation'' but declined to elaborate. · Spokesmen In Saigon admitted the' sharp reduction ln troop 11lrength and said no South Vietnamese bases re- m1lned north ot French Colonial Route 9, · once lhe ula of the drlv• acrou the Ho Chi Minh Trail. At OM lttne the ll,000 .,,,,. "'-,.... manned fire support buea and landin& ·fJOOff ·nortlt and south of tbe road. Ten IUCh batta•- havt been 1bandoned. Fiild reports 1aid Amerlean helicoptm' brought out the 1,000 defenders of Fir• Base Brown today. Brown, 12 miles inside Laos was-the weaternmost ARVN position after othet evacu1Uon1· Theft rUttieat · pOint m U01 now 18 · ni'eba11 A "Luoi, 10 mile. along Highw•y t. 1be base has been under attack for teVttal days. Thf farthest penetration wu . IS.. LAOS, J'.• ll Mer~y l'lission Lawman Takes Tot to.Hospital A C.OSt.a "Mesa prilittrnan raetd . 1 gravtly ill baby to a hospital t.ad1y, after her mother 1nd father . .stopped at a radar traffic speed checkpoint · to ask directions. Offictr John C. White ordered Mrs. Sheena Eden, of 3087 Platte Dri,vt, into his car and sped three .mtles through rush hour traffic to Calta Mesa Mtmorial Hospital. Physicians checked Zella T. Eden, 2'12, and dttermined that she could be transferred to Hoa1 Memorial Hospitil for care by her family doctor. Hosp°it.al spoktsmen listed her in guard- ecj condition and under observ1tian thil mOming. '_I'he baby's mother told police 1he was afraid" the convulsina: Want had obtained pol.!IOa or gotten into 10mt tne of medicine. Hoag Memorial Hospital pediatric:lds said liter they were uncertain. what wa~ at fault,_ or whether lt miJht be a natural illness. Officer White was contacted by th8 Edens at 8 a.m., parked near the busy intersection of Bristol Street and Ran- dolph Avenue. Using red lights and siren, he wove through heavy commuter traffic ta Newport Boulevard and three mile. an the mercy mi.sston. .,.Mesa A.~eek Federal Help on Local Project.s A team l)f 'Costa Mesa leadtrs beads for Washington D.C. this weekend on a ,doubJe-purpose mlssloo tbat ct11.1Jd hive• far-reach.i:nr lmplic1tions. Mayor Robert M. Wilson ind Coun- cilman Alvin L. Pinkley, • two-term major, ire delegates to · ·t b t Congreaaional-Cily Conference in the na· tion 's capit.fl. They also plan a 1Jdt: trip tt1 the headquarters of the U.S. Department of Houaln1 and Urban Deielop)nent. Bethel Towers. the city 's 18-.story retirement sky1cr1per, ls on their aa:end1 for discu.!18kln alon1 with o~ra liU it. Built with feder1l 1sslst.ance, these facilities are prohibited from paying local property taxes under HUD restrictions. Consequently local taxpayers ".must assume the burden of support for such vital services as water . .!lewaae. disposal, police and fire protection. Bethel Towers was built through Assefriblies or God Jne. aponsor-tihip, while the Western A.!lsociation of Baptists Inc., is now propo11ing 1 twin adjacent to It. Councilmen have agreed thty will deny a perm it for the new one unless a way can be found to circumVent the HUD laws laying the t.ax·support burden Est.ancia High's 'Oklahoma' Big Box Office Hit, E1tanci1 High • School'• 1tudent prl)o- duction of "Oklahoma!'' ill sold out for performances tonight ind Saturday. !ri response to th~ demand for UckeU, Student AetiVJties1 Director 'Don l..tlwry said, another perforn\.ance has been schei:luled for 8 p.m. Tue1da;y In Estancli Forum. More th·an 3$0 tickets at' $2. each will go on sa,le Monday. in tbi student stor• on cAmpua. Re:serv1liom: may be maU by calling Lowry at f42-20fl0. Further. the sludt:nt production mar travel to Leis\Ue World, Laauna Hilla, for yet another performance .. Lowry aald. That d1tt hu yet to be aet. Super GTanny, 108 R 0 ME (AP) -Mulo lmperlall. tho wom1n Romana call Super-Granny. celebrated her leith birthday today •Ith a feast and In Cood btalUt "I am not throuab with life yet." •he •aid. Sb• iula 11 ll't•l.Jrandchlidttn. ' I ' on other local citizerui. Belides lhe HUD visit And tM two.day conference lponJOred joinUy b)'. the N1• tlorill League of Cities and tbe tf.S. Conference ol Mayors. Wibon and Pinkley will meet with California legislators. Vice Presidertt Spiro Agnt"' will ad-- dres.s the several hundred city leaders at Monday'.!! openina: session. Reveriue-5haring as proposed t e Congi-w; by President Nixon will 1et heavy emphasis Tuesday, while urban problems and welfare reform 1rt abo scheduled for talks. · Mayor Wils()(I him.!leU will p1rUclpate Monday in a workshop on water ptillullon and land use planning, as a st~rina committee member of the group's en- vironmental quality branch. . w·~· The conference Js at the Washington Hilton Hotel. • Soviet Anny Troops On Move in GermanY. BERLIN ! AP) -·~iztable Soviet army troop movements were reported in East Germaay early today. Truck driver• told pcilice they saw 800 to 1,000 RuiSian. trucks . with troops heading from Berlin northeast toward Hamburg. lncreued troop movements have been reported rectntly, 1pparenUy in connection with 1nnual . 1 p r i n g m1neuver'S. · Orange Coast Weather lt'll be 1 weekend to write the lolk& back east about-sunny 1k.ie1 After midmomina:, with tempera. tures ranging from "72 JocalJy to az ln mid<OUDty. INSIDE TODAY There i& o. uniq'ut a,.t galftrtt in Nt!wpo7"t Btat1' which .thm.os scadp,U7"t a.t if tac1' piec11 were ts jewel. Rtad about it in thU week'1 \V ttlctrnk7". _,,, " Ctlllwltlt • (lllQ;Jllt "' ' (ll1Mflolf .... ,_ .. ,_ .. Dffltl flfttlcil1 " ........ " lf!lfrttt ..... • ...... ,.,, -... " ......... " ... _ • M1H1tte LICM""' 11 .. ' .. .... n.• Mllfll1lflllllft • "'~ ...... ... .... .,,,. c..t1' .. llHtturati .... trt¥t.~ " '""' , .. ,. Sttdr Mtrlllltl •11 Tttwt.• " -... n-• ""ltltr 4 .._,, ...... 1).11 .. --•• w-.... ~ ,• \ '!" ---"'' !!fi.\t'ftness U.S. Laws Hartelius Alibi 'Not Excuse' He~rd at Trial For ·Newport . . A Costa Mesa hosJital nurse testified ';)urtdty ;n the Orange C.ounty Superior Court araon-rraud trial of Or. Ebbe ffarttllus that the physician's blonde mlstreu calJed ·and aaked her If she ~ ordered medical records reflecting ~. doctor-'& presence at Ute hopsltal lfll April 9. Mn. Emily Ryan quoted Reba Vaughn IJ as:k.ing her "are you going to fix tfiem?'1 and told tlefe~ attorney MaJ.- tftew Kurilich that she immediately aSsurtd Mrs. Vaughn ''I'm not going ~ perjure .myself -I woul4n'l do that for my own mother." . Mrs. Ryan said the records reflect Newp.ort Man Jailed in Assault Case ·One . N~ Beach resident is in jail on charges of assault with a deadly weapon aod a second is lo Hoag Me- morlal Hoe:pital following a "nlursday night fight ID <#Ona del Mar. Booked on the _ charg~ is Gary Lee Fetterman, 23, 1950 16th St. In good con- dition at the hospital ls James M. Rogera, 13, of 709 Acacia Ave. Police reported lhlt Fetterman and Rogers and Rogers' companion, Steph-. anle Gore, 24, of the Acacia Avenue ad- dress, got into an argument over Fetter- man's dog· at aboul-1:30 p.m. 'l'hunday outside of Rogers' home. During the argum~nt, ~etterman al. legedlY st.nick ltfiss t;;ore, and w h e n Ragers attempt.ed to intercede, the sus- pect assertedly knocke<t h' Im to t h e-iround and beat his head against the pavement. •OffiCen'aaJd the same series of events "'8 rtPoM.edly repeated whert Miss Gore attempted to 10 for help. follege Bound Col. Joh!\ A. Lindvall will be- come vice president of South- ern California College in Costa 1'-1esa \vhen he ,retires as an Army chaplain in t:!une. The sec alumnus will be in charge of public relations and fund raising for the liberal arts school. oaAKGl COAST DAILY PILOT OltANGE COAST ,Ull1SHIN(", COMPANY Jtoii1rl N. w.,4 ,rn:e1 ... 1 •r.d ,~l1Mf' J1~lc R. Curl•v \/let ,rc11C1tn1 tnd G.....-•I M1ritt1t ThtM11 Ko1~il (ClllOf lhoMtl A. Mur,r>llint Mtntglng l!tllor Ch ~r111 H. Looi 11.ithtrd P. Nill Au l1!1n, M1n1111n11 E<hlor1 C•it• "'"• Office J JO Writ 81y Str11t M1ilin9 Addron: it.O. !lo'I( 1S60,112~?• Otti.r orflcn N.....iton lt1<ll : JU" 1111w~ 1 ou•..,1ro L11111nt !lttr• ,.0,.11 Av!nvr H11Mln1•oi 8tlC "••t~ lo1111v1rd S.n Cir-nit • C1m•rt0 R~)I 1.1., .... tn•l '4J-4J11 . Cln1lrlt4 A'""fillll '41•1671 I09r'~'· 1t11, Or.,.. Cou• 'l,f&lllf>ll'lt ~'"¥· No """"" 1~•• Hh11lr1I~ .. .,...I l'nffW .,-11.....,.,h_ll l\iw'll~ m•t 11~ ,..,... ......... utwu. 111tc itl ,,,.,.. "'l"lrw) o~ C9111'1"1th1 •-· 'fC'6.d tltn _I ... 111i.I II Nt~ .. ltll 1<.4 Gtl•t Mtt•, C1llfo<"Ri.. Sull>t<'1P'lt!I 11v c:1rr1tr 11.1.t -.,1111~1 l'ty mt ll llJS -llllt J "~ll11rt 1h1\llll!lclM, l l }I '""'11'\1'f. that Dr. Hartelius, 50, treated a patient al the Beverly Manor Convalescent Hospital from 8:30 p.m. Lo nearly 9 p.m. Kurilich saya they punch holes in U1e prosecution's argument that-the doctor planned the fire at hi.I C.orona del Mar otftcet: that night and ht further claims that Mrs.: Vaughn's ttlephont call -.as an attempt by the Costa h-1esa woman to. remove a valuable.alibi. The prosecution aJle1es tha.t Dr. Hartellu.s asked Mrs. Vaughn'• brother Jim Blevins to set the fire at 2345 E. Coast Highway· as part of the doctor's plan to destroy what are described a1 ''highly incriminating pal.lent records." Blevins, 39, has testified tha\ he did burn the office and he has also told the jury that he helped fake the theft of the doctor's car nine days earlier under Dr. Hartelius' directions. DAIL'( rlLOT Ill" nti. Newport Beach cannot u.'le federal en· vironrnental legislation as Jggal reason to void the Pacific Coast Freeway route agreement, City Attorney Tull y Seymour aeid today. In an opinion prepared for Mond11.y ni&ht's City Council meeting, Seymour cites law1 barring e1penditure& of U.S. tu dollars on freeways crossing park land -u the coast heeway does - but point.a out the state has not yet committed ltaelf to ukinr for federal money. 1be council Monday will meet to map plana for upcoming negoUalioll! with the state precipitated by last week's rejection of the accepted route in a special election. In that election. re1idents by • g to I vote asked the council lo repeat the accepted route ea1t of Upper Newport Bay throuah Coron• de! Mar. Councilman · Donald MclnnJ1 had a1ked fur Seymour's opinlon on the federal aspects of the lasue on the eve of the 1peclal election. Receives •Wi1191' Dave Ganoung has won hi.., Eagle Scout rank. hi ghest a Boy Scout can hold, v.1ith Troop 189 of Costa Mesa. He is the son or Mr. and Mrs. John K. Ganoung or 1863 Elba Circle, Costa Mesa. Kurlllch put a mentally rtlarded wltneu Into tht box Thur!day to establish that Reba Vaughn ordered Blevins to take the doctor'! car. MASCO, SGT. MARTIN BLACK DISCUSS LEGALITIES OF ESCAPE In S.11 Beach, There 11 No lacape From th1 Law Mclnnl1 had pointed out the freeway, as planned, would cross the Harry M. Welch Memorial Park, pl10 known as Newport Dunu, at the mouth of the Back Bay. Lewd Phone Call Suspect Pleads Innocent to Raps I The 2I·year-old witnesa, who was described in court Ill having a mental age of seven, testified she was pre&ent when Mrs. Vaughn told Blevilll to take the auto and that "Jim got mad because she hadn't left the keys in the car." Southland 'Houdini' Gets Froni Puge 1 'The trial before Jud~ James F. Judge resume• Monday. Kurllich expects to end his defell.'e of Dr. Hartellw Tuesday._ Reprimand From Police LAOS • • • Sepone, 27 miles inside Laos. William Howard \Vall of Corona del fo.far has pleaded innocent to charges that he made 13 lewd phofte calls to Harbor Area women. Newport Blaze Injures Mesan In Apartnient ~ A Costa Me11 man is lillted in ·good condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospital after ht: suffered second and third degree burns on hls face. haitds and legs during a flre tn Newport Beach. The fire was one or three which brok~ out in Newport during a period beginning at noon, Thursday. Investlgators 1aid Andrew Russo, of 276 Cabrillo St. was injured when a compressor used to spray lacquer ex- ploded, Igniting the finish . The explosion caused about 11,000 damage to the apartment at 1129 E. Balboa Boulevard v.·here Russo was work.Ing. 'The other two fire~ both ocCWTed tn restaurants. An estimattd $2,000 damage was done tO Hank'S Ocea'n Front Cafe, 2300 W. Ocean Front, when a fire started in the ldtchen at 7 a.m. this morning. Firemen said no injuries were reported In lhe blaze which was apparently ignited by faulty refrigerator wiring. Damage was negligible from a grease fire which hlt the kltchen of the Jolly Roger re1t.auranl, 203 Marine Ave., Balboa Island at g p.m. Thursday. Firemen spid the fire was extinguished by restaurant employes before it spread beyond the stove vent where It started. Fro11a Puge J SST. • • Jant 30. But the aide said, "the President is hopeful that the senate will restore the funds for the prototypes." Sf:n. \Vllliam Proxmire ( 0 • W i s . ) , leading the battle against the plane. cautioned suppcirt.era "the SST is still very much alive." ''On the noor of the Stnate the division on the i1sue has been very close," Prox- mtre said. "It Is possible that the House vote will give us just the advantage we need to win, but victory against the SST Is far from certain." An inlonnal UPI poll of Ule Senate, completed just before the House voted, backed up Proxmire's assessment of a close vote, which will come probably next week. The poll !bowed 48 votes against future funding of the SST; 45 supporters of the jetliners; tv.'o Senators leaning for the project, three aga.tnat; and two absentee•. Candid Escape artist D. D. Masco has drawn a reprimand from Seal Beach Police Chief Lee Case. for his eHorta to perform a "Dive to Death" off the city's pier Saturday. A certified Jetter daled r.tarch 7 in- formed Mas:co that "The City of Seal Beach will not allow you tG use any facilities under our control," including the pier and the boat docking facilities. 'l'be Jetter, lligned by the chief, added that the act was not considered in the be1t interest or the city. "This is: ridiculous:. I've never he:ard of such a thlng," Mas:co said this morn- ing. He added that" he: would pertorm his 2 p.m. jump -bound by two handcuffs and SO-feet of chain -on schedule:. Police re.strained the 3 2 -v e a r -o I d •·Houdini" from jumping Off the pie:r Jasl Saturday after he had failed to get a boat from v,.hich to perform his stunt. Masco said he would board a boat In Long Beach and perhapA return there to avoid a confrontation with the law. "I am sure that it's awfully dangerous, Sugar Ray Set For Mesa CofC Banquet Tonight Celebrities -from earthbound stars to interstellar stars of Mission Impossible -will shine tonight in C.osta Mesa at the 21st annual Chamber of Commer« ~Iemberahip Banquet. Sugar Ray Robinson, former -v.-orld middlev.·eight and ·welterweight boxing champion \\.'ill be featured speaker in the f.1esa Verde Country Club event. lie also will receive the chamber's annual Heart Award for servi~ through his youth foundation designed to reach underprivileged children through sports. Chamber leaders are partially staging a benefit for the program by oUerina: tickets on a pair of boxing gloves autographed by the ex-champ. Besides Robinson, longtime radio and telgvision personallty Dick Lane will gather with chamber members at g p.m. for social hour, followed by dinner at 7 and 8 p.m. main evgnt with Robinson. Mayor Robert M. Wilson is program cfialrman for the annual affair, which always features a lop-name personality. Schedules had not been confirmed late today. but Balboa Island actor Buddy Ebsen, former decathlon champion Rafer Johnson and Greg Morrl1. of television's Mlssi:in Impossible were tentatively plan· ning to attend. Camera But Subject Didn't Smile WASHINGt'ON (UPI) - A 52-year-old doc\.Or has been charged wllh the attempted rape of a drugged patient afl.er police observed the alleged attack on a planted closed circuit television system. The allegtd assault Wok place Feb. 25 while Dr. John L. Avery wa1 mak· ing a ~ c&ll oo a 20-year-old patient at htr 1uburban Montaomery County, Md., 1partment. Jud1e Calvin R. Sandera Thurad&y ordered Avery held for grand jury IC- Uon and releUtd him on a $10,000 property bond. Aecordlnl to testimony by County Medical Examiner Belden Reap, Avery 1av, the woman two injections in the arm. She lost con sciousness in two or 1hm: mlnute1. Reap said Avery partially undreslled the v.·oman, "flnally pushing her back onto the couch." Two po\Jce dettctives algnaltd by Reap then entered lhe apartment to make the arrest. The allkeout v.·as set up In the woman's apsrlmtnt as a result of an In· cident with the 111me doctor earller thl!I year. On that occa1iion she 1lle1edly sought to dettrm ~ne from a local Mspital whst caused her ta lost consclou1ne11 after he admln11tered medication to her The cimera, which mea1ur!d '4rfix2 incllts w11~ planted In a shoe bot on 1 table ln the efficiency 1pertment. Rtap said the lwo detectlvts did not watch the alle.aed aasault out of "modesty." 1 but I'm sure that I can do It," Masco sald 1bout his dive. "Houdlnl never did 1nything this danaerous. When he jumped off his brldaea he only had one pair o! handcuf· fes and one pair of leg irona. And he had a safety rope to boot!" Board to Find Superintendent A screening committee which will seek applicant.a for the post of superinte-1\dent of the Newport-Mesa Unified School Dis- trict has been appointed by district trustees. • Conrad Briner. faculty member of the Claremont Graduate School. Claremont Men's College, will head the committee. Joining him will be Kenneth C. Peters, superintendent of the Beverly Hills Uni· fied School Diltrlct and Dr. Ferd Kie- set, superintendeJtt of the San Juan Uni· fied School District, Sacramento. The men will prepare a list of appli· cants for seleetion by district trustees. The board of education officially ac· cept.ed the resignation of Superintendent WlllJam CuMh•gham Tuesday night. He is realgning to become the executive sec- retary of the newly formed As.t0eiation ol California School Administrators as of July I. Confllctln1 reports on the Laotian cam- paign made it difficult for observer• in northern operational bases and in Saigon to explain clearly what wu going on in Laos. For example, field reports said Brown was evacuated today but a South Vietnamese 1poke1man in Saigon said battle reports were received from there as late ti noon. The Saigon spokesman told cor- respondents at the daily briefing that 2,000 to 3,000 South Vietnamese _troops had been pulled out of Lao! 1n the past 48 hours. reducing Saigon's com- mitment across the border to about 18,000 men. Field reports said several thousand other troops tJad been removed ·without announcement and there were were less th.an IS,000 there now. Khe Sanh. the big American helicopter base 12 miles inside Vietnam, was hit twice today by Communist gunners in their most accurate attack in four days of shelling. The guns, apparently firin& from close to the demHitarized zone (DMZ) a few miles to the north lobbed about 30 shelb inLo Khe Sanh th1.s afternoon. Acme hit- ting inUde the perimeter and wounding at least one American. Another 30 rounds hit the base 1hortly after nightfall bul there was no report on casualties or damage. Field commanders said the 1,000 South Vielnamese infantrymen based at F1re Base Brown had been flown to Artillery Base Delta 1, nine miles inside Laos. Wall, 19, who police assert made the obscene calls under the name BUI Jackson. was arrested Sunday by Newport Beach police when he went lo the home of alleged victim for a date. Wall was bound over by Judge Donald Dungan in Harbor Judicial District Court for a meeting with Orange County Medical Center psychiatrillls who will report to the court on March 22. At that time consideration will be given to reduction of Wall 's Sli,250 bail. A pre·trial hearing nas been scheduled for April 1.:. in the Municipal Court. If the youth pleads innocent lo the misdemeanor charges at that time, a jury trial will be held April 20. Hospital Transfers Elvis Presley NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Enter· tainer Elvis Presley, undergoing hoapital treatment for an eye infection. has been moved to an area of the building which is "more easily guarded," a hospital spokesman says . The hospital has been deluged with telephone calls, flowers and caller.! .at- tempting lo convey lheir get -well wiahe.! to the singer, v.•ho entered the hospital Tuesday. Sher,rill Has Ai~rived j For+~. firit time, this 1xceptional r.ne of upholstery is now •veilablt on the west coast. s~.r-~ rill, one of the fin11t producers of upholstery in the country offers you a new experienc.e in viewing quality furniture. An unparalleled 1eleetion of styles and fine fabrics art coupl.d with cre~smanship unmatched in this price cate9ory. If you are in need of upholstery, be .ure to view this exciting collection of moderately priced, quality furniture. A Ted von Hemert exelu .. sive. DEAt:ERS EOR: HENREDON -DREXE~ -HERITAGE Nl!:WPOIT ITOllt: Ol'IN 'llllDAY 'TIL t 7td11111 NIWPORT BEACH 1727 Wollcllff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Profffsfon•I h1terlor 1 O..l9ner1 Avolloblo-AID-N51D LAGUNA l!ACH 245 North Cout Hwy, 49~551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P\Mo Ten ""' Mtitt .t ~ c • ..., 14 .. 12•• - \ \ J ' QUEENIE By l'ttll lnterlandl j J -------- Snow, Rain High Winds Lash U.S. MUlsection · By U1.Ued Pre" lnterutioaaJ ''.lt's the typical lion aod lamb dr.al Jn spri ng wtathtr," • H1sllngs Neb., poli~man said as snow and winds or 100 miles per hour st.rand~ mo!orist" and overturned three trailer homl!s. But the lion appeared tn prevail as the snowstorm plowed through lh!! nation's midsection today. car• blocldnr Ill ,..ds. MW Muon City raldtntl were 1trat1dtd ror the nllht in Ott Molnu whett: their team played In• hl1h 1ehooJ basket· b1JI lot.trtull?U!nt. Satchrrw in Hospital After Heart Seizure Ft!dU, Mirth lt, 11111 OAILV >Uf f T1·ain Car Case P1·obed LA SAU.JI:, Ill. (APl -Office employes 1t the little eye." Ge v e 1111DOnl lnv"li&awra rail llne I n north-central RJclW'd Sprifll et the '-" 1lfttd the records of 1 Uity TilJDolt 1ald \t>e c1r1 aup-force refttJed tt 1pec:ul1te oo JlllnolJ r1Jlroad ind ID even PoMdlY were the property cf the po11lble lmpllcaUcm of 1maller my1tery company t~ • my1tery Cilmpany which or11nlzed crlm1, but 14ld dty in an attempt · t6 find painted on new tdentlfytna "work wW have 16 be daM «it how mort1 than tt million mukl and leued lbem to tn othet 1r111 of the country'' worth of Penn Central frelaht other raUroadl. to determlr,e whttMr 1imillf cart dl11ppeartd. A U.S. •t· FBI agents seized t he situations o:llt elltwhere. tomey 11ld the c•r• ap-recorch ol the 141 S.lle line BechUe a;aJd a federal irlJUI p1renUy were stolen. and o' Magna ! 1 r l h jury ln PhlladelpbJa, 1 where Joeeph Cinotto Jr .. general Enterprtaes, Inc., wh I c h the Penn Central has held· rn•n•1•r or the La Salle ~ rented • one-room afflce tnd quarters. would be;tD looklhl Burtau County RaUraad -a aome 11hop 1p1ce from the lnto I.he ciae Wednesday 11\d frei ght-only line with 1 mere r1Uroad. would c1Il In records ftem tS mllt1 of trackage -termed An FBJ 1pokesman 1ald other tinnl. Bechtle did not lhe dlaappearance "a terrtblt 11enU were checking for lde.ntify lhe othtr comt>Plts. misllke." pouible vtol1tlon1 of the He aald no arraats had been U.S . .Atty. Louis C. Becbtle federal 1nter1tlte tranaporta· m..1de, adding that he did net er· Phlltdelphia reported tion of stolen property law know whether criminal pm. 'urbat's very ~. but I don't Me how ll\ imlt&tion of w. c. PiJcis ill rolnr t<> Wee the ltockholden' mind.a off the lt&te of bu•in•." Six towns in the Omaha Public Ptwo1er Diatricl were completely without p o w t r Thursd1y night. Some 600 to 700 farm houses were without power and heat in 10 to 211- deflrff wuther near Ord. Neb. Power officials said repaini would be difficult until the winds 1Ubaided. NEW YORK (UPI) -A two days after ccviplttina a Thursday that 277 Penn Ctn· a.nd the fraud by wire lt1w. atcutions would result. spokesman {or Btth Israel two-weei eneagement at the trtl Railroad cars vanl!hed He 11ld 27 cars with Ptnn "Everyttunc 1• aketchy 11\cf Hoispital said today juz artist Waldorf A1tnrl1. since early 1970 after being Central markin11 painted over Incomplete." he aaid, One 6f Louis ·'Satchmo" Annstrong lmlt1t.ed by untold mual-diverted onto the La Salle had bten found In L1Salle '1 the sketchy elements is a fi.nn was resting comfortably and ciaM ans 1ln1ers, Armatronc . tr1ck1. He said the cars ap-yard1. know• 11 DI v er 1 if I ed. "responding to treatment" for produced th ou 11nd1 of parently were ztolen in The Fedtra.1 Task Force on Propertie1, mentioned inc~ a heart ailment. records, appeared In ICOrts 1wltcldng operation~. Organized Crime has Joined documents filed when the Flt Even the wheels nf govern· me.nt ground to t1 halt 11:~ power w111 cut In the •I.ate capitol In Lincoln. Earlier report1bad 11ld that of IT\bUM pictures and played "I rr:11ly d!'ln't know what the lnvr:stigation and a obtalned search warrants \& t.hr: grave!·11oiced Ir I.Im Pf: l ln nl.ahtclubt and concert h1!11 happt.ned," said Cinotto. "I railroad IOW'Cf! 1ald. "There Inspect the LaSalle railroad Ride of Terror About two to four lnchea nl sno-w accumulated in the tutem part of the state, but driltl ind blowing anow drop- ped vlclbillty to near zero. playe r was In critical (:00· in the we11tern world and really can 't say any more." Is more thtre than meer.s the premises. rlitlon after being adm.Jtted behind the Jron curtain. __ .:.._ __ _:__:. _______________ ...:._ ________ _ Monday to the ho.spJtal't In-Jn JOSI he was w1mtd by tensive care unit. doctor1 ta alow down .aller Bandit Holds 2 Hostage Trtlflc In western lowa was at • 1t111dstlll 111 tht atorm moved In with sleet, freezing rt1 in, ice and snow. Thr: 70-yr:ar-old mu1ician1'1 a near#fatal ccU•pae in Italy. per~nal phyaiclan, Dr. Gary Th t Jrrespreulble "Sat.- Zucker, said Armstron1 had chmo" told the worried phys\-nnt had ~ heart attack ci1n1 : "A lot of J)tOJ)le live although he h•d been 1ulferinr acoard lnt tn Hoyle. au t fr om a h'art c::ondilion for Hoyle's dead _ y Uve ac- aomr. time. cording tn Loul1 Arm1trong. '' ORLANDO. Fla. (UPI) - 1'My god, please go away.'' the woman's voice pleaded over the police rad io to pursu- ing officers. "l ~'anl to see my husband and children again." Mrs. Lity Thompkins. a sav- ings and Joan association teller, and her boss. Ralph Ha!ller, were taken hostage Thursday by a shaggy-haired gunman who robbed the firm and fled wilh them in a stolen police car. Driving around in the patrol car, ttie gunman warned polict nver I he car's r1dio to stay clear. •·s.ick off.'' !he ~unman said. "If you want the hostage alive, cool It. I'm going t(I blow this guy'ii head off U you don't pull them off. Get them off my back and l mean it." Patrol cars kepi awa y, but police kept the fleeiJlg car under surveillance from 1irplane8 1.nd helicotpers. place. Juat wt.it. Don 't WiltfY about it. They a~n't gelng to go free ." After twn hour!'i or riding. the gunman spotted a green Cadilhis. and used the .stolen car 's police liiren to force the vehicle to stop. He freed Mrs. Thompki ns. whcse snn is a Highway Patrolman. and the dri11er of the Cadlllae. Perry Bernard . Parkin. Ark.., but tonk Hasner with him. "We're socked in tight." "' Million Cify policeman 1ald t11rly today. "The -'now pll')W!I can 't gel out until visibility eases up." Armstrong. who rose from ''iOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"'il the handicaps of bein1 born II in poverty in a New Orleans s ALE shack to become one of America's f o re most en · Cars wen~ halted "' l Hamptan. about 28 miles south of Maaon City, because al poor vi1lblUty and stalled t.ertainers. r f: n ° w n e d WATER LILIES lh'•ughout the world. wu 1d- mittea to Bet!! larael only Hasner later was released unharmed in a wooded IU'ea and the officers finally cap- Cost Overruns Cited tured the bandit \\'hen hiJ car WASHINGTON iUPl l -technolol)'. Pacific Gclclfi1h F•rms 14142 Edw,rcls Sf. Ofl Ill• ... 04 ..... , ..... , •• .. It ..... , .... lkM. was wrecked after a chase 't'he Cmeral Accounting Office 'T'he poe;t 111id It obtained !~~~~~~~~ on Interstate 4. He suffered 1GAO) ha~ discov,red that d f GAO ' Ii mi nor f;icial lacerations when an a vance «ipy O s WHTMINSTll ltl-7105 cost overrun~ on Bl weapon• 81 lud " l·'U f lhe car hit e tree . The amount ·Pllt a y, acqu ~ an a ~ystemii have ret1 ched $33.4 or money he took wa1 not bi!Ucn 11n far . the Waahinfl:on majrir wupon1 1y1tem1." determined lmmedlat.ely. P()lt a aid tnday. The GAO. an Ind ependent The FBI charged V!taliu!I Malina uskas. 21i. of Altamonte The G A 0 b I amt d watchdoa •aeney und&r lhe Spri~. Fla,, with bank rob-"deliberate undtreslimatinJ, cantrol of C:Oniffll, 1aid the bery. unantieipa.ted de velopment major weapons 1ystema in· Hasntr. branch manaaer of d!ffieulUt1. faulty pla.nnlni. JUal!y were advertiaed to COit the American Savings and poor man 1 gem en t , bad W .f blllion . By June 30, 1970, Loan Association, said wMn estlm1tin1 . ·• inn atlnn and the the Pentaaon e1t1m1ted the NO. I ON THE COAST Your Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT "You don't think I'm that much of a fool." said the gunma n. wearing a false mUJtlche 1 n d sunglases. ''The planes are ill over the tht gunman ent.erf'd h I 11 d11lrt to erplnit n e w coat at $117 billion. estllblishmel1\ ind began w.11v-I_::.::::__:::__::!::=._:.:.:...__:::,:..::,_:::.:_::::::_ ___ _.!====================::._-------------------------------- lng a pistol. "All T eould .see wa1 how big the barrel of that gWI Wal." Agnew Charges CBS With Distorting Facts BOSTON (UPI ) -Viet President Spiro T. Agnew said ThurJday t1ccusations of di.stortion leveled 11t the Pen· t1gon in t1 rectnt CBS· TV documentt1ry could just t1s well t1pply to the network !ta<!(. Ainew aaid lhe CBS new~ documentary ;'The Sellini'. of the Pentagon." broadcast Feb. 23, failed to observe the adage about people living In glass houaes throwing stones. The V!ce President quot.ct the CBS !!Cript ll.!I saying. "nothing Is more import.ant t.o 11 Democracy than the free flow of information. Misln# formation.di st or ti on and propaganda all interrupt that now." "It. i11 the CBS televialon," he said , "not the Deplftment or Defense that leave1 much to ht desired ln terms of the free flow of information.'' fn New York CBS President Frank Stanton called Ainew ''mi1taken. '' Stant.on aald "The Stllln& of the Pentagon " ha!! b e e n praised by "dl1Ungui1hed American~ from .~ill walks of life. It h~~ been criticiud. But we believe that It l! an Important and valuable job nf journalistic inve&tigalivt reporlini;i. '' VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS PSYCHOANALYZED BY JACK BIDWELL .. , Chancet are If you have @ver areentd your Volk•· waaf!n up thr alley be- tween thP Lidn The•trf! Md Bid\\,.JJ"~ i\111n1 Shon \'OU have already ken itnalyzed. You he'''" "'°'"n studlf'd to be ttu• mo!.l rll[f'·frff of all Individuals. Nep down you IU'f' a llttlf' snoot~· ~­c&u1e you kno\1' you btlong to an f'lltf' rrnup of r.tf!I · tlvr Pf'Oplot. lt I~ un..,f'r· 1tnod tha1 you can dK:or· 11.te your Bug anyway you likf' hf.c11uJ1f' V-Dub~ art' 11r· ceptablf' In""" r.ttirt ' You 1nob fhf! 111.v in th" C•dl1- l1C"" Mforf' h11 ha111 • ch11nr" to look dnwn nn you. What dCM"ll he kno"' •boul Min E tn \ndlvld..:11 1 "11:rf!pt how m111.ny Individuals ti11ve Carllll11 e1? AnY"'•·'" ht-int 11 rr1111. th·11, rf'sClurc('ful Pt'r~on you r11.n immt"diatf!Jy ap- precl111ti-m11r.y mort thlnv In !if,. ttu1n th, unft1rtun11t11 man in tM Caddy. You •r" •bl!'! tn t11.kr 11. bAsicll.117 u1lv thine 11nd adorn it with yaur own lnnnv&tlnn" 1.nd 1nmi'hnw m11k11 it rutf' -C•dlllAes 11 rt ju.tt bom bHutltul !!~ Of cnurat whtn fl com ,.1 to 11vtnt money thlt i11 )/"!Ur t~C"l•l'"'' Thllt \, whr~ 11..ll my fr!'!!'! 'PIYCh(ll· nay comt~ tn. t am havln,C" 11.11 f!Ccentri(: salf' that \1 1otnr to l\ttract ~l pMipl• ot your nature. ln fl\ct, lt'1 bound to 11.ttrar.t. all tht Ftrtari. Lamborghini ltld Ca.dilJAr nwrlets also. You can reco,;nitt them by 1he!r ~ady ,.ye11 find they ma y comr lncoimlln In thetr neighbor 's VW ! SO YOU HAD BE'ITER Gf:T HERE EARLY berl.nn1ns Satur- dJly mr.irnlng, Ma rch 20. w, w\11 have a hUl f' If'· lf!Ction of Dea1111att, ™11· on1h.lr" and To 0 Mart Suits up to $14. now 140. R1.lnrr Sportcoau orlsln•I· ly $70 nnv.• 125. You will 1'1,V for Any mode1t al ter· at1on• i l'IC"urr~. AliO. ynu mltht removf' your hark seat bf!cau1f' H ~Msn't l!nd hert. Wf' tr'. srnlnr ln have thret btr· rain 1ablr~ ... 110. M . ll nd ~1 rrsptttivtly. What ~·ou ar11 ~ntni to fl ntt on lh"'" tah!"• will utound vou~ Jantzen Swtattn. Corbln Dre.11 Sltckl. •111. wr!J Sla ck• SJO. Gl."t. V.nro, Hanit·Ten •nd Hath· e~·a~· Shirts: S~. The 11 U- hl11 11 rnr blr it•s.19 ('Inly -llld ynu ml~ht ~ &hocktd hy wh111t you ftrtd on It -r.omr and ll""f':' Nf'Xl 'vrtk, .lark Bi6wtl1 peych~nlllyzea the ti.tan tn th!'! Cadillac! JACK BIDWELL 34'7 VIA LIDO lo NIW!'O~T IEACM .. If you do, you'll be glad to know there are S8 places in SoutheJ:n California to get help . The 58 offices of Southern California First National Bank. We 've been im proving our loan-m aking process so much we .have it down to a science . .isount1RN CAUFOivM In fact , we can arrange your loan in a matter of hours . And the interest will be at low bank rates, instead of the other kind. FIRST NAT10NAL IAllK " 673-4510 ~=~===!!!"!!"!!!"!!"!!!"!!"==!!!!!!l!!!!l~COSTA MESA, 230 Eut 17th St., 6'12°1660 HUNTINGTON S~ACH , Utt Ad'"'' Avt., ~62-3377 -17122 Booch Blvd., 841.9681' I • • --DAD.. Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • • , . ' .i.. ' Nader's A"t! ;~or stories wiJ.b Or&l>C' Coa•t datelines aN! seen OrtlJi 1n \he nation 's news medJa these ~ys. President Nixon makes announ.;e ents from the Western White House~ Gov. Ronald Reag n pays w hom- age regularly. Sen. Barrx _ Gqld)"•ler an olbers prom- inent in natiol)>.l affairs also m~ke new fro111 the llar- bor Area. . Consumer advocate a.nd ecology crusader Ralph Nader 1enerated the latest local dateline Wednesday. He 'proposed at Orange Coast College -for the first Ume in Calilornia -formation of a statewide stu- dent agen'cy to attack social ills and problems· that deep- ly concern them through the courts, legislative lobbying and economic pressare. He outlined a program of 800,000 community col· Jege students each contributing SJ to $3 to provide fund~ for a potent organization similar to Nader's Raiders, with ;i shnllar: alms. ·Some business executives and even some student! may disagree with Nader's program, which has had aome auccess in Oregon and P..tinne.sota. But one thing emerges· that is undeniable: he offerl'i young people • clear alternative to dropping out or turn· • bJ' their backs in frustration. -EYaluating Candidates Voters in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District will be given the opportunity to meet the candidates seeking election -to three openings on the seven-member board. The Ass'ociltt1on of University Women and the League of Wom1µ1 Voters ·are jointly sponsoring a candi· dates' forum_ ~t(l:3q p.ll)., March 31, in the Estancia Hi&h School Foruln . Alternative such an opporlll.lllty to bear all candld~les ;, parUcularly mtaniogful. Running unoppo!td for the 11eat from which James IV. Peyum b retirln' a Donald E. Smallwood, a Costa J.1ea• attorney. He will represent voters ln arel one. lncumbel\l Mrs. Marian C ,8ergeson of New.port Beach i! opposed In trustee·area three by Donald T. Bull a businessman from Costa Mesa, Incumbent board president Selim S. f'ranklin, a (~osta M,esa attorney, ls opposed in trustee •rea six by Herbert H. Stricker, a sales representative from Newport Beach. As in the past. the DAILY PILOT wilJ present back· ground information on each candidate prior lo the elec- tion. Help for OCC 's Winners Orange Coast College's speech learn this year has a record to be proud of. They have won every tourna· ment they have been in, and recently took fifth as a team in a field of 80 four-year colleges and universities. In that same tournament, the OCC debate team of Bill Landers and Mike Mik1aus v.·on first in that category. The team has been invited to compete in the nation· al championships in St. 1.-0uis April 12·17. If they go, it will be strictly a do-it-yourself project The team has to raise the money. So far they have held rummage isales, swap meets, candle sales and car washes. But they are looking for projects. They only have the rest of the month to raise the remainder of the $4,000 they need -about $1 .500 more. • Jn lig~t of lJie.resignation· 0;f Supl William Cunning· hatn, the 'Apri1~201 election is _particularly important to lb.e continued quality• of the qewport·Mes:a schools op- Clubs or organizations which can help provide a project students can do to earn the m o n e y, can call 834-5714 of 834-5725. They're not asking for handouL'I:. They v.1ant to ,earn their way back to St. 1.-0uls. So far they have earned the. invitation the hard way, by beat· ing everyone else. .'The winner and still beaV)'Weight champfon of the U.S. Senate. , ' eration: · · S'mce all ~trict voters will decide·on all three races, What's happening on our campuses today? Some very fine things. c Bard-liners Replaced by Pragnaatists Red China Now in a Thaw? • WASHINGTON' -Ch'-e Premf<r aiou En·lai'11 dramatic ~stt to Hanoi adds new menace to the· rumblings that Red China might intervene in Laoa aa Me did once befort in Korea . In• the past, the North Vietnamese have heaitated to bring tht Chinese too deeply lnto the Indochina conflict. Now they are iumlng openly to Peking for SIPJIOrl lo· Cak the . • allial-....i.tion ii Leos, --eritl-cal. -. . Nevmbelen, the naUGna.t~ intelligence estimate, w b l c h g U i d e I Piesident Nixon' d1lcounts Uie danger of Chinese Intervention. T h i 1 secret uses1ment is based upon the best lntelll&ence available to tbe U.S. Here it the ruaoninl behind the optimistic estimate: has been in the other direction toward the Soviet frontiers. Although Peking hal'i deployed a large force in South China. tbele divisions apparently haven't been reinforced or put on alert aince the Laos invuion. -THE u:s. ESTIMATE is that a thaw, rather-than .a new freeze, is beginning to develop in Chinese-American relations. 1"e bB.fd.liners have betn replaced by pragmatistll in many key positions in Peking. The. American sec:tkln of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, for example, has been liken over by a professional diplomat who is more realist then cloc- trlrtairt Maoist. There is cautioull op- timism that Washington'!! fr I end I y overtures to Peking may bring a positive -THE NOllTR!Yletnamese art relocrt· response. ant to lnctltuii the.tr dependence upon -The warningll that preceded Chinese Peking, which ' would-heighten Chinese involvement in the Korean War were influence oYtr lheir a(fafis. This would far more ominOUll than the current warn. also u~t MO.cow:, which ha.I furnished lnp over· Laos. There is little doubt most of .NQrth" V1'tnam's military -ht Washington that China would send ha1"4ware. The Hanoi rulers ~ve always . ~·~voJW1te:trl" to stop an outright U.S. tried to walk.a delicate tJghtrope be:iwten tnypkln of Laos or North, Vietnam, but Moscow and Pekin&. They alJO haven't ..ep; such operation is planned. On the overcome the ancient V i e t n a m e 1' e :coDtr1r9', U.S. troopa: are pulllne out distrust of the Qllnese. The· U.S. view, i1f Vietnam. therefore. is that the Hanoi threat '1:to inwlve the Olineae 1D Indochina is a~ THROUGHOUT the U~S. mUJtary tn. bluff. wlnment in Indochina, Wallhlngton and -There bas been no sign of military Peking have hi d aecret understandings. movement Jmide China toward the American and Chinese diplomats have Indochina border. indeed, the movement been' in constant communication in Warllaw. They have managed., In each crillls, to bridge the great gulf betwttn the two nations. True, the Chinese diplomats.have been rigid as steel beams. Often, they have spoken less for the sake of the listening Americans than for the dogmatlllts back on mainland China who read the transcrlpta. One participant has describ- ed the diplomatic encounterl'i to us as ''not so much· negotiating as ·like listening to Radio Peking." Still, the formal talkll and informal contacts have cleared up millUn· derstandingll. prevented miscalculations .and provided a clear channel of com· munication. THE LA TE President Kennedy, for instance, asked the U.S. negotlatorll to deliver a warning at the Warsaw meeting in March, 1961, that the U.S. would intervene in Laoll with military force unless the Chinese permitted a cease-fire. The Chinelle brought back to the next meeting word that Peking would accept an international guarantee of Laotian neutrality. For the moment at least. this ended the Laotian crisill that had the world on tenterhooks in 1961. When ex·President Johnson began born· bing Norih Vietnam, he sent assurances through Warsaw that the U.S. had no del'ilgru: on the territory of either Nortlt Vietnam .o.r Red China. This wa:i; delivertd at the Feb. 25, 1965. meeting where U.S. Ambassador John Cabot emphasized the U.S. didn't intend to delltroy North Vietnam nor to invade Olina. Training College Presidents Stanford. Harvard and all sorts of colleges and universities have recently acquired new pr~idents. The question in the mind or every tltinking American is: "Where do they come from ?'' The answer, of course, ill The lrma N. Mortcriss Academy of Co 11 e g e Pres:identry and flyin&, Trapezists. The Academy held one of its rare open houM:s the other day for parenU of pros- p e ct i v e lltudenU. Dean Gril'iwold Grommet , the t)e.. loved head of the institution, kindly served as guide. "nDS, FRIENDS, began the Dean, "ls our .Admi!!:k>n11 Of· flee. All candidates art carefully screen· ed to determine whether they have the rare quail ties it takt:a to be a. ct> liege P"'sld•'JI /OOllY: .. -_-i: ..... ,_ Friday, March 19, 1971 .. TllC ...Ulorial pagt of th• Dail~ plJo( 1ttkl (? fnfonA and stlm- tllat< r<adm br prtmtting thil ...,,_,.,, .,,._ mid """" mcnta11" ,OA topb of fnt<rn& mid riQnlfi<G•Cf. b1 erov1<1inv • forum Jar lllC -,,,;on •I our ,..,.un· opbilonr, mid b~ prese•tfng Ult diwr•t view. pofnu of ln/ormld ob.strwn Crra4 tp0kt.smft' cm t.opia of tht da~. Robert N. Weed, Pllblisher I I . 1 Ar t Hoppe · ''No"'' the candidate crawlll through this little door here, crosses that higlt vdre there over the tank full of piranhas, solvell the four-dimensional cheS.!I pro. blem on the other side in five seconds and. ii successful, I! •·elromed by ~tr. Phission Chips -the gentleman there with the boots and \\'hip. "The purpose, ol course, is to test the candidate's physical agility, sense of balance. mental dexterity and will· ingness to stoop to conquer -all absolutely essential qualitiell in a college president these days." "WHAT'S THE ~fAN-with the \\'hip do?" asked a puuled father. "Mr. Chips," replied the Dean, "tests their masochism. Now then ... " The group was suddenly llurrounded by a hordt of students in t111tered attire holding b>rth cups and bowlll and crying pittously. "P)e1se, Air, c111 you llpare • dime?" Tht Dean. Rmiling proudly. dispatched each · wtlh • cuff and •a kick. ''Our Elementary Begging Class.·· he ex· pJaintd. "Here at tht Academy We try to instill the proper begaarly spirit, 110 useful in approaching ···ealthy ,.alumni in laler life. Oh. 1ook,.we'rt in luck!" A slender youn1 man tipped past, pursued by a howlln1 mob of his fellows. an throwtng rocks and bottle.s at hln1 without IUC:.U$.~. '"TllAT'S YOUNG llorgan." !'iaid the Dean admlrlngly. "He's bttn clo<'ked around tJte Q\11d ln 2:$2 -1 school tte0rd. we·re predi ting not only a brllU1nt caretr for Horgan. but a long one. Now on your left ii • class in Ba11ic Knot Untying and nn yo ur right I ' our School of Elocution. Listen!" A babble of indecipherable sounds emerged through an open window. "We 11ke to say," boasted the Dean, "th11t all our graduates use not only 'Words you can't understand, but w h o I e paragraphs you can't undentand." A boy moped past. shoulden hunched. "That's poor J\ferriwell," whisper!<! the Dean sadly. "He cracked under the strain and losl his nerve. He·s now studying to ~ an aerial acrobat v.'ithout 11 net." A MOTHER asked if all students got jobs as college presidenU: on graduation. The Dean frowned . "Last year, all but one, he said. "It \\'all that fool kid, l{oroYt'itz. He forgot everything we taught him. Instead of declin ing vociferously at first when the Trustees of Skarewe University offe~d him the job of pre sident. he eagerly said he wanted to ta~e on the challenge." ··Whal'~ \\'rong with ~aying you y,•ant lhe job?" ask~ a parent y,·ho hadn't been listening. "Good Heavens'" cried tilt Dean in &urp-ist. "lf you y,·ere. a trust« •·ould you hire some kind of nut?'' Dear Gloomy Gus: \\lhen will our rambuncth>us rft~ councilman leam he can catch matt niea with ltoney than with vinegar~ -P.l..A. 1111• ,....,~ """" ..... ,... l'lt.,.., ,.., -.... ,1,., ""'.. " ""' ... '"""'· ,_ ,..... Ht _.,. te ..... , • ., .. 0111¥ Pl"'· Lear11 to A·sk the Right Questions 1'he first lesson to learn when you gro,w up is that if you don't ask the right queiitions, you won't get the right an11.,.,·ers. It'll sUrprising , how many gro.,.,•n-ups never learn this -so. they keep asking the wrong questions, and keep getting un.utisfadory answen. One of the biggest wrong questiOM today is: ··Why all the violence and agitalion and disre- gard tor legal pr1>- cesses?" You can't gel a sensible or meaningful answer to a questkln like lhat. You have to back up and ask a prior quelllion: " \V hat makell people and inslilutions move?" And lhe usual an· swer is : "fear, shame. and publicity.'' FOR 20 YEARS and more. it ha!'i been an open secret that colleges and unive:rsitiell were poorly run on almost every level: little \Yas done: to change them until the student! began kicking up 11 fusl'i. Then the need for changes wal'i hastily and tardily admitted. \\1hy have government agencies, at every level , suddenly become so solicitous of the public's rights and needs, when these same righU: and needs have ~xisted unsatisfied all along? Because people are making a lot of noise now, and demanding action instead of words. Why are necessary reformll made only after a catastrophe, and rarely before'! After the plane crashes, after the mine collapses, after the theater burns down, after~the 'patient dJes of neglect? Wri DO l~TJTUTJONS a n d eat.abµ,hments refuse tO list~ to 'feason, 10. calm words, ta legtumate complaints. to quiet appeal1? Why do they always wait until catastrophe strikes. or rebellion lhttate:nll. before taking stel>l!I that they then admit were "always necessary"? 'fhese are the right questions we should be tisking: Haw do we make our in· stitutions more fesponslve? How do n restructure our establishments so that thty will take preventive measures in time, and thul'i make agltaUon and v;o. lence unnecesl'iary? In short. bow do we vet the people in power -anywhere -off their duff~ before the fuse bums down and blO\\'ll them o(f? A DECADE AND more ago, T \\'ent tiround the colleges lecturing end predic- ting \\'hat \\'OUld happen there if nothing changed : the i;ludents cheered . lhe lcachera r;hruggcd. the adminislrator~ booed. But it all happened, beginnin& at Berkeley, and gelling worse:. The: san)e is going lo happt'n throughout 011r natlon·s prisons and penitentiaries I' ~sential reformll are not made '"'"" I Yt'hcn the convict~ riot on a scale llave not ~een before, W& will again ask lht \\Tong quel'itions, 11nd again make the reforms , and again too" late. Quot es James ~chwab•rher. Jr .• S.F. t11nt'ert sln~er, "" nttd for public musical ~rformanct5 -"All lhls mu.sic and !'iin~l n~ I! 11 trip ·without dru,11:.~ , • , it does l'iomethJna 11 povf!rty progr:tm can·t do ... it knocks down all the barrlcfs. '' Education at the Mercy of Voters To lhe Editor: Our educational llystem should not and must not depend upon lhe taxpayers' :;.upport at the polls. lf this change demands a rewrite of the state con· siitution, then this should be undertaken. Our standard! of education must not only be mainlained but, hopefully, im· proved. To low8' our lllaJldards in tltil'i day and age when education ill more essential than e.ver btfote ill unlbinkab1e. It is also unfair to expect citizens struggling with a fi1ed Income to vote themselvel'i more taxell evto for a vital issue such as education. 11Klugi\ I wonder if we have comidettd just how much more ol QW' 1u: dollar woUld' be spent on poUcing and puaishment if our young people are: occupied with school only half of each day. THE STATE MUST pro\·ide a more equitable dislrlbulion of funds to the districl3. I understand tltat in the state of Hawaii, fund s are dispensed equally lo each district regardless of !he wealth of that district, thereby insuring each and every cltild the equal opportunity guaranteed by our constitution. Why could this not be a part of our future planning for the state of California? Please act now to do what is possible: tn remedy 1he deplorable practice of putting our most important consideration -our children's education -at the mercy of the polls. ft1RS. M. L. CHAFFIN 'Infantile Sad S ar ks' To the Editor : So far. I've read three Gloomy Gusse:l'i complaining about people tying up police and fire phone lines with "non·emergen· cy" callll after "obvious earthquakes.'' One . from ''Harassed Dispatcher," sug· gested that "If all they need is reassur. af}ce, let tl\Cm call a friend -if they have ooe.'' An0ttier 1 Gloomy Gus. E.V .• referred to such people at "infantile sad .sacks" and said lhey "should be arrested and fined ." While 1 did not call the polict! after that "obvious earthquake," 1 must put myself in the class of "Infantile sad sackll" ~cause the thought certainly did crcm: my mind. In fact , I think il's•'a perfectly natural reaction. Not ~ssarily wille , perhaps, jus1 •imply natural. BUT THE TONE of the Gloomy Gussu ls more frightening titan an earthquake. They sltow extreme intolerance of their fellow man and hil'i weaknesses,. whatever they may be. So for Harassed Dispatcher. E.V. and all you other models; of courage: whn are irritated by us infantile sad sacks. I quote Sophocles: "Every man 1,1.'ill fall who, though born a man. proudly pre~umes to be a superman.'' 1r you supermen \\'ill forgive our infantile behavior. \\'e sAd 8ackll will of courlle forgive: your egotism. P.S.: E.V., you SQunde:d downright na.¥ ty . Put 11 little lo\·e in your heart! HarAssed Dispatcher: bone up on your spelling. you ever-so-grossly mi55pelled tying , tieln'g. ELIZABETH LANGE SI. Clnlr Defe11de d To lhe F.d1tor: On f\larch l an ed!lorial entitled "Do"·1tgrad1ng His City" ripped Coun· cilman St. Clair apart in what 1 r.on$ider noth ini: more than a vencmous vehicle <'mploycd to undermine hi.' po!l!!ibilit:v of brln(I reelected LO public (lffice . .IU,3t 1 .... •n days later another e d 1 tor i a I regarding thl Eam. Sidi Study again I • \ L•tt•'I !rt"' rNd_., 111• Wt lfMfl.. ...,,_., wr1t1ro .,,.~kl C911"" lflelr --• lo! • _..., •r ltH. Tll9 rl•hl N ftfMl-n .. lltltll'I » II ..._ •r •llml11at1 UPHI 11 ,.....,,,... AN lt lltn IOtWI I,.. cllldt 1!,ntlllfl •"" l!Mlllntl .,..,..,.. Wf "-mty ~ wllfl1Ml4 .., ~llHI It suHlcllllf --i. ,.,,,.,,1. , .. ,rY will ,.., .,. Ml~ made: innuendos against ft1r. St. Clair which only served to strengthen my original suspicions that the DAILY PILCYr is .starting its own slanderous campaign against him prematurely. Because a man speaks out for what he believes in, he is brandefi a "Big Mouth". 11 thlll is true: then there: are a lot ol "bi& moulhs" around, myself included. UNLEss HE follows like a sheep In a pack,.even if all the sheep are black, a man is accused of (and I quote) "bad taste. petty issues, and uncalled for airinc of personal linen." Since when has it become: wrong to speak up and tell the truth in.st.ead or "sugar coating the fads" when an individual is asked wltat is going on in his c)\v and when he is quite aware or his facts and has always been able to substantiate anything he hu said. THERE IS ~1UCH going on in eta f.1esa that ~Ir. Average Citiun j~nol a .... ·are of. For instance:. how many people in Costa Mesa know that Sidney Scher, owner of the Harbor Shopping Center, • chose to build the marquee: of the Edwards theatres over a major storm drain which wall paid for by the Fairview Road District assessment in conjunct.ion with the Fairview Road lmprovement Plan No. 11 passed by the: city council June 17, 196.1 and paid for through as.se.l'ill· ment of the affected property owners. Mr. Scher contended it cost ltim $5,680. 70 to construct the reinforced foundation.s necessary to keep the marquee from crushing the storm dra in and thi ~ amount was paid to him at his request on Aug. 31, 1970 out of the capital ouUay portion of the general fund. which in pla in language means out of the ta1· payers' pocket. ·ALL THIS CAME about becautt tht. cily failed to get title to the easement at the time the lltorm dr;iin wall buill, Do you call this kind of negltct. GOOD city go,·ernment? This tramaction it a matter of public record all it wa11 ok"d by the: city council by a 3 to I 11 CQuncilman absent) volt an Aug. 3. 1970. ln.,ofar a.~ Bill St, Clair onen be:in& In the minority on il!sues before the cilv council . Is it not very probahly a fact lhal ht is in the minority betause the rest o< the city council very often resemble ostriche11 buryln& their heads in the sand~ AS LONG AS YOU 'lfert publi.l!lh.inc lnfopnaHon. why did yoo refer to your inftfrmant as "one re:anor·· iMtead or ldentlrylnR him by name? Could it be he has special interezl~ of his o.,.,.n in some of the irregulariliel'i brought out and so preferred lo remain anonymou~~ It Is my !llggestion Uu1t since you chO$e to make NCh a detrimental 1ttac:k upon a man who i..8 in ptiblie. life., ht should have "his d11.y in\ court '' anti be gi ven CQWll space in ynur pap.r for retAliatkln "nd the reader be allowed to form lhtir . qwn opln1nn in11!caf1 or ~ing brainwathtd by IMidious edl!orial, thal in content alont border closely I.II Ube.I and slander. (MRS.) CLINE WAUGHTAL 1. I , , I ' I I • .~- Saddlehaek Today's· Flnal N.V.. Stocks VOL 64, NO. 67, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1971 TEN CENTS 3·,700' \Join 13th Swallows Parade Saturday Tht 13th annual Swallow's Day Parade will get underway at I p.m. Saturday tn san Juan Capistrano with 3,700 participats in this year's extravaganza. Parade chairman Charles A I I e n rep:irted Thursda y that 22 bands are definitely 5C::hedul ed. 10 floats arectleing prepared , 46 marching uni l3 v.·ill bt present . a,nd 195 eq uestrian unit.s will be competing. Amon& bands will be the popular Whit· tier Cavaliers Youth Band, which ap- peared in tht Sugar Bowl this year and won sweepstakl!S in a band com- petilion in Corona last ~·eei:. New entries this year include tht Loog Beach Mounled Police, which leads the Rose Parade each year, a group of trained co!tumed dogs paraded by Le isure World residents, an entry from Fire Sale Next? Blaze Wipes Out Goods in Truck Pedro R. Gallardo'g "best wholesale deal in years" went up in smoke on a shoulder of the San Diego Freeway in San Clemente Thursday. Now the Tijuana businessman has lo muste r up more cap,ital and try to consu mmate another deal in yardage, thread and pl~stic kitchen items. His entire -load -destined for a slor! In Baja California -caught fire after a tailpipe in the heavily loaded pickup tru ck burned through the bottom of the cargo area. Gallardo, his father and 1 woman companion stopped and passersby phoned ,or firemen to put out tht afternoon blau. The load was 1 total loss. Fire Chief ?krt Hacketl sai4. The dollar loss wa5 abou t $351il. "He was really upstt," Hackett said, "becaU5f! this was tht best deal ha had made In years.·• At least Gallardo still has bis truck. Damage to the vehicle was confined t.o a plywood camper shell. Slide Buries Hundreds ln Peru Mining Tragedy LIMA. Peru (UPI ) - A massi ve tand!lide sparked by heavy rain fell Into a mounta in lake in northeast Peru Thursday and ensuing flood s wiped out 1 mining .camp with h•vy loss of li fe, police said Friday. "The number of deaths ascend t.o ap- proximately 400 to 600 out of a total of 1,000 miners," a regional police 5pokesman said . A spokesman in Lima for the Chungar M.ining Co .. whlch operated the camp, &aid it had "practically disappeared" under tons of water. He said 50 to 70 miners had been hospitalize d in nearby towns and villages. The co mpan y spokesman s a i d the dis aster occurred about 9 a.m. Thu rsday when the rains dumped a hillside into School Board Candidates To Present Views Saddleback Valley residenu will ha ve zeveral chances to hear school board candidates in coming weeks. Two grou ps have sc heduled meetings next week featuring the candidates for the San Joaqu in Elementary School District the Tustin High School District and the' Saddleback College District who will present their views. The Capistrano Highlands Homeowners Assoc iation will ho.st the candidates on Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Valencia School. The Saddleback Valley Republican Assembly has scheduled candidates on Thur5day. The la tter meeting will take place at 8 p.m.· at Royal Savings and Loan Association in El Toro. Candidates spoke before the Mission Vie}o-Sadd)eback Valley Democratic Club an Thursday. Lake Yanahuin, In Pasco Department ISO miles northeast of Lima, forcing lake waters out of their ·banks and burying camp , installations under ton1 of water. The spokesman said be had been in contact with the camp just before the disaster but that its radio transmitter had subsequently gone off the air. Ht said the Peruvian-owned mines produced about 240 tons a day of lead and .copper. A polite spokesman from the 2nd region liaid local police and ,miners from nearby camps \\'ere engaged in rescue work throughout the day and nigh t. Ad· ditional . police reserves were dispatched to the scene from Lima· Government authorities said details ol the tragedy werl!: still 1kelchy because of the Inaccessibility of the campsite en a mountain ridgl!:. They said th• camp was a good eight to ninl!: hour car ride from Lima and that previou5 communications with the area had been maintained through the mine radio, ap- parently washed out. Council Denies Designer's Bill San Clemente Building Designer Erie Boucher -tuml!:d down for J>lyment of an "additional services" bill for $800 by city councilmen two weeks ago - was zpumed again by the plnfll lhlll week . .Sticking to their guns councilmen unanimously refused once more this wel!:k to pay the tab for what Boucher 11ys is extensive redrafting of air conditioning sy stems for the proposed community clubhouse. Boucher'5 letter adamantly stating he received directions from councilmen and some membc!rs of the c'ity staff for the extra work wu ordered received and filed~ the Calif~• Animal Control Office.rs AsSoclatlon~ the Newport Harbor High School Band and the Saddleback Mothers of Twins whose float won t. he sweepstakea trophy at the Mission Viejo St. Patrick's Oay·Parade this week. The· parade 'champions for 1!}70 1nd 1971 qf .tilt C,.l\fomi~ .Sl;a~ Horseman's Association wj.11 bt pre~ent along wiµi Brownie Da yis astride a JflOUnt and his $60,000 silver saddle. • Six judgea will. be 1'd by head judges Ben Godfrey of Utt Southern California School Band and 6rrhestra A~iatjon and Nell Jt,µ.sSl!:l\. llcensecf parid1{'jlidge for the California State Horseman'• Association. . The parade will begin at Orttga Highway and De.I Obispo Street ,and will rriovf along El Camino Real, La Zanja and Cimino Capial,rano to Del Obispo., ' ,. City atreeta alonf the pvade .route will be clo..ct ll'OU!ld noon to through traffic. · Also a~ noon, squarl!: dance exh1bitions wjlJ be &lven by the Sblpm1tea and the Ramblin Rogues square dance clubs. The aMual fil!:lll breakfast will be ztrved from .1:30 to 11 1.m. on parade day by tbt San Juan Capi!trano Women's Club IDd Rot.Jry ·ClUb at the women's ' •· 1e s ee1n . .. Mission Trail '(rustees Okay Bond Sale Bid .EAST lRV~NE -The sail!: of thl!: San Joaquin Elementary School District's re111atn~1 · $1,605,oOo In bonds h11 been ~· ~mr~t.~~1t4ir;.· . -lblJ . -\old the<. *"1 JI!• bollbm ol lhe Jni.tul rail! •ppears Jo be Iii tht nett few month1. Ha aaid bonds were recently aold' for jdtt ~er fivt percent by other districts. Relecated > i ·.·:,, .ID.ILY01'~t!flff1~ i ' \ .' { L ;, ~ . I ' .. . . ' .• .. Fifty date palms, about 40 years old. are being· transplanted at cost of S200 each.along San Clemente:s Camino de Estrella. The E. L. WhJte Co. is moving ·each tree 14 feet frbm existing curb-to allow a road widening project. Some critics feel the trees may die if transplanted1 Councilman Thomas O'Keefe lost his fight with county to keep palms in origin~ location. Ouhhouse Will Be Built Even if Bond Issue Fails What if Proposi tion A of the San Clemente parks and r«realion bond Issue falls and funding for th e new community clubhouse falls: through~ City councilmen this week informally agreed that a clubhouse ''in some form'' would replace the charred bulk of the pre5ellt communi ty gathering place. The agreement included tM possibility of a "scaled-down version" of the plans bought for $1f,000 by the city. eMlier thls year. Proposition A on the ballot calls for voter approval of '490.000 ln reveool!: bonds kl finance the clubboule, c.:ompltt.1 With a 500-seat auditorium and r mttlinC room1 at the present site. Mayor Walter Evans 11id· he believed that if thl!: n~ssary two.third.I ayl!: vote did not materlallzl!: at the polla April 20, ''WI!: probably would have to t it down with 1 contractor and work out a scaled-dawn Vl!:rsion.''. At least 157 ,000 exista iD city bud1et 11 the Jnsurance payment for the fire 10 .. --bardly •. -ah Jo .. complete ,u,, bull ding. u p~!1J19d. Councilmen, how'ever, had dUcu.s.wd lhe tapping of thl!: city'1 P.OOI of reservt funds to build the · c1Ubhouse aa f ID 1 Superintendent Ralph Gates said the money will be used fbr the new in· termMiate sChool in Irvine. Swhn f;l1U1e1 LAKE FOREST -Residents of the community who want to enroll their thru "1d (our ye&r olcb Jn. swimmifli claasea mulit register by ·Monday for the new schedule beginning in April. The clanes will be offerl!d on Monday, Wednesday. Tuesday :and Thurad~ from 10 to 10 :30 a.m. '11d ~om 10:30 to 11 a.m. , . , Cliu:ea will . run sis. wtfks With 1 limit of flvl!: children per class: Batid Comert MISSION VIEJO -The Tustin Union High School District's honor band Will perform a concert Saturday at a p.m. in thl!: Miu ioo Viejo High Sc'hool gym- nasium . John Del Monaco, principal of lrvina School , wlll be guest conductor. Mls11ion Viejo High wHI C1:1ntribute 11 performl!:rl Including Jim Benson . Dan Dickenson, Chl!:ryl ·Everaon, RI c k Gillenwaters, Sherry Markowitz, Eric Maizon, Shelly Norris, .Stev•' Ramtrei. Wayne Slayton, Holly Weber' and Dave Wood. The amcerl ls free and open to the public. Green . Divider Gets Go-ahead St. Patrick's Day didn't mW San Oemente City CouncUmen this week. Not on]ry did most · members · of the coundl · don aomething green for their St. ~at'1 .v~1ion of a council meeting, .lJ\ll, the .a'noUP ,also, voted una¢'!'oua!Y to dreu ,a aection or tht ·c1ty11n.1ireen 11 well. · Avenlda Pico, recently estended from Loo MollllO& .to El Camino Real, "111 re«ive I lf'ffO=-ct~ divider. Library Rites Saturday . llternative t.o a bqnd iuue. ~ The original target price for tbt replicemen~Qfe the.bond 1Mue wu tel-bad 1bee:a about $200,(0). ' I ' I ' . I '. Cllq Mlna&tj' Ken Carr !The rurn1111e waa once O'Clir, he 'intima'ted ) preised f6r the. green dJVidtt .1trip. EUl!>lc -~ • .,., nol..l!is • ra, lkloale, bo'jevt1-. · . H.O r o<omm.Me<t .teen asllhall, ho 1 t0Jd councilmen, "beeatise It fOoks 'Wt· teT." Clark Heads Official,s for Mission Viejo Dedication The form al dedication of Mislion Vle- jo'a zpacious new library will take plaet: Saturday at 10 a.m . .,.,,ith Supervisor Ralph Cla rk serving 11 mastl!:r of ceremoniez. carm1 Leigh of Sacr;iwnto, • stlte Hb rarlan. will be the guest speaker. Participating in the ceremoniez will be thl!: Rev. Paul Uhlar of Mount of Olives Lutheran Church who w\11 give the invocation and bt nedlction. Mission Viejo Bey Scou1' will lead lhe pledge j of allegiance and iresent colort: Harry M. Rowe, Orange County librarian, and Richard O'Neill of lb< Mblion Viejo Company alMI •ill lake part. The new library, 1 branch of the Oran11e County Library system fir sl opened ltz doors Monday. Feb. 22. Il contains 1n.ooo 1qu1re feet of fleilble 1pace which can bold 40,000 adult volumes and 13.000 children'• volume11. A ~ hour-camrmnlty meeting room also hu been Incl uded In lbt laclllty. which la locattd 1t UMI Chrlllntl. The structure is Spanish-style with heavy wood beams and a red tilt roof. Dignitaries invited to the dedication lncll)de State Stn. James Whelmort (R· Fulltrtonl; Am mblyman Ro b e r t Badham (R-Ne wport Beach); M l 11 MLulon Vie:)o, Linda Huber; architect.I Layne: Tom and J11n Truskier ; J. E. Hook, vice prezldent of .Miller Construe· UQJI Co.: Cy Fe:L11therly. r et I r e d 111perv\IOI". and J*ph MiMk. Ora nae County buildina 11ervlcu director. .~ Since lhtn,. bqw1e.v4r,, blK.ia•t ~es hlv< bWI · 11pped lor arloUl · Mooo to buy up 'prlva~e property ,~ar North Beach. The land I• ear:marbd for park-. Ina and 1 large youth rtcrtaUon center. whlch aleo iJ an Item on the April 20 bond IJ!ue. In all, San Clement& voters wilJ~cast a v«Kt on four reVtnut lJauu. Beaidea the clubhouse, the othen an !he y of""1'r lor aboul 13SO.OOO; pi<r al lmprovemonu, aboul ... 111d dMJopmatl pll'b, --Ull,OJ!I. ,,? Coupellman Tbon}11 O'Keete cav• the areon hlo hearty support. Smut Penalty Set LONDON (AP ) --The HOUH ol Com- mons voted ttlliay to punish people who aend tm10llclted aes llteratur1 throuch thfl m11\1. The HI pkv1c1es 11n .. ol up lo !IM lor d~JrlbuUna material deacrlblna or IJJualrJifln& IUUll 1tchnlqllu •\lllluo the recel'ltir ordered JL · .. clubbousl!: nm the flre. 1tatlon. After the parade two dinnl!:rs will bl held. One is a "sail.Id al prl!:lldente'' honoring Fiesta President Dick Bfsp at the El Adobe . slartinr at 7 p.m. Reserva tions are necessary. • A campground barPecue and ·street dance. will be arranged by the: Ho&ienda Ri~l!:rs of Santa' Ana at s ,·p.m. at q,e campgrounds at'lhe end of Allpu Street Tickets will be availa"ll!: at the event. Red Guits Shell U.S. Base Camp SAIGON' (UPl)--Another 1,000 batU .. weary survivors of the rapidly shrinklnl South Vietnameat. task force in Laos new back today to Khe Sanh, leavini fewer than 15.000 men inside Laos, military zources . said. Khe Sanh itseU was attacked twice today by Comnuinist artillery and rockets • .. Jwnjilng from U.S. heljcopttrs, the 1oldier1 kiszed the around and embraced buddi~. tear1 atrUmina: down their dus-t¥. artmy faces . One of them said, "Wt l\&d been ,llghlin& f<r six weeu Jn r.a... We w'oilld ...-surrender than fight any more." There was no official report that tM Laotian Incursion was coming to an end. but field reports 1aid 20 South Vielnamesl!: army . trucks pulled away fr om the Ham Nghi headquarters of the operational C9mmand near Kbe Sanh toda y with furniture, radios and tquip- menl. A spokesman called the mov• "rotation" but declinl!:d to elaborate. Spokesmen in Saigon admitted the sharp reduction in troop 1tren1th and said no South Vietnamese bases. re- mained ·north of Frtnch Colonial Routa 9 •. Mee the axis of the drive acrou tbe Ho Chi Minh Trail. At one time the 24,000 men in Laos manned fir• support bases and landing zone8 north and south of thl!: road. Ten such base's havl!: been abandoned. Field rl!:ports said American helicopters brought out the 1,000 defenders ·of Fire Base Brown today .. Brown , 12 miles inside taos was the westernmOl!lt ARVN position. alter otber evacuations· 'Their farthest point 'in Laos now is Firtbase A Luoi, 10 miles along Highway 9, Tbe besl!: has been under attack for several days. The farthest penetration wa5 Sepone, 27 miles lnaide Laoz. Conflicting reports on the Laotian cam- paign made it difficult for observer• In northern operational bases and in Saigon to explain clearly what was going on . In Laos. For l!:lample , field reporU zaid BroWn war evacuate(! today but a Sou th Vlethamese spokesman in Sa.igori aald ba ttle re?Ott!I were received from there as late 11 noon. The Saigon sp6kezm1n told . COT· reapondentls at the daily briefing that 2,000 to 3,000 South Vietnamese troops had been , pulled out of Laos In tbe past 48 hours. reducing Saigon's com· mjtmel)t across !he i><rder . Jo aboul 1&.000 men. Coast Weather lf ll be a weekend to write the folk5 back eut about-sunny lkiet after midmomin&. With t(mpera- . lµfU ranglnl' !tom 7l locally to IJ . in mkkouniy. . . INSIDE TODAY · Thsrt is a· vnif1 ue, ~rt1gaU't'f ln "f«wport ~IOfh w~icfl show1 sculptuts o.!'f/ so.ch pltcs wert a;jew«t. Read obouE ft fn 'thLt tdl«k'1 Wttkender. _, Mevlt9 tl'•lf --" ,..,..., ........ ""-C-lf ,. ............. DM ..,, .... ~ ,,. ,_.. , .. ,. ''""' """""'' ... ti T•Vll• tr TllMI-tr.tr w-• .,._.. """ l:J.14 W"111 liflW\ 4,f w ... ......, ... ' ,. ., ,. • • % DAl~Y PICOT SC A ,..,_ patient at Dr. Hmld Day's Cap-BJ '!'be Sea hoopllll in Dana Point ~ 11Nndt,y In Orea• c..n. fy SUporkr Court tblt the payc:bl&trlat ... ornec1 him be "°uld 1be put "wider rtstrl!Uta .. H be trled to leave the facill· ty. I Cblrles WIUlan>a, ~I. ol Long Beach, told the jury In Judge R o n • I d crootshant•a courtroom that the con- troolaUOll OCCWTed In lite August of Four Nabbed In Holdup Of Marine Four Youn1 S&n Clemente area men face cbarJ!J of anned robbery today for allegedly picking up 1 Marine before midnight Tburaday, drlVlnl him llOW!d, then robbing him of $5 1t the point or a toy gun. The rour were arrested :shortly after midnight after patrolmen recognized a van described by the holdup viclim. After the victim, John Arthur Gartia, cooflrmed the van'a Identity, officera said they made the arrest near a motel at 2435 S. El Camino Real. They recovered the Wy weapon as well. Those booked on suspicion of armed robbery are Charles Randolph TutUe, 21, of 30648 Calle Chueca, San Juan Capistrano; James Michie! Jenkins, 20, ()f 203 S. Calle Seville; Gary Martin Hagerty, 21. of the same Calle Seville address, and Robert John Norman, 19, of 331 Calle Pescador. All but Tutlle are from San Clemente. Police :said Garcia told them this story: The Camp Pendleton Marine had been hitchhiking along Ute 2100 block ()f S. El Camino Reil at 10:37 p.m. when a yellow and whlte van pulled alongside and he accepted a ride. After driving toward the Margarita gate ()f the Marine base, the driver of tbe van turned off and began tr1vellng on several side streets. Garcia quoted several of the occupants aa saying he wu in danger. After Garcia began to prate.rt, police related, the driver of the van pulled onto the 100 block of Calle Junlpero. As Garcia exited two young men grabbed him; another pulled 1 gun. Garcia pulled free , but two others grabbed him a few yanfl away. After another acutne, the Marine said, he retrieved his wallet with a '5 bill missing. He then ran from the ITI>UP and called police fn>m a pay phone. From Page J ISSUES • • • Laguna organizations, groups a n d churches. To date M local ()rcanizations have made space reservationa for the Festival of Issues dilsplay area. Groups wishing to participate are invited to call the Volunteer Post, 49U37S. Speakers are available to answer questions and describe opportunities for participation. Labor Party Soars LONDON (AP) -A Gllilup Poll today abowed the Labor party 12 percentage polnta ahead of the Conservative govero- menlrln populartty. This waa an lnrrease of 4.5 points In the past month. Gallup sald the government's popularity' had been hit by the unsettled economlc outlook and rising unemployment. \ DAILY PILOT OAAH~ COAST PV•lllHrNG COIUNft a.1\t1rt H. 'W1.4 ~ Ind PllO!Jlhlr J1ci{ II;, Cwrlw Vici P~ft e!llll G-M ~ 1\1M11 K1nil ...... Tli111111 A. Mwr,.iR• MIMtlns ••1• ct.•r1t1 H. L111 a.1cli•tl P. HiJI AMlilllft; Mtnlflnl UlMn ....._ ..... OMM 222 Fer11t AYlflYI ._ __ 105 N1rlli ll C11t1iu Retl .,,... ........ C-'9 ,,,,..,! ,. W..1 a • ., .,,...... N""""1 a..c-ti: um """°" touiw."' Hwn!--a.dt1 11171 heel! awiru.N • Hospital Says Doctor l(ept Him • Ill 111$ wbcn be and bis wile told Dly the P1Jcblab'lc treatment was worthlm and ahould be tumlnaled. "I told him l dldn't lhtnk we wer• llllll and we didn't need to tnlet a menlll boopllal," WlUlam,, leflUled. He explained that he tnd his wlf1t Barbara, 29, consulted Dr. Day about their marital problems with no orlginaJ intenUon of entering the hotpltal. The complaint flied by the couple 8"'111 lhlt Dr. Day hid 11r1lt jackets In mind llhtn be alleJedlY Intended to provent them from le1vlnf bla boepltaL Wlllllllll teotilled that be WU ll•en 1 ''1ptclal lhot" at a tlme when hill rel1Uvea were about to villt him and when he was demanding th1t he be allowed to leave the hospital he entered voluntarily. "I went back to my room and then I blacked out," be said. "When I came DAil Y PILOT Pllett ..,. •kMirf KMlll« BIKE RIDER, KRISHNA MEMBER HOLD DISCUSSION In Newport Beach, A New Contciousness on the Strfftl I Krishna Sect Soliciting ~ ~ ... Alms in Newport Beach By JOANNE REYNOLDS Krishma· Consciousness came to Newport Beach Thursday . Two saffron-robed members of the Laguna Beach based religious cult hand· ea out literature in the Newport Pier business area and in the Via Lldo shop- ping area. They accompanied their solicltatk>n wltb chanting and cymbal playing. The group·s appearance in Newport capped a minor city hall controversy during which city officials sought fruiUessly for a means of denying the chanting and sl.nglng culUsb a permit for soliciting in their city. City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt sign- ed the certificate March 9 after City Attorney Tully Seymour submitted an opinion that to de ny them a permit would be a violation of their Constitu· tional rights. OfficlaUy known as the lnternalional Society of Krishna Consciousness, a bona fide religious sect. the cult has been activ~ in Laguna Beach for over about a year and a half. Their public appearances usually feature chanting, drum and cymbal playing, as well as the sale of nad.lng material about their Hindu beliefs. Merchant! in Laguna Beach claim the commotion created by the men disturbs their customers and have sought to have their permit rescinded. Their appearance in Newport Thursday apparenUy caUSPd litUe commotion and police noted they logged no protests from businessmen. Passersby watched briefly or took a pamphlet and then moved on. Business in surrounding stares did not aeem to be affected . One o{ Thursday's &oliciter:s, v.·ho a:sk· ed to remain unidentified, said they were surprised at the good reception they had received. ''There is a great hunger in Newport Beach. The people want to tum away from materialism," he said. , "We will come back probably Friday or next week with all the boys," he added. -- The indication was that while Newport residents were willing to accept the literature, they were not as qulck to donate to the cult. The expansion efforts of the Krishna sect have not been limited exclusively to Newport Beach . They have applied for a permit to solicit in Costa Mesa at so. Firemen Rescue Stranded Cyclist Fire1nen from South Laguna and Laguna Niguel were summoned to help rescue a motorcyclist who rode over a bank in Laguna Niguel Thursday af. temoon. Edward Gene Perkins, 29, of 26~01 La Sierra, Mi.ssion Viejo suffered a neck injury and lacerations: when the cycle he was riding tumbled down an em- bankment near the end of Niguel Road. He is reported in satisfactory condition al South Coast Community Hospital . An engine crew from the nearby Niguel Fire Stalion and a rescue team lrom the South Laguna Fire Departmenl \\'ere called to the scene at 3:45 p.m. Battallon Chief Richard Pilkington loaded lh!! firemen in hi.!1 pick-up truck to reach the injured man who was given emergen· cy fir~t aid and carried to a waiting ambulance. Laguna School Evacuated In Telepho11eBomb Tlu~eat An anonymous telephooe call~ T~urs­ day told Laguna Beach School officials a bomb had been planted In one of the schools. forcing evacuation of the classrooms by t.he city's 3,000 pupils. The bomb lhrut came at noon when -a mature man's voice told the school switchboard operal<lr, "'There i~ a bomb in your .schools that will go nff In half an hour." Authorities are lnve1tlgatlng Ule c1ll, an offense th1t 11 a felony. As the caller did not specify which school, school and fire Department of- ficiala ordertd the evacuation of tht five public schools in the district and the private St. Catherine'• Elementary School. City firemen and police 0Ulcer1 search· ed the four schools \\o'ilhin the city lim ils and county fire officials checked El t>.1orro and Aliso Elementary School lor the reported explosive device. \\1len the 12 :30 p.m. deadline pa:s:sed without incident. the youn1sters were allowed to return to I.heir classes and lunchrooms. Laguna Beach Fire Chief James Latimer said the children responded in their normal rire drill procedure ind lh!!re \\'as no running or !i.hoving by the students in an effort to flee the buildings. "As for n.~ !he students knew," Latimer iald. ··rht ringing bell meant Just another fir< drlU .'' ' to 1 was surrounded by fellow patients. doctors and nursu.11 Wllllama and bla wile seek lll0.000 In danlal" from Dr. Doy on the~ malpracUce charees. They claim that Mn. Williams' aubjection lo electro- ahock tre1lmenta led to a stroke and left her crippled. The attractive plaintiff \\'ore a brace on her right leg in court Thursday but It produced an attack from defense ai· torney Wallace Reed who told the jury that Mrs. Williams did not wear the brace •·w~ !he participated in water akilng and anow akUnJ." He described Williams as ' • a patholcgical liar'' and defended Dr. Day as a psychiatrist who operated according lo "accepted standards or psychiatry in the co1nmunity ." Williams testified he \vas assured by Dr. Day that electro-shock treatments would enable him to forget the fact that he had been unfaithful to his wife and would result in hi! rememberins "only the 1ood llllni•·" He saJd Day 1111.U"ed blm that the treatments were "too percent safe'' shortly before his wife 1uffered a 1troke. He testified that be saw other patients who underwent the treatment "turning blue and receiving \\'hat appeared lo be oxygen." The t.rial is scheduled to resume Mon· day. Toilet Crisis Accord OK'd Action Follows Breakdow1i of Sludge I nci1ierator By PATRICK BOYLE 01 Ille 01ur Pl1t1 Iliff To avoid Jocking the lids down on 7 ,000 tollets in the South Cclunty area, the South Laguna Sanitation District has entered a "sludge burning" agreement with the city of San Clemente. The need for the agreemenl arose recenlly when a $145,000 sludge in· cineraror at the district's Aliso Creek Onofre Beach To Open Easter For One Week SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A money· short Department of Parks and Recrea· tioo announced today that a new state beach will be opened for one week only Eaater week to raise funds for future development. A spokeaman said the unprecedented action is being taken because the depart- ment Jacb fund.a for capital develo~ ment. San Ono(re Bluffs State Beach, in San Diego Coonty, has been part of Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base. It v.·as leased to the state for 25 years by the Marines at $1 a year. Jt is a three-and-a-half stretch of virgin ocean .frontage. All types of camping except tenl cam- ping will be allowed, because camping will occur 09 lbe pavement of old highway 101. • The one-week opening is b e i n g sponsored by the State Parks Foundation, a private group which '.donates funds for development of atate park,,. Camping fees will be $3 per night, with day use fees $1 per car. Funds will go to tbe foundation, which hopes to have the beach fully open this summer. Only chemical toilets and garbage cans will be available, but campers will have to bring their own water. No lifeguards wlll be on duty. The deparbnent says up to $17,000 may be raised East.er week. sewage treatment plant broke down. Although the • district has two such machines to burn solid waste from the area, district manager John Smith is worried the second machlne could also break down . ''\Vhen you are working with mechanical equipment," Smith said, ··anylhing can happen . Our two in· cinerators were the first ones built and they had a Jot of bugs in them." "Although most of the problems have been worked out." he added, ;,things can develop overnight." If something did happen to the secoOO machlne, Smith sald, the sanitation district would be faced with what could only be described -at least in print -as a "massive problem." To allow for .such a development, the district recently agreed with the city of San Clemente to burn sludge at the cily 's sludge incinerator. The "urgency measure'' calls for the di.strict to pay $1.000 a week for the burning :service. "We just entered the agreement to be ready to haul sludge to San Clemente if we have to," Smith said. "We want to be sure we can di!pose of it wiUtout polluting the beache!!." The sanitation district senes the South Laguna area's 3,800 dwelling units. ln addilion, the district hall an agreement with the r.1oulton-Nlguel Water district to handle a portion or their s1nltation, which am0W1ls to about J,500 additional customers. From all of l.hese ho1nes, about l million gallons of effluent daily ill pro· cessed through the district'!! sanitation plant. The liquid ef(luent is given secon· dary treatment and pumped into the ocean while the solid matter is strained off and burned. This process leaves severa1 tons of sludge to be disposed of daily. "We"re really hoping we won·t have to haul it down to San Clemente," Smith said. "It could be quite expensive as it \\o'ould have to be completely enclosed in tank trucks." Smith said the inoperable incinerator \\'ill probably be replaced with a less expensive model. Candid Camera But Subject Didn't Smile WASinNGTON (UPI) -A 52"year-old doctor has been charged with the attempted rape of a drugged patient after police observed the alleged attack on a planted cl~ circuit television system, The alleged assault took place Feb. 25 while Dr. John L. Avery was mak~ ing a house call on a 20-year-old patient at her suburban fi.tontgomery County, J'\fd., apartment. Judge Calvin R. Sanders Thursday ordered Avery held for grand jury aC· lion and rtle:ased him on a $10.000 property bond. According to testimony by County Medical Examiner Belden Reap, Avery gave the woman two injections in the arm. She last consclou.sn~ in two or three minutes. Reap said Avery partially undressed the woman. "finally pushing her back onto the couch." Two polict detectives signaled by Reap then entered the apartment to make the arrest. The stakeout was set up in the woman's apartment as a result or an in- cident with the .same doctor earlier this year. On that occasion she allegedly sought to determine from a local hospital what caused her to lose consciousness after he administered medication to her. The camera, which measured h.6x2 inches was planted Jn a shoe box on a table in the efficiency apartment. Reap said the two detectives did not watch the alleged assault out of "modesty." Sherrill Has Arrived For the first time, this exceptionel line of upholstery is now available on t~e west coast. Sher- rill, one of the finest producers of upholsttry in the country offers you a new experience in viewin9 quality furniture. An unparalleled selection of styles and fine fabrics ·are coupltd with craftsmanship unmatched in this price c.ate9ory. If you are in need of upholstery, be JUr e to view this exciting collection of moderately priced, quality furniture. A Ted von Hemert exclu. s1ve. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEl -HERITAGE N!WftOlltT STOll!l OPIN 'lltlDAY 'Tll ' 7edt1111 NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wtstcllff Or., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Proffflion1I Interior De1igntr1 Av1ll1bl~ID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 34l North Coul Hwy. 4944551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL , , I I I I I I 'l I I I I . . • . ·iaguna --eaeh EDITION Today's Ffiud N.Y. Stoe'Q • VO L. 6'4, NO. 67, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA •I F)UDAY, MARCH 19, 1971 TEN C~NTS .. '.·Summer - Parking' Near Festival Prohibited: Parking along the median island in Llguna Canyon Road 11djacent to the Festival grounds is "definilely off" for this aummer •-and all fu ture summers -La1Jl¥lf Beach city ma~ager Lawrence Rose confirmed today. Decision of the Traffic Depar tment ol ttlf State Divi5ion of l:lighways to atck down on Laguna's infornlal sum- mer parking arran1ement will remove approximately 150 spaces Rose 1ald. Bui, he added, "It will be an advantage in the long run ~ause the: situation out there has been very hazardous." Ro~e emphasized that patkiqg 'still "'iii be permitted on the shoulders of Lagun11. Ca nyon Road. Ttie new order llpfilies only to Ule strips alongside the center e.m!ll!ilC"""":!:'"!~·~·~~~~~~f'"~-·= 'W :l!f _., ff9'W'JllP" Laguna Grinning ! By Ph il lnterland l :J f . .A <Q m <O I 'l[@JI' I i £' • ~~,; . I) ~ "Every Time Yoi.J Mention 'Hlgh-·Rise' He Go•• Right :Through the· Ceiling." GRINNING OVER 'LAGUNAGRINS' STAGE SHOW SCRIPT Councilman Ch1rlton Boyd Watches l1n Bern1rd 1t Wo rk Co·lony'sFestivalof lsslies Needs Lag·-Una Lyrics Ori1inal songs or lyric& about Laguna or on ecological subjects are needed for I.he April 23-25 festival of Issues theatrical production, "Lagunagrins." Authors of same are invited by dir~tor Jan Beml'lrd to bring them to an 8 p.m. music call Monday at lhe Festival's Volunteer Post . 334 Forest Ave. Lagunan Bernard, who teaches film makihg and screenph1y writing at UC lrvint and is music director for Rowan and Martln'11 Laugh-in oo television, is volunlffrlng his lime to serve as director of Lagun• tbeater project. Bernard will wrtte ind dirttt the tnUAJcal review, touching on bot h humorout ind serlOU! 1s~ts of Art -'. Colony life. Cartoonist Phil lnterlandi has loaned the name of his popular Lagun1grins cartoon series to tht 11how which will combine skiLs, muaic Md film with au· dlence participation Rquencea. The stage pretentation in the Festival Forum theater will be 1 part of the Festival of Is!lues, jointly spon50red by the Laguna Beach Ja)'cee.s and the University of California , Proceeda of ticket i;ales will be donated to the Lagu nA Greenbelt. During the thret!-rl11y event, the Festiv al groundi; wUI house. a Cammunity Fair. comprised of e1hlblt1 and dlsplaya of project!!, acU"lt1e!I and ttrvlcea of !See ISSUF.S, P11t !) divider. A spokesman for lhe Division of Highways pointed out that the parking in question always has been illegal. though the Division has taken a tolerant attitude toward it during Festival season, hoping the city would be able to f!l\d some. suitable alter11atlve., "The parking alo~slde the island ac· tually ba1 been 1n movin& traffic lanes, .. the 1pokesm1n u.ld, "and· th.11 ill in spec.Uk violation of the Sat" · Vehicle Code which aay1 traffic lanes ml1$t be kept open al aU Ume.s. Parkjng on the road shoulders, however, ia legal." It will be up to the city, be added, to see· that the center lanes are kept clear by poe:tln& no· parking signs or • painting the curbin1 red. Rose said 1¢ay be did not yet know 'tfhich proeedure would bJ 11.!ed. The city menage.r u.ld he e1pect.s that dty,.operated siluttli bu.s service from downtown parkin1 areas will be 1ufficitnl to handle traffic tn and from the Festival 1rea. The city bu applied for t mergency ' funding for the purcha1e or four' t.11!1 far the city transit line ed 1tou aatd lbere is ''reasonable hope" that tM bulU will be avallablt by summer. "We know we will get the grant," he said, "but if it 1hould not com. through In time I will aeriously comider leasing· equipment t,a .ee ua t.broulh .the season." OU Ie roo s ee -o . G(IS Sqition Laguna Nearly App.etls ··Hulitt •• The Planrrin& eo~uion 'a approval of 1 gas !l.ltlon ~stnkt!on permit came within a vote Wednesday of being appealed by the Laguna Beach City Council. City Councilman Roy Holm .' at the ,;uggestion of resident Jim Dilley, re- quested the ·permit application be restudied by the council because of the 50-year-old Star Pine located at the con- struction site. .,.. The conditional use permit application was filed by the Standard Oil Compeny to construct a service alation at 1251 N. Coast Highway, directly under tht giant pine tree. The oomplllly'1 first plan. submitted in February. bad been rejected by the commission out of con· cern for the tree. However. the company redesigned what commission metnber1 had called a Peru Slide Takes Lives Of Hundred s lJMA. Peru <UPI) -A massive land!llide sparked by heavy rain fell Into a mountain lake in northeast Peru Thursday and ensuing floods wiped out a mining camp with heavy loss of life, police said Frld•y. "The number of death!! ascend lo ap- proximately 400 to 600 but of a total of 1,000 miners," 1 regiona1 police spokesman said. A spokesman in Lima for the Cbungar Mining Co., which operated the camp, said It had "practically di&appeared" under tons of water. He said 50 . to 7~ miners had been boapitalited in nearby towns and villages. Lake Yanahuin. in Pasco Department 150 miles northeast of Lima, forcing Jake waters out of their. banks and burying camp in1tal1ation1 under ton• · of water. The spokesman said he llaQ 1beu. Jn c911tact wl~b the .c1mp just, be;fore .t1!9 di1111ster but that tt.s radio tranimltter had subsequently gone off. the · 1lr. He said the Peruvlan-<>wned mines produced about 240 tons a day ·ot1ead and copper. A police spokesman from the ;nd region said local police and miners from nearby camps Wfrt engaged In npcue work throughout tbt, day ind nighL ~d· ditional police resuvea were~ d to the scene from Liml• "' Government aulhoriUe1 uld details of the tragedy were stilt sketchy becl:uM of the inaccessibility of the camP1ite on a mountain ridge. They 11ld the camp w111 a good eight to. nine hour car ride from Lima and that previous eommun ications with the area had been maintained through the mine radio, ap- parently washed out. Early reports indlc1ted, however. lh1t camp offices, pl1nla. warehousu. shops and other in1llllations all were 1ub- mer1ed. '.'me.tal cilnt!' ind the rev\aed ptan was tpprovtd . after a com~y · official assured ·Ute corrimiuion· tbe tree would be welt cared for . Counetlm&n Holm aaid Wednesday. he did not neca6sarily feel lh•t the corn- mis.sion 's decisiQn shpuld be overturned. But he said he would like to have an opportunity to make' a cOMpltte study of the sit.e plan. . · "All you know and 111 I know (about the plan) is .whi t l have read.' ln· the papers," Holm said. Since there are only twp da~a between mutlngs, lhe council does not receive the minuteS of PlaMing Gopunission nieetini;~ in time for ils ow1;1 Wedile$day session. Holm aaid . he felt 'the commission had been tOO fas: in' tht de(rtt or pro- ttttion orrered !hl: trei! from· dri veway and paving installation at the gaa ataUon. However. ~1ayor Richard Goldberi came out 1trongly in fa vor o( the com· mission's decllljon. "I feel we have a Planning Commission we . have pul our faith in," he said. "that has been quite thorough in thi1 ins tance." Holm countered by saying the council did not know how thorough the com- ml~sion ha~ ~n as council members had not yet seen the minutea of Monda)'·• meeting. Holm"s motion to appeal tht permit approval was defeated by a vote of 3-2, with councilman Charlton Boyd siding with Holm. Laguna 'Adopts' POW ; Sets Rites For Monday I ' ' ' The Laguna Beach Cily ,CounCil has ''adopted" an Air Force pilot believed to be. a North . Vietnamese prisoner of "'r aa a gestul'!: of cnncern for · the welfare Of 11! POWs. Btcause of the council's action, March 22 has bee.It declared Maj. Don Lyon Day~ Maj. Lyon was ahot down over e.ntmy territory on Marpi 22, 1968, ,1nd DO wonl·his yet beeft ~Wed u-.to Mla wel(lre, alUIGuCh bis co-pilot ia. a.. kllO'f"n. POW. Followtng the C90ncil'1 u•anl(!lOUr ac. ti~;' Janjs LY"'i;·the olfjetr'• w!fe .. P<f· SDl'iaUy Jh1nk'° the cou~il#ienJOr1 their ~anttlrian· ~rn. LJiW ~nd'1lls witt honeymooned hf LI ..... Sffth 'followfrig their mAITiap-in 1851. , • . tho """""' ~ftlll4!i ... tbe CCllllldl ' "1 : U.. i.o,-· 1111Cb Coininltl.o of Cqnient. .I"" l'QW~ ,~ '°'""'~ member 'Mra. Henry Mitter ahowed the toWKll I poller·liud ,photOifl ph OI· the mlsifu1 man. . ~ poater, depictin& 1 crt~-cut. amU· 'Ing Maj. Lyon, wlll be distributed In an effort to foster community aupport of the committee'• concern. On, March Z2, Don Lyon Day, tM committee hopes to tnlUatt a letter writing c1mpalgn by clllien1 to tbe 1overninent of North Vietnam rtquuUni lnlonn1tloll conctmlng Maj. Ly<ia. 'I '.t-f e One of Ea.ch For Marriage SACRAMENTO I UPIJ -A . bill requirin& applicant! for a marriage \i~se lo obtain a doctor's certiflCate officially alaUng ·thetf ,,m~~.~~~" (DJ;; Josej. ~, · • . , ·"'nlil bW Is~·­there have beer{ 0Ccl1fofl1· whe'n · counb' clr:rka have Wen unable to determine, by mere visual oJ>strvatlon, the sex of a marrtace license applicant," sild 'McAllster. "Occasionally an applicant ·wUI masquerade as a member of the opposite &ex." He said "all of our m8!rilge, property end inheritance Jaws are b11ed on the premise that a valid marriage can ei:J!t only betwetn pusona of opposite aex.i!s." · "This bill will make cettaln that marriage licenses' are not Im- properly Issued by Inadvertence to persons ol lhe same ae1 ." Trial Delayed For Hilntington Man In Search The 1rraignment of a Huntington Beach .man on charges of grand theft, forgery and COMpiracy ~·• been delayed while the FBI 1e1rc'7'11 for 1 missini Newport Beach stockbroker and his wife. Judie Eugene Lan'gbauser of the Cen· tral Oranie County· Judicial Di1trict Court set April 21 as the new dafe for tlie ,arraignment of James Shipley, former vice prtflident of World FiJlancial Trends .. He is being held on 1250,000 while the search continues for Mr. and Mrs . Joseph Dulaney, who were also involved with Shipley and the invutment firm . Investigators hope that when court action is launched against Shipley, 38. of 16951 . Lowell Circle, they will be able to place him Jn the courtropm with Dulaney, 37, and bi! wife, Marlene, 31. The couple faces identical charges, A natiOnwide hunt for the Dulaney! began eight weeks ago when investigators Je1roed that the couple had been seen in Dulaney's birthplace of Flora, Ill.,1 after their return from West Germany. Tbe Dulaneya went to· Europe in December, IHI. An inveat11ation of the now dtfunct· World ~ ·Financial Trends compler In Laaun•"Hlllt~iid 5'af Beach revealed 1pparent ftauda or more than '3 million, authorities claim. FBI agen!a are confident t~ar that . thet"'l.re 'cloaing u.e·rtng on lhe DulltifYs who .were. Jn\·estlaator1 ttY • .sem •)Ust thretiweek! ago i,1L.ol0l'1dll. , .·.. .. lnve!tlgamts beHeve Ultl more •than 300 iifwaton. i~mw ot· them r~ · llf 1ht"Lellurt Wotld re0rl!ll"lent com· munltif.,Jh Stal Be1ch•nd·Llgu:oa HUit wer. defrauded by, operators ol tbe•World Finuci1J Trends or11nluUOn. , Ca r Behind Tin1es LO UISVILLE. Ky. (AP) -Police tow· ed In a c•r Thursday for Improper re~latratlon. The car disph1yed 19(1 license t1gs -the ye1r II w11 manuf1cturtd. Oftictn beaan 1 a.earcb for lbe nwMr. ; an End Hinted For Laos .Operations !AIGqN (Ul'l)-.l&lnlber l,tltltl - wwy •urvi""'° of the l'llJ?ldlY shrln1ilni South Vl•tJw11•H Wk force In LIOI Oew back today to Kbe Sanh, leavln1 fewer than IS.000 men in11ide LaO!, military sources 11ald. Khe Sanh itself was attacked twice today by Communist artillery and rockets. Jumping from U.S. helicopters, the soldiers kissed the ground and embraced buddies, teais strear1i.lng down their dus- ty. grimy faces . One of them said, "\\'e had been fighting for sis: weeks In Laos. We would rather sarrender than fight any more.'' There waa no official report that the Laotian incursion wa1 coming to an end, but fil!ld reports 1a.id 20 South Vietnamese afmy trucks pulled awao) from the Ham Nghi headquarters of the operational command near Khe Sanh today with furniture, r1dios and equip- ment. A spokesman called the move "rotation" but declined to elaborate. Spokesmen In Saigon admitted the sharp reducUon In troop strength and aaid no South Vietnaniese ba"ses re- !l'ained north of French Colonial Route 9, once the axis of the drive 1cross the Ho Chi Minh Trail. At orie time the 24.000 men in Laoa manned fire support bases and landing zones north. and south of the road. Ten 1ucb bases bave been abandoned . Field reports aatd American h~icopters brought out the 1.000 defenders of Fire Base Brown toda)'. Brown. 12 mUes inside Laoa was the westernmost ARVN position aft.er other evacualiona· Their farthest point in La08 now la Firebase A Luoi, 10 miles along Highway t. The base has been under attack for several days. · The farthest penetratlon waa Sepone, 'll milea inside Laos. Oruge Cou& Weatloer It'll be a ~d lo writ. Ille folk!! back, east~t-tunny aklea after midmomlng. w:lth tempera· . lurts ranging from n locl.lly to 82 • In mid-counly. ~ INSIDE TODAY Th1re is o uniqut art palll'rU in Newport Bem:h whu:h 1how1 scuLpi1tre ai i/ t:ath piece wert a jewel Rtod about ft ln this week'1 Wttkcndt:r. ... t!M 1• , ..... "'.. l Cl*~lflt U• 1 , CklHlflM ., ... C-ICt U c...,,_. IS IHaoltl Netlul 11 Df¥tl'(H 11 ••1'9•111 .... ' PIMMI •ti ,..,.... 14 """ L8!!~-II ,..,..... . ....,....l.~1• • J. DAILY PILOT SC fdd.ly, Mmh 19, 1971 ~ Witne·ss Says Doctor l(ept Him in 1Hospital A lantW polleot II ~. Harold Day '& Capl&lr-By The Sea hoapltal In Dana NII~~ 111 Or1111e c.ui.. ~ s...,onlir °""' lhtt tile poychla!Nt "lflned blm he would be put "under r•tralntl" if he tried to leave the racill· \)< 'tl>arlos .Wllllams. 31, of Long BtaclJ, ~d the Jury In Judge R o n a I d qooluhanll'1 oourtn>om !hit tl1e con- 17"tatlon OCCWTed In , lai. August ol I Four NabHed In Hold1Lp Of.Marine Four younc San Clemente area men !IOI dlargu or anned robbery todaJ for al{tgedly picking up a Marine before mldnlgbt 'Ibursday, driving him around, then robbing him of $S at the '"point of a toy gun. The four were arresLed shortly after midnight after patrolmen recognlied a van described by the holdup victim. After the victim, Jobn Arthur Garcia. conrtnned the van's identity, oflicer1 uid they made the arrest near a motel at 2435 S. El Cami.no Real. They recovered the toy weapon u well. Those booked on suspicion o( armed robbery are Charles Randolph Tuttle, 21, of 30848 Calle Chueca, San Juan Capistrano; James Michael Jenkins, 20, of 203 S. Calle Seville; Gary Martl.n Hagerty, 21, of the aame Calle Seville address, and Robert John Norman, 19, (If 331 Calle Pescador. All but Tuttle are from San Clemente. Pollce said Carcia told them this story: The Camp Pendleton Marine had been tiitchhlking along the 2100 block or S. El Camino Real at 10:37 p.m. when a yellow and white van pulled alongside and he accepted a ride. After driving toward the Margarita gate of the Marine base, the driver of the van turned off and began traveling on several side street!. Garcia quoted several or the occupant! as saying he was in danger. After Garcia began to protest, police related, the driver of the van pulled onto the 100 block of Calle Junipero. Al Garcia exited two young men grabbed him; another pulled• IUJI· G11ci1 pulled free, but tW"o others grabbed him a few yard! away. After another scufne, the Marine said, he retrieved his walJet with a ~ bill mlaalng. He then lan from the lfOUP llDd called police lrom • pay pbone. From P.,,e 1 ISSUES '" ... Laguna organizations, groups a n d churches. To date 54 local organizations have made space reservations for the Festiv1l o! Issues display area:. Groups wishing to participate are invited to call the Volunteer Post, 494-U75. Speakers are available to answer questions and describe opportunities for participation. • • ' Labor Pa rty Soars LONDON (AP) - A Gallup Poll todoy abowed the Labor Partr lJ perttntoge points ahead al the ConserYatlve govern- ment in popularity'. This was an increase of 4.5 point! In the past month. Gallup said the government's popularity had been hit by the. unsettled econamic ouUook and rising unemployment. DAllY PILOT OUMG;! COAST PUIU ltONO UMIAltt ••ff;t N. W•1I .......... .,.. hllltW J 111i: k. cwtt., Ykti ~lllftf ...... O..M ~ n ...... K.,,,n ..... Tlri111111 A,. ... ,,tr.1 ... ~'"' l•!Rr a .rf,, H. Le.1 a1.11.r4 '· Hill ...,.,,_ ~'"' llltft .....__ ...... 221 F.r••t Av•11~• S..C.__.OMM 305 N1ttllt Iii C1Ml11• l•1I .......... COii. MN11 .DO W..I .. ., llfllt H....,..., •m<111 »*' Newpwt •C111lw1• kunllnellfl a.di: 17111 19Kh kolllw•rf 1115 when ht Ind hlJ wlle laid Dl1 the JJ11chlatrlc treatment we.a worthleP Ind ll>oolld be tmnlnated. "I iold blin I didn't think we Wert ""to IOd ~ didn't noed lo onter I mental ~Ill," WUUamo teotllled. He erplllned that he and his wlf" Barbara, 29, consulted Dr. Da.y about their marital problems with no original inlalUon or entering the hoapital. The complaint flied by the couple ossttll lhll Dr. Day bid 1tnll Jack•t. •In mind whtn be alle1edly im.nded to provent thtm from 1entng 1111 holpltoL Wlllllml lelUfied thot be wu &Jven 1 "lptdal lhOt'' at a tame 1 when h1I relaUvea were about t.o vWt b1m and when he was demanding that he be allowed to leave the hospital he entered voluntarily. "I wtnl back to my room and then I blacked out," be said. "When I came ' DAILY PILOT PMI• lh' IUd!l rd KHlll..r BIKE RIDER, KR ISHNA MEMBER HOLD DISCUSS ION In Newport Be1ch, A New Con1ciousn111 on the Streets Krishna Sect Soliciting Alms in Newport Beach By JOANNE REYNOLDS DI' 1M O.H1 Plr.t St11f Ktishma Consciousness came to Newport Beach Thursday. Two saf!ron·robed members of the Laguna Beach based religious cult hand· ed out literature in the Newport Pier business area and in the Via Lido shop- ping. er.ea. They accompanied their solJcltation with chanting and cymbal playing. The group's appearance in Newport capped a minor city hall controversy during which city officials sought fruitlessly for a means or denying the chanting and singing cultist.s a permit for .soliciting .in their city. City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt sign· ed the certificate 111arch 9 after City AttOrney Tully Seymour submitted an opinion that to deny them a permit would be a violation of their Constitu- tional rights. Officially known as the International Society of Krishna Consciousness, a bona fide religious sect. the cult has been active in Laguna Beach for over abaut a year and a half. Thelr public appearances usually feature chanting, drum and cymbal playing, as well as the sale of reading material abaut their Hindu beliefs. ' Merchants in Laguna Beach claim the commotion created by the men disturbs their customers and have sought to have their permit rescinded . Their appearance in Newport Thursday -apparenUy caused little commotion and police noted they logged no protests from businessmen. Pusenby watched briefly or look 11. pamphlet and then moved on. Business Jn surrounding atorts did not seem to be affected . One of Thursday's sollcite.rs, who ask· ed to' re.main unidenlilied, said they were surprised at the good reception they had received. "There is a great hwiger in Newpart Beach. The people want lo turn away from materialism," he said. "We will come back probably Friday ar next week with all the bays," he added. --- The indication was that while Newport residents were ~·illing to accept the literature, they were not as quick to donate to the cult. The expansion efforts of the Krishna sect have not been limited exclusively to Newport Beach. They have applied for a permit to solicit in COsta Mesa also. • Firemen Rescue Stranded Cyclist Firemen from South Laguna and Laguna Nigue l were summoned to help rescue a motorcyclist who rode over a bank in Laguna Niguel Thursday af. temoon . Edward Gene Perkins, 29. of 26701 La Sierra, Mission Viejo suffered a neck Injury and lacerations when the cycle he was riding tumbled down an em- bankmenl near the end of Niguel Road , lie is reported in satisfactory condition at South Coast Community Hospital. An engine crtw from lhe nearby Niguel Fire Slatkin and a rescue team from lhe South Laguna Fire Department were called to the scene at 3:45 p.m. Battalion Chief Richard Pilkington loaded the firemen in his pick·up truck to reach the injured man who wa.s given emergen- cy first aid and carried to a waiting ambulance. ·Laguna School Evacuated In Telephone Bomb Threat An anonymou1 telephone calltr Thurs- day told Laguna Beach School officials a bomb had been planted In ont of the schools, ft>rctng evacuation of !he c;lassroonu by Utt city's 3,000 pupils. The bomb threat came at noon when - a mature miin's voice told the achool ••ltchbolrd operator, "Thtt• 11 a bomb In your school.1 that wUI 10 off In half an hour." Aulhorltles are investigating lht call, an offense thAl is a fek>ny. Aa \be caller did not 1pttlfy whl~h school, school and Fire Departmtnt of· flclab ordered th' evacuation of thf! five public achoola In the district and the private St. Catherine·• Elemtntary School. City firemen and pollce officers search· ed the four schools within the city limits ll"ld cowity flre ofllcials checked El Morro and Aliso Elemeotary School tor the reported t:Jplos\ve device. When the 12:30 p.m. deadline pas.!ed without Incident. the youngstm wett allowed to return to their clwts and lwtchroom.s. Laguna Bc1ch Fire Chief James Latimer s3id the children res;ionded In their normal fire drill proctdure and there was. no running ar shoving • by the !;ludents In an effort to flee the buildings. ··As rar as the studentl knew." L3tlmer sa id, ·'tht ringing bell meant Just toother rirt drill.'' to I wu ·1urrounded by fellow patienta. doctors and nur1e1." Wlllllml and bls wU. oeek !6!0,000 ln duna1ea from Dr. Day on their malpractice char1es. They clabn that Mrs. Wllllams' IUbjection to electro- abock treatments led to a stroke and left her crippled. The attractive plaintiff wore a brace on her right leg in court Thursday bu t it produced an attack from defense at- torney Wallace Reed who told the jury that Mrs. Williams did not wear the brace "when ahe parUcipated in water &ldlnl llDd snow &idJn&." He deacribed Wl.Uiams as • 1 a palholegical liar'' and defended Dr. Day as a psychiatrist who operated according to "accepted standards of J>flychialry In the community." '('" Williams testified he was assured by Dr. Day that electro-shock treatments would enable him to forget the fact that be had bten unfaithful to hls t.i!1 and would result in hl.s remembftlnj: ''only the good thin&•·" He saJd Day lNw-ed him I.bat the treatments wert •1100 percent saft'' .shortly before his wife .suffered a stroke. He testified that ht sa\V other patients \Vho underwent the treatment "turning blue and receiving what appeared to be oxygen." The trial is scheduled to resume Mon· day. Toilet Crisis Accord OK'd Action Follo ws Breakdown of Sludge l nci1ierator To avoid Jocking the lids down on 7,000 toilets in the South County area, the South Laguna Sanitation District has entered a "sludge burning" agreement with the city of San Clemente. The need for the agreement arose recently when a $145,000 sludge in- cil>erator at the district's Ali.so Creek Onofre Beach To Open Easter For One Week SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A money. short Department of Parks and ~crea­ tion announced today that a ne\v state beach will be opened for one \\'eek only Easter week to raise funds for future development. A spokesman said the unprecedented acUon is being taken because the depart· ment lacb funds for capital develop- ment. San Onafre Bluffs Slate Beach, in San Diego County. has been part o( Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base. It was leased to lhe st.ale for 25 years by the Marines at $1 a year. It is a three-and·a·half stretch of virgin ocean frontage. All types of camping except tent cam· ping will be allowed, because camping • will occur on tie pavement of old high,.·ay 101 . The one-week opening is being sponsored by the State Parks Foundation, a prlvale group which donates funds for development ot state parks. Camping fet.s will be $3 per night, ¥lith day use fees $1 per car. Funds will go to the foundation, v.tiich hopes to have the beach fully open this summer. Only chemical toilets and garbage cans wlll be available, but campers will have to bring the.ir own water. No lifeguards will be on duty. The department says up to $17.IXX> may be rttised Easter ~·eek. sewage treatment plant broke dowa. Although the district has two such mach!nes lo burn solid waste from the area, district manager John Sm i t h i.s worried the second machine could also break down. ··when you are working w i t h. mechanical equipment," Smith said, "anything can happen. Our two in- cinerators were the first ones built and they had a lot or bugs in them." "Although most af the problems have been worked out," he added, •·things can develop overnight." Jf something did happen to the second machine, Smith said, the sanitation district would be faced with what could only be described -at least in print -as a "massive problem." To allow for such a development, the district recently agreed with the city of San Clemente lo burn sludge at the city"s sludge incinerator. The "urgency measure" calls for the district to pay $1.000 a \Veek for the burning service. •·we just entered the agreement to be ready to haul sludge to San Clemente Candid if we have to," Smith said. "We want to be sure we can dispose of It withou& polluting the beaches." 'Ibe sanitation district serves the South Laguna area's 3,600 dwelling units. Jn. addition, the district has an agreement with the Moulton-Niguel Water di.strict to handle a portion or their sanitation, which am0W1ls lo about 3,500 additional customers. From all of these homes. about 2 million gallons of effluent dally is pro-- cessed through the district's sanitation plant. The liquid effluent is given secon· dary treatment and pumped into the ocean ~'h.ile the solid matter Is strained off and burned. This process leaves several tons of sludge lo be disposed of daily. "We're really hoping ~·e won"t have to haul it down to San Clemente," Smith said. "It could be quite expensive as it vt'ould have to be completely enclo8ed in tank trucks." Smith said the inoperable incinerator will probably be replaced with a less expensive model. Ca1nera But Subject Didn't S mile WASHINGTON (UPI) - A 52-year-ald doctor has been charged with the attempted rape of a drugged patient after police observed the alleged attack on a planted <:losed circuit television system. The alleged assault took place Feb. 25 while Dr. John L. Avery was mak- ing a house call on a 20-year-0ld patient at her suburban Monliomery County, Md., apartment. Judge Calvin R. Sanders Thursday ordered Avery held for grand jury ac- tion and released him on a $10,000 property bond. According to testimony by Cawity Medical Examiner Belden Reap, Avery gave the woman lwo injections in the arm. She last consciousness in t"·o or three minutes. Reap liaid Avery partially undressed lhe woman, "finally pushing her back onto the couch." 'I\vo police detectives signaled by Reap then entered the apartment to make the arrest. The stakeout was set up in the woman's apartment as a result of an in- cident '~ilh the same doc tor earlier thiii year. On that occasion she allegedly sought to determine fron1 a local hospital what caused her to lose consciousnesa after he administered medication to her. The camera, wh.lch measured 4x6x2 inch.es wa.s planted In a &hoe bo1 on a table in the efficiency apartment. Reap said lhe two detectives did not watch the aUeged assault out of "modesty.'' Sherrill Has Arrived For the first time, this exceptional line of upholstery is now available on th·e west coast. Sher- rill, on1 of the fi nest producers of uphokt1ry in th1 countf"Y offers you a new exp1ri1nce In viewing quality furniture. An unparall eled selection of styles and fine fab rics ere coupled with craftsmanship unmatched in this price catego ry. If ~u are in need of upholstery, be sure to view this exciting collection of moderately priced, qullllity furniture. A Ted von Hemert exclu- sive. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NIWl'OltT STOii OPI N r111 DAY 'TJL t N!WPORT BEACH 1727 Wt1tdlff Dr., ~2·2050 OPEN FRI DAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Profeulonal lnterl1r Detlgners Avallabl......,.,ID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH :US Norlh c .. 11 Hwy. 4'4-6.lll OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 I I ' ' ,, I I I I I j l San Clemenie Capis·irano VOL. 6<4, NO. 67, 4 SECTIONS, 4<4 PAGES ' . • • EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA · FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1q7.1 -' . Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeu. , .. • I TEN CENTS 3,700 Join 13th .Swallows Parade Saturday The 13th annual Swallow's Day Parade lli'ill get underway at I p.m. Saturday in San Juan Capistrano with 3,700 partlcipat.s in this year's extravaganza. Parade chairman Charles A Ile n reported Thursday that 22 bands art definitely scheduled, 10 floats are being Pfepared. 46 marching unit.! will be present and 19S equestrian units will be c:ompeting. · Among bands will bt the popular Whil· t.ier CavaliUs Youth Band, "'hic.h ap- peared in thl'! Sugar Bowl thi.!I year and won sweepstakes ln a band com· petition in Corona last week. New entries this year include the Long Beach Mounled Pollet, which leads lhe Rose Parade each year, a group of trained costumed dogs paraded by Leisure World ruidents, 111 entry from Fire Sale Nexi? Bla ze Wipes Out Goods in Truck Pedro R. Gallardo's "best wholesale deal in years'' went up in smoke en a shoulder of the San Diego Freeway in San Clemente Thursday. Now the Tijuana businessman has lo muster up more capital and try to consummate another de.al in yardage, thread and plastic kitchen items. His entire load -destined for a store In Baja Callfornia -caught fire after a tallpil)e in the heavily loaded pickup truck burned through the bottom of the cargo area. Gallardo, his father and a woman companion stopped and passersby phoned for firemen to put out the afternoon blaze. The load was 11 total loss , Fire Chief Mer\' Hackett said. The dollar loss was about $350. "He was really upset,'' Hackett said, "bj?c11use this was the best deal he had made in years." At least Gallardo still has his truck. Danuige to the vehicle was confined to a plywood camper ~II. , Slide Buries Hundreds In Peru Mining Tragedy LIMA, Peru IUPI) -A massive landslide sparked by heavy rain fell into a mountain lake In northeast Peru Thursday and ensuing noods wiped out a mining camp with heavy loss (If life, police said Friday. "The number of deaths ascend to ap· proximately 400 to 600 out of a total of 1.000 miner!," a regional police &pokesman said. A spokesman in Lima for lhe Chungar Mining Co.. which operated the camp. said it had "practically disappeared" under tons of water. He said SO to '10 'miners had been hospitalized in nearby towns ,nd villages. The aimpany spokesman s a i d lfle disaster occurred about '9 a.m. Thursday .-hen the rains dumped a hillside into School Board Candidates To Present Views Saddleback Valley residents will have aeveral chances to hear school board c:andidalel! in coming weeks. Two groups have scheduled meeting! next week featuring the candidates for the San Joaquin Elementary School District, the Tustin High School District and the Saddleback Colleg'e District who will present their views. The Capistrano Highlands Homeowner• Alsoc:iation will host the candidates on Monday al 7:30 p.m. in Valencia School . The Saddleback Valley Republican Assembly has scheduled candidates on Thursday. The latter meeting will take place at 8 p.m. al Royal Savings and Loan Anocialion in El Toro. Candid8itea spoke before the Mission Vtej~ddleback Valley Democratic Club m Thursday. Lake Yanahuin, in PasCf!I Department ISO miles northeast of Lima. forcing lake waters out of their banks and burying camp installations under ton1 of water. The spokesman 1aid he had been in contact v.·ith the camp just before the di sasler but thal iL! radio transmitter had Nbsequently gone off the air. He 11aid the Peruvian-owned mines produced about !40 tons a day of lead and copper. A police spokesman ftom the !nd region Said local police and miners from nearby camps were engaged in resctJe work throughout the day and night. Ad- ditional police reserves were dispatched to the scene from Lima· Govemml!!nt authorities said details of the tragedy were still sketchy because of the in1cces:ibilily of th!!! campsite on a mountain ridge. They said !he camp was a good eight to nine hour car ride from Lima and that previou! communications with the area had been maintained through the mine radio, ap- pattnUy washed out. Council Denies Designer's Bill San Clemente Building Designer Eric Boucher -tumed down for payment of an "additional services" bill for $800 by city oouncilmen two weeks ago - was spurned again by the panel this Wtek. . Sticking 'to their guns councilmen unanimously refused once more this week to pay the tab for what Boucher says ia extensive redr1.fting of air conditioning systems for the proposed aimmunity clubhouse. Boucher'! letter ad&Jll&nlly 1tatjng he received directions from councllm~n and some members of the city staff for the ·extra work was ordered received and filed . the CaJiiornla Animal Control Officers · ~ation . · tile Ne,wport Hart>or High School Sarni and the Saddleback Mothers of Twins whose. float won I he sweepstakes trophy at the Mission Viejo St. Patrick's Day Parade this week. The parade cham'pions for 1970 and 19'1 of the Califomia State Horseman's Association will be present along with Brownle Davis astride a mount and his Sfij),000 silver saddle. •• iets .~··· . . . ". ' Rerocated Sil judges will be. led by head judge! Ben Godfrey of t.M Southern California School Sarni and Orchestra Association and Neal Russell. lictnsed parade jUdge for the California State Horseman's Association. The parade will begln at Ortega Highway and Del Obispo Street and will ·move along El Can\lno Real, La Zanja and Camino Capistrano to Del Obispo. Fifty date palms, about 40 years old, a.re being t'.rarlsplanie'd ',at cost of $200 each akJng San Clement~s Camino de Estrella. The E. L. While Co. is moving, each tree 14 feft from existing· curb to allow a road widening project. Some critics feet the tree.I\ may die· if transplanted. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe lost bis fight with county 'to keep pilms ln original location. , City 1ireete 11\>oJ the parade route Will be c19sed aiound noon to through trafftc. Alao 'at.. noon, aqP.lBrf: danct exhibition! w.ill be tiven bx the Shipmates and the Ramblin Roguet 1quare dance clubs~ Tbe annual fiesta breakfast will be aerted from &:XI to Jl a.m. on parade day by the Sin Juan-C.piatrano Women's Club and Rotary Club al the women'• Down the Mission Trail Trustees Okay , . Bond Sale Bid EAST IRVINE -The sale of the San Joaquin Elementary School District's rerilaintng $1,505,000 in bonds ha1 been authorized by tbt ~d of Trullees, < Alfl!IW\I . Sllperi~I-Bu lltl!lllit' Ulil w.U !Did the .board tho boUam of the Interest ratee 1ppe1n to be in the ne1t few months. He 1ald bond! were recently sold for just under five percent by other dis'trict.s. , Superintendent Ralph Gates said tht money wln be used for the new in- termediate schOOI In Irvine. Swim Clu1f!1 LAKE FOREST -'Residents of the community who want to enroll their three and four year olda in swimming classes. must register .by Monday for the new schedule beginning in April. The classes will be offered on Monday, Wednesday, Tuesday and Thursday from 10 to 10:30 a.m. and frtlm 10:30 to 11 a.m. • • Classes will run 1i1· we~ks with a limit of five chlldren per clus. Band Con.int MISSION VIEJO -The ·Tustin . Union High School . District's honor band will perform a concert Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Mis.!llon Viejo High School gym. nasium. John Del Monacti, principal of Irvine School. will be guest conductor. Mission Viejo High will contribute 11 Ouhhouse Will Be Built • Even if Bond 1·ssue Fails _ ... performers including Jim Benson, Dan Dickenson, Cheryl Everson. Rick Gillenwaters, Sherry Markowitz. Eric Maxson. Shelly Norri!, Steve Ramire;, Wayne Slayton, Holly Weber and Dave Wood. What If f>ropo!ition A of the San Clemenle parks and recreation bond 1issue fails and funding for the. new community clubhouse falls through~ City councilmen this week informally agreed that a clubhouse "in some f".lrm ·• would replace the charred bulk of the prt1Se.11t community gathering place. The agreement included the possibility of a "scaled-dO"'.f1 version·· of the plans bought for $14,000 by the city earlier this -y~ar. Propo&ilion A on the ballot calla for voter approval of $400 ,000 in ·revenue bonds to finance the clubhouse, complete "'ith a 500-seat auditorium and meeting rooms at the preHnt site.. ' Mayor Watter Evans !aid he believed that if the necessary twO-tbirds aye vote did not materialize at the polll April 2CJ , "we probably would have to l!lit down with a contractor arid work out a scaled-down version .. " At lust $.S7,000 exi&l! In ,c:ity .budget as the insurance payment for the fire loss-h&rdly enough to complete itie building aa planned. ' The concert public. Is free and open to lhe Green Divider Gets Go.ahead St. Pa~ick'1 Day didn 't · miss San Clemente Cfty Councilrrien this week . Not only did most members of the aiuncil dbn something green for tllelr St. Pat's version of a council meeting, but the group also voted unanimowiJy to dreas • section of· lhe ·city in , green IS well. Avenlda Pico, rettntly extendtd from Los MolinO! to El Camino Real, will receive a green center divider, Library Rites Saturday Cot.mcilmen, however, had diik\Jased the tapping of the city's pool (If rt.serve fund,; to bulld the clubhouse 11 an allemati~ to a bond Wue. The original target price for the replacement-before the bond is.rut was Rt-had bel!!n abolt $2()0,IOI, Citq Mana1er Ken. Can-(The' aumame was once O'Carr, he intimated) pressed for the green divider strip. Ethnic background was not his ra- tronatt, how.ever. Clark Heads Officicds for Mission Viejo Dedication The formal de'dICJion of Mtulon Vie-- Jo'• spacious "fw librtfy wUl take place Saturday at 10 a.m. with SupervilM RaJph Clark serving as master of ceremonies. Carma Leigh nf Sacram~to. a allte librarian. will be the guest !peaker. Participatin; in the ceremonies will be the R~v . Paul Uhlar of Mount of Olives Lutheran Church who will 1ive t'he invocatinn and benediction. Mlaion Viejo Boy Scoute wtll lead tilt pied.!• ----------- • I of allegiance and present colors:· Harry M. R.owe, Orange County librarian, and Richard O'Neill of tilt Mlssion Viejo Company also will tall part. 1'ht new library, a branch o( lhe Orange County Library 1ystem first opentd 118 doors Monday . Feb. 22. It contains 10,000 square feet of flexible space which can hold 40,000 •dull volume1 and 13.000 children'• volumes. A 1tory hour-community mee:tlnJI room •Lio hat been Lncluded in tht facUJty, • I I • which is located at 24851 Chrisant.. The structure Is Spanish-style wtth heavy wood beams and a red tile roof. Dignitaries invited to the dedication Include State Sen. James WMtmore CR.- Fullerton): Assemblyman Robert Badham IR-Newport Beach ); MI'' MWion Viejo. Linda Hubtr: archltecttl IAyne Tom and Jan Truskier: J. E. Hook, vice pre!ident of Mlller Con3truc- Uon · Co.: Cy Feathel"ly, r-e t 1 r t d 1upervl10t, and Joseph Mlstk, IX a nae County bull din a services director. •· ~ ,.. -··-·---------... ----__ ._. ... . .. Sinct lhtn. howev.er. budeel reauvM ha Ve bun tapped Cor aboUt *200,oo:I to buy up private property near North Beach . The land i! earmarked· for,pl.rk· Ing and a large youth recreiUon center, which also is an item on the April J'J! bond iasue. In all, Sen Clemmie voten wUI cut a vote on fotir revenue INIJCIJI. Bt1ide1 lhe clubhouse, the other1 , art the youth center fnr about '3$0,000; pier access and capital lmprovementa, about $107.0llO, and purchase and development or nei1hborhood parka, about fl40,000. , .. _ .... - He recommended green asphalt, he told oouncilmen, ''because It looks bfll· l6'.'' Councilman Thomas O'Kee1e rave the rreen hit hearty IUpPQrl. Smut Penalty Set LONDON (AP) -Th• Hou.e of Com- mon·s voted today to punish S*Ple who stnd unsolicited HI lltlraturt lhrouib tht ma\11. The act provides line! or up to $000 tor distrlbut.11\1 material ·detcrlblna or lllwtr1Unr aerual l«hnlquu unlesa the receiver ordtttd ll clubhouse near•the fire station. After the parade two dinners will be held. One is · a "salud al pruidente" honoring Fiesta President Dick Beus at the El Adobe starting at 7· p.m. Reservation! are neCeS!ary. - A campground barbecue and street dance will be an'anged by the Hossienda Riders of Santa· Ana at 6 p.m. at ·the arnpground.s at the end of Alipu Street Tickets will be available at tbe event. Red Guns Shell U.S. Base Camp SAIGON IUPl)-Aootber 1,000 bat&. weary survivors of the rapidly 1hrinkin& South Vietnamese la!k force In Laos flew back today' to Khe ~anh. Ieavinll fewer than 15,000 men inside Laos, milit.arY sourcts 1aid. Kl)e Sanh itself was attacked lwiCe today by Communilt artillery and rockets. Jumping from U.S. helicopters, tht!I 1&ldier1 kissed the ~ and embi'aced buddies, tdrt 1tl'taminl down their dus- ty. grimy faces . One of them eaid. "We had bttn fighting for iii weekl in Laoe. We would rather IUl'?todet than fight any more." There was no official report that the Laotian incursion wu coming to an end, but field reports said 20 South Vietnamese army trucks pulled away from the Ham Nghi headquarter! of the operational command near Khe Sanh today with furniture, radios and equlp- ment. A spokesman called the move "rotation" but declined to elaborate. Spokesmen in Saigon admitted the sharp reduction in troop strength and said no South Vietnamese bases re- mained north or French Colonial Rout• 9, once the axis of the drive across the Ho Chi Minh Trail . At one time the 24,000 men in Laos manned fire support ba1e1 and landing zones north and 110Uth of the road. Ten 1uch buu have been abandoned. Field report.! said American helicopters brought out the 1,000· defender• of Fire 'Base en,wn today. Brown. 12 miles inside ~os. wa! the we!ternmo!t ARYN po!ltlon after other evacuations· Theit farlhe.!t point in Laoa now la Firebase A Luol. 10 mile• along Highway t. The base has been under attack for several days. The farthe21t penetration wu Sepone. 'Z1 miles inside La°'. Conflicting reports on the Laotian cam- paign made It difficult for observers in northern operational bases and In SaigOn to explain clearly what wa1 going on in Lao!. For .example, field reports 1aid. Brown was ev4ouated today b!,Jt • South Vietnamese 1pokesman in Saigon said battle reporta were received from there 11 late 11 noon. · Tht Saigon spokesman told ar4 respondent.! at the dally briefing tha1 2,000 to 3,000 South Vletname!e troops had been pulled out of Laos In the past 48 hours, reducing Saigon's com• mitment acrou the border to about 18,'0oo· mth. Cout Wea titer It'll be a weekend to write the folks back east abiout.-sunny 1kiea after midmomlna. with tempera- tures rangin;: from '12 ·locally to 81 in mJd.<ounty. INSIDE TODAY There !$ ·o unique art ooiu~ in Newport. Beach which 1houi1 !cutpturc OJ if eoch pitce. wtrt a jeweJ. Read about it in tlti.J wt1k'1 Wtekcndtr. .,..._ u.tt M"""4 ,...... ,. ••tt.Rti ....... .... flrt!IM CwMT 11 attl .. r"'t' U.H SYMI il't"Mf' 11 ...,., 1•11 lfldl """"°" •ti T ..... Milll tr .,,....,. !J.,,, Wfflllff 4 """"""• MN't 1).U --.. w..-....... twl ' " :1 OA!l Y PILOT SC frl<U~, Muth 19, 1971 Witness Says Doctor l(ept Him • Ill Hospital A f<rmer paUent at Dr. Harold Oay·s Clpbtrono By The SU hosplt.t in Dana l,'plnl teolllled Thursday In Oranae CoW> ti SUportor Court that the psychlatrbt *med )ltm he would be put "under rfatralni3"' 11 he tried to leave the facill- tf. ' ' . .l.~arles ·Willlama, 31, <lf Long Beach, UltO tbt jury In Judge Ronald Q"ookshank'1 courtroom that the con· ~tauon occurred tn late August of I ' four Nabbed Jn Holdup Of Marine • ' . Four youna: San ClemeDte area mu lace chargos ol anned robbery today !Or all•i•dly picking up 1 Marine before midn!cht ·'l'hursday, driving him around. then robbing him of ~ at the point of a toy gun. The four were arrested shortly after midnight after patrolmen recognized a van described by the holdup victim. After the victim, John Arthur Garcia, confirmed the van's identity, <lfficers said they made the arrest near a motel at 2435 S. El Camino Real. They recovered the toy weapon as well. Those booked on suspicion o[ armed robbery are Charles Randolph TUtUe, 21, of 306fl Calle Chueca, San Juan Capistrano; James Michael Jenkins, 20, <lf 203 S. Calle Seville; Gary Martin Hage rty, 21, of the 1ame Calle Seville address, and Robert John Norman, 19, of 331 Calle Pescador. All but TutUe are from San Clemente. Police said Garcia told them this story: The Camp Pendleton Marine had been hitchhlklng along the 2100 block of S. El CArnlno Real at 10:37 p.m. when a yellow and whlte van pulled along1lde and he accepted a ride. After driving toward the Margarita 1ate of the Marine base, the driver of the van turned ()ff and began traveling on several aide streets. Garcia quoted several of the occupanta u saying be was in danger. Alter Garcia began to protest, police related, the driver of the van pulled onto the 100 block of Calle Junlpero. .As Garcia ei:ited two young men grabbed him; another pulled a gun. Garcia pulled f~. but two others grabbed h1m a few yards away. After aoother 1CUffie, the Marine said, be retrieved his wallet with a SS bill missing. He then ran from the group and called pollce from a pay phone. From Pagel ISSUES • • • Laguna <lrganlzations, groups a n d churchea:. T<l date M local organizations have made 1pace reservations for the Festival of Issues display area. Groups wishing to participate are invited to call the Volunteer Post, 49«375. Speakers are available lo answer quesUon.s and describe opportunities for participation. Labor Party Soars LONDON (AP) - A Gallup Poll today ahowed the Lab<Jr party 12 percent.age points ahead of the Conservative govern- ment in popularity. This was an increase of 4.5 polnll in the past month. Gallup said the government's popularity had been hit by the unsettled economic ouUook and rising unempl<lymeaL O'-Adl COAIT DAllY PllOT QIU.NG~ COAtT ,UtUIMING t:IJMP'Nf't ~.Wt N. w •• 1 ,,..i.lftt •rllll '"'*lti'IW Jeck t.. Cll!'i.., Vke J>rwtldWll .,.. ~· MllllfW n.111•• "'"" Edllw n.,,, •• >.-,...,,_.1" Mellltloll l!dl"' Ch1tft1 H. loo• kich1r4 P. N4A ~111911; ~-. ldlW1o L..t ........ Offke 222 F•r11t Av1111w1 s..c._.,.~ 301 N1ttll II C1,.,l11e R•111 OIW.,_ Codi ,._.: ,_ W•f .. 1 SttMt N....,, ~I JllJ Nrwf!OH to.I,...,., Hllll'llW.tDI\ a-a: Ul1t hlCll tl\olevt,_ 1965 when be and hi1 wile told Day the peychlatrla treatment was worlhleu and ahould be lermln.lled. "I !old him I didn't think we Wtre nuts and we didn't need to enltr a menial boopllal,'' WllUams 1 .. u11ed. He e%plalned that he and his wif~ Barbara, 29, CONUlted Dr. Day about their marital problems with no original intention of enterlilg the hospital. The complaint filed by the couple asserts that Dr. Day had stralt jackets In mind when be allegedly ini<nded to prevent Ui.tm from leaving h1I hoapllal Williama ttsUfied that he was givu a "special shot" at a lime when hill re.laUvea were about to vl!lt him and when he was demanding that he be allowed to leave the hospital he entered voluntarily. ''I went back to my room and then J blacked out;' he sa1d. "\\'hen I came DAILY PILOT Plletl H llkrl•rll K .... ltf BIKE RIDER,..K RISHNA MEMBER HOLD DISCUSSION In Newport Beach, A N•w Con1clou1n111 on th• Stretts Krishna Sect Soliciting Alms in Newport Beach By JOANNE RE YNOLDS Of t1M1 Dtltr J>ilel Sltfl Krishma Consciousness came to Newport Beach Thursday. Two saffron-robed members or the Laguna Beach based religious cult hand- fd out literature in the Newport Pler business area and in the Via Lido 1hop- pln1 area. They accompanied their aolicltaUon with chanting and cymbal playing. The group's appearance in Nev.'JXlrt capped a minor city hall controversy during which city officials sought fruitlessly for a means of denying the chanting and singing cultists a permit for soliciting in their city. City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt sign- ed the certificate ~tarch 9 after City Attorney Tully Seymour submitted an opinion that to deny them a permit would be a violation of their Conslitu· Uonal rights. Officially known as the lnternalional Society of Krishna Consciousness, a bona fide religious sect, the cult has been active in Laguna Beach for over about a year and a half. Their public appearances usually feature chanting, drum and cymbal playing, as well as the sale of reading material about their Hindu beliefs. Merchants in Laguna Beach claim the commotion created by the men disturbs their customers and have sought to ha\'e their permit rescinded. Their appearance In Ne"-'J>Ofl Thursday apparently caused little commotion 11nd police noted they logged no protests from businessmen. Passersby \\'atched brleny or took a pamphlet and then moved on. Business In surrounding stores did not seem to be affected. One ol Thursday's $0licitera, ~·ho ask- ed to remain unidentified, aaid they were surprised at the good reception they had received. "There is a great hunger in Newport Beach. The people want to turn away from materialism," he aaid. "We will come back probably Friday or next week with all the boys,'1 he added. --- The indication was that while Ne'WpOrt residents were willing to accept the literature, they were not as quick to donate to the cult. The expansion efforts of the Krishna sect have not been limited exclusively lo Newport Beach. 'They have applied for a permit to solicit in Costa 11esa also. Firemen Rescue Stranded Cyclist Firemen from South Laguna and Laguna Niguel were summoned to help rescue a motorcvcllst V.'ho rode over a bank in Laguna Niguel' Thursday af- temoon. Edward Gene Perkins. 29. of 26701 La Sierra, t.1ission Viejo suffered a neck injury and lacerations \\'hen the cycle he was riding tumbled down an em· bankrnent near the end of Niguel Road. He is reported in satisfactory condition at South Coast Community Hospital. An engine crew from the nearby Niguel Fire Station and a rescue team from the South Laguna Fire Department were called to the scene at 3 :4~ p.m. Battalion Chief Richard Pilkington loaded the firemen in his pick-up truck to reach the injured man v.'ho v.·as given emergen- cy first aid and carried to a waiting ambulance. Laguna School Evacuated In Telephone Bomb Threat An anonymous teleph()f!e caller Thurs· day told Laguna Beach School <lflicials a bomb hi<i 1*n planted In one or the schools, forclng evacualion of the classrooms by Ult city's 3.000 pupi\.s. The bomb tbrul came at noon when -a mature man·! volct told I.he school S\li'itchboard O,ittalOr, "Th~ is a bomb in yow-IChoo~ lhat will go oU In half an hour." Authorities are lnvestlgaUng the call, an offen1e that is a felony. As the caller did not spec.lfy which IChool, school and Fire Oepertment or· flclals ordered the ev11cu111ion o( the five public liC:bools in 01e dlatrlct and the private Sl. C11therlne'1 Elementary School. City firemen and pollct officers search· I 1 ed the four schools within the city limits and county fire officials checked El ,_forro and Aliso Elementary School for the reported explosive device. When the 12:30 p.m. deadline passed without incident, the youngsters v.·ere allowed to return to their classes and lunchrooms. Laguna Beach Fire Chief James Latimer said the children responded in their normal fire drill procedure and there V.'AS no running or shoving by the students in an tffort to flee the buildings. "As far as the students knew," Latlmer said, "the ringing bell meant just another fire drlll. ·• f to I was 1urrounded by fellow patients, doctors and nuraea." Williams and his wife seek $650,000 In damages from Or. Day on their malpractice charges. They claim that Mrs. Williams' subjection to electro- ahock trealments Jed to a stroke and left her crippled. The attractive plaintiff wore a brace on her right leg in court Thursday but It produced an attack from defense al· torney Wallace Reed who told the jury that ,_its. \Villlarru did not wear the brace •·when she participated in waler skiing and snow skiing." He described Williams as • ' a pathological liar" and defended Dr. Day as a psychiatrist who operated according to •·accepted standards of psychiatry 111 the community." Willia1ns testified he was aS!ured by Dr. Day that electro-shock treatments ~·ould enable him to forget the fact that he Jlad been unfaithful to his wife and would result in his rememberinl •·0«i.Jy the good th1Dg1." He said Day a111urtd him lhat the treatments were "100 pereent sale'' shortly before. his wUe suffered a stroke. He testified that he sa\V other patlent.t who underwent the treatment "turning blue and receiving what appeared to be oxygen." The trial is scheduled to resume Mon- day. Toilet Crisis Accord OK'd Action Follows Breakdown of Sludge Incinerator By PATRICK BOYLE 01 111• 0111)' P'li.1 S11H To avoid locking the lids down on 1,000 toilets in the South County area, the South Laguna Sanitation District has entered a "sludge burning" agreement with the city of San Clemente. The need for the agreement arose recently when a $145,000 sludge in- cinerator at the district's Aliso Creek sewage treatment planl broke dOYln . Although the district has two such machines to burn solid waste from the area, district manager John S m i t h is v1orried lhe second machine could also break down. "When you are working with mechanical equipment," Smith said, "anything can happen. Our two in- cinerators were lhe first ones built and they had a Jol of bugs in them.'' "Although most of the problems have been worked out.'' he added, ··things can develop overnight." . if \\'e have to," Smith said, "We want to be sure we can dispose of lt without polluting the beaches." The sanitation district serves the South Laguna area's 3,600 dwelling unil!. Ill addition, the district has an agrttment with the Moulton-Niguel Water district to handle a portion of their sanitation. whlch amounts to about 3,500 additional customers. Onofre Beach To Open Easter For One Week If something did happen ro~the second 1rfiachine, Smith said, the sanitation / district would be faced with what could only be described -at least In print -as a "massi\'e problem ." From all of these homet'I, about 2 million gallons of effluent daily b: pro- cessed through the district's sanitation plant. The liquid effluent is given secon- dary treatment and pumped into the ocean while the S()lid matter is strained off and burned. This process leaves several Lons <lf sludge to be disposed of oaily. "We.re really hoping we won't have to haul it down to San Clemente," Smith said. ''It could be quite expensive as it would ha\'e to be completely encl0&ed in tank trucks." SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A money. short Department of Parks and Recrea- tion announced today that a new state beach will be opened for one week only Easter week to raise funds for future development. A 1pokesman said the unprecedented action is being taken because the depart- ment lacks funds for capital develop. ment. • San Onofre Bluffs Slate Beach, in San Diego County, has been part of Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base. It was leased to the state for 25 years by the Marines at $1 a year. It i~ a three-and-a-half stretch of virgin ocean frontage . All types of camping except tent cam- ping will be allowed, because camping will occur on the pavement of old b.ighway JOI. The one-week opening is b e i n g sponsored by the State Parks Foundation. a private group which donates funds for development ol state parks. Camping fees will be 53 per night, with day use fees $1 per car. Funds will g<l lo the foundation, which hopes to have the beach fully open this summer. Only chemical toilets and garbage cans wll l be available, but campers will ha\'e to bring their own "·ater. No lifeguards will be on duty. 'The department says up to $17,000 may be raised Easter week. To allow for such a development, the district recently agreed v.·ith the city of San Clement~o burn sludge at the city's sludge incinerator. The "urgency measure .. calls for the district to pay $1,000 a week for the burning service. "We just entered the agreement to be ready lo haul 11ludge to San Clemente Smith said the Inoperable incinerator "-'ill probably be replaced with a less expensive model. Candid Camera But Subject Didn't Smile WASHINGTON (UPI) -A 52-year-0ld doctor has been charged wilh the attempted rape of a drugged patient after police observed the alleged attack on a planted closed circuit television system. The alleged assault took place Feb. 25 while Dr. John L. Avery was mak- ing a house call on a 2()..year-old patient at her suburban Montgomery County, Md., apartment. Judge Calvin R. Sanders Thursday ordered A\'ery held for grand jury ac- tion and released him on a $10,000 property bood. According to testimony by C<lunty Medi.cal Examiner Belden Reap, A\'ery gav~ the woman two injections in the arm. She last consciousness in two or three minutes. Reap said Avery partially undressed the \'¥oman, ''finally pushing her back onto the couch." Two police detectives signaled by Reap then entered the apartment to make the arrest. The stakeout was set up In the woman's apartment as a result of an in· cident with the same doctor earlier this year. On that occasion she allegedly sought to determine from a local hospital what caused her to lose consciousneP after he administered medi cation to her . The ~amera. which measured 416x2 inches was planted Jn a shoe box <lft a table in the efficiency apartment. Reap said the two detectives did not watch the alleged assault out of "modesty." Sherrill Has Arrived For the first time, this exceptional line of up~o11ttry is now avail able on the weit coti1t. Sher .. rill, one of the finest producers of upholstery in the country offers you a new txptritrtee in viewing quality furniture. An unparelleled 'election of styles arid fine fabrics are coupled with craftsmanship unmatched in this price cate9ory. If you lire in need of upholstery, be sure to view this exciting collection of moderately priced, quality furniture. A Ted von Hemert e•clu~ $1V8. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE Nl!WPO"T 5TORI! OPIN 'RIDAY 'TIL t NEWPORT BEACH 172) Westdlff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 / ' INTERIORS Proftulonal Interior D11i9ner1 Av1!11bf._AID-NSID " • • • LAGUNA BEACH 34S North Co11t Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ( Frida)', March 19, 1971 hCongress Cup Opens With 9 Protests .,.. 1111 •• ' • l"-4tf1t lolOTICI TO C•IDfTOI$ C I ICAT• 0" •utlHll5 IVJl>ll10I. COlllT 0' THIE "ICTITIOIJI JllAMl: ,,.. u11Mnl9 ..... -nnlfr ... ,, STATI 01' CALlflOINIA l'Olt DAIL V PILOT J 9 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE c"""udl"11 I b\ltlMH otl 5b 9 Wttf THI COIJNi::r:..:~ OllAN•I: ,,. 5 Boats Wind Up With 2-1 Marks ; No Tripl e Win ners 'fth, (0,11 MfU (t.ilforn1 •• ""'°'' '"" EtTATE OF kENIV WI NT~OI' 'Jjt,l l•tllllw~ nrm n•rnt of lE4T>lEll ENTINE, i\LSO KNOW" Hl:NllY GYPSY •1111 Ill.II ••141 llfm 11 <__,>ecl w. VALENTIN[, IJ.SO K OWN A:. of 11\f l•llew1 ... lltr-. w-.... ,.,. kl'Ni:tV \IALEN11Ht', DfCEA11!0. Iii lull Ind •l•Ct ., fU!Otnte II '' ~TICE IS klllEIY QIYEN i. 11>11 1ot1owt• cr..Sllo<1 o1 1i.e 11111.,.. llAn'lftl cl.-c"9111 By A.U.10N LOCKABEY 0.11, l'llllf '"'""' ••lllt" Congressional Cup sailors are obviously sailing by the book this year. In the flrst 15 races Thurs· day there were nine protest flags fluttering from starboard spreaders. There were three double protests \vhich kept protest committees busy until a late hour. The committee announced that the results of the prot.est! resolved would not bt an- nounced until today -even to the contesting skippers. Protests to the contrary, there were no triple winners In Thursday'! contests. Five yachts wound up with 2·1 records and five with 1·2. o ... l<owt11. loot Vtf!OV~f, L•~""' .... , •II ..,,...,, "'"'"' cl•lmt ... 1 ... r overhaul hun on the doYinWuid defeated .Jennings, 3:fl8 and a1.c:11, c.111 ,,,, 11111 0tt..u,n1 ••• ,,11111,.,, 10 111e run and take the lead at the Mosbachcr defeated Pickard, o.i.o M•o~" .. i;~~:~ '"""' wan 111t n..:1111.., vouc,..,., 1,. ST ... TE OF C"'LIFOllNI.... I"* offl(• ot !/It cit>-111 ,,.. lllllV• first leeward mark. 3:25 tdouble protest pe:ndin.,;.) OltANGE COUNTY: i~;11~~~;y °' ..:!_:;:,'::"'10'~ w~'.! The two boats were overlap-o .. M••<" 11, n11, br10" •n~. • dtl11•n<H:I ,, ,,.. 11111,1 01 th<lli ,110,""'v•· ""d approaching the leeward Winds for the firsi day·s Nat1•y ~ubllc '" •nd •o• ,,10 s111•. llOboln"'" >Ww••r •ncl Girl•l'lll •J.oll ,.~ ptnMtllv '""'''"' DIP\ Fowllt ~»Own cimp~ Ori.,.. Ntwoart ••··• < 1'11 t k b l Sch f. Id b k th t'Om""lition ranged from II to to mt 10 br !'he """" wne1~ n~m• ' ...... • arr• 1t mar ", U 0 le ro e C I"~ It lubicrltllcl lo tt.. ,.1!/\ln lntlrumtfll t"/6'J, wMcl1 II !/It Plttl ol bu1l111~ overlap \\'ilhin a few lengths 15 knots. ind icknowl...._td 11t t•ecu1..i 111t •~mt. o1 111t """"1l1nl'd In •ll m1111,., •t•~ 01 11,e 'nark. Burns tr'.ed lo Results were expected to be 1011;,1.r ~.u 1.1 .. 1n11 1o 1~ ••lttt 01 .. 1c1 "K"'""'• M•.., attli Mortoo wlltll11 '""'' rnontno •!!ff •n• UtU Pt.ODii• \York up on the inside of of more conclusJve todtiy as N11••"' Pu1111c -c11ilor111. uor lon of 11111 notic •. r th d bl · Prl..c1Pll Ofllct In Ollld Mtrdl '· lt11 Schofield during the rounding, some o c ou e winners 0,1.,,. c1111ntv v1r11•1• "· vt1ttu111. •rid and ' ·1 was then that protest of Thursday tangled in crucial My C1>mm1u10t1 E1•1,.1 s.cudl'; P11tl!lc WtHon•1 •••~ A<>•ll t. 1n1 av: Gt11•11• L. Hollow1l1 flags started fluttering from matches. The series winds up "~b11,111c1 °''"'' co.111 0111y P1101 ~~~..:~'i.,• of 111 both yachts. Schofield crossed Saturday, M•rc" 1t, 1•. Aar11 '· '· 1n1 K6-11 •bl>v• "'""" dt<~••• the line i 5 seconds ahead of· ------------LEGAL NOTICE ~·~:~~~O~~ws•11 •Mo 0••L""'0 Burns. LEGAL NOTICE N __ , afk•, ctmtn11a ..,.., -----------ltl: ,.....s ... Other results in the first HOTICE OF IULIC Tlt.ANSl'Ell ... ...,, AltlrMYI l•r C•IX,\(Utk• S.rl.' u·ere·. O'Neal -·er Bob CiK• 61tl -'lfJ U.C.C.) ClltTlil'ICllTI 01' IUSINl.St Pvbll'/\td 0••"8• Co.et! 0.11\1 "·'ct, " "' I«,_ Nt. 4llf JI l'ICTIT10US NIIMI! Mir"' 12. 11. ,., ..Urll 7, lt71 J.O• 11 Mosbacher. Houston, Tex .. by No•I<• 1, "''""'" i•""" to'"' c1111Ho•• 1r.e ~llclertlt11111 oo cortlh tt>ev •t••-------·------- ds • k d ol TOMMY llA E GOLO, Tt•nofftor, t-uctl"' • bu•lntH II tu W1•I lllhl 39 secon : Pie ar over •l'IO•• ou11,,11, •ll<lt1H 1, 11c1 wu1e l1tf S•, Cosr• Mt1•, c11lf1>rn11 un<1tr "'* Odenbach. 56 seconds: Jen-Drive. NfWPDr1 8tt(h. Coun!• of Ot•"8t flclUIOlll 11 .... ,..mt of EARTH FOllMI , r $!tit OI (tlofptnfl. !hfl ' bulk lflnlltr llllcl 11\11 flid llfm II (GMPO'ed OI --------------lllngll over McCorn1ack o San " 11>ou1 to ~ ... ,0, •o JAMIE l(ELL y ltlt to11owrn11 1>u,0111. '""°"' n1me1 in ,. 40l4t F'ranc•'sco one m '•n 01 sec· l E Mp l E T 0 N Incl JAY l(l!NNY htll •lid 1>l•cn ol rtll<l"""t ·~ II Cl!ITll'l(ATe 01' •USINISt ' ' TEMPLETON, t 01dnu1n,p. TtlnolorHl. lolloWI: l'ICTITIOUI HAMI and Charley t.1organ or St. Wl'I01t bullftttl ICl<lflH It 11 .. •on•lr• Oon11d J, Sutl'lt!rl1tld, ltlol Fullerton, Tiie uncltf'Jfllllld .xi.1 cerrll., 1111 1, G B h W•v, Newi>od 8!1Cll Ind l J 1t1 Coal1 Mt11, C•l•f. t9RCIUC11!1111 I bulllleH 11 P, 0 . !IWC Petersburg Over reg 001 Cfncll....,ood. Wt1!mln1t11, counlv o1 l'••nk l. M1nswr, l~l Pom0<11, Lon~ '4-11, lr~ln1, Ct!llornl1, ~11~1 Ct•ntl,on of Hawaii by I _min. 11 secs. O•T•;:·~.~!!~~v0:0c:!11:;,n~:; .. 1<1 11 1oct1.o ~~~!;·J:~~~ u. un ~;'1~t ~0i,,!,, ~~m ~:::.. ~·~~~: (Booth was flying a protest II 1)01 Wel!tll!I Ori••· NtwPDrl llt•th Oon1IC1 J. Sut~erl1nd NELL'S MANAGEMENT CONSULTANTI b C nt IO St 1 r ( mo nit Fr1n• L. M1n1uv 1n<1 tn1t 11ld ll•m Is comPOtld of at the end of the race ut c;',1; :.oc.";.~~·11 :e~,0,1~ r~ 11~,,11 ST-''E OF Clo.LIFOllNIA. 111e 1011-111111 llfrJon, whoH ntmt ~ did not file). • .. All 1toc~ '" "•Cle, ,,.,u•••· ..... 1 ... ORANGE COUNlY. run tnd Pitt• cl ,,,l<ltnct [\ '' lolloWI~ h d O'N ] m&nl •nd 'lll>Qd--wlll o1 '"•I •••vlv ''Ion O" M"'<~ 11. 1971, before m~, • Robert J, 0·0orontll, •111'> (1•"•11001 [n l e SCCOn SerlCS ea bu11n"1 k"Own 11 ROM RAE H ... 111 Not.,~ Public on 1n<1 for ••Id S!•te. ,f,vonut, Coront CMll Mir, C•lllorf'l!I. defeated Pickard by I 2 sTYLISlS ono lot•l•d •• 1101 W•••~llll ,,,,.,,,.,11~ IPP••••<I Donald J. Su1n~rl.tn<I 01t&d M1rch 10, nn . Orlvt, Nrwoo•t Bet(h, Coun!V ol Ortnge, .tnd Fr•nk L. M1n•u• known 10 me Rober! J. 0'00<1n1ll seconds (pending a pro lest by s111~ 111 c1Hto•n11 ro bo tl'lt ••"on• wh11.. "'"'t• ,,. s111e of c1111cr1111, La. Ano•lt• counrY1 LEGAL NOTJCE CL.QSE AT THE START -Bobby Burns (Boat B) and Henry &hofield treated s~tators to some close pre·start maneuvering in the first race of the Congress· ioblJ Cup match racing series Thursday. The findings of the protest committees could change that by today. There were no standouts in the first three races. Double winners, pend~ mg protest decisions. were Henry Schofield of Alamitos Bay Yacht Club: Bobby Burns. Califorrua Yacht Club: Pal O'Neal, Larchl'lont. N . Y • ''achl Club; John Odenbach, Yacht Racing Union of the (;real Lakes; John Jennings, St. Petersburg, Fla., represen· ting the NA YRU, P '>ckardi· ·•1CC 0 rm a ck Tnt bvlk ''"'""will be con•vmm••Pd 1ub!.cflbtd 111 t11e .. 11M11 ln1trum1nt eno on Mire~ JO, 1171, belore mi. " • 1' on or •II•• I/It Jl•t d•Y of Mire~. •<knowlrd'>fd lh•Y •~e<~1"d lhe s.tmt. Not.,y Putll!c In 1no lor 11lcl Sl1te, defeated f\,1osbacher by 29 itn. •• Ntv.oort N1t1on11 B•n•, uo1 1ott1d11 se11J "'''0<1tl1Y 1H11rtd loberr J. O'O...,ne n h d f ed Wntclln Orlvt. Ntw,,.,..1 Bt.c:h, Cl!Ufl1~ M"rg•r~I 1'01g known !o mt lo be Ille Mtton whll't Seconds; Odellb8C e eat ol Or•l'lll•. S11!• al C1lllornl•. Nol1rv ,.ul>llC -C1lllornl• n1m1 I• iu!IK•lbt<:l lo 11'11 within In· Booth 14 seconds: Burns So t~r II •nown lo '"' Trtn1tt ... 1. Pdnc!o1I OllM:t 111 s!rUm•nl •nd •cknowltdted ,,. tlKUltd ' 111 bu1lntH n•mt• Ind 1<1drfue1 .,,..., lo• ""gel., Covnrv !he 1tmr. Dana Point t· :.., Goal i11 fj 6 Series Dana Point viii! be the stina11on of some 50 yachts peeled lo set sail Saturday the 1971 Inaugural o[ lboa Yacht C\ub"s 66 Series. The ra<X! is a change from il~e originally scheduled Drill· • • Islands Jlace. •'fhe fleet will be divided o four classes of Ocean cing yachts sailing under Cruising Club of America CA\ measurement rule and c P.1idgel Ocean Racing eet -boats 30 reel and der. t.fost exciting race of the day y,·as the opener between Schofield and Burns. Burns got the start and led Schofield to the first \\"eather mark. only to have the ABYC skipper defeated Morgan. 1:3a (double tov T1an•'••o• !or '"' tll•« v••·~ 111• M• commlnl"" E•ai••• tOFFtC1.AL SEAL! Prolesl ~nding ] ', a n d Jen• 11ts!~.~.al!•t•t11I lrom lht 1bovo, ••t D«:: I, ltlf Loi' l. P1lmlnl I"' ,.~, Publlll>"" 0••"11• (o•SI 0..111 Pi!o! Nollrv Publlc<•hlor11l1 nlngs defeated Schofif!ld 1:01. 0111a M••cll 11. 1,11 M•rcn "· :n, A1>r11 1. '· 1n1 6t&.11 ""1"'1,.1 ott11;, 1n . . ' J•ml• Ktnv Ttmaleton ---L111 ""~•Iii Countv In the third series Odenbach T11n1•1••• LEGAL NOTICE Mv commlnlon E••lrt• defeatf!d McCormack. I :Os ~~:,:1~~:; TomaltlOtl Publls~°":>'.1':,;,"~~1,1 011.., t pending a protest by Pub1lsnl'd o •• ,, .. co.e•t o,.,,, ,,i..1. """'°"' M•tdl u, it. H. A11ru 1, ••11 McCormack I; Booth defeated ~arc/\ lt. ~1 •11-11 c11T~r~~~T~~J:" N~U,:~Neis O'Neal. I :31 : Sch o f i e Id LEGAL NOTJCI<:: 'rht ulld4l '11tn.a 11ou c1111"' '"'' •r• cOl'lduCll,,., 1 bu1!ntn 11 1t7' Unit No.]--------------defeated ~1organ, 1 :27: Burns ,.,..,"-----, l'!1c..-.1 1 •• co.11 Mu.1. c.111orn11. u""~r a1111: JQ9 CEll.T!FICllTI 0, •UitNllS I/It lfctltlou1 tlrm "'"'"' ot METAL NOTICE TO Cll'tllTO•I FICTIT10US Nlo.MI SllTCH (.ASTIN{; llEPlo.!11. COMPANY SU,l"lllOR COi.NiT 011' THll Po'O". l4l·11 LEGAL NOTICE c;~:,~~".'1';u':i...:,°.'' .~·~~~: ~~:;,,,·,~: ;::; i:i!t""':r.,::·-:~·· .. ~e'!co na;;:• !~ s;:;ET~; ::~~~11::~• 11,,. Co•!1 Mt11, C•lllorn lt . undtf I/It follow• 011:.ANOI !lcut\ou• llrm nime of All15AN"S 01rrell II NOfl, 19 .. S Vo•mont L•. N&. A·Unt KOIJSE ana !flat s•la firm 1, ca .... ao•ed l'lunll,,t!Ofl B1tcll, (•llfOf"ll E"~lllt of MARY FRANCES 9110\'/N Classic Field Seeks DI ltlt lollowl"e 11&•s0<1•, wllo•e "'mts ICIA P Nt>e, lfl•S V~rmonl Ln., lk1 MARY FltANCES WILl(ENSOP.: 111 l ull Ind plate• ol rnldtntt '" HuntlnglOn BtlCll, Call!orflll. 0Htltfd •• lollowi· 011..i M•r<ll 11, 1~11 NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIVEN te lh · Romu•ldo P°"lel. JOlO so. M•ln SI, 01rttl\ II NDI' cr...il!o" al tl\1 1bovt n•mtd dtctdlr S•nli An1, C•lilo1nl1. ldt P. NOf/ 111•1 •II PtrtOf'I ll1vl,,., cl1lmt 111lno Nltk "· Godov. 1., \ll O~dtn Or. Sl•I• of C1ll!crnl1, O••'lllt Coun1• lht ••Id dK1111nt •re requlr.O to rl~ 1 0, Anq~I••· C•ll!or•I•. On Mir</\ U, 1911, belort mo • tl\em, wtth lht ntc1n1rv W>UCll<.,I. 1 · Laurels i11 Drag Boats A classic field of blown fuel hydros will be shooting for the elusive 200--mile-per-hour mark this weekend at Long Beach Marine Stadium during the National Drag Boal Ass'n Spring Championships. Oa!td Much 11 1911 No11rv Pvt>loc In •nd !Pr ••la $181•, !ht 11lllct ol !he tit•~ pl th1 •bOY Saturday's r 3 c i n S gets Romuil~o p00,.1 Ptr1on111v 1nct1r•d Oerr•ll ~. NO" en!ltled covr1, or lo PreHnl th tm. vJil' 'th h Nick,+,,, Godo• k•IOl'lll to mt lo bt 11\t Ptrion whoo lht ne,tn•rv vou,htrs, lo I h Under way at 10 a.m. Vil t C St~!t o! Call!ornl1, Oranq• Count•· "lmt 11 1ub1tflbPd to Tiit Wltl\ln In· U•<le•slq'lfcl •! the offlct ol Ills AllorntY , , b . On Martn 11, 1911. lloPtorr Mt. 1 •trum<l!nt and 1ckno..lttl~t<I h1 t•ttut"'1 JOSEPH I. -'NOER!ON. IN N. M•~ ~kl Class and Jtl Oats going Nolarv Public on and !or •lid S!alt. lh~ ••m• St., Sullo 601, Stnl t AM. CtUlornl1 , . d h ](](] oer5<>ntlly too•areCI Rom utlno Po111oi !OFF!(IAL SEAL) Which 11 I/It Piie~ of b!Jlllltll of lh Ill lhe morning an t e ino NI'°. " Goaov ~11own lo mr 10 J•on L. Joll1t U"""'l;ntd In 1!t mlllo'1 Ol"tlt•nin .1 ho . l b~ 111, ,..,.0,., wl\ou ntrn" ere iubM.•i~· No1~•1 Pv111;,.c.11111r•11 to '"" e1t1!1 of '''" dtc•dt111. wJ1n1 tnt e-per• Ur e q U I p ffi en ,., !C Tiit wo!loln ln•ll"u...,..,,I and J'1!•clp11 Oll•Ct In four moM/11 tt!or I/It llrit outllf<l ilC Of•no• Counl• o! I"" no!lct qualifying at 2 p:m. Just prior ~5°F~ic1::~·~~'.;,.'(1 1~•cuie<1 111• ••mt Mv comm1 .. 1,,,. Eip1,., 011te1 Februt•v n. 1t11 I th l W W.] l 1 ~ M•..., ll•th Morie• Morell 7, 197] Thom•• 0 . l•own 0 a ayne I ms 0 ...... ng Noli•Y P11b!IC ·Cth!or11(• STATE OF CAL1''011NIA I E~k\/lor OI 1 COUNTY OF OllANGE l H. of !Ill! W•ll of the 1bov• •·Mr. Beach will attempt th c P"<1<•a•1 lite ~ On 1.o.1rch "· Hll, !»!Pr• ""'· 1~e Ntm~ ooced1n1 Oranoe Co<1n!Y u11oet1ltn.,,. • Nol•.., P11tl!lc !fl ano JO$E'H I . .AND•lllON. World record holder Ed" piloted by Fresno's Larry Hill will be lacing last year·s f'astest boat "Lika de Split" to be driven by Bob Miller of Sausalito. Mac (Hay) Bale. the 1970 point."! winner will barefoot skiing record Vo'ith ~';,1f~'."~;is10" f.•a••'I 1or 1ald s111,, 11er\011111v 10Ha•e<1 101 IN N. Mtin 11., su111 ttt Tu1·unga's Mike P.tasino Lowing P\/Dl•~f\ed O<~nge c"'" 0111. P11r1. " Nor k11own 10 rr• 10 be '"' ""'!<'" 511111 An1, c1ui.rn11. I .o.11 •"o"' ntm1 h 1ubK•lbt<I lo 1111 wllf\;n Tel: 5'17.-01 in "Hot Damn Hondo'· M•~" 1•· 16 '""Apt~ 2' '· "11 · 1n11•um1111 •rid •ck110'Nlld11ed to mt Attt.n11 1ar IE•tt.u11r Ray Ca••ll>··, " p a n ·, ,. LEGAL NOTICE '""' 1"• e•1cu1td tilt ,,m,. Publl1hld 01.,,.t Co••• r:i.,1,, ,,,,. <><.. .. WITNESS mY "•nd Ind offlclt l 1e1t FPll•UtlY n •nd M•rch I, u. I' P..1ouse". the world's fasl~st ,.,-,, 10FF1C•-'L sEALI 1111 .,1.1 VO LIWftf\Cf J 8tn~elt rtatbotlom at 146.87 mph, v.•ill ct:•Tll'IC-'lf OF •UllNf"ll NOii•¥ l'utlllc b f · 'ff ] FICTITIOUS NAME PrlntlP•I Olflco In e acing st1 cosnpet tion Th~ un<11<•!ened a11 <P•llh 111ev ••• o .. ,,.,t coun•v from the Cornwall's "Big con<luchno • bu1oneu ~1 ll'lll C110•• M• Commlulon E•Pltt• 111• )fM LEGAL NOTICE ~The course v.·iJJ be from e starting line off the Balboa er. around ··c" m a r k ellbuoy I 1'l miles of f wport Pier) U1encc to the ish line off the end of Dana int Harbor Breakwaters. ,Balboa ''::icht Club has ar- nged to make a combination ce-cruise out ol the event, ·1h mony of the non-racing wer and sail yachls ac· EVEN CLOSER AT MARK -Henry &hofield (Boal A) overcame a lead by Bobby Burns at this point of their Congressional Cup match, Rounding the mark a fe\'; second later, protest flags flew from the spreaders of both yachts. be driving a new speedster and Mike DuBiel, the Hun- ,, • lone. HvnllnotM 8PICfl, C1lof1>rnl1, unG•t MtY ., ltll NOTICE TO ClllOITOll Kahuna and Fresnos Larry int 11c1nlou1 firm n1mt 01 METllEL Puc11,,.,.., 0•1"8• Co••' DtllY Pilot 1ul'111t1011: cou11T OI' THI Schwabenland j n •·Joker's l"NTEllPlltSE:S and '""1 ••!d tlrm h Mo1c11 1•. 76, Aor11 7. t . !'11 J11.11 1tAll" OI' c1o.1.11<01N1A il'OI tington Beach artist, will have · . ,. ce>M1>111t~ ot '"' 1ot1ow1"9 oe,,o,,,. who11 --------THI" COUfifTY oil' olt.ANOI t 'he b. bl f ] S \l/ild . n•m•I In lull •n<I pllcu or r11ldenc• LEGAL NOTICE Ne. "·'IW a go a IC: O\Vn ue tr ·-ire·~ tollc•.. Elllte ol MARV LOUISE !IAlll(FI for the first timt in "Hare''. M~u•lce E. Trlao. s11•cP, n1. So6 -----,.--,",------1100 known •• l0Ul5E IAltlCli l L''G L N So Euclid. S1n1• lo.n•, Ctlllo•n'• O•t••1fll. One or the top contenders .;; A OTICE judi Jo l,.oo"•~· 11lJ1 Cvo•r Lt no. l'ICTIJIOUI IUllNISS NOTICE rs HEllEIY GIVEN lo " for 'he ~m>'le p>'nnacle could Hununet"On ll1ec11, c1111orn1t 111•1 NAMI. Sl-'Tl!Ml"NT . crulltort o1 th• •ltov• 111mt<1 d«tdf ~ _ __ DllPd Ml'<" 11, l'1t 11lho !ollov.lne P•roM h dOlng bulontn lhll 111 Ptrooni ht•!"' ,111.,,1 ••tin be ,;J\.tr. Ed JI" now owned 1uP£11101 cou1t.T 0' THE M•u11c~ E. Trion •• ,, .. , •ooM. ''' 0,,, •• ,,,.,,th• ,,rd d1c111en1 ,,1 ••aulr"' 10 11 ' tTlo.TI! 01' CALll'OllN!A 1'011: Juell Jo Loont• " " ·• '"' !hem wit~ !ht nect 1ery ~ ; mpanying the racing yachts Dana Point for an overnight nQezvous. ~,·Format of the 66 Series has • en radical!y changed this " ar. A new race April 11 B1·oa1l Appeal by th"' Cornwall brothers, lHI! COUNTY 01' OIAN"G• ,,,., '' ,,. ••OllNI-'. ltoufl• 8e1c", Celllornl•. 'I I vouc .... '< ' L Wlllor J El!armin Jr 01 Flo" l~t 11 llct ol lht citric ol 11\t •~· Roger and Gary, of Reno. NDTtCE 0 ,. ::-.:~u,•,. ''''"'' 0'0~NG•',,',?uN,,',' ''''· ,,,,,, "'· , 51,.t! L~v~n• Btach 'c111i~rn1o 1n1h1e<1 court, or to '''""' ltltOft. w1 ' ~-[ r " " Tiii! "bu1lnt u 11 bei,,g concluc0ffll by' lllt llKfH~rv vouch1tJ, lo ,,.. u • Nev. 11n;: 21).. OOt (Win SCreW FOil l'llOIA-Tlf Ol' Will ANO 1'011 NOl~r~ Public In l~d for 1tld (fllr •n lndl•l<lu•I de,.lt•t'd ti lht cllltt ol hl1 tl!Grntl: ·11 be kno\vn as the Abalone inl race. taking the fleet a round trip to Abalone Collection of Stories II , d Hydro a! O ·g·na!J l.llTTlltl llST.AMl'NTAllY (IONO P•r!<>ntllY •~ne1•ed /,\tu<I<• E T""" W•Uf J Ellerman Jr CLAUDE E. YOUNG, JIJ Wt11 'T~h I O\\ar W rl I Y W"'IYEDJ and Jual Jo loonoy Onown lo "'~ ,ublii!\od O,fnvo (OIJi O•ilv Pito!. !trttt, Stnl1 lln1, C1lllP•lll• ,,1'01. Whl< purchased by Ed \Vills of E1t1!1 or LOUI~ MORRIS STEU8ER. Ip b~ Ille IH!""''" "'"""" 111mt• ~·· M••t!\ 11 " " -'l>rll 1 !f11 ~1·11 11 11'>1 a!1ct ol bu1l1'1111ofIll•11ncllr111 .... , ] $20 OOO Bobb Otct•lf<I 1uo,cr1DP<I to 1110 wltlll• •n11rumtn• .rid ' ' ' ' 111 •!! m•lltfl M•lllnln1 lo the tila Fresno or , . Y NOrlCE 1s HEREBY GiveN 11111~'~"O)>Oltd••d1n1v e•ecu•ftl '"'' u"''· LEGAL NOTICE ol uld d.-c1d1111. wr1t11n 11><1r mOt1r Pellon or Jnglewood driving M11Y Lo111,. W.:oht UI ~-· hied httf)/I !O!!ltl~I S••ll 1rttr I/It llril PUbllctllO<'I ol lhlt noll(t, 1 • Dl'llllo" •~1 arobtl• "' will 1na Jt•• L Job>I ------..:.. Otl"' Mire/\ I , nll Nick and Roberta Nichols ' for IHU~~(t of L1!1trl le•l•m••!••• Nnlarv Publl( . (Alo!c• .. !• Cl!llTIFICA~:e~'i •USINISI Wllll1m E119en1 ....... "The \Vitch" and ''\\larJock" lo Ppl!tlol'll• 180l'ld Wtlvtal re.11renc~ Pn•clo1I Ollie• 111 ,ICTITIOUS N.AMI" EJIKUlor cf lht WIU of IO w~IC!\ 11 m1<11 lo• turln•r 1'1•!"111111 O•ar>v• (oun1y I 11\t 1bow Nmld clKf'llf'(•I ·1 l d b J. M h "" Ill I !n II "" I ' ~ I Tl\• u•n~rsl1nt<I Goe• t•tllfv ~-• cu.uo• • YOUNG pi 0 e y Im Ur p y, are 1 1 • mo • P •c• o tit n~ IYv Com,.,1•'1on E•ooru canCl\/thn~ 1 touil~t" ii 1~ Aoaml, >>• Wn > ,,·,,, S>- • int sou t he a st of Cameo ores. Aid to Trailerboats ~Other races in the schedule *elude: •.!( H\lfltington 20-Fathom race, flifaf·23; Huntington Tidelands ~ct~combined v.•ith Nc\Yporl !ia·1;bor Yacht Club's !jtn:Ji~nson Series) June 12; f IUtng l~lands Race. July 17 . fboa to Long Point, A'ug. .~ ~d Long Point lo Balboa. ~ug~;JS. ~ . ace Slated ' f0 En se11ada n l\'la y 6 N.~l'\'port Ocean Sa i I in g ssociation has set ~1ay 6 the d.ilc for the start nf e 24th annual Newport 10 nsenada race. 'The sailing cxtravagama nually draws more lhan 500 ats and is rated the large!'il fshorc international race In c world. Tire start off the Newport tty i.~ one of the great chi 1ng spcclecule rs. Trailerboats/West, compiled by !he edi1ors of Se a ?ofagazlne. is a collection of stories for the adventuresome sn1all boat owner \vho is not content to stay in local \\'atcrs bul wants lo head for distant places. Since more lhan 1wo out of lhree boats sold are lrailefablc, the book should have an appeal to boating enthusiasts. Originally appearing in Sea and writlen about lrailerboaters. the stories and pictures \\·ere self!cted to presenl a sampling of the possible cruise trips in the v.·estern states from Canada to Mexico. Some of the trips described are to wilderness areas. ac· eessible only by boat. Others are about watenfays close lo civilization with nearby shops, Coast Guard Sets Exams •NOSA general r11ce airman announced thal cn- v blanks are available at Flotilla 57 of the U.S. Co,st ·ost yacht clubs. Skippers liuerd Auxiliary announces ho have !ailed in previous re!umption or the Courtesy n sen a cl a rat•cs ivill :.1 o tor boa I Examinat'fbns 'itomatically receivt: entry starting !his monlh. anks along with lhc race Mrmbers of Flot!ll11 _57 will nouncerrcnt and invitation. conduct the exam1nahons at Race chairman r.eorge Yule-Newport Dunes and at Dani' edicted a new record of en· Point on the third Sunday of ics !his )ellr 1.argest entry e\·ery month starting Sunday, t lo date has t>etn ~. ~lan::h 21. Hours art: from , The raet> is oprn 10 cruising ID a.ni. to 2 p,m. pe ~achls v.·11 h a minimum The ~ur.tesy ~Jotorboat Ex· a1erline lcngLh of 20 fctt amlnat1on 1s a free cheek of an overall length of 24 boat equipment by a trained t v.h lch meet safely stan-and qualified member (If the rd~ of the Ocean Rnclng USCGA. J~ of Sout~rn California. Roat~ thi:it Pass !he ex· Tfhl r11cr i' usually run In .11mlnat!on will be awarded 1 11r .dl\•l3ions, Ocean Raclfli, dec:il whi ch is recognized by J~l Ocean Racing. Pacific the Coast f,uard arid harbor andlc11p .and ocean r:iclng J>!ftrol boarding officers as In· warans. Tht!e In turn 11re dicaling the boat compiles (f Int<'! cJassrs <iccordlng w1:h federal boa ti n g rc- to !heir r;1tir11l:i; qulrrmcnt:i; , ,,.. 11m1 1111 bttn •ti !or Ao•ll I. M•r<ll 1 Ull n ...... other prime threats. 101. ti ' JO • m., 1n Inf cou11roorn Puti,.hed 0,,~9~ Co••' 0111v Pilot c0:1• "'~••· cintornl•, u"""' '"' <· t1ftl1 ""'· c11111tn11 rnt1 h I d · f I O 1 t N l 1 d 1 llh&ul firm n•mt Pf CINEMA REAL Ttt• S<ll"Jll ote s an enttrla1nn1enl or The big blown fuel hydros:, ~·',;';~; ,.:;., 0~1,,,"'w •• ~~vr1~ N-•rch 1•. ?l •nd 11orr11. •. 1111 f!o.11 EST.., TE.""" •h•! 11id 11mo 1. comPOltll 11110,1111 """ i:~ecu .. r the entire family. v.•ill be part of Sunday's racing "" ci1v o1 S•"!• Ana. c111torn11 LEG 'L NOTICE ~· '~• ionowlng oe•sori, wl'IOse na"" P11b111nM Ort"9e co.11 Dtol~ l'I~ hed I lh t 011111 M•rcll 11, ltll " "' '"11 tno Pl•c• or retldtf!Ct 11 •• M•rch 5 11 lt 26 .,71 4'1- Some of the stories tell of sc ue at sarts al noon w E.S!JOMN, ----""'"' '0110;:11d•n st ... ~•n su1tTVc-1, 709! ' '-·-·------- h;gh adventure while other5 an.~ features a Spet'd water ""LL Sl"liE;-:,"1~ ciu-CEllT IFICtlE oF aus1NEss Hoover wt•, 1utn• P111r.. c.. LEGAL NOTICE skung attempt on the record "' North M•I~ Strttl FICllTIOUS NAME Mtrch 3. ltll . f I I . r r bo l l"e """''"gned ao Clrldf 1n1v ••t Bohdtn s. $ull!•ck l ,. ... n give ac ua In orma ion a u of 122.11 mph by Danny ~:~,1·,~~:·5~1~~1::;-R1• coood.;r!lno • bu•ln~•• ~' ,,0 l••in• s1111111 co1l!crn11. o'""'" co"nt1· Cl!llTrl'ICAll DI' 1u11N1s1 'he area and lh' I C.]]l·e ] Ch ch.]] J S Be d' 1111 1 I' 11>1 ~v• N~wporl Btitll C1li!o•"I• unf!•f On M•rc~ J. ltl!, bolot1 me. I l'ICTITIO~ NAMI a l l S 0 Ur I 0 an rnar lnO GrlllV •r • "'1' >'< "''tiio-,, II•,., nomi ol s11'..,ll:KLE No11rv Public 111 '"" for 11ld S'•'•· T~t unelt,,lo"ld GOf/' ceo111v 1h1 be f d l 12 .45 Publ1'~td O•u111~ cn1•1 01,•~ Pllot " ~ 8 5 n 1 OUn • a . , Mire/\ IJ. 10. JI, ltll 61!·/l PL (.NlY tn~ lllAI !Old llrm !1 tDmOOltd llf'IOnol•y IPPt•rl'd O~dln leo •n Condutlon~ ~ bu\ nen 1! :;Q7 9 Ml!lr •········••iiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiii••lliili•iiliiiiii••••••••••-i•lol 1"• fol•owlno ""''On\, w"n•• "'"'"' $ultl•Ckl kr>awn •o m• !o bt Ill• Prt1on l!olb<l1 l•l•nd, C•lllor"lt. u11C1•• !ht r ---in lull AnCI oltce> 0r r~•lOence "'" whou nome " sublC,.Oold lo lht ,.,rnl~ !lllou1 llrm ntmt 111 "SCORPIO ! I ! 1~r1ow• lntrrumpnf 1nd •ckno .. reo,eo h• ••etv!ICI lHE SElo." 1nd '"•I 1eld ll•m 11 cor rem Ev•n• J• .... o Irvin• -'•r. !hf •~m• Polt<I 01 !ho followino person, who CAMPING BUG IAlC & l lC. / Th i C ompin g Bug is • 1971 • stenda rd Tra ils W e st C a mpster . standard b•etle (model 1111} ind The trairer is fully equipped with Electric Br•kes , Queen Size Bed, lee Box .&nd Butane Stove. The tote! eost for these two units is only $3195 +Tu & Uc. Se6el #'• (1112524627), (5041~). Bug, So if your spouse is bu99in9 you to hit the roed -try a Camping 11clusively at HARBOUR V.W. 11711 HACH ILVD. HUNTINIHON HACH, CALI ~, N•woo•t !!•~ch, (•Ill (OFFICIAL SE,f,l) ~eme In !Ull and Ill•<• o! re1ld1~, J;,... Mc'llcker, 1110 U•~ S! .. Ntw~o•+ M~•• K. """" '' •• !011ows· l!•dc~ (aHt NQlory Publlc-C1Hlo1nla Ser.cir• ltf Wlllt<I, j(/I Fo•nl11 w;,r•" [••••· Ill\ [ Bolb<l• Blvd . Pdncio1+ Ol!lce In Corelli dtl Mtr. Ctl!I. llalbco, (alil. O•ln~t Cwntv Ooled Morell 10, 1971 Tom Ev•n• Jr M• Commh,lon E•P"" S.""r• Let Wtll•ro Jomtl W McVoc~.r Nav, )f. 1911 5l,f,lE OF CALl~Oll:NIA, Kirk ~ F••"' l'ublllhtd Or•"llt Co11I 0••1~ Pllol ORllNGE COUNTY ; STAT[ OF Clo.llFOllNIA Mtrc/\ ~. 11, 1'. 21i. If/I 07·11 Of\ Mt•th 10, ltll, b<'IPre .,,. I OQ-'NGF COUNTY Not111 Pvblle I" end tnr u ld $14' On Mtf'~ 11, 1911. /\<'lo,. m• • LEGAL N,OTJCE """on1111 ll>llftrfll S1nd•1 Ltt w1111 NOIA•¥ Putll1C Ill •nd lo• 11ld $1f!t, --~ Ip .... to bt ·~ OlflO" Who ~•.,!l<ltllv ••ot1r..:I Tom Ew~n1 J•. ----n•me Is >Ub)(rlbtd •o !he v.11/\ln Jim McVlc•t• ond IUr• £••n1 k""*" 1'~611' ll•vmtn! tnd •ck-tinftl l~t •~ecuto to m• !o t>o !l\e Pt"°"' who•• •Mm., CEllTl,IClo.TE OF IUSINISS 1114 llm• I art iu~•c•l""d "' 111• ,.111\,,. ln•l•um•11 l"ICTITIO~ N.AMI! COlll<ltl St~I) utd tck.,.wl.cl~od l"•v ~·tcutP<! 1np l h• undtrtltned a°"'' <t•li!v '"" I< M••• lltrh Morion i•m• c-utl!"' • bu1ln•11 II Jot McF1aa•n No!...., Publfc • (1lllor1111 ~Otllciil ~••II l'l1ct. N""'"" l11ch. C1Ulornl1, undPr l'rlncl1>1I Olllct In Jo ..,,,.... M•n" !'ht ltc!lll11U1 llrm n1mt ol PYll.AM!O Or•nte Cc...,lv Notirv Pul>ll' -Cll•to•n•I f:XCHANGOllS 1nd t~1! !<lid llr"' •I M1 Commls1J011 E•oltn Pdnclofl O!fl(t In (omooatd of iltf !0110 .. 1n1 Pt'IOn, """"' A1>rlt f, 1tn Ortn<1t c""n'• "•mt in lull tfld P11<.t of •t,lclento l'ub!ls/\td Orlnttt (011! Otlh' l"I' Mv (C>M"'l"oon £Aol111 11 11 lollows "'llrtl\ 11. It, 1'. APrll 1, lfll 5.)9. M•v 11. ,,,. N1n<v J. c ... ,,,., llU (Otll<t Pl ., ----- ---- 1 p,,111,..,.,., o,11,111 Cots! 01uv Poloi Coil• Me••· C1111arnf1. LEGAL NonCE M•«" "· L"E"G~AL"'N"o'·rc1c"E'~ "-11~ o11111 :.~~~~ }'c!~~°" 5"'' of C1Ulornl•, 0flf\fll C011nty• F·JM' I On Mire" 11, ltll, bettrf mo, 1 l'!CTITIOUS IUSINl!IS Nollr~ Putllk In ""' lor Mild $lilt. NAMI ITlo.TIM•NT p.40fJI ot•sont!IY •PJO•trtoel Ntnc;y J. C111utwo T~ lollO'Nlf'lll per1en1 trt 9clr CEllT"FC•ll DI" IUllNISS lllOWll to ,,,.. to bf the 01rton whclt b\/Jllle'JI ti~ ~ICT!TtOUS NAMI nlmt 1, iUblC!'lbld to l~t wllll!ll Jn. NfW,ORT (li!"NTfll 0RTHOPE01( Thp 11ndet1ltn!d CIO!!I ctrtll• •~t 11 itrumen! incl 1c1;»0wl.cltld 1~1 ••..:~ltd .-00 Ntwport (..,ttr Or!~• Suitt 11 eonduclin~ 1 bu1ln1u ti 111 W. Htm\llon '"' 11,,.,. NPPDrl 9t1cl\. C11tl1>rnl1 ftfM) SI .. (11111 M•11. (tlltcrnl1, ~nO., l!\f (OFflCIAL SE ... l! JlrTl!lt F. tfld Sltllt lo., Cll•vo !lc•llfous 111m ntmt of AL'S THOMAS M••v Beth Mofton !f()l W !:mbtuv lo.Vt' An•hto ~AFETY 5Elt.VICE 1nd tn11 •Old firm Noll•V Publlc·C~llfornl• C1llfornl1 9111Cl• i\ com1>0>od o• !no 101iowln1 Dt•1on. l'rlnc1P~I Olllte in J•mtt F. Ch••o' wllo•• nimt In tu!I tnd •'-<t ol ru!<ltMI Orantt Coun!V Publllhlll O••••t Co11I O•r,., l'ol 11 ti IOllOWI My (omml111cn E•ol•"' MttCh J, U, IJ. 26, lflt OU·. E11/\fr Goudtn!I, '1ot Mint• SI . .Aorl! t. 1'11 Cos•• Molt. (1111. PvDlltl>ed 0•1noe (011! 01111 Piiot, 01lld ...... ,... II. 1911 Mlr(JI n, If, ,., .AP•ll J, ''" Uf·ll E1t111r G•ui!en!I 8.Alt MSJ I ST"'" ore CAL!FOllNI-', LEGAL NOTICE HOT1c1 ro c••o1To1t1 011-'NGE COUNTY SUl'l!lllOI COU•T 01' THE 0... M••<" 11, ltll. bf-lo" m• • STA TE OF Clo.Lll'OllNIA l<Oll Nol1ro Public +11 •nd lor 111<1 Sr111, 11'-Jl'lM THI COUNTY 0, OltANOI LEGAL NOTICE Dl"rlllfllll¥ toOtfr~d E1!"f' Gtudtntl CEllTlll'ICllTI" 01' •UllNISt Nt, 11'"4q jt-n to ""' lo .k I~ Glr)Ofl w~.011 ll'!CTITIOUI tlfAMI E"'f!• 11f A, Mii.TOH Gll!:l!N tl n1mt !1 '"~1crlbed IP !ht within In· Tll• v-•lltl!td natl tf•ll'1 ,.. It ALVAH MILTON G•l!!l!N, Of<tl$.cl 1t•umf"t 1~a ttk-lflltld '"' t•KU!tCI condu<l!no 1 11\tt!l\fU 11 ltJ Amltof NOTICE IS HERll!"8V GIVEN la I' "'' •lmt Wev, N"tWl>O•I l!ltt(h, Ct llfor"ll, t2WO, cr.,,Horl ot 11'>1 •~~ ntm"' ""'"'• COll«lll ~·~'1 uncl... t~ llctUl1111 fbm Mmt ol lh1I •II Pf•t-ll•vl"' cl11fn• 101!~ ' M••• (tl!1' Morton ltANCMO C-'LIFOllNl.A tltOPE'ltTllES Ille ult MceOl"t trt '""l1M1 hi II NolllY Public' Cl11"'•11I• •NI l!\tt ,t ld llrm 11 c111nu•0Md ol flllm, wit/\ Int r>KtlltfV vaucll•"· ""llC•P•• O!h(t Ill 11'• hlll(twlno Pfnlon. wlll>I• ........ In lht oftitl ,, !1't Cltf~ ., Ille •be· 0••"9,• '°" .. '"•' ' , 11111 •nd Pitt• al rttla~t'IC• I\•• tt1-t1 ... t111td ceur1. or 10 •'"'"' Tlltm. '"' M, °'""'"' " •P "1 'ltOhtn C. HOl'll ln1. /'tJ A,.,itol WIV, Int lle(llll.... Y$UC/I ... \, 19 !lie ij ... prll I ltll Ne-I 8tt(ll, C•lllorf'lll '1U0 lltrsltn"" 11 ltl• ollltlt el "'' •ttOf,,.Y '°Ubl"h"" Or•~•• C11•1I Otll• P\IOI Otlfll Fl'f!ro,;lrY rt. 11/1 COOKSEY, S(HUMA(Hf'lt, COLEMlo. "'••th It, 16. -'P"I ). I 1111 •U·ll $••MM C HOOO;lftl MINYARD I. HOWlo.RO. !Jf Tiwn I• LEGAL NOTICE l!ll• Of C1lll1tt"11l1, LOI -'"'tlfl Coun!v Covn!11 ltat<:I, O••"llt'• C•lllornlt ~U On ,~........ 14, ltll, bl"or• mt, Whl(/I •• lflt PIKt Cl buillltU ot ti 1 Nt•t.., ,.uonc In •no ,., 11111 s111•. u""'n lt-!ft •ti m1l!tri nrt•l"" I< M" •"tofttU1 •tOllll'd StO'Ol'ltn C. t10llk lftl. 10 I"• P•lt!<' ti •~Id Mctdtftl. wit~ l'ICT!TIOUS I UllNlll --ft IO m• 10 Ill !Ill 111rton wllo1t lour monllll •!ltr "" ft!'I! .-..DllcUlf NAME SlAT IMINl n1"" 11 tub1trlbtd lo l"t wllMn I"• of 11111 l>O!lct ,,.., tollow1.,. Pttlon Ii llO!nt bvlontl\ '''"'"'"'I tnll tcOnowl~tll l>f llt.KUtid Ott"' l'tbtu••Y ''' 1'11 ,1 ll>e ""'' N. IClo.fHltYN Oii.iN H~Ol Pl\1111( l.ll'HOLSTE llY, IU w It!!\ ~I, (0\1• Mnt. C111lorn!t ,,~,, 110((9 (1mo1r>0ul, 11111 low1 S!. Cc• to M•t•. C1lllorn•• '1~1• T~I' bYll~tU II ~tint (01'\dUCll!I fl• tn i"dlvld~•I 11, C•m.,....,111 t1.,bll1~•d Or•"O~ ("ct•! 0111¥ M•rc~ 11 u it . .Ao•1r ), \fl! <Oll,t(IAL SE ... Ll [~K~lfl• ol .... Wiii F•1r• C Hvnhmtfl of ll'lf •bow tll""td •tO!'!ll•nl Nol1•r 'Ubll< (tlllO•"lt COOJUIY, ltMU'9\.ICHll, COLl!M.AN , Ptlfl(li>•! Ofli(f 1., MINYllltO I. HOWA•O lot •ne1lt1 Ceunty IH Ttwt1 •R• ciw111rv •••' 1"• ComMll'lcn E~•lru O••!JI!•· c1111 .. 1111 "'4 ~,,~ J!, I'll Tth Jll·lltl r.1 1111 Anw111v1 "' '""'"'"1• l'ub11,1'•d Qr11>11t Co,,11 01lly l'rlot 'ut111111toe1 O••not Co.111 O~l!Y "11t' M••(1' \. !T. II :-., ltl! •I-' ll '°"'f(f'I S )f, " )t. 1''1 ... ,. '· "' . .. . . . %0 DAIL V PILOT SC Frld., Man:h 1'9 1971 Yotcr itJ01aey's Worth OVE R THE COUNTE R Complete-New York Sto ck List . How Retii·ed Pe1·son s Em.·n NEW YOlllC (iP! Ft1<1ty \ Cllm-!•I, Nt"' Yorio. Slot~ E~,h•"llt fl le .. •• ,,._lfllvt lftll•.clMi.r 'l""llltMOI •I .,, ... 1.,.•ltly t t '" !Nm NAID f'rl(" flf .,., ~klllt rtl•U •• """'WP 1111rilff"'" tr ~"'mloaO." NASO Listings for Thursday, M1rch 18, 1971 Mo1·e and Coll ect Be11ef its Ab<lru1r ~ ... 1,,, ~n L~"° I/~ I I• AUIH I II ACMll'C tV IO """' M~t lb NEW Yill:I( 11\I") !'0$1 G•nr l ... n ·1•u1 !ilV lJ' l • ITmcnr c. II I ., • AdmtE• ttO By SYLVIA PORTER Mr A a 69 year..()ld self employed real estate dtaltr earned more than $8 000 lo sl year -far above the n1ax lmum the law permit.$ him to earn and still draw Soc1nl Secur ity bener11 s Nevertheless he c o 11 e c t e d close to all the checks to which he was ent1t ed Atr T retired cl(.>nred $6 000 r"erat1ng a hamburi;er stand a~ a sum1ner resort between Memorial Day and l.abor Da) last year -again see:mmg!y enough to ehminate all Social Security benef1l:l Nevertheless he got a rat por. hon of his benef11s too Atr F a rehred aceountanl eamed $4 200 $.1 600 preparmg income tax returns during Ja nuary April the balance 1n Ule form of a monthly retaine r of $100 from J uly through December for doing minor chores for a chent Despite the fact that his eanungs were suff1c1ent under the fam!har ' re!1remen1 test to precluCe his benefit paymenl:l /11r F aJso collected most ot his checks Mi lhons of Americans do not realize that the test for pav4 ment of benefits under Social Security 1s not the same for the self-emplo) ed o I d e r American as 11 1s for the person who "ork.s for someone else as an employe -s1mplv because t he self-employed person s income lS not as closely connected \Ylth hi s work as the employe s The confusion always has been a matter of deep concern to us ' said a SoC1al Security spokesman Anyth1nf? that will help people grasp the d1f ferences will be valuable ' Okay here goes -Under the general rule your annual earnmgs are the measurement of your retire ment If your earnings '~h1le stOI under 72 are SI 680 or less you are considered c:om plelely retired 1f you earn ()Yer that amount you give up some or all your benefits for the year -In addition tht law sa) s I hat no matter v. hat your total earn.logs for a year you will i;et a check for any month In 1Ah1ch you neither earn WaRes of more than $140 nor perform substantial SCP< Ices as a self-employed ptrson \Important note the hm1l on 'A hat you can earn 1n any year or any n1onth v.111 be raised under the bill now before Congress -probably to at lecist $2 000 a )ear and possibly to as much as $2 400 This though will not alter 1n any way the meS!age of th!S column ) Now comes the d1stmc hon If you IA.Ork for someone else as an employe the test of your retirement 1n any given month IS the total of your wages specifically under todays law whether you earn State Aid e Clain1s Firm Coercion Cahfornla vehicle reg1stra lions increased by almost one ha lf m1lllon dunng 1 9 7 0 , Department of ?i.lotor Vehicles figures show OMV Director Robert C Cozens said vr:h 1cles registered 1n the Slale on December 31 1970 totaled 13 818 869 - an Increase of 495 918 over 1969 Nevertheless the 3 72 per cent grow th 1n vehicle popul11 hon reflects a relatively poor year in the automobile 1n dustry and compares with 1n creases of 5 16 percent Jn 1969 and 6 3 percent in 1968 A1 o t orcvcle registration~ con11nued to soar hilling a total of 561 621 -a one year increase of 92 188 or 19 6 per cenl No less than 200 000 motorcycles have been pul on the roads of California 1n Just three years Fee pa id p assenger -n.~ fol owfno ht Fotcm ·~· 0 • S<ICll ,, l T • T .... o 0 Jo». lOl.lo Ad Ml I ) 0 I I Hied~ F n~I (o • > 6, Sc•n 0~ )\ 11.o Tr!Moll >l ii• ~1.o Add I>> >Ou more than $140 ror that month J11lon..! Secyrhlt 1 F~n~ln E 1U 1~ o lc•ntn E J'-2°' Tdco Pd 19 «' Allm I r f I ~•l•~~~~•n e:~t·~.~ f,, l ,, .. ~or~" ;. 1 .. !l;:~n'oo ,. i'4 !1f'fl1Llet160 But I you are sel -etnp oyed 1n .... r1ncc1 .. lndv1 (;11:1 Cn p ~ : ...-!: J~oe rJ~ 10 J ·1Ty OI. .. i ' : l • Ar1~e:'1nc0 the test IS not how much r1~1 1toc1<1_, l''b F•t 11 JO sc 1101 1 1~ 1 i~ unlttc • • s A• P oe1 1111> Bink Ina Trull I ~I lt 19 ~ic O!<> • foU~C '101 J o I Atl"d u!•l!i money )OU earn 1n the month 111 ~onco 5 1 1 11 s.c 11\t u i, s,."' ~o 6.,. ,,.., u" 1111"' » 3l ~ A• R'" '°* 111 11 sv1 10,11 , •Y Gb '' l 'r..'"" l 11 UnMcG I.> '•AJ1no1111rt1 bul how active you are , EmP s 1• l"I Altt 1 1 • "'s.1s com 10 1ot, us Br M 1 10 • Akio~• 11 Ir th hlVI Ilk 10 o,. l(hvt c 1 o ! • Sl'n•c• F 0 t 1 •US ' w o ;>'l '1 Al• Ge1 I 10 -)OU spend more an Hiru NC .;.i1, l5 RI E•t 1 f , ~nll•n 1 • l. us Tr•Ln .-, ""• A •• ~. 1n • 1 •< h lh I 5ll1w8os il b\o~IHfn \ l.fS.cGo lo 1 UnvAr I• 9•AbetoC :D " ours a rnon n a uv1 11"' ,,. .. w. 1111111 " 31 S.Vtft u J.t4• w , uo Ptft '" n 13 Alblr11"' :u busmess )our services are v. Nl:.~.k.' ,., .. c1:'"1111": ~ ~ u ! ~,,: 1: ""1:'" ~~11i.~""c. ff!~~ :~:S.~"'~ Consld.r .d ' .. •-tant••I FloUn Lr (l• •l .... ~..!'!',':.' l&•I •SRnpT1 "s3 .. V•lll•LD ,, ''1A••n<I .. :!Or uW .., v~ ~ 1• I , S C•l~ll I~ .. It VOUI Air I•~ t AIAmL! 1fU le b I 1 .... >lrllo1' Ge<!...., l • 1 !IQNE "•I • , "" Vlntf S1 ! 11 Al~t Co ~ un SS you can s U m I .u.r co 1 , ""' Goukl ti' 1 71.. 1"' Gs co 11 , 111-o ve11::ro in 1~ ~ 10 A lpglod 1 40 evidence ShoWlng that your :fi: l~cS :;, l!,: 9v!JF<: 1111 3~ s::.~~ c: i1: :;~ ~·.c.:.. In 1:~ "; A ~Lud "'I services were not substantial Airs 1"" 9 9~ ~ • ..., , ~1, 1 1 1SP~c•rv o. ,,. w1a1 .. "' ?4 ,, !11f:.i"C,,\1:c AVM Co ' t>1 GA Miu 2l ~ • 51•n<1Vn ~' ll W1111 Ila U'-Alkl Mil" o1Q despite the amount of lime Atoe,1 M l 1 • e"~" ""'' 1 . • , s a ;.,., • ., • ni.. w 11.~a~ .. • • dMI 7 D Acu.iin I" l •"' 2S'ii Grntl RE XI > 11 • Sl•n HPd 11 • )t W•1h NG 16 6\'o A 11.0 Pd U you put In Allwar J J"1 ~rev Adv ••• 151 s. II ~ ,, s W11 Tr Ill '> II Al ledS! , '° ACI01n /j 17'1. l7h '0"• ,, ) ••• SI 6 .. b c •lit •• 1 Wtbb Re II I 11\o AU~ SYPer -If you spend less than ArJY Ro• 1. ·~ ult tnt 6 1 , Svb" T v l , 111. w1111n1 w t 1c Alli• c11 cu l h th All., Sht l~/, 10'1 ~ro<ln 1 1:0... 5UQd• F 11 111) Wtld1'n ~~"' ,", Al/rl•IA .. ! oO :i ours a mon in a Air 1n<1 l ;~1 H•ro>er 11 ll>o 1< s"""' Et '' l' we n11 M ... • b J Albee 'to • ~ •I:. Httlth In I • u! TIME DC 11 • t ' Wtl F 6 111 11. !:~~; ~ ~·" us1ness your serv ces are A10err, n n >) He".., JO ~ ~ 1 f:~:~.· 'i1, ,h• ~:le,,•; 19 • ;,, ""'•rs u 160 never cons1d,ercd to be!~~a(., ,,"',}""~:'U~: 1 ; loTiv1or1 ,, 11wun "IA ,, i.~::,:,.A{,5010 substantial !~11 ("'1 ,l ~ ,:~ ~TJ!c "~': ~. ~! i-:~~· ~b ':1: ';' :z::~ ~ ~ ,:'• 1i Am E• pn 60 Jr d betw •• n All TKI! l • Molobm 10>1 10 I Ttot~m "' 1e6 llt W••~ ~ u 1 1: ArnHen o .. you spen Atlu ilfV • : .-. Hoovt• •• , ~~"" T•l«Pm s • • , W•1 vn1 13 ' o ~1~~ '1l:: 15 and 45 hours a month ID!i~nE~~ \g ,:~l:~:!~o11c!1 1i ... lf!{~~ 711 ~·:'~~m~ 'j"•; AtT>AJrlln • a business you r services All>I Crm 3 \ l~ How"' in 111 11 Tn Amo "•• J WlnJt 1~11 11 ' 21 AB'~' OS<> A n~nm • S,.. H~e -/Al 5 s ~ T~e m /\ 111 l"' W \C PL 21 1 !l !m8;:;~:! 11200 generally are not substantial Alpfn -..o • • tlii 1otvd l"P :!! ., n, 1 tnv co 1••1 !5 Wdwrd .. 1'I , :io Am ,..,, 1 :x: unless you are performing :;:: ~: J;" ~"' ~~.·: ~o 31, 1! • i ::;nv G "a ? ~ ~·1~~ 11 .f • ,; " C•n pt 7s J F A El l..•b H.i • HY•tl In! lJ I " • Toti E I.I .,. • YrdnY '° 3~. :r. :mc~~~"k high Y valuable services or Am ExP 9o~ '' • 1m1we s1 13 : ·~~, Trao:or c • • z on uni u 1•~ AC ySuv in instance ~fr G retired and !~ :"~" ~ l~~ 1\:::'d,.N~~ 11 , ,... ,. ., AErvs ,f" vi put his son 1n la\v in charge :mM~•t,: i/..: i~ 1~:: ~}1~ ~: X •• .__ ~i:1~.1t11\j 0£ hlS $5()() (l{)0.3 year bUSl/leSS :~ J..t.~Y ff\, ~~\It 1~:··c:..1 1 .: 1~.. ~~V~Ul~r::-~ He never sets foot 1n the !:::U: 11 "': 1j • l~;m ~n 1~; 1, MU TUAL ~~Ef~: ln~o office but Mr G makes au Anktto In IJ ,,~. lnl '"""' • I 1 Am I" • Ates In<! t 4 6'°" fnll..•11 C If ., 14, AGn ~d ti~ final key dec1s1ons Mr G s A a Ma~ 11 t. 11,. 1n1 Mun 1 21 " A GtntnJ ~ AtkMoP I)~ lJ"-Int SYI •7 •I FUNDS A Gnl~ en lo services are highly valuable ArkwtG 1 • u •'""'Ii:, 16 , 11 . Am Ho ,1 '° to the business and he can l !:~! ~ ~-:. ~~ ~~co1>~'J 1' ·, , ~ 'ti~,~' f COilect benefi•• ~',::.~• Sv 1~•: 1!~! ,J~uh!v,", 10 ~ 11-.. •m Ho~ u .., .. ~ ..! ,,', -.·.~ .....,.,.... ~m .. 1,",',',',"o N t I th l\lCC Sor 66 I! Jame• F •• -,.. ow 0 exp &lfl e cases AllGI• LI ,~. u I Jl,.,..SbY I) !O). A Ml lC. ! '° M A ad h ti .. 000 Auto Sci ,.,, • Jiiiy Fds 11.o ]l INVEST NG ln<l•l'Y ~ .. s 91 ... Ml c . OI' r m e IS en re "" ll•lrO "' s • s~ Jo1IVI\ M 10 I ~n. COMPANIE' INTGU un8Vll ~~ /f:P 0 s be£ore a stroke in May Ba~erM ot. 211. 1<01 CP 2 ; 1nv coA ll 69 1• 9S • •• n Ila! l"ntC • 7>l l(MS 11\d If 1 15~ NEW YORK C,t,P) In~ C.ula t2• 9~4 ~"ftPn3to 016 P'r.J) ••d him he was com Bantr Hy .... !lit I<• 1a• s1 o • 91. ,., 10 cw ~e c n ln••i Bc1 111•,. 03 •m '.,•,, ',', -O•~m fl I ]6 )0 I •1l1SI '' 00 o< " <••oo<o > " -•o • Ill Pl\I •u~r "' bf " v• 1 Am SI> p ill:rb Pletely relired from May on 111rrng .t ~. •1.:o rl(alv•• JI Jn '"" Nat.....,. "'cc 10s ""I • 15 s l A sm~i l to Bandt F •IV. '7>1 l(•M•n 11 lJ, i!lnn 01 ~t ~rl!lt• Mui 10 •ll 1l ArnSoAt 70 and collec ted benefits Mr T Baum• I 60>.· •1 111 K1t1 Grn l 1 • Cfa ... !nf • • p 09 I 51 • 91 AmSAI II\ 1:l Elav!• Mk 24 ~ 15 K•YJfTI • • S "" Jrke• •1 w1 en S 0<:~ 10 Cl 11 11 A!T' s d was retired durmg the lime Btt<:l\m 31'• ll'• 1Ce1r r u , 11 .. tnes~ etur 1 t• Se ec1 9 20 9 19 • Sid au ,, Bttlllf ~ 11• 11\lo l(P~M C• 11 I) "n VI Pv ISi 1111 he was no t acllvely mvolved Btnl s10 11Lf. u K•l•H 3~: J> ~okl(b:t~; bQuJ.11nv 11nn 111 SY !'T&ft~u •I with bis hamburger stand and ~:1: ~.'\! !~, !J\, ~:llw:m J,: ,f~ l11~t<1> ln111;:r:v A ... 1!':1 'l: 'i ~ ~~.M~T L,60 h COli ct d be f o. f 81t>I) IA! 9*11 10 Kelly Svc .,,1 JZ A"tGn l 10 l 41 1 Hn<ock I II I 9'1 AW '''' < >I SO e e e ne 1 ... , or 11111wp1 W 11>ti11 Ktulf E llft 12 1Ae1ml••llY Fun<1 J"""''n n,tntt ..,mzrroc seven months Air f d1dn t a,',',.!,•• a,,',~ ICe,,", ,• .. •, 11 • 11 G""th 111 1 '° 1Cevs1...,. Fu"'1• Amtr<>n 60 ...,, ...,. I( " I••• 1'~ 1nccm • 3' 4" Acollo I~ U. II O AmPl•k 60 work at all in A1ay or JuneB0~_H,,• ',' •-,1C~1 ,,•,c t1 JG 1n,u• •:it1ott Cu• 91 i<1 ol 19B1,..MF lnc,g -~ ,.. ... Ji, 4 Aav ir• • •l 6 S Cu• Bl 20 Q!l 71 !7 Ami• c 111 aad v.orked no more than 10 B0~•,M.C~ 19 L 1,•,• ',I~,",',' • ·~ ••tn• f.$ •~ 15 11 ot Cus il 4 s ,, 9 lll AMI" Inc ~' -"'n -, I • 9\o At!llla d I •S 111 C111 l(l I r/6 I 80 Am1>P<1n llo to 35 hOUrS 8 month fro m 11,~,.~.;.1• 10'", ','", r.·~.·. '°,' JS '6 "'-1111 e 911 9 it Cul Kl S • SU Am1>tK C~ p "" " " " :ll\<o JI• All Am F I? '° 1"' S1 19 ,! 20 96 Amstar /Q J uly through December so he 11rlnk• o.!o0,.L•n<11ttt s H•A! 1 1 111191 u1 s110~5115A ilrk$ St• 2s·~ ,~.,. lftM Wd 10 " 10~ A p1h: .I'd 11 ll 13 26 Ill 53 ! ,. ! 99 A::;~!~d PIJi! \Vas able to co llect bene!1ts 11,.,.ng "'' 11 """ L••1on ~"' J"Amc•P 6Sl 1u C111 ~' ~G• s>o" 11 '' 8rSll lier i o 19'1'11 Ltldv (o 18'• 19~• Am Bui J d ) IQ PQ 8' l S9 • ll A:::'a~o~d 1 !or eight months Buclcb M 11 , 11 Ltl'I cna1 21. •, •"' D•ln 1121 11 n Kn ckb 1 &1 ~ n ,. 11 >1 • Ir h doubts 81Kktv1 11 1f> 12 Lt \ur r, 16 16~, 1'm Eqtf univ1 I Kn!(k GI 10 6 l ll A~<' ~,"I YOU ave any llunng n ll? 4 L""'' llF 11, 1 Ame E'orou Ltno~ Fii 681 IS orp V{ bout hlh J Burn Sm '.JO 3Clhi,.ln8c1•I 111411 CaPlt ,1!100lle• Grn •91101JAMC1vl ?O a we eryouor a cosec1CL•e1 i~.n Llllunc '" o ... h'lm• ,051051 1..~. R"r.1&H1 ... :PaoU;~" is relative are handling yourself ~:~c!.vN c:1, 2'~t:fi'"c:d.,. ?,; ~!: ~nv~1 ~~1001 tto: ~111 ~~! ~~ ..,;-L Clll'~ so you can colleet your ma• ,'',M•-•N J.1 11,,'' ~,, ,'~•-•''c" , • 1j • s::'~ 9.., 1G n LU• 1nv 1 n 1 i.s II.PL "' B "° . .., -. ·~ 16 • 1 • ""' Grl~ • n 1 se L nc Nu 1 n "6 A~A Svc I 06 1mum of retirement benefits ~!: ~ s~ , •1 1 1::_: ~:'I ~!: 1ji1 1~ ' :::; ~~1 ~ ~ 1~ ~~ tgn11n, s~v ! " :.~:l:N °,: i Put your fact:1 to11ether v.1t h C1ps .... 1 • ••M• Rtv ''~ "••mN i11~ l!<l Jll ca""° J1u1111A•c.~ o~ .. 1 c C60ll\ II r ••••• M•ll-I .., II Anc~Df Gro•P (fD I I ~J' ~J ,., ' P<• ! (19 care take them to the nearest C•P TK J-. ,., Minor c 1 1 ' CaDlr •" t ,, Mui 11 % u ~ Artrr• o s C•t• CP S • ) • M&r Miii "' 10• Gr"''" 11 111301 l•ll> r,o fl 11 Ar t" R lvDv Social Security office and ask C1r11 51• JI-a l 1 M llrowr J51o J> • lncmP t JS 9 11 Mnvn• tn a 91 t a1 11rmcc s 1 r d (••I Gru ,,., 7S • M111! LI> 1\111 • l'a Inv 9131"11 Mltlli n 136 S'~ Ar"'t 017 ~ or gu1 ance C•K NG 11~ \1"' MCCP " S• l Vtn 0 11 •I" M~! Gr ~ 6 ~5 6 tl "'"'' p'" C&vn4n :: 17 ~ l>.;. McOutv l•~> 11 A• rort <6 s 41 M111•c~u1tn Cc ••mJt C'< ~~ ~en eo "" 7•\.o Ml'Olc If 1 ~ A•t l-louqh en FreeO S 3• 9 ~ fl m R I IQ ~nVt ?S 1~11 t l>td "lmlu ll 1 F~nG A !II &1! ln<IPD 6M 1.)11> o Clll'D 90 e v I.OD 10 o IOl1Medl n 311 161 l'o"G 6 t IQ I MI M~i. I fJ lSl 1>.rvn n(!l C~Anc• A' l••Mjlrd In 11 19 SQ<~ f7' 6tlfllftn "r l '" ~~l•ndo 110 t1ia !OI 6 0 6>Mt1tr En 1 l l1 Sc C ~ l•6 571Ma•• G~ 171131! As~C' cll •O c 11 11 ,1 •Mouw 2n,? lllltlf.>" ,,. '""'"" 1 i• 116 9••11 P•~w Cntlll " A~ 1 MIOld Ct 9 IQ flavr ~ t~• t•O Mot1 •Sf fl.I A~s.cl OG JO Bea cl1 Ma11 ill" H•I Cr. ... M f •11 lllCll i K ... l ... C:llM Clll ~";:~. ~r -A-C!'ll<rlelrM I Cl'IMINY )U )l 11 I Ill I/ti c"°" ..... •l 11 11 11 _, cnttv,_, .o A u1 ~11, Jl -.+ , Cl'lll i!!MT • ll I)'-' H\ 1• •-•~~I~ 1 1~ 11 !lll. illo ,,,,. .,. !~IM"fi"r' I! 14 1)1" l]l'o 111 Ml I' pf ,, 111' 1Po 1Po II l"nMI ! <Cl JS )lt l<" -"° nRIPc! UP n 1111 11'1. 11•-~ct.RI ct NW IQ SI 51 )I -+-1-'1 (l'locPu j'~ U 11 lO ; 10 .... -~ !htll l:t•1 l<l d "o "'~ d i• -o h<l1C1l CYJll I JS! 5~'0 U~ + ~ !'ltloCll o Di ho i IU. Id ~ "I I l hrom1 ,• 176 n•. n n i,, ""cml Pl 19 l'lw 4\1 ~ h Y•r I~ , ..01' <O "I) -'1Mla SJa • H'lio 1+~ 16 ,_,._ lnn8ell (• )6 11 le~ 10 1 -... :~a G~E,. '¥)5' Jl .,, ., .o1 -4 l\MlllC 1411 10 13 II ll'IO ll I + <,. iJ~ln 1 IO 1' ll o 21 ) n~ -111Sv< 1l'O 1111,nttll • 11y111vSO 1J 21 t 11 t 111> --t-o !VII\• Pl&! IJ 1J • 1~' ll'• -11• $1n tt ~~ ~1 ~·=~ 1:•: ~~l~G IO•l o d1•l1-c Cl!~ t0 1l' ll\.o ~ •-1 \tVE llll 11' ... 11lo ~ 16 .. -1 ""' !I• :J.1 JJ 1 31~o JJ\o. + J i1·· P 11 ~pl 15 )• lll )I. ...o. !ill 79 19 • 1f 9 -.. l~tl1l'e1 ro 11t JI I JI.: JI._ ~ cN'1 ~ ::r' SQ ll 11 , 11 l'o CNA D A 10 10 l•, l ••o 14 , _ o. COO•I S! Gu l 1f 11 , lo ,c1~G1p11t ~· as a~ 6.1 I + 'Cr>e•C I y • 1;-.. 11 ?• • "' , Cr>e• 8! G 66 111 u t 11 I• (011 Pal 1411 !5 '' 1• ~ '' c,111n1 A -t l'61u ,..., ColnsR1d '' f>I-• \\\o <, ,.fooln•l 160 12? '!r 1!1 : '!1',= .... C~I: :::",,11115 Ho"• ll>o 17...,_ .. cBs 1~ .IO 11•,, T>o 1 • _,_ C9~ pt1 Ill ...... f!o •lo-1Cou G•I 176 lO l!'4 JS 1 l.1 t -, Cal Piel Cir 314,, •I •• +.cos.ooh 110 I< 1/'o 16 , 11 -•i1Cmb En I JO :n o 8 11-,.-C<nbE pt!JO n lt•• :1'9• 79\l-" cn..,So v •O l ??>, ''' 1 \ii_.. , CcmwE ?lCb !20 61 61 61 -1 CME pl9" JI 17 1 )<\ .... J6 -1 (omE ?!10 5 lG>o 10 201, + \Ii Comw O 60 flf f •l 'O .O 1 -I • CO!T'O pl1 12 :n t\1 t ' 9 1 Como~! ~e 6 1J U IJ Comsa SO 'J j1 • lO'o 30•+ Cone Ml1 t ' • l '• I • -~, CcnnMlv ,.,. il'tlll •l ·~ •l -(•fCfll'lfl( 611 ~ ~> ~! ~~ ~ Conca, lilO 17 J, ,,: JI>-Confd1PI • 39 ll 1), 17, ~onE~<ol J HI 16 }!>, 76 1 ~OllE' pl Cf 61 4 IU l l \If ICoi Fd1 1 :'ll )6 JS l•• :u , ICO" FGoiJO l' I• u u 1 '"" r eog~ 1 ~ l' Jl JI 'Con L~3!np 19 lJ , ll • ll -. ConN> G I 11 100 , loo 100 +1 Cons l"owe 1 191 ' • 71, I + ' ConP .. Oil 52 I" 11 < J~, ll'lto-1ConP.., P•SO l~) 1' 1J•, 1l ->o Cont.._ r Lin 173 lJ J • 11 1 •COti!Con 160 ! 19 !9;. 19 1-Cot(op 01; f )4 1 Jl JI ~ •CMt Co pl "'" i~. , ... _..., 1 c1cp ,,1,.,,~ JI s~. ~ 50 ->c1Cpp!61SO l .u, 'I •l C<>nMlg 5 ~ 'H ii1 : if: ~i ; : ~E!~iJfl~ lS 1 .. 11 1 11 1 -~onlTtl 10 !ti •!I lot'• •!~1 -f.>"l•ol 0~18 ll H>.;. If-. 11 .. -• 1 nO~! Pl•~ lUO 170 11-. 11i-~•Con"""'1CI Ito l I'-l'• I"• •COOl<Unll JO I :IC > 7~' 1t > -f'M!W' In 1 .II) 10 1P, II 11 1 <>-• (~• TR ll J• l 1 J•\o +••Coopl ot\)I ,1 •I • ..i, OI •-"Copel•"" !10 ~1 '~ ti M "' , rcoelige Si a I c 1~• 1r , f.-1\CopwldSI I ll• ,, .. )} 21 Corl" Ml o>~ I' .,,,., •101 ~' I lo-} Co GJW 1 soe 1 ~ 0 IC Cow•1 Com ~, 3 ~ Jtl, 3~ I ~ '1 Co• Bd~,1 )Q ~ U• O 9'o + • CPC In 1 IQ 111 1\o ,,,. '1\.-\ocant 11.0!l JI'~ J1• ~1"f,--(tdl'I" 7l I 1Q 20 10<-C•oc~N I «f 11 " • ,1 , ·~ + • c o"'cK ~ '8 16 0 1~1 ~1 ... 1Crcos•Hrid ! 1' J1 3" > li + t CrcvCon &II n 131 7J , 21:w. 1--1 co..., cor-1~ 18 u Ir ,,.~z~1 110 l• 11 1 1 lll -cr"1 glf 1 ti ? :0. ''• '' • + •CT~ Corp 40 I l ' > ~I 1 ]I f -Cud ~~ 0 I to "' •~ " -.>. ('~<'hv pll 11 !•I 1 • l ?J i.. Cu!lq~n 11 A• " , ,,,., 11\ol +. cu..,mF-n Cl sta 11 • ~ 1• , -ru,.n o uq 1"1 l it 11'"" ,~,+'-"Corl•W ! 7& 2' 21 o 1'I ..-t Curl •W ~ ''0 1>16•t• r•1-1 1 0 21 :;.1, 3'• l -i1Cvcc.,.. 10 ~ , ] -f ~ ~ Cvor111 MMe l " ~ ' ) 11~ l .,., > °t \~ ~. 1 1n o ! I I 1 000 1 OF Oil PA INTINGS WHOLESALE WAllHOUSE OPfN TO TH I PUILIC automobile regrstrallons hit 10 !XW 155 -up about m 000 over lhe prior vear There v.ere also 1 758 685 trucks and l 299 716 trailer Tax-exempt (state rounty city etc ) vehicles totaled 194 692 Ma1·ks 25th C ~t~U I~ 11•11\IOtx l l1 ile•<Ot1 USOll!IQ M,1~ •• 1•0?l<r?o1GSpl °" Cl I ii klll I].,.. 141, M dw Gt 19 10 ll~ g .C:nl ~ l2 9 ll MIOA Vo '10 6 ! A1MI lr•n o C.l tOtl t U l MIH ~ !f Elt-G11/t'076SMood•Co 1'Pn 11.1~""~"'1 Cl,,h5e • !'6"° MIU Mui l• IS Bon<l<1k 6 )I 1 •1 Moody s ll Cl 1• ?t AllCJ;,EI l 36 1~ ;9 ~ ''11•H'-l 1? , II so•;. OFF Ult• EDINOEll SANTA AlrlA At tention Investors 1100..tOI LIFE INSUllANCE tor n low 911 $21 .80 Monthly * ... "" ·~ 846 1245 tlll (Ill • or write Richa rd F1b1•n l .. l1r.r•d Fl"111telt1I Ad•l1or r 0 lo• '101 Hw11ti"tto11 hock Collf 92~47 •090 JS I Last year I 287 719 new autos trucks trailers and motorc}cles were registered in Cahforn1a and 455 421 out· of state vehicles chanj?ed to Cahfom1a reg1s!ration Offset ting the.st increases the owners of some l 247 000 vehic l es left them unregistered lot v a r 1 o u s reasons Junked lhem or drove them out of the state Ba nk R educes Ra tes Loa n Cr ocker-C11Lzens National Bank announCiXI Alarch 16 a 1 ~ percent reduction 1n 1ls real estate loan rates eHective 1n1mediatel) The reduction the fourth this \Car brini::s the rale for a pnme single family res1dcn hal loan to 6)~ percent The bank Satd 1t will consider financing up to 80 perrent of the loan on .a maximum 30 year term --- you're never nervous with our service seventy-one• at ~~~L~ 2eGO HAl\80 '9i llLVO I COSTA Ml!SA (11•) 64()-9100 Cn<lt~ pf !OJ IOI M 'I"' " IQ t ' llos pn S! a 38 t It Mii' Fd 9 1• 9 Ila Ali< <>11 U ',",'"·· ~. .. ,", ·,, ·•• •• ·.•.',",,i ]! 3' , BCKI Fdn I! n 1111 MIF Glh • " • 2.1 A!IC.H•Et DI ' lJ :: ~~· v ' s-. 6 BOl!Pll I •6 9 1! M11U~ Gv l l'(l ll II All II cnflo l Ch1nUt I lt 16 • M!H VI G l~I I',_ 11,.,.n FJ 1 II 4 lt Mo OmG I 81 6 ll A Tl Reh Dfl IS 1110 ~ s' I ~ ~?11 \1 ~ Bank Year CIMt; :n l?~Mo R~cn 1111 8V(QC~C~•n MuOrnn1~to11i<;AllRenpr l Cl••~ Ml :l'9 • :IO Mod Sc 1\ 1 I 611 le~ IS lo 16 60 Mui ""'" 17 tl !7 Ol Attllch of!'° " ' C•u<nt 61 l,M..,,Wk R 1f1 21 C•""n 19 1311~1Mut Trtt 1tl0 )QOA•1 Ch~"' ! Cl ntn (II "'. J • Mool Col 10 ~ 1o>, D Ul<l J 18 •.ll NEA Mo t 10 7J IO fl Al,, (Ot'fl l'90 ~I '' ' 151 l l l • (ICl'NCSo "J 1 2l lMoo<fP ll ~o 7l1 ~atW S IOl•1 .76N•! Ind 1 l211,1ATO lnc Q!~ Coo~ l S5 Moo<e S 1 ~ 'J l6 NY '/nt H 911~ !S N•I Secy, S•r Au Otl P o~ ~ 1~ ~ ,j Everett J (Ev) Svoboda Co n Fii I 11. Morron IC Ii, 11 BuiM l'G 111 Ill iln•n 1 ;1'~0 Autom D~• 19J I ~ It Colon S1r JI J JI M llf T <\ 7S 1 1<) CG Fn 10 QI 10 It Bond .110 ! Sl ~11 orn,• "' 16 SI 16 J Q 8 • Curren Y n1anager at Bank com c ;a , ~ , M•~' "'' 1 1 , f 816 , 0, 01v d • ~l , 9 .. vco oro r • S d l Com! Sn >I'll 1t-i.. Moten M S' 6 1 !~f1"'1nv l l 3 9R G wrh t n 10 n t>.vcQ c~ wl O 1~mencas pr1ng a e coml.".-1 1l Mo Cub 1111'11 101 <hr 665 1?1 PISlk 1~•a<i~v~~v 0~~:i.i10 11 l• • 11 • " .. 4!4'4• EdLn"er branch 1n J-lunt1nuton '""'"' ri ?s • 76l M~' e 11 • •1 • C•nt ~hr 11~•u 1t lneorn s s 6 o 11.vn' inc 19 , 11 ,., c CPm!lh 1 lJ Mun•l>P l •l ·c~a"~n11n'""' Soc\ IS19 JI ... I ?•O !~ 1 , I Beach marks his 25th \Car Com P" !•)• lt'1 MyPr LC '• • J~ • 861~11 11 t n 01 Ne1 G ~ t •110 v ... ~~~ .,"11 1 10 IQ 7~ C""'P A 1 • I > NCC I"" 1 o I (pm St 119 1 '6 N~u~ (r l &JI '~ O with the state'AJde bank th1s Cme1 r ..... 16 1•,,N•~vco U•\I.• Grvltl s·~ s9'"1,uw ~111 11s1 1 15A•1tt 1 ll 111 ·~ 9? •8 ' lf • -B-1,,..p l~ ! !1 N1!Cft rR 9'01 0•1 !n<;Pm 71S!'1N•wWC1J•l1•61 month mPI ,, I .... N•I G&O 11 . 1. • SPK 911 l OI Newton 1J 1111 01 B~ .... ~· • PmrP~ 1' J " N K~p S • !'-(halt Gr Bo• Micro ~t 9 1' 7 1• 51 "' Svoboda \\ho }Olned the con P1D 1l41'""N•TLb u'l..tS r ca~t 1 .i 1,,1 Nor•61t hJll~l'B~~otr 61 '" " " " ' • 1 '· J? ba"k as a clerk (pn Roe\ J1 ll N•t Med 11 JI • Fun<1 10 114 H" Oen''" 1 } 1 l B~ 1 GE 1 ei " at the San Cont •n l J N P~IPll! !7 ... FrRI ... ~' 93 M Dmra& t n 6" B~ngor Pur1I CooPf l ll • 11_,, N SecR"' 11 , 111 $hrtid 11 t! IJ OJ 100 Fu"" lo 5< H 'II) B~tigP Pl 7 Francisco headquarters 1 n co-tnc '~ :i. N•t ""'o"' 1, 3, sPKt ~ 111 10&0 101 F.,11d , n 10 61 Rk 'c 1 J• 1 .. 6 ha' bee" tn charge Of Corp S I • S•Nll Slv• • C\.o c~ern< 11JltJl1 1.,~4 /mS 111111$3,ta~\~l 'IV 1 " to1m Yr 9 '~N EnoGE II to Co on~I ONtl 11 1.!!J 'ol an~or ~gt th S d I Ed fr C'"'' ~ "~' lS " NJ N11 C. lt • 201> Eoo' '" •110 Mn~ a~ 'I I~ P.atbO ?ll e pring a C inger o ice Cro" Co ll 36\• t.11c~1111 F ](I 1 )() Fon<1 1 ,1 11 ,1 oon AIM 1119 ll :ii B• n ci;i l! N be 1962 Cr c~ R I I N11n A u u • cr .. !h 6 11onTc s~ M ~ll• Fla c re to liJncc ovem r c~1 " F '"' 1n>, N ~ '" B •• ; •S inc om 9 ,, lt 10 Pact l'na e '6 'oJ B "' 1~ '' Clive 10 CIVIC affairs he Cv~·~1 c '~ '. Noi;& c;, 13 • 1'. Vtnl l? ) II "' "•v 9 0 • 05 p, ! D•MB Lb1 t"l01NEu .:i 1 l• 1•,c.-Gth 1 11 1Pnn \q ~ll 81 r~ ~d "' " • ' ' " ' '" ' 1s a member of the North g•nlY M 111• ll Nw N• G io 10 • com~ Pd s 30 J 10 r>• M111 1 ' 11~ ~" nl 1~ ISi Co lilt 11 •NW Pu5v 13 o J • Cwl n ill! 1 u ! l"h ' 1 ' ~IV ~ ~l h 11 I llunlinglo• Beach Lions Club oa ~ O•• l J•• Nox11 c11 i• •so • c .. 1" c i 11 190" ~. m '" 11 ~ I •~t L•~ i " g• a Gen ll'I. J•, Nucl R1c 12 '" [()<fop "' I~ a 11 ?llP n• • 11 J 12 51 Fltvk C; ~ 1-funl!nglon Beach Chamber of ala Pc~ • 1 ~o~1vv M n•• l7 1 CPmP•I 111 1 u Pon !'~• ~ e 1 11~ n~1 1 • Oa•,tn P 1 J •Onfn Ari 9, 10 Comp d o J 1' Pion Incl 11 1113•1 II•• F'" 1 ~ 10 ' "' '" ., '" " '" ... • • • ~1. " ' Commerce North Huntu:gton Dav 1 JOG s • 6 •Ollie Ferr 11 • r. come Fd it l~ 11,., "3n 1nv , n "7• r. ,,... n 1 n h Cl b f °'r. Mir 19~2'0•01 Shale ••I Comstk 1 •'91Plgrth fll,67 1 P• Oc• l' !J '"• Beac Rolary u lun c. 11• lll 11•. """ 001 Scan 1• , B' conc:o d 1 .., 1...., Pr • c, n~ B••cn A, 11 61 I• , B h K h r 01eor 1" e • ''gDlc 'r~c ~ o'CDr'•Ol '" 11rt"1'I Crwn l•~' •1 I' ·~P• Qt) 11 • t1ngton eac n1g ls D OHlb/!"J51 5p,.'"M11 S'•J •conueGlll ln N"• ni11n,11cdnl6'1 1i2, Cl b d I Otll'l lnl 11'~12 1 <mon U ,H1c0,.11 1 ~'I I)' Ntlo J~tO r•ll•~rr"I "b 111"1 o um us an IS re11surer Od c~nT "'• 11. g"'' TP n , u con• Gin 1n 15 11 o!Pro F d 1 "m • r ' Hew 60 t• • , rlh S di 'Ith 10.1 Br 2'•llTvt•N" a o•cor<>ldllnll•ll"•o "tl <1"'1r'11n •1i o e pnng a e n e C an S oew•¥ F •, •, •1 cat 1 '11 .,cniv c1o 1 111,.,111 cvar ~ J •1 ~t.., t• Ill ?l ?~ A~soc1ation g •,";',!1 5(,. '( 1~ =•,,", ~', s r n l'lO v a • o M l"•uG s.. r ~J 11 '' 11~ ~ 1 n 1 • ' ., '" '/I Crn "Dot ' ' 1116 p " "' F~ ~ E !I D l ~: lleres1dcson \Vhit11evDr1\e 00 !}'n,, "•' •,.~:,••,,",, l ~·vq111111111 c~~1 el 1!'1,. c • -"r 1 1'D•• tr-cu r,. 1e•n<,. 0 111 1nllunt1notonBeac:h\\Lthh1so•P"J 11 ll•P&no1 0 l Otc' '1J!I Gn rnoo11s1 1 n,1r <1 P "' DP<:u• 10 1 IO~o P1 I< Dr U U 1 oei..r 1l61 lll9 lncCl'!I ~ 1 •11 Be<itl Jpf 2JO 1\ Q l• \\Jfe Ahce The\ are lheDnd"L 1 &•11 l6~1"nrk1>1 ! 'D•ll~ 1~68~ nveot !\ellolRri•! ~ • Dpw Jo 49 0 , • ..,, f'8 kV (,f l I 1l ' DQCfll Co• 15 \.ll 1J 90 V \ ~ ~ I 9" Ile kt~ PRa 0 Pareotsofthreech1ldrenandoav •OB ?S 16•P~kw i 1 1 ~.0 .,. 1;91 i;o vova9 1 •11oa~~s1 110 96 ?J Dunkn 0 1~•19• Pal c9,n ll ,. Dfv! d 1) ~IJJ9 P•v~r p <11'11 I B~Tnrr loO l '9 have one granddaughter o,n• "" t, •••P~111..., P • 6"'o•v L 1,41is1t 11n1re Ml'O c.IR• o~ 11 • O' on H 11; >Pnv1l t 1' 0 E4tonS.tlcw~d ~t !Ir lit l61l61) John .. 6 1 El Pont I• t P1Yl Or • ll R~a~ 1 t •Sclklt Ft.no n • Lii" 8 F~ll 5,, 1' I 1l I Petri l.'I l )11, G""tn 1 (1 I In! nv ~ 1••1 Blo<~HR I 104 Eberl " 5 • 5 t P'""•les r l• l~ toc~n t 1 , <o<I 1 J•61 Bue Bell I 't 1 E ton~" ' 11 """" P>t l 5~•<1 o l)lnl• r 1••11 ,..., fl lu'1 ! r I i"' " . " . '" " " " " • ' • " ... I ' ' . " ' " "' ' ' • • • ' " ' " EOoc $'<. 1• 1 Pl'& ~•I 1 Sn<~ 1 •I Cc., 51 1 ~11(61ROfl~e11~• "' 11 'i••'',',', '°0 '°o 1~.•0 0 0•1 r:i..-I l 67U~l5f v #~,,.. R<'f'ngC4 •O 111 l • J 1 1' I E<r 1v 300 J•1 110 1Ct~ i'b •h • • • Id• lie It Pell !lorl u' "IOI'> l•r<I ~~··P'n.-J l<'I! I EI NJt .~1(1 1""<ub l1 1111u1 1 •n•11r°""111n1 ,1 ~'''' Fl!t<'lm 5 Pl'lof.>" too e~9 1 Jl~t t<•,.,1•r! l!c<'•n "" •1 "' 1'1 No~vr s ".~ ! A 1 1 1" 111 ~tl sr•rs u., ,, ' Bo •IV~ '1 7 1 lns1u·an cc Post Gi ven El c~"' • • Pin~'" 1'0 11 9 110 ,1 <,.,. c;~ 119 o• F\r " t 1 E<noS ()t 1~ • 19 •Pl tin l i•~~nem rd un•v~lt Bo•<<!• i• '1 • • James :\t Seghers has been appointed an assi ~tant manager ()f New Yo1k Life lnsurance Compan) s Nc1Vporl Beach general office ac cording to general n1an:i.ger Wilham S Cosentino En• ~v \ 31 JO Ppr1 HI( 1 ~ n r•< e ,_, 31 • 1 , 'l r1 r r.i e~, 'v It 1 '" P~\ 1 r.. I I" 1011 ~n ~an 1001 9~1 ~cu n< •rt En!Y >I f ! Proc Pl I? l • •11.-!~1,111! '~t '° • En co n J 1 l"•o Go I ' • 'l"m• Fun~~ 8 oo~! 1 •I E4 I .,I 11·17~ l"ruo Mn ,1 3 C•at 91121~8• R ll Mv 1111 E~Toc 61/ f'bS tl' 1 ~SJDll lnvoil 11 6f1ll'Brl tMvef1 F>PC ... "1 ? 1 Pvb S Nt I • 1) I IJ f H 1"r ti ' 1, 1~ fl I p~ 4l• FPA fo folO Pub t P 11\ '"'h 6 1"]'11 _,.ll•P~ lo•:1t FB Coco "/ 1PY"Pt 11 I. I '•1P t9SY I "V ?Ill ~,y \',. F•ll C 21 11IP11..-n•t 1 l~ •o 1 • 'wlnv r 1 lll 111 P~"~G It F~bT('ll; l•POro ~. ~· 1,,...~,~1$o~rrtnvlJ..SSl 01 •'""U\.lll F ~a ~.1~ O•ICM 1l 1I• T 1 lilU~C•cl•• 14•?'!1 ~"s':.~0 ?!' r r 9 1 1, 1' 1 r Fn nC•1 I'"' I Frrn l"I '"" j''l""'"S~n. l~ F n<lllv l! 17 fl •non Pr 101 I 'I Ov•m , , 4 01 <tntt ~I fl tt • ~ r ~ , 10 f-<1P )I l ' l;!•M•I ( It '~ lftdu\I J~I •JI St'~"'"' Fonn< A.;v'E l1Q Seghers }OlllCd Ne1~ ' ork ~~7g :.:..r :, .. ~! I ~·:~~<~ ,~ I~ ::.~"(" : s: : .: !m.., ~" r ~ ~ ~ ""r" Co Life 1n l969 as a f cld un FGllr< 1 1 ,,., .. ,,... 11\,t!,JF V• !lllllfl Fdvc 1 1 t08 11ud~·~"1 a derv.r1ter in Los An~cles A s~ :MI M~ ,i. 1•. ~~~I:~ ?' l 'IF~• 1"~'5111'~ SI n ~Cl'! ~ Buov IV ~ d I I' P~ •! ) ' JI• p "•v 3 ~ 3: g~~ ;~· 1~:: ~!o t)p 'i;:1~ ~ Cllr P an agent hi5outslan ing saes 1 F1 WJn , 1 Rt!'" o •,, ~. 510(~ 1n111 115 sioc• ,,Mll•'<l~~n~11~: ,'ft d I r d h f th " c~r r r ~ii' "' 1 •v • Fs! Mui I ~Ill t jl S<1'H' vl>d I v recor qua11r 1m or Cr. 1•.. 1 <tcoe. 01 1; 1 N 1 ,~1 0 c1~ ,'i!,~rl ~~~~g·rri company s Star Club j ~c~ w r.<> :~~'~.I ~ 1~ 1 ~~!, 5 ,:!: ·~ ~' Sl 7l ~.';',, 1 1 8 1 .II fl u nd1 '" A nal!\oe of New 01leans ~~,,,00 1~, 1 ~;::,~11 '" 01l•'7h ~!' l~ J{/ ,11 ~v~~· f'J 111~\r;:;u~n9unv0 P.lr Se.gher s 1s a gi 1duatc Fftd c;" , s1 '" l••<" , 1 111 o f S 't C 11 Fa fl(!•ro G"' Ttchncl J9J •JI (A'1" c~,,., O 1 ftl1 !I o e gt> c,.,.1h u1l11'' T~mp .:1 1,•:,2,' •1 C•d•r'ICr •~d Lo d DP I ln<Ol'I l1!1S u TcrMR .., cc ( U\~lRna) .Rn C BU Mii t 4tUTr1nC11> 'M S'1 • r' h JI •n 11 a In nu~ lllOI ommeo S~c~ 101111 71 T iv E:<t 11n1 J t!~~.;i~L~·•5 Un1vers1ty 1n C icar;i:o e Is ••t•Dt '°' '""'" 111• '"•'.., cu ""'lctr ~~~~a" &'~ '! 11 n 1:.:t G~ 'l M 1 3 ~ c~~ ~~ 1 1o 11ct1ve 10 local \OU!h RroUp~ • I ... at<! I" !O 1hltl !Oii 1<111 (lrtleo ONTC t ll ID2fl lw~c '"" ~ !\ ' J ~,;~ t::.: Jo as \\ell as the l'\a\Jonal ""full D1v1DENDS ,,.. •n ..... 11 ,11, Grw1t1 ''' 1nu"1' Mu i 1)n11nlcan P11< llG --\· u11 11 ~"11~1a "1<11Jlce .. r tn a Assoc 1 al l on of L.1(c u~ln• 01t1erw1w io..,111"' 111 pl111 lr(cm It 110 u " '" ~vc \.•1 CM>& 11 a ""Fd Ir/I.I~! 1nl1 1rn fl~ 11 1"1-, C•o <'..11tc1 Unden1 r1ters •-tt• rb1 d•~ ••?d I>' "''d "' ''' 111 .• fu'>CI n.t G u HAI +nv 1 ei 1, C« 11.,.n ~ I ' 'I '_ Cm•c •Utr&. \" r~P 1n<111 "'le , < He and his wife r-.l:irut live v••• flG '"'1' '''1 c 0•~rn•n ,, .. .,,~,. ,,, '711 wni"" 'J • ••• C• 0.,, r ~ I JI ICCu<r ul•lf'd d vldt'"<I• 10) "' d 111 Inn l d 1J I,, I! I.Jn 1rd Fur • r IO PLI .. at 6532 Dohrn C1rc C un y11,1 1,, (II~ 1iu1 ,1oc1ti !• tn l'l/11 Pl~t '" 111 "ccm 1u S•1 carp ttc .o " h ,_ , Fl'n<I An '~I ''' Can \.r 111 u 'c ,,, e~ ' I ' ' . 71 6] ' 1Q9 II , J ' ~. ,,. 0 • 17 I o 1 00 • SI l , 11 l• •.I Ir • ~~ j •• .. . " .. " ' . " " " ' . " ' J ,, •9 •l ' J~ n '" • -C- .. "' ' ' ' ' " . ' . • '" '! GEN WAY Unglon enc r1 • •111• "oct OIY,.,tl\ll (~I 01 a "' ' G• rwv • ~· 1i) •l Con nc 17 nf ) 1 IC• ,r.: ' • Y&••-l•lllOIYldtn!lcml!.., l!M•GtnSI( 1~'l1~Jl lticam 1•6 1\()(~•! • -r=1~;;;~~~~~~~;;;;§§~:::;;;:.;=======-----------_;:::.;;;:_11 Ctn! ill \lotlr 01 0 !Ill ••• lkl Pt ('; b•n ! • I I IJ S< e" I 1 QI (~ I •C~ ~ b c•M tn t oct iql " blnl< 11a1cv "'" G l~A ~~ ~fl • ,1 l ~;~i,,., 1) ~ 1; ;o 1erT 1 0 (•v~•1hl•o••tdl'•t"l1•llon t1le11~11 Bil ,d f 01 •11v1, lM Fa f)1 c~0 '1 11 dl\lt bullo" I•! ••..tlvkltnd1 f"'I) c.,..., l 1 ;o 1• • Val ~ n I f-6 I 1• f l'<o (~ i • whffl ltWfd. lwll •I• 1nt.. Gf!lll'd A f •1 f IJ !rt!)'>' ) i1 S ti t•l1"''" p 7 ' ' ' ' ' ' " • '" .. IUSi A lllW 71 GIAID Pill C.r"' In<! ?11~) ~ Sel St '" 6'1 Cea" o •IO • . ~ PONTIAC DEAURS SYSTEM ., _._ \: ''''"0•S 111 IMl(.llH Po!ll0.,1"9 Gu•rdn '611118' V~c~• or 0 • ,••, C•roco ln1 JO t4•"' 110" v • ..i bl 1 l'I l c ... 1 rav r ....... It lrlt!fOol IR 1'"'11'1• 1111,,.,ltUtl HFI ... !:).! V•ntrd ••I 'i1 Ctn .. ~..., I., • • • ' ,•. 616 It ' ' .... :..~ •• • ' t .4'---.:;;.-~ ·.:=:1-.-: .. _.. UOSlt 11611 l l ll( l 92·66S 1 or 636·2S00 CONTACT Bill DAWSON tetlowl"' 11911 I IS fr1ct Ill" In IM•h! tr) Glh " 0 •II Vt ftl!f' S 11 5 IJ C•"I LI 6 lo lowlllll l!tur• K "'".,. 1n ?Sfllhl He be r II f •I V ~ ro I 'I 111 ~~II LI ., , <a ' ... '' -H~Cl'd l!Uljl•W•l~I n l"'"c~nlP<. 10 l&I IGllO'Wll\f llovrt t lrf(I ft 7.,.,11 H&C l tY 1161 1 11 .,.,,,~ "'w t I• Q C•n l•fl 111 1"'1lt11a lollowlnt IN ' It 1r1t11Nt H"l'.!b Gor ' • lt \lrt ~ r °'" c~ .. MPw ,0 tn 1•1hi. H.Ott 11 ) 1! I! E ~ f "'} 16 f"M!<\I; 1 <-'r~•· I~'" 1 .. ,1 ,, rO• r-..... • I( M•" II 1100 ~c~ 1 101l1ll[,·~,,5~··.!lfl 1,,\)v1"" 1 1 •I" lrtov t• CHECK THE DAILY PILOT t~M ... ~o':,, •M 117 .J....i~ 11 ;~1'i~f:;;~p~; :2 (j""t" .11 •i1 w--111" I "I "'J ,,,1.,.. ot ~ EVER Y DAY FOR l~(o.., •<ff 1 1 WM 1• n C~n~~•lr 6e Tt1•1l1~!J jQW~11no &71)•1 1CFl~I ~ Al l Cu "REN T T unt / w co l°d r, &l< c~..._.," t>e " l,,.,•<G ~·o .. W~Plt i -osr1Cf~Gb~P!I.! M • "K~ INFO"M •rroN 'II G ' ' '"lw •c JO~ '" ',, c~ .... os ''° ~""'' I\"" ~C Fd Alt61U r.•Yor~ 11 ••1c~~ ..... l<jy j 11'1( Fn I ~ 1 H l• •1'1' 10 '9 l1 •7Ch,ltMl!n~ ' II )~ , I 0 M "' ' " ' • ' " 1' i• • ' " II• , '" l" " ll '' " .. , " . " " . ., ) ' \I fj • -,1 -I " • • ' _, " " . ' • ' I ' I ' . - '" " ' ,. ' , fl c L1 I ' ' ' ' t'1' ~LI • 2 ,.... "'" lhlh l Niii! t..w ci..t Cit .. rr1d11. Mmh 19, 1971 SC DAILY PILO? 21 '" Friday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List .,. ) ""' \ I f .... , ............ .. • .. .. ~ O~LV PILOT Friday, Marth 19, 1971 ' ' •• 1Week0nly 1~he most jncredible sale bon- anza this a rea has ever seen! Lin1ited q u a ntities on ma ny items. No refunds. N o ex- changes. No special orders. • Easy C redit Terms A vailable • J\ls o BankAme ricard and Mas ter Charge • De live r y A rra11ge - 111c-nts Mude At i:imr or S ale We Need Cash! 01i111er dies. CHFC is fuced with satis/ji11g its 111u1111/acl11rers a11d thefa111ily estate. a11d cash 11111st be raised/us/! 1'o do this u·e have sliced prices l o rock hotton1 Oil eirery ite111 i11 011r slore. EveryJl1i11g goes t o raise this 'nuch needed cash!! • 'fhe death of CH FC'l owner has forced us to take drastic action to dispose of our gigantic invencory and raise cash immediately! No Dealers Please! Fantastic Selection· of Gorgeous Decorator FAMOUS BRAND QUILTED LAMPS! Paintings & Wall Hangings! Mattress & Box Spring Sets Twin Set . Reg. '79 NOW $48 A.II Sizes, Styles a,1d Colors! · B,e11utif11la11 ifi,·ial Plants & Fla11·e,·s .AJ1 SiitJ.1 Full Set Reg. '89 NOW $ 54 Swag Lamps, Table lamps, Wall Lamps! 'BEDSPREADS! Choo!fie,f rom a co1orf ul array of Prints, :~~~.& Velveteens$' Taw;n, f ull, Queon While The'V Last Unbelievable Bed!fom Buys.' 5-Pc. GOntemporary Double Dresser, Mirror, Queen 1-leadboard, 2 Ni fr Stands. ) PRICE Queen Set Reg. '129 NOW $77 Values NW $94 to YOUR CHOICE BOOKSHELF J-Shelf 36" WALNUT BOOKCASE SOFA SAVINGS! BONUS! 6' "fall 5-Shelf Bookcase. White, Green or \X1alnul. S-Pc. SPANISH BEDROOM 'J'riplc Dresser. J\1irror, Hcadhoard, 2 N i1e Stands Reg.$449 Now$228 ~ 6-Pc. Thomasville BEDROOM 78" 1·riplr Dresser. Twin Mir· roes. KinA: Headhoard. l Commo<les. $599 Huge Reclit1er ~filavit1gs! Genui11e La·Z-Boy RECLINERS in Velvet, Tweed or Vinyl. Reg. '149" $87 NOW 100 .. Velvet "fuxcdoSofa -Avoca-N $166 do o• Gold Reg. $299 OW Span;sh Black N s13s v;oyl Sofa Reg. $249 OW Early American Qu i lled floral N s147 Sofa. Maple .,;m. Reg. $299 OW Vinyl or Fabric Sleep Sofa. Fu ll Now s12a Dining Room & Game Sets 7·Pc. Spanish Dining Set Round or Oval Table W/.\-12" Lea' r s,, ..>am ask Seat Chairs, Plus Buffet & Hutch. ltt. $54t Now Now Now lovely 5-Pc. Chrome Dinette. Padded Seats & Back" •••· $169 Handsome S-Pc. Game Set. Oct. Table W/ 15" Leaf & 4 Chair~. Elegant Swivel Chairs To blend with any decor! High Grade Decorator Fabrics Reg. '59" $24 NOW MAN SIZED VINYL RECLINER i=or body pampering relaxation In HtodsomcGreen. Reg. 579 3731 W. WARNER -5ANTA ANA -PH . ( 714) 546-6730 5 TORE HOURS MON. THRU SAT. 10 A.M. 'Tll l 0 P.M., SUN . 10 A.M. 'Tit 6 PM , ~ . .. . ) Riles Raps School Tax Here They Come Swallo1vs Return to Capo Today Hil{e Plans By BARBARA KREmJCH OI 1M 0•11~ ~lie! S11ff La.gun, Beach school board president Larry Taylor today quoted State Schools Superintendent Wilson Riles as saying he would not support the proposed atatewide school property tax unless $400 million or new money Ui made available by the state. Operation SwaJ\ow Watch started early In San Juan Capistrano today. Tourists began assembling at dawn with their warm coasts and jugs of coffee, hoping for a glimpse of the famous swallows that return every year on this day. fBy 9 a.m. 300 persons were standing in front of the old flfission entrance, eyes facing south, searching for the e.lusive, darting litUe birds. (See earlier stories, page 10). Those who expected a black cloud to descend on the old city \\'Ue disap- pointed. But tourisb v•ho knew what they \\·ere looking for were not. Immediately behind the throni: aboul t\\'O dozen swallows darted among the trees and Mission ruins. Down the street behind the l'orba Adobe another doze.n or so were already sizing up the mud situation. While the visitors were holding binocu\ar.s to the sky, several small groups of swallows flew overhead. One man nudged his wife and pointed to them. But most kept staring down Camino Capistrano waiting for the "cloud." But il never arrived. Jt hasn't for years. Taylor traveled to Sacramento Wednts· day with Laguna Beach s c h o o I s 11uperintendent W i 11 i a m Ullom a n d trustee Norman Browne to attend a luncheon meeting with Riles and 12 of the 35 men1bers of the Schools for Sound Finance Committee. The districts have banded together to oppose the school financing plan, back· ed by the Slate Board of Education, which would take additional money from so.called "wealthy" school districts to help poorer districts. San Joaquin Schoolmen OK Merit Pay Plan Under the plan, a statewide property tax of $3.75 per $100 of assessed valuation Y.'ould be imposed. The funds thus ob- tained, to which would be added $400 million in state funds. \\'ould be distributed to all school disliicts en a per-pupil basis. \Vhile the plan would result in tax decreases in many districlS, others "·ould be obliged to increase their existng tax rates to maintain existing educatioaal standards. In Laguna Beach. a tax rate increase of $1.42 would result . Taylor assailed the claim made by Joseph Brooks, exe cutive secretary or the California School Boards Association, that the statewide tax plan would yield ~26.6 million for some 20 Orange County school districts. "1n fact," said Taylor, "the statewide concept would bring in only one-fifth or that amount. or approximately $5.3 million. The balance of the 'gift' which Brooks promises to the Orange Co!lnty group would come from the $400 million v.·hich the pushers or this piece of tax legislation hope to get from the state." Taylor added, "lf the stale makes available $400 million of new school sup- port money, districts throughout tbe state would benefit without lhe loss of control of their districts which this Robin Hood statewide proposal certainly threatens." He charged that Brooks and others are trying lo insert emotional issues into the campaign using words like bankrupt, chaos and even foreseeing a mass m·ovemenl of people from the area." He said the Laguna representatives pointed out to Riles that Laguna already is making a substantial lax contribution to help poorer districts and that many retired persons in the community could · stand to lose their homes in the face of a $L42 hike in the property tax rate. Urging residents to let lheir Sacramen- to representatives know that they oppose the tax plan. Taylor said, "Schools need additional suppor•, ~ the stale con· ~titution pla~s h responsibility for school suppofl oft tne stale, al the same time granting education first call on the general fund ." The state should be responsible for aiding poorer school districts through some means such as the sa les tax, he said, not by placing lhe burden on so-call- ed well-to-<lo school di~lricts like Laguna which in fact already are making i larp;e tax contribution because of their high assessed valuation. 1'J1ist Be Spri119 Trustees of the San Joaquin Elemen- tary School Dislrirl have officially adopted the proposed P r of e ! s i o n a I Advancement Yardstick (PAY) policy as their official position on nonautom:1tic salary increases. The proposal adopled earlier this week ouUines three levels for salary increases, providing a yearly minimal increase for employes on Level One, the lowest level: .a larger increase for those on Le\•el Two (called Basic PAY). and a large increase for those on Level Three (called Super PAY). The system of evaluating exaclly who v.·ill fall in these categories has not yet been developed , although the PAY proposal includes a philosophical ap- proach to the system. Early last fall the board adopted a position that automatic salary increases for all employes, including teacher11 end administrators, would be eliminated for Legion to Hear Narco Officer A Laguna Beach narcol'ia officer Will address the t¥1arch 25 banquet of the Laguna Beach post of the A.merican Legion and its Auxiliary concerning drug abuse in the Art Colony. Det. Neil Purcell will discuss the ef- fects, availability and users of dan~erou.s drugs. The detective will also display an exhibit of illegal narcotics for the legion members and explain what steps the community can take lo help solve the current drug abuse problem. The banquet. scheduled for 6:30 a.m. in the Legion Club House. is being held in honor of the 52nd Anniversary o( the founding of the American Legion. Annoying Calls Charge Dropped Charges that Laguna Beach resident 1'1irkla t.1arks had made annoying phone calls to the Laguna police department were dismissed Wednesday in South County 1'1unicipal Court by Judge Frank Domenichini . f\frs. Marks, of 1244 Victory Walk, was arrested Jan. 28 on a warrant issued by the District Attorney·s office following a complaint brought by the police department charging she had made frequent and annoying calls. Released on her o\\·n recognitance, the defendant maintained she had called city hall only to inqu ire about a neighborhood road problem . Judge Domenich.lni dismissed the charges without comment DAIL T l'ILOT lt1ff 1'11111 David S\Yani;on, seated, is ready \\1ith some advice for member!! of the l\1ission Viejo Association of Artists and CrafL~men. Ther will exhibit March 27 al the La Paz 11-ledical Center in Mission VieJo. From left to right standing are Doris Swan'i9n, Dolores Smith, and W. R. Newby. a merit pay program. Since then, classified, certificated and administrative employe groups have met to formulate ideas on how the new system will operate. The board has emphasized continually that the new system is designed to reward outstanding teachers. Trustees ha ve agreed that under the old system a teacher could be rev.·arded for merely "surviving another year." Teachers have expressed fear that the merit system could pro\•ide competition which \\'ill be a detriment to sludents; that parents might object to their child being in a class oot taught by the "super teacher" and that the district will have a difficult time reeruiting new teachers. The most controversial part of the pr ogram is the method of evaluation v.•hich pnobab!y will be done by a !eacher's principal or a classified employe's supervisor. The evaluation \Viii be done on the basis of performance, but the criteria for evaluation are not yet formulated. The board has until June to work out details of the plan. Flcig Def ender's Role Disputed SAN DIEGO <AP) -The presiden t of the Associated SWdents at San Diego Slate College has protested to the Freedoms FounCation over · its recent award to Bill Pierson. The foundation cited Pierson. then a San Diego State football star, for what it said was his defense of the American flag against demonstrators on the cam- pus last May. "We believe that if you had acce~s to more complete information you might not have seen fit lo honor Mr. Pierson as you did," Mike Boyle told the. foun- dation iR a lelter made public Thu~ay. Pierson did not foil a plot to tear down the nag, Boyle asserted. but stop- ped a group of sludenl!I who wanted to lower it lo half sta ff in memory of the students killed at Kent State and Jackson State Colleges. "He did not defend the flag from ~ screaming mob,'' Boyle said, adding that with his letter he was enclosing "sta!ements of persons present v.·ho \\'ill testify lo that fact.·• A spokesman for the foundation at Valley Forge, Pa ., declined to comment on Boyle 's letter. Little League Coaches Sought An organi:iational meeting Of t e a m coadles for the minor division or the Laguna Beach Little League will be held Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the city recreation department building. 'The minor division, composed of ei~hl teams. is in need of coaches for the 1971 season and fathers of the bo\'S participating are being asked to volunteer for the jobs. The league is open lo young ball players ages 8-12. Two coaches are needed for each team and fathers interested in coaching are asked to attend the meeting, to be held at 175 N. Coast High~·ay. Furthur in- formation may he obtained by calling the department at 494-1124 ext. •s. 'Ecology Store' Talk Set Tonight Laguna area market managers have been invited to hear how a San Fernando Valley market chain switched to "ecology preferred" products in a program to be presetlted at 8:30 tonight in the Festival Forum theete.r by Pro--en- virooment·people <PEP). The program v.·ill feature lilt story of Alexander:\ Markels, reportedly !he firs t major Southern California chnin to go all out for ecology by pushing environmentally soUnd products ranj!:lng from non·phosphate detergents to meals packed in biodegrediQ.le containers. Also featured will-C Irvine ecoloRY professor Peter Apstatt, v.·ho will lhow a series of films on eovironmcntal a:ub- j«IS. The program ls open lo the publlc, 1dmlssion free:. DA!LV PILOT DA1LV l'ILOT 11111 l'lltll Pla11t-l11 Planners l\lis.-.ion Viejo Jligh School's ecology group. Let's Insure Future Environment (LLFE) reviews land- scape plans fo r Saturday's Plant-Jn . Sherry J.1r· Cauley of El Toro, and Pat Veeh. Irvine, check plant· ing plans with advisor Gary Haynes "''hile Lorri Se lufsky and Terrie Burk check sprinkler locations. LIFE has coordinated the large volunteer effort \\'hich will involve 300 to 400 in the planting or 1,000 trees and shrubs worth more than $2,200. Student and community lundraising efforts paid for the plants. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sc1ninar Slated For Lagw1a City Employes Sa11 Clemente Adding Two Elements to General Pla11 About 30 Laguna Beach city cmploycs \\'ill participate in a ~pecial public rela· lions seminar April 1, designed to im· prove city hall relations with citizens of the community. The educational program, prepared by the United Stales Civil Service Com- mission_ is especially for municipal ~overnment employes and aims at im- proving listening skills and person-to- person contacts for city staff members dealing with the public. A.s host city for the. seminar, Laguna Beach has invited the neighboring tO\\'nS of Ne"·port Beach. San Clemente and San Juan <:apistrano to send represen· laliv~ tltiployes to the daylong projfam In the festival Forum theater. Men1bers of the Chamber of Com- merce, the Civic Lt-ague and the Laguna Beach High School Student Council also have been invited to ·sit in and monitor the program. San Clemente's General plan received two new additions this week -mostly a~ a legaJ formality for consideration ror federal matching-fund grants. A housing element and a sewer element to the city's general planning guidelines "'ere appro\'ed by coouncilmen after publi c hearings. No one appeared to discuss the plans \\'ilh the council, howe ver. The housing element drew criticism from one councilman. Thomas O'Keefe. v.1ho termed the product "full of generalizations and platitudes." City Manager Ken Cat"r said he had lo agree with the couneilman, but the only hope for more sub.~tantial dala on ihe city's housing needs is the receipt of census dale collected by the gOvern· menl last year. ··unti l then the generalitalions and platitudes should serve the purpose ," Carr said . t.1ayor Waller Evans termed the 1eg- ment of lhe plan "a great history of the city. I enjoyed reading it, even if il isn·t very substantial." The se\\·age element diUered con- siderably in content from the housing element, however. Included with a \\'Titlen report on the city's projected SC\\'age systems is a large map showing the lines in place. Both segments will comply. Carr ex- plained, with a federal ruling which lilate:! any city seeking matching-fun d ~anl3-particularly f(om the Depart· menl of Housing and Urban Development {HUD) -must have those two aegmecll in its genera l plan. San Clemente ha11 applied fer matchint funds to construct a crltiCaily needed sewage collector main planned to be installed along the length of El Cl'fnlno Real. atlantic music ANNOUNCES SONY'S newest • • The Model 640 Three-Motor, Three-Head Stereo Tape Deck ! At A Remarkable New Law Price ! Here is Sony's first low-priced three-motor deck. The 640 shares many professional features with the remarkable 650: Die-Cast Tape Guide and Head Block Mounting Frame, front panel Sound-on-Sound and Echo Controls, Microphone and Line Mixing , and a Record Equalization Selector Switch. All transport function• are solenoid. operated with unique piano key • • controls. The 640 offerl high-per- formance and GT styling. This i1 the recorder which will reaffirm Sony'• position as the leader in the three-motor tape deck market. lowest price ever for a S 0 N Y 3 • head and 3. motor professional stereo tapedeck. 369'5 STOP! before you buy any records! Our prices are the LOWEST! LIST OURS OUIS LIST Iron Mountain Depot $4.98 $2.59 Friends $4.98 $2.59 (John Hartford) (Elton John) Lave Story $5.98 $3.29 The Cry of Lave $5.98 $3.29 (Andy Williams) (Jlml Hendrix) The Johnny Cash Show $5.98 $3.29 Butch Cassidy $4.98 $2.59 (Johnny Cash) (Sound Trick) atlantic • music "445 E'. 17th St., Co1t1 Me11. Open Sundays 12·5, Saturdays 9-6, Dilly 12·9, Closed Wednetdl'fl Dual/Garrard/Shure/ ADC/T eac/Fishe r /Sony /Rectilinear /Harman·Kardon Pickering /Sherw ood/ Allee Lan •i ng/M oranh/Whorfedole/Soundcrafhmen Miracord/ A.R./8011k /Mclnto•h/ Scott/ JBL /Empire/Dynaoo/Bose. • ( \ •' I ~ps ,Going Through The Channels By THOMAS A. MURPlllNE Of .. Olltf '""' Si.If GETl'ING 1'BE MDSAGE: Scientific folka from the University of Southern California have been out prowling &l'tlOftd ·the Santa Barbara awm.I r.cenUy to see what they could learn about oil spills and ocean currents. The prowlinl, as a mauer or fact. has been going on for two years now. - UP'IT ........ Keeping Watch One of the ways the USC folks hoped tO track currents in the channel was to launch JS,000 watertight envelopes with the hope of followlng them and thus charting the ebb! and flows. Thursday was the first anniversary ot the overthrow or Prince Nordom Sihanouk. Cambodia troops with U.S.-made Mle rifles still patrol the streets. Although the capital was quiet, sharp fighting took place out- side the city. Lamentably, I cannot report how well they made out in all the charting. But Thursday Dr. Ronald L. Ko\pack , chief reseatdler of the USC project, reported that 1,800 of the 15,000 envelopes laun· ched were washed ashore. found by the public and returned to good old SC. Strike-hit British Ford There was also a comment card inside each envelope to be filled oot by finders. Some comments included: Of fices Ripped by Blast -"I found this card because 1 was beachcombing and goo fing off when I should have been at work .•. " -"What's wrong with you people? The California Penal Code prohibits littering of our public beaches ... " AND FINALLY, there was one card that complained strongly about a tiny weight which wu included in the en- velo~ to provide flotation ballast -"I tried to use your washer in a candy machine. It didn 't work. Nerl time, send a smaller washer ... " Obviously, the USC scientific research team learned through its tw<>-year effort a heck of a Jot about human nature and responR. It remains to be reported if they learned anything about ocean currents in the Santa Barbara ChaMel. * CONFIRMED CORNER: lt w a 1 fftdtctied in this corner the other day that a lot of verbal exhaling wall likely still lo come this session from the legislative halls of Sacramento. Just to give you one example, comes now the Senate Government.al Organiza- tion Committee whi.ch rejected a proposal to limit California governors to two terms. Defeat o"-the tw<>-term constitutional -amendment proposed by Senalor Arlen Gregorio (0-San M8teo), came after Committee Chairman Ralph Dills (0. Gardena) asked in rhetoric : "Why limit an Earl Warren, a Ronald Reagan or a Hiram Johnson? Would you want to restrict someone like Moretti. Moscone or Hugh Flou rnoy to onl y t~·o term! • ' . ?" You know. its seems that Dills was la.king an awful chance asking questions about that many politicians in just two sentences. He could have touched off a deb.ale that did last all day . * END ITEM : I underslaod the Republicans have now issued a handy guide and glossary of terms to their speakers \.li'ho will appear on college platforms across the nation . If he gets into trouble, all the GOP spokesman has to do is whip out the handy guide, hide it behind the podium and rup to the right page on how to handle the collegians in a given situation. Example of one GOP daffynition : "A hassler -same thing at a bomb-throwtr " Oh yes, Mr. Speaker, you're off to a gre:ilt start. LONDON (UPI) -A timebomb ex· plocled in an office building of the strike- bound Ford Motor Company today. Police evacuated the Cafe Royal near another Ford establishment after a bomb scare. Pollce said no one was injured when the predawn blast from a fused bomb ripped through tbe basement of the 14· story steel and glass Thames House housing Ford office.s in !!ford, IO miles east of London. The e:qilosion blew in a basement door-"and shattered nearby shop windows. In London, police cleared the Cafe Royal or a lunchtime crowd minutes after an anonymous caller said a dynamite bomb had been planted in the restaurant. The establishment ill ne:ict to tht Regent Street showrooms of the Ford company. Police searched the restaurant but found no bomb. "We have just got Ford and we will do the rest later," a woman said in a phone call to the British News Agency Press Asaociation. The woman said she was from the "Angry Brigade," a group police blame for explosions at homes of several government ministers. Ford plants have been closed by a strike by unions demanding higher pay. Henry Ford 11, president of the Ford Motor Co.. visited Britain last week but refused to intervene. But he said Ford would make no more inveslment.s in Britain because of the nation's labor Wicks 'It'. a lottery for who tallt1 _longeat, ua or the Paris Peace crowd!' problems. It is such labor strife which the con- servative government of Prime Minister Edward Heath hoped to ease with its proposed industrial relations bill. More than 1.25 mil.lion workers struck Thursday to pro1est the bill. It w a a the biggest strike in Britain in more than 40 years and trainmen, powu workers and teachers said they likely would be the next to strike to protest ~ anti·strike measure. The anti·strike Dill ls in its final stages in Parliament and expected to become law by summer. Heath again denounced such strikes in a speech at a dinner Thursday night in Sheffield. "One man's strike becomes another's redundancy (layoff) notice," he s1id. ''And all this for the luxury of a political strike. We now have the opportunity together to bring to an end a aad and 5habby period in our national lift." Nixon to Attend, • Thomas E. Dewey Funeral in NY NEW YORK (UPI ) -Flags were lowered to half staff at city hall today as hundreds of dignitaries, headed by President and Mrs. Nixon, and other persons were scheduled to a~d funeral services for the late Gov. ' mu E. Dewey. • The Rev. Dr. John B. Coburn w1s to conduct the 4 p.m. (EST) service at St. James Episcopal Church with the assistance of the Rev. Dr. Ralph Lankier, pastor or Christ Church on Qu11ker Hill, Pawling. Burial will follow in Pawling where Dewey maintained a country horn~. Dewey; a three-time 1ovemor af New York and twice unllucces!ful Republican candidate fOT' President, dli!d of a heart attack Tuesday in Florida at the a1e of G8. Nixon was sch89u1ed to fly here durinc the day with a delegation including It· torney general John N. M itch e I I. secretary of state William P. Rogers and Sens. Jacob K. Javita and James L. Buckley of New Yori. Winter's Fury Not Spent Midwest Lashed by High Winds; Rain, Wet S1iow Fall Califon1lo V.S. St<mm•f'!I A lttt wlfllff ........ btlfttld ttM ~r«we11 1ooav. wltfl "'-~ wl!Mh 111~1 ... MJ-n •M IOWI t~ t!Orftl Wl nllntt _,Id frw tfle Grt11 Ulkn ''"· ••• ,. ... tw .... '""' _.,,,,...,, ,...,.. le till -<Milo v1ll•v. wllllt .... ·~"'"' ... ,, .... "" (•"'''' , .......... MIMIU'"' V1!1tv1 JrO 11'11 lcrNtr ,0...11 UlkH . MN¥¥ .,._ Wflrtll,,._ ._.,.. IM •I,.(! '°" WltCM'tl" , ... M\eflll"" 1NI ""''' 111111 '" !r1<fl of r1I" t.H 11 Mofll'f(prnff'I ~ Motllof, All., 1N If JOt"ttCOlt , Motl If fflt ... Httn ht ll Ill !hi ".tloll i.toi1 f1I, .tiff tNI "°" l'llllhtr U,... tfllt "*"'Inf rtMld '""" ' Mlt'lll' ,_ 11 Altll'ICll•· C•lt.. to ti ti •rowMvlllt>, Tlll. Stvtf\1'1"11 (t llW•!t lt1d ltlr t "4 .,..,,,. ..,......., Wllll !;CWllll'tl/td "''""' -~ •-"'"" vu l•bl• tllud.t IOd•Y 1M M lufdl¥. , .... 1K1I fM, Hltlt i. ttr n C011i11I •-tt•llirn rtrlff ,..., » i. '4. Wt!., 1-0tfl l\llt LI. lllilnt 1--IN rt• rtiwe Ir"" Sol ' •. !tun, Mn....,. Tides PalDAY n o1 m. 0 1 t ·4f t ,m. O,J JA1'Ul6AY rln! ltltlt P!fll !OW iet .W fl/t i! lKO<'ICI IOW • ,.1,,1 ltlt~ 1 fil '"• •S 11 00 . '"' 0.7 l.fl 11'1'1 l } • "1 "'· so 4.8) I lft. •.T . l lr11 IOfl' '"°"" "'-" .. $«W '°"' " u "''" ~) 4 d1m, lt ll:IJ•-"'· l •. Tem...,,.at11t'es ar UH11'1D ,I.IS INflll:Jolil.T!DNAL ,...,_lturn '"" 1f'tcl1llt!ll!I" ..,. tflt 2Ultur -!lid tndl"t 11 • 1.m. All>l~Y Altlu<l..,.,._ut All911t1 AMl\Orl91 Rollo" Rulltlo Cll!CtH Cl..c!n"'I! (IW-411\d 0.1111 °"""'' Off MOitlll °"''°" F1!rtM .... 1 ..... l,..ltNIOlh Ju-u ICIMtl t it\' L.1• VH•• Laul1vnit M..,.,.hls Mlt'"I Mllwwr_. Ml-1N1i1 N"'OrlffM N..,Ytfll Ollttl!Mlt CllY ..... ,. P'1IJ11 Slfl"'l l'lll!lft~l• ""°'"!• P'lll1boi••~ "''tllM. Ort. tt1•l• CllY .. ~ l t tr1mt1110 $! L.1111• i 11t Lt~t C!"' ''" oi.w ,.,. ''•fl\lt<O "'"'"I "I~ L.t"I Pr.c. " " " 's .. " .21 ... ., " • • J.t )I , " ,, {I •• . " .. u ·°' . " •• ·" ·" " . . ~ ... • II • » " " " . ft I ) . " " .. " •• ,. • " . , J1 1 n " .n " " ,. • • " • " ~ " ,, • " ~ a " ,)J • • " " " " II " " " ,, • " • " • ·" First Since Truce Egyptians Fire On Israel Planes By TUE ABSOC1A TED PRESS Egyptian antiaircraft guns opened tire on Jsraeli planes: today for the firtl time since the Middle East cease-fire beaan Jut August, the officlal Middle Eut News Agency reported in Cairo. The two Israeli planes -identified as Phantom jets -appannUy were not hit. The agency said the two aircraft intruded over Egyptian positions at Port Fuad at the northern end of the Suez Canal. , The ~se-fire expired on March 7. The Egyptian announcement coincided with a report in a Beirut newspaper that Egypt has indicated to the United States that it will start sbootillg again Russ Shocked By Ousters From Mexico MEXICO CITY (UPI) -Mexico's ex- pulsion of five Soviet diplomats Thursday night was "the ~t aetious act short af a break in relations'' between Mexica City and Moscow, a Communist source said today. He said the move took the 8ovlets completely by surprise. Thf! expulsion order was is.sued 72 hours arr.er the government said it had smithed a subversive plot by Mexican guerrillas trained in Moscow and North Korea. It also followed MexiC<J's recall of Its ambassador from Moscow for an indeterminate period. Foreign Minister Emilio 0. Rabasa did not relate the expulsions to the alleged plot, and refused to answer. all questions from •ewsmen on that point. He uid the presence of the five diplomat& "is not acceptable to the Mex- ican government and, consequently, it is the desire af the Mezican gOvernment that they abandon our national tmitory in the shortest possible t i m e." He did not say how soon that was. Anti-Communists. including a diplomat who defected here last year, persistently have charged that Moscow's embassy in Mexico City is a center for Soviet subversion and espionage in Lalin America. The Soviet embassy declined comment on the expul!ions. One Communist BOUrce, however, said the action was "completely unexpected." He said the Russians had expected only that Mexico would file a protest. It was "the most 11erious act of reprisal Mexico could have taken, short of break- ing relations," he a aid. Ordered to leave "'ere Soviet charge d'affaires Dmitri A. Diakonov, first secretary Boris P. Kolomiakov, second secretaries, Boris N. Voskoboinikov and Oleg M. Netchiporenko, and Aleksandr Bolchakov, wbOSf! tiUe was not given. Queen to Reinstate Honors to Hirohito LONDON (AP) -Queen EHubelh n will reinstate Emperor Hirohito of Japan to the oldest and most exclusive arder of knighthood in the world - the Order of the Garter, diplomatic sources said today. Informants closely coMected I n arranging the emperor's slate visit to Britain next October next said the queen will announce the reinstatement during the vi.sit as a gesltln of &ood will. ' 110111 the Suez ca,.1 any Ume after March 24 unless thf! stalled Arab-Israeli peace talks get movina. Al Nahar'.! Cairo correspondent. Fu1d Mattar, wrote that the warning WU given in a letter President Anwar Sadat sent to President Nixon shortly before Sadat announcf!d that Egypt would no longer subscribe to the cuse·nre. Egypt, Israel and Jordan have con· tinued to abserve a de 'facto cease.fire along the borders, but Mattar 'reported that Sadat's Jetter declared a 17-day "period of grace·• March 3 through. March 24, to give U.S. diplomatic efforts another chance to bring about "tangible progress toward a peaceful solution." In Washington, Secretary of State William P. Rogers had a scheduled meeting with Foreign Minister Abba Eban of Jsrael over U.S. efforts to modify Jerwalem's terms for a set· tlement. Rogers wants Israel to withdraw from all Arsb territories seized in the 1967 war with an international pescekeeping force to guarantee Israel's security. In Jerusalem , Deputy Premier Yigal Allon indicated no softening ln lsrael's position. "There Is no subsUtute for a peace treaty and secure bonlers which we will be able to defend by ourselves," he told a meeting of the Labor party. Such bordus, he said, werf! vital to ward off "a lightning, decisive war against us." British Troops Hunt for Bombs In Irish Autos BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - British troops today baJted mol"f! than 400 automobiles in the most intense cam· paign yet against extremists jn Northern Ireland. The searth of cars beean after terrorists bombed a shrine of the Irish Republican Army (!RA). The troops set up roadblocks at every major roote inlo BeUasl as part of a stepped-up drive to bolster Premier James Cb.ichest,r-Clark's bard-presaed government. Border areas also were sub- jected to increased attention. Army spokesmen aaid the check en Belfast traffic was the biggett evu undert.aken by security troops. As the weapom searches began an explosion rocked a Republican Garden of Remembrance in the Carrickmore District, 45 miles west or Btlfast. It was due to be opened Monday by Nora Connolly O'Brien, daughter of Republican leader .James Connolly, executed in 1916. The expl os ion blasted a l~lnch crater in the garden, erected by the Irish National Graves Association ln memo1/ of the Irish Republican army men whe died in the 1920s. Chicbester·Clark told parliament a few hours before that fre sh troops would be brought in to "tighten the clamp" on extremists. The only way to get rid of them is to make it "too hot to hold them," hf! said. The reinforcements will increase the number of British troops in Northern Ireland to 9,700 and was the only gesture the premier made to bis critics who demanded he get tough against eJ:· tremists. "It is the nonevent or the year," said rightwing leader William Craig. "It only underltnf!s the end .J>f the present government." "Clark mu st go~" a crowd of 4,000 Protestant.s shouted outside parllameill. ''Oark must go!" UPI ?•"'41111 LOSING A ST AR? Maj. Gen. Koster Army May 'Bust' Generals I nvolvetl In My Lai Case WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Army has recommended that Maj. Gtn. Samuel W. KMter and the general who assisted him in commanding the American Division iAvolved in the alleged massacre at 1'.fy Lai be disciplined and p<Wibly demoted. Koster. 51, resigned as superintenden t af the U.S. Military Academy at West Point last year after he was charged with covering up the alleged massacre of more than 100 Vietnamese civilians · at My Lai by a unit af his division March 111, 1968. The cherges were drop- ped in January. Brig, Gen. George H. Young Jr., SO, was his assistant ia Viet· nam . Army sources said Thursday Gen. William C. Westmoreland , the Army chief of staff. hsd recommended that Koster be reduced in rank to brigadier genttal and Young to to Ione I. Westmoreland commanded all U.S. troops in Vietnam at the time or My Lai. It was not known exactly how many men faced di!ciplinsry action. At one time, 25 officers and men were charged either with committing crimes at My Lai OT' of attempting to cover up the incident lster. Charge! have been drop- ~ against all but five of the men. Young told the Chic1go Tribune earlier this wetk that be had received a letter saying that Westmoreland had ordered that be be demoetd to colone.I, stripped of his Di1Unguished Service Medal and that a letter of reprimand be placed In his file. Y.oung told the newspaper be had been Informed he wohld have a chanc., to rebut the charges that he was guilly of "substandard performance of duty ." He said he was told he could answer in writing and in a personal appearance before Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor. The general said he would do both because he considered the actions unfair, "More than eight months after I was declared innocent I am being sentenced," Young said . Hoipital Warns Man He's Expecting Baby LEAMINGTON, England (UPI)":: Al f Robert.!. a 52·year-old night porter, apen· ed a letter from lhe Leaming Spa Hospital and got a shock. It told him he was expecting a baby and invited him to the antenat.al clinic. Later a hospital official apologized for the clerical error which had mixed up Roberts' appointment for a knee ex· aminatlon. Warren 80!) Lauds Youth Former High Court ·Chief Reminisces on Birthday WASHINGTON (UPI) -Former Chief JusUee Earl W1rrtn turned 80 today, with praise for the naUorl°s y~ people and a warning that confiict of interest poses one of the greate9t evib: to the government of the republic. • White-haired. grandl1Wlerly and looking healthy, Warren reminisced .about hi!'. epochal years on the court and said the college seminars he has been Ct'ln- ducting sin :::e his retirement have renew- ed his faith in the young. "Jn the main,'' he said in an interview In his Supreme Court office. "our young people are far more knowledgeable about what's going on in the world than they were In my day as a )'OUttl. They are more concerned , motivated to play a part. "I like young people. 'J'hett are 111 few datructionJ11J. But 1 atlll think the majority of thtm are good. forward- iooklng young people '"ho want to im- prove things,·· he ~ded. Looking at the nation 's judiciaJ syttem. Warren 11id if a ma n has a way of life lhat dtm1nds more money thin 1 federal Judge makes "Lhen ht can't afford to be a jud(e." "There 1tt certain things that people can't do if they are 1oJn& to be In cerlaln positions. It's the 11ame with cabinet poslUms. If lhey can'L afford to take the job, llltn thty shouldn't take u. "A confilcl of Interest is one of the most t vil things In government todsy," HAS FAITH IN YOUNG E1rl W1rren on Birthday he n ld. "It should be of tremendous conCf.m to the clUunry of the country.'' Warren added that when he waa on the bench he never felt free to play the st.ock market because the con· glwnerate nature ol many businuses made it impossible to know whf!D a canflict of interest might pop up. Of his years on I.hf! court Warren said he was diaappolnted lhlt school desegregation had not progressed futer but he is not frustrated. Hf! added that he was happy to have served ttie court at a time when the most conlnwtrailt problems came up. And he alfcred thae thougtlts on the difference b e t w e. en politics and law: "I happen to hive had year1 in both fields. When I was in pollUcal life I realJJtd that poUUcs t. lht art 0( the possible, as BOme one has aald. You have an ideal but you compromise as you go along in order to make Pf"OCJ'tlls • • . and you hope that the time m.y come when your ideal wlll be •chleve4. "But when you are de1Ung wllh the judicial process and with constltuUonal principles, you can't say you will be saUsfied with establiJhlng a UWe of the principle today and maybe JOme time (those who benefit) will get all of It. You 9land or fall on the prlnciplM you feel govern tht sltu1Uon. "lf a decision fai ls to conform to the wishes of the public. th at is iutl one of the haurd1 you a13ume When you enter the realm of the judicial procesi:. ! I QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Snow, Rain High Winds Lash U.S. Midsection By UnUed Prt11 lnternatlonal "It's the typical lion and lllmb deal In spring weather.'' 11 Ha1tings Neb.. policeman said as snow and winds of 100 miles per hour !!tra nded motorists a n d overtumed three trailer homes. W'S blocking all roads. Muy Mason City re aldents were stranded for the nlaht ln De1 Moines whert theJr I.tam played in a high tchool b11ktt· ball tournament. DAILY PILff S Gove1•1ament Sift• Recorm T1·ain Car Case Probed LA SALLE, Ill. (AP) - G o v e rnment lnvealJ&alors sifted the records of 1 tiny Illinois railroad and an even 1maller my1tery company to- day in an attempt to find out how more than SI million worth of Penn Central frel&ht cart disappeared. A U.S. at- torney said the cars ap· parenUy were stolen. Joteph Cinotto Jr .. 1ener1l Office employes 11 the llttl1 rail line i n north-central Illinois s1ld the cars .sup- posedly were the property of a my1tery company wb.lch painted en new Identifying mark1 and leastd them to other railroads. eye." Richard Sprl&1• of the task force refuied to apeeulate on the possible impli cation of or11nlzed crime, but aald "work will haYe to be done in other 1rea1 cf the country'' to determine whet.her 11imilar aituaUona exist elsewhere. But the lion appeared to prevail as the snowstorm plowed through the nation's midsection today. Six lowns in the Omaha Public Power District were completely without pow e r Thurad1y night. Some 600 lo 700 farm houses were without power and heat in 10 to 20- dea:ree weather near Ord, Neb. Power cfficlal1 11ald repairs would be difficult until the winds subsided. Satchmo in Hospital After Heart Seizure manager of the La Sall• &: Bureau County Railroad -1 frtl&bt~nly line with a mere 16 mllee of trackage -termed the di!appearance ''a terrible miatake ." U.S. Atty. Louis C. BecbUe FBI agent• seized t h e records of the La Salle line and of M1gna E1rth Enterprlaes. Inc., w h I c h r1nttd a one-room office and some shop space from the railroad. An FBI 1poke1man 11ld agenta: were checkina for poalble violatiorui cf the federal inter1t1le tr1nsporta· lion cf stolen property \aw and ~ fraud by wire law. He aald 27 cars with Penn Central markings painted over bad been found in LaSalle'• yard1. BecbUe 11ld 1 federal if&nd jury tn PhUadelpb.11. where the PeM Central has head· quarters, would begin looking Into the case Wednesday and would call iTI records tram other flrnui. Bechile did not Identify tbf. other companies. He aald no 1rre1t1 had beert made, adding that he did not know wbetber criminal pro- se.cutlons would rea:ult . "That's very good, but I don't ue how an imlta.tlon of W. C. Fields ia going to take the 111.ockholdon' minds off the 1ta.te of busineu." NEW YORK (UPIJ -A spokesman for Beth Israel Hospital said today jw: artist Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong was ,resting comfortably and ·•responding to treatment" for a heart ailment. Even the wheels of govern- ment ground to a halt as power was t'\ll in the state capitol In Lincoln . Ride of Terror About two to four inches of snow accumulated In the eastern part nl the state, but drlfta and blowing snow drop- ped vicibility to near iero. Earlier reports hid said that the grave!·voi~d trumpet player was in critical con· dll ion after being admJtted Monday to the hollpltal'a ln· tensive care unit. Ban..dit Holds 2 Hostage Traffic In western Iowa was at a 1t1i.dstlll as the 1torm moYed ln with sleet, freezing rain, ice and snow. The 70-year~ld mu1lclan1'1 personal phy1idan. Or. Gary Zucker. said Armstrong had not had a heart attack although he had been 1ufferln1 from a heart condition for some time. ORLANDO, Fla. tUPJ l - "My god. please go 11w11y." the woman's voice pleaded ove r the police radio lo pursu- ing officers. '"I "·ant lo see my hu sband and children again .'' ~1rs. Lily Thompkins. a sav- ings and loan association teller, and her boss, Ralph Hasner. were taken host.age Thursday by a shaggy.haired gunman who robbed the firm and ned with them in a stolen police car. Driving around in the patrol car. the gunman .warned police over t he car's radio to stay clear. "Back off."' the gunma n said. "If you want the hosta ge alive, cool il. I'm going to blow this guy'11 head off lf you don 'I pull them off. Get them off my back and r mean It.' I Patrol cars kept a"·ay. but police kept the fleeing car UJlder surveillance f r o m alrplane1 and hellcotpers. place. Ju.st wall Don't WU"ry about it. They aren't going to go free .'' After two houri cf riding, the gunman spotted a green Cadillas and used the stol en c.ar·s police siren to for~ the ve hicle to stop. He fre~ Mrs. Thompkins. whose son is a Highwa y Patrolman, and the driver of the Cadillac, Perry Bernard, Parkin, Ark., but took Hasner with him . Hasner later was released unharmed in a wooded area and the officers finally ctp- "We're socked in tight." a Mason City policeman said early tod1y. "The sno• plow11 can't get out un lll visibility eases up." Car5 were halted a t Hampton. about 23 miles south of Muon City, because of poor vialbiUty and stalled Armstrong. who roae: £rom lhe handicaps of beln& born in poverty in 1 Ntw Orleans shack to become one of America's foremost en. tertaine.rs. r e n o w n e d throughout the world , was td· milted to Beth Israel only Cost Overruns Cited tured the bandit when his car WASHINGTON (UP!) technology . was "'recked after a chaae The Genetti Accounting Office The pogt 1aid lt obtailled on Interstate 4. He 1uffer~d IGAO) has discovered that d f GAO ' minor facial lacerations "'hen an a vance copy o • cost overrun~ on 61 weapont 8' ~ d " J-'tl f the car hit a tree. The amount ..-page •• u y, acqu ~ on o ' sys tems have reached '33.4 of money he took was not billion ao far. the Washington major weapon• 1y1tem1 ." determined immed1ately. p 1 od The GAO, an independent The FBI charged Vitalius 091 •a d t ay · f\.ialinauskas, 26, or Altamonte The G A 0 b I a med w1tchdog agency under the Springs. Fla .• with bank rob-''deliberate underestimating, control af Congreu. 11Jd the bery. unanticipated developmenl major weapon• 1y1tem1 in· Hasner. branch manager of difficulties, faulty pl1Mln1. ltlally were adverllied to cost the Amer ican Savings and poor man a If: m e n t, bad '83.S bllllon. By June 30, 11170, Loan Association. ssid when esUmauni," Inflation and the the Pentaaon e1Umated the of Philadelphia rep or led two days after cc.npleUn1 a Tburlday that 277 PeM Cen- two-wttlt enaagemerit at the tral Railroad cars vanl1hed Waldorf Astoria. aince early 1970 after being lml tated by untold musi-diverted onto the La Salle cian1 an1 alngen, Armatron1 tracks. He 1aid the cars ap- produced t h o u s a n d 1 of parently were sto len I n records, appeared in scores awltchlng operations. of motion pictures and played "l really don 't know whal In nightclubs and concert halls h1ppened," said Cinotto. "I in the western world and reaJly c1n 'I s1y any more." The Federal Task P'orce on Organized Crime has joined the investigation and a railroad source said, "There Is more there thin meets the "Everything ia 1ketchy and Incomplete," he taid. One of the altetchy elementa is a firm knowa 11 Diversified ProperUe1, menUoned in court documenUs flied when the FBI obtained search warrants to inspect the LaSallt railroad premiaes. behlnd the Iron curtain. -------------------------------- ln 19S9 he w11 warned by doctors lo slow down after 1 near-f1Uil coU .. pse In Italy. The lrrespres.sible "Sat· chmo" told the worried physi· clans: "A lot of people live 1ccordln1 to Hoyle. Bu t Hoyle'• dead -I live ac· cordlna lo Louis Annatrong. 0 SALE WATER LILIES P•cific Goldf i1loi F'""' 1 .. 1 .. 2 Edw•rdi St. WESTMINSTER 1'3·7105 NO. 1 ON THE COAST Your Hometown Newspaper 11 Thi DAILY PILOT "You don't think I'm that much of a fool.'' 11aid the gunman. wearing a false mustache 3 n d sunglasses. "The planes are ill ov~ the the gunman en~red h I 1 de1ire to e:rplolt n e w cost at t 117 b!Won . est.ablishment ind began w1v.1 ..::.::::.:__...::___::::c:::__::_:..:___:::::.::..::__::=::::.---_...::::==========--------------------------------- lng a pistol, "All I could SH was haw big the barrel of that gun was." Agnew Charges CBS With Distorting Facts BOSTON" fU PI ) -Vice: President Spiro T. Agnew said Thursday accusations o f distortion leveled at the Pen· tagon in a recent CBS.. TV documentary could just ;is well apply to the network Itself. Agnew said the CBS ne'A'S documentary "The Selling of the Pentagon." broadcast Feb. 23. failed to observe the adage about people living in glass houses throwing st.ones . The Vice President quoled the CBS script as !aying, "nothing ls more: important to a De:mocracy than the free now of information. Misi n· formation , di sto rti o n and propaganda au int.errupt that fJO\lo'." "It is the CBS television,'' he sa id, "not the Department of Defense that lt1ves much lo be desired in turns of the free flow of information ." In Ne"' York CBS President Frank Stanton called Ainew "mist.aken." Stanton said "The Sellln& of the Pentagon'' has b e e n praised by "disUngui1hed Americans from ill walk& af life. It has been critici.ud. But ·we believe that It Is an Important and valuable job of journalistic invesli&atiYe reporting." ' VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS ' PSYCHOANALYZED BY JACK BIDWELL ••• Cha.ncn art if you h11\·e: f\'tr caree:n~ your Volks· "'aftn up th• allf'Y be· t"·een the Lido Theat.re: and Bld\\"f!'IJ'1 :'\l"n~ ~hnn you hAv« alrtady been an1ly:r:~. You hav" bf'tn 5tudl!'d to bt the ml"l.~I r•r,..frr" nf 1111 inOh·idu11ls. Dtep dO\\n you a.rt a 111111" snonl\" ~­Cau~e ynu knn11• you hrlon i: In An rlit" i;:rnup of rrr11· th·r Pf'nplc. It i~ under· stood that ynu ran dl!'ror• 111e your Bui: 11ny\1'llY you like bt>cau~r V·Dubs 11 re AC• ctptablf' In Anv a1tirt' You 1nob 1hl' guy In !hi' Cadil- lac before he hll-' a ch11ncl!! to look do"·n on .\OU. \Vha t dota hi' know about hf<lnio: 11 n lndh1du11l . rxC''"fll hn"' m.11ny lndividualg hllvl' Cadillacs~ Anyv:ay. hf-In!.! • rrl"A· tiv'". re1ourcrful Pl'r1on you c11n lmml"dlat rly •P· prrciatl' m11ny mnrr thin~ In lift than !hr unrorl unatP mi.n in th" C1tddy. You Ar" abll' In 111kr A bn~ic11lly uii:h• thlni!-and f!ldorn it .. ~:l!h )·our """n innovation• 11.nd ~(\meh(\"' m11.k• ii MJ ''" -C11d\ll11r'I arf' j1ut born btautifu1''' o r r(lllr-1'" \\ hrn it C'f'rn"• to 111vina-mont'~ 1h11t b vnu r 1D"Cl11ll\' Th•• l' Wher~ ti! my frff !")'Chol- OIY comn in. I a.m h•vlnJ: an ttcfntric ule Uuit \1 r olng to attract all people of your naturf'. ln !act. It's bound to attract all the ffM'arl, Lamborghini and Cadillac own@rs also. You can recorni:r:e thftn by their be11dy eyes and the:y may came: incognito tn their neighbor's V\V! SO YOU HAD BETTER GET HERE F.ARLY beR"!nninii: S11tur· da.v morninit. March 20. \Ve v"il\ have a hugt 1e-lf'ctlnn af De11nsgate:, Dev· nnshir,. and Top 0 Mart Suits up to $145 now $40. R11tntr Sfl(lrtcoats orl&inal· Jy $70 now $25. You "A-ill pay for any modest alter- 11.tlnns incurrf'd . Also. Y"U might t'fmov• ~·our b11ck llt!lt. beeau1t 11 rtottn't e:nd her". WI!' are i:::oing '" have thrtt b&r· rain t11bll's ... SlO. 34. and Sl respttti\fely. What ~'f'lu ar'" ~ninr t" find on thl'Jt 111.bles "ill utound ynu! Jantun Swraten. Corbin Orru S\11ckt, Bill . "·ell Slack11 JlO. C.nt. Enrro. Hani-Ten and Hath· 11.'"'a" Shirts I-'. Thf Sl ta-ble ·is for bif: d@a11 only and ynu ml1ht bP 1ho.-kfd hy "'·hat ynu find on It - r"m"' lll"ld 1e1!! l\'!'XI \\'f"l'k , Jarll Bld'<Wl! rosychoa n1tl}'7:e1 the t.1an In th" Cadill!IC! JACK BIDWELL 3467 VIA LIDO In NEWPORT BIACH If you do, you'll be glad to know there are 58 places in Soutt iern California to get help . The 58 offices of Southern California First National Bank. We 've been improving our loan-making process so much we have it down to a science. SOUTHERN CAUFORNIA In fact, we can arrange your loan in a matter of hours. And the interest wi ll be at low bank rates, instead of the other kind . RR8T NA110NAL llAlllK 673""510 ~============~COSTA MESA, 230 E••I 17th St., 1>42-1 660 HUNTINGTON BEACH , 8899 Ad•m• Ave., 962·ll77 -17122 BHch Blvd .. 847.,68f •• ' I • D AILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Evaluating On April 20 voters ln the south Orange County ichool districts \\1ill elect the men and women who wtll govern their schools. Scores of candidates have filed for these important posts. despite the fact that service on school boards Is all too often " thankless job. Candidates for Saddleback College, Laguna Beach Unified, Ca pistrano Unified, San Joaquin Elementary and Tustin Union High School district boards of educa· tion °"'ill be participating in numerous programs arrang· ed by community organizations. Whether called candi· dates' night, forum or meet.the-candidates, the sessioni have a common purpose -to introduce voters to the men and women who seek to run their schools. One of the earliest of such sessions is the Laguna Beach Coordinating Council's presentation of the 12 candidates who've filed for the three Laguna Beach Uni· fled board openings, Monday evening in the City Hall Council Cham be rs. More such sessions will follow for other districts as the election draws near. Watch for announcements of them in the DAILY PILOT and take the opportunity to meet the candidates. ·More Nuclear Po,ver The recent decision by tbe-.state Public Utilities Commission granting permission for building of two massive nuclear generators at San Onofre is reasonable. Candidate's lars. That issue Jast fall seemed 1 remote and routine one when data was delivered to PUC Examiner Arch Main at the San Clemente hearings. Since then, obviously, concern about possible earth· quake damage has been foremost in everyone's mind. The next hurdle faced by Southern CaliJomia Ed· tson Company and San Diego Gas and Electric Company ls the Atomic Energy Commission, which wilJ hear the matter along the South Coast this spring. Up to now, fact! seem to support expansion or the nuclear facility to meet Southern California's continuing need for electricity -and its continued aversion to any· thing that would produce more air pollution. · Complicating the P icture Two pieces o! zoning legislation currently under study in Laguna Beach could directly concern the pro· posed annexation to Laguna of 2,500 acres of Irvine land directly to the north. The CR (commerclal·residential) ordinance would set standards, including height limits, for beachfront hotel developments. The PRD (planned residential deve lopment) ordin· ance would provide for cluster housing, including multi· level housing, in hillside developments. Once the ordinances become part or the city code, they wilt apply also to developments within the expand· ed city limits should the annexation be completed. Further complicating the picture is the initiativ& campaign seeking to limit all building height in the city. The ~ine Company plans to develop a master plan for Its ent11e coastal community prior to annexation. Despite the concerned outcry by some citizens at the PUC's bearings in San Clemente last .fall, the com· mission found that the two uWity firms · which sought t.be permit have made adequate provisions for safety and ecology. Commendation should go to the commission for its rmn position on ironclad geologic and seismic studies of the site for the twin reactors costing a half·million dol· If city restrictions on height, density or other fac· tors should conflict with this master plan, resolution or the conflicts could become a major annexation issue. The :w.inner and still heavyweight champioo of the U.S. &mate.. Hard-liners Replaced by Pragmatists Red China Now in a Thaw? WASHINGTON -Chinese Premier Chou En-la1'1 dramatic visit to Haool adds new menace to the rumblings that Red China might intervene in Laos as she did once befure in Korea. In the past., the North Vietnamese have hesitated to bring the Chinese too deeply into the Indochina conflict. Now they are 1uming openly to Peking for support in case the allied escalation in Laos beccnles crttl· cal. Nevertheless, the natiooaJ intelligence estimate, w h i c h g u i d e 1 Presldenl Nixon' diaoounls the danger of Oline&e lntervenUon. T h i I secret a.wJsment is based upon the best inlelllgence available to the U.S . Here ls the reasoning behind the opUmistic estimate: -THE NORTH Vietnamese are reluct· ant to increue their dependence upon Peking, which would heighten Otinese influence over their affairs. This would also upset Moscow which has furnished most of North Vietnam'• military hardware. The Hanoi rulers have alway& tried to walk a delicate tlahtrope between Moscow and Peking. They al!o haven't overcome the ancieul V i e t n a m e s e distrust of the Otloese. 'lbe U.S. view, therefore, ls that the Hanoi lhttat to involve the. Chinese in Indochina i.s a bluff. -There has been no &tgn or military movement Inside China toward the Indochina border. Indeed, the movement has been in the other direction toward the Soviet frontieni. Although Peking ha.s deployed a large force in South China, these divisions apparently haven't been reinforced or put on a1ert since the Laos invasion. -THE U.S. FSTIMATE is that a thaw, rather than a new freeze, i! beginning to df:velop in Chinese-American rtlations. Tbe harfi.line.rs have been replaced by pragmatists iD many key positions in Peking:. The American section of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, for example, has been taken over by a profe!sional diplomat who is more realist then doc- trinaire Maoist. There is cautious op-- timism that Washington's r r i end 1 y overtures to Peking may bring a positive • response. -The warnings that preceded Chinese invol vement in the Korean War were far more ominous than the current warn· ings over Laos. There is little doubt in Washington that Chins would send "volunteers" to stop an outright U.S. invJSion of Laos or North Vietnam, but no such operation is planned. On the contrary, U.S. troops are pulling out of Vietnam. THROUGHOUT the U.S. military U.. volvement in Indochina, Washington and Peking have had secret understandings. American and Chinese diplomats have been in constant communication in Warsaw. They have managed, in each crisis,• to bridge the great gulf between the two nations. True. the Chinese diplomats have been rigid as steel beams. Oft.en, they have spoken less for the sake of the listening American.s than for the dogmatisls back on mainland China who read the transcripts. One participant has describ. td the. diplomatic encounters to us as "not so ~ negotiating as like listening to fladio king." . StiJl, format talks and informal contacts have cleared u p misun- der.itandings. prevented miscalculations and provided a clear channel of com· munication. THE LATE President Kennedy, for Instance, asked the U.S. negotiators lO deliver a warning at the Warsaw meeting in March, 1961 , that the U.S. would intervene in Laos with military force unless the Chinese permitted a cease·flre. The Chinese brought back to the next meeting word that Peking would accept an international guarantee of Laotian neutrality. For the moment at least, this ended the Laotian crisis that had the world on tenterhooks in 1961. When ex-President Johnson began born· bing North Vietnam, he sent assurance!! through Warsaw that the U.S. had no designs oo the territory of either North Vietnam or Red China. This was delivered at the Feb. 25, 1965, meeting where U.S. Ambassador John Cabot emphasized the U.S. didn't intend to destroy North Vietnam nor to invade China. Training College Presidents Stanford, 11arvard and all sorts of colleges and universitles have recenUy acquired new presidents. The question in the mind of every thinking American '" '"\\'here do they come from ?'' The answer, of course, i!I The Irma N. Mortcrtss Academy of Co 11 e g e Pre.sidentry and Flying Trapezisls. The Academy held one of its rare open houses the other day for parents of pros- P e ct i v e students. Dean Griswold Grommet. the be- loved head or the Institution, kindly gerved as gulde. "THIS, FRIENDS, began Ole Dean, 1'is our AdrniB.sions Of· flee. All candidates are carefully screen- ed to determine whe.ther they have the r1re qualiUes It U:kt11 to be a college. pmldenL tj>d1y •• Friday, Moreb 19, 1971 Tll< cdllOrial pag• of !ht DailV Pilot "''" to mfom •lid atil!l-ulof<I NOd<n bM ,,,. ... ttng this newpapcr'r OJ>f"""" and '""" """''"'II on toplcr of mt<r<ll a!ld irlplfl«mc<. br providilll/ • furum /or Chi ~_rpr1ui01' of· our rtatkrt' opffPonl, and bU pr11entfng the dtver1e vit"' pofutl of Informed obiervm and rpokeimett Oft topiCI Of tht do11. Robert N. Weed, Publliher • I ! Art Hoppe l \ ... "New the candidate crav;ls through this little door here, crosses that high wire there over the tank full of piranhas, solves the four-dimensional chess pro- blem on the other side in five second!! and, if succt!ssful, is welcomed by f\.1r. Phlssion Chips -the gentleman there with the boots and whip. "The purpose, of course, is to test the candidate's physical agilily, sense of balance, mental dexterity and will· ingness to stoop to conquer -all absolutely essential quaUties in a college president these days.·• "WHAT'S THE MAN with the whip do?" asked a puzzled father. "Mr. Chips." replied the Dean, "tests their ma!IOChism. Now then .•. " The group was suddenly surrounded by a hortle of !ltudent!I in tattered 11Uire holding forth cups and tmrls and crying piteously, "Please, sir, can you spart a dime?" The Dean\/'8miling proudly. dispalched each with a cuff and a kick. "Our Elementary Bqging Class." he ex· pJalned. "Here at the Acade:my we try to instill the proper beggarly spirit, so useful in approaching wealthy alumal in later life. Oh, look. wt.'re in luck! .. A slender yoone; man z.ipped put, pursued by • howling mob of his fellows. ill thro\\'ing rocks ind bottles •t him without SUCCt.!.!. ''1'11AT'S YOUNG llo~n." "Id the Dean 1dmiringly. "l-ic's bten clocked around the Quad In 2:52 -1 school record. We'rt predicting not only a brilli.ant career for llrirg.i n, bu! a long l.'lne. N1>w on yobr '''' is a clA!.'1 in Basic Knot Un!yin~ and Oii your right our School of Elocution. Listen!" A babble of Indecipherable sound!! emerged through an open window. "We like to say," boasted the Dean, "that all our graduates use not only word!! you can't µnderstand, but who I e p.aragraphs you can"t un<kntand ." A boy moped past, shoulder.i hunched. "That's poor Merriwell,'' whispered the Dean sadly. "He cracked under lhe strain and lost his nerve. He·s now studying to be an aerial acrobat without a net.'' A MOntER asked if all students got jobs as college presidenls on graduation. The Dean frowned. "Last year. all but one, he said. "It was that fool kid, Horowiti. lie forgot everything we taught him. Instead of declining vociferously al first \\-"hen Lhe Trustees of Skarewe University offered him lhe job of president. he eagerly s11id he wanted to takt' on the. challenge."' "\\'hat's wrong with saying you want the Job?" asked a parent who hadn 't been listening. "Good Heavens:·• cried the Dean in surpri5e. "If you -v.·ere. a trustee would )'OU hire some kind cf nut?" Dear Gloom,· Gus: Mayor Goldberg's eltetion cam· PA.Ian claimed he'd Avt. Lagun.it from llipplts. 11• didn"t. He says high rise will SHVe us from higher taxes. It won 't1 as witnes5 Mi!unl and \Vaiklki. -B. S. H. ,~,. l'Ml'lo•• Nf/lt(fl t'llfln' .... w.. .... -11Yr11Y _,. .. .... -llt•. ltM ""' "1 _.., le O'"'r' Gg" o.llY l"lr.t. s Learn to Ask t he Right Questions 'The first lesson to learn when you grow up is that i1 you don't ask the right questions, you won 't get the right answers. It's surprising how many grown-ups never learn this -so they keep asking the W1"Dng questions. and keep getting unsatisfactory answers. One of the biggest wrong questions today is: "Why au the violence and agitation and disre- gard for legal pro- cesses?" You can't get a sensible or meaningful answer lo a question llke that. You have lo back up and ask a prior question : "What makes ee<Jple and institutions move?" And the usual an· sy,·er is: ''Fear, shame, and publicity." FOR 20 VEARS and more. it has been an open secret that colleges and universities were poorly run on almost every level; little was done t-0 change them until the students began kicking up a fu ss. Then the need for changes y,·as ha stily and tardily admitted. Why have government agencies, al every level, suddenly become s o solicitous of the public's rights and need s, when these same rights and needs have existed unsalisfied all along ? Because people are making a lot of noise now, and demanding action instead of \vords. Why are necessary reforms made only after • catastrophe, and rarely before '! After the plane crashes, after the mine collapses, after the theater burns down, after lhe patient dies of neglect? WHY DO INSTITUTIONS a n d establishments refuse to listet1 to reason, to calm words, to legitimate complaints, lo quiet appeals? \Vhy do they always wail until catastrophe strikes. or rebellion threatens, before taking sleps !hat they then admit were "al\.\·ay:s necessary ''? These are lhe right questions we should be asking: How do we make our in· stilutions more responsive? How do we restructure our establishments so that they \.\'ill lake preventive measures in lime, and thus make agitation and vio- lence unnecessary '? In short, bow do we get the people in power _:_ anywhere -off their duff:s befOrt' the fu se burns down and blows them off? A DECADE AND more ago, I went around the college! lecturing and predic- ting what would happen there if nolhing changed; the students cheered. 1he teachers shrugged , lhe administrators booed. But it all happened, beginning at Berkeley. and getting worse. The same is going lo happen throughout our naUon's prisons and penitentiaries if essential reforms are not made DOW. And when the convicts riot on a scale we have not seen before, \Ii i? will again ask the wrong questlons, and again make the reforms. and again too I.ate. Quotes Jamti Schwnb~cbtr, Jr .. S.F. eoncl:.rt slngt.r, on nttd for publlr. music.al ptrformantts -.. All this ri111sic and ~ingi ng is a trip wilhout droi:is . . . It does something 1 poverty progrl!TI Ctlll 't do ••• it knockJijoy,n all the barriers," Education at the Mercy of Voters To the Editor : Our educational !)'titem should not and must not depend upon the taxpayers' eupport at t.be polls. If this change demands a reWrite of the state ron· sUtution. then thi& should be undertaken . Our standard!! of edu.cation must oot only be maintained but, hopefully, im· proved. To loy,•er our standards in thia day and age when education is more essential than ever before is unthinkable. lt is also unfa'° to expect citiz.ens struggling with a fixed income to vote themselves more taxes even for a vital i~sue such as education . Though I wonder if we have considered just how much more of our tax dollar would be spent on policing and punishment if our young people arc occupied with school only half of each day. THE STATE J\.1UST pro\'ide a mort equitable distribution of funds lo the districts. I understand that in the state of Hawaii. funds are dispensed equally to each district re gardless of the wealth of that district. thereby Insuring each and every child the equal opportunity guaranteed by our constitution. \Vhy could this not be a part of our future planning for the state ol California~ Please act noy,• to do y,•hat is possible to remedy the depl orable practice of putting our most important consideration -our children's educalion -at the mercy of the polls. MRS. M. L. CHAFFIN Epilon1e 111 Se1•vlce To the Editor: Laguna Beach should point with pride to Roy Childs, o~rner and operator of the Pottery Shack, for his excellent way of hand.ling the recent •·Pottery Poison· ing" scare which swept through many a Jocal home. When tlJt U.S. Food and Drug Administration ( USFDA ) issued an order to recall 400,000. ''Poppy Trail,'' dishes by Metlox. A1r. Childs was prepared to offer hi! customers the epitome in service. friendline ss and concern for those who had purcha sed the aneged Offending dishes from his establishment. .Although onl y one brand of the "Poppy Tra'.il'' dio;hes \\'as ~uspect ~ "California Tempo '' -Mr. Childs made it clear to one and al\ that his business would stand behind th e USFDA order for ANY and ALL J\.tellox products, suspect or not. REING ONE \\'HO arrived on Mr. Childs' doorstep with twn accused SOU(>- salad bo"'·ls. 1 \\'as treated with extreme courtesy and every method y,·a:o; used to quell any fear 1 might have had O\'e.r using !he bowls. My name and address was promplly noted. and l was advised that although my bowls \\-'ere nf the "1..3 Mancha" type of "Poppy Trajl." I 5hould not use them until the USFDA had properly tested all the Mel\ox prOOucts. If they proved to be defctlive, the Pottery Shack would stand bt>hlnd them for a complete. refund. despite what e\·er age the dl!he.1 might be I received a thoughtful letter from J\·1r . Childs. plus a stamped, addreMf'd post11l f ard lo the Metlox Company , asking for lhi: fina.I USFDA report. He ~lso advised me nol lo use my dhihes unti l the report was final. hopefully the end or this month It is. Indeed. gra!ifylng to }(now thHt merchant'! like Afr. Childs ex ist. and that personal lnvolvtment w i t h c:uslomcr., i., not • lh lng of the past. .. • Letters from readers are welcOTM. Nor'l'TU1Uy writers should convey their messages in 300 words or lesr. Thf right to condense letters to fit :pacl or eliminate libel is reserved. AU let- ttri m~t include .signature om! maU. ing address, but nome.s may be with-- held en request if su!fident rea.io" is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. ll's nice to know that somebody cares! LEE C. MILLAlt Time Caps11le I• i\'010 To the Editor: America seems to be caught up ln a time capsule. for, from all ap- pearances, we are fast retrogrl!ssing back into feudal days and the feudal system. We may not have castles, moaU and drawbridges yet, but we do have polarization -guarded cities, walled·in cities, reservations, ghettos, majoril1 races banding , together , the old people isolated and the generation gap. Also, monopolies. franchises and con- glomerates where too few have too much poy,·er and too much money, Illus die· tating to the many. Thus, •hat has happened to democracy? To "united we stand ,'' etc.? l.F THINGS ARE to become. this drastic. then let's get on with iL Why not King Arthur and his Knights cf the Round Table? (So far they art: not in the picture .) Knights dedicated lo y,·hat \\'8! onC* a great set of \'alues -integrity, honor, honesty, concern for the hl:lpless. etc. Knights with a cause! A quest! Let this quest he a crusade! A crusad1 against pollution. Let it spread worl(j.. wide! Fight pollution (no polarization) for their motto. For, thus. we wipe out polariJ.ation by uniting to survive. Hence no more y,·ars. Only a mighty crusade and knights who strive fearlessly for a world for themselves and others to lh·e in. The lime capsule is nQ\.\. ELlNOR DAVIS B11 George Dear George : 1 just wanted to write you a letter of heartfelt thanks. For yeani J went around worrying that pt.opl1 thought I wa!I eccr:ntric. Then I • starttd reading your c-olumn. I've completely quit worrying about my5eif -now I gn around worrying that people think YOU are eccentric. CURED Dear Cured : Yeah -you may be curtd, but many more testimonial!! Ukl! THAT and rm going lo be pretly sick. • Dear Geargr: As one of your fans I would like lo know how many chapten there are to your book on Sideways Thinking. K.B. Dtar K.B.: Thue'" only one chapter. K.8. -bll h boy, iJ lhiJ a LAU book! •• J • • l'AMll.l'-CIRCVS --1»11 Bil Ke at1e -~----"I '111 all cut of "11iles for today, Daddy." CHECKl.NG •UP• Eat Your Meals In Pittsburgh By L. M. BOYD MISTER, HOW DO you know you can't restore your hair if JOU haveh't tried pull· in& at amall tufts of it with a {lair of pliers? Hold on, no whimsy intended. That's what the famous gentleman Bernarr MacFadden did. He was pretty near bald at the age of 40, but sported ·a fiOe sbock of hair by the age of as. And he always contended the. daily plier treatment was one of his secrets. He had w:veral.. PLEASE NOTE, the most tasterly lrtt down here in the 43 states is a red spruce at Lubeck Point, Maine . Most we sterly, a redwood south or Eureka. Calif ..• NEVER, NEVER buy a really w.l.ttrproof sleeping bag, ad· vises a medical m a n • R.epeUant, yes. Proof, no. It's got -lo-breathe. he. says .••• P ECULIARLY, the TV sh9W that draws the biggest au- dience by far worldwide can't even get a sponsor in the United States. The soccer championships. HOW ~1UCH DOES ii cost to take your family out to dinner? Say you're four. Average tab nationwide runs $17.36. In New York City, it's '35.96. Jn Soulhern Californ ia. $13 .15. Why 1 don't know, but Pittsburgh, Penna., is "·here Nun Seals Extinction Seen Soon? CAGLIARI, Sardinia (A P) -Mediterranean nun seal is disappearing from ils Sardi· nian breeding grottos. FulcD Pratesi. of lhc Italian Associa· tion for the World Wildlife Fund. expresses rear lhat the &pecies may be extinct soon. The shy sea1s get their name from a bh1ck and white coat aimilar to a nun's habit. Once 500 were Htimated lo be in the Aegean and Balearic islands. around Corsica and the restaurant cbecks for rour average lhe least. Only $8.36. Remember that. If you want to eat out,. Pittsburgh's the place. CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q. "You know the man in the Hathaway shirt ads, the fellow with the patch over one eye, is he really half blind?" A. Baron George Wrangell? Not at all. At last report his eyesight was 20-20 .• , • Q. "What's Calgary Redeye? A· Half beer. hall tomato juice. !<.fixed into a mishap .... Q. "ls it true the government's going to put out a new $1 with Dwight Eisenhower's likeness on it?" A. That it is. Expect it by November. WHICH ARE the more in· telligent -blondes, brunettes or redheads? Argument con- tinues about that. But a .surveylaker in New York City says he oow knows. Some claim. He got his hands on the intelligence tests of more than 1,000 coeds. And the com- puter's tally of the batch, he says, proves blondes tend to be the brighte r. Thars natural bl~des, not bleached. HOW TO Gt:r oil and grease stains off unpainted concrete. That's \Vhal a customer wants lo know . Spread some dry P~d ce- ment on them. About a half Vich thick. Next day, S\.\•eep it up. Stick a piece of burlap in .solvent. mineral spirits maybe, and scrub v.·hafs left of the stain. If that doesn·t do it, give the stains another layer of cement for ~ day or so, this time soaking ii \l:ith the solvent. So advises our Household Hints specialist. IT 'S KNOWN exactly h:ilf of all record albums are sold to leenage girls. Oh, you 're nol surprised .. , LATEST OOPE on color TV sets shows two out of five American homes now own one of same . Your questions and cor11- ments are welcomed !Ind 1Qitl be used i 1l CHECKING UP whereuer possible. Ad· dress letters to L. /tf. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. in bretding caves on•----------- Sardinia 's rocky east coast. A year a~o naturalists here estima"ted that only about 15 still soughl haven in their favorite grotto. Pratesi says the number Ls believed to have dropped to seven-six adults and one young, indicating a virtual end to breeding. A few have been captured In an attempt to preserve the 1ptcies in zoos. The last two captured young died in the Rome. 7.oo. . FREE LAS VEGAS HOLIDAY FOR TWO PHSONS-l DA TS-1 NIGHTS • TttlltllOt'ftllDn NI>! lncMHd, WITH ANY RCA CONSOLE PURCHASED SAVI NGS TO $JOO APPLIANCES LA6UNA llACH 889 GLENNEYRE 494.o'!iaz Reds Gi ve Eg ypt New Helicopters fridl)', March 19, 1971 . ' YOUR RCA D"IAtER Sales,, •nd Factory Authorized Service COST A MESA 411 L S...e111-tti St. have 128 ~IIG·2ls, Including the latest model~ as well as about 150 other ti.11G jets, about 50 bombers and 97 SU-646-1684 \At•N Hllh ,. .. I fl llllYICt: 1''40H•• S•>UI CM 1 .. M 4111 DAILY PILOT 7 ·D7·lll0 WASHINGTON IAP) -The Soviet Union recently gave Egypt more helicopters capable of carrying troops on dashes into Israeli tenitory, U.S. lntelllgence sour~s say. Three Soviet ships u11loaded modern Ml-8 t ran spo r I helicopters in Egypt, the sources said. enhancing the Egyptial\S' ability to I and raiding parties behind Israel's front llnfs. 7s. The latter are us.td ch e y o.uy,~ , .. ,1 ,;;, ""· for close support of troops.11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Egyptian air force has about a 4-3 advantage in com· bat planes over the Israelis, U.S. sources estimate. The seven-month cease:(ire has given the Egyptian air fGl'ce an opportunity to regai11 its confidence after losing 110 planes lo the 1sraelis. The Egyptians now own an estimat~ 133 Russian-made helicopt.ers or various types, Hearly double the number they had last fall, the sources said. KIRKPA TR;ICK'S OVER .:Z,S YEARS IN THE HARIOR AREA E11rh of the turbine-powered Ml-& can carry ZS soldiers and can be stripped of seats and used to carry military equipment as an air am· bu lance. American sources "'ho pro- l~ded this Egyptian I o s !I estimale say the Israelis lost 27 jets in combat before the truce began in early August. 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'.J .. see all there is ••• in color television ... .at your deafer! colar·6ot' a long Ucnel _ .. _ •Optional with dealer • - l , j I DAILY PILOT rt!d41, March l~. 1~71 3 Perish, Fire Rips Dan~e of Love h k Rest Home HOLLYWOOD (UPI\ -Lttcking a proper court bench, San Franci-scans Brace for Quake Judge, Jury Take in Act Quee11 Mary Official s Praise Program at Start of Probe ~ SAN FRANCISCO (AP \ - Shaken hy l!Xperts' "'Arnings that a 1najor earlhquake is overdue, San Francisco is rnoving to limit deaths and damage if anothtr hig tremor strikes. Untouched hy It seriQUS quakt since the 1~ disas~er, San Francisco was JOited 1ntt1 ~ctinn by the recent remor near Los Angeles \\'hich left 64 dead and caused extensive property damage. , The &ard of Supervisor~ voted Thursday to set a Attorney • Makes Plea For l\fanson number of anlitart qui e pr~ the Judge took hJ11 ~itlon of honor adjacent to the cash LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Jrcts in motion, after hearing 1 register. k · 1· t av lhal the IN GLEWOOD fUP ) Long live the Queen. qua e specta IS s s · The aJx.man, 11i1-wnman jury ""rched on barstools. real question is not whether Three elderly men died and ,,.. Words to that effect were .nnther big Quake will rattle t .. 1 Judge Irwin J. Nebron, after convenlng court Thurscll1 y uttered wannly Thursday by wo oi.ner persons wtre 0• al the Bottoms Up Bar, then looked at the four dancers and the c ity, but when. Jured today in •nearly morn· said : three me• involvtd in the A Jt111jor quake ' ' I 1 multlmllllon-dollar projecto to overdue ." said Dr. Roberl ing fire which heavily damag· "Do you solemnly swear t.o recreate the matters refer· convert the liner Queen Mary Hamilton, chief seismologist ed one wing of 8 convalescent red lo in this case sub.!ltantially the same and as nearly as into 1 tourist 11 l r 1 c t i 0 n of the National Center for home here. possible as your have performed them in the past'!" ca 1 cu I ate d to return Ea rthquake Research, who ltd p 1· Id . ht The dancers swore . they W(luld and began their 20-mu1Um1lllon dollars lo the city o ice sa e1g person• minute routines. a panel of IO experts in an were trapped in the rear or The unusual court ses~ion w11s convened so the jury or Long Beach. appearance be f 0 r • the the building, but five were eould determine whether "The Dance of Love" was ob-City Manager John R. 'uper"l•0 -Thursday The Mansell told a subcomm1·11ee • ""'" · rescued by four policemen and scene, as argued by the prosecution , or a work of art, as chances of it being as big the defense contended. of the Assembly Ways and th 8 00 R'chter ma~1·tude a fireman who crawled into Means Comm,· t tee 1·n· as e ·'"" 1 00• Before lhe dance began, a middle-age woman juror shocker of 1906 "are prac· the burni•g structure on their with glasses studiously took notes on a yellow legal pad. vestlgath1g expenditure of lhe !lcally 100 percent," he said. hands and knees. f Court rtporter George M. Kraft began operating hUi l!lleno-almost $50 million lo date : The board ordered the The other three w drag· type on the bar I.Op. "The future of the city nf Public Works Department to ged out by .11nother officer. Then lhe lights dimmed, loud rock music blurted out Long Beach hinges on the SUC· report on how quickly it ca n but one was pronounced dead and the act began. The juror .11bruptly !topped taking notes r::: ... or failure of this pro- begin enforcing the two·year· at the l!Cene and the other and Kraft put his fingers in his ears. nld law against <>verhanging two died en route to the The dance was performed twice. <>nee by the star• -It was pro-Queen-Mary day. parapetc:; th.11t a strong quake hospital. Joseph R. Ferrari. 28, and Susan A. Setters. 21 -and once Opponents will be beard at could sh ake loose. killing and by their understudies, Thomas Mahaud, 24, and Mary Stev· later senions. injuring people in the streets Ten persons were led lo enson, '?t. Long Beach used $3.4S beJo .... ·. safety from the second floor T ,r first dance st.arted with the bearded Ferreri and million of the funds it gets I d ed I d fled of the two-story wood frame from tidela·"s 01·1 dr1'lllng to I or er a aw ra red-.1alred Miss Setters appearing In short kimonos. At the •IV d t · building by officers. R~identa b y •• Q ee Mary fr lo set up a team to e ermint: end they wt:re wearing only ballet slippers and embracing u uie u n om · h' h k. d r b ·1d· or the other wing of tht: St. the Cunard L't•• That was 1ust w 1c in o u1 1ng on a belr-skin rug in what resembled sexual intercourse. · f · h r th Erne Sanitarium. a newer , only tile beginnJng is sa e 1n eac part o e The trial continues I.Oday -this time in the municipal · 11 one-story structure, also were Co!t of the conversion pre>- ealaUon to tht '50-milllon area wu due la.rgely to a cha.na:e of plan1 tncludlnc n · peded facilltlea to band.le more touri1ts. C-Ohtn Js 1peclal counsel to the Califomi• Museum of the Sta Foundation. • nonprofit group , which has a 40-year C'Ol'ltract with Long Beach tn construct and operate a maritime museum on the Queen Mary and run tours of an educalionaJ nature. Jacques Cousteau celebrated oceanographer, has been hired to create a lifelike underseas atmosphere in the bowels ol the Queen with dioramas a•d animated figures. mean a net profit of S2 mil lion which would go to the city to help pay off its investment. VNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS 9tolP.M. MON .0THURS. 10·S P.MJ PllDAYS 10·4 P."- 17141 540·5211 , l oc.ote4 111 1 •, S.. C•att f'fu.a, Ced• M~_,:; AHi. VI'• ,. .... 1.-M111 .. ll ~· H. M. STOLTE •• Cohen said the museum·tour phase of the Quee111 ahould I~;::;::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;!;~ gross about $4 million on a ye.srly attendance of t,750,000 visitor1. That, he said, would TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ ·; LOS ANGELES ! AP J - Charles Man.son's attorney has begun pleading for the clan leader's life aft er lhe pr~ gecutor al the Sharon Tate murdtr trial told jurors all fo ur defendanLS are ''human monsters" who deserve to die. c y. evacuated. but were permitted courtroom where It started. i'ect was estimated al a The board also ordered a to return later. The st11te brought lewd conduct charges against the L•• sc••• ,,_1u11 .. • a.... • ...,., W D Y mo"' 10 ·inst all ~ to too relatively mode.st $8.75 million e are OU.·~·.: • "" The ciu.se <>f the fire was four dancers and five other employes of the bar aft.er police originally. G•,,.. -"''"le• •1 "'' · GOLF TIPS monitoring de vic t:s in major officers viewed lhe routines more than 75 tlmes. The de-NEWPORTER INN Ev ery S•turday .~. bu·td ' t th under investigation and no Maru:ell and other witnesses. PAR 3 GOLF COURSE w t 1ngs o measure e · fenda.nts are charged wlt.h 33 misdemeanor counts. d " Irving Kanarek, represen· ting ManS<>n , began an ex· pected two-day final argument Thursday by suggesting the leader of a hippie-sty le "fimily" should be spared as .11 possible specimen for psychiatric study. precise effects of quakes, -~dam~a~1~·~.,~ti~m~a~te~~w=as:.._=""=·..1::=================:-===J_j'~it~y~a~tt~o~rne!!:_y~t..o~n~•~'~Pu~tnia~m!~'~'·:":::•~"~'~":'•~••:,,::•;"~'~'~'~"~~=========;'. large and small. mediately available. afld Les H. Cohen said the And it called for t 1tudy r----::::::--:::::::-:-----------------------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~·~· of how to make safe some 63 city~wned 1ehools and *::::-.;;:-~::t-:~~:§:~~::::;::::::o:::::::~:::::'k~'l:::.. · thousands <>f older buildings built before tlle current building Cf>de went int.o effect 25 years ago. SST Jobs LOS ANGELES (UPI) SAT. ONLY ' COSTA MESA ONLY HRS. 10 A.M.·10 P.M. ~puty Dist. All y. Vincent Bugliosl. in a fin.11t argument lasting less than 10 minute!'>, told jurors in the trial's penalty phase. "If th is case isn't a proper case for im· position of the death penalty against all four defendants, no case evtr would b!." He spoke of the st.libbing· gun-shot slayings of Miss Tate and six others, saying, ''The seven murders in this case were so incredibly savage, ghastly and blr.arre they are perhaps unprecedented. They are so devoid of any ex· tenualing circumst.ances that the death penalty should be automatic." 'In Peril' Ii I Aerospace Industry offlcialsll~===~~~~~~~~~~;;:;:~=======~~==~~~=~~~~~~=~~:~~~~~~~==~=~~=~~~!~~J predicl 3.1 00 Co 11 for n I a ......... <::::'""=.;;;;# ""::o;;;;,,,:;'t!:=:!.l>==!J workers will be affected im· ----------------mediately if the SST pro11ram Bugliosi. speaking f r o m notes while posed at a lee· turn, told the seven-man, five-woman jury which con· victed Manson and three women cod ef end ants of murder~onspiracy, "What 1 aee In vou is the collectiv e conscienCe of the community. The eyes of the world are focused on you.'' i,g cancelled by Congress. The oflicial3 said Thursday that four ma J or sub· contracting firms in Southern California employ 1,800 of those while another 1.300 are working directly on the SST programs at small firms throughout the slate. The la rgest sou th I and employer involved in the pro- jeet is North Am er i c an Rockwell, which has 9 0 0 per90ns working on a $34.2 million contr.11ct to provide wing flaps and rudder and stabilizer sections for tw<> SST prototypes. •Bald Eagles Thrive' Teacher Says DDT Good For Wildlife WASHINGTON (UPI) EPA Administrator William The bald eagle. America's na· D. Ruckelhaus said DDT stlll tional bird, ls increasing in was needed for ma 1 a r i a num bers rather than dy ing mosquito cont i'lo I and for because of DDT poisoning. a certain crops. The "imminent California educator contended haiard" was not sufficient to Thursday. justify an immediate ban, he Dr. J. Gordon Edwards said said. mCl.'it of the bald eagles dyin g In testimony before the are killed by gunfire . House committee. Edwards Acluall v, the San Jnse State accused var Io us con- College Professor said. DDT servalionist organizations of is good for birds and bees arousing a public outcry by sa ''~ng 1he plants the y feed 1hrough '' spurious pro- on fr om destructive pests. paganda," particularly aNiut EdY.·ards . an entomologist DDT 's allegrd effect.!i on \\'ho ha ~ taught at Sa n Jo11e jiiibiiiriidii,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitl su1ce 1949. came to lhe l defense or DDT in testimony bt>fore the House Agriculture • Committee. I He protested ca ll s by con· &ervationislS for an end to l DDT use nn crops, saying ''millions nf people will die") flf diseases and i;;tarvalion If farmers are denied its use . I SALE TROPICAL FISH P•cific Goldfish F.11rm 1 14842 Edw•rdt St. On"'' !•ft Di191 ,l'rff••1t~ •I Gtl"tft Wit! •n<I &ti''· \Vhile Ed,~111rds \'.'as tesli· fying . the Eniyrnnmcnt.al Pr~ 1 tection A g e n c y announce d WESTMINSTlllt there y.·nuld be no Immed iate 193·7105 DOTb~an~·--~---"" ................................... ~·1 ••v•nty-ones •I ~~~ 2eOO HAASOA 8LVD. f COSTA MESA (714) .640-1100 SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY, MARCH 20 ONLY -WHILE QUANTITIES LAST , REDWOOD COMPOSJ 60 LB. BAG With 11itrogen. Ap- ply now for sprJna grov.·th. Highly <>r· Jdf'al snil ONE DOZEN GOLF BALLS Rev. 6.84 366 Cool t'l)ftoM « tottor:t' blended with rayon c;ir polyester for c:uy·ct.tt: t'omfort.. Prints. sc;ilids. New coU&c stylCL 12· I 8. I ~.;.~t~~~~~ ~--·~--------------- " 13~Z. • MIXED MIXED NUTS o.,,. Rog. 67< 3 7' Crisp , mindiy ~ Mrttfor part1~. TV mun ch1n~. sna.cks. Vacuum ao kef:'ps them !uper-fresh. 13-oz.• Ou r Rtg. 351 c.tt let for Ea.~· ter uith type 108 Polacolor® · fllm pack for all col-m .. pack cameras. LJm1i.c ""'1fttltJ, -.... "' ... ltrl. ....... , . t!ilfll. JR. BOYS' LONG-LEG PAJAMA~ 99. All~bttiadc:loth p•· jamu 11te dura.bk snd DELUXE BROOM 97~ limited •u•"tlly, ,..nt f(lld i. 6Ni.rt ~ Sit .. lltt/11, Limit 1. FRINGED REVERSIBLE RUG Our R09. 97c 57c Multi-colored nylon/cotlon-fillM rugs to &catter everywhere, revers!!' for double the cha.tm. Sma.tt fringed ends: 19x3J .. 5iZP. Ge t them tor kitchen, laundry, playrooms, patio, ('Ot\l\gP tno! Our Ro9 . 9.44 521 Thrrr JnPtal-shadrd 5wh·rl Jlghta Qn fll"flr·tn-ctillnt POI'" Jet you fnr11~ rlirrrt Ix-am I n r rf'11rl 1ni::: or m 11~ir, ~pn1 l1iih r A pa!n1 ini.;. d 1ffllS!' 11oft Ji i;: h I tnn. Warm !'lf'ig,,. OM6 Sot , 1120171. ·,. , • , { • • . - < ! ! 'BORN FREE' READY FOR LONG VOYAGE Cliftons, Son, Mother June ind Mike Get Away Family Plans Trip, :May Never Return Last week, the CUftons :tiroke down the fence behind :~ir north Huntington Beach home and let the neighbors know what all the hammering had been abouL .... : . :They trailered out a huge ~foot trimaran, capable of ~ling practically anywhere in the world. And that is exactly '.what the family of three plans :te. do. : : The b o a t , appropriately ;named "Born Free," was the ,Jµbject of more than five ;»:ars of painstaking labor and c:Oa:t the Cliftons $10,00U to 'build. ~ -''We wanted to move out .Or our house and retire before ~e got old," explained Mrs June Clifton of 51701 Rivie'ra St., while her husband steadied the boat on the trailer. "We want to get away from all the high payments and Ste a little of the world, even if we have to sell our house and everything in it." Thi:; summer, they plan to sail the sloop-rigged craft down to the Sea of Cortez, the Carribean and t h e Bahamas. They don't know if, or when, they will return. "We bave no goal and if we like a certain place we'll stay for a while, There's very little money, so we 'll try to get work whenever we can," Mrs. Clifton explained . Neither Mrs. Clifton, nor the couple's 16-year~ld son ha ve . c· I S h sailed before, but they have :, Ir S 0 ug t t1kon tesso.,. Mike Clifton, 45, a neon sign · F. p hanger, has been around boat! ; Or ageant for the past 20 yea rs. He has extensive sailing ex- . ·Entries are now open for perience and will be assisted '.either the Miss Huntinjton by Richard Wright, a Beach or Miss Fountain Valley businessman. who hung up his beauty pageant. work to go on the voyage. ''I designed it and built ll -.. Both cities are looking for myself," said Clifton. sporting fbung, pretty girls who live a 2.months-old m a r i t i m e or work within their borders beard. "I first built 8 little fo compete in the chamber balsawood model but our dog, if commerce sponsored Attila, chewed it up." fvents. "He 's been dreaming about · Miss Jayme Boyd is the this for 8 Jong time and you Current queen of Huntington can 't take a dream away from Beach while Miss Lind a 8 man." chimed in Mrs. Clif· Anderson holds the title in ton. "I've helped him out as Fountain Valley. much as I could by handing Both queen contests are him s c r e w d r iv e r s and acheduled for May 15. Faun-varnishing the inside." ta.Jn Valley's will be held at "We're going to have to the community center while wait until we sell the house Huntington Beach plans its so we can buy the sails, And contest in the auditorium of if we don't sell the house, Huntington Beach Hlgh School. we'll go anyhow." P'or more information phoneliii••------•m;;I the Fountain Valley Olamber WAREHOUSE SALE of Commerce. 968-2013, or the l!untington Beach Chamber, K 01 CARP MU6'1. Both contesb are ora:ani.zed by tht women·s division of each chamber. Who Cares? No oth•r 110W'lptper 1111 tli1 ~rid core1 1~011t your commr.1· J ..l+., lik1 your Cem11n111ify d1ity 11owt.p1p1r do11. 11'1 !lit DAILY PILOT. -- I H.,...1111-1 of color1"'1 1wlmmfn9 1.-.nh, 1 rnust tor ell AQ11trlu111 . f<om SJ.50 \llllT US frtnl l .. S-ClfNI T...,.,, PacHic Goldfish Fann 1..0 W•w1nl1 SI .. W'111111Mlitr Oii lh1 kn 0!9911 F•eew•v" Go!d...,we-.t """ flol1• ni.nts I See ~Y Today's Want Ads e R.edtt0rated large 2 bed- room. new carptta It df"llp. f'.s, buiJt.Jns $150. Child Okay ... Ck 365 CM. ' e Opt>rating A6,~ncy,' licrn!- «I by tl'w! slat(' of Cah- rornif.. Training avail, can be Onaoced. Check 200. • Wurlitu.r Spinet Organ, 1 yr old, double manual $&50. Ck 826. 8 UOO-MOVING Lee mlr- J'\'lr, bardrock map!e bed tram&. trunk. National GeocniphleJ, bol•tm • cover, andirons. Ck AU. Biggest Tax WASHINGTON (UP!) Most American famllles pay about the sa1'le percentage of their earnings\in federal, state and local taxes whether their annual income is an im· proverished $2,000, an affluent $50,000 or anywhere in between, Census B u r t a u figures showed. Taxes -direct and indirect, obvious and hidden -take about 30 percent of the income i>f the vast majorit y of America n families because regressive sales and property taxes offset inct1me taxes which are scaled to the ability to pay. The biggest tax bite is felt by the poorest group of families, those with income of less than $2,000 a year. They pay an average of SO perceflt of their earnings In taxes. But taken together, persons with income of less than $2,000 and more than $50,000 aceoo.nt for less than 10 percent of the population. For the rtst of the income groups, the total tax percentage is strikin&ly similar: $2,CI00-$4,000, 34.l!i per- $3" Women's Shifts or Pant Shifts '12" Curl Mid Steam Hair Setter DIM!• 20 toli.ts. $f" ~for mo.t hel!'dm. Plo1tlc COM Wi&! "*9• urinO C:\,lp. es299 c.omtortcibi., cool,,.,... • •lty styJn In _,-c:o,.. fabtits, the d •"Im look. toe>-4n stmin • .olickondprints.10to 18 ond S-M·L. Practiail and l'rtllyl $J"Women's Ccuual Slippers All pu~ 1llpPt,.-"·~""''''"'"" $)37 out. Crlnkl• vlnyl pottnll end vlr1Yl1 l'I wricvs atylec. Co!OIJ, t iI9'fotolt. '1" ldola Slrttdt Ires "'' ..... $JS9 • Bite Felt by U.S. cent; H,QOO...M,000, 31 percent ; $6',00048,000, 30.1 p e r c e n t ; $8,000-$10,000 29.2 percent : $10,000-$15,000, 29.8 percent ; $25,000-$S0,000, 32 .8 percent. Herman P. Miller, chief of .~ Census Bureau's popula- tion dlvialon revealed the figures. The census found t h a t federal tax collections -ln- di\"ktual income tax, Social Security tax and the portion of the corporate profit tax that la passed along to con- sumers In the form of higher prices -ge~rally rose with, ln<:ome although there wen a few ~zceptions a.nd the rate or Increases w111 small. But, Miller said, state and local taxes -mostly 11les and properly tues -wen "regressive at all Income levels." The lowest JnCGme group, under n.ooo. paid the highest percenta1e of earn- ings, 27.2 percent, in state and local ta"xes. The rate declined steadily as Income rose with the highest income group, over $50,000, paytn1 the smallest tu ptrttnlqe, 1.7 pereent 1be fiaure1 are diatorted somewhat by Miller'1 defin.i· tlon of income. He included only eamlnis and excluded government ''transfer'' payments to Individuals such as w8lfare benefits and Soclal Security payments. In the under $2,000 Income bracket, lhe average family received tran.afer payments sllghUy ln uces1 or the earn- ings Mlller included in his definition of income. tr tran&- ftr payments were added to the iAcomo base, ~ average S.lllllfdal Satl•is lor Ytl 11 llnfllf• ., " .. T•uoll H•• 111 n11 A• Pf11 M1n•rH1 Mtr1 T•r11p11t Hi1 lt1rer L11lc for fht F11or11n11t Shtlf T111l DtJ M111 lrt11 Df1 .. c111nt1l We're O,.n Eltrr H11rs 7 Dip 1 WHk ftt T11r C111• Ytnl1n11, Tlt1n111 DrlffJ Dnii lllC DIMtllt lt1r1 l11r T11f DAil Y PILOT \t· Poor famlly In that group J)lkf In taxes about 2$ percent of hl.t total income of e11rnln1s plu1 tranlfer benefits. Including transfer payment.9 in the Income base brings the total ta1 picture a llllle closer to the ability to pay. Bui for most inccme groups, the spread remains n a r r ow • FamUies in the $4,000-$6,000 bracket pay Jn taxes 26 per· cent of their total income In· eluding transfer payments. In the $1S,Q00..'2S,000 bracket, the rate is 30 percent, 1 difference of 4 percentage points. Reg. s12•i Bonlon Chaise Lounge Full Year's Supply \i&l-1' Vitamins •Jl.•tM111tiolom,,_ • $1.lf 1<1.1t1,i. ""' y;i.-•ltto h ... •SI.JI C-•~lt ~"' 700 .111..., ~, ...... ft ......... 1'" ld!n• :;:1"1~~=--b:=-=~~U:.".: 31c<= Saccblrin ·--... -2kcroC~l"'s Aspi11 ~ "':". 21c~ Ptmlit ,.._ 22' S1W Wtr1. list iJ'rtr1 Nit Sime lecer41 • '"" ._., • lM ·3•t ----·· " ...... , ... , ..... "' .,,... 91111~""" • llllltt llntll .. ·=i ..... .... "' ............ Cit l.,, •111 Value! Quilted PlllowCowrs C.b-pk~h • "'ln11t•, M«•&Mi-.. -. 50' Ya~I •-'• Chcllllte Miits ~.29c Ttttt c1111fy MatthholfOf ,_,, IOMtl)', s911 Ha11d1om• "oll '" .,,..,.,. lcuna• op1n1 ~lat flK 1unnlng. Tro,..formr from cot to c:halr to contout l oun~• In .-ordl. :5111t fram1, 1 turd 'f tubulor vil!VI In }.vo-~. Ytllow ot TIW• Compo,.,. OthMa at·7Sc '~::, Autollltlffc Transmission Fluid =-'-~: 4i$J 8!'121 ,., ..... Deodorant Soap :::'"" 8'88' pt'O'rid.i 0 !l• ,,,_ I ............. c.,_ .. M.-tllhiri ~fally hli•er Gloves .............. 44 ••tips (I ,.,.,. for c fl1m grip. Flr1t .,.tlty, ·Dute• Slnclalr Scotdt Whlsliy l;:".W."' ..... $3" '"" ...... .. J O Dlll V PILDT '"' LEGAL NOTICE .... lllCTIOUS IUSlltlllS NAM• STAT•MINT lo!IGWIM Ptr-It 001n1 LEGAL NOTICB LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE o•OtMANC• NO. n-4 Of tte!M .. fffl 10 ,1ovklM flW IR fl HIN ,t,,lf OIOUllANC• Of' TM• CITY COU,.._ l'*'t Artldl IMJ IN llloM lw lhe Cll'I' fllCTITKIVt IUSINfll C1L Of' TM• CITY Ofl COITA MllA. '° conatr!Xt t1orm dr1lnl. Ind 0114 NA.Ml ITATIMINf c.\Llf'O•NIA, (•I 111i TIN I A "'""' Wll ti. t• .. ndtd onlJ l6r rw1lr, bnlflett Thit "llowl,.. W*'• art dolnt O•AINAO• flll tcHl!OULa, MA•· m1ln-nc:1 or lntltlltllOn o4 ,..,. • ., bY1!,....H II: INO ••OYlllON ~· THI c:oi.. Or11 ... ,. IKUllW• .u hi lnlll~I ""'! DANA MAlllNA INN, l•lll (Nil LA VIST,\ MOTEL, !~BS. fl C1mll'ICI Ll!CTION TMl•l!OI', l'llOVIOINO Miiltr Ort!ntH ,. .. .,, IMl\ldh19 rt011ri HltllwtJ, 011111 Polnl, C1llt. 111111 S1n (_,..,..,,,, (tlltornlt. flOll ••1MaU•l•lllll!"T I" SC)fillla mtlnl-<>U 1nd ..-~o .. ol rullllltl 11-rl e.,..,.o L1nnll1111, JOlll CNal H1l111 1M ErMtl M.flll'ltl. 2.0S l"STANCtiS AND f'•OVIDINa l'O• llft.0' In pl~• !IOI offdflc1llY IMI...,. HIGll-•. 01n1 Poin!. Co!ll, S. fl C1m!ne lt11I S1n (llmflnlt, T"• US• 01' SAID fUNOS COL· In tM M_.tu D<tl,..ff Pl1n. Cit' ....., T1111 1>111!nen LI be/119 ConGOJC:lld by (1Uf0fnlt L•CT•D. lnc11• ll'ICltOledntu to• '"-conllrOJC:lil>n lft lnl!llvlavll. flllt bu1l,,_.1 11 "'I"' COIWIOJC:lttl bY THE CITY COUNCIL 01' THE ClfY of 1ny clrli,..GI t1ClllTY Pf'll•ldl"I lfll 11:-rt E1111e1W" L1nnf\1m 1n lndl Id I ~ •;,tll•hld 0•&-· Coe1t OtllY PIM'>! v \II. OF COlTA MESA OOEA HEllll!:tY O•· .ols '°""'" tor rtPIYl"tnl ol "''" -·s Heier! M1"'/n11 CIAtH AS FOLLOWS: cllOllCIMH tl\111 Ile from lf\1 ctr.lnN j,j, 1r, H 1...:1 M1rcll s. u.,39!;; PubllM1d Or•Mt\I CNll O•lllr Pllol ••CTIOlf 1. TM Cltv councn of ""' !ti 1\lf\O. 'l----------------1~.:.::":":.:'·_::"c·:':'·:':'J''~':":' ____ _:•:':'": (II\' ol COlll ~ -Mrfll¥ find Melltot u .111 .... 11 ... Df•l-llitelllllft LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL \ NOTICE ~ clecl.,t 1,..1 '"-dtvll_.,tnl of Apolk1n1t rt<1vtlll"9 conn-ctlO!I w1r-.' 1----------------1-------:-::::::-------P'-rlY In IM CllY .... (Giii Mllu., ..-1111,,. dftlntvt l1clllt111 11111! be ·r• tncll.ldtfl9 111bdlvlllom tnd •trctl$. f•Ol'l'I Olulr..:1 lo l'•Y tnt !l•tln•GI tee ti IAll. 11111 <•••o•oC•T',-,, '"'''''' time To Umt '"u!r .. 111t' COf'll!ructlotl ol Jl"OVl(fllel for In r1111 A•lkl•. NOflCI fO C•EDlfO•S • lttlllll•• ti Ml torlll Ill !flt M11ltr SUPl?ll.101. COUJIT 01' fHt! FICTITIQUS N•MI Or1l,..11e Pllll. S.Clltot IJ.lN ••c1111i.R1 ST•T• OF CALIPOJINI .. '01: 1n.,_ ~nele'llVMCI does Ctrlllv M h TIW Cltv COllndl funl>el' flndl •11d No dr•ln111 tltl ol>fll bl tllenld 1HI COU"TV OF Ol:ANGE conaucl!ne • busfnHI •I Ul25 F•rnk1m cltcltr" tl'llt '911 H ..... tlnefler ltl or col!K!td !n 1f1f tollqwl .... ttHI: NI A-t.MM Slrtel. Fo1m!l!n V1ll1r, C1!Uvn!•, under lor!ll f\1v1 ~n t1lrty ,_.nonec1 on 1 d l'l!flf ol JAMES E CllUTCHFIELO Ille llt'!Ulout llr"' nlmt ftl JOHNS 111 ol !flt w-rn lflrOU911oul tl\e City, 4•) Tiit ltt llltll not ti. ..,_I 0f'Cff.... '$Pi111NKLElllS •nd tf\1! ••Id llf"' 11 l•klnrt Into CO!'IOlderiUorl IM t~lstlnto on •n• (Otlll•u<lloro on tnv Pl~~ HOTICE 15 liEllE8V GIVEN lo 11\e CO<fll>O>ed cl llw !0Uowl111 1>er11001, Wllcll Ortl"'ill !Kllltln tncl 1114H rMwl•..:1 ct llncl with llltl t•OH "''1j11'9'N1< creo:Ulori DI the •boll• """ed decf<IPnl ""mt In !vii •lld plltt ol rukltnct bY lllt fol••I.,. Ortltitllf! Pltft ol '10.000 1•111'1 1"'1 :; ~t· · 11111 111 P1non1 111vln1 cltlm1 111lnst h •• ID/low•· T.,. Cl" Co;incH furfllf; flflllh ...., ·~wie;:;ll•t 01 ,,,. toil 11 GIO>' IM 111d decldent ••e •t<1vlred to flit John G•Kco, 16J» F1mlllm St .. dKl•rn. 11111 ••-r ..imlnl11f1t1on of I rue Oii. them. wltti ffle MK ...... •v ...,u</\t~. In Fovnt1ln V•lltY, Ct!lfornlt. lllt Mtlltr 0••1111111 Pl1n i ncl It. ullll"ttr fb) Any parctl Ill l1nd .,,..r :IO,OCll !hi ollltf of Ille clwk of Ille ollOve Oiled Mtrcn 11. lt11 wcct•• fur Ille purPoSt tor wlllcll ii 1rou 11111o11•t Itel I~ 1ln wht•t 1119 enllltt'd court, qr lo pre11nt them, wlfh Jol'i~ Grecto wtt dnl1,..ttd rtQUltt• lftf! tM u111•1 follow l"' condlllon1 t•lll: Ille nten•I•• WOIKfle'I. 10 '"* 1,1n. Stitt of Cthloml1, Otlntl County, Cl" of COSll Mew be Otcllred 11 1. Wlltrt !flt ll'tUlrwe<r>enl conil•h ckrsltl'lld 11 11\t olllct ot lfl.tlr 1rtorMYI: On Mlrch 11• 1'71• bllo" m., • 1 d•tl,..1• •re1. of J,nJ.,-iol" t ll.,1llon•, lnc;kNlllllt eltc· COOKSEY. SCHUMACHEll, COLEMAN, Nolan> Pl/bile In Ind lo• .. Id $lltt, l/\t ClfY Councll hJMIW'r llnd1 Ind lt"lctl, plumb!.... h .. llM, 1ncl .,.,.. MINYAllD .. HOWA lllO, 111 Town I. ""''°"'11' fp~a•ed Jonn G•ttco known Otclt•n lfltl '°" P•OIKlliln "' Ille PtO. llltUn111 Country lloao, Ortnvt, Ctllloonlt 92641. 10 "'" to be lht ,...,....., wFIOM ""'"' "'"" wllf\ln lht Clll' ~ COlll Mfq whlcll ls Ike ol•ct of bvilneu ol lho 1• •ubicflbell lo 111' wl!Mn Instr<""""'' 1nd for 1h1 b9ntfit of Ille h1111!i, vndtr1lent<f In 111 mallt•• perltlnlng tno •ck~owl~e<I fie ••1tult<1 111<1 ••m.. ...roty 111d wtlltrt o! tllt comm..,,.11\'. 2. An, l<lcllllon or mtlor 11tl!!'1!1tn "' an tJllll"t buHdJ,.., UN\l!rucllon of •n eccts--i' bulldlng, I" 1n1 torm -t•I !Pio t«\lmWll!ed Vt lut of 111.t lmo..,vtmtnl _, not uceecl 1111! 11-IMI YllU•liofl of l•nd l/ICl bulktl .... •S s11own on 11\t County AutUOf'1 currtnf 111ts1.mtnl roll: 10 1111 "'"' or •tld dtte.Hnl, wllfll~ tOFFIC ,:L SiA;111 Morion t•M1ln ortl,..tt ltcUlll•• must be pro. l<>llr mon!hs '"" the llr1I Putlllttlion ~1';.., 'Publl<·C•Ulornlt •ldtd for le P•OIKI -.ttlnsl lnun01!1on "' 11111 nolLCI. Prlnc:IPll Ottlct In II deltrmlned •• • Pnlblblllll' l•otn Dttttl Ftbrutry 26, 1'1' O C tv s!...-m Cl'<lle ohtdlts, THE FlllST NATIONAL ,::"romm~lon E1plrt1 Accor111"91J, '""' II 1ntctld to !fie & ... Ni( .. prll I l91I Co.It Mtsl MunlclPtl CQOe, Cht91tr OF OllANGE C_OUNTY, Publli/\ed cirintt Coi•t OtllY P!lot. :w;ll, Artkle I, wllld1 11\tll bl ts follows: l. No PlrCo! of ltnd tlltll be IHtH.a' • narlonal blnking •nocl1tlon. Mirdl 11, If, 2,, APrll 2, ltll B0·1I llCTION 1. moro !~•n one• for lf\t drtl,_ &v: II E. Dr!nt."•n let •• provlOed for In 11111 Arlk;le, r:~ecvtor ol Ill• Will of CHAl"T•ll XII lrttlPKflvt ol cll•nv• In IWMrlfl ... lllt •ilO~• ntmt<f OtceCl9M LEGAL NOTICE l"ubHc Work• section 11.1" o..111 ti l'-COOll"!l!!Y, IC"UMACHEfl:, COL8MAN, Al'lklo I • MINY ... RO & HOWARD f'-tNSI Drolnt .. Jlltl Foe1 1111!1 bl d....,.119<1 In ""' f:;I"" IH TIWll & c ... 1111"'1 llot• CEl.Tll'IC.lTI[ 01' CO•l"OllATIOfll 11011. $.cliff 11.111 M .. t1r Or1I ... •• ,.... TrT0!1,1ry prior !o !flt iPCtftVtl ol 11\t Ort1ttt. Ct lll. nue T•ANSACTION OF •UllH•Ss UNO•• Tiit City of Cost• Mtsl 1>01 •doPlt<I fln•I t•tCI or Pirc•• """ In !ht tlJo! Toi: SO·JUI FICTITIOUS MAM• I O OI rt(Oroe<I m1p dt•tloPmenll Ind ti f All1r111y1 fol E•ecwtll' Th• unaer1111.,.,d cor1><1r•tlon d<>l's Ind now htJ ~n tflKI 1 ~·· •• 1(11na9t tilt l11u1nc1 ot t oulld+no 1>1rmlt tn Publl1flt'd Ortnv• C011t 01111 Plk'lt. lltrtbf' ctrltf'f lhll It lo conllY<llnt Pion, wlllcfl '' W.n, • !Ir "° ce •nll •ti ollltr ln111nco1. • M1..:11 s. 11, "· 16, nn o111-11 • t>usl,...• 1n th• $tot. 01 c1111cr1111, fr'blk ne .. i~r h revl•ecl ..,!,"::i =• .~~ 5Ktlt11 u .111 cr111111 M f" r I • r Layer Cake Const ........ tlOH 1----------------Cftunh of O••fllle, 1n ,,... c111 or sanu 111~11~1""7. "Ch!.,1 .. "''i Ar11~1. 1. :s'!~>on A11'"""""" • "" LEGAL NOTICE ""'· •I !'50 E11I 11!11 S!retl, Sulit iloUO el tt<I., Cillf<>rnl• Governl"enl An1 p1rttl <II' Parct11 of ltnd h1 vrnt 109. under Ille flcUtlout firm ntmt Colll T,,. Dfllcltl <OP1 ol seld Mtiler *" .,,..,...., l<I• 1111rm d•1l11 ·fm· I t l. mat 'als to the story classroom building and a 200-seat lecture hall. 1--------------0' 1n1•"" 1nvu1nw"t s.."'1'" •nd "''' or11;..,. P1t11 is on nit 1n 111e ~II<•• P•ovem1n11 Prior to "'' P•• ... " "' luge cranes ffiOVe COnS rUC IO_n 1 erl . . f'·1Hl1 ~10 lltl" 11 U>mP<>"8d or the lollowl119 or Clh' Ell!>lnHr II 11 F•lr Ori••• 11111 orcHnonc:• under lmPrPwtmtnl •ACI sixth or seven floors of UC Irvine s new social SCI· This is the last major UCI building for which funds CEllTIFICATE OF IUSlNESS COtPCrt•IO!'I, whOH prlnc;lptl pit<• ol Coolt M .... CtlllO!"lllt, •NI •'1'1' •lffrenct "' ttn or 1r .. prc .... monl Ati ol ttn d I ti. b Q l be ·1 bJ l"ICTITIOUS N•ME bullnes• 13 11 tollow1: In lf\l1 trtlclt to ll>t Mll!tr Oril11t1• crocttdlll91 1.11111 h1we .. I 'red!T· tn ence building, schedule for comp e on y co r . are avai a e. Th• vnoe .. itned "° ct•lltr 111ey 1r~ 1n109r11tc1 Fln1nc:111 Ad•!sors. Inc .. Pl h 11 be 10 tflt maP• •1011 Pl•m th• dr•ln111• '" Ml 1onh In SectlOn The $4,7 milll'on tower will be flanked by a four conoue11.,., , 1>1111...,., .1 w wost 1tt11. 1uo Eest 17!fl Strtot, sv1t1 Hit, S1nl• •n11: ~1 "" IM• ,;,.terl~I «>.;. n.1in 1n11 _.11on 01 111<1 fmprovtmenl Coil• Mei.o. Ctlllornl•, llfl<Hr Ille flt· Ant, Ctlitornl• IPtC C• ons, 1 0 • 11H1sm1nt per 1crt t lloetlt<I to """" _::_::_::.:_.:_.:_:_::.:_.:__:.:__:.:_ __________ ;_ _____________________________________ l1 i1iou1 ll•m ntmt ol MtOONALOS HAM> O•ttO: M1rcli 10. ltn illtullnv ••Id Mllltr D••ln•et Plln •• dr1!ns. WMre s.o ld lmor0111menl or. ,_ llUlllGElll$ tnll !hit 11!0 firm ;, com· INTEGl!:ATEO FINANC.IAL "" lilt •I !flt •bavi llldren. The ctl'dl"" Included"'°'' lfltn tlorm dreln, POied ct lllt lollcw1"9 0..-...,,., Wh<>!e AOVISOAS, INC term• ol lf\ls tttlclt shtll IP<lil' to 11\t. CllY Englnttr .t.111 1octn1Jn itt.I' ' Trees' Fate lu Hands Of Plam1ers SANT A AN~ -ine fatf' of " row of eucalpytus trees has held up Orang(' County P lan· ning Con1n1ission approval or a 93-home subdivision just south of the Sanh1 Ana Free· V.'llV. Commissioners decided to take a field trip to !be site before ruling in mid-~Iay on approval or disapproval. The proposed tl evelopment Is the latest unit of "The Ranch''. a tract being developed by John Wf Klug of Newport Besch on the easterly side of Yale Avenue and approximately 450 feet north of P..1oulton Parkway, t>ast of Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility. On the outer ed.lle of 21-acrt plot is a row of tall eucaylptus trees. common to that Irvine nanch area, To be decided is "'hether the trees go, become a part or individual owners' lots or be enclosed in a countv service area kept up by all 0 ho1neO\.\'ners in thr area. In previous de\•elopmenl of The Ranch. Klug incorporated ro"·s of trees into green belts protected by service areas. They are not c.onsidered parks as they a rf' only 60 feet \.\'ide. V nif icat ion Plans Set Fo r Review SANTA ANA -The Orange County Committef' on School District Organization has set meeting dales with school districts to review existing n1aster plans for unification. Under slate law voters residing in d istricts "'bich have not been unified must \"Ote on some plan in 1972. The County Committee recom· mends unification plans to !hr ~late Board of Education \\·hich must approve the plan~ prior to an election. Huntington Beach U n ion High School District plans \\"ill be discussed ).tay 1:'1 and Tustin Union lligh School District plans will be revieWed ~lay 27. Both meetings are in the respective district board room• Newly rlected officers or thf": County Committee are. .Joe A. Coffin. president, Orange, and Mrs. t.1arion C. Bergeson, Newport·Mesa Uniried School District trustee from Newport Stach, via:-chairman. Speed Li111it Gets Approval SANTA ANA -Th' posting of Royce Road in University Park with 35 milt.per-hour 1petd U.mlt signs has been ..approved by tbe Orange Couo· ly Board or Supervisors. The count7 Traffk: Com· mJ1tef: uld the. llmlt i, neca.sary between t.1 lchelaon Drive and Y.tle Avenue. LOCAL No etfler 11ew.''''' t1ll1 YO• '"l'P• ••• ,., 9..,. 1\i.e11t whtl'1 IJ&iflf '" I" t.lt. G.r11i11 Or11191 C.1d thtn the DAIL 't PILOT. n1m.1 '" full 11111 Pltce1 of re1ldence Atlllur L. 11"9111•• •11 of 111• Ore!ni~t l•cllflJH "°"' In ''""'"'..,,' Plr 1c,. 111oc1ltd lo sf-trt •• tcllowo: Pret!denl 01•tt wlthlll lf\e ClfY of .Coit• ~ dr•ln1 •nd hl1 nnol11111 s111tt be flntl. N!:"'~ ~-.t~~C.'::it. "" lr~lnt Avt , ~~~~\,:1~,,'~i':~~;_IA SS =~ "":!', ·,~,o:;·:~a~ '·~~!;:~ ~~~::-: SKtlla 12.111 Prl~•I• Drtl-• l'Klll'M Oo•oll\y Simon, 1"1 Irvin• l"vt,. On M1>ell 10. lt11. be-fort mt 1 Pl•n. FH1 Pro•lded tor t nd lllf erPIAdlhJrn t<lewP<Jrt 8HCll, C1!H. Nol•rY Public tor 11!4 County •NI Sectitn U .112 Or1l111" JI•• 10 111 mtdt !•om tllt dr1ln11• !und Oiied Mtrct> t, 1111 Stile. p..-111n1Uy IPP•••ed Anllur L. Tht" 11 llerebY tdiblilhll<I 1 droi,..;f •r• to bt 11><>lktbfe To thoot l1clllllt1 Lewi• M. Simon B11t1t>e• known 10 l"O lo be 1111 Ptt1ld.,.I I!• of ll,OOO.OO Ptt 1r.,.1 •C•t ol ti PfOYidtd lor Jn t11t M••lor Or1ln•q• Engineer Say s Sun Shadows Oorotf\v s•mcn of It.. corPOrtlion lh1t t:r.tculed !flt l•rtd l>elft9 dtYtloot'd 1, 'ti forth in Pl1n •rtd provlou• t•l•ll"' dr1ln10 t •!'lfe· Sf..,TE O~ CALIFOlll NIA , wl!Mn ln•t•umPnt on llth•ll of IM <Of· lfl!I ordlntnt• on t oro•l•e<I 111•1•. I""'" 1no ti<etnen!J or oubllc "'Ill• ORANGE COUNTY: P<>•ellon lhoreln ntmed. tlld tcknowk!dv· Th• funds Cftlltcled her.,,twltr 111111 bf of 1'11J. Or1!n191 f1c\1Ule1 ntetlltrY On M•rdl I. Hll, IM!'lort mt. • td to mo lhtl 111ch cooPOrttlon t:r.ecwhd d_.ited In 1 ltOfttl• tund wl'llcn wll~lo any OtYflODf"tnl by re110~ ft! Mollr'I' Public !n 1nO lo• 11id Sl•te, th• lll"t. shill bt known 11 tilt "Or•lnige J'et •t<1ulrMitnl1 of Ille CllV ol Coslt Mut Pt•o.on1lly IPP•••ed Lewi• M, Slm<ll'I !Olllci•I S.al) Fu'ld," ... Id ftt 111111 Ill COllK!ed, Of !flt Uniform 8ullOlft9 (ODf 1/\111 1nd OorolllY Simon ~-II to me lo OorolhY I . Nltl•~n 0-111_.,, ind tMpended In the Ctlt bt II lf\e .ole ••Pll'lll of lht devtlool"'. Ill Ill• Ptro.orll Whmt 01m11 ... S\lbSC•lt>. ND!lfY Publl( . C•llf<>rnlt of 1LJbcllvl1IM1• '"" P••t•I maPI In 1nd tund1 obltlned ti P•OYlded fllr Trigger Swallow Migration The swallo\vs returned lo Capistrano today and a navigation engineer says he k nows why. Each year on March 19, St. Joseph's Day. the s wallows arrive at the Mission San Juan Capistrano, California's oldest existing ilructure, and depart for Argentina Oct. 23. The swallows have been doing this, with few e.'I.· ceptions, since Fa t he r Junipero Serra established the Riot Control P rogr am Set In County SANTA ANA -A coun- lyv.·ide riot training rogra1n has been granted $155.000 in federal funds. thr Orange County Criminal Justice Coun- cil has announced. Keith L. Concannon. ex· ecutive direclor of the council, said the funds from the om· nihus Crime Control and Safe Streets act of 1963. must be matched by $50,000 in local funds. The riot and d isor der training program involves 22 police dt>partments in W county as well as "'ell as the Sheriff's Department. Tbe program "·ill extend current mutual aid agr«ment.s bet"·een law en· forctment agencies "to de· velop a certain level of disci· pline and standardized know- ledge to permit any number of 1hc 2.130 law officers to work togelher effectively in the event of an outbreak.'' Con· cannon said. Police 111an Gets $44,500 In Laivs ui t SANT A Arl!A A Hun- tington Beach policemao ha!i been awarded $44.500 in damages for en en-duty traflic accident six years ago tha1 led to his receiving psychiatric treatment for long periods of time. Orange County S u p e r I o r Court Judge Robert I... Corfman halted a tw~week trial when both sides in the lawsuit brought by Officer George F . Abbond settled the action for the amount granted to Abbond plus 113.750 to the State. Compensation Tn!iurance F'und and $1,750 to the city of Huntington Beach. AbbOnd had sued defendant John Alfred Thomas for $100.000 in an action that held Thomas responsible for the colllslon between his police car and Thomas' p ickup truck on Feb. 15. l!NU. a t Goldtnv;esl Street 11:nd Warner Avenue. A~d !laid lhe accident Ttll him with psychJalric pro· blemi thdt @ntaUed coun§ell· ing for four tfmt! a VH!ek and a reduced capability that confined him to lighter dulie' wllh the Huntington Beach Pollce Department. mission In 1776. Before that, the birds roos!ed in the b!ufls alung the coast. Now comes Joseph N . Portney, an avionics engineer for Lillon Industries, who believes the changing angle and length of shadow.!! cast by the sun triggers the annual migrations. Portney explains that in the sunlight the tip of a shadow cast by any object follows a concave path during the day. It bends away from the sun during the fail months and reaches the muimum curvature Dec. 21. During the winter, t h e shadow path begins lO flatten until March 11, the first day of siiruig·, when it follows a perfecUy stralght east-west course. "Il is well known that birds po9sess acute vision and retentive memories," Portney continued. ''Flying aloft in td lo 11\t wllllln in1lrum1nl •NI Prlnc1Ptl Otl\ct In iccord&'ltl wttll SKtlO!'I llS•l..I 01 !he In 11111 AMICI• sh•ll ""' bt t•P.,.,dtd their Winter latitUdeS, the •Ckf!OW1.ilgt<I llltY t•tC\llt<I 11\t llmt. OrlOff Coun!Y llvs!ntSI 1nd ProltHIOlll Codt . Stitt lhtrflor. swallows could easily monitor !Ottkltl $e1u ~;.,_c;;:n;~1·~on IE:r.piiu "" c.111om11, 1nd 111 other 10Pllt1~1. SECTION 1. " 1nv 1et1lon, 1uhl~1Qn. Miry lle•h Monon ltWI 0r !ht Sl•I• of Celltornle. All 1tnlenct, cl•u1t or phr•MI of lt\11 the shadOIV cast h • tall No••" Public . Ctllto•not l"l!•teAL •NO Pl!TTV, INC., ,,., celltt!t<f 1,. r~u• 01,..., lt!in '""" ordl,..nt• 11 lor •"Y ••••on ~•Id · ro ) a PtlOCIPll Office In ~o~i::l~I c: .. ~WDrlvt W•ll, calf ol 1ubdlvlslftn1 end P•rtel1 svbltcl be lnV•i!d or unconst11ullon1! bY · !ht object-a tree, a hilltop, or Or1n11t Countv 10 parcel m•c1 •11•1! Ill 01!d ln end Otclsl"" of 1n1 coun or com ... i.nt My Commlulon E•Pl•es S1n1t Ano, Ctlll.,,..ii t U!11 decoilttd In iccorOince wl!h rules and lurl10IC1Jon, IOJC:h d .. c:lsl"" 1h1tl no! lf/4"11 a mountain peak. Aprll t. 1971 Publl111e<1 Orange (0111 D1llY Plkl!. h b 01 th lldlt r h ! J tlon Pwbllllltd O•e"9t Cot ii 08;11 Piiot Marti! u, \,, 2,, AP•ll 2, lt71 j.1)·11 r"ulatlo"• t i •ti tort ,• !llfM rr<tor .. e v0t ' c I t .. rtmtC" ~,, --•~ "By early March, the birds n1.11 ol Fln1nct lcr !llt City of .,.,, t11. "' 1n1 ordl,.1nct. oh• ovnc ~'""u• Mtrcn !1, It. 76 .. Aorll 2. 1971 Stdlon ll.llJ 111111,,., de~lern 11111 lt would ll1Yt p1Wfld nole that the path of this LEGAL NOTICE . !hlS Otd!n1n<• tlld ••<II H('flon, IU"tc"· LEGAL NOTICE lltlunll of !fie P•Ymt"1 of ·~·d fetJ !Ion, • .,,tenet. cl1u1e and pl\r11t, lf\.,li!, shadow was flattened t 0 NOTICE OF TllUST•lf.'$ SAL• 1h1ll not be mtde O(ICI •• d ,.,... lftliPt<llYI of lllo foci th•I 1n1 ·!ift• virtually a straight line, and f'·212lt "''· 1'·2ttt ' 111"1 been oth:I Jn •c<o•d1"'1 w•;n or mo•• 1r<tlon1, 1ubf.r<tlon1, dtu~·· Cl!llTl,ICATI' 01' OISCONTINUANCE On FrldtY April f, 191', 11 ll:flll 11111 ••lklt. t:r.ctot In !ho U!f Wtit t sPnlence•"' ph111e1 lhtrtol, bt Otclji/M this gives them the signal to 0, us• ANOtO• A8ANDONM•NT 011 A.M.. CALIFOlllN IA l>.NO ANO IN· "" tPPllc1nl Pr dtve!OP'r •btnoon• invt lld or unconllhYllo..... • begl·n theo·r ,. •ay,-3,000 m1'le FICTITIOUS NAMI! VESTMENT COMPANV I tOl'Port !lon tM i ubdlYlllon "' Plfttl r>IP by •t• ... n Thl1 oraln1nco 1h1ll 1rrec1 onl'f lllo~t 11'\J THE UNOEllSIGNEO dot! l'll!rtbv ts dvlv •-lnlecl Trulttt vndtr Ind of IOmt lorlU~IOUs tVPnl not w!lllln •POl lct1lon1 for bu!tdlll9 iierml11, Pl~I flight to San Juan Capis-tt<tltv 11111. •lf•cll~e Marci\ 10. nn PUrtu•nt lo Otttl of Trw11 dated J1nu1ry tilt co;i••ol of ll•d ,:;t11<•%:; d1~~·1~~~ """P• and swbcllvllioM ""'l<fl ••• Ill.cl trano' " lie c~le<I to do builneu undtr !flt 2j. IMJ, e~Ku1ecl b'r PAUL II , LUCAS •NI uMll•t Dro M llnd" lh I "d otf!clatly wltll tllt Clh' lrom Ind .~ f!cll!IOUI firm nimt of HOUSE OF ... NO CAlllOLE A, LUCAS, hu1blnd t rod C°j'n~ll 1 11"1 ma~e.., 1 onO 1':' IUl~rl~~ 1111 01tt l111t lf\11 ordlntnce btcllfJl<5 Bill Smith, a spokesman for AAf$ •• 31721 E•lf CNSI HlehWiY .... 11. •ncl •KOl'ded Febtu•nt 11, lMJ, '";;" • 1:t'"t~ tn !hit IM ('!~ 1rttc1!v1. wirh Ille ••coctlon '"'' ··~y h Coron.o cet Mir. C1lltc•nl•. whlcll ll ln11t. No. '~' In -..:II. PIG• ~ fr'"" nv 1~~ 1":, • 1ttrli1tl rtlu.:., of lf\1 1lortmtn!lont<1 1pptlC•llON Cf' t e community's s w a 11 0 w bu11n ... 1 ..... 1orm .. 1v comPOled of ""' 1J1, "' Ottkl•I ill!COfdl In "'' ollfc1 QOlllC l"•Y croY I wto'c~ lhtY 11..d 1ont •~CtPlkln Pt•mlts •l•tedv '"""· greeters, WaJ asked about the follow In~ Htton, w~oae n1mt In lull of rr.t Covnll' RiteorOtr al Ort"9t Countv, reltlnl"9 •nY t 1"'1':;"" Cih' !or !flt pro-h1vlno 1/rtad\' 11..t 1 dr•ln11e 'tf• tlld 1tlKt ol rt1klenct 11 ti tollaws, C1llforni1. Will SELL AT PUBLIC wllll cT"l~n: en:!l!ffrlnl inoPetlion• oulremenl tctordlnl lo our MIJloijt theory and commented. "I'm ....... 11· AUCTION TO HIGHEST 81DOElll FOR (IU ~ D I ~. Pt•l~rm..C on bell•lf O••lntg~ Pl•n. ••Id ,....,;,,IY\lnt •hill .fral'd that's lhe wishful thi'nk· C•tY kl'ID•. P.O. au 7•4. (O!"DM CASH (NY•blt tt tl""t .at 1110 In ::f "id ;oP~~c':n~.,.. Hvel....er. i.. <lefomHI vtlld 1na onlorcellblil Dtl Mfr, C1lll. !1wlul ,.,_., of IM Un11..i Sl1lt1J ... /\trtundor. ing Of a SCienliSt." Ctrl!llc~lt tar '''"""'c!ion ct bu"""' •I lflfl S..Ulf\ front e111t1nc• to Ille Stclltot 11.IM ·-lrH Centlrudloll SECTION 4. T~ll orOoninct sl'llll i.t"e " . . unllfl" rh1 •bo"' tlcllllou• n•m•, •NI Ortnet County olll CouMl\ou1t, Clly of WlltntYtr ' Ot,..klomenr I• Dl•nntd etffl:I 100 111 111 full torct tlllMY UM The birds ft!ed on flying 1llld1~lt o! PUbl!c1tlon lllertol, l•t on S1nl1 ltt..a, ~lllf of C1htarn11 111 rltll!. In 1 IOC1llon w11ere m• Mester Plan dav1 lrr•m •NI '"'' n1 PtUlte "!Ind ln0_,_ d In October when lllt In ""' ctuc .. of !he County Cle•-111te ,"'1d lntvrest conveyed 10 •"" now c1111 for , 1torm O<•ln and "'' •PPllctn! .nin, prior 10 1111 •~Pl•ttlon ct IHtMn ;><;'""'• an ot 0••~•• County. under !flt provl,lon1 held bv 11 un<llr u!d Oeecl ol Tru11 Pt develoPt• ll reoulrod lo tO!'lslrvcl (lJ) d•Y• from Jh DIH•oe. bt oubll~td flying insect5 are practically ct ~•cllcn 1466 of tlle Civil Cod•. In Ille Pf'Dl>trlv 11!uat~ !11 Ill• Clll' 11\t 1t01m d•tln_ upon oubllc r!vllt ct Of1C• ;,. 1111 oringe c°'" 0 1111 Plllll . WITNESS "'' ~tnd this !Om dlV ct of Costa Mew, ln ••rd Coun!y •nd w•1 or on ""v1!1 Prooerty lo 111 8 new•P••tr ct gen••~! clrcutt non, JUI here they go back to Argen. M1rch, 101. s111e dt..c•lllld 11: . <>edictled •• P1Jbtlc rltht of wtY, lflt •11-c•ln1ee1 1'1<1 puDllsht<I In the Clh' o1 tina -..ey'<e only down there G•,. kno• Lot 1 of Tract No. ?ffl, on 1fle c!lctnl or d..,•IOPer 1h1ll be rt<lulre<I 10 coot• M••• toveth" with tilt "'~, • 111 Pubhshtd Or1ngf CO••' O•llr Piiot Clh or Co111 Mt11, Counly of O•tntoe, OOll 1pprOPrltlt bond• to cover lflt esll· cl the me;.,be•• cl lht Clly Co.incl! a couple of months and when Merch n. u. ;6, Ao<ll 1. 1111 $.jef.11 S!1!1 of c11<1ornl1, •• .,., mop •Ko•d· mittd constrvc:tlon c"'t o1 tf\e 11or"" voling lo• t nd 1g1!n11 111• 11me. . the insects hatch in the spring LEGAL NOTICE ed Jn 8ook !1 P1vt 50 Of Ml.ceu1 .. 10111 dr•ln ind iubml! cOD;eo at blo orlct• 10 PASSEO ANO AOOPTEO thlt 1f!h . Maos, In !ht o!flc• or lkt Couoty lllt Cltv EnolnP-• Drlo• to con1truct!on, dlY ol Morch, lt7l. they Come back here,'' Smith flecordtr "1 iild Cou"tv. . If !l'>t t1llmtlltd con•lrUt!lon «is! h i1108EJIT M. WILSON .d p.-o.111 More tommonly ~"own I• 200I Ah111 ltH thin Ille draln•Vt tee, tht IPPllcan! M~vor ol 1h-sa1 , CEllTll'!C ... TE OF IUUNESS, A~., Cost1 Mt••· Cilltornla. •hill PIV 1 ftt e<1uel to !he !<>!al City of Co•ll Me11 FICTITIOUS NAME Said 111• will be m•!lf, 1>111 wllllcut fff Dis~d on Tiit 9,.,., ~rta btinv ,o.TfEST , * * * * * Tt.e un<it t1l;neO do c•rlil• 11\ev "' (OVtnanl or warran1r, t•ott11 er lm•llta. d•viloPfd mlnu• lht edlm•t!!d CO!'I· EILEEN P. PHINNEY conouctlnp 1 Duilneu •I ~ Alton No. •H•rdlng title. OOIM!Ulon. or t,.. llnte!IO!I co•I of Ille i!orm drtin. Pdo• City Clt•k ot lh• a, s~n!t An•, Ctl!tomla. unde• tne cumbrtnct1. tft PIY lht •Mi•lnlnv prln. lo ••Of>l'•tH1>9 the bond•. tfle IC!ull City ot CO\I• Mnt Lion Country Offers llct\llOUI ll•m n•m• ol J I. J MA!llNE tlcal '""' OI the no!f IKv•td by COii of tho il0tm dr•ln Slll ll be esflbll•I>-STA.1£ Or' CALl ~OR"11 A tnd lfltl itld firm I• com"°'ecl ftf 11id OHO OI 1'tu•t. lo-wit' 17(l,lllol.J1. td b' ll>t Cl!y fnglnotr. hl1 COii COUMlV OF" ~ANGE .. lllt lollowlng 0,,....,,, who11 n1mu In w!lh lnlttt11 l•Drn Seoltmlllr l, 1910, •iHmll•· •NI bid orlcu •• tSlabJllfled (ITV OF" COSTA MES• l tull llWI olt<ts cl rtildtnct 1rf 1s as In •t ld note praylde<I, ldvlntt•, 1,.,,., t~ret comP.,illYI bidl ind on I, EILEEN P. PfilNNEY, (ltv t lvt: follows !I 1ny, undtr lht It""• of 11\d Deed Mlded '"' cllergtd 0, , rtll"bu"'1'1'1tlll ftf I~• Cltv of Co111 Mt1• •llO e~-otlldo John HowirO Nt<tY. Ulll ll1rbtr ot Tnill. lffi, ch:.orvn tnd ••Hn••• mMlt so 11111 lht iclu•I con•l<Ucllftn Cl••k ot !!It City (ounc:ll of 1111 CIN St , Wt1lmlnstP•. llolllM FlovO JesHt, DI lht Tnnltt end cl ""' lru1ti ct11teCI c"'I plvs IM Oriinlvt !ff Ptid i• of Costt M•s., llitf•bJ cerllly llltl 1'711 WNklltn Ln . Hunllno;ilon 8•tth. bY stld Dfffl ol fruit. eouit 10 but no! lo •~Cttd U ooa 1M •bo~• •nd 1-ol119.0rdln1nct No. 01111<1 FeD. 1'· 191i Tiie 'bonttitlttJ wndt• ••Id O..ed of per etrP ior t~t orou tre1 d•vtl.;,,td.' 1,1·4 w11 lntroduct'd tlld con1fcl.,ed Ml'C· JOhn How••d "1act• Trw11. by rt•IOfl of • Dre1c11 Of ~ef1Yll Stc!IOn n ltJ llilml>u~nl •••-nl ••on b• wcllon •I • ••1ul•r metrlnv Rotwrl Fiord Jpneo i" the 0Dllt1Uon1 Mcured '"""by, Wllffe i11t IP<>rlcint or d•vtloi>e~ hi• 01 111d Clly Councn on !ht 111 dlY $111• ftf Ctlllorn11, 0""9t County f\eretclc•• e~Kvttd •nd <llllVtft<I lo ..,111_., lnlo on •trttmen! with Ille of Mort!!. ltll, tnO lf>tre1111r DIAIM Swallows' S anctuary Jr the s wal!O!ft'S can find no saoctuary in San J uan Capistrano. they can Oy a few miles more and nest among the lions. Pat Quinn. an official from L ion Country Safari. told members of the Seddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce this week that lhr lion park has become a sanctuary for native wildlife. "We've established a home for lots of native animals.'' he said. "In Africa you see \01s of birds feeding on meat left by lions. Here you see hordes of slarlings a n d blackbirds doing lhe same thing.·• He said the park is al· tempting to maintain the ecological balance of the area it occupies. In addition it i! s tocking its lakes \\'ith crusta· ceans and fish for flamingos, storks and migratory birds. has e~tahlished a rookery, and has begun lo allracl mice. ground squirrels. birds and mountain lions. He admitted that there has been some Joss of birds fron1 natural predators: hut the number of losses is far out- numbered by the gains, Even among the park's "transplanted" animals there has been a population ex· plosion. "Wr have had 55 lion cub!! born sinct "'·e opened.'' said Quinn. "Most of the lime we leave the cub.~ with their m o\Mrs un\es! "'e pull one out for a public rt'l3lions vlsil ·· Once a cub Is remO\'ed it tRke! a Jong lime to rein· troducf..J.Lto the pride. Quinn dt!icrifid the proces! "'hich invnlvts gt'ttlng the cub used hi one adult cat al a l.ime 11nd vice vtrs::i before the baby !inn Is put back. "But ln 3 year's timr t11ere i! no dlCferencr at ;iJI btt11{>f'n a cub rajsed by the pride and one r11istd in t he nurSl!:ry." Qulnn said thf' p~rk is 1ry1nii: rrry h ard to breed animals. since "t w'll someday become On l'tb•w•n> 11, 1t11. 11110•• mt. lflt vnd•,.ivl'NI • written C.Cl1rt1I"" Cl!'Y .,. COllt Mt1a P•OYldlnv 10<'" lhe and •-led •• 1 w~olt •I 1 rt9111tr 1 1 1 Nftt•"' Public In and for ... ,., ~I•'•· Of Otltvll ind Ol<Tl•nll lor S•lt , •nd Cc•r or dr•inavt ticllllln bv paymtnl me>1H"9 of ••Id City COU<!Cll Mtd on, necessary lo restock species •t•s.on111., •cP•••f<I Joh" How"" N1ur wrn11n no•l<e or bre1d1 •nd ~t tltctlon bY tht o.velootr, •nd wh1!r• ~• 01 tn• is1n dar ol Mtrdl. 1•11, br '"' .sh. r Af . Ind lloDtd Flo~d Jenee lcnown to !ft t•UH 1ne \llldtnlgned lo 11!1 •••d laid l•clll!lt• e•Ctedl tht dr1!n19t ftt. follOw/nQ roll tlll vote: . Vanl Lng rom r1Ca. me 10 bfo !ht """°"I WllcH ,,1 ,.,.1 properly to urlsfy l"d 0Dlh111lont. •nd t rtimQ<ll"H!<T1tnl m•Y Dt ma"-''""" AYES: Plnklt'f, SI. Clt1r, WllJon, "Since t900. 50 S""'Cies have ••• 1ub1c.rlllld 10 '"" within IMlrv....,nl 1n..•e11t1r, "" Oect"'.'be• t. 1910, '"• 111, orolnttt '"' fund "" "" tonow l"9 Jord•"· H1mmt11 Y~ tnd •<-""wltOeeO they t•ecvt!d !ht unde,.IQned tau1td $•<d noti<• o• b•e1c.I'! b -1. NOES· Nont . hed f th lh d Ind GI tlKlio" !O be rKOr<ltd In 111 . A8SENT o Nont van1s rom e ear an ;~~iici ... L sE ... LI book 9.ie1, .,09, 11• ~ 1110 Ofllcl•I 11> on1v tt monirv 10 1v1l11blt rn tN wiT"Es~ WHf:l'!EO", 1 ~'"T 60() are currently in dan~er,'' MAllY K. HEMRY f1:1cord1. lht fund; l>trtunlo ..,, mf ll1tw1 lllO 1!llrt<1 tl\f he said. The bigg"t problem Nol~•Y Public . C1hlorni1 0111· Maren •· 1911 (bl Provldlnto !f(d montf ""' not seal ol t">f c1rv of Cc•ll MtM lhl1 PrintlP•I Otll<• In (ALIFOA.NI .. LANO ANO bten commll!Pd by bud;~t for ctll~r Ulf\ CllV ct Mt•ch, lt11. is people. Where there are o .... ,. Coun!V INl'E5TMENT COMPANY l•tl!lllts: EILEEN P, PHINNEY domest'.C ano'ma(S, '"Old OOleS M• Commlnlon E:r.oi•eo As ,,10 Tru~IH, 4cl fl:tlmDu"emPnl m•dt bv priorltits Cl!'I Clerk t nd tX-Olflcle .. Nov, l~. 1tn BY Slgltd M. Guntner tllibllillfO bV !ht Cl!y En9l"H' Cltrk DI lht City Council are usually not permitted. ":b~~~~ed 26 O•:~:t ~::;~ ~."1~1• P!1~'. """11,n~o 0,:.:! 21~~!,, 0111, Piiot Section n . '" Fu Ml commllm1n11 Pu1>11s~~11' o~~~,!1 'c":!:, M;.;;Hy iouor ''!{ere bisons and passenger 1911 ~;1.11 M•rcll n. n, 16. 1911 5.:11.11 Tht montv 0Dt1!ned tn•cugll o•Ymen1 M1•th u, 1•11 JM.11 pigeons have disappeared. \Ve LEGAL NOTICE LEGA.'~ NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEG_A_L_N-OTICE hope that emerging nations1___ _ __ ------------------______ _ "'ill learn from our mistakes Oll:DINANCI! NO. 1l·J North oo· 36' )I" weu tlonQ ••iO 1, llUtlw •mtlldtd bv '"' •ddltlcn l t, EILEEN P. PHINNEV, CllY Cl•rk A"1 OllDINANCIE 01' TH!li CITY COUN rentttllne ftt MO!'ltovl• Avtnue, lhtrtlo of tho lrtl <lt1trlbtd iro Stc!kln ot !ht Cl!v DI Co111 Mts1 Ind t•-otllclo and take steps lo preserve ctL OF THa CITY o" Cosr• MESA; • 01111nc• .,, llO D7 111t te 1 oolror. 1 ht'"'' c:erk or tfl$Cl1y council ot tht c11v their wildlife." CALl,OillNI .. , CH•NO!HG lHE !O"C· ••id 1><1!nt bll"9 I" tht bcHJndtr'I' lln, SECTION J. Thll Ordln•nce th•ll 11~1 o! Co1!1 Mt••· heteby ctrllh tb•I INO 01' .. POlllTIOM OF LOT tell, cl thf City ot Ntwoorr Be1ch t nd tlttcl Ano bl In lull IOf(~ lfllrly 00) ll'lt •boYe •"" lo•tgoint OrolnAnct No. Quinn said the most exciting NIEWl"OJIT MISA Tll•tT, FlllOM 1 !flt City ot Co111 Mt••: 1Mnct south d•v• trom 1n<1 •llt• Ito oa1<1;t 1nd11'·J w•• lntroductd and co"1lde•...t •w- lh;ng lo hap""n at Lion Coun· ANO 11 10 Ml. if. 2J' SJ" Wtit, Xl2.00 lef,t to • or!"' to th• e~olretl..., ot lrlletn fUl tlon br ~ec!lon 11 1 •tvult• "''''lf19 r -Poin! in t~ f'Orlhtdy l>owlld••Y di•• lrom lht 0111•te 1114!rtol 1h1i1·01 stid CilY COllntll cm !~ 1,1 da~ (ry iS the poSSihiJil,V that One Tht (\ly Council <>I I~ (!!y OI of JtlO P1rcet ,, ••Id DClnl bllno bt PUbl!1hed onc:e !n lht 011.ANG~ of Mtrch, lf11, •nll lhtfttflfr Piiied (ft1ll Mts1 Cloto htte-1>1 Onl~\11 II tal tne 111U€ POINT OF &EGINNIHG : C0A$l DAILY PILOT, 1 n~1otr •nd Jd OPled "' t Wf\ole •t • •f'tu1~• Of their 24 Cheetahs is low.. lh•n<t Sovtll oo• lll' SI" EISI, J0002 ol Qtf'tl!•l l d•cul•llon, printed ~nd mettlnt of ••Id CllY Council lltld Ml Pregnant SECTION 1 All lh•I POrllon ,,,, !ht '"' lo • fllll"' In th~ •oulhlrly P\lbtl1heO In lht CllY "' Cool• Me•a. !ht Hlft d•Y ol M1•c/\, tfJ! b1 '"'-. ro!lowl,,. O•ICtibP<I •ttl p._,,, it rooetlltr wllf\ 1111 nt"""' ol Ille ""'"'bf" to1owonq roll ca ll "°"' • 0 I l3 h I h h l>ownd1rY of ••Id P1rc•I '' t1't'flC1 ' n y C ee a S ave ever llttebV pltced 1nd lncllldfll Jn lf\1 Ml South 19, 'l' 31 .. W~•I, ·~ ••Id of !IW C1t1 Council Vofln~ l!lr INI t "8ln1t AYES· Counc,lmtn: Wil10n, PIN.lty, •--ho . 1. '( ( Zon• lo wll 0 1 Ille wme. JOfdln, Sr. Clair, H1m"'t" ...:1;'.n rn In cap lVl Y. ye Porct! ! and Ille Wt•lttlY 1S.CIC botl"d~ry hlW', ll1.06 ,.,.., ta 1 non PASSED ... MO AOOP"TEO lhl1 lS!ll MOES: CovncllmPn: N- man has dominated tbem for lftr, 11 me••ured 11 n9hl 1ng1t.1, in •ne v.eilr.•IY lint 01 ••Id Percel l: <11• of M1•th. itn A8S ENTo Councilmen · Nont ot Plrttl 1. In lhl City of c..... 111""'' NO!"lh oc· :W' 51" w.,r, &tono R08ERT M WILSON IN WITNESS Wl-IEllEO,, ' h·~· thousands of y·ears." he said. Me11. Counrt o! 0•1,.9,, S!•lf o! s•ld wMrtrly 11'" t dl•t•...:e cl JOOOl M1yo• ftf lht h"'tvnlo oet mY 11100 tnd i lll•f'!I !~• ''" tft • l'O•nl '" 1nr norlftprly -~· 0 C He expt''.ned that cheetohs C•U•c•nla. 11 •hown on • m•P recoroe<I , . , M "' C •r "' o•ot Mn• St•I ol !ht Cl!v cl Coot• M111. 111r, In e-ll, Pt~• l •. ot P1rctl M11>1. dory 0 said •reel 1' lllen<t orrn ATTEST: 1t1n OIY or Moren. 1f11 I d th, 1" 55" I'••' ll206 l"'!I lo tf>t TRUE are high y l'lef'VOUS an IS At«>•dl ol ttld Ortn~t Coun!v. POINT OF llEGJNNING. EILEEN "· PHINMET' EILEEN p PHINNEY dd 'ff. ( f BEGINNING 11 lht c•nlfrllnt J.,. Cltv Cl•rl< ol tl\f Cltv Cit<~ and t•-eff!tlt 3 5 tO the d l ICU ly 0 1f'1K!lcn o1 11th 51~1. 60 lt1t wide, SECTION 7 Pu"u~nl lo !flt orovllk'l"' Clly of Cosl1 Mui Cler~ ftl !"f Cltv Ceuncll breed·ng 'n captivit)' •nd Monr.,.,I• •venu,., 60 Ifft w10,. ct .S.clion '7XI.• of "'' Mvnlclp11 Codt ST•TE OF C ... Lll'OANI ... I ftf In• Cl!v ot (ft"• Mui I I 11 1hown "" l•ld P•rctl m101 !henc•101 lh" (lh o! (ftlll Mt••• 01'!,,cl COUNTY oc OR,o.NGE 1 55 l"Ybli111f>d 0f1n1e Coe1! 0111• r l1f>! "Even if 3 cheet.ah has d•O•rtr .... ••Id c•n! .. llM in!er1Kllon. M10 A·I ct lht (lty ~I Cool• ~·· (ITV OF COSTA ME~A I M••tl> n , Jt11 .,, made a kill and is hungry. if it is upset bv something, it "'ill leave 1he kill " Quinn said the park cur· rently has 11 pregnant zebras and several pregnant antelope. He·s hoping for some giraffe ::ind rhinoct!ros offspring. too Not only docs it add to 11 d"·indling animal population its also profi1Rblr, The ROini:: price for 11 glr;iffe 1~ $5.000 and for a white rhino. $10,000. Reserve F und Loses $-100,000 SANTf, A.NA Ornngr County's generRI reserve fund h11s been depleted by '400.000. The money "·ent to make higher than anticipntrd ex- pendllures in lhf' Aid lo Dependent cchlldren progr;1m County Adnlnlstrative Of· fleer • Robert Thom3.!I told ~upervlso~ there Is nnly $141.000 Jert In lht rrserves frorn I a 101111 rir SI m1lllon at tt.; $fart of the year. I ' I•• .. :· .. " " ' ·----l----.; .. _ ...... ,~ ............ . .......... """ ..... . ..... .... , ............... _ ... ..... ... ,..,, .... , ... . ·-,_.. .. _ ....... ,_ ... . .,, .. ,~ ........... . ..... ,,_ .. _ ······· l(G(NO .• -·--........... ,_, .. ,,, ~ ..... ,, ··--........ ., ' ...... -......... .. •• '1""'"'·'-"'"'"'"'_ ........ . -.... , ... _ ..................... ,,_ .... . ' ,_ ............. . , ..... DISTRICTING MAP ,. --·· .,. ___ .. .,., A/I Frida'(, March 19, 1971 DAILY PILOf J J Vital Statisti~s io~the Orange Coast Area11 ,,..,... .................... ,..,"""'_..,,... .............. ,,.. .................... ~ .............. a... ............... -=:l!L...:om..:C.~""-..._ Dissolutions Of Marriage M ... toc:111n, Ror>•ld S, •M Oi."" M.tlt ••1.,.. ,._,di t '-M n 5!DIU'll, Nltllol11 ll'MI MtlV t Fttly LIV,_. O'Dtll t !'ICI Ch.,•I M, !Cm:;• 0~ F Ind O&l~hl 1..-P0¥1'tll, l""I l• I ncl LtOtltrd I!~ ClttciD TO"I (.•'Id J(lfln c. w.1 .... Vlt•I"' M., I ncl Ptl•I~ J. Cl11k. JO<lllrM' t fld Anl>llt IEO'o"tftl lltNrt. Oe!IN. Mt•l• t nd Jo .. pll 11..or,,,,!U, Vkk[ L.. ml-111'11 ~ ... i. It n. ,.,, .... t r.cl C•nlll t l . L"'""· £1rt. Mid 11:\tilttlf DMn ll:oluMa. l ln<Jt D. tnd ,,....,,,, J 5"'1!1!0fl.J1c:q"'ll rM11 Jar •nd Denovt n 'ff\omp....,, Vicky Loul11 l llO lllllltll Edwin Oivi., Ht!lll C tno ci.rt"'I (. ~I 1~111, t HY J. tlld Jtmtt '!!· Orbl~or, Nomw ICt lllr t nd Gll(r DaLwa::r:· ~l•le• lllulh tl>CI }tobtrl GHDert N0tMtn l-roo, Jr .. Frln-fnd Jo Anf! Sdlm <It Gen••• Ltt 1nd \lklOI II 0..,,NI. C1rl A, t.nd Huli AOlt F:.~~llNflnt J, i l'CI J •~ K. Auoemut, Eu9-Cl•••nc• 1 ,. d Ou!t,rru, 11111• •NI fdwtrd Mc:Don.llcl M1n.l1> Eu .. ,.. • n <I \111> bu'rt n. Jolln R IC1t1rd •nd Anne EllLall, Ll'tlll 0~,.''""l.',~ ... JIC>I k $. (uH..,, I el ht:'\. J . i nd Mtl.,ln fl, M ' ' Croo;~•,',:.... [l"'I ~•lne ind ltWit rd k•1h•rlfl0 M1r111r•I , l.oo:·•-· t 'f Meo r.· ~ Jlllln P, Mvlt •Ill .., ,, , ,.-•• ''l." ' .,.... ••• Dow ... Fl •l•no. wi•I• ...... Andi"' M ~··~ JOI-and l'aul E ...... ,, ......... H ..... • • MvtrJ, M!Que Elo1 and Dontld KtlMI C1Se. Ir-F . IM l"rtdtrldl D. '°'•Wiii !IC, AM tlld Wiil im Attn lrc• .. n, 15•!1f ltott Ind 11fi1:;:r1 lruct ComJf:x-l •ron H fll<I OlorJI J lianlv, Oline H. t!>d JOI• F. f rl•M!n, Mtrll Lolo IM Thto<ICW'<! "'ft• l"tmt!I live I~ lllobtr~W, Min-er, Jr., Pl!rlcll J. i nll lllllc"-1'11 W, Coe.n. Jtc_tl,.. 1., 1nd L1wr111Ct T. ~~~l:~;;;·K~ 1~ndJ~~lll AM Wtlch rl1n111 Ell••O..lh 11>11 Roltl'ld AIOI. Sht ron K. 11\d Frthk DlllOLU"'•Dl\I !)fl MAllllAGI! Hl~t~~~jun• Ma,.,. end Roller! Euttnt ~•~r.~· i~.~·1~"!..,/f;',,~$ ' (Ht,.on, Arno!cl 0. and Ct trl1 0 , Monr11I, f'1u11lno I". 11111 llltn !''. .,_,Cl l>oJl1ld J1m10 1ncl K11'fllotn f'aT;\< ~:;:,\i~':" ~~,;~•rl~~n~ ,,.. f'ql l"llM M•r~h' LI' • ' Mi ,·•,, ' -~-. '"' ,,, Lllllon McVO'f, John Ed...,.,d •ftd Dwolhy Prt•rn~Q'"''Y "'""Jack Lr. Mo•I~ Crocktr, Em~I Mtalnt I nd R•Clll•d ,i'"''' n <kl, rvct OW1td Incl J11rl n ' .. ..,. •·-" ' I J I nd H Halpen, I 1 MU and Jil'l'I• Wt_... Oow!lnt "•w•'· ~ork• I . •nd T"-'111 T. Br1nd..,ouro, Rot1er1 w. 11'1d Liiiian T. ;-,;;:~; ~,::,'::,R~r.r.:' !:"'Timti 'Urct'iei Ml>•t • wi • 1rrv Mui. i tn •I'd Jemei P•lfltk !"'"r Jolln c11Uord 11no PhYlll• Aa,..• Rob<'rh, Lind• Jinent •rv:I Donni• F 1er, SIM!rrv Lynn '"' ""H' l<111orff, Joen A.. •!'HI WIUltm Gaorye er-"', LoHelne L. 1nd J l1nm1 c . L !"""I" Piul Allin 11111 NiflC'I Marl• 111 lno, L nci. Al'll'I •llG JotfJlfl 8~~~!·~0~~~n":i~rl~~0jf.'~ Lr~~ c;1,.. lft11mond SiwYtr A11n L. 1fld M1rlor~ L. 11KM"",,,',",I N!n• $ocorro 1/'d J1rn15 trO'I !tidied' m•-. •••-•. 0 •• Wf•••·-''' 0 "'"' L Cur!fv Donald Emrrv •Jlcl Ellillbtlh 011llsv, D1rvl l!dflll tfld EClwl1> JtMlt GUiiiory, Judv Lynn Ind J-n $!t,..n )l:::O,J,110J:..i:'J11::."1~ Jlmm:u,:.ik," CldV; M1.Y""'jo"1rv:1''Wut1.;''E •11MrH Marcll It ~'Belly J Ind R.,.. Rldl1rd Cl1rk MMQ\lnt, C1rol Ann I MI WUll1m .. llo1•nber1. 1rwln '"° 011ne E Loi>ei, Ci rmtn ·~ H•rttart si\liw. Sonnlt 8. 1iw;1 Marlin o. Hus1oy1, Mir! Ann •nd P1u1 OO•n Otl"''· W1rr.n R. •114 M1rllvn v1n t;.,k, 111. P1nlc!1 LvM end i;v•n,,•· J10n11 ~ ... ,~, '"°-~E~lt1 Lr ,~e'. ';,i,!;:;,, 111.·M,";!, J:':'' NE.,j.ITlllll f on!u, Nana L. and H ... rv R. f'INAL DECIU!IS 11 ••• Clt lrlJ;,OUIM Ind H•r;)Dff" S!Mt. Frie••• f'l.ntftbern r 11'1!1 Fr-··~-··o, llllr1n Ann Incl ... nll'IOllr Curit ~::: • .:;, L':.'.~1ne '.: :;:;; E:,~ c:-~na "'i:\·ttn. !!owl ... lttlt Jtl~ Ind Jamn t:fl!trH M~...,~ I ~:~r:.iy Ill t '1':i "t~::!:t 11:'."''' Cn~~!:r'!. Jlldllll ... ..,. •ncl ll-rl Jtromt W~ktl, Fa,,nlt 15talrict I nd Clydt Ktn· 9 rldy &tv1<l1 Joyc1 tJ>d Jann JOitlHl McConnfU. ~tllY A, 1M Garv L. N••••· MtlM Eillllt I nd Rlch1'11 Al .. er1do, ROINnM MfrY Ind GtfY llo:o••· °"''!""' L. Ind Jouph M. JOltPll ~~;;·ma-;;. t~!'I: ~·.';J~Tt:~~·J. CllOMOl1. J1nl1 RHllCCI and •1110 l Nt. ee"' L ...... 8 111 L. llodl, J(lfnn• {, 1'\d Wllllam It. All>lrf LH R•lmor. 1 d frN ... lcM 1ncf Ch1rlol· (OUlll" J t mt s II . and Ka!tiry~ G. Le1r, AlvlNI May tod Otoroe Alber! Mlch&tl Crocket!. .liunn L t nd D•vlO E. T0ttno. Dolor•• I nd F rt MI ~ Hicks. M1xlne Mllchelt 1n<1 W!11l1m1--'"''---------------''-"'.'.'.'."--"'"''-'""-'"''-'"'-"c:'.::'.'-.C::=:::c.:::::::.::c..:::::..::::::cc:.::c. ___ .::::cc.::.::::.:::::::::c::::.::.:::::c:_ __ _:::o::::c_ ___________ ..=_o:;cccc_ccc_7-0---------------------- Don0v1n l ur111. Chl rlts Htnrv 11111 li111I Ann l1llv1. ConJl1nc1 Ju n 1n<1 S1lvt11fr , .. L1ndM1n, G..,rte e'ICI Wllllllmlrwi Marlt Slo\otll, Ettie! Mary 1n<1 J1mt1 H, Phllllo•. C1ro1Yn J1111 1nd Wllll1m Flo1d (11CJ1 H1r""1 JOMPh Ind Gereld!M !lo•• Ric"'" M1u•lc1 s. 1nd 01111 Mlrl• .... ndrewt, RUOoll>ll Jon i nd E11N r '"" J orrl1. Ill<! C. 11\d ll ld'l1rd A. '''" ""9..:• " (ollrlf, Jt..,.I S. IM )01 \I J 0 1•11· J11nnt M1rle 1.llJ-· Oon11d Wl1111m Pa!ltr.an. R1vmond Lou" 1 n o cna•ltne 1"ltrrl1, Sharon R. 1nd Llo•d G. Crow11v, Alll M1rl1 and (h••l•s M1rlon Ot l ulll., lvt n Omar a nd Enol1 L0t•nt G1t", l l rO.r.i G. a nd Altn Lt Roy H••m1n11n, LIOll••d Ar!llur 1J>d (n1rv1 Ena T1tum Sn1ron Ann t nd lltlo~ WIYnl A!01r1on, Andrtw (,Ind Oe"J .. P1110. Thtodort L. •nd Maurtto ll r11nn<Jt\, Hiroko 1n<I Ch1rln P. Allyn, \llcior H., Jr. 1nd Petti Ann L1mllllfl, Ct rol I nd H11eld L. Ftrouscr>. Rost M. ar.a Malcomb E. Lowell, Gtll w. end J , lltv Nun111r11, ltre11 and Rul>ln N, Crowltv, KilfllH n Jun1 1nd J1mu llruc1 Kri ll, Avis EH11be11'1 t tld Armin Htnrv Youn11 Cart Jultan 1NI Codnt Marlon Dtw•v. Alllf•ll end Mlch11l c;, Noo:th, Joan LH •NI We!lt r $tanlt Y li1rrowbv, LINll G. 1nd Tl!Omll It. Good, L1n1 Ind Wlnlre<I 0. Wor>tlhtkt, Allhur E. end A1win1 P, H1mm, lefty J. t nd f rl'd S"mour, Tully H. IMI Tamsen H. A~1n. C1rolyn M1rlt aJ>d Gt,ald A:1Y Wllli1m1. Ci ra! H. and Jolln N, """•II. Mlcll1tl 01t1r1t and Goldit ,,_ Lvm1n, Soni• J. 1nd 01vld T. l'llt<I Mlrdl 11 8ud11~kl, J 1cquf!lrlf J. •lld lt1111min '· Miii er, A!lct M. and L-•rO W1111am $Ti r!, ~ollbll Sut Ind Robert V1rnon ,, Plt l. 8••11••• Ann Ind Mlellltl JOl>n Dohn, Ju1nlt1 Mt• i nd Frink JllM!Pll l't~CllllO, M1rt111 1/ld Wlllltm l urkc. llon1IO II, end Cltudll Plltd Mirth lS Mtrfltltld. D1nlt l Bell and Oorl1 Fulcla Ferrill. Judith Oran end Jann DwloM (9"noll,l;i lllll1n L. l<IO JtmfJ £ t~~~er,'rjl:~etM~tl~~d ::J•l~h~~I A:ubln Ill lltol>ertl1, Oorotnv M. and Jo1eoll A, D.,.nev. Cht N I W. IJ>d Reber! S. r~~'.11e.ri:u~:11: .. ~i'o:.~~ 6~~\'r" L,bric.k, Su•1n111 M. 1nd ROl>trl rq;/1~,' C•tolYn G. 1nCI PhlllP $. e uker. Katnn.n Gell end lloMrl Poul '"""'' Mlrl•m I. 1nd 15obby 0 . 6fC1\onln,, Carol A 1nd llrv1m 0. kom1>1rdo, J1nlce tnd Oougl11 N •~tr. C1rolyn F. t J>d Horact Loe ll'rllo\· 11.\ealllf R. 1nd OtKln L. ~t~nl/e d, L1urrr>1 Loll t nd C1stv Clall lleMcn, Thom11 Ri<lllrd i ncl ti.Irv ... , ... , ~f/11(1m'~tre?ii 1~,~~t;t:~ 1100..rt """ M,K11>nev, Norm1 I. a nd Haw1rd G:::~. Ell•n McGrHDr el'ld Jl'lltS Gr1n1 MOl/Jtt, Jtrr1 W, t nO K•r•n £. IC"l!ftler, ll1rll(.r1 1no Jt rrv L Grotn. Jam•• B 1nd Arl•nt II lot-erl(lll, Elhtl K, t nd Frl!dt"dl , .l\Pl';i;,~1~1 5!1t ron Lt• 1nd J1me1 Fl•!1w, C1rolln1 Ro•• •'Id k'tnnttll Wlllllm INTlllLOCUTOllY DECREES Entlttd M1rch 11 f'nton, E1ae•1n11 l<'ld Jllhn Wll!Tam Murl>l>y, Jonn W. fnd Oorl1 MQT+t• Mlr1nd1, Annttlt Peull"' 1nd Alren10 Frink S.U.OllOW, David N1m1n t nd Eth1bt1h '"" Hott, Normt Je1n 1M cn.r111 Ralph Tl'l'llfr, LIWf~CI JOlln 111<1 Jevct A .. n1t11 Gom11. Jo Ann 1nd Oenltl Wllllem Allr1m1, ll••erly A. ind Norman IL Hv11ne1, to::1v H ftnd DouGlft• E Quick, £rmal M. 1nd Ch1r tt1 M Smith, ~hen.I Doe and Rot>or! J1mt1 Cltm•n!, Mirier!• El•1nor 1nd M•l•ln llArldell Burt, 11101• l 'ld GMr!M' E. l!oc.httler, Pe1rlcle M .Ind B•nn• A Ma'lrlluo, Ptnt leae MAry 1nd D1rr11 Wln!lt ld l!v'"· e1tt1, Joe ~nd J1mt1 Ea•I llu!h, Aa•lt L end HMrY John $hlaman. ll!Odnr• Frttmfn 1nd Vir11>nl1 .. Death Notiees OIAl"l!I! EC"Wll'I D•ti>e•. •ot 11, of 100 ""onlt \11111, Co.11 M.,1 0 •1• cl d•lth, Maren 11. $fr.1cH Ptr1dln11 •! Bell Q.,,,.aw11 l/,crtu1r1. HOLT £"'ml V H119"'3 Hell, '!11 E D<fl" l lvd. N•wJ>Orl Beech, Dei. o! d•11n. Mercn 1'. fune,•I •tr•«•• ••II i.. h•l.d Sl!urdlY, Mtrch 10. 11 AM, P•clllc v;e-.. (hlPff, with II•~ Lortn ~lic~l"'lM" otllrl11Tno. '"urn.,,t n! Ptcllic "''"" Momorl1I P1rk, P1clllt Vltw Mor!u1rY, Ol1•clorJ. LAMBl!llTSON lliv•tn S. Laml;jrrl•on. 381 W, ll•v St., No n. Cotti M•••· 01lt of <l••I~. !1<1rch 11. Surv!vl!d b1 dlUllMtrt. Join e . o.itvldton ""° Conni• Con•t1n<•; b"'t"•'• G"°r9r Wortmen, G••~aild• ~rrv!cf1, S1turd1v. 11 A.M, Good S111oht•d Cem~ltrv . Directed bv P rri< Family Colonl11 funtr1T Homo RUOOLl'H 1;1•!1n E ltudolall. Aot 6S. cl '1831 N~l•"d St , Hun!ln111on l•1cn 011• .,f ao1tn Mt'<~ 11. Svrvi••d by !wo 1cn1, OaviO Pri•<I , of Wt•t V•r11lnl1. 2ane Ru<1aloh, Se&tllt: <11uu~ltt, Mrs M1,.,. Ellen COO<lington. Cc•!• Mt•I. ll ••1nclchlldron M1morot! •••vict1 ... rn bf_ held S1h1rd1v, 1 PM, St, Jefln tno Ohr!,,. E1l1coc1! Churcl'I, wlln F1thor John Donaldson cff!cr111no Family 1uu· 1n1s !hMI w1111lng lo me~• m•mo•••I tontrlOU!lonl. ot111r <Dn"•OIJI• In '"' Amt•k •n C•nc•• Fund. 8111 lltOldWIY Mcrtu1rv. Dl•Klou. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLTFF 1\10RTUARY 4%7 E. 17th St.. Costa J\lcsa 61Mll88 • BLATZ 1\IORTUARIES Corona dcl Mar OR 3·9450 Costa 1\fe1a J\fl &-64%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway. Costa J\lcsa LI 8-3433 • J\TcCORJ\OCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY li95 Laguna Canyon Rd. 494-9·t15 • PACJFlC VIEW J\fEMORIAL PARK Cemetery 1\lortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Dri\·t Nc~port Beach, Calllornla 544.2100 • PEEK FAJ\111 .V COLONIAL FUNERAL JIOJ\tE 7861 Bol~a A'''· \\1estmlnslcr 893-Mt.5 • S~llTH'S 1\IORTUA RV 127 Main St. UMSlt Jlu nllnglon Beach ::--Siii:LVllfG IN COLORS Also in walnut or white li•r•'• quality 1ht lving wilh cho1'e in d1pth. Got lh• elult In Y•llow. • Orongt. and A•ocodo, 'Plvs your ~ cholc• of whit• ot •a11111t pvrpl1. abooth.) 8x24 1.79 8x26 2.39 8x48 2.99 l0x36 2,39 o.10x48 2.99 • l l2x36 2.39 l2x48 2.99 •PAIL• WASTEBASKET ·LAUNDRY BASKET •DISHPAN YOUR · CROICC 1 47c EA. Th• paR ho• a spout crnd 11 a higgl•. The wat11ba1k1t ii 37x36. the f1)UDd lovndry ~ basket !t 26x36. th• dl1bpon l• 211C3i. and th• Kor• l• Lak1r1131-C1ltlc:1 41-1. PNEUMATIC SCREEN DOOR CLOSER Au!omttticollf clo111 th• scrffo door wllh o qul1l p111hhhhh. Or Is it "p••11tttH''? Or mcrybl, "phhhhlt!tt." Or. Or. LOW VOLTAGE LIGHTING Sof1. lalf to lay out. cmd th• thorm ol 011l1\d1 llghllng l1n't hotd lo hood\1. Comp\111 with •it• a.nd 1ron1lona1r, 3 LITE 2987 6 LITE 4917 GARAGE DOOR WEATHERSTRIPPING Ll~• an \n111ranc• bet in a dic:1 gom1. w• try to pT•pc111 lor anything. And In CalUom!a. you don't lino• ii II'• Santan01I e r 1v111hl.ne .001. So tut out the dlolt lo th• FLOWER Ir VEGETABLE SEEDS If you don'1 l11l Ilk• 1crving mo11ty oza produc1 (you'r• bcmazaa1) 1b1n you 'Will 1njoy natural lt91h produc:1 you ha••n'l to1tld'1inc:• you wet• o kid. On a dltt? Tok• th• llow11 1Md1. 5~KG. CHAPIN SPRAYER A compatt d10l. ea•ltr lo carry. .a1litr lo pump up. ond o whi.-; ol g•Ulng bu;• no matt•f whir• lh•y hid•. Double dom• pr111ur• lank. '6971 ~ GAL. ORTBO LAWN & DICHONDRA FOOD Thl1 11 th• Um• for your spring crpplicotioll and o iilc• lim• for o hall price deol tao. Alto o nlc:• llm• lo mo•• thal i:novn taiD lhat lolc11 up hall th• ymd. lst Bag R1gul1r 443 :nd Bag H&ll Price FOR BOTH CUT GLASS KNOBS Th111 look Ilk• som• ll:ind ol a clo.11 .i1al. Scrw 1h1m far do11bl1 in a high. cla11 jolol ond Ju•t c:ouldo'I r11itt making a pr\c:t. 117 J:A, MEDICINE CABINET DECORATOR FRAME Ta1r11h1 old la1hloned plain m•dicl n• cabln•t that c:om• V"llh th• houn, attach thl~ 14121 lromt. In wbil• and gold. oil gold, or 1ll••f llnlth. in 1ovnd or aquar• ahop1. and ••• wow. 997 BEDDDfG PLllTS Plied up llS. piuas gt on Italian wedding n don't k.now any real ltalian1 •ho .en th• 1tull). S.Oi.atUul flow•r .. •ori•IWI plenty. 37cTRAY CAST IRON SWITCHPLATE Cltver little d.c:oratln; thin; lor the guy who lllc11 sor:nttbtng d\IJ1r1nt. On1toll It 1 on 1h1 light 1witc:h neaf91t ~ yovr poiaoa dart di1ploy.) UMBRELLA RECOVE;· Thi• one I om going lo proc:1.d ,.,.,. •lowly 'With. Th• hltl lnlonnallolll go! I• that it's o cover !or a pat.lo • umbrello In orang• ar gTH D. for 11p ",: 10 o 1 It. umbr1Uo, 01. qu11Hona !tom tb• oudl1nc1? 997 IT~RR'I COME AriOU"El'TltlS l(OOIC Of"F l l'IE T~LE REDWOOD STAllfED TABLE & BENEK SET l l Jfopt ool lo tun out. hut oow w1 got ci solemn. ,. promi•• ol mony . many. and you c:on g•I 1997 •h• .... ,., .. >obi• wi>h • bench11 to matc:h. FIBERGLASSj PANELS , For rooHng, patio co•1r, pri•acy l)OQ•l1. l11:1clng. or whaltvtr th• g1nlu1 on your block 1ugg1111. Cbok:• i ol colort. ~ •••••• 1.99 .. '. 2.99 "3.99 McCLOSKY'S EXTERiDR SIDING STAIN A good nam• Uhaf• whol lh•Y 1111 111 ol McClosky'1). Good color 11111d P9rmo111nc1. yo11'll g1t 1om• tlm• oul ol thi1 11uJf. 497 GAL. ROUGH DISTRESSED CEDAR BOARDS ' Goto 11ock of th••• In rondom ~ wldth1. Put them t~•lher and you·,. gol wom•thing good going for you. land-ct D9Cll llHI• pU• ol lool lor the Nollonal mob to mak1 th1 payroll. WI hop•.) sq. rr. f : ,, ,, I I 1% OAILV PILOT ....... ' iVJ .,... !!.,~~ HAS TIGHT SHIP Sen. Robert Byrd Sen. Byrd \Upgrades No. 2 Post \VASHI NGTON !UPI) -In 11 little less tha n three months, Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia has infused the post of assistant Senate Democratic leader with .a completely new dimension. Never again, perhaps, will a Democratic "Whip" remai n conlcnt wilh just being the party's No. 2 man in the Senate, a member of• !he pivotal policy and s.teenng committee and having a chitnce to sometimes start the da.v wi1h breakfast at the \\'hite lfouse. Byrd h11s greatly broadened that narrow concept of the job. To it, he ha5 added two major functio•s. Certainly No. I in ·Byrd's lis t of priorities is ~he task of keeping the Senate 10 order. No . 2 would be his public relat!cns job for the brand- new public address system. Gone are the good cld days "'hen rules were circumvented by unanimous consent. whe11 11. time limil on a speech could ~ extended with ease and when a senator could whisper to a colleague without peril of being called to crder. Jn his-new role. Byrd has turned the post into something resembling a high school pri"- cipal who r has a fetish for disci pline in dealing with 100 unruly studenl.5. Nn one is immune. Las! week, assistant S t n a t e RepubliCO'ln leader Robert P. Griffin of Michig11n w a s caui;i:ht talking to Sen. Charles H. Percy of Illinois. "Mr. presider1t. may we havr crder." Byrd Qoomed. T.iken aback. r.riffin and Percy parted as If slru'ck by 8 thunderbolt. Not an other peep was heard. . Simih1rlv. the three-mi nute nile on Speeches during the so-called morning hoor is now 1 th ree-minute n1le -not a five-minute, JG-minute. er JS--minute rule. Whe" a St'nator's three minu!es are up. the gavel bangs. Many ve teran senators a_..K for another three but Byrd rises from hi~ seal In object. •n 11ct that 11~ 10 be an absolu te taboo in I h i s gentlemen's club. Hand in h;ind wilh th\g rlevn- tinn to crder has been Byrd'~ Jove affair wi1h the fl e.w ~ounrl tmplifyin~ sy~1em. instRHed tor this Congress. · Byrd alway5 uses hi!! mike . Sf05t other J11en11tor5 try. wh<'n lhtr can remember . 11l1hn11e:h the cord once caught Griffin short and ne.11rl y ripped his jacket. Senafe: 'Democratic leader )lfke M11nsfleld. h G w e v t r . Mver um his mlcrophont end dots not plaa to. This poses a prnblem fr1r Byrd. How do yoo SUfitji!est. tactfully. to your leader ~at he u~ the modt:t1 mech!nlCI when he doell r.ot w11nt to ! Byrd tolvtd the problem 9t1ce. but wttbout too much ,..,.,.,., THE BEST . ···'"""/" ,.11, ,, ..... , ••. lljlf•" ,, •11• •' .... .,,,,., l'lltli 111•11111l1t ce111 lc •trl111t. Att4 It 4,11., 111 tt.. DAILY PllOT. ,r Frld.tiy, Marek 19, 1971 - MARCH STARTS TODAY M-1 Co Burlget Slcr!s where the smart money's going to be saveJ., ). all departments of all May Co Budget Staes -"'"WINDFALL OF VALUES save! bulky knit acrylic cardigans 4. 99 reg, 5.99-7,99 choice sale group of iunior fla,res 5. 99 regularly9.99 never-iron print twin size sheets l.99 lfperfec~-4.99 Handsome sov;ng• on bulky ~n~ atryl· ic cardigan.sf Crew neck and club col• Jar styles, oil with long sleeves. Bo.sic and novelty weaves.. lo\ely ~ariety of colotS. s;ze• 36-46. O.mtond;ng saving> on a greet <ol!ec· tion of o ur better funior flare panls. Twills. stripe$ o nd many more in popu. lar fabrics. Hurry In lo gel "VO•• cl)9ice. Jr. sizes S.l:). ~ polyeote,,.conon blend. 8uttoo- down broadcloth with French culls, deep' soHds, 14~17 ne ck, 32-35 •lee'"' A• Ivy oxford cloth wuh bliHon arff, bitto!>down cc11or, S.Xl. Monyore 1st quat.iy. Twf• flct....ta. ted. Pottems, colors.. 5.99 foll 12.49 k;ng 4. 99 king c.oses pr. 3.99 pr. standard cose9 rlome~!ics 803 2.99 4.99 1.99 pr.1.W .rnlss~ sportswear 800 fvnicit sceneeot. 829 ,..... tumuhiAQS 806 SWEATER KNIT PANT SETS S-M-L m;.Oes• dres>es 810 ro;. 7.99 5.99 MISSES' ZIP FRONT TWEED KNIT TOPS m;oses, sportswear 800 ro;.•1.99 3.99 MISSES' COTTON PRAIRIE DRESSES mi~' sportswear 800 r~. 8.99 7.99 NYLON KNIT TOPS IN LARGE SIZES women's dresses 816 ro;.3.99 299 JUNIORS' PRINT PEASANT SKIRT jun;or sportswear 801 rog. 6.99 4.99 GIRLS PEASANT PRESSES girl'$ weor 824 -4.993.99 GREAT CHOICE OF GIRLS' PANTS g;rls' ..,,or 824 rog. 2.99 200 GIRLS' JUMPER SETS, lllG CHOICE g;rls'weor 824 r•;.6.99 2.99 MISSES' ALL•WEATHERCOATS 8-18 women'• coots 828 reg, 24.9913.99 MISSES' CORDUROY PANT COATS women's coots 828 r•;. 19.9913.99 LONG PRINT JERSEY DRESS jvnior dresses 829 reg. 12.994,99 WIDE CHOICE OF SLEEPWEAR sleepwear 82 1 comp. vol, 3.99-S.99 2.99 MISSES QUILT ROSES lo t.1ng eweor 815 reg, 11.99 to 13.99 6.99 MISSES' DUSTERS AND COFFEE COATS. loungeweor 815 comp. vol. 4.99-6.99 3.99 MISSES SHORT PANTS S-M-L loungeweor 815 comp, voluo 5.99-6.99 4. 99 STRETCH NYLON BIKINIS, BRIEFS do).wa:,r linger;e 820 c0mp.vaL 1.00 29•, 4/J.00 STRETCH NYLON BRA AND BIKINI SETS. foundot;Oll$ 819 rog. 2.00 1.59 SEAMLESS MESH NYlON PANTYHOSE women'> ho,;ery 807 reg. 79c·59• or 2/1.00 l<RINKLE BAGS, SHoutDE!l, HANDLE STYLts handbogs 827 '"II• 5.99 4.99 PRE-CURLED STRETCH WIGS fa>b;,,o""""°ries826 -12.99 8 .99 SCARVES IN SQUAW, OBLONGS faoh;o,, accessories 826 11111'• 1.99 1.00 INFANTS' CRAWLERS WITH SNAP CROTCH infant•' wear 808 ro;. 1.39 69• or 3 12.00 CHILDREN'S SHOES, MA'NY smES ch;ld rcn',.hoes 813' r•g. 6.99-7.99 3. 99 MEN'S SANDALS, BROKEN SIZES men',.hoes 823* reg,4!19-S.99 2.99 BOYS' COTTON KNIT SHIRTS. SIZES 8-18 boys'weor822 •olue2.99 2/3.00 BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS boys' wear 822 rog. 2.69 2/ 3.0Q BOYS' CASUAL PANTS AND JEANS boys' wear 822 valoe 3.99 2. 99 MEN'S FAMOUS MAKE HICKOK CR£W SOCKS furn ;sh;ngs 806 ro;.,1.00 69~ 3 pr. J.95 SHORT SLEM, NO.IRON DRESS SHIRTS mon'• furn;sh;ng> 806 rog. 3.99 2.99 MEN 'S ACRYLIC KNIT SHIRTS· men'l sportswear 805 reg. 4.99 3.99 . • ' may co touth co•tt pl111 , Mn dlega fwy. 1t brlatof, co1t1 m•u, 54t..932l .... thop mond1y thru Nturd1y 10 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., sund1y noon 'til 5 p.m. MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SHIRTS men's sportswear 805 reg.3.99 299 ALL WEATHER COATS, ZIP LINER men'sdoth;ng 814 wo,.25.9912.99 MEN'S DOUBLE KNITS PANTS men's cloth;ng 814 rwg. IS.99-12;99 MEN'S ALL•WOOL SPORT COATS men'•cloth;ng lrJ4 wo,.40.00 24.99 MEN 'S WARM WINTER OUTERWEAR men's sportswear 817 w0fe l6.99-l8.99 7.99 MEN'S No.IRON CASUAL PANTS tnen's•pamweot817 ifperf.5.~.99 2.99 MEN'S NO IRON GOLF JACKETS men's sportswear 817 volue6.994,99 CORDUROY, VELOUR JUMPSUITS men's sportsweot 817 reg. 12.CO 6.99 SY,xBV2' OVAL RAYON AREA RUGS rugs 81 l reg. 15.00 10.QO WIDE WINDOW PANELS 5B"x54", S4"xs1• dropedes 818 rog. 2.19·2.39 eo. 1.89 FIBERGLASS ® DRAPES 48"xS4• droper;es 818 t•g. 7.99 4.99 NO IRON POLYESTER PILLOWS20x26" dome>tks 803 rog.4.99 2.99 CARRIAGE TRADE BATH TOWELS linens 83 1 reg. 2.49 1.99 POPPY PRINT TERRY BATH TOWLES J;nens 83 1 rog. 229 2/3.00 KING-SIZE ELECTRIC BLANKETS bedd;ng 825 ff porle<t .. 59.99 29. 99 MAY CO BUDGET STORES HAPPY WANDERERS -A tropical progressive dinner tomorrow night in?pires (l eft to right) the Mmes. ~oger .B.erg~rsen, 1'.Jick Kindlein and Robert Collier to express their antic1pat1on musical· Lion-Hunt's On The n1ost important item on any club's agenda is membership. \Vit h this though t in mind. mem bers of the Laguna Niguel \Voman's Club, Federated will put an extra ounce of plann ing into their ~nnual me mbership tea on Friday, Ma rch 26. A cordial \velcome is extended to all won1en in and around Laguna Nigue l to attend the lea from 1 to 3 p.m. in the l\1onarch Bay Beach Club. • The c!ub is federa ted but is not divided into junior and senior sections. Its primary purpose is civic. but it is now large enough to pro· vide interest and com1nittee sections for many different types of \vomen of all ages. Numbe red among the most active sections are a bridge group and a large socia l section. "This year's objectives." according lo l\1rs. Ga ry Davis, presi- dent, have been centered on youth. recreation and eco logy." Two types or memberships are available -active and a.~sociate. \Vomen interested in de termining whether the club is t heir ''cup or tea" may contact Mrs. Davi d Robbins , membership chairman, 1t 495·5219 or Mrs. Davis at 495·4309 fo r information or reservations for next Friday's tea. ... FROM THE LI ON'S MOUTH _'j t;,,e mem ber.< 9f the Laguna Niguel \Vo1nan's Cl ub are hunting Tor ne"' members. ill anticipation of drawing a large cro"'d (peacefully, ho\vever) fo r the annual l\<Tem· bership Tea on Friday. ~1arch 26, tleft to right) the ~tmes. Leo l/artanian, Bradley Sims and John Smol· Jen do a little advan ce scouting . ' Members of Laguna Niguel Woman's Club, Feder- ated and their husbands will don Hawaiian attire, dust orr their ukuleles and head for a Tropical Trek tomor-- row night Mr. and Mrs. Peter McAllister will bid al oha to travelers as they arrive at 6 p.m. for a cocktail and hors d'oeuvres opener. Next, the group will move to a Hawaiian greens setting in the home or Mr. and Mrs. Jack Weber for a salad course. At 9 p.m., the lu au will begin in the go lf course home of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Griffin. Finishing off an evening of fun. Mr. and r.1rs. Nick Kindlein will host the desert cou rse followed by pool· side dancing. Women interested in joining th e \Voman's Club in time to enjoy the trek may call Mrs. David Robbins. membership chairman, at 495·5219. The club was organ ized in June of 1969 by 15 active women under the leadership of Mrs. ~ack Weber. From that number, it bas grown to a memt>ership of 58 and community projects have reached out into a variety of civic endeavor. One of the feathers in the club's cap is a small park at La Hermosa and Maltaso Place. After consulting with utility companies and area residents, a committee under the direc tion or Mrs. Phillip Carleton drew up a land· sca pe plan and irrigation system and began a drive to fund the park. Their first committy project was ded icated in June. 1970, with -assistance from residents and clubs v"hi ch donated trees and labor. In other activities, members have mann ed booths at the annual Fiesta del Niguel; collected gifts for un· depriviledged children on special holidays; worked on community forums; staged rummage sales for a com· munity youth building and enjoyed numerous fun, rather than fundraising , events with their husbands. BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 Ptkl9y, Mtttll 1,, 1ttl I , .... II Family Applause Guaranteed to Bring No --Curtain Calls DEAR ANN LANDERS : ~1y llllle sister is only 5 ye ars old. She l1as a fa ntastic memory and can repeat a poem perrectly after hearing it only once. Sissie can count to 200 and rei::1te the Pledge of Allegiance. She kn!)WS t'very commercial on TV and can act !hem oul just like lhe performers. I can vouch for the ract that Sissie isn't bashful and v.·ill perform for anybody. What l would like to find oul from you is if anyone can use her commercially. My parents kno\v I am writing I.his letter and they are in favor of it. -SISTER OF A SMART ONE DEAR SISTER: "rtlat you are as king Is how your fa mily can make some, monty off your llltlt sister's t.xctplional intt lllgtnct. Pt1y ad\'ltt is lo lorge t It. ANN LANDERS Supersmart kids art. obnox ious •h'n they are COD!llanlly pushed to perfonn. Children lbt.lr own age dis like tbem and adults find such exploitallon ap- palling. Pttoreover It glve1 the gifted child lht. wrong conception of learning. They grow up bt.llt.\1l1g thal the principal reason for acqulrlni · knowledge I~ to show off. • DEAR ANN LANDERS : \Vhy do yo11 print letters from girls v.·ho have been seduced and abandoned and continue " to give them the ,.;ame 011frnod&I ad vite? Instead of ,<;aying. "I tolrl you so,'' v.•hy not say, "Good riddance'. .. What e>:aclly are these ninnil's com· plaining abou1? \\1hy would a gi rl \IJANT to marry such a skunk? It bums me up when J read wet>py letters from nitwits v.·ho beal themselves:. publicly 1n yo11r column hecau.~e they v.·ent lo bed wi1h a bu,V. hnp1nR il would ~ring them the ul!in1ate pnze -marriage. Then to their horror, the rat says - '"Sorry, I can't marry you. You were loo easy." Any girl who had an experience like that should thank her lucky stars she didn't save her virgi nity for her \vedding nigh!, TJ-IEN find out what the guy was lfke. Wouldn't it be terrible to marry a jerk like that and have him queslion her purity because she didn't pass the l.ests in the 1914 medical books? Shout halleluja, girls. A new day is dawning.~ LJBERATED DEAR DAWN: What'1 you r ht.el~ I'm with you all the way. DF:AR N AN.N LAND,f.RS : You missed a greal opportunity lo help a 101 ('f loner;ome ~·omen. I refer to your reply to "Solo," the widow who made four telephone. calls, in an effort to get 11 couple to cofne to her home for dinner. One friend said, "Sorry, my husband is drinking again and if you serve cocktails he'll be drunk the whole weekend. J can't take a chance ... " If that widow thinks SHE is loneso1ne, she should have had a heart-to-heart talk with that lady. No one. is more. lonesome than the wife of a drunk. J know because I've been married to one for 30 years. I never know \Vhen or IF my husband Is cqrn lng h o m e for dinner -or what condition he'll be in when he gets here. Granted. both the widow and the wife of a boozer have a hard lime, but they could help each other sharing a few sociable hours. \Vhy didn"t you tell her? -MARRIED & SOLO DEAR r.1.&.S.: Becau1e I didn't think of It. But I'm glad you did. Thanks for writing. CONFIDENTIAL TO BORED, UN· FU LFILLED AND NE ED TO BE NEEO. ED: Yes, I have an answer for you, Write lo Closer Look, Box 1492. Washington, D.C. 20013. There Is 1 desperate need for teachers of the han- dicapped. Here is a splendid opJ>Orlwtity to give -and to receive. Give in or lo~e him .•• when • py glvt.1 you tbl1 line, look out! For tlp1 011 how to bandJe the 1uper 1ei: 1al~1man, check Ann Landen. Read her booklet. "Necking a nd Petting -Wbal Are lht Limits?" Send you r request to Au• Lander1 In ca re flf !he DAILY PU..01- enclotilot 50 .cent1 In Cilln ud a Ions, stamped 1elf-a ddretsed envelope. • • •• t fr1dii7, Mucll 19, 1971 Horoscope: Pisces Face Fac ts j PLANS SOARING -Huntington Beach Chllpler ~·:.members of Delta Gamma reflect buoyan't theme of ! Sorority's 98th annual Founders Day Reunion, en· :: titled Soaring Into the Seventies. Anticipating lunch· > •• '· ~~ .. DORIS KEYES To Say Vows ;·Nuptials tn Offing . 1 .•. ,. ::~ WIY July wedding Is fietng'ptanned by Doris Evelyn Keyes and James Russell ~sk, whoae belrothal has ~n aMou'nced by Mr. and Mr1. William S. Keyes or ~ta Mesa, parenta of the f~ture bride. Students Announce April Day Alr. and Mrs. Waller B. Dixon of Costa ~·I e s a announced the betrothal of their daughter. Donna Dixon to J?on fredri~sen ~uring a family gathering in their home. Among guests were f.ir. and Mrs. Lawrence Fredriksen of Costa Mesa, parents of the future bridegroom. Others attending v.·ere ?o.lr. and 1'1rs. Fred Ricard, hfr. and t.irs. W. G. Dixon and r-.1rs. Caroline Thayer , grandparent.8 or the couple, Alr. and t.frs . Ford BroY.-n and f.fr,' and Mrs. D. T. Lumpkin. 'the bride-tt;i..be is a graduate ot Cost.a Afesa High School arid be(' husbanP is a. graQuate of M"~aUy High School. They both alt.end Orange Coast College. An April 3 wedding Irr Calv~ry Chapel, Santa Ana, I! planned. Fling Springs SATURDAY MARCH 20 .. ,.tiact,, •IQ A. rl e 1 ult¥tt ld: . ..., eoafldt.,. nw ...,. ... ~ eccu1oaa1 ___ ,,.,... __ °" ...... ....~ Arita ii trfctul, I 14ep e a4e It, I •tual tatY1tot. O. 91pttve plao, Arlu nUen pup ti ldf-<loUC. & II lmporlul for memben el who.iiacoJ tip s. .Okve ~ betwee• .,,.._ ml UmllllJ.. AlllES (Morch Sl-Ajrll ll)' Impetus shown in career area, you take definite atep to fulfill amhlUoo. Gain cooperation of family memben. You will need IOild emotlonlJ. llljl!lOrt. Catalina Ceremony Planned Wagners Tell News Mr. and Mn. K<nnelh Waper of Calta Men have IDDOWICed the engqement of their dau&hter, Dor 1 n n e Wqner to Vlad Ghl11!1mi110 -ol Dr. and Mn. Radu GhluJamt11 of Albany, N.Y. Mia Waper ii a IJ'ldu.ate ol Ettancla llJab School and Ora.nae Cout College. eon get-together on Saturday, March 20, are (left to right) the Mmes. Fred Lawhon, Thomas Tullu and John Pagan. The Huntington Beach Chapter will hosl the galhering in the Airporter Inn. Her flance, an alumnus ol Ca.Jifornia State College at Lone Beach, earned bl5 MS dearee at the Unlvmlty ot Montrtal and is atudylng for bl5 PhD ln Albany. 'Ibey bavt pla.nntd a May 21 weddJ.ni en Catalina llland. 98th Anniversary Monday Meeting Musical County Delta Gammas Soar Into Seventies Slnalni and lmlnunenlal music will fill the air MoDday, Getting close to the century mark, Orange County Delta Gamma chapters w i l J celebrate their 98th annual Founders Day Reunion on Saturday, March 20, in the Airporter Inn. filrs. Roger Weninger of Huntington Beach is chairman for the galhering, themed Soaring Into the Seventies which will begin with a socia l hour at 11 :30 a.m., followed by Iuoch at 12:30 p.m· Program Combined A Joint businesa meetin& will get under y,·ay 'al Z p.m. on Sunday, i\farch 21, for the Fleet R es e r v e Association Branch and Unit 175 of Oran1e County. · There will be a no.host din· ner following the gatherin& in the Staff NCO Club at the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Station. Official visitors will be 111rs. The guest speaker will be March 22, u Newport Harbor Mrs. Cla1rt WoUf, president· Stnlor ClUzens and their elect of the Blind Children's fritndl are entertained at 7:30 Center, founded in L 0 1 p.m. 1n the Sen1or Citl:tnl Allgeles in 1938 by Delta Garn· Recreation Center, Newport ma alumnae. Beaeh. The center is noted for itl A luncheon ls pl&Mtd on Cradle Club, through which ThW'1day, Much 25, for mem- medica1 specialilta ready blincf' ben only, to ·be given by babies for the nurRry IChool the Homt·Makers Club, Inc. program -mo undertaken Card playln1 will follow. at the center -and COUD.9f:I parents 00 prope:r training for Mmibers also a r e an. their blild infants. ticlpaUn1 an Euler program Seven 5G-yur members will following the Aprtl I busineu be introduced at the lizncbeon, meetinJ. A hat parade with when HuntJncton Beach Delta . . Gammas w1)1 host tbe Santa prua: and choral mU11c are Ana, Saddleback, Fullerton-on the prorram, and put Anaheim ud W b I t t i e r presidents wUI be honcl'ed chapters. l\le.Sts . E~blem Club Planning Officer Installation I / Mrt. Geora:e Babbitt, -" ' DORINNE WAGNER May lrido Don't argue with superiors. TAURUS (April ZO.May 20J : You may be dealing with the abstract. Means apj>earances: could be deceivlnC. Look beyond tbe obriow.. Com· munlcate with one at a distance. -...)\eJease self from senseleu reibic&lorui. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Money situation improves • Resources Increase in value. You can get down to practical luuea. You know where you stand -and what to do about it. Heed voice of eiperienct. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Lie low. Find out what is being done and why. This is accomplished by s b r e w d , unobtrusive observation. Let others set pace. Don't try to force i"ues. U:gal matter is hlghligbted. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Streu creative approach. Ac· cent greater originality, in- dependence. CaprlCGn in· divldual could play significant role. Romantic In t e r e s t s dominate. Maintain s e I f • eiiteem. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221' Hunch proves accurate. One who aided you in past could make reappearance. C h i I d could pose problem. Be fair but firm. Steer clear or one who is an apparent know-it-all. LIBRA (Sept. :>J-Oct. 22)' Activity increases a r o u n d home base. One linked to you emotionally or I e g a 11 y becomes sell-assertive. Main· tain aense of humor. Family ipember needs a good laugh. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): ACcent on short journeys. jdeas which need additiona l development. Some relatives, neighbor s may take pugnacious stance. Be aware of fine points. Check direc· tions, reservations. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Be ready for change. . special messages, com· irtunicalions. Share knowledgll. You will learn by teaching. Get together wllh Gemini in· divldual. Pool resources. CAPRICOllN (Dec. 22-Jao. 19 ): What v.·as hidden is ex· posed to light. You find out y,·hat has ~n occuring behind scenes. Family members are involved. Clandestine acti vity is cmphas1zcd. You w 111 understand. AQUAR IUS (Jan, 20-feb. 18): Obtain hint fr o m Capricorn rnessage. t.luch that occurs may IX' obscured ft'om view. You y,•ill have to read between lines. study !ine print. Avoid tendency lo r o o l yourself. PISCES (Feb. 19-t.iarch 20): Accenl on friends, hopes, wishes. Carry out plans. Don't hesitate because of sec ret fears. Older individual is favorably itnpresse d. You could receive needed financial backing. T" !'Ind out wno" h1C~¥ !or VOii 1,. moneY and love. or"-' Srnney Omarr·s booli;tot. "Sf'tfff Klnh for Mffl aod w-." send ttl•lhdato and so ~•nl~ to Oma!< AnrolOOY S.C:•.is. !ne OAILY PILOT, llo• 31«1, Gnnd (ont•&I 5!f- fion, I'll!'*' Yo•K. H.Y. 10011, Miss Keyes and her fiance both are graduates of Costa Mesa HJgh School. She is a student at C alif o rn ia Proresslonal School. Members of the 524 Club of San Clemente are making plans for the annual Spring Fling fashion show and dinner at 6:30 p.m. 011 Saturday, March 27. Alice ltfann. southwes t regional president, and F. E. McCulley, national vice preai· dent. Huntingtoo Beach Moose Lodge will be the acene of the 15th annual ina:tallaUon of offieen for Huntlqton Beach Emblem Club at I p.m. on Saturday, Mardi :IO. JUpf!me junior pa1t president of tht: Supreme Emblem Club ol the United States, will be installin1 officer. Mn. Carl Sharpe will aatist her. Raggedy Ann Dons Array of Raiments Her fiance, aon of Mr. and Mrs. GleM W. Lusk of Costa Mesa, received his AA degree ht electronics from Orange Coast College and Is serving in lhe Marine Corps at Fort Gordon, Ga. They will exchange vows in the Presbyterian Church of I.he Covenant, Cos ta Mesa. Sweater Comes Clean '\\'hen washing a turtleneck sweater, open the collar so suds can penetrate to get all the layers clean. \\'hen nearly dry, fold lt back in place and luck a twi.!ll of tissue tn&lde to help reshape the coUar to it.I original oon- i9"'· Fashions for all members of the family will be presented in lhe San Clemente Masonic Temple under the direction of Mrs. Howard Monk, general chairman. Reservations may be made v.·ith ~1rs, Fred Croucher of San Clemente or Mrs. Carte r McGregor, Dana Point. Pa rents Club Orange Coast Chap t e r, Parents Without Partners sponsors a pancake breakfast the last Sunday of each month in Costa Mesa City Park from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Wally Richards, chainlMln. w 111 answer quesUon#regardlng the public "rain or shine" event at ~ or ~!l&M. Gu itarists to Perform Musical Date Noted Guitar music will b e featured when members of the Cameo Philharmonic Associates gathe r ln the home or A1rs. John Di!Jon Wed· nesday, March 24, Performing for the pro. gram, to follow lunch. will be Jordan Cannady and John Childers, Estancia High School students. Their offerings will include American and foreign folk songs, country and Western music, B r o ad w a y show tunes and modern ballads. Mrs. David Lang w i 11 pres.ide over the butlr1e1a meeUng. Cameo Aasoclalet work in the Philharm<J11ic of. fice, preparing the monthly society news bulleUn tor mall· ing lo all women's commltlet members. Committee members will be jointd by their hwband1 Saturday, March 27, for a cocktail buffet in the home of Mr. and Mn. John Store. in charge of arrangemenll for the annual party are Mr1. Store, Mn. John B. Parker and 1'-frs. Ira Sm.1th. To M seated as president is lifn. Guy H. Cannon. Th°'5e iervlng w:lth her will include the Mmes. Art \Vhitten, John Earley, Dean Hedden, James Greer, Gllbert Davis, Tony Caracciolo. Oscir Eidem, Skip Floyd, Sal Caracciolo, Walter Bennie, J o s e p h Schlereth, Michael Weninger, hf ax 'Boren, Che1ter Smith, Lyle Vcnes and Arttiur Bii;hop. Speaker Named Raggedy Ann will be the heroine for Orange County Alun1nae of 1\lpha llcHa ri, who will collect funds to aid the Hope Haven School for l~etardcd ("h ddrC'11 during their annual fashi on show tomorrow between 9:30 and 11 a.ni. in Dul· lock's, Santa Ana. ~frs. Robert llarturian reads about the ad\'c nlurcs of the be· loved symbol of childhood's love and friendship to Suzanne Oefl ) and ('hris1in c, who will join other youngsters to serve as hosts and hostess es at the benefit. Slate Preview Waist Watchers Xi Epsilon Psi Chapter, TOPS Waist W a t ch er s Beta Sigma Phi will gather assemble every Thursday at at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, ~!arch ~~-~-in Circle View School,, 23, in the Costa Mesa home _ n ingtoo Beach. of Mn. Donald Richardson . Mrs. Frank W. Reed wi!l preside over business and i11- troduce a proposed slate or officers. CUSTOM FITTCO FOAM DRESS FORMS f~llCT f'l/l'I! !f~~l'i o~ ""JQ r 1r.•11<c FIT PllNTSI BARBARA GARDNER 8J9·SSJ2 Dr. Edward Taub will be ~~~iiii~~~~~~il l the featured speaker when11 Jewlah Family ser vic e 1.HO'• Of OIL PAINTIN9S FINAL Auoclate1 gather at 7:30 p.m. WHOLISAU WAll:IHOUSI Sunday, March 21 , in t~ OHN TO THI PUILIC Republic Federal s. vi n g I so•;. OFF bulldlna:, Santa Ana. Topic will 161t L •0111••••· SANTA AHA 2 ., be Cul'ftnt AWtudes on Drugs, ""-...,. ,.,...., .. ~-,...,.,,.,,_.,. ... ••••1141 ,-~Se~x'...a~nd".'_Y.'._o~u'.'.th~R'.'.e":vo~l'.:l. __ _::il:Dio=::::::='="="="='='="='"='="="== Patients Ridin g High New Bus Contributed An eight-passenger van to transport patients to recrea· tk>nal acti vities on and off the hospital i;rounds has been contributed to Fairview Stale 1-lospital by Eta E psi Ion Chapter, Epsilon Sign1a Alpha IOl"Or:ity. Key1 to the \'eh1cle were presented lo Dr. Anthony N. Toto by Mn. Eric Lundquist, president of the chapter, The presentation culminated two and a hal! years of effort by the general membershi p Jn aollcltlng, collecting and sorting food coupons. Since the project w a 1 started in 1968 by ltlrs, Lund· quist and }.1r.;. Dav id Chandler, then chapter presi· dent, 372,666 food COUponJ were collected r e q u i r i n g i,e\'('ral thousand hours or work by members. The balanCf' of money rt· quired to purchase the \'an "'as rai.sed by the group's an- nual fite'A'Orks booths and two dinner dances. ServJng as chairmen for these projrcts were Mrs. Chandler, M111. Joseph Cook ;ind Mrs. Robert Bartol. Mrs. C. William Kuhr, "'ho now resides In Oceanskle, headed lhe coupon drive prior to Mn. Lundquist. Among the many com· munity organlzaUons who sup. ported the chapter's drive for coupons were the Red Crou, Junior and senior women's clubs, Air Force Mothen, church groups, garden clube:. senior citizens' groups, Scout and Campfire organizations, mens service clubs, mobile home parks, ve terans' organization!!, women's aux. iliaries, the bU'!liness com- munit;' and many indi viduals. \ I / ~ <? ••sy.car• ectiv•·W••r ()"' new for spririg : c11u1I fl1res ~•11••1J1•~ctN' e "''''•' ah•tt• ' } fttfile11 hltJt4, "9Wlf9tf C•llfotr 644-1070 DAYS OF OUR SALE • B.D.HOWES and SON fJNI. JEWELERS f OR THRf.£ C.E:'.\ £.R.o\1 JU:\:> NEY.PORT 8(\CH: 3U2 V1> Lido • E;;. ;, :I I I I l DICK TRACY LIZZ:,5LNCE WE'RE 60TM A~SIGNED TO STAKE - OUT Tl-llS PQlX:M ~. I SUGGEST WE Si AAT AT Hl5 ~OME. TUMBLEWEEDS Mun AND JEFF DID YOU ADVERTISE 'FORA JOB LIKE I TOLOYolJ? YEl4' I PLJT ANAD IN Tl-IE PAPER JUDGE PARKER ~ ly Cheder Gould r----....... BO'T'W -'OJ TAK• ,. WMV CCIULON.,. TMI! DAV SMIFT # W! WORK BOTM SMIFTS ANO l'U. TAKE TCGETM!!R t TH E NIGHT. MAN-3 s · L'AZY, YOU BOOB,OO'>OU THINK ANYONE By Tom K. Ryon HAW! HAW! HAW! HAW! I GEf il!E SICKENINl1 FaLlt.11 l'M ffCOMIN& A LE'GE:NP By Al Smith UNWILLING TO IS GONNA CALL WORK. DON'T WAITT YoU? ~-'I A JOB BUT H-;:. ----,;;~;:;::., NEED ONE-i:t Jl ,..&.ND NEVE!l WILL! C.LIP Tl-IE W!NG5 OF MY .l.N6EL •. WHO FLIES AT 30000 FEET!~ By Harold Le Doux LET'S NOT UNTIL YOU GO &.t.CK TO HAVE MORE, Tl-IAT GALLEY AN11 &R'ING ME JOH NNY.. A TALL 6lAS5 OF GINCXIZ -'LE •• WITl-I JUST A. LITTLE TOUCH OF SOMETH!N' IN IT : By Frank Baginski .·.· ."·."\". ·.··.··.:·." I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ' A. POWER) ACROSS 1 Pad b Souttt or il!umina!ion 10 No longrr Cllrttnl l~ Grreting 15 Sin lo Stare at 17 Mensa· Z words 19 Form of . p1ec ipitallon 20 Food store 21 The li1sl upcoming occ;n iOn: 2 words 23 Gretk author 25 Rtg ret 2b Device tor catchln o fish Z7 lntr1jeclicn or surplise 29 We111ht allowance 31 Not happy JJ Airporl code for Erie, Pa. 34 Arrange: ' ' 2 words 36 Su!~ed ~0 Items or llocr covering ~z Spec 1alty sho11 44 Grant 45 Different from H1ose spec Hied C7 fn jcys 49 G1ow el d ' ' l " ' ., l J; -~ " I " " ., " " " " " 70 " • .,, " "' ., 50 Spanish article 52 Melon, ror one 53 Swindle : Informal 54 Aires t: Slang 57 Pronoun 59 Racetr~ck emp!oye e 61 Means of travel 64 Encircle b1 Though\: Prefix 68 Story teller· 2 words 70 Meal 71 Move to a11 acllon 72 Upright stone slab: Var. 73 Whirl pool 74 farm implement 75 Narrates COWN l Fake 2 Hondu1as banana por\ J The "UH" ol "UHF": 2 words 4 Chip 5 Cense g1owt hs or trees Ii Granl perm ission 7 Shake- river ' •. 1¥:. " " . " " ~\ ,, lO " " .. " " " II~ ~ Y~ A 8e()l 0(£ £~A S 8LA0[ 8 Unde1ground worker 9 Anatomical sl1ucture JO Haven 11 In return lZ Muck 13 Beller 18 Business places 22 Maplt lrats or Bru ins 24 flower reaturr 27 P1iestess of Aphrodite 28 "In·---": 2 words 30 Flower J2 One of the Seven Dwarfs J5 Jabs J7 Crr\ain mine1al fragme nts: 2 words · 3B Nervous • , 11:: ,_f.'' " !¥ " )/19171 39 Prorou•1d 41 Salt: French ~J Relative 4b Provoke 48 Most imminent 51 Watch !hr late, late s!low: 2 words 54 lruiocenl 55 Supported 5!i Thr necessit1rs of life 58 Expres s strong anger bO Raise the spirits ol 62 Mo1e tha n one · Prrf1 ~ 63 Hence 65 Organ fsm fib Milestones f;,9 -····-····· Brunsw icl; " ,, " ' -11: .. . ,, " ll ' " " ~ ~ " " " ' .. •• . .. -,, " r ~ . ' " ,., .. " .. .. .. " n ' . ,, ' " --- PERKINS MISS PEACH J(UL'i' SCHOO\. ];LARION STEVE ROPER PEANUTS ' ~ ·.:k .i~.i. ~~ 9Uf" PONT l\OllRY, MISS Pfi.Ac.H, "'1' LL SELJ.. THEM ANYWAV!! U'L ABNER ,.,, SALLY BANANAS GORDO !VII-LOWS WUP S/IJ.MEJ-1'SSJ.'{ FOR ALL Fi.ORA' sruc'ii!f ll.DOTEO TD "TllE-SPD1"f @:'\ ~- MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS By Mell • • GET '/OU~ COP'f OF THIS Wf.El''S ~ivot.U T10NAtY >Jew ~EL.LY SCHOOL 1¢1..ARIOIJ By Saunders and Overgard WE WOJ<K FOi.:l HUD DANNEMOR ···SEff AM' I-IE" HEADS UP TNE OUTFIT THAT'S SEEN RU5TLIM' l'OUR CATTLE.' YOO'Vt! G-OT Mt!t-1 ON MOST ALL 'YOUR RANCHES TAKlM' /\ PAY•OFF.' Charles M. Schulz ., THI ST'IANGf WOlltl MR.MUM ,.,, DAIL V PILOJ JI!' ly Al Capit atQ..C•t-P ·~ By Charles Bonatti ·. By Gus Arriola · By Ferd Johnson ~ . . Ill'..~~-~ . , By Roger BoDen ' CO~Vfli:SATIOf,) IS Kl~lle T1<E .Afrr OF -rac.v1i:.1cm ! DENNIS THE MENACE 1 I i ' ' . . . . . ·~ ffl'f HO mmctJ 10 HIM,JOeY. 5alE 1<10S Ger HO fl:ESPECK ~"THEIR OUJERs/• .. J 6 DAii. Y PILOT f,!day, Mlttl1 l'l tr•;} Bencl1 Comes Through As Bruin·sRoll, 91-73 SALT LAl\ECJTY !Ai'1-0ncc again, t;CLA·s bench slren,i.:111 ha~ raid off and as a resull, the l'iu I-ranked Bruins 11re just three garnc11 a" ay frorn a fifth straight nalional basketball <"ham· pJonship. l.:Cl.A \ron 1ls 25th t.lra1ghl ~CA/1 tournarncnt g11mc. 91 ·73 01·er Bngharn ''oung t;n11·ers1ty Thursday night in the NCAA \\1est Regionals. The Bruins Sa!urday afternoon 1neet Cal Slale (Long Beach ) 78-65 victor uver Pacific. for the right to ad11ant'e to the cha1nplonship showdown in Houston March 25-27. Hcserve forward Terry SchofLl'ld keyed L'CL A "s rather easy triumph. \Vit.h !he score close rnidway in the first half, he eame off the bench to hit Jive or se1en shots from outside. -~ #'f't I UPI ltlt~hol• ERIC McWILLIAMS SCORES FOR LONG BEACH. 'trip UOP, 78-65 49ers Stag·e Co1neback; Face UCLA Saturday SALT I.AKE CITY rAP1 -Both roacl\es had sonlclh1ng in 1.:01nmn11 'J'hQrsday night after Cal Staie tLong BCJ,ch I defeated Pacific 78-65 111 an N<li\A \Vcstern Regional s c rn i r i n :i I bai~tball gamr. '1Nothing \\'Cnl right f<1r us in 1hc f irst half:' said Long Beach roach Jcl'ry 'J'aikanian. ·'Nothing went righ1 for us 1n thr liCCDnd half," said UOP coach D1t'k t:dwards. UOP. geltin~ I~ points from l·hubhy 1;uant Bob ThomaS'ln, 1ook a -44·31 hatftlm' lead. But L<lng Beach rnan·rl back and ran away y,•ith the garnr after I 48-48 lie "Usually I grt mnd at half·t1n1r. ,1 hcn 111mething likr 1hal happens:· T.1rk;in- Jan said. "but I felt so sorry for the1n 1his teainJ tha1 l Just didn 't say a11rthi11g. "\\'e \\'Cre a\\'ed a little by thr sur- roundings. \Ve're not used to pl.'.l.1•111~ Trevi110 Sl1are~ Lead With 66 JACKSO~'VfLLE, Fla -Lt•c Trevino Jang a song aboul "Arn1r · and l'n- tertained with f\1ex1can-A1ncncan storir~ It was easy to lell he shol a good gcoce in lhe first round nf thC' $1 25.000 (irtater Jackson1·1lle O(X'n gnH tourna· Jnent Thursday. Bul the six-under·p."ir 6fi Trev1110 car- r ied into today·s second round had lo ,.bare first place billin,i:: \\'Ith a similar ~t'Qfe by the lon e arnatl'ur in the field . homr lu11·n boy Strve ~1rln~ k e· ~losPs l"nce• ''''!l<"I . ._. bcforf' this many people " A capacity cro11d of 15.000 11atchcd 1hc ga1ne tll the Un1vcrs1ty of Uta h ~prci.'.l! events center "Also. wr v.·cre 1nlin11datcd by .John !oJ;ine!li." Tarkani;in continued "\Ve thdn·t s<ii; on hin1 properly iind he got the ball loo much Lil the Hrst hiilf ··And 11·e used a l-J..-1 zone prelly v.rll 10 the second half .. 1,i;1ncll1. UOP's G-10 eentcr v.hu ;i1crag- rrl 21.5 points and 18.9 rebounds a game. 11as held lo six points 1n the second half and ended the game 11•11.h 16 point." Grorge Trapr i:lnd Ed Ratleff took !hi' ball in bel!er ag;tinsl Gianelli 1n thf' second half," Tarkanian said Tr;ipp hil 2.1 ;1fter scoring only six i11 lhl' first half and Ratleff stored J.1 after hillini; only five lhl' r1r .... t h;1lf ·\Ve re pas:>1ng and s!:ind111i: instead nf n<1ssing and niovlng ." ~aid Edward ~. Qf Pncirit' ' Th1·1r !rap of our gu/lrd"i at 1111ckoun g;i\'e them 1he inorncnlum." ht• said l..!lng Beach forcrd nurnerou.;; tur nn1·cr" bs u.~1ng 111·0 men to prt'ss the P<ic1f1c guards as the~· brouRht thP halt u11 court •·11 11as ti hellt11a rel'rr .... al." ~aid lhc dr1eclrd J-:d11·ards UOP, 21-6. and \\'est roasl ,\thlrl1c Ccnf~rcnce champion, n101•es 1 n I o th1· l'acific Coast A1hletic A'<:'<:OCiat1on ncxl yrar \11th Loni: Br;1t•h. no1v 24-1 LONG &E.i.C>t !/fl PA(l~IC 10! l!•!lt'··· Will""'' ~""'"''••"'' t•r•~, r~1 •• 1. ' ' "' .. " " " ,. ' " '. ' l) '"(••·•G II llti.nr, • 0 •• ,,.1 l J l~am••Gn 0 S•t"•"n I Sc~~·O"'IG"' I! .•o•~u• "~•r·• "'"~.~ Ocvol"" " J• II To•>: ' ' ' J \t 11 ' O I 4 •I 1~ \.~ " '·• IJ ' 0 ~ I o o.a o n o o o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 " 'r,oQ !\•"'' """' '( ii n )() ~1 11 ,, -11 " n •~ l~"~ l\tOf~ 11 P•C•h< 10 TO!•I Ill•" ' ~u•~~ cu• ''(••OO AP"~~•~<' LO"Q II••<~. '-'<Wlll•I"''· P""'' Thal shooli 11g. plus a JXllnt flurry in the last niinule of the first hair, led by Sidney \Vicks, gave UCLA a nine-poinl halftime lead and BYU couldn 't get closer than seven points thcreafler. The l:Sruins are 26-1 this year. B\'U assistant coach Pele Whitbeck said BYU planned to sag off L'CLA 's guards and try to stop the Bruins inside, since UCLA has nol been hitting well from outside this year. That backfired, thanks to Schofield ··Henry Bibby must have had his bcsl shooting night of the year and Schofield came in and made us honest." ''Il was our worst xame in ~n1e lime. but UCLA maJs.es teams play bad- ly.'' \Vhitbeck sarcr- BYU's Sleve Kelly Jed all scorers for the night wlth 24 points. George Trapp of Long Beach had 23 and guard Bob 1'homason led Pacific with 19. UCLA's scoring \\·as spread an1ong six players in double figures. Bibby led the way with 15 and All-American Sidney \llicks had 14 points and 20 rebounds. BYU's Kresimir Cosic, a sophomore center from Yugoslavia, had 18 poln1s and 23 poinls but most of his points ca1ne after the game was out of reach. UCLA's John Wooden said Sall La ke Cily's altitude (4,500 feel) n1ay have bothered all three coast lean1s. F'or that reason, he said, the national chan1- p1onshi ps probably shouldn't be held in a high-mountain area. UCLA ('1) ' ' ' P~1·o•;on A·~~v er~ ·· • •. "d f•rmer E<~•' 8e1<~1t1 10t•I• UCLA ''" j ).6 ll 1·1 I( I l 1J ~l !S 6 f.2 It ) l·J II I 1).0 1 J 1·1 I •O tl·ll ti IVU !llf ' ' Toll~etrup • " Ke!ly • •·• (01 .. c • ,., Fty•r • ,. M•ll•• " Bun-•• ' •• JOrQtnlO" • •• S•rk•l•h11 • •• BailfY 0 •• Toll!~ JO ll·" " 511 -•1 " 41 -/J Tol&I toul1 -UCLA ll. 8VU II Fovltd our -'°!Of'I• Attr"d~ncr -n .OJ7 Pe1111 (28-0), Villanova Top NCAA Rivals ' ' " " " " ' • " • " RALEIGH . r\.C. 1AP1 -··They're the h<'sl tean1 Y.'e faced all year." South Carolina coach Frank McGuirr said arter unbeaten Pennsylvania defeated his tea111 79-64 in the NCAA Eastern Regional basketball semifinals Thursday night. Villanova controlled the boards behind the shooting of Ho.,..·ard Porter lo S\veep pasl Fordham, 85-7ft. in the opening gan1e . Third·ranked Penn and Villanova will play Saturday for the right lo represent thf' East in the NCAA nalional finals al Houston 11cxt week llangy Bob fl1or se scored 28 point~ tu lead Penn to ils 28th consecu1.1l'e victory. The Quakers broke open a tighl battle in the last se1•en and one-half minutes v.•ilh a brilliant shooting r~­ h1bition from the free-throw hne, hilting on 20 of 21 during that period. "It's no v.·onder they 're undefeated," 1'lcGu1re ~aid. "They outpla1•ed us and descr1·cd lo .,..·in. They made no ni1st:ikes and 1f they play that well . they can go all the \\'ay. The Penn-Villanova game shou ld be a real good one " Perin defeated Villanova carl1c·r 111 1ht' regular srason. Penn coach Dick Harter ~ai d uf the uptomu1g gan1r . "I think Villanova will have a psychological ed,'le going in. Villanova gave us perhaps !hr toughest game we had this year." Villanova 's heighl and ability to lx::at Fordham ·s full court press \\'ere key factors in the victory 01·rr the H.Rms. Porter scored 20 points in thr First h11H as Villanova took an l J-po1nt lead , ~7-36. He scored f1l'e n1ore the second half for a total of 25 before fouling out 1vil h I: 36 left. Charles Yelverton paced Fordham 'A'llh :12 JX>ints. F'ordham coach Dick Phelps ~aid Villanova handled his lcan1·~ pres~ IJ('l'haps lxillE'r than expected . I le adde1l , "They handled the press 11f'll The~ 1i111n't fold . They scored 11·hen thry hatt lo .. Villanova coach Jack Kraft said hi~ tea1n "did a n1orc thiin excellent JOb thr rirst half on thf:' defcnsil'e boards. 11·hich \\'as very important because 1t allo11•cd us to run .. l'n1 just ticklrrl to death that \\IC are playing for lhr Eastern Regional championship 1nstcnd ol for third place ... BYU PLAYERS WATCH SIDNEY WICKS SCORE IN BRUIN WIN , 91 ·73. "£he Mighty Fall Marquette, Kentucky Boiv ATHENS. Ga . \APl -Alan Hornyak's rwo free lhrows 1vith si x seconds left gR1·e Ohio Stnte a 60-~9 upset victory nl'er second-ranked f.,.larquette and a 35· point explosion by Al!·American Jim J\1cDan1els sparked \\'estern Kentucky to a 107-83 victorv over Kentucky Thurs· day night in the NCAA. Ohio Siale and \\'cstcrn will collide Saturday afternoon for the regional tille iind a berth in next \1eek ·s ,\'CAA Finals al Houston Hornyak a J9.year·old sophon1ore. shauered Al ~lctiu1r1?·s dreams of a na- t1onat rha mp1onsh1p at r-.larquette. The death blow for the \Varriors. 11·ho had won 39 in a row, came 11'ith si'< seconds rcn1a1ning when Horny.ak sank a pair of pressure free throv.·s that ga1·c 131.ic 10 t·hampion Ohio Stale a th1·el·-po1n\ lc<id in its 60-59 triumph. "\Ve \YOn some we should have los1. hut 11 e trv hard to be men aboul losing." said f\1cGuire , whose team tv.·1ce led by 13 poinls in the first half. It 11•as a night or upsets in the National CollegiAIC Athletic As~oriation il'lideast Rc~ional Tournarnenl . "\\'e rrall.v hung in thel·e a couplr nf tunes 1vhen 1t ~cen1ed 11nposs1blc." said coach Fred Taylor of thr !0th-ranked Buckeyes. "Our poise v.·as good." ,\ll-American Dean "The Drea1n" ~1cn1inger fouled out \\'ilh five minutes left and his 1eam leading 55-50. HO'll'e1·cr. It 11•as a dismal evening for Men,inger. 11•ho !tcored only 11 poinL<; and missed four free throws and lwo layups. ··1 usually Rel up for a game l1kt !hi s. but tonight l JUSt couldn't get st arted:· r-.1rm1ngcr said. "I was Oat.'' The Buckeyes led only once in lhe gan1f', 2·0, until l II ren1alned \\'hen 7.foot sopho1norc Luther \Ville hit a layup 10 give Ohio State R 58-57 lead. 1'1arqueltc. now Zi-1. n1issed t11·0 s:hots 1n till' l1nal 111111utc but retained pos,..,css1on f'[1t:h !1n1c and then callerl 11111C' out \\'l\h SCl'cn seconds left 10 ~et up <i fin al pla;, llowP VC I', a turnover ga,·e Ohio Sta1f' posse.~s 1on \\·hen All1r ~lcGuire. the Cage ~ l{c s ults Th11r1d•v·• ••\ulh ut u~ l~tn qu•rtt'1•n•• ,.,.,"fl ~1twrd1y •1 If•""'"'· >t,C -'t""· 11·1 "•• V1Htntw•, 11·• .i.1 •1htn1. C.1 -Wnl•r" IC..,luc~y. 1)-J, ••· Oh1• llllt, lO·I •t Wp<h1t•. ll•nH\ -D'•-·· ll 7, .... K1n111. ,,.1 •1 1•11 L•-• C•h. Ullh -UCL•. 11·1 "' Cal llO!f (Lfnt 8~•<hl. 1' I riC•A Col:tOf n ......... lrm•r..,.11 11" r~'" '"'o" 01 .;·"""'' v;,.,., •. 1• E .......... ~l. $0111~wei1 LOu><••n• I• N11~n1! Jr. Ce•lt~• lt•t•I' 8 '•<-•t Ni1g1<• F'~•11 N.,. \It, B1coot O•dJ t1 Gull (~•" P1n1m1 C>tv, Fl• V• 17 (OlumbJ.•. f~n" ~·~·• H , lyl~· l••P« wvo ~l "''"llll•o, It< 1; !+utth•n"'"· 61~1' v.o • f'lllWll'!~ N 0 •' Q11.1r11dln111 I'". coach's sort stepped on the boundary while laking a pass. Hornyak was fouled in1mediately 011 the inbounds play and hit the game winning free throws. Jirn Clcarnons led Buckeye scoring \vith 21 points and Jim Chones paced /\1arquelle with 18. \\'estem turned the tide early against the eighth-ranked \V1ldcats. stretching a one • po1nl lead to J2 midway in the first half. The 1!11ltoppcrs led by 16 before in· !ermission and ended all Kentucky hopes during a nine-poinl flurry 111 lhrcc 1n1nutes that shoved their lead to 71-47 i,•:1th 13~22 remaining. ·•\Ve v.'ere ready to play." satd l\'estern coach Johnny Oldhain. "I thought our quickness was the difference. \Ve don't play much better lhan we did tonight. If 11·e do, \1•e'd better play in the NBA." "\\le had trouble even getting in the right direction," said Adolph Rupp, the Kentucky coach \vho was drcan1ing of a fiflh na!ional championship thi s year ·ti ·t..· -::: ATHE;1\'S, Ga -Joe Hall. assistant haskctball coach al Kentucky. tossed a 1vorn horsesht)(' on a table Thursday night and said, "E\·en this couldn't help." ··rhis shoe came off Proud Clari on. a Kentucky Derby 11 inner." Halt said. "I kept it in my left pocket. I kissed ii. I did everything. but ii didn't help.'' Kentucky 11•as belled 107·83 by \Vestern Kentucky in the NCAA ~1ideast Regional bt1sketball tournament Thursday night. \VlCHlTA . Kan 11\Pl -Kansas and Drakr. after niirro1v Thur.~day night vie· tones. \1'ill meet Saturday in the KCAA ~lidwesl Regional basketball µlayoff finals. Fourth ranked Kan sas. notching ils 20th ronsccut1ve 1nomph, edged 14th ratC'd Houston 78-77. and Drake. 19th ranked. surprised 121h ranked Nolre Dame 111 overtime. 79·7:! Saturda) ·s \1'inner goe~ to Houst on r~1r the na1ional ~C'1nH1nnl~ A ~~-point perfortnancr by D<11e Roblfich and Burl Stall11·urth's :la-point 1·ontribut1on giivc Kansas its 26\h dcci.!'ion 1n 27 gan1es. l\'ilh Poo \\'clch \1ho bucketed 28 Houston poinl~. pcckini: a1va y 11lth fil'e straight baskcL<; near the end. 1hr Cougar~ cainr closr. however. to end ing the Jayh:iwks' string of victories. Rohisrh , ~rC'ond learn All- ''1nera:an. dropped 111 Kans,1s· 1<1.~! seve n poinls. all 011 frrr lhro11 s 1n lhe Laver Keep s Sizzli11g Pace; E111erso11 Falls l'\E\\I YORK !AP 1 -r\c1thcr Rod Laver, nor Tom Okker thinks he played well. bul both sur1ired the semifinall'I to reach the S50.000 final tonight o! the Tengis Champions Classic al r-.1adison Square Garden. Lavrr had a rough n1atch Thursday night aga inst Dennis Ralslon as he com· milted se1·en double fault ~. His opponent had eig ht r1oub!c faults. howe1 er, a~ the red-headed Jefthandcr 11011 6·3. li·4, i-5. Okker of The Nelherlands h;id pro· blems wit h both his ~cr1e and opponent Roy Emerson of Newport Beach before a 6-4. 2-6. 4-6. 6·3, 6·4 1·1ctory. ··1 must hare done so1neth1ng right because I won.'' La\'er said ... I didn'l feel the strain any more than usua l and I 11•as glad Denni s' serve v.·as oH.'' Laver has won 12 straight matches 1n the $210.000 con1pclltion ror a lota\ purse of Sl25,000. He and Okker look SJ5,000 for scn1ifinal victories, with S35.000 the big ptize in the final. ··\Vhat a crazy niatch," said Okker. "The importance or this n1atch mad~ me more nervous at thl" end than it did at the beginn ing. IL was a slranJ:ri match 11•here ne11her of us played loo 11•ell. ~·et \1·e had son1r great s'1o1s.'' RalsJon sceincd to gain on l.al'er in the final set ;ind pushrd the Aussie into a sudden-dciith for the final game. L31'er took the 12·po1nt rontest 7-4 a~ Ralston double faulted v.·hen the sam; was 4-4 . last lwo minutes Hr .:1lso i;:o1 16 bow1ds. blocked six shots ;ind stole hall four t1n1es. re- tho Stiil111·orth. who got only !i1r po111tc; in lhl· firs! half 11·hen Ka nsas trailecl most of !he 11ii.1 n1adr 9 points U\ the first scl'en 1nu1u1cs or the scconct half that opened up a 51 -13 Kansa~ advantage. .Ja~·ha11·k roach Trd 01\ens. dc~p1tr !he \·iclory, 11•a5 unhappy 111th !hr l\an5as pcrformancr "\\'e dtdtfl pcnetraic lhcir Lone," he said. "\\le didn't play good on defense ., Guy Le\1•1s. lhe llouslon coach. said. "Kan sas JUSl had too rnany ~un~ fnr us. trs an extremely phvsictil tean1, and they JUSt kerp eoming al you.·· The :\otre Dame-Drilkc J:Rllll' 11•as tird 6~·62 at 1he rnd of regulation play aflrr Al Sakys sank a iurnper with 4·second." Jef1 to put Drake even Drake, v.·ith Sak\ s. Torn Bush and .Jim 1\'ordruin and Carl Sal~·ers. hHtinJ! of!cn. piled in 17 points rn the overtin1<' to seal i\'qtrr DAmc·s fair TUCSON -t:rrry ~1oses' h1o·run dnu . tile in th e sixth inninR broke n 4 1 ht and propcllrd the C:11ilnrn1F1 -\111.;rls It> a 6-4 v1etor.v ovrr thr Clr1rl;1n1l Jndians 1n R Cactus l..caguc ,i::an1r Thur~­ t!A)'· Californut hlld taken 11 4-3 IN11I in l'he third on a K~n f\\t .\!ullen homrr but the Indians lied lhf• J:3mr 1n lhr f•lUrlh on a pinch 1tnublr by lr>r1 Fur1l 11ml Graig Ncttlr>s' .s1n~lc Another NCAA Title for Martin Dr;ikr's Bobb~ ,Jones did a 1nagniflccnt Job on Auslln Carr. thr Irish All- An1erican and Player of lhe Year. Carr got only 26 pou11 s. far below his J8..point average. and allO\\ed the 1\'01re Diimc e Kings T"p ll11irl'" Jt-.'CLEWOOD -\\'111gcr ;\1ikP U~rr~ !"hp?Cd home !ht• 111nr111\g ~o:il on ;i breaka'llaV rnld'lla1 In 1hc final period :i s Los Angcll'S lx'al Clurilgu·~ Bl11rk llawks, !hr Jcsgur Jcadrr.-. Thuriiday r11~ht 1n a National liO{'kr} League game, 02 Byer" look a 1>rrfct·t p:1~~ rriun rrn1t;r .!uhe \Vld111,l'l Thi• ;1.~~1~t ga11· I\ 1d1n~ :>a points ror !he ~(''1St1n , .::i ncv. K111Rs' N"COrd . Byer~ bcsit go11he Ton)' ~::'pos1 ro lfJ IU.Vf lhr Ki ng!> R :J-l rdi,:(' 111111 1hP.V ~~11h~lood R latr ~onl b1· r;rrr1 l'lri1l"r Sprri11l to the 01\ILY I'll.OT SPHl:..'GF'IELD J\las~ -Stnior t'ol!t.c \l;1rl1n 11·1!1 rel1rr as undclralrd \C \i\ <'nllece d11·1sion !'>00-~ ard frecsl.1 le s1\ 1n1- n11ng chr1m11ion .illrr 111nn111,11. his lour1h ~1ra1ght nal1onill title Thur~day 10 pat::(' tt• lr11n1• lff a commnnd1ni.: :!j.ro1nt :irh ;1n\;igr 01·f'r sf.'<ond pl.1t•r l 'nn crs1!\ 01 Sn1J;hrrn Fhir1d.1 lrl :1c!1on 111 Spring. f1rld Cntlrj.l!' Tlnu ,da1 Teiin1m:itr,.., i>~tahll shrr1 !hrrr lrv1nr ~rhool r1•cords to s11pplen1rnl 1\larti11 ·~ :,<)() t•11 i!JI 1 a~ !hr Anlr'lfi'r,.., a111ll<;$1'd :'I fl1'111! 111,,1 111 r .. 'l '" 11 lnr ~·;u!h,,rn Flnr 11l~ San Fernando \'~llcy S1;He I" lh1rd Wl\h ~1 \fiir11n·~ 1·1crory in the 500 carnc r..isily, Rrcord1n11. to UC! coach Ed i\'.ev.1a11d ·'lip 11·a5 the top qua lifier b.v a widt' n1arg1n He iust wen1 001 un a fast \l:l('(' and 11a~ ne1'er In trouhlr. ·a i\e11 \11nd SR Id !h.'i \1111n1nJ: lime of 4 ~3 51 ~asn'I ('noujlh 10 rrase his Oll'n nii:1n1111I rccotd !.t'I Ill 1%9 ;it 4:41 3. "\r1\•]and v.11s rquRll l' cnthu~1a~t1c 111>0111 .Junu1r .Jim F<'rgu~. 11ho finished fourth ln lh" ~ h•·r iri h1~ be~l·cvrr t1n1r llf j ),") :J'I ' Vor thr .~C'CCJtld year in a ro1,· H1rh +~:ason f 11;1s no~rd ou1 n1 !he 1ndil'idual ni('dlry h_1 HOf'-tcnlh ot a second llr h;~~ 1V hr our hardluck s11im1nrr 1n 111(' n<it1011ills · 1\'r.,..land said Ea~on fu11~hcd second in thr 200 1ndo in 2·01 2 lo e~lnblish an Jrvinr school rt•cord T!1t· 11 11111:-r 11·as Rick ;\lorchrad nf Southt'l'll Floride in 2.01 ! l'llikl' (';1rnahan R U(l sophomorr, t1n1shcd four1h rn ~ tH 5 1 he Lil l 100 rnedley rrl11y lrRJTI set " !lrhool mark 111 \\'Inning the conso lation rnrr 11·1th SI l1mt lhal 1~ould have been star only one held goal in the overtime. Bush led the Bulldo,l!S 111th 19 po1n\3 ,i::OQd for hlth 111 rht thamp1onship ract as Drake lost three starters on fouls, The UCI quiir1t'! 11iis clocked 1n 3:43 o S8 kys. Jrff Halhburlon . and Leon lfuff 1111h Jc;1dofl !'tl\'imnirr frank Gardnrr "Jones d;rl a tren1endous JOb on Carr." Dra~e Coach r-.laur ' John said ' Ca1T getting lhe other .... chool niark in thr earned c1·ery Ont' of ·his 26 points JOO ba t k in 56 i John said Jones asked lo ~u;ird Carr. The rrcord ~ctt1ni: relay comb1nr 11 J~ ' I hcsitntcd." the coach admitted "[ roinposed ol c;<irdncr, \\adc ,\rl'll!' 1 t'f)!t-thought !luff should ~U(lrd Carr because _ . he IS biggrr but 11hrn ;i ~id 1vii nt., brcas1 -1 0~.'11. larnahRn 1iOO fl.1 IO ~uard s11n1cunr 'that b;id I didn'l ~2 1 \ and Jiic~ 01C'kn1ann ~ 100 frcr rr11ll~ hc~ilate long" 48 41 :\o!rt' D:11nc coach Johnnv l)cr :ii· l1fl f111lcd lo qu:1l1fy for 1he finals lribu!ed the loss 10 ··a very 'nal gains. in the 50 frre And d1dn·1 ha\'e en!n~nt~ 11'!1! probnbly thr worst gan1c we've bad , 111 the dh·ini:: t\obody played 11'rll." ' I ··-"•*•··-· F'rlday, March 19, 1971 DAILY .iLDT 17 Top Spike Field Set Area Aces Top CIF ' ' ' For 50th HB Classic ' Swim List • By PHIL ROSS 01 l~t 0 11lr 1'1111 Stttl \Vell, 1l's flnally here . The Golden Ann1v~rsary ed1 · \Ion of the n1uch-huzzahed Southern Counties track and field meet a1 Huntlngton Beach High has arrived un the scene <ind it could be a doozy 1£ the \\Catherman cooperates. Preliminaries arc ::.lated to last frorn 11 a.m. to I p.m. with finals (ol\o\vlng from 1·5 p.n1. Awards and medallions will be presented to a myriad or people in between the 180 low hurdles trials and the 440 finals at approximately 2:45 p.m. An1ong those receiving an- niversary n1edallions "''ill be p;ist meet managers. roaches, -tr -tr Me et Records Soufhern Counties Record• 100 -9.6. ~tel Clipper (~1uir). 1958. 220 -20 .5. Harold Busby (Muir), 1965. 440 -47 .1. Bill Sims t\\'hi ttier). 1969. 880 -I :50 .6, Greg Jone~ (LB Poly I. 1968. hlile -4· 13.8, Decker Undervvood (South Tor· ranee), 1969. T\vo mile -9:08.6. Jtuhcn Chappins (Excelsior). 1969. 120 1-l~I -14.0. lsaat Curlis (Santa Ana), 1968. 180 LI ! -18.5, Tom l·Jester (San Bernardino), 1962. 440 relav-41.7.•C'cntennial. 1968. l\file rel.iy -3: 1 A. I, Centennial. 1969. l ligh jump -6-10. Reynaldo Brov.1n {Comp· lon). 1968. l,ong ju1np -25-4 12, Jerry Proctor f?\Iuir), 1967. Pole vault -16·63'.i . Paul Wilson (\l/arren), 1065. Shot put -67-1 . Dave J\1urphy /Sunny 1-Iills), 1966. . . . ... . " "· Tin1 e Scl1ednle Event slarting times for the Golden Anniversary Southern Counties track and field meet at Hunting- ton Reach l~igh Saturday: 11 a.n1 . -Al! field events except large schooli; shot put. 11 a.m. -Sina!l schools 100 yard dash trials. 11 :15 a.nl -L<lrge schools 100 trials. 11 30 a.ni. S111all schools 120 hlgh hurdles trials. 11 :45 a.ni. Large schools 120 high hurdles t rial.~ Koon -S1nall schools l\VO mile finals. 12.15 p.m. -Srnall school s 100 finals. 12.25 p.m. -Large schools 100 finals 12.31) p.m. -Sn1all school s 120 highs final s. 12 45 p.n1 . -Larj?e schools 120 highs finals. 12 55 p.111. -SmalJ schools 880 finals. 1 p.n1. -Lari:c sc hools shot put. l 1 O p.111. -I .arj.!e schools 880 finals. 1 2.; p.n1. -Sn1alf schools 440 rel<ly. 1 . .JO p.rn. -Large schools 440 relay 1 ·55 p.m. -Large schools t\l'O mile finals. 2: I 0 p.m. -S1nall schools 220 trials. 2:2:> p.m -Large schools 220 trials. 2·40 p.111 -Sinai! schools 180 lo\v hurd!e.c; trial ~ 2:5!i p.rn -Large school s 180 lo\v ht1r<lles trials. 3 p.111 -A11·arcls ceremonies. • 3 JO p ni. -~inall schools 440 final s. 3:20 p.ni. -Large schools 440 finals. 3:30 p.n1. -Sm;ill schools 220 final.~. 3:40 p.n1 . -L<lrge schools 220 finals. 3:50 p.m. -Sinall schools 180 lo\\' hurdles finals. 4 p.n1 . -Large ~chno l s ISO IO\\' hurdles final s 4:10 r .ni.-~n1 a!I sc hools mile finals . 4·20 p.n1. -Large school s 1nile final s. 4:30 p.m. -S1nall school s 1ni!e relay finals 4.40 p.m. Large schools mile relay finals. Golden Wes t Must Fill Three l(ey Cage Spots By CHAIG Sll EFf Of ftl1 D•llr Pllol 5!t!I \\'!th two starters returning for thr 1971-72 season, Golden Wesl Co I I cg c ' s ba.c;kctba ll tean1 \1 ill hnv(' a nuclcu5: 1h;it rould lead to :J 11(Jl hc:r out st;in- ding sc:nson Thai ·s thr opinu1n or Rusl lcr cage bo ss Dick Slru·kl1n \\ho guidrd hi s rlub to a 26-7 ~eason m<l rk. a Sftutht>rn California Con[crrncr t11le Clnd a 1hird pl;irc fini sh in the st a tr pla~ off.c;. "\\'c hav<· three dr!Jnilr ~pots lo fill ;ind 11e'rc going to h:\vc to gel freshmen to flll rhcn1." ~ay~ Stricklin. "\Ve } ~·011ld really likr In gel a 'good rchoundcr to fill 111 at the front line." Stricklin frrls th<l1 1hrrr ls ,11 lot of t;ilen1 in the arrn. "Thcrr arc plenty of h1g narnes, hut !here ;irr ;i lol of slr<'prrs, 100 " 1·11e !wo bigg est ~p111~ 10 fill ~111 br llv1~r v;iratrd hv 1i1uurd Ch l'I.~ Thun1p~on and for\1ard J)rian A1nb ro11eh Thornpi.on fin is.lied L h c season 11·1th 71i9 p01nts 1n lhc J3 g;uncs lnr a 2., :I :11 rr;:i~r In two ~1'31'!1 :11 G1,1den \Yrs! he to1aled I 4i:l po1n1s, "1p1ni;: ou t Jl•~I abou t every Hu~llcr individual st"onns r c c or d alonJi the \\9) An1hrnzir h was lhr ll·<un·(. top rrbounder i'lnd n 1 ~ o avere11:cd 18 4 pu1nts a ~amt' lit 1njurtd a knrr prior lo !!,_ sl<ir1 ur th(' ~l nlr pla}nH~ S, saw little action af1er • phnn1orr pl;1vni;1kr·r Hirk Jl1' ·nt5. 11 ho n1lssed th c playoff ' \\Ith 111nnon11rlrri<i~. also 111111 nnt be h11ck <1 long ~·IU1 I.op reSl!1''c JcH Po1,c1s. -' • 1'hc 11>.·o starter.'l returning 11'1clude 6·S lor11·cird J i m 1\ntlcrson and 6-JO post man illark 11ekker. ho l h ex· ccpt ionally good shooters. Andrr.c;on avera ged 1 7 4 points per garne this past sc:1son, ~cnring 573 Dekker hit at a JJ.2 cl ip \Vlth 422 l'OUntcr~ In rr\·1e111ng the season, Slr1eldin frcl s 1hal his club co11ld have v•on the state c·han1p1on.ship v.1ilh a different drav. in the playoffs. 1\f\rr getting hy loURh Cornplon u1 a regiona l tilt, lhe llustlrrs l''Crc forced to niee l San Joaquin Delta, a run .ind gun oulfil !ron1 t\orthern C;;\ifornia that la!er captured the con s o lat ton crown "I lhoul-(ht 11 e could have 1,1,on 11. all v.•ilh a different <l1·1J11:' ~;ud SLric·khn, V.'hO ru1 111ed out th::it ~late cha1np J..ong Be:irh did not have lo p1:iy in thr regional~ <ind thrn 111e1 llar1nc ll in lht' first round of the state tourney. Jl c al:;o addrd !hat "'ilh An1broz1t•h and Barnes al full Iii!. lhe Ru stlrrs could have v.·on it :'1\1 . "\\"hr11 you take :i.~ay 20 poinl s and 19 re· hound~ per game 1 i\mbro:dch s lolalsl. i I · s bound lo hurt )OU "Overall it wa~ a super srason and I'm really pleased \\'hen 11·e stu.rl cd the s('a ~on \.IC kn~w we had good kids and good mAt t>rial. It ~·:i ~ JU~t :i n1a tter of bringin~ \h('m tor.iethcr and I thought \.\'C did th is. \\'e didn 'l !tt any 1::na1.~ at the time. but wt felt l''r rould have a winnlni team.'' officia ls and sportswrlt1rs \Vho've been associa ted with the meet since ti' 1922 in- ception_ The return of last year's athlete.of-the-meet -sprinter Gordon Peppars or Compton -is expected to highlight a learn battle in the large schools division between the Tarbabes and their crosstown rivals from Cenlenniel. Defending champion J\1orn· ingside is favored to regain the small schools crown which ii ran off with last spring. The 440 and 8&0 races ap- pear to be the best eve nts on Saturday's card -depth- wise, any how. Centennial's John ~1anley is hack to defend his fille in C()f'()na del Mar Hl&h'1 Kurt Krumpholz is am~ the top five In four events In an updated CIF li11t of best swim times. Krum-ph olz Is secc"d In the 100 and 200 free with marks or 49.0 and 1:47.7. Costa Meta's Ron Mi sJoltk Is third in the 100 back with a 58.S and CdM's Gartn Bergeson edged into the (Of' five with a 1 ;05.4 in the 100 breasl fli fth). The list ts composed rrom a CIF release along with lhE best times recorded in the Orange Coast are a. 11» mf'dlt v r1ltv -I. l'l«lltnd~ 1 :Q I 7. Gott• MHI 1 :u.t 2. Ml'81Ml1 ,.,. J t. FPO'ltllll l :U .• J. U l\llr\ 1.•J '· m lrH -1. Furn\11 1'00!1\1111• 1·M I 2. K K•um9hOI• IC.aMl 1:•7.r 3." WRO lStn•• Monlc:1l 1;•.1 •.: one large schools 440 race DAILY ~II.OT 11111 mi. '"d he's already dipped down THURSTON JR. HIGH KIDS MOB RAM MERLIN OLSEN FOR AUTOGRAPHS. ICoc:•l1 (l'lMl1ncl1) 1:.t 1 '· l 1bttl\olr. (lYnwood) 1:'9.l. JO f•H -I, "•rnoldl 11.Yn'M!Odl; ''" 2 C•rtv CNolre 0 ..... 1 n.f. l. I(, Kni'"1'holr ICdMl 1nd M1111,.. FOOlhlll) :J2A S. Rou f8urt11nkl 22.f . • 200 IM. mtdltV -I. Cllllllelct: to 43.7 in '71. He's supported Olsen Is Helping Promofe Youth F ootb1ll Progr1m In L19un1 Beach. by teammate Richa rd Davis -----------~----------------'-----'-------------­ !49.5). At the same lin1e. Morn- ingslde's Carl Shaw (48.9) will atlempt to cop a sma ll schools qu11rter-mile diadem for the second year in a row. There are no Jess than 10 other quartrrmilers entered in the meet \\'ilh bests under so.o. The half.mile competition is also split into two races in each division \\'ilh 14 runners already under 2:00.0. Corona de! ~1ar's Nick Rose (career best or 1:54.7) will ha~·e to con tend with Morn- ingside's Percell Kttling. third in the slate at 1:52.8 last year, if he expects to ca pture the sm all schools 880. The DA ILY P IL OT Perpetual Trophy v.·111 once· again go to the fastest. miler of the day. La rge schools milers include Millika n junior Jim Shepstone (4 :24) Pasadena's Emerson Davis (4:19) and Randy Dunlevie (4:25) of Los Alamilos. Huntington 's John J\1ullins 14 :24 .1) and Costa Mesa's Bob Gollnick 14 :23.51 will battle with r.1ark Schilling (4:22) of Garden Grove and Redondo juniQr Harold ~1 a r s h a I I 14 :20.J\ in the small schools mile . Spil{efest Lw·es Top Shot Field Orange Coast area athletes could steal the thunder Satur- day in the shot put antics ;it the 50lh annual Sou!hern Counties track and rield meet at Huntington Beach High . Ne1vport 1-iarbor's !\far k Stevens comes into the once-a· year Huntington invitation:il "·ith the best available mark \rith the 12-poun9 ball -a 60·414 error!. Crcspi's Randy Cross h;is gone 61·41, but he won't be at Huntington Saturday. Stevens' p r i n c i p a 1 coin· retition in the large schools steel ball catf'gory could '>''ell come from his O\.\'n junior tea1nmale. Terry Albritton, possessor a ~-4 best. ll appears that the bulk nr the good shot putters will be performing in the 1 a r g c division with ~1ira Costa's i\1ikc Giroux (56·61 and Bob J\1ann ia5-10l of Savanna amoni;: the ch11llcngcrs for the Newport pair. Costa ~1esa·s Brad Bordrn boasts a 55-1 1? best and he's "' 11:ood bet lo cop all the marbles in the small schools di\ isinn Although troubled by a bad beck l<ltelv. Rorden stands head and shr111Jders ahri1·c !hr other small schools entrants. JC, Prep Gvmnasti cs • 61-101/2 for Tar Shotputter IGlt l'Wl11tl 1:" J '· Furn!n l'oethtln -,,al.$ l . c1.-..-lfl SwuMOI 1~.t­ Strttll•n (l'"oomtlfl 2;0l.J '5 lilryMldo( (l "f'l!WOOd ) 2:QIJJ. 100 111 -1. 1Clnt11 /Mlr11t,lel· !•.o 1. Furn111 fl'"ootMlll 5'.• l. 1(01:111. Clh4t1nd1l 5'.I '· 8Kkll•UI tR .. lt ndt). S'.I J M•lllllU (Mir• Coal•) ll.2. !00 trH -I Wtbb !S1nt1 MOl\lc:t•- 'f!.f ). K. Kr1N1111ftolr !CdMI 1n(, 'urnln !Foct/1111) 4'.I ~. Clltlllthi. 1G1111<111tl "·s J. Rotllt IBvtn• l"t•k) San Cle nt ente's Hoff 1nun Pol e Vaults 14-6 "'·'· !CO bt'k -!. Cl'o1t1l1kl IGllNt lt i 5.1 l 1 Furnl11 1Foo111lllJ 5'.J l -MlllOltk (Cfl .. Mt:u) 1'-' t. Clnt11ttr- Cfl Selimclol •rd 51'141w (l8 Wlllonl' 57.f. Newport Harbor shot putter ~lark Stevens shov.-ed lhal he's more than ready for Saturday's Soulhern Counties meet at lfuntinglon Beach High as he flung the 12-pound shot 61-101? in the Tars' 65 ~~- 521h Sunset League dual meet loss Thursday aga inst visiting Westminster. The effort puts Stevens in a tle for second place on the all-time Orani;:e County list "'iht Fullerton's Kent Pagel, 1vho accon1plished the same last season. The pai r only trails Dave ~lurphy of Sunny Hills. who \1·ent 67-1 in 1966 for the county record. In other top marks of the day. San Cle1ncnte's Tony Hoffman pole vaulted 14-6 in the Tritons' 8.'H2 Crestview League loss at Orange and f\larina·s Bob Brickner turned in a 4:27 .5 ~·inning mile in the Vikings' 71H2 dual meet setback at Santa Ana. Other Sunset League acJion saw visiting Huntington Beach fall to Western by a 66-52 count ·while f>.1i11sion Viejo dropped a 73-5'1 Crestview loop decision to invading E I ~lodena. Costa ~1esa traveled 1o Estancia to nip its cross\01vn rival by a 73' ~-51 1 "' score while host Corona drl M<ir and unbeaten visitor Fountain Valley prepped for 1hcir shov.•do1,1,·n next Thur11day with \l'ins over Edi son (80-47) and f\lagno!ia 193-341. The only non-le:igue dual !';(IW J_,aguna Beach rip nrdg- Jjng visitor University. 96-29 Thu rsday's action featured seven area double '>''inners. Thev includrd ~Hssion V1e- jo 's Rich Cordrry (1\0, 4401. t\e\rport's Griff Am 1cs i 100. 2201. Carlo Tosti or Corona 1100. 220l. Phil Maas fI00,220) and Ray Harris lhi,qh jump. long jump) of Founhiin Valley, Eslancia's Bruce Gira s o 1 c 1100. 2211) and Brad Borden of Cosl<l t.1esa (shot put, discus). Cd~J.f:fl i so11 v 111nv C1ron1 d1! Mi r !tel fC7l ltlM~ 100 -1, lolll ((! ) Mlle~ !C.l J. L1C•~tl& (El. Tim•· 10 I i10 -1. 101!1 (C) 1 Mlln f(\ l L&C•1cl1 !E!. l lmt! 11.• . UO -1. Co~ tC) 1 L~• (C.) J. R1vmolld (£1. li,,..1· 31 J, "° -l. Ao11 !Cl '· AnC!fllG" !C f l. K1no\! !El. Timi· J·Ol I Milt -I ,,_IY•r•I IE! 1 Gl•n"'" !C > l. Y1>11n;fr !E l. Tim• 4 3' I 1·Mll~ -1 O~v !Cl 1 IMC•wrt (E l l W!I'°" (El. 11m• 10 DI.I 110 . HH -I, Powol\ !£) 1 Mllb (El 3 Kt~t (()_ l 1m1: 1' 1- UO lH -l /o/•)• IE I 1. (~111"1>1 !El J, M•lll (fl. 1 1"'~ 11 ' •«I Rof~y -1. Coro~• de! Ml• l lmr: •• 1 Ml10 R•I•• -1. Ccrcn1 Cl•I M•r Tlmr. J,Js.o. l-IJ _ 1. 141Yl~ IC) I K•n1 !Cl l . Colllng1 !El 1-1119~1, ,.10 LJ -l, Colll"f• fE) 1 F1ir&r (Cl '· lt'e!c~I! ICl. 0111~"'" '°'' PV -I V1u9~n (Cl 1. F...-~I 1£1 ]. G1ID"" (EJ. Htlt M: '11 ·•. <,p -I 11mrr#..,,.,I~ IE~ '· To•h (Cl J Brown((). Dl1t1nt(' l f-1. 01\t\ll -I RDY11t• /CJ l . Frlu•lle tCI J Kur!~~-tEl. Ol1!1ncr: !•~·7'., ... l"d!1~ (II) IUJ COttl"I t tl M1r 100 -I. Giron !El l 11rr1r1 (E l J. l•C1ad1 fE). Timi : 10.7. 7211 -I. Gfton IEl 1 l1C11cf• (El l . Wvnnt (Cl Time· 7J.O. MO -I, K1ltmw I(/ ,, H1U.., CE! l . G1mm111 !El. Tlmt: 1:1' l. 13'° -I. Croollr• !Ct 7 Nob I• (Li ) J. GroYtl'fl (E). TJml . l.3'.0 no HH -I. Swanson (El 1. Wllaer (El ]. Gltnnon ((). Tll!'lt II.•, 110 lH -1. C11lno IC! ' .l.r111no (E l J, Glrn~on ((f. limo; U .I, l&O ~111v -1. Edl1on. Tim" 1 :J9 s. HJ -1. .l.nde'1on (El 1-Wilwn (El J. ll1r1nrt IEl. Htl;llt: j.}. LJ -1, Gl•M ~El 1. l•C•1Cll (El J. At11tUY I(). Ol!lln(t; 11·11. PV -1 $•1bv (() 1. IUm• (() J Pt1tt1 !El. HrlgM: '°'· 5P -1, HI!! (Cl l . Jt~ntn;1 (E l J. Mcln!vrt fll. Ol•t1n(f: •5·1'•· Ol•U11 -1. Mt!nlV..., /El 1. Wtlll (() J. ClmPblll IE). Oli!1ntt: Jal.O. "' l!fl-{•U (U j CW.,,I dt! Mtr 100 -l . WllM>n ((1 1 MtP~"wn {E l l . Elt"trl IEl. l lmt: 10.r 1IO -1 WU.on /Cl ?. M<Plle'lon {El J. ~u•l>tr!wd 1£1 Tlmt. n • 6.11> -\, Bow" !El J. Lin~trDth IEl J. 0tVU\1P• (E). Tlrlt 1:l2.' U70 -1. V1r911 CEl J, M1~ntV rc1 J. 1"cGo.,n If). Tlmt J 1•' 170 lH -l. P~ul 4El 1. Golo (El l Gill (El-11mf , U.l UO RtllY -I. Edi»n hl'\t : "' 'iJ -I, M1t.oo> l(l 7 lro~•ll CEI J. flrvwn fEl. H1lthl: j .j. LJ -I. McPl'lrrl<l<l !El 1. 801nr• tCI ' lit bltw~n G•ul {El 1na TrP•1ll ti!! Ollftnct: ll·l PW -I Edwt•d• !El 1 Motir (Cl J. fl•ltit! rE>. 1-1r1gM· 1a>!I. .,P -1. 8 1a•low JE\ 7. Mor100 !El J. Mlnn1 IC J. Ol•ffnct· """ your repair handled with care 1eventy·oneii at ~~~ • ?l500 HARBOR SLVO, I COSTA Ml!SA. (714) 6it0-9t00 J ~1v!or ~E! Timi· n e l-00 -1 Clli1e.n!o {El 1 Ho"'1!r tMl l. Fink ff ), Tlmt L1' I , 1310 -1. Vtnf'lill !El !. HoNtll fMl J. Hurley 11) 11"'•· J;JJ.t, 110 lH -l. l\lwtll (El 1 O'Conn(ll IMl J 111rcn1rd (ML Tlmt: ll.~. "° Relay -I. Min ion Vltlo. T1mt '" HJ -I. i.;1c~1rCh !El 1 Monn C~l J. W1rll t.Y.) H1l9/ll, }.4. U -1 Cu,..m1,..., !M! J. M..,. dO.:k• tE) 3. ,._twill !E). Ol1!1nt, 11.1 !. PV -I. Alwell (El 1 11.rt~lrd !M) 3 i.11~e•ltN fEJ H•Tg~I . 10~ ~P -!. Hl~ktv (Ml J. Jo~~o.i>n 1M) J l •PPtl (Ml. D1>t1nte: '3·JI,. 1J)0 -1 .1.ndo"en CS) 1 Pt MfrJ.., {D! J, l1!~1m !5). Tlmt: J:Jl.I. 110 lH -I. LIM !!) ). l t'Wd !DI J. Tlrnmo•n !OJ. Time; 15.5. uo ft.tllV -1. Orl ntt. Time; '" lJ -I. ltnt rd fDI 1. GrH nl1w ll>l J, WI•• IS!. 01,,lrwr: u.,•,.;.. SP -I. St"r1m tSJ l. McC11tl (O f J. Arrlo11 tOl. Dl1!1nct : "·''~. Lions-Tar• • .(Ill f!'ft -I. l"uml11 Cl'GGthl!I) 3:•.o 1. Sir.chin IFoo"'llll J:SO., 3. M•'"'* Ile w u...,, J:JJ .s '· I( Krv"'..ntl!J (CdM) J:51.7 S Ovtelnl !C,._.,J) l :,J.O. IOCI br,.1t -I. CP11ttlt1d IGiw..t•~l-1 :00.0 1. Koc:1l1 fR«1l11'1C11) 1:0..• 3-V..-ltt tl• 5tmt) 1:0L6 4. ""°"'•'°" l l\'llwood) 1:04.t J, Btr"PIOll ICCIMI I :OS.• 400 ,,., r•l•v -1. FGG!htll 1:111 t 1. R1ncl'lo At1ml1oto l :11.? J, eor ...... d~I Mi r J;l'/,f •. R..il1rd1 ;a,n .J. J, l fl Wllion 3:!3.1. UCI Hosts Net Rivals Four ou\.-0f·slate oppontnllf are listed on the UC Irvine tennis schedule Jn the next 10 dayit with three additional matches giving the An teater• a tota l of seven in the t!Hlay span. The University of Colorad& will be at UCI Saturday at 11 with Noire Dame Universi-- ly on hand Sunday mornin& : ai 10. After taking fl.1onday off, lhe Anteaters tttum to actJon Tuesd ay against the Air Force Academy and ente rtain San Diego City College Friday before goin,g to Redlands University on Saturday. Arizona State is at UC! the foll owing li-fonday and UC San- ta Barbara on Tuesday to complete the busy lo.day slate. Ocean Academics Comes to Orange County SCUBA OCEANOGRAPHER ,-f Prntr'"" fr>" l 'll trrJld4 '1'11r1fh f)rJ1c•lrd In Ort•" A11"'''""''1 • OCIANOGRAPHY • MARINI BIOLOGY • MARINI UFI • SCUBA AND SKIN DIVING • !COlOGICAl SURVEYS ARCHAIOlOGICAl TRIPS Lear11 by Part icipati11g HOW1 OlllNTATION MllTIN• WHI M: MARCH JS, 7:30 P•"'- WHlll: ISTA NCIA Hl~H COlAL •DO M ' f 11 DAIL V PILOT Friday, March 19, l!l71 SPIKE RESULTS ... (Coadnued from Page Ii) " Lagana-Trojans V~"llY ~n.I IMC/II tK) 11'1 Unl.,."ltf' 100 -1. A'lll-n, ?. 1-•r>Otf• tLl l. Tl• w•w~A SttHrl ti.II •tlO ftlllclle (UJ. TIMJ' 0.4. Jlo -1. c.f/f!fl ll j l. A;111<11t I J. Slu .. f CUI. Tl"lt' 1.4. UQ -l. Giffin ) 1, A•~l""°n (ll S, Sttvt n• (LI. Tlmt: )3.1. MO -1. S!•vefl• Ill l lvr0t0 H.) ), ~(f !U~ ncy,: 2;11.1. Miit -1 $ml ( 2. Pri~~•ll 1Ll l l C~rl1!1tn\t" LJ. 1-: f:S4 l J~ II' -I. GCll'Ill~ IL) l. llt•l<ln I \ J. >10 !111•11 Tomt: 10:1S S UO l'IH -l. P1ct (1._l 2. 11t!1Qn Cl) 3. L1"°rllll (LL Tlmt: 11.0. 190 LH -'l P1c1 !LI 2. Ltr.d•llfl tl) l. Ntl>Ofl l ). T~; 12,~. 4.oO Atl•v -J. . l•o11n1 ee1(h. ,,..,~, 4.14. Milt IUltY -1. l....,...f lhKfl, 11lr!' ~oltJ~· A ~"" IL\ 2. Hl•!Oo (LI 3. MYll n!~ ,'fh . Htln"t: J ... U -1, AIC!Olt {U) 2. M<N1lr IL l J. O.vl• IUl. DISlfN:•: 1 ... s. " ~ \· 5w"°'..ey '\J 1. Mc~tlr (L• '·No l!l'f! !o+elnl!I: .o. 5P -1. O"'l IUl 2. Mu•DllY (UI l. florR.Oo !Ul Ol<!Mt(•' .1.n1• .... Oll'U• -I. K•hl•l•~I ILl 1. M"r .. l!v IUJ J. DeR1do (Ul. 01•1•"'" l:Jl.-1!. L•tlll!f ltf",.~ it.1 fill) U"IV'llt>I,.. 10C -1. Rl•r JU! ?. 0•kf1 (Ul l . Holrnwo<ld IU . T mt; 10.A. !"O -I. M&rrl.-e• !Ll ' o.~ •• (~j,l. ~01'l'~i!_!!l. l•1·~t:1.2S i11mor J Bovie !L). Time: 1:33.f. !"" -I "II" "ll " l.\lr]t hl tl) 2. Wllbbl'r IUl. Tlmf: l:'lt.t. 11<' "'"' -1. w!,..,.,o ('I t Miii•• Ill], G•••~ CU). Time: llG. no L"I -1. 1v1 .. ·11i.. !! I '· Ahl~t CL ) l. Gft~es (Ul. limo: 1$A ~·~ R•lt• -I. un·~•r"1v. l lrrno; 1.'' '· HJ -1. NelllO!' (LI 2. Wl .. ~11> (Ll ], C1uertv !\JI. HelG111! U . 1 J -1. I.le'·~~ !LJ ? ov~es !Ul J. Rlllf (U). Ol$1tn.;:e: 11·5. l>V -l. Re"''"~ Hll 1 Koi>es IUl J. !WHnt'V (Ll. Hf19hl: 1n.o P' -'· Klo<"'r"'~" Ill 2 /'"'"'fore! (LI ]. Fo11"' (l). Ol•••~ce: ~7.31~. f\l~u$ -\, M•im!~'d !l ! l Robf'rl.ofl (U) 3. 011vls (U). Ols!tn'e: ,..,, '" l•t11111 eet<ll (5'1 (211 U"!v1,.t!¥ 100 -I, Mlltrlrie' fL} 2. Hve!lY (lll l. OY~f. 111>. r ,me: M.•. . 1!0 -I, Mtrrlner (L) 1. liVO!lY ll" l. Gt'!D>" .... II' l i..,<' 10.a 660 -1. OVk• (IJ) l , Tie l>etwttn G1llO' .. I, {L) 1r>cl 8ro<:km1n !LI. Time: l :M.1. l':"I -1 T•,.<l••~I (L 1 ' NtV•"o (l' 1. <"•!•'" [Ul Tl"lP" l :•li. no L!i -1. Kl .. olt>.och Ill l. Ot>ev ll' 1. ~··or&! !L' Tl'"'"' 157 UG Reliv-1 Uni•ers!IY. Time: l!.6. HH -1. !lallr (L) l. McM•n11• fl I ), O~v f' \ H~q"I : ~1. LI -1. Ot>ev Ill 2. H1vt1 jL) 1. "<M•nu1 tl' Dl•l•n<•· 111. PV -' l •~<• lUI '· l-l~>'t1 (LJ l. 8v1hm1ier lL). Heigh!; 9,0, SI> -I, ~l>Ull /LJ 1. BlnltV Ill 3 ''"'O&o•cl !L) Do<' an'~ ,. ~· • Oj•cu• -l. Shull \Ll 1. 81Mev (l) l, Wt•ltl•rd (LI. 0 1!•"'°' lU·t. CF)j J, L.W. ~I. r.i.11~: U . {F~. ), c.,!.: IF~, .. ~, J:.. Ct"° PV -1. (lo•,d-CFJ, 1 Pt-m,l. ~dltflk !Fl. Ht!itlt: IM, S -1. lllft>I !Ml, t. \\ltl~1r (F). J. "1111911ft IF/. O~l1nu: U-2'-, OIK111 -l . i'lot e!laf CFI. 2. St.cl CMI. ). Htthllti!S U'I· Ol1!1n¢1• I.._ ••• '" ~ltla V.i1ty 111) (11) Mt1.,.i11 1!4 -1 /.'lti «1$111 C•·). kon {Ml. a. Klndrfl(I CM). Tltrit: 10 .•• m -1. V~rn~(F I. 2 1Aof'oultl<I (Fl, l . Klllclrtcl JM , Time: 11.1. b6G -l, C11"n m {F), 1 Mlllltr IF). J, SMl!tr (~). T!,..~: 1:.12 7 ll» -I. 1'1111 IF), 2. Moo•t (I'). J, Alex•flder (Fl,J!mt: J:Je.2. 11'l HH -1. hO'<'"I (Fl. i Jord1n (01, 3. Nlhlll IMl. Tlmt: lf.~. 120 lli -l. Chlovor! ~Fl t. Jor<ltn IF\, l. C"Ml"9htm CM\. Tim': "' P!O lie•~• -1, F<Wnltln V•iltv, llmt; l ;lt,J. HJ -1. "''''' •r.· 1. MfC11rrv (Fl, 3 Olr.on (Ml. Hel I: 5-~. LJ -L MQll~laki F), 2. t~=a~td !Fl. 1. MOOrf !FL Ol1llnce: 1f·7h. PV -l Rob<K~ (Fl, 2. 0!'°" (M). l. L!lllen,.n (Fl. 1-ltlt~!: 11).(1. SI> -l. Bowm~~ !Fl. ' l(ind•od 1~'1. l. KfOP IF>. Oln~n!f: •l9 Ol1cu1 -I, Ti. bol!W"n frox,11 !Fl •'!Cl lowm1n CFJ. 3. O•ntitr Ml. Ols!lnco: 101 ·3\1. '" '"~Mltln Vtlle>I (6l) J?Dl MA9110l!t <,J.~ 3 --1'rc,,.;~·t~'· 'Tr..!&, ?~ '· Bt11 180 -I, 8t!I (Ml, Ste11t• If ), J. f.l>ell CF). Tl,,,e; 19.9. iff' l:-K1~i1 ~fl~~'ft'm/F/'.3'~i. Crookt 1120 -1. $tfrew1jl (F), 1. R•mlret 0 11. 7. C&n!o \ML lrne· 1:11.9 110 LH -I. Whlltvnb (Fl, 1. Tr/>One (Fl, J, C•lmp IM) 1'1me: I~ I . HO Relav -l. Foontaln Vfllev. Tlmt: "'1.C. HJ -I S""11Ve<ll fFl t. Me..it tFJ. l. Lebrum CMJ. He th!' '-'· LJ -1 Sewl•tda (F) 2 II• beTl"Hn Lebtum (Ml tnd 'vam•'*• IFL o.,t•nce: ll·S'1> PV -1. Leonard fFJ. ]. J•~ln• (M), J_ ll«~n~a (f l. Hol~ht: 10.(1 '' SP -1. Rlcig1111no (F), 1. Lctt,1rr ), l Sil~•(~). Cl•l&l>(e; .j(i.J'"· Vilas Paces Corona Past Santiago, 4-1 Dave VHas scattered six Santiago hits in sparking Corona de! Mar !11 g h ' s baseball team to a 4-i non- league victory over the host Cavaliers Thursday. The victory was Corona 's fifth of the campaign against two losses and a tie. The Sea Kings were scheduled to open Irvine League play today at Santa Ana Valley. Vilas displayed a fine curve In striking out eight of the enemy and running his season record to 3-0. Meanwhile, Corona jumped on top with single tallies in the third and fourth frames. A single by Scott . Parker. a stolen base and Keith Samuels' one-base blow scored the first one and singles by Bob Palmer and Stu Karl sandwiched around a passed ball got the second run home . The winners added two in the seventh on singles by Vilas and Jim Bishop, a sacrifice by Brad Baker and 1'1nrk Erickson's two-run one-base blow. Gauchos Win, 8-5 Coron• cl•I M., !O .. • "' Par~"'· I! ' ' • Bl1tt0o.1r , ' 0 Samu•I•. !b ' • , ' Baktr, 11> 0 • • 0 J. 1>11mu, ti • • ' • Efit~i.on. c 0 ' ' 8 1>11mer. lb ' , • Nl(ISO<I, Jb ' • 0 • R, John•on, rf , • • • s1arr, r! ' • • • s.,,,., '" • • • 0 l(a•I. 21> ' • , M, Jol'lt1son, u ' • • • Vil••· P ' ' ' • Torars " • " S1"!11to (1) .. ' • "' Meier, II ' • • • Lane, rt ' ' • Scnled. 1• ' • ' F 0<mor. JI> , • • 01••· )b ' • • • IC.omb1e1. c , • • • Na<I~, <! ' • , 0 MD•g1nll. lb , • • • R~11. lb ' • • 0 Ra1>1e1. 1> ' • ' • TQt11~ " ' ' Scor1 DV 1nnln11 '"' C.c•on~ <lei M&r 001 100 ,_ .. 11 • !.en1l190 000 001 0--1 • ' Baseball SOUT H COAST CONFERENCE W ~ l GI Fullf'IM !.en Clew M~• Mt. se~ .o.nronio S..n o rnio 0•1nge Co••I ce .. 1101o ' ' 0 , ' ' ' , . , , ' ' ' 0 ' ' . ''· , " ; I S1nt1 "'"• 0 6 c ~1' i tnu"o1v•1 See" Ml San An•onlo I, (CHllOS ' To<l•r'• G1mt (e,.l•o• •• S•n!e Ana 51lunlt1'1 G•m•• Cr•n9e Cc.1>st 11 Sao Olevo !2\ San Ole!l~ Mts• 11 Fulle,1on I?) MISSION CONFERENCE w ' I SA·Jllaritaa VlflllY S1nl1 An• (16) (411 M1t!n1 JM -1 Hlll !Sl 1 .'/l11tb1 J wni11e11 !Sl. Time; 10.0. "-0 -1 Hrrr•ll (Sl ). V•nlimlglle (Ml l. Edwards (5). Time: 11 j_ 1•D -1 Our< ISl 1, 151 J. Jur~ (Ml llmt: !S.S. l'lO 1 l.ot~"'•n /Ml "I <Julnt•nf (51 l. (lf"Ol>fll \M). l ime_: 2'01.6. Mii• ·-I B•lrl<.np• •Ml ' C1rrlllo !SI J l1<>11e" (M). T:me: 4'.21.S. "l·Mlle -) C•~e! ISi 1 Pn11llP$ (Ill) J. Tello (Sl, Tlmr: 9:\1 J 17-0 H~ -I Av•rv! 1•11 1. M~a~ fS) l T•vlor !Ml. f,me c lS.5 1f0 l•~ -I Lin~·ev !~' 1. (M\ 3 ""t'Vt (M). Time' 198, •olO Rel•v -I, 5•n•1 An&. ~l l I.Ill• Re l•v -1. f,m~. •II -I l(l,no•~bo•9 IS\ ), 1 " b'lwl••I s~~' (Ml and "!tr•~t"v i/'. llrigM 6.(l lJ -I H•lmln•ik [M,l 1. SO<i\tr 151 J BvH1nw1on IS! 01n1n,e· ll·l. PV -1 V••mllve• rsl 2. L&•a (S l J. BO<lll <SI 11elgn1; 13·6, SI> -l. Reve• IS\ 1. C,1r"1 ISi l . 1-lw~er IMI Oi1l•nce ; SO.O " ... S•ni, ~,.. !an (1J) M1f1n• 100 -l. Tvi.• !SJ 1. Var111' !~' l. Che~ IMI f ;me 10" ?~ 1 Tvl.. !51 1 CSI J, Cl1~1<. IMI. T•ml, 13.5.' /J,i) l. !!•~ant (~I l . Pa<~er <>• J T~lma~ \Ml Tim•• l!J'.!.S 1120 -I. Yeo•! ISJ l Navbot (5) J PleHe (Ml. To:Y'e: ]•JO.I. 110 HH -1 Sancno !Sl l. B~en "(St J, S!en~o !M l Time: 10.1 l~O LH -1. S•ntho 1Sl 1. Gome: (SJ l ev~·s (SJ Tim•· ll.6 Pao R•I•• -I, 51n!1 Ana. limo; 1 3 5. HJ -1. Harr~ll ~Sl 1. Moreno \Sl J. Joc~•~n ('\! H~loil · J.( \,J -I (,M$$ !Ml 1 Hlr•la (M)..J, H•rrl~ (5). Time· 1.30.0. PV -!, LOO"I IS) 1 ICwen !S) l . /lnullar IS\. H~"M-lJ-). SP -l P~rno•kv !SJ 1. C1nvl" (5! J. Je,,,en IS i O ;l~not: ••·• Santi Ant (IJ) (lJ) Mt""' !CO 1 l'l~:ic~ (SJ J. Scan !S) l. Edwo,d\ ()I. Tfme: 11 .C 180 -1. C~•iJ1Pn\en !Sl 1 T•t be1wl'<'n Mv•acle (MJ lr'KI Eaword• (Sl lome; 10-0 ~o -!. Ha"•ll 151 1. l>ocktll (1.11 J A~•ri• !'l llm• !:l<l.n · is\31~ Arro'Yo \~;n,e11;1.,\~'. ~ 35 ~avwork 11~ LH -, N8 .. hAll lS) l w .. 1c~ !Sl .!. McClo"~ IMI T "'"· 14 '· ,.,'({l R~I•• -!. S•nT• Ane. Tim~: HJ -1_ IAo.-h~ll (S) 1. Scol! j ~I J. (u!,n IMI l'C!~hl: 5·1 LJ -1 !Cahn IS\ 1 Ha.,Pll IS) J. Ma"ne11 15! Ol"once· I~ 1 , PV -1 Coslello IS) 2. Mt("""'' I IS• 1 L""'ell< l>I l<"'lh! 111> SP 1 lllto !M) ' C.ullf,.~l !~• -'"~"eq• (SJ. Oi•lonc.: •1 ·9':. "FREE" Sa n boating FREE YOUR~Elf OF THESE CO~TS : 0 l•tQa lnvt1lme~I • Hi9~ Moo•;,.9 Coih • Rep•ia & M"inlenance e Cl&""ing Cho1e1 e ln•~·~nce SAN BERNARDINO -Eric "~10"'"' ) 1 Christensen banged out two ~:';;~1;v ~ ~ I triples and a single to drive So<J1h"''''''o l I BE A P'LAYllOY! I f . Gronmon• ? ' 1 n our runs 1n pacing Sad-sac1dleb•c-i 3 , 1 dleback College to an 8-5 vie-sin ee•n1,c11no 1 J 1 You• F•mily or Gi1I Friend [ •"·• '''' 0 • Will lov, »• Id•• tory over host San Bcrnardlnn " ' " V I . Tl\olnd•¥'t Score• c I al ey in Mission Conrercnce S•ddlet>•c~ 1. S•n ee•n••dl~o $ ALL LIDO baseball action Thursdav. c~enev e, P11om11 1 The win was the G3ucl10~· ~~,':,w~~1.''i,o:~.,,~~~·;11de SAILJNC CLUB I first in eircuit play ar.ain~! G•oosm<>nt •1 (~•!!•¥ f Sn<ldlet>ft~ •• C•!tu• I 675 0827 ' a trio o losses. It also snor· 11,.,,,,,~, 11 s1~ s''"•'d•ne " f ped a nine-game losing st rrak. ;~·:·~·:·~·~' ~'~' ~':'":":•:"~":':",.,.,..:,:-~-~;-::-:-::-:::-:-~~-~-~-~=-~;-~·;: Sadd!eback piled ur six runs Iii-- ----' in the first three frames. I A single by Gary Jacki;on, ('hristensen"s one-base blow,1 MARCH SERVICE SPECIALS ;• two ~·alks, Bob Blacklidgc·s' ~ingle and a sacrifice rly by 1 'Terry Boyle plated three runs I In the first. I Rl'1ol11tionary n!!w op l'rOlio11ol mothod1 fl'lltOn O•ongo Co11nty·~ Ho I 'Ll,.col" Mt'rcurv dcolo:tr "ow offers 'tcu~torv outhorln>d s.c-r• !l(c ot prices tompa•obtc to tho\o:t cho~cd ~y· St'~C~ ,,~t!o111 and 01he1 non•ip«lo11:ed rcpoh ct'ntcr1o Sor•lce by CIPf>Ol~I· J Ho\.\·ard Ho~·t"s \.\"alk and Christensen 's firs! triple carn-1 ed coach Doug Fritz's club i Its fou rth run in 1hr. second I frame. I A double b~· Jim C;impbell , Blacklidge's single end an er· ror iot lwo more runs hon1e In the third. S•cldlt!Ntk < ll .. ' • '" J•rt•O"I. "' ' ' , • Cl!dt!.,.tftl. 11 ' ' • • '"'""· c • ' ' Ctm~I. 11> , ' • llltC~llClff, P ' , • lll•~rd, • ' • • llovlf. ID • • ' llovlt\. (I • • • "'°*""''' II ' • • • M!!I~~, !I ' • ' ' Ho'/!, .. , ' • • To1111 " • • • SCAif• tr '""'"'' '"I ltd!llflll(~ J!I iXl'l ~11-11 ' • a."'""""']"" 010 OJG 001-i ~1 II ll'l~nt sovc1 you f111ther rimt o~d money , ' 4 REG. $4.75 OIL CHANGE 1~d11di"! 5 q~trh of t op 9r1da Unio11 oil. J11rl CALL FO• Al'l'OINTMENT TODA'fl REG. $35.95 TUNE UP l"dud:~g """' (onJen11r, poinh & 1p1'~ p!u91. J~1t CALL POI ArP'OINTMlNf TOD.AT! • SANTA ANA Ll~CO!.N MERC:J!~Y 1301 NO. TUSTIN AVE •• Sl.NTA I.NI. 547·CB43 '"WE APPRECll.TE YOUR IUSINESS" ' JC, Prep Net Results Top Ski Events Scheduled Atid you must be the daring kind, rtady to face any obstacle. Needless to say the obstacles will not be disclosed ahead of time. Co 1n in g prepared would not be nearly as much fun. These races ere involved with suspense ·~ intrigue. .~ • blizzard raged. The race was held, nontheless. and be was in iL I wiJh I knew what kind or anti-freeze he used , for he returned not looking much colder than when he left. In its own right the Hansel and Gretel is as high on the scale of major seaso nal events a.s NAJAC -at least for Southem California skiers. The similarity ends there, ex- c~pt for two things. Grindelwald Ski Club. on~ or the pioneer ski clubs in Southern California, is as in- terested in funding the U.S. Ski Team as are the other supporters of NAJAC. The club is donating all profits !ron1 the H.ansel and Gretel to the U.S. Ski team. As anyone who has been involved in organized skiing knows, the U.S. ski team is Christensen Top Gaucho always in need of fund s. Tbat is U1e prl~ or being an amateur, but a worthwhile one. ll may be tiresome to hear about the need year after year, but it is a real one, nonetheless, and a good cause. Secondly, no shorty skis are allowed in either competition. But about the differences, you do not have to be selected through rigid competition to enter the Hansel and Gretel. Anyone capable of a snow plow can enter. As a matter of fact, a good snow plow is usually a distinct ad· vanlage. You do have to wear a costume, but unlike the natty new uniforms tbe F\VSA junior racers are sporting, you create rour own -the more different -the better. It does have to conform to the theme, however, of TV commercials. The idea is to try to represent or demonstrate some particular TV commercial. You do not need to be a member of a team, club, or have an FWSA race card, just the desire for good will between skiers and ski clubs and for snow fun. The vital statistics: entra~ are paired off by 4\1wjdg names out of a h_at; the ·~ pairs, dressed in cos~ start down the race COUlh holding hands ; together they must go through t B,e obstacles; costumes restrit ting movement may b' e removed during the rat;~: poles are not recommendtit as they may create a safety hazard . Race results will b e delermined according to the be:sL overall timt. ~th racers docked for not (tompleUng obstacles. Additional rules. in-- structions and time penaltiet will be posted at race time. Costume judging will be ac- cording to originality, flait, amount of v.·ork. and, in the case of group entries -cohesiveness. IMPORT& SPORTS CARS SAFETY-JET TIRES WHITE WALLS F $ 0 00 Plul •Tough, resilient Duragen• ru bber tread for long mileage. • 4-ply Nygen!i nylon cord 11. R •1.1~ Fool, El . TIJ, SIU body combats bruise • uo~u impacts, runs cool. • Smart, match·mate whiteline styling. Volksw•gen e Porsche e Volvo • Hillman e Renault This week only at GENERAL TIRE FRONT END ALIGNMENT U. S. INDY MAG WHEELS SET OF 4 .......... $99~~" FORD-CHEVR OLET-PLYMOUTH DATSUN-TO TOTA Shock ~ COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE $49 9 ~""'''"· W!!l'lt~t Olsc1. We do all this: e Reline all 4 wheels • Rl- bu ild all brake cylinders e Turn & True 4 . brake drums • Repack front wheel bt1r• ings e Adjust brakes, restore fluid e Road Test Your Car! LOW MILEAGE USED TIRES LOTS OF NON.SKID TREAD s59s .. ,h Some Used Radia1 Tires Crooked wheels rob your car of maximum performance , ride, steer- ing and tire wea r. We correct caster, camber, toe-in, toe·out to your ca r manufacturer's specifica- llon::.. and safety check: and adjust your steering. Absorbers J]' . ''··~ ..__., -.-~' ...... EXPERT WH'EEL only 0 CADILLAC 9 CHRYSLER •• ss~~~ S!tndtrcl ,no tomoatl American c•ra. Delco Our ,rc1.ia\i,h lll•!all TIC"". f:unou' ma~c ,h()o;k ab,orbtr~ non't ta~c ch11n..:c''. (jct fll.)•1t1•'c cur ~·1)ntrol: WHITEWALL TIRES 9 LINCOLN 8 BUICK L71•1 ~•110116 tlS«IS ~ . ~ ,,CJ, WE HAVE BOAT TRAILER TIRES Don Swedlund ' BA.LANCE TIRE CHAINS PASSENGER & CAMPER COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours : 7:30 to 6:00 Daily 540-5710 646-5033 ( Friday, March l 9, 1971 DAILY PILOT J9 Congress Cup Opens With 9 Protests LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOTICE "'" •••am •• , '(.'· 'Ill NOTIC• TO CJl•OtTOlll C 1 1 ,. O' '1111 1Ul'l111011 COUllT 0, THI "ICTITHM,lt NI.Ml TM uftOtf.i.-._. t.,11,., l'lt It STATI 01' (Alll'04UOA l'Olt totw1111<flftt , lh.lal-1r At I Wtil TMI COUf\ITY' 0" OJIANe1 ...... .... _ '"'" Cotti Mtll C1INotnl1, l,ll'IW• '"' ESTATE o ir Hl!NllY WINTHll;OI" \IAI 5 B W 0 d v w 0 1 2 1 M k N T o l w • llcflllau1 "'"' 111,.... "' LEATHll!'lt t t GY,.SY tnd 11111 itlf Ihm 11 <6ml005MI ENTINIL ALSO l<NOWH AS HE NI ' oa s in p t 1 -ar s; o rip e inners E,~: ~~-!:c.":,*;,,;:f":: 1:-n;! ~~~~l~:I1€:i~~1~~:?:·: ' " By ALAION LOCKABEV Congressional Cup s ailors art obviously sailing by the book this year. In the first 15 races Thurs- day there were nine protest flags fluttering from starboard s preaders. There wrre three double protests which kept protest commHtees busy until a late hour. The committee anoounced that the resul~ of the prolests re.solved would not ht an· nounc'd until today -C\'en to the conlesting skippers. P rotest! to lhe rontr.ary. there v.·ere no triple winners in Thursday's contests. Five yachts wound up with 2·1 records and five with 1-2. Dtn F-llt , ltlDO V11ln'kt, l U'NlfOtl of the I-I ~ff ltc:l•d« Overhaul him on the downwind de feated Jennings, 3:58 and •e•ch, c1111. "u11• .,''-' •,~ Hnoti• 11••1ne cl•lrtta •11o1ln• Ol!td Mirth 17. 1t11 W d d<K.otnl '"' •MU!rff i. 111 run and take the lead al the fiiosbacher defeated Pickard, 0,11 Fowl!• 1h1m, wu11 "'' nec•n••~ """'ht", 1 d k STATI! OF (Alll'"Oll.NIA, ll>e olfl~• of '"' cltrll It ""' ..... first leewar mar . 3:25 (double protest pending.) OllAJotGE COUNTY en1u11fd '°"''· °' to P'""'' tMrn. w11 The tYo'O boats were overl.ap-. , 0n Mtr<h 11. un. w 10•1 me, , '"' 111m....,,... W011CIW••· '' ii. uo Winds for the first days Nol••• l'ubflc ~ •NI '°' u ld ,1111, dtf1l1;'9d 11 '"' olllct 01 llltlr 1Uo.tMv1 pcd approaching lhe leeward Ht1ontU1< ••~•·•~ Din Ftwllt k..c1wn llobfr '°"' Howllf' 1111 G1rl1M, di n1ark, but Schofield broke the competitlon ranged from I lo to "" to H "'' ,.,.., who'* ,,.,..,, '"""'" 011"•· N•w"'1 111c11. c1n11rn1 i..-A 11 111ttl(rlboff l• !ht within lnitrlll'l'ltnl tJUJ. wll!cll 11 11\e 11!•<• of IM.ltlnr. overlap within a few lengths 15 """'ts. ,.,. ·~--'tdll•d 111 e•KYll4 "'' wmo. " ,,,. vnd..-.111\111 in '" m1111n ··~ Of the m.'k. Burns t'l'ed •~ Result! were e1....,.ted to be (0111(1&1 Sttll t•ln!n1 lo ll'lt 111111 ol 1tld dtc.Otfl "' . ,.. ... ~ Mtrv Sith Mor!f)fl wl!Mn lour mon1111 tfltr "'' tW1t llUbl work up on the ins ide of of more conclusive today a s Nol•"' "ub!lc . c11l1or1111 c1t1ot1 "' 11111 ""'1c1. f '"-do bl I l'rlncletl Olfkt Ill Ot11111 Mtrd'I t. 1t11 Schofield during the rounding, some o uie u e W nners 0""'' couM~ v1r1rn11 "· v11 ... 11111 •!'141 and l't w" '"en that protest of Thursday tangled in crucial i.1, comml••l<>n ~•I••• Stturlfy l'•clllc N•n-• •Mi• UI April t, 1'11 S1: 0-ll't l . HflllOWtll flags started fluttering from matches. The serle! winds up l'unh•h"" o,,,,., ce.11 0.11, "lk>• C•·Ell1<1110r1 ' 11 9'1"9W111 oflM both y achts. Schofield crossed Saturday. Mtrc:n 1'· l,, ••• 2• '· nn '"·71 ,....,, ,..nllld "K~nt the Une 45 seconds ahead of LEGAL NOTICE ::_•~:!!~~em":•••• AHo •AJtuN· Burns LEGAL NOTICE N.w-t .. Kii. c1111'""8 fWI " • Tt11 S-.Mll Other results in the first NOTICI 01' •ULK Tll.1.NSl'llt l'·MttJ Att.nlol.,. .. , C•luc. ...... series v.·ere: O'Neal over Bob is1e1•,:,i:.:. -;,~1:;1~;,ic.' <lllT~rfrtt~u~" Nt,:~Nass M:r'°:~~,.~~i;::,11c;,-;~11 Dall• ~~ fi105 bacher. Houston. Tex., by Notk• i. h1r111v tlY"" lo 1111 C•""l!or1 TM und~rtlon~ .. ctr111,.. 1111• 1•••-------·------- d P. k d of TOMMY JIAE GOLD, Trtn1,.ror, C-U.::111'11 I bu1lnH1 t i Ml Wtlt lltnl' 39 secon s ; IC ar over wf'le" butll'len •Odrui 11 111i1 wi.ic!ltt st .. ,.,.,, M1 ... c111f .. nl• uMtr ,.,.. LEGAL NOTICE Odenbac h 56 seconds· Jen-or1,.,, New-' 1e1tn, coun1y of o .. ,,., l!CTll""'• nrm ''""t of EAllTH FOllMS'--------------. ' 'f ~lilt of C•lllornlt , 1 ... 1 1 bo,oll lrt noftr L'ICt lh1t 11!0 U•m It comHSed 1!1· n1ngs aver McCormack o San 1s 1bou1 10 be m1oe to J"1.'.IE l<l!Ll y "'' tol!ow1,,. 111-......,, w!wlH ,..,,,,, 1" P <ltlM . 01 T E M p l ET a N nO JAY Kl!NN Y lull '"" PltCll ol •tllOl!f>Ct •rt ., ClllTll'ICATI 01' IU$1NISS Francisco, one mtn sec; TEM,.l l!TON,. Pl•l~rlllill, T•ln1lert~I. lallowl: ... ICT ITIOUS NAM• and Charley Morgan of St. wl!Olt 1M.11in1u ..ia .... 11 1ut •on•I•• Donald J, SutnlfJtnd, Int l'"u!lerton. T~e u"""11onec1 11at1 certttv M P b G Boon. w1,, NewPOl"I lltC~ lnO I J 7' J Cot!t Mtlt, Ctlll. col'lducUl'lt a bu•lntu al f'. 0. &r elers urg over reg 1.11 Ctl'llllltWllOO, wn1rnint11r, counrv el ""'""' L. M1n1w, l5J l'omon•. Lont *'· ,,.,., ..... c111tornl1, '""' C1rn1ll• of Hawaii by I .min. 11 secs. 0r;";:~~v•:0';!1~:."~:;,,tc1 11 1oc:11111 ~!~!:·J:~~~ 1s. un ~~:~·h, ~:,~i:.,. ~:m ~::;.. ~·g?~~· (Booth was flying; a protest 11 1101 Wt!ICtUI Orlvt, Ntwil'Ort Inch Dor>tfd J. Sulht•l1nd HELL'S MA.NAGEMl!NT COHSULTAN'I t th d f the ace but Countv ot O•l nllt Sti tt ot Ct1llornl1 Frtl\k l. M1n1uv tnd Intl 11kl firm It comil'O-• a e en 0 r ~Id ''""'''Y '11 11t1crlbtd In .en .... ST.I.TE OF CALIFORN IA, Ill• foltOWll'lf JlttlOn, who ..... -I did not file ) II: All •IOC:~ In It ..... fl•lurtl, ec1ul1-OllANGE COUNTY; lull l l'ld 1l1c1 ol r11ldtnc1 Is •• toflow1· · . , 1 I rnenl 111<1 tood will ol fhtl INU!~ w lcn On Mtrch 11. 1911 , bl10r1 ="''• • Robtrt J. O'DonMll, tll\lt C1rn1tit In lhl' secood series 0 Ne.a bustniu ~ .... ,,n ,1 llOM AAE H.k!R No11.-,. Public In ""' for 11ld S•1t1, Av""'""'· Coro..• d•t M••· (•H"rn\1. defeated Pickard by t 2 STYLl5TS 1n<1 1oc:111d ,, 1101 w1.r,t111 p1r10111111 •P<>H•td Don11d J. suth"t'"" o.t t•d M•rc11 10. lt'1 . Or!-..., Nlwl'Orl l11cll. (~nil' of 0rlf191, lr.d F rt"~ L. Mtn1u1 llr1awn to mt ll•rt J. Q'O<>nl\lrl seconds (pending a p rotest by Sttte oi c1111ornl•. to bl 1"' "''"'" wl'loat "''"''' ••e S!•te ol c111torn11, Lo. A.11111t1 Covnt~1 C ()SE AT THE START -Bobby Burns (Boat B) and Henry Schofield treated ,;~tators to some close pre-start maneuvering in the first race of the Congress· iOD:al Cup match racin g series Thursday. The findings of the protest committees could change that by today. There were no standouts in lhe first three races. Double \vinners, pend· ing protest decisions, v.·ere Henry Schofield of Alamito..:; Bay Yacht Club; Bobby Burns, California Vachl Club: Pat O'Neal, Larchtnonl. N . Y • Yac ht Club; John Odenbach, Yachl Racing Union of the G reat Lakes; J ohn J ennings, St. Petersburg. Fla .. represen· ting the NAVRU. P l k d i '1 C k The bul~ lrtn1!1r will bt con1ummtlfd 1ublcr\IMtl lo 1111 wlll'lln l111!ft1<ntt1I l nll On M••tll 10, U'1, ~rt rne. C ar ; 1• C 0 rm IC on er 1tter !ht l Ut d•' cl Mt r<h. tc~nowltdotd llltv ••eel/ltd Ille ,.,.... Nolt"' l'ubllc In 1nc1 '"' ••IC 5••1· defeated fi1osb.acher by 29 it 11, tt New11itr1 N111ona1 l tnk, u o1 (OU!cltl lt•ll ,.,_11y ''''''"" flobtr1 J, O'Ocn"' ed WtslClifl D•lvt, Nt_. llKl'I, Counr.. M1r11rtl Hot1 kntWn to mt to bl I/It HrMn wl'lt! seconds; Odcnbach deftal OI or111,1, 511tt 01 (.olllornla. Nchr1 Public -Ctllfornlt """' 11 1ut11cr\'*1 tt tho wlll'lln 11 Booth 14 seconds· Burns Sc ,,, •• k'-11 lo '"" Tr1n1tertn , •rll'l<l••I Otlkt In tlrumtnl •nll Kknowlffltcl "' llllKUI( ' • 111 bu1lntu ntrnt1 tnll ffdl'Kltl Ul@d l ot An•tl" COINl1Y l~t 1trn1. defeated Morgan. 1:38 (double bY Tr1n1ltror fflr tht 111 ... Y••" 1111 M~ Comrn1111on Eulr11 !OFFICIAL SEA.LI Dana Point • • oal in an;i Point wilt be th& stinal1on of some 50 yachts peeled to set sail Saturday the ' 1971 Inaugural of lboa Yacht Club's 66 Series. e race is a change from origina lly scheduled Drill· ls!ands Hace. he flecl will be d ix1ded o four c lasses of Oc:ean cing yachts sa il ing under Cruis ing Club of America CA I n1casur('1ncnl rule and f\fidget Ocean Racini! eet -boats 30 feet a nd der. he course \\ill be.> rrom e starling hne (If! the Balboa er. a round "(... m a r k e tl buoy 11.2 miles o f £ v.·port P ier ) thence to the ish line off the end of Dana int Harbor Breakwa ters. alboa Yacht Club has ar- nged to ma ~e a combination cc-cruise out of the event. th n1any of the non-racing wi!i and sail yachts ac· mpanying the racing yachts Dtlfla P oint for an overnight ntlntvous. Formal of lhc 66 Series has en radically changed this af:-A ne1v race April 11 11 be known a.~ the Abalonr inl race. laking the flee! a , round !np ro Abalone ini:s ou t h e a s tor CamC'o oqc. i races 1n the schedule ~ ti~gton 20-Fathotn race. , , : Huntington 'fi(lelands i om b;ned wHh Newpo" • or Ya c h t C l llb's 1 son Series) June 12; r i · g Isla nds Race, July 17: I to Lon~ Point. Aug. . ark! Long Point to Balboa. g. IS. ace Slated ~ o Enloiena<la ~nMay6 Newport Ocean Sa i 1 i n g ssoc1at1on has set ~lay Ii the date for the start of e 24 th annual NC\\·port I~ nsenada race . ')l The s a iling e.1;travaganza jnnually dra\\'S m0re than 500 ~ats and 1s ra1cd the largest j rshore international race in e world. T he start off thC' Ncwporl ttv is one of the great ici1t1ng spectaculars. NOSA g e n e r a I ra{'e a irman a nnounced that en- )' blanks are available al ost vacht clubs Skippers ; ho 118\'e sailed 1n pr evious 'nscnada r:u:ts wr!l ~ 'utomatically receive entry anks along \\Ith the r~ce nouncemenl and 1nvitat1on. ' H:u:e chairman George Yule • cdicted a new record or en- its this ~rar. l .aq~est entry l to date ha!> bctn !164 The rac' IS open to cruis ing pe }a('hL-. v.·ilh a minimum aterhne length of 20 fett • an o~·crall length of 24 ~I ~·hich n1ect S<tfety stan- ~rds or l h~ Ocean Rac ing •:jlct:l or Sou!hcrn C~lHornla. "'•~ThC r<1re IS usuull y run in divlSl(ln.~. Oce!in Rucing. t 0Cf'an Racing. l'ac!flc d cap nnd O('can r11r lng r11lamArans, The~(' 1n t11rn 11re dlri1lf'd inln rlas~f'~ ;1ccordlni: 'fl 1hr11 r at11"\, EVEN CLOSER AT MARK -Henry Sch ofield (Boat A I overcame a lead by Bobby Burns at this point of their Congressional Cup match. Rounding the mark a fe\v second later. protesl flags flew from the spreaders or both yacbts. ---- B1•ood Appl'ol Collection of Stories Aid to Trailerboats ti.lost exciting race of the day was the opener between Schofield and Burns. Burns got the start and led Schofield to the first v.·eather mark. only to have the ABVC skipper di I d J H ll: lf dllltr91'11 lrom 1119 1bt1>1, ,,.. DK. 1, 1'1( lol1 l . "•lmlnl protes t pen ng : a n en-wont Publl•hecl Or11111 CM't o.u, ,.1101 NO!•rY Publlc.C1111orn11 nings defeated Schofield, 1 :01. 011..ii Mtrc~ 1S. 1111 Mtteh n, M. Al'•ll J, 9, 1911 .u-11 Prlnclp11 0ttle1 In . . ch Jtmlt l<ellr r ..... 1111111 Los """'~' County In t~ third series Odenba Tr1n1ftf'lt LEGAL NOTICE My comm1111o11 Ex1lrt1 defeeted McCormack I 'Os J11 K•nnv THl'l•ltton Octot>or !t, 1911 · · T1t n\ltr1t Publlsl'ltd Ortl\lt Cotll Ot!l't p,1, {pending a protest by PLll>li\hlfd Orin" CM•t 0111y ""''· ""*'' M.trch lJ, 19, ,., A11r1t J. 1971 "3.J '1cCo,mack)·. Booth deftaled Mt rdl It, nn 111·11 ClllTtPICATI 0, SUSINlll J> f'ICTlTIOUI NA~I O'Neal. 1:31 : S c h o f i e Id LEGAL NOTICE t11, undlril9l'ltll "°" c.,11,., t11e1 •r• B c0nducll"9 '-bu1ln111 11 1t'2' Unit Nt.1--------------defealed Morgan, 1:27 ; urns P·4MJI , Pl•c.,.,1lt, t o.11 ~ ... c1111orn1a. UM!•' '"" '*1' N ~ 11ctn1ou1 firm n1 .... al METAl NOTtC:• TO CllllDtTOfll CEllT~ic~tT~:u~" M~y:~ •1• !TITCH CASTING flEl'A lll COMl'ANY IUl'lllllOI COURT Of' THI LEGAL NOTICE Thf unOtflll nl'O -ttrl l!y ttltV '" .... 1c11aw1.., Jlff"lOftl, ................. I" ST.I.Tl 0,. e.1."t'OlllNIA conGudint 1 bu>IM•• t i 1,n "'•t•nll• ::i':ow!'." •!tc11 ol' ••11dtrw:1 ••• •• POii T~~ ... c111o~:TY Dfl .I.vi .,-Co1!1 Mtlt. Ct llforn!1, undtr !ht Otr,..lt II. "'-• ltltS Vtrmont Ln tM. °'"''"' llC!l!k>u1 llrrn ntm~ flt ARTISAN '$ ·• MOUSE t l'ld 1~11 ,110 firm II comio\lfd Hunlln11on Bt•ch, C1llfotnlt E11tlt ol MA.RY 'IU.NCES llllOW~ Classic Field Seeks ldt '· fol", Uf.IJ ..... """' l " .. akt MAR1 ,RANCES Wlll(lfrtSOi , ol 111• to!lcwlnt •tflont, whoo• ntmtJ "11,1nllr>gtcn 8t1cll, C1lli.rnl1. Dl'Ct••lfd. In lull tl'ld t ltcts el rtllOt nct trt Otted Mtftll lt. 1111 NOTICE IS HIEll:EIV GIYEH .. 1'11 • tJ ';1!,;:~0do p.,..111. ~10 le. Mtln 51,. Dtrrell fl, Net <•..,Uor1 or 1119 1bov1 11amt4 dtctd., Si"lt Mt, Ctlllornlt . ldt P. Not llltl tll J>tflO!\I h1vl119 <ltltm .. t lno Nick .k, Godoy, lff .~. OtOtn Dr., Sltlt of C1lltornl1, Or1n1& Counlr . lh1 stld dKtdtnl ••t '"llltM i. Ill l o• An~eies, (t!lfornlt. On M1rch n, HI!, t.fort mt • ttltm, with lt!t ntttutrY \ooud\ffl, r Lau1·els in Drag Boats A class ic field or blown fuel hydros will be shooting for the elusive 200-mile-per-hour mark lhis weekend al Long Beach Marine Stadium during the National Drag Bo.at Ass'n Spring Championships, \\'orld record holdf'r ''Mr. Ed'' piloted by Fresno's Larry Hill Y.'ill ht facing last year·s lastest boat ''Lik a de Split" Dlttd Mtr<h 11 1t71 Nollrv l'wbllc In tnll l~r ttld Sltlf, lht OlllCI ol lllt <ltrll ti lht tbo'< r a C i n g gelS llomutldo "ocolt1 lt •iont lt1 IPlltrecl Otfrt!! II . NO. t Mltltd <our!, or ,,, 1r11tnt tliffl'I,, .. 11 . h ,1., Nie~ A, Godoy k"Clwn lo f!lt lo .,. 1n1 Plrson Wl\Oit in. n1c1111ry vouclltr&. "' th ~ Under Way at JO 3.m. V.'il 1.ue Sttlt ol Ctllfornlt, Ortntt County; "t"" 11 1ubtCrltoed lo lllt with in In· undt r1l•nt11 •1 lllt oflltt af 1111 .l.ft-y , . d J ( bo , O" Mt rcll 11, 1•11, ltlfort mt, t 111'\"Nnl tl'ld t tkl\lwledltd "" n..:uttd JOSEl'H I. AWOl!!lSOH, -N. Mt!• Ski CJ3SS an I! ;ttJ going NOlttY Pubtlt !11 t lld for ttld S!tlf, Ill~ l~m~. SI .. Sui tt 601, Stnlt An., Ctl1fltr111t, I h . d th too l'tflon•llY IPOtlftd llom1111do l'Ol'ltl !OFFICI AL Sll!".l.l) wlllcll II "" lllt<• of b\11!111 .. of 111· n l e morning an e 1,.,d Nie-•. Godoy k..c1wn " "'' 11 Jetn L. Jobi! undtrtlt11t<1 In 111 mllttrt "'11tn1n • 'I • ho . t Ill "'' """"' wllOlt ntmn ,,1 lllbltrlt>-Nottr" l'uttllt-Ctll!ornlt lo tllt 11!11• OI uld 4tctlltfll, wlllll m1 e-per-Ur e q u I pm t n .,, to th• .,..1111111 ln•w u.,..nt •nd l'rl11clttt Oltlt• •n tovr morillls t1t1r 111, 11,,, t11bllt1t a O••M• CCKml'v qt 11'111 nollcf. qualUying at 2 p.m. Jus t prior j~~o;;"K'i.!~~J~~"1 ••l'CulM '"' •tm•. My c ..... m1u1 ... Eatlrt~ 011111 F1br111rv ''· 1'11 I M IJ,tft.h 1. 1t1l Thom11 D. Brown to lhat \Vayne \Vilms of Long ~:t: ... ;t:bl1c~c: ••• n1t 5TATIE OF CALIFOllHIA l E~•cul"' I 0 111 I COUNTY 0 1'" Oii.ANO! l '" of lllt Will of 11\1 t bo'ff Beach y,•ill attempt the Prone ptl Ct n On MIF<h U, 1'11. btfort ,..., Ille NtmHI cltttdtnl Ortnoi CounlY Vncltt~\tntd. 1 Hottrv Pu•l11; 111 1nd JOJIPH 1-ANOl"JIJON, barefoot skiing record with M• cornmtu ton E•••'"' for u ld s1111, 1>1rwn1nr 11M1rtc1 1111 * N. Mtlll 11., lkl"• in · Aorll t , 1911 l'olnl, P. Nor ~nown to n" I• bt ll'lo ttrtcn l •llf• Ant, C1ll .. ntll, Tujunga's l\1ike Masino tO\YUlg •ua11111ec1 Or•n•• Cu •I 01i11 wl'I••• "'"'' 11 swburlbld to 1111 w1111111 Ttl: St1-4•11 in ·'Hot Damn Hondo''. Mtrt.h ft, 1' '"" A.Pru 1' '· 1911 '4-1·71 ln11rum.,,1 end •citntwltdttd 10 me AU1r1•tY ,.,. l!•l'Cue.,. Satur~ay 's R C II., • • p I LEG'L N~CE ttltt •llt •••cultcl lllt ''""· P11bll11'11111 Or1nv1 Cot •! 0111• •·i.r ay ase ] ! In c n VIJ WITNIESS '"' ~tnd •nll offldt l H•I. F-..1 .... l' •nd Mtrtll .. u, 1t to be driven by Bob ~1iller P.1ouse··. the world's fastest 10,,1c1AL st•t> 1''1 •'1·71 P-4Mlt l 1wrtnct J. Stnnt!I of Sausalito. Mac (Hay) Bale. flalbottom at 14e.17 mph, will c11lT1l'tCAT1 o, •usrN1s1 No11rv l'ubHc >-f • tiff t'ti l'ICTITIOVI NAMI l'rlnc!••I Olllct In LEGAL N011CE !ht: 1970 points winner will ~ acing s compe I on Tnt underolon.o do ,,.111v 1heY ••~ 0,,..,1 counl'v cir d from the Cornwall's "Big i:an<1uc11"' • 1t<J1r ..... •' 11n1 cw.... M' comm1111on EJ•'"' ••111 ~ be iving a new spec Ster L" h " d F ' La Line, Hunt!MIOl'I 8t1ch. C.1111 .. nlt. un<l•r Mt~,, lt1t NCTICI TO eJt•DITOltt d M'k DuB ' I th H n.a una an re!no .s rry 1M flctltlcw urm """'' 01 MfTftE L l'ubll1h6d 0r1n11 c1111 0111y •11ar tUl't110R COUltT OI' THI an 1 e ie • e un-Schwabenl.and i n "Joker's ENTERl'llUI!:! •~d 11111 ••'~ firm lt Mt "11 1•. 16. ""''' 1, ,, 101 ilJ.11 tTATI o,. c.1.ttl'OllNIA ~0111 tington Beach artist, y.•itl have co•111><>1.0 o1 1h1 1e11ow1,,. 111•1on1, wt>os• TN• C:Ol.Ml'TY ol' OllAHOI \\'itd'', n•mes In lull Ind 1>ltc11 11 ruldenc• LEGAL NOTICE ,.,._ A......,J a go at the big b\OWI'\ fuelers ., ••• ~llOWI: 1!1111• "' MAllY lOU ll!: IAIKl• Jor the first time in "Hare·•-M1u•k• E. T•l•P. so•'' u•. Ml6 ,. ,,., 1110 known 11 LOUISE. aAltl(lll. h d LEGAL NOTJCE So. Euclid, Slnlt Ant. C1IUornl1 PICTITIOUI aUllNltl O.'"''"· One of t e lop conten ers Judi Jo loo~•'· Tl)l! Cupit Lin.. NAMI ITATIMINT NOTICE IS 11Elll!IY GtVl!H ,, "'' ro' the ~mi'le pi'nnacle could ___ Hv11tlnv1on ltt<n, c111fo•11l1 "''' , , , , , cr1dl1oro "' tllt ~bQ ... ""'"'" dl(.,,.,.,1 .1.1\N" Oiied M1rtll 17, 1111 11Tht follow"' l>trlOl'I 1 do"' UI ntst lhtl 111 P•flOn1 h1vln1 cltlm1 a11ln1t be "Mr Ed II" now owned sVPE111011 cov11T OP Tiii M&11rlct E. Trip• "'''"' •oo•. ''' -,,, ••••••· 1h1 11ld oec111en1 ••• r"~lrM lo 11111 1 • ' tTATI! 01'" C.l.lll'OllNIA POil , ... , '' • -ooo " -•• ,,. '"' -' b th C ti b 'he' ~ .. _ l11unt l11ch, C1Hlornlt. "'"'· w n n1c1UU"I' Y rt, n y e ornwa ro s, THI COUNTT 01' Oii.i.NOi SlATE OF C.l.ltFOllNIA, Wtlltr J. Ellt•rntn. Jr., •51 Flor• 1111 olflct af '"' dirk ol ..... ~ ..... Roger and Gary. of Reno. NOT ICI OP "~ .. :~':'OP l'l!TrTION ~~NG,!t,~~U~1~Y:!'1l, bl••rt mt . , Slrttl, L•iun• lttch, Cttlfornl•. 1ntlllecl ccurt, or lo 1>r1wnt llltm. 1>11111 Nev, The 21}-foot twin SCteW 1'011 1'1101.l.TI 01' WILL AND 1'"0 Nollrv l'ijbllt Jn Ind !or 1110 ~lltt Tlllt busln111 It btl"I ton<luc!td bv ::f!fl~:i··:~'iht ":i1~:r~ ~f1 ~=,..:.- Howard Hydro was ori"inally LITTEi l TllTAMINTAJIY (I Pl •ton•llY tP••••lfd Mturl<• E. Trip• •n lndlv~:,~ir J. Ell""''"· Jt . CLAUDI! ~-YOUNG, JU Wttt Tlllrlll b WAtVIDI inti JUllJ Jlt l_.,., k"°"'" le mt l'ybtli~td Ortnot Cllll Ot ltJ PllCt Slrtt!, l1nt1 A.111. (.1l!lcrnl1 t tlVI, which purchased by Ed \VilJS Of E•ttlt el LOU!~ MOll:lllS STEUI II, le b! 1nt ~"°"' wl!O;<o ntn'llJ t •• M h 11 1' 2" A II 2 lf1I Soll·71' 11 1111 Pltet of hltlnnt flt JIM u11Hr1ltl'llll Ot<t•ttd. 1<1blcrlbfd to !~t wl!llln Jn,rru,..•nl t rHI •re • · ' 1' ' !n 111 <Tllll•~ pertalnlnll lo 1111 t1t1t1 Fresno for $20.000. Bobby NOTI CE 1s NEll:EIV GtVE N lhll ·~-now 1t<11,d lh•• •••cultd 1111 ••m•. LEGAL NOTICE "' ••Id d<Ktct.,.,t, wlll'lln four m111tll1 Pelton of Inglewood driving M1.-,. toyl11 KOl\1111 11n lillfd heroin i0t11e111 set ll 1tter •n. ""' oubllc1tlOll ot thlt l'IOllOI. ' • Prtltl~n to1 Probllt ol wHI •1'111 Jtin t Jolls! Otolocl Mtn:h I, 1t11 Nick and Roberta Nichols' 1or 111u1ntt o1 Lttrt" Tn11m1nt1N No11ry0 l'ub!I<. c111101nl• ClllTll'tC.1.~i"~; I USIMllS w11111m l!u.tn1 ''"""" "The Witch " a nd "Warlock" to •ell!lol\lr !l ord Wtlve<:ll "''"''"' "r!n,IPl l Oltl~t Jn ll"ICTITIOUS NAMI E•ecvtor of"" WIU" 10 w/llth I• mtd1 for furlftt• 1tt1tltUllfl. Ortnt• Counl'v T/lt u~d•••I•""' dotl ttrlfh ~ h tl>t 1bo¥t n1mM 4tcfllt~I piloted by Jim f..!urphy, are '"" tntt 11\f llf!le •M Pii e• cf ht1rl"' M~ COl'llrnlu!Oll E•11ru rondyctlnt , binlne., 11 1100 Adtrn,, C:UUOI •· YOUNa lh . '" t I"" ltmt l'lt l ltt1n JI! tor Ap•U •· Mtrch 1, lt1l (. 1 Mtl Ct ltlornlt ur.der Int Ile JU w .. 1 Tltlnl It""' 0 er pr~me ~urfa S, 1111, ti •·:IO '·'"·· In the C"'"'""'" •ub!hht<! o • .,,,, (011! DlllY l'llOI ti~~;, llr~' nttT\I of ' CINl!M.A flE1'l •111t1 ""'· C•Uftr~I• ""'' Trai]crboats/\Vest, compiled hotels and entertainment [Or The btg blown fucJ h ydros ot D•Ptltrntnl No. l ~ Ille! court, Mtrc~ ,,. 1' t nd Aprll 1, I, l"l 610·11 ESTATE 1nd lhtl ttlcl' Urm It <Ofl'IPCtlfd Toh "1"'Ul t i 100 Civic (enlor D"~e WHI, In ' Att.nloif hr I JKUt.r by the eo'ito'' of Se a the entire family. v.•i\J be part of Sunday's racin11 "'~cu, or 51111• Ant. C•llfornl• LEG 'L NOTICE of 1"e "'110"'1"'' ''""'· ""'°'' "'"'' l'ubllohff Or•n•t c1111 c11ty 1'1111, IY DttlHI Mi rtll IJ, ll1I n In lull. tt!<I l lt ct of rH IOtnct II ti Mtrt.h s, lt, lt, U, 1,71 'U-7\ II r "-r h l l II r schedule that starts at noon w E si JOHN 10111w1 J\1a gaz1ne. is a co cction o tJ<.Jffie o t e s ones e o d I t d t cciunt., Clt rk ' ,..~"'9 1c1101n s"oh•11 Sul11Yct11, 1on LEGAL NOTICE ~lo,;cs ro, the adve11tu ,.,ome high advl!nture "'hile others an ea ures a spec v.·a 'r HALt 111:t1Y c111r1 •1c•Tll! o, 1ut1N1s1 Hoovtf w.,, 1~1"1 ••·•· ci. skiing attempt on the record ... N•rtll Mtlll llrNI PICTITJOUS H.l.MI Mt•t.h J, !Ill ·--------------" b t b . t give factua l information about r 'l l•ntt A"' <1111 ... ~11 '"' un<11rs!,nld do Ctrll h "''" lrt R.ohdtn s. ~11111"'"1 l'·IHff sma oa 0\1·ner \Y O is no o 1-2.11 mph by Danny Tel· 0111 •M,·Nll <lfll!Y'""'' , buiiniu ,1 uo lrYln~ s1~11 ol' c1111orn11, Or1n11 Count·" Cl"ll:Ttl'!CATI" o' au1rN•SI t t l . l I l the a rea a nd the r c ·r r l Ch h 'll I s Be d. Att' " "lltlentr ,Ovt NtwPCrl llttCh Ctllfornl• und•t 011 Mite~ .], ltll, btlort mt. • l'ICTITIOIK HA.Ml con e nt o s ay 1n oca \Va er~ a I I IC.~ O urc I 0 an rnar UlO ,.~11~:11 .. • 0~1,,., Coti! O•llY "llof ,,.., ··11,1111ou. firm "'"'~ cf 5,.;.,lll<LE Not•rv PuDlk 1n ,..,, for ••Id $1•"· Tiit ul'ld1ril1l'lffl dolt ctr1llY .~, 1. but \\'ants to head for distant be found. a t 12·45 Mi h 1, 111 u lt7I ,1111 PLENTY ind 1ft11 111d firm 1, corn1to11d 01rton111y '"'"''"d llchd111 S'9Pll1n <onduct ln1 • bu1tn111 11 Xt7 • M•rlnt . l•••tiif••·······-iiilOOO._lii.iiiiiiil•iilliiil•tiiiiiijii"l-Oii,_li:iiii,iiiiiiii••····· of l~t lcllowll\I ''''°"' wlll'• n•""'' Sulllvckl ~nawn lo mt to bt '"• ~•rton lelbo• h!enG, Ctlllornl1, undlr r~1 lie· I 1--Jn full '"" l'lf(ll cl ' r~tlOtnct i re "'"°'' ntmt 11 1ub1crlb•d 10 lht wflhln llllou1 firm n1m1 ol' "SCOftl'10 IV paces. I I 191!0'Nt: !n1!rumfl!I t nd t ck .... wltd11Mi1 /\t llftCUltcl THE $EA" t!ld !ht! Jt!d firm Ii (0..,. Since more than two out I To"' EY1nJ Jr .. 'io •••1~• A••·· '"' '""''· 1to'fd "' '"• 1011ctw1110 ••"""' wh01• N,w1tort llt<h, Ctllf. !OFFICIAL Sl<At l ntmt 11'1 lull ind Jltct ol •••ld•n(• flf lhree boats sold a rc, 1 Jim ,,_,Vlcktr. 1110 U!ll St., N1w1t~r! MtrJ I(. H""'"' It 11 fol lows: tr;i ilerable, the book should I CAMPING 9••<~ ci•ll No11rv l'ubl1c·CtlllG1nr1 s1nor1 Let w111'"' JO• f'trn1111, !<Irk' ""'~" IT11 E. ltlbCI l lvd, ••l"CIPtl Ol!lct In Cc1on* dt! Mir , c1n1. have an appeal to boating ltiboi, c~111 0•1nt' coun1Y D111fd M1rc11 10. u 11 C'llhus'asl•,, Tom Evtn' J1 MY (OmMl!llOl'I E~Plr•t S1nGr1 lit Wt lttr• '' Jimfl W MtVlc~•r Nov. U, lf11 STAT[ OF CALIFOllNIA, 0 . . II e g . Sea Kirt s 'Evtn• l'uttll•lltd Or•n•• co.ut O•U~ l'itol OAANGE COUNTY : ng1na y app ar1n Jn STATE OF C•l ll'OllNIA M•rch J, n. It. ,,, 1'1! U l-11 01'1 Mi rth 10, 1911. ""'"'' n'lt. • an d w r i l I e n ab OU t i BUG OPAN GE COU NTY; "'"'"' l"Ubllc ln '"" tor ••I.II st1t1. !railerboatrrs. the s tories and On M•rc11 11• "11• btlc•P m•. 1 LEGAL NOTICE "'....,111v •-•rM 51""r• Lt• W•" .. " NottrY Pwbllt In •nd lo• 1tld Sii i•. k....,...n lo m« to bl tn. PlrMn w11~.., pictures were selected t o pert0fl1it1 111"''"'° Torn l!:v•nt J•.. n•""' '' ~ubttrlbtl "' tl'tl w11~1n lrl· Jlf!I McVl!krr tnd l<lr~ Evtn• kl>CW" ....... ,. ttr~nl l lld t(knlWltdfed ll'tl IU)CU!ld present a sampling of the lo ,..,. to a.. 1111 o•rtons wt.o<• n•m•i CltTIPICATI! OP 1ul1Nl!J1 '"" ••mt. 'bl t . . th $ 1,1 MIDKrlbtO to ""' wl!!lln ln,lt\Jm•n: l'"ICTITIOUS H•MI COl'1clt l Seti) poss1 e cruise rips in e 3195 ,,.,, •rt..c1wlfdttd 1111, •~tcvitct 111@ Th• uM•ttltnH "°" c1r111 .. 1111 '' Mir" 11111 M«toro ~estern states from Can.ad.a conduc11.,. 1 1>u11"'" 11 '°' McFHcf•n "'°''" ""b'k -c1111ornt• (O'fiiC1t1 \HU Pl1ct. Newport lt•clli Ct11tornlt. U1'1ffr l'rlnclpt l Olllc1 In O :\l exico. Jo An.,. Mt nl'I 1111 tld ltfou1 llrrn n11nt ol PYIAMIO Ort1W1 Coun!v Some of !he trips desc r ibe.d i ,..0,1,., l'uttllc -C•!lto•~,. l!XCM.kNGOllS incl "'" 11ld n""' Is M1 CemmJn lort !••''" I Prlrt<!1t1t Ofllct In Comt>CIM ~I th• lollow!nt P8rtOl'I, Wi'ICSt April '· Ull are lo Yo il derness are.a s. ac-'TAX & LIC, 0,.,,q, cwnlV "''"'t 1n full end ti•<• '' r111111nt1 PutUt11111 or11191 c1111 0111r 1'1111 'bl l b •-t 0th 1 MY comml1o110n E~•lr11 11 11 1011ow1; M••tll n, lf, 7'. A.trll ~. 1111 Uf-1t t'ess1 e on Y Y IJ\Ja . ers 1 M•~ 11, "" N•"'~ J, c1s1ubf, Hu c,,,1c1 ''··1-------------'-- are about y.•a terways close to "\ Publi•htd o,,,,., Co••l 0111, •Her Coit• Met•. c1111ornl1. LEGAL NOTICE I M1rcll 1•. ?,, 11'111 A.orll l, J, 1'n 60J.11 Dllll!t M1rcll 11, 1'11 c1v1liz.ation with nearby shops, N•n'Y J. c111ubf LEG 'L N-CE St1+. of Ctlltornl1, Ottn1t Counll': l'·Jll1 Coast Guard Sets Exa111s F lotilla 57 of the U.S. Coa st : G'tn1rd Auxiliary announces ! resumption of the Courtesy :\f o to r boa l E\.aminations stnrting this mo~th. I ~iembcrs of F'lolllla 57 will l L'Onduct the exa minations at 1 Ne-v.·port Ounts a nd a i Dana Point on the t hird Sunday of r r ery month sta rling Sunday.I :\larch 21. Hours are from j 10 am. to 2 pm The Courlesy Motorboat E:ii:-1 am1na11on is a free check of l bc;at equipment by a trained and qualified rnember or the USCGA. The Camping Bug is a 1971 • ~tandard Trails W•st Campster. slandacd built (model 1111) end The trailer is fully •quipped with Electric Brakei, Ou•en Si1e Bed, Ice 801 and Butan• Stove. The tot•I coit for th•ie tw o units is only $3195 + T .. & Lie. Social #'s fl 112524627), (S0419j. Bug, So if your spouse is bugging you to nit th• rctd -try • Campin9 eaclusively at HARBOUR V.W. 18711 IEACH ILVD. HUHTIHIOTOH HACH. CAUF. 142..j05 Boals lh<t\ pass thr elf· emin111ion will hf C."l'Brded a d('ra l which is recognized by lhe Coast (.tuard anti har bor pa1rnl boarding officers ;i~ in t!icR!ini:: the hoat complie~ 11 1•11 1.-rlcr al ho:i t i ng rc- r;·1 1trnrn1:0 lr.._,_ ____________ _ "' VII On M••tll II. 1'11, lllftrt ""· • '',';1~T~Of~ ... :~~i:N•:s '.-. Noll r" "ubllc 111 11'111 !or ttld Stile. Tho 1 .. ,1 1 ~·-• ''''' H-l ltv tltoetrtd N11KJ J, CtUVOf "' -lie ,... t rt ClllTll'ICATI 01' IUSINIJI t1town to rni lo ... 111• Hntn wllOll hltlnt11 11: l'l(TITIOUS NAMI" ""'" 11 \uDtcrlbl<I ft !ht 'll'llll!n !n-NEWl'OllT ((NTER OJITHOl'l01!!1, I Tiie un<11r1 lt11ed dotl ctrtlf" 1h• It ilrvm"'t 1..,, t tkl'IOWllfdttd tht u.cvltd •to H1w11rt C1nl1r Drl'v1 5ullt 104 conOuCllno t butlnto 11 111 W. Mtmllton 1111 ime N-PO•I flttcll, (tllfo<nla n.60 St .. Celt• Mt11. Ctlllor'lllt, v11d1r ,,.., to,F1c1~l SE AL) Jt"1tl '· tl'ld Sltll• A. Ch•••·· llCHflou1 llrm n8MI ot AL'S THOMAS Mtr~ 9llll Mo<ton lt03 W, l?"rnbtu, Avt., APllhlll!'I. SAFlTY SIEJIVIC! l rod 11111 ttld tlrm Nol•'' P11~lc-Ctll1ornlt C1llfor nl1 fll).I lh comPOn11 ol' ""' l91!1wl"1 •t rtcn. Prlntlfl•I O!fl<• 111 Jtmto F, Cll1vc1 whoo• n•"" 111 full •fltl 1+1c1 If r11ld1nc1 011"11 c1ynfy l'ubll111td O•tnl t C111ot Otllr •1r..1 11 t o follcwt: My (om,,,IUlon t!•~l•tt M1rch l, Ii, lt, U. lt71 •11·11 '°"" Me••· c1111. l'wbl11hto °'""'' co.11 011lt ";101, LEGAL NOTICE I 1!1lht<"" G•ukntl, ')Of MIMr I t.. A••ll '· 1111 011t0 M•rch 11. i"1 M•~"~'~'c''.:'·c'~'·cu~. ~·~~~"'..''.:·.:'~"~'--~~:•::·"" 1-----,..,-.,,------E11h1r G1\l'dt11ll -IAll .)flJ I ST•TE OF CALIPOllNIA, LEG" N~CE NOTICI: TO CfllDITOltl OftANGll!" COUNTY, ~ VII IUl'l'JllOll COUIT 01' TNI' On M•r(ll II, lt11, lle!o•~ mt, • JTATI Of' C.1.ll,.OIHIA POii, Hol1ry PuttllC In •1'111 lot 1110 Slt!t, f'·JtlH TMli COUNTY 01' OJIAN•I 9'ftlOlltllr tO~tltlO ll!"l!htr 01\ld1nll Clll.Tll'ICATI OP IUllN•Sl Nt, A• .. tn '"°""'" II "" lo be !ho 1trton .mc>'t l'IC:TITIOUS NAME Etf1!r ol A. MlltON GllEEN, tka 11~· !1 1utts<•lbtd fc lh• Wl!ll!n 111· t h1 ul'l&tfllfnH does (fr!llY n1 ., AlYAH MILTON GRl!(lf, Ot<t tHd. .....,.,,, '"" Kkl\IWlfftld .... ••KUltd COnducl!nt • D111lnt11 It 7'l N!illOI NOTICE II HIERl!9Y GlYEN to .... l~e u me. w1v. NtWPOfl SttCI!, C1lrtM11!1, flMO. crftllOrt II tht t llo\rt ntrnlfd '""'"°'nt !Ottlc!t t Still ~ ulldl• nw llctrtl0u1 11"'11 ,,._ of 11'111 t!I """°"' h1•I"' cltlm1 •••ln1t Mt rv hi~ !Oii llANCHO CAl tFOllNIA l'llCl"l!flTl!I t!>t Stltl do<"""! 1r1 rMVl•td i. ni. Nolt"' l'Mttllc -Ctlll0t11lt i nd !hi! ltkl firm 1\ CtlrllllotM of lflam, wllh thl nttflll,.., 'fOUCl'le•.. lf'I l'rlnc!1111 ontc1 In !lot loll""I'"' .,.r,an, ....._ "'"" 1tt "" 1lllc• of 1111 t1t tt of "" •&ov-~~'(:,,,',..,'j1~~ t!•Olt H lull 11'1<1 •ltc• of ,.tldtl'IC• It 11 tolloVfl : tnlllltd court, or " t'lttnt llltm. wl"' St""'" C. HDl'lflno, l'IJ Arn!-w1r. lht nt<llllrv ,,_11.,,, lo "'' w"' I Al•lt 9• itn NtWHfl l t1(1>, CtHfor"lt '2640 dtn l•nod •I 1111 ofll••• " ...... 11 .. 0••• Publl!lltd Ortl'lll C0t1f OtllJ l'\1111 Dtltil l'rbrvtr• If, 1111 COOK!l!V. !CHUMA.CHEii, COLll!"MA ... IMtrth lJ, H, .kl>rll 1 .•• 1111 11 .. 11 $!"""'ft (, HoP!lnt MIHYAll:O .. l'tOWAJID, 11! Town ...... Slt!t ol' C11lf0t11l1, l ot A.Mein CounlY: C..,..1,.., flotcl, Or1,,.., Ct !llornl1 f?oUt, I LEGAL NOTICE o" Pebr"lrY ''· ltll, tlt'lw • mt. wl'llc~ 11 ..... •l•c' of bu1ll'lfH "' "'' I 1 Noflf'I 1'11bll< tn tnd for 11!d Sl1!1, undtrtlt,..,, In t U "'''"'' llt•llll'llfll p stH ,,,.._11¥ t•°'''"' S1•0Pltn (.. HOi>•Fftl , .. "'' Hitt# "' tlld dtc~dtlll, .. uMn PICTITIC\U •UllNlll ·-to "'' to "' ,~. H'9ltl """"" """ rnon1111 .n ... Ille ""' M llctl!trt NlMI ITATIMINY "''"" t. wttc•!blfd " Ille wlttiln !Fl' of "''' Millet . f,..t tolloV1l~1 Pt•1on It 1k>ln1 ""•IMll 11fun'llnl tl'lll 1cl._lfd1td ltt. tllllC~ltd Otltll "el:>r111rv 1t, U n ''' Int •tmt. N. ICATHllYN Gll l!EN I NYD£ llARIC UJl ~l !Tl!•Y. IUl!Ol'"F lf;I AL Sl.All E•Kulrl• of"" wm W 1'1h St,, Co111 Mtn , C1l!Ttrnl1 F•tlll! C. l-1un11"'~" M I~ tl!Ovl n•""" dK'1tr"t 11''1 No!trv l'ubllc·C1ll!ornl1 COOICllT, ICMIHAAC:Hll, «l"IMAN, llncc1 (tmHMlll. tic. I.wt SI.. l'rlncl,11 Oltltt I" ~UtY.1.10 I NOWAllO (ftl11 M .. t. (1!tlernl1 •HH l OI Al'lt•~I (eunl'v IU T"'~ .... (-fTT RM41 Tnl• bu1t ... 11 ,, "'"' COndlilCltO '" My (Olflmlnle" •••Ir•• Or1111t. C.llf•tllt ,,... 1n ll'ldlYlf v•• .kut ll, Hll Ttl; U t-'111 II . Cl n'IH NUI T·ll tU Atllf' ... YI IM" llKY!rll Publlolled O•tftt• '"''' Otllf Jlll&f, •ubl+thtll Oltntt Coit! O•lt~ PilM l'u•1ttlloll 0rll'ltt Cot\! 0.1"' l'llllt M1rch n. II, 26. 1\1•11 1. 1171 ~ .. ,. Ml •(ll J. 11. It, ~·. \0 1 "4·11 Mttt~ J, 11. "· H. nn ·~" • ~ OA\l'i PILOT ___ S •I lrou1• lfJoney~~ Worth How Retired Pe1·so11s Em·n l\fo1·e a11{l Collect Be11efits By SYLVIA POllTER ~1r A, ,1 69 \esr old s<>U cmploved reul est11!e de 1ler ea1 ned mo~e than $tl OOJ Ja~1 )car -far 11bove the rnax· Jn1um the l11w pcrnilu hlm to earn and sllll drnw Social Stcurtl) benefit~ Neve11he!ess ht co 11 e <'I e d clost: to all thf' checks lo \I hr ch he "as enlllled ~lr T re•1re<! e e:ircd S6 000 r"t'raung a han1burger stand al a sum'Tll.'r resort between ftiemor1al Dai and Labor Day last 1ear -a~:i1n seemingly enou~h to ehm1nate all Social Secur1!1 bcnefl!.s Neverthel("';s he got a fat ?Qr· t1on of his ben~f1ts 1()1) ft1r F 1 re11 ed accountant earned S4 200 $.1600 prepnrrng 1ncon1e tax returns during Januar) April the balance 1n the form of a monthly retainer of $100 fr on1 July throllgh Decem~r for doing n1u1or chores for a cl1enl Oeso1te the fact that h1s e:irn1n~ "ere suff1c1e11r under the r 1m har 'retirement lest' to preclude his benefit p11 1 n1cnt~ ftfr F also C(l!Jected most of his checks ~hlt1ons of Americans do not realize that the tesl fo1 pa1 ment of benefits under Social Security Is nol the same £or the self-emplo1cd o Ider American as 11 1~ for the person 11ho "orks for somc:ine else as an en1plo)e -s1mplv because I he self--employed person s income 1s not as closelv connect.cd 111th his uork as 1he cmplo1 c s •The confusion rih1a1s has been a 1nattcr or d"e)l concern lo us ' s~1d a Social Secur1tv spokesn1an Anvlhn1g lh;it v.1JI help people grasp the d1f fcrences "-Jll be valuable Okay here goes -1n t1ddlhon lhl' \11\li s11~ ~ that no mt.tier 11h!ll )our lot 11 c 1riungs £or fl \ear you 11111 ~ct 11 check ror :iny mtinth in \\!J,clt you neither earn \l.'llJ:eS of more than S\40 nor pe~form substantial ser\'lccs as a self.employed pe1 son 1 Important note the l1m1t on "hat you can earn in any ) car or an\ tnonth 11 ill be r111sed under the blll r; ri v before Congress -probably to at least $2 000 a ) ear and poss1bl) to as much as $2 tXl 1lus though will not alter in anv 11a) the message of this column ) 1':01\ comes the d13hnc- llon U ~ ou work for somrone else ilS an t1nplo~r the test of 1 our retirement tn anv g1\£n month is the tot.a! or )our i.1ages specifically under todays law whether )OU earn State Aide Claims Firm Coercion · Cal1forn1a \eh1cle registra 1100., increased ~y almosl one .tw(f pulhoq during I 9 7 O , Department of fttotor v'eh1clts figures s11ow Dil!V Director Robert C C.Ozcns said vehicles registered 1n the State on December 31 1970 totaled 13 818 869 -an increase of -4!)a 918 01er 1009 Nevertheless the 3 72 per cent gro\\lh in \eh1cle popul.'l lion reflects a relallvelv pcor year 1n the automobile 1n dustry and compa res with in creases of 5 16 percent 1n 1969 and 6 3 percent 1n 1968 ~Io I orc\c\e regLStrat1ons -Under the Jleneral rule\ your annual earnings are the measurement of }our retire men\ I£ )OUT ca 111ngs wh le still under 72 are SI !i80 or less ~ou arc con!'i•dere:i com pletely retired 1! )OU earn over that amount }OU give up some or all 'our bcncfJts for the \car continued to soar h1llln,1?. a IQtal of 561 ti2.l - a one \ear 1nc1ease of 92 138 or 19 6 per cent ~o less than 200 000 motorc~cles have been put on I.he roads of (iahforn1a 1n JUst th1 ee ye<'rs Fee pa 1d pa ssenger au101nob1lc rcg1strat1on'i h1l 10 00t 155 -up aOOut 222 llOO O\Ct lhe prior )ear There 11ere 2lso I 753 63S trutks and I 299 716 trailer Tax~xempt !state count\ c1t3 etc) vehicles totaled JM 692 Beacl1 Man 1 0001 OF CIL PA(NTINC'S WHOLISA.Lf WA.J:iHOUSI OflN 1'0 THI JUILIC Marks 25th 50°/o OFF 161' E EDINGL!lll SANT.Ii .. Nit, , ... ,.. IJ5..4Mil Bank Year DE .. L•ltS WJiNTED Attention lnve1tor5 •1t11to0 LIP:E INSUltANtE f•• 111 lew •• $21.80 t.1onthly* .......... 846 1246 1•lt tl!I • 01 ..... 11 Rrcherd Fabian Ae9hterf'd Fh1.int1c.I Advli o1 P () Boe 1101 H u"tl11~to11 leoch, Collf •?•41 09• JS Lasl vear J 287 719 ntw autos tn1ct:s trailers and moto1cycleS< were reg\stered 1n Cahfornta and 455 .J21 out· or ~\;ile I ehJCles chargrd lo Cat1rom1a reg1slrat1on Offset ting the~e JOClClSCS t~e ()1\ncrs of srin1c I 2~7 000 1eh1cles left thent unieg1s!ered for var 1 o us re:ison~ Jori! ed them or di ove them out of the Slate Bank Lu.tn Hcdnccs Rates Cr otkcr Clt1zcns J\a111Jn3.I Bank announced ~lnrch 16 a 1• per~nt reduc.ion 1n 11.,. re.11 e~late loan rates effectnc 1n1n1ed1a1eh Tne reduction Jhe fou1 lh th1~ ~car b~1n~-. the r:i'c for a prin1e single fa1n1lv residen t1;il lo,1n to f,~4 percent The h:ink s:i d 1t \\ 111 consider f1n-111c1n,; up lo 80 p~rcenl or the loan on a max1mun1 30 ~ear tern1. ---- Post Given you're never nervous with our service sevenly-one1 al ~~L~ GENWAY IUSE A NEW '71 GUllD Piii PONTIAC DEAURS SYSTEM .... ,,.._ ....... .. ,, _._ '\. t ---=--. .... . - l .·._ --, ---· -· - ,._, ues11 u1r <WI .LEASING As Lew 11 $12t.t5 - 801 LONGPlll pQffnAC 13600 WCM llVD, WISTMINSnl 192-66$1 ... 6i6-2500 CONTACT SILL DAWSON OVER ffi~OfJNTER ' ·~t!': !..,_.. ... _ .. -.~ tf ...... .....,.,, f .... ,,_ MAtD '"' --ll\lrlll~ llMfk~ ., C9_.. .... NASD Ll1tl ... for Thursday Mardi U 1971 ' . . • I Complete-New York Stock List tU!W '1'0.( fAl'I• """r.01 ..... _ .... '"• YIA Sllldt ILidl•,._ itrlue ki.t Net iJIHJl.I MIP .... CiMI CM • " .. , • ' 1 1~ " '" '" ' .. " " 4 !%': :3 ~" BS 6J , " . " n ' ~ , , . lt ll -C- " ·~ " ,1 " J l; '" " ' " " '" " I nr .. '" .. " li . . ' ... " . " ... " 1;1: r.;z '" 'i . .. 1l~ '" :f'' ;t ? ~ ". " ~ i: Ui. u11 4 ~ ,jl ~~ 1"1 " • " l' . " 71 11 ~ l ,, • 1• '" " " .a )I\ •. il" 1\1 t " " 1l t ,.... .. .. llHll..I H1911 LAW (llM (lie. " 1"1 ~ . ,, ,, ,, . 3• ••• '1 11, 11.l • ' . l 9 :111 • 11t ll • •a ' ' ' . II 11 I l 1 I o Ir) I I , • l • 161 "'• ,, ;ti' • " -\JI' 6 o . " I lt , . ''" 11)0 7" • ,, 1: ' ' . • • ! l" ' ~, • l l • 1 " • 1A 11 ) ,,, l '~ .,~ ... .. ' J l ,, .. 1' " • " ' . ,. i~ jl I " ,, " . ,J l"'. " ,.,, ., n • JI n'4 ' ~ In 11 • f " l "' " .. "' ld 1'. 11 ~t .• •1 t J 1JS lJ , ••• Jl9 tl ' ·~ ir.: ~ .. 21 1' • " . ll 20. ol(ll ,, • " :1461 2U l•, -G- " . 11 .. " , .. .. " " ~. 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OAJLY l'ILOT • • \ \ • • 1!2 DAILY PILOT F"riday, Marth 19, 1971 l· • • 1 Week Only The most incredible sale hon~ aaza this area has e''er seen! Limited quantities on many i1en1s. No refunds. No ex· changes. No special orders. • E asy Credit Terms Availa•le • Also Baak.Americard and Master Charge • Drli,·ery Arrani;!••· 1u e nts ftladt" At 'rin••· Of Sal .. We Need Cash! Otc11er dies. CHFC is /t1ced iuilh satisfyi11g ils 111111111fac/11rers a11d Jhe fa111ily es/ale, a11d cash 11111sJ he raised/as/! To do this tlJt have sliced prices lo rock botlo1n 011 e1:ery ite111 i11 our store. Everylhi11g goes lo raise this 11111ch needed cash!! 'fhc death of CHFC's owner h a:oo torced us to take drastic: action to dispose of our gigantic inventory and ta.isc cash immediately! No Dealers Please! Fantastic Selection of Gorgeous Decorator FAMOUS BRANO QUILTED LAMPS! Paintings & Wall Hangings! . Mattress & Box Spring Sets Twin Set Reg. '79 NOW $48 All Sizes, Sly/es "''d Colors! 11edul if11/ 11 r1 ificiul P/Jnls & f·-lr111't'rs ·A It~ izeJ.' Full Set Reg. '89 NOW $ 54 !:iwag Lamps, 'fable Lamps, Wall Lamps! ALL BEDSPREADS! Choose-( rom 8( vlurl ul array of Prints, ~:t'~.& Vcl><1<~m$~ T,~ ;n, full, Queen While 'J'hey /....u s/ Unbel iei•able Bedroo"' B11ys.' 5-Pc. Contemporary Dou!-ilc Dres-,cr, Mirror, Queen J Tcadboard. 2 Nitc Stands. PRICE Queen Set Reg. '129 NOW $77 Values NW $94 to YOUR CHOICE BOOKSHELF 3.Sh•lf 36" WALNUT BOOKCASE SOFA SAVINGS! BONUS! 6' 'J"aJI 5-Shl·lf llOokcase. While, Grcl'O or Walnut. 5-Pc. SPANISH BEDROOM 'J'riple Dresser. t.lirror. l-lcadboard, 2 Nitc Stands Reg.$449 Now$228 - 6-Pc. Thomasville BEDROOM 78" Triple Dresser, Twin Mir- rors. King Headboard. 2 Commcxies. H11ge R tcli11er Savi11gs! Ge1111it1e La·Z-Boy RECLINERS in Velvet. Tweed or Vinyl. Reg. '149" $87 NOW 100" Velvet Tuxedo Sofa. Avoca· N $166 do or G<>ld Reg. $299 OW Spanish Blacl-N VinylSofa Reg.$249 OW SJ38 Early American Quilted flo ral N s147 Sofa, Maple 1<im. Reg. $299 OW ':'in~l or Fa~ric Sleep Sofa. Full N s12s size 1nnerspr1nJ!: mattress. OW Dining Room & Game Sets 7-Pc. Spanish Dining Set Round or Oval Table WJ.~· 12" Lca~·cs. 4 Damask SMt Chairs, Plus Buffet & Hutch. Reg. $S49 Now Now Now lovely S·Pc. Chrome Dinette. Padded Sea.cs & Backs Reg. $169 Handsome 5-Pe.-Game Set. Occ. Table W/15" Leaf & 4 Chairs. El•gant Swivel Chairs 'fo blend with any decor! High Grade Decorator Fabrics Reg. 'S9" $24 .NOW MAN SIZED VINYL RECLINER For body pampering relaxation Jn Handsome Greco. Reg. 579 .• 3731 W. WARNER -SANTA ANA -PH. ( 714) 546-6730 STORE HOURS MON. THRU SAT. 10 A.M. 'Tll 10 P.M., SUN. 10 AM. 'Tll 6 P.M \ EIKE A Complete Guide ••• Where '· " I I j : .. I I -'f ;'ff #;,;I ' BENTALL'S SILVER PORPOISES LEAP FROM QUARTZ GEODE Unique Art House Ope11 111 Newport .. There Is a story told about a man \\-'ho traveled the world over searching for beauty in srt. He spent many yt-ars and when he had accumulated a great collection of works , each with its own special me11ning for him, he returned home and wrote a book about his travels and how he had found each piece. He called his book "The Passionate Eye." The author's name is long since lost to memory, but the story had a profound effect upon a man named Stan Bent.all, who has carried on his own search for beauty and had to look no farther \\-'hen he wanted a name for his sculpture gallery which opened last month in Fashion Island. Newport Beach. He call· ed it "The Passionate Eye." The gallery is unique not only because it houses sculpture exclusively but in the way __,ach work is displayed -as if each were a rare gem . It makes the viewing exciting, involving and most pleasurable. Jn the collection, currently on exhibit, one will find the action-packed pieces of Tom Holland with men in vigorous. masculine activities; female nudes in sensitive moods, as well as models of his large size Western monuments, "Tribute lo the Pony Express" and ''Cowboy, 1870." > > ' ( 1 Friday, Mi11'th 19, 1971 DER _\ to go • •• What tlo • •• .,.. .............. __. --- f. The creations of Guyol in sculptured glass shine like bright rain drops. There is "City of Tomorrow," ''Lav a.'' ''Prisoner'' and a whimsical piece tilled '"Three Againsl One" with three ducks In a nose dive. His contemporary glass sculpture is penetrating, intelligent and witty. TOM HOLLAND'S "THE NAVAJOS' IS TYPICAL OF HIS POWERFUL MONUMENTS SILVER BIRDS IN FLIGHT CONTRAST WITH ROUGH TEXTURE Intermission County Tlieater Groups Start to Comrnunicate By TOi\1 TITUS Of tllt 01lly P•!OI $!1!1 At this point in the week, i( you've been trying to hit all the new shows in the area, you may be a little tired and more than a little frustrated. It's understandable when eight productions lift their curtains in the same week. \Vhy, you might ask, don't the local theater groups gel together and do &omething about it? \\'e!l. the groups did get together about rour years ago with this stated purpose, among o!hers. in mind. The result was the Orange County Community Theater Association, born w i l h a burst of en- thusiasm at the Huntington Beach Playhouse v.·ith virtually every com- munity playhouse in tow. Six months later, with only a handful of interested participants, OCCTA was laid to res!. ~ Victim, of the snrt nf apathy which result.'! v.·hen groups v.•hich are hardly aware of each other's t>X- istence attempt lo coordinate their ef- forts. WEEKENDER INSIDE FEATURES Friday, ri.tarcb 19, 19il There is an lndian Trading Post in Balboa where one may buy beauliful. rare. handmade art of Southwest Indian Tribes. It's run in conjunction with the current Indian Art show at the Museum. See story on Page 24. Stan Oe.laplane rage %4 Oisneyland Mu~i~ rage %4 Knoll's Phofll Day Page !4 Laguna Chamber i\.1usic Pa11e %4 ~avel 8argain5? Page !4 Out 'N' About Pages %5 • %C Guldf' to Mrivle1 P.11ge t7 Telt\'lsion IA.rt Page t7 Guidl' lo Fun Page %8 In the Galleries Page 21 Live Theater Page %t Polith:s nn TV Page %9 rt1erle Haggard Page D Chapman College Playtrs Page 2t In the intervening years, more theater groups have taken root in Orange County, and the conflicts m---faleduling have grown commensurately. This past week is a case in point, with two openings on Tuesday, one on Wednesday and four tonight-and only one each last weekend and this weekend. But hopefully, by next season, there may be a bit more communication among Jhe various theaters in the form or a revived OCCTA which is presently being tested as an ex per i men ta J, volunteer project by this columnist and a colleague on another newspaper, Herman Boodman. As it stands now. 10 rounty playhouses have indicated their interest and, begin- ning this month, they are printing, either in !heir program or newsletter, t~ schedule of upcomin~ productions of other community theaters. This gets the message to the people who go to the theater while they're doing so. thereby boosting each participating playhouse's box office potential. Thus, v.·hen playgoers went to see ''Who'll Sa\'e the Plowboy~·· a:t the San Clemente Community Thc11ter I as t v.·l'ekend, il was brought to their attention that the playhouses in Laguna Beach, Lido Isle, Irvine and Santa Ana are all active this week. and that the Costa Mesa . Huntington Beach. Westminster and Fullerton groups will be going on the board!! in April. And each of these theaters lists the San Clemente pro- duelion in its program or (in Laguna's case) newsletter. Once our local theater.~ begin to cooperate In this fashion, it should be a natural step to the pooling of other resources.J1uch as casting lisL~. costumes and scenery. And then they just might look into that matter of flexible schedul· ing-postponing a show one week, say, if too many other groups are opening on the same weekend. There are more theaters around today than there were when the fir3t OCCTA nourished briefly in 1967, but there also appears lo be more communicalion among them now. The time for in- lerthealer O'IOrdinalion, which would benefit all concerned, is ripe. Along the walls are ma ssive geometric Rteel sculptureii; by Dan Gluck and his glass-topped table bases in abs1ract and floral designs with plenty of •varie1y. The huge sculptured. front door of the gal!ery is also the work of Gluck. WOODY HERMAN HIGHLIGHTS OCC JAZZ FESTIVA~ SATURDAY Woody a11d All Tl1at Jazz Highlight OCC 'Festival An array of 75 bands from throughout the Western Unired States and a special concert by Woody Herman's Thundering Herd will highlight the third annual Orange Coast College Jazz Ensemble Festival March 25-27 which starts at 8 a.m. each day in the auditorium, 2701 Fairview Drive. Costa Mesa. Herman, currently the hottest big band in lhe nation, will give a two-hour concert in the · OCC gymna sium at 3 p.m. Saturday, March 27. Tickets. on sale al the OCC Student Slore. are $3 for adullS and $2 for students with a student body card. University, college. junior colle~e and high school bands have signed frir the festival rrom California, Utah, Nevada, and Washington, n111king it the largest festival o1 lt.s kind in lhe Western United Slates. Director Charles Rutherford h~s lined up many thousands of dollars in prize'I, Including instrumer.ts, records, trophies and cash awards. All awards will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the gym before the Herman concert. EJ:ich of the 75 bands v.•ill be allotted 20 minutes on stage durinR the com- pelilion. Judges will be top-notch pro- fessional musicians: Sonny Sti~. Clark Terry, Dan Morgenstern of Downbeat Magazine. Raoul Romero and Rick Davis. They will be present in the Auditorium all three da)'S to judge, and to mt.et with 9mall ~roups of young musicians and discuss music as a pro- fession· and latest trends in the field . On Friday at 8 p.m. there will he a special playoff cnmpetilion in the Auditorium for the top bands in the fei:;tiv111. Tickets will be •$2 for ~dulls and $1 with a sl-udent body card. Non-objeclil'e metal sc ulpture or Dale J1allbl'rg ('Stablishes its ov.•n scale. Some are curving designs such as "\Voman in Silhouette'' or '"\Villy the Wanderin1<: Abstr:ict \Vhale "' ·while otht>rs can only be clescrihed as rock-like lumps which graphicaJJ.v depict such amusing titles as "Moose'' or "Teddy Bear." Across the back of the gallery are some rif the silver sculp!ures or Stan Brnt<1ll Y.'h1ch he has combined wilh mineral spr(·1rr.iens -gorgeoU!ii rocks with silent flying hirds, quartz geodes and ;imethysl \Vith sandpipers and porpoises. All tributes to nature and its miraculous untouched beauty . Each v.•(lrk in the gallery i$ purchased outright by gallery owner flrntall, displ;iyed and lighted lo its best ad· vantflgr. Viewers arc encoura)'.:ed to brO\\'Se and stay as long ag they like. Their questions v.·ilJ bt:! answf'rl'd hy cnmpetent personnt>I but. otherwise they :ire left to rnjoy lhe brau!y and serenity at their own speed . Holl y\v ood 's Old Buildings Tumble For Parking Lot Two of the oldest structures in filmlaod hit the dust !his past week to make room for the automobile. Becau.~e or lh(' increased activity in lhe Golden \Vest Hroadcflsters Hollywood lot. a 7,500 square foot two-s1ory huilrting and a 4,000 square fool scenic dock were torn down to provide· additional parking space for KTLA staff members and production companies using the Golden West Video Tape Division faci!i ticg. The building, nearly fif1y years old and daltng back to the days when the property was the site or Warner Brothers original llollywood studio, had been constructed as a studio theatre, with the upper floor partitioned off into dfcssin~ rooms. Al Jolson 11sed one of these dressing rooms while he was making ''The Ja1.z Singer" -the industry's firsl '"talkie" -at t he Hollywood studio. When Paramount purchased the lot from Wamers in 1955 the building became KTLA-TV Studio One. More than 200 people could sit in the audience and walch their favorite shov.•s such as "The Spade Cooley Show•·, Leighton Noble's "Bandstand Revue" nr "The Orrin Tucker Show" being aired Jive from the studio stage. According to KTLA Chief Engineer John Silva, the first <'olor television program lo eminalc fron1 a studio in Los Angeles was a segment of Channe l !)"5 ''C1ly Al Night"' scrirs and it w11s done in TV Studio One in 1955. 'l'~Jaus Landsberg, 1ht> pioner.rlnit genera I manager of KTLA, look newsman Ken Graue .=ind his ''City At Ni1thl" viewers on 1 tour or KTLA And described the new color equipment Installed In Studio One. GUYOL 'S SCULPTURED GLASS 'Ha1nlet' Closes Fullerton Run This Weekend The thunder and lnlrigue of Shakespeare's blood revenge, ,"Hamlet" will roll across the California · State College, Fullerton stages its f l n 1 I performanC(ls tonight through Sunda y. Guest artists Monte Markham and Vernon Weddle appear with a .student company of 50 in this thea~er department presentation beginning a~ 8:30 each even· ing in the Lillie Theater, 800 N, Siage College Blvd., Fullerton. Enthusiastic crowds attending the opening performances last weekend were greeted in the theater foyer with Elizabethian musicians and strollfug players. These pre -show cntertainmenllll will continue this week along with the exhibition of paintings entitled "Hamlet Impressions'' by Laguna Beach artist, David Rosen. Hung on the walls of tt\f theattr01 Inner foyer. the paintings illustrate various lines from the Hamlet . text. Rosen, a nationally prominent artist, has had,12 one-man shows in Los Angelet and several other cities. His work has been shown for the past 14 seasont at the Fe!ltival of Arts ln Laguna Beach. The Cal State Fullerton production ~ fers sharply from the traditiona l melancholy Dane approach lo "Hamlet.'' Director Kirk Mee, asgistant professor of lheater, has stressed "the base motives that drive both king and com· moner." For reservalions phone fl70.-3371 afler «·30 p.m. 24 DAILY PILOT Fild17, Marth }q, 1971 Travel Watch Cabs • ' In London ly STAN DILAPLANE LONDON -Sv.•ingy London is crov.•ded as us· ual. There really isn't a seaso n. It's all year round. London gets jan1med \\'ilh businessmen and diplo- mats. Here's y,·here oil business is done by visiting oil sheill:s. Black diplomats in \\1hite robes fill the hotel lobbies. London is \Yhere they trade conces· sions for y,•hatever they want. It's the hub of 'vorld action -above the table, under the table. The \Val k· in tourist simply hlsn't a chance. Book a room be- fore you get there or you'll wind up sleeping an hour out in the country. * Some insurance: The elegant gambli ng clubs have rooms for members who don't want to stagger home in the early morning. Cost me $15 a year. (Out- of-town membership.) It's pretty chill waking up in a gaming house. The morhing action is the porter sweeping down the hall. Still it's a room. And the price is right. * Better rooms are in the various aeronautical CARMEN DRAGON At Disneyland Sunday Disney Concert Slated N ewpo1·t Gallery Sells Indian Art The Art Rental Count1I or the Newport tlarbor Ari Museum has transformed ii:! Sales and Rental Gallery lnto a Southwest Indian Trading Post for the dura tion of the exhibit "The Art of the Indian Southwest" currently in the 1nain gallery through April IL Beautiful , rare work! of art. handmade by Southwest In· dian tribes, have been brought lo the museum shop. on the same noor with the gallery, for visitors to view and purchase. Outstanding silver and tur· quoise hand-wrought jev.·elry ranging in price from $1.~ to $600 include rings, pins. earrings. concha belts and squash -blOSS<>m necklaces Also featured are bird-fetish necklaces and those made or turquoise and co ral. Kaboli, son of the famous In- dian painter Kaboti J s represented by his paintiag "Dance of the Ra In Messengers.'' ($.WO! Among the many interesting1 and colorful Kachina dolls of- fered is the ''Ogre" Kachina ,' enforcer of child discipline. The slory of the Kachina dolls and masks is told in the Tom Bahti books on In di an Ceremonials, Tribes. and Arts ! and Crafts available at $2 per l'Op)'. For lhe collec1or of fine pottery. a special selection of Santa Clara black. Zuni and Oiegano bowls, Navajo hang-. 1ng pol s and Santo Domingo l painted piece:. are available Other interesung iten1s in- clude cloth Indian do I 1 s, drums, peyote drums, fans and rattles, sand paintings. exquisite je.,.,·eled silver boXes by John Ho:<ie and Richard Yazzie, and a jeweled leather Apache wedding dress. 1'he. Sales and Rental Gal- Hungarian Quartet The Laguna Beach Chamber Music So ciety \\'ill present the Hungarian Quar- tet in concert next Thursday in the auditorium of the Laguna Beach High School, 625 Park Ave., playing the music of Beethoven, Bartolt and Schubert. See guide to Fun for ticket details. clubs, engineer's club and so on. (Usually prefixed with the word "Royal''.) You need a friend to put you up for membership. Versatile composer and con- ductor Carmen Dragon will supply the m u s ic a I ar- rangement and direction this Sunday for the second in a series of afternoon concerts at Disneyla•d. Fine quality Navajo rugs from the various areas of the Navajo Nation offer a selec- tion of representative pattems including ''Two Grey Hills" and ··storm P<ittern. '' They range in price from $38 to SJ.500. lery is open from I to 5 p.m. ----------------------------------- * \Vatch the cabs from London airport. lf it's not metered, it's a pirate. You can make a deal in ad- vance. But if you don't the price will be the driver's soaring imagination. * "My husband will be in Moscow this summer. 11 there 1nything I should tell him to buy?" Places for foreigners to buy are the bard money shops -berioz.ka. Thal is they only take foreign money. No rubles. Have some small bills because they won't be able to break your $20. Cossack fur hats. Jewelry. Amber. Enameled boxes. Scotch whiskey and English gin are cheaper than al home. So reports free lance writer Robin Kinkead, who spent the Stalin years there as a news correspondent. Kinkead gave it a return visit recently. * "C1n I let our thrN-ye1r-old son drink the, weter in Tehiti?" J drink it and Jet my children drink it. I just asked PanAm and UTA and Qantas what they tell people. They say "'ater's OK. * ''We think we h1"e everything for our t rip to Europ., but would. be gl1d to hear 1ny of your ide11 ••. " A pen-size flashlight will keep you from stumb- ling around European bedrooms. (1 spent a day and night looking for the light S\vitch in a French bath· room. Finally located it -you'll never "g1.iess among the pipes UNDE R the wash ~)' * ' A few plastic sandwich bags giv81 )IOU 1iom• thing to put the socks in. The ones you wamea 1ast night and they didn't dry. Also good for wet soap. Can be used for sandwichertoo, if you plcnJc. A knife with a screwdriver blade and a corks-crew finds work to do. Open IA'ine. Repair the hotel plumbing -the plumber rarely comes until you are checking out. * You can buy everything and get everything - you don't have lo treat it lill:e a camping trip. These things I've found handy. * "Will t1kin9 two small childrtn on a bo1t to H1w1il be so terrible we'll wish we hadn't?" No. Ships are so \\'ell set up for children that a lot of people prefer going that wav. I took l\VO of mine on the APL \Vilson. When l sa.,v the passenger list I thought it would be a shambles. Of 500 pas- sengers, there were 200 kids: * But no. The kids v.·ere organ12ed in playroo1ns. They had a meal service at their 0\1·n tim e in the dining room. One whole side of the promenade deck was for supeniled play. No adults allo'" ed. I sa\1 them so litUe, I began to get lonesome. A .. nd the children LOVED it. . * Complementing the Dragon arli!try vt'ill be guest vocalist Claudia Cummings. the 68-- piece Disneyland S}'ltlphony Orchestra and regular park fa vorites. the Dapper Dans and lhe Kids of the Kingdom. Dragon .... ·ill combine this ag. gregaUon of musical talent s i11to presen tations at 1. 3 and S p.m. on lhe Tomorrowland Stage. This weekend's musicale fe~tures on entire program built around famous American standards and music from the Wonderful World of Disney. Dragon has added h i s personal touch to t he Disneyland conctrt , providing spteial scoring for each song. including his arrangements of "America the Beauttlul" and the "Battle Hymn of the Republic." A distinguished s o 1 o i s t , Claudia Cummings has ap- peared wilh such prominent orga11iiations as the Denver Symphony, the Glendale Symphony and the Lo s Angeles Phi Iha r mo n ic Orchestra. EnhergTops For Sports Dic.-k Enberg has been n a m e d Sporlscaster-of-Uic Ye ar for 1970 in balloting con· ducted by~t' Na tional Sports- casters and Sports"'Titers in Salisbury, North Carolina. Vin Scullv and Chick Hearn \rere the "ruaners-up in the \"oling. as Enberg .,.,·on I he coveted honor for the third lime in the past four years. Enberg is heard on Kr-.1PC as !he radio vo1~ or the Calllornla Angels and the Los Angeles Rams. and on KTLA Channel S. on Angel and UCLA basketball broadcasts. He also does a numbe r or sport specials. highlight ~ho.,.,·s and spo rt reatures Of special interest are pain- tings and ink drawings by Mary Moret wtJo has won ac- claim v.·lthin the Indian realm at rurrent juried shows. Mike Photo Day Scheduled At Knott's Knou·s Berry Farm will be under fire tomorrow a s amateur an d professional photographes gather to shoot special models. Naturally, all the six-guns in Ghost Town \\'iii be traded for c amera s when photographerli take advantage of unlimited photo possibilities all over lhe farm during its annual Daguerreotype Day photo contest. Not only will a variety of sets be available for that da y, but dozens of models are scheduled to represent 300 years of American cu lture. They include : lovely beauties dressed iQ. turn-of-the-ttntury period cloth ing; a pretty Spanish senorita and da shing charro: bold. colorful gypsies previewing their Gypsy Camp t'Ostumes : an expr_essl ve Me~­ ican revolutionary cou ple and all of the farm's personalities. This year's Daguerreotype Day will feature n e w categories for the competition. Entries will be accepted Jn : Knotfs Personalities (action shots of models at the Farm ): Fun at the Farm I a class for the humorous or gag shot); and Special Effects (an op- portunity for unlimited ex· perimentation with camera or darkroom techniques I. Photos may be submitted in black and white. 35 mm color slides and color print categories. Black and -...·hite entries must be al least 8 x 10 inches mounted on 11 x 14 board. Wednesday through Sunday and is staffed by volunteer mernbe rs of the Art Rental Council. Proceeds from sales \\'ill benefit the Newport Har bo r Art ;\.1useum, 400 fl.1ain Street , in the Balboa Pavilion. SHOOT THIS HOMBRE With 1 C1mer1 PlteM All slides must be tabbed for Kodak Carrousel. Color prints must be a minimum of S x 7 inches mounted on 8 :< 10 boards In order to be eligib le for prizes. entries must be shot Saturday and must be receiv- ed by Knot 's public relations o!fice by April 21. Contestants Guide Aids Vacation Cartan's Booklet Gives Trip Warnings Did you k11ow that no person or company can legally sell airline. rail or steamship tickets for less rhan anybody else'? Or that jf you have to return earlier than planned while on" a charter trip you'll have to buy another ticket for the journ.ey home'.' These questions -and more -are posed and aRswered b y Thomas J . Donovan. president or Cartan Travel of Chicago, a division of Carte Blanche, in a hard-hittnng brochure detailing his company's vaca· lions all over the .,.,,orld . Donovan, w ho expresses concern at some of the ''bargain-basement I ra ve I come-ons inflicted on the American pub lic" claims that travel is a bargain in terms of the enjoyment people get Crom trips, bu t that in tra\'el -as in everything else - "you get \\'hat yoo pay for." Says Dono\'an: "Really good hotels. rooms, meals, ell- tertai nment, sightseeing servicts and careful, pr<>- fessional attention to tra\·et details are not marketed at discount prices anJll•here in the world. "It Is true that rates may vary seasonally in a ~rtain area, but nobody can offer rooms at Jess than the prices published by the government or hotel associations in these areas.'' Charier r I i g ht s certainly have a place in the travel spectrum, but people must realize the limitations inherent in this form of travel. You have lo go and return together. They are generally large groups with built·ht pr~ blems like the simullaoeou~ movement of hundreds of pie Ct's of baggage. Americans generally do1i"t want to -nor need to - "rough it" whe.n tra l'elling. Donovan claims. "Americans live well at home and 1eed to maintain that level \\'hile abroad to be comfortable and satisfied. This kind of ac· commodation simply i s n 1 t available for 'five dollars a day' or anywhere near it." fl.lore of Donovan 's philosophy plus a mouthwater· ing catalog of escorted and packaged vacations (with a lucid explanatio• or the dit- feren ce between escorted and packaged) are to be found in Cartan's "Vacations All Over The World" brochure. available on request from any local travel agent-broker. ~1itcheH · Signs HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Cameron ~1itchell has been signed to co-star with Sidney Poitier and Harry Belafontt in "Buck and the Preacher'' for Columbia Pictures. Hyouwantthe~vacation you'll have to make waves. Prinress ~to Mexico. mav submit up to three photos ~.:... in eAch category and division. ,.. Thts seems to "'·ork on all ships -I get quite a few glowing letters about it. I've never had a Jetter of complaint. (Five blue water da vs to Ha1A•aH and complete babysitting service. That''s heaven) ~;..· ;-~~~- THE CROPS IN! ~ ;<"' 'All-star Band' Slated 1be big ''All-Slat Band"' of Terry Gibbs has been booked to play at the 1970 Los Angeles Area Telel'ision Ac ad em,, Awards presenlat1ons by prO. ducer Jim Gates. The award! ceremonies "'ill be held at the Holly-wood Palladium this Sunday. Terry Gibbs' seventee n piect big band will also pri>- vide the musical backinM for the 90-minut.to IJVt KTLA telecast of the a w a r d s ceremonies which airs from 7:30 lo 9 p.m. on the same dale. Jo i n in g leader and 4 \.'lbtaphonisl Gibbs are . Frank " Capp on drums: Paul Smi!h 'I al the piano: Barney Kessel 1 on ,gultar: and ;\ton~ Bud .... ·ig 1 on bass. I The sax section includes· JI Gus £ivona. Med Florv. Don l\1enz.a, Wu Ciatti a ~ Pele Otrisleib· Trombones include I Frank Rosolino. Cha rlie Loper ..:. and l\1ike Barone. I The trumpet sect Ion feature s: Conte Candoli. Triscari, John Audinrt Oruck Findley. HUNTER'S BOOKS THE wur~ FINHT IOOKSTORES FOR lZO YEARS-SINCE 1151 Loc1ted At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA Phone (71 41 543-9343 u ,soo-. & Paport..cks 32,000 Utn11HI Gteetiftt Cords IARl>AINS c>•LORE! OPBN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.ltl. THE FLAVOR'S FANTASTIC ••• THE PRICE IS lll>HT! SANTA ANA STRAWBERRIES Picked •t th• p••k of ripeness every morning •t 7 •.m. E1peci•l1y far u1. Th•y couldn't be . 1weeter, fre,1her ?r law er priced. Came ••• ••• came 1•ve .. 1,000 bo11e1 for th1, event! W• h•v• •m with long sfem1 too. FLOWERS From A Bunch of O•i1ie1 to $100 Prize W inning Arr•n9•m•nf. Come See! Come S•ve! "''' A lot of flor illt fie . ........ •LOW••' YOU'RE THE WINNER WHEN YOU SHOP WITH THESE COUPONS • •••••••• • ••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • l'IRST 0 , • TME. N!W CROP • LIMITli:D SUPPLY • J1 ( In Mo1t $torn • STOCK UP • ZUCCINNI • SQUASH • 10¢ LB. • • • • • • • l imlt-S Lb1. • 8 With Thi• Coupen • ••••••••••• ICEBERG LffiUCE GOOD Sill Llmlt--6 With This Coup0t1 •••••••• • • • • CUCUMBERS • • ' • 5" • • EA • • • • Llmlt-6 • • With Thi• Coupon • ••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE MARCH 24 These rest•urant' demand the f ine,t for their cu1tomeri. Th•t's why fh•y feeture NEWPORT PRODUCE! P1tronixe them! Th• Arches., Newport Be1ch : 1o011 Docks. Newf)(>rt le•ch : Howorch, Newport Be•ch; The Fiallennan, Huntin9ton Be•th: lerkalllrtS "On Th, Be y", Newport Be•ch , ind o"'' 200 oth1ri. How 411bout yCM1r c•lling u1? ....... 67)-1715 67.J-1711 611·6lt1 "Where qttolily i..s llit Ord.tt' of iht lloweH ~' ------------------- FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS - DINERS FUGAZY TIIAVEL 2071 Soi JH11•l1 Hfll1 14. H•wport .. 9Cll 644·4600 • DAllY PJLOT ;J.5 \ , \VEEKENDER OUT N AB 0 UT ORANGE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE 'Cook's' Tour Whal would you do confronted by the prospect of more than ten million guests sitting down to your dining table during a single year? Personally \ve'd book quick passage on a freighter to the South Seas and seek immigrant status. But we recently visited with some folks who can't cop out so easily and actually have to prepare for such a mammoth undertaking. The place that provides food in these coloss~l proportions is none other than Orange County s v.·orld·famous Disneyland. Our hosts for the day \vere so1ne of the people cha.rged '''ith the respoos,1· bility for catering to the eatmg needs of the parks great cro\rds. CINDERELLA FESTIVAL \Ve \Vere among three contingents or press rep· resentatives on hand for the kick-off of Disneyland's first annual "Cinderella Festival." From our obser· vations of the first day's agenda, it must be conclud- ed that the three-day event v.'ill be stirring up a lot of fun for years to come. .. The lucky lady chosen (by lottery dra\\Ping) ~s each day's Cinderella received a num_ber of exc1t· ing gifts. These were presented following her coro- nation and royal procession in a horse-drawn pump· kin coach dO\'-'n 1itain Street. A REAL CINDERELLA We had an opportunity to chat briefly \Vith the firs t Cinderella, finding her gracious, witty and articulate even amid all the hoopla and exc1tment of winning. She was Mrs. Frank Davis, a housewife from Stanhope, Iowa, who measured up to her sud· den role with true royal aplomb. !\-1rs. Davis' trip to California-to visit a brother \vho lives in Santa Ana -\Vas a fortieth birthday SEAFOOD CONVERSATION Everyon• Is talkln9 about _our deli- cious steamH ctams and CJlant 116· 20 OL) Australian Lobster Tails. CASUAL LUNCHEON FASHION SHOW DAILY Enl•rf1tnm1nl & 0•11ein9 HAl"l"Y HOUR J111011. • frl. 5 to 7 p.111. wltll Hon d'Ofll•rH IAN9UET FACILITIES J17 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNTINGTON IEACH CLOSED MONDAYS R11•r¥tlion1 Act•pitd 53,·255S HOT PIZZA!! "FASTER" DELIVERY 5 to 9 P.M. 675-3375 BALBOA ISLAND AND BEACON BAY AREA SMALL MEDIUM LJ,ltGI CHEESE .75 1.2S 1.75 MUSHROOMS .90 1.SS 2.lO SAUSAGE .90 1.55 2.lO ANCHOVIES .90 1.S5 2.lO PEPPERONI .90 1.55 2.lO COMBINATION 2.00 2.90 3.75 .JS EXTRA CHARGE FOil COMIOS 011 2 ITEMS IEIR-COOllS & IUO-SIX P'AtlC 11 ... THE HEAD BAGEL 305 Ma,lne Ave. Balboa Island eli ~ l~eJtau1·a,;; POOlPd •ftd AMERICAN CUISINI TROPICAL COCKTAILS CONNIE COMPELL AT THf PIANO IAR Wff, Gfld Th•n. HiNt ~OLYNESIAN SHOW~RI. & SAT. lt61 ADAMS AYE. lat Mo11toliol HUNTING-TOH IEACH 968-5050 gift from her husband. In an appropriate comment after her selection, she quipped: "it's as they say. life rea!Jy begins at 40''. TREASURY OF GIFTS The treasury of gifts showered on Cinderella led off with a new coiffure, a make-up kit. and a conLribut;on of $500 to the charitable organization of her choice. Others were tied to the three big "F's" featured in the festival -food, flowers and fashions. Cindere11a's prizes in these categories included a coronation luncheon for her and her guests. a choice of five outfits from the park's fashion shO\\'S and complete landscaping services for her o'\'n "castle." ACTIVITIES GALORE The three "F's" figured largely in the day's activities for members of the fourth estate. Editors and journalists in attendance consisted. for the 1nos't part, of food and restaurant, garden and fashion writers. Each of the three groups ''ie\\1ed the general proceedings then divided for special programs gear· ed to their particular fields. Fashion reporters were hosted to four original exhibitions of the latest spring and summer styles. GARDEN TOUR Garden and food writers were treated to l wo firsl·time·ever events. The green thumb newsmen were conducted on a tour of Disneyland's flashy gardens, guided by the park's landscape experts who revealed previously undisclosed secrets on the plant· ing of the gardens and the techniques for their care. REST AU RANT TOUR Jn our department we joined colleagues from Southern California metlia to tour Disneyland's unique kitchens, restaurants and other food-service accommodations. The occasion marked the first glimpse behind the scenes of this incredible opera· tion by anyone other than employes. TEMPLE GARDENS {)JIHi:SSRestouro11t LUNCHEON & DINNER DAILY Visit Our RICKS HA COCKTAIL ~\.~~~~ Featuring Exotic Tropical Drinks IUFFET LUNCH 11 :30-l:JI Mond1y thru P"rid1y Ol'•M 11:)1 1.rn. ·II J.rn. s .... ftln1 T~wn. 11:)1 1.m. ·I 1.m. l'(f . .1nll 51t. 1500 ADAMS (•t H1rffr) COSTA MESA S40-19l7 S40-1 t2J DON JOSE' /\'OW APPEARING DIRECT FROM MEXICO LEE RAMOS DUO Enchilad11 and Taco ................. $1 .35 Chili Relleno. Enchilad1 ...... , , ..... $1.50 Sen"t4 wltt. llce, leNI, Tostfflt•• •flil S•I•• FINEST MEXICAN JOOD AT REASOHAILI PRICIS e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Ad1ms (1t M19noli1) Hunt. B11ch 96'2-7911 Eve11 011.r H11111l>11rger PRESENTS ITS WONDERFUL WORLD OF OMELETIES With Service To 2 A.M. Friday And Saturday Nites FEATURING 30 WORLD-WIDE VARITIES OF OMELETTES SUNDAY TUES.-THURS. 9 to 2-S to 9 11 to 2-.5 to 10 FRI. & SAT. 11 to 2-5 to 2 ---3101 NEWPORT BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH 673-0977 To get our group of non-calorie counters (in this business you have no choice in the matter) into the proper frame of mind arrangements were made to partake of the feasting at Cinderella's coronation luncheon in Main Street's Plaza Inn. At the end of the meal we felt as royally pampered as Prince Charming and his whole court. l HERE WE GOI From Adventureland's Tahitian Terrace, the £irst deli cacy brought to lhe table was shrimp tern· pura. Thi!S \\'JS quite defferent from ordinary batter· fried sht1mp, both in the way the shrimp were cut and the way the batter had been mixed. The entree was a super-savory and tender tri· yaki steaK. Its marinade sauce had been skillfully blended to impart a slight hint of s\vectness at once pleasing and distinctive. T\vo excellent complementary dishes accom· panying the steak were Cantonese fried rice and chow yuk. We especially liked the latter. which con - tained fresh sli ced turkey breast. onion, celery, mushrooms, bamboo shoots, water chestnuts, chick- en broth and Chinese peas. 1.lrssert took the form of a sensalionaJ Fanta· sia cheese cake. A most unusual but welcome touch was added \vith a small side of chutney. CHEF'S TELL ALL The recipes for all of these dishes. except the steak. were ccntained in a complimentary souvenir booklet given lo every lady attending the Cinder· ella Festival. It also marked a "first" wherein chefs made initial public disclosure for preparation of som e of Disneyland's most popular dishes. Other recipes released for home kitchens in- cluded seafood jambalaya. Monte Cristo sandwich, seafood creole, the magic kingdom burger, Ne\v FINE FOOD AND ENTERTAINMENT 212 1 E11t Coa•• Hi9~w•y Cor•n• tl11 Mtr llo11rvAli•"1 '7S·050S DANCING • PIANO BAR Hofl tl'o1u¥r1t CLOSED MONDAYS 101 JOTM ST. RISllYATIONS MIWPOAT IUCH '71·0300 We Serve V.S. Prime Eastern Corn·fed Beef E;rrbrsively, Personally Selerled And Aged 111 Onr Oum Cooler A Thrtt: Generation Family Tradition -Est. 1921 FINEST ·-SEAFOOD AND OYSTER BAR IN THE SOUTHLAND 630 UDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675-0100 PRESENTS (' l Bill McClure ~t ~ / Duo ~J. 4,JD :1,JO Phil Desanto AND THE CORPORATIONS lll ' . OPININCO MARCH l2 ): c_:,/f/ed}~ o/n1t c Orleans Square clam chowder. spaghetti meat sauce and German chocolate cake. THIRTY FOOD SPOTS All 11 dining favorites are served daily in one or more of the 30 Disneyland restaurants and re- freshment areas. And it became something of a game in itself just to keep tab on this "'ide variety of eating establishments during our tour. Excluding those alr~ady mentioned. in Ad· ventureland we noted the Sunkist '·I Presume'' and Tiki juice bar. Tomorro\rland netted the Coco-Cola Terrace and Space bar. ~roving through Frontierland, we observed th e Casa de Fritos, Pepsi-cola Golden Horseshoe, Oaks Tavern. El Zocalo Wagon, River BelJe Terrace, the Dugout, yie Wheelhouse, Fort \Vilderness snack bar and Delta Banjo. In New Orleans Square one can vi sit the Blue Bajou restaurant, Creole cafe, French market, 1'1int Julep bar or Royal Street Veranda. Fantasyland offers \Velcb 's grape juice bar. a. ·nun1ber of Disney character food stands and the Pirate Sh.ip restaurant. Still more spots on rilain Street are Hills Bros. Coffee House and Garden. Carnation ice cream par- lor, Coke Refreshment Corner. Plaza Pavilion, Car· nation Plaza Gardens and Sunkist ?i1ain Street. \Ve didn't have time. of course. to visit every one of these many establishments. But those where \Ve did get behind the sceRes -together with the overall information and statistics cited by our help- ful guides -gave an eye-opening picture or the park's enormous food operation. TEN MILLION PLUS Small \vonder few. if any. restauranlc; ln the ~·orld can boast the clientele that Disneyland food faciliti~s serve in one year. In 1970, park chefs cal· ered to 10.2 million hungry guests. Continued on Page 26 Real Cantonese Food e1t h1 r1 or t1k1 hom•. STAG CHINESE WINO lll 21st pl., N1wport Bt1ch ORiole 3-9560 o,.. T_. ln111MI Dalfr 12·12 -frf. •IHI s.r. 'ril J •• -. HUNTINGTON LANES DINING ROOM tlie FLING ENTERTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK DANCING * HAP HALL DU°" wflft J..,• l!~•ro 1n ••• Tluir. ttini 51•. ~~ * L1rry L1k1 Sini::er Guitarist For Early Risers ind L•t• Pl1yert Optn 01ily From 6 A.M. to 2 A.M. R11r-Me11 Th11t1r MESA SQUARE 145 E. 1ftll St. Jwt •ff NP'f'ort ll•d. ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY AT THE TREASURE CHEST MESA LANES DUANE BASS and His Guitar Tu•M•y thru Sund•y Ew•nlngl I •u•lnft1m1n'1 Lunch Mon. thru rrl. I 170l SUPERIOR COSTA MESA /Near T71h St. and Nr"·port Avr l mITLf.1 MEXICAN REST AU RANT Yl1lt •11r H" Att«• le•llfO ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday thru Sunday By LICHO PEREZ "EL TROVADOR DEL CAMPO" M1114., "d T..sd•r KIDS FIEST A DAYS OP'IN 11 A.M. -11 1".ltl. SUND.AT THIU THURSDAY 11 A.M. TO 12 P.M. Fll. & SAT. 547 W. 19th ST. COSTA MESA 642-9764 Food To Go • • If DAILY '!LOT frldaJ, M.vth lt, 1971 \ Pine liallan Cuisine Cockralls G;.. hlty -I p.-. t• I .. -. CLOSID MONDAY 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY ·--673.f267 In Japan, the carp is the symbol ol welcome. At Yamato, Newport Center. we W(llcome you to th& mchanting crperience of dining in serene splendor. Sup(lrb cui.sine, including steaks and butterfly tempura shrimp, teriyaki. sukiyaki. sba-bu s.ha·bu.. Luncheon from 11:30 to 2:30. Dinoer (an extreme pleasure) from 5:00 to 10:30. Re.secvatioos booored. W011D f AMOUS JAPAN ESE RIST AU RANTS 9 U8D1Dt11 BO Fashion 1'land,Newport Center 644-4811 San F1'.nci.soo Century Plaza Hotel, L.A. THE BERLINER German Family Restaurant ~ F•mous For SAUERIRATEN wHh POTATO DUMP LINGS Enjoy A Wunderbar Time At Our BAVARIAN FESTIVAL SATURDAY, MARCH 20th Starting at 1:00 P.M. Music and Dancing With The EDELWEISS TRIO FROM BAVARIA •-..t1on S•111lt.4 Open D•ily Fer Dinner From 5 P.M. CLOSED MONDAY CHILD•IN 'S MINU UN9UIT FACILITllS !-. • • ,,¢ Al10 \'i1 il DEii IERLINER DfLICATESS I N f i111 f.urop1111 Feod1 lrnped 1d 1,,,. I W01111 11582 IEACH ILVD. Te-.n & Country Ctnter HUNTINGTON HACH Ul-5800 •• ~. WEEKENDER Continued from Page 25 Last year, Di sneyland visitors consumed 4:5 million hamburgers, two million hot dogs, 3.5 ~II· lion orders of French fries, 300,000 orders of rr1ed chi cken and nearly three million ice cream bars. Guests also drank enough soft drinks to fill a five-ac re, lO·!oot deep lake. During one particularly busy summer day, the well·equi ped Disneyland kitchens produced eno_ugh food to feed 83,000 patrons. In the peak summer months it requires 1,500 employees to staff all the park's food centers. COST A MAJOR ITEM Price, u•e learned. is another important consid- eration in the total food operation. Surprisingly the 1vera1e food cost to each guest for an entire day is les.s than $1 .55. We further concluded that another essential ingredient in the success of t he Disneyland food operation is the quality of the young men and Wome n serving as waiters and waitresses. Their warm smiles and attentive service makes a consid- erable con tribution to the total dining pict ure. EQUIPMENT It w.as extremely revealing to see some of the equipment and procedures utilized in the tasks of preparing, cooking and serving the staggering quan· l ites of food sold in the park each day. Home chefs who find it a chore to prepare for as many as ten DAILY -1 DINNER SPECIALS $3.95 BREAKFAST AND LUNCH DAILY TA~J1kWHALE WITH A SWltlt~ING Yll:W (lfl' "'ltW~Dl'llT HAl'll•Olt 400 MAIH, IAL!OA l'fHIHSllU. 0141673-46.13 NOW APPEARING THSdoy tin s.t•rdoy c. c. RYDER SUNDAYS ·· THE PAUL LEMOINE TRIO • LAGUNA FLEUR DE LIS COCITAILS HOIS D'OtUYIH J.7 P'.M. O~IN SIVIJrl D4'fl 1460 S. COAST BLVD. LAGUNA BEACH 494-2077 Fll!I 'AlltlNG-IN REAi PRlttCf o+ wlWes RESTAURANT SIAPffD-STIIAllS T11e., Wiii., Tflur, 0 ... 11 t """ frrl., '•!., SIMI, O...., 11 •rn (Closff M.itllt,11 SANTA All.I.: 15175 Kan. IMI. 139.mo (I l lkt 11. II Uilltf) ; ll:elo)( with u5 • , , en1oy your lovor11e coc ~'O•I.,, lu ncheon or d1n,..er !ook ou1 upon 1he sea if! Suflu,..,,~' FRANCISCAN ROOM Luncheon everyday e~c~pt Sunday fr o.., 11:00 on. Dinn•r )f!rved unhl 8·00 pm. Monday and f11doy ' ll&aitA Newport #I Folllion ltlond ~lf4 N&wporl Certler 644-7200 Monday, fndoy 10100 '!ill 9.30 All o!her days, 10·00 '111 5·30 PIZZA HOME DELIVER HAVE CHANGED A ~Pl s SINCE THE OLD DAYS , I c.Airporter qnn "Hotel MIDITllltANIAN DININI ltOOM C•pt•l11'1 T11blt CoffM Slltp Cobottt CM);toll L•-~~ ll~lcrt11111'1 .. lll IM D•M•nt M"th1t enll l•~"'Met lffllll 1•71'111 \1 1\<'.\l1l!ll fl 111\11 ~(\\MnTllt\t!I t \l !I , OUT 'N ABOUT -.--·-· guests would regard any one of the four central kitchens a kind of culinary Eden. 2,000 HAMBURGERS AN HOUR \\'hat wizard of the b~ard bar·b-q, for in· stance. wouldn't feel fa int ~g an appliance that can turn out 2,000 hamburgers an hour? We viev.1~ this marvel of production, a huge piece of equip- ment knov.'n as a Broilmaster,· during our stop in the kitchen at the Coke Terrace. · THE BAKERY We also beheld the model of a modern major bakery wherein Disneyland's vast array of pastries and cakes are baked fresh daily. Here, cakes are n1ade to order with elabor;i1e personalized decora· lions as requested in advance by guests planning to celebrate special occasions while visiting the park. ACCURACY Production charts are posted on kitchen walls that anticipate the various quantities of each item to be serv ed daily in the course of a month. Based on past records and continuing studies, their de· gree of accuracy never varies by more than four or five portions of what was expected. On hand for our excursion through Disneyland's kitchens v.·erc the park's two executive chefs -In· dian Aramaki and Peter Felgentreff - who uphold their responsibilities backed by impressive creden· tials . Both genUemen, as might be expected, further impressed with the spirited dedication they exhibit· cd toward their duties. PETER FELGENTREFF Peter. \Vho supervises food preparation in New Orl eans Square. is a native of Hamburg. West Gerniany, and received his education in Germany. After graduating from Hamburg's Albrecht Tear Oberschule High School, he obtained three years of formal chef's training at the highly·regarded hotel and restaurant college in Hamburg. FORMERLY Kitchens over which Peter has presided in· VISIT THE NEW ''0'' JOE'S APPEARING NIGHnY TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY SHANA AND THE RICHMOND Servin g Dinner Seven Nights A Week FEATURING STEAK • LOBSTER Lunch Do ily Mondoy thru Fridoy 843 W. 19th STREET (111 Th• Ybht Sll•pph19 Cff,.rl COSTA MESA 646-0804 WANTED FOii IMPEllSONATINCi JOHN WATNI, W. C. FIELDS JOHNNY CASH LAURSEN KENNY MA.Y ee A.RMl!O WITH GUITAR -HE IS CONSIOEREO EXTREMELY ENTERTAINING! REWARD TOUllSELf WITH TOP INTllTAINMINT FINE MUICAN FOOD AND ATMOSPHlllll T11•sday rtir11 S1111day at .. J4J1J DEL !'RADO DANA POINT • ,,.,11s RestauRant Whah!ver Happened to Individuality in Dining? Dlstil'ICtive dining Is alive. The 1ec.nt Is M indlYidual prelerrnc&t. Cntius savtffd and served from the ski/let at your teble. The menu is definitely Continent!! I A.rn6rlcan. fOlt R[S£RVATIONS: 714·644·1700 O(l Wt!8'S NlW~llll'llll INN l l 07 Jarnb01'911 Road • Newpott DNC:h, Clilf0ml1 PETER FELGENTREFF, INOIAN ARAMKI Eat<utiv• Chefs With lmpre11i't• Credenti1l1 elude the Hotel Vier Jaheszeiten in Hamburg, Switzerland's Hotel Storchen , the Omelett Surprise restaurant in Paris and the wine restaurant Jacob in Hamburg. He has also prepared food at the Ch1;let on the Lake restaurant in Milwaukee and the Five Crowns resUuranl in Corona de! Mar. -9' . Peter joined Disneyland an as executive ~hef l.n April, 1970. He lives in Huntington Beach with h1s wife Ursula. and their sons Heinz·Peter, 6, and J0h~·Andren, 2. INDIAN ARAMAKI Indian Aramaki, who is headquartered in Main Street's Plaza Inn, was born in Puunene Maui, Hawaii. Following graduation from Maui High School , he decided lo become a diesel engineer. So determined, he moved to Los Angeles where he enrolled at the Hemphill Engineering School. Ultimately forsaking a career as an engineer, ht started obtaining practical food preparation exper- ience to augment special recipes which had been passed on through the Aramaki family for several generations. HIS OWN SPOT lndian owned, operated and served as chef .at his own restaurant in Chicago for 10 years before returning to his native Hawaii where he served as executive chef at the Kono Hawaii restaurant for eight years. He joined the Disneyland staff in June, 1964. Indian resides in Westminster with his wife, Keiko, and their two sons, Michael, 19, and Kenneth, 17. His olde1t son David, 27, is following in his father's fooUteps and now works as a cook in Disney· land's New Orleans Square. ~ ADOS TO THE FUN While Disneyland may be the ultimate realm of make-believe, the reality o! what goes on behind the scenes to grace the tables of millions of diners constitutes a very substantive and planned program Even from our limited exposure, we'd say it is one lhet pays off handsomely by making dining in the park an important part of any vi!iL IMAGINATIVE . The area's out 'n' abouters may have missed many good bets by thinking of the magic kingdom only as an amusement park. lt is that in the finest sense of the word, of course, but it's also a concen- tration of one o! the most unusual and imaginative groupings of restaurants anywhere in the world. 1=========1 ,]llt..~~-..J11t.I sunday I BQUOCh ua.m. to 4p.m. IFJ!VI~ 38(11 Eur Coln Jb:aWAT C.OJIA ML JU.., CAtm!lxa PJJOll"I: (714) 1575·1374 Nl•HnY AT 'iOO '·""· SUNDAY MATINEE 3100 P.M. l•L4.M ... 9p.111. JIMMY YANN 9UAlm LU•CH • DIHER COCKTAILS UQUISITT HORS D'OEUYRES ]looN UOCKS 3J33W.CMstMwy. N1wpert INc• 142-4298 ONTHI IA'I' AT f)l'U(..S ftl\?IEM l'IESTAURANT Continental Cuisine Cocktalls Servtng LuncMon and Dinner Mondat1 throwgh Saturdo~. Closed Sundays W • •r• located next to the May Co. in South Coa1t Plaza . JJJJ s. Mtt.I 140.Jl40 J.LLll WEIT PRESENTS The Sen1ation•I TONY FLORES Guit•rl1t/Vocall1t Folk, Cl•••ical, Sp1ni1h TUE. THRU SAT. FEATURING DINNERS 111 th• S•11 Fr111ci11• M11111•r LACI OP lAMI STIAIS e SIAN>OD 5 ro 11 Nl&HT~ y Drfflli: h tM h"'Y ef WINTlll SUNSm AT COCKTAIL TIMI IVSIHISSMAN'S LUNCH 11 :00 TO 5 SATURDAYS LUNCH OR BRUNCH II TO S -OPIN IYllY DAY .. Tll OC•AH AD~o\(EHT TO H WM>ll:T 9IACH '11"1 J104 W. OC!AN ,RONT NIWl'ORT HACH Your Guide to Movies Love Affair Editor'• Note : Thf11 mcvic ouid• ts prepcrtd by tht flhru commitk• of H1rbor Council PTA. Mrs. Friday Evening MARCH 19 Nigel Bailt'y b preafdent and Mrr. Bruct Nordland U committt1 chairmen. It if intern:l«l QI 4 n/erencc Saturday Moming .......... 1:00 8 lie "'" Jtny Dunphy, l :!S. '"' U1 TMI .., • Ill 'Virgin and the Gypsy~ ~ '" dtttntdninQ nftobl• daughter btcomt1 fMlt!hed robberlu and aun fl&htl, f i l m 1 for urlai1t age . in hippie environment of sex amidst humor and pathos. group1 a n d wiU appear and drugs. Burt Bacharach m u s i c a I weekly. Your vfttD1 MC Uttle MW'der1 (R): Elliot score. 1ohcttcd. Moil them to Mo-Gould stars Jn black fantasy Tbe CheyeDBt. Seti.al Quit vit GWde, car• o/ th' of urban collapse. Dlre<:ted by (GP): After Civil War, 1 Tex- DAILY PILOT. Alan Arkin. aa cowboy inherits a bordello * Lo\letl aad Other 8tran1er1 in Cheyenne. James Stewart, ADULTS (R): Adult humor lmpirtd by Henry Fonda aod Shirley B.S. I Love Yoa (X): Adven-story of 1 fancy wedding . Gig Jonell. comedy occun' when disaster- proDe East Indian actor is accidentally invited to chic Hollywood party, Sellers. Patton: Salute To Rebel (GP): Film port; alt of the World War II general known as "Old blood and tures of • young man 1n the Youna cast is the father of Cold Turkey (GP): rn advertlllng bu.sine11. Pet.er the bride. miluon b offered to small Guts," showing him aa a man Kastner, Joanna Dames. M•A*S*B (R): lrreverant Iowa town if residents stop capable of intense profanity Tit• BabymU:er: (R): When comedy about the Mobile smoking. Story of how greed and as a brilliant war a wife cannot produce her Army Su!gical Hospital during affects the town minister, doc-strategist George C. Scott is own child, young bl pp i e the Korean War. Spoof on tor, rlgblwing fanatics aod the Patton. Karl Malden I 11 volunteer& to have baby for nurse-doctor relationships and enforcing police. Local bars General Omar Bradley. Ftlday, MMe.II 19, 1'1111 DAILY PCLDT !7 MATINEES. SAT. and SUN. CJ KNIC ll111•rrkt Tom Snydtr. l :JO. IMrile ......,. D n. AllM si.. Gu•b: Pit 7:00 8 ,_ ....... w.,. H•rrtl'oC\01 Jr .. Jtrry llur1111d, Chlell DID (I) m ,......,, .... the child.less couple. Sta.r11 the "Last Supper." Stars and masseiue parlor do thriv-Sudden TerTor (GP): 11· Barbara Herlhey. Elliot Gou1d and Don a Id ing bPJ:iness during smoker's year-old boy on Mediterranean1I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ballad of Cable~ Hope Sutherland. "withdrawals." Island is only witness to chill:!: (1\): A double-eroned' pro-The Owl And Th~ Pu11ycat Grand Prix: The lives and ing political murder. Family:!,.--------,------------, UP11bttt i nd doc Slvml, Cl'l1ro. GI llltnct l11111te RIQM. 0 Sii O'Ckldl llM: (C) (90) II) s-.. ltf..t "tM.Plf .,. tlll .,,.,. .. (C!OffttdJ) 7:30. hltf• 1..-. '50-Gllfton W.tib, Jttnnt Crain. 8 91)) mJ Medllt l Jtct;l1 CJ Did: ¥111 lt'Jte u llld: ~c. m Tiit n1nUt1Nte1 GI Yoe! .. , l frtlflds Ill illl CI!""'"' "': 8 1111 IIJ ........ ,, .... h .. specter left ta die on desert (R): Barbra Streisand and loves of four international rac-ignores his plea for ht:lp I NATIONAL ·GENERAL TH,:ATRES teams up with a self~tyled George Segal star ln film ing drivers. Race scenes of because of his frequent fan·r-~::;;;;;~-~~~~~;;;~~-' preacher and a prostitute ta version of Broa~way comedy major town·track.s of Europe tasles. Ziggy i! left alone to eet revenge. Prostitute -with a-heart-or~ photographed and 5 0 u n d. escape from the relentless 'I'll DI Of M d gold theme. r-rded re1!1"s"cally. Stars police who hunt him down. NN NG MARCH 24th e ary . a . ~ R ... 11•1 Daughter f GP) : .. -.v 1o1 BEGI I GI Mllfflnllltd ''Cotnmunlt)' Htlpt11 w Heir Bouaewlfe (R). The disU>-Ro~;t Mitchum and Sarah James Gamer, Yves Montand Tell' Them WUUe Boy Is #t" GUIIll!l_W_ !!ii"""' ,,.,, 0 illl CI!..-""' ..... @El Hotldtfl' l4 Clti11119 Hour tegratlon o~ a Nt:w York mar-Miles star in love story set and Eva Marie Saint. Here (GP): Rtservat!on In- ria1e. Came .Snoclrre15 ls the in scenic freland of 1916. The Greal Whli. Rope dian boy in love with educated A ONE WEEK· LIMITED ENGAGEMENT bored housewife. Rlchard Ben-R tless bt:autlfu1 wife of (OP): Flctionalized account of Indian girl. Father discovers -(! Tiit Anlwlcan Wut: G llowlt: "War It Mtlr' (drun1) Eli.. Kirt f1111nl•r di C611M11111 '64-To117 Ruutll, l •)'l'I• B1rron. jamln plays the pompous m~~d!e-~ged school teacher life· of Jack Johnson-first nude love rs in forest and is SPECIAL STUDENT & GROUP RATES husband. falls in love with English Ma· Black heavy·welght champion shot by lad in self-<lefense. AVAILABLE (D N"' Jim H1Wlhornt. m T1"9 tf Well1 flfll t :'tS l![l: Art lbldkt 1:30 D Q (I) m T1le IQllen Fl E P( ••1 So of 1910. Tragedy results as Posse hunts him down. Robert CONTACT MANAGliR NOW FOR GROUP ve ••Y eces v • : n i·or. Tragedy for all results, d d K th · R f Ith I I f ·1 pre1·ud•'ced box•·ng establish· Redfor an a arine oas. INFORMATION. l ;XI G C.ndld C.1111r11 8 C1111pn P'nflt o wea y mu.! ca am1 Y The &'tatue: (R): Story of ti> HMllPl'dfl ltdtt hnl~ m TIN f)ylq Nun ! "'°' IW CID Sllecttd '111111/llullc.ltt 1:41 ....,...11'1 Ml'tlll m-•-.o:e lBHll"""' l"' -GD L• Otrid.001 ..., ... m uc.... au 11> m "· -T:tlO I) Cll Nfft Wtlttr Clonkllt. 8 MMI: ..... ..,.,... (td¥tlltvft) Cl m NIC Nin Dnld l rtnklq. '41-fl'ICI klllumy, 1#1 Gtrdlltr. leave.! home to roam. Uves 8 male's preoccupation with ment reacts to his victory They Might Be Giants (G): contentedly with cheap the sire of his ttproductive and his publicized affair with Poignant comedy.fantasy star- waitress, drinks and brawls organs. a white woman. Starring ring George C. Scott. An wiilJ new hlllbilly friends. 1'bere'i • Glrt In My Soup James Earl Jones. amnesia victim following the Feoli (R): Love drama (R): Galdie Hawn and Peter Jemiy (GP): Marlo Thoma! death of his wife, Imagines 11taning J ason Robard!I and Sellers star in adult camedy. portrays Jenny, a pregnant he is Sherlock Holmes. Joanne Katharine Ross. Story of a Escapades of 8 f 1 i g ht y girl from New England who Woodward as the d r ab May-December romance and American girl and 8 stuffy goes to New York. She mar-psychiatrist whose life Is a jealOUJ husband. Set in San Engli!lh gourmet. ried (for convenience) 8 young changed when love and beauty Ji'iiJUs O Wlllt't 117 lint? 0 (ft) (J) ltrTJ' t..n SMll' m 11! CJ) I Lnt l11CJ CD A.II • ....,.. .,,,.,,. ...._ ID Drlclllt ""'" (dflt'IMI) '58-Knl11 llltt• fJ) Sollf! 11twa, k.,. D1nton, Jull1 Adllftl. CI!) Ckht t11t Urine Word -mt Clnoo" ("""'11) '40o-loll ti) Ml Allor~ Tl Hill. Lynn 81r1. msimpllMt•ll M•N (BTl"M IMat m 1i1m1 s... 111 ..... , c.n.m 7:30 ID 9 CfJ n. lnttn11 m ,_.. .. Lltiflt o m HIP 0i:1111rm oos11ai1tw1 t:• am"" h irthtr M Die Lind." (R) fJ l1TJ (])11M DHbltdldln . Francisco. The Virgin And The Gypsy min wbo wishes to avoid the touch it. Get Carter fR): Michael (RJ : Film adaption of n. H. draft. Tbunderball (GP): Re-issue Caine is small-Ume London Lawrence story of young Little Big Man (GP): Dustin of James Bond spy story. Tale thug in story of reve111e in woman's unhappy life in her Hoffman stars as a 121-year-of international underworld's British underworld· father's bleak, hypocritical old gunfight.er in this "better threatened annihilation of an The Gra11hopper (R): Jae-rectory. Seek5 fulfillment In whilt-than·Red" story of the English and American city. quellne Bisset plays a Cana-affair with gypsy camped American West. Culminates in * dian eirl who setks excitement near-by. battle of Custer's Last Stand. The lett er immed iattly No grander Caesar ... No !1f91118r cast! ~ ~.J G Vbtl•ll 1'9111• SllllW 11.uem: G ....,..: "'NII' 11 • DIM ..._. M111. Rrlntld R .. 11n, fr1nk fon· (westtm) 'IZ-Jtll11 ""11111, Lil• Lu. 11lnt. ID Ml'ril: "ltMMI ,..,.,... (dr .. 0 Cf%i (]) Ei) I l!iCp;L I Undtrlll m1) '55-Rod Clmtrt111, Jtd: KtllJ. Werld " JIClllUH c.~-· "Setrlt Ill AntM " """ In the United Statu and finds Love Story (GP): A 11 after the title indicates the n1rcoUc11, pr os t 1 tut ion, MATURE TEENS McGraw and Ryan O'Neat rating give n the picture by homOlexuals, and finally a AND ADULTS star in romantic, billersy.·eet the Motion Picture Code: pilot who sky-writes obscene Botch Cas1idy And Tbe Sun-fable of today's co!Jege youths Tht Code And'Rating pro- words. Costars Jim Brown. dance Kid (GP): Legendary and t~e generation g;ip. Told gram may be fo und on one Julius Caesar -Charlton Heston Jason Robards. John Glelpd 121e of t1le Sun~en Cml." C.pt11'11lO:OO •• ([)Jdt &llt,_,.. CoullelU Ind th• Cfl'll' of C.lyplo D Cl> m H. .. ,.,...., explor1 lh• myttlrious hh11 holu 8 ([)Hit 'lfttll1 "Joe" (RI : A crude factory friendship between the most In their language. of the motion picture pages. worker and his wealthy ad-infamous and amiable of The Pany (GP): Slapstick1-;:--:0:===='=====1 vtrti.sing executive r r i end, Wertern outlaws who flee ~ 'p""i·c"K"w"~l•C•ocK' ~ @!Ii§; on Ill• ote1n f1001 oll tht l1h1m11. E lJICM l.Art BUI, share hatred of "blacks, country and take Sundanct·s (R) 10:30 8 18 (I) tllfM illlblbtltiliii c:JMllllo!I $ Mtflt: "T\I Litt CJ9 ([l m: ..... C.... .. W111tei" (dnm1) '6Z-Toll)' Brittan, Cl99P John Witt ie. 111 the lilt )'llt of II ...n.: .,,,..... ~ (td· liberals, weUare bums . • • bored sd!oolleacher·misl>'ess ' . BOOKSHOPS ~ f. Violence erupt.II when Bill's to Bolivia with them. Bank ·-l!iiiiril!l'llF.i_:iliiifici ,I llU<ITY · Nazi GCCUpltlon of Dtl'lllllrk. 1 wntutl) '!I0-1111 Wlllltms, TOii! TOHITI AT •:OO & t :40 o.o~v-• {714) 639·nDO PO k y 0 'd•--SOI/TH COAST PlAIA 0,... smtll town Is forced lo openly t1k1 Brown. sldu In 1ffec:tin1 the e1e1•1 Of I fJ @{J) SQ KIWb Brltilh •renl 11:00 8 i Atdlil'1 fllllllm IC our Wll of; ~lld , ............ , ,.,.,. .. ·-·~· m Trd tr eon.i...-0 Hit ha: (!) MMI: (C) (21/1: ~I') .,,.,. ef fJ CIJ MM -nr11s ••d 1.1q!IW"' (comedy) 11 e "'Swlltml ,,..,... -lllJhllchb at Slllflt ComMJ Era. (ldWntllr1) '54 -bd C1111tM. 'Oscar' Winners II!) g_. JO Joe11111 Dr;, .loft1I lnil11'1d. &Ill DMM ID Ml"'= .,.. lllllM lllllll" f · h B P k' J:!iS m Clllltlot • s.p• (f.OmldJ) ·so-r.,,,.Tliofi-. Hlttlt _Th~ DAILY PILOT, fn cooptrat on w1t uena ar ~ a:oom Ti T•H tilt Trltll 11~un. Mov1t~nd W~ ~uieum, offtri reader1 a chance _to par~t- Ol T•roe"' Mldrkl (50) a:> AD.a lllda111 cipate 1n noiu:mtoidt baUotuig to select popu!4r w111;ners .tn @llln fflftdta Mix "NMdln1/ ll:30Dll).._.. tht "011car Derby." Wttk's vacation for two tn Mtnco City W1nlin1." A IOlk tt tilt people 0 ltil (I) nt H•f'llJ IOJI or Honolulu and a plact of honor at ~h~ Stars' !fall Of f'ame who utllry Hit n•d• Of ol.hlr>-II) M1ft0 • llll1no lt1nch1'9 A words Banqutt in HollUWood awdtt the. national winner. pol1tlc1r t11ur.-., n111iou1 l11dtra. Aft moon Vote now by filling out and clipping out thu ballot: pl)'dll1trlsts.andttl1Ukt. e __ . _ - _ _ _ _ _ _ _____ _ It:~:.. 12:ao1Jem~ , 1:05ai)Luc:*l llbr• G"Tlllltrl flf Mm ...,... Mark an "X" in the box which appears in l:JOl)9 ([)AlldJ'Crfffrtti MdJS••· 8Morit: "TNll ll•ltl ' front of your selection. Vote for only one person J!r mows his l.1mlly l19m R111l1h (id'rytutt) '50-0t'lld Brur.t, Kl'\" f Pl be t I t --• , c bt tir11 Mllltr. 1 or film in each category. ease sure o comp e e back "' Gr11n ........ , ···to · fJ !J2)CIJ d)Mna1tnatMN the 25-word statement at the end of the ballot and com• tct!n1 miyoi. Don KMlttt. 1tuf111 1'ho!Ms ind TlflJ L" SJhtt t ,.dr d h mber so you Geort• Lindi.,, '•ul Htrtm1n, G1t11 fill in your name, au ess an p one nu . ...,, 1utst. (It} autrt. can be contacted if you win the prite trip and ba!l· D l2J (J) m KIN " lttl .... I~~,,.... quet invitation. All ballots must be returned (m ·e JlrTJ Wm ltlatit A 1Ptd•I e:tre. m HelWIJ person or by mail) to the DAILY PILOT by 5 p.m. inony honorin1 lh• U tiur &UPll'· mi 1tni .. a 11 ...... on Monday, March 29. stir. Ch!O; Kt1t11 llllCMt. 12:J08dtJCllTIMI ...._ I O llllCl!Ell "' -,,,,_ . a-.,_,.,...!""'·' n, "A Kl'lllht 111 Shlnint """°'·" tdJ) '52.-.lllllt Ltlch, c.rttoft I m Dnld FRiii Slltw Guats 111 C1rp111t• KllNn WynA. Bud~, Gree.a. [rich Stttl, Dl1t1t m Pr* TIMI q....., lm4 1"1111 Rig , tlld P•ler 81ktf. m Dollln IM1 s.. I m11p1c1gllS.ltdld A 111rd look t:OOG9CllDlll:ltdlJ'&Mlttll7 r ti the C:.lll&r'lll Cerreet1e111I T11ll1· 8 Im NCAA lnMtbtin RtcMNI ln1 f1dllty, ICll'lt ol rnuch rtcltl Ol'lt!i Chemplo11thlp, 1 conflict rtetlltly. 0 Merit: {C) """'7 All IMti' I €[!! ''""" fOf l~111 (dnmt) '56-Jtlf Chandltf ltk1!1'4 1 t:llO 8 a()) CBS F'*f Mwle: (C) Boont, Georc• Mtffr, Jullt 'Munt. (? hr) "ni11 PnplftJ II C.116111111· m ....,... "'llllt•lll llrf" (ait11· Id" (dnmt) '66 -Mlftli1 Wood. tdy) 'JS :.. St111 llurtt tlll Ollvtr 0 Tiit F1atttn Htrdy II a! 00 EE nat 1111 ID N-/W•k a S,.ltl fE (] Cll!t tn Sa 1tt11r (2 hf) OJ AIMt dt Mt AlllM ll!J JO Mlnlltu G) M1tor MMM e:i 1111•/nl. Ill .... ' Altt .... t:J08 9 (J)Th"""" i Jlltldll " .... "Bil ..... 1111111" ... aJ)(J)9)1llt OU CMPit (dr111'11) •4t-t'9idlot TOM . ..,_ I llrtln: ht Uttlb. m M..t.: -T.i Dras (Wiiiem) OllPJ. 81rtllt1 Hcrwtr lftd )O)U '57-WOd C..mtr0n. Susaklftd f.O·llalt m Seope Ill ""' """!<' .... !D -.... er!\ Mntml1/,....t .... HQ II DlllrJ'• T,.._. cm CMai• • Allpltill a • .,. r11111 !D:IO D 0 00 m stm11 """' Em f-*I•• 111-.i. "!h11,,,.\.-Wlsll In tt.1 OA1m." Gfl IO\M Mowlt: "1lil ,,..... th D Ifs ~, _ Mwllll....... If °"' J•a." Douct11 F1l1'1MI. 0 (!! ~""' ...., • .,.. 2:IO fJ 1'11 ,... StdltJ "C111 W• Mo B lntlr w.-NM dur.t MMlltry Sptndlntr m NIWll Put11tm/Flshfll1n" m Mftle: (C) -....n.r (1M11- (D S.. t1tt UM turt) '5'-St:twtrt Gnn11t, JNn @I ,alldttlN Grtt""*. GIOf'P S1nd1'1. Zl nA J:OO 11 llllidlr/Olbld« 1Dll0 0 Rold .... MIVll: °'ROid II a c.twftr t.wlhir Joi Caln,.. Ztni:lb9r" (mualell) lob Hefl'I, 11111 n•ll• •M Ctll n.ti1r n.. JMMt t~. Oef'Dttty l1ino11r, f1t111tlno 111d Midllll LH. OJ Ill .tolln• """ ID 1111...-: "TM lftlt 0.1 htCt" Cl 1""""9M (drtm•) •q -0.nnil O'Kttfa, U:GOG lllJ(IJll!-Clil ...... ,_, _,, Ct u (I)~"""' ., ...... ... am,... mr-. ... ..... GI llhWll: "Tllt c..I """" (-J:ill Beat Actot- 0 MELVYN DOUGLAS for "I Never Sang For My Father'' 0 JAMES EARL JONES for "The Great While Hope" 0 ·JACK NICHOi.SON for "Five Easy Pieces" 0 RY AN O'NEAL for "Love Story" 0 GEORGE C. SCO'l'l' for "Patton" Beat Actress 0 JANE ALEXANDER for "The Greal White Hope" 0 GLENDA JACKSON for "Women In Love" 0 ALI MAC GRAW for 11Love Story11 O SARA MILES for "Ryan's Daughter" 0 CARRIE SNODGRESS for "Tbe Diary of A Housewife" Beat Motion Plc&ure of 1970 O "AIRPORT'' (Univenal) B VFIVE EASY PIECES" (Columbia) "LOVE STORY" !Paramount) 8 "M• A •s•H" (20tli Century Fox) ''PA1TON" (20th Century Fox) WHY I VOTED FOR THIS PICTURE (in 25 words or less): ..•.......•...•.....•...•.. . ...... ' .. ' ..................... ' ..... . ' o I • • ' • • 0 • ' • ' I • • • • 0 • ' • • • ' • • • • • • o ' o o 0 ' • ' ······································· Name ..............•..... Phone .•....•. Streel Address ........................ .. ,...,..,, 14 -"'"""'a..... 8 BUICK PRES[NTS C'I Zip m --· "'" C•"'""'i CBS GOt~Cl.ASSIC 1 y · .. · .... · " · ........... · ...... .. '3'--Cll'J' C111nt. Dollirln F11111inb * 8 !llCl:l• w a.II • --- --- - ----- - ---- -... --..,_,tC)_ .... _ .,_ ... _ hou-wHe • """ """' ""' l!!I ·-"'-·-- AND AT J:!il ONLY ROBERT REDFO~D 'TELL KATHARINE RO THEM ROBERT BLAKE WILLIE SUSAN CLARK 1 13lJ~ A UNIVERS.lol PICTURE 111'1.Q *HEY KIDSI * Ill 'Al SHOW SAT. 1:JO "THE YOUNG AMERICANS" l•clu1lv1 °'11"t• C-ty .,.. ... ,,_, .. FIYI U.SY PllCIS" "BALL.AO OF CA.Ill HOGUr' "l'llCIS" -l :JI "·"'· "IALLAD'' -1:\J •~• !l:lf 111. a Jvn.-COlll, ,...., U :JI l•ch11lv1 Or11t1• C111nly lnt•t-~1 "RYAN'S DAUGHTll" lllf OfUct o,.. 11: """ -t l".M. n.uy S-lmn Min. Ill"" TIIUr'I. • I 'l'.M. l'rl. ·Sil. · l :IO l'.M. Miit"-111. • lim. -1 P,M. '''"""'i .. ,...., _ Q illlCI!m"' -,. MaU ballot to: "Oscar'', c/o DAILY PILOT, 1 " 11 111-" G .... -. -"'O lox 1560 iCioistiaijMiji•siaiiCiAi9i2~6i2~6~~~~~~iiii~'.Jl lltlifll(l)llllM trtfl'll Ii)~...,.,.... r I I a (J) m ,..MJ c. ... ...., m l.tdl • ,... Bllh6p iuh1 11 l'lttt. C:OOIQ' •11 •"1J...... • M ISSION VIEJO AltT ASSOCIATION 0 (9 Diet; Cnttt T\t 111111 11"'•-..... _..... "'"' ~"' '"' •·•~ ART EXHIBIT (""'9lcl!) '41--ilnt C,,,.,, llWMll Mrrltll tflt .., f1' 1flll t••** -T\I Wllldtw'" (1111-P'tllll1 lndltM. ,.llM) '49--Ml!ur KlfltttdJ, G ~ 1tt ~ eow... •:1»111• AA1t1 ,..., 11et GI " .. '"'"""' __ • ....,.i:..,.... "l.a, 'lfWn" 1ftll °111llfll W. GI MNI WttW a.Hc:allb." ., ... ,., tJO 9 Mtwo1t! •Jlbllll ,,.,. (drtfM) Ill D ....... 11 .-~ 'Sl -Vn RllllDll, .lot!! t.ilt. 4~5 9 f"trl-,._ SATURDAY, MARCH .27 from 10 A.M.·S r.M. I.a Paz Medical Center L• P•1•Chrl••"ll Dr .. Ml11lon Vl1Ja • soum SEAS TROPICAL ASH Largest Selection of Tropical Fish & Supplies in the area. Now :t lec.tlo111 111W. WILSON, COSTA MISA (Oii F1lr•~w lld._ S•l-l'HI ms AU111t1-Hllftlln1tt11 •••<II HMIU "I.I. I le• Y .. " ,., ''Ttte lellocl of Cable Het.,.." @9 VALDEZ IS COMING .. '""'~••LOI M1lltnlll..,, ii:lleH "1Cr•llohw1 losl of Jovo" IG1 l"IYI "Culffr of ttlo Wnt" (GJ wllll llOfltrf Sll•w ~Hus~and.sli.s;.supalatfvef **·**i! Hljfi"~st1Jlatff18f," -WANDA HALE. N.Y. Dl iT'f NeWi' AL 11µ1AN ... $AM ~MAW,_ G•'ftllA JD CID•JEIU' .......... .......: ~ 41. ~tAN .r-._..,. -SAM SHAW -_. oi-o.i ~ J()t1N CAlSAVfTfS ~ COLVMl lA "'1'VRU [GP)..::.i:;p-:..1 . ) ' Exclusive Oran9• County En9a9ement 2nd .TOP.BIT ' " . . ' %8 DAILY PILOT Friday, March Jq 1'171 Political Jflentballs Live Tl.enter Television 'No Wa y to Run Elections' Haggard Former]}' Convict Area Theaters Feature Dra1na, Co111edy PlaJ S By 'hrnnct 0 '1<1abtrty It has been f01.1r months since viewers choked-down the last po I i ti c a I cum1nercia\ designed to influence their voling In the November elec- tions. 1.iama Mi21 ! Thatsa no way to run .an election. Or i.s it? The po i I ! ca 1 meat·bal!s hadn 't been off !he air a W<'Ck before Gallup pollslers and ad- men Foote, Cone, and Belding, 6th WEEK DUSTIN HOffMMI "l.Jllll BIGMMI.: Plr9oGor,.ted• ........ Inc., began lo comb through the electorate to determine if TV commercials were an effective way to sell can- didates. 'rbis is the sort of venture only an advertising agency would have the in- nocence to undertake because no one will ever know the answer for sure. Nevertheles s. their findings reccnlly dropped out of the computers at FC&B and !be result s are now ~­~~~~~~~~~....;.;;...--.iJ Pl!MlllE OIAMGE cou•n ENGAGEMENT 11.DWA"DS . 21fDTOPFU.TUIE BARBARA HERSHEY TICl'\NICO~Olt ~ "TheBa!Jy ooMaker" 121 • (hoft•I BOTH RATED (R} {te• "diary of a Hmad housewife" richard benjam1n llll i!l carrie snodgress Jedricll« 2nd llf YllJO _2nd ot HA RIOR BARBARA HERSHEY -n;·sa~ l!I Maker" ail CH~W.ltt•~'• a.t'! ' ~) ·"' NOW AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS • IN MISSION Vl~JO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~II( Olf(,0 f'tlol Al lll PA/ hJRl\jQff 830690 - EDWARDS HARBOR ~.2 H•--lt¥D ., WIUOll ST. tOlll •£11 l•f·°'ll l 1Ull1 $ClllTll or !I."~ Dl(IOO rll"f PREMIERE ORA NGE COUNn' li.\'GAGEMENT Geo rge C. Scott, Academy Award Nominee fot Bt1t Actor in "Patton" Plu1 Charl•ton Ht1ton I" --..YH"EHAWiiTAiis··- 20th c..1..,.roo •"""''""AMES EARL JONES, Cl> JANE ALEXANDER ~ "11teGreat ~ eoior White Hope"~ DUVSIVE 01.lMGE COUNn INGAGIMENT '" Tl'M .,..n-iMSr.1'1 c&.,....• AU.Of.MY AWARD NOMINI:£ BEST A(l()ll . -· lorl Joe A(fltES5 . .bnt Altiolldr l'IMI "McKENZIE BREAK" aYailable: the overwhelming mniority of adults believe they had some cfrect on voting behaYior. Half of them felt they v.·ere "highly innuential." * A TOT AL OF 1609 men and v.·omen were asked 1wo ques- tions: .. How innurntial do you be!ie1·e sul·h i:ldvertising was Jn i:lffecting the way peopl-e voled in the last elections? Extremely inrluenlial? Very innuential? Some w h 11 t in- fluential? Slightly influential. Or not at all inrluential'! There has been S?~e discus~ion late· ly of restricting or cdntrolling in some fashion the amount and type of such advertising. Drug' Film Scl1eduled On KTLA The dn.ig problem will come under discuss ion on Chanoel 5 this Sunday when Robert K. Dornan hosts a former ad· diet and a film maker who has documented the effects of narcotics on a young rock musician. Appearing on the hour long "Robert K. Dornan Show," \\"hich airs at 4:30 p.m. on KTLA , is Johann Rush, a 23- year-old documentary fihn maker who serves as a member of Mayor S a m Yorty's Citizens's Narrotics and Dangerous Drugs Com· mi Ile~. What dCi you think or this idea?" The people who m o s t favored some kind of restric-- lion were men in professional and managerial positions, we5temers, and those in the $10,000 to $14,999 income bracket. The most frequenUy specified concern wall that alt candidates should have equal time and equal money. * The poll suggests that peo- ple ·who think the polill-plug!l are extremely Influential want restrictions on dishonorable claims as well as on the amount of money spent. And, a final amusing point : even those who don't think i;uch commercials are in- fluential want them restricted · because they're a nuisance LEGISLATION which w~uld limit campaign spending on TV was recently vetoed by President Nixon. To date, no one has submitted legislation desi~ed to limit campaign spending as a public nuisance. But it might not be a bad idea. * After studying the situation at great length (and breadth), J ~·ould like to submit The O'Flaherty Proposal F o r Political Huckstering o n Television: -DONT AU.OW any politi· cian to open his mouth on before election. ... A rew years back, :P.1erle Haggard did a guest spot on one of Johnny Cash's network television shows. The two singers were diSclll!ising a tune and Johnny said, "1'.1erle, I did that song on my latest album, which we recorded at San Quentin." "It's funny you should men· lion that. Johnny. Tt.e first time 1 saw you was at San Quentin." "You did?" said Johnny. ··1 don't remember you being on that show, Merle." ''f wasn't." replied Haggard. "!was io the audience!" Haggard, one of the best singer-tnusicians in the Coun· try-Music business today, will appear at Anaheim Convention Center. 800 W. Katella Ave ., Anaheim . March 20, and will, no doubt, bring down the house as he sings many of his own compositions, inspired so lo speak. by his early days behind prison bars. MERLE HAGGARD Anaheim Concert Date fair guitarist, he was invited to join the "1arden's Show and he became a regular. Now he could sing the songs he had written; now he could improve "his guitar playing; now he learned a lot about music. Released from jail at 22, Merle turned to Yarious odd jobs, proYided by his brother, but augmented his income by playing lead guitar at nigh t at High Pockets, a Baitersfield country music club. }{is original few night s a week led to three. then four and finally six nights a week as a musician, for he did no sinEing. Realizing where his real future lay, Merle quit his brother and went into the Country-fitusic business full time. "Thieves Cam.ival" A French comedy on stage at Westminster Community Theater, in the Finley School. Trask at Edwards Sts., West- minster.' Fri. -Sat. at 8·30 pm. through March 20. 1ie- scrvations -897-8315. "J\11sa Julie" uTbe Judgment" Two one act play3 on stage al the Nifty Theater, 307 fl-lain St .• Huntington Beach, at 8:30 p.m. Fri. -Sat., through April 3. Reservations 536-9158. "Wbo'U Save the Plowboy'.''' A drama on slage at the San Clemente Community Theal.er, 202 Avendia Cabrillo, San Clemente, Thurs. -Sat. at 8:30 p.m., through ~iarrh 27. Reservations--492--0465. "You Koow I Can't Hear You \\'hen the Water's Running" Four AndCi'son playJets on stage at the Lido Players, 701 Via Lido Soud. Newport Beach, Fri.· Sat. fi1arch 19-20. Reservations -673-5383. "Janus" A comedy on stage al tile Laguna fiioulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, La· guna Beach , Tues. • Sat. at 8.30 p.n1. through April S. Reservat!ons-494-0743. ''Marathon 33" Drama of dance-<:razed 30"!!: on stage at Orange Coast Col- lege auditorium, 2701 Fairvie\'f Road, Costa Mesa, Fri.-Sat. at 8:30 p.m. March 19-20. Ticket!> free at OCC Bookstore or ticket office. "A View from the Brldgr'' An Arthur 1'.1iller drama on stage in the Studio Theater on t.;CI campus (llun1anitie~ Bldg.), staged by Irvine Con1- munity Theater, Fri. · Sat. - throu gh April 3 at 8·30 p.m. Reseravtions -833-0793. "lJllies of the Field " Comedy-drama on stage at Santa Ana Community Thea- ter. 500 \Y. 6th St. Santa Ana at 8:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat., through Aoril 3. Reservations -543- 7647. ''!\fother Earth'' "lmuginary lnYa lid" "The Ind ian 'Vanis the Bronx'' On stage at South Coast Re-- pertory. 1827 Newport Bl vd .• Costa Mesa . at 8:30 p.m ., '·Mother Earth," Wed.-Thurs.: "Imaginary JnYalid." Fri. • Sal.: "The Indian \Vant!! the Bro•r.:,'' Sun. Through '°1arch. l~ush will show a portion o[ his fdrn -"'Journey Jn 'fimc'' which is a penetrating study of youth drug addiction, its cause and cffcc!. On film, Rush followed rock musician Donnie Jacobs through lour years of his life as he prcrgressed from glue :iniffing to heroin. -D!SPLAY the voting !"fcord of all politicians on every issue -in LARGE TYPE and VERY SLOWLY . Those politicians who aren"t IN offi ce must indicate how they would ha Ye Yoted if they HAD been. Haggard, called the "Poel of the Common Man," will neve r side-step mention of his prison record. Though born and raised in Bakersfield, he's really an Okie by heritage his family having migrated \\"CS! in the infamous Dust Bowl days of Oklahoma. He has known poYerty and hard times at first hand. A real bad boy, by his own ad- mission. Merle was sent to a number of tough reform schools \.1-'hen a lad and at 19 was committed lo San Quentin for attempted armed robbery while drunk. lfe's glad he did, for the ex·con today is way up there 1~ith the "Big Ones" in show business. His songs. and he 's written scores, haYe sold in the millions and made almost a million dollars for him. And only last year. he was ac- claimed the Country Music Associatio n's "Entertainer of the Year" and "Male Vocalist ••11t• M•"lc • Ch·lc lori""'· M•in SI•••' & Pie• a1 .. o1, 0•~1 Door P•i111 • A i 1011 $1.7S • C111icl1•11 1mdtt 12 f rt• of the Year." His "Okie From,[~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Also appearing is r.1urie Stinner, a 23-year-old forme r narcotic addicl, who has kick· ed the habit and is now help· ing other young people. She is the chairman and co· founder of a narcotic rehabili· tion organization called "The Self-Concern.'' which has its headquarters and housin,g for young addict& at a ranch in Chatsworth. Spigelgass Gets Post As Writer Leonard Splgelgass has been named as a v.-riter of the ~3rd Annual Awards Program or lhe Academy of Motion Piclure Arts and Sciences. ac· cording to Robert E. \Vise, produ cer of the show. -THESE DISPLAYS lo be embellished by such addilional items as all campaign con• tr i but ion s and brief biographies of those who made them. -THE E~'TIRE show must be carried on ALL television channels simultaneously and repealed twice with oollege credit given to the kiddies. -TO INTEREST viewers who might not otherwise be attracted to such pro- gram mng, the announcers and page-turner:oi: C(luld be recruited from loca l mod eling schools, be equall y diYided ac- cording to sex, and required to perform in the nude. If teleYision is going to be used to sell us our politicians it might as well be fa ctual and interesting. To date, political commercials have been neither. l\fovie Chosen For Festival It was while at San Quentin lhat Merle was proYided with a God-given opportunity. A Muskogee" addition all Yi: . received the top av.•ards as !he Best Single Record of the Year and the Best Album. T\VO Plays Haggard's music session at Anaheim on March 20, will also feature his own band , Set to Open The Strangers, and his own \\'ile, Bonnie Owens. plus Tom 'I'. Hall and Sammi Smith. At Chapman,r:===== MOVIE RATINGS FOR ~ENTS ANO YOUNG PEOPLE Tv.·o one acl plays will open lhe Spring season for the Chapman College D r a m a Department, t.1arch 25-28 in the auditorium on-campus, 333 No. Glassel! St., Orange, at 8:30 p.m. "No Exit'' by Jean Paul Sartre and ''A Phoenix Too Frequent'' by Christopher Fry, represent two differing views of life. They present a cynical treatment of the ways people reveal themselves in discov ering their basic dislikes of each other. The alt~phomore cast for "No Exit" includes ~lark Hen. firickson, Carla Diran. Debbie \Varren and John Copeland. f .... N.-r-ol ri.. ti/Hop ii 10 jMOI,. -..,,_, '"" -·...,,. ot ....... ·-""....,..,.,. ,"""' '/Wfrfn, ............................ -a ~-Ill·· ... _.,,. Appearing in Phoenix \Yi\l be Stephen Shaffer, \\'emkea Spigclgass y;on an Academy NEW YORK !AP) -Colum· Farris and Linda Sicker. Award nomination for v.•riling bia Pictures' '"Saturday filorn· Stage manager is Emiko On i. -.... 9 ... .. ....-... --.............. ._ lheffi~Sa fi1<.·~1 .. T· cf F 1ne NC>,v ApD?irotfl""",•?nt'E Nf\'tPOll1 & HARBOR, COST~ MISA WEEK DAYS Eve .Show 5ram. 7 P.M. Co11tl11oow1 Show Sat. Fro'" S-Swn. Fro'" 4 l or9oi11 Moth1ee E•ery Wedonday 1 P.M. HELD OVER EXCLUSIVE ALSO THIS THIUllfR "SUDDEN TERROR" JUNIOR MATINEE NEXT SAT. & SUN. BROUGHT BACK BY REQUEST lhc 1notion picture story for ing" v.·as selected for Showing[~~====;~~~~~~~~~~=====~,,. '":\lystery Street" in 1950. at the First Annual Interns-FRANK ""i lh his appoinln1ent, all tiona l Experimental Film MORGAN key incmbers uf the pro-Society Fe stiva l held I ACK du ction lean1 for !he program February 11·13 at Canisius h.a\"e been set. The others are College in Buffalo, N.Y. HA l E Y ~aul Chaplin, associate to The rilm was made on Joca· ~;~~~~;;~~!~;~;;;;~~~~~ \Vise; Quincy Jones. music lion at a resort 6,000 feet dirrclor; I. A. l.. Dianiond above Palm Springs '''ith 2{l <ind \\'illiam BO\\"ers. the non-professional young people others niembers of the \Yrillng lrom the greater Los Angeles h.::ini. Donald f\I c Ka y I c , area. choreographer: Edilh Head ,,-:._ ____ ..:.,..:., __ ....::::;! <.'ostun1e co nsultant; Hobert F:J filetzler, business manager. and Waller Glover, \Yho is in charge of !raffle: and securi· ly. Robert Finkel is executive producC'r and R1ch11rd Dunlap prodocC'r·d1reclor of the pro- Jll"iun Jor the i\"BC Television Ne111ork. ~·hich "'ill televise the Q<;car Show in color from lhr Pa1·ilion of the Los Angeles ~lusic Center on Thursday, April 15. YOGA CENTER r~\ ~~~ FrH Demonstration e S.t1i1rdoy 10 0 .111. • S1i111doy & Monday I ,.111. 445 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA 646·1211 Come ., vou *'' MAJOR STUDIO SNEAK PREVIEW * * IMPORTANT * * -FRIDAY, MARCH 19- The loYI coupl• of the seventies ••. ind the l1vgh riot of the y11r -R1tld (G) f rurn l'aran1ount Pic tures STARRING -WALTER MATTHAU & ELAINE MAY e FRIDAY. MARCH 19 SCHEDULE ONLY e OOORS O~fN AT 4:30 'Low• Story' 7:1S-Pr1vitw 9:00-'Low• Story' 10:45 ' 511·221J • J!Ut•Uf. •<>•fflJITf 1 Acldlmt Awaro Nom'"i!IO!ll * AH Ctltr P .. mlt .. E ltll Pl<lurP-fll!'I! Ado• '"' A.Urtll * , GN'1t C. Sc~•ttmtnl! "LOVIE STO~Y" (GP) * 'THEY MIGHT flE GIAJrfTI" s ..... • l h•rl. -'''° •1:00 • 11:f0 I e .llln•I <llrn•t·EVI Mlr!t 5l~G/ l'rl. • 5•1. -I ·I · lf · 11 p.m. • "GllAND Pill)(" " •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All Color P~rlm Gfll'9t c. Seen "Pit.nDJrt" tGPl plU! • JOll" W1y11•Rt<k MU<IMI• '"THE UNDEFEATED" 4GJ AU Ctlf• Prtmifft ERtlltr!lllll Dick .,..,. D""'' "COLO TUlt.l(EV" (GPI plvs • J•mu Sltw•rt.M..,..., ,..,.. "(.HIEYllHJrfE SOCIAL CLUI" IGPI .. It C:GIOl" l'~(ltlllVll Drlv•I" !119Wl""I , •• --... ) Undtr 11 M111t It Wl!ll P1ren1 1 , l fl-=..-"l .S. I \.DV• '!'OU" !ll f , . ~U plv!; • Mtr'9 Thomu . ."JEflJrf't"' IGP! •••••••••••••••• • ••••• •••••••••• -~ ·---5"41-6011 All Coltr l'•m!IT E•ltrT•lflm1111 AH II•• cur "l(JtAKAT OA.. EAST 0' JAVA" 101 pht1 e "G1Jt;TEll 01< TMI WEST'" 10~ p1.,. e THIE ...... zrE Jt -111.LI l'IOMT 01' TNIE CIENTUllV •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All Cttff ""''!IJ' l"l.ntlllft'ltftl ''TMI' AllSTOCATS" 101 thrl • Tiit Af~111tvrn of "l(IJrtC o,-TJrft CltltlLllS" 10! • ., •••••• , ••• ., •••••••• ., ••••••••••• 1 ....... . "Something Exclusive Showing LIMITED ENGAGEMENT for Everyone" THE BATTLE OF THE BUTT! THE CHALLENGE: /~ ---~ Every-;;;an, woman, and child t~ \ to qui~smo ing for 30 days ... ...,!or your c ry, for your honor, L ~.J> r S25,000,000I ,_ - 1 U.,.. ~ '11 llmrrlJI • ,. , DICK VAN OYKE :COlD lURKEY' M'fi n 11'1'1'.l:!l!)ll·ctlNeRtmil(lttcw. ._..,OJ1 .. BOO N£Wwm i.i.:-O !OrW« 1--llll~ -·l(llY~ lOR _.,~'(Rljj ttiA .. 'flt11UoLfW'.:fKD:.l ._ .. -tor~lOR [Yi·,~:» C8l.Gll t11rtl..-t' ........ ALSO PLAYING --- 2nd BIG COMEDY HIT Peter Sellers "THE PARTY" I ¥our Gu ide t o Fu11 Hungarian Quartet Slated i\1ARCH 19 -to GOLONURINAS FIEST A -The 13th annual Fiesta de las Golondrinu, a week-long celebration which coincides with the return or the swallows to San Juan Capistrano Mission closes this Sat. On Swallow Ray, March 19, Spanish, Mesi• can and Indian dances wlll Ile performed in a pageant in- side the ~lission grounds. The all equestrian parade will be held at 1 p.m. on March 20. A1ARCff_JI -21 A~1ATEUR ASTRONO:.fERS -The Orange C.Ounty Ama· teur Astronomer Club members will be showing photographs of astronomy findings and explaining the methods or tele- scope study, in the mall at Huntington Center, Edinger at Beach Blvd. in Huntington Beach March 19 -21. A show of In the Galleries Corona del Mm· W ate1·colors Se t SHERMAN FOUNDATION GALLERY -2625 E. Coast High- way, Corona del ti1ar. (Formerly Coffee Garden Gallery.) Hours : 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. The Junior League of Newport Harbor exhibit "'ill include watercolors by Caro Eaton. George James, Aline Thistleth\11aite and Ellen \Vright, through April 15. BOWERS ~fUSEU~I -2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours : 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tues . .Sat.; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun., and 7 to 9 p.m. Wed. and Thurs. No charge. On ei.:hibit through March, a sea shell collection and Oriental fabrics aad em· broidery. OCC GALLERY -2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Hours : 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mon.·Fri.; 6 to 9 p.m. Wed. No admission charge. On e1hibil through March 26, drawings by OCC art instructor, Ted Baker. . MARINERS LlBRARY -2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular library hours through ~1arch, paintings by Jerry i\1uller, Junior EbeU Artist of the month. MARL'iERS SAVINGS -1515 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, etchings and pastels by Bertha Staebler, through March. NEWPORT NAnONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, New- port Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, through April. photographs by John H. Atkinson Jr. MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive East, · Costa Mesa. Currently on exhibll through March, paintings by Clay Campbell. COSTA MESA UBRARY -566 Center St., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular library hours, stitchery, batik and macrame by Donna Friebertshauser. through March. J.VCO SAVING -3310 Bristol, Costa f\tesa. On exhibit dut· Ing regular business hours, oil and v.·alerco!ors by Bob Den· istoun. through 1'1arch . LAGUNA ART ASSOCIATION--307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Hours: noon to 5 p.m. daily. Docent tours, 2 p.m. Sun. "Media Explored ll." an all media membership show; paintings by Gladys Gray and weaving by Richard Landis. through March 28. Admission, non-members $1 : students SO cents. CROCKER CITIZJ:-:NS BANK -2300 Harbor Bl vd.. Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular business hours through March. paintings by Gertrude Mattocks. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th SL. Costa ~fesa. On exhibit during regular business hours. work in all media by Peggy Russell, through litarch. JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Highway, Corona de.l .f\far. Hours: ti a.m. to 5 p.m. daily . On exhibit, through March 26, varied \\'Ork by Tom Wesselmann . SADDLEBACK GALLERY -1660 West First St., Santa Ana . On exhibit through 1'1arch 20. "Roundup of Cowboy Art'' with 31 Western arlists ctisplaying their paintings. No charge. NEWPORT HARt0R ART MUSEU!\f -400 Main SL, Bal- boa. Hours: Wed .. Sun., l to 5 p.m. Mon. 6 • 9 p.m. Docent tours 2 p.m. on Thurs. On exhibit. through April tl. "The Art of the. Southwest Indian.," Indian objects including jewelry, baskets. pottery and weavings from Hopi, Navajo and Zuni Indians. Admission , $1 for adults, 25 cents for slu· dents and children under 12. CORONA DEL MAR LIBRARY-4W 1'1arigold Ave., Corona de! Mar. currently on exhibit during library hours, a multi· media show by students of the Harbor Day School. through March. DOWNEY SAVIJl-'GS -360 E. 17th St.. Costa f\lesa. On ex· h.ibit during regular business hours, oil and acrylic paint- ings by Gordon Andrew through March. TRANS Al\fERICAN TITLE -170 E. 17th St.. Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular business hours. oil and acrylic paintings by Irma Parker. through f\1arch. , t:~t. Show St•rtl 7 P.M. CONTINUOUS SHOW SATURDAY AND ~UNDAY FROM 2 P.M. FREE PARKING Exclusive First R un EL LIOTT GOULD -CON SUTH ERLA ND MARC IA ROOD IN "The Little Murders" "' ALSO '" JACQUILI NE BI SSET 1 JIM BROWN IN I I "The Grasshopper" se.lecttd works or Oran&e County professional photographers also wtll be on view in th& mall l\tARCH 11 • APRIL 17 PADUA THEATER -The Padua Hills Theater, Padua Avt.. three miles north of Foothill Blvd. in Claremont, is p~nUng "Lunes del Ct.rro," a folk play, with songs, music and dances of the Indian tribes Indigent to various regions of Oaxaca. Performances are Wed. and Sat., at 2:30 p.m .• and Wed. through Sat. at 8:30 p.m. Dining room open daily except ?itonday. ReservaUons recommended, phone (714) 626-1288. MARCH ZO ART FOR CHil..DREN -Saddleback College's Fine Arts Division is presenUng "What if ••• A Fine Arts Happen- ing for Children'' on Its campus, '8000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo, this Saturday from 10 a.m. to .12:30 p.m. Open lO all children 8 to ID-years ~Id, the expe.r1ence ls !or children who wish to learn by dorng. Storytelling, ere.alive drama, chorlc speaking, drav,•ing, painting and an art film are scheduled. AtARCH :0 BENEFIT SHOW -The Santa Ana Guild for the Deaf is presenting its second annual benefit show at 8 p.m. Satur- da y in the Sant.a Ana Valley High School, 1801 S. Green· vil le, Santa Ana. Scheduled to perform for the affair are Nanette Fabray, Jerry Naylor, the Carol Burnett dancers, magician Don t.Ianley, the Hear and Now singing group and Judy James. Emcee will be John Wade. All funds raised xiii go to the treatment of problems or the deaf. Tickets, $1.50 may be purchased at the door or reserved by calling 5.1:>3998. ~1ARCH ZZ TRAVEL LECTURE -Lloyd Mason Smith will hold travel lectures, presented by CX::C, in the Estancia High School Aud i· torium. 2323 Placentia. Costa ~1esa, on Monday evenings at 7:30. The series is on "Islands of the World" and is designed to better inform the public about them. Lectures are illus· trated by color slides. No registration fee i.!l r~uired. '."he ~1arch 22 lecture will cover the South Pacific, Society Islands, Bali, Tonga, Fiji, Samoa and New Caledonia Islands. and New Guinea . ritARCH %4 FOREIGN FD..l\t SERIES -The South Coast Cinema. &J.. ciety is showing a series of foreign films, in the. Forum on the Festival of Arts grounds, 650 Laguna Canyon Road, La· guna Beach. On March 24, the tt.alian Film, "Nights of Cabiria.' 'directed by Federico Fellini in 1957 will be shov,n. MARCH U • APRIL ! TRIP TO NORTH POLE -Tessmann Planetarium at Santa Ana College, 1530 w_ 17th St., Santa Ana, is hav~g a series or public shows each Wed. at 7:15 p.m. and Frt. at 7 p.m. The film "Easter and Our Calendar," will be shown through April 2: "2001 B.C . .'' April 21 l o ~lay 7. and "Shado"·s in Space," May 19 • June 11. The performances are free but reservations are. requested. Phone 547-9561. ~IARCH ts CHA!\fBER ~1VSIC CONCERT -The Laguna Beach Chanl· ber f\lusic Society will present the Hungarian Quartet in concert in the auditorium of Laguna Beach High School, 625 Park Ave., Laguna Beach, March 25 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets, $4.50 for adults: $2.50 for students, if available, may be reserved by calling 494--3106 or 545--7535. !\IARCH 2S OLD rt10VIES - ''The Thirties" will be the second of three ~Iain St., Balboa. March 25 at 8 p.m. Clips of great films from the depression years vdth W. C. Fields, Marx Broth- ers, Ruby Keeler, .l\1aurlce Chevalier and Jean ijarlow will be shown. Tickels for the series are $5 for Mateum mem· bers, $6 for non-members. Students: $5. The third of the. seriu is scheduled for April a. J\IARCJI 25 • APRIL ZI STORY HOUR - A .story hour for pre-school children will be held in lhe Alariner·s Library, 2005 Dover Drive, New· port Beach, each Thursday at JO a.m. The Coron~ del 1'-iar Library, 420 .f\.1arigold Ave .. Corona de! Mar \Ylll hold a story hour for pre-schoolers every second and fourth Thurs- day of the month at 10 a.m. l\IARCH %7 ART FESTIVAL -The Mission Viejo Associalion of Artists and Craftsmen will hold its spring exhibit, Afarch 27 in front of the ne111 medical center. fi.1arguerile and Avery Parkways, Mission Viejo, during daylight hours. Painting. ceramics, metal sculpture, macrame and tapestry will be shown. l\1ARCH ti BAl\'D-CHORAL CONCERT -The Int~rmediate School In ?.1ission Viejo y,·ill present its spring program with the band and choral groups performing at 7:30 p.m., .l\1arch 29 at the school, 25151 Pradera Drive . .l\1ore than 180 musicians will participate with Lamoyne Taylor directing the school band and Lee Austin a11d Nancy Stannard conducting the two choral groups. Open lo the pubUc free of charge. -IALI OA Pt:NINSULA- IALIOA ILYD. AT MA IN OP'IN 6:41 e 671·4041 The minister's daughttt. Htt father taught htr about God: Tht g)1>SY taught htr about Heaven. "Il"H. "Lawreit!:e'• vt>"'t:.../)"'\ 1HE 'W&= ~ \ , ............. [BJ- ) '-~p.....,p,o..., . • .... ·c-r..r,... .. ({fl..:/ ALSO "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" GIC YOUNG CAC Cl.Oltis llACHtWI COLOR !!!lo 'Wuthe ring Heights' Hcathcli!t ('l'imothy Dalton) tells Cathy (Anna Cal· der-Marshell) of his plan to marry Isabella Linton, in a scene from 'Wuthering Heights' currently showing at Fox South Coast Plaza I.I Theater. THE VILLAGE WEST FINE ARTS AND CRAFTS CENTER Ma~• Re1orv1tions Now For Gallery Space During The Festiv•I of Arts 79J l09w111 Ca11y111 Rtad • ff'ff poltl11t • 494·9J90 Frldu, March 19, 1q71 DAILY PILOT 29 MARANATHA CONCERT Fe1turin9 LARRY NORMAN GENTLE FAITH REBIRTH SATURDAY, MARCH 20 8:00 P.M . $1.50 ADMISSION FI RST SOUTH ERN BAPTI ST CHUI CH AUDITOllUM 610 HAMILTON -COSTA MISA BAWDY COMEDY -BITING SATIRE FRI-SAT WED -THUR "• , , like nothlllO yo11•--. '""·"-LA ltME!. " •• , fo'f'/11!. U-nly, ...,1,rtlll'IJno · ·~ •vw 1., otNrm .,... ov1 or .,...,, -•· -LA "TIMI!$ Mollere's "THE IMAGIN,\RY INVALID" NEW mu1fc1 I revue "MOTHER EARTH" IOI OFFICE: '4'61 JU 01 ALL A•INCllS .~(~1 t th ( oa I '{1crf1Jr\ Looking for a good drama 7 O ne that will move you emotionally and keep you absorbe d - For Only $2.50 1$1 .50 for students) 1 Then can 833-1 024 and mi ke your reserv ation for Tomorrow Ni9ht- ll•ca11 .. Ta11l9ht'• ttld 0111t1 Th1re are only S More Perform1nce1 of IRYINE COMMUNITY THEATRrs Production of Arthur Miller's "A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE" In the Old Studio Theatre, Humanit ies Hall, UCI Use Parking Lot 1 •nd Re.,,.mber: Curtain is at 8:00 P.M. DIVORCEES WITH CHILDREN: IT'S TIME TO ' MOVE TO THE COUNTRY FROM CROWDED CITY APARTMENT TO SPACIOUS NEW COON TRY HOME OF YOUR OWN FOR JUST $134.40 A MONTH Kids need a healthy environment. They thrive best in the country, in the fresh air. with Jots of other kids. Perhcips you ciualify for special FHA financ ing that can move you out of yo ur crowded •j)4!1rt.· ment and into your own spacious new three bedroom two bath home at New World. Here, you'D find swimmin g pools, wading pools, tot lots, miles of greenbelts and parkways, lush landscaping and gardens. And all the building ma intenance, landscaping and lawn care are done f~r you. At the same time, you'll begin to enjoy home owner's benefits such as tax a dvantages and equity •ccrual. And all of this for poymenls of just $134.40 a month. Compare this to the rents you 're now paying! Good schools are nearby. So are churches. Plus shops, restaurants, large markets and sho pping c1n• ters are right in the neighborhood. New World is in be autiful rolling countryside at Laguna Hills, iust seven miles from the fun of Laguna Beach. For all the details, visit New World soon. Give your kids the environment they need. Gold Med1n1on An·Elt'CMc LMng @• ..... __ ,....,.,. .. __ stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor ~d~~7 youve never heard it so good 'I-• • I , 3Q DAIL V PILOT f"rldiy, Mtrcb 19, 1971 • ATLAS. CH RYS UR r1r•our111 ••PERIAl Costa Mesa * ** ** * * ** IMMEDIATE DELIVERY FOR THE GREAT LI TTL E CRICKET OUR COMPLETE INVENTORY OP CHPYSLERS, FURYS, ROAO RUNNERS ANO SATELLITES, AT REALLY CL EAN-UP SAVINGS I ! '64 DODGE '°U.U SIDAN Aulom1tic. radio, h11f1r, f)0Wlf Ille•• ing. br1k•1, window1, 1•1h, 1i• condition- ing, !EMZ918l s595 '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA. CO UPI VI, autern1lic, ,,J;o, ).11ttr, pow,r slee•· it19, w).i!t wt \I lire•, t i r conditionin9. (TUllJ45 l '65 FORD GALA.XIE 500 VI , 1ulom1lit, radio, healer. powar 1t11ring. lRPR797! '67 BUICK GS SPECIAL 2 DOOl VI, 111!omatic, r1dio, ~'"'''· pow1r 1l11•· ing, 1ir co11dilionin9, .,;nyl roof. 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BRAND NEW GALAx11 q&si;,be4&10,.··;c;112 ; PICK·UP 1971 '69 fo•d cqpc. w;th 300cu. ;n. eng;ne,customcob, <ad;o, heat.,, h .. vy IMMEDIATE$ DELIVERY (lJ54H112413) NEW 1971 F·100 PICKUP $2488 ~~~~-E FULL PRICE .(F10BRL0003B) duty camper equipment. ( 182000) · COMPLETE Cl\MPER Pl\CKAGE $ FULL PRICE Brand New 1.971 ECONOLINE YAN $2688 FULL PRICE $58 8 MERC. COLONY PARK '66 .................. ;••.•·•·'"""';" $1088 •11110, ,ow1r 1t1trl .. , ni410, keat1r, m1tli • BRAND NEW 1971 51919 FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY AT WILSON FORD OR IF YOU PREFER OUR EASY TERMS $.65 i• rhe 10101 down povme~, end $65 i• !he lolol morirhly poy....,,I ind~din9 'toll. 'ii lie-¥ cili .fino1'Ce charge• on opp•O\led crediT for 36 monlhf.. 0.fe.,ed. paymeni price " '240$ ittdltdint·iU'i- nonce charge$, lo~•u, '11 li<;en•e or ii you p1eferJo poy.ccnh, full t1uh price ii $2051,9.S illc:lvdiflt' *"'91 10, & '71 licenst ,(1Vl3~ 107116) :'r lN•UAlPllCl•TAlllAR 10.64% 1 ', l971 MU·STANGia~ ' 1-------------------1 "'uchrnor9.(IUE47S) '68 ~'~I;P}~.~ .... ;.. $48 8 .... ------------+------------......,. , ............ "'""' . '68~~~~-~.~.?~~~!~~; $1288 70 ~~~!.~.~.!.~.~~~ .. : ... .. ---..... ==.,,.,.=,.... ..... ---_..;----I hecrter. CXHW-629) l•dl•, hocrr.r, rifle woll tlrft. '68 ~~.~?,~.~?,~2.NET $7 88t--------------+-,-6-,~FO~R".'.'D~_SU'."."'.P~ER~V"'.".A~N:--._----~ ~----=·~··~":':":':"':"!"109~~==~-----~ '6 7 Y;~:.~.E!.~~~l~~.~ .. lh""'· $ J·488 .,tomolkl•••'-"""l'"'I""'· '6 7 ·~~~!.~~~ .. '!.~.~~L~,r $888 •' ----(·_,._ .. _ .. ________ . ----+----(_"'_ .. _._,. ----------.,;.;~ 1---F=o:-::R'="D'='RA'="=N~C:::H:::ER='=O:-------I 6 9 ~~!~.~~.~~!!.~~.~~~'"'-$1988 '6 7 ·;'""'"""·"';',h'""·(V2Jll2) $128 8 1 11-----'"_·_"'_i•,_h"_'_'"_(OOO_l_Hl-) -----· ___ ,.. ____________ .;__..;.._,.....; __ '69 ~~~'~'~?.,!!.~~.~~ ........ $2· 288 '69~2~·~·~!~.~~~; ........ $22.88 ror1 fh1C. (011260) lr•ke1, P•••r Wh1l1w1, l11fo1i1 loot. ' (IXC-SM) I '68' !~~.!.-.!~~~~~~~~.~ ....... $138 8 l.oHo• t.,, SliowrooN Frei• (216-ISY) '69 T-BIRD LANDAU ·$29·11 P.11 Po•tr litel••i .. fecttry Al~ Powor : Stotrl ... WIH· Stofs -lnlkt .. Y"J.776 . • • .. ! '67!~,~!!~.~,~~~~.~.,,;, .. "' $13 88 M•c:tl Mort. (SXE-161). · • " J ( 32 DAll Y "LDT frld.,, Mi rth 19, 19/l , Everyone Has Somothing Th at Somtone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ·rhe Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Can Sell It, Find It, Trad a II With a Want Ad HoulM fot Sii• ---··--· HURRY! HURRY! $21,950 \~on'I la11 loni. 3 hedmom~. 2 h.ath, M.rdwood tloor1, carpet,;, dt•pe1, bltns, dblt $:11r.. hUt:t C'l">\'f'rM parlo, hlock 1111.ll l"ncr. f ull price S7L9:l[) :>;o rfo1o1•n \'A nr ;,•, ', Jnan ran ~ asi;umr<l I 111!h Sl:I() 11 mnnlh pay, all. Ca.II 54G-115l, tope.n t \'tl.) [Y Ol'!N HOUSE SUNDAY 1·5 16532 Los Verdes, H. B. J BMroomll, l BarhJ, e:cct"p· tion1Uy 1harp .\fr11.do10t'l11rk E!tll.lt Homt. A M main· ff'na~e, profl!ll~ionally ]and. aca~ yard. Country Club an!a near Htil and S'prin1- d11le, Jo'ull prire $39,lm. 546.231.J \0 THt: RF:/\L '"'\.. f:STATr.RS . . ' CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCHURE OF CU••INT LISTINGS OFFICE OPEN SAT. & SUN . NEWPORT BEACH DUl"LEX Brand new 4 BR., 2 Ba. uf.per unit plus 3 BR .. 2 Ba. Two generation ower unit. Close to tivic center. S73,500 ""ith very excellent terms. Gene Vreeland WOULD YOU BELIEVE This great view7 4 lar,R:e bedrooms, 3 baths. \v~t bar. all electric kit., sunny breakfast room. formal dining room; corner lot. Com· munity swim pOOL $79,500. LaVera Burns Ol"EN SUNDAY 11-3 1219 SANTJAGO -A beauty! Owner leaving the country. Anxious. 1'tagnificent 22x20 custom den \\1/high beams, overlooking ex- -q~i~ite yard. ~ Brms. w/view. lrg. formal d1n1ng rm. Asking $89 ,500. Muy Lou Marion YOU ARE INVITED TO OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY AFTERNOON In Bayshores at 2722 Circle Drive. Spacious. contemporary home w/exceptionally low leasehold of $360 per year. \\'e have other Jine homes from 542 .000. Mary Harvey PARK LIKE Rear yarct \\'ith POOL. enhance.~ this cutie; 3 bdrm. home with SHAKE roof. on quiet cul de ~ac st reet. Be an early bird. $49,500. .Harry Frederick ~c A TERRIFIC BUY ~ l'The Bluffs''. Three bedrooms & bath~. with a view. One of the be~t greenbell~. cloiie to Upper Bay. \1acant, ready to move in now. $42,500. Al Fi nk IRVINE TERRACE Call to ~ee this large 3 bdrm .. contemporary home w 1a pool & v1e\\·. The 1pacious livinit room & den are ideal for gracious living. A clloice location. $85,000. Bud Austin UNIVERSITY PARK A pool & jacuzzi of you r own +-all assoc. !ealures; live in solid comfort in this lovelv 3-BR .. 2 Ba .. lp:e. family rm. home. Quiet ct.ii de sac st. Xlnt location. $48,950. 11Chuck" Le"'I' POPULAR EASTBLUFF Cozv 4 BR. home. in a great residential area. faniily room. C'lo~e to ~chools. churches & freewa,•s. H urr\'~ !51.000. Gathryn Tennille CORONA DEL MAR-VIEW Custom 4 BD. home \\1ith ouLo;ta nding vie\\' of harbor -localed on cul de !'ac \\'ith rom- plele priv;;icy. Offer needed'. Excellent fl. nancing. $105.000. J~arriett Davies CUTE-OCEANFRONT First time offered, so hurrv! Furnished 2 BR. with fireplace. C'hoice location -wide he11.rh -large front natio. 2 car garage. Good condition. S54,~00, xlnt terms. Art Gordon OWNER IS ANXIOUS Big price rerhtrtinn on thiJL: beauty make~ it Baycresl's bargain buy: One of Ivan YilelJs best with big -0001. on a big secluded lot. Now $87,500 I.:. ~immcring. Bill Comi:tock OCEANFRONT Superb S. E. coastal "iew. Beautiful c:ui:tnn1 in aated area. "-'/beach. pool~. tennis courL". Larae playroom '\.v 1nreplace & bar. 7 Bed · rooms. 6~ ba's. l ,uxuriou~ appointments. $39 S,OOO. Caro l Tatum IALBOA PENINSULA Choice bay(ront lot. Prcstl2e location for " single. ramlly residence or multiple unit~. Prtv•to u ndy beach. $75.000. Bette Partch EMERALD BAY l~I l~,.__I --····-· I~ I ........ , .... I~ I Gen.ral LEISURE LIVING 1111._ &lrnu;. 'l~·o Batl'l8, all * r lf'clric (bnrlom!nluin. In. ****** * TAYLOR CO. * eluding t·adiant h"''· Beau- tifully c1u1>t•IM and draped. Oetachrd dnublr &•rll&r, profr18ional I a n d 1 c a p _ Pd rhru-<>ul. Jo:n.loy hllldm!n- ron rourl• It 11hufflr bollrds, purring grttn11 And hPalM poo!J, with Xl olh"1' ('harm- iN:" Tlf"ighbor!i. NO ~iAn•;. TENANCE -REL.AX ANO LIVE. Only ~.~ With ThTu\tS. E11Mtin11:11 CAil f.46-4579 Ocean Breeze and Whispering Trees M11.gnir1c-en1 pine ltf'PS N"al- Jy acN'n1 rh1.~ Marp ~""'" port n· ... ~r HomP. 4 8'-d- rnoms. 2 h1111hs. rorn,.r lt>I, roon1 !(Jr boat anrl 1r11i1Pr ThiJJ p11n1tflse tor ktrb: ,, only onp m1lr 10 rh,. heach. Nrw lis1in.1:. t"o ciO"'" tQ Vr11. S.12,%0. ~COATS ~ WAL~AC! CAMEO SHORES -Slll,000 Owner will consider e~changing this luxur· ious 4 BR & den home for amaller one. Lge. DR. plush bar w/view of spacious patio, pool & lanai . Fine design thruout. 4500 ORRINGTON RD. Open Sun. t-5 :30 "BROADMOOR" SPECIAL I $62,500 Attractive & sharp! Hurry today & see this lovely 4 BR home w /FR & formal dining. 2612 LIGHTHOUSE Open Sal·Sun, 1·5:30 PROMISE HER ANYTHING Then surprise her with this luxuriously ap- pointed Dover Shores Italian Villa featuring 4 BR, den & 3th baths. View~ ........ S99.500 1606 ANTI GUA Open Sun, 1-5 :30 DOVER SHORES -$105,000 Brand new home w /dramatic 2-story living room. 4 bdrms. study, garden rm w/wet. bar & formal DR. Island kitchen & 3-car gar. 410 MORN ING STAR Open Sat-Sun. t-5:30 CAPE COD ON WRONG OCEAN! Authentic in detail. White water vie"' in North Laguna. Custom built 5 BR & 4 baths. Private steps dn to beach ........... $185,000 IRV.INE TERRACE -$62,SOO Choice location! Near F'1shion Jgland . }-furry to see this spacious 2 BR luxury home ~·ith 21h baths. Unusual detail. 439 AVOCADO Open Sun. 1·5:30 LINDA ISLE -$250,000 Vacant-Im '1t1 POSSE SION Owntr u.y1 ae this 3 rm Wratside riv@ by 9IW Grove Plau, thrn <'.all for appointment to ttt. Pnced at ...• , 523,SDD VA Repc1ie1sicn J Brdroom, 1\1 bath5, doard pall&, ntwly~rat!!d, Meu. de! Mar, Slf.00 do\\'n. $31 ,950 JUST LIKE NEW J Sedrm. 2 bath Condomln- imum, completrly redrc !nclud1ng nl'W c11rpets. Im· mt>tf. occupancy. Pri~ be- low milrkf'I al .. , •• $20,SOO ... ------'= "= qp~ "J -.:...J . .-.I ..-.,.-.-.......... ,. ~ &42-1771 Anytime EASTS I OE COSTA MESA Spacil'IUll i\lodern CU!llom built rambling homt>. Ctim· pJ,trly Jpnced in with bnck "'all11 and wrought. iron J.:<11'~· Lar11;P Living Rm. wilh oj'.lf'n bParnt'd ceilinp. Thrf'e B<lrm.•. Two baths. DIN. Ri\.1. AND EIL.F.CrR.IC Bi l KJT. reocec1 oU heated Md fil!f'r!'(f POJL. Pr1ced lo Sell fast st Only $29.!JOO with GI OR FHA TERMS. MACNAB -IRVINE Serving Newport Harbor since 19M, twenty- five experienced residential l!ialesmen wtth over 270 years of service. FINER HOMES LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT Elegant 4 bedroom t-illa \\•ith 2 bedroom apartment. Formal dining room, basement, sheltered patio. A beautiful home at $225,000. SPECTACULAR HARBOR VIEW A galaxy of lights by night. Charming and comfortable 3 bedroom, 3 bath quality home with the low. low price of ........... $69.500. You must see it. Open Sat. & Sun. 801 Kin gs Road, Newport J-leights. SPECTACULAR Beamed ceiling in dining and living rooms -bay and ocean view. Hillside pool and ter- r ace surrounded by rose garden. .!JI new carpets and decor in this beautiful 2 BR -2 Bath home. Call us for an appointment $56,500 I NESTLED AMONG THE TREES A delightful 3 bedrom home in beautiful lr- vine Terrace ..................... , , . $47,500. Call for appointment. 67~3210. BEST BUY IN NEWPORT BEACH Immaculate, beautifully decorated home has everything for carefree family living, 4 bed- rooms, 3 bat.hs, family room, formal dining room. Beautifully landscaped gardens with room for pool -.................... $43.500. HOMES FROM $27,500 to $44,000 REALTORS Open Evenings e 962-4454 • Glamor & perfection in this guperb 5 bdrm home w /fam. rm ., formal DR & 5 baths. Ele- gant decor thruout. Pier/slip . Air cond. ,31!1!1111!!111!1! .. l!!l!l!I~ 1 A T OU C H 0 F N E W 0 R L EANS Immaculate, roomy 5 bedroom home on spa· cious lo t. Walk-in closets -Dining room - Family room. You can't beat the value-this \\1ill sell fast! OPEN SAT/SUN . 1·5 1134 P•ularlno, C.M. Walk In All 11rhnols lncl. Or- ange ((')llS! Coll'"R'· J BR., 2 ha. plus flln1 . rm. Coosid · 'r 11!1 t'rms. $29,700. .. * * * 972 Denver Or., C.M. niA or VA.. 4 BR. plus lam. rm , 3 ha. J,i;:10., lov,.ly lam· ily hon:f'. Xlnt n,1ghbor- h0()(1. S3Zi.950 I . . . .. WATERFRONT HOME FOR LEASE From April 1 thru August 15. Furn. 2 BR + bed.rm on lower level. Beaut. bay vu . Pvt. pk. w /flowers & trees. Ca ll for details. "BROADMOOR" TRI-LEVEL Most desired a menities in this spac 4 BR home w/fam. rm. & sep. DR. Ocean/Island \'iew & dream garden w/rare plants. $77,500 BAY ISLAND An older 5 BR home with loads of charm on this lo\'ely tropic.•! island right here in New• port Beach. Pier &'slip. Call for appt. POOL $26,950 Tur hP~t ht-1 1~ !he fir~I p,or- eon to JPr 1h1,11, absolutely Ji:Or1l'P(IU/il .l hPrlrm, 2 hath horn,. ~·11) hi! thP new qwn· A FABULOUS BUY 3 bedroom. 2 bath Model. Quality carpets - beautiful decor. Central air conditioning. De. lightful family room ................ $34,900. For appointment call 675-3210. HAVE A CLUBHOUSI Pool, putting green and tennis courts almost in your backyard -while enjoying a 3 bed- room, family room home in delightful Uni· versity Park. \Valk to public golf course.. ..................................... $27,500 2425 22n~lr~, NB Ra<'k 811.y: rllnch.11 J.l'ffin11: nn l l/lOth acr,~. ,000 •Cl · IL home plu• fiOO ,.q, fl. pt11yroom. 3 tuilh11. 4 RR. plu11 111:,. ram. rm . Room tnr ponJ, IP'111 1~ l'IS, l)r " .i1 1J1nn k1rl~! iR7.~. LIOO NORD -70' BAYFRONT Lovely courtyard patio surrounded by~ bdrm home w/4 baths & guest apt. Pier/sli p ~r. Spark1ing condition, cool REAL ESTATE SALESMEN PLUS '8ndy beach. By appt. ........ $260,000 mYrl'Pd (Hlfi('), fully <'rptc1 An outstanding opportunity ls ava Hable for on jl'rPa! t'Ornrr locati(ln. 2 real e~tat.e salesmen to replace 2 of our NEAR LITTLE CORONA BEACH ('ustom built spacious modern. 3 BR w/gour· met kitchen. \Vide angle vu of hills & some ocean vu. Beautiful wood paneling & fabu· &verybody 11ual ifir,11, 1" ~·· ~taff u1ho are being transferred to other areas sume thi! low 1nlrresr VA I "b · loan . besi hurry~ c 11 o respons1 il1ty. Fringe benefits including 545-8424. 8 1 free medical insurance. Call or write Rick fi7:'l-577ti BAYSHORES BAY FRONT NP"'' Exclusi11P .t Brrlrrom1.. ~h B11!hs \'1Pw l11n11ly room 2 firPp]llC'R P11norJ1.m1<' Bay \11pw B111)'5irlr Hra1rd Pool Jmm11C'UlllP <IN"am hom1 By aPf!i01ntmrnt only $293, 700 REAL1'0RS SrNCE 194·1 673-4400 OPEN HOUSE SAT. & SUN. 1-5 5892 PADUA l RrrlrorH1'1&, 2 B11lh~. f'.>.:!r11 11h11rpl 1rim in~id,. snd nu!. rnmplelf' 11pnnkJpr !ly~t .. m. lnvtly covf'red p11 ho v.•!th ocl'An \'If'"'-\\'11.lrr ,viflrnrr lous m~tr ste. Priced lo sell! ........ $87.500 ".216 'POPPY Open Sal. 1-5:30 CHOICE LOTS -PRIME LOCATIONS DOVER SHORES & BA YCREST 90' Front, level, fee ................ S 27.500 85' Front. level , corner. fee ......... S 28.500 80' \1iew site, level, lease ........... S 29,500 75' x 180' VU on Galaxy, lease ...... S 39.500 57' Front. pier & slip, lease . . .. $ 53 ,500 BEAUTIFUL LINDA ISLE 56' Waterfront. Lease ............... S 69.500 45' \Vaterfront. Lease . . . . ... $ 73.000 45' \V&terfront. Lease. Plans incl. ... S 75.000 108' \Vaterfront. Lease . . . $12..5.000 ''Our 26th Y ••r'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 21 11 San Joequln Hills Ro•d NEWPORT CENTER 6«-4910 * * * * * * * l ·G~•n_•_,_•_l~~~~~~l ·G-•_n_•_••_I~~~~~~ Posh Palace MESA VERDE CAMBRIDGE COATS " . WALLACE REALTORS -54'-4141- (0pen Ev1nin91) ' -a-Rusnc OPEN HOUSE Xrr11 shaf'T1 4 BR , .l BA. Cut, 2 bMroom home with hP•ut tilP l'fltr:-'. murr t"rg'" r111mil,v t't'IOm. HUGE inc-Jucil'd. Own,r lran.~frrl'fl. 3106 ).1urr11.y Lanr Colhl llnml' re11.dy tB o<"rup~ · Mf'CA • Niturda.v & SurM:h1y 51 .. ~:-\"A Loan. Full J'rtcf' Qilf' ~BR + FA -(lwnPr SZ:.9.10. 5'6-2313 11.nxtouit • f'HA • VA 01\ • ))81\l"llPd l1v rm " ,;Ion!! lot. R.aJAl'rl bnrk hPlll'lh in trplr. Cu . .tnm l"Tlll.• I. rlrpA l1\•1ng room. f 1rtopl11r" It thrurol. fonnAI dinLnf 111rl'll. BBQ in fllm1ly room . QUICK Bhn r"ngr. nvrn /,, <lih11o·1hr. OCCUPANCY. If you a~ 10 Tl!I:: REAL I~ I::STl\TERS ' '" ' ' .... ELEGANT VIEW LIVING E11rn Imm !hr itnllrmP! kl1r'h .• d1n1n11: • 11\•lni;: 11rr11 C..nmP •f'f' And tall In lo\'f'.', ()pf-n from 1 to 5. I ORI \'I t Ol\ON ... ' ~!',.1ro1,>1 Approx. 1800 sq. rt/ SJ2.500. uarctung [(Jr thll! "COUN- {;J oc f"HA 1rrms. Call TRY ATMOSPHERE," nflS I M7-17'21. IS IT? Qnly $32.000. CALI. .,,,...,,,_ ' A4l\ttill\4~ ·~&CO.I ~ ~IUCI "'-•tll·llH 1n41 BtAch Btvrl., H1nr Bch • ..,_,__.,.,.. __ de msir. hdm. A mu~t Ji!!e! Dl9 llarhnr, Coet11 AfeM 0P9n S•t. 1.s l o()=-..,-.-,.~1---'---Or>'" "" • p m. ' 2 Stoiy Doll House 1060 S1nti1go BOYD REAL TY :11;:hl f., rn111 s1 M"') ., Ctfi\t '7!-5930 POOL & VIEW t_..r.R" pllllo, 2 Brt, N ci•n. !;porlr.o..•. Npw 11pphaf'IC'f'5 • lnw lr1t.~r. M1kro !I d111rr 1n ~,... 62~ RAmona, Irvin!! Trr "" CURT DOSH, Realtor Gener•I WATCH THE BOATS F'rom kitch .. \iv. rm. & mstr. Br. ol this 3 Br. 2 ba. CdM bayfronl beauty w/beach- es on both sides. St29,500. "' BEACHES -BOATS Bayshore~ bY the beach. 4 Bdrms., 4 baths Top loc8tion. Reduced to $74.000. BEACH KEYS rr,.turing bf.11.mrd r''iHnas. coiuntr:,· ~t.vlr kJtrhton ~·/ hl!n,,, Jo1111:h nf p11;n,.thna:, ~h111kp roof & bt'11utitu1 c-111r- J>f'IA. Uniqur E11;11tlid, h01'111', 11:parious ups1111N , 2\, ri.r .i:-ar•.e:~ ,, b"~'"mf'n1 . Untw - V'\f'vPably low pr1Cfo<I S2t!Y.il. Hur~. call 540-1151. tnptn l'Vf'.O. ! ' Macnab -642-6235. SALES MANAGER Excellent opportunity available for a sales manager with real estate license. Responsi· bilities include staff control. classified adver· tising. and sales instruction. Applications to John Macnab•-642·8235. MACNAB· IRVINE 675°3210 HARBOR VIEW HILLS Light and airy 3 bedroom & family room with great view from large entertainment patio. Open Sunday 1-5 , 1027 Tiller Way, $57,000. CHOICE BA YCREST I. Large 3 bedroon1. J bath & family rm, 2 fireplaces. lovely lo"' maintenance garden on quiet street. "1\1ust see" at $62.500. 2. Custom built 4 bedroom, 3'h baths, family room with extra large living room over-look- ing sparkling pool. Formal dining r o o m • $81 .500 DOVER SHOR~VIEWS 1. Near new 4 bedroom, 3 bath family room, Formal dining room. Great court yard pool. $lt2.000. 2. Special floor plan for teens or visitors. 5 Bedrooms Jlh: baths. family room with fire-- place. formal dining room, panoramic \'iew. $92,500. HARBOR HIGHLANDS 1. Com!ortable 4 bedroom family home priced U> sell at 139.500. 2. Large 2 slory S bedroom home-011 fine corner lot. pool + separate children's play yard. 'v'acant. See anytime. $79,500. ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors 1033 Mlrlners Drive, N.B. ~1550 Dover Shores Office -----------------. -G __ ._.,._,_•_I ______ J Gtner1I * CHOICE * 00sA'"'F'°"E"'T""'Y--,,P-,,Rl-V-A-CY- Within step& to the pt1.rk & be1rh in lhi,; a.t- tractlvr.ly dtt<1rated 4 Btdrf'lom. dlnln( room IL family rt>Om home with beamed ceUin1s. Extra l1re1 lot & y,·ell located on tuk!HIC street. '89,SOO '&4~.&1'1 ~:vr~. G7l-J.igs I 17:111 \\'. (011.0.t H1$fh• .. ~· Go "'·ith this 3 Br. & den. Pine tree. shad· ed homt on lge . (you o"'n it ) lot. Best terms. S42.500. Open Sun. 1·5, 468 Serra Or .. Corona Del Mar. Cnmm,.rcil.J lnv,.tlmrnr np•r U hubby tr.11lll'ls ii. you w1nt l...111(') ra1r. N,.wport lk11ch. ~urlty, ~. 03.0700 C OLLEGE PAR-K OPEN SAT l·l HOME SHOW REALTORS exchange? l••se-option? (;h(l1l'f' \\'estclifl 3 BR. F'11m rm, J • <"•r '"r111t. Pon L Tr,.de do""'" ll'!r 1noornt or ~ ""~'f: )"l)IJr bu111nMt1 k llvr 321 SNUG HARBOR l•rtr 11,rt sturl~ plu11 11 · OPEN SUN. 12-4 lhPT? loo. F'ir11t 111ory ~ r-;EWPORT HEIGi ITS U""IVUI: tiV"tfl$ ~EIUl .. 17~ COM HILLSIDE JU11 re-hsttd $651)'.J. 1eil' than brio~. CUtr. cle.u 3 bedroom wnh Anthotir pool, somr \•le\\. neW c:rptg, and frt land \ Thb will ao fast? AT $43,0001 U""lll UI: ti()Mi;S 11. ... 1 E1t11•. 175«IOI 2") E. Ca.tit Hwy. \' Co1on.11 O.t Mar, Cdt. • TAX REFUNDERS DANDY DUPLEX 2 &odroom each unit IO'"'~ Down $29,9!0 SHARP SHARP . 2 Units on Cosra. f.1esa St: $31,950 ' TERRJ'IC TRIPLE~'. Prr~nt Income $420 m•; FHA appra.iBB.l k 18les prlqt $39,SOO ' FANCY FOURPLE>C 4 Studio a.pts, 111 BA eaclt $41,000 Ntwpo~t at , ' F•irvityt 646-BBfi (anytime) BRAND NEW Immt'd1at' nccupancy, Pric..1H tw-l(')W rpplarPml!ni. 4 Bed· moms, 3 hi\lh11 + pcnvde' room, ll!.rgr panellf'd fall!· ily roon1 \\1th 2nd hrepll.Cf' k bhn wf'I har. Ca.rpetl!d thruou1. Sp11rkling pool MG Y,el!,rf'rl landscaped court- yard. CAii today to i;rr th!B out~ll!.nding Dover Shores 0Hr:r1ng. 1 Ivan Wells & Sons Roy J. Ward Co. EXCLUSIVE AGEi\IS 1003 !\larlnerg DriVf' ~].$() (Open Dally) • IN-LAW SUITE · Come 11ee this clrver ~oludOo to tilt difficult pmhle m oJ wt'lerr !O pur thf. Jolks mMI 1tiU gi11f' thPm rhf' privacy !hey ntord. In 11dd111on ro; l&ril!! 115.&Um11blP. ]nan, t1tl!i well n1aintainrrl homP bu hoat arcl!s!. 3 hPdmoMI!, 114 bafhs, 11 d1nir1i; room antf 1s nellr arhools 111 n cl South Coast PJ.tJZll. VA of FHA Trrms 11va1lahJ,. All this for only $27.001. Hll(- ry! This onr \l'On't !alt! 546-2.lll O THE REAi I '"\. ESTATER.~ . ., . CANYON SITE•; \\l'\fh pa.rti!ll ~11.n \1'11.'W. 2 Brdrm & dton, 2 hath +. bf!llUT~ful f111mil.v room (17~ 371 Mfh fiat:stonr llreplace, 1pecia! p;ulf'Uing . ~moked a.lass ~1ndow, s~.750. OPEN HOUSE SAT. & SUN . 1-5 MESA VERDE 216' Serang, C.M. l Br. & Family $37,lOO Rey McCerdle, R.e•ltor 1310 Nt\\T()rl l\lvrl , C ~f. -mn2t MESA VERDE SPECIAL ?.love In romomiw 1n TIU !H1hly dttorated 3 bl'dt'M1'1l & family room "''llh tire., p!a~ -2 m1nutr ""lk fO ail 1torri -r•n bP 1ren Anytlm,, c" 11 rto" ~ S28.000. ~231.J \ D THI:: RI::AL '"'-r.ST/\TERS • ,, ' !¥ 644-2430 Coldwell, Banker 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR ., N.8. 3!6 PRINCETON Brln11( mom ..., -4 nn -+ root.. AbSPfllPf' "" ntor """* ... offf'r. This m•y ~ • h"lll"l" JEAN SMITH, RL TR florenc• mccu1 rltr. 642.77!19 a_nytimr "WEED It k reap .... ell'~ fllJI Thi! trtA~llN!! ,l trs.1h - tum ln!n r'll.,:h thru 11 011.ill' Pilar Cl11J~if1M "d. 642-SliTR Air room & a•rll.Rto•. S..(i. Pmlu.!lion trtts. nov.·,.ra. 3 (ln(I •t<'lty h115 !WO plu~h II\' ~rub!W'd pllfioii, Xlnt tf'rml ~nr 11.p11.r1mtnt1. F><tr111 lot .Hal Plnchin & A11ec . ;----------1 lnr pArktn1;, Tot11I pncP REALTORS I l' ACR&-POOL--HORSES $&9,jl)O, Orl11,. by 417 Jltl I ;moo E, Coafl Hwv. 67~192 J br, t~ b11, country-IT)'\« Slf'H!f, Dt1 not c1 !1turh trn. -Mme rlf'llr new p•rk li'"fltr an1~ Cl!.!1 (l" ntr 11~rn1 &II 11111'.' hrft\JI no11o·1 Call .fban ~111:>< I'.' :< t' h 1n1 •, 1•------------------'1l/Vl F !irh$r f\I fi-lfi·~~'i:"1 liT.>-4114 E1P, f;T';i.17~7 fi~2-~71 N~w! ()y,nrrfAJ!'t '>1~9-li7 DAIL V PILOT 33 I~ I-...... I~ Goner a l EASTSIOE $19,950 LIDO WATERFRONT Cha<mmo E"t"d• horn•. ov. APTS.-320 LIDO NORD n L J? Lf //) /Ji 1 :~:c.1 2 1~~~"~;:nis~1~~1;~ $-~~~~ ~~~~1.w:n.1~"'~~ /-' l!te V.)a.rrei1 f<:.eall'J ·-t "U'l•'t ·-e. J b car """""es & utJJ. room. ~ ..... e. .. y ..... a. UJmpe1e .. --pi•e'nt• WHh patio, carpets thruout SO Ft. on swimming beach. "~ ., anti shingle roof. Large Jot, \Yi!! eonsider trade Ior boat alley access, one block to or niaximum $85,000 )ge. 4 COAST IS CLEAR Catholic church. Ne,.,. on BR. bOuse T markei . won't last Jong, Bill G;undy,. Rltr. , AND HE VIEW of the Bay is spectacular. Call 546 5880, Heritage Real-833 Dover Dr , N.B. &U-4620 2 Excellent properties available: Lachenmyer tors. (open eves.} I * 3 BEDROOM, dining rOOR) & den, im· e.au 642-5678 Now! maculate and beautiful . , .. , .•... $59,500 302 Kings Rd., Cliffhaven O~n Sun. 1-5 Realtor Open Houses THIS WEEKEND KMp thlJ he1111dy directory with yeu thl1 wHke•nf •• yo1 'JI• lta11w-hu111ti111. All the IKatlo111 llsted btlew or• dMCrlHd h1 9'"'-' detail by ed¥trthf1t9 olM- whoro 1111 tadey'1 DAILY PILOT WA.HT ADS. htro• showh19 0,.11 ho111•• far 1alo or to rnt or• 1,..-d to lfst s11ch i1tfarmatio11 I• thl1 calum• eock frlcloy, HOUSES FOR SALE (l Bedroom) 231 Orchid, Corona del Mar 675-3331 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 439 Avocado (Irvine Te rrace) CdM 644-4910 $62,500 (Slill 1-5:30 ) (l BR & Family or Oen) *624 Ran1ona (Irvine Terrace) CdM 642-6472 (Saturday 1·5) (3 Bedroom) 546 Santa Ana Ave., Ne \vport Beach 646-4-060 (Sun 1-4) 5205 Bruce Crescent f Lido Sands) NB 642-5841 $33,500 (0pen) 1060 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB 675-5930 (Saturday 1-5) 309 62nd St., (Ne,vport Shore s) NB 541J.12!l0 (Sunday 1·5) 242 Lugonia St., Ne\vport Beach 646-7171 $29,950 (Sun 1-4:30) 1921 Deborah, Newport Beach 646-7171 (Sun 1-5) •27 Balboa Coves, Newport Beach 642-5000 (Sun 1-5) 216 Poppy, Corona de! Mar 644·4910 $87,500 (Sal 1-5 :30) COi Kings Rd. (N'pt Heights) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) 548 Vista Grande. Ne\vport Beach 673·8550 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (3 BR & Family or Oen) 30441\Jadeira fMesa Verde) CM 673-4350; 645-1564 eve. (Sat & Sun) 2939 Catalpa St., (EastblttfJ) NB 644-1450 <Sat & Sun) 2722 Ci rcle Dr .. (Baysbores) NB 644-2~30; 833-0700 (Sun. afternoon) 1134 Paularino, Costa Mesa 675-5726 (Sat & SlUI 1-5) 2304 Fairhill (Back Bay) NB 642-8235 !Sunday) 1031 Concord , Costa l\1esa 673-8550 $30,500 (Sun 1-5) 2861 Serang (l\'lesa \'ertlc) CJ\1 548-7729 $37,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (4 Bedroom) 2124 l~ighland , Ne\\•port Beach 646-7171 (Sun 1·5) * 19870 Vermont, Huntington Beach 96 2-1680 $24,000 (S at & Sun 1-5) 2015 Bayadere (Irvine Terrace) CdM 644-2430 $179,000 (Sun 1·5) 1032 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) (4 BR & Fa mily or Den) *356 Princeton (College Park) Cl\1 646-3255 (Sal 1·5) 601 Cliff Dr., (N'pl Heights) NB 675-4600 (Sat & Sun 1-5 ) 12772 Barrett Ln ., Santa Ana 544-4002 (Sat 1·5 , Sun. 10·5) 1219 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB 644-2430; 833-0700 (Sun 11-3) 972 Denver, Costa Mesa 675-5726 !Sat & Sun 1·5) 2425 22nd Street, Nc\vport Beach 675-5726 (Sal & Sun 1·51 **505 J\forning Star {Dover Shores) NB 042-8235 (Sat & Sun) 1747 1\fi ra1nar (Bal boa Penin .) NB 673-8110 S64.500 1Snt & Sun 1·5) 4500 Orrington Rd. i Irvine Terr.) Cdl\'f 644-4910 $175,000 (Sun 1·5:30) 2612 Lighthouse (Broadmoor) NB 644-4910 $62,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 1606 Antigua {Dove r Shores) NB 644-4910 $99.500 (Sun 1-5;30) 410 J\forning Star (Dover Shores) NB 644-4910 $105,000 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 18818 Redwood , Fountain Valley 962-13i3 (Sat 1·5 ) (S Bedroom) 925 W. Bay, Balboa 673-6210 (Sat & Sun 12·5 ) (5 BR & Family or Oen) 732 Bison Ave .. (Eastbluff) NB 644-1060. 673-9226 (Sat & Sun 10.5) *1033 ri1ariners Dr. {Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Open Daily) **210 Evening Star (Dover Shores) NB 642-823.\ <Sunday) **11 Linda Isle (Linda Isle) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Stm) DUPLEXES FOR SALE 12 BR & I BRI 212 Onvx. Balboa lslo.ind 675-5726 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (3 Bedrooms each) **22:1 r.rant St .. (N'pl Sbo<es) NB 675-4600 !Sunday 1·5) (4 BR & l BR ) 711 .Jas m1ne. Corona de! J\.1ar 673-8550 !Sat 1·51 HOME & INCOME 12 BR & 1 Studio ) 435 Santa Ana (N 'pt Hghts) NB a, 548-12!l0 (Sunday\5) ... ,. •• 1 • * Wot9rlre«t + + + ,,el etttl Wiwterho11t * IBLLSIDE Building Site ...... $18,500 2209 Cliff Drive Newport Beach Dark area denotes average 35'x100' beach Jot. The outer lines show this property: 73 .45' on the bay, 35' rear. sides 261' and 248'. Office Open Saturd•y• & Sund•y• PETE BARRETT REAL TY 1605 Wtslcliff Dr., N.B. 642-5200 Gener el efinJa J~fe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMEN't 26 Linda Isle Drive Decorator furnished. 5 Br. S bath home fac· ing Harbor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna. Ready for i1nmed. occupancy. \V /dock $200,000 S3 Linda Isle Drive l lome on lagoon, 5 BR., 41h ba .. w/4 frplcs., jacuzzi tub, hd,vd. flrs., sep. liv. rm., din. rm., fam. rm. & brkfst. rm. $175,000 92 Lind• Isle Drive Beaut. 5 BR .. 4 ba. home w /formal din. r m. & family rm. 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway. Built·in gun cabinet & bookshelves. $145,000 107 Linda Isle Drive 5 BR. 3 baths: fam. rm., form. din. rm. 2 Fplcs., Rm. for pool. Dock. By appt. $145,000 Waterfront Lots No. 44 : 108 Ft. on water . . . . .... , . $125,000 No. 76 : 3 Car garage. Reduced to ... S 77,000 For Complete inform•tion on all homes & lots, please call: BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642~620 Corona del Mar Income Units Dandy duplex with room for expansion. Lo ca t e d in Orange County's most desir- ed area. Ideal set up for home plus income or a good investment. Com!' 15ce the numerous possibilities theS(' units otter. Properly in t!1is area is hard to find- don't delay. Call 645-{)303. l'ORfSI' E OlSON '" P f ,II l TONS Vocant $18,990 General 5 BEDROOM BEAUTY 'ol'ith 2 very iuxurious baths. Hardwood floors \\"ilh lots of nylon carpeting \\·ith match- ing drapes. Gorgeous Palos Verde stone fireplace. Huge country style kilchen. Short walk to school!. Gland FHA terms available \\"Ith ne1v LO\V 1'iC annual percenlage ra1e. kt us show fl to you~ Walker & Lee RcaJ1ors !J-1;).9-l!ll Open 'til fl P:\I POOL TIME- non·1 wait on th i.; lovely pool home in Ncwpon Heights. Every conveniellC'e for fam- ily living. Four suru1y bed· r00j11s. 2 baths with outside rntry from pool. Large COV· c1·,..d patio, carerrec land- scapini:. Better hurry - $45,950 546-2313 1SEi() Newport Blvd., Ot CALL 6'16-39'.!8 l:.Ws: 642-2237 associated BROKERS-JI EAL TORS 2025 W 8alboll' 67J.J66J SHEER LUXURJf 4 Bedroonts + maids' rim in this Baycrcst home with large family room & formal dining room. Island range & rab!e i;pace in gourmel kitchen. Designed for pri· vacy & loaded with extras. Appointmc11t only, Arnold & Freud 388 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 646-7755 TRANSFER YOUR PROBLEM to SPECIALISTS Property Management Real Estate STEPHENS & KAYE 645.0122 ANYTIME $28,950 2 Story E legent! S Bed. & Family Rm. Fruit trees and park like yard surround !his beautiful home, Natu ral brick fl.re- place in large Jiving rm, huge family rm, built-in~. xira haths, open tll II PM. 84Z.6691 TARBELL 2955 Harbor Located in Harbor High arC'R. 3 Jaige bdrms -con1plt'trly redecora1rd -llf'\Y ca.rpe!- 1ng -drapes. Hoorn for boat or trailer. OuWoor liv· ing on brick patio. F inanc· in.I!: very Jle."<ible. Owner wil consider Jea5e.op1ion - lai;t possession ....... better hurry. Call 64>0303 2299 1-larbor. Costa Mesa NO DOWN LOVE the Back Bay? TO VETS Vlild birds & wide bluf' skies? Mesa. dcl Mar beauty :; Bird\\'atch ~~m bed in yr bedrooms + family room • blue rm w/1t sown \. 11 bal· giant covered patio new cony 3 Bd, 3 Ba. 25' den, water 50f!ener-heavy' shake 2 frpl c's, Shag c~-pts, .Lot.~ roof and dandy yard for kid- of Rlas.~ open to v1e11·. Come di"i'i . ORV priced at s:ll,f)O~ make offer. 2939 Ca!alpa St. • l-!omc al-d •pr· 1~--' Ownt'r 6#-l<JJO '$:Jl :o~a,. a., .. ..,. * 5 BEDROOMS * 546-2313 or 842·253S Beaut. Harbor View Hon1es res. w/wet b;1r, lovely i:arp.; self-cleaning ovens; ready to move into. $59,500 Including lhe land. CORBIN- MARTIN *A-FRAME* 2-Sty. beach home xlnt c<>n(J. 3 BR. I~ ba, 2 c:ar g11r. Bltns. New cpts. $33,900 CAYWOOD REAL TY REAL TORS 644-7662 631>1 W. Coast 11_,,., NB $24,750 Newport ., F•irview 646-8811 (anytime) COZY FOR A COUPLE Only 2 yrs o!d FHA/VA ok. An in1posslble lind in !hf' Cosla M('sa area. A two year o!d home with large bdrm~. rondifion for $23,9.lo with modern kitchen in spotle1s F1-IA·VA 1erms. You've got to sec to helievt'. Dial 645--0303 IORl.ST.J Ol.SON R£Al.T0RS 2299 J.larbor, Costa Mesa Macnab-Irvine Costa Mes• YOU"LL Love this beautiful Cambridge Highlands home on quiet cul.de.sac in CoJ. lege Park. 3 large bed- roomi; • 2 or "!hem shut· tcred, 2 baths. family rooin, 2 fireplaces, new lush shag 1•arpc!s, electric huilt-ins. Lcively backyard with patio, near ~chools and shopping. $33,000 with a 5 ~~ •!ti assumable loan call 540-7413 2424 Vi1la Del Oro Newport Beacti 64.f.-113.1 NOT A CONDOMINIUM Ne> monthly malnt. fee1. Frt row Bay view home w/wrt iron courtyard. crys,, chan. deliers frm Spain. Shag crpts, 3 Bd, 3 Ba. 2 frplc's, Pool-ta~Je.sized rec rm, M6tr suite opens to pvt deck & view of Bai:k Bay, bi.rd! & sky. 2939 Qatalpa St. Owner 644-1450 BY owllt!r 5 br, 3 ba, view, fee land~ption. Repainting included in asking price $52,500. Xln't tenn.<t avail. Lrg 2 level yd w/Jot cabin playhse I. gym 1 e t . Courtesy to broken. 732 Bison Ave. ~1060 or 673-9221) BLUf'FS CONDO ~PLAN Located on lush greenbelt, Nr Bay, 3 br/2~ b a , crpt/drps. By Owner : 644--5983 r OWNER $2a,500 Fount1in Vallty VACANT Optn 11-6 1-----..;..--.1 Out or town O\\'ner wil.I sac-EXECUTIVES rifice treshly painted 8 yr Live amid IU."<ury, Lowt111 old home, new shag carpel. price in perstlge area, ~e lng. Jn desirable bay area. value grow, homes priced Low interest assumable to $53,000. Walk to 8Chools. toa.n or Jaw down. 541)..l.25l Owner t.ransferred, must e BY OWNEft..2 story 2 sell! Steal thiJI on. at 3 Bedrm Townhouse in ex- cellent area. C1ose to every. lhing. 2 Balh areas, w/w cpts & drps, bltn range oven + refrig. Outdoor ]iv. ing. shuffle board, tennis, pool, BBQ. It's ready for yoll! Full price $18,990. Sub- mit your term~. Call 847-1221 \o ·THEREAL \"\.. ESTATERS DREAM COTTAGE-548"1290 Darling 2 BR home In acc!'nt 2 STORY Br. + Wx2.J' rec, room. 134Ell·:"'s' h d RI Realty Company B!tn intercom, ttereo, ''"" C ra er, tr1. BRING, , , AM-FNf radio, fire alarm; 892--6606 17141 Beach Blvtl ., 1-Itgn Sch O~n 'Iii 9 p.m. 6 l/4 °/o INTEREST ASSlJ;>.tE G.I.. 3 bednn, fa1n!ly roon1. frplc. !'.epar. ale garage. Close in E-side Costa J\fesa. PRICE REALTY 1TI6 Orani::f' Avt>., C.Osta Mesa 548,.3209 REPOSSESSIONS Sparkllns;: clean homes. 110me ne111y painted&: carpeted. 2, :, .f. & !'i bdrms. Som'" with pool~. FHA· VA ronv. terms, []'0111 $20,000 !O $~0,000, Collins & Watts Inc. AA·ll Adams Ave. 962-5523 -CHILDREN \\'ANTED • ' bdrm -2 balh· fain rm + 2 ~1oty-lgf' fenced yarri. Cul de sac for s8.ff'ty. No trnlfie . o"·™'r a n.'l.lou~. AGENT Gr.J-'1930 DIAL direct 64l-5678. Ch~ yoUr ad, thl':n 1tt hack and 11ste.n to the phone nncl ~ d r 'i J'I' II • Ir: -;'~;:;=;:;=;~;:;=~~:;::.I colors of Ha_rvest Gold, W/\I/ 4 Bdrm. & Family Rm. *OPEN SAT/ SUN* crpt, ~ouvrd 11 hu 11t'r.11 , $14,950 YOUR CHILDREN Jrg beaut, yard. Worth BLDR'S Sacrilice-Span. ityle to ~e this 11parkling comfor-$34.000. Will sell for $30,000 nu custom 4 Br. $32,500. ta.ble family homl' on 8 this weekend. 54-0-8986. $1.500 dn. Loaded wt xtru. quiet cul-de-i;ac . .f, BR, Fam-"-tesa del Mar, owner, well Shakes. Frpl. Crpt thruout. Uy room, tomiaJ dining kept 3 BR., 2 BA, frple, Spmkln, lndacpd, t n c I· room. Everything for hap· on over 10,000 gq, ft. cul-de-10223 Ph ea a ant J.ve. py chlldren •nd carefree sac lot. Prof. lndscpd &: 1 ,,,53_7=-0~380"°"'==~~~-I family Uving. Double brick decoratrd. Hrdwd raised e BY OWNER, ( BR Mt, flreplace, 11unken Roman floor, luxury crptd. FHA CORNER UJI', 3044 MADEIRA sparkling tll(', gltaming Prime location~ Pres!fge MESA VERDE paint, roey brldst bar, con. home area,-owner desper· ~vely, immac. home. l sl ver~ble garagt'. AU on Jrg ate-. Price reduced to $2~.950. offering, Beaut. grounds. E/side Jot. Only $22,500. Huge family nn, entry hall. Cov. patio. New copper Broker, 646·8726• blt-in range . oven • di&h· phimb'g. Blk to golf course. $23,500 wulll'!t, 540-1720 bath and deliithtful child· 1..;',:c\(:,;%;;.='l3.l""'.!="'·..;54c:""c,38:::;91:.,,,_ ,,.....""°_*7541J..<0_.,,.38_*,.....--I ren·s play yard. TROPICAL PARADISE Huntington S.•ch S:><.500 $158 A Month TARBELL 295S H°'bor George Wiiiiamson 3 Bd. & Oen DOVER SHORES REAL TOR Low monthly payn1(•11t11. En-View home. 1148 Santl11go Dr. &45-1564 EVES. try he.JI. fif11' quall!y built-Best buy. apac. ~ liR. • ba. ill$, picture "·jn(lows. Large Adaptable !Joor plan for ST. JOHNS SCHOOL covered patio. Open ti! 9 cou11le or 1.gt. family. Newly (Are111 . 4 Bdrm.11 .. 3 ha's. Pl\f. 540.1120 decorated. By app't. $91.000. Macnab-Irvine 642-8235 675-3210 3042 BABB ST. TARBELL 29S5 Harbor Bill Grundy, Rtaltor J'!'"!!!!'"'""'!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!! OPEN SUN. 1-S NEWPORT--833 ""'"'Dr., N.B. 64'46>l 81lboa Island E :cYHri:N~gRs SHORES 3 BEDROOM BEAUTY * OPEN * F ri./Sat,/Sun. 1·5 ..,,!!!!!!!!!!6!!75!!5-s!!BOO!!!!""!!!!!!!!,JThi~ 3 l>Mroom. 2 bath hfim,. Zooed C·2 !or home & btllli· 212 ONYX ~ DIVORCE--ha11 nl'w t'nrprt~. drapes, OC'S.S $.11 OCXI Duplex; 2 BR. apl. plu1 1· {lflint 11nd dl.,tw.·a~hc.>r, Com· .,· .,·::-:,.·.,,..·_..,,.,,........-BR. ap!. Good locntlon. MUST SELL! pl_lml.'flt !hi~ \\ith .'-'Ommu-Vlnco Realty Rnom lo build, See this at O.t~om built 2 itory holn<', 4 nr1y fni:llltles. tennis Coor!. only $M,500, bMtm + tam. &. 1'\11\dl'<'k. swlmmlnR" pool ~nd clu~ 2029 Harbor, Cl\t M6-0l33 S<..-enlc Praperr1r.ii 67:1-5726 Balboa Peninsula's be!lt buy houst 11 nd lh" totn.I i;at k· I UNITS 3 BO, 2 bn + covrrt•aar 11 1 $Gl.~()(J. l\~I! 11.mouut11 to 101111 livlni:, .Ju.st Hi!ted! Good flfl.'W o{ gst h.st w/·% ba. Nr wet Open Set. & Sun. J.S $29,9SO 646-7171 Anaheim. Be Jlrrl tn sel'l trpl, pal, rovd fn<..'tl, $10 1747 MIRAMAR PyrnrTrld E."<chanior! J\t dn. 673-6267, Lnui~ lfrio::it~. Rllr. fi73-8111l 11,,:•,,r.-..AA00.;,7,""==...,---c~ i o,;,U,:,,P,:L:;;E.,,;X::::.3:::B::,.:.:"_d_l"-,m-.-,~,. DAI.LY PILOT for action! ba.. k l Br. Jji,500 Jo'1K it . '.o ·THEREAL '"-ESTATERS .,,,,. '. "' Call 612-6678 Ii: Sa~! f>yr.amitl E:<ctuinJ(On 675.s.qoo Fish, &treams. waterfalls, ..,.,_.-------1 Grenhse, garden w/3 BR ELEGANT MANSION + 2 8'~ frplc, dbl garage. 2 Story colonial IJl!peT big, Quiet cul-<*-sac, AHUme priced low $39,500, 5 Bed· 67o ntA loan. Appl only, room 3 bath, hat"l:hwod MS-1243, 2238 Catherine Pl. floors, formal dining room TRANSFERREb new .f. br fam:Uy room, lArie Uvlni home cmplt e.atm eab wrk, room, llttplace. wall to w.11 8-bor, xtra lg fam rm, wtde carpe~. drapes, co~red 101, dleondra. Schl's close. patio. modern complete bun Nr S. Coast Plaza. 6% VA kitchen, A mw:t IO 1ee, Loon or new financing your tenns. avail. !>40-1959 11lage Real Est.1 te VACANT 3 Br + tam rm, If 2-ba, bltm, C'rptsfdrps. frplr, Ir,::: )'d. 2 Yn old. 962-4471 ( :::.J S4W103 Good IOCallfln. Take ow:r -t BR Jlt BA Tuwnhou!lt 6~ '%. VA $215, per mo. tolal. 111tt11~ 5\4 ~ FHA. pool: OwnM'/Agt t;.16-4410. lennl" elc. Owner, $24.000, JUST lJSTED, E-slde ::"'"'-'.,"°=·=--=--~~I tri1~ltx, S·l9.~. GT nn down. The "Ytllow p~·· .r Rob OL~on, Rltr ~16-5jg() classiUed , •• &4i..."S18 • \ • .. I ' • ~4 DAIL V PILOT . y Frid.,, Mmlrl •. 1971 1~-_,.,_ .... ~I~ I _, ..... 1~1 1 _,,, .... R11I t 11111o .....,,, ~~~~·-~~~~1:~~~~1 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 1[~1 r ,.._ l~1 f -~· .. l~I _ ...... l~i l -~- Hou ... Furn, or I • f I 150 170 Monoy to Loan 2AO Hou&ei Unfurn. 305 HouMt Unfurn. 30S I Unfum. Huntington 8•ach Lagun• a.~h N•wport 8Mch ""crNg• or •• • Lota for Sile :.:::~~::...::=::.:---r;;;:;O~C~E:'A:-'7':N:-:'.V:::IE::W:;:-I TERR IF I c T R I PL EX 0 ' ,EGG BRAN,.CH A FORECLOSURE 1st T D Lo a n _a._n_._,._i....,..,,......,.;:--.-11-C-••_•_• _M_._ •• ____ _c_ •• _ •• _M_._ .. __ ,....._ $ 1700-2-4 Coral Pl1ce n ·· acrt.oi t'OO uur~I \·t'. $120. ut1l pd. Cot y J Br. rot· 3 RR 2 ~ IW' .. ly paJntM!, .t BR .. hrat Ml'AA Vl'rdl! aN!I.. HOBBY c;r11{'1ous nldtr ho~l',h1P"11 ~h· Charmlria. xlnt rontl . 2 BR'• ll'flntut in We1rmln.oitl'r. Z~i at'rl' horse ranrh repr1s· 6%.,.... fNTERESr 11111,. £/aidl'. A\'I row. patio• trplC ltneffi yard. Fain. rm . 2 ha .. tpl , Bltna, l-fOUSE I'd on Ivy (.'(t\'l'ri d ~· '· 1 r1u·h H\'V . .oih&kl' mnf. Pr!\'. L~:ASF.. SELL. TRADE, ~ast-d fmm fnrml'r .,~ 2 d TD L Blue Beacon* 645-D llt S22.'i .. 2.161 N~trf' Damf' "-_,.-fi'ull cam k flrJ)A. I...a'f, t NEW VA CobbleitOllf' pith ea' pa~t I pAt1nli, 0 t>nr. a11M1.gt1. I· Cl 1ont'rt. excl'Jltnt ahnpping •Pace employee now avaU. n oan l M11n"11 Domain-Private k 2 BR Duplex Garaie. No yal'd. Atrn.1n1._ Lat. ~~ htih ~nd to f'nlry. Ll.Jl!r. I t'rpil', ~Ire arta. Annu1d rl'rl!l'r a1te adjactnl to Mo. able at devtlop!!r1 cost. Q S70 , • 731 -par! ('Ov'rl. (,ardl'rwir !!JC, pa no Ill fen«d rt-Ill' yard. . 1;· :l lO Pnc $4:.!~ hile Honil' f'ark. Ownf'r mo. 1't"rm~ ll.llstd on eqully. u1rt, · ~Is. Arlul11. $144./mo. · ~ $19:-l ;;..15.l604 Aft 4 S2Z.'o Prr :i.10. rot1I. 3 or 4 BR. lorm dtn rm. ug,,i blirlc trplr. lgt rllr ]n!, 2 rar dr- t~chf't't gar. MARINER REALTY M1.5.)41 Call !l'lr ahov.·ini $100 MOVES YOU IN GI Pl'trlt!ed "''oocl firtpl.oire ~nc•nn;r ~·· 1k· r R~alt~r · ovatf'd, i uhml1!' ': SAVE .$3000 • '42-t171 545-0611 I AL.A Rental• • 1>-1~:19(1() \V, \\lil!!On. f!.4S-2802. ·'·Cl --· -· --·I 11c:roM livln; ronm w11ll. a re a 11 Larwin Realty, Inc, Srrva1g l-!11.rbor arPa 21 yrs. Sl:IS _ Huge 1 Br. w/lrplc, SPAC 2 Br. Stv refr\J:, Sen ement• 1'~nrm1I rlin1ng room. 3 Berl· '46-7414 or __ 5~8.:5484 E xclui iv• Ag•nts on !hr~e f11hulnu1o. ~k 1tufl· 1 Sattler Mortgage Co. I R"&r, 2 blka In O('ean. cp!/drpg, kld11/pets. S!S? 1 ON Tnf: Bf.ACH + !n- J'Oflml, 2 bath• PLUS 1 bl'd· I PANORAMIC VIEW 21 ~2 R k" t H n ded, ranch 1Ju 1preada. :1:16 J<;. 17th Street Blue Beacon* &45-0111 Al.A Rental~ e 64.l-.l!IOO n,,,1•1, ,.1, • ., P<ivato oom-~-hoU S<iS .JClO J n I 3 .~, roo .. ui-s ' · · Loc111td In the boom111R . L "" ., • room 5""11 u . · · nf tl!:V ~ niAin r 11.nnl' · l 54~541 1 anytime Soulh Cnait arl!a near San J>r1v11e money frnm $1500 NE\VPORT Hrt11 • 2 Rr. HOUSE 1n. court. 2 Br, cprt1, niurlll)', par~ 11nd bl!ar.h - Call • AR , 4 hit , home w/ forniaJ I Juitn Cllplsft'ano. H I g h 11 p for 1~t & 2nd Join~. Bl!na. Cpll!, drpa, Av\ oow rlfT>&, par10. !176 W. 17th St. C )' p r u 1 S h o r I! • .S 1 n din. rm .. 111rudy; 2 frplr11., IC 0 U N T R \' Living -bo th moi privale Tru1t Deed C enter Inc, $160. No. A. CM. 54S-~9 Cltmrnlt . ~ llCf. t1":' 0 1.an "''' h8r. Nl"wly i?deror. PIA('f'rv11le ilre11. ~ 11c 1'.11\ 11 d" d e ~--' ' I 1323 !': Broarlway S.A. ALA Rental~ e MS-3900 Arti11t'1 houl"P. f f1Ur IPVf'IC, On ~M~· h1'11ch. S169,500. 11rt\' lakP Df'Prl re11tr1r. rnA IHI JOCl\n.i ill e Jit'Ullr-1 . , D p . t i bf>d JL..a halhs Cml pool. 4 BR, J RA h<\ml!. d 0 8 P .1 • . a nice thf' narurAI hl!auty ol Loan Brokers Since 1949 si:1;i • Separate 2 Br. Duplex. ana 01n 11 ""'","· 11 r •• ,. • td REAL ESTATE 2001 Rllyll' r. Y 11 p ' lion hrlrl11I lr'81l~ !IUl'lll('I' r>4:J-R.3St yllnie l k i;::a f'r1a 11m y "" , Crpl9, dtp!, lll!ll.I>" painr · B ill G r undy, Realtor MAd, pipPd v.•aif'~. Ollk.s (,, thi11 formrr SpaniKh Gr11nl · a n Stv. nofrig, Kar, chi d o · SPANISH oct1nfrnnt villa, ~iudiv, ·,,<'. Unlurni~hl'<i or bl!n1, f'lN"plal'I", HUR RY :! 1190 Glrnntyre 51 RJ:t Dnvl'r Or .. N.B. 642·«i20 11pec1acuJ11r ,,,."'"· Sl.l.000 ,.urmundf'd hy bfo.oiut1hll I Blue B•acon * 645-0111 ipar. Atcludrd 2 r _()u nrl ! . lu1·111shf'd l...onJit'·ltrm 11'1M Collin5 & Watts <(~.9-473 :tt9-0.'H6 -BALBOA COVES "'/ll'rms. Owntr. f.42_1!1611 Clevl'land Na11on1I forrst. 1 1~ IMMAC. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Cptr;, Yachlman'1 paradlSI!. S450. 1 only (owrWr trll \"f'l inf:I,. 962-55'23 EMERALD BAY I WATERFRONT All uulil!ts a\•a1lab!e. 1. HOUltt farRtnt -~ rll"f'!'I. hltns, f'ncl s:ar. Sl40 4!1'l-212R tt}fl, Call (714! 496-57l3 GI No DOWN Tran,;ferrrcl _ !\lu~r ,11ell' * Chcncr. mult1ple zonlld PRICJ•D t'ROM S!l.950 ALA Rf'nlals • fi4.)-J!IOO 3 BDRM, 2 BA., family .rm. ='~'-"~""'--.,-'7--...... • A IJ>"r1rn111 l bdrm. homl! BR 2 •-· I Or;init Count~· 11.rr"il'l:e LOW OO~WN-EASY TERt.1S 1' $12:i. Spac l Rr. 2 Ba, IVO cpl~. drps. l.J>~tl4.v...., ~21"'• Duplex es Unfum. AL COST .. ,.1• ~.rm.~-•-•m 1,11• Prime Joe. l . ....,, 11ng e h-" 300 1245 , -" Ap• , ~~ $50 TOT " "'"' V I"""""" cf'd .,..., lf Houns Furnis .u rpls, rlrps, ch1ldN"n ok. • va.u . · • ~ Be-:!.rm. 2 bfllh, blrn1, I'll'"· \rl 30 fc hoAt slip. i1a.~ ::t Blu• Beacon * _ _.. or one e er I"' room: extrll IJ:f'. d 1n!nJit' sior~'. Nev.•Jy drN>r. Ftn llania Dt"U tt I C1rrum~tancts forre lh.!-Im· 1.~.ro 11 r C d I M '·' pAln11't1 !hrun111, rrpra, rm. i.llvr ly ttelut1td pauo 8. ,.11 G ,·undy, Re•llor &12-6."60 ml'd111te d1,;posiuon ol th,~e General 8 El Toro r .. _ RARF. JndeN:l·lr{: l r. 5tovt ,•----------NEW l Br. 2 ba, cp!a. drpe, drp! V11r11nt. l\1ov, in'! • se!!.500. 64,.620 lf'w rho1ce patcf' ~ """~e . I ,. T A • '1 tel 0 '1' "-,,, D' N.B. ....., ....,.. A I r LOSS "' o·Ffri1. ~ml ycl. Uti pd$% "•r. SJOO Mo., I~. ,. II' & W_.... urner SI c a "'· 'J" ·· "'"' rrl'~. l'l('e9n v ,. 11', 1 ormtr 011 nrr~ 11 yo ,.. ""'O lnS v••• r l I r Al.A Rtnt11.l9 e 645 .. l!IOO DELUXE Corb1 n4 !\111rtin Rltr"R.fi.44--7662 l!()j '" Coa111 Hwy., Laauna CHARMING, nf'&r Y nrw_ ·I 7-miles fmm f'lt'e11.n. V,ry I GA IN': C11.JJ nr v.•n!e nr 1 LAKE FRONT 962-5513 494-1177 Anytime I hclrm. 2 h11.th~ It l11m1ly h1lh. $i00 J)f'r arr". Ill'~ complele rle!ail11 and color RENTAL FINDERS SIT.'i -Ne.,,,•ly der, 2 Rr. dhl 1 l -~F~.-n~l~•-s7fl~c~1~$~1-1 ,000I OCF: N VIE\V VILLA .. rn1. l..11r2, k11rh"n '"~•/tler!..I rln , 6~~ in1 ALAN REAL.TY on·sile pholo11. Buy dil"l!ct Fret To La ndlords 1 itar l ncd Jor kirlA It ptl1o . k Costa Mesa . R 2 LOT• DOI I HOUSE' * '~ lt1 d ·gn· 2 til!n5 , IJ1 vrly n<>w r11.rprt~. 711·72fi.l ll!R a~k lor Alan. from !ht developer: 645.Q l 11 Blu~ Beacon * 64.S.Dl _11 j.~~·11~~.1:;~~~ v;.:~.o~ ~81~ 1 2 BR. <;rp(rl, pl drp'd. water 2 .Bedrm: ! t;_, DININ.G N~~·: ~*'"e ,"'O;.,.r., r"~1. Din. ~:~e 'i;c·l~l:''i~!1~:.:· :1;~' GOV'T I rvl S.i ic. Wrllt RANCHO CAPISTRANO <1)!5W lfth c.,,t• MMo VACATION yr-rnund. l<1d~ gun ha!cooy /.I. $:.0,000 c·oun· furnrl, No iml. <"hlldren or ROOM, bltn~. everylhin& 8 rr11. frpl. Kitch. "-'/rang,, I • , ·1;, ~ , _ PA k -~ 0 ,p0•1 Driv,, Rm 3 • ' I wp!{'flmP, Util pcl. $13ll. fry •1,b, ,,r.r. fa ciL Pool~. J>l'1~. $1:1!). 9fill.mJ or ne11.'. f'ubm1t on tl'rm5. nvl'n, d l~hwaiitier. S~!l.000 d~~A'M'~R.EALTY 646-2414 .....,nd h a~ ag~, ll.85 5 ~~1 N~~rt B~Ach, Cal.~ $l1.i _ lnrl u!il . Niro> l Br. ALA Rrntal!I' • Mf>..:1900 r\di~g, ;allin2, elc. !Ake 546-fn.il., 26Z1 ~11n!s Ana HAF FOAL REAL T,Y full pritt. l.llwer dn. p11ymt. ONT ~ w ,;. a C v e' 1111 ~22.1 \l."alk to slores. i\101 e in !O· Corona del Mar Forl's!. Branrt n"11. !VI y11rrl Avt . Jnq r hnu~ .. C. 842-4.tfr1 E\·r11. :i.41-2441> OK. ll OC,ANFR rnll uio, a. .. day. work. $·1i;i mo. ACT SOON! j H ti ton Beach IMISSJON REALTY 4~7 bUPLEX Cem1tery Mobile Home/ Blue B1acon * &45-0111 1:\ AR, 2 ha tn\\·nhst, Sn *** 21:1 : 612-2817 ••• 1Newport Beac:h un ng 4 BR + den .. 90l11.r1um, I 172 ol HI\':<', drrl rll'ck. pllh(l. . ' ' GLEN MAR 3 ha, 113 acr'I" vif'w lot. Gnrw1 lnrom,. 16.':.500 I Lots Crypts 156 Trailer Parks STEPS ti'> bch 2 Br, 2 Aa, \ ell'c kllchl'n shait rug.•, . l.OVF:L' 2 Br, 2 h11 ~rrie. :1.000 11q 11 ·$.;;i.ooo. Ca.JI BURR WHITE HARBOR RI'~! ~rmorial EXCELLENT 1>pp. 25'7e nf t·hldrn or .~ngl ~. Sl!iO\•' util. Clo~ to actiOOJ~, S21~. ISf'. Fountain Valley I choic r Bluff a l~-f!, BEAUTY 64&-0964 or 4!W-8314 R•altor 675-4630 I Pirk Cosra ~1esa p!ot 618 two 5 St11.r )'Am. N. H. Blue Beacon * 645-Dl 11 61.'.-5.'¥.!2 SPAClOUS, ''ery clea.n 3 hr, Crpf1~1rl~s, f IArpl~i !:i:S· It you wan1 a bi.t: home "''1lh 3 UNIT~ nr bl'ach, 'hopl!, j "l!lOI Nf'll'port Blv d NB. 5pac~ll A.B. Su~t Lawn, Parln! !or 6.'iM. Tot.U 5\')llC'f'S \\'E HA VE IT 1 Br. grE"at J BR, 2 BA, ~, hlk lrom 2 ba, '.Xlx22' paneled fl)m Ava enu fl pri · small yard \l.ork -S,.e th11 \ll'W, fu rn 10',, riown or VIEW UNLIMITED J400 12131 322--0819 aft 4 pm. :n2 (\42 1p. !'f'ady to slArl loc. IJ!ll pO S100. hl"arh S?.00 mo. No ptls. nn. $2:l0. 842-1681 3 bedroom v.1rh extra b12 lnl.df'. S4!1,500. 494--492i 3 Ar. 3 R11., z:;: rer rm, 2 cnm:ir.1 LimirM PArlnf"r. ALA R"n111I.~ • &l.'l-3!0'1 rvf'~. 61.1-{19.'\R FOR ise, 1mm11.c 3 BR. 111 l 1 ll WI !amity room home Top 3 BR. 2 BA. bltn1 , ~Ir. lrplr·~. Shai rrpt1>, La: 11un-Comm•rcial ihip. Net return Hlf' l~I AT the lwar.h. )r round! 2 BR. Duplex $200. 2 Br. ha, new sha& cpts k drps, Ap•rtfTlftlll lor"ent. shape anti ~1111on. 1>1 ua frpl varrl. $28.'i mo. Lll~na 1 rlrrk off ms1r .~u11r. "1al k ro Property 158 )ll'llr JM prr mo. For deta ils Kiri' ok Util pd. $1 1i. hnui<f' $225. Frpl"~. ~·pis, trplc, bltn~. $240 mo· shtl11· :VO. u thl1 hOme today. Nl~;I. 494-4746, 499-13.11 I c.di\1 Hi nr nFW f'lrm schl. call 682.t.1.'li. ALA Rentals e '45-3900 I rlrps. Ct1lt Ownrr 675--~82 968.9543 or 213/241-t;,AA, •••••••••• .. ' -" 29,, c 1 I COAST llwy & 2nrl, So. La· •.: h A f "" -~""" SPANISH ;i BR, .'tturlin. (,oocl f\nanr1n11:. · ·• a a· I 3 RR l Ba. St1>vr , hobby 3 BR, 7 ba, Elec ... 1c rn, pt1. urn. - "'--"'II Cnvl' arr1 S66.7.'il 1111 ~r. Ownrr 644-l ~it'.l. guna. Prime Ml'Til!r. 50x50 Real Estate Wanted 184 Balboa Island I rn1 Nn <lOJit'll, SZ7.i Mo. Call Wl w cpl, Rf't".if('()l'111f'<I Sl:il :G::---: 1 ------·1 \o THE REAL \""'-ESTATERS '• '• . .,.,,... 2 1ry bldg, $82.500. Do enera 4!M-RO!l-'l Rarh. l b!k !fl he11.ch~ Nl'w fi4Z-"T"rn9 l!nyiiml' :"i seres, !O le11~. Bkr _ 1 $250 ·YParly. I C1rC'le CUSTOM FURNITURE f!rm. Eni!untl R. F:. S.1.1,:ioo. J.ll\'l'ly .1 Bdrm, 2 florence mccue rltr. \YANT VACANT M·l, 2 to 2 RR furn, house. GllrRge 6Th-643!1 A'1 . 6 PM. mfl, 17600 Santo m1ngo 1 -..,,,:=~'."'.'.:"'°°"''°'°":-I rtr~ & rrpts, BlrM. Com· Rl'11lonom1r11 6 1~100 REALTOR 615-11.11 Co1ta Meta Huntington Beach RE!\'TAL. g,e ad clas1 110 For The Younq Lido Isle 111un_ir.v ~I; By O\\ner. Condominium• I \l'ANTF.D: 3 Ar,., 2 ba hous... I DESIRABLE * C11!l 54R-34~t * li42-.'ill-ll .. ,:.n'i lh11ce CN"s· f I 160 to huy nn conrlillnnal M.!P,; N rt a h NR bf'ach 2 BR. corw!o At Heart Prime Lido Nord C'f'nl , IJ,ido SAnd.•t or sa • I contr. ln llrtA or O. C, ewpo ' eac: HO~rE w/dtihwsr.' v.-/w crpt, rib! Corona del Mar This delightful 3 tif'drnnm j BR. 6 . ba . \v/eJtvAtor. 59 NF.WPORT Hri1thts corrl!'r I EXECUTIVE Cnrw:lomin1um Cnlleitf'. C11ll !'l>l~~!I 2 Br 1.urn1shed houst for 2 Br 2 ba, rptr!, r!rp!, k•ri•Pr! garagf' N. par10, $ 11 :"i · FURNISH!::D Blrchelor •pt "I \\' 11 Ji 101 p ,,, & float $275 1'.XXl ~· air heat, Garh·rilllp, bh ·IO!, "',''" •••2 11,B. I .1 ., nome hits rvrryt,, "ii'· 11 · · · • ' · .) r.r, 2 ti11, frplC', rleep 1haJt in l\ltsa VrrdP. Next to I rent .,o_ P.Pt~. "'l't>-""' for m11n on y, uh Jl~a. lo "'all ·•-·''· '"'''m Tip of Lido Isle I I ~1 I C 2 S ' 67" <·-,,ho~ l>r frplc, pat1n, K8ras:r, watt r I bll ' Q t l hlk lro -•1 ••-~ L .,.... 1hru....nut. Rr11 1· l'll n. -~• Go I ourse. • fflry . ~ '"' ·""" · · · fum Adults onlv, 00 flPI .~. l RR . Crpt~. I! tc.. ·in~. u1e , m..., ,,,,.,s. draee-1 and shutter,. Tl'r-81":1ur. 4 BR., 5 Ba. home 2 Tu~tin Avr &46-4-'25 Sl!.1. Sun Rr/Z'v ti11th~. ln1rrrom, I fiMnciil I • RATE: REAroNABLE rlhl . a11r, fot'Cl!fl 11J 1r he11.t, Call 644-7101 for appt to raee ·.kitch~ and hr11utiful lrpl.C.!. 56 fl. v.·at!I' fmnt~ie. JV Mon· or 883-1022 or custom c 11 h i n e I r y In Houna Un furn.. 305 1 S19:>/mo. tst k last mo_,; aPe y&n'I . f"HA or VA tinancina Room for large boat i hpl, AA.'l-5181 wkda~. Kitchen & fqrh. Spac.iou~ I I G I Acm~~ frr.rm Country C uh + SIOO rle11n'g rltp. 961-8047 ~e"'L~H~G,-,&"°',7h•~l~or-.-furn;::::-:U~l!l•I · ,.._ ~~ 000 J ene ra 21:1 t.lr~a Dr. ,.. Ph !>18-67fl6 i1 11 v11ilablt. Ste ,11n~ com-rn~e ..,,.,.., · Dover Shores Beyfront rlinina k living mom. !'~ · 1 RR, patin. pool, na1ur11\ pr! 2 blks Biir Coron&, ] p11rt SJ0.200. 842-:ISJa Bill Grundy, Rltr. BEST BUY. REDUCED for \'ouMI for the price $35,500 Bu1ines1 4 BR !", BA Dbl gar SPARKLING .1 t-.Eorlroon1,_ 2 bt11m c·Pilins:s. Nr tiospital. I Adil, S144. yrly. 642-8520 \0 THE REAL \'"\.. ESTAT ERS ' ' ' "' . J'•,• Sl.1 Dovl'r Dr .. J\'B 642--4620 i ~ick Sall'. :I Br, 2 811. Ol!n, Will i!'ll furnish~: Ste a t Opportunity 200 S17:i '-''/option at tia th homl' w1!h IArge l11m1ly Ava il April ~-SJ65 util pd. * LRG Rachl"lor furn util * REDUCED * 3024 Club Hou~e Circll', I $24.!lln. 20?0 fin AA' " 110' mom. all bltn.oi. If u 11 Yd 17676 Cameron, 842-5192. I pd. 2 hlk• "'' 'c••o•• l . Bar. PiPr. Slip. Sll0.500. MO-J!799 for 11ppt Ari At1air. LOCAL quarrtrly publirA· cRrpe!rd, nice t n c o s e • . " ·-· Imn11t'. 5 BR., family rm. ~1936 nr 644 .Q.I EXECUTIVE !Inn. Gmsa $11.000. can. bP mm"l loL 1r1 .. 11l lor A yard, "X('f'lll'nt IOC'etion. WALK to hPac:tr, clean_ 4 Artlt. $120. "\rl.v. 642~20 - -P·R-l-CE-SL_A_S-HED-45 FL Lot street.tn-RUSflC modtrn 2 BR tieach rlouhlf'rl. SIJ('('4'"'~rul sill<'I! Nice hflmP, bl'auty "'hofl r.r8~e s~ J>"r mo .. 011.·Jl('r bdrm., cpl~. drpi;, .N>lrig, 2 RR, Av11il April b M•Y B 'l o ly CONDOMINIUM Or 11ov hu~inf's~ nf'Pd1n2 """! 98 I 1trtet. Y app n ._,.,, '-blk 10 "''""· 7 '6-l. Ownrr 1to1no Ea.ti. $7(lfl0 I · .. 11 ""'MldPr npnon lo S26.'> mn. lf'a~. _,.... ;) nnl,v. All bills pd, .$200 mo. ~ hi J bed 150 '~' """7 v N r. H trallic rl1.~play 11.d\·rrti~ing '~ 10 ·0ownlor 1111 rp .-S93, ,r~ nl1\ R2 l<'I ~lu,t 51"11 in~lP~ll errlr. t xtrn '" to right pl). Adlff'rhstn2 purchaw.Call54j-842~.TNHSE-cpt, d'P, rel, w'hr Adul1~.nnprts.67~3.'lll homr with room LIDO REALTY INC c 2 1 rv J BR 2' r f loyri \V 1.ytlr. Rltr rm mrner • $:\.1)110 or offrr. On r , nur11e. ~ 0 . • 1 rnntrartll !'f'l urn most n ~uth CC¥t.~I R.ealton1 . dryr, rn£, -pnol, 7 Br, S16."i ,.. .1-'URNISHF.D h11.ch@ler for bo&! <'r rraller. crptrt , 33n Via Lido 673-7300 64?~ ha!h~. Jn1tf('f1m. Spariou.~ M.le pnef' Can he handlN1 1 ~~~.~~~i.9'~:1~~:? ,J BR. l-4 BA CondoiTilnium. J Br SlR.1. ;i.;~140.'i, 96S-9425 1 11.pl, 3 hag carpel. Utilities '~. de.~irl'rl hltns. Im · 164 . • \l'A .. T<''Rl'RONT. --k, rlin1n1 & h\"1112 room lr'll b' J ply 644 1060 9 ---'--"'-.,.-:--:-- u.i ~ c.. ........ • • -Air.in r8nJit'f' • o v " n , SALE nr lt'a~. LJit'r: 2 BR, pa1rl. $120. G«-7192 med i1te po11u!1!1lnn. nnly la,.unt Ni,.uel I · Yours !or !hP price .$.~.i.500 . .am-6pm , 613-9226 Free Rent •I Service h "1 Bl S24;~~! Call Bmktr/0"''"· • • hnal incm, J BR, o prit'I! \V11J ~I'll furn1~ht>c1, :>r, it! l've~/"knd~. rii~hwA,.,her & g11r A'l:e 1\~ ha condo, lrl"c. IN<, l Br furnished. lncJudinr !'r .]J(..~ 10 lil'f': BY Owntr • immi r .• l hr, ti:v nwnr for quick sale. J024 (1ub Hou~,. Circ:JI', Charming Collage • 2 BR rl111poAAl. Larar m 11.' '." r Pool. Ownf'r, 499-3464 e\'l'l. I uiililif'~ Sll'i. . . , 2,, ba, fam rm, \dry rm, fi75-1900. ;im.Rmror~pp!.Arl Adair. '"\\'ANT11.C'h11rx'f'IOl'Xl'rt:iM" tif>a\'y :;hail' carpet, fully berlroon1 \\'fconnerl\ng 3 Br rumpu!I room, fi1~2440• Brnkr:r B' O....·nf'r 2 SI}, 4 AR . f l 1 deck $?ll.OOO. CHARMlNG hlllR!de homr your ""'O initiatives I. dr1tpP'1, unfurn1~h~rl. :I bPd-M.lh. l BR hAll 111.rge crpt!!irlrps Pnclo~ yard. "°""'""'"°°""-----1 3 ha, ~-11m rm. D!n'i r m, ::.:iJ:iR 1 ' "·/vi'"'• Nt wport H t i , 11biltlll's~ SP1 your own roon1~. J ·'~ h111hs, Jflrmlll I ho\lmny, fully c 11 r p t t .. d_. Avll ll 411 S4i-\~.R6 I. Costa Mete La un l'!rv F"rplr, Sh11kt mo!, · · Income Prop•rty 166 hflurs t. goals~ ll1otl'J'f'~t,.rt. <linini;:. firrp\aff', rlr11pffi $Z25. Av11\I, Apr1l•1 -----·------\;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;1 8 \0C'k ~·All, Ten ·a1..oi f'ntr~. M ' I v· . ~IR-7933 l c E EAST SIDE rlmp "'" II posrcarrl 111 w lk & L I. :r;.1ri.-2fi2~ L B h * * * * cnv'rt patln. Open Ne Siii Ill on 1•10 Newport Heights ! UT • C'\A~~1fif'd 11.d No. R.i, n11 ily a er ee :l B~ronm. 2 bAlh ExecutlVf' aguna eac El Puerto M••a Apt• k Sun, 6401 Athl!n11 Dr. SF.LL or Lf:ASF: I VALUE DUPLEX Pilo1 P. 0. Box 1;,ro, CostA 1 tinniP. Bl!-tn~. r:ti~hwa!lhrr, NEW Hilltop hnme w/ore11n * * * * 3 h I I BIG M ' C 1·1 ,-De" :.1().1.1 \\lf'.~t<"l1 f! Dril'" c d HUfttfngton Harbour 11t11ne home r. s:e •m . e~R, a 1.. · """"' " rli~pns11I. hr<>placr, pario. v\ .. ~'" 3BR, 2BA .. pt~. rp~. J Bedroom Apt1, rn1, !ully f'rpl/rlrp. lae Lan:!' 3 tidrm, f-.mlly rm. NP" rondition. i:wo, one bMd-Mct:anrl!rss:• I f.-16-7711 Oprn '!ii !l P\1 Nr. RAkFr & F11.irvie"" bit.in.'. Irplc. \\'Pt bar & I C I ' 8 "" n ,,,...,., I ·d h H rc">Om units "'l lh 11 nachl' I SACRIF'I E • • "" · p11tio; $211.,,..,, II' ron~1 er c11n1n£ rm, 2 alh•. Uil' O\\nrr bui lt u1!l-OPERATING AGE: N r Y l J!uge hf'drooms, 2 !ov<>ly Noriti Co.da :-.1e~a . $245 mo. o~n beam ctil!ng~ +.am. SlYI &: up incl. utilltit .!l. Alm :'>fagnitlcl'nt 4 br .. 4 tia 2nd TD. OwnPr: 1i3Cl-1Hi1t I ~"para le ma~t,r hdrm, 2 £ar1lge~. , ' q I LIC'D BY 1'1\E: STATE Of h11ths. _Iar~e ki1,·hen \\'!1h \r.oitf'r pd. 2 )'r 1,.11 .• ,. 11 vail. rm. S?.00 mo. 972 LI J.l1rada I turn. Pool • R.ec:reat!M '-':'all'rlront home in Hui"; OPEN HOUSE by owl'lf'r lrplc~. r.araar. on a lll'y.1 11Y <:1nstructm~, S~ per CALIF TRAINING AVAIL. ~·! bu1H ins. Cerpet~ Arwl I Rl'I~ & ~'" rlf'f'ln!lil re· or ('all .t!M-5200 !l rl'a. Qti itt Environmeiu .. Onii:fon lt11rbour. 1 O "'-• ..... r'6()5 Via V1Fn. F in,. H!"1t:ht5 are11. $.~.00t1 1 m1.0·. ineome, e t ay -CAN Ar. FI N A!\' CF: n . drapPs !hru oul. !lardwoorl nu1rrrl :,.1;)-'6')9 for app'I, OCEAN"RONT J Br. Vill11. t :"i7' r1 k f ll ~111 ...... ns . -on t la 1 ., • Of! 1treef parkina:. No W -"l'•l!'rfrr)n • or ,. 10 4 RP.. 2 BA, 111rg:I' ti1rk l"ALL I:\, ,., · 1414 13, 900 T · 646-7171 ('Al.L O"'NER r:VES/\\'K-flnor!I, hrirk firrplace. ito1,1. AVAIL 411. 4 hr, 2 hll. conipl PArtiil!y turn. Priv. hf'arh dren, no peta, ru ' _;.q2.1601 Jor 11ppr. Pr1n. '~rd \\'a!t"rlall. R37-72'1.l I ~~ ~ I ' erm' ND~. 4!WAAl6. I h!!' ~anlj::P, and r .. ncerl I crplri ... rlrpd, ci.'ihw11hr, P11_rklikP s:rounds, $ 21 j lci~l~ only. Mes~ Verde -"""""'-WANTF:D: Orllll$:f' C n t ~ .\Arri. Rent Al ~Zll~ m~nt~y, fP nC'rrl )A rri. StO\'P if rwf'd-Monrh. 4!14-46;i.1 I 1%9-1961 l>1aple Av._ rv1ne R F:Al .TY gF11f'rlll on .oia lf' liquor ~ _ hArytain. a ro tr l f'c1 1,1 & 111 ~1 mo+ $100 CO!l/a Mru _. PACESETTER Nt•r Jll •,..part Pa i l Ofrlct 1 llc t n~e. Ror111f 1fl f' .'4.i-046·1 ~unty If'". S2J.l. 546-9.1!!0. Newport Beach Mi11 Per1onality 3 BR. 2 ha . Htavy 11h11kl" NF:\\', qualily·hull• :l br, 2 r,sr11ur11.n1. Ca~h Courte~)' ONE mon1b·5 rl'nl ·. · -~·"~· 2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crpt~. _.J I • Sill UP .. v.il\ bf' d11a ppoin1 ttl LI ynu l'OOI . EnJOy the \O\'l!ly !llffi· rur hflm'. ShAJ: r.rpr~. rirp~. DUPLEX+ LAND to brnkf'r11., 114/R.1~1i0 I ~ess than .,ne mrinth 1 rent rlr ( !mvr refng. Qui,t Adult1 Preferrl9Q r.IA'.'iT 1 & ~ BEDROOM! d ' •· -' Thi' 1 -' _.. h 11 d hn<k f'Plr ---,, ,.,,, 101•1 do11·n p•ymPnl I p. · · · POOL AVA ILABLE . . on 1 ffil'tl '"'r t•~,a~. ml'r hrl'ttP~ . ....,,..,,. pnrru 1' u f'r~. u~ ' 2 • 2 Bedroom un11 11 wirh AS.~. with $100.o:xl t<i hf.Ip 1 3 , •-d tmpic1t ~P11inJit' fnr 11dult ~ 2 BR 2 B . g _..._ Gor.t:l"flus, park-like 11ett11TK. arrh1trrr "' r o ! r ··\\'f.l.,.. !or rhi~ fine aN'a 11t $37.500. 1 11lt kilrhrn It h11ths, &rrvl<'I' on m11.nv 1nP . nr ~ .,.., rm .,_ I 60 . a .. {:ara , " •~'"" Cl cl f n)L\IF.:" ac:rn,~ th, front nl 1 N porrh. rnel plfLO, t'IO~I' 10 i;a r11lilt~ be111.·el'o. Room for lorm lra~l~Jt <'f1mp!ln)I. Tl'r· hornr•T · C11.1J 11, 10 ~rr if only. 1 blk 10 ~11vps. I . .1 BR . 2h Ba., garAgl' I o.'I! s:ar~s:.e~ _or m.&¥,· • Ir COR B • .~hop'" ~ llll liChool~. S:l!l.9j()_ 4 n1ort unit1. Allf'y entr11 nrf' r ifle prnhl p n If' n t I 11 1. \'OU · n~;11ify SF. y \f 0 UR 1 f\4~.'lll. REALTOR i48-6966 Jmum securlt}. Quiet 1trett. thi!glamnmusf11m )lhC1mP. .. .$J l ,;.r().Call646-11nro~re .'.'lf'C\irt<I (;r,.81 nppor1un1ty.1 .. , ·' ·-. • ~ 1 ~ · Ad ulrJ. no pel ~. 20 20 3 BR 2 811., hltn. \\Pl b11.r f\46-40M. Mr. [),oi1·f' 714'1i4i-!M62. REAi.TY. ('all R~i-1221 LR\. l B R~ g11.r. ~n .m LEA5E or U<r. Option. 4 Fulitr!on Ave IHA.rhor to R.1.1sr.d f11n1n1t rm. It land-MARTIN !'ECl.UDED l tir. 2 h11, frplr, FOOD TO GO : :\10 VI & POP RENTAL :'I Rr /, dinin)? rm r~llrlrl'n or P'~~-·: ~1 Br, 21,, s~. hltn~. 1·pr~. drpc, Ray. thPn So. unlll 2 hlkt sO:-llPf'rllofl'rlrction.S:l.i.900. ,.,..n1od l"ltd kil, ]J:,. p11ho,I CAf'F IS!:: OR, Sf.ti 1 +2 h11.rh S2:il Jl"'r nio J~t \\atrr fur_nrl. S 7it. · ·· · rrp!r tlhl s:.oir. ~ml yrl. Nr ~ of Nev.•pnrt Bl vti. 6'0· I R.EAL TORS 6'4-7662 PIPr 11;.oir. tX!f'n~i ''" Jlll t'rlrn. I ;. ._" i;.12.7,;r)i. • ~ ~ a1"1 ta ~l + $100 ~rp. Dial or ~ .. -w;.f.(J.J1 _2fi17R. i'ian(a pool.o;' & ti>nn1~ C'.rt. \\.11.Jk ~690 (i. • d h·1 ---Nr .'.'lrhls k l'hUITh. !1\l'11l ---1';4.'l-O?lB t"ort>,•t l' •. ()l~n. An11 A1·,. lnq r ho11.,,. C. to heh. $:'100 . Oyll CU"n;:b~o'i;".-v~,;:b'l "'B"e~O~U~l~;fuwt"l . . . . re I GOLF COURSE I fllr lan11I~·. $:19)/IO, Prin-COSTA MESA I W~ECKING )'ltl"rl, ·'~:\I lflf'A· . Jnr. Re11lrnr.!', 2299 Harbor, REAUTJFU!.. .\.fESA DEL 714 , ll'li-1746, PVI' fi4t>-7Ge!i VAL n· !SERl Garden Apt&. ~ HOME .r1p111~only. li4:..2'i64 1d1 9am TRIPLEX 11on. Rf'll lW)llll hlr. \ 111. ~f'll ! cn~111 \lr~ll I tllAR, :I A1't1rm. 2 ba!h, \VATERf'RONT :l RR. 4 All. Ari II.• -18 Fln e n.. 1111 or parl C11 ll !'T:l-71lb ·i 1 12A-u no pr . w r1 REALTY Ry ''"'nt'r e 4 AR. /, clrn: lg. lo1. _ · ..:._ __ . Landlords-Owners 11f'w r•rfl'l'T~. 11v111 11 ~-, horn", n.-wly rerlf'<"., on aan· F\'Pl")'l\hrrr. Strf'am & Univ. Park 0-nler. Jn·ine Cu~lom built Mes11 \'Pnl" 4 ('llH r>r \VAik to hi arhl. Thi' rl1>~at you 1.'8rT mm~ 10 Bu1in•s1 Want.cf 210 \\"r ,11J[ 1·,.rrr 1Pnants In ~·ou prr mo. on lease. Call 1111en1 riy hr11.ch. Sl.llOfl Month I \\'11.lrrr.oi l!, 4.'i' P"IQl Rf'c. n.m, Cl.ll A~·riml' ~211 t.,..droom. :I bath, 2 lirf'p!ar,. \h1rshall 0 Realty fi7~ li\•l niz lor ltf'I! artrr An in~-t'RF:F: nl rh11 r1:r. , \Ian~· 54f>.-414l Bill t~runcly Rltr M2·4621'.t S11u1111. S2l s 1·2 Brlrm, Furn· 1 '!!!!!11!!!!!~~:!"'!!"11!!!!'1 hnmt nn J1th !airv.·11:v. A~· h 111! lnv,stniPril nf onl~ 20 " \\.ANTf.0; Or~nfl'!' In 1 ~·' rlrsiral>lt 1rnan11 on our :"PAC!OUS .'\-4 Br. l b11.. BEST Ntwpnrl Jriration, 3 Unh1rn. Imm $1 :1.~. SEE CT: I' sum.oihle 6\.7" lnan. Rl'dUr· Newport S ores I dnwn 'appm);. $8300~ 11 th1.~ Jit''""r11 J on s11l r liquor l\iit11111: \1•1. I Film rm. °LK" f!)C{I ysrtl. BR clrn rl1nln11 . inrl IR\\'11 2000 PAr~n.•, M2-AAiO VILLAGE II ,r1 10 $6.l,900. Open house I DUf'l.F.X fll' fln canal fmn1 v.· 1 •ll !Thnralfi:I \\"e&tstd2•B~~-I 1 r" n ~' · Rn n 11 r 111 ,. ,\I.A RPn1~1' e 645-:t<!Ofl Frplr. S.1.iO. Ca.JI Jim fl t m11.in1. .s.12.i. Cl.II 646-4414 SA!. Ii Sun. 1 in :;, M':!li ~Br . up .. 1 Br dn. Sfill.;-l'it pv:. rtr roomy .,.,. rr,111 ur11 n1 . C11.•h f'11urtpsy fi45-1q7fi or ~l"r-211.1 1 e BRAND NEW e . I · h h k 714fR~!\.4i-70 3 RDRM'.., Family rm., p11.rlc 1 h La Sa.lie 1'fodel. 4 BR. lamily, .laVll. Rd., .\lesA \."enie. \1 11 rshall Rl'11lty fi7;,.....t600 mom un !11 ,:u oorl U'~i:le ~'!__ f'!'I ~r'. · · 1 like ~·-.rd . lo.~la ~fella . Kid11. RUDGET Bc'>nitl'r-2 Br . Newport H•ig ts !·:.! BR, I\, BA. Pool. Blrl nt. 3 ba: 2 1tory, pnc1 ~urfi:I ~095. h I 11ar11rre~. h11. ~ ri Money to Loan 240 OK brk , $200 a month. NO rp1s, drp,, kirl1 J, pet!; 2 BR lilh <B r fl'ncl'rl Vll rri J Di!rhw11ht:t. CArpef/drapff~ S5000. s ,.,t buy: .. BR & POOL Sante Ana Helg ta anrl pnvare pa nn .oi!"l"a11 t 1t· • 541}..1 • .,... i $14. • . . uiu pri BRASHEAR REAL TY ,. rl'lll'n! fl)r the ov.•ner OCC'U-FF.I': · """· ·1• • $201 J'l'r month. 121 3 11 . , 3 Ba , dill rm. fAm rm. 3flflfl ACRE !or Cnmm'l Stablr~ nt c·ash Fast '· 3 BllRr.f. + f11mily rm .• full Al..A Rl'n1a], • fi4.1-.'l!l00 ••S--~1~ 1 P:\1 'Iii fj P:'>I .:oZl \ !CIOr\11 s•,· M?-Wt? !';ves: 8ll·~ ~q t: or llv1ni spar!'. By or hnmf' r-1111hl!!S ~7l-226l !"Ill · 673-1550 I rlining rm., bu1l1-!n.~ .. hrk. 2 RR . Hou.!or. t'tpt~. rlrpl, • • l 4oO Ml'rTlm!I<' "ay Lagune Beech ""'ntr. Prlnr Onl~. Phone or fi7l-a723 $.41,SOO •1911 A month. NO FEt, 1 nr 2 ~mitll t'hild rrn, no ~1ver11ty Parle 1tt & lnd Tru1t De•ds ., I ROR:\1 Arllt~ nn pfU L.v.ly 2 Br/2 •• , Condo :..19-0!li-4 ff\/' 11ppt. I N""'port, 540-1i20. pt>tJ. GAr1t11;f'. $\S.i. fi46.-2119 ~ -1 . ' · · · ;c.:.~C.,C-.::c;-"°rc=:;;::-:;:, I FREF. AJ'PRAlSALS 4 BR. k family rm .... $.JJ5 S12.i mo 1ocl. util. Nt leguna leach Home ~ RR. 2 ~A. F1mily rm. I T u1t n Costa Mele lnvettment BEAM~ CottitJit'l"-stv notri£, !,EASE 4 hr/2 ha, lg tncd 3 BR. fanl. rni. k rlin. rm. i ho p"s:. :ill Ctntr:r I t 10£..'.1. for yritr round rom· rrplr. Rlt-1n~ F'l'net>:rl Yr?· HORSE Prol)f'rty hv owtlf'r. 541-771 1 anytim• rh\!rlrrn & pet!!. Yr\y, $ll'i. yrrl, Chlrl~i;.~~14 * * Tur-lie Rock .......... S.12.l !;4(1....()62.1 Ion" rr11.rioo11 rl'l111trf1 liv· s29.o:xi By O\\·nrr. 54~5.1 ·j •1 Arl'f', itllrf'C!I\;,. 4 hr PVT party w11nta 16 to )') ALA Renr11l~ • 64~39()11 * * .} · 3 BR., & rl 1n. rm ....... s:l2.l '11~0~1~vr~,-.-,,-,..-,~.-.. ~,-.-ld"'1 I 1111. Ail •Xll!r!l'lt maJnla in. Newport Beech f11m rm. dln'R rm, hf'11 mftl '! 11n\r~ from owner. l\'e11.'J)(lrl/ 4 BR., 2~1 ba!hl ........ S.325 $.\~. T\111id M>r, llnf'ns, 1V anct a•ttndrfl. T, n n l .• UP FOR GRABS I t'l'llinii::, rlhl JtlltA.t:" k trul,! l\1r~a Ril'll, ~l't0.675~ k lf'IP !'eal1rk M111el. 2301 C'(IUrlJ. nnly 1m ~!f'f)~ fn prl· lrf'f'I J\1UJI M(lvl'' !'!-14·41'l!li S@~~}A !J,£!Jis• Npt Rl ~·n. f;46.744.l vate bl'ach al.oiri ov,rlmkJ This J bMtnnn1 Allrl A h11th. --' k e 20 UNITS • -( •1.~viurnu,· hl'll !f'rl pnnl , All wl'&I nt HArhor Rlvrl, 1'111~ • Turtle Roe I Wrll OV1 ln !111nf'd, '" flOl'll 2 Br. turn trlpl•x. W w cp 11, •-~ I G 'l ' 400 M h Th p / 'fh fh B 'ff f Ch '/ nl'wl.Y <l,.C'flr. Nf'w fu111. ' !'Irr kit . Jntl· N'ltig, r11n.t:e, YA. ll'lfln ol ......... r11•• .oiny. roa, ... ~ .. • 11.y l'XC' 11.ng, e Ull 4! WI 4! UI • n UC,; 4! dllh\\·Jl~hl'r k rl1epo11AI. C11m-nn! r•n t•kl! 011•r 11ub...,ct I NOT ONE CENT , t~RTIN ('O. M2·5000 Pool, $140. Nn rhlldren ct ri!t lely r11 rJlF!rd \1.11111<' \\'llll rn S1 27 pPr mnn1h. Thi' I• nf'cl'1u11ry to, put this tinmf' WANTF:O, 2-12 clfan unlls o =:ro:,~",,,1:.~'~'ts ~ "SINCE 1946 .. c"_,1'~'·"-~0.~0i.l7l_R~=-,-=I thntout. l.owrr ll'Vt"I )al.In· Prlc1?' lfow !t(ll'g thi~ ftlltl in TOr l'f1nrl1t!on. , .ii 11\•) for privatl' pa.rry, low 10 forin four· simple words. l RR . Tralll'r $100 + util drY Ms \\~hr/dryer. 111nr• yf!U .. $19,500. CALL I 1.,.11rly 1~: 4 Srlrm~ .. f3m1l.v ,.. 642-3.'\fM • h t \\'t•tP:rn Bi nk Bldg l\1An11·!' l>"flplf' only. Stud II.If rnnm " <touhle rarpQ~I. Wa Iker & Lee rm. P\.U~ l?rm11.I rllninl; rm, OFFICE B LDG. I · ,s Al'! IL II E I Univf'rJity Park 11pt, &90 1ocltl'11 u!il . 6-46-tt09 ~,, I• , '°'"'' unit in I 2 R~rh.oi. ~rptl". & hl1.1n~. • Deys 133-DlDI Ni9hts Afl 4 pm. in Ntl income S26.500 o"'~°""-.:::=c:c:::;--;;--;o:I beaut Jnc1.oirpd, µ111mlM 1190 Harbor Bl\'t1, 11t Ad11m' Aak1n1 $44.~ l~,tLU~ SlnQ"le ren11 n1 ··AM" NICELY fum\sllf>d 2 Bl\ .,.,., Close 10 mitrk"t & ;).t~ Opr:n 'Iii 9 PL\I rNG 11-lF.: 1.ANr'I. , IUI Prlrt $270.000 J BR. 2 b11lh1 ........ $300 u fl I t .oi Ir & h Irk I I' I ahp'tlJ. Avail furn nr unlurn. . I s:«j ynu ''" th\a Ont RIGHT Return-1n...,. nn C'Uh tnv. p E D I T I f 3 BR .. 2\1 barhs , ...... , sm ""''unt1f'rk S'60. '• i 1r111t. Pnctd undrr mark,t lnr di· PRIVATE ROAD NO"., W, R. DUBOIS INC. j * 1 1 1 ' t 3 BR. 2 ba. tam. rm ... S.l40 Aclul!~ fl1r..&1M ~rl 4&),., Pknne: ~7·07!ll , JrnmPC'. J BR, dtn, din. rm., * 54~1166 • • _ _ t .· J BR. 2 b1 homr ,, .... S:W I * DELUXE l BR • • MlNT CONDmON * :l beth homt on tar. lenctd INCOME UNITS B1chtlor apt/I, Sl5 "'Jdy ~ 2.,.~rm~O~p~o :i:!: ~0~~1ii1~'-~;>',~~1.m::~ l~~.·~i '1'i~.f~~E~~1::"~;~ Ty NE R I i 0 red h·111 1 :?;i!";~~,:~~"'~i ~o~~ flln• " />f'11 rh HuTTY nn , rl•n!: ritil. 11:ar•s:r , ~hClp. U<,J I I' j I -. Ovirheord (lbouf a dum b-• ~.it thi• °"' •1 117.Wl Asw pVll " putung Jrtf'n. I J'SINCE 1946 . I ll"""''· O"n"r 11 ruc1r1u, :'\take bell: '"He's so dumb, he wot•r' REALT" 1 -'S°'IS~5-~S'H""•c.R=P-.l ~8~R""'. -I • VIEW H0~1': • R•.~1 bu.v tn ar!'fl $6-4 .SOO. 1,1 \\'••l•m R•nk Rlt1a _:rrrr Ai:~n• fi7:;.m; h la garden with whiskey 10 lf~;i11'•r1 pml Adufl ll, no ,.,. ' '20 6 I ..... _ . Uni\. f'll rk c .. nl l'r, h'\'lnl ,..,,....,.,, tht r.tf'f'l'I r 0 m Call M"14f;2n lot app 'r I Uni f'r,1ry P1rk I LIDO ISLE--... Nnrt1, W I D N 0 W I grow -,.,.,.oroes. t l!Hn ok•. Al~ 2 l'l r unrurn· OCl•llDwnL 4 Bdrm• .• 3 8111 Gundy Realtor D a3J.01DI Night• hf'llrh "P1' Jo"\irn Gi r ,_,. I I I I' I . [ A c~i.,, tn. dluc\le ~~ Cill An.vtimt ,\.\J.OA2fl Y, nitrta:. E11s!51fle st.a. be.tM. J Yt'))b. L tr . r ' •ya hl'arh. 1/11.tehrild yr. l01 4 W bv f•tli1'Q,., thi ,..1..ino ¥llOfd. W lll l M2-~20 rTM'tl CMQ rm CU..tM'I bit · Aikinii S140.MO. Cnn~1"1"r d 1 f ., No 3 be'--••tc ~=--,--,--,.-_,...=~-c l I _,,.,· , p, Ir , * OPEN SUN. l ·S * I BUSIJ-.:!IT tn11rke tplaCf' In you 1"'1 op '°'"" P • ..-. LGE nir'tly furn 1 SR. Apt w many •. ,. ,,_ trallr: fi42-tMi, !J43-nlt exr PARi.;:-Llkf' ~ .. 11 t n r nr ---'··--.. ·-·~1.~. 3 Plu1 Bdrm•. 2 hll ths lt'\\lt The DAILY Pl1.AJ1 "' P~INT NUM8E R~O lEITE~s· IN $1 '\ll Clot!'(\ a:•rA.lf'. No n"UVO!"J "' "" ,..,.., OOVE s \~'e11d1tf 1hop'g .Attr.oir l ,..,,. hrr.'W' .... i.... •17 8 -'LOOA .S Ou1lt!rd 11telit1n. •a Yt 1HfS[ SQUARES· P"I~. nn ml'n Inquire , 1;uu fl~ fl'ORTIN CO. i 641-.lC'JOt'I ml)nry. Um• I< tffllrt b)' lll r fN'~l\ly ri11 in!l'rl, 11"\1 •8 .. "'.oi lhirl' rn' --~~ "'lR.~ umrhalr. IJ YflU Ali ln tht cll1&U'itd UNSC:RAMetE >.90YE LE JER~ _.Mt cpt, rir1v f1Atln, f1U1t+ .L.l\ I ~-:;_-u;rn-)1':,. rGR uJ~. ti}' "w~r. P'Mn· SECTJON? Som~ I 1 TO GfT NSW[fl: •t'f111ts, till JW"r, R.,.I~ rr(l·d. LGE I BR SIM, &eh $l()fi. J=::~!::i.lll!!l:'hsol>~l:; r1pr1lt onl~. Bitck RIY ~ Tll1t !•''''' dr•w In !It# 1\'e~I ""'ltehJna fnr It. D ~a I S2M/nm. lnclda tardener k Ulll paJA Ovt-r ~ ·~-._..-M . I ha, PMI, '·'"""' .• • n.u, """ a ... 111td M'-'"' 1""""' ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 •'IT Ml->601 • "'-'"'' • • 491-2'1Y! • ).1')..4,,~ A-1 642-\j;iR -"-'-'------ ' c " 8 I l • I Q• w l w I ' 1 ' I TC ·1 ' s E B 11 A R 2 6 p s B l F rid.i.~, M.1rch 19, l 971 DAILY PILOT 35 1._I~ ,__iiiiiiiiiiiiiii .... ~ .. l;;;;;;;;;~f[ -... ...... lltl I ..... ~, .. , ... .,. I ~ Jr..., ........... l~1 ~1 -;;;-·-;;;;;;;;·-"'";;;;;;;;'__,· .. ;;.:;;l~;:l~l;;;;;;;;-·;;;;;;;;-.. ;;;;;;;; ..... ~l~~~:-;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;'" ... ;;;:,I~." I .__ ....... J~J[ ...._. .. -lltl Apts. Fum. 360 Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurr). 36S Apt. Unfurn. 3'5 Apt. Unfurn. Apts., 370 Furn. Apts., Furn, 3'SApt. Unfurn, Newport Beach 1--------Coste Mesa Newport Beach Cost• M.a. Costa Mes• Costa Mesa Newport Beach liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ni:W LRG DELUXE APTS BRAND ne .... · bachelor, 1; blk iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 8och-fu•n $139.Sll "' "'""· ""' .... pat~. NEW NEW NEW J BR-furn , .... $149.SO Yrl> le-al>!!. 673-1631 aft 6pn1 1 BR·furn .... $179.SO Newport Height• VILLA CORDOVA HARBOR· TOWNHOUSE JNDrvlDUAL PRIVACY ADULT LIVING Lg dlx :.Z br Pri ba wli:ar & 1tor. Park -ltk e al mo.spherP J.'ncd pat.10, CID, \\'tr pd, 63&411'} NOW YOU CAN AFFORD NEWPORT BEACH UNFURN AVAILABLE c::-;:-'c-;:-:c-"---- ADULTS 0.'llL\', NO Pl:."l'S LRG I Bi .. 0\1plex apt. N,.w 1160 Pomona 642-2015 w/v.· crpt~. drps, t1lP, fll'wly drPOraced. ~Tature adult~ only. \\'orklng \I' om an 11rrf'd. No JK'ls. $1 35. \'earl.)'. By Owtier ~&--716.) QUIET-S AFE 40 Unit Adult Apartment Complex 2'l17 Harbor, near 'Vil.son 2437-D Orange AVf!. $1:7.'J e 2 BR, 1 BA TOWNHOUSE.1 '6.~l--K;o';ov;o;~<-to;o"~·-S~1iiiiiiii .... $~t5501 All on 1 floor. $123-$135 e Heated pool-Adlllts only e No pe1s-Adj to ghoppin.c • No rhi!dren Enjoy $750,000 health club & s pa: 7 pools, 7 tennis courts. Bachelor. 1 or 2 Br's. Al so 2- story to\vnhouses w/ 2 or 3 BR's. Elec. kltch- ens, private balcony or patio. From $175. Subte!ranean parking, elev, maid service. Full-line food market, dry cleaner beauty salon within complex. 7 beaut. model apts. 9 am to 6 pm daily, other times by appt. Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rds. N. of Fashion Island. 714 : 644-1900 !or le asing info. GARDEN LIVING Quiet, attra(·. pleasant . U•1! palrl. Hen!Pd Pool. I B • $140 • 2 Br $175 Adults, no JK'ls, 740 \\', 1S'1h Sr., C.:0.1. CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlts, no pets. Lg kil Sl.35-Uf>O, 2421 E. 16th SI. NB. 646-1801 Apt. Unfurn. 365 u~ n~~v51u;~ij~!~~~ I ;;G;;;e;;"•;;;';; 0;;;1 ;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:= 1 Be. '"'"''""' "'''"1" YENDOME open daily. I 2110 Nev.'por1 Bh·d. C~I , Il\l~LACULATE AM'S~ * S d• A ADULT'"" tu 10 pt $ 11 Q F Al\IIL '!' Secllon * 1 Bedroom $130 Close to shopping, P°'k ?>tAPLE ST., t-.'l~AR 19111 I* Spacious 3 BR's, :? ba 645-0349 * Sv.un pool, puV green 1 & 2 BEDROOMS Entertaining ~·Hi be a !Jira~. ure. Decorating !his lovely, spacioUs apt ~·11J be a joy. e Specia.J cabinet space e Lock garages w/ lg stor ORLEANS APTS. e Bm ceil e Llldry e Patios ADULTS ONLY • D\\'/dlspl e Huge gas stve I :? & 3 BR. Avail. Private pa· e .Special soulldproolini:: ou, pool -indiv. laundry fac. e Peer> 2 rolor shal:" (~r. Orang!' Co. Airport: Tus. carpels drapes tir at 17tl1 St: nr. \restclitf). GAS & • \VATER PAID I Mo. to Mo. From $140. lill Tustin. Co!!a Mes;i 2323 Elden Ave, CM ~!gr. 1\lrs. Thompson 6.f2.4641 (Near Back Bay) ~ !\!gr. Ted \Vooclhead 646-0032 MARCH Move-In Bonus 1 mo's Free Rent GARDEN LIVING Quit>!, attrac, pleasant. Ulll paid. Healed Pool. 2 BR. S\65. Adults, no PE:I!!. 7·l0 \\'. lS'lh Si.. C:\1. 2 Bl'drooins unlurnished apl. ~ith private patio, carpel!! I..· blt1ns. Ea111sirle D:lsta ~fesa SJJj, 64 2-8368 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS 64&-1287 ' HARBOR GREENS Dan• Point GARDEN &: STUDIO APTS SPECTACULAR oceanCrnt Bach. J, 2, 3 BR's. from $110. view. 2 BR, ~ ba, stove, 2700 Peterson \Va)'. C.M. rrfrlg, cpt.s & drps. $2'15. 546-0370 8.17-s.370 * TOWNHOUSE * Eut Bluff Huntington Beach AVAIL Nov.-2 Br. illl xlras. Pool. Kids Ok SI~ & $159. Furn a\'ail. 17131 A &-B Keelson Ln, 968·1j10, 8-i7.-41l;6 2 BR. J'1 BA. Crpls, drp!1,l ---------- •p111io. Adults. Sl60. 13-1 F.. BEACHBLUFF Apts or Unfurn, or Unfu rn. 370 Huntington Be•ch Huntington Be•ch o/!a Q"inla .JJ.ermoja Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Herv mosa's lush green atmosphere & strOll tree- li.ned walk wa ys to your apt. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED I BR. Uni. $150 -Furn. $180 2 BR. Uni. $180 -Fu•n. $210 3 Spac. fir. plans, decor. furnishings: live within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ seculded seating co mpl. w/Ramada &: Foun· tain. * Color co~ord. kit w/ indirect lighting. * Deluxe re n9e & 0¥en1 * Plush 1h•9 crpt9. * Bonus 1tor•9• sp•ce + Co¥. c•rport * Sculptured m•rbl• pullm•n & til• b•th1 * Ele9•nt recr••tion room. FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY Blk Crom Huntington Center, San Diego Frwy .. Goldenwest College. San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd·., So. on Beach 3 blks. to Holt; \V. on Holt to . LaOuinta Hermosa 714: 847-54-41 1 ~=~~=~~---I * Frpl, lnd1vllndry lacls LIKE NE\\'!. FrPshl~I 1845 Anaheim A va. painlf'd. Eas1s1dr· 2 BR A· COSTA t-.fESA 642-282·1 Din rm. $160. Con1part'<l al I.!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!"!!!"!!"!!!!!!!!"!!!"! $200. 192 Tulip Lanr. Call HOLIDA y PLAZA $50 move-in allowance :? BR. FRO:\f $155. C0:0.1- PLETF.LY REDEC, CLEAN & COZY FAMILY UNITS. C01'-'V. LOCATION. VILLA J.·tESA APTS, 119 W. Wilson. 6~6.J'.?31. ,\Ielody Ln. ;;.18-1768 or NEWPORT BEACH NE\V 2 BR, 2 BA. dishwash· &J2.96.iii Villa Granada Apts. ers, pool. pa110. 8731 Ellis. I •====~===========--=~ I GARDEN APT 2 Bi· 1,., four bedrooms with ha.Jeon. _ __c8~·1~2-~114~7~T~o~c~":.::c'·=39.\=·~7 --I Apts., Apts., P('1e 55i-9187. 8~2.-4·123 * * .$135 * .. DELUXE Spacious I BR furn 11p! S135. Heateri pool. Ample 11arking. No children -no pets. 1965 Pomona, Ba. Studio Nf'W <'Pill i. l~~. above & ~low. Grac~u.! DELUXF. 2 Br. :? b&. Frptc, Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. dl'"ps. lncd patio 'l hlk 10 hving & . quiet. SWTOUnd1ng tl'lr1g. bl1ni;, gar, 0<.'E'RI\ vw. ---------------B--h,----1 or Unfurn. 370 LovP!y l BR. lrg & tastrlully flirn. Encl ~·;irrJ . Lndscrxl. ClosP to OCC. 1004 El C~I. :?'217 Hai•bor, r.car \\'ilS()n :! 13R, 1'~ BA STU DIO TQ\\'NHOUSE. $140/rno, 17th St shop"Ji. l60/n1n !or f11mily \\•tlh .. 'h!Jdrf'n. $175. 536-6T20. I :;N;;e;w;ipo;;;;';':;B;;;;H:;C;h;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;N;;;e;w~po;;;:';';;;:•;•;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;J Adlts. 2.l..1 Cabrillo. 642-0161 Nell.r Coro11a de! !llar High I• School. Fireplace we! bar & 2 Br ap1-11•/"'· drps, bltn.~. FROM $135* 2, BR. I AA. Garden Units built.in kitl'hen aPpliances. disposal, laundry ~pRrt•. No .. Sl30 UP * Shag <'rpts, tl.rl>l', dSh\\'hf, 835 Ai\1JGOS V.'AY 644.2991 pPlS. 962-8578 ror 1nro. Camino. ~H6-ji().1 ---------- Balboa Peninsula • Heaterl poo!·Adulrs only • No pet!l·Adj TO sl1<1pp111~ DBL. "'·ide n1obile hon1e. ---------- Coinp. furn'd. :\1a turr 1 2 BR.. frplc, balcony, 3Jj adults. Unlil Oct. 1s1 . F.. Bay. \\'in!er ra t rs . 54S..2.136 Sl ii/rno. Yrly S2n/n10. Jn- GIA:\T I & 2 BEDROO\I! patio, !)(>an1 ('ei!ings. lrplr. Coldwell Bank & Co * STUDIO APT. * Gorgeous, park·l1ke setting. gar. 26.)() Elflen. ;131--0002 r.1;inaging Age 1 er s-n-s22J. WALK TO BEACH!! Closed garages for ma.x-af! i pni & Sun. Sl65/mo. ----" ----LOV ELY NE\\.' I & l BR's. rfuire No. c. ti73-l52l or • 2 BEDROO.\I 1mum security. Qu iet Sh't'e!. 1 2 BR. 2 BA . lrplc. Upstiurs. • NEW DELUXE • Crp!.~. drps, dsh1vas.her~. $25 Per Week & Up &48-7771. • I'~ g,\THS Adul1~ no pets. 20 2 o t\eiv <'Pl. drps, adults. no 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lea..~e. Incl 709 Palm • S..7-3957 BACHELOR & l BR. • ADULTS O:-..'l.Y Follerion Ave 4Har bor to pets. f160. Eve!! ;,.w..0896. spac. 1naster suite, din rm TV &. maid serv avail. Corona del Mar • HB.ATED PCX>L Ray, lhen So. unlil :? blks Days j.l().2510. &. dbl garagr, auto door 450 Vicloria, C i\I. lO'lt r-.11ssion Apl. D. C.\I So. of Ne'ol'J>Orl Blvd.) nJK'ner av1ul. Pool & Rec, QU~. studios SJ\.'l. 1 Br .'>10-960il .J.W.1Zii9 &12-8690 ./ STUDIO 2 Br . .Ne~· rpts, area. ~10DLRN 2 Br. Duplt'x. f'rplc. bl!ns, ('rp1.~. rirps, 1\·ell-1nain1a1nf'CI. 2 children ok. Sll5/n1n. M2-j,llJ7 -11 drps. Patio. Closed 11!11r. 1 1 ~ • 1~. • Sl.w. No ch 1 rn or pers. NE\\', ATTRACTIVE 2 hr Lovely Spanis h Deco!" ...,.,, $:::.0 movinrr. allow. N••" 2 ,I,~ ~I I A C'I 0 _ ~-I r I Ba. Nr shop'g. Adults, no o"~ A•o•g-. \l'•y, NB , • .:>J r, (en ve, · .. xe .-, rounclpmoff'd dup ex rp c. FROM $135 00'1 v" B f m~ Apt 6 .,.. ,, .__ d .1 pets. St;-,.;. &15-351:. l\1ana.,ed by r rorn $135. Cp!s/drps • .. ._ · • crpts, urps, uo·ame Cf'I · Gas and \\1ater included "' bltns, lncd patios, pllly T BR. $1 25 • 2 BR. $140 ings, hltn.s, patio. Arluhs l & 2 Bedrooms I k 2 BR. Sl:il & S\10. \\'ILLIAM \\'ALTERS C.'O. area. S4&-?m. Pool. Bltn.~. crpls, drp1, no ON TEN ACRES only. No pPts. Refs. Sl6'9.50. Built-ins e Air Cond lncldg ut il. Adults only, l:T;;O;;\;;VN"1"1"o"U~S~F-:;dr~\~,~,-':;,"-:;B'-l..".':"c..':"'::.':'.':_ ___ _ hild '"~ , E l & 2 BR F , u~"·-23.>I Santa Ana A\"!' 67J-0395 no pet~. 2~1 Avoc11do, Cl\!. 2, 0 _ bll" 1· I r. SI50-DLX 2 Br, I'~ Ra , studio c ren, no pets. ,,...,..... . . urn . .,. uuun. -· • · · · Carpers e Drapes 646---09·9 'I D<I, n , rp . patJo, J,i:. ronl. pa!l(I. Arll!s. w/w 17th Pl. C.M. 541l-Z138. Fireplaces I priv. patios. Enclosed garages . · 1' rnc i:a r. Quirt. 675-503.l rpts. \\'111 ~I'll ror Sl6.7j(). TO\VNHOUSF. E-~irle 2 Rr, Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. • BRAND NEW e I r°"t & Recreation Rooo1 2d~~: ~;ooB~ •. sl~~r:~11.~r~b~; 2 RR .. 2 A.II . Din., Rn1. fp!. 19ll2'l i\1argatf' Ln. 11.B. ·1•, Ba. Pool. l\"o pets. $175. 900 Sea Lane, Cd~t 644-26ll 1·2·3 BR. Pool. Bltos. Dis \. 160 W. Wilson 642-7373 no"', SIS.I nio. :l4~r-OTIS, 11 \.J.r1{') V1e'1. $'.al .\lonth 2 BR. C'losrrl ;iara'il.'. p11110 Call 646--6610 {l\tacArthur nr Coast 1-lv.•y) I ;:.slier. CarJX'l fdraprs. Utll • CORSICAN no aos\\·r r. S:IH4Z7 Av11.1l ~Jay 1 64·1-113:1 Bkr. I area. f'hi!dren & i.m11!J pet NEAT I Br iv/gar. SllO ~12.1 Vie1oria SI. N~:\V 1.2.J Bdrm. Al! bltns, 2 Br studio-P vt patio, encl Garden G r ove I ok. Sl•tO. !M2-ll36~' Olympic siie pool-Billierds-Seun es-Tenni1 pro ,hop--Color TV 1oun9e-H•elth Club'- lndoor golf dr iving renge-Perty Room-Full tim e Activiti•s Director. BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: Sin gles , I & Z Bedroom s, furnished or unfurnished. REASON.i\BLE RE NT*: Singles from $135. 1 Bedroo1ns f.rom $145. 2 Bedrooms from $200. Low mo\'e in charges. No lease req'd . Models Open Daily 10 am to 8 pm. SOUTH BAY CLUB OAKWOOD GARDEN Apartments (just for single reopJe) lr\"ine & 16th 714' 645-0550 Apartments I resort living for sini:lc & married adulUl J6th bt\\•n Irvine & Dover 714 : 642-1170 .. Re nt subjccl lo location Back B;iy are11. 280 Del * COROLIDO APTS * 400 l\!rrrimac \\iiy shag crpt~. drp~, closrd gar-gar i 1,1 ba crpts / drps/ SJ:?;> CLEAN 2 Br, Crp!s, ~lar. 1213) 431-9~8 2 Br. stud ios & street levels, ag('s, lrplc in 3 Br. 1!i n1i. blt~s. No. CM. $l6S. Adul!s. EASTGATI'.: ARl'.:A Clf'fln, drps, bltns. Adull~. 110 pe1s. Apt. Unfurn. 365 S1nt1 Anl SPi\C. t Br. Crp!s, drps. SI8J & up. Penthouses S220. \VIL.SON GARDEN APTS. E. So. Coast Plaza. OU Sun-~9.043.1. ~paclous.2 BR 1\.1 BA studio 1!\0 R0t:hrstf'r. 5-10-8100 :_:::,;;.,~,;;., _____ _ pool, nr shops, Uhl pd. 1884 Dshwhr. frpl, dbl carport. z BR Unfurn. Newly rice. no"er af Ross. Mgr at 421 apt. Patio. rrp1s, flrp~. elec 2 B Cl T B L Newport Beach VILLA MARSEILLES ~1onrov1a Ave., C~l. 548-0336 Ne1\' cptsldrp~. Sp a c \\'. SI evens. 5t;. " ~ C LL "" ~12 BRAND NEW Pool. 673.3378 2321 NE\VLY decor :l BR, ept.~. k1tch. laundry !ari\itif'". I r. ose_ 0 e•Crl roR I d I 11 I I Adil I '"''· bltns, :?·car ""ar11g<, \\'Alk to shopp1nIT Nr fn1·y. A. ,....., • .,;r OCF.ANFRONT 2 Br 11\·r dplx E/SIDE 1 Br. w/w crp1'g. ease. e.t.:, a eec. grounrs. !, no Jlt' s. * $170 * • -OUS 1 lgr, new 11/a v1e11·:? BR. $140 I mo. 228.l Foun1111n $160 673-7:x>9 SlfiO mo. 120!l2 Bailry. 1 1 RR :ipl, 3 blk~ lron1 ocran. $2'/:"l yrly Cp1s. rlrp~. hllrL~ SPACI bl1ns. sunderk. ulll IX: l 1 BA apt. All blt-ins incl \\'ay E. (Hai·bor, turn \V. ~ Br, 1 1 ~ ~a. patio bll·ins, LRG·QUIET-CLEAN 1197-:.0-12 $16.""i nio. ,\1·ail :O.lar. 21,lth. Seashorr.:)()rh 213:2.IR..1_!21 & 2 Bdrm. Aptt. Ad!t. $138. Yearly 6-12-8::i2Q d1sh11shr. dbl. gar. Adlts on \\'ilsonl l'1111s, drps. Ask abou t our S16;i. 2 BR.111 BA. GE kit<'h. H t ' I B --'-~>.16-1710. 13 BR 2 ba duph:x Br11nd Adult l iving • $1j ,_r 'o\ttk u Pj ool.". 6-,, 0 992. I d.•scount plan. S8o Center un 1ng on eai;n -· ' "-1 I F & U f ,..~ ~ ......., I Adlts. £.side CM. ~.11.6432 '!. RR/2 B•\. 11at10 Norlh nrw ·~ hlk 10 r..-ac1. yry urn. n urn. ~·/kitchens . .$2.l ~r '.'.'.·:.f'k J SPACIOUS 2 BR fan1 rm * BRAND NEW * Sl, 6-l:?.S340 LY d ' ed d Children Welcome lt B. Adults. $1i5/n1n lrasr. fii:\--16:H all 6 pn1 Dishwa!her -color coordlnat. up Ap ts. ~10TEL. :HS'·9•'" C'rprs. drps. O"''TI; Sun. only' ., BR • QUIF.T. Adulls. 2 BR. N2E~'R. l~ :°.r~~ sl~lp"pi~og. lmmac. 4 ~r. 3 Ba.. Stud.io • • IW2-5fr66 "* • XTRA LARGE 2 Br, 2 _ba, ed appliances. plush sba&\ BACH. Apt. Pr1·. f'nt & <:n; 'l·~••r'•ta • LA COSTA APT. S, I & -· 1 Nn ..,.,,_.. Drps, C' r p 1 B' I , I p d bit "-' -1 'ho•'" ol I --'o•• .,.,,., ..... y " Bl I & "' & ·""hools, $J6.."i. 54&-17;~ ap · ..-p ex. riv. pat10.1 New ,1 Beach crpls/ rps, n..;, pauvs, .. a.,.,,. • .. ....., na . bath. Garage avail. Cpts. · · tns, S\\'l~nllng ~ ga,.r-rish'ol·hr. healed pool. Sl30. " c po ·OR he 2 b ths taJJ I Uti.1 pd 170 nio 5-lll-9jllJ 1 St'droom. Up over garage. agl'. All utll pd. $1 JO to SliO '..?.);) Pacih" A\'e, C~t. srUDJO 2 B 1 rpts, drps, bllns. Lrg play pncl gar. S17j, ~.11.31 ac mes • a • • . . G d"1 $J j() ·021 "* r. ~"' cp, an'll. Cul-df'·ll8C s1 No pets >;, f·.'ACLl>"f' ,, .. _,, Apl•. '· 1 \VESTC1.1rr ,.,, 2 B-R. 2 showers . mlrro."" w.ud-' , . arage. provi . ·' "J. mo. Adul1s no pets. l :>is-fiS711 or &12-4429 drps, pool. 1 child ok. 171171 B 11 c· 1 ·842.,07_ · n•~ • • .. _ d lndire:c:t Ii""'! Sl()O SIN GLE. Sub.Ir!. Bl'thel Ins Cdl\t l:J4 Avocado' C\1 &1"·9708 . -"* MG-0-196 • ____ e -~re I'. "" 1· Br, 1•p1~. drp~. bltns. pool. ba, frpk·, blln~. adults ouly. rouo::. 00':9 · b _1.~:·:1 Toi~·er~. Jo'or Sf'n1or only. • l ' · · -l.RG. 3 Ar, 2 Ba. l\e~· shag * FRESH AIR-pnv Jh'llin, ~luriio IYll''. 11 ~ $200 nto. 67~>-l51i:? Ing in kitchen .• tt1&1UAal1 6-12-9956. \Costa Mesa I 3 BEDROOM , crpt. Bltns. Car port 1 BR. used bri"k rrplc. 'ol"/'ol·, Ra Child nk. ~~1~26112 l~z-,1 • bar_. huge pc1vate f~nced · I BR • 0 It~ ,,,.1 ,,111 Slfi9/mo Nt>"ly dee. Nr. bltns. bt>arn ceil. palio. $1 40. \Valk 3 blks 10 Bf'ach! p 1,_,,,·, A•k '"°"t ""~ Newport H•19hts ""tro • plush landscaping .. · ulr · ·~' · \!~ balh palio Slln dl'f'k I ocr ·--,.t.1 I ,. I 612 0·20 '~" ,,,.. ~ ' '"' l?ool, garai:r. dis po s a I. I El CORDOVA Apt c1bi gai'.agr. f;rr~!fl<'f', t•r: 1 __ , ·1•11-1• '' 1 Ad 1· ear Y. ~ .....,.!' Brau!. bii;: 3 BR apt. 'ol /w di~fflunl 1 A U r 1 brick Bar-B-Q's . Jarie heat. Adull~. no pels. EH2-2383 S rlrrora1rd. 6:i7 Plumrr. Apt • Newly Dec?rated EdA STh ShIDE 2 Bdr. bltn.~., '"','·~· ld22r~>s,N bltns •. ;:clolplt J.~OURPLEX, 3 BR, 2 BA, pa1~ 1:i::ry Zi~i1s,g~:;l ''31"'°01\'s& l•Bna~. I I St . QUI('! 1 &. 2 BR s Gar &: s \.\' r, crpts, rp~. enc r,. r1i:. .1. o pets. ,..,... 1 1_1,.·11 -,0 m". ;, .• ~ ~. ''' o. r11 0 • I I Br. spa<'10u~. Arl!ts, $12i C, 4.7 P:\1 11rckdflvs. 9 Ai';!-· · ~:....:,,.....:....c..:.:1 D\V, lrplr, imn1rd occupy. ,. " ...,.,_,, Pool. Ideal trir IH1c helors. 2077 Charle St. 642-4470 5:3o p,\1 'ol'<'f'liends. Reier-pool. Crpls, ~rps, Adults gar, priv palio. 645-2939 -1-MO.'s, Fr•• Rent $2'1.l. Adul1.~. Jnq. 4150 A XTRA nice 2 br pool gar (~il-11.N.ot So.Coaa!Pl&ul , 1993 Church . .'J.18-963.1 SPACTOUS ne1v 1 & 2 BR. cnc•rs reriuiN"d. only, no pets. 642-8042 SllJ mo. I hr up per, lresh AS:K About our di!'COt1nt plan! Patrire Rd, 6 ~ 2. 4 3 8 7 ' ' ' Sant• Ana I I I 'hi k • _,_ crp1/drps. Adult.~. no Pf'1S. PHONE• 5S7 BlOO . ADU LTS only. :? B-•. -. -C-pl-s. 11· d11·hrs. x1ra c o~ets & ? Br Unfurn Apr Stovr Ii.: * LRG 1 BR. apt. All new pa1nl, 1 sJn "' ga, 11agP 2 BR, rrpls, drps, bl1ns, car. 6-12-1 771. Sl60. 1)'12-llOOl, 642-!!006. • • drps, bltns, gar. bo l l h cq;ts, drps. tile & paint. disposal. PorC'h. 61'3-5729 port. Sl,IO. z RR, virw of Bark R11y. Call ,6-i6-:i9i;:~ Bl1n.~. S145/mo. 546--0-1jl. :? Br Duplex. ;inr, pat1n. 72.i Uti1'11 ~13r,.21G2 Crpts, drps, 111! elec. Pool. San Clemente l"Up an:.~. \LXUry ' ,, . cr-pt'g. bl'<iUL ree. fac. & ref.rig incl'd. Garage, Pool. REDECORATED lge 2 hr. !l9J! El Camino. C.l\f. arllls .. 359 16!h P~. C~\·l. s1;.r, Nr Huntingto1'Harbour lrnnis. Srrurt·rl bldg . nr\\' rrpts & drps, bltns. 1r BEAUTrF'UL 1 & 2 BR. 1110. 'ear least< .. l-111-:;21_8_ Triplr>r _ IJUirt Sf"ll. Ltit 1 .$21'9.50. 644--02i3 evf'~. Pool Prrfrcr for adul1s 1\·ho All u1il pd. Adhs only. "' appl'l'Clate lovely, quiet sur-Jl"TS. L\lgr. No. '· 383 IV. DELUXE 2 BR., 2 Ba., bltins, dshv.·hr, rel'. mom. Adult..: only. S180. 4!J:?-2259. \ViL~n SI. S150. Child ok . &l2-731i Con1c1nporary Garden Ap!s. l Br, ronv den condo.t·rplc. Br. $140, :i Bft . $240. Pers OCEAN \'U yrly 2 Br. :! Patio~. fr p!cs, pool. patio, pool & ft'<' facil, gar ok 17141 1!46-0071 Ba, lrpl, f'll'r kit ., <'nc gar, 2 BR. frpl e, cpts. dri>s. Close roun11ing:.~. --SPACIOUS 2 Br. 1 T.. '" 2 BDR~l. :? Ba1h ap1. Room. $lj()/n1onth. • Call 54~'.5.i:l * Ut1! BACH apr, xtra lrg, Sl:?i Gar & lndry nn Adil. no pets. 5-IB--8~22 or 6-12-25.'il ./ A\'L now·! & 2 Br furn. Pool , rec rn1. ~ lOt'ahon. No Pf'Ui or t'h1kiren &16-5112·1 Dana Point SINGLE, S2' & i\1a.rina l lv•y. 1V, pool. pets ok. up. 11kly Dana Inn, :Wll t Coast Park-Like Surrouading QUfET. DELUA'"E J.2 & 3 BR APTS Prv pa!IOS .. Hld Pool~ Nr shoP'll! • Adults ronly MARTINIQUE APTS. 1177 Santa ""' AVI' .• C\I ~lgr. Ap1 113 646-5~2 LRG "' apt~. $140 2 Be. $160 3 Br, 2 Ba. Htd Pool. Newly dee. Play yd. Cptd. Drps. Bl tns. Patio. Child. ok. 199/l L\1ap1P Ave. s.12.5344 New ep1~. rlrp!> Blln~. Nr shop'g & schls. s 1 6 0 .i-1&-lil'.I --UPPER BAY . """"' 3 "'· ' ""· blt-1n.~. I enc" d , cul--rle-~ar s2:io lraSf' 2r19 Norse. ~12:'..1 LGE I BR : All "'" pain1/crp1. Adull~ S12.'i. .. 6-12-."iOOO • LP.G-Anrac l Ill 2 Br'.~. lltrl pool, ('pis, drps, r11~pi, Ulll JXL \,~·I \.fonrov1a ~Jg...o3~ ------ LG ' "'· 2 Ba. nr11 C'[l1 ~. dr·p.<, no r'lf''~. rh1lrirf'n ok. ' $14~$160. Call 5-l&-3163 ,=A~d;;ll•=·~l=''°::;;,·~&liiJii-t:;i,=·50:':,--;o:=I &fill~. nn pt!.~_ fiiJ.-1900. I" mkl f.: IX'ach. Adults, I 2 RR, 1 ba, rli~h\\·asher, ., 2 BR. hn:l\\'d floors \1·atl'r J BR. Sin ~ ok. F"'?m rani::e, d i.~po.,<1t, crpts, drp~. 21:l::i53-11"71'------I -"°=-~"='~'~·~~~"='~· =492-=. ='=33=2=·- I prl. $1:1~ n10. 1093 \\'allace, S\25/mo., 71_1 \~. 18!h :SL. natural beani l't'llings, patio DF.LUXE3 br, 2 ha. \\later H'Or !lamil!on 1 C~1. 6-12-201.i, 6-12-202Cl &-poo l. Nr hospital. Adults view, 1'::! blk 10 bearh YP11r· 2 BR. I'~ BA. cpts, drps, ENJOY pMvacy"' Deluxr J only. $1~ util paid. 17616 ly S2S:)/n10. 67.>-3126 ('V('S. palro. no p1'1S, SJ7j mCI incl Br, bl!ns, t"C lr1g, cpt/drp, C11rnrron, 11-12-5192 BEAUTlf'UL PAR!\ NE\\'. ! u11I 3.1~,\ Cabrillo. 5411-881.13 gar. bale. 962-418() --, CllEZ ORO Af7T'S PORT J BR apl. fcir sub· SJiARP lr=r I BR. Cpl, Dl'ps. LARGE 1 BR hlrni: 11 /v~ 823-1 A!lant11. 1-2 BR Pool lease. Call 644·0001. Blrn~. quier bldg, ~o pets. cq:its, drp~. s1i5 mo .. 984 El Pr1\·atr f;aral(e ~·asher. 2 Blks from beach~3 Br. 2 $130 ;I0-972'1 Camino. Bkr 642.-4422 1lryrr11. :),16--Mlll, ::36-2727 Ba Duplex. Par10. Dsh'ol·hr, e 1 & 2 BR. Neilly (•arpeted. 2 BR. Twnh.o;e. 1'~ Ba, Patio. A JroOd \l':inl ad ~ a good S235/mo. 835--0890 Mon-f'r1; <lr11pes. elrc. kitchen. l I child ok, no Pf'fs. $1 50. investment ,\·lmds 642-18.17 1·hild nk. Ph. 6'16-8151 l!llll-A i\1 1s~1on. 51E>-IAA2 Apts., Apts .. 2 BR , 1 BA. Crp1s, rirp~. :o.tODER~ 2 Br. 2 Ba sruriro Fur". or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 CAN'T BE BEAT SINGLE STORY South Sea Atmosphere 2 BR. -2 BATII Carpets & drp9 Air Conditioned Private Patios HEATED POOL Plenty of lawn Carport &: Storage HIDDEN VILLAGE GARDEN APTS. 2500 South Salta Santa Ana "' 546-1525 """ ........................ I !' Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. i10 Huntington Beach BEAUTIFUl, FURN. APTS. I S14(}.S1 6J. Quiet, priv. patio, 2 wardrobe~. frplc, (lressing rm, locked sep. gar. Pool. Sauna. Rec rm. 221 ·1 CollegP Ave. 64&--0627 \\'h1Te Elephant Dime-A-Line Apt. Unfurn. 36S bltn~ .~ngl gar. l rhi!rl ok, 11p!. new cpt, nr ~chis, bHns, . M rie1s . Sl·IZl/n10. &l&-3-1:1:? storage. S165. 643--!49fi IH~u~";'';";g~lon=~B;e~eid>;::::=:H::u:":'::i:n:g:lo::•:::B:•::•:•:h===H~u:":':i:•:e•:•:n~B~e~•:d>:;;;;;:;~H;;::u~n;l;in~g~l:on;;;;B;e~a~c;h;:;; Apr. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365\ nr srhl~. s16:1/n10. :~c,...124.-, ---1v,.·u help you sell! &lZ--567& Apt. Unfurn. 365 17301 Keel.son Ln. (l hlk \V. of Beach Blvd, on Slater) . • 842-7848. l BR. pa110. pool. natural t>E-am crll1ng~. Nr hospital. Avail April 1. Sl6.~ ulil pd. 17676 Cameron, 842-5192. DELUX E l & 2 hr · \Valk ro hrarh Adults Sl3.i l.r. up. 220 12th St,. 219 t:ith SL * ~<'h ap1 . compt ki!<'h & bath 1 b!k 11.B. pier. SS.i. YrlY. I 11dult. &12-8j20 :\IOBILF>: home al hrach, :? Br. $160 mo pa.ys all. ;13&-7S60 or j3&..(1~7 Lido Isl• ./ BEACH APTS. Bachelor S200 1 BR. S22j. $2:.0. 3~'11 Nord. &12-4097 or :-.48-2211 t>Xt 22'1 Newport Beach CUTE B11yfronr Ap1. Su1r11hlr !or single girl, \\'ho 11krs ~\·Imming k bo 11 !1 ni;:. Sl.'(i/mn utl prl. :>1S-l:Z02, ~l4S-.102~ BALBOA 811 y Club basfront IPTTa~ 11)11. l~'lf ~ ft. 2 br, 2 h11. 'o\'f'! b11r, ~p rhn'g n-n f'lrrn or unf 6-*6-62..10 * S2S \\'EEK .~ UP • l\IESA tl-10TF.L f.:IT<'hfn, TV"s. m111rl M'rvicr ltt>l\ff'(j f)'Xll f:'6-_,._,7'-- BACllELOR 11p1. 'o\ /~arni;:c j '.'Jr h~\ Xlnl nr1Ji:hhorhood C•!I 673-illi:i> I 1·.-0CE=~.A7N=r=R=o=N=T,..,.h-oe~h-.~,,~,. ear. PJ1rll11l kit .• Sl:IO/mo Yrly. 642-34 13 f"o-bl'!!! N!~UJtJI!! fi4b-.'i678 Newport Beach ~---.,.----------~ Newport Beach Newport B•ach Newport Beach p manner square apa1 b 11ents 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 inlormalion telephone Mr. Robert M. Buckley, Manager at (714) 645-0252 or write to The Office Of The Manager, Mariner Square Apartments, 1244 Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach, California 92664 Ci,, l l ! l J QUALITY APARTMENTS I " • • • I 38 DAILY PllOT Aph., ' Furn. or Unfum. PALM MESA APTS: frldlJ, March 19, 1971 l~I ~[ ;;;""';;;"" ~1~~1 ' -.-.. l~I lootn-][g] [-w•,-1~1-... ~··-I~ 1-... --]~1 ;;;' ;;;"""°;;,_;;;;;1 Room• 400 8u1lnou Rental 445 Announcemenlt 500 Fovnd (fraa ads) 550 Baby>itllng Gardening Roofing Help Wanted, M & F ~f COLLEGE or \Wrldng girl STORE bldg or oJc for I.e. 'fir CAMP O-ONGO nr 1..ah LARGE Ptl rt.bblt, Uatit BABYSl'riING, my 'tme. LEEPER BROS. Compl yard 11'°'w"eN=ED.,;:.,A-lloo,-l-t"i-. "A-o"tnor~lz. BUSBOYS v.•anttd. Neat ap. BA.Ibo& . Isl, •ht kit & 1V Xlnt Npt Blvd upoJUN!. 911> An'OWhead. Clunpi11g ex· btov.'!1 ln color, weighA ap. di.)' &; nlg:ht; Cost& Mesa, & gllrd~ malnl. Res & f!ti Applicator for Sno.llide pearancr. :<int p~. Over rm, tele. $65/mo t. up. a/f. Acroa1 from city hall. pulenee 1£11' children aat prox, 10 Iba, Mar, J". S11.n. Newp't. area. Re a a. comm'l, 64&-6812 or 548-7004 noor SystetnJ. 645-1691 21. Full or part time, AJlll.y 61S--3613. 675--lf.Ol S.-16 coed. 3, 4 & 1 wk llll.¥0 Dr, l blk trom Irvine. 64541&1. EXP. J""" .. """" c-~-ner. SeWinn /Alteritloni in per50n Tut11 thnl ~ · GALLERY Sho •-•· t 1'tMlons. Member Ca 11 I 646-S886 .. ,.... • ..,-cu"" • btwn 11 •· 3 to M• uel ~lASTER Bedroom, private p wr ""'". r Pv c Slide lv'i~=::':-;:-:::;--::::::,--,.,,-BABYSl'l'TER. all -.ges, 24 Gen, cleitnup, Jlnul\~ tt'ffl. ... •• A <' 0 1 r y & bat b. Contact Village Inn Hotel, A9IOC o t. anlps. 1 YNG male cal, pure whitf', houn. warm meals, blg Malnt. yard 646-00l9 ALTERATIONS, restyling. Behefiky, Nw-port BNch 1 BR unfw ........... Sl35.00 F ai r v I e w /Baker / OCC 696 So, Coa.sl Hwy, Lllauna "-f(lt-tocethtr Thurs eve short hair arreen eyes back yo.rd. 642-1592 CM. General Serv'i•eo Expert fitl6. Top ref'1. Tennis Club, 2601 Eutbl\¢1 l BR furn ........... Sl'9.SO I .!""'~··~·~5~1"-:::.:.1998:::_ _____ 1. ,;°';a~c~h~. 2<94-o;:.•~1~'6:...,~-~-l >MC.ar~.,"""-::.-;Th. ~-:-::::;:-:c;o.:---! liWeet. Yng' black cat w/.i LW5V1N~f<cfiho~mmo .. :i.t•~-;:;;~yard;;;i:.I ~~~~:!_'.~·~:___ N.B. al"fll, ~Zl'()I Call Dr, N.S. Bachelora FuntlShe<i LGE room, 11\'I bath & en· NO\V Available • 2 rm shop Card of •nk•/ in ""bite feet. 847-ThSS Hot mealJi, !'rafts. 2 )Tl Jlu11ba.nd Busy? Call Moose ,R~o~t~h_C~al17---~~=~ • COUNTER GlRL. Appl)! from $lM trance. ?t1e•a Verde . or office space, $65/mo. 833 Mtmorlum SOS FOUND: Sm. brown TeJTier up. 54~2615or 54&-8786 54!'>-0820 after 6-Repa!r Alttr.111ons -642·5845 KENTUCKY FR I ED 2 BR AJ1t11 $175 mo. Employed person .. ;,.1~3611 \V, 16th S1,. N.B. 548--0044 rn meinorv ot Iris Spurlin· type dog w/Oea oolla.r, BABYSJ'M"lNG In my home Bulld-SeN 1.tost Things Neat, accurate, 20 years exP. CHICKEN, 693 So. Cout mo /mo OK or Uft 9583 I d I I R I I 450 •J • femal• vie · n.~... • u~. Laguna Beach, bl!twn • POOi.. • '"-r-n ustr • en • Jn the muJtitude ot 1ny ti.lain 3n:i .,~ .. ~uu -all ages, anytime. * LABOR UNLIMITED * EUROPEAN dttssmaking 1-4PM, in penon e SAUNA ROOM for non-srookin1: la<ly thOughts \\'!thin int: fhy · · ~ 5'5-1641 HANDYMAN all eusto1n titted. Very .;..,;:;,"2.;;;,:;.::;;;c;.,...~-~1 eJACUZZI ""ho wi11he1 home al· SMALL UNITS <.'Omforts delight rnY sou1FOUNO on EastbluU Or., ClULDcaremybomeonly. Welding-C'arpentry673-1922 reasnnable.673-1849. COUPLE w/chu·reb 1561 Mesa Dr. Santa Ana mosphere. COSTA MESA (from Psalm 64) To ~r N.B. Brand new sporu car Harper Sehl district. Call ~lANDY?o.IAi"W will do rnobile Tile custodial exp for religious 1 -~-:*-":'.'.!"-':'..'.n~G~*::,.--l!lS. & $167. Per Month loving relative~; to her hubcap. Please identity. 5'18-1623 borne repair & plu1nbi~. ----------~7~ & apt on prtm. NICE roo111 !or working man Immedlat~ Occupancy niany, many de yo t e d &U-5752 or * 6£.6945 * CERAMIC tUe new & w/ <>r w/o cook'g privil. New 6500 1q, tt. unit, 18th & friends: 10 her kind and FOUND Nr: Fair or. BABrSI'ITIN~-~Y 00 1"' or Houllnn remodel. ~ est. Small COUPLE to manaae 14 apla &side, Clot Gtl--0326 \Vhittier, ll0.220 power, thoughtful neighbors; Domestic long ha.ired male ~~: r'nyan~m;'.""~7;1? 1--...;•:,... ______ jobs weloome. 536·2426, in Balboa. (714} 982-15311 Co1ta Me1a BAY MEADOW APTS. e ll5 PER wk up \\'/ kit. plenty of parking. . \Veo Thank You, grey & wht tabby cat, 1-2 . . YARD, Garage cleanups, 5J6.-88S5 SCO'IT REALTY, 309 N. Beam ctUings, paneling, priv. • $2S \\'ttk up Apl!i. ;.10TEL. See: nobert Nattress, Rltr. From her n1ost )TS. 546-1541 SlTh11.1ER reservations be111g trees dirt ivy removal, skip T°""re~e=s~.-,-.~lc_e_____ Euclid, Upland, Calif. 11atios, recttation tacililles. _54~8-~97~5'>~-'...------~ Costa Mesa 642-1485 appreclat!fe 1amUy. FOUND: Sha=>..i ...... in H.B. taken ~h & park. Reas. loader backhoe. 962-8745. ----------DENTAL sec'y, divrorsi1ied r K'IO' ..-. llc'd & ins. CM 549--0706 ·=='~·~::;:=c,-"-~-TREES H--' T T . AU Adults, no pet~. i'OR rent a fun room in 7500 sq ft-AU pcrw~r, heat.' on 3/12/n w I mllar. Call BABYSITTING : HAULING, gen'! cleanup, • ~gts, op, nm, duties, secretarie.I 1kll1. * Bachelor Apt lllO • c.~J. Ni~ &: quiet borne lights, partitions & flooNJ [t] .!: Jdentify 536-82n in 1!1Y home, 1ree serv. Handyman. Reas. cut, removed, hauled. Ins. Mature, congenial. Top * 2 BR. Jrom $165 * for ·w<>rlcing man, 642-47!» finished. 1535 Monrovia, p -" , • TAM fenced yard, refs. ~,.a 648-5848 =&4;.::2-40..::30;:.:B=;~g~J:.:ob:.:•:;____ sa1fU'Y, ~2456 erso,-• E Brindle bunny on Mesa area. 642-0384 · ~ · ===--~~=--! V.1c.1tlon Rentala 425 N.B. Call 645--0710 . Bal.lxta Island. TRASH & Garage clean-up, Tutoring DENTAL ASSISTANT 387 \V, Bay St. {htwn Harbor NEW bldg, .1368-l72S aq II. 673.9223 ALL day or alter school, 7 days. SlO a load Free ___ .;.,.______ least 1 year experif!ncct. & Newport Blvd. ~mi N.,EASTER & Summer, 3 BR Nr Baker & Fairview, I Pe•oonels 530 DARK Poodle "-dog !>iy E-Blde C.M. home. Mon est Anytime 548-5031. FORl\lER ErJilish teacher Mature. 963-5182 of 19th Sti. &. 2 ha, \V&lk 10 bch &. • "'t"= thru Fri. Over :I. 642-4386 • will tutor students in her -'-'7'"",.:.::_:=====-1 CALL l \Vkl hi 714 yr. lease. Sullivan, 54~429. McFadden-Newhope a re a MOVING, Garage 'clean-up Costa Mesa home: grades * DENTAL HYGIENIST *' &.lli-0013 poo, Y or mont Y· : '.'OMME QAL-USTRJ * FULLY LICENSED * 839-5532 Bullders & lite hauling. Reasonble. 4-8. M.50 Per Hr. 540-2797 Part time l-~N~A....;S;:SA:=U,.:;P:.:A:.:L:.:Mc__S_ MS-Z86l ' R IND AL Renowned Hindu Spiritualist • . . }Tee e ti t 645-1602 ~· * 962-6671. * 500-1500 sq ft, 13c to l2c Advice on all matters. BL.ACK~ wht rabbit. vie BRICK block concrete s ma es. GERMAN & FRENCH Summertime rM"ar the beach. Rental1 to Shere 430 I * San Clemente 496-1840* Love, Marriage, Business ~arbor High. Call and iden-carpe~try, b:iwe leveling: Housecleaning Easy Pleasant f.lethod DENTAL receptionist. age. l & 2 Br. apts, H!d pool. ./ RENT M·l 1125 aq tt Sl25 Readings given 1 days a hfy 548-3583 all types remodeling. No For Adult5 & Oilldren. 30--40, Mon thru Fri, Exper Singles can share. ll40 to \\TILL shatt quiet 2 BR mo. ll55 Logan, No. 6,· CM. O job too amall. Lie. Contl'. * SPEC'IAL ••• CARPETS * * 833-()5;,.t * req'd. 644-TI62 $163. ho1ne, color TV, pbone. 675-',116 week, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. y UNG female white & grey 962~945 cleaned, 4c sq ft, $25. 31.2N.ElCa.minoReal, calico cat. Vic: Brookhurat . Uh I DISTRIBUTOR, manage 177 E. 22nd St. C:\I Patio, auto. washer. 2 sbop-& SI VJ B • S • mirun1um job. Please call p o stery yoor own b ... ,·ne , w/ -· &12-3645 S4l·9:i66 pini areas, \dth active Stor•9e 455 San Clemente ater, F. y, 968-9033 us11:"1e11 erv1ce 536-'2247 or SJG-2129 .,.:. ___ :,..._____ "" s 1 • .-, ........ _..... n o".'"' o k er' "92-9136, "92-0076 BLACK miniature Poodle, 1----------LIC Upbolsterer -Quality come potential of $1000 P..C1" '"'"= SUITES Ava,·lable· 17612 TYPING SERVICE HOUSECLEANING u • u h n10. Initial invegtment IHI! !).18-9547. · REDUCING technology male, found vie Adam, I:. \VOrk. An 10ny1 P • Beach Blvd, H.B. Parking' 1 . . d H ~-Sa . 96 .. .,...,..~ Neat, accurate, fast. Pick up Ex~r. Relia. Refs. cA ... ,.,-••0 ·-NB than $.100. Early retirement. revo utionize . Inches taken a.-""r t. n1te. .trMN-J I ;~=~ .. ~~~· ~~~~.,~~·~·~~ ' BACHELOR to altare apt Air cond: Heating: U 10 .&;,:d~•~ll~v,~&1~~:04:8~1~. ----l--;;:-:~C=al1""~53::'1:.:-5468~=.,=,,..--possible 642-2150 Carpe+-ina: Janitorial serv. <> in minutes. BLACK & wtiite rabbit vie ~ w I game. Be.i.utifully furn 'u-& Measurable re.suit! before H••bo• Ht·~ --a. TYPING my home. Term Bay & Beach Janitorial [IlJ k DlSH\VASHER * I A. nd l TV Inquire Suite 8 or ca.II .... • 6 " cu-c c-" . d n I I il ·-., c al t H . 2400 Harbor Blvd. ap . IT co , co or , your \'ery eyes. Become &46-6627 papers, mwer thesis, Call • """• win ows, oors e e. En11loyment µ.o.y\'i \V onv escen Olp Cosra i\tesa pool. $100 mo. Cali Terry 1 ..:540-Sc:.~7~2~4 _______ Suddenly Slender. J-fome _ Linda 846-4141 Res. & Comm'I. &l6-14...l 2055 Thurin St. C.M. Ph:'. RING BROS, Announces Apt.s. NOi\' A\'ailable MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE !714) 5S7-80W at 537-2819 before Sam or selt-appliffl method. Free C~R. Spaniel, ma!e. Call HOUSE OF CLEAN-642-3505 aft 8 pm Rent•lt Wanted 460 class &: demomtration. Call lo identify. C.1rpenter Complete Ho"~ Cl•aning *DISHWASHER * $;i0 move in allO\\'ance ..=::..::.!::;;.,... _____ ~I ="''°""""'""'""'°'"'.'""'--~ •------------1 J b W I d M I 700 Lovely I & 2 Br, pool apts. YOUNG girl needs 2 female RETIRED R. E. broker & for reservation. 5'16-3904 4.,.,..>v.>0 CARPENTRY 642-6824 O •n e • a e * PORTER From S12.0. Adults, nO pets, roommates, $55 mo. Child v.'i!e, quiet, dependable, PURE Collie aboul 6 mo. !\fiNOR REPAIRS. No Job Income Tax SCRAM-LETS E.xpe.rienced,Apply lnperson nr shops, frwy & bch. ok. Cail 64&-0717 aft "· wk· desire 2 BR. lower apt. or e DISCOVER YOGAT vie. Harbor High. 646-6082 Too Small. Cabinet in gar-, to Harold, AU.EY WEST,: &a2-Zl8l or 613--0507 nds anytime. a.1. house, unturn.: c Jose d Greater Vitality &. Mental LONG hair Golden Retrei er & t h bl Smiley Jax Serv1'ce 21~ Oceanfront, Newport g•-•• No y--~ "-rk "'-Abilirv! FREE DE!\ION· vt-. H•••--H•·-. °'° "709v ages o er ca nets. ANSWERS Beach, across from pier. : • LOVELY, lrg I &. 2 BR. YOUNG gal would like to . ...., ' <Uu ...., • vi.:· 'J "' ... uu.-&"' .,...,....., $45.8175 il no answer leave Panel'g, patio, yrd, gar/wtr ~t1°~~.b~;9owith same. ~:~~5~Y lst. Up to ~T~:, !~ts ~~o(:~:~ Lost 555 nu1t. at 646-2372. H. 0. • llth YEAR LOCALLY e OMV BOOKKEEPER ; pd. lniant ok.12192 &linger.1_:.:::..=::c..:::::..::.::.. ____ 1 •G 12-72) Yoga Center, 445 E. Anderson. Qualified _Reasonable Easily -Tepid -Entry -~'fw.t have sLx months exper.: Harbor Blvd to Zodle's, E. Offt'co Rental 440 ARAGE WANTED• LOST c RPENTRY W A S"ULEY 11'•-d-v -~vED · 17th St., Costa Mesa, A -Repair. All · · " " "' "'"'' ience in processing OMV· on Edinger. 839-0959 Approx 2-car size, for rhe ~.gm Woman'.i; tan \Valle!, SaL phases, Home &. apt, Lite Certified Public Account'! Overheard about a dumb.. forms and general ottice' EXCITING furn 1 BR apt SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY building <>! 14' fiberglas 3/13. Vic. ~1arke.t Basket, hauling. Eve: 54 8-6 2 66, &42-2221 anytime 64&.9666 bell: "He's so dumb, he wa-procedures for Auto Dealer. ll35. Pvt deck, pool, Crpts, 1·2-3 room, up to 3,000 sq, bo 1 at. Need for 90 days at DREAMS! N.B. or Bal·Broas!ed Chick· Day: 537-1860 TAX SERVICE $4 UP ters his garden '>1.'ilh whiskey Paid vacation, sick leave, d-·. •Jtna, •valk Jo tow·n. ft. oft!""' suil.,, l mmed. OC· east. •n Balboa K"P mott" to -w STEWED 1 ,,,.,,..," • .,~ " ...... \\.'hat messages are they try. • ' ~y. REMODELING & Repair App't available days, .... om ""~· group ins. benefits, etc. Sal-, 145 E. 18th, C.l\f. 548-9M9 cupancy. Orange County. ""=,.;.*..,:64&466;;..::::.~5_:•~~~ ing to ieU you? Write : The Return LO. Call 673'6434 afl Specialist. Comm 'l. residen-t'ves. \\'knds. 548.05.38. Job W.1nt•d, Fem•le 702 ary commensurate with abi1.· I eves bt\l'n 3 & 6 /.irport Irvine Commerc· YOUNG MD, w·t'f•, 2 kt.d< ~. l · s · J'" 3 pm Jial p 1· b · t C (') I C.Omplex, adj. Alrporter ed 4 B 2 .~ 1 Lymuum nstitute u1te ou · _:., ane 1ng. ca l n e s, 1842 Newport, Ci\1 ity, all Ed Hacquebord, BR apfs. Furn $140. bank! ne r °" urn or 4500 Campus Dr., NB Ca. LOST: Male tabby cat, drk, rn..._nite, formi c&. 644-7598 HIGHLY qualified Caucasian sro-8017. · Unturn $130 util pd. Adult~. Hotel & Restaurant, • unr for yr, Begin July. mi<I. long Jur, S.A. l-fgts area. 1-----------tSKOUSEN TAX SERV, y.·oman desires permanent DAVE ROSS PONTfAC j no pets. 820 Center St. San Diego & N'pt F\\'ys. Prefer N.B., Cd~1. Write RE\VARD Pltase ca 11 C.1rp•t Servic• Reas. Your Home. 540-3894 liveout housekeeper J)OISl- 1 GC2-5848 UNCROWDED PARKING Sholkoff, 18 Greenview, s.F. DISCOVER DISCOVERY 54;;...397.l Ironing tion. For interview &l&-0348. * DRIVERS * ·~ _ 11 lg 2 Br. l•,-. Ba, LOWEST RATES _>1~13~1~. =-.,---~---Find Yourself REW Diamond Carpet Cleaning !---''-------lVO'lAN .11 k . N E • .........., .... ~ Vwner/mgr. 7172 DuPont Dr. -;; In Someone Else ARD for info re lost A · ss ffi.ON!N " wi coo evening 0 xper1ence utl rm for wh/dr, palio, Rm 8 Ne..,,.,,.rt Beach WANTED to rent for mo Call Now . No Obligation male Siamese kitten (6 n -Y~ siz&e roomaU . G my hOme $l.25 Jk'r meal from 3 pm on plus N lid $16-""' 0.,00 • • TI.... ot J Fu 3 Bd ho r\.t:Pfllr!ng inst al1on~ hr. Bring own hangers. ,. It d ,. ., .... ,,, f ecessary• gar, cp p, a. ~ 833-3223 Courttay to Brokmi une, rn. rm me (714) 835-6885 mo'sl, v.·/yellow t'yes. Vic. F E &151317 ig 1 u 1es . .,..,,,...:;i at • . , tbt .d ,. l Sol ree st. . 54~7&1t. J·.30 2 BR Sl.25 unfurn: ll45 furn. n es . res1 en ia area. The Award Winning Serv. ana \Vay, L.B. 494-5!¥.W 1 ~--7'-;;---.,.----1~--.,...-'-~-----,;;:::;,,_,.,---.,,..,.-,-.,.-,-I Must have clean Ca.Ht driv. Famlliei welcome. B 1 G DESK SPACE Npt Bell or vicinity. \\'rite SINGLE? WIDOWED? :I Lo.st dogs: Golden retriever Cement, Coner,~• Janitorial PRAC. Nnl'!e. Good refs/ex· ing record. Not under 25. SUR APTS, 20.-3-2049 222 0, orest Avenuo Classified Ad No. 88 Daily & h. . l ~r Home or hosp Ov.•n YELLOW CAB CO Wallace St. Phone 5'i8-430l Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Costa Divorced? Ov•r 21? R \\' tle min pood r · •• CO~RETE. Floors, SPARKLE Janitorial. \Vin· ,,.. · · •· Laguno Beach i\lt-sa, Calif. 92626. For a self f'Xplanatory mes. e\vard. Last seen _17th & patios, llrives, sid~'.llks, dows, floors, crpts & constr trnnsp. 7am-7pm 0 r? 186 E. 16th St., C.M. ! Huntington Beach $946& 2 CAR Garage in Costa sagl"24hrsadaycall Nev.1>0rl Blvd. S4S-7a27 slab~. Reas. Don 642-8514. cleanup. Acompleteoomm'l _548-4:.:.:..,:.:.62='--~----1 * DO YOU WANT A t .-96-4801or50.9991 $~1 long-hair gtey ca t CEl\tENT WORK, no job too serv. F'or Free est call, LIVE-in h<>usekeeper or STEADY PART TIME AVAILABLE lo' lmm-"iate I\ esa, To be ustd fo~ / u 1 · 96, -7., babysitter. Call 280-7967 arxJ J OB• lnl · ON BEACH' = 1 Call T Th c d R d $lO v.· ye O\V eye~ Q,,\l v1c small, reasonable. Free .......,,, -· . erestmg ~ • occupancy, Sublease pleas. s orage, erry, e PA U.~ & ar ea e~. 1\lesa Dr & Elden Ave, C.!-1 l' 1----------ask !or Mirian. type job from home. NO ant" room suite. 2043 West-1,oRe.,:.:.al:.,::E~st=a~t"::c:.'='1&-=:.:.:."='='--readings only ll '.\'/lhJS ad. 646--1542 · Estlm. H. Stu! ick, S4S-86l5· Landscaping 'A~JD~E~S~~,.~,,-. -,-.0-,-v-al~,-.,.-,..-, 1 SELLING, Write brieOy to J BR ........ From $235 cliff Dr., Suite 200 Newport GROUND Floor office space 10S31 Beach, St an 1 0 n Contractor L Classified ad No. Ul The · 1 d c rl 1 •1 327-3406 YEl..LO\\f Lab pup, 7 mos., ----------icens•d Landscape elderly care or family care. Beach. 642-7690 or tee Uu1ld-\\'an e · orona e "ar, H ROD'! Add.,' L T CONTRACTOR e ""8218 Homemakers, 547-fi681 Daily Pilot 330 W, Bay, Furniture AvaUable Cupets-drapes-dishwa~ heated pool.saunas-tennia rec room-ocean views patios--tlmple parkini So. ot High"-·a.Y. 6.14-1361 LCOllOLICS Ano 8.!I ear Infection Jn right " luOM, • . ;}-f<)-ing manager. A nymous. v· W l C •t Co •truc1·1on Sin l ~-or J b W • M & F 704 Costa 1'.1esa, Cali1. 9"Q;i, Pbone ~2--7211 or wrl!e to ear, ic: es · '' · n~ · g e S•v•.:r Painting & o S antea, · · BEAUTIFUL 3 room olfice 2 BR. un( house u·/ stove, 0 Bo ml C ta. M 642-6625 2. Estim., plans & layout. p h , giving phont' number. suite w / kitchenette. Ideal Need fncd yard for sml P. · x ' os esa. 847-1511 aper anging EXPERIENCED J anitor • ENGINEERS and f h.I 1 · dog, Ct-.f are-.i . Call 646-3.)65 DANCE JeSM>ns' Latin & 2 Gennan Shepherds. males, couple desired offiC'e clean-• ELEf"rDONIC TECHNI· Security auards, or arc 1 ee, 1 n s u ran c e aft 8 pm. American. Introductory off. 1 .blk ,& ta.n. 1 brn & blk. ROOM Additions/Remodel-PAINTING, professional. All Ing. Mon-\Vcd-Fri eves. CIANS :-+:• Design and agent, realtor, etc. On er S4 per hr. 673.7185 VI<'. Newpot1, Bay. 838-8328 ing. Free planning serv. work g u a r n. Co Io r Monrovia SL In N. B , Misc. Rentals-465 WST N•"I•-" s,·,,,.,. wt.th Kennedy & Hau!'IE', 633-ti270 specialist. 646-1081: 5-17-1441 ~&--015.~ assembly, solid 1 tat e I HUNTINGTON PACIFIC S350/$300 per mo. 6.t).-0770 ED ""'""-' ~ d I"' 0049 H I W t d M & F 710 circulll"y. e FENCED atorag• area. • flea collar. Vic. Springdale ays ~ eves. PAINTING : Honest, 8 P an e ' Advanced Kinetics, t nc. I 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. DESK SPACE oil surfaced: Costa Mesa. stt' Beverly at home. & \Varner, HB. 846-5158 t-.1Y \Vay, .qual ity hon1t guaranteed w ork, Lic'd, 1231 Victoria SI. c.r.t Call 646--0281, 962-7813. \Vhlte Elephant Dime·A·Llne BURMESE Siamese cat. 7 repair. \Valls, ceiling. floors Loe~ rers. Call 675-5740 Accounts Payable (714 ) 646-TIS:i m•i 536·1487 IOfc open ]0 am..(i pm Daily \VILLIAl\l \VALTERS CO. 305 No. El C•mino Re•I Soln Clem•nt• 492-<4>1 • WILL sacrilic..--1.-0w Rell- ;jii;;ijiiji;iii;i!!iiiiiiiiiiiilfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1I mo's, Mesa Verde llTt'a. etc. No job too small.t-"-"-'°---------Clerk-Equal opportunity emploYer -* * * * Rl.-WARD, 54()..4357 :J.47-0036, 24 hr ans. serv. PAlNTL'l'G/paperlng, 18 yrs e ENGINEER _ Fiberglass DO Add'.,'ons * 0 -mod•lt·ng ln Harbor area. Lie & T ( ·b·1· f ·-' 1· M c '' RA'', a Siberian Husky, "' '"' " ota J'('Spons1 11ty or p1uuuc1on. • ac regor * * thildren's pet, lost 3/11 in Gerwick & Sons, Lie. bonded, Ref!'I furn. 642-2356· Accounts Payable. 1.1ust \'acht Corp, 1631 Placentia, S.A. Hgt'!. 5'j()...7J23 673-Ei04l * 549-2170 INT & Exter. Painting. be proficient \Vitti 10 key, l=Co=a=ta~M-'-"------I '.! B'R. ~155. 3 Br. l1 8D/up. Pa-111.J. Executive suite-of (If· ,,.-------------------.. I tio. Pool. Children ok. fices. 3345 Ne.,.,·port Bl\'d. ~·JORA K1U Ap ts, 18S81 ~lora CN~B=·:...::Cal=.1~&1~5-454:...:':::5·:_ __ _ Kai Ln, 1h b!k E. of Beach, * NEWPORT BEAC:l:I Ch-ic , off Garfield. 962-8994. Center. 310 liq. ff. AnsY."er 1 Newport Beach & Sef'rc-tarlal. 6'15-HiOl ·~---------CORONA DEL MAR BACHELOR. & l br apts. 1 I: 2 Room ollice spaces I Nr Bay. Eves. 67ij..1876 or avail. OWNER * 673.67;)7 .t9.J...22SO ~--------3700 NE\VPORT BLVD, NB 1santa An• • ON TilE BAY . I LAS PALOMA$ G7:J-2464 or 5.JJ.;itJ2 .APAR1':\II::NTS 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM Brand flt'\\' from S.140 From 300 sq. ft. l'k sq It. 1 k 2 BR. furn.-unturnished G7:i.2464 or s.11·5032 "' i l h dish\\'IUlher, 1-leated 01"1'~ICE • xlnt loc, Ri\•erside pool & Jana1. Central gas Dr, NB, $85 n10. Avail 4/l. heating & a1r.oondilionlng. 64:>-31'.150 or 644-5177 Business R•ntal 445 I Gas & \\·ater paid, Private patios. Color cboice shag carpeti112. Santa Ana S.W.39S8 ltOO West \Varner Avr. PRIME LOCATIONS E. 11lb St., Costa Mesa 1120 Sq, U. "'11.h pe.rkln{: North ~1f South Coast Plaza Shoppi/\g C~nter & near San Diego If. Newport Frec'.\·ays. O:lnv~nJently localed corner W•rner & Bristol. 27c Per Sq. Ft. • BroadYo'ay, Lagu:ia Beach 1650 Sq. ft. with parking 30c Per Sq. Ft. HOUSE: Hunting? \Vatch the I OPEN HOUSE column. • Apt1., Rtalonomics Bkr. 675.6700 For best te!ulls! 042-56711 Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. Brand Spanking New In Beautiful BACK BAY 1 •nd 2 hdroom• Furnished 1nd Unfurnl1htd Adult Living * Dh1hwasher * Stove and Refrigerator * Shag Carpeting (4 exciting colors) * Sound Proofed * Billianl Tables *Pool * Large Recreation Center Oecup1ncy In Mlrch RENT STARTS $155 • Vista Del Mesa Apartments ~ Tus1fn & MIN Driv• \51' 54&--4BSS 37D LOsr •.~ Shepherd, 1-!i Lic'd Contr. Remodeling Lic'd, ins. Free ~st. 30 yrs Lie. typing, requires 2 EXP'O waitresses _ Xlnt Samoyed, nil ,..,hlle, femalt. Additions. Plans, Layout exper. Chuck, &l:Ml809 yrs. local work exp. \VilJ pay, full or part time. Apply Vic. Lake St, H.B. 642-6759 Karl E. Kendall 548-15.l7 * PAPERHANGER * check references. Co!ila in perwn, Tues thru Fri Trader's Paradise Have 360 Acres, F&C, ~Tin· nesota. \\'ant boat, airplane, mobile home, TD's, or sub· mlt. i\1r. Jensen, agt. 6~37'26 &t2·812o Eves. '63 Ford Jt T pick.up w/ lumber rack & tool boxe.~. Trade for your equity In late n1odel pick-up or car, lo mileage. 54S-1945 \VANT GOOD NE\V OR LIKE NE\V LRG REFRJG. FOR GOOD CUST01\1 UP. HOL. OF YOU R CHOICE. g~&:jjS TOWNHOUSE 3 BR. 2'1; BA Newport Beach, Elec kil., frplc, poo!. Pri. patio. Val· ue $32,000. Take T.D. Trail· er or '!' 0\\'tler 646.6654 W AITTED late model V\V Squareback. Have 1966 Mustang (V8, auto1naticl, low mileage, good tires, orig owner, to lrd. 496·5957 '70 Ponliac CaD.lina 4 dr, loa.ded, $3350 valu '67 Chev Impala .t dr, loe.ded. $1650 valu TRADE for TD's, lot!, what have you, 494-4825. Goll course Jot-Christmu Val .• Ort. $3C()O v a I u r for qulck <lea!. \VIII trd $1~ eQ. for c11r, boat, jc?..--elry, anUqu~1 or 1 673-0802 '69 Old! CUtlus S . load('(!. low mil~. xtra clean. Trade for u.11 boat or motorcycle. 494-3452. Laguna Beach .t7 Fully lmprov'd R-1 lois @ $4,SOO ($211,500) Clear. \\r1u Div\dc. \Vant M<1tor- yacht, Airplane. Bll)'Slde home: or Jnc. (7141 459-3103 * * * Furniture Prior instructor. 6.J6.2449 l\fesa electronics finn. btwn U & 3 to Mr. Helmut PREGNANT Cat, Tiger Call ITI41 545-8261 for in. ~ky, Newport &a.ch striped, short bob tall. Vic. FURNITURE Stripping • any No \\>ast1rn: tervit'W, Tennis Club, 2601 Easthlul1 lines 13!h St, N.B. 6-15--0.810 · * WALLPAPER * II-=:...::::.::=:..::::.:::::::_ __ I a\•erage chair 01· rocker .. .. Equal Opportunity Employer Dr, N.B. RE\\'ARD! Irish Setter pup, str ipped $5. &12-34.JS When you l'all ?vine =E~XP=.0~~s-,~1 -,-,-.~;-,~1 -1-0-,I times dollars malt, 5 Jno's. l\farilyn, ~-"-C---.,.-------1548·1444 646-17ll Advertising Salesmen Gerdening lJ fo o drugstore Sat's & &m1t1. 546-2969 or 673-1434 LESCO Painting Contractor to st' space r range ·~--'-"_"_'"_'_'"_' __ ,](Pflj 2.J' Islander sailboat, sleeps!•••••••••• 6, docked at slip. Exchange S h 1 & C I bl. at· \Vrt.t"' Submit resume to Bo. x 36,5, AL'S GARDF..N!NG Int/ext. 2 Sto"" S""Cialist. oun y pu ic ion. ~. ., "' po B o~• s t A Corooo de! :'llar, Calif. for gardening & smal l Also, ac coutl . ctil. · · ox .u.V'I, a.na na, landscaping services, call spraying. Lie & ins. Calif. U270.J. * FOUNTAIN \VORK • 540-5198. Serving Newport, &IJ-2399 1 -,:....AN~,~.O~N~E~-°'-. .,.-~,,~--w~ho experience necessary. Cdi\!, O>sta Jl,fesa, Dover PAPERHANGER flock foil i~ 1villlng to. work, apply Call &H--7402 \\·eekends for mobile camp· c. ~ 1 1. ('r. 1n1 rue 1on1 Shores, 'VestcliU. vinyl, guar., estimates'. the In person DELANEY'S SEA • GAL THURSDAY • *LANDSCAPING* Hangman, 547-5846. SHANTY, 630 Lido Park You don't have to be as 575 l\E'\I' lawus, lrE'e reniova.1, Schwanz Dr., N~··="~· -----~ sharp as our Gal Friday, sprinlders. drains, arbors, PAJNTl!\Gfpapering. 18 yrs •ASST, HELPER• but \\'e'd 1ikE' \'OU lo want AIRLINE lo be. Gell('ral ~lericaJ work 1 Y.r. o!d Great l>ant', l\lale p<1tios, fen ces. Lic'd conir. in Hnrbor a1ea. Lie f,, a $l.75 HR. a SCHOOLS 3 I "36-122:i bondE'd R f' f 64Z.Z3:i6 \\'lite typing, Principal BC· -+ &12·6820 * brindle. Papers-AKC·5 gen. 1· ~"rs oc. t'Xp. J. :i. ' e s urn. · · Pern1anent cmployrnent. F·ull Jlvlty includes filing, order ped. .. champ. stock. 1nc, dog PACIFIC JOHNSON 'S GARDENING * PAINTING * tt•n• or p-•t Jime. De""nd. · Da & •· I Cl .-"'-' .. ~ process111g & invenfont po•C hse. Trd for old car, sntl. Y 1~1g11 assn Yard care, cleon-ups, 11,· Qoalt.ly. Rca0, Prict«. ,·,btc. ., • 13 "~"" " ing for mfg'r of pharmaceu • boat, furn. or ? 646-6942 -~ """"' planting, sprink le rs . free-c-sl. 6·/G.QS&.I Call i\lr. Frank * :>.16-9862 · J W I l 75 300 610 E. 17rh ~t. Santa Ana 962 2035 I t1ca products. Expe_r. in ater ront ot a x , ' · -· Plast,,r, Patch, Repair B 1\ Bys ITT ER, i\1ature drug or food suwlement !n- Carlsbad, clear, w/carry VIRGO Swlm Sch 0 0 1 I1ltOFESSIONA~~. Pru1ang, 11·0111an f(lr I yr olct Friday dU1itry desirable but not 1st. \Vant loc'ai irnp'd. prop. Lessons, 6 nio's thru aOulL l~ee 11·ork, sp~nk\ers, aera· * PATCH Pl.AST.ER ING mornings, Bu s hard & mandatory. Steady employ. or good stock s. Rich Irv.in, Garden Gro\'e & Balboa Isl lion, pests, d1seasr, ,~·ced All 1~'JM>S. Fret est1n1alr.q Talbel't. 96g...3730, ment \\'/health benefits pd. •··-675,,"""" control. Clean up )Obs. Call ~1:i c 11 '-• ~1 Exc,.,..'6or. J"V'NV. G.1t>--2550. Temi• George ~5893 BABYSITrEfl needed al my a l>'ff>'""" for interview. HAVE: BIG SEAR 3 Br . ' PLASTER. Pat ch·Rn1. home during day v.•ithin LIN\VTLCO LABORAT02· hed ho S30 000 E>..'PER. Japanese Gardener. Adds. Ne\\' 11·ork. Free Sonora sclil area. Call aft lES, Costa 1\·lesa, Calif. furnls mt, ' · 1 I~ Comple'f'. law-; serv & estimates. ~145--4588 aft 5 5:30 537-9293 1 --'--c=A~L=F~R=JD~A~Y=:;_-I $8400 equity. \VANT: Car, Strvic:H 1nd Repairs landscaping. ;:i 4 6-O 7 2 '1 , Pl b' -"'-"''..::::_c.::.:.,~~-~~ I land, or 1? 1.lyers . 5.ill-1~ urn 1ng BAB\' s ITT ER needed, Laguna Bch based, non protll 6'13-Gio6 responsible, 5 days A week. erology organ, ex: per, EXPER Japane~AmeriC'an PLU~tBlNG REPAIR Bay Vie iv School area, S.A. mtt.tun' dynamic sec'y. 1'.lust A1nphibiot1S car & huge an· Baby1itting lique hous.N:ar \\'Orth S1800·1-----"----- & s1200. \\'ant late big car COSTA MESA ~\en::edes or ? 642--5690 or PRE-SCHOOL 548-3869 11.ft. 6. lStr. !.:. J\·lonrovia, ';; day + fuU day sessions Planned 'f":'1n bed~, llkt nell', canle progran1, hot lunChes. Age& ~\~tb mobile home. '"e Mte 2·6, hr~ 6:30 A:\t.6:00 P1.f. tm. N~ double bed or '! ,18 wk-C0?.1PARE! 6424050 Call or SJS..5237 ~· 1 ,,:c,:::::..::::::·c__~-----~~.....:~·"----IOflLD care 1n my home. H11\'e l\IG Midget rondsteor, Tnfan1 to 4 yrs old. Have new paint, engine, top, 3 yr old daughitr. Fenced Xlnt r.ond. Value '895. yard, lar;:c honlP. Call Trade !or travel trailer or 830-4270, hr8 7130 to 6:00. ski boll\, 54>ll.82 El Toro, .i\1\ssion Viejo area HAVE : Beauliful 3 Br. Npt BAB\' S I TT TN G-Hourly, Beach home t.oan µ-iti.lo dally. "'kly. f>'tonr.'t'd )'Ard, Equity $24.00J. WaJ1t: • 111: !~t ine11.I$: P 1 ~ y '1.' ti'.!: 5, comt' Com v 1 1 -~ I elcr:.1>n !Sehl 1hs1. :i3&-u&4, , ., acan «rn.i. 'i36-4ll3 ?>1atcbam Realty. 646-CSJT · BABYSITT!i\'.G niy llflmr. WhJ.t do you have to trade! \\'kday~ & 11·k<'nds. Brhind Ll1t 11 hent -In On.ngt Pomona School 6"6-5.~l. Count)''• IAl'l'l~I rtad tra4-i=c~"=------­lna: post.6'2-567& CIULD cal'f' in 1'1)' hon1t>. * * Fo11ner n1Jrstry Ii t ho o I * !f'a.cher, t."flllege trained. $»-4«9. gardener. complete garden-No job too sn1all l!gts. 5.JZ>--45S8 alt 5 be ru-ong in public relations il'ljf service & cleanup. • 642-3128 • \\'Ork, type 50 \VPl\f + s 89l--0150 e PLU:'llRING e BABYSJTI'ER. housekeeper, S.H. Salary open. Beniti~.1 · mRllLrr, depcndablt>, live ~ AL'S Landscaping. T ree E!ectr1cal Repair SS hr tn or ouL 9Gs-8230 aft S:JO 497-1724 Mr. Lack removal. Yat'd remodeling . &12-Toft.i fi-12-1·1()3 GENERAL Clerk. Req. H.S. Trash haul.ing, Jol cleanup. Pow•r Sw•eping BEELINE Fa,hions needs 10 grad, type 50160 v.-pm (ata. -'"'"!!P~'~;'~'~P•crl~nk~·l~•~"'~·~6~7>~1~1~66'-I ;;:~;;;:~-;_,~-,...-;-ambitious lodies. '"ardrobe ris!1calt, some knowl"'lge ot PACIFIC I'· S · & -t p1ufit Car nccesa. Call '" EXP ER. J apanese gardener ·.;,\\er iveepuig · 10 kry adding m•chl•-• Ga.r<ienin" "'-N · b t Vl !7l·H :122-76~7 • ..,. • Reliable main~enance ".,..rv. 0 JO 00 1-,;.o..;;.;.:~~~~=='°"'-I ditto machine hC'lptu!. G-OOd Reaa. monthly rales : sn1alL 6i3-116ll 24 hrs. e BLUE DOLPHIN e ~tarting salary+ po1.entlaJ 1192--3219 PARKING Lor PO\\'l'r \\"AITRESSES ·····EXPO'. with lfJ'O\Ying finn. Call .tor ~fOW, edge, vac. lmt & rear Sv.·t rpl11g & 1\taint. A-I Over 2'.i. 3.155 Via Lido, N.B. interview, 492·US3, Mn. yd~. Y:kly: $20 nio: l7.;il Po'\'t'r S1rf'l'f!ing. j~:>-S7lt BOOKKEEPER Gonzalez. • tim•. H.B . .,._T.118. Ruume Sorvke • • ' · -G=E"N"E"R"'7:AL--,H°"E"'Ll'~-1 UniQut, )'OUng, gro\\'tng com· ntEE est. Con1pl or pRrtl!\l \'E "th XI' 0 d' ( ry • $3 la"'" ma.int. & clesnt1p. \ have th~ ~l<"~t u111quc pany \\1 11.nc 1a r lnt .15 HR! e L.,\1. Gardening. f..12-0'J7:i. RES.l.r:\fF. SE.R\ JCF: ln Or-pu1rnlial, seek11 a v1vaclous, Large chain ntPda 9 tnel\, --oc~~-~-~--1 angt> Coun1y. You i;!;l'I ri rom-abovf' averngr F/C Sook· tulJ or part lime for ~r- (;a.roenini: Sen·iee pl(•tc-ri•fl'11·;1\ $Crvlrr. nor krl'pet. Thill Js nn excep. ehandislng and service. by e.."l:perlenced Japal\l'se just ropfe~. l.A't our C"ll(:r! tlonal oppor1unrty for the C&ll Mr, IJay 5'JG.9!£2 ==,.-•=968-tl-.,~1<~3-•~~-·I u.•chnk·al \\'l'llt·r~ ~'(lll11rll ;.1·ou r\;:h t per!IOn. 1714) S.1G-ro50 EXPER. 1!1"-'11.ilan Gru'Clener in .Y\JUr jnh serking. \\'e itl'f' i ..:'~"="~h~"~m,.______ • GIRLS • GIRL$ Comp 1•1 e GA r d en l n g ex:pert_a In rn1p!nyn1ent. Co)SI Accnt. E11tabll•hrd firm, opcninJ Servict. Kamalani. 646-461'6, :,.innur;1cturu;g exri C' A I\ J'll!W branches. f'l. or pt. CO:'lfPLETE ya.rt! Carr T'HE MORRIS IJlra llw -\\'c5r<'ll fr rei~rl· 1!mt. Cle1.i1up, trash h1tulinit h~ RESUME SERVICE ""I Ai.;rrX'y, ~3 \\'e~tcHft e $3,40 HR. e job or nto. 897-2417, 846-09:12 835-2522 Dr, NJl fi.Ci-2ij0 Clll Mr. Gr1od • ~ DAILY PILOT for-ac11on! 2100 No, Main St. A goocf <A'Rnl ad i1 a pxj DAILY PILOT for ac&at Call &42-&678 .\ S1~·e! Suitt: 302, Nlnta Ana lnvrstment Call 6-'2-278 & Sav~! • ) ----------------- ' • ( ' ' ' ' M • ' ' 1.,. 1.1 i LEGAL NOTICE I EGAL NOTICE P-4C-ll CEllTl ,.-!(t 1'~ t'I, lll!<IHESS l"ICTITIOU~ NAMf ,,... undt,.l<!nf'<1 d""' r •r!lfv l'lo !• •Oftductl"" .1. bu•lot u e• ••10 w C<>••! """'" Ntw1>11't B•.1.rl>. Ce!llo•"I~. u"ll•• ... fl(lltlMJ5 !Jr"' """'t nf Jl.\I Tlo!OIAAS AGENCIES """ 10\ll •~Id fir"' 11 ,.,,.,.,. ........, "' t.... 1.,11.,...1.,., ""''""' ... ""'' Jfl"'t '" lull ft>d pit <• 1>! r•\"'""'' 11 n• M l!•ws 11~,, 5 llMt<> nt!I W C'<111r 1-<wv .. Aot 16 "'°''"'0'' Be1tl'I Ct hl Otted Mt•<I> 17 1'11 "n"'"•1 < l>"(<O ~1'A1E nF (Al 1ro11>11• O<>•Hr.~ rn11"1TY 0... N .I.tr~ I' ltll . ~'"'" .,... • Nn'•"' Pu~'" "' .1.n~ •or 1~•~ <•tt• ""'1cn~11v '""'~"d ~"""'' S Ill~<<! ~n to m• tn t>e tl'I• or,.rn wl'l<1 .. """'" ]\ •ub•crl""d In ll'lf wlt~ln Tn •••u,.,•nt ... ~~ acknowlt<i~rd he r•ecu!fd tl'I• 11me (0111(111 <toll MMV B•T~ Morter Nnt.1.rv l>u~''' C•"•orn<1 P••ncle.1.1 ()Ifi e• Jn n•nno• '"""'• Ao•ll 9 1911 ""~'''""!! Q,•na• Cn•'' D••'Y l'llc• M•'""" 10. ;~. A.r,11 7 9 101• ~~l·I• LEGAL NOTICE SUPER IOR COURl OF l H! Sl•l! OF c•llFORlll lA FOit T"! COUNTY ~c OR,1,lllOE Nn, A·t!Ui NOTICE QI' HF.l.lllOIG fl, P!TIT IOOI FOR Plt Ol llT F OF Will .I.ND FOJI 1.ETTf'llJ T E~T.l.M ENT.1.JIY (IOND WAIVED! f'O•l•'t .,t (AR0l YN M ROSS. Oe•••·"<1 NOTICE I~ HEllEflV GIVEN •~ot Jr~" ( C!n•• ~., 111'11 ~'"'" • 1tt!l•"'n .... O•Of'M'I!• "' will ·~o Ir• l1IU•<><• !It Lf"~'l Tr•••m•n•A•Y tn P•'P nn•• IR1'1·~ W~oyffll •P•••t nc• •c .. ~It/I I• """~' •~• '''''"'' no•H<u•o•• """ !~•• "'' ""'~ '"~ nl•<• n• fl<o•""" '~" •• ,.,. h•• ""~ ·~t '"' ""'" • 1911 1! t JO • m , In ·~• c1111•1'1)Ntl {I C'•corf,.,•n• "" ~ ,.. ••!~ ceu•! •' 1'WI Clv•< Ct n••• O•lv• W••'· Jn Ill• Cl'v n• Son!o An•. C•lilc•n•• 01•"' "'•'<~ 1~. lUI W f ~T Jl')Hlll Coun!v Cl••• COLON•l SfllM 14!•111NG itlt.1.Nl<LIN ' 101 E••I 111~ $1fff! Cn1!1 M111 Call!Offtfl "'" . Tt!: (1U l Ml·ll\I ' llfl••Mv lor 1'1till&n•• PLJbll•~"'! Or1na• C~l!I c;,,,, '"'"' Mt rc./I " 70. "· IQ/! ~It.ii LEGAL NOTICF. ~ tU P!ll lOI. COU RT 0, lM [ SlATE 0' (lll lFOROll.l '°'llf SOit Tiil (OUNlV OF ORll NGI! No •·•ll4' NDl tCl 0' HIAlt lNO 0' l"t!Tll10"' l'"OR Dl!Tl!ltM INAftON ll;AT Pf lt 10"'i Ot(D UNOEtt ("!lt(UMITANCI!' Wl4fR E Tl41!!111: ti NO SUl'l'ICl!JtT (VlOENCE T14AT TN IV 0 I I 0 '(lftll\. T~N!OUJL V f.t.Tat• ol llMietl M [..,1~1'1 Cl• 1"'<1 t.;Qfl(E !5 ME!llEBV G!VEN 1~1t J. 0.-~1•-t E"'ltl'I ~"' ••lfd ,...,,,,, 1 ..... <(Ip lj'O" ""'""'\"•'"~ !l'lfl ,..._, "'"' "'''"' crrcu••"'~""~' ..,.fl<o•• !~•" II M •u!h( .on! rv•~·~' • •~•! ,,..., d •~ •I"''''"~"""'~" ""''"C' ,,, .. ~.,~ " ~ tor ,~,,,.., 1M1•h(>1I•" 1"1! t~ot 111.o 11"" llM oi~cr or ~·•·1·• ·~• i.,,,. ~81 ,,,..~ \01 tc• AC•·' 1 \')'1 f;."C A "" In •~• caur!•"""' ot •C•dl"'•~• Ole 1 rl •~·of cou•t. I! 1ID CMc c·~··' n .... W•1I. /ft '"'t t l!V o• $~ft••,.,,,, C1llll>"n•1. CU1'd Mlf{~ 11 lt'1 W f Sf Jl'l>;N Countoo Cl••I. OS TltOW, OltUC.kl•. NllSITl lt ~JtO l(U lt!T ti w11,111,.. 1aui.v1 ... su"• Jtt Vf<'l'I' l>!lllJ, C1Hlo•~l1 flllll 1 ('1ll Jn·Dlllt·"l 1'11 4!!9'1'1t¥1 i.. l"ll!lleMf P~.iltl'I" O•t""t (NI! 0111¥ ft llet "-"•«~ 19, 1(1, t,. "" ,., t\ 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 • Friday, M•rdt 19, 1471 DAJLV ,JLOT r I ,_. J[Il]1 I ._.... J[Il] I Help Wanted, M & F 710 I Help Wanted, M & F 710 J[Il] I ![Ill .___I -~I[§] I Jotelp Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M &. F 710 Furnltur• 110 Furniture J G1rl Olllet'. !>1uii;! knn111• t10l1Si."\\IIVES • :\ o~ln&s RECEPTIONIST IT£ L.EPHON1': advtrtitlng WHY BUY pa yroll &-grn. oft . dutw~, Pl t1mP. A1·e'r. SJ prr hr. Muir havt R<"rttllrlsl bAck. fnim our pltuent Ntwport be able to takr ptx">nr nnlr~ No 1'1'" IW'C". \\/,. train. 1''or ol"·· H I M ,. .....,.,nd, nn sit. i-;11 .... r. rn.-..1. r Y w.a&l'1. om- Ill USED llKES & REPAIRS & assume l"f'spc>ns1bLht). appc. call r.tn;. Mulltr "''"M •-r 64 31}:M') Apply in pr™>n Johansen l • 5-!6-5770 • ~tng 11dvrrti11n.R: <1r PR •ng nr rve. llhl a . ~ i;non. NP"' o!1·a. 0 C. Air-l.l Mr. r-.tsdr1d FURNITURE? 70" Sllngrani ~$40 Gt rl" & Boys bikl'tt 11!t-Sf5 Iii 1pd bl k""· tomr In a!Ock & Christensen 898 \\'. 16th li"<'PRS E I I S N 8 -~" mp yr Pl'Y1 Pt. p(lrt, A(lv11nr'f'mrn1 TJ: L Jo: P II 0 N E J N -Rent mo, to mo, with 112 Wltl Ouilri to Order l Be flexible! Gerage Sale 1 · Gl"Or>:"" AUen Byl11nd AJ::tn· MISS EXEC AGENCY T ~':RVl F..:WI NC., No gll!ng. • }IEAD \VAITRES.'i -ti r11 106-B E. 16th, SA. 100•/. Purchase Option l HP BrlgpStratttm mini 2340 NEWPORT BLVD D H I 410 W. Cna~! ![""'·· NB ~:Rrn $40 10 $!ill prr wttk. Da \1•k inner OUSI' ;,.17-ll39!i .. J \V k ho PE'rm. Jnter.·le11i·5 9 10 \2 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. liiiii 646-3939 or at mt, chcu1r )'(!Ur Ind. Item aeloc:tion hlkr, a:ood rond $45 or will COST A MESA I noon. SA~t'S SEAf'OOD i ~~~::;;~~~~~~ own hOOn . Call 71 4/828-0'J58 16278 Par1f1c /111i·y. Hunt RECEPTIONJ ~ for J n n ee TRAINEE ee 24 Hr. D•ly, tr1df': Ve a pa l!'i Occ OPEN 6--JOPM Wk.DY! CUSTOM motorbike S.%: Yamaha 80 9.5 SAT. &. SUN. I Belt l Pt1f'n Bf.auty Salon ·ruP:o1 Hous•wives & Mothers thru Sa1 ItilO W. Coa$1 DPr'l'lt Mgr. ~•leg.Serv. Eire-Furniture R1ntal trail bike sso. f'urn»:u~. PRIME y .teht C I u t 1rolu:< Corp. Imm, empt. 517 W. 19th, C.M. ~8-34111 bookt, clothing, man1Je, Do lk , Lk Hwy, N B. you ... ) P money. 1 " peoplP ~ 1\rP )'()ll O\"rr T:i ~ HavP yQll JO hr~ f)E'r •1k, you rould ~pend 1n ;i 11rll pRld, p&rr Unlf' Joh" If you 11 ns11i·Pr ~'('S 10 rhe~P 4 fllH"'lrl lOn~. "'e shnuld 11:rt toJ;:elhf'r. Cal! nte, S.12 am at &.19·2921. For In!. ph. Griswald S.10 A111.beim 77f...:l800 Hoovrr tlMc #Crubbt>r/wax-Member1hlp For Seit RE L 11m m1ly 496-2383. La.Ha .. --~3708 .,/polisher. Mia1•, 8 -• "·l Below Market. Owner • LIAB E )"OUnjl, m11.n, l"lf'AI .,.. u;n. ..... ,.,. ""' I apJl('ar11nce. 'i"" 2l-29, for * WAITRESS..EXP'D ESTATE SALEll It SUn only. 400 Cambr1d111 Moved Away Fro rr I SA\'E CASH! c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ISEST 11111 SI fu!I time g!lrd!'ning 1811.,, Nnt urwtrr '21. NO PHON~ From motion pictUNJ ellttU· Cir, C.M. toH 17th & lrvlnr. Are•-Ca 11 (21~ I main1Pnance "'Ork, C'..ond CALLS. Apply in person, tlve'' luxurloua Tuilin homt. tum on OgJ~ to Cambndgtl SIS.7557, Mon. Thr\ ~NE PERSONNEL opporh1n1!y for lhe right Surf & Sirloin, 5930 W. Coast Sa rnrlc, i roomi ol ltallan PATIO Sa.le: 2 motorcycles, Fri. 9 AM·5 PM. Wlcndr SERYlCES•AGENCY min. 96'.l-..%1 2 Hwy., N.R. & Medit fumisnings lnch.d-car air rondi!ionf'r. 2 TV 'a (714) 75 .. 2196. •lSS E. 17th !al Jr\'lnP• C.~f.1 RELIABLE hllhysi!ler . 011tr YOUNG int'I co attla MgmL. inK 011 pa intlnfs, t~ll\t llv-men'• <'IOllM'll, maltrf'SM's, l -Al.L~~l!-,-m-,-b-..... --~-w-.-LO-. 642 • 1470 lli. ~1.'I hi">mf". Mon-Tutll pt'nOnnt>I, V1riablt hn. ing rm piPCrll', Kirig bdrm PrTIS~ cooker, eltclnc HEAT COOKWARE SET r11 1P~ 4: ~11 : 311. P11.ularino un!lmil~ Income. 497-1379 suite. Pt1·an tables & Jamp1. akilltl • lirepla('e logi, lad-waterieu, ~tti.inle1" alf!ol'l 1 -. ___ -. _ :i;("h<>f'll Rrea 54()...\677 6' a rtif. planr11, Dlnf'llf! u l, rie.r 11 varioua m i!IC. Items. llO!d home Mmo S359 t&la j';.~~&-:i;:-co:'i SALES • \\nn • \Vom•• 1 [§] Art objtcts. 1V. much mort!. ~3 ... ~Eunil •,• 0,•.... CM11 S74 -Dia mond cut pendarr. , ' "" '"' J ~ <-' " I • " I 10 S .-..-""'' a 1 Wtt ys, 1 ,.,, -. l•k• I I! M•leh!N €'Xf'l<'ril'ni·P. ••• · ·-. . tl07l Rl"d Hill, Tuatin. day Sal-Sun. eanings Sl:W ti1ke SM I A<'roun1ant SiOO, Years I STOPlll Mlfdlandi .. r 1, .~• .~un <1n y. . . u ., . .,.,.. ., Lit Reind•r1 j LOOKING & ACT 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:;;~ MU5"T' 11ell ~ful or bH.ut GARAGE Sale Sat &-Sun. Speni.,h !!Ola & lovf'~ar $651 Ip I A • M-.. · for the 1"1tr l,o n i < ,,. t1k1'$319 orh11tolr.;,.:is..217' ••.1onn• 9.•ncy ~RIP11 mindt d ..,.~0 ...... ror Antiques 800 ..uiternnean furniture 9' ~ ,.. ,.. ....,,. ""'Id <·' 1 1 ,, • -r\menter IHaml o• •~ * AUCTION * 4 . ....., ca. mpus Dr .• i~.B. yourself, , ~•I "'''" op-.. -cnu;,,....,,-ve vi! aoia ,.... ' lo 1 bl k h·"""'" 1huslu 1. Auorted electronic Cal! for Appoiotmenl PQrtuni ty. Xlnt future lnr veM"a · ll<' nauge J..... 1''1 ne ~'urnitur• ! :J4fi.21JR righ( man. ERn1ings rnm· LIQUIDATION SALE llOfa &. lovetteal, kine-.lie ~=·nt.llA1~1t ,"',"v'pm, ,',"', k Appli11ncr -~~-.-. -hf'drm 11t!, gamr 1e f, ._. .._. -~~ m('nrf" 1n11nPciia1l"ly llhnuld Hi-back velvl!.f c hairs. col-~hold iu•m11• !'146-6476. Auctions Friday, 7:00 p.m . LADIE~ spi'Cialty ~hop nef'ti!I i.... in f'Xrt'~~ or S?:iO. """r wk. "10 s -w· d . A . B "' I• " .. ,,. h·l "·l'---,,. Hlnhest Qu1llty !Pe t11ble J. end commode11, " turgf'Ofl uL, C.M. 1n y s uct1on arn ,. rn ... _.,., ·' '" P, 00 ,...,.., No rRnvassing or ~nlir1t1n1;. • ' •I fi7~ o·,70 I pictu1~s. 111.mpt;, etc. AH leM ESTATE Sal,., ''''''· & _,, N•wpo•I, CM "' --, · ,,...., ritrrvirw~ h~· Appr11ntn1rnl ~,..,, .,....,.= LIQUOR CLER -K European Ant1'ques than :I mo old. Sacrltice. tools. Anrlques: Bird.r;rye Behind Tony·, Bldg. Mafl. * * nnly !"l·.1 11·f'l'kti11y~. il.1fi.2771. Anaheim, 6,16-..•~11 M I '•-;;"';;o'-'-;:;';-C.:'"7:::---,.,-ape Br 11'1. IAble1. chsir1. SILVER ol No1 undr, 1 r .W, Coslil MPSRI SALF:S trainpe for ma rking 14 SE7J'S twin box "PrtT\J(ll Jamp11 & pictures. Sat 9.5. fax st P, Nf'w, $75. a!'f'll. ' ust ha1•e rPta 1 Orvl<'e~ & stationt"~. E•rn Mink boa S5. 2 fut j11cketf ·J Propo1ed Antique Shop &. rn1ttttsac11 $25 a~L 4 .ets 137 W. Santiago, San tie· l 12 1 wh' 1 .... liquor t xper1enre. App!ica-\\•hile you learn. II not will· double box gprinp & ma t· mentt!. a ze • Ke, <mtt:"k, rion~ t'Onf1rll'nllal. Ph: in~ to lea rn a1 iraineP pay, M.yst liquld1te all •t lttsaes $2& set. I g pc Sal. ea. or $35. kit both. s.tA-3883 don"! apply. G ood op.. COST ORN CO Spanish corner froup in GARAGE SALE Alao garqe Mle. 10071 La -M-ECHANICAL portunit)'. Outline qua!1fica· EAR ST blue .,.....,.n Sll9-compl. All Moving! SmaH lumbtr, Pie-Deepeosa, F. VA.lley 1 li lk I \\ ' · Cl · d ... ~ Id ' & No. of T•lbert ott \V•rrl . ions. r ile a:\lilfLe ad in i:ood cood It areril\zed. tur~ u!lme mou lnJil!I ExprriPncrti with hand & po111Pr 1001~. Capah!e ol acrur111r \li'ork. 54~11 78 TOPATRON, INC. Medical Train•• \Vorkin£ 4 clays u•1 nmr l@ft !or ~un. A.~~1stina: 111• sur· ge~. Call Helen Ha yes COASTAL AGENCY ?790 Harbor R! , Cl\.t ~1Q..605j H11rhor Blvrt. a t Ad11m.~ 71!EN OR \V0~1 EN, pa rt o~ fu ll timP. ran\·a~ local arPa.~ -no .~r!l1 0~. Call f'1·en1ni!:!I 497-1.1117 ***MOLDERS E"l:perirnrrrl onlv, all 3 shil l~. 1\·lacGrrior \'·arh1 Corp., 1631 Phtr Pn!i:i;. C.~1. ~10Tl-tER'S hrlprr, li\'r·in. hah y~i1 l i n~ !.· LITE housework Room. lxiF11-d & 1<i1h1ry. Call Rll :I Sat or >11! dRy Sun. 6-12-~ ~1 ·n.s1Nr. Rld to care for 111.d.1 wirh P11.rkin~nisn1 P.rhrl ~hi l l. Rrrs. &l·l-5&.'llt :i/1 ::i pm NURSl'.N"~r.~----RJ-N-., Exprr1cncM "* 5'19-JOl;l * • PART.TIME * HICKORY FAR'.\1S 41:: TQ11·n f... CoUntry, OranJi[f' PART t1rnr RookkPr prr in ~·our hon1P for G11.s Srr\'if P ~l:i Exp prrf'ti. \Vii i train. Cnron:i d('J Y!Ar on I y . fi7"-4112 PART t1rl1(' ITR111Ct'~. n111IP , MS nr Croll, No r xr f"IE'!'. Thr Znn Rrs!at1ranl, Coasl I ll~' /, :\ir Arrhur. P1\STE-UP 11.ni~t. rxpPr'rl. f'11rt 11n1r 642-9262 anv dav. A~k lnr J<'rry · • · PRX 11.n~\\'Pr1ng ~rr•irr. PX· J)f'r prrf'ti, Full lime, &!Pally ! 1~t1rk :i.1MJ(.!11 H R PIANO !I'll.Cher. f'l\'rr 30 )T~, l l\i lhri::: lo hr l r.:i.1 ned fnr pRr1 11mr r mplml 1n mu~1c ~rhtinl. :i.I~ ihQ3 e PHARMACIS T-.- .:\"o 110, [)R ily Pilot. r o. in G•r19• Sil• UFF. \AA.~ H11.rbor Blvd, many miace llanl'ftus itrma, DBL m&ttreM A. box .-pnn.a. Bo:i. 1560. Costll ~lr!lll. 92626 c:vi. 543-9457 Cheap! ~1 El Dorado Dr., like OP11i• S25: ra•tan d bl s AL Es F. 11 c r 0 w 0 f-Slll>ntlon dP~k. ws lnut 1'7'fl0. l~c-,.-..,.--cc.,,-~~~~"-l -'-HB=·-'c'6--004c'_::_c'______ he.:i.d bo11 rd f1S: dhl gpre•ll flf'f'r-SalliflKS & Loan A!t.<;OC. Quef'n Anne rlsk. oak 1730 1 :>t r;~ wa,ln~ ltnlllh bdrm BEAUTfn.JL Antiuqf'! & k bolst~rs S15; maple ~11· I., ... , a., .. , R ,, ,. 0 • •' Cnrrv t·rnch Brkfrn! 1m . ae · .. ' pc Sp&nlsh ... 11 ,.bl on-cheat SJ:t: 11wcedn ..... r!l"'n "" '"' I.><" ~ " ·.i: . w11lnut f1 n11~h dn>«M'r wl oh..,r co ec e11. ornate "' Ofr. Salary open Equ11l Op. ~rov~11.l .~,;c~yCll(.10, Durch in irror S39. l 6 drawl'r dome trunk, b1by It ;~dual !!prftd 121. pnr. Employr r. Se n d a st t enl / Tyro-walnut finish drf'!!!lf'nL S%i lnwt.old .R:()(JCtie~. Si.I & t'€'SUmE' lo Cls~s1 llf'd Ad No. leRn che~I, 181h Cr nt. Hal. ea All i ood cond UFF SUn JO ro 4, 607 Nflf'c1uus, MODERN rouch. t If' r~ o! ~1. O::iily Pilnt, P. 0 . Box •ltar. chair, 171 h Cent. Frtnch 1885 H:rt!r Blvd · CM: CdM AM/FM./totftt t & h I e. 1~. C.o--;!a ~1 rsa, Ca !12626 St. f1Ji1. 17th Cent. :i4S-,...S7 · I-="---------Floor I.mp. Ch1lr • ot-.,.., LIDO. Mov ing. Lg m irror SALES \\loman. JmmPd posi- tmn for !ull.v ~xper. f11~hion ."lllr~ wnrne n. .'i.l\111ry + ron1n1. Arply Chris' So. Cn,.,sl PIR1.a , • Ai;k !nr Mr~. Edwards or .Mr. B<'rohn. SARAJl CovPntry nt Prl5 fl. fir pt time help. No In· \·rstn1r nt \Viii train. mi n agr 20. 53!}-1407 t.. 54.3-9066. Sec'y/Tr•IS. $20K L.A. arr.:i.. C11n1truc11on haekgmund hPlrful. Sr. Acct. SllK Con~1r, CPA nr PA bkit-rnd NEWPORT P•rtonnel Ag•ncy 833 Dover Dr., N .B. 642~3870 Alto decor1tiv• •cc•••· l 4' SPANISH desk S49, t hardrock map!'" hd frsme. ioman. N-1su1e H.O. train. ~ pr dil'lf"rtl" M'I S29. 1 :i t:runk, Nar i Geographic11, !P45-aJ07 nulrh farmPr i;tyl'" Pf'\\'-IX' Spanish dinf'llfl 11,.r S3!1. bol1!er1 & Cover, andirons COMPLETE 11peci11l officer's t ~r. As~ortf'd coAch lamp~. 1 i pr din~rtr M>t intiqu~ turn. C01111l l@s1 m l~. Silt uniform w/le-athf'r holliter, liJl"hl fl lfturP~ &-. CRnd~lahra wh 1-· h ' I &. Sun 111 ViaCordo11A NB likf' new. Coel S7(1·, w\1111!!1 Pt11SAn1 WO\'f'n ta'""!~lril"~. Ill' ll1!~ S:l., Al In too<1 1.;::,:.:;:_,.c_:_"°:.,::::.;::_c:_:c,::.._ •-· rond Uft" 1••1 H bo for $35. 847-73.~ P!lint in ~~. S ml'lll mirror.~. · . ....,. ar r THURS lhru Sun. Furn, Cradlr11, S p11n lsh ti\Pll. A~-Rlvd. CM . ~~9457 ~1. clolhes, d fl co rat or MOVING. 11elllng ~l!rylhtnr: C'oh~~'d· e'•r'',',','i. "~-f'tbtrry. BEAUTIFUL Klng-llz bed. pitttA, rlc. Everything in fk~rn .• _wash/dryrr, hfthy k "'''""'· ras5 firn1. Nr vl"r U!f'd. still Up.lop sha!>f'. 30292 Gr&nde 11. lhlllJl:ll. 49'-8973, 483 Oak &. copper. VI • · N I I SI l 223 62nd St Nprt Bch, or ra U ror a ppt. anytime * 646-6416 * Second Hand Ro1e ANTIQUES p11ckagMl. Fram .. included. Illa. ....(11111. i u e , .. .All:"\Jllll $130. worth S260. w 111 _._ ...... _,,. _______ WA NTED: 195!1 McC!ulloch delil'Pr, u11u11\ly ho m ! . MOVING-Beds, eolR. bunk.~. }1ying Scolf fiO H.P. any 842-66.16 crib, dlildrena turnituIT. ronclition. \.l.'ill PAY l1' to 1 LARGE l!(lf& & }nve ltf"Rt Sporl Catsm11 ran, bookc11M"11 ~. 5.ll-7294 S9R. I R. Spanhm 90fa "' & mud!. much morr. M11rch NF.\VPORT Bl"arh Tl"nnb; lnvp ~ral SAA 2 Sp1tni11h j t!I. 20 -21. 16441 Maldi>n Cluh r hart er ml!m· ln11P M"•ls s29 ""· All in _£1rclt. Huntington 11arbour . her~hip...S400 + trl.ll&ftt. good cnnd.' f,, arrr1li7.f'd , , MOVING E11.st Garage °"C0•="~"~'-='c'c"'~----­ UFF. JRll:t H1rboc Blvd, Salr , Frt. Sal k Sun. Furn., AMPHI Cal, brand M'f. 2 Ci\.f. ~9457 11.ppL, -.11 dubs, lrtf'Zl"r, h ~ "v rs on eng11w. Fun ln •\lB, NE\\' ne vl'r u~ KJIROEL-11\erl'O. lamps. Dutch Hallf'n 11and. 9now or wherever. f\faple chopping block, ER SPANISH SOFA&. lovr -Marina, 6221 }'tnlry Dr., Mu ~! 1ell Sl095. 548-f685 SECRETARIAL, Pl llme-18 H B hrs/11i,k: S'.!O ,\1igh! COMidl"r large pine hutch t1bll", Mal, scotch guarded pvt ~=· ~· ~-~----~ DOUBLE bfd rompletr, like radio allv€'rllsing ll,1tf'ncy p\nr rornPr cabinl"I, p!y; Sold Sttl'5 will a'ccept SAT&: Sun. Olk round 111.ble, new. Xln't cond. Soi6. SeMng apprrntir r. Nr Blllbna Is. maple &. pine lea cart, f2B5 or b!!1 ofr. 968-5806 54"', 6 chain, buffe t, dishe1, machine-wfcebinet A •t· Rr."I: A01·prtlsi n,.;. 67:\-666~ walnu! hnrn c11.bine1, g• SOFA. never used, qutlll!d yard equip .• tools, dl"COra-tachment~ $42. 64&-4718. SF: V CF. p1nr rtr.11 11ink, floral. scotchguarded $1 2~. tlv, llem. misc. 9332 Tahiti l c=o=M=McO""'o"o"n'°E=."oc"clbo•cd:.c:mC·-~-, . ,fl l . S1nt1on AttPnd11nt, ~ n1;i.ny olhr r lnvr lv p1,,rr~. Or Im 962 '.\265 .. ""' full or par t T1mr. not unlll"r OJ>('n Wrci thru· Sat Matching love.eat S 7 5 . __:.-_ ..: ..... : _:.·_ ·=~~-·I 5-HP SM, Sailboat libergla~s JS. ~1 us1 he nr111. ~OO<I ap-1 11 AM -!'i PM 5.i;,...19;\S e DESPERATE!! e 011er plywood, Sabot mul pear.1ncr ,{. J)f'rsonAbl~. SOF'A, m1151, S75. Vlrhll" Gar11ge 1a!e -mu1t 8rll & sail $12.';. 837-7039 ,..,, I J 00£ 13!1 W. Isl St d " I • hold . "'""' rt' f'rPnre• T ,. , .. 0742 lllf'l!P Sl"I. rnrl 111.hlP Ii urn. hon~" Jte n1.11 RIF1...E: MARLIN Goldf"' .... 11••1-• Bl"d., C.M 1 ... ".'~'" .. !'!'~~~~~· .. ~·.... h 5 I • Th S £73 ~•9 " ~~ ,.., v c n . S4 . al ll:l nl, 8+6-HlOO ur.o:. 1hru Un · . .,.,.. A Mountie. 22 cal., Lever SERVICF: F..stR h'ci. F ull E'r * ANTIQUE * afl 5. RIG iarage S&llP-10 am to action, W/4 X Bllllhne.11 Brush r~. S125-S1 75 11i•k. to ,o;;pani11:h Walnut dinirig rm DR.EXEL Early Ameriran 6 pm. Something f n r srope. $15. C!!ll 528-984$ ,ltt st. al~ pr. rimr ~5745 sr!, 6 Chairs&. tah!, w/carv-llOfs . cha ir11, rommodr. Ji k~ ~vl"ryolll!. 2804 Broad SI, 6 p.m. weekdRys. SHARP GIRL. for pmduc11on ..,1: b11:qo, Sl:,0. Also old trunk nrw, S4~ m«ke ofter. N.B. 646-4988 REM IN r. TON Ph!ctric assii.:-nmenls. scheduling, in .• ~·~l~:l.~"'6-~~7~)>~;~~-===-lc......,..j;:~~l-;;::;;:::;::::;c:--c:--; VISTA Garagfl Salr, 215'92 typPwrilPr. 21·· ca.rriage. 1·rn1t1ry. Par I -~ on1er· * ORI ENT AL RUGS GREEN n11ug1hyde b 11 d K11nko11 l.11nt, Huntington CJpan, lypt goott ~ S 1n1<:-typini;: rrqu1ri>d . div11.n, likP nf'w. $60. Collt>P Beach. 9-:l PM. S at . Fri-Sal. 673-4262 " G \' hi c Royal Kermin. 12x23, also , 11c •rt'J.:"Or 11c .orp. 1ahle 11 2 pncj 111hl~11; a ll Much 20th, 1971 GOTTA GO "til Mid, ''-'II 1G.~l P!11rrnlia, C.~1 liml r siZr!I. 67:.-3.Y.i.l l 2S E <~ '!'" . "~' A,;off,;;~;.----,,,.1;.~· ;::;';"~~!":'~~'c,.-7'_7 FRI. SRI & SU n: T1hl8. din'&. :I BR vt1, LamA1'· Sharp Girl Frid;y-.A~p~p_1_;•_n_c_•_•~----I02-I FTRM Klngllize bed J mo'• Dfln111h furn. Tool~ k milK'. rug~. Honda 50, MI t t , NF:W Ce.Jori~ g:ss ranJi[P _ old. Xln't Olndition. SlOO. All rea~ble, 111~ Holid!l y _9£8.-__ 7_<_30 _________ 1 Artr1t rti1·r. 11i•rll .':rOOmPd \\ll11 11~ pci7.f', ni>V'f'r used. 962--619.l Rd , N·B I • YA.Cln' CLUB "Lf11r.\\'1r1>" 111 !1h J:oorl !Plr. St'l f -r lP!I ni OR' 011r n. 2 C0~1FORTA8LE t"Mir1: e GARAGE SALE • 1121 MEMBERSHTP flhOnP vo1re to 11c1 I !! N'Cf'P· !hermo~tatir lop burOC'r, Ill-I Uphol-1 fN'l'!n ll"1tlhf'r Beltia St, N.B .• r'-1Arr h 'Jl'l SAVE $:l00. J lnnl~t \n 11 husy. r i.rirlni fra-rffi broilrr. RPta1I.~ S399, w/ottorTlllJl. AIM t 1 n k Misc ilemti. 644--0352 • 644-096.1 * fl.Plier, pai·i nnir. ~'l hJrday offirr , M11s1 be r xprr'rl . 1n be-st Qffer. 646-4i'r.>4 vacuum. 1226 OutriaJrl"r Dr. ALMOST AntiqUl".'1 -967 Orn-SLATE pool tablr. Rtd\~ a m 4 hnu r~. Jrospi!al rxprr-rt r 11 !ing wilt\ !he publ1r , COIN-opcratPlf w11.~hPrs 8. Cdl\1 644-lli07 ver Dr. C.M. off Babb bf'I yard lract(lr, Ii() ~v. P.U. 1rncr prefpri·rll . e JIUNT-~alf"~ ha rk.R:rnd prtff'rTPlf Oryrrs. elPc dryr ri: T20 VICTORIAN COUCH, OLD, f'aularlno & Bakf'r 2 yr old Color Oimb. ING TON JNTERCOr.l MU:\-hUT no! 11rc. Ca!J f\li~1 f or-volts. Xlnt cond, $100 pr. W I CARVING S, $75. SAT & Sun-Ba1"8tooll, RP-642-7442 !TY HOSrITA!.. Prr~n· ~fi4.i.4121.-~~=~~ 51~16011 nrt 5 :i-18-57.iO pliallf'rll. Kld11 ltii ng~. MiKC. 's"1~c"y"c"L_E_s_.--.-ll--,-,-,-.-.-.' nrl [)r pt, 17i72 Br~1.:h Blvrt, ** SHARP GIRLS * GAS dryers k rrh11 COUCH, olive lshric, ! 9621 CleRrbrook Dr, H.B. StirtKraYft, 3 Sp, lfl Sp. RtA~. Mun1 in£1on Brach, or call looking for ll prrmi1nenr po-w11 shr~. S.'iO. Wlll d ~ 1 culll'llOOI!, like l'lf"W. I MOVING. Meny household 334 Del Mar, 0.1 642-1272 .'tli.7Rfl7 J<1!1on. One or Or11ngr Coun. "'/giia.r. l\lilr Chi;:. Me.ytag $60 *** 54().36;,J items. Ev..ryThin& mus! ito. SIGN~. i:ho-cArd1, postel'l'I . p RO ~· EcS~S-!O"N~A-L--p-ho-ne 1y·s f1ntsr botiqUPJ. Mui:t br repairm11on. 53t-R637. HIDE·A·BED COUCH S35 X17a1 Kel11in, H.B. 962..(174~ w\nciowi:. tn1cks. lnw price. !<Olici tnr • Dan11 Point, San r xprr'ti in all phllst~ ol REF'RIG. Sellrs S:\65, wh 14' OR !>fAKE OFFER QUALITY furniture l.t. mi.'lc. Morn or f'Vf'll. !162-311117. ClemPntr. C11pistrRno area. On11que i:rllini.:. J'ull 11mr rro~Orss, i<'Pmkr. \\'/Irr. • * 540-5756 * * rrom 9:30 to 4:30. SAt 3/20. \\'ork in ~our 111vn hnmr. pern1 posi!l(ln fnr ni;:ht gal. Perfect. Sec $226. 962-538~ 292 E. 18th SL, C.M. ~{s.\4r.~.r11~t~ee~rP;:·OOP~~:. l ~1~~~€'~:.a !1l:;,~;.11 I~~~ L:l~~~ose:".:~,~~,. ~~::~ ~L!'s~r~i~;l ~~b~:; s~. ~~,Machinery 116 LGE quAntl ry Br•zlll a n "'ml" r al d!. g o ori -ml!d quality. For CA«h. Lookina for Ma/Pr or othf'r. !i-11\-71164 anll n<"l"!ll. J 644-2'*00 S:l.i. ~S-9547 C, C ,M. (up11tal~) ---------- nAILY PILITT fnr RC!lon! ;:o-;":..:.::c---"~~---l liif>'Riif.:~rniR-.:iihi;;wl""'".,..-----~---1 ~.R AMP Onen generator. NO matter whllt 11 I!. you REFRIGERATOR with large S' "·I ~ _, ~ 11 I I B 'II · * LAD\"S GOLD ,-0, lh•I l!<m ,,.,., I~. "''a llVOC9uu .. ~ .. or COB--""""' "''ll OU pu . UI ·111 I • " ,. "" c11n sell It wilh a DATLY lrct'zer $4.i ' ' try !hi" T'l"nny Pincher P ILOT WANT AD! Mz....!671 • * 64~7820 .. * l~~JX1r11.ry 1tyl~. goo'! con· 1tarrer. $250 548-!M97 ROI.EX WA.TOI * Help Wented, M & F 710 Help Wented, M & F-ifo :,=o~M~1=n°A7L-,~,71ri7g-.-.. -,-o,-.~,02I diflfln. sr,o 5'40-6I09 Miscellaneous Ill • AHl"r 6 pm; 6~801 cubl<' lnnr. Top freezr r, li"lfl<!IC'~u~sr=o=M~-mA-d7,-~,.-el-ionol~ MO v 1 NG : wutwr/dryr. I EXERCISE COUCH *R•staurant ANNOUNCING ANOTHER Exc iti ng Far West Service * r/1oonraker * Now accepting applications for- cond ition S50. !,.i7-46."r.l 110fs . modl"rn. blul", :io:lnt work hence w/v1M, chair w•vmRATO R SlD KF:N 1\10RE wa.,hfor. S3.i, ~,.;1 cm;;;;;"";;;;'":;. ';;"r· ~c~.u~1 ~6~7 .. ~34<~'¥=~·~m~'"~· ~"~':·'~'~'~' ~~~=~=~~·~-~;;;;1:;';;;:*=== I rPllr111 : Al!IO W11.!l'll"r & Dryl"r r.et. ~ 109'5 ROLLEICORD Ill C <'•8e $~ HPilsnri F u t u r a n i r S1rohon11r flssh S20 BnltX" lfimm mrivlr r11 mf'rl J lf"n"' l\1tTPI s.~ Ampm 1000 ll'Rl1 lh nim projrrlor S75 Argug c:i Sl:t Golrtie :\.imm 'lirlP pm.if"clor Sl5. M11.ny 11mall movie itr m11 962-R.13:1 • fOOD & COCKTAIL PENTAX Spotmatie. I~""'· C. D.S, ml'!l'r roTlf1., $175. 9AA-71511 n • xlnt WAITRESSES • HOSTESSES • COOKS • BUSBOYS SLIDE Projector with 12 tra.YI, S4(). 642-~77 Furniture 110 • DISHWASHERS • BARTENDERS I ANTIQUF: ~· •••• , tabl• .Sllc. M11pl~ dh!ii ~. 222 Apply In per son only Poppy, CdM l~ ~ 1 :30 A .M. to .. P .M . • 5 ROOMS or F1JRN• ri ' I BDRM, LIV'G RM, DIN'G ;:;;;;;+ L 18452 Mac Arthur Blvd. RM. REFRJG. fitl-aJ66. !~~;;--~~~ ~;~ Acros!I from Ora nge County Airport 1 CASH klr furniture. a~ [•••••••••••••••••••••" plla~s. triol~. ml.te l«im.1. ~n 9 to !. &f2-701! • I ' D.Ul Y I'll OT Frld.IJ , Mllrth 19, 1971 -I~ I -!~I FrH ID You l ~I J~I I~.__[ _ ..... _."""_!§] 111 Sportlnt Goods port, Jlke new $60, Lee Mk desk -.1·tl•n1p U>, Clean qual bNl.i, dbl Ir ct $3Ch$40, Pro}e-ctor \\'/zoom lt'na Ii ~ded lk'Tt'f'n $15 both, Ooylr eomm'I v •cu um •·/attachmentll $30, Elec addin1 marhine $45. H..OUty mtc:>-l:iller SGO, Mite. Open to reaaonahle (lffera. 962-4914. 19771 Estuary J..n, H.B. jb1wn r.tqnolia &. Beach B!vdl Tho "E•rl Of Arm111 Gun Shop • • All Cuna, Ammo " AC· ces.soriea Ar Below ~'bolt'­ ll&le. Open Noon '!11 8:311 Pi\1 'J"\Kosday thnl Sa1W'day iii. BRITIANY SPKnlel, fi General 900 Boats, Slips/Docks 910 Cycles, Blkti, Mobile Home• 9.15 TrailerJTravel 945 Trucks 962 mos oJd male. Read)' 10 1-,,,...,,.,.,.,.,.______ 'Scooters. 925,I _____ ;_;_ ______ .::,..._.,....,,....---·-,=,_.,,.-...,.~---- n-aln . .,,_,.,,, "" SPRING CLEARANCE BALBOA "''""' moonne • --------1 THE BEST OF '67 PROWLER ,.,..,., hfr, '70 Ford Bronco YOUNG kitten& long ~nil 20' Oyer Cl1tn1or Girl. int1>r-~\' 1nboo.rd cruiser !or aale. We Take BOTH WORLDS 16' 1o,·/atte1110ries. idp« 6, i;hort hair, all c 0 I 0 r 5 l'f'ptor JXIWfr. outboa!'d Sll'C!J5 2. \;ray niarine 6 For a beautllul ho~. iow.1 ~'~'-"'~"'~°'-· $800~~·~8<~7_-~9"_1.= :;.it;..73fll 3122 drivr. S2t9:1. eyl engfne. S2100. 'l.ocntrrl Motorcycles rnl-intenance and arcbltecur. Tr•ilers, Utility 947 21' Lap.!1lf;1k" ulility, Volvo 1" norrh Bay 011 S<ipphin" In Trad• ally !mp,,--• .. de 1 °· KITIENS 7 nio's~ Also 5 Si . M<i-5836 .. ,.,,..e s gn, ""'e "k old kllt<'n.11 avall ~lareh Po\\'Prt'd, S2"115 the eXcitinlJ new "Village 14' Tandem Trailer 22. 836--i-193 3120 8' fiberglass dingh~. a.s is, BOAT SLIPS On YW's House" by Lrvitt P.lclbUe \Vith 4. whttls. All steel weld . s;.o. av~ll. N.B. Ca.U ~~ BILL YA ES Systems on display now at l!d construction. 1.(" St~! T\\'O baby rabbitli lo a good I -G cyt usaj Nordbt>rg f'fl· T BAY HARBOR deck plating. \Vil! seU or hOrnr. Call 493-3894, 'San gine. ft'Ont pow11r takt>-Ofl .t Boats, Speed & Ski 911 VOLKSWAGEN MOBILE HOMES trade for pickup. 3166 Sicil.Y, Juan tap1s:lrano 3/:20 redul·tion gt>ar. BOSTON WHALER 32852 Valle Ro11d 1"2:; Baker St. C~ta r.tesa (t.tesa Verde) C.11. BEAUTIFUL fe111alt> G. I only.\ cyJ Lhuer Uie~el Gf5.J.'141 .,._ J ,.._ Justs. or S.D . ..;-....,, at Harbor ~~~~~~~~~~ Shep. 1 1 ~ yrs li!lll.Yed to ex-l u1>ed Chrysler Ci'OWn \I / ----------=11 uan '-"pu;trano • ··1 ~ V8, 4 ~·h~I dr!l'I". '1.400 mlles. Like brand nr1v. RadKi, air corJ111tloning, !722AI. $3299 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2!128 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA 546-1}).1 Cf'ptionaJ home 846-9617 3/19 reducllon geilr. Boats, Storage 912 1_:":7=-<ll00:=:12"=:'·<:ill::::,l<~9'.!::::·'=-~~·1_/n;;~-::;:~7l~l~/S4;i"O.~!M~l~0:7.':77: I!~) **INVERTER, Heath Klt, BEAUT. v.·hi!e fne-.. 'y 8 wk 1-32 volt hf'a"" duty gcnrra· OPEN "-·i _ _, ON warer-74 B11.y11ide AulosfOl"S.le n-1 >lPJ< l2VDC lo no I Newport •• Bey) ""' -~ DUO y11.1u, rep:uri; Viii•-. N.B. ' ,,, ' ·-· 1 .:;···---~-~ I '57 Ford ;l Ton • old puppy, lovable & al-tor & switch panel.. & ,,0 , •• , ""' _, It -· ~ VAC, 60 cyrles. 400 \\'alls. Costa Maia .... · · r-· lge cabana liv'g rm/din'g ~·-k ''"lh 8' ·am-•. Th'• fectionate. 4M-5887 3/29 2.used fishing chairs. 6-·-96" -11 ''"" •• L ... ~ .., NE\V assembled &: checked l.l-O<lll:I, eves .....,, · rm combo. F'rplc, custom 9r.l Is strictly clas• Excellenr ' •-1 ~oo C·" 646-.7J11 NEED gd. honi• w/•...,. for Misc, boat davits. ,_, .__ Dune Bugg1es .-ou . ..-cr11~ ._, . ..... "'" r.t •-1 d C'o 11.1tc_,..,n, Mexican Slone rondihon, lhat v.i ll ,,;ure --•"5 -•1 6 p •1 gro1•in English Seiter male ay "" seen at -l 0 ·''11P· I a ...... '1q"I. .... er " . _, """ L d p k 0 pa110, country c u b h s e 1960 CORVAI R l•ke ""'' of ""Ur sumn1t-r kd gtl. w/kirls 642-2398 3/19 Yll"..r~ """ J 0 ar r. T I l I " , .. wee ay!. Rll''LE'. MARLIN Golden 39. _ r'nsport•tion w poo pr v, boat slip avail. Make Offer Radio auloma!ic. li\198770). •• VACUUl\t TUBE VOLT . S~IALL whllr inale kitten \VANTED: 19:i9 !\-lcCull™;h 151,4 yr land lease. $27,000. 516-7817 After 6 f'M , $1099 A r.tount1e, 22 cal .• Lever ,,.,07210 F'lying Scot! GO H.P. any VELOCE'ITE l-~·-~·>-~28::::16:_ ______ I :-_:~.::::..:.:::.:.:..:..:.::~~ l\.IETER, He\\'Jell Packard, action, \V/~ X Bushnell .,_. T k 962 31,, ~nd ltion. \\/ill pay up 10 l SPACE ,.,.__ rue I model .,100 H. xJnt condition: SCCIPf'. $75. cau -:i28-986 __________ 1 $50 531 _72!M Campers, Sale/Rent 920 ton, new c utch tires, on ....... ...,an, dble ~'ide. $~ or make oUer!! Call altC'r 6 p.m. \\'eekdays. ONE rabbi! wi1h cage; Ol1E' • brakC's. piston and lower Mobile Park has 9 hole.I----------CONNELL CH£YROL£J ~9S.15 after 6 P ~t SURFBOARD/Q\uck den 1 guinea pig "'i th cage . BOAT, moto~. trailer, .ia CAMPER end. Purisl's delight and 3 par goll COUTS(', othfor • 1\•eekday's. 968-3162 3/19 horse rlectr1c start $450. 111 perlrct shape. Best orrer rec advantages. Come to DODGE '69 5'8" 11vin fin, $66. 6~10 ]169 Do t Lan C :\1UST SELL Entire Hous~ aft 6p~t l\I ALE pr. Watrr Spaniel. I -~~-'-"---'-·_-'_!.__ CLEARANCE SALE 01·er ~9j(J. 675-5954 after 4 ol!ice at 21462 Pacific Cst 2828 HARBOR BLVD. hold Furnishings, free:t.er, ~~-~~-----About 3 ......... f'ricnd ly ]5' Boston U'haler type p.in. Hwy, Huntingtoo Bch. SPORTSMAN HEAD SKIS standard 210, ,,.~ boat $'100. 16' boa! !l69 536-8871 piano. roy.~. bikes, misc. binding•, ""°"• poles, •35. 536-23S8 3/20 I YAr.1AHA 1~~'-~=~~~-- COSTA r.IESA ~·1203 DUMP TRUCK $995 = •t Pl "'o 2·~ , ~ !taller 3150. 646-1757 • ~-rn[ u· '71 ~~ .,~ 00 < ~"" 2•1x60 DELUXE PON ,.eyer ace.,,.,,. '""'o ~72 To qualilied home. Beau!ifull-----'--"-'-.:..::::__ ....... &e ""econ pre ...,., r.c. 1111111. _,,.;i, ..... ~, -VS, long whrel base VAN Autoinalic 1rans., radio, heat- rr, new \VS\\/ tires. rull <"urtains. J o \V 1n!lcage, !'iOR 49\lll 642-5769, TV R d ' tilFI amber, male, kitly. Sv.·ttl. I Campers Now Slashed IQ m ill'~. Vrry clean. Call DEROSA 2 br/2 ba. ln.~cpd, POOL tables, slate. old-s"t•,...• 10, • 136 lovable 548--0813 J/20 Boat1/M•rine -· i $49 OYIR S3:1.J492 days, nite &12-43&1. lg porch/crpt, cement pa!io, 19:i7 Gi\IC Good operating ronditlol\. --" I •· g• 9· Equip. 7""' ACTUAL A.sk ror Jor corner lot. Space 18, 17JO fashioned nouue s, 1 · • · GER!l1AN Shepherd, female. Wh' l C Sacrilicr. \\'iU deh\•er li'i'f'. •* Vacuum tube VOLT 7 mo, good w/kids. ------------FACTORY ATALA Jo; racing bikr, lite Su;.t;er, l\l. See Thurs & See at Daily Pilot 3.'.0 \Vest Bay Street Costa J\1e.11a 1447 Hayr s A\·e. Long i\fETER. Hewlelt Packard, 965-1~7 3/:ZO 11\ * INVERTER, Hea!h K11, INYOl<;i 11·e1Rh1. 21 " framr cam· -·--------- &ach, 2J3/ 435·8885. model 400 H, Xlnl condition; n1od el :'.1Pl.f, 12VOC lo 110 SHOWCASE: pai;:nolo rqpt. 7 11.r~ks old. 8.>; 12 Nor'lif', bl>autiful conrl. SALE PRICED TODAY or ca!I BABY 'grand piam $400, 8' S7J or make otter. Call s::~9cr:iuch VAC, 60 cycles. 400 waas. DEALER Orig price ll7.'i. Sac ll25. furn, i2100 2191 llarb<n·. bar 1 staols Sl?.5, 6-bumer 52.8-9845 after 6 p M ~/20 NE\V asSf'mbled & checked FOR &J2-23Q7 C .. \1., lot 61. The key ai t.lrs. G!'eenman 642-4321 stow $50, 21 cut ft frttzer weekda~. -out. SacriliCf' S\00. Call ELDORADO CAi\WERS llO'.'IDA 90 Trail & sln.'f'I , off1tt .. No ehllrlrrn or pets. $175, Pl,ano moving dolly FANTASTlC . VALUE: [B 528·9845 afier 6 P.i\f. \reek. THEODORE llkf" new. l~s than 'i!XI m i. Sxl:> VIKING-Clean. nea1 ~~~L~ ',i7 4 11'hl dr. ln1. ai T. P.U. Short whet>lbase. 8 .11pd !rans. Hubs, big tirei; & lo\v camper w/rack $85(1. 548-9642 t25. 870-6919 Spanish Medi! stereo con-I Pelt nl Supptilt J ~ _•_•~Y_•·--------ROBINS FORD Rini:: neck pheasant cockll. furn 1 br, stg. La1;Una fan1 Y.'E loe.n-Buy.Sell anything. sole, AMIFM, tape oollet. . . SEAGULL 4 horsr Centul)' 2060 HARBOR BLVD. J.IS--0486 pk, $:.O/n10. SITJO, 67:).2643. AUTHORIZED OEAl EA 2000 llARBOR BL., COSTA i\1ESA Coas·I Pa1o11n & Auction. 241S Cost $600 New! Now S1T3. motor. Near nc\\·. SIZ:,. COSTA MESA · 612.0010 HONDA 305 Scramhlrr, .>;Int S.-..::l2 1\lasterbuill -10x2.,1 Nc"')Xlrt Blvd. £42.8400. 548-373&. Cats 852 673-480!! corn!, compl n hll engine. cabana \V I c.\'.1ML ha1h. ?ttOVING...ceramic mo Ids, grffnware, toil&, clothing, i\tisc. 2279 Republic, 01 lRVINE Cout C.OUntry Club 1membership J(lr ale from ,~her. 644-4569 Mi1oell•ntou1 W•ntff .120 WAN'l'ED: Ladies quality ~fl&' .I: &unmer wear. Ba,1, jev.·elry, small an- tiques 0 n consignment. Tues· Fri. 9: JG.OPJ\f. 544-9311 \\'ANTED: 22 or-32 Cal . blank pistol Ii. p I a 5 I i c cov~ weithtL 847-5900 Mu1ical lnstrument1 l22 w!CASE. Xlnt ** FLUTE """"· 1"-' GIBSON AMP Htg Sch. 347.j070 Office Fumiture/ Equip. 124 CALCULATOR, current model. 12 Digit '"Arith tape, recall memory. 675-0060 Pl•not/Or911n1 826 WE QUIT!!! SCUBA GEAR: Cmplt .tfll: Llke New • usord on!)' 4 1tme1. 1100. Many Ji:tru. ......,,,, Boa .. , Pow" 906 '68 VW CAMPER 137' 64>-J976 Comp! '"'"· Ca"""" & I 'fi7 YAi\lAHA 305, good eond. toolsheds. S2250. 64~21.i!l 510.9100 Open Sunday • l!GS Chev truck. Loni bed, lleetsidf'. $300. Call any1ime, 545-8189 JIM'S il!lllop ~lru. Board· ing Slablc>11. Al) SIM'! eorr.tJS, COI.U~IBIA 2S 1969. D11.ys: 213 ' 636·07S7: E1·r~: 71~/ &16-012.t or 213 I :t3J.3-13R. Bo•ts. Slips/DockJ 91D au!o, v.'All!n'r5, •, ml. nu l 26' ~lip, Sti."J/mo J'rlv11!r I Ortega Ill\)' lrortt Ssin Juan I "·A!h Nl'I. 2 ~ Ba~boa Covr~. Capis1r11no, 49.1-3111, 11(! .5. N.R ('11 11 fi7.i-4 __ .1._.1 __ HORSES bi:l!l1'1'fl"d rrnlr rl 1 y,q .. · >; 30-;-lJ BOAT ~11r;', trained. lestll'ln~. Ent:lish i .l-11 l'ly t1r, $100 mil F.1r nit1 \\'t"'slem . 1()'.)() 11 r r,. ~ '.\1ich11rl, Rl lr. 67~ RM"'OOd St11 blr~. .2 () 2 116 VACANC'TE::i Coct n101)('y! f...ag'UM Canyon Rrl Rent your hnusf'. 11111 , iollu1' Seu idlt Uemt now! QUI I bldg .. f'tc. lhru • 011lly Pilot I &12..-~ Nn\''! 0111.~~ifiC'(l iui. ---------- , * DELUXE SUNDIAL l\lust sell. First Sl25 rakes. l7X50 Lake\\'ood Lid"' ex· * Like nC'W. fi42-2:HO panda, 2 BR, in Adult Pk. • Nev.· Uger paw ~·ide tires. no pets. See mgr. 2060 * lA ·1 1!169 H'ONDA 3;:JI CB 5200 Nr11·port Blvd. '69 Chevy Yz Ton VS. au1omat1c, custom cab ( 32()().1 E I. '67 G~IC ~ T. Panel, 20,!XXI mi's. v.g slick shift. $1695. 548-3224 morns. w m1 rs, new c>ng. ml. $·150 F'1rm. Call' Btw: 1..:..:....::.::.:..:::::::_ ___ _ • $2~TJ. Or best oflrr _1_~_·,_,~m--. ~•-•&-_1_34~'----I Motor Homes 940 ,I • Pvt par!y &15.2633 aft ~ • '69 HO'.'IDA 3f>O. .Just/'ijiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii / Kelly Blue Book $2675 Our Price $2399 '67 Dodge Van V8 stick, xlnt cond. good tires. Sl3!'.0 pvt. can finance 675-5686 • * INVERTER, Heath Kit. rebwH. $550 or brst offc>r.j l n1ode! ?i1P14, 12voc 10 110 6~2-m79 * Kings Coach * VAC, 60 cycles. 400 v.·atts. ----------NE:\V assembled 8, checked '68 llodaka IOOcc dirl bike, Motor Home Agency BARWICK l.\1f'ORTS INC. '69 CllEVY P.U. V8. 3 t;pd. r/h. Xlnt Cond. $1950 or b.r;t olr: 642--0563 out. Sacrili~ SlOO. Call rebU eng, 1223. S , L d 528-!IS1.'i afler 6 p . !\I . • 830-2~23 • uper1or * an au ·10 SHOW SPECIALS 'll<t>f'kday~. TRA1L & Stttet bike, 10'i Cusrom Cabnver Ford Yamaha En<IUr() 250. Xln.t New 7l's 5 l\\V, roof air. eng DATSUN !)9.g So. Coast H"'Y· Laguna Beach 51&4051 I 494-9771 '6!t Ford pick-up ~ ton Ranger. Air &: full po\\'er v.•l !h camper shell. Ex- celJC"nt cond[tion. 893--1909 '66. 4-sprl slick, ~Ip.~ 6, bu. J Co1Kl, S600. 673-:'>117 air. A.\1-t'i'll stereo 8: rape, tanr. t>lec. ~'2500 Day T\1'0 '10 Suzuki !JCl's cn.ise control, 413 pngines, 6J:J.J711 ; rove \\'kcnd 1T.O P. Lo pymnt's. Xln1 dual holding tank s, 11·atcr • 54S..1423 • I Clllld. &l:r-0001 punliers. loaded• • CHEV. '68 CUSTOM CORVAJR PICKlJP 4 SPEED $2~ • 61S-J2.i7 • Auto Leasing 964 CAMPER 1970, V\\! Pop Top. '6.'I TR J U ;\l pH ~N· This Weekend Only Radio. 7000 mi.. S.'.650 or NEVILLE GD CON-D . 6CM N. llarbor, Sarrta. Ana PICKUP ---~-----~1 LEASE best offer. "193-1770 REAS. &lf....438:: 839-9030 A NE\V 1971 Cycles .. Bikes, Mobile Homes 935 Oprri 9 to 9 <la1!_v 1 ~ 1on V-8 f'lcetsklf' 1v11h Jong PINTO Scooters 925 I CONT EM PO..:i.... RE:i\'T 22' \\'inni $22:i/1vk, Sun1mf"r, 7c/n1i. s~ If '70 YA:'-1AHA li5 CC J::nduro. reser\'ed by 4/30. 51:>-78.i7 \\hl'E'i basr, full CUSIOIT\ $50 00 m auto. trans., chronlP. rai14i • O. po~·rr hrakes, rad., hti>, 1~6 mo.) Hea vy duty bump r r. open end Xlnl condition. Extra.~. $.).~. COMMUNITIES Coll 64&-3601 Trailen, T•avel 94l CHR0:'.1E ,...f,\G \\lfEELS1 RENT rte., PIC. l'\abl>rs Cadillac·~ A NE\V 1971 • LAGUNA HILLS '67 Shasta TravC'I Trailrr. . PINTO 11· \\'llh (')ectric brakes, Ol\'n serv1cr rruck. 'Q98737J 2330J. RIDGE ROUTE DR. ~to\'P, relr1g igas) inarine $1888 $4 DAY (Corner of t.foullon Pkwy) 1o1Je1. sleeps 6 comlorl.ably. A)SD Prest1.i::e adult rommuniry. c 0 mp\ et e I y rnclo9C'd 4¢ MILE adjacent lo Leisure cabana. all jacki;. :xi gal. ~:\_ .-" \\'orld. Beauli.Jui surround. pi't'ssurized ,valer tankj & IDCI~ PUT A LITTLE 1n.i::s. ;ill luxury appoint. 30 iat. holding 1 3 n k. CADILLAC KICK IN YOUR nirnts, pulling green, hobby Beautiful cond. \Vi!! take AUTHORIZED OlALE~ LIFE! shop. n1uch more. Slj,j(j cash or 1vill trade 2000 HARBOR BL.,. THEODORE Cycles, Bikes, CALL 83Q..3!MXJ lor sn1all station wagon \V\V COSTA i\fESA ROSI NS FORD Scooters 925 : e SANTA ANA Squareback or Toyota, etcJ. 5-10·9100 Open Sunday 21)6() HARBOR BLVD •• . I 40!l() \V. FIRST ST., S.A, J.19-~ 1 e COSTA r.tE:SA n.n.l'U"'Lr1 1 FA.\IILY community, abun. e 15' TRAVEu.'>l-!_~L.R, '61 FORD P.U. S.,150. Goorl ~~~~"~UlO_l~O~---I dance o[ recreation for ch1J. CLEA!\', R00'-1Yfi116w. · cab, Jong bed. 3031 Samoa Sell the old stuff Buy the , THINI rlren. nr. gd, schools, shop. 1'>'642-7458 • Pl.. C.i\l . ~ new ~uCI HONDA pini;, ~~vi.Lcl~:g.~~~se. Auto Service, Part1 966 1 Auto Service; Parts 966 Auto Service, Part1 966 ... "FRIEDLANDER" UJll HACM ()tWT, •I 537-6824 • 8!13...7566 NEW-USED-SE RV. B11y the mobile home of your choice, nio"e in lo any one 01 our "OPEN" park~. NOW OPEN!! -----------• -....... I ~10DEL i\lOBILE JIO~!ES ........... .. '68 TRIUMPH 250 in C0>la Mo~'.• G"""'"' -,. ,.... Park. 2·\sf,(] Amer i can a r-;;="i;;i~ ..... I ' Sl:l.900. :zo.-..::t2 1\1 on t ere y SJ2.7:iO. Completely ~rrup \1 /skins, ""'n111i;s. porch, E:\t'elle111 lil•lr!i!ll)n. (8'.\77C71 1495 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN San Jua.11 C11p1stra110 837-4800f,19.1-4Jl 1 /499:226t CIC'. GREENLEAF' PARK 17.l(} \VhiU1er Avf', C.1\1. G~;>-2:110 • * £1.'>-0~."iO 1'urn unused itrm~ i11to quick Nl $h, call 642-JlOS Auto Service, Parts 966 AUTO AUCTION SUNDAY, MARCH 21st. 12 NOON TO 5:00 P.M. BO CARS CADS-CHEVYS-TRUCKS FORDS-MUSTANGS FOREIGN CARS AND MANY OTHERS 20°/e O*f)Osil on Bid ISO .DO REFUNDABLE DEPOS IT No Personal Check1 Please 3 Day1 Allowed for Financing MARCUS MOTORS 2100 HARBOR, COSTA MESA 645-0466 ROAOMARK POLYESITR PREMIUM*QUAUTY I u•t ... plv ~!ltyt<l<I """ '"' • """"'''" 1'111-thlll'T'~ 110•. Uo 10 lh', .. 1du \hjn mo•l <0>•11t1\lio"•I tor••· "'" "'TiftE fi.50.ll 20.11 7.JS.14/7.3S·1S 22.4i 7.7~-14/7.7S·1S lJ.47 8.2S-14 /8.25·1S 25.24 8 ~5-14,111.SS·IS .i.:'~'~-'~'...l.--"''---' ' •. r""''""' o~ • .,,~ .. b t:'•ll•.Sl!rin1~Jd'. ~f"\tllon • .l,ltko..~ '''" " "" l>"f •1·•1•"' 01 ~~•I 11· t1.t"d1td "' 1n••"I ••<l'J br •B ,I"•"""' '' It hO. IJlt hlmt ''Kolly•Spr"'1'1tld", 1·0~ ••n IN "'" ll > q~al 'I 6\lolL BRAKE OVERHAUL RENOWN NYLON ECONOMY 4·PLY Four lull ~lff<"' '~IU<I •VIM! (Ofd. Run; """"1n, <OQI ,.,in •d''""J U<"ln '"J cnn><rn<t•~n. TUBELESB WHITEWALL TIRE. &llE ' 6,j('}.J) 7JS.J4 7.7S·14/7.7S. JS 11.25· 14/8. IS·IS 8.SS· 14111.4S· IS CELEBRITY GIP PlllCE PlLrB f.E.l. PER TIRE."-j-'P!-"R'-'T-"OE'-1 14.6l $1.78 15.75 2.04 16.41 2.17/2.1!'1 17 .6 T 2.JJ/1.lS 11. 90 2.SJ BElTEO PERFORMANCE C./1' C1>11<1tu<1ton: Twin loOf•ll,,. l><U• •n4 '"'In 11r>IY•>l•• <Drd Plin flrtot ,.,..,. 1ub11lf "d' 11,...,1, .,...,,, th• •o•d. ll'ld• ''"d for o~""~dloe r••<I· )"> '°" •t>d <o"""'• l)l)t.ft<t"• l •ln "'hilt i!d1•·•ll. TlllEL£D lllT£1W. PllCE PUii FEJ. TIRE IZE l'ER TlllE PER TllE 6.50·1J 2l.6t Sl.65 7.3S·l4f7.JS.J5 25.61 2.lS/2.41 7.75·14/7.7S.15 24.14 2.SS/2.61 A.75-1.1/8.lS·IS l8.91 2.67/2.77 8.SS·1.l/A.Sj.1S l1 .2J 2.93/2.93 ALIGNMENT • ' • .. -. : . ' . . .-. r .. Friday, Mvch 19, 1971 DAILY PILOT :J9 I ~ I c[ _ .. _ ... _"'_· ... _. __ l§ll '----_ ..... _,,. .. ,,_l§l I . - vice, Perts 96& Autos W•nted CADILLAC NDITIONEn RADIO DIATOR HTEl.D \l'IPER MOTOR WE PAY CASH FOR YQUR CAR R!::ST BARGAINS COME SEE OUR SE!..ECTION OF TOYOTAS MUSl' 0 POSE OF IBESE ITEfl.15 IS WEEK-END CONNELL CHEVROLET PAYMEHr Jim $lemons Imports 14:J W. Warner 542-3110 1-'0lNTMENT 1 CADILLAC 'l'R NSMISSION '2828 Harbor Blvd. <»sta Mesa 546-ta:IO Autos, Imported 970 READY TAKE AWAY! AUDI EXCELL T CONDITION - lst CA R BUYS -:=...,,=,----~~!%!ENT '70 AUDI 100 LS Autos ~anted 968 4 Door Sedan. Black with beige interior. lmmacul11lc! WI! PAY TOP Only TI4 actual miles. (874. CASH CBY). BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN ~tor u~ cars Ii trucks, jusl ~1RorH' ciiiveot[r· 32832 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837 .4800/ 493-45ll/.499-2261 BMW $69.01 MONTH• Sant• Ane , • .36 n1os. Del. pay pric~. Open Eves. & Sun. "'" 36 5411-4125 12gr•fl '10 MERCEDES Benx ZlO SL . d.>o:t:~ ~::C1 c•~:x p ~I ~I~ '69 Cornlla Statton Wagun, ,.j ~~ Coupe ~ster, automatic, .\.P.R. '1tM%. Serial No. new tires, looks cood, is pwr. steering, AM-FM, 13~347 frod,Sat&Sun4!H-3239 S.. white 11idr-walla, low • ' ''fRIEDLANDBr' m~. excellent condition, • On approved credit '69 T~':lt& Corolla, 22.000 1J710 llACH ILYO ' 588 BEP, Dealer. Dan. 8111 Maxey Toyota ~77;~i~~ condltion. IHwy. lfl ' ~14 18881 BEACH BL 847-85M --------- 893-7566 • 5.17""4 ·o; MERCEDES""" .., v. HUNTINGTON BEACH TRIUMPH NEW-USEO.SERV. '"'0""""'· AM-FM """ 11 '69 Toyota '71 SPITFIRES .__.. --· -'a ?>1eref!d~ 221 D, aotomailiC, - ---..---A.\f-Y~1. air conct., tiolh NOW ON DISPLAY \\ith MW engines, e-xctUtnt 4 Door sedan. Automatie, n-Comp In for a test drive! '68 FIAT &;o Spydtr. See al condition through out, Jl~f d10, air condinonlng. One Calafla. Enco. Best offer, SLE~IONS, IMPORTS, 120 0111"0er. Exet:Uent buy, CZUC FRITZ WARREN'S 492-1976, 492.-9662. w. W&rnel', Santa A~ m;s 1. SPORT CAR CENTER $1499 no E. l!t St., S.A. 547--0764 '68 Fiat 850 Spyder 41.000 NE\V '70 Mercedes ~' 220 Opr.n dally 9-9; closed Sunday mi, radio& radlals673-54Dl O~sels largeseletf ion, alt 6 pm deeply ' discounted' prices. '60 TRIUMPH TR-3. Wire Ask for Sales ?.lanager , l82ll Beach Blvd. lfuntlng!on Beach 1967 F;at ....,, ""'"· 4-~. JIM SLE •. \IONS J>JPORTS. CONNELL CHEVROLET wh•. "'w '"''· """' good. '67 BM\V "'1600 -Fine cond. lo mi. Good transportaiJ.~. 120 w. \\amer, Santa Ana. $300/best offer. 540-2608 $1700. Pvt pty. 011.ys: $650. Call &12-U!a ~114 282.l! HARBOR BLVD. VOLJ<SWAG~N Mi.fi087 KI 9.J3J1 TOP DOLLAR 646-0525: Eves : 642--0T/8 ..!:::'.:..~~~~~--h.10<i",.,~';,SL;-;c'>ou:;p<::;-;1'>:;,;;,;;;,,;;;:er, l'OSTA lirESA 546-120.'\ DATSUN ___ J_A_G_U_A_R ___ , ""tom .. k . OW'· "~ri'"" $1871 . ., vw ""'.good m«hao;ca] AM-n.1 rear :!('at, spe-ch1I cor.d. Needs a little body !-:-.,...,,-------JAGUAR sms. Le. 9TJ AS:\1. Jl~1 1971 TOYOTA COROLLA v.·ork. $4;il. !»S-1487 '°' '65 Datsun Wagon HEADCj)U.ARTERS sLE>IoNs \MPORTS. 111 2 DR. FACTORY EQUIPPED .10 vw. MANY EXTRAS CLEAN USED CARS 4 speed, dlr. Real Nice. !\'CT w. Warner, S&nta Ana •9878 Sl't> Andy Bro\rn 333) The only authorized JAGUAR , D,....,,,.,...,.. n~ """ S CHOICE OF 5 lznmacu!atf' Best offer! THEODOR d I I "~ . H ..._~ 64 ME"""L""'r;.., rxnz •~u , • 644-5996 e ROBINS FORD $5-"" '"oms • · " ' '69 BUG. AM/FM. tiun. E r·un Price ea er n lue entire ar...,. t tic .A>"1·Fro1" l thf "Wt Lew" 77 ' intvior o:imp!etely tt<:On-$1300. -'Zl M Street, Ba.Ibo&. ~ ""°'' 81,d. BARWICK ~~r!E'S d;tlo"'";Ji!i·, <.000 mil• Wa« TOYOTA 613-8707 ~ta lifesa SERVICE ""Sta'.'.· p• Tll, dealer. 1970 VW ttd Re bl 642-0010 Ii\JPORTS INt. .. ' . uona e. \VE P.\Y TOP DOLLAR DATSUN PARTS MERCESE:s l!KI SL '57. 4,00J l9fl6 Harbor, C.M. M!i-930.1 ;,~;ay8~7;~:0 Sat & SUn FO BAUER mi on 171'tl'hau1. New clutch "'-,.::c:""'c:..:=--- R 10P USED CARS 998 So. Coa'1 Hwy. BUICK ,...,. .;. & 10i"10 ": BJIJ.. MAXEY 1970 VW :;q,,areba<k. A"to. U your C&T ls extra clean, Laguna Beach IN Restoff!d to original cond. radio, lite blue w/black Int. "• "~~:'.in BUICK "'"""' / '""9711 COSTA MESA S>l50, .,...,,.MG f TIOIVIQITIAJ , ~~-''_""_. ,_\_·,_ '_,k,_.IXXl_nu_«_Ex_·_tra_•· ,,. t' • 171h SI. DOT DATSUN • --· =-I. Co'•· M•" ,,. ~,, 234 E. 17th Slrfft 11181 BEACH Bl VD. 'fi.1 c~vy 4 dr, r/h, power, "" .,..,...,...., OPE~All Y 548-7765 Hunt. hich 147455J fact. air. Xln't cond. $550. l~rPORTS \VANTED SUNDAYS '67 Jag XKE 2+2. 4. spd, lmlN.al'Cout}fwy,oaBcll l---*~64:02-..:3'!:;:_5 --• __ Orangt Counties 18835 Beach Blvd. Fl\.f/Al\1, wire whl1, kl mi. • THINI =~~-~~~--I 'SS Bus. Header exhaust. TOP $BUYER Hun~on Beach Beaut cone!. Pvt. owner. ''~G'' '68 Corona Hardtop I Wide rear tires. 51.!XM} mi's. BILL 1'.1AXEY TOYOTA S47·77Sl or ;Y.(}..0442 Sac. 675-5127. Gd cond. S9ffi. ~ 18881 Beach Blvd. '65 Jag 3.8 l\lark JI sedan. Loaded, Black Ja.ndau top. '6(i VW Bug, Reblt trans H. Beach. Ph. &47-8555 New 171 Dahun Xlnl mechanical, Original, \ Automatic, radio, heater. & eng .• good tire~, heade~. \VANT late m0i1.e\ Ford Van. 1600 OHC, Pickup \vilh can1p... i 2400. 675-4177 'FRIEDLANDER'' CVWN 7481 Take small down. ere., $400. Aft ti pm: 494-4768 6 cyl. no j-cink, plea5e. er. Sale price $2099 dlr. ~M-,,,E"R"C=E"'D"E"S~B°'E=N==I 1Juf 1R.1.cM tHWY, "I Will finance pvt. ply. C3.ll •'69 VW Bug • Sunroof, '"'°677.'-~"~:;4~''-"-'-' ;,·,--m~. ~~I (# PL.521452270) \Viii take =,_,~_,--.,.,-,....,fl 893-7566 • 537-6824 art 10 am 49,1.7506 or 540·3100 r&h, Xlnt cone!. \Ve'll help )'OU s ! 642-5678 car in trade. \Viii finance M.B. '61 sedan. Air. be t NEW·USEO.SERV. $1475. * • • 644-4832 For a.n aa to ~u a.round private party. Call St!i.8736 cond. Pvr. pty. Sacrl • ------..-:.. '70 Crown Sedan '60 Karmann Ghia convt, th clock, dial 64J..567S. or 4!M.68ll. $995. 675.5127. ......---------Xlnt cond, beige w/blk top, Autos, lmporttd 970 Autos, Imported 'ACcu7t0"',c-, '1m=poc-,::tc-od:;--;1!..l_::=-==M:..=G=B:...:=__:_ Loadf'd. must sacrifice. Le.~s red Inter.. Reblt eng, 30 • -------'--------'--.:..---' lhan 10,000 n1iles dlr. #4246. 1\1.P.G .. $575. 644-6.116 DEAN LEWIS i\IGB Solt Top. Take small do"'" or older I ,,~.,.:..vw'°""""a"°"-< '--_'-"p"',-isl~,, car in trad.-. Aft. 10 a.m. sunrool, nu tires, generator. Overd1ivl'. Radio, w i re .::•n 3IOO 4"' -~ .....,. or ""'"'-""'· !>48-nM 4!»-2940 [i~[]~[]~ Dl$COUNT whls, radial tires. 1300 mi. ~~---~-- Xlnt. 646-4763 LEAS!'.: A NE\V '71 Toyota '66 VW, Clean. sunroof & 1967 MGB-Xlnt rond. Lo mi. for only $~9.98 mo. \\ilb just radio, 6<XXI mi'a new eng, Pvl pty $99.96 + Lie. i ...:I000::,::·_,:6c:7>-c,2::1::96=~-- Call aftl'r 6, 675-4Ei02 Bill. ~IAXEY TOY OT A e '63 BUG, RUNS, NEEDS 18881 Beach Bl. WORK, $350. PORSCHE 8-17-8:>55 Hunlington Beach •548--5927 * , ________ _ '63 Ponche Super ·59 Corona <kir. Blue. R&H, '9i V\V Fastback, Al\l·F'M, • air. auto. Must Be 11, sharp, UJS 367, dea.ltt. Cpe. Bahama yellow With blk $1495/be5t ofler. 968-8872 l\.1erlf'. 546-4114 interior, Al\1/FA-1, chro1ne Autos, New 980 wheels. recent e n g l n e PX\V982 Autos, N.., 2 DOOR HARDTOP Deluxe all vinyl Interior, automatic transm_ission, power steering, whisper air conditioner, AM radip. Dual rear seat speakers, Decor group, remote left hand mirror, tinted glass, etc. # 1246K57J888. immediate delivery. JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 540.5630 6-42-0981 1 71COROLLA $2399 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-30n Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. JOHN COHNILL WE'RE LOADED 1f't TOYOTA Crew11 led. 19'7 TOYOTA C94'0110 SH. 1969 TOYOTA C.roM c,., R., H., Alt co11d ., '4 •pood. !XSSl4•1 DEAN. LEWIS COSTA MESA '66 912 Dark Green with Black inter. ior, AM/Fi\I, 4 Speed. CN0S421) Real Nice? BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capiso-ano &17 .4800/ 493-4511/ 499-2261 * 1968 PORSCHE 912 coupe 4-spd~ air, new 1700 engine, new tires. Tmmaculately' cared ror. 547.6()91 days; 673-1901 ni!l'S & wknds. * '!iO PORSCHE Cab. New Semp radials, leather seaU;, chrm v.·hl~, Bursch exh. 548-7001 LATE 1966 Por~che. SanHary Corvair convrrsion. V<?ry clean, all thr. goodil's. Sell or trade. 53&-1690 ·70 911 T, >-~pd, Beaut orani;:e, 911.S ints. & wtm, A~l/l'l\t Pvt pty. 644-5347 1966 PORSCHE 912..,,\lany ex· tru. Mll!t sell. Best otrer. 67J....27Tl HEW '70 911T Emerald green with black leather interior. AM/FM. Lot.1 more! #911010188%. BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Caplllrano 837-4800/493-4511/499-Dit RENAULT REN A ULT 1961 • One owner: 1ood rond in .l oul. A.11klng 1200. can Ms.4212 att s pm TOYOTA '67 Toyota Land Cruiser 4 v.'httl drive. 6 eyJ., 3 SJ)ffd. Top condition, Clean. (UU 814 J. $2199 CONNELL CHEVROLET 28211 HARBOR BLVD. COST~ s.;.1Jo:1 We'll help YoU sell! go..5671 "ND Gimrnie~1. ND Gi¥11w1y1, J~1! 21 Yn. HDn11t S1Uin9 WITH . THE ALL NEW 1971 CHEVROLET WAGONS! • The rear window goes up and disappears into the roaf. The tail gate goes down and disappears into the floor. ALL MODELS • EQUIPMENT AND COLORS AVAILABLE! BRAND NEW 1971 VEGA NEW 1971 CHEVY '!2-Ton LONGllD ICll-4tI•tJJ221 OVER 50 VEGAS TO ........._._...CHOOSE FROM Named Car of tho Year 1971 MOTOI TllND But Handling Car in America Regardless of Price IOAD & TRACK • Finest Out Of Compa.i son T esls of the Six Small Cars CAR I DRIYIR 2 DOOR SEDAN NEW 1971 CHEVY 110 SHOn YAN W/AUTOMATIC TU.NS. IWJ I 5tU I J7Ct 11 . ORDIR TODAT IN YOUR CHOICI o• 10 COLORS CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-1200 \ \ " ' .. 40 DAil V PllOT Fr!d.11, Marth 19, 19n I l§J [ l§l I l§J I )§] [ Auto•fotS.~ \ )[ c=1 ] ~(._•_'_'"-'-"-"-~-~!!~J I~_,_ .. _"_''_"_""_~)[ £4 11 ~ Au101for ~ )§] 970 Autos, lmportMI 970 Autos, UM4 990 970 Autos, Imported 970 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported Autos, lmpo"'1i 970 Autos, Imported Autoo, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 1u1ci 1----..;... ___ _ VOLKSWAGEN '10 VW BUG 217 AGr $1699 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3001 Ext. 66 QI' 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '68 VW CAMPER VOLKSWAGEN '69 VW BUG ZVC 708. $1599 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 6T 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA f.IBSA VOLKSWAGEN '68 vw WAGON Radio heater. IXEV-1571 . $1599 Harbour V.W. VOLKSWAGEN '67 vw SEDAN Rldlo & Heater. (UU\!812) $999 Harbour V.W. VOLKSWAGEN '65 vw SEDAN IRIZ 306) $825 Harbour V.W . '69 VW FASTBACK YWD 177 1871l BEACH BL. 84~ 1B711 BEACJll BL. W-4435 18711 BEACH BL. 842-4~ $1..-HUNTINGiON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEAOi HUNTINGiON BEACH VOLKSWAGEN · '68 VW SEDAN $1200 lull price NO MONEY DOWN (OACl $48.69 Per Mo. VOLKSWAGEN '63 VW SUNROOF $700 full price NO htONEY DOWN (OACJ $28.37 Per Mo. 136 Mo, OAC} U c. ZZR 924 Intenat comput~ on 12"',, automotive discount rate:. which la equivaltnt ID 21.2o/n annual percentage rare df'· ferrtd J}llyment price 1s $1021 .32 Including all l11tPr· est. All taxe:1 and license or VOLKSWAGEN '63 VW Bug Radto, heater, 4 11peed. (\\'AZ 11).l ). Full Price $399 BARWICK !t.1PORTS INC. DATSUN 998 So. Coast Hv.')'. Laguna Beach 546-4-051 I 4!14-9m '67 BUICK R1'1ERA 1 O\\'NER, fl\C AL11="0nd, Full p!)"Pr . Vinyl rod. Miehe-Un nres, i\1ag v.-he1J1. 5tereo taP". CALL DR JOYNER. at '.'67-7077 Silt tr Sun, 1-6 pm ·~ BUICK Skjarlc Sport Cou~. Ai\1-f'M, 11utomatic, 111r cond. chrome whttl, low n1ileagr, $1395. ROH 808. <lealrr. l\1f'rlt<. ~114 * DELUXE SUNDIAL "'' * Uke new. CHICK IVERSON '67 VW BUG '66 VW GHIA Large Selection (36 Mc. OAC) Lie. YXR 794 Interest computed co 12 '4 autcmotive dlscount rate, whieh is equlvalent to 21.2~ llMu.al percentage r ate de- fured payment price Is $175,1.04 including all inter. ~!t. All taxes and llcen:se or J .YOU prefer to pay cuh, the t~u price la only $1289.00 Jn. c'.uding 1.ax and license and tr.\ one penny mott. lf you Ptf'fer to pay cuh, ihel--=~~==-- fuli priee Is only $751.00 in-'64 VW '69 BUICK i..f' Sal!'f', W\fe's car. Likr nev.. l..cJ m i's. -klr, Air, V1ry! top. A\'IX'iirlo l;rt'f'n. 642-2!\40 * New tiger paw wide uru. VW Blue with black intenor. 1500 Yellow, with Bl~ landau Of YW Campers, eluding lax and license and e '65 BUICK WAGON * Low miles, new eng. en&iM ha.'I '68 lieats &: tcp, new valve }rib XNH&:t V K b' * $2415. Or best otter 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 6T bumpei-s. Special of the $1199 ans, om 151 *Pvt p<rty 6'>"'33 "' ! 1970~".!'o~~VD. w .. k. IZA1Jl!66J CHICK IVERSON Buses, New & Used BILL YATES ~OLKSWAGEN "°' eiLl'."'vTTEs SEDAN $850 .. * 646-7DlO f'\'eS CADILLAC . ., VIV SEDAN -Too '°""· 1 ,,,=====~== I $999 VW lmmodlote Delivery ~ .. ;;;:,tru. Sunroot ·~o~~~:' GHJA. XI.NT CHICK IVERSON CHICK IVERSON 549-3031 Ext. 66 or fi7 e 196.S VW BUG-Private * Call 546-9249 * VW 1970 HARBOR BLVD. VW party must &eU. Only $795. '68 V'IV-A)1 radio, 8-track 5'9-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 COSTA hfESA 549-3031 Ext. 66 er 61 M6-18TI tape, coco ma.ts, chrm whls. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 1970 HARBOR BLVD, i.2852 Valle Road Sa.' Juan Capistrano SJ7~/49J..4511/499.2261 VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road (WXG 2871 $799 • San Juan Capi8traoo Harbour V.W. Cad. '67 Cpe. De Ville f'ACI'ORY '69 VW, AMIFM. Auto, sunroof, PRICED TO SELL. * 6f4.6CJZ7 * Real clean. $1125. 540-0145 COSTA .r.rESA VW 1300: Perfect runn~ COSTA :MESA ccnd. tnq uir e 212 ENGINt VW 1600 com· pletely reblt, Never run, S3."A> eJCcltange, $400 ourright. 968-3049 8.17-48001493-451I/499-mt '65 VW • Reblt t>ni, ~..,, paint, very good cond Reuorn1.ble 642-3518 c r IBnl BEA(!-{ BL. 8424135 64Z-9463 • HUNTINGTON BEACH ATR CONOITIO:-.'JNG f'ul! power, beautllul clnth b lPalher Inter. S!f'reo, door lock!, cru1.~r ron1rol. trunk openrr. L1gh! gentintl, auro rhm1ner. mosr el'ery dl,'(, extra. 1TVVfi:.fll . • '68 VW, $1300 1967 FASTBACK -AM/FM, Ma.rguerite, or call 644-1740 * 645·5698 * 1unroof, Jo mi. Spotleu. Alt 6 pm. '65 VW squareback, lair cond. PRICED TO SELL, $ST5. 49S-3440 '67 V\V Bug, belge. 24,000 I _11_<_'5_. -"-'-~'"-3-· ~~=~ m1. Clean, tape deck $100l. e '63 SEDAN $395 642-2156/aft 6 644-4864 * ~-4821 * '69 W', R&H. Xlnt lo mi'11 orig ownr. 548-8058 A.ft 6 pm. cond, S1450. 1966 VIV-factory air, new tires. Blue "'lblk interior. Xlnt cond. Call 832-05l2 '69 VW 9 Pass Bus S2000 &l'J-5670 e '69 VW SQUAREBACK • • 1970 V\\ ·Yellow, sunroof. '68 BUG European, CuRtm Auto trans, new brakeg Xlnt cond. $164:). • '69 VW-ye!lo11:, chrm whls, tac-h & SISOO * 673-6182 • Xlnt eorat. Sacrifi~ S1295. stereo, lmmac, $1400 flrm.1.,-=°"'~~-c=..-c= 673-22TI or ll&-41.20, \Vhl5.lr 837-~95 • '66 VW Bu& • Good eond. A,utot, New • . · ' 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New NICE 2ND CARS! '65 CHEVROLET Corvalr Monza. Automatic transmission, radio and heater. License number (PCS468) '66 CHEVROLET 8"1 Air. VB engine, radio and heater. License n·um· ber (SBT:514 ) -'64 FORD Futura. 3 speed transmission, radio and heater. ~f"" ceru~ number (JAE4l31 YOUR CHOICE 5499 $26 TOTAL $2625.;~;~ty DOWN PMT, PMT. 24 MO. $26 i1 ti'I• to!el down 0111m•nt •nd Sl6.25 it th• totel month ly p1y111enl indudin9 tex, Jic1ns1 enil •II f;n•nc• ch1r911 on 1pprov1d creilil for 2• ,.,onih1. 01f1.,1d p•vmenl pric1 i1 $11511 includirig ell lin1nc1 cfi1r911, t111t1 I lic1n11 or if you prefer lo pey c11fi, lull c11h pric e i1 $5211.95 includin9 11111 11•, lic1n11. ANNUAL P(ltCENTAGE RATI 11.161/1 t '· 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 ~-~~---~-New tune. $790 or best offer. Autos, New 980 1 Autos, New 980 64&-&178 $2666 ... _ • ·-· . ~ .·· -· :·'· ' . .. , .... : . '•'.- IMPORT SPECIALS LOADED PO,NTIACS '69 v.w. BUG '67 BONNEVILLE 4 spttd trarumi.uion. radio and heater. License V8, automatic, radio, heater. it"·er 1teer1ng. ~~r number (297Xll-{J br1kts. air conditionin~. viny top. License nurn;..r t714AKE' '69 v.w. BUG '67 GTO Automa t11" tran.smisslon, radio and heater. [.Jcens.e VS, automatic, radio. heeter, po"·er stffnnr, po1<·er number CZVL8951 brakes. air conditioning. vinyl top. License num!M>r (UJE&50f '69 TOYOTA '67 BOMNEVILLE 4 speed transmission. radio a nd heater, vinyl top. Llrense numbPr fXTS343t Hardtop coupt'. V8. aut.om11-t ic, radio. heater. prl\\Pr steering. po\1"Pr brakes, air conditioning. Sl"'rial number 130591 YOUR CHOICE 51688 YOUR CHOICE 51588 $60 TOTAL $61 TOTAL DOWN MONTHLY' PMT. PMT. l6 MO, $110 i1 !he tol•I down P•vm•nt •nil $61 i1 th• to+el monthly p1 yl!'l1nt includin9 t1x, lit•"•• ''"~ 1U finenc1 cher9e1 on 1pproveil cr1dit for l b monlh1. Oefe,,1d FULL PRICE p1ym1nl pr;,, i i $12511 including 111 finenc1 cher9••. l1i11 & lic1nt1 or ;f vou pr1f1r to pty c11h , full c11h p•ic1 ;, $1775.40 indudin9 •• 1 •••••. nc ...... ANNUAL PIRCINTAG( UT! 14.55'/• BRAND NEW '71 PONTIAC Venturan. 52395 ::.~LE $200 DOWN $77.50 MONTH! 36 MONTHS $100 ;, +h1 to+•I ciown Sl•Y''""' •nil $71.50 It the lolel "'cnlhlv ptym1nl ;.,tludin9 t1•. lj. •:en11 end •II lin1nc1 ch•r911 on 1pprov1il credit fo, 16 ll'\011fh1. Oef•treil P•V"''~t p•ic1 ;, $1990 includin9 •II fin•nc1 che r 91~. l1l1t I lic1n1• or if you pr1f1r to P•V c•1h, full c11lt prit1 i1 S1564.75 incluilin9 1tl11 ltll", lic•n1e. l ll l l71W l99471 ) ANNUAL PlltCiNTAGI It.A.Tl 11 .01% ' t 'fi6 BUG • Xlnt. \Vh!lrerl int. 43,000 ini. New 1ires. s~. 67;>-2021 or 5-tS-3389 'GB VW Bus. Xlnt condition. Sunroof. snso. 548·1487 1969 VW BUS $1750 + * M&.2742 * + U~1!~L~ AUTHQRIZ£0 0£.lol [it 2600 HARBOR BL, COSTA MESA I 54CJ..9100 Open Sunday 1---,.,c-=--,.,,.,.,-;;~---• '64 VW BUG -.~69~c~,,-.,-.,.-v~,,~1,--1 RO\V 399 Full pov.·er, glX'd rond. $799 6'>-2262 nr 613-5723 CHICK IVERSON '• 1970 cou~E • .,. vm. by pvt p.trty, SJIRS. vw • 673-4693 * 5t9-30n Ext. &i or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COST'A MESA '69 Convertible. 1 o ad e d , $4200. Can fin1.11ce. priv. pty.. San Clrmtnle 714: 492-2800. WANTED 1968 El Do'""'· LOADED I'll pay top dollar !or !'OUr I $3800. VOLKS WAGEN today. Call li73-3.1lll or 67~2;,41 and ask !or Ron P inchol, 549.3031 Ext. 66.67. 673--0900. '66 vw SEDAN j\llN li7'2! $888 Harbour V.W. 1871 l BEACH BL. 842.4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH '68 VW BUG VTS-907 $1299 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR 3LVD. COSTA r-.lESA • 'f'o.'\ VW RUG * XLNT COND + 642-1308 11!! <\pm + LEASE A NEW '71 VW $51.89 Per. Ml'.1. + Tax AT BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32R52 V<ille Roar! San Juan Capistrano 8.37·4MO 493-4511 !499·22£1 ·:.,., V\V -Rebll eng, nt"' hrake~ S.1.30 or brst o!fer. 673-3558 aft 5 e '68 VW Bug e Good conrl, ~rust .~Pll ~1 lj() • • fi7J-!l'i.ifi '60 CAD. Near new eorine. Very clf"an. $32~. • 968-1801 ... • CAD. '65 SED. DE VILLE FACI'ORV AIR a>NDITIO/\'lr-.'G Full power incl. Plt<r!ric win- dow~.,&. Plectri(' ir.ta1. Signal seeking r11rlio. Srp 10 ap- precia1e. IT'BY.1061, $1222 ~1!~~ ''JTKQAIZEO O(Allf' 2600 HARBOR BL., cosr A 1\1 ESA 5"ID-91C)l)j Open Sunday • • CAO. '69 CUNVERTIBLE F'ACTQR)' Am CONDITIONING full t ·11o·er, 1111 leathPr inter- ior, ~ 11 & 1Plrsmp1c litf'er. Ing. '"el"f'O, loaded w/extras & f'ry low local miles. ( Y'NW9!1 l . $4444 ~1!~~ ALJTHOR•ZEO 0£.Altl't 1600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA !)40.~Jf"() Opf'n Sund11y '66 VW Bug ' : "'~"· ''"" , '"'"' <RJB I Cad. '70 Cpe de Ville 81'J. t. Full Pr1C"e $999 !ARWICK !AIPORTS fNC. DATSUN 9&-So. Cn11st H1••y. ~na Beach ~o;,1 I 494.9m '.VOLVO FACTORY ,AJR CONOITION!Nr. RI 1..L LEA TI-I ER INTER TOR. ~'I.YI top, full po11o·rr. n.lr & ,,Jt~C'Opi(' Sll"f'rir\I:'., flfl'rt'O, /hca.ll:-o dlivrn. Sokl "'"""' & <ttVICed by 11.~· 172r'JBEJ) $5999 ~ ~1!~~ AlJTHQl'llZED O(Al[" 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA lHINI ~'YO~O' "FRll'nlANDER" ) M0-9100 Oren SUnday I e • L•r911t Selection OF LUXUR IOUS CADILLACS in Orange County • 19 Cpe DeVlllts • 18 Sed. De· Villes. 6 El Dor~rl~ • 5 Con. verlibles. 16 1>lht'r lt'lect trade·ing 19~ thru 1970'1 flwleutiA "'' ""~'· :~vo6'6i 111 <>Na?.~L~ ~~£0DUUl't '61 \'OLVO 122 S. r.tr. fr11: 26(¥1 HARBOR BL , o"·ner. J":rl Mnd. lo iii. s·75, COSTA .\IESA -C~JI 962-3017_. I 'OAll.9100 -.TYO) O!>('n St1nrlAy 'fi~ VOLVO \1'8~11 l.1s \Ir. • hlS: ('fV;:lnr, 'ilnt L'Of'i' 700 &12-:l.i40 I NO matter wha1 It 111, )'Oil , -ca_1, tell It with 1 DATt.Y 58 VOLVO· Xlnt C3nd DAll.Y PILOT WANT AD t.;li,. fi•l-*~i9 tir ~ f.17 I CAii f42-567R R.· ('har;f' i1 , '\' • • DAILV PILOT 4l • ,, ..... "'. 1§1 1 ~....... l§J I ._ .. u. l§J I .,,....... l§J I· _,,,._ l§J I .,, ....... 1----.. 1·-... --!@ I .,, ....... l§J I .,,.. ..... l§J Autot,. Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990 I Autos, Used . 990 Autos, tiMd 990 Autos, Uted 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Auto1, Used 990 CADILLAC CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL .( CORVAIR CORVmE ~-::::-:::-:::-::::::::::::=-~ ~""".::"::':':".'.::-:-':~ CORVEnE COUGAR COUGAR FORD CONTINENTAL '66 Cad. '69 CPe de Ville '65 Impala Wagon Air condit.lonina. pov.·er 1ltf'r. '69 Corvette "6.1 Corvair Monza lEIG82:!i l, Aulo, $299, $10 dellverA, Trrn1s 11va1L 1945 Harbor B!"rl., C.J\_I. 4 &J>f'ed, air t;0ndltlonint. • "64 RED Corvette, 1 owner, Top COlld, Sl550. •644--5029* 1-'AC'f'OR'I' ina radio, automatic. Ifs AIR CONDTTIONrNG a bUy, (TVC!!94). 4-DOOR =,,,------, powrr ~if'trlni. A,\1.rM 1---.c•o=u"'G"A-;-;R.----•·6.1 CORVAIR cnnvt a!ereo. Thi,, gem \\'ill ,11e t Spyder-Cl'>Orl cond. ?.take of-you wtth ir~ coa t of gorgeous FACTORY fer. l:;vrs &12~2. 1---------~ o " aoid. (P233!h. '70 Cougar AIR·~vNDlTl NIN '62 MONZA, bl•ck. F•ir <3599 F'IJU.. L.EAntER INTERIOR $799 Full power t.quipped, padded FULL LEAnn:n lN'I'ERlOR cond. $165 or offer. C•ll f LESS TI-IAN 21\,f!.)() t.11LES 642•9220 top. till • "'"""''' .,,.,. CONNELL CHEVROLET ing, sterM, mm-I all deluxe excras. IYSC6851. 15,000 Mil• Warranty $4444 ~1!~L~ .&UT!i()RIZEO 0£.&L[I\ 15()() HAflBOR RL., COSTA MF.SA 540-9100 Open Sunday • 2828 HARBOR BLVD. EJCquisltl' l'Xecu!i\"t black fin. I ====-~~~~= I CONNELL CHEVROLET COSTA i1ESA 546-120.1 "h w/n,.tchrd !r"h. '"'"· WRECKED '6' C<!~oir, '6' Full py,r. incl . nit whetl, engult. Runs perfect. Call EV ,1 lib <S k • '1 d 5.)7-7399 ~HARBOR BLVD. 'Qi CH~ Y . ·a u . , , door Jot ·s, A~f-r~., ra 10, =~=~~-.~~~·!COSTA MESA Mf>.110'.1 automa!ic, rwr. sleerlng, new \VSV.' tidt~ ,fo 11bsolu1e-'6:\ 4 SPD, Cnrvair Spyrler, i ·===~-~~~-'-1 \\'liitt side \\'all~. Jo w I~ near brand ne\\ 1ns1de Turho je1 eng., ~ or be11t '67 C'VET C'onvC'rt 427, po!11 ~i!~:~:~~;~i~ 1160 I sAiE" PRICED) TODAY olfer.17~22 FOR ~~:~·!\~~Ilg~~~~~ :~·~r1e~1: $11J.i0. 5'-IR-72001846-9023. Panelf'd Sprint "'ht'el:o. SUPER CLEAN 673-6326 COMET ~1!~,~ 9UICK CASH '&l STINGRAY. Xlot Cood. THROUGH A 2 Door HarrHop, \'8, autom11- tic, faciory air mnd., powrr slP('rtni;:, J)O\l"tr hr11.ke~. l"inyl roor. tinrPd 11:la~s. ra· din, heat('r, ~·hite wall tire!, Wheel covers. !837 Ah."1') $3111 Garden Grove LINCOLN-MERCURY 10120 Garden Grove Blvd. Garden Grove 6.16-1980 CAD. '65 Cpe. De Vilte. Air, all P\\T, lthr, la.ndea.u lnp. tilt \\"heel, radials. Xlnl l·.,-.,-M-,-,.-e-C_o_m_•_l._A_"_'o_tr_'°_'· cond', $1.650. 67;}.f,()6(), C'.oorl 1ra11spor111!lon. AUTHQ<llZfO 0£ o\L[FI 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA ?.1ESA DAILY PILOT 4 11pd, 4ll ~-Rik ln1/ii-x1 . Draf!rd. $IMO bst ollf'r. 5.~7-2277, 673-:io48. '64 CORV F·B, Arn-Fm, Hur11r, poi;it. CLF.AN" * • 546--0239 •• '69 Cougar, air rond, vinyl top, new 1ires. lo blue book, $'2300. Cali an 4: 30 pm - 549'-3163. 6+1-6111. a.i(}...7~"19: afl 7. 67.1--034.1 54a.9100 Open Sunday WANT AD • --1960COMET • CAD '68 Gd tran!lp, $150, 962-l:lfiO The ""Yellow Pa.gr~" of 642-5678 CPE. DE VILLE Cl) to ckoo§fo from FACTORY AIR CONDmONING Full po"'·,.r. T\Jt wheel, AM· FM radio or slrl'f'O, \'i nyl top, et<',, etc. 1\VEA 393l. l WIK 59(11 Your Ow-lice lor $3444 ~1!~,~ .&UTH0<>12f0 DEJ.LEFI 2600 HARBOR BL., COST A t.IESA ~·9100 Opt>n Sunday • CAMARO MUST M-11 ·~~ Cama.rn Loadtd SilvPr. Lo mL S21!F1/bti;t offer. 644-4.119 11.11 6. '63 CAMARO, Xlnt rond. 1970 -427 eng; :I0,000 mi',, $2150. Pvt pry, 54;r1907 'TO Cam;uo, 11ir, Ai\1/fM, lo mi. ~fust ~acrifiCf', mak' Offf'r. R92-:1:;2<1 CHEVROLET '63 Cor1air 2 Door coupe. J-;xcf'llPnl con- dition thru.out. Rea.I good second c11.r. '!UOJ7911. $599 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 lfAP.ROR BLVD. cosr A ri-fES;\ 546-1203 '69 Malibu Air corvl. Vil, 11.utonlatic. dlr. Ra.dio, he11.1,r.. ryy J02J!. t.lu•t 1acr1lice. 12395 lull pricl". C11l! 494-7744, '70 NOVA \Ve'JI help ~u sell! 642-5678 classili«i ... 642-5678 Autos, N•w 980 cA-u-to-,-.~N ... -w----.9"8"'0 Autos, New '67 TOYOTA LANO CRUISER o( wheel tlrOve, ~ evl., l 1pted, Tos> eo~ditio~. Cle•"· IULJ. 011) '68 TORINO G.T. 2 01. Cpt. R1dio, l>O""•' 11•••· '"9• 4 1p1ttl. Niee tlr. Ditl eh•tP· (~TY4Sl I '70 FORD WAGON L.T.O. Country Squjre. Go'9"""' ct < h11 LTD !nt1•., >.M . .l'M •t•r•o, t ulo., P.S .. 1ir eond. R•m tin•n~ f•elory "''"'"'Y· B,tter look hert. t•sqAVB J '65 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX '65 IMPALA WAGON Air conditio"in9, s>owtr 1t1er· in9, rtdio. .u.itoMt lie. lft • b~y. (TVCl9otl '69 CORVETTE o( 1p1~d .• ;, co"tlititnin9, pew· tr 1teerin9, ..... M.fM 1l1r10. Thi1 91rn will 911 you wiih ilt · co1t ef 9or9 1ou• 9old. ( P2llf) '69 TOY·OTA o( Door 11d1n. >.ulomtlic, Tl• d•o, 1ir conditionin9. On• own. tr. Exe lltnl buy. fZUCll4) '63 CORVAIR D.AIL'i' PILOT for aclion! Call 642-5678 & Save: '69 COUGAR·l...o ml. A/C, RIH, Vj T, llUto. Xlnt mnd, I..o book. pri ply. 642-1020 910 BUY WHERE THE NICE CARS ARE! BUY WHERE THE RIGHT PRICES ARE! BUY WHERE THE GUARANTEED CARS ARE* B.UY '68. Cougar XR7 Vt, automAtlc, dlr. Power steering, &ir rnnd. Priced ro It'll! ~WXB0421 , Kelly Blut Book $242a Our Price $1799 BARWICK '67 CQllCAR. J>npular g1'M'n color, f'JCI. & int Auto. Irani;, P/S, rliM' brake1, factory 1ur. R/M. Rf'Crn! 1une-up, nrw lil"E'~. Sl>f' .11.! Gulf :<:1111ion, Bol~R & Spiin,11. d;ilr, llR, Call 1197-Jt174 eve~ k \\'knd~. Bt~l Offf'r: DODGE '67 Ford Wagon Cn!ry !Wdfln !I p11ss. Auto., P.S., r11d1n . Hurl)', \\'on'! las!. (PZ\1:!1. $1399 CONNELL CHEVROLET RERLT 'l7 DODGE 1R21!1~ARRORBLVD Suburhan, 11!11 \\Iii?". Rl'C ffiSl'A J\.-lf•:5A ;...t6-.l20J IMPORTS rNC. DATSUN 9911 Sn. Co1t~f Hy,·y. l.ag1Jn11 Bea.ch ~6-4().)l / ~M-977l --,67 COUGAR- tuneup. 1 ransp ('i\f, Mus! ... '" .,.. 11"' " ,, I '66 Ranch Wagon li46-6-M2 '62 DODGI-~ CA"1 PER R,.l:ih Au !on111tk, JlO'l'rr stl'Prtni. rng, 6 cyl 11.u10, $1000. (."\\'J0031 . LU:\'URY SPORT Btautlful 1in1e lrost !irilah, \virh black interior, equipped 642-1241, 673-l11l3 Kelly 81\11> Ronk $118~ FORD ""ith 11uton1atic trans., pnw. "0'.19,.,6:o5"'F"•-•"'d""G:::-.:-1 "'soo::::-:X::L- rr steering, pnwer brakes, fa ctory air, radio, healer, comp!rlt'ly Sf'r\"iced & rrady for in1n1tdiate rlrhvPry. SHi75. 1UPH1~7) Johns.in & ~n. 26'26 Harhor Bll'd., Cosla .\1tsa. 540·5Ei30 Burkf'( seal~. pny,·cr .~trer1n~. po11•pr hr11.k,.~. aurornatil" 1rans., 4fi.OOO ori,e. mile5. \\"nn 't la.~I Jong. NtlfV 268. $77~. John~on & ~n. 26'26 l!arhor Bl., Cosla ;'.lcsa. ~0-56:SO. fo"ast ~Ultll are ju~t a phone ""77=='""""=-eall awll,I-' • 642-~78 For best results! 642-5678 Auto•, New 980 Autos, New 980 Our f'rlt<e $999 BARWICK rMPORTS INC. DATSUN 991! So. Cfla~t Hv.•y, La1.,"\1na Rr11<"h 5-16-40.il .j!}.1.9771 ~~~ Daily P1Jol \\'ant Ads have h11rj1'11ins .i,:11lorP. Autos, N9w ____ 9_8_0_ 1 '70 MALIBU '67 MUSTANG ' 2 Dr, H.T, Pow1r 1l11dn9. r1· dio. ShowtOG"1 f,.1h, ttm1i11:119 f1e tory 9 ut 1111t1e. !t.Oll '69 . IMPALA -4 Or. Stden. >.11lem1+i,, pew- 1r 1l1erl119, r1dio, 1ir to"d. 011d 1h11p '"' retl ch11p. IYOS542) '68 CAMARO 2 Dt. H.T, Vi~yl roGf, power 1l11ri"t• 1uto1T11lit, r1tl io. Showtoo"l frtth. !XEZl79) '67 CAMARO 2 Or. Cpe, Hty J1d. h1re'1 1 '68 V.W. BUG R1tl io, 1fi<k 1hifl, buy o"• ....hol111l1, (WCE261 ) '66 V.W. BUG Hurry. fSVZ2b7) '69 v.w. WAGON V8, au1om111ir, power s!err- in&. dlr. Lo11riPd. (CVE3&.I! f'ull price S219i C11ll 4M-7T« '&\ Cht>l'y 2-rir hrrltp, auto, INo. PIDfil01 $29!1, SlO delivPrs on appro1·rd credit. SeP al 194.') H11rbor Blvd, C.i\l Air. Tht wor~•. One ownt• hi1· to•v. Lo"" m>lt1. N1w eolo1. Ger91ou1. !PKG6t.Oi 2 0001 <oup1, E•t 11lenf condi· tic" thru-cul, R11I 900.4 ,,,ond ,er. !UOJ791l WHERE YOU ARE TREATED LIKE A CUSTO·MER BEFORE & AFTER SALE! 1 Or. H.T. -•dit, •ulo"ltt:c, pow1r 1!11ri119, Sh•rs>i•. 1 TYC. 46ot l I p•u. 1ltiion .... 9on. Th:, t1r i1 90•9eo11•. R1dio1 itiek, low mil11. IYCM699l '61 Chev.v 2-<lr iNo. RVP374l l lqi!, $10 delivers on ft~ i:irovrd cttrii!. !'i'e 11.t 1945 Harbor Blvrl, C.t.I. "611 Chev. M11.libu 2 dr, PS, 6 cyl. 881 otr. nvtr S1 5.111. Xlnt cond. 830.7395 I tve 6'>154fi 'M Chtvy Impila, A-1 rond. A/C, Pwr window!, Orig owner, SR7:i. 673-R269 , 6'1~21,112 '65 FORD soo • FAIRLANE Coor. Ratl io, 1uto!1'11tOc. ,,,,,;,,9, Shc1>9. !CZV. '57 FORD 3/4 TON Tru,k with I' c~"'P'" Thi1 (1 olrictlv cl~n. E~ct ll11>I co•di. lion, th~! w;ll 1ur1 lek1 cl•• <if you• 1umm11, Rtdio. IYlo.,.1tic, I M91710 l *30 DAY 100% PARTS AND LABOR GUARANTEE OR OPTION OF 24 MONTHS '66 IMPALA S.S. Coupt. Buc~tl •••h, con1 ol1, r1d ;o, P.S., vi"yl roof. t <r. Thi1 /Ike ttr ii our w11 k1nd 1pt · ei1I. IS,000 on • o"""'' Mi111 , !T!JIOt.! '69 OLDS CUTLASS "S"' tcupe, 11,000 or.t ow~tt mil11 with l•tlory "'•"'"'" book. Thi1 btt~liful qold ctr ht1 P.S., P.I., 1ir, r1d:o, 1uio. Su11 ;, nitt . !ZRU39BJ :sr-1mp11.l11 4-rlr hrrllr. Air cond Vll, Au!o 1r11n!I, Pf!\v~r. Vinyl rop, "$1450. 67:.-tOO!l. 6Jf>....'13f,6 ·flt EL CAMINO -VPry clean, Ml'\\' ftUlo tran!I., buekPI seat11, makt offPr. . '67 FORD '70 FORD PARTS & LABOR DISCOUNT OF 25% '69 FORD '69 CHEVY ~'''" 1957 Chtvy 2 Dr. 6 cyl s!ick. nt w M&l rovrr1, good con- dition, S.100. 642-489.1 '6~ Ctw<vtl!'. v~. Runi< roorl. NPPrl~ borly work, $4.iO * • 61:>-47:'11 ·;s7 CHEV'' . 2.\\ Xln1 ronrf, "8.000 mi"!!., nttrli tires, S300. 54~1369 '58 Chtvetl~ M11ihu Sport CouJ")f'. Low mlle&,11!'. Very clea n. $1750. 962-66.il ·55 CHEVY 2 rlr Jmp.!1111.. 327 i!ni;:. S.'>.'il. • Call 1193-4943 * i 1MPALA '67, Alft, Pl~. P/8, S\29.i OR BEST OF· F'!:R. 6'12-!17.'17 '57 Ch•vy 2.clr Bel Air S350. Eves &fZ.1961 'M Impel• 4-dr hrdtp. VB. f1ctt1ry •ir. S-400. Owntr. 547-1&41 "62 Ol@vy IT NOVI, Stanrlarrl tra.na, Run~ OK, Gond b1Jy 11 115. 645-otl7R 'M tri.IPALA 3t11Hl'ln \rll!:!l'ln. wlEv~rythinJ. C.rl Cnrnt ~ir 1 :118-00i~ LIKE To tradt-~ 0 u r Trider'• Ptradlae column ta fl'lr you! :S Lines, 5 Day~ for $3 CaL toda y ... 642-5678. WAGON Cnt•y 11d•"· ' p1u. Aulo., P.S .. r14io, Hurry, wo"'t 11.t. f P2 Jotl l BRONCO VI. o( ""hltl driv1. ~.400 m;le1. Likt b·~"d n•"'· R~tlio, 1ir ecl>• tlilio1>;1>9, I 122AJ 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA j LTD SQU IRE WAGON ' Piii, pow•r window•. •~lo. '"'l:e, 11d;o, air cond .. Gcr9tou1 car ,.jth w1rr1nty btok. 81 liro!. !ZSUlotll ,. 34 TON v.11. Ne"" Sut1 Di1I e•mr•• co ~­ v111 ion . New colo., hi9~ rubber, 'ulom 1tic. ¥8, 811ul0ful CIM(I• 11. H•1 •+1tio~ w19on coml~rl i nti conYt1>i ence. {171 •lG! $3,699 • ., \ • • • :12 DAILY PILOT f"rid.i) Marth 19, 1971 BRAND NEW CHEVROLET 1971TRUCK PllCES IFFICT1¥f . TIL 10 P.M .. SUN. MAI. 2lST OPEN: MON. thru SAT. 9 A.M.-lOP.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M.-10 P.M. ~2297 .... ··--.._,. .. --- ' '99 TOTAL DOWN ,lu1.Tax l L~tt1~ PAYMENT •571s i~~~ONTH 48·MONTHS NO REASONABLE DEAL WILL IMMIDIA Tl DILIYIRY largest Truck Se lection in Orange County Seriol 61.( 120 Dozens To Choose From BE TURNED DOWN! OrVtr yours now· Do11r11 lo choose from i11tluding oil fincmct chorges on pl'"•opproved credit for on1., ~8 ~fh_s. The full cosh_pric• is $2353.85 including tax & lie. o.ftrrtd paymen1 pric1 only $2866.56 •nduding llltlftsl, tax & he. Annual Pttttnto;e Rote is 15.99-%. lmmtdiatt o.livtry . . ' . . . ORANGE COUNTYS FINEST USED CAR SELECTION y.g, ~speed. 1ad10, lleater, ,fl (380Al ' Torol Pritt -: Plus Tax & Lie. '67 Plymouth Barracuda '68 PONTIAC GTO ~ V-8, wtomot1t, ps. bvc:ktl seo1~ $1688 Toral Prici stereo. (WTX983) Plus Tax & Lie. TRANSPORT A TIO~ SPECIALS '63!,!,BUG $588 '67~~~~Mo~ (~1430) $688 -. '66 ,~~~!~.K~·~ PS. radicl. fu;lll) $688 • ' Toto! Pric.t Plus Tax & tic. Sa!L~llite \1-8, ourama1 1c, ps, $1288 Talal p<ite. air, rod ia, heater, (XW£834) Plus Tax Lie. '68~~~~~~-$1088 '64f.~~~~.~~TAL $688 '65 ~.~~~"· lodio, 11eo1er, '" (NGH27ll $688 ' '66 BUICK RIVIERA V·8, au1omat1c, PS. M, ISSE5881 V 8, Au tomatic, cs. IVTH387) $1488 Total Pr<• Plus Tox & Lie. s1288 lolol Pr<• PJu1 Tax & lie. $2288 Tolol Pr<o Plus Tax & Lie. TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS , 64 l!,,lA'"""";, ...... ,._ $788 dio, h••'•'· (WIJ5b51 7 FORD $1088 6 7 Mostarog 6 cyl. 3 speed, rad io, htoltr. (SXR932) '68 FORD CORTINA $788 "~+om•l ic fr•n1 .. r•dio, he•l•r, (WIJb56l l j '69DATSUN4 $1280 Total Pr<• l)'lus lox &l ie WEEKEND SPECIAL '66 CADILLAC DEVILLE Sed an, Full Power. ISBNbl7l ~ ii % u < ... • • AVL Autot, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 AutOI, Uucl i.---:=-FO"'"RD,,..,,....--i~........,M'""E""R""c'""u"'"R~Y-1 MERCURY tto Autos, Uted 990 MUSTANG '69 MUSTANG CONY. _. ntE SPORTY ONE vrt-Air, all pwr, d l 1 c Au!Os, Used OLDSMOBILE '68 CUTLASS Autos, Used t90 Autoo, lhld PLYMOUTH ''9 Plymouth Ro&drunntr. 1 New tirt1, clutcb .l ~. ~ .. T.O.P. Dt.ya 131-156(/aft PONftAC ~(5 'Plntiac . '' rr1~ 11, March 19, 1q71 990 Autos, UMd DAVE ROSS PONTIAC "'•&5 Ford i· 'lane 1910 MERc. cONv. ~~'." 19111""" ~: :: 4 Door. Rl.d ' , automatic, Thia flashy tulip yellow with bnkff. AM/FM. 644--0134 Auto., Radio k Het.ttt, Pew~ VJ, automatic, powttr •iffr· .P!N'"r &lteriJia', strona. black lop &: interior auto-MUSTANG itr Steerinc. Lie. XUF 358 lni, vinyl roof, rid.lo, heat. 6:30 pm ~T4lt ,-_ '53 PLYMOUTH 2 dr, blick, orig cand, 19 mn S200 er Trade. 64S-4687. 'Grand Prix ·m Rambler Statien Wason. SlOO unditr wholf:&&Je book. MUI! Sell? fl.«l(), M6.ooe Complett Sales I.: 51'..rvice eves &: wetkends 2410 H•rbor Blvd. ,61 CLASSIC Rambler lC'ZV096), mobile has been driven only $1699 er, C?l938ll l $599 t>.ooo mu .. " m'" be"'" BILL YATES $1699 A ..... _ at Fair Dr. Ir. • ue ...Oriui. One C'Ntler P/S, P/B, factory air. hiatorY. lnw miles. New Cott• Mesa 546-8017 $.100 ** 962-l&« & drlv'" to •PP"d•l•. RA· '70 MACH I BILL YATES NNELL CHEVROLET ;:;,"~.i;"·i:;::,f.,:!~ pi;;,a1;;;/,:.'!,'~w ";;:; V~~~~,EN 'lOLKSWAGEN ~.. cond., etc. 4 Mar new dres. S2195. Call 642-0137. San Juan C.pish'ano 32852 Valle Roa.cl ~ BARRACUDA FA.Sf· BACK • Air, aulo, clean. Make ofter. 833-2369 -•--r-.. CPKrm) Open 7 days a w~ek ~· $if99 -. =· cr-8.,,'"',.,AM=l<>..-''--"'=PM= _s_TU_D_E_B_A_K_E_R_, CONNELL CHEVROLET 70 FIREBIRD ESPIRIT ·~sE~~~·ofr",;'. l8'JB HARBO'R BLVD. Ask for demonstration, (105· 837 • .aoo1493-4Sll/.499.2261 San Juan Capistrano PflrrA MESA 546-1203 AZP). John90n "' Son, 2626 '70 MUSTANG Faatback. !37-4800/493-t~ll/499.rJSl H bo Bl d Co M 14,00'.l ml, 351 2v, 4 spd , '65 Muslaog 2-dr, VS, kpd. ''U Ford Ga laxle 500 fAar r v " 111 eu. xlnt com:I. Loedt'd xtras, tNo. RZF4871 $~. SlO '69 Olds. 442 2 Dr. H. T. '67 GTO Pontiac, Or i c 21:11 HARBOR. BLVD. PONTIAC 4 qwd, V8, All' con1t, pov."er steerlnc. rally croup. A.\i/ F'M, wide oval1 with ma& T·BIRD 2 Docir-Hardlop. Radio, heat-1~='""""~:-,-,,==~=~ $2495. Call J im: 540-4(& delivers on approved ttedil. ONE OWNER 14.000 foll. owner, Leas tharl 40,000 COSTA MESA St&.1203 er, powtt steerin&. power 1970 MARQUIS CPE. '68 MUSTANG 2+2, p/s, See at lM5 Harbor Blvd, BeautituJ silver milt finish mi's, +apd, Too many ean, l96B, 2 Dft. Bonneville bard whffl.s. (777 BQII -------- ...... ti 1, factory air, au!oma-SHOWROOM TYPE OF CAR p/b, ait-oond. $J.600, C&.ll C.M. w Ith burgundy interior. No reuona.ble ofter refuaed. top. Full poM, t n c I c tnn11. $645. ORB 512. ll,OOOMJLES ~2585. OLDSMOBILE Equipped with auto trans., 673-&31 AM/FM radio, nu Johnaon t Son. ~ Harhl!lr Attractive medium turquoiae ~SA:-cru=r~a~oo;~,.-.~,..--M-,---•• r .. radio, beater. power a1eer-.67 GTO w/itereo, Ma.Dy ex· callbratl!d polYllua prern. Blvd., CMia l'o1esa. 540-MlO mi.st fi nish with white inter. a-.. 1---------lng, power brakes, pov.•er N & Wid 2+2 fastbck, t-lakit offer. '67 C tl .ndo , lf tru, Red &: black, ew tirtt. Xlnt cond., q ownr, llOt , ..,__~,roof. ~:..u.; Pvt pufy. Call 673-4355 u ass WI ~-~ &Ir plCOnd. )'OU lll'el. 8eft ofter, 1 Onr. $1795. Jles. 4z...t\241 Bui. ate. .r-Ct;"Juiwn .,.,,, ... pjlCU are h ...... to eue, 'I 544•2922 <19'&--0768, S41)..M:T6 ~ auto. trana,, am·frn stereo '66 MUSTANG Hdtp VS. auto Air oond. dlr. VB, automtltC', m11a this tine car. (XLJllS) NTIAC Fittbird 400. Pontl•cs Finest :.pr. Cpt. Radio, PD""'er radio, heater, power steer-trana, ait, P/S, + Xrra.s. vinyl lop (lJEF364). Must Johnson k Son, 2626 Harbor .,we:ruig, 4 speed. Nice car. Ing, power brakes, factory ~1.,.995~··.,.-~----~ sell. n6S5 full priu, Call Bi., Costa Mesa, 541).56.30 wer, ro a.it\ Oean. 'ta Grand Prix with all the '68 Torino GT $2999 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 137-4800/ 493-4511/499·7l61 '67 FIREBIRD Qir1 cheap. !MTY.sJ), air cond. Truly ~poUe11 ~ '69 MACH r. Air mnd, disc 494.7744. "fi6 OLDS Convt. Fae air. · eqe. Best offer. eoodl••. Bet.utifu.1 tUTQOUl& ,-$1199 Ui<E-ne"' 4 near new tire1, brllkes, factory s tereo . ====-=----~ full vinyl Inter., Eltt. teal, 6 pm eves. wilb Wb.lte landau mp. S3166 Hardtop. Excellent condition. ~· etc. See .1r ask for demon· Loa.di!d . $1800. &16-6319. '69 CUTLASS Supreme, auto Xnt cond, SI095. 540-2928 '65 Pontiac 2 dr ii'f. Full Johnaon A: Sen, 35l6 Harbor db'. Full price S129'J. Take son &: Son, 2626 Harbor Bl., AUTO, S750 OR OFFER. mac con · pr v oW'ftr DAILY PILOT for action! I o'"""~~'-'-"""-""=~ Hou. Huntlnc'!' Watch the fin. JWI:. pt;y, call 5'IO-llOO ot e '62 T·BIRD Good cond ition, Hu Ewrythlna. ?o1a.ke ofter! 67>-filJO . • '81 T ·BIRD. Mwit sell this Wttkend, Best c ff er . 96&-4703 '65 T·BIRD. Special Landau, air, full govoer, Very clean. $995. "'"-"1' IT'S WONDER.l'UL tbe m&ny buy11 in apptiaJal: )'CU find bt tM C111glfted Ads. Check them now! 'NNEU . CHEVROLET 1tratlon. (916 BEQ). John· ~ . ..,=MU=S"T~A~N~G~C~O~NVT=.-. ~V8~.1 trans, P;s. i/B, r~~ r;;;e~~ :~~&J_~ cub. Blvd., C:ista Me&11. 540-5630 small down. (ZR\V889) Will Qi&t.a Mesa. 540·56.lO. *54G-311S• For best results! 642-5678 CaU &t2-5678 & Save! We'll help you aell! MJ.5S78 OPEN HOUSE column. 494-7506 aft 10 am .. • • HARBOR BLVD. Autos, New 980 7"~~~----.9~8"0 1-.A-u"'"to-,-. °"N.-e-w----.9=90 Autos, New Autos, New 980 At1to1, New 910 Autoi, N•w 980 r -A~u-t-os-.~N~o-w---~,~I0~1 OOB1' A MESA 546-1203 '70 foiil"Wagan·· • (buntry Squire. CoorJ;eous car 1'u LTD inter., AM.FM '&breo, autti., P.S., air cond. ~!J:emaininc .factory wunn- ~. Bttter look here. (5 !AWi. $3999 :CONNELL CHEYROLEf. t ~ 2828 HARBOR BLVD OOS1'A f\1ESA 54i1:m, '&7 COUNTRY SQUIRE ~ VS •. AT., ps, pb, lac air, lUI rack, "8,oOO mi. New &rakes, 1hoeks, batttry. Re- 'blt trans. Clean good oond. $1600. 892.2910. 1970 Ford Maverick tln't value at S1800, New W/w tires, heavy duty •llllpension ~ ahoclai. Low mUeagf':. 644-2387 after 6. '67 FAIRLANE Conv: 3 ,pd, VB, lo rni, very clean. $795. Mfr.1165 1970 Ford RANGIERO-P/s MOO ml. ""10. CslJ M!-288< Ute.r 6 pm. 1rr P'crd Ranchero. soo XL P/S. R/H. Aulti. &1t otter • 5'8-1927 • f '69 FORD LTD tWJy I~ l owner, Sl~. ,. C1ll 643"-0671 .. '6115 FORD VAN, xlnt oond . '"4XI. Reblt, eng. !-Call 962-0833 *'62 FALCON WAGON _Like new S298. 968-~189 P IN TO · ro f.1 OCO exec. wile's car. Xlnl. Loaded . Below dealers cos!. 96S-Q60 '69 LTD, 429 hp, full power, air. l S2450 *** '497-1376 FORD Van '67, 219 V-8\1f!i;' &a.n Sl.00'.> or trade-tor vw &: u. 642-!m& '38 Ford Cou~v..,ci, oriflnal cond. S7:'i0 Gish. Call 642-4U7 '66 FALCON UH. VI!. Make olr 839-8-188 '(19 FORD Country Sedan. Air & powtr. 20.000 mi. Xln! cond. $2800. 492--0i.l.'> '65 FORD W11gon V 8 : PS/PB, air. P\'t P ty : $650. 548-9477 IMl'ERIAL IM:PE JttAL L1Ba r o n . Loaded! 6 mo ld. 20,000 ml. $8200 nitw; 5Z6(I() cagh or tlkt tivf'r p y m n l s. 53&-4287 ~days 8: JO to 10 pm. JAVELIN 'Q JAVELIN 4utomatic trans.. pov.·rr stttrinr. ndlo, heater. \VAR U,. SU15. Harbor American ~~~ tll~I l Y•~ ttAllBOP COSTA M£~A JEEP '62 Seout Jeep, POil OOice model. Gro:! ('(ll'Kf. Special !nter. decor. ftlake offer. ~1548 '45 JE!P $IOO ~h. 546-2154, 8 AM· 9AM. ·· MAVERICK · '70 MAVERICK Pvt pty, Be11 ofr. 64f-l470 MERCURY 1969 Mercury Mont910 ATTRACTIVE it EO)NOMlCAL Lilti t Ivy finish with .cold il)o tttlm equipped wlth au to- rAaliC trans. radio, hearer . .,O .... r 1teitn11g. ,.,<'. Prt~ fOr qulek 1Alt Sl~~-YCN- 330. John511n .!t !'tin, :3626 Harber 81\"rl , Costa Mesa. 5'0$lll. r.1uST v ii. ·gg Ml'~Ul')I l<.!&r- Qult Y.'11aon. RAl'llti, Air t:GOd, 4'29 ere, kl mi's. '4~ r.IERC1Jfl:Y Vlllacrr St.I . waa. t ine c:ond. ruu f'IO""~r. •ir cont'!. Nt1V ILl'l'S It bAt- ltry St2'5. 1"r1v r I y fi73-4ti~ BAUER BUICK m COSTA MESA ''SPECIALIZING IN ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST INVENTORIES OF BUICK5i0PELS & JAGUARS! RIVIERAS -RECTRAS -SKYLARKS -BIG WAGONS-WE HAVE 'EM ALLI UALJTY'' ' ' OUR SAVINGS ARE AT THE HIGHEST RIGHT NOW! SHOP TODAY!! OPEL HEADQUARTERS . . . . JUST 4 REMAINING ', NEW 1970 OPELS LEFT AT 51 !~ FAcr6~v INVOICll MUST BE SOLD THIS WllKIND! AUTHORIZED JAGU'AR SALES-SERVICE & PARTS! LARGE SEL~CTION OF NEW & USED JAGUARS TO CHOOSE FROM! WE LEASE CARS PRESTIGE CARS AT SENSIBLE PRICES ALL MAKES & MODELS EXAMPLE: NEW 1971 BUICK SKYLARK 2 DR. H.T. Fully •quipped including va •n;ine, •u+om1tic, redio, he1+er, power 1te•r· in g l brakes, fe ctcry eir conditioning, white w111 l11, tintad 9la11. tr1AUIR$. ~ PER MO. BONNEVILLE 4 Dr., H.T. Auto.. Rlr.H, P.S .. P.B .. air conditioning, custom vinyl roof, remaJn lng factory ""'arranty. !VCL9'8l. ru .. Book Price $2M5. $2205 .. '· '69 JAGUAR ' XKE COUP!\ 4 1peed. factory air, radio A: he1ter. wire whffls. !Jue Book Price $4585. LXXD260l . ~ 1 $3885' • • ' ~ '67 JAGUAR XKE CUSTOM 2 + 2 Full power, faetory. lir con· dititintnr. AM-FM stereo r•· AutomatJc, chrom• wire dio, vinyl roof, factm")' war-whetl1, radlo, heattr. Very ranty. <794AFBl. Blue Book low mllea1t~B344). Blue Prtce $5055. Book Prll'e . $4255 $3180 '69 WILDCAT '69 ELECTRA 225 Custom coupe. V8. automa· CUSTOM SPORT CPE. tic, RlH, powtr tteerinfi &: VI, auth., Rl:}f, full pow1r. brakes, t1ctory air, v nyl factory aJr, vln.)'l rocf. Re - roof. (YRW2061. Blue Book malnln¥ factory warranty. Price $3400. IXYZ5 7). Blue Bock Prict $3M>. $2800 $3455 BUICK.1~ COSTA MESA BVICK·OPEL·JAGVAR 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa "Sl'ECIALIZING IN 9UALITY" 5 4 8-7 7 6 5 WE LEASE CARS • , • I I ESTATE WAGON 3 seater, V8, automatic, 'RA H. P . .5., P.B.. factoty aJr, fac· tor)' warr~y. <ZVE.432). Blue Sook ·ce $5065. $4665 '69 OLDSMOBILE '. CUTLASS SUPREME V!I, automatic. Rlr:H. powitr ateerinr Ir: brakes. facttiry air. vinyl rrici CXV1454). Blue Boqk Prl $.1000. $2500 • \ • I ' , Business Is Good At Theodore Robins Ford: The Reason I• Sinaple Ftillr 9t1lllppe4 wltlt 1600 C.C. entlff, fillly 1pckre1!1.1N 4 .,... ......u...i. .. t.at• & defre•I«, hl·Senl "dlrect- •lr" \lffttleflff 1yt'"'-wllldth~d west.en, ltl·Mclt 1.fety IHicltet ....._ Ifft bel~ -• • fro1t Ir -, padffd !"-' & dodi, 1""'9 ~. col•-. bod111~ lkJlltl. Ordef Toct.y NEW '71 MUSTANG New 2 Dr. Hardtop SAVE V-S. bit Ures, A-T, P-S, P-d~cs. rad, air, T-glass, \\·hi c:vrs, Hi bkts, etc. $53990 (144519). W·stkr $3742.00 Our PYlce $3202.10 New 2 Dr. Spts. Roof SA VE 351 V-8 .. hi bkts._ bit tli::e:;:. A-T. £· $ ~ Ii I stettr, P.d1scs, radio, dec\'il'P. T-glass, 576 \\'hl cvrs etc. {131869). W·llkr $3911 .25 Our PYlce $3334.74 2 .Dr. Convert. SAVE 351 VB, P-top, P-str, P-dlscs, hi bkts, bit Ures, tit steer, A-T, AM-FM. con-$1501• Bole, P-\vindO\\'S. spt ~·hl .cvrs, T-glass • etc. (102430). ~ ' · • W•stkr $4784.75 Our Prlc• $4034.St New Mach I SAVE 35 1-4V, auto/trans., rad., pwr. sir. ,\ d isc brks, spt. deck, con11. grp., spts. $70100 inter., wide ovals & more. {100060J W-stkr $4449.00 Our Prlc• $3748.00 ~;~ RANCHERO NEW RANCHERO EmW!on control .,,._ E7Xl4 m.., $68388 AM radio. Cll91.31J. · ~ w .. 1kr $33'6.82 Our Price $2712,,4 •· NEW RANCHERO 500 SAYE 351 V8, crulaomatie. vlL croup, P.S., power d1'c lrrakn, radio, tinL &Uw. $88883 H.D. auap. (11S648J. W·llkr $4214.06 Our Price $3395.43 , ~i~ FORD NEW LTD 4 , DR. SAVE P-disc, bit tires, 400-VS, A-T, P-str; 00 ai•, T-GUw. cl"' elk, •adio. ek. (13(). $863 w"!kr $4924.~0 Our Price $4061 .00 NEW LTD 4 DR. SAVE 4;00-VS, A-T., radio, power str., disc $ OQ braKes, air, tint. glass, vinyl roof, elec. 862 clock. (130883) W·1lkr $4924.00 0.r Price $4062.00 New LTD Brau9. 4 dr Hcltp SAVE P-discs, bit Urea, 429-VS, A-T, P-str air, radio, T-glass, dlx str \11hl, whf $90011 cvrs, nylon cpt. etc. (103503). W..ikr $5069.75 Our Price $4169.64 N,~v.f~-~T ~1~~~ ... s!~!~ •-SA VE discs, air, radio, T -glass, whl cvn:, $74596 nylon cpt, etc. (100964}. w .. tkr $4343.7S Our Price $3S97.80 N.~f BRONCO N!'." ,!~~=-~ b:~t.~=~H~. SAVE pkg~ 2 skid plates, H.D. tires, spa.re $64127 tire carrier, R&H. h-ee running hutxs, H.D. rad, H.D. bat. (00685), • W-stkr $4436.27 Our Price $3795.00 NEW BRONCO WAGON SAVE VB. bucket sts., traction lock R-ax1~. 76 Ltd. slip.front axle. Spt pkg., aux. $706 fuel tank, rad.lo, free running hubs. W·llkr. $4680.22 Our Price $3973.46 MUSTANG SALE _.,. -·-·- I THIS WEEKEND .. -ONLY - BRAND NEW 1971 TORINOS 26 ST~K TO CHOOSE . FACTORY. 4 DOORS HARDTOPS FASTBACKS $75 OVER INVOICE FROM pl111 t•x & licens• NO GIMMICKS -NO ADD ON'S -NO ORDERS ~~f T·BIRD NEW 2 DR. LANDAU SAVE 429 V8, A-T, P-S, P-discs, vinyl fJ>, bit tirt:'S, t ilt steer., P-seats, $1352 air-auto temp cntrl, R wind de- frost, P-anten. {100014). W·1tkr $7378.00 0.r .·rice $6025.54 N,;~ ~T.~~;..~~!!T~~.. SAVE t enor, vinyl roof, tilt stttr, air, $115078 T-gl&>, P-wtndo..,, bit """' rad, auto brk rel, etc. (111706). w .. 1kr $6561.00 Our Price $5410.:12 NEW 2 DR. HARDTOP SAVE 429 VB. A-T, P-steer, P-discs, rad, spec interior, vinyl roof, bit tires, , 17908 tilt steer, air, T-glass, P·windows, etc. (111578). W·llkr $6609.00 Our Frlce $S381.90 NEW 2 DR. HARDTOP SAVE 429 VS, A·T, P-S, P-discs, spec In- terior, bit tires, tilt steer, a.Ir T· $114170 i.:lass, P-\.1.indows, rad, vinyl tp, etc. (106435). W·llkr $6358.SO Our Price $5216.80 ~~ FIOO PICKUP NEW f.100 STYLESIDE SAVE V8, amp I: oil gauges, radio, reduced {~4)~eve1 exhaust. G78x15 tires. $74369 W·llkr $3438.81 Our Prico $26'5.2' · N:,:,1:. ~~0 ... C.~~!~~k ..... $AVE amp I: oil gauges, tool box, cruiso--$95389 matic, opt. vacuum booster, Mt-FM s.tereo, P.S., G78Ji15 tires, etc. (0651). W·llkr $4850.20 Our Prico $3896.31 •CAMPERS• STIC. :2100 -11 ft. SAIOIA. 4 lU. ft, r1fri91r1tor •. C~1t11• r1n91 " hood, S1ri1I .t:90266. LIST PRICE $1U.t.09 >· SALE PRICE $201445 STK. •2111 -11 FT. SHAWNEE. 4 cu. f+. r1lrigJr•tor, Ch .. t1t.11 r•ng1 I hood, hot w1!1• h1•Kr. ;110716' I LIST PRICE $2672 ' SALE PRICE $210745 STK. 2'TCl51 -11 fT, NAVAJO. St1 inl1,1 1t1el 1lov1. S1rial #11524, LIST PRICE $2120.57 $ . 98 SALE PRICE 1647 • 5TIC.. $1.!if -11 FT. COMANCHE. 4 cu, ft. nftig•r•lor, 1t1/11o 1111 1!111 •+••• co•1r. lll!i1l6) LIST PRICE $237'-17. • . $ 68' 60 SALE PRICE. 1 . · 2 ~~r' F250 PICKUP N~1'~~~~ .;~Tf.~ H.D. SAVE F I: R &prings, apl!t rims, spare tire, $.76087 gauges, chrome mUTOrs, R. D. radl~ . ator. (Stk. •0003) (801531 • W01tkr. $3131.77 Our Price $3077,,0 N~~ !.~!2 VB~~,~~. ,m~ SAVE •pee. crubo., P·Di'"• air, AM-FM $1091 00 atereo: P.S., 2S pl. tank, 1pare tire'. (80951). w .. lkr $5415.'7 Our Price $4324.'7 FORD-l TD-GALAXIE -TORINO -WAGON SALE 10 to choose from. '6S thru '70 models. Coupes, hardtops, convertible .and 2 + 2 Fastbacks. Some with 4 1peeds, also air conditioning and automatic models with power steering. '69 lmp1I• H.T. !XOCl59) l '69 M•libu H.T. f8078SI J VI, •uto., RlH, P.S., Air, '69 w19on. Con,our1, VI, •uto .. R&H, P.S. Many to c:hoos• from. •6s tin 70 Models. Sport roofs, fermals, 2 tloor & 4 door Mrdtops &: sHon. fMJI po':¥er, air c:ondftlonhtf. Wcsn1ntln ovollablt. 1970 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI, •ulom•lie, r•do, h1•it r, pow1r 1t•1rin9, f1clory 1ir, f1 elory WGrr•nfv •~•il 1bl., OUR '°itii'c'i'A$2s96 '67 MERCURY COMET ~96 Cyclon(', 2 Dr. l l.T. V8, auto., P.S., R&ll, good miles. (TXT655J ,. 63 Y.W. BUG 4 ~pel"d, i;ood miles. (liJl09) YOUR CHOICE $2496 '67 CHEV. IEL AIR VB, R&H,,aufum11.t ic, P.S., facL air. ll.105541) '66 CHEVY II R&H. automatic. po"·cr steering. (RYS516l EXAMPLE: 1970 FORD LTD 2 "dr. H.T. Good mi!tt, VI, •uto., l'.S., RIH, vi11yl roof, •ir, Win. •vi ii. I 152AGI~ OUR PRICE $2896 $99 6 I ·~-6:-1. -~-~-~-,~-,~-~RA-&H-,--$~1-9_9_6-.-~-~da-C-~-~,-~~-~-~-:~,.j. ~-.. -. _$_3_1_9_6_ P.S. (ZDV707J vinyl roof, good miles. '67 PONTIAC Le1'1anl'I 2 dr. H.T., VB. auto., P.S., R&H, air cond. (VEP17•) ~196 '65 DODGE DART SED. 6. 11.uto., R&.H. IRIH121J '64 EL CAMINO P.U. $99fr·-----------··-(X_x_s•_•,_J ___ , _____ _ VS. R&H, auto., P.S. 1 · $696 (YCN070} '69 COUGAR H.T. $2496 '63 COMET 522 . ....... __________________ --a VS, auto., P.S., a ir, R&H, 1'.lct@Or. Recond. vs, ( 5) 1970 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOORS ( 5) r~~Q3J; warr. avail. ~~~1~\!~:.0·1}L~S18~&ir. '69 LTD 2 DR. H.T. $239'6 VB, auto., R&H, P .s., vinyl roof, air. warranty a11an. (ZKH57Jl I ..... ,, . <'. , ~ ... · -· SALES DEPT. HOURS ' ) '66 PL TM. FURY Ill 4 dr. Srd. V8, 11uto .. radio, he&tf!r. Good n11lcs. (656481 I AM To ' PM MON·FRI I AM To 6 PM SAT 10 AM To 6 PM SUN ' • I Color 11l1clion, full, r•condition•oil, good "'!lei, VI , •uto., P.S., hi r. Sotn1 w/r1clio t. City of Co1f1 M111 le••• r1lurn1. ( 104111) I 1041261 110412.!i l I 105l241 I 1041271 OUR PRICE $1696 '68 PLYM. VIP 4 dr. H.1\ VS, aul. R&Ji, P.S., 11.1r. \Varr. av11.il. (756CQR) -PARTS-SERVICE 7 AM To 9 PM MON HOURS 7 AM To 6 l'M TUE·FRI • ' • '64 CHEVY 1/z TON Pickup. 3 speed. · heater. (G6.5001 ) I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS • , ~ t ' • '