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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-04-14 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa-~-.. , - • a.c mun r ...,.our owe ) -. leha~k College 1 \ \ ' Gale. Win·ds~ Sti .. f _ . . . • • . Hair Hassle Aired ·Manhandle---Bllr.~ , Southland Ge ts Boost I n Gas Tax SACllAMENTCl (UPI) -The Senate loday .......... lbelf ml plll<d a b11I -·piop1111111s Aid mimioDy - 1ncru81 Southern Ca!Harlna'1 share ol galoline tu revenue. The measure by Sen. James R. Milli (0.San Diego), was sent to the Assem- bly on a strict north-south vote, 21-13. Pasaage erased a one-vote rejection of the same bill on ,Monday. The legislation would elimPlate the current fonnula for distributing gas lax money. Instead the Slate Highway Com- mission would decide where to spend the $600 million collected annually from the seven-cent.a-gallon state gas tax: Sen. AJan Sbort (D-Stockton), appeal· ed lo southern senators to demonstrate ''statemanship" and vote again.st the measure. He equated the issue to that of approval of the California water proj- ect which transports surplus northern water southward. "We've been p!Wldered once,,, Short told the senate. "Are we going to do it again?" Sen. George Deukmej ian (R-Long Beach), a candidate for the GOP attor- ney general nomination , cast the decid- ing vote today to pass the measure. He was campaigning Monday, when the bill wen t down 20-15, a vote shy of the necessary number. Crypt Opened By Court Order; Wife's Body OK Authorities al Westmitmer Memorial Parle have identified the body of a woman removed from a crypt there Monday u Mrs. Peart 0. McGinnis, who died August, 1961. The crypt was opened by court order Manday because Ronald T. McGinnis, husband o( the dead woman, is suing the park for $50,000, claiming it lost. track of her body. Officials representing the Park said to- day that finding the body proved their c0ntention that it was right where they sakl it was, "Crypt E-5." Att<rney Dudley Gray. representing 1t1cGtmi.s. said the suit would cootinue because, "We still contend the park lost track ol the tzod)'. ll took a court order for Mr. McGiMis to find his wife's body." Gray identified the woman by a gold chain and a ring whkh she wore when buried. A patholOlist and a dentist were present for further tdentiric:.atiOn, but v.·ere not needed aft.er Gray said he was, •·gs percent sure" ft was Mrs. McGinnis. The body was returned to the crypt lat.er Monday. The suit started about two years ago "'hen Mr. McGinnis, who was ordered not to be present al Monday's crypt opening, was told different locations for the crypt by dlf!erent park personnel . Attorneys in the case will return to Orange County Supetior Coort May • to continue legal aeUon. •• :~ j . . Splashdown Set Friday . .......... ,NCIJSJ!ff•NiNI .- &PACE CENTER, ilooltoB (AP) - Apollo 13'1 -battlod _, lo bring their .cr!Jll'led eraft -lo -from a quarter mWlon miles away at Misaloo COnlrol decided they would aim for a Friday spla.i.lown ln the Paclfle. James A. Lovell Jr., Fred W. Haiae Jr. and Jobn L. Swigert Jr. took morteuts to conserve their pr<dous ............, of water, oxygen and power· u they raced fartbel' !ram earth towanl •-~ "lllllch hod --Imilnc lll'llt -• violent...,.,... al a preaurize<fluellinr Mond.ty nJcl>l ' . They were to loop around tho mooa Minnesota · tonlgbt and two hours later, at 1:40 p.m. J. d ' PST, were to lire thelr lwiar lander U ge engine to sped them back toward earth . and a splashdown In the Pacific north of New Zealand at 9:13 a.m. PST Friday. Asked whether the three spacemen, Nixon . principals Jn the most dangerous drama 3rd P. .,. ck?' .. ln,American space history, would make it •!1.<?me safely, lllgbt controller Glynn Lun· ney, answered, "Yes, barely." · •.; ''We've got the situation stabilized," he WASHINGTON -(AP) -An lnlonned Senate source said today-that President Nixon will nominate Judge Harry A. Blackmun of Minnesota for the Supreme Court. This was Uie word repotedly passed to key seaators. An aanouncement Crom the Students Raise J ~ 'Hairy'\ Issue· At .Saddleback By BARBA!tl. Kl\EIBICH Of tlle o.1Ji. Plllt Sllff The Saddlebadt Ceiege ''hair problem'' was aired anew Monday night in a lenglhy OO!lfrontation bttwetn the board d -trust~s aoo almost a OOndttd students. The good-humored sealoo -moved tc> a large music room to accommodate the crowd -was marted w:lth frequent laughter, bursts of applause, praise for the stude11ts' "decorum'' by board preei· dent Michael Collins, ~ for Sad- dlebaclt's high ..-.;. quolity !ram several of the studentl and cheers for an elderly lady from Leisure World who klentified herself as a "rldkaJ.'' ·After listening to lhe IJJPOllls and. arguments · ,_of llKft than , 20 speakers, board members ~d flatly they were not prepared to make any 1 m m e d' l a t e' changes in the cootrovtn:ial dr9s code, but agreed that further .. -Is not out of the question. It was infOrmaljy igreed lbat a new student·trustee-adminiatraUon woUld be named before the end of the quarter jwt beginning to~1<talk tt·over." Meanwhile, it atii)eared that an 1niti'al "flurry of enforcenieot" of the bait code 1 · • siiii. ''Tbe molt crWcaJ thing now is to . ' ~ · ktep it stabilized the rest of the lllgill" U'IT ......... White House ·was ~ ~lY• "~ . l.s Lovell, Haise and Swigert flew away Blad:mun, • cloR friend of auer 'fQml home, here was the pictw-e aboard Justice Warren E. Burger, bas been i . their spaceship: WATC HES FROM GROUNO Ml11ion Chlo! Sl•ytan membor al the 3th, u.s .. arcwt.~.« · . <i-'""' command ship, disabled by the Appeals in st. Louis since 19*' ... Re·.ir:Q:oap. , ~11 mysterious ~pture, was completely . .._ .• · . . $tiut down electrieally. emergency bat· astronauts' lifeboat, was providing critical power, oxygen, water and other li!e, support. But its supplies were ct:rop. ping and the astronauts were operating on minimum ~uirement.s. pomted by former rMSKJent Dmgtit 'D. teries and oxygen supplies were available Eisellhower. . ·1,. to take the ship, the only vehicle that can Before word'•'that "Blackmunnns lNh:-· carry the men home, through the at, on's cbOice for-the'1court postifor wbiCh . rnospbere. two Southi!mi judges ·were rejected, key ~ -The lunar module which became the -Officials were concerned malnly witb the water supply. With n houn to 10, Republicaa ~~were bJiefed '·by Deputy Auy, 0... Richard G. Kleindienst in a Capitol''hideaway, Afterward COP· Leader Hugh Scott or Pennsylvania said that passlble nominees had·been discussed and that.he upected announcement of the Presillent's-lomina- tion "in the very near·rutU;.e.';' Scott was asked if be t h o· u g h t Blackmua's chances bad been• hurt by former Vtce Presideat Habert H . Humphrey's statement Monday that Blactmun iS the kind of man he would like to see on the court. "I don't thiDk Humphrey's en, dorseme.ot burls anybody)' Scott roplied. Scott said the meeting with•Klelndlenst ... the type ol-11ation he had•urged on the administnUon-after the Sen1t.e's rejectloll by a 51-45 vote laat Wedoesday of Nixorfs nomination of Judge G. Har, rold Canwell ol Florld1. Canwell was nominated after the Senate had turned down. by a 5M5 vote list. November Nlsoo's firsl.-~•>o. for the court post, Judge Clemut' F . Hayns:worth, Jr., of.South Carollna. Police Watching Bowling Green Coast Barge Buffeted By Gale Winds , Waves By ALl\ION LOCKABEY ••Hnl llllllW hampered by 1$-lmol winds thlll klekecl up teaS ci up to 1J feet. Near.gale force winds and heavy seas Despite ihe high winds, the Harllor ripped a 175 foot barge loose fn:m Jts Department had relilltlvely little trouble. moorings off the Santa Ana RJver jetty At 12 :10 a.m. today · a 21-focit cabin t.fonday. It was snatched frQJn the poi.m.. <7l1ber broke loose from her moortnp off ding surf by the Coast Guard cutter Point South Bay Froot Avenue, Newport l!eedl, Divlde. out of Newport Beach. and crashed into a seawall at DIG A few hours later the nearby 432-f~ Bayside Drive. During ite courae da"1i pipe-laying veste.I, the Davy Crockett, the bay the boat mlri.culously avoided was in danger of being driwn 'aabore hilting other moored boats. when the ere,, was unable to work the The Harbor ~ent said the boat wincfles to shorten up on the mooring belonged to James A. Nolan. 2311 N. lines. The vessel, a converted Uberty Rosewood St., Santa Aul. It was not ship, was Ja~r secured without help from seriously damaged. the Coast Guard, Two commercial sporUishing boata The D~v;ytCfockettJs,el)gaud, ill.~.in& · p8rted~thelr ancbor4ine'1 ati Dana Potnt, pipeline for Uie Multlinllllcin -dollar "S'arita: Harbor at 1:10 a.m. today but were Ana seWer outfall. 'lbe barge is an aux· rescued by tbe Harbor Department and lllary ,..,.1 used for hauling rlprap and boots f the San •--other n\aterlals on the project. company rom CJlll:fna:ile The heavily laden barge came within a Sportllshlng C.O. few hupdred yards of the beach oU 50th Winds up to 5o.eO knots Carther north Stfeet before Uie Point Divide got Jines kept Coast Guard and commercial retOJe aboard ·to hold her until company tugs aaft busy most of the afternoon. took her in tow. The barge and fhe ship Hird aground and breaking up off Port would go back hlh> abeyance pending Lawnbowlers are probably the -Id's receipt of a written opinion from the most u~ grass fanciers, ranking belong to the Peter Kiewit &: Sons Hueneme is the 465:foot, 12,500 ton Construction Co. former cruise ahip, La Joelle, which The hl\rge roporiedly broke 1-from brolce 1oOoe from Its moorinp al the lhr<e-judge pend of the Nlnlb DilCrlet equally with golfers when il comes to Court of Appeals In Los Angeleo. • belnj meticuJ9us about their gmns. The judgeo lsst week ord<nd Im-Soil was no -1hat bowlers In San mediate vacaOon of injunctions obtained Clemente Monday asked police to keep an in January by aUomeys representing eye onlheir ireeos at San Luis Rey J>ark some or the long-haired students whleh which were showing i\gn.-of damalf. forced the college to permit them to PoUce indeed kept a wary watch on the register. ' green, and a few minutes after receiving the motlier ship sbortly after noon and beigbt al the stonn. A Coast G u a r d t"'1> comPfll)': .. tugs atterupted to .. keep it h!,lfcopter evaQJMed two crewmen from ojf the beidi llul parted lines In the pouo-lhe shlp shortly alter k fetd!ed llP on the dlna: seas. beach aouth of the Olannel Islands As the .tug "me perilously clq5' to Ha,rbor entrance. The Jhlp hid been slfure · abOOt f'p.m., NeWport JUeguirds~ • mOored a hall,mlle offshore whe.re ll was notllied the Coast Guard and the Point awaiting . conV!raion into a floating Divide arrived on scene aboLK 4:30. With restaurant Since issuance of tbe injunctions, en-the comp~ they found the an1'ft'er, foreement of the drtu code has been A young sandlot baaeball team moved relaxed pending a llnal eoort declsloo "" onto the green belor. aunaet and began lo its conslitutionallty. play. The order terminating the Injunctions They were direcied to a less tender tllee SADDLEBACK, Pap II orea. lbe help ol the compall)' tugs, crewmen While flying over the drl.lUng vessel a got a lour-inch nylon hawaer aboard. Coast Guard helicopter O!>Otted the body The Divide held tl1e barge offshore unW of a man clad In Uln-dlvlnc gear. The company tugs could take her in tow and body was plucked [rom the sea and tum~ haul her to Long Beach. ed over to Ventura County authorities. lt The rescue and towing operations were (See WIND, Pqt t) .,_ on a Friday m.e.w. 1111' llod enouall·waler for M boun, I maqlD <If IJ houri. To keep tlUs margin, I k • --powerOOW. lomjp1- eledrical P"I"" of 17 ampena ,.. - for moo\. al the journey, r ...... Ibo average hourly Water =- five lo z.• ........ The --for coollng the -and -· aa well u for drinking. . -'l'llt-IUllPiJ·--- tial. ,,,.,.. boil ....... !JI =.JI ~ If•• , smw; blr11Bf'L 11' .................... ·11!!!!•1" Jllttt ---1••1ft--Qqla° WU fed throql U oP'll """1«ting tunnel Into the command cabin" the pilota c:ould operate theft. -Wlll> -reduced well beloW If amps pel' btms whenever pqnlNe Miaioo ~ ofli<Uls oU! Ille abjp'i. supply ol. DOD amp houn of power lbOulll be suffident but they admitted tt would leave llttJe marlin. Only euent1al ln- atrumentl were being operated. The an!J panel • upts .. ..... In the Llf. Otben were ructed on as needed. SHIP llOl'ATED -To keep ·the apacecraft from overl>eating, the -· llllip WU ... casiooally rotated.Ill ...... ., 1111 HT degree heal of the 11111 -DOI -ca one sii:le !or too long. -Lovell and liaise, tried from Ianc· hours al wmtllng with the _.... .... grave problems. were asleep in tbe eom..1 mane! lhip couches, Swigert, wbo -llor1 slept sis hours._loo_k "!"""' of -from MilsiOn .........., on lll<llll ti .,.._ oervlng the 00!1IUlllableL · • -All three wore flight <OVValll. 'l'llt •pacaults would ·tate too mueb. -and oxygen. ' ~unicaUons with the earth.'ftr'lt'. 111Crat.chy because one of the hlch:powered anteqnas wu taken oll the llae. · l:.oopbJg the moon .Is the 111111 Wl1' home, olllclals said, because APollo Joi WIS ·eQe lo 111 .tatpt aMbe Umo al the a~ and already wu on a oC!JOUl'le . that woold take II arooad tho -·· backside. .~ To atop albt al the'-Would 'ba~ r<qulred OOIJllderable acme -arid fuel .upeodltart, s o m e th J n _g tbi altron1t1t1 d1d n0t hav.e 'wttb Apailo 13'1 big; command lblp enslne Idled 1IJ eletj tric:al lalluro. I The °"" .......,,iaat nillable;ll' the ---....... the ... tbat was to baYO_lowered Lovtll and Halle. tO (lee Al'OILO, Pop I) or .. fe Weadler There11 be lesl wind (oow thal the election cmnpaip are over) and more sun cm Wednelday, trith temperatures llock up lo 15 along the coast and -7' Inland. ". INSmE TOltAT Orange COOll th_,_. got I a pair of "encor«1" tAU wt1k, oloiig urllh hDo °"""" c ...... premieres in Logv.na Beach and Costa MtJG. Set Enttrt.crimnent, Page 9. • -. .,..,.. ,... lt --.. ..... c--. • --.. ..... "''' .................. ,,....._ ' = : ....,....,....,,.,. --.. t .. • DAILY Pll01 5 Tuf1dly, Aprl\ 14, 1970 LitJ,_e~ing In r IP.ICE CENTER, Houston -{AP) -Wllh the words •Houlton. we've had a pro- blem," Apollo 13 commander Jamta A. Lovell Jt. alerted .. .,... cGilU' ;Utn dllt .. the pi&Med lunar land"18 mllalon on Apollo $pa~e C1·isis I was ln trot.able. Here we the hlghtights of the exchange betw.eJI, lhe ,...1spacecraft (SC) and the capsule communicator (CapCom) in Mission Control. SC: "Hey, we've had a pro- IR blern. We've had a main B bus ., interval (a main circuit had broken). C<P(:om: a.ter. Main B Interval. Oka11 stand by we 're SC: Yeah, we got a ma In bus. A u n de r volt now. too showing. CapCom: Main A under volt? , SC: tt•s rea::llng about 2S~. Main B ls readifla zip (zero) right now. 1 CapCom: Standby one1\ Jim (astronaut Lovell). CapCcm: 13, Houston, we'd Ulre you to attempt to ttton· nect fuel cell I to Main A 1'nd fuel cell 3 to titain B. Verify that quad delta iJ open. reach. Jack, both In pitch and roll, so I'm 1uspecUng thnt maybe it's whatever It Is that's spinning bAck there. I had to use. direct in order to !Jtabllize rt, and u JOOn as I do we're going to pick up rate alam. Can you pick up any jets firing! • CapCom: St.and by. Whitt direction are your rates \n: Jack? (astronaut John Swigert Jr.) SC: ll's negative pllch and ne.ll'allve roll . U,I Ttll•Mol9 kind of clve ll~ "an okay lo rtlnstall the probe and drogue. Or if n~ssary to use the LJ'll (lunar modu~) consumables. CapCom : Roger. SC: 1\m transrnllllog. I don't ha~ any current now. liey, it'1 ~rr. It'• off. They :J they killed. the bua complete!YI now. It'1 dead. ' PAO (public affairs officer): . long proctdurc: fred, . We figurt v.·e'IJ aet abOut 15 mlnutes worth of power left In the command module. So we wa.ut you to .st.art gttUng over ln the LM and geltlng some power on that. And are you r.eady t.n copy your procedure? SC: Okoy. , looking at IL , ~ SC: Okay, right now , 1' Houston, the voltage is looking SC: Okay, llouston, I'm showing, J tried to re1tt and fllfl cell 1 and 3 are both showing gray !lags. But they are both showing zip 011 the nows. CapCom: We copy. CapCon1 : Roger. 13, Rous. ton. We n e e d to get some more lnstrwnenLation u p . We'd like you kl put inverter one on both AC buses. Over. SC: Okay , Okay, you ~ot In- verter one on both AC buses, and Jack (ct1p1ule com- municator Jack Lous1na) one or the items we turned off was the, all the fuel cell pumps. Okay, and you mli,ht let us know when the fuel cell twn needs ill pump bact we oui;ht to·tate cart of lhat1 Jack. COMING HOME EARLY AFTER ROCKET MALFUNCTION Astron1ut1 (from left) Lovell, Swigert, Haiae Apo llo Control, Houston, con. tlnuing lo trouble shoot \\'ith Apollo 13 crew. closely watching oxycen quantitirs and pressures Jn the command module. JsolaUng tbe search tank leavea oxygen for enlry if thls should beeome necessary. Also. if necessary, the 13 crew could open a tunnel and use oxygen from the lunar module. PAO: Thia la Apollo Control at 67 hours 46 minutes gro.und elapsed time ... \Ve have an apparent serious oxygen leai in the cryogenic oxygen in the ser•ice nu>clule . . . In this scheme of J!Oing across to the lunar module, st.ill connected wUh the open tunne1, the lunar module would serve as a sort of lifeboat for the crew of Apollo 13. Sometime tater in the mission it Is expected that they woi.tld retum to the prerclurn trajectory, \Vhich they left yesterday in the mid• course burn number 2 •. , Thls Is Apollo Control. \Ve ha\'G confirmation no\\" that two of the Apollo 13 crewmen are ln· deed in the lunar module. <IOOll And .... luod a l'RltY • farge bang associated with the ·· cauUim aod warning there. And Jf I recall, Malo B was ... the ooe that bad an amp apike ~ cm ti ance before. eapc.m:-Ro1er , Fred .. (~Fent!lliJe), • SC : Okay, Houston, art you .still rtadJng 13? CapCom: That's af. flrmative. We're reading you. We're st!ll tcyi.ng kt come up with .:ime good ideu here lof )'OU. - SC : Som<lhing ~giving us I . ....... ... ,. . . . - CapC01n: Roger. 0 k a y • Fred. we want fuel cell 2 pumps to AC one please. SC: Fuel cell 2 to AC one r:oger. Okay, ifs on AC one. CapCom: Okay, J3, we 've UPI T•lti>M\9 ~T·HAeP.liHID -·Er, ~ allows!).,.,, Ai>ollo 13'1 astronauts iiiill:I ' ·· lnJ mission after explosion @!!I lh _ _ ii'cl ship 205,000 miles from earth. Power now is being sl(pplied from the lunar lander, which must be jettisoned before splashdown. -- Apollo· M~sion Briefs Fnm Wire Servl<es • Nell: Timing Good SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) Neil A. Anmtrong, the first man on the moo1.1, and Alan L. Bean, the latest man on the moon, conceded today the elec-- trical failure on Apollo 13 "happened at a very good time. if It had to happen." "'lbeir C-Onsensus is that It gives t1*e ~ astronauts time to research the pro--. blem and do something about It as op-J>05ed to another part of the mission when they wouldn 't have the tlmt avalb1ble to them," said a NASA of!lcial who talked to Arrnstiong and Bean. Armstrong was a member llf the Only olhtr manned flight aborted early. 'Ibat . Was Gt:rRlnl l!I, brought 'back because the spacecraft began spinning out of control I~ Mareh, 1966. . ' e Water No Problnt .SPACE CENTER .. Houston (UPI) - Water is a ·minor problem for the Apollo 13 ere", which had ooly a 44-bour supply . DAllY PILOT Mewpett le.ti .... _ .... c .... Mne H1llri .... e111 .. _. ,. ...... w.u.,, s .. Ciewl•Jlf't Rolt11t N, We14 "'"""'' ..... Pvblllllet' J1c• l . Cwt! • ., Yk• Pt1J!M<tl -Gclwftl ~ 1"•"'•' ••• ~1 fi'dll ... llli:""'' A. Mw'''°''' 1o1~1rot e.11 ... lic~••4 P'. Nt ll Slvtll Ot-(wntr Editor t .. lt Mt•I: 1JI WUI 8t1 '""' H-l ••>1(11: 2'11 WU! l1llle1 a9Vk¥9"' l•f'l"'I llN<JI: tn '••ul A~1n..e tl""11,.1.,, '""'' 11'11 St1CJI &"'1ievt,_ ~ (ltll'llfl"': alS HW1JI El c.m ... llNI In the lunar module fuel cells with 77 hours remaining in the mission, a NASA spokesman said. The crew still has a 48-hour supply or water in lb survival kits in the command service module. the spokesman said. This totals to 92 hours of waler for drinking and food preparaUon if the flight can be brought down Friday as planned. Food Is tio problem, the spokesman said, except that the crew may change its menu to use food which does not require water in preparation. 0 Re•cue Delp Ottered LONDON -The United States got of. fers of help today for any rescue opera- tion for Apollo 13 If the spacecraft comes down in the Atlantic. Britain said its Royal Navy ships would be placed at the disposal of any rescue operation if asked to do so by ·the United States. But a Defense M i n I a t r y spokesman in London said It blld received no request. In Paris. President Georges Pompidou ordettd the French fleet on a state of alert to be ready for any recgvery. Word of this was relayed to the U.S. Embassy in Paris. Bra~il's navy and air force were alerted for a possible rescue operation off the coast of Brazil. There was a posslbUllf Apollo 13 would come down In the South AllanUc but U.S. space officials were hoping for a splashdown Jn the Pacific as originally planlle\l. e Tau Gives Report 1.iOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet news agency Ta.$1 carried Its: fir1t report on the Apollo 13 trou bles in a brief, factu;il dispatch from New York. Tass saJd the "three astronauts are In grave danger'' bul "fiJght officials are takJng all measures to msure their safe return to earth." Until the electrical breakdown. the Apollo flight had rttelvtd littl'! attention In the Soviet media , althou,Rh full reports had been expected when the moon lan- dlng wa~ carried out. 0 Stand1t11 In Germnn11 RAMSTEIN ATR BASE. Germany (UPI) -U.S. re1'Cue aircraft under com- malld 01 Ramateln Alr Base are standing by to help U the Apollo 13 spacecraft lands In the Atl1nllc, 11 spokesman for lht ba.se said today. Jfe 11.ld the C130P HerNles pl1ne1 belong to the 40th Aerospace Re.tet1e and RtCO\'ery Wing, Apollo Support Forces. They are rtady to r-espond to any direc- tlona from the Oep1rtment of Defense or the National Aeronautic• and Spact Admlnlslnllon !NASA ). Classroom Nudes Case Decision Slow at College LONG BEACH (AP) -A decision has been postponed in a faculty discipline case in\·olving two male teachers who us- etl a naked woman and a naked man and £lag movies in a sociology class. Donald H. Sin1onsen. acting president of Long Beach State College. said r.·lon- day a nev.· report or a ne"' hearing con1- mittee would be required. Slmonsrn sa id a three-man facultv commillee hearing the case had not sub- miUctl a "proper report .'' lit said specific charges weren't dealt with. The eommitlee reco1nmended charges be dropped against the two teachers. Don Robertson and t<.tnrion S\cele. The t~achers said they \1·ere tryhig lo prove in class that nake dness and pornography were ha rmless. A decision in the casr may be poslpon· ed until the end of the academic year in June, sources said. Vet Exemptio11 Deadline Nears Deadline for accepting claims for homeowner and ..,·eteran exemptions is 5 p.m. \Vednesday County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw warntd tcxl:iv. Hinshaw emphasized 1hat the law does not provide for late filings. The hmneowners' division ls located at 700 \V. Civic Center Drive. Rol'.lm A I~. Santa Ana, telephone 834-3821. The veterans division is at the ssme address but In room B-292, telephone 834-2760. l{omeov.·ners' c:ccmption for the cur- rC'nl year is $750 off the a!tscssed va\ua- t:oi -:-bout $75 on a home with a market value of !20,000. The VfteranJ' exemption is $1 ,000. Frona Poae I WIND. •• had not been Identified late loday. --In o~er sea mishaps the Coast Guard res:-ued five p!rsons from two fishing botits "'hich htid dragged anchor ;ind C'r:ished Into each oth~r orr Santa ~1onlca l!ay: rcrcued a 27·foot auxiliary sailboat v.•hich was out of fuel and unable lo m11ke :iail in Long Beach Harbor. and rto:cut'd a I JO.foot fishing b11rge which dragg ed anchor oll the east end of Long Beach H11rbor. f got lols anct lots of people \vorking on this, we'll gel you some dope as soon as we have It. and you'll be. the first one ID know. SC: Oh, thank you. Okay, Jack. and the weird con- figuration we're sitting in now, is we have the hatch installed, \Ve still .have the probe and dro~uc irWde the command module . and we're going to slay in lhis situation until you CapCom: We have a pro- cedure for j:l'etllng po\\·er from the L~1. "'e'd like you to copy d0\\'11. SC t Okay. Stand by, Jaek. IL sounds like li!:ood news. Okay, Jack. About how Ion~ is it? CapCom: It's not a very Fron• Page J APOLLO ... the lunar surfa~. The spacemen trig- gered the engine 30 seconds early today lQ adjust the course slightly to a palh that would take them back to earth Friday night if they made no additi onal maneuve r. The second fir ing at 9:40 tonight was planned to increase the speed enough for a land ing )0 hours earlier. Asked at a brleling i! there had been any dan1 age to the heat shield. w h I c h must protect the astronauts from the tremendous heat of re-enlry. He said there wali a slight possibility of such damage but that there "'as no evidence or any. The decision to try for a Friday landing in the Paclllc meanl lhat Mission Control had decided not to adopt a "super!ast" return plan. Under this. the engine firi ng tonl1ht would have been lenp.1hened to ."iVe the ship a heavier push home. But thts would have consumed more pnwer. President .Ni xon keDt In touch with r4evelopmenf.I through ohone contact with NASA Adminlstrqtor Thomas 0. Paine in ~iisslon Coptrol. Neither the 'United States nor Russia has a soace rPscue capabllitv. So the astronauts will have to rlepend on their skill and that of hundreds of e~perls on the ground to get home. Jane Fonda Vo~1s To Continue Fast DENVER (l!PJ) -Actress Jane Fonda anlf more than a dozen other young men and v:on1en shru'?ied off chillv tem- p:!rature and huddled under sleeping bags ?nd blankets today In their '·fast for pc3ce." The niovie star said she would remain at lniled Nat ions Square in downtown ncnver unti l the 36-hour fast to protest t h~ Vietn am \\lar was com pleted at mid- ni .. ht tonight. ~fembers of the ~1ounlain States Viet· nam Moratorium Committee said it '"as r!ifficult to determine how many others l'><1r\ joined the fast since many were alternating in six-hour shirts. Miss Fonda. easily the center of at. t~ntion on the busy street rorner, pledged to drink only waler, tea or coffee during the fast. She spent part of Monday carrying a ~1nal\ paper bucket and asking passersby lor "money for peace." She ·was able to quickly fill the bucket with money. From Page l SADDLEBACK H·AlR ISSUE • • • "'as a \'ictory for the college. but It ls not y!'I known what the judges' \Vrillen opi- nion will bring. On the possibility that the order c o u I d have resulted from a technical flaw. Or. Fred Bremer. colleJ{e president. said he would recomme.nd •con- tlnulng the "wait and see'' policy. ltESCINDED ORDER Earller In the day. Bremer had rescinded temporary suspemlons nrderert for hvo halt'cocle violators by !ht. Dean or !='tudenfs after ronfe.rrlng wi\h other jl;'udents "'ho poin'erl out the oosslbilitv that th~ written opinion miJ{hl change the pich1re. Rrerr.er said he felt the ooint was valid and would prefer to wait for the opinion. Sludent body president John Bothwell noted that some 200 mJJe students are af- rected by the hair rulif1g and "need to know." He emphasized that during the two ' months the hair rules have not bef:n en- f11rC'!d, no incidents have occurred and "It h11s been established that hair 11 oot att influencing factor.'' · Students reiterated their ar1Umenl 'I t11at, as adull1, they should have lhe rhiht to make their awn decisions rtgardlne; dre..1, e1peclally since many are over 21 and some are veterans. They strtsud. on ce more the fact that Saddleback is the n'lly junior college with a dress code and that 11n increasing number of high schools .ore dropping dress codes . LA UGHING STOCK •·saddleback Is a laughing stock," said one. "Jl's a fine school academically and l will always defend ii, but it's bl"Come a laughin;:: stock because of this ridiculous dress code." A stuclent clad in blue jeans. purplP. undershirt and stovepipe hat stood up. "I am not trying to be a clown," t:e sald .. "I am trying to show you how ridiculous a dress code can be. For your lnfonnaHon this outfit I am wearing is in lull com- pliance with the exisUng dress code." A member of lhe football team argued, '·The athletes have shown ln the past two months that It is possible to maintain strict di scipline even without enforcing a dress · code.'' Collins reiterated his view that it is all a matter of maintaining "decorum in the classroom to produce that degree or formality essential to th:! process of education." Al the end of the four-hour meetlng he commen ted that the students pres-:nt had displayed grea t "decorum". DOLLARS AND CE1'"TS Trustee Hans Vogel brought the arguments do"·n to dollars and cents. Rem inding the students that residents of the district h11d passed a $9 1 ~ million bond Issue at a time when bond issues Wert being defeated In many other areas, he said, "Our bond issue ·"'as passed by 73 percent. and In Lei.sure \Vvrld it was 90 percent. 'nlat ls why we are able \0 have the finest facilities and an excellent faculty. "But fr those people out there decide they don't like wh at's going on here, you're out or luck. The moment we relas: the dress code. I guarantee vou tha!'s the end of your money -and already we have to start thinking about a second campus." Supporting hi s contention that the present board and its policies are in tune v.•ith the community, Vogel noted tha t trustee Patrick Backus v.•as re-elected in a race against four opponents and defeated his nearest contestant, an American Civil Liberties attorney, by two to one. DEFEAT ACLU ''An~·one could defeat an ACLU at- torney in Orange County.'' said Both\\'elL '·That's just the point." \7ogel replied. 1o1·m talking about the temper of the electorate in Orange Countv and l think •we understand and reflect it. rm not saying it's right or v.•rong . You might say in a way that you students are victims of it. But that's the wav it is and you have to understand that the only way people have lo express their dissatisfaction wllh the v.·ay schools are run i-by voting down bond issues -then there wO".i't be any' school. You really hav~ to decide v.•hich is more important. your hair or a first class educalio1,1.'' 1 A woman "'ho said she had five sons "all wlth long hair and I dor.'t like il.'1 said the whole thing seemed like "a pret- ty small issue for such a big board lo be fooling with." LOUD APPLAUSE An elderly lady \\'ho rose to identify hers zlf as "one or those people from Leisure \\'orld " "'as greeted "'ilh loud ap- plause by the students. "I am a liberal .'' she said. "! guess t might be a radical at Leisure World. At least I'm in the Democratic Club. But I mu~t tell you that while I would go on \'Oling for your bc.iids any\1'ay. I believe man;· people out there would not." Complimenting the students on their behavior and intelligence, she added "I just can't understand why you don 't ~ant to groom yourselvt.s so you look as in- telligent as you really are.· It wasn'l exactly "'hat the stude.1ts wanted to hear. but they gave her another round of ilpplause. The carpet they both chose? Bigelow's · Barcelona BarCf'lona combines \!'!~ casual. ll·fnd·toss<'d shag look of loday \~~ an elC'gant Spanish gr!Jle pflUrrn. The long, slcndrr yarns h!!.\'P a sort. shlmn1ery ~lov.• ... the dramatic multi· colors are i\>lcd1ttrrancn.n-lnspirro. Use Bar· ctlon11. ln a Spanl~h or l\led!trrranran setting or \Vlth 11 ltra-modcrn or mixed contemporary ... !or ~ truly 11tunning rrrcct. And because the fi bers nylon, Ba~Jona ·s ,,0 f'asy to care tor. Soll doesn't $1 095 5how , .. and pik-stays tT\Sp and !.nrlngy. A ClnP buy for an~'-~· 't4· on<' "'ho \\'llnts i.;reAI slyli~ · · . a •'oOm ful of luxury at 1nc11111~ 1o11111i. 1 a dCl\\·n·~o-earth price. ' • • 1~,;::~:"""' 6 Sunny Mediterranean Shades ALDEN'S CARPETS-DRAPERIES I • Mrditerr•nean Moss Antique Amber • Sp1nl1h Poppy Spanish Leather • Granada Gold At1vlo Avoc1do • appro,.·cd Bigclo\v nylon pile e ll YEARS 5[RVINW THE ORAN~E COAST e 1663 Plccentfa-Costa Mesa Phone 646-4138 -----------------------------------------------------------l I 1 i • ' .::;.,, "·"·"· "'·"··="· ·"'-"""'· =-----.. ·J··----;;. ..... __ ......... ..~ "~ ~ --... ·~""'~p,"l~"'Tn~~~-"""'~r.l'Jr~~l'!l!':!'l~~~~~~~~~~ • Duntingt~n Beae~· voi:. 63, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE ctjuNTY, CAtlFORNIA ' !TUESDAY,-APRI~. 1 ~ •• 1970" ; 0 0 ea s .ac Piek 4 of 18 Turnout Heavy In Huntington rn an election regarded as crucial to the city's future, Huntington Beach residents went to the polls in com· parattvely heavy numbers this morning. 'Ibe voters were picking four can- didates (a majority of the city council) Valley Voting Proves Light In First Hours A late morning check or five precincts In Fountain Valley showed voting light , as expected, in the city council election. Only 173 of 10,195 had cast their ballots in five poUing places at Harper Sdlool. McDowell School, the central fire station, city ball and a residence at 16057 Shasta St. Seftll ttsldenU .,. oeeking three city VALLEY VOTE TALLY PHONE: "2-2424 couocil seats in today's election. 'Ibey are: Incumbent Mayor Edward Just, in- cumbent Councilman George Scott, and challengers Jim Bartz, Mrs. Hazel Cour- reges, Albert Hollinden, John Mangano and Burton Taubman. A light campaign and apparent Jack of controversial issues has Jed m o s t observers to expect a light voter turnout, perhap.s not exceeding 25 percent. Innammatory charges and a heavy series of candidates' nights have not been evident this time as they wel'il during last September's recall election when 4,745 residents, or 48.1 percent of t h e registered voters, cast their ballots. 11le polls in 18 precincU are open today until 8 p.m. Results of the election will be tallied in city hall, lO'lOO Slater Ave., and may be obtained by phoning 962-2424. A tolal of 72 precinct workers are man· ninl the polls in Fountain Valley. Crypt Opened By Court Order; Wife 's Body OK .Authorities at Westminster Memorial Park have identified the body of a woman removed from a crypt there Monday as Mrs. Pearl 0. McGinnis, who died August, 1961. Tbe crypt was opened by court order Monday because Ronald T. McGinnis, husband of the dead woman, is suing the park for $50,000, claiming it Jost track of her body. Ofllcials representing Ule Park said to- day that finding the body proved their contention that it was right where they .said it was, "Crypt E-S." Attorney Dudley Gray, representing '.tifcGiJll'liS, said the suit would continue because, "We still contend the park lost track of the body. 1t took a court order for Mr. McGinnis to find his wife's body." Gray Identified the woman by a gold ch'aln and a rin1 which she wore when buried. A pathologist and a dentist were present for further ldentilicaUoo, but were not needed aft.er Gray said be was, "95 percent sure" it was Mrs. McGinnis. The body was returned lo the crypt later Monday. 'I11t suit started about two years ago when Mr. McGinnis, who was ordered not to be present at Monday's crypt opening, was told different locations for the crypt by dilferent park per'30f'lflel. Attorneys in the case will return to Orange County Superior Court May 4 to continue teaal action. from a field of 18 for seats on the city council. ~parts ol the city, the vote was being combined with the elementary school district's special election for a 40- cent tax override. A spot check of the 74 precincts in various parts of the city this morning fOund ballot inspecton busy. At 11 a.m. it appeared that about nine percent of the total electorate of 41,291 had cast ballots. In the southeast of the dty, at LeBard HUNTINGTON VOTE TALLY PHONE : 536-6511 Elementary School, 77 to 500 registered voters had balloted by II o'clock. The booths at Huntington Beach High School, which serves downtown voters, were less busy; 51 of 422 had voted. Twenty-Bil voters out or a total of 590 went to tbe polls at the Ocean View School District's administrative office on Beach Boulevard in the nort.lw:entral area. The figure for Meadow View School in the northwest was 32 out of 605 and for Harbour View School in the extreme northwest the totals were 42 out of 494. Al UU. pace It .......i that predietions of a 22 percent turnout mijht be ]ow, particularly with tbe polls remaining open tmtil I p.m., an hout later than usual in .municipal elections. City clerk Paul Jones,.who made the 22 percent estimate Monday, was busy going from precinct to precinct this morning ironing out problems. He declin- ed to comment on the voting rate. The campaigning generally was free of controversy but the election ls considered vital since the voting pattern in many council decisions has been 4-3. This alignment was particularly ob- vious in votes on downtown redevelop- ment as called for in the Top or the Pier plan. Three votes that have been pushing downtown development are at stake - those of Mayor Jack Green, Al Coen and Dr. Henry Kaufman. Green and Coen are seeking re-election, but Kaufman is not running. Only one "go-slow" vote on downtown development is at issue -that of Ted Bartlett who is seeking re-election. The first resuhs are expected al about 9 p.m. and they will be posted on a big board at the main fire station at Main Street and Indianapolis Avenue. Fire Chief Ray Picard has invited can- didates and residents alike to follow the returns at the station. The city hall phone switchboard will also be well manned to answer vote tally requ ests. The number to call ls 536-6551. Ben efit to Aid Edison Athlete~ A three-hour program of entertainment to benefit Sam Fuga, will be ataged Sat· urday night at Edison High School. Fuga, an &lison football player, suf· fered a broken neck in a game last fall. The program, under the 4uspices of the Edison High School Booster Club, will be- gin at 7:30 p.m. Price or admission is $2.50 pe.r person. Master of .ceremonies for the evening will be Chuck Boyle, a coach at Cal State (Long Beach). The first part of the program will in· elude a performance by Jingles and his clowns, guitar music by Felipe Perez and Nancy Tedasco, a singlng duet by SoMle and June Budd and a specla1ty show by Lee Fugal. After intennisaton, the Grind Land singers will conduct·a one-hour program. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market staged a modejl eomeback late th& aflU· noon from the steep decline that Had char .. acteriied the session earlier. (See quota. lions. Pages 10.11). The average had been running beh ind for the entire session and was blf as much as 9.17 points al 11 :» a.m. • UPIT.._.... WHAT HAPPENED -Chart shows. how Apollo miles from earth. Power now is being supplied from 13's·astronauts aborted their moon landing mission the '.lunar lander, which ·must ·be jettisoned before · after explosion jolted their command •ship 205,000 splashdown: , 1 ., ~~~-'-~--"~~~~~~~.......;'--~~~-'-~~~- I , •• ,·f '•f'1' ~ ;; ·~-.;.. .. \- ' ' . Minnesota JDdge • -. ~ . ~ World Navies-.,--_ . . -' Nixon's Third Court Offer Help Choice to Be Blackmun? For Splashdown From WIJt Services ' e Rescue Help Ottered WASHINGTON (AP) -An Informed Senate source said today that President Nixon will nominate Judge Harry A. Blackmun of Minnesota for the Supreme Court. This was the word reportedly passed to key se1ators. An aAnOuncement from the OV School Plans Show Changes For Kinderg arten Plans for anOt.her •Ocean Vlew school have been approved by the district's board of trustees. But it's the kindergarten that has schoolmen excited. Aided by the possibility or a new educa· lion bill (AB 496) which would remove exiSting fonnulas for the allocation of state aid according to square footage. architects Anthony and Langford have come up with a design which would radically depart from n o r m a I kin- dergarten plans. The kindergarten at' lhe scflool, to be built between Slater and W a r n e r Avenues, Golden West and Edwards Streets in 1971, will rely heavily on in- dividualized learning. Specific proposals include the follow- ing : -A large group area 1arge enough to seal 60 children on the floo r for music and other acUvities. -'L'hree small· activity centers for the Instruction of arithmeUc, r e a d i n g , science and social studies. -A toy block playing area. -A curved interior wall with holes for the children to climb around in. -~ aod crafta SJ>l!ce, complete with ea5'ls aQd flat work surfaces for 28 dli.ldren. -A cooking and playhoule area'whert youngsters cOuld be introdll<'ed to the culinary l'::t."nder adult guldantt. • · -An ation room from which visitors and' educators cou1d watch· U)e activities.~' '•,;' , . The -.er sd>o01 \J part al I lk!lool design study by the state Department or Education to detenuine how state ald alloca~ons would be released on the basis or design for a specific purpose 'nther than square footage. White House was expected shortly. Blackmun, a • close friend of Chief JUstice Warren E. Burger, has been a member of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis since 1959. He was ao- pointed by fonner President Dwight o: Eisenho\\o-er Before word ttiat Blackmun was Nix- on's choice for the court post for which two Southern jud~es were rejected, key Republican senstors were briefed by Deputy Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst in a Capitol hideaway. Afterwanf·GOP Leader 'Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania said that possible nominees had been discussed and that he expected announcement of the President's aomina· li on "in the very near future.'' , Scott was asked lf he thou g h t Blnckmun's chances had been hurt by former Vice President ' Hubert ·H • ' Humphrey's statement Moodily tbat Blackmun is the kinCI of man •he would like to see on the court. "I don 't think Humphrey's en- dorsement hurts anybody," Scott replied.' Scott said the meeting with Kleindienst was the type of consultation he had urged on the administratlor.. after the Senate's rejectioR by a fil-45 vote last Wednesday or Ni."ton's nomination of Judge G. Har· rold Carswell of Florida. Carswell was nominated after the Senate had turned down by a 55-45 vote • last November Nixon's fitst ·choice for the court post, Judge Clement F. Haynsworth, Jr., of South Carolina. School Trustees Reschedttle Meet LONOON -The United States got of. fers of help today for any rescue opera- tion for Apollo 13 U the spacecraft comes down in the Atlantic. Britain said Its Royal Navy shii)s would be placed at the disposal of any rescue operation if asked tc ,do '!IO by the Urilted Slates. But a Defense Ml n Is t r·y spokesman In London said It had recei~ecl no request. In Paris, President Geor1es Pompldou ordered the French fleet on a state of alert to be rea~y fQr any recovery. Word .• of this was relayed to the U.S. Embassy in Paris. · Brazil's navy and air force were alerted for a possible rescue OP,eration off the coaSt of Brazll. · · ' · • • There was a possibility Apollo 13 would come down tn the South Atlantic but U.S. space officiala were hoping for a splashdown In the Pacific as originally planned. e Nell: Tlml119 Good SPACE CENTER, Houston (UP()• - Neil-A. Arinstrong, the first man on the moan, and Alan L. Bean, the latest m4n on the moon, cooceded today the elec- trical failure on APollo 13 "happened at a ""'l' good Ume ll It had to happen." ."1beir consensus ls that· it gives the astron&\lts tlme to research the Pf'Ooo blem and do sornethin1 about it .u ap- posed to another part of the mission when they wou1dn't have the time available to them," said a NASA officlal who talll:ed to Armslrong and Bean. Armstrong was a member (If the only other manned flight aborted early •. That was Gemini· 8, brought back because the spacecraft'began splrullog out of cOntrol ·lnJMarch, 1966. · A Huntington Beach Union High School Districttrusteesmeetiogorlginal l y · e Watu No Prel.tle-M scheduled tonight has1been reset f<r 7:30 p.m. Thursday. SPACE CENTEI\. Houston (UPI) - Trustees will consider a student pro. Water is a IJlinor ptobletn for the Apollo posal to alter dress ·standards now In 1S crew, whJch had 'Only a "44-hour supply force at all six district schools. io the ~ module fuet cells with 71 • The new me.ting will be htld al diolri<t 1l"ln;s mnainlg•,jn;the ml8lon a ·NM&· • • headquarfer$. lto21 l7tb St. , ~ 11~. · . ~ • t • • • The cmr slllJ, bu .1 .~ · '1ljllil)'. al . · ·-..teiiJl)ls.JOl'Tival'ldls Iii the COlmDand , Leaion Post to Meet · lfl'Vlce module, iiie !Pbtesinan .ui..ThlS , " iotals to· ill boon "' water'.jor drinking The Hu~Lington• Beach PCl,'t No. 133 at and food preparaUon ll the ·night, can be the American Legion will hold its annual · brought .down Friday u plann~ nomlnaUon 'of ofllcers at 8 p.m. ThuriJday Food 11 no problem, the spo)l:eaman at the Legion Hall. (See BRID'S, P• I) • T...,..'li Bui . . .. ~· -~ ·N.r.· Sto+'"i TEN CENTS Space }llast . ' ' Forces Halt .. Of Landing SPACE CENTER, Houmn (AP) ApojJO. !l's artronauts bottled today to bring 1heir crippled craft back to earth from a quart~ mtlllon miles aw.,-at Mission Control decided they wauld abn f0< a Ftiday splashdown In the Pfcifl<:. James A. Lovell Jr., Jl'red W. Ha1l8 Jr. llld John L. Swigert Jr. took llMll ll:uta to conserve tbeJr precloul couwnablel of. water, OZ)'lea and power u thtj' raced farther from earth toward a moon which had been their luding t.rpt untll • violent eruption of a pn!9IW'ized fuel tank Monday nii hl. 'ntey were to loop around the moon tonJght and two hours later, at t:fO p.m. PST, were· to fire their lw1ar lander engine to sped them back toWa rd earth and a splashdown in the P&clflc north of New Zealand at 9:13 a.m. PST Friday. Asked whether the three spacemen, W'incipals In the most dangerous drama in American space hiftory, would make it home aafely, fllghl controu.r Glynn Lim· ney, answered, "Yes, barely." · ''We've got the situation' atab~," he !&.id. ''The most crtUcal thing, now is to keep It slat.qJzed the rest of the flight." . M Lovell, ,Haile and Swigert new awa1 fr<1111 ·bqme, 1*e waa the piclUio af1!iarc1 1heir opaceshlp: .:_'Iha· cOmmaiid' Dip, ii!"'*'""' .. 111111 ,,,,.wlaus rupbn, WU completely """' down eleetrlc:llly. einergellC)' bat- leriea llld OSJll "' "'PPlJa """' .Vallablo to tlll:e the' lblp, UM C11J.y veblCle that can any the men home/ through the a~ 1D01phere. · ' ·-The lunar module which became·the astronauts• lifeboat, was p r o v l 'd i n 1 a1tical power, oxygen, water and other life support. But its aupplies ...,. drop- ping and the astronauts were opttaun; on mUµmwn requlrement&. -Officials were concerned mainly witti the water supply. With 72 bourt '° go, based on a Friday landing, they had enough water for 84 houn, a margin of 12 hours. To keep this margin, t b e astronauts must power down to Minimum electriCal power of 17 amperes per hour for most of the journey, reducing the average hourly water con.mmptlon froll'i five to 2.88 pounds. The w.ater.11 usedJor cooling the electronics and cabin ozya:en aa well as for drinking. -The oxygen .supply was more aubstan-n· tiil. They bad enough for lZl hours, a ~ margin of SO hours, barring unforeseen events. The astronauts moved around as Utile as possible to reduce their con. sumptibn. Oxygen wu fed throu1h an open connecting tunnel into the cogunand cabin so the pilots could operate ~. -With power reduCed 'Welt below 17 ainpa per hOUfS whenever pouible Misaion Control oJlicllli said the llblp's supply of 500 amp houri of power should be sufficient but they 1dmittod n would ,,. leave· lltUe margin. Only e.ssentlal In-., .• stnuneota: were be1nt operated. 'Iba only .1 J'lnd. lights on were In the. LM. (See Al'OUO, Pip I ) • Wear.er ' There'll ~ 1 ... wind (-that the e1eetion campatcns are over) and more sun on Wednesday, wllb temperatures back up to as aJona tbe coast llld lllojf ?V, Jiilan!I. ~SmE TOD,\Y Oranoe Coast thmtergoers alt c pc,ir of "mcores" Chil w•ek, alo11g "1ith two Orang< "'""'!JI premifl'e1 in Laguna 8ttJCh and Coato MeJG. Set Enttrtainm1nt. 1 Paae '9. \" -· ' ._ .. ' , " ''"' • e;......., .... ,. . j CfllllMS ti ·~ t C,,......_ . tt ·Olltll ~ • :) """Ill·•-• ' ..... Iii I I 9 ,._, ~ , .. ,, !~ t• ........... 1~ -I I. 'j Be Sure to Vote TOday; Polls Open · Till 8 ,, ·r '• .~ I • ' I DAii.~ PR.OT H ' .. • lo : • 9Y.s Set .. F or. 1 ,BalJ .. S~a.son , The umpre_•r cry d "P.lay ball!" will do& .,...,. HunUogtpa lleach and Foon- llln Vllllcy when mOr. than 2,000 boys irom l to 12 st.art lhil 5WM1er's Llttle 1.e.,... b_Qebllll "¥son. · 'Jhl lfta•s tiYe Little Ltlgue organiza. tloim lllOY'I ia&o ac:t1on OYff the next Ufte -with two ]-' otartlni play lhla S.LurU)'. . ' A tOtol ol 1.127 boys ploy LltUe Lague bait in the two cities,· With the numbers ~ ;rowtns each year. . ' LitUe l:eague pro~s cDvislons for majors, the older b0y1 who play in 1il~ star Cpmpetitiop. .. a\,..tbe·tnd or the year: mlnon, alJalljJy YllUDltr boya, and ·farm teanu. ¥°""•· boll ·pl>y"'_ e11Lerln1 their first competition.. LeQ>e-!>y•ltague bert's bow they line up for Oill:awnmer's teaton of play. 1 o.e.. View Utile Lupe, with 5M boys playing this year, is entering its 10th year of action, oldest league in the area. Buck Williams is league presidm· for 1970. Its boundartes 1-ally cover tile area betwmt"Magftolia and ·Alg(iriquin streets, -~-~et and Ta I.be r t Avenues, wft!i,~.llt aome 'Parts of HWllblgtan 'lle.cli. Leap teama play on four fields owned by ~·leque on the · corMr of Hell Avenue Ille! Graham Street. A LoLal of 31 leaml iii!! Compete !hta ,..,. with ·hfo major ~ ,Lwo mjnor \flvlaloos and two fatn) JllYis!OOJ; • ' ' Gamet_att ~IY<lL•l e· p.in., MondaY. throulfl':P:r1dlt ,'814 :t."o.m., Saturllly, Openlhg "dlj la Stiturjlly with oeremonlel. It~. . . f uol UWe LtNM la only a year Y"Wlltf .IJWI Ocffn-Vlew, '!Ith offl$fs upecji111 !196 boys Lo Pill' ball lhla 1\1'"' mer. 'Robert Hovey Ii· p..e.ic1en1 ol the learue. . RotibWoiod generally Olvera the area between · BuCb ~Iivanl and Bolsa Chica Road, and Emn,er and · Bot.a avenues. It lncluclea part> of Huntington Harl>our. . - 'lbe lea«Ue ~ three dlamondJ OQ the Marina h{I aite at Edin1er Avenue and Gratwo str..,( ~ one diamond at Marina llllb School. -· :IO teams will play tbla aeason lrith a divt!ion ea~ 4a seniors. ( cott· 1eague) and majors and two minor dlvt.nons. , · _ G8111ef start at 5,30 P·'l'·· Monday throulh Pridaf and I a.lf!., Saturday. Openinl dai la llaturday with cemnonl" starting at I 1.m. Foalala · Vllley LILtle ........ b ~·· ~'-·")th""' "'" year~ ;a ~. 10 pla~· . · prelident for 19'/0 la Rlcbard . . The loogue lak'" lri b'!Y•. nnn aD part.I of the dty of FOUIJLain Valley except a !mall area bet'ween Brookhurst Street and Harbor Boulevard, north ol Warner AvtDUt. NY Newspaper Guild Slows Slrike Plans NEWYORK (UPI) -The New York Nenpaper Guild decided early today to postpone lndeftnitely its plans to strike the New YIX'i Post. Acting on an earlier 1trlke vote by member• ol the Post, the guild had scheduled 1 walkout for 6 a.m. EST to. day. But after separate talks by mediators wl.t.h the newspaper's manage--, ment and the union Monday night and· early Loday, the gqjld deferred Ila plll1!, which could. h~ve"led m,a shutdo,Jn of New York'.1. four 1111Jcr -.papers, Knenian in:YR Talk : ' Fountain Valley league currently uses No1diamondl lo. the Green Valley tract oo Slater Avenue, east of Ward Street and is building a third field next to the ci· ty corporation yards on Ward Street. The 1ague operates with 44 teams in a ma· jor,-two mJoor and two farm divisions. Qame time ii 5 p.m., Monday throu~h Friday; ·10 a.m., Saturday, and 12:30 p.m .. SUnday. ·Special ceremonies will start 'league play at 10:30 a.m., April 25, on the Green Valley diamond. Hu.nUngtoa Valley Lltde League enters ttJ third season of play with 315 boys signed up for action. John Cwieka is p<WdonL ol tile league. Loque boundart .. Ile between Adamo ·.am1 · Garfield avthues, and B e a c h · l!ollletar:d and: tile 5anla Ana River In · · Hllntlng10rf Beach: Twenty.four teams· Will play. UU. lllmm"' In major, minor and farm dJvtsions. Gamea are played on four diamonds at Bushard School, 19899 Education Lane, Huntlnglon Beach. TeSma play at 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, and t a.m., Safw'day. Opening day cercn<nleJ 1tart at 10:30 a.m., April 25.· -LIUle League la al!o entering Ila 3rd bueball .....,.. wUh 2S2 boys ready for action. llc!!> Hernpbill guldes that aclion u 1..,.,. president , Sea view boundaries stretch between Magnolla Street and the Santa Ana River, and Adams /tvenue and the ocean. ·nie Jeague :has three diamonds at Leban! SCl!oof, :1045] Cralmer Lane, Hun· tington Beach. Eighteen teams will line tip' fer &urnmer play 1n a major and two minor ditiltor\s. ·cames start at 5:!> p.m., Monday throUgh Friday, and 10 a.m., Saturday. Spedal cerembnies will start the season at I a.m., May 1 Willi all the tittle league teams in ac- tion this summer, if one of the young1ters pleads, "take me out to the ball game," thwe lhould be one nearby. Draft Will Take 15,000 for Ma y WASHINGTON (AP) -The Selective Service System will drart 15,000 men for the ~nhy in May, the Pentagon an- nOunce;d today. ' The May draft Is a drop of 4.,000 men from each ol 'tbe thtee previous months' mmi~er riddelta. 'Lowest · draft call this year was 12,500 in January. Pentagon olflclals said there was l'K' particular signlfiCff1Ct to the drop in the May manpower quota. "ThJs request supports currently ap- prov~ strength levelJ and will -assure a timely flow of replacements completing their tenns of service,'' the Pentagon ,a:ld. Huntington Schoo l Trustees to Mee t While the last tew voters are casting thtir ballots to declde the fate of a 40-eent ta .o9'e1Tlde requested by the Huntington Beach City School District, the board of trustees will meet Jn a regular business session at 7:30 tonight. Trustees will hold their normal meeting In the library of Dwyer School, 7S5 14th Street. One Item they wiU consider con- cerns asking voters in June to approve a'hike in the interest rate on $4.75 million io already approved achoo! bonds. .. ~ .~u1<'tin~o~ Art Display Dat e Slated What promises to be th! largest art show in Orange County will be presented April 20-23 by Ocean View School District 1tudents in the Huntington Center M;lll. ' Under the .themt: "Edu '70," it will endeavor to feature a creative work by each of Ult diatnct's 14,000 students. Already entered in the show are 800 ex· amples of creative writing, 1,500 pleces of art work and 1,000 science and social acience projects. In addition, there wll(be various ''live'' performan~s. including puppet shows. tumbling exhibitions, plays, choral and instrumental concerts. "It looks like it's going to be a three.. ring circus." said Mrs. Rose Clark , a district art resource teacher, who with the help of parent volunteers, has spent weeks organiz.ing the show. The already mounted, framed and labeled es:hiblll are now stacked up in the district warehouse from which they will be traruported this weekend by ca r, truck and station w~on. HAVE YOU EXERC ISED YOUR RIGHT TO VOTE IN TODAY'S MUNIC IP The exhibition open! in the block·long mall at 7:30 p:m. M<inday with a choral and ins trumental copeert and opening ad· dresses by ~fayor Jack Green, Supt. Clarence Hall and Lloyd Budwick of the Huntington Beach Masons. From Page I APOLLO CRI SIS • • • Others were flicked on as needed. -To keep the spacecraft from overheating, the astronauts' ship was oc· caslonally rotated 90 degrees so the 247 degree heat of the sun would not bake on . F rom Page l BRIEFS ... said, except that the crew may change its menu to use food which does not require water Jn preparation. e T m s Gives R e port P.fOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet news agency Tass carried Its first report on the Apollo 13 troubles in a brief, factua l dispatch from New York. Tass said the "three astronauls are in grave danger" but "flight officials are taking all measures to ensure their safe return to earth ." Until the electrical breakdown, the Apollo flight had received little attention in the Soviet media, although full reports had been expected when the moon lan- ding was carried out. e Standb11 in 6erman11 RAMSTElN AIR BASE, Germ any (UPI) -U.S. rescue aircraft unde r com- mand 01 Ramstei n Air Base are standing by to help Jf the Apollo 13 spacecraft lands In the Atlantic, a spo kesman for the base sai d today. He said the Cl30P Hercules planes belong to the 40th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Wing, Apollo Support Forces. They are ready to respond to any direc- tions from the Department of Defense or the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ). e JHe teorlte Suspecte d SEDONA, Ariz. CAP) -The power fail ure on Apo llo 13 probably was caused when th e fuel cell was struck by a very small meteorite, Dr. Harvey Nininger said today. Nininger, regarded as an expert on the subject, said he had given this "very positive opinion'' to the Nat I on a I Aeronautics and Space Administration after being consulted by it Monday night. one side for too long. -Lovell and Halse, tried from long hours of wrestling with the spaceship's grave problems, were asleep in the com- mand ship couches, Swigert, who earlier slept six hours, took scores of instructions from Mission Control on means of con- serving the consumables. -All three wore flight coveralls. '?be spacesuits would take too much power and oxygen. -COmmunicaUons with the earth were scratchy because one of the high-powered antennas was taken off the line. Looping the moon is the safest wa y home, officials said, because Apollo 13 was close to its target at the time of the accident and already was on a course that would take it around the moon's backside. To stop short of the moon would have required considerable engine power and fuel expenditure, so m e t b I n g the astronauts did not have with Apollo 13's big command ship engine idled by elec- trical failure. The only powerplant available Is the lunar module descent engine, the one that was to have lowered Lovell and Haise lo the lunar surface. The spacemen trig· gered the engine 30 seconds early today to adjust the course slighUy to a path that would take them back to earth Friday night if they made no additional maneuver. The second firing at 9: 40 tonight was planned to increase the speed enough for a landing 10 hours earlier. Asked at a briefing If there had been any damage to the heat shield, w h i c h must protect the astronauts from the: tremendous heat of re-entry. He said there was a slight possib illty of such damage but that there was no evidence of any. The decision to try for a Friday landing in the Pacific meant that Mission Control had decided not to adopt a "superfast" return plan. Under this, the engine firing tonight would have been lengthened to give the ship a heavier push home. But this would have consumed more power. President Nixon kept in touch with developments through phone contact with NASA Admlnlstralor Thomas 0. Paine in !\fission Control. · i Underprivileged Camp Reunion Set Saturday Young campers and oil men will get together for a reunion barbecue Saturday at the R.M. Pyles Boys Camp head- quarters in Huntington Beach. About 100 underprivileged youths w,ho attended the Pyles camp last summer will meet with their ~nsora: for a party at 815 Knoxvllle Ave. The camp and reunion barbecue are provided by oil men from throughout the county. About 100 oil workers will be at Saturday·s party. The program includes 30ngs by the OranJie County Joplin Boys Ranch choir, a rock concert by the Pyles camp staff, and an address by Al Irwin. assistant athletic director at UCJ. The Pyles cam p was founded by Robert M. Pyles, a fonne r superintendent with Siltllal Oil & Gas Company. who died last October. The camp, founded 21 year' ago. is in lbe Sierra mountains, 6S miles northeast of Porterville. It 'has always been sponsored by the oil industl)' .• Bob McAdams, c~p: mana~, sa. ,, that more than 7 ,500 boys· have been . through it s two-week program. This sum- mer another 88 boys, selected by Orange, Anaheim and Huntington Beach police and the Santa Ana sheriff's office, will go to the camp. The reunion barbecue has been going ror five; years. Center Slated For Recruiting The Air Force will ca mp at the Hunt- ington Center Mall this week and use it as a recruiting base. Several events are planned at the ce n- ter at Beach Boulevard and Edinger Ave- nue. At 7 p.m. Wednesd ay a concert will be given by the March Air Force Base Band and at 8 p.m. there will be a fashion parade of old and new uniforms of the Women's Air Force. "That kid's never going to forget that his work was in the mall for all the peo. pie to see,'' 1.1n. Clar~ said. Other district personriel involved with the coordination of the effort are Hal Chapman, scienct; Keith Halfpop, social science; Betty. B:urke, music: and Rita Jett, creativ e writing. Cla ssroom Nudes Case Decision Slow at College LONG BEACH CAP) -A decision has been postponed in a faculty discipllne case involving two male teacqr:rs who us· ed a naked woman and a naked man and stag movies in a aoclology class. Donald H. Si monsen. acting president of Long Beach State College, said Mo~ day a new report or a new heaµ-ing ' com· mittee would be required. Simonsen said a three-man faculty comm ittee hearing the case had not sub- mitted a "proper· report.". llf tald specific chara:es weren't dealt wlll'r:-.. The· comniltte'e r4Corrinlenaed' CbiJries be' dropped agalmt ~ two ~l$fri, Don Robertson and tifarion Steele. Tb e teachers said they were trying to prove in class that nakedness and pornography were harmless. A decision in the case may be postpon- ed until the end or the academic year in June, sources sai~, Chamber Ta kes Night For Baseball Game Tonight may be election night for 50f11e but it's also th e Huntington Beach Cham- ber of Commerce's night at the ball park. A party of 200 Huntington Beach base- ball fans will altend the home opener of the California Angels against the Chicago \Vhite Sox at Anaheim Stadium. Realtor to Speak Ml)< .. KrJsn'!!i, a· lonnt"r SD& leader , <Dd .uals!lat lo .,the d~ In charge of Student COU1lldln& oL UC Irvine. will ad· dreta H II.~ ~111.1} on· Va 11 e y Young llepDbltOol II q.m. Wedne!day ~ tile 4 Wind$ .'llftlaUrlDI, 11411 Bolaa Chico, Huallq1<Wlleach: Coast Barge Buffeted Neithe r the United States nor Russia has a space rescue capability . So the astronaut! will have to depend on the ir skill and that of hundreds of experts on the ground to get home . Other displays at the mall will Include · the Wright Patternln Base "History of the Air Force" exhibit, Hound Dog and Quall missiles and a demonstration by German shepherd patrol dogs on Satur· day. DAILY PILOT real estate columnist Randall R. McCardle will give a talk till· ed "Improvement Begins With 'I'" at the 8 a.m. breakfast meeting \Vednesday ol the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors al the Huntington Seacli!f Country Club. The carpet . ~ -· DAILY PILOT .otlMCil COAST PU•t.liHl/\10 COMPAA't , I•"•'' N. W11d -· 1P'rf.IJHiit.ltlll PlllJI~ "'J1ck l . c.r1,,. \llc:e Pm~--,..,,~ n. •••• k11¥il l41iW t1ri ..... A. /11!~11: •• M-t"'9 IEtl"' Al"-rl w .••••• -""~ ' ............... Offlc• t 1111• l11cli ,l•11l1~a'" Mtllrl'lf .\d41,...r P..0.·k • JtO, tl641 OtW oM. .. uw.e •ndlt m ,_i ,.,_ Ctlll ........ r DI Wt~I l•Y Slr"1 ~ ••.O.: '111 Wnl ...... l 911kff"' ... ~I »t NWlll f l C ......... bM --,.,- ' By Gale Winds , Waves By ALMON LOCKABEY ... 11119 l .. llr Near.gale force winds and heavy seas ripped' a 175 foot barge loose from lti moorings ofr the Santa· Ana River jetty ·Monday. It was snatched from the PQUn- ding surf by the Coast Guard cutter POint Divide out of Newport Beach. ·A few hours later the nearby 43:2-fool 1 ' pipe-laying vessel, the Oavy Cl'ockett. WU in danger of being driven ashore when the crew was unable to work the wincbel io shorten up on the mooring line&. The , vesseJ, a converted Liberty &hip, was later secured without help from the Coast. Guard. The Davy Crockett ls engaged in laying pipeline for tl>e multimillion dollar SanLa Ana .ewer ®tfall. The barge ~ an aux- Ulary ve.s.w.l laed for hauling riprap and other materlals on the proJ~t. The heavily laden barge came within a few hundred yards of the beach o!f SOth Street before the Point Divide got lines .iboard to hold her untll company tugs took her in tow. The barge and the ship belong to the Peter Kiewit & Sons Construction Co. Th e barge reportedly broke loose from lht mother ship abartly after noon and two company tugs attempted U> keep it on the beach but puled lines in the poun- ding seas. Al. the tug cemt: J)'rllously close to shore about 4 p.m., Newport IHegu11rds notified U!e Coasl Ou1rd and the Point Di vide arrived on acene 11bout 4:30. \Vlth the help of the company tugs, crewmen got a f()Ur·lnch nylon hawser aboard. 11:ie Divide held the barge of[short until company tugs could take her in tow and haul her to Long Beach. ~The. rescue and towing operatlons were hampered by 35-knot winds that kicked up sea1 of up to 12 feet. Despite the high winds, the Harbor Department had relatively little trouble, At 12: 10 a.m. today a 28-fool cabin cruiser broke loose from her moorings oft South Bay Front Avenue, Newport Beach, and crashed into a seawall at 2300 Bayside Drive. During its course down the bay the boat miraculously avoided hittin& other moored boats. The Hatbor Department said the boat belonged to James A. Nolan, 231 1 N. Ri>sewood St ., Santa Ana. It was not seriously damaged. Two commercial sportfishlng boats parted their anchor lines at Dana Point Harbor at 6:10 a.m. today but were rescued by the Harbor Department and company boats from the San Clemente Sportfishing C.O. \Vlnds up to aQ.60 knots farther north kept Coast Guard and comme rcial rescue craft busy most of the afternoon. HRrd nground and breaking up off Port Jlueneme is the 46S-root, 12.500 ton forTne r cruise ship. l.a Janelle, V.'hlch broke loose from ILS moorings 11t the he igh t of the storm. A Coast G u a rd hellcopler evacuated two crewmen from the :!hip 1hortly after It retched up on the beach aouth of the Channel Islands Harbor Pntrance. The ship had been moored a half-mile offshore where it ~·111 awalOng conversion into 1 lloeUng rrstaurant. • 6 Sunny Mediterranean Shades Mediterranean Moat Antiqu• Amber• Sp1ni1h Poptiy Speith Le1lh1r • Granada Gold Atavio Avocado 100% approved Bigelow ny lon pile ------------------ they both chose? Bigelow's Barcelona Barcelona combines thr. cuual, wlnd-tosscd s°nJe look of today with an clC?ganl Spnnish &r pattern. The long, slender yarns have a ~ft. ahlmmtty glow ... the dramatic multi· ..""'ors are Mtdlte?Tanean;lnaplte!d. Use Bar· celona in a Spe.nlsh or 1a1edlterranean setting or with ultra-modern or mlxt'd contemporary • · · for a truly stunning efrttt. And because the fiber's nylon, Ba.rce-lona·a 50 nay to care tor. SoU doe8n•t '1 095 show · .. and pUe 1t.ays crisp and l[>rlngy. A fine buy for any. ~· 111. one \\•ho ,,...,nts great styllnc: • · · " roomful of luxury at lrltlud~ lnst11•a. • down·l<>-eartb vn··· . . . li*n ,..,.h •n ill'> ... • ltrtlMllio!I • ALDEN'S CARPETS-DRAPERIES 0 IJ YEA RS SERVING THE ORAJ-IGE COAST e 1663 Placenti-Costa Mesa Phone 64413S ' ,. 1 .. Listenillg ·In on CRUSADING BARBER ALLAN (CENTER) DEMONSTRATES HIS STYLE ON YOUNG MARINE El Toro Barber Walt Radick (left) Gett • Ltsson in Modified Military Haircuts No More Jarheads Barber Giving Marines 'S tyle' ' By STEVE MITCHELL Of ffle Oallr l"lltt Stiff The word "Jarhead'' may soon be discontihued In Marine Corps terminology -at least if Ken AJ!an, a Corona del Mar hair stylist, has anything to say about it. Allan 's big gripe since moving to Orange County from his Beverly Hill~ hair styling shop is the number of Marines he sees with the "while sidewall" haircut, so prevalent among Jeatherneeks. "These men are being scalped by government-issue barbers," he stated. Six months ago, Allan decided to do something about the haircuts, which he says are 1 'demor1llzing to the servicemen.'' In a Jetter to El Toro's commanding general, Brig. Gen. Henry W. Hise, Allan ;;uggest<d a short-cropped haircut be oll·- ered to Marines "which complies with mitKary regulations but does not loot like a three minute skin-job." The general displayed an interest in "Allan's idea! a.net a.1ked him to demonstrate his modified m i I i t a r y haircut at El Toro. , Colonel WUllam 1\1. Lundin, he air stat lion's chief or staff Jt:ave testimony to tht! success of Allan's £irsl session with El 7oro's head barber. "Since the initial intruction, M.,. Bentley, the head barber, has given me' several fine style cuts and, as 'you purported initially, my hair does, in fact, look and reel better," Lundin stated. Now shi: months later, Allan has betn Jane Fonda Vows .To ·Continue Fast DENVER {UPI) -Actress Jane Fonda and mort than a doz.en other young men and women shrugged off chilly tern. perature and huddled under sleeping bags and blankets today In their "fa st for peace." The movie star sakl she wouJd remain at UnJtcd Nalions Square in downtown Denver until the 36-hour fast to protest the Vietnam War was completed at mid-- night tonight. ' .. Members of the MOWllain Slates Viet. riam Moratorium Committee said It was difficult to detennine how IMny others had joined the fast sinct many were altemaling In ~x-hour shills. MW Fonda, easily the center of at.. lefttion on the busy slreet corner, pled~ed to 'drink only water, t.ea or col'fee dur1n1 - the fast. I f , given tht go-ahead and Is trainin.g El Toro barbers once a week in proper hair styling. ''The Marines will bave a choice of get- ting a regular haircut or having their hair evenly styled," Allan stated. This should eliminate the "assembly line" pro- cess of haircutting that is presently emcloyed at the air station. The price of a regular haircut still will be $1 and the styled cut will be about $3.50. according to Allan. "This price seems high, but I ha ve talked to dozens of Marines at El Toro who have told me they would give half their paycheck lo get a dfcent haircut," Allan said. The Corona del Mar hair stylist, who has had many famous ana influential personalities beneath his scissors and comb, ts receiving no fee for training the government-hired barbers at El Toro. ur was in the Air Forte and I know how the aervkeme~.J·feel about military haircuts," he stated. Allan says that he began his hair styl- int project with the Marine Corps and will branch out to the other services if the El Toro plan works out. "I started Vt':ith the f\1arines because I knew they wou1d be the hardest to convince," the Scottish-born barber slated. In addition to training the barbers In his hair cutting techniques, A11an has been Instrumental in planning for the new barber shop under construction in the $1.5 million Marine Corps Exchange which is scheduled ror completi>n la\er this year at El Toro. ' ~ Althoygh his services to El 7oro are free .. the tonsorial artist does make a comfortable livil!g from hls Corona ~I Mar &hop. He bas cut the hair of Pres1~ dent Nixon'11 ·cablnet members during their Ila)' in orange.COUOly last Augusl The list of Hollywood e<lebriU.S Iha! stop in for 111J1.Ulle' bene.alh his skilled stjssors Is • Jqe and includes John Wayne , Stan•Kenton, Sean Connery and many others. Allan began his trade at the age or 6 in Scotland and became the youn,Rest registered master barber in Britain when he was 15. He has appeared 85 a gue&t on the Steve Allen show where he styled the television permallty's hair on the pro- gram. A three-page arUcle has appeared in Life magazine featuring the stocky hair stylist, and other articles have ap- peared tn Esquire and Gentleman'• Quarterly. . AJ!an moved to Orange County from Bev...ry Hill• last July. "Mon of my customers are local bullneasmen,0 he noted, "but I ltlll do ...,. Hollywood 1"0fk~ .. More Gas Tax Funds. Approved For Southland SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Senate today reversed itself and passed a bill which proponents said eventually would increase Southern Callforina's share of gasoline tax revenue. The· measure by Sen. James R. Mills (D-San Diego). was sent to the Assem- bly ·on a strict north.south vote, 21-13. Passa ge erased a one.vote rejection of the same bill on Mond ay. The legislation would eliminate lhe current formula for distributing gas tax money. Instead the State Highway Com- mission wouJd decide where to spend the $600 million collected annually from the seven-cent-a-gallon state gas tax. Sen. Alan Short CD-Stockton), appeal· ed to southern senators to demonstrate "statemanship" and vote .against the measure. He equated the lslue to that of approval of the California water proj- ect which transports sulplus northern water southward. "We've been plundered once.'' Short told the senate. "Are we going to do it again ?" Sen. George Deukmejian (R·Long Beach), a candidate for the GOP attor- ney general nomination, cast the dec id- ing vote today to pau the measure. He was campaigning Monday, when the bill went down 20-15, a vote shy or the Jlecessary number. ' Vet Exemption ' Deadline Nears Deadline for a«tpllrlg claims for homeowner and veteran exempUons ts 5 p.m. Wednesday <:.ounty Assetlor Andrew J, Hinshaw warned today . Hinshaw emphasized that lhe law does not provkSe for late filings . The homeowners' division Is located at 700 W. Civic Center Drive, Room A JS6, Santa Ana, telephone 934-3821. The veterans dJvision is at the same address bot In room Jl.292, telephone 834"2700. Homeowners' exemption for the CUT· rent year Is '750 off 0 lbe assessed valua- tion -about 175 on a home with a market value of $201000. The veterans' uemptioo II 11,0llO. -H Saddl.ebac.k College OAILV PILOT I ... ,• • . .. • ..... '!. ~ t • ' ·t Humor Hits Hair ·Ha$sl .e. • • ' \ . '0 • The Saddleback College "hair problem'' was aired anew Monday night In a lengthy confrontation between the board of trustees and almost a hundred students. The good-humored session -moved to a large music: room tO accommodate the crowd -was marked with frequent laughter, bursts of applause, ·praise for the students' "decorum" by board pre.sf. dent Michael Collins, plaudits for Sad· dleback's high academic quality from several of the studenta and cheers for an elderly lady from Leisure World who identified herself as a "radical." Arter llstening to the appeals and arguments of more than 20 speakers . board members said Oatly they were not prepared to make any i m m e d i a t e changes in the controversial dress code\ but agreed that further revision is not out. of the que:ition. It was informally agreed that a ni!w student.trustee-administration would be named before the end of the quarter just bealnnlng to "talk it over." Meanwhile. lt appeared that an initial "Hurry of enforcement" of the hair code would go back into abeyance pending receipt of a written opinion from the lhree-judge panel of the Ninth District Court of Appeals.Ut Los Angeles. The judges last week ordered im· mediate vacation of injunctions obtain~ in January by aftorneys repres'enting some•of the long-haired studenb1 which forced the college to permit them to regi~ter. Since Issuance of the injunctions, en- rorcement of the dress code has been relaxed pending a final court decision on its constitutionality. The order terminating the injunctions was a vict.ory for the college, but it is not yet known what the J~es' w.rl~n opl-· nion wili bring. On the peail:Jtlity that 1be order c o·u·l d have resultec;l· <from a teclmlcal flaw, Dr. Fred ·Bremer,;C!Ollege president, said he would r:~ CODo tinuing the "wait and see" policy, ·Earlier in · the · day, · Btetner bad resClnded t~m~tary 1usPe'!lions Oitkiect ror two hair cdde v~itors by the Dean:ot Students after conferr~g with ct.her sttidents who ppinted out the possibility that the written opinion might change ffie picture. Bremer said he felt the point wa's valid and would prefer to w4ll fur the opinion. Student body president· J9hn Bothwell noted that some 200 male students arP. af- fected by the hair rullnl!l and "need to know.'' He emphasized that .duting the two monlhS the hair rules ·have not been en- forced, no incidents haVe occurred .and "it ~as ,been.establishe,d thi.t· hair is· not an inOuencing factor." . · Students reiterated lllei~ }at~nts that, as adults, they shoukt have the right to make their own decisions rtgardlng dress, especially ·since many art oVer )J' and some are veterans. They' stf~.1. once more the fact that Saddleba~ tbt only junior college wlth1a df.¥!1 . 111!111 that an ln.cre¥1ng number Of high icbOoll are dropping dress codes. · LAUGHING ,STOCK "Saddle~ack' ls a laug~lng stock," said one. "It's a fine school academically and I will allt&Ys defend it, but it's bec.ome a laughing stock because of this fldlculous dress code." A student clad In blue jeans, purple . undershirt and stovepipe hat stood up. "I am not trying to be a clown," he said. "I am trying to show you bow rM1iculoua a , , dress CO;de can be. For; your, ~~,.. this ouUjl'I am wearing il .Jo'fUll' . ...,..' pllanct With'the Witin( drfu ~.;' ... : A member of the football tom arlUOd.; "The athletes have -ln'the put t'lio' mootbJ that tt ls poalble to ma1ntolis strict dlJclplln< even wt1hoUt adordn( al dfesa cOae.". ' .• ' . . . ' J ·Collini reiteraled liia vlew•that ii 1111111" a.msti.r of maintarnlng "decoriam'ln'."°J classroom '1o produe< that (~"'"" er;: formality essential to ·the 1~ Of~ education. 0 · • • • I • ( •I At the end of lhe four·hour ~in&Jie commented·that the 'l!l\udenta ~t had...r displayed great "decorum". •\ DOLLARS AND CEN'l'S Trustee Hans Vogel brouaht t h e'~ arguments down to dollan and cents., Reminding the studentl that ..-11 ~, the dislrlct bad puoed I ••\'' ~; bond issue at a time when bQad lauel ' were being defeated In many otber areu. ·1 be said, "Our bood iuue WU pmod 11;" 73 percent, and in Leisure World lt WU •11 percent. That is why we are able to baYeu the pne.1 l~cllitles and an m:cllqlj, faculty. ( • • ~ "~ut ii thooe people out then uie;, Clqn't Ill<• wht'• 1oln& on• llM, 10!J'rt Out ol !uck. 'l1ie moment \re few<\ U>! drell code, I guarantee you that't'the end of your money -ind already. we have to start thlnkln1 about a RCO~ J Cf!DPUS." I; Supporting his contention that. t¥. 1 preeent board and Its pollcle1 are In ttJriA with the commun1ty, Vogel mted thi( 'truttee Patrick Backus was re-elected ln r a race 1gainst four opponent.I AM' l defeated his newest contestant, "'an American Civil UberUes attorney~ ~two J to one. · '·· .: - ' . . ' . ' • • ,,,., • ' . ' ., «: ' I Turn in for a 3·piece place setting of handmade Mojave stoneware. With gasoline purcha5e at participating retailers. Other piecesarealso na~able. . -. DAILY PILOT ,_.. .., .. °""' ,. ....., . I Mrs. J. 1,_,.n1 Swl,.rt, moth-~r of the substitute aStronaut on is way to the moon. said her son y have one sUcky problem dur- g lhe:!l'lp. John Swlprt does not · cularly care for peanut butter. nfortµnately, due to the last ute uature C1I. hls departure, he as to· eat the food-ch .. en by the •b.e replaced, TllOmu ;MatUng- lofaltingly loves peanut buttar there Is a• good supply of it in food locker. : . Member& of tht Butte, Mont., High Sc1oool Barnt and ChorU3 had planned W participate in a di.strict-wide mu.tic festival but tMir direc:Jqr, a union tMmbcr, joinfd G :.athef''1 .strike. How- ever, the "'""g murician.t tbt'r• undaunttd.~They provided their own transport.ation, pe.rfoNmd without their director and wqn •',suptrfor ratings in both tVf'nts.• . • Somebody slole the bright r ed station wagon of Chicago's 10th Battalion Fire Chief R I c h • r d Josepka SW'Kiay· while be was at a fire. The car was found later ln Lake Michigan near Evan'ston, Ill. 1 A Northwestern University aecur· jty guard spotted the vehicle's red lights flashing underwater. ':. Yippie leadtT and Chicago 7 defm,.. dant Abbit Hoffman i.s shown wiping his nost on what appears to be a replica of tht American flog during an apP,tarance at Kamas Wtsleyara University in SaUna. TM Salina coun.- t11 attornt"t1 filtd charger again.st Hoff· man for aUtgtdl11 dt1ecrating the flag. • Kevin Cl•rlco ol London, England had a lover's tiff :with his girl- friend, so he feared the worst when he foond her with her head in the gas oven Sunday night But Elelno Suther1•od pushed him away wben He rushed In and ~bbed her. "I wu just dryin~ my llalr," lhe Aid. "J do it often. ' - I Tea~hers Ignore ' 01'der by Court LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Vowln& to re- ~ out unUI tbel.r demands are met, strlkina: teachers in the natJon11 ~nd 1.,....i sdlool •YJl<m today defied a cowt order to return to work and Slwts Fired " At Truckers; ' 40,000 Idle 'Sholl. were fired at trucks In the Detroit area today and In Chicago more than 40.000 drivers and dock workers were Idled because of a strike by two unions and a lockout by trucking com· panies. 1be Chicago and Detroit developments were the mo1t notable in a continuing wave t1. wUdcat strikes by drivers unwill· Ing to a...,,i a propooed National Teamsters Union contract that would raise wages of 450,000 by $1.10 an hour over thtte years. Michlpn Sta~ Police aald a truck driven by a teamster member was Wt by aevenl baDets u it traveled from Detroit to Gnncl Blanc, a dlJtance ol about 40 m11 ... ~ Vehicle, hauling steel to a General Moton Ccrp. plant, wu followed by a car for.aeveral miles along U.S. 23, Police said. Shot.a were fired from the car. 'nle truck WU hit but the driver WU not harmed, poJi« &aid. 1be latesi shooting report was "one of several" recei~ byj Michlgsn State Police during I.he wa kout, whlch has forced the big auto companies to close a doun plants, lay off 42,000 workers and reduce work schedules for at least another 40,000. About 3,500 teamslers ended their wildcat strike Jn the Harrisburg, Pa., re«fon tod•r i.nd withdrew "icket lines. A union loca spokesman said members agr<ed to return to their jobs unUI a con- tract was either raUfled or rejected by the natlonal membenbip. Navy Man Named ' To High 'Posf ' . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Prealdent Nixa~ today ~ Adm. Thomas H. !>{..,. as nri CIWrman ol the Joint Olleli ol Stall, IUCOeediD1 Gen. Earle G. Wheeler. in tho natiol!'s higbe.t rsnking n!UIW, po.t. -Moorer is now Chief of Naval Opera· lions. Wheeler, 6t, who has held thtofUce siJll:e,luty, 1914, plans to reUre wj1en the · ~e becomis elleOtive Jul/' 2, aubject ldJieMte cool'1m11U1>1 ol Moor<r., . N~ at the same time designated Vice Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt Jr., now commander ~ ~val forces in Vietnam, lo suc:oeed Moorer u Navy Cblef. Moorer, II, wtll be the oecond Navy man \o bold the pooitioo of Chairman of the JO!nt Chlels. Adm. Arthur Radford be1a tbe poo1 in 1~1. LA Times' Bill Henry Dies of Heart Disease NORTllRIDGE (UPI) -Blll Henry, a Los Angeles Tlmea poUUcal coliimnist for 30 years, ls dead at the age of 71. Henry, who began writing his column "By The Way .. in 1939, died Monday at Nortlirldge Community H"pltal of· a heart dbease. His 51-year career with the Times began as i. aporta writer In 1112, was hilhlllhted by two N1tlonal lleodllner AWanh and be was to receJye the Medal o1 Freedom, the hJihest n ud the Prell- dent can bestow to a civilian, Api11 J2.. plckel<d hundreda ol achools !or the se- cood atralgbt day. About half the dlstrkt'1 25,000 teachers failed to report to work Mon~ as the cl. ty ol Los Angeles struggled to keep its SIS schools serving &50,000 students open. School Superintendent Robert Kelly IC· cuJed the striking teachers of "making the young people a pawn" after many of the students who showed up for the open- ing bell were lll!!Dt home because of tho sciutjty ol leacbers. He ordered the achool b o a r d ' s negotiating stall to diJcootlnue talks with the urlion "until such time u teachers are back in the classroom and the strike ended." Kelly then sent the board's attorneys to court "to clearly establish that the strike Is illegal." Superior Court Judge Richard Schauer granted a temporary restraining order ordering the strikers back to work. Robert Ransom, president or the Uniled Teachers of Los Angelea, said the union would not obey the order and declared the strike was a "moral oot a legal iuue." 'Ille union president said wage demands were not as important as forcing the state Legislature to allocate sufficient fiinds to bring about an end to deplorable classroom condlUons. However, in Sacra m ento, the Legislature held out JitUe hope it would vote emergency funds to meet the strik· ing teachers' demands. Many lawmakers saJd that without Gov. Ronald Reagan's support, there wu virtually no chance of the passing of an emergency ap-- proprlalion bill. Kelly said the teachers have caused 11great damage" to school programs and added that "the strike has been effective in hurting education." "The schools will be open .•• We will try to give the dlildren an education. We hope a partial day's ochooling I.! better than nme," Kelly said. A spokemian for the achoo! board said 48 percent of the teachers stayed out, but UTLA asserted the number was closer to 60 percent 'Break' Reported In Air Walkout WASHJNGTON (UPI) -The Federal A»iation Administration reported a "ma· jor break" in the 21-day air controllers ''sick out" with return &o wort today of almost all controllers in New York. An FAA 1potesman said 141 of the 158 amtrollers scheduled on at 1h'! key Islip, Long Island, Control Center reported for work. The center had been . the major trouble spot of the slowdown. The FAA said only Kansas City re- mained a major trouble spot, pending reports from Denver and Oakland, which had been continuing to have high absenteeism among its controllers. The back-to-work trend became ap. parent Monday, and the return in New York today appeared to portend the end ol the work stoppage. F. Lee Bailey, executive director of the Professional Air T r a ff I c Controllers Organization (PATCO), said Monday, "'the deadlock is broken." Bailey warned, however, that some controllen reporting back to work were being 11harassed, intimJdated and in· terrogated" by the FAA wlticb must certify that the returning men are medic.Ily fit to work. II this contJnues, Bailey added, "There fs no telling what will happen." lie said if the FAA and the Department o f Transportation "come forward in good lallb" the •Ir lralflc 111tem could be in lull operation b)' the end ol the -k. New Snow Storm' Spreads Cold Weather Ranges From Wyoming to Northwest Couttil Y1rt.blw tleltdl ~ _.ty l\l~llY t. dlV. Y1rl1Dlt wlndJ nlwM tnd "10lllll'lt "'°"'' ~,.,. wttlfflY lt t. •• ,.,, 111 '"'~ 1o111r •llCI w ... .....,., Hltll il. • ClMll•I ltmM•l lUP'fl rtl!H ,..., J11 to "· lnl1M ......_,""°" , ...... fr .... » It .... W11,,.. l-1l11rt IO, S wtt, M,,..n, 'l'ldes TUl5Do\T ~ llltll ... , .... .. t r)ll 1.Pft. S.7 lf(Ond low • ., l!J)ll 1.m. '·' WION•SOAT \ ~ ..... MILD..J 11,S. Sum-r11 • "'''°" ~,1.,. ltoml ~·td &Yt• '*"llw•tlfr" WvlW!!lllt bl'Ollt~t (Old r1ffl • -w Iv•• 1 wio. OtM With tl•Mt •Incl• o••ffllflftl trorn tilt ll:Ddt· itl •• tllt fl'KlllC (cMn !, Wlnill t\1111 VI l'O *) !'l'lfla Hr hour -• """"-ltOtPI M111111,.. to Arltlllll. liff¥V _,,, wtrflll!tl -· ....,....., fot "'"' M lflf O.'of•1 "'""-fout to tltl'lt l"C:lltt -· ·-~ltd. 'l'emper•t•re• AlbuQ-1 AllCl'lor ... ""'"'' W...-.lltld llllfl1rck ... H .... ~ 9..-WMVRlt Cllk oto Clncl""1!1 -~ DH Mo!- Otfrolt F1!rblnlo,1 Fon W04'11'1 ·~M ~let!I Honol ulu IC•M<111 (It'/' I.•• v"'' LOI A"Mltl Mll"'I Ml...,.1POll1 Ntw Ori .. ,,. Ntw YOH! HOl'!ll •!1l!t O.ltl•<lf C*ll'-Cll't' °"'•"'• , ..... $prl"91 '•M lloblu ,,_,. ,lnlobvrtfl ...... 1111111 111-.ld en~ .. .,, 111111 ·-IKl'"'M~lo Mllll Lew ,rec. 11 •• " " IO 47 .06 11 " .06 17 :n .2!f S1 :M .ll " " 11 7J " .3t .01 )J '3 ·°' u " ~ .3t .1• JO •l .1~ " » n " IO U .10 " » " " n ~ ., 1S 41 " 4 11 6t ., ll .1, 11 SS ., •2 ~ " JI 4t u " 4' JI M " u ., JI " " .. "' .. , ~ " JI '' ,. l 7 .OI n u T 51 ll ,II PRESS DEAN DEAD M1rrim1n Smith, 57 Merriman Smith, Famed Ne,vsman, Suicide Victim WASHINGTON (UPI) -Merriman Smith, the dean of White House cor· respondents, died Monday. He covered six presidents over nearly three decades for United Press International and won · the Pulitzer Prize and the President.ial Medal of Freedom. Smith, 57, was found in hill suburban Virginia home dead of a gunshot wound, apparenUy self.inflicted. A d e a t h certificate was expected to be issued to- day. HJs six presidents spanned 28 eventful years, from Franklin D. Roosevelt just before the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941. to Richard M. Nixon, who said of Smith: "He was one o' the great reporters of our time." At his death, he was dean of the Wltile House press corps. For some years he had been senior wire service cor· respondent ana--traditlonatly ended presidential news conferences with the worda: ''Thank you, Mr. President." Smith won the Pulitzer P r i z e , American journalism's highest award, for his reporting of the assassination or President John F. Kennedy. U.S. Officer, 6 Men Sa ved at Crash Site DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) -Seven Americans, including a ba'ttallon com· mander, were rescued today from a mountainside where their h e I i c o p t e r crashed the previous day. All seven aboard were injured. none seriously, military spokesmen said. One suffered a broken leg. Cambodian Base Destroy~d by VC PHNOM PENH (UPi) Vie\ Cong troops today destroyed a government out· post and cut off a major highway leading through Cambod.11'1 'jich rubber plan· taUon regJon alO{lg the border with SouVl Vietnam, the government announced. The·repd't said the Communlsls burned and leveled the outpost at Ktek, 70 miles northeast of Phnom Pehn, which WJS defended by a force ol 100 Cambodians. The government said 15 government soldlers were killed in the three-day bat· tie and that more than 100 Corru;nunlsls: were believed killed. In Vielnam and estimated 1,200 North Vieblamese troops captured a govern· ment outpost on the western edge of the Ho Chi Minh trail, overwhelming Royal Lao army~·ts made up mostly of teenagers. The attack Krek, eight miles from the frontier, appeared to be part or overall Co unlst efforts to win total control of th eastern regions of Cam· bodia fronting Vietnam. Smaller attacks were reported in the Prasaut area, where the Viet Cong seeks to win control al East-West Highway l, and at points bare- ly 25 miles from Phnom Penh. The government said field reporls showed before the Krek battle its troops had killed more than 120 Viet Cong in eight recent batUes. In Vietnam Moritagnard tribesmen struck back at the .Communist forces besieging their Green Beret camp at Dak Pek and st.onned up a hill to recapture Jeers of 'Nigger' Ve x Ambassador STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Dr. Jerome H. Sweden, said today anti·American dem· onstrators had shouted, ''Nigger, nigger, go home" to him and that he resented ii. The M-year~ld Negro educator wu the · focus of demonstrations both when he ar· rived in Stockholm last week and today when he drove to the royal palace to present his credentials to King Gustaf VI. He told ao embusy news conference he did not worry about demonstrations as such. "They are part of the political life in a free, democratic nation," he said. "However, I am just a little bit con· cerned when I hear such remarks as 'Nigger'. both at the airport and today when I was driving to the palace. "That was a personal attack on me and I resent it. I haven't heard that for many years and then only in the most racist areas of the Uniled States." 1n outpost seized when the North Viet· namese began their siege on &mday. 1be titontagnard.s, mercenary moon· tain tribesmen led by U.S. Special For· ces, killed 25 Communists and suffered only light casualties, Col. Nguyen Ba Tin, comrpander of the South Vietn11mese 24th Special Zone, reported. He ·.said tht C:Onununists had Qt 217 men at Dalt Pet and another 1,515 dead at the nearby Dalt Seang: Sped11 Forces camp since that alege began Aprtl 1 •. Both camps are near the border of Lioe, 290 miles northeast of Salg~. ltl·i-c·k-e·11 ••• The clock on the Campanile Tower et UC Berkeley· got a new Mickey Mouse look Mon· day. Mickey's hands and face \Vere pasted on the kingsize clock face by pranksters who apparently entered the locked to"'•er and stood on a platform to lower the cutout into place. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PAIO POL.ITICAL AOV. Just a few more hours At 7 P.M. today t he polls close, and you "!ill have exercised your right to choose who administers th e tax dollars you pay for your health and safety in Costa Mesa . How strong your vo ice will be in city government may depend on how you strengthen you r City Council. A large vote turnout tells the opportunist and the talkers that he re is a city that cares what h a p p e n s to itself. To para- ph ra•e a very wise saying , "All it takes for thos e who se e k fo r t he mself the ben e· fih which belo ng to all, i• for go od men a nd •wom en to do not hi ng." We ask you to vote for Jack Hammett as your city councilman. We feel he will serve you best because his RECORD indicates t h e s e thl119s: .1. He is an Active hard-worker for positive changes. 2. He has an excellent public record of service and training for this job. l . He is tied to Costa Mesa in his work, his family, his interest, and his past perform· ance. Jack Hammett's RECORD tells us he won 't just hang around City Hall and enjoy being called "Councilman" without working to deserve that title. O.K .. if you haven't voted yet, the choice is obvious. You can stroll down to your polling pl ace or you can watch the Early Show on TV, but are you goin g to enjoy t he "re-ru n" at Cos ta Me 1a City Hall fo r the next fou r yea rs 7 Notd • ride to y-ponr.., place? Colt .. '46-4300 Jack HAMMETT FOR COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL, TUESDAY, APRIL 14th f'lnl l'l\tlh ............ !·OOl ,m. I.I IJll'lf tow ••••••••• • • 0 00 ··"'· •• , SttoN 1'11111 • • • 1·41 ......... . Hll\o' -..rt Wt!'Yll11t1 tlM Wtrr 111 tflK ! lor 161111\frfl Monll,.. 1nd -. Wtlltni W'l'otnlftt. 8Jow!nt -Wll COllllnt htrl""°"'I trf-..1 tonelltloftt 11'1 N tll If MGtN ... , S..11 f'r111C(tct 5Mlllw 51 .. .01 co w M MMmll TO ILICT JACI HAMMln tun ·a1-S;n •""" hit '1!14 '""· ~ ... U1t11""" kt1 I t• t.11'1. SvlWlr tlllft -.Ii.. -"'' Gt'Hf l•ft .......... ltMI--~ ..,... .,, Ille Ull't!M ..,tl'lwtll, --, ..... . w ...... , Sl • .ro COSTA MISA CITY COUNCIL o u IL..;;;;;;;;;;;;j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,~..;, ... ;;;,;M~o~N~·~lty~·~S~'Ml:::...,::.;-;.::••~l~l~,~17~~:.::k~ .. !C....:::::.::·i:-:...~ 6J d,t4_ -... -------------------- I I .1 I I I I I I l • F~11n~.i1i , Valley El>'II•ION ' . -... VOL 63, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES . ORANGE ~· CAUFORNI~ TEN· CENTS • J 0 0 .s· Piek 4 of JB . ! . . • : -~-11· ·.ol -I I . ' ,.: ~~ ... _ .•• J -1"!i'·• , r,, • 1' • ... j \ !j:L·I--'-., . -.... Turnout Heavy In Huntington ·Space Blast .· Forces Hait i ' . . ' ' • Of Landing .. SPACE CENTER, Houslon (lir.f - Apollo 13'• astronauts batUed todq to bring their crippled crali back lo ell1h from a quarter million miles &way' at Misalop Control dedded. they ,would.ailn for a Friday s~ In the· P...ctlic. Jn an election regarded as cruci al to the city's future, Huntington Beach residents went to the polls Jn com· paratively heavy numbers this morning. The voters were picking four can- didates (a majority of the city council) Valley Voting Proves Light In ·First Hours A late morning check of five precincts in Fountain Valley showed voting light, as e:rpected, in ttie city council election. Only 173 ol 10,195 had cast their ballots in five polling places at Harper School, 1t1cDowell School, the central fire station, city hall and 1 residence at 160:i7 Shasta St. Seven resideUs are seeking' three city VALLEY VOTE TALLY PHONE : 962·2424 council seats In today's election. They are: Incumbent Mayor Edward Jllst, in- curribent Councilman George Scott, and challengers Jim Bart%, Mrs. Hazel Cour- reges, Albert Hollinden, John Mangano and Burton Taubman. A light campaign and apparent lack or controversial issues has Jed m o s t observers to expect a ligbt voter turnout, perhaps DOt eteeeding 25 percent. Inflammatory charges and a heavy series of candidates' nights have not been evident this time as they were during last September's recall election when f,745 residents, or 48.1 percent of t h e registered voters, cast their ballots. 'Ille pons in 18 precincts are open today unW 8 p.m. Results o£ the election wiltbe tallied in city hall, 10200 Slater Ave., and Jbay be Obtained by phoning 962-2424. A total of 72 precinct workers are man- ning the polls in Fountain Valley. Crypt Opened By Court Order; Wife's Body OK Authorities at Westminster Memorial Park have identified the body of a woman removed from a crypt there Monclay as Mrs. Pearl 0. McGinnis, ·who died August, 111&1. The crypt was opened by court order Mqnday because Ronald T. McGinnis, husb&nd of the dead woman, is suing lhe park for $50,000, claiming it loet track ol her body. Officials representing the Park said to- day that finding tbe body proved their c:onteotion lbat it was right where they said it wu, "Crypt E-S." Attorney Dudley Gray, reprnenting McGinnis, said the sllit would continue because, "We sUIL contend the park lost trick ot the body. It took a court order for Mr. McGinnis to find his wife'• body." Gray identified the woman by a gold chain and a ring which she wore when buried. A pathologist and a dentist were present tor further identificaUon, but were not needed after Gray said he was, "95 percent sure" it was Mrs. McGinnis. The body was returned to the crypt later Monday. The suit started about two years ego when Mr. McGinnis, who WM ordered not 1.0 be present al Mond ay's crypt. opening. was told different locations for the crypt by di!ferent park persormel. Attorneys in the case will return to Orange County Superior C.OU.rt May 4 to continue lecal action. ' £rom a field of 18 for seats on the city council. In parts of the city, the vote was being combined with the elementary school di strict's special election for a 40- cent tax override. A spot check of the 74 precincts In variou! parts of the city this morning found ballot inspectors busy. At 11 a.m. it appeared that about nine pereent of the total electorate cl fl,291 bad cast baUots. ln the southeast of the city, at LeBard HUNTINGTON VOTE TALLY PHONE: ""'511 Elementary School. 77 to 500 registered voters had ba1Joted by 11 o'clock. The booths at HunUngtoo Beach High School, which serves downtown voters, were less busy; 51 of 422 had voted. Twenty-six voters out of a total or 590 went to the polls at the Ocean View School District's administrative office on Beach Boulevard in the north-central area. The figure for Meadow View School in the northwest was 3Z out of 605 and for Harbour View School in the extreme northwest the totals w~ U out of 494. At this. pace ft ~ed ~t predictions of a %3 percent turnout might he low. pil'ticularly with tbe polls remaining · open untll I p.m., an hour later than usual in municipal elections. City clerk Paul Jones, who made the 22 percent estimate Monday, wu busy going from precinct to precinct this morning ironing out problems. He declln· ed to comment on the voting rate. The campaigning generally was free of controversy but the election is considered vital since the voting patt.em in many council deciliions has been 4-3. This alignment was particularly o~ vious in votes on downtown redevelo~ ment as called for in the Top of the Pier plan. Three votes that have been pushing downtown development are at stake - those of Mayor Jack Green, Al Coen and Dr. Henry Kaufman. Green and Coen are seeking rHlection, but Kaufman is not running. Only one "go-slow" vote on downtowri development is at issue -that of Ted BarUett who Is seeking re-election. The first resuHs are expected"at about 9 p.m. and they will be posted on a big board at the main fire station at Main Street and Indianapolis Avenue. Fire Chief Ray Picard has invited can- <lidates and residents alike to follow the returns at the station. The city hall phone switchboard will also be well manned to answer vote tally requests. The number to call i! 536-6551. Benefit to Aid Edison Athlete ,. James A. Lovell Jr., Fred W. Haile Jr. and 'John L. Swll'r\ b'<took shortcllD to C<)lllerVe thdr, pr<c!OUI comwnablll of water, oiy,eo UCl! ~ .u they need farther from earth towri a-moon wltiidt had been the!> landing· tar-Wl!il • violent erupllon of a presauriled luel. tant Monday Jillhl. They were to loop arouOO tbe moon tonight and two hours later, at 1:40.p.m. PST, were ·to fire• t.tieir lun·ar lander engine to sped them back toward earth and a splllhdown in thel Pacific north of New Zealand at 9: 13 a.m. PST Friday. Asked whether the three spacemen, principall in the most Oahgerous drama in American space histoey; would make it home safely, fflght.>controller Glynn Lun-nty, U11Wered, "Yes, barely/' t ~ · '""'.,........ "We're lot the ~tuaUon stablllM!'f'," be WHAT HAPPENED ·-Ohart shows how Apollo miles from eartll. Power-now is heing·suppliOCI ffdm said. '"M>e moot cr!Ucal thing now Is to 13's astronauts aj>orted their moon"laridinJJni<sion , the lunar lapde~, wllici>-ml!St· be jetttsoned :before,.. keep It stabilized tbe rest of the Dlgf>{" , _af_t_e_r_e_x.:.p_Io_s_io_n_.:..iolt_ed_th_ei_·r;~:..am_.... _fn_a_bd._'. _•_hi-'p'-21111-",_ow_· __ •P:..l_a.sh~.d_o.._,wn.:.·_·_ 1 • •• tJ . , , ":\ ' ,Al Lovell; Raise .00.SwigertOew aw., . _. ... ., ,' ._, ·,1.\rL1.',/·~.{".,(f. '..:.;t+,.~l '"<":..'t I / >t;.-•\_.~ ·~ {'l ,. ~~~~~P wastbeplctur:e,aboaN , t • t 4 • • J-'< I'! .. Jl't;if '. • ")'. r (·,...., • ~'11/t, i.J• I,: jr ft:! ;, ~. -"JI ,1i. ~·, ,. ' , -• i". pki ; , Mlnneseta .Judge · · .. ·· World/ Naiies" " stin-~=:=~ I ~ ·-•• ~ .l-' ·~ • •: ' ' . > 'I sllJ:l ldowD. electriClllJ. tmfll'tenc1 bat. Nl"xon's T ·hi" ... d Cn••r· t ---·· Ott~J.'-:0-~ip. ·· · =:=.~~'."~ .. ~·i:i:i: .• ,, ' · : ·W,-· ·· · · f,1.' · · carey the• men home. tllroucb the. at-,. ' F or SP.1ashdolvp. mos~~ ••• modul• wblch become the • • · '': '·: 1 , •• astronaUls' Uleboat, was provicllng Fr,oni !'1t'~rt ~~. 1 , 'criUca1 power, oxygen, water and other •111e•cua ·~1,., Offer.ff lil••'!'J'P'l'1. 13¢ its llUJUllles were:ttrop. ChoiCetoBeB.lackmun?. WASHINGTON (;tj>) -An lrilormed Senate sourC)e said to(tay 1that£p~ru Nixon will nomin.te ~udge. lhrrf . ..A. Blackmun ·of: Minnesota· for the •Supreme Cour't. This was the word ..repOrtediy passed 'to key seaator.s. An unowlCenlent from the OV School Pians Show Changes· .. For Kindergarten . • . '.' ~.C:\ .. ~ "' , • ping ahd the astronauts w'ere' oPtTatinl ~ H0111e·w•I~ shortly. . , LONDON -·'J1ho'.United 'Stales iwt.'or-· on minimum requlremenia. . JlJlck.mun, • .a . doR friend o£ Chief .. , ren\of' help tq!faf ,for-any;~~Oper•· . -OfficlaJa,wue ooncer6ed mainlJrwitti Ju'stic:e1 Watren'..E .. Bw:ier. his. bttn'. a tioi:t·for Apolloi1s-1c lhe'spacecraf'i comes '· the water supply. With 72 hours to ao. memper or the l;thrU.S.\ClrcUitCourt of doWn·intthe.AUantic. baied on a Friday 'landing, they h8d A I · s • ... ,. -• 1-9 H ~ · · , enotigb1water far M hours, a•marpi.of 1J P~ ~in t. lNUM ~nee ~ 1 e wu ap. · Britain sald'H! Royal tiavy.slrift.·wjK!Jd1 houn. "'"' 1._,. this _,..,,., t b • pointe(f by former President D:wight 0. ·. 1..a pl '"' 4 v ...... t" .._ .... , El Mo · ' ui;' aced at 'the disposal of any• rescue astronauts must power down to niinbnum se wer. . • . . . "Pl'fli)lon tr 'l'~ed to® so•by the•llfl!ted electrlcial ·power 'ol l7 amperes per'booli' ~. wofd. tHat Bl~ ns ·N1r-f ~S.1 But . a ~ Defense ·rMJ n I 1 try • for ri:i01t of the journey, reductng the on s choice for._ the ·ooµrt •poet.for ,Which r -·9pdeBtDan 'in ,London said it Md'receiv.ed average bour1y water consam~ trOm., two ,ScJJthem judges were ,rejected,.key,, no requeSt ; . ,.... zn .--ia """'-la ·.~ r.· J;tepu~lic81l senators were 'br:iefed by · . , . ' . , lv.e !<> :"'."_P.C1u!.N.l'· '·'~ !".~-"'.'.~ DepuJy Atty. Ge"/Rich~rd, G. Kleindienst In Paris, Prelideri~ d~g~tp'?lllpfdl?l' coollilg tJie efeCfronics 'a"jiQ Ci61ii, osygen in a CapitOI hideawaY. · or~~d th~ French · fleet Ol]....-8 ~le 9f · as well as for drinking. 1 ,. • . · · ~alert to be ready: ror anf recov .. ry. W""d · Th ppl •~·-Alternrd-GOP.. Leai:ler ·Hugh ·Scott or -_-mthi -·-•-:-. ., ··-~u -· .,:.z. , . "!o!! .. -e oiygen su Y wu more su-_"'"u- p I . ··'d th t ibl '-~-m ~1 s 'WIS re1ayed·to cne U.ol. Embi!!y tial '"'-' had '"""''"h for 122 "--·-a eM!Y varua....., a po!S e nomu~ ··. ·p. .. • """'3 ..... w-e i1UUC11, had been· discussed and that he· expected • in a. ans; , . · . margin of 50 hour!, barrinc unforeseen announcement ·Of the Prestdent's IOmina-.W~ s · navy , and · air · force ·~~re ~\l'en1!. The utronauts moved around u tion •itn the•\l'ery near future." • alerted ~or .a possible. r_escue ~ation off . little. a~ .• PQSSible to ~~ their ~ Plans for another Ocean View school Scott Was asked If he t h 0 u g h t the coaSt or Btazll, sumption. Oxygen w~ fed tlirougb. an have been approved by the ·district's Blackmui1's chances had been hurt by 'l11ere·wa~ a possibility Apoll~ 13 would open CO!lD~ng tunnel ~to th~ ~mand board or trustees. fonper Vice · Presidei1t ~Hubert H. · -come down 1n, the.South ,AtlanUc but tJ:S.. cabin to tlie pitota could operate there. But it's the kindergarten that ha! Humphrey's statement M'ond.!Y that sp·ace ~als were hoping f~,, ·a -Wlth power reduced wen be~ 17 school.men excited. Blackmun is the kind ·of man 'be-would · SJ11.asJldOwn1 m the 'Pacific 111 orlgmaDy amps per ·hours Whenever piouible Aided by the possibility, of a.new edui::a-like to see on ll)e court. plann·ed.' Mission Control olticia1s said the ~p's tion bill (AB 496) which would remove "I don't think Hump h·r e y 's en-• N ll: Tf supply of 500 amp f:lours of power sa.ld .. ~ting fonnulas for tile aUocation .of dorsement hurts anybo<ly,'"Sc6tt repllel!. ' fl •. mbtfl· Good be sufficient buMhiy admitted It would st.ate a}d according to square ',f~, . I Scoft•sakl'the•meeUng wiPI Kleind£ettat SPACE GErO'ER, 'Houston i(UPI)~-' leave llttle margin: Only essential hto architects Anthony and Langford bl.Ve was the type'l!f'~ltatlon 'he'•ha'd.urged Neil A. AnTistrong,~ the~ fif'Sf man 00 the · strumeotl~were being operated. 'nle..onl1 come up with a ~ which would on the administraUon after the Senate's • panel lights on were in the LM. radk:ally depart fronl. lfo rm<• I kin-rejeCtiOri by a 51-45 vote last Wedne!day moon, and Alan • L. Bean, the fattst man (See APOLLO, Pap: I} dergarttn plan!. . ": of '.Nixon'i J;iomiilation '.of Judge G. Hat-on the !1'oon;·Concecteci··to6df, tfle eleo- A three-hour program or entertainment The kindergirten at .the sChOol,. to· be , rold Cal'!Well of Florida. : ·, ' . tricBI failure on·Apollo113 "'hapj)ened at a to benefit Sam Fuga, will be staged Sat. built between . Slater. and W a g ,e-r 1 Carswell · was nominated after the· , very &ood ume It ltihad,t0ihappen.!'. .Oraage urday night at Edison High School. Avenues Golden West ani:I Fiawards ' Sehii.t~ ha~"Wrned1doJ!D by. a SM§. vote . "Their consinsu; .. istthat.,.it 11~ the ; Fuga, an Edison football player, suf-·. Streetesrin 1971, will rel)'t hel.vily;·,on~ln-1 laSl.~N'oveinber"•Nl,xOn'! first choice<'fin' •astrooa~Ls·1 time ~to ·reteatfh the pr&. fered a broken neck in a game last fan. dlvll:l\l&liied learning. • ' t ' the .court ,post. ·Judge; C!emeirt F.. 1 blem aQd do something· about Jt as op· Tbe program, under the auspiceo of 'the Sjleclllc, proposals include the· follow-'Haynsworth. Jr.,.of!South·car.ttna. JIC\SOd to·~ part ol;the mt-when Edison High Scliool Booster Club, wlD be-Ing : they wouldn't,-h1fe the time av,aliabli to gin al 7:30 p.m. Price of admission iJ -A large gT'(Up area·larfe enough to , ' • ' · • • them;" StAld •a NASA official who talked 1uo"" -· ... andt·.!..':'".:~,~.111e. n ... r?r.mua1c • 1c.".'·' hoo.· I Trustee."'" · to :Anp~g and 11ean: • Master of·ceranonies for the evening uuiu--.'\.!. .. ~ ,UC 'J:I Annstrttlg,was·a nm~·of i(be1 only will be Chuck }k)yle, a eoach at Cal St.ate · ....,.niree sm8U activity <:mters~far tKe· : ~ . ' ' " ., • o(bier"mamied· flighl~aborted eJrly: 'J'ha( (Long ll<ach). lnstruclion of arltbmeUc;,.re ·~·i/n,g . lne·""·lie' \.]~~le' Me1 e' t'" : was Gernirll•l.'.broughM>ack•beca1111 'the The first part of the -am wlD In-science and IOl'ial -• n """ u.... . sp0cecraft"l>t1an• ~.out/of .cdqtrol 'nle.re'll be less wind (now that the election campaigna: are over) and more suo on ·Wednesday, with temperatures, back up to 65 alq the cout and near 70 Inland. elude a performance by Jingles and his ~ toy block playtog' am , · · ' In 1M1m:b: 19'6 clowns, guitar music by FeUpe p.,... and -A ~ed lnleT!or rill' ,.jg, l>oJti for I ~·lfunllngton Beach•Unlon •Hll!>.scl>ool' · , ', ." :.," ", ; ··-~ ~ · · ' INSIDI! TODAY Nancy Tedll5CO, a singing duet by SoMi• the children to'cllmb a.,..., In. -. Di~ tt:u11..,·m~ng·O'rl g;t'n1 1•l'l1' • e ,W.•ter · No, ,bo•le-, .. :. • . , and June Budd and a sPecialty !how by -Aota and crafts'-· _,let< witb I sc\>e<!di'!llJO!>ll!Jlhfo:~~ f~r.7;30 ' S .......i.• ., . : , ., I Oi;>'!ll•/.<;,~~~~"¢ ,) Lee Fugal. easell and nat Wk ~ 'f ' 28 , p.m. 'Mrursday. . , ",... • PACE, qE~~ .Ho~·1t{UPJ) -i 1a paa1 ~ ,_."'q :"'·~ wc~1 t· .. Afte:r inlennission, the Grand Land clilldren. 1 • "• ~ 1 T~!lr'~~·W,fll·•con1'der ·a .tiup•t pre-.• Wtter li'~-~-' f8ir'9.':1~&-~l1o\i,,_ 'j'94011g-11'fl~~·tt•.~ Co'Dftt. f .1 ~ singers will conduct a one-hour program. ...:.A.cooking and JJll;rhOUe 'atei +re . ~l,!SO r.llte.r' .dreti ·~~ ·ln:1 l 13 •crew ·fi'.hlCh . Onfx·Z'~~flid"Dt 1~J • p~miere1 tn ,LQo{ina·Be~ch.an4 •1 ' ~~rt ·youngster! .Oilld ti, li!-Ood~ the 1·1j\l'l:i~tall..JX;dil!tiict "°1' ·.' ' ~·.~·~; ,t,y!\)~ · 'rl'T -.C-.. 1<1 llfe1<1, St!f•(trtoinment ' ' . Steele lt111rkeu culinary w :-Udt ~., 'I 1 'D*'now~wlil1>o _ lei 1!hoUr•. . . , )li!;'l!'l"loii • ~ < . !Par1t 9. • • / l · I -An obaervatian roa,n'4 ,,_ .Wh1ch ~~~ers,11,s:.t7th:St • .a~eSrdan. ..f._"~._. __ ;_J . ",.:, 1:_.. , =·,..... ·;,· • ., • NEW YORK (AP} -The stock market visiJors· and educStort ooaW1 witeb the l ' ~ .,. f~ ';~J:r:t;~~·st ~ •. , . ~JJ L~ , ·k......, u. ... J ,,..,,._. .._ .: ta ed od st ba k lat this f•a.. actlv:llles. ' .L' 1'tj ~· "'1-J1n~· 'te com~qg 1' ~ u o....,. c...,., • ~rr!mmt.heeste:7ecfuieth:thad~har: 'nle new school ls part ol 112-tchool Leo·ion Po.st fO Ct ~~ ·"llce ult. Mriiins~kt . .tllJ , 1t1ttttt 1: :='"""" ".;~ acterized the session earlier. (Set quota. design study by the st.ate De~meut .of ; t " • ..~ + . I·,.; . I :to· . 'hOtiP'l,i~ r_ " ·910 dr,idldnli · .._... .P-.. • t...,. Mnttt 1"11 lions. Pages 10-11). . Education to detennine hoW, !Wte aid · 1'he HantJna;ton J¥ach 't'nn 33 ri. ~.~·r,'od Pfti·1• :1't! t ~ 1W ,J=•u• 1 .. 1: ,::::-J The average had been running behind allocations would~ r~Jeued fll!ht'Nsis 1,~Americaa·Lepoil.~~~kft ,M i";• ~do'fb: • . Pfinh_ · , 1 ~ • ;: ::. ,_. ,..,! for the entire session and wu ctl as much of desian for a .specific l)W1llOR r&ther' nornlnatiQn of,otfi~O y ,... is iMb. ~ &at .spoktlll)ll\ rr 1....,... , • .,. ,_. .., •• t .17 poinls It U:IO 1.m. than aquart foota(e. 1t1be teiioo Ha1I.:. • : (5'\t' . P•1'1li , .. ~ ....... ------'-----' • • \ Be Sure to Vote · , ~ • . , .. I Tod hy ; Open Till 8 I .) •• 1 ' ------I \ I DAILY mor H T,..., •"'1 )4, 1110 si .. rt• Siilurdalf--- ~,obo 'B'J,Y,s · Set . ' . . . For ··Ball Season · ' ' The umpire'• cry of "Play ball!" win rilltl -Hunlington Budl and Foun-tain Valley wh•n more than 2.000 boyl from I to 11 start this summer's Little League baseball seaton. The arta's five Uttle Learue organiza.. tiOl'll,IDtlvt into actlon over the next three -U with two leapes Starlin& ptiy thil Saturday." A flllll ol l,1J7 bo)'I plly LJtUe Leaiu• ball th the two ciUes, with the numbers growin« each ye.tr. Li\Ue League provides divisions for majors, the okter boys who play in all· · star oompe"1Uon .at the end of the year: minors, sUibUY yotinga boys, and fum tearm, youiig ball players ent.ertng their fint competltioo. League-by·Jefgue here's how they line lip for th.ls summer's seuon of play. Ocea View LJtlle Le..... with Ml boys playing this year, is e~ing Its lath year of action, oldest league In the area. BU(k: Williams is league president for 1970. lts boundaries 1enerally cover the area between Magnolia and Algonquin streets, ~d Edinger and T a I b e r t Avenues..wltb excepUpns in 60nle parts of Hunllnit<ii> B<aeh. . Leque teams play on four fields owned by the league on the comer of Hell Avenue and Graham· Street. A total of SI teams will compete this year wtth· two major dtvtlions. two mJnor dlvlslom and lwo fann div!li<N •. Gama . .,. pllyed ·al I p.m., Monday through Friday and t a.m.. S•turday. Optninf .,, II Baturdly with ceremonlea at I p:m. . Robla-LJtlle Leape Is only 1 y .. r y.......,. thao Ocean View, with olllclllis erpeding 396 boys to play ball th1s sum- mer. Robert Hanvey ii president of tbe league. Robinwood 1eneraUy covers the area between. Be.ach Qoulevard and Bolsa ChiCI Road, and Edinger Ind Bo!JI avenues. It includes parta of Huntfniton Harl>our. The leqoe .... -diomondl 00 the Marina Park 1ite at F.dlnger Avenue and Graham Street and one diamond at Marina Hlgh ·School. Some 30 teams will play this teason with a division eaCh in · ""'1on (coll leasue) and majon Ind two minor dlvillonl. Games 1tart at 5:30 p.m., Mondly through ~Friday and I a.m., Saturday. Opeling'day l1 Saturday with ceremoniel staiting at I a.in. Foantala Valley Lltue Leape ls •IArtlrii lls Ith yeir ol action with IOO boyl ocbtiluled to pl1y. Leaiue praldent !or 11711 ii Richard Woolard. · The leque lates In boys from Ill paril of tile city ol Fountain Vllley except • miaU ·area between Brookhurst Stred and Harbor Boulevard, north of Wuner A~ue. NY Newspaper Guild Slows Strike Plans NEW YORK (UPI) -·The New -York Newspaper Guild decided early today to _. Indefinitely Ill plw to strlke the New York Post. Acting on an earlier strike vote by members of the Post, the guild had scheduled a walkout for 6 a.m. EST to- day. But after separate talks by mediators with the newspaper's manage- ment and the union Monday night and early today. ~ guild deferred lb plans, which could have led to a shutdown of New York's four major newspapers. Krisman in YR Talk Fountain Valley Jeague cumntly uie1 two diamonds in the Green Valley tract on Slater Avenue, east of Ward Street and Is building a third field next.to the ci· ty corporaUon yards on Ward Street. The Je.;i.gue operates with ff tum• in a ma· jor. two minor and two farm divl~ons. Game Ume 11.5 p.m., Monday lhrOU¥h P'rlday: 10 a.m., Saturday. and 12 :30 p.m., Sunday. Special ceremonies will start league play at 10:30 a.m., April 25, on the. Green Valley diamond. · Hwitl nrton Valley UltJe Leap enters lb third season of play wilh 315 boys signed up for ac:Uon. John Cwieka is president of the league. League boundaries· ·Ue between Adams and Garfleld avenues, and B t 1 c h Boulevard and the Sula Ana River 1n Huntington Beach. Twenty-four team.a will play this IUJMltl' tn maJor, minor and lann divilloos. Games are played on four dlarqonds at BUlhard School, 19699 Education Lant, Huntington Beach. Teama play at 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, Ind I 1.m., Saturday. Opening day ceremonlea It.art at 10:30 a.m., April 25. i(urlew Llt&le Lupe II allo entering its 3rd baseball season with 252 boys ready for action. Don Hemphill guides that action u league president. Seav~ boundaries slrttch between Magnolia Street and the Santa Ana River, and Adams Avenue and the ocean. The league has three diamonds at Lebard School, 20451 Crairner Lane, Hun· tington Beach. Elgl\teen teams will line up for summer play 1n a major and two mblor divillonl. Gamea start at 5:30 p.m., Monday hgh Frid<)!, and 10 a.m., Sllurday. Special ceremonies wtlJ start the 1eason at t 1.m., May 1 With all the UWe league teams tn ac- tion thla aummer, if one of the youncster1 pleadl, "take me out to the ball 1ame," there ahould be one ne.rby. Draft Will Take 15,000 for Ma y WASHTNGTON (AP) -The Selective Service System will drart 15,000 men for the Anny In May, the Pentagon an- nouneed today. 'Ibe May draft Is a drop of 4,000 men from each of lbt three previOUI months' manpower req uests. Lowest draft call this year was 12,500 in January. Pentagon officials said there was OC" particu1ar sigalflcance to the drop in the May ma1tpOwer" quota. "'Miis request supports currently ap- pr'oved strength levels and will assure a timely now of replacementa completing their terms of service," the Penta1on Wl. Huntington School Trustees to Meet While tbe last few voters are casUng thtir ballots lo decide the fate of a 4Cktnt tu override requested by the HunUngton Beach City School District, the board of trustees will meet in a regular business session at 7:30 tonight. Trustees will hold their normal meeting In the library of Dwyer School, 735 14th Street One item they will consider con- cerns asking voters in June to approve a hike ln the Interest rate on $4.75 mllllon in, already approved school bonds. • • • DAILY PILOT PM!e "' LM Pl'M HAVE YOU EXERCISED YOUR RIGHT TO VOTE IN TODAY'S MUN ICIPAL ELECTION? From Pqe J APOLLO CRISIS Others were flicked on as needed. -To keep lhe spacecraft from overheating, the astronauts' ship was oc- casionally rotated 90 degrees so the 247 degree heat of the sun would not bake on From Pqe 1 BRIEFS ..• said, except that the crew may change its menu to use: food which does not require water in preparaUon. e r... Gives Report AiOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet news agency Tass carried Jb first report on the Apollo 13 troubles in a brief, !actual dispatch from New York. Tass sa.ld the "three astronauti are in grave danger" but "flight officials are taking all measures to ensure their safe return to earth." Until the electrical breakdown, the Apollo flight had received little attention in the Soviet media, although full reports bad been expected when the moon lan- ding was carried out. e Standb11 in German11 RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany (UPI) -U.S. rescue aircraft under com- mand 01 Ram.stein Air Base are standing by to help if the Apollo 13 spacecraft l<rnds In the Atlantic, a spokesman for the base said today, He sald the C130P Hercules planes belong to the 40th Aerospact Rescue and Recovery Wing, Apollo Support Forces. They are ready to respond to any dlrec-- tions from lhe Department of Defense or the National Aeronauti cs and Space Administration (NASA). e ltleteorite Suspected SEDONA, Ariz. (AP) -The power failure on Apnllo 13 probably •tas caused when the fuel cell was struck by a very small meteorite, Dr. Harvey Nininger said today. Nininger, regarded as an expert on lhe 1t1bject, said he had given this "very positive opinion" to the N a t I o n a I Aeronautics and Space Administration alter being consuJted by it Monday night. ••• one side for too long. -Lovell and Hal~. tried from long hours of wresUin1 wilh the spaceship's grave problema. were asleep in the com- mand 1hlp couches, Swigert, who earlier slept six hours, took scores of instructions from Mission Control on means of con· serving the consumables. -All three wore flight coveralls. The spacesuits wouJd take too much power and oxygen. -communications with the earth were scratchy because one of the high-powered anteMas was taken off the line. L<>Oping the moon is the safest way home, officials said, because Apollo 13 was close to Its target at ~ time of the accident and already was on a course that would take it around the moon's backside. To stop short of the. moon would have required considerable engine power and fuel expenditure, so m e th i n g the astronauts did not have with Apollo t3's big command ship engine idled by elec- trical failure. The only powerplant available is the lunar module descent englne, the one that was to have lowered Lovell and Haise to the lunar surface. The 1pacemen trig- 1ertd the engine 30 seronds early today lo adjust the course slightly to a path that would take them back to earth Friday night If they made no additional maneuver. The second ,tiring at 9:40 tonight was planned to increase the 1peed enough for a landing 10 hm..:rs earlier. Asked at a briefing if there had been any damage to the heat shield, w h i c h must protect the astronauts from the tremendous heat or re~ntry. He said there was a. slight possibility of such damage but that there was no evidence of any. The decision to try for a Friday landing in the Pacific meant that Mission Control had decided not to adopt a "superfast " return plan. Under this. the engine firing tonight would have been lengthened to give the ship a he avier push home. But this would have consumed more po\ver. President Nixon kept In touch with rlevelopments throu gh phone contact wit h NASA Administrator Thomas 0. Paine in Mission Control. ' V nderprivile g e<l Camp Reunion Set Saturday Young campers and oil men will get together for a reunion barbecue Saturday al the R.M. Pyles Boys Camp head· quarters in Huntington Beach. About 100 underprivileged youths whn attended the Pyles camp last summer will 1neel wjth their sponsors for a party at 815 Knoxville Ave. The camp and reunion barbecue are provided by oil men from throughout the county. About 100 oil workers wUI be at Saturday's party. The program includes songs by the Oranl{e Coun ty Joplin Boys Ranch choir, a rock concert by the Pyles camp staff, and an address by Al Irwin , assistant athletic director al UC!. The Pyles camp was founded by Robert f\f. Pyles. a former superintendent with Sle:n al Oil & Gas Company, who died last October. The camp, founded 21 year:r ago. is in the Sierra mountairu, ~ miles northeast of Porterville. It has always been sponsored by the oil industry. _ Bob McAdams, camp manager, sald tliat more than 7.500 boys have been through its twO..week program. This sum- mer another 88 boys, selected by Orange. Anaheim and Huntin gton Beach police :ind the Santa Ana sheriff's office, will go lo the camp. The reunion barbecue has been going for five years. Center Slated For Recruiting The Air Force: wlll camp at the Hunt· ington Center Mall this week and use it as a recruiting base. Several events are planned at the cen· ter at Beach Boulevard and Edinger Ave. nue. At 7 p.m. Wednesday a concert will be givtn by the March Air Force Base Band and at 8 p.m. there will be a fa shion para de of old and new uniforms of the \\'omen's Air Force. Huntington Art Display Dat~ Slated What promlsea to be the Jar1est art ahow in Orange County will be presented April 20-23 by Ocean View School District 1tudenll ln the Huntington Center Mall. Under the themt "Edu '70," it will endeavor to feature a creative work by each of lhe district's 14,000 student.a. Already entered In the show are 800 ex- amples of creative wrlUng, 1,500 pieces of art work and 1,000 Jcience and social science projects. In add.iUon , there will be various "live" performances, incl uding puppet shohs, tumbling exhlbltio M, plays, choral and instrumental concerts. "It looks like it's going to be a three- ring circus," said Mrs: Rose Clark, a dislrict art resource teacher, who with the help of parent volunteers, has spent weeks organlzin1 lhe show. The already mounted, ·framed and labeled exJUblts are now stacked up in the district warehouse from which they will be transported this weekend by car, truck and staUon wagon . The exhibition opens in the block·long mall al 7:30 p.m. Monday wllh a choral and instrumental concert and openin1 ad- dresses by Miyor Jack Green, Supt. Clarence Hall and Lloyd Budwlck of the Huntington Beach Masons. "That kid's never going lo forget that his work was in the mall for all the peoo pie to see," Mrs. Clark said. Other district pert0nnel involved with the coordination of the dfort are Hal Chapman, science; Keith Halfpop, social scient1!: Betty Burke, music; and Rita Jett, creative writing. Classroom Nodes Case Decision Slow at College LONG BEACH (AP) - A decision has been postponed in a fa culty dlsclpllne case in volving two male teachers who us- ed a naked woman and a naked man and stag movies In a sociology class. Donald H. Simonsen. acting president of Long Beach Slate College, said Mon- day a new report or a new hearing com- mittee would be required. Simonsen said a three-man ficulty commiUee hearing the case had not sub- mitted a "proper report." Ht said specific charges weren't dea·Jt with. The committee recommende<t · di&rgcs be dropped against the two teachers, Don Robertson and Marion Steele. The teachers said they were trying lo prove in class that nakedness and pornography were harmless. A de cision In the case ma y be postpon· ed until the end of the academic year in June, sources said. Cha1nber Takes Night For Baseball Game Tonight may be election night for somt but it's also the Huntingtcn Beach Cham- ber of Comm erce's night at the ball park. A party of 200 Huntington Beach base- ball fans will attend the home opener of the California Angels against the Otlcago \Vhite Sox at Anaheim Stadium. l{ealtor to Speak Mlke Krisman, a former SOS leader and aula~t t.o the dean in charge of student counaelin& at UC Irvine. will ad· dress Hunt l n Ito n ·Va I I e y Young Republicans at I p.m. Wednesday 1n the 4 Winds Restaurant, 16431 Bolsa Chica, Hunlingtoo Beach. Coast Barge Buffeted Neither the United States nor Russia has a space rescue capability. So the astronauts will have to depend on their skill and that of hlindreds of experts on the ground to get home. Other displays at the ma ll will Include the Wright Patterson Base "History of the Air Force" exhibit, llound Dog and Quall missiles and a demonstration by German shepherd patrol dogs on Satur- day, DAILY PILOT rt>al estate columnist Randall R. l\.1cCardle \\'ill give a talk till· cd "Improvement Begins With 'I'" at the 8 a.m. breakfast meeting Wednesday of the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors at the Hun tington Seacliff Country Club. ----- The carpet DAILY PILOT OAA.lilGI COM? itU•LISMING c.oM.lltA.N't l•lttrt N. w,,4 11t11.1\dtflt ... ,,.llt.lw ·J•cli a. C111l1v \lie# l"m!ll"" ..... OIMttl M.11\1 .... Tl!.•••• IC11wil ldllw Tll-11 A. M~t.; ... M"""N ld!IW Allttrt W. l1t11 A.Ulldli. h l!or .............. Offlc• 11111 l1ich l1ul1 .. 1•4 Mailiftt ,UJ, .. u P.O. h• 1,0, '2HI --.. ............ cto1 mllt-IA-t.IM Mnt! I» Wul •• , SWftt ,._. .. 1(111 2711 "'"' .... , .... llW .... .. ~Its al -.11 ii """" llNI .. ~. ii.&.l\.V PllO?, ...... w.•ICll " ,._~· "'-New"""-" "'91hflnl .. 11¥ t•t'1H kMo •n li'I ....,,IG tMI ... W Ll ..... 1 •...i:"- lik-' .. K'I. (iilll ""'°''' Mll'l'tlllf1*1 .. di .... -......... \1111t,, ................. ,.._, 111n--. ~ c.:.1 '"":i.~1,.. """""' "'"'""' "'"" 1'9 I I 2111 W..t ..... , t:w .. """"" ... (II. .,.,., a w..i .., .,,..., C.11 ~' ,...,.. .. fJl4) ,,J .. 111 ,.._ WM I IT U Cell 141.Jllt O.Y•' Mue:rtll!.t 64.24611 .....,;1'Mo mt. o,.,.. c. .. 1 l'\lllltll~ °"'"""· IQ ...... t.•i.. 11M1r11-... ......... ~ltft .,. """''-11 ,_.....,. _, .. ,..,, ... llUlll Wllfltlll ~lit! ,.,. ...... """"" ... -· • ...... dlM .. , ..... If 91 .. ......, ... cfl .... C-lt Mew, ClllfM!ll, ..,._,..,... ht ...,,.. c,• ......wri tt -"tr.If__.,,., """-' _ ... , .......... ~,.,. -:.:....--. By Gale Winds, Waves By ALMON LOCXABEY ......... ,.,. Near-gale force winds and heavy seas ripped a 175 foot barge loose from lls moortnga off the Santa Ana River jetty Monday. tt was anatcbed from the Poun- dinl surf by the Coast. Guard cutter Point Divide out of Newport Beach. A few hours later the nearby 432-foot pipe-laying vessel, the Davy Crockett, wag in dange·r Of being driven ashore "'hen the crew was unable to work the winches to shorten up on the mooring lines. The vessel, a converted Liberty ship. wu later secured without help irom the Coast Guard. The Davy Crockett ls enga1ed in laying pipeline for the mu!UmUllon dollar Santa Ana sewer outfall. The barge is an aux- iliary vessel used for hauling rlprap' and other materials on the project. The heavily laden barge came within a few hundred yards of the beach orf 50th Street before the Point Divide cot lines aboard to hol d her unlll company tugs took her In tow. The barge and the M.ip belong lo the Peter Kiewit &: Sons Constructton Co. The barge reportedly broke loose from the mother 11hlp short ly after noon and t~'O company tugs 1tt.empttd to keep It on thf. beach but parted lines ln the poun· ding SeM. As lhe lug came perilously ck>se to shore about 4 p.m .. Newport lifeguards notified the Coast Guard and the Point Divide lnived on sctne about 4:30. With the help of the company tugs, crewm~ got 1 four·lnch nylon baw&er 1board. 11'le Divide held t2'8 ~e oUshore unUI .. - company tugs could lake her In tow and haul her to Long Beach. The rescue and towing operations were hampered by ~knot winds that kicked up_ seas of up to 12 feet. De:splte the high winds, the Harbor Department had relatively little trouble. At 12: 10 a.m. today a 28-foot cabin cruiser broke loose from her moorings off South Bay Front Avenue, Newport Beach, and crashed into a seawall at 2300 Bayside Drtve. During Its et1u:-se down the bay the boat miraculously avoided hilting other moored boats. The Harbor Department said the boat belonged to James A. f\'olan, 2311 N. Rosewood St., SanLa Ana. It was not seriously damaged. Two commercial sportfishlng b::>ats parted Lhelr anchor lines al Dana Point Harbor at 6: 10 a.m. loday but were rescued by the Harbor Department and company boats from the San Clemente Sportlishing Co. Winds up lo SG-60 knots far1her Mrtb kept Coast Guard and commercial rescue craft busy most cf the afternoon. Jlard aground and break ing up off Port Jluenem e Is the 465-foot, 12,500 ton former cruise ship , La Janelle!, which broke loose from Ill moorings Jll the hei,ht or the storm. A Coan G u a r d helicopter evacuated f\\'O cre"'•men from the th.Ip shortly arter It fetchtd up on the beach 1t1uth of the Channel lsh1nds Harbor entrance. The ship hod been moored 1 half.mile offshore "'here It was a~altlng ton\'trsion Into a noatJng rulaurant. .. 6 Sunny Mediterraaean Shades Meditet111Man Mos1 Antique Amber • Sp1ni1h Popt'1 Spuith lA•th•r • Or•n•d• Cold Atavlo Avoc.do approve d Blgelo\v nylon pUe they both chose? Bigelow's Barcelona Barttlona comblnftl the casual, .,ind-toaPd ah&i look of tod.a.y with an elegant Spanish grille pettern. The Iona, slender yams have a aoft, ahlmmcry glow ... the dramatic multi· colors an Med.iterranean-inapittd. Use Bar celona in a SpaniAh br J.f~lten-ane&n aettin; or wllb ultra-modern or mixed contemporvy · · · '°" a tn.lly atunrrlng e>ffect. And beoca.UM the fiber's nylon, B&rcelona'1 so euy lo cue '"· SoU d""n't $1 ()!5 11how ••. Md pile slays crl!p ' and .pringy. A fine buy tor any· ,.._ one who wanta great 1tyllnp,: ••• 11. roomrul of luxury , •. at l<-<hldlo.t i...11111- 1 down·to-e--" -ioo '"" ""'~ "' -.. .... .... • • •l'tUlllli. ALDEN'S CAR l'ETS-DRAPERIES 0 ll Y~RS $lRVIJl:G TH I; ORANGE COAST e 1663 Plac:enti-Costa Mesa Phone 64-38 ~----------_____________ _._ 1 I l I l ' •I I • 7-----•.. ... • Ne • • .. 'l'eday's n.i1 . -- ·~ VOL:. "63, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS,. 24 PAGES • ORANGE -CotiN'TY, CALIFORNIA . . ' TU~SDAY, APRll, 14, 1970 TEN CENTS • 0 0 ea S· • Ballotiag Ligltt e ·Turnout Smaller In City Election About 11 .percent of Newport Beach's 25,Sll .elif.ible voters had balloted in !he dty <Olll>dl race by late JllOlllinC today- • litUe less than the 15 percent that bad voted ~ the same hour two years .ago. 'Ibt final voter turnout nro years ago wu n percent. A 1pof checi ol r<present.aUve precintS 1howed the heaviest voting in the West- c11ff aru and the Ughtest in Corona del Mar. Here Is how the early voting looked : -Cook Rarage, 436 Seville Ave., Bal- boa. 13 percent. -Marsing residence, 543 Fullerton Aye., Newport Heights. II percent. -Mallnoff residence, 1438 Santiago Drive, Harbor Hlgh]ands. 16 percent. -Wood garage, 2848 Catalpa Ave ., Eutblufr. 13 percent. -True garage, 2612 Seaview Ave ., Corona det Mar. 7 percent.· 'Ihe stream of voters to the polls was expected to intensify by late this after- noon, with heaviest voting at about the dinner hour. Veteran P!ecinct officials Up.&HJte.mlaate electitn hWrnl •:Ill be available to persons pbonlnc Newport Beac~ city hall be&lnning at 9 p.m. Tuts-- day night. 'De telepboae •amber is m.. Zltl. said that Is the usual procedure for New· port elections. At city hall after 7 p.m. poll closing, when the first returns start trickling in, p~bly aboul 8:30, City Clerk Laura Lag1os and other municipal aides will be posting the results on a large board pre-cinct by precinct. ' Cwtomarily, the winners will make an appearance in the city hall lobby, which will be open to the public. and remain until the last votes are counted. l;oast Barge Buffeted • By Ga~· Winds, ·waves . By AIMON LOCIWIEY -·-Nlar.ga~e force winds and heavy seas ripped a 175 foot barge loose from its moorings o(f,the Santa Ana River jetty Monday. U wu snatched from the PoUJloo dine surf by the Coast Guard cutter Point Divide out of Newport Beach. Newport RehiJ:es Library Trustee A Newport Beach city library trustet wbo had resigned over the financial dis. clOIW'e Jaw before jt was declared un-- con.stltutional was reappointed Monda)' bytbe City Council .. "I'm glad we have an opportunity to do this," said Mayor Doreen Mar- tha JI after councilmen unanimously had reappointed Roger W. Hardacre to corr tinue his term. Hardacre's four-year term of office on ijw Board of Library Trustees ends June 30. A few hours later the nearby 432-foot pipe-laying v~I. the Davy Crockett, was tn danger of being driven ashore when the crew was unable to work the winches t4 shorten up on the mooring lines. Tbe vessel, a converted Liberty ship, was later secured without help from th~ Coast Guard. The Davy Crockett is engaged in laying pipeline for the multimillion dollar Santa Ana sewer ouUall. The barge ill an aux- iliary vessel used for hauling riprap and other materials on the project. The heavily laden barge came within a few hundred yards of the beach off 50th Street before the Point Divide got lines aboard to hold her until company tugs took her in tow . The barge and the ship belong to the Peter Kiewit & Sons (See WIND, Page Z) Stock Market. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market staged a modest comeback late this after- noon from the steep decllne that had char- acterized the session earlier. (See quota· tions, Pages IG-11 ). Space Blast :. Forces Halt · Of Landing SPACE CENTER, HOllllllo (Al') -, Apollo 11'• utronauls battled 1odaf to tirio( tbeir crippled ·craft back to Nrlh from a quarter million rnllee; away at Million Control decided 'they would olm Irr 1 Friday splashdown In 1be Poclfic. Jameii A. Lovell Jr., Fred W. Haile Jr. • and Jolin L. Swigert Jr. took sbort<utl to , cooserve their precious COMrrn•Nea fA water, oxygen and power as they need iarthtt from earth toward a moon which bad been lheir landing tarset until • violent erupUon <A. a pressurised fut) tant Monday nigh!. They were to toop around the • moon: tonight and two hours later, at 1:40 p.m. PST~, Were to fire their lunar 'lander engine to 'ped them back toward earth and a splashdown in the Pacific ndrth of New Zealand at 9:13 a.m. PST Friday. Asked whethet the three s~n. principals in the mO!t dangerous ftma in American space history, would tn1ke it home'salely, fligb\ controller Glyml LuJ>. )\ey, ~ered, "Yes, barely." • • • IWI ~ . "We've got the situation stabilized," be WHAT HAPPENED -Chart shows how ~llo miles .from ear\h.,Power now is being .supplied from said. ''The most criUcal thin& now Is to 13's astronauts aborted their moon landinJ ,missian the lmw .lander, whicll•mus be jettisoned hiofore ' keep·i>Bllbllbod tbe resl,:ol tbe lll&bt." after explosion jolted their command Ship ~,()()() S~ •. _ , · ~ , . All 1-ll, ilall< andJwllwt Qew IW'>'. ~-j.~· ~ ',•, ' ' l , .~· lromhome,"""'w•tlie~-.;1 Ne~ ei1caa" ·: .. · · · . · Min ·so -.. .iuJ.:e . :G~~~b!:!.,~.~ -----· · ~ · ... ._J 'ff'· -· shut dOl.n ti . emorgency bat· C ·z w·11 T u Blackmun Next . :ni:.-:a:~'."t11eonly=~·J..llf"~ QUllCl l · ear p :;::. .... 11ome, tl9'Jila"' 111e, at. · Freeway Overpass Pact Newport Beach city councilmen voted 5 to 2 Monday night to tear up a two-year. old Pacific Coast Freeway agreement with the state to move an overpass in Corona dtl Mar from Buck Gully to Morning Canyon. . Theil' action was greeted by mix~ reaction from the partisan 200 residents who crowded the city cdlhcil chamber and spilled-out into the city hall lobby. 1'he -two councilmen Voting "no" did not want the overpass lo· stay at ~uck Gully, they didn't want aliy-freeWa.y period and there was. much sentiment among the audience '°"that pOsition. ' Councilman Hoffard Rogers became a' new freeway foe, jOining· Paul' Gruber in a fight to·block any freeway. "I've never seen any freeway in- terchange grow smaller with age. This is < • ' offensive to rrr.e. L consider it a. rape of our community;• said Rogers em· phatically. The other five councilmen said they were reluctant to renege on a signed agreement but they had beeri convinced the Morning Canyon overpass does leas damage to the environment and provides better traffic service than the Buck Gully overpass. • None ef the city, councilmen mentioned whether the Morning Canyon overpass costing $600,COl.more. to build was a fac· tor in their cons.ideration. W. K. Hashimoto, assis'tant district · engineer for the State Division of , Highway's .Los Angeles office, said the slate will now submit a new freeway agree~ent to the city. It will be necessary.for the Djvision ·of ·Highways to hold a formal public. hea"ring before that agreeme.nt can be. signed, pe said. Residents of . Harbor . View Hills and about half the residents of Corona Highlands were pleased with the,council's decision. The other half the Corona Highlands residents · and tbo9e of Cameo Highland!l·wert;bitterly disappointed. Pick for Cour.t.?. -nie 1unar module which '"°""""111e astronauts' lifeboat, was p r o~'l'frfr. qitlcaJ ptrwer, o~gen, water=~ life 1Uj:tport. But Its aupplit!J . . WASHINGTOl'I (AP) -'An ln!ormed senate soun:e said today that Preaident Nixon will nominate Judge' Harry 1 A. Blackmuit of Minnesota for the, Supreme Court. . TDl.s was the word report~ly passed to key ~nators. An announce,ment from the White House was expec~ shortly. Blac~mun,· a close frltod • of Chief Justice Warren E. 'Burger, 'has. been a member of the 8th U.S. Circuit, COurt of Appeals In St. Louis since 111511. He was ap. pointed by fonner President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Before word that Blackmun was Nix· on's c:hoice for the court post .. for which two SOOthem jtidges were re~, ltey RepubHcmr ·senators were~ briefed by Depuly Ally. a... Richard ·G. Kleindienst in a Capitol hideaway. Afterward GOP Leader Hullh Scott of Pennsylvania said that passlbfe nomin:ees had been discussed and that be expected innouncement of the frtsldent's aomina· tion "in the very near future." . "I d0n't think Humpbrey's en· dorsement hurts awbo<fy," Scott replied •. Scott said the meeting with Kleindienst Was the type of consultation he had urged on •the admin!stration after the Senate's reject.lo" by a 51-45 vote last Wedlllellday of Mxon's nomtnatiOn of Judge G. Har. rold Carswell of Floryda. ping jnd the ~nauts were on mlnJmum requirements. .--Officials were concerned malnly with I.. (he water IUJlply. With \12 how's to go, l)ase<J ' ou a Frldiy landing, they had , enough water ·for 84 ho11n, 1 margtn of lJ hours. To Hep this maraln, th e astronauts must power down to mlnimwn eledrlcal power of 17 amperes per hour for -1 of...lbe journey .. redudng 1be averq011audy wller.COlllU!llptloO from · five to.J.18,pxmda . .nLw:ater is used for · cooling the electronics and cabin. oxygen · as will as for drinking. -The oxygen supply was more substan- Ual. Tiiey had ellOllih for 122 '-:>, a margin of '° hours, barring unforeseen evefitll. The astronauts moved arotmd u little as possible to reduce their con- sumption. Oxygen was fed through an ·~ open connecting·tunnel Into the commind <;abin so the pilots could operate there. . -Wjth power reduced well below 17 ,.. amps per hours whenever possible Mission Control cfficlals l8ld 1he llhip's · supply of 500 aM.P hours of power should be sufficient but th.•Y admitted It '!'ould teave Utile margin. only essential in- struments were being operated. 1'e only panel light.I OQ were in • the-LM. (See APOLLO, Pap I) Newport Police Pay. Hike or .. ge Coaat -. Cultural Good Wishes • OAll.Y ll1l..OT 1'91,..... ' ers Day. Mayor urged comt11unily ,!inanci"1 SUPJ><!rl of 20-member group 's upcomiii& European. {oar, 16 be made this summer under· name of "N~rt Beach Youth Chorale. . Ir . . Promised h1 Fiscal 1971 ' Newport Beach police <lid not get ,the justment 'for police only; saying It Is a Immediate pay raise they asked for:but case of a whole family of posltiorls being got what amounted lo-a promise for the underpajd compared to other clUes al'Mi future from city councilmen Monday. • 1 special circumsta..ces confront police to- Councilme1 unanimously· rejected City daf making• niorate especiaDy Important. Man.ager Harvey L. Hurlbµrt 's recom· He IJ'O~ a 2J percent:incre~&:e!for mendaUon for police salary hikes but the 78. non-rankil'lg oUlc,er;:s, five percent said they would give spedal attention to for ithe 1$ sergeants, 7.5 percent. for1tbe ' provlding a healthy raise for police nut five Ueutenanlsrand five percent for. the fiscal year beginntag 'July 1. three ~•ptalns. • . . Cowtcllmen said they · cOuldn't 10 along" The no,..ranldng officers salary ~Id With the wage beat now became it ii IO• lfterease from I range of '7JI to l1'71 per late in the fiscal year aad becaust other month to a ra,nge" of 1 f731 to f8M per city employe1 would feel ctieated. • month. Phillip Bowen, City Employes Aslocl.. r Countjlm<n postponed ICtlon on tbe Uon .,,pre;ontaijv<, ·"said empioyes ·II\ ''J!l°""""jllnle:.,..~ .. wns\le!I wUh other wwftrf)aid clasSificalionl woukl ex-lt •1tm litftdtYJ • • • ' 1 . ped relfOllcUve · pay in<ij!...., from' ''Tl)e poblt has· been ~"i!>und•ntly lhe. police ralse1. · ·ef~ · :' sakt Cbui ~~ I We•t•er There'll be less )Vind (now that the election campaigns are over) and more sun on Wednesday, with temperatures back up to 45 alq lhe coast and near '10 inland. ' INSIDE TOD~Y . Orange Coa&t theatergoers oet o pair of "encore.t" thU week, along with two Orange County premierts in LaguM Beach and CCJ.tta Mesa. Ste Entertainment Page 9. ,,_. ' -• ,_ .. "' ' -·-.. ,._ ••• ·--•• =.. " --· • " --.. _ ...... • ..... 1 .. ,, _,.,. • Sltd 'Mlfhh 1tol1 .............. ' T .......... ~ t , ·-1•11 =· . -" • (. I ~WM " ._., -...,u.4 l • wwtf. ~ .,; • 4;f I Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall (left) greets singers Chris Gamel and Rita --.Jacklin and their director, Donald Haneke (right} after ero- claiming this day Corona del Mar Madrigal Smg· ' .. • Aprtl, som1 ""police, rr <OU!'9~ ... .,. '&lllil" · · 'tlllt .pollc.i~i'n<i<f .,.ell Hurlburt defended his propi>Sed pa)! ill., ' · " tM 1'bi.iet, p'JJ • • -. •" • ( •I, '' I j.at ' 't 4 ' .. ___________ _, I ~ • • \ • ·• Be Sure to Vote 'f;~~'y'; ~~Po_ll~ .·: -.J:.;.IU,: ' .... : ' f, .,j -• ~ : ~' '~ .. ~ f" .. ~' •I •·• •' j._ ,r ~ l •• ' . ..... .,..~ ' .. .. '\ .r· ·~ - 2 DAil Y ~ILOT II .-........ -court ·-- • Permanent Site (;et~ More·· Study • By JACK BROBACK Of Ille Deltl' Plllt Slatt Tbt flllur< Joutlon of Harbor Judicial District courta, under study for almost two years, setm1 doomed to additional E',.... P .. e l APOLW •.. Others were OJcked on as needed. study before a permanent site ts H:lected to house presently overcrowded faclUtles. Mayor Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach has requesled, and been granted, time Wednesday at 2 p.m. for a, one-hour presentaUon of Newport's bid to locate the new court facilities In the city's pro- paeed. clviC center In Irvine Center. Mayor ·Marlb&Jl, in her letter, states thlt the. pretenlaUon will be for in- fonnaUoo only and that the city makes no request for a decision by the Board of Supervisors. / Strip Park Purchased By Newport Newport Beach city councilmen bought the city a strip park Monday for '50,000. "The price has been cut dO\fn to the point where I would rather take It than let it go, but no more until we get a mas- ter plaa or parks and projections. on how we are going to fir.a.nee them," uld Coun· cllman Lindsley Parsons. The narrow, strip park the city bou1ht will run through the Harbor View Hills Bttn homes developmeot south of Buffalo Hills Park. -To keep the spacecraft from overheaUng, the astronauts' ship was oc· c:JaiooaU1 rotated IO dqr~a so the 247 degree•he1t of tbt sun would not bake on one aide for too 1ong:. The additional study indication comes in a covering letter to the supervisors by Stanley Krause, director of real property aervices~ . •I"' Total cost of developing lhe park will be about Sl30,000. The city has been asked to pick up $90,000 originally but the offer subsequently was cut lo no more than 150,000, with an estimated 11.ctual cost of $43,000, by Donald Bren Company Vice -LOvdl and · Hal&e, liied from long houra 'or wrailhii with the spaceship's grave problems, were asleep In the com- mand ship couches, Swigert, who earlier slept six hours , took scores of inst,ructions from Miaslon Control on means of con. serving the consumables. -All thrf\.. wore flight coveralls. The spacesuits Wiukl take too much power and oxy1en. ·· --Commwllcatlons with the earth were ac:ratdly becauee one of the high-powered antenna wu taken off the line. Looping the moon is the safest way home, officlals. aaid, because Apollo 13 wu c1oee to tta target at the Ume of tbe acrident. and already waa on a course that would take It around the moon's ba<kslde. To stop abort ol the moon would have required considerable englnt power and fuel .eipenditure, so m et h I n g. the astronauts did not have wilh Apollo 13'a big command &Np engine idled by elec- trical failure. The ·only powtrplant available is the lunar moduJe descent engine, the one that was to have lowered. Lovell and Hai.se to the lunar surface. The spacemen trig- gereid the engine 3Q secoods early lodty to adju!t the course slightly to a path that wouM-'iake them back to earth Friday rUght1r-they made no a d ditional maneuvtF. The K!l'tllCI firing at 9:40 ton\ght WU planned to Increase the speed enough for a landlfli 10 1llurs earlier. Asked at 1 briefing If there had been uy damage to tht hut Jhield, w h i c b must. protect the astronauts from t~ tremendous beat of re~try. He said there wu a slight possibility Of such damigebutthat UteHlwu no evldtnct'bfJ any. , ,1f1 ' The decision iollf'Yfor a Friday landing In the Pacfllc' ~ant that Mi!~on Control had decided ·nlit to adopt a "sup<rfut" ntum,plan. Under this, the engine faring tonlglit' Would have been lengthened to d;;.i,tdip a heavier push home. But ,B\11 w' have con11.1med more power. P ' ~ent Nlz:on k:ept in touch with devtlapments through phone contact wi~ NASA Ad ministrator Thomas 0. Paine m Mission COntrol. ' Neither the Uruted States nor Russia bas a space rescue capability. So ~ astronauts will have to depend on the11 skill and that or hundrecb of ez:perta on the ground to get home. City Sidewalk Ordina.1.1ce Set An ordioanee to keep city sldewa1ks cl~ of businessmen's dl.!play merchan- ~ or Ii~ was introduced Monday ilight by the NewPort Beach City Coon- cll Exceptions are made in the propased ordinance for temporary •.torage of build- ing materials next to coMtruction pro- ~ects and for newspaper racks. Anyone wishing to apeak on the sub- ject of the ordinance may addre!s Ule city COWlcil April 27. DAILY PILOT O•ANGt. COAiT l"U•l..lSMINO COMl"ANY ko'9•rt ~. W1•4 f'ruilknl .,.. ..... ~ Jt1k l. Cw/1y VJ(e ftrelcltftt _,.. 0.W•I ~ Th•m•1 K•••ll ..... l'-•111•1 A. M.r,kln• "-llfw EOllW l'-•"''' Ferllln• Ht.,,..rt kKll City l!f!IDr ....,.,, .... Offk• 2211 Will 11 1'90• 1.~1,,,.,4 M•llhit M4r•111 ,.0.101 1175, •2••t °"'"' -C•h MIMI 110 '#wt ••r Slrwl -....,,.. I~: 712 P'ttr•I ,.....,,,,.. Ml,l'lllrll*' Sffcfl' 11111 lkt<ll •"11""'9"' i.n c~i.: * Mwtll ll ~ a .. 1 Kt1U1e-1!0te! that the announcement of · the nO.r cif:y of Irvin< "lndlcaia the need to 're-evahiate the county's bisiC crlteril and conalCter lddUional site locations." Current studies, under way since early 19118, have been narrowed to the Newport Center alte and one on the Orange County Fairgrounds adjacent to the Coal.I Mel& Civic Cenler. · Krauae· at.ates that the new city of Irvine ii partially in the Harbor Judicial District and partially In the Cenlral Judicial District. 0 When the city becomes a reality the boundaries of .the Harbor District must exclude or include all of the new city," Krauae advista. Krause'• department originally sludled 18 different locations for the proposed new court faciliUu. The choices were narrowed to three, then to the two. (The third site, Lockheed property o n Pallsade.t Road, wtst of MacArthur Boulevard, was found to be unavailable .) The Newport Center site 1.ncludes S.25 acre~ wbicb the county could purchase for $439,890, or $13.790 an acre. Proposed by the city was a sharing of parking faciliUes and jail space for prisoners. Krause'a analysis noted that expensive doubl~~eck parking would be necessary, that .nine acres was really needed and that the county could purchase additional acres from the Irvine Company for about SlZ0,000 an acre. The fairgrounds site in Costa Mesa was originally !!Umated at $40,000 to $50,000 an acre but last Feb. ti the Qrange County Fair Board offered to sell for $69,U. an acre. County officials saw a problem of park· ing on the site on Fairview Road south of Arlington Drive because of the prox.lmlty of Orenge Coast College,· Co!ta Mesa High School and the Maude Davis lntermj\iliate llcbool. , , Cc.ti MHa ' Officials countered that thei r poUce could regulate parking at the court site to prevent use by student!. Si nce the court site location w~ last discussed by the supervisors last August, Costa Mesa officials have been searching for other court sites , possibly nearer to the civic center. Costa Mesa officials sald that" Fred Sorsabal, acting city manager, would at· tend Wednesday's session. He will pro- bably second Krause's suggestion for ad· ditional study to give the city time too!· fer 11.eW locations. Originally, at the first estimated price of fajrgrounds property. Costa Mesa boasted a $1 million advantage to the county in cost as compared to the Newport Center site. DililL 'T PILO'T Sllff P'll91• On .the Block Furnishings of old Villa Marina Restaurant on Bay. Side Drive at entrance to Balboa Island will be sold at auction Wednesday. Spokesman for the Irvine Company, o~er of the land, &aid the building will be torn down and replaced by a new 1~~staurant. Breseot restaurant which went broke, is an eye- sore ," according t~ Robert 11Buck''. Fisher. com- mercial properties manager for Irvine Company. Fron• Page l WI ND .•• ConstrucUon Co. The barge reportedly broke loose from the mother ship short ly after noon and tWo company tugs attempted to keep lt off lhe beach but parted lines In the poun- ding seas. As the tug came perilously close to shore about 4 p.m .• Newport lifeguards notified the Coast Guard and the Point Divide arrived on scene about 4:30. With the help o! the company tugs, crewmen got a four·lnch nylon hawser aboard. The Divide held the barge offshore untll company tugs could take her In tow and haul her to Long Beach. - The rescue and towing operations were hampered by :JS.knot winds that kicked. up seas of up to 12 feet. Despite the high winds, the Harbor Department had relatively little trouble. Al 12:10 a.m. today a 28-foot cabin cruiser broke loose from her moorings off South Bay Front Avenue, Newport Beach, al\d crashed into a seawall at 2300 BaYside Drive. During its course down the bay the boat miraculously avoided bitting' othe r moored boats. ' The Harbor Department said the boat belonged to J ames A. Nolan, 2311 N. Rosewood St., Santa Ana. It was not seriously damaged. Two commercial sportfishing boats parted their anchor Jines at Dana Point Jlarbor at 6:10 a.m. today but were rescued by the Harbor Department and company boats from the San Clemente Sporttishing Co. Winds up to 50-60 knots Carther north · kept Coast Guard and commercial rescue craft busy most of the afternoon. Hard aground and breaking up off Port Hueneme is the 465-foot. 12,500 Ion fonner cruise ship, La Janelle, which broke loose from its moorings at the height of the storm. Newport Okays Lobbyist To Push Anti-oil Bill Newport Beach city councilmen Mon· day appropria ted $2,000 toward the cost of hiring a lobbyist to push a bill banning offshore oil dfilling along the Orange Coast through Congress. The cities of Laguna Beach and San Clemente along with the County of Orange and the Coastal Area Protective League are expected to join in the un· dertaking. The lobbyist is Fred B. Burke of Ini:lustrlal Development Associates Inc. Washington, O.C. The rate o! pay will be $200 per day with the estimated total cost to be $5,000, according to Newport Mayor Doreen Marshall. Earlier informaUon had put the cost at first $50,000 and then about $12,500. The job of pushing the bill apparently is look· ing easier, however, with Gov. Ronald ·~ Fro1n Page I POLICE ... Shelton. He suggested the City Council at budget time re.view its policy of paying police an average wage compared to other cities and consider paying a superior wage for superior personnel. Council man Donp.ld Mcinnis said be thought that consideration shoukl be ex. tended to all public safety employes. which would Include firemen a n d lifeguards. Reagan behind It. Mayor Marshall said a "joint powers'' agreement will be signed between ~ county and the cities for ~e cooperative undertaking. But it will take some lime for the agreement to be signed, sealed and delivered and in the meantime coast residents wou ld be losing valuable lime, she told the City Council. AccordiDJitlY, Newport c o u n c i I m e n authorized advance of a retainer fee of $1 ,000 to get the lobbyist started to be paid either from city funds or from funds furnished by the Coastal Area Protective League. The bill would prevent oil drilling in federal water, beginning three mUes offshore, adjacent to areas where the near.shore tidal waters are designated marine pre.serves by the state. Jn effect. it means the U.S. government couldn't QOllect revenue by putUna in. Gil drilling platforms !Outh of ~ Santa Ana River (the boundary line between Hun· tington Beach and Newport Beach ). .Col. Melin Rites Held in Whittier · Private services were held today for Col. Charles Raymond J\.1elln, USAF rel., who died Sunday. He was 75. Col. Melin died at Hoag Memorial Hospital following a lengthy illness. President and chainnan of the board or Owens·Park Lumber Co., Los Angeles. he had lh•ed in Newport Beach for 11 years. President Harry Merrill. - City councilmen agreed to spend the money to provide rest rooms and other improvements to make the pari public rather than a private community associa- tion facility. But at earlier meetings and again Mon- day councilmen worried how many parks the city can afford. City policy is to finance park1 out of a building excise tax fund col~ected fr~m charges on construction within ~ c1~y. Hov:ever, city fire stations and libraries are to come out of the same fund . City Manager Harvey Hurlburt reported there was $201,000 in the fund at the s~ of this year and a deficit of $345.000 1s projected in another two years If fl.re stations are built at Jamboree Road 1n- terSection with Santa Barbara Drive and with Palisades Drive, plus other lmer projects. Councilmen therefore. de(lared a mora- torium on any more citv parks until a master plan of future park sites could be prepared and excise .tax re~enues from construction to the ultimate city boundar· ies projected. . Councilman Paul Gruber said the only answer he can see is to charge an acre- age fee for the purpose of developln~ parks. He said the n the citv could P!ck the park sites. "Nobody v;ould hand pick It for us and present us with a pretty picture.'' . . Councilman Parsons said it apJ)fared to him the city Parks, Beaches and i:tec· reation Commission had been so an:rtou t to get anv kind of park it had encouraged the developer. J..iayor Doreen Marshall defended the Bren tract park. sayifU!' it aopears to have a lot to recommend it. She noted there is a k>t of street-end aC'f'e~ibility, ... DOrtant when there are small children ~the nei,e:hborhood." · , • Cltv Parks and Recreation Dirertor C111· vin s·tewart also spoke of the benefit! of the strip park concept .. Rerre11tion ic: not limited to hitlin11; a basr.ball. It i! also going for a walk and rPadin" unrrr a tree and this park ls well suited for that." he said. But Parsoro~ came hack lo the mone11 ouestion. "Mr. Merrill. where is your riearest fire station?" he asked the de-- velonment companv vice president. "Ytell. w~ like lo give neople your phonl number, ~tr. Parsons." Merrill answered. Cancer Drive Speedup Sougl1t Apollo Mission Briefs Cou ncilman Hoi,•:ard Rogers pledged to work for a wage that would provide retroactive pay not just from April but from la.st November when Newport police pay first fell below the average o! other ctties. En gland Crisis Over? During his distinguished career with the Air For ce. Col. Mello served as com· manding officer for three bases, in- cluding Ma rch in Riverside and Hamilton in Sonoma County. Sluggish movement Is hampering Costa :ftfesa's Amer ican Cancer Society fund drive on a neighbor-to-neighbor basis and officials would like to speed it up. From Wire Servlcea e Reacue Help Ottered LONDON -The United States got of. fera of helP.. today for any rescue opera· tion !or Apollo 13 tr the spacecraft comes down iii the Auanttc. Britain sald its Royal Navy shl~ would be placed ai the disposal of any rescue operation if asked to do so by the United States. But a Delenae M I n I s t r y spokesman in Loodon said it had received oo request. In Paris, President Georges Pompidou ordered the French fleet on a state of alert to be r'ady for any recovery. Word of this was relayed to the U.S. Embassy in Parta. Braz.il 's navy and air force were alerted for a possible resc ue operation off the coast of Bra.iii. There was a possibility Apollo ta would come down in the South Atlantic but U.S. space officials were hoping for a splashdown in the Pacific as orlginally planned. 8 Nell: Tlmln11 Good SPACE CENTER, Houston CUP!) Nell A. Armstrong, the first man on the moan, and Alan L. Bean, the latest man on the moon, conceded todey the elec- trical fail~ on Apollo IS "happened at a \'Cry good Ume if it had to happen." "Their consensus is that It gives the astronauts lime to mearch the pro- blem and do something about It aa op. posed to another part or U'le mission when they wouldn 't have the time av1llable lo them," uld a NASA official who talked to Armstrong and Bean. Armstrong was a member of the only othtr maMed flight aborted early. That wu: Gtmlni I, brought back because lhc &pacecraft be~ao spinning out of control in ?ttarch, 1966. e Water No P ru&lem SPACE CENTER, Houiton (UP I) - Water is a m.Jntir problem for the Apollo 13 crew, which had only a 44·1·our supply In the lunar module fuel c:elk wJth 77 hours remaln!ng in the mission, a NASA spokesman sald. The crew still has a 48-hour supply of water in its survival kits in the command service module, the spokesman said. This totals to 92 hours of water for drinking and food preparation lf the flight can be brought down Friday as plaMed. Food Is no problem , the spokesman said, except that the crew may change .its menu to use food which does not require water in preparat.ion. e ·Ta•• Gh:e• Re port MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet news agency Tass carried !ls fir&t report on the Apollo 13 troubles in a brief, factual dispatch from New York. Tass said the "three astronauts are in grave danger" but "Oight oflicials are takin·g all measures to ensure their safe return to earth.'' Until the electrical breakdown, the Apollo flight had received liUle attention in the Soviet media, although full reports had been expected when I.he moon lati- ding was carried out. e Standbfl In Germon11 RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany (UPI) -U.S. rescue aircraft under com- mand o. Ramste\n Air Base are standing by to help if the Apollo 13 spacecran lands In the Atlanuc, a spokesman for the base said today. He said Ult CI30P Hercules planes belong to the 40th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Wing, Apollo Support Forces. They are rtady to respond to any diz'ec. lions from the Department of Defense or the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). O llfeteorlle Suapecled SEOO~A. Ariz. (AP) -The power !allure on Apollo 13 probably was caused v.'htn the fuel cell was &truck by a very mnnll mt'teorJte, Or. Harvey Nininger said today. Nininger, regarded as an expert on the subject, &aid hC! had glve:n this .. very pos!Uve oPlnion" to the N a t I o n a 1 Aeronautics and Space Admlnlstratlon after being conaulted by ii Monday nlghl LONDON (AP) -Britain's Labor par. ty government said tod ay the nation has fought Jl! way out of its long financial crisis and that the Bank of England's dis- count rate will be cut from 71h: percent to 7. He is sllrvived by hls wife Stella, of the family home al 227 Poppy Ave.; two sons, Thomas of LongvJew, Wash., and Arthur of San Gabriel; a brother, Norton of Evanston, Ill., and nine grandchildren. The family has requested in lieu of flowers friends contribute to I h e i r favorite cha rity or lo Chlldrens Hospital. Envelopes for donation& are started at one end of the block and passed on to the end, to be picked up there with funds replacing cancer literature. "In most neighborhood s .. yhey should "In most neii;rhborhoods. they should said f\.1rs. M.D. Morris, chairman of the local campaign. The carpet they both chose?· Bigelow's Barcelona Barcelom. combines the CUU&J, wind·tOMt'd &hag look ol today with an depnl Spanifib p1lle pattern. 'lbe ion&. &lender yams have a dt,. ahlmmery glow ••• the dramatic multi· eolors are Meditenanean;in1~ Use B&r- eek>na in a Spanish or MMltenaneen aetUng ot with ultra~m er mixed contemporary • , • for a truly atunning effect. And bea.W5e the n ..... ""'°"· Barcelona'• '° s1 09 n.,. to care for. SoU dcesn't 5 Mow ••• and pi.le atays crisp and aprina. A fine bu,y for any-"'1'" one who wants great styling •.. a roomful of JuXUr)' . , . at ";"'~!'.:~ ":,t11:!:' a d<>wrr~arth price. "'tY>"illl 6Swy Med iterraaeu Shades ALDEN'S CARP'm-DRAP'ERIES • Mediten•ne•n Moss Antique Ambtr • SJ)9nlsh Pol)Dy Spcbh Lt•th•r • Oran•d• Oold At.vio A¥OCtdo 100% •pproved Bigelow nylon pllo 1663 Placentia-Costa Mua Phone ~s I) , 1 1 7 ' Cosio Mesa voi:. 63, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ' . • L 0 ea s ac Nunabers l'aru ' Turnout Spotty In Mesa Voting SpottY turnouts at 49 voting. precincts -up in some, down in others -made it difficult by midday to determine a trend in Costa Mesa's Il70 municipal elect.ion. A aliatiUy heavier volume was reported ~t some locations over the 1968 balloting. U1 whk:b 29 percent of the city's registered voters reached the polls. Mayor Alvin L. Pi.nk1ey said he dropped !n at several precincts and esllmated the total could go a bit hJgher than in the 1958 elect.ion. A majority of the council was up for re- election at that time, however, while only two seats are up this time, those of in· cumbents George A. Tucker and Willard T. Jordan. Based on the campaign to date, Mesa Chil,d Death Case Probe Grows A lilt ol ..,... ud --d ~lali ... In Ntt York was beinc atudied today as· authorities prepare to broaden a probe ol Costa Me.w's butchered baby <:ase to the eutem seaboard. Relatives of Dr. Wesley G. Slocum and tlis wife will be questioned about the fate of. Cynthia Slocum, who vanished in early 19&1, less than three months after she was born. Dr. Slocum, ff, Is held at Orange Coun· ty Jail, charged with murdering the in- fant , while his wile is expected to be a key witness in the bizarre case. A preliminary hearing date of April 22 has been set in Harbor Judicial District Court for the former Santa Ana surgeon, c:lisabled in a gunfight with police four years ago Sunday. Dismembered remains of a baby were discovered March 2& in a freezer that thawed after being removed from tbe Slocum.s' ·former home in Costa Mesa. 1be crudely cut up body is believed by police to be that of the miS!ing infant. Dr. Slocum was arttst.ed the following day at Orange County Superior Court, where a pretrial settlement hearing was about to open in his $2.t million damage &1lt against Santa Ana police. Jlis wife was also arrested, then releas- ed after being questioned and police have continued to hunt potential witnesses who might corroborate her own story. Detective Capt. Bob Green said a con. ferenc' would be held tod~y with Orange County District Attorney's investigators oa lhe New York angle. One version of Cynthia's fate is that de was taken to be raised by ttlaUves in New York, where Dr. Slocum and his wife, a surgical nurse, met and married. Detective Gerry Thompson is the man· picked for the New Yori trip. observen said Jt appeared the closest race would probably be between Tucker and Planning Commissioner Jack Ham· melt. Tucker's campaign manager meanwhile, charged today that someone staged an apparent attempt to discredit him in the eyes of some voters by i~ legally placing campaign posters. "It's the white station wagon caper," said Dick Morrison, e:zplaining that CITY HALL VOTE TALLY PHONE: 134-5411 persons unknown made the rounds over the weekend in such a vehicle. Morrison said private homes were hit, with Tucker literature stuck on pegs in the lawns, misdemeanor offenses which official campaign workers were strictly warned about. "We bad no connection wjth this, t swear," said Morrison. He added that•many other legally plac· ed Tucker signs were stolen from the Mesa 4'1 llbr area over the weekend. Volers.amious t. 1nrn how the re1ums ... .,.,, up 1111\1' can Elecllao Central 1t11Je,Oosta Mesa Civic~ oftu.7:ll0 p.m., wben the fint tallies wW'ec:rnt in. Costa Mesans, as well u the Seven men-in the race for the council, may drop in to headquarters. where team1 of clerks will be busy canvassing the vote. Three clerks will be kept busy handling calls to the number listed above th is story, since the main line leads to three extensions. · The vote will be posted on a tote board as it is fed in from the 49 precincts serv· ing the city's 27,000 registered voters. Several precincts had begun to indicate a voting pattern by the early afternoon. with 80 out of 600 at Balearic School and 85 out of SSO at 2781 Cibola Ave., in the Mesa Verde area. Councilman Tucker Ras strong support there. A random sampling of other head- quarters showed the following turnout: Adams School: 75 votes. Califmi.Ja Scltool: 85 votes. Com Men Civic Cea&er: 54 voles. Harper Sdtool: 44 votes. "That's Jl1<tly light. •• pretty light," said a precinct spokesman. Election obsen:ers po I n t e d out, however, that voting patterns a.re strong- ly affected by geogra~y{ J n com e brackets and other factorC · Older areas of a city, where one may find many retirees, generally show a strong head start, while heavier density residential areas may get off lightly. Comfortable income areas -such as Mesa Vede -may also be affected toward the close of the balloting, when professionaJ men and o u t -o f ·a r e a employes arrive home. Polls will remain open In Costa Mesa from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., while In Fountain Valley -heavily populated· by com- muters -a p.m. is the closing hour. C~t Barge Buffeted By Gale Winds, Waves Hy ALMON LOCKABEY -·-Near-cale force winds and heavy seas ripped a 171 hit barge loose from its moorings ol.f the Santa Ana River jetty Monday .. It WU snatched from the pauir ding surf by the Coast Guard cutter Point Divide out of Newport Beach. A few hours later the nearby 432--foot pipe-laying vessel, the Davy Crockett, wu in danger of beinl driven ashore when the crew was unable to work the winches to lhorten up on the mooring tines. The veuel, a cooverted Liberty ship, was later secured without help from the eo.st a .... d. The Davy Crocbtt 11 e!l&l(ed In laying pipe.line for 1be multimllllon dollar Santa Ana aewer outfall. 'lbe barge ii an aur-lliari ruael llled for hauling ripr1p IJ1d other mal«lall oa lfle project. • · The heavily laden blrge wne wlllltn 1 few hundred 7anll ol the belch off 50th Street helore Ille Point Divide IOI lines aboard lo bokl. ber until company tugs took her in tow. The barce and the ship belong to the Petu Kiewit & Sons (See WINO, Pl(I II . 'If!,..... WHAT HAPPENED -Chart shows bow Apollo miles from earth. ~ower-now is1being supplied from I !3's astronauts aborted their moon landing. mission the hmu lander, which must be jei..iiso~ed before 1 after explosion jolted their comm~ ahip ,205,000· spla&hdown. . . ·-~~~--'--~~~~~~~~-'-~'--~~~--'--~~~- , _,J, ... • • • .. . • .. t ' t·., /'1 ~ ... -. W:orld Navi~,. ~ · ' Mesa Bribery s ·uspect ArraignmentPoslpo1:Wd . -· .. _ _, Offer Help For. Splashdown From Wire Sel'Vk:t1 . . .. e ReJette Help Ottered One of two men charged with trying lo bribe a policeman to frame a theft case prosecution witness weat to court Mon- day. while a western states hunt for the second continues. Samuel C. Rosman, 27, of 29351 San Briso Place, Laguna Niguel, had his ar· raignmerrt postponed until April 20 at Minnesota Judge Blackmun Next Pick for Court? WASHINGTON (AP) -An Informed Senate source said today that President Nixon will nominate Judge Harry A. Blackmun of Minnesota for the Supreme Court. This was the word reportedly passed to key se11ators. An unouncement from the White House was expected shorUy. Blackrnun, a clole friend of Chief Justice Wat"rtm E. Bufaer, hu been a membtr of the·lth U.S .. €irc.<u.it Court of Ap~als in St. Louis since 1959. He was ap. pointed by fonner' President Dwlibt 0. Ei.sellhower. B'."efore word 1hat BlaCkmun WM 1Nix- oo's choice for the 'COUrt pGlt for which two Southern judges were rejected, key Republicaa senators were briefed by Deputy Atty. Gell. Richard G. Kleindienst in a Caplt.1 hideaway. Afterward GOP Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania said that poislble nominees had been dllCUISed and that he expected anrlouncement of the P,resident's IOlnina· tion "in the very near-future." 1'1 don't· think 'ff ump hl' e y' s cn- donemeot hurts anybody," Scott replied. Scott salQ,llle ._11., w\111 Kleindienst was the lJlpe of """8111tlU.O be hid urged on the admini!tratl.011 after the 8'nate's rejectioR by a $1-CS vote last Wedaaday ol Nll:on's bOminadorr of Judge G. Har· rold eam..ir or Florkla. Sf!Hk JitlrftcU.. \I • ' ' ~ • -• ,l NEW YotJC'w;~!'lle lfld" ln.,k•tj staged 1 tilillst cbmeblici: late Uiil• after~ l!OOll rrotli the iteep decline that hid chi~· 1cterized the session earlier. (SM ~­ tions . Pages 10.11). J :30 p.m. In Harbor JudiciaJ D~trict Court. He and Eugene C. Rondondo, 44, of 2242 E. 22nd St., Newport Beach, are accused of attempted bribery and conspir:acy to falsely arrest. Rosman. bearded and manacled to other prisoners when led to court Monday, is also charged with furnishing dangerous drugs as a result of the case. Costa Mesa PolJce Officer Gary Bar- wig said Rosman was the contact man In a March 24 scheme to plant narcotics In a car driven by a man who is to tes. lify again.st Rondondo. Cooperating with authorities, ·Charles S. Dreyer, 32, o( 1645 Sunset Ridge Drive. Laguna Beach, went· along with the alleged plot and on April 3 he wu . arrested. He has been cleared of the phony charge by District Attorney' Cecil Hicks. Rosman was subsequently arrested at hL~ home, while Rondondo -who skipped bail on the theft trial scheduled to begin · last Wednesday -is believed to have fled the state. The two principals were Involved in ownership of the NewPort Beach 'night. club bearing the name oC·blind soul sint·• er Jose Feliciano when charged with lhett last summlr. Paunchy and wearing sun&laues, Ros- man attempted to evade cameramen try. iflg to shoot his arrival 'at court Monday. CLIP MACHINES A.RE NO MOWER ·A burglar mowed down a Costa Mesa landscape. maintenance·finn's inventory,· the victim told police Monday Byron E. Robinson or 327 W. Wilson St. said he found seven mowers missing from a storage !hed which Was rifled' overnight. LONOON -The ·unJiecr Stites got of. fers of help today for any rescue opera. tion for Apollo 13 Ir the spacecraft comes down in the Atlantic. Britain sald its Royal Navy ships would be placed at lhe disposal of any rescue operation U asked to do '° by the United States.• But a Defense M: i n I st r y, spokesman in London said it had received no !'!quest. ' In Paris_. President Georgu Pompidou order,~ the Frepch fleet on a, state of alert to be ready for any recoverf, Word Of this WIS relayed to thelif.S. Embi!sy In Paris. Brazil'• navy and air force were alerted foi: a pcwibli rescue operaUoo off the coast of Br~il. · · . . There was a. PQBs1billty Apollo 13·would co1iie down in the South Atlantic but U.S. space officials were hoping for a stilashdovm m· the Pacific as orlsinally planned. e Nell: Timing Good SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) Neil A. Armstrong, the firat man Oii the moon, and Alan L. Bean, the latest man' on the moon, conceded today the elte- trical faUm on Apollo ll"hllppened llt 1 very good lime If it had lo happeii." "1'~lr consensus is that H glvei the istronauts Ume to research the: pro-· ble1n and, do someµllng about it u ·op· ~ lo another ~M of ~ riWaion "hen they wouldn'.t have the time available to them,'j said a NASA official who bilked, lo Armstrong and Bean. , Armstrong was a mE:mber of the. only Other maitn'ed Ql8ht aborted early. Tbat• was•Gemlnl· a, brought1baci: because the ~cecrjlft began spinnlng'°'lt of· control· Jn March, 1966 .. e Water No Proble• : SPACE' CENTER, Holllton (UPI) - Water 11 1 minor problem for the APollo' ' • 11 ~,.w!>leJo,hlld'<*!Jl•i ~ .. Di!Y ;_p;µl!f~11lf Ci1si8..Qver? , :..... (:;'~iii.-~~:~~~ I fl' . "· .. sfjottaftinl -,WJ ~ " · " .-. , • .'J.ci~·!APj~-Bntalit:(Lilior plr.: The ciew•sllJJ ~ 1>#~~11Uppiy~. 1 ly .g.yenmi.,,tiai1f today ·tJ>e D11tl0ll>hll ' ·Waler In ltl lllrfi•-lkltl In the commllld , fought lti ',..y' otlt .. f iL1 long lina~lll . , serylce m<ldule, the,.spoko•11>1n uid. This. ·crisis and thlf Ille BaAlr ol F;ngJ1nd'1 di,. tolab to ~ lMlun Of water for drlnktnc couqt rate will be, cut r:om 7~ percent< to . •!Kl food preparation if the rught can be 7. brooaht,dpwa !'rld17 u pionoed., T• .. Y'•l'l..i :-N.~ . .fe•_zk'------... TEN CENTS " • 'I Spa~e B@~t. FQrces Halt . ·- SPACE CENTER. HOUl!on (AP) - Apollo t3's utroniqll 6attled toll1y t. tiring their Crippfed crlll bldt m eii:th from a · quarter ·million _nille.s any at Mllsion Control decided they would .U.. foe I Friday,spWhdown ID tllo Podlie. James A. LoveliJt .• Fnd W:lfllloJt. IJ1d John L. SwJam Jr. look~ t. conserve their tn!'ioos COlllUlllal>loa ol water, ozygen ancf power u they nlCed f~r (rom earth tov(ant a moon whidt had been their llUlding tar&el ....U I violent eruption of a praaurized fuel tant Monday night. They were to loop around the moon tonight and two hours later; at.1:40)'p.m. PST, were to fir!l their lunar lnder engine to sped them back towfrd earth and a splashdown in the Pacific north of New 1.ealand at 9:13 a.m. PST Frktay, Asked whether the !Moe -n. principals in the most dangerous drama in American space hi.story, would make it home safely, flight controller Gl)'M Lun# ney, answered , ••ves, barely." "We've got the situation stabilized.,'' he said. •'11\e mpst criUcal t\),ing now is to keep It slablliud the rest ol the fllght." .As 1-tl;llala alld Swlaert fllw.1.., .....,.,_, bore WU tllo.ji<!an ~ ••-~--"•c • UICll' ___ .__...... • - -··- ..... ,,,. . ........i 'lll>lp, dl>lbled'!!,lho 11111 ..,..,._ .......... ·~elr oloit -·~. ·--bot. terl& and a,aen:~pp0a were avaHibl• to like the ship, the only ..tilcle thlt,can carry the men home, through the at. mosphere. -The lunar module Whicl:I became the astronauts' Ufeboet, was p r ·o v I d I n c crlUcat pGwer, oxygen, water and other life support. But ·111 suppllet ~~ci:?.i>: ping and the utronauti were ~ on mll)lmum l'!qUiremenLs. ~ -Officials: were concerned m81oly with the water IUP.PlY· ·With 71 hours to go, based on a · FrJdiy landin;,· they had enough water. I or t4 hours, a marstn of 12 hours. To .ktep this margin, th e i.stronauts mlllt powe'r down to minimum etedrical pom of i7 amperes per hour for 111<111 .of the i01!1J1eY, reducing the avera" .hourly water comumptku from five to Z.11.jlOW>dl • .DILw.W ~ Uled for cooling the electronics and cabin osypn as well as for drbttin&. -The oxygen 11.1pply Was more IUbstaft. (Boe APOU.O, Pip I) Parking Pass Nninher May Lead to Culprit . A serial number' C!>Ukl . pro:Ve who burgllrized a car parked at C.Otl 1\1.,. High Scllool Monday. police said today. • .. Instructor Chet Atlas, 29, of Loni • Beach, said the car clouter stole hi.I faculty parking itlcker, No. 1115, ;. estimatfi'lg ita value..,1t 21 ceot.s. ' Oru11e Weadier There'll be less, wind (now thlt the election campatins are over) and more IUll on. V(edriesday, with temperatures back up to 15 aJoaa" Ille Coast ... near 70 lnllf!CL .. ~SIDE TODAY ; Orangie COO$t thtoteroom Ott a 1pair of "encore•" this tHfk• along with two Orange County prt11\itrts in Laguna Btach af'(I Cotta Mesa. Ste Enttrtainmnt, I ~;,9. ,. " • • ' " • • • Be Sure . to Vote TQd~y;f., .. ·Polls ·. Opell Till 7 .. • • • I DAILY PILOl "'I T ........ WATCHES FROM GROUND MIHlon Chief Sleyton Was "It String Of 13's That Plagued Apollo? SPACE CENTER, Hoos1on (UPI) -Al first the astronaut. called the number assigned ,America's third moon landing rught "a joke." One crewman's wife call- ed Jt "Lucky 13." But all the bad luck traditionally aJIOCiat.ed with nwnber lS struck MQn- day "iilgbt. A ·power failure crjJJi>led Apollo 13 1eas· J/lon 12 )Joun before. l1s planned ~nd~zvous with the moon, wip- ing out an cha~ fqr a lfndlng and en- dangering the crew. · The classically' unI!JCky number' crop- ped up for Apollo 13 in a lot of places other than its name. Blastoff came at l3 :t:f Central Stan- dard.. mne. or '1:13 p.rn. And nOw that the landing mission has been aborted, a splashdown tlme of 9:13 p.m. (PST) has bttn tentatively identified by Mission COntrol. The b.ig·fallure came on the lSth day ci the month. Asked before the flight If he felt superstlUous about the mJs~ion number, Thomu K. Maitingly, one of the original crewmen replied: "We'll, at first we were hoping we could launch on Friday the thirteenth and have a patch with a black cat or somet&ng lite that. But we steer away from all that. Ifs good for a Joke.'' 'Bad luck struck Mattingly extra early. Two days before the flight he was grDUllded because he had been exposed to German measles, to Which he had JK1 Im- munity. John L. Swigert was assigned to take 'Mattlngly's place . with James A. Lov~ and Fred w. Halae. / . • fb:lte's wtfe Mary saJd berort the fiigl>t: "We're caillni ii Lucky 13." It wm't. Girl Injme.d Crossing Street A-t Costa Mesa girl was hurt Monday night when struck by a car while trylng to obey the traffic signa1 at 19th Street and Pomona Avenue. Lori McElveny, 10, of 702 Shalimar Drtve, was treated for contusions at. Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital and released to go home. She and her sister were crossing when the Don't Walk signal began to flash when they were in the middle of the street, according to police. The ifrl started to run and collided with a car driven·by Jeffrey J. Borchers, 19, of 19642 €onstellation Lane, Hun- tington Beach, as the motorist made a lefl twn. - Copter Drops Trailer CAMP PENPLETON (AP) - A big Marine helicopter dropped a quarter·ton cargo trailer accldentaJly while Oying it in war games Monday. No one was reported injured. DAllY PllOT OJl.utGl CO.Ul l"U•LllHING COo\ll"ANY Roli••• N. w.1d '""'"'"'' .,,.. "llb11•~ ... Edi ... Tlio"''' A.. M11•111'ii"' M_,"'9 l'tlllfr c... ..... Offk• JJO w,,1 lty Street Mt il1111 A'1,r1u1 P.O. 101 I '60. tt•l• 0tt.r OffkH "...,...' htd\1 nu w..1 ''"'°' .....,....,,,. UtvM l•ch: 2n FOru r ....... _ H11111in9!0fl ••tch: 1111J 1110 l:111!w1rt1 $111 Clf<'*'ltl: Jf,I N'"°" It '""'"'-AMI D.1.1\.Y •II.OT, 1lo'llll •Wllldl k t-i..r"'ltl 1111 "~-•-1, " """"!"'" ,,.1, ,.~ .... ""'· .... M -•It 1t11!-lot L~ IMC~. NI....... l•Kll• (OlN Mft.1, """"tlnti""' lt-.:;R W F""'ltll! Yl"tY. 11°"9 W~~ !WO Nfi.n.I eo!l111t11. Or•lltOI ton1 "\lttltfl"'t ' ~ lll'll'lllfll pit~ ltt It n11 Wn1 .. _ IMN H1"10fl It«~ ..... 1• Wt•I .. ., •'"'4. Cttl• ,IMM. fe1s1•1nr 171•t M2-4J21 . c .............. ..,... •• '42·5671 c.rrltM< Jt1t. °""'* CM&t N!ith"'t ~y. ... -'*'"" w..11 ...... .... 1111 rMTtfl> " ........ _.. ...,,111 """ llot r•ollfCW wlltllell ~lll ..,. """""' .. COf"t'l'Wll -· -,_,..l .. llaf NI....., ltlrll ..., "''" """6. .1 ..... 111, ''"'" .... ""' "' U IT .... rtM ~'II h' -ii 12.11 -lllly1 !lltfllMY -llMllofl .. U.• -!hi,, ' -,.. ••• .,.i r l\POLLO. :. " 1111 '111ey hid enoop l'f' ID bwra, I ..,..... .¢ Ill houn, barrios "°""""' ..,.._ 'J'he ........... m-Uf!Od • lillf' '!" .,,..uile Jo ....... thllr - _,clio, °"""" -loll ...... --~ ..-1o1o Ille._.... •Qbin .. ~ ----.... , ~~ ponr 'nducod ·wall bo1ro II amps ptr houis whenever poo11i.1. Mission Control olficlals said the ship'• supply of 500 amp boun of power shoU1d be sufficient but they admitted it would leave little margin. Only essentJal in- struments were being operated. The only pane) lights on were In Jlre LM. Othets were flicked on as needed. -To keep the spacecraft fr o m ovtmeattac. the astronauts''ship wu: oc- casionf,)ly rotated 90 degrees so the 247 degree heat' of the 11un would not bake on one side for {oo long. -Lovell and Halse, tried' .from long houn ci. wratuiii with the 1paceshlp'1 grave ,problems, were asleep in tbe. co~ mMd ohlp ~clrel, Swigert, who ear!Jer slept II> houn, took acores of lnolructlpns frorD Mluloci Control on mew of ccm- serving the contUmables. -AU three wore filght coveratla. The spacesuits would take ~ much power and oxygen. -Communicat.iona with the earth were scratchy becauae one of the .high-powered antennu was taken oil the line. Looping the moon ii the safest way home, officials uld, because Apollo 13 was close to It! target at the Ume of the accident and already was on a course that would take It around the moon's backside. ·To atop 11hort of the moon would have required considerable engine power and fu~l eipenditure, 1 o me t b I n g the astll>nauts did not have with .Apollo 13'1 big command ship engine idled by elec- trical failure. The only powerplant available la the lunar module descent engine1 tht one that was to have lowered Lovell and Baise to the lunar surface. The spacemen trit- gered the eaglne 30 secoods early today to adjust the cOurse slightly to a path that would take them back to earth P'riday night 'If they made no additional maneuver. The second firing at 9:40 tonight was pWme<I lo lncreue the speed eoo111h for a landing 10 hours earlier. Asked at a brieling if there bad been any damage to the heat shield, w h I c h must protect the astronauts from the tremendous beat of r~ntry. He Hid then wu a slight pos11lbiUty of such qamage but that there was no evidence of any. The decision to try for a Friday landing in the Paciijc meant that Mission Control haq ~ecided nol lo adopl 1a "superfnt" fetum plan. Under this, the englhe firing tonight would have been leagthened \o give the ship a heavier pusti home. But this would have consumed more power. President Nixon kept in touch with developments throu1b phone contact with NASA Administrator Thomas O. Paine in Mission Control. Neither the United States nor Russia has a space rescue capability. So the astronauts will .have to depend on their skill and that or hundreds of experts on the ground to get home. Optimist Oub's Speech Meet Set Five top speakers 16 or under will com- pete. Thursday in the Cotlta Mesa <;)ptimist Club's 1970 Boys' Oratorlcal Contest, to be held at Rembrandt's Restaurant. "Youth, Full Partners in a Better Tomorrow," is theme for the contest this year, expected to involve 50,000 boys in the ti.S. and Canada. Dr. David W. Gibson, local chairman, said the winner among five intermediate schools Will compete at district level, with seml-fina1s June 28 through July 2 in Los Angeles. Five finalist.a will be selected at that stage, with $6,000 in scholarships at slake. Dump Day Due In Mesa Verde Saturday ls Dump Day In the Meia Verde 'area. Spring cleaning Is curTently In season and members of the Orange Coast Col- lege Fomislcs Team are providing low· cost transportation for junk or usable discarded Items. The latter will go to Goodwill Industrits. Material may be delivered to the Meta Verde Realty parking lot, 2850 Mesa Verde Drive. or OCC speech te1m members will pick up the cargo at your home for a nomln&I fee. Funda from the program will help send the OCC Forensics group to the Univmi- ty of Michigan P.iay 5 for the NaUonal Junior College Foremlcs championships. The OCC team is tops in California and a strong contender to take the U.S. title IC the trip can be financed. Fence Clin1her Loots l\1esa Surplus Plant A f~limblng burglar loottd mo worth of toolll from a COsta ~iesa surplus company, the owners reportt'd to police Monday. Lucien Blason said toss from the plant at 1$58 Superior Av!., fncJuded assorted hand tools 11nd an air compreuor ouUlt. -··-· .... ·-'-~ , DAll.Y Pll.OT Steff ....... Stretching a Check Mrs. Wilma Kaiser or La Mirada cashes two-Coot goatskin check for $25 she received as winner of contest to name book dealing with the history 'of Gc>Bt ' ••• ~.er, Costa Mesa. Author Ed Miller (cenj.er) ao- companied Mrs. Kaiser to teller's booth where United California Bank executive ChUc.k._ Purcell cashed the unusual check. Mrs. Kai!l!r'a 0 A Slice of Orange" won over 489 entries in what turned out to be a Ifationwide contest. Newport Police Pay Hike ' Promised in Fiscal 1971 Newport Beach police did not get the Immediate p.ay raise they asked for but got what amounted to a promise for the futurt frOm city councilmen Monday. Councilmen unanimously rejeeted City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt's recom· mendallon for police salary hlkes but said they would give speciaJ attention to providing a healthy raise for police next flacal year beginning July I. Couflcilmen said they couldn't go along with the wage boost now because ii Is so late In the fiscal year and because other city employes would feel cheate<:. Philllp Bowen:, City Employes AsJOCia· Uon representative, said employes in other und~rpaJd clasSt!ications would ex- pect retroactive par increases from April, Same as police,·iftouncilmf:n gave the police raises. Hurlburt defended his proposed pay ad· justment for police only, aaying it 11 a cue of a whole family of poslllons being underpaid compared to other cities and special circumstances confront poUce to- day making morale especially important. He proposed a 2.5 percent increase for the 78 non-ranking officers, five percent for the 15 sergeants, 7.5 percent for the five Jieutenant.s and five percent for the lhret captains. The non-ranking officers salary Would lncrea11e from a range of $718 to $872 per month to a range of $736 to $894 per mon th. Councilmen postponed action on the ' propo'Jal three weeks ago, wrestled with it again Monday. "The point has been made abundantly and eloquently that police need special consideraUon," said Councilman Robert (See POIJCE, Page Z) Shelton. He suggested the City C.Ouncll at budget time review its policy of paying police an avera1e wage compared to blber clties and consider paylng a superior wage for superior personnel. Councilman Donald Mcinnis ·said he thought that consideration should be ex- tended to all public safety -elnployes , which would include firemen a n d lifeguards. Councilman Howard Rogers pledged to work for a wa1e that woulJ provide retroactive pay not just from April but from last November when Newport police pay first £ell below the average of other cities. Service Station In Mesa Held Up The best way to persuade a service sta- tion attendant that you can get $85 in change back for a one-spot is to show him a gun. Costa Mesa police said that's .what one customer did after approaching Donald L. Allen at a Lerner Oil Company station at 2360 Newport Blvd. Monday night. Alien was forced to hand over contents of the pump island cashbox shortly before 10 p.m., the victim told investigators. Funeral Gets Turkish Riot Rough; Erupts ANKARA, Turkey ( A P ) -A demonstrator and a policeman were in- jured today when the funeral sfrvlce for a doctor killed in a student clash Monday turned into an anti-American demo'nstra- tion. ?.fore than 1,000 stud@nls smashed the windows of the American-Turkish Foreign Trade Bank and damaged rurniture and office equipment. Agenda Split Mesa P,lan Panel l)elays · 6 IteIDs The Coa:la Mesa Planning CommJsslon alm0&t split its agenda in half Monday night, recommending approval of nine matters and holding six for additional study. One postponed wu a z.one excepUon permlt for George Buccol1'1 tract of 70 homes oo 15 acres ot land on the south akte of West ltth Street, west of Whittler Avenue. ..., AcUon was delayed on that item, until May 11, plus a required zone change swlt· ching the land involved, from industrial to single family hOme use. Detailed discussion of the two related matters is sc.nep uled for an alternate P.londay night study session the ~·eek before the formal hearing. An application for Melven T. Chrislip, of 2861 El Rio Circle to move an old home to 2687 Orange Ave., was narrowly ap-' proved by a 3 to 2 vote, Commlsajoners Charles Beck and H.J. "Jimmie" Wood voted against Chrlslip's request for the permit and also a zone exception pemUt Cor its ,placement at the Orange Avenue site. They noted the residence Is 25 years old, saying it is not compatible and cer- tainly would not improve the area into which Chrislip wants to move it. The home is now located at 1072 Palisades Road, Santa Ana Heights. Commissioners also recommended a~ proval of these measures: -A specific plan oC alignment for a street along the south boundary of a t~ aere elementary school site tn the Mesa Verde area, tying Into Golf Course Drive. -An encroachment permit allowing ?.!orris A. Waliock, of Palm Springs, to locate trash containers, a fence and park- ing area in city right-Of-way at 1570 Newport Blvd., where be is building a convalescent hospital. Crypt Opened By Court Order; Wife's Body OK Author!Ues at Westminster Me'morial Park have identified the body or a woman removed from a crypt' there Monday u Mrs. P'earl O. McGinnis, who~ August, [ltu: • 1 v . ...~ The crypt was opened by court arde+1 1.1oodaf -~au.se Ronald T. McGinnis. husband of the dead wom'an, Is suing the park for $50,000, clalming it lOEit track of her Lody. Officials represenUng the Park said to- day that finding the body proved their contention that it was right where they said It was, "Crypt E-5." A(torney Dudley Gray, repre11tnting McGinnis, said the wit would continue beeause, t'We sUll contend the park lost track of the body. It took a court order for Mr. McGinnis to find his wife's body." Gray Identified the woman by a gold chain and a ring which she wore when buried. A pathologist and a dentist were present for further identification, but were net needed after Gray said he was, "95 percent sure" it was Mrs. McGinnis. The body was returned to the crypt later lilonday. The suit started about two years ago when Mr. McGinnis, who was ordered not to be present at Monday's crypt opening, was told differeni locations Cor the crypt by different park personnel . Attorn eys in the case will return to Orange County Superior Court 1t1ay 4 to continue legal action. -A zone exception permit allowing ·paraplegic Charles S. Brown to operate a pet photography studio as a home oc- cupaLioo at 205 Dartmouth Place. -A zone exception permit for Rudy Renka, of 515 Hamilton St., to live in an existing home while operating an auto repair shop at that address, ln a com- mercial zone. Among the several matters continued Cor additional study wall a zone exception permit by Irvin and Donalda Sawyer to exp.and their convalescent home at 2619 Orange Ave., to accommodate I 5 O persons. From Page 1 WIND. • • Construction Co. The barge (epo rtedly broke loose from the mother sbip shortly after noon and tl\'O company tugs attempted to keep it off the beach but parted lines in the poun- ding seas. As the tug came perilously close to shore about 4 p.m ., Newport lifeguards noUfled the Coast Guard and the Point Divide arrived on scene about 4:30. With the help of the company tugs, crewmen got a four-Inch nylon hawser aboard. nie Divide held the barge ()ffshore until company tugs could take her in tow and haul her to Long Beach. The rescue and towing operatiom were hampered by 35-knot winds that kicked up seas of up to 12 feet. Despite the high winds, tl)e Harbor Department had relatively little trouble. At 12:10 a.m. today a 28-foot cabin crulier broke loose from her moorings off South Bay Front Avenue, Newport Beach, and crashed into a seawall at 2300 Bayside Drive. During its course down the bay the boat miraculously avoided hitting other moored boats. The Harbor Department said the boat bek>nged to James A. Nolan, 2311 N. Rosewood St., Santa Ana. It ~·as not seriously damaged. Two commercial sportfishing boats parted their anchor Jines at Dana Point Harbor at 6:10 a.m. today but were resc~ by the Harbor Department and comFr. boats from the S<ln Clemmie 8'i>r111Shi"8 Co. -• W-°* up to 5MO knoll farther north kept qoast Guard and commercial rescue craft busy most of the afternoon . Hard aground and breaking up off Port Hueneme is the 465-foot, 12,500 ton former cruise ship, La Janelle, which broke loose from its moorings at the height of the storm. A Coast Guard helicopter evacuated two crewmen from the ship shortly after it fetched up on the beach south of the Channel Islands Harbor entrance. The ship had been moored a half-mile offshore where it was awaiting conversion into a floating restaurant. While flying over the drifting vessel a Coast Guard helicopter spotted the body of a man clad in skin-diving gear. The body was plucked from the sea and turn- ed over to Ventura County authorities. Il had not been identified late today. In other sea mishaps the Coast Guard rescued five persons from two fishing boats which had dragged anchor and crashed into each other off Santa Monica Bay; rescued a 27-foot auxiliary sailboat which was out of fuel and unable to make sail in Long Beach Harbor, and rescued a 110.foot fishing barge which dragged anchor ()ff the east end of Long Beach Harbor. Oassroom Nudes Case Decision Slow at College ~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ LONG BEACH (AP) -A decision hllo been postponed in a faculty discipline case Involving two male teachers who us- ed a naked ~man and a naked man and &lag movies In a sociology class. Donald H. Simonsen, acting pre11ident of Long Beach State College, said Mon- day a new report or a new heafing ·COm· miltee would be required. Simonsen said a three-man facul ty committee hearing the case had not sub- mitted a "proper report." Hi 'said specific charge.!! weren't dealt with. The committee recommended charges be dropped a1ainst the two teachers. Don Robertson and P.tarion Steele. T h e teachers sald they were trying to prove Jn class that nakedness and pomo11apby were harmless. A decision in the case may be postpon· ed until the end of the academic year in June, sources said. Rohbe1·y Noted At Space Center One trouble the tense A'pOl10 13 astronaull needn't worry about aloft is breakJng and entering. but li11S31on Co11· trol In Costa Mesa reported Monday the theft of an lnslnlment panel and com· munlcatlons gear. · The b11rgl1ry was 11t P..1cNally School. lnstructor P.1onty G. Fones told police ~omeone prie<I open a porthole In the mobile Space Center classroom parked on campus, taking nearly $500 In valuables. Losa Included 1 desll: converted to almulalt an lnslniment J>lnel. plus a citizens' band radio used in the teachlne: aid. • L 6 Sunny Mediterranean Shades Mllditernnean Mon Antiqua Amber • Spanish PoPljly Spani1h Leath•r • Granada Oold Aravio Avoc.cio • ,, ' 100% approved Biielow nylon pilo The carpet they both chose? Bigelow's Barcelona Barci!lona eombmet 1~ caauBI, wlnd-tosst'd ahq look ol. tOOaJI" w:IU. an elepnt Spanish. grille pattern. The k>ng, 1~nder yams have a. aoft, ahlmmery glow ... U-.e drama Uc mull.i- color. are Medi~rranean~lnsplred. Use Bar· etlona in a Spanish or MCdlterranean setUns;:- at with ultra-modern or mixed contemporary ••. tor a. truly stunning effect And becau5e the fiber'• nylon, Baf'CC!Jona'1 so $ -to """ ,.... Soil ....... 1 0' 5 abow .... and pile stays erlsp and sprlngy. A fme buy for an,---.. )"I. one wtlo want& gT>eat styllni: • .. • roomful of luxury •• , at 1rit,..111111r10 ""''"''"':-• ·--,....___......._,. . "l"' ....... ....,...". ~...., pnce_, ,..CWl'liofl ALDEN'S CARPETS-DRAPERIES 0 I J YEA.as SEAVIN& THE ORANGE COAST e 1663 Placanti-Costa Mesa Phone 646--1838 7 • . Sadlllehaek Teday'I .Ple•I • • • EDIJ,ION • vor. 63, NO. 17, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ·C>;LIFORNIA :TUESDAY; APRIC )4: ·1971> ". . 0 ea s ac ODI 17% Before Noon Voters Hurrying To Laguna Polls Space Bl~t Forces Halt ' Of Landfu . g SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Apollo lS's astronauts battled today to bring their crippled craft' back to ·51rt1t from a quarter million mllet away ac Mluloo Conlnll decided they would lim for a Frjday splashdown in the Paclflc. By BARBARA KREIBICH Of ... o.itr ...... ,..,.. Business was brisk at Laguna'• 14 poll- ing places this morning .u voters turned out unusually early to caat their ballots in Voting Brisk In Cl.emente , Capistrano By JOHN VALTERZA Of n.. Deity PJllM SI.., Voting precincts in San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano reported brisk business under bright blue skies In twti municipal elections today. About 10 percent of the registered voters had cast their ballots by mid- morning. In San Clemente, '744 cit.izenl had cast their_}'Gtes fot three of lS candidates on CITY HALL PHONE TALLY PHONE: 4'2-5101 the ballot and a yes or no on a beach fee straw vote. A total of 7,789 are Tf!gistered. In Capistrano, only partial returns were available today after refusal by election officials and City Administrator Ernest 'Mlompson to divulge the number or voters at the C6unty Fire Station voting precinct. Officials at the city's other precinct, a residential garage, said that out of 450 registered voters there 97 had cast their ballot.. Thompson, adamant about not releas- ing the figures at the !ir:e station until he returned to City Hall later in the day, reprimanded tht DAILY PILOT !or "disrupting the election by calling this number (the f1te staUon phone)." "I had to reprimand the other newspaper! (two others) whl~h al!J? call~ thls morning. You are all disrupting this election," he said. In San Clemente, all the precincU with phones were contacted and all reported on voter rigures. The six precinct! contacted reported brisk business. Several elect.ion workers said that clusters of voters were already fonnina lines waiting to vote. At Concordia School with 1 , 1 8 3 registered. 137 persons had voted for a percentage of 11.5. The DeRault re sidence at 211 Esplanade reported 1,142 registered with a turnout of 172, amounting to the ~ghest percentage or 15 percent. The Community Clubhouse on Avenida Del Mar reported 1,215 eligible to vote with 131 casting ballots for about 10 per. ~\·City Hall a total ol '!47 had vot.d out of t,291 registered for a percentage of about 11.5. . st. Clement's Episcopal Church with t,262 registered greeted 119 voters, or about 9 percent. The Russell B:. Henchman residence at 4193 Calle Bienvenido, listing 4 O 7 registered voters had 38 ca!Ung ballots or about nine percent. 'l1le polls are expected to become busier later trus afternoon and this even- ing. . NEW YORK (AP) -The s1"ck,marker 1taged a modest comeback late this after· noon from Uie steep decline that had char. 11cterized the tession earlier. (See quota. lions Pages lt>-11). Tht average bad been running behind for the enlire session and wu ofi as much as 1.17 points at 11 :30 a.m. tbe municipal election. In five precincts checked by the DAILY PILOT at 11 a.m., four hours after the polls opened, a 17 percent voter turnout already had been logged.· Heaviest voting usually comes late in tbe day as workers return borne. This is especially true in Laguna Beach where a high percentage of the work force leaves early in the morning for jobs in relatively distant locations. At the Main Fire Station 106 of the precinct's 650 eligible voters had cast ballots by 11 a.m. and many were waiting CITY HALL PHONE TALLY PHONE : -1124 in line. At a sporting goods store on downtown Broadway precinct worker.s had handled 131 of their 635 registered voters by the same hour. Top of the World Fire ·Station, with 681 registered voters, reported but i n e s s "very steady all morning" with 116 ballot. cast by II a.m. WHAT HAPPENED -Chart shows how Apollo 13's astronauts aborted their moon landing mission after explosion jolted their command ship ·205,000 • u .. ,, ........ miles Crom earth. Power now is being supplied from the lunar lander, which must be jettisoned before splashdown. Down <It N'ya ,Place, 11,wM "very pd so far,'' with 110 « eoo voters turning up dlll'ini U. morninf. 'lbe senior loanp at the bilh school, converted into a polling place for the election, had clocked 101 of ita 112 voters. The polls will remain open until 7 p.m. this evening. Votes will be counted in each precinct and the tally sheets and b a 11 o t s transported to city .hall, where results will be posted on a special board in the council chambers, opened to the public for the occasion. Phone operators will remain on duty at city hall -494-1124 -until tbe final tally has been made and the three new coon- cilmen 's names are known. Interest Running High in Laguna Council Election Damoro*. CJo-.dmanttfon '·. •• . • • -.1~ . ' ' 'Hair Problem' Aired At Saddleback Session The Sacldleback College "hair problem'' was aired anew Monday night In a lengthy confrontation between tl)e board or trustees and almost a hundred students. The good-humored session -. moved to a large music room to accommodate the crowd -was marked with frequent laughter, bursts of applause, praise for the students' "decorum" by board presi· dent Michael Collins, plaudits for Sad- dleback's high academic quality from several of the students and cheers for an valid and woald prefer to wait for the opinion. Student body president John Bothwell noted that some 200 male students are af· !See SADDLEBACK, Page Z) Minnesota Judge Blackmun Next Pick for Court? elderly lady from Leisure World who WASHINGTON (AP) -An informed identified herself as a "radical .'' "A l Id •·• that Pres·de t "I really can't put a handlt on this ,,.,,nae source sa i.uuay 1 n one," said City Clerk James D. Wheaton After li stening lo the appeals and Nixon will nominate Judge Harry A. y,.ften asked to predict voter turnout in arguments of more than 20 speakers, Blackmun of Minnesota for the Supreme today's emotion-charged Laguna Beach board members said flatly they were not Court. cool ncil eJec1tion. prepared to make any i m m e d I a t e This was the word reportedly passed to n past e ections a 45 percent turnout changes in the controversial dress code. t f ••· W, ..... l"' N " '"'~ o'r .a avies , .. ,.. T' ' I • •, I Offer Help For Splashdown From Wire Services e Re•cue lftilp Ottered LONDON -The United States got of- f~rs of help today for any rescue opera. lion ror ApoUo IS if the spacecraft comes down in the AUantic. Britain said its Royal Navy ships would be placed at the di~sal of any rescue operatlqn if asked to do so bY the ' United States. But a Deff:nse ·M I n I s t r v spokesman in London said It had received 1 no request . Jn Paris, President Georges Pcmpidou ordered the French fleet On a state of alert ta be ready fur any recovery. Word of this was relayed to the U:S. Embassy in Paris. Brazil 's navy and air force were alerted for a _possible rescue operation ·off the coast of Brazil. There was a possibility Apollo 13 would come down in the SOuth Atlantic but U.S. space ·officials were hoping for a splashdown in the Pacific as originally planned. wa.s about normal. But one index or the key senators. An announcemen rom 1.111:: interest in this election has soared ab-but agreed that further revision is not out White House was expected shortly. e Nell: Timing Good normally high for the art colony. of the question. Blackmun, a close friend of Chief SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) Generally Jn a municipa1 election from Jt was Informally agreed that a new ha bee ~ .. d t t st dmi · tr 1· uld b Justice Warren E. Burger, s n a Nell A. Armstrong, the first man on the SO to 65 persons vote by absentee ballot. ""' en · nt ~a n1 s a ion wo e 'nlis year city hall has received absentee named before the end of the quarter just member of the &th U.S. Circuit Court cf mOOtl, and Alan L. Bean, the latest man ballots from 163 persons. bel{inniOI! to "talk it over." Appeals in St. Louis since 1959. He was an. on the moon, conceded today the elec- "lt seems the interest level Is much Meanwhile, it appeared that an lnilial pointed by former President Dwight D. tr1 cal failure on· Apollo 13 "happened at a greater than in previous years," said "flurry cf enforcement" of the hair cOOe Eisenhcwer. very good time if it had to happen." 1 Wheaton. He said he e1:pected the voter would go back into abeyance pending Before ward that Blackmun was Nix-"Their consensus is that It gives the turnout would e1:ceed 50 percent by some r"teeipt or a written opinion from the on's choice for the court post for which astronauts time to research the pro- margin. Transients and drug abuse have three-judge panel of the Ninth District two Southern judges were rejected! , kbey blem and do something about It as· op.. James A. U>vell Jr,, Fred W. Haile Jr. and John L. Swigert Jr. took sbortcUta to conserve their precious consumables of water, ozygen and J>O'ftl' as they need farther from earth toward a moon which had been their landing target ontil a violent eruptlon of a pressurized fuel t.ant Monday night. They were to loop around the moon tonight and two hours 'later, at'6:40 p.m. PST, were to fire their lunar • lander engine to aped them back taY(artl earth and a splubdown·ln the .Pacific north.al New 1.ea.land at t :.J3 a.m. PST Friday. Asked wbelhet tbe Ihm ._.,..., principab ln the most dangerous drama tn American space history, would mw lt home aaiely, Dight controller Glynn t.un. ney, answered, "Yes, barely." "We've got the situation stabilized," he said. •inie moat crlUcal thing now is to keep it stabilized the rest of the fllgill" /u Lovell, Haist and Swigert Dew away ~ home, here was the ·picture aboai-4 llieir ~p: . -'lbe command lhlp, dlqbled·w ·ur. still myllerioo< ruplure, wu "'"""elel1 ahul 4own elt:Clricallr. emer-bat. teriff and ozypii aupp!Jell were avaflablo to take the ahlp, the only vehicle that can carry the men home, through the at· mospbere. -Tile lunar module which became the astronauts' 1Jteboat, was providing critical pcwer, oi:ygen, water and other life support. eUt Its supplies,...,..,~ pjng ,an~ the astronauts were.~ating on minimum requirements. -Officials were concerned ma.inly witti the water supply. With 72 bow'! to JO, based on a Friday landing, they had enough water for 84 hours, a marefn of 12 hours. To keep this margin, th e Utronauts must power down to minlmmn electrical .power of 17 amperes per·bour for most of the journey, reducing the average hourly water consumpUon from five to 2.18 pounds. The water is usecf!or cooling the eJectronJcs and cabiil" oxyitn as well as for drinkJng. -The o:rygen supply was more substan- tial. They had enough for m hours, a margin oC 50 hours, barring unforeaeen events .. The astronau.ts moved aro.und u UtUe as Pol!ible to reduce thf:lr con· sumption. Oxygen was fed throti.gh in open connecting tunnel into tbt command' cabin so the pilot& could operate there. -With power reduced well below, 17 amps per hours whenever possible Mission ~trol officials saJ4 the ship'• supply of 500 amp hours of wwer should . be sufficient but th.ey admitted It would leave little margin. Only essential u,.. slrurnenta: were being operated. 'Ibe only panel lights on were in the LM. !See APOU.0, ..... I) Orange been a key issue. Court of Appeals in Los Angeles. Republican senators were brle ed y posed to another part of the ml&Sion when Laguna Beach has 8,359 rtgistered The judges last week crdered Im· Deputy Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst they wouldn't have the time available to We.tiler voters. Jn the 1911 election with 7,135 medtate vacation or injunctions obtained in a Capitol hideaway. them," said a NASA official who talked . te ed • 011 -~~ I 1-·~ . J ~. •-~ 1· g Afterward GOP Leader Hu~h Saitt or to Armstrong and' Bean. ""'"A-•1'1 be 1 Ind ( that regis r , "• .,,_,.... n -...,,. in anuary u' a .......... ,s represen in Pennsylvania said that possible nominees 11~~ eu w . DOW turnout was 44.5 percent; ln 1964 it was some or the long-haired students which had been discussed and that he ex~ed Armstrong was a member of the ·oillr the electJon campaigns are over) 43.5 percent and in 1961 it was 47.5 per· forced the college to pennit them to announcement or the President's llOmina· other manned flight abortecl'ea'rly. lbat and more sun on Wednesday, wilh cent. register. tipn "in the very ~ear fut:Ute·" was Gemini 8, brought back because the temperatures back up to 65 along The 1962 elect.ion wu a cliff hanger for Since Issuance of the Injunctions, en· Scott was a.sited if he th 0 u g h t spacecraft began spinning ·odt of control · the coast and near '10 inland. third place between Harold T. Ellerby forcement of the dress 1code has been Blackmun's chances had been hurt by in Ma t'(h, 1966: INSmE TOD •y and William Lambourne. First one took relaxed pending a final court decision on former Vice President , Hubert H . 4 the load, then the other as addlilonal its constitutionality.. Humphrey's statement Monday that • Water No rrobletn· . Orange CoaJt thtaCtt'QOfTS get precinct talUes came in. The order terminating the Injunctions BlaCkmun Is the kind cf rnan he would SPACE CENTER Houst (lJPIJ . a pair of "en.corer>' um Mittk, Ellerby finally edged Lambourne. He was a vidoi-y for the college, but Jt is not like to see en the court. \Yater is aimJnor r'obJe 1°" the -' 1J; along with two Orange County got 1,317 votes to Lamboume's 1,%72. yet known what the judges' written opi· ''.I don't think Humphrey's en-. P m or "'Po O Lambourne ran a1ain in 1964 and was nlon wtU 'bring. On the possibility that the dorSement hurts anybody," Scott replied. ~3 ~~wiun"hichar modhadul•Olliry altt-elboui r suithppl77y1 premlere1 in Laguna Btoch and elected handily. , ardet .t.cri ltl-·hav , '»l:ll&ed...-~tn a Saltt sa!d. lhe meeting with Kleindienst in e . . e ue . c s w ' CO.Ito ftfesa. Ste E·"ttrlcrinmtnt,. The first vota lo be Cilm!.d tonight todu)ical lJfw ~ Br.il!Ol;><OI!tBt l>ai',~ or COASUltation be had urM<! hours r<m•lning in tbe mwlon, • NA.SA Poge 9. willbt..the.abtmttebal~:¥;.sh®ld ' ~-·sait":wouklrecomfne'iiclcon· onthi'ai:lmtnistttitfOn~afttrthe5'nati•S ·.s~an •aaid. • ' c111i.nrii. , .._._ • ~ ?iniahea <by i'.$:.lli ea .:,~rfu ·~ • • tJa "lratl ~ lft;,;f!dllcv.. _ ~rejectlot._bY'• 514 .vote last .wedftelClay , tMle''.c.~stllt .bas~1~ .o.6our supply ot: c1M11111t u, , MlltWlt 11-. ~ Wheaton sakl he dtd"not, ,-liJtt ~ !. El . t,1n \'t}ftt ·~111· er~~1 .. )l~ll I,· Of _N~rnom.rnauon tti~udp,>G. ~Ir. ~ ~Qlef ut:ttl~1ftft\li In the comma~d ~=-1"~;, :..-== • tallies to start coming in much before 9 r~~·fll>l'ary'""""'1!1onii0/illr6d rol.Ut;~l~of<FIOtid.r. · ' , · imllce ... the spol<elll111n,10ld.,~ •.. I ~ 'l ~ -· ,.Jl or 9:30 p.m. for ~o 1'1111 code v1olat.or1'1i; the Dearr,of c.rs~'. · 'wal'r ·Dominated t,afterft the~ ~ 1£.>":tl ~l'lfR(. WBter .fat': dtin~ '~ . .i.,,,1r . Mlrtl• lt-11 A big boanl will be set up In tbe council s~ Oft . conli!rring ~otMr-Se~• hl\cl turned1,tlowtr·b)'·• SMS .. ote llilil food prepalaf§> K·ifte ·nillltl can· lie ' l..~ "l! : chambers for tbe public and a runnJng al~i't'ho peiu~out he ibillb' last No...,mber' ~1'°"'s~fir.st ·~1Ce ro~ 'b'i'oulbt dOWD'F~X 11 plaMed. ~ 1; .._,1 ,....1,.1: total of the precinctl will be chalked up that 1111,wrltten.oplnkiii might •ta< , the court pllll, · Jildge Clem.,i' F. Fm b .0 ~. the 1pokemtan -"° 1 """ -,. .. they come ill. ~said lit !ell the ,.int.... 'Haynswortlt,,J~. of South Cuolinl. j ' (So( BRllll'S, hp II ~ . . ,· .. , ' I Be Sure to Vote Today; ·Polls 'Open Till 7 I 1 .(11 I ' ' ----..- J DU.Y l'llOT IC . Listening In on . Apollo SP~ <;lllbR. lloUlton ~AP) -Willi tile w o r-d 1 Bolltm1, we've had a pro-"*''Alllo U ..,.._ ..... l: 1"'1111 Jr. -Ole na.4.tomrolla's"tllal the ploMed lmlar laading mlaalon wU In 'trouble. ll<re are the hlghllghta of the t1cbn1e between the ~ (SC) and lhe caflUle communicator (CapCom) ID.Miaion Control. SC: ~·Rey, we've bad a pro. bl• We'vt bail I main B bU! .....i li main· eii<ull hid ..._,. SC: '(fi!i, ia Fl 1 q1 a h 1Ju1. A uodl'T'TO!t -IOO lhowl ... c;.pm: 111111 A .... ...UI . • SC: 1t•• ~-·~ •11, Main B lo ......, .• (.,,.) rJght l'M)1IJ. 1 CapCom: Standby one, Jim (astronaut Lovell). - CapCom: 13, Houston, we'd llke you to attempt to recon· neet fuel cell I to Moln A and fuel cell 3 to Main B. Verlfy lhal quad della ill open. re~ Joel<, bolb In pllch ud ..n; oef I'm '""*°"' Ilia! -bt tra w-It fl , tMl'a ipl"'l'W ~ !bore. I bad ..... -In onlt\> lo alablUle 11t• • *" M I \It I ................ p!Cl up note opln. Clll l'OU ~ up any jets firing! CapCom: Stand by. Wh at dJrtetion are your rates in Jack? (astronaut John sWJgert Jr.) SC : It's negaUve pitcb and negative ro.U. VPIT• ....... kind of sive us an otey to relnata» the probe and drogue . Or tr necessary to use the LM <ii--I -mabl,._ ClpConi:-llopr • SC: I'm' tranomtttlng. I don't have any eumnt now.\ Hey, it's off. It's off. They - they killed lht bus completely now. It's dead. ~ PAO (public affairs officer): tong -proced.,;e, Fred. We flgui'6 we'IJ get about IS minutes worth of power left in the command OIOdUle. so we want you to llirl gedq over In the LM al'.ld ge~Ung some power ·On that. And are you ready~ co~y your procedure! SC: Okay. CJlllCorD: ~. Main B lnt41w). Oby, 1$1Dd by we're IOoklng II ll SC: Ok1y. right n o w , ifloustori, the voltage ii looking good. And we had a pretty large bang associated wilh the caution and warning there. And)! I ·~1 Main B WU lhe -.Iha! naa an amp spike SC: Okay, Houston, I'm sbowinr. I tried to met and fuel celi 1 and 3 are both lhowil!I frl'! ~Ip. Biii they ore IJOll! showing zip OD lhe nows. CapCom: We copy. CapCom: Roger. 13, Hous • ton. We n e e d to get IOnle matt instrumentation u p • We'd like you to put invtrter one on both AC buses. Over. SC: Okay. Okay, you got ln-- verter one on both AC buses, and Jack (cap s ule com- municator Jack Lousma) one of the items we turned off was the, Ill the IUel cell pumps. Okoy, and you mJihl lei us blow wben the fuel cell two ntedl Ill pump back we ousJ!I to lake we ol lhal, Jack. 'I DON'T HAVE ANY CURRENT NOW HEY, IT'S OFF.' Trouble in Space: Lovell, Swigert, H•lse (from left) Apollo Control, Houston, con· tinuing to trouble shoot with Apollo 13 crew, close l y watching oxygen quantities and pressures in the command module. l10laUng the search tanlr leaves oxygen for entry U thiS should become nectssarr. Also, if necessary, the 13 crew could open a tuMel ·and use oxygen from the lunar module. PAO,: Thli b Apollo .CQutr\>1 at 57 hours 46 minutes ground elapsed lime ... We have an apparent serious oxygen leak in the cryogenic oxygen in the service module . . . In this scheme of golng acr04IJ· to the ]tq\ar module, still connected with the open tunnel, the lunar module would serve as a' sort of lifeboat for the cre\v of Apollo 13. Sometime later in the mission it' is expected Ulat they would return to the preretutn traj~tory. which they left yesterday in the mid- course burn number 2 .•. This is Apollo Control. We. hB!ve confirmation now· that tw~ of the Apollo 13 crewmen are in· deed in the lunar module. SC: Okay; Houston, are you sUll reading 13? on it once before. · ' CapCom: Roger, Fred (ulraaalll Ferd Haist). CapCom : That's ar. fmnltlve. We're reldln& you. We're still tryq to...:eolne up wllh 10me pOd'ldeii blro IOI" you. • 1• . SC: Somellihw fl' CIVlnc Ill I From P .. e J SADDLEBACK HAIR ISSUE ••• feclod by 1he hair ruling and "need to know." He emphasized lhal during lhe lwo monlhl !lit hair nllel have not been eu- rorced, Tl!>' lncldentl have occurred and "ii hu ·been established lhll hair ill DOI an in11ueaclng fact«." Studentl . reiterattd their arguments lhl~ u ,.iwu, they lhould ba.-lhe righl to !"akt lheJr qwn cleclalons regll'dlng -.O!Jl'CiallY ~ mony are ov,r Zl and aOrne are· veterans. They streaed. ...,........_lbe·fact lhol Saddlehack is lhe only jUD!or college wllh •· dreu code Ind • lhal an lni:rwlng llUl1llitr of bJah tchooll . are ~g dreu codeo. LAUGllNG 8TOCX "Saddlebaek ii' a lalilhlnl 1tock1" said ..,., "Ira a llhe 1chooraeaaem1ca11y and · I will ;JWil'J defen•Mj, hut 11'1 beconie a laughlnc otock beclule ol lhill ridiculous · dreu:--code. t• A. -~ In blue JO!'Jll, purple undinbJrl ll1'f otoveplpe hol stood up. "l am not trylna: to be a ciowJi," he said. "I am. f:?Y,lnc to ·tbow you how ridlcul9u* ~ dttii code can bt. For your inlormollon lhli oullll I am weiring 11 II\ fllll .com· pUl!ICt wllb 1he txlllh\c dnol code." A mernbtr ol lhe lnolblll !Um lrllJ.ed, "'!be albleuo have lbawn ln.lhe Pl!I too ==-~.,iJ~~~==· tlreat Code.• : eon;;. nllerot••fbla ..iow t111111 fl d • molter ~.1111~lnl11t 1'dooon!m In lbl George Penney Funeral Set Private funeral oervloes will bt held Wednudoy for George Penney of Three A1<h Bof who died Monday al the age of 72. A resldeot of lhe Newport Beach and Laguna Beach area since 1946, Penney wu a well-known trial lawyer. He had procli<ed law In Newport Bead> since 1111.1. From um to 11132 he wu lhe cblef !rial attorney for the Los Angeles District At- torney. Mr. Penney leam hls wUe Mariette o• the family home; two sons, John C. anc James F. Penney, both of Emerald Bay : two !liten, Agnes Lund of Washlngl-0· and Zelma White of Colorado; a broth Paul Penney of Sacramento, and fl grand~. '!be family hu suuested I h a memorlal donations be made to the 8( SColMI. of America, Orange Coundl, lat s. Beer St., Santa Ana. DAILY PILOT ""'"' .... "' .......... .... u..-... c.. .. ....... ...,. C-. MftC SnC~te l'>'IANGE COASt PUILISHIHG COM,AH'I' R1Mf1 N. W11d '"'""'"' tlNI M tl1""' J111\ l, C11rJ1r \111:1 ll'n!t!Moot lftf Gffltrtl M-- l111ft'll1 K11vll Elllt<' Tll111111 4. Mu1plli11e MIMltlill Eln .. ttt,lt1rd I'. Nill S.11 oi-to <_1, Edlrw Offl- Clll• ~: I» Wu! ..., ''"•ti Nt9f.oll'I ltcCll: "" Wttl ..... , aoui.v.,. "'...,. •"cti: m ,_, ..__ Mllltllftl'-" IMCll: 17111 a.tttfl tWltw"' $111 '*'-'* * HW111 II c.itllnt IMI O.\ILV .. ILOT, wllll ..;)lcJil 11 ~MC *"t ,.. .. ....,,..._ II 111111.ii.todl lf1llt '"''°" "'°" ... 1111 ..... tllt Cl!l161!1 ltf Lltllf\I k'~' .......,., """"' t.111 M.... H"""lllll'IWI ... rll • F-lllio von.t. 1i.,.. •llfl ""' ......... tfll""'. Ol'arrite Ctut 1'""'4ilfllflt '°""""" "''''""' ,,1e~•1 ''' 11 nn w.,1 ..... 11\lf •• .......,., ... tll, ,,, .. ut w.e 1tr $trwt; C-M ~. Tot 1a1r1 1114• 642-4111 c...,.. ~w .. ••2 s•11 S. Clea 10 A•· ~''"'"u , ... , ..... 4fJ-4420 ~lfllt. 1t'9: Or... ~lt ~i..ir... c......._,, Nf -. ,1.,-. mw1r11-. Ul~I IMllW fl' .. _,._ti ...... I~ _, • I~ wllfllWF ••tllf W • ....... .,~--· ...., ci.n -~ "" !It! ,.._..,, •••"" W C~ll M..._ (.11 .... a..ui.illWI .., t•IT'-' N.tf -'""' ~ -'1 If.It -1111" 11111/ttry 4tllin.lllent. ., ... ll'llnlflly, cllSll'OOm to produce that degree of formality essentlll to the proceaa of education.'.' At 1he end of the four.hour meollng he commented Iha! the lludentl preat11I had dilplaytd are•t "deconun ... DOU.AU AND CEN'l1 Trualee Hant Vogel brought I h e 1t111111l"nfl down to dollars and cents. Reminding the lludents lhlt residents ol lb:' dfllr!CI hid pwed a 181> million bOnd luue at a Ume when bond Jssua were belq deleoted In many olber 1reu, he aaid, "'OUr bond Issue Wll puled by '13 Ptre«>t, and in Ldlure World It w11.90 percent. Tblt iJ wby we are able to have lhe flnell fac!Ulles and Ill elctllenl fl<lllty. . "Biii If 1hooo -'< ool there decide thq doli't llke what'• 1o1ng on here, you're out of luck. 'Jbe moment we relu the c1rw code, I suaranteeyou lhlt'• lhe end of ')'OW' money -ind alrudy we bave to lltrl lhinldnr 1boul • eecond campua." Supportbig his contention that the present board ind Its policies are in tu~ with tbe communJty. Vogel noted that trustee Patrick Backus was rHlecied in a race against ·four opponents and defeated his nearest contestant, an Amerk:an Civil Liberties attorney, by two to·QM. ~ ~- DEFEAJ ACW "An~ could defeat ad ACLU at- torney ii, Orange County," said BOthwell. "That's just the point," Vogel replied. ''I'm talking about the temper of the electotate in Orange C:Ounty and I think we •understand and reflect It. I'm not saying it's right or wrong. You might say in a way that you students are victims of It But that's the wav it is and you have to understand th1t the only way people have to express their dissatisfaction with the way schools are run i:. by voting down bond issues -then there won't be any school. You really havt to decide which ls more important, your hair or a first class education.'' A woman who said she had· five sons "all with long hair and t dor.'t like it," said the whole thing seemed like "a prel· ty small Issue tor such a big board to b"· f~Ung with." LOUD APPLAUSE An elderly lady who rose to ldenf herself as "one ot those people frc '..el sure World" was greeted with loud < 'lause by the studen~. "I am a liberal," she said. "J gues 1ight be a radical at IA:Jsure World. ~ast I'm ln the Democratic Club. Bu1 tust teJl you that while 1 would go oting f!>r your bonds anyway, t bellr tany people out there would nol" Complimenting the students on th ·>ehavior and intelligence. she added, · just can't understand why you don't w; to groom yourselv1.s so you look as i telligent as you really are.' It wasn'& exacUy what the !tuden'. wanted to hear, but they gave he another round of applause . NO CHANGES Trustee Backua spoke up with, 1'J'd bc- agalnstchanglng the code right now. but t realize we're llvinR: in a changing world and I'd be very willln~ to sit down and discuss It with the students." A student said he appreciated the fact that the trustees had clarified the finan- cial support aspeet of the problem Rlld felt It hJd given him something more tn think about. '.'We just want )'OU to level with us and stop all this pussyfooting aroond," he added. BOthwell said, "\Ve realize there may be some rlslt in eliminating the part of the dress code about the hair. but it you will take this rt11k I can pledge to you th1t the students wlll make a real effort to make themselves ltno,.;-n In the Cf'lm· munlty as sensible, reliable people. \Ve rtally would like to show people th&t hair ilc;elf is not a problem and perhaps If we work together v.'e can dQ th11t and keep the support of the community." STUDY GROUP Collln~ said that If the judges' written l'lpinlon support! the dress cOOc ''tn- forrtment will proceed" but 1gl'f!cd th11t a t1lmmlttee could be fonned to sll1t\y a rcvl8td code for !he ntxt quarter. As I.ho meelinn dio:0trsed. the l11dv from 1..eisure World found her~elf 5\lr· rountitd by ~tudenls. "Thant!: you for coming to hear 11!1 ma'1m.'' hid an 11thlrle. "~1:iv~ vou'd like to come b&ck nnd ~e 1101TI..? of four fon'br1ll P"ml'll," The lady said mnybt sht would. c CapCom: Roger. 0 k a y, Fred, we want fuel cell 2 pumps to AC one please. SC: Fuel cell 2 to AC one roger. Okay, It'• on AC one. CapCom: Okay, 13, we've VPIT........,.. WATCHES FROM GROUND Mlulon Chlof Slayton From Page 1 BRIEFS .•. said, except that the crew may change its menu to use food which does not require water in preparation. • Tma Gives fteport MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet news agency Tass carried ll.5 first report on the Apollo 13 troubles in a brief, factual dispatch from New York. Tass said the "three astronauts are in grave den"ger" but "flJght officials are laking all measures to ensure their safe return to earth ." Until the electrical breakdown, the Apollo flight had received litl!e attention in the Soviet media, although full reports had been expected when the moon Ian· ding was carried out. e Sta11dby ha Germany RAMSTEfN AIR BASE, Gennany (UPI) -U.S. rescue aircraft under com- mand Ol Ram.stein Air Base are standing by to help if the Apallo 13 spacecraft lands In lhe Atfsnilc, a spokesman for the '1ase said today. He said the C130P Hercules planes ;Jong to the 40th Aerospace Rescue and ·ecovery Wing, Apollo Support Forces. hty are reedy to respond to any dlrec· Jns from the Department of Defense or e NaUonal AeronauUcs and Space 'ministration (NASA). ' Meteorite Suspected 1EDONA, Ariz. (AP) -The power ilure on Apollo 13 probably was caused hen the fuel cell was struck by a very man meteorite, Dr. Harvey Nininger ·aid today. Nininger. regarded as an expert on the subject, said he had given this "very positive oplnlon" to the Nation a I Aeronautics and Space Administration after being consulted by it Monday night. Lagunan Draws P•ison Sentence In LSD Carrying PHOENIX (UPI) - A Laguna Beach man convicted of pos.!lessing 12,000 LSD tablets was sentenced Monday to an in· determinate term In federal prison. Jesse V. Mahch:, 26. was remanded to the U.S. Attorney General for treatment and supervision under the federal cor· rections act. MAhclz w11 convicted March 25 after tcstltying that he flew to Phoenix Sept 30 wllh a sultcaae containing 12,000 LSD table11. He told the court that a Phoenix mM had offered to buy the tablets from him for $1,000. Arthur Fluhr, former agent-in-charge cf the Ariton:i office of the federal Bureau of NarcoUcs and Dangerou5 Drugs, testified that the n1an was an in· lormer. Machiz, who faces trial in California on a charge of possessing 10,000 L'iD tablets. was allowed' to remain free on $10.000 bond pending lhe outcome or an appeal. got lots and lots of people working on this, we'll get you some dope as soon u we have it, and you'll be the first one to know. SC: Oh; thank· you. Ok1y1 Jack, and the weird con· figuration we're sitting in now, is we have the hatch installed, we still have the probe and drogue inside the command module. and we're going lo stay in this situation until you CapCom: We have a prcr cedure for getting power from the LM, we 'd like you to copy down. SC: Okay. Stand by, Jack. It sounds like good news. Okay, Jack. About how long is it? CapCom: It's not a veiy From l'age 1 Private Beach Use Move Urged In South Laguna APOLLO CRISIS Others were flicked on as needed. -To keep the spacecraft from overheating, the astronauts' ship was oc· casiooally rotated 90 degrees so the 247 degree heat ot the sun would not bake on one side for too long. -Lovell and Halse, tried from long hours o! wresUing with the spaceship's grave problenu, were asleep Jn the com- mand ship couches, Swigert, who earlier slept six hours, took scores of instructions from Mission Control on means of con- serving the consumables. -All three wore fiight coveralls. 'nle spacesuits would take too much power and oxygen. -CommunlcaUons with the earth were scratchy because one of the high-powered antennas was taken off the line. Looping the moon Is the safest wa y home, official! said, because Apollo 13 was close to its target at the time of the accident and already was on a course that would take it around the moon's backslde. To stop short of the moon would have required consideraJ¥e engine power and fuel expenditure, something the astronauts did not have with Apollo 13's big command ship engine idled by elec- trical failure. The only powerplant available Is the lunar module descent engine, the one that waa to bave lowered Lovell and Haise to the lunar surface. The spacemen trig· gered the engine 30 seconds early today to adjust the course slightly to a path that would take them back to earth Friday night if they made no additional maneuver. Police Watching Bowling Green Lawnbowlers are probably the world's most uptight grass fanciers, rankin g equally with golfers when it comes to being meticuJous about their greens. So it was no wonder that bowlers in San Clemente Monday asked police to keep an eye on their greens at San Luis Rey Park which were showing signs or damage. Police lndeed kept a wary watch on the green, and a few minutes after receiving the complaint, they found the answer. A young sandlot baseball team moved onto the green before sunset and began to play. They were directed to a less tender area. • • • The second firing at 9:40 tonight was planned to Increase the speed en<iugh for a landing 10 hours earlier. Asked at a briefing ii there had been any damage to the heat shield, w h i c h must protect the astronauts from the tremendous heat of re-entry. He said there was a sligh t possibility of such damage but that there was n-0 evidence or any. The decision to try for a Friday landing in the Pacific meant that Mission Control had decided not to adopt a "superfast'' return plan. Under this, the engine firing tonight would have been lengthened to give the ship a heavier push home. But this would have consumed more power. President Nixon kept in touch with developments through phone contact with NASA Administrator Thomas 0. Paine in Mission Control. Neither the United States nor Russia has a space rescUe capability. So the astronauts will have to depend on their skill and that ot hundreds of experts on the ground to get home. Council Ponders Changes in Laws Laguna's lawmakers should live up to the name Wednesday night as councilmen consider passage oC ordinances ranging from ontrol of transients in business places to more strict regulation of massage parlor employes. The council Is expected to pass through second reading an ordlnaOCe proposed by Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan to aid business firms, esp e c I a l I y food establishmen~ in preventing loitering on the premises. The ordinance would prevent persons from loitering, standing or sitting on com- merelal property contrary to the wishes of the owner. If loiterers refused to leave at the owners request, police could be summoned and a citizen's arrest made. The council Is also expected to pass through second reading an ordinance regulating licensing of employes of massage parlors that has been recom· mended by the police chief, , The ordinance was sought after arrest or a female massage parlor employe In Laguna on suspicion of conspiracy to commit prostitution. The council is also expected to adopt a resoJuLion that seeks participation of the entire community in enforcing litter laws and cites the spe<:itic code sections that apply. A move is under way in South Laguna to limit private beaches from Three Arch. Bay to Circle Drive to private use by the property owners. Property owners coocerned o v e r transient beach use in the area have banded together in an association of about 70 members • Bob Benner, Laguna Beach businessman and South Laguna property owner, said a title search has been con· ducted concerning an old easement for the stairway at Ninth Street. "We have researched it and it is a privatE; beach and it is going to be treated as a private beach," Benner said. He said the beach access over the ease- ment is not public. He said the easement was given to encourage property owners to buy lots and v.•as recorded in 1929. Benner said the private properly lines run to the mean high tide line and although the area oceanward or that is public there is no practical public access to it. Benner said it is not a question of whether the present beach users have Jong hair or not, it is a que stlo n ot whethe r they are property owners. "It is purely a legal matter and one that is relatively easy to enforce ," said Benner. "The rightful owners w i 11 reserve it for <lUr use. That is what the association is intending lo enforce." Former Lagunan Killed iI1 Laos A fonner Laguna Beach man wa s one of si x Americans killed by the crash of a transport plane in the northern moun· tains of Laos. Tl)e victim. Capt. Kevin Cochrane, 48, \vas piloting the plane that was on loan from the U.S. Air Force. a C-130 transport. It hit Phou Bia, Laos' hlghest mountain Friday as it was coming in to land in bad weather. C:OChrane's wife and three children have been living in Vientiane. Searchers were expected lo rea ch the wreckage in the rugged mountain area t o d a y sometime. The carpet they both chose? Bigelow's Barcelona Barcelona combine! the casual, •:ln<l·IA:lm-d sh~8 look of today with •n elegant Spenlsh grille pattern. The long, slender yarns havP. a soft. shimmery j;:low •.. the dramatic mulli-colors ate Mediterranean:lnspired. Use ear. ce:lona in a Spanish or 1t1Cdlterranc8J1 setHn1: or with ultra-modern or mixed contemporary •.• for ~ truly 1tunnln:::: etrect. And because the fiber 1 nylon, Barcelona's so l'llY to care for. Soll doesn't $1 095 show •.. and pile stay& CTiap and 1prlngy. A fine buy for Jl\ny. 14-7d. one "'ho wants ~at stylln!t ••• a roomful of luxury • , • at ltocludln9 •~"•"a. a dowo-to-e&r\b .....tee 11ori Miii •~ u~ ""' • Ot<C\ltlliafl 6 Sunny Mediterranean Shades ALDEN'S C.t.RPET?;-DRAPERIES ' Mediterranean Moss Antique Amber• Spanish Poppy Spi1ni1h Leather • o,..nada Gold Atavlo A-.iocado approved Bigelow nylon pile 0 IJ YEAR S SfRVlt>;I; .TH~ OftANGE COA ST 0 1663 l'l;rc11nt!o-Co~t:i Mosa Phott• 64MO.Z3 ' I • Lagl111a Beaeh · · Teday'• ftiiil --iDl.~~~N \ ~ . voi:. 63, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 2-4 PAGES oAAN6e ·COtJNrr. >C',t.;~IFORNll': ' • . ea s ac· • • 17% Before _N 0on · · Spaee. B~ast.~ . . .......... -. -. Voters Hurrying To Laguna Polls Forces Halt i SPACE· CENTER, HOUiton (AP) - Apollo Li's uttooluta battled today to b~ their crippled craft back to wtb frOm a quar{er mllllon milel 1w•y at M!Jaion Control dedded they would lfm By BARBARA KREIBlCH Of ltle Delly llUM Si.ff Business wu brisk at Laguna's 14. poll- ing places thiJ morning u voten turned out unusually early to cast their ballots in Voting Brisk In Clemente. Capistrano By JOHN V ALTERZA Of ti. Dllllr l'lllt Staff , Voting precincts in San Clemente and · San Juan Capistrano reported brisk bu.sinesa under bright blue skies In two municipal elections today. About 10 percent of the registered voters had cut their ballots by mid- morning. In San C)emente, 744 citiZens had cast their l'llt• far ttree et 15 candidates on CITY HALL PHONE TALLY PHONE: 492-5101 the ballot and a yes or no ~ a beach fee straw vote. A total of 7,789 are registered. ' Jn C'ipistrano, only partial returns were available today arter refusal by election officials and City Administrator Ernest 'Ibompson to divulge the number of voters at the County Fire Station voting precinct. Offjcials at the city's other precintt, a residential garage, said that O:Jl of 450 registered voters there 97 had cast their ballots. ~pson. adamant about not releas.- ing the ftgUJ'es at the fire station until he returned to City Hall later in the day, reprimanded the DAIL V PILOT for "disrupting the election by calling this number (the fire station phone)." 0 1 had to reprimand the o th e r newspapers (two others) which also called this morning. You are all disrupting this election," he said. In San Clemente, all the precincts with phones were contacted and all reported on voter figures. The six precincts cont.acted reported brisk business. Several election workers said that clusters of v~ were already fonning lines waiting to vote. At Concordia School with 1 , 1 8 3 registered, 137 persons had voted for a percentag< ol 11.5. The DeRault residence at 211 Esplanade reported 1,142 registered with a turnout or 172, amounting to the higbeSt percent.age of 15 percent. . The Community Clubhouse on Avenkta Del Mar reported 1,215 elig:i'ble to vote with 131 casting balloU for about 10 per- cent. . ed At City Hall a total o( 147 had vot out of 1,211 registered for a pen:entage of about 11.5. . st. Clement's Episcopal Church with t,262 reglotered greeted 119 volm, or about 9 percent. The Russell a. Henchman ft.!idence at 4193 Calle Bienvenido, listing 4 0 7 registered voters had 38 casting ballots or about nine percent. The polls are expected to become busier later this afternoon and this even. Ing. Steele M•r km NEW YORK (AP) -Th< stock market staged a modest comeback late this after- noon from the steep decline that had char· act.eriied the sealon earlier. (Set quota· Uons Pages 10-11). ·~ Th< aveill' had boon nmnlilg. bthlnd'. for the entire .sessklo and Wit off.as much II 9.17 Points It 11:30 a.m. the municipal election. In five precincts checked by the DAILY PILOT at 11 a.m., four hours after the polls opened, a 17 percent voter turnout already had been logged. for 1 Friday splashdown ill the Pldlk. James A. Lovell Jr., Fred W. Halll' Jr, Ind Jcillq L. Swfiert Jr. toOt --to ~ their [nclaua clmuiiillilii ol Wiler, oznen aM power ·u they ~cod farther from wtb towlfd • lllOOll wtiidt had been their landiog larpt ..w • violeot•eruptloo ol o pralUrized fuil taat Mondor nlghl , · Heaviest voting usually comes late in the day as workers return home. Thil is especially true in Laguna Beach where a high percentage of the work force leaves early in the morning for jobs: in relatively distant locations. At the Main Fire Station 106 of the precinct's 650 eligible voters bad cast ballots by 11 a.m. and many were waiting 'Ibey · were , o · loop around the moon , tonight and two hours liter, 1t 1:40·p.m. PST,., Wtfe ·to · ftre their , lUNU' landet engine to sped them back toward"<Arlh " Ind a.1piashdown jn' lbe P1elflc north ol New Zealand at 1:13 a.m. PST Friday. CITY HALL PHON E TALLY PHONE : -1124 in line. At a sporting goods store on downtown Broadway precinct workers bad handled 131 of their 635 registered voters by the same hour. Asked whether !he three ..........,, .. principals ·Jn lhe most dangerous dtama • tn Anlerfcan space history, -111 mike It ', home safe[J, ·fll8bt .controller Glynn Lun- ney, answered, "Yea, barely." " u;,.,~ "We've IOl the iJtuaUon stablliled " he WHAT HAPPENED. -Chart shows how Apollo mileSofrom.eartlJ. Pnwernow is being•suppJlecl from said. "The -critical tblng now '" 1o Top o! tbe World Fire Station, with 181 registered voters, reported b u 1 i n e s s "very steady all morning" with 116 13's ·astronauts}Sborted their ·moon landing mis~ion the lUnar lander, which ·must-be· jettisohed'. befofe keep lt atabilbed the rest of•tbe fllcht" after. explosion •.joUed 4b.eir ;command··ship 205,000 splasiidown: · ' ' .. • ~ ,' •. • Aa Lovell, Haile and Swigert new awar --------.....,------,., -:.-------,..--,.... . ,. ., . fro\" home, here WU•the-pidun lboan! . ~ • ' ' ' .... , :. ~·-l*elbl.p: . ' ballots cast by 11 a.m. . Down at Ny" Pilce, fi Wll "Yer)' good so far," with UO of IOO voten turning up dllljn( lit'. moming. ... -. ... j • . ' Wt ....t.1.fd ... .f.~'.11j;.J. , ,: • .:.,,;:n--""'""!IDll l!lfp; diMhljjl_&,_lliO BIUBOI"O-~{)!!ll:•'taft9D'A· :r"-. •', "' W ur l~.'RVlee . .,,.)(-(. :':t :1°"' ruptun, -<>mlilel<b-'Hai~-Pr~ble.~'' iir~d, .. ,' Offer . II~i~'·"' ··~.·'" ,'$*!~~uE 'Ille -*-at the 1llP sdlool, cooverted into a polling place for tbe eie¢ion, had clocked 101 ol ita SIJ voters. 'lbe polls will remain open until 7 p.m. this evening. Votes will be counted in each precinct and the taUy sheets and b a 11 o ts transported to ~Y hall, where results will be posted on _a special board in the council chambers, opened to the public for the occasion. At Saddle·back Session mosphere. . For Splashdown .. t~ul.~f=t .. ~.~·~ From ·Wire. Ser:vlces c:rlUcal power, oxypn, water and other . life IUpporl. But ftl. 1Uppli01",......drop- • R e•eue He.Ip Ottered t>ipg .and !be utron1uta,were openi!IO( Phone operators will remain on duty at city ball-494-1124 -mrtll the final tally has been made and the three new coun- cilmen's names are known. Interest ~un!'in g High in Laguna Co uncil Election ·-The Saddleback College "hair~e.nl"· ' . . was aired anew MOnday ii.iifit · In a Jengthy confrontation' between Ule board of trustees amr almost a hundr~ lid nd ould J to rt ~ .. _ ,LONDON -The United ·states got of-va 'a ·w ·prci.er -wa · •w ... ~ rus of help today ror ·atJ.Y rescue·opera-opiriion. . · 1 f Ji aJ Student body president John Bothwell ton or Apo o 13 If lhe spacecr t comes noted that some 200 male studenls ·are al· down in the Atlantic. (See SADDLEBACK, Pqe tJ Britain said lta Royal Navy ships would students. be placed at the disposal of . any rescue The good-humored sess)on -moved to owation lf asked to do 80 by the Up.ited . • t .. g. music room to accommodate the Minnesota J u dge States. But a Defen.. M l"n i'• 1 r y . crowd -was mai:ked with frequent SJ>O~fS'Dan in London aakt It had recejved . · ' no request. _ laughter, bursts .of applause, praise for Bl km N xl Jn Paris, President Georges Pompidoo the students' "de<Onll1l" by board presl-aC . . llD e ordered the French fleet on a llata of Q.ent Michael Collins. plaudits for Sad· alert to be ready far any recovery, Woid .dleback's high acad'"'1c 'qii ili[y fiOin ·--p•ck ·r0· r · Y'"-urt--·?·----6Tlhii.wH relayed to the U.S. Em\>85oy [,._ tud t nd•"-1· I ~ • mPans. several o urc s en s a .... "t~rs or an · B zit' nd Jr I 1 f Le. w id h .' ra s navy a 1 orce .were ~Ider!~ ady rom .~ur~ ~r w 0 WASHINGTON CAP) -An:lnfonned alerted fur a possible rescue operaUon off'· "I really can't put a handlt on this identified herself as a radical. Senate source sai.d today that Prelident lhe coast cf Brazil. , one," said City Clerk James D. Wheaton After listening to the appeal.!! ·and . Nixon wlll nominate Judge ·Harry A. Tbere .was'a'PoSSibl.ll!r Apollo 13 would when asked to predlct veter turoout in arguments of more 'than 20 speakers. Blackmun •of Minnesota for the SutJrenie come doWn ln'the>SOOih Atl~Uc ~t U.S. today's emotion-charged Laguna Beach boa'rd members said flatly they were' not . Court ' space officla11 , were· hopang for .. a council election. prepared to make any·irTimed·fate Thi . th di rtedl .... a·....ito Sl)lashddwn In the' Pacific a11orlgjnally In past elections a 45 percent turnout s was e wor repo Y. ~ planned was about normal. Bu.t one index of the changes In the controver!i~l. dr~ss code. key ~11ator1. An alllllOuncell}ent from the · interest in this election bas soared Sb-but agreed 1!1-atrurther rev1s1on is not out White l:fouse was expected sbOrU)'. • Nell: Tlm1"9 G'8d normally high for the art colony. of r:1:~u~;~ally agreed-that a new Blackmuri, a close· friend .of Chief SPA.CE CENt'ER, HoUsfun '(UPI) - Generally in a municipal election from ...,,dent'-·stee-adrriintstratlon would be Justice warren ·E. Burger,. bu· been a Ni!il A. ~ng, the f~t man on the 50 to 65 persorui vote by absentee ballot. ""'"' •uu • 1 . • • • This year city ball has received absentee named before the e1Jd1of the quarter •just member of the 8th U.S, Circuit, Coutt "-moon, arid L. Bean, the. latest. m!f! ballots from 163 persons. be!Pnni~ to "talk it over." ApPeals In St. Louis since 19\59. "He was ap. on the' nloon, • conCeded • tcMlay 'the elec- "It seems the interest level is much Meanwhile, it a~red that an lnrtial porrted .b~ irormer Pres~ent DWight o·. trical failure on · Apo Ho 13 "hlppened at a greater than in previous years,'' said "flurry of enrorctment" of the hair eode · E!Senhower. . , . ~good Ume If it had to happen." , ~ Wheaton. He said he es:pected the voter wotild go bact into abeyance -pending 8':~ore word •that Bfackmun was Nix-'i'f1:1eir consensus ·ts that It glva, the. turnout would exceed 50 Jl'!rceDl by some receipt of a Written opin\on from the . on's.. choice for-the court post for whieh aatrop1uts time to ~ the pro-.. margin. Transients and drug abuae have three-judge panel of the Nfnth Distrid two Southern judges were rejected, key bltm and do tomething about' It u op- been a key is.!ue. Court of Appeals in Los Angeles. Republica" senatp~ were brle_fed by JPled to another part of the•naislien 1'hen . Laguna Beach has t,359 registered The judges last week orderiid Im-Deputy Atty. Gen. Richard G. JOeindienat they wouldn't'have' the Up!e'availab~ to -1~'-•th 7-ed. le ti of . 1·~'--btai ed in a Capitol hideaway. • .. __,_ ,, . Id ' NASA olf'~l ~-•-~~ voters. In the 1-e """""' WJ .-m ia 'Vaca on in "'""""''.., o r: Afterward GOP Leader Hugh Scott or wn::ru, SI a ~ '""""" ....._ registered , 3,011 voted. In 1966 the Jn January by a~ey~ represent~ng Pennsylvania said that possfble·nomtnees· to Armst.torig and Bean. · ' turnout was 44.5 ~t; in 11M it was some of the lo~·ha1red ltu~nts which had been dl!.fuued andithat'he.·expected . Armstrong '!"'a ~rpber .et~tbe on.JY 43.5 percent and in 19G it wu 47.5 per-fo~ the college· to pimtnt. them to announcemept of•the President's llOPlina-o~r. manned' flight aborted e:ar1y. That cent. reg~ster'. . . lion "in'the4i'~ near future ." · · · was Gemini a,' broblltt' b'ict' beeause'ihe ' The 1962 election was a cliff hanger for Sn'ICe lslluance of the lrjfupcttona, en· Scott wa#.r asked if ·he t b n.u 1 ht. sPaceCraft be«an 'splnn!nl ,eul 'o( ~ · third place between Harold,. T. Ellerby {orcement of the • dress code has been Bleckmun'!' hances had been hurt by I~ Mar,.cH1 )1116.. , , ". ' ' • and Willlam Lambourne. First one took relaxed pending 1 final court decisloh on former VI Presld,ent· • Hube('l A:, · -, ~ the load, then the other is additional Its constitu~onaltty. •f11mvhrey' statement Monday that , • Witt.er NO ~r9&fe.~ · ' precinct tallies came in. The order ·fermJnaUn~ .the Injunctions Blackmun 1e kind or man he would 'SPACE CENTER, Ho···..,-(UPI)' __ ·: Ellerby finally edged Lambourne. He was a victory for the college, but It i.s not like to see e court . · ' -wi~ got 1,317 votes to Lamboume's 1,272. yet.. knoWn w;hlt the -judges' written opi-"I don't Ink Humphrey's en.. Water ls a 'minor problem f«' the Apollo 1 Lambourne ran qain in !ISi and .,., nlon will bring. On the ""'°'btlity that the dorsemeet . anybody," Scot! replied. 13 crow' whlcll .hod only ·• 44-hour'!Upply ' elected hardly. order co ~l d have resfttt.ed from a Scott said .the meeting wiUt Kleindienst , In the· lunar ·rhodu.le fat! -'eelJs .. wtUJ 77 1 The Ont 'Votes to be counted tonight ltcbnicaJ na:w, Dr. Fred Brtlber, college was the " consultation he had urged houn'IUl:aihhrgiln·tbe mission: '1 NASA will be the absentee ballot!. TheM! should presklmt., said he would recommend con. on the ad Uon after the Senate's · ~ said: _' .~ ', • 1 ' t\e linisbed by 1:15 0< 1::10 p.m. tlnuing the "watt aOd l,.." po)lcy. . rejection 1~5 vote 1831 W-Y • The, cn:.w lttll lils a,41-hour =d · Wheaton said be did not ezpect preclnct Earlier in the dJI', ~et · ~' ~!lll\)it<I · ludf!f@'",J!St-J'""'.iMta'. ' ''~ilil\la ~ ,1 ' tallies to start comina in much before I recindedtemporary·~~¥!~~ _,...·~tr. •I .~t1¥ ~~ ·: or 9:30 p.m. for lwo 1\alr code viol~·lril'llle 0.0.~ I ! · led -jhe . IO!af!~:r ' 'wtl<l;'lor _i\f!Ulflt on minimum requirtmeota. --otficlab wen: concerned mainly with !he water IU[>[>iy. With 12· hours lo go based on a Friday landlnf, Ibey had eoough.water.for II boun, I IDltP, d 12 houri.. To keep this m1'l1n, I h, ~auts must J>o•\!I' down to m1nlmum elediical power ol 17 1m.,..... per hour for -ol 1he journey, redudnr !he averqe hour[J water c:onsumpllon -five to.J.11 [>Clllndi. The w1ter lJ ""'( fllr .,,.Ung !l>e eiedi'OiilCI Ilia cabin OJ<Y ... as well aa for drinttng. -The oxygen supply wu JllOl'1! submn- tial. They bad enough· for· 121 hours I !IW"lin ol IO hours, ban1nf unlcreMen events. ~ -ull·IJl"V'd -u liWe u poosibie to .roduce tllelr .,.,_ aumptlon. °"1ien wu· fed tllfou,it. 1n open connecting tuMel into the COllllllllld cabill IO U...pflota ciiuld·operate thert. -With power reduced well ·biJow 117 amps· per boon wbenever [IOlllble Mlsslon .C.Otrol olffclala WI the obip'1 supply ol 500 amp boon ol pawor lllould be llifrJclent but they iidm!lled It WQU!d leave little margin. Only eaentJal lft.. •tnunenta ...,.. beill1 operated, 'Ille only panel Ugbta on were In the LM. (See APOU.O, Paao II -' Oralil(e I There'll be -wind ,, ... lhol -· the. electlon,wnpaigno "" onr) and more 1W1 00 Wedneldayt' wltll temper1tw-ea back· up to Ii """' the cout Ind near " illllnd. . INSm E TOD-"Y, ' Ormoe Coast lhtattrgOffl o•t a pair of "tncorta" thil ionk . ' alona unth iwo Orongt County premieres in taouna Stack and Costa Mtsa. Stt Enttriainmnt, Paot 11. Abigbolrdorill·beo.etup .lp-tho~ Stud<nta ~.alte<.•~'1J--·-~ . ;-~=· · '~!IW!li<° •1'/:' cbamben for the\j,06Jic:·inil ·a'lii~. -m.tnis<:rrllo:'~oiiJ~ i· i ·. ·~ • ~. ''' ~-; total ol Ille pfteinctatwill i!e-c!*llted>up-Clisl'illerwl'IUlei! ~ e ' ' · ' • '. .. ' lif PiiilAm, _ tliei~t · ISthey'*""ln· plcture.llremer11td1*11elit pojnt,;u ' .'.C-_ • 1 llBID'l,~•t ,,,~;\"-----------' f 1 ) •• i , '""' ~ -yrr---f .. ·~\ .~ -•' , .. , ~ • l I I•;< . • ~· ""> , Be Sure to Vote '1\l·da~:: ~ ::us , e.pfili ·: 1 J t, • t ti. ' • I I• I ' ~• 'J •' I ' • ' /1 Till 7 :; .... • "' • • f J:'. " • • . • ' ' .:":ii .,, ; t .. -..... 1 ''=' _,,._lr.' ' ' ~ l \. ... .i" '· 4-··~ ' • • f.i ., v ~t·~ ' . I· • •• "'.'."--~'-:--~~--,-----·-·---~'~-~ -• -~ l .;;; ... =~7<-=""=""',...""""' ................. ""' .... ..,.".~·"t""l~"·="'"'!'· ~~"'""~""'!llll""""' .... 1!!11 .. ,.. ............................ _____ _ J DAILY l'ILOl SC Tllftdo1, April 14, 1910 . -LiBt eJiing on Apollo Sp~ce Crisis .. SPACE CENTG, HOUl!OO SC: Ylob. we JOI a ma Ip (AP)' -WlCb the w 0 r d I bus. A u a d Ir Voll DOW tot .. ........_ we'Ye bad a Pf1> ahowlng. c '~V -CQOaai: ~A -Dilll Jr. -.... , 1111 -tllat1he SC: n~ ~ obou1 Ill\, laoor 1aodlna mlK!on Main B II ....imc lip (.,..) *Ible. right now. Here If< the bllhlllht& or CapCom: Standby one, Jim tbe 1 • ; p,.., .between the (astronaut LoveU). ~· (SC) and the C.pCom: 11. Houston, we'd atpmdt"'t!o mmllnlcah>r Hke you to attempt to recon- (Cl!ICon\) In 14l»IOfl Control. nect fuel cell I to Main A and SC: "Hey, we've had a pro. fuel cell s to Main B. VerUy blem. We've hM • maln B bus tha!t quad ddta is open. lnluftl (a maJo clreult had SC: Okay, Houston, I'm brolllo). tllowiQI, I tried to ,...t and reacb. Jadl, bolti In pitch llld roll, IO I'm ·~ tbat maybe lt't wluitawr -it I& tbat't'-11oet there. I, had lo ,"" din.t In ...... to ~tt.Ullu -u l do , .. ,,. J!lllaa lo plS up tall apln. Call }"' ~ up any Jet.t Orlng? · CapCom: Stand by. What direction ire your rates in Jack? (a.!tronaut John Swigert Jr.) SC: lt'a negative pitch and necative roll. . . kind of gfve us sn okay to r<lnltall the prob< and drogue. Or u~ to use theLM .(--) -blal. ' CapCom: ._. SC: I'm triumJl~ng. I don't have any OuiTeDt now. Hey, It's off. It's off. They - they killed the buJ complet.Jy now. It's dead,, . PAO (public arralrs·olrtcer)': ' -. lc!nl • prooedure, Frecf. We figure we'll 1et •bout 15 rNnutes worth ol po"er ltft ln tbt command mochdt. lo .... wut,.. IO ~ l'lllnt 01tr In the L.c and tettln& ~ power on that. And are )'pll ready to copy your procedure? SC: Okay, ClpCom: Ropr. Main B fuel cell I and I are both lntetwl. ou,, 8lm>d b1 wo'nl lhowlns ·cr"1 !lap. But they loo1!,lloJ at II. , an l!odl s1-lng lip on ' the SC: Oby; right. no w, flows. CapCom: Roger. 13, How. ton. We n e e d to get some more instrumentation u p . We'd tlke you to put inverter one on both AC buses. OVer. SC: Okay. Okay, you got in- verter one on both AC buses, and Jack (capsule com- municator Jack LoUSJna) one of the Items we turned o(f was the. all the futJ cell pumps. Okay, and you mlpt Jet us know when the fuel cell two need• it.II pump back we ought to take care of that, Jack.· Ul'I T.......,. 'I DON'T HAVE ANY CURRENT NOW HEY, IT'S OFF.' Apollo ContrOJ, Houston, con- tinuing to trouble shoot with Apollo 13 crew, eJ o • e I y watching oxygen quantities and prtS11urea ln the command module. llolatin( the search· tant lea ves o.xysen for entry if this lhould beccme necwary. Also, U -.y, tht II crew could open a tunnel anti Ute oxygen from the lunar module. ·PAO: Thi> Is Apollo €ontTOI al ~7 hours' 48 minutes gr0und elapsed time ... We hive 1n apparent serJous oxygen leak in the cryogeiilc oxygen ln Uie service module . . . ln this scheme of going acrou to the lunar module, sUll eoimected with the open tunnel, the 11.1nar module woUld serve 11 a 10tt of llfeboat for the crew of 'Apollo 13. Sometime later in the mission it Is expected Utat they would return to the preretum trajectory, wbieb they lefl yesterday in the 11).kS· course bum number 2 .•. Th1s is Apollo Control. We hav! CQnfirmatJon now th•t two of the Apollb 13 crtwmt n are in- deed ln the lunar module. Houlton, the voltage II looking CapCom: We copy. good. And ,.. had a protly SC: Oby, Houston, an you ta,.. bane -11.tid with the sun ...mng 111 cauUon IDd ,JVarnln& there. C~pCom : That's af. Ml ii ~· ljaln B wu . fir...U.e. We're mdlna you. the!!'--· bM u lll!J> spite We're lllll \l)'lnl 1" <ODii up au n -befor<. · with .om. good ldeu-illn fer ~m: Roger , Fred you. (UUW!Jut J"~J1l llabe). ' &C: ~-11 pvlai UI a ' ... FrotttP ... l SADDLEBACK HAIR ISSUE • • • fecU!d by the hair ruling and "need 1o know." He tmphuJzed _that during the two months the hair rules have not bffn en- forced, no lncldecta have occurred and ••tt has been establbhed that ba1r is not an tnnuenclhg fsctor . ·~ Studenta reiterated their arguments tha~ u ed!lll&, they lhou1d have the rilht to make Ule1r own decilJonJ regardin& drei!a1 esptdaU, &ioct m1ny are over tl and aomr: are veterans. 'Ibey stressed. once more the fact that Saddleback is the on1y junlbr college with a dreu code and that an Increasing number of high schools are dropping dress codes. LAUGHING STOCK "Saddleback Is 1 l1ughlng 1tock," said one. "lt'1 a fine IChooJ 1cademlcally and I will always defend It, but 1t'1 become a laughing !loct because of this ridiculous dreu code." A· student clad In blue jeans, purple undershirt and stovepipe hat stood up. "I am not trying to be a clown," he AJd. ''I am trying to 1bow you how ridiculous 1 draa: code ean be. For your information this outfit I am wearing ii in full com- pliance with the ul&ttng dr.eu code." A member'ot the footbi:llteam 1rgued, 1"Ibe athletes have shown In the past two months that tt is possible to maintain •lri~ dJOcJpUoe ..,.., wlthool enfordq a dress code." O:>llinl re.Iterated his view that It ii· all • matla' ol malntalnlng''decorum In the George Penney Funeral Set Private funeral services wtll be held We.dneaday for George Penney of 'Ibree Arch Bay who died Monday ot the age of 72. A resident of the Newport Beach and Laguna Beach area sioce 1t46, Penney wu a well-known trial lawyer. He had pracUced law in Newport Belcb since 1955. From 1927 to 1932 he wu the chief trial attorney for the Los Anselos DIJ!rict Al· tomey. Mr. Penney leayea his wire Marlette of tho family home; two sons, John 0. and James F. Pennty, both of Emerald Bay; two ai,sten:; Agnes Lund of WashlnP>r and 7.elma White of Colorado; a·brotll i .. Paul Penney of Sacramento, and Ii' granddillc¥en. The family hu suuest.d t h a memorial donaUons ~ made to the Bo Scouts of Amertea, Orange Council, 381 1 s. Mr St., Santa .+iia. DAILY PILOT """""' ...... ........ ,.., S. ChM~lw Oll:AHOE COAST ..UM.ISKUolG COM'AHY Re'Mrt N. We14 ~-~-.. J••• l. c,,, •• Viet l'rw1:..rit HI! ~•I M-tw lh•M•I K •• ,11 IE'llllllN' Tlt•1111t A. Mutphi"• M ..... tflf Efllel" IU1h1N P. Nell '-'tlll Of....,. c:-1~ E•Uw °""" C.ft M•1 nt Wt~! hy l!Ntt Nl~I a11cll1 '211 Wa.I •1111Dl ku'9v.,'lll u_.. •1«111 m •-1 .._....,.,. Hi.M•lfll-•..0-1 1"7J •• ,1;11 •• , ..... ,.. h a CIMwllli JI)) Mtrl~ II C.lflltot I H I l)AIL'I' 1'1LOl. Wflll .... ldl 11 ~'Ill !k frtt""·"'-· II !ll*lll'ltil 'llllll'r «<• 1111'1- .. , Ill .,..,, .. """'''' ltr LIO-l•oall, .....,.,., lffcll. <••• "'-· lt\ofl1W-.1.,. letcll .,.. '-''"" v,n.,, '""' .i1t1 1 .. NflMal Hllltnl. °'"* C11>t ,..,_.W.lnt ~ """"i,. 111111111 ••• •' n11 w..1 .. ..,.. •~ .. ~ .. ~ tr.ti ~ w• .. , 111"1. C-N -M. Tl41p•1• C7141 6eJ-4JJ1 C'-'fiH °"""ill .. t4J 5671 S-CI l l All~; f~.,·-4f1.-44JO c~;. "" Of1ntt co.ti ""°''.,.i"1 ~. ,.. """ ,,.,... 11iv.1r.i ...... ~ INlllW' .., ....,,..""'"""'1• llt<"" -M ~.......,.. -'""""' ttKIM .... ...... ., tilt'rfllfll -..-. ...., c•••• ••1tt ,.!'Ill « Ntw"" ••N'frl .. ""N M .... C.11;,,ni.., klhu1 ...... '' wnftr IJ.• "9111.l....,.I 1\1' !NII U.• -1111"1 llllllllwy tlftllM!lltll. ''·°' -·~''· clusroom to produce that degree ot formality essentJal to the process of educaUon." At the end of the four-hour meeting be eommented that the atud!nta present had displayed great "decorum". DOIJ.ARS AND CENTS Trustee Hans Vogel brought t h e argumenta down to dollan and cents. Reminding the student. that reaklents of the dlstrict had puled a 1911 mllllon bond lsaue at a Ume when bond issues were belnc defe:at!d in many other areas, he said, "Our bond issue was passed by 73 percent , and In Lei.sure World It was 90 percent Thlt'is why we ire able to have the linW faclllties and an excellent faculty. '1But if those people out there decide they don't like what'• aolng on here, you're out of Juck. nte moment we relax the dress' code, I guarantee you that's the end of your money -and already we have 1o Jtart thlnklnt about a oecond campus.' .. Supporting bis contention that the presetil board and lb policies are In tune with the community, Vogel noted that trustee Patrick Backus was rt-eleded In a race agaJnst four oppon!nts and defeated his nearest eontestanf, an American Civil Liberties attorney, by two to one. DEFEAT ACLU "Anyone could defeat an ACLU at. torney In Orange County," said Bothwell. "That's just the point," Vogel replied. 11t'm talking about the temper of the electorate in Orange County and I think we understand and reflect lt. I'm not saying it's right or wrong. You might say in a way that you students are victims of it. But that'• the wav It is and you have to understand that th! only way peOple have to express their di!.!latisfac tion with the way schools are run J:. by voting down bond issues -then there won't be any school. You really haV! to decide which is more important, your hair or a first class education." A woman who said she had nve sons "all with Jong hair and I dor.'t like It," said the whole thing seemed like "a pret~ ty small Issue for such a blg board to be fooling with.'' LOUD APPLAUSE An !lderly lady who rose to ldenUf herself as "one of those people fro1 Let~e World" was gr!!ted with loud a ;->la y the students. "'I a liberal,'' she said. '"l guesr tight be a radical at Lelsur! World. 1 ~aSt I'm in tbe Democratic Club. But 1ust tell you that while J would go i ·oting for your bonds anyway, I belie nany people out there would not." Complimenting the :stud ents qn lht behavior and intelligence, she added, ' just ca'n't understand why you don't wa to groom yourselvui so you loot as h tellig!nt as you really are.' It wasn't exactly what the studeT1l'" wanted to hear. but they gave her anotber round of applause. NO CHANGES "Trustee Baclcu1 spoke up with , '1'd be agaimt changing the cod! right now, but I rtalize '\'e're Uvtn• in a changini world and rd be very willlrut to sit down and dtscuM it with the students." A student said h! appreciated the fact that the trustees had clarified the finan- cial support aspect or the problem and felt It had given him something more to think about. "We just want you to level w1th us and stop all this pussyfooting around," he added. Bothwtll said. "We realize there may be some risk in !limtnating the part of the dress code about the hair, but U you will take this risk I can pl!dge to you that the students wtll make a real effort to make th!mtelves known in the com· munlty as senslbl!, reliabl! peoole. We really would like to show peopl_e that ho.Ir It.self Is not a problem and perhaps If we wort together "'e can do that and keep the support of the community." sruov GROUP Collins said that if the Judges' wrllten oPlnlon supporta the dress Ct'>de ·•en· forcement wUI proceed" but agrtcd th11t a committee could be formed tn study 111 revised code for tht ntxt qu1rttr. As the meetin~ di~Ptr.:td. the Indy from Lflsure World found herself sur· rounded by studeni.s. "Thank you for comlnr to hear us ma'am," l&ld an 1thlete. r.MAyhe you'd like to come back and 1ee sotnl! of fou r loot ball wzames." ni. lady said maybe slie would. ,., Trouble In Space: Lavell, Swigert, H1I" (from left) CapCom: Roger. 0 k a y. Fred, W! want fuel cell 2 pumJ>I to AC one please. SC: .Fuel cell 2 to AC one roger. Okay, it's on AC one. CapCom : Okay, 13, we've Ul'I T"""9lt1 WATCHES FROM GROUND Mlulon Chief Slayton Fron• Page 1 BRIEFS ... said, exctpt that the crew may change its menu to use food which does not require water in preparation. e Toss Gltles R e port MOSCOW (UPJ) -The Sovl!t news agency Tass carried Its first report on the Apollo 13 troubles in a brief, fa ctual dispatch from New York. Tass said the ''three astronauts are in grave danger" but "llight officials are taking all measures to ensure their safe return to earth." Until the electrical breakdown, the Apollo flight had received little attention in tl1e Soviet media, although full reports had been expected when the moon lan- ding was carried out. e Staud!Jy ;,. Germany RAMSTEIN AIR BASE. Cennany (UPI ) -U.S. rescue aircraft under com- mand 01 Ramstein Air Base are standing by lo help if the Apollo 13 1pacecraft lirnds In the Atlantic, a spokesman for the base said today. He said the CJ30P Hercules plane~ ·~Jong to the 40lh Aerospace Rescue and :ecovery Wing, Apollo Support Forces. hey are ready to respond to any direc· ·::ans from the Department of Defense or le National Aeronautics and Space imlnistration (NASA). I Meteorite Suspected SEDONA, Ariz. (AP) -The power tilure on Apollo J3 probably wu caused rhen Ule fuel cell was struck by a very -mall meteorite, Dr. Harvey Nininger said today. Nininger, regarded as an expe;rt on the subject, &aid he had given this "very positive opinion" to th! Nat Io n a I Ammaulk:s and Space Administr1tion after being coosulled by It Monday night. La gunan Draws Prison Sentence In LSD Carrying PHOENIX (UP I) -A Laguna Beach man convlcted ol possessing 12,000 LSD tablets was sentenced Monday to an in- determinate term in federal prison. Jesse V. Mahciz, 26, was remanded to the U.S. Attorney General for treatment and supervision under the feder.o.I cor- rections act. P.t1hclz was convicted March 25 1flcr testilying that he flew to Phoenix Sept. 30 wllh a suitcase containing 12,000 LSD tablets. He told the court that a Phoenix man had offered to buy \he tablets from him for $1 ,000. Arthur Fluhr, form!r agent0in-cbarge of the Arizona office of th! Fcdtral Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, testified that the man was an In- former. Macblz, who racu trial in CA!lfomla on a charge cf pos$fsslng 10,000 LSD tablets, was allowed lo remoin free on $10,000 bond pendina the outcome of an appeal. got . lots and lots of people working on this, we'll g!t you some dope as aoon as we have It, and you'll be the firtl one to know. SC : Oh, thank you. Okay, Jack, and the weird con- figuration we're sitting .in now, is we have the hatch imtaUed, we still have lhe probe and drogue inside the oommand module, and we' re going to stay in this situation until you CapCom: We have a pro- cedure for getting power from the LM, we'd like you to Cf>PY down. SC: Okay. Stand by, Jack. It :sounds like good news. Okay, Jack. About how Jong is it? CapCom : Ifs not a very Fron• Page l Privat~ Beach Use Move Urged In South Laguna APOLLO CRISIS Others were flicked on as needed. -To keep the spacecraft fr o m overheating, the astronauts' ship was oc- casionally rotated 90 degrees so the 247 degree heat of the sun would not bake on one side for too long. -Lovell and Halse, tried from long hours of wrestllng with the spactshlp':s grave problemJ, were ulttp in the com- mand ship couches, Swigert, who earlier slept six houn, toot scores cf instructions from Mission Control on means of Cf>n- aerv lng th! consumables. -All three wore flight coveralls. The spacesults would take too much power and oxyg!n. -Communic1tlons with the earth were scratchy because one of the high-powered antennas was taken off the line. Looping the moon Is the safest way home, ofliclals said, because Apollo 13 was close to Its target at the time of the accident and already was on a course that "'ould take It around the moon 's backsid e. To stop short of the moon would have required consld!rabl! engine power and fu!l expenditur!. so m ! th i n g the astronauts did Ml have with Apollo 13's big rommancl ship engine idled by elec- trical failure. Th! only powerplant availabl! Is the lunar module descent engine, the one that was to have lowered Lovell and Haise to th! lunar surfatt. The spacemen trig- gered the engine 30 seconds early today to adjust the cou rse slightly to a path that would take them back to earth Friday night If they made no addit io na l maneuver. Police Watching Bowling Green Lawnbowlers ar! probably the world's most uptight grass fanciers, ranking equally with golfers when it Cf>mes to being mellculous about their greens. So it was no wond!r that bowlers in San Clemente Monda y asked poliei! to keep an ey! on their greens at San Luis Rey Park which wer! showing signs of damage. Police indeed kept a wary watch on the green, and a few minutes after receiving the complaint. th!y found the answer. A young sandlot baseball team moved onto the green before sunset and began to play. They were directed lo a less tender area. • • • The Rcond firing at 9:40 tonlght was planned to Increase the speed enough for a landing 10 hours earlier. Asked at a briefing if there had been any damage to thefheat shield, w h i c h must protect the astronauts from the tremendous heat of re-entry. H! said there was a slight possibility of such damage but that there was no evidence of any. The decision to try for a Friday landing in the Pacific meant that Mission Control had decided not to adopt a "superfast" return plan. Under this, the engln! firing tonight would have been lengthened to give the ship a h!avier push horn!. But this would have consumed more power. President Nl xon kept in touch with developments through phon! contact with NAS A Administrator Thomas 0. Paine in f\.1i ss lon Control. Neither the United States nor Russia has a space rescue capability. So the astronauts wlll have to depend on th!ir sklll and that of hundreds of experts on the ground to get home. Council Ponders Changes in Laws Laguna's lawmakers shquld live up to the name Wednesday night as councilmen consider passage d ordlnances ranging from ontrol of transients in business places to more strict regulation or massage parlor employes. The oouncil Is expected to pass through seco nd re ading an ordinance proposed by Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan to aid business flnns, e s p e e I a 11 y food establishments in pr!ventlng loitering on the premls!s. The ordln.ance y,·ould pr!vent persons from loitering, standing or sitting on com. mercial property contrary to the wishes of the owner. U loiterers refused to leave at the owners request, police could be summoned and a ciUlen 's arrest mad!. The council ls aliO expected to pass through second reading an ordinance regula ting licensing of employes of massage parlors that has been recom- mended by the police chief. The ordinance was sought after arrest of a femllle massage parlor employe in Laguna on suspicion ot. conspiracy to commit prostitution. The council is also expected to adopt a re~o!ution that seeks parUclpation of the enflre community In !nforcing litter Jaws and cites the specific code sections that apply. A move is under way Jn South Lagu na to limit private beaches from Thr!e Arch Bay to Circle Drive to privat! use by lbe property owners. Property owners concerned o v er transient beach use in Ute area have banded together in an associalion of about 70 members. Bob B!nner , Laguna Be1ch businessman and South Laguna property O'tl'ner, said •title Rarcb has been con· ducted conce~rnlng an old easement for the stairway at Ninth Street. "We have researched it and it is a privale beach and it is going to be treated as a private beach," Beimer said. He said the beach access over the ease- ment is not public. He said the easement was given to encourage property owners to buy lots and was recorded in 1929. Benner said the private property line1 run to the mean high tide line and although the area oceanward of that is public there is no practical public acces1 to it. Benner said it is not a question or wheth!r the pres!nl beach UR rs ·have Jong hair or not, it is a question ol. whether they are property owners. "It is purely a legal malt!r and one that Is relatively easy to enforce," sald Benner. "The rightful owners w i 1 i reserve it for our use. That is what the association i:s intending to enforce." Former Lagunan Kill ed in Laos A former Laguna Beach man was one or six Americans killed by Uie crash of i transport plane in th! northern mO!Jli.. tains of Laos. The victim, Capt. Kevin Cochrane, 43, '"as piloting th! plane that 'll'lls on loa n from the ~ U.S. Air Force, a C.1 30 transport. It hit Phou Bia, Laos· highest mountain Friday as it was coming in to land in bad weather. Cochrane's wife and three chlldr!n have been living in Vientiane. Searchers were expected to reach the wreckage in Ule rugged mountain area to d a y sometime. The carpet they both chose? Bigelow's Barcelona Battelona combines t~ n1ual, 'Vind-I~ shag look of today with an ele£&nt S~l&lt crWe pattern. The long, sl!ndtr yarns have a IOft. shimmery glow ••. the dramatic mulll- colon are J.fcdJtern.nea.n;lnspir-N, Use Bar-celona in a Spanl:sh or Medlt.erran~ setting « ..tth Wtn.~modern or mixed contemporary ••. for • truly stunning ettecl And bf!tause the fiber's nylon, ~Iona's so eu7 to .,.,.., for. Sou "°""'' $1 (}!5 abaw • . . and pile stays crisp and fP1'fno. A fine buy for an)'-y1'. OM who wants gtnt styling ••. a roomful ol. luitny ••• at Jr>(tud!roo lrll•n.. • down-~Ul .-... llOll .-!"' ..... ~--... ... 6 Sanny Mediterranean Shades ALDEN'S CARPm-DRAPERIES Mediterr•M•n Mott Antique AmMr • Sp•nish Poppy Spenl1h Leather • Granada Gold Ata•lo AYocado approved Blgalow nylon pile e I l YMAS SfRVl~G THE ORANGE COAST 0 1663 Placenti-Costa M-.a Phone 644-4833 I I I J I I ____ P __ _,.._;;;:i;i u-··---•••_._.........,_..._,~-~-~--~--~---.-. .... ---... --... --------"'!"------------""'!"'l"--.-----.!"'!'-~!"9 ... ~-.. ' . . CRUSADING IARBEllt ALLAN (CENTER) DEMONSTRATES HIS STYLE ON YOUNG MARINE 111 T..,.,Urbtr W•lt Rodick (loft) Gob • Luson In Modiflod Mlllt•ry H•lrcut1 San Clemente's Best Known Citizen Coming No More Jarheads Barber Giving Marines 'Style' San Clemente's best-known citizen is npected to arrive about 'ntid-summer, but police are prepared for President Nixon's annual visit and others it may bring. Tbe President's vacation is expected to draw demonstrators in protests similar to those logged last season and Police Chief Clifford Murray said today his depart· ment will be busy. In fact, the predictions for a land olfict business have spawned an application for aboftt $119,000 for salaries for nine new olfieers and new equipment his depart- ment will need. "But1he trouble is that we just haven't been able to find any qualified appHcanl5 for .the nine new patrobnan jobs," the chief said. The salary is competit.lve -even ta\rard the top of the list r01: patriorilen in Orange County cities~ A starting patrobnan in San Clemente can earn a base pay of· $671 .a mon~. which will grow steadily ·and reach f18% by the end or his secmd year of service. But ao rar there haven't been any takers. Some of the reasons for the dearth.of 1ood police material still aren't clear, the clrieI said. Veterans generally rank among the._ best police trainee,,, but despite the many returning veterans, few of them want to otep rig!it Into a poli<emari'1 unilorm. MM of them have learned a specializ.. ed skill or trade in the service and their only goal after they leav, service is to go back home to make a break lnto that field, Murray observed. San , Clemente's roster or It officers, plus admlni3trators shows all to be veterans. • ''There's no question that ex-military men make good officers," the chief said. · Another problem In the competitive marltet for patrolmen is fringe benefits. Despite an attractive starting pay lbe potential police officer comiders other factors -insurance retirement and pension benefits -just as strongly. By STEVE MITCHELL Of JM D•llY Plitt Ila/I The word "Jarhead" may soon be discontinued in Marine Caps terminology -at lee.st if Ken Allan, a Corona del Mar hair stylist. has anything to say about it. Allan's big gripe since n:ioving to Orange County from hi' Beverly Hills hair styling . shop is the number of . Mariqes he sees with the "white sidewall" haircut. so prevalent among 'leatheniecks. "These men are being scalped by government-issue barbers," he stated. Six months ago, AJ!an decided W do something about UM! haircuts, which he says are •'demorali zing lo tbe servicemen." In a letter to El Toro 's cmunanding general, Brig. Gen. Henry W. H'ise, Allan suggested •a Short-cropped haircut be off. ered to Marine, "which complies with military regulations but does not k>ok like a three mim.r&rskin-job." Tbe ' general dis&)layed an Interest ih Allan's ideas and asked hlrn to demonstrate. 'his · modified m I Ii tar y haircut al El Toro. Colonel William M. Lundin, he air sta. tion's chief of staff gave testimony to the success ol Allan's first session with El .. Toro's head barber. "Since the initial lntruction, Mr. Bentley, the head barber, has given me several fine style cuts and , as you purported initially, my hair does, In fact, loot and feel better," Lundin stated. NOw six months later, Allan has been given the go-ahead and is training El Toro barbers once a week in proper hair styling. "The Marines will have a choice of gel- ling a regular haircut or having their hair evenly styled," Allan stated. 11lis shoold eliminate the "assembly line" pro- cess of haircutting that is presently employed at the 'air station. Flashing Sign Offered to City A pension plan in San Clemente's department is being built slowly, but still Lagunans may still see the daily time does not compete with some other and temperature and keep up with city department& in the county. • aotiv!Ues. · "'Ibere are probably other reaaons, but In a lllO\le to escape tomorrow's three. it jS really difficuJt to pin them down year sign morator:iwn, · Laguna Federal firmly," Murray said. ' Savings and.Loan offered its nashing pole SNl Clemente's grant a pp\ 1 C<a t Ion sign for community service. covers the first year of a proposed City planner AI Autry said the copy on ~year program and it has a· few -uni-the sign will be removed, replaced with que characteristics. the city's name, and a change of copy · While many departments have a!ked below will advertise public events. for federal funds for a specific, neW. pro. Although Jt would be simpler for the · ject, the San Clemente application is a . savings firm to take the sign down, Autry "discretionary" one and asks for fu~ added, Jt has offered it to the city while for · general staff and· equipment ad· agreeing to pay the $300 per month ditiom. • operation cost. ' . Pa·rents Back • Ill The price of a regular haircut still will be $1 and the styled cut will be about $3.50, according to Allan. ''This price seems high, but I have talked to dozens of Marines at El Toro who have told me they would give half their paycheck to get a decent haircut,'' Allan said. The Corona del Mar hair stylist, who has had many ramous and influential personalities beneath his scissors and comb, is receiving no fee for training the government-hired barbers at El Toro. "I was in the Air Force and I know how the servicemen feel about military haircuts," he stated. Allan says that he began his hair styl· ing project with the Marine Corps and will branch out to the other services if the El Toro plan works out. "I started wilh the Marines because I knew they woulC! be the hardest to convince," the Scottish-born barber stated. In addition to training the barbers In his h8ir cutti,ng t'tchniques, Al~n has been instrumental in planning for the new barber shop under construction in the $1.5 million Marine Corps Exchange which i! scheduled for completion later this year al El Toro. Although hls services to El Toro are free, the tonsorial artist doe! make a comfertable living rrom hi s Corona de1 Mar shop. He has cut the · hair of Presi- dent Nixon's cabinet members during their stay in Orange County last August. The list of Hollywood celebrities that stop in for a pause beneath his skilled scissors is large and includes John Wayne, Stan Kenton, Sean Connery and many others. Allan began his trade at the age of 6 in Scotland and became the youngest registered master barber in Britain when he was 15. · He has appeared as a guest on the Steve Allen show where he styled . the television personality's hair on the pro· gram. A three-page article has appeared in Life magazine featuring the stocky hair stylist, and other articles have ap- peared in Esquire and Gentleman's Quarterly. Allan moved to Orange County rrom Beverly Hills last July. "Most of my cwitomers are local businessmen," he noted. "but I still do some Hollywood work." 01amher Hears Report on Fund San Clemente's chamber of commerce directors will hear reports on United Fund plans and a newcomer's service at their regular luncheon meeting Tuesday at the San Clemente Golf Course restaUrant School Open Houses Slat,ed During Annual Week A eomJreJ>erJaive "bac,t ~ 1e.hool., pro. warn. ·at 'ftNmon Intermediate School, a Unoe fair at El Morro Elementary sChoOI, free rides to the school aboard an authentic san Francisco "cable car" and eeverat open house programs 'Cill mark Public Schools Week, April 2o-25, In t.guna Beach. The cabie car (re-designed on a bus chassis) will. leave from tbe Chamber of Qimmerct. 280 Park Ave., on a series of trips to ouUying schools on Tueaclay, April 21. . At 9 a.m. and JO a.m. there will be trips to the Thurston program; at 10:30 a,m. a run out to El Morro School, returning al u ,·u . for ""°""" 1r1p 1o T{Jurston. At 1 p.m. there will be another run up lhe hill 1o Thuntoo, lollowtd •at 1,:io with a vlsll 1o Alioo School, Between s .and 4 p.m. Tuesday lhe cable car will be mad• available for lhol1 04hop on" trips around·tbe·cknfntown are•. Noting the-50th ,anniversary of Public Schools Week, Dr. Wil!iam U 11 om , superintendent · or 'schools, said, .. A special lnvita~ is extended to those in Laguna Beach who have no children and have not visited the schools, to attend these aperi hoU8e programs." Back-to«:bool day at Thurston on Tuesday, April 11, will Include programs covering aJI school levels in Laguna and will end with a 11school Jurich" for visitors. ' , From fl to 9:30 a.m. coffee will be. sen+· ed In Room JOO, followed by a PTA program featuring the high acbool choral readers at 9:30. From 10 to 10:45 a.m., and repeiited from 11to11:45, there win be four pr~ gramJ oo current acbool actlvttlts, as follow" " t -Elemeolary School! (Room 'rn): tile teaching of mding In Lquno school!. -High school (Room 711): 1. prO(ITam oo student involvement, presented by the students and du.Ung with 1 t u d e n t respoo&ibillty, the dress code •nd the mini-courses. -Junior high (Room 711): Eiplaoation of nexi&l.e scheduling and team teaching. --Oimmunlly 5ervlce (Room 717): The role o{ the PTA in the community. From noon to I p.m. lunch will be serv- ed. El Morro School11 Science Fair and Art a la Mdde will be on vtew 7 to 9 p.m. Wednellday, April 22. Top of lhe World School will hold open house from 7:30 1o 1:00 p.m. Wedn<lday, April 22 and Aliso School's open house wtll be from 7:30 to 9 p.m. on 11iur8day, April 23. Sign Law Relaxed ' By .Laguna taguna Beach plAMlng comminlontr8 agreed Monday to relax arell!l of the sign ordinanc.J involving pole signs, size -detenninaUon and location. but they cast wary eyes at bucket and globe-sllaped signs. In a first ol two public hearings, the .commission.directed the planNng staff.to prepare an amendment for modification of the section which determines sign area. In answer to. city planner >J Autry'9 auery, "Do you find spherical signs ob- jectionable!''. Commissioner Joseph Tomehak replied he did, citing bucktt si~s or revolving buckets. Two-sided pole signs are measured by the area. of each face, Aulryf¥>ted, giv· Ing a round sign more allowable visible area. "My question is, how fat ca'n a sign aet before it's four sided?" asked O\arles Johnson. "What about a revolving hot dog?" ~d· ded Carl Johnson. Planners asked the staff to draft a method or measwing the total area of spherical signs. The corilmis.slon agreed to relar c:riteria in these areas: -Pole ·signs may now project into the plblic way or beyond the street plan line. -Distribution of sign area on pole signs for various shops will be more permissive. . -Comer pole signs may be more parallel to one street than to another : parallel signs may be oriented to the side property, eliminating the present £ive- foot setback requirement -Sign area will be measure<! !>y the ex· terior perimeter. -Provision will be made for a com- prehensive sign program for shopping centers. The second public hearing will be April 20. In other business, planners: -Continued a public hearing a n upgrading of the Texaco service station at 1833 South Coast Highway to allow the applicant to provide a better plan with regard to landJCaping and lighting. -Approved modlfied plans for St. Paul's IAltheran Church, 1190 Morn- ingside DriVe, which reduce height of the sanctuary to 27 feet and orient the building to Morningside Drive. -Deferred variance applications re- quested by William Gee, 495 North Coast Highway. and Jerome Arntsen, 2430 Lomita Way , to later sessions for more study. -Approved a single-family variance rquested by JlllAJ Barkan at 651 Virgin~ Park Drive~ //IT~ ... --Selected a green electrolier style for Heisler Park. -Denied a variance application ex· tension for Phillips Buick, 310 Broadway, on Dr. Robert French's motion or "lack or ecortOQlic hardship." According to Aulry, the car dealer has failed to meel requirements of the 1968 ·variance In- volving on-site drainage, signing of "no left turn" onto Broadway, and a coo- forming sign program . • LOlilE FIGURE CROSSES OTHERWISE EMPTY POREST AVl!NUE , Fri sh Asph•ll ond Tomporory ·P•,rkl,. Probloo\1 1.,; o..m-n· ~' ' Street Repatr Project .. Dow~tow.ri on s·~heduk ·· ' . ' • ' Re-surfacing of Forest and Ocean · avenues and Beach Street in downtown. Laguna Beach is "right oit,diedUle" (~ day 'with Forest Avenue re-opened to' trtiffic and the -other twO ready for tranlc· at 7 a.m. Wednesday. · · Old surfaces were shaved off Sunday and .I giant paving . machines spewjng smoke and flame inched along all d8y ll-londay laying the new surface. · Culture Groups Plan Program Spolies:men for 12, differfnt L!lguna Beath cultural groups will particlpate 'ln, the Laguna Coordinating Council'• "Night with the Arts" at 7:30 this evening in the Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Building. Describing lhe aceomplisttmenla . ·and aims of their organizations for memberi of the council and guests will be Don \Villiam~1 pr9'1ucer of 1 l;he Pag~t' of the Masters; Verner Beck, FestlvaJ ,of Arts director ; Lila ZaJi or the Civic Ballet; v'ehna Sun of the Lyric Opefa Association;' Ruth Osgoo(f S a I y e r , Playhouse and SchoOI of Art and Design; Wallace McKay, Art Association Gallery; 1 George :Gade, Cham&er• Music: Society ; George CuMingham, c· o m m u n I t y ConcertS'; Harlan Terwilliger, Sawdust FeStivaJ: Tom Leslie, Craft Guild; Mitzi ' lnterlandi,:Fe.stival·ol Arts Chorale.; 1and Phil Prentice, Art-A~air-. · Businesa WU Slow in the downtown j area, with access to.,moat sCol'el blocked 1 during tll~ ROvlng operaUon. MOii sfW> owners IJJ"M pirt•olctlie!day atandlrigO. I their doorways OO&erving tbe1men tand " machines at work.· • · r ~ ,• '. Members Of ffie downtown1Won:lforce, l unable to reach their ·fav.orite-'~ f spots,, were obliged to leave ~ Clif$10D l side street! and walk to work. 1 • Barring -.(a thought lbat chil/ftlto , city street deparbnent), Ocean ·anc1 ; 9each will be back to normal .. earty { Wednesday. _ As soon as the downtown streets are ! completed, crews will move le ~ municipal parking lot on Glennep-e 1 Street at Laguna Avenue: to give, it ·the >. wne scraping and repavln1 treatment. Services Sl.ated . .. . ' For. Mrs. Arno1't Services will be held In Rockford,~;n. for Kate Q. Arnold of Wilmette, DI., 1iho died Friday while on a visit 'to the Emerald Bay home of lier aon, William B. Arnold. I • l Mrs. Arnold a190 fl l!Urvlvtd by.·a daughter,.Mary Alice Hynes of Wllmette: a sitter, Nora CumJey ·o! Arizona; seven . grandchildren and oPe great.-gi:andchild. She was the widow of Judge William W. Arnold, fonner ~an r r:oiqt Illinois ·and a jOO,e of the: Tas:~ ol the U.S. . Turn in for a 3·piece place setting of handmade ,M91ave.stoneware. . . With gasoline purchase at {articipating retailers. other' plecesaraalso available, • • , • \ -··. •l'-' .... ..,,,=....,,.,..--.,. ...... ~,., _...,.,,.,..,...,,..,.,,.,.,,.,.. ...... ""'""',..""'-~""'"""'"" ... ""'""' ... """"""""""'------···~-------: DAI\ Y •II.OT ~ ............... j Mr1. J. Loonard Swltort, molh- 1er of the substitute astronaut on 1h11 WtJI/ to the moon, .. id her 100 irDtJll laavt one •!icky problem.du!" ·ing Ille trip. John swi,-rt doe• not 1>articularly care for peanut butter. 1JnfortnMt,eJy, due to the last imlnute Jiiture of his departure, he u tO eat tile food chosen by the ,man he replaced, Thomas Matllng- Jy. Mattingly Jove1 peanut bu~ :ancl there Is a good supply ol it m 'the food locker. • Members of tht Btttte, Mr-nt, High School Band and Chorui had planned to participate in a district-wide mu.sic festival but thtir director, a "nion member, ;oined a ttachn'• striU. Hot11- ever tilt roung m¥.ricianl were undliunted. Theu provided thtir own tron.sportation, perfcmntd without their director and Won "'svpe,.ior ratings in both ewnu.· '·. . l Centla..e £A Sirihe Teachers ··Ign·ore. Order by Court LOS ANGELES (UPI] -Vowinc 16 re- main out unW llMir ~ lin mt~ etJWnr ttac:bers in the naUCXl'• aecond la ...... IChool syotem tod07 delled a cGut onler to relunl to wort and Shots Fired At Truckers; 40,000 Id"le picketed hundreds ol schooil for the ... .cond straight day. About half the district's 25,000 teachers 'f~iled to report to work Monday as the ci- tt ol Los Ancele.s struQied to keep lb 611 schools 1emn11SO,OOO otudenla e>pin. Sdlool Superintendent Robert Kelly 10o cu.>ed the striking teecher1 u "makin& the young people a pawn" alter many of the studa>ts who showed up !or the open- ing bell were sent home because ol tbe scarcity ot teacbefs. He orde?'M the sdloo1 b o a r d ' 1 negotiating staff to di.tcootinue talks with the union "until such time as teachers .are beck in the classroom and the strike Shots were fired at trucb Sn the ended." Detroit area today and 1n Cblclp mere than 40,000 driven and dock workers Kelly then sent the board's attorneys to were Idled because of a 1t:ike. by two court "to tlt'.8f1Y establish that ~ 1trike unions and a lockout by trucking com-is illegal." Superior Court Judge Richard panies. Schauer granted a temporary restraining The Chicago and Detroit develop!11ents order ordering the strikers back to work. were the most notable In a continuing wave pl wildcat atrtkes by drivers unw:lll-• Robert RaMOm, president of the lnr to . accept a proposed Nationa1 United Teachen of Los Angeles, said the Teamsters-Union contract that would union would not obey the order and raise wages of 450,000 by $1.10 an hour declired the strike was a "moral not a over thrte years. 1 1 · e " Micbltan St.ate Police said a truck ega lllSU • driven bJ a teamster member was hit by The union president said wage demands sevel'l1 bullet. as it traveled from Detroit were not as important as forcing lhe to Grand Blanc, a distance of about 40 state Legislature to allocate sufficient • miles.. . The velticie baallng steel to-a General lupct., to bring about an end to deplorable Somebody stole the brigbt red Moton Corp.' plan~ was followed by a classroom cocdlliom. statlon wagon of Chicago's 10th car for RVeral miles aJorq: U.S. 23, police However, in Sacramento, the Battalion Fire Chief R I ch 1 rd said. Shots were fired from the car. 'nte Legislature held out JitUe hope it would Josepk• Sunday while he was at ~k wu hit but the driver was not vote emergency funds to meet the stru- a fire. ~e car was found liter in' ~~ ~g report was ·"one of ing teachers' demands. Many lawmakers Lake Michigan near Eva!'ston, :tIL several" receiVed by Michigan Slate 5ald that without Gov. Ronald Reagan's A Northwestern University SecJU'· · ·Police during ·the walkout whiCh has support, there was virtually no chance of ity guard spotted the vehicle's red forced the big au to com~es to close the passing of an emergency ap- lights flasbln( .Wlderwater. a dozen plants Jay off 42,000 workers and propriatlon .bill. · · • reduce Wort' ICbedulea for at least Kelly said the teachers have caused another 40,000. ''great damage" to school programs and Yippie leader and Chkago 7 di/~ dant Abb~ Hofjmtm ii •hot.on wiping hia nose on w.ltat appears to be a 1'eplica of the American fla.g during on appearance at Kama.i We1ltua,n Vniot'1"1itv itl Salina. The Salina coun. tr attorney fUM charge1 against Hoff· '"""I"' allegedJ¥ des<crati!lil the flag, • !!••In Clerke ol London, England had a lover's tJI1 with ·his girl- friend, so be feared the worst when he found her with her head in the gas oven Sunday nighl But Elelne Sutherl•ncl pushed him away when he rushed in and grebbed her. "I wu just dryinr my hair," ahe said. "I do It ofWI.'' About 3,500 teamsters ended their added· that "the strike bas ~ effective wildcat 11.rike· In the Harrisbur1, Pa., in hurting educaUon." region today and withdrew picket lines. A "The schools will be open ... We will union local spokesman said members try to 1ive the dilldren an education. We agreed to return lo their Jobs wrtil a "°"' hope a partial day's ochooUng I! better tract wu elther nWled or rejeded by than nooe,'' Kelly said. the n•tiooaJ membership. A spokesman for the school board said Navy Man Named To High Post "L ' , WASHINGTON (UPIJ -President N-today named Adm. 'lbomu H. Moorer u new Chairman of the Joint aileh,ol Stall, IUCC<Odlng Gen. Earle G. Wheeler in the nation'• hlibest ranking military poll. . Moorer is -now Chief of Naval Opera· U-. Wheeler, 62, who hu held 'the office ..mce July, 19", ]ilans to reUril When the 'change becomes .elfeeUve July %, subject 1o Senate con:flrmadoo of Moorer. NU:on at the same Ume designated Vice Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt Jr., now comnwxfer of NaTal forces in Vietnam, to suooeed Moortr as Navy Chief. Mocnr, 51, will he the second Navy •. man to hold the position of Chainnan of · the Joint Chiefs. Adm. Arthur Radford held the pool in 1115U7. LA Times' Bill Henry Dies of Heart Disease NORTHRIDGE (UPI) -Bill Henry, a Loo Ancel., Times poi!Ucal coiumnbt for 30 years, ia dead at the age of 79. Henry, who began writing his column "By The Way" in 1939, died Monday at Nortlu1dge Community Hoopttai ol a heart d!seue. HiJ 51-yeu career with the Times began as a 1porta: writer in 1912, was h!ghlight.d by two National HeadUner Awardl mt he was to receive the Medal ol Freedon), the higbest award the Presi- da>t C111 biestow to a civilian, April U. 48 percent of the teachers stayed out, but UTLA asserted the number wu closer to 60 pel'OOll 'Break' Reported /11, Air Walkout WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Federal Aviation Administration reported a "ma· jor break" jn the 21-day air controllefs .. sl~i: out" with returµ l9 '~k today of almost all controllers in ?'1ew York. An FAA spokesman aaid 148 of the 15& controllers scheduled on at the key Islip. Long Island, Control Center reported for work. The center had been the major trouble spot of the slowdown. The FAA sakl only Kansas City re- mained a major trouble spot, pending reports from Denver and Oakland, which had been continuing to have high absenleeism among its controllers. The bac.k-~work trend became ap- parent Monday, and the return in New York today appeared to portend the end of the work stoppage. F. Lee Balley, executive direc:tor of the Professional Air T ra f f i c Controllers OrganiiaUon (PATCO), said Monday, "the deadlock is broken." Bailey warned, however, that some controllers reporting back to work were being "harassed, inUmJdated and in- terrogated" by the FAA which must certify that the returning men are medlcelly flt to work. If thls continues, Balley added, ''11lere Is no telling what wUI happen." He said if the FAA and the Department o I TransJ>OrtaUon "come forward in good falth" tbe a1r traffic system could be in lull operation b7 the end ol the week. New Snow Storm ·Spreads Cold Weather Ranges From W y oming to Northwest \ ~ ..... Ml\.D.J V.S. Summary .t. mt ler .. ,1,,. 11erm Cffl"tff .... ,, -1-si...,, 'Nnmlllt l>~I cold ,..,. or _,, IYlf' I .. lclt l fM wl!ll 1!r-wl"°' tll.ltllOl"I lrom !he Rocti· Ill Ii> llM; l'1c!llc to.at. Wllld 111111 111 to • mllt1 Hr "°"' Wt r1 -!tom Mortl1"" '9 Ar!nN. Hff'l'f' "'°"'' w1<11l11t• WW• orcltrtd for most et tht D11tol1• "fl'ller1 twr lo 111111 lllCl'ttt _..,, 111MC:two11. H-v tnow w1ml1191 1190 wtte In t l'9tl tor -"'•'~ Ml!lll"" 1114 l!Otl!'I· ..... ltfl °Nl'Otlll!lf, •lowlllt •now Wll t llltl..,. tlllt,OOvl h't.._1 COfldll111'11 In INrfl ti M9flltN , "''"" ... ,.. ....... u ... -""' o ... , t.11<1t, Ntw llltlend 1111 0.., lOlltll .,, llM 111lrtrrM1 a.;111wttt, remper.t11res "ltlt L-l'r.c. AIM\lt«Ne " Aftdlor•t• • Alllnlt ~ •••trafleld .. l lV11t rck " Solle " "''M " '"'"'"'"Hie u ClllQi90 .. Cl...:Jnn11f " Do~ff .. Des Moine• .. 0e1 ... u " Ft irbenlt.a " Forl Worfh n ,_ ~ ...,_ " t<""°'utu • l<IMll City • L11 V"'* " Los "-""let " Mll"'I " Ml-POiis " Ntw C)rl .. na " N..,vm " Nortlt ,.11119 • 0.-i.M .. Oll!11!om1 City .. °"''"' " Pt!"' s ... 1~1 .. ,.,M Roto!U " Plloenll ~ Pl"lbu,,_,. .. P011111M ~ RMlkl City JI Red 1111" M ·-.. s 9(t • m.tl hi .. S.1n ll'r111<IKI • Se.1119 H lPG111ne " Tllttfl't l .. W1t1ttnr. u ----- " ll " " " .. • " " " " " " " " .. " .. • " " .. u ll • " • " " " " ~ .. H " " .. " .. .. " u ., ... "'' ·" -~ ·" .. . .. "' "' .. "' .. ... ' . .. .. VlllT ........ 0 PRESS DEAN DEAD Mtrrlm1n Smith, 51 Merriman Smith,. Famed Newsman, Suicide Victim WASHINGTON CUP!) -Merriman Smith, the dean of White House cor· respondents, died Monday. He covered six presidents over nearly three decades for UnJted Press lnternaUooal and won the Pulitz.er Prize and the Presidential Medal of Freedom'. Smith, 57, was found in his suburban Virginia home dead of a gunshot wound, apparently self-inflicted. A d e a t h certificate was expected to be issued to- day. His six presidents spanned 21 evenUul years, from Franklin D. Roosevelt just before the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941, to Richard M. Nixon, who said of Smith: "He was one o! the great reporters of our time." At his death, he was dean of the White }louse press corps. For some years he had been senior wire service cor~ respondent and tradiUonaJly e n d e d presidential news conferences with the words : "Thank you, Mr. President." Smith won the Pulitzer P r i z e , American journalism's highest award, for his reporting of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. U.S. Off icer, 6 Men Saved at Crash Site DA NANG, Vlelnam (AP) -Seven Americans, including a battalion com· mender. were rescued today from a mountainside where their he 1 i copter crashed the previous day. AU seven aboard were injured, none seriously, military spokesmen said. One suffered a broken Jeg. Bereu •ii Baek Cambodian · Base Destroyed by VC ' Pl!NOM PENH (\11'1) -Vlei Cong . ' troopo today dtllioyed a 1ow>r111,,.nt out- poll and cul oil a maJ<>: hlgbway leadill( thnluih Cambodia'• rich nlbber pl .... taUon repm along 'the bordar with SO.th Vietnam, the gov-allllOWIC<d. The r<pcrl said the Communllla burned and !iveled the -outpoat et Km, 'IO miles nortltwl ol Pltoom Pehn, which wu defended by 1 force Of IClll Cambodians. 'lbe government said 15 1overnmeot soldiers wer. tlllecl In the three-day bat· tie and that more tbaD 100 Communilts were believed kl.lled. In Vietnam and estimated 1,%00 North VJetnameaf troop1 captured a . aovern- ment outpoet on the western edge of the ffo au Minh trail, ovefwhelminr RDyal Lao anny units madl up JnOIUy ·of teenasen. • The attack on Krek, eight miles lroni the frontier, appeartil to he part ol overall Communist. efforts to win total control of the eastern regions of Cam-· bod.la lronting Vietnam. Smaller attacks were reported in the Prasaul area, where the Viet Cong seeks to win control of East-West Highway 1, and at points bare- ly 25 miles lrom Phnom Penh. 'Ille government aald field reports showed before the Krek battle its troops had killed more than 120 Viet Cong in e.ight recent battles. Jn Vietnam Montagnard tribesmen struck back at the Communist for~s besieging their Green Beret camp at Dak Pek and stormed up a hill to recapture Jeer s of 'Nigger' Vex Ambassador STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Dr. Jerome H. Sweden, said today anU-American dem- onstrators had shouted, "Nigger, nigger, go home" to him and that he resented it. The 54-year-old Negro educator wu the focus of demonstraUona both when he ar- rived in Stockholm last week and today when he drove to the royal palace to present his credentials to King Gwitaf VI. He told an embassy news conference he did not worry about demonstrations as such. "They are part of the political life in a free, democratic nation," he said. "However, I am just a little bit c;:on- cerned when I hear such remarka as 'Nigger', both at the airport and today when I was driving to the palace. "That was a penonaJ attack on me and I resent it. I haven't heard that for many years and then only in the most racist areas of the UnJted States." an outpoot seiud when the NO<lh Viet- namese began their siege on sunday . The Montagnards, mercenary moun- tain triheamen led by U.S. Special For· cer kllltd 25 Communists and suffered • only Jigbt ·ca.sualties, Col. Nguyen Ba Tin, commander ol the South Vietnameoe lltb Special Zone, ,_ted. He Aid the Conul)unisla had loll 21' men at Dalt Pek and enotber 1,515 dead at the nearby Dai: Seang Sped.at For~~ camp alnce that siege began April 1. Both camps art our the border al i.os, 29G mn .. n«theast ol Saigon. Jll·i·c·k-e ·u • • • The clock on the Campanile Tower at UC Berkeley got a new Mickey Mouse look Mon· day, Mickey's hands and face were pasted on the Jringsize ,,. clock face by pranksters who apparently entered the locked tower and stood on a platform to lower the cutout into place. Just a few more hours At 7 P.M. today the polls close, and you will have exercised you r right to choose who administe rs the tax dollars you pay for your health a_nd safety in Costa Me sa. How strong your vo ic e will be in ci ty government may depend on how you strengthen yo ur City Council, A la rge vote turnout tells the opportu nist and th e talkers that he re is a ci ty that cares what h a p p e n s to itself. To para- phrase a ver y wise sayi ng, "All it take s fo r tho se who see k for them•e lf t he bene· fits which belong to all , is for good men and women to do nothin g." We ask you to vote far Jack Hammett as your city councilman. We feel he wlll serve you best because his RECOR.D indicates t h e s e things: 1. He Is an Active hard-worker for positive changes. 2. He has an excellent public record of service and training for this job. 3. He is tied to Costa Mesa in his work, his family, his Interest, and his past perform• ance. Jack Hammett's RECORD tells us he won't just hang around City· Hall and ehjoy being called "Cauncllman" without working to dner¥e that title. O.K., if you haven't voted yet, the choice is obvious. Yo u can stroll down to your poll ing pla ce or you can watch the Ea rly Show on TV, but are you going to en joy the "re-run" at' Costa Mes a City Hall ' fo r the next fo ur yea rs? • NIM • rl41 te y-polll1t placa7 Cal .. '46-4300 Jack HAMMETT FOR COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL TUESDAY, APRIL 14th ------------------- 17 San. Clemenie Capistrano YOC. 63, NO. 87, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES • • . . r ORANGE ·COUNTY, 'CAllFORNIA ru~DAY', APttlC :1'4, '1970 • •• -· > • ' . ·~ .. 0 0 ea .s • ac J7'J. Before Noon Voters Hurrying To Laguna Polls By BARBARA KREIBICH 1" Ille Daltr ,, .. Steff Business was brisk at Laguna's 14 Poll- ing pla<es thia morning aa voters turn<d out lll1ll81lally early to cast their ballola in Voting Brisk In Clemente, Capistrano By JOHN VALTERZA Of .... Dllb' "" """ Voting precinct$ in San Clsnent. and San Juan Capistrano reported brisk business under bright blue skies in two munidpal elections today. About 10 percent of the registered voters had cast their balloU by mid- the municipal election. Jn five precincts checked by the DAILY Pnnr at 11 a.m., four 'hours after the Polli opened, a 17 percent voter turnout already had been logged. Heaviest voting usually comes late in the day aa workers return home. 'Ibis is especlally true In Laguna Beach wbere a high percentage of the wort force leaves early in the morning for jobs in relatively diatant loca!i-Oo.s. At the Main Fire Station IOI Of the precinct's 650 eligible vote.rs bad cast ballots by 11 a.m. and many were waiting CITY HALL PHONE TALLY PHONE : -1124 in line. At a sporting goods store on downtown Broadway precinct workers bad handled 131 of their 635 registered voters by the same hour. Top of tbe World Fire Station, with 681 registered votert, reported b u & i n e s s "very steady all momlng" with 116 morning. balloti cas\ by 11 a.m. In San Clemente. 714 citizens had cast Down af Nvos ~,it W• "vtl'Y IQOd their ..i.. fw -ti. U candldala "1 · ., frr:,• Wla.ltitet• '9ler'l _,.11p , . , ~ daring !&"'""K· CITY HALL PHONE TALLY The looqe It lie 11!P IChool. PHONE : 4'WIOI c:oovmed into a pollJnC piAce for the election, had clocbd IOI Of'ill llJ voters. "n>e polls will remain ·open until 7 p.m. this evening. the ballot and a yes-« no on a beach fee straw vote. A total of 7,789 · Ire registered. In Capistrano, onJy partial ret\lm! were available today after refwal by election officials and City Administrator Ernest 'Jbom.pson to divulge the number of v...... 11 the County Fire Station voting precinct. Officials at the city's other precinct, a residential garage. said that out of 450 registered voters there 'II had cast their ballots. '111ompson, adamant about not releas- ing the figures at the fire station until he returned to City Hall later in the day, reprimanded the DAILY PILOT for "disrupting the election by calling this nwnber (the fire atatioo phone)." "f had to reprimand the o th e r newspaper! (two others) which oho ..Ued thia mcming. Vou are aD dUrupting thi3 election It he sa.Jd. In sa:i Clemente, all the precincts with phones W .... contac!..t Ind all reported on. voter figures. ·The siJc pr<einds contacted reported brist business. Several election workers said that clusters of voters were already firming I;nes waiting to vote. At Conconlla School with 1 , 11 3 registered, 137 penons had voted for a p!rceolage of lt.5. Ttie DtRault residence at 211 Esplanade~ 1,14% regiJtered wlth a turnout of 172, amounting to the highest percentage of 15 percent. 11te CcmmWlity Clubhoule on Avenid~ Del Mar ...,,orted 1,215 eligible to vola w;ttt 131 casting ballc:ts for about 10 per- cent. Al City Hall• total of 147 had voted out of 1,211 r.pt<nd for a _..,tage of •-II.~ · I ~~ 'th SL Clement'w ~ ~ "' 1,:m registered greeled Ill voters, or .-9 perC<llL . The Russell B. Henchman residence at 4193 Calle Bienvenido, listing 4 0 7 regisle<ed voters had 311 casting ballots or about nine percent. Tbe polls are expected to become OOsier later thia afternoon and thll even- ing. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market staged a modest comeback latt this after. nooo from the steep decline that had char· aCterized the session earlier. (Ste quota. tiom Pages 10-11). ne average had been rumlng bth1nd for the entire 1e51ion and was off as much · aa 9.17 pohita at 11:30 a.m. Votes will be counted in each precinct and the tally sheets and b a I Jo t s transported to city hall, where resu1l!l will be posted on a spedal' board in the eotmciJ chambers, opened to the public for tile occasion. Phone operators will rtmain on duty at city hall -UHIJ4 -until the final tally has been made and the three new coun- cilmen's names are known. Interest Running High in Laguna Council Election "I really can't J1Ut a handle on this one," Mid City Clerk James D. Whtaton when asked to predict volar tu1'1KNI in today's emotion-charged Laguna Beach council eltctl.on. In past elections a 4S percent turnout was about normal. But one index of the interest in this election has soared ab- nonnaity high for the art colony. Generally in a municipal election from 50 to 65 pel'!OllS vota by aboentee ballot. Thls year city hall bu received abeentee ballots from 113 penona:. "It seems the interest level is much greater than in pre.vious ye.an," said Wheaton. He said he expected the voter turnout woold exceed 50 percent by IOme margin. Translftlts and drug abUle have been a key La.we. Laguna Beach has 1,361 rqlJteNd VOlars. In the 11111 electlm -7,m registered, 3,011 voled. In 19 the -WU U.5 percent; In !tit II .... 43.5 pereont and In ua H -47J per· cent. The 1116% election WU I cliff hanger for third place between Harold T. Elll!rby and Wllllam Lambourne. Ftrat '"" tool< the load, then the other as add!Uonal precinct tallies came in. Ellerby flnallJ edpd Lambouh>e. He got t:Sl7 Yola 1o Lambourne'• 1,m. Lambourne ran apin in 1114 and was elected handily. The first Yola to be counlad tonight wlll be•the ..,.._ballots. These lhou~d be fini\hed by· 1:15 " 1:30 p . Wheaton 11kl be dld not upect prec' t tallies to start coming in much before t or 1:30 p.m. A big boon! will be set up111'tbe,C0111Cll chambers far the JIQD!lc and a)'.lln01ng total of lhe --will be chalked up •• they come IL • . Space Blast Forces Hali Of tandfug ~ SPACE CENTER, HOUiton (AP)' - Apollo 'ti's u1r<1rn1ula battled today to bring thefr crippled craft b11Ct to eartll frbm a quarter miQion mil• away at Mlallon. Cootrol dec:ided they would olm for a Friday splashdOwn in tbe' Pacific. James A. Lovell Jr., Fred W. Hille Jt. and Jolm L.·Swi,.rt Jr. tool< illloilt ... to conserve their pttciGua -GI water, ozygen and power u tbq ~ced farther from earth town a moon which had been their landJq latpt until • v\Ol"11 eruption et a pramlaed !uO! lonlt Monday nilbL 'n\ey were to · loop around the ·moon tonight and two hours later, ot 1:40 p.m. PST, were to f1re their lunar lander engine to sped them back toward earth and a splashdown In the Pacttlc north of New ZeaJand at 9:13 a.m. PST P'ftday. Asked whether the three opocemen, ptj.ncipals In tbe man daqerous drama in'Amerk:an apace history, would mike it home.ufely, flight contraU<r Glynn Lan- ney, amwered, "Yes, baiely." WHAT HAPPENED -Chart shows how Apollo 13's astronauts aborted their moon landing ·mission aft~r explosion jolted their command ship 205,000 1t1i1T .......... milJ!S ~m earth. Power now is being supplied from1 the lunar lander, which must be jettisoned before· splashdown. ''We've got the aituatlon stabllbed,11 be sa)d. ''The most cr!Ucaj thing -Is to keep It atabillud the rest; of t!ie flight." As t.ovell, Hai9e and Swigert new away from home, here Wal the pij:ture -..... ~·~"t ·. . . .. . . .. . -· 'Hair Problem Ai~ed At Saddleback Session The Saddlebact Co!Ioge •'bair·protilem" was aired anew Monday night in a lengthy confrontation between the .board of trustees and almost a hundred students. The good-humored sesaion -moved to a large1musjc room to~.accommodate the crowd· -was mark'ed with frequent laughter, bursts oC aP,p1ause, praise ror ' ' the students' 14decorum'' by board presi· dent Michael Collins, plaudits for Sad· dleback's high aca<R-n\ic quality from several of the students and cheers for an va~ and would · prefer to wait for the · opinion. Sllileut obody presld<nt John -ell noted that some 200 male atudents are af. , IS« SADDi.EBACK, Pap 2) Minnesata Judge Blackmun Next Pick for Court? elderly lady from Lei!Ul'e World who \V ASHING TON (AP) -An lnlormed identified herseli as a "radical." Senate source said today that President After listening to the appeals and Nixon will nominate Judge Harry A. arguments of more than 20 speakers, Blackmun of Minnesota for the Supteme board members said flatly they were .not Court. prepared to ma~ any i m m e d i a t e This wu the word reporteoly paned to changes in the controversial dress code. key senators. An unouncement from lhe but agreed that further revision is not out White House was expected shorUy. or the question. It was infonnally agreed 'that a new Black.mun, a close trlend of Chief student·trustee-adminl&tratlon would be Justice Warren E. ~urg~r, ~s been a named before the·endtof the quarter just member of the 8th U,S. Circuit Court of · beginning to 'jt.alk it Over." Appeals ln St. Louis since 1959. He wa1 ap. Meanwhile, ft ,appeared that an initial pointed by fonner President Dwliflt D, "flurry of enforcement" of1he hair code Eisenhower. would go back Into abeyance pending Before word that Blackmum was Nix· rei.~ipt of a written OP.inion from the on's choi~ for the court post for which three-judge panel of the Ninth District two Southern judges were rejected, key Court of Appeals in Los Angeles. Republlcaa senators were briefed by ne jodgel last weet Of11ered tm-Deputy Atty. Gt11. Richard G. Kleindienst --~• r l · · obtai;;._,.. in a Capitol hideaway. mediate v..-uon o n)Unetions~ ·,ft:\! Afterward GOP Leader Hugh Scott of in JanlJl!JY by attome1a representing Pennsylvania said that i)()S!lihle nominees some et the lol!(.fuil""1 'studenU which had been clil<u3sed and Iha! he expected. forCed. the college to permit them to announcement of the President's womlna- regiaf,er. Uon "ln lthe very near futurt ." Since illnlance ol the Injunctions, en-Scott was asked if he t J1 o u g h t forctment of the dress code has .been Blackmun's •chances had been hurt by rtlaXed pending a firial court de'.cisiotron former Vice P.resldent .Hubert ff. Its COMtituUonality. Humphrey's st.atefnent Monday lhAt 11>e order le:rmlnaU111 the lnjllnc:tions BlaCkmun ls the Kind of man he would wu a victory for the.~. but it is not JJke. to see on the court. yet known whit the Juden' written opi· "I don't· thlnt H U'lll p h re y 's en. nlon wt11 IJrlna. On th&poUlblpty that the doroement hurts anybody," Scott replied. order c o U 1 d have. resulted from a Scott said the meeting With Kleindienst technicfl flaw. Dr. FredJ3remer, College was the type of con!Ultation he had urged prestdent, said be wGU)d ~mmend con-on the adminl.rtraUon after the Senate's tlnulng the "wait and ~" policy, rejec\loo.by -45 vcte l!Jl.'fed~"'t Earlier in the day,i ,Bremer had ; ·of NI '"• ion · of ~~ G:~ reoctncled temporary SUSpel)Sions,ord<red ' rvld •Jl10r!da. ' . • for two hair code v\olaton lly the OOan ,of I 1c.mwon · ' 'nolnina!eil aflar 'II'! , Students • ~, mrl'STiOi wfth,, other ' SeMfe ~ . down. hr a,p.45" ~- atudo!ita 'Wl)o',P01nted out' the'-poulbillty ~t· N-Oii's first choice! fi>r that the wrttlan opinion ll!fghl>change !fie tlie ' ..uit ptt. Judie C~I' .f, plctun. Bremer laid be IJ!Mbe'..J>Oiniwas 1 Ha~' lit' of po.th Caro~ .. . ' • . tbeir~p: ' ' '.lirlli 'iii "9l 1',1), " ,.,,. • . • \ ' ~The canlniond. lldp, dillbW•bf-the ,. w .:0¥10 1-,•in"'-. sttn mYll<rio<m rupture .... -~ ·• ., ~·~,''1l t nt~~.!emerpneyb& . · : 1 •. · • · ! -' ' : ., ~ -• ' • tertes and OJYttft .iuppuee wwe nal1alile Offer Help to take the ahlp, the GD!rftlllcle lbOt con . . · carry the meo home, through the ot- . ' • ' rnospbere. F Spl ' hd' ' -The lunor module -becmne•the or as own. astronaula' lifeboat, was providing . ", From Wire Servk:e1 • Re•c~. H.eJp f)ff~e~ LONOON -'The United 'States•tdtki· fen ·oJ belp'ltcia:iy1 for any rescUe ~a4 tion1or Apollo 13 lf ihe spacecraft corites down 1tn the . .A:UanUc. ' Britain said Its RoyaJ'Navy sbl.ps would be placed at t~e disposal of any ·rescU;t • OP,efation if asked to do 80 by u;e United States. BUt a Defense M 1.n I s•t r y · spokesman in London said It bad received no request In Paris, President Georges Pompldou ordered the French fleet on a state of alert to be ready fQr any recovery, Word of this was relayed to the U.S. Embassy in Paris. Brazil's navy and air force were alerted for a possible rescue operation off the coast of Brazil. There was a possibility Apollo·t3•would come down tn the South AtlanUc but U.S. space officials were hoping for a splashdown in ·the Pacific as originally PIMf'ed. e Neil: Timing Good SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPi) Neil A. Armstrong, the rust man on the moon, and Alan L: Be'an, the latest man on the1 m<>on,. conceded ·tockiy the elec- trical failure on ·Apollo 13 "happened, At a rery good Ume ll it had to happen." . "·Their consensus .js that It gives. the astronauts Ume to research lhe' pro- blem and· do something. about it as op- p0sed ,to,•J10th.er pai:i.o! ~ nilsslo~ when they wouldn't .bave,the time avaUaftlt to ' them,'' said a.NASA officlal who ta!J<ed to ArmstrjXlg and~~ ' AmJStrGaa: was a· member of the only \ other manned flight abor1ed early. ''Ibat 1 was Gemirii l,~brou1ht 1back•becau1e the spacecraft began ~ng out of control critical power.._ oxy~. water and other life support. Blit ill iupp11e1,wen ~ ping and tbe astronauts wn oPeratinl on infninlum ~"· . --Offk:la1o ---malnly witll the water supply. Wlth· 72 houri to 10, based on a Friday landing, they had e~gh.water for 84 hours, a ~arg:ln of lJ hours. · To· keep this maigtn, 't'h • utrooauta.mUll"'°'""'dcnm to minimum electr1ca1 power of117 amperes per hour for most of the journey,. reducing the average hourly 'water consumption from., five to 2.11 poonds. The water ii UMd for cooling the eiectronlea ad cabin ozy,n. as well as for drinkihg. -The oxygen aupply was more aubstan- tial. They had enOUgb for 122 heiUrs, I marllin of 50 boun, barring unforeseea events. The astronauts .moved around aa little 11 poosible . to ""1oce their .,... sumptlon. °'Yl"D' wu fed through a open oormecting1mmel Into the commud cabin 80 lhe pilots could·operate µ,ere. -With power reduced well below 17 amps per hours whenever poosible Mission Control officials said the tbfp:1 supply of !GO amp hours of-power -111 be sulflclent but. they admitted tt - leave little margin. Only nsential in- struments were being operated. 'l1Je 00;)1 panel Jlghla on were In the LM. (See APOLLO,..pqe t) Oraiige 1\'eadier ' There'll be leaa ,wine! .(now that · the eiectlon 'campaigns 'are tlVf!t) and more IUD on Wedneldly, rib temperatures back up to IS aloog the coast and near ieltnland. in March, 1966. : • · · , · · INSWE TODA. Y e Water .. N o ·Problem Orang< Coa1t th<atera<><ri gd ,SPACE CENTER. HolJllOn CUPl), -. a pair o/ ''tn~e.t'' thi! to(tk, ~ater is a q'lill<lr. problem for. the Apollo along with two Orange Couftf!I 1; cre,w, which had oiily .a .._bour·gupply premitrt.t in LaguM Btoeh mad . In. the lunar module f~ cells with 77 Co1t11 Mt&a. Sfe Entmainmtnr, hours remdtrllng <in ,the ml.sslpn, a NASA Page 9. spokesman said~ , · , t •ll""i. ., ,....,,_ '" The crew still bas-I' .S,howr--.ltQ)pl~ <Ai , 1 ~:=:::. u, ,.,,: :=.. ~ .: w·atea:etn1Jtiatirvlval(kits.1n~ttte..comm•nd l '(flllltt u °""' (_,, • serv'lce module,1the'sP.okesnian~iJ1d .. ~ 1 ~left !: := :;" ........ :-i 1 tolab to 91 htur1 Ot'wa~drtnkbil : ..,.,_,,... · •·• s-.i ~,., ? aftd ~' Pre;.raaotr' lf tbe1tfgM 'Uri "" I =~ • I: ~t ~ ',; :: f ' tl brou~_down1 1'11aay1ai planrted: ·•. . ::"t:.n i: =· .._ ,,.~ ·M Is '!lo iro\ii.m., ,the 'sp0kmri1n · 1-• --,. ·: (~ B~, ~I) ', ';~ '""-----------• • ' . . ~ To.day ~: \ I ~ ~ Be Sure to Vote Polls ope1,1 I Till 7 ..' '1 4 .. f • --. • • . '' 'I' I .•••• ·, .. }\l ~-·-·.,=r.~. "'··""-~""-·""·,;;;"""'°~nr.:<::<:::<":'-:<"1<.:'<l>'·'"::>-;:;::;:;;::'l""l'.l:~ ... "-"''l"l!P.!,....~"':'-."""!'!!'!!"l'!lllll!ll!l,.,..,.""'111!!•••••••--••..,--------~ --,--' . . .. ... ..... .. .. " .. .. .... .. . . . • I DAIL v 1'11.01 SC Apollo Spaee Crisis . . I . ~-· w Li~tening In an SP~ cania, -(AP) --Ibo •ords 04~ wt'te Md a pro. ~~~JJt.-1:"9ir9ulld ..-.. that Ille planoecl ....... luidlltl -was In~ Hue are Ibo hlghll1ht1 of the uillap bet-• the -oft (SC) and I h e e1peu)t coinmuDlcator (CapCom) In ~ OootrGI. SC: "Hey, we'ft had a pro.. bleat. We've bid 1 tnaln B bu1 -(• lDlla cln:ult had _,_ SC: Y .... "' 1'1t 1 11 a I a rel$, Jldt, botll In pitch and llol. A otr .. tr volt -loo roll, oo I'm 1~ lblt sbowbc. moybe 11'1 wbllawr It 11 C..C-: -A _. 11111~ "'°"'"' -tlln. I ..itf " .... ta .. dlnct In ..... to SC: 1t•1-t11Moul•11,. -1,lilM, .... Mldt Main B k 'iloldllJ • (-) ........ ID plOt up nlo rllhl ..... , . ...... lloa-,.. ....-up lll1 ,. CapCom: Standby ono, Jim jets firing! · (astrGGaut Lovell). CapCom: Stand by. Wh ot Caee<>m:.J3, Houston, we'd direction are your rates In like you to attempt l(I recon. Jack? (utronaut John Swigert llO<t fuel cell I lo Main A and Jr.) fuel cell 3 to Main B. Verify SC: lt'I negative pitch and tbat quad delta 11 open. nqatlve Toll. SC: Okay, Houston, I'm C1pCom: Roger. 13, Hou!- UPI Te.......,. kind el 1Jve us an ok lo IOllJ p-ure, '~. e nln.stlll the prObe and d iue... figure we'll set about l!i Or lf necea.ury to use t ·liM minutes worth of power left In (--.ie) tho command module, 6o Wt CopOoai : Rapr. · •Of.!)""! lo IWI IOI~ o,.r SC: I'm transm!Ulng. t In Ibo LM and getUng 30me don't have any cutrent now. power on that. And are you Hey , it's olt. Jt'a off. ,They -re,dy to copy your procedure? they kllled the bus completely SC : Okay. now. It's dead. . PAQ: This ls.Apollo Control Capeom': ~-Mlin B tnt.eml. Oby, llllnd by we· .. ~·tn. . SC: Okay, fllht no". -. tho. voltage Is looking l09d. And we bad a pretty larp bang uaGclal<d with the c:autlan and w~ !her<. And If I ncoll, llaln B waa the -tbot bid .. 11111' aplb OD It ODOI before. ahowinl.. I tried to reset and ton. We n e e d to get aome fuel oiD 1 ed 3 are both more instrurnentatlon u p • lhowlnl 11'11 !!qi. But they We'd like you lo put Inverter are botb showing I.Ip oa the one on both AC busea. Over. fiows. SC: Okay. Okay, you got ln- CapCom: We cop)¥ verter one on both AC buses, 'I DON'T HAVE ANY CURRENT NOW HEY, IT'S OFF.' Trouble In Spac•: Lov•ll, Swfg•rt, H•IH (from l•ft) PAO (publtc affairs officer): at 57 hours 46 1nlnute1 grgund Apollo Control, Houston, con-eh1psed time ... \Ve have an tlnulng to trouble shoot wlth epParent serious oxygen leak Apollo 13 crew, c Io 1 e I y in the cryogenic oxygen in the watchqig oxysen quantities service n1odule . . . ln this and prt&sures in the command scheme of going across \o the module. bolaUng the search -1unar module, still connected tank luvet oxyaen for entry if wllh the open tunnel, the lunar th1J ... •bould become necessary. module would serve as a 59rt Also, If necessary, the 13 crew of uteboat for the crew of could 'open a 'tunnel and use Apollo t3. Somethne later in pxygen from the lunar module. the mission it is expected that SC: Okay, Houston, art )'OU and Jack ( caps u I e com. still reading lS? munJcator Jack Lousma) one CapCom : Roger. Ok a y, Fred, we want fuel cell 2 pumpa lo /.C ooe please. CapCom: Roser, Fred (utrGalul Ferd Halle). C 1 pC.o m: That's af· of the ltenu we turned off was flrmlU... we•,. readJlll .JOU. the, Ill tho fuel cell pumps. We'rt stlU teylnlJ lo come up OU,. and you mlahl let UJ with 10me good ¥Seu here for know when the tuel cell two you. neodl Ill pump baek' we ought SC: Some~ Is Pinc 111 1 to take can al lbll, Jack. SC: Fuel cell 2 lo AC ..,. roger. Okay, It's on AC ooe. " From P .. • I SADDLEBACK HAIR ISSUE ••• fectod by the hair rulin( and "llO<d lo Jcnow, >I He emphulrod tlllt durinll the two months the . ha!\" n.Jt. have not boon en- rorced, no lnddenta: have occurrtd and "JI bu --bltabed thet hair ii nol an influeoclq: factor." Studenta reltiral<d· their argmnenta the~ u adults •. they. llbou1d have the right to make their own clecialonJ regarding dresl, elp"dlllJ ·llDce-muy are wu 21 and liomt lft.'~I They ltresaed. once mor.e tht:flCt;:th:at Slddleblck 11·~ : only l!IN« ~re. wJth a !ll'.tll code and · that an tocreasm1 l'llntber .or .high ICboola , are .~g ·dmr codel. LAUCllJNG. ll'i'OC!t , . .. Saddlebact)a,a ·~9Chln1' itoet," 1ald ooe. :'n:~ • 'fllle'IC!lool ac;ac1em1ca11y anc1 I will llWIYi daland J~ but 11'1 become ·1 laughing ·atoc11 lloc:ause of tbls rldlculoua dress' Code." ' ' A studeot clad in blue jeuo, purple undenhlrtUd aloveplpe bit ilood up. "I am not 'trylnc to be a dovnii" he Aid. u1 am t¢>g . lo illow yo'u ~· rldlcµlous I draa c'1'k Clll be. Fer YI'"' b)f"""-'tlon . thla ouUJI I am wetri!ll II In fuU com- pliance -the ixlstbi& dnp code.• A member al the football team ai'gued. · "The 1Uiletes. hive shown in lbe put two --tt If poalbll lo -·'-taln . ·-dloclplJna mil'1'lllloal enf~ ~ .. dr• codt.'' . ' . eo111n1 . ..u..u.i.1111 -lJioi,u iran. I mattef Of meinl•infqs lldeNWA·fii the . . •• George Penney Funeral Set Private funeral aervlees will be bold WednoSday foe Georra Penney of Three Arch Bly who died Mooday II the 1ge of 72. . A resident al the Newport Beach and Laguu -area alnc:e !Ml, Penney WU • wtll-known trial lawyer. He had pradlced law Jn Newport Beach since 11155. FnJm lrl7 lo 1912 ho WU the c:hiel trlll attorney for the Loo Angeles District A~ tomey. Mr. Penney leavn bls wife Marlette of the family ,home; two """'· John c. anc James F. Penney, bGth al Emerald Bay; tWG slston, A-Lund of Wa!hlnglo" and Zelma White of Colondc>; a brottr Paul Penney « Sacramento, and fl· grandchildren. 'l11e . Wnily has sugg"l<d th a memotlal cbauono be made to the Bo Scouta: -of. America, Orange Cowx:U, 3811 s. Beu· Bl., Senti Anl. DAILY PILOT _ .... . Le,IH ... ,, c;,,. - H•llq• ..... ........ ....,. ..,c_ ll:eMrt N, We.4 P'rui6111t Miii ,......,.... Jet\ .. c.,.:1,y ~kt ,.,..:_t ""' 0tnet11 Mlllttlr lk111•• ""t41 , ...... ' "°"''' A. M•r,1tl11e .. .,... ....... Rl,hef4 P. Hell $t•llll "'--c-iy Mii# ....... Ctlll Maa! w WQI 1.,-lttwt ~· 1t1e111 nn w..1 lf1N1 ._,,_,. ............. 9-11: ttt ,_, ,,._ Hllllfl•lf""' '"'du 11171 htc• ~ t.11 ,...,,., * """" a1 ~ ""' DAILY P'IUJY, """' w"•k.lt -<~ ... N ............ t. a. ..... ltl\ed •11ly tit<. &-. .. y lfl .... ,. .. Ult .. -1.4'1¥111 kl.Iii. ""-'l '""'-et.I• ,,..,,.,, Hllftl..,_ teecll ft ,_. ... YIMfY, •*'t wHll - ........... 11.... °'"""" Clt1t l'wlolillllllll ~ """'""' "6111\ .,.. ., ftll .... ..... '""'~ "'-' '"""' ..... Ut Motl .. , IWHI, C... -· T .. spl no 17141 642-4Jl1 Cl•lftt4 M\•11 ... 641-167'1 .. as.... Al Dt,.,, .... : T ......... 4f2-44H ~ 1111, Or-. c.ttl ~ltl>Mt ~·· ... -....... llliioltret~ ....-191 ON!,_. .. (Htf1i..-1t llel'P! ,..., .. ,..,...,... Mti.t ~ ,..,. ...... ., """' ..... -. .,_,., Cltu '"'""' ... ., N'""'1 ltJ(ll ,. cesie Mft.I, cer-...., W1Kr..-., .,. c.n" .... SIM ~,I •r """" Sf .• -l!llyl O!IMIMry ~I..._! ..... SI •• -ll!lt. . I cl-to pnlduct that degree of formality euential to the process ot educaUon." At the and of the four-hour meeting he commented lblt the aludenta pr....,t bad displayed great "'decorum". DOLLAllS AND CENl1I Truatee Hans Vogel brought the argumentl down to dollan and cents. Reminding the sllldenla that realdenl:I of the district had Pt"* a ll!i million bond Issue at 1 tJme when boDd illuu were, being defeated in many other artll, he said, "Our bond lsaue was Pt"* by 7S percent, and 1D Leisure World It waa IO percent. That fl why' we are able to have the fil1UI facllJUea and an uctllent• faculty . "But If lhole people out than decide they don't Uh what'• (Olq on here, you're out of luck. The iboment we relax the dms code, I gllll'llllee JOO lbll'I the end of )'our money -and already WI bavt lo IWI lhlnklnl about a aecond campUa." Supporting l\11 contention that the present board and tt.s policies are In tune with· the commwllty, Vogel noted that trustee Patrick Backus wu re-elected Iii a race against four opponentl and defeated his nearest contestant, an American Civil LiberUes attorney, by two to"""· DEFEAT ACLU ·~ 1'ADJoee could defeat an .ACLU : at• tornefln Orange County," iaJd BolhWe~. '"I'bltt's just the point," Vogel rtpUed. ''I'm ·talking about the temper of the electorate in Orange County and I think we understand and reflect it. I'm not saying It's right or wrong. You might say in a way that you students are victims or It. But that's tlle wav I' Is and you hav'e to understand that the only way people have to exs)res1 their dis.satisfaction with the way echool1 art run l!. by voling down · bond issues -then there won't be any school. You really have to decide which is more important, your hair or a first class education." A woman who said she had fi ve sons "all wtt1I long hair and 1 dor.'t llke it," said the whole thing seemed like "a pret- ty small issue for such a blg board lo be fooling with.'' LOUD APPLAUSE An elderly lady who ra&e to ldenlif herself as "one of those people fro1 Leisure World" was rreeted with loud E ""lause by the students. "I am a llberal," she said. i.1 gue!! light be a rad~al at Leisure World. ' :alt I'm In the Democratic Club. But rust tell you that while I would go 1 otlng tor your bonds anyway, l be.lie . nany people out there would not.•• Complimenting the students on tht behaVior and intelllgence, lhe added, ' just can't understand why you don't wa· to groom yoursel vu so you look as h telllgent 11 you really are.· It wasn't exactly what the student.~ wanted to hear. but they a:ave her another round of applause. NO CHANGES Trustee Btckus spoke up with, "I'd be against. chanllng the code rlght now. but I realize we're llviru( in a changing world a1'Cf I'd be very willing to sit down and discuu tt with the students." A student said he appreciated the fact that the trustees had ctartfted the finan- cial support aspect of the problem and felt It had given him something more to think about. "We just want you lo level with us and stop •II thls pussyfooting around,0 he added . Bothwell 18id, "We nall!e there may be some risk In ellmln1tlng the part of the dress code about the h1lr1 but if you wU1 tUe, W. risk I can pledge to you lh11t the student.I wlR m11.ke a real effort to ma>ce themlelves known In the com· muNty •s •nalblt, reliable people. We really would like to show people that hair Itself Is not • problem and ptrh1ps If we work together wt ctn do that and keep the support of the community.'' STUDY GROUP Collins Wd that If the Jud&es1 written opinion supports the drtn code ·•en- fon:ement will proceed" bllt agreed thlt 1 committee could be formed to study a rtvtsed code ror the ntll't quarter . As !he mHlln.I( di~rse.d. the h1dy from Lel!Urt World found he~lf sur· rounrled by 11tudenu. "Think you for comtn1 to near us ma'am,'' said, 1n athlete. "M11.yhc }'ou'd like to come back and att ao1nl of four root.ball ••mes." The lady said m1ybe she would. ,. ' CapCom: Okay, 13, we've UPIT......,.. WATCHES FROM GROUND Mlulon Chief Sl1yton From Page 1 BRIEFS .•• said, except that the crew may change Its menu to use food which does not require water in preparation. e Tas Gives ~e,.Ort MOSCOW (UPI) -Tbe Soviet news agency Tass carried Jts first report on lhe Apollo 13 troubles in a brief, factual dispatch from New York. Tass said the "three astronaut! are in grave danger" but "flight officials are taking all measures to ensure their safe return to earth." Until the electriell breakdown, the Apollo flight had received little attention In the Soviet media, although full reports had been e:s:pecled when the moon lan- ding was carried out. e Standby ha Germany RAMSTEIN AIR BASE, Germany (UPI) -U.S. rescue aircraft under com- mand 01 Ram.ste in Air Base are standing by to help if the Apollo 13 spacecraft lands in the Atlaolic, a spokesman for the !lase said today. He said the C130P Hercules planes along to the 40th Aerospace Rescue and ·.ecovery Wing, Apollo Support Forces. hey are ready to respond to any direc- ons from the Department of Defense or ie NaUonal Aeronautics and Space iminlstration (NASA ) . l iUeteorlte S111pecled SEQ9NA. Ariz:. <AP ) -The power tilure on Apollo 13 probably was caused ·men the fuel cell was struck by a very ::imall meteorite, Dr. Harvey Nininger said today. Nininger, regarded as an expert on the subject, sakl he had given th.is "very positive opinion'' to the N at lo n a I Aeronautics and Space Administration after being consulted by it Monday night. Lagunan Draws Prison Sentenee In LSD Carrying PHOENIX (UPI) -A Laguna Beach man convicted of possessing 12.000 LSD tablets was sentenced Monday lo an in- determinate term in federal prison. Jesse V. Mabciz, 26, was remanded to the U.S. Attorney General for treatment and supervlsion under the federal cor- rections act. fl.1ahciz wu: convicltd March 25 after testifying that he flew to Phocnill' Sept. 30 \\'Ith a suitcase contalnln1 12,000 !..SD t:iblets. He told the court that a Phoenix man had offertd to buy the tablets from hlm (or Sl .000. Arthur Fluhr, fonner a.gent·IMharge of the Arliona office of the Federal Bureau of NarcoUc1 and Dangerous Drugs, testified that the man \\'1tS an ln- Jonner. Machlt, who faces trial In Callfornln on 1 chargf: of pas.c;esslng 10,000 LSD tablet.I, WIS allowed lo remain free on 110.000 bond pending the outcome of an appeal • 1, I ---------- gol lots and Jots of people working on this, we'll get you tome dope a1 IOOD IS we have II. and you'll be the .flrll ooe to know. SC : Oh, thank you. Okay, Jack, and the weird con- figuration we're sitting In now, is we have the hatch installed, we still have the probe and drogue inside the command module. and we're going to stay in this situation until you CapCom: We have a pro-file>' ~·ould return to the cedtg"~_for getting power from prereturn trajectory, which the +-Mi we'd lilr:e you to copy they left yesterday in the mido do~p. course burn number 2 ... This Sf: Okay. Stand by, J ack. lt is Apollo Control. We have souiids l!Jl.e good news. Okay, conflnnaUon now that two of Jack. About how long is it? the Apallo 13 crewmen are in- CapCom: It's not a very detd in the lunar module. *'* Fron• Page l • I Private Beach Use Move Urged In ·soutl1 Laguna APOLLO CRISIS. Others were flicked on as needed. -To keep the spacecraft ( r om overheating, the astronauts' ship waa oc- casionally rotated 90 degrees so the 247 degree heat of the aun would not bake on one side for too long. -Lovell and HiUse, tried from king houn of Wrestling with the spaceslllp's a:rave problems, were aaleep in the com- mand ship couches, Swigert, who earlier slept six hours, took scores of instructions from Mission Control on mew of con- serving the consumables. -All three wore flight coveralls. The spacesuits would take too much power and oxygen. --COmmunicaUons with the earth were acratchy because one of the high-powered antennae was taken off the line. Looping the moon Is the safest way home, officials said, because Apollo 13 was close to Ill target at the time of the accident and already was on a cour.se that would take it around ' the moon 's baclulde. To stop short ol the moon would ha ve required considerable engine power and fuel expenditure, so m e th i n g the astronauts did not have with Apollo 13's big command ship engine idled by elec- trical failure. The only powerplant available Is the lunar module descent engine, the one that was to have lowered Lovell and Baise to the lunar surface. The spacemen trig- gered the engine 30 seconds early today to adjust the course slighUy to a path that would take them back to earth Friday night !f they made no addi t Jonal tnaneuver. Police Watching Bowling Gl'een Lawnbowlers are probably the world's most uptight grass fanciers, ranking equally with golfeis when it comes to being meticulou.s about their greens. So It was no wonder that bowlers in San Clemente Monday asked police to keep an eye on their greens at San Luis Rey Park which were showing signs of damage. Police Indeed kept a wary watch on the green, and a few minutes after receiving the complaint, they fouild the answer. A young sandlot baseball team moved onto Ule green before sunset and began to play. They were directed to a less tender area. • • The second firing at 9:40 tonight wu planned to increase the speed enough for a landing 10 hours earlier. Asked at a briefing if there had been any damage la the heal shield, w h i c h must protect the astronaut! from the tremendous beat of rHntry. He said there was . a sllght possibility of such damage but that there was no evidence or any. The decision to try for a Friday landing In the Pacific meant that Ji.tlssion Control had de<:lded not to adopt a "superfast" return plan. Under this, the engine firing tonight would have been lengthened ~o give the ship a heavier push home. But this would have consumed more power. President Nixon kept In touch with developments through phone contact with NASA Administrator Thomas 0 . Paine in Mission Control. Neither the United Slates nor Russia has a space rescue capability. So the astronauts will ha ve to depend on their skill and that of hundreds of experts on the ground to get home. Council Ponders Changes in Laivs Laguna's lawmakers should live up to the name Wednesday night as councilmen consider passage of. ordinances ranging from ontrol or transients in business places ta more strict regulation or massage parlor employes. The council ls expected to pas5 through second ~ading an ordinance proposed by Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan to aid business flnns, e s p e c I a 11 y food establishments in preventing loitering on the premises. The ordinance "Y.'OUld prevent persona from loitering, standlng or sitting on com- merelal property contrary to the Wishes of the owner. If loiterers refused to le.ave al the owners request. police could be 5ummoned and a citizen's arrest made. The council Is also expected to pass lhrough second reading an ordinance regulating llcensidg of employes of massage parlor5 that has been recom- mended by the police chief. The ordinance was sought after arrest of a female massage parlor employe in Laguna on 5USpkloo of con&piracy to commit prostitution. The council Is also expected to adopt a resolution that seeks particlpation of the entire community In enforcing litter laws and cites the specific code sections that apply. A move is under way in South Laguna to limit private beachet from Three Arch Bay to Circle Drive to pri vate use by the property owne rs. Property owners concerned o v e r transient beach use in the area have banded together in an association of about 70 members. Bob Benner, Laguna Beach businessman and South Laguna property _ owner, said a title seareh has been con· .. ducted concerning an old ea5ement for Uie stairway at Ninth Street. "We have researched it and it is a private beach ·and it Is going to be treated as a private beach," Benner said. He said the beach access over the ease- ment is not public. He said !he easement \\'BS given to encourage property owners to buy lots and was recorded in 1929. Benner said the private properly lines run to the mean high Ude line and although the area ocean~·ard of that is public there Is no practical public access to it. Benner said it i5 not a quest.ion of ~·bet.her the present beach users have long hair or not, it is a que5l.ion of whether they are property owners. "It is purely a legal matler and onQ. !hat is relatively easy to enforce," said Benner. "The rightful owMrs w i 11 reserve it for Our use. That is what the, associatioii is intending to enforce." Former Lagtman Killed in Laos A fonner Laguna Beach man was one of six Americans killed by the crash of a . transport plane in lhe northern moun· tains or Laos. The victim. Capt. Kevin CochraM, 48, was piloting the plane that wa s on loan • from the U.S. Air Force. a Cl30 transport. It hit Phou Bia. Laos' highest · mountain Friday as it was coming in to land In bad weather. Cochrane's wife and three children have been living in Vientiane. Searchers were expected to reach the wreckage In the rugged mountain area lo d a y sometime. The carpet they both chose? Bigelow's Barcelona . Barcelona combines the casual 11o•ind·toesed -sh~ look of today with an eleiant SPMi1h &rWe pattern. The long, slt"ndcr )'9.mS have a 90ft, shimmery glow .•. the dramatic mulll· colon ~e ~lediterranean:lnsplred.. use Bar- celona in a Spanish or Mediterranean setUn~ Ol' with ultra-modern or mixed con~ponry •.. for a truly stunning eff~t. And btcaUR the [lber's nylon, ~Iona's AO ..., 10 care for. Soll -n·t s1 O!' •how ..• and pile stays crisp and springy. A &e-buy for 1..nv-1'. one •·ho wants great 1ty11ni:: •.. • roomful ol lu:on1ry , , • at 11oc11oitw. '""""" • down-to-earth .-... '"" w11ti ... -.... n.s. ..,,vtl\11111 6 Swy Mediterranean Shades ALDEN'S CARPETS-DRA .. ERIES Mediterranean Moss Antiqu1 Amber • Spanish Poppy S1>1ni•h l.e:•ther • Orentd1 Gold At•vio AVOC'•do lOOo/o approved Blgelo" nylon pile 0 I l '°E.AllS SERVING THE Oll:ANGE COAST O 1663 Placenti-Costa Mesa Phone 646-4838 , • ' TU fSOA Y APlttL 14 I ........ -.. ("'l UIB 8CIJIM -tel (IO} "'It• ...... "' ..... Tiit i.-.. fl*l. It t11t MtM -.. W ,... tOflllfMI I ttfarf lnu'ltef ..... D Wits with I ,.., ..,..,.. .. 9 (J) 1111 -.., (30) """ Swilell Sitttra." A ttpe ,... ,. l:tl I . Ila .._ (C) (60) JtrrJ Dun- 8 11 •-"" (C) (>!) • c.. , .. ,., 1\b? (C) (30) ~ lllttoM. .ltd.le Vtrn0n •fld "°"' Al'Mtttdll!I 1111 pentllata.. 'tlllS to J11lll INt W i. the wio. tifl'I of I Nbllllf H~ COl- 141ir1ey, 1111111 HIMa. Miii hau, Mtll&M Mtw1111 ind ltM Hebtl ·-·--(Cj (IO) , .. llT"orit1 i. ftltwM. Ul..t":.t"'.,." .. (i;omtdy) 'W--ht O'lr'lit, =:r. Brtnn1n, Chllt Wills, Eior l4ldMn- 1n. All M·l-Rlnt« IUlllMOM his old crt11i• flolrl tMlr Rdlnc c~aJ11 t. d•11 u, a -.,.. ..... D "WAR AND PEACE"! * Patt 2-HENRY FONDA. AUDREY HEPBURN-Cir. • Sii: O'Clldl li&tN: (C} "Wll * ,_,. Part II (dram1) '5'- Henry Fa~. Audrey Htpburn, Mil F11T1r, Yittor1o G1ssm1n, Anlt1 fk· b111. John Miiis. lol1loy'1 story of Citrilt Rutlll n II pr1111ru I 11\t 1tuc:t by Nlrf01ton. CfJ Diel v. "" (30) ID Tioo -(C) lllll msr.r rret (C) (60) 'IHI llJMC .._., -tel (30) ID WU1'1 ""'1 (30) "Inland Wat1rw17 #1." A trip thniucti the ltlltrc:oalal W1t1iw1y frwit Chttits· ICM!, S.C .. to St. Au111stint, Fii. 8CIJllS -(C) 130) .,_ (30) Cl9 D C.U. (30) «D Jlelllls II tM ltulNI (C) (60) Jtck Whitt, Aln Dttier, GIOlit GrNr, Pttti Bttbt. i:JO D DIC ,.....rvlct (C) (6(1) ...... -.... (C) (90) Gultb ifldud1 Pit H1rrWlcton Jr~ Alll• StNtn1111, Stu Gnliam, Frank tallllrae I nd Th1 Tokyo Happr ..... II TM IMM 1 ... (C) (30) An- dr l'rint, JKqueJine Suunn •fld Gtor1• Clrlin 111 wlkomtd bJ !Iott Jl111 MacKrtD. Cl JitJ fMrltl Martiln (C) (30) Im Ill""' -160) 9(1)_ .... ...., IC) 130) 9 DEIUT ....... (30) Y61hikD KoOIJuhl b llosltu f« I IMll· p11t llfln 111 tfle "SlloU stylt" of JIPlllllM flow« 1rr•n1inc. 8(1) .. _ ....... (Cl (30) ID -'"" -(C) (>O) ID Tloo lie ,..., (t) (IO) m r.........,.. wit11 Ertc ..... (30) "Tht Rolt of ttlt w .. ., ... Ill D£IUT LI c.c I (IO) • t.00 8 9filllll• ,_ - le: (Cj """I.A. -.......... (myQy) '-.:oiert c.-. QI. IM hker, HOIJlllrd Dul'f. A .., dllttla: lttOl'Mf IS ltttd .mtl tolf. lnr wllllt 1111111 to bt 1 "pwftct ui!M." ·--.... (() (10) Gunts incll.lde MlllOll lhrlt, . JI Annt W«lty, l11rit Chaw, IN Tonf M Whitt . fli) llO ·-(() (IO) .,_, Dubroml\ XX." hrt 111. FNturN 1r1 the lmhtnt Collep Glee Club, th1 Oub•ownik fll)ubMols rod; voup. th1 SIMo o.t11c ....mblt, pi1nist Cl•lldlo Arr111 11\d ~lolinbl IS.IC Sttrn. Q) Mltri!IHlt J A1e1 .. (ill) APOLLO 1111 lftllt.: "'"rwlllllllll '"'' .. lflttf. ""'' ......... -.i, ,... ... ,... uHllM --.. tllil fl'-! ., llM rrl_,IM ,_,... IS ll'tluift. Clla!HMll 1, ~ '"' 1 wHI cw,., It¥• 1t1111M1Nltll ., ,,,. •ti,. n•tr' . "'"'"' i. ,.,., ,.... sdtMulM flt "''*'· ,,,. IJ 9 Cll Tloo --... JJ. (l)" (lOj (R) A trtftic ticket f .. c.Wed bf J.J. 1dcls t0; Ille political WOIS of Gowtnor Dtlnllwltw. 0 ""-(C) (30) Birt« W1rd. m """ <C> 130) em .1ot1n.s. Ill•-' -(t) (30) 81-" (() (60) c 111111 --(() Jad Lathim. tm AJWI• T1 (30) 1301 lo:oo a am" M•... .., 1soi M1k1 Wiflic. alld Hwry ....... ''Hello, M11. Bi'DW11. Thia Is Fma: 7:1D II CIS Eflllinl Pins (C) (30) · Wtlter Cronkitt. II WNt'1 .., Unt? (C) (30) m I LM LICJ (30) ID llll n. a.ct (C) (30) ID(]) l r..-i <C> ClOl • Alllrtl (30) QI(() Tidl II' Cell ... lllkd (C) ....... u. s-(C) (30) a!)···-· lllril (S5) GI T'lol .., CCI (301 7:J08Qll(I) amm:J H1tl111f ApMtl ... S. (C) · (60) focusln1 • tM twlttionlhlp bttwlM tlM Dutch people and their lftltnt i lly llld tntm)'-tht .... thlt pto· fflm l llO 11klS I Jook It th! biltory ti lh1 dauntlm Dutch •nd Ktlltl of their uniqut 1n4 Lilll'" ,. ftlhlf• Oii hllnllTJ Brown, 1 lolldo11 ""Yllic wbo com· munu with mtnpottrl. ''Wt'n Oruwnint i11 G•rtt.ce" 111d ''Do Wa Bellwe In tilt BHI of ltirhb?" trt 1150 ahowll. em-cc1 <'°> o IHI rn m --· 11.1. (Cj (&O') '1111 RllNI Dodo!'." Dr. Welby trill to ,,.,, I J001W -.ctw fll!llin1 I lul.dildt ~ .. ""' • dinic operlti111 Ml 1 ,_ Mil" ......... "" ...... """ ,_ .1NI 'M!flia Gt., . ....,_ El I "' tel (IO} 111--(IO} f.D Sil I 1itti (C) (IO) "'1111 k · wick. "0.11 l1nb ••• Supw Snoops." GI RIM (30) ail FatMI Malt.lff (60) colorful t11dition1. 10:30 m A_. (30) 11 a1oom 1 Dft••" J1111111 11.0088a-----Ct) (30) "MJ Muter, tht ChiU · . . - -w.1 '"' Kinf." Tony must 19 Jeannil to It N.., .ht:NI .,. htt 1n11ic power to Nik tht D lllllt: .,_.,.. ~ efforts of kis con·m•n cousin. G•· (fltnnt.111•) ·~11111 Hllltw, Etchl- briill Diii runts. •• Chourt111. O @lllalllod""'<'l(60l m-.(t)"111ol~-..... (R) ''Tiit Girt In Chlir Nine." A IJ"' (mJslCll) '57 -J .... Pwlll, d•l!Vllflnf• pl'ldk:tklns lnltlitt 1n Cllff Robltbon. · lll'l'lltiptlon Into 1n illtpl abor-m lie Slil, a. leW (CJ llo!' r1c:Ut. CfSll'I 0..no¥1 Ind (HI {I) 4J (j) QI (I) ... ~ Gail WhitMy 1uat.. m i IHC!IL! LI C.. (C) (I) m .... $ lleirit: ,.,....... Fir11 on Conicl. Wit" (dr11111) '61-ClrroH B1M:r, Rtlpll M11ker. Nltr btin1 ltbdtd, 11:15 @ (]) c;... leu1a ..... °?1fdlt 1 you111 rlri kleps her tr11Jc 1tOI)' 59." to hel1tll and tlnally lem1 hom1. ll:lO II 9 CJ)""" lrilfill (t) m Trull er C.ftllflllltltll (C) (30) tD ....., m -,, ,_..__ "·-,,.) m,..,, ...... 1&0J \ffll..!!JIM:l-llJ --a, .. · UTioo,_ 9 Tiii CltJ Wltdlwi CC> (60) D GD Didi CMI (Cl IE cnz • ._ <301 CD MIN: ..,..., ._ ... (dr11111) ·~ry w..,.. lZ:OOIJC.•llllr llAltil .._CC, l:OO D 11:1(j)11!1 DobWo -l"' fJ M°'"' "l1lo ""' ·-(C) 130) "Whtrt Th1r1'1 1 Will, (adYlnture) •57 _ Jttk "'-· Thfl'1 Ho W1y." When 81'11Ct I doesn't chooll Dtbbit 11 hil pro-Wllt •m Reynolds. spteti¥t 11111 1u1rdiln, ht lntd· DD""" CCI \'lrt111lly tr11ltS 1 f1mlly feud. Q) Actitl n.til: "TouahMI Mia l 1rry Stordl IUISI'-· AJivt ... Dint Cl•!l. IJTM Mni111 .. {C) (30) Louis z·OD l)All-WIPI sai..; "[apt F1t111 ,.,., An111 811d1r. Robtrt r.u111. • th• Sthll•." '1he 'ar1lnitc," "illll· JIQ P1l1nct, Pit Crowll)' Ind A1· Cltl of thl l!ilinds ., 1111 Moortlttld 1mt. . • ft Tell 1111 Tmti (C) (30) Z:M IJ llM/IM Us T"9 "7 ('C) V.IO'<ESDhT DAYTIME MOVIES l:lt fJ ..,..,.. Wiii T1tk" (cl11m1) 'SI -Ct!Y G11nt, Je1nn1 Cr1in. t:oe n -,., tt •• rftlld" <i:omtdyJ '31-RtJ Milltlld, lr.n. HtrvtJ, .. , ... ,,.. lllillllllrl'" (COl'llledJ) '39 -lob Bums. CltdJs lilOtlt. t:J'.o G CCI "Wi. " 11leir T_.. (mu- ticll) '5Z -JnnM Cnln. Mymt "'· m WA w.... ......... (dr11111) '3.._Kaltl1ri111 HtPbul'l. Y•t f(ef· Hn. 1:30 ID CCI .,_ " •- <•~entu11) 'IO -Robtrt T.,.«, Ann• AubrtY. 2:00 D "SllMtt 1.-,,,. (4tt1111) '~W1ltll11 Ho16t11, ;!Ofl1 Sire• .... 4:00 11 CCl .. ..,.,.,. 11c1¥t111~rt> .,._ Victor Milutt, Jtfttl: ltllfl, Rol•lll """'· e JOB PRINTJNG e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Qu•lify Printin9 and Dependable S•rvict for more tha·n e qu•rt•r of a century. PILOT PRINT ING 2211 WIST IAUOA ILYO.. NIWf'OnaACH -&41"41Jt DAILY ~!LOI' • Tlaeater Notes ~Encores' Joi·n ·New Coast Shows By TOM TITIJS Of 11e o.1tr Pllllt ,,.,. Somethlng old and aomething new -two ex- amples of each -sums up the thtatrlcal picture aSoo1 the 0tanae. CONt this week u two new productions bow in aklnpide a pair of popular returnees making their "en- cores." Both the newcomers are eouaty premieres, "The Right Honourable GentJeman,' openiria; tonight at the Laguna Playhouse, and "The Girl in the Freudian Slip," the Cost.a Mesa Civic Playhouse's latest attracUon,' to be unveiled Fri- day . Comin1 back for additional performancts after being well received in their debuts last tan are ."We Bombed In New Haven,"' opening a '111ursday- ooly nm at South Coast Repertory, and "AH the Looe- ly People," a Tennes se·e Williams anthology, on stage 1'hursday through Saturday at the Open End Theater. John Ferxacca, Laguna's resident director, is staging ''Right Honourable Gentleman," a dramatir.ation of the famoos Dilke scandal that rocked Victorian England. Ralph Richmond ·stars in the tit.le role, with Joen Wulrsohn and Virginia NiJ:an playing the women in · his ure ... Completing the Laguna cast . are Phil de Ban-os, Ron 'ChrisU, Jo Anne Black, Alan Hart, Jamila Mynderse, Den- nis Lambert, Polly Johnston, Steven Scott, Pat McQuade, Bea Wood and Red Stoddart. Miss McQuade is costuming the production wl.tb J,eff Cowen designing the sets. Performances are g I v e n 'I'Uexlays through Saturdays ·at the playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, 'RLIPHONI 67W2N ·WINNER OF 3 .ACADEMY AWARDS BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTION John -Schl11in91r BEST SCREENPIA Y W1kto Silt Al .. Playlnt 2 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS wiUi reservations being la.ken at 494..0743. * Returning ater an absence of two shows in the directorial chair at the Costa P.!esa Civic PlayOOuse is Pali Timbellini, who 's staging the "Freudian Slip" comedy, opening Friday for two weekends only, Ray Scott, who replaced the ailing• Paul Caldwell in mid- rehearsal, takes the leading role of a harried psychiatrist, with Carol Faulstick cast as his wife. Rounding out the CO!t.a Mesa cast will be Ron Fillan, Diana Spencer, Pam Hall and Ed Little. Perfoqnances will be given Frida,ys and Saturdays this weekend and next. Warren munity Center auditorium on the Orange County F a i r g rounds. Reservations may be made by calling the Costa ltfesa Recreati o n Department at 834-S303. * "All I.he Lonely People : The Private World of Tennessee \Villiams" returns to the stage of Newport Beach's Open End Theater for an extra hair dozen per!onnances t h i s Y.'tekend and next Warren 'Toby' Sla ted HELO OVER Academy Winner Beat Actor Deacoo has oompUed ~d &1a1ed the production. The cast includes D3v1d and Betsy Paul, Genevieve · Mur-- ra:y, Walter and Carol Phelps and Robert Howsley. Samuel Crump portrays Williams as a child in plio(ograpiu by Ken- neth Shearer. The show will be staged Thursday lhrough Saturday this weekend and next at the O{l"ll End, 2815 Villa Way, Newport Beach. RcservaUons may be secured by calling the box office at 675-1120. * On stage '111ursdays only through tlle run of South Coast Repertory's r e g u I a r pro- duction, "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," is an encore staging of "We Bombed 'in New Haven" by Joseph Heller, first presented in September. Directed by Martin Benson. the antiwar drama features Don Tuche, Pat Brown, Hal Landon Jr., Heath Park and James Baxes. Benson also directs "CUckoo's Ne s l ,' ' which resumes ils engagement on Friday, featuring Landon, Kathleen Rogart and Peter Bland. . Both productions are being staged at SCR's Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations are being taken at the box office, M&-1363. Resuming iriday at the Huntington Beach Playhouse ls the Jean Anouilh comedy "Waltz of the Toreadors" (to be reviewed In lhis section Wednesday). Ruth Dorward is Woodwind Qui Slates Concert HELD OVER 5 Academy Awards * CElll.W'l.fOl l'llMll5 Ilk JOHN GIEN KIM I ntE SUN0ANC£ KIO WAYNE · CAMl'llW. • IWlll'I - ALSO -GI' U11 Mh1llllll "THE STERILE CUCKOO" Bargain Matinee Wednesday, 1 p.m. ADULn Sl ,00 ,__.. CGltJI ft lllUIE l•I ~ .. ~-=-~~ 4j> ALSO -GI' MAGGIE SMITH Best Actress "'Z' damn near knocks you out of your seat." -PeuUne Keel, Th• New YCM"ker "An 'A' for 'Z'. Stands without peer as a document and thriller." -Judith cr11~Nsc -rv An N.G.C. Theatre F--DiW SOUTH COAST !A PLAZA TH•aTRE ~ Silt Dio(!F>..W.t.>t lr;s!ot • 5~1·2711 s T T A 0 R M T 0 S R 1 R 0 w Ace4..y AwM WhlltM BEST SUPPORTING ACT•1ss -GOLDIE HAWN- \Wtl(ll' lnoriD i ~181lllllU llllroiliiJl1 ' ('B(lllJS FIO\\llr . ~..z.,..n I. -IMlllU ,..,,,., .. -Att.-Ac.....,. Nelltllff • ... t s.,.m .. Act..--1*" Crcisw • ... , M•lclll' Scerci Steve McQueen "The Reivers· •• -....,. ~w9'4 Wli111et' BEST ACTOR -JOHN WAYNE-_,....,_ JOHN lillN KIM WAYIE • CAMPllW. • DAllllY • - 2114' TOP HA.TUii NMIHtff f• ... , S.,,.nl .. Ac."--U• Ml...ill I ' Playttouie. SOit S. Analt<lm St., Lons Beach. Beltram Tanlwell ls dkecting the Vin- tage come(ty and l'tlervatJons are being taken at (Ill) 4l8, 0636. FD""7'wsouTH COAST !A PLAZA THIEATlllE Sin Di1to FtNw1y at lriltol • 149~2711 GIG YOUNli llST SUPPOITING ACTOl "BEST PICTURE Of 111 TUii" _,....., S-d., ._ Alto WOODY ALLEN In 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Bob BEST SUPPORT ACTOR ELLIOTT GOULD _ /;.-BEST SUPPORT ACTRESS c:~~~N BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Alice Wiutrtf __ .. .. , ..... Crtlal Wl....,11 ... ~1 ........... tf ..... NlllLE llQE/mRT CllP [Ill! I CW.I TID 1 lllI I BJllTT C!W/Dllll "11111 .. ,,. ......... , .......... ~-...: ..... 1.11•-...._- 1----1 11!1=.."'?L~.=.)e G ALS<>-ACAD. NOMINll "PIOPLI SOUP" HARBOR al ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546•3102 ON HARIOI BLVD.· ONE Mill SOUTH Of SAM DIEGO fWY. NOTHING, HAS BEEN LEFT OUT OF THE ADVENTURERS ; ,. ___ ..,_ .. _,; ·-... -'° ........... ....... __ ........ ·--.--u.m . ._.._.__ .... ,...ADVlllTURllll ............. -...-.. -..-----------·--,_,_. ____ _,__ ............. .,.. .. _..._, __ .. ......... .._.,.,,..,... •tw----·....-1::..-;.-:::;- ~--.:=-· I Olll Y PILOT ., SVL VIA PORTEil Me JOO awm that you may N1i1f be paying u much ., 1:11 .. $10ll • fell In bank -dlqes, no( ooly !or .,_ ............ _. ... but allo for savinas accounts, safe depalftbnes, ov er d rawn cbeeks, J1te klan: pa.yrMnts, de.! You are • usin1 a n un- pro<ed<nled vari«y of bank IU\'ices today, many of them · Jnvoi\'lQc 1 service charge. Ana the long term trtnd or thele cbargt1 la relentlessly · up. f'OA INSTANCE, one large 1New York City bJYJk now ch•rres $4 a month for a regular checking account in which you keep an average rnootbly balance of $200 or less, f3 if the balan c e averqu between $201 ~nd $400, $%if Jt'I $401 to $600, $1 if It's fl801 to S800 and $0 if the balance 1s more than $Mii). At M • mootb, tbe yearly cost of just llllint.ai.ntng a regular checldng account at this bank is $41. Note : A few baW havt been advertising in recent months completely free check· in& account! ~th minimum balances as low as $100. And tome banks oUer free check- ing to high school and college students if the.it parenb also have accounts 1t tht same bank. TYPICAL CHARGD on . a special checking account in which there is no minimum ba1ance required are 50 to 7$ cent,, a month plus 10 cents for each check you write. Some banks charge Jess per check but add a charge for each deposit. Using this e1ample, if you write 20 check.I a month the service charge will run $2.50 to J2.7S -which adds up to PO to $33 a year. P.tost banks impose a late charge If you fail to make a payment on a loan within the "grace period~ of five to JO days after the due date. A typk:aJ late charge is S per· ce:nt of the payment, up to a mulmum of $5 in any one month and PS over the life of SC Worth the loan or 2 percent of the original loin amount, whichever ls less. On savings accounts, one In four banks charges ''&ciivlty fees"· for !rtquent withdrawals. Here are guide,, for saving on bank service charges: A REGULAR CllECKING account usu.ally is the least ex- pensive type and yoo o!ten·can eliminate any service charge simply by keeping the re- quired balance in the account. lf you find you art continuaUy dipping under. the minimum. consider transferring (undll from your savings account. Yoo might save more in service charges thao y o u would lose in interest. II yours is a special check- ing account aOO you are writing a lot ol checks, switch to a regular checking· account. Normally, a special checking account is more economical only if you write fewer than 10 checks a month. LIMIT THE number of checks you write. Hold out a realistic swn of cash when you depoSit your weekly paycheck . Pay as many little bills in cash as possible and make in· stalment loau payments within the period of time your bank specifies. The First Annual County Advertising ~ DON'T ASK for a special statement of your checking account balance if your bank makes a charge for such st.atements. Among banks that do. the charge may b e ' TAX SHELTER WORKSHOP A,.,...k•n Mlrl1r1h Inc. itl coope,llloo\ with Slerep & co. wm c-11<1 I -Cl '*P 1-Nr Dll '"" MVll'll"9t5 II lrl¥Hl,.,...,lt lof !ht Cl .... tk>I» fMftf flf 011 1rod Nllutl l c;., P<OC191"11ft. flll$ rnee!lllO h t •P<t ul, '°'" --lrl lhl 11191'*' II• ll•ltlo.14. .,,.. -~-wlll llt led ..,. Or. MMi.. Mllltl, Viet Prti1411nl ,, Amerk; ... Mlnertlo. SiMCllluU, Dr, Miiiet wlH upllln .IH'O'letl and 11ml·P'"t....., 01111· ifW .. Ml.C:lt OI rltll lnvnltnlnl t#IMltl. · t .. Ani hM t.4 T• A"9H Tl-: A,,il 1l, .. 7:JI ,,M • ....... c•H ~ & C•. f•t 1w1N1Me. Mhl Pllttft 71 W7WtM THE MYSTERY SHOPPER WILL BE LOOKING FOR YOU THURSDAY FRID/\ Y ~-fiii SATURDAY APRIL 16· 17-18 ANNIVERSARY DAYS n., M.yli•ry Shoppt r will 1lr•ll th1 rir1•ll ,114 P•Y for t~c•v 1hopptro o~rc.ho101. Yov c111 b1 0111 of the bi9 .; ... , ••• ~ Soath Coast ?1111 G r111dt1+ Of All" M.111 NATURAL RESQ(JRCES FUND,1f'IC. 1'00\T\Otl TO ~1'XS1'VIKGS ••• , • , T"• 0011 of N11ur1I l'le1ouro.1 Fund, l"C, 11 to m1k1 your "'°""" 0H)W ••• to do 1MI, Ille hmd ''~" W~ll II i;onti.a.11 11rvcllnt and ,.,. •ontlll9 ·,;,~ •~·•11111 , 111 ... n1ri.d 8 .. '°911\fllt drHllrlQ PI09"""· f o< ,our ''" .l>fe>i.HCIW ~/el • , • "'''" eom111111 1nd ,..,,, ntt c~11 btlo•. ········-·-···-·---·····-·-·····, : P"''" "nd ,,,_ lt\!Or,,,1110ft t nd ! p1atP11Ctu1 IOOUI NltUrtl "''OUl(tl f~nd. l11c. NAl.IE ---·----- ADORESS---·--~ ClTY_.,,_._·-·------ STAtE"---···-·-· .. ZIP.., __ 'fElEPHONE --····-····---·-··-: , .. ······--·· -·-··--···-·-·-··-··' WESTAMERICA SECURITIES l l l S WISTCl lH DR. HIWPORT llACH PHONI 641-6.710 WE N-OW PAY AnnU1lly en $20,-000 lnvn tment Certific1te1 When Held to Mlturlty •. fundt In by the 20th ltrn tnltre•t From the h i. In-P•l<I Qu1rtorly. California Thrift & Loa ta 170 E. 17111 ST. COSTA MESA 64~045 { 'Triangle' Set To Develop ' •I Complete:..New York Stock List Jtlarf~et Synabols ---·-~ ~ --:... -'""'"'-'·-..:..------------------------ - -------~--·~--~ ______ ....,. ________ -----~-~--~------........ ....,--,...,.--..,.,.,,....,....,--,--=-:-"='--... SC DAIL'Y PILOT 11 Con1plete Closing Prices -American Stoel{ Exchange List President Aide Picked by Firm Natlonal S)8le1n1 Corp bu Annou~ced that G 'N'a)'nll Lesli~ has been named ml.5" , ta nt to the president for cur .. poralc deyclopment.. ~ ,, .. , ,_c-;:;:;;:;;;;;;;;., ,,C':-,~_:-:'._::".".~,:--~~~~~,,...~~ ..... ..,.,.,.~ -_ _..._ ........... , .. ... $1,000,00D itt .W Mefchandite is orrivinv,<Ot our ~llowroont i11 Huntington Beoch. New .sofa,. choirs, taltle1, bedioo1N, dinint roo., nc.s;,..rs. ~l'Mr gtDUps, ond dinette Htl ••• in all styles and colon, ~_,., •Co~ ... p0Ni,.,., Meditenaneen, Early Alil•rica1i;' ond Transitional .. ,-.11 of this lo give you the lorgmt Mf.ctton of furnitu,. in Sovthern Californial 360 vigneHet of icomplete occe11erized fvmlture to1help •)"911 vi1uofh:e what it will Jook like Ht )'"r own horMI from 1too1t to coast • L..wita. it the talk of theiurniture industry. Unlik. '90lf .... fumiture stores .. o•r warehouU: and st.ow.OtMn 11 unc&.r one roof (lower qot.-,heod) and in tnOSt coses w!Jat,you picked out in our' showroont•can be piclr.ed up i....diotely ••• ir's ri9htther•·in our,warehou1el Come in ••• shop and coinpa,. , • , We know you won't· be disappointedt' the ' natio•'• finett furnil11re at prices ond value• that up to now were thought to be impaniblel ---~ .... ~ .... MONDAY ~ .. · ~10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Elegant 2-Pc. Curved Sectional that · provides 142" of Comfortable Sitting! This two-piece G.lrv'9d Sedionol will provide a tolol of 142"' of comfortable sitting I The straight section is 82" long, ail"led section 80", and 33" in width! Upholstered in rich quilted gold Motelosse fabric ••. Friends.will Hiink it's costly brocodel Packed with top quality featurM such as reversible seal and bock cuJhions for longer wear ••• Zippered' cushion caversior cleaning ease .... Self-decked ••• (the wme material rho! went into the sofa is under the cushions) , •• ButtonecJ tufted endi of the sectional odd lo the charm and design effectively! All seal and bock cushions ore Uret hane foom filled; to f\old !heir original shape and picwfde otmbst in comfort! Soft spring edge construction means that your cushions ore resting on foam covered podding and not directty oil.the wood frame •• , This means longer shape to your sofa! Soll casters provide .aiy mc:Wementl There ore moi:iy many more features too numerous lo mention •• , Wh y not come in and let ooe of otir wlesmen LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE $486 show you this .50Cfionol ••• You won't be disappointed\ Reg. $699,95 5-Pc. •Party Set by ''Bassett'" l91Jo$22f.'9.5 '719.90 Spanish .Safa and Loveseat Famous "Bassett" quollt, at big ~·This P9a. finisf{Pdrty Set will be tMcenterof activities in your·honwr,;Useif .for.dining or cOngenial game table. No worry, of JCrOtche or.spUlsps this beo':"ilul •Pitde.ial table h~s matchjng M~_1High Pr.es;,ur9. lom'moted top. four beautiful carved chairs \,;th Gold fabric seats. Yov11,be proud of this set for yeon..IO come if· yo• h11rry . to Levitt 'lodoyl 1 Th• last word in l11nuy • , , designed to complement today's smor1 interiors. Yo11'll love owning this magnificent Sofa and love.seat i11 all its regaJ sple11· ,, King-Size Sale on Bedding! leg. $119.9.5lEVITZWHSE. PRICE $99 This is the biggest bedding buy levilz con offer and the best! For less than $I 00 you receive: (2) Box Spring tJ.ottrmes;(I) 76"x80'' King-Size Mattress.-(2) King-Size Pillows; (I) King-S ize Moftreu Pod1 (2) King.Size White Shffts; (2) ICing- Size Pillow Cmes. All ten (10) pieces ore yours for one low pricel dor. Upholslered in easy.to.core for HerC1Jlo11 ••• (Copper) ••• accented by ~· S119.qo intricately carwtd Dork fruitwood trirn. Features reversible Kodel wrawed seal and bock c11shions with zippers • , • for soft comfOrt·ond double wear ••• plus the lu1t11ry to11ches. ofself·decking, soft spring edge and low legs! Shop ot•levih: WarehoU$1t todoy and Savel Sovel Big Handsome Vinyl Recliner! R.g.$79.95lEVlfZWHSf.PllCf $38 After o lo"g bu&y day what better-way lo unwind and hst your tensions meh ~than i~thiJ big handsome ReClin· er. Yoor choice of block or green vinyl ... wipes clean with do mp doth, wears like iron. This remarkable recliner ho1 your f~ite position for watching TV, reading or sleeping. The perfect choir for any bvsy home. With today's low, low Levitz Warehou$1t price why no! buy o poir and reloK together! Feathery Elegance! 6' Fern Tree R~. SlS.95 l~VlTZWHSE. Pl11CE $17 This . lifelike, lacy deco rotor fern tree is fresh green in color • , , Will brighten ony home or officel Delicate, feolhery folioge ••• Fle1tible slemi •.. Plonled in on unbreakable deca<a· tor con!Oinel" ••• This plan! normally sells for more than $35 ••• Hurryl , , • levit;r; sole price of $17 is far two (2) day> oolyl Lavish Vinyl Covered Modern Swivel Rocker Req.S69.95lEVITZWHSE.f'R1Cf $37 Comfort at Its best, sit down and relax in the cloud soft comfor1 of this lavish modem swivel rocker. Polyurethane loom filled seat, bock and arms, deep rufled bock, upholstered in g1ovo-sofl, leather·like, wip&<leon vinyl. An ideal choir for any room in your hornel Available in Green or Block! . ~ . ,. ' . Mqgnificent Mediterranean Formal Diriing Room ~ •. I lfVITZ YM5E. l'«E $5 .87 by famous 'iUrtagusla"! OisetJYef' rfle splendor ef ~us dinirig .with tftis,Mgont dining r6om by hsJ.$924.'91 -Unogusta". Croftwj in nw1Uow Spanish fruitwobd r1nisfi that•hos beitn care- fuDy bqnckubbttcf. Ycl-'get tbe mossWe 60" wide Breoltfront China-• .ffle large (be!.) extensiOl'I Tcbl• wilh .one~) l8" leof;'J)kJs ~of four (4) high.poclt ct\airs (I arm & 3 sides) with upholsteted '90f .. · I :ea.s~ett·I ,,,.~ .... "Bassett" 4-Pc. Mediterranean Bedroom Master crafted by-'WOfld famous "Bouett". Features lcMsh tJM!, of wrought $lfVllZ 'M-!St. ntj'.:f' iron. chain type hardware, lu1turious and richly carved dr~ and door 2 9 s fronts. You get the massive 7'r triple dresser ond landscaped· mirror, ldng. • .I size heodboord and 2 drawer commode. Ma~e today your day Jo come to Levitz and save! Rotg. $569,9.S j:eassettl ., Bassett Elegant Italian Provincial 5-Pc..Bei:lroom, Hand-Rubbed Pecan finish'! Thit custom hond·rubbed Pecan finished master bedroom will be one of your prized possessions for many yeDr3 to· come I Features Pecan finish on Pecon groined selected venee'3 oM hardwoods with simulated wood cor.vings. The dresser drawers and nite stand hOY9 deep roomy drawers for ample storaijel · You get the sil( (6) Drawer Dresser, Mirror, King siz-e Headboard, and two UVITZWHS£.ma! $339 hg $.529.9.S (2) Nile Stands. Dresser diineMions ore 31" high, 72" ·long and 18" wide! This set will fir nice!ylfe O"Y bedroom! Corne to Levitz; for value that can't b. topped! I KROl!HLl!R I 6-Pc. Kroehler Contemporary Master Bedroom Set The newest trend in Contemporary furniture with the heoY'f tnassive look achieved by the double fold effect on the drawer fronts and the lavishly deep llVITZWHSt "1!Q $397 mouldings and O'o'ef'lays over the doors. It will remain enduringly beautiful 1 . $'89.95 because of the fine croftsmonship , • , Finished in Pecan wit+. a heavy top '11 ond plinth bose ••• Suite Includes: Triple Dreuer, Mirror, c:Mst, fuU size Heodbcr.lrd,o!'kf Two Nff• Stands • , , Com• to t..vitt today for hig~ qualify ot !cwt, low prices! OPEN DAILY lO TO 10, SUNDAY NOON TO 7 YOUR CHOICE!! , Vinyl Walnut Finished Bookcase or Commode! LEVITZ WHY. PRICt $28 ..,, Rev. $59,95 it0. During ttlis MJI• you ttave your choice of either the 3·shelf bookcaM ••• or matching stotoge commode I Toke od- 119nl0ge of ltll1 low low prk:• ond ~ both piece1 .•• stack the bookcoM: on top of the commode! Both pieces ho.,.. Waln.ut finllhod MlrocHi Vinyl F!nls.h • •• lolTs longer than the fine.t locquer orwrni$hl Toke od'IOntoge of the ~vings todoyat 1-ttzl , I COASTroCCJ,4Sr FURNl1URE WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM San Diego Freeway At leach llvd. .......... ____ ,,,,,.... Easyto Reach from Anywhere .At L•vilz oll the "retoil frilh" ore toke" out of the WorehouM Sole Price. The pric• you poy is in the Cor~ to" OI\ our Dock. Toke it hOMeyounelf or hove it deli.,.red by l..,itz • , , There will be o 1moll delivery chorge duo to the1e incredibly low Warehouse Sal• Prices! IASY CltlDIT TlllMS AVAILAIU --· LEVITZ WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM • BEACH BLVD., Edinger Ave,. Next to the Huntington Shopping Center! .. Plush Diamond Tufted Contemporary Sofa Her11's a lu11uriot.1s Solo designed to complement todoy'l lmart $EV11TZ 6WHSE.~"'°" interiors! Deep Diamond Tufted seat and boclt for the utmost'" comfort .,. Cu&hlaned wilh pure foam , .• You have your choice ot Block Vinyl or Gold Chenille upholstery! Solo is 8 feet long •eg S2•9 So and will Mal with complete comfort 4 odult5I Boll caster1 pro. ReQ. $l99.9J ~ vide eosy rrtQ\lemflnt, Motthlng love'80t oYOilable at $I 34 during this so let --~--------------.. ------. ----------~-------------,---------------..... !"'!" ... -.---""'!'-'""" I . - CflVSADING BARBER ALLAN !CENTER) DEMONSTRATES HIS STYLE ON YOUNG MARINE , . El Toro S.tber W•lt Redick (left) Gets • Lesson in Modififf Military H1ir'cut1 Science, Math Facilities Shown At Saddlehack No More Jarheads Barber Giving Marines 'Style' Saddleback College's facilities and eq~pment for the science, mathematics, engmeering and teclmology division will be on display for area high. achool teachers Thursday. Science0 and matbemalics instructors from the college Will host high school teachers from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 at the new campus. ~atvin L. Nelson, division chainnan, Sa.Jd the meeting has been called to ac- quaint high school teachers with the facilities and curriculum and to discuss the college program so It will meet the needs of students. Sophisticated equipment on display will ln~lude an infra red spectraphotometer which measures r a d i a t i o n of in• termoleeular mOtion. a Gammameter 8 for high gamma particle radiation source and a refractometer and electronic balancer. Forster Names ' Honor Students ·'lbirty-four Marco Forster Junior High School students have been selected by their teachers as student of the month in respective atcivlties. The seventh and eighth graders are Brenda Bentley and Donald Basse. foreign language; .Katherine Powers and Randy Tanner. science, Allison. Jay, Walter Bennett, Neal Martel and Be verly Brewsaugh, art : Amanda Doane and Ri ck Dauos, drama; Jane Divel, Bob Drown, Pam Harberich and Bob Yoder, physical education ; Emily Crean, Tim Koci, Japice Wolenly and Jeff Hunt, math; Michael Todd Mason and Dave Buck, Industrial arts; Deanne Hoversten and Carol Stamp, Home Economics; Alli.son Jay, William Hunt, Cindy Keim and l>uncan. Wilson. Engl ish; Tina Rob- bins, Michael Prelip, Linda Shuck and, Robert Mohme, history, and Michelle Dastrup, Owen Nannie, Susan Bunkall and Tim Kennedy, instrumental music. By STEVE MITCHELL Of rM Dlllr Plllt II.if The word "Jarhead" may soon be discontinued in Mar:lne Corps terminology -at least if Ken Allan , a Corona del Mar hair "styllst, has anything to say about it. Allan's big gripe since moving to Orange County from his Beverly Hills hair styling shop is the number of Marines he sees with the ''white sidewal1'1 haircut, .so prevalent among leathernecks. "These men are being scalped by government-issue barbers," he stated. Sii months ago, Allap decided to do something about the haircuts, which he says are ''d.emo.,.alizing to the servicemen." In a letter to El Toro's commanding general, Brig. Gen. Henry \V. Hise, Allan suggested a short..!ropped haircut be off. ered to · Maribes "which complies with military regulations but does not look like a three minute skin-job." The general displayed -an interest In Allan's · ideas and asked hiln t o demonstrate his modified m 11 I t a r y haircut at El Toro. Colonel William M. Lundin, he air sta- tion's chief of staff gave testimony to the success of Allan's first session with El Toro's head barber. "Since the initial lntruetion, ·Mr. Bentley, the hetid barber. has given me several fine style cuts and, as you purported initially, my hair does, in fact, loot and feel better," Lundin slated. Now six months later, Allan has been given the go-ahead and is training El Toro barbers once a week in proper hair styling. "The Marines will have a choice of get- ting a regular haircut or having their hair evenly styled," Allan stated. This should eliminate the "assembly line" pro- cess of haircutting tbat is presently employed at the air station. The price of a regular haircut still will be $1 and the .styled cut will be about $3.50. according to Allan. "This price seems high, but l have talked to dozens of Marines al El Toro who have told me they would give half their paycheek to get a decent haircut," Allan said. DAIL.Y IL.OT 119ff ...... GETTING RUMMAGE READY FOR SAN CLEMENTE SALE N1ncy Gorm1n (left) end Mrt. B1rb1r1 Tobf11Mn San Clemente's ·Thieves'. Market To Raise Funds ... Hundreds of donated Item& will IO on sale April 24 and 25 in the annual fund· raising event for San C1 e m e n t e 's Interfaith Serviceman's Center. , Many of the arUcles are 8lrtldy col· Jccted, sale spokesmen said, but more donations of usable articles are welcome. The Spring Thieves' Market will be he ld from 9 a.m. to I p.m. Friday and I lo 4 Saturday, in the chapel of the Lutheran Church of Our Saviour, 200 E. 5:an Pablo. Tnchkled in the sale will be one section ('ailed the "Boudoir Boutique," plus areas nf£ering books, clothing, household goods ;ind Impulse items. Some noteworthy items 1 I r e a d y donated for sale include a bola bag for wine, a back pack, a baby's baptismal gown, several typewriters and furqiture. Volunteers offering either help with the sale or it.ems for N.le should contact the center at 492-1114. Barbecue Slated For Sen. Schmitz The Saddleblcli" Valley Schmitl !or Congrese Cammtuee hat a n n o u n c e d plans lot I barbecue '-1Jlll the ""'llor 1t the GraUan B1dart ranch in El Toro on Salurday, April :15. Pr&dinner refrelhmenta and mariachi entertainment will begin at 4 p.m., 11111owed by a steak barbecue at I p.m. A limit'<! number al ticket. will be available at fl .50 a peraon, committee chairman Robtrt S. Bevocqua said. For further lnlormaUoo dill -· l Down the Mission Trail Elks Organizing In Saddleback Elks and prospective Elks C 1 u b members are being recruited for a new Saddleback Valley lodge which is being organized in Southern Orange County. Meetings of Elks msnbers and those interested In joining the new lodge are being held every Monday evening at 8 p.m. at the Mission Viejo Recreation Center. Several meetings have been he1d and a peUtlon bearing 162 names has been se11t to the Grand Lodge as a first formal step in obtaining a charter for the new lodge. Prospective and former members of the Elks Lodge are invjled to attend lhc weekly meetings or call Don Robinson at 830-02'6 for further information. · e G.i• Slao11> Fuld~IU . . . ' . . ' LAKE ' 'FOREST ~ "!;a Fiesta de Primlvera" ·wtll,be the name ·of the -fitst fashion sboW ICheduled by ·the' newly formed Lake F-Orest Women's Club Wednesday. The event will take place from 1 •to 4 p.m. at the Beach and Tennis Club. · Modeling will be done b)'. members and their children with fashions being shown by Bonnie's and LaVan's. Refreshments will be r.erved. e Talent Show Winner• SADDLEBACK VALLEY -First place honors were won by Stacy Ettinger and Jeff and Julie Hal'Tis at the recent latent show sponsored by the Exchange Club of Laguna Hills-El Toro. Mi5.'I Ettinger won for 1 p I a n o performance and the llarris youngsters won for a rock dance perfonnance. The area winners will next. compete in regional contests with those winners going on to state finals on June 17. The young pianist is a student , at Mission Viejo High School and the, dancers attend O'Neil School in Mission Viejo. e School Picks Officers , MISSION VIEJO - A nominating ~ venllon to elect new student body officers at Mlssion Viejo High School will be held Friday. Candidates go through an in-service training sessiqq and campaign from April 1 26-24. An eliminating -convention is ten- tatively set April '/:1 with the final vote cast April 28. e Girl of llfonth Chosen • T11tsday, Aprll 14, 1970 s DAILY PILOi"f. Appeal to €ount1. More Time Asked ' ·By1 Capo .Min~rs · Owens-Illinois Jnc., operators of a silica mining plant in the soulheast part of the county, five m11es north of San Juan ' ' JR .. FOOTBALL COACHES SOUGHT' A meeting will be hekl In San Clemente tonight for persons interested in coaching or managing Junlor All·American Foot-i.in~ . The meeting will begin at a· p.m. al 211 East San Pablo. It is a bl-monthly meeling of the South Coast Chapter or the foctball group established for youngstus belween the ages of 9 and 13. · The chapter reptesents San <:;lemente, San Juan Capislrano, Dan'a Po.int and Laguna Niguel. Additional information may be oblal'!ed by phoning Bob Bqurg al 492-327~. , CaplstrlllO, will take their rlshi fw '°""' ..,.ratbi( holln lo the Boord al Supervl..,.. Wedn<lday. '1'1le glass making firm wants to operate 24 hours a day. They are t.w re· quired to cloR down, under thft.oourit)o11 Sand and Gravel District criinarice, between 10 p.m. and • 1.m. r The nqueat for unlimited houri' WI! fumed down by the county P,lunin& Commission last Mardi 4. In their petition lo the supervlso!;1, the Owens-Illinois officials ~ted •out thaL the mining opetaUoo ii .. Conmtc~ · on 1,173 acres providing sufficient bl.dferlng for any possible impact on IWTOUnd.ing areas. The firm request! UJat the unlimited hours be granted as • Jong as t b e agricultural preserve status of 1djoining lands continues, supposedly 10 years, and that UJ>9n tennlnaUon the !"~Jeci: be revfewed by. the supervllOrll. 1 • . ' . ' ' . ) ;. !-, • Turn in for a 3-pi~e place setting of handmade Mojave sto.neware. With 1asoline purchase at participating retailers. Other pieces are also available. 1 \ • T"'">• .... 10, 1'711 Teachers Ignore Order by Court • . ! l 1 1 'Mrs. J. L ..... rd SwftlOri, r1!0lh-~f of the substitute astronaut on ~ls way to the moon, said her son PJ8Y have one sticky problem dur- llli the trip. John $wftl0rt does 1!'!t particularly care for peanut butter. lJnrortun.lltely, due to the l11t trilnute nature 'of his departure, he t, s to eat the food chosen· by tile an be replaced, Thomas Matting- • Mattingly, loves peanut butter •i14 there is a good supply of It in \be food locker. • .. Members of the Butte, Mont.~ High School Band and Chorus had planned to participate in a diitnct-widt mu.ric /t1tival bvt thdr director. a union member, jofftt?d a Uache7"1 1trlU. HO'ld- ner, the png mu.sidc:ms wert undauni.d. Tll<p prot>ld<d their own tromportation, f><Tforrl*I withovt thrir director m&d ioon '' 1" p e ,. i or ratings in both et1n1t1. • • Somebody stole the bright red station· wagon o! Chicago's 10th Battalion Fire Cblel R I c h • r d JOHpko Sunday while be was at a fire. The car was found later in Lake Michigan near Evanston, IB. A Northwestern University ncur· ity guard spotted the vehicle's red ligbls flashing underwater. • • L05 ANGELES (UPI) -Vowln( ta re. in•I? Out unW tbetr dlminds are met. lllrikin& teachers In the nallon'• second lareeat achool -today defied 1 court order to return to work· and ·Shots Fired At Truckers; W;OOO Idle 'Si>ols ...... fired •l truck• In the P.etroit ar~ today aDd Jn allcago mere than 40,000 drivers and dock workers were Idled because of a strike by two unions and a lockout by trucking com- panies. The Chicago and Detroit developments were the most notable ln a continuing wave ol. wildcat atrlkes by drivers unwill· Ing ta ICCtpt a propoood National Teamlt.en Uni«i COl'iract that would rllle wqes o( 450,000 by 11.10 on hour over three yura. MJdtlpn state Police 11id • truck clPveb by I lamlter member WU hi! by several bullets u it traveled from Detroit ta Gnnd Bllnc, • -ol 1boul 40 miles. The vehicle, baullna steel to a General M-. Corp. pilnl, w11 followed by 1 car l<r ......i mU.. llJon& U.S. 23, police Wd. Shots were fired from the car. The truck was hit but the driver was not harmed, police said. The lltest lhoollng reJl'l'I wn "one ol teV1ral" received by Michigan Slate Police during the walllout, wbleh h11 forced the hll auto companlea to cloee 1 doRn planll, lly off C,000 worken and reduce work ochedules for 11 leul .-r40,000 .. A-S,11111 lelm>t..1 ~ the~ wlldc1t ltrike In the Han11bur1, Pa., ref!ioa lodlJ llllll wlthdmf picket lines. A union local spokesman said member• qroed ta relum to their Jobe unlll • con-tnct WU either nUfMd « rtjected by the llllionll membenhlp. ~avyManNamed To High Post -., .. · .. _"AsmNGTON (UPI) -Preaident ·~·tadly lWlled Adm. 'lllomas H. ~. aa new Cbalnnan of the Joint Clllelo ol Sllll, IUCCffdlng Gen. Earle G. WJleeler In the n1tlon's hlgheal ranking n1ru1ary pog1. • Yippie leader and Chicago 1 def~ dont Abbie Hoffman ii shown wipi11g hia 1wse on what appear• to be a replica of the Amerioon flag dvring at1. appearance at Kamaa WeSleJIGn Unioer.rity in. Salina. The Salina COM~ t11 attorne.11 filed charges again.it Hoff·- man for allegedly d<aecra!ing Iii< flag. • Kovin Clorko of London, England had a lover's tiU with his glrl- fpenct, ao be feared the worst when tie found her with her head in the ~gas oven Sunday night. But Elaine Sutherland pushed him away when he rushed in and grabbed her. "I was jUst dryinf, my hair, 11 she said. ·t1 do· it often. • Moorer ii now Chief of Naval Opera- tions. Wheeler,. a, who hu held tbe ofllce iifoe July, 1tM, plans ta ... u.. when !be chlnge becomOI effective July 2, 1Ubject to Senate confirmation of Moom-. .Nixon at the same time designated Vice Adm. E1mo.R. Zumwalt Jr., now commander ol N1val forcu In Vlelnlm, to succeed Moorer u Navy Chief. MOOH"r, 58, will be the lf:COlld Navy !Diii .ta hold the poaillon of O.ainnu of the Joint Cblel1. Adm. Arthur Radford beld the poll In liiU7. ' LA Times' Bill Henry Dies of Heart Disease NORTHRIDGE (UPJ) -BID Henry, 1 Lot Angeles T.lmea polltical columniat for 30 years, ii dead at the age of 71. Henry, who beg1n wrlllne his column 11By The 'Way0 in 1139, died Monday at Nor1hridee COmmunlty Hospllll of 1 heart d1seue. His 58-year career with the Tlmes began as a sports writer Jn tttJ, was blgblllhted by two National Headliner Awards and be wu to receive the Medal of Freedom, !be hl&besl IWlnl the l'ml· dent CID bataW ta a dvillln, April 21. . . . picUted hundl«ls Jl sdlools for the se· cond slrai(hl day. AbouC ball the distrld'a 2S,OOO teachers failed to report to work Monday as the cj. ty ·of Loo Angeles strualed ta keep Its Cllf schools serving '50,000 students open. School Superintendent Robert Kelly ac- cused the strfkin& teachers o{ "making the young people a pawn" after many o{ the atudentll who &hawed, up for the open- ing bell were sent home because or the scarcity of teachers. He ordertt the school b o a r d ' s negotiating ata.tt to.discootlnue talks w1tb the union "unUI such time as teachers are back in the classroom and the strike ended." Kelly then sent the board's attorneys to court "to clearly establish that the strike is illegal." Superior Court Judge Richard Schallf:r granted a temporary restraining order ordering the strikers back to work. Robert Ramom, president of the United Teachers of Los Angeles, said the union would not obey the order and declared the strike was a ''moral not a legal issue." The union president !aid wage demands were not as impodant as forcln1 the state Legislature to allocate sufficient funds to bring about an end to deplorable classroom condiUons. However, in Sacramento , the Legislature held our little hope it would vote emergency funds to meet the strik· ing teachers' demands. Mall,)' lawmakers said that without Gov. Ronald Reagan's aupport. there· was virtually no chance of the passing or an emergency ap- propriation bill. Kelly sald the teachers have caused ''~at damage" to school programs and aQded that "the strike has been effective in hurting educaUon." "The schools will be open •.. We will try to give the children an education. We hope a partial day's schooling is better than nme," Kelly Jaid. A spokesman for the school board said 48 percent of the teachers stayed out, but UTLA asserted the oumber wu closer to 60 pel'Call 'Break' Reported In. Air Walkout WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Federal Aviation Administration reported a "ma· jor break" in the 2l~ay air controllers "'sick out" with return to wort today of almost all controllers in New :York. An FAA spokesman said 141 oE the 151 controllers scheailled on at the key Islip. Long Island, Control Center reported for work. The center had been the major trouble spot of the slowdown. The FAA sald only Kansas City re- mained a major trouble spot, pending reports from Denver and OHiand, which had been continuing to have hJgh absenteeism among its controllers. The back.to-work trend became ap- parent Monday, and the return in New York today appeared to portend the end or the wort stoppage. F.. Lee Bailey, uecutive director of Lhe Professional , Air Traff Jc Controllers Organization (PATCO), said Monday, "the deadlock is broken.'' Balley warned, however, that some controllen rtporting back to work were being "harassed, intlmJdated and in· terrogated" by the FAA which must certify that the returning men are 'medically fJt to work. If this continues, Balley added, "There is no telling what will happen.11 He sa.id i( the FAA and the Department or Transportation "come forward In good faith" the air traffic l)'ltem couJd be in run operolioo by the end " the week. New Snow Storm Spreads Co'ld Weather Ranges From Wyoming to Northwest c.i11 .... 1a SOVTHl!"ltN CA.LlllOft:NIA.-Varlltl>lt e!Oo.od1 T......,, Chene. f9w Klllllfl'M ~ •rwnll -"'''"'· ltrtllt f\IJtr .. 1nt11 tflr-'! TundaY. Cooltr """,... t1lfll. "" lrihotlol' TllttM, eM _, •r111 Tundwf' 111.,111, A lltflt WMl'l'llol" -ii--1'°"5 W ... llHdlY. LOS ANGEL!"$ AltEA -MotllY ftlr tfi1'911911 T\lftlltY •llfl -Ylrlt•IO t.IOt,ldlrteH. Ginty •lnft fnd unllllllfd cool. Hltll T-y "' l-Tunffl' ,.19111 JI. S-•nd I Hiiie ""'"""'~ w .. ,,.,.,..,. P'OINT CONCl!f'TtOH TO Mt:lOC,t.N 11011.i)'lill -SmllH et1n w1 •"'"91 di., lll•Y911 P'elltl c.r.c:..,1'°" " Mtl!kl'! llordW. W"I te -11"""1 wloWI If to :JI kMU wllll '"'-"'911 l'llftdll' "-C:Nt1low Tllftlln 1119111. Wtti.Ml' W1""5 1t f9 l'O kllDh W~l'. V1rlo 11111 clllulb llut INllh't' t11fo T""''"· ,_I nd I Urn. Wit ...... WtdftHMl'. lilC Tlll!ME IOUl'HIEllN NIEVI OA - V1ri9* C:lliivdt wlflt dll!KI el flw 11--4-1 119M .,_.. 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" u " • n ~ . u " 47 14 ,02 . " 61 JI ~ H .. • .071 ... J7 ,, -" 11 ,ff 11 " 1' 51 4J .II PRESS DEAN DEAD Merrim•n Smith, 57 Merriman Smith, Famed Newsman, Suicide Victim \VASlllNGTON (UPI) -Merriman Smith, the dean of Whlte House cor· respondents, died Monday. He covered six presidents over nearly three decades for United PrJSS International and won the Pulit~ Prize and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Smith , 57, was found in his suburban Virginia home dead of a gunshot wound , apparently self-Inflicted. A d e ath certificate was expected to be issued to- day. His six presidents spanned 28 evenUul years, from Franklin D. Roosevelt just before the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941. to Richard M. Nixon, who said of Smith : "He was one o' the great reporters of our · time." At his death, he was dean of the White House press corps. For some years he had been senior wire service cor· respondent and traditionally e n d e d presidential news conferences with the words: "Thank you, Mr. President." Smith won the Pulitzer P r i z e , American journalism's hJghest award, for his reporting of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. U.S. Officer, 6 Men Saved at Crash Site DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) -Seven Americans, including a battalion com· mander, were rescued today from a mountainside where I.heir h e I i c o p t e r crashed the previous day. All seven aboard were injured, none setiously, military spokesmen said. One suffered a broken leg. Cambodian Base Destroyed y VC PHNOM PENH. (Uj'IJ -Viet COn( L !poll when the N«lh Viet. troope today dett!oyeci a government out· nameae began ·r siege on Sundly. )JOI\ ml cul olf a m1jor blghw1y leading 1 The Monlapard.s, mercelW')' mow> lhroll(h C1mbodl1'1 rich rubber p11D. tain trlbeslll<n led by U.S. Special For· llUon .,...,. llong the border wiiit South ce1, killed 15 Communists ~ IUffer<d Vietnam, the government announced. only light cuualUes, Col. Nguyen B1 Tln, 'Ille nport uid the 0ommun1..i$ bumed commlllder ~ the South Vie...,.... 24111 IJld leveled the oulpoot 1t Krek 70 mil" Special 1.ooe, reported. northpst ol Phnom Pehn, which wu He said the COmmunists had loot 21T defended by a force of 100 Cambodians. men at Dak Pet. and another 1,51J dead The government said 15 government at the nearby Dak Seang Special Forcts camp since that siege be1an April 1. Both soldlers were killed in the three-day bat-~ps are near the border of. Laos. M tie and that more than 100 Communists iniles northeast of Salaoa. Were believed tilled. In Vietnam and estimated 1,200 North Vietnamese troops captured a govern. ment outpost on the weatern edge of the Ho Chi Minh trail, overwhelming Royal Lao anny units made up mostly of teenagers. · The attack on Krek, 'l&ht miles-from the frontier, appeared to be ·part of overall Communist efforts to win total coatrol of the eastern regions of Cam· bodia fronting Vietnam. Smaller attacks were reported In the Prasaut area. where the Viet Cong seeks to win control of East-\Vest Highway 1, and at polnts bare- ly 25 miles from Phnom Penh. The government aaid fJeld reports showed before the Krek battle Its troops had killed more than 120 Viet Cong in eight recent battles. In Vietnam Monlagnard tribesmen struck back at the Communist forces besieging their Greeri Beret camp at Oak Pek and stonned up a hUI to recapture Jeers of 'Nigger' Vex Ambassador STOCKHOLM (UPJ) -Dr. Jerome H • Sweden , said today anti-American dem· onstrators had sbouted, "Nigger, nigger, go home" to him and that he rese.nted it. The M-year.old Negro educator was the rocus of demonstrations both when he ar· rived in Stockholm ,last week and today when he drove to the royal palace to present his credentials to King Gustaf VI. He told an embassy news conference he did not worry about demonstrations as such. • "They are part of the political life in a free, democratic nation," he said. "However, I am just a ijttle bit con- cerned when I hear such remarks as 'Nigger', both at the airport and today whe n I was driving to the palace. ''That was a personal attack on me and I resent ii. J haven 't heard that for many years and then only in the most racist areas o! the United States." Jtl0 i-c·k•e•11 ••• The clock on the Campanile Tower at UC Berkeley got a new Mickey Mouse look Mon-- day. Mickey's hands and face \Vere pasted on the kingsize clock face by pranksters who apparenUy entered the locked tqwer and stood on a platfonn 1 to lower the cutout into place. ----- Just a few more hours At 7 P.M. today the polls close, and you will have exercised your ri9ht to choose who administers the tax dollars you pay for your health and safety in Costa Mesa , How stron9 your voice will be in city 9overnment may depend on how you stren9then your City Council. A lar9e vote turnout tells the opportunist and the talkers that here is a city that cares what h a p p e n s to itself. To para· phrase a very wise saying, "All it takes for those who seek for themself the bene· fits which belon9 to all, is for good men and women to do nothin9." We ask you to vote for Jack Hammett as your city councilman. We feel he will serve you best because his RECORD indicates t h e s e thlnqs: 1. He is an Active hard-worker for positive. ChalHJeS. 2. He has an excellent public record of service and training for this job. 3. He ls tied ta Costa M- in his work, his fomDy, his Interest, and his post perform- ance. Jack Hammett's RECORD tells us he won't just hang around City Hall and enjoy being called "Councilman" without working to deserve that title. O .K., if you haven't voted yet, the choice is obvious. You can stroll down to your pollin9 place or you can watch the Early Show ori TV, but are you going to enjoy the "re-run" at Costa Mesa City Hall for the next four years? NIH• rWo,. yes,.. .. piece? e.l..MMlOO Jack HAMMETT FOR COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL TUESDAY, APR1L 14th 1 11Md1Y wtlll .. """9 MfY ""'"""-Flrll 111111 , •• , , , • , • S:OO '·""· 4 I (Mtlct tf llW tulllf'td 1'-tn Wlfll l'lrll '-, . •• ••• .. • lltOO 1.11'1. O.J ~ ltwt UGI ..... c.i--Twedl¥ ~ lllelt , . , I:" 1,11'1. 4.t H....., -¥1111'1"'91 1IM Wt rt 111 f!IKI Jar tOUIMl'll Monl11111 f lh:I llOrll!· -t1r11 W~omlnt, llowlM -w11 (fVt!rtl ~111rdou1 lrt wl t.llldlllol\1 !11 Nrll If Mortl1111, $111 ,-,lllCIKI ~Nllll !! : .OI COMMmll TO lllCT JACl HAM Mm n .. TO COSTA MISA CITT COUNCIL •'"' lWtHy fl191!1. A lttli. •trf'MI" liU!I IUMt J::J '·'"· ltl'I l :U 1.on. er. ltlr ~,. r Mlfll •1 ... 11:'41.m. Ith li.IOt.111. "'"'"' llclM ....wllltd _, """ Omt l tktt. Ntw IEMi.M lfl• °"' IOI/Ill ·~ r ulrM!I ""'"'"""'· ..... M TlltrlTlll W•'111Mr ' 11 as hi. McNllfty, OM,..... -441 1. 17 .. It., CMt9 M .. U d .N ''"~~~ ... f;oo~~..-------:-0--------.,~~~ ... iiiii ..... ~~~~;.;;~;.;;;;_..;,;;,;;;.;.;;;,.:;;~::.::::..;.1 , -- -- -- -- ---------~ T~-------~ -----------.----------------------~---------,..-----·---,---------~--,-"!°"- Israelis Fear 'Wa r' With Russ By Ualtecl PrtsJ lntuutfou.l Israeli Defense M l n l ~ t e r Moshe Dayan said today in Tel Aviv he feared p ossi bl e \ cl aahe$ between the Israeli air lo~r~nd Soviet technicians rn -g E1gy pt 's SAM3 rnlssil def~es. He renewed I s r a l 's \plea for mare American F4 Phantom jets. Dayan's statement ap~d in an official interview with th.e Israeli armed f o r c e s rnngah:ne Bamachane (in the camp). Special significance w~ attached to it because it was distributed to coincide with the arrival of assistant secretary of st.ate Joseph Sisco, a specialist in Middle East affairs. The Dayan statement, distributed by the govern ment press officer, likened Israel's position along the Suez Canal to that. of the United States during the Cuban m i s s i I e crisis when Soviet missiles in· stalled in Cuba brought the United States and Russia close to war. That's No Lady • • • As Sisco ended a four-Oay visit in Egypt to pay •one-day visit to Israel, I.he Israelis an- nounced more air raids across the Suez Canal against Egyp- tian military target s. A spokesman said Israel hit the north~ and southern sec. ton of the canaJ and that all raiders returned safely. At Fatah. one of the leading It's a "liberated woman" being arrested by New Arab guerrilla organi zations. York Police. Nine members of the \Vomen's Li bera- announced over its Cai r o tion Front occupied the executive oliices or Grove radio. the Voice or the Stonn. Press Publishing Co. April 13 as a protest against t h at Palestinian guerrillas what they called the flI'm's "sexist editorial policy." have opened a new front against Israel in the upper About 25 women, some of them e1nployes of the Ga l I l ee area near the _c_o_m.:.p_a_n'-y,_t_o_o_k.:.p_a_rt_in_th_e_s_it_-i_n_. ________ 1 Lebanese border to l o r c e Israel to disperse its forces and weaken its military con· tori. The Palestinian A r m e d Struggle Command (PASC I announced in Amman that combined unifs or three Arab guerrilla 'organizations fought a fierce battle today with Israeli troops along a 28-mile front in the North Jordan Valley. It said the guerrillas attacked ~·ith rockets. heavy artillery and other weapons. R uss Team a t SA LT, Pledge Cooperation VIENNA (UPI) -The Soviet negotiator arrived to- day for the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) and said Russia will lake a "businesslike and constructh1e attitude" into its meetings Vladimir S. Semyonov, ar- riving on the Warsaw express train after a 32-hour tnp from Moscow, warned that the SALT talks will not be easy. F d S with the United States. 0 1' COres U.S. Chief Negotiator Gerard C. Smith and his ·Puhlicati' 0. n· delegation were arriving late "The complicated and dif- ficult nature of ou r talks is ob- vious," he said in a trainside statemen t. th.is afternoon from Brussels, where they briefed America's B D I NATO allies on the U.S. posi-Y oug as lion in the talk s. opening Thursday. "For its part," he said, "the Soviet delegation has been in· structed to m aintai n a businesslike and conslructive attitude and we hope it will be the same on the American side." WASHINGTON IAP) _1--..:.:.C'----------------1 House Republican L e a d e r Gerald R. Ford says an article published In a controversial '. magazine by Supreme Court 1 Justice William 0. Douglas 1 remove s all doubt abou t the need for impeaching him. Ford, who has conducted an investigation of the 71 -year~ld , Douglas for about s e v e n : months, said he plans to out· line the results of his probe in a House speech \Vednesday. He said publication of the article, a condensation of Douglas ' book "Points of Rebellion," in Everg ree n magazine "~as the stra"' lhat broke the camel's back ." "If there ever "·as any doubt about the need for im· peachment proceedings against Justice Douglas they were eliminated by puh!ication of the April issue of Evergreen," the GOP Leader said: After Ford makes h I s speech, Reps. Louis C. Wyman (R-N.H.), Joe Waggonner Jr. (l).La.), and others plan to in- troduce .a reso luti on calling for creation of a specia l com- mittee to investigate possible impeachment of Dougla s. Ford said to avoid any partisan tinge he would not join in sponsoring lhe resoJu. lion, but added he would personally vote lo impeach Douglas. B uses R oll In Florida BRADENTON, Fla. IAP) - Yellow schoo l bu s e s transporled blac k and wh.ite children to thei r new classrooms today in A1ana tce County as off icia l s im- plemented the desegreg ation plan blocked last week by Gov. Claude Kirk. Some 2,600 <>f the county's J7,000 public school pupils were sent to new schools to provide the 81).20 black-white ratio ordered by a U.S. district jud ge. Th e plan also Crans(ered 107 teachers. Kirk wa~ at the state Capitol in Tallahassee when the busing began. School Supt. Dr. J a e k Davidson sald everything wu ORDER THIS WEEK! Af ot//er's Dt1y tle/lve l'JI • IS Sf/// /llflfflhteet/l Mother's Day Portraits that say 11We love you!" special • one Bx 10 for you lo keep • two 5x7 for Grand mother& • si>i wallet-size for the fam ily Bring both your children in now ••• and • there's no extra charge fo r lhe famiJypetJ ·Remember you can charge it at Penney 's. 99 workmen rtmoved the battery P:t,ILLllTON tl UMTINOTOll •IAC.N NIWl"CHIT •IAC" of telephones Kirk had In-or•Mtftt c .. ,.,. H""'tinoion c"'"'" ,,.,.kilo 1111M Agnew Raps Open College Admission · DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew says It is a serious educational mistake to Jet unqualified students attend the nation's universities in order \to meet social goals. Condemning both the open admission and quota systems, Agnew asserted M o n d a y night: ;'For each youth unprepared for a coUege currlculmn who is brought in uqder a quota sys tem, some better prepared student is denied entrance." Agnew,\ here to address some 3,000 Republicans at a Probe Opens For Medina ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -A closed-Ooor hearing into Anny charges against Capt. Ernest / L. Medina in the alleged My Lai massacre begins today at Ft. McPherson. The hearing is to detennine whether Medina will face trial by court-martial. Medina is charged with responsibility for all slayings wh.ich. allegedly occurred in the 1968 attack an the Viet- namese village. He says he has been infonned that the civilian deaths at My Lai number •at least 175." $50-a.plate dinner, said, 111 do not accept the proposiUon that every Am erican boy and girl should go to 1 four-year col· lege." ''for coll e ges and universities to deliberately draw Into a high ~~ademic en: vlronment studenta wbo are unquaillled lntelleetu~Uy or whom the primary and secon- dary schools . h a v e con-- spJcuously failed to prepare ls to create hopes whie are Funeral services were doomed to dlsappolnbnent," held In p~-vill p ~~ e, a., he said. .-M on da y f o r John The vice president said O'Hara, famed writer, there should be "ezpanded who died over the week- educatlon opportunities fo r end at the age of 70. deprived, but able Yo un g Among his novels of the people" but declared he "ea s t e r n establisJi.. favored ''b e t l e r preparing ment" were "Ten North them -with add J t Ion a I Frederick" and "But- governmenl as!lstan(..-t -in terfield 8." some form or prep school ----------11 rather than tossing them into a four-year c o ll ege or university curriculum they are not prepared to handle." "Certainly no young man or woman with ability and talent should be denied," he said. He added, however: "Any attempt to subordinate the great universities of this country to soCial goaJs for which they are ill-designed and ill-equipped can on 1 y result In tragic ~es to both these instituUons and t be na tion." Suha rto Visit Sla ted in May JAKARTA , Indonesia (AP ) -President Suharto eipecta to leave for the United States May .26 for a lo.day official visit, a pr es ident i al s poke s m a n said ·today. Suharto will beret urn l n g President NiJ:on's .visit made during blJ Asian tour wt Ju. ly. TLMSdlf, Aptlf 14, 1970 DAILY I'll.Or f WATCH CRYSTALS . . ' • e SHATTllPROOI'. e WA111. USISTANT e DUllAIU e CWR HADINe '$300 ( YALUI APRIL \1 . ntau AP11L 11 MIN'S WAJCHIS ONLY (P...., c.,...1,.1tlthtt1 Hlfhw) DIAL REFINISHING 11P011 APTn Aprtl 14 ..,_ """' 21 Most Watchll "Thi Stor• Thi1t Confid1nc1 luil+11 .• j(;rk• .::.~~r... .~~~ ~r.: .. -. -. Opoo M-n.s., l'ff, T1I t ,.... For 56~ a week more you can live fla111elessl}! ( Like in heaven ) You deser.ve the comfort of an all-electric Medallion Home. A nd for an average of only 56¢ a week more in utility bill& you can h ave it. The cost of electricity for the average all·electric Med allion Home is only 56~ a week more than the co st of both gas and electricity for th e typical home using gas. (Established in a survey of more tha n 8,0CO h omes. Bills were typical of a family of four living in a 3·bedroom home.) Half the homes surveyed were all-clccrric Medallion Homes, where everything wa11 run by electricity-no gas. Electric cooking. Electric heating. Electric water heaters. The other half of the homes surveyed used ga5. Herc arc the findings: Average Weekly COsl or Electricity Average Weekly COit of Gas Total Weekly Cost -Gas and Electricity Exira Weekly Cost ai All·Electric Homes 'All·ElECTAtC HOMES $5.44 ·D· $5.44 .56 ... HOMEI $2.61 2.27 $4.BS Wouldn't you prefer a cle3n1 cool; flameleSs electric kitchen? A q uiet, clean, space-saving elcct'ric water heater? Flameless electric heating with room-by-room temperature conrrols? An all-elecrric Med allion Home has them- plus built·in provisions for the all·clcctric future . for the good clea n life-live electrically. --'"'I: It's mote than worth the 56¢ a week. :::::J- Sout/Jern California Edlaon going smoothly. As he spoke, \ stalled In Davidson's office .. ""'· ... -,, when he took over the school ,_.... rfOOI', .,....,., ,,_ nw, m 7 m -.. 1 ----------------------------------------------..-.---syslem lul w"'k. '------------------- 1• •• , . •• ' • ' .. ,, t• • -•\ I ~ • ·• . ,\ . . • ' r ' i I • I I • . ' . • •AO.Y PD.GT EDITGIUAL PAGE Saving the Sant~ Ana To u.e cndlt or a 110UP or lanllhted ea....rv.11o .. a l'ICNIU..,.mllldecl reoldml• ol Orange, Rlverald• ~ Sen Bemanllno counties, a movement to preserve tho s...ta Ana River bUin from moUnWA ,&OUtea' to coa"'1 moulll has been under, way ainc8 !Ona before tl>e clll'ftllt llJlti.P9lluUon clamor be~an. ' llllPlred by •\11164 Pacific Coast ma;aztne article ·-t the eucceu of tho Save the AmuicaD River M- aoclatlcm, the citiieni formed the Tri-COW1ty Conser· vallon LeaJUe, headquartered in RJvenlde.1 Tbolr &oil !1' to uve Southll'll California's last ~ anpaved river u a priceleu auet for residents ot an lhNt coanli•. (Tbe river Is larlOlY in Its ortilnal atate ucept for a conll'Olled ditch acroH Orange Coun- ty on Its final NII to the oc11n, the Prado Dam IIld dn-for lrr\pllciD ) strong support. ba( -bulldinf to the point wllere a s.....af111 Olllcome 'PPfUI to 'be beUA!r than u ...,. bet, d .. plte,baYIDf lo· oaat,end ,wJtJi the red "°" and bureaucratic JatbariY,or !adlfference of more ~ llO governm~lal ••eacllt, plu private lindown· •!'I alon1 the river: Now arrayed in commm resolve to achieve this ~i:vatlonal and 'reerelitloilil ·goat ·are more than 1,000 Individual members and 110 supporting organtza. tlGn1 Of TCCL. Tllay bave lmJM>tUDt·alllea.'oOlle ls·Oraii1e CoUllly, with lta oMi Feaiherty ,l\ffional.Puk. Tlit• occupies """" :llO·acreo alon& tliO nver, comb!~ oak groves, IP'lllJ' 0111ft ._ and rlverbaDll: foreat. e flnt phase II -open to the public. ' . ADolber .ming aDy 1' the Riverside County Parks D!ljlartment Moaey bu been made avallable for a first rlven!de. unit IJf'. l ,000 aert1, dtpendlng on fed· era! matclllng funda. Tbo plan la to buy river llild to llllt together existing partJ in Riverside to create a tare• nucleus-eventually to connect with the Prado Baetn area. . 'Af a colorful part o! this drive, some 1215 Tn.County Consefivation 1League members have . taken· to horse- back for a "coast to crest" trail ride along the Santa Ana. They're riding the 90 miles on three weekends- and hoping the day will come when there will be a riding trai~ if not a bridal path, all the way from the tjvermouth to mountain source. All who would like to give active support to this ''Save the Santa Ana" movement may do 50 by con. !acting the Tri-County ConoervaUon League .t Box 5513, RJverside, Calif. 92507. Day of Reckoning Tomorrow , the day of reckoning on income tax with both Uncle sam and the state of C&lifornia, will separate the ideologists from the pragmatists. The ideologists may st.Ul...be bravely asserting, but in a rnore feeble voice, ••tiles should hurt. Pay them in a lump sum." Pragmatists will answer, "Yes, taxes hurt enough as it ls. Let's reduce that April 15 pain." Even Governor Reagan has come out Of his "feet in concrete" stance and is now advocating wi~ holding of state income taxes. A very great many of his constituents will be wishing right now, aa they pony up lump sums, that withholding had become law in California long ago. 1 The time is Jong overdue when we not only make the income tax burden easier to handle, but alJO when those in·and--0uters who have left their share of the tax burden on regular resid ents of the state stopped escap- ing their share of the cost of government. -· ..... -. Non.Crooks Commit Most Guild of President. Draws Together in Common Sympathy ' Gun Murders Dear Gloomy Gus: I uodentood Law llllU,ol the state -code -111 illesal to put ' ....... public utility polD. pub- Ile lreOI, *· A ,_ caadldttel sale!' they wouldn i pollute the en- vin:runent wftb aigns. I'm taking down the names of 111 who vlolate this to be sure NOT lo vote for them. -J. w. awifUy and IO irmoctbly. • Tbere II analher Important plfCboJocical fedor involved b e r e , Sbaattnc ii 41ldlliltt: at a diJtance." 'lbe lllD lltlm to do the job, almoet m ktitamomly. Pew penons cou1cl bring 'lbomlolffl lo klD with a lmlle or other -thet II blbody, ,._, « in-'-IJ penantl. But the 11111 provld .. both ]illylical and p '· y c b o I o 11 c a I "dllltnct" ,_ Iba ktlllq, lllOlnl ti far ..... bnpenooal and - ' AMIRICANll AllE the mo 1 I munleroul J>.OOPle In Iba Weatem world, and the leaii ratrlc:tod In oar ..... lo ....,. <t all IOril. Eva the police In many European counltla do not CUTY Ill"" u • m1tter of COUl"ll; am wbtn the poUce do not Carr)' -. the crlmlntla do not Carr)' them either. Ordlntry cltlum rare!)' ... a .... The aiocan "PiOple Kill, Guns Don't," Is fabioul and mlsletdln&-P<ople don't kill w:ltb tbelr claws or thetr leelh, u animals do; they kU1 when, it teem1 easy, on the spur of tbe moment far more than 1n a pmntdltaled murder. And the aun II wbtt lj!W'l lhe DIOllltllL Stricter IUJl-<On• trot lsws may not deter crlmlntls, but will keep a lot <t peopla 1rom becomlnll crimlnall before lhe1 llnow wbtt ii h•P' penlng. D~rupters of Justice llJOUccmmlta_oll_llllM IOCiety you may bopl to escape - lion, but -DOI be.auprlled If ,OU .... L Yau may Nill capllft, llld K la then a.. duty " the trmllal -to •bdut yoa. You are enUUed tmder oar law t.o a fair llld public trial, with determlnatloo <t guilt or Innocence by a Jur1. Such a trial ipull -... -· " ptoCoctlaao GI,.... -rtpta. 'l'hil I)'-pravtlla In -walml jultlct, with «rltin important modlflca. tkn. It hN evolved over ctnt.ur1el, and. did .not J!Hnll· In> ucleot monarchlal -· It ii radically modified In. -., l<ltllttrlan -<t all kinds, when Iba -bt,. few If any n,hil. 1be Amtrican l)'ltcm rata1tn the fun. damealal rllht 10 defend younell when 1ccuffd. RtvoluUcmrl• hive no re1ard for thla right, and e,.n In· non· Judicial conlr«ltallonl ~ the right to shoot down lheJr -nta. rr II ABIJNDANTL Y clear that If OJch J111b11c 11pr.. u the Chicago Stven prll•~···~ the power to CONtitute and ad- -c:ourta <t juatlce, they would snot 11o n,htl, Im tpeOCb or other, IO Ille...-~ bofore them. But tbt moMlootrletwt btve -.. Oii In -I ~ trials hive a purpooe ,., ...,.... .... denltl "' lhe rlgbta "' .....- 'lbelr.I""• .. --• they them,.lv" pro-dlim, ,. io U11111111ttne anc1 a1sintegr1te ... ~ jadJdal ........ They do lhll i1J -disorderly b'h'l\I:· i 1 courts where thq m broo3J1i In trlrl frr Wbatmir oftlnle. They ma11ii~t U in -.0-Uon and oillctnily, or ~ CIOllUd wltb -cbarpd .. with m•lnlalnlns -deconnn. 'Ille aloo bln a tplnolf J!WP*, hopln& to ~ -btnh --"' natnlnt 1hlt Ibey can with -. pltlllibllily cbtrp they ... vicllmt cl a fuciltaodoty. IT IS EVIDENT no •Ylf<lll of Jllltlce coold endure If the dlmJptlons went unchallenged. RecenUy, the Uniled Stal .. Supreme Court. tn a unanlmous declahm unrelated to Utt Chicago case, empcwertd the District (trial) courts to put certain ex· traordinary ratralnta on defendants whl dimlpt their own !rials. 'Ille Judicial syst.m, Snd the reeling " lht -i., la chary GI impairing the rree form cl trial. But the hilh court held that trial courts may bind and gag con- tumack>us defendants, and evict them from lbe court when necasary to ~ cted witb the trial. The delicate quostlon whether 1 deftndW so evict~ loses lhc protection of the Sixth Amendment, which guarantees a "public'' trial and other due proc:iesaea, wM not touched by lhe d~sion. whicb wu 'Written by JuUce Black. It WU timely <t the Supnme Court to find tills cause, becau.w it would be absurd if a tree aoclety cannot protect Its ~udlcial foundation 111lrtiSt the gnawing inroads of a few thousa.nda malcontenta, who coold be hwtled before a r~lllfl BQUad for their tonduct tn half the nl· liool acrou Iba world tadai'· Time Heals Some Political Wounds WASHINGTON - Lyndon B. Johnson came back to town last week to villt with old frtenda and establllh the fact that he l<ls along fine with President Niloo. It -seemed like a coincidence. A ftw weeks ago Nixon told a visitor: ''I'm not one or those who runs down Lyndon Johnson.'' Johnson told a friend : "lbere never wa.s anything to the story that I hated Dick Nixon." Johnson explained, too, that he had never believed that a speech Nixon once made amounted to calling Johnson's revered senior, the late House Speaker Sam Rayburn, a traitor, and had tried, unsuccessfully, to conviDct: Rayburn of thaL Hany S Trum1n Is alto reporled feel· Jng better about Nixon since the Presi- dent sent out to Independence, Mo., the piano Truman used to play in the White Route. Tnunan was Jncluded jn the traitor charge attributed to Nlxon durint: the heat of a congressional campaign, a.od it '° rankled hbn he vowed never to alt al the same table with Nlzon. TIME BAS llEALED a few cl the wound• " Ille pall and the guild "' presidents bu drawn together In com· mon sympathy. No one la more un- derstanding of. a prt.lldent than an ex· Jl"elldeot, or bu more relson to be. ·,<'I( t.• '~f°lt. . .... R •~ •lion•; -............. _ ...... """",:.:..:...J The country Is getting harder to govern all the Ume, rarely harder than the last couple of years of the Johnson ad- ministration, and who knows what's ahead? Johnson is trying to get the record straight on what happened at various times in his administration, based on records and not recollection. If this con- founda the Jt<ry of a few old friends such as former Defense Secretary Clark Clif- ford on what happened and when, the record will still have to stand. That record, according to Johnson, 11how1 that he decided to wind down the war, stop the bombing of North Vietnam and generally move toward a lessening of military operaUoos after the TET of- fensive in early 1961. The contrary story la that CWford and bit associates op- posed and frultrated at that time the Pentagon'• reque:91: for a big increase in troop commibnents. It was not Clifford who proposed the bombing halt but 5ecrdary cl. State Dean Rusk with a full assist from U .N. Ambassador Arthur . . Goldberg, as Johnson tells it. THE POSTURE OF Clifford as a dove in the hawk's nest is thus refuted and the accounts of suc h tertiary officials as Townsend Hoopes, an assistant defense secretary, are set dowrr-as uninformed twaddle from one several Umes removed from central decisions. Rusk's primary responsibility for the bombing halt has since been confinned alld J"ohnson is gathering together ad- ditional evidence to show that he was already doing what the dovish elements urged and well ahead of them. • AU this will be in the former President's memoirs to be published next year and will undoubtedly arouse more controversy but in the end, w i t h Johnson's superior access to records, he is well on the way toward making his case slick. These post-presidential quarrels are not unusual. The historians are still trying to find out who was responsible for the isolation of Berlin as a western enclave in Soviel·held territory in World War II. Was it Roosevelt or General Eisenhower? 11fE CURRENT INTEREST centers more pointedly on the fact that President NJJ:on does not wish to embarras! former President Johnson in eatablishing what Johnson believes to be his own record as President. There is no attempt in the Nlxon id· ministration to blacken the rtc«'d of Johnson, no raking over of prior events. no rummaging around in closets far old skeletons as there was, for a period, when Eisenhower took over a f t t r Truman. Truman had cooperated in th e rehabilitation of President Herbert Hoover. who was in eclipse after lU!I defeat in 1932 but who died more than a quarter century later highly respected and with a revised public attttude toward his one-term presidency. Johnson, as president. established a relationship with General Eisenhower perhaps unprecedented in the cootact!I between presidents and ex·presklents, not in domestic matters because EisenhoWer approved little Johnson was doing in that · field, but over the broad range of in- ternatiopal security. This •Intimacy is not likely to be duplicated. betwetn Johnson and Nixon but there is quite obviously a significant degree of mutual re11pect whk:h now helps to make it ~ible for Nixon to carry out a consistent policy in Vietnam. For his part. Johnson is able to proceed with clarifying his record w i t ho u t partisan recriminations from the new ad- ministration. Disturbing Man's Biological Clock LONDON -The jet age is with us, but man apparently is not yet with the jet age. Flying from east to west or vice. versa still causes such diaortentaUon that the State Department directs k e y negotiators not to engage in sertoua talks unUI they have recycled their biological clocka. SI m j la r I y 1 most BrtUsh busl.neumen are forbidden by their fimu to algn any contract in the United Statu: unW at least 41 hours after a trans-Atlan- Uc flight. "The complex machinery ol the body, which is regUlated to a fairly constant program or sleeping and waking, rood and exercise, rtSt and sleeo, adapts only alowly to rapid time Wngu," said David Moreau, a director of the Syntex pbarmaceuUcal linn. fO ANALVZE the dlttuii>ances In man'• bJologica1 clock, the company Is ttud,ying a group of male and female volunteers between the ages of 20 and 40. 'llley will be shutUed bet-n London and Su Francisco in April. Four doctors accompany the volunteers · to administer tntenstve physiological tests enroute and eiamine blood aod urlne specimens every fou r houn around the clock. A novel aspect ol the>e tests Is the precbe measurement or hormone. produced by various glands. Specialists believe that the honnonH secre ted by the endocrine glands drive the human biological clock and keep the body time-oriented. \Vhe1 man i s .--•11 George ---. Dear George : J"m a doctor who's comtanUy &11· noyed by ~pie at partlea asking ror free medical advtce. Don't you think there lhould be a law about this? M.D. Dear M.C.: Gee, what do l know? Next llme you're.at a party why don't you gtt 1J0me lawyer off in a comer and ask him about it? (St.nd your problems to George for down-to-earth common-aense con!Ualon.) ~ ' I .1 ' abruptly transported across several time zones there la a lag before the endocrine system can adjUll to the change. Praumtbly, the normal rise and fall in the dally flow of hormones gears the brain and Jn tum the.body to differences In daytime and rdghtllme activity. THE MOST WIDELY btld theory is that the body'• biological clock ls cen· lered In the pituitary gland. Hormonal secretions from this gland instruct the brain. For example, In the normal 24-- hwr cycle, the gl&ndl 11tart sending· out hormones after the body has fallen asleep In order to infortn therbrain that the body m,U!t prepare Itself for waking in a few hours. Scientist! now ,rt in search of drugs which would reU.eve hwnan beings of "their need to accllmatlze to the circadian (14-hour daily) cycle. Passengers might take small doses of hormones so they coold safely slide their time cycles backwards or forwards . What side effects such hormones migbt. have on the human For Fairer Tax Balance Knowledgeable ta'payers realize that tax reform i! to a large ertent tax read-- justment. What most of us want is our money's worth from the tues we do pay, and if not a reducUon, at least the assurance that the overall tax burden ls belllfl equitably shared by all. There has been a long-Ume but little menUoned tax discrepancy 1n Calliornla between the 15 mllllon-plus customers of taxpaying investor-owned electric uUlities and the little over 4 million ltho are serv- ed by the non-tllJ)ll)'in& government· owned O)mpanitl. THE FOllMEll'S bills rtflect the 11111 million paid list year by investor-owned uUUties ln state income, local property and local !rancltlst levies. In contrast, utlUUa: owned and operated by local aovemme.nts or public districts pay no it.ate income Lax and In most instances lit~•. ~ no local "'" to supj)ort °" publk: 1Chool1 or higher education, and their cu5tomt:rs reap the benefit. ' ' TO OORREC'I' '1111S unfair lmbalajlCt of reapon~blllty foe tho COJta .r lmpori.nt public aervtces, Assemblyman WilUatn T. Bailey <t San Rafael, chairmlo o! Iba ---~ .... t i : Guest Editorial Assembly Revenue and Taxation Com· m.Ittee, has introduced a bi~, AB 908, which would Impose on the government.- owned electric uliliUe1 an nclse tax on operating revenues which would match the 14 pe:rtenl current average pald by their non-government counterparts. 111E BAGLEY BILL would allow municipal eleclltc systew a total credit of $15. l for any property taxes paid and for in lieu payments to the cities' general funds. Even with that credit, the pro- posed levy woukl raise approximately $28.& mUllon new revenue to hclp support public school•. Assemblyman Ba1ley has emphasized that hls ,neasure ls In no way an at.tack on govemmenl-owned utility operations. tt ls not • public vt. print; Pl)lffr issue. It i.s 4imply11 aound mc:,lhod;of cquallzi't\i among ,.u electrtc uuuµes customeh t.M.lr share of lhe tax burden rcqulredl \o keep •Sfntlal atate 1ervlces In operation. CalUorDla Feature Scr\ltce mechanism have not yet been fully e1· plored UNTIL THE anU·Ume pill Is 1nvented, - tourists and bu~inessmen alike will have ~ to suffer. tli8ht crews, however, are In tt' slightly different c a t e g o r y . TM : physiological effects they endure are I partly counteracted by training a""' habit. ,: One businessman who makes lrequen ; New York·t<>-London crossings brldges. the discomforts ol the six-hour difference' by going to bed immediately after hu(; arrival in London at 8 a.m. in the mo':""l ing (2 a.m. New York Ume). By noon he wakes up and has breakfast on hi.a New'1 York Umetable. That night he forcei himself to stay up late by going out on j the town. When he wakes up the neJlt 1 morning, he is completely recycled for 1 a typical London work day. I A time pill could ha\le other important · applications. When astronaut! travel to j the moon, for example, they gradually I Jose all• sense of time -a concept rela-j live only to the rotation of the earth. ·· Hunger, seasickness, and the cycle-of fertilization all have been displaced over the last two decades by various pills. Jn the science-licUon era j'Ual ahead, time is obviously next. \ --~-- Tuesday, April 14, 1970 The tdiCoriol J'dOI Of tht DcflU Pilot seeks to inform and ttfm.. ttlate reader1 bt1 J>rt!tnting th.ii ne10.rpaper'1 opiniotu and cOm. mentar.11 on l0pic1 of intut1t and significance, bt1 provtdino • forum for t1'e erpressfo:A of our readers' ophtkml, and bg presenting tht dfver1e ofew- points of info1"1U!d obtft'IJtrr o.nd ipoktsm.en on topics of tht daw. Robert N. IVtod, Publisher _____________________ .;_ ___________________ _ ___ L ______ · ______ ._· ____ _ • l J ¥.arm(ul S~oking Comes 1in Morning lly L. Ill. BOYQ AT JW.m ii a re~ on the w~e -qui11 her job lo have a baby. 'lbat'i no vacation. Her workln& -. are uid to Jump fnlm lO to 14 (>OT 11eek ... aa or ln Penmy1vula?" A. \Ke lucky wJm that -· On Little Ralox Cr<elL Near Burkesville. The old boy who Burkesville. The old boy who struck it In 1119 wu drWlng for w ate t. Pennsylvania's Titusville Fiekl dldn 't come in unUI 30 years later ••• Q. "You ------------------------ Tuowy, Aorn 14, 1970 DAILY PILOI' f Man Held --in Murder Case : BEVER!. Y HILLS, call!. llailGD, olllcen said. A stray mortally 11ounded . . (AP) -Poll<e aay E...,.,. slue wouod_ed a ~-in Friedman w .. booked for Frloclman shot and killed a · tbe leJ. U... Walla fell ' lnvesti,atlon of murdor. tnlCk driver be held mponol·J _;:::_.;:!:__;=:__;=:__;---:..::..-;;-:--:-:--::-- ble for the traffic accident detllh of bl1 yoong ,... last September. Lou T. Watts, S7, the driver, fell -under a fUtlllade of pi>tol fin Monday outaide the Munlclpal Court bulldiq. fl' r J 1 dman, a 43-year--old employ< ol the Los Anceiel Counly Real Eftate MllDOi<'" · ment Department, had been seeking for months \tO have Watts Prosecuted for the death of the boy who was struck wblle bicycling. Ethan, 10, "" Friedman's only child. TSE OPllllATOR of -of those computer dating services admiU JWivately the girls who want to meet men outnmnber the men, who want to meet girls by about 15 to one. mlPI uk your Love and War , man lllla: Which has the bet· SABOTEURS BOMB BERKELEY HIGH VOLTAGE LINE 'l11e cltatrtct" attorney aald there wu no eVidence to juaUfy a prooecutioa. Fried- man hired a pivate m. vestlgator, ..._ nport failed to alter the situation. Watll told lnveati,aton the boy had swerved suddenly and he couldn't avoid him. ter chance of making a sue-_____ c_._in_pua:.,..._· _B_l•_c_k_ac1_o_ut_Wh_•_n_B_l_•_•l_To-'pp'-'-l•_•_l...;lg:.....P_ow_•r_T_ow_•.,.• ___ _ ceu ol 1 aecend marrlqt -a widow flt a divwcee?" A. 'Ibe widow, be aaya; Later, police said, Watts \Vas found to have four driving ll001ses obtained by giving false tnrormatkm. SEX -'-In JucualOI other than En&J.iab, .. you tnow, in- -oble<U ore giveo a ·sender. So here'• a moment's wor1h of game !or· Uio dll!M' table. What'• the lex ol • typewriter -male or female? How about a bicycle -la 1llat a ht or a abe? And·tbe titcben' sink -is it male or·female! Ships are always she. So are cars. Alrplanes, too. Even Anny tankl. Why! OPEN QUES'nON -How many drlnb 1hould a' bartendet" know how to fix to be eooaldered a food pro- f esaional? L\Tl!:BT STA'l'lmCS In- dicate only u..e out of 10 teena&e glrll .. steady • • • AMONG TSE GROVNDS for divorce in Cb In a is lo- q u 1c Iou1ne1 s ... A MATRIMONIAL E X PE RT named G. D. Hamiltan claims the avenge man has three )ove affairs before marrlale ..• T H 0 S E PROFESSIONAL SNIFFERS employed by the perfume makers to determine whether the product is marketable ani known in the 'industry as •JDC:lllt:S. ", • ."I SAY MORE than a foarlh of the fin&nclal support fOr our · pibllc unlvenlties comes out ' of our Wes," writ.es a Lot · Anegles client, The gentleman rhas tt right. Just 21 percent, to ,be es:aot. ,, CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. 1"Are hibernating bears ~ dangtrOUI?" Fairly, Part •Jlani<n uy llley'n pretty easy to wake up . .-.Q. '.'Settle .·an argument. Whert was this coantry's flral oil well, In Tex· INVENTION -·Tbe llGWld engineen have come up with a rig whi<b leli them play back a tape-recorded talk at double speed withoul-mO!ng it llGWld like chipmunks. Mo 1 t I n- genklUS. 'Ibey call · it a hannooic oompreuor. T b e American Foundation for I.be Blind is ll!ing it to record books. Now the blind can listen to auch at up to 400 words a minute. AN AtJmOIUTY on auclt matters aays Man ii the only animal with the capacity to feel aorTY for hlmlelf. . .OF COURSE, it's widely known that fathers wttb daughters but no sons are the best-dress-- ed men. . .TSE MBDICAL FELLOWS claim the most harmlul cig~e of ,the day ia the one you amote before breakfast. DOG LORE -When con· fronted by a strange dog , the thing to do is ho1d your arms straight down at your sides with your flsta closed and talk gently. '?bat's the· advice of a canine . authority com· missioned to tell postmen how to bandJe themselves in said ~1tuation. To a man, a cloted fist is ominoua, he saya, but to a dog it is the open palm that is the threat. Your qutltiom and com· mtnts ore welcomtd and wilt be u.ttd fn Checking Up 1Dhe1'e~ pasriblt. A~ dress Utte1'1 to L. M. BOl/d. P.O. Boz 1875, N01Dp<>rt Beach, CoUf. 92660. .. Judge Issues Restraint; ; Trees Safe for a While . MOORPARK (AP) -Ven- tllra Superior Court Judge ~=1y'Mv~ :!. ~ · remain Jn the way of workmen attempting to widen California 111 on the wut edge of Moorpark. Beach issued a temporlJ')' restra..inlng order M o n d a y preventing worker• fr o m cleartng what remains of a grove of It eucalyptus and pepper tree.a, ~ ol them 70 years okl. . He aebeduled a hearing -Monday c:n a permanent io· junclion aplmt nmovlng the Ima. >.. many u 150 students from nearby Moorpark Jun!Or College have demonatrated to save the treu, ~ by cliJnb.. ing In them. Dr. Stephen Herzog, chaitman of the social science department at the junior col· lege, IOOlht the Injunction, auerting "the ecolop::al value or the trees to hu~n life .•• Bacon General Engineering Co. of Omard, through a Department of Highways con- tract, had cleared 5li of the trees before the temporary restra1nlnl order WU issued. WANTED! Men And Wome11 Wltll A Desire To le On TeleYlllon. ARE YOU OVER 217 CAN YOU TAKE DIRiCTIONS7 Tako I Productions, Inc. la ,.,_ Te An....,.. ~~lnl Of OUr Now HOUYWllOD TAllKT POOL fer AM.TS TO -'UDmON ON-CAMlltA CALL 714-547°6251 TAKE "1" PIODUCTIONS, INC. HOl.L YWOOO, CALIF. '. Berkeley Power Tower Hit By Bomb Blast; No Injuries On March 9 police arrested \Vatts for invesitgation of driving with a revoked license. Police said Friedman wa~ at. Munlcipal COurt when the case came up Monday, talked with watts brieny outside t h e building, then began firing ao automatic pistol at him. BERKELEY (AP) -Tile University or California cam· pus operated today with power carried by a temporary wooden pale after an 8(1..foot steel tower was knocted over Monday by a bomb uploslon. Most of the campus was without power Monday from 11:48 a.m. until about 7:30 p.m. The Lawrence Radiation Laboratory a half mile away, went on emergency pawer shortly after the blast. Tile two main aceelerators had not been in use. Oakland police a r e In· vestigating the explosion, the fifth in two years at utility towers oper;11ted by Pacific Gas & Electric Co. There were no injuries. The tower dangled 12 feet above the ground, supported by one of the two 115,0QG.vclt lines it carred. Later tt was removed. Watts ran toward the "i'ear entrance of 1 nearby police Beausoleil Speaks; Says Manson Slayer Berkeley poUcfi also were trying today to determine who threw two firebombl against the frool: facade of t h e Berkeley police station late Sunday. , nie small explosion sCorch· ed the cement structme, but no injuries or other damage was reported. Several police were injured In a bombing at the stalk>n parking kit in February. Anti-ROTC Rally Held At Stanford STANFORD !UPI)· -About 700 penona attended a con- vocation on ~violence Mon· day night at Stanfor'd University , scene ot several recent anU·ROTC demonstra· tiOfll that resulttd in van- LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Robert Beausoleil, a member of the "Mamon FamUy" on trial for the 1laying of a 3f.. year..old mus~cian, testified Monday the ktlllng was com- mitted by hippie cult leader Charles' Manson . Beausoleil, 22, took the wit· nesa stand to accuse Manson of stabbing to death Gary Hin- man three weeks before the Tate.LaBianca klllin&s. Previous witnesses had te• tified that 8eJtUSOleil kllled Hinman with a bowie knife., At his first trial, which ended in a hung jury, BeaU901eil did not take the stand. He told the jury he went to Hinman's home with two fe- male members ol the cult to try to force him to give no,ooo to the famHy. He said he te~ ·- phoned Manson at the cult hangout of the Spahn Ranch and told him Hinman had of· fered to give only $100 or $a)O. Manson came to Hinman's home looking "very fierce and very keyed up," Beausolell said. The defendant said Man- son "slashe~ the bagpipe musi· clan across the face with a sword and beat him over the head with the hill. Manson left, Beausoleil said, but came back a RCODd: time and talked with the musician about moving to the rancil, be- coming a memj>er of the fam· ily and "living like a king." When Hinman said be didn't want to give up his Buddhist sect or his friends, Beausoleil s.Ud Masori pulled out a krdfe and stabbed him twice in the stomach. Stepfather Denies He Killed Boy . LOS AN,GELES (AP) - Ronald Fouquet has denied beating his S.year-<1ld stepson lo death, saying the boy sud· den1y got sic~ and died. Fouquet, 31, on trial charged with first-degree murder in the death of Jeffery Lansdown, told Superior Court dalism. The convocation. called by the Studen'ts SpOnsoring Com· mlttee, WU told by antl·ROTC leader Paul Rupert that the greatest task facing "the pro- ponents of non.violence is the elimination of ROTC off the . . tC ti..· eoOI Brake la tho ftRt big achanco 11\ brake nnlngl In 20 y .... It etope ,ou cold. * Rogula', -· dlac brakn. * Atl-lc& lonlp..._ .. · * tnatalllid In 90 ft!l!Nloo. J • '~ F~ brake adJUltmtnta '°'\ht nte of ,our car. * "Non·Pf1)rattd guarafttu tors year• or 31,000 mll• (whkhever coinel llrat).' campus" Rupe.1 bead 0( the Stanford * U.. your BilnkAmerlcard, M11te' Charge,. 11o(f.ROTC·• nlovetneilt said ~ mo4'to1lcompanfcreditcM'dS,orourown >' ••there 11hould .ha Ve i, e e n lliiahCtng. i :-: -' •• • ·· ~; ., • · · ·~ man:bes when Pre1ldent p·------(Kenneth)•Pl~r 1>'1•bed the ~~ .. ROTC vote through tho faculty · · Sl'l!CIAL,_CTOIH! pFFER senate." ;&;: i:. • 1 About 150 persoM earlier ~~ · ' ;~~ i: co~~:~~~ I S "1 ' t;~e: ... ~ "0 was held. The marchers were Iii\ , " . .;.....~ I .1 addressed by John Grube, . . . &o.•f1 • • n. member of th~ univen1ity's I on a set of new CCX5L BRAKES Council of Presidents. -"The idea· of this march" Tlk• thl~ cour,n to your . Atkins Immunity Nixed jurors Monday he dkln 't notify authorities because be "had a police record about half.a-mile long. "I didn't want to 1et ar· he said, "was the result ~f BIG· BR~;i~ ~ .I c o o c e r n directed at the Off9f Umlted to on•~ folt. v Io I enc e sur,rouncling the -·--ROTC question. • , ; . LOS ANGELES (AP) -A judge has denied a motion to dismiss charges against Susan Atkins, whole gand jury teatimony helped lead to the Tate.L&Bianca murder cue c:har1ea. Mias Atkin1, usually ailtnl in coort, laughed Monday at one point in the hearing on the m· motion. Judge Malcolm M. Lucas of SUperlor Court ruled that there were su[flcieht grounds to hold her for trial, due to her statements before the Grand Jury lut Dec: 5. Dave Shinn, her attorney, rested for manslaughter or contended there w a s in· something,'' he testified. sufficient evidence to support His wile, Betty Lansdown Song Hits Top the indictment and that she Fouquet,. aald the boy dJed four years ago after beatings HOLLYWOOD ( u P I ) -hadn't voluntarily given up her and mistreatment by her hus· Merle Haggard and his song constitutional right !o remain band. The mother said the "Okie from Muskogee" won silent when she testified boy's body was taken to a five award! Monday night lo· before the Grand Jury. Saugus canyon. A skeleton eluding song of the year at the "It clearly shows the round later was never fifth annual Academy of Coun· desperatk>n of Susan Atkins in positively Identified because of try and Western Music awards seeking to recant her Grand Its condition. banquet. Jury testimony," ntorled Vi·;;:;;==================-.1 cent BuglJO!I, deputy district attorney. Miu Atkins then laughed aloud. BIBLE THOUGHTS Someday all tax services will be computerized. I WE ARE TODAY DISCIPLINI i1 •11 lrt1port•t1t l ibl• princi · pl•, -1 H•b. I 2:5·11 ) , A child who r1bel1 MUST ft1 dl1t!pll11ed. If net. he will r•b1t e9eifl ind 191in e11d will 10011 be btyond p•rt11t•I guid1nee. Othen. l po11ibly the LAW! will h•"• to clici111i11e hi111. !lret• t11t elev PERM ISSIVENE:SS li11•tted el cll1· ci111ifte ) it th1 9reele1t thrt1t to "e11r \ BlNEFICIALll!fsrnv1cEs $S ' COSTA MllA J7' 1.1 .............. .... ,,. lt....-.mJ. ,,,. .............. .. ANAHllM , .. Mfft, liMl W. Llllcelll-m:·77M 11ff w. 1..11 , .. ,,.. ..a.n• *2 W, L.._ An_..,.lllt °""'= ........ ' ,. ..... 1 °'" • ·- 111tioft. 6•'· •1100 m111f •••rci1• .ti1cipli11t wht11 reb•llleft occ.urt. Ott.er· wl1t, ht wo11ld cee1e lltin9 God! Wh1n Ade111 r•b•lt1d, God ·coultl 11ot legicelly wllhheld .tl1d11lin••V ectlon. Ht HAO te reect •t•i111t thet r1b.llie11 er ct•tt bei11f ~od. Tlti1 pri11ciple 11 wtll und•nteod. If Wod i1 to be 6od througl<iout E:t1r11ity, he f1'1u1t e11:erci1e di1ei• plin e i11 the h1r11fftr, Soult who rebel •91hut 6ed 011 tirlh will feel God'1 di1cJplinery ection thre11the11! ettrflity, I Mett. , 21141 , 2 Cer. 1:10). Obetlience to 6od 111 thl1 Ille will 9uenl eg1/,.1t u1111ltet•nt di1clpl!11t h1re1f11r 1M wlll mte11 h1ppjnt11 111 the tfornel lilt. J11111 1eld. "Ht thet btltt••th end 11 b•ptl11d the11 be •••H-", M•. 1•:1•. He"t YOU ebtyed thi1 co111m•MI· me11f7 Wilt YbU rtbel e91in1! 6ed by rif111l119 te be ftepti1e4, encl 1ufler di1eiplin• throu9he11t tter11ity7 Vi1it Church ef Chri1!, 211 W. Wi11011 St .• Colli Me1e, C•lifer11i1, •114 let 111 •ul1t De Cool lrakl: •~'1 al; Ilg Brlkl Sii.tr c.nttrl. Costa Mesa 3181 Harbor Blvd. IJ_,. S.9'l ef S.. Dl..- fTHweyJ (714) 549-4022 13311 Brookhurst St. 10.. WMll Nortll ef .... Gor.ft PNow-,.1 (714) 638-0911 Huntington Beach 16091 Boaeh Blvd. co .. w.u ....... S.DI ... ,,....,, 1714) 147.0011 Santa Ana . 626 w. 17th SITH! (714) ·-· you le lie ,beptitfd. Phert•: 541 -5711 , '4•·5161 . ~~~~~~~~b:::::~==========~~~~~--,.,.-:~ . • • • . . : stereo 103F~. ' • the ·SoUnds of the harbor ' • . • _ldS'5f1-~You\re never .heard it so good ' ,. \ • ~· • ·• !I ' • • ' .. .. ... . ! DAll.Y I'll.OT 11For. The :~Record ·I ARBUCKLE 6 BON WetlcHff Morblary 11'1 E. 11111 SL, C..ta Meaa -• BALTZ MOR'IUARIEI! """"" dtl Mar OR Ul5I c:.ta M-Ml WCI • BELL BROADWAY MOR'IUARY Ul~c..to- ' • JllU)AY BllOTllDll ....... v..., . ~ 1'1'11-Bhd. -.....-1G-m1 • PACIFIC VIEW MJl:MORlAL PARK Cemelery e M-ary . Clla~ SSM PHllle Drive . Newpan -•, Cal1fornla -' . • PEEi[ l'AMILY . COLONIAL nnlBlW. . ---A ... 'If--• l&UIEK MOaTl1AftY '--.._lllS : .. Orr , -..... . • ~~ . .,,_ .. B ·--din . /vtly'• Fun Mt .., flld. .... wt' " .... ,.. II M ... 11 Ult Dolll.Y llLOT. WILSON SCHOLAllS -UCI senlon who have Woodrow Wilson Fellowships cllJcusa plans for graduate work with Dr. Henry Cord Meyer of UCI faculty (right). Students are (from left) James L. Croyle, W. Lance Bennett, Phyllis Ill.' Jolmsoo. and Stephen W. Coon. Students Win Wilson Fellowships SANTA ANA -A Santa Ana ~man who mutmninded the borgJary last June 5 o I Berk.shirt's Restaurant I n Newport Beach has d e e n aenteooed to ooe to 10 years in mt. prison. Superior Court James F. Jtidge'1 sentencing d Anthony Umberto Rossi, 33, closes the case that began when three men broke into die restaurant at 34$0 Via Oporto and took nearly $5,000 in cash and checks from the off""' sale. JOOn George Fillzzola, 48, Las Vegas, is currently serv· jng a one-year tenn in the COllllty jail !or his part In the break·in and will be placed on five years probaUon on his nfease. 'lbeir alleged companion In 1he Berkshire's burg I a r y. Henry William Willminl, Ill, of 21• Rep.\blic Ave,. Colta lttesa, was cleared ol. ~al charges alttt be t..tfllelt at length .., the trio's organiza· Uoo o/ the Newport heisL Wi.dow Gets $1 Million FUILERTON -A Fullerton woman who was widowed and lost her two sons when her husband's light plane crashed within sight ol the famny home has bttn awartred $1 million in damagt.a by an Orange Coonty Superior Court jur)'. Judge Robert Beyard to1> firmed that award to Mrs. Juanita E1efther and h e r tbrte-ytar~ld daughter, Lynn, after a two-wttk. trial in which the cue was defended by Beech Aircraft Corp. o I Wichita , Kan. 11>e aircrall fltln denied D<gllttnce In the manufacture of lhe 1 t I 4 Beecbcralt Debonair whith mJlitd March 3. !Ml, .. it lpproached Fullerton olrport. Killed In the cralb ,..,.. Nldlolu Angelo Ele!lher, &t, llld hll two -AQstlo Olis, ll, ad Nyco, 10. It was -• the trial that • dtftd ii • fUeJ cttl WU the --cl~ (allure. schoob provide winllen with araduate felkwnhips. T he names ol the J,152 studtots who received honorable men- tion also .are bein& circulated among the graduate deam. Croyle, of 13186 Rodhill Av~, Tustin, i! amoq 100 W-.W Wllaon Delignates .. lected for top honon and $1',000 awards for ,.aAnved nowch, t<avtl er llody dur· "Vic tims of Flood To Get F etkral A id SANTA ANA -Property owners; especially those in can- yon aresa . of th• county, whose holdhlp suffered debris damage during the floods of January and February, 1969 may now apply for financial aid. A new federal law provides ror the first tJme direct monetary reimbursement to private property owners. The law prbVide!I federal funds for expenets incurred by owners for removin1 or disposing of flood debris depoolted 00 pro- perty. Debris ts defined as material deposited uJ>On the pre-flood area which is so heavy or voluminous as to be difficult to move to a disposal Teach-in At Fullerton FUILERTON -Cai State Fullertoo ls staling an en- vironmental teacbsin April 22 to bring knowledge of pollution control to campus students. The event, entitled "Earth Day." will begin at la.m. with films and slides on en- virorunenta1 pollution a n d booths sponsored by local businesses and organlzatlorui conctmed with the potluUon problem • The Earth Day is part of a national campaign involving thou•andll " coll•g• a!!d hl&h IChool campuses. Accordlng to Cal Stat. Fultert.. Ecology Action ltudtnts, tbe . teach-in wu developed to lmpn!sa upon the publlc the needs lot enviromnentaJ control. site, lcconfini to County Flo- od Control Chief Engineer Adler Wins JC Honor . LIGAL NOl1CE . T .... ... -.-,,..------- ------- ---. - I ' T u [ ., IJ ;\ I ..... Ill~ ~·· .. -(C) (IO) JMrt OU• .. jlh7. ··--(C)(lO) • c. '" ,., 1*1 4C) (30) ... ._ ..... _ ... .,, ............ ,....ii.ta. 8 1'WAR AND ltEACE"! * ~1rt 2:....itENRY FONDA, AUDREY HEPBURN-Cir • • Sil l'a.d: MeN: (C) .... ... ,_.. M II («11111) '5&- HtllfY FoMI, Aildrey Hepkra, llltl F•l1f, Yittotio Ghlml11, Aftltl U· "'" Joh• llllllt. ,...,.. • ., " Cr:1rllt 111.11111 .. it ,,.,.,.. for the attKk ., "·-· IJ ......... (30) mno -<CJ <"I •• "" (C) (IO) 117J ()] AIC --(t) (30) e -.rs ....r (30) "lnllntl W•ttrwr #1." A bi' tllrotP tM IQ 111111 Wlltrwq frtnl Chtrlel· flll, s.c.. • St. Aullldint. Flt. Ill (I) .. -(C) (lO) ·-(30) Ill• -(30) Cll-lo"' -(C) (IOI Jttli: White, NH Or1ilr, Gilorlt Grlll', htti lnbe. '°" t r ·, f .., : .-, i ... --( .... ) '3&-ltttlllrilll H~ '*" Hef· 1111. DAmME MOVIES 1:30• (C) ..... ti R11 41 a· (~) 'to -..... '•· ..... .,..,.. W Tlfk" {dflJM) '51 It Aubrer. ~ry Gr1nt, JHn111 Cf1!11. e JOB PRINTI NG e PUBLICA '{IONS e NEWSPAPERS Quality P'rintin9 end Oap1ndahle S1nic1 for mor• thi n • 41u1rtar el a century. ' PILOT PRINTlt·;G J:JI 1 WDT IAIM).A llft., NIWPOlT llACH -l4MJl1 ----~--- . ' ~OltrM-t: s elk•••\ Al• Pl.Jlftf 2 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS • HELD OYER 5 Academy Award1 • UMUl'l.fll .. Sfall .!iELD OVER •• Ac1domy Winner 1 . · Best Actor NI> .JOliN . . Iii.IN KIM ! ntE SUNDANCE Ka:> WAYNE • CAMPeW. • DMBY ALSO -., LI,. MIR1telli "THE STERILE CUCKOO'' 81r91in Mltlnu Wedn1scl1y, 1 p.m'. ,.. •• ••" llfl• I 1111~~~~-I ALSO -., MAGGIE SMITH S.1t Actress u·z· damn near kn.ocks you o~t ·of your seat." -hulM KHI, Tho -Yorllff . . "An 'A' for ·z·. Stands without peer as a document and thriller." -Judith cr1et.N11C -Tv An N.G.C. Theatre -SOUTH COAST F--. ~ ox l"LAZA THllATlllE. ~. ""Dife! '"'""" 11 lrlslol • 511·2111 __ s T A R T s T 0 M 0 R R 0 Tursd'ay, lprtf t•. tm , , P~ILY PJL!! .l. • • • a•ACM . AT •u.1• • • MUNTINOTO,N aiaAC" • M?·•M• Ac...,A.-WIMl9f BEST··~~· -GOL'DJE HAI~ I JA'ilu M1 1 I m I ' _.... ' ~WWllO .... .. ............... ...., ...... ... ·----l•hrt er .... • ll;lf ...... 1u,.. Steve McQUeen "The Reivers· Ac-..,, AwiaHI WI""' BEST ACTOR -JOHN WAYNE- ' -I i l ECMNICOl.OPI• ·,. "/1./\/1.f.<>UNl "S.~t I ~· a· . "BT .PICIURE OFTllYHll" ·~ Bo.td,,, Rt--Abo ' . WOODY ALLEN In "TAKE THE. MONEY AND RUN" 4 Wialertf .. ,., ..... ........ 0..1 . . . ' ..... _tl ....... 1-Mltl- "' 1"111.1.llllO'llCM l'llOOUCno.i , Nlllll llm/llll01 lll.P I D 1 CIR(l 111D1 m j BlllT lllWllllll Clllllll ..._111...,.tm1DQ·.--amms·...-11~Wli*·...,...••·••-· . ·1--.... -1 00 ..==i::.-:r.=.l-C ALSo-.ACAD. N0'9'1NEI "PIOl'LE SOUP" HARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA; PHONE 546·3102 ON H.t.1101 ILVD ... ONE MIL.I SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY. ' NOTHING HAS BEEN LEFT OUT Of THE ADVENTURERS r ·---·--.. _ .... __ .......... ........... _. .. _,_ , ....... -. ··--·-----·--.-.-·---·--....,.. __ ....... , ···-.-.-.. _ .............. ;. -·-1----------....... -._ ~-==---=-~ ' ,. ' '· ' '' I q I\ : , ' I \ I . I I ! ' .. . . J• DAILY PILOT s Tursday, Aprll 14, 11J70 • I rt Worth How Mucl1 f 01· Banking? ., SYLVIA PORTEii Are you twm that )'OU may cuUy be paying as much as • to $180 1 yu.-r in bank ~ cliarges, not only for ,.... cboclllng account, but • for saV p :ft""' We cfePoilil bOI 1 o Y e r d r a w n. ehecks, 1ate ~ 'P11ments, .C.? Xou art us\ng a n un- precedeoted variety of bank ltt'Vicn today, many of lhem JaYOlvina • s«vlct charge. And the long term trend of lbeM .charges iJ relentlessly up. FOii INST6NCE, one 1 .. ,. New York City b1Mk now charges $4 a month for a regular checking account In which you keep an average monthly balance or $200 or lea, $3 if the ha la nee averages between $201 and '400, S2 rr it's $401 to $600, $1 if il'• '801 to saoo and so if the balance1s more than $800. At M a month, the yearly cost or jullt maintaining a regular checkmg account at this bank Is $48. Note: A few banks have been advertising in recent monlhs completely free check· inc 1tCCOUol.s '1th minimum balances as low as s100 .. And some banks offer free check- i"ll to high school and college students if their parents also have accounts at the same bank. ' TYPICAL CHARO.ES on a special checking 'account Jn which there is no minimum ba1ance required are 50 to 75 cents a month plus 10 cents for each check you write. Some banks charge less per check but add a charge for each deposit. Using lhis example, if yoo write 20 checks a month the service charge will run $2.50 to $2.75 -which adds up to $36 to $33 a year. Most banks impo!ie a late charge if you fail to make a payment o:i a loan within the "grace period" of five lo JO days after the due date. A typical late charge is S per· cent of the payment, up to a maximum of $5 in any one month and $25 over the life of the loan or 2 percent ot the orl&inal loan amount. whlchevtt is Im. on' savings aceount.s, one In four banks charges "activity fee&" for frequent wlthdrawal5. ~ llere are guides for saving on bank serv;ce charges: A REGULAR CRECIUNG account usually hi the least ex· pensive type and you orten can eliminate any service charge simply by keeping the re-- quired ba'lance in the accoun t. 1£ you fi.nd you are continually dipping under the minimum, consider tratlS'ferring funds from your savings account. You might save more in service charges than y o u would lose in interest. lf )'OUrs i8 a spct:ial check· Ing account and you are writing a lot of checks. switch to a regular checking account. Normally, a special checking account is more economica l only ii you write fewer than 10 checks a month. LIMIT THE number of checks you write. llold out a realistic sum ol cash when you deposit your w~kly paycheck . Pay as · many lit lie bills in cash as possible and make in· stalriient Joau payments wilhin the period of time your bank specifies. DON'T ASK for a special statement or your checkin~ aCCOW>t balance if your bank makes a charge for slJ('h statements. Among banks that do, the charge may b e TAX SHELTER WOltKSHOP A~lctn Mlner .. i. tnc In COOPl!•~l!ori w1111 Sltf"1111 & Co, Wiii <otlducl • workol\Op ~ml""' "" •n• A<lw'11149 .. ol lnYelt..,.n!t lo• II•• 111w1Jott. fl'Ml!I of 011 •rid N•t11r1I Ge> ~rU11. Tl!i1 Mttllt>v !~ e~P•IJJly IOr ~ 111 lhf h;vMr I•• 1t<1C1111'1. TIMI ~IKVUlon wi~ ... m:I by Or. Mlf'\Gtl M!l+.I, Viet Prnidtnl of A,.....klfl MIM<1n. Specltlully Or. MH+.1 .. m UPl•ln ""° ...... •M 11ml-pro ...... lfl'Ml- lrlt 11 ellltd• ol rlllt: '""°"~' <"l1,•1· ..... •' y ..... ,. 1""'9tl ,. """" .~ ~. Till'91 A~il 1,, •I 7:)0 ,.M. ,..._cell.~;& c •. fet ,.........,, ..... MiM httlt 714475..JtSI . . THE · MYSTERY ' SHOPPER WILL BE LOOKING FOR YOU THURSDAY FRIDAY '@¥ Ill . SATURDAY APRIL 16·17-18 ANNIVERSARY DAYS Tiie Mv1terv Shopper will tlrol1 lh• rr11ll 111d p1., for luc•v 1hoppe,.. 11ur,ht1e1. Yow tin b1 on• of lh s b;t win11or1! ~ South Coast ?tua "T ht Gr111dt" 01 All" Adve1·tising Retreat Set N-\TU RAL RESOURCES FUND,IHC. AD.Q\T\Oll iO ~t.X sr.viNGS ... , "-. 'f"-goal el N11Urll l'le1ou1CH ICWnd, Inc. 11 lo m1kt yo11t 111-y ll'OW ••• 1o do fhll, I ... f""4I ft-el •hit ii con1io.r1 Pfl/d9111 •ftod .... 101\otbi. rllb lltfOltOll I .tfwr1UM1d c11 .. el°""'-nl dnUln9 '""''"'· f OI ~-lfff ptOSjWCtlllf ~UI/,., p/1111 comp/111 lf!4 11n1/I tn, c:;o~.001t /Jrlowt. r········••••••••·•······•••·•··1 : P!e•M ltlld -lnto1mt!lon •11d : ' P•O•Pll'f"I •bOlll Niii/iii "-N11rc11 • r.no, IM , N•ME ••• , __ _ AOO.,_E$S_, ----- Cltv "·--·-·---ST A.TE _211'- ' TELEPHONE,, •. _--·-·-, ································' WESTAMERIC~ SECURITIES 1121 WISTCllf P Dl. NIWl'Ol'f llACH PHONI 642-,711 WE NOW PAY • Annually on $20,000 lnv1stmtnt Ctrtiflc1tt.1 When Held to Mlturlty, Funch in by th1 20th Earn lnt1r11t From the 1st. lnteNtt P1 Jd Ou1rterlv. Calif ortaia T hrift & 170 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA = -- OVER THE COUNTER Set 'Triangle' To Develop 1 I - Complete:-New York Stock Lisi > ------------------ lffn,.ket Synibols • • f1 " ~ .. . " " • " ~ • • • • • • • • • t • ' ! • ' • i l • • • ' • • • • • t • • • ; • • • • • • • • I • • • • • • • • • ---w- Apr II 1970 DAILY /llOT Monday's Oosing Price~Complete New York Stock Exchange List I I • .. • ., I • Sl,000,000 in new merchondi1e is orriYing ot our •or•house•showroo.ft in Huntington Beoch. New sofas, choirs, tables, bedroolftS, dinin& room1, recliners, corner gf.011ps, and dinette sets.,. in oll style• ond colors, Modern, Contemporary, ~iterroneon, Early American, and Tran1itlonal. All of this to giYe yow the largest selKtion of furniture in Southern California! 360 ¥ignettes of co"'plete o aessoriied furn iture to help you visualize what it will look like in your own homel f rom coast to coast l1Nitr. is the talk of the f_vrniture induJtry, Unlike molt .. furniture stores .. our warehouse and showroom ir ul\der one roof (lower oYerhead) and in most ca.-s what you picked out in ovr showroom can be piclced up immed iately •• • i(s right there i" ourw~ou1e! Come ln ••• shop and compore , •• We know you won't be d i1appointedl The • notion's finest furniture at prices and volues that up to now were thought to be impossible! MONDAY ... -c ~10 a.m:to 10 p.m . Elegant 2-Pc. Curved Sectional that · provides 142" of Comfortable Sitting! This two-piece Curved Sedional will provide o total of 142" of comfortabie sitting! The straight section is 82" long, curved section 80", and 33" in width! Upholstered in rich quilted gold Matelosse fabric. , • friends will think it's costly brocade! Pocked with top quality features such os reversible seat ond bock cushions for longer weor ..• Zippered cushion coven -for' cleaning ease ••• Sell-decked ••• (the some moteriol _that went imo the solo is under the cushions) ••• Buttoned tvfted ends of 1he sectional odd lo the charm a nd design effedivelyl All seot and bock cushions ore Urethane Foam filled; to hold their<eriglnol .i.hope and provide utmost in comfort! Soh spring edge construction means !hot your cushions ore resting on foa m covered podding and not directly on the wood frame ••• This megns longer shape to your sofa! Boll casters provide eosy movement! There-ore moi:iy many more features too nvmerovs lo mention ••• Why not C0"'8' !41and let one oftour salesmen LEVITZ WHSE. PRICE $486 show you this l!Kfloryol ••• •'You wo_n'I bedisoppointedf Reg. $699. 95 lMTZWHSE. PRICE 5-Pc. Party~ • $147 by ''Bassett'' / ,~ Reg. $m.9s Famous "Sossett"'q ol \\tj.#9fngsl Thti Pecan finish Porty • : •719.90 Spanish Sofa and Lowseat Set will be the cen ter';' octi~r home.·UM1t"fcv dining or congenial game toD4e. No WOrry of scrotc;hes.orspllls 01 thls beautiful pedestal toble hos if'oti.hing Micorto High Pressure lominoled top. Foor beoutifui:W~ choirs with Gold fabr ic seats. You'll be proud of this set for years to come if you hurry lo Levitz today1 The lost word in lu:11ury ..... designed locompfem9n!'todoy".s-smart interiors. You'll love owning !his mognifkent Sofa ond loveseot in all its regal splert-o King-Size Sa le an Bedding! l@9.$lBq,9slEVITZWHS[.PRICE $99 l h11 i! the biggest bedding buy Levitz con oHer and the bestl for less than $1 00 you receive: "(2) Bo11 Spring Mattresses; ( l ) 76"x80" Kong-Site Mattress; (2) King -Size PillOWli; (I) King-Size Monress Pad; (2) King-Si ze Wh ite Sheeh; (2) Kmg- S1ze Pillow Coses. All ten (l 0) pieces ore yours for one low_pricel dor. Upholstered ln eosyiocore•for Herculon ••• {Copper) ••• accented by t.g,$719.90 intricately carved Dork Fruitwood trim. Features reversible Kadel wrapped Mal and bock,cu1hions with zippers ••• for soft comfort and double wear • .';.plus the luxury touches of self decking,40ft spring edge a nd low legs! shdp at Levitz Warehouse today ~nd Savel Sovel " Big Handsome · Vinyl Recl iner! R99.$19.95lEVlTZWHSE.PR1CE $38 After a long busy day whol better way lo unwind and let your tensions melt away !hon in this big hondsom .. e Reclin- er. Yovr choice of block or green vinyl ... wipes clean with damp cloth, wears like iron. This remarkable recliner hos your fovorile position for watching TV, reading or sle-eping. The perfect choir for any busy home. With today's low, low Levitz Worelx>ase prke why no1 buy o poir and relax logelherl Feathery Elegance' 6' Fern Tree ~"'il.$35.9S LEVJTZ WHSf.PRICf $17 This lifelike, 1ocy decorator fern tree is fresh green in colOt" • • • Will brighten any home or officel Del ico le, leathery foliage ••• Flexible stemi _ , , Planted in on u11breokoble decora- tor container ••• This plonl normally sells for more thon $3.5 ••• Hurryl _ •• Levitz sole price of $17 is for two (2) days only I Lavish Vinyl Covered Modern Swivel Racke r R&g.$69.95 lEVHZWHSE.PfUCf $37 Comfort ot its besr. sit down and relo~ in the cloud soft comfort of this lavish modern -ivel rocker. Polyurethane loom filled seal, bock and a rms, deep ruhed bock. uphohtered in glove-soft, leather-like, wipe-cl«Jn vinyl, An ideal choir for any room in you r home! Available in Green or Block! • Magnificent Mediterranean Formal .Dining Room ••. by Famous·"Unagusta"! lfvtfZ. WHSE. PRICE $587 Discover th& splendor of grodovs dining with this elegant dining room hy R~ $924.9.5 ... UnogustQ". Crahed·in mellow Spanish Fruitwood finish that hos been core. fully hond-Nbbed. YMI get the massive 60" wide Breakfront Chino. the large (Reel.) exlension Tobie with one (1) 18" leof,~us set of four (.C) higl'i-bock choirs (I arm & 3 sides) with upholstered .seo!J. "Bassett" 4-Pc. Mediterranean Bedroom Moster crafted by world famous "Bassett''. features· lavish u5e of wrought iron, choin type hardware, luxurious and richly carved drower and door fronls. You get the massive 72" triple dres.ser and landscaped mirror, king. size-headboard ond 2 drawer commode. Make today your doy lo come lo Levitz ond save! lfVITZWHSl PRICE $298 • l:aassettj Bassett Elegant Italian- Provincial 5-Pc. Bedroom, Hand-Rubbed Pecan Finish! lfVITZ WHSE. PRICE $339 This custom hand-rubbed Pecan finished master bedroom will be one of your prized possessions for many years to camel Features Pecan f inish on Pecon groined selected veneers and hardwoods with simulated wood carvings. The dresser drawers ond nile stand hove deep roomy drawers for ample storage! Reg. Sj29H.J You get the siic (6) Or~esser, Mirror, King size Headboard, and two (2) Nile Slondt. DreJ!er dimensions ore 31" high, 72" long and 18" wide! This se! will fit nicety ftlfo any bedroom! Come to Levitz fot value thot can't be lopped! I K"OEHLE" I 6-Pc-Kroehler Contemporary Master Bedroom S&t The newest trend in Contemporary furn iture with the heavy mo»ive look achieved by the double fold effect on lhe drawer fronts and the lavishly deep mouldings and overlays over the doors. It will remain enduringly beautiful btt'ouse of the fine craftsmanship ••• finished in Pecan with o heavy lop LEVITZWHS!". PIOCf Reg. S1\19.91 ond plinth bo~ ••• Suite includes: Triple Drell«, Mirror, Chest. Full size Heodboord, and Two Nit• Stands ••• Come to Levitz today for highest quality at low, low prices! OPEN DAI LY 10 TO 10, SUNDAY NOON TO 7 YOUR CHOICE!! Vinyl Walnut f inished Bookcase or Commode! lEVI fZ WHSf, PUCl $28 ... [}yring thl1 10le yo11 have your choice of either the 3-ahelf bookcoM! •• , a< matchi ng storage commode! Take od- 'IO!toge of thll low low prke aMJ b11y both p!.ces ••• stock 1he bookcase on to p of the commode! Both plects hove Wolnul flnT1h•d Mirocle Vinyl Finish , •• lasts lo~er tl'IOll the finest locqver or varni1~I Toke odvonlog• of the l<Mng• today at L.vi111 SINCE '''0 "°"sr ro coAsr FURNITURE WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM San Die90 Freeway At leach llvd. ...... ______ ,_,,.. fasy to Reach from Anywhere At Le¥itr all tile "retail frill1" ore tokeft 011t of the Worehoute Sole rric:•-The price you pay i1 i" the Car~ tot1 on ovt Dock. Toke It h01Myo11rMll or ho¥e it deli..,.red by Levitz ••• Thet• 'Will be o s1t1all deli¥ery (horge due to theae incredibly low Woreh"Ouse Sole 'rlcea1 EASY CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE --· LEVITZ WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM • BEACH BLVD ., Edinger Ave., Next to the Huntington Shopping Center! , ' I '. ' . Plush Diamond Tufted Contemporary Sofa Here's a lu~urious Sofa deslQ!.!ed IQ complement today's smart interiors[ Deep Diamond Tul1ed seat and bock IOf" the utmo!t 1n colTlfort ••• Cushioned with pure loom .. -You hove your choke of Block Vinyl or Gold Chenille uphol!!eryl Sofa is 8 feet long ~~-S249 Solo and will seat with complete comfort -4 odult'I Boll casters pro· ~-51"·95 '-*" vide easy movemen t. Matching loveseot available 01 $1 34 during thil sole! t, I { I I ' r t l --.. --~ ~--...-___.--~----,---,...~-- • SUN TO 'REIGN' DAILY PILOT I' .... W .lcllenll ...... It looks like rain clouds above, says Sue Groet- sche. The teenage Or- 'ange Coast College co- ed prepares to shed he r fashionable shades for her umbrella. Summer Shades Will Never Fade GRANDMA STYLE FOR MISS C:UHY MCDONALD • Ra in or shine! Umbrellas are neceasary for Orange County women. Little Bonnie Johnson wants shade from the hot sun: the others await April Showers. •-1s ~ MISS (!RETA BERGDAHN WITH BRIGHT EYES No Carbon Copy for Pia Yam Haupert, a young miss who wants to look like mommy, tries on her own pair of sun- glasses. Although a rt.Ille too large, Miss Haupert seems to like wbat sbe sees. • By MARIAN CHJ\ISTV New York -Dashing PI a Lindstrom, Ingrid Bergman's 30- year-old daughter , wears h e r , nerves on the outside. Physically, she's a carbon copy of her famous mother -ercept that the light hair is a bleach job and she smiles only with her mouth. But the personality, a mesh or the bru1que and brittle, Is i;tricUy her own. Pia, who was divorced eight years ago from Georgia textile ty. coo.yachtsman Fuller Callaway m , Isn't the ateely bachelor girl sbe pretendl lo be. On one hml she prote .... lo be anUmarriage and finds 1J0111ethlng wrong with every man who gets close enough .to be scruUnl:.ed. But, without reluctance, she talks openly about her deaire to have a baby, 'niere were no dllldreR rrom her two-year man'ia1e to Callaway. The word "baby" ls the ooly noiin In a long tetw-tete \hit makea her lcy·blue eyes melt. While waiting for Mr. Right to appear on the horizon, Pi1 ia work- ing for CSS.TV, New York, as a general reporter on !~: 11 o'clock evening news. Pia's on-screen fa shion Image can only be categorized as tough chic. Her day-to-day wardrobe con- sists of trouser faa!".!=:ls, either by Luba of Elite or \'lctor Jori.!I or Cuddlecoal Pia's alma mater is Mi 111 College, Oakland, with Po1tiradu- at.e studies at Paris' Su:-bonne. & can be expected, her newaca!ts are lnteUigenUy strUng together. A,bout her television carttr; "Being Ingrid Bergman's daughter has not been 1 parUcular benefit. Becauae I wu llUttO\.:.ided by the Hollywood ·l)ildl-ml th e Roaaelini 1emlal, some people think I'm too fri volous to do tbe job." Pia acted in a handful of Ita!Jan movies but never made n bl1. "I'm nOL dt!peratety amblt1ou1/' she ••YJ· "I've hid 1 cloee-up of am· ~ thrust at me all my Ille ml I dol't wantJt.'' Now she lives in a West «Mb Street apartment With a -lh'll living room and one bedroom. She rented it completely furnished down to the most minute. delaU - Including books, records, paintings, sheets, pillowcases, dishes, glasses and silverware. The only project h'Jvolved in 1nov· Ing was a shift of wardrobe from her ronner San Francisco address lo New York. Although Pia prof...., not lo be oblessed by fashion, her interest in being 1 clotheshorse ii obvious. A few years ago she posed for Galiano magazine ads because the liquor company promised she'd wear ci:>uture. clothes from Italian designer Princess Irene GaJilzlne. Evtr 1ince she was bitten by that luhloo bug she hu haunted the New York boutique of Allen and Coa.. for offbeat c I o t h e s - preferably pantsuits -by Funlty of California. Her cunent falhicn-pa¥ion is the stlnfty ribbed sweater that' shows otr her votuptuoua figure. Rarely does she buy less than rive \:uhmue sweatera at a Ume. Pia uaed to act OR whim. She mamed cauaway on an impulse. He propoaed while they were drlv· lng along a Nevada highway. Quickly she said "yes" and they stopped at the county jail ll Elko where pollcc ln the radio room acted as wiLnesses. On the current allure of mar- rihgc: "Now I find f'm des~ralcly trying lo find excuses 11ot to mar· ry.'' Ingrid Bergman, who aow liv~ in Switzerland and is married to b~inessman Lan Schmidt, maket weekly overseas calls to Pia and arrcctlonate letters now baclt and fort h every few day~. As a teenager, t h e mother-daughter t"elaliOJlshlp was severed whe11 Ingrid and llalian mo'vie director Roberto Ro~inl had their well- publlclzed romance. "It happened In 19t0 and now who cares about my mother's past? On· Jy neurotic people write me hato mall," she says. Pia shows signs of h a v I n g mellowed with age. At age 13 she told the judge who handled her 'parents' child custody battle tha~ she preferred lo live with her father. Now she says: ''Whcl'I you 're young, It's easy to condemn. As you get older and make your ow11 mislakes, you get genUer ih your condemnation." I ,..,_. -~ -..,..-.,... .,.. . -. ~-. T1i1t54l1, April J4, lC17Q . .. • , 'Leftovers' Good _Warmed Up DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 1 parenl who 11 olclt and tirld al r,ldlnc 1rtlcle1 · ~n "How to Gel Al...-Wflh Your Teenager." l w1ab ,aomeone woQld write an 'l('llcte on "How to Gtt Alon1 With 1 Y_our• J]a~." Hert are a few ~­ . aeeflons fot opener11. 1 µ~Mom and Dad are llhort tempered '~nd unpleasant1 1.f1 using a few obaolete ,p.brases such as, "Wha( tan 1 do to help?" "'ie1, I'd be hippy to." Anothe! · one 11 "Thank you." When the phone rings or there la a knock at the door, don't play like you ire deaf. Get off your duff and see who Jt is -even though an able-bodied adult l5 right in the same room . Offer to do i f vor for your old bea up stated many tlrries t you don't believe in M>nely be1rt1 club! and computer matcblna -and for good reason. But )'ou, An~1• Landen, could pe"rfonn a wonderf11l aervlee If you would help the' lonesome people·ln thls world to find each other. You could rvn a very high-type bureau. In lite world wbo are loaely ud woalcl .,.. precl1te an bJtroducttoa to otbtr •eeat people who alao are lo11ely, bat pllya.1 Cupid na be dan1ertU1 ud I wut M part of It. mother -ng up your cloth , clean the bathtub ou've used it ·-.'>/. Each applleaat'1 letter would be carefully conaldered. 'Ibey would be rtquJred to ll!hd char1cter references supplied by employers and cltrgymen. You abo might agree to interview the finalists in your home. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A etrtaln sirl in our crowd thinks she is you. All of 1 sudden she remembered her mJddle name is Ann and she wants everyone to call her that. She gives advice to everybOOy whether they ask for It or not. She even tries to talk like you but it d0esn't come ·off. She sounds ridiculous. Last week she started to comb her hair like yours. How do you feel about 1his? P.S. She is 14-years old. -PORT HURON straighten up your room. Be polite. When your parents tom on a CleM Miller record and start to dance don't fall on the Door laughing. Show aome resplcl After all, fol.ts in their 40s and 50s don't know better. It's the way they tued to dance in ihe olden days. DEAR PORT: FlaUued.. Spirit of Spring Inspires Fashionable Benefit .. This ii a plea for tolerance and un- derstanding, kid!. Give us old fogies a break. We need It. -1911 The applicants could be matched ac· cording to a1e, religious afflliaUons, edueaUonal backgrounds, lnterests, hob- bies aM so on. For example, a widow with three small children could be match- ed with a widower with two small children. Get it? Please give thh1 Idea serious oonsideralion, AM. -SEA ITLE DEAR SEATl'LE: All I attd 11 to open a ma&chmaklng bw'ea11 ID my bome and I would be • divorcee wllb no small chlldrt.n. No husband in bl1 right mind would stand lor It. "The Bride's Gulde" Ann Landers' booklet." ans wers some' of the most fre- quently asked questions about weddings • To r e c e i v e your copy t>f tbi1 comprehensive guide, write to Ann Landers, in care of the DAILY PlLOT newspaper, enclosing a Jong, self-ad- dressed, stamped envelope and 35 cents in coin. Fostering the Spirit.or Spring for their third anrlua1 fashion show are Mrs. Joseph P. Frank Jr. (left) ,and :h.1rs. John Gorman; members of Columbian WJVes , Knights of Columllus Atixiliary. Tickets for 'the 8 p.m. event taking" place Ftid~, Ap ril 17, in > •• · eair Wed . ·at . Presidio ·Fort Scott Chapel at the Ptesldk>, San Francisco, was the setting when Cathryn Ann Barnes ol the Jlmldlo and TirMlhy Gary Newell of Hun- tington Beach exchanged their wedding .rings and vows. San Jose,)fiss Judy Gaylor, San Francisco, and lttis.s ltfary H11ttel, . .Dalf City. The bride, daughter of Sgt. and Mrs. Bobby R. Barnes. was given in marriage by her father for the full military ceremony conducted by Colo- nel Robert J . Plocki. Attending the bridegroom . son ol Mr. 8{ld Mrs. Robert G. Newell, was Steven P. VOgef of Louisville, Ky., best man. Seating guests were James s. Barnes. the bride's brother : Don Piotter1 New York, 'lnd Daniel E., Carricjc~ .. ~ w Jersey. , Miu Debra McQueen, the bride's cousin from Santa Clara, served as maid of honor, and bridesmaids were cousins, Miss Susan Graber, Date Noted For Retired The new Mrs. Newell al· tended Sea11ide High School. Her husband is a graduate of Marina HJgh School and • at- tended Orange Coast Colle ge where he majored in pclice science. Alter attending -:an Army school in Fort Gordon, Ga., he was stationed as a military police officer at the Presidio. -, Chapter 121 of the American p • Association of Retired Persons eerJng will meel at noon on 'l'llun- day. April 16, In the Stnior Citizens Recreation Center, A · d Ne.wport Beach for a,lalk 00 -fOU n Bringing AA.RP Closd' &rto- cal Chapters. </Arr ~ • !'r ... Speaking will be f!•t< ff. · . Dewey. represent.alive of-Area / RATING · her ltth IX of AARP. 1.,., !birthday tomorrow will be Eugene H. Hite Sr. Ol Hun-Miss Elsie Newland, a rHi- tington Beach, Callfomit.islate dent of the Harbor Area for director, will prese~~ t h e , the P._ast 37 years. Helplnc her chapter's official .charter to make the day a happy one will Lloyd E. Morrison, presi~nl. !~ members t>f her former Mrs. James Sawyer will pre. Sunday School class. sent a musical program, ac-~ Miss Newland was active in c:ompanied by Mrs, Pau line church work for many -years Mithoff. and still is Interested in youth. NAARP Is open to all She co rrespo nds with persons over the age of SS. servicemen and calls h e r Anyone wishing membership nephew, Mari s Newland and lnfonnation may call lrtrs. his wile, Irene in Tustin each Ruth Johnson, 844-9849. ~ day. ·• ' '• -S~ ANNbUNCES :THE OPENING OF OUR NEWEST STORE IN NEWPORT IEACH AT f EAST BLUFF VILLAGE CENTER 2549 EAST BLUFF DRIVE (Next to El Rancho Mtrketl S•• Our Compl•f• Lin • of SPRINCO l SUMMER fASHIONS Ore11•1 e Co1tume1 e Pant Suif1 e Blou1•1 • Imported K11it Suit1 ~ Swe•ter1 e J•welry e etc, If''· OPENING SPECIAL · ARN EL (Travel). SHIFTS 3 R90ular Price $4.50 ••ch •: NIWPOIT IU.CH 5AN C~IMINTI l~f WTILUrr DI. 104 N. II C1111l11• .... 14111LUfr YILU.•I CINTll TU5TIN-70t 'D' 5T. e l"NKAMEllCAID e MASTEi CHARGE the Peek Famlly Cdlonial Te"ifaCe Rocirn , ·westmlr,_. ster. may -be obtainl!d by calling Mrs~ Bernard Selz. 839-3277. or Mrs. James McCain. 892·8160, general DEAR ltll: That'• my year, too. ' nub for sptakllg .In behalf of 111 museum pieces. It's high time somebody cave u1 u assist chairma n. ~ · OEAA ANN LANDERS : You have I'm sure there are many decent J>Wple Horoscope Gemini: Protect Self WEDNESDAY APRIL 15 By SYDNEY O~fARR I AmFS (March 21-April 19): Spend wisely. Compare prices. Select quality. Temptation ls to throw cautlon to winds. You can make loved one happy through sincere expression of feelings. Don't try to purchase affection. TAURUS (April 20.May 20): You can be confident regarding Intuition. You know what must be done. The Idea ls to avoid procrartinatlnn. GEAllNI (May JI.June 20 ): You may be deOOved by in- stnictions, direction... Some- Genealogy Expert Due one today attempts a SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 11): double-talk routine. Be amus.-You could get green light to ed but don't believe everything proceed wltb p r o j e ct Im- you hear . Protect yourseH in portant to your self-esteem. ~ clinches. Accept challenge. You may CANCER (June 21..July 22): have to work overtime. But Individual who relates sob there will be compensations. story may need to learn facts SAGIT'l'ARIUS (Nov. 2 t • Of life. Be falr but firm. Don't Dec. 21 ): Light touch is bes~ help those who rt fuse to aid today. High-pressure methods themselves. Accent on income cause some to get their potential, funds, savings. backs up; take it slow, easy. LEO (July 23-Aug. U ): You CAPffiCORN (Dec 22 • Jan. may be called upon to fulfill 19): Emotions are intense. But claims, display abilities. Cycle give logic equal time. New la high and challenge works in contacts today could prove your favor. Take special care significant. Stress new at- wlth appearance. Many will be titudes, policies. observlnlf, evaluatln.r. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-F~b. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22l: 18): Accent on public rela- Mueh that occurs may be lions, how you deal with those subtle, behind the: scenes. who offer conlrac_i, specia l Don't attempt to force issues. agreements. Heed your own A call or message from one at counsel. P..1any who offer ad- a distance could eventu ally v i c e m a y n o t b e clarify matters. Patience is knowledgeable. your ally. PISCES (Feb. 19-~farch 20): LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You are busy. But don't ski p Accent on hopes. desires. meals. Remember he a Ith Genealog_y will be the toolc obstacles to fulrillment of resolutions. Adhere to pro- under discussion when the wishes. You need full coopera-gram which permits activity Soul.h Orange Cout Alumnae tlon of mate. business partner. \vithout bulldlns pmisure Ill Chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha Some deli cate matters require breaking point. Relax tonlght meets Thursday. Aorll 16, ln di.,crttion. Act accordine;l''· with conl{enlal person. the Huntington Beach home o(I jiii .......... iiii ... iiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiii .. Airs. Wintoo \Varner. WHAT'S THE BID? -Mrs. Timothy 'J\ilt and Mrs. Frederick M. Barnes. (left to right). 'vish the dress Mrs. Robert Howard ls modeling. More bidding will take place 1vhen the UC I Big I Boosterettes present a benefit fashion show and luncheon on Thursday, April 16. Soeaker for the 7:30 p.m. ,l!'alhering will be Mrs. Ted1 Risch,ard, wife or the president of the OranPe County! Genealogy Society. A native of Santa Ana, she has been active in t h e ' establishment of the Cllarles 1 Benefit ~ashion Showing 'Clothes ' the Line' on &wers Museum in Santa Ana . Free Ba11d .:-';:-•1cert Mrs. Patr ic k McDonald, lfed,1esdoJJ, April JS president will conduct the Bring the ramJly to hear meeting. Zeta Tau A Ip ha thl' i\tarch Air Force Band perform alumnae in the south Orange in th<> mall at 7 1>.m., then stay and Coast area are invited to at-sl'e old and ne\\' 111omen's Air Force formation ma\' call P.:I r s . Huntini:cton Center nt Beach and Designer fashions will go on the auction block w h e n members of UCI Bjg I Boosterettes present the sc· cond annualSchol a r s h i p Fashion Show and Lunchcq_n. The ~1esa Commons Gold Roo1n on the ca1npus will be clecoralcd \\•ilh parasols and bu!terfties on Thursday, Apri l !6. 'l'he day 's activities will brgin :it 11 :30 a.m. and a buf-1 tend. Those wish ing further in-I uniforms modeled live at 8 p.m. Edinger and San Diego free\vay, HB. \Varner, 842-6068 .. ----~"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""""'""'""""""'"~"'""'""""'""'""'"~ -''"" • Alta· Bahia Guests (ct lunch \\'Ill follow . I Midshipmen on Sta ge The event is be ing planned by ~1rs. Bronko Mllich, l\frs. Sydney Shannon and Mrs. A-1el ' Farn1er Fflshlons will be modeled by Miss Alise Smith. I ~trs ~lel Farmer. M r s . ' llr.bert 1-lov.'arri and ~Ir s .1. \Villiam Krumpho lz. STILL SLIM AT FORTY? l\.fusic by Newport Harbor High School's l\.1idshipmen v.•ilt fill !he Ne1l'port Beach home of ~~rs. Luis Lazo when the Alla Bahia Working Corrl'- 1nillee of lhe Orange County Philharimnic Society meets. The program will be in- troduced by' ~irs. Richard Pledge Service Pledge Ceren1onies· for M r~. Joseph MolliCa v.111 take place when .1he ··4mbda Zc t 111 Chapter or Slg1na J->llJ Gan1ma lnterrw tiorw l So rority mee-ts· Thursday, April 16 . Mrs. F.r~nk It. Pr..etler. \fl!! host the meeting in her Hun· tingtoi) B'eaeh ~e and ~fn. Herbert Bland~1n be the: in- stalling offlci!r. ;s ;FR!EHDLY -i . . I If you have tlM" l"K'h;hbors or know ol anyonf' movtna lo our are•. pk'a~ tPlt us ao !hat v.c may extend 1 rr'lcndly n~Jconre and help lhPm 1~ bPN!me acqu.alnttd In thl'lr nrw 11urroondlnp. II So. Coasl Visitor 494-0579 494-9361 Harbor Visitor 646-0174 Franklin on Thur sday, Apr il 16. at JO a.m. Now in jts third rc:ir. lhc band started as a \'olunlary group call~ the stage band . lt 111as named' in 1969 and audi· lions became necessary !or mf'mbership. ln 1970 it 11•as added to the ~ehool curriculun1 and its ar· livilies were e1panded to in· elude jau t es t ivat com· petitions and service clubs. It also has coritlTiued l~ schedule cf public serVice progrnn1s. 1 ServinJ!; as ho~tesses .... ·ill b • ~frs. J-ohn Croul and fl.f r~. Cres~ey ~furray. fl-1eclings of the Ci'.lmmillPf' tak~ place the third ,,1ursdriy of every monlh. GueSl:s ttre Welcome aod may · call Mrs. Wiiliam· M. Laifli. ctiainnan , a,~,7~5033, Robert S. Lawrence. UCI I dean of st udents, \viii preside ' as narrator and auctioneer at thr fashion show. Proceeds 1vill be presented lo the Big I t Boosters for alhletic depart-~~ 1nent scholarships. ~\ Staffing the boutique bar fj···i.. \l'hich will feature handmade ? items will be the J\lmes. Ed -- Nev.·land, Sue P.fartln, Hov•a rd tJ:-r· atld Albert Irwin. 1.1rs. Jame.~ f /i \Voodbury, ~tr5. Don a I di ,, Simpson and Afrs. Clifford t 7 \Viltiams \\'Ill s e ·r v e as 1 hostesses. : Tickets arc prked at $3.so j and reservations may be made t with Mrs. Frederick 1.1 . Barnes at 833-6931. You bet. There Is no reo1on for onyone to be heovy ofter forty. for that motter there's no reoson to grow "heovy" ot ony oge. E:s.p1,ially when there's a SLIMMIN' WOMEN oround. Featuring the world fo - mous STAUFFER SYSTIM for .•lenderiling. At SLIMMIN' WOMEN you get the geritlest yet most effective ff•Ot· men! in the world to moke 1ure you get 11im -ond stay thot woy. Whether it's hip1, woi1t, 1highs, tummy or whe1ever, our 1y1tem wlll melt owoy those in,hes ond pounds so quickly you'll hole yourself for not starting sooner, After o ll, world fomou1 STAUFFER SYSTEM hos ~ been 11imming women for over 30 years ond ofter oll thot time l:Nrta ~THEY MUST II DDING SOMETHING RIGHT! , __ WANTED! t t SALIS INTHVllWHS M1111 '' •••r ''' tJ, StrN1 teln '-lit'"'"'• Mett. l•collo•I tel•ry, Coll Mr. SI"" Ul .. 121 1Ur f'orre f'ndtlo11 Sl1o lll U'ed11erdn11, AprU 16 ' t &l SLIMMIN~ WIMEN ~ FACIAL SALON ·I No¥i·oPEN A.M ••• ,o.oo r.M .. 11 ...... ,. ,,oo A.M ••• s.oo r.M. ' BEACH AREA I FULLERTON SALON TUSflN SALON Prtl ty gtrls, In lllr force' blu@ -uld t>lylr nnd ne1\·-111odelcd ll\'o Al 8 p.m .. ron1c 111 7 p.111. •nd hC'11r frrc conccl't by thr J\larch Air t"Clrce Ba nd frtt on mall JluuHn1Zton Ccntl'r 11.t 8l'1u:h nm! Edln.(er 11t S11n Dlt\l!'o F1'1"f'\\'&.)' 1-IR. ' 1101 Newport llvd llll l111 Cha -111111 Avt . 5411111 rJnr ''"'' t L Cott• Mtt• ' r111 Olfl<• YUl11t • S26·7104 Lorwl• ,11111rt •121·4121 142·1113 . • .. ,,,...,,. .... " ___________ ... I ( I \ I \ _.._ ________________ ..:.-----------~~-~----'~· -·~--- \ ------····,..····--··---------. -. ---. -. ·--~ -- DICK TRACY • TUMBLEWEEDS Mun AND JEFF , JEFI; DO YOU KNOW HOW MANY W FOO\ls GOVERNMENT IS USIN6 THESE DAYS? PAL, THE LONG.l'ORM AND Tl-IE SHORT l'ORM · . 'H:o\VE GONE Olfl'·Tl-IE WINOOW! THERE IS 1 ONLY ONE F<mM • .. By T 0111 . K. ,Ryan M~ill*' l1'S 'CAUSE THi:'l'S SO MANY OFUS ... By 41 Smith ~i~e~"""'-m-1,,,~§ c;? • --~ JUDGE PARKER WHO GAVE YOU nlE MEt>l(IME? WAS IT RU5 ?' --...~.--., Crossword Puzzle FOR RELEA SE TUESDAY, APR IL 14, 1970 ACRO SS 51 Thal is : Yt~ltrdJy's Puzzle Solved : \I O' TH l II !>•i!i•lml •t Il l 111 0 l P ~l 11 VE G ll• 2 word s 1 Parent S4 Spark le s Eurol"a11 SB Conl iruie 9 Smal steadfastly quafltily . ·tiz Took l( Nt ighb01 illegally of Syria fi) Peactlul 15 N ovt I 1st harmony Jamts---· fi4 Drilfl hOlst lb Electrical Mi Mo~t • -Mlb. PEACH dt~ict obliqut ly 17 Taking li7 Rip on ·new fiB Rav ish gasotln t fi9 Horst 1' Lyr ic potm 70 Vainly 20 Inward: 71 Dtmonstratt, Anal. In !ht 21 HJv lng no old days 18 Dt ligllthil 46 \II inter cillzensh1 p places • grolind 23 Rangeland DOWN 22 Account . cover '; squatter 24 Biblical 47 C1nop lf1 'I • 25 Unoriginal l Stduc\ive woman ovtr •ltats 211 Burden ftmale 27 Flow !trough 49 Ctergym1n's , 21 Casino 2 Ont of stawly • titre : Abbi. tustomtr \ht Horae 29 USC sy mbol 52 Nume rical $•?>'' . ..!!!c . . ..... ~ ........... By ~ Harokl l,e Doiix. . '. ~- ,I ., • .. • • U'L AINIR .. SAU Y BANANAS .. . . GORDO ANIMAL CRACKERS ~Y Men -~ND P'e.~LLY, MA!tCIA, I ""SENT YDUI< HASIT. OF • PUTTINQ LABf,l.5 ON PEOPLE .• I 11·1'/ (? PlioNE)' 32 Part of 3 Floats JO Kind of te st pref ix homr 4 Great cir(le Jl Kind of 53 Wooded enltanct of tilt t arlh tilrth 55 Tflt . BIG.tDU 'If. '" 37 ·-,,11, 5 Ga l in 32 Moisl Penl)leuc h 33 Oeblor 56 Run 011 lo 31 8ristlellke "'song , 34 Prtposition be married fippl!ndagt ii Protection 35 Stfort: 57 Put back int i 39 King of 7 Schisms Prefix original Judea 8 Produced 3fi Gradt shapt 41 Rowtr's as an tlftct 40 Kind of 58 Go through necess It~ 9 Yo un g fir, timtp1tct 59 lssut 42 ;~~i~glti 10 F·11itd •3 ~:t~:;,uni · Ml r"a~,~~~:~:n. 45 Kind or 11 Li ha ceous 44 511owing ill End ing used co1on111dt planl signs ot with fed 41 Sultable 12 Bo unders wetping: or fun SO .Storv 11 Vit ws 2 word s fi5 Call f • STEVE ROPER ' ly Saunden and OVtl'fJOrd ' . _.,,...,........,,......., ~, ~~~~ ~~~"~.~, ~.~,~ '" " 2 " " • i ' I T,.ld<I, .,., 14, 1970 : ii -. ' • t/i(,. DAILY PILOT jl)... By Al Capp , · . ' By Charles Banotti ~eY.saLLY,aRe You HURT ? t-~~~~~~~~~~"' ·: By Gus Arrlala By Ro9er Bollen UDfHE.RI ~arc.o:iu. 6E 'T'ELl..llJG ~-lRAT WOleto1 • HAS !01EfHllJG DEADLY II! IT/. .. DO 0 a • ' DENNIS THE MENACE \ u ' ' . I I JI DAILY PILOT ruesday, A.prll 14, 1970 1 Red-ho ~ Angels (5 ~9) Ambelm StMUwn hla bardb' been 1 "I 'Ir ... foe California'• - y L ti then the AlllU playin( ii* --tonlJ!ht ... bu1ll7 lbe ltllndly -. Ibey used to be. · °'lllnll' • -110 the """'' llol•hecl ' ,,.-• IQ.II HhlbltlQn ...,.. with ·-lo the Los~ Dodpn. !kll ·lalt. Tueldly in Milwaukee lhe &Ulonila ball tot hot and they ha..n't -all. 'l1le Aqels; undefeated in five \ games, own the belt record in the major leagues and ltad the American Ltacue Westbyoae1ame. Lefihander Clyde Wright, wbo went sir lnnillp lo pick up a Wi11° last Friday as ca111..m., whipped Kansas City, IM, will atar( for the ~b q:1inst righthander Jot Harlen, 0.1, and the rest of ,the Chicago White Sox (1·5) and last in I.he division. 1l could turn out to be quite a pilcllin1 dutl. Twlco) J.ut ...,.. Wrllbt and Horlen booUll up with tho Chlcqo ve.teran wirmiDc 6oCh times, 3-1 and 3-2. ' Attfel Sl•te ,. All t.-1 f kMl'C t7tl) A,H, 14 Al\9tll V11 Cl\Jcato 7:5' f ,lft. "''· IS """" Vj. MlnllttOI• 1:5' •·"'-~'· 14 Allltll ¥1.• M1Mtiol1 7:U 1.m, ' The Angels wiU be trylnc to overcome home opener jitters which have plagued thtm since lholi: lint Anaheim Stadium . . u,. , .......... DOWN THE STRAIGHTAWAY ..:. Marlo Andrettl. winner ol. lbt I.ndl-polls 500 in 1969, ptllbes Andy GranaWll'• new STP race car to a spee.d of 190 1D!lh •• he pa1Ses Jn. front ol.·the. grmfolandg, that are •till under COOJtrilctloll arOnlario MOtor Speed· way Mooday. First race on the track is Sept. 6 but alter two.time "1111 winner Rodger Ward had of- ficially opened the. oval with several laps in J . C. Agajanian'1 car, Andretti took over for bis shake- down cruise. OntariQ~~N~w Race Concept •u .• E;·~ouin Out Construction Noises lit BOWARD L• ifl f~~ •1,FGld ..-y ol Torrance to enter · Asked U be thought Onlarlo would ' 91 -. o.iw '' tw,g can at Indy and Ontario. eventually replace Indianapolis as the ONTARIO -A new r.:las ~ ~Ooday,'1'Jnaugural event on the 2Y.· Jeadlng track in America, he !aid: the waterTI biorir.on ~ impniWIWA' tit oval,hld a five mont.h head start on , "Indy will always be the grandaddy of • . • the opening race, the California 500 for racing. Can you compare Sant.a Anita to are lllol the ultimate. 5!<'\'11t "'~' "l"C lndlanapoUHype cars. . tho Kentucky Derby or any other bowl about a De\f concept rq, 11domobile rae-.&dger ,Ward, a two-time winner at game to the Rose Bowl? Each has its in.I. . , . • or .~ . 1.Ddy apd CWTeotly head of public .reta. pl&Cf: in the sports world and I think the . Ontano 1'1otor Speedw,.fY pas,'MlQ a . lions at Ontario, had the honor of dnvln.g same thing will bold true in automobile hiltoric milestone Mond•y when the the fmt race car around the track. racing." liOWld. of r~ engines drowned ou~ the • He stepped Into . Aggie'.'s No .• 97 and Andrelti was the second man on lhe buldours, ~aci:bammers and ~ con.-acled the track with a veteran s know· track in Granatelli 's newest car, one ltruc.'tk:rl. notses that have dominated the bow. . designed in Germany and brought here .eene· ta date. When he stepped out of the ear he wu recently Mario AndretU, ltM. lndianaJ>O!.is win· ~astic :iioo..rt the future of racing at "The ~ar worked beautifully today," he ner WM thefoe. along.With ~host of otber ~~· , . . said. "It performed well under windy top pUq ~ mcludmg Al Umer. Our track 1s a htUe wider than Jn-conditions There were some good guru Billy ~ukOtjcb. Jr., Joe Leonard and dianapl)li1 and I think it is better ~n out there .and they didn't move the car Pamelh Jones. terms of safety for this reason. If there 1s around at all .. 0wnen. included J. C. Agajania!I, ~y an accident, you have m~e room to get \Vhen ask~ about the new track, GranateW and Jones who is teaming with around or out of the way. Andretti said : ''It is a good passing J ohnsonEiles Application For Newport Harbor Job Ernie Johnson, the man \\'be guided El RandlO High School to football glory for 13 year.s. has officially applied f1Jr the varsity football coaching opening at Newport Harbor High. The higblf respected grid mentor told the DAILY PILOT, "I still haven't really made up my mind yet just what I'm going t9>do, but l m1de my application ~o as to be sure they (Newport) don't <'iOle H oot before 1 make up my mind." Rozelle said his lnvesUgat lon uncovered that Miami had violated league rules on three count..s. • NEW YORK -WW!s Reed said he f•lt like "Lew Alcindor'1 kid brother" on the basketball court. Maybt ••• but he didn't play like his k.id brother. Reed took po Milwaukee's lllptr rookie In a matchup of JMtchless centers and helped New York bowie< the Bucu. IU· lit, Mond1y nlg!X In the National Basket- ball As90Cl.UOO playolfs. track. It is plenty wide for race cars. There aren't any dips bu t there is a slight elevation going into turn three. "One of the things that makes racing exciting is the diversity of the various tracks," he said in answer to a quest.ion comparing Ontario with Indianapolis. "Indy has its own characteristics and so does this track. They are the same in general layout but this track has a little more banking coming off the turns which is a grea t feature." When Granatelli was asked about hi.s new car, he said : "There are several ~ferences. First, we ha ve Andretti driving it. It ls also built on a triangle base and the ,.,.eight is lower in the car. The nose is low and It is a wedge shape." Agajanian, owner of the car Ward drove, says he will enter three car1 at In- dianapolis. He will have.Vukovich. Jr .. in the familiar No. 911 and Bruce Walkup In the car that was at Ontario P.1ooday. A third car will be driven by a driver from ArgenUna. Face Chisox Tonight. dlbul In t• -· ... .;., loot I-I lo the W11!11 Sol. ,,_,.,. -m!y -of laur bomepnmlero. • · Calllornll II ....,..., for a ~ of %5,000 -but -of the t.am•1 .-dl1lou1 SW! 'then II a pol!Jbi1111 lhe Angels wW UCMd UWr An ab e Im Sladlwn -1111r1< 'of 31,'80 Ml Iii Ille&. . " The clu~ wu idk Moqday, mtinJ up an.,. compl<llng Ila llrae-came weekend swttp of tho Jlo>'• wbldl pvt the •• Anpla the bolt 1tart in lholr 1!11Ml' bflt«y. . And caJflGm1a ""' aaclly aquoakln1 by tho _. ..... 'Iba club has pounded ~ Ii 11111 for a 1'111!1 while the Anftl ....,..... Nlve 11mlfod tho loa to 15 hill and II runs. . Durtn( tho oprin& tho Anpll were eYJluatM ' u 1enar1Ily weak oa off we but ao1'd .. tho niouncf, That second haij has been borne out ~t the· California hitters have bittered the hJUln& predlctlooa to pi-. Tbty're rlpplaf Into tho ball for an over.U .115 teem averap. "'-I tho lt-1 .,. np!an BUI Voa, .f/I; Aun1io ~ .417; Jim Spencer, .m; &cer Re!>OI. Jll; Jim ,.,_I, .141, and Altt J.m-, .Ill. "I thou.lht we'd hive more hJUJnc," An1•ll manager Lefty Phllll(ll said as be reflected upon the club'• poor sprln& sbowln&, "put you've ,at to he arna,ed at that kind of hlttln(.'' be .. Id. turntriJ to their regular aeuon play. "I've never 8tta any club like this." , Dodgers Add to Miseries Of Hard-luck Lemaster By GLENN WHITE Of ftle Diii¥ Pl'9t lt1H HOUSTON -ApparenUy Denny1 Le· muter and Lady Luck are never going to be on the same team. After the Houatcm southpaw's uncanny run of ill fortune from 111M9, it would seem only logical that lhfnP mipt go more his way in 1970. Howev~, la his first two starts of the curref'Jt c:amp&igo, he'• apparently still io the groove -or rut if you prtfer -that began in 1958 when he prepped at Ox· nar<t. To wit: HJs lint game oI 1'10, he Jed the Giants, -44, then was pulled in the eighth hmlll(. '!be AM» faltered and loot, H, wtlJ· Leniaster 1ett1ng no decision.. Then Monday ni!lbl before 10,m •t the Altrodome, Lemaater scattered five bits apiblt the Dodsera. again in elgbt in-- nfnp. He was lifted for a•pinchhitter, to no avail, and HoUston shared a loss with Denny, 2-0. He 1ave up ~ run - a homer to Andy Kosco with two out in the sixth. K08CO was a .091 hltter at the time. Meanwhile, Don Slltton aerved a two-- hitter jn giving the rejuvenated Dodgers their second straight shutout victory after dropping their first five games of the season. Sutton was sbaky early, touched for three walks the first two innings and loaded the bases with one out in the se- cond. But somehow he escaped that, and eight 3-2 counts to varied batten. He faced only 22 men the last seven in- nings -not a bad night's work for a guy who played Anny over the weekend. For Lemaster, well. it was simp?y a replay of a worn CIUt record. DeMy must hive n:aliJed be wasn't ' born utxler a lucky star when aa a high school senior he dropped 1 pair of beartbreaius. The first wu a ~hitter, which he Jost on an error. ':l'h& other came in the CJF ch-lonahlp 1atne with Cllaffey· when he bowed, 3.2, all en unearned runt dish. ed out when the third bueman made two bad throws . Jn between he managed four other » hitters, l.ncludlng one NVGtnning verdict over Sant.I Paula when he struck out all 21 batters faced. ,,.,,, .... Sa te Al ........ K,1('411 Apr. U Doclgv1 II Hwl1M ''" p.tn. Nr. 15 Dedt•n 11 Clllel-tt .. ~ N r. 16 Do61t,... 11 Clrlcll'IMll s ··'"' A,,r, u DoclMrl 11 Allenl1 t "·'"' That waa in 1958. Yet his date with Lady Luck blS been poltponed ever since. ·Take 19'4 when Lemffter, then a bud· ding star for tlle Milwaukee Braves, was facing the CinclnnaU Reda. He was 1ooking a no.hitter tn the eye, when, with one out in the ninth, Leo Cardenu, scratched a aingle betwffn third snd ~. ruimnc the bid. Lemaster hid another ni>blt game going In 1911, when the Braves moved to Atlanta. He wu dueling the Dodgers ind Sandy Koufax, and for seven and two- thlrds lnnlng1 he had not aJJowed a hlL But Jim Lefebvre broke that one up with a homer, although Lemaster won the game, 3-1. "I've had four or five one-bitten," he told the DAILY PlLOI', "bl.K I jU9l can't seem to slip that masic one in. "Frankly I'd rather win JO 11mes than have a no-hitter became 1hey pay you to win and the more you win, the mtft you earn. "I lh1nk pitdllni 1 no-bitter ls the farthest thing ft<m a pUcher"s mind.'' • Epltomhing Lem.uta"a ablence o£ fOOCI luck wu the injury that COii him a start in the 1967 All.Star pme at Anaheim. Denny, admlttedly a slow rtarttr. had pul lol•ther a floosy ,,, mark snd All- Star skipper Walter Alston (Dodgen) had elated the Braves whU for opening duty againll ~ American Leagut'I eUte. But four days btfare the game, Lemaster WU playing againet the Mets. In pregame wmnup be was tak1nc one last Jll'actice throw when he lost foot!nc and Jammed 111 elbow into tho rlbl while falUn1. Result: Two cracked rihl and a 111t on tbt bench while the All.Stars batUed 15 lnnfnp at the Bl1 A. IM dJd the curly hJlred hurler com. plain? No. He's grown phtlOIOPhtcal, aaying, "Heartaches 11:0 w:lth It -• miscued ball, bad pitch -that's all part of the game." And .. Ibey ... -espec11lly ....... Denver Lemaster ls on the mound. LOS AN•ILl l MOVITOM 1111 r lllrM Mr fl rltl Wills. u 4 • 1 • Mlr9f"· 2lo 4 ••• MtM, If 2 O t t N..Mhltr, rf 4 t 1 t W.CNIYll. ct ) t t t Wyfln, d :I t t t tc.o, rf 4 I 1 1 f'•I'-• l b 4 I t t W.P1'111tr, ._ 4 t t t Mrit, n 4 t 1 I .Uf*'lrt, 3111 3 1 t t T.DIYll, If ) t 0 • Gnlll'111'Wllt,2ll1 ••• 11....,., lb ' ••• T....,., c 4 0 t 0 l"otw.r>*, c t t I I ktMn. 11 4 t 2 1 Ltmlt,.,, 11 I t t t Mlyliltrry, pll I t I I •llllnflll"'-11 I I I t Tot1l1 lll t ' t Tltlll :II t 1 t LOS Aftttlll COO CIOI 001 -2 H1M,1tte!I COO OOI toll -t DP -Hllllflt" 1, LO• -LC11 Anlltl• I, HOl.I~ fin J. 11 -Mrit, Tortlef't. till -11:05<0 (1), ll -w. 0.Yll. S -Gr1i..rt1w111. lf'N ll lll lllO Svl1'wl IW,1·11 f t t I 4 4 l.-lt•r fl .. 1) I 5 I 1 ' J lnllfllMtn 1111•• HI~ -II)' l-fltr (W, 0.¥111, Ill)' 11/llnl!Mnt fL.......,..l. Tl1111 -2:21.. A~t -lt.m. f.asper Proves Point Early, :Wins Masters AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -Bill C-r tipped all hi! listeners. It wu 50 minut~ berore the first Mondly shot rang out at Alll\llla National club's mammoth pines. 'Ibe other side hldn't even put on its spiked shoes. "Gene Littler pl1yed better goU at 11e Jt, than he does now," said Cuper, the game's onetime fit boy. "Me? I get bf:t.. ter with age." Four holes after the two-mm war began, Casper had proved his polnL It , wu i ll but over. Buffalo Bill was the.ad ' by four strokes and all Littler did on the Uf'I T ....... GRE EN COAT FOR CASPER -New Masters goll champion Billy Casper of San Diego, tries on his new green coat emblematic of vic- tory in one of the nation's most prestigious tournaments. George Archer, last year's winner, gives Casper a hand. Billy fired a three under par 69 to defeat fello\v townsman Gene LitUer in a playoU a't Augusta, Ga. Monday. back nine wa1 make It a bear1ble •f· ternoon for late-tuning t e I e v 11 I on customers. Casper shot 19 and won his first Ma!ten. He wore the famed COit ot green. Littler had a 74 and wore short 1leeves. "Winning: the U.S. Open is stiU the No. 1 aceomplishment for me," admitted casper, knowln1 well that proud, ~ jacketed Augusta National members listened. "But thil is a cklle leCOnd." Casper won the Openg of 1151 and ltu, beaUng Armld Palmer in a CG1ne-frorn. behind playoff in the litter. He has never won the PGA c:hampionahlp or the BriUsh <>Pen. but has joined Palmer and J 1 c k Nicklaus as aolf's only Io 1 f I n a: millionaires. "A grand 1lam today Is Jmpo.ulble - or next to it," said Casper. "It was something 20 or 40 years aro. but there are three times as many fJne goJren now. ~ odds against It are utounding." Joh~. who's been an usistant coach at Cal State (Long Beach) for one year afttt taking El Rancho to the CIF play. offs 10 stratght years, has been rumored aa a candidate for t.he Newport Harbor aoc(Mlsslon Viejo vacancies. Newport's opening resulted when \Vade WlllS stepped do"!' from the helm after five successf\zl ye1rs ol coaching the Sallon. .Guerin, Hawks .After Laker Blood Cuper wlll lty 1nyw1y. He announced plans to play in the remainder of the Big Four, the U.S. 1nd British Opena snd the PGA. Clsper WU a rtiued champion, loo!<· Ing 11 tt be tilt he beionfld in that ,,._ coa~ -even thoush lt wu lhree a1ru too big. 'An eye tnjury prompted Walt.I to rt· tirt a yw or two earlier thaq planned .Mluion VleJo'a vacancy pap~ ·up .,.,. Ray Dodge Quit to assume the role ol aUiW:Uc dlrtetor only at the: Dtablo cm)lll. Johnson. whole El Rancho teams won Ill, Jolt II snd ll<d !. u1d be dots11 't •.,.U lo be ready with an lr00><lad .-..U lllllll later thb w<OL • NEW YORlt -In calnin1 a ""' eo.tth, th• Miami Oolt>hinl have loot their No. 1 drift chof<e for 1'11 to the Baltimo« Colll. • Pete Rozelle, comml11loner ·or the Na· tiMal Football 1'Alu<, handed down that penally Monday to the Dolphins When i>6 found the club guilty of t1mperi.n1 in its 1uecn.1fu1 tffon lo lure Don Shula a\\•a1 from the CoitL I ATLANTA tAf>l -0 There'U be a lot or blood spilt GI that floor," Mid a tough- talking AU.nta .Hawk& COlch Riehle 'Guerin, but.National Baaketblll Al9ocla· tkyi Caqlmliliootr Wolter Kennedy ut,k· ed tollP<r -lt,000 worth. C~ eal1ed a press coo(erence Mon, daY afternoon to cb1rge that of(icla1s ddlboratily protected Eliin Baylor and Jerrt Wtlt Sunday afternoon as they helped the Los Angeles Laktra to a 119- 115 victory over the Hawks In the llr1t game d Western DlvWon Onal playoffs. "If that's the way they're going to c•ll I.he 1amc, BayJor and Weal won't be arou nd to "hoot 11 c;r 20 foul1." Guerin said. "II Is inconceivablt to me." said Ken· nedy, "that any cotch in any sport. even under the most 1tvtre motional !!rain, would threaten 'there will be a lot. of I ' blood spilled on that floor tomorrow n:l&bl' and that 'Cf!rtain -players m1y not bf: around wbtn the p.nl:e ls over'." KMnllly then irmouliced that ht b ti nlna Guerin $1,000 and holding Guerin 011 TV 8:10 p.n1 ., Ton ight Ch•nnel 5 personally respons ible for the conduct of his Hawks In the second 11:ame of the belt cf seven wies tonight in Atlanta and for the rut of the playoffs. Guerin replied that he would appeal the fine and that his "players aren't 11:olng to be pushed around again,. that's tor surr.'' Mranwhllt., Lakcn General M1nagcr Fred Scha us rtftatd to ' ' d I g n I f y • • Guerin'• charges with a re~ly. but uld he was going to request increased sccuri· I ty ;a t the coli!eum In Atlanta foo.itht around the playtts bench and betwetn the floor and the dressing room . "You never know afttr a statement like that what tome fan wlll do," Schaus said. The winner of the HawU..Lakers series will mttt the winner of the Eastern Division playof!s between New York and fl.1111A'auk~. 1'-1onday, the Knicks edged the Bucks llZ..111 to take a 2-0 lead in that aeries. Gutrln's remarll:s were dire cl e d aga.inJt NBA referees Manny Sokol and Mendy Rudolph. Rudolph Is th• senior NBA offlcJal. Guerin said that many persons have told hlm that Sunday's of(Jclatlng was the "bi11e1t dllgl'ICe that they've ever witnessed in sports." Gueri n said that he could care less if his rernarks affecL the ~tlclaUng in I TutSd1y•• pme. "The.re's no doobt tn my mind that Sunday they were protected," he c:bar1· ed. The Laken lhot IO free throws, to of them in the l!eCOOd haU. '!be 41 Polnta scored from the foul line overcame 1 20- point lead which AUanta built up from the field . In SUl1day'1 11me, West; the NBA '1 leading ICOff:f' thil 1taton, made II of 11 t ... throWI and Baylor made II of II. G\lorfn ail() uld N-y t h at Laker superstar Wilt Chamberlain curled officlal1 1everal Umts and w11. never p<nallzed, but that he (Ouerln) snd Hawks Captain Bill Brld1ea received technical fouls for merely arguing about a call. He said the Hawks have auffcred from officiatlna for the pa.st month. ''Tbl!:y must have me1sured It for me when I wei&ht!d 240,'' he said. "Hey, ftllow1, I'm skinnier now." Sktnnltt, yes, but the San Diego nelfhbor of LltUer ap- pem to hive added back ab<M 15 of the IOme 911 pounds be dropped on his lamed diet a few years ago. Despite ploying Mond1y under sultry, -.... 1&, ~ marched ......, the lllopes of AUIU'la N11lonal In a lhlck lftlltr. "I Hke to ntp my muaclell wann," he 111d. "You won't c:1tch mt rn llhort 11teves too often. I like belnl wann." Cuper uld he 1tldom played defensive .-II, the kind that -have <ost him the ltlt Mastera c:rown. He ltd for M holes but faded with a front nine 40 on Sund1y and watched g..foot.,. Geor1e Archer stride by to the UUt. ~-----~...--.-.... -.. __ . ____ .,... ____ -.. --·-·-···-... ----------. -···------,.....-.-------- Rustlers To Host Swimfest Golden We~' College I s favored to capture , the first a n n u a I Southern Californla Conference swim cham- pionship, scheduled for the, Rustler pool Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Finals in rour events -the SO free , 200 indlvidual medley, 500 free and 400 medley relay -are scheduled for Thursda:Y. The meet gets under way at 2 p.m. Prelims and finals on Friday and Saturday art slated for 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Friday's events include the 200 but- ter f I y, 200 free , 100 backstroke, 100 breastroke, one-meter diving, 4 0 0 in- dividual medley and Pl free relay. On Saturday. the events in- clude the 1,650 free , 200 backstroke, 200 breaststroke, JOO butterfly, 100 free, 400 free relay and three-meter diving. The Rustlers are favored in the meet, on the basis of their 4-D comerence dua1 m e e t record. Golden West h a s posted a 6-1 season mark, Jo;s- ing only w Fullerton. The foursome of Don Lip- poldt, Greg Feinberg, Keith Donaldson and Km Swenson Sliding for Honie will carry the load for coach DAILY' PILOT 11..-l'Mll Tom Hennstad's team. Bobby Farrar, leftlielder and leadoff hitrter for the Lippoldt is the Rustlers· UC Irvine baseball team, slides safely across the mo s t versatile performer, plate in a recent game wilh Southern California Cot- ranking in the top 15 in Iege of Costa Mesa. Catcher Lynn Taylor awaits a belated throw. The Anteaters are currently ~3-2 for the season and will host Redlands University Thursday afternoon on the campus diamond. Southern California in six .. ---"-------------''-----''------------------------------ events. His season b e s t s and southland rankings include : 1,000 free -10:46.0 (second); 200 Cree -1:50.2 (third); 200 indo -2:06.8 (fifth); 100 free -50.6 (13th); 200 backstroke -2:06.a (second); and 500 free -5:09.9 (fourth ). Feinberg ranks fifth in the 1,000 free (lO :M.1), 14th in the . 200 free {l:S0.2), loth in the 100 free (S0.4), third in the 200 back (2:07.7) and fifth in the ,500 free (5 :13.4). · Southland rankings a n d ti mes for Dooaldson include: sixth in the 50 free (22.8) and firth in the 100 !rte (49.1). 'SWeMdn l\aS the 12th best clocking in the 50 Cree (23.1), the fourth best time in the 200 indo (2:05.9), the second rank· ing in the 200 butterfly (2:1'.H.2) and the eighth best mark in the 500 fret (5:15.7). Gauchos' Cox Rated Nationallv • Saddleback College's Paul Cox h a s the sixth best javelin throw among junior College athletes in the United States, according to a list of marks released by JC Track and Field. Cox has a seascn best of 208- fl, v.1lich is also the third best tt'lrow in the state. Tops in the javelin Is Willie Fraklin of Mesa, Ariz.. JC. Franklin has cleared 200 feet six times this season with a best of 2SU. Night Baseball for Preps Has Many Pros and Cons On the surface, the Idea ot night baseball for high school players seems partirularly pleasing. First, it affords parents and students lo support prep baseball on a larger scale lhan the norm of say 50 to 75 souls attending afl~r­ noon tussles. Azld, it gtVes. the players the opportunity to exhibit some of their skills to a bigger audi- ence of major league scouts. However, after the recent debacle at La Palma Stadium between Newport Harbor and Anaheim High School, one wonders if it's all worth it. To begin ~·ith, Newport's pitcher Mike Me- I < ' . ___ , -- ROGER CARLSON -------- , Minn was lost for the season after tearing some tendons and muscle fibre in his pitch· ing arm throwing the curve ball in the latter slages of the second inning and came out after one batter in the third frame . And, with the outfield grass displaying the characteristics ol ice because fit the.evening dew that dominates Orange County evenings. two players slipped atte.mptliig lo catch fly balls during Anaheim 's 16-4 roul An Anaheim outfielder had' to •be helped off the field by two mates after Slipping and falling on tl)e' final out or the Jame. Newport co3ch Andy Smith isn·t too sure about the cold, damp evening responsible fo1 McMinn 's inju ry , but he Isn't ~DY (oo anx· lous about returning again for a nocturnal engagement with the Colony. "No more night gam es this year .. that 's for sure ," snaps Smith. "We'll play Costa Mesa again next year 2t night (non-league) but I don 't know if we'll accept Anaheim's invitatioo to play under the lights again," be ~s. Smith says McMinn may have been his top pitcher and without bfm Smith tenns the future, "interesting." "McMinn was probably doing the best job of any pitcher we had. He tossed eight in- nings or shutout ball against El ~odena but didn't get the win. "He was snapping his curve from the cl· bow that night and it just didn't work out," fini shed the Sailor bo&S,. Other severe setbae'li:~ ror Newport thi~ year included the loss of Bob Stafford to an operation (bone infection) and Mike Flem· Ing. Corona del Mar coach Tom Trager nixed an invitation earlier to meet Magnolia and Loai'a of the Anaheim School District under 'the lights. saying he felt the Anaheim teams were at an advantage because of more ex· posure to night activitv. • • • Sunset League wrestling coaches named Oiris Horpel of Newport Harbor as the wrestler of the year in the circuit and West- ern High's Bob Wilton was coach of the year after leading the Pioneers to the league title. • • • Laguna Beach High's base ba11 team has lost its No. I catcher, junior Tom Murphine, to the American Fieid Service program. Murphine is slated to ·Spend next year In .Panama .•• beginnin~ ;this week. It's been ruled, however, that the Artist will be eligi- ble to repeat his senior year at Laguha after returning. Area Prep, JC Golf Summaries S1tlt1 Alll 111) tit) Orl ... t CM11 ltHI (0 1 lost "' J. Gt umer 15) 1·5. Brown (0 ) l l.0 T1111111 CSI W . Kent (0 1 1011 to a. G1um1r (5) 1·'· scotl 101 d•I l rmberv1r !Sl 6-0. T1dlm111 10) IOlt 19 W1rr"'1 ISi 2·•. ~ (0 ) loll 1-Wll1111 (SI M . MtflllfllNll (10 4111 ..... ,. .. DtGr.iellt (HI hf. Roal IS), W P111H (lAI dtf. Flole¥ IHI, W lla ... ln !HI def. L_..rd !SJ, •·2 WYtld: fl }def. lire (H), •·f Oeb IHI dllf. C1U1 (SI, M Gifford /HJ 1111. C1ut (SJ. '.(I NtwNrt H1rtllr IH I 111 W"11111111tll' V1nl!Y Miller !NI 111$1 Iv E!drld:tt !WI '"°· Zlmm1rm11" !HI ftl. M1rk !WI 5-1. Goodwlfl 00 def. Sd1Wltltr11 !WI ,.0, Ke11t /NI dtf. Sl191lt111011 IW I H . MIYtr /NI dllf. Slrotlt (W) '·f, Trubo IN! def. St1hldl1r CN) •.o. V1rillY f1ltfl(lt 11•1 \11 MlllHHf G"Of"" IE)""" f.. ltoti.rboll CEI won •.o. Scl\Ulfe If 1 won $.0. ""'911' I , -u . llYI~ ( WOii Ml. Hiii {E) WINI J.(I, "'""' c.,..~. ,.., Mir UJI UI 11111111 1'1uewer (Cl lost to !IOf'~t (E l 3·1. Freet !CJ dr1 Kn19'11 c J,1-0. C1r ro!I C~l det Kt:::•v ~ S·G. Qu''"1"•"',s11 '•"/'/ 1,••· CodY Cl Iii' 111 I'll • · Irwin (CJ dtf Rub no E l·~· Baseball Standings Orange Coast College's Kurt Clemens has a best o! 187-8 in the javelin , which ranks as the 13th best effort in the U.S. OCC's Jim Heath has the 15th best shot put effort (51-4) in the country and the 10th best in the state. NATlONAL LEAGUE Ai\IERJCAN LEAGUE Major League Standings (TllOllY~Oll TI~ Emle Cathcart of Chaffey is the shot put leader (55-6 ). East Division East Dlvl1lo11 WL -@ WL -~ Ne1v York 3 2 .600 Ballimore 5 I .833 Philadelphia 3 2 .600 Delrol l 3 :1 .500 2 TIP: u.s. JC S•lk• Maritt P'l b h 3 100 -1:omon$llfl l.'Nrrlttl. •.11 H1r· I ls urg 2 .600 \\'ashinglon J 3 .500 2 ti-!Ocie~, Tex. • t.4:. Ford !Me,. St Lo . I 2 600 Bos 2 3 •= 2" th!I •...... 1 Btldwln (S.tnll'IOle. Flt .), • UIS • • ton ......... 1 M1s.-I~ (L-BHCfl CCI. f.S. Ch1'cago I 3 250 I ' N y k 2 " '00 2" 270 _ Eornon-.. J1.J· s""1'1 v....... · : ew or · 01 ... ~ c&rlr.1. J1.l1 1.-1u Cc1, 11.•1 Ford, Montreal I 4 .200 2 Cleveland 2 4 .333 3 11~· -Ed!T>OMOll •l.O: $1!'-'· Wes! Oi\ision \\' I o· I I '"'"'l ,,,,..,.r!ttl. •.111. "'l' t ut>-e1 IVs on l>ocll.. r·~I Glenn M ..... tt), •. J; Cincinnati ' 3 .667 Angel• 5 • I.IOI Li:J1 .!.. uc111,,ofl T~'/>~1 •. 1:s1.1, San Diego 4 3 .571 t\1inncsola :1 O 1.000 1 1111th1t 1E1 c .... 1"°1' i :St.1111 H..,.. Ali 1 4 3 571 42 " jCH Anul. Lowrn AmN k.ln 11:rver1, an a • ~1ilwaukee .l 4 . 9 ., ·~ife _ 811r11w111 !SP<*.1ne. w1.ii.1. San Francisco 4 4 .500 1 1 ~ Oakland 2 3 .400 3 •:ot.01 Monrl11• ts111t1 MOnlc11, •:11.l' Houston 3 4 '29 2 K C'i 2 4 33J J" Greer ILont 9~&Cfl c c1.'tio •:I•. 1 ·" ansas I Y . 'l"J ~tltcncock 191kenl11dl Ybl !8111111, Dodgtr1 :t $ .Z38 l Chicago I 5 .167 4\~ ,.V.;.tii::~. 11:" ... , 1, ... 0,Nl. ,,1>6.•1 IMflfff'1 ttn1111t1 c ovtrl ILA V1!lt'll, t:o1.,, l urk"l'hl, A.1111111 •, k~ Fr1nclteo l MMMl1''1 llnvlli t·ot •· EmPtll"" (Glef>Oa~, "rll.). S"' 0 1"'° J, Clncl11111ll I Oa•l111d 7, MUWl ""-fll 1 ,;11:.; WNWl' l.t.rMrk.lft Rlverl. Doolrrrs 2, Houston 0 1'111111 CllY •I Ml1111ewt1. INIW ",'t~l-'" tlill'dln -J-. !Siii O'-l TM1P'I •MIN Onl, .. ,,., l(hld\lled. "' "" P!ttttM.treh (Ell/1 l.(IJ ft New Tflfl CK-lfl T.....,.. 0-l i,l i labb (LACCI, ,,,., Wl*l"I .. II 1 ~~1~· ~~f~1 _ Heilmin tG1tll-PlllllOklPlll1 (Stoor! l·OJ ii Cl\~ IHolttlN" : .. ~~." ~lboeftdtt •II ff Olklllllll 10.-· d.~. S2.•: Jak90!\ /Mes•· Artt.!. U.I ; a.n Cl\lc ... • CHOrllft .. II ., ""'"' !Wrltlll , .. ,. (;ltft11 IM~'111), .U. • I'•<~~ >•· MlllllN!ll {lltl'lll.o 0.11 It "· Loul1 IGibsoo'I "'•" Hl"' lump -l!tl""CIWfl ..... • 1 .. ), 1'19111 ...., ''' 'rtdll'P (P11ldlfllll, -.10\11 lll'W S." Ftlncisc:. lllobtrtton 6.1) II Alllnll (Hi ii' Cle.-.1111111 (HllNI .. II II Dllrell CLOl,..n · 1Frri1111), 140111111 cMlra Cos111, '-10. 1.e1. llllM Wt slll"lton llrvntt 0.11 '' a11tlmoni 1Pt11Nr Poll ¥ ... II -crroer !Mn•. "'Ir.,\, ~-.... , .. -,,, •• ,,__ M l, 11'9hl H•"'llOll (Frewio), 1w1• '""/Cllr'\l' _.., '"' "'' MK.IMll H (S!mtl\Ofl New Y1rk (~tenon 1.e1 •I tellefl (Culp .. IJ 1'·11 Mc.MUlllll 1$em l'!Or.· I I . ' l.(I), "llhl K1nt1I CllY 11 MlllllflOlt, ,_ li1c1>1rcl, IMt. S111 A"IOnlo , 1M. °""9ert IFOlltr 0.1) fl Houtton !111¥ Mil, Lon• lllmP -Hiii ~'· '" A11ton1a;. nl911l WM""'"''' ·-''"'"'I" Wood• .ILA O, ''·' j w .. 1111Mlt\''1 •1111n Chlc•to 11 Ollo.llfld, 1119111 ~r,. E111 LAJ' l f.l : A 14'".CE11 Ptdlldtlpt\11 I t Chlctoo Ml1111--·· -·-···· ,,,., LA.), o!-1 \11; Bu It IEatt LA ~· . ' D• I A•• I ....... ~..,, •• .,,... n Trlp!r lumP -JldUOf! { ''.!t.Arl1 ), 1" ..., • II\ •• ""'"' W11~l11t1toll ,, 11111,,,,.,,, 111911! 50.t i Frf9!"lfl CS•11 .klttl. .... , ... , a 11b Ooaorr1 II Cl!lclf'lll•ll. nltl11 Ntw Y«ll it lotloll CEll l LAJ, •'1 Ktllrv (P1lldenl). ..... S.n FrlfldKO I I Ho\ltfO!I, 11J1hl Ofll\I ·-N:flfdv!H, •lh1 C~•'t' ui fiN rkl. •tY11 ·-------------------------------"' p~,,t,i~C~~ 'ta,11rTI1· ™' r.:;;;:~~~er~~ J.J, r-~ rr.~ \)lr90); ~1 1 ('°'"'i A,11..), U· t 1 VI-Li C~ ti 11 .. l'Jo. OIKut -11 !Mt flflt:t '"·/• 1ru 1 l!told'ltttl s.11 Mltto • 16'-, 'IF,$ 4C,1'1'19-, lt41; I I I 11 C l'IDll!, Fl1.J. I 1( ''ltil11 -FrritJ1'1 1Mtlf, Atlr.l 1S2· 11 llCk IS4n>I,..., ,1 •. 1, tts-6: f!b~.Jt, .. 21rit1etJi1w~k..1.J~ A11fenie1, l Ml COii j'$Mjdifl)1tt;), tttl-' . • U D rtlt' -Mf:rrll!, L~o.tl"t\I DEAN LEWIS IMPORTS 1966 HARBOR ILYD., COSTA MESA 646·9303 Authorized Service and Parts for All lmporhtd C1r1 Modern Body Shop for All C1r1 Orange County's Largest and Most Modem Toyota and Volvo Dealer COROLLA 1970 $1853. +Tax & Lie . ALL MODILI IN STOCK MARK H-HILUX PICKU' LAND CRUISIRS-COIONA VOLVO If you're sold on 1 VOLVO we'I sel you one. THE FINEST SILECTION OF LATE MODEL IMPORTS ind SPORT CARS IN ORANGE COUNTY 1:u/'~'-'u~~it..11M"••ko. lN~d1 Mtrrltt, 11 $.II LA l'ltf«i :1J:l1 ttmtl!ON"> I' .. Jtll.41 l"IOlllll , ti".;;.'. .. _____________________________________________ ,,, ' i I l__ Tutsdlf, AprU 14, 1970 DAILY PILOT 11 Monarchs Fall w Cellar H • With 9-6 Loss to Saints By PIDL 11088 Of ... """"' ..... ,..,. Mater Dei outhit visiting St. AntbcMy M, but It WU lo no avail, u the Saints went home with M Angelus L e ague baseball victory In a wind· blown affair Mo$y a l Memorial Park Jn Santa Ana. The setback dropped Bob Wlgmore's Monarchs into sole pouwlon ol the loop c<Ilar with a U mart, 5'ti gamu off the pace of league-leading B.ishop Amat, and virtually en- ded Mater Del hopes of a CIF playoff spot at the end of the Angelus c,mpalgn. ' After picking up two runs n the first inning for a brier lead, the Afonar c b s ei· UCI Swimmers Feted at· Banquet peMenc<d a lhlrd-innlnl col> lapst which saw ~ Sab8" pack away slx tallies on tWll singles, l.hree walQ, t "'-t\ stolen ba.ses, 1 wt.Id pitch aJ)d an error. Wttfl !he "'°'' Billi 2-0 In till. third, Mat.r Del sophomoN rtghtha"nder Steve Mannaod had a temporary control Xf:'t blem and Wlgmore replaced. him with centerfielder Gary Simpson. The latter Inherited a J.l count on the first Saint hitter he laced and promptly walil>d him and moved him down to second on a wild pitch. And before the dozen major league scouts In the .stands could yawn, St. Anthony bad scored six times. Members . of the UG . ~r.v:Qie ... •nd ~ill be a member or the The Monarchs put across N.CAA . Colle.ge Division ~ UCl team. again next season. tv•o runs apiece in three di{- pK>nSh1p swimming team were He also woo the 200 nd 1 650 re.rent inning.a -lhe flrst . honored l\1onday n!ght at the . 1 • fourth and seventh. fifth annual.swimming awards each ol ~ past two seaaons Jay Hasler and Ray Salazar banquet at Mesa Commoos and anchored the 400 and. 800 led the k>sers wttb two hits Hall ()n the Irvine camws. relay teams. He Is also in All-each. · Coa c h Ed New I and American in both aquatic tt. AMTHOMY '" presente~ special awards to sports. 11tr1tn1 Steve Farm·er, captain of the Newland pre s ented ~· 1 l i: I team, and Mike Martin, nani.· members of the team with ~~ltn.:i•' ~ f 1' ed most Valuable swimmer. ..... certlficales and jackets .along ~~:: f., t 1 Farmer, a senior f r o m .wJth the special trophy awards L-•ft. <f • 1 • 1.tlldrY. .. ' 2 2 Newport 8 e a c h , ~·as a lo Farmer and Mart in. ~r:t.T.u~'-111 1 T 1 : member of two ~'inning relay Rich Eason concluded the s.F:t~~11, • 1 • • • teams (400 and .:M> frees tyle:), eve.it with ·a nw>clal pre~en-Ti• MAT111 011 1,1 '1 ' ' JI he ur-11t r 111 rt finis d fourth .In the SO free tatioa ·lo Mr. and Mrs., Al :ri1111r1 u ' 1 t I and seventh in the 100 free in Irwin on behall of the team M!~:f. 1b' I 1 : I the NCAA meet. Re also was a ·The lrwins Were i-eCipients of Ml11~'1&;,,~~b l : : a member of the 400 medley traveling bags. &\'i'f.~· ct-o. i I 1 J r~lay team that f I n i s h e d , Irwin was swimming eoach ero10, rf T : a! hth Ucl Ui lh. nd ~:."'. ... • • ! e1g . at un is ~ason a h:iier • .., 9 1 1 Farmer is an All-American will take a sabbatlcal leave to Ad1m1. :111 1 • ·1 I Colllll! 2b 2 I In both swimming and water travel in Europe and inspt<:J. ~lmi_l.ld. Kt 1 I • polo at UCI. Olympic G&mes faclllttes In ot• s""' Ii... 1-... '° ' 3 Marlin, the f r e e s t y \ e 1972. st. Anthony 006 a ....., I I Mlltt tiff 200 '!fP ~ • ' distance specialist who has r-=-=-::-::-::.===========::::::::::::::::'.::::::::::::; won five gold medals in the last two NCAA meets, three in individual evenls and two in relay races. was named most valuable swimmer. He has ~·on the 500 free event for the past three years North Cage Nominees Coa ch Pat Adam! h a s selected 15 nominee s to try out for the Norlh aggregation in the fourth annual Costa Mesa Kiwanis North-South basket- ball game to be played June 20 at Orange Coast College. The roster must be trimmed to a sq uad or 10 plus two alternates by game time.' The candidates: Phil Carlyle (Savanna ), Jim Morri s (Sonora ), Greg Grugel <Servlte), Frank Chi Id s (Fullerton). Denny Nicholas <Loara), Biii Boyd (Lowell ), Wally Hamer (Orange ). Dan Rafferty (Western), John Boren (Magnol i a ). Dan ptlllllps (Anaheim ), Darrel Roberts, Pete Miller (Troy), Ralph Reese (La Habra), Mark Connelly, Rick Aberegg (Katella), Kim Swaim, Frank Dehn (Sunny Hills ), Stan Hein, i\-fark Olsen (Villa Park), Ran· dy Chri s ten so n . Don Soderberg, i\-11ke Grimwood (Los Alamitos), Kurt Brown , Calvin Graham, J im Anderson (Rancho Alamitos). 7 em to t pm. lolh w1y1. 7·1·9-10·11 am·12 noon·1·2·M-s..&-7·1-I pm. ) More on wffkendi. Plus ftijhts on the ·r11our to SanDiego! 1:15 em lo 10:10 pm. Bolh way1 . 1:15·1 :30·1:30-10:30·11 :SO em-12:30-1 :30·2:30-S:SO. 4:30·5:30·1:15·1:30-7:30-1:30-10:10 pm. More on tiffk.nds. ' Why worry •bout a raservalion when PSA has ovtr 160 flights• day? Such an aasy·to-rem•mber ach•dul• yoo can cany It •round in your h•ad. Why remember lowest fare1? Or 111 J•tlT Or great 1ervlc• to Oakland, San Jote, and S.c-- ramento? Or lhat kld1 und•r 12 lly PSA (with lheir pa rentt) for hall far.? Stfll want a reservation? Just call your ,,.....,, agenl or whatsltsnam1 •irlines. PSA gn. ,_ • lifL Windsor, the only whi~ born high in the Canadian Rockies. " " • ' ' ' WINDSOR~~CANADL\N lhe smoothest whisky ever to a:xT)e out of Canada!. ' ' •' I ., I l f ! I •• SIS l'OR SALE '*-••! OIAlltil COUNTY'S LARG I ST 2129 HARBOR BOIA.EYARD 546-8648 0,. h•"9 .. l:JO 11100 Leu tban one mile walk to the sunny Pacl rtc shtft, This immaeUlate 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 2 story home .ha& been a ppraised I by, the Veterans .Administration at $31,300. I TM owner bu b een l'. transf•""'1 and very anx- ious will cOnslder any reuonable oHer. Call to- day Pl steal it! I 1 Rustic Ranch Thia beautlfUI 4 bedroom ranch style bOme located in prime Costa Mesa atta features heavy ah'.ake roof, l'UltiC wood exte rior. &e.P arated m aster bedroom • u I t e • pro: feuionally add~ beam ceillne family room with Franklin fireplace, deluxe gold shag carpeting, con - vertible ~ gan.ae, rumpus r oo·m gold M e d a I lion eoirvenience kitchen and much, much more. All terms available, No down VA, Jow down FHA 1 $33.SOO. See ll now! ' I Was $23,500 Now $21,lOQ Na ~ney down You'd bttter blur)' on Ul.il one. Sharp 3 btdPCSbm Costa Mesa home1>i1.No down to Vetl, $1.050 down to anyone. Enelocttd tanat 'vith tropical plantJ}fnd waterfall. priVafe rear yard and secluded patio for summer BBQs. 'That's right $21.,.UIO tu11 price. Hurry! ---, 3 Bedroom filer upper $20,500 Brin&" your palnt brush and &en1b bucket to Costa Men where you'll find the bargain of the year. It nredg hel]>, but the $S$ 1 you'll .. ve. No down to vets $1000 d O\\' n to anybody. Call NOW or 'you'll mW ill 3 Bedroom and Fami~ Roam Take over 5%%, ~15.1. per month includes tax t s, That'• right Total pay· ment will be $153.00 per month subject to existing FHA loa.n, including everything for thia dream house, 2 baths, bri ck f irepl ace , beautiful enclosed patio, new ear pet l.ng, throughout, double gara,gt. timt-s&\'- ing built-in kitch. \Von't lul kill(. Secluded County I f 11er Upper I I: .I Located 1n the back bay area of Newport Beach on % of an acre. Fealuring 2 bone corral$, enclosed lanai ove rlooki ng beautiful swimming pool. 'I1le 2ICKI IQ. ft. 3 bedroom rnidence needs paint and elbow greue, but whet a ~. Owntr will financt: at T.5%. Call todt.Y. OIAllN COUNTY'S LUHST 2129 -80tl£YARD 546-8648 o,. ........ Ill l :lO HOUs1s ,DR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE H'ousEs FQR SALE IHousis FOR SALi HousE.s FDR SALE HOUs1s FOR SALi !!5!!!!1S ,DR SALE o ... rol 1000 Goneral 1000 Genor1I 1• Oenorol HOO General 1000 -rat 1000 C..to Moao 1100 AmNTION IS YOUR vmRANS GARAGE SZZ,000 FHA-YA Newport Beach 1200 BAYFRONT: $18,500 Mobile home. New erpt, drps, priv, beach, clbhse. adulta. A-3 oflnJa PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES READ THIS • SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 1'0% FINANCING, Property OVERA.OWING? has been aPJ>tal.aed and own-• er will sell at VA app!'&lsal wtth a ltll'Pllll ot autos, Three spacioua ti«troom.: boe.ta, campers, workahop """'" IA-Jiuina _,__ paraphtmalla -or jwit ~ • ... gc ·-""' .......... cen·~·-_ .. H ' with fireplace family room ........ .....,. · · ere• • and bullt·in 'kltchtn with great 3 • bedroom, 2 • bath, breakfast attll,. Beautifully family . room home, uaed carpeted, draped and in e~ brick fireplace: A hearth, on cellent condiUon. 13'x23' cov. • quiet cm..o&SAC atreet ered screened in patio with, • .TWO DOUBLE G~ Here It ia! A 3 Bedroom Anchorage Way, Lido Park. home on ~ Ea.st Side of ~•.,73-,.,.2896.,..,.c;-:-=-:-=:-..,-;;;; Costa Meu,, 60 x 135 ft. lot, L E ASE Io pt inn $75,000 large double car pn.ae. No Bayerest exec. home. Full dOwn. VA ot' Small Down view Back Bay $750/mo. 15 Lind• Isle Drive . , FHA. Call Now! 546-2313 O"·ner -642-4n5 New & beautiful 4 Bedroom, 5 bath home with large sunken living room & fam. rm., wet bar. Radiant electr1c heat. Carpeted & O THI:: RI:AL '"'\. !:ST.I\ TF:I!S HAWAII BOUND -Luxury Baylront Condo. Furn. 2 Br. 2 Ba. $47,500 xlnt temu. ~lcKen:!!le Realtor. M6-0732 landscaped. Priced ................ $155,000. lf yo u are in, the market for a NEW home, see these outstand· ing customized homes, built by Frank H. Ayres and SOn, locat- ed in a prime area very close to lluntington St ate Beach. The homes are priced from $30,290 to $33,690 and vary in size from 3 to 4 bedrooms, 2 to 3 car gar- ages and 2 to 3 bath s , with shake or mission tile roofs, fire- places, underground· utilities, concrete driveways, built · ins and carpeting. There is VA and FHA financing available. There are 3 homes available because of credit rejections. Occupancy by May I , 1970 in this unlt. As added features these homes in· elude such additional extras, as shag carpets, front lawn land· scaping with sprinklers. ' • ' AGES''' -500 large yard enclosed with ce-· • • _.,, • ' NEW USTING BY Ow""· '"' Bf,,,,,. Modol St Kbome,4BRor 3& 16 Lindi tile Drive New 5 bedroom, ·5 bath home. with upstairs view of Corona del Mar hills. 3 Fireplaces & BBQ. Luxurious carpeting & panelling. Land- ntent block wall, Well land- scaped ltont· and. rear. An Excellent Buy at $31,350 . VACA N T . IMMEDIATE PO~ION. e No down w23~e: iow down ~d='="=· Bo:'='';;' ...... "' ...... ="'='==I FHA: 3 BR, 111 BA, dble 1223 ear. Huge yard, fenced front Barcrest scaped: With dock ................ $145,000. n Linda Isle Drive A: rear, Sharp! Won't last? FINE Baycrest Four BR BOB OLSON REALTOR home tor sale or trade. Colesworthy 546--.5580 Secluded street, large yard. New 5 Br., 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble entry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Mstr. Br. bas beam ceil. & own frplc. Large family room w/fireplace .............. $185,000 & Co. 2 Houset .. 3 Bdrm, l·Bdrm. =",;8-0113:======= Ine. $265. Cloae w atores, o;;.:-511o,.., \U7 park. $25,000. 5f5-2486 ------- Owllr/Agt. SCENIC* SPACIOUS 10 Linda lilt Drive REALTOR BY °""'r < Bodrm, bug•· COMPLETE VIEW Newport Beach Oft1ce family nn, xlnt Costa Mesa Bay & fo.f tns, 4 Br, 4'ii Ba 5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family r'?orn & large rumpus room. Carpeting. 3 Fireplaces. 4,246 Sq. ·FL , .. , . • . $169,300 5 Bedroom 1028 = Dli.Ve area. Low down. ~3283 + maids. High ceilings. 5000 sq ft built around court. W1ttrfront Lots . FEE LAND Moao Verde 1110 4 .,... gar, E·Z malnt. ld•al Nq. 4: Excellent 51 ft. Linda Isle leasehold lot. Plans avail. Consider trade ..... $35,000 Hall of Fame DOVER SHORE MESA VERDE s BR '" '"'"""";"'. $!!8,000 Formal Dining room, 15x24' furnished. Assume 61Ai% AREA tam Joan. Owllt'r 54S.7249. Our next unit is now on sale for occupancy in May and June 1970 and introduces the new 3,000 sq. ft. "El Dorado" model priced from $34,490. • rm, 2 1.,,ic'•, 211 ba, I""======= Completely mlecorated t~ Custom built 3100 • sq ft. lrg lot, $46,500. Owner/ Agent terior. Outsta.rxllng kitchen, MONTEREY RANCH bime Call aft 6 PM 540-782.1. beautiful shag carptg thru-Four bedrooms, three baths: o .. ~~,;.;:..::==== out, hardwood floors under family room DIN I NG Newport &.ach 1200 this car~ting. Cedar li~ed ROOM, large' rumpus room !--------- No. 41: Long water view facing Harbor ls· land w/76.2 ft. of fronlage. Plans avail. No. 88 : Point lot with ll8 ft. of fronlage. Long water view. Plans available. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR (Our New Address) 833 Dover Dr., Suitt 3, N.B. 6-42-4620 1000 I General LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS 320 LIDO NORD 1000 Rancho La Cut1t1 Homes on Brookhur1t •t Atl1nt1, Huntington Beach 968-2929 -ffl.1331 General 1000 Gtner•I ~----~-~ closets. \\ondcrful locat10n. and electric kitchen w I th Price reduced to ~33.950. built-in retrlgerator freezer dishwasher, doubl~ oveDl!I'. Carpets, drapes and shutters thru-out. 18x38 heated and filtered pool with electric cover, 1\1."0 rear yards • slumpstone planters a n d many extras. Tn1Iy a qual- ity home • VACANT, U.1- MEDIATE; POSSF.SSION. Priced to i;eD at f72,500, COATS ' WALtACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pan Evenings) 1000 Newpart Hei9hts LEASE OPTION $350 PER MONTH Mod?m beauty just 2 blocks to OCEAN BEACHES, Ca- thedral BEAMED CEIL- INGS, modern LA VA STONE FIREPLACE. built-in kiteh. en, 2 elegant baths, Design- ed for low maintenance to ENJOY LIFE! WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES , TOTAL PAYMENT * TAYLOR S Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility $134 PER MONTH room, with 85 ft. fronting on excellent swim· Real sharp 3 bedroom, 2 bath . NEAR CLIFF DRIVE. On double lot with large greens, large 10' deep well landscap. ed private pool, 2640 SCJ. fl. 4 big Bedroom, 3 Baths, For· ma.I Dining Room, Breakfast room, Laundry room, 3-car sized garage v.•ith po..,,·er Walker & Lee ming beach. Units are newly furnished. home. Freshly painted. Gt LINDA ISLE " .. Reduced to $200,000. Xlnt terms loan of $15,800 at 5% % an. f.iagnificently designed home 2043 Westellff Dr. 646-7711 Open •til 9: 00 Pi\I BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR nual intere1t, You can't beat withs bdnns, m8id's rm & It! Service Porch. Double 5 baths. Spacious llving & (Our New Address) Garage. Forced air heat. dining rms open to eantilev· ~13~3!:!D!o!v!er~D!r! .. !S!u!·t!te!'!!3,~NT-!ew~po!r!t!B~e!a~c!h!!!64~2!-46~2!0l Conlplctely fen<.-ed,' Sprink· ered patio deck facing Ja. : lers. Carpet & Dr a p e s goon. Rumpus rm plus fam- 1 ;G;;;;'";;'";;';;a;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;OOO;;, Ger>tral 1000 throughout! Family Room. ily room which opens to gar. opener, paneling decorator Evenings Call 531-5570 wall paper. , .Luxurious Liv-~~~~!~~~~· ~:t7~ Instant Motel HARBOR Highlands. Believe us, these homes·are hard to find. Bright &. clean 3 BR & 2 BA home w/eozy frplc, in prime residential area. \\'alk to Mariners ScbooJ. &: West. cliU shopping, Price(! for immediate sale $28,SOO! ! ! Call 5l;M24, Fixer-Upper New. liatinc of Mesa Verde elm~ Jiome on qu iet meet.~~il work but prie- ed,iJ'iabf::Jor, preee:nt conch· UO.. Yacant O;l 101r ;teases i Big 5 Bed.rm home • $310. :Pl'!'!'.~-,, $37,450. .~1ie~·veme Pacesellrr, l + .,iam, avail 5-1 Ior 9 ·~ .,.,, $250, ./ t;nvel)' 4 + ram, I story ranch, Back Bay view $350. -May optiOn at $50,950. SCl·SllO -c-.a-.. LEGE REALTY Miiia at"""'·"' FABULOUS VIEWS Of ocean &: jetty -from this: lovely home in exclusive Cameo shotes see 4521 Tremont Lane Expensively landscaped yard · 2 Bedroon1s & den formal, view dining room Owner moving out of town $74,500 Listed exclusively with Let us show ii to ynu! GI Ol' den patio. \Vet bar in gal- FHA Terms available. leria. $169,300. DOVER SHORES WE SELL A HOME •so Linda'~'°"" daHy \.5 VIEW EVERY 31 MINUTES "C:~~r~:;;."' ;::;:j 3 646-7171 Shary 8 uftitg in commercial zoning. • .located next to and across the street from the busiest & best motels in town, 6.6 Asswnable loan I: ideal for family suite motet Call for details. Exclusive ~.':i::: ::. m;:,'"i Walker & Lee TAYLOR co. 1o ·THEREAL ''"""-ESTATERS complete outdoor entertain-2790 Harbor Blvd at Adams Realtors ment area. Paneled family 545-0465 Open ;til 9 PM rui So.n J oaquin Hills Rd. CALIFORNIA with. , , • room & formal dining room. ,..iiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiii.., I NEWPORT CENTER Viow of Bay. & dty Ugh" LIDO ISLE 644-4910 KITCHEN Newport beyond, Spaciousness is the Charming 4 Bednn 3 Bath PAID YOUR 1969 Airy and bright, overlooking at SPECIAL \vot'd. Sl.37,500. bo · · 1 1' nd' professionnlly landscaped Estate Ale. 28.57 x 85 R-2 'Jot MACNAB-IRVINE . me 111 1mmaeu a e co 1-Victoria Good ta! tJon. Extra large upstairs INCOME TAX?? gardens. Modern avocado ren area. $20,000 ReaJty Con1pany master suite + 3 Bedrms built-ins with lush shag car-...a11 IMMED. POSSESS. (714) 642-8235 downstairs. Separale dining Plan ahead for l9'10 with tax pets lO match. 3 large bed· (enytimt) Beach cottage, 2 & den, Tip. 901 Dover Drive, Suite 120 rm, beamed ceilings thru-savings in this t1pacious 4 rooms, 2 baths, fireplace on Top cond. Lots ol paneling, (714) 675-3210 out. $63,500, Contact Ken bedroom, 2 bath home. Sep.. cu!-de·sae lot. Assume 61h'';-;11:.:;:::;:::;:::;:::;::::;::: irplc. Easy care lot. 1080 Bayg'd D · · arate JS x 20 family room, government loan, $191 pay~1' MORGAN REAL TY Newpo~ ~a;~e !~~~han1 to see this FP'I:P~Ccfi=a~~t·:u :~ ALL. EaStSide/Westside 613-fi642 675 6459 """ WE SELL A HOME 34ll E. Coast Hwy., CdM SHARP CLEAN Pete Barrett \ NO DOWN GI or FHA. s k PRICED RIGHT! EVERY 31 MINUTE Take your pie of these cute BY TRANSFRD owner 2 UPGRADED REALTY WE SELL A HOME w Iker & Lee 2 Bedroom hom ... Both""' ""'" 1 yr old 5 BR, 3 BA, Freed-Om home 'vith 3 huge . EVERY 31 MINUTES I vacant & have dble ~. arch designed, pool size Jo!, bedrooms, gorgeous pullman 16Cl> Weslcliff Dr., NB large lot and excellent loca· end ol cul-de-sac. 1 Blk bath. Home h8.8 added den 642-5200 ~ Walker & Lee 8424455 7682 Edinger 540-514-0 tlon and priced to ~ll •t... Back Bay. 2700 Sq ft, din or family rooni with great -~~=~~~,..:,.----$22,950 rm, sm sewing rm or otlice, FIREPLACE. Gre•t loca· LIDO BEACH HOME 7682 Edi,,..r 4 BEDROOM lam I l<ll 30 x 14, liv nn t1on, Ready ror occupancy. 540-5140 842-4455 ONDOMI UM w/beamed ceilings &: frplc. FULL PRICE $21,500. No Four bedroom two bath home C NI ?tlother-ln-law suite "'/sep dO\\'n 1o VETS or $650 to with completely 1nodem ldt-$24,750 Full Pric' e Assume low int loan. lmmac· entrance. $51,000. M&-7544 FHA Vet,., \VHY RENT? chen. Ready for immediate ulate condition. Clubhouse & * DUPLEX PLUS * WE SELL A HOME occupancy. O osc to Lido pool privileges. Unbelievable REALTY COMPANY One lot from Orean & \\i th EVERY 31 MINUTES Oub & beaches. $50,{XX). Ideal 4 Bedrm. 2 BA complete at $26,750. will trade or cash 642-lnl Anytime Ocean vie,v, 2 BR & 3 BR. Walker & Lee E. -,.1;_rff.Iand ~ ~~:~-i~~~1fn~~%c! ~~~~ equity. ca 1111~.., .... ~H"'E"'Y""'v..,;E;.T.,s"',,""".!!!!-:~~amgu.e~~L~l·!~ 2790 llarbor Blvd. al Adams 545-9491 Open 'I.ii 9 P r.1 _. ._ loan can be assumed by any. Cotdwell,s.11cer one. Payable $126 per mo i~ $391 Total down moves you tal area. $51.500. 'tr ... oeow• .... Y d duding taxes. Owner will / in! 3 bedroom beauty com-Grah1m Rlty, 646-2414 --consider 2nd TD for lower plele with POOL. 11eparate Near Newport Post Office down payment. Su bmit 12 x 30 DEN, 1-fodern built· TiiE BLUFFS 3 Bdrm, 3 ins. All of this located on a terms. Call a.fQ.1151. I ~~~=~==~= bal.h, split l e v e 1, on REALTORS LIVE BETTER 550 Newport Center Dr. 673-4400 FOR LESS Newport Beach, Cal if, 3 Bedroom beauty in nice 833-0700 644-2430 area, convenient to .schools11., ........ ~~"'"~"'"~ FIXER UPPER & shoppl,.., B"utilui iAnd· YOUNG & OLD ALIKE NEEDS T .LC. scapi~. An unbelievable Sharp clean home not too low price of $20,500. Featur. large or small! Easts.ide Basically sound and needs es blt-ins, extra quality cpts. Costa Mesa. Assume rnA only a handy-man and TEN. 2 Baths, EZ terms. loan at 6\i~~ annual interest DER LOVE and CARE. 3 \Vilh payments of $110 includ- bcdroom, 2 bath, separate PAUL•WIU'fE es all! TOTAL p R y c E family roo1n '''il.h BIG back CARNAHAN Sl7,400. \VHY RENT? CALL yard. ONLY S2000 down and 1.•ALTT co. WE SELL A HOME Opportunity WANT PRIVACY? large cul-de.sac lot. Trans. greenbelt, Custom ten'ed owner says sell GI Lots of room to entertain or FHA decorated & immaculate. inthis3BR, +dln.+f.am. WE SELLA HOME Large kitchen. $37.900. + 20:<22 rt. all purpose rm. EVERY 31 MINUTES ~75aft6 pm weekdays Encl. Spanish courtyard. 3 DON 'T MISS BLUFFS Years old & imm~c. Close Walker & Lee E:ii:q\lisite 3 Bt, :z~' ba wet to schools & shopping, bar, dbl oven, auto water ONLY $47,950 Z790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams llOftnr. By0wner$45,000. Ph. Welke r Riiy. 675-5200 545-9491 °"" ·m 9 PM 644-0985 3366 Via Lido, NB Open Sun. BLUFFS, 3 Br, 2 Ba,! level, University Park · 1237 SITUATIONS MAKE BARGAINS ••• Here's one. 3 br, 2 ba with lam rm. Tennis and swlm- ming pool near by. fp $30,500. Owner will consider all oil· ers. e Red Hill Realty Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime 83J.m20 Corona del Mar 1250 Bluffs Owner Says HELP! MUST sell this outstanding 3 bedroom condominium that's walking distance to schools. Ideal floor plan for children with the master bedroom suite on a separate level. \Veil priced at $31,000 BUT owner says "present all oUers". Call Us Quick 673-8550 'O THE REAL \"'-ESTATERS r' ' ! 0 UNEXCELLED VIEW of Harbor & ocean, Attr. split level hon1e on R-3, 5100 sq. ft. lot. Ideal for 4 Apt. units. $225,000. 2501 Ocean Blvd., CdM. By appf, only. Bill Grundy, Realtor 833 Dover Dr., NB • 642-4620 • CASHOUT BY OWNER 219 Poppy Ave, CdM. Ocean view 3 br. priv. patio, Just above little Corona Bch. Moving to Hawaii. MUST SELL $52.400 Phone 675-7817 S56,500 Ocean View 2000 sq. ft. Exquisitely decorated . ycu'll be enchanted! Lge, bdrms., din. nn.. inviting pool. Choice Harbor View Hills ioc. ''8/8" Realty 675-3000 BACHELOR PARTYI S\vinging pad for the young at heart. 2-Sty. Jiv. rm, & 2 BR. 2 Ba. Let income unit pay hills! $57,500 Hal Pinchin & Assoc. REALTORS 3900 E. Coast Hwy. 615-4392 3 BR. Den, 21Ai ba. Con- temorary Architect design- ed It. blt. Slh'io tra.nsfetnble loan, $69,500. By owner. Phone 673-2854 for appt. BUSIESr marketplace ln town. The DAILY PILOT Classified section, Sa v e money, time & effort. Look $164 per n1onth pays au. EVERY 31 MINUTES $21.600 FULL PRICE. 1093 Baker, C.M. 546-5440 w lk & L WE SELL A HOME a er ee EVERY 31 MINUTES ;::;====~I.I Wanted REAL ESTATE Sales pepple. Private· desk &. phone. Top commission. F1oor time, Good 'valk-in tratfic. Same location 14 yrs. Call for interview, NEW IVAN WELLS' ntE QUICKER YOU CAl4 choice com. lot, walled 4 BR, 3 BA + powder room. THE QUICKER YOU SELL I patio/view. Many at!, ex- Fonnal din rm, fam nn w/1 ========="--',;"";':,· ;:'";;·;::500~. ";,;;4-4,=:2!0;:. ============-wet bat & frple. Luxurious-I: Now! ly crptd. Superb view. Pool in landscaped courtyard. ;c ;""'\_ Roy J. Wani R•aflor 1430 STAR GA'ZER~~I Good 1nvestment. $35,000. NO DOWN VA Galaxy Dr. 646-1550. Open j!:~:!..L!!.!..;.:.;...;,_Bya.AYJ.l'OIJ,llN-----i-:'"'.".,..:~ Reasonable down payment & 1860 Newport Blvd .. C.l\f. Daily. A H~~ M y.,WyJtdiWty~ M sm ~~u. :m':~ ~r;ns~~acnt $pac. 5 B~ 2 BA home in CALL 646-3928 Eves. 673-4577 LUSK EASTBLUFF ~Ni. n -:[ :i•t to 't.W:.~ ocT: ii~ Walker & Lee Business Building 2700 Harhor Blvd. at Adams s4s.o46s Open 'til ·g PM Lachenmyer Realtor 7682 Edinger 842~<1.').j 546-5140 JUST LISTED W II-.u.ce di Rlt xlnt loeauon. Crpts, drps, REDUCED $1SOO tt-16-1 ~~message xi.· --i......:.'! 4-1>29-3A e rm tr •• ri. sit hdwd Dr's Min down * WATERFRONT* L•r 4Br.2~b8 ....... ·-erl••V· ¢:~ "'"""'"""-CIOlltip:ll •l'Gto•-·iua~ J3.l7 Channing cuttom home with 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. FHA.. •",7550. cau· Mr, N•l-VWll -ol'fOIZo:tloc&irthsign. I I r bi · b. ~ -~ .... _ -DUPLEX in" citY. To view call 1 w-,, ........ 1;1 r°"' o so tin sbelvts & ca i. 548-7729 64~ l'..~•. aon, Heritage Real E!tate " 2Y;;;. ~;;;.. 62-n..- neti. Heavy • ha k e roof, ~U51 Pier & slip with !hi· \''ell lo-"WAL To,. 3 5p\ICI 3J You 63 ~ beamed ceilings, large: l:iv. LIDO SANDS .:..::c::;:;:;.· ~=~==-ce.tedduplexon ?itarcusA,:e. -=COft==·~l~N~·M~=-==;i :z. ~~ ~~ ing room, 3 finopla~s, 22x 3 Btdrooms VETS NO DOWN in w. Newport Beach, Walk 171·Jlllt•==:!l~ t;Upt 36""" 66&11J! 22 family room, 3 Bedrms. 2 Bltbt:, bulll·iM and the seller will ~ your to the ocean I; shopping. .-MM 7 ar.,. 37 o.r 67 a. 1% baths. Patio, large yard $26.500 cloaing costs! C\J.ttom llOO Priced to sell at $65,IXXl. $28,950 Gt@MAr'il ':= 3:~ :;~ w/aepplaytrea.Cu1-0N&c. Geor9• Wllll1mson sq. tt, 3 BR, l\t BA home C. Robert Nattress Realtor S Btdrm. + 3 Nth1 !'t(.l,AJ"f lOll!t AOfor 70 " $4l,SOO.' Auume 5%% loan, . REALTOR ~~~. R-2 kit. Full price Olsta ~fesa 642-1485 Q\\·ner desperate. F\111 din-60-73-7,s" :i::;: ~~ H~ S21J Pl'l' mo., P.t.T.J. f'll' 67, ,350 ~'I"' &-a _......, . .... 13~ <I.Md 7J&thind ~~'=~ appt call 6f6.,32SS 545-2737 .--.r _. ,,.,. ' FULLER REAL TY eOverlookin9 Can1le ing roon1. ('ntry •1t1ll, popular lof'Wllh M Polre 74 in r J Smith orR It ' JUST LISTED 546-0ll4 3 BR. home, Private beach noor plan. Park like yard. :~~ !:~ ~~~ ean ' ea or ' Sharp E-skle unHs w/pool, --~=~=~--area. Nr. pools, tennis & rec. 540-1710. 17Gcio4 -A1Stol<• 71 For on qui~t lll'CILJdcd st, 2 BR $22,500 arta. Walk to Ille Ottan. TARBELL 2955 H1rbor ~=~ !:~ ~~ 400 E. lTlh St ., Co!la MeM rach, g~r·11. drps., crpt~., pa. assume 5y,o;. Lo.n Only $24.900! Horses or Unit• 20..._ SO To IOS.... SHARP Office 1ulte 528 sq. tlOll, S7a,OOO, Dnn I v.·a!t. n-1.1 1 •---•-· hftn CAYWOOD REALTY u a.ere 3 Br 2 Ba pool 21 n.n !l~ 1121~ rt. at 819 \V.16th LO\V rtnt, BOB OLS,,~,,'°!~~EALTOR °33~~::"'•dl~;; nn.: 6303 W. Cout Hwy., NB 6~fJf 'loan. '?.lay 'trade: ~~ SJn...r, a:ii.;. carpet1, drapes, l"t'stroom. ~ lal'liC11 llvint rm .. subject to • 548-1290 • .-~~'~·'-"',.,:.,· -~----I ~~ ~~ ~~«tM ~ E~i:.~ s:~~~ ~ "N-E~w=P-O~R~·~T_.,,H_E~l~G~H=r S 51.4 •;, Joon to aasum~. 2 Bedrm. hrdwd Doors., frp\c, 2 l:IOUSES'on R-3 Jut, % mile ~= r, ~ ~ e rambling-ranch style J M!).1T2fl. xlnt eonrl. 'East CM, R-2 to bct1ch. \Vant more units 21"-" •511, eaii. 646-nn Bedr1n, 11hake roof. frplc. TARBELL 2955 Harbor $19,500. Klngaard RE r..u or T.D.'s. ~~ :~"' =~ S.A. Heights VA or nlA, 3 S28.9:'10, K ; n ca a r a, R.E. I '2-2222 FORTIN co. M1-5000 IO. IV\ "''s ~ S23,500. Xingaard, ri.1· 2-2222. TltE SUN NEVER SETS on '-"=-------! ·..:;;="--'=--...::::.:::::;:1 Mn\S/Good \B/Adtt:ne {)Nmn! R.E-. M1 2"-2222 . \Vhltt Elephants? DAILY Pttm WANf A.0011 SOCK IT TO .!DI! ___ cn_AA_o_"_rr_• ___ ·-----------------------------' White elcphantil l)IJ'ne..a.nne i I I ) I ·, • ----------------------------------,.---..------------------------------~-...,..-~-..,.--..,,-----..,.....,.."....,...,..---:-".""~-· HOUSIS l'OR 'SALi IS POil SAL i 1711 TriplexM .. from $38,185 W EST BAY AVE. ba. 4 UI\!'". frva1 152.000 Chu:mina tiew 3 bdrm. I V~w Homes -Xlnt tennl 1(ed1tenantan style: ~ Lots .. nom 1'7,000 from ocean & tmy. 8ulldC!r'1 Apt. rtntalt • from $13$ home, <op qul\lity. GOLDEN TRIANGLE 8 111 Grundy, RHl!or RNlty e 4ft.- Tl.IHG'lf, "''"' ..., "'° ra Y mor INTALS ...................... Summer ltont1l1 2910 RENTALS RI NTALS • RENTALS ' I RENTALS R EN ALS I L$ Hovsff Unlurftltltool Ap_h. Furnl...... 'Apia. Unlumllhool Aph. Unlurnl..... Apt!. Unfv!"I""" _ ....... _~ N.wport Helghh J210 Gonot•I -Coil• MoH 5100 Ceol• MeM 5100 '!!,we""! llNdl 5200 N.w"'!!.... - UDO 11 le RestMtlont. ll'EW 2 BR, 2 BA, tarn, bltn1, Home or apt. Jlll)r thru ref. Grdnr tt\cl, Av. Mt.Y 1. Labor Day w .. 1<. 613-3948 s:IOQ. 64).8099 (213) <S&.1«111 _,._.,._ ::;;;::;;: -- . -.r :.\•-/ARC \\ll~r~ •·, (1/ • t l • ' • THE AMIGQS WAY A . ' l!utbluff Aro• Off J •mboroe Rd. 833 Dover Dr •• N8 64U620 • 432 N, El Q.ni1no Real C....,lnium ' 2950 Coron• del M•r 3250 SAN Juan Hills, leut 6 mo. CLEAN 3 Br. 2 Ba. Frple, min. 2 bl' A de.n. 3 blhs, crptt:, drps, dbl gar . Single Adults ~ lf:neM, Goll & rec. Children ok. No pet 1 . 1 ,,_,_, 1~ 2 ~ Lklo Isle 1S51 S•Cn Juol n prtv, AdultJ..No pets. Avail. 613-8869 ;;';.,,.z~ 1 turn'ish: -ap atrano 1715 MJY lit $350. MO. Call IJKE'"',,,-.N"e"w:,-,;-3-;B"r'"; °"2-;ba~. ~a11•1 ed. al\d . unfurnished', ,with UDO ISLE PERFECT 493-3380 blt-W M'1nt. pool, °""' complete privacy and land- • ('_fct/lll/C/' lllt'l'l'i 111~1(' \\ C)()tl~ Onmo• Count11'• llo.t BtaVtl./tll , Apartmtnt Comm.unit~ BeautJ!UI, new • now renUng • 22 unlls ol 2 bdrms., Z baths, with fine quality color COOi' • dlnatea carpets & drapes. Gold Medallloa1 ell electric kitchens. Frplcs. Outdoor llvln~ areas. Pool & recreational faclliUes. Cl1l: 1 &YflONT HIDIAWAY RENTALS vw. Adulta , 1331). ·~ scaped countJy dab·- " u_.. Unfu 1-•~ phero !ncludl"" $7l6,000 R•ro Opportunity . -' ~OI m ~-81lboo 3300 .. ,.,. ol recreational lacU- Featur ing a c I u b atmosphere for y our comfort a nd pleasure-just completed I or 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Furnished or Unfurnished. BOYD REAL TY 675-mll t Br. Home. Or can~ used Rambling Trout atttam wan-Gtntral 3000 lties designed &nl operated 11 duplex. • ~en past thla ntatlc jewtl 4 BR. (or tum,) 3 BA. Year-ju.st for s.in&le people. Priced for quick sale with 2 lge. bdrma., new bath ly $.15Cl mo. Frank Marshail By owner &: modern knotty pine kllch. **RENTALStt Realty. 615-4600 $6000 CASH Lge, living rm. features Iota t BR .. untum Triplex •• $125 =_,====== CAN HANDLE of panellrc· It huge w:iodowa 2 BR. Duplex, kids ok •• Sl50 Lido l_sl_, ____ 3_35_1. I facing the fONSt of towering s BR. House, tot/pet •••• $170 -Full price reduced to $104,CWXI. pfries rippling btooks A Bachelor Apt nr bch ••• , $85 BEAUTIFt1L S BR. 3 BA. Was $125 000, House located ' · 1ro· •-2 BR .,_ A 1 ~~ A U arl •· bes '·c1e f island complete &eclus10n m tu~ . u1.1u. p ••••••••• ......, va now on ye y u:ut. on 1 st ... ,.0 ...,...""'0• restoftbewortd.Completely ROOMMATE SERVICE $600 per mo. ., Call l41w) ...-.-. Jumiahed incl, carpet's. It * MANY ontERS * Owner/ 6 7 3-225!.I. Eves, *or 96U410 for Wo. dnlpe.s, Mlnutts from the FrM to landlords 644-'..sm Ask for Mr. Johnson trwy, & only ll mi, to the Blue Beacon Rental Finders ======== DECORATOR'S new harbo,, 435 w. l9lh St, CM 64>-0lll Huntington Botch 3400 HOME SHARP, spac 2 gtory, 3 ot 4 Beautifully done. 5 Bdnns. UNBELIEVABLE Bedrms, fam nn, all bltns, Family rm. Xlrlt street to PRICE OF $19,00'.I newly decorated. $215/mo. street 45 1t. lot. And. owner will AvaU 5/1. Heritage R.E. $98,500 finance at 8% 540-1151 Copen ewa.} LIDO REAL TY INC. I'"' " !Id 1 k 2 Br ·Rents Fro m $145 to $300 Immediate Occupancy Mo. to Mo. Leare Avail. ANAHEIM 277 So. Brookhurst (1 blk. So. of Lincoln) (714) 772-4500 AJr.Cond ... soundproofed, self cleaning ove0s, ,._ --- beam ceilings, dishwasher. lush landscaping , Cost• Mo.. 5111ll N1wpor~ H~IJJh.._..1•_52_,,f,1 with streams & waterfalls, elevators, BBQ's, -------'-e HOMEY 2 f!r. l'tple, Pl) clubhouse with social activities, saunas, QUIET a Luxuruous prlv patio,. quiet. Adults, Jacuzzi & swim pools, private garage with ADULT LIVING AT. • • pets. 673-1083 storage. From $140-210. HACIENDA HARBOR !""-===--~ :.i.;-=.• CO:".:"":i\'a1M°:~"'oo':s .~~ ~ ~~;: :,.s~ E•~----5~1 Just eut ot 2600 Hartter 11¥4 nr. Nabt'l.1c.dlllac all utUU:lea Jncl. PRESTIGE LOCATION 425 MERRIMAC WAY, COST A MESA e 54$.4300 _Bltns, ahag crp!S, d.,,.. pr, For 1eue. <1<1""' l1181 oq. a. I VIRYTHING NI W-MOVI IN NOWI beaut Jandscpg, Sony no 4 BR, m BA apt. 1i'Pftllt, ~:m!i'i:'f'""'""'""'!l!!!O"i'!!!!!!~~~~~~~~1 pet& Inq at Ole. by pool or :·.r.:::: RENTALS apt No. 9. 241 Avocado. drapea. ~ !"t bar, S"1 a~" balconies, dbl pr ott kltchli Aptt. Fuml1hed General 5000 """'"2925• Ewa. 6f6.a97'9 dahwhr, dbl oven. Pool. Coat ·Ne;.;.--;;-Booch 4200 ORLEANS AP,TS. " '"Ct:ir~ ,::-ttoif VEN DOME ADULTS ONLY u-~ ~ 'i:[ .. ~~! Newport Bo•ch 3337 Via LI,. --THE HUNTS" •N ..........,h ' sm pet 0 • ' "" u i ... iOM.1 '""" 1% Ba studio, patio w/w, RAN IMMACULATE APTS! BAYFRONT BARGAIN -REAL FSl'A't.lE . encl gar, Av. now. Bkr. FOR lease with option or NEWPORT Bi:AcH G 0 ADULT & FAMILY 4 BedrOom home reduced to 34144CoastHwy.,DanaPomt ~ lease to right party. SECI'IONS AVAILABLE 2 &: 3 BR. Avail. Private pa. ••...-~ Uo, pool • lndiv. laundry 1ac. 2 BR Studio, 2 Bath. ~ (Nr. Orange Co. Airport; Tus-rm. l:ple;\ plush erpt'g, bit~ tin at 17th St; nr. Westclltt). Ina, analJ patto, 2 cai Pl'I $ilo.OOOforQuiclc .Sale! • 496.1268 e· "RENT'=r.,-,~,..,=-~op~uoc· "'n"'3"'o"°r4' Beaulitul home in prestige 880 IRVINE AVE, Cloqto1hopplng, Park Vogel Co. Rltn. 2li67 E. Real Estate Br, 2 Ba. good area. To $250 area. 4 BR., custom carpet IRVINE AND 16th OPENING * Spacious 3 Bt'a. I Ba Coast Hwy, CdM 673--2020 Salespeople wanted mo. for June 1. 645-0146 aft & drps; patio & landscap. (714) &15-0550 * 2 Bedrooms 1741 Tustin, Costa Mea Mgr. Mn. Canon. fl42.4641 6 . I * SWin> Pool, Put/ ..... Huntington Bo•ch 1.400 C1pi1trano BHch 1730 !20>-Many ....... 4 br, II! 1~;..%': ~.~B.20131 Soutfr Bay Club IMMEDIATE *mi:::=::: STUDIO APTS. SllS MO BUYS NR MARINA & BEACH ba Twnh<e, atvlrefr. child VACANT , lmmedlat• Apartments oosrA MESA &'2·2'2< '"""""ma-2Balha $250 mo. f#.:M92 TOWNHOUSE • New trr. 2 BR. 211 Batlw, --pr, patio. 615-503.l Coreno del Mor • CU!tm 3 Bed, 3 Ba, Den & & pets conad. Bkr. 53,._ "°""";on, 4 BR, 2 BA,!========· OCCUPANCY Carpeta " drapes. Gar&&< YOU A NEW hobby rm w/sink. Sfl.ble &: home crptd &: com pl 339-C CABRILLO liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\ 4 BR HOME open fields 2 blks. Costa Mtsa 3100 ,,.redecorated, $235 per mo .• Costa Mesa 4100 C $175 Per Month • ot I' . $36,97;). 15% down 496-3377 .lease. Tradewinds Realty, Luxury prden apartment. osta Me1a 5100 $165 On Lease ... ~- LESS and have 5 or more Condominium 19SO area in absolute gorgeous ~V7ACANT==,~B~r-. 72~Ba-.~IV~'1~k-to * * beautiful landseapfne & • MARTINl"UE • If you earn $8,500 a year ar -2 Story. 20XI sq ft of living 847-&,l SUNNY oUerina; complete privacy, --------&7540~0 o - persons in your family, you condition. Quiet street. close beach. Family only. $240 unparalleled recreational Park-Like Surr!.ndlngs -''''?ECCL.& may now qualify under the 2 BR Townhouse. $1 ,000 to schools. 3 Bedrooms, mo. Lease or lease option. * ACRES * facilities 1n a country DELUXE 1-2 .t 3 BR APTs.1--,.,.,--====--ON TEN.ACRES new mA Program 23.5 Jor below mkt, 51K% int. rate. 1amily room &: huge bonus Agt. 54G-172J or 54&-9652. club atmosphere. Now 'Prv patia. • Htd Pools EL CORDOVA 1 A 2 BR. Furn A Uafl;lrl a new 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath Must sell. 544-2689 T ~ S3llll "·'! Brand new delwc apts, spac. , Flreplacea I prtv,. ii.Ho& I home. Payments of ..,.," per room . ....,ase · m<J . ._... 3 BR. 2 BA. Fam Rm. 2 * MotetAptS * leulne In Newport Beach. Nr shop'g e Adults only l'oola. Tenn.ii O>nblt'l a-.. .,....,., 545-8424 South Coast Real frplcs. $250 mo. Rent or t 1117 Santa Ana A CM ious, 1 &: 2 Br, 5'vimming · • --. mo. for 360 months (30 Duplexes for Sale 1975 Estate. lease. Avail ltlay 1, t . !f!odels open 10 am to 8 pm 11.1-A t 113 e ~6.~""' pool b-bque ree hall These !!«> Sea Lt.ne, OdM 6H-281I years), including truces & 962-8206 Studio & 1 Bedrooms Rents from $1354310 ••46• P ....,.... are the best'tn the atta. See (MacArthur nr. O».t Hwy) insu~. Payments may be MONTICELLO ne'l'·ly dee 3 them a t zm Charle, manaa- Jess depending on your i~ CdM, 2 houses, garden , Br, 2 Ba Twnhse. rumt unf. 3 BR. nr new. Bl tns, crpts, LOW RAT~S h Furnished or unfurnished or for Santa Ana area er John & Louise Sellen SPACIOUS 1 Br a p t •• come. Annual percentage 1~ $55,000. $1000 down. Encl gar; pat to, pool. dshwhr, dbl gar, $210. Av. Day, Week, MOnt COCO PALMS-646-2ll8 ' carpets, drapes, re f r tr., -----~ - terest rate ot 2% on • Bkr 675-6044. 642-S223 96$.2647 immed. 544-9506, 53&-1083 FREE Oakwood SANDALWOOD AP'I'S. . •to~. garage. Adult $150 $23,990 _ ........ age. RENTALS 2 BR duplex. Fenced yard, 2 BR 0 1 Bii . drp e TV-Kitchenettes 2101 Ponderosa. 5anta Ana Harbor Heights Apt1. mo. yrly lease. 675--1'7N "-~ I hod up ex, -ms 5· • L' M·'d Se'"" !Nr 171h • ~.~-) "" ·-"•·my Del"-2 & 3 BR. Houses Furn 1 Gar. Sl30 mo. 2058 Pomona 1150 t~ De · niens-"" .... ct Garden · "' ·~ ... , ... ~ n.uu • """ ___ ,. ' ..,., posit. • Utll-Phone Service W Home atmosphere Incl garr, Balboa $400 ln cash is all yoU n=u St. 548-fi680 Call IJ.U..7913 FAIR AY frcd -'• h bl to move ln, which includes General 2000 • Heated Pool • all Incl ....-tg, tns. Cls to 3 BR. House, i11a per 1 · nal So f o c A rt SD trwy lhopg ch1 k closing c:Mrge1 and im-$155-2 BR, 2 BA. Studio. mo. Adults, 1 infant Fountain Valley 3410 s1~ai.rgr¢:u~s . • pa menfS c8~ Bakr & ci:ier: ~oi 1 BR. partly turn. Adulta on- pounds. Will ooMider pet. Avail OK. Call 646-1286 2376 NEWPORT BLVD VILLA APJS. Harbor) Rental Ole 3117 ly. no pela. Yrly lae, wlcly 1 mile from the' ocean -~"';:w::·.;:B:;okr;;·.:"""'811"="-'=~~~ 1 $000 Mo. 3 BR. 2 BA. sharp&: 4 BR, 2 BA. Nr High Sehl & 541-9755 1700 16th Street Cinnamon Aw. 546-loM or monthly. M4-0753 aft 6. fil7-1 BR. Cot'•"•e. All util clean! Av·anable un· • Grade Sehl. Xlnt area. Private patio, pool • lndiv. in Huntington Beach .,... ._ VILLA MESA APTS laundry tac. * LOLITA GARDENS ....,., • ...,., pd. Baby & pet ok. Avail. mediately. 541).11.51 Refer mt· $265 mo + util. • 714: 642·8170 EXCEPI'IONAL YARD Bkr. TI4: .,_........, C JI gss.a297 A t 2 BR Furn. Priv patio htd Near Orange Co Airport A: -l"":'"~":'::":":::::="""l.;:""~w:;;.~B~kr~.~534-69811~:::::~== 4 BR, 2 BA, large fenced ' • gen • ' UCI. Adults on1Y. 2 BR. blt·ins. mirrored wall, 1· 1 HOME' )'ard, children & pets ok. 531-6541 pool, 2 car encl'd gar. Child· 8 YCL FF Velour wall paper, infant St • Rental• ,0 Share 2005 ========o j l"lr. welcome, no pets please! A I MOTEL OK. Gu & water p·". ·~-642-111161 L B h 37 1185 LO\" WE 20122 Santa Ana Ave. ""' ,.....,,,. aguna eac OS mo. * ,, EKLY RATES * Edlng'er, (Nr. Harbor· New&: ready for immed OC· WOM -Shr Bluffs home M V -;d-Il9 W. Wilson. * 646-12Sl Kitchen, TV's, mald service. Mgr. Mrs. Bruce 545.3894 Zodys) cupancy. 4 Br, 2 ba, bit-in w/mothel' ~ dau~hter. Non· 1111 e • 3ll0 I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,\ $30 PER WK. & UP Heated Pool. CLE AN, Q u iet 2 BR S"P'°Ai-C~lO=u•s~h~o~m~,--~11= .. range & oven, dishwasher, 11moker. Daily Pilot Box M· 3 BDRMS. & DEN Bachelor &: 1 BR, htd pool, 646-3265 DUPLEX. New cpts, drps, I ,_ ydfe 27 LUXURIOUSTri-Level4Br, bll->"n oven & range , townhouse 2 BR, 2 BA, w w crpt, .... .,.,,, rear nc. · Fireplace, carpets, drapes, maid service. Kitchellll &: CLEAN 1 BR: Start I"' mo. bl!-rp•-drp tlo j •-t yd •·-'·-· SINGLE GI j und 21 to 3 Ba W/ 2 frplcs, lg fam bull I -ge""'G .. e dispo--'. Fenced '"'• c ui, 1• pa • ;;f•s«Ju:.m --~cfu:: share apt. ~itha.i;> girls, N.B. rm., sep din nn, front &: ily ~~~tchf:n. A Fine fam. ':iar:O~~· ~ Viet.or!& (Nr. :;; :c:~p!~ ~~ y~~ Close ;';shopping. e1~· gar~~~~:e & pool. VA .. ~ -taJ d "·" D "'7 95111 alte 5 rear patio. Rear ball gaa Water •-iardener -•d. w.> mo. ~.,.,.,, r~1ri ...-.. au own .......... area. ays ... ~ ; r , $265 Month -Lease DLX. 1 Br Spec · 1urn. All p.m. 0< _. 2 BR 1~ ba 51 · ~ 962-1353, 645--0636 ~~t., gardener. $37S. ~ION REAL1Y 494.D731 elec., troei:tree rdria. w/w DELUXE 2 Br. WestcliU Joe. 1d~~t ': t~~-~4S :'~~ gar,' prt· patkt, ~;z :aua: DUPLEX ~oo~~IE~uew=.~n: ----cpt. Full Gar. w/ator. Quic;t Pool & bltns. Adults $225 deposit. Avail May lat . no pets .. l8U 9om ona. Prime ........ 8 ......, old. VA 6% "A" ..,,,,,, Newport Beach 3200 M isiion VJe jo 3708 Adults only, Mo/mo. $160. nurno lse. 642-6274 Drive by 753 Scott Pl C.M. 548-0357 . iii \ Joan. $2i7 pe;·~. $7500 to-.....,_...,.,,. zno Elden. 64G-9Z78 Eves, Balbo~-(Do not disturb tenants) DELUXE 2 br. Adlirtill0wr Huntington · Bo•ch 5400 ON BEACH!1 e SINGLES FRCM 1140 e 2 Bl< 11! BA FROM 1225 e 2BR2 BA FROM$1i0 e 3BR2 BA FRQM$31J Carpe~, heated pool-aauna-tennil '"("'-room«ean views. ... v patloa-ample park(,ns. I'!";; Security ~ j •H FURN. alao Avail. "·HUNTINGTON " -PACIFIC ta! down to tint TD. This is Costa Mna 2100 WESTCLIFF 4 BEDRM beauty, v.-ondetful 2 Br, 2 Ba, sunken living 4300 then call 548-3036 alt 5 age 45 only. n.o !rid!' See fix " cl -fl ho /I -m lrpl balcony no 11ml """265 161h Pl , m OCEAN AVE .• H.B. not a er-upper, its ean -1.wv sq, . me w arge family location. Avail April ·~ • • • BACHELOR apt., utilities HARBOR GREENS mgr 4oU.r-ace (714) 536-1'8'1 and occupied. ISide one) $150 4 Br. Bit-ins. crpt11, drapes, 3lx20 fam . room. Nloe patio 16. $225 mo. Agt 546-4141 children S200 mo. AvaU May paid, $85 mo. 310 E. Balboa APARTMENTS 2-LRG. 3 BR apts. Avail AD'" 'TS ONLY per mo. (Side two) $225 dbl. gar. tncd. )'d. $245 mo. and yard, newly decorated, -' -1st. 1255 dBaker 540-0896 Blvd., BaJboa Ba he! 1 2 3 Furn/ April 17. Pool. 1998 1'if"il.pie, NEW DuELuUXE APTS per mo. 5G-6714 many extras, $360 month. Condominium 3950 eves & wkn s c or, · & BR. Apt 3 548-2803 1607 .Kent Ln. Open Sat. & FURN. 1 BR. Quiet &: nice, Lido Isle 4351 uni. From $110 & up. Gar-. ~ . e WU..L FURNISHe I' N rt B ch 2200 --O den patios e Beam ceilgs SEPAn.n.TE Unit 2 Br,-crpts, 1 BrriRM. • $135 ewpo ea Sun. p.rn. or call owner FOR Le N 3BR 2 BA $120-l130. F\lm. Studio, $ll Frpla e Rec"-· e 2 ~-•a drps, yd, gar, xhl!.~· 2 B RM. • ~a 673-3293. ase. ew · per mo. Adults, no pets. ni•... ruu.i ~ ........ 962"4471 ( = J S4M103 AVAii:--April 20 thrn Junt Eastblu.ff. Nr school. pool, 21.35 Elden Ave. Apt 6, CM. SUMMER RentaJ On Bay, Saunas e Nursery School sgi E. 18th ,No. 3 , e .~ UTIL. PAID e l-=~~-~-~-1 20. 4 Br, 2 Ba $250 mo. 7101 Ad If Onl tennis courts. 644-4834 ' Comp! furn. 2 Br, 1 ba, Fam It Adult sections. Jm. NR. New 2 Br, l~ Ba.·CrPtll, HEATED POOL GAS BBQ W lk to •--h <~•) ~1912 u 1 Y SUS CASITAS t1o trpl 6 7 5 2328 G 119UC Seashore Dr. ".w ,...,... 2 BR 2 balh Ill I I """" pa • c. -med. occup. 2700 Peteraon drps, stove, dshwhr, gar. TIIE CAMBRIDGE ~•) •"'9567 · sp ew -Dupl1xe1 Unfurn. 3975 '"'"· I BR Ap•-. A~·•ta ke-'-(213) 654 3016 Decorator's dream 4 BR, 1% or(,....., -..-AVAILABLE NOW "' aui w •iua. .. Way, CM Nr Hrbr & Ada.ms. 700 W. Wll50n, 642-795S Botsa Chlca Ir: Warner H.B. BA upgraded crpts, CU!tom Bay &: Beach Realty, Inc. only. no pets. 2110 Newport wkdaya. • 546-0370 CHEZ oRO Apts. 8234 Allan.: drpl!, lge covered patio, Jn-Balboa 2300 90! Dover Dr., Suite 126 NB 2 BR, 1 BA near H.B. Com. Blvd, CM. G42-9286 ~ -· 5200 ta New l·Z.3-BR. prtv. door I outdoor elec kit, llh FOR •· A il on 64S-2000 Eves. S43-6966 Hosp. Child OK. No pets. $145 & up. Attrac. 1 BR&: 2 Balboa l1land 4355 LUXURJOUS-NEW Newport Beach garages. Pool. U tlltt1 Y Ad It . "ed ...case. va so , 1130 847-4349 .., __ , pd G TS new. u ,~pi_ . BaJboa Penimula Po i nt. . . BR. c-UUJ, Util •. arden BOAT Slip &: 2 Bclnn. rooms. • Take over 6%. + ~ % mt. 2BR. F'rplc. Bit-in elect NR. BEACH. 3 Br. 2 Ba. RENTALS Living, Adults, No pelJl. 1800 garagt: apt. I bath. $350 Quiet Adult l" ·n BAYFRONT 1 536-8038 or 531).2721 FHA. R/O. Obie gar. $325 mo. Or Duplex. Nu cpta:. mtns. Yrly Apts. Furnished Wallace Ave., C.M. Bill Grundy Realtor 642-4620 IVI g 2 BR, 2 BA Luxury Apts. 3 BR. Medallion Twnb&e. BRASHEAR REAL TV unfum. No pets. 675-0496 mlJ mo. See 119 Grant, l Bdrm Pool Utll 1 & 2 BR. 2 '"'m ~i-Prlv. terrace, elevaton, sub. Washer/dryer,,. refrig/atow. 847-8501 Eves. 642-0427 Newport Shores. then call Gene ral 4000 · · H ti-'-111 -_... ,.._ .. , 1""""' Crp'· ..i-. n.....• ....... .i1. paid. Adu1ts, no pell. un "••v11 '"'a..... --Adults only, nu pets. terranean pk'g. All etec, .... ....i">• .ruu. r••-4 Enjoy the View Huntington Beach 2400 540-'1573 REMARKABLY Nr. shop'g. $140 mo. WOMAN Empl. HB area 4 307 Avocado st.,C.M. Pool, soft water, docks. 3121 ,.962-4=1-67~------t LEASE $75,000 Baycrest ex· UNBELIEVABLY 54~3348 or 6'f5.-1650 """·•···'a lge. 1 bdnn. apt. See Mgr on premises W. ('.out Hwy, Newport. NEAR, Huntington Harbour, We offer a custom 3 Bedrm NICELY Furn. 3 BR. 2 BA. ec. home. Full view of :lack EXTRAORDINARILY 1 BR. ~·m Apt. E • ,,·de. •·" ·-''°2202 N 3 B 1 B k ho bac,., M d '" w/gar, laundry •--Wtlea. (Behind K-Mart oU Harbor "'"" ew ' r, r. pets o • me l\lng on ea O\\"· home In Pacific Sands. $225 Bay. $500/mo. Owne r il 148 ~ ~· ~ --(714) lark golf course for $36.900. mo. LE 6-39ll. 6ra-58lO S42-4TI5 BEAUTIFUL Frplc. Uf pcl. S per mo. Have wen .. mannered an· at corner Rutgers & Avocado) SPACIOUS Apt; avail Jar <•w> ,,,,_ or Designed for the executive Val D'isereGarde nApts 336 E. 2Clth. &12-8520 cient poodle It OCC col· Day 642-3.)35, eve 645-0283 lease , 2 br, 1 ba _84~~~=-~----t , 3 BR Furn Twnhse. Middle GARDEN HOUSE. 3 BR 2 / · ot b F ,.., w~ d,oesn t ~t to be fe~c-of H.B. $2'Z5 mo. Ca 11 BA. 2 pools. Back Bay 1325 Putting green, waterfall &: SMALL l BR furn. apt. All lege-age aon. Pref, 1urn. but '2 Bedroom apt. 2 story, King w gorgeous ""' "1· or A'ITR.ACT. 2 Br. Now avail., ed1n. Sl.lbmltyourterma. 536-l.(2l,extl9lforappt. Le ti s&tam,floweneverywhere, util paid. 998 El Camino will con11 ider unfurn. size ?.faster bedroom plus ~ppt call 673•?742 or all extras. Pool. Kids OK. The Real Esta te M1rt mo. are op on. 45' pool, rec. room, billiarll.s, Dr., C.M. 546-0451 546-638:1 afternoons, 430-0742 large 2nd bedroom. 11,2 673-841.4 $149 mo. 17401-A Keelson 847-8531 Summer Rentali 1910 Bkr &T.:Hi044, 642--8223 BBQ'11, Sauna, fum.-unfum, ADULTS Lra: l BR furn. apt. eves. baths. Fireplace. Bit-ins, LOVELY, Lg 2 BR. 2 BA Ln. H.B. 968-7510, 847~ 1-::=--=c;--====.-t.;..;;.=;..;.;..~,.._"'---AVAIL. MAY lsl. 3 Br., 2i.. singles 12 Br from $135 1 ..,.," 2 BR. Adulls only, Util pd. d!shwuher. Private patio. apt, blt~lna. Very desirable LRG. 2 Br Apt. Adults. Cloa-7t/20'o INTEREST SUMMER RENTAL Ba Town home. Sw>·m-••· See it'! .;.... P'arso-· Rd.·. Nm•,w_ ."!!21197 15• d:_r:~,b. tns. ~....., 11 ...... '6 4MIN .... .....,... ..... Beaut-Quiet. $200. Avail Enclosed single garage , area1 avail now, $UIS mo. ed garages. 2608 Engl•nd Take over VA loan at $239 LAGUNA BEACH pool. ,$300 Month &12-8670, Between Harbor & 2 BR Qu' t Clo t ho, M~ l . 17676 Cameron . Pool &: recreation room , Jean Smith Rltr. 646--325.5 St. Call SJ&..1205, Mgr. total monthly. 3 Br, l~ ba, Beaut, Blue Lannnn Villa, 2 Hal Pinchln Realtor 675-4392 Newport - 2 Blk N. 19th · ie • se 0 8 P ~· 842--6121. Adults onl)'. $185 mo, 1st &: BAVl:'DONT L ............ 2 Br. 2 LGE. 2 BR. Duplex. Crpta, •--~~,..,,-~c'.,~:...· -I Nr. Harbor I: Adams. $165. 1 t 1 it d · .. r;•~ -~., llx17 encl patio", like new BR, 2 BA. w/dtyer, wet bat, GARDEN House · 3 Bt. 2 Ba. HOLIDAY PLAZA Call aft S, 540-3997,. BEACH LOCATION -Lrg l as Pus secur Y eposit. Ba." Boat al.Ip avail. $300. drps, gar. Yard &: pa&: customdrp!, crpta, One year 2 swimming pools, tennis Pool, Back Bay. $325. DELUXE, Spacious 1 Bdnn &: 2 Br. Pool, Adults. 219 549-0674 Fum, $350. Agt. 646-0732 $13.'i 548-1867, 847-9508 old. Must sell this week! courts, steps to private beach 675-ro44 • 642-8223 Furn apt $135 plus utll. 1 BR. Furn or unlurn. Pool. 15th St.. HB. 2 BR. Unfurn. Newly dee. BRASHEAR REAL TY $425 month of June. $250 LOVELY TWNHSE w/view of Heated pool, ample parking. Crp~, drps. carport. 560 W, New crpts & drps. Spae Santa An1 5620 I Santa Ana 5620: 847..&107 Eves. 642-0427 wkly. J uly and August. pool 2 Bdrm 2 Ba frplc No children. no pets. Hamilton. &16-6478 , Santi Ana 4620 groWKls. Adlts. no pets. $140 """'"-.;........_ ____ ,.--., ________ _., OWNER: Assume 6% VA. 49S-2152. 10 AM-2 PM. patio, $250. Agent 646.-1965 Pomona, C.M. mo. 2283 Fountain Way E. $140. Lrg cheerful newlu (Harbor furn W on spacious 3 br, 2~i ba, tam ---Newport Beach 4200 " ' • · rm w/frple, land1eped , Gene ral 3000 1Gener1I IGtneral 3000 __ tur:n. 1 BR, apt (triplex) Wilson). Wilson Gard.e n s I Bltns, garg. 1 child ok. Nr Apt11 garden kitchen. mmac, HOTEL ROOMS FOR schl1.2230 S.Centerst.S.A. ="---~$~17~0~--- !162-1199! VIP'S EXPENSIVE? J!!J'arnerl 5'>-098> 3 Br, 11! Ba, pailo, bli.ln" C.t'?.l.1l ~.,. K. _ /) 'C ~Q.9 ldoal For Combln•tlon B ch 4705 crpi.. drpo. All< aboot our Huntington Harbour 1405 BY OWJ\'ER: Beautiful Waterfront h o m e. 45' of water frontage w I pr l v dock. 3 br, 2 ba, newly redec. $82,500. 846-5041 <1r 644-2260. 16992 Barona Ln, H.B. <Hunt. Harbour) Fountain Valley 1410 --" SPANISH Townbouw. Drapes, carpets, decorated, prden patio, 4 Br, 2lii Ba. recreation facllitln nearby. Assume good FHA to.II 117.950. 968-t019 Logun• Hiiis 1700 BY OWNER: 3 BR + den. AU:ume 6~ loan A bey equity. Mt s. 837-ms TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD p~ .1.'QU ~,_ ~ P(J" v OFFICE·APT. l;L •• •~p~un~·~~·~·~~~iii lJdlacoo~~n1~p~1an:. ~880:~·ee:n:ter The Purz/e with the Built-In ch'uckle PresUge privale BaylJ'l>nt I' St. 64U34o. view, 2 BR. apt; completely $35 WEEK Grac ious Adult Llvlnt • :~~~~~.~m•ts r · r I' r I' r I' I !>·g~;c.~~ lETIU$ IO I I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 tum. with linens, etc. Sea. 2 BR. w/w crpts, dtps, blln sonal or yearly rental, Laun. ' ··-·-·A ti y nd RIO, spiral •-. trpl. 145 dry facilities & boat slip ......., ... ,, P · ear-l'OU res-~......, avail. 546-7602 or &12-464l. Ide.nee, rate gl,W'allteed. The E. 18th St 64!).-0092, $190. New Village lr.n. '94.9436 * PELUXE l & 2 BR BEAUT. Waterfront Duplex I !i!!il!!!!!ll!ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!l I Garden Apia. Bll·iru:, ptjv. Nwpt Isle. Lrg 2 br & 3 br fWt Apt; al!o llief!Pln& mu. patio, heated pool, frplc. on channel IU' ocean. Wet Utll pd. Freo TV & radio. Adults, $145 mo. 5t6-5163 bar, laund., gar, boat dock. 1.;;22llll;;,,;:So;;·=Coa=•!:H:">';;;·==• I 2 Wk minimum Summer or 1• 2 BR. Upper apt, $140 mo. Winter rental. 673-7861 or Dana Point 4740 Gaa,, elec. & water tum. No (805) 687-838t. ' pets. Adult! only. 169 Walnut, OCEANFRONT APT. ATTRACTIVE 2 BR, • BA. Apt E. Call 54 ...... "" I Be L lu 1 B pool, Lease. adult. $185. 7 BR. unlurn. SilO mo. No pex. au m. r., ...... """"" 4~-·~ ~ J s CM den, married cpl only. No ..,,~PJN or _.._.,, pe..... ORM t. • pet1. S250 per mo. Yearly, RENTALS Call 549-3437. Owner. 6TS-ml. ~!!.:. Unfumllhtd _ 2 BR. Apt. New crlll1 A BACHELOR, 1 & 2 BR. Cor drps. Fe~ patio, $150, uni I Crp•-d flo General 5000 2658 Orange Ave. CM. urn · ...,, rps, pa ' --·----NEW l>lx l fr 2 Br. She" crpt, pool. bltns. IH0-$18'. • RENT • drp~ bl!nt. lmmed. occp. Seacllft Ms nor Apt&, 1525 .,.__ 11~. u • ,_ •n2321 Placenlla, NB. 3 Rooms F urniture "•u•u oN ......,....,.,.,,, .... ~ COMFORTABLE Bache!°' $19.95 & UP DELUXE 2 & 3 BR nnlum spt. Man only -40 or owr. MGUth·To-Month Rentals apUJ. 938 El Camino Drive, $70 mo utU Incl . 673-«68 WIDE SELECTION C.M. Pb.546--0451 l BR turn. apt,, utllltiet -NO DEPOSIT 0 .A.C. ** EXTRA LltG. 3 BR. 2 pa.Id, garage, ye a r 1 y. Custom FUrnllurc Rental BA." $1.60 mo, Ctpta, drps. OOS-.1793 itter $ 517 W. 19th, CM 54&-3481 Avail lmmed. 557~9752. ·-----------------------··-;;;...."'-'-"'..;...--- ' ' I \ 'l I . ----------..._________ Ult.,. A,arlm•tth Spnnilh Sty"1 Lu%ury ;Ull11 tiri11• ~,.,.,c.,.... 8.Ut-lft «flc:IM!pt ' r rlt•I• hit awl BllltflftJ' A•,1AHWe11• R.....i Poot ,,.,,. s •• Q ...... ~ hr0tA-1 rt. of ~ c..,,, ,,._. Noto R entin r 1000 MacArthur Bl•d. • 5..,.,,. -'•• 540.8491 ' I I I I ' I ' Tutsdi1. April 14, 191) IREAL E TATE AL ESTATE ___ ,__.* ... -lll!l--..--mii11ANNOUNCIMINTS j!<J.~!f!!:~U!!!nl!!!w~lll~•!!!:...i~_L,!!G~o.-!!llf'~•!_I ____ \ _ _!!O.~:!!'"'~•!_I ---'Ir :le * * , * and NOTICI S !' ~k'I!!'! BNch S400 Mloc. Rantak I"' C-merclal MIS '"""" "'"Ada) '4N ~Bdrms. J balli. Prtv patio, NEW Guqe tr rent FOR ule, stare ~. hel.tt:d pool. 'WUhe:r le: drytr &-tide. $20 pu month , --W. 19th St. Bdbel -up. ...,._ Slorap only. Call--~ Towen area. 54~761 Ag:. 1 Bdrm. Carpell. GA.RAGE FOR RENT dnpta. Avail Apdl 1$, THE Stortae Onty. M24l.20 lndustr11I Rtnt1I 6090 LINDOORG CO. S.2579 FOR Ltase New 8000 sq ft 2 I r •pt. i 150 mo. J'nd trial bJd $1000 5ST44G or 141'-3311 Butinttl Rental 6060 mo':' Can be '~n •t ;; S-t -h HILLGREN SQUARE Pn>ducllon Pl. N.B. m-5500 !"'=:.:...;:;. 5455 2 1torn avail, tor lm.rned. or Cll 343-7S11 BEACl apt, unfUrn. View or IM11e In one of dty'I busiest 2 OFFICE S AVAIL. ~ FOUND: SUver Mill. Poodle. Vic. Hell I: 8uahard, "F.V. 5.!J-6590 SCHNAUZER DOG Ccnna del Mar area. 67~5529 VIC :llth le Orange, 8lk A wht Spanlel/Retr pup, 4-' moe old female 548-Ml85 octU 1: harbor. SllJO, ht a ahopp!ng centen. App. 850 1 -3 rma, 1. 2 nna, 646-1724 WMddy1 Wint? Whlddy1 Got? lu< ONLY •lable peoplo oq, II. '" -SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR EYE GI.,..,, boy'•· Found S"RVICI DIRICTO"Y When You Want itdone right ••• Call one of the experts listed below/! SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY .ue call <2Ul 58J..U25 . 250 E. 17lh St.. Calta J\.tHa Lota 6100 NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS at 22nd St. It Newport at '" "' Ca11 Mr. Bram f2UI OL l-27QJ1;;;;;;;,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Specl1I Rite ,•=:"'=''°;;'°'· ;'";;;· 548-S948~=~= I &.by1ltting 655G "31 Income Tix 1;:1:;:•;;AM;::::;::;;;;;5620;;;:1• BALBOA ISLAND e IMPROVED LOTS 5 Li--5 tlm" -5 bucb -l·D_ryw.:.;c.•;;.. 1 ;... 1 ---= -----··--~67-"40 Leue atore-pl11Mbln&' in &: JtULEI -AD MUST INCLuoe lost 6401 RiuA. Exper ?..ty Home. e DUDDY Drywall Co. Uc'd T A x VILLA MARSEILLES appropriate fN' beauly For Sale 6 fully tmp~ ~11~"":'"'~""!:,..." ~-=:,:. :"'.:.J: LOST Good rates, Refer. $12.50 Contractor. Large or Small BRAND NEW 11alon. 307 Marine Ave. lots in prime loc of CerTitos. t-HDTH•HO FOii &AL• -TP.ADEI OHL'" : Dally type dog, mixed per child. Mar&' a re t , Jobs. Ph. 84'·9~1 SPACIOUS 67>-0486 or see your broker. CI~ to Artesia Fwy &: Car-To Place Your Tr1d1r'1 P1t1dlM Alf breed, long haired, &TtY & 548-1801 I :::=:;;;:,;~=:;~== man1ta. Al!IO, 3 lmptoveJ PHONE 642 5671 while. Female, Reward! Vic. VERY l'·b'· Fl 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt1. STORE BLDG, Yorktown Individual lots in H 8 All in • Newport Blvd. & Santa laa-re ... ""' mother of 2 oors 6665 Adult LIYi"I Center, Beach Blvd. E.qp'd well developed · · $8350 View lot · 1 'iV: miles lo Lake '51 Ford RancN!ro v&l $350. bella. 646-0366 or 642-5853. wants b ab y 1 l t t I n g, my Funt. & U•fum for beauty shop, plumbed per iot t ~ui>wne Arrowhead, $3500 value-'57 Plymoulh val $175. Both p home. Prefer infant to 3 CARPET VINYL TILE wuher • color coordtnat. for barber lhop. 962-8996 Cal l Mr~~~ti!rn n%:· clear. Sv.·ap for property or good cond. Trade for ? or EARL. Earring, gr a Pe yn. Call 545-0223. Frtt estimAte I.Jc. C.Ontr. ed a,ppliancts • plush ahaa Hunt. Sch.. 962-l353. '!' U 8-2i98 eves, days car. Ask for Dale 675-7513 ~~~~c.~Uc~:"~ cii1LD care, my home, by 541).72G 546-4478 ~ .. c:botce of 2 ooJor FO~R~RENT~~' E8'~a~u~ly~Shop~:;0~r1;.~;;~~:!"'~""!~" 1.......,~::;;~·,,.,..-..;;;;;,.~ or 546-SSSl 6"-4T16 S...S the v.·eek. \\'e1t side C.M. 4 schemff .. 2 baths • 1tall oHice &pact. Downto w n OVERLOOKING N.B. Back NEWPORT DUPLEX 0H"a~vo-'.lard=o,:.w1~u~ .. ~ .. ~.-'"'-s yn. or older, 646-9270 &bowen • mlrrored Ward· H.B. Call 536-2691, Bay. 4 Cust Jots, A rare op... FULLY LEASED. $24.GOO Rome, Oregon, Clean, quiet, ATTENTION Halecreit! BABYSnTING, H.B. & F .V. NEW Lawn s , re-seeding. ,robe dool'I. indirect Ught. p'ty. Fee. Kingaard R.E. EQUITY. TRADE FOR clear, green, :i11h, hunt, fly, B l ack P a rt-Labrador. area. Any age. any hour. Complete lawn cal'f'. Clean fna ln kitchen • breakfast Ml 2-2222 TD'S OR ? 548--0897 wkday1 hike, boat. Ask for Dale Female, med size. Answers 847-5802 up by job or month. Free ~-h•-e prlv•I• le---" Offlct Rental 6070 . . 67' 7513 """""'"'I to Shane. 545--1901 ••tln•aleo. Fo• ,·n10 call ~ " -.'"'-~ WEST Newport, pair R-2 Spectacular level View lot .,. · .,...,.~ · BABYSl'ITING In my home patio • plush luxueapma: • 30'x85' close to bay beach &: Colorado River near Park-TR.ADE, '65 VW CAP.1PER, BROWN &: black Pomera-I i,;...c yn. S15 wk. Call 1 .,,""=·'-'~17_o_r~......,,...:..==-~-~~~·a -~heat-LAGUNA BEACH shops. $38,00J. 642-3188 er. Eqully -. Trade Jor CLEAN, ALL NEW NAU. nCi~nl vi~.~~~~ A: \V1llaon, 673--0568, C<L\I. AL'S Landscap•"ng. Tree -,,....... • &anal. Air Condit'-·' ' ••• or •. -GAHYDE INSIDE W/IC"' ·" · .....,............. to 1 n d · · --..,_ • .:.-oc•.:c ....,,.... Removal. Yard Remodeling. 3101 So. Bristol St. ON FOR.ESI' AVENUE Acr••I• 6200 Owner 494-2339 BOX, WATER. FOR: -~-~--~------Brick, Masonry, Trash Hauling. Lot (\iMi.N.ol So.O:>aift Plaza) Delk space available in CLEAN PICKUP, 548-45.53 GREY Striped altered male etc , •r•• C lean-up• Repa•·r S t •-· ·--"' bull Wll.L TRADE 10 irrigattd '--------~'-'-'~ lln • .._ new.,.. U4Uce ding al 21,i Acre11 by Dwn<r, Utllltles-Trade Small AppLiar""" ,,__ cat, fiea collar, ans to 1 · Sprinklen. 6~ll66 PHON _. __ ,__ acres In Hemet w/l rental!I "c '"" BUILD "· od I '-'-"'c;;;::;.;;•~;;:;'.,,~-E : 557.aol POllJS _,..tion in downtown near running water A: Golf n"ir, 11 VT"O' same location "Charil" vie. Mesa Verde. • n.cm e • repair 1· GARDENING 1~!!'"~!!!!!"!!"'~'!"'""!91 '·-··· o . ~ Air , for OraJlie County income ,~ ,,.. .,_. k bl k, 1 , .._ ..... uca....,,_ cond .. Course. $950 dn. $14,900. for mobile home, boat or child's pet. 56-7002 ..,...c, oc concrete. . LARGE C>eutul newly Honed, carpeted, beaut:Uul (213) 78Z-7171 property, ???? carpentry, no job too 1mall. Trees. ahrubs, ivy removed. II=. ., uni. 1 BR apt.. entrancn: Fn>ntap on _ _ Call . CTI4l 962-Sl ,,~,, .,,..,,, or __ ,6 e·-s. OOG1 • Huge b I a ck New-Lie. Con tr 962-694.5 New lav.•ns. Rototilling. 1-~ree F .....,...,...., ~ ~" oundland vie. 21st ol Tustln. I ua ""JB C'rpts, drJl!I, bllm. garr. l ornt Ave., rear leada to lake Elsinore 6202 2 BR, ~ach cottage R-2 lot 14. Glas Outboard with Heartbroken. 548-45!J5 es· ........,., chlld OK. Nr achlL 2Z30 s. Munc:lpeJ parldna loll, $50 -Huntington Beach. Approx. 5 · C•rpent1rlng 6590 AL'S Garoenln&: Ir. Lawu Center St. S.A . (Nr. per month for space, Dnk THIS WON'T LAST eq $1000. Exchange for ;\fo-tra1aile:. CaTra""a' ,top &ilboasidet LOST: Small young female Afainlenance. eomm-i .. 1 W·-l . .,. _ •'"' cha'-avana••· for 15_ . cu1 ins. e or sa. p G fl IJ I d k CARPENTRY --........ '" ............ " ~"'t q·a """ bile Home or TD's. Ceil up. ray u Y ur, ar industrial 6" ttaldentlal. f===:==:;:"'===:::I BU!lneu houn answering Martin Realtor 64&-2266. Y"ith ll'ailer. ean. Reward. 5.16-7886 MINOR REPAIRS. No Job * 646-3629 * 5705 l4!1'V1ce available for $10 Approx. 80 acres. AJI utilities. -.tt;~Ca:::;ll:,;:M:;0-0093:;::::'....,~~ BLACK Cut velvet bag con-Too Small. Cabinet in pr-"" utili .. __ .... :.11 ,.,.,,..,..·, At corner Lakeview, Olive TWO lovely Townhouse&, R2 v .. · w lot. Dara Po•··t, ..., " 1 h •••• ,. Exp. J apanese landscape, nu uca _... -~~.. N 2 " taining knitting. \Vestcliff nr o e r ca<.HUC • 1 telephone. St. $1500 an acre. Term.a. ev.'JIOI1. BR 2 BA ea. will trade FOR industrial or Dover last Thurs. 642-2458 56-11 75, It no answer I.ta~ c eanup, maintenance. Gardening 66IO Service e 12th YEAR LOCALLY e Qualified • Reasonable Open SUNDAY &: nites No Appointmeot Necell8l'Y * SAl\fE DAY SERVICE * e FREE EXTENSJONS e \V. A. (Bill! SMILEY Cei-tifit>d Pu.bllc Aceowit't 2408 l\Jargaret Dr .• N.8. (oft Tustin bet 15th iii 16th) 642-2221 Anytime 646-9666 Central Business Services eTHE TAX ADVISORS Pe.rm. of!ice-Reaa Ratet 328 No. Newport Blvd. Opposite Hoag Hospital For Appl. Call 645-0400 Ironing 6755 IRONING In my home. S1 llr. Dressmaking A altera- llons. 545-7641 Painting, Paperhanging 6150 OCEAN FRONT new luxur:v aptl, 2 BR, 2 BA. Adults, no pell. 497-1661 DAILY PILOT Agent. 1Tilll6 Grand. n4: F lrepl, lg pool. Eq. $10,000. commereiaJ investment msr: at 546.2372. IL o . !\.lack 842-&142 5l8-2I32. \Vant R.E., ~r. boat ?? 1 pro"'"'.. •"" OOO '"OO OOO 2 GERMAN Shep. Pups, 2~ Andenon EXP. Ja....,,..se Complele CUSl'OM Painllog '"The Agt, 646-0732 ,,_ • .._v, -· • •• ' ' blk-b rkg .. -·~ Days 546-0928. ~~rla, C~~~~252611~:;~ CAR.P==ENTR~"~Y--C~,-.-lne-t>--Rro-m Yard Service. Reas. NB &. Exterior-Interior Specialist" ' 222 FOREST AVENUE D•n• Point 5740 LAGUNA BEACH Out of State Prop. 6208 Great Dane Pup 6 v.·kl, . 0.9466 shols, male, sable brindle, DELUXE NEW DELUXE l rm suite in new 17.63 acres on South Fork of trade for transportation car 2 BR. 1% BA, split le\l'el, b ld1 ., adjacent to beautiful Pay~tte Rive.r in or misc fumitlln! or ?!? of "?th all appliances, garage, "Alrportno Inn" 1 Orange hl'art of Idaho a recreat10nal 1 _1_125_,_•_lue_. _......, __ . __ _ vte"W. ~ mo. Drive by Cnty. Airport. Air-cond., area. Hai new modern Have 4 Pride of Ownership 33913 or 33897 Copper Lan. cpts. I: drapes, music & hou~ and 2-room modi;rn unils in choice TusUn loc. tem or call 494-2328, 6'-4791 janitorial service, Av a It , cabin. Plenty good sp~ Want larger unit!, commer. or 499-1397. Mey ls!. Call water developed. Accessible cial, or.! Naricy J, Moore, Lingo Real !;state BOB PETTIT ye~r round. Suitable for Realtor 673-3101. Investments 833-&101 . 833-0l4f E~s rettrement home er ex-I------------...:......::::.:=..::::.:: I c e 11 e n t development Ofr BEAlIITFUL ENGLISH 6 ./ Near New Harbor: New 2 Moclern Offices portunity. Write L. S. · Rm, Home near Pasadena Br. 1% ba duplex. apt, rn:. 1_1 Farber Lowman I d ah o drps, blt.-lns. pr. sun dk. •'" 1 ... ,..e. $1~ 2 rm suite. 83637 • • • for N.B., Cd~f. C.!\t. Duplex S200 mo Call S37-8822 Air cond. Sect y service, or units. Home value $29,500 • park.Ing, centrally located. BUSINESS and clear. Call S.18-8.532. REAL fSTATE So. Calli 1>1 Nal. Bk. Bldg. FINANCIAL Genar•l 230 E 17th Street RMtals W•nted 5990 Costa Me~ 642-1485 Business • OFFICE OR Sl'ORE Opportunities 6300 HAVE: '69 Jl,JERCEDES Add., Patios. Any size job, Clif area. 54G-737l Residential • Commercial. BENZ.230, auto trans, ra-SILVER Beige Fem., Shep.. Mike 673-llli& & G46-2S?6• CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST.. No job t00 large or too small dlo, 5 ~ old. Eq approx. recently spade. Vic. Hunt. CARP Mov.•ing, edging, odd jobs. Lie. Bond. Ins. Won't be un- $l400, TRADE far. land or Pac. Apts., Reward 5,16.-Q57 ENTRY -CABINETS Reasonable. !l4M955 derbid! 646-3679 Remode.llng-repa.ln. No job I -;~~=.;:=:;.,;;;;:;;,~ V\V or ?? Ph, 842-3235 1.IEN'S Reading glllsel in too amall. Call 646-422..t JOHNSON'S GARDENING INT &: EXT, Painting. Free cue. Balboa I!llancl. Yard care, aean-ups, Prun-ests. Loe refs. Neat & e 646-5177 e Old World Craftamanship ing, planting. 962-:?035 Honest. Call Chuck 645-0809 LOST: Falcon, has U.sses. Finish v.'Ork my Specialty or Jirn 548--0ID:> ,,.. Call Dan 673-1166 JAPANESE Gardening wagon, same valut>. Vic Brookhurst &: Adams, Service. Neat "'Ork. Cleanup METICULOUS PAINT ** Call 545.7684 ** HS. Reward! Ph. 962-7382 QUA.~TY Woodcraft. sml yd. maint. 968-2303 EXP. DOCKS·housea, int.ext. llave ·ro 1'1ustang, 4 on noor, value $1000, Trade for ~mall American station Smogless • Trd eq./beaut. BLK German Shepherd, 5 gen constr. & carpen~. GARDENING, clean-.ips &: INS. col. studenta. 675-5812 Oceanlront 4 Br, 4 ha, 2 sty mos, male "Tito". vie 23rd Call Ken 645-0044, 548-4235 lawn reseeding. Reasonable! INTER or Ext. PAINTING, hm, Oceanside for vac land, &. S.A. Ave. 64&-2547 GEN. repair, add., cab · Call 646-6504 IMMEO. SERVICE. Local income or smir hm, Orange I====="====::. I Formica, pa.nelln&". marllte. ref. FREE est. MS-1627 c_".t"yo-, 531~-065=;::1·..:"'°""c.:..;.::":__ I Person __ ._ •• ____ 6405_ Anything! Dick, 613-4459 LA\VN t.IOWING SERVICE PAPER l'ANG!NG =-Neal, depend .. ble. reason. ~ 3 BR, 1~.;, ba + fam rm. REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS abll'. Free est. 846-0955 20 yrs exp. Free estimate. Value S27.500 Clear. G.G. Tom Gawne, Jr. *CABINETS. Any sl7.e job Call Keith anylimf! 642-2509 25 r ;>48-6713 J Jl\l'S Garden1r1g & la1vn For 2. 3, 4 units In H.B., Sells Y s exper. maintenance. n es. & com-PA INT J NG -In t • & Ext. F.V. or ?1 Lynch Realty Ne1v &: used cal'!i &: trucks • CUSTO~f PATIO • mercial * 54CMS37 Highest Quality. Lowest 838-5361, 6.12-3106. at Connell Chevrolet OR RE?.10DELING Prices. Fully "P· Ins. John ' FOREIGN Ex.ch Student in 15 x 35' or 30 x la' ------ a r e a fr om Norway. oHitpking&uWfurn FAMOUS BRANO Rare 19-10 Lanchestcr Sa- loon, value around $'1200: trade tor car. boat or ~. Xlnt mcchanicaJ condilion. 962-4981 Recreation Veh. parK site. Trailer rents, service sta., 4 Br home. Good income now. Eqty $140i>.I. \Vant apts. TDs, ? FUtr/Exchang- or 675-4961 * 54!}-2877 or S«r.7308 ~ JAPANESE Gardener serv-2828 Harbor, C.M. !'>IS.l.D) . f Vall 673-1166 The preceeding "''9.! a paid -----1ng • ey, H. Sch, Costa """''"'"'"=~=~==~ SponlOl'ed by :UE8EC needs Newport 1: Bay Center, CJ\.t NAME 20 Acre11, Je,.,.1 land ~mer residence ne ar 2052 Newport Blvd ~1252 CANDY & SNACK ROL,.E near Lovelock, Nevada. Irvine Co., Fashion Isl. Stu-(PART OR FULL TIME) Trade for cam-r. "''· dent able to pay for rm ~2S to USCIO Sq Ft, Furn or un-• VERY HIGH !NCO ~ &for board Write q: turn, crpt&, drps, parking. . '.'fE . house w/pool or ? 1! San DI ' Stat · J R.eUonabl.M '&trr2414 XII} We need a distributor m this 540-2333 8 0 ~ e '-" ,• A'°11 St., Newport Beach atta for our candy (NeaUes, 1---------Sierra Lake!ront Re!IOrt. · · ~a "" OFFICE SP C Planters, Tootsie Rolls, ~1ilk 2 Newer duplexes, 11ide by Open summer-ckl8ed win. WOMAN Empl. HB area 4 t A E Duds, etc.). No selling in. side; 3 Br. 2 Ba. ea., fplcs: ter. Inc. $150,000 • eqty yn,. need1 lge. l bdrm. aot For~ Leue. World Savingl volved. \Ve furnish an ac. nr. beach. Equity approx. $170P.1. Want-new Challenge, salesman survival advertise-Cement, Concrete 6600 ~fen, Npt Bch. 645--0345 PAINT NOW SAVE $$ Call Jack NO\V? ! _m~:g>,_t_. -------CONCRETE v.'Ork all types. General Services 6682 894-389:> or 8'17-1358 Single-Widowed-Divoreed Sawing, breaking, hauling, • COLLEGE SI d t 2 * WOMEN * Skiplcmdin<t•, Lie. Service le LAWN ?I.towers sharpened -u en yrs ex- Everyone's looking for the right one. \Ve have a way-so call us &. ~in to live! 547-6667 .... perience. Low prices. Quality. 842-1010 small engines repaired-lite Steve 548-4549 weldi!li. Faulkner's Mower w/ga.r, laundry f~. Bldlc·· Pacific c.oast Hwy l counts. You must havt 2 to $27.000. Trade for land or TD's. Lets talk. R.ltr. H ave wdl-mannered an-Forteat. Laguna Beach. 8 hrs. per v.·ce.k spare lime indust. Realtor 673-4350. 675-4001 27 hr. recording clent poodle and .o e e . t 1*.1 C&U1494-9481 * (days or eves). *FULLY LICENSED * * CONCRET E Work, Licensed. Patios I drvwys, etc. Phillips Cement , .....,., WALKS. Patios, drivev.•ays, la1vr\s rototilllng. breaking, removing & hau l ing. 548.-8668 Shop, 2U2 Harbor Blvd, RETIRED Painter: 26 yn Coila Ml'sa, 646-7203 exper. Neat & honest Non CURBING - Home Address. drinker. Call 53f>...ii8ll Guaranteed. Call co 11 e ct * PAPERHANGING {213J436-346l before noon & PA.Il\"l'ING. * 968-2425 1 college-aae 110n. Pref. rum. CORONA DEL MAR SllSO to stm -i * * * * * Reno111ned Hlnllu Spiritualist. but will consider unfun1. Immaculate 2 room. Private TOTAL CASll j!!!!!!!!!!l!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I I AdviCI' ~ all matters. 546-6380 aftemoons, 430-0142 office.. Ground floor. Private REQUIRED BUSINESS and BUSINESS and Love. i ta'trlage, Business eves bah. "" F Readings given 7 days a · t ......., mo. Util pd . or more lnfonnation writ!' FINANCIAL FINANCIAL 1 Woman, singlMO, wrttting Parking. 673-0757 Owner. "Distributor Division No. ;;;,:..:;:.:.:____ week. 9A:\I-9Pl'.l 312 N. E kl It houM-Camino Real, San see qu e ...ne a r Best Location in CdM 23", P.O. Box as, Pomona, Business Moner to loen 6320 Clemente. 492-9136 492-0076 ocean, J une 10 • Aug. ~h 800 10 1400 sq. ft Deluxe Off. Calif. 91769 • Include phone Opportunities 6300 I;;;=;;_:;_=::;:;;..._..:.:;;:;: SAUNA. MASSAGE Exchange for care~kipg. ice Spaces. Avail lmmed. no. ==--...;.;; 1st TD Loan mode•• "'"t or••'•• San PhoneDwn<r.~ Alflllale WHIRLPOOL-GYM CUSTOl'.I CONCRETE PATIOS • ORIVFS . ETC. J.'REE ESTl1'.1A TE, 67f>.5516 •CONCRETE noor11, patiol, masonry. Any sz job. Reas. Don 642-8514 aft 4. ~aullnt ____ 6:;7~30 BEFORE YOU HAllL TO 111E DU'-fP -CALL. 646-62!1.I. Sa\"(' $$ CARL'S !\.loving, Hauling & Cleanup. ~; Ton P.U. Reas. Free Est. 548-8918 !\!ORE Concrete patio. for HAULfNG $10 A LOAD le S1lon de Traltments -leu money. Artistic 1etting Clean up. Tree Serv. Gen. Francisco. Xlnt refer. Box CA 103/l.1, Daily Pilot, NB. MED, Dental suites avail, NOY SUPPLY Lo\\'e&t Interest Available =~=''=-=""""'c._~, 1 725 & l2l5 9Q. ft. 35c a gq. ROUTE 2nd TD L WOR K ING 20 yr old ft. 5911 Heil Ave HB . (No selling involved) oan desperately needs s ma 11 846-322l. Excellent income for few furn hie Of' apt. ~o SIJO, Vic hours "·eekly \\'Ork (Days Placentia &:. Victoria., C.M. EXE CUT I V E OlliCI' -. . ·. Tenna based on equity. 642-2171 545-0611 2930 W. Cs!. Hwy, Npt. Sch. & finishing. 644--0!.m Pruning 646-2528, 543-8043 Daily 10 am·1 am 642-3154 CEMENT \VORK. no job too YARD/ Gar. Cleanup. \Ve accept all credit cards Small, reasonable. Free "--... · t h no:move .. ,,es, ivy. ras . LOOK lG-20 years younger, Estim. H. Stuflick 548-861.:i Grade, backhoe, 962-8745 the secret of the STARS. A PAINTING & Repairs. R easonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Call 54.7-1441 Plastering, Patch, Repair 6llO * PA'!'CH PLASTERING All types. Free estimates Call 5<11Hi825 Plumbing "'° PLU~tBL'JG REPAIR. No job too s1nl\ll • 642-3128 • 646-6175 • Harbor f r ontage near and E~en1ogs), Ref11lmgaod ='"""-~--~~-I Newport Blvd. for lease. eollecting money from coin RET. Teacher wants 2 bdnn 1000 + sq 1l Ph. 642-4644 operated dispensers in Or. unf hse, )Tly Lse. n r for appt. ange Co. and surrounding !1:;NB-Cdl\1 $1&5. 499-3728 EXEC ofc suite • llOO sq. ft. area. We establish route. Serving Harbor are& 21 yrs. S•ttler Mortgage Co. 336 E. 17th Street proven &: unique face-llft Child Care, Housecleaning 6735 1 Remodeling & v.•ithout surgery. SiS.3538 licensed 6610 ( crptl/drps. 444 Npt Blvd. (Handles name hra_nd candy 1 Yr. leue on Lido Isle. l Br Call alt 7 pm wk d y s and . snacks). $1625.00 . cash house or 2 Br apt. Furn or 6?5-4644 ~~· For personal tnter- unlum. 671-2089 . view 1n Orange Co. area, e LANDLORDS e NEAR C.M. City Hall. 3 Rm. send naml', address and OWce1. Paneled, carpets, phone number to f.1UL Tl· FREE RENTAL SERVICE drapes. Sl50. Call 642-6560 STATE DIST INC 1611 W HA.'1BURGER STANO Best Brok1'1' 534-6982 " ., • . CM OFFICE $90 Broadway. Anaheim, Cali-Balboa location. J\.1 UST Mortgages, Trust Deeds 6345 I $5000 1st TD <>n J-lunt· lngton Beach apt zoned lot. $50 a month including 9%, 3 yr due. 15% discount. 494-8100 or 493-1706 Rooms for Rent 5995 Call 646-4833 fomia 92802 1Il4) T18-5060. SELL. Call 642-7~.'.)5 FOR tt:nt oftlces or stores ..... NAGER B . W ed 6305 Money Wanted CHEERFUL Room & bath 130 E. 17th st., c~t $85 ml'\ us1nes1 ant 6:150 overlooking ocean $20/wk. i. up. 646-8181 OWNER Ef\1PTY STORE 1000 _ 1200 Nicely decorated qul~t bldg, I OfflCE or store opposite National corporation, l'IO'\!' in. sq. ft. ford e Ii ca t cs sen sundeck &: kitchen priv, 1289 Balboa Bay Club. 1510 W. terviewlng, for owner man. take~ut v.·ith gas. elcc- S. aCDast l:I~, Laguna Coast Hwy, NB. 64&-4887 ag:erof complete family rte· trlr:lty. plumbing fixtures Be ch. 494-90 . . HUNTINGTON BEACH reational sport center. Ex-only. In 5hopping ctnttr ROOM & bath in pnvate Air Conditioned tremely high return on In-preferred. Box JIJ.1 Costa !'°!Tt('• Of. Female pref. ON IEACH ILVD. \.~tment of $12,500. Secured. J\.lesa a 46-8340 or 540-2394 Dek spaL<e available In Rigid in\'estJgatlon ln\'ited. ========= MONEY Wl\NTEO Secured by p1'0perty $25,000 required, will pay top inter- est & points. Short term. Call 1213) 962-6410. ANNOUNCEMENTS ond NOTICES eves/Y.'knds newest orfice building at Must have management & lnve1tment ROOM w/kitchen & ba, prime location in lluntlng· PR ability. Reply to Box 580 Opportunities 6310 Found (Free Ads ) 6400 Priv. entr, qUlet. Ideal ror ton Beach. Air condJtloned, the Daily Pilot or call Mr. -~------- man worklna: n ights . beautiful entrance. Front· Mark Rice (ll4) 774-7050. SMALL Investors earn 3';'e 548-2720 age on Beach Blvd., l'ffl' ~=,..:.::,,,..:.;,,.,..:.=:c. all · I · · ~,..:.=-----.--.. lleadl to private parking *BEAUTY SALON; In annu Y l n parl cipat1on FURN. Room. Ulil paid. loL $50 per month for best ktcation in New-'"'ilh importer with 01\·n ~~ ~udent. ~ mo. ~bler>e,8! ~ Bu~~r: Port ~ach, Xlnt JNfk· ~~~;8 rr:~C:an~~~t~~~ BROWN Puppy w/flea col- lar, fourw:I Su n d a y on !lliuion Viejo GoU Course. Claim at 26031 Via Vienito, MV eves & \\'knds. P .O. Box BAY &. Beach Janitor ial Rep.:•.cir _____ 6:.:94.:0:1 2014 Seal Beach. Pre School serving So. Or-Carpc~. "'indo"·s, noors, --R:::E:.:Dc:U:;C.:E:..::Saf::•:::::&~l.,-1-,~.,~,h-I ange Co. 6:30 am to 9:30 etc. Res & Commc'l. GoBese Tablets &: E-Vap pm 7 days "·k. Full·P/tlme-646-1401 "y,•ater pills" \Ve Ii I c Ii f ( Aft. sch!. Rates for 2 & up. -.,~,,"",.""-a•,-.~,,-,.~g,-~-1~.,-. Pharmacy 646-3706 or 534-1292. Carpe~. windoY.'1, fiool'!i, elc. SPRING Brides! Delightful MY Home, 18 n1os up, Res. & Commc'l. 548-4111 piano music at recept)On + hot meah1, n11p, supervised \Valls-Floon-\Vindows & Rug1 dinner music. 645-1376 play, l'o'lon-Frl. 6 4. 6-0 3 52 Oea.r Vu Windo1v Seivlce AlL'OHOLICS Anonymous C.~f. Res. & Commc'I. 646-2698 Phone 542-7217 or v.Tite to ========66=20= I ~-,,__ Contr1ctor1 Housecleaning Fast &. EUicicnt THE RE MODELERS COMPLETE REMODELING * 642-3660 * PLUi-1BING, painting, c!l'CI. appliance5 , v.·i ndo\\·s. healing. Refs, lic'd. 897-4850 P.O. Bo..'t ~ \.AJl!ila 1'1esa.. UP TIGHT need !!Omeone to talk lo? DIAL-A-FRIEND, W. M. FERDI 847-1293 BUILOER 6411 6i5-l830 6'4·2888 @ ==~""' ... ~"•7"5-~~ Se w ing_ 6960 C 0 J\-1 P LET E q u a I i 1 Y UPHOLSTERY Se1ving, llfl':J housecleaning. Experienced. type. P illows, c u 5 h i 0 n s . Reasonable. 638-23:>1 skins, IB. boat cushions, Cemetery Lots 4 Cemetery lots. Harbor Rest ~1emo r ia l Park. Blue Spruce section. 548-3075 Additions * RemodeUn&' Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. 6'f3-00.l1 * 54!l-217n 6625 T.~•.::•:.;••:::l ____ ...;:64.;;3::5 £.arpet Cleaning CARPET STEA!l1 CLEANED GUYS &: Gals withe Spirit ol Adventure. Expedition leaving AOOn for . Centnl America. Searching for lo!lt 1'1ayan cities & diving for !Ge Par Sq. Ft. Read The pads. P ick-up l: delivtt. Call after 5:30, au-1012 Tile, Ceramic 6974 + Vel"l"I('. The Till' P.f11n * Cust. V.'Ol"k. Install & ~pairs. No job too small. Plaster patio. Leaking •ho"Ner repair . S47-19S7/84G-0206 ROO t F . houn answerln&' service 1ng. Atino1t new, fresh, and sell ing ditt<"lly to con- lr: e~tr ~~R.c~vA ba. 8:vallab!e for $10. All ut.111-colorful de1lgn. 7 sta-sumer. J\.1inimum $300. CM · c ve., lies paid except telephone. tions, 7 air-cond dry-\Vrlte Box P102 Dally Pllot. hf ALE Dachshund/Beagle gold. Call belwn 11 A~f & 8 mixture, Very Ir I end I y . Pl'it, (213) 874-46.).:i. Leather collar & flea collar.1 -N=-'"O~W'==s,..c.•T=H=E=­On Bal. Penln. Cannot keep No soap • No bru!lhel. Uphol· atery cleaning &: noon acrub. bed &. waxed. Guaranteed reirultitl 646-5911 DIAMOND Carpet Cleaners e Spring Cleaning Special • 3 aver. slie rooma m 645-U17. F'rff Esl DAILY1 PILOT TOPSOIL '977 · · DAILY P'ILOT ff b I FURNISHED, Util. paid, 17175 llACH ILVl). e rs, CO • Ir, pvt -~ NVESTORS! lnlereated In $50-75 mo. Girls only. 388 HUNTINGTON llACH tlo. Low rent and ut1l 1. 1 2 ~ an nu a I re I urn . w. Bay, c.M. &12-8520 ~2-4321 Very cle•n & cared for. Professional man has $8000 dog. Dov.'nt'Y Cl13) 861-7940 PATR Of Bl-focal glasses \\"/black r ima In blue ca81'. Dover Sho res beach. 642--0757 $15 per wk llp W/ kllchen .• DELUXE OFFICE SPACE Pl•••• call 642-0844 or ~~~ P.I~ N;~~~ ~m~ ::"d $35 wk up 1q1tg 23i6 Crpted, pane.led, etc. 10 In-9'8-4622• mo rt g a a e ror ra.1nily Newport IDvd C~I ~ dlvidual offices. Over 4003 ,--.,,CO"rN""'°LA""'UN"D'°RI=ES~-cmc~ency. Prtncinnls only. ' · sq, rt. Located In NY.i>t Bch. ·*' .. ~ Priv. Room w/ba. Near $900 -. mo incl uttl. J\.tr. Frigldiire ~";;._,;7;::566~=~-~~~ FOUND Black J\1ale Puppy. O. C. C. Prlv. entr. Gallup, 642-9-110 From S6500 lo $.17,500 INVESl'ORS! \\!ant 10~' In· Part Doxie or &s!elt. Vic. 640-5682 • __ 0 Buen.'\ Park • f'\lllerton 0 tertlt prime loan! Private Victoria & National. 2llJ l-===="'"=='====l1ndu1trial lCyl p~n • \Ve!llmlnr;ter • parly has $U.OOO f'<\U\ty in r\ational, C.l'.T. Meteh, Trlr. Crts. 5"7 Pr-...rty 60IO Cunt1ngton Ben.th e Gank?n own home. \Vant $:>..000 to FOUND A cute puppy. ~•--,..... rove • Tustin • Santa 17 000 2nd mo-Prl ~~· . • •·~age. n-"'111.·hite p&.Y.·s at National HOUDAY BEACH MOTEL---------1 Aha e Costa Meu e Ana. clpals only.~ j;' Ok S CM C ll JtoorM • kltcbenetta, 100' to NE\V Bldg., ll.000 #f ft 1or helll'I • La P.llni.da. ========"=== a I., • • a k ach. F r ee Continental sale or leue. For details CALL CHARLIE 52J..7833 . Money to Loan 6320 LI 8-5923 breakfuL 1132 N. El llanla lltnlty rANT~IC Bus. Oppor, 6 WE .,·,·.~ OR BUY COLU E : Vic. University &. Camino Rnl S:. 8-3582 )T medium llizl'd restaurant " nn.r.. Back Bay. Looks Purebred, #WEEKLY rafn. SEA 6U-65tiO In N.O. !hat must he &Old TRUST DEEDS 7 or 8 m<>'s old. Male. LARK MOTEL, 2301 C , I dur IOIOuolmgr. lOJ\ldown 54J.8381 anytime Bkr. 642-87j9 Newport 81vd, Cotta Mffl-omm•rc•• 60IS Call Gall' Pike • 494-6373 tor BEAGU.:. NO c 0 LL A R • .An:: diM N™ --. .... appt to itt. BUSI.EST mat11l'tplace in t'E:\IALE. NeY.'Port I Orel 1.11.1;> _,,~ ...,,-son Qeo~~.... town. Thi DAILY PILOT ~I 642 C1Aallied'1 aeHoo powtr, ?'llAJUNA l n Newport Btaeh. 1 NE\V Snack ~tachinea I ChtS1111fle-d Ud:ion. s ave ar, -T2lO For e.n-" ta iieJI uowd tbt Prime k>c. F'ee $3Lr,,ooo route. Good lnd. income. money, Ume A eUort. Look BOYS Red b!kt', vie. ot dock. dial~ Exd. K ln s1ard, R.E. $1.:AXI. Call 11 tt . 4pm now!!! Yorkto"''" & Bu s hard Mr 2-2%12. 6i>Q22 Pvt ONnr. ~102 ~-'-.;...;.;...:c;.=. _____ ~~~-~- TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 DISCOUNT Carpet Cleanel"I. Expert~Lateat Equip. used. Credit cards $6. Rm.646-1234 REMA.RC Servicta. 3 rooms sn.so. Full gu11ran. Credit t&.rds OK. MT~ Carpat Laylnt & Ro!':'!lr 662' EXPERT CARPET INSTAL- LATION l Repair, No job too small. &f6..59T1 CARPET LAYING C.A. PAGE 6.f2-t:J70 DIAL direct 6.fi..5671. ~ your ad. then sit bit.ck and listen to the phone r\na! """t -~------------- ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace TOPSOTI..... Nitrogen fortified redwood aOded. 837-4852, 83()...$.)0 or ~~32 Trff Service 6980 TREES. Hedges, trim, cut. stun1ps, removed, hauled. 30 yl'!i exp. f ully in~. &l~-4030 Telavision, Rep1 ir1, Etc. 6915 Economy TV Service Introductory Offer! Color TV Serviee Ca.II $4.98 plu.11 par\1. llB 894·4135 Of &16-4730 Uphol•l•'Y '"' C'lYKOSKJ'S Cu.11tom. Uphol, EuroPtan Ctaftsma1111.hlp JOO~;, fin! 642-14.N 1831 Ne11tport Blvd., C.~T. i'JDES • f'Qt convaJttcence, dde:rly care or tatnUy care. Hamemalcers. "T.et .,a I g -Joloo Mfn, W,om.· 7100 , I .I Instructions • This variety of fine schools • could introduce ·you to a new tomorrow. For furth fr Information rt91rdin9 the Daily Pllot' Scho&lt ind l111truction Ot,.ctory . . CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325 I ~ n j Ac<!V Clerk· Typl1t HKeyadd.,$375.mo.Meta!P"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1;1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.1 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-., .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. Verde Country Cub 549-03Ti' • Mrs. Myer. AIDES • N"""'"' HOUSEKEEFER Exj>er!eft«d prdemd. Age 35 or ovt!r. Apply: lA.guna Beach Nurs.J..na: Home. (714) 4!K-8175 Ancient Mariner -NEEDS- • DAY• DISHWASHER APPLY IN PERSON 2:i01' W. COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH AT ONCE, man handy with ama1J tools, Car helpful. Call 8:,30-9:30, Mr. Grans- hill'y 496-2383. ARE YOU SATISFIED with )'OUt' present income? That YoUr ability supplement your income, Husband & wife may work together. Call 146-4659. Al'T. MANAGERS Couple needed • man must ~ able to do minor repail'I. Write Daily Pilot Box M·28. * BABYSIT * with children or adults, De.Ya. overni&ht OJ' week ends. Many '9teady job&. To $75. wk. No ff!f'. Apply Home. maker. 1638 E. 1 Ttb St., Santa Ana. Young Set Pre-School Serving Southern Orange County FULL -PART TIME -AFTER SCHOOL 6:30 AM lo 9:30 PM ~DAYS Ratu for 2 or more 1525 Soni• An• Costa MeH 646·3706 or 534·1292 -·--~ COME SAtL WITH US ! AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS For Men and Women • Rt1erv11tlon1 e Tr•vol Afonl e Ticket Solo1 e Air freight Corgo e Communlc1tion1 e Operations Agent Day ind night cl111e1 AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC • Santa Ana 543-6596 610 EHi 17th StrHI Accredited : . National Association Trade & Technical Schools Approved for Veterans Eligible lnstitulion under the Federally in· sured Student Loan Program Enjoy Success in Life through Modern Cosmetology ASTROLOGY CLASSES . NOW FO,MING Complete Astrological Services Evorythln9 fr0;m "A" to "P" IArles.to Pisces! OPEN TUES. thru SAT. 11 :00 •.m. to 5:00 p.m. ,I Closed Sun. &: Mon.) THE SUN SIGN 712 E. B1lboa Blvd., Balboa Peninsula 675-6661 To Women ••• , •• Of ALL Ages U you are entering the business world or if you are presently em- ployed and need to Improve your IMAGE and INCOME, the l Newport School of Business offers a unique and extremely efiecUve Refinement l;ourM • • • • • • For both men & women w• 1lso have ,... h11lonal voC:atlonll counnllng Hrvlce. Phone 84%-3870 newport school of business l l J DOVll DllVI, NIWP OIT lfACH WOODBURY COLLEGE Founded 1884 Summer Q\Nlrttr Open1 Mliy 21 Summer Seulon 0ptM June 22 F•ll Qumrhr ()pent l•pttmMr I Accredited. Western Auodat!on of Schools and Colle&es 8.4BYSITrERIHOU8ekeeper- 5 day wk, must live • in. Priv. rm + salary. 540-9497 1t BAKER * All..round, 40 hr wk, good pay. AAply or coll: CUPCAKE BAKERY :..~t7lll St. Costa Mesa, L11rn to Sall on 80111 from 14' to 37' .RADIO NEEDS ANNOUNCERS M•lhr Of Science DegrM In lualMM Adll'llnlltr•tl• ........ , ef kMM• Detra .... , .. , ........ ..... Courses 9 iven: In broadcasting, only ability counts. Age or education is no barrier, once you have ac· quired the training that can bring you fame, happiness, and big money. Provram In: lual'*' lduutlon with t9Khlnt mlnon In lc..,..kl. lnglllh, HumHltl• 411' Soc.Ill lcS.C.. Art ltluatlon wtth nachfng mlnon In ,.,.. ... _ Education er loclll Selene ... llacholor Of SctlOC• D"'Jfff I• ... Rildo .,, -BEAUTY SALON - [n C:O.ta Mesa offers secure polltlon to welJ trained op. era.tor willl aome following. BEGINNING INTERMEDIATE AND ADVANCED COLLEGE of BEAUTY ALSO FCC 1st Phone U ceJUe e ACCOUNl'ING e SECRETAR· e MAJU<mNG Mate or Female Pennatreu Beauty Salon Personnel (Il4) 540-8582 Call Jor Interview WIN GRAil.PREFERRED 6 Wttk C()Uf'Se Result& Guaranteed THE INSTITUTE OF BROADCAST ARTS 1681 W. Broadway, Anaheim • FOREIGN lAL ADMIN-Adverttslng TRADE ISTRATION Economics e MANAGE-Business Merchan- MENT Education dlstng Economics Economics Public Finance Finance Rela Uons Operations Merchan-Real Estate Per'l<lnnel & dlsing Sa1ea Man-UTY Operator, good auarantee. For Laguna area -Cal.I 494-9519, for Sa n Clemen~ 496-9U6 ISLANDERS (1H new Motor Saller)· O'OAY • CLARK THISTLE • CLARK INTERNATIONAL 14 • CHALLENGER 32 & 37 • WINDSURFER SAIL & SURF, offers onl y the most advanced , updated Courses and Techniques. Your skills will be only as good as the training you have JJ:een given. When you train wlth us, you team by ullng top profeWonaJ equip- ment. You are taught by qualified W()rking alt personalitJes and you are heard ()n a leading Orange Coun- ty Radio Station. lndu.lrlal Office ~ Relations Manaa;em~t e ~TlONS • e coMMERCIA1J111t11otEeh<>riWtrif. Adverlielnc BEAUTY ()per, female , tome foll des'd. Take over die;ntele, '30--1010 New Classes Start Each Tuesday Register NOW 646·2919 ART / !~ nlndustilfii111 ' Journallam • FASHION . I ii .:40-""laUo.Ql.._ Med.Ill Man. DESIGN ,.,,..._1 ~bllc ,,r agement BOAT CARPENTE.Rs, EXP. GELCOATERS CAIL FOR FULL INFORMATION e INTERIOR • ~.latJODt rv PUbllc DESIGN 1,.~,~ Ditatt RelatJona: MECllANIC TOUCH UP MEN &: SOUTH COAST YACHTS 1100 w ... Peclflc C_, Highway ·~ r") 1027 Wllshlre l•Jtv9"d-L01 Mel• toOtJ-412....,t BONDERS For Fret Audition .....,.m ..... PleiM Mnll ln~Rtl to: ·''1 " ,:,,· WAREHOUSE STOCK'CLK. * ffARBOR YAOITS * l5192 Goidenwm Circ. NIWPORT MACH 645°1131 1895 Ne.(port Blvd., Costa Meu 2817 S. Br~stfl, Santi Ana 540-0667 •J. Student Loans N1mt .. -------··,...-·-~ -.. · .. --.·---1 Westminster,Callf.SM4U711;~==~~~11:~1il~~~~~~~1 1 •!!!!!!!!!!!!';;:':;:::;;:"""'":"'~=-':;":;:":~~;"'.,,!'I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ City .. -.. ·--·-· .... -.............. -,-•.t!t• __ .... _._ ,Ip -Placement Assis tance Bookkffpor Ii Min. 2 yrs eXp. Banking pay. "'11 system I computer exp, helpful. AIR, AIP, monthly ffnan. statement!. Ve r y pfeasant surroundings in beach area. Newport Personnel Agency 833 Dover Drive NB. 642J870 BookkHpor lo $700 Ftt re.imbunced. Small office, pleuant working conditions. JASON BEST :Employment Agency 2207 So, Main, Santa Ana 546-5410 BOYS 10 • 14 eam.. Roll ... °""' for 1.or1llla Beacb, So. Lqwia DAILY PILOT 6IU371 •BUSBOY. Graveyard shift. Approx. 35 hr wk. Ap. pl.y in person 562 W. 19th St., C.M, Ca1eterla Help Wanted : DISHWASHER. Stt Mgr. at new Safeco Insurance Bldg, l'liTS Brookhunt, Fountain Valley CBl'ookhunt. No at San Diego Fwy) or call 962-2654 bet 9am ()r aft 5 . Daya call 962-1711 AKER -Couple llvt- i . Must have refer & be a · per. 893--1880. XARATE FOR MEN ONLY? No! In fact we have family classes {& rates) in our sessions for men, women, children. Famous Japan Karate Fed. now offers KARATE IN SAN CLEMENTE You may take extra classes free at the main school in Santa Ana. Head sensei : world-famed Fumio Demura, former All· Japan Karate Champion. FREE UNIFORM WITH 3 MO. COURSE JAPAN KARATE FEDERATION 1911 S. El Cimino Real, S•n Clemente 492·2867 CASHIER P/time, Brilbt· Enthuslutic !U.24 hn per Jobs Men. WOm. 7100 Cake Decoratin g Instruction Art Suj>plles • Gilts ·Rentals Complete Home Baker Supplies BEGINNING & ADVANCEO CLASSES New Classes Starting !st Week in May SAUCEBMAN SCHOOL . ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS 88 FAIR '!)RIVE ·.COSTA MESA Grades ·1 through 9 Small group and Individualized teaching lo meet the realistic needs of youngsters. • Abilities will be challenged by good teach· ing and a variety of educational materials so that more effective learning will result MOTIVATION Operates only from within a ~rson -not from the outside. Good teachmg can stbn- ulate motivation within a youngster by buildinj!' on successful learnin' experiences. Nothing succeeds like success . WHERE THE PROGRAM FITS THE CHILD I Willard H. Saucennan, Ed. D. Telephone S4M060 School 54t-17SI love.) ENROLL NOW FOR FALL NEWPORT BEAcH CHRISTIAN DAY SCHOOL 15th & Monrovl,tr Strffl1 N1wport B1ach PRE-SCHOOL -ELEMENTARY· Special · Summer Educalional Program Limit to 12 sludenls per class Kindergarten lhru 4th SPECIAL RATES FOR FIRST 25 WHO REGISTER!! .136-1930 oiler 6 p.m. & Wffkond1 546-7866 Anytime ---.~----~~---------Wk) jftd S&t's, Apply In per. ' ~1··• HO S K EP R ""· Bad< Slree~ No 25 Clorlcol Tr•lnH $325. ••COOK•• Expcrienooo. ELECTRIC Mcn'OR SHOP ""'""" GIRL FRIDAY cw .. n ndl ·-·· ~ u E E E Fashion Island. N.B. No typine nc:c. Xlnt Co., COOK Apply: F1ylng BuUer 3101 MAN 10.15 yn:. exP. call Energetic man, expe:r, mt HUN'MNGTON VAL LEY 9,...2~~~[; Call or Apply l ==~=;...,.~-,,..,-1 beftfs & working condl, Newport Blvd., N.B. An n We1tcli(f Penonnel, neceaaary. Varied work, CONVALESCENT .HOSPI· ·~w .a.. PARKHURsTRETIREMENT CHILD CARE: A lovin&: lady .IASON BEST ( Experl1nctd) DISHWASHER . PAJtT.TJME 2043 Westcll1f Drive, N.B. ahipping, clerking, mntnce. TAL. 842--5551 Apply Penonnel Director to~ for well·mannered 4 Employment Agency Breakfast Cook Swiu Chalet, 414 N, Ne"''· 645--2770 YeaN"Ound, good benefi t.. * HELi-ARC WELDER. So. Coast .C:Ommunll;y JtOspl. RESIDENCE Yr old boy, 6 mo sirf, in new :z:xn So Main Santa Ana par(. N.B. E>.'PERlt:NCED DI n ne r For appt, 494-4515, The Pct· aluminum. Appl)I. 110 W. tat. 31871 Coat Hwy,, South 9925 *La~ F'.V, borne, MorrFri 9-7, S.t 9-5. • 546-.54io APPLY IN PERSON Waitress, over 2l. Spaghetti. tery Shack, Laguna Bch. l?lh St., Costa Mesa: Laguna, Calif, Ph: 49&-1311 IZil mo. MUST be ,.li•bl•l===~"'-C..,.--* DRIVERS * Bender, N.8. 64>--0651 CENl:ltAL OFFIC£. Good HELPE" WAN~ -P·~ El<t 356. ' HOUSEKEEPER. M~IUtt. 4 have own tn.nap. 49f..5S34 CLERICAL w o r k, pet• DENNY'S "' J.LU cµ • for .cook'i 4 lite Hakpr tor al! 7 pm. ma.nent part time. Sul> No &......-ie.nce FACI'ORY Workers, pd . TYPING Accounts Payable time for ekferly lady Some HOTEL " • • elderly widow on Bal Isle. C H 1 L D-care/bousekeeper,• mil application to P. O. Box ... ,_.. vac.. holidays, k Ins. Will knowledge. Oeaeh area. Call meal pttplll'l.tlon, Ute' house. Very pleOOt worki(lt condL Rm I: board • S25 wit. 11 I 2 hu•-5 , 2 4000 1.quna HWa 926SJ or RESTAURANT N.cenary! train. 32972 Calle Perfecto, Loraine, Westcllff Peraonnel work, 3-4 d:&.VI. 613-2734 · .. _ ... 1.0 11_1 clau hot•!. In 613-S103 ve-n, c \>.n :n; • can ' 8 37-0661 lor ap-S.J .C. Agency, 2043 Wes i cl l tf ,...,,,.. •• · rr.====-== yn old. NB. 541-7348 • I · , • Musi have r.Jean QLUtontla FIBERGLAS Hand , ... Up. Drive. N.B. 66-2'nO Hospl.tal the hou!ekeeplnf dept, Ex. HOUSEKEEPER -Motbe:nl ~~·~•G, Ligh' -·'el•~"°~"-'m_e_nt_. -----bo Blvd ..... vt -~ .. __. ..-., _, will H , ...... Ll I •·· • IWMLAI,,.., ., •uuu , 3170 Har r • ""' I'll ~~vn.1 • .-~y e:itper not necess but GARDENER TRAINEE Nun1ng .. LVN-M/t per1ence welcome or e,....., ve--n. IWYm • borne•, put.time, for oon-COASTAL AGENCY Costa Mtu YELLOW CAB CO. Charge nurse. Top ware• train. C..U <n4> 6"-1700 Ext. bot.rd + SUS mo. Spanb.h aclenlious ladits. 5U-2!1J6 A member ot 186 E. 16lh st. helpful. Call 549--046.1. No exper. nee. Xlnt 41PP• and employff benefits, 575 OK. 3 c h i Id r e: n • Call CLERICAL TRAINEE ~tung " Snelllnc Inc. eo.:u Me• * 01ntral Office * ('f14) 546-0085 Two Dlthwuherl · ~1162-=8936=·==~~- Women 1845 With &OOd 1 Q Tho World'• Lor901t * COOKS * Young firm 1"""• mature _.... GUARDS * BAYVIEW CONVALESCENT HOIOil•I HOUSEKEEPER • Cbmp<o. 45 ..... I'll tuft. A 10 key adde~ Professional Can or Apply DRIVERS Wanted in Laguna per$0tl to iwist ln ofc. Lllo X -HOSPrrAL-• PHYSICAL Ion, own tranlportatlon, Uve' .. , vr E loy t S. 1 PARKHURST .. .,..,..REMENT Beach area for newspaper typlllQ'., Close-In. Slart at 20~ Thurln, Cotta. Mtsa THERAPIST In, 4M-3944 aceura"ey Mtded. $1.15 to mp men rv ce n.r.•' delivery. Mutt ht've good $325. ca 11 Joan Martin, FULt. OR PART TIME. Pre-$42--3505 Apply Pen.on~! Director ---'---~--r •tart, with advance A OOl'T'I· :r:~-rn;1: OMA~ 9925 ~~CE FV cu and be over•i.8. Cont11.cl 540-«l55 lcr 55 or older. Work any HOTEL Ma.1d. l'Ull dme. So. Coa•I Community INTELLIGENT Younc M puttt train. oppor. 4301 r · a.t ams -am a, · • Joe Nobies, DAILY Pl.LOT, COASTAL AGENCY •hilt. Onlfonn1 f'Urnlshtd. Pennanent n ildent prefefl. ffoapltal, 31872 Coa!t Hwy .. fatter Hia n a 1ptt dl11g B)tth St., Suite 6 tnr. ** COOK TRAIN£~ eve1. 002-553l 64'"'4321 2100 HarbOr Blvd C.M. Contact Chuck Siter. 19700 rtd. 4M-1198 Sout h Laguna. Calif.· Ph: bullet. ReJ.£..tteatalt. 2:167 airport) N.B. ~1ust be 18. THE ZOO COOKS wilh broiler exp, --------' Jamboree Blvd.. Newport . 499--UU E:itt. 356. Jtatl>Or, C.~t. DOtiT . ~rr ~ for Ml.Mrthut at c.our Ifwy, Aleo waltM?l91!11. 'tull ~r part· DISHWASHER • Graveyard IT'S WONOERFUt. I ft I Beach, 833-0000 £xt. 2273 alt. o..ASslnEo? Someone w\11 --~-----~.to ftmd:lh_ >'OtD' N.B. APr>\v1ln perwi11 time. Call 337 .. 0006 Relief took·all shiti.s. Apply IYIJJO' bu,ys tn appliance• 9:30 AM, Wed. thru Fri. bt kloklni tor ll Dial 662-HOUSEKEEPER. • tJv, tn 11 Your Ad lh our home · ··find creat b\O'l ln 1 Tht' Collage Coffee Shop fl62 you ilnd ln tht ClauWed 5611 , ~ for elderly ·eoople, M1tlure clua~ !omtOM .w tod81'• Oauitied Ms. PILOT WANT AD!l 542-5678 Whlte Elephants! \\/,19th St •• C.r.1 . Ads. Check them mwl DAILY Pru/I' \VANT ADS! woman pref. Call 642.-G6$1 kloklng for lt. Dial &Q..$1l '. l ~ l • ' I 'i : • J I '' I • '' c I h r • t ' LOT Tu1sQi, Aprp 14, 1970 ~~!f!~!!_!~~[!J~~'.!:L~~~,jli5Q~ & IMl'LOYMI NT MIRCHANDISI POR MIRCH ANDISI .,,, -----------------, ---------M.I RCHANOISI PO R SALi AND ftADI · FREE TO YOU ~ -· SALi ANO TllADI SALi AND TRADI -11• Jobe -. Wim. 7100 ~!!" ~· W!"l'-/100 Fumltvro IOOO Ful'lll,.... IOOO Mt.an ...... ' -LOVEABLE F emale -<d DAILY PILOT J l1Jl'QIUAL Malltenance RN, NI~ aupervbor, xlnt SeMce slale • Serri9e-Pfpt1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; I-CUSTOM· JIWELRY ~!""1!::.. ·~t.6 ~ v~ ~19nt'~.1~~,~ =~;:,!,::"=: *$1u<~~~~1K + PUBLIC NOTICE . ~·••w«l<ltrcrt,.. ~7.1·ound '"Newport CLASSIFIED INDEX • 11 I """ M\iaj C.M M I I 1-F New Mark C Bloome made to ordtt. Nfce ttodr of He 1 sh ts a re a. Cal I l7-95:ZS. or 847-JZi&, bdr. T · em or • or • OWwt AH lr1r1d N ew Furni•ure re•urned frOM Model rtop It eaninis that are dil-~ 4111 , .. ,.., "-'rke ...................... ••AL DIRECI' an.ma Im, 642-mf • ~ta l:M~.!~ta WW HOflles, decora tor ca ncella•io n1 a nd cU1pl&y studio1. ~nt a t fa.tr pricet,. E'wl')'· Need eood home& for~ Utttn A E OOM & NAID ,..,\ •.•ANTJOR RN. 11-7:• UU\ xlnt wort:· •-:'._ ~~ ...... fi ... •t;1-··. s-nflh & Me41Mrr-n ~umlture thin( in Jowtlry m&kine • klttena, '\lw"· ·Wbile, ~-·. HOUSES FOR s L ~O'tlls. i lllAILlil coum . ,,., • j nd' ' be fl'-""--., ..... ._.., · "" ,.,.,. r-;-;--$]'9 "18100 ""•· v """ "'8.1 H••Ut. .................. ,,IM OUEST MC>Mfl -1'ULl. TIME n& t'O I oc; ne ... .....,..,. Ptnalon It Prot Shir Plan. 9 Pc MecHtt l eclrooM 1ulte o r99, " , now • . toola & equip, ~Uria &: i(Qf, ..U black, tlaer atrlPf;, COITA Ml_I& ................ n• MIM:. llENTALI :C Ian Oemente -492.-7871 tact Dlftdor of Nuni"-, Apply Mark C. Bloome Co., Gor9 eoul Sptnish Cus•om so fa w/mat chg love seat rockhowKI ~upphe•. ~ u t "3 Du.UY Rest &re lhOrt ::: ::~o':"•.:;;;;;;;;;:·:J:: ~~::tJ';rJ~~ri·········,.,.1 1 C.M. Memorial Hosp, """"' ltarbot Blvd., Coria CL-lea of beeu• fabric•,, .... $41f .95 no~ $225.00 1t0llel, rouah slO~ rind. • COU.••• PA•IC .............. 1111 1I A1t.I!• ~A11111.s •1 LUY SAL E~ ~2734 .-nv 'II Jnp 1: 1ett11ijt1, Sterlin& slL ha.ittd. 1191'·1.IU. •....O•T •••cM ........... 1• au11•ns •••T-.L ........... -, Mesa. Sp•nish Dini"/ sek ···-·······N·············.:···-·· ' 75.00 PREGm~ C 1 ~ .,.,.., ••1et1TJ .......... 1111 ~•ca •••TAI. ......... ..-• 1 YoU t:*n recrWt I: S I"' 0 ' E T bl & COff T bl e 11 00 ver, gold fill~ It 14l< a<ild. '""'"' a. Cr&.Y • ,..,......, COY•• ............ 1111 i•DuSTa~L ·~ottl!•JY .... .-~..., -·· ~ a ,..-.-u; Seo Sett)' Bruce at SERVICE Station Attendant o 10 •111: n • 11 ·ae • es ········• • \Ve will clean vour ri-s & \\•hUe, desperately needs a •• .,., INN.II ........... 1n1 c:_,...a.c1AL •••.•• i··• 11C .. _,, u. .,..,~ Gx t Ex T II O r Tab le l imps r•9 ' '4f 95 "now -' I t 00 ~ .... M YCau T .................... 1m 1NDus1aiAL a1NTAL ........ '!!." M • • perienoed. Dfl¥1, Apply In Sp1ni1h a ng. wig 1mp1,,ra9:;..,. • now• · method. We love he.r but \\'e have DOVI • sNOalS ............... 12'7 aANCHa ........ -···-···-·-''• 1 ... bu1ilneu: MOOK MOOD m Penn. full 1 me · -1 ecoH S l ' ' ·,., t S """• 22·50 jC\\'elry by the ultra:&onlc Jovihg home. 'fonderful pet. '-'.,....•I .................. 1t11 l.OTI ....................... '1!" • •2302 :"""" ec , R 1 G s · h F ·t •••TCLll'F ............. 1111 c:1T•u• ••ov•• ............. •n• ~a perw;m; ..Browns _Shell Strv. ,. OCN'l'ls o or9eou1 p•n11 urn1 ure • FIVE M CD.fS Ac ~Uersia. ~ 4/16 AA••Dfl .... N\.AMOS ........ 1m •c•u•i ................ .u. * ••DIES * Ac-.. ..._ __ r Girls 990 E. Cout Hwy., N.8 . lw•s reg. $1295} Sacrif1c al $425, ttmtt LAPIDARY SUPPLY S'lALI.. Bla-" "-·"-r 1.,.._ UNIVlllltT'f' 'At9' ........... 1ur u11a au1N011 .............. an -~·~, ~ " ~ \,oUl:AC ...,~ lltVllilll ....... ,. ....... :, •. ., ltll ltllOllT '110,l!lllTY ....... ,. .• i wocic \n pOOne: order dept, 410 W. Coast HW)'., NB. SERVICE Ste.tion.. Exg 1 d R D FURNITURE Rear o( 'College,Cente.r rier lo J:ood home. 6 ?i1o'a aM:IC 'U Y ...................... 1tte OltAMOI co. ,.o,lttTT ..... Oil '~ -( ' Sho M•• ~·nt · I AITat.UFfl .............. ., ... 1142 OUT 01' ITATI PICW, ......... • M. otficl", 4 ... hn a da.Y. By appoi:1t. ~ Help. 3.12. lhlft. Salli')' + 1144 Newptrt BIYd. (•t H•rbor) Cot t• Me11 on1y p,.. ..... >.;.\;' er old. Xln 'I ch1I4ren1 dog, .. I ,.,. ll" w.lUHT>IN. Ofll:ttT ........ 4tl •• " .1 •• _ a wk. No typi..... eomm. App'1 In penon. 4618 Ever y N igh t 't ll 9-W·'. Sat. & Sun. 'Ill ,., 7150. Harbor Blvd,. U.A ~male. 96S-,6188 •I I ~ 11v•• TlttUCI ............ 1i.u 1u1D1v11tON u.ND , .. , ..•••. Ult "' ._,. · .... -Cos • M · S49-2039 coaoNA DIL MA• ........... 1lll tl!AL 11TAT1 111vic• ....... u • ...U5l ha.Ye 1JOO(l telephohe S.IMmin To $850 Campoli Dr. NB. , . ti eta' * P~I. ~/16 I ALI OA PIENIMIULA ......... 1 .. t.E. l!XCMANO• .............. mt -~ '1bice, &U-1$ll . 'PLUS CAR. ii: EXPENSES SHEET METAL MAN ·--\VELSH T errier, male, 10 f.':c~:J. .. ::::::::::.::"..::~= t. If. WANTlllO ................ .- • l:.xcept~ career opty open to tim:.l1 god btnafita, pvund P u rn itur. 1 IOOO Pi•nos & Or 9""11n1 1130 , mos .. hea.llhy, we 11. ma I). L100 11L• ................ ttsi BUSINESS e nd ln So Cal teiT r--•AL•OA 1su 11110 , ............. 1JJ1 FINANCIAL Loail Oft:lce ,Jobi . . . floor w/ new t'Ompany, Xlnt .BRAND NEW nered needs good home. MUNTINOTOM ••ACM ......... 1 .. No C•· -F La & well known Co. chance for advancement Or9an Shoppers! Fund abandoned on desert. 1tutr1T1tr10TDN HA••ou• • ., •. ,.., •ua1H111 o .. .-o•tuNtT111 .. .-JM1r1• 1w,.. rM wants 1 man w/a de-& • 3 ROOM GROUP LINDA llLI , .. •U&1NeM waNTID ... , ...... ... •••• • .. To. JASON IEST $2'7 Did you koow tt,at 1ve are 8i2-5261. 4/lS l"OUMTAIN VALLI\' .......... 14U 1Nv1STMINT o,,w1u111n. ... &111 , Ph!uc call tor appt. ~-Agency 642-n<I 1857 Harbor. c.o.ta Mesa * 5-11 LvN·S * some Pl"Offll -.u:.11 exp, P Empl-ent A-ncy ha · FR E .. · ORGAN SIAL •tACM .............. .,14'1 1Nv11lMll!NT WAMTCO ...... &alJ I be '· "·'I •• ,,., 557--........ ..~ ~-1•-.... 1 '""°' vmr o;. Need lovable home for very IUNSIT l lACN ............... 14111 MC*•Y TO I.DAN ........ -.. .4Ht nia . ....,. °"" ...,, "V""· 2207 So Maln Santa Ana ~"' re .... ar _,, 'CLASSES and that you can lova .. 'e affeclionate wh.ito uaoaN 010111 .............. 1•n ,1aotr1~ LOAN5 ............ .m Ablpll Abbot Pemnnel . ,, ... "'~'0 We carry our own contracts .... t.oM• ••Aat .................. IMI J•W•L•'f' LOANS ............ ua Agency 230 w w ~ y , D I t F rent a Baldivin Ori::an &: get kitten, 5 mo's irrcenWi blue J.ICIWOOD , ................ Int cOLUTllAL LOJ.MI .~ ...... uu 1 • · arner, STENO •n • t coun urn. in on the tun" 11'1 true. bul • : I eyes 548-08l3 >•ANG• couMTV ............. 1• •IAL l!ITATI LOAN-I ........ ::; , Suite 211, Santa Ana. . 417 w. 41h St, S.A. 547·24}2 only al . ~~~~~~~~~~~1 . . OU'T.OF COUNTY ............. 160I MO•TGAOl l. Ttlllt .... ' Northern ()rar]ge Co area ' 4 YR old fe1nale ea ... , OUT OF STATE ................ 1 ... li\ONIY WAMTIO . . ... ~ ~· · 1 ' Open Daily 104 * Sat 10-6 \VARD'S BALD\VJN STUDIO , STAHTOllll ... , .............. un ANNO"NCEMENTS ' Front ofc Job.in sales de:rpmt. Sunday, 12·3 hound to good home, Ex· Wl!llMINtTI • ................ 1•11 v · • f xlnl engineering fl 1819 Newport, C.P.f. 642-8484 CARPET Left lrom Comm'!. c e P 110 n a 11 Y good wi:th MIDWAY c.1TY ................. 1•1• ind NOT ICES Tilll Cr p/tlme .. top 1al. I: SALES MANAGER bendlls. Santa Ana Bristol . TRAINEE Cbnvaleteent Holp., S.W. Be on cmd fir ot new & ex· S.A .. Call.Mn. Faulhaber citing lndust of Cable 1V. b-•PPL 1209 W. Hemlock. Ft, gd u.1, lrg, ,Co. benfts. 5'6-196&. -"'Must haw dsre to wk . Gd MALE-Telephone sale .. Fire deal. Paid daib. PH: Mr R>an .,...,., appear, trans, 18-25 yr~. San Clemente Cable TV Interview call 492-QSo. .;;pe 60 wpm, 100 SH, wui REMODEL ING. SALE Open Every Nile contracts. SI.98, $2.88. shag children. 540-3769 4/16 =::i: :"..: HGiL""'"""'"~:,: FOUND ll'P'll ,..., ........... "'" mmkler training w I iood Beau, Lou.ls 15th dm tbt &Rx' & Sunday Aftemoon $3.99 sq. yd. Drakes Carpet OlllANGIE . . ... :::::::::·::1m ~~TsOMALi···:::::::::::::::::::: .. skills. 44 w/'J leaves $650, 9' loose PIANOS & ORGANS 173)6 Beach Blvd., H.B. AKC Bassett Hound, 2 )'ts old ~~~~= TUsTui ·:::::::::::::::~: AMNOUNCl!MEMTS .............. 1,• ' back ........ bl I t f tr 842-5114 pet. Needs fenced yard. •MAMllM .............. 10. lllTHI : ............ -........ I Nowport P e rsonnel ~-,.. ue ve ve .llO a NEW & SEO lri-d>lor male, Good lamily llLVl•Aoo CANYON ......... 1u s l'UHE•ALS .................. n , A9.ncy S500. lite orange uphoJ, arm • Yamnha Pianos Organs \VILL pay $20. lo lak.e over U$UNA HILLS ............... 11tl ,AID OllTUAll't .............. 4'U •• $75 Cu Im Ill 54(1..8638 eves. LAGUJ'A l l ACh .............. 1111 l'UNIEllAL Dllll!CTOltS ......... 1• 833 Dover Drive C1u , SI. I sz. qu • Thoma.M Organs Holiday t lcallh Spa contract I ~~~~~-~~~-LAGUNA IUOUl"l ............ 11'1 FLOIUSTI ......... .-4'U 11'"-.>0IU U.N Cl.EMl:HTI ..... 1'11 IN MIEMDltlAl\4 .......... , ••. NB .... -613-blueT.134""'. ad $50. Misc ttell'Ull .• Kimball Pianos for 2 persons. llu-" sell, Very IOl'llblC stripe Calico fe. Ml55ION VIEJO ............ 11tl CAlllO OF THANKS ................. ,, • Kohler & Campbell going In 5Crvicc. 6Ta-3807 male kitten, 5 mo's, Ver)' SAN 'U.t.H CA,.llTltAN O 1m CIEMltE•Y LOTS ............... 1. * s .1e1/Ro tell * To terve yo u b atter AMERJCAN Of MIU11'n•"1'llo COAST MUSIC r'A~ ..... t layl'r hil! Hi Lo J'J·iendly, needs good home. CAl'LST•ANO l l ACH lilt ClMl!TEIY Clt Yf'TS .......... tut I • ._...,... DANA '01NT 174t Cl!MET E•'f' Clll Y,TS ......... ~· Exp,u.Jesrnan w plantknov.·. it's KingsJz, BR set $400 . NE\YPORT & HARBOR nylons Sl.99 yd. Shilgs ~9-1955 or 546-7:!>2. DCEANSlOli .................. lHf :al!MATOllll!I ..........•. 44l.,• I SALE• nR!ENTED .~ .. f'" •-&-• n"-·ry I bo 0 1771 'olEMOlllAL PAIKS ........... 4' l """""" ""' ..... 06"· .,._ ... """' · JASON IEST Charcoal dbl BR set $100. Costa ?.tesa * 642-2851 lrom $3.50 up + m:· a r , DARLING. Gray kitten, 8 JAN 01£0 . . ............ ,, ..... ucTIONi ............... 1 GEN •••• M•"•GER Some .A_ ... ,, ..... exp he[pful • •IVEISIOE COUNT ........ .... '''' ll!•VIC:I" 4oUI "'""""" "'" aa.IU-.-. Headboard SS Lamps $3 2 x Open 10-6 Fri 10.9 Sun U.5 !IOc.pe:r yard. 847·11i19 \\'k.!i, maJc, would like lo MOUSEi TO ... MOVEO , .... Ult ;~tvliL .......... ' OF to aell material I wrv. $6000. Employman• A n ency 3 m '-110. "7' sof" "'" Sal 1 belo•• to 1-·lng family. coHDOMrNIUM ..... 1n1 ·· ........... _ \ 'II ~..... ~ .,.... GOING To l{av.<1ii '· Al .... .... ou,.Lt:XES ,0 • U LE 1t1s A11t -raAN5POITATION ..... . HOOD SAILMAKERS' Call Pal O'Brien, 540-6055 m7 So. Main, Santa Ana & S12J. 548-3446.or 494-6364 PIANO RENTAL S HouseM°ld F'urnishings must 968-4397 4f1B ,.,.AltTMtNTi .,011 SALE ,,.. AUTO TaANl l'OllTATION ...... ..u COSfA MESA LOFT COASTAL AGENCY 9'1&t \V, Katella, Anaheim BLOND wood bdnn sel; tge New and Used J."O! 897 Center St. Apt 4, UNUSUAL pair of CCHINAI RENTALS ~~~=~"';~~oa1NG ·::: = ' Must be knoYiiedgeable rac-2700 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 546-S4l0 or 821·12'20 dresser w/mirror, n lg h I All monies paid apply to pur. Costa Mesa. "64.1-().197 house kittens, 7 nlOs. had Houits F u rnished SERVICE DIRECTORY : ing u.ilor ,with .I t.r 0 n i" Sales W. AIJ'RESSES*** stand, headboerd, ·spring & chase. -"='-'-'"""'-""~1oc-k_$l200_ · & ho GENl•AL · ····· ·· JMI ACCOUNTING ......... .-; marketi .. tr Ill.ks a nd I or ,_..... ti SCONCE, ;wall ·c . operation !I ts, lo !,'OOd •ENTALI TO Ill.Alt! ........ tOH AHIWlltlNO Sl•VICI ....... '* • .., • For ttcorded uowrma on EXPERIENCED mattreu. Good cond. $75. GOULD MUSIC credenza & extendo table home. 644-0900 4/16 COSTA MllA ............ 2101 AP,LlAMCt: •t::l'A111. '•ti. u u ~ a.e neral manaze'?lent ex· *Dial 545-0658 * complete. 673-1349 Mll!SA 01L MA• ........... 21• AS,HALT, 0119 ......•.. ~ , •· ~-~!date mu.11t be 2tM5 N ~lain SA 547 ""°1 $300, Etchings. 2826 Chaleau SWEET & .. A'"'· Y'""" ME». v111101 ............... tilt AUTO 1r,A1•s . f · .. 11• "' per""noe . ....ua> Es b Full APPLY . • . . "'VUO An< ~....,, D<; .. .. .... COLLEGE ,Alli( ........... .,1111 AUTO, .... l •lb. T-Ek. .... ' sro w th·oriented. Bue SALES-Servict ta . er HOUSEFUL Of new model ............................ ,_w~·~'~·~Lag==~Bc=h~. ~~--·--white ca I , housebroken, MIWPO•T atacN ............ 2111 •AIYSft"l'ING ........ 61M ··'·ry pill$ -Ht inttnlive. Bnab route, $l25 • wk, SURF I SIRLOIN home fumihm!. Reg. $683, CARPET '"·'·ii"'" will sell f em ale. 557-8986 art NIWH•T MOTS ............... m • IOAT MJ.lt'Tl!ftANCE ........ ms }' -··-t··' to tart. c rr ·-Paclfio r --·t '''"" ....... .... NEWf'OIT stt0•11 .......... m• ''''"· ... JONltY, lfc. .......... . P ie•••,.., ...,.me to·. •-x ""'atan o:o;u s . a <RJU · .._._. •1 • ..... w 1197. -"'17 o r u .... IOND SI•' Y All 5 30 4/16 mo -'""'" ,.. ""' A.. ..... o;n-n n.IUTU• .n\\aY, am-hi.I lut 2 rolls of carpel. : . I AYIHOllll!I .. ............. IUSIMl"IS SllllVIClffo. ....... 4UJ : M ·-I"· Daily Pilot ' 5'6--5743 Newport Beach 637-6200 aha. New & used pl•-ol 0, part. 0ou' ble , ... ,, back. 2 . DOY•• IHOlllS ............... 2227 I UILD••s ................... U71 • -•~ .:::.'--"=----~-~~ ·-· .. USED 1w1n mattresses &: •tSTCLlFI! ............. m • cAT1:a1No .................. •SH MANAGEMENT SALES Ledy, cu r tain, WA I '!'RESS W a n trd • 8' Sofa never used, quilted· most makes. Best buys tn $2.99 per yard:M0-7245 lnnerspr i ngs, old but UNtv1•11TY ,AltlC •...•...... m7 CAlllNETMAKING ............. .... ' drapory I. '"'ts. UdoU'.11 Jamaic_a Inn Coffee Shop_. no-I, o-•-hguo~., 112• .. So. CaJil. at Schmidt jlU5IC lllVIMI! ........................ nae CAll,INTl•IMG .............. '191 • 6" ... ~.., •u .. NEW 5· office de sk & useablc, 8541 Judy Circle IACIC. •AY ................. t24t CIMl!MT, c..ia ............... 6611 : TRAINEE Home F ur n I 1binc1, So. 7AM·3.30 Pl\f. Apply in Matchill&' loveseal s 75. Co. 1907 N. P.1rln, Santa Ana a rmeha.lr $80. Nf'YCr ui;rd HB after 6 pm only. 4116 t:AST aLUl'I' .................. ~:! CHILD CAltl!. Uulttd .......... It , •-,...Ive, .....,,,_ man ii). Coast Plua.. peM!On, 2101 Ole.st Hwy .. 776--0j92 100 1 ·0 ~v~T TEll•-'CI! ........... 2Hi ~:=~~c~~:!NING ..... :::··.::: • "-.. --·· CdM .::ccc;=-~~~-~-7 ~1., •• c9arpcl 9x J . 3 Little Kittens free to good c:o•ONA Ol!L MAil .......... ttH cA.ll .. 5-T U 'f'ING • 111,Alll "26 l terested in job with future * Secreta r y * · AVOCADO Velvet Sora & GULBRANSEN ~1odcl 2400 .,.,....,,.., home!!. Very healthy & cule. eALaoA . .• . .............. not o•A,EllEJ ...... WI I tri Fumiture Rental Co. Must b.e we.11 ~med. at. \VAITRESSES Wanted, flve. Lo"'''''· 5. Co,.,.,ulslador Organ. 6 mo. old. Piano cf-POOL TABLES Carr onyti·me 842_2176 ,116 LIDO 11Lr .............. 1n1 OEMOLIT10N ......... tW /xln • rd hif'· • '"I .. IAY ISUNDS ............ UJI DIAl'TING $11VICI! ....... , •. '6f/ ~ • . APPLY tracUve penon w I typ. gravcys ll ~ open. lanlf"I, sacrifice. 832·7068 feet, Leslir, auto. rhylhnl 8. 118,, Italian Sl.ate Intro IAUOA ISL.ANO .......... 1UJ l"LIC'r•ICAL ........... "41 517 \V. 19th St., c.~t. irw skillll, lite SH. Look like Apply In person. section. dbl manual $92J. • . ST. Patrick's Day 1i Persian HUNTll~GTOH l l"ACH ......... t4tl IOUl .. MI NT ll!NTALS ........ ~ • ~-""1 e a N•--t, lhink ••-a -m. ODIES RESTAURANT HIDE-A--BED $50 67" ~·,· oiler. $495. 547~ kittens of b rue ·Cream FOUNTAIN VALLIT .......... >n1 l'INCING . .. .......... ....-..........., ,.._,,.... .._ ...., ,,...,,,... l l AL l l!ACM . .. ........... 24$1 ll'L.00111 . .. .. .... 4661 'IANAGER, wo e k end. ptJler. I.Ota cf public: con. 1400 W. Coast Jlwy, N.8 . 546-4569 UPRJGJIT Plano. for sale. llAND Painted oil ponrait of mother 516-996.1 4/16 LDNO •EACH ............ , ... I.SN l'UltMACE·a.-,Atlls. Etc. ..... wt I ,. s ~ Call J w R E s s ...... ....... or"""''" children from a K' o•ANGe COUNTY ............. 2*, ~•NITUll •ISTOltlN• M•ture \\'Oman .• ~ f.arni. tact. tart..,.:>. oan ** A IT . • .,.,.. DIN. M!l, xln't cond. Bdrm Made in London. Over 100 .JV" .. -~ TIGER Jtlen, female, 8 SANTAANA ...........•.•.•. 2.11 ••El'INllHIMG "" ' b • •Martin 540-605.5 -rienced over 21 Apply In t b oprnos matt ...t ..... , otir. 1 or , ki'nd. photograph. 6~&-3629 "''ks needs a good home wasTMINSTl!lt ................ uit GAllOlJ'\ll"'G . . ......... .-ly type recreation clu • p. ' .. -' ) se ' x .... . • l!li" J• ' . • MIDWAY CITY .............. 2•1• GIN••AL'111tv1c.ES .. ,. ......... 1 P1 .. betw. JI• 3 pm Pacific COASTAL AGENCY person, lo Coffee S ho tJ cond, $50 ea. ~7;,:J alt 6. Beautiful oond. t.1ust !IE'C to \VHITE kitchen stove, In gd ~397 4/16 IAHTA ANA HllOHTI ........ ua OlllOtNe. DllC IN~ ................ ·1 ~ -H ~ Blvd c ~~ .. __ ,, H ter La n ~ta _,, • r 64°'063 I COASTAL .................. ,,.. GL.415 '"' Sandi cabana Club, 8141 "'"" · ar.,.,, " ·"•· '""' 11· 0 gu a, · LARGE. comfortable ch11ir, apprec. S350 Call 5J&.8326 1..'01"' c ean. .,.... 0 2 Adult male rabbits in l11rge LAOUNA Sl!ACH .............. 2111 o•EEN THUM• ::~::::::::::::47.,. •····ta. H.B. SE c RE TARY. AppU••nts s. Coast Hwy, Laguna Sch. -Id. good -ndltion. 131l. ESTEY . d see anyliml'. c•-. 2 b3.by r. b bit •. LAGUNA NIOUeL ............. 2TIJ GUN SHO, . . U11 • ..... .... .. -...... antique organ. nte s -~ MISSION VIEJO .............. 270& HEAL TM CLUIS ................ ,,,. ' ?.fANAGEMENT OPP OR . 1 b ou l d have a 1ood \VAITRESS WANTED 962--0STI few repairs, make offer . SCREENED Alun1. enclosure 494-73:)4 4/16 iAN CLEMENTE ......... 1111 HAULING ·······•······ 4,,. • bac ............... l -all hue f FUU. TIME !--------~-33tJ9 7' wide 20' 4" Jong, Asking SAN JUAN CA,ISTllAHO ..... 2715 HOUSECLUNrH'a·"··"::::::: .• m l i Full Ol' pt. time. car ntt, 20 .... vu .... n p ti 0 ~·. IV. \Vool...:.rlh Co. HO_ U_SEFUt.. Of Jurnlttu.·c: 830-KIITENS: Cutµs buttoos, 7 CA,ISTltAHO l lAC H ......... 21• INTl!lllOll DICOllATING ..... 6U7 hr wk. 836-4302 oUlce pro cedures, be -... d 1 relr kn.. $15. You 11!move. &lfi-8ol30. ii·ks. 'polly° trilil1('(J. 1 ~ DANA '01N1 .......... tl41 INCOME 'rAll .......... '14I I . tl't d' , bil>'ly 2302 Harbor Blvd. C.~I. 1n1ng, an1ps, • • • i.... PIANO TUNING & Repair DIRT Bike IOOCC •~. a< ,·,. tttVElll loE COUN'rY ........ 11M lltON, Onl•met1i••• IK. ........ &Ut I al ma ure Jn a I u e "". bed d kll I .. 94 8385 Expert. reasonable! 1\1 r . 'Ml Sian1ese. 642-2637. 4/16 VACATIOH llENTALS ......... 2'11 lltONING .............. 61H l MAN To assist Mgr. Loe to orianizeherwark.Prefer W AITRESS. Apply El ·es' ec. • _ Go Can SHP racing frame, suMME• •tNT'ALS ......... ,, .. 1NwuT1NG ................. i 1u appliance store. l\fust be ha · 1e~-• do ,768 ~ 1 Aarne~s 615--6967 or 6~ Cockapoo remale, all black. CONDOMINIUM .............. n se tN SUllANClf ................. 6711 . call 8 30-9 30 Mr pure sing or ma ,,.. oon-Mata r, •• e:wpor Office Furnltyre I010 slicks. SSS. 545-61® ou~Llll t.s FUltN ............. ,,11 INYEST1DAT1MG, omc11 ..... •nt , neat. : : " ' trot exp. Type 50, shorthahd Blvd., C.OSta ~tesa. 642-'417 Television l20S NEWPORT Beach Tenn i 1 2 mo's old. Free 10 gOod RENTALS JAN1-roa1AL .....•. •ne l G~ 496-2333 80. For appt. call Mn. Ruth WAITRESS Want~-'.luot be USED steel des'-·~.so e ·'""'""-""-"-'----'= .1 home. 646-2656. H Uni ··•·d JEWEL•Y •1E,A1111. 11e. ...... .. • TH ·-~-· Studle & ""' "" ..,.. Club full fa m 1 y mem· OUIH urn1 ... ,.. LANOSCAf'ING ················"" M · .;>l,JCl&I 1 Ai.. KQ)trl:') ~XI, A_ve.,y over 21. Call Galley Cafe, Po&ture chairs $12.aG & up RENT Color TV $1 mo with benhip. Best offer. 644--0139 FREE. had 7. 3 left· kittens, GINl!llAL ............. '* ·.ocKSMITH ··············•··"" Frerich Teachers. S'itlTil ~u...t• M, umer D1v, 2620 -•••o for intervie\v. • u··" 2 • t drawer filing tl to BuY 545-JSM ¥.:Siamese. they are bcau1i. COSTA MESA ................ 11• MAID SEJ1v1c1 ...... ,. ....... 6l1J 1 prl ···-· 67' ••10 .• y·r "t)t' l .. ,,...,.... '""" op on . . REDWOOD picnic !able w/4 MEIA Ol!L MA• .............. ,1 1$ MASON.,, ••ICk ........ .... ; v. JKOIJVU . ...._ ,,j a s. Susan, ~A. ·nr Habor • WAITRESS·. 6 n;gh'• • wk. oa.blnets . U.scd wood desk.II South COii.st ~tagnavox, 2133 ful! 642-0588 4/16 Ml!SA VE•o• ................ Jilt MOYtNG . STO•AGli ....... ::;: ) i\JATIJRE, Expe-r'CI. ~bysij. W.~~n .:-~tt a l OP· 7PM-2AM. Some "'cooking. litcMahanBt'M l>esk lnc. Laguna Canyon Rd. Laguna benches, $15, Lounge chair FREE Kittens for Good ~~~~.~":E"fctt ··::::::::: .. :r,: ~:::i::::r~~r.~.:;;;::.: ! ter Pref Lido Isl ~'n ~ empl!)Yet. 6 1800 Newport Blvd Beach $7. 962--0877. Home~. 5~~l.).1. 411 5 NfiW,OlllT HGHT5 ............. n11 PATIOS· .... ............... I . . 893. r :::n -N. s'horth nd THE AITIC, 642-M-12 aft . 64" .;~... REGULAR Balboa &y Club Nt:W,OJIT IHOlllS .......... :mt f'HOTOGltAf'NV ....... Wit transportation. 549-1 -cty./ 0 • WELDER COtita ~tega * -'OJI.I GE TV needs work $20. SERVEL Gas Re.frigertor. •A'f'I MOltEI ............... Jm ,LASTEltlNG, '•!tit, a...... . ... j ""TURE •-··•·· Sal~n. S40t>.-.,,f'J·..._.r ,1111.,. Jee. Xlnt ,,._...,, Wotdcr· Arc '"·rt . Console ""/remotr control. ?.1embersip for sale. Call DOvea 1tt0, "'' ....... r•··-.. ,m7 ,.LUMllNGi ........... "" 1 •• .,. ._.,wnC<" "'30"-'f'"'YJ ": .....v-rl ""'"" nu 546-8801 8A~1-5Pi\1. \Vario! well. 675-6607. 4/15 l'fESTCLI, • • ........... mt ,IT G•DOMIMG •HI General o re exper Tue1.Sat. oppo' ,, ·1. f9r the right g:I • ...... &·burnt .... .' Appty' -·Offlc.e Eqwipment 8011 PHILCO console TV needs UNIVlltlllY ,J.•IC .• , ....... nu POOL 5E1tY1c.E ........... •nt 646-7401 !JASON BEST ...... •oe. '11 Yt"Ork s;i. a46-4.569 $13 Lov1rtYA,rl."*'p pink suil. FREE puppieR. '1 Collie /\; IJY• • ·"t"· .... .,. .... -.. l"OWEll IWEE,.ING ........... it11 Red-~Renlals. . .. ' .Em nt ....... * TRANSICOM CORt!t .... , SCM pr\ol\"-calculator .""'"'. .. T:y1 8 c '' Samoy·" "S-9W. 4/16 elfliCS,I AY .................. ,!UM .. Slr:IVICI .............. .. :< ployme !i-ge-.,, 85 l81h S C Pot .... """" 21 .. TV .,c:. 17,, bl TV like ~.w, si+e l 1% a ""' ... ~ EA.,,.tl L.Ul'fl ............... ,.. wOOFtNC . .. ........... ..,. MEDICAL Se<lt'y .. RadJOIQO ·-So M .. • -ta • l W, t., . ~-;Alma walnut 30x.50 desks $99 .,.... porla c c:.•1-'°":f' s r II T_... . .... llADIO •• _.,,, lfk ...... : .... ..-... 1) . Co taot """' a.in Mn na $20. Bolh \\wk g 0 0 d -... ~ 8 CACTlJ &: succu ents You 1•v1Nfc 'JE.•••c• ............ »ti I EMODELlNG ... RE,Al• ,, ... exp., ·~ Y ~. n -· 546-5410 • WOMEN POLISHE~ f'a) ahn01t new. 546-3013 540 .,,29 \VANTED: English riding dig _ 548-2898 4/l6 co•ONA .... MA• ........... mt ,IEMOOl"LING, lllTCHINI .... 4HJ Jim "Shee·b a n, c . Mt no ex_,.;..nee: nee; U N D E RWO OD ddln .,....,,., IALIOA v ................. s. SCISSO•I IHAl,hl ........... m M 'al H 642-2734 1 =-raC"'r.1.oy Good llklll.11 ,....-a g •70 SYLVANIA Cotor TV clothes, sizes 12 thru 14. MIXED BEAGLE,. 4 mos. IAY ISUNDI ,.. .......... -... UH SEWING ............ "" emon osp. ~•P"• • ' • TOUCHUP MOLDERS&: hi c Ilk new $45 Lisa 67~ Ltoo 1sLI •, .............. JHl 11EWING MACHINI •e,.At•s ''ti MOTEL MAIDS Public ffntacl . t/o ·~ BON DERS NEEDED • mac n ' ..,.; 7464 • walnut tbl model $295. days old. 642-6206 4/16 IALaoA ISLAND ............. ms s E,T•c TANl(S,. sew-. 5k. .. •s ~ ·~1•g * "'"'"· ee. OJ} L o r a In e • r--'· ·-•y. Appty·. -&I" ·~•. eves o:~A7678. GEIGER COUNTER S 3 S. PETS •nd LIVESTOCK NEWPOtT W8T ............. aui. TA11.011NG .............. im ' ,. .,._ 'W'W ""'r-"'" ~· .,.,..-HUMTIHGTON at:A(H ....... :tillt TalMITE CONTltOL .......... ffn WKlCllff"°hrMlnnel Agency, W D SCHOCK CO -5464569 --HUNTINGT,Dft tlA••OUll ..... *5' TILE, c..-amk . . ........ "14 Nul"tllng 20t3 \VestcllU Ori""'· N.B. • • • Store Equlpm.nt_I012 Ho".Ft' & Stereo 1210 Cots 1120 FOUMTA'lif VALLl!T ......... :>11• TILE, LIMllll'" a JM,...· ...... •us EGISTERED NURSE 3502 S Greenville SA 2 T\VlN-bed box s pring& &: -----' su.L •IACH ............... 301 tltEE SE•vlCE . . ...•. ,,. R &IS..2T70 . • . . --~ -GAllDl!M OltOVE .............. >47S TELIVlllOH, ••H1". l!lc. .. •-.S IC.Cc u . \\'OMAN' 10 "'Ork in Donut STORE fixtures • ;ilass top ~lARM'TZ ~1od. 7T pre-ump mattresses, p e r f ect con-SIAi\IESE, Ab Y s s 1n 1 an & LONG •EACH ............. JIOI u,HOLITl!lt'f' ................ ''" Expanding. 00· 1.1· ·Cha· it"ngt'"" SECRETARY, p/l1n1e o r ,.'.p, over 21. No phone counters. back eue_s, etc. dition, $20 set. 491-1273 o•ANOE couNTl ............. 3611 #ELOINGi .......... •n1 " ..... full H rbor Le I '"' I 67;'i-3177 2 Mcintosh amps 7;Hi0\V.1 ~==-=:..::.:::..::....c:c:..._ Persian call! for sale. Vc1y SANTA AMA .................. :NII WIHOOW CLlANINO ............ n 1 upportunlties, Continulnrr ed. ' a Phare~~" ,£., ex· calls please. Wi n ch e 11' s Reul Call eves Akai !ape de<:k, reel & e11rt. SEAR'S S"·imming pool, 4xl2 ttasonahlP.. 546-8858 "1"Mt MIT l"ll ················3611 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ·~ _, req .rm-''1\IJJ or . I MtOWAY CITY . . . ......... Jill ucation program. Contact 64'". 7!50 · · Donut House, 2947 Harbor S __ Dual 1019 turn. Sure 91E filtl'r. pump, rht'm1ca Ii k ACTA Sillmese k i 11 en s , SANTA AM-' HEIGHTS ......... :Ult Joa WANTED, MH ·· ·········*" --nnet So. C•••t "·-~ Bt;·'. C.'I. G•re•e •It _,, ti I " 00 1~~ "·'"' 111u· •II 4 COASTAL ............. 37" '01 WA'NTED, W-• ........ H2t ,...,...., ......, ...,.,.,,. ·u " • cart. A or prl a . vacuum, ,,.,, u't..>-uu'ta · · Bluepoints & Seal. l·f', 2.~t, LAGU NA IEAC:M .............. am JOB WANTEO, ll H ' ,_ ~-·t SEC'RfJTARY 6•,:o •""" r ,,_ D' 64" ~ .... 13)4 LAGUNA NIOUEL ............. J7fl MIEN I WOMEN ..... Tftf mun Y 06P. "°'" .._._. WOMEN GARAGE Sale: Furn, Ap-., .... """ PI......,, \VANT A .! ""''0 $25 ea . .,.. MISSION vtlJO .............. 110& ICMOOL5 1 1N1T•uCTIOM .... u• Hwy, So. Laguna (TI4) 499. lnfonnal office by the beach. Jmmed. open!"""' for child pliance.11 & Misc. 141 J t '·=·-~========-J-i:::="=;;'=0::==="'-'-'0:,0:,=i;i;==== SAN <:Ll!Ml!'Ntl! ..... 1111 J01 ~•EPAIATION .......... 11oe I'll E •~ Good typin" end shorthand "b~ T R d 8220 SAM JUAN CA,ISTllANO J12l TKtATR ICAL .. .. 1,. xt. """' .... ea-/·om pantons. yuur •"'• Bar"·r S I . Westminster. .... ecar •r• MERCHANDISE FOR ak!JJ l"e ired 714-493-4586 '" " "" ,..,.. CA,ISTllANO al!AC:H , ........ 11>11 ORGANIST • Choir Director 5 qu · at your leisure. We Sit Bet· <Near Westminster Blvd & DANA 'o•NT .......... J14• SALE AND TRADE f E :e~~• Ch h in SECRETARY PITI To SONY 260 tape n>cordcr & Z9 NO MATTER CONOOMINIUM ......... nu or p-.u.-. urc me ter. Inc. 642..J274 Rand1D Rd.l tape~. Per! cond. Just l199. OU,LIXll UNFUllN ......... ?f1S l'UllNITUlll! .......... ... c.~t. 548-00li mominp Land D e v eloper . N.B. o·~·o '' ~o...: ho t'--'--'------D-G___ 5UMMI• lllMTAU .......... Jtf1 Ol'l'ICI l'UltMITUI E ........ Hll Under l5 Call 645-2820 Y u.. . en .IO""" w wan NEIGHBORHOO •rare Take a look. L?20 Balboa RENTAL) Ol'l'IC:E ll!OWl,Mt:NT ....•.... M11 OUTSIDE VER IFIER ' · . to learn a trade in the mov-Sale. Furnifure. 9x12 rug, Blvd., NC1''J)Ort " h -..1 STORI liOUl,Ml!HT .......... Mn . SECRETARY / Receptionist · • I b · '51 Do I Apt1. fu r n it eu >:AFE. •ESTAUttAMT ......... ea14 Cail b Im l No ex Ing s orage usiness. misc. Items. m ngo, Gl!Nl!tAL .... .. •OM •All l!ou,","•'oo"'os ........... ttu Y appom en • Construction, exper pref. Need 15 • 20 men. If in-EastbluU. Camera• & cosTA MI SA ................. "°' MOUSEHO ......... 101t per nee Must have depend. s H • ~1 ..... M 1 ;=:=.======~ MESA Vl•DE ............. •lU G•llAGE SALi[ ......... I02J . . ..... , .. nr~----.. terested, call betw &SO JJll Equlpm __ .~, l:tOO_ AT llEW1'01tT llACM ............. ,.. l'UINITU•E AUCTION ........ It'll able car. Good s;.tartins saJ. s E AMS"l'RESSES!Sailrhak· & 4:30 pm. 543-7159 Appliencat 1100 w H NEw,011T HllOHTI .......... •211 .,,.,.LtANCll!s ............. 11•. ary & opportunity for ad. on/exp'd '"-t loc • •-k. . ~;:....;;;_..;.. _____ " MOVIE CAMERA Nl!Wf'OllT stto111 ........... em •NTIOUEI ..... -... 1r1t I Cail 64"1508 <"UJ• . .,, -Wl!STCLtl'I' .......... ,fflf SI.WINO MACl'llNI ........ llh vancemen . .v . ing c:ond:s. 2UO Newport Schools-Instr uction 7600 Gq.IERAL. E I e c"t . aulo $8. 546-4569 UNIVlf.ltSITY ,AJll( ....•...... G11 ~UllCAL INSTllUMEMT •.....• 1li PBX OPERATOR ·--I t od l r I '~===-=-=====-IACIC llA 'f' ............. •t4t PIANOS a o•OANS ............ 11)11 Blvd, N.B. Frank Rice ·--wu.,.,., ae m e, :itn --EAST •LUii', ............. 4142 ••010 ................. 12c• E11per pref. Over 30. Sa.i lmakers 673-3568 Cott•g• Art Shoppe cond. $75. Kenmore gas M facell1 neou1 8600 ~:~::: oet. _MA~ .. :::::::::::!: ~'-~'~1~~:1t i:O"":;·:;::::::::~: C&ll 540-2051 • • * s E A M STRESS, Pa.,t· Art lessons, l11nd & seascap. ·dryer. xlnl cond. $ 4 s .· ----------IAY'ISLANOS ................. UH TA .. E •ECOIOE•s ....... m • PBX A · 0 • 'd · "· •ign., &. truck lettering. 347-8115 or 546-8672 * AUCTION * L1DO ISLI ............... 4151 CAMEltAS • l!OVt,MINT ... llff ns\lo·ermg >3'1:,rv •• exp lime, faclory exper prefer-IALIOA ISLAND , ............ ..us HDllY su,,uEs . . ........ 1411 p[Tf'd. t"'ull trme, poss. pllr1 red. 493-4704 Emma Blankinship • Joyci KENMORE Aoki wuhcr & If you will scll or buy HUNTINOTON 11.1.tH ......... 44N s,DllTtNG G0005 ......... Ult ti If I n.h. •t ===~~~~-~~ Sisler, 690 \V, 19th (At.r,o, W'estl .. ~i-f'\ec. dryer. 'OUNTAIM VALLEY .......... 4411 SINOCUUIS, ICO .. EI ........ ~ Km,me. ~n · D<.: area. •· T. SERVICE Station Allendant. ... ._, .... -· , give \Vlndy a try IT Is \EAL 11AcH ................. 44H Ml1CELLAN1ous ............. .... p 5.36-8881 rnona) 642-1689 or 836-645S. both >elnt cond. $45 ea. ' Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m. ..ONG I EACM ............... UOI MISC. WANTI O ............... 1611 . F'ull time, eve. i;hlfL Ex· s-8672 )ltANGI! COUNTY .................. MAC:HINEllY, lie. ............. ,. PR? Du CT I ON. Exp;r. perieneed, neat 1 n ap-PIANO LESSONS • 847-8ll5 or 54 i~ W indy's Auctio n Barn • • • GAao111 011ova •.••.. , ............. uM•1• .......•....... 11s. req d, (Female) Browning -arance. See J im. 2590 Beginners, lntetinediate1 • L OVELY She Iv a do r w1.1TMINST11t ................ un ~1,~~:~N1G MAi li1t"i'Ai.S ':::'."':;7J 011 C 1916 p •· tla ~ THEORY IM 14• Good ;2075~ Newport, CM 646-8686 'o\IOWAY CITY ................ 4'1' IWA"I "t7'f g. o. ..cen , Newport Blvd, c.~I. all ages. • • Reiri.gerator, a. con· 1 Be"i~ .. Tony" Bldg. Mat'!. 1AMTA ANA ................... 4ill E d L IVEST·oc· C.t.1. 548-llTI SERVICE Station. Part time. PROVJZATION. ReaaooabJe. dltioo Ca.II 548-6207 llOlll,I ~e~:tNA~~-H~t~_HT·~·::::::::::: ~ET~~G:N~•Al ........... !'.. R ... pt/G '.rl F ro'd e y -~ • · A •~ Call after 5 p.m. ~ WEST INGHOUSE &"to. LADIES Diamond D i nner COASTAL ............... ,..CATS ..,. gn.vey ..... "" swing. pp..,: .. LAGUNA l l ACH .............. 4NS ............... . Long Beach Area h1. off San in penon, Lorin's At"CO, 3201 THE SUN NEVER SETS on1'.Wullc:r: tood cond .. $80. Ring, ~et with 1'4 k11.ra1 I LAGUNA H1GUr.l ........... 4111 =~~El ·· ............... :g: Diego t'wy.) \Vork for busy Hal'bor Blvd. C.1\1. DAILY PILOT WANT' Al)Si 64fi..5641 eves. or Sat/Sun. center diamond, 2 diamonds '· ,.1 \~ Y O.U C A N MISSION Vll JO ............ •7tt .. 1v1EsTOCK · ·· .............. .... 'I k I h Ide .. SAN CLSMENTI" .... "11 CALIFORNIA LIVING eriglneering dept I'. do a va· --USED A ll & TV' 11 • ara on eac s · · 1 SAN JU.-M "''tST •ANO 41H ricty of work. Type 73 Yi'Pfll. Jobt Mtn, Worn. 7100 Jobs--Men Wom 7100 . PP ances , 1• 1. Brillianl cut. Sac r i I Ice! [ •. "'",·,' l 111 ·~~· ~! 5 E LL IT CA,.•STltANO 11•ctt 47>11 Nul$El 1E1 ..... ·-"" __ ___: • (Ual'anteed. Dunlaps 1815 ·.Jtepty to Box P360, Daily .1 ~~ ,,. DAMA l'OJMT ., ............. 41'1 IWIMMING POOLS ,,. .,. Min. 1 yr exp. Attractive -· Ne-C.M. 548-7788 ....,1.101 t a1,LI X. •k. ..................... ,ATIOI ............. 1"1 tront ore type. -I"'".. .. ·· WITH A r.oNDOM1M1uM .................. 1,WNtNos .... "" N•wport P ersonnel SALES GIRLS • • • STOCKM£11. • • ~&ki~~!:~. s:~ ~ ~R~O~C~K~H~O~U~N=D~S-~F~R~E=E RENTA'LS '"""''"""'" •n TRA NSPORTAT ION.'"' 833 ~-~!.I PHARMACISTS PHARMACISTS see anyUme. PoH•hlng """ & ''mbtor. DAILY PILOT ,Apts. U nfurn ished -l,.".t~~:,:•"" :::.::-.::::·:.: ........ ..,.. UTV'e .. Complete new rock shop. G MlfltAL ... ,; ........ ,OWE• caUlll!ltS ..,. NB. 642-3870 "''"'•' fir II•••·• for 1110 Come jq & nontster'for draw. CO"A MlSA ............... ,, .. S,l:lO-IKI IOAT ............ ... Afttlqutl ,.. Ml:SA VlilOI ............... 1111 IDAT T•AILBlll ........ , .. ..,, Receptionist •~oth11 •Roth•t ing. Open 7 day110 am.ti pm. WA N T A D ltE.,.O•T ••A<M ........... sl'O& 10AT MAINt lfNANcl'•· ...... ,. THRlm THRlm DI ... Rm •·t, B••Ul i lot 8101 Bolsa Avt> NliWPOllT Hl lGNTJ .......... JtU IOAT LAUMCHING ~ ...... fa4 $450 "' "" . ..~w•o•T I NO•I"• ........... 11). MA•INIE EOUlf'. : .. ::::·:tuS Queen Anne Leg 4 chrs 1 ~fid\\'RY Clly • 897.]!)70 WE,1'(LI,, .......... mt IOAT Ill,, MOO•IHO ..,. Lowly new ores. Beach...... DRUG STORE DRUG STORE . . . """'"" .............. "" .... "'"'" ....... "" V l I .I ~fust see to appre c . OOLDSPO'T' Rt'frig $100 •AcK•AY ............ SM 10AT•ENtAL1 .............. ,.. e:ry pell.lllll wor ng . For fa,t Strvic• & EAST aLU'" ............ 1ut •O•TCHAttTI"• ............... ..,, condJ. Top be11f1. Call MJM • opaning soon ~747. Spanish 1lereo S200 Hanging • 1( coaONA Dl"L MAI ........... n.M FISHING SOATI ............... ,... ~, ·---Ab' It Abbo opening IOOl't lamp $40 e & \Y TV $2j 12 x IALIDA ................. Ult I DAT MOVINO ............... .... ..... . ""'''11"". IS• l Sales s·.1s Stackmen ·-~ u. hi •120 ~ E A . t •AY tSLAND• ............. llH •OAT •TO•A•I! ................ .... PvmnneJ Agent.')'. 230 \V. 111 ~·n• ,,..c ,,.. 1S' India MIJI $50 T buffet •. 1 11pert SSIS enc:• LIDO !SLI ............ l!fl •OATI WANTliD ................ tt W Su. 211 San ta.bl ne t s1;. Vacuum cleaner ;;:i I lALIOA llUMO ........... Ail •1•c:•Al'T .............. ,,. arner, 1te , ta e G•oil w11k i11t ,, e GooO •or•it19 SINGER Auto zig-iag, 6 !"! NUNTIMOTOH ••ACM ......... s. l'LYING LllSOkl ............. tlM Ana, • :·.~.•,iti,•,•,• • !•.".',1",•,',' mos. old. No attach 1'1Ci:dcd 1-co"'-·-:,-P"-L-641E~-~E"'.~ .. -,-E-'nc-yc_l_0_-. \ DIAL ~:~rTtt:c~At.~•~ .. :::::::::·::~ :g:~~· ~:::: .. ::::::::::::·= RHt&un.nts • See w ~ for 1le-iag. buttDn holes. " "' ~ .... LOMG •IACM ................ llCYCLES ............... nu • M•ll\' •*"'' lt1n1fiti • M1 .. y olt••t lt1111fih d!!s'-!I etc. Guar. $37 cuh dill Brilannlca w/bkc.v. 642-5678 oaAM•• COUNTY ................. I LIECT••C CAils ···············'"' Fa ,'fe.at SCtvice1 Inc. • '"''"-'i•I• ep111lt1t• • 1 ....... 0ioh ., •• , .. ,, ··~ '7-• h T I AM/ OA•DEM OltOVI ................. ,. MINI SllllS ................ nn )f72iR.eynolds S.A or ~mail pt.yments. 526-6616 -nil l'fl.MOCE'lll1 c WlltMIM$TI"• ............. Jilt 'l'GTOllCYCLl:I ............ ... Nr . Mic.Arthur •• Red. Hw Phannac1·s1s Phannac1'sts -fl\1 an band radio. likt! 11('...... M•OW•T CITY ............. u" MOT"o•scoot.-11• .......... '»I U•.57., .... , ••• ~,,_ 5. DIRECT "',TA .A ....................... ~. AUTO St•¥1Clr:S. '"•Ti """tti o P ................ e-or M 1 1 .,.... .. .. ..,, ..... ... sAN A .. "" ......... -auTo TOOLs. Eou1, ... "" ....-i....w e ,,,f111i1n1I prectlce e Pr1fa11io,.•I precttco UJ Cl _3 ·~ • knd 'UIT'I,,. .. .. ......... NM r1tAIL1Elt 'tltAVIL ' ...... "" C:OCO't -'Reuben E. l.tt e C i t••' 1p,o•tv11ity e c.,1·1t •ppoth1~ity lnsttul'l'\efltl 1125 111 ... ..,.., e\'l!I w ~. r.oASTAL ............. 11oe T1tA1l1ai. u"11,., .......... •u• Reubl!!n'a "' Snick Shone e ,,,,\\,,1 '''''' e u <•li o•I '''''' _;;,:.;;;_;;.;;....___ L A Z y Gym.JJt-en!c<l. Ap-LAGUIU a aAC'f .............. 11• CAMf'lltS ............. ,,,. ~ d I UGUN• #ft9Ul l. •· ....... Jrlt t ltUCllS ............. ,. New ... Jsadotts •114 beRefih •114 lte11efih 4 PC. Be1\nners rum M! prowd. II om t 4"Xl"rclxer. f "'" c1.s:M111r• , ......... l'7M 11:1~5 . . ............ . R-N~l-n&m<e~~=.~......i=....,,,,.,...~tor-.·lle '"''"";,,, ,.1.,,,.,,,., • 1,.,,...111;.1. pl •c1,.,111t $85. Violin~....,.. Trtm inches. Easy quick . ~:1#':.:3:~!::"° ..... :;: ~e:;1:.9uoi:,~::.1.L.s .......... 5~ 'd on! BA d Apply Wed. & Thur'I. Apply W ed . & Thurs. ~ •"l.Y 11'1 ftelirc & lookina: bet· I' DAMll P011111t .......... s,. IM1'111TED AUTOI "" ~' y. ~e r e: •pr'il 15 & 16 .,,,.1 rs , ,6 -tcr. g.n..27j6 fl REA_L ESTATE, ~~Ju~t·~u,,,,·,·:::::::::;,. .. prtrd. Xlnl ~ lJI ,., ,., • Pi•nos & O r1•n1 1130 Gen•r•I ••ce c.a1 1 11o ........... u •t&rt.1111 .. lary. Con &&c1 1.••1 w A 5111 w A -~ --DJA:\10ND Engage rlng l • o• ........... ,.,. -1rner VI . •rner ••• .._.... I tied I nU•l l X. th:. .. ........... &UTO IYINT~ .............. ff:lt OJrector of Nuniiw. C.M. H unti-ton Baach Hunt I-ton Bot1ch • UPRIGHT PIANO •'edding llfl'ft" ma c u · coNooM1N1UM .......... n se 1.UTOS wo\Nll"D ............ ·nw '!•"""·' H•-. "" _, ••• ... Good cood. 1100 '•!t O'"r ,.-, .. I\ l~l ltl!NTALI WANTIO ......... PM NIW Ull ........... .... ll rai -~''" ""° "" ..,.,.,, "' ' llOOMI l'O• l l"lllt ···~· '"' •UT( Ll'AJIN._ ........ ·.·.·-,, fciv1l oprwtu11ity ''"~toyer Eq111I •ppori11,.Jty 111111l1yat &ti__ ... ·~ " llillf0arlllor""3/LTS -~ I • I .. I Ljm-i__..!.~~~_J~----~~-L~~~'~-~~~--~.L...-----~- I ' . . ' - ---··------·----·-~---~--------------..---------'!""--... '!11111------. .. ~~~"'!'"!":'I!!"" TllANSl'OlTATION TRANSPORTATION PITS and LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTAT ION --Oot• 1121 lloat Slip -rl"9 90:16 Trucks HOO Imported Caro -------·. ··-I.;..;.:..;=------ TllANS .. ORTATION TRANIPORTATl l'lt~Wl"i lHI Tl · tiiiii u.;;c;;;-'-'-""-' .. "°°'-u.-... c.ri-----Imported Car! -Auto L111l.. ftlO UMd C•ro TRANSl'ORTATION ---.. _._ -GREAT no.._ male 7 ~ .. "' Moolll>r wi'l!l' Siq GMC TRUCKS FDRARI Old. ..... ..,. • -.. • ------- mil<, -.. patio ftlm., m-ml n..!:te ':ii .. -flltltAltl 1...a ,boo~ blka W fff __ ,,, "'"' ., N,_ -Ud. Cl- -' , Alrcrall tlM "°"°""' Oran&• Count>'• ..,.. °"""1'• ..i,. ..,._ -::Y0'.:7'.LK::S::-W:::A:-::G::EN::-11-ro•R•D•A•UTHliO•R-IZE·o-1 CHEVROLET FORD LEASING SYSTEM ---··------11 DUNTON t YW BUGS ' Amerlco'1 -lout"I '65 CHEV. -J a. W.rc!ID~ .. 111. ''"""' lar -or net hnltp, er..., -. rill. ,,.... AtllO ltalti. P/~ """" al all .,.,. .... .... p/1. 40,000 ~. 1111'1. .. 11111, :"fltlit wllb brown AKC Collle pupptu S Miki iOi LEAISi· Ctl l~ oal,vAutborizedGMCDtUu ~bid Ml•. ' l30 Uch. AKC l•Ol&l• Turbo•Char11d IOI . UNJVlltSITY IA1'=":.:'l:'!~&!.'?" CoWI. 3,..... old $30. Call pholOlraphlc l un1lnc , OLDSMOBILE N.wport kacb aft.rt. ~lOtT lflltlft Cl.p &b)lltll• 2S:iO Harbor 8lvd. f42.94()5 $4(1.17M SILKY Turiet Pup., Qui.Ht)-tnapalomttar I: 1ntrwM OD1t1 M• M0-9G-10 AutMrbed Fmart Oealer b~. YU')' tm&U. lbart tcanner, ttt. Alto c 1.n Bl &v +railer Hauler J\~ facet. $125 •up. lt!Jd Avail. pho'°IJ'uh mott Orult Oo. Ton. ~ moklr, 4 •Pffd v.ith RAT C.U -ms 11111 ~ l30. U1·7111 I IJiffd, !OSO. '70 ..... 1-------- YORkiiiiRJ: TER l\lltR • -1131.all '69 FIAT Ill> Sporta ..... PUPPIES. AKC, a wlll Mobllt Hemt1 •8 div ''Carry All" V...S exce lop cond. New, $199. • ... ** 6'f3.-TT56 ** auto. f'Ah. cuttom • i r, take -er paymenu. 1l20 ctiiUN SlllDberd P\l,pl, eo.tt Mee& e N • w po r t a:tra.1. $11\IO. Call 642-3693 BtlbOa Blvd. Jjewport, AXC. m M•pal'4 Aw, • Kanor -196f Ui:ilD FIAT $IJO or beat C.M, -0 alt & Q,..nleal Pal1t • an• J.lt J!!.!! '510 olttt. MoYbll, MUil ..U. SPRINGER Spaniel Puppy, pvt. club bla:h on a llllutl lSCS MU\tary Jetp, all tnetall--==!97='====== AKC rec!!t 673-4061 ~~e~le11:;' ~~~:~~ c•b, roU bar, two bar + tx· JAGUAR flne1t nlobUe homes. ' tr.•. ~. 61'"'1792 </ \VHITE Toy Poodle Stud Service, AKC. MT-n76 MODELS ON DISPLAY ---• 9520 '11.&GUAR 1750 Whlttiu Ave . C1mptr1 -, eo.11 .,,,. w.1s;o --'-. -----HIAD9UARTIRS ........ ,.... ••. ... -·a.-..... Good· FORD e lln_,IA .. Gall .. ey ,_ • """ DMlo• llllo· -. ..... !00 can and tnlcltt c .. ~ ...... -........ ,_. $399 • CompeHUve ..... ' -'i fOi\11 "* I kl h ..... •. ........n e Ntw ea.r dealenhlp attVk:e Cl'lnDhatt out. Good tor ....... • .... • Full "!rad•,"'" ... .., tor • • . * * ....,. Good tiioi a a1r -' •a ... ,. ANA YOW' pre1en ca.· 'Q Chmltr ....,.,. dldlmr $2$. 111 S. 21at. Cll ~ ,,. •~~.Popular mak" ovaU. BY OWld:ll. I Dr. -; •II l'Oid XI., 1141i, ht1..,, • 146-""76 For Complete l)ctails ca.u blu~ l'ltb 1Dltddnl 111l011 Ml)o trans. mG. ' ·~ M11.lcon1 Reid· & vll\1t ,.,, in xlhl OODI. ~ 5'S-C$ Ltuln, MatlaJ!'tr Radio (frlat/lwo ••al211J1 ThMdore he11.ttr, air cond.; NU' Ylew 1119. 3111 Ext.• or rr ROBINS FO,RD :.!:.'.°',,~~ .!:, "'::'. UlO HARBOR BLVD. 2000 Harbor Blvd. trana. All appt'1. tn xlnt COSTA MF ... U Cb!ta Mtsa &12-0010 c:ond. '70 Llecnse. Clr In tARGE • ...,.-L'EfsE-i;.;..-~:, "'S::~~,..:::~"':,,7. SILICTION 19111 Fol<! V8 ;,..IDO Pickup •ble, HandlH • """ llke • ~ VW w/campcr, air, p/i, auto dream, asonlyChrya.lendo! wr Tut Jt IDr )'Qlill"lfW We have .................... -. n.d, V8, fUlJ pwr, fac air, auto tra111, nu Utta. 833--150& '67 Colo~ Park, 10 PUI wa.r, all xtru. Prlv. pty. $1S50 (llJ) m,.2344 '•PALCON ITAnoM WA..,N $1766 '64 LINCOLN ·-•MA- 1 ?ttINI doxies, long ol ADOOth Take Harbor Blv4 to 19th * * 8 Fu I I c • b-over Tht only autborized JAGUAR coats, Mu.at reduct stock. St. tben .... -e,t to Whittier camper, fa ctor Y diloo~ .._. iD. tbe UN Ila~ 1"'1'15. Sll-ll2I. 531...,. , A ·Hnuod -.1, ,..ey to IO· MIL --i • OD , ·-..- RARE )q eoat Odhuahuu. vt.", Jomlcn lftc. : ~~t.75 :Uk:tv":':'; ~ CAMPERS 'S'o~Hm~~ ..,. 3 CU't, on11 l ilrl..,.: 1Mke v.1, "'~ ....... '"''· '''· H b V W .au. Call: ..,..., After f.1111 ,. •• ,. ,.~11 ..... ~~. ~ If our CAR LIAllNO • p,)I, (or ... 1m11 .., ••• MlllWll. limo ....... ·•1-.11 """ .. ,, .••. • • 300 W. Cit Hwy, NI. MMld dme>: .. _. dlJ'k ..... n.u,...ttry;vtnyl slt l. ISLW 4J71 Mutt raduoe .tock. l30. l liiY HAitlOR ll&hb. butana Wik. beddtnr, SALll 175. 11314121 or 531-<0n Mellll1 Heme S.IH 16 .... ""'" ........... p. SERVICI AKC Alradalo Pupa, BuraJar • VIAR END Window dnpot. Whlll !l>Ol' PARTI alann. wllove. P<t..i.ow, I CLEARANCE SALi lut 189.> - wQ, lhoh. ~1.15. NOW ON DISPLAY ** 13' 0-trallar, u... IUICI( WEilH COlli Cardlcan l2,1S.2:1,U 6 3DW!del delk: le cabinet, 1lttln1 ])UPI, AKC, 9 wks old. ~ Up To 60 Feet Lone facllltle1. For qulck aale .... IN um• .a Quality . ......,., 1125 Baker St., 0oota ,._ ..,., '"" W••• UtA St., wu.,:A . ..,...,. LAB. RET. Pupi, AKC ~ bloclt Ea1t of Harbor Blvd.. Costa Mesa . Jae S: 111b 11Nft Show I. field Champs Colta MHa <"Jl•) 5'0-MTO SMALL Camper fact«y. built ... ,,. Blonde &: black 67l-8T7S * RARE OPPORTUNITY * fits Datsun or hu t.daf• AFGHAN PUPS, AKC Mobil• llviil( on .IJ>e boacb. '° fit 6' P/U bod, "'°' -· MllCIDD llNI 2 Mo'1. Ternu. 846-M52 Limited no, of lp&ct• In ,.l~llJOE,~545-3893=="F""'°"'=I------'""'-"' new addl&D to DrUtwood .... • -Boeh Club. o..,. luwlH '525 MODELS ON DISPLAY --· ---'-------21442 Paclllo Cout Hwy. * AITRO AUTO * QUAl\TEI\ ._. 1tldlnc0 lloultiil(ton Bocl\'Uf.'1511 . --Sl'ICIALS- tralnedt. pntlt, I. tound JOMJCRA lat. VW Vf..uodel $3295. $300. -...... poey vw ........ 1995 geldlnc,--: 1p lr l·ted SU(I •. Y: p~~~~ New.(lfllO) VWauahi$1W --Arab atldl"1° ~-~• 1mmed ' UMd VW Clluall $300 op _. ...-6 ilMw ' ---. . ,,.._ GT -·ecidy $995. hone, $19511 .. 511-0ll. · -tlon. · Sl.hl.ra ~ 80,, $:l98. , 1960 190 SL, 2 tops, Michel~n Bffullllil CiiiOblut , li&re. ' S & .K MOBILE Sahara Bocty M" 1335. , """: '""' cood. -w .. -""'· Goot1 ro. lhi>w • lfOMI •RoK1Rs T·Mod.i 111 .. 13911, . ..,... 61>-292'1 .... Wlth.lh&w· ~. MOO. Call 12312 Btach Blvd., G.G.. Seconds Dlacoullted 6734S21 i·-e la.0921 e 301 E, lit Street, ianta Ana Gl!:tDING: 5 .... A.QJJ.A. IHf • 20x45 541.2912---,.-. __ lll_C ___ _ ~u~·-k.~~ .. ~~t .5 $500 Owner TransWftd vwu~ ~· • dirt. Sala, Strvk.I, PU'tl u>0 "'"' -.,._,," ... · 2 Bedroom. 1* Balhl, Ro ...,-, ~ .. J.lJ'll'I, new 10P· lmnwdiatit ~. FOR Sile:· 10 Yr Old Gelded 11 d le $500/blt ofr. ~ , .afl u-..1..1. ~ , ca.rpe , rapes, 41: • --Bucitlkin Pb. 5'&-6912 &ft · We1tmlnlter/Santa Ana area Hora" MG . A\J'ftlORIZED -* * * ' * top1 autom v.a, new tlrtt, $893 w.a 6 lltl\VICE 1ed Caro ,,.. out1tandJnc cool. ll150.11 __ "-----·..__ mu !IEAai 11..·-491-11139 'ff OLOIMO&l~I HLTA M ' JIU!ITl!fOTOlf UAai FLEET SAL_ E COMIT. llG6~WH=m:=""'vi'"'11t::-::M"'uo"'tanc"'. '1 67 VW • tl.--L 19,000 ml, p/' p/b, •radio • ~ MUlt se11 thll ...... ca>-191'0 $JJSO. cn4, ~ • o..r H.,,t,,. v.1, •• t •. 2 Dr. ' 9Pd. dlJ'. Mdn!lht CU.tom Impalu, f o ad e d • Comet. Nttdl npU-. tr•ltf .. fie, 1lr, ,..., lh•t· lllAck ext. 'l'llle pkkup truck smo. "' 1970 MU1tanp, Good bodf-•-. .... of. OLDl .. QllLE ,,.,, ............. ""1••· kl trade or •mall down. FUii loided $3000. (21 1970 Ford fert ~ ~ well tire., •iftYi , .. f, tint. price $1087. (XIH83fi). c..u Ge.taxies. 1 0 ad e d $3125. Ml tf111, wlt1I ,..,,,.. 1 Phlll alt 10 AM , ... um .,. .6:)5.5480 . CONTIN!NT AL ·n OLD• °'""' -· 110 "' !1 ' 5f0.31.0l. U168 LIM.ANS 4 Dr. Hi'dtp. V!!ty gd cond. Auto traN, $2895 191'1 vw Van Partial Campo• $234S. 1966 ,,..,..,.1 • "'· '66 Continental Pl•. r/h, ...... whl """"· mo Er\IUlt. IOOO mil• on Krdtp. $2145, Both hi.~ SI. S&X> Priced tor Uses reg. JU. $1500. By enatne. Extra aet. ct tirt1 A power &: aJr/cond. Owner. 1~r W 1, 1'U1l aria. cwner. Call 673-3145 rlma and 2 sand tire1 $2100. 67J.-2259. Eves 644-5972 er + &I~ co~ Exct:'; '67 OLDS 442.Pfi. Ptb, 5.u-21M ""ndltlo 31000· I DI P/w, air cond. All Extru. ...... n. ' m , r. $1850. MUST SE L L! ·~~p!':r~~·t = BUICK ~=-4) Call 54&-0634 or 675-3354 alter ,:30, enrtne " & C:Omfort&blel---------;======== • ·~ OLDSMO BILE ride. All •Y•tems Io , '62 Buick Skylark, V-ll 4 apd, CORVAIR Stufire, clean, xlnt Uru, 673-0097. gd Urt1, clean. XI n' t good condltloo. &f&-2633 VW Van, amper unit, reblt mechan. $650. 545 -208 1 '63 CUTLASS F :a5 trans, '64 enc, complete 1.nytlme &16-1587 aft S:~ '65 CORVAIR $4.95.' Aft 5:30 PM MS-i& brke overhaul &: new tlre1. p.m. customized. Must see. $MIO. 642-1210 1s'°"Y,..o"r°'11=-.-:o"w"o"'""''-;,,,,,.,..B=u=1ck • 557-7863 * PLYMOUTH '85 CORV AIR l\fonza. Xlnt '57 Volkswagen. Good con-Ele~tra Hrdtp, 4 dr cwitom. dltion 642-5172 aft 4:30 PM S195.i 644-4399. cond. Lo m I' 1. Daya I--------- Mon-Fri, A nyt ime wukends. CADILLAC 'A VW ~.back. Slick, -------- «IOO ml. Wh.ltt/bUc int 'St Cad Stdan De VIiie Prtvatt.pl.l'b'. ltf..Sl.Tt For immediate Sale ·• VW' ..,.f· iGlld. l$OOil ALL •• PARTS 642-m4, tvts 53f..7fll CORYEm '70 PLThlOtmt Roadrunner. Full pw, tape elk. Transl to Gtnnany. Price r I a: b t • -·- '61 TOYqTA CUSTOM GIOWM W•M. 4 .,..... ,,,,., IWTf 1041 $,1116 M•ter. '61 GALAXll 'SOO I DOOi MAIDTOP VI, •11tt. tr•n•· f•cttty •11, pow•r ilttrillf, r•41o, ho•t· ... 1i s1'ae6 . 'ti RAMBLllt 4 DOOi HIAN il•ill•, M•lt r, 1flck 1hlft, •¥t rdriv•, I PIW JI I) $789 '6' MUSTANG 2o30 PM A.M.S. 5<>82<2 lmporlM• A-ffOC! rRiHsPoRTAr1ok ~"!"""'!'l"'!!!!!!!!!!\"'!l,_I AUSnN AM. ERICA I) 1· 111JI111 I .li!llj'Lll [>, . mats. UAOO ml. IWl erl Call after 5 p .l\f. 5Q.a12ll '64 CORVEITE 2 lop!l , 4 1pd, Mic hel i n tires, map, am/fm, new ena-. Best of· fer. 494-686.1. '63 Plymouth Wagon. Ve-ry clean. RWll ,re11.t. Rm, P/S, PIB, $449 -Oller. 645-1028 l DOOi 2 BR Trai ler-cabana, Beets & Yachts toOO Bayfront. Newly decor. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Many extru. Adult Jll'k. See to app~! Price reduced $13,250. 675-0250 er~ f.-fUST Sell! Spariilll!i clean 10x40 in quiet C.M. Park. New awnings. $3650. 646-3557 Advice -Flake -<>win& -20x60' VIKING SCANDlA. 2 Packet -KNOCKED BR, 2 BA. 5 Star Adult A pe11.tmilt ii one \vho Park. Owner 54&-4142 aft &. "·ould complain about the I,;;;=====""'"'- noise if .opportunity KNOCK-Mini Blk•• ED. '275 -" AUSTIN AMERICA SI.lei. Service, Par1• Immediate DeUYel7 ADliodolo l~rlllpu1 I JI 111 p Li I I '• 3100 W. Clout HW7. H.B. -.... ,.. .. _lllO_ 'rl MGA. l'ld. Ntw iop. liOdy . In :alnt coM. Best offft.,Cu bt•ll~ . tis E. Balboa Blvd, N.B. OPEL, 3100W.0...1lw7., N,B. 60-!HM .... 176<1-------- Authartzied MG Dealer 1967 Opel Kade.tte, dtluxe 211» HP Bored out ensl.nt. ===:=:::==:;,::::::=I mOOel S!IM. ~UTO uk !or Xlnt ,. ... M..,. ...... $15. AusnN HEALEY ''"1' H .... tt alt l o , .. 962-4744. 1---------PORSCHE SUNBEAM ' 'ST SUNBEAM, factory hardtop, low mileage. $l2IXI or best otter. •92-7038 "Le:u:lf!r tn 1be IAar:b t·111t1" ======== ZIMMERMAN TOYOTA 2145 HARBOR ILVD. 1 _______ _ wamnt)'.!!Mm ort: '15 j DJ\ .• All P\\T, windows, •a VW Sl4ant 1.uto, I Ml.ti. Fact air . tilt \\'hi, new owner, clean. $U&O/blt ol; Urti. Only 5;),00J m I · 1 , !er. M&-3129, pvt pty. $1995. 5'~1651 anytime. '67 VW -iilib. ''? '68 EL OORAOO, 1 u I I y VW $600. 133-T7l2 tll equlpt. private party $5600. 5Pl\I. 675-6896 ew1. 675-5187 or 642--0900. ... vw dOOd cona. 646-4645 aft 5 pm CA MARO '13 VW SUnroof. Needa bodyl --------- '6ti Colwtte F1tbk, 327 cu. In. 4 spd., p/1. Xtra. Clean. S291S. Must see! ~789 '64 Corvttte Fastback, 4 apd, a\r, AM /FM, 32,000 mi. Pvt. $2&15. 646-7800 '65 FSTBCK 327, 4 spd, Hunt, new red paint, mags, + xtru. Sharp. 494-4<M8 worit, •ncint 1n rood cond. $4.50 M6-9ST4 aft 5 pm '69 327 Au to trans exctl cond DESOTO · • 300 Honda &rambler 303 ·r.s~ Roa~,-,.-.... -.~,~,-. 0~00 ml '1, llke new Xtl'M. $35aO new. Asking $1850. 847-0462 '63 VALIANT CONY. Good cond. 557-8375 v.1. ,ute. +r•11•.. powor 1t.•rl119, r•dle, "••l•r, vl11yl roof. ISVCjj. 1051 $1369 '65 MUSTANG I + I Pl.ITU.Cl 6 cyl. Stick 1hlft, r•die, -·---·---ll h••t•r. ITHV 1961 '61 FIREBIRD 400 PONnAC SA VE $500 e .. 1 COHO. $"9 '65 ~· POLAU. HAlDTOP 'GI V\V Van pt.rtW camper $~. ldake oUer 1 or both ------s=o Cell MM9U after 6 tTS..llOS 1955 ~Sotd 4 door, power pmor11M3'9wktndl -·-·-----brake•. &teerinJ,' Hat. v ... , 166 vw Sqbck. Xln't CHMOLET ~e~~. ~ ::~co~~:~ V8, pwr, •leering, low milea, R/H, dlr. ab de.luxe equip. ~ake forelan car in trade. wm ftnance .,...-<-2121 Calf Rll '-'lffJ 1.!Jo1J1ti9 stS-0834 Qf .4:9U't6. ,(IM!ll~ -""' I 41 t'fM-c. A11te, tr•u., •c· foty ;r;, .pewtt 1toorl119, , •• di...,Ji.uter. Moch•ttic •P•· ct~t(JlWJOSJI oond. Beit Oller. $245. 2294 A pa c I! I c, M&-4600 645--0259 . -.,-vw~.-.,,e..,.,h•.p• 1ntld• '66 MAUIU H.T. ======== & out S473. 125% •tst St. NB Special paint • Safllri Yellow DODGE '6-1 V\V Bua Sl,OOJ or be•t · w/black leather int., V8t ,__ _____ _ offer, good c. o nd It Ion , power lleerlng, auto., ~-1· 'sG QODCE Dart, 273 V8 eng, 962--l680 vlbra110nic radio. Hu 1had 'llUto. r/h, good cond. $005. . ~-""~-~_._,-,,,..--1 Jovtna care. l\fuat aacrlflce._ 613-1291- 1965 V\V. good cond. Clean. Take foreign. car or lb\l.ll -~,,.,.._,K:L~~,~,~1~00~- New tires. d f070AQJ 54Q.3100 .>IJ .. -. * 53&-2870 * own. ) or 642-5669 ~=~,..-~,,-,,-,=cl 494-102J alt 10 AM. '68 VW Bug, Xln'l CoolJnil. 1969 Chevy S.S. 396 Radkl, lo mi'.s. Seit er. 4 •r>eed. SI695. Call evt1 642-8136. =========-I .~==,.-61-.,34=-386=-,,;;-;c= '62 FALCON Wqon. dlx. '48 CHEV. 4 dr Sed. All orig. 1 t ••00 ~ n er., , auto., n.«n, ......... l Owner car. Xlnl running cond. $450 or be1t oUer. --·-----1 cond. S250. 96S-ra2S. s.~942 . FALCON VOLVO 195.'.i Chevy 2 dr Rdan, very clean $175. FORD '61 T•mpest Pont'~.S/,l;l\9jl Wagon, Good cOn ~1 1~-ft .. $2SO. 962--0877 0 ''°i ,. ·~;~~.;."ii~~~~ 11.fter 5. r- FOR Sale: '64 GTO Poutlao . Gd cond, cle11.n. Best oiler gets it. 548-5939 RAMBLER '65 Rambler 770, 6 cyl, 2 dr ""0 tt· $693 "'66 MERCURY 18'.·"'~ PAIKUNI I ll ' • J-l>e.r H•rdtop. Y.1, •11t•. tr'ittiiJ f•c. •Ir, powor tlt..-i119, po••r whrdowt, poW-tr •••h, rN le; h••tor, whlt•w•JI tir•t, ti11t•d 9l•n; wll ••I covon. fSLU 1521 ---$1093 hardtop, r&h. n/c, Vtl')' '4¥ FAIRLANE clean. Pvt pt,y ~~ L:.. IM I DOOi HAIDTOP '65 RAMBLER, 2. dr hri;ltp. 1 · r v.1, •wlo. tr•111., f•ctory Owner, lo m\'1,' auto, p/1, ,.1, C•fltlltlo11i119, pow•r 1.,,rlh=. =""°=·=M+<==m=.=;;;;i;ll '+t otl119, r1dl•, h•alor, I· whlt.w•ll tir••· ti11i•d ._...____ . T~Jllfl:D 91•11, -wlietl ''¥•r1. ISIV --"--'-----·11 502)' >llhl328 ~"'""~'.!!!.'~..!!!.5 1937 FORD V-1 2 dr. All qrtg. Show cond. New paint le tires . Mu.st sell. Be1t otfcr. CUI 846-4m. DEWXE 1930 l\lodf.I A Cou.pe ga~ rutored with rumble 11:1.ll. l\twt Stt! ! 673--8691 19.18 MG-TA with rlabtband drive, aeml-restond. Sl&-1380 I DOQI • cyl. J •P••' ff•n1. 1vc;.y 14tl $883 '61 CHIVROLET IMPALA J Door H1rdt•P· v.1, ewlo. h•11•.. f•'· o1ir, ,..w•r 1+.•rl119, ro1dio, h••lor, t111tM 9l•u . IWIH •s•> $1593 54G-64l0 ALPINE Power Crul1tr1 9020 '67 Dohuo ltJOI), Lo ml. ITIOIYIOITIAJ A~IOI W-;,;;;;. 9700 Chrome rlnu, tuned VC• • __ .. _ -·-=---''5 FALCON 4 DOOl 111e• 1hlft, INIE IJll ----1967 32' CHRIS Cl' aft Corinthian twin ICl'f:W, xlnt cona. $1500 do..m. Alk tor HfXVey. Arches Marina, 3332 \V. Co11.1t Hwy, N.8, BY Chvner, for sale or trade anythlni of $3500 v&luf', 2'l' Outboard cabin c r u 1 s er. - VACATION TRAVEL CENTER lxc.I. ·Golden F•lcen Olympl• -Alpl~ Apaclte • Whffl Compor \Vorlds llU'Rttt most com- p6rl\e RV vehicle ahoppirw: °'""' ~ Gani~ Grove 8lvd1 Ga 534°6686 SpH~ Ski INl1 90'9 ~fUST Sell lt' tnbrd Ski no..t. Any reu. oftl!r ac-OoMd Sat. Open Sunclll.)' ctp_ted. A(t & ..... ~ 15' FIBllEGW rllh I Ski Boat w/b'tr. No motor. ~. Call 111-•1 ~-··-·· -Marini "'"Ip. toSs \VA NT ED : Small tent trailer. Slttp •:'tailgate en- tr. Not ovtr Sn>. 536-2449 Jil DEVILLE $so0 3l'M6 Klllybrooke. C.llf'. * .. ,.., .. s 111 !!:!!!• 'so.! l"" llO • OMC = l ''7 Ponl Window Van on.a, Complt1", UMd lotl 'Blf I'-· ....... tic, rt• than u ~ S1IDO. ~ dlO, bt&ttt. Jdel.l 'tor eamp.. 9 .OC-1 PM Of aft T PM trtll' C!OINDll'Clal. Ntw tin•, -· _ dlt. lClnt nmnlttr cond, Wiii , iii HP,_-· lOIW n-_,. .,...,,, tYLT· 111aft $11JO.. . Ml) Cd -aft 10 .,. Call !31-1331 t\4S.tJe34 or "4-'773, hou •I, I 1pd . Like Mark II W-WE PAY TOP ne .... ·. f>ol.s.39116 Pl~ SH '" 2000 ROADSTER . H~.:;..""c ... l:'r. (A 130 hp, 5 speed, xlnt cond W"IOftl $!!19•. Pvt. pty, 533-m.1 or DEAN LIWIS 536-76!n. tor used can • trucka just ' lW Harbor C.M. lf&..9303' ctlll UI for free etUmat~. 68 DATSUN, 4 door, RAH. BIIJ.. . MAXEY GROTH CHEVROLET Xlnl cond., motor like new. $138.i. 5474GO, 983-2393 ENGUSH ~!!.. lf!OIYJOIT@ 11111 llACH BLVO. Hum. l11ch ld7-llSS I ad"N. olO>Ut Rwy. Of1 Bdl 1165 Land Cruiser. Xlnt cond. n"r.iO/nttr o I ft r. Call ~aft.r6. ---VOLKSWAGEtl Mk for Salet !Ha~ 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach Kl 9-3331 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CH!VROLET --ltvd. eoo1a -w-1:111 uaollTIWA!mD 0ra.rwe ONntt.s TOP I BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ' lml-ltvd. n. llMCI\. ""· ..,_ __________ ... 'l ____ -· We h1v1 coupes, a.dens, & lost of gorgeou1 wi gons at th• "good old days" prrcff, Come In .tnd '" why Mont190 It th• best Inter· ' medl1tt buy In Amer lu . , · ~ . ' NEW 1970 MONTEGO 2 ilr. h•riflop. Equip. wltir d•l11•• wh••I CO'+'efl, wlllt• 1i4t w•ll ttt•1 , '''P•lin9, 1uleffl•ttc tre111mi11i•11, ,....., 1t••rl111, AM r•ifio, ti"t•if tl•n. No. OHOIL1•1954 52841 Johnson+ son, ll~HU t HTIUHll • llllm• llllllf· .. IU~ ,.,. .... ....,., ..... _ ........ • • roillo, $693 '66 IUICK •mDA· Z Do•r H1rdto,. Vof, t 11fe, tr11K., f••· •1t, f11/I (Dtw•r, rHlt, h•tter, whitow•ll tir11, vi11yl roof, ll11t•d 9le11, whtol c•••ra. I RQK •011 $1893 DUNTON FORD 2240 ........ SANTA AlfA " ""-~07· ' . • ~ I t I I I • l • i ' ; I . • l l I \ • t r l I I • • ' . "~"!!'.' , • • . I • • " -• l . . ' ' l'lllCIS.11fKTMWE>NESDAYTHROUGHTUESDAY . . . APR1l 15;16,17,18,19,20,&21 · ' . . ·-f!lllN • e.ol.'PllCICAG£ • S1CINl!SS 1:111 ·SAUSAGE ~-..•PICNIC; mu e EASTfllN iiuAufy PORK ROAST • •, • I ~~•FAMllY PAO< CHOPS SLICED PORK LOIN I' ; - 'UicMl1f1SMEe£XCB.LfNTFORBAR-B4 SPARERIBS . HClf, ..,,'TO EAT ' < I • COOKED.CHICKEN • ,/ . !• ' LIM••wr•QUAIJlY . . , _ UND ·-BEEF . . . -:: . ~. -_ ... -·-.-- 57c 24c. C4.0if•.t.1• 1UNO•MI. MC:l• IAYI 111 SPAGHETII • " c I· • • .. I • ,f. '. • 1~1 ·e 714.0l. BOX• $AYE 4c > ' •· ·•.' _,:_ • ·~. · . .. .. · ·' . . " ' ••• • 1 • • ' • I' J • • • • iscount Prices · EV·E.RYOJ\¥! -. ' ' • ~ FAD. SELLS ONtY USDA · CHOICf Bfff ~, .. Edd . . . - -iiAiiiaoi'.oou·un• 6fc .,, .. lt .. _'Meii•li . 69c _.n.ci•l.•;.•~ .. 37c ·• 1\l!llllLOAF•'.SPllTlOP-ilAYEk 33c . _,,~DWlll .. ill•l~ll:. -BRIDGfORD•4•x7'"SIZf..Ol. PACK• SAVI IOc 59c ,..,.-r ~ . · -? i,:, ( i ~ _ SLICIDHAM . flolCA'iiiirnHU'iis ~l.47c . REGUIAR AND ~IU( • 1-0l. RED RIPE " 9c . PILLSBURY BISCUITS LOCAL GROWN -FROZ£Ne'"'NCHeSAVl20c .. . Joh••l-Apple Pie 59c ;ACX•SAW17c opslcle Variety Pack 52c \1!1-GAUON•FAMILY PAO<eSAV,l llc '): ... 59c Foreinost Ice Crea1111 • 1.~d -.. ··-···-···-·--- 7.0Z. IOml • ttGUlAl DIY 01 OllY • UYI Jk PRODIN21 SHAMPOO rAMllY IZZITUll • U\'f Ill CRUT 2 TOOTHP~ln J c 1S.OL tom.1 •llYI S1t (IM:W.1Jc Off) HOPI MOUIHWASll J6c I . ' S/MUSIZf ··11TICHOKES 10~~ HRST,CFlH!IMSON WHITE ROSE i·oc . ' MD• SffttT • IUIMUDA ONIONS POTATOIS 5·i29c C'Aiion""·cilio... I oc MUSHROOMS £ 39c • I •- l MNmRll•COl.Ollf'UL CARllAnO•S I I I ... I •