HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-02-01 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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2!1000 C-a·m~ to Rally~
MY · HANDS '
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SECURITY
DAILY PILOT '"" bY MR V1"'ru MARCH INCLUDED DURABLE "UNCLE SAM" ON STILTS WHO WALKED A MILE
There Were Differences Of Op Inion But No Serious Incidents
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DAILY PILOT
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VOL ..... HO. 27, I IJCTIOHS, H l'AGlS
LandJng . Doubtful
A~f~onauts Fail T . . L . . 'B, . , Man Killed,
Apollo 14 astronauts, speedirig ac-Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and
Calm Restored •
•
After Violent
Chicano Riot
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• • • • • • • • • • -
• 0
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arc
Flghp; for Llf , Sound Unit
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issiol\ Viejo Youth
Shot at Gas Station
Falls Apart
In Clemente
tely toward the moon, ct'lecked their Edgar D. Mitchel! examined the dev ice 111 LA R1· ot' !31alfunctioning docking mechanism by for an hour before gonng to sleep after
' , ~ today b,ut failed to find the trouble a busy 1511 hours of success and frustra•
1 wltlCb could scrub their $400 million tion that started \\'ith a flawle ss launcll By JOHN VAL TERZA
01 ~ 01f1Y '"'' Sltll
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from Cape KeMedy.
The routine linkup or the command Pro be Continues ship Kitty Hawk and the lunar lander
Antares turned int.o a tense hour a n d
44 minute struggle Sunday night to pre· l,ito Drowning vent the failure of America 's !e<:ond
straight moon mission.
But the successful iocking of th e two Of Newpo rt Pai' r vessels by an unorthodox method left
the possibility the mechanism would fail
Coroner's investigators today listed
drowning as the cause of death of a
Newport Beach couple, but continued
their investigation Into the role of a
faulty whirlpool bath which may have
electrocuted the pair before their deaths.
L<ing time Orange Coasl rest~urate.ur
William Stewart, 6.1. and his wife
Jsabelle. 58. of 1344 Sussex Lane. were
found in their pool Friday afternoon
by their chauf!eur Harry Goodwin.
Detective Ken Stnith said investigation
Is continuing in the events which led
to the double tragedy at their Westcliff
h""1e.
The Investigation of the whirlpool
equipment was begun v.·hen a pipe rrom
the device was round in the bottom
of the pool.
A neighbor interviewed by officers told
fhem the Stewarts had complained of_
belng shocked by the equipment on prK>r
occasions. They were regular swimmers
aod had had it installed nine months
ago.·
Jhvestigator1 at the scene had the
devict checked by a city electrician
'''ho told them It seemed to be working
WrfectJy. But ofricers noted that some1
wires in the pump were spliced together
with black tape.
Coroner's investigator Jim Riesner said
tests are being conducted to det.crm~rl'e
if an electrical shock from the device
&luMcd the pair as they took their
afternoon awlm. or if their drownings
\\'ere due to other causes.
He 1ald lhe 1ccldental deaths occurred
between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Thursda y.
• >
again after the lunar module lifts off
from the Fr a Mauro section of the
moon Saturday.
Ground experts vicWed television films
of the device and V.'Orked with models
to decide if Shepard, 47, America's first
man in space, and rookie Aslronaut
Mitchell. 40, would be allowed to spend
33_1_, hours on the lunar surface.
A space agency spokesman said a
decision wasn't being rushed but pro-
bably will be made sometime before
a braking maneuver Thursday to put
Apollo 14 into moon orbit.
The astronauts never were in danger
and even if the m90n landing is cancelled,
nfficials said they could still loop the
moon to take pictures.and perform some
scientific observations.
The docking mechanism failed to w<1rk
five times while !ipollo 14 .sped through
20.000 miles of space. But on the sixth
try the space pilots ga've.-an extra Jong
(Stt APOLLO, Page !)
l\'lotorcyclist Dies
Of Acci dent" Injuries
Los Alamitos motorcyclist Jack Mou,
20, of 4174 Green St.. died Saturday
night at Los Alamitos General Hospital
of injuries received in an accident in
Fc··-!ain Valley lru:l Nov. 10.
Police reported that f\.1ott 11uslained
severe he::~ injuri,.s when he lost conlrol
<1f his cycle at Slater Avenue and Santa ?I: '~ ('•:-ce t.
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• • •
A 17-year-old Mission Viejo youth
fought for his life in South Coast Com·
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -An over· munity Hospital today while Orange
night curfew brought <:aim to the East County sheriff's deputies ste pped up
Los Angeles Mexi can-American barrio their search (or the man who put a
today following violent skirmishes in bullet in the young service .station at·
which <1ne Chicano was killed, 48 per· tendant 's head .
sons injured and 88 arrested. Douglas Ray Wheat, Jr., 24551 Satur-
Sunday's window-breaklng and looting na Drive, was shot early Saturday by
rampage in a business area followed a an unknown balldit who took an esti·
peaceful rally at Belvedere Park of 5,000 mated $5ll froTT\. the till of the Arco
Chicanos protesting alleged police bru· station at La Paz Road and the San
tality. '-i>iego Freeway. ·
County supervi~ors declared a state of The boy, who had worked just three
emergency and imposed a 6:20 p.m. to months at the station. was found face
S a.m. curfev.: in a IO-square mile area. down in a pool of blood in the storage
Deputies said that 88 persons wer~ ar· room at the rear of the station by a rest~ on charges ranging fror.n failure motorist who later told officers : "I jt.fst
to disperse to assault on an officer. felt somelhing was wrong."
w~~e s;~~~~s :~dat~~!~~l60st~:!n~~~! Deputies rushed the youth to South
looted.
Nine buildings including a bank and
an au tomobile dealership were set ablaze
by firebombs. A liquor store and bail
bonds building \\'ere gutted while dam-
age lo Pan American National Bank
was estimated at SlS,000.
Sheriff Peter Pitchess said the shoot-
ing death resulted when silc deputies near
the bank were confronted by about 500
to 600 demonstrators who hurled miuUes
and advanced on the officers. Pitchess
said the deputies fired warning shots
over the heads of the crowd with shot·
guns and also fired shots into the ground.
The sheriff sakl the victim,·who was
nol immediately identified, and the
wounding of the other persons occurred
at this time .although the circumstances
surrounding the incident had not yet
been determined.
Twenty-three civilians suffered In-
juries, 14 of them wounded by ll"lfirt.
TY(elve deputies suffered minor injuries
and 12 flrem1µ1 were treated for 1moke
Inhalation after battling a total of "'
flre.8 In the area, most of them ln truh
bins. • •
Total 1tructural damage waa tsUmat·
(See cmcANo.. P•1• i1
Ortega Fire
Victim Critical;
Home Destroyed
Jackie Wrigley, 49, ls in critical con~
d!Uon al. South Coast Communily
Hospital in South Laguna today following
a fire whiCh destroyed her Seavers Can-
yo11 home early Sunday.
Hospital attendan ts said she suffered
second and third degree burns over 40
percent o( lter body wben the fire, believ·
ed to hev been started by a cigarette,
enveloped her home located 16 miles
e&st of--San Juan Capi!trano c>ff Ortega
Highway. ·
County fire department battalion chief
Bob Day said 30 firemen fought the
4 a.m. blaze for an hour to keep it
from •r,reading to nearby homes and
forest and . Water ha.d to be hauled
to the 1lt.e, from one fourth mile away.
. The $30,000 home .wall CQmpletely
destroyed, Chief Day reported.
Coast Community Hospital where doe-
tors performed emergency surgery-io
remove the bullet lodged In his skull.
orncers said young Wheat was shot in
the back of the head.
A sheriff 's patrolman said he la .St
saw Wheal befo r e the shooting at
about 2 a.m. Saturday, just two hours
before the seriously wounded boy was
found,
Man , 'Girl Held
In Huntington
Party Slaying
A man and a teenaged girl are being
held by Huntington Beach police today
in a switchblade knife slaying of the
host at a Friday night party In downtown
Huntington Beach.
Suspects Paul A. Stenerson, 22, and
Candace Neal, 17, both of DOwney, were
captured in a dragnet operation by the
Downey police onicers Saturday night.
The victim was Arthur E. Bashaw,
21, of 321 7th St., Huntington Beach.
Stenerson was booked on murder
charjj:e11 while Miss Neal was charged
with being an acceMOr)'I in the alleged •
crime.
Huntington detectivell Gene P(IOI. Ray
Anderson and Bruce Y<1ung brought the
couple to Huntington Beach ar9lJnd 3
p.m. They said the girl will be arraigned
in juvenile court.
Bashaw died at Hurillngton Intercom.
munity Hospftel shortly after midnight
Friday. DocU>rs made an all out effort
to save the tire of the young man
bleeding to death from multiple stab
wounds believed to have been lnnlcted
with a awltchblade knife at his apart-
ment.
Police believe BBshaw held a pa r l y
(Set ~fUROER, Pare J)
Dr. Carl 'Mcintire and 2,000 of his
followers marched through the streets
of San Cemente over the weekend,
singing and chanting for a total armed
vlctory in Vietnam.
And at the end of the march -
which included Uncle Sam on stilts
towering above young and <1ld alike.
Dr . f\.iclntire experienced difflculties with
the one piece of equipment which led
to a two-week donnybrook with the city
council.
After being the object of two batUes
tn city hall, the sound system broke
down for more than an hour. -
But, undaunted. the liery New Jersey
minister with an enor mOU!I following
from his radio broadcasts u~ a bullhorn
(Stt McINTIRE, Page I)
Orange Cout
Weather
Those low clouds will bum off
late Tuesday afternoon but the
temperatures won't get past 60 '
either locally or fUrther lnland.
INSWE TODAY
I t took -Apollo 14 astronouti
si.t:· tries to 1ucctufullv <bm-
plttt a 1"01'1.tlt\ler cOnsidertd
one of the most rlJuint with the
last sophisticated 'quipmenl -
docking two spactcraftl. Set
storu Page 5.
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J DAILY PlLOl s Molld.tJ, FtbrUo4ry 1, 1971
'lffat1sota ViofetWe'
Officer Called
., .. At Penalty Case
UlS A~GE!.ES <UPI) -The pro-
ncuUon today summoned its second and
last witness to the allnd to back up
ita conl.enUon Charles Manson and : hls
three young women followers ahould be
sent to the gas c!fmber for the brutal
Sha ron T1te murders.
Prosecutor Vincent T. Bugliosi planned
to question Thomas Drynan, an Oregon
F rom Page 1
McINTIRE. • •
while an alternate syslem was being
repaired.
The hundreds or marchers -many
of them elderly -gathered on the
flatland and slopes of Linda Lane Park
amid scores of banners and placards
with slogans blending religion and
politics.
Some called for an end to the ''n1>win'1
policy of the U.S. Government.
No inci dents which could be interpreted
as hostile toward the group look place
at the Sal.Urday afternoon klckoU of
a series of victory marches throughout
the nation.
The event. however, drew curious
onlookers from the nearby Linda Lane
beach.
At one point of the procession five
bikini-clad girls walked beside the
paraders.
Several older men snarled disgust al
the girls' attire.
"First, they allowed burlesque indoors.
now lt's in the public 1treeb ..•
shameful," growled one man carrying
a huge flag.
The Mcintire followm came from
throlJlbout the Southland · to President
Nixon's adopted town.
DelegaUona from Los Al'i;eles and San
Diego C.Ounty formed the m1jority of
the group.
A few hundred others were from local
communities.
Despite the warm weather. few or
the el derly felt ill e f f e c ls from the
one-mile walk through neighborhood
1;treets.
Only one person required first-aid:
Dr. Mclnlire's aUltman took much of
the atten tion of the day.
The man, who has marched with
Mcintire. foUowings before, wore bo1ing
gloves and wu bound at the wriat,
to demonstrate the effectll of the "n~wln
policy."
"Our trouble," Dr. Mcintire said, •·is
that soon we will have simultaneous
marches throughout the land, and we
have only one Uncle Sam to m a r c h
with us," he sald.
The kickoff [or the marches was
earmarked for San Clemente. Dr.
Mcintire said, because of the presence
of La Casa Pacifica, Prealdenl Nixon's
villa.
But anti·Nixon i entime nt ran high
among some of th e ~rtister's marchers.
Two Youths Held
On Robber y Rap
A boy taldn1 hla grandmother $3 for
her dinner was the victim of a strongar m
robbery in Costa 1'1esa Friday night,
but gave police enough information to
capture two suspect$.
Tom\'. Young, 11, said he was dragged
from his bicycle on 17th Street between
Santa Ana and Tustin avenues, shaken
do·: ... and relieved of the ca.5h.
·He said he told them the money was
for his arandmother'1 dinner, but they
took It anyway.
Police patrolling the area arre1ted twn
14-year~ld boys; who were taken to
Oranre County Juvenile Hall on
strongann r obbery charaes.
DAllY PllOT
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State policeman, to testify lhal Susan
Atkins was· carrying a loaded gun and
·once thraatened to kill him when he
arrested her in Oregon.
The thru!t of the state's presentation
during lh.e penalty phase of the trial
has been to show the jury -the same
one which 'convicted the rour on 27
counts of murder and conspiracy in
the Tate murders -that the defendants
wf'te predisposed W violence.
The state was foiled last Friday in
Its plan to introd,pce evidence concerning
an eighth murder wlth which the hippie
chieftain and Miss Alkins were charged.
Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older
accepted a defense argument that it
v.·ould be unfair for the prosecution (o
present evidence concerning the killing
of musician Gary Hinman, with which
Manson and Miss Atkins have been
charged, but not tried.
The ruling cut short by several weeks
the pr06ecution phase of the p e n a 1 t y
trial.
Bugliosi's first witness was Bernard
''1.otsapoppa" Crowe, 28, who told I.he
seven.man, five-woman jury Manson shot
him onct in an altercation over the
sale of narcotics. _
The defense, which planned to present
a "complete case" in Its effort to aave
the four from the ga.!I chamber, was
ordered to have its first witness ready
Utis afternoon.
They have indicated that testimony
on the defendants' behalf may take 15
or 16 court days.
First witnesses for the defense will
be members of the "f.fanson Family"
who will tell about the cult's life style
and peace-loving hippie ways.
Manson bipl!elf was reported anzious to testify, Is was Miss Atkins. who
reportedly planned to deny that It was
1he who stabbed Miss Tate to death.
•
UC Irvine Coed's
Drowning Death,
Declared Suicide
'IJte death of a UC Irvine coed whose
body was found In the ocean off Lagu-
na Beach last week "'ill be classified
as a suicide , a spokesman for !he Or·
.ange County Coroner's Office said to-
d1y.
LaKUna Beach detectives conduded a
full investigation of the death of UCI
senior Carolyn Jones, 21, when severe
injuries .,.,.ere found on the body during
an autopsy performed by Coroner's Of·
{ice pathologi.sts.
These. included, in addition to bruises
and abrasionJlllpparently c a used by
rocks off Crescent Bay Beach. deep lac-
eratio ns on both wrists and a skull
fracture.
It was concluded that the laceralions
were self-inflicted and the fracture prob-
ably resulted in a fall or leap onto the
r o c k s, according to detective Gene
Brooks.
The young woman. whose parents live
in Glendale, had Ii~ alone in an apart·
ment at 1287 Cliff Drive for the past
16 months.
She was described by neighbors and
fellow students as leading a quiet life.
usually retiring e a r 1 y and keeping
"pretty much to herself ."
Though she apparently had given no
indication of ~ep depression. detec·
lives said she recently had complained
to friends that she was having trouble
sleeping and had &eemed somewhat un-
happy since the departure of a boy who
had visited he r here.
She had obtained a prescription for
sleeping pills, Brooks said, but only one
tablet had been taken from the bottle.
f'ro1n Page 1
CHICANO. •• •
ed at $190.000.
Shortly after darkness came to the
area. Pitchess said deputies v.·ere in
control of the situation. He said 500 of·
ficers y,·er~ used in the area at the peak
of the violence.
. "There's absolutely no provocation for
this degr,ee of violence," the sheriff add·.
ed.
The rally, which ended late in the af.
ternoon. climaxed marches which be·
gan Thursday. Contingent! of 76 to 100
particJpants m o v e d toward the park
rrom Venice, San Fernando Valley. Mon·
l.erey Park, Whittier, Lon g Beach. San
Pedro, Ontario and Pomona Val h~y.
The marches and rally were sponsor·
ed by the Chicano Moratorium Com·
mittee which said the rally was a "hear-
ing" in which the community wa! told
of "the many cases of police brutality
and other problems with the police.''
There were no arrests during the rally.
Authorities said that about 4.S minutes
1f~r the rally. about 1,000 young per·
sons ignored p\eu by rally monitors to
go home and marched lo the East LoJ
Angeles sheriff 's 11ubst1Uon. The build·
ing and clvllian 1nd polict cara In 11
parking Jot were pelted with rocks and
boltles.
Deputies used massive doses of tear
gas in thelr attempli to -.ispent the.
crov.·d, which then moved down Whit·
lier Boulevard sm1shing windows of
buslnrssea and looUng at least 20 stores.
Pitcheu ordered 1wetps of the area
by deputies armed with shotguns, and
tear gas agaln was used dur ing brief
but violent 11dnni1hes.
J
New Cota cep t
~ecycling Study
Of Sewage Set '
By GEORGE l.EIDA!.
01 1111 D•llY PUtt .....
Moult.on-Niguel Water District directors
have decided to explore ways of recycling
&ewage waste s rather than planning for
continued ocean disposal.
Manager Carl Kymla said the dist rict
which serves MiS11ion Viejo and Laguna
Niguel would attempt by 1974 to devise
a system that would use secondary
treated sewage effluent to irrigate park.!!,
golf courses and freeways lylng within
the district.
The concept is not ntw to the
Moulton -Niguel district since it has
provided treated waste water to Mission
Viejo Golf C.Ourse !or watering greens
and fairways.
The new element is the txpansiolr
of the jdea lo public parkl'i and freeways
providing additional acreage for
''disposal" of treated wa11tes at a pro-
jected savings to taxpayers.
The district now discharges a half
million gallons dail y through the San
Juan Capistrano outfall near Doheny
Beach. By 1978, Kymla noted, that fa cili-
ty would propel 5.5 million gallonl'i per
day from the Moulton-Niguel district into
the sea.
f.. Ul'I T11tphoto APOLLO 14 •OA RS AWAY FROM EAR TH ON MOON MISSION
Weatherman Fi nds Hol e In Clouds for 36-story Bomb
If some of the projected increased
flow from the developing f.1ission Viejo
and Laguna Niguel areas ca n be diverted
from the jointly operated lreatment plant
a~ San Juan Capistrano, the outfall need
not be. built so large. r
•oooooli Gra1ad'
W~ves of Astronauts l(eep
Tabs on Their Husbands
.. We will have lo build a larger out·
fall." Kymla said. "But the amount,
cost and effect of sewage discharge
on the ocean will be considerably chang-
ed by the recycling attempt."
The equipment necessary to recycle
treated wa'stes could be built for ··one
third lo half of the cost of the new
outfall."
Key to the recycling concept is !he.
debut of Feather River Project waters
in Southe rn California, when t h e
Metropolita n· Water District begins im·
porting the low total dissolved solids
fresh water -250 part,, per million
(PPM ) versus 750 PPM now brought
in from the Colorado River.
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
"Oooooh grand!" exclaimed Joan Roosa.
•·1 knew Stu would do it. He's good
al fixing things.''
The dark -haired wife of the Apollo·
14 pilot flew home to TeXa s from Cane
Kennedy Sunday night , aware that the
crew was havin~ difficulty \\•ith a tricky
dockiilg maneuver. •
"How .are they doing'?'' she asked a
reporter as she and her four sleepy
children piled off the jet at a Houston
a1rpor l.
"They docked on the sixth try," she
w•1 toJd. She broke into a 11.1per 1rin.
commended her husband and the crew
and said: \
.. Oh, I didn't -know that. Jt 's been
kin d of tense.. But I had a good feeli ng
about this mission . I hope they go down
lo the moon now and find a big rock
that's four and a half billion years
old." -
Louise M1tche!I. \Yife of the moon
lander pilot. was the firsl of the three
wive' to return home. arri•:lng half an
hour earlier. Louise Shepard remained
in Florlda overnight and was due ba ck
today.
. J\1rs. Alitchell-said the plane's pilot
1nformed her lhal the command ship
bad successfully linked up \11lth the lunar
* -tr! * . Fron• Page 9·
APOLLO .:.
•
module after five rutilf! aUempU.
A joint study by the Slate Waler
Resources Control Board and flood .con-
trol Board and flood control officials
of the natural under ground water storage
basins is due this· a;prlng. Kyml a said
It 11 possible report will indic ate
Fro1n Page 1
MURDER •••
"Great~" she responded. •
r-.trs. Shepard admitted 1l ~s a hllle Friday night at his apartment, which
tense for aY.•h1le ''bul I thought il \\'as was crashed by a group of youths from
a \'ery beauttful launch -It reminded the Downey .area.
me of lhc 1-"nurth of July." They theorize l.h11l around JO p.m.
Asked ho1v ~he spent lhe tense a fight began bct_wcen Basha"' and the
momerils 1vhen lhe mission appeared uninvited guests. A knife was pulled · · d h and Bashaw reportedly wa~ ~tabbed in Jeopa r y. s c sald, "l was eating repeat edlv as he retreated from room an omcl e1 , bec;1use at the lime it was to room . J
the -Ollng lo dn." She said she and lier tv.·o daughters. Finally, bleeding sevcrel.v, Bashaw
Julie. 19. and i\ilrs. L:iura Snyder . 2.1, cra1vlcd !hrough the kitchen of his apart.-
would leave the cape today. menl and dOY.'n down a hall to the
Little .John Roos.1, l, r1pperired Un· i~~IJ!CX:~~m where he collapsed against
concerned ahou! the 11·ho!e JTIAtler . He 0th · "'as the first off the pl:ine. sound asleep ers attending the party called police anr:I 11·at,Fhed ;i~ Bashaw was taken to in the arms of a fan11ly friend. Andy the hospiLJl.\. During the ballle l.o s:ive
Phil lips of Tyler. Tex. • his life. doc!ors called for eJShl units
"I wan t to get my kids hon1e," Mrs. of blood 1vhich v.·as rushed to the
Roo!!a said "They're just. "'orn out." · b h
The other Roosa children-Christopher, ~hc~~r~1.~g of~~:1 Y 1 e Orange County
11. S1uart .Ir .. 8. and Rffliemary, 7 -Police said lhe !iUSpecls froni Do"'neV
moved off the plane on their own po"'er b h · · looking not unl ike .lfiree kids 1vho had "·ere gone Y 1 e lime the st<1bbing and hard sho'e "th th I · was reported but officers from the ·1 eir s eering spent a lon• da.v ;it Disne1.•land. · · ; rocket• d 1· k d th l rr Spcc1al Enforc<?ment Deta il (SE Dt rush. an in e e "'O era wit h The r.11tchc!l •iris _, Krirl.vn. 17. and lh• unorthodo t h · ed lo Dov.·ney in 5earch of the sus""c~. x ec n1que. Elizabeth. 11-carricd sch""! books off ~ Roosa 37 f k. "" ln Downey. 11 doze n offi cers were only · · a so 8 roo 1e !!paceman, the plane, but admitrrd thev. gol very · crawled 1·nto fh h 1 h 1 a jump behind the susnoc ts as they · e a c a ew hours Ji!He study1·ng done. ~ f t d d ran from one possible hideout to another a er an remove the linkup device,..,_ Karlyn's companions ~~1d site had a 011· h · a ti h. h 0 " •.cers liaid t e duo apparently J1pcnl -n opera on w lc normally would trst !oday at school and wa~ .. verv tne night at the home of a friend in the
have occurred on \Vednesday. v:orried ab out it ... It 's a heck Or Downey area. They were arrested 11t
Roosa lhspected the inside of the coupl· a note -her dadd y's going 1.o the the home of the gir l's mother, J0348
Ing '11lth his hand~ and a flashlight moon and she's golla take a te•t." "' ·11 st n~ .. -• t d " · " 1,ewv1 e .. , 1JUWney.
.... ., repor e some impressions t ha t •'lfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiii are rough to touch, probably scratched ]'
in lhe su rface of 1he droi;tue for about
a quarter of 8JJ inch deep ...
"Jt appears the probe hit the drogue
dead center every time we tried lo
dock.,. Roosa said, "but it just didn't
<::.tch.'' · ·
11 ... is possible t~ pump out the water
which has too high a total dia;solved
solids tTDSI content -1200 parts per
million -and replace ll with 8 polished
effluent having a TDS of around iOO
PPM.
This would result, Kyl'Ma lheorlu d,
from adding the TDS rating of UHi in-
coming wa tl!'r supplies, 250 PPM, to
the expected amount of total dissolved
solids usually found ta be added t•
sewage effluent after it has received
secondary treatment. The resulting ef-
£1uenl of 500 PPM total dissolved solids
"very possibly will be pure enough to
lipread in the underground basin.''
Natural ...,·ater found in the basi n e1-
rceds state suindards for .us~ .and no
11·ater has 'been drawn from ejther· of
the large aquifers under San Juan
Capistrano sioce 1963 11.·hen a landmark
cou rt judgment said water purveym-s
must provide a certain level of wale~
quality, KymJa noted. ,
Thus, with tv:o unique "outlets" for
lreated sewage wastes the Moulton·
Niguel \Valer District could enjoy con-
siderable savings while contributi ng to
enviro nml!'ntal quality at the same time.
Kymla said the long range savings
"'ould result from the lessened need
to build large interceptor sewer lines
and outfall fa cilities.
The env\ronmental ccntributions woold
be a lowered amount of discharge Int.
the ocean and a conservation nr water
supplies by recycling water Imported
by f.1etropolitan Water District.
Among area s that could economically
be irrigated "'i\h reclaimed waste water
"'culd be the 50-foot median strip pr&
jected for Crown Valley Parkway;
Laguna Niguel Country Club; a county
park planned for Laguna Niguel: and
a l'ieven-mile stretch of the San Dle1•
Freeway through the district.
Atlanta Democrat
Cho se n to Fill
Sen. Russell Seat
ATLANTA fUP J) -Dav id Gam brell,
a 41·year-old Atl11nta allorne)I-ind
chatrman ·or the Georgi~ Dtmocr1tlc
party, \\'IS named today by Gov. Jimmy
Carter lo fill the unexpired ltrm e!
the late Sen. Richard Russell.
Rwsell, dean of the Senate in whidl
he served for 38 years, died Jan. 21
of a respiratory ailment. His lerm e1·
pires in January, 197.l.
Gambrell is ex-peeled lo seek the
Democratic nominalion for a full six-year
term in the 1972 primary. One of his
opponents likely will be Lt. Gov. Lester
!liaddox.
Gambrell , ~on of E. Smythe Gam brerJ.
former President of lhe American Bar
Association, was picked by Carter Jaat
fall to carry oul his refor ms in the
State Democratic party. JU! was 1 close
ad vis er and contributor to Carter in
the l11tter's camp'ligns for -evernor in
196fi 11.nd 1970. \,
\
Offshore Pla tform
Fire Extingui shed
NE\V ORLEANS ~U Pll -Shell Oil
Com~ny 6l}cc.essfully clogged a fourth
"'ell 7ilr Its burning offshore p\atrorm
Sunday night. But il still must kill to\:O'
more we!ls before the: two·month-old tire
can be extinguished .
_The fourth well to be killed w11s clogged
•\\'Ith mud as v.•ere the previous three.
T~e mud was pumped into the well!!
lhrough relief shafl!i drilled deep below J
ll\e surface of the Gulf o( Mexico ,,.. . .
The astnwauts then ins pected the
fl'lechanism and tr iggered it se11eral
11mes by hand. It worked every time
-and thus failed to show "'hat went
,·:rong. -
T.he docking mechan ism. which never
be:ore has failed in flight. uses a pointed
"probe" on the co mmanrl module to
nud~e 1nt11\ 11 r.one·shapf'd dr ogue on
the lunar lander.
We are clearing out hundreds of Items at dras•
tically reduced prices. Come In and 1 hop '
around. A pawn shop Is more fun than a rum•
mag~ sale.
STEREO
VISIT OUR
SOUND
ROOM
-. ., ~ ....
Clemente Girl ' Rescued F ro.µ1
Cli ff at Park
A young. pregnant San Cl"'menle
housewife became the_ object of 3 cHH
rea;cue by firemen· Sunday afternoon after
!ihe became stranded near San Clemente
Stale Park.
Fireman Sheldon Schmidt used a ladder'
lo assist ~irs. Alice Faye Dubo5e. 17,
of 239 Avenida Oe:I ?.tar.
Lifeguards also "·ere !iummoned to
ll1e bluff \\'ilh cliff rescue 51ear, but
a ladder, spokesn1en sa1<t. \\'Orked better.
J\trs. Dubose. .Lold firemen she and
htr husband v.·ere climbing do\\·n the
htufr. He mttde it. She became frightened
about 21'1 feet from the bottom.
f.tra. Dubose required ~o medical treat-
ment after h~r rescue.
HERE ARE --A FEW EXAMPLES
1 ~------MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS-JEWELRY GUITARS ISp•n;1hl ··············-········ R•g • lb.SO $12.SO
50%-OFF
All 11111mond1 gu•r1nt1td to
1ppr1 IH •t 40 '/. mor• or
your ''flO" .. 'I b1c:k In full.
GUITARS ISpon;,;i ........................ R•g, S•.so $39.95
C~ARINETS ................•............................... from $35.0D
S ARE DRUM ................................ ·--···--· l rom $1 2.50
FLU TES I <I " I ................................................... $85.DO
ACCORDIANS I 120 B•u I .........•............ $35.DDand up
FR ENCH HORN ......... ······-·············· ............ $13 5.DD
-SPORTING GOODS -
Doubl• T•ptr
SKI POLES .................. $11.95
Attorttd
GOLF CLUBS ............... 50 ¢ ea.
1 O"ly L.. C. Smith Doublt B1 rr•IN
SHOT GUNS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $85.00
MA NY CA MERAS AT 111' SAVI NGS
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and L ~AN
1838-NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·1741 ·
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA letwHft H•bor & 1,_,wey
WE LOAN BUY · SELL & TRADE A:..MOST /YERYTHING.
• , .
• (
NEW and USED STUIOS
IAR~lllNS
lr'1 Th• M1pp1nlng Thlni
~~ 30% OFF
STEREO & MONAURAL
RECORD ALBUMS
ALL ARE 2 r OPULAR 5c llRTISTS
11 'tR ACk TA'I
PLAYER DECK
''" ! ..... , •• , , .. '" '29" ,,_,, .. , .. _ .
'
I
r
. I
I'
I
I 1...
..._I I
Bnntingto~ Beae~
EDIJl'I ON
Today's Final ·
N.Y. Stoeki
--
VOL 64, NO. 27, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY l, 197J TEN CENTS
•
I Employe Power Struggle Heading for Climax
'.
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l
r
By ALAN DJRKIN
01 ltl• DellY !"llO! 51111
A months-long power slruggle between
two rival city employe groups in Hun-
tington Beach will be settled w i t h a
1ecret ballot Tuesday.
Nearly 400 e'inployes will vote on
whether they want the longer established
City Employes Association {CEA) or
its challenger, the MUnlcipal Employes
Association (MEA), to represent them
as their bargaining agent . with the city
administrator and council. ' . firemen, policemen or lifeguards -the
The couricil authorized the California 11o safety services have their own employe
State Conciliation Service to conduct the groups -in personnel and salary
election after talk! between leaders of negotiations with th& city.
the groups had failed to re50lve conrrlcts. News of the formation of the · MEA
Two poll.! will be set up Tuesday came in November after the result of
-at the city yard in the morning the annual pay talks were announced.
and in the council chambers in the Most emptoyes were· granted an 8.25
afternoon. Cost of the election will be percent hike, although the police and
borne by members of the associations. ffi'emen were given 11 percent increases:
The successful association w i 11 The CEA represented its non-classi!ied
represent city employes who are not employes in the negotiations. Although
no dissalisfacli<ln has been expressed
al the amount the CEA won, leaders
of the MEA have pointed out that
because of the way its by.laws were
worded lhe CEA was not formally
recognized by the counc11 in personnel
discussions. • ·
William McKim, president of the MEA,
explained today·that the flew organization
was formed becawe several groups in
the city were dissatisfied because the
CEA did not have that formal recogni-
tion.
"Vi'e have been wide open for a union
organization," McKim commented. "But
we didn't want a union coming in. We
wanted an organization based on local
conditions."
h-1cKim claimed th11t in a recent
meeUng conducted by the CEA a vote
was held on which of the two bodies
should become the official agent.
''The MEA was voted in, but the
ballots were lost," he added.
Ted Kramp, president of the CEA.
said today that that vote was discounted
becau~e it was "just a straw poll and
the people at the meeting were
predominantly MEA members."
Asked why merger efforts between:
the groups had failed, Kramp responded.
"There are basic differences 1 D
philosophy Uiat can't be worked out
''In my opjnion they are Uriion oriented
and much more militant than any
association I would care to be associated
with."
•
Apollo 14 Bugged
Linkup Trouble Still Not Solved
•
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THE DING DONG GRANDMA OF ,HUNTINGTOtt BEACH DISPLAYS MEXICAN PRAYER BELL
When Frencn Abbott INChe1for1 11111, P.luco Abbott RtKhll "" Hl1 W1llol
Bells· Toll for Abhoits
Hunti1igton Couple Have 400 Tones in Their Home
•
'
By TERRY COVll.LE •'~"'?"'-; ...... w"f!i-· • · •" is really a music box that plays "Silent
0t 111e c.11Y P'11o1 s11tt ~· , • ..,, ... Night."
The bells are ringing for Pierce and ' ~ ''I have an old dinner bell of 1terling
his gal. silver from my molher. It's 1t least
They have a choice. of more than 65 years old," Mrs. Abbott added. 400 in their Huntington Beach home.
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) -
The Apollo 14 astronauts, speeding ac·
curately toward the. moon, checked their
malfunctioning docking mechanism by
hand today but failed to find the trouble
which coold scrub their $400 million
lunar landing mission.
Alan B. Shepard, Sluart A. Roosa and
Edgar 0. Milchell examined the device
-for an hour before gonng to sleep after
a busy 1~'.-i: hours of success and frustra-
tion tbat started w\lh a flawless launch
from Cape Kennedy.
The routine linkup of the command
ship Kitty Hawk and the lunar lander
Antares turned into a tense hour a n d
44 minute struggle Sunday night to pre·
vent the failure of America's second
straight moon mission.
But the successful locking of the two
vessels by an unorthodox method left
the. possibility the mechanism would fail
qai,t· aflF ~·llJPlr m-,IUll oll
from the F r a Mauro iedion Of Uie.
moon ~turdaiy.
o.r.u!dA!'P.'rts viewed ltltv~JllW Ot ttte device and worked with mb'.deli
to decide if Shepard. 47. America 'g firgt
man In space. and rookie Astronaut
Mitchell, 40, would be allowed to spend
33\i: hours on .the lunar surface.
A space agency spokesman said a
decision wasn't being rushed but pro-
bably will be made sometime before
a braking maneuver Thursday to put
Apollo 14 into mootl orbit.
The astronauts never were. in danger
and even U the moon landing is cancelled,
officials said they could still loop the
moon to take pictures and perform some
scientific observations .
The docking mechanism failed to work
five times while Apollo 14' sped through
20,000 miles of space. But on the sixth
try 'thJ space pilots. g~v' &A ~~ lM
nd tiali! •h<ve with tlle!r ilmtiif
rockets and Jinked the two craft with
.tl>.!.~odox technifi~~ •. _. ,.;,.,,_ 'RX6Si ," 37, also a·~JPlCllftlft,
crawJed Into the hatch a few hours
later and removed the Unkup dtviet
-an operation which normally would
have oceurred on Wedntlday.
Roosa i.1spected the inside of the •. up14
ing with his hands and a fiashlight
and reported "some Impressions that
are rough to touch, probably scratched
in the surface of the drogue for about
a quarter of an inch d~p. ·•
"It appears the probe hit the drogue
dead center every time we tried to
dock," Roosa said, "but It just didn't
C -~Ch."
The astronauts then inspected the
mechanism and triggered it several
times by hand. It worked every time
-and thus failed to show what went
\Tong.
The docking mechani sm, which never
bc:::·e has failed in flight, uses a pointed
"probe" on the command module to
nudge Into a cone-shaped drogue on
the lunar lander.
With the probe in place, three "capture
l.::~hcs" are supposed to catch the lander
and hold the two vessels together until
~ :ng of 12 latches locks. ·
But for Apollo 14, the three capture
l.:":·hes .:: ·'n"t worlt.
So, on the sixth docking try, Roosa
drove the command ship, with probe
extended, into· the lander'~ pro~r aUgn~
ment. Instead of using the apfure
latchea to hold the spacecraft toðer.
Roota flred control jets to keep the <!t'n snug until the tocking latches
engaged.
At mission control In H o u st o n •
engineers took a "wait and see" attitude
white they tried to figure what went
wrong.
After their unscheduled study of the
faulty part and an exchange of In-
formation with the ground. the aslronauts
~!:ed if they oould go to sleep :.J minutes
early. Thi..y settled down at 7:45 a.m.
EST for a scheduled 10.hour rest ~riod.
Pierce Abbott. 80, is a retired civil She has several fine crystal bells in·
service worker for the Navy. His gal, eluding a cranberry glass bell, a gold
:'\frs. Frances Abbott. 75, is a bell fanatic. crystal from Portugal and one of French
''He reaches for his wallet when tw flinL
··ea rs me ringing a bell," she says. Some bells are satt and pepper
~ "It's a hobby we can all enjoy," he shakers, two or three ee.ts serve as
~~· holders and one is a thermometer .
. 1~ have bells from 47 different na· Animals are featured on many bells.
·ions. 'They have religious bells, cow There's an elephant from Rhodesia. a
Beach Physician
Loses Wallet
In Garage Heist
Sunset Bay Development
Gets Temporary Delay
"Jell!, wood bells, crystal bells, orna-crane from Taiwan and a kangaroo from
-nental bells, figurine bells and nearly Australia.
rinything you can imagine. Their biggest bell is on 11 tall post
"Last week we received a bell from in the backyard. It's a large school
t iechtenstein. the smallest principality bell cast in 1886. ';The neighborhood
in Europe." Mrs. Abbotl said, reflecting children sneak in to ring on Halloween,"
he thrill of getting another bell. f\.1r. Abbott said.
~1ost of their bells come from friends DAILY P'ILOT 11•11 l"llO!o ':J even round a cbird feeder in the
ho have travelled to all parts or the BELL FROM COLLECTION shape of a bell,'' f\1rs . Abbott laughed.
,orld . Fish Mt•n Wedded Bli'ss ''They sometimes call me the ding dong
"We've made a lot of fr iendships grandma ."
Ii.rough our bells," the little bell keeper But she loves to show off her collection .
xplained. "And we've learned 11 lot. "It's given me an entirely dirferent
:ach time we get a new be!!, we go ''My favorites are oriental bells. They outlook on life. We don't have time
'> the library and stu4!). the history take us further back in history," Mrs. to think of ltofiing old."
f the region it came from.'' Abbott chimed. "I like figurines too, A book about bell colll"Cting and featur-
The great bell collection began 1& because they represent different coun-ing the Abbotts and other collectors
he h tries." vears ago on her birthday w n e is now on display at the Huntiagton
bought her a cow bell as a unique Both Abbotts are members of the Beach library. "Maybe some.~ay they'll
gift. American Bell Association and gather want to use my bells for a display,"
"Let's start a collection," she 11ug· once each year with other bell collectors Mre. Abbott said .
gested. to trade their secrets. ~1eanwhile. 'She's willing to Jive free.
Four·hundred bell! later they're still The tiniest bell Mrs. Abbott owns is advice on 'bells. Just give. her a phone
collecting. ... a miniature railroad bell. It's not quite call at 846-5662. You'll enjoy the ring
half-an·inch bigb, about the size of half-a-in her voice when 9he talks ibout bells.
thumbnail.
A Huntington Beach physician lost a
wallet containing $114 and several credit
cards over the weekend when he was
confronted by a tough·talking robber
hiding in his garage.
Dr. William W. Altig, 17158 Courlney
Lane, told investigating officers he was
just placing a book in the backseat
of his car Saturday night when the
man popped up. pointed a pistol at • him and said, "Give me your money,
this gun Is loaded. llurry up or I'll
shoot."
The brash gunman was described by
Dr. Altig and his wife Marie as being
about 25 years old. 5 foot 10, with
long blond · and wearing a striped
shirt.
Officers I ter stopped a man answering
to that d cription in a Huntington
Harbour rking lot and took him into
custody.
Huntington Knifing
A temporary restrainlng order has
been placed on the planned Sunset Bay
development near Huntington Harbour.
Superior Court Judge Robert L.
Corfman issued the order against
building permits for the project Friday
in continuing the hearing on the case
to March 12. ·
The case is based on a 'Suit filed
by Arthur Knox, 3322 Easter Circle,
Huntinglon Beach, who is asking the
court to order the city of Huntington
Beach to withdraw the use variance
it granted Real Property Management
of Beverly Hills to build the multi·rilillion
dollar complex. ·
Knox argues that the variance was
granted without the developers pr.ovll'lg
a legal hardship existed. At the March
12 hearing Judge Corfman will rule on
a demurrer filed by the city. If the
demurrer fails, then the merits of the
case will be discussed.
Crowds Besiege
County Beaches
J It may be mid·winter in ~1aine. but
ljt was time lo hit the sand and surf
thi s weekend in Huntington Beach.
She. wears another tiny bell on a
chain around her neck, It was a Valen·
tine·s Day gift rrom Mr. Abbot. The
bell is fWed gold with a diamond lapper
in the center.
History surrounds many of the bells
they own .
One is a loud punch bell (you slap
the top of it with one hand, cover
your ear with 'the other) once «iwned
by Napoleon's butler.
Pair-Held • Ill Party Death
Warm .,.,.eather brought 10,000 run·
balhers to the beach Saturday. Another
9.000 hit the sand Sunday even though
&kies were cloudy. 1_
The water temperature v.·as 55 degrees
both days. according to Huntington
Beach lifeguards. Air temperature rose to
78 degrees Saturday, then dropped ba'ck
to 72 degrees. Sunday,
Lifeguards had three patrols on the
beach both days, but reported no serious
incidents or drownings.
A Yalanche Kill s Two
TREMP. Spain (UPI) -Two persons
were. missing and pre sumed dead and
four others injured Sunday . when an
avalanche swept across ~ ski run in
the Pyrenees. pollce aaid. All victims
were Spaniards.
"A family friend gave us that one,"
~1rs. Abbott explained. "He received it
about 1900 from an old Frenchman who
said his father was NaPOl¢0n 'J buUer."
They have an elephant bell from
Pakistan that flew over the hump with a 'frifnct •when 'Tie . was ' a mt!mber of
the original Flying Tigers in World War
II.
There's a carved stork bell - a repTica
<1f one dug out of the ruins of Pompeii.
Bells slso come in odd sbape! and
sizes.
One Chinese be.II features two carved
fish, symbols of wedded felicity.
Seven figurines are lined up on one.
wall 'shelf, each ,depicting 11 costume
from 11uch eountrles aa England, Belgium
er France.
An ernamental bell from Switzerland
A man and a leenaged girl are being munity Hospital shortly after midnight the door.
held by Huntington Beach Police today Friday. Doctors made an all out effort Others attending the party tailed police
in a switchblade knife slaying of the to save. the life of the young man and watched as Bashaw was taken to
host at a Friday night party Jn downtown bleeding to death from multiple stab the hospital. During the battle to save:
Huntington Beach. wounds believed to have been inflictt?d his life, doctors called for eight units
Suspects Paul .A. Stener80r\, 22, and with a 1witchblade knife at his apart· of blood which was rushed to the
Candace Neal, 17. both ol Do~11ey. wert; ment. operef1ng rbom by the ·Ortnge County
captured in a dragnet operaU~n by tbe~ . Police believe Bashaw held a part Y Sh!riff's office.
Downey police officers Saturday night. 1 • Friday . night et his apartment. which Pollce said the suspects from Downey
The victim was Arthur E .. ~aw,; was crasbed·by 1 group of youtM. from were ·gont by the time U!it slabbing
21 , of 32L 7th St., Huntington Beac:1': .·I · the Downey area. was report!d but offlcm from the
Stenerson was booked on murder They theorize lhat around 10 p.m. Special Enforcement Detail (SEO) rush-
charges wh.11€ Miss Ntal ti.!IS charged a fight began between Bashaw and the !<I to Downey in aeareb of the.'lu.specl&.
with being .an 1cccssory in the 1illeged uninvited guests. A knife was pulled.• Jn· Downey, a dozen offlctrs were only
crime. , and Bashaw reportedly was atAbbed • jump behind the suspect.a: u they
Huntington dete<:tivu Gtne Poot R.iy repealtdly 11s he retreated from room ran from one possible hideout to 1notller.
Anderson and Bruce Yotptg bropght the to~. Officers aa.kl. the duo apparenUy spent
couple to Huntington Beach around .J FlnaiJy. ·bleeding severely, B&ahaw the night at the home of a friend in the
p.m. The)' said the girl wUI be· arraJ~d· crawl'f throµgh the kitchen of his apart· Downey area. They were arrested 1t
In Juven'Ue ceurt. ' · ment and down down 11 hall to the the home of the 1ir1'1 mother, i0348
B1ih1w died at Huntington 111,teroom~ Uvfnc room where he collapsed 11alnst Newville St.. Downey.
, • •
The judge also will consider March
12 whether to allow Real Property
1\fanagement to intervene in the cast
as an interested party.
The Sunset Bay complex will be built
off Pacific Coast Highway at Admiralty
Drive, opposite Huntington Harbour. It
calls for creation of a peninsula with
an ll·story apartment building and f0ur
three-story apartment structures. Plans
also reveal an 11 ·story hotel on the
mainland, a four·story office building,
a shopping center. several acres of
single-family homes and 300 boat slips.
In Good Condition
KANSAS CITY, Mo. IUPI) -Form.
er President Harry S Trumaii strolled
outside his hospital room during the
weekend where he Is being treated for
an intestinal inflammation, but doctors
have not set a date for his release.
Orange Coast
"'eather
Those low clouds will bum of[
late Tuesday afternoon but the
temperatures won't get past 60
either locally or further inland.
INSmE TODAY
1t took Apollo 14 a.stronaut.f
11.x tries to successfully -com-
plete o maneuver considered
one of the most rouine with the
la.st sophi.tticated equipment -
dQClcing ti.Do tpae.ecrofts. See
story Pag~ S.
llrltl• ... ,'"' c.eu .... nie . C""~IH U• (let1H"" c-1c• , __
Dtalll Nttlcfl "'-" •dllfflel .....
lnl•M•l~IM!ll '5n111Ce
Hlf•C-
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I DAJL v PILOT H Monda)', February l , 1971 -
-< Bad Luck in Bunches
F 01· Huntington Officer
By RUD I NIEDZIELSKI
Of !ht 0.llY ,llllt •t•lt
Sgt. JIJJ'Jt.! Mahan of the ,.Huntington Beach Police Department bad • rollgh day last \Vednesday. ·
for several weeks he had been saving soft drink bottle caps good for a
free ticket to the I...os Angeles Kings-Bufialo Sabers hockey
~
game al the Forum in Inglewood. Wednesday was supposed
lo be the big night.
Even before he took off. ~fahan ran into trouble. He
had just given a narcotics talk at a local school and 11tab-
bed himself with an old hypodermic needle fropt hi! dl!i·
play kit. I •
''1 got a little nervous about th11t so I went to the
doctor and gof\ a tetanus shot," said lifahan . ·~ -J ...
' "And when I got home my wife told me my 3-year-
old boy had to go to the hospital. He had the flu and Io.st
14 pounds In tv.·o days. We took him to the hospital in Bellflower.
Mahan decided to go to the game anyway, as a means of relaxation for
his wilt who, naturally was worried about the boy.
"\Ve were on the Long Beach Freev.·ay near Ingl ewood v.•hcn T saw a
pickup truck in lhe rear view mirror. I moved to the other side of the road
because he was doing about 80 to 85 and weaving all ovtr the road," 14ahan
recalled.
"!\1y wife said she Ulought ht was going to kill somebody. so v.·e followed
him. When we got to the Harbor and Santa Monita Freeway inlerchange he
bit four cars and totaled his."
Running over to the pi~up, which had burst into flames, ?>.Iahan tried
to rescue the dri ver.
.. Both doors of the cab were jammed shut and when T tried to get him
out. he called me a pig. J told him he was under arrest and he spit blood all
over me. \Ve found out later he was under the influence of some kind of drug.
drunk and driving with a suspended license. It was no wonder he didn 't ""'ant
tG come out"
As V.'itinesses to the crash extinguished the fire by throwing· sand on it.
?>.1ahan subdued the driver and waited for the Highway Patrol to arrive.
"The CHP took him into custody. But v.·e still wanted to get to the game
and when J took of£ I was so nervous that I backed right Into a Los Angeles
police unit and put a dent in it." said Mahan.
When he arrive at the Forum. the b~:~=viltcii--""1ea-m cam-"· _..
1n his bottle caps for the ticket , but the man at the ticket window wouldn't take
them.
"They were just in their break between the second and third quarter, but
the man at the ticket booth told me they had already figured everything out
llld that he couldn't give me a ticket." he said.
At that point Mahan 's wife lei loose with a tirr t or anger.
• 0 He gave up under the onslaught and got his s rvisor who got us the
tickets and told us that we could sit an ywhere in the ."
The game was a good one (3-3 tie) and the Ma ans started home. but
then couldn't remember where they ltft their car.
"While I was out in the parking Jot J finally ran into Capt. Us.sher and
Lt Brown (Capt. Arland Us.sher and Lt. Dwayne Brown or the Huntington
Beach Police Department). I was supposed to meet them there in the first
place. They told me that they had just seen my car and led me to it."
"It was really a weird night.''
Fights for Life
Mission Viejo Youth
Shot at Gas Station
A 17-year-old Mission Viejo youth
fought for hUi life In South coast Com·
munity Hospital today while Orange
County sheriff's deputies stepped up
.~ the.it search for the man who put a
bullet in the young servl~ station al·
Golfer Teed Off;
All Gear Stolen
A Westminster man went to the Costa
Men. Golf and Country Club Saturday
and got a little teed off.
He returned from a break at the
clubhouse and found his gear stolen.
Frank B. Roe, of 6131 Shawnee Orive ,
told police his loss was $425 and included
16 clubs, golf bag and accessories.
DAILY PILOT
CllUHG~ COA$T PUaLIMHNG COM,A.NV
Roitrt H. Wttd
'rt1ic11111 t f.d Publrsr..r
J1clr R. Cwrlty
VI~ ,rnld.nt •l'.4 !HflOfl l M.o!Mtlr
Tho""'' K11vil
l!dll*r •
Thofl'I •• A. Mwrp~i11.1
M1~1111\1 1!:'1.or
Al111. DirkiN
Wnl Qr1~2• C-ty l!:•fl!w
Albt rt W. 1•111 A.uocl1t1 Edltor
tendant's head.
Douglas Ray Wheat, Jr .. 24551 Satur.
na Drive. was shot early Salurday by
an unknown bandit \vho took an esti·
mated $5!:1 from the till of the Arco
station at La Paz Road and the San
Ditgo Freev.·ay.
The boy, who had \'-'Orked just thrtt
months at the station, was found face
do"'TI in a pool of blood in the ¥rage
room at the rear of the station by a
motorist who later told officers: "I just
felt something was wrong."
Deputies rushed the youth to South
Coast Community Hospital \vhere doc-
tors performed emergency surgery to
remove the bullet lodged in his skull.
Officers said young \Vheat was shot In
the back of the head .
A sheriffs patrolman said he last
saw \Vheat b e f o r e the shooting at
about 2 a.m. Saturday, just two hours
before the seriously wounded boy was
found.
The officer said everything appear·
ed to be normal at that time '4'ith the
youth serving late night motorists.
Sheriff's investigators do not link the
Wheat 5hooting '4'ith that of a Garden
Grove service station attendant who was
shot in the back Friday after being
pistol \4"hi pped into unconsciousness.
• . Future Honie
~:!J!~B!!
. ~;:!:!f IP-'. .. ~~ .. -! ....... , .. ,, -
•
Man l(illed,
48 lnju1·ed
ht LA Riot
' '
,· ..
' LOS /INGELl::.'i fUP I) -An over· ;
night curfew brought calm to th' East ,;
Los Angeles Mexican·America n barrlG ·
loday following violent i;klrmishes In · •
\1·hich one Chicano was killed, 48 per-
5ons injured and 88 tirre~ted.
This is where Huntington Beach's municipal busine ss
v.•ill be conducted when the city's $8.5 million civic
center is complete. The five-story building planned
at l\.1ansion Avenue and Main Street will house gen·
eral city offices. The three-story building next door
u1ill house the city's police department. Architect
Kurt Meyers bas designed a partiaJly ~unken and
heavily landscaped parking lot to go u·ith it.
Sunday's window-breaking and looting
rampage Jn a business area fo llowed a
peaceful rally at Belvedere Park of 5,000
Chicanos prpltsting alleged police bru·
_.YI Hy.
County supervisors declared a state of
tmergency and imposed a 6:20 p.m. to
~ a.m. curfew 1n a. 10-square mile ar!a.
•
UC Irvine Coed's
Drowning Death
Declared Suicide
The death of a UC Irvine coecf" whost
body was found in the ocean off Lagu·
na Beach last week will be classified
as a suicide. a spokesman for the Or·
ange County Coroner's Office said to·
day. •
Laguna Beach deltctives conducted a
full investigation of the dea th of UCI
senior Ca rolyn Jones, 21, when severe
injuries were found on the body during
an autopsy performed by Coroner's Of·
fice pathologist.,,. ~
These included, in addition to bruises
and abrasions apparently caused by
rocks off Crescent Bay Beach. detp lac·
erations on both wris_t5 and a skull
fracture.
It was concluded that the lacerations
were self-inflicted and the fractUre prob-
ably resulted in a fall or leap onto the
ro c k s, according to detective Gene
Brooks .
The young woman, whose parents live
in Glendale. had lived alone in an apart·
ment at 1287 Cliff Drive for the past
16 months.
She \\•as described by neighbors and
fellow students as leading a quiet life.
usually retiring ear I y and keeping
"pretty much to herself."
Though she apparently had given no
indication of deep depression, detec·
lives said she recently had complained
to friends that she was having trouble
sleeping and had seemed som ewhat un-
happy since the departure of a boy who
had visited her here.
She had obtained a prescription for
gleeping. pills. Brooks said, but only one
tablet had been taken frpm the bottle.
Probe Continues
Into Drowning
Of Newport Pair
Coroner 's investigators tMay listed
tlr ov.·ning as the cause of death of a
Nev.•port Beach couple. but continued
lhelr investigation Into the role of a
faulty whirlpool bath "''hich may have
electroculed the pair before the ir deaths.
Long time Orange Coast restaurateur
\Villiazn Ste\vart. 63, and his wife
Isabelle, 58, of 1344 Sussex Lane. were
found ln the ir pool Friday afternoon
by their chauffeur Harry Goodwin .
Detective Ken Smith said investigation
is continuing in the events which led
to the double tragedy at their Weslcliff
hnme.
The investigation or the whirlpool
equipment was begun when a pipe from
the device was found in the bottom
of the pool.
A ntlghbor interviewed by officers told
them the· Ste"1arts had complained of
being shocked by the equ ipment on prior
occas ions. They were regular swimmers
and had had it installed nine months
ago.
Tnvestigalors at the scene had the
device checked by a city electrician
v.·ho told them it sterned to be working
perfectly. But officers noted that some
wires in the pump v.1ere spliced together
with black tape.
Coroner's investigator Jim Biesner said
tests are being conducted to determine
if an electrical i;hock from the device
stunned the pair as they took !heir
afternoon swim. or i' their drownings
\1·ere due lo other caqses
Mcintire Paraders Call
For 'Total U.S. Victory'
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 1!11 0111)' ,He! llllf
Dr. Carl Mcintire and 2.000 of his
followers marched through the 11treets
of San Cemente over the weekend,
singing and chanting for a total armed
victory In Vietnam.
And al the end of the march -
which Included Uncle Sam on stilts
towering above young and old alike,
Dr. Mcintire experienced difficulties with
the one piece of equipment which led
to a two-week doMybrook with the city
councll.
After being the object of two battles
in city hall , the aound r;ystem broke
down for more than an hour.
But, undaunted, the fiery New Jersey
minister with an enormous following
from his radio broadcasts used a bullhorn
while an alternate system was being
repaired.
The hundreds of marchers -many
of them elderly -gathered on the
flatland and slopes of Linda Lane Park
amid scores of banners and placards
with slogans blending religion and
polilics.
Some called for an end to the "no.win"
policy of the U.S. Government.
No incidents whic h could be interpreted
as hostile toward the group took place
Rt the Saturday afternoon kickoff of
a series of vi<'tory marchts throughout
the nation.
The event, however, drew curious
onlookers from the nearby Linda Lane
beach.
At one point of the procession five
bikini-clad girls walked beside the:
paraders.
Several older men snarled disgust at
the girls' attire.
.. First, they allowed burlesque indoors,
now it's in the public atreet.s .. ,
shameful," growled one man carrying
.a huge flag.
The Mcintire followers came from
throughout the Southland to President
Nixon's adop~d town.
DelegaUons !rpm Los Angeles and San
Diego County formed the majority of
the group.
A few hundred others were from local
communities.
Despite the warm weather. few of
the elderly felt ill e f re c ts from the"
one·mi!t walk through neighborhood
streets.
Only one per~on required firsl·11id.
Dr. Mclntire 's stiltman took much of
the attenti on of the da y.
The man, who has marched with
f\.1clntire followings before. wore boxing
gloves aQ.d wa1 bound at the wrist,
to demonstrate the effects of the "no-win
policy." ·
"Our trouble," Dr. Mcintire 11aid ... Ci!
that soon we will have 1lmultaneou.•
marches throughout the land, and we
have only one Uncle Sam to m a r c h
with us," he said.
Deputies said that 83 persons were ar·
rtsted on charges ranging from failure
to disperse to assa ult on an officer.
The v.·indows of at least 60 businesses
were smashed and several stores were
looted.
Nine bu ildings including a bank and
an automobile dealership were set ablate
bv firebombs. A liquor store and bail
bOnds building \\'ere gutted while dam·
age to Pan American National Bank
was estimated at $15,000.
Sheriff Peter Pilchess said t~e i;hool·
Ing death resulted when six deputies near
the bank were confronted by about 500
to 600 demonstrators \\'ho hurled missiles
and advanced on the officers. Pitchess
said the deputies fired warning shots
over the heads of the <"rowd with shot·
gun s and also fired shots into the ground.
The r;heriff said the victim, \\-'ho was
not immediately identified, and the
wounding of the other persons occurred
at this time although the circumstances
surrounding the incident had not yet .
been determined.
Twenty-three civilians suffered ln·
juries, 14 of them ""'ounded by gunfire.
Twelve deputies suffered minor injuries
and 12 firemen were treated for smoke
inhalation after battling a total of 35
fires in the area, most of them in trash
bins.
Total structural damage was estlmat·
ed· at $190,000. .
Shortly after darkness came to the
area. Pitchess said depUties v.·ere In
control of the situation. He said 5!10 of·
fictrs v•ere used in the area at the peak
of the violence.
''There's absolutely no provocation for
this degree of violence,'' the sheriff ad d-
ed.
The rally. which tnded late in the ar.
ternoon, climaxed marches \\'hich he-
gan Thursday. Contingents of 75 to 100
participants moved toward the park
from Venice. San Fernando Valley, Mon·
terey Park, Whittier, Long Beach, San
Pedro, Ontario and Pomona Valley. Brothers Knifed
111 Beach Attack
Near Their Home
Two brothers walking home to their
downtown Hunti ngton Beach apartment
Sunday night were slabbed durin"g-what
police described as a possible "rtvenge
a Hack."
Jud-ge-Calls for Delay
In Finance Theft Case
Alan B. Sandler, 19. and Stephen C.
Sandler, 21 , both of 309 Hul'lli ngton Ave.,
received wounds in the left lea.
Treated at Huntington lntercommunity
Hospital. the pair refused to go to Orange
County Hospital for further medical aid.
Their description of the asr;ailant was
sparse and officers said lhey appeared
hesitant in divulging information.
The assailant was described by them
to be About 5 foot 10, about 19 or 20
years old and wearing Jong brown hair.
Officers said the attack occu rred
around 9:30 p.m. as the brothers were
v.•alking al ong Huntington Avenue.
In their report, nfflcers theorized the
motive fo r the stabbi ng might have been
revenge but gave no further qet11 ils. •
A two-week delay was erdered loday
jn the arraignment of a Huntington Bea<'h
man accused or involvement Jn a Laguna
Hills financial enterprise that may cost
its investors more than SJ million.
Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Paul
f\.tast ordered James E. Shipley, 38.
of 16951 Lowell Circle, to return to
his courtroom Feb. 16. He set bail 1t
$250.000.
Shipley faces charges of grand theft.
forgery and conspiracy. All were filed
by the district attorney's office after
investigation of his role as vice president
in the World Financial Trends empire
admlnistrered by mi~slng r;tockbroker
Joseph D. Dulaney.
Dulaney, 37. 11nd his 1vife Marlen~.
.
36. Newport Beach face Identica l
charges. They left wit h their ttu"ee
children for Munich, Germany. in Ju11e
1969. shortly before an investl galinn IJf
the now bankrupt empire administered
from officts in Laguna Hills and Seal
Beach
Shipley today had a curt "no com-
menl'' to offer as he left Judge ~ta5t's
courtroom. He had the same comment
for newsmen as he lef~ a recent
bankruptcy court session 1n v.·hich he
denied any knowledge of Dulaney·~
v.·hereabouts nr the rea~rins that led
to his boss' sudden depar ture to Euro~.
Ship!ty is accused of one count of
conspiracy to crimmit grand lheft 11nd
forgery, friur counts of grand theft and
three counts of forgery.
We are clearing out hundrecl1 of Item•.., dras•
tlcally reduced prices. Come In and shop
around. A pawn shop Is more fun than a rum•
magesale.
STEREO
VISIT OUR
SOUND
H11ftth19taa .. «II Offlc1
1717S lttt:h loul1w1rd
M1i!rft9 Add11•u P.O. 1011 790, f2•41
Ot"ar Otflc11
Starfisl1 Stars HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES
-MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS-
GUITARs !Spanis h) .................... -.. R•g . 26 .50 $12.SO JEWELRY ROOM
NEW and USED STEREOS
L••Ul'I• •••c~I '" l'"Ortll .. -~ t;Mt1 Mtll: UC Wttl l1y Sir N I ,....,..., 6 11cll1 2111 WM! SllllOI lllllllew'C
&111 Glll't'ltn!t : ~ Hlr111 l!I C.ml111 l .. 1
OAIL.V ~ILCT, ... H~ •111'11 ti ~1..U 1~1 t1""4'rffl. II l>WltUll•" lltlly .. , .........
i6t'f Ill ...,..,.,, UllllO!IA fw Lt,...1 ~
... ....,, '""'· (tti. /l>ftl, Htmtl .. ..., ..... Inf foun\lbl Vti!lr, lllflt Wllfl N>
"'11'1111 """"'· °'"'" c.111 ,'*111~ .... ~,.., -"""'"" ,If,.,. 111 11 m1 WMt
.. ._ lhod.. Mtw,ort atac11. atil iJt W•I ...., llf#I, C..le M-.
r.s.,i.. .. C714J f41-4JJ1
..... WatllllMtH Cel 14t.1111
Cl-11'9~ A4..wthl .. 642·1671
twyfttM, lt7t,. Cl'•• Go&tl PllllltPtlfll (~. .... lllln 11'wlet. 11•tr1t1 ... 1.
141wi.1 ....nr .,. """"'~11 11tNJ11 _., lie ,...,.,!,IOl!f wl!tw.11 IPKlfl ,_
...,.. .. lif OllP'f'WI' -· llcll'lf ~ Nfllft MTil 11 ,....,.,, .. ti'!
•t'lol 0..1111 fll_, (.fllftr~ll, ~,,pti.t h' -
(t N'W 0.21 -llllYJ W INlll UJl-!lllYJ
,,111,..,., ••11'111..., 1.t.11 11W111111r.
•
Ho1neowners Figh! Apart1nent Bid
Fountain Valley City Councifmen 81e
becoming 1ccustomed to the faces of
homeowners who live near Starfish
Lane.
Tutsday night will be no exception
whtn Classic Home!. a development
company, trits one more time to con-
\'lnce the city to allow apartment! on
the small strttt
Clas.,ic Homes Is appealing tht coun·
ci1'1 Jan. S decision which ~med do~·n
apartment zonlng for $.2 •cres 11lonR
Starfish. A large crowd of homeowntrs
is txpecttd to oppose the ap11rtrnenl~.
The: homtowntr1 say 11partments would
<'rowd Slarfl1h and m11)(e It a tr1ffic
haurd. Apartments would also dump
more chUdren into crowded school5, they
111y.
Councilmen agreed with a 3. z vott
denying apartment zoning the last timr .
Tuesday's appeal was allO\\'ed \\"hen
Councilman John Harper, who \1oted
against the apartments, Joined tv;o oth-
er <'Oun<'llmen to allow lhe appeal.
Councilmen George Scou and Al Ho!·
linden opposed the toning and opposed
the 11ppeal. w h 11 e Ed Just and Ron
Shenkman fa,·ore<:l the aparlments and
the appeal.
Classic llomts "'ants to build apart·
ment,~ on the fh•e-ecre site btcause It
claims lhe property isn't 11dequate for
an ything P.lsc.
The 11parlmenl hearing is lhe only
public~~sring set for Tuesda)' nta?lt.
Counci .. ~n meet al 8 p.m.
50% OFF
All 411mont11 1uarant1M t•
11,pral1e 11t 40-;1 m•r1 er
y11Ur moMy llack In full.
GUITARS !Spani1hl ........... ._ ...••... __ Rog. 59.50· $39.95
CLARINOS ...... _, ....•.... ·-···············-·····-·-· from $35 .00 SNARE DRUM ......................................... from $12.50
FLUTES I~ I" I ................................................. $85.00
ACCORDIANS 1120 S.u I .................. $15.00 .. d •P
FRENCH HORN ............................ >.. ........ -.... $1l5.00
-.SPORTING GOODS-
o.ubr• T•1Mr
SKI POLES .................. $11.95
AsJOrtM
GOLF CLUBS ............... 50¢ ea.
2 Only L. (. l mltl'I O.ultl1 lar,..IM
SHOT GUNS ................ $85.00
MANY CAMERAS AT lie; SAVIN<;S
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and L()AN
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. . PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA letwuo H-• .._.""!'
WE LOAN BUY· SELL & TRADE ALMOST EVERYTHING
•
IAR<;AINS
lt'1 rho Happ1nlng Thlnt
¥~ 30% OFF
STEREO r. MONAURAL
RECORD ALBUMS
ALL AU 25 POPULAR C
ARTISTS
I TRACK TAP'(
PLAYER DECK
Pl•• l11t• rt1o1r ,,.,... s29t5 It.ti Y•lff,
I
•
! ...
' .
"'· lr ·);
' " ~~· ~ -~
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6men •
BEA ANDER SON, Edilo•
MH111,, F•lllru1,-, I, 1'11 " "''' lJ
Month Glows
Golden Ke y n1embers are glo,ving \Vith anticipation over this
month's activities.
An outstanding speaker and a theater party have been arranged
by ri1rs. Ivan Narragon, program chair1nan, and Mrs. \Villiam Susman.
Dr. Ralph Sher, chairman of the boata of 1-lelp Une, will address
members when they meet at 10 a.in. Tuesday, Feb. 9, in Lake Park
Clubhouse. ·-·
He \\'ill explain Help Line's aitn , \Vhic.h is to make available a
listening service for distressed callers \\'ith reference to various agen·
cies in the community which might offer aid.
Coffee will be served by ~trs. Charles Wright. hospitality chair·
man.
A night at the Huntington Beach Playhouse \vith a backstage
afterglo\V party including the cast is being planned for Friday, Feb. 19.
The play is a comedy, "Generation," and both play and party are in·
eluded in the $a.so ticket price. In charge of distribution of ticke.ts are
~1rs. Cy Peterson and Mrs. Narragon. liirs. Peterson may be called for
additional information.
1'1rs. Jack Greeley, president of the 1-luntinglon Beach support
group for the Chi ld Guidance Center of Orange County, has appointed
J\.trs. Richard Gardner as ne\v thrift shop chairman. The shop, located
at 311 Fifth St., will accept contributions of any salable articles.
·~
IDEAS GENERATING -Checking off a busy schedule for the
month are (background, 1eft to right) Mrs. Bob Fickett and Mr s.
Cy .Peterson, members of Golden Key who will be attending the
1-funtington Beach Playhouse production of "Generation" featuring
Steve Uhler and Eva Ne"·stead (foreground). Golden Key me1nbers
and guests will be joined by the ca st for an after·the·lheater party.
'fhis month the organization also opens a membership drive and
anyone interested in working for the center which offers lO\V·fee
psychiatric treatment to emotionally disturbed children is invited to
call Mrs. Norman \\'eaver, membership chairman. ·at 846-5931.
"
{ ·. ./ ,,
r , I. ·r· ..
•
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• '1 '
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Futu;e Designers Emphasize Finer Point s
Proving that a ·stitch.in time might be \Yorlh money
is .J\.limi Baker {left). She points out some.of the de·
tails of her \Vinning costume in a sewing contest
sponsored by the Seal Bea ch \Voman 's Club. Admir-
ing her "··ork are (left to right) Mrs. Marx Dressler,
r
contest chairf!1an: ?\Jrs. l-lenry Schadee, president.
and ~1ary Fiye, third place winner. A cash a·ward
also \\'as presented to Lori Brookover for her crea·
tion \vhich took second place.
.
lnferno tionol Friendship Shrink s Horizon s
f-Jun tington Beach Girl Scouts will be thinking about
International Friendship, theme of the annual Think·
in g Day program taking place between 1 and 4 p.m.
in the Stace.v lntcrinediate School. Costumed mem-
bers \vho \Vilt be participating are (left to right)
Susan J ones, Nona Boucher and Sherri Rodgers.
Each Brownie. Junior. Cadette and Senior troop will
present a song. dance or skit representing countries
around the \\lorld. w
Fiance' s. Sec.ret Desire Out~hines Glowing Wedding Plans
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am 20. My
fiance is 21. We arc planning to be
married soon and I need an ans"·er
to a question . J and 1 had a lalk
last week and he confessed he has always
wanted to be married in a purple sequin
jickel. I toll! 'him I'd have to think
It over. The next day I discussed it
with-my mother. She said it \\'as all
right wilh her. if the minisler didn't
object. So I asked the minister. He
said he dldn·t see any reason why my
fiance couldn 'l get married in a purple
sequin jacket ii he wRnted to. since
grooms are \1·earing all sorts of off-beat
outfits lhese days. (Br ides, too.)
\Vhen 1 told J he repli ed, "I've changed
my mind. It would take the attention
av.::i.y from you." This "'as very sweet
but now I feel guil!y -knowing how
much It meant to him. Should I insist?
ANN LANDERS
-ONTARIO BRIDE
DEAR ON: No. Let It be. If there's
anything a bride doesn'i need
groom in a purple sequin jacket.
You "·ere right in your answer. Ann.
The reason the little girl craves male
It's a affeclion is because her own fath er is-
nored her. 1 kncJw, beca use m )' dad
v.·as like that. He never once: let n1c
DEAR ANN I.ANDERS: .I 11·as hit i1it on his lap. I cannot recall thal
hard by that letter about !he little 7-ycar· he ever kissed mr.
old girl who climbs on men 's laps anct4, Do you kno1v 1vhat happens to l1ltle
behaves in an aggressively afrcctionate girls with cold fathers Y.'ho reject them~
manner. I was that Jil lie girl 20 yea rs They see '·daddy" in every male v.·ho
i1go. 'l'o !his day I can hear my mother pays them ihe slighles~ atten tion. As
say, "Isn't it cute the \\'ay Sherry goe.! teenagers they are pushovers for heels.
for the men ? She doesn't care for women swingers and lecherous old men who
at all !"' like young rlesh.
I Jived through it all bul I was luckier
than most. I mcl a wonderful man
\1·ho und erstood my problem and helped
1ne get well. (Yes, il is a sickness.)
v.·e have a wonderful marriage now
and I consider myself e x tr em e I y
fortunate. I hope lhc little girl in the
letter is as lucky as I \\·as. 1 will
pray for her. -Sl~ERRY OF BOISE
DEAR SflERRY: Thank you for a
touching lrller. I bopt the unaffectionale
falhcrs out there w~o have little girls,
"''ill read it and do some soutsearch\ng.
DEAR ANN tA N"DERS : If I am
\Ya1!01ving in self-pity please kick me
in the bloomers. IC I have a right
<to complain, say so.
I hRvc brt.n mRrried 15 year11 to a
man "'ho works hilrd, pays the bill!!
-.
on lime, Is a good fath er and has
never been kno1\'0 to lose his temper.
He tells me I am a fine wiie and
a wonderful person . Should I be satisfied ?
Well -here's the rest of it.
f'rom the day we married r have
been alone on Thanksgiving. New Year's.
mY birthday. his birthday, the chil~
birthdays, J\1other's Day, our anniversary
and every holiday that gives a man
a day olf from wor k. The rea s oii. l
am atone so much is because my husband
Is a fisherman, a hunl cr, a bo\\•lcr;
a s11·immcr. a surfer. a skater and
a card playe!r. In other \11ords he"s in-
te rested in everything but staying_ home
1\·lth his family.
Do<t have lhe right lo say something?
-A MARRIED WIDOW IN SAGINAW
DJ!:AR SAG: Of course you do, but
J have I bunch JI won't do any good
a( this Jale date.. The lime to llav•
''said something" was IS years ago.
You don't mention whether YOU enjoy
any of these activlt~s. J xe ln yoar
list many 'bfngs the family coqld' de
togclher. Is this possible? Explore the
pr<1spects and It might produce a parllal
50lutlon.
• Drinking may be "in"' to !he tldt '
you run \\'Ith -but it can put ~y0q
"out'' lor keeps. You can cool it ..and
stay po pular. Read •·&o1.e and Yoii .
-for Teenager s Only:• Send 35 cent.i
in coin ;;u1d a lcn-::. self-adates~
stamped C'nvclopc. with your requ~ti •
care of the DAILY PILOT. ··.: •
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Monday, Ftbruary l , 197!
•
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Virgo: Shake Off Lethargy
TUESDAY
FEBRUARY 2
By SYDNEY OMARR
The Saglttarlan can be
sociable, agtteable, but wants
to create policy and be one
who 11 called upon to ei:platn
and direct. U you want to
)t;eep a Sagtttarian 11 a friend ,
aslt advice. Nothing pleases
this nartve more than bel.ng
able to eX}llaln and teach.
Some famous pertons born un·
der SagUtarius include Al
Katine, Flip WUson and Emlyn
Williams.
ARIES (March 21·April 19):
Hold on !o valuables. One v.·ho
sings siren song does not have
your interests at heart. Be
receptive. Make c h an g e s •
Realize your own worth. Build
self-esteem.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20\:
You canno~thro\V off
responsibility ere are com·
mitments w 1ch you must
fulfill. Family members may
try to force issues. Don't let
anyone.impose his will on you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Perceive hidden meanings.
Find out .why people act the
way they do. Don't be lulled
into complacency, You do
have . a mission. Major
purposes ca• now be clarified.
Principles
Of Decor
Capsuled
,,.._
CANCER (June 21.July 221:
Hold tight to principles. You
will have additional
responsibilities. You can ban·
die them. But you also should
be compensated for efforts.
Know this -act like you
know it.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
may 11ot be obvious.
· PISCES (Feb. 11!-Mar<'ij 201:
You get what you want by
utilizing written word . Don't
attempt to substitute
superficiality for t ~ o r o u g h
understanding . See through
sham. Be alert, aware -and
sincere,
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BmTHDAY you sbo0old
cultivate appreciation f o r
rhythm and music. Many
persons are drawn to you -
and you can easily be spoiled.
You Jove attenllon. You also
are wtlllng to aid others to
attain goalf. Recent flurry tf
confusion Is golng to be
replaced by some solld ad·
vances. By April, you st>ould
be more comfortable iD fbwl•
clal area.
To 11t1d ovt \loflll'I llldlv ,,,.. ""'
In montv tnd lov!, ordc!, ~':fi' om1rr'1 baokltt, " e(ftl H!n r MM 1nc1-·Wom•n:• Stnd blr lid••
End 50 ctnh 10. Om¥• A1l•1.,10 ' l'l:rlli, ttM1 OAl,.Y PILI.IT• eoa: .io, rtnd C1nt11I lttlor.. NIW Oi"kO H.'f. lll011.
Finish projects. A v o id
premature starts. Be willing
to test a relationship. Put a
stop to wishful thinking. One
who constantly takes ad-
vantage of you should be put
in place.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Take a chance on your
abilities. Shake off lethargy.
What you need is not as far
aff as might be imagined,
St. Andrew's Setting
For Lane-Shaw Rites
Utilize past expe rience. Open D1tt.1 r in g d o u b I e r I n g
communication lines. • ceremonies Mary Kay Shaw
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): became the bride of Lindsay
Lie low. Play waiting game. L Relative who whines should Perry ant.
be helped -but do set limit. The Rev. Dr. Ch a r I es
Means refuse to be door mat. Dierenfield performed t h e
Accent on getting opposing nuptials in St. A n d r e w 's
forces to cooperate. Act ac· Presbyterian Church, Newport:
cordingly. Beach for the daughter of Mr.
SCORPIO (Oct. ZS.Nov. 21 ): and Mrs. Donald W. Shaw
Be versatile. Some of your of Newport Beach and the
ideas are ready for greater son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry
develooment. One who seems C. Lane of Tucson.
out of reach expresses in· Given in marriage by her
teresl. Grab opoortunity. father, the bride asked her
Make small sacrifices for sister, Mrs. Paul H. Reynolds
greater Rains. to be 'her matron of honor.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Bridesmaids were Mrs. David
Dec. 21): Some basic re· llutchinson, ?.1rs. William
ouifements take more money Dumler, Miss Pam Trowe and than anticipated. R e a d h between the lines. Don't be Miss Cathy Lane, t e
caught short, Study Libra bridegroom's sister.
message. Get expert advice. Attending as best man was RS. L. P. LANE
Take nothinl? for granted. Michael Williams, w hi 1 e Newport Beach Home
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. ushers were Tom Combellick,,,1'--'-----~-0j
Square Dance Buffs Take New Step
19): Good lunar aspeCt coin· Tim Morrison, David DeCon-11 "
A series or Inter I 0 r cides with serious decision Cini and Reynolds. ~
decorating classes will begin connected with ch i 1 d r e n • The bride is a graduate of
this week with Miss Ellie speculation. You come out on Corona del Mar High School
Hennessee as instructor. top -after a trying time. and the University of Southern DTERY Round dances will be fitted In between s~re
dances beginning Friday, Feb. 5, at the Val~9fie
Special dance of the Lace 'n Leather Square Dance
Clµb, \v~en Mr. an~ Mrs. Jess Sasseen start calling
along \Vlth Marv Llndner, club caller. Swinging out
for the first square and round dance prograni from
8 to 11 p.m. in the Huntington Beach Recreation
Center are {left to right) the Sasseens and the Juan
Dillons.
Serves Mental Health
Subjects to be ccrvered ln-Keep the faith. Creative ap-California. Her husband is a
elude selecting the right look, proach overcomes handicap. graduate or the University of
color. floor covering. wall AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. Ariwna and is affiliated with
treatments art principles and 18).: What appears to be Phi Gamma Delta. .
accessories'. weight on your shoulders may The newlyweds will reside
.. . turn out to be asset. Wh'tte· ~i~n~N~Ol(PO~~rt~B~e~a~cll~---;;.~~i:iii=~ The eight.week classes will,_ elephant could be of actuar 11
• •
Outside
Friends
Lend Aid
Games Lunch Ta bled
April Rite
In Offing
be open to both men a~d value. Get expert appraisal.
·women and a textbook will You have plenty -but it
be incl uded with the course.
Classes will take place on
Monday and Thursday even·
Prince of Peace Lutheran ings from 7 to 8:30. Thursday Sea Siren•
factory authorized
'
' ·' ' •
~
i
Mrs. Rosemaey Goodenough,
founder of Friends outside,
will speak following a noon
potluck luncheon of the Unitar-
ian Uaavenalist Women's Fed·
eration 11lursday, Feb. 4, in
the Costa Mesa Church.
Friends outside is a n
organization that works with
families of prisoners. Mrs.
Goodenough's early activities
were involved with helping the
families of men incarcerated
in Santa Clara Jail and
Soledad but she now is work·
ing in Orange and Ventura
counties.
The public is invited to at·
tend.
Civil War
Drama Told
Civil War days win be
recalled for members of the
South Coast Club of Laguna
Beach on \Vednesday, Feb. 3,
as Leisure World resident .j
Mrs. Florence Cox reads ex·
cerpts from letters "\\'Tit ten by 1 her grandfather to his young
bride while he was . away
fighting . Mrs. Cox has traveled ex·
tenslvely to collect these let·
ters Which are to be bound
in a book and preserved in
the Huntington Library.
Social hour will beJ?:in . at
11 :30 a.m. in the To,vers
restaurant u11der the direction
or r.trs. Joe \V. Long and
Mrs. Paul Hill.
Reservations may be made
with the Mmes. Ora Stickel!,
chairma11. George Johnson. or
_F.~~ls. I
YOGA IS • •
II YOU Ull t11 'I'"•·
""' iJ 1~1 lC11NCt: 91 Vllalll)' .. "•IH .
Pltll' DIMONSTltAT!OM
ITANCllN9 ON YOUll HlAOt WALKIN9 ON flllEt
s1n1NO LIK£ .. Pltl!Tll!"L' ~-NO!
i ;i'"UES. NIGHT-f ,,m.
CIOSMI lt•rt Wmd. ~ •• ~~:~ CE~!~~ .. .
1 5•11• I ....... Ill
Cl-M,... .,.,
~~ ~~-1
FAIR
, .. f.,t, f1i1, f1ctv1I. n.111
• tflm woNlt ''"" •ii' f1rlott 111 l epero11tle11 011 the DAILY PIL01
-.flf{tpftl p191 OVlf'Y 41y,
Playing games to benefit the
rehabilitation of former
mental patJents will 'be
members and guests of the
Fountain Valley W o ul a J1 1 s
Club.
Mrs. Joseph Giesing, me11tal
health chairman, .will open her
home for a games luncheon
at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Feb.
3, and proceeds from the
luncheon Will be used lo pro-
vide art and crafts materials
for the Garden Grove Mental
Health Activity Center.
One of three such centers
Laguna Group
Amearican Legion Auxiliary
of Laguna Beach gathers the
second and fourth Thursday
evenings in the Legion Ha11.
located in Orange County, ll OP s t I Church, Costa Mesa will be mornings from 10:30 to noon T S Sea irens mee n
is guided by specially trained the setting for tbe April 3 and Thursday afternoons from ~illybrooke School, C o s t a
volunteers who offer former 1 to 2:30 at Sears, South Coast Mesa. Programs begin at 7
\. ts I I d h' nuptials linking Joyce Runge Plaza. p.m. every Wednesday.
pt ien r en s ip, security .and Michael Ollila. ·---------------------~II and needed therapy during Miss Runge, daughter of Mr.1•
their readjustment to the com-and Mrs. E. H, Runge of
rnunity. Huntingtoo Beach, is a
The center Is open each graduate or .Marina High
Tuesday ·between 9:30 a.m. School and UCI. She te aches
and 12 :30 p.m. and the State at the UCl Preschool.
Department of Social Welfare Her fiance, son of Mr. an~
hopes to open such centers Mrs. Eino Ollila of Costa
in all communities on a five-Mesa, is a Costa Mesa High l
day basis, Mrs. Giesing sald. School graduate and served
Tickets for the luncheon are, :;;i~n~t~he~A~ir~F~o~r~ce~·====J====~
"MABEL -COME IN AND
GET YOUR PANTSUIT"
Wt hlYI • '~" Mltclien °' llttvlltvl "'"" ln •II 1111 n..-ulors .o 11111 VIV ctn knit 'fOllr twn 1>1nt1vll
or drfft. Wl'll htlP 'fOV 111 11111.cl. Knl"ltto m.chlntt ••• 11111 IM. Coll'lt Jn 11111 td 111 ll>t .i.iani.
The KNIT WIT'0":t'J!'A"
Phon• 54$·2112 COSTA MESA
$1.75 and anyone attending ls!r
asked to bring a packaged
cake or cookie mix which the
center uses for its weekly
refreshments.
Mrs, Giesing or Mrs. Gerald
Wessler may be contacted for
additional lnfonnation .
FABRIC VALUES!
PETTI-POINT PIQUE PRINTS
.Crowning Glory
beauty salons
Brilliant new spring colors in mOd designs ••. all on the
le'ason's most popular fabr ic
PERMANENT PRESS, MACHINE WASH
NEV ER NEEDS IRON ING
PERM SUPER SALE!
• $20 MAGIC CURL
• $25 GLAMOUR CURL
• $30 REGAL CURL
$ 9.50
$11.50 .
$14.50
BUDGET PERM always $5.95 (Normal Hair)
SPECIAL -SAVINGS!
SHAMPOO.SET
STYLE-CUT
Sry11\t o•I'" 1ilgll•!~ hight•.
SOUTH COAST PLA.%A
lower L1v1l-N1tl lo $1111
, ..... 146-7116
Op1n E~111l1191
Me11 .• f1es .• W1d
2.95
1.50
Lott• W('f!k
3.45
2.00
267 I . 11th lT .. COSTA MISA
PhoM 541·''''
Optn E:v1nin91 I S1nd1y
W• CAI!•'"'' '1'111 lltlr. Jtl' IMt!I
REG. 98c YARD VALUES
44"/45'' wide
100o/. cotton
NEW SPRING WOOLS
BONDED KNIT JERSEY
acrylic: and wool in a wide range of solid colors
bonded to acetate tricot.
ALL WOOL FLANNEL
for new spring
gauchos.
dresses, Pant suits or mod.look
BONDED COORDINATES
PLAIDS 'N SOLIDS
textured matchmates on acetate & nylon
54" widths
HOUSE oF Fa B-RICS
S..11h C"st l'lor-Bri.tol 11 Stn Oi190 fwy.
Coiro M-545·1516 t
Or•'"Jl'felt MGll-Or11191thorp1 1nd H11bot
fttllene-S26·JJ 14
Ho11er Pl•i-1 711. '' 81i1tol
kn~ A11-S4l·SSSI
l11t11e Port C111t-l1 P1!1111 •I St•nlo11
111"8 'erlr-t286lJJ
save $100 now
on Corning
-
No burners. No coils. No drip pans. Just a
l!at white surface. Ccimplete thermostatic
heat conlroL The Counterangc'" electric
range with self-cleaning oven from Com-
ing. Comes with eight Cookmates• cook·
ware. See the most revolutionary advance
in cooking in 100 years.
SET Of 8 CORNING
COOKMATES INCLUDED!
·-
SAVE $100 WAS $Stf.95
s4999s
Integrity •nd Depend ability sine• 19'47
COSTA MESA-411 E. Sevenleenlh'St.
646-1684 D•ily 9-9 Sit. 9-6
EL TORO-LAGUNA HILtS PLAZA
837-3830 Dilly 10-6 M/F. IC·9
l I
I
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•
Fo11ntai11 Valley
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Today's · Final
N. '¥. ~sfiieJU.-
VOL 64, NO. 27, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C~llFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUA!(Y I, 1971 TEN CENTS
Employe Power Struggle Heading f.or Climax
By ALAN DIRKIN
01 ,.... D1Ur l'!IOI s .. 11
A months-long pov.'er struggle between -
two rival city employe groups in Hun-
tington~ Beach will be settled w it h a
1ecret ballot Tuesday.
Nearly 400 emp!oyes will vote on
whe ther they want the longer established
City Employes Association (CEA) or
its challenger, the Municipal Employes
Association '(MEA ). to represent them
as their bargaining agent )"Vith the city
administrator and council.
The council authoriied the California
Slate Conciliation Service to con4uct the
election alter talks between leaders of
the groups had fa,iled to resolve conflicts.
Two polls will be set up Tuesday
-at the ·City yard in the morning
and in the · council chambers in the
afternoon. Cost of the election will be
borne by members of the associations.
The suceessful association w i 11
represent city employes who are not
firemen, policemen or lifeguards .. -the
safety services have their own employe
groups -in personnel and salary
negotiations with the city.
News of the formation of the MEA
came in November after the result of
the annual p8y talks were announced.
Most errip\oyes were granted an 8.25
percent hike, although the police and
firemen were given 11 percent increases.
The CEA represented its non-classified
employes in the negotiations. Although •
no dissatisfaction has been expressed
at Ule amount the CEA won, leaders
of the MEA have pointed out that
because of the way its by-laws were
wor<ied the CEA was not formally
reaignized by the council in personnel
discussions.
William McKim, ))resident of the MEA,
explained today that the new organization
was formed because several groups in
the ~ity were dissatisfied because the
CEA did not have that formal recogni-
tion.
"We have been wide open for a union Ted Kramp, president of the CEA',
organization.'' McKim commented. "Bitt said today that that vote was discounted
we didn't want a union .coming in. We becauie it was "just a straw poll •nd the people at the-meeting were
wanted an organization based on local predominantly MEA membei:s."
conditions." Asked why merger efforts between
McKirn tlllmed that ' in a recent the groups had failed, Kramp responded,.
meeting conducted by Ule CEA 'a vote "There are • basic differences i n
was held on which of · the two bodies philosophy that can't be worked out. , . . •'Jn my opinion they are union oriented. should become the ofbc1al agent. --and much more militant than any
''The MEA was .voted in, but the association I would' care to be associated
ballots were lost," he added. with."
Apollo 14 ~uggeJI
'
Linkup Trouble Still Not Solved
•
•
• I
\..' ' : ...
THE DING D.ONG GRANDMA OF HUNTINGTON BEACH DISPLAYS MEXICAN PRAYER
When Frances Abbott Re1ch·e1 for • BelJ, Pierce Abbott Reaches for His Willet
BELL
•• !'
Bells Toll I or Ahhotts
Hunti1igton Couple Have 400 Tones
By TERRY COVILLE
Of 1111 DlllY Pl .. ! S11lr
The bells are ring~g for Pierce and
his gal.
They have a choice of more than
400 in their Hunlington Beach home.
Pierce Abbott. 80. is a retired civil
service worker for the Navy. His gal.
Mrs. Frances Abbott. 75. is a bell fanatic.
"He reache!! for his wallet when he
hears me ringing a bell ," she says.
"It's a hobby we can al\ enjoy," he
says.
They have bells from 47 different na·
tions. They have religious bells. cow
bells, wood bells, crystal bells. orna·
mental bells, ·figurine bells and nearly
anything you can imagine.
"Last week we received a bel! from
Liechtenstein. the smallest principality
in Europe." Mrs. Abbott said, reflecting
the thrill of gelling another bell.
Most of their bells come from friends
who have travelled to all parts of the
world.
"We"ve made a lot of fr iendships
through our bells," the little bell keeper
explained. "And we've learned a lot.
Each time we get a new bell , we go
to the library and study the history .
· of the region it came from."
The great bell collection began 18
years ago on her birthday when he
bought her a cow bell as a unique
gift. "Let's start a collection.'' she sug.
gested. . ... Four-hundred bells later they're still
collecting.
•
DAILV PILDT Stiff P~ott
BELL FROM COLLECnON
Fish Mean Wedded Bliss
j'My favorites are oriental bells. They
take us further back in history," Mrs.
Abbott chimed. "I like figurines too,
because they represent different coun-
tries."
Both Abbotts are members of the
American Bell Association and gather
once each year with other bell collectors
to trade their secrets.
The tiniest bell ~1rs . Abbott owns Is
11 miniature railroad bell. It's not qulte
half-an-inch high, about the size of half-a-
thumbnail.
in Their Home
is really a music box that plays "Silent
Night."
"l have an old dinner bell of sttrling
silver from my mother. It's at. least
85 years old," Mrs. Abbott added.
She has several fine crystal bells in·
eluding a cianberry glass bell, a gold
crystal from Portugal and one of French
flint,
Some bells are satt and pepper
shakers. two or three eels serve as
holders and one is a thermometer.
Animals are featured on many bells.
There's an elephant from Rhodesia, a
crane from Taiwan and a kangaroo from
Australia. .
Their biggest bell is on a tall post
in the backyard. It's a large school
bell cast in 1886. "The neighborhQod
children sneak in to ring on Halloween,''
Mr. Abbott said.
"I even round a bird · feeder ih the
shape of a bell," Mrs. Abbott laughed.
"They sometimes call me the ding dong
grandma."
But she loves to show off her collection .
"Ifs given me an entirely different
outlook on life. We don't have time
to think of growing old."
A book about bell collecting and featur·
ing the Abbotts and other collectors
is now on display at the Huntington
Beach library, "Maybe someday they'll
want lo use my bells for a display,''
Mre. Abbott said.
Mean"·hile, she's willing to give free
advice on bells. Just give her a phone
call at 84§--5662. You'll enjoy the ring
in her voice when she talks about bells.
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) -
The Apollo 14 astronauts, speeding ac·
curately toward the moon, checked their
malfunctioning docking meehanism by
hand today but failed to find the trouble
whi ch could scrub their $400 million
lunar landing n1ission .
Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and
Edgar D. Mitchell examined the device
for an hour before gonng to sleep after
a busy 15~~ hours of success and frustra·
tion that started with a flawless launch
from Cape Ken nedy.
The routine linkup of the command
ship Kitty Hawk and the lunar lander
Antares turned into a tense hour a n d
44 minute struggle Sunday night to pre·'
vent the failUr'e of America's second
straight moon mission.
But the successful locking ()f the two
vessels by an unorthodox method left
the possibility the mechanism would fail
again .afttl' the lunar module lifts off
from .the· Fr a· Ma'uro 1ecliilfrJ1tl' the mOorr S3:tlirday. · ~
Ground experts viewed television films
of Uit de\tict and worked With . fnodels
to decide if Shepard. 47. America 's first
man in space, and rookie Astronaut
Mitchell, 40, Would be allo~ed to spend
331h hours on the lunar surface.
A space agency spokesman said a
decision wasn't being rushed but pro-
bably will be made sometime before
a braking maneuver Thursday to put
Apollo 14 into moon orbit.
The astronauts never were in dal)ger
and even if the moon landing is cancelled,
Beach Physician
Loses Wallet
In Garage Heist
A Huntington Beach physician Jost a
wallet containing $114 and several credit
cards over the weekend when he was
confronted by a tough-talking robber
hi.:!'.:i:;: · his garage.
Dr. William W. Altig , 17158 Courtney
Lane, told investigating officers he was
just placing a book in the backseat
of his car Saturday night when the
man popped up. pointed a pistol at
him and said, "Give me your money,
this gun is loaded. Hurry up or I'll
shoot."
The brasb gunman was described · by
Dr. Altig and his wife Marie as being
about 25 years old, 5 foot 10, with
long blond hair and wearing a striped
shirt.
Officers later stopped a man answering
to that description in a Huntington
Harbour parking lot and took him into
custc.:!:" ' She wears another liny bell on a
chain around her neck. It was a Valen· Huntington Knifing
officials said they could still loop the
moon to take pictures and perform some
scientific observations.
The docking mechanism failed 'to work
five times while Apollo 14 sped through
20.000 miles of space. But on the sixth
try the space pilots gave an extra long
and h1td ah<Jve wHh tlteir steeti'lti
rocket! and linked the two craft wWI.,
the unorthodox technique. '
· Roos'a, 37. al!iO i "tookl~ Sp.icei;nan,
crawled into the hlitch a few hours
later and removed the linkbp. device
-an operation which normally wou1d
have t'.!CtUrred on Wednesday,
Roosa i:1spected the inside of the upl·
ing with his hands and a flashlight
and reported "some impressions t h a t
are rough to touch, probably scratched
in the surface ()f the drogue for about
a quarter of an inch deep."
"It appears the . probe hit the drogue
dead center every time we t,rled to
dock ," Roosa said, "but it jus[ didn't
' ~ch."
The astronaut s then inspected the
mechanism and triggered it several
times by hand. It worked every time
--and thus failed to show what went
J, rong .
The docking mechanism, which never:
b::::.::;·e has failed in flight, uses .ii pointe.d
"probe" on the command mOclule to
nudge into a cone·shaped drogue an
the lunar lander.
With the probe in place, 1hree "capture
I:.' :::es" _re supposed to catch the lander
and hold the two vessels together until
• ·ng of 12 latches locks.
But for Apollo 14, the three capture
):'-"~~ .. ·.,•t wor'·.
So, on the sixth docking try, Roosa
drove the C()mmand ship, witp probe
extended, into the land~r·s proper align·
miht. Instead of using the captw'e.
latches lo hold tbe spacecraft together,,
Roosa firied cootrol ·jets 'to · teep--ttte-
crilt anug until the locking latches
engaged.
At mission C()nlrol in Ho u s l o n ,
engineers took a "wait and see" attitude
while they tried to figure what wen
wrong;
After their unscheduled study of th
faulty part and an exchange of ·
formation with the ground, the astronau
ar'·ed if they could go.to sleep:., rninut
early, Th1..y settled down at 7: 45 a.
EST for a scheduled IO-hour rest ~ri
Sunset Bay Development
Gets ,Temporary Delay
A temporary restraining order has
been placed on the planned Sunset Bay
development near Huntington Harbour.
Superior Court Judge Robert L.
Corfman issued the order against
building permits for tbe project Friday
ii1 continuing the hearing ·on the case
to March 12.
The case is based on a suit filed
by Arthur Knox . 3322 Easter Circle,
Huntington Beach, who is asking th! ·
~ourt to order the city of Huntington
~each to wilhdi-aw the use variance
it granted Real Property Managemerit
of Bevefly Hills to bui1d the multi·million
dollar COrilpiex. · ·
Knox arglles ·that the variance was
granted without the developers -proving
a legii:l hardship e):isted. At the March
12 hearing Judge Corfman will rule on
a demurrer filed by the city. If the
demurrer fails, then the merits of the
case will be discussed.
The judge also will conside r Mai-ch
· 12 whether to allow Real Property
Management to intervene in the case
., as an interested party,
Tht Sunset Bay complex: will be built
off P~cific Coast Highway at Admiralty
Drive1 opposite Huntington Harbour. It
calls for creation of a peninsula with
an 11-story apartment building and tout
three·story apartment structures. Plans
also reveal an 11 • story hotel on ths
mainland. a four-story office building
a shopping center, several acres ci
single·fam ily homes and 300 boat slips.
In · Good Condition
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Form.
er President Harry S Truman str'llled
outside his ~pita! room during the
we-ekend where he is being treated for
an intestinal inflammation, bu t doctor•
have not set a date for his release.
'
or .. ge Cout Crowds Besiege
County Beaches
.. tine's Day gift from Mr. Abbot. The
bell is filled go!a with a diamond tapper
in the center.
tt may be mld -winter in Maine. but
it was lime to hit the sand and surf
this weekend in Huntington Beach.
History surrounds many el the bells
they own .
One is a loud punch bell (you slap
the top of it with one hand, cover
·your ear with t~e other ) once owned
bY Napoleon's butler.
Pair Held • Ill -Party Death Weather
·Those low clouds will bum off
late Tuesday afternoon but the
temperatures won't get past 60
either loca.Jly or furthe r inland .
Warm weather brought 10.000 sun·
bather.s ttt the beach Satu~day. Another
9.000 hit the sand Sunday even though
skies were cloudy.
·The water temperature was 55 degrees
both days, according to Huntington
Beach lifeguards._ Air temperature rose to
78 degree! Saturday, then dropped back
lo 72 degrees. Sunday .
Lifeguards had three pan-ols on the
beach· both day'~. but reported no serious
Jncidents or drownings.
Avalanche Kills Two
TREMP. Spain fU Ptl -Two fl{'rsons
"·r:re missing and presumed dead and
four others injured Sunday when an
aval11nche swepl across a ski run 1n
the Pyrenees. police said . All victims
were Spania rds.
' ..
"A family friend gave us that one ."
Mr~. Abboll explained. "He received it
about 1!!00 from an old Frenchman who
taid his father was Napoleon's butler ."
They have an elephant · bell from
Pakistan that flew over the hump with
a . friend when he was. 11 member of
the original Flying Tigers in World War
IL
· There·s·a·carved' sloi'K bell -a replica
or one dug nut nf the ruins of Pompeii.
Bells also come in odd shapes_ and
sizes.
One Chinese bell fea tures lwo carved
fish, symbols of wedded felicity.
Seven figurines are lined up on one
wall shelf, each depicting a coslume
from such counlries as England, Belgium
er France.
An t1rnamental bell \.om Switzerland
'
I
A man and a teenaged girl are bting munlty Hospital shortly after midnight
held by Huntmgt()n Beach poli ce todty Friday. Doctors made an all out effort
in a switchblade knife slaying of the t() save the life of the young man
host at a Friday night party in downtown bleeding to death from multiple stab
Huntington Beach. wounds belleved to have been inflicted
Suspects Paul A. Stenerson, 22, and with. a switchblade knife al his apart·
Candace Neal, 17, both of ~y,1wtre medl
capturt'd in ·a dragnet o~raiiOritie · P&lice belie~e Bashaw h~ld a part y'
.,Downey Police officers SBturday n • Friday , niati.t at his apartment,, which
The vi"=•l m war. Art.bar E. iW1 was cta1fied by a group of. youths from'.
21, of 32l 7Ui St.,·Huntirigton BGa.ch.! .. the .Downey area. ·
Stenerson was booked on mur 11'1ey Oleoriie that around 10 p.m.
charges while Miss Neal was cbarged a fight .began between Bashaw-and tM
with being an acc,essory , in the alltged uninvited guests. A knife was pulled
crime. and Bashaw .reportedly was stibbed
Huntington detectives Gene Pool. Ray repeatedly as he retreated from room
Anderson and Bruce YOUng brought the to rOO!f\.
couple to Huntington Beach around 3 Finally. bleeding severely, Bashaw
p.m. They said I.ht girl will be arraUmell ~ trawled•throbgh the kitchen of his apar~
in Juven\lt'i court. ~ 1 ment and down down a hall to the
Bashow died at Huntlngton lnterccm-tfvtnQ: room where he collapsed against
I .,
lhe door.
Others attending-the party called police
and watched as Bashaw was taken to
the hospital. During lhe battle to save
his life, doctore called for eight units
of bloocf which was rushed to· .the
OperaUng: room by. the Oraqg~ COl.lnty1
She.riff's office. ..._
• Police siid I.he suspects from Downey
were. gone. by the. ume the stabbing
was reported but ,officers from ~
Special Enforcement Det1il (SEO) rush·
e4 to Downey in search of the suspecl~.
tn Downey: a doi.en officers were only
1 jump behind the suspects as they
ran from one po.'lsib\e hideout to another.
Officers 111id the' duo apparently spent
the night at the honie of 1 friend Jn the Down-ey area. They ·t.iere arrested at,
the home ()f the girl'' mother, 10343
Newville St., Downey •
INSIDE TODAY
It too1t Apollo 14 astronaut$
1il: trigs to Sllccessfully -com·
plete o maneuver considered
one of the most rouine wilh the
Jast ·1ophistieated equipmrnt -
docking-tWG 1 1pOcecraft$. See.
story Page $.
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I
J DAILY PILOT H Mond41. Ftbn1.ary 1, 1971
Bad Luck in Bunches
\ For Huntington Officer
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of lflt IMllY l'IS.I l ttll
Sgt. James Mahan af the Hunt ingtoo Beach Police Departmtnt had a rough day last Wednesday. •
Far several weeks he had bee11 saving soft drink bottle caps good for a
free ticket to the Los Angeles Kings-Buffalo Sabers bock~y
game at the Forum in Inglewood. Wednesday was supptmd
:ft: ..,, -J
to be the big night.
Even before he took.off, Mahan ran into trouble. He
had just given a narcotica talk at a local school and stab.-
bed himself with an old hypodermic needle from his dis-
play kit.
"I got a little nervous about that so I voent to the
doct or and got a tel.aau.s shot," said ~I ah an. • • "And when J got home my wile told me my 3-year-
old boy had to go to the hospital. He had the flu and lost
14 pounds in two days. We tOOk him to the hospital in Bel!Oower.
Mahan decided to go to the game anyway, as a means of relaxation for
his wife v.·ho, naturally was \.\·orried about the boy.
"We were on the l..ong Beach Freeway near Inglewood when I saw a
pickup truck in the rear view mirror. I moved to the other side or the road
because he was doing about 80 to 85 and weaving all overt~ rGad~" Mahan
recalled .
"11-fy wife said she thought he was going to kill somebody, so ~·• followe4
him. When we got to the Harbor and Santa Monica Freeway interchange he
bit four cars ~d totaled hl.!i."
Running' over to the pickup. which had burst into names, Mahan tried
to reSOJe the driver.
"Both doors of the cab were jammed shut and when T lried to get him
out. he called me a pig. T told him he_ was under arrest and he spit blood all
over me. We found out lattr he was under the influence of some kind of drug,
drunk and driving with a suspended license. It was no wonder he didn't want
to come out."
As witfnesses to the crash extinguished the fire by throwing sand on it,
Mahan subdued the driver and waited for the Highway Patrol to arrive.
"The CHP took him into custody. But we still wanted to get to the game
and ~·hen I took off I was so nervous that I backed right into a Los Angel~s
police unit and put a dent in it," said Mahan.
When he arrive at the Forum , the blood-spattered officer tried to cash
in his bottle caps for the ticket, but the man at the ticket window wouldn't take
them.
''They were just in their break between the second and third quarter. but
the man at the ticket booth told me they had already figw:t. everything out
and that he couldn't give me a ticket," he said. ·
At that point 1tfahan's 'Wife let loose with a torrent o anger.
''He gave up under the onslaught and got his supervisor who got us the
tickets and told us: that we could sit anywhere in the house."
The game was a good one (J.3 He) and the Mahans started home . but
then couldn't remember where they left their car.
"While I was out in the parking lot I finally ran into Capt. Ussher and
Lt. Bro\\n (Capt. Arland Ussher and Lt. Dwayne Brown of the Huntington
Beach Police Department). I was supposed to meet them there in the firs t
place. They told me that they had just seen my car and led me to Jt."
"It was really a weird night ."
Fights for Life
Mission Viejo Youth
Shot at Gas Station
A 17-year-old Mission Viejo yo U t h
fought for his We in South Coast Com·
munily Hospital today while Ora nge
County sheriff's deputies stepped up
their search for the man who put a
bullet in the young service station at·
Golf er Teed Off;
All Gear Stolen
A Westmiruter man "'ent to the Cost.a
'J\-fesa Golf and Country Club Saturday
and got a little teed of[.
He returned from a break at the
clubhouse and found his gear 1tolen.
frank B. ~. of 613.1 Shawnee Ddve,
told police his loss was $W and included
16 clubs. golf bag and accessories.
DAILY PILOT
O;!;A.~Gt C.OAST PU8LllMll4G C4M'AX't
Rob1rt N. W .. d "'"''°."' .,~ ,.11111111>tr
J1clo: R. Curl1y
Viti Ptt!ll!•~! tr.d Gffl«t l 'Mllfl"
Thom•• K11.,jl
EDi!tt
Thn11111 A. M11rphi11t
M1n1,,n1 EOi,tr
Al111 Di1li11
Wt1t Ort•)t (OU~lr [dl!.r
Albert W, ltt11
A11otl•I• £dl1M
tendanl's head.
Douglas Ray Wheat. Jr., 24!151 Satur.
na Drive. was shot early Saturday by
an unknown bandit who took an esli·
mated $50 from the till or the Arco
station at La Paz Road and the San
Diego F'reev.·ay.
The boy, who had v.·orked just three
months at the station, was found face
down in a pool of blood in the sto rage
room at the rear of lhe station by a
mt'ltorist v.·ho later told officers : "I just
felt something ~·as wrong."
Deputies rushed the youth lo South
Coast Communi ty Hospilal where doc·
tors performed emergency surgery to
remove the bullet lodged In his skull.
Officers said young Wheat was shot in
the back of the head.
A sheriffs patrolman said he last
i;aW Wheat b e f o r e the shooting at
about 2 a.m. Saturday, just two hours
before the seriously wounded boy was
found.
The offietr said everything appear·
ed to be normal at that time with the
youth serving late ni1ht motorists.
Sheriff's investigators do not link the
Wheat shootin1 with that or a Garden
Grove service station attendant who v.'as
shot in the back Friday after being
pistol whipped into unet'.lnsciousness.
L
Future Hot11e
This is where Huntington Beach:S municipal business
will be conducted when the city's $8.5 million rivic
center is complete. TtJe five-story building planned
at Mansion Avenue and Main Street will house gen·
era! city offices. The three·story building next door
\Vill house the ci ty's police department. Arc hitect
Kurt Meyers has designed a partially sun ken and
heavily landscaped parking lot to go with il.
-uc Irvine Coed's -'Mcintire Paraders Call
Drowning Death .,
Declared SuicUle For 'Total U.S. Victory'
The death or a UC Irvine coed whosa
body wa s found in the ocean off Lagu.
na Beach last week will be classified
as a suicide, a spokesman for the Or-
ange County Coroner's Office said tC>-
day.
Laguna Beach detectives cond ucted a
full investigation of the dea th of UC! ,
senior Carolyn Jones. 21, when severe
injurieS were found on the body during
an autopsy performed by Coroner's Of·
lice pathologist.'5.
These Included. in addition lo bruise!'!
and abrasio ns apparently caused by
rocks oU Crescent Bay Beach. deep h1c·
erations on both wrists and a skull
fracture.
It was concluded that the lacerations
\.\"ere self-inflicted and the fracture prob-
ably resulted in a fall or leap onto the
r o c ks, 'ticcording to detective Gene
Brooks.
The young i,i,·oman, whose parentr; live
in Glendale. had li ved alone in an apart ·
m'nt at 1287 CIUf Drive for the past
16 months. .
She was described by neighbors and
fellow students as leading a quiet life,
usually retiring ea r I y and keeping
•·pretty much to herself.''
Though she apparently had given no
Indication of deep depression, detec·
lives sa id she recently had complained
to friends that she was havi ng trouble
sleepi ng and had seemed somewhat un-
happy since \}le dei:birture of a boy who
had visited her here.
She had obtained 11 prescription for
sleeping, pills. Brooks uid, but only one
tablet had been taken from the bottle.
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 !ht O.llY P'li.1 51111
Dr, Carl Mcintire and 2.000 of hi.~
lollowers marched through the streets
of San Cemente over the weekend ,
singing and chanting for a total armed
victory In Vietnam.
And at the end or the march -
which Included Uncle Sam on stilts
towering above young and old alike,
Dr. Mcintire e1perie.nced difficulties with
the one piece of equipment which led
lo a twC>-week donnybrook with the city
council.
After being the object of two battles
in city ha.II, the sound ...ystem broke
down for more than .an hour.
But. undaunted , the fiery New Jersey
minister with an enormous foll owing
from rus radio broadcasts ustd a bullhorn
while an alternate system was being
repaired. •
The hundreds of marchers -many
of them elderly -gathered on the
flatland and alo~ o( Linda Lane Park
amid scores of banners and placards
with r;Jogans blen~ing religion and
politics.
Some called for 11.n end to the "no-win''
policy of the U.S. Government .
No incidents wh ich could bf'. interpreted
as hostile toward the group Look place
at the Saturdi-iy aft.ernonn kickoff of
B series of Vit'lOry marche:<1 throughout
the nation.
The event, hov.•ever, drew curious
orJookera from the nearby Linda Lane
beach.
At one point of the procus.ion five
bikin i-clad girls walked be!lide the
paraders.
Several olde r men snarled disgust at
the girls' attire.
•'first, they allowed burlesque indoors,
now it's In the public streets . , •
11hameful," growled one man carrying
a huge flag .
The Mcintire foll owers came from
throughout the Southland to Presideiit
Nixon's ad opted I.own.
Delegetloo!I from Los Angele5 and San
Djego County formed the majority of
the group.
A few hundred others wefe from local
communities.
Despite the "':arm weather, few of
the elderly felt ill e f r e c ts from the
one-mile wa lk through neighborhood
slreets.
Only one person required first·a id.
Dr. ~fclntire's stiltman took much of
th e attention of the day.
The man. who has marched with
~1crntire. followhigs before. wore bos:ing
gloves and was bound at the wrist.
to demonstrate the effects of the "no-v.·Ui
policy."
"Our trouble," Dr. Mclntirl!-·3.iht. ''is
!hat .'!OOn we v.·ill have simullaneous
marchel'i throughout the land, and we
have only one Uncle Sa m to marc h
with us,'' he i;aid .
Man l\.illed,
48 Injured
li1 LA Riot
LOS ANr.ELES (UPl l -An over·
night rurfei,i,· brought calm to the E11st
L<is AnRtlf's Mes:1 can·American barrio
today fnllov.•in~ \'iolent skirmishts In
1-1 h1rh one Chicano v.•as ki lled, 48 per·
sons inJnre-d and Ba <1rrested.
Sundav's ~·indow·breakinl'.: and looting
rampag; in a business area followed a
peaceful rally RI Belredere Par)< of 5.000
Chicanos protesting alltgrd police bru·
tali!~·.
Coutil." super\•1sors -declartd 11 state of
'mergency and imposed a 6:Z{l p.m. lo
S a m. rurftw in a IO·square mile arta.
Deputies said 1hat S8 persons v.·tre. ar·
resred on chargrs ranging frnm failure
to disperse to assault on an officer.
The windows of at least 60 businesses
v.·ere smashed and several stores were
looted.
Nine buildings including a bank and
an automobile dealership o,1.•ere set ablaz.e
bv firebombs. A liquor store and bail
b0nds building v.•cre gutted "'hile dam·
age to Pan Ame rican Nation al ·Bank
v.·as estimated at $15,000.
Sheriff Peter Pitchess said the 1hool·
Ing death resulted when six deputies near
the bank v.·ere confronted by about 500
to r.oo demonstrator! "\'.!10 hurled mi!!Siles
and advan ced on the office rs. Pitchess
said the deputies fired warning shols
over the heaCs or the crowd o,1.·ith shot·
guns and also fired shots into the ground.
The sheriff said the victim, who w1s
nol immediately identified. and the
wounding of the other persons occurred
al this time although the circumstance&
surrounding the incident' had not ye t
been determined.
Twenly·three civilians suffered In-
juries, 14 of them wounded by gunfire.
Twelve deputies suffered minor injuries
and 12 fi remen were treated for smoke
inhalation after battling a total of 35
fires in the area, most or them in trash
bins.
Total ~tructur~I damage was "estim1t·
ed at S190 .00J .
Shortly after darkness came to the:
area. Pitchess said deputies v.·ere In
control of the l'lituation. He said SOO ol·
!Jeers v.·ere used in the area at the peak
of the violence.
"There's absolutely no provocation for
!his degree of violence," the sheriff add·
ed.
The ri ll~•. \\•hich ended late in the 1f.
lernoon. climaxed marches v.·hich be·
gan Thursday. Contingrnts 111 75 to 100
participants m n v en tn"·ard 1he par k
from Venice , San Fernando Valle'" 1-1nn·
terey Park, Whittier. l..ong BeaCh, &an
Pedro, Ontario and Pomona Valley.
Probe Continues
Into Drowning
Of Newport Pair
Brothers Knifed
In Beach Attack
-Near Their Home
Two brothers walking home to their
downtown Huntington Beach apartment
Sunday night were stabbed dur ing what
police describe d as a possiblt "revenge
attack."
Judge Calls for Delay
In Ftnance Theft Case
Coroner's invel'itigators today list~
drov.-ning as the cause of death of a
Ntwpor l Beach couple. but continued
their investigation Into the role of a
fauJty whirlpool bath which ma y have
electrocuted the pair before their deaths.
Long ttme Orange Coast restaurateur
\\lilliam Stewart. 6.1, and his wlfe
Isabelle. S8, of 1344 Sussex Lane. were
found in their pool Friday afternoon
by their chauffeur Harry Goodwin.
Detective Ken Smith ,;aid Investigation
is continuing in the events which led
Lo the double tragedy at their Westcliff
home .
The investig11tion or the: v.·hirlpool
equipment was begun when a pipe fr om
the device was found in the bottom
of the pool.
A neighbor inlervie"'ed by offi cers told
them the Stev.·arts had complained of
being shocked by the equipment on prior
occasions. They were regular sv.·immers
and had had it installed nine months
ago
Jnvestigators a1 the scene had the
device checked by a city electrician
v.·ho told them il seemed to be working
perfectly. But officers noted th1.t some
wires in the pump ""ere spliced together
"'ith black tape. .
Co roner 's investigator Jim Riesner said
tests are being conducted. to de:termine
if an electrical 11hock from the de\lice
stunned the pair as they took their
:ifternoon sv.·im . or if their drov."Oings
v.·ere due to other causes
Alan B. Sandler, 19, and Stephen C.
Sand ler. 21. both of 309 Hu111Jngton Av,.,
received v.·ounds in the left leg.
Treated at Hunlington lntercommun1ty
Hospital. the pair refused to go In Or11.nge
County Hospital for furthe r medical ald.
Their description of the ass11.ilant was
sparse and nfflce rs s11.id they appeartd
hesitant in divulging informalion .
The assailant was described by !hem
lo be 11bout 5 fno~ 10, about 19 or 20
years old and wcarin.I{ Jong brown hair.
Officers said the ;ittac k occurred
around 9:30 p.m. as the brnihers 1<o'ere
walking along Huntington Avenue.
In their repirt . officers theorized the
molive for the stabbing might ha\'e heen
reve nge but gave no further detail5.
A tv.·C>-week delay was erdered today
in the arraignmen t of a Hunt ing ton Beach
man accused of involvement in a Laguna
H ill~ fin ancial enterprise that may cost
its investors more lhan $.1 million.
Santa Ana ri.1unicipal Court .Judge Paul
J\1asl ordered James E. Shipley, 38.
of 16951 l...c'lv.·ell Circle. to r'turn to
his cf'.lurtroom F'eb. 16. He set beil ar
$250,000.
Shipley laces charges of grand theft ,,,
forger~ and conspiracy. A!I were fil'd
by the district attorney's office after
investigation of his role as vice presiden t
1n the World Financial Trends empire
11dminislrered by missing ~lockbrnker
Joseph D. Dulaney.
Dulaney, 37. and his wtfe Mar!tne,
36. Newport Beach face Identical
charges. They left v.·1th fhelr three
children fnr :-.1unich, Gt>rmanv. in JuAe
1969. stiortly he.fore an inves.t1gation ~f
lhe nov.· hankrupt empire administered
from office:o; Jn Laguna Hills and Seat
Beach.
Shipley loday had a turt "no com·
ment" tn offer as he left Judge Masrs
co urtroom . He had !he ~ame comment
fnr newsmen 11.s he lef: a recent
b11.nkrup1ry court .!'ession 1n v.·h1ch hi!
denied any knowledjlt nf Du!anev·~
wherrabnuts or the rea.,on~ that ird
lo his 1>9ss' sudden deparr ure to Eurof)t.
Shipley is ac cused of nnr coun t nf
c·onspiracy 10 ~ commlt grand 1heft end
forgery. fnur counts nf J'!rand thefJ and
three counts rif forgery.
We are clearing out hu11dred1 of Items at dras•
tic ally reduced prices. C om e In and 1 h op
around. Al'awn shop is more fun than a rum•
magesale.
STEREO
VISIT OUR
HwRtlRtt•I IHc.li Offtt•
17175 l11ch l1~1•~••d
M1illn9 Add'r1u: P.O. l o• 7f0, ,2641 Starfisl1 Stars HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES
JEWELRY -MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS-
GUITARS ISptnish l ··········-············ Rt9. 26 .50 $12.50
GUITARS !Sp1 ni 1hl -·······-•• .. ·········Ri g. 59.50 $39.95
CLIARINfTS ·············-···-···········-·-·······-··from SJS.00
SNARi DRUM ··········-·······-······-····-··-·-fr om $12.50
SOUND
ROOM
NEW aod USED STEREOS
IAAGAINS 01 ... r Offk.I
Ltt~"' IMdl! tt2 l"trnl A-
CO>•t Mt i1: :U0 Wn! lry SI> .. !
Hf'Wl!OI'! &tu~: 2'!1 Wft! l•fMI loul-1"11
h n Glttl'ltft1t: JOI! North. 1:1 '•mlNI lllMI
•
Ho1neowners Fight Apart1nent BUl
Fountain Valley City Councilmen are
becomin1 1ecustomed to the facts of
homeowners who live n e a r Starfish
Lane.
Tuesday .night. will be no exception
""htn Clas.sic Homes. a deve lopment
company, tries one more time to con·
vlnce the city to allow apartments on
the small Slrttl. -
Classie Hom's Is ApJ>taling the coun.
cil's Jan. $ derision which turned down
11partment zoning for 5,2 acres along
$tarfish. A large crowd of homeov.ners
is t>xpected to oppose the apartments.
The homeowners say apartments WOUid
crowd Starfish and ml.kt It a traffic
hazard. Apartments would also dump
mCJre cbUdrtn Into crowded schools, they
.. y.
Cooncilmen agreed v.·lth a !\ -2 vole
dtnying apartment toning the la~t time.
Tuesday·s appeal v.'as allov.·ed v.·hen
Councilman John H11rper. v.·ho voled
againsl the apartments. jt'lined two oth-
er councilmen lo a.llow the appeal
Councilmen Goorge Scott and Al Hol·
hnden oppostd the zoning and oppo~ed
the Rppeal. w h i I e Ed Jusl t1nd Ron
l'ihcnkman favored the .11p1rtments and
tht't appeal.
Classic Homes want~ lo build apart·
ments on the five-acre site bec.1use It
claim~ the property lsn'l tidcquatc for
11nythiog else.
The apartment hearing is the: onty
public hearing set for Tuesd1y ntgh1"
Councilmen meel at I p.m .
50% OFF ~
All flal'ftff!da tu•r•nt .... t•
1wal1• et 40Y. mH• er
yovr mertey ta(k In full.
FLUTES 141 '·1 --·--·-----·-······----·---·--·---·--··----· -····-SSS.DO
ACCOROIANS I 120 B•11 l -·--·-····-·· SJS.00 eftd "P
FRENCH HORN ·---·······-······-----·--··-··········-----·-··· SUS.DO
-SPORTING GOODS-
o.ubl• T •I*'
SKI POLES .................. $11.95
A11ortM
GOLF CLUBS ............... 50¢ ea.
2 Only l . C. Smith O.Utlt lamlMI •
HOT GUNS .. __ . _ .......... $85 .00
MANY CAMERAS AT llG SAVINGS
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LC AN
1838 NEWPORT BLVD . PMONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA lotw•" HerNr & lroedwoy
WE LOAN BUY· SELL & TRADE ALMOST EVERYTHING
lt'I Tht Happenll'lt Thlni
~~ 30% OFF
STUEO & MONAUU.L
RECORD ALBUMS
ALL AU 2S POPULAR (
ARTISTS
I l ltACJI'. lAPI
PLAYER DECK
Phtt lntt '''' 1~, .. $29fl lt.t5 Y•IY•.
' l
j
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I
7
7
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\
Newport Bea~h Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VO L 64, NO. 27, 3 SECTI ONS, 32 PAG ES ORAN&E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY ·1, 197 1 TEN CENTS
·2,000 Join Mein tire's
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot m. PallY 1'1191 Sti ff
Dr. Carl -fi.fclntire and 2,000 of his
followers marched through the streets
of San Cemente over the weekend .
singing and chanting for a total armed
victory in Vietnam.
And at the end · of the march -
which Included Uncle Sam on stilts
towering above young and old alike,
Dr. Mcintire experienced difficulties with
the one piece of equipment which led
to a twc>-week donnybrook with the city
council.
After being the object or two battles
in city hall, the ~und system broke
down ror rJllllte than an hour.
But, undaunted, the fiery New Jersey
minister with ao enormous following
from ·his radio broadcasts used a bullhorn
while an alternate system was being
repaired. •
The hundreds of marchers -many
of them elderly -gathered on the
flatland and slopes of Linda Lane Park
amid sccres of banners and placards
with slogans blending reµgion and
polltjcs.
Some called for an end to the "n<>-win''
policy or the U.S. Governmenf -
No incidents which eould be interpreted
as hostile toward the group toot place
at the Saturday afternoon kicko!f of
a series of victory marches throughout
the nation.
The event, however, drew curious
...
DAILY l"iLoT l'l'lo1'9"" IM l'•v..-
Gets (Zap) Rubella Shot
It only hurts v.ihen )IOU look. \vas the posture adopt-
ed by this youngster as he received his anti-rubella
shot Sunday from Drs. Dorothy Ray (left) and Helen
Trotter at Newport Harbor High School. He wa s one
of an estimated 47 ,500 youngsters who got new
vaccine in one-day countywide effort against birth
defects caused when pregnant mothers are exposed .
to children ""ho have rubella (German measles).
County Hea lth Department officials said Sunday's
turn out for the \\·ell-advertised free shots was not
as large as they had hoped for, but termed the ef·
fort "a good start."
Two Youths Held
On R'ohber y Rap
A boy taking his grandmother S3 for
her dinner 1.ra~ the victim of a strongarm
rob bery in Costa Mesa Friday night ,
but gave police enough information to
capture tv.·o suspects.
Tom '·. Youn~. 11, said he V.'as dragged
from his bicycle on 17th Street between
Santa Ana and Tustin avenues, shaken
de·-and ~lieved of the cash.
He said he !old them lhe money was
for his grandmother's dinner . but they
took it an yway.
Police patrolling !he area arrested t"·o
14-year-old boys, who 'Nere taken to
Orange County Juvenile Hall on
strongc:-:-i robbery charges.
\
In Good Condition
KANSAS crTY' ~10. (UPI ) -Form-
er President Harry S Tn:man strolled
out.side his hospital room during the
vreekend "'here he is being treated for
an intestinal inflammation , but doctors
have not set a date for his release.
f
r
WINS ME DA L FOR VALO R
N1wport Offic1r Elllngh1m
Fights for Life
Mission Viejo Youth
Shot at Gas Stntion
A 17-year-old ~fission Viejo y outh
fought for his life in Sou!h Coast Com·
munH y Hospital today while Orange
County sheriff 's deputies stepped up
their search for the man who put a
bull et in the young service station at·
tendanfs head.
Douglas Ray Wheal. Jr., 24$51 Satur-
na Drive, v.•as shot ea rly Saturday by
an unknown bandit who took an esti·
mated $50 from the till of the Arco
station at La Paz Road and the San
Diego Freeway.
The boy, who had \\'Orked just three
months at the station, wa~ found face
dov.11 in a pool of blood in the storage
room at the rear of the stalion by a
motori st "·ho later told officers: "I just
felt something was "'Tong .''
Deputies rushed the youth to South
Coast Community Hospital where doc·
tors performed emergency surgery to
remove the bullet lodged In his skull.
Heroism
Officers said young Wheat wa s shot in
the back of the head. ·
A sheriff's patrolman said ht last
saw \Vheal be "fore the shooting at
about 2 a.m. Saturday, just two hours
before the seriously wounded boy was
fou~d.
The officer said everything appear-
ed to be normal at that time with the
youth serving late night motor ists.
Sheriff's investigators do not link the
Wheat shooting with that of a Garden
Grove service station attendant who was
shot in the back Friday after being
pistol "'hipped into unconsciousness.
A valhnche Kills Two
TREMP, Spain (UPI) -Two persons
v.·ere missing and presumed dead and
four others injured Sunday when an
avalanche swept across a ski run in
the Pyrenees. police said . All victims
were Spaniard5.
Landed
Legion Honor s New port Policemen
~ ~
Ne"•port Beach pa trolmen John Ell·
1.ngham and Patrick o·sullivan were
honored Saturday bY · tbe. Amei:lcan
Legion for acts of heroism they .per.fotm·
ed in 1970.
The 'two men received their awards
along with 11 olher county policemen
and a fireman at a banquet sponsored
by the Legion's 29th District in Anaheim.
The organization's highest award, the
Medal or Valor, was conferrl!d on Ell·
Jngham who was able lo physically sub--
due a drunk driving ,;uspcct "'ho
a5.~rtedly hart ~hot 11nd wounded him
and fellow off icer James Gardi ner.
,
O'Sullivan received 'a leUer of com-
menda tion for his action while off duty
in reporting a fire Jan..-2, JJ?O.' He
spi:ltted the fire in the unoccuJl'ed home
of David Lovatto, 2423t C.stllla I.:ane,
Mission Viejo, and broke Jn to the buz-n..
ing house to search for occupants.
The awards wm conferred by Andre"
Sola ntai, Callfotnla. Amerk:1n Ltglon
comrminder. James Gilbert, American
Legion national exei:Utivt.cc;i.mm ltteeman,
and Gerald Btock; administrative 1srl5o
1ant..10 State Senator Jame1 Ylhetmore
1R-Garden Grove l.
•
•
I -
San Clemente
onlookers lrom the nearby Linda Lane
beach.
At one point of the procession five
bikini-clad girls walked beside the
paraders.
Several older men snarled disgust at
the girls' attire:
"First. they allowed burlesque indoors,
now it's in the public stree'ts ..•
shameful," growled one man carrying
a huge flag.
The Mcintire followers came from
}
throughoot the Southland to President
Nixon 's adopted town.
Delegations from Los Angeles and San
Diego County formed the majority of
the group.
A few hundred others were from local
communities.
Despite ihe warm weather, few of
the elderly Celt Ill e f f e c ts from the
one-m!le walk through neighborhood
streets.
March
Only one person required first.aid.
Dr. Mclntire's stiltman took much of
the attention of the day.
The man, who has marched with
Mcintire followings before. wore boiinC
gloves and was bound at the wria4
to demonstrate the effects of the "no-win
policy."
"Our trouble.'' Dr. Mcintire said, "ii
that soon we will have simultaneous
marches throughout the land, and we
(See MclNTlRE, Page Z)
Apollo 14 Bugged
Linkup Trouble Still Not Solved
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPlJ -
The Apollo 14 ast.ronauts, speeding ac-
curately toward the moon, checked their
malfunctioning docking mechanism by
hand tod~~b4tjailed ~~ the ~~ __
whicn: '\:(i(Ua SCI do-tl'\trr1400 lllOn
lunar landing mission.
Alan B. Shepard. Stuart A. Roosa and~
Edgar D. Mitchell exc:imined the device
tor an hour before gonng to sleep after ~
a busy 1s1.~ hours of success ·and frustra· -1r
lion that started with a flawless launcb. ~
from Cape Kennedy. ~;.,/
The routine linkup of the command
ship Kitty · Hawk and the lunar lander
Antares turned into a tense hour a n d
44 minute struggle Sunday night to pre -
vent the failure of America·s second
straight moon mission.
But the successful locking or the t~·o
vessels by an unorthodox method left
the possibility the mechanism would fail
again after the lunar module lift& off
••
from Ole F r a Mauro section of the
moon Saturday.
Ground experts viewed television films
of the device and worked with models
lo decide if Shepard, 47, America'' first
man in 5pace, and rookie A!ltronaut
Mitchell, 40, would be allowed lo spend
33'12 bours. on t.bt lunar surface.
A space agency spokesman u ld a
decision wasn't being rushed but prp-
bably will be made sometime befort
a braking maneuver Thursday to put
Apo llo 14 into moon orbit.
The astronauts never were in danger
and even if the moon landing is cancelled,
officials said they could still loop the
moon to take pictures and perform some
scientific observations.
The docking mechanism failed to work
five times while Apollo 14 sped through
20,000 miles of space. But on the sixth
try the space pilots gave an extra long
and hard shove with their slee:ring
rockets and linked tbe two craft with
the unorthodox technique .
Roosa, 37, also a rookie spaceman,
crawled into the hatch a few hour&
later and removed the linkup device
IS.. APOLLO, P•&• 2)
Probe Continues ••
fn,to Drowni1ig -
Of Newport Pair
Freeway,~ V,oting Decision
Due From Superior Court
Coroner's investigators today listed
drowning as the cause of death of a
Newport Beach aiup\e, but continued
their investigation lnto the role of a
faulty whirlpool bath which may have
electrocuted the pair before their deaths.
Long lime Orange Coast restaurateur
William Stewart, 63. and his wife
Isabelle. 58. of 1344 Sussex Lane, were
found in their pool Friday afternoon
by their chauffeur Harry Goodwin.
Detective Ken Smith said investigation
Is continuing in the events which led
to the double tragedy at their Westcllfr ·
home.
The Investigation of the whirlpool
equipment was begun when a pipe from
the device was found in the bottom
of the pool.
A neighbor interviewed by officers told
them the .-Stewarts had complained of
being shocked by the equipment on prior
occasions. They were regular swimmers
and had had it installed nine months
ago.
Investigators al the scene had the
device checked by a city electrician
who told them it seem ed to be work ing
perfectly. But officers noted that some
wires in the pump were spliced together
with black tape.
Coroner's Jnvesligalor Jim Biesner said
tests are being conducted lo determ ine
if an electrical shock from the device
stunned the pair as they took their
afternoon swim, or if their drownings
were due to other causes .
COMMENDED FOR ACTION
N1 wport Offlc1r O'Sul llv1n
I
..
A decision whether or not to allow the
Marcb I freeway election in Newport
Beach. was expected late th.ii afternoon
by Superior Court Judge Robert L. Corf·
man.
Judee Corfman listened to two and one.
UC Irvine Coed's
Drowning Death
Declared Suici.de
The death of a UC Irvine coed whose
body was found in the ocean off Lagu·
na Beach last week will be classified
as a suicide, a spokesman ~or the Or·
ange County Coroner's Office 1aid to-
day.
Laguna Beach detectives cohducted a .
full investigation of the dealh of UCI
senior Carolyn Jones, 21. when severe
injuries were found on the body during
an autopsy performed by Coroner's Of ••
fice pathologists.
These included, in addition to bruises
and abrasions apparently c a u s t d by
rocks off Crescent Bay Beach, deep Tac-
eraUons on bolh wrists and a skull
fracture.
It was concluded that the lacerations
were self-inflicted and the fracture prob-
ably resulted in a fall or leap onto the
r o c k s, according to defective Gene
.Brooks.
The young woman, whose plrents Jive
In Glendale. had lived alone in an apart·
ment at 1187 Cliff Drive for the past
16 months. •
She was described by neighbors and
fellow students as leading a quiet life,
usually retiring tar I y and keeping
"pretty much to herself."
Though she apparently had given no
lndfealion or deep depression. dettc·
lives said she recently had complained
to friends that silt w1s ha ving trouble
1sleeping and had seemed somewhat un-
happy since the departure of a boy who
bad visited her here.
She had obtained' a prescription for
sleeping pills, Brooks said, but only one
tablet had been liken from Ult botllt.
Hijacker Reportedly
Spared by Russ ians
MOSCOW IAP) -Tbe duth 1tntenc:
of a former government clerk from
LllhU11nia for 1n 1ttempted hij1cking
h111 been commuted to 1$ years In a
labor camp, unofllclat BOurces report.
The Informants aald the presidium or
tht Lithuanian Supreme Soviet reduced
Vll1utus Simokaltls' a.entence on 1ppeal.
half 1fours of arguments this mcrnlng',
prefacing the testimony by indicating he
felt both elections should take place and
telling the lawyer for the plaintiffs to
convince him otherwise. "
Attllrney Angelo Palmieri, representing
the three former Newport Beach city Of·
ficial.s seeking to halt the balloting. con-
tended that both propo!itions seek to give
the public control over administrative
acts aiid the proposed charter amen~
ment also attempts to limit the legisJa.
live authority of the City Council.
City Attorney Tully Seymour, saying
the City Council has the right to breach
a contract. said, "The people have a
right to make (such) policy."
The March 9 election, If it Is alJowed'
by the court, seeks to direct the council
to rescind ll1' existing agreement wittl the
state on the ·ruture route of Pacific Coast
Freeway through Corona del Mar.
The second question is a charter amend ..
ment that would require fut ure councils
to conduct referendums before signing
any and all freeway agreements.
Officers Appointed
For March of Din1es ,
Dr. Jerrel T. Richards of 3S5 Via
Li:lo Soud, Newport Beach, will head
the f.farch of Dimes fund raising cam--
paign in the Newport Harbor Area.
Robert A. Goodwin of the Newport
Branch of Bank of America will serve
as campaign treasurer.
Oruge Coast
Wea titer
Those low clouds will bum off
late Tuesday afternoon but the
temperatures won't get past 60
either locally or further inland.
INSWE TODAY
It took Apollo 14 astronauts
!li.t tries to iuccessfully -com-
plete o maneuof!r con.~ide-rf!d
OM of the m0&t rouint with tht'
la.st &ophtsticated equipment -
docking two spacecrafts. See
1tor11 Porie 5.
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I
,1 OAILY PILOT N Mondu, Ftbnary 1, 1971
~lflanson Violruice'
Officer Called
At Pe:Q.alty Case
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The pro-
secuUon today summoned its second ,and
last witneg to the stand to back up
jts conteotlon Charles Manson and his
three young women followers should be
sent to the gu chamber for the brutal
Sharon Tate murdm.
Prosecutor Vincent T. Bugliosi planned
to question 'Ibomas Drynan, an Oregon
"Lotsapoppa" Cl~. 28. who told the
\5evt~man, ftve-woman jury 1-ianson shot
Flood Waters
Drive People
From Homes
By United Press Internatio nal
ltundreds of persons were forced to
remain away from their flooded homes
in northwest Washington today and a
main natural gas transmission une was
endangered by rampaging rivers car-
rying melted snow runoff to the sea.
Many re.skients of Ferndale and
1'.tarietta were forced lo fl ee from their
homes in low Jyjng areas as the !'jjpoksack
River ran over Its banks, cover!Pig most
major roads in the .area.
The main nortb-south transmission line
or the El Paso Natural Gas Company
was "badly bent'' by a slide on the
south bank of the Pilchuck River north
of Snohomish and the section was shut
down as a sa!e ty precauUon.
The closure bf the line in northwest
Washington caused a · shutoff of in·
terruptable service all over the state
and diminished natural gas supplies as
far av.'ay as northern Nevada. The com·
munities of Lake Stevens, Snohomish
and Monroe were completely without
him once ln an 1 altercation over the
sale of narcotics.
The defense, which planned to present
a "complete case" in Its effort to save
the four from the gas chamber , was
ordered to have its first wiLness ready
this afternoon.
They have cindicated that testimony
on the defendants' behalf may take 15 or 16 court days.
First witnesses for the defense will
be members of the "~tanson Family''
whe> will tell about the cult's life style
and peace-loving hippie ways.
Mal1SQll himseU was reported an1ious
to testify, as was Miss Alkins, who
reportedly planned to deny that it was
she wbo stabbed Miss Tate to death.
Stale policeman, to testify that Susan
Atkins was carrying a loaded gun and
once thraate.ned to kill him when he
arrested her in Oregon.
The thrust of the state's presentation
during the penalty phase of the trial
has been to show the jury -the same
one which convicted the four on 27
counts of murder and conspiracy in
the Tate murders -that the defendants
we re predisposed to violence.
The state was foiled last Friday in
its plan to in(roduce evidence concerning
an eighth murder with which the hippie
chieftain and Miss Atk..ins ~·ere charged.
Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older
accepted a defense argument that it
would be unfair for the prosecution to
present evidence concerning the killing
of musician Gary Hinman. with which
Manson and Miss Atkins have been
charged, but not tried.
The ruli ng cut abort by several weeks
the prosecution phase of the p e n a I t y
trial.
City Official's
Father Succumbs
a natural gas service. ~Funeral services will be held in Min-
A spokesman for El Paso gaid ~ tern-nesota for Matt W. Dostal, I.he father ~f
txirary bypass around the sectton of B h c· ,.._ · ·1 •1 the line bent and exposed by the flooding ewport eac ity \AJUncliman M1 an •• .
was expected to be completed some Dostal.
time today. The elder 1'.1r. Dostal died Sunday in
About 200 skiers trapped in the Mount ldinnesota at the age of 73.
Baker ski area we~ brought out Sunday ln 21ddition to his son, he leave!! his
after being forced to spend the night widow,'Mary, and daughter Mrs. Wallace
in lodges and cabins in the mountains. Selleseth, both of Minnesota, and... seven
The skiers were prevented from leav-grandchildren.
ing by washed out roads and bridges The family suggests those wishing lo
covered with water on Coal Creek and make memorial contribul.ions please con-
Boulder Creek. The !ikleri bypassed the tribute to Oralingua Foundation for the
watery AeCtions Sunday, using an old Deaf, 7056 S. Washinaton Ave., Wbittitr,
Jogging road. 90602.
•
OAILY PILOT Sll tf PM!•
Boat B11rns in Bay
1-larbor patrolmen mop up after fire which left the
O\vner of the 35-foot ketch Ton1aha\vk \Vith severe
burns. John E. Arens, 59, of 818 Aleppo St., New-
port Beach, \vas reported in good condition today at
Hoag Memorial Hospital. He suffered first and sec·
ond degree burns on his face, ar{Tls and hands Satur·
day in flash fire aboard his boat. Firemen said a
spark from the distributor set off the blaze just afler
Arens had taken on fuel at a Balboa Island gas dock.
His wife, Ruth, irso was burned, but was not hos-
pitalized. ·
Judge Calls for Delay
In Finance Theft Case
A two-week delay was ordered today
in the arraignment of a Hun tington Beach
man accused of involvement in a Laguna
Hills financial enterprise thal may cost
its investors more than $3 million.
Santa Ana Municipal Court Jud ge Paul
Mast ordered James E. Shipley, 38,
of 16951 Lowell Circle, to return lo
his courtroom Feb. 16. He set bail at
$250.000.
Shipley faces charges of grand theft.
forgery and conspiracy. All v.·ere filed
by the district attorney's office after
investigation of his role as vice pres ident
in the World Financial Trends empire
21dministrered by missing stockbroker
Joseph O. Dulaney.
Beach.
Shipley today bad a curt "no com-
ment" to offer as · he left Judge Mast's
courtroom. He had the same comment
for newsmtn as he lef~ a recent
bcinkruptcy court session in which he
dented any knowledge of Dulaney's
whereabouts or the reasons that led
to his boss' sudde n departure to Europe.
Shipley is accused of one count of
conspiracy to commit grand theft and
forgery. four counts of grand theft and
three counts of forgery.
..
f'ropa Page l
APOLLO .•.
-an operation which normally would
ha'>'.e oceurred on Wednesday.
Roosa i.1speeted the inside of the . upl·
lng with his hands and a flashlight
and reported "some impressions that
are rough to touch, probably scratched
in the surfa.ce of the drogue for about
a quarter of an inch deep." ·
"lt appears the probe hit the dro~tH!
dead center every lime we tried to
dock," Roosa said, ''but it just didn 't
c .~ch ."
The astronauts . then Inspected tht
mechanism and triggered it several
times by hand. It worked every time
-and thus fa!led to show w.tiat went
' rong.
The docking mech anism, v.'hich never
bc~ore has failed in flight. uses a pointed
"probe" on the command module to
nudge into 1 cone-shaped drogue on
the lunar lander.
Man l{ill ed,
48 Injured
111 LA Riot
LOS ANGELE8 IUPI\ -An over-
night curfew brought calm to lhe East
lJ'!s Angeles Mexican·Arneric<1n barrio
today fo\lov.·ing violent skirm ishes in
V.'hich one Chicano v.•as killed, 48 per·
60ns injured and 88 arrested.
Sunday's v.·indow.breaking and looting
ramp<1ge in a bu siness area fo!lo\\·ed a
peaceful rally at Belvedere rark of 5,000
Chicanos protesting alleged police bru·
tality. •
Cownty supervisors declared a ~late of
t'mergeney and imposed a 6:20 p.m. to
s a.m. curfew in a ID-square mile area.
Deputies said that 88_ persons v.·ere ar·
rested on charges ranging from failure
to disperse to-assault on an officer.
The windows of at least 60 businesses
were smashed and several stores \\'~re
looted.
Nine buildings including a ban k and
an automobile dealership were set ablaze
by firebombs. A Hquor store and bail
bonds building were gutted while dam"
age to Pan American National Bank
v.·as estimated at $15,000. \
Sheriff fltter Pitchess said the shoot-
ing death resu1ted v.•hen six deputies near
the bank \\'ere confronted by about 500
to 600 demOnslrators v.·ho hurled missiles
and advanced on the officers. Pitchess
said the deputies fired warning shots
over the heads of the crowd with shot-
gun! and also fired shots into the ground.
The sheriff said the victim, who was
not immediately identified, and the ..
woundiJlg of the other persons occurred
at this time although the circumstances
surrounding the incident had not yet
been determined.
Twenty-three civilians suffered in·
juries. 14 of them wounded by gunfire.
Twelve deputies suffered minor injuries
and 12 firemen ·weie treated for smoke
inhalation after battling a total of 35
fires in the area, most of them in \{ash
bins.
Total structural damage was estimat-
ed at $190,00l.l.
Shortly after darkness came lo the
are3. Pi trhess said deputies v.·ere in
control of the situation. He said 500 of-
fi cers v.•ere used in the area at the peak
of the violence.
''There's absolutely no provocation for
this degree of violence," the sheriff add·
ed. Dulaney, 37, and his wife Marlene.
36, Newport Beach face identical
charges. They left with their three
children for Munich, Germany. in Ju11e
1969, shortly before an investigation of
the now bankrupt empire administered
from offices in Laguna Hills and Seal
Ma n, 'Girl Held
In Huntington
Party Sln y ing ·Colder Than Hell
DAILY ,ILOT Plltlt bV J•hn V1!11rr.1
A man and a teenaged girl are being
~eld by .Huntington ~ach police today
1n a sw1tchblai 1ite 11:!aying of the
host at a Friday arty in dov.•ntown
Hunlington Booch.
Suspects Paul A. tenerson. 22, and
Canda ce Neal. 17, ~oth of Downey. were
. captured Jn a dragnet operation by the
Downey police officers Saturday night.
The victim was Arthur E. Bashaw,
21. of 321 7th SL. Huntington Beach .
Stenerson \.\'85 booked on murder
charges 11·hile l\lis~ Neal 111as charged
with being an accessory in the alleged
crime.
Huntington detectives Gene Pool. Ra v
Anderson and Bruce Young brought the
couple to Huntington ' Beach around 3
p.m. They said the girl v.·ill be arraigned
in juvenile court .
Bashaw died at Hunt ing ton Intercom·
munity Hospital shortly after midnight
Friday. Doctors made an all out effort
to save the life of the young man
breeding to death from multiple stab
v.·ounds believed to have been inflicted
v.·ith a sv.·itchblade knife at his :ipart-
menl.
Police believe Bashav.· held a pa r l y
Friday night al his apartment. v.·hich
v.'as crashed by a group of youths from
the Downey area.
Frigid Wave Grips North , Mid1 vest
By Unl!A!d Preis International
The temperature in Hell, i\!ich .. was
nine below zero ear!y today. Il was colder
than that in many places around the
country.
Readings between 10 a~d 20 below were
commonplace arounrt the upper Midwest.
F'ro.~l or freeze warnings were in effect
in Lou isiana and i\l ississippi. a hard
freeze was expected in nor1hern Georgia
and cold \\'ave warnings were in effect
for North Caroli na and northwest Florida.
Detroit and Toledo, Ohio. established
records for Feb. I. wi!h respective read-
ings nf four below and five below at 2
a.m. The temperature still was fall ing.
A resid£'nt of Apolln. Pa .. Pop. 2AOO. said
early toda y it "'as "just plain zero" the re.
Travelers warning s \\•ere in effect in
parts of North Dakota. South Dakota and
~1innesota as northwesterly winds gusted
!o 40 miles an hour, whipping snow from
last week's 111.·o storms.
The early morning read ing of two be-
low in Minneapolis. combined with biting
v.'inds, sent the v.·ind chill factor to 43
below zero.
Some 200 snov.·mobile drivers got their
entrance fees back Sunday when an oval
tra ck at Iron Mountain. Mich., Jroze to a
<1angerous condition before a scheduled
race .
More than 1,000 persons were left v.·ith·
out heat for more than a day in north-
eastern 1\1innesota when a natural ga !I
main broke betv.·een l\eewa!in and Coler-
aine late Friday nigh!. The 1\orthcrn Ga!I
Cnmpany said Jhe cold prevented immed·
iate repa irs. Residen ts sought refuge in
businesses and other homes as tempera-
tures dipped to near 30 below.
A train ·carrying a ski tour from Chi·
cago to Iron a1oun1ain. ;\>heh, took 1612 hou rs for th e eight-hour trip v.·hen fr1g1d
temperatures and drifting srrow crippled
engine units.
T.,.,·o days or subze ro cold ln Jhe Chi-
cago area destroyed most of lhe rare
tropical plants at the subu rb;in Oak Pa rk
C~nservatory \\'hen the bu1!d1ng·s heat
fa iled . A conserva1ory v.·orker, hea ring of
the situation. \\'alkcd there from her
home, suffering severe fros!hlte.
At least !O Chicago-a rea Jandlorrls 1rere
summo~ed to ~ourt for nll_rgedly failing
to provide suff1cJent heat 1n their build·
in gs. \ MARCH INCLUDED DURABLE "UNCLE SAM" ON STILTS WHO WALKED A MIL E
There Were Dlff1rence1 Of Op Inion But No Seri ou • Incidents
i•Plijij!(1}I
ORANGE COAST PUl!ILISHINO COMil.t.NY
Rob.rt N. w •• d
,rnldtnl 11'1d 'ubl!IMr
J1tk It. Curl•v
Vk:• ,raldt...t tl'ld Gt,...-1! Mtnao••
EOllor
Tho1r111 K•t¥il
Thom11 A. Murphin•
L P•t•• Kri•g
Ntwpott •-• Offlt•
2211 W•1I l•lbo1 loul 1¥t rd
M1l1ln9 Addr•1u P.O. l o• 1171. 92661
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DAILY "IL.01, woll ""'kll Is COlnbl'°" "'-N-~ II pUblitMd 41 11V lltfllt S-
Iiiy "' t.tPe••ll ecm""" tor ~ •ffcll. NltWW'I -...cti. CO.It ~. Hlltlllf\0""1
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,.,., ..... 17141 642·4l21
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tclltorllot mtlll• •• M~tl1em ... 11 i..11ln -v Ill ~ -..n111ou1 'lll'Cliol "'"'
mtulOn ol Clll'Vt~M -·
........, cf•H l!Mlt~ 1'11'9 ti NfWllll" •..ell aNI (Otl• Mhf, (111111r,.11, '\/bt.t rl11tlon ov
'ctr•I•• '' tt "*'llllf1 bf ll\ltl U 11 tnOflttll\>1 ,..11,!jff dtt!l11<1llorl~, I? U 'l'Ol'l!l!lf.
.Atlanta Democrat
C1iosen to Fill
Sen. Russell Seat
ATLANTA <UPI) -David Gambrell,
a 41-year-0ld Atlanta -attorney and
chairman of the Georgia Democratic:
party. was named today by Gov. Jimmy
Carter to fill the unexpired term (),
the late Sen. Richard Russell.
Russell, dean o[ the Senate in Y!'hich
he served for 38 years, dled Jan. Zl
of a respiratory ailment. His term ex·
pires in January, 1973.
Gambrell is expected to seek the
Democratic nom ination for a full six-year
term in the t9n primary. One of his
opponents likely will be Lt. Gov. Lester
Maddox.
Gambrell. son of E. Smythe Gambrell.
former President of the American Bar
As.wciation, was picked by carter lasl
fall to carry out his reforms in the
State Democratic parly. He was a close
adviser and contributor to Carttr In
lhe latter's campaigns for governor in
!llf6 and 1970 .
.Reds Report Bag
TOKYO <UPll -The L11n5 P11tr inl1c
Front clainitd today Communist forces
In Laos last month 11hot down thrf"e
US. aircraft, killing a total of 20 crew
members.
Fron• Page 1
McI NTIRE ...
have only one Uncle Sam to m a r c h
with us." he said.
The ki ckoff for the marches v.•as
tarmarkerl for San Clemente. Dr.
~lclntire :said. because of the presenrt
of La Casa Pacifica, President Nixon's
villa .
But anli·Nixon sentiment ran high
among some of the minister's march ers.
"\I/here Is this \Vesttrn White House
\\'e hear about?" one man in his sos
asked his fellows .
"It's down the road a piece," said
another. ''but don't bothtr, they v.·on't
even let you get close."
Ball oo n, Ca r Crash,
Honest to Goodness
ST. PAUL (UPI) -A hit-and-run
balloon was blamed Sanday for a bii l·
loon-automobile crash ntar here-per·
hip., tht first In history.
Two perliclpants in the St. Paul Win·
ter C.1rnival balloon race were saillnr;: •
along 11t about SO feel. v.·hen a strong
downdraft sent the balloon skidding on·
to tht Ice of While Bear Lake. TI1e
rondol11 skidded a c r o s s the Ice 11nd
~mashed lnlo tht car of a c11rnlval of·
ficial. Thtrt were .only minor Injuries.
•
We are clearing out hu11clrecls of items at clras•
tically recl~cecl prices. Come in, and shop
around. A pawn shop is more fun than a rum•
Jn•ge sale.
HERE ARE A Fii!W EXAMPLES
-MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS-JEWELRY GUITARS ISpoo;>hl ......................•. Rog. 26.50 $1.2.50
GUITARS !Spani,h) ........................ Reg. 59 .50 $39.95
50% OFF
All dl•mond1 1u•r•ritttif t•
ap:pralae •t 40~~ ffttft or
y.vl' monty N <k In full .
CL AR INETS ................................................ from $35.00
SN ARE DRUM •.. -........... -....... ----·-··· .. -from $12.50
FLUTES 141 ") ......................... ·--····-···-··· ...... $85.00
ACCORDIANS 1120 Bass I ...................... $35.00 ctttd up
FRENCH HO RN ·······················-·········-·········-··· $1l5.0D
-.SPORTING GOODS-
0oub10 Taper
SKI POLES .................. 511.95
A11ortod
GOLF CLUBS ............... 50¢ ea.
2 Only l . C. Smith Oovltl• l •rrtltd
SHOT GUNS ................ 585.00
MANY CAMERAS AT llG SAYI NGS
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and L(d)AN
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
' DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA l'.:~tw~c~ •·larbot' l roodwcry •
WE LOAN BUY· SELL & TRADE ALMOST EVERYTHING
STEREO
VISIT OUR
SOUND
ROOM
NEW ond USED STEREOS
IARCSA INS
It's Th t M1ppenln9 Thlnt
¥~ 30% OFF
STEREO & MONAU RAL
RECORD ALBUMS
ALL ARE 25" POPULAR "
ARTISTS
I TIACll l API
PLAYER DECK
Plw' Int• ,,., ,._, .. '2915 19.91 V1lw1.
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New Hats Add Service to Wardrobes:
.
A year of .intensive community service triining is drawing to a close
for Newport Harbor Ser.vice League 41rovisionals, who will be honored dur•
ing a luncheon Thursday, Feb. 18. in the Balboa home of ~1rs. \Vatter Gib-
a;on Jr.
The course, which ,co..,ered eight basic topics, was designed to furth er
educate and inspire young \\'omen wh o are interested in community involve-
ment.
Topics included the history and development of Orange County, or·
ganized e!forts in community planning, commun ity health and welfare, pnlr
lie and private education, governments. ind ustrial and commercial condi·
l ions. cultural growth and the role of the vo lunteer in the community.
To complete the training, the provisionals heard talks by active and
· sustaining members \Vho are working in community agencies. Co mmittee
chairmen "'ill outline the league· projects and commu nity agencies "''ill be
explored for their volunteer r pportunities and requirements.
COMMITTEE HONORED -
AJso honored cfuring the lun'cheon will be members of the provisional
committee, rhaired by Mrs. Donald Ayres Jr. They include the l1mes. B. \V.
• \Villiamson, Alex Robertson Jr., Hancock Banning Ill, Gary Davidson, Kpl
Barnum, William F. Bonner, Ronald Foell and Edward F. Ward Jr.
Provisionals are the ?wtrnes. Bartlett Bro\vn, Albert Brownell. John
Cashion, Rondell Hanson. Stanton llerpick. Elliott Johnson, William B. t.tar·
tin, Keith Nelson, Randolph Parker, Ben]amin Robinson , J. Frederick Simp-
son, James Walsworth and Ed\vard Whitehouse.
To explore the field or education in the county, the provisionals were
dispatched in teams to intervie\.\ .. administrators and teachers in all phases
of educa tio n. Concluding this segment of the study \vas a panel discussion.
moderated by Selim Franklin, president of the Ne'.'•port-l\1esa Unified School
District board.
Also on the provisio nals' schedule \\'ere a lunch and an informal dis·
cus.sion with Ne\vport Beach officials including E. F. Hirth, mayor; Tully
Seymour, city attorney; Jan1es Glavas, chief of police; Harvey Hurlburt. city
manager. and a spec ial guest, Cal\'in Sc hmidt, judge of the li1uni cipal Court.
STUDY TOURS '
The provisional s toured the Costa ~1esa City Ha!J an d Police Depart·
n1ent. attended a breakfast meeting \vith Ne\\•port Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce members and heard a ta lk by Phil Bettencourt. administrative·assisl·
ant to the Newport Beach city manage r, on tr~nsportation and the Orange
County Airport.
They scheduled a tour' and di scussion of the lrvine industrial , agric¥1·
t ural and commercial complex and heard a talk by Juvenile Court Judge
Robert P. Kneeland.
Other tours and disc ussions in cluded Juvenile Hall with Don Hall-
strom, Bowers Museum with Orange County his torian Mrs. Ellen Lee. the
Back Bay \vith an OCC biology professor, . .o\lbert Sitton l-lome and other wel·
fare agencieS'.
Concluding the course \Ve re talks by an authority on estuari es and
land grants in Orange County. a drug panel and a talk on the cultural scene
by Tom Garver of the Ne,vport Harbor Art hlu seum .
TRYING ON FOR SIZE -Afte_r a year of studY., provisional s
or the Ne,vport H:trbor Setvice League ate about to pick their
areas for community service~ying,on the various interests
for size are (lop, le'ft to right) the limes. Albert Bron'nell.
Randolph Parker and (seated) Stanton Herpick. Provision al s
\vill be honored during a luncheon Thu rsday, Feb .. 18.
Customs , Cult'ures Shared
Tea Flavored I nternationa I ly
1'ea \\·as setved \ri lh an international fla vo r
\vhen National Charity League members and their
Ti cktocker daugh lcrs gathered in the Dover Shores
hon1 e of l\'Jrs. Royal Duan e Tucker Saturday.
The occasion \Vas the annual mother-daughter
tea or the grou ps, to \\•hich American Field Servi ce
students \verc in vited as special guests.
l\1embe rs \.\'ere given an opportunity-to meet and
talk \rith the students and hear them speak about
their countries during the 2 to 4:30 p.m. event.
' FOREI GN GUESTS
A1nong guests \rere l\vo students fr om Coron a
del ?iilar Jl ig h School, Ann e Bouffier from . Paris.
,,·ith her American mo ther Mrs. Hara re lr\v1n and
sister Na n lr\\·in, and Eli Fure from Oslo, Vi1ith Mrs.
l\1ason E. Si ler·and Pam and Pat Siler.
From NC\\'po rl llarbor 1-Iigh School aame J\·lonica
de Ca roli s of San ta Fe. Argentina, \vith Mrs. Lad is·
la\v Reday and Lenore Reday, Phanit Na Lam pang
fr om Thail and \Vilh l\1r~. Robert Oa\vso n and Linda
Da\vson, and Rachael Perhan from Bristol, England,
\vith ?i.trs. Jan1es Fitzgerald and Jan Fitzgerald.
The students spoke during two half-hour pro·
gram s, and each n1cmber \Vas assigned a time to
arrive to share in the presentations.
fn the receivi ng line \\•ith l\Irs. Tucker and her
daughter~. Joni and Patti Tucker, were Mrs. Herbert
John l\·lean y, chapter president, and her daughter.
Debbie i\1eany. and l\fr s. Guy Austin Smith. TiC::k·
tacker coord inator. and her daughter, Hollie Smith.
Jl onored guests \vere all past presidents of Na·
liona l Charity League, Nen1port Chapter alon g \vith
!\!rs. Ric hard Ferda. presid ent of National Charity
Lea gue J uniors, and Mrs. Penny Mclver, a te'1.cher
at the John 'f racy Clinic Demonstration Home in
Costa l\1EtPa, '-''hich is sponsored by the league.
Other sp,ecial guests \vere Mrs. James Robert
Gage. district director of the Am erican Field Serv-
ice, and 111rs. Robert Bruce Under\vood, activi tie11
chairman at Corona del l\1ar I-ligh School. Both are
league men1bers.
ACTIVI TI ES FURTH ERE D
As an added hi ghlight 'or the tea. riiTrs. ritc any
presented l\Irs. Ga ge a che ck to further the activi·
tics of Atnerican Field Service in the area.
Presidin g at the tea. table \Vere the pres ident s
or the various Ticktocker grade groups. along \vith
their 1noth crs. They are Glenna 'Anderson and l\frs.
Edmond Anderson ; Jana Granze lla and iirs. John
DaPrato Granzella; Shelley Samuels and ~trs. Jack
Keith Samuels; Vicki Lohman and 11-trs. Rowland
Gardner Lohman, and Susan. Pangburn and Mrs.
Clifton \VaJter Pangburn.
Coordinating lhe preparations \Vas ?ii1rs. Richard
\Vatter Smith, tea chairman.
TicktOcker assignments for the tea included
sandwiches, seventh and eighth grade; name tags
ninth grade ; lea, coffee and punch, 10th grade;
mints and nuts, 11th grade, and cookies, 12th grade.
Invitations were mailed by the 11th graders.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
M•"U', f1111'111ry 1, 1'11 N P'lt t 11
ANOTHER MOTHER'S DAY -Mother's Day com°'
t\vice a year for National Charity League members.
"·ho \vcre honored by their Ticktocker daug hters
durin g a tea Saturday. Giving the red carpet treat·
nlent lo their mother, Mrs. Royal Duane Tucker,
arc Joni (left) and llatli Tucker.
Fiance' s Secret Desire Outshines Glowing Wedding Pl.ans
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am 2Q. t.ly
fiance is 21. We are planning to be
married soon and I need an. ansv.•er
to a question. J and I had a ta lk
Jasl week and hr confessed he has ahvays
v.•an teii to be married in a purple sequi n"
jacket. J told him I'd have to think
it over. The next day I discussed it
with my mother. She said it was all
right wilh her. if the minister didn"l
object. So I asked the minister. He
said he didn 't see any reason "'hy my
fiancc cobldn 't get married ln a purple
sequin jacket if he "'anted to. !ince
groo ms are «earing all sorts or off-beat
ouU its these days. (Brides. Loo. l
\\'hen l told J he replied, "l'vr changed
1ny mi nd. It would take the attention
away from you." This "'as very gweet
but now 1 reel guilt y -knowi ng how
muc h it meant to hi m. Should I insist~
ANN LANDERS ~
-ONTARIO BRIDE
DEAR ON: No. ~t It be. If there's.
anythln"g •. bride doe sn't need ll's a
groom in a purple sequin jacket.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I \\'I S hit
hard by that lette r about the litile 7-year·
old girl ~·ho climbs on 1nen·s laps and
behaves in an aggressi vely anectionate
manner. I was that little girl 20 years
ago, To this day I can hear my mother
say. "Isn't it cute the way Sherry goes
fnr th~ men? She docsn·t care fbr "'on1cn al au ' ..
I
You "·ere right in your ans"·er. Ann.
The reason the little girl cra ves male
aff ection is because her 0\.\11 rather ig·
nored her. I know, bec_ause ·my dad
was like lhat. He never once let me
sil on his lap. J cannot recall that
he ever kissed me~
Do you know what happens to liUle
girls with cold fathers who reject \he m?
They see "daddy'' in every male who
pays them the slightest altentio n. As
teenagers they arc pushovers for heels.
swingers and lcchcrou3 old men who
like young flesh.
I lived through It all but 1 was luckier
than most. J met a wonderful man
"·ho understood my problem and helped
me get well. (Yes. it is a sickness.)
\Ve have a v.1onderful marrJage OO\'V
and I r.onsider myself e x t r e m c I y
fortuna lc. I hope the , little girl in the
Jetter is as lucky as I v.·as. I •will
pray for her. -SHERRY OF BOISE
DEAR SllERRY: Thank you for •
touchln« letter. I hope the unaffectionate
fathers out there who ha\•e little girls,
v.·111 read II and do some soul8earehlng.
DEAR ANN LA NDERS: 1£ 1 am
\\•allowing in se1£·pity please kic k me
in the bloomers. If I have a right
to complain, say so.
I hAvc been marri ed 15 years to a
n1nn \Vho ·works har d. pays the bills
on time. is a good f~1ther and ha~
never been known to lose his temper.
He tells me I am a fine wiie and
a \\'Onderrul perso n. Should I be satisfied ?
\Veil -here's the rest of ii.
From the day v.·e married I ha \'e
been alone on Thanksg iving. Ne1v Yea r's,
my birthday, his birthday, the children:s
birthdays, ti.1othe r's Day. our anniversary
and every holiday that gi\!CS a man
a day off from \\'Ork . The re a s on I
am alone so much is because my ·husband
is a fisherm an, a hunter, a bowler.
a swimmer, a surrcr . a skater ond
a card player. In other words he·s in·
!crested in everyth ing but staying home
wi lh his family.
Do I have the right to say son1 thing!
-A ~!AR RI ED \\I JOO\V IN SAGIN1\\V
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DEAR SAG: Of course you do, but
I h&\'e a bunt'!h ii won 't do any good
al this late datt. The lime to bavt
"sa id something:" was J5 years ago.
You don 't mention whether YOU. enjoy
any of these acUvitics. I see in your
list many things the family could do
together. 11 Ibis ~slble? Explore lht
prospects :ind It ml111bt {lroducc a partlll
M?lution.
Drinking may ~ "In " to lhe klas
you run with -but ii can put you
"out .. for ,keeps. You can cool It and
slay JlOflular Rc;:id "Booze and You
-For Teenngcrs Only." St'nd 35 ccnl.£
In coin and a long. sel!·addressed.
stomped f!llvelofll" \vith your request in
care of !he DAILY Pl!.OT.
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Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Vir·go: Shake · Off Lethargy
TUESDAY
FEBRUARY 2
By SYDNEY OMARR
The S11Utar1an CUI be
toelable, a1reeable, bat wan11
to create policy and be' one
wbo t1 c1Ued apon. to explain.
and dlrttt. U you want to
teep a Salfttarlap •• a frirad,
·au advice. Notltlnr please1
lhl1 aaUve more thu being
able to erpll!D and teach.
Some fa.mou1 pertom bora nn·
der Sa,tttarius include Al
K111De, Flip WU.On and Emlyn
Williams.
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
·, Hold on to valuables. One who
~gs siren song does not have
your Interests at heart. Be
receptive. Make c h an g e s .
Realize your own worth. Build
selt~steem.
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20):
You cannot throw of I
responsibility. There ·are com·
mlbne11ts which you must
fulfill. Family members may
try to force issues. Don't let
anyone impose his will on you.
GEMINl <M•.r 21.June 20 ):
Perceive hidden meanings.
Find out why people act the
way they do. Don't be lulled
Into complacency, You do
have a mission. M a j o r
purposes ca A now be clarified.
CANCER (Jwie 21.July 221:
Hold tight to principles. You
will have additional
responsibilities. You can han-
dle them. But you also should-
be compensated1 for efforts.
Know this -act like You
know it.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
may aot be obvious. t
PISCES (Feb. !~March 20):
You get what you want by
uUlizing written wr.n:t. Don't
attempt to suhsti tute
superficiality for t ho r o u g h
unders_tanding. See through
sham. Be alert, nware -and
slncere.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY . you 1hould
culdvate appreciation f o r
rbytb.m and music. A1any
per10111 are drawn to you -
and you cu easily be spoiled.
You love attention. You 1lso
are willing to aid others to
attlin goals. Recent flurry of
confusion.. is going to be
replaeed by some solid ad·
vances . By April, you should
be more comfortab le ln finan·
clal area.
Finish projects. A v o l d
prematur! ·starts. Be willing
toi lest a relationship. Put a
stop to wishful thinking. One
who constantly takes ad·
vantage of you should be put
in place.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Take a chance on your
abilities. Shake off letharizy.
What you need is not as far
off as might be imagined.
St. Andrew's Setting
For Lane-Shaw Rites •
Utilit.e past experience. Open D u r in g d o u b t e r I n g
communicatiol! lines. ceremonies Mary Kay Shaw
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): became the bride of Lindsay
Lie low. Play waiting game. Perry Lant.
Relative who whines should
be helped -but do set limit. The Rev. Dr. Ch a r I es
Means refuse to be door mat. Dierenfield performed l h e
Accent on getting opposing nuptials in St. A n d r e w ' s
forces to cooperate. Act ac-Presbyterian Church,_ Newport
cordingly. , Beach for the daughter of Mr.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): and Mrs. Donald W. Shaw
Be versatile. Some of your of Newport Beach and the
ideas are ready for greater son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry
develooment. One who seems C. Lane of Tucson.
out of reach expresses in· Given in marriage by· her
terest. Grab'' opportunity. father, the bride asked her
Make small sacrifices for sister, Mrs. Paul H. Reynolds
greater izains. to be her matron of "honor.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov . 22-Bridesmaids were hfrs. David
Dec. 21 ): Some basic re-Hutchinson. Mrs. w i I J i a·m
quirements take more money Dumler, Miss Pam Trowe and
than anticipated. Re ad Miss Cathy Lane, t be 4 between the lines. Don't be caught short, Study Ubra bridegroom's sister.
message. Get expert advice. Attending as best man was MRS. l. P. LANE
Take nothln'1: for granted. '-1:ichae1 Williams, w h 1 1 e Newport Beach Home
Square Dance Buffs Take New Step
Principles
Of Decor
Capsuled
A series of Interior
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. ushers were Tom Combellick,
1
, __________ "i
19): Good lunar aspect coin· Tim Morrison, David DeCoil.-P
cides wHh seiious decision cinl and Reynolds. ~
connected with c h 11 d re n , The bride is a graduate of TER! Round dan.ces. will .be fitted in between square
dances begmn1ng Friday, Feb. 5, at the Valentine
SpeciaJ dan.ce of the Lace 'n Leath~ lfk}uare Dance
Club, w~en 1.fr. an_d rvtrs. Jess Sasseen start calling
along with Marv L1nqner. club caller. Swinging out
v
for the first square and round dance program from
8 to 11 p. m. in the Huntington Beach Recreation
Ce nter are (left to right) th e Sasseens and the Juan
DiJlons.
Ow side Serves Mental Health
decoraUng classes will begin
this w e e k with Miss Ellie
Hennessee as instructor.
Subjects to be covered in-
clude selecting the right look,
color, floor covering, wall
treatments, art principles and
accessories.
speculation. You come out on Corona del Mar High School o
top -after a trying time. and the University of Southern
Keep the faith. Creative ap-California. Her husband is a
proach overcomes handicap. graduate of the University of
AQ UARIUS (Jan. 20--Feb. Arizona and is affiliated with
18): What appears lo be Phi Gamma Delta.
v.•eight on your shoulders may The newlyweds will rtside
turn out to be asset. White ~l~n~N~e~wpo~rt~B~e~a~ch~.--_ _;~~ elephant. could be of actual Ii
Friends
Lend Aid
Games Lunch Ta bled
April Rite
'In Offing
The eight-week classes will
be open to both m"en and
women and a textbook will
be included with the course.
Cla.5.$tS will take place on
value. Get expert appraisal.
You have plenty -but it
Monday and Thursday even· Sea Sirens
factory authorized
1ifrs. Rosemary Goodenough,
founder of Friends Outside,
will speak following a noon·
potluck luncheon of the Unitar·
ian Uwaversallst Women's Fed·
eratidn Thursday, Feb. 4, In
the Costa Mesa Church.
Friends Outside Is a n
organization that works with
families of prisoners. Mrs.
Goodenough's early activities
were involved with helping the
families of men incarcerated
in Santa Clara Jail and
Soledad but she now is work-
ing in Orange and Ventura
CO\.lnties.
The public is invited lo at-
tend.
Civil War
Drama Told
Civil \Var days will be
recalled for member! or the
South Coast Club of Laguna,
Beach on Wednesday. Feb. 3,
as Leisure World resident.1
Mrs . Florence Cox reads ex·
cerpts from letters ·written byl
her grandfather to his young
bride white he~ was away
fighting.
Mrs. Cot has traveled ex·
tenslvely to collect these let·
ters which are to be bound
In a book and preserved in
the Huntington Library.
Social hour will begin at
11 :30 a.m. in the Towers
restaurant u11der the direction
of Mrs. Joe W. Long and
Mrs. Paul Hill~ Reservations a · hf' made
voith the htmes. ra Stickell.I
chainnan. George Johnson. or 1
F. G. Nichols. I
YOGA IS
(~\ ~v~ -
JTANOUl6-0N YOU• MIA01 WALKING ON 11'1•11
s1ntNIJ LIKI" ... IT21L1 NO!
YOU,.,. .... Y ....
y .. , 11 tM' SCllNCI tot
Yll•llty 6 "•l1t.
ll'ltll Ol!MONSTltATION
TUii. NllHl'T_, .. "'°
Ckuon S~ We4.
YOGA CENTER
MJ I , ltl'fl SI, .. ,, I
Ctlll M...._. ......
CtlNI " ¥M ,,.._
FAIR
F1d, f1 ir, f1ct111I. Tho11
fhr11 wer'• "'"' 11p f1cte1t ht
,,,,1ti111 111 th• DAILY PIL01
1dilo1i1I p191 •"•rt ~''f·
Playing games to benefit the
rehabilitation or f o r m e r
mental patients-will be
membera and guests of, the
Fountain Valley Woman's
Club.
Mrs. Joseph Giesing, mental
health chairman, v.·ill open her
home for a games luncheon
at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Feb.
3, and proceeds from the
luncheon will be used to pro-
vide art and crafts materials
for the Garden Grove Mental
Health Activity Center.
One of three such centers
Laguna Group
Amearican Legion Auxiliary
of Laguna Beach gathers the
second and fourth Thursday
evenings in the Legion Hall.
Prince of Peace Lutheran inp from 7 to 8:30, Thursday located in Orange County, it f o 30 t TOPS •-s· t In Church, C.Osla Mesa will be mornings rom 1 : o noon .x:a u-ens mce is guided by specially trained and Thursday afternoons from Killybrooke School, Co 1 ta
volunteers who offer fonn~r the setting for the April 3 J to 2:30 at Sean:, South Coast Mesa. Programs begin at 7 . r . nuptials linking Joyce Runge Plaza. p.m. every Wednesday. pr.t1ents riendship, security and Michael Ollila. .., __________ ;;;;;i ________ _
and needed therapy during l\.iiss Runge, daughter of ~1r. 11
their readjustment to the com· and Mrs. E. H. Runge of
munity. Huntington Beach, is a
The center Is open each graduate or Marina High
"MABEL -COME IN AND
GET YOUR PANTSUIT"
Tuesday between 9:30 a.m. School and UCI. She teaches wo to•v• • 1u11 1111e1;o,, of 1><1•u111u1 yu111 ,., ,,, "'t 1
and 12:30 p.m. and the State at the UCI Preschool. "'"' co10r1 sco !hot you c•n ~n11 ~· ow11 ~1n11v11 •• drHt. W1'll h•IP YOV "' tl1'1ecl. Knll!l"g m•chlntl I Department of Social Welfare Her fiance, son of Mr. and 1r1 h•r• 100. CGm• 1 ... ,.,Ml 9e1 •II th• d1t1111. j
hopes to open such centers Mrs. Eino Oltila ol Costa The KNIT WIT'o",'",.~?AST 1 in all communities on a five-l\1esa. is a Costa Mesa High ,.._
day basis, Mrs. Giesing said. School graduate and served rhono 545.2112 COSTA MESA
Tickets for the luncheon are1 :;;i~n~t~he~A~ir~F~o~rc~e~·====~~~~==~~~~~~ $1.75 and anyo~ attending ls!t
asked to bring a packaged
cake or cookie mix which the
center uses for its weekly
refreshments.
l\trs. Giesing or Mrs. Gerald
Wessler may be contacted for
additional information.
FABRIC VALUES!
PETTI-POINT PIQUE PRINTS
Crowning Glory
beauty salons
Brilliant new spring colors in mod designs ••• all on the
season's mo st popular fabr ic
PERMANENT PRESS, MACH INE WASH
NEVER NEEDS IRONlt-)G
·PERM SUPER SALE!
• $20 MAGIC CURL
• $25 GUMOUR CURL
• $30 REGAL CURL
$ 9.50
$11.50
$14.50
BUDGET PERM always $5.95 (llormal Hair)
SPECIAL SAVINGS!
SHAMPOO.SET
STYLE-CUT
SOUTH COAST PLAIA
Lowtt L•~•l-N1wt to Stt•t
·-·-94,.711, Op•"' E"'"'"''
Mell.•THS.-Wtcl
2.95
1.50
lot•r W ...
3.45
2.00
1,11. 17tli ST., COSTA MISA
'"'" $41·••1• Opt11 E~111i1191 l Su11d1y
Wt (All! 1_,ul '(8•1 l.ell '(8or aou!I
REG. 98c YARD VALUES
4411/45" wide
100'/. cotton
' NEW SPRING WOOLS
BONDED KNIT J~RSEY
acrylic and wool in e wide range of solid colors
bonded to acetate tricot.
ALL WOOL FLANNEL
for new spring dresses, pant suits or mod-look
91uchos.
BONDED COORDINATES
PLAIDS 'N SOLIDS
textured matchmates on acetate & nylon
54" widths
HOUSE oF FS BRrcs
S••th CMst Pln-lri.tol ot Se11 Oio9• fw y.
CMt• M-545·1116
O,nttf•lr M1ll-Or11191thorp1 1114 H•rDor
hllort•-121.211•
HOl'lll' Pia-17th 11 l1i1lol
Snt• Ao-543·5551
l111H1a P•rll C111ter--L1 P1lm1 tf $1111!0~
l110tte , ..... ~21•J2J
save $100 now
on Corning
• -
No burners. No coils. No drip pans. Jost a
l!at white mrface. Complete tbermooatic
heat con!rol Tbe Counterange" electric
range with sel!<leaning oven from Com-
ing. Comes with eight Cookmatcs• cook-
ware. See the most revolutionary advance
in cookins in 100 years.
SET OF 8 CORNING
COOKMATES INCLUDED!
,
·-
SAVE $100 '$ 9995
WAS 5599.'5 4
COSTA ME5A-411 E. Seventeenth St.
646-1684 Dtily 9.9 Stt. 9-6
EL TORO-LAGUNA HILLS PLAZA
137-3830 Doily'l0-6 M/F .1C·9
'
I
r
7
---
7
Cosia Mesa Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Stoeks
vo\. 64, NO. l7, 3 SECTION S, 32 PAGES ORANGE COIJNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRU.ARY l, 1971
#
TEN CENTS
Join Mclntire's San Clem·ente March ----By JOHN VALTERZA
Of IM D•ll1 l'lt.1 i111t
Dr. Carl Mcintire and 2.IXXI or his
followers marched through tht' streets
of San Cemente over the weekend,
:iinging and chanting for a total armed
victory in Vietnam.
And at the end of the march -
which included Uncle Sam on stilts
towering above young and old alike,
Dr. Mcintire experienced difficulties with
I.be one piece of equipment which led
-to a two-week doMybrook with the ci ty
council.
After being the object of two battles
Jn city hall , the sound system broke
down for more than an hour.
But, undaunted, the fiery New Jersey
minister with an enormous fol10Y.1ing
from his radio broadcast! used a bullhorn
while an alternate system was being
repaired.
The hunt'lreds of marchers -many
of them elderly -gaUtered on the
flatland and slopes ol Linda Lane Park onlookers from the nearby Linda Lane
amid scores of banners anlt placards beach.
with slogans blending religion and At one poin t of the procession fi ve
politic:;. bikini-clad girls y,·alked beside the
Some called for an end to the "no-win" paraders:
policy of the U.S. Government. l' Several older men snarled disgust at
No inciden ts which could be interpreted the girls' attire. • ~
as hostile towaid the aroup took place "First, they allowed burlesque indoors,
at the Saturday afternoon kickoff of now it'.s in the public streetl ...
a series of victory marches throughout shameful," growled one man carrying
the nation. a huge flag .
The event, however, -drew curious -The · MclnUre followers came from
throughout the Southland to President
Nixon 's adopted town.
Delegations from Los Angeles and San
Diego County fonned. the majority of
the group.
A few hundred others were !rom local
communities.
Despite the warm weather, few of
the elderly felt ill e l f e c t a from. the
one-mile walk through neighborhood
streets.
Only one person required first-aid.
Dr. Mclntire's sWtman took much ol
the attention of the day.
The man, who has marched with
Mcintire folJoWings ~ore, wore boxing
gloves and was bound at the wrlsf,
to demonstrate the effects of the "~win
policy."
"Our I.rot.Ible," Dr. Mcintire aaJd, "la
that SOOD we will have simultaneoua
marches throughout the land, and we
(Sff MclNTIRE, Pase I)
Apollo I ~ugged
Linkup Trouble Still Not Solved
Gets (Zap) Rubella Shot
It only hurts when you look wa~ the,_ ~ostur~ adopt·
ed by this youngster as he received his antt·rubella
shot Sunday from Drs. Dor othy Ray Oeft) and Helen
Trotter at Newport Harbor High School. He was one
of an estimated 47,500 youngsters who got new
vaccine in one-day countywide effort against birth
DAtL Y l'ILOT l'IWM •r LM ... , ...
defects cau sed when pregnant mothers are expo~ed
to children who have rubella (German measl,es).
County Health Department .officials said Sunday's
turn out for the v,:ell -advertised free shots was not
as large as th ey had hoped for, but termed the ef·
fort "a good start."
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPIJ -
The Apollo 14 astronau ts, speeding I C·
cUrately toward the moon, checked their
m111functioning docking mechanism by
h.!lfld today but failed to find the trouble
which could scrub their $400 million
lunar landing mission.
Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and
Edgar O. Mitchell examined the device
• for an hour before (lllnng lo sleep after
a busy 151:!! hours of suceess and fru stra·
tlon that start.ed with a flawless launch
from Cape Kennedy.
The routine linkup of the command
ship Kitty Hawk and the lunar lander
Antares turned Into a tense hour a n d
44 minute struggle Sunday night to pre-
vent the failure of America's second
straight moon miMion.
But the successful locking of the two
vessels by an unorthodox method Jeff
the possibility the mechanism would fail
again after the lunar module lifts off
~ • I ~
Routine Agenda
. t
For Costa Mesa
Council Session
Strictly routine business is on the agen·
da for what may be a relatively brief Cos-
ta MtsJ City Council meeting tonight.
from the F r a Mauro section of the
moon Saturday.
Ground experts viewed television films
of the dev ice and worked with models
to decide if Shepard, 47, America's firs t
man in· space, and rookie Astronaut
Mitchell, 40, would be allowed ~ spend
·, :.. ' '
33'11: hours on lhe lunar surface.
A :space agency apokesman aaid a
decision wasn 't being rushed but iiro-
bably will be made sometime before
a braking maneuver Thursday to put
Apollo 14 into moon orbit.
The astronauts never were in danger
and even if the moon landing is c~ncelled,
officials said they could still loop the
moon to take pictures and perform some
scientific observations.
The docking mechanism failed to work
five times while Apollo 14: sped through
20,000 miles of space. But on the sixth
try the space pilots gave an extra long
and hard shove with their steering
rockets and linked the two craft with
the unorthodox technique.
Roosa , 37, also a rookie spaceman,
· crawled into the hatch a few hours
later and removed the linkup device
(See APOLLO, Pace %)
Freeway Vot~g Decision
Due From Supe1·ior Court .
A decision whether or not to allow the
March 9 freeway election in Newport
Beach was expected late this afternoon
by Superior Court Judge Robert L. Corf·
man.
Several items of interest appear on the
agenda but they will be set for J>Ublic
h~•rings at 1a'" dates, with no act ion of Atlanta Democrat d1scuss1on tonight.
Judge Corfman listened to two and one.
half hours of arguments this morning,
prefacing the testimony by indicating he
fell both elections should lake place and
telling the lawyer for the plaintiffs to
convince him otherwise. Fights for Life • VC Irvine Coed's
Drowning Death
Declar ed Suicide
The death or a UC Irvine ~oed whose
body 'vas found in the ocean off Lagu.
na Beach last "'eek will be classified
Mission Viejo Youth
Shot at Gas Station
The 7:30 p.m. calendar is headed by a
public hearing on whet-her or not to re-
voke a zone exception permit for 11 boat-
vard and truck lerrhinal at 2Q97 and 2099
Placentia Ave., as considered.
Properly owner Karen Fenn. however,
has announced since a similar hearing
four weeks ago was continued until to-
nigh t that she is selling out .
Legalities involved with this latest ,de-
velopment effectively suspends further
11ction and will force the new oWner to ap..
ply for a zone exception pennit wh~n sale
as 11 suicide, a spokesman for the Or· A 17-yea r-old ri.1 ission Viejo youth
ange County Coroner's Office said to-fought for his life in South Coast Com·
d mun ity Hospital today while Orange , a[~guna Beach detectives conducted a County sheriff's deputies stepped up
their search for lhe man who put a full invest igation of the death of UCI bullet in the young service station at·
Rnior Carolyn Jones, 21 , when severe tendant's head .
injuries were found on the body during Douglas Ray Wheat, Jr., 24551 Satur-
an aUtopsy perfonned by Coroner·s Of· na Drive, was shot early Salurday by
fice patholtigists. an unknown bandit who took an esli·
These included, In addition to bruises mated $51.l from ·the till of the Arco
and ab rasions aPparently caused by station at La Paz Road and the San
rocks off Crescent Ba y Beach, deep lac-Diego Freeway.
erations on both wrists and a skull • The boy, who had worked Just three
fra cture. months at the station, was found fa ce
It was concluded 'that the lacerations down in a pool of blood ln the storage
were self-inflicted and the fracture prob· room at the rear of the station by a
ably resulted in a fall or leap onto the motorist who later told officers: "I just
r 0 c k s, according to detective Gene fell something v"a.s wrong."
B\'ooks. Deputies rushed the youth to South
The young \\·oman. "'hose parents live Coast Community Hospita l "'here <IOC·
in Glendale. had lived alone in an apart-tors performed emergency surgery to
(See DEATH, Page 2) remove the bullet lodged In his skull.
Officers said young Wheal was shot in
the back of the head.
A sheriff's patrolman said he la3t
saw Wheat bef o re the shooting at
about 2 a.m. Saturday, just two hours
before the seriously wounded boy was
found.
The officer said everything appear·
ed to be normal at that time with the
youth serving late night motorists.
Sheriff's lnvestigatont do not link the
Wheat shooting with that of a Garden
Grove service station attendan! who was
shot in the back Friday afler being.
pistol whipped into unconsciousness.
They believe the weapon used in the
Mission Viejo shooting was a .~ali·
ber revolver. The gun used in the Gar·
den Grove holdup was of smaller c:ali·
ber and the bandit's holduo routine was
very different from that uSed at the Ar·
co station, they said.
is completed. •
The pro posed widening of Del Mar Ave·
nue fr om Nev•port Boulevard to Santa
Ana Avenue -which slirre~ a contro-
versv before p]Rnning commissioners last
wttk -Is not set for action .
Counci lmen will merely set the $1 28
million project for a puhHc hearing at its
Fch. 16 meelini:-?, at which time property
owners involved may address the issue.
City Attorney R-Oy June is also to give
a report on the possibility of making tax-
payers involved in 11 limited-area electi on
pay resultant expenses instead of the com·
m11nity at large.
Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley called for
~uch action followinl{ tht! recent Marina
View annexation bid which failed . leav·
Int!' the a.rPa unincorporated and citizens
with a $500 election expense.
Prosecution Rests Case
Two Youths Held
On Robbery Ra~
A boy laking his grandR1flher $3 for
her dinner \\'a~ the victi m of a strongarm
robbery In Cost.!! Mesa Friday night.
but gave police enough Information to
captu.~e two suspects. State Says Defendants 'Predispos ed to Viol.ence~ Tom··. You:il!. 11 . .1111id he was dragged
from hla bicycle on 17th Street between
S.nta Ana and 'tllstin avenues, shaken
d~ 11nd :1eved of the cash.
~
From Wire Services
LOS ANGELES -The state rested Jtli
case in lhe penalty phase of the Sharon •
Tate murder trial today after calling a'
Oregon state policesman who said Sunn
Atkins once told him she would have shot
and killed him If she'd had the chance.
As the witness JeH the stand l\fiss At·
kins leaned over and lold her attorney:
··Why are you trying lo kill me? J
haven't done .-mhing to nobody,"
The defense Willi to open it case th is
afternoon.
The defense. "''hich planned to present
8 "CC'Jmplete case" in ii! erforl lo 11ave
the four from the ~(l.S chamber. w11s
ordered to have Its first v;itness ready
thi1 afternoon.
---
They have indicated that testimony
on .. the defendants' behalf may take IS
or 16 court days.. , •
First witnesses for the defense will
be i:nembers. of ~e ".Manson Family"
who will tell about the cult's life style
and peace-loving hippie ways.
Manson himself was reported anxious
to testify, as was Miss At.kins. who
reportedly planned to deny tha~ it waJ
she who stabbed Mlo;s Tate to death.
State policeman, to testify that Susnn
Atkins was carrying 1 loaded gun and
· once thraatened to kill him when he
arresttd her in Oregon.
The thrmt of lhe state's pre~entalion
durlng lhe peru1lty pha~ of ,the trial
his betn to ghow the jury -the same.
one which convicted tbe four on 27
counts of JIMJ,[der and compiracy in
the Tate murders -that the defendant.s
were predisp;ised to violence.
The state 'l.!as foiled Jut Friday in
its plan to introduce eYld.ence concerning
an eighth murder wltti which the hippie
chieftain and Miss Atkina were charged.
He said he told them the money wa1
for his grandmother's dinner, but they
toOk It lll!yWay.
Police patrolllng th~ are11 arrested two
14-year-old boya, who were taken to
Orange County Juvenile HaJJ on
stronc~--· robbery ch11rges.
Ha rry Takes St!_oll
Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older
accepted a defense .argument th.It it
would be unfair for the prosecullon to
present evklence concerning the killing
of mmlcian Gary Hinman, w1UI which KANSAS CITY , Mo. (UPI ) -Form·
~f1uoon and ri.1Js.s Alklna have betn er President Jlarry $ Truman strolltd
charged, but not tried. T, trutside his hospitat-room during the
The ruling cu t short. by se\•tral weeks , weekend where he is . hclng treated for
the prosccuUon phase (If lht pen 1...., en Intestina l lnflamm11tion. but doctors
trial. h•vt not set 1 date for his release.
Chosen to Fill
Sen. Russell Seat
ATLANTA (UPI ) -David Gambrell,
a 41·year<(!Jd Atlanta attorney and
chairman of the Georgia Democratic
party. was named today hy Gov. Jimmy
Carter to fill the unexpired term o.'
the late Sen. Richard Russell.
Russell, dean of the Senate in which
he served for 38 years, died Jan. 21
of'-)1 respiratory ailment. His term ex·
pires in January, 1973.
Gambrell is expected to seek the
Democratic nomination for a full six·year
term in the 1972 primary. One of his
opponents likely will be Lt. Gov. Lester
Maddox.
Mailman Strikes
Left Turn Signal
Neither sleet, nor snow, Ror dark of
night stayed a Costa Mesa postman on
his appointed rounds. but fog and too
much mountain dew cl.id Sunday~
He ieollided with a left turn signal
standard while cruising down the middle
of Newport Boulevard at 17th Street in
the I :4S a.m. bla11ket of fog.
~ircer Phil Donohue said the motor ist
-who suffered a cut li~was patched up
at Orange ~nly Medical Center and
booked Into jail (In suspicion of drunk
driving.
He did not dispute his condition. Patrol·
man Donohue noted ln the accide11.t re-
port.
Golf ~r Teed OH;
All Gear Stolen
A Wt~lrnlnster man went to the Costa
fl,1esa G(llf and Country Club Slturday
and got 1 little teed off.
He returned from a break at the
clubhouse and found his gear stolen.
Frank B. Roe, of fil31 Shllwnee Drive,
told police his loss was $42S and included
16 clubs, g(lll bag and 1cetssorles.
Attorney Angelo Palmieri, representing
the three former Newport Beach cily Of.
ficials seeking to halt the balloting, con-
tended that both propositions seek to give
the public control over administrative
acts and the proposed charter amend·
ment also attempts to limit the legisla·
live authority of the City Council.
City Attorney Tully Seymour, saying
the City Council has the right to breach
a contract, said , ''The pe<Jple have a
right to make (such) policy ."
The March 9 elec:tion, if it Is allowed
by the court, seeks to direct the oouncil
to rescind an existing agreement with the
state on the future route of Pacific Coast
Freeway through Corona del Mar.
The second question is a charter amend~
rnent that would require future councils
to conduct referendums before signing
any and all freeway agreements.
2nd Se1nes ter Begins
The sec:ond semester of the school
year litarts Tuesday and students at
Costa J\fesa High School are asked to
report at 8 a.m.
During the first hour, students will re.
ceive their class schedules and room as·
siinments for the new term.
Oruge Coast
Weather
Those low clouds will bum off
late Tuesday afternoon but the
temperatures wo~'t get past 60
either locally or further inland.
INSmE TODAY
It took Apollo J 4 aslroMuts
sl.t: trftr to 1uccc11/ul.lr .com,..
plete a maneuver coMicUrtd
one o/ tilt most routine with tht
ltasL 1ophisticattd equipment -
docking lino 1pacecrafts. Sec
sto r11 Page $. •
l lftM
'"""' c111tw1111
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DMlll Hltlc" ··-l!flltftll ,_
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f'lllMC:I -
II
D • ' ..... " II
II
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IJITll l'lf'lw 1 I
SMrh tl·U ti.cti Mtitm 1•1t TtlfotklN It Tlltt"'1, ,,
Wt•lfllf I
Wt-'• Htw1 IJ.IJ ... ., .. "'*'" ...
•
'
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. . . ....._
2 DAILV PILOT C
Vrban Visit -
Mesa o ·ff icials
\ .
Compare· Notes
Sleepy border town officials in Yuma,
Ariz.. outdrew Costa Mesa leaders by
more than seven years In a mutual
fight to save their dete r iorating
do"'11towu business areas.
Little besides resigpalion of a central
redevelopment dlstrrct makes the two
citiu comparable today. but Costa Mesa
may learn from Yuma's guccessea and
failures. J>
-This is the assessment of Mayor Robtrt
M. Wilson.
He and a contingent of Costa Ptfesa
businessmen and officials visited Yuma
recently to compare notes in the field
of self·lnitiated urban renewal.
* * * Mayor Wilson
Will Confer
With Agnew
California cities will be represented
by Costa Mesa Mayor Robert f\.f. Wilson
Friday when leaders from throughout
f tbe nation confer with Vice Presideot
Spiro Agnew on revenue-sharing.
He was delegated to attend the one-day
session in Indianapolis, Ind., last Friday,
when the California League o( Cities
Board of Directors gathered i n
Sacramento. ,
"Tb.is_ really came ~s a surprise,'
said Wilson, noting that ether boar~
• members have longer tenure and senlor1·
ty in politics. ' .
"But I've been on this revenue-sharing
kick for a long time." he added.
Mayor Wilson said he believes Costa
Mesa was the first Callfomia city to
raise the issue through Congressman
John G. Schmiti.
Referring to President Nixon's recent
state of the nation address. Mayor Wilson
remarked that while lunar exploration
and Southeast Asian combat are im-
portant. urban problems take priority.
"The biggest priority;• be added. ex-
plaining that local government is more
knowledgeable about where tax money
returned by federal authorities 6hould
be invested.
Revenue-sharing, the object of a hill
currently in Congress. is seen as 8
method (If returning income tax funds
to cities instead of asking them to raise
Jocal taxes even more.
Purpose of the Friday conference by
Agnew is lo brief national civic leader·
delegates on precisely what problems
it faces in Congress.
Mayor Wilson said A!fnew will also
discuss the support needed at the local
governmental level to back President
Nixon and secure Coni;:ressional ap proval.
He said he doesn't know how many
men will attend. but noted he represents
405 member communities of the
California League of Cities.
Froin Page 1
DEATH .•.
ment at 1237 Cliff Drive for the past
16 months.
She -y.·as described by neighbors .and
fellow students as leading a quiet life .
usually retiring ea r I y and keeping
They've had lime to digest the d.;1ta
gathered .
J\.tayor Wil son flew lo the border city,
while City Councilman \Villiam L. SI.
Clair and others chartered 1:1 bus.
Yuma Mayor Tom Allt and Councilman
Jim Pender met Mayor Wilson and his
group al the airport to brief them and
provide a tour of the $1.7 million
downtown Yuma mall facility.
They found a picturesque Spanish
mission motif. located in an area far
smaller than the redevelopment district
for whlch Costa lttesa has drawn boun-
daries.
''The .. Yuma P.tall is similar in some
respects to the Costa Mesa study
area," says f\.fayor Wilson.
"It was , as l understand it, financed
solely by the property owners and it
is considerably less costly than the initial
Costa Mesa estimate." he continues.
A preparatory study of the mult i·
million dollar, three-stage program to
engineer downtown Costa Mesa's Image
for the 1980s is currently in final stages.
Mayor \Vilson has predicted it will
represent a $20 to $30 million investment
when completed -if done· to the max·
imum possible degree -in two decades.
Yuma property owners organized four
separate assessment districts to make
their 1962 dream become a reality.
For some reluctant investors, it was
an undesirable nightmare.
Despite the promise of new pr9sperity
as a result. they were appalled by this
cost table :
-Street improvements, $628,000.
-Land for parking, $459,000.
-Improvements of Jots, $542,000.
"Not everyone .connected with the prn--
ject is enthusiastic about Its future."
says Mayor Wilson.
"Some feel it was far too costly and
expensive for the benefits received. Some
feel they picked the wrong theme.
''But what was important f.l'l me is
that they did something about their pro--
blem . recogniiing that the alternative
v.·as a total decline and failure."' he
continues.
"Many stores rema in vacanl. Many
merchants have i'iimply closed their doors
rather than conform to the ne\v
Pt1erchants ?\-tall Associatio n rul es and
regulations."
"But those that remain. for the most
part, are enthusiastic and look forward
to a far brighter future than before,"
he emphasizes.
He also points out the distinct di£·
ferences between Yuma and Costa MeM,
from the broad geiigraphical to the zubtle
economic factors.
''It is a hot. desert town of 30.000.
while are are a cool coastal town of
75,000." he explains.
Sleepy Yuma grew slowly out of the
desert too. while Costa Mesa sprang
from a rural gathering of 10,000 or
so to 75,000 in lfl years. with 120,000
persons envisioned.
"ll will be several years yet before
!he total evalualion will be completed
in Yuma." he concludts.
"Yet, I am sure v.•e can profit by
their experience."
Dr. Gustave Roy
Rosary to Be
Recited Tuesday
"pretty much to herself." . Rosary will be recited Tuesday at Dil· ~~h she apparently ha~ g1".en no , day Brothers Chape l. Huntington Beach.
".1d1ca1to_n of deep depression. ~e.tec· for Dr. Gustave A. Roy, prominent county
hves . said she recently had ~ompla1ned anesthesiologist who died Saturday.
to friends that she wa~ havi ng trouble At the time of his death. Dr. Roy was
sleeping and )lad seemed somewhaL un-the head of the anesthesiology depart·
happy since the departure or a boy who ment at the Orange County T\1edlcal Ccn-
had visited her here. ter.
She had obtained a prescription for He was also a member of I.he Orange
sleeping pills. Brooks said. but only one County Medical Association. the Ameri-
tablet had been taken from the bottle. can Medical Association and the Knights
of Columbus.
DAILY PILOT
O~A~Ge CO.Ul 'U&Ll~ING COMl"AH'I'
Robort N. w,,4
Editor
Thom1i A. M11rp!.;"'
M"lflfli7 lfdlter
f;ott• M"• Offi'~
lJO W11t l1y Strotf
M1lli"t Addrtu~ l'.0, l ox tS ~O. 9!62,
Otlin OMMt
tl~rl ... di: !211 Wal ••IM• tov1 .... 1r•
l.JtYM lMtlli m 1'wul Av"""•
Hun!111tto>1 &Ndl: ,,.,J I NVI 191/IOVl•d
l1n Cltrntntt: as Hortl'I Et c,,,..1,.,. llul
A resident of Costa T\-1esa for 15 years.
Dr, Roy was a retired Naval Captain and
a member of the Orange County Retired
Officers As.Sociation.
He lea ves his widow. Gertrude: sons.
Thomas M .• Robert B., and John J . Roy :
a daughter. Patricia and four grandchil·
dren.
Requiem T\-1ass \\'ill be celebra ted Wed·
nesday, 9 a.m. at Sts. Simon and Jude
Catholic Church. Dilday Brothers Mortu·
ary are directing.
Hundreds Canae
• •
DAILY ,l~OT l"llf,. b~ Jt~ft llllltrtl
Man l{illed,
48 fujured
In LA Riot
LOS ANC.ELES IUP!) -All aver·
night curfew brought calm 10 the Ea~t
Los Angeles Mexican·Amer~n barrio
today following violrnt ~k lrmishes in
v.•hich one Ch!rapo was ki lted , 48 ?er·
sons injured and ~8 arrrsted. \
Sunday's v.'lndo"l··breaking and looting
rampage in a business area follov.•ed a
peaceful r<illy at Belvedere Park of 5.000
Chicanos protesting all eged police bru·
tal1I\'.
MARCH INCLUDED DURABLE "UNCLE SAM" DN STILTS WHO WALKED A MILE
There Were Differences Of Opinion But No S"rious Inc idents
C~unty .super~1sors declared ri stale of
emergency and imposed a 6:20 p.m. to
S a.m. curfew in a to.square mile area.
Deputies said that 88 persons were ar-
Police Hold Man, Teen f'rom Page 1
McINTIRE ...
rested on charges ranging from failure
to disperse to assault on an officer.
The windo'ol-'S of al least 60 businesses
were smashed and several stores were
looted.
In Switchblade Slaying have only one Uncle Sam to march
with us," he said.
The kickof f for the marches / was
earmarked for San Clemente,_ Dr.
Mcintire said. because of the presence
of La Casa Pacifica, President Ni1on's
villa.
Nine bu ildings including a bank and
an aut6mobile dealershlp "'"'ere set ab!aie
by firebombs. A liquor store and ball
bonds building were gutted while dam·
age to Pan American National Bank
V.'as estimated at $15,000.
A man and a teenaged girl are being
held by HuntingLon Beach police today
in a sv.·itchblade knife slaying of the
host at a Friday night party in downtown
Hun tington Beach.
Suspects Paul A. Stenerson, 22, and
Candace Neal, 17, both of Downey, were
captured in a dragnet operation . by the
Downey poli ce officers Saturday night.
The victim was Arthur E. Bashaw,
21, of 321 7th St., Huntington Beach.
Stenerson was booked on murder
charges while Miss Neal was charged
with being an aec1:!ssory in the alleged
crime .
Huntington detectives Gene Pool, ltay
Anderson and Bruce Young brought the
couple to Huntington Beach arou.nd 3
p.m. They said the girl will be arraigned
in juvenile court.
Bashaw died at l{untington Inlercom·
munity Hospita~3 after midnigh~
Friday. Doctors n all out. effort
to save the life of the young man
bleeding to death from multi~!e .stab
wounds believed to have been inflicted
wilh a switchblade knife at his apart·
ment.
Palice believe Bashaw held a pa r ~ Y
Friday night at his apartment, which
was crashed by a group of youths from
the Downey area.
They theorize that around 10 p.m.
a fight began between ~ashaw and the
uninvited guests. A knife was pulled
and Bashaw reportedly was stSbbed
repeatedly as he retreated from room
to room .
Finally. bleeding severely, Bashaw
crawled through the kitchen of his apart-
ment and down down a hall to the
living room where he collapsed against
the door ...
Others attending the p~ called polict
and watched as Basha was taken to
the hospital. During th baUle to 11a~e
his life, doctors called for eight uruts
of blood which was rushed to the
operating room by the Orang~ County
Sheriff's office.
Police gaid the suspect!: from Downey
were gone by the time the stabbing
was reported but afficers from the
Special Enforcement Detail (SEO) rush·
ed to Downey in search of the suspects.
In Downey, a dozen office.rs were only
a jump behind the suspects as they
ran from ane possible hideout lo another.
Officers said the duo apparently spent
the night at the home of a friend in the
Downey area. They ·wefe arrested at
the home of the girl's mother, 10348
Newville St., Downey.
But anti-Nixon sentiment ran high
among some of the minister's J'!larchers.
"Where is this W~lern White House
we hear about?" one man in hli; 60s
asked his fellows.
"It's down the road a piece," said
another, "but don't bother,. they won't
even let you get close."
Mesan Threatens
Policemen, Kin
With House Knife
Sheriff Peter Pitchess said the shoot-
ing death resulted when six deputies near
the bank were confronted by about 600
to 600 demonstrators who hurled missiles
and ad vanced on the officers. Pitchess
said the deputies fired warning shots
over the heads of the crowd with shot·
guns and also fired shots lnto the ground.
The sheriff said the victim, who was
not immediately ldentlfied, and the
wounding of the other persons . occurred ~
at this time although the circumstances
surrouriding the incident "'had 1not yet
been determined.
Twenty-three civilians suffe red In-
juries, 14 of them wounded by gunfire .
Twelve deputies suffered minor injuries
and 12 firemen were treated for smoke
A Costa A-1esa mechanic who became inhalation after battling a total of 35
angry during a ta lk with his son and fires in the area , most of them in trash
daughter.in-law was jailed Saturday, af. bins.
ter allegedly threatening them and five Total structural damage was estimal·
k 'f ed at Sl90,00U. policemen with a kitchen °1 e. Shortly after darkness came to the F P J Howard R. Powers, 45, ol 1626 Newport rona age Boulevard. was booked on suspicion of area, Pitchess said deputies "''ere in
0 . assault with a deadly weapon and as· control of the situation. He said 500 of-APO LL • • • saull with a deadly weapon against a ficers were used in the area at the peak
• Jaw officer. of the violence.
-an operation which normally would Investigators were conferring with the ''There's absolutely no provoca!ion for
ha ve occurred an Wednesday. Orange County District Attorney today to this degree of violence," the shtriff add·
Roosa 1:1spected the inside of lhe -upl· determine if complaints.an those or lesser ed. h ing with his hands and a flashlight charges might be issued. The marches and rally were sponsor· P b Cont; U€S and reported "some impressions th 8 t Detective Lt. Harold Fischer said the ed by the Chica no Moratorium Com-TO e ., are rough to touch, probably scratched trouble erupted at noon Saturday in the mitlee which said the rally was a ''hear·
in the surface of the drogue for about I railer park where the suspect \Jves, lead-ing·• in which the communi1y v.·as told Into Drowning a quarter of an inch deep." ing to a call for police. of "the. many cases of rolice brutality
"ft 11ppears !he probe hit the drn:.;ue Off icers Leo Jones. John Stoneback. and other problems with !he police ...
' dead center eve ry time l\"e tried lo Ri chard John son. Ed Sutton and Sgt. Bob There were no arres!s ciuring the rally. Of Newport Pa ;r dock," Roosa said, "but it just didn't Goode approached Powers. at which time Authorities said that <ib<lut 45 minute!
., c •ch." he allegedly began slashing and waving after the rally, about 1.000 young per-
The astronauts then inspected the lhe knife mena cing ly. sons ignored plea.11 by rally monitnrs to
Coroner 's Investigators today Hsted mechanism a.nd friggered it several "He backed up against 11 building. the n go home and marched to 1he East l.lls
drov.·nlng as the cause of death of a limes by hand . Jt worked every lime raised it abo ve his head and threw it Angeles sheriff's suhsla!inn. The build-
N'wport Beach couple, but continued -and thus failed to show· what l\'Cnt Into the ground three feet from Jones' ing and civilian and polict cars in it
feet." said Lt. Fischer. k. I l 11 d ·1h k d • 1heir invest igation Into lhe role oV a · rnns. par 1ng o were pe e w1 roc ·s an
~a The docking mechanism. which never bottl es.
faulty whirlpool bath which may ave bc ~.::::-e has failed in nigh!. uses a pointed Depulies used massiv e dnses or trar
electrocuted the pair before their deaths. "probe" on the command module 10 Balloon, Car Crash, gas in their attemp!s to dis perse the
Long time Orange Coast restaurateur nud~e into a cone-shaped drogue on crowd. v.•hich then n1ovrd down \Vhi t-
William stev.·art. 6.1. and his wife the lunar lander. Honest to Goodness 1ier Boulevard sma sh ing "''indo"'s o[
Isabelle. 58. of !344 Susse x Lane. were \Vith the probe in place. three "cap:ure businesses <ind looting at least 20 stores.
--1 1~· .:·.cs'" ~re supposed to catch the lander ST. PAUL !UPI! _ A hil-and-run Pilchess ordered s"'·reps nf the area round in their pool Friday a ternoon and hold the two vessels togethe r until by depulies armed "'ilh shot guns. and h fl H Good 'tn balloon was blamed Sunday for a ba!· · by their c au eur arry w · • A g of 12 latches locks. tear gas again "'as used during brief
Dcteclive Ken Smith said investigation But for Apollo 14, the three capture loon·automobile crash near here-per· but violent skirmis he s.
Is conlinuing in the eve nts . which l~d !:'·~~.• · 'ri 't wo~1•• haps the first in history. The Mid-City Motors auto dealership
to the double tragedy at their Westcllff So, on the sixth docking try. Roosa Tl\'O participants In !he St. Paul \Vin· v.·as gutted by fire and ri l least fj\·e new
home. droVe the command ship, with probe ter Carnival balloon rare were sailing Toyota autos "·ere destrny Pd. Damag P.
The investigation or the ~hirlpool extended. info the land~r·s proper align-along at about 50 feet . when a s!rong v.·as estimated 11t $120,f)(){l. Depu!irs at.
equipment "''as begun v.·h~n a pipe from men!. Jnstea d of using the capture downdraft sent the balloon skidding on-tempted to push new car s nut.side the
the device v.•as found 1n the. bottom latch es to hold the spacecraft together, l.o the ice of White Bear Lake. The building but when firrmrn were called
of the pool. . Roosa fired control jets to keep the gondola skidded acr oss the ire and in to put nut the flames th r_:; 1\·crP met
A neighbor intervie\ved by officer s told craft snug until the Jocking latches smashed into lhe ca r of a carnival of-by a barrage of rocks and harnp,red by
\ht>m th e Stewar ts had complained of engaged. ficial. There were only minor injuries. a heavy pall of 1ear gfls.
being shocked by the ~quipment ~n prior·__,~'-''---------------------------------------
occasions. They were regula~ swimmers
and had had it installed nine months
ago. .-
ln\'esligators al the scene had . ~he
device checked by a city electr1c1an
v.·ho to ld them il seemed to be \\'Orklng
perfectly. But ofiicers note~ that some
"''ires in the pump v.·ere spliced together
"''ilh black tape . . . .
Coroner's investigator Jim Biesner said
tests are being conducted to determine
if an electrical shock from lhe device
stunned the pair as they took their
afternoon s"·im . or if their drownings
"'ere due to other causes-.
We are clearing out hunclrecls of Items at clras•
tlcally reclucecl prices. Come In ancl shop
around. A pawn shop Is more fun than a rum•
111a9e sale.
HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES
-MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS-JEWELRY GUITARS !Spani1h l ........................ R•9. 26.50 $12.50
. GUITARS !Sp,.;•h l ........................ R•g. 59.50 $39.95
50% OFF
All lllamtntls 1u•ranf'M4 t•
.,,ral•• at 40 % m•n .,.
y•ur monrr Mick In full.
CLARINETS ·····----·-·-··-··--·············-···· .......... {rom $15.00
SNARE DRUM .......................................... from $12.50
FLUTES I ~ I" I ............................................. . ... $85.00
ACCORDIANS 1120 Bon I ...................... $31.00 ond •P
FRENCH HORN .............................................. $1l5.00
-SPORTING GOODS-
Dov bl• Ta,.r
SKI POLES .................. $11.95
Attorttd
GOLF eLuas ............... 50~ •a.
2 Onlf L. c. Smith Deubl• l•rr•llf
SHOT GUNS ................ $85.00
MANY CAMERAS AT llG SAVINGS
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LO AN
STEREO
VISIT OUR
SOUND
ROOM
NEW and USED STEREOS
BARGAINS
lf't Tht H1pp1nln9 Thlnf
~~ 30% OFF
STEREO & MONAURAL
RECORD ALBUMS
ALL ARE 25" POPULAR "
ARTISTS
I TIACK TA'I
Orange County residents turned oul in droves ror the casting party
for Laguna's 36th annual Pageant. of thr Mastcr5 Saturday and Sanday.
It will begin July 16. Bert Pettey, hair rlre~~lng :.nd property director,
checks head size of Bufl Tlllesen, 17, of Costa A1csa.
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA l•lw•,. Horbor & ''""'"°'
WE LOAN BUY· SELL & TRADE ALMOST EVERYTHING
PLAYER DECK
l'tw9 l11te ll\lt t!T!ff '2995 11.tl Yol~t.
,
' '
' -
'
I
'
I
)
l
I
,
\
Saddlehaek
' ED ITI ON
Today'•-F-l•al
N.Y.S~
VO l. 6~, NO. 27, l SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA MONDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1971 TEN CENTS
Overcrowding Plagu~s San Clemente School
By PAft1ELA HALLAN
01 11\t l>•lty ~1191 Sltll
San Clemente High School's bulging
walls will have lo be deflated next
year. but school district officials haven't
yet decided how to do 1t.
The two most probable plans being
studied include double sessions or !he
addition of ten more portable classrooms.
··\Ve have to Come up with the most
beneficial situation.~· said .Joe \Vi mer,
Director of Administrative Services for
'
' the Capistrano Unified School District.
··Whatever we decide, "''' cannot
disturb the educational program," he
added,
Wimer stressed that a definite plan
has not yet been proposed, but several
are currently being studied.
One plan was to move all the ninth
graders to Capistrano School and squeeze
all the sixth graders back into their
elementary schools.
''l think this plan is pretty well dead,"
said \Vimer. "It was feasible · if t.Jie
kids \\·ere to stay there for more than
one year. but with Dana Hills High
School opening in 1972 we won·t need
to move them, it wouldn·t pay."
Wimer said the: state ·has approved
the need for Dana Hills High. The cost
hasn't yet been okayed. "They won't
approve the cost until all the bids are
in . It's possible that all the bids could
be too high."
Whether or not the district will decide
arc
DAllT "II.OT ""°"' ltf' <':91111 VltlwU
MARCHERS PARADE THROUGH SAN CLEMENTE IN SATURDAY DEMONSTRATION
An Estimated 2000 Per1ions Came To. Dr. Carl Mclntirt 's Rally About Vie~n1m War
DAILY "ILOT ,Mtto br Jell• V11ttn1
MARCH IN CLUDED DURABLE "UNCLE SAM" ON STILTS WHO WALKED A MILE
There Were Differences Of Op inion But No Serious Inc idents
Astronauts Tr y in Vain
.....,,
To Find Docking 'Bugs'
SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) -
The Apollo 14 astronauts, speeding ac·
drrately toward the ~oon. check~d lheir
malfunctioning docking mechanism by
hind today but failed to .find the tr~u~le
which coold serub t~1r $400 m1lhon
lunar landing mission.
Alan 8. Shepard. Stuar_I A. Roosa and
Edgar O. Mitchell examined the device
for an hour before gonng to sleep. after
8 busy 15''.i hours of succeS! and frustra·
Uon that started with a flawless launch
from Cape Kennedy.
The routine linkup of the command
ship Kitty H1twk 11nd the lunar lander
Antares turned Into a tense hour a n d
44 minute slrUggle Sunday night II' pre·
vent the failure of Amerlce's second
straight moon mis.,lon.
But the succc53ful locking el lhe tw&
vessels by an unorthodox method left
lhe possibility the mechanism would fail
again after the lunar module lifts off
from the f r a fl1auro section of the
moon Saturday.
Ground eKperts viewed television film!!
<if the · deviee aod ·worked .with models
to decide if Shepard, 47. America's first
mtin ·in .space •. and. rookie Astronaut
Mitchell, 40. wod!d be allowed tG spend
331.:2 hours on the lunar siftface.
A space agency spokesman said a
decision wasn't being rushed but pro·
bably will be made sometime before
a braking. maneuver Thursday 10' put
Apollo· 14 into moon orbit.
..the astronauts never were In danger
and even if the moon landing ts cancelled.
officials said they coold still loop the
moon to take pictures and ptrform seme
scientific observallons.
Calm Prevails
In LA's Barrio
After Violence
LOS ANGELES (UPJ) -An over·
night curfew brought calm to th• East
Los Angeles Mexlcan·American barrio
today following violent sklrmiJhes in
whi ch one Chicano was killed, 48 per·
sons injured and 88 arrested.
Sunday's window-breaking and looting
rampage in a business area followed a
peaceful rally at Belvedere Park of 5,000
Chicanos prote'Sting alleged police. bru-
talit,y, ·
County supervisors declared·.11 state Q(
emergency and imposed· a 8:20• p:m. to
S a.m. curfew· in a; IO.square mile ares.
• Deputies said that· 88 pcnons. we rt Ir•
rested on charges ranging from failure
to disperse to assault ori an offlett.
The windows of at least iO businesses
were smashed and several 1tores were
looted.
nn. 1 ...IMUJi-double sesskm al the high
sc. next year or the add.ition of
extra classroonu "A'ill be ultimately
determined by the Board of Trustees.
··The cost of each of these alternatives
hasn't yet been worked out in detail,"
said Wimer .
Wimer said the district is also studyi ng
the situation in elementary schools and
the junior high, but doesn 't foresee any
additional problems for next year.
"Of rourse, we won 't be able to make
• Ill
Qevelop_s
In Speaker
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of Ille Dallr ,lllf 11111
Dr. Carl ·Mcintire and 2,000 of his
followers marched through the streets
<Jf San Cemente over the weekend.
singing and chanting for 1 tot.al armed'"'
vicl<lry in Vietnam.
And ' at the end of ~ march -
which included Uncle Sam on stilts
towering aOOve young and <Jld alike,
Dr, Mcintire experienced difficulties with
the one piece of equipment which Jed
to a two-week doMybrook with the city
C0\11\Cil. . .
·After blnng th~ object bf twci~batt'ies ·
in city hall, the sound system broke
G:>wn fot more than an hour,
1 But, unlifunted, the fiery New Jersey
minister wiµi an enormous following
from hls radio broadcasts used a bullhorn
while an alternate system was being
repa!red. ·
The hundreds of marchers ...:... m;fny
nf them elderly -gathered on the
flatland and slopes of Llnda Lane Park
· amid scores of banners and placards
with slogans blending religion and
politics.
Some called fur an end to the "no-win''
policy of the U.S. Government.
No incidents which could be interpreted
as hostile toward the group took place
at the Saturday afternoon kickoff of
a. series of vicl<lry marches throughout
lhe nation.
The event, however. drew curious
onlookers from the nearby Linda Lane
beach.
At one point of the procession five
bikini-clad girls walked._ beside the
paraders.
Several older men snarled disgusl at
the girls' attire.
"first, they allowed burlesque indoors,
now ifii in .the public streets ...
shameful," growled one man carrying
a huge flag .
The Mcintire followers c.11me from
throughout the Southland to President
Nixon's .adopted town.
Delegations from Los Angeles and San
Diego County formed the majority of
the group.
A few l1undred others were from local
communities.
Despite the warm weather, few of
the elderly felt ill effects from the
one-mile walk through neighborhood
streets.
Only one person required first-aid .
Dr. Mclntire's stiltman took much of
the attention of the day.
The man, who has marched with
Mclntlre: followings before. wore boxing
gloves and was bound at the wrist,
to demonstrate Ule effects of the "no-win
policy.''
"Our trouble," Dr. Mcintire said, "is
that soon we will have simultaneous
marches throughout the land, and we
have only one Uncle Sam to m 1 r c h
with us." he said.
The kickoff for the marches was
earmarked for Sa n Clemente, Or.
f\1c1ntire said . because of the presence
of La Casa Pacifica, President Nixon's
villa. But anti-Nixon sentiment ran· high
among some of the minister's marchers.
"Wllere is this Western White House
we hear about?" one man in his 50s
asked his fellows.
"Ifs down the road a piece." said
·another. "bul don'l bother, they won't
even let you get close."
Avalanche .Kills Two .
' 't"REMP, Spain (UPI I -Two persons
were rrilsslng an~ presumed dead and
four others Injured Sunday when an
avalanche swept 1crOliS a ski run In
the Pyrenees, police said. All victims
were-Spaniards.
11. determination until the end of this shift an entire grade level there.
year," said Wimer. ''We can·t tell this "\Ve usually consider where space is
early what our enrollment will be." IJi.. available and the cost of transporting
Preliminary stu~ies show t'it the students or adding extra classrooms,'-
junior high will be able to accommodate said Wimer.
its load and if any elementary school Wimer add~ that once the new f\lgh
is overcrowded, it will probably be San school is built ft will be able to serve
Juan School. as an outlet for ov~rcrowding at Marco ··tr a problem exist! at San Juan Forster Junior High.
\\'e will probably either shift a portion "The next school to be built will pro-
of the attendance area to Viejo School bably be Sborecliffs Junior High ln San
where we have empty classrooms or Clemente.''
eme.nte
Fights for Life
Viejo Youth, 17.,
Shot by Bandit
A 17·year-0ld Mission Viejo youth
fought for his life in South Coast Com·
munity Hospital today while Orange
County sheriff's deputies stepped up
their search for the man who put a
bullet in the young service station at.
tendant's ·head.
Douglas Ray Wheat, Jr., 24551 Satur-
na Drive, w111 shot. early Saturday by
an unknown bandit who took an estl·
'l'•l<d· $;.> from IJl<"lill _or 11>• An:o
stati'Ori ,at · Lai Pai ;J\o8d. MMlr t1te ·'am ,
Diego Freeway.
. The boy, who had wor~d just thret
months at the station, wis f<n.md fa~
down in a pool of blood ln the 1torage ro6m al the rear of lht station by, a
motorist who later told officers: "I just.
felt something was wrong."
Deputies rushed the youth to South
Coast Community Hospital where doc-
tors perfori:ned emergency l!urgery to
remove the bullet lodged in his skull.
Officers said young Wheat was shot ln
the back of the head.
A sheriff's patrolman said he last
saw Wheat b e r o r e the shooting at
about 2 a.m. Saturday, just two hours
before the seriously v.·ounded boy was
found,
The officer said everything appear-
ed to be normal at that time with the
youth serving late night nwtorists.
Sheriff's investigators do not link tbe
Wheat shooting with that of a Garden
Grove servit't' station attendant wbo was
shot in the back Friday after bein&
pistol whipped into unconsciousness.
Tbey believe the weapon used in the
Missipn Viejo shooting was a .38<ali·
ber revolver. The gun used In the G.ar•
den Grove holdup was of smaller cali·
ber and the bandit's holdup routine was
very different from that used at the Ar·
co station, they said.
Woman Badly Burned
'
As Fire Sweeps Home
A 49·year-0Id Seavers _Canyon woman
suffered ~cvere burns in c. predawn blaze
Sunday wh1ct-t1est royed her $30,000 home
Jn a sceoic .::len along Ortega Highway
n .> San Juan Capistrann.
Jackie Wrigley, whet fled her blazing
residence as bystanders fought flames
Clemente Girl
Rescued From
Cliff at Park
A young. pregnant San Clemente
housewife became tbe objeQ. of a cliff
rescue by firemen Sunday afternoon after
she became stranded near San Clemente
State Park.
Fireman Sheldon Schmidt used 1 ladder
to assist Mrs. Alice Faye Dubose, 17,
of 239 Avenida Del Mar.
Lifeguards also were summoned I&
the blllff with cliff rescue gear, but
a ladder, spokesmen said, worked better.
Mrs . Dubose told firemen she and
her husband were climbing down the
bluff. He made it. She became frightened
about 20 feet from the bottom.
Mrs . Dubose required no medical treat-,-
ment after her rescue.
2 Rec Programs
Will Continue
' Twet separate recreation programs for
men and women at San Clemente Hi&h
School w'iU ·continue thrnu1b the next
11eme1ter.
The . evening recreation for men of·
ferlng basketball,'volleyblU, weichtliftlng
and ~building will continue wiek'
nighll at 7:30 p.m. No preregl.&trali~n·
is needed for the activity.
A women'• aUm·trlm c\1u also will
resume. being held each Thurld1y evn·
mg 1tartlng at t :30 p.m.
There b ao chara:e for eltbe.r class.
lo reach her. suffered third and second·
degree burns on one·third of her body
in the devastating fire at 35561 Seavers
Canycin r:::d.
County Fire Department splikesmen
said 30 firefighters fought in vain ta
save the residence, but were successful
in keeping flames, away from nearby
homes and brush areas.
T.:J home was bumed to the ground. '
The Wrigley woman remained ln
serious condition at South Coast Com·
munity Hospital early today. She was
transferred to a military hospital later
in the day, spokesmen said.
Authorities said passing motorists
noticed the blaze et about 4 a.m., but
by the time they and neighbors reached
the home the structure was C1'.lmpletely
involved in flame .
The woma.i.. who lived alone, a~
parently was awakened by the blaze
and fought her way out through searing
heat.
Orange Coast
"'eatber
Those tow clouds will bum of£
late Tuesday afternoon but the
temperatures won't get past 60
either locally or further inland.
INSIDE TODAY
' It took Apollo 14 ostronailt&
six triea to succeisfully ·com·
plete a moneuvtr comidertd
one of the most rouine with the
la1t sophisticated tquipment -
docking two spacecraft$: See
story Page 5.
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•
'
----·----___ _.. ____ _ • •
I OA1LY PILOT SC Monday, Ftbru•ry 1, 1971
Recycle Plan Studied
Water Directors to End Ocean Disposal?
By GEOJIGE LEmAL
01 lflt O.llJ 'Ila! Stilt
Moulton.Niguel Water District directors
have decided to explore ways of recycling
5ewage wastes rather than ,Planning for
continued ocean disposal.
Manager Carl Kymla ~aid I.he district
v.'hlch serves Mission Vlejo and Laguna
Niguel would attempt by 1974 to devise:
a system that would use secondary
treated sewage effluent to irrigate parks,
golf courses and freeways lying within
the district.
The concept is nol new to the
1.1oulton -Niguel district s i n c e it has
provided treated waste water to Million
Viejo Golf c.oune for watering lrMM
and fairways.
The new element ls the exp1nslon
cf the idea lo public par.ks and freeways
providing additional acreage f o r
"dispcsal" cf treated wastes at a pro-
jected savings to taxpayers.
The district now discharges a half
million gallons daily through the San
Juan Capistrano outfall near Doheny
Beach. By 1978, Kymla noted, thaL facili-
ty would propel 5.5 million gallons per
day from the Moulton.Niguel district Into
the sea.
II IOm< of th• projected incr~d now from tht developing Mla1ion Viejo
and Laguna Niguel areu can be diverted
from the jointly operated treatment ph1nt
at San Juan Capistrano, the outran need
not be built so large. ~
"We will have to build a larger out-
fall," Kymla said, ''But the amount,
cost and effecl of sewage discharge·
on the ocean will be considerably chang·
ed by the recycling attempt."
The equipment necessary to recycle
treated wastes could be built for "one
third to half ()f the cost of the new
outfall."
San Clemente S.recess
Key to the recycling concept ii; lhe
debut er Feather River Project waters
in Southern California. when t he
f\1etropolitan Water District begins im·
porting the low total dissolved soHd!I
fresh water -250 parts per million
<PPM) versus 750 PP~1 now brought
an from the Colorado River. Merchants May Be Next
A joint study by the State Water
Resources Control Board and flood con·
trol Board and flood control officials
()f the natural underground water storage
basins is due thi s spring. Kymla said
il is possible tha~ report will indicate
it. is possible to punJp out the ,water
For Ride-~ong Program
By· JOHN VALTERZA
01 !flt 0.llJ Piiot Jletl
The success of San Clen1ente's police
ride-a.long program has never waned
since. its incept!on last fall, police of-
17 San Clemente
Girl s Commence
Hospital Stint
\Yithoul ceremony or fanfare, 17 San
Clemente High School girls enrolled in
the health aide training program Utis
morning began their first day cf work
at South Coast Community Hospital in
South Laguna_
The students are part of the Regional
Occupation Program being sponsored by
the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified
School Districts. There are a total of
24 youngster:!! enrolled in the-training,
but the seven Laguna Beach High School
students did not begin work today
because of a school holiday.
The 24 students, all seniors. spent
the fail semester 1n training at Beverly
Manor Convalescent Hospital i n
Capistrano Beach. They will remain al
South Coast Hospital through the re-
mainder cf the school year.
The students will work under the direct
gupervision of nurses at the hospital
two hours per day for the entire
semester. 'upon graduation from high
school in the spring, they will be awarded
qualification certilicat.es as nurses' aides
and will be qualified for employment
in that field.
Seniors Collecting
Cans, Glass Bottles
The senior class of Laguna Beaclt
High Schpol has jumped on the recycling
band wagon and announced tbe students
will begin collecting glass bottles and
aluminum cans for recycling.
The students hope to spur residents
to begin saving their trash that can
be re-sued. The students have set up
collection receptacles behind t h e
bleachers at the football field where
citizens may take their cans and bottles.
63 Rebels Killed
LOURENCO MARQUES, 1"1oza.mbique
(AP) -Portuguetie armed forces killed
63 African guerril\as of the Mozambique
Liberailon Front in two major Dectmber
cffensive5, a military report said today.
The report said about 400 guerrillas
lnfiltral.td from Zambia in an attempt
to strike at the big Cabora Bassa hydro
electric project and other targets in
the northern Tete district.
DAILY PILOl ... '
Ntwp•lt •• K~
Let•11e '""' C•t• Mn•
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fed l'el• Y.U.,
S.. C1911111ate
OltANGE COA~T PUILISHlNG t0M'AN'1
Robt ti N. Wte4
f rHICl'tlll er,f l"v'l!ll'MT'
J .,~ J:, Curlty
Vite ,r .. ~ttfll •rA Gtntr11 Mlnfll.,
Tho"'•• K••wil fdl!or
7ho"''' A. M111 phl11•
MIMllf!p [fllor
lli,~tr• P. H1U
SOUlll 011"'1!0 CllOlln!)' t:dllOI'
o"'"' Cul• M11o1: »O Whl •• .,. str .. I N~ .. ICll! ml Wtll lelllo1 IDUleVIP'lf •
L•lt,,,.. l t1tll: 1n ,..,,., A""'ut
1'411flll"CJ!.,.. letCll: 1111J e1t<h lll'lllt.,..!"11
a.11 Cltmtlltt: .lOl Nlfl~ El (1m!M Rul
CIAtl 'I' ,.llOT, wlfll ""'ldl I, etn1b>l'lfd th1 ,.,,.., •. ,.,n 1, 11 ,.,..,It~ tiny ue1,i """'
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111 .. 1 IM~ N.wpeft a.Kfl, el'llll DI W.,
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Clmln.4 .Alf...,hl .. 4i42·S671
kl 'le111oate All 0.,..rtwt":
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INY H r1Pf'Olf11u<11 w11""'11 H*lal ,.... f!\111. llf ewyrltfll ..,.....,
~ tit• Sl'l!ttt lllf(f If ~ IMC~
., .. a.It Me,e. Ce!olfl'ftll . Ill''"" '"
Uff11t SJ,U -•~1y. •vmt ll ,H-lf\11'
tftllll.,Y 0"1~1111"'· II.JS ,._ftlflf\I,
ficials said today, and the next phase which has too high a total dissolved
might Jx; the addition cf Interested solids (TDS ) content -1200 parts per
businessmen to the project. million -and replace lt with a polished effluent having a TDS of around 500 While the plans have not yet been PP~i .
made firm, Police Chief Clifford Murray This would result. Kymla 1heorized,
iaid be Us working on an idea to welcome from adding the TDS rating of the in-
businessmen inle> the program which coming water supplies, 250 PPt\1. In the expected am ounl of Iola! dissolved
gives the visitor a first-hand insight solids usually found to be added to into pclice work. · d sewage effluent after it has receive Since last fall several hundred t.'udents secondary treatment. The resulting ef·
from San Clemente High School have fluent of 500 PPM total dissolved solids
taken the tour of the department then "very possibly will be pure enough to
have. boarded patrol cars for 1 few &pread in the underground basin ."
hours exposur~ to the world as the NBtural water found in the basin ex-
patrolman s~es it. . ..~ cced~ state. standards for use and nn
And the s1gnips have not waned 11nce water ha s been drawn from either of
fall. . . .· the large aquifers under San Juan
School off1c1als s21d the calendar . for Capistrano since 1963 when a landma rk
the program -four st~denls e~ch night cnurl judgment said water purveyors
of .the week except Friday -is bookt.d must provide a certain level rif water
solid through.March. quality, Kymla noted.
Murray sa id th_e progra'!I offered a 'Thus. with two unique "nutle\s'' fnr
few squeezes "durtng a _pcr1<>? late last . treated sewage wastes the Jl.1oullon·
year wse n many . of his . cfhcers were Niguel Water District could enjoy con-a~.ay at the San Diego pchce acad~my. siderable savings while contributing to
But n~w ~h~t V.'e . have our 10 new environmental quality at the same time. m~n wo~k~n.g 1t 1~ eas1.er than e~er. Kymla said the Jong range savlngs-
The m1t1al pinch 1n al!ocat1ng man· would -result from the Jessene.d need
power lo the program IS ov~r now. to build large interceptor sewer line5
an.d the advant:ag.e~ far .outweigh the and outfall facilities.
minor growth pair..... he said. The environmental contributions wnuld
Tw~ patrolmen. have done much of be a lowered amount af discharge intn
the ride-along pro1ect for the deparlment, the ocean and 8 conservation of "·ater
Burdell Burch and ~~···~ Re.i~~I. 5upplies by recycling water imported
Each man takes the v1s111ng groups by P..fetropolitan Water District. or. youths .-. r_n~y .or whom ~avP ~d-Among areas that could economically
!1'11tted their m1llal bitterness with po.lice be irrigated with reclaimed waste u.·aler
in ge~eral -out on patrol each evening, \\'ould be the. 50-root median strip pr1> ex~1ng the guests .to much of the jected .for Crown Valle.y Parkway:
routine a~pects of lhe ~ob. . Laguoa Niguel Cou ntry Club: a count)'
All agree that basic attitudes have park planned for Laguna Niguel : and
mellowed . a seven-mile strt.tch of !he San Diego
The only aspect cf the JOb which Freeway through the district. Is denied the visitors Is a situation
,.,:;~ • .!individual safety is in question.
"When something of a serious nature
arises we arrange to drop the guests
off at a street corner and arrange for
someone to cnme and pick them up
immediately." Murray explained.
While students have voiced ovcr\vhelm·
Ing enthusiasm ror the program, ap-
parently the ir teachers are -nol quite
as interested.
An j,1vitation alw11ys ha s existed for
teachers to undergo !he same activily.
the chief explained, but the total from
that group in the last year or so is
''about two."
Atlanta Democrat
Chosen to Fill
Sen. Russell Se at
ATLANTA IUPll -David Gambrell,
I! 4l ·year-old Atl anti?' attorney and
chairman of the Georgia Democratic
party. was named today by Gov. Jimmy
Carter to fill the unexpired term o1
the late Sen . Richard Russel1,
Russell. dean of the Sena1e in which
he served for 38 years. died Jan. 21
of a re!piraklry ailment. His term t.l·
pires in January.~ 1973.
Gambrell is expected to seek !he
Democratic nomination lor a fu11 slx·year
t.erm in the 1972 primary. One of his
t1pponents likelY will be Lt. Gov. Lester
~1addox.
Gambrell . son of E. Smylhe Gambrell.
former Pres1denl of tht. Amerlc1n Bar
Association, was picked by Carter last
fall tn carry out his reforms ln the
St•te Democratic party. He was a close
Valentine's Day
Dance Schedule
The new Teen Drop-in Club, sponsored
by the Laguna Beach Recreation Depart·
menl, has scheduled a Valentine's Day
dance Feb. 13 at the Boys' Club gym·
nasium.
Junior high and senior high school
sfudent.s are eligible to become members
of the club and to attend lhe dance.
Admission lo the dance· vdll be 50 cent.s
for club members and $1 for guests.
J\lenibership 1n the club is only $1
per year and entitles lhe studenl trl
attend all regular Drop·in activities at
no cha rge. Drop-in activities art. offered
weekly at the Boys' Club facility and
include pool, ping pong and sports
parlicipatinn, Dances. movies and field
trips are scheduled periodically for mem·
bets.
Further information may be obtained
from the Recreation DeparUnent at 494-
1124 ext 45.
Painting Class Set
At Rec Department
Laguna Beach art instructor Nelly
Allen ~'111 begin teaching a painting class
for residents Wednesday at 10 a.m. at
the Laguna Beach Recreation Depart-
menl .
The class. limited to 15 students. will
offer individual instruction in u.·ater col·
or. oil and acrylic. Prospective studenL!I
may register al the department during
business hours . Further information may
be obtained at 494-1121 ext. 45.
Sharpe11ed Axes
Council Calls 'Tinib er' on Sign
A b11lbo:..i.I. ,; 'ul
~fisston Viejo stands defl1nlly 1l the
i;oulh end ,.! Camino Capistrano pro-, ··~.·-"Yr ~Nell:tMo\·e ••. "
San Juan C1pistr11no city CQUncilmen
have decit!ed to take .up the challenge
3nd m kt thtir own next move -back
lo court.
City attorney Jamts Okaiakl Bald the
city will resume litigation Feb. 11 to
force 11 • ~\'fll of tne billboard.
The city w\:I try to have !ht Injunction
agalr·' :·~e sl....,'s remo\·al l!fttd and
conttmr· '· • ""!!on rein 5t&t rtl.
At one time 1 UJ(I city h11d ~·on the
battle to rt1nove the billboard which
violated a "ily ordinance. The si gn
o~·ntrs, a San Diego firm, t1.·ere ordered
to remove it by ~nlhl'r of 1969.
'\!hen ii was not removed. the city
,-.t I -! ~ <.OU: • i;:; r • 1ntt ::-:?t
ol cour1 charge~ and won again.
But ~n .after that the city learned
U had been slapped with a countersuit
• • :e 10 a '-·1dstlll.
Tht city, t1.•hich h11s ch11nged attorneys
liLnce the fighi began , now hopes to get the
m<er settled cnce end {or all.
At ont. ltme a member of !ht council
w•s 50 : • over thl" sign t.hti! hr
suggested paintins It black or chopping
if dO\\'r'I.
•
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0411.Y PILOT S11!1 1'~1!1
Bu11dreds Cauie
Orange County residents turned out in droves for the casting party
for Lagur'la's 36th annual Pageant of the f\.tasters Saturday and Sunday,
It will begin July 16. Bert Pettey, hair dressing and property director,
checks head size of Sufi TiLiesen , 17. of Costa i1esa.
Laguna Beauty Conte stant
Ha s Shapel}· Con1petitors
The r.tiss Laguna Rea ch Pageaanl,
which 12 days agt1 h<1cl one conte stant,
grew quickly and entries closed lnday
with nine shapely ladiei; signed up for
the conies!.
1'he beauty pageant, tiChcduled for Feb.
12 al lhl! Festival ef Arts Fnrum Theater,
is being co·~ponsored by !he city Recrea-
tion Oepartn1ent and th e Junior \\'oman'.!li
Club. The c·ontest \\'inner will receive
numerous gifts from local merchantl
and wlll reign with her courl (Iver the
Winter Festival, slated to begin Feb.
19.
The entrant.s are Jill c:rcenwald. 20,
Nanci Nichols, 16, Nancy Henderson,
17. Jenifer Bradley. 16, Frances Cotterell,
18, Marie McCarty. 16, Kath I e en
Shapard, 17, Claudie Miller, 18, and
Candi McCue, 19.
The young ladie~ will be judged 11n
the basis of beauty. poise and C'harm
by a panel of five persons associated
~·ith the entertainment industry. 'The
Judger; for the contest are Byron GrHfith
of GE Artists; Chris Robinson. l'IC\or;
Robert Carter, artist and actor; Penn.v
Bl'lyshore. modeling instructor a n d
Monika Hamlllon. former beauty queen
and model.
The mas~r of ceremonies at the judg·
Stash of 'Grass'
Found in Lot
Cardboard boxes full of cut gras5 are
a common Bight in e.mpty lots along
!he South Cllast. ·
But when the vegetation is nea tly pack-
ed in small plastic bags, the interest
-by police -soars.
San Clemente narcotics detectives said
loday a local resident found two dozen
"lids'' of marijuana resting in a small
box in 11n empty lot Saturday ;ifternonn.
The next day, they added, the man
!urned the quantity 11f forbidden "'eed
over to pol ice.
The lot where the box wa:; dumped
Is bel"'een 133 and 129 \\'. Canada.
Offshore Platform
Fire Extinguisher!
NEW ORLEANS IUPJl -Shell Oil
Company successfully clogged a fourth
1vel\ on its burning offshore platfnrm
Sunday night. But it i;till must kill four
more wells before !he two-month-Old fire
can be extinguished .
The fourth well to be killed was clogged
with mud a~ were thf' pre\'iou~ three.
The mud was pumped into the wells
lhroug h relief shafts drl\led cletp below
ihe surface of th·e Gulf of l\1exk:o.
i1tio will be television pcrsonall1y Johnny
Geant. Admissinn to the pageant,
scheduled tn begin at 8 p.m .. is $1,
and tickets may be purchased in advance
at the Recreation Department, 175 N.
·-coast High~'ay,
Medical School
At UCI Gra11ted
Society Charter
Tht. California College of Medicine at
UC Irvine has been awarded a charter
for its chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha ,
the nationa.1 medical honor society.
Dr. John Z. Bov.·ers, president of the
st1ciety, inaugurated the new AOA
chapter which includes 1 I senior medical
students as charter membe rs and four
charter faculty members.
The top scholars of this year's
~raduaUng class include Rnbert· E.
Blackwelder. Fred H. Hlrshburg, Bonnie
.Jean Johnson . Dennis L. Johnson. Robert
MacF'arlane, John C. Michalak , Stephen
tltorrison. Barbara H. To~'ne, Gary L.
Treece. Theodore Van Dam and Gary
Wagner.
Faculty members of the honor society
Rte Jt1hn E. Connolly. Eldon L. Foltz
and James H. Graham, all medical doc-
tors. and Haluor Vermund. M.D. end
Ph .D.
Dean Warren L. Bostick accepted the
AOA charter on behaJf of the College
of Medicine .
Mabel E. Lyon
L'llst Rites Held
Services ~·ere held today ln Alladena
fnr J\label E. Lyon. 33221 Ocean Hill
Drive . Dan;i Point. ~·ho died 'Thur:!lday
in South Coast Community Ho~pital. She
\4.'3S 7~
A narive of England . l\!rs. Lyon had
li\'ed in California for 51 years.
She is survived by a son. Kenneth
nf Dana Poinl, lwo brothers, Kenneth
Smythe of Pennsylvania and Keith Smith
of Santa Rosa: and three :;i11ters, Mrs.
Ina l\1oreland of London . England : Mrs.
Winifred Nichnlls of South Pasadtna:
and f\1rs . Ivy Bertonot.au f)f St'!u1h
Pa~adena.
The Rev .. John V. Fransworth t1f SI.
David's Episcopa l Church -0f North
Hnllywood officiated at !'lervict.s and
burial tn the M.:iusoleum of Mountain
View Cemetery. Altaden;i .
Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary dlrec-
lnr~.
56 4 Mod els
Tllrn Out
At Pageant
By FREDERICK SCHOEt\ll';Jll.
01 "" 0•11~ 1'1111 '""
They all came to the castini: Jil!l·lo·
gethei for Laguna's l97t Pageant or the
Masters and for a rew hours on Sunda~·
afternoon jf wa s stnnding room only
backstage at Irvin~ Bowl .
By the tinte the Jast wou!d·he li\'ing
picture model had beeo numbered , pho-
tographed and measured the rounl fnr
1he wrekend signup had reached 564 -
an 111l·t ime record this early in the year.
"It's wond erful , ju lit \\'Onderful."
bramed producer Don \Vilt iamson anrl
<'llsling director Karla Allen. "\\!hat "
1urnoul -with a selection like this wt.'11
be able· to fiJld the perfect model5 for
every plcture ."
Si7.e and proportion are the keys lo
casting Jiving plctur£s. \\lilliamson t>X•
plained. and heighl ;ind measurrment:s
must fit wilhin the inch to create the
desired effect.
~1ore than 400 inodels -men, '~omen
.:ind children -are needed 111 make up
the two complete easts fnr the Pageant,
each c<1st working on alternate week.<;,
along with substitutes and a bevy ol
back~tage workers for makeup , costume
and other duties.
In previous yeart, lhe producer said,
lhe casting get·togethers usua lly round
up somewhat over ~00 volunteers and
the ~ mark rareh• is reached \lnt il
late sp~lng wbesi mcire calls ha\'e gone
nut.
This year. the Saturday night signup
passed the 200 mark . with more lhan
JOO turning out for the Sunday afternoon
casting session. ..
Now, ~·ith photographs and specifica-
tions of each volunteer in hand. castini:::
direc!or Allen will set about the task
of matching modrls ln the ~I artwork s
to be reprnduced in this year's 28 pro·
gram Items.
young s,vimmers
Returning From
/
Canadian Trip
Six San Clemente swimmers will relurn
tonight from a whlr!wind weekend ,o
Canada where they blended keen .i;wim-
ming CQmpetition with just pain fun.
1'he ~·eekend to Vancouver. B.C .. came
after an invilation to fht.. San Clemente
swimmers during a coaches' convention
in San Francisco reccnlly.
The local youlh~ whn tonk up the
Invitation bv Woodland Hills Swim Club
are Peggy Tosda!. Malcnlm and Duncsn
Wilson, Mark McCa rtin . P a r r t1 ck
Lineback and Dorothy and Kathy \ll'pnzeL
The youths spent the ~·eekend in 1he
homes of Canadian :swimmers ;incl swam
in two meet.. at Simon and Fra5ier
Universitv.
Coach . Ginneve Harris of lhe San
Clemente Al'juaiic Association said the
plans for the trip included sM11• trips,
exchange worknuts. S"'im cl inic~ an1
sightseeing in the Picturesque Northll'e5t
province. ....
Toro Troop Held
In Bar Shooting
A complaint char11:in11: as~ault .... ·ilh In·
tent !ti rommit murder wi ll be 6ought
today by Santa Ana polit'f> agai nst L!Cpl.
Donald W. Nt>well Jr., 22. nf E! Tnrn.
who was jailed Saturday night following
thf' shooting of barmaid M11rgaret Rosen·
dahl. 2.1.
Police s.11id Ne\\•ell. ~·ho turned h im ~e\f
· .:t headquarters, claimed the shooting
\\'.llS sccirlen laL
We are clearing out hu11dreds of Items at •ras·
t'cally reduced prices. Come In and shop
around, A pawn shop is more fun than a rum•
magesale.
STEREO
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Lagu11a :peaeh
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
* YOL 64, NO. 27, 3 SECTI ONS, l~ PAGES ORANGE couNtf, CALIF<:lRNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY f, 1971 TEN CENTS
Planners May Vote Tonight ori Bea¢h Zoning
By BARBARA KRE IBICH
01 tlMI 0.111 Piie! $Ifft
The Laguna Beac h Plann ing Com-
mission will hold its second public hear·
ing at 7: 30 tonight on the proposed
CR (commercial-residential) zone thal
would establish standards for oceanfroot
hotel-motel developmenl.
Commissioners could vole ton ight on
their recommendation to tbe City Council
regarding the controversial ordinance, or
could continue the public hearing to
a future date. They can recommend
for or against passage of the ordinance,
or propose modifications.
Since, with the resignation of com-"
missioner Thomas Johnston . the com·
mission is short one member, it is con-
sidered likely that acti{ln may be delayed
until after a fifth commissioner is seated.
The appointment prob8.bly will be an-
nounced at the City C:Ouncil meeting
Wednesday.
The council also is required to hold
a public bearing on the ordinance before
acting on its adoption.
The first Planning Commissioner bear·
lng o nthe CR ordinance drew a crowd
of 250 on Jan. 18, mostly protesting
the idea of buildin'g high rise structures
on the beachfront.
Propon!!nts al the measure, who cite
the city's impending need for iocreased
tax revenue, are ' expected to present
their arguments tonight.
The ordinance is being considered for
application in two beachfroni areas :
between Lag una Avenue and Cleo Street
find between Mountain Road .itnd Agate
Street. A thirsl area, from Cliff Drive
to the Recreation Department an North
Coast Highway, was also in the original
proposal, but commisslonen have in·
formally agreed in inititl studies to
recommend elimination of this section.
Chief bone of contention in the
ordinance is the hei&ht, lirnit which, in
the draft proposal, "".OUld go up to 10
DAILY ,ILOT ,.._,_ '1 Jtlllt VllNr'll
MARCH INCLUDED DURABLE '"UNCLE SAM" ON STlt TS WHO WALKED A MILE
There Were Differences Of Opinion But No S.rlout Incidents
Clemente Parade -Q. · .ule't .. .': ..
. '
Mcintire Freedom Marcli Calls for 'Towl · Victory'
By JOHN VAL TERZA while an· alternate system was being
0t "" 0.11~ ,1101 s1•ff repaired
Dr. Carl fl.1clntire and 2.000 of his fThlhee hdndrldedsl of marchhersd-manlhy
followers marched through the street.I o m e er Y -gat ere on e
of San Cemente over the wttkend, flatland and slopes of Linda Lane Park
singing and chanting for a total armed amid scores of banners and placards
victory in Vietnam. with slogans blending religion and
politics. And at the end of lhe match -Some called for an end to the "no-win''
which included Uncle Sam on stills policy of the U.S. Gavernment.
towering above young and old alike, No incidents which could be Interpreted
Dr. f\iclnlire experienced difficulties with as hostile toward the group took place
the one piece of equipment which led at the Saturday afternoon kickoff o[
to a two-week donnybrook with the city a series of victory marcbes thro'ughout
council. the nation.
After being the object of two battles The event, however, drew curious
in city hall, the sound system broke onlookers from the nearby Linda Lane
down for more than an hour. •beach .
But. undaunted, the fiery New Jersey At one point of the procession five
minister with an enormous following bikini-clad girls walked beside the
from his radio broadcasts used a bullhorn paraders.
Colder Titan Hell
Frigid Wave Grips North, Midwest
By United Press 1.Dternatioa11
The tempe rature in Hell, Mich., was
!'line below zero early today. It was colder
than that in many places around the
country.
Readings between 10 afld 20 below were
commonplace around the upper Midwest.
Frost or freeze warnings were in effr.ct
in Louisiana and Mississippi. a hard
freeze was expecled in northern Georgia
and cold wave warnings were in effecL
for North Carolina and northwest Florida.
bourr for the eight-hour trip when frigid
temperatures and drifting snow crippled
engine unlts.
Two days af subzero cold In the Chi·
cago area destroyed most ol the rare
tropical plants at the suburban Oak Park
Conservatory whe.i the building's heat
faile<f. A coMervatory worker, hearing of
the situation, walked lhere from her
home, suffering severe frostbite.
At least 10 Chicago-area landlords were
summoned to court for allegtdly failing
to provide sufficient heat in their build·
in gs.
Se1vera l older men snarled diagust at
the']tr1s' attire. ·
''First. they allowed burlesque indoors,
now it's in the public streets ...
shameCul," growled one man carrying
a huge flag. '
The Mcintire followers came from
throughout the Southland to President
Nixon 's adopted town.
DelegaUons from · Los Anieles anH San
Diego County formed the majority of
the group.
A few hundred others were from local
communities.
Despite the warm weather, few of
the elderly felt ill e f f e c t s 'from the
one-mile walk through neighborhood
&lreets.
Only one person required first-a!d.
Dr. Mclntire's stiltman took much of
the attention of the day.
The man, who has marched with
Mclntire followings before, wore boxing
gloyes and was bound at the wrist ,
rnr'demonstrate the effects af the "no-win
policy."
"Our trouble," Dr. Mcintire said, "is
that soon we will have simultaneous
marches throughout the land, and we
have only one Uncle Sam to m a·r ch
with us," he said.
The kickoff for the marches ' was
earmarked for San Clemente, Dr.
Mcintire said. because of the presence
of La Casa Pacifica, President Nixon's
villa .
But antl-Niron ,sentiment ran high
among some af the minister'• marchers.
"Where is this Western Whi te House
we hear about?" one man In his 50s
asked·his fellows.
"Tt's down the road a piect," said
another, "but don't bother. they won'.t
even let you get close."
Detroit and Toledo. Ohi o. established
records for Feb. 1. with N!spective read·
ings of four be low and fi ve below at 2
1.m. The temperature still was falling .
A resident of Apollo, Pa.,Pop. 2.400. said
early today il was "just plain zero" there.
Travelers warnings were in effect in
parts of North Dakota, South Dakota and
Minnesota as northwesterly winds gusted
to 40 miles an hour, whipping s1ow from
last week's two storms. .
Woman Badly Burned
The early morn ing rea~1ng ~ tw~ ~
Jow in Minncapo\Js, combined with b1llng
winds. sent the wind chill factor to 43
below zero. Some 200 l!l'lOWmoblle drivers got their
entrance fees back Sunday whel'I an oval
track at Tron Mounta in. Mich .. froze to a
dsngerous condition before a schedul~
race. 1 . h More t.han J ,000 persons were eft -wit •
out heat for more t.han a day In north-
eastem ~ilnnesota whtl'I. .a natural gas
mai n broke between Keewa tin and Coler·
alne lale Friday night. The Northern Gas
Company said lhe cold prevented lmmed·
late repairs. Residents sought refuge In
busine!iStS 11nd othtr homes as tempera·
tures dipptd to 1car 30 below.
A train carrying a skl tour !rom Chi·
(-ago to Iron fl.fountain, Mich., took IS!,\
As Fire Sweeps Home
A 4!}.year~ld Seavers Canyon woman
suffered tevere burns.in .. predawn blaze
Sunday \.\'n1c.: "estroyed her '30,000 home
in a sc:enic ,1en along Pftega Highway
ri • San Juan Capistra11n.
Jackie Wrigley, who fled her blaiing
residence as bystanders fought names
to reach her, suffctcd third and 1econd·
degree bums on one-third of her body
In the dev1st.ating flrt at :WSl Seavers
Canyon rto.id.
County Fire Department spokesmen
1aid 30 firefighters fought In vain to
1ave the re1idenee1 but wei:e !auccusful
tn keeptnr names away rrom nearby
homes and brush areas.
T.,_ home was burned to the .IJ'OUl1d •.
The Wrigley woman . J'Cl!lllntd tn
&erious condition at SoutJt \Cou( eom.
munity Hospital e1rty today, ~.~as
transferred &o a military hospital later
tn the day, spokesmen Aid.
Authorltlts gald pauklg motorlsb
noticed the blait at about -4 a.m.. but
by the time they Al\d neighbors re1ched
tht home tht 11.ructure was completely
Involved in name.
The worn&., who· lf\red 1ltmt, ap-
parently was awakened br the bl•z.e
and foughl bu wly out throup ttoi:!n&
heat.
--------------
s~ries or 100 feet, with sideyard re·
QUirements increasing with additjonal
height.
In a study session following the first
public hearing, commissioners agreed
that 100 feet was too high and seemed
le favor a m;lximum height af 60 to 70
feet.
Also under discussion is the question
of whether height should be measured
from highway level. h:om beach level.
or from a point 14 feet above beach
level.
Under present zoning, height limits
in the Cl and C2 commercial zones
are 30 feet and 50 f(j,et from highway
level respectively and building is permit·
ted from lot-line to lol·line.
The proposed ord inance would requirc
minimum sideyards of 10 feet or 10
percent of total Jot width for the first
three stories and an additional five feet
of sideyard for each additional story.
Adoption of a uniform hot e I' uine
ordinance has long been urged to
overcome problems of s u I i t zoning in
many oceanfront areas.
Some of the properties running through
from the highwa y to the oceanfront in-
clude three zones, commercial, multiple
residential and single residential.
Development of these p r o p e r t i e '
heretofore has been accomplishe d
through variances but this procedure
is banned under a new state law that
calls for re-zoning rather than issuance
of ust variances.
Mayor Richard Goldberg last week
warned tQat Laguna's property taxes
may increase by as much as 50 per:cent
if new revenue sources are not developed.
'-fayor Richard Goldberg laist week
warned that Laguna's property taxes
may increase by as much as SO percent
if new revenue sources are not developed.
High rise opponents maintain that such
development would destroy the Art
Colony's tranquil village atmosphere.
Apollo 14 Bugged
Linkup Trouble Still Not Solved
SPACE CENTER, Houslon (UPI) -
The Apollo 14 astronauts, speeding ac·
curately toward the moon. checked their
malfunctioning docking mechanism by
hand today but failed to find the trouble
which could scrub their $400 million
lunar landing mission.
Alan 8. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and
Edgar D. Mitchell examined the device
for an hour before gonng to sleep after
a busy JS1.'.t hours of success atl6 frustra·
lion that started with a flawless launch
from Cape Kennedy.
The routine linkup of the command
ship Kitty Hawk and the lunar lander
Antares turned into a tense hour a n d
44 minute struggle Sunday night to pre·
vent the failure of America 's second
ttralgbt moon mission .
But the .successful lockinr cf the twc
.,...i. bJ u '-lhodoJ -mtlJ!od loll
the possibility the mechanllm wo1.1ld fail
again after the lunar module lifts off
~PF r« Mau.ro llCUcit' ot UM! moon Saturday.
Ground experts viewed television fjJms
of the device and worked with models
to decide if Shepard. 47, America's first
man in space, and rookie Astronaut
Mitchell, 40, would be allowed to spend
33~ hours on the lunar surface.
A space agency spokesman said a
decision wasn't being rusbed but pro·
·bably will be made r;ometime before
a braking maneuver Thursday to put
Apollo 14 into moon orbit.
The astronauts never were in danger
and even if the moon landing ls cancelled,
Calm Prevails
In LA's Barrio
After Violence
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -An over·
night curfew brought calm to the East
Los Angeles Mexi can-American barrio
today following violent skirmishes in
which one Chicano was killed, 43 per·
sons injured and 88 arrested.
Sunday's window-breaking and looting
rampage in a business area followed a
peaceful rally at Belvedere Park of S,000
Chicanos protesting alleged police bru·
tality.
C:Ounty supervisors declared a state of
emergency and imposed a 6:20 P·llJ· to
S a.m. curfew in a 10-squ~rea.
Deputies said that 88 persons were at·
rested on charges ranging from failure
to disperse to assault 'on an officer.
Tbe Windows of at least 60 businesses
were smashed and several stores were
looted.
Nine buildings including a bank and
an automobile dealership were set ablaze
by firebombs. A liquor store . and ball
bonds building were gutted while dam·
age to Pan American National Bank
was estimated at $15 ,000.
Sheriff Peter Pltchess said the shoot·
Ing death resulted when si x deputies near
the bank were confronted by about SOO
to 600 demonstrators who hurled missiles
•Dd advanced on the officers. Pitchess
said the deputies fired warning shots
over 'the heads of the crowd with shot--auns tnd also fired shots into the ground.
The lheriff said the victi m, who was
not immediately idenllned, and the
wou'ndlng of the other persons occurred
at this Ume although the circumstances
surrounding the incident had not yet
been determined.
Twenty-three civilians suffered In-
juries. 14 of them wounded by gunfire.
Twelve deputies 1uffertd minor injuries
and 12 firtrhen were tttated for smoke
Inhalation after bJtlling a total of 35
fires In the area, IM!t of them in trash
bins.
Total structural damage was estimat·
ed 1l 1190,000.
--
I • . ---
officials said they could still loop the
moon to take pictures and perform some
scientific observations.
The docking mechanism failed to work
five Umes whlle Apollo 1• sped: ......
20,090 miles of ~pace. But On 'tht sixth
try tht' space pilots gave ttn extra Jon&
a,n4_ Wd · shove will\ UteiI: atetrlne roc'iets and linked tb:e two craft wltb
lbe unorthodox technique.
Roosa, 37, also a rook ie spaceman,
crawled into !he hatch a few hour&
later and removed the linkup dtvl<:!:
-an operation which normally would
have occurred on Wednesday.
Roosa i.,spected the inside of the .. ~up!·
ing with his hands and a flashlight
and reported "somc impressions that
are rough to touch, probably scratched
in the surface of the drogue for about
a quarter of an inch deep."
"It appears the probe. hit the drogue
Fights for Life
dead center every time we tried to
dock," Roosa said, "but it just didn't
c. ~ch."
The astronauts then inspected the
mechan ism and triggered it several
times by hand . It worked every time
-and thus failed to show what went
\Tong.
The docking mechanism, which never
bc:::-e has failed in flight . uses a pointed
"probe" on the command modul e to
nud ge into a cone-shaped drogue on
the lunar lander.
With the probe in place, three ''capture
latches'' are supposed to catch the lander
and hold the two vessels together until
a :ng of 12 latche s locks.
But for Apollo 14, the three capture
latcheS d:dn't work.
~; en the 1i1th dockin& try, !lOOM
drove the command ship, with probe
extended, into the lander's proper align~
ment. Instead of using the capture
litches to hold the spacecraft together,
Roosa fired ctlfttrol jets to keep the
craft mug until the locking latches
engaged.
At mission control in H o u st o n •
engineers took a "wait and see" attitude
while they tried to figure what went
wrong.
After their uqscheduled study of the
faulty part and an exchange of in-
formation with the ground, the astronauts
asked if they could go to sleep 26 minutes
early. They settled down at 7:4S a.m.
EST for a scheduled 10-hour rest period.
Mission Viejo Youth
Shot at Gas Statinn
A 17-year-old Mission Viejo youth
fought for hi s !He in South Coast Com·
munlty Hospital today while Orange
County sheriff's deputies stepped up
their search for the man who put a
bullet in the young service station at-
tendant's head.
Douglas Ray Wheat, Jr., 24551 Satur-
na Drive, was shol early Siiturday by
an unknown bandit who took an e&tl·
mated '51) from the till of the Arco
station at La Paz Road and the San
Diego Freeway.
'The boy, who had worked just three
months at the station. was found face
down Jn a pool of blood in the storage
room at the rear ()f the station by a
motorist who later told officers : "l just
fe(.f something was wrong."
Deputies rushed the youth to South
Coast C:Ommunity Hospital where doc·
tors performed emergency surgery to
Burglar:s Take
$1,000 in Loot
A lravtl-weary Laguna Beach residtnt
returned early Monday from a four.day
trip and discovered hl5 bouse had been
burglarlzed of ne•tly $1,000 fn merchan-
dise.
Pollce S81d ,Dortald Downing. or 775
Summit Drive, arrived home at 11bout
4:30 a.m. and fbtlnd his front door stan·
ding open. The door knob had been
pried until the latch broke, officers sat~. ,
According to Investigators, the thief
csrefully seai'thed each room of lht
borne in hil quest for loot. Items mlsslng
Included an oil palnUng valued al 1500:
1 camera : '20 In coins and currency:
kitchen appliances; and other household
item s.
remove the bullet lodged ln his r;kull.
Officers said young W~ at was shot in
the back of the head.
A sheriff's patrolman said he last
saw Wheat b e f o r e the ~hooting at
about 2 a.m. Saturday, just two hours
before the seriously wounded boy was
found.
The officer said everything appear·
ed to be normal at that lime with the
youth serving late night motorists.
Sheriff's investigators do not link the
Wheat shooting with that of a Garden
Grove service station attendant who was
shot in the back Friday after being
pistol whipped into unconsciousness.
Oraage Coast
Weather
Those low clouds will bum orr
late Tuesday afternoon but the
temperatureJ won 't get past 60
either locally or further inland.
INSIDE TODA\'
lt took Apollo 14-astro11au.t.t
i ix ITies to successf ully ·corn-
pltte o maneuver considt red
one of the mtMt rouine with th•
la3t sophisticated equipment -
docking two spa.cecrafts. See
story Page S.
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---------
''
Z 'DA.JLV PILOT
Recycle Plan Studied
-.-
Water Directors to End Ocean Disposal?
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 1M D1ll'r Pllfl Ill"
~foulton-Niguel \Yater District directors
have decided to explore ways of recycling
Rwage wastes rather than plann ing Jor
continued ocean disposal.
Manager Carl Kymla said the district
whlch serves t.11sz.ion Viejo and Laguna
Niguel would attempt by 1974 to devise
a system that would Use secondary
treated sewage effluent to Irrigate parks,
golf courses and ireeway1 lying within
the district.
The concept is not new to the
~foulton -Niguel district. s 1 n c e it bas
provided tnlted waste water to Miuion
Viejo Golf Coune !or woterlng ..,....,
and fairwaya.
The new element ia the expansion
of the idea to public parks and freeways
providing additional acreage for
"disposal" of treated wastes at 1 pro-
jected st1vings to taxpayers.
The district now discharges a haU
million gallons daily through the San
Juan Capistrano outfall near Doheny
Beach. By 1978, Kymla noted, that facili.
ty would propel S.5 million gaUom per
day from the Moul ton-Niguel district into
the sea.
San Clemente Success
Merchants May Be Next
For Ride-along Program
By JOUN VALTERZA
Of flM D1lh' .. llet ltllt
The success of San Clemente's police
ride-along progrvn has never waned
since it!.-id:«.plion last fall, police of·
17 San Clemente
Girl s Commence
Hospital Stint
'Vilhout c'remony or fanfare, 17 San
Clemente High School girls enrolled in
the health alde training program this
momlng began their first day cf work
at South Coast Community Hospital in
South Laguna.
The students are part or the Regional
Occupation Program being sponsored by
the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified
School Districts. Th're are a tot.al of
24 youngsters enrolled In the training,
l;lut the seven Laguna Beach High School
studenb did not begin work today
be cause cf a school holiday.
The 2~ students, all seniors. spent
the fall semester in training at Beverly
:Manor Convalescent Hospital i n
Capistrano Beach. They will remain at
South Coast Hospital through the re-
mainder of the school year.
The students wlll v.•ork under the direct
&Upervision of nurses at the hospital
twG hours per day for the entire
semester. Upon graduation from high
scbool in the spring, they will be awarded
quali!icaUon certificates as nurses' 1lde1 ~
and will be qualified for employment
in that field.
Seniors Collecting
Cans, Glass Bottles
The senior class or Laguna Be1cb
High School has jumped on the recyclin g
band v.·agon and announced the students
will begin collecting glass bt>ttles And
aluminum cans for recycling.
The students hope to spur residents
to begin saving their trash that can
be re·slled. The students have set up
co\lcctiGn receptacles behind t h e
bleachers at the football field where
citizens may take their cans and bottles.
63 Rebels Killed
LOURENCO MARQUES, ~1oiambique
fAP) -Portuguese armed forces killed
6.1 African guerrillas of the Mozambiqu'
Liberation Front in two major December
offensives, a military report said today.
The report said about 400 guerrillas
Infiltrated from Zambia in An attempt
to·strlke st the big Cabora Bassa hydro
electric project and other targets tn
the northern Tete district.
DAILY PILOT
""''" ''""" "'"'~ .... L .. va• l•o~la Pev•'91a f .. llf
CM'• Mn• S.. C._.it.
oaANIJIE '°AST PUILl.SHIN.G COMl'AMY
Robert N. W1 e4
Prnld•11I 1r.4 P111t11111er
J1clr: 11:. C11rl1y Vkt 1'rtJ.Ot11I 1r.4 co-r11 MINllV
Tl111m11 1Ce1vil
.l!01tor
Jho"''' A. M urph!~• Mtlllllll' Ed1TOI'
1l.ic~1r4 I'. Ni ll
•011111 O••f'll• Ceun1y Editor
Off1cM
ficials 1aid today, and lhe next phase
·might be the addition (If Interested
businessmen to the project. ,
\Vhile the · plans have not yet been
made firm , Police Chief Clifford Murray
said he is working on an idea to welcome
businessmen into the program which
gi ves the visitor a first-hand insight
into police y,·ork.
Since last fall several hundred s'udenls
from San Clemente High School have
taken the tour or the department then
have boarded patrol cars for a few
hGurs' exposure to the world as the
patrolman sees it.
And the signups ha ve not waned since
rail.
School officials said the calendar for
the program -four students each night
of the week except Friday -is booked
solid through March.
, Murray said the program offered a
few squeezes during a period late last
year wsen many of his officers were
away at the San Diego police acad!my.
''But now that we have our 10 new
men working it is e.asier than ever.
"The in itial pinch in allocating man·
}Xlwer to the pro111ram is over now,
and lie ad.vantates far outweigh the
minor growth pa.ir.;;," he said.
_ Two patrolmen have done much of
the ride-alonlll project for the department,
Burpell Burch and 1':"·"? Reischl.
Each man takes the Visiting groups
of youths -many of whom have ad·
mitled their initial bitterness with police
in generaJ -out on patrol each evening,
exposing the guests to much of the
routine aspects of the job.
All agree that basic attitudes havt
mellowed.
The only aspect of the job which
is denied the visitors is a situation
v.i1-.e individual safety is in question.
"When something of a serious nature
arises we arrange to drop the guests
off at a street corner and arrange for
&0meone to come and pick them up
immediately," Murray explained.
While students have voiced oveC>Yhelm-
lng enthusiasm for the program. ap·
parently their teachers are not quite
as interested.
An i11vitation alwa ys ha s existed for
teachers to undergo the same 1ctivity,
· the chief explained, but' the total from
that grou p in the last year or so is
"about twG."
Atlanta De1nocrat
Chosen to Fill
Sen. Russell Seat
ATLANTA (UPI) -David Gambrell,
a 41-year-cld Atlanta attorney and
chairman of the Georgia Democratic
party, was named today by Gov. Jimmy
Carter to fill the unexpired term o!
the late Sen. Richard Russell.
Russell. deal) of the Senate in which
he serve d fof 38 years, died Jan. 21
of a respiratory ailment. His term 'i:·
pires in January, 1973.
Gambrell is expected to seek the
Democratic nominati on for a full six-year
t'rrn in the 1972 primary. One of his
opponents likely will be Lt. Gov. Lester
Maddox. '
Gambrell. sen of E. Smythe Gambrell.
former President cf the American Bar
Associat ion, was picked by Carter last
fall to carry out his reforms In lhe
Sta.le Democratic party. He was a close
If '°""' of the pn>jected Increased now from the developing Minion Viejo
and Laguna Niguel attu can be diverted
from the jointly operated treatment plant
at San Juan Capistrano, the outfall need
not be buJ\t so large. •
"We will have to build a larger out·
fall ," Kymla said , "But the amount,
cost 11nd effect ()f sewage discharge
on the ocean will be considerably chang·
ed by the recycling attempt."
The equipment necessary to recycle
treated wastts could be built for "'one
third to half ()f the cost of the new
outran."
Key to the recycling cOncept is the
debut of Feather River Project waters
in Southern California, wh'n t h e
Melropolit.an Water District begins im·
porting the low total dissolved solids
fresh water -250 parts per million
(PPM) versus 750 PPM now brought
in from the Colorado River.
A joint study by the State Water
Resources Control Board and flood con·
trol Board and flood control ()fficia\s
of the natural underground water storage
basins is due this spring. Kymla said
it is possible that re2ort will indicate
it is possible to pump cut the water
whicti has too high a total dissolved
solids (TDS) content -1200 parts per
million -and replace it with a polished
effluent having a IDS <lf around 500 "'
PPf\1. •
This would result . Kym la theorized,
from adding the TDS rating of the in-
coming water supplies. 250 PPM. to
the expected amount cf total dissolved
solids usually found to be added to
sewage effluent after it has r~eived
:;econdary treatrrlent. The resulting ef·
fluent of 500 PP~t total dissolved solids
"very possibly will be pu re enough to
spread in the underground basin."
Natural water found in the basin ex·
ceeds state standards for use an<l no
water bas-been drawn from eltber\of
the large aquifers under San Juan
Capistrano since 1963 when a landmark
court judgment said waler purveyors
must provide a certain (eve! of water
qual ity, Kymla noted.
Thus. with two unique "outlets" for
treated sewage wastes the Moulton·
Niguel Water District could enj oy con·
siderable savings while contributing to
envi ronmental quality at the same lime.
Kymla said the long range savings
would r'sult from the lessened need
to build large interceptor sewer lines
and outfall facilities .
The environmental contributions would
be a IGwered amount cf discharge into
the ocean and a c0nservation of water
supplies by recycling water imported
by ~1etropclitan Water District.
Among areas that could economically
be Irrigated with reclaimed waste water
would be the SO-fool median strip prD-
jecled for Crown Valley Parkway;
Laguna Niguel Country Club: a county
park planned for Laguna Niguel; and
a seven-mile 11tretch of the San Diego
Freeway tbrougb the district.
Valentine's Day
Dance Schedule
The new Teen Drop-in Club, sponsored
by the Laguna Beach Recreation Depart·
ment. has scheduled a ValeAline's Day
dance Feb. 13 at the Boys' Club gym·
nasium .
Junior high and senior high 'lichoot
students are eligible to become members
of the club and to attend the dan ce.
Admission to the dance will be 50 cents
for club members and $1 for guests.
~1embership in the club is only Sl
per year and entitles the student to
at~nd all regular Drop-in activities at
no charge. Drop-in activities are offered
weekly at the Boys' Club facllity and
include pool, ping pong and sports:
pa rticipation. Dances, movies and field
trips are scheduled periodically for mem·
be rs.
Further informa tion may be obtained
from the Recreation Department at 494-
1124 l!Xt. 45,
Painting Class Set
At Rec Department
Laguna Beach art in~ctor N,\ly
Allen will begin teaching •Painting class
for residents Wednesda y at 10 a.m. at
the Laguna Beach Recreation Depart·
ment.
The c\a.~s. limited to lS students. will
offer individual Instruction in water col·
or. oil and acrylic. Prnspective students
may register at th' department during
business hDurs. Further information may
be obtained at 494-11%1 ext. 4$.
Cotlt M•ll! llO Wat a1y ,,,...,
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CAIL V PILOT, wttll wllkll h C8""1111'1d !111
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-
Council Calls 'Tiniber'. on Sign
A billboc..d, .; .. ul
MLS!ion Viejo stands defiantly at the
south end 4·! Cam ino Capistrano pro-
'· ·--· ~"Yr ~ Nexl f\fO\'e .• .''
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen
ha\·e decided to take up the challenge.
and m ke lhtir own ntxt move -back
to court.
City attorneY James Okaukl said the
city will resume Utigatlon Feb. 11 to
force 11 l\'&I of the billboard.
The city will try to have !he lnjuncllon
ag11ir1·• r1e ~ign's removal lifted and
contctnl'I' .-• ' Ji':tfon relnshllcd.
At one time the cily l!ad won the
ba ttle lo 1em<1\'e lhe hlllboard which"
vio\1ttd a .. ity ordinance. The 11ign
owners. a San Diego firm, w're ordered
to rcmo1e. It by December of 1969.
When It v.·1s not removed. the city
v .. t '" · : .. <:()Ur . ss f, tJnle;::;>t
of court chargts and won again.
But sonn afttr that the city 1,amed
1t had been slapped with a countersult
1 , ;e toa ···,dsllll.
1'he city. v.·hlch has changed attorneys
5\nce the fight btgan, now hopes to get the
m11ncr settled once and for all.
At one time a member <>f the council
was :;o ~ over lh' sign that he
suggc.st'd painting lt black or chopping
II do"·n ..
\ •
OAILY PILOT 11111 PllDll
Hundreds Canie
Orange County residents turned out in droves for the casting party
for Laguna's 36th annual Pageant of the ?>.1asters SaturdAy and Sunday.
It \vill begin July 16. Bert Pettey, hair dressing and property director,
checks head size of Bufi Tillesen, 17, of Costa h1esa.
Laguna Beauty Contestant
Has Shapely Competitors
The Miss Lag una Beach Pageaant,
which 12 days ago had one contestant,
grew quickly and entries closed today
y,·it h nine shapely ladies signed up for
the cGntesl. ..
The beauty pageant, scheduled for Feb.
12 at the Festival of Arts Forum Theater,
is being co-sponsored by the city Recrea·
tion Department and the Junior Woman's
Club. The contest winner will receive
numerous gifts from local merchants:
and will reign wilh her court over the
\Vinter Festival, slated to begin Feb.
19.
The entrants are J ill Greenwald, 20,
Nanci Nichols, 16, Na ncy Henderson,
17, Jenifer Bradley, 16, Frances Cotterell,
18, Marie McCarty, 16, Kathleen
Shapard, 17, Claudia Miller, 18, and
Candi McCue, 19.
The young ladies will be judged on
the basis of beauty, poise and charm
by a panel of five persons associated
with the entertainment industry. The
judges for the contest are Byron Griffith
of GE Artists; Chris Robinson, actor:
Robert Carter, arlist and actor: Penny
Bayshore. modeling instructor and
MGnika Hamilton, former beauty queen
and model.
The master ()f ceremonies at the judg·
Swsh of 'G rass'
Found iii Lot
Cardboard boxes full of cut grass are
a common sight in empty lots along
the South Coast.
But when the vegetation is neally pack·
ed in small plastic bags, the interest
-by police -soars.
Se n Clemente narcotics deteclives said
today a local resident found two dozen
"lids'' of marijuana resting in a small .
box in an empty lol Saturday afternoon .
The next day, they added. the man
turned the quantity of forbidden ~'eed
over to police.
The lot where the bnx ~'as dumped
ls bet"•een 133 and IZ9 \V. Canada.
Offshore Platform
Fire Extinguisher!
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Shell Oil
Company succes.!lfully clogged a fourth
'veil on ib burning offshore platform
Sunday night. But it still must kill four
more v.·ells before the t'vo·month-old fire
can be extinguished .
The fourth well to be killed was clogged
v•ith mud as were the previous three.
The mud was pumped into the wells
through reli ef shafts drilled deep below
the surface of the Gulf of ~1exico.
ing will be television perso nal ity Johnny
Grant. Admission to the pageant,
scheduled lo beg in at 8 p.m., is $1,
and tickets may be purchased 1n advance
at the I.Recreation Department. 17S N.
Coast Highway.
Medical School
At UCI Granted
Society Charter -
The California College of Medicine at
UC Irvine has been awarded a charter
for its chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha,
the national medical honor society.
Dr. John Z. Bowers, president of the
society, inaugurated the new AOA
chapter which includes 11 senior medical
students as charier members and four
charter faculty members.
The top scho lars of this ,year's
graduating class include Robert E.
Blackwelder, Fred H. Hirshburg, Bonnie
Jean Johnson, Dennis L. Johnson. Robert
MacFarlane, J Ghn C. Michalak, Stephen
~forrison. Barbara II. To"·ne, Gar v L.
Treece, Theodore Van Dam and Gary
\Vagner.
Facully members of the honor society
are John E. ConnGlly, Eldon L. Follz
and James H. Graham. ell medical doc·
tors. and Halvor Vermund, ?o.1.D. and
Ph.D.
Dean Warren L. Bostick accepted the
AOA charter on behaU ot the College
of r.1edlcine.
Mabel E. Lyon
Last Rites Held
Services "'ere held today in Altadena
fnr Mabel E. Lyon. 33221 Ocean Hill
Drive, Dana Point, who died Thursday
in South Coast Community Hospital. She
\\'as 73.
A nalive of England. t.l rs. Lyon bad
Jived in California for 51 years.
She is survived by a son, Kenneth
of Dana Point, two brothers, Kenneth
Smythe of Pennsylvania and Keith Smith
()f Santa Rosa: and three sisters, ~lrs.
Ina ~1Greland of London, England: Mrs.
Winifred Nicholls of Sou th Pasadena :
and Mrs. Jvy Bertonneau of South
Pasadena.
The Rev. John V. Fransworlh of St.
David's Episcopal Church of North
Hol lywood officiated at services and
burial in the ~fausoleum of r.tountain
View Cemetery, Altadena .
Sheffer Laguna BeAch Mortuary direc-
tors.
564 ModelS
Turn Out
At Pageant
... By FREDE.RICK SCJIOE~tEllL
01 "'' 0•111 PU1! ill!!
They All came to the casting gel-to-
gelher for Laguna's 1971 Pageant (If th'
~1asters and for a few hours on Sunday
afternoon it \\'as standlng room only
backstage at Irvine Bo\\•\.
By the lime the last would·be living
picture model had been numbered. pho-
tographed and measured 1he count for
the "'cekend signup had reached 56~ -
.an afl·time record this early in the year.
"It's v.•onderlul, just ~·onderful."
bean1ed producer Don Williamsnn and
casting director Karla~len, •·\Vhat a
turnout -with a selt'ttion like this we 'll
be able to find the perfect models for
;!very picture."
Size and proportion arc the keys tn
casting livin g pictures, \Vi!li amson ex·
plained. and height and measurement.'!
must flt ~·ithin the inch to create the
desired effect.
~1ore than 4()\) models -men. "'omen
end children -are needed to make up
the twG complete casts for the Pageant,
each cast ~·orking on alternate "'"eeks,
along with substitutes and a bevy of
backstage workers for makeup, costumP.
and other duties.
In previous years, the producer said ,
the casting get-logethers usually round
up somewhat ove.r 300 volunteers snd
the 500 mark rarely is reached until
late spring whe11 more calls have gone
out.
This-year, the Saturday night signup
passed the 200 mark, with more than
300 turning out for the Sunday afternoon
casting session.
Now, with photographs and specifica-
tions cf each vpluntel!r in hand. casting
director Allen will set about the task
of matching models to the 41 artworks ··
lo be reproduced in ·this year's 28 pro·
gram items.
Y ouiig Swimmers
Returning From
Canadian Trip
Six San Clemente swimmers will return
tonight from a ~·hirlwind weekend to
Canada ~'here they blended keen swim·
ming competition wilh just pain fun.
The "·eekend Lo Vancouver. B.C., came
niter an invitation to the San Clemente
s"·immers during a coaches' convention
in San Francisco recently.
The local youths who took up the
Invitation by Woodland Hills S"•im Club
:i.re Peggy Tosdal. Malcolm and Duncan
\Vilson, Mark l\JcCartin, P a r r G c k'
Lineback end Dorothy and Kalhy \Venzel.
The youths spent the weekend in tha
homes or Canadian S\\'immers and swa m
in two meets at Simon and F'rasier
University: ·
Coach Ginncye tlarris of lhe Ssin
Clemente Aquatic Association said the
plans for lhe trip included snow trips.
exchange 1vorkouts, swim clinics and
sightseeing in the picturesque Northwest
provinre.
Toro Troop Held
!_n Bar Shooting
A complaint charging assault "'i th In·
tenl to rommit murder will be 6ought
today by Santa Ana police againsf L/Cpl.
Donald W. Newell Jr., 22. of El Toro,
who was jailed Saturday night following
Lhe shooting of barmaid f\1argaret Rosen·
dah!. 23.
Police said J"e,\·ell. "·ho turne<I himself
· _t heaciquarters, claimed the shooting
was accidental.
We are clearing out hunclrecls of Items at clras•
tlcally reclucecl prices. Come In ancl shop
arouncl. A pawn shop is more fun than a rum•
magesale.
-STEREO
VISIT OUR
SOUND
ROOM
HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES
~-J-E_W_E_l_R_Y __ , GUITA;; l~p~~~~~·~·-·~·~.5.~.~.~~~!~0-$12 50
GUITARS l Sp111ilhJ ··-··············--· R19. 59,50 $19.95
50% OFF
All lil•m•nd• 1u•r111t•H to
1p,ral11 at 40% mor• or
you r mo"•Y IMck In full.
CLARINETS .......... : .... --··········-·················from $35.00
SNARE DRUM -············· .. ············-·········-fr om $12.SO FLUTES I< I" I ........................................................ $85.00
ACCORDIANS I 120 Bon I ----··------··· $35.00 and up
FRENCH HORN ................................. -.............. $135.00
-SPORTING GOODS-
0oub11 TlptT ,SKI POLES . _ ................ $11.95
A11ortff
GOLF CLUBS ............... 50¢ ea •
2 Only L. C. Smith DM/1111 l1rr1IM
SHOT GUNS ................ $85.00
MANY CAMERAS Al llG SAVINGS
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and LOAN
18~8 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA letwHo H•b« & 1...r...., ,
WE LOAN BUY· SELL & TRADE ALMOST EVERYTHING
L
NEW aod USED STEREOS
BARGAINS
lt'1 Thi H1p,.nln9 Thlni
~6 30% OFF
STEREO & MON4URAL
RECORD ALBUMS
f<LL 4RE 25" POP ULAR "
f<UISIS
I T•ACIC lAl'I
PLAYER DECK
''"' '~'· '(twr ... '"-. s2915 Jt.fS Yelw1.
---
.,
j
7
I
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'I
'I
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I
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'I
•
~an Cle111enie
' --.
Capistrano
'
Today's FJnal
EDITION N.Y. Steeks
VOL 64, NO. 27, .l SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALfFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1971 ' TEN CENTS ,
•
Overcrowding Plagues San Clemente School
By PAMELA HALLAN
01 tht DllW ~lie! still
San Clemente High School's bulging
\\'alls will have .to be deflated next
year, but school district officials haven't
yet decided how to do it.
The two most probable pla ns being
studied include double sessions or the
add ition of ten more portable classrooms.
•·we have to come up \vith the most
beneficial situation," said Joe Wimer,
Director of Administrative Services for
the Capistrano Unified School District.
"\Vhate\'er we decide, we ~n.not
disturb the educational program,'' he
added.
\Vimer stressed that a definite plan
has not yet been proposed, but several
are currently being studied.
One plan y,·as to move all the ninth
graders to Capistrano School and squeeze
all the sixth graders back into their
elementary schools.
"l think this plan Is prfltY well dead,"
s.iid Wimer. "It was feasible if the
kids were to stay there for more than
one year, but with Dana Hill:: High
School Opening in 1972 we won'l need
to move them, it wouldn't pay."
Wimer said the state has approved
the need for 'Dana Hills High. The cost
hasn't yet been okayed. "They Yr'On 't
approve the cost until all the bids are
In. It's possible that all the bids could
be too high." '
\Vhether or not the district will decide '
' arc
' CAIL Y PILOT ""°"' " Hll• Vll""'11
MARCHERS PARADE THROUGH SAN CLEMENTE IN SATURDAY DEMONSTRATION
An E1tim1ted 2000 Persons C•m• To.Dr. C1rl M<lntire's Rlllly About Vietn•m W1r
OAILY PILOT rlMt. bJ J1ft11 Vtltll'll
MARCH INCLUDED DURABLE "UNCLE SAM" ON STILTS WHO WALKED A MILE
There Were Differences Of Op inion But No Serious Incident&
Astronauts Try in Vain
To Find Docking 'Bugs'
SPACE CENTER, Hooslon (UP!l -
The Apollo 14 astronauts, speeding ac·
curately toward the moon. checked their
malfunctioning docking mechanism by
hand today but failed to flhd the trouble
which could scrub their $400 million
Juflar landing mission.
Alan 8. Shepard,·Sluart A. Roosa and
F.,dgar D. Mitchell examined the device
for an hour before gonng to sleep after
a busy 1$11' hours of success and frustra·
I Ion that started with a flawless launch
from Cape Kennedy.
· The routine linkup of the command
ship Kitty Hawk and the lunar lander
Antares turned Into 111 tense hour a n d
44 minute struggl~ Sunday night to pre·
vent the failure of America ! second
str11ight moon miuion.
But the wcctSSful locking of the twe
vessels by an unorthodox method left
--
the possibility the mechanism would fail
again afler tbe lunar modille lifts off
from the Fr a Mauro sect.ion of the
moon Saturday.
Ground experts viey,·ed television films
of the device and worked With models
to decide if She pard. 47. America's fir st
man· in space, and rookie Astronaut
~1itchell. 40, would be allowed to spend
3314 hours on the lunar.sur:face.
A space agency spokesman said a
decision wssn 't being rushed but pro-
bably will be made sometime before
a braking maneuver Thursday to put
Apollo 14 into moon orbit.
The astronauts never were in danger
And even If the moon landing Is cancelled.
officials said they cou1d still loop the
moon l9 lake 11lctures and perform some
&eientiflc observation!.
Calm Prevails
In LA's Barrio
After Violence ,
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -An over·
night curfew brought calm to the East
!As Angeles Mexican-American barrio
today following ,·iolent skirmishes in
which one Chicano was killed, 48 per•
sons injured and 88 arrested.
Sunday's window-breaking and looting
rampage in a business area followed a
peaceful rally at Belvedere Park of 5.000
Chicanos protesting alleged police bru-
tallly.
County. superviSOrs declared a stale of
emergency and imposed a 8:20 p.m. to
S a.m. curfew in a 10-square mile area.
Deputie.J said that aa persons were ar·
rested on charges ranging from fallurt
to disperse to as!ault on an officer.
The windows of at Je11st 60 businesses
were smashed and several 1tores were
looted. •
, .
'
on a quasi-double session at the high
school next year or the addition of
extra classrooms will bt ultimately
determined by the Board of Trustees.
''The cost of each of these alternatives
hasn't yet been worked out in detail,"
said Wimer.
\\'imer said the dist rict is also studying
the situation in elementary schools and
the junior high. but doesn 't foresee any
additional problems for next year.
"Of course, we won't be able to make
• Ill
·J?evelops
In Speal{er
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of lltl 0.11., Pllet ltl ll
Dr. Carl ~tclntire ·and 2.000 of his
followers marched lhrough the streets
o( San Cemente over lhe weekend.
11inging and chanting for a total armed
victory in Vielnam.
And at the end of the march -
which included Uncle Sam on stilts
towering above young and old alike,
Dr. Melot~ experienced difficulties with
tHe.:-orit ·pteoe lf•equlpment "1cb led
to a two-week doMybrook With tbe city
council.
·After ·belng the object of two battlel
bi city hall, the sound system broke
down fOr more than an hour.
BuL undaunted , the fiery New Jersey
minister with an enormous following
from his radio broadcasts used a bullhorn
while an alternate system was being
repaired.
The hundreds of ma rchers -many
Clf them elderly -gathered on the
flatland and slopes of Linda Lane Park
amid scores of banners and placards
with slogans blending religion and
politics.
Some called for an end to the "~win"
policy of the U.S. Government.
No incidents which could be interpreted
as hostile toward the group took place
af the Saturday afternoon kickoff of
a series of victory marches throughout
the nation.
The event, however. drew curiou!
onlookers from the nearby Linda Lane
beach.
At one point of the procession five
bikini-clad girls walked beside the
paraders.
Several older men snarled disgust at
the girls' attire.
"First, they allowed burlesque indoors,
now it's in the public streets •••
shameful," growled one man carrying
a huge flag.
The Mcintire followers came from
throughout the Southland to President
Nixon's adopted town.
Delegations from Los Angeles and San
Diego County formed the majority of
the group.
A few l1undred others were ftom local
comm unities.
Despite the warm weather, few of
the elderly felt ill e f f e c t s from the
one-mile walk through neighborhood
streets.
Only one person required first-aid.
Dr. Mcfntire's stlltman took much of
the '\ttention of the day. The man, who has marched with
Mcintire followings before. wore bozing
gloves and was bound al the wrist.
to demonstrate t.he effects of the "no-win
policy."
.. Our trouble," Dr. Mcintire said, ''is
that soon we will have simultaneous
marches throughout the land.· and we
have only one Uncle Sam to march
with us," he said.
The kickoff for the marches was
earmarked for San Clen\ente. Dr.
Mcintire said. because of the presence
of La Casa Pacifica, President Nixon's
villa.
But anti-Nixon sentiment ran high
among some of the minister's marchers.
"Where is this Western White House
we hear about?" one man in his 50s
asked his f~llows.
"Ifs down the road a piece," said
another. "but don1t bother. they won't
even let you get close."
Ava lanche Kill s Two
TRE~fP, Spain (UPI) -Two persons
were missin& and prtsumed dead and
four others injured Sunday when an
avalanche swept across a ski run In
.the Pyrenees. police 11\d\ All victim•
V.'f.re Spanlards.
I
---
a determination until the end of this
year," said Wimer. "\Ve can't tell this
early what our enrollment will be."
Preliminary studies sho\v that the
junior high will be able to accommodate
its load and if any elementary school
is overcrowded. it will probably be San
Juan School.
"If a problem exists at San Juan
we will probably either shift a portion
of the attendance area to Viejo School
where we have empty classroom1 or
shift an entire· grade level there.
"\Ve usually consider· where space ls
available and the cost of lransporting
s~udents or adding extra classroom3,"
said Wimer.
Wimer added that once the new ~b
school is built it will be able to serve
as an outlet for overcrowding at Marco
Forster Junior High.
''The next school to be built will pro-
bably be Shore.cliffs Junior Higtl in San
Clemente."
..
Fights for Life f
Viejo Youth, 17,
Shot hy 1-Bandit
A 17.year-old Mission Viejo you t h
fought for his life in South Coast Com-
munity Hospita l today while Orange
County sheriff's deputies stepped up
their search for the man who put a
bullet in the Young service station at-
tendant's head.
·Oot.iglas Ra¥ Wlteat, Jr., 24551 .Sa hl!'·
na Drive, Was shot.tearly S.turd.Y )J' '
an unMown bandit who took an estl·
ll\8ttd $Sil from the tlll of the Arta
sli4ion at La Paz .Rotll .JP4 ~ SaQ
f)Jego Freeway.
The boy, who had worked just three
months at the station, was found face
down in a pool of blood in the storage
room at the rear of the station by a
motorist who later told officers: "l just
felt something was wrong."
Officers said young Wheat was shot in
the back of the head.
A sheriff's patrolman said he last
saw Wheat b e f o r e the shooting at
about 2 a.m. Saturday, just two hou rs
before the seriously wounded boy wu
found.
Tht officer 1ald everythinc appear·
ed to be normal at that time with the
youth serving late night motorists.
Sheriff's invesUgatora do not link the
Wheat shooting with that of a Garden
Grove service station attendant who was
shot in the back Friday after being
pistol whipped into unconsciousness.
They believe the weapon used in the
Miss ion Viejo shooting was a .38-cali·
ber revolver. The gun used in the Gar·
den Grove holdup was of smaller cali•
ber and the bandit's holdup routine was
• Deputies rushed the youth to South
Coast Community Hospital where doc·
tors perfonned emergency surgery to
remove the bullet lodged in hl.s skull.
· very different irom that used at the Ar·
co station, they said. ,
Woman Badly Burned
As Fire Sweeps Home
A 49-year-o\d Seavers Canyon woman
suffered severe burns in ., predawn blaze
Sunday which destroyed her $30,000 home
in a scen1c glen along Ortega Highway
n: -r San Juan Capistrano.
Jackie Wrigley, who fled her blazing
residence as bystanders fought flames
Clemente Girl
Rescued From
Cliff at Park
A youna, pregnant ~an Oemen.te
housewife became the obJect of a chff
rescue by firemen Sunday afternoon after
she became stranded near San Clemente
State Park.
Fireman Sheldon Schmidt used a ladder\ to assist ,_1rs. Alice Faye Dubose, 17,
of 239 Avenida Del A1ar.
Lifeguards also were summoned to
the bluff with cliff rescue gear, but
a ladder, spokesmen said, worked better.
Mrs. Dubose told firemen she and
her husband were climbing down the
bluff. He made it. She became frightened
aboUt 20 feet from the bottom.
Mrs. Dubose required no medical treat·
ment after her rescue. ·
2 Rec Programs
Will Continue
Two separate rec:reatton programs for
men and women al San Clemente High •
School will continue through the next
semester.
Ttte evening recreation for men of·
fer lng basketball, volleyball, weightlifting
and bodybuilding will continue week .
nights at 7:30 p.m. No preregiltraUOn
is needed for the activity.
A women's 1llm-trlm clau 1lso will
resume. being held ,each Thursday evn.-
ing starting al 7:3Q p.m.
There ii no charae for either class.
to reach her, suffered third and second·
degree burns on one·third of her body
in the devastating fire at 35561 Seavers
Canyon Road.
County Fire Department spokesmen
said 30 fi refighters fought in vain to
save the residence, but were successful
in keeping names away from nearby
homes and brush areas.
T:~t! home was burned to th~ ground.
The Wrigley woman refnained In
serious condition al South Coast Com·
munity Hospital early today. She was
transferred to a military hospital later
in the day, spokesmen said.
Authorities said passing motorist!!
noticed the blaze at about 4 a.m., but
by ·lhe time they and neighbors reached
the home the 1lructure was completely
involved in flame.
~ The woma1., who lived alone, ap-
parently was awakened by the blaze
and fought her way out through searln&
heat.
Orange Coast
r-,
Weather
Those low clouds will bum off
late Tuesday afternoon but the
temperatures won't get past 60
either locally or furthe r inland.
INSmE TODAY
lt took Apollo 14 o.stronauts
six tries to success/1.dJ11 ·com-
plete a moneuoer comidtrtd
one of the most 'rouine wit" the
lost sophisticated £quipment -
docking two 1pac•craftl. See
story Page 5.
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Z OAJLY PlLOl !C r~oOOay, Ftbruary l. Jq7t
Recycle ,Plan Studied
J ater f?irectors to End Ocean Disposal?
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 lfle Dell'I' l'lltf,,Sllll
Moulton-Nlguel ¥later District directors
have decided to ~plore \l.'8YS of recycling
sewaae "·astes rather than planning for
continued ocean disposal.
Manager Carl :Kymla said lhe district
which serves Mission Viejo and Laguna
Niguel would allernpt by 1974 to devise
a SJ'Slem that would use set<!ndary
treated sewage effluent to irrigate parks,
golf courses 1.nd freeways lying within
the district.
The concept is not new to the
t.toultoa -Niguel district since it has
provided I.teated w111te water to Miulon
Viejo Golf Course for watering I Nll\I
and fairways.
The new element Is the expansion
of the Idea to publlc parks and freeways
providing additional acreage f o r
"disposal" of treated wastes at a pro--
jected savings to taxpayers.
The district now discharges a haU
million &allons daily through the San
Juan capistrano outf1\I near Doheny
Beach. By 1978, Kymla noted, that facili-
ty would propel S.S million gallons per
day from the Moulton·Niguel dislrict into
the sea.
San .Cleniet'lte Success
Me1~chants May Be Next
For' Ride-along Program
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 "" O•Ur r Ll•I ''tff
The success cf San Clemente's pOlice
ride-along prcgram has never waned
gince its Inception last fall, police or-
17 San Clemente
~Girls Commence
Hospital Stint
Without ceremony or fanfare, 17 San
Clemente High School gi.rls enrolled in
the health aide training program this
morning began their first day cf .work
at South Coast Ccmmunity Hospital in
South Lai\lfla.
The students are part cf the Regional
Occupation Program being sponsored by
the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified
School Districts. There are a total of
24 youngsters enrolled in the training,
but the seven Laguna Beach High School
&tudents did not begin work today
because of a school holiday.
The 24 r;tudents, all seniors. spent
the fall semester in training at Beverly
Manor Convalescent Hospital i n
Capistrano Beach. They will remain at
South Coast Hospital through the re-
mainder cf the school year.
The students will work under the dir~t
gupervision of nurses at Ute hospital
two hours per day for the entire
!fmester. Upon graduation. from high
"gchool ln the &pring, they will be awarded
'quallfica&ion certificates as nurses' aldes
and wi[ be qualified for employment
in that field.
Seniors , Collecting
Cans, Glass Bottles
The senior class cf Laguna Beach
High School has jumped on the recycling
band wagon and announced the students
will begin collecting glass bottles and
aluminum cans for recycling.
The students hope to spur residents
to begin saving their trash that can
be re·sued. The students have set up
collection receptacles behind the
bleachers at the football field where
citizens may take their cans and bottles.
63 Rebels Killed
LOURENCO MARQUES. Mozambique
(AP) -Portuguese armed forces killed
6.1 African guerrillas of the Mozambique
Liberation Front in two major December
<1ffensives, a military report said today.
The report said about 400 guerrillas
infiltrated lrom Zambia in an attempt
to strike at the big Cabora Bassa hydro
electric project and other targets in
the northern Tete district.
DAILY PILOT
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S. C1eMMe
OIANOE COAST l"Ul1.ISHINO COM!'AN'f
Jlo\i1rt N. Wtt4
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Tirol'll 11 A. Murphi111
MIMOTllJ Ecfl!OI"
fti,~111i' '· Nalf SOoUth Or1ng1 c.oun11 Editor
Off!&•
ficials said today, and the neii::l phase
might be the addition of interested
businessmen to the project.
While the plans have not yel been
made firm, Police Chief Clifford Murray
said he is working on an idea to welcome
businessmen into the program which
gives the visitor a firsl·hand insighl
into police work.
Since last fall several hundred s':Jdents
from San Clemente High School have
taken the tour of the department then
have boarded patrol cars for a few
hours' exposure to the world as the
pa.Lrolman sees it.
And the signups have not waned r;ince
fall .
Scbool officiaJs !laid the calendar for
the program -·four students each night
of the week except Friday -is booked
solid through ~1arch.
Murray said the program offered a
few squeezes during a period late last
year wsen many of his officers were
away at the San Diego police aca:!~my.
"But now that we have our 10 new
men working it is easier than ever.
"The initial pinch in allocating man-
power to the program is over now.
an.d lhe advantages far cutweigh the
minor growth pair..:;," he said.
Two patrolmen have done much of
the ride-along project for the department,
Burde'.! Burch and w.··-~ Reischl.
Each man takes the visiting groups
of youths -many or whom have ad·
milted their initial bitterness with police
in general -out on patrol each evening,
exposing the guests to much of the
routine atopects or the job.
All agree that basic attitudes have
mellowed.
The only aspect of the job which
Is denied the visitors is a situation
v.:; •. c Jndividual safety is in question .
"When something of a serious nature
arises we arrange to drop the guests
cff at a street corner and arrange for
someone to come and pick them up
immediately." Murray explained.
While students have voiced overwhelm·
Ing enthusiasm for the program . ap·
paren!ly their teachers are nol quite
as interested.
An iilvilation always has existed for
1eachers to undergo the same activity.
the chief explained, but the total from
that group in th( last year or so is
"about two." '.
Atlanta Dernocrat
Chosen to Fill
Seri. Russell Seat
ATLANTA <UPIJ -David Gainbrell.
a 4l·ye11r-old Atlanta attorney and
chairman of the Georgia Democratic
party. y.·as named today by Gov. Jimmy
Carter to fill the unexpired term Cl~
the late Sen . Richard Russell.
Russell. dean of 1he Sena1e in whi ch
he served for 38 years. died Jan. 21
of a respiratory ailmen t. His term ex·
pires in January. 1973.
Gambrell is expected to seek the
Democratic nomination for a full six·year
term in the 1972 primary. One of his
opponents likely will be Ll. Gov. Lester
Maddox.
Gambrell, son of E. Smythe Gambrell,
former President of the American Bar
Association. "'as picked by Carter last
fall to carry out his reforms In the
State Democrallc party. He was a close
If some of the projected Increased
Oow ff'Om,.tlpt developing Mllslon Vlejo
and Laguna Ni1uel areas can be diverted
frqm the jointly operated treatment plant
at San Juan Capistrano, the outfall need
not be bullt so large.
"\Ve will have 10 build a larger out·
fall ," Kymla said, "But the amount, •
cost and effec t of sewage discharge
<Ill the ocean will be considerably chang·
ed by the recycling attempt."
The equipment necessary to recycle
treated wastes could be built for "on!'.!
third to half of the cost of the new
outfall ."
Key to the recycling concept is the
debu t of Feather River Project waters
in Southern California, when t h e
~1etropolitan Water District begins im·
porting the tow total dissolved solids
fresh water -250 parts per million
(PPM) versus 750 PPM now brought
'in from the Colorado River.
A joint study by the State Water
Resources Ccntrol Board and Oood con·
trol Board and flood control cfficials
of the natural Underground water storage
basins is due this spring. Kymla said
it is possible that report will indicate
it is possible to pump out the water
which has too high a total dissolved
solids (TDS) content -1200 parts per
million -and replace it with a poli shed
efnuent having a TDS of around 500
PPr-.t
This ""'ould resu lt. Kymla theorized,
(rom adding the TDS rating of the ln·
coming water suppliy. 250 PPt<.ot, to
the expec ted amount of total dissolved
solids usually found to be added to
sewage effluent aft er it has received
seco ndary treatment. The result ing ef·
fluent of 500 PPM total dissolved solids
"very possibly will be pure enough to
spread in the underground basin."
Natural water found in the basin ex-
ceeds state standards for use and no
water has been drawn from either er
the large aquifers under San Juan
Capistrano since 1963 when a landmark
court judgment said water purveyors
must provide a certain level of water
quality, Kymla noted .
Thus, with two unique "ouUets" for
treated sewage wastes the Moulton-
Niguel Water District could enjoy con·
siderable savings while contributing lo
environmental quality at the same lime.
Kymla said the long range i;avlngs
would result from the lessened need
10 build large interceplor sewer lines
and outfall facilities.
The environmental contributions would
be a lowered amount of discharge in to
tf1e ocean and a conservation of \vater
:supplies by recycling water imported
by Metropolitan 1"ater District.
Among areas that could economlcally
be irrigated with reclaimed waste water
would b& the Sil-foot median strip pro-
jected for· Crown Valley Parkway;
Laguna Niguel Country Club; a county
park planned for Laguna Niguel: and
a seven.mile stretch of the San Diego
Freeway through the district. ·
Valentine's Day
Dance Schedule
The new Teen Drop-in Club. sponsored
by the LaglJ.t!,a Beach Recreation Depart·
ment , has sCl'leduled a Valent ine's Day
dan ce Feb. 13 at the Boys' Club gym·
nasium.
Junior high and sen ior high school
students are eligible to become members
cf the club and to attend the dance.
Admission to the dance will be 50 cents
for club members and $1 for guests.
Membership in the club is only SI
per year and entitles the student to
attend all regular Drop·in activities at
no charge. Drop-in activities are offered
v.·eekly at the Boys ' Club facility and
include pool, ping pong and sports
participation. Dances. movies and field
lrips are scheduled periodically for mem·
ber!\.
Further information may be obtained
from the Recreation Department at 494-
1124 ext ~5.
Painting Class Se t
AL Rec Departrnent
Laguna Beach art instn1ctor Nelly
Allen ""ill begin teaching a painting class
fnr resident s \Vcdnesday al 10 a.m. at
I he Laguna Bf a ch Recreation Depart-
ment.
The class. limited to 15 sluden~. v.'ill
offer individual instruction in \Yater col·
or, oil and acrylic. Prospective students
n1ay reg ister at the department during
business hours. Further informat ion may
be obtained at 494·1121 ext. 4$.
Clllill MUI! )JO W1:1t tfY Slr1tl
t1.....,.,.1 •••ch: m1 WNt "lllo• loYltVlrd • l..tfUM ••ell; tn •-1 Jo~11t111e H11n!l11111'Dll IHCl!t 1111J I M'll 80\llf•ortl .1411 Clr:rntMt l Jiii Ngrtll Al Ct mlno RUI Sharpe11ed Axes
'
Council Calls 'Tiniber' on Sign
A billbo:.. rt, .. "ul
A1 is.~ion ·VltJO stands defiantly al the
south end t·~ Camino Ca pistrano pro-
, · · •. · "'"Yr r t\Pxt ;..lo\'e .. ,''
San Juan CapistraJI() city councilmen
ha\·e decldtd to take up the ch•llenge.
and m ke the1r own n'l't move -back
to rourl.
C~ty attorney Jamn Okazaki 11ld thP
city v.·UJ resume litigation Feb. 11 to
force. !' ival of tne bi llboard.
The citr will try to have the injunction
agair·' ,·,, sien':i; rPmO\"al 11{\ecl and
conttmn' ;" 'action rtln!tJllt~d.
At one ti me thi:i city h11d won tht
blittle to rC":1no,·e the billboard which
''1olated a ... 1ty ordinance. The 1igo
owners. a San Diego firm . were ordered
to rc.mo\·e. it by Dccrmt('r of 1969.
\\'hen IL '4'35 no! removed, the tity
\ .I I '.~ l'OU. SS r ~ >ntt::-:;>t
()f cou rt charges and won Again
l3u1 ~oon aft('r that rhe city ltArned
11 had bt'n slapped with a countt.r!ult
e to a ·1dsli ll.
The c.ity . which has changed Attorneys
!ilflce 1tie fight began . now hopes to t:tl lhe
matter settled once. and for all.
At Qne time a member cl the council
.,,,.., so ! ovr.r lhe sign that he
sugcstcd painting it black or chopplna:
it down.
CAll.Y rlLOT Sl1ll r11tl4I
Hundreds Cattie
Orange County resi denls turned out In droves for the casting parly
fo r Laguna's 36th annual Pageant or the !11asters Saturday and Sunday.
It \viii begin July 16. Bert Pettey, hair dressing and property director,
checks head size of Sufi Tillesen, 17. of Costa Me sa.
'
Laguna Beauty Contesta11t
Has Shapely Competitors
Tbe f.1iss Laguna Beach Pageaanl,
which 12 days ago had one contestant,
grew quickly and entries closed today
with nine shapely ladies signed up 'for
the contest.
The beauty pageant. scheduled for Feb.
12 at the Festival of Arts Forum Theater,
is being cn·sponsored by the city Recrea·
11on Ot'part ment and the Junior \Voman 'S;
Club. The cnntest winner wi ll receive
numerous gifts from local merchants
and will reign with her court over the
\V inter Festival, slated to beg in Feb.
19.
The entrants are Jill Greenwald, 20,
Nanci Nichols. 16, Nancy Henderson,
17, Jenifer Bradley, 16, Frances Cotterell,
18. Marie AtcCarty, 16, Kath I e en
Shapard, 17. Claudia f.1iller, 18. and
Candi McCue, 19.
The young ladies will be judged on
the basis of beauty, poise and charm
hy a panel of five persons associated
with the entertainment industry. The
judges for the contest are Byron GrHfith
of GE Artists; Chris Robinson , actor;
Robert Carter, artist and actor; Penny
Bay.shore, modeling instructor a n d
f.l onika Hamilton, former beauty queen
and model.
The master of ceremonies at the judg-
Stnsh of 'Grass'
Found irt Lot
Cardboard boxes full of cut arass are
a common sight in empty lots along
the South Coast.
But when the vegetation Is neatly pack·
ed in small plastic bags, the interest
-by police -soars.
Sa n Clemente narcotics detectives said
t.oday a local resident fou nd two dozen
"lids" of marijuana resting in a small
box in an empty lot Saturday afternoon .
The~ nexl day, they add~d. the man
turned the quantity of fo bidden "'eed
ever to police.
The lot where lhr. box y.•a:i. dumped
l:i. between 133 and 129 \V. Canada,
Offshore Platfonn-
F ire Extinguisher!
NE\V ORLEANS (UPI) -Shell Oil
Company successfully clogged a fourth
\Veil on its burning offshore platform
Sunday night. But lt still must kill four
more wells before the two·month-old fire
can be extinguished.
The fourth well lo be killed was clogged
\Vilh mud as v.·ere the previous three.
The mud was pumped into the wells
through relief shafts drilled deep below
the surface of the Gulf of Mexico.
ing will be television personality Johnny
Grant. Admission lo the pageant,
15cheduled to begin at 8 p.m .. is $1,
and tickets may be purchased in advan ce
al lhe Recreation Department. 175 N.
Coast Highway.
Medical School
At UCI Granted
Society Charter
The California Ccllege ot Medicine al
UC Irvine has been awarded a charter
for its chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha,
the nationa l medical honor society.
Dr. John Z, Bowers, president of the
society, inaugurated the new AOA
chapter which includes ll senior medical
students as charter members and four
charter faculty members.
The top scholars of this year's
graduating class include Robert E.
Blacky,relder, Fred H. H.irshburg, Bonnie
Jean Johnson , Dennis L. Johnson. Robert
MacFarlane. John C. Michalak, Stephen
l\1orrison, Barbara H. Towne, Gary L.
Treece, Theodore Vail Dam and Gary
\Vagner.
Faculty members or the honor society
are John E. Connolly, Eldon L. Foltz
and James H. Graham . all medical doc·
tors. and Halvor Vermund, M.D. and
Ph.D.
Dean Warren L. Bostick accepted the
AOA charter on behalf of the Ccllege
cf Medicine.
Mabel E. Lyon
Last Rites-Held
Services were held today in Altadena
fnr Mabel E. Lyon , 33221 Ocean Hill
Drive , Dana Point. v.•ho died Thursday
in South Coast Community ~ospital. She
v.·as 73.
A native of Engla nd. t-.1rs. Lyon had
lived in Califorflia for SI years.
She is surv ived by a son. Kenneth
of Dana Point , two brothers, Kenneth
Smythe of Pennsylvania and Keith Smi th
of Santa Rosa: and three sisters. Mrs.
Ina r-.t oreland of London, England: Mrs.
Winifred Nicholls of South Pasadena :
and J\1rs. Ivy Berlonneau of South
Pasadena.
The Rev. John V. Fransworth of St.
David's Episcopal Church of North
Hollywood olficiated at services and
burial in the Mausoleum of ~lountain
View Cemetery, Altadena .
Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary direc--
tnrs.
•
564 Models
Turn Out
At Pageant
... By FREDERICK SCllOE1'11~1lL
011~• OtllY 1'1161 Still
1:
They all came to !he. casting get-to-
gether for Laguna 's 1971 Pageant of the
Masters and for a few hou rs on Sunday
afternoon it v.•as 5tand ing room only
bat·kstage al Irvine Bowl.
By the!Hme the last would·be livin g
picture model had been numbered. p~o
tographed and measured the counl for
1he y,.·eckc nd signu p had reached 564 -
an all·time record this early in the year.
"It's wonderful, j u st ,~·onderful."
beamed produc er Don \Viltiamsnn and
casling director Karla Allen, "\Vh al a
turnout -wilh a selection like this we'll
be able to find the perfec t models for
every pictu re."
Size and proportion arc !he keys lo
casting Jiving pictures, \V illiamson ex·
plained. and height and measurements
must flt v.·ithin the inch to create lhe
desired effect.
f.1ore than 400 models -men, women
and children -are needed to make up
!he two complete cas!s for the Pageant,
each cast v.•orking on alt ern ate weeks.
along with substitutes and a bevy or
backstage workers for makeup, costume
and other duties.
In previous years. the producer said.
the casting gel·logethers usu ally round
up sornev;ohat over 300 volunteers and
the 500 mark rarely is reached untll
fate spring wheR more calls have gone
OU!.
This year. the Saturday night signu p
passed the 200 mark, wit h more than
300 turning out for the Sunday afternoon
casting session.
Now, with photographs and specifica-
tions of each volunt~er in hand . casting
dire<:tor Allen will set about the task.
of matching models to the 41 artworks
to be reproduced in Ibis year's 28 pro·
gram items.
Young Swimmers
Returning Froni
Canadian J'1ip.
Six San Clement e swimmers will return
tonight from a y,·hirlwind weekend tG
Canada v.·here they blended keen swim·
ming cnmpetition with just pain fun.
The v.·eekend to Va ncouv er, B.C .. came
after an invitation to the San Clemente
swimmers during a coaches' convention
in San Francisco recently.
The local youths who took up the
Invitation by Woodland Hills Swim Club
are Peggy Tosdal. Malcolm and Duncan
\Vilson, Mark McCartin. Parr o ck
Lineback and Dorothy and Kathy \Yenz.el.
The youths spent the weekend in the
homes cf Canadian sv.·immers and swam
in two meets at Simon and Frasier
University.
Coach Ginneye Harris or the San
Clemente Aqua!ic Associa!ion gaid the
.plans for the trlp included snow trips.
exchange workouts. swim cli nics and
l'iightseeing in the picturesque Norlhv.·e.st . ~ prov1nt e.
Toro Troop Held
In Bar Shootin g
A complaint charging assault "'ilh \n.
tent to comm it murder will be sought
today by Santa Ana police against L!Cpl.
Donald W. Newell Jr., 22, of El Toro,
who v.•as jailed Saturday night following
the shooting of barmaid f\.1argaret Rosen·
dahl. 23.
Pol!ce sa id Newell, who turned himseU
· .:.t headquarters, claimed the 5hoo1ing
was accidental.
We are clearing out hundreds of items at dras•
tically reduced prices. Come In and shop
around, A pawn shop is more fun than a rum•
magesale.
STEREO
VISIT OUR
SOUND
ROOM
HERE ARE A Fi!W EXAMPLES
JEWELRY
SO% OFF
All lll•m•nill1 1u1r1ntNd to
1pprei11 '' .tel% more er
.,our mon1y h•1k In tutl,
-MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS-
GUITARS 1Sp•ni1hl ............... -....... R19. 26.50 $12.50
GUITARS !Sp•ni1hl .-..................... R•g. 5,.50 $39.tS
CLARINETS ·······················-····· .................. from $35.00
SNARE DRUM ··-····· ............................... _ from $12.50
FLUTES I• 1·•1 ·-·········-·······················-··-··············$85.00
AC:C:ORD IANS 1110 Bou I ·····-·-········-· $35.00 ond •p fUN~ORN ···················-········-·············--$135.00
-SPORTING GOODS-
0outi1. T1per
SKI POLES .................. $11 .95
At1orttd
GOLF CLUBS ............... SO~ ea:
2 Only L. c. Smith Doultl• l 1rreled
SHOT GUNS ................ .sas.oo
MANY C:AMU AS AT llti SA VINtiS
COSTA MESA JEWELRY and L(J AN
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646·7741
DOWNTOWN C:OSTA MESA h twun Horbor & lroodwoy
WE LOAN BUY· SELL & TRADE ALMOST EVERYTHING
--...
NEW ond USED STl!EOS
IARtiAINS
lt'1 Th• H1pp•nln11 Thlnt
¥~ 30% OFF
STl'REO r. MONAURAL
RECORD ALBUMS
ALL ARE 25 POPU LAR ¢
ARTISTS
I T•ACK TAPI
PLAYER DECK
lltu' 11111 .,,_, m rte '29" It.t i ¥11~,.
l
I
)8 DAILY PILOT SC
LEGAL NOTICE
Monday F"cbn1ary l 1411
LEGAL NOTICE \ LEGAL NonCE
'' Cfl'T OUI a\ntNISS MAMI St•'fl"lllfT
, .. 19wl"9 "'"°" i. dG .... ~ .. .i .....
JAMES A MU~ CK
Sl>t I <o O"'! c.,.,,, v cl 0 ... Q.
!IY C A R•nd• C• 0 ". Oeo.,
John O Ho 1NI
o~ v P o • ••
LFr.!\L ~OflCE
,.OT(~ 01< T•USTEE S !All
u,.DEI! OIEO OF T•Ui T
TF l!tll
LOA" NO l?U~
Your Money's Worth Complete-Ne~ "X,orl{ Stock List
Health Insurance "11!.W Y01tlC IAl>I "'-•v I '°"'"" t P<l1,. Yan. .S•«lt. E•Cl\I .... P<k•1
Plans Mostly 01( ~(Ill F<I A~L«o Q ACF no 1 .a AetneCltw ta Atma M~I 20 lidm•E• .541 "'I l'o'. I 10
6y SVI VIA PORT~R
.Across the country hf teccnt
weeks full page newspaper
ads have betn offer1ni,: you
s p e c 1 a J hosp1tahzatlon In
surance plans under which
for a small fee you c11n get
$100 or more a week 1f you
are hosp1tahzed for sickness
or accident And )OU can get
the benefits 1n cash until
either .)l{lU ve usec' up $10 000
or vou d1e
No age hm1t No mud1cal
exam1n:it1on required l">o in
\Cst1gat1ons Just ta:< I rte
cash proleet1on for ~ou ancl
your lo11ed ones sa)s one
insurance companv 1v h 1 ch
ad\erhsed $l~a week up to-
$10 000 1n Ne\'1 York several
days ago For people of all
ages and fam1hes of all sizes '
the company added quoting
premiums ranging from S2 95
a month for a man between
tht> ages or 28 and 45 to
${i 50 a month for a n1an aged
75 or over
'ARE TRESE plan~ a iy
good1 asker! my editor
~lust people buy lhem during
the restricted periods :id
verllsed or c:in "e bu~ lhf'
insurance \I here\ er we ":int
:ind \\henevcr \Ve "ant" !10111
can the compan1e:-; m'1ke
mone} on such s m a 11
prem1yms"
AnsWers Yes the plans arc
good for most of you eoar1a
hons of them are sold by
many companies so Just ask
any reputable comp a ny
v.hetber 1t ha!. a plan available
for you the costs to you are
so low because the plans are
mainly n1arketed I hr o ugh
newspaper ads dirE ... t mail
and credit card b1lhn g stuffers
or 111th 1ery low comrn1ss1ons
to agents -all inexpensive
11a}s of sell ng and thus JUSll
fy ng lhe small premium~
But buy these. plan~ only
as piggy back coverage Oil ex
1sting Blue Cross or olher
basic hosp1tahzahon plans
warns l\11lton Sch1fr president
or l\tadts0n Life Insurance Co
a New \ ork ba!ed msurance
company 11 h1ch has pioneered
1n piggy back medical 10
surance
• YOUR BLUE CROSS Jype
policies provide you \Vilh
many other benefits in ad
d1t1on to your room and board
Check lhcse benefits
And by all means obey
-'00 "' 1:.. ~m • the rund:imental rule of buying!~ ~:tt Pl;<'
1nsurunce only from a coin !~e~' f..:0
pany or companies licensed~ : !'p ~
Your stale ,.,_ lt•o ,.,
"-1 lnd11• "' Your i nterest 1n AJton• •~ At G~• 0 hosp1laltz1:1\1on 1 11 s u r a 11 c C ~ =~oe n ;,•
never ha11 been greater lhan Allltr1•n• :11
od f th I Ac1nA11m t :iy or c s1mp e reason ,.,_ tos •nd :io
Lhll the COStS of:~a,'1:;?8;
hospltaHiallon !lever have~ .;:t::: ~ i
been so staggering ! ie:aP~" ~
As a result the importance : ~,t~ "11':
of p1gg~ ba( k CO\ eragc 1 ever : ~s Po 1'!.
I as been so crucial to mil hons ! ::s w.! •
or An1encan s cmph11s1?es ~ "sQ~~~ o.~
&hiff I t'Oplt' need policies A '*'l!f'm "' 10 i;upplcment !heir baste 1tm• ua 6(1
AMBAC j(I hCS:)l\al.J.i; tho :ind protect Ame e, "'
then1 lf'On1 fn1:lnc1at d1sa"ter !:;'.:~!.:'~00
1n ca:-;e or catastroph1c 111 ~~ 111> _:
Am.I. n IO
A811k• OS<J A8"11•?l'O
TllE SL\tPLE inexpensive ::;::e~~~ 17070
pohc1es lo which l referred " t:~n "' s Am C"' •n above provide cash benefits A cne" .o AC YS~9 fO fr om $10 to $50 a day payable Ac vs "• 50
each day you arc hospitalized ~~v·o~ 12-\
usually without flmc I in1t ~g •J:_ v~'1t
The money might go for such :~EvP..!'''~
items as private r o o tTl s !~e~~p p)'/:'6
Private nursing care 1ihys1 AGnBF<1 n~ A Gtnlll,S(I c1ons fees cvnvalesccnt costs 4.G11 n11 1a
..... Ho• "° exlra home e~nses The an ,._ Hom' o
I f A Hotro•P ' nua premiums or a 1nt1nl""' 110 P ;~
about 40 ye<1rs old would be ~mMea ~~ Y.I?
$3310$36 1 :,,,MM~~1"°
Bui on top of thts the \\hole !:;'.1p9,~·0 1 :
area nf ptgg} back major :!' s'!':. 01
n1ed1c:il poilc es 1s suddenly 11m, s~ P .oc. ' ~ ~ C1pen111g up One Nc11 \ 01 k AmSoA 10 AmSA " 10 company for 1nsla11ce is now ...,,., s d
offenng a piggy back to cur ao/~J t: 15.,
rent ma1or medical insurance Am T& T ? .o
pohcles "h1ch would pay up:~~~ 6f1
lo $100 000 In extra bene'1ts !~ ,0 :i 711 after the holder has used up :~.111~ •c
his deductible of between :~~ t~"" ~
$6 000 and $30 000 of benefits :~~t" 10 64 under his existing roverap;e :~gr~ ~!"D
The annual premium for lhe :~ • 01,~1 entire family might be as low i::i:~ ;g "~·
as $60 to $70 a year :~ .. con 90 \\hen national health 11 "'" ~ ~v Ano C a~ XI surance Y.Llh protection Ao~c~ec" u
:iga nst lhe sk\ rocke! ng costs !f.toOco ~"
o( catastrop!uc illness or ac !~~ f,,c c 8:
c1dent -becomes Jay, the!~· :N°!97 need for 1h1s sort or prolecholl: <~ Pos~ 1111 will d1m1n1sh or d sappear ! ~~:so1s60 But even though bills ror A --P 1 o A m p' IS this sort of insurance already Armi c• •~
have been introduced 10!0 the ! ~ c~P ~
92nd Congress and even ~,:;~ 0 no 70 lhough President Nixon may ~06"'.tca
grab the lead 1n urging the ~s~ ~t°
msurance the time of passage ~~"o.,!°'~':f
of thit' leg1slatwn 1s far Crom~ <ltjcMo~
certain and surely way oft ! '1t~~C110f1 la
So tf you have use for "' •~ c.,...m ! A •s Coo piggy back insurance bu y it r..To "'-c1.
hlh h Auo•P(MI -1v 1 e ceding I e warnmgs Au om o~ ~
1n this report !",~"'c~ ~no
AtoCo w Avco D l IO Av~ \/ Pd 10
A 3rd Car i11 Future
Avnt lric ~vn•I 11 A~ Pd Az ., 0 • "'
For Many A1nericans
IN HI GH GEAK
\11th Carl Car~tensen
There s a th rd ca r 1n the
fuh.1re of many Americans
bul 1t s more likely lo be
a recreauon \ eh1cle lhan
s mply a means of transporla
lion
The predlclLon that con
t nued expansion vf t h e
recreat on market ""11! mean
a fon vehicle 1n the garage
came rrom Harold Sperlich
41 year old F'ord vice presi
dent and general manager of
Truck Opt!rations
Sperlich po nted 01 I tha1 thr
\lho e fRcc of rccre:itlon 1s
th:ing ng and :i 1tomot \t rom
p:in es such ~ Ford n111sl
~hange " th it lie told
nl'wsmcn attending Ford D \ i
dons 1971 rerreatron 11eh1cle
National ne\\s conference at
Rancho tap1slr:ino that lhe
recreation vehicle boom of the
fiO s \I. as caused bv the new
dnveab1hty and h\eabihty or
recreation vehicle~
particularly 1n lrucks -and
the consequent w1ll1ngne."s of
ll'omen lo go motor camping
'TKE !'t10ST important
development 1s thal cars and
trucks are changing in con
I 000 • OF OIL l'AINTINGS
WHOLfSALE WAREHOUSE
Ol'EN TO THE l'Ull.IC
50°/o OFF
t cp1 he sa d For example
11h1!e people still need cars
and buy lhctn enthus1asl1catly
they arc looking al many or
lhcm as veh cle9 with a more
util1tar1:in intent Tch lo\e af
fair w th the automobile 1s
still there but people buying
them place more emphasis on
using them and less on iust
owning them '
I le sa d that the automobile
1nduslry en1oyed boom years
1n 11 c 1960 s partly because
j)CO!lle wanted and could af
ford a second c.:ar Jnd the
sucress or !he 1!170 s s
r:irt ally predicated on lhe
An1erican f:in11ly s nled fir
a th rd vch1c:lr
ll scctns to mr thJJt lhe
th 1 d un 1 w1ll 1norc !I ~ 1 I kel)
he a recre:it on Vf'h cle ~ a
motorhon1c :i pickup c111nper
a Bronco off ro:ider bul a
fun lar
A CONTINUED bnom in the
1970 ~ will be spurred on by
megalopohs I ving and the
human need to get back to
the land he said In the
\
l.1'-9 "" (WI I Hlt-~·· CllM C•t --~ .. .. • ' '" • .. J •• ' • .~ ' • m:
'" "" • 'I • 1~ * • • " ., " • 3:1; ' ' " " " ' ,, . • H • • '"• • " "' " " ,,.
" "" ' ' " " "' '"' ' • • ' " " " '" .. ,. • •• • • " •• " ..
alll ~· ' " " •
•• •• " , 1{1 • ~
I I ll o
J " '~1 3J • ,.. " " ' JS •t . ' . " . ~i SJ:
·~ '
, .. • it!: • • ...
" ' . !1" ... ... " . '" " " ·-" " . .,., .. ,, .. •• 1•1~ ' ''" ' '"
IJI :11"1 21 • ,,,,,,1,,
llrl J;~ ~vi
•HA It 11 o ,., ,, . ,, "° .... ,. s •
:~1 n: :1 ... ) •I •• I •1 • •• •l • I• , n .,,~.11 , )!;l .~1 ~'r·,~.
I ~.,, >~~ " , . ~ I\~ I I• lO 1' "' " ,.• ·~I~~ 1
H ,, o )Jlo J2 ,, l' JJ 1>0 }O ,,
...... IUt 0Hll I Ml• 1. .. (ltH (llp
)2) ~,l:
"" . ,.,
11: ·i l , . '•' .. ., .
" 46• t I ' ,, . . ~
j "' ~ f
' ' ,ea n
" " '"' • \fi
.;\ .. " 1f! n
'" " ' ,,. ,. .,
' '" " " • "' • '" •• " ' '" ' m .. " .. ,
" '
• " om ..
"• IS
' " • " • " ' ~.
-· " . 1S 1+'• )• -+ 2 • ..... , ..
)J o .. I
II) .... ,. _,_,
SI +I ,a ...
"
j
DICK TRACY
;.,.'r~~"-l..... ( (
\ Llll,OLf' . OAI.., MES
WORRIED'!
-AFRAID '¥0U'LL.
GET KILLED!
MAM! w~~RE's ni1s
ROOl<IE
BEEN AU..
MY
L1 F~f \:>.J/
TUMBLEWEEDS
,•,Ji_
~-~-. . .
JUDG& PARKER
UMAWA•E TllAT
MltT l-IA.5 A.lRE/\P"/
HEAR'P ABOUT .
ELMO'S AR:R'esr,
5™ DRIVER
G!YES HIM
TME NEWS OVER
™E PMowe :
PLAIN JANE
ACROSS
1 Deranged
4 Carried
'l Make wav:;o l~ Me llow
15 Wa lking
l b City of
.As ia
17 Octopus
19 Memb'r
of US
veter ans'
group:
Inf orma l
20 Herb
21 Formtr
UN VlP
22. Hawaiian
food
23 Assembly
plate
24 Employe1s 2fi Slangy
negative
29 Massa-
t hus,tts
"'" 31 Intent
JZ Boy 's n1""-
JJ Inebriated:
Stang
36 Ne• lilnico
town
38 Exist
39 Lar9"
Vt11lures
41 Person
who f1•es
.mining
cl1Jms
oil Had dlnntr
44 Content of
some TV
program
1 , ' "
4b Father
or mother
47 Float
4'1 Bishop's
!.tat
5G ·Epoch 51 Stream 5Z Laid by
5 .. County In.
Scotland
58 Mov' al
1~11 sp,ed
LO Distant:
Comb. form 61 Plains
:inlmal
62 lnstrunrit
L4 Exter-
minaling
ag,nt
bL US Revotu-
li onary
commander 67 Proportlona l
relation
68 Fish
69 Musty
70 Pungs
71 E1191ish
cath,dral
town
DOWN
1 Title of
respect
2 US rocket
stage 3 Supreme
splrll
of evil
4 L.u9e
bundle
5 Below pllf
6 0 lsturbs
• , • .. r f "
17 "
"' '~ "
" ,.
'
"ROOl<l I! MARRll!S
/>a. FEMAU! 5U!llnl!
OM,NC)I IT
COUl..Dttr' ee1
nlATWASNOTA
WHISTLE, DEAR! A L/>!l'(
NEVER WH ISTLES AT
A G.ENlUMAN!-
ly Cliester Gould
OKA\I, LET ._.ER
GET t<NOCl<EO OFF.
-WMOCAAES?
By Tom Ko Ryan
71lATWAS
A PUCKEREI'
SIGH
By Al Smith
--~-
By Harold Le Doux
Ll'L ABNER
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
COME
RIG~T
OVER,
SAM!
EL'MO MUST~ GOT IN TOUCM w1rn
DR'IVER! CA.LL ltNCE SACK! TELL
HIM TO FIND OUT WHETMER PlflVER
WAS INVOLVED IN A.NV WAV WITH
l't> LIKE TO TAI.IC WITH ELMO FOi:
,. FEW MINUTE5, eos .. BUT NOT IN
HIS CELL! I HAVE TME UNEASY
FEELING Tl-IE WAND 8 JNPU5Te1E5
n
5oTTLoMl'NT
7 Mos t
Inquisitive
8 Ext1 emely
d'lical'
'J Skin
irritat ion
10 Drama
o! old
Calitornia
11 Untouched
12 Man's
nickname
13 Stone
18 Ellis
"' Vancouv«
24 Strip
ZS Humbird
on,srlf
27 Form'r
S. Am,rican
VIP
28 lnllu,nce
30 Gas
33 Haber-
dashery
Item
34 Enur,
• ' '
. "
" • n ,,
THE ARRE ST! CAN SEE lNSID~ YOllfot J'~Jl!
211n1
35 Part of
musketee1s '
slogan:
3 words
37 Rocle.
40 Garmen ts
4Z. Gum --
45 More lhan
two Of
llf"ee
AS Interlaced
SJ Raise the
spir its of
55 Long-
conlinued
pracl.ice
56 P'rtainln9
"
to musica l
l:lU3 lil)'
57 Admlssloll
59 Equ ine bl Organic
~a lure
li2 Card game
63 Labor
organization:
Abbr. 05 Perf0tmed
11 " "
,. lJ "
By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS
PE!lKINS
MISS PEACH
MAl<CIA
IS A veRY
DIFFICULT
Pett..!10N.'
STEVE ROPER
YE5,5HE'S
GOIN&
THROUGH
A 5TA6E.
W.YBE ITSHOULD
CAME BACK TO GET MY BE THE MEN It.I 1 PET A IR·POLLUTEA, BLUE. SIB! -I
6TE\IE! THOUGHT I HEARD JUST FOUND
'YOU TALKIN' TO )Otl~SELF/ SOMETHING/
•·SH.All I 5E~D
FOR. niE
MEN IN
WHl1E
SUITS'!
•O""*"-,._,..,,.
IT .AL.WAYS
COMeS A80Uf
/HIS TIME'.
OF LIFE.
/T:S CAL.LEO
,. Pft.Ei-ADOi..E5c.ENCE.'
1<e1< HEICT
STAGE
WJU.. 8E
A LOT
EAS/6.R
TO PEAL..
WITH •••
By John Milff
By Mell
yes
IT COMES
1N ASOUT
70 YEA#t.5,
ANO IT'S
CALLeD •saN1urr.' . ;
~J ~"l!t> , j) 1-1 l
"'"'-.. """"'
By Saunders and Overgard
RIGHT! TO ;tJICOW!M:EO TJ«TOIEAPBEEF
IKf'S "FUTUl?E START WITH,IT SERVED /I{ CERTAIN li'ES"!IWRAllTS
CLEARS UPAMYSTfSN.' COMES FROO RVSTL!ib ,_.--<:
LISTEJoJ TO THIS MEMO/
ml" » 1: "
" " l>
J1 .,, "
.. ,fl .. ., " PEANUTS By Charles Mo Schulz
" .. " ' .. ·-•I .. •• ~ ,, ~ '
.. -" -'-:.I':'-..
,, " H " " " .. "
h1-W " -.. , "
"" --.. .1 ·~ '·' -.. " n •
·-
Mon<tay, F"tbrual'}' l , 1971
,
Tk( STUNG( WOllD
MR.MUM
G
~"11:£ '~P«I
.lAi1CAN '"'· ~IMlo\~ 1\IM
DEllVERlf'
'/t/11
'
/
DAILY PILOT J7
By Al Capp
By Charles Barsotti
By Gus Arriola
.Ai',,fosr
f"IQJS! Pia.TT~ ~~ASTLY I W1>ATHli-l<0
By Roger BoUen
' '
ooa
" Q
•
---...:.__ '+
---"'"'."!=-~·-
DENNIS THE MENACE
'ITS SU~ EASl!'I< 10 HAKE IT NICE ANO ROUND
WHEN YA START Wllll A 6:JWUNG Ml!. IN ll!lMrtru!' ..
:
I ' . l
! ' ~i ~: " " K ' ~ ~ . ..
" " lo l o l• lo u '·' ,,
" l• " 1
" l l ' ' " " u '·' u u u u u 11.11 u u 1t1 t' I l:. "' l" l "
tn I lo lo l u lo lo l lo
lo lo l o l l o l " " ,,
l•
M M
M M M M M M M M M M M M M M
" M
M " M M M
M Mo M • M Mo
M M M M M ... Mc Mo •• M M< M< "' .,
I~~ ~c
M< M< '" .,
'"
I ~ ~: '" M
M •• •• ' ~.: M •• "" •• Mo M
M M Mi M •• " "' M l "' "' "' M . ~1 Ml M
M M
M "· M M M M
M M M M M
M M
M M
M M M M M
M M M ~ M M M
N ' " N, • • • N ~ • • " N N N N
N N N N ~
N 1: • N ~ N " N • N N • N • ~ • " •
•
f.ionda1, February l , 1971 SC CAILV PlUIT JO
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20 DAILY PILOT Monday, February 1, 1971
6.50xl3
Tubeless
Blackwall
ALLSTATE
PASSENGER
'nRE GUARANTEE
(;uaninteed A?i11:;1: All lire fLi l·
ure or defccu in matffli.I or11,.orl·
1n.11uhip.
fol:' llo• Lon~ For 1he life of I.be
origim.I ttcid. · ·
Whal Sean \'11ill Do: Jn C'!'l'.d1.an.i:c
for the tirt', rc:pbcc: -ir, ch.u.;111,g
tor lht proportion of current ~r!I.
ing price plus F1:drt'l.I bciie-l ·;uc
1hat repr~nu r.rea..I u~eJ. Rcp,.ir
11.1.il puncrun~'ilt no char.i;~.
l>uar11n1ccd AJ1,3in~t: 'fre.ld -a·ear·
u•L
Fur Ilow Lo11F: The number cif
r11cinths specif1eJ.
Wh•t Sean Vi'ill Do: Jn cxcl1anse
for the tire, replace ir, chari;:int:
1he currc11t ~lling price plu.s fed. ·
e1•l fu:c.ise T-ax less the Jollo'l\·ing
aJ lollt'a!Ke:
~lonthly Gaarantrc
J8ro24
27to 39 ,.
AUow~nee
10-:;;
20''.:i
2'.5%
Se_ars
Plus 1.78
Fedl'ral Exci.,I.'
']'ax and
Olli 'fire
36-MONTH GUARANTEED
Sizr: T,.d<.f• F.F..T. Size T,.d .. I• F.E.T. ""'~ .... .,..
'1'uhaies~ l.llack1~·at l 7.7,'i'\ I l :!.t 87 !!.I 7 -fi.51h I ~ 16.87 i-J;.a H.2.'ixl·i :?7.87 :!.:t1 --7.7:is l1I :?I .87 :?.J 7 ~l.:i.'ix 1.i 31.117 :!.!\:I
8.:?s ... 1.1 2 t 87 !!.:-!3 1.1.1 ... 1;; 26.37 2. J•J
Tnhelrs~ 'Vl1itf'\\'t1 ll 8.'l :ix l:l 29.37 2.:~;;
6.50x 13 19.87 l.7H U,4 j xt;; 3:!.87 :!.jJ .
7.35xl4 ::!3.87 2.0.i .
\
FRE~;
Battery
l11!lalh1tion
l . I
I '
':' ,
Express Higl1way Hauler
6-Ply
!lated
Nylon
• 6-ply rated ny·
Ion cord con-
st ru c Lio n for
~tre11 ~1 l1 autl
lo 11iz n1ilea~e
e \Vr ap around
tread enables·
Leiter cornerin;
and n1ore l!ila·
hilily
I
i
l
~~--·-: '•·-
SIZE f'ri•·e
Tuhe-'fype
6.70xlj :! 1.26
7.UOx l 5 :!3.i.•
6.50x l 6 :!6.06
7.00xl3 :tt7;i
1'uhelr!!-"
(1.70xl5 '.!6.1)(1
26
Tube-T~·,-.e
1'111.11 2.40 r.E:r.
F.E.T.
:!.40
.'.!.a:;
2.61
3.00
:?.70
"10 TRADE-IN REOUIRED
. ·,,
t;i.,
·''-'•' --~ ;;,
•
Guaranteed 4-8 Months SAVE $5!
IDGH VOLTAGE BATTERY
Regular
~27.99
Trade· I n
Price
99
\ri1h
TnoU•··ln
'~·-.l1'H, 111:,
...... 11'. ~ !'"""' ~:~~~r"'
Fit:> 90% nf Al l An1 crir-n11-
.\l alle ]~-Volt ~yste111 Cars
S..ar>1 n.11 .. ...,. ii f ;uarnnt<'C
'1 l'rtt rrp!.icrment tl'irhin. fi ~111 d,1y~ 01 pur .. h.1~e if b.11-
~ 1crv ['r0\T,defective.A1 r·
er '1() ,].~·,,we rrrl.1o:c 1be
~ hJHl."r>', 11 Jl·te<:tl\·e, ~n,!
~ rhJ•\il" 1·01• only t'or 1he
ii per .. 1.! nr· 0111·ner.~hip,
h,i,,.,J on tile rc,11ul:ll' rricc
/<.'!~ 1r.r.de·r11 ~! 1he 11me of
tl·turn, rro-r-.r.trtl ovrr U-,t"
nun1hl'r of month~ of '
i:;iur1n1ee.
~-SAVE $1 66! Sears Air ..-=.~•.A -· 39° Quart Can 1r ~7 "=--~
i -• rl~ Filters for --Heavy_ Duty I-I eavy Duty Regular '4.99
O.E.R.* Shocks Carburetors
3~? 199
• Fit most cars •Traps dirt a nd c.lusl
"OrigiDal Equipmeru Re· particles. A 6Cll~a·
plactment tioual buy!
SA J'E 'l!
11/2-Torl llych·aulic I Sturdy •4.;99
Jack Ratchet Jack
3ss 399
~
•'Two-piece lifting • 1V.i ton capacily
handle • ,\djustable hei!!;hlt
•Built-in rcltase •Sturdy co11'\lruc1ion
,:i\"e -
Sl'C.ll'S
I
I UINA PAIK TA 1-4400, J21o4S30 fl MONTI GI 3·391 1
CANOGA PAIK 340..0661 GllNOAU CH 5·1004, Cl 4~611
COMPTON NI i-2111, NI 2·S761 HOLLYWOOD HO t 0 Sf41
,.l!AltS,1t0ftlUCKANDCO. COVl!'CA 966·0611 INGllWOOD Ol 1·2521
Shop Night~ Mon. thru $at. 9:30 A.M. to 9:'0 P.M., Sunday 12 Noon to~ P.M: ..
,-
-\ • '\ rg lg l\lotor Oil
HEAVY HEAVY 27~ DUTY DUTY DTOR Oil MOTOR. Oil
• i\ferls or exceec.ls
:ill new ca r 1uanu·
faclnrer's \varranty
r cquiren1cn111
SA V1.<: •!f. !
H.egular 118.99
Bau cry
Char .. cr 0
1499
LONG llACH HI S·Oltl
OLYMPIC & SOTO AN l·S2t 1
OIANGI 637·2100
PAIAOINA 611 ·3111, 3S1 ·4211
POMONA NA. 9°Jl6l
•
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i"ili•I iunc
• 1,ha,.,-.-1 •• 1tca<ly
t> ~'"'' rJlr • II i r h "11 1 ·Jl11 I
lr;on·f<Jnu~r
I ;1.;1
,ICO WI 1·42•2
SliNfA ANA Kl 7-3371
IANJl fl S'llNGS 944·1011
SANTA MONICA IX 4•6711
IOUlH COAST PLAIA 140·UU
•
I
(l§fjt1) Oil Filter
199
• T~ilttrs out lilutl,:e.
1l irt hrfore it
reaches the eng,ine
Batterv Booster Cable •
2?7
•For 6 1tnd 12 \'OIL
l':IN
• 1~-rt. hon~ter cah1e
# 7 l{J:!
1HOUSANO OAKS 497·4S66
TOllANCI J41·1J11
Ul'lAND t&l-1917
VAlllT PO 3·1461, 914·2220
VllMONf ,l 9·1111
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Monday, Ftbruary 1, 1971 DAILY PILO'I 3
Daily Pilot Staffers Win 25 -Awards
BEST NEWS, BEST COLUMN
Art Vinsel
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BEST SPOT NEWS PHOTO
Richard Ko•hler
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BEST NEWS FEATURE
Barbara Kreibich
BEST SPORTS FEATURE
Rudi Nledzlolskl
BEST SPORTS NEWS STORY
Glenn White
DAILY l"LLOT 11•11 PINllH
BEST COMBINATION
Patrick O'Donnill
Excellence Cited by Press Club
1..ed by double winn<'r Art VinS<'I, DAI·
LY PILOT v.Titers and photographers
cullected 11 first pl ace av.•ards and 14
citations for Jijjnorable achievement in
1970 Orange County-Press Club com-
petition.
1'he honors were handed out Saturday
night during the press blub's 16th annual
awards banquet.
at profcssion~f wrestling as practiced
at the Orange •. County Fairgrounds in
Costa t\1csa.
--Sporls Editor GlellD \\'bite (best
sports news story) for his accounl cf
how former Laguna Beach resident Bill
Toomey broke the world decathlon
record.
-Reporter Rudi Niedz ielski (best
sports feature) for his story dealing
with the life style of a professional
motorcycle r a c e r from Huntington
Beach.
managing editor of lhej Register. The
award was established ~·tn honor of a
pidheer Orange County \ ne\\'Sman who
died in 1968.
It is given annually by press club
directors to an individual who "over
the years best exemplified professional·
ism within the communications field and
service outside it to his fellow man
as characterized by the spirit of Sky
Dunlap."
\Vilkinson will retire next spring after
27 years with the Register.
sublt<tl! Winntr -Vlni:1 Srrtlf'!D, Los Allllfltl
l lmtt; Hono .. 1111 -.c11l1wmtn1 -L1rrv Andttnan.
T~t lh<1l•Ter ar>d Lti' "l~nt, OAILY PILOT.
Bttl rrc .... 1-.•per SIOl"'I' Ind PllOtl by I Comtr.J111t1111
fhPot11r-PllOt04,,pl\tr (Orlni;rt County 1ublt(I/' W1nntr -Par-.r~ O'=>co1111fll, DAILV PILO I Honorablt Achot Yem"'t -L•t l Mo1g1n, Loi A119tlff Tlmtt. Ind Jtck O. Mllltr. TllO Reglsttr.
™-rt~ i;.•1·~~~·, ~~·i.111~1"::~1 .... ;me~r -''J.7.i 8:..i~~"Plui:-·.e 11~llll•t1r, an11 Pttnck O'ODnMn,
I t s! SPOI NtWS Plloll: Wlnntr -R!cl\llrd Koefller, DAILY PILOT! Hot>011blt Adllev-nt -L.tr"" Ar>llP'50n, Tiie R..qo• tr, t nd Cl1y Miit..-, Th• llcql•ltr.
llittl New\paptr o>a•t LIYOUI: Wl11Mr -All .. :'..:T~"'+71..,?"J~r .. v"~\'ro~. ~~0t'o~l:.nA~~~'i=~~ Tht Re<il"er,
Btil NtW1P•Ptr "Brkilll" «Or1ni;re County 111b11c!J1 Wo11ne• -T~om1• Fortunt, LO• An'itlf\ T mtti Hariorablt Achltvement -Tom Ek:l'lorn, The
R.cihltr. •r>d JIM! C.rOtro, The R~lst,r. Btsl Ntw•oaptr 1-ellvr1 !O••n~e County 1ub~c1 ): 'fr"1~~':e1 -Ho.:-0",:;:i, L~~~r ... :.::~~;10'.'... c~v sm,:f.~
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Vinsel. the DAILY PILOT's Costa
Mesa city editor, \\'as honored for his
story about a "'ild and \\'OOlly city council
session when •·the chocolate chiffon hit
the fan" during a hearing on a proposed
pie shop in a residen tial neighborhood.
It was judged the best news story or
1970.
Vinsel also won in the best column
category for his moving Pilot Logbook
on the death of longtime Costa Mesa
Cily Clerk C. K. "Charlie" Priest and for
another Logbook -this one in a lighter
vein -giving a behind-the-scenes look
at nrwsmen covering the arrival vf
President Ni:ir:on at El Toro f\1CAS.
-Reporter Joanne Reynolds l best
education story) for her story about
how one Harbor Area high school teacher
has found how to reach go-called in.-
corrigible youngsters.
The number of awards carried off
by DAILY PILOT writers a n d
photographers Saturday night totaled 25,
second only to the 32 won by staff
members of the Orange County edition,
Los Angeles 'I'imes.
Av.'ards in the 1970 press club rom-
petition lnlluded $100 to winners in each
vf the 10 s pecial categories plus
cash and plaques for winne rs in the
24 general categories. 'fop cash prizes
($150 each) went to the winners of
the best news story and best spot news
photo categories. Entries in all categories
for the 1970 contest totaled 630.
Lo. Arigelt• Times. tr>d L•~ Morg1n, Loi Anoelea Tlme1.
Bet! f>llllliCll'I' "'''''' by • Pulll!c Rtlll!OM R10 ... 1111llllve: Winner -Jtromt Colll111, lrvlne Comp~nv; Hot>OrlDle Achltvtmtnl -Oon Fl.Imm, Phil co.Ford, end Vt.di M1ck1v, Clllld11n'1 HoaolHI o! Or1nge Cau~ty
a .. t Sot: 1'111u... Pl'IOlt1 Wlnner -Dttrl1 A. Je1nntn•, La. A"<!•W• Tlmn1 HOflOt'tblt Acl\ltve-ment -Rlchtrd KIM!nler/ DAI LY PILOT, 1nd VjMf S!rtltlO LOI .t.nllf't• 1mq. BEST EDUCATION STORY
Joanne Reynold5
BEST PAGE LAYOUT
Alan Oirkin Bt •I NtW'IOlptr Column: Wlnrit• -Ari VIMel, DAILY PILOT ; Honortblt Aclll1vtmtnl -Chuc~ Loe;,,, DAILY P1LCT. Ind Jerome Collln1, l)AILY PILOT.
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BEST SERIES
Terry Coville
BEST FEATURE PHOTO
Lee Payne
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Other DAILY PILOT first place "''in·
ners:
-Photographer Richard Koehler (best
spot ne"'s photo) for his dramatic photo
of an officer rushing a stricken child
from a Costa !'o1esa police helicotper
to a hospital.
-Laguna Beach Reporter Barbara
Kreibich (best news feature~ for her
story about that landmark in neon, the
''Hotel Laguna'' sign, being removed
In deference to a new municipal
ordinance.
-\\'est Orange Counly Editor Alan
Dirkin (best page layout) for his artistic,
yet functional, organization of photos,
.stories and headlines y,•hile a member
of the DAILY PILOT's copy desk staff.
-Chief Photographer Lee Payne (best
feature photo) for his imaginative study
or bay, boat and beach reminiscent of
a scene from Robinson Crusoe.
-Reportl'!r Terry Coville (best series)
ror his five articles on oil blight in
)funlington Beach.
-Photographer Pat r i ck O'Donnl'!ll
(best stvry and photo by a combinalion
reporter.photographer) for his wry look
1imes staff members captured 12 firsts
and 20 citations for honorable achieve-
ment (second and third place showings).
The Fullerton Daily News Tribune had
four first place winners. The Santa Ana
Register had three first place and 14
honorable achievement winners and the
Orange County Evening News had one
first place and three honorable achieve-
ment winners.
DAILY PILOT staff members v.·ere
eligible ror awards in 30 categories.
They \\'On one or more awards in 16.
Besides the DAILY PILOT's Vinsel,
only Bill Hazlett vf the Los Angeles
Times and Thomas Fortune, a former
DAILY PILOT writer now with the
Times, won two first place awards in
1970 press club compeliton. Perhaps the
most versatile news writer in Orange
County in 1970. however, was Lael
Morgan vf the Los Angeles Times. She
won a first place award and six citations
for honorable achievement.
Saturday's awards ceremonies were
climaxed by the presentation of the Sky
Dur.lap Award to Clennell Wilkinson
F ollowing is the complete list of win-
ners:
OENE"•t AWAllOS:
81!11 Edll11r11I fOra.191 County 1ulll1Kll: Winn~ -Al!rf<I L. Htw,u, F1·ll11ton Dtllv Ne~ Trlburie: ~f~~ble Atl!ll"lt..wn• -Tom Fortune, Los Ange!n
•fft l!dlto,ltt folt!tr than Orlngf County toolc): ~~~~b,,-.r.~ri' .... .!.:~'1vn•.:._ tr,,, ... ,:~er.7 1"T'~~
R.cil1te1. ••ti ••11 -C.W.-191 Or•ftft Cowtll" e~bo Ioctl: Wlnntr -Ed"'"· ICE1V1 H-rtblt Athltv .. ment -Solcler McLt1n, KWI ,
Bttl Arilclt !Of' I HOllM Ortlfl ay ' PWUc RtltlleM llet1rtttnl1llv1: Win~~ -Biii Slew1rl,
Beckm1n lnslr11merih1 Honortlllt Achftvtmtn! -
J1nt S1evt ,,., Irvine Comoanv, Ind .t.rl Le~vlt!,
Pacl!lc lele!JllOne.
IHI Mtt11ln1 ""rliClt (Otlf\Rt County 111blt cll! Wonntr -11•11 Ha•lt!!. LC• An<l<!les l 1me1; Hot>O•~Dle Atl!!evemenr -Fr~n~ C. McGee, Ntw World• of . lrvlne, and VI Smith, LOI AnttllS Tlmts.
Bisi N1wso11•er Htt dllnt: Wonner -Bob l ltbfll, Fuller!nn O.llv News Trlb11ne0· Honortblt Achieve-ment -lltrl>lr~ 8Ylrle, ""ILV PILOT, Ind J o 0!1on. DAILY P IL T.
Btsl Womtn's l'lr PtmUy l>Ktlon llol"'!': Winner C••' S•wvt•, rllt Realole•; Ho11orao11 AchltNtmfnt -L~el Moroan, LOI Anq~lti l imps, 1":,~1r.Jo:r::. ~or,l~;,l;,1fv A~:i/fo'n 1~'1::t.o, Wlnn•r
-Cl•¥ Miiier. Tht 11""\!ltr; Hono•tblt AcM1v1mrnl -H1I 5Cflul• 1.., Angeles Tlmtt, tnd Lee PtYnr, OAlLV PILOT, .
Be•I Sporh t.ew' 51(1ry: Winne• -Glonn Wlll!e. DAILY PILOl : Hcno••blt Ac/lltvtmtnt -Cid S~wvtr, Ttw> 11.cilsl.,,
ant 5portt fu•~re ilOtY• Win"'' -Ruell Nlt'111let,kl, OAILY PILOl: Honorlblt Aclllt <H"'fnl -Mar/I • Orl,coll, to• A11111l11 Tlmt1. tnd Howtrll l. K111C1v. CAil Y PILOT.
lttl 1Ptr11 l"llot1: Wlnntr -Y11n1clo N1netrl, T~• Re<1l11rr.
lttl NeW••••tr Serltl (Ortntt Counl'Y tublecth Winner -T1rr, S. Covolle. OAILY PILOT: HOfl<lttD'' :~1~v~-;::'c~r~:",ti,,.~f~~•,u1~::in~ngtlt1 Tlmti,
att! Sttl" er N1w1ffpor Phtlo1 !0,tnQI County
8ttl New\ "••lurt• Winner -Barberi Krtlblcl'I, OAILY PILOT; Kono•1blt Achltvem!nl -A•I Vinsel. DAILY PILOT, l l'ICI Tom ForlUM, Lll• All(!l'ltS Tlmt•.
81ttl News Story COrtnot Cavnty 1ubltcO· W!n11t r -Art Vin••'· o-.ILY PILOT; Hono<tblt Athltvtm1nt -JGl!n Gev11, Or•-CC>Unl1 Evtnlng Hews. tnd Tom 811,l1v. C•1LY PILOT. Sl"ECIAL AWARC>3:
•tit 1101"'!' tfl Otrltltla: Wlrw>tr -Htf'mltl ' Wonq, Los •notlrJ Tlmt1; H-r•bf1 .-.chltv•m•nt -Mt,Jle O•htOll, Los Ano-Jn Tlmtl. ••t MHkal ,,.,,., Win,_ -JOM~ o..,.r, O••nc:t COllll'Y Even!nn H•ws: Honor1bl1 .t.cl'llflw. mtn! -Clar.t 111~ Ora11111 Covnlv Ewn/lllJ ,,._,., Ind U11 Mo•111n. LOI Ang1l11 Tl .....
B•tl AtC'OljYCI SIOf'f; Wlfl<\tr -M.otll• Oflocoll, LOI "Anq1!1~ Tlm111 Ho...,•1ble Achll!>'tmenl -11~1 Ttmbtv.,, ll'NI 1'qisru, 1nc1 Ltet Mo191,,,. LOI Al\!ftln Tlmtt.
lest Sl•l'Y on uw tr Af,.,.lnltlrllll'll ._. Jut!l(tt Winner -O"vlO S111w, t111 ""no;Jff" T!mn1 Hono•ablt Acl>levem•M -Biii Ht'l!ll!. LOI ""notlt1 Tlml'1, Ind Joan Gevtr, 011nae County E,,..nlnia "''""'· Btll S!ory on En!1r11lnment: Wlnnlr -l1el Mcr~tn. Lo. An<ielf' T1m11: Hot>0r11blt c~l1v1mtnl Tr.. i~111~~mes, Tne ll19T11er, t rod J im a.an,
11"'11 S!orv on Pl,.. ,-,.vtnllon: Wlnntr -lllltfl: Willlnm1. Fullt•lon CllllY New1 T•lbun11 Honnr1bt1 Achl•Wmfnl -C~vld 5.~tw. lei A11111le1 TTmei, and S1tndl Mo1l1y0 Tht Rfl!l•ltr.
Beil 5.101"'1' or Urb111 ""lltlrs: Wlnnt• -Vlr11il K•el. LOI ilrn•!n Tl·~•., Honor~blt Acl'llewm1nt -Biii H~rleTI, tOI ""nllflfi Tlmft, tnd Ttrry S. Covil le, DAILY PILOT,
1111 51.,.,. on · w ... tern HeriltOtt Wlnnfl'" -f!ob G~!!emy, LM ~11011-. Time., Honortblt At~levernPnl -Gl<!rCll' Comr~. Antl'>tlm BulleUri. 11r>d David S~11w, Los A ,Qeln Times.
Be1t EdUCll'Clfl s·oo-= Wlnnt• -JCl!lfll\t l!eVM•dl, ~~LLeTd8F,15~Tl YHP:('C~?T• At M1vtm1nl -George
B"t Arilclt DtlllllCI Wiii! L.tw Erttffcemt"'' rc1;;".;;.~:,11~Ht!~tt.\r,~~·~~.'l.~".t.~~1T~=~•bl1
Ski" l>unl•e .r.w.,11': CIMMIJ Wllklnson, ""lllff!nt editor, ll'le R,.ql1!t1.
Contnl Jlldott: Vt llt¥ of lilt Sun Cl'>tJlfw, Si11m& Della C~l. ·PP!otnt•, ,t.r1t.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
OSCAR
MAYER
8 OZ. PKG.
• • • • • • • • • • •
Not just OOlogna ••• but Oscar Mayer's .•• at this price. And you ,ct to choose either beef or the blend of meats and save big on either
vne. A sand\\·ich favorite ••• you know you can't find better quality than Oscar Mayer •• , and El Rancho has the hottest price in town ! . ~ /...
..... 19~. Beef Brochet: .M~"~ c.o: .. 4 9 .c. Celery ..... ~~o:N.F~E:H!.
tiny onions, ready to cook! Crisp stalks ... tender, flavorful ••. great with soup, sand\viches ! Strips of top sil'loin, wrapped around
Aged Steaks. U.S.D.I. CllOICE
t I I • I I I
Top sir loi n cuts ..• care fully trimmed ... ;!icd for finer flavor :
Fondue Beef Cubes ................. s1.89Lb.
'J'iny cubes of top sirloin ... seRson, dip in boiling oi l on fondue forks!
Ox Tails . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . ' . . . . . .
'Vhy not serve ox tail soup •. home made .• hot and hearty goodness!
I Prices in effrct 1\fon., Tues .. JVcd.,
Feb. 1, t , 3. No sale1 to dealers.
Lipton's Soup .~~i~. 3 '°' $1
Jf you can boil water, you can serve delicious soup. Twin pack.
39~ Margarine I,\ AZ OLA
• •••••••••
Corn oil makes the difference .. spreads smoothly, tastes so good! 1 lb
Calgonite .. : ...................... ~···"··· ........... 79e
Save 20c on tJ:te big 50 ounce package ••• automatic dishwashen J
Liquid Joy ................... . .: .............. 59-:
Big kinr 1ize bottle ••• get dishes. silver.,.,·arc, sparkji'na:._,tjean !
ARCADIA: . PASADENA: . SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACH: ... 2121 Newpq1t Blvd. and
Sunset and Huntington Dr. (El Rancho Center) 320 Vies! Colorado Blvd . Fremont and Hunt ing lon Dr V/ornr'r ;nil Alronqu in (Boardw.rlk CenlerJ 2555 Eastbluff D1. (Eastbluff -Village Cel\ler)
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,f eAJlV PILOT Monday, rtbruary l , 1971
•
' I J
'.And where do you think
you're going?'
Gls Just
Need Love
By DICK WEST
As the armed forces move to make
military life more atlractive by permit·
ting beer In the barracks and introducing
other amenities, one question stands out:
How will this relaxalion of regimen·
talion affect discipline? Or. putling it
another way. witl a soldier who has not
been conditioned to obey chicken regula·
lions still respond to battlefield com-
mand!:?
Having emerged from World War II
as the senior technician-fifth grade CT-5)
in lhe U.S. Army, I feel I am qualified
to address myself tO this question. And
my ans~·er is: -
Yes, military discipline can be mairi-
lained witrout a Jot of Mickey ~louse
stuff, provided the old hard line GI
tradition is replaced by .something else.
That something else is, or course,
love.
If a soldier feels the Army loves him,
he will perform combat duty as readily
as one in whom obedience has b e e n
instilled by petty tyrants.
The burden of making soldiers feel
loved obviously will fall on the drill
instructors, platoon sergeants and other
( ' ,, · l'he. ' . r . . ILJJ aD IHl'll'IEIJR
Heavy Fi9hti1ag
Israel Attacks
Lebanese Towns
By United Press International
lielicoptcr·borne Israeli commandos
struck twice into Lebanon du r 1 n g Ilic
night and attacked Arab guerrilla
hideouts, Israeli spokesman reported in
1'el Aviv. Guerrillas struck t\vice in
the occupied Gaza Strip, "'ounding 6t
Arabs in an atlack on a post office
and attacking an Israeli truck.
The case-fire still held along the Suez
Canal and .Jordanian frontier but Syria
joined Egypt in calling up reserves as
four Arab nations "'ent on a full ~·ar
footing. With the cease-fire expiring on
Friday, Egypt once more emphasized
its hard line negotiating stand.
spokesman said more guerrillas may
have been trapped and killed inside one
of the demolished houses.
Villagers said the raid lasted four
and a half hours and that the guerrillas
suffered one man wounded. El Khiyam,
a town of 14,<XXI, apparently y,·as not
hit directly bul a resident said the
Israelis searched Al Falah headquarters
and that later Lebanese artillery fired
at the Israelis.
In the Gaza Strip, a terrorist entered
the crowded main post office carrying
an automobile tire and set it down
in a corner near Arabs lined up to
collect their Israeli pay checks from
the postal bank. The tire began emitting
smoke and then exploded, wounding 61
Arabs. five seriously.
·--••
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I \ "'' .1 •
,. ' • The target of the Israeli attacks were
'1.he town of El Khiyam, four miles
inside Lebanon, and the nearby village
of Qila (also SP,elled Kfar Kela), due
north or the Sea of Galilee and about
25 miles inland from the coast. ll v.•as
the first Israeli strj,ie into Lebanon since
a raid Jan. 15 against a guerrilla
frogman base on the coast.
A few minutes later an unknown
assailant threw a grenade at an Israeli
truc k a half mile from the postoffice.
Jhe explosion inflicted neither damage
ll01"" casualties.
CAMBODIAN SOLDIERS CROUCH BEHIND• SHRINE FOR COVER FROM GUNFIRE
Israel said the commandos killed at
least three guerrillas but suffered one
killed and three wounded as they blew
up three houses. Lebanon reported heavy
fighting during the attack and a duel
behveen Lebanese soldiers and an Israeli
helicopter. A Lebanese \voman said she
was robbed•of $3,000.
An Israeli military spokesman said
the raids Sunday night and early today
\\'ere in retaliation for 10 raids against
Israeli border villages by e<ilestinian
guerrillas based in Lebanon. The
Cl1ichester Near
Nicaragua CoJ-;t,
End of Journex
~1 AN AG U E, Nicaragua (UPI)
Sir Francis Chichester, 69, is nearing
the Coast of Nicaragua at the end of
a 4.000 mile solo voyage across the
Atlantic from Africa, the British Em·
bassy reports.
Phnom Penh Scene of Bloody Bat tie Between S. Viet5, Cambod ians
Mozambique
Inundated
By New Floocl
A11abt1slt Tea11t Hit
8 Y a11l\:s l\.illed by Re{l
Rocl\:et, Morta1· Sl1ellings
LOURENCO f\fARQUES, Mozambique SAIGON (AP) -t\orth Vietnamese was killed and 18 \YOUflded.
(UPI ) -Fresh flood waters poured into and Viet Cong forces killed eight Th k e attac at Da Nang touched off Portuguese Fast Africa's c Y c Ion e• Americans and v.·ounded 25 early today a huge fire that destroyed thousands
stricken lowlands loday, hampering in attacks on six U.S. positions in the or gallons or fuel and damaged some
rescue efforts for thousands of flood central and northern province s of South ai rcrafl No casualties were. reported.
victims already marooned for fou r days. Vietnan1. Alcanwhile t!,e most sustained born·
Africans o\·ercame their fear of The most devastating attack wa s a hing campaign of Ille \i•ar stretched
helicopt ers and planes to plead for food 50·round mortar barrage and ground into its l15th day today With more U.S.
from Portuguese anny craft crisscross· assault on a reconna issance team that raids on the Ho Chi h-linh trail through
ing the flooded district. The central had set up an ambush position four southern Laos.
government said 135,000 persons lived miles \l'est of Chu Lai. headquarters Informed sources said some 30 B52
in the worst-affected area around or the U.S. America! Division . Seven
A · k'll d d d bombers, each carrying up lo 30 tons Quelimane, the administrative capital of mer1cans were 1 e an seven woun • the central Zambesia province. Only ed, the biggest U.S. casualties reported of bombs. and about 20 smaller fighter· ~ · I d t· · lh bombers and gunship' poWlded the 20.. 24.000 have been rescued, bet Zambesia in a/,\111ng e groun ac ion in more an · th mile-Jong trail network in the latest Gov. Lt. Col. David Ferreira declined six rui · s. round or auacks. to estimate the death toll. The enemy forces apparently had trac·
"Communications are difficult and ed the movements of the team from 1'he aim is to slow the flO\V of North
lhe 198,h Brl·gadc Vietnamese arms and troops into .Cam. sometimes impossible," he said. "Only · The Olher fl. c Am r· an ·1,·on• al bodia and South Vie tnam Sil ttt'al !he \Yhen !he level of the waler subsides v e ic posi " · ('eked · h't b k t d mortar \\'ilhdra11·al of American forces ca n con· vdll \l'e be able to question the native were I Y roe ·es an 5-triba l chiefs who are the only ones They included the air bases at Da Nang tinuc, sources said. ..
Jo~ Patrols
Set h Canibodia
To Sto Troub'le
(UPI ) -South Vici·
namese and ambodian military police
d j o i n t patrols to help
a\·oid -"·e~pe=·· ion or last Saturday's
st reet et\\"een Cambodian and
Vic!namese servicemen.
The If>-minute batlle took one Cam·
hodian life and 1\·ounded 12 Cambc>-
dians. Automatic rifles. grenade launch-
ers. rifles and at least one niachinegun
\\"ere used by the allied combatants on
land and from South Victn;itncse ri\'er
patrol boals.
South Vietnamese spokesmen said to-
day they would slick to a limited lib<!rty
policy for South Vietn amese sailors and
forbid the carrying of arms ashore.
The two governments also reinstitut·
ed a lapsed policy of having South Viel·
namese and Cambodian military police
ride in the sa me jeeps. spokesmen 1;aid.
Italian lo Visit
' ' ~·'d · -"l e·
The embassy said Chichester. v.·ho
Jeft Bissau, Portuguese Guinea , Jan. 13
aboard the Gypsy J\loth V, is expected
to land 1'uesday night or Y.'ednesday
morning in San Juan Del Norte, a vii·
lage near the Costa Rican border.
who can accurately estimate the number and Cam Ranh Bay. a military adviser's The U.S. Command announced the Hrs t
of ir.habitants." compound at the Tu y Hoa air base, 1najor American unit to be phased out ROf\tE (AP ) -Premier Emilio Colom·
a helicopter unit seven miles oorth·west of Vietnam as part of President Nixon's bo of Italy 1vil\ visit \\'ashinglon Feb. A government spokesman said earlier of Cam Ranh Bax and an artillery sixth round or troop cutbacks that y:ill T8-19, government orficials said today. 20 bodies had ~n recovered from the base 32 miles l!iOUth of PJeiku City. reduce U.S. strength to less than 284,000 He ~·ill be accompanied by foreign non-coms involved in the training regi·
menl
His goal was to make the crossing in
20 days in the sailboat which also has
an auxiliary engine. He will be flown
to ~1anagua later in the week for \\'el·
coming ceremonies, the embassy said.
ar~:~eira said fresh flood wal.ers from __ Tue __ u_.s_._c_o_mm __ an_d_s_a_id_o_ne_A_m_er_ic_a_n __ m_e_n_b_y_M_•_Y_L ___________ M_in_IB_le_r_A_l_do_•_lo_r_o_. -------
the interior highlands of Moiambique Lei w suppose, for example, that
Private Esterhaey fails to &how up for
target practi~. His rifle instructor,
Sergeant BQnaparte, should do more than:
report 1he absence on form 11463-Y.
Sergeant Bonaparte also should make
solicitous lnquiries.
"I missed you at target practice this
morning. Private Esterhazy. 1 hope you
"·eren't ill."
"No. I'm okay. I just happened to
oversleep and I didn't feel like rushing
around lo get readr for riDe drill. So
I stayed in the barracks and wrote
1 few leUers."
"Good thinking, Private. The Army
wouldn't want you _lo inconvenience
yourself . You're sure you didn't skip
the drill because you '"'ere offended
by something l"ve done'?"
"Heavens no. Sergeanl. J couldn't ask
for a sweeter rifle instructor."
"l"m glad to hear that. I couldn't
hear to think of one of the fellows
in my unit being unhappy, particularly
when "'e may be shipping out to Vietnam
:soon."
''I appreciate your concern. Sergeant.,
and 1 want you to know th at if we
do get into combat you can count on
me to carry my share of the load.''
"That's the spirit. Private. And ir
there is ever anything l can do to
make your Army service more pleasant,
don't hesitate to call on me." UP I
-UPI
'"Berli11
Pliones Restored
BERLIN (AP) -''liello, Bcrhn. This
Is Berlin calling."
Operators in the eastern and western
halves of the divided city 'll'ere using
this greeting today as they placed calls
for persons on both sides of the Berlin
Wall for 1he second day in a row after
19 years of silence.
The calls go via nearby Potsdam and
arc ha ndled as long dislance calls over
the 10 Ji n('S -in 1952 there .,.,·ere almost
4 .000 -that East Germany plugged
in Sunday.
A total of 1.336 calls were completed
Sunday bct.,.,•cen ihe start at 6 a.m.
and midnight.
\Vest Berliners \\'ere loath to talk about
their ctJnversation s after so long a
sllcnce. but one case that \\'DS reported
could be conside red typical:
At the West Berlin end, six members
of the fa mily all tried to talk at once
near the A1alawi border hampered rescue
operations of the Portuguese Army.
Calling~
• tit Divided City
in the three~ minutes allotted. On the
other end of the line. in East Berlin,
there were fi\·e persons talking. On both
sides, tears.
A stranger's voice speaking the same
Berlin dialect interrupted ; "You r time
is ended. Please end your con\•ersalion. ''
Then a let-down feeling as !hr void
of division returned.
Of the 1,336 calls completed Sunday,
507 ••ere placed in West Berlin and
829 in East Berlin. For another 329
calls into the East, there v.·as either
no answer or a busy signal. Up-tlHiale
address information was a factor.
Beh1•een midnight and I a.m. Afonday
the 1.247 calls estimated avallable for
fo.l onday \1•ere booked.
A telephone V.'ake·Ufl service reported
extra heavy lraffic from people \\'ho
explained they \\·anted to make sure
they "'ere a1vake when their calls came
through.
Polar Front Snags East
Onl y Florida, Texos Escape Grasp of Bitter Cold
"
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BOOK CASE
Toll ond slotely, this elegant pit ce comes in ever so sof1ly dil·
tres1ed fruitwood , •• wilh four ! three ore odjustob1e) gloss
shelves bocked with gold floral patterns. $ 149
77"' h, 24" w, 12" d. Reg. $209, SALE
CHAIRSIDE CHEST
Sils low ond 1owely, is there anything so luiuHious os o richness
of fruilwood by your side •• , lop opens up to use os o treasure
chest. Trimmed in custom hordwore. s79
22" w, 16" d, 19" h. Reg. $109 .SALE
DRUM TABLE
Designer piec.e to showcase wherever you need onot. Worm
fruitwood sculptured in the custom manner. Doors open to use.
ful storage with on adjustable she.If. $89
25"' w, 25'" d, 21 " h. Re.9. $11 9, SALE
SALE NOW. .. at ALL 3 STORES!
SANTA ANA M•in •f Eleventh S~7-lb21
S•nt•·An• Stort 0Ptn Mondty t:v1ntn11
PASADENA Co!or edo •t El Molino 7.92 ·6136
POMONA Holt , E11~t of G 11rty 692 .J02b
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Pc~~:IAy. Ftbrua.ry 1, 1971 OA,ILY .PILOT 5
II At First Fo1·111 s a t Post Office
Apollo 14's Unusual Step Mail Smut Ban Goes Into Effect
SPACE CENTER. Houston
(UPI) -The trouble WIS the
astronauts were trying to dock
the command module with the
lunar lander the way they
had practiced it -the way
all the other flight s had dock.
ed .
automatically snap into plaqt
to lock the vehicles firmly
together. \
intercourse. any act of sadlsm
or masochism or any other
erotic subject directly related
to the foregoing ."
send an advertisement to been on the list for 30 da)'!,
someone whose name has been a maUer who seeds him sex·
on the list for 30 day! they ually oritnted · material is
will face severe criminal and liable for penattie~ of up to
civil penalties. $5,000 or five years in prison.
The postal service wlll Names will femain on the
be removed 011 a written
notice from ~ tnd.lvidQa l to
his local post oftice.
Post offices are making it
as easy as possible !or persons
to get their names on the
master liSt. Once they figured out it
should be done just the op-
posite way, tl\e docking suc-
ceeded.
Sunday's docking probltm'
came with the first step. The
three capture latches could
not be snapped -into place so
mission control advised the
astronauts to dock backwards.
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Starting today. the post office
-if requested -will put
vour name on an snti·smul
i1st designed to give you
blanket protection s g a i n s t
"sexually oriented'' n1ail .
The option is part of a new
law designed to k e e p
unwanted pornographic ads
out of the mailboxes. It offers
broader protection than a l968
law under y,·hich a citizen
could object to a specific
mailer, but not to all types
of mail he regarded =1 of-
fensive.
A court lest of the law,
undoubtedly winding up in the
Supreme Court, appeared cer·
la in. Some courts have
claimed its provisions are un-
constitutional.
charge smut mailers $5,000 list for five year!, but can
for the list and it will be -----"--'--------------
But it took fi\'e unsuccessful
att.empt.s before they figured
it out.
On the sixth try. Apollo 14
Commander Alan 8. Shepard
threw a SY.'itch to fire a
nitrogen bottle 51h inches long
and the diameter of a half
dollar . The bottle's 5,000
pounds per square inch of
pressure for~ the probe 93,
inches forward. This put the
Rock y Asks
Record Hike
12 docking latches into position ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -
to hook without first snapping Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller the three capture latches in
At 7:13 p.m. EST Sunday,
the command 5ervice module
Kitty Hawk moved in to dock
\Yith the lunar m o d u I e
Antares. Th is firlll attempt
came as the capsules were
6.418 miles from earth. They
tried to dock four minutes
later. lt did not work.
place. blamed the federal govern·
Thtn Roosa bumped the two ment for !\ew 'l'ork's fiscal
_ vehicles together. The docking problems today as he re-
At 7:18 p.m. the astronauts tches caught. quested a record round of tax
tried a second time. "We gol some , Houston." increases totaling $1.11 billion
The !aY.' says a sex-oriented
ad is :
"Anv advertisement that
depicis, 1n actual or simulated
form. or explicitly describes,
in a predominantly sexual con·
tex t. human genitalia, any act
of natural or unnatural sexua l
Any person y,•anling his
name on the list must go
to the Post Office and fill
out a form which includes
his name and address . The
form say& the individual does
not "'ant to receive "sexuall y
or i en ted'' advertisements
from any source.
A list \\'ill then be compiled
-the first one in about 20
da ys -and it will be offered
for sale to smut peddlers so ,
they "'ill know to whom not
In send their offers. If they
mailed out every month.
The advertiser ~·llling to call
himself a smut peddler must
make a $5,000 deposit to get
the list which he must have
in order to avoid breaking
the Jaw, However ,
pornography sales Iota J
millions of dollars annually,
and most dea lers prefer not
to send their material to
uninterested persons.
It \•dll also be a criminal
offense for anyone not dealing
in sexual materials t't
purckase the Ii.St.
Once a person's name has "It sure looks like we're Shepard reported at 8:56 p.m. to help finance a proposed
closing fast enough." said "We had a hard dock." ,--~:;;;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... ~--lunar module pilot Ed,11.ar D. Shepard then c r a w 1 e d state budget of SS.45 billion.
Mitchell. But again the at-through the tunnel to inspect The Republican governor 1 HUNTINGTON BEACH ART LEAGUE
tempt failed . the latches. He said all 12 !old t he GOP-conlrol!ed
"I'm going lo go back out of them had taken hol d and legislature that he had no A RT EX H I B IT
there and try again," he said. the vehicles were firmly lock-choice except to recommend
Th th! d ( 1 26 ed FEllll.UARY 4-6, from 10 •·"'· to 9:30 p.m. e r ry came at : Back at f\1ission Control, higher taxes. be c au s e
p.m. authorities \\'ere hesitant to Washington apparently Y.'aS roufh P.oast ...... •·1 hit it pre1ly good and say if the procedure would not going to come through cJ '' J 196
held four seconds on contact ,_J'~"~r~w~o~r;k~a~g~a~in~. ~llLw~as~,~th=e~y-o~n~t~im~e~•~·it~hit~he!:~fe~d:•r:aJJ ---=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--! and we did not latch." com· said, a very unusual step. revenue-sharing program. mand module pilot Stuart A.
Roosa said .
"We're about. out of ideas
here,·• said mission controls
capsule communicator C .
Gordon Fullerton. "Give it
another try at docking."
They tried the fourth lime
at 8:22 p.m.
"I hit it pretty ~ood a n d
we did not latch," Roosa said.
They tried it a fifth lime
at 8:37 p.m.
"No latch," ~litchell said.
Normally there ;ire two
steps in locking the craft
together. First. three latches
on the tip end of the pointed
probe on the command ship
snap Into the drogue of the
lunar lander. Then the probe
.stem is retracted, drawing the
vehicles together.
As they come 'into hard con·
tact, a dozen docking latches
Banker Dies
In Trapp ed
Snow Part y
RED LODGE, Monl. (UPI)
-Hugh Gaulsha, president
of the 9th Federal Reserve
Bank in Minneapolis. d i e d
Monday while trapped wilh
16 other snowmobilers near
Beartooth Pass.
The cau5e of death was not
immediately known.
Others in the party included
Minnesota Viking f o o I b a I I
players Jim Marshall and
Paul Dixon.
They were located Sunday
night near the top of the pass.
The party hild encountered
high winds on an outing from
Red Lodge to Cooke City and
were forced to spend the night
in a store closed for the
winter.
The Carbon County She~iffs
office reported search parties
from Red Lodge and Cooke
City found the group "holed
up'' in the "Top of the Moun-
tain" store after running into
high winds y,·hile attempting
to cross the rugi;icd. nearly
11.000 fool mountain.
A search had been launched
early Sunday after it was
learned that the group failed
to reach Cooke City as
scheduled Saturday night.
Search teams were
dispatched after aerial nights
by the Yellowstone Park
Service and Carbon County
authorities failed to find the
group because of low clouds
and near zero visibility whiclt -
hampered aerial efforts.
Four Child ren
Di e in Bl aze
OOSTBURG. Wis. ! AP)
Four children died early today
in a fire which destroyed their
home near lhls Sheboygan
County village.
Victims were Daniel Rahe,
16, his brother Gustave JII.
8, and 1isters. Lisa, 4, and
Tammy, 2.
Their father. Gustave Rahe.
and two other children Henry
6. and Debra. S, escaped.
H
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Total strength over 1.4 blll!on dollars~
I
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1mPERIAL SAVlnGs,1
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Newport Balboa Savings' new name
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·pu~llc l"vlte4 -All IMh ,, .. _ Nurury ,,_..,.,
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' DAILY PQll'r-EDITORIAL PAGE
' Offshore Oil Dilem1na
For close to 2,000 yean. "pouring oil on troubled
"'lters" has been a part of conunon speech.
How about, today, "oil pou.red on water brings big
trouble.'• 1
This is particularly-the ca,r,e ~n the California and
Gulf coasts where oil sl>ills havt resulted from offshore
well-drilling blowouts, frres and shipwrecks. ·
The Santa Barbara Channel catastrophe of Jan. 18i
1969, brought the first major pubUc outcry against off·
$hore oil drilling. It also served tel bring into focus the
conflicting interests which have nllde difficult if not
impossible any swift and certain sobltiqn to the problem.
First and certainly foremost is the public interest
In protecting the coastal environment -marine life as
well as land -from the ravages of oil pollution.
Then there is the need for this mineral energy
source for vehicular and other power. and for by-pro-
ducts used in countless ways in everyday living.
California is ap oil-importing state: its offstiore re·
&ollrces are needed to meet its own needs.
Nol the least factrir in this metlle~ of Interests is
government at both federal and state 'evels. Offshore
oil leases produce hundreds of millions of dollars for
government and are touted as a <!great relief to the lax·
payer." \
And or course there are the oil company interests,
with their hundreds of tbo'usands of stockholders to serve
along with performance of an undeniably ''if.al role in
meeting the needs of a motorized America 1and the na·
tion's defense.
These are the main elements in the dilemma Sacra·
mento and 'Vashington -and Gull state gm·ernments
too -must face and try to resolve.
California's Sen. Alan Cranston has prepared a bill
which would set up an ecological preserve in the channel
consisting initially of 38 leases on which no oil tias been
found. These leases would be terminated.
The bill would declare a m9ratorium on developing
29 other leases where oil has ali'eady been discovered or
where exploratory drilling is now going on. The mora·
--
toriun1 \VOttld last for at least fi\lt years, pending develop-
ment or under\vater drilling and production technique s.
and more effective means of conlrolHng spills.
' At the state level. the State Lands Commission
alarmed co nservationists last \Veek. Assured the operation
\vould be "failsafe." the commissio n approved the first
oil ,1:ell to be drilled in stat~-controlled waters since the
Santa Barbara spill.
The approval will permi Standard Oil to drill anoth-
er v.•ell on a man-made island off Seal Beach. ln v.·hich
72 \veils have already been drilled. Considering the re-
cord and the conditions there, which are not comparable
to the geologically unknov.'n si tuation at Santa Barbara,
the decision seemed reasonable.
The DAILY PILOT's position, as 5tated earlier, re-
mains that all offshore oil fields should be put into in·
active reserve against a national emergency. And in their
place to meet present needs should be oil from such
federal on -shore reserves as Elk Hills · and the new
Alaskan field.
But the fa ct remai ns that offshore \\-'ells are an en·
vironmental blight even \Vhen "failsafe .'' The sooner
they can all be put into a perrnanent reserve the better
for natural beauty and the public's peace of mind.
Cory Ca11 Help the Coimty
Orange County, as a Republican stronghold, might
be expected to have its interests in eclipse with both
hou ses of the Legislature controlled by Democrats. The
political picture is not \Vithout hope, however.
Assemblyman Kenneth Cory (D·Anaheim) has been
named chairman of the Democratic caucus. He can, in
that post, help or not help the aspirations of fellow
Ass~mbly members.
With such leverage, Cory should be in a position to
help his ho1ne coun ty despite its strong GOP coloration.
Ironical. perhaps, but Democrats can, indeed, be friends
in deeply Republican terrotory.
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a,,, .. , ~U::::.t,.....
VOICE OF T~E PENIAGON
How Do Boys
Achieve Their
Manhood?
Dear
Gloomy
Gus: 1
If Reaga1i Is Right, Preside11t Has a Bear by tlae Tail
-··-"""
Never has it been so difficult for
boys to gro:·1 up into men.
Be:coming a man is not a matter
of chronology. It is a matter of 'proof.
Throughout the history of mankind, boys
have had to prove themselves men.
Davy Cfockett "killed him a b'ar when
ht" wu only three."
Others, in order to
establish t.he:mselves
u: men, have had to
win races, p r o v e
I.heir skill in bul'lting.
show they could han·
dlt!! a team and plow,
endure survival tests
In the wilderness,
brini home an en·
emy scalp, or drink
haU a pint of whis-
key without passing out.
To become a man it has always been
necessary for boys to associate with
men., as helpers on father's farm. as
apprentices to craftsmen. as squires lo
knights, u water boys to baseball teams.
Tbroogb such a.uociation they learn the
secrets of the adu1t culture: what rltuals
to observe, how to care for equipment,
how to drink and curse and fight, how
to earn and maintain the respect of
other men in a society of men.
BUT TODAY l\fOST boys are separated
from lht lives CJ( men. Men leave for
factory or C1ffice early in the morning,
commuting many miles to work. They
do not re turn unUl evening. Boys are
brought up by mothers and
schoolteachers.
Hence boys often have no idea whal
their fathe:rs do at work . They have
no idea what • man does that makes
h.lm a man.
Unless a boy is a good enough athlete
to make the varsity squad, unless he
ioins a strttt gang or the armed for~•
·or goes to engineering school, he 1s
likely to spend bis entire life with women
around. Mobs of Cliffies have invaded
Harvard classrooms. Yale has gone co-
tducational. Girls move into fraternity
houses. Thi!! ezperlence of being a man
ln a socie:ty of men becomea Tarer
and ranr. It's fine to prove to women
that you are a man. But the final •
proof 11 when you prove It to other
men.
WHAT YOUNG ftfEN profoundly need
as they grow up, 3ays David Riesman,
b to be extended to the limit of their
powers. They have to ezpe:rieoce si1uat·
tom tn which they have to do more
tbaft their best in order to escape death,
capture, defeat or failurt.
But what is thei'e in a boy's life
in our afnuent society to uttnd \im
te the limit of his p0wers? lf he gets
on the hlgb school football team, he
wW ttally hl\'e lo extend himself. But
what of all the other Sllldents?
High achool ls no challenge. In mO!t
conunonltles If you don"l learn enough.
to JO into the next grade, they pass •
' I
Ni.xon's Reforms Face Rough Going
We have too many drivers around
here malting "grave" mistakes.
-F. H. S.
T~ll fwtun Rll«h tt•••l"l' wi.wi.. "''
_H,.rlt~ IM,._ .t IM 11twi~•per. 1"'4
WASHINGTON -One or those little
coincidences which carry significa nce
happened on the day President Nixon
1,1.·ent before Congress with his massive
package for welfa re reform. revenue
Sharing and government reorganizalion.
At the White !rouse. in the morning,
presidential aides Donald Rumsfeld and
Robert Finch briefed a few ;:eporters
on lhe presidential State of the Union
message.
Afterward, one Qf you anyway. For many lhe curriculum 1he reporters was
is so slow and repetive that lt 1s a • guest 31 a sma!I
bore. For others it is simply meaning less. l~ncheon given by
Furthermore, the challenges Cl( work t 'II; e United States
In the outside world are denied kl rhe Chamber or Com·
boy by exclusionary union rules, by chlld mer ce ror Gov. Ron·
labor laws and, where these do not apply, aid . Reagan of Cali·
by minimum wage laws. as we.JI a~· fomia at its head·
by the legal and social pressures that quarters a long block
keep him in school whether he wants , away across Lafay.
to be there or not. 1t4 ette Pa rk.
SO THE VAST f\-IAJORITV of boys
are excluded from the world of men
and denied lhe chance to exercise thei r
powers, physical or intellectual. ls it
any wonder that there is a youth prob·
lem ?
Boys need challenges. Their y,•hole
being cries out for the m. To face starva·
tion, the possibility of death at enemy
hands, the risks of fallure in llrhool
or work or business, and then to lriun1ph
ove r these dangers -these are the
stuff of human growth, of maturat ion.
The contrast could not have been more:
pronounced. Nor could it have been more
illustrative of the problems ahead for
President Nixon on the whole range
of his proposals, which are all tied
in together.
REAGAN. 1\10ST of y,•hose time is
nnw devoted to welfare problems in
California since the campuses have
fjllie1ed dov.11, said that he had seen
I 'resident Nixon. dined l•dth him but
not once had the subject came up of
. .
Richard Wilson
Reagan's opJ>Osilion to Nixon·s cher ~shed
weirare reform to provide a basic floor
under the income of one and all.
\Vhile the presidential aid es were talk·
ing about boosting the floor from $1 ,600
to $2,400. Reagan was saying that all
his studies in Califomia show th is plan
will nol prove to be a substitute for
""'eirare. but y,•ilJ merely be piled on
top of it.
Reagan, who was planning to see Nixon
on his visit to Washington. reported
that the President seems to be out
of touch with a national revulsion against
welfare abuses and transfixed by
Washington ·bureaucrats who ha ve sold
him on lhe guaranteed annual income
idea.
AS FOR CALIFORNIANS. Reaga n
said, they are "really unhappy" about
the welfare problem and at a loss to
understand y,•hy Nixon \\'OUld persist in
supporting the plan y,•hi ch was blocked
in the Senate during the last session
of Congress.
Reagan is full to the brim with [rightful
exan1ples of ll'elfare abuse. He give!t
credit to Nixon for believing that lh l'
income guarantee ... ~n be in lieu of
ll'eifare and encourage recipients to go to
work. but says it just does not work
that way.
The Caiifornia governor does not object
to an experiment to find out what is
most likely to happen before, not afte.r,
the welfare rolls are doubled, tri pled
and quadrupled. lie has some ex-
prrin1ents or his own he ll'OtJld likt
to 1ry out on creating a public i,1ork
force lied in v.·ith job training.
BUT HE BELIEVES lhat to launch
headlong into an escalating multibillion
dolla r guaranleed income plan would
be disastr ous. Reagan welcomes sharing
the federal government's income tax
revenues as proposed by Nixon but he ·
also has grave fears. based on the desire
or Governor Rockefeller of New York,
that this system will also be piled on
top of the already huge grants in aid
to states and localities.
Presi dent Nixon evidently has a long.
long y,·ay to go before Congress l\'ill
lake welfare reform and revenue sharing
the way he wants it. There is an even
larger way to go on his proposals for
massive government reorganiza tion
reducing the 12 Cabinet departments to
eight.
Little noticed is the fact that this
y,·ould also force a reorganization of
congressional committee set-ups which
are keyed in 1vith the operation or
government departments. One example
suffices, The new plan y,·ould merge
the Argiculture, Commerce, Labor and
Transportation Departments into one
huge Department Qf E c o n o m i c
Development. Congress now has separate
committees and subcommittees in all
those fields. y,·ith heavily vested interests,
status and seniority involved.
THE WHITE HOUSE is continuing to
put on public pressure to blast loose th•
revenue sharing and v.•elfare reform pro.
posals. It is reasoned that people are di!I·
contented generally y,·ith the responsive-
ness to public need s of both the executive
departments and Congress and y,·ill bring
their pressure to bear.
So long. however, as such obviously
popular leaders as Reagan and such
polilically astute congressional leaders
as Dem o c r a t Ylilbur Mills and
Republican John Byrnes. read the public
mind a different way, Nixon is in danger
or being completely frustrated in his
Jar~est plans.
There would appear to be little
likelihood of public excitemenl over the
government reorganization plal). It is
a bureaucratic maze few \\'ill understand.
As for welfare reform as Nixon 'vants
It . he has a bear by the tail if Reagan
is right. On revenue sharing it will
take more public pressure than now
exists to overcome congressional op-
position in his O\\'n party. to say nothing
o( lhe Democratic leaders.
If an arnuent society does not provide
boys with challenges. !hey are compelled
by inner necessity lo improvise their
own. ls this not one or the reason!)
that gangs of youths try to provoke
authorities into confrontations? Have )'OU
not observed the joy in the faces or
campus radicals on lc-arning that 1he
police have been summoned? Ha ve you
eve r seen such A need to assert manhood
as is shown by the Black Panthers~
Drive Is Under Way to Smear Hoover
WHAT ABOUT DRUGS and the youn~?
11 challenge and risk are y,·hat so many
youths need and are not getting, is
it not likely that warnings about the
dangers of drugs simply make then1
more aUractive'! And stealing cars!
Whatever else a boy may be doing
as he tears along the highway at 100
m.p.h. trying lo el'ade the pol ice, he
is certainly exttnding himself lo the
llmit of his powers.
The Black Panthers are a sqciety of
the young. Unlike the l3-year-0ld Pueblo
boy who joins a khil'a of male elders,
the Panther recruit joins a group almo~l
as ignorant and inexperienced as himself.
That"s what U1e generation gap is
about. Fathers ay,·ay from home. for
whatever reason, and I he r e f or e
unavailable lo lheir sons as models of
male adulthood. The boy:; forced to im·
provise their own subcullure, unguided
by adult knowledge or experirnce.
That's the problem for fath('rll. lsn"t
there something we can learn from the
Pueblo Indians about passing ()n a
culture? How can 11•e bring our sons
into our lives'!
tt takes n1en to make men. ~1olhers
ca11not do It by thc1nsel\'CS. Nor can
high schools. Nor collt'~t'i.
By S. J. Rayakawa
Prrsidenl
San Francisco State College
\\'/\SHl NGTON -lt is beroming In·
creasingly evidenl that a \videspread
and organiT.ed drive is under \Vay to
\'1ciously harass and smear F'BI Director
.J. Edgar Hoover for the purpose or
forcing his replacement. The indications
of this are i;o pronounced !hat con·
J!ressional inl'estiga\ors are looking into
the mattrr.
lnvoll'N1 in this strongly suspected
undercovrr conspiracy is a hodge-podge
of nlal contents ran ging from anarchislic
revolut ionaries to muck·raking sensation·
mongers i,1ho leer and hate the ag·
gressil•e and hard·hitting F'BI chief. They
include white and black extremists and
\11olence-add1cted bfr.~erks. Comn1unlsts,
1'rotskyites and other Comm u n is t
Plements, Ne\\' Leftists. bleeding-heart
liberals and self·r lgh1enus proclaimers
of various 1ypcs. muck·raker!i and scan·
dal-mongers.
fl1r\LICIO US A1TACKS on Hoover
from lhese so11rri.-s are not new. It's
an old story for them lo la~h at him
for propaganda and other self-serving
reasons. But lh is time th(' Vf'non1. fury
and extrnt of 1he tlnslaug.ht far exceeds
any th i11g in the past.
Jl nol only hss all the t'armarks of
a planne(I and organ11.ed campaign, but
rhPrl! appenrs lo hr no hmit lo the
::ibu!'e and calurnny l'le<iped on the FBI
head.
, ..
' Allen-Golds111ith
\
fully on the job. Actually. he is in
excellent health, fil and in top Yigor,
and ha sn"l been away fro1n his desk
due to an ailment in years. Recently
he had a thorough physical examination
and the doctors gave him a clean bill
of health. His blood pressure was normal,
his heart. kidneys. lungs and other vita l
functions ln good ·condition. The FBI
chief today ls as alert. dynamic and
as !orceruHy on hi s job as he haS eve r
been.
-That he has an armored car and
gets a new high-priced automobile every
year. Both are provided on the direct
1nitiati\'e and authority of Congress. The
replaced ''chicles a"' assigned tn FBI
branches in various parts of the.coun try.
Most or them are still in use. ..
• -TH.AT HOOVER IS losing (avor In
the Nixon administration, and it \vants
to gel rid of hirn. Thi~ is completely
untrue. His s landing In 1he
Adm ini stration "''RS never higher. and
the besl in any ad1ninistratlon since the
t:isenhower regirne ( 195.1-61 ). Hoover l~
on close pt>rsonal and professional 1ertn5
with bo1 h President Nixon and Altomcy
Central John fl.fll chcll .
-That Hoover hai; scirved under eight
Presidents gince he took over the FBI
in 1924. He did, and every one of them
acclairned him. and he worked in full
harmony v.·ith them. Jn 1960, when then·
Senator John F. Kennedy was the
Democratic candidate for President,
some of his ultra-liberal partisans
pl an ted word with press henchmen that
Hoover .,.,.ould be ditched. Kennedy im·
mediately repudiated that allegation and
emphatically declared he eagerly wanted
Hoover lo remain. And that isn't all.
This unequivocal assurance was echoed
by Robert Kennedy, younger brother and
campa ign manager, later attorney
general.
IN TJIE NE\V Congress {92nd ), l!S
in every one in the pa st. Hoover and
the FBI are held in Jilera\ly reverential
esteem.
Graph ically illustrative of tha l is that
the FBI budget is always appro\'ed
ove!'ll·he\mingly ll'ithout change. No F"BI
appropriation has ever been cut. and
there have been occasions when Hoover
was asked if he needed more money
than called for in the budget.
Rep. John Rooney, D-N.V., chairman
of the I-louse Appropriat ion!! Sub-
committee that has charge of the FBr
budget. is a particularly strong admirer
of Hoover and his agency.
of race, color and creed. tle always
call:; lhem as he sees them .
Graphically illustrative is his recent
testimony before the House Ap.
propriations Subcommittee when he
declared :
"TOP BLACK PA~'THER Party
leaders almost without exception have
been involved in crimes of violence.
The Black Panthers now have substantial
conneclions 1,1.·ith hostile foreign
elements: the Communist Tegimt!! in
Nor th Korea and Arab terrorists in
Algeria. Increasing ties between Arab
lerrorisls and the Black Panthers raise
1he ominous pos5ibility that militant ~
may seek lo ape Arab tactics. including
airplane hijackings. lo gain the release
of jailed Panther members.''
Another reason is the warm praise
voiced by former Attorney General
llamsey Clark.. Now a New Left aspirant
(or President. he is throwing barbs At
Hoover. But in 1967. when Clark was
a member or the Johnson cabinet, he
was lavish i111 his praise C1f the FBI chief.
By Robert S. Alltn
and Job• A. Goldsmllll
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Monday, February I, 1g71
B11 George ---------,
Gross li<'!I and fabr k:lllons are com·
monplace. sordid innuf'ndoes about his
personal lire 11re bruited aboat. hari~ss·
mcnt or :r;ome kind 1~ an 11hUO!'t dally
e1·enl. and lhn~at~ or bon1b1ng., shooting
and even poisoning ha ve mul!ipl..,d. Quotes
ln 1960. Congress demonslratt:d Its hlgh
regard for Hoover by enacting a law
enabling him to retire at full p11y -
~·henever he decides to do that. Outside
of the judiciary, he 11'1 tilt only head
of a federal agency to have th at disl inc-
tion . His salary is S4~,000 -a\.50 fixe<t
by Congress.
Tht tditorlal pogt of tht Dall~
Pilol stcks to inform and ttim·
tJ/-0te rendt:rt by prt11ntfng thU
t1ews1J(lper'.s opinions and co~
mentary on topfc1 of inttrett
and significance, by providing o
forum for tht txprts1ion of
our rcodtr1' opinions, and b,
presenting the diver.Sc tdtU>-
point.J of in/Ottnf!d obstrvtrt
and spokesmen on topics of th1
do JI.
Dw'~•:
You suagisted take u p
ceramicl. see a marr iage
C'Ol.IMt.lor, bu ild bi~houses as a
hobby, seek professional help. do
not allow myself to be kissed on
tbe lirrl dlle and be less Inhibited.
•1'11 kfDd or answer wu that7
CONFUSED
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Otar C<lnfustd:
Sorry -the old problt>m·CQm·
puter got st9ck on me again. C-Ould
vo u repeat your pro-
blem'!
CONFIDENTIAL TO DEAR AB-
BY: Do YOIJ take on subeontr•ct
problems? J'm whip~
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ll"s a rare week that lloover isn 't
thr targel or suth v. rltten or teltphQned
menaces. Last year there 11 ert more
than 50 of them.
The lies. distortlQl'ls and n1111;re11"tsert·
tatlons being c\rcullllcd abour him are
as unconscionablt JI~ 1hey ar(' glar ing .
Foremo~l among them are the following ,
\\'HAT TllE\"RF. SA \'ll'iG:
-Thal Hoover ls ~lck, athn8 ~nd l\u1
Richard \V. Lyman. nt.w Stanford pres ..
on sludtnt ailtnl m11jorlty -'"l'here
i.c; a ''t'ry large majority or students
-probahly mildl y leh or ctntcr -
v:ho don"I pa.rticlpatt in politJcs. or only
\\hen 11 gr ts \'try excilin~ and v.'l\t'n
lhe ~adlint:s gtl very bill. and bla<'k.
The Radical Left Art a very mail num-
btr lhat mtke a very loud no ise.''
TllE:RE ARE J\IA1''Y rea~n8 for
Hoovtr"s uniquely hish rating on Capitol
lllll . Among them are:
In the 47 years he has direcltd the
FBI. it has ne\'tr bttn rocked or
besmirched by S<'andal or improprlet,v.
It has never bet.'n lnvestlgale<I by
Con(!'ress or any other branch of the
go"crnn1ent. Allio Hoover's forccful~s
and bluntness In Oealing wilh vice . crime.
cr1mlnals and t xtremisls -re,11ardle!S
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
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QUEENIE By Phil lriterlcmdi
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Bftl'IJers 111 Trouble
'
Hair Piling Up-on Tops of Heads
By ROBERT KIECllKllEFER
Uftlll'll ,.rffl l111tfMlloflll
local 9, ill ustrates v.·1th o story The secret. Rothstein tells shop near the Ohio State
about a long·h<ilrftl, boarded his ne\\' union menlt:iers. is University campus, has hired
Hair that used to pile up barber: s1111pl)'. "If you can't beat a black barber because it
under barbers' chairs i s "One day this barber Cllllll' 't 111. Juin 'cm.'' And the lakes special talent to cut the
staying on nien's heads these into the crty on business ;ind b:1rbers who follow that Afro style .. The barber himseU
days. Barbers are hurling as decided to get his hair !run-rPasor11ng say it works. y.·ears an Afro.
a result. n1ed. Before he \1·ent Into a Mn1rcuts Associa te s, in New A silky.voiced recepl onisl
A New York Cily barber: shop, he bought some coffee Yurli.·s East Village, charges greets customers in Lou s J.
"It used to be a cus tomer and doughnuts. planning to Sil fur a cul. But . for the Scavone's "Salon " in Balon
v.·ould leave the chair and say, sh1:1rt:' lhc rn \Vith the barbt~r. price. lhC' customer gets a Rouge . Scavone offers styling,
Mcnd,1f, r tbruary 1, 11171 DAILY PILOT l
•
HENRY'S AEROPUERTO
• f 'k
•
Wakes Up The Economy The
Enti.rt Month of Febru1ry
ONE DOLLAR 1$11 OFF
ANY MEXICAN OR
STEAK DINNER
Me11 .. 111•1 .. W.d. 0111v 5 to 11 p.111. ,
Al•e: 40c Off Q., All Ch.\ldr•11't Oi1111•tt;
MUSIC I Y HANK• PAUL •
J,t, A Sot. -THI 'AIULOUS \
• TR.10 FR.OM MUNGll
2122 PALISADES ROAD
Near Or•nge County Airport 54~·5579
. i ·~
:··:.f I .. ~J .. { · ..
'See you in a couple of v.•eeks.' "The harbcr looks nt hun shnn1µoo and dry, plus rock rn an i cures, co I o ring,
Now. you're lucky If he's back and tells hin1 to t;ikr his l'O(fel' inusk'. colored lights and a straightening, s ca Ip treat.
in five or six Y.'eeks or even and doughnuts and gel out chief barber v.•ith a beard and ments and other services.
five months." ,.Jl~le~~·~·o~u~ld~n~·1~c~u~l~h~is~~ha:':'_l~o}ng~i;sh~h~a~ic!.~~~_:""":~-~w~h~ic~hic~a~n~rn~n~lh~e~ta~b~to~a:s~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ An At I a n t a haircutter : because it \\'as too long." John Burgler, who runs I much as $30 a visit.
"When it used lo be every
tv.·o "'eeks ror a haircut. now
it's every lhree m o n l h s ,
sometimes six months."
~ :· .. ..
... The manager of a Lubbock.
' "1 K...• r, ...... s,w-. •. w. "';1. "•"" .....,,. .~
Tex.. barber college : "Our
biggest problem is gelling
enough practice on penple v.•ho
still want th e shorl cuts.'' "Stop! Basta! Alto! Fini! Stopenzee ...... · Cambridge. Mass.. n e a r
t.1a ssachusetts lnslitute of
Technology: "Now they
(students) rome maybe once
or twice -for the pront and
graduation.·· CHECKING
•UP• 0
The refrain is the san1e
around the nation . And the
barbers say they are. indeed.
gettlng clipped by the long·
hair style.
Cl1aii·s Switchecl?
"We've had aboul a 40 per·
cent drop in business,'' a New
York barber says. Sa m
Caldera. a Fresno barber for
17 years, says business in his
lo1,1•n is down by the same
percentage.
Tl1ere's Reaso11 But many of the barbers
say loss of business is a re sult
of failure lo adapt. r-.11'x
Rothstein, secreta ry·treasurer
of Phl\adelphia Barbers Union By L. M. BOYD
IT JS THE W0~1AN not
satisiled with her own looks
who intcrmillently switches
the furniture around in her
house, contends Theodor Reik
. , • IN SIZE, the body of
the average man. it's said.
is about halfway between an
atom a·nd a star ... ADVISED
BILLY SUN DAY, that Love
and War man of yeste ryear,
"Try praising your wife, even
if it frightens he r al fir st."
THE 1.ADVFRI EN D and 1
are on the road. Would not
v.•ish to slow you \l'ilh a
trave\og, but must report the
temperature between
Flagstaff, Ariz.. and Albu·
querque, N.t.1 .. as we passed
through the other night drop-
ped to 30 degrees F. belov.·
zero. The scatter (If stalled
cars. dead at unpredictable
angles like dry bones in. the
desert, looked crazy. a s
though the care had gone out
of nature. Can hear him nov.-.
my reader in F'airbanks,
Alas ka, saying, "That's no.-
thing. buddy.·· Still , although
1've lived in the north country
mostl y. by peculiar chance it
is New Mexico in the Sunny
Southwest where I've seen it
coldest , so rar. On lo lhe Gulf
Coast. .. A GAS STA·
TIO N l\IAN in Lubbock, Tex·
as. yesterday said of his boss.
•·r-.fan. he's so contrary. if
he'd drov.·n. you'd have to look
for him upstream."
EVERY WOJ\1AN needs at
least one hal. tYi'O girdles,
three handbags, four sweaters.
five slips. six pairs of shoes
and seven dresses. So suggests
a fashion expert. ~1ister, does
your wife possess her ap.
propriate quotas of th e
aforementioned? . . . lN
PRISON, the men convicts
seem to be more troublesome
than the women convicts. But
flnce they're released on
parole, it's likely the men will
Shell Told
To Sto p
Sea Dumps
FREMONT (AP\ -Shell
Oil Co. has been orde red to
slop dumping toxic chemical
· <'Ind petroleum wastes into the
Pacific Ocean no later than
Dec. 31 by the Regional \Yater
Quality Control Board.
Shell's Martinez refinery
dumps an estimated 15 million
gallons annually or waste too
caustic for its treat ment
facilities to handle. the board
said. The unloading of toxic
·wastes about 100 miles off
the CaUfomia coast came to
the attenlion of the board
after it WRS discovered by
an unnamed student attending
Diablo Junior College.
Shell officials said the dum·
ping operations had bee:n in
effect for eighl years and thal
"lastes had been unloaded
about 50 miles orf Point Sur
and Point Geor~e north of
Eureka until last May.
simmer down to become fairly
easy lo deal y,·ith. while the
y.·omen may get all riled up
to become impossible to con·
trol. Such is the clainl of
an experienced lawman v.·ho
can 'l eip!ain the why of it.
Your auesttons and com·
ments are welcomed and
will be used in CHECKING
UP wherever possible.
Please address your letters
to L, hf. Bo yd, P.O. Box
1875, Newport Beach, Calif.
AOVEllTtSEMENT
Now Many Wear
FALSE . TEETH
With More Comfort
When deniu~ •lip down and
come looae, 1prlnk.l1 on eom1 ea~· to•ullll P'ASTE!ITM• Denture Ad he-
etve Powdu. P'A11TEETH hold• den•
t\U'ell firmer longer. You feel 1.11or1
comfort1bl1 . , , e1t more 011tura.!ly . PASTEETB II not ~Id. Ther1'1 no
1umm1, 1ooey, PNtY t.a.ate. Denture& th&t nt ere eMentL11l to health. So
111 ynur dent11i r11utarly. Get l'Al!ITEETH 1t Ill drua: countel'I.
LAST
7
DAYS
Give him your love
in a Valentine Portrait
... taken just with him in mind!
3FORONLY4
95
Hurry In now and you'll receive ona big,
beautiful Sx1 0 for hlm .•• plus two 5x7's for
Dad and Gr.11.ndadl Don't mlsa JU And re-
member, you ce.n charge It at Penney's.
Qi! company experts
testified tht.Y did not believe
the dumping caused d11magt
to m11rine life but s8id &mar ~----------------------'
'Ul.t.E•'l"OM
~ire: ... ~ ""! '-· 111.041
l!U .. T1MOTOM I E•<M
HuntlrtO""' C:..,ler
""' ,,_' "' 7711 0.•-..,,,. °"~ &-1
MI Wl"O•T 1£.llC'I
'•lllloft l!.l~nd
""' ·-· .... ,313
marine organisms ~uch II
JarvRI form' of crab an
pholoplankton could be kill e<'
1r discharges l<indcd on tori
a( them. '-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'
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If there is a better value
than the Penncrest®.color T.V",
it's the Penncrest® color T.V.
on sale! Save $41.95
~-\
COLOR
Early American m1pl•
3 Y••r picture tu~ 9u1r1nlH -Penn1ys prov rd .. horn.
service on any Penncrest •TV (ln·!ltore service on portable
TV) lor defects In ma!ariala or worti:manshlp •PPNtlno
within 90 days of purchase. We replace your picture tube
(using a rebuilt picture lube) If defective within 3 YNrl
on color TV. We provide replacement for 1ny p1rt If dtr.o.
tlvt wi1hln 1 year. Labor la extra attar 90 days. Conllct
Penneys fo r authorized service under guaninlte.
Sale $308
Save 41.95 Reg. 349.95. Penncrest "'
portable color T.V. with 18" screen
measyred diagonally Is feature-packed for great
color T.V. viewing. Automatic fine tuning, built-in
automat ic color purifie r to minimize color
1isturbance, high impact plastic cabinet
CALt.. .. (714) S2:U-401
Sale $288
Save 41.95 Reg. 329.95 Penncrest® "Contemporary"
style table model color TV with 18 inch screen measured
·diagonally. Walnut finish t>ver hardwood cabinet. Also available
Early American maple, and Med iterranean (not shown}.
A,.;J.bl< •I the10 Penney 1tore.: FAS HION ISLAND, Newport Center ; HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunt;n9ton Beac~
Buy it qn Penneys Time Pa yment Plan.
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f ~•ILV PILO r '
Doctors Report .Way.That
l Relieves Itching,' Pain' Of
S~ollen Hemorrhoidal4Tissues ~ f'irat Ap licationa Give Prompt,' I T empor ry Relief in Many CaSCJ
i Thert•s"' mott elTf'Ct iY medi-inflammation. q'he answer ia
' cation th11t in many ases doctor-testedPrf!paraliott H•.
~ 1ivee prompt relil'r for ours ,. There's no other hemor·
t from such hemorrhoida d i!· rhoidal formula like Prepara-~ oomfort and actuitlly elps tion Hand it needs no
" shrink &\.\'elling .of he or-prescription. Ointment or
: rhoidal tissuee e1used b the •uppoSi~ri05,'
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---Futw·e
Of CRLA
Clo11ded
WASHINGTON !U PI )
The (uture of the emballled
California Rural L eg a
Afigi~tance is more obscure
than ever today follou.·ing a
5eries Ill "' e e k e n d pro·
nouncements from the acting
director of the Office of
Economit; Opportunity.
Frank C. C ar I ucc I an·
nounced Salurday nighl he
would not override Gov .
Ronald Reagan 's ve\o of a
SI 8 million federal grant Ill
fund the lega l aid progr3m
in 1971. He JSaid the program
would only be fundC'd through
·July 31.
Reagan said he was '·pleas-
ed and gratified" that his vetn
had been upheld and an·
nounced plans for a private
legal services program to
re place the CRLA in July.
But in a qualifying sLa1e-
menl Sunday, Carlucci said
the decision not to override
Reagan 's veto did not mean
that CRLA v.·ould necessarily
be phased out. He sai d an
appointed OED Commisson
would study !he program and
Reagan·s criticisms of it.
I
·Severe Medi-C .al, Welfare
Cuts Indicated by Reagan
SACRAi\fEt\'TO t UPll -
Gov. Ronald Reagan wlll send
the Legislature a "counter-
revolutionary" state budget
Tuesday balanced wilh shar p
\\'elfare and Medi-Cal cuts and
no increased taxes.
"Prepare you rM!lves for 11.
great outcry of anguishNI
resistance," the gove rnor Rd-
vised 952 cheering delegates
to lhe biennial Republican
State Convention.
Reagan announced he will
a1•oid a def icit of $750 million
or even more" by .. proposals
to reduce the C(ISl of govem·
ment and not by increaM!s
in the tax burden:'
It was the first time Reagan
has c o n f i r m e d legislative
predictions that the stale
fa ces a potential revenue
sho rtage of al least $700
million in the fiscal year
beginning July I.
Reagan said his fifth state
budget will reject the premise
that welfare is "sacrosanct
and must be preserved in a}l
its profl igacy and its colossill
failure."
ln his most partisan speech
since the 1970 political cam-
paigns. Reagan told the ap-
plaud ing audience that "we
a.re engaged in a counter
revolution" in which "some
people are going In learn to
stand on their O'NO two feel
and like it."
to join in reforming w!ltare
and ~ledi·Cal . . . it is a
misu.sP of public funds to con-
tinue the immorality of these
programs w h i c h victimize
those who pay and those who
are mo.~t in need ."
Other go vernrnenl services
also will f~J the pinch,
Reagan disclosed. "There will
be smTie reductions a n d
postpo nements we w o u Id
rather not ha ve made," he
said. "But government , like
the ramily, has moments when
it must defer and cu t down
until times get belier."
The new state budget. which
is certain to spark 11 months·
Jong fight in the De-mocratlc-
contro\led legislature, w i 11
take effect July I.
The present budget i s
roughly $6.6 billion a n d
legislative sources pre d I c t
Reagan's new spending plan
won't be much higher.
.Unlike the federal govern~
ment. the state cannot adopt
a red-ink budget.
Bitter Tttg•Of•Wor
Reagan Backer Elected
To State GOP Ke y Po~t
SACRAMENTO IUPll -
Gordon Luce. the hand·picked
candidate or Gov. Ronald
Reagan , ha s been elected No.
2 man in the California
Republican Party alter a bit·
terly fought tug-of·war.
lion of Luce.
"This is 11 Lough one,"
Adnerson told th e 9 S 2
delegate!!. his voice choking
back sobs of emotion while
the Battle Hymn of the
Republi c played nver the
public address system. "Ifs
been a tough fight but v.·e·ve
reallY been sharpening our
teelh ror whars ahead in two
years.·•
Beauty Bulletin
from Penneys:
Come in1 or a Helene Curtis
Springtime Perm
Including ahampoo, cut
and style.1 ooo
Or try our Helene Curtis
"Incredible" Conditioner
treatment lnclLding
shampoo and aat.3aa
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"If the commissio n finds
that CRLA is con ducting its
activities in comp liance v.·i th
the OED statutes a n d
guidelines, l will. of Course.
refund it in full." Carlucci
"Some v.·ho have known
government subsidy," he con-
tinued. ''must instead begin
to pa y commensurate with
the ir ability so we can C(ln·
cen lrale on those in rea l
need."
Luce . 4:>. a San Diego Sa v-
ings and Loan Executive and
forme r member of I he
ioJOvernor's cabinet. I u r n e d
aside the challenge of Sa n
~1arino attorney Clifford R.
Anderson al the weekend con·
venlion of the GOP State Cen-
tral Committee.
"I see no danger of any
split in the party." Luce an-
nounced shortl y arter his elcc·
lion by acclamation Sunday.
Anderson. who later con-
firmed that he v.•as crying,
said the "die was casf' when
his forces were defeated in l.---------------------,
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use our money!
we say "Yes" to 2.039 loans eYe1'f week-for
lett-o-Yer bills, emergency expenses. hcwne or
car re.pairs, any good reason. On approwal you
can borrow up to $5,000 or more. P~
are scheduled to fit your budget -with a
money--back guarantee (if you find you can do
better, return the money within 5 days at no
cost to you).
Fast service, too! Y~ may M'te 'fOt!T' monev
the day you apply. That's how last we can say
"yes" at Morris Plan .
Morris Plan
673-3700
N1wport Beach -3700 Newpor t Boulev1rd
oet. offtceS lwouigholrt C.......
said. .
Reagan called it "hard to
believe" that the commission
v.•oul d recommend continued
fundin.e: of CRLA. knowinli!:
"all the things that caused
this impasse."
Reagan said "the key to
balancing the budget v.·ill be
the Legislature's willin~ness
GREEN BERET, ALAN DAVIDSON
presents
"THE GREAT PRETENSE"
A Spec ial Color/Sound Film Pre1entatio11
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 3, 8 PM
How doe s our aid and trade to Com·
muni-st Nation s help Communist North
Yietnom kill and maim American fight-
ing men7
Onl y mi nutes ea r I i e r ,
Anderson abruptly pulled out
or the race and made a secon·
ding speech for the nomina·
2 Viewing
J ets Killed
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Ambrosio Zavala and his son
~1ario. 9. stood on lhe railroad
tracks near Los Angeles
Jnlernaliona l Airport Sunday
night v.•atching the planes take
off. They never heard the
train which killed lhem.
Zavala, 39, had taken his
son lO lhe airport to watch
lhe planes n ea r Aviation
Boule\'ard and Centu r y
Bouleva rd -a popular viev;
poinl to watch the big jets.
! --
Fa stest 1n The West
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
The engineer of the Santa
Fe train said he couldn't slop
tn time. The three engines
and a caboose v•ent another
300 yards down the track
befor e they could come to
a ha lt.
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Buy it. Sell it. 'fr.v the fastest response in the West against
your own clock. Test Diml'.'·a-line Ads, "'here the action is,
in Saturday's DAILY PILOT.
15th & Santa Ana Ave., Newport Beach
STARTING DEC. 23
NOW! lCl'lG BEACH IS SHORTER
TO NORTHERN CALI FORNIA.
Both were killed instanUy.
. (Psst ar.,.. COl8Wyl Long Beach to Los Angeles (Orange County, Palos
Thls Ul¥eS ya&&~ Sa n Fra ncisco $18 Verdes. Wilming1on, Tor rance, elc.),
ro&M er., to S.~ Includ ing tax. long Bea ch is like having your own private
Leave Long Beech: airport. You don'! have to light the free -
• Now you can fly PSA from Long Boach 7:40 am 1vay traffic lo l . A. !n1emationa1. There's
Alrport to San Francisco. Four limes 11 d~y. 10 ·45 am eBs y parking And the crowds haven't
More on weekends. More 111ghts then 1 :30 pm found 11 yet . Nellt time you head north
any olher a irli ne . Corinec1ions to Sacra· 4 30 pm (or south). head for Long Beach Airport
mento. Or. avoid lhe freeway and fly lo Mon thnslhurs & Sa!. by way 01 your travel agent and PSA.
San Diego. II you live any place south ol ~-M_0_"_1_11_gh_1'_'_'_' &_s_u_n_. _, PSA lfWs ya11 a llft.
a drive to make secret the I
balloting for the v ice
chairmanship.
'"That was the one that con·
l'ULLl .. TON
O••~t'f•I• ce~te• lf'd ll(l(lr, 111·.0oll
HUNTINGTON I ll.CH
H11111;11g1"" ce~•e• 1..1 "cw. m .1n1
Orl"91 ''T~o' Clly" •>t·Mn
NIW,e•T llACll
~•a~I°" l1l1M !nd 11oor .. •u.n11
vinced me." he told newsmen \'.===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~ and shortlv afterward sent
word lo ' ~ that he had
dec ided t11 ·aw.
Supporte r 1\ n de rs o n
believed lhat he could defeat
Luce If the balloting were
secret and at the same time
avoid ''embarrassin j:l" Reagan
by publicly voting for a can·
didate other than Luce.
Only One
Fi na! stoc ks in a11 home editions.
That's a biit deal ? It is in Orange
County. The DAILY PILOT i~ the only
daily newspaper that deliverti lhe
package. ·
Call Collect
(714) 523-6511
for our shop-at-home service, free.
S·ave up to 50%
this week only.
Select from luxurious
reup)Jolstering fabrics .
Reupholster now in your choice from our beautiful collection of cut
ve lve~s. nylons, slub cottons. damasks and many more. All reduced sos
for th is week only. Regular low Penney prices for our custom fabrication .
.~~.~·
D-11• now. UM Pannay& llma piryment pier
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' Mo11day, Ftbruary 1, 1971
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Please pardon our immodesty
The Orange County Press Club -has just aw·a-rded
the DAILY PILOT more stacl<.s of plaques
,.
The Orange County Pre ss Club's 'Oscar' is a handsome plaque called an Orcop -the top award for journalistic ex-
.cellence in Orange County . An Orcop looks like the one on top of the stack at the right (above). The stack represents
the awards DAILY PILOT staffers brought home from Sa.turday's 'Orcop Night' festivities . It was an even better than
usual awards banquet for the DAILY PILOT which, aver the years, has won more Press Club awards than any other
county newspaper. The staff's pile of Honorable Achievement plaques was even taller than the Orcop stack.
DAILY PILOT staff men:ibers brought home 10 Orcops -half of all they were eligible to win -plus one first place
in a 'Special Awards' category and 14 Honorable Achievement plaques (for second and third place showings) ...
a total of 25 awards. The DAILY PILOT was eligible for awards in 30 competition categories and its staffers won one
or more awards in 16 of them .
Readers probably will agree that it is a record of high achievement. Perhaps they will even join the DAILY PILOT staff
in an excusable display of immodesty as we salute our 'stars' listed below. Each of them won an Orcop in tough com-
petition . And for Arthur Vinsel and Richard Koehler it was even tougher. They won what are considered the two top -
Orcops of them all -one for the year's best news story and the other for best spot news photo of the year. Here are
the DAILY PILOT's Orcop winners:
,1\.rtl1tu· R. Vinsel (Dual Wi1mer) * Terry Coville
Be st ~wspaper Series ** Best News Story
Best Newspaper Column
Patrick O'Donnell Ricl1arcl l(oel1ler * Best Combination Photos & Stoly * Be•t Spot News Photo
Glen11 White Barbara Kreibich
Best Spor ts News Story * Bes t New s Feature
I
Rudi Niedzielski ,<\Ian Dirk.in * Best Sports Feature * Best New spaper Page Layout
Lee Payne * _Joanne Re ynolds
Spec ial Award No. 9 * Best Feat ure Photo
Best Education Article or Series
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Jf DAILY PILOT Mond'1J', ftbf'lltir)' 1, 11171
'
Ci1 ·h•' PF.Ri\IA-PREST"' Dresses
Sensational
Value!
' Her fa\'orite ::;tyles •nd col ors. Machine wash,
tumble dry, skip the Ironing. 7 to 14.
In Chubby Sizes 81/z to 16% ..................... %for $9
Little Girls' Spring-s tyle
Perma-Prest® Dres1el!. 3·6X .................... ~For 16
SAVli 28o/c ! Children's
Underwear SALE!
Regular S l.i9
Package of 3
L.i ltle Gi rls' slee\•eless \'est or doub le
lahric cro1ch panty or <'Ol ton rib \.in it.
S1zes2 1o6.x.
Li ttle .Ro~·s' rre1"' nl"t k. ·r-shirts or double
fil hrir crotth briefs of tolton rib kn it
Sizcs12 to 6x.
.SA VJ:,' 1 .'J'lo lo ,'JI o/o J"ow on
Sears Luxurious Carpeting
Your Cho ice
$l .99 "Chaleau·· Car peting 1n A crilan~
11crylic pile. Graceful contemporary Ooral
p a ltern in yn11r chot('(' or 9 decorator
color!.
59.99 "ShagmOt.1r " l '<ir11et vi IUO' v Darron•
polyc~te r ... g1\<'!! ~·ou superb resi licnt·c
:o nd ,,·armth u!iually tnund In cost ly "·ools
:21 color!i
./
GUARANTEE
Ir oontrol or blanket
prove derectlve within
S year!I or sale, return
the complete unit and
we will repair or re-
place it. al our option,
free of charge.
•
~AVE
~olid-Stale Electric Blankets
Re!!ular $29.99 $·1·· 497 Twin, Single Control
$44.99 Jo~uil Size. Dual Control ................. 21.97
564.99 King Size, Dual Co ntrol ............... 31 .97
$54.99 Queen Size. Dual Control .............. 26.97
Five year 1uarantee fo r a!lsured quality. Exclu-
sive solid state control: Machine wash & drv.
Convertible cornerli. Choice o f colqr;s. ·
Cl MONff Gt l ·ltl 1 Sears CA NOGA PAllK 140·0•61 Gl lNDALl CH S·I004, (I 4••61 I
COMl'tON NI •·2 J ll, Nt J .)761 HOLLYW OOD HO f .st•t
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Matching 'fable & Chain La1np s
$10~~or 2ror$20 BoYs' P.ERl\'IA-PRES'f w S hirts
Table Lamp -...·ith nigh t light in base. Antique
.'-al1n shade. AmlJe r o r green glass base.
~l•tc hlng Cha i n Lamp ha5 tassle pull chai n
off/on s"·iteh, amber or gree n gla S!I, bral!s finistt
I rim. Buy a p air now of.table and chain lamps to
highlight your d ecor.
----~ ,,.it> ·• l'I f'I ..... ,i;. f;
'1co wr •·•2•1
OIANGI •l1·1100
.. 3ror$5
Short slee\·e spo rt shirls \\'ilh straight botloms.
Assorted plaids. Sizel!'6 to 12. ·
Li ttle Boys' Perma·Prest® Sport Shirts in \\.'0\'<'11
Ringham plaids. 3 to 6x .... : ............... 4. for $S
S3.99 Boys' 'Ru gged l\'estern Style J eans with
double knees. Sizes 6 to 12, reg., slim ..... 2 ror $6
2.59 Little Boy &' Jeans, 3 to 6x .............. 3 for $6
Sears Froslless
RefTi gera !or-Freezer
14.8 cu. fl size has 9.90 cu. n . rcrrigeralor
section ... 4.90 cu. fl freezer section holds
t7 t·l bs. Roomy porcelain·enameled crisper.
l·landy door lihelves in both sections. 11-lag.
netic door cfosings seaJ lightly. 11-todel 69010
Ask.About Sears
Convenient Credit Plans
."iAVE '21 ! Ken111orc Ga ~
2-Temperalure .Dryers ,
Regular
• $149.95 $128
:;1 ~at" .se~1ling ~r1es c!C'lthcs completely;
Atr Only selling gently fluffs plllo\~s.
b~a nkets. Convenient Load·a·Door pro·
v1dc.s ex.tr~ .,.,·or.k-i;.pace ror sortini: and
fold11lg. Lint scr('en catches strini:.~.
threads-clothes conic Out bea11tif11ll)
fres h and clean. ?\lode! 70110
SOUTH COAS T 'LAlA J40·ll3.)
THOUtAND OAICS 4t1·4St 6
TOlllANC f '41-1Sll
\'ALll'f ,0 l •l.t61, ~1 4 ·1210
VllMOl\IT Pl f •lfll tl.AllS, itOtllUCJ< AND CO. COVINA 'ft•·06 I 1 INGllWOOD OR 1 ·2 S1l
Skop Nl9ht1 Monda)' through Saturday 9:30 A.M. fo 9:30 P.M., Sundoy 12 Noon to l P.M. "~atlJfatti,:i n Guaranteed or Your Money lack''
SA NTA ANA Ml 7.3371
S.ANTA f l SPllNG5 t44·101 l
SANT A MONICA I X 4·011 1
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For The
Record •
PMA PGSW!M
Births
Death Notlees
CHAM••lllt
C';r1c1 M•t Cll1mi..,1. A•t U , el U4t
l'1r.on1. C0&t1 Meu. 01lt e1 •N lrl, Ji11-
u1rv JO. S11..,.lv9CI b, .. n, Jt"ll•• G, l'I·
holl. Coot• Mt JI/ ,_ 111111"11 tll•N
o••Nlclllldrt n •nd 1lr ,...,1r1 ,11Mtcllllftt/I.
St ,..ICt), loclt v, M ..... y, 10 AM. ltll
lr~tV Cllt •l'I, wfl~ tmor.,,...111 II
\111111111 CHnt ru ..,, Neri/I koll'lwood. ltfl
t r1.aw1v Morluorv, Ol•KIWI.
(GMl'A•NON S ~ollanlt t. Com111<1nen, Rttldtft! tf
l'll111tin11on l11cll, S11rvlv1f bv aort nlo
Mr. Ind Mri. ,..,td II!. ComNtllOl'I: brt '.
lfttr, Jomes ,.. I t r1ndp1r.n11, Mrs, \lleltl
Com1t1non1 Mr. INI Mro, Joi•Ph kir· r~nv. s1 ... 1c11, Tut1d1v, 11 ·:» 1-M. 011.
flt Y !ltolt1e" Cll111I. "•lv11t IM••..,tn!,
D!l<IAY !lr1lllt r1 Mortu1ty, 14J·'771, CH·
rll(tfrt.
DOST.-.L
Moll W. Dt11!1l. At• '31 rtillltnt ti Mlnn~11t1. 0 11t •I 111111!, J1nut no )I
SUtyivod by w!l1, M". M1ry Oott1t. ti
Hu!clllnson. Ml'lntsoi.; dtut llti •, Mra.
W•llt C• S•ll11.t1n. L1k1 Cl!y, Mln1Msot11
•on, Milon M. Do1t1I, Ntw"'1 I Ncl\;
11v~n G••ndd •llllrtn. ~~rvlc11 will "-
ht lll In HultMnson. Mln1111011. 1'11nllv
l lHllHIJ l'lm.1 wl•hln1 ro m1k1 "'9'1\ft•!tl
cao!•lbu!lon1. 111111 aonlrlbu!1 te Ortl·
lnfu1 l'&und.i~ fer lht O.tl. J'OH I .
W11hln1111n Avr .. Whl!!l1r, '°'°'·
OIONl'.Y •
lt09er Melvl'I GldMY. "''" 6', et t2' I.
1!111 !l•v l!llvd .• N-POrt l11c11. 0.11 et
d"th, J t nut •Y XI. Survlv~ bY wll1, 11111
0. Gidney; 1l11er1, l!mt llnt $ylvl1 t"ll
Lucv Woe1t1r. Ch•oel •trv!co •n~ !n.
'~"""'· T"""''· 1::111 "M. Wt $1min1!1r M-r!1I Pt'11 M1rtu11v i nd Ctmt!trY.
NATMCOCll
Cl\t rl.., 1-hthcock. ••• 6', el Miii Club·
l'IDU•• Cltd t , C&ott M•<&. SlrvlcH Mf'td. 1"11 I t Smllf\1 Motlu•rv,
M.t.WI(
.t•"'"' l-t•w-s, Alt Jt. tr/ :ttl3 Ct YIM ,
C&1t1 M°'•· Dll1 e' <l•Uh, J111111no •.
Sorvlvtd llY wll1. 5nlrloy, 5t tVl(tt ~
lrt of I t !! lrMllw•v M~1..,,
M•INll•l
••~•• L. Ht lnket. ••• 11, er 114 c .. 1.
M..,t 51~11, (1111 Me••. D1 .. .i ... ,,,,
Jonuorv JO, Su..,lvld by 41..,.1111r. Mr1.
Oct•&tflv Strt hl, Cttlt M ... 11 1W9 t rt fld•
dllld•t" t nll lh•H t ru l-l"t ft<ltM1fr1n.
Sff"Ylct•. lnd1Y, M1nd1v. l •M, 91!1
1!"•1dw•v Clltffl, wl!fl lltv. l. V. Tor.
-D!licl•tlllt , IMe'"'""'· Htrtl&• ""' Mtmed1I Ptrt , 1111 llrntitwt • Mor!111,..,,
Ol•f'C!O,,.
IU)l.OIN
1-1111, .. Held'"· J.11 11. or JlJ till St.,
M'tnt!~<>tnn !11or~. G••~•sld• 1•rvlc11.
Wedntod••· 11 AM. "•cfilc Vl1w Memer-
ttl l>trk. S!'nlll'lt Mortu1ry, DltlCIO•t.
1e•1st •11
A11111 ICtult• il.11 n. or lt7J N1w .. r1
lllY!! .. So..tt JI, Col!• M111. Survlvtd 11¥
fwe dl.,IMt•I, Mr1. l!volyn irunt i nd
Mrt. Ill!• Ce~nt!IY, be!f\ ,.,, Ntw Yert;
lwo brollltri.. Jelln l1r111rd, ol Tolt <le,
Ohl&; cn.,tor J11•n1td, or NtwNrl
9e1cl'I; lou• t••ndcfllld ttl' •o•o•v , Tut•·
111¥. 1 PM. ll:l'ftul1,., M•n , Wt~nt1<1ov,
111 il.M, bolt'! 11 S! Je1c111..,•1 C1Tho!lc
Clluttn l!:•!ombm•n!. GIW'd Snn llt •d
C•m•"''' wi!fl 1'11nor T~em•\ ..ievl"
oftic!•llnt l!ltlt ••0111w1v Mortut •v, 0 1-
'" O• Gu,11v• ii., •ov. llt,•dfnt 11 (1l'f!t
nrs1; d~lt o! de•th, J1rw1rv )!I. 1-tttd
"' Ant1lh••IOl01v Dt•t. or O•ontt (NJnr.
Mf'ditl l C~nt•rJ mem~r nf Ort ntt Cot.,•·
"' Meillt •I ..... O(lt tlon. Suf"Ylved tlY "'"•· Gtrlrli!!•i 11tr<•, T1'1m10 M , l•~r1 I .
•nrl Jonn J. lt11v1 dtutlilt•. 1>11rrc•• ii..
C•1wlord; •011• t••ndcltlldrtl'. lte•t rv .
T11t11l1y, l •IJ l>M, Dlldt, l •o!htll Cl•••
!I. llte<N/tm MIU, Wtd"lldl Y, t il.M,
SS ~/men I. J ud• C1tflollc Chu•c~. '"'
'""'""'· il.1t1n1lon C1mt ltr¥. l!I TMe. 011111v t•ot~'" Mo•1111rv, ... 1.n n, DI·
ITUMI"•
0•11 1!1 Stum•I. J?lll'I Molt il.Y•, Hu111\nt•
lon lt1cn. 01!1 of lltttli. Jll'Ut rv !'.
!.urvlvod bY wU1, M1tlt: tnrtt ion,. H••·
nil!. Lew11! C. 1nd Vttnon S!um•I; •11.
'"· Mn . M&Y 1>1vn1. G11vuldt i1•vlce1
Wtdr<ltdt Y, 11 AM. W11tm!r<llt• M&ll'ftr·
lol Pit~. l'ttk l'tmllv C•l11nl1! "untrt l
Hem1. Otft ci ......
WllG14Y
1!1~1 S. W•l,ht. lJ)T Wvomlnt ''" WMI·
"'ln1!t • D•!f 01 <111 1~. J1.,.,1no II. SU•· ~lved b~ d•ut~tt" Mr1. Le•nt Ulrk;~J
l l1tpt, M•I Am1!11 G,.lllt o; "°''"" l •l nd·
chlOdrtn; two lrttl·t•t'lllc~llll•.,,. S1rv-
ltts. Tl>Hdl V, 1d ·.YI il.M, Pt .... l'"1m!IY
COllW'lt l Funlft l H&mt .
ARBUCKLE •SON
Westclllf Mortuary
tz7 E. 17th St., Cotta Mt11
14MW • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar .... OR 2-1451
Costa Mesa ........ ml g.%U4 • BEl.L BROADWAY
'{ORTilAllY '-
110 Brffd~ay, Costa MHI
LI 1-!lll • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
17H Llpn• Canyo1 Rod.
•H-Nll • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIA L PARK
Cemetery /t1ortuary
Chapel
M PadHc View Drive
Newport Beach, Callfond1
IU-n• • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
13111 Boin Ave.
We1tml11sttr .• I~ • SMrrns· MORTUARY
C%1 ~fain SI.
RuntlnJlnn Bt1c•
13HS!ll
•
DAILY •ILOT l l
Hus FirnrSeelcs Enroll1ne1at Increases.
To Drop Routes VCI Asking 35 New Faculty Posts
•
By GEORGE LEJOAL
ot 11\t OtllV ,lltl ... If
,.t
I
Come see our
we•119ive a little green.
A free Azalea, to be exact.
If you'd like one, just stop in ou
new Costa Mesa office . From no
through February 12, we' re having Open
House to give you a chance to see that
our beautiful new bu ilding hasn't turned
our heads.
Our peop le are still .friendly. If not
friendlier. And our co mplete escrow
services, home loan s, and Umpte en
Ways To Save are just as nice as ever.
Furthe rm ore, we' re now easy to
get to-right in Harbor Center, on the
corner of Harbor Boulevard and Wil-
son.
So drop by. We'll have your bloom-
g little gree n waiting, plus special kids'
balloons, free coffee and refreshments
and lots of smiles to help make this the
nicest Gpen House a beaut iful new
bui lding ever had.
Open house hours: Mon.-Thur:
9-4; Fri. 9-8.
Glendale Federal Savings-Costa Mesa
Comer of Harbor BolHvard le Wilson. (Harbor Center)
Free Alllea co·cclcbration with our Newport office at 500 Newport Center Drive.
I
JI DAILY PILOT
'
MoJtdu, F'tbruuy 1, 1971
Dan ish Modern styling-model 7142
Early American-model 71,44
on concealed swivel casters
Also SAVE $80 on
Instant Automatic
REMOTE CONTROL
Enjoy more conveniences-and
more functions than any other remote
unit offers: UHF/VHF channel selec·
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station goes off the eirl
Your Choice $6 ·9 gso NOW ONLY
I
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agncrvQ~
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on concealed swivel casters.
$ on each
of these
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• NEW Ultra-Rectangular Screen
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Enjoy today's biggest picture-on the color
TV with a built-in memoryJ~Amazing Magnavox
TAC remembers for you I It keeps flesh tones
natura l-pictures sharp-automatically. There's
no more jumping up to adjust controls-no more
unsightly green or purple faces. Switch channels,
let the scene change-TAC will always give you
a perfectly-tuned picture-on every channel,
every time! The 315 sq. in. screen, with new
square corners and a new flat surface-gives you
clearer, sharper pictures with less glare plus 'he
most fabulous life·like realism you 've ever seen I
And-two Magnavox high-fidelity speake1s
bring you wonderful listening realism, tool
Magnificent Magnavox Color TV-the closest
ye t to a motion picture screen I
Your choice NOW ONLY
•
Spenlsh 1tyllna-modef 3933
on concealed swiwt caatn
s I I on each
of these
ASTRO-SONIC STEREO
FM/ AM Radio-Phonos
that bring you breathtaking
listening pleasure!
.
Enjoy spectacular concert hall realism-
plus fine.furniture craftsmanship I Once you gee
and hear Astra-Sonic Stereo you'll know why it's
acclaimed the world over for its beauty and for
it's remarkable sound reproduction-whether
from recordings, exciting Stereo FM, noise·free
and drift-free Mona ural FM, powerful AM radio
or optional Magnavox tape equipment. Eac h
model shown has 100-Watts EIA music power,
plus an Air-Suspen sio n Sp eake r Sys tem with
two High· Compliance 12 .. Bass Woofers and
two 1,000 >¥Cle Exponential Horns that project
sound from both sides and front of the authen·
tically styled cabinets. Their Deluxe Micromatic
Player with Cue Control and Stylus Pressure
Adjustment exceeds all others in accuracy.
Your choice NOW ONLY
16th Century Italian-model 3935
on concealed swivel casters
French Provinc;.lal-model 3934
on concealed swivel casters
Cassette or Cartridge
TAPE PLAYERS
SAVE
$10
ON EACH
Magnavox Tape Player Compo ..
nents-easilyconnect to stereo consoles
or componen t systems and will bring
you the enjoyment of pre.recorded
tapes. 4-Tiack Cassette model 8867 end
8-Track Cartridge model 8869.
Your choice
NOW S4990
I I
!
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i
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I
IWlagnQVo.x. I
IMlagnCIV"o.x.
HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
GOLDENWEST & WARNER
HUNTINGTON BEACH
SALES ONLY
842-5596
• .
45 Years of Dependable Service
401 MAIN
HUNTINGTON BEACH
SERVICE & SALES
·536~7561
•
HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
BROOKHURST & .WARNER
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
SALES ONLY
962-2456
)
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1
REFLECTING ON FASHION -!\Irs. Seymour Nutt, president o[ El
Cami~o R_cal \Vo1na!l 's Club, and 1'1rs. ~am R. \Valke~. (left to
right 1n mirror} admire an elegant gownfttes1gned for evening \Vear.
The club \Vil! present a fashion sho\v and luncheon on Thursday.
Feb. 11 . around a backdrop of doves and roses Flying Into Fashion.
---~-
friends Host
Ingredients Mixed
For Poetic Evening
J\ jug of \vine, a loaf of bread and thou \Vil! be bolstered by a
good book as members of the Saddlebark Friends of the 1'1ission Viejo
Library sponsor a \vine-tasting party on Thursday, Feb. 11.
\Vith proceeds going to\vard enlargi ng the library for dedication
U1is 1nonth, n1embers hooe for a full house in li1ontanoso Recreation
Center from 8 to 11 p.m ...
'rickets at Sl.50 per perso'n 1nay be obtained from !\!rs. Robert
l}ecacqua. 830-4603, or l\1rs. Ronald Norris. 837-3254. Chairman of the
event is l\·lrs. Becacqua.
Saddlebaek Friends of the l\1ission Viejo Library \vas formed i n
the fall of 1970 for the purpose of buying books, planning programs for
both children and adults and support of the library in general.
The group is headed by l\·lrs. l\1ichael Collins assisted by the
!\ln1cs. 1'heodore Cooper, vice president; Roye Solberg, secretary; John
Blat·k. treasurer. and Norris and George Ragsdale, membership chair·
n1cn.
Other board 1nc1nbers include the 1.lmes. \V . l\1irhael Slater,
publici ty; Becacqua. chairman of fund raising; John V. Shannon, For-
r est Dunivin and Thomas Reeder. dedication chairmen: Ed\vard Cas·
s3ro. choiirman of book drives, and D.S. Decasas, chairman of the Junior
Friends. ·
Persons interested in membership information arc invited to
call ritrs. No rris or 1.lrs. Ragsdale, 830-7618.
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• "'" \"
A GOOD BOOK AND WINE -Saddlcback Friends of the
ltfission Viejo Library (left to ri~ht) the 1'1mes. Ed\vard
Cassaro, \V. li1ichael Slater and John V. Shannon re-
.. ---------... -------
BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466
M9nll1r, ftllnltrr l. 1m • '"'" 11 •
Tea Pref aces .
Show Time
1\n annual Membership Tea at 1 p.m. on Thursday,
Feb. 4, will preface El Can1ino Real Woman's Club's
Fly Into Spring fa shion shO\V and luncheon on Thursday,
Feb. I I.
:ti.1rs. Carl E. Jensen of Dana Point \viii act as chair·
1nan of Lhe tea in th e Community I-louse. She \Vill be as·
sisled by the Mines. l-tarry Rogers. Robert lrwin, Samuel
Dunning, Walter Caruthers. Franklyn Blume, Th~as
Harrison, J . H. Kincaid. \Valter Thatcher and James .. Lan-
sill.
The afternoon program \\•ill be presented by 111rs.
James 1'1cCalla. amenities chairman and past president
of Orange District, California Federation of \Vomen's
Clubs; Miss Helen Dee who "'ill present California history
in song and monologue, and the Saddleback Colle~e
Chamber Singers under the direction of Donald A. \Valk·
er.
\Vith the lea a thing or lhc past 1ne1nbers \Viii look
ror\vard to the fashion luncheon at noon in Community
I louse.
Doves and roses \Vil\ create a peaceful and lovely
atn1ospherc as Mrs. Ed\vard J-layes, originator and c~m
n1entator. describes a bright and elegant array of spring
fashions fro1n Cornelia Bige\o\v.
Also assisting with sho\v arrangen1enls \Viii be '-1rs.
Ku ssel \Valker. \vays and means chairn1an, and !\irs. John
Renfro, luncheon chairn1an.
1)roceeds fro1n the sho\v 'vill benefit El Camino'5
sc holarship fu nd.
•
place books with a wine rack. The group will sponsor a
wine-lasting party on Thursday, Feb. 11, as a fund-raising
event ror the nc\v Mission Viejo Library.
Fiance's/ Secr~t Desire Outshines Glowing Wedding Plans
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 20. l\.1y
fi ance is 21. \Ve are planning to be
n1arried soon and l need an ans\•1er
to 3 question. J and I had a talk
last wC'ek and he confessed he has alY.·a~·s
\1·antcd lo be married in a purple sequin
JACke1. I told him I'd hav1:: to think
i! nver. The ncxl day I discussed it
11'ilh 1ny mother . She sa id it was all
right with her, ir the minister didn 't
object. So I asked the minister. He
~aid he didn 't set any reason why my
fiant'e couldn't get married in a purple
sequin jacket lf he .. .,,anted Lo. sinct
groo ms arc \\earing atl sorts of off-beat
ouirits these days. (Brides. too.)
\\'hen I told J he replied, "I've changed
1ny n1ind. It woald take the attention
:11~ay from you.'' This \\'as very sweet
but no .. v 1 feel guilty -knowing ho'v
much ii meant to him . Should I in sist?
• •
ANN LANDERS
I Jived through II all but J \Yas luckier
lh<ln mosl. I met a wonderful man
\\'hO understood my problem and helped
111<' get \1·ell. t Yes. it is a sickness. l
\\'c h:il'e a wonderful marriage no1v
:ind I r·onslder myi:elf e 1-1 r cm e I y
-ONTARIO BRIDE
DEAR ON : No. Ltt it be. If lbere'1
anything a bride doesn't need It's a
groom in a purple sequin jacket.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was hi~
hard by that Jetter about the little 7-year-
old girl "'ho climbs on men 's laps .and
behaves in an a~gress1vely affectkltlate
manner. I was that little gir l 20 years
ago. To this day I can hear my mother
say, "Isn't il cute the way Sherry goes
for the men'.' She doesn'l care for women
at an!"
! '
You "'ere r ight In your answer, Ann. fortunate. I hope lhc little girl in the
The reason the HtUe girl craves male letter is as luckv as I was. l will
affection is because ht>r O\\'TI father ig-pray for her. -SHERRY OF BOISE
nored her. I know, because my dad Df-~AR SHERRY: Thank you for a
'\\'as like that. He never once let me' !ouching letter. I hope tbe unafftclionale
sil on his lap. I cannot recall that fathers out there who have little glrls,
he ever kissed me, wlll read It and do some &0ulsearehing.
Do you know whal happens to little
fi!irls with cold father! who reject them?
They see ••daddy" in every male who
pays them the slightest attention. As
teenagers they are pushovers for heels.
swingers and lecherous old men who
like young flesh. •
DEAR ANN LANDERS : If 1 BJll
\\•allo\1•int: in self-pity please ktck me
in the bloome rs. If I have a right
lo comptaln, say so.
I ha ve been married
man "'ho works hard,
15 year!'
pays the
lo •
bills
on lime. is A good father and has
never been knOwn t'o lose hi~ temper.
lie tells 1ne i am a fine wiic and
a "·onder[ui person. Should I be satisfied'?
\\'ell -here 's the rest of it.
From the day v.•e married I ha ve
been alone on Th3nksgiv1ng. Nev• Vear·s.
my birthday, bis birthda y, the children's
birthdays, f\.1other's Day, our anniversary
and every holiday that gives a man
a day off from work. The r eason I
am alone so much is because my husband
is a fisherman, a hunter, p. bowler.
a swin1mer, a surfer. a skater and
·it card plttyer-. In <ttht-r wor4s he"s in-
terested in everything but staying hoine
with his family.
l>o T have lh e rii;lhl to say something?
-A r-.IARRIED WIDOW IN SAGINA\Y
DEA R SAG: Of et>urse you do, but
I have a bunch it won't do any 1ood
at this late date. The Ume to have
"s:iid something" "'as I~ years ago.
You do n't menHon whether YOU eajoy
any of these activities. I see ln your
li!!I many things the family could ct.
together. Is this possible? El'plore the
prospects and It might produce a partial
solution.
Drinking may be '•i n'' to the kids
you run "'ilh -but It cnn put )'O\l
"out" for keeps. You can cool It and
stay popular . Read "'Booze and Voll
-For Teenagers Only ." Send 35 cents
in coin and a long, self-addressed.
stamped en velope with your request la
care o( the DAILY PILOT.
I
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.J'I 0.t.ILY PILOT
Your Horoscope Tomorrow •
Virgo : Shake Off Lethargy
TUESDAY
FEBRUARY 2
By SYDNEY OMARR
The Sa1Utarl1n cu be
aoclable, aa:retable, but wants
to create poUcy and be one
wbo 11 called upon to e:rplaln
and direct. U you want to
keep a S111ttar1an 11 a friend,
a1k advlct. Nothln1 ple•se•
tbl1 naUve more than beln&
able to txplala aad teach.
Some lamou1 pertou boMll un-
dtr S1Jtttarh11 lnch1de Al
Kallae, FUp Wlltoa .and Emlyn
Wllllam1.
ARIES (~farch 21-April 19):
Hold on to valuables. One who
sings siren song does not have
your Interests at heart. Be
receptive. Make ch an g e \:,'
Reallze your O'A11 worth . Build
self-esteem.
TAURVS (April 20-May 201:
You cannot throw off
respon.!lblllty. There are com·
mttments which you must
fulfill. Family members may
try to for~ Issues. Don't let
anyone impose his will on you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ):
Perceive hidden meanings,
Find out why people act the
way they do. Don't be lulled
lnto complactncy, You do
have a mission. 11-f a J o r
purposes cu now be clarified.
Principles
Of Decor
Capsuled
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
HoJd tight to principles. You
will have additional
responslblllt1e1. You can han-
dle them. But you alao ahould
be compenuted foi' efforl!.
Know this -act like you
know IL
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
may aot be obvious.
PISCES (Feb. J~Marcll 20):
You get what you want by
utilizing written word. Don't
attempt to substitute
superficiality for .t ho r o u g h
understandlng. See through
sham. Be alert, aware -and
alncere.
IF TODA:Y IS YOVR
BIRTHDAY you I b 0 QI d
culUv1Ce 1ppreclatlon f o r
rbyt.bm and music. fttany
perlODI are drlwa io you -
and you cu e•1IL)' be 1poiled.
You love attenUon. You also
are willing to aid olbers to
allaln 10111. Recent flun-y of
confusion 11 1otng to be
replaced by some solid ad-
vances. By April, you 1hould
be more comfortable ln finan-
cial area.
Finish projects. A v o l d
premature starts. Be wllllng
to test a relatioruhlp. Put a
stop to wishful thinking. One
who constantly takes ad-
vantage of you should be put
in place.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S<pt. 221:
Take a chance on your
abilities. Shake off lethargy.
What you need ls not as Jar
off as might be Imagined.
St. Andrew'~ Setti ng
For Lane-Shaw Rites
Utilize past experience. Open D u r In g d o u b I e r t n g
communication lines. ceremonies Mary Kay Shaw
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): became the bride of Lindsay
Lie low. Play waiting game. Perry Lant,
Relative who whines should
be helped -but do set limit. The Rev. Dr. Ch a r I es
Means refuse to be door mat. Dierenfleld pe.rfonned t h e
Accent en getting opposing nuptials in St. Andrew 's
forces to cooperate. Act ac-Presbyterian Church, Newport
cordlngly. Beach for the daughter of Mr.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): and Mrs. Donald W. Shaw
Be versatile. Some of your of Newport Beach and the
ideas are ready for greater son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry
develooment. One who seems C. Lane of Tucson.
out of reach expresses in-Given in marriage by her
terest. Grab opportunity. father, the bride asked her
Make small sacrifices for sister, 1.trs. Paul H. Reynolds
greater R:ahu. to be her matron of honor.
SAGmARlllS (Nov. 22· Bridesmaids were Mrs. David
Dec. 21): Some basic re-Hutchinson, Mrs. W i I t i a m
ouirements take more money Dumler, h1iss Pam Trowe and
than anticipated. Re ad :r.1iss Cathy Lane, the
between the lines. Don't be caught short, Study Libra bridegroom's sister.
message. Gel expert advice. Attending as best man was: MRS. L. P. LANE
Take nothinlit for gfanted. Michael Williams, w hi 1 e Newport Beach Hom•
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ushers were Tom Combellick,lp;;i0iiiiiii0iii0iii0iiiOiiiOiii0iii0ii;:;
Square Da nce Buffs Take New Step A series of Interior
decorating classes will begin
this w e e k with Miss Ellie
Hennessee as Instructor.
19): Good lunar aspect coin· Tim Morrison, David DeCon-
cides with serious decision clnl and Reynolds.
connected with c h 11 d r e n , The bride is a graduate of
spt!culation. You come out on Corona del Mar High School
top -after a trying time. and the University of Southern
Keep the faith. Creative ap-California. Her husband is a
proach overcomes. handicap. graduate of the University of 1
DTERY Round dances will be fitted in between square
dances beginning Friday, Feb. 5, at the Valentine
·Special dance of the Lace 'n Leather Square Dance
Club, w~en ~tr. an~ Mrs. Jess Sasse en start calling
along 'v1th Marv Lindner, club caller. Swinging out
for the first square and round dance program from
8 to 11 p.m. in the Huntington ~each Recreation
Cen ter are {left to ri ght) the Sasseens and the Juan
Dillons.
Subjects to be covered Ith.
elude selecting the right look,"
color. noor covering, wall
trevtments, art principles and
accessories.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Arimna and is affiliated witb
18): What appears to be Phi Gamma Delta.
SMO•I ,Oii
WOM•N & CMILOlllN
ttJ •• 17tR SI.
Cllll Mtu • IY.1111
Ou t side
Friends
L~nd A i d
Mrs. Rosemary Goodenough,
founder cf Friends Outside,
will 0 speak following a noon
potluck luncheon of the Unitar-
ian Vnaversaliat Women's Fed-
eration Thursday, Feb. 4, in
the 'Costa Meta Church.
Fr.iends Outside Is • a n
organizalion that works with
families of prlsOners. Mrs.
Goodenough's early acUvlties
were involved wllh helping the
families of men Incarcerated
in Santa Clara Jail and
Soled ad but she now is work-
ing in Orange and Ventura
counties .
The public Is invited to at-
tend.
Civ i l ·War
Drama Tol d
Civil War days wlll be
recalled for members of the
South Coast Club of Laguna
Beach on \Vedne!day, Feb. 3,
as Leisure \Vorld resident,
f\1rs. Flottnce Cox reads ex-
cerpts from letters written by
het grandfather to his youag
hrlde while he was away
fighting . Mrs. Cox has traveled ex-
tensively to collect these let-
ters \\'hich are to be bound
in a book and 'Preserved in
the Huntington Library.
Social hour will be~ln at
11 :30 a.m. in !he Towers
restaurant u11drr lhe direction
of ~l rs. Joe. \V , Long and 1
rtlrs. Paul Hill.
Reservations may be made
,.,•ith the ?\Imes. Ora Stickel\,
chalrm21n. George Johnson, or
F. C. Nichols.
'YOGA IS . . .
fr,t.NOING ON YOUll M&:.a.07
W.a.1.ltlNO 01'1 11t1••r
11n1NO Llltl A lltl•tll\.r
NO!'
YOU CH......... I
Y• N t1M I C11NCI " Vlltllty & lltelH,
, ••• ll•MONl1"•ATION
TU•I. NHINT-4 ,,._,,..
c1 ..... s.., w-4.
YOGA CENTER
4U •• 1htl II, -·
FAIR
'"'. "' ... .......
F•tl, ftir, ~ ftcl11•L Tho1•
th,•• .,.,4, un11 "' f•clert 111
opt ,1ti•11 '" th• 0.A ILY r1LOl
etll ilo,ltl P•t• ""'''" 41y.
Serves M ental Hea lth
weight on your shoulders may The newlyweds will reside
tum out to be asset. White in Newport Beach.
elephant could be of actual 1p;iioio;i;;;i;;;iioii;;iio;i;;i0iii0iii0iiiiii
Games Lunch Ta bled
Apri l Rite
In Offing
The eight-week classes will
be open to bolh men and
women and a textbook will
be included with the course.
Classes will lake place on
value. Get expert appraisal.
You have plenty -but It
Monday and Thursday even· S e~ Sirens
factory authorized
Playing games to benefit lhe
rehabilitalion of -l o r m e r
.mental patients will b('
members and guests of the
Fountain Valley \V o m a n • s
Club.
Mrs. Joseph Giesing, mental
health chainnan, will open her
home for a games ,luncheon
at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Feb.
3, and proceeds from the
luncheon \\'ill be used to pro-
vide art and crafts materials
for the Gardtn Grove Mental
Health Activity Center.
One of three such centers
Lag una G roup
Amearican Legion Auxiliary
of Laguna Beach gathers the
seeond and fourth Thursday
evenings in the Legion Hall.
Prince of Peace Lutheran ings from 7 to 3:30. Thursday located in Orange County, ii r •• TOPS •-SI t I Church, Costa 1\.-!esa v.·ill be mornings rom 10:.iv to noon .xa rens mee n is guided by specially trained and Thursday afternoons from Killybrooke School, Cost a the setting for the April 3 volunteers who offer form er l to 2:30 at Sears, South Coast ~1esa. Programs begin at 7 . nuptials linking Joyce Runge Plaza. p.m. every Wednesday.
p::Uents friend ship, security and Michael Ollila. 'p;i0iiiiiii0iiiOiiiiiii0iiiiiiiOiiiOiiiiiii0iii0iiiiiiiOiii0iiiiiiiiiii0iiiiiiiiii~ll
:ind needed ttierapy during f\1i ss Runge, daughter of Mr.ti
the ir readjustment to the com-and h1rs. E. H. Runge of
muni!y. Huntington Beach, is a
The center ls open each graduate of ~1arina iligh
Tuesday between 9:30 a.m. School and UCL She teaches
and 12 :30 p.m. and the State al the UCI Preschool.
J)(>partment of Social Welfare Her flance , son or Mr. and
hopes to open such centers Mrs. Eino Ollila of Costa
in all communities on a five-Mesa, is a Costa Mesa High
day basis, Mrs. Giesing said. School graduate and served
"MABEL-COME IN AND
GET YOUR PANTSUIT" ..
Wt hl¥t J lull ltlKlio" If bttvlltvl y1rnt I" 111 thl
111w ct10r1 IO lhtl you c1n kll!I your own P•"l1ult
er llrHI. Wt'U h1lp you gel 1l1rttd. K"lll!"g m1~hlnt1
••• htrt !1>11. Come In 11111 1.i 111 lht 11111111.
The KNIT WIT'0·:~~AST
Ph.o .. 545-2112 COSTA MESA
Tickets for the luncheon are1 ~i~n~t~he~A~ir~F~o~r~ce~·====J~~~~~~~~~~ $1.75 and anyone attending lsJr
asked to bring a packaged
cake or cookie mix which the
center uses for its weekly
refreshment!.
Mrs. Gle11ing or Mrs. Gerald
\Vessler may be contacted for
additional information.
FABRIC VALUES!
PETTI-POINT PIQUE PRINTS
'Crowning Glory
beauty salons
Brilliant new spring colors in mod designs ••. all on tho
season's most popular fabric
PERM~NENT PRESS, MACHINE WASH
NEVER NEE DS IRONING
PERM SUPER SALE!
• $2 0 MAGIC CURL
• $25 GLAMOUR CURL
• $30 REGAL CURL
s 9.50
$11 .50
s 14.5 0
BUDGET PERM always SS.95 (Normal .Hair)
SPECIAL SAVINGS !
SHAMPOO-SET
STYLE-CUT
Mo11.•T11M.•Wed
2.95
1.50
Lett• W..ti
3.45
2.00
SOUTH COAST ru.u 267 I. 17th St •• COSTA MIS.A
lower le~•l-Ne•l lo Se•ll PheH 141-•tlf
Pho11t 146-7116 Op •" E•t11i1191 I S~11d••
Opel\ f:¥t ni1191
Wt [All!!: JM\f'I ye~I l ... VI~• Miii
REG. 91c YARD VALUES
44" / 45'' wide
1 oo,.-. cotton
NEW SPRING WOOLS
BONDED KNIT JERSEY
acrylic and wool in a wide ra119e of solid colors
bonded to acetate tricot.
ALL WOOL FLANNEL
for new spring dresses, pant suits or mod-look
gauchos.
BONDED COORDINATES
PLAIDS 'N SOLIDS
textured matchmates on acetate & nylon
S4" widths
HOUSE .oFFllBRICS
l••'h Cent rle1-l11itol 1t s .~ Oi1go Fw~.
'
Cott• M"e--14S·1Sl6
Ore119tfalr Moll-Or1119•lh1""' t nd H•rbor
f11!11rt•tt-126·2l J 4
"•""' r1-110 ••• l rillol
hl'lt• ,.._,43.ss11
111"• Pertr Ct11t-l• ,,Im• 1! S11,,to11
l11Mo P...t-121•J2J
I ;
save $100 now
on Corning
•
No bumern.Nocoils. No drip pans. Just a
llat whito surfaoc. Completo thermostatic
hut controL Tho Countcr.mge" electric
range with ldf<leaning oven from Corn-
ing. Comes with eight Cool:ma!es• cook·
ware. See the most tovolutionruy advance
in cooking in 100 yearn.
SET Of 8 CORN ING .
COOKMATES INCLUDED !
-
SAVE $100 $49995
COSTA MESA-411· E. Sevont .. nth St.
646-1684 Dally 9.9 Sit. 9·6
EL TORO-LAGUNA HILLS PLAZA
137·3930 Daily 10-6 M/F. IC·9
f
I
,
~
I
'
I
[
•
7171 0
Jacket I" 71650 i/'
Pants j
X-170 L;~
Boot Le ggings
I I
' I I ll I~;..>
Irene
Gilbert
'
• '!
AT
WIT 'S
END
By ERJ\1A BOJ\tBECK
~ty dog, Harry, has_ a pro-
blem. He is the only dog :n
our block who is a dog. All
hill other canine friends are
n:?xt-to-h111nans who \Vear lilllc
sy.·eaters. \\'atch their \\'eight.
use a mouthwash, get spelled
in front or. and are literally
members of the families.
They bave high !Q's and
do extraordinary U1ings. This
is making my dog neurotic.
The other day at ca rd chtb
I watched hin1 sadly as the
\\'omen discussed l h e i r
favorite topic: Super Dogs.
''Did you read where a riog
in i\.l ichigan walked 300 miles
through snow-covered roads to
get baok to his orig inal
owners?" asked 1 woman. (l
cringed. Only last week Harry
cul through a hedge lo go
to the bathroom on our
neighbor's lawn and had to
have the police bring hln1
home.}
"~1y Flossie is smarter than
that," said her companion.
"She waits outside the
supermarket and directs the
carry-<lut boy to our car \\'!Tl-I
THE KEYS IN HER t-.tOUTl-1
FOR THE TRUNK."
·-,.....,,.._"!, ....... -... t:' 1
. The bes t selling kn icker of the "Knicker Blitz"
\\·111 make you feel terribly chic, or n1ake the1n also
as "gaucho" pa nts.
Jiere they are topped \V ith a bolero jacket fas-
tened by buttons \Vith chains -easy to make and
elegant ~o look at. Fabric suggestions: Linen, double
crepe. sil k and \vorsted, ra\v silk, synthetic blends.
· · These precl!t, preperforated Spadea Designer
P_attcr_ns produ ce a better fit. Order 71710, jacket;
give size, na1ne . address and zip. $1.25 postpaid.
Wedding
Performed
An aHemoon ceremony In
I
1,000'1 .-OIL PAINTINGS ,
WHOLESALE WA•EHOUSE
OPEN TO lHE PUILIC
50°/o OFF
S P I ~ UH f . EDINGEll, S.&NTA ANA l. au 's Lutheran Church, PhOll~ 1>H*
Laguna Beach was the setting I~ CEfEllS WANtt:o ~
for the marriage of Laurece
DeVore and Larry J\1. Kauscti,
both of La guna Beach.
The Rev. Roy G. Gesch
.. .......... ..
1!00Horto1 ---Order 71650, pants, give size, name, address
and zip. $1 .25 postpaid. Com bination offer BOTl-f
pa tterns for S2 .00. X-170 boot-legging fits all size~.
Sl.50 postpaid. Address SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX·
perfo rmed the double ring 6::===
rites.
The bride, ~aughter of »tr.
and J\lrs. Harvey J. De.Vore,
chose l\1iss Cris \Vetzel as!
n1aid of honor and Miss Bechi 15, ?llilford, N.J . 08848. -Riech as bridesmaid.
Morning Ceremony The bridegroom , son of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter 0. Kausch,
chose his brother-in-law Randy
DeVore af> best man. Grant
\\letzel and Tom Baylor were!
ushers. Karen Cornwell Weds The new Mrs. Kausch is
was given in n1arriage by her a graduate of Laguna Beach
father for the nuptial s. Serv-High School. Her hu~band .
ing as matron of honor was also a Laguna high school
her sister. Mrs. John D. graduate, attended Orange
\Vyatt. and other attendants Coast College before entering
included Miss Katie Cornwell, th US A
fashion ts child's pl ay at
th~ red balloon ltd.
Karen Cornwell of Cosl<i
;\lesa and James F. Chapi n or Santa Ana exchanged their
\\'eddini; pledges and rings
during a ceremony conducted
in St. :\1altl11as Lpiscopal
Church , \\!hillier, by the Re v.
Albert Jenkens.
The bride. daughter of !\Tr.
and i\lrs. »·lax T. Corn\\·ell,
C111•n H11<1•e Phoi.
MRS. J, F. CHAPIN
New Bri de
Gard ene rs See
Gree n Vision s
Vi sions of beauty \\•ill be
provided by J\·1rs. Sy Iv i a
Lea!licnnan of Kellogg Supply
Inc. for rr1r1nbers of the San
Cletncntc r.11rdcn Club at J .30
p.1n. on \\'C'dnesday, Feb. 3,
Jn thr VF\V 1/al\.
The speaker ~viii d1:-.c11~s
ferns for cool and gr<'en
visions of beauty which \\•ill
lie in club plans for an annual
flO\\'Cr show in April.
e . . rmy.
-~·
11of' IUO>I 1JcJj ~!,1f111\y ••ll••U~l
thihlrc11'1 tlorf' in the 10111hl•nd
16877 AIK01111uin St.
lll''rt~1:10.'i llt:AI II
{71') 146-1666
another sister. and l\1rs. The couple is residing at
\Villiam R. Chapin and l\lrs. forl Hood. Tex.
John Chapin' sisters-in-la\V orl .. .::.::;;.::::::..:;:;;:... ............... iiiii ... iiiiiiiii .... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!I
the bridegroom.
\Villiam R. Chapin served
as his brother's best man and
ushers were John E . Chapin,
his other brother, \Vyalt and
J ames Moore.
The new ~1rs. Chapin is a
graduate or Corona del ]I.far
High School and attended
California State College at
Long'' Beach \\'here she was
a member of Alpha Omicron1
Pi sorority . I
Her hu sband, son of l\1r. 1
and J\.1rs. John E. Chapin of l
\Vhittier. was graduated from
Californi a High School, \Vhil·
lier, and Rio Hondo J unior
College.
Chopter Looks
At Two Topics
A program on dance \\'ill
be presenled for members 011
the Beta Alpha Pi Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi tomorrO\\"l
at 8 p.m. in the home of
J\Irs. Nea l Glatman of Seal
Beach.
The program. to b e
presented by Gla\man, wi\]1
feature a guest speaker from ll
Golden \Vest Co\legc.
Concludir.g 1hc c v en Ing ,
io.·lrs, Forest Hall. civi l defense!
chaim1an, \\·ill present her
husband \\•ho will show a film
on biological, chemical and
atomic warfare.
EVERY TUESDAY
AND THURSDAY
FROM 4 P.M. TO
CLOSING IS
'BUCK'
NIGHT
AT GRANTS
FAMILY SPECIALS
YOUR CHOICE: * Roast Turkey Dinner * Golden Fried Chicken * Roast Beef Au Jus * Ham Steok Hawaiian
With potaro••· cho ic• of ''''table or crnm,
coli •law, rolt and bwtter.
$
Monday and Wednesday Evenings Only I
BRADFORD HOUSE STEAK DINNER
S•rvM with toJ~ed gr•en J-lad, 2 $3"
potatMJ. hot roll and butter. for
BROOKHURST & ADAMS
HUNTINGTON BEACH
You Work Less
You Save Money
Keeps thing s cleaner without
e£fort, eliminates bath tub rin gs
Soa p and clothing last longer
Smoolher.
f.:a,lrr Sfwi, et·
Fttl Fruit
•MOt••
Ask Apout Sears Convenient Credit Plans
Comple te In s tallation Available ! Just Ask!
''"' I Sears I
....... -.. ..... uo.
So . Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Ph. 540-3333
Bu ena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Ph. 828-4400
Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St. Pb.. 547-337.l
ONCE-A
oNVI
S>'LVANIA
GIVES
yOUTHE PLUS3
• .......... FEATURE \ 'PACI<
DAILY PILOT J5
"How dl1patln1. •I Wei I
woman. "That toundl ao •••
This is the sales event that ..mart bnyen: have been rit.ize
for. Now, for a limited time. you can get all the quality .
and engineering excellence Sylvania home entert.ain.men&:
products are famous for ••• and with up to $100 in en.
in gs. Bu t don't delay, if you m~ this· opportunity you
may have t.o wait a whole year for another chance at
bargains like Utese.
PLUS ONE: ·Sylvania 100% •olid state chimis nma coolJ!I' ' . runs longer. . .
PLUS TWO: Sylvania Ne w Dimensional Color. Combitlel
brightness and contrast for the sb.~pest picture ever.
25" diag. meas.
PLUS THREE: Sylvan ia I nstant Push-button Tuning.
Select and automatically t une up t.o 11 UHF and/or VHF
stations at Lbe l.ouch of a button. ·
SAVE $100
"
Plus Th~ Feature Pick Color TV model CL883. The big(eSt cok>r
acre-en ava1lable: _25" (d.11£". meas.). Inst.ant Pusb-button Tuning Ci'es'
a perfect color incture instantly. Solid state !Glbiiltar }()ON] ~
the v1titn1te in reliability.
HANDSOME MEDITERRANEAN
Full -featured Meditenaoean &tyle:d color
TV/stereo entertainment center wiUt 295 sq.
in. Sylvania color bright 85•picture tube. Plu1
ultra-reliable-Gffif.iltar~TM chassis with Instant
Color TM . FM /AM and FM stereo radio and
auLom atic record player assure 5Uperb stereo
SO<llld. Sylvania model CF664. •
NOW ONLY
NOW ONLY $84988
TV REC!.PTION BJMUl-'TSD
,.._1..._..~~...-.-
COMPLETE COLOR TV.STEREO
Complete color TV /st,ereo entertainment in
one superb instrument priced as low as many
console color televisions. 295 sq. in. Sylvania
color TV with remote control. FM /AM and
F~ ste~eo radio and automatic record pla,.er
"'With Air Suspension speakers provide superior
sound for your TV and stereo entefiainment..
Sylvania model CF570 •
NOW ONLY
HURRY! QUANTITIES LIMITED AT THESE LOW SALE PRICES!
646-1684
~
l111.egrl111 a11d Depe11dabllll.IJ since 1941
COSTA MESA
411 E. Seventeenth St.
dolly 9.9 Sot. 9-6 8l7·lBl 0
EL TORO
LAGUN4 HILLS PL.uA
(Next to Sev·Onl
dolly 10·6 Mon. Fri. 10·9
I
•
.. .
...
DAILY PILOT Sl1ll Pllllt 'l'M LONELY •• .' -Gary Saderup attempts to
spark a romance with Beth Titus in this scene from
"A Loss of Roses" at Huntington Beach's Nifty
Theater.
MONDAY m""' ·-.... <C> (30) Guest1: P1I H1nry, S•rrla M1ndt1
Ind 8r1&il '6', Walter Hltbl, Rachtl
Roberts.
FEBRUARY 1 (D ftllflJ SqlN (C) (30)
! V ~ N I N(,
@ID hlUm fOt' LJrrin& (30)
Gii) Mla;llllltt YaldlZ Sltow (30) ''°' 0 ljj (jJ • .,..., R.f.D. (C) (30)
1:00 I) 111 Nm (C) (60) Jury Dunphy, Howard becomes thi host of 1 B Kfl:BC NIWllMct (Gj (60) Tom local lelevisian literary program
snrdir. wl11ch le1tur11 poellf r1adlnp ind
O Th• Allen Show IC) (90) Tent•· bemmu •ttKhtd to an 1nonrmou1
thot Guests: Milty Allin, Vlnctnl fin named "Mellssa."
Pritt, Kitty CarUslt, ind 1nnounc11 D ID (I) m Wtrld PmllM MOf-
Ch1ro. Iii\ (C) "'S.11 HUI: Wht IUlllll llM
O Sii Q'Clotl Movie: (C) aoy1n11 Myslt1lo111 Mr. FOl!tr'l"' (wcltun)
If Mysltry" (utventure) '67-Rlch· '11.....[rnest BorrnJnt, Bruct Otrn,
ard [&111. Lois Nrtl.1111.on. l'•Plfll4!rs JudJ Gtu0n. A 11011·polltle1I ma11
wMi 1r1 totttd lloWll In 1 Soulh ii pe1suidtd to run for 1h1ritf tf
American Jun1le fi1ht for iurYivll. I 1111111 wullm town.
0 Didi V111 Dyk1 (30) 0 The F11ftlvt (60) m The FlinlstOMs (C) (60) 0 @(J) (ii ABC MondlJ Mo.le:
m @ (I) Stir Trek (C) (60) (C) "Dimtt America• Sl)'le,. (R)
ED Art Sludit (comH.IY) '67-Uitk Vin Dyke, Deb·
9 (1)N1n/Wuttier/Sporb (C) bie Reynolds, J1:son Robirds. After
i flshtf F111 Uy (30) • 17 Jf•fl of m1fli11e, mup!e 1t1m
· lfatldero J4 IC: (60) dlllo1tt procttdinp. Then 111 Ind·
Wi111s to Advenlllrt (C) (30) dent 1t • nl1ht dtrb brln11 them
Q9 LI Ktn f1M IUa1 con Co11111tll lo1ether 111in.
(ii) ftftl 11 ttlt Rfflld (q (30) OJ i IHC!M I U...._. C1tJ (t)
1:15 Ii) Chlrlll's hd (C) (60) SN wardrobt, ltmous •ts.
1:30 8 Cllclld C111tn (30) lf*l•I tflecb. ttuntmen, to\lnd m Tiit n,1'111 N• (C) (30) ld11u tnd ttltvlllon Ind motion
QI (I) NIC """ (C) (30) plc1ur1 If.In. Ill·-..... <Ci (30) llJ Rul•• (C) (60) (~ ~· Q!) (J) CIS Nn1 (C) (30) Se1rch of Rembrandl" em Slllcttd Fllm1/Mutlt1!1 (C) IE 30 Mlnu!a (C) (30)
!?J 1"' _, "-' (CJ (30) ID ~(IO) m LOii Dhldldos <30> mi" c;B ABC KIWI (C) (30) t:lO IJ 9 Cil Doril DIJ' (C) (30) Doria
7:00 IJ CIS EV111ln1 "-"' (C) (30} l1hrthi trltl to uv1 her old caw·
Watter CronkltL counllJ friend, Leroy B. Simpson,
B m NIC J01'1fr "'" (t) (30) lrom willlSSIJ frlthit1na: IWIJ Ill•
Dnkl Brinkley, Johll Ch1nmnor, 1m1U fortune ht hu won n •
Fmik MtCH. rodea prize. Q W1uir1 MJ LlrM? (C) (30) 0 Candid CINI (30) Gl @CIJ I Lon L1cy (30) IIi> Maltal4i/Pator'a Deati (30) m 0ra1•et <c1 (Jo) m eoncin • N ... (30)
ID @ 111111 CC) (30) lO:OO D 9 Cil Clrol lumetl Show (t) f11J SP«ul&Uon (C) (60) (R) "A (60) Rit1 H1)'11'Qrttl m1k11 htr llrst
Olnverutlon with 8. F. Skinner.~ t1lerislon 1ppur1nce. Jim S.UtJ
~(I) Trvth or ConllqVtllc.n (C) 11!0 g11tsts.
IJ Clltht tbt li¥1nc Word (CJ (30) 0 Bil 5 Ntwl (C) (60) ll:l't'tn iEI Rourie (JQ) ~1nders. 81rnty Mor1is.
fl:) SllltJllMtnle M11ll (55) 0 But11 W1rd News (C) {60) a> Movie 1i1mt (t) (JO) m Newt (C) (60) G«111e Putnam,
7:!0 II® (j) liun'"'oke (C) (501 H1I Fishm111.
"JHktl." Elie Br181len auerta u (() Tr1•r1 (C) (30) "Azttc Gold."
R1111'11s, • prison parolee who II· m I IJIClat i llw 111d Ordtr (C)
turns to Cod1• City onlr to find hii , (90) (R) Filmmaker Fredulc-Wise·
fi1nce1 m1rrltd with 1 littlt clr1. man presents a clost·up portrait of
Ci)~ (j) ID Red Skt~n (tl the bi1-dty polictm•n.
(30) Eva Gabor 1nd w~t11 Co• €IJ Lutttit1 (C) (30)
rutsl mi Te!e~ntm1 Ar1efttino (2 hr)
0 N'f'PD (C) (3Q) 10:30 Ii) Bill Johns Nm (C) (30)
0 @ (I) Q) Let's M~ .. J A Dul Oil lnttrtldurnb1t (3Q)
(C) (30) Mority H•ll hcsts. 11:00 IJ !ffl (I) IE "en (C)
(;JM.1MIM""'(C)"1"'""1 Cl ~<IJ!Ll""'(C) ,, nt1t lovtl" (dram•) '53-Kl1k D Cln ,,, T•P nld (C)
Dout111, l'ler M11ll. Trio ol &tlotl 0 riD Ntw1 (C)
storla : btllll lmpl'Hllrlo finds atld D Mnll: (C) "'COflO" (lcl·ri) '61
losu ""' In OM nlftll; I G11ttrn· -81!1 TrM~. Wllll1111 $Jtmlu.
e.ss 11111 In lovt wltll htr chu11; m (C) "'"'' If tllll TI•btr11nd"
1 d11:u1 11t1111st 111m r1tlr1 to lht (dt•m•} '60--Al111 Ladd, Je1nn1
11ftty DI tttelr new fDlll!d low.. Crtln. m Trvtti If CllnMq111nees (C) (JO) m MoM: •AattnbfMd HMrt" (dll· m tt l .. , •• Thid (t) (60) 1111) '5()..-{'loel Coward, Ctll• John·
IE) Cifl.., JO son.
(f) LI D111n1 (30) @ (]) PmJ M1aon
7:S5 mi Clllltien Gt s.pndo1 11:30 II 9 ())MIR' litlflllt (C) Aslrol·
L1IO 0 @ (I) UI) Llu1h·la (C) (50) oa 1pecial, le1huln1 authors Sid·
Mutello M1strol1nni, 1111Lln mo.It "" Om1rr. Lindi r.ooc1m1n ind
ktol, ptr1orms for the !!rat time on Cu111n MOOft, ICI011 Jolln Fors)'lll•
U.S. t1 levl1ion 111eameo11111t. ind Ntllur T1t1dllr, ind let An·
0 Yif&flllll l11U• Sllow (C) (60) 11le1 M11or Sim Yorty.
John Callf'ltta, Bin G1r1r11. Pttu 0 @ (I) m ltflmry C.ltOll (C)
Fa!k, HI!!! G111rdlno, Sue R11ney. Guests: BuddJ Rieh, P1tq Kelly, 0 (ill (JJ f!I Nt~d Came (C) Di1n1 Kelton.
(3Q) Bab Eub1nkS host1. 0 MDIII: "11111 Wm" (l'll)'l!try) m ft fll1 lhl Trvtll (C) {30) ·~et Niro', H1!!1ry Broo•"
fill Wttld Pr1u (C) (80) 0 Q] Did Cftltt (C) Johnny m M,. ti Ylsio~ (30) Btl'\dl, Arthur Godlrty, Geor11 Gt Maki J r..tr.11\u (CJ (60) Plimpton auest.
l:G5 a,;) Aqul Trn P1tints (25) 1:30 6 QJ (]) H1rt'1 Lllty (t) (30) fB World f'rm (C) (R)
l>llrtnr her ,,,.,. sate, Lu CJ' !Ind• 1~: ! ~~ ~ C~ 101•
whit 1pp11f1 to bl a "m11lc 11mp" • _. · -11
111d lhl ftmilJ It thrllltd with 1114111 (df1m1) 'SS-funk LO¥,loY, Lie
ludt •rMf the wllhts It 111nts. M1rvln, TtTIJ Moore.
O IHl ClHIJ n. ""' •-<Cl 0 0 ""' <CJ (30) Jtck Barry hosts. m CilClt 114
TUESDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
J:JO 8 "fats C.r11IY11" (Cl:ll!lldJ1 'IJ
-Rtd Skelton, tllh11 w1m1rne.
9:00 0 .,, .. tf tht Wild KlrtW' (wlll·
wn> '4,__..•'7 &Ith ttuati-. Jtflllt
IJl!tOft. "l'"1" (dflrM) ·~t -
P1u1ett1 Codd1td, R11 MWltnd.
I t :ICI D "Sii • CttMtd SMp" (comedy)
'62-bbtrt Wllfllf, Dolofa Hirt. 1 a •u be M*ltlil .. <ll'IJ'ft•m
'•S-J1rnu C1rne1. Rlcfl•nl Conte.
II (t) "MMM• (drame) ·~
Malll, Fl'ld hlf,
1:00 m "lltod •• ""Stln" (1dvtnt1111)
'4S-J1mes Ctan.,. SylYI• Sldn•r.
J:«l D .,...., ltftrt Dart" (dr1m•)1
'Y-.IMO Slmmo111, 0.1 D'H1tlihy.
Rholldt Fltmi.111,
C:JO I) tCJ '"1'11 Till Mil'" (1d\1nl\lr1)
Nifty Theater
'Roses' Magnificent Drama
FOR EVERYONE
TO SEE!
Phono 673-6260
By TOM BARLEY
Of ,._ D1ll1 rlltl lltff
William lna:e'• "A Loss Of
Roses" is a cla!!lc example
af a theme 1n which American
dramatists have no equal:
Small Town, America, and the
big -and tragic -things
that can happen tO small peo-
ple.
But there Is nothing small
about the magnificent way in
"A LOIS 01' lfOlll " ,,. "''"" w Wlllllm ...... dlrKI .. by Tom Tllui. HI llHl11n by Piijl
G•ICl"I', llthll"' by A:c-n Flllan. 111111 mlll6rtr A11n FIH1n, prf'Ufl!tc:I FrldlYl
11141 S.turll1Yl lhr0<0t h Ftb. 21 11 lht NlllY Tl'lelltr, J07 M1ln 51., Hu"' 11nsiron B.a1ch. THI CAST
l.111 Gre.n . . •. .. • .. .. .. Btth TI!\11
ICtnllY lllrd ............. GlrY 5edt"'~
Htltn ll1lrd .............. A:ulh WI DMr
A:lckv P-ts ............. A.on Flllan
Jeltv llt1ml1 ••..••..••.... P1ul GractY
Med1me OllJI ............. Ann Fllltn
llOM'f CIYllllllJh ......... Tom Trlm•n
whlch the Nifty Th e a t e t
players of Huntington Beach
take this absorbing rlay and
wrlna: every ounce o emoUon
and pathos from ii.
You can smell they have
a 1uccess right rrOm the open-
ing scene aad they go on
to make a memorable triumph
out of loge's tale of a
homecoming that brln&i a lot
or disaster and just a liltle
common sense to its three
principal.!!.
The most abundant laurels
In a play that merit s roses
all the way for Its gifted and
dedicated caat must go to
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY
ROAD SHOW ENGAGEMENT
STARTS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3RD AT
Cl1¥F.MALAND THEATRE-ANAHEIM
ALL SEATS RESERVED
Newport Beach
Cablevision
CABLE CHANNEL l·A
FEB. 1 • 5
PROGRAM GUIDE
MON., WED., FRI.
NEWPORT NEWSWATCH -6'00 P.M . -in color
Know \vhat'!I hsnpc'ning in NeWpOrt Beach-news, i&ports,
v.·cather, important local issues-nightly on channel 3.
ENCHANTED BACKYARD -6'30 P.M.
TnkE' n visit to the Coast Guard-a ne\V educational chi!· dren's series on Cablevision.
"FIVE SUNDAYS"_ 7,00 P.M.
!S golt tournaments-Doral & Citrus opens in Florida plus
more i l<eat golf action.
HERE, THERE AND EVERYWHERE-7 '~ P.M.
Join Jae! and her guests on a European holiday tour.
. NEWPORT NEWSWATCH -1:00 P.M.
II you mlssed It at 6:00-Catch It at 8:00 P.1.L
THE SCENE -8:30 P.M. -in color
Jay's ai.iest this "'l'ek-song!tress Kate Porter
SALLY OF THE SAWDUST-9,00 P.M.
Sta1Ting \V. C. Fields-Cablevlslon'a contlnuina 1trlts d't
film classics
TUES., THURS.
NEWPORT NEWSWATCH - 6,oo P.M.
Dally nc\vs shO\\'
Cl\llC ISSUES -6,JO P.M.
City Council rnccling hlghligh1s
SNOW JOB -7:30 P.M.
Jotn Bobbir S1n.hlrr for lnl C'l'f'ioting &tJests and exciting ski films-<'&ch \\'C'<'k on clt3nn<'I 3A
BASKETBALL_ 9,00 P.M.
?\-ton: txtltln& bukt'lbe.ll action from Nl\\·port lll!.rbor as the T711'1 tackle the \\'e1tmlnstcr Lions. '
NEWPORT BEACH
CAILEVISION
Z624 W. COAST HWY.
ln1t11U1tion $14.115 Monthly S11"Yic:e $6 .60
"THE RE'S MORE TO SEE ON CABLE TV"
FOR YOUR CONNECTION CALL
642-3260
Beth Titus for her superb
depiction of Lila Green, the
one-time family friend v:ho
goes back in later years to
find that little Kenny ls y,·ell
pa1t the diaper stage.
She is never less than
superb in any scene tiut her
scenes with Gary Saderup -
Ideally cast as Kenny Baird
- are the best thing we ha ve
seen in community theater for
some years. She memorably
conveys the anguish or the
woman who feel! that she
may have found her longed
for love, albeit it be w Ith
a man several years her
junior, just as Saderup con-
vincingly displays the turmoil
of the man Vt'hO comes to
recognize the gulf between
lu.!t and love.
Adding a full third to the
efforts of director Tom Titus'
very gifted t r I o ls Ruth
Wagner as Helen Baird, the
battling widow who realizes
all too late that the direclion
of her love for her son is
Jnev itably driving him out of
her home and her life. Her
realization of this produces
one of th e best moments in
the play and she brings a
lot of force and conviction
to several torrid scenes with
the distracted Kenny.
Ideal casting is a major
factor in the success of this
Inge play and director Titus
must take full credit._ for his
impeccable timing of hts of-
fering. Inge's low key script
demands an equally low, key
delivery from any cast and
JOHN WAYNE
A Howard Hawks Production
"RIO LOBO"
'ilch icdot"' ~-Z.1:1: •nvnr
"XOJITI: W.&J.IB"
A~W....... ..
ACH!w. GNTtl ll"6mSf~
#J.l.l~o..! lfO!NICOl()I•
A *1fOtW Cil:NftAt l'ICTUll5tllf.Mf flDll8
Alan Arkin
In
"CATCH-22"
Also
All M•cGr•w
In
"GOODBYE
COLUMBUS"
IOTH "It"
aALIOA
673-4048
OPIN
6:45
7ot I . lala...
hlbN P•nln1ul•
NOW THRU TUESDAY
"'" "3 in the Cellar"
wltlrl Joo1111 Cel/lire
BOTH IN COLOR
BOTH RATED "R"
THE BEST
Jl11d1rtl!1p poll• prO"I "P11•
nYh .. It one of the werld't nio 1t
popijl•r comic 1hip1. Rttd it d~i!.,. t,. !~1 DAILY PI LOT.
doesn't al ways, unfortunately,
get it; but Titus reads his
signals flawlessly and our
reward is a pl ay th at seems
destined for• honors and, sure-
ly, a longer run than these
fine Nifty Theater players en·
visage,
There Isn't very much ror
the play'a supporUng cast to
do but what there is gets
admirable treatment from
Paul Gracey. Tom Triman and
Ann and Ron Filian.
The last namtd most con-
vincingly injects a note or
two of savagery into his seedy
relationship with Lila Green
and his rea1 life wife con·
tributes a most channing
SEAN
CONNERY
isJAMES
BOND
cameo of Madame Olga St.1'::=:=:=;=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~ Valentine, the belle of the!;:
boards who Is more often ofl I NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES I
them than on them. I'·~-;~~:::;~:::::::::::::--~-;:;::=~~~;::=~~--'· Roses all the way ror all]
concerned with "A Lolls ol Jason Va~harJ·n Roses" and the armful N t
deli"ced to Miss Titus at final Robards Ross
curtain was more than richly
deserved by her and a
ma gnificent cast.
Divorce Asked
SANTA MONICA (AP) -
Hope Lange, 37, star of "The
Ghost and Mrs. M u I r • '
television series filed I n
Superior COurt Monday for
divorce from Alan Pakula.
Pakul3, 42, who produced
the movies "The Steril e
Cuckoo,'' "To Kill a Mock·
ingbi~d,11 and "Inside Daisy
Clover," and Miss Lange have
been married six years.
2NO COMEDY HIT
MIS NV
EDWARDS .
CINEMA VIEJO
IAN DlfCO fWY. AT U ,AZ TVllNOff
IJO·ltto
ALSO· J•ck L•lftMOll
The~
touched
each
other
ond
let go -
ol the 1~~~1 ..... ,--
worl d JGPIG ~~ -G---
IXCLUSIYI lNGAGtMIHT Al.SO. .bntiSll>Mlrt
NOW PLAYING He"ry Fo"do
WEEKDAYS 6:45
SAT. 3:30 &: SUN.12:30
AIFii-::oC>Fi I
..,. LUIUITll • IUll lillTlll .... _ ,._.,.wn
CE:Nll UllUY IUU Ufll
.. HNI URID ITAN?ll IAllY IULlll Uft'l llLUI
MIA 'l'YITll IAIMIA IALl
AllPOIT
HCHEYENNE
SOCIAL CLUI"
(GPI
Co-fe<1/"re
Jock Lemmon
Sandy Dennis "THE
OUT-OF·
TOWNERS"
-Tl·~--·-u~ .. -•-IOXOFJn<PMli.IJ
Fastest in West
Buy It. Stll It. Try the fasteSt mponse In the West against your
own clock. Test Dime.a-llnt Ads, whtre the action Is, In Saturday'•
DAILY PILOT.
ELLIOTT GOULD
or. A 0.l'llO L WOll'!:~ 1'"'""'1'o~
"I LOVE MY ... WIFE"
"LOVERS AND OTHER
STRANGERS" CllC CIC YOUNG
ClOlltS lrACHMAN COLOR
~o
TWELVE CHAIRS" G)
THE •1 MOYEL OF TltE YEAR·MOW A MOTION PIOTUREI
I• ''Th• Owt Of Tow11tr1" ~ .. ~.~M~ ... ~~AC~A~D~E~M~Y~A~W~A~RD!'!!'CO~N~T~EN~D~E~R ..........
1 ·MELVYN DOUGLAS
"I NEVER SANG FOR
MY FATHER" AIM>--Ali Mocgraw
In "GOODBYE, COLUMBUS" R
'51-Burt l111C11t1t, !
. ----~~~~~~~~~~~.~~~==""~~=1.·
LIZZ ,OLD
OAL,.Ml!'S
WOi'Rll!DI!
-AFR/t.1D -..oJ'LL..
GE,-KILLED!
..iAM! Wl-IERE's TMIS
ROOKIE BEEN ALL
MV
LIFE?
TUMBLEWEEDS
JUDGE PARKER
U NAWARE nlAT
/t\R.T M.A.S Alli:EA.Vf
HEARD .-.sour
ELMO'S .A.RREST,
SAM 011:1VER
GIVES J.l1M
TI-4E NEWS OVER:
™E PMOt.iE '.
11-IERE ARE SOME
11-11NGS I 'D SETTER
PLAIN JANE
WMAT
AM I
SA\llNCi?
By Clinter Gould
OKAV, LET ~E~
GET KNOCKl!D ~.
-WHO CAAl!5?
By Tom K. Ryon
-rnATWAS
A PLM:KEREP .SJGtl
By Horold Le Dowe
I'D \.I KE 10 TAllC wrT'H ELMO FOt1: ELMO MUST'VE 60T IN TOUCM Wln4
VRlVER! CALL \llNCE BACK ! TELL
\.HM TO FIND OUT WMETHER PR1VER:
WAS INVOLVED IN ANY WAY WITH
THE ARREST!
A FEW MINUTES, B08,.15UT NOT IM
MIS CELL! I HAYE THE UNEASY
FEELING TME W ANV 15 IMPU ST~E5
CAN SEE IN51P'&YOUR. J~IL!
PERKINS
Ll'L ABNER
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
n
ANIMAL CRACKERS
I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWE R I
ACROSS
l Oeranqed
4 Carried
'I Make wavy
14 Me llow
15 Wa lklrw_i
16 City of
.Asia
17 Oc topus
19 Member
or US
veterans'
g1011p:
lnfcrmal
20 Herl>
21 FDl'ml.'r
UN VIP
2-2 Hawaiian
food
23 Assembly
plzcc 24 Employers
26 Slanqy
negative
29 Massa-
chusetts
""' 31 Intent
32 Boy's nartlf!
33 Inebriated:
Slang
3L New Neidc.o
town
38 Ex ist
46 Fath'r
ot moth'r
47 Float
49 Bishop's
s'at
50 Epoch
51 Stream
5Z Laid by
54 County in
Scotian LI
58 Move at
1:1 11 speed
60 Olsl3nt:
Comb. fcrm
61 Pl ;ii11s
~11 ima 1
li2 Instrument
ti4 Exter-
minating
~qent
li6 US Revolu-
tionary
commander
67 Pr oportiona l
relation
68 Fish
6'1 Mus ty
70 Pungs 71 English
cathedr al
lown
DOWN
7 Most
inquisitive
B E-tr emely
de I le ate
CJ Skin
i rritation
IO Orama
o! old
California
11 Untouched
lZ Man's
nickr\<l me
13 Stone
18 Ellls •
" Vancoll\'tt
24 Strip
211/71
35 Par t or
musketeets'
slogan:
3 words
37 Rock
40 Garments
4Z Gum --·-
45 More than
two or
tt.ee
48 Interlaced
53 Ra ise the
spirits of
55 Lon q·
c.onlinued
practice
5& Pertaining
to mus lea I
quality
MISS PEACH
MARCIA r~ A ve~Y O!FF/CUL."'r
PEl(SOt-.1.'
yE5.5HE'S
(j(}INf?
'THltOUGH
A STAGE<.
IT AL.WAY~
COMeS A90Uf
IHIS llME. OF LIFE.
IT :S CALLED I
'Plt5-ADOLSSCENCE..
HEif. NfJIT"
STAGE
WIL.L SE
A I.OT eAsre.i:t
TO PEAL.
WITH •••
By John Milff
By Mell
YES
IT COMES
1N A&OOT
70 YEAR51 AND IT'S
CALt.eD
"SeNILITY.'
39 Large
vu!tures
4 l Person
who fixes '
I Title of
r!Spttl
2 US rocket
stage
25 Humb1Nf
oneself
27 Forml'r
S. Amelican
VIP
57 Admissio11
59 EQtdne bl Organic. STEVE ROPER By Saunders and Overgard
,mining
claims
AJ Had dinner 44 Content of
some TV
program
I 2 l
"
17
20
2l
lJ " "
"
" "
" n .. ..
'!""
J Supreme
spirit
of ev il
4 Large
bundl'
5 Below par
6 Ois!urbs
• ' •
t:ii" II
"' " ~" :
..
~ .. .. .~.i"
~"'
I
28 1nfl uen ~e
JO Gas 33 H ~brr
da slier y
item
34 E nlire
• '
:>;,
' :-,.
"
9
"
19
22
I • ''
'°
nature
b2 Card game
63 Labor
organizat ion:
Abbr.
t.5 Perfcrmed
" " "
y,
l6 " ~
lJ "*" ,. .,, \" JI
' " "
" .. ..
"' """'
j
" " " " SI
"
'
·' ..
1., n
' '
WM!E IT SHOUlO
I CAME BACK TO GET MY BE THE MEM IM
PET AIR·PQLLUT6R, BLUE ,SIS.'-J
LSTEVE/ 1'HOIJGMT I HEARD JLJST FOUND
l"iotJ TAlKIN' TO ')oOlmSELFJ SOMETHI NG/
~·SHALL I 5EWD
FOR Tl-IE
MEM IN
WHITE.
SUITSf
PEANUTS
IKE'S "FUTU•E
8001\. HUH~
THAT'Lt. COME
IN ttANDY/
• ... . _,,..... ..
.,
, ..
RIG~T.' TO
START WITH.IT
Monday, F'ttituu-y l , 1971
THE STIANGI wo•LD
MR.MUM
·o
)111;'/1:£
·~""'' .lAilCA~ '"· ~il!I\• ~
DELIVERIES
DAILY PILOT J 7
By Chortn Barsotti
By Gus Arriola
.ACrfosr '11"15! / F'UT'N '6ti"STJ...,r Wl'AT~l'R!
· By Roger Bollen
ooa
" '
~·
DENNIS THE MENACE
•
Ja DAIL V PILOT s Mon,;l.y, Ftbruary 1, 1971
LEGAL NOTICE LEG.U. NOTICE
'
.......
LEGAL NOTICE
nlonri• l!ldtl•• '" ''''" IP~V&bl•
Your ltloney's Worth Important
Confidence Health Insurance
Plans Mostly OK Ret11rnin« l'.'l
NEW YORK (AP) -Somtl
1·eturn nf confidence is ap.
pearing in that somewhat
obscure but vitally important
area of cnrporate finance call·
ed the C()mmercial paper
market. Activity rose In
December for the first time !
since ~lay. r
By SYLVIA l'ORTER the fundamental rule of buying
insurance nnly from a com•
pany or cngipanics llcenscd
::-i your state."
Your int erest in
Across the country in recent
"''eeks, full·page newspaper
ads have been offering you
s p e c I a 1 hospitalization in-
surance plans under which,
for a small fee, you can get
$100 or more a 'veek if you
are hospilalized for sickness
or accident. And you can gel
the benefits in cash until
either you've usec' up $10.000
or you die.
''No age limit. No medical
examination required. No in-
vestigations. Just I a x -f re e
cash protection for you and
your loved ones." says one
insurance company w h i c h
advertised $100-a-week-up-to-
$10 ,000 in New York severa l
days ago. "For people cf all
ages and families of all sizes,''
the company added, quoting
premiums ranging from $2.95
a month for a man between .
the ages or 28 and 45 10
$6.50 a month tor a man aged
75 or over.
hospitalization i nsurance
never has been greater than
todBy for the simple reason
1ha1 the costs of
hospitalizatinn never ha Y t
been so staggering.
As a result. the importance.
nf piggy-back coverage never
hns been so crucial to millions
n f Americans, emphasizes
Schiff. "People need policies
to supplement their basic
ho~pitalization and protect
them from financial disaster
in case of catastrnphic ill-
And 1~hat had caused the
decline? t.'othing Jess lhan the:
inability nf the Penn Central!
Transportation Co. tn pay ill!
bills on time. So shocked were
other corporations that they
dared not lend out their excess
cash.
"ARI-: 1'11ESE plans any
good?" asked my editor.
"Must people buy them during
the restricted periods ad-
verlised or can we buy the
insurance ·wherever ""e want
and \Vhenever we want~ Ho\v ,
can the companies make
mone}' on such s m a 11
premiums'!''
Ansv.·ers: Yes. the plans arc
good for most of you: varia-
tions or them are so ld by
many companies, so just ask
any reputable co mp a n y
\vhether it has a plan availa ble
for you: the costs to yeu are
so lo1v because the plans are
mainly marketed t hrou gh
newspaper ads. direct mai l
and credit card billing stuffers
or· \Vith very IO\V commissions
lo agents -all inexpensive
wavs of selling and thus jusli-
r,;iig the small premiums.
"But buy these plan::. only
as piggy-back coverage on ex-
isting Blue Cross nr other
basic OOspitalizalion plans.·•
v.·arns Milton Schiff. president
of Madi:ron Life Insurance Cn .•
a New Ynrk-based insuranc1•
company which has pioneered
in piggy-back medical in-
:;urance.
1•VOUll BLUE CROSS lype
policies provide you y.•ith
many other benefits in ad·
dilion to your rocrrry and board.
Check these benefits.
"And by all 111eans, nbey
ness."
·ruE SIMPLE inexpensive
policies to \Yhich I referr~
above provide cash benefits
from $10 to $50 a day. payable
each day you are hnspitalized,
usually without time limit.
The money might go for such
items as private r ooms ,
private nursing care, ph ysi-
cians' fees, convalescent costs.
extra home expenses. The an-
nual premiums for a man
about 40 years nld wnuld be
$l3 to $.16.
But nn top nf lhis, the whnle
area nf piggy-back major
medical policies is suddenly
npening up. One New Vnrk
company, for instance, is now
offering a piggy-back lo cur-
rent major medical insuranct
policies which would pay up
to $100,000 in extra bene'its
after the hnlder has used up
his deductible of between
$6,000 and $31f,boo nf benefits
under his existing coverage.
The annual premium for the
entire family riiight be as low
as $60 to $70 a year:
When national health in-
surance \\'ith protection
a~ainst the skyrocketing costs
of ca tastrophic illness or ac-
cident -becomes \av.·. the
need fo r this Sort or protection
1\'ill diminish or disappear.
' But even though bills for
this sort nf insurance already
have been introduced into the
92nd Congress and even
though President Nixon may
grab I.he lead in utging_t.be
insurance , lhe time of paasage
nf thi!'I legislation is far from
certain. and surfly way nff.
So, if you have use for
piggy-back insurance, buy il
-while heeding the warnings
in this report.
There is a good reaS<Jn. The
commercial paper 1narket. isl
\vhere many large con1pan1es
lend and borrow \~ilh each!'
other for short t e r m s ,
ranywhere from a day to 270
days. The notes are un-
secured, backed only by a
company's reputation.
Naturally the re ls some ele·
ment of risk in such lending,
but participants in this pro-\
fessional market felt they
kne1v enough aboul each other1
lo avoid taking any great
risks. It was a mar,ket built!
nn confidence.
\vhen the Penn Central, thel
nr.tion's largest railroad, ran
into financial lrnuble the cvenll
thnroughly shook corporate \
finance officers. Perhaps for
the first Lime they fully ap-
preciated the element of risk!
in commercial paper.
As a result. the amount or
paper outstanding sh r a n k
sharply. But in December, the l
Federal Reserve Bank nf New
·1 ' York now reports, 1 rose
again for the first time since!
the PC debacle.
Total vnlume last month
rose by ti millinn to $.~3.54 1
billion after having declined
$1.3 billion in November. Snme l
nf the increase may be at·
d. ' tributed lo an expan 1ng
econnmy. but it suggests also
that the PC shock waves are1
1 receding.
In another credit market.
participanl!i are engaged in
what is being termed the
trade-0rr. a game that coold
have important consequences!
for lenders. borrow ers,
builders and nthers. Jt in·
volves the home mortgage
inarkeL
A 3rd Car in Future
r..1ortgage interest t a I c s
1 along \Yith n!her c red i t1 charges arc fa1\1ng, a ract
closely watched by milhcms;
nr individuals ,.,. ho con-
template buylng ho1ncs . If)
rates arc fallin g. 1hcsr. people.
they may continue to !all. , I
"
For Ma11y Ar1iericans
IN tuGll GEAR
"'ilh Carl Carstensen
There"s a third car in tht
!uture of n1any An1ericans.
but it's more likely lo be
a recrealion vehicle than
simply a means of transporta-
tion.
The prediction !hit\ con-
linued expansion of t h e
re!.'.reation niarkel \1·ill mean
a fun vehicle in the garage
c11111e from Harold Sperlich,
41 year old Ford vice-presi·
denl an d general manager or
Truck Opera!inns.
Sperlich poin1ed out that the
v.·hole face of recreation is
ch:'lnging and autornoth·e com·
1>anies such <'Is fo!"rl must
change v.•ith it. llr told
11c1\·smen at1ending "Ford Div1-
dion":;. 1971 recreation vehicle
N;itional nev.·s confC'ren ce at
Rancho C::ipislrano lhat thr
recreation \•ehirle boom or 1he
6(1's v.·as caused by the ne1v
driveability and liveability or
recreat i on vrhicle.s.
particularly in trucks -and
the consequent 11·illingne~s nr
11·nmen to go rnotnr 19mping.
"THE ~!OST im -or I a n t
development is th at cars and
tr 1r.k~ rire changing in con ' . .
cept," he said. •·for example.
y,•hile people still net'd cars
and buy them enthusiastically .
they are looking at many Qf
.S.hem as vehicles v.•ith a more
utilitarian inlenl. Teh love af-
fair with the aul.onlobile is
still there. but people buying
1h<>m place more en1phasis on
using them and less on JUiil
owning them.''
I-le said that the auton1obilc
industry enjoyed boom years
in the 1960's partly because
people \Yanted and could af-
for d a second car. and the
success of the J970's is
partially predicated on !hr
American fan1ily 's need for
a third vehicle.
"ll seems to me tha1 the
lhird unit \\'i ll n1ore than likel,v
be a recreation vehicle -a
motorhnme, a pickup camper.
a Bronco nff-roader, but a
fun car."
"A COflr.llNUED boom in lhe
t970's \\'il\ be spurred nn by
megalopolis living and ttie
human nred to gtt back to
the land,"' he said. "In the
old days y,·hen America was
primarily a rural country, the
Their thinking isn't without 1
merit, becau!>e a wh<llesale 1
reluctance to buy conceivably !
could actually force mortgage
rates lo\ver, thus fuHilling thzl
£'xpectations. It could happen ,
because Americans in general !
are shrewd in usinf: credit.
The U.S. Savings and Loan
League is attempting to wa.rd)
off this pnssibility by rem1~·
riing the public Iha! even 1( I
interest r:ites comr clown .
housing prices arc likely tol'
continue highzr.
The 1eaguf', whcr:;e members
are the biggest mortgage 1
lenders in the country. ar gue 1 that no\v is the tinlc to buy,
\vhich is exactly 1vhat you
1 would expect them to say.
But they do supply some !acts
to cons"1der. I
Assume. for example. tha\1 1he home tn be purchased re-
quired a $2~1.000 mortgage atl'
7 percent interest for 25 years.
thus making month ly
paym ents $176.69. excluding
tuxes and o t her cnn·1
sidr.rations. nf course.
The purchaser clelays, anrl 1 as he delays the price nt the
house he hnpes to buy keeps \
going up. thereby forcing him
to consider a larger mortgage
1; he is to keep his monthlyl
µnv1nent constant at $176.69 .
1,1w!ul rno.,,v ----'"' llfT'f " t~lf '" lol ltw-u,.;lfd 51,1'ft•1 •II ,1 .. ~1 11110,
•nll ln!trt!I. co•\VtYrtl lo •"d ~w hold
; ~.
1.000's OF OIL PAINTINGS
f
big vacation \\'as for a mHn
fro1n Paducah, Ky .. to go to
New York. Now, v.·ith most
people !il'ing suburban are;ls
and megalopO!ises, the big
vncRtlon attrartlon fnr Ne1v
Yorker~. say, is to i::n J>aducflh
ir his mortgage require[Jlenl l
increased to S26,000, he must
ha ve a reduction in interest
to about 6.6 pcrcrnt. If il1 . goes to $27 ,000 hl'.' must hope 1
l>y !I und~• )•Ill ., • ..,, .In !he D•OO•flY
<11t1•I• 1n ••Ill tovnlv •nll ~l•I• ~••«ID«!
11 tohOW1;
Lot 1S T••t! ]•~1 In m~ Ci!• ol I Cntl• Mt,., Co"nlY ol O•An~•. ~1..i•
01 Ct111o"''•· •• o•• '"~" '~<o•<l'd on Boo1i. 1)1 Pn9e-. 6 10 l• l1>tttt•••I I
ot "'~"!· ln 1n1 011'~• of 111, Covnlv I ll:oto•n•r ot •~hi CttuA1• Altl.: l"H AN:l•OI ~1, Co•i. ,_.,,,_, • c .. 111or .. 11 51111! 1111 wu1 ti. ft\Hf:, hi;! wl•lleU' !ll\"•fll"I Of '"'"lf\IV, t>P•tU OF lmpll"" ,,..,.,,.,, 1111•, oou•·n l111> or •ncii,.....
brl"tt'· 10 lllUtlY 11\t i...!~"'G,.....11
1 t«v•"" l>w 11\cl Deed. lfltl1t11o,.. 111<> t~ "~ t•&oo ,.1•• ol Ill• 11"\lllr• ~nd •(of l~f ltvll• <r•Mtcl b~ ••ht ·-· ..:IVI"(.... "'•••w~o•. Wolf\ l~!~r,O •i l .. <11"~ '"'°'~'II. •nd ti!<> unt,,10 P"ftC•P~I
d "'' n(ll• ·~<~•l'CI bY l~t >~It ~...., 1.,.,.11 Ul.-Ol t1 "'''" lft"'"' ,.,..,to.,
!rt.., J• '' 1•. !flO ~• ••t•·-'"
•· •• id .... " I 1 W[S T~l()f 1 11Ll'
C"M"ANY ,. H• '"'"'" llY WESTE"lllll Of!EO I (OllPOllt•T•Olll
' aw WAYlll[ H ~IHtwS
A .. tl'lot!!ttl Olll<t• ,,, 1.0.t
1'11~1. P wt'llllllH 0••1'<1• Co.isl Ot•lr
lltb•ut•Y I. I. & U. 1911 )(l.o " I -----
Care•1 'I Who
N• other nev:spapc_r ill the
L1 WTirld cnrts about your com· I 1nunity like your cornmunity .
1
d11ily nl'1vsp.apcr doc.s. It's
1' Ir~ OAILY P\l . .Q'T.
WHOLfSALE WAREHOUSE
OPl:N TO TH( PUILIC
so•;. OFF I h it IE, IEOINC£11:, SANTA AN,.. f
Ph""t 115·-·-~ 1 OEl.LIEll:S WANTIEO I
AUTOMATIC
GARAGE DOOR
OPENER
SALE
ORANGE COUNTIES
VOLUMI OISTlllUTOlt
LOWEST PRICES!
l•utel1eti•~ ' s,,.,,,,
G•tO<J• Deer "'''"''' R1pl1c1'11
642-3490 I
Sea Coa st
Builders Supply
165 1 Pl1centl•,
Coit• Me11
'
figuratively, if not ;'lc-
tuAlly."
Sperlich pointed nut the im-
portanct nf the recreatinn
market to the automobile in-
dustry, and particularly to
Ford.•
for an in1eresl rate of about l
6.2, l'lnd if it rises to $27 ,500,
he \\'Ill need a n1ortgage cos-
1 ting less than 6 perceni.
tmplicit in the league·~1 outlook is the suggestion lhat1
prices could f'asily rise at I.he
ralf' suggested but that in·
terest rates 11re l'l()t likely to
"Salts or vehicles used In fall below 6 percent. I
outdoor rttre.ation -~talion Still anothe r faclor mav br
y.•agons. cars for tov.·ing and entering the trade-off. Some
trucks for camper units -builders art plannin~ to hold
represent more th:in 25 j)('r· do"'" price lncrcast~ by cent of Ford D1visinn's annual . d II h I k I rcduclnR the site of the houses car an l'.l 1. r11c vo umr. ff
1 ht said. ''And il's probable . ~ ~r. -----
!hat more than 800.000 ~ale~
ptr year are mndc by J-~ord
dealers lo people ,1·ho "'iii
use !heir vehicles for recrea-
11011 .''
llE SAID TllERE nre about
ten rnillton r c~re 11tIotia1
\•chicle(; on Lhc road In
Anlerlc.11. a figure that \\'ill
uicrca sc 10 25 1n11lion by 19i8
CHILDREN
LIKE
UNCLE LEN
Who Listens
To Landers?
/
•
-
SINCE ...
SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA • • •
• • • Just
About
Everyone
Does
That's Who
You Can 'List en ' lo Ann Landers
Da ily '" Th e
' I
•
WHAT'S YOUR HANCiUP?
' I
'
' .... -...
'-~. H h·· • "'· , ,r
If mountain climbing is your thing, we can't help you much. But if
your real "hangup" is looking for a broad view of th e news that in·
·eludes a good, hard l9ok at what's happening at home, the DAILY
PILOT has the line you should grab. We give you a broader view of the
'
world than you can ge t even 12,000 feet above Chamonix in the Al ps .
Mont Blanc, ove r th ere in the background, is the highest peak in
Eu rope, which reminds us ...•
. . ---.. ----·-.. --. --. -.
•
'
• Our local coverage is hard to top. When it comes to piling up infor-
mation about local schools, sports, social events, entertainment or
crime and calamity, we're king of th e mou ntain. We're your home-
town newspaper. We make keeping up with the world, the nation,
th e state, and the county, your town and your schcol a lot easier than . .
climbing a mountain. Just grab our line. No more hangup. _The DAILY
.
PILOT will take you where you can see the view from the top .
l
~·~...,.r.~~-;>'t ~~·"..'t"···r "" •
DAilU .·· Pj<JT
.. "
f
'
. 20 DAILY PILOT Monday, Ftbl'llary 1, 1971
6.50xl3
Tubeless
Blackwall
ALLSTATE
PASSENGER
T IRE GUARANTEE
(:uar.in1ecJ A:ain,.1: All rire f.ij[.
ure or defccu in flUteri.U or,..·ork·
1n3nship.
For Dow ~iu:: f or ~1e life of 1hc
nriginal ucaJ. ·
\\•hat Sc;,n. Wi ll Do: Jn exch~
lot 'he ti~. rt-pl<>Ce ·it. ch¥gin,:;
Jor the proponion of current ie\1-
ing price plus I'ed<"ral Excize T.u
1 h~t n:prcKnts ttea<l u1Cd. Rep.U r
nJil punctures at noch:iri:e
(;uaranlecJ A;:ai115t; Tr~Jd v.•t:ir-
our.
Fur Jlow I.on~; 'Ilic nun1bcr of
nmnth$ spccifieJ.
What Scars Will 1)0 ; In o:rha.a.t:e
for the t.ire, replace itr chari:ing ·
the current selling price plus fc,1-
erJI bci11e Tu lc)S the follo..-in.g
allowance:
.\lunlhly Gnarantee
18 to]i
27 , ... 39
•iO
Allllwance
JfY,,
:io~;,
2)~o
Sears
Plu:s J.7a
Feder al Exci~c
'f ax aud
Old 'f jre
•
36-MONTH GUARANTEED
Size Tnd .. I• F.E.T. •• t".....i •• 1. F.E.T. J'.;. .• . 1ze l'r><e -·---'fubr l1·.•il ll lu1:l..\\;il l 7. 7.i'" I t :! ~.87 :!. l j ----I-----6.50:< 1:1 16.1:7 I .'ii: fl.:!:i'" I I :!7.H7 :!.:::.: -· ·-------·· 7.7.i\" 11 :! I .ll7 ., 17 ::.:-1.ix 11. '.~J.U7 ~.;,:~ . ,_-_·_ --fl.2.)x I I :! 1.87 :!.:i.1 : 7.i.l\" 1.1 :!li.87 :.!.PJ . 'J'n!Je.le~~ \Vh ile'''all B.1 :;,. J:i 211.87 :!.:i;; ·--6.50'\:l :l I0.87 J.iS t:. l.JxJ.) 3:!.87 :! . .)3
7.35xl'1 :!J.1:17 2.0,
FREE
U111h:ry
ln~11/1111ion
Express Higl1way Hauler
6-Ply
Rated
Nylon
• 6-pl y raled ny·
Ion cord con·
s truc tion for
s tren it lh and
Joni mileage
•Wrap around
tread e nabl es
better cornering
and more sta·
Lility
1
l
I
SIZE !>ri1:e
Tube-Type
f'i.70x:l 5 :?-t 26
7.00xl.) :l:J. j'j
6.50x 16 :.!0.()6
7.00xl3 3J.7j
'l'ubeleii..,
6.70~15 :!6.06
26
Tu tw:r,,..
rlut 2.40 t·.1::.1·.
F.E.T.
:.!.40 .
2.8.)
:?.61
3.00
2.70
NO TJlADE·IN REOU!RED
·•
Guaranteed 481\fonths SAVE $5!
IDGH VOLTAGE BATTERY
R egular
S27.99
Tracie-In
Price.
99
\\lj11.
TrJJ~.111
'•-. l~<J, 1U '.
4.N·~ n:t.,~""'-
4.l:.;.. 4J'IU
F'its 90% of All A1nerica11-
Mad e l~-Volt System Cars
S""""' Bau.-ry
f;uarantce
Fri-!" repl;l(emcrn: withio
'Jtl dJrs of purclo~se rfb.11.
1crv f'tOV('j detccri9e. A If•
',i! •·r••UJJ)<,,.\\'eri-pl~cc rht" l·~rren._ ii dc(e.,U,·(', ~nd <hJ~ yo11 onlr for 1he
pen oJ of owncr.•hip, b.i~t-.:1 on the rcgu.l.U" price
leis uade-in lit the time of
rc1urn, pro-r.ncd O\"ef Ito!"
number of months of ·
.':Ullr.llltec.
SAVE $166! Sears Air <;:_~> ~=§ . ., 39c Quart Cau
filters for IIcavy. Duty IIea''Y Duty Regular s.'.l.99
O.E.R.* Shocks
3~c~
•Fit 1nost cars
"Ori;::iiu l Equipmenc Rt·
pliM::cmr11t
11/2· Ton Ifydt·aulic
Jack
3ss
•Two-piece lifti ng
l1andle
• Buih-in relea~t
l·alve -
tUl N.l PA•ll: TA 1°4400, .S21-6Jl0
Carburetors
199
•Traps t.l irl and J u ~!
11u1·1ic le~. A t-c n!'a•
tional buy!
.'\ .. I VE'I! -. Sttu·dy '4.99
Ratchet Jack
399
• J 1/.i. ton capacity
• •\djus1able hrii:.h 1 ~
• S1urdyco n~tructi on
ll MONTI GI 3·3911
CANOGA PAIK 340.0661 GLINDALI CH 5·1004, Cl 4-4611
COMP10N Nf ._2111,. Hf .2•1761 HOLLYWOOD HO 9·5941
5EAllS.,JlOE8\ICK A1'DCO. · COVINA 966-0611 ING~WOOO Olt 14J21
Shop filghls Mo.,. thru Sat. 91JO A.M. to ~:30 P.M.,"Sun.doy 12 Noon to S P.M.
-·--'\ -.1 • Motor Oil
HEAVY HEAVY 27~ DUTY DUTY DTOR OIL MOTOR OIL
•~feels or exceeds
ull new car ru1111n-
facturer's lvarranly
requireruent11
SAVB '4!
Regular '18.99
Battery
Charger
1499
lONO llACH HE S-0121
OLYMPIC & SOTO AN l ·S211
OIANGI 637°2100
PAS ... DtNA 611 ·3211, lSl-4211
POMONA NA f ·lltl
• Dl'lh.,.n 7~~m 11
inili~I ~UrJt
• Ch•rJt& •I 11e1dy
I) •nlf' nit
• l li ~h nnl ·pUI
lr•n•fortner
l i l,jl
PICO wr •·•262
SAN1'A ANA Kl 7·3371
IAN1'A Fl S,_INGS t44•1011
SANTA MONICA IX 4-6711
SOUTH COASI PLAZA 140-~JJ
lti#Jltil Oil Filter
199
•Fillers out ilndire.
d irt li t'rore it
1·rachcs the engine
Battery Booster C~ble
"ar~
• J:!.ft. booster cable
117 162
THOUSAND OAKI 4f7·4S66
TOllANCr J42·1Sll
Ul>LAND 915·1927
'i'AUIT PO l-1461, 914·2220
VllMONT l'l 9· 191 I
I
Mond11, Februolry l, l4J71 O~ILY PILOT 21
Superstitio11s ~Archer
Sticl{s With Same Ball
Gilroy Pro
l Captures Ri ch
Golf Tourne)·
..
PEDRO RODRIGUEZ (CENTER), CREW CELEBRATE DAY TONA VICTORY.
Oliver, Rodriguez Survive
Mechanical Agonies, Win
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -
"There were. times," said England·s
Jackie Oliver•Sunday, "when I felt like
swapping plaqi, with mr wife back home
-and she's pregnari•."
Oliver, R 29-year-old Grand Prix vet,
had just finished what he described as
t?-e toughesl chore of his motoring career
-co--driving 1 a Porsche to viclory in
the Daytona 24-Hour Race with team-
mate Pedro Rodriguez of Mexico.
An experitnced endurance racer,
Oliver shar ed'. a multitude of problems
with his le!'s excitable Me xi can
i;tablemate. And he admitted that he
worries more when the car isn't running
r ir'·'.. 1.
Sportff in Brief
' -
"I fel t like crying when
transmission went bad with three
th.
hours
to go," the modhaired Britisher said.
"1 was driving when it failed and was
ready to accept the blame if we were
forced to quit. Fortunately, we got il
repaired in time to continue.'C-
The v.·inning Porsche spent an agoniz-
ing 93 minutes in the pit having the
difficulty fixed, and both Rodriguez and
Oliver said they counted every second
of the time mentally.
Oliver's wife Marilyn , a former London
model he married last July, is expecting
a baby in February. She was unable
to come to the U.S. for the race.
Services for OS U Ace
'
Killed in Auto Crash
KLAMATH !FALLS, Ore. -Funeral
services wil11 be held today for Mike
Keck , start"lg guard for the Oregon
State University basketball team. who
was killed early Saturday Jn an
automobile accident near Susanville,
Calif.
Keck . 21, J\lamath Falls, was in an
auto whi ch left U.S. 395 and rolled O\•er
1everal times. .
Casals advanced to the finals of !he
Virginia Slims Invitational tennis tourney
here Sunday night with sparkling vic-
tories.
Miss Casals won her match 6-2, &.t
over Ann Haydon Jones. Mrs. Jones
could never settle into her game and
tried to out-hit her smaller, faster op-
ponent when she might have slowed
down the game.
Rodriguez and Oliver, both of whom
ha ve been in 1,1•inning cars in the famed
_LeMans ra ce in France, said they were
surprised at the speed of the thre~
top Ferraris against which they raced
twice around the clock.
"They were much fa ster th is year
than when we ran against them last
year," said Rodri guez, who got the fourth
victory of his career at Daytona. "They
could take us going down the straight
almost anytime they wanted to. Our
cars were faster in the infield."
Other than the mechanical troubles
which, in the end , were solved, the
two winners said they had no real pro-
blems.
"Except loss of sleep,'' Oliver said.
"I didn 't close my eyes, I was so keyed
up. J found that about all I could. do
was try to relax, and even !hat didn 'l
come easily."
Rodriguez said it was the toughest
race, physically and mentally, that he
has run at Daytona. He s;Hd he wa.~
in the car about 14 hours, with Oliver
at the wheel the other JO.
"t-.fa ybe l ha ve been around too long.''
Rodriguez commented in his broken
English. "Every one of these things
get tougher.''
But Rodriguez said he ill looking
forward to driving a Chevrolet in the
D~ytona 500 Stock Car Race Feb. 14.
'As for Oliver, he is off to California
for a few days of "yacking with some
sponsors" of the car he expects to dri ve
in the Canadian-American Challenge Cup
Series starting in June.
Then it's back to England lo await
the baby.
Keck, who was Oregon·s prep athlete
of the year in 1!167, was Orego n State'lii
second leadin~ scorer with a 14.1 per
game 11veragf.
Two other 'occupants of the car re-
mained hospitalized Sunday.
Chamberlain's 33 Points
Larry Webber. 20, Sacramento, a.
reserve forward .center for OSU . un~
derwent knee surgery at Washoe Medi cal
Center in Rel'lo.
Donald Williams, 23. Oregon City, a
student at Oregon Stale. was in fair
condition at Lass~n Memorial Hospital
in Susanville.
•
BUFFALO -•·rve had a ball ." said
Janet Lynn and "I've been sleeping
and nol practicing,'' said John Misha
Petkevich, the nation·s top figure ice
likaters. Miss Lynn, 17, of Rockford. Ill., 1,1•on
her third consecutive national senior
ladies' title Sunday in the U.S. Figure
Skating Championships.
......_Meanwhile, Petkevich. a 21-year~ld
Harvard junior, from Great Falls. Monl.,
v.•as the men's figure champ.
•
ARCADIA -Costa Mesa·s Barry
Asher was $2.000 richer today, thank's
to a third place finish in the SS0.000
Greater Los Angeles pro bowling OPf!n
Sa1urday at Rowling Square in Arcadia.
Spark Lakers, 133-120
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Wilt Cham-
berlain's 3.1 points and 27 rebounds Jed
the Los Angeles Lakers to an easy
1~3·1 20 National Basketball Association
victory Sunday night over the Portland
Trail Blazers.
Chamber:alo was supported by Happy
H · ~·Jn~ who scored 26 points, and Jerry
West with 24 as the Lakers won their
sixth straight :tome game and stretched
their Pacific Division lead to 21r.z games
over. idle San Francisco. Los Angeles
is now 31·22.
Portland scoring was led by Leroy
Elis. a former Laker, and Jim Barnett
1,1'ilh 24 points each.
The lnss was the sixth in 11 row -
anrl eigh th in nine games for the Blazers,.
17-.19.
The Trail Blazers broke on top 1$-9
as Ellis ripped home longrange jumpers.'
But Laker guarrl Gail Goodrich got Los
Angeles moving and the home team
led 40-35 at the end of one period.
Chamberlain's rebounding and the:
defensive ball·hawking of Laker guard
\Villie McCarler helped Los Angeles to
a 61 -51 edge v.·ith 4:11 left in the second
quarter.
Geoff Petrie and Barnell brought
Portlanrl buckets and Los Angeles led
67-flS at halftime.
'011Tl.ANO LOS .l.NG(l.fi . ' ' lh,n•l1 10 •·I 1• Erick"'"
Gr~• I 1·1 1' l-'•!•llOn
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A!t-&nct -11.011.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -''I'll admit to
being superstitious," George Archer said
after winning the San Diego Open ROif
tournaf!tent Sunday,
"I'm wearing the • same sweater I
wore when I won the Masters.
"And I played the same ball for the
last 12 holes . I felt I had It going
with that ball and I just didn't want
to change."
Most pros change balls after three
or four holes, but big George started
a string of four consecutive birdies on
the ninth hole that propelled him to
his first victory since the 1969 tr.iumplt
at Augusta , Ga ., and he stuck with
the same ball.
The &.foot-6 Archer, a one-time ranclt
hand at Gilroy, Calif., fired a brilliant,
seven-under-par 65 breaking out of a
pack of five players who were tied
for the t::p going into the cool, foggy
final round .
His 272 total was 16 under par on
the Torrey Pines-. Golf Club course and
three strokes better than second place
Dave Eichelberger, who had a final
68.
Jack Nicklaus, who Jed the tournament
at one point, had a 66 for 'n7 and
was tied for third at that figure with
Miller Barber, Pa u I Harney and Bob
Stone. Harney had a 69 and Barber
and Stone 70s.
Archer , who picked up $30,000 for his
seventh tour victory. overhauled Nicklaus
with four consecutive birdies. starting
on the ninth hole. and coasted in.
Nicklaus muscled his wa y into the
tournament lead at one point. when he
wedged to six inches for a birdie on
the 12th hole .
But he missed a five-foot birdie putt
on the 13th, lipped out a 25-fool bifdie
try on the \~th and took a three-putt
bogey on the 16th. ~
Archer, playing several holes back of
him, was on his birdie binge about
then and the bogey knocked out Nicklaus,
v.·ho finished with a 66 for 277.
"I was the tournament leader when
I V.'as on 13.'' Nicklaus said. "I thought
at that point that I could win il. But
every time I IOOked up, Archer was
making a birdie ."
Archer, one of five players tied for
the top spot going into the final day,
chipped in for a birdie on the six!h
hole, wedged to three feet on the ninth.
made a 14 rooter on the next and put
iron shots inside six feet on the next
two to go five under.
He laced en iron to within four feet
on the 14th and ca nned the putt. He
closed out wilh an 18-foot putt on the
171h.
The start of pla y was dela.ved 50
minutes by a heavy fog, whi ch hung
on most of the day. Archer was asked
if It was a factor.
''Doesn't bother me," he said. "I won
my first tournament , the Lucky Interna-
tional , in the fog. And I'm from San
Francisco. They've been known to have
some fog there."
Archer was off the tour for awhi le
after hi~ Ma sters victory because of
stomach troubles. Then last year he
developed a "tenn is elbow,'' calcium
deposits in the left elbow.
Fin•! 1tO••• fnd mon•Y WiMino• S11nd•y in 11'>1
Ion 01090 D~n:
GIO•ll• ,l,rCllff, I J0.000
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Bob Ok l 10,,, 1/11
DAve S!otklOn, 111!
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Jim JOn"lle•on, 1111
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;
GEORGE ARCHER iLEFTl RECE LVES CHE CK FROM ANDY WILLIAMS.
Weakness at Guard
USC-Bruin Titanic Next;
Woode11's Forces Sloppy
By As50Clated Press
While coach John Wooden was calling
his latest UCLA basketball victory
displeasing, It was being recorded RI
a milestone in sports history.
A quarter century of winning basket·
ball .
.John Robert Wooden , who says hill
197()..71 Bruin team "hasn't realized its
potential," v.·on his. 539th college game
as a head coach Saturday when UCLA
walked past UC-Santa Barbara, 74-61.
It was, as Wooden later admitted,
not one of his team's best games,
possibly one of their poorest In terms.
of learn play.
Bul since 1946. when Wooden took
over as head coach at Indiana State,
he has never had a losing season and
Saturday's victory, whiclt gave UCLA
a 15-1 season record , assured Wooden
of his 25th straight season above .$00.
Jr UCLA gets into the national fina ls,
it will play a total of 30 games.
Jn 25 seal!Ons as head man . 23 at
UCLA, Wooden·s record is 539-154. 78
percent. His worst record was 14-12
in 1959-60.
Getting Into the final s l~ Wooden 's
time-consuming goal and this week he
has his most important job -gelling his
team ready for crosstown rival Southern
California.
Gelling UCLA up [or USC might not
seem hard in light of past performances
but he::iring Wooden talk after his sloppy
~·ictory Saturday, you'd think his team
was Q..16 instead of once-beaten.
•·Realizing your potential does n 't
always mean winning." he said. "I've
had teams that didn't win ll national
championship, or even a conference
championship, tha t I was very pleased
with because they pla yed lo the limit
of the ir 11bility. This one hasn't."
The main problem. ironically. Ii; at
guard, a posiHon where in former years
UCLA tt1as strongest with the likes of
Gail Goodrich, Walt Hazzard, Lucious
Allen. Mike Warren, John Vallel y .
Henry Bibby, a junior, has been presh
ing and his shooting percentage is far
off w.hat Wooden admits he expected.
Kenny Booker, while a defensi ve master,
hasn't launched the Bruin fasl·break
flolilla as Wooden had hoped.
"Despite our problems,'' Wooden &aid
with a smile. "the importance of this
game and the individual pride or our
players make things look a lot better.
I'm sure we'll have the desire to pl'ay
11 Jot better than we have been playing."
The across·lown comment?
''I'll say th is about UCLA: II you
have the druthers for any one tearyt
in the country, UCLA has to be that
team. They're still the favorite to win
the natiorvil championship."
--
Asher defeated Gary Dickinson 1249·
225) and Bil! Johnson (~216) before
losing lll Di ck Ritger \270.2341 .
Rltger fell lo Dave Soutar of Gilroy,
Calif .. iil the championship match, 2.'lf>-
210: Soutar Y.on $6.000 while Ritger.was
awarded -.,,511().
7 Oldtimers Make Hall of Fame
Bob Boyd. however, sits in the chair
of Bruin beater. The Bruins have Jost
only five games in the last five years
and Boyd owns two of the: triumphs.
And this Saturday, ltis No. 3 rated
Trojans may actually be slight favorite.~
over UCLA . The game is ·on USC's
home court. the Sport! Arena .
f\~W YORK (AP) -The doors of e Baseball's Hall of Fame swung open
today for seven old timers elected by
Cen!er 1'~rl Foote of the University it vete rans' co mmittee af!er the regular
of Hawaii w~s plucked off In the 16th ballot of the Baseball Writers Association
round of !ht National Football League of Amer ica had failed last m o nth to
player draft l11st week by the San Diego name any moderns to the shrine.
Ch~rgers. Legendary pitcher Rube Marquard .
Fonte I! an ex-Orange Coast College who fhares the record of 19 consecutivt'
gridder whose parents reside in Co1lta . victories in-a single !lesson, and George
Mesa. M. Weiss, the exf!cutive genius who built • OKLAHO~tA CITY -Top-seeded Biiiie
Joan King ind second-seeded Rosemary
the New York Yankees into an .11wesomf!
power house from the ·!ale 1940! until
the 1960s, led the advanCil ol the
oldtimers.
l
Also named were outfielder&
Hooper. Joe Kelley and Chuck
first baseman J;:ike Beckley
shortstop Dave Bancroft.
Harry
Hafey.
and
Marquard , who won 201 games pitching
mostly for the New York Giahts and
Brooklyn Dodgers, frorn 1908-25, Hooper.
who hit .281 in 16 American League
seasons and Kelley and Beckley, both
pre·l900 stars, were: named as ~·real
nldtimers." whose careers ended by 1915.
"I wa., 11urprised:" said Hooper, now
&.1. "I've been f!ligible for thi!i honor
for 40 years. NRlura}ly, most all the
people who ever a:&w me }lay are dead,
so it's prelty hard to gel in."
Harey (and Bancroft ) both starred in
the 192tl-30 era when the other playeri;
named Sunday were winding up their
careers.
"That was great news," 111id Ha.fey,
who batted .317 in 13 seasons with St.
Louis and Cincinnati and led the National
Leiii'gue wilh a .349 mark in 19ll.
"I've been eul to darned long -'37
was my last year -I didn't think
I wa11 ever going to get in thtrt."
Now • rancher In Calistog•. Calif.,
Hafey celebratu his 68th birthday Feb.
12 .
Bancroft. a switch-hitting, fancy fielder
who had a career .279 average in 16
NL sea.sons. was just sitting down In
a Sunday afternoon chicken dinner , when
he got word of his election.
"That's the nicest thing l f!Ve r heard
in n'lv life.'' he said. <;That's marvelnu.,.
Word-s can't describe how happy J am
abouf1t."
Weis., was the unenimous selection
of the 12-man commlttet in lhe executive
category. He served first as farm direc·
tor and later as general manager of
Yankee teams which won 19 Ame.riean
League pennanLs and IS World Scrlts.
But Boyd isn't unrealistic about the
importance of th is game between No.
2-rated UCLA .and hi!! llQUad.
"This game is not the pinnacle oi
our season. It is simply the fifth i::amft
of a l4·game conference race. although
naturally it's a very important game."
Mea.nwhile nn the weekend, SoutheMI •
Cal was taking 1he meaSti"re ·of flliools. ------i
81·68, and Loyola-Chicago, 91·13. for 11n
unblemished 16-0 slate : Washington took
l.ong 11l1nd, 9&-7S, and Gonzaga, A&-'13;
W1shinglon State lripped Idaho, 91-70+
ind Stanford Inst In Santa CIAra, 11-71.
Oregon State and Californl! wert idlt.
"
D.lJLV PI LOT
•
D•ILY r lLOT "'" r 11ett
DEFENSIVE STANDOUT-Mater Dei lligh's Dave
Kiley (23 ) is seen in action against University's Tom
\VaJker (20) prior to Angelus League basketball ac-
tion. Kiley's future is clouded because ol an auto
accident during <:hildhood. lle's the floor leader for
the Monarchs 1n their quesl for a second straight
berth in the Cit' playolfs.
Kiley Endures Adversity
MD Stllr Pla ys Despite Doctor's Orders
By ROGER CARLSON
ot llM 0.JIY P'l .. 1 II.Ill
Two old riva.ls -leamm.ales when
in junior high -met in Angelus League
basketball play in the opening round
of loop battle.
When the l~ue was settled and Mater
Dei had bea.ten riv.al Servite for the
third straight tin1e during the past two
&easons the stats on the two individuals
didn 't reflect the winner.
Cold statistics bore out that M a le r
Dti guard Dave Kiley had scored stven
points to John Seymour's 18 of Servile,
then ranked No. 4 In the ClF and
first in Orange County.
But Mater I}ei coach Jerry Tardie
Is convinced that had his team been
without the benefit of his 6· I senior
playmaker, the .results might well have
been d!sa!litrou s for the Monarchs.
"Without Dave '• ball handling we 'd
ha ve been in trouble against Servile,
he \l'IS WlQueslionably one of the key
factors in beating them.·• says Tardie,
a Seattle University product under Bob
Boyd (now of USC'~ No. 2 ranked Tro-
jans).
'rardie say1 his guard's prowess on
lhe floor isn't in lhe scoring department,
as he relies on Kiley·s ability lo lead
the team from his playmaking position.
"Dave·s our quarterback. He runs the
show, sets the plays up and is a tremen·
dous passer. If he had legs, he 'd be
c::· · -~rling.·• says Tardie.
It's the last line that l.'i the tipoff
lo the adversi1y the Costa Mesa resident
has endured. howcrr-r. lhat is his1orv.
The Monarch flash, v.•ho went tO St.
John the Baptist school in 'Costa Mesa
prior to Ma ter Dei, v.·as involved in
an automobile acc ident al age 7, and
Saddleback Faces Owls
After 77-59 Setback ·
By CRAIG SHEFF
01 "'' Dtlly P'llll $1t ll
~o learn likes to see itself shuttled
lo the rote of a r;poiler but that's lhe
~itu alil'ln Saddleback College is in now
as the 'fission Conference basketball
r11ce enters the final game of the first
round.
The (;auchos or coach Roy Sle\'ens
'irtually eliminated themselves from title
contenlion v.·it h a 77-59 loss lo San
Bernardino \'alley College Saturday night
at ~1i~-;ion Viejo High.
\\'ith a 2-4 rircuit mark . the Gauchos
are three games behind lhe co-leaders
IRlverside and Chaffey / with eight con-
ference tilt.o; left.
Saddleback returns to circuit play \\'td·
·nesday. meeting Citrus 14-2) on the. Owls'
court.
In Saturday·s loss. it was again a
case of too much San Bernardino hei1ht
"nd some poor GO!lucho shootina fr om
the field .
jumpers and a hogt of lwi~tin& l11y-ins.
Saddleback. aJthough h!llin~ only :11 .~
percent of its shot~ ~ 12 for :111) still
held a 29-27 lead at the half 11nd ¥/a~
up by one ~39·38J v.·ith Hi minu!es left
in the game.
But San Bernardino rreled off eight
straight point.' for a 4&-3!1 edge and
eventually pulled ahead lo ib final 18-
poinl margin.
'"'"1_c_ no I•• lt•~••tlM Hll
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R119ge d Sched11lc
the results of the mishap are still 1
deterrent to his success,
In fact, his playing days could be
over (ollov.·ing his senior yea r al Mater
Oei if the doctor's orders are obeyed.
A ligament operation on both knees
v.·as performed last spring and he was
on crutches for six weeks.
The doctors are against further com.
petition because !he constant pounding
and jarring on the gym floor could
lmpHir his walking.
It'll be a bitter pill for the ~leso:1n
lo swallow if th8t's the case. because
h;:isketball. according lo Tardif', ls his
bag.
Kilry, v.·ho has a pair of younger
brothers also al Jl.iater Dei /Jeff Is
a junior on the varsity <ind TommY'
is a sophomore on the junior varsity I,
ha11 been a starter for the Monarchs
in each of his four years at the parochial
institution.
He v.·as the most \laluable player on
the Bee (as a freshman! and junior
varsity las a i:;ophomore\ and v.•as an
honorable mention on the All-Angelus
League team last year as ;:i snphomore.
His bi,11; Fault is his tendency to gamble
In his passing.
''But I'd rather ha\'r. hin1 gamhlinR
there than trying lo score 30 per game ,"
says Tardie.
He scored at a 5.0 clip for ~la1cr
Dei last year v.·hrn it advanced to the
CJF' playoffs and con1pleted a 20-7 year.
This year it's a 10.9 average and
!\later Del civ.·ns a 13·5 mark.
··nave's \'ery l1nsrlfish "'hen H c0mc11
to 11coring, he jus! \l'ants to v.•in.
··But he can hi! from outside or nn
drives and along v.·ith his passing game
and defense "'e feel he·s a complete
player," says Tardie.
\l.'hether this 1s Kiley's last yrar ·
playing com~titive basketball and
v.hether ~1ater Dei continues on to the
Angelus League title and a berlh in
thP CIF' playoff!i is a matter l'lf rnn-
jecture. hut l'lnf' thing is for sure -
a.!i !he lfiS-pound Kilty goes. so v.·111
the. Monarch5 .
Saddleback just rould not match the
1ndtan5 on the boards and, more im -
Porlantly. could not stop slick San
Bernardino guard John Griffith .
UCI Ne t Seaso11 Nears
Griffith hit 34 point.a on gome nifty
UC I Swimming
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UC Irvine will ;H\tmpl one nf lhe
mos! ambitious and grurlling tenni~
schedules in lhe schMI°• history thi~
i;eaS1Jn v.·ith 'll individual m<1!c-hes. four
tournaments and the NCAA chan1·
pionships listed .
Coa'-·h ~1yron McN11mar1f~ char~c:ii will
tangle v.·ith Stanford. USC and UCLA
early 1n lht campa ign. then in one
stretch in ~larch will f11ce .Al State
jLos Angell'~). the Unlvers11y of
Colorado. Notre Dame. Air Force
Academy. Rtdlands. Ariiona Slate. UC
San!SI Rllrbara and the Unh·er1ily of
New Mexico .
All but the Rtdlands t1rh1i r ire on
the UCI court~.
UC lltYllfl TlllOtll ICH ICU~I
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19'11 11 -Son '""'"""'ft Vtll•V l ••lf 47 ·-' ::::\ ~ : ~~')!~t·J~~~ ~~11:7'i' I'!?._ Dl"' I
,.~ti! S -$on 01•~ $!•to l!C J11 • "' )
Mov 1) -I ' '"" f t•ntllftn Vl lltY 5!1fr 0 "'"I '-'•• U -I• UC 5•• 0101~ !! JCI
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01Y "0"1 01 0fD<IU-" Vnovt•t•y, )11"• !~,. -~(41 ~•..,t1I0!\1~ flt IUnl•t't'~ r " "~"' ., u"'""''"' ~' D"• o .....
Valley Stat e
_Next Opponent
For Anteaters
San Fernando Valley State College's
basketball forces visit UC Irvine Tuesday
night to face lhe Anteaters, who are
fre~h from a cross·country trip in which
they dropped an 82·69 decision to Florida
State College Saturday night.
Tuesday's contest >A'ill be a rematch
of an earlier loss to the Matadors, 93-78,
and coach Tim Tift believes UC! ,can
return the favor on it.s home court.
•·we played very well al Florida State.
P..1uch better than Vi'e did Wednesday
night in New Orleans and v.•e were
in the game until the last two minutes,"
he seld upon return home Sunday.
The score 'ol'ilh two minutes to play
lltood 72-67 In fa vo r of the Seminoles.
The UCI pressing defense then drew
a rouple of fouls and flo"rida State
made good on one-and-one situations,
eventually bringing the final margin to
13 points.
"Florida State pressed the tnlire game
and I thought our kids handled it well.''
llnlike the game in New Orleans, Tif t
praised the officials. ''They did a very
good job all the way.
"We v.·ere hurt on the offensive boards
Rgain because or their tall men. This
boy Reggie Royals \6-111 crashed in
and rebounded \Vell."
Royals 1~·as high point man v.•ith JS,
15 fir.Id ,i::oals and five free throv.·s.
Phil Rhyne returned to form v.·ilh
a 25-point performance on 12 field goals
and a free throw with Bill Moore close
behind at 17.
A crowd of 5.000 sat in on the encounter
in Tallahassee in v.•hich the Seminllles
outscored the Anteaters 10-2 in the final
t\1'0 minutes.
After Tuesday's game with San
l~crnando, UC! 1\'ill host Sa n Diego State
College Saturday night wi1h freshman
preliminary games borh evenings at 5:45.
UC lrYlnt !Ol "lllrltll Siii• ll21 '• " • .. " " .. " ll ~vn• " ' ' " E lltY • • ' " MOO•• • ' • " (;~"•I! ' ' ' ' Cl••~ ' ' ' • lloy11t " ' ' H
BY• 1•"9n•m ' • • ' l<ong ' ' ' " llolpji ' • ' • Vo~ng ' • • • Mo!l''""'I ' • ' l r ny • ' ' ' &l•c• ' • ' • ••• ' • ' ' B•~or • • • • 10••11 M • " .. Tol~l1 ,. " ,. " H1lt1im1. FIOrlCll $1t!t ~. "' lrvlnt ...
• l
Barons Fall, 7 5-63 ' .
Chargers Alive
For Playoff Berth
Ry PHIL ROSS
Cl! lflt Dt l!Y P'llll lt•t!
Edison High's basketball team wa11
hopelessly alone In the Irvine Uague
cellar v.·hen last week began.
However, the Chargers of COAch Dave
Mohs are 11tanding in different stead
today follo wing Saturday nighl'1 7~
thumping of archrival Fountain Valley
at Hunting ton Beach High.
As Mohs put it afterwards, "we 11ill
ha\'e to play everybody else except
Estancia and Fountain Valley. And , if
our kids play the rest of the way like
they played tonight, then a CIF' \AAA )
playoff spot is still a possibility."
Edison 13-SJ is now massed in I sixth
place deadlock with Costa Mesa and
Carona del f\.1ar with the prospects of
facing the latter on the road Wednesday
nlghl.
Yet. the sixth place trio is but a
!ling!e game in back of Fountain Valley,
Santa Ana Valley, Estancia and Mag.
nolia. all tied for second wit.h Identica l
4.4 records.
F'ountain Valley'.!I Barons will be at
home Wednesday night in An attempt
to slow down tall Magnolia and get
back into :i ~·Inning mold.
Baron 1ncnlor !)ave Brown v.·as almost
specchles., afl er watching Edison tear up
his squad fron1 the insi de.
He said. ··we 1..·an·l do a lot on the
boards without <Bill) Kristina\ !starting
forward lost to the Barons for tv.·o
weeks v.•ith mononucleosis ).
•·1 could just see thi!I (the Ediso n
\\'in ) coming with this silly Friday-Satur-
day schedule and the ~·ay we played
la st night la 49-38 setback to pacesetting
Los Alamitos).
f1~nl1in v.i1ov !UJ ea ... n tlll •• " " " " " • " Sn i~Alf • ' ' • Snook ' • ' • p,, .. ' ' ' " Wrl11til • ' • lllt•o•r ' ' ' ' Fl'~"' • ' ' " G C,.1rnf • • ' ' " Mci<:•n"'V • ' ' ' P G1r~tr ' • ' • T~om•On ' ' ' " Pow•' • • ' " Miiii • ' ' " f oott ' ' ' ' A•11• ' ' ' ' 111rm°" ' ' ' ' O.."i•luon • ' • ' lotal1 " " H " lOl•ll " .. " " ,c .. , ~v o~•,,•••
f o.,..••in Voil•t " " " 11 -•l Ecli•&n " " " 11 -,,
''It'~ hard to gay who his lhf! upper
hand for the 1econd playoff 1pot now,''
hr. roncluded .
Afler a clo!le contest was In effect
for the first three qu.1_1ter1, Edison look
the slarch out of the Barons by dumping
in IJ straight poinl3 1n the Initial 2Y.
minutes of the final fr1me.
The streak vau\led Uie Chargen from
a modest 50-46 edge Aller three periods
into a .61·4fi gap wllh 5:%7 Jell ln the
game.
A half doien Fountain Valley lurnoven:
In the fourth stanza allO contributed
to the Barons' demi1e with aeveral of
the Charger ~uclc.et1 in that atrttch direct
results of poor Baron ball handlln1.
Jaycee Tourney
Seedings Set
Seedings for the 1971 state junior C<ll·
lege basketball tournament in Marcl'I
have been Announced.
Single rel{ional round games will t1ke
place in bo!h Northern and Soulhern
California March S-6 lof,th the eight top
te<ims vying for the stile championship
Marett 11-13 at Allan Hancoc k College
in Santa Maria .
The fo.1etropohtan Conlerence h11s been
seeded r-.10. I in Southern California,
followed by the South Coast, Southern
California, \Vestern Stsre, Mis:slon <1nd
Desert circuits.
Both the fo.1ctropolitan and South Coast
champions will draw f,rst round byes
in the tourney. The Sou,hern CA I circuit
v.•inner will host the Desert champion
at a neutral court.
There are t"·o open spots In both
the north :ind south for cu-champion!!.
Following are the pair:ngs:
Upper br11cket -Camino Norte, bye.;
Western State at Missi('n; Golden Gate
at Golden Vallev: South t:oast. bye .
l..O\\'er brackCt -VaEey, bye; Desert
at Southern Cnti rornia ; t ent ral at Coast;
~1etropolitan, bye.
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YOUR SAFETY IS OUR BUSINESS----------
• f.1ond,1y re-br11ary 1. 1971
Coast Area'·s Prep Swim Outlook for 1971
The 1971 prep swimn1ing
season is on tap with the
campaign officially open this
"'eek.
A dozen high schools i11 1he
Orange Coast area field sv.•in1
teams and lhe DAILY PILOT
will carry all of their results,
first th(ou gh thlrd, in vaNJily,
Bee and Cee classifications
along with the winning lime.
An added feature is the
\veekly summation of the area
bonor roll, which includes the
lop three winning times in
\•arsily action.
Coverage includes all action
In the CIF prelims and finals.
along with an exteRsive
hypothetical meet at the end
of the campaign between all
Orange Coonty schools, with
the school records of 39 teams
compared.
AcOon . started today with
ssion Viejo at La Quinta
non.league competition cap.
by the Irvine and -Sunset
gue relays and Estancia
ays Saturday.
ere's a brief rundoy,•n on
each of the area's teams:
Coronn del ltlnr
Fourteen returning varsity
lettennen. bolstered by
sprinter K u r t Krum'oholz.
gives the perennial Irvine
League champion Sea Kings
another potent juggernaut.
Coach Cliff Hooper's 1971>
CJF champions appear to have
a solid hold on the Irvine
circuit but may have_rtroub\e
in dual meets against non·
Teague powers Sunny Hills and
Foothill.
Loop rival Costa J\lesa is
also gi\•en a shot at the Sea
King wagon .
Leading the formidable ar-
ray or talent in Hooper's camp
is Krumpholz, who has turned
in a 46.8 clocldng in the
100 free, considerably better
than the school record or 49.4.
He's also recorded a 2:05
200 individual medley and a
1:01.5 100 breast.
"I think our strong point
might be in the flexibilit y or
our squad in dual competition.
And. the kid s are working
hard. they are the most
dedicated groun we've had
here at Corona del Mar," says
Hooper.
Other seniors u•ho figure
Prominently in lhe Sea Kin'!s'
plans are Tom Boughey (200
and 400 free), Greg Loit.z (50.0
tree and 57..5 llyl. Mark Otto
(55.0 Oy ), Garth Bergeson (a11
~JI.round perrormer proficient
m every st roke). Tony Oliver
{52.0 free ). Rick Walker
i I :00.0 backstroke ), J o h n
Ho!yoake (1:12.0 back), Rich
Hyland (23.0 and 54.0 in the
sprints) and Jay Dwyer (a
middle distance rreestyler).
Getting the job done means
to defeat rival Corona del ti.1ar
In dual and league Cinals com·
petition.
Costa Mesa is the only loop
outfit to ever outscore Corona
io dual compeUton, but it went
for naught as the Sea Kings
captured lhe finals and the
circuit title two years ago
-something lhey've done
e"ery year the Irvine loop
has ex.isled.
Leadi ng Utter's contingent
is all-round performer Ron
ti.1isiolek. who received
honorable mention A 11 •
American statu s last year in
the 100 backstroke (56.4).
Other senior varsity return·
ing lettermen bent on cap-
turing a first-ever Irvine
dtampionship are Jack Hall
(58 .0 in the 100 fly). Bill
~1cAneney (52.0 in the 100
free), Mike O'Brien (1:12 :0
100 breast). Neil Richey (1:10
JOO breast) and Rod Ross.
Ross and O'Brien v:i\1 be
concentrating on lhe distance
freestyles.
Junior lettermen in the fold
are Mike Yarwood (1 :08 100
breast), Matt Waidelich (23 .0
SO free) and John Carpenter
(1 :03 100 back) w hi I e
sophomore dive rs Ken Hart
and Mike Zeldin complement
so p h o m or e breast.stroker
Steve Sponagle (1 :07 ).
Edi1011
for us," says the Eagle
laskmaster.
cutler's record at Estancia
h::is never dipped under .500
in this, his six lh year at the
helm.
And lhe mainstays o( the
Eagle squad tryi'rig to uphold
that mark are Larry Blat·
terman, ~tilton Ka~'abe .and
Dan Keril.
Blatterman, a junior. swims
the backstroke (1:00.0) and
freestyle (~.Ol while senior
Kawabe is in the same mold
with I :02 and 55.0 capabilities.
Senior Kent concentrates on
the breaststroke (1:10) and
individual medley.
Others in the fold include
seniors Bob Petrina (I: 12 in
the 100 breast l. Steve Webster
(56.0 in the 100 free and 2:20
in the indG medley), \Vard
Saunders, Doug \Veiler and
Danny Za11etta.
Juniors are Jeff Littell ((rec
and fly) and Tom Smallwood
(free and breaststroke ).
The Eagles will again host
thelr annual Estancia relays,
vrhich includes Re d I a n d s •
Glendale Hoover, Ro 11i11 g
Hil ls. Beverly Hills, Chaffey
and Troy. The event is slated
Saturday.
Fo1111lnln Vnlle11
Coach Ray Bray of Fountain
Valley High has a solid
nucleus of returning lettermen
hack for the 1971 swim season
Edison High's swim pro-with onJy Peter Eich and
gram appears to be coming Russell. Solt absent vi a
of age as coach Eric Emery's _ graduauon. .
forces now include a total The latter is now at the
squad or 46. Air Force Academy.
That's 25 more than last "All or our str.ength is b~c~
year. and with a home pool Ou r actual "ars1ty squad is~ t
to bolster them. the Chargers large, but the you~er kids
could make some noise in the ~re numerous and we re loo~;
Irvine League race. tng for a pretty good utu re.
S . . 1 says Bray. even returning varsity et· The leading candidates in t~rmen an~ tv.•o tra,nsrers the BaroPJ picture are John
figure to give Emery s op. Bertani, Frank Ero\vne. Peter
ponents plenty to worry about. Noah Kurt Westerfeld and
Leading that woup are Ron Fred 'Lammers.
Bukof! and Bob Wurster. Sophomore B erti an
Bukorf is a sophomore with specializes in the sprints \Vith
1 :OS JOO back and 59.0 100 a 53.0 100 free credit.
fl y credits. Wurster. a senior, Browne. a senior. l1as a 1·09
is an all-around athlete \Yho 100 breaststroke accom plished
gives the Chargers the flex-and Noah concentrates on lhe
ibility for dual meets. middle distance races.
Others in the fold are The junior has clocked a
juniors Mike Braun (24 .t in 4:2<1 in the 400 rree.
the 50 free ). Pat \Vest (several \Vesterfeld. another junior,
strokes), sophomore Pat has a I :03 in the back.stroke
Moorhouse (a freestyler) and ~·bile Lammers is a butterfly
se niors Greg Wil s on man, with a l ;04clocking.
(freestylerl and Steve Loeffler Others that figure lo help
(distance free). the varsity pi cture are Jim
The Chargers picked up ~ McAdams, a junior. in the
transfer from Estancia in freestyles, freshman Sc o l t
diver Rick Blackburn and Shelton and sophomore Mike
sophomore ti.tark Harvey from Eich.
Tucson. The Barons host a11 in·
Freshman George Budris Is vitational pentathlon meet
rated as good as Bukoff was
CLIFF HOOPER
Coron• dtl Mar
Feb. 20 in their highlight spic-
ing the Irvine League action.
Uu11th1gton Benc/1
Huntington Beach High 's
chances for dual meet vie·
tories in Sunset League swin1·
ming action are severely han1·
pered by the total lack ol
candidates.
Coaches Doug Scott I in·
terim) and Ron Blackledge
lwho'll officially take over in
the rail) have only II su'im·
mers in the entire program,
\vhich encom passes varsity,
Bee and Cee.
However. they do have an
outstanding individual \1·ho
figures to make noise in the
league meet and Cl F con1·
petition.
He's Clay Evans, a junior
who transfered from 1'1arina
after hls freshman yea r.
Last year, under coach John
Greenfield, he set schoel
mark s in ive events and
shared two o
Here's the ma•"-.,~·e set
as a sophonlore:
200 free -1:55.7: 220 in·
dividual medley -2:04.J: 100
fl y -53.1; 100 free -52.9:
100 back -59.8; 400 fre!'
-4:08.0: and as part of the
200 medley relay -1:49.5.
With only a supporting cast
of 10 others it's obvious thal
the Oilers will be hard pressJd
tG come out on top in dUal
meets. however. J
Other Rlajor candida tes ~re
Keith Fresonke, Ted Reid,
Bruce Peasley, Robert Wolr,
Jim Joyce, David Herrera and
Dave Roysdon.
BlackJedge is enthusiastic
about the overall pictures :
"We have the best program
this year that the school has
Bill BARNETT
Newport Harbor
Pver had. \Ve've been having
tv.·o or three workouts a day:•
Interim coach Scoll opines
that Newport Harbor and
f.1arina rlgure to be the class
or the Sunset circuit .
Anaheim. Utlist Football off Its lofty replacement has been made
However, Viking c o a c h perdl. yet.
Chuck Morris doesn't see any The Mlsslo1 Viejo Diablos "We have -some nne In-
letting up in a hot team race usher itr the '71 aquatic dividuals. but I don't thin k
which he figures will lnvol\'e hostUltles with a new coach. anyone is going to touch
his teMY1, the d e f e n d i n g former Cal State ( L o n & Foothill.
champs and the Newport Beach) swimmer Doug Butt. "F'oothill has n at 1 on a I
Jlarbor Tars. Burt takes over the Diablo caliber swimmers tn Steve
Mo1Tls says, "It's a three reins from Dick Cancday, "'ho Furniss (freesty le and in·
team race. But we have depth switched -Over to the new dlvidual medley) and Rod
as aa advantage for us. University lilgh as athletlc Stracken (Rliddle d 1st an c e
"We're missing an outstan· direct<>r last fall. freestyles)," says Cummings.
ding spijnt star and we could TI1e ex-Downey High star San Clemente'11 mninstayit
also use some help in the .sho"'!i guarded optimi s m are seniors Joel Hartman (200
butterfly and backstroke." about the Diablos' current and .00 httl and Wayne Bur·
Sprinter Steve. McConaghey. prospects. "I hear th 111 ri$ ibreaststrokeJ.
backstroker Lee Davidson and Foo thill is super tough as they Mark McCartin (fly and In·
individu l medley performer always are. do medley) and Tim Springer
Howi oh11son were the only "So, I gh•e us an outside !sprints) are the best bets
gr alion losses accrued to chance of finishing second in the ju11ior class, both bein~
M na. But the trio left areas along with Tusti n and San individual Crestview Leagur
of inexperienee when they Clemente." champions la!t year In the
departed. fttission Viejo is a very weight levels.
~torris ls hoping that Bill young· team with sophomore '"e•l111ln•ter Fahrenkrug will be able IG John 1.,e(igue the best the Y
do the job in the lndo medley Dia blos have to offer. Coach Gerry Maruiion Is jus1
while senior Alan floops and Leogue clocked the fa stest taking a \Vait and see attitude
sophomore Mark Rollins are lime. in the nati011 in his age when it comes to the current
the primary backstroke can· ~roup (13-14) last SUR\mer in prospects of the \Vestminster
didate s. the SO rrees tyle while mana12;-Uons' swimming program.
The Vikings could h e ing :;pots In the top 10 in The RandolPh. Neb. native
strongest perhaps in the the 100 free and the 100 but-confides. ''we're still 8 younJ!
breaststroke \vith senior Kevin lerfly. team and actually a whole
\Vi\liams snd soph Co l in The Diablos are a I s G year away from cGmpletr
Hardy around. bolstered by all-round transfer maturity.
l,ngunn B eacli Seniors John Maltby and Mike McDouital, frcm Lorn· "\Ve riAished fifth In the Chuck Holloway and freshman poc's Cab rillo High. He's listed Sunset League last year and
tt• b ·id· f whiz Bruce Scholes will hold as a possibility in the h 11 · h f ·-h bell s a re UI ing year or the fort in the distanc~ events breaststroke, ind Iv id u a I ope to nis Ou• i or er
coach George Carey and his '~hl\e the best available sprin-medley and so rree. th i.o; time. Laguna Beach Arlists with 011• ,. 1 1 t 1. · h E · r ·i "It can be a very satisfying ing a en 1es wtt nr L es season ii the kids bring their
ly three seniors returning for and Greg Booth. Sa11 Cfe111e11fe times down." Mannion adds.
the 1971 s · ca paig ''Crail? Daniels (junior) and . . . h I h wim m n. Charlie Shiosaka (senior) have··· .. ··A:·· ma1or rebuilding season Jn addition lo a ea I Y Mike ContinG, Earl Wellsfry both been doing well in the ls. in order at San Clemente group of you11g swimmers.
and Digger Ware are the three butterfly." says ftforris. "But H1.gh ~he~ coach Ben cu.m-ftfannion also has an assistant
seniors in Carey 's group. 1 \\'e have a pretty well balanc-m1ngs Tr1tons. are preparing coach for the first tinle In
Iv t t b Cd team and Some guys W,.11 for the 1971 sw1m season. Gary Drent . a former Ca I are concen ra es on t e Slate (Long Beach) water polo butterfly and ind iv id u a I be doubling up in some Cummings has only a pair star.
events." ,; or seniors among his can· medley "'hile \Ve\ls(ry is a rlidales. which includes 23 F'ive 1970 lettermen plus a
distance swimmer. JtlissiOtt l'icj'» freshmen and sophomores. '&.CJ letterman who sat t)l1t
Ifs John Wellsfry, however. ( The Trilons are furthe~an-competition la~l season ru·1· The normally eight·lea1n back to lead the sqund. \Yho is considered the best Crestview League is pared to dic::1pped by the lack a Senior Kelly Barthell l('T -
in Carey·s bunch. The just four school s when S'A'im· pool on the school grounds. tered as a freestylist anrl
so phomore middle distance ming season rolls around each Instead they must trek to backstroker in 1969 while Ar t
swimm er is already clocking year. the San Clemente municipal Lillis ( s pr 1 n t s), ~1ark
his 200 and 400 free practice And, 1971 Is beginning like pool (a six-lane ~yard od' Kenworthy (butterfly), Ton1
any other Crest\'iew cam-dity). wlth the major portio11 Burgoyne (butterfly), Robhi C'
sprints at a par with las! paign, u•i1h the other th ree or grief the problem or getting llaber (distances ) and \V('·•
year's bests. league outfits (ti.fission Viejo. horne afterwards. Phillips ( s pr Int s and
J1,1niors who figure in the San Clemente and Tus1inl Compounding the problem i~ backstroke) picked up 'ill
Artists' Orange League plans 1_t_r~y_;n~g_t_o __ k"_oc_k_P~'-'-'"-"_;_,1 __ a_b_ro_k_e_n_d_;v_i_ng:_b_o_a_r_d_. _N_• __ m_oo_o_•_ro_m_s. _____ _
are ~lark Ashling. R icc i
Prock, !\tike Robe1·ts, Tom
BrGtherton. Steve Bunting,
Craig Parsons and G r e g
'Carlson.
Other sophomores are Tom
Redwitz, Richard B e n L o n ,
Dana Slowsky and Ne a I
Amsden.
Newport ffnrbor
When aqualic-minded
youngster.• reach their senior
years at Newport Harbor
High, it seems that they try
and find other diversions away
from swimming. TUESDAY·WEDNESDAY PRICES
Juniors in camp are Brian
ri1i1Uch, Harry Plamer and
Dave Otto along w i th
sophomore Bruce Krumpholz.
last year as a freshmjrrand
Emery is counting nn his
performances along with help
from Lee and ban Graham
and Mike Pepi.
OCC Five Now 3-18 The reason is simple, states
Tar swimming mento,r Bill
Barnell.
while they last •••
Special Purchase -
Slight appearance
blemishes*
A promising freshman is
Larry Gates l52.I JOO free
,nd I :00 100 fl y}, lermed by
Hooper as. "very promising.''
"Our major stre11gth has to
be depth . Right now "·e 're
focusing on the individual
medley aspect of practice to
find some balance and depth,"
says Emery.
Following 72-60 Loss
"By !he time the kids are
seniors here they get kind
of tired of traveling all over
Newport Beach lG play. And
I get rather tired or it too.
Costa Mesa
There is a familiar ring in
the air at Costa ?\-tesa High.
'"here coach Don Utter's Mustangs are preparing for
the 1971 swim campaign.
"\Ve've got the potential to
do it -to win the Irvine
League. It jusl depends on
How strong we get in the
distance events, and ~·hether
t.'e can maintain our level
of proficie ncy In the specially
events.
""It'll be a chal!eniie for our
l:ids to get the job done."
1ays Utter.
Esta11~ia
Coach Les Cutler of Estan-
cia is unhappy with his team·s
progress in anticipation of the
1971 swim season. despite the
return of several promising
candidates.
"We 're definitely behind
schedule. perhaps by a month.
"A lot of our swimmers
are engaged in other acti vities
.and they're not getting sooie
or the proper training.
"I don't think February is
going to be a good month
VCSp Next Cage Foe
. For SoCal College
By llOWARD L. HANDY
01 the Oell1 P'llol St•ll
\Vhen a basketball game
turns from a point-a-min ute
first hall into a scoring affair
in the second, the team with
the hot hand is usuall y the
v.•inner.
Orange Coast Col I e g e 's
Pirates battled a thin San
Diego City College team on
ev.en terms (or 32 minutes
then fell into a cold spell
and dropped a 72·00 South
Coast Conference decision to
the border visitors Salurday
night.
The lGss ran OCC's season
record to 3-18.
Coach lferb Livsey's Pirates
and the Knights from the
border city played a deliberate
first half in which neither
team wa s able to generate
a consistent scoring attack
and the halfl i1ne score for
20 minutes of action found
San Diego in front, 24·22. PASADENA Southern to close lhe gap to twG but Orange. Coast made it close
learning a great deal this year
ar.d they will be a fine basket-
ball team next season. \Ve
still can give some of these
conferen[\e teams some trou·
hie this year," he said with
co'nfiden ce.
The Pirates came ou t or
the halftime intermission with
an early vengeance and surg-
ed to a 30·25 advantage in
the opening three minutes.
From this point to the 7:49
mark the lead changed hands
fi\'e times before McLemore
hit a series of jump shots
and a pair or free throwi;
to put the Knights in front
to sta y.
Orange Coast has a bye
Wednesday, then travels to
Fullerton Saturday night in
the firs! ga·me of the second
round of conrercnce action .
Ort "" CNll IN)
Con'o¥
Hollne•
Ollllt
u.o1 ... illt•
~1~'r::~""
W1lte•1
S~t!ll~
I• II •f I•
I I 0 IS . ' . • l J 11
l 0 1 •
l ' l u l 1 I I
I 0 J '
0 0 ' 0
"I only figure us for aboul
third place in the Sunset
League this season because
we don't have any seniors,"
Barnell adds.
"We should be a decent title
contender by next year -
~ause u•e'\I knO\Y whether
or not v.•e '11 have a new pool
by then:·
Normally the Sailor Sl\'im ·
mers have managed to stay
at the top or near the top
of the Sunse t standings by
n111k ing use of nearly every
pool in the in1mcdiale area.
This season, t he in·
experienced Tars u•i\I be going
through the normal grind with
only five individuals who
figure !G make big waves.
Mall Greer \vas fourth best
In lhe SunsPt "h1sl yea r in
the 50 freestyle and he 'll also
avail his services in the 100
free.
1~ U II 60 T01111
Cali(ornia College continues lo the seeond chance was futile for the fi rst 12 minutes of
play basketball games close as the hosts misstd a pair the second half with Tim
to the vest and Saturday night of shots at the final buzzer. Conroy and Duane Diffie hit-
was no exception as the ,.Iarlin, a 6-3 forward, "'as ting from outside with con-l•~ 01." tni
Vanguards handed-Pasadena high point man for the game sistency but when a cold spell 11 11 11, ••
Ed While. lhe goalie ~·ho
helped lead the Tars to the
CIF water polo title last year,
placed fourth in the loop last
season in lhe breaststroke and
he's alsG a strong contender
for 1971 honors.
College at 72-70 defeat on the with 35 while the mGSl SoCal's lhat has plagued 1he Pirates ::;:r;o·• ': ; ! ~;
strength or lwo Ted Harper 6-8 Dave Payoe could muster all season set in, Ssn Diego's <>111 ' 1 l 1o
IHnrl11n
fi eld goals and a free throw w11s 15. Dan Hoffman was Orie McLemore and Mike :/1'~11 ! i J 1! The ~111rir.a Vikings were
by Paul l\1 iller in the closing high man (or the Vanguards Windle U'ent lo work to pull Pu•n ' o , 1 edged oul of the Sunset . h to1111 30 11 ,, n Le I · · I , g ni inut'!'S. wit 17 and Harper was close the winners well in front. Hiu!lme· sin 01,00 ,1, 0 ,1n1, ''''' ague sw mmJng tit e 111 I 70
Next gan1e is at UC San behind with 16. "This is a yGung team and n. by perennial powerhouse
Diego Saiurday night. SoCal College trailed by Jive v•e don't have any quitters."li"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,I
Pasadena was able lo steal points, 33·31. at the haUtlme Livsey said before lhe game. Why It Pays to Know the ball from the Vanguard intennission but moved ahead After lhe contest he
weave twic e •l midcourt ~·ith 37·36 early in the second departed immediately in
:l2 seconds left and the score period and for th~ final time disgust btceuse of the loss. BOB PALEY 1t 72-68. at 63-62 with 5:30 left. "I think these kids are The first 11me ror.,,11rd ~filte 11";;,;;.;;.;:;;;•;:;:;;;;;;.. ___ '='.:::~::::~~;:~;::...:::;
MarU" h;t a 10.foot jump shot VW BRAKE
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UNIROYAL
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Reg . 2 " 156 Reg . 2 ' 160
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20,000 MIU GUARANTU
HEAVY SHOCK
BRAKE ABSORBERS RELINE INSTALLED
21~~ ~10?A~H
FIRST INTRODUCED ~D~ r~ln 1111'& TIO P•W:.
------
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DAILY PILOT Monda1 FrbrllMY 1 1?/l
Pro Basketball, .~~~ ~IUUJl,d I'~ Collegiate
Baslietball
FV Wrestlers Place 2nd
Hockey Standings
~ •Ant.UTE OI' nn;: ~ I rt Five Counties Classic
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SET YOURStll FOii A BALANCED SWING
Perhaps the moot overlooked
aspect of the golf swina:, yet one
of the: most vit1f, is proper bal·
•nee. Losing balance during the
swing ruin~ timing. Lack ot bit·
ance also atficts the path of
tht clubhtad.
The wli&hl 1ewtr shifts to the
out51de of the right 1oot during
a bal1ric•d backs wing. Althoii&h
weight ·does shift onto the left
foot in the course of the down·
swing. the head Cllnd shoulders
should nner slide in thatdirec.
tion.
A simple way to insure prop·
er balance is to imagine that
)oU,r body is• ''triangle of pow-
er" (w:e illustration). As you
address the ball, feel that your
weight is centralized on thlf in·
. ner sides of your feet. Thert
keep it c6ntralized as you swing.
e.c "''*""~""'-
Hoop Standings
MISSION CONFl!llE NC( Or1Mf (Oilll, l>vf
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C"11tev J I 'n Cltrv1 1 !15
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Fulltr!on O •51 ,,,,1.... I "~
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SOUTMWEST
Vt•~ 95. Arl1on1 S+. 90
lulu IJ. Wic!'oit1 SI M
$MU «), "°'k1n11• U
""IOl\I II, llYU 16
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lt•ll TK!'o 111, lt•ll it.1.M 61
ltOCl(IES
Colo••Oo St 19. tit" Mtd<o 11
w,om•1>11 6•. le••• /El P1101 111 !oil
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By ROGER CARUION
Of 1111 D1!1v .. llel Sltlf
Fountain Valley High ' s
Irvine League wres tling
pQ\Verhouse appeared lo have
its share of individual cham·
pions in lhe sixth annual Five
Counties Invitational Saturday
night with a pair of Utlists
al'ld a runnerup.
But a stunning reversal to
several other Barons in earlier
action negated the Barons' try
for their first Five Counties
title, thus coo.ch Vern
\\1agner's host ere\\' fin ished
second to ~1ira Costa in the
learn race .
Fountain Valley
heavy\\·eight Bob \Yalker and
mate Danny Lewis (168) con·
tinued their all winning \\1ays
in the finals \\'hile surprise
finalis~ Preston Millier fini sh·
ed second in the 178-pound
class for the Barons.
Other Orange Coast area
finalists were Huntington
Beach's Pat Buono in the 141-
pound di vision and Corona de!
~1ar's Gary Casey (157 ).
Buono lost his bid for a
championship on a 2-1 decision
lo Erawley's George Smith
while Alan .Albright of
Norwalk beat Casey, s.-0.
Walker capped the night by
pinning Norv.•alk 's Joe Botello
in 1:34 to give him 17 pins
and a 23-0 slate \\'hile Le\\·is
upped his personal record to
16--0 with a hard-lought +2
dec ision over Norwa lk 's
Daryle Schall.
In consolation a c t i o n ,
Closeout on
fiber glass belted tires .
Now $23 "'" 1.00 , ••. ""' ... ""''"'· Ori9. 30.95. 700.13,
Wtiitewa!I tubelMS.
Fott•Dtt 'El Tltn' 2.+2 "'1h 2 belts of"'"'' g .. sa on I
J pfJ 10f'Jnt•r cord body. Dv.t wMMr•ll design, 100.
Whlk•tlWl•t•• Whilew1ll lubltle11
I
, I
r•"' ,..,,,.1
~•c.S~ Iii• n1nga ,,.
! 00 13
~ •Ckw•ll
• Rugged 4·Ply Nylon Cord (most sizes)
• Good traction and skid resistance
• Good mileage at a low price
,., •• ,,!> 14. ,~.
:s '' b'•d ••"'
\.\ "••~w1H1 ll 00 """t -t~I
• ... !!'25-1 1
• 15 blt<l<wtl'
S•r• I ~r;.1a • Ii 1~1l11bl1 I" w""tt only at •J-l.00
... ,,C•I DIUI r {' ol II" 10 12 Sol ptr "'" ""' ,..,,, ....
OFFER ENOS FEBRUARY 27, 1971
Corona .tel ~tar's John Blan-106-Sl$Con fMt. Mlt11111 MC a.~. 7 dl11 IC:t ~alcol .f.4 pied won a 7·0 decision O\'er n~ca11r1 1u.11naJ ff< s.n 1"1ui.
Bolsa Grande's Rob LWHiren CE11c1111crr 1 •.O. IU--SlocYm !II Mod-) pln....t in a rematch of the recent coic !ao1 .. G11na11 s.st.
Orange Coast Invita' tional 1»-a1inplte1 ccoront ott Mlrl Gee l unogr'" (llolst Gr111dtl 1•. finals in the I 3 O ~,pound i:;._c:.~11 cFon11M1 11tc 11.•
d. . gut!" (Ml~ICQ C:Uv Po.ty) •l. 1vis1on. 111-N1v1.,.o (C111~1t;o1 p!nt>td St un·
Ch · H h f o I · ller1 lNo..,.&lk) 1:20. r lS Ump rey 0 1·0Un a1n \J._HvfnP!lrcv lFe11n11ln Vt lltvl
Va:lley (148) picked up points plnnNI M!lltt (OomlnGUlll J;)),
for the Baron cause in the 11~!;;:~~r;~:;.,.,:E11~. ~"''1 •«
consolation round by pinning 16'--111na11 ccorona del Mat> 11tc 11.otllnaon (Ml. Ml-') 10.1. Robert Miller of Dominguez. 111-$111uv1n tU•Llndl •lllMll l"rlct in 3:2'7, (N-111) 3:.0.
lt+-llwnlrtl tc1i.•lc:.ol cl« 11.tn· 'The scoring \1'as c Io s e 11o1011 (E1 Mo111 ... 1 s.o .
through the rirst six p I aces lll-HU!!ttt cc:.11xkol •lnMlt Tilomls
with r..t i r a Costa surviving ~'-'-'-"-"'-'-'-"-'-· ___ · ---~-
with 72 follo\\'ed by the host
Barons (66). Calexico (63),
Norwalk (53J. l\11. ?i.tiguel (57)
and Upland ($4).
f.-lexico City·s Politechnico
High had one grappler reach
the consolation round, but
Cesar Regueira Jost a 4-3
verdict in the 136·pound
division.
CHit.Ml'IONSMI P.
tt-e1111un lUol1nd) dee
cc11t•lcol ~ . 106-Sal~ tMlr1 Cos11l cite Wenner
IP1cllic1) l·D. 115--G. ce..,n• (Mt, M;suetl llK le•·
vrl lC1le•lcoJ 1·2.
n3-T1ckell Cllrawlev) dee M. CtHl'lt
CMI. Mlsuell 6·1 (ol)
• llG--No .. 11 (Mir• Co•l•l llK Ml•·
liner (E•c1l1lorl 9·1. 136-Hutsl !110111 Gr1ndt)
l !111t'°" !UOltnd] 5;50.
141-Smith !Br1v..iev) !lee
(Hunnntton llHCll) 2·1.
\ll-Ev1n1 tP..cillc•I dee
IMlr1 Ca>tt l .... 151-A!l>rlghl (N1ll'Wllkl !lee C1stY
!Coron1 !lei Mtrl S-!l.
161-Ltwl• (Faunllin \'1lley) !let _
Sc~lll (Nol'Wtlk) 4·2.
l1l-Til111 tFont1n1l olnnfll Mlllltt
(Fauntl ln 'l/1lltvl J·U.
lU-Skk;itl (M!r1 Colli)
MlCk• (E•ctlJiot) J;OO.
ns-w11k..,. (Foun•1in 'l/tlle1J Pinned
lloltllD (Norw111<.I l:Sl.
CONSOLATION
ti -Morion IMir1 Cosl,IJ dK Gome?
!llOIU Gr1ncltl J..S.
SIZE ORIG NOW FED. T "X
C78-14.---30.95.-.;.$23. ___ 2.15
E78·1 •-32.gs.:__S23.-..2.35
SIZE ORIG NOW FED. TAX
560· t 5 .... -29.95 ........ $23 ... -... 1.SB
F78· 15 ....... 24.95.-.$21.-... 2 .6 t
BFG1unt1 it h
WHEEL
A L IGNM E NT
•
F7 8· 1 '·-····.3.4.9S .. -•... $29 ....... 2,55,
078·14 ....... 36.95--$29 ....... 2.67
H78· 14-.. 38.95-··· $35 .•• -2.93
J78· 1 4.-... 40. 95-.. -.$35., .... .2. BB
Tire 11ver 1peclal
3 d1y1 only!
Look what you get. 1 088 ,
wheel ahgnment
brake adjustment
balance ' wheels ..... , ''''
Mon. Tues , Wed. only
G7 8· t 5 ....... 36.95 ... -$29 ....... 2.77
H7B·1 5-..... 36.95 ... -.. $35 ....... 2.9B
• 900-15.-... 38.95 .... -.$35 ....... 2.90
L78·15 ...•.... 42.95-..... $3S_.3 .22
Foremost
Muffler 17se·
Installed
MUFF\.Eft
GUAftAMTE[
1r • ~enne1·s he•VY du!~
m11lll•• l1o!s ~ll•r '"1111.
l•hOI' br• p,.nnersAuH>
c .. ~!e•. du• to delett•v•
l"e1ch~"d1se or "'O•k·
m.in1llop or w•ttOul
w~•le ti"• ""Q ~ll pU••
c:n111r o•n1 lht c:I•, '--------t 11111 C:""!KI us •nll •
P1one1~ '"CIPh~I "'"'
1epl1t• 1/11 d1l1c;1.v,.
m1oll!tr,no 1at1f cJ11rqt ,
Yet, you c•n shop I 2 to 5 Su11deys. top. et 4'ny ol thttl• Penn•y Auto C•nter':
FASHION ISLAND, Newport c • .,ter, HUNTINGTON
CENTE R, Hunf i!'l9ton 8e•ch U1e Pennty1 time ptyrnel'lt pl•l'I.
WE
COSTA MESA:
JONES TIRE SERVICE
2049 Harbor Blvd.
IAt Boy)
646-4421 540-4343
•
ORANGE:
JONES TIRE SERVICE
1100 Tustin Ave.
(Acros s from New Post Office)
Sll-3383
i .
WESTM INSTER:
L J. DITILE BIG 0 TIRE
7352 Westmin1ter Ave,
19J.SS72
•
1lll l..-R•
llADIAl , ••
l'lOPLI
1:18D
J• .,,
t
' ,,
~.
'( {
' ~· ,.
~; •• •• ,.
~; •• ,.
' -. Mond1y, FebnwJ l, 1'71 DAILY '1LDT 25
Everyo ne H•s
Som ethin g Th•t
Som eone Else Wa nts
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You C1n Se I It,
Find It~ Tr1cle It
With I W·~ Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
l~I I~ I I~! ]~' [ _, ..... · 1~
[ Huntington le•c:h General
*
General
* * * * TAYLOR CO.
Gen•r•I General Cfener•I *l ~J~U~S~T=L=IK=E:;;:;N=E=W;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;:;;;;:!:;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;:;;;;;;;;;=
3 Bertrm. 2 barh Coridom!n. /) / J /}
General
-CO-UN-T-RY-C-lU-B l-IY-IN-G1 -AB-A-NO-ON-EO-_B_EA-CH_ ,_EASr_sm_E---,~-.,, -, .. -, 1 -..wrc~
av1ila.blP, Choice 3 hl'drm, OwlfER
EASTBLUFF SPECIAL
Hurry for this one ! Can't last! .A.. great !ami·
ly home with 4 bedrms. fam rm & dining
rm. Lovely pool surrounded by cool decking
& lge ·patio area. $59,900
EXCLUSIVE BAY CREST
Really exotic! See this rare Hawaiian style
·4 & den home today. Rooms all surround
lge INDOOR pool. Vie\v too ~ $78 .500
"Our 26th Yea r"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joo1quln Hilla Road
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
* * * * * *
'"m. romplot•ly '""· ••. ol..inda ~le eluding nf'w c11.11~11. Im·
2 bath hon1e in 1,bsolutely l DESPERATE! $1500 Below Market DIRT CHEAP /$19,950 ;mm""'"' ,...,,i;i;.. •. All '"'' "'"'" n ........ ., Cal. bltn~. harrl11·ood 11 o o r ~ . iforn11 CJ111.•ic. Has .1.UJ"l.C·
~:;'m~~~;,'~(· Pnoed ""· PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Ari t'a~!! PrivAlt, ('Aff'fl"ff' Thal '• riglll! \'OIJ ran'! buy t:rp12, lireplare .C. quie1 live 7\.i ?b VA loan, l sp&c-
community living !i mlll" thP dirt for ihi-priN>. SJ)l'lrk· rrsldenli11.I localion. A mu.~1 I inu1 bedrm1, !!!lee bltnt,
from hlUf' PAelti('. S\\im· ling m<X!Prn l bedroom. 2 lo 1ee at S.l3,000. C1JI crp1d, drpd, block .,,.alJ tenc. $20,lOO
NO DOWN TO VETS
I Large 3 BR \\ith 20x2o rum· I pus room, hrdwd floon:.
1 Rear ya.rd C":Ompl block "'all.
ed wi1h jumbo cement patio
IU'f'I\. VA appraised 11t. • ,
$24,600
I Lind• Isle Drive
Spacious 4900 sq. ft. 4 BR., 4112 bath home.
Din. rm ., fam. rm .. study & 38 ft. water·
front liv. rm. 2 Frplcs. Carpeted & land-
scaped. . ........................... $164,840
n1lng, tennit, recrl'&tion •!'I!!~ f\111 bath-. llURI!! t:ounlry ~:s-8424• South C 0 a• l Ing beaut wood burnlnr tiN·
al your door-step. 3 di11.rm· stylrd k1tchf!'n with lale1t Realtor5• I pl11.C'f'.
Ing bf'droom 11uites. Color built·ins. I.And!ICaping 10 S23,500 Pacif ic Shores Re•lty
NIOr'din11lf'd •ll t lf'C. kitrt'lf!'n. pt"rlr.ction Tree111.nd fio'4'f'r~. QUICK pos~ess10n, no quali· 1536-8894 Ev@ll; 347-5MA
Fnrmlli dinina Rrea. l..u1h Tropical R'f"'enhou~P. Brick lying. · · takP ovPr f1fA • lo&n. 3 Bedroom, big fencf!'d
For complete infor mation on rll't'p pile ctrpclin.g. l...arir J)lltio & plantPrs. Tiki l\2h~. backyard. fr!.'~hly pa.interl,-1 $11,500
a ll homes & l~ts, plea'• c•ll: f'nrlo~f'd atrium pAlio. 2-car 1..4.>"A', lO\vrlown&: mov1?ri11;h1 nPw waler hea te r , l Bedroom 2 bath, fiOxlOO
L OR garagP. LOW LO\V DOWN in. A mu~t to Vt'!? Call 11 !mo1f-nf'w roof. cA rptlin" fe---' lot. Include• modun BILL GRUNDY, REA T • ,._, EASTSIDE TRIPLEX 133 B "2-4620 or a1sumr txisting FHA ('1l·t1 !lfi2-.'"il8:i It. kitchen floors. Agt. rlt>C blln range It oven, gar-
Dovor De., Suito 3, N. • ~ '''"· A '"" """ call FOREST [. OLSON ,, •• ,., b d. 1 FA h 1 ·" Sharp units "A'ith (21 2 Be'drm ....., · age 11poaa, f!'I , w...,
& tmchelor Unll on largl!! lot.I!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! {TI4) 962·5585. MOVING-TRANSFERRED-IO \\'all crplB1 df'Pll, patio,
Dble rlPt11chPrl garage. Try General I Gener•I FOREST [. OLSON Inc. RPlll1orJ Tired o! fighting with riblr gara11:e, , 11nd~aped,
lOt;"Q down, only. • • l----------1----------l!n :n flrookhurst AVP. tf!'l'l&nl~~ Call the problem fenct'tl. Low down. pe.yml!ntl
$37,950 l Bedroom, 7 Bath MESA VERDE loc. Rea.Hors 110l~ -South Coast ReAI clwaper thin rl!!nt. t;
~· General I G eneral
F ixer Upper Sharp, four bf'dranm. t11·n 191 ~1 Rrookhurz• Avf!'. SUPER Buy Elll&IP. Property Manare· I' $22,SOO bllrh home w1lh r~ar Living ml!!nl Divi~ion.
'·m .. Dinin' Rm . .,,• •r•ck. Hnnlington Be11rh .~==~"='"'~"~'==~-" -i 1---~----~ ,;;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;1
: OCEANFRONT GREEN THUMB?
All it nrrds is some pa1n1, a " I ftl ••71 ( - ) 546 110J 1111Je e100'4' grca5e and some hng B•N Electric Kit. Near-ACT NOWI J17,lt50 F ully lmpro\·Prl, l OWNER ANXIOUS ~ -· -
1Pnrlf'r loving rare. ii ha~ ly nr1\' C'Jllll, thru-0ut • fully l BR Pool homt!. <N.•ner will bM:lrm, 2 barh k f11mity Pricf!' rtdueed In M'll !l(}W~ SEE TODAY
PVPrylhing you need, a good draper!. Doub·..; g11r112r, boat h11ke !itOOtl ctn. pymt. Convf!'n. room. 8Hn11, dblt; gal'agr, l>llv!ng arf'A. 4 BR. 2 srory,
PE~RON
··;J .. l.T.TT'""',~. ~: TRIPLEX
~ Pridl!! ol nl\nPrship in rhls l·
::-~ stnry triplex on !he ocean.
~ front. Luxurious Jrrt floor ~~ unit has 4 bedrooms, 2 b1 ths.
:: • builr . in Barbf'rue, b e 1 m
~: C'f'ilingl', !root balcony, !lun.
.:-dl!!ck anrl a vie\\' of the bay.
::: Lh·,. in this OOf' and ttot rhr
642·1 771 Anytime
H you h;n·r OllP, we ha\'e the !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;,,,!!!!!!!!!!!!!
properly for you. Jt'5 [()11'.
moclrrn. 4 bf-droom i>Pauty
on a swt"eping corOE"r lot in
rh-o College Park area ol
Cos111 ~1cs11. In back, your
ftnwer h'l\'er lrif'nds \.\'Ill
delL,1:ht a1 rhe complrre
GREE:\ HOl,;SE and srpar.
11 1e !hadprl lathP covel't'd
Arra. A mo~! unusual prop.
erty at $211,990.
nt'ighborilOOd, CO\'ered pario, !llorag~, 1001 house, p I a y 1 i~nl to all schools &. shppg. CilrpPl.!I & rlrape.~. $\R.1 • Come lo Z">8 Shf'N·ood St, 01 WON'T LAST
J11rge built.in BBQ doublf' house anfl 1111'$:1' pano1.1 A~ur11e 6~ r;i loan '31,500. monlh pays e1•rrylhln1 with Got everythinjl'.! l Brdmnm.
• O!hPr [\\'O 111rsze Apli;, Primf'
l\'lnttr ' suminrr rental~,
Only Sll0,000. 646.7171
. WALLACE
$28,750
4 Bdr. +Oen
Family Rm .
•
COATS
"
I
REALTORS -S46-4141-
(0pen Evenings)
Huge oversized r00ms, bu111.
1n book.~hel\'e~. cozy d!.'n.
natural hritk lirPplace, No
do\vn GI or FHA terms.
540.1720
TARBELL 2955 Ha rbo r
CLEAR AS A BEl:L" 2
6.63 AcrE"s hy LakP Matthew~.
()v.·n,.r \1j1nls tn hqu1rl11IP.
ChPapest i\\·a11 in aff!!a. For
cirru!l/11\'()(_.Ado. Xl nt futurt' .
-writP off, aprx 45 n11n
from C~I.
JEAN SMITH , RL TR .
400 •E. lith St., (,\f 646-.12~
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
TWINS
\\'!.': have just
hren prPsl'nlPd "''1 th
2 rondominium uni1s
in rnnven1en1 Park Lirlo
Bl'11rooms, 2 haths each
Pn\·. ron1munity pools
anrl landsrapt>d park
Under rhf' markf't
ai $26,95() t"aCh
Good Jinancing
REALTOR..'i
SINCE 194;,
673-4400
'""e 11 nd a price 'rag thlll f'en1-Prl anrl wrl! lAndscap. INCOME Jo\\· down p!lymPnt. Call COLLEGE Park. By owner, bltn11, block wall ff!n<:I", con·
fe.1ls you ir'~ a srealt So l ed including ~prinklen;. A Fnut11lf's: 121 2 8f'droom 540-1\~l !or rietail1. (Open $2.4,500. 2.lCll Columbia Dr. ven1l!!nt lo 1bopping. IName
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
AREA
Enjoy On{' nr "C 0 ST A
i\iESA'S f'I NEST" 1nc111Pd
nc11r \\'ESTCL!f'F SHOP-
PTKG CENTER. A n1 pl,.
room for your l11rs.:e lurni.
turr. ThrPe GIGANTIC RD.
\\'H I F. Ot" BU" AT •·900 Evr~ I + &4:)-0!IZ'l • your 1erms,. Only $23.950. gf't \\'llh 11nd !la\·e SS nn A·· A :i. j2\ 1 BMroom, ••.... S:l~. •=·~·=------~ this one. ~8640 ONLY SJ2.:,00. Duplf'x 2 Bedrooms , SJ2,j00 s . Dan• Paint Callins ~~~ta, Inc.
-Farr;."-·
R,\1S., 2 hath~. new ~olrtrn Realtor
ha1'Vf'st .~hag c11rpr1, dnulilt' 2629 H ho c" -;;;;i;i;;·.;,;'';;;;'·.;·~·;· .. ;; LOG SlZE liI'f'place in !hr ..
Family roon1. rresh 5p11rk-THE TIME TO BUY
ling whirp dccnr in~ide 11nd IS NOW'
our. Bri2h!, chrPrlu\ R1N . . , • .
Kitrhrn wi1h i;:arrl('n vif'\\'! 1 hi~ r.el/rr ~ \'ii.Cant hon1e 1~
FHA .VA TF:Rl\1S • 0 UR J<Olng hegi.::1n2! Hf''s in a
Rf.ST VALUE! At ONLY n1oorl lo l~lk pricP. Hr'.r;
SJJ.~ asking S67.500 ~nr 3500 It.,
· 4 BR., formal din. rm., dl"n
& pool. Let's make him an
ollf'r!
DYER THE RIVER
anrl thru thf' wnorls m1Jehl be
all righ! if you art' goi11g ro
Grandma's but ii lhli; is I
.vour rou1r to wnrk irivf!
your~f'll A hrf'Ak~ R11y rhl.•
lrrf'w11y rln5e 4 hPdrm, 2
bilrh, 1Sxl8 11rtrlPrl lam\1y
F:1·pnin~.~ Call 6tl·7438
(:oldvvaD ~ room, 8 yrAr olrl home 11nd ............_ ..,..coi:;,..,,.,~ rPlax. A .~1e11l 111 $27.950!
--..--VA1f11A 1rrm!!.
833-0700 644-2430 I /ca.. co: TS 4 Bedroom' 2V2 Baths
No Dawn Pmt. 7°/. Int.
This 1mn1acula!P 1900 ~11 fl
home is located in a beau·
tilul presfis:r neighborhood
rlo!le to school!! ftnd s hop.
ping. It h11s 11. rotally auto.
matir sprinkltr sys1em,
SfllU'IOUS f'lf'ctric huilt. in
Macnab-Irvine
Realty Comp11ny
GRACIOUS
FAMILY HOME
~WALLACE
REALTORS
• 962-4454 •
Open Evenings
3078 Molokai Circle
°'''''·' 2 """""'m' >i.t.ooo Heritage I 1 ----"="~~--1 LOTS 4 BR wl•<cmm. $29.""1 •••lr••' 51.,7,, loan. Brautiful \'lf!W. I 2 STORY
1'i29: ''11cht Or, 494-5-430. G.I Nn Down, custom 3 bf!d. 2 RP.Sidt'ntial lot1 in Sanl!~~~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;; l .J:~2;:''1_!":'-~~~-Jac1n10. 13.500 f!'&ch. rm. :\hath!, beautifully Janel.
c.2 Froniage on H11rhnr e BALBOA ISLAND e Caver Sharai scaperl, many Pxtras!
Blvrl., 94x3:'10; 11tte11 front Bf'~t buy • be,:r loc11rion
And re11r, SI JO.l)ll. Charm. homr, Rm . In bid . * PRIME VIEW * KRAFT REAL TY
HOME & BUSINESS Rt'ducrd to $44,%0
1 Extt. SPcJur1Pd Con!rmp. 17171 Brat:h Blvd., H.B.
fdPal for pnlert11ining. Old 1 142-1411 Reat11urant and 4 BR houSf' ISl..AND RF.AL TY world ch11rm! Hi Cl!!ilinp, Fr•ncisc•n Feuntaint ln the N'1tr. C·2 arf'a, Great 67:\-1200 675.~0fl t:v,.11. leaded winrlow~. brick " Fant•,tic Pool (H&F) fu1u rP. Sll~1.COO.
VINCO REALTY
2029 HARBOR BLVD.
646-0033
CRISIS
* WESTCLlff _*__ wrought iron. :'l,000 liq f!. 5 4 Bedrms! 3 baths!
2 BR., 2~i bA, Conrln., pool, hi',;, 4 <'8r szar. $178,000. /~I r --• ramily rm w "" c! annu J..O\\' rill, Q\\•nr r W/(ln11nr. f'urn. apt. :;4~.724!1. d' . 1 n.,_ i ' (.ow F'ORTIN CO. 642-~ I ~..:;.c:.co: 1n1ng arl"A . """u.::I •
Fountain V•lley \ inttre1t loan!
Balboa Island . . \ HAFFDAL REAL TY Ye11, there 1 a hf'11u11lul Span-• EV . S-4l 24'6
3 BR, 2 Ba + 11:sl hllf', i!lh Condo ln Fount11in VaHl!!Y M2-440:i '"· ·
0....·0Pr nut or '4'ork, homr pa!, cov'd, lnrrl, nr wat, l th11t h11s 3 bedroom!!, 2
mu~r bP 1nlrl imrned\a1rlv. frpl, $10 ~f dn. Elcl. Own, h111h~. 111! th p rf'er,.111iCln11I BY OWNER 4 Bf'drooms, lamily rm. Ii~-car l!lt. fi73-fi267 lacili1ir.. fpoo1, clubhouse ,
p111cr. 2 story nn hU!!"· hugf' Collage P•rk pool t11blP11, pilch and pul
lot A!kin~ S.'7 500 Submit and much morr•. Assum,. a An~ l'l'Rl'flnable '011;r fPf'nd· COLLEGE Parle, by. ownrr $22.CXXJ 71,1 <;:-r .H.A. to 1 n
. f 1 r ) C 11 • 3 br, 2 ba, f11m 1ly rm, \\1lh lo""· paymrnl~. 101at
3 Bl"droom, 2 bath, c&rpets,
drapeK, auume G.l. loan.
V.1.canL Small down.
M7-8507 ot Eves; B-1178
in2 ° rec 0 1 u e · a lireplarf', lge frnC'f'ri yANI. pric:f' $26,900. Ca I I MY.', M5-8~24· S'~'i• ~~HA, p!lyments $16.i 546.2JIJ, •CONDO f hr, 1 ~1 ba vaanl
mo. $26,!IOO. 54()..93.ifi Newly dPCOr. Crpl11 / drpa:.
\outh . (. oast -
TWO HOMES
ONE LOT
Coron• del Mar !!huttrrs, patio. 5'~ % FHA.
$22,500 Ownrr, 968-50'19.
·-0 THE REAL
'"'-ESTAT[RS B•chelor'1 P•r•dlse
Coran• del Mar . OPEN HOUSE
One Berlroom . houM: w1th 1 Sun Jan 31st, 12-4 pm
Sell id.It Items now! c .. 11 642-Sfi78 Now!
of)t'n_ l>t'am ce1hna' 11.'lthln I tsff Puffin Lane wa lking-<1lst11.ncl' or Llrrlr 1 1 1 3 b f ·1
Look. 2 . 2 Bedroom homes Corona Bt'ach. AU 1hl11 plus mmacu 8 " . ~· ami Y
k1t('hrn, roomy famil.v room, 5 bt!rlron1ns, formal dinini<,
shakr roof and 11 ~pl'A\\'lin2 family room. Largp masrer
n1·rr~izPd rrsidrntial lot. All sui!e wirh 30' of \\'Ardrobe. :1
thl~ 11 nd n111rh mnrr. A11k\ng ('ar .1t11r:.i2r. On larg" f'ncl()~.
SJ~.75tl . Call nnw. :>16-~640 l'rt lot 1•,.ith ('Qmplert' priv. nn """ Jot • Whl'l l a bu.v . INCOME 11.nd TERi'.1$. room, lormAI d1n1nJ:" room, Spntlf'Sf; 3 Bf'droom t d • I
(~:W.~INDEX}
8:00 a.m. t o 5 p.m.
?>ionday thru Friday 9 to noon Sa!urd11y
Advertisers may plBC'@'
their ads by t elephone
Owner Says Sell First Tin1e Arl\'. Buih 10 own,.rs """ds • But $32 !KIO cui om raJ>l'!I. <'BrJ>f' 1· pl.'rferr Ill a home + inr.omP C ll 67.J.ll:i.50 $3'l.500. F HA, VA or conven.11
' Reduced $2000 I L.<irgl' Rooms 1 · tional linanc:inJt". C.J, Reeves HoultslorSala
2 FirrplACf'l'i: nr 11.~ 11n JnvesTmf'nl, t:xctl. I
This hl'.ln1e is in Costa l'\1rsas lrnt access 10 1hopping 11nd "· All!IOC. 536·8887
Cul-dc-S11.c L I p I H I Cla11ification 100-1-49
11c}'. ~·i n;t lime offered.
S94.:l00. I~
COSTA 1'.lt:SA nrnCE
330 \V. Bay
642-5678
NE\VPOHT BEACH
2211 \V. Balboa Bh·d.
642-56i8
HlNTii\GTON BEACH
17875 Beach B!\'d.
540·1220
LAGU~A BEACI{
222 Forrst Ave.
494-9466
SA~ CLE~lENT~
, :305 N. El C11mino Rral 492-4120 .
N ORTH COU~'TY. ~Hal free 5·10-1220
hest area, it's a 4 Bf'rlroom 2 Rrahor Hu.c:f' Lanai !IChoo!s • Hurry • Comt in· ove y oo om•
h11rh residrnt·e \\'ilh a h1n1· I 1629 Jlarhor, C.:'-1. 642-8235 675-3210 f'HA/VA \'t'~1\gat" and invr!ll. 16 X 34 IHt'a\ed & Filll!'rf"d) ~--,-.,-,-,-"-.,-,-~ f-.i
ily room and sparkl1ns: iii..iii.ii..i.iio.iiiioiiii;iiiii ... 1 !!~"'""~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! s211.9;)() DIAL &l~·O.~l 423 POINSETT~ Lovi!!ly yard w/boat aatl!!! 4 c-ral ~ swimmi 11~ pool. Ranch !ltylr RARE FIND Eight Bedrooms BUY IT! FOREST E. OLSON Drivr by, <:all for APP't. to!ltt L11: bedrooms! Crpl~. drp!, I t'('lmplr!e voith rusl!c wood rxtra~· Uiw lnlert'sl Loan! c1.11ific•tion 150-114 ('.~!enor. , Ir's II \.·r,: )'flUO.C: VA NO DOWN FR + DR + POOL REALTOR~ ' the hrs! buy In town! 2 .BR. HAF.FDAL REALTY ,------~
B 2 2m Harbor CM + l·BR. bach. apt. Good I I and hraut1fully ra~ fnr .• Eai;ti;1de. 4 edroom~. That'll ri,e:hl • II lull hdrm~! · • ·· · lnromf!'. Rlln~. palio: aar. 1
1
1142.4405 Eves: 541·2446 f~ial •
Ownf'r ai:.kini<. S29.9JO, ;\lake ha1h~ lan.::r fen('erl hack-Formal nR • FR • mfldern Seller Transfer red . .
offrr. 5'16-8640 )11rr1,' dhlr s:ar<1szr Ownrr k11ch • hrPakl11.~1 11rea . 4 Ea,t-$2,151 DOWN! a~f! !llre~~ lnr adr '1. unit. Huntington Beach C l•siific•+ion 200-260
le11v1ni;: for Ari1.on11: \'f'ry b11th1 . la~e LR . white "'"'"'"'"'"''"""'"'"' j Bf'au1ifu\ :1 hf'drom hn1nP MORGAN REAL TY I $18,250 11nx1ou~'. Submit 1111 ollPrs • t,ril'k F.P. Pool hra1Pri & You Can't Live with 2~'1: h11lhs, hugp 20 x 20 673•6642 675•6459 VA 00 flown or foiiA s;..o down, I Ho&wfwAlftt
only $25.500. Call e\·ps : hllrr. Barlmin1on l'OUrt • A I F F pl11y room! Bu!11 in 1969. V11· C 0 R 0 NA DEL MAR z Rttlroom, z ba1h Condo. .
646.2'1!!0. /t\'Hlry • much morP, ~·ou nyp ace Or ree r11nt for immedilllP OCC'U· Charmf'r. Exira l~e. liv. I 1 I 1· · m n um, al'll:e ivin11: rm., l
ll'on·1 bC'hrv" 1he l'('asr.in11hlc But .voo CoULO purch11~P pi1nt.\'. VPrj' rhnirr f'ounra ln rm. v.•/lpl, 2 BR. Eire. modern kitchf!'n .,~lilh eltt I
pnrP. llUl"r)', Dial 64:l.030l thio: wrl1 loralPrl \\'P~l.!11rle V11l!Py spol . f'ULL PRICE is b:tn~. H/f' pnol. S!nglf' 1"1'11. blln J111ngr k oven, si:arbage ,,-.-.--.. -.. -,-1_-..,.--,l l ~l FOREST E. OLSON tripl r~ and li\'f' in • t'fim. S26.500. Submi! your 1rrm11. on R·2 rm, lor 2nrl uni!. disposal, plenty ol cupboards ...,... • ...
Rl':ALTORS for111ll!r 2 Rrrlroom u n i I w I k & L Will IP11i:e, IP11sP/opt. or '-slorql!! spact, ~ep Jiving . CLIFF DRIVE ,~. N•··•poct "''''· C'• 1 \\'Ith pri\'lllP yarrl 1111'11. fore. a er ee 11rll, fu rn. or unf. 67:r4fi6fi room, crp1s & drp11 includ· ! c1.11if ic•tion 360-370 ""'' " " nY.l l/arhor, Cos!a !\1C~A nd' ,·, h,.,,., ···" b .,, . I
Rr11l1or
2.629 Ha1·hnr, C.:'-1.
BEAUTIFUL
c1.s1ification l00.35S
Lachenmyer
Rea II or
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
Deadline for ('OPY & kill!>
Qualil~' cusrom cons1ruc1i<Jn!
1
CALI, 646.39211 nr 5"4.'>-34~?1 fnr apprn,~i~;11!rl~' $~ ·~~; Rf'al1ori1 CHARMING 2 br w{m11s11!vl!! ~· F'~h heal, ~lio, payments I I[ A)
I
Bett('r 1h11n nrw condilion! M•sa Meadow' nio. lflA~rd on ll)M, dO\\'n.) 27~ l111rbor Bl vrl. A! Arlams u.~rd hrick frplr, OJ>f'l'l I'll! 11.n ttn • ~entel1 _,-
Truly minimum carP yarrl ! Nire, ]Aliff' 3 & f,oimily 00 ;,45.(M6:l Otl('n 'rll 9 PM bP11m11 1hn1oul, lncd yd, cor-ll ..._ ______ J.
• --, , h , · , TRI PLEX rAL1. li7:i.!l.i.'il 11 1,,~ 67•240, 1 -.... "'11 p Jn nlUC c.~lrf' qu iP\ rif'lld end .~trl't'I )0<'11· 1-'0B. DE.TAii~\) nrr 0 . ·"'·""''· ,,.. . • I c1.11ific•tion •DO-•bS
ls 5:30 p.m. the day h\~·
fore publication, extC"pt for ~lond11y Edition
when dt>arlline ls Satur-I
day, 12 noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS: AdverUsC"1-s
should chc<'k their ll~
daily & N'port ('rtnr~
!mmPdiatC'I}'. ,. HE
DAILY PILOT R!I Q\Jmcs
Jiabili•y for 1h,. first in·
~correct in!Crtlon only.
CA!'\CELLATIONS~
\Vhen 1.d!lini.: an ad br
s ure lo in~kc 11 rl'('nrrl
of lhc l\lLI. 1\U:'>lBF.H
,g1\rn ~nt• h\' ynur Ari
t11krr :i~ ret·c~pl nf yn111·
c11n1•,,\h1tlnn. This kill
n11n1l)rr rnu:sl h(' pre.
srntrl'I by \he advf'rtiscr
In c11se or a d l,;putr.
CA'.':CEJ.LATfQ:-J 0 ll
CORBE("TI0'.'1 ClF' NE\\I
r\D RE~'(lltE llUNNINC::
E,·f'r~· rfforl i.!I nu1rle In
kill Or co1n ·rrt a """' ad
I hit l hll~ hrrn l}rd<'N'd.
but \\r c1111not ru11r11n·
f<'f' to rlo so un!il the Ad
h<1~ AP!lCarcd ln the pl•
pr!',
DI ~l~;.A.J,l;\'f: ADS:
Th<'~<' ari' 111·1' ,.1 r1,.111
rash in 11d\11nct' hy mall
or 11l All\'""" or our l)r·
tlcC's. NO phnnt' ord~J1i.
Tiit; DAIL'' l'n.nT rr· l'<'r\'C'~ th<' rich! tn cl11~
~1fy, rd1t, 1·r11~11r nr rt ..
ru~,. 11ny ad\f'rllscmtnt.
11 nd 1(1 ch11ni::e 111 rate~
& rr~ul11tions v.Jthout
pr'io1' n<ntrt.
CLASSI FIED
MAILING ADDRESS
p, O. Box 1™•
Co1t11 ~ftaa.
92"2'1
f'-'p\1•pnn l-lf'!ghl~~ 3 Rrrl· -lil)n. OHl'rerl on no down I Near So Coast Pla7'l JNrOME CdM 2 h<IU~e~. 9o/.i ' '~~~;~;, ~r!i~I. ;:,'~~ ~\t~~~ ~.~:c~~c~~;~~ :~i~~;~~s V~ • h Ml ;~~~. ~~~~1:~~rithin1. •M4~~~~~l~AlOJ I A~en-ent• II ~]
111 $<\fl.900 .• Call 616.7171. $39,500 loan a!sn 111 ;i14 ,...~ SZ8.500. I 4 Br-clroom.~. 2 111h~. lirr· ------------
IR! u.~ ~how you !hi~ ,·ery '~• 2 Bcdrm unil~, ~rpAr<1 1r Rent a ls · ---==~=~~= pl11cP, bltn r11nge k ovrn. Costa Mesa TRI LEVEL I C l•ssific•f ion 500-510 ~pecial home tnd11y. nne tor O\\n<.>r. Ll1·e. in and 2 RR Cnnrlo !urn ........ $175 ON ~~~~~~N T C11rpP11. ,~~11~'· patio, dhle Distinctive I 4 S!>droom11, F'11.mlly room, I I[")
try SfiOO dn11.•n FHA. 4 AR llou~r. MP.sa Vrrde S~ a11ra2f'. .1. · .f ormat dining room: Thill Ptrionall
r irr It. lln11 r, will hold 4fl fl. Ray Mc Cardle Realtor Executive Home w11 a modrl homl!!. Atr mn-' ,. --~-~-_,.
-···· BR 1' h• Jo•·•c p · 5 •• 7729 * :1700 1111. It . M CHAR~f~! .t LLEGE REALTY . 11 • • rice · ,.. landsc1pin11: . a ra.rf' finrl ,------~
N•wpart ~1-· ~so-l'wlL 2 BR. 1-hil. Uppt'r; 2 1810 Nrwporl Bh·d., c.~f. d1tlnnf"d, block ll.'a/I, fop I c1.11ific•tion 525-535
Sin" 000 * Magnifirent virw of tht: I lal JSOOMl!MllHMW,CM. 1• • !'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!I Hllrbor 111 only $39.951). FHA or VA Loit tnd ftuftd
EMERGENCY SALE Fairview l~~~::::i:~~~~~ Call: 6i3-."lri63 642-2Zi.1 E\·r11. $26,500 Tr rm1 • 842-25.l.1. Brin!!.'. your offer on this prilnP Ii • Lo11dt'1I wirh s~ci11! lea-I
Irv. TPrr. 3 BR. Mme \\' 646-8111 NEW LISTINGS 3 BR. + F•mily Rm. IUrl'!I c 1.11if ic•tion 550-555
pnol & many extras for l•nytime) Elrir:in! !)rrplarr. Huge !Am· -Ruill-in \aruum 1ystem l '~
rhniC'f' living, A&king $59,500 ,,.;.;;;;;;;;;;-.---•lt"ir11t rime offert>d • drive hy Uy rm. l Bt>drm, ParklikP -F:!Pctronic nvPn , __ ,._'_''_~_'_"" __ J ~
by '
"''"''' n"'~,, --193.i~ Nrwhavrn Lllnt>, H.R. .viird • !Iha.rip ·r fruit trl'l!'J.. -rnrrreom . " ... " . MESA DEL MAR a r8fl' f1nrt 3 hf>drm \'il'W Jn!. PrimP. ]{)('lltion. No down -Price jnclurle~ w11shPr c 1.11ific•tion 575-510 CORBIN-'A niu~1 ~,.II" 011 nrr ha~ 600\ l/i~ Amiiros C1rr\,., H.B. TRANSFF:R t!.'rm~. ~1720 -+ dryer, ~frigrr11!nr. JO-/. DOWN hnu~ht !n Flnrirl11 . nn,, or A 4 RPdroom prn,e "Francis. YOUR PRORl.1';1\f TARBELL 2955 Harbor frl!PZl!t ·. l flP~rQllm Dream Hnmr on I ,~
MARTIN t11rll'r.•t nor ~rory htl1nr11 in C'llJ\ _Foun111in11" r~sale.. In SPJ-:CI Al.JSTS REPOSSES-SIONS--;-F:lrc1.rh; Jll.rAgr rlnnr 1 l11r{e l.'Orner, C'rptrl, drpd, Semtn1ndlttplire ~
!hr arr11 "'llh 2\IOO sq. II. 4 lAAfb .~11n!!'t :-.1ar1an1, t .V. p t M t •. ~PIH'IOU!I btorlmoma d~slrable hlln!I int.I. rl1sh ·' Cl•111i/ic•fion 600-699 "·"•·-•n•. 2 "·"'"'·· 1,,,.,,, BC"nu11ful 1 hf'drm, 2•1 ha. raper Y anagemen Spark.Ung cle11n homes, some • Uniq11P Tri !r:vel c '"'" '"' "" Real E1tate I newly painted & carpeted. 2. · • -• on. 1 w11~hl!r. Br1111t caurlyard [Ill IA mlh' room. BraulHul l·~r-"STARDUST" ~1111tle al()r.)I. trmpnr11ry rlr.•i11:n 1 patio & In rop location nr I l IJ · 11· " b ' 1 STEPHENS & KAYE l, 4 .Ir a bdrms. Somr with * p I u "·1· " • f u....i-ment pPI~. llflnlt' lrt~hly pp.intPd " ,,av~ ! e ·ry, Ca l f(l see. r rp -n...., 1evanle 1c-ho0ll It shopping, Chtck -, .,.....,
L In R •• lty I 645.0122 AN\'TlMF: pools. FHA·VA conv. term~. •"7"""
REAL r ·oRS 644-7662
NO i NOi OOWN I
In 1•rter11n11 for 1hi~ :1 hl'rt.
room bf'au1y· U.'i!h rnnm in
roam Quality ~arrr1s 11nd
tlr11pr~. pu~h bullnn N'll'lk
crn1<'r m11ke a l1nt' lrim1I)'
hr•n1,., \"A appraiAAI $~7.oOO.
!n~irtr 11nfl 0111. ('ln!'.r 10 Sr arw , nc. from Sl7,000 Ill S40.000. .,, ·111"1• a1tr11cllvt price le xlnl fln. C l•siific•fion JOO.JIO
John,: and 11u ~rhu11l' plu~ 962-6981 any lime CORONA DEL MAR Collins&. Witts Inc. !">46:~1.1 1nclnJr.
1hnrp111g Call nnw a.tfi.231.t _ RI 3 BR I y AA-ll Adams Avr. 962.:i,J2l Pacific Shores Realty 1r~]
NEWPORT HEIGHTS n~rl. su.:W.r& s~z~· :· 10~.· *OCEANFRONT * 5.16-M~ r.ve.•: 842.Rm MtrcMndlN V Oose In 11chon\5 & 11nrr,:. , ..
Vrry rinr .l BR. 2 Ba. rnod· S:..i,~9~. DUPLEX Cle 1sific•tion 800-836 ~rn home. S.tl;,oo, Ha m• Shaw Realtor • Cnmp. rurnl.shtd, 3 Br, up, MESA VERDF. 6•/. VA l I 11 ~1 Wal~~~.~ Lee 1-BEACH-UNITS-675-3000 "Armrh11 1r lloutrhun1i112" 2 RR.. rtown. sn,500 lAvely -4 BR 2 BA + f m Du1ch H11vpn MllTin11. rJd~tinR h is Ind Supp11ts ~ E. Coast ll\\•y., Cd,.,1 GeorSI• Williamson rm. home. 'Nr Khonl 'uh: S21 .~ loan pay11hle_ $19.i IM'r
1 lngrr 11 rrn13I unl1!1, Nr\\porr fJ 11.l\ ,\ lllC.ll 'If
llE .U: .. \" l:\f.
67S.7225 Realtor It tMp'sz cntr nn qu];I .. 1.1 monlh PJ.T.I. • Brdronm I c1.11ific•tion ·1 50-158
ST EPS TO OC EAN i 7J..4350 645-1564 •v•s Eire bHn.. like "" 1 h I 2 ba1h. elPr bl1n l'llnt:r l •il4! 1142.445.i or 541'1.'.'l\40 Shorr~. clo~,. 10 h4°'Arh, 14
-p;j"Ew MODELS-sz;u·11stl'11, nl\J.v !I yr11 old, no
Under cnn~tructinn . ~r 1hr \'A('11nri"~ F.::'lc"ll"nl yr11r
pl11n~ al IOJ.3 ~l11r1llt'rs Ori\'P, Am.1nrt lnrnme ol $1600 mo.
f ~l \~19 ~?S lO~.i •
-'
I lmm11r. 4 Rrlrm. 2 h11!h horn ...
Bhn~ .• c11rp, rlraJ>f'~. 2 Cllr
.ira1112r. Only S:\.lOOO.
CAYWOOO REAL TY !'lover Shorf's, 4 & :; Bt'drm,:, S13~.c.xi. English Waterfront
Qu I d 6306 \V, COfl~! il"A'Y·, Nn 4 N !I h11rM. !l!.'IPcT )'(tut O\\'n I CALL ~ e• • • l 4 14 . " nt, Pttilf' n'IOf, sh1ni:;lr S.8-'.l290
rolo" ,. "ustnm det•1l,: All 91~ ~ 111deA, .,..arm wond lnL, m&l· ~~~~~~~-...,.~
\l'i!h nUt.SIAntit"i \'J{'\\fi, Rny -""'CIMIC. nl!ltt'nt !f'f"P!l. 52' rrtme 5 RR, :1 Blllh. F('lrmAt tlv
'I J. \V9rd, Rltr. &46-\5.j(), Jtf.AllY f"Jnl11,ge. Pier/slip, $179.9.iO. rm It rlinlng rm . 2fiOO aq .
Opf>n DAil)·. ~~·-~~~,~~ PETE BARRETT RlTY I '' 0w0f'r :l46-IT\.',
Turn tho!e Whit!!! Eleph1u1ts CU STOM F OURPL E X • SELLING Ynur bOftl~ "Ll!t"
Into c~h thni a D&lbi Pilot I Chclic~ NeivJ)llrt Arf'.A. $74 ,000 642.SZOO w'i!h uJ .• ~!"ll tt f11i;t. Oa.lly
Dime-a-line ld\J • Own"r 713 9Sl·7Q39. Pilot C111g9if\Pd. ~2-5678
. • w \IK ... b b ,. I ... lf tL I ihllR' crpl thruoul nve_n,n1.lw1111 ,.r, 1rrp11rr, t1811d
DUPLEX S.'16.9:'10 \\'l <;j(l"nith tU,. enlr)' Bltln fAmlly rm ., tArpf'tt, rlrll?'t, M...-..Equlpm.nt
23rrt &: Or11n••· C.M. bonkc1.se_s In paF'l(ll'd l1v rm PllllO, dble_ raraar:, sprink· Cl osTcefon tOO 9 I z . It!~ land!iCaprd a I I t • Bulldl!!r 642-4905 wfu,,.d brick lrplt. By · -'
1 ·=~=-~-.,-,.,.--.,,-~ !-°"-·"'-'.:.· -1-".:.·"°-· _._,_;_, ... .:.:._,,_ I' Qhtilj~MJjlAij[l 1 Trlflt90flatlon e Golfer .. • Attent~n ·e GOOD 5 BR. h~e on Lon-----__ , . --~-....,-.,,.--..., 3 BR 2 Ba. Xb11 oo~r Jo1. donbP1Ty ln No. C.fo,f . 96J.44JJ (:r.'J"J41-~10J l Cl•ssificLflon 91J:-•.t7
Walk ,,, C()Unttf ~lub. AtJUmP f'X \Jllnr fHA \OA,.n
t'ORTTN CO. fi42 ·SOOO a! 111ppm1t, S2.'1,7,IJO w/lnlf'N'a.t
IT'S A brl!I!!:: •• MU ycur al 'Inly 6~.. S2JOO down
Items with f!!a.se. UM! Dally PAYmnl. Ch.\S. C. fo,fa.11ln
Pilot Clas1\lied. M~~ Rltr. ~-tl~.
4 Br. spilt ltvPI,. Sol Vlst11 I
C111ll mndPI . bnat I: trlr
1rta, ~h'11 lrit lot, lop «tnd. ~,,,.....,~-,-~~
Cll.11 ~42.-4169. I c1 •• ,jfic•tian ,,o.
1'n'I' be1t t'tlllltA! 647-5673 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!ll!llllf
•
I
\
:
,
'MILV l'llOT MOndlJ', Fftittwr 1; 1971
• • ,• .
Classified "INDEX ::Advertising. · -· -~.. '.
AJl ..... c ........ Moe .• , ... I•
cs.-Hr -""" Mi.twJ -....... --: ..... ,.., ..... ~~
.,...-~
h rc .. w .. .-.. --Ct~ ..... o .-....
c; ...... """' ----.Dt:IW .....
e .....
P9mhll• V•lfn --.......... " ...... ·--HQ!llltM ...,_,
·~-. U¥1M T.,_ .... _ ._,.
UIYM Ml"' ._.._ ........ ,_,., _ ... _
M_'I' ....
Ml4w1W ("'
~v,_
H'"¥' ... tll ,.....,. ...... .. Ill..,.,. ....... .. -.,.,_
$';11 ,,. ~'""' 's. .... ,..
sa9• """ "9i1t1ts , .... ~ ....... ·--""'"""' ,..,. Wn-
w .. t"'iMler
..
... !_, _11u_aen_'_~_su_. ,_"_· __ I [iJ
ACrM .. fiW .................. IM·
""""""" ................... 151 •n.1-,.,,._,, .............. IM
~ Left,/C"""' .......... lM
<"91mwdel ,.,...;,. ......... ; .. IH
( ....... ~ ..... Nit. ....... ,1 ..
DQ!m(et/Ulllhi a.le ............ 10
, ........... '"""' ............ 14'1 •I_,,,_., ........... , .... Mt
·~·~ ............. l il ~ .... -........................ 11'
NiWt. MMwfT .. ..., fl'trb . 11'1
....,,._ a...t, •-' .. u•
• ,,..__ Ce.. """""" • .. .. .. • Ul
• ~ tf It.I• ".,..,.., . . . . . . na.
• llMNMI, ,..,..., °""" .. . . .. "' • • _,................ lU
llMI •mt. ...... __ .... IM,
All~ dtlallknlM ......... ...
ts..ifr -..._ Mlwl ·-......... ..,.,..
....... _ ...... fl'.m -·-·--··-c•~-.. _
('"'91 ..,.,1c.
~lilllo•• c~. c.ct•l•
ctitW C'ln "-·-,,.,. .... -·" •i..rr1a1 ,,_ ... -·~----·~ .. •ltA
. MMI• a ... ,
M-.C"fllillt
l_T._. ........ ·-· ·-· .... .-.
~~kl
Mlktf9N•u' --"•""1119 & hM •• ,1 ...
fl'.wi.t.11 .. •at• . ,. ...... ,.....
Pr..tw, Plfdi. a..ir ·-· ,.... S-lce & 1nr.n.t1tt ........... ., -· ........ , .. "'"', ... ' -.... _
Ttlrthi• tltN.r ...
...... Silt ·--·-VMilll"""
W111._c .... 1..,
..
I..__ ~-Y"""___,t ][Il]
.... w ....... ""'" ........ . 7tt ~ W111ttot, f<1"'91e · ..... : ..... 1H
J91U WutH. M & P ........... 1+1
HW WllllfH. M a P .......... ,f lt
I F~ancial J~I ~ ~-1~
~-~·-------"~'""" ........................ ..
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H'"'tlngton Beach
N1CE S er, 'wttam rm. NI":
1'1-v.')' Ir. new elementary
1ehl. Want to seU fut!
Prlncipals Onl)'! 8944076
SACRIFICE a br, 2 ba, lam
rm w I frplc. Ul,CXXI,
Auumable 'Z%,~":i. 962-1864.
Huntington Hartiilur
SACRfFTCE -$89,CXXI
?ofqnificenl 4 br, 4 ba,
v.·aterfront· .home in Hu~
ting1on Harbour. l O 1 '
"'aterfront. 57' dock. Call
592-1601 tor appt_ Principala oruy.
lrvln.
Houses Furnished 300 Houso• Unfurn. 305 HouSff Unfurn. 305
200 _N ___ rt_B--ch·---Coste Mesa University P•rk
I DEAL FOR DESERT / ~-------1 ;,;,•;;,.w.;.:po='-"-"ta=---1.:-;;;;-=::-;;::;:::-;;;:;:-1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 SPA DEVELOPMENT DISTRlBtn'ORS NEEDED MOBILE home • Lido arca..1 ;
'
b •. bed .. ,,_ 2 BR. l&rl':· Pa!io. Crpt&, Approx, .. 000 acres of land r, •111& , crp~. JHiuu. r · n..1 1 witb lob ot \\'&;;,,r! $100,000 HUNT'S · \\'ESSON · Nt>w Pool. 11 blk bay. Adults, drps, slove, re rig. .,.. ... r 11 I tropical se-tting for adull5 Ool\'n. 6% lnt. y for 2 muJrl-m I Ion do I a r ad. no pets. $200 mo. 6il-3409 .. only. 1 hlk to ll'K.lps. yrs. • then am.mortlze w 15 vertbed snack par;., pro-FURN. l(q)ny Pine rue4
yn:. For mort> info. 1t.Tite: ducts. NEED f'IO\V! Reti. house, util paid. $125/mo ='~'~"~'-mo.,. _&,IG-4::--'30.::.::::-;::;;;;;
Philip \Vhlle &. Co. able n1en or won\en in your Suitable for B 8 ch e I 0 r J J BR, 211 ha, huge bonus 1
so: Bank of Amtrlca Bldg, area to ser.,,ice fa.st-moving &t2-5no. nn for in-law or kids. $26:> 1
625 B'way San Oiero 9'1101 coin opE"rated productJ in mo. Nr Coli!& ri1eu. High.
8 · CRES company M!C'Ured Jocatlolll, Housos Unfurn. 305 !>57-~7. I + A commer'Cial or factory. Part G•n•ral 4 BR house \\'/back yard.
r or
CALL US
2-3 Ii: -4 BR. renla.), In
University Park
and Turtle Rock '"E HAVE nIUf!
"!11111 I 11,lltl.
- --'l l P1di11r or full time, 6 to 12 houn Vic Paularino & Bristol.
New on markf't, C-1 zone. per ,1·eek -110 selling. CASH 1 BR furn trailer ...... $65 1 557-4101 after 5 "SrNCE 1946"
Price and rerms to sell. Ma. REQUIRED $(iOO to $1.497. 1 BR turn cottage ...•. , $11~
1
• LOVELY 3 br horne, 2 ht \\'estern Bank Bldj'
jor rorner on Brookuhr31 \Vrire for more informatl ln: 1 BR pnv home ........ $9J ba. East SJde loc:atJOn. sit;, Uni\-ersity Park
Ave., \\'estmlnsler, lns!an1 • .'.ood Supply, P.~. 2 .. BR prlv home ........ $00 ino. &12_3863. Da ys 833-0101 Ni9hts
Larwin Reelty, Inc. Box 3155, Torrance, Cahf. 3 BR kids/pets OK .... Sl50 EXECUTIVE 3BR 28 A -·
EXCLUSNE A~ENTS 9050. Include phone numtx>r 3 BR, den, pool ........ Sis:> Lovely lencl'd yrd. Grdnr
96249U anytimo YOUNG \Vomens Bou tique. STAR*LET 776-7330 tncl 5265 &12-0506, 612-2TJ5 I ~EE~ LIKE •• • .. ., , Cemetery I Xlnt S. Orange Co Loe, est. S165 . 3 BR. 1~ BA, R/0.1 $lD _ 2 BR Nt\\' crpts, ! . Hol.llaforft.ne
Falling in love again ..
1
Lott/Crypts 156 5 yrs. Rtai'l<>nably priced. PO Cpli, drps, patio, yd Child. stovl' relrig child ok ';;m;m;m;;·;m;mi;;;;;;1
Here'i your chance! Charm. · Box_ 2703 Cap1stn.no &ach, ok · I ALA Rentals' e &Jj.3!1()() f I
ing family home of -4 BR., 5 CE~fETERY Jots $250 Calif. I Blu• B•acon * 645-0111 su· 2 BR I BA Stove Hous.esfum.or
310 crllp color scheme thruout. each. Pacific View '.'ltemorial Investment 3 BDR..'\J F mily nn park 1 ~ : · d s ' ' Unfurn. £v!~I ~~been&donr .. h. Park. n4 -745-6741. Opportunity 720 like yard_ ~ta r..1e~'. Kids i A~1~e~~':· rp 9 6-l:>-3900 1-c---d-l '-.. -.,---i P8•JU5, anW1Cpg, muc C I OK '·k ·~ th NO oron• e fYMI "' !00 ommercl• A!liliat• • w ·• .,....., a mon · 2 BR ne\\'lv dee Adlts 2 more . .,...,, · p 151 FEE ~1720 · · ' 1 -~-------1
i eel h II roperty If · ·. ch.ildren OK No pets. 2'178 2 BR. H/F pool, elec. bltns. • 41 / 01 $110 INCL util · Beach I Placentia. &16-::.637 bl · U ( $250· turn . r I_ EARN 15°/0 12 10 per mo !~ngalow w/ cpts. Child $17:1. 3 BR. Child1:1'n OK. ~2GJ: ~~urn. •
$100,000 Cash Down RETURN• ALA Rentals • Glf>.3900 Fnl·d. yd. 21).1·1 Prrs1drn1 Pl. Duplexes Unfurn.· 350
REALTY $170.000 Loan1 at 1%-8'7o 1&1£.---114:1 ----~',._.".':'.~2.15=··:1 ::..:.:;..:;_-;:'-:'-;-----1 "AAA" TENANTS S17:J. l Br. 2 Ba, R/O. Cpts, • ~-~ : Univ. P ark Center, lnoint D Sh L• gu-• Be·-L IJ.000 ,q Jt • OC Ai.......,rt drps, pool. Xln1 for child. over ores a ..... 9Ut Call Anytime 833--0810 I . ..,.. j\\'e can pro\'e it! ----------1 '!"''""'""'"!!'"'"'!''""'""'""""I W.R. DUBOIS INC. on an in1·estment of $2j(X) 10 Blu• Boacon * 645-0111 bit 12 BR, stove; retrig, wfw
L•tun• Be.ch * 545-7166 • $2j,{OO (f u 11 Y secured) 3 BDR..'L + family rm., lull 4 BR. !dn1 rm, den, n drps. $2'50 util paid, Ocf:an
Shoppin9 c.nter Sit• sounds interesting, We \\'OUhl dining rm., built-ins., brk. I s11'/l't l. 1,;nobstn.u.'tt-<i VIC\\', view. Adults, no pets. Perm.
----------f 1J) ac. C-:l downtO\\'fl San like to talk to you. Our in. $390 a month. NO FEE. Pool. $1000/mo. 6-Mi-2130 Hy.i-2815 or 2131HO 5 -6781. $31,900 1 Juan Capistrano~ or can be dusrry has grown ovpr 100'70 I Newport, 540-1720. Fountain Valley Lido 11·1·,------1
3 Bedroom 2 bath Early Cali.· split tor de\•eJopment. Bkr, over rhe pa.st 6 years. Lead-SlfiO -VERY clean. Nr,vly 1 --------
fornia 1tyle home, lesa than 493-1153 or -493-1706 eves. ing economists say it "'ill dee 2 Br. hse. ?.IO\'l' in 3 BR. :l BA, crpls drps \\'ATERFRONT, lgt. 3 BR,
·a Year old·. White \Yater surpass this growth over !he today bllns. frpk. D/\V'. fncd 2 BA, up .. din. rm. $400
view. Tile entry wilh double Condominiums next fev.· years, For appt & ALA Rentals • s-t;,.3900 yard. s235 "'°· Trade\i•inds I mo. lease. 6~
v.'OOd doon, open beam ceil-for sale 160 fact.! call ~Ir. Gregory ac 1130 _Roomy 2 Br. w/ g•r•g• 360 Really 8~7-8;',Jl Apts. Furn.
in&:. lots of "'ood thrtlout. COl'.'DOmNIIDl • l\lonli-530-7060, l\1on thru Sa1. & yard. Kids \1·elcome. Huntington Beach I CG~.-.-,-,-.-1 ------
Buill-in kitchen v.i1h di!h-cello J BR, 2 BA, romp! SEASONED notes balance Blue B•acon * ~S-0111
washer. Call • redec, Dbl garage, encl $25,0CKI & $j(J,[)()(] executed 5 BR 3 BA Liv rm din 1------...,-:::::::-I
patio, Enjoy clubhouse !iv-by multi-billion s mfg. 10 'f, nn 'tam ~ 2600 .,;. ft HEATED 18:oi:36 p 0 0 l ' RENcTo'"sGTSFULERSSNITUU · 2 lJ 'd · Id Call 61-52·9 · · -""' · Cove.red palio. panJ !am. Jng'. poo , no_ outsi e Y1! · ov.Tier J· J $335/mo. ChlTier. ~6-1713. kil . Buillin rangt'. All . 2
main!. WUl consider 2nd 67;:i.304!t I "'o-""'=====c=-=
T.D. 121, 9 50. Chvner M I L 2'0 $115. NICE EASTSIDE 2 BR car gar. w/lau~ryf & ~vtr Complol• l BR. ~.-• 833-2:>72. oney o oan " \V/YARD. soflnr. 4 BR, 1,,.,., I. !\el\' .r w n
..AO tan
REAL ESTATE
Bl 8 64 1·/v.• 21 yr lse $29J as low as S22 per mo • -1190c1enneyres1. I EXCEPTIONAL Entrance 1 t TD Loan u• ••con* s..0111 '-·~9.1 ~ . . ioo r. PURCHASE
4!M·9473 549-0316 fo Mesa Verde Coilntry Club. S I Corona del Mar I 74·~· · OPTION
100' VIEW of o e ea n & 2 BR Condo. Spanish lityle. ,_,, 1 l BR. 3 BA, :.l~redith Ind. item selection
Cat &t in a . Small but Xlnt finan. by ow ne.r , 7 \~ io INTEREST * 3 BR on double :ot. Crpts, j Gardens home, a\ad 00\\' 4 v Month to Mo
buildable iot in Laguna. 546-8790. No ch.ildren. under 2nd TD Loan I dra_pes. dbl garage .I ~' S330 pe~ ~· C~I 1'tr1
2 hr, d~u'STOM •
$3 950 full price Low dn 12. S2i::i/mo. G, JI Roberl.!lln oegt'f', ut 0 as ,.,'ow c I Jo~ monthly T base-II .ty Realtor 67' 2-WO 1 Realtors. 54.5-8-124 Furniture Rlfltol . · • • w 2 BR. 2~i ha. Pool, ·sauna. erms on equi · ' .,.. d :117 \V 19th C r.1 548-3411
paymenU:, Bia. 493-1153 or Low dn. (}ol:ner \\"/linance 642·2171 545-0611 ATI'RACTIVE :l br collage, 3 BR Toii'flhouse, r;pt/ ~p~. , Anahe.tm ' · · 174-2800
-494-6632 eves. Fortin Co. 642-5000 Serving 1-larbor area 21 yrs. I . Fenced palio. $21.J. 517 patio, carport. No )ard LaH b. 6!M-3708
lido l1Je 1 Income Property 166 a .;;, E ~~th9;~:et 0• Carnation. ~90 mrssag€'. 962-99LI.' \\'e'U HOLIDAY _PLAZA S ttl M t C I v.'Ork $190 To stt lea\r 8 ia I
----------110 Un its-Eastside Co~t~ . l3BBLRKS3 bato ocean,.or h;iy, call you back. DELUXE Spacious 1 _!~I
ON STRATA CENTRO j . , den, 1n'g rm, 1 fui·n apt Slli Heated ........,. .
• 8..>drooms, 3~ Baths i i\lesa. Archilect design, no Cash Fast ·' bltns, Lease. 613-3~77 2 BR, l ~. B,\, O:>ndo. al.I Ample parking. No children
3;i Ft. + Lot \·acancie~. low main-bltns, al'all now al $17J • no pets. 1965 Pomona,
Street to Stra1a !enance, good rl'turn. By rROi"T house, 2 bdrm.~. 7 mo. Call :\Ir. H o e gee . I C:'ll.
0 .,2 ,.,1 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds I ha., carp., drapt>s. $22.l . ~ 0 ,2, A ~ . .,, w""· ~ ~ RAJSALS -,;~ '· ''"'· -,C7H~A~T~E~A7U~LA=po=1N°"T~E" "'~ FREE APP ,',!onth. Agent 6ij..2IOI ~""-;,-c--,----::::
LIDO REALTY INC. Costa Mesa lnv~stment Costa Mesa l Br, 2 ba hse. panelerl DELUA'E fw-n 2 Br, BPI ..
3377 Via Lido '73-7300 23rd &: Orange, C.~f. 541-nll anytime lam nn. lrplc, bltns, crpt Pool. Close to shops, $150. ** ,0• lot • Clean 3 br, 2 DUPLEX S36.950 :~""'""'~""'"'!'""'""'~I Drive By & drps. $250 lease. 96S-5363. Adults, 00 pets .
ba. Newly redecorated. I Builder 642-4005 Money Wanted 250 I 570 v· . s 3 Br. 2 ba, shag ctrpl, drps. 1941 Pomona Ave, CM .
Large patio. sn,soo. 1ctor1a t. bltns, fenced yard. S240, F B Ibo p • I . ·KI 5-2512 after 6 pm 'L-.,-,,-;,.-,-;s".'1.---.. 17;;;0 A ~ERY well_ established Costa Mesa & L. 968-6J89, 96S-4~. : a II •n•nsu.
business ln regional Orange . , need ·arrl 1 e $25 'VK-OCEANFROJ\'T Mes• Verde OCEAN front lo Coast Hwy County shopping cent e r 2ho Bedroom. unfurn~hed 1 2,!~~rl~~r~~i/:,mo ~hiJd l Lovely Bachelors, 1 _BR.
SUPER 1 0 c a t i 0 n _ I jg 6 R-3 propeny. approx. 12,000 needs e:11pansion capital of use, C11!1X'IS, open ~am _ · ·
1
ii I aid sel'\llct P.ool UtiL ~fynle\\'OOd. 3 BR, fam, sq. ft . Xlnt business or $30,000 to S50.!XXI. Exr-ellent eeiling, Huge renr yard. A ok. 842--1019 i • 67i.s;4o 9
frpl c. FHA-VA pending. home poss i bi Ii t y. So. o PP or I uni I Y. \\' r i I e real nice house. Children & * * 3 &Inns, 2 Baths, clo~e -=----.--.-=-:----1
$27,500. Owner 499.1901 or (U Laguna, $110,000. ( 213 ) Classihed ad No -41, Dally , pet:; ok. SJ7j mo. 6-16-1394 or ro :O.larina High. $7-10/mo. Corona d•1 Mar
496-39-19_. 244-119'1 P 1lo1. P .O. Box l;;so, Costa 673-0900 Kent Allen. Cati &16-1224. ~ BACHELOR near shop'g. =~~-~=-1c.--,.c-A=h i\lcsa, Calif. 9~ BR O h H • • NO better view ot in re j SHARP, clean, e!ose to For lease 4 , utc aven I Priv patio. Adults. $125(mo. N•wport B•ach
EASTERN CHARM
Beach Hts, Laguna, Reas. Mortgages, schools & shopping, l BR, I on cul-d~-sac, 13• ba, _bllTJ_:". Uli! lncl. 646-f095
}.1nt fin. By 011-'flt'r. flfTN. Trust Ooeds 260 2 BA & fam rm. trplc, FA fresh paint thruout. 5~~;,s ~~--.~~~--=--t
DOWN ..,""" 5-46-8"""' bef I h · .;bl
1
LRG pr1v Bachelor. Room ........... '""' $3.i 000 1 1 TO 3 e~t. patio, " e . gar., Huntington Harbour & bii1h. No cook'g. Pvt e ntt. 10 am & aft 5. · s on ai;r_e fru11 ln'eJll. E.'l:tra nice • _ . . _
T11·0 story pTe'!ltiie home 1vi1h • esla!e parcel \\'/ magn1h-1 nn\v $22.l a month Call $9;i incl util. 675-4537
a sunny Calif. sparkling I Mobile Home/ cent \''\cw. 9.,. int . 5 yr ~.,,·11.1 fl .1 R ·.,, I HUNT. Harbour 11·aterfron! :l BR 1 ba crpt pool So.
T 'I p k 172 ,~ . ,.....,.. J eri age e ors, 3 b 2 b I 1 d k , , , ' ~1imming pool, -4 Bdrms. 2 ra1 er ar s due date, 12 ' d1~rounl. IOpcn Eves.) I · r. a. rp c, :r of h"'JI, adults. no petJ,
baths large country kitchen I 9~ 2 . . Bkr. ~,3-1153 or 491-6632 !,, dock. W nr lse/opt1on. S\6j lea5f'. 613-8213. "th " 11 bit Jo'' 1 / SRlr or trade: 1 10. 4 x60 mo. ei•es.
1
LARGE J\·IESA DEL :\TAR $350. 6-l 1-2260 By oi1·ner. '11 • ns. _1ne cp 5 blie by 01,·ner, trade for hume \\'i1h 4 bedrrils, family j Costa Mesa
d:?Jll· A real .family home. home 536-249-1 rm and large fenced yard. N•wport Beach 1----------1
$.)J,000. See This today. I I~ Quiet inside s treet •$JO WEEK & UP
CALL O 646· 2•1• Real Estate Wo1nted 184 Hotisn for Rent it!! Fam1iies only at S275 pe~ 3 BR, 3 Ba. la11:e home I BR. or STUD IOS furn w/ 9 ~,, Apt, Units In good location mo. Agent &.16--4141. On channel v.·ith pier & float, ron1pl. kitchen (all ~ec.). ~ \\'anted by pvt buyer . Cond SHARP l BR 3 BA tri-level I la11:e patio, $-150 per mo. Free linens, heated pool, air.
•EAL TY t · ~-t ~ 3511 H F · h d 300 '· 637..(163.l or 6ir>-3435 cond, 1V & maid service Neir Nt•,•rl p111 orrltt no 1mpo ..... n · .. 1a-• ousos urn1s e hnn1e, 3 car gar, all bltns, .,-,;;:;:::,--:'::-:;::-:'::;---;;,;
01,·nl'!' 11"ants action now! : 4 Bdrm. on channel SJ50 al'ail.
NEEDS TEENAGERS General Only S290 per ino. Call l\lr. l BR. dplx. pt!y furn. :S2JO Daily & Monthly rates
Small comn1unit)' pool, club-11 •] s= C , A Hoegee. South Coast , Cay"·ood Realty 5-18-1290 2080 Ne"'PClrt Bh'd., at 21st house & putting green 11·ith Fi1u1ncial "~ -oiy ..... gu11a collage. Reidtors 'l}-8.t24 . · e &12-2611 e
this immac. adult occupied Private garden. Uri! pd • .l-• • I N\VPT BCH. lmmac l BR, BIA . ·d • r.l/Ch
3 BR., family rn1. ho1ne.. Blu& Beacon* 645-0111 )SJ--IARP 3 BR, 2 BA, quiet den. dining, 2~; BA: fron1 niencai • '"'11'
. street Now vacant $230 per S3S:J. Delta &164114 • • • • 8 • • Lge. b<inns. & huge encl. pa.. Business , $110 . Uri! pd. 1 BR. J b!k 10 mo. Call LARRY,· Heritage I $l60/i\lO .• Thi!; is a rare [ $30 /,vk up. $100/mo. up
tio makes this a ~af home Opportunity 200 ocean. Child/pet ok. Real E~tale 540-llSl. nne on Peninsula Pl! Call STIIDIO &. 1 BR Apts
for a family '11th teenage!'!. * CANDY SUPPLY Blue Beacon * 645-0111 12-BR h . I C ' ALA fu'ntats • 64j.J90Q 1 • ~lor TV, P~ne serv, J>?OI $59.500. · _ se •n ("(IUr · rps e Linens 111a1d serv avail.
Del ency R•al Estate DISTR. * Sl2" · beaut Dix '· BH. blrn.~. & rlrps. $14.') mo. No pet~.) l·BR dupfrx. Cii1~. d1'Jl~. Clip Art'. Good F'OR $5.
2828 E. ~oa~t H1vy .. Cd~I (PART OR F'ULl. Tl:'\IF.:) t'P1 drp. d-whr. 1-A h!, i.?::Lr. 1 or 2 ~mall ehildren. 20i7 rRnge. ,\dlls_ lS'o dog.-. SllO Cha 1·g{' "ards Acc. 6~4-'i710 . VER':i:: HIG~ INCOl\IE Blue Beacon* 645-0111 \\"allAcf'. Apl 6. 6-16-2i19 \lo. Grahan1 Rlty 6--16-2414 12.176 i"ewpor1 B!l'd. 5-iS-97715 -;;B~A~L~B""O~A'"COVES l\ow ava11Bbll' in Cmlta l\lt'Sa Balboa Coves . I S\40 . GOOD loc. 2 BR. I s1A· • 2 BR Be h h • • • • • • • •
WATERFRONT and ~urroundini; area~. All ' ' ~ P. 0. nc11• cprs. Garg. Child c'l~i:d pel ok.' Al'a~lc nnw se. ACAPUL<;O Apts. atttacti".e·
\ocahons are commercial or \\ ATERFRO~T. °"<-'?r " Br. & jX'I . AL . Rentals • 6-l!J.l.l!OO Pool, U11t paid, Garden hv-Prime Joe. 3 BR. 2 ba. single
sior;o, Ne\"IY decor, Fenced
}'d. 30 ft. boat slip, $'19,500
Bill Grundy, Realtor
833 Dovtr Dr., N.B. 642-1620 I
l\IU~ SEU. BY O\\o'NER
Brand new, fee simple, 1
blk beach, 3 br, 2 ba, 2
frplr, beam celling!, 11·/11·
carpet, huge dbl ·g a r .
642.-i52.'t
BLUFFS
Popular E. Plan, lush un-
bell, 21; ba. l BR ! den. By
01\•ner, $46.jOO. 64~-2290 .
BY Ol1Nr 3 BR. den. 21~
BA. Pool $.'\S,000. 1936
Tel'E'sila Ln, N.B. 6~2-2378 .
•223 OCEASVIE\V A1-e for
sale by O\.\"ner. View o! &y
I.: Ocean. 348-'983.
factory furnished by us. :z. Ba . :'>lo. to :\lo. S].j(I_ ALA Rf'ntal~ e 6t: .. 39J() in,l!'. Adults, nn pets. 1 BR.
Qualified ""'rson \\•ill becon1e Bill Grundy Rtlr. G!:Z-4620 -· 1 Sa S14i & up 2 BR $liS. 1800 . . .-~ LARGE Ranch !ype 3 BR ve your L'81' • !t's not . · · datriburor for our ·candy Balboa Island ,{: family, frplc, fu lly crptd '\allace Ave., C.1\1.
IKestles. Pl11,11rer~. Toor.•ie . • outdoor BBQ & ('Ol'en'ci far! Just reach for your I FURN. 1 BR apt. Sl35. Avail
Rolls, :\!ilk Duds, etrf. You 4 BR. furn. Avail Feb 1st. pal in. SZ2j ;:'\lo. Pen'On phone Ir. call ' Dail Pilot I Feb. l . 1922-B \Va.llace.
n1us1 ha,·e 2 ro S hrs per S375/nio yearly. Gas &: ""tr P.€'11.lfy 6--12-lTII 1 y Adults. Ko men. No peta; .
week spare time (days or pd, &16-7130. Ciassified 642-5678 Olarge Info., 838-0038 :\Ir. Davis . 3 BR . fencer! yard, garden '''esl. l BR. homl', So. Bayfronl, & · $200 h Sell idle items now! SIT";i(I CASH REQUIRED dock pri\•il. Sl.10 :'>lo. ro Ju,,. · patios mont your ad~ today!
61;;..-0391 Call 642-j6i8 Now! For mor'-' informa!ion 11Titt: 1.i. J~land Rlty 67:\.-1200 ___ _::· ::::::. ___ ...!..=========:::.t.;;~_;~=~===-1
"DISTRIBUTOR OlVISION Balboa Peninsula •Z:. P.O. Box 1739, Covina, ----------
Calif. 91722 Include phone COZ\' 3 BR rott, nr bay
number. & shops, ulll pd. $8.3/m<1. r
AffiHt1t1: In 6/1, eld. f'pl Pl't'f. Adi!~.
1r no f'<'I£. 6il-1162
4Y2°/o per mo ca••· 1~:·:_ 1,. ..
RETURN Lge 3 br. 2 ba furn hon1e
6·1:'>-1622
$@~~lA-"£~S9
The Puzzle with the Bu.ill-In Chuckle
S•n Juan C•pistrano (\Ve can pro\'e IH Laguna Beach
!------'"---.-t on an investmtnt of $2."il() lo RENTALS l BR. 21 ~ BA Spanish Sl:l.000 tf u 11 y M'('UN"d) •
,10wnhou!14!'.. bltins, c pt~, Mund~ lnterrstinir. v.·r ll'Ould 1. ?h11rn1lru: olrlrr
1
t hrlrnt,
drps, pool, elec gara~. like 10 talk 10 yoo. Our in. un urn1~fk>d . un11, ~t". fllnl.
many otht'r extnuL SJ0.500. dustry has groi\ n or er JOO', I'll! . m11~11·r I 11·. r rn .
6-14-7200 day, 673-102!! t\'r, nvflr flw' past 6 year~. lA'lld. 11·/111'11t piuwll lni;:, '.'Id bnrk
Silver ado Ing ('("()flOmi~rs ~11.y i1 will fln>pl:u'\'. D<'f'nn 'irw. Ju~l
surpass thls R"r'OV.'th 0,·er '™'I acro~s fron1 rn.-lx'orh Tn.t· 13 BR hOmr 1v/den, hv1n next fl'iV yraf1;. ~~or 11ppt .~ ly an nur~1andi1u.-: rt'Ol.11 at
room \\'/lrplc. F l."er uprorr lacls C'all 1ilr. Gregory at $2'10 :'\lo. l 'r. Va~
f'enctd yd, p11ttn, $12,!iOO lJO.i060 r.ton lhl'\.I Sa! 2. 2 bdnn. & df'n. furn .
:\lust M'll. &19-2Xl6. FRTGIO~IRE. . . . . a fe~Y !il~ps to till ~:ind
NOW'$ :rHE 4!'f' shopping Ctr, S.A. $2.lOO al . \ 1tlOr1a l~arh . f4:r
• Alph B
'
, J)all(I llt't'k 111/0t.'('8'1 1·1c11', Tl.ME FO.-Jn>M a 11 • " 1°-\I \' ' -ft Cr n!f'r \\'e~tminstrr S30f11 •1" • o. r, .... ·a~" QUICK CASH tlo\\·n it An.Ahelm 1"°nl'\\'l'fl ~11:'.~ION RF.,\l.T\'
h1.undry, (!1.Sh 0111 e Giu'flf'n !l.\i Sn. Cn11~1 1111~ , l.A[::Ull:i THROUGH A t;ro1·p, lit' ston>, cash out Pl!O:\!:::, ~!ll--Oi:\1
DAILY PILOT I '1' 51>-;m IT-, A br'"'· ,,,,,---,;;;;;
~ UNSCl!AMBlf A80Y[ lfTTf ~S ~ TO GET ANS\Vflt
WANT AD I FA8 t results 11.re ju1t • phorw! 11rn1~ with r11,.r. nsP Daily •••••••••!!111!11!1!1!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!••••!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1•!!!!~.--~=~'._~~--t:All &\1-ay . &12...56iS Pilot Cla~if!('d 6-12...i6i8 SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATICN 900
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JOIN THE
'SELLERS CIRCLE'
WE'RE
SAVING
SPACE
FOR
YOU •••
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If you sell a service and don't advertise in
the DAILY PILOT Service Directo ry, you're
doing business the ha rd way· The Service
Directory (classifications 6500 -7000 in the
classified ad section daily I
advantage you get through
. g 1 v e • you an
no other adver-
tislng medium. It reaches customers who are
ready to buy. Be there when your prospects
come into the market looking for th } service•
you have lo sell. If your service isn't listed,
we'll start a category just for you.
Pick up the phone rig h I now and reserve
your space in the "Sellers Circle" •
Your Direct Line. ta
Directory Results
642-5678
CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT
\ •
Mood.,, f1bnmy I. 1971 °* D•LY l'ILD1">'27 ---l[tl l -... -1[!]1! ~··---1~1 ~[ -..~ .... ~ ... "'~-~l!tJ~l.~•~ ....... ~· ... -w41tJI ~"'-lit!
SAYE
~ASH!
3 & 4 BR-l &. Frplc, fam
room, double garage. Beaut.
lounge. Pool. Billiards.
Adult A: Children.!! area
350 Rivltta Dr. 64UJ300
• MARTINl9UE 4i
P•rk·Llkt Surraundln91
DELUXE 1-2 A: 3 BR Al'TS.
Also FURN. BACHELOR
Prv patlos * Htd Pools
Nr !lihop'g • Adults only
rm Santa Ana Ave, 0 1 Now'S THE Mgr. Apt lJl • 646-..'\542
VILLA MESA APTS.
TIME FOR 2 BR Prlv pa!lo. •Itd pool.
2 "' ,oord gar. Child«• "·t'lcome, no pets plca11e!
QUICK CASH ,_!!,._55
'25_7"_' _"'_w_. w_""'_"·
THE GABLES·
THROUGH A 2 Br, r.!Ee~\~~~ A~~.
crpto;, dfJ)ll, range, focd yd,
DAILY PILOT ~;~~:~.,, $l~
26l!·L SarilA Ana Ave Sl""
WANT AD
642-5678
MESA VERDE I
2 BR, cpl&, drps. bltns, v.•a.sh/
dry 11.ltach. Locked gar &
stor. Lrg_ cl~rts, Nr. ahp'a:· I
Ov.·llf'r. ,)4().5599, MS-3209.
REGENCY ~--•••••W.[1 &: 2 BR, Crplg/drps M!lf
cleaning gas oven. enci &ar.
P&tios. 543-3605. 377 w. wu. 1
"'"·
•
'J.ounlairu .
lled/u..,..-Siyl. Lruury
l&SW--SB&llll
A.dolt 1J.tn1
J'undohed & tJnlllnlAbed
Irvine
Ocean!ront 3 BR. 2 BA, Child·
ren A: pet 0\(. Yrly $21~ .
675-1410 22:10 \V. Oc:tanlront ,
ttl')' 1 br. blln!, c~.
Dll>s. WO. util P<J. •
Adult fem only 548--5001
~~N'.T BE BEAT
sJNGLE STORY
Soutb Sea Atmosphere
2 BR, • 2 BATII """'"" .... Ail" Conditioned
Private• Palioll
HEATED POOL
_ ~le;nty, 6/ 11.wn
· Carpon •·Stonp ~~~GE
• ~·~ South Nia Santa' Ma ........... ws
Vitti ·CBNDdYI
NEW .NEW . : NEW
Luxury 40 Unit Adult
Apartmtn' CompltX
" I & 2 BEDROOMS
FURNISHED . OR
UNFIJRN,·
• Spacious ~nta
e Spttial cali.inet gpace
• Lock pr&i".!1 w/ IC atcr
• Bm ceU • l:ndry • Patios
• Dwhr/.disil • Gas stove
e Special soundpMOfing e Shaa ~ dnP<1
3S7 \V. Bay S1 C btwn Harbor
& Newpon Blvd, !.( mj N.
Of 19th Sf). I
CALL 6f6.007J
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DAILY PILOT Mond'Y, Ftbt114? l , 1911 '
I~ ~I _ .... ~_·B ;;I _ ... _-... -1~~;1~1 ;;-~, .. ~l~~l~-~";;;;l~~~I
430 Office Rtntal '40 Announcein.nts 500Announctimenta SOl Aph. ~R.;.oo;;;"'='-------400-Rentalt'. ~ Shari
Jlurn. or Unf urn. 370 Sl.!EPING rm, $60 ptr .mo. WANTED • W. rilht woman SHARE alr-('OlVj, cptd cfftct,
OC Airport area. Tel & 1.1\5
Wh en You
Want it clone
right •••
Priv entr l b&. Adults, no lo gh NB 81\lffl hm. PYt
~lli. 213.\ Dden, CM. Ste -ba. all priv. SIO. 644--0369 serv\ce incl.
$15 mo.
WANTED
m-1467 e DELUXE l ~• 2 BR's. ?-fsr. No. 6. G11r•91 for Rent W
Furnorunturn.$145&,UP. OCEANFRON T lite * STO GE GARAGES, NEWPORT atlices, cpl1 ,
Pl:ol Gardens. 177 E. 22nd housekttplng rooms, Elder-1 S drp1, cuan view, tram S&5 OVERWEIGHT /LADIES Call one of
the experts
listed below/I
St (:~f. 642-36-t:t. ' 1 ly rnUemen only. Linen Pho ., l til g per mo. Onr Aft 6 pm: ' &: ulil incl, S80 mo. 67S-7Jfi6 n,, '" un pm. 675-4644 For 'Yeight reduc~g program to establish
1tatJstJcs tor rapi permanent weight loss,
conducted by qual 1ed physical culturists.
Must be a minim m of 20 .founds over·
weight, have transportation an not current-
ly under doctor's care. AU inquiries com-
pletely confidential.
l BR. frp~. drp•. 11'0 uni. 'iiOfiilf"-1 :;-,Rot;;;;, ;il--'-;•Uii••l -"';;;~=====,I $160 fUM"I. 2658 Oranse Ave. t:OSTA 1-fesa, cloae to OCC. c• •n a """ * NEWPORT BEACH Civic C.~I. .;.;~1657. $55 l $6.1 utJI pd. Fem&le SUPER-DELUXE QUAUTY Center, 300 ft to lOX> ft.
u 1 1 -'-only. Ideal !or student. · Anw1 a: Secretarial. 675.1601 nunt ng on ~~ M~ l -2-3 room, up to 3,000 14.
ft . OUice 1ulte1, lmmed. cc-AIR COND" OCEAN VCEW
cupancy. 0rall&'e County. assorted siu1, shop center
/.irport Irvine Commerc· San Oemen.te 492--2979
Complex, adj. Alrportu 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM ON BEACH!
YNG roltep or '"'Orlring girl
Balboa Ill. Kit & TV rm
ttle. $6Sfmo &.: up. 67>3613
• Bachelor ~Ptl. »'otn S215 ftJRN room in priv. home. Hotel I: Re1taunnt, banks, from 300 aq. tt. 35c sq ft.
' """"""·-l ~ [ ................ J~ I
• 2 81111-uni. From $225 Costa Mesa. Kitch-pr\..,il +. San Diego I: N'pt l'wyl. 675-2464 or 541-5032
Nr. OCC. 54~1061 UNCROWDED PARKING
ASK FOR MISS POWELL-537·5410
81bysittln9 Hauling P 1intin9 &
P1 perhanging e 2 BR Furn. From $285 i c---:""'"-;=-::=,----;:: LOWEST RATES 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB
r--t• ~-.. , "·hw••L-* $15 PER week • up ·""-·--I 2!7' D p ID • ON THE BAY·• Ir-------, .__..,.. -w• ~ ncr • .,., 50 .... vw•"'r mar u on r. .11[ 1~ \\'UL babysit In my 1,, •-"' pool ·-... te · w/kitcbens. ..... per wt..... -fi'rr>-2464 or 541-50.U rm uo:at -1a ... _... ruus A ta MOTEL. 548-975.5 Rm. S, Newport Beach Lost Md fowrd lnttrvction f..--home in C.M. w/fel'ICM Light &. Hea\y
ttc room-oce1n v:le~'• -up P · Sll-3223 Courtesy to Brokers SMALL oUice, priV'll.te en. yard&: playrm. Hot lunche.!i. Anytin1e. Cali Chuck
paOO.ample parklnc NEWLY rum room, Sl8 per 1 CE trance, SJO. 569 W, 19th St, Ref.!i. Reliable. Re a 1, 540-3379 or .f94-.4438
HAULING
PROFESSIONAL Paintlnz.
Exler. 1 story, low u $200
w/gd paint Ava: rm. $18.
Aceous. ctillng& spni.yed Z..
coats $15. Roy, 347-11l8
Seeurity ruard.!i. weelc & up, Pvt e:ntr avail. j DESK SPA c.M. 642-9689. J ~IOVlNG, Garage clean-up
HUNTINGTON Phone 546--MSl I 222 Forest Avenue CdM Ottice mites UOO sq. Found (frN •ds) 55o Schools&,
575
Q-IJLD c1re. My home . k lite hauling Reasonable. PACIFIC LADY only. Heated pool. l B h It. or ieas. Will rtdtt it rn <-"·t J -~ 300 _ instructions Large play area. H 0 t J Free estimate~. 645-t602" PAINTING; ~~nest, !,13ra
1
.•,-Kitchen pn'vil . Nr. 13th -" eguna eeic · k 67" •'"" rvUND ... · an. ""'"" I 1 d work Llc d Loe ... re crpt, Pnv. pr g. ..-.uu. block Ne~·Por1 Blvd. Small, lunche1, CM 64.>-3298 iYARD, Garage cleanup_s, ~ell
67
5-.7
40
a!; S •
71.l ~ ~!&7 H.B. Harbar, Cl'tf. 646--0669. 491-9'66 S NEW oflice1, 17877 Beach long ha ir, fem"1e dog. Wh ite • • • • • • • • • •BABYSIT My homr. Day 1 trees dirt ivy remo..,al, skip I ' ' '
1_ LRG Br, full_ ha. lg closet!,) BEAUTIFUL 3 room olti« m. Lowest rents Ml-2525 &-black, no collar. Dragging or nite Any age Hoi' meals I loader backhoe. 962-$745. PAlfl.'TING inter & exter. <;1~10\;~~;S ~aJ'.Y pvt e:ntr. patio. 3 blks bch., auite w/lcitclie-nette. Ideal 01 m· 394--0015 chain. 83!M&32. PARENTS & fen~ yard. fi46._3738 TRASH• & Garag' clean-up, I Nca_!
0
:'
6
ork. Rea1on11b !e
bay. &T3-l02.1 aft
6
til ll. 11 for architect, 1n •uta 11 c e Busl~11 Rental 445 FOUND 2 rnale: pupple~ look BABYSITIING Eves &· riays. $10 a load. Free est. I 642 .,.... .
2 BR. S15S Up .• 3 BR LAG. ~-Rm y,.·fba. pvt agenl, ttaltor, etc, On like Terrien Blk/wht feet wkndll. My home. 67>-1283 I Anytime, 548-5031. PAINTlNG/pa.perina:. 13 yrs
$180 UP. Patio, poo!, f!.l'lf, kit ri~. $65. Resp m&le Monrol300via St. In .,A~~· U::ASE Harbor Blvd 110~ and chest Vic'. H11rbor View Are You Feeling days, Evea, 548--0417. I HAULING, cleanup, lots e1r. in Harbor, attlu a • .,;,_1~s:
children ok. MORA KAI student perf. 497-1838 $350/ pe.r mo. VI or office. 1380 sq fl. Xlnt Hills 644-2909. Ho-leas? R•., s n b I. Han ri y ma 11 bonded. Ref 1 rn. VI. ·
I · ..-~ Bu1ine11 Servic• Apts.. li8811'.'J:ora Kai Lane, ROOM v.•/kitchen, pvt en· DESK SPACE location & _park ng, Air SHEPHERD Type f!"male 11nyllml' you call. &15.078S. !FIRST Class Painting &
lit hlk E. of Beach oU trance & bath. • R 1 cond. Carpeting, $325 mo dog, black & tan ; found la Your Child An * BURGLAR ALARMS * I Houiecleano·nn paper • hangln1. Free est. •-~-'d '''"' -~ 1 105 No: El Camino ee c II 642-8060· ,..,es LIS.-26911 •
\H.l"IJCI • ~;7;71 548-2720 I Son Clemente a ' ' near El R1u1cho, N.B. Under-Achiever Shop, home, boat & c11r. Ca!! 545--34.i9.
1 BR. Uni, extra close1:1, Rentals to Sh•r• 430 4.92--(U) STORE or Shop av 1 i1 . 6'14~138. Due To Poor LocA.l & Silent 646-1116 SUN Brite ~ta int Carpets, I INTERIOR & extPrior pain:
b!tm, crpta, drpt, Sl.30. l I -d 0 w n t 0 w n San Jua1~ V?C ol So. Santa. Ana, \'i: Reading? Carpent,er l\oors, windows etc. Re.sid'l I ting, Average 2 BR 11p~ Sll:i
BR. furn, $145. Gas pd . ELDrnLY lady would like CORONA DEL MAR C1~istnno f~r 1~• m&le territt pup. Wht/gray l . k comm'!. Free est. la bo r & matrria l. 5-18-J.i46
Pool Patio. Adltl, no peta. same, to ahatt her CdM / 2 Rm sultr., pvt ba, pvt entr. bu.sll.e!a or ~~~e. $85/mo. fa~ blk spor on tail. Flea Our individualized program ot CARPENTRY i17-5621. PAINTING professional. All
536-6?17 home . ltalian ,descent pref. Prlq, crpt/drp, ulil pd . 493-Ua.1. 493-eves . rollar. 53S-7181. instruction ,in reading by MINOR REPAI~S. ~o Job\ HOUSE OF CLEAN I work g0 uarn . Co!Clr
1,t2 BR's. FRO~f $125 673-7D7S or 675-2672. · $145/mo. Owner. 673-6757 SI'ORE w/wor~hop 1 n GER1\tAN Shep. About t yr.' specialists ca.n help your Too Small, Cabt~I in_ gar-Complete Houst> Cleanini: SJ:'Ciali.sl. 646-7081; 547-1441 ~rlockinr beaut garden SHA,JtE my waterfront home LAGUNA Beach: Office in ~ck, TV rtp&ll' or 11.p-old . Vic . Bradberry It Heil,] child realize his potential. , • .11ge.oi: k other cabmetJ. 642--682-t I PAINTING-Ext-Int. lJ yn.
patio .l hid pool. Adullli.1 w/dock. Man, 30-fiQ yeus. &At Canyon Shoppinr Cntr ~tance 44;-r;1r& '~t ~; H.B .846-1938. \V, are equipped with the 545-8175 U no an.!iWtt lea~ Mesa. Cleaning Servi~ exper. Ins. Uc. free est.
1035 l.2th St., acrou from I $150/mo. 6T.>-43.31. n6:t to Safeway, 675 s.f. $275
1
use. ,__ ·Thy ~'-3,., __ FOUND 1 ..... e rabbit on 1/28 1 most proven audio-VlluaJ ln.!ig al 6-46-2372. H. · CArpell!:, Windows, f1nor~ PIC Accousf. Ceiling~. 968-9126.
Lake · .....,_=;!'.. F£~1ALE rooinmate needed mo. 4....-;>oo.U, ·Vo.JU. ford M&-29n. Ellesmr.rt Ave .. ~es1 equipment, · , Res k Commcl. ...,,,.....\ l *PAPERHANGING _ Park "~" ,,...,., .._. ,.,,~~ 4941.,~.. acros! uvm eo. ....,,,u~ .... ,. . An.Jerson , "''"A l I
* IAYFRQNT * until June. &l_ boa Island. S NEW offi«S, 1'7877 Beach SI• -W 19th ,1 CM Verde llf'ta. 54&--0.ilS REMODELIN G & Repl\ir Bay & BP.ach Janitorial & f'AINTING. * 968·242a
I C-".,...,.,, ,,,_ 9 PM nly , -.,,_ .. =...,, re ... ..., · "'" Phon, now for f'eilltl'Atlon. S~ia.list, Comm'l, residen-· _._ fi Hia:h-rue. be1at. 2 BR. tum ..., n•.-..-s-> '
0
· ~1· ....,~'t!al i;nta .,.. ~ $115/mo. * ~74l4 MALE Siamese cat vit 21.st oal. Pantling, c abinets, Crpts, v.·inuuwa.-oors f'tc P h111te r, Patch, Repair
or unfurn. From $295. 3121 ~D~U.~o-!A~-Lin<~·~~W-~5618~~~!! ~.,.~213~,~391-00l~~,~-~~~~ \ C M and Santa AM Ave ., READING marlift, form ice. 644-75SR. Res. It Comm I. 646-1401. I W. Coast Hwy, Npt Sch. I E. llth S!·• oste eta 646-3302. Income Tax 1 -.-P-AT-~-,-P-LA-STE--Rl-N-'G-. Stol'Mlltice:, $liO Month ':e ilings \....J"I
LRG 2 BR unt redec. bltns llWJI \ 119 ) Rea.lonom.ics Corp. 6?5-&700 SMALL bl1ick d0&. male, vie. 1---''-------.l retri1. Gar av\. S140. l Aparttnent1forR-.t:-Aplirtmlfttlhwftent 349 w. 18th C.M. call AND PAINT Accoui;lical Ceili n11~.
BR furn 1125. 711 In-~-----;;;;~ I:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/ DESK SP'"· Lagu"': Nlguoi 540-<748. GUIDANCE 110 " •• """· 5.11-<927, Smiley Tax Service All type.!i. Free e1;timate1
Call 540-6825
lndu1tr1&1 area. Secy 1erv. or 636-3110 Plumbing dian1poli1, HB ... 545-0160 831_14111 daya. FOUND Poodle Vicinity 300 e 13th YEAR LOCALLY e
Apta., Furn. or Unfurn. l70 Apt1., E UTY Salo f Le bJock 17th St.• Coal& Men . SERVICES Cement, Concraf!...__ I Qualified • Re11snn
1
able --P-LU-,-1-B-IN_G_R_E_P_A_m __ Unfu 370 A I Furn. or Unfurn. 370 8 A . n or 1.se, 646-1116 W. A. SM ILE"l
Fum. or m . P 1., fully ,q1upped, in aho pp1nr •• CONCRETE. Beat The Certified Public Account't 1 No Jnh too !mall
Gener"el Gener el General center, San Oem. 492--2979 Lost 555 Bad Weather! F 100 r 1 • J 642_2221 anytime &l6-966S • fi.12-3128 • l~~~!!_-------~~~~------_::::::;::;:::_ ___ -:--·1 440000°'SSTOToRERE~.'"'ii1boiw,p~,00Hifik"';:· DROPPED Gold Benrui Of So. Orange County pat io~ Rt'as, Call Don Plumbin.i;. Elec1 . Repair
$95. 2340 Newport Blvd, ~Tisi wa!ch in front of &12-83i4. 1 HOME TAX SERVICE $7.jO per hr
" ' •• ·• -ve>W-next move . . ' . . . .
· ,shoukl be to . ~ . . .
-" ,,,. t I --___ .._ I ... ....,
... t UA"'."'" , " I ~. '
I.' . . ' ,-Mftg.
HUNTINGTON BEACH -Ad ults
Look Into ...
OP[!jl"G lnCIAl -1 8EDROOM FIOM $1451
CASA delSOL
Nt1r all buchu • Pri~ate Terrace • Rec Bui1dl nt •Sauna~
2 Pools • !IUi1rds • Gym • Puttinc Green and Vo!1eyb1ll
Buill·i" Kitthtns • Dishwashe~ • Dispouls • Carptts/Df1pes
C!o!.t to all shoppint •Private Parkin& ind Slorap
ALSO: 2 Bedroom 11/fi1eplatt f1om S205
21661 Broothunt, Hlllllin11ot1 l!eath-(714) !62-6651
HU NTINGTON BEACH -Adult and FamOy Sections
The possible dream ...
1 Se<Jroom fro"' SIJS-2 Bedroom, 2 laths From $155
HUNTINGTON GRANADA
Private Terrace • 3 Pools w/Cab1nas • Built·ln Kitchens
Dishwash!fl •Carpets/Drape~• Walk.in Closets • Drts.sin1 Rooms
Close lo Shopf)ing, All Beache~ and ltisure Areas
17111 Golden Wm St., H,,,;,~.., ... "' (711) IU·l05S
(Jtnl South 01 Warner)
SANTA ANA-Adult •nd Fa"liJY Sections
Break the monotony ...
OPENING SPECIAL-! lElJIOOM FRON !lln
PARK PLAZA Private Patios • Ree Builijin1 • SaunH • Jacuul •Poot
Bu1lt·•n Kitthtns • Oishw1$ht11 • Carpets/Orapu
Nr1r Soutti Co1st Pla11 • Lt1sur1 Ar11s • FrHWl)'I
AlSO: 2 8'd1.,m/18'ih foom 11!7
Town HOtJse w/I ~ Balhs From SI 75
3900 Sovt~ F101m, SI'" An1 -0l4) 54~3214
(2 bloc~s e1st of Bristol al'ld M1tArthur)
Man aged By:
HARIDI MANABEMINT CD., INC.
•
, '
•
C.M. 646-2S44, S48-&.l33 house on Orchid CdM sun ELLEN CEMENT \\'ORK no i...1t too I Fed. & State 20"!. below la.st fi..l2-273:i &12--0306
, , • • J" yr!'I rPturn. Appl. avail. Industrial Rental 450 111;. Pleue return. Call DAVISSON sm~ll. ~ason~ble. Frr._e
1
INTAX rep Day 67.>l28J Roofing
t 673-18114 btfore 8; 30 AM or E~t1m. H. Stufhck, 548-861.l Eve 548_041 7 1-----. -----1 SMALL UNITS Alt 6 PM . Dlrector Contractor
1
LEE ROOFll"G CO; Roohna:
E WST in J\jeaa de/ Mar, Jan INCOME TAX SERV of al! type~, recover ,
COSTA M SA l, ti.1ale German Shtpherd, 34921 Calle Del Sol ADDITION_ utilily. stOrAl!:f'-$4 & up. 9 am-9 pm \vkdy~. repair5, rool coaling~. Lie 195· k SlS7. Per ~lonth black and tan, Joni hair. CAPISTRANO BEACH Or gar. bld2's. lnt>w con-Open e..-l?'s/"·knd.•. App!s ~-honried sin« I 94 7 ·
Immediate Occupancy ztr.I $.l3ll sq. ft. a! 400 A\'ail. j.;11-0.)88. 1842/l.'.e11·por1 ,1 &12-7222. New 6500 1q. fl. unit, 11th t M5-4'l26 ,a.II 3P~1'. h · c M ==="'"""'=c::c=c::=I 496 6129 sq'5 or tr 10 eithtr 1n-· . EASTERN Qual1ty-\l/es1em \\1hit1ier, Jl(l.220 po"'er, IRISH Setter, malt', " mos, • d' bid , •• ,_5997 V . Bch J ., h 1vidu11ls or r a. VI lrono'nn Prices•. All "'P'S Roofing . plenty of parking. vir ictor1a an ~t . 1 • '"
Stt: lf,obrort Nattress, Rltr. SlOO reward 213: 943-8636. I I • I • • • • • • -4 P:\1· Lyle 6i.1-791Ul.
' •-M 6421"' MALE Bl · t s· t 01·1cover a Groat Now LJC'D Contr. Remodeling, JRONJN~ my home Sl.2S per J Sew'1.ng/Altoration1 I ...... sia esa -'K)J utpo1n ntmese <:a add-ons, roofing, painting It. hr. Bnng o11.-n hangen.
NEW 6500 aq fl M-1 I P.!ICt! lost in fl.1esa <lei Mar area. Career With The · '=A"J°'5B ... 1664 I S4>-7641
. repairs. ,J'flJ"" "' , .,....,. • --cc-=-c""""cc-=-1 • Dressmaking -Alterations I w1-o·-· • drive-in doon. Rew1rd. 540-36'18 .
m "" GEN'L CONTRACTOR Ironing: Sl.50 per hr. I Speeial On Hc.m.!i
By owner. ~S033 di)'&; BLACK, malt, .!ihaggy poo-AIRLINES Remodeling-Room Addition& Bring Ov.·n Hangers Cal Jo * 646-6-146
I 646-0681 eves. die. Vk. f'airview & Baker. Lic'd/ins 645-0991 , 673-6809 Call 645-3092 EUROPEAN dressmaking all
NEW bldg, 1728-2300 1q. ft. PleaM! call 546-2962 I A n11tural for ~ung peopl~ Additions * R.emodelini: Landscaping custom li1trd. Very rea1JOn . 1
Nr Bilker & F11irview, 1 '4•bo v.•ant excitement plus. G 1 k & Son L"r
1 1
d" , :ihl". 67~1849
yr l&e. Sullivan, 540-4429. \~I Ticket Agent? Air Freight? 6T!t..fiJ~~ c * · 541~21711 1 LA~DSCAPl~G: nc u 1ng -4~1,ccc...c",-"--~64=2•5~8475,-1
1 tnitruction rm' Station agent! Reserva. · . , · '. pa no~. rlenking k fencing. terations -• 1~~8~~~.MC_l\1 . ,.....,..... tlons? &mp nr travel Lie ~ . Con tr. Remodeling ! Re11~. R.17-!j.'lOl. Neat, 11cruratt, 20 yt!ars exp.
Owner 644--2228, 646-1252. «gent? We 'll train you for Addlh'"!_n!, Plans, LAyout CO~IPLF:Tf: Prof. Se r v · I Tile
these «nd more, day or nlte. 1<11.rl F •. Kendall 5411-1537 S1atr. lic'd CC1ntractor. Call ----------j Storege 455 Sc.hools & , \Ve include placement aa-\VALKING DECK 96&.-192.11. + V"rnP, The Til' J\1an *
1 LARGE. lock . up, storagP.l -'-"'~'~'-u~c-t•_o_n_• ____ S_7_5 ii.stance, COATINGS Masonry I Cust. v.·ork. In!tall & rep11 in .
I Or 1111 IYP'"'· l.ci! Roofing I No job too ll-ml . Plaster space available. COSTA MESA ' -k' ho fil&-639:5/~9116.1 Est. 21 Yh. Approvl'd to Co., C:\1. 6-12-7Z22 !or tree BRICK, block, conc re te, piitchin.c. u·a 1n,i:' "' "''r
PRE-SC!-iOOL Veterans. Eligible institution P~r . I cal'Jl'nlry, house leveling, repair. 847-1957/846--0116. Misc. Rentals 465 1811: & Monrov~. 'ii rtay +I 11 r re orlelin.c No · & --'---------I full ' day gesston.~. Planned I under the federally irll~ ROO:\t Addition~. L. T. 11 ypes 1m1 L' c' CERAl\lrC hie new ·
atudenl lo...n proa:ram. ConstMJttion. Single 1to.-u or joh too ama · LC, ontr. remodel. FI'ff tst. Sm11ll Fenced storage apa~ prn,,...m, hot lunche$. Ages •;, !162-694" 2 ~-t •·~ 2. Est1m .• plana & Ja,-out , ::i. jot-i;. "'rlcome. 536-24 6, fo.-campers, ...,..ta, e c. U, hn: 6:30 Ati-1-6:00 Pl\1 . ·
C&ll 642~ $18 wk-COti.fPARE! 642-4030 Airline Schools Pacific 84j-JiU.
1
Painting &
1
:;.~.f:.AA.11.i,
SJNGLE, enclosed garage. or &38-5117. 610 E. 17th, Sant• Ana ~IY \Vay, qulllity home Paperhanging r--,-.-.-S~.-,-v~i-co ____ _
c 1\1 54~6596 l't'pair. "rall• CT 11ing, !loors . -f'or auto or .storage, ·1 · PIANO L!s.soll.!i your Mme --.,,-.,.,-.,,-,c-c-::-==c=:--1 '°lr. ~o ;n'h too small. + EXTERIOP..tN'.ERlOR * TREES, Ht'dgta, Top, Trim,
S20 mo. Broker 642-44~-certified te11che n . ~1usic , ~IANO LESSON~ ~17 _0036 24 hr an~. ~rv. \Von'! bP undf'rb10 Cu.<ftlm r ut, removeri, ha.uled. Ins .
Sysltml'. Mt. Hathcock, I B!"g1nnl!rs, lntermed111tes. . ' wor~. f1nt~r p11inls. Free 6'12-4030 Bia: John ]~ 646-1368 Learn thean· aight rtadin,it Furniture P.•r/color con.~u!tini::. Refs. T t . I Announcll!Nfll• iii-BUSIEST marketplace in etc. ca.u BniCt (U.C.I. mus-FURNITURE s 1 . . Ii,, hollf!Pd. f ull fin11ncing _u_o_,,_n~g'--------I
'--------tov.•n. The DAJLY Pil..OT ic bkgrnd) 546-4473. 11-fesa Al.'IO, bMt ~,;'r;J~f& 11va1l. 4!12-:\1.18. 543-508~ FULLY r!'l"f!enli11led elem. .~Cl~"jj"jj'fiij«l~~"~"ii;'°'i·~~illiiiVi•~Nl~oi.iiiiii~iiiiiiii~i l Jm~o~1~,1~-~l~'_:_•:"~'_:_l:O'_~":I. LESCO Painting Contractor ! lrachrr 1n·a1I, to !Ut(I~ 1n Announcements 500 642-34·1:1. I Inter & Extf'r. 2 Story Y<>Ur home, 11.ny 1ub.1ecL * * * * * * SJ>P.ciali~t. Also, acrous1 fi46-7R74. 1\VKLY. Psynetics lecture, Ga rdening ,;praying. Lie & ins . Did yuu ever Ullnk or awai>'
I
f'eb. 9., Amer. L!gion H&ll, AL'S GARDENING 64.>-2.199. Ing that White Eleph11nt In
1:30 p.m. Dr. H1.rmon v.·ill 1for 11:arrlrnin11: & ,.-m 1111 No \Vastini:: the att ic for l!Omething :you
lect\lrf'. on Hypno!ii!"' Self-Trader's Parad1'se I liind~capinJ: ~ervicr!-, call *WALLPAPER * can USP.'!' Try the Trader! Hypoosi~. -S2·0717 ~0-:.19~. Serving Ne"•port, When you cill.l .. M11c" I P11r11.dise column In the DA.I·
I~ I Crl:\1, 0i~111 :'l!r~a. {)()vf'.r 5'18-144<1 646-17U ly Pilnl W11nt Ads.
I• Shorr~. \\'P~tcliH. Ines 'p R 0 f E SS IONAL m•i~
Personals 530
tenanrP. pruninJ:, trrf' work. t I. mes ~prinkler~. pr~'""· thsea!'f'.
\\'f'Cd control. C\1'11.n up job.~.
T!"rm,.-. Grorgr , 64&-389.t
ADVENTURE 1 dollars AL'S LAndscaping. Tree .
SAILING CRUISE remt)val. Yiird rtmodPlin~.1
150 ft. 3 ma~t Square R\gger_l Tra~h raullns:, lot cle11nup.
Lf'in·ing 3/l.)/71 for 3!'' '-------------------'! Rrpair sprinkltrs. 6i3-t t66.
montM. Men It women v.·ant-Exchange Sl00.000 ,quity 1n Sx40 mobile homt furnish. JAPANF:S&American Gar-
ed v.·'dt.!ilre for ad~·enlure Motel & Rlncho S11n111 re ,.n, lge rm 11ttachtd . On 1he rirnrr. E1'p. Comp!!"1e Gar.
& tr11vtJ & abili~. to ~h~rt proJ>l'rty FOR cle•r e~tat!". hearh. Be~t park in BRj11. dPn1ni:: &. LAndscapin2.
expenses. Fop-1rtform1t>on srrea2!" or '.' Pr1ncip11ls Tr11de tor ,.quity in house. !l.~.l-01.iO.
call Pam RtYnold~. ,.... ,n\y. ;">42.6fi6."t. · ~1000 v11h1r. 91>S-7R.1(1 1-,-,--,_,~,-~P-,-,-,-.. -,-00-,-.-,_-,_ 12]~) 37S.2605 . -112 'SS Por!lch" T11rRa 912 .... ,pd. 2 11dj11f'Pnt U.guna NlgUf'I A\·.1: twn SlD-per mo.
NE\\·ron·r TNTERTORS X.1nt conrl .. l.11.000 m1. Trade Vif'IV 101 .c., 74':178, SI0.000 c ,,, :\1 G11nienin1 Serv, -~NNOUNCF.S for cheaPer car or 7: ?CIUilv. Trerl" for unimp rov· 61t;...7~1.l.
Tom \\'1!1i11.m.~ In! r r In r EvP!'I, Citll ?rl 11;•rrii~e or '? NE\\' ~'-"~.~.,~,-. ~,..~,-,..~rl'. 'c"o~m'°'pl
Dfosi.1ner. h11s joinf'd lh!"ir 41W-36.12 .'>46-5.17.f or ;,46.{)().'lO lll"'n ca!'I". CleAn up by joh
.c.tudio. 6i.i-6420. 1126 E!l!il nr mo. frC'f' e.'i!. t 'or in fo Coa.c.t HiP,way, Cnmna dtl Trade $10,!XKI eq in LAkt Ar· 12 .Uni!.~. U'1nt to f:'Xrhanf':~ lf.17.2~17 or M6·09.'U.
l\!er i in B Cit A bld•l to"•hr11d lol ln Arro11.·h~11d l'lr n1orf:' unit.c., So, C1li f., -'-~~-,',~'-i'-"7~~-
/ I h • I" t ho * Reside.nUA.l -Apl• * . SWEDISH l\1AS$AGE •nd \\'ood~ ,~. golr cour!t, cu ' :o.11n r11nc mi llttl or use "* Commercia.I * · . la.k• pr1\", for pwr OOat. (11ta li nA l!ilanlf. SAUNA . , Tra1nl'd Tech. Ol k GP 714.R:r.!4'69. Rl<'h h'\\in Rf'iillor 6i;).6060 Cnmplete Ca.rt 64&-98.)5
tor ttlax•tion. Pr ! v • t e1;.~'.:_;;0'=::-"'z=::o-O= room~. 1Catamaran, dllmllg!'<f, ,•ery HAVE : Sli0.000 2nd m , $3.'lO GEN Cleanup, tree ti sprnklr e OPEN 24 HOURS • r11.•t prototype, 2o ft ~· ru11. month, 7r-;._ Fl'lr: Ir!".. I.: lt'n' .. Rototil. l!andymM,
Ii ""I rl I clear Oran<t Cnt>·. unil~. nril'f .lOtill. Rea~. 640-s_,43 2626 Newport Blvd. tom IT'il er. "L l tra r •~ ~
Cwi!a hlrM M.)..Mi() for k.1tt i111lbollt . 644-19.'\8 hf'mr. l11nd or lots. EXPER. H11v.aiian Gani•ner
1 J ~" ~tnic Pr<1per11e" 675-5726 Cont p I e t e G •rd e n I n l
YOU CAN 00 YOGA-1'"-'~"_c·~ .. '~·-:=:-:-:-:;:;:-;:--;:--Servi~. Kam&lanl, 646-4676.
Frte O..mnnstNi fion Tur~. •I for H~:ALTH I NEE:O Ill-Ha\·e ~p~· 2 BR. 2 baih ·com ple te Yard Cart1 I l
I ~pm, For Vitality k Poise. O.sert. C1.l -ournfsl.ltt ·ll"\'" hnu~ 111 Newpon Bt11rh, Jll\f sto-48..!1
C~~ses Siar! "1M. Yoga 2 bl<lg Ct eorn Ci\!. lnr. Si45 cle111r. "'ant local \'11r3nl l
Crnlrr. 44$ E. 17th St, C.M, rp W ilt eq S4?~1 AI Af:;Q.~ ~r. It'll~ nr lot. B3lhoA Bay Prop.. Gener al Se rv ice• I
646--8281. Pitlmd11lr. Eq S22il1. &16-K..~ rrtlps &1~· 74"1. -------,--,--1 Husband Bu1y! CA11 1-looH
SINGLE? WIDOWED? 100 hp John~n o .s . rn.11:. 6 Choire Oeu.rt, ne:11ir Jos.hu~ ~.).()Ul 111tl'r 6-~U'
Olvorctd? Over 21? gal fuel tank. batttry rahlt~ free. 2 OR hom" & 6 lln'l'~ R11ild-Sr.rv ~foat Thing1 I For a aPlt 41xpl11na1ory me•-&: boll '1 et>ntrat cablt. $700 V1lue S.l0,000. \\'3n!: Local RAI/I'. Gu!ll'rll lnirt1l le:d.
A.le 24 hn e day call \'l hlt. Trade ror mntnrcyclt property & fr3d1'. Qu11ilily work. Re11~nible.
1 ~96-(8(11 or Ml-9991 ol e:qual valut!. 548..6178 494.4746, 499-1331 F'ret ~~I. 96~2203 j
ALCOHOLICS Ano,ymou•. * *
Phone ~mt or write to / * * * P. O. Bot tm Colt.a ~leu.. ----~
••
Need
remodeling?
See
want ad
l '
SERVICE DIRECTORY
FOR EXPERT
I~ the
DAILY PIWT
'
HELP
,
•
Mond1y, F1bnl111 1, 1CJ7l OAILY PILOT !9
.......,....,, !!Ill [ !!Ill [ !!Ill [ !!Ill [ -I~ I --. I~ ~I ;;-~!~~~!
Job Wanted, Mole 700 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F tlO Help W•nted, M &_F 710 Help W°"Jecl, M & F 710 Help W•nfed, M & F 710 Appll•n<H 102 Ml1tell•neou1 111 TV, R•dlo, HIFI,
136
BRmSJ-1 BUTLER. ¥>'0r~ed
for Brit. Amb., Moscow &:
US Amb., Belgium, p. J · 1 Wilkin.son c/o Government
llouitt, Btnnud1, 646-3271
for info.
Job Wanted, Femala 702 !
1-----~~-~' TRAVEL. k live in com-j
panion refined lady. No
drlnk/s1'(li)lw. Rel. poslUon
w/1an1t' NB only. \Vrlte
classilied J\d No. 42 Daily
Pilot P. 0. Box 1500 Costa
r.teaa Cali,( 92!U'S.
EX PERIENCED Teletype
Operator dealre · tull-Hme
employmE"nt in Costa :'llesa
&J"ea. Call Toni al 642-3&13,
e\'t!.
SECRETARY· EXECUTIVE> (
All office ski\l!I Incl. Book-
kttpina: '492-:5619.
AIDES-For convaleSCt"nce,
E"lderiy care or family care.
Homemakers, 547~. --Jobs Wanteci, M & F 704
Htlusecleaning $3 hr
and Plumbing Repair
• 54;;.2929 •
Help Wanted, M & F 710
A/R Clerks
!Construction backg1lland. $450
Sec'y/ Recept
Typing &: SH. $4j(I
Receptionist
Lite typing. $37j
College Girl
Part Time ~ half days wk. +
wkncls. ·$:1.50 hr.
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
Ill Dover Dr., N.B.
642-3870
A RESUJ\1E puts your ap·
plication on TOP~ \Ve coin·
pose !: prin t 100 copies -
ONLY SIS.50. Call fi.l&-085~
tor appointment.
Admin Assist to Pres
f\fust have degree or equiv,
business t'Xp. Starting salal')'
S;i50 mo. Call 714/673·4411,
1 to :; pn1.
Applicants
SERVICE CENTER
Employment Ag"ency
* * * Skilled Counseling
Clerical
Professlonal
Placements
l.fe)en Schaffer 6~·l·19S1
50C NeWport Ccnlrr Dr., NB 1
1
Suite 53.'i
AUTO BODY MAN
tm m<'d. openings ror t'xper.
metal \\'l)l'ker w/Jocal lirm.
Exet"plional deal on salary.
Call Now! 9 am 'til 9 pm.
ORANGE COAST
EMPLOYMENT I
AGENCY
124 Bmad11.-ay, C.:'11. &lj-3111 I
'
~ I
--
Tbe
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Marketplace
7"'-' n.r
p;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I B A B Y S I T T E R
casloM!lyJ. Rer1.
L-;-(;;;;;::U:-:;;SSiimim:-J:li;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[;;;:;;;-:;;;;:-;:;~;;;; ;-=---:--:~~~~~ Ster" Io c. r * DENTAL ASSisrANT • PART Thno babysitti~ KEN~10RE •uto wuher, REF $1l Dh~lle at! $11 l~h &: Chalrside. Some t x Per. • ~ t!Mkp'g, lor 2 achl chldrn, COJ>,pettollf'. Late model. ~sl draWttl $10 Rotary BOGEN 85 watt amp. 1-Ji"
11peakers in eabfueu. 2
,realistic mies an<! stands.
Make Offer 645-3441.
temporary
peri onnel
proud to be an
• amer1can
glad you're a
girl??
regiiter with
• amer1can
girl
invest
your
time
&
talent
wisely
&
be your
own boss!
at
• amer1can
girl
•
you will find exciting
temporary
to fit your
& needs.
positions
schedule
WE NEED
TYPISTS
CLERKS
STENOS
FLEXOWRITER
SECRETARIES
PBX DP ERA TORS
ASST. BKKPRS.
ACCTG. CLERKS
• amer1can
girl
needs YOU
2172 Dupont,
Suite 12
Newport Beach
(Nr. Orange County
Alrportl
West Oceanrront,
6"f3....78'16 774-14l3 N · B · Fringe benefits. Some Sat. ._,, 1 . & 9. Hrs 2-5 pm ~n t nc:'.::· $65. O!llv. & mo"' tr u;i Black air C'Ouch
Urd!Q's. lfuotlnaton Beacb ~ wkdys, 1n llB. Call all 5: 30: Oll.,..-8ll. • ~ c r le chair $1G P.taple conMI BARP.IAID·Exp'd. Apply ~ •l't"a, Call 8 lm·9 pm, .... ·~1=0• ;).
• -•• .>Jfl'* oNO TV $45 67 Zt'nitb color TV,
person. 3 lo .f pm, 686 W. 846-3540. ~ ...,,, RECEPTIONIST REFRrGERATOiy-\V/LG Ull!>~ $14$ 67 Under.i.'OOd
.19lh, _C.lil. -DENTAL Assistant, chair. · GENERAL OFFICE FREEZERS. S35--l45-US. t'lt'cl. type'>lTitfr. exctllent I If'
BARMAIRDS. 21-30, Exp. sick-, Exp'd ~Pllnded duties To $500, Newport lkAch Co.1..,--"~-*-6'_6-_?8_"1_•_•_~~ $60 Jake'~ Merchandise 117 fret 10 You ~~,':~,:~~ E;t:.~~ Room, llunt. B<:h. 968·5782 p_.\t/ ~ moviJ'li' to loveJy new Jr-Auction 104 r.. 18th, C.i\!. I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
BEELINE FA.Sl-llONS otter 847-1549 Al\f Vin(! otflc.ts. Exceplional op.1---:P::U::B::L:IC:-A-:U::C'::n:-:O::N:--1 'I"•"v"IN"E""Coa""•"• "'eoo=.:::,..,:.,-,C;;;l::;:"b 11
DENTAL ASSISTANT . IRV1NE PERSONNEL poi-. Top benefits. Call MJ$1 J'ebruary u 8·30 A~I family rnentl>trshlp tor sale Lovable / cuddly black fem.
xtra Income, xtra clothe~. Exp"d., full time, Recep. SER\llCESi>ACENCY Connie-, s.a7-612'l, Abipl\ Ali. N0VELT\' \v.\ro1E:s frcnn memhtr. For in-kitten, 6 mo·a whlte trim I:
for family. Nttd a job? tionlst -Assistant. Ovt'r :za. ~ hol Pf'rsoiuw;t A&:ency, 230 \V, 1635 Monrovia, Cos!a J\1t!a. lormation call 673-9131, ?t1r. \Jndtrcoat. semi • Iona tur.
\\"ork from homE". For appt PH: 646-3a35 \Varner, Suitt 211, S.A. Smith _ lJ Net'ds gd home 135.4493 or
,,.m,.<iilii830-iiiiiiimii·.1,..",.."',.-,.',.",..',1DJS1f\VASIIER evening ah.if! M al Office REAL ESTATE Building Materials 806 CARPET LaJ.-ers have ihag-897-5-ISO #/3 1 • Apply in person, Odit''1 1400 Fron!, c. mt'db\~~I exptr. * MANAGER * & comm'! tv.·ttd crpll. Dtal 2 Beltutllul brown tabby cats.
Coast Hwy, N.B. prel ' Im., i ina:, etc. Ca.JI tor lntevit'w PANELING dlrret. Exptr lnataller. Can 1 shOrl haired wht eat. All Betly Bruce
Secretary
Entertainment lield. Typing
&:/, SJ~ So for optrations
dept. Must the natural look.
?ifon & Tues. off.
Personablt', '>''tlJ groomed, 846.1690 1 CIO!eOut Sht'eta V-Groove finance. 539-8327, 811-8140
0Qflj1JT girl wantt'd, :Q..45, people oriented. S"50 + wl '"'===~~--,-.,.-1 IL99 Up, lst Grade. BRUNS\,'ICK I ti malt's young triendly and night shift. No t'.XP nee. good raiaes. RESUMES that work by regu a on tun 644-1492 2/2
l\1R DONUT 135 E 17th fonner personntl dirtclor. 10.5 dally, 11-4 Sun, Pool Table, EdgE".brook
C.1\1. Adm. Assistant Sen&tble lftiCt's. _Ews & MILLER-DRAKE modt'I, all accesaor1e1, $200
*DRIVERS*
No Experjence
Necessary!
l\lust have clean California
driving record. Apply
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th St., C.r.t.
knd 557 '1625 2406 So. 1-.ta\n St., S.A. or best olh:!r. 548-6.195.
Sec'y 10 ht'Ad ol finanet. Top v.· 5• too. -· (Next to St&fldan:t "''""'' · skills + ability lo Yt'Ork w/ ROUTE Sa.les--$130 Wk to al. 5"1032 i\fAC-15 chain saw with ex· I ._.. tra new chain and clutch.
figuns. Ext'c. litc'Y rroom· Take ov t'Stab Ful tr Brush'~'!"!~~~\!"'""""""!!"'' I Used t"ice, rost S167, will
lnl:'. Abie lo hand.It heavy rte In Laguna. Xlnt pt tlme iCABINETS complelt' sell for $100,, 842-1128.
l't'spon.slbtlity _Young group, wk alliO avail SU-?SJ3. kitchen. Rang~, ovrn, etc. PO'ITE~ .,11tieeJ $100
L.A. &rta. SiOO. Employtr SJ.LES Woman, t'.~Pf'r in 646-5393 Portable G.E. TV l7" $20.
paid ftt. deli. Apply in person Sl9 ,.,.:=::::::-o-----1
\V. 19th St, C.:\f. 1Camera1 & Table&: chain $13. 642-3330.
BLACK/ white female ter-
rier 1'ii )Tll. xJnt health.
good ••ith clilldrtn, good
v.·atch dog. Uc. to rood
home only 842-8006 2/1
GREYHOUND dog for track
& hunting or pet. Hsbrk.
gentle w/children 1~1i yrs.
847-6160 2/1
Salei1 Equipment IOI \VATER bed, 6x7, Never PRETTY little apayed calico
... -opened, 50 yr guarantee. cat nttds good honle.
• PROFESSIONAL .. PENT AX zoom, Nikon lOj to.lust !iell $45. ~8-4J32 494-1~ 212 * SALES CAREER* tel, Cannon FX SLR&: dt"l, ""'c:;-;::::_;c::..;~=.'::;;:;:::I SIX 8.'ol'ttk old "''ppies •
SPECIAL Escrow Secr•tary r EMPLOYMENT
Gd typist, no SH, hvy desk. COUNSELOR
Advance lo Escrow OHJcrr. If you 11.'ant a rewarding l.: ~tarlln --• plu -mn1 WE Loan-Buy-Sell anything ··-. S ...... ary s .. v • Yash Tir, Rollie-2.8f' Kowa Coaat Pawn & Auction. 2426 dachshund • poodle m Ix.
Secretary
t Girl ore. 2 to.ten. Litt" Sil.
top grooming &r looks. 0 .C.
Airport.
Secretary
T() V.P, properly de\·elop-
ment. Hvy typing & SH. Eg..
crow, R.E. or legal good.
General Office
Xero.xln~. filing, ruMing t'r-
rands, Ille typing for leading
challenging career please
contacl us regarding join.
ing this organization as an
employmenr counselor in
thi& office. Call Zena, (7141
956-1000.
Cal-Fair
Employment Agency
625 So. Euclid, Suite 4
Anaheim
E.XPERJENCED couple Yt1ll1t-
td to manage 2{l unit motel.
Free apt + _percentage.
&12-4422 or 646-1730.
\Ve will be inlcrvie"'ing for
an in~rnational firm that
Ms opentd offices in New-
port Beach. i.:equlremt'nts
a.rt! Lilt' cyping &r/or 10 key
adder, pleasant penonalll)',
gOOd grooming & Ute \.\'l)rk
txper. {\-i Fee Paid & ~2
Rtimbun;ed in 6 ~tonths.)
Pleage Call For Appt.
Frte & Fee Positions
F irst year earnings of SLR, & misc. 962-5278 Ne\'-'""rt "Blvd. 6t2-8400. _ 494-5403 212 $12,000 • ph13 possible 2 yrlO':=::h:c:-c------;;;; ·~
training program by century Furniture 110 BALBOA BAY CL UB 5 PUPPIES • Poodle I<
Id n tional BUil' membership for sale. Chihuahua adorable. To 0 a co. lllt'S! or DINING SET-Genuine Birch good 'hcimt'. 64:Z.-3354 2/1
sales background htlptul. Provincial 5 laddt'T & i ann =,..--,-,,::54~&.M:,:.:8=1~,-,c:;-::-I ~N;;;;T.,-o;;~;;---;;;:;ccl ~? travel/Pi!gmt. opportun. ~hair, Galf'\~~ table \vilh AIR conditioning unit, Ftdco, GENERAL Patton's Dog!
ltit'!I. extra ltaf and pads. fits any car. $50 FIRr.;1 wht English Pit Bull tt'Trier
RONALD A. S:\Jmf * * * * 59>5784-673-2750 2/1
Suite 815 SOr A -Provincial Custom NE\YPORT Beach Tennis FREE puppit's, 8 wks. Part
550 Nev.•port Cl!nter Dr, Made 8 ft. in excellent con. Club fanlily mtmbershlp. Beagle. 20Ta2 KE"lvin, H.B.
NeYt'JlOrt Bch. 644-2190 diUon, 962.499'2 962--07A4--:::--... 2/2 EquaJ~OWcy Employer • * * * -\VHIRLPOO NC\\' shag rugs, blue gTttn HO~IE ~'8nlt'<I for young Sarah Coventry Inc., full or L \VASHER l..'08 9· x 12' Sacrifice. $6.j nULle \Vire Ila.ired TE'nit"r.
488 E. 17th lat Irvine) C.l\I. pt-time help netded, no In-So. RMs SI., Santa. Ana 83J..:M79 Call 962-204j 211
'42·1470 vestment, Will train, min.1-.54
0
2--1-981,---;;;,---.--3 :'lion old blk Doxie ma.le ~~~!!!!"'""'"~~!![-·:!·~·...:"'::;·;,;,:55~1"':;;;":;'~;m.oo~::I::.•-1 Custom Draperies I HATCHBOAROS loves children 1625 So.
legal groups. [ "'""""iiiii""~~~iiiiiii
FURNITURE
410 W . Coast Hwy. _SALES -
1Newport Beach For local dept store LOOKIN~ ior rn?U than just SECRETARY-Derorator draJ)l'ry "l>rkroom . MS-4192 Gtet'nville, S.A. 2/3
By Appt. 646-3939 e TOP C01'.IMISSION anolh~r )Ob? Joi~ the. '"New • RECEPTlbNisr . closing out 2500 yards of M1scel11neous
Beaunful Ideas Div. of Kno"."'lcdgt' of construct10n drape-ry lab.ric and made-up Wanted 110 a HEALTHY. bright puppie1,
GENERAL FOODS. Hel.P desired; escrow & purchas-draptrles. ~lateriali from ------------I mixt'd size, color &:: brttd .
otht'rs 1 tobP E"nha':·r their Ing helplul. Shorthand ~00 75<:: a yard end dMlpe-ries CASH for turn, appliances, S40--0TIR 211
~~na ~.ur~I b 1 ~"11-\vpm. fttuf;t ht sharp . fron1$5pair.3853 BlrchS1 .. tools, & misc it em&. }1lEE\\~,modt'lglassCo. ~~$f50a :::111~~ N~ e':p n:: Interviews by appt only. Newport Beach. :J.16.J431 adj 642-7015 or AfL5. 54s-4227. ~3231~ u per 10 r ~j~
.. !!"!'~"'!'!!"!'~"!"!!!!!!!!!1 e CO. BENEFITS
* BOOKKEEPER *
1
Quality line to seU
ARE YOU THAT GIRL? Apply in person
Young, fast groy,•ing Co., dt"· to Mrs. Thompson
sires sh11rp, enrhusastic.~u!J / W. T. GRANT CO.
Charge Bkkpr. lo assume t Personnel Of[ice
key rol~ in Accounting Dept. 98U Adams AVE'., Grant Plaza
No door to door. Exec. pos\ .. ,0CaO<'lloJuo;;yc~•,.•,1;;54<l-8:;.,;;;o833"-· ;;;;;;;;l;;'~o~O~',;';;"•~·~C~o.;."~"21Yc_;,A~h·~t>O~•~·t.'= '69 V\V deluxe camper van, lllDE A BED oocl lr
tions avail. 842·2664 12 SERVICE Station Salesmen ENTIRE contents of l BR sleep! 5, sink, icebo.~. radio · -· g amt'.
MAID m~therly tyl)l' take wan\t'd : 1-40 hn;, 1-32 h111. apartment; Cootemp:irary & heater. Immaculate. $2395. ~ia;!t. ~~;,t Philodend~~
care: 'of home & 8 )or old ?-.lust be exp'd, No one , f~lture, 13 .mos old. Pain-495-5906, 837-3306 after 6. l =sc=o~rr=v,,:..;~do~,~;~,----"'I
daughter. Live in, guest under 18 need appl y. ting~, d~aper1es, lamps, etc. MU11cal lnstrumtnts822 lo vahle 16 m~xe eV:~
qrtrs + SlOO mo. Ask for Chevron Sta. 3190 Harbor ~all K<'n. 646--0921 or 836-4493 211
Outsla.ncrtng opportunity for Brookhurst & Adams,
the r!,tbt pt-rson. Send re-Hfg. Beach
sume to ODETTCS INC. 1S4j An equal opportunity
S. i\111nchester, Anaheim, employer
Calif. 92802, * BLUE DOLPHIN *
\VAITRESS-Experienced and
o\·t>r 25. Apply ln person,
3l5.l Via Lido, N.B.
CABrN£T '-faker. retired,
exp'd, man to linish inteMor
of 30' sail boa I. Will trade
beau!. ·~ f'ord Sedan.
air-cond, etc. for labor. 1
~lust ha\le ref's, Ca 11
962-8690 af1 6 p.n1.
CHILD care, !)..J ~lon/f'ri,
2 cbildren, $1 hr. Own trans,
trvint' TeITace. 67:J...8i36. I
Oerict1l
RUTH RYAN
AGENCY
SPECIALIZING
Hope, 67>-3210, 673-51;)4 . Blvd., C.i\1. 557-3807. _ LUD\VJG 4 pc Drum set \V. ---------!
GRAND:\tA type hlikpr, 1·5 1i i\fAtDS. EXPER. * SERVICE SfA ATI'. all VA. LUABLE orig oil pai11-Zildjian Cymbals Inc. All COCK-A-POO puppies 6
Id kl I I I I I d b I Act't'S!lOries ~1~. 548-9634. weeks old malt1 & female yr o . v.·or ng paren s. Over 21. Apply: shifts open. App y ln perron, 1ngs. mpo1· <' mar t ~
Live in, pvt rm. sm sal, Ben Bro"•n's i\fotor Jlott'l r.tac Arthur & 4678 Can1pWi din'g \a blt'. i\loved, must ** DRUM SET $200 ** 847-7867 112
tic. 642-9393. 31106 S. Cout. S. Laguna Dr., N.B. sell lhi!I "·eek. ~6-0732 or LIKE NE\V LOVABLE U Wttk 10111
GENERAL ~TAKE full lime \\'agt'a, pal'1 SERVICE Est!b'd;_ Fuller 548-22ll e.x 521 543-5148 t'\'e or 'ol'kend haired kltttn to 1'.pl. only
ACCOUNTANT lime be a. diatrlbutor uf Brush rte, Sl25-Sl1a "''k. to SPAN, coffee & end tb\s, Office Furniture/ 968-2379 211
Opportunity for an aggJTS-pure' organic cleant>n, food 111., also p!. time 54~7-ti $60. CheIT)'Yt·~ bed , Equlp,_. ______ 12_4_ Z Yoong Jovtly gray .and wht
sive young accountant in a supplements & cosmetics.* SHAMPOO GIRL * con1pl, $20. s .... ·1vel rocktr -ftmale klltit'a and 2 lovely
small division of·a large fn. 637-4606/613-20&!. Assistants, Beautlr:ians, Hair-&~ foot llfOOI, $20. Evy ch.r, 118 Dlck m Im e o tr a Ph blk/Wht malell. Mf...7.f92 212
1E"rnational corporation. i\tust ~~~==--~--1 dressers Hair Stylists Hair $5. 64:Z.-3701 machine, all attachmtnts; TAN male terrier mix pup,
ha\'e at least 2 yrs. exp. in M~k• $!SO pe~ Hour k r..fodels & Giri f'rit"nds.' Call: 1ru=~R~Q~u~o~1s=0~· -,71,-,~1-.,-m-..,~,a Postap rnettr, All $l50. 6 m<>!. good w/chUdren.
general accounting. Some on ti e PF ne, t 64~.4;~~·· ' R9Y Alvarado, HAIR HUNT. S35 ~latching chair $10. Both ,6~<~5-~34.l3=~· -,:-..,----= 548-7947. 2/1
college level acclg. educ:a-Pl me. or app · E1tS SALON &14·2151 day or in ,·rry good condition. Pi•nos/Orvons 826 QUJET 1 yr old ft'male wh!tt'
lion. Salary commensurate l\IALE \11Hh lumber buying eve. 642-3643. ---'--=------r-al. Ideal for older couple.
1\1/('Xp. & education. Send rr. & selling expl'ritnce for Sheet MeI•I & " SO CLEARANCE 675.;i941 2tl 2un1e&salaryrequ i~ments. retail yard. J\lust btl ·' FA, nt>vt'r used. quH1erl
\rrite Classified Atl •SO pleasanl, good wi1 h people, Machine Shop fl oral, M.>Otchguarded $1 25. SALE FREE Horse Fertilizer ~ll
Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560 nice appearance. Good pay. Foremen J\·latching loveseat $ 15 · Over 100 Pianos & Organs Cypresi; St., S.A . ffgts.
Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 For appl call J im Corman Heavlly e."<p'd in precision 5.10-SJ.17 Redctced toi immed. salt', ~O-O'J25 212
Equal opportuniry employer. 714-893-fllOS. fabr ication -prototype & 101\ AS NE\V?! Buy Now & Savel t J\tALE & 1 ft'male rat, I G~.e~,=,=, .. ~1"",~I=ai=,~,.~,~ .. =,=,""~ .. =d;i;MAR:;;;olNEWio,-,:,~,~pm=~,;..,~,-;:.,;.,,.;;;;r,1 volume productio n -small :1,.,s~~ing s0f11 ~7:i * Open Daily Jo tlJ 9 blk k whl. 545---5707. 21'2
Custodial. Pvt. Day School. Also, l\larine pain!er, expcr. ~hop • computer equlp~1ent ~. eves: &1~2{120 Sat 10-6 * Sun 12-5 FREE pupple-1 1 male &
IN
OFFICE PERSONNEL
li93 Nev.'J)Ort. Costa i\lesa
&16-48.H
17931 Beach Blvd., llB
8~7-9617
ReQuires general exp. in Apply in person, Basin manufacturer -1 r v 1 n e. *1 Cusrol\t F1JRNJTURF.: COAST MUSIC t female. 962--0744. 2/t
cat•pcntry, plumbing. elec. r..1arillt', Inc., 829 Bayside 546.929.1. fl.ENTAL. Set! 11d class ~f,Q NE\VPORT & HARBOR
trical. Ref's. \V r ite , Dr, N.B: or c11ll 67~360. SUPERVISOR LVN 11.7 :30 Gen<'ral. Call &18.3481 . Costa J\lesa * 642-2851 2 Large shttts ct drywall . , -m UI Classified ad Nu. 6.i, Daily NEED LOT BOY a .m. rel. sh., wk end5. G•ra91 Sile 112 STEIN\VAY Grand. Artist
CO\f PAN IO~ 1 h k Pilot, P. 0 . Bo'.'!: 1560, Cos la Blue Chip Auto Sales Park Lido Convalescent . 1 model Gennan scale _ ~S. r.tANX cats 10 month!!
. , , le s w 'I :\lesa, Cal if. 92626. 214j Harbor Blvd., C.i\I. Center • &12-SQ.\4:0.llSC. boallng llc1ns. Con1. $169.1.' Stclny,•ay Grand, old. 540-2333 2/1 li\'e-1n, r m, brd &: Jj() mo, --p sst:? ho &: I in U>isurc \rodrf. A.~ j(J GIRL .M 'ol'Qnian to do house-TRAVEL CONSULTA/l.'T tor a. 5• rm, pumps ors model L in ebony $2895. 3 Piece sectional, ll69 Dmwt
or under (f<'b. Jjthl Call c ean1~g a ernoons. : -Nt'wport .,....ac: gcnry. . I b .. I nul\.I • . I II I Jo OVERSEAS 0 • h A more'. fnnalal>lc hoat. Elec. Kimb•ll G-·• 1488. Lant' Coi\la Mtsa 2/2
.i4s-li6i' aflr 6 P:O.I. I ~ab>:s1t ~ yr ul~ gll'I. l\1ay ;\Just IJ.e fam iliar ivilh tnm a s. f< 1sh ng grar. \\IARD'S BALD\VTN S'ruDIO
hve-1n 1[ desire. Salary ~e\\'J>Of1 Beach ar('a. ?-;lust Shot shell rtload<'r. Elcc. 1819 Nt''>l'l>Orl Blvd, 642-8484
COr>:SULTANT. Cf>n'I foods open. ~>48-9658 · ht f'Xp('r'd in Jntcrnalional sn1oklng oven. S il l 11ng
1
Jfammond, s ! e in v. a Y, n~eds 7 \\'Omen fo~ Vivia~ I JI SKPRS Emptyr pa)'! fet'. • Jo·es • & Domestic tickt>ting & dinghy. Huntln.; kn1ve•. Sac. Yamaha. Ne1v & used pianos \\~ard CosT?ctics.. \\e George Allen BylAnd Agney touri;. Send resume to John 968-S873 of n1os1 makell. Best buys in llEJ
:~~l.n~~~;~~lposs avail, sm 106-B E.16th, S.A. 547-0395. \ • J. J\filler 60 ~1aidt'n La, 14' boat & I.railer Sl:iO 16' St:o. Calif. al Schmidt Music
IJ\·lMEDIATE openings at San Francisco, Calif. !).l\08. outboard & traile-r $350 Co., 1907 N. Main, Santa l-D_og.:..• _______ 154_,,
COASTAL
AGENCY
Carpeteria for exp·d carpet $l lS TYP!Sf -Pricing Clerk. \Ve !land looled saddle $150 Ana . .;;;;c;;--::=-:--;,..,;IST Bernard 6 wk:s M, A.KC
salesmen. Apply in person · '11ill train. Great future for Couch & chaJr ;2;-, each. HAMMOND organ B-3 al1ots, \\"OJ'IDed, beaut,
only. See Ed Luksteln, 1TI4 Total Fn \\'Orkcr v.·illln!i!: to srart at i\115£:. household \ I e n1 a . w/space rxpandt'r & Leslie ma. s 1 I vt , rou&h $150
Nt'wport Blvd, C./\-1. the bottom. $2. hr to :s!Art. 557-9359. speaker. No dealers. \\'ill 53&-4755.
LADY_ For RE"staurant WHY PAV MORE? Call 536-7442 Sat or Sun BABY clo!hcs & furniture, dellv<'r local. ;1895. ~ "G~E~R~M~AN~-,ho-rt-ha-~-..,-,.·.I
Pl\! for intcrvie\\I, clolhes 11' boa! & motor, S I M h ' 121 AKC, OFA cert. Top \1·ork. Exper. de~·d. Call UNIVERSAL ----· · ew ng ac 1nes S-t:J..1686 • * \VAITRESS • E."<-h!iehold iten1~ /:.: lurnilllre , -•..::.:.::.;::;;;.:_;__-'-field/show, 528-3887 •ft
714/956 2251 pericnced, apply in perwn, many odds &· t'nds. 1&1•11 * REPAIRS* Spm. I LOCATION ~!EN-"' ODIE'S, 212 E.17th C.~f. Lake:mont Ln., H .B . Clean, oil & adjust your ma-1 o="'A~C~H~S~H-U~N~O--p-u_p_o.
TELLER EXPERlENCED O~LY Open 1 rlays a "·eek \VAfTRE SS . Exp'd, over 21 842-2266 I chine in your homt'. Spec-miniature, AKC, Bia.ck &
Some exper. nl:'ces1. for per. Vend in:; Routes. C 3 I I for Ge rm an Teslaurant. G•RAGE 0•1, Ad n·-• i11.l $3.95. all work iuaran· tan &: mahogany red .
son speaking Spanish. Room Collect, (312) 642-3757 -i\lr. OPERS-SINGLE NEEDLE &582 " ~ Udo • 1 1"" f d 545-8238 714/633-40l8.
for arlvanetmt'nt. Start $315. Logan Suite 3121 -JOHN Spec mach Exp'd only TilE BERLINER, 1 frosl·frt>e rt>lrig, $75; Gas ee · · --~=~=-~~-•
CaU Linda Lee. HANCOCK CENTER -rl_ . , d NB' Beach Blvd. Hunt Bch. 11ove $10; \Vasher $j(}, ~tlsc 1970 Singer Zig-Zag Au to, BASSET HOUND PUP.
Chicago, Illinois 60611. ~_a:;ear, a . pay. , . WAITRESS, Exp'd. in food Items. Cheap. 306 E. 20th. bi.!aulifuJ walnut col\IOle . Tri-colo~. 8 \11k5 $50
SALES TRAINEE · &.oocktalls Age ~35. App Cl\1 r-.take1 buttonholt'&, • 540-8638 e
HelpWanted,M&F710 HelpW•nted,M&F710 in p('r s:J-0 Lido Park Dr, · · overcasu seams, b lind -~~~~===-I
Fantulic oppor. "orklng w/ I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;1,~N~B~~·=-;,,-,:;:-::c:c-=l BEGINS \Vcd. 9A.\1~Pl\t hem8 designs etc. Guar. e DALMATIANS large y,·holes11.le~. Join win-II · 189-M Sanla P.ladrlna Cirr:le, $44.44' cash, or small pymts. AKC e
ning l<'Am. Start $.'i700. Call W 0 l\I ~ N -r a ntastic op-"r'V. nr Gartl~ld & l\lagnol!a 515-8238. ** 6"2-l93l **
I' '"''" """"· WE'VE BEEN INVESTING ponumty to "''" "" 962.-t\61. .,---....,..--...-.-...,. $100/day. Learn rc-volu· 8, LIKE n w r.of $7• Q lit Sporting Gooda 130 TEACUP Toy Poodle pups.
IN LAND FOR YEARS tlonary new beauty· technl· . e a J u~ Y Tiny 2 lb Poodlt'5, Yorklt"s DISPATCHER , l'{Ue. Guaranteed p!aceme-nt 11_ntiqu~d d;.e1wr & mn'1'0r SURFBOARD~) 6' 6" sing!f! or i\faltese at atud. ~s,.2100.
I For Scrvlce Depl. \Varran1y &r clientele at our locations s:;o, m15C. 540-4528 fin down rail. 1 6 O" twin
bC'kgrrld. lde11I loe. for ex-NOW WE'RE INVESTING or your borne. ~a-1779, Mlscellaneou& Ill fin & "'et auit. Offer. Miniature Schnauzt'n-
ptr, pe rson. Start $~. Call lliM~i•~•~L~Y<>[i;""~'·;;;;:;dlod.;;;o.dimtiiiiijiifjiiipiiiii 675-5633. AKC, litust !It'll lmrr.t'd .
Linda Lee. 113 WOft1EN nt'ed~ to demon. UNIQUE AUCTION TV, Radio, HiFi, 136 *Te=:;~~S ~~~S *
OPERATIONS JN PEOPLE. !ltrate beiul. mink oil. koll· _S_te_r_eo ______ Yr end j>uppy &a.le, groom-
metic~. mink acce8s's. Call I ~ k ... -•• OFFICER r · -·• 8 1 1 •••3J3J SYLVANIA co l or home ng, ... ,..e P -up . .....,,...._. IV@' Yt'arK 11go, our g • ...,... ut not e~aent fl • for appt K·KORP -'iW"
Great oppor, 2 .. \ Yrs. bRnk· CQmpe.ny w a s Jitt\(' Jf you'vt' had 50m,. · ' ANTIQUES.IMPORTS t'nlerlainment centl'r -Liv•stock 151
Ing or rclA1t'rl e:llpt"r. Ex-more then a name on salra exrrrlence, you'll UNREDIEEMED A.'1/Fl\f stereo turn er 1----------·I
par.ti conc-rrn ncl'ds you no'>'', a door. high hopes and find that hrljlful, loo. L JI~· I PLEDGES \V / A.r .c .. 4 . 11pd GarTl}rtl PET chlckt.na, ducb. fertile .s11111 1~100. c 11u Hell'n lot~ of ambition. Today But If yo11'rt' u~t look· Mtrchlnd!M record changer. beaut can-eggs, cagt's, J\1anx cit '>l'e're a multimillion Ing tor a job lo kf'Cp ' 540-2333
Haye:&. dollar company, pubUc-you busy 'fll the ne.xt ~------COAST PAWN & temporary cabinet. r.l ust l ~~~~~~~~~I ly held; the fastest one comes along, for· St't; and hear lo &ppreclatt.
RECEPTIONIST I gro'ving l&nd corponl· 2ct It. ,,_An_ti~q_ue_• _____ aoo_
1
AUCTJON HOUSE Best ca.sh offer or conakJE"r
t.ookln$: for 11 d1 v('r~ified }ob~ lion In the West. It \Ve'll be spcodlni:-•lot •1 ~ade for tqual v11luf!. l -Ind ll• lP J
F'lne loe. Sonie 11 1p ~ AIR I took pll'.'nty of s""'l'AI or monry nn ynur CHERRYWD hulfel. 0 Id F b 3 d 7 30 557-4639 aft 6 p.m. 1 ~;-~~·;~;';: m;•~·;;~l(.~!I
k I d ~. .,.. C 11 11nd a f11jr share ot luck 1r11lnin11:. sn the nnly E" ......... an style ma 5 t er e • r , : p.m . -now e ;r .... 11rt .-.•J a I h h .,~ >IUNTZ 4 & 8 -k ~ o get "' rrt> we arr. m<'n "'" "'anl arr 1 n~ pit'~. !JS" Jon' 62" hi. 642·8400 1 ... c .... me
Linda Ltt. I nod v.•t lntcnd to stay 1vho v.·ant to build R 633-llSl 2426 Newport Blvd., CM unit + 11p;>ro.'(. 70 tape!!. General --.
therr. \Ve·rr going to nr\v carttr. If you 're lie,...:.~--------$10.1 OR. BE..."1' OFFER. -----------1
JR. ACCT. do it by stoc:klng our ~ood. th<' financl&I pie· Appliances 802 · I l\lust HU, M8-fi613. ask for
Relocate in dream land. r.x. 1b:~hi;lt mi'~J~tl""I~~ ~~11~1~~~ ~('ll~·~~.Y ,.r;d K£Ni\IORE gas dryrr, xln't * A,.1UC,,!I0,1u N * .,•0ndY:.~·mt TV SCR1AM-LEJS
per. In n'IO!l'l mgml, NE".xl find. l..ifl' Jn~ur,11ncr? Fringe rond $50. Al~ GE c.lcc. nt .. m re '·<:.!• color
night leavinlr:' for 1trtat Oil-\Vt' tlt'>td people. Good bene(IL~? Sure. rlryer, >:ln't oond. S35. ~liv. . & Appl\1100:-: Yi/AFC. must 1 a c r I r I c,. ANSWERS
por. Slart $16,000. C.ail Hclt'n people. 1'1"Ybt you're Take a lon1t. h11rd look t guarantttd. 5464672 or Au;lion11, Friday, .7:00 p.m. $~. Call Pt"'" 6 le 9,
Hayt.s,. Ont' of ttw-people we'rt> at (ourself bllfort you 8'7-8115. • Windy s Auction Barn 64Ml57 I Ration -NJ---VI-•· -
540-6055
2790 Harbor Blvd.
Cost• Mesa
• \
rr YoU t'e -~t • Collitt' you Stt'. m11)'br we wl/I • RF.PAJR-man hU cI6iin 2Ur~i Ntwpol'1, O f MS.8686 GARRARD l'ecord~er-Pylhon -'IV SET
lr.okln~ for. cal , U yon likt 'ol"hl!lt -I --' -
background. th al ' s 1.00. hlle model ~·11'.~rs & Behind Tony'11 Blc!fi. r.111t'I. pl&)'er, DWmond 1t)'IU1, reg. Ad-lib about a wife: "t
LANO CONSULTANTS OF AMER:CA, Inc.
ORANGE CO. ARF.A • t714 ) 8.\.'·3233
RIVtRSlOE AREA • •714) 793~ LOS ANCF.l .• £$ AREA ·f2J3) 871-3670
dryen, Rsnbl, guar, r.tast~r FOUND NUDE S3!J.Sct, special S27. 1''ew At-
1
~lln ht>r on a qu\i sllow. Shf!
Chg QI.:. 531-86.17 " lrnkin11: roof In [)()ver l11.nl1c Music .f4.'i F.. 17th 1va.~ 'ol't'arlng a bare mkh1ft
!Tho fasle!l.I draw ,\n thf: \Vt'J! Shorl"ll. r fixed II . T. Guy I ~ERF.0 G11rrard 1urn111h!". 11.iid I thOJght she wae a TV
, • a na·11y Pilol Cla51ifif'd Roollng Co. 6·15-2780 , Slln1uk1 llml'L SIT.>l ~"f-:T~:~·~--~,~==~I
Ari &t'2-.i67S I ;>tlL9~!ll 7~~-'.'.t'.S \vr 11 twolp )'OU tell!' 61W61'1
' •
,,
-. . '
3 DAILY PlLOT Piland.11 Ftbru.lry l, 1971
I ~~~~ I r,::;i J§l ' 1· '"w·• .. s.1. J§J I .,,,..... il!!J ~~~I Autos tor Sile l§l I ~[ l§l .__I ._ ......... _!§]I l§J I Autos for Salt Autos for Sale
El~.tts, Maint./
SerYice
935 Auto Service, Parts 966 Autos, Imported 97L Autos, lmport9<1 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990
i1 :!>1hi!#!:l •I•l llj:j l c,~~::;"~~:v;;::; ·:..~:::l ~~~:_J:.:.A~-G~u:..:_A=_=-R~~~:i :.;;=:..:TO=Y:..:O...:.T.:..A--l-:V-:-O::-'.-:LK-:-S:':W.C....:A.:..G_E_N=1.;.:;:=...:.v:.:.o::.;L:...V.:..O=-~.::~:.:C:.:..:.:O__:N:.:Tl:.:N:...E_N_T_A__:L.:..:.l: __ M_E_R_c_u_R_Y __ ,
I Mob ile Homes
902 .
; BO.\'r '
' .th
I"
, Bo,,ts ti\orino ·
Eq..iir. 9a4
----1
,lj !. :.. j ! ' . \
t IH\l I " --Eo:tot ... Pow41r 90~ I
I ...
' '
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l
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•
I 1 Cl.!~ s
I,, '• I tor I
,\'1 111
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, c·r Cnu: -
909
\1/1r:r nr\• •
r , nly II 1 •. 11'-'"·
,f •• f\1.•' .. :.
''!\ $1 •1(1 ill·
• , .· ·.;. 1
CA E COD CAT BOAT
' l ' ~ 1-~~\::
Louis, Slips/Docks 910
I '
' ! ....
·r.-~.::
p Ill ~~,· h•1,•1
: . 11 f1 ,, r l
11 . (I ll'"1
. l. \ . !.! • ~ ·i· Jt
1'."'.lr..' I l:!\,f,
('j' ... ' }f
Boals, Speed & Ski 91 t
I" ., !•"··or ,,
.,, .. I 'l~-''~ll~
lt"·
!-iurrllundcd hy
lfv1ne Or:1il.;t>"
"''"~"u'"''· Alt'" ..,.,,." • '64 XKE • 1971 TOYOTAS Larg• Se'9ction • VOLVO . .,. ENGINE & '"'""" [ 1969 MARQUIS .: l .11 \\ L-l 'niroya! 1lrrs. Xlnt cond, $2j(IO, Of VW I good. Body rear ended. $200 Brougham 4 Dr. H.T.
:! F1a11·1 \\' L L'n\royal 11res 546-9501 John Chu ARE HERE I l Campers, All 71 's Are Here I or bcs1 orrer. cau 677r-2Till EXCF.LLENC~ Real rul'.•I li•1n~ ~rt ;'.o~•·
~(> Ql'~ .Ill, > !\OjJf l!lg .-.. & ""1 ~~ \\' I Jt.1~s. $150. ~~~~~-~~~1 The All New 1600 cc Vans, Kombis, 112 -l·\.I • 145 • 164 • CORVAIR t>£RSON U·,1ED
t;!.!-1111'\. KARMANN GHIA Corollaa1 1800 E ...
1
This l;l.'11u1iful top of th f'
Auto;-w-.-n-,-.-d---9-68 1·---------·I 4 Speeds & Automatlc!S Buses, New& Used 4 Speeds & Au tomatics titrn·ury l!ne has t~ popu·
ALL ELECTRIC ----------I '60 Ghia, '62 eng, big bore, The All Ne\.\' Coron'a HT Cpc Immediate Delivery 1970 144 Sedan Demo 'till CORVAIR. red. CorKl Jai· dt1rk ivy J.':l'cen metallic
stroker crank, new clutch, 4 $j'l('ed & Auton1alics CHICK IVERSON 1ubtier. Good 2nd car S27:i. finish with nuttching inter.
Cheese from
105 fi oor pl ans,
you ncm~ it·! .
Adults-Pets O.!<.
Private Club-SS00,000
Recreation Center
14 BEAUTIFUL LY
FUR NISHE D
MODELS
(LJ!r. 'fl~!')::1
149 51 Jaffrey Rd.
In Irvine
WE PAY TOP CAS H
!or u~t't:f cars & truck! just
i-atl u~ for fret' l"!itlmat~~
GROTH CHEVROLET
A~:< for ~ales ~tannger
18'.!l J Beach Blvd.
llun!lnG!On Beach s :i .fA'\1 Kl s.3331
WE PAY CASH
fOR YOUR CAR
CONNEL(.
CHEVROLET
2828 Ilarlior Blvd.
n1i. South of Tu .. 11n <i11d \ C.Osta r.tesa S-1r~1200
11 n1!. S, or S~n!a Ana Fr.\·y. ---~---=~-
\:! ;u1. =-:. o! S;.in Dil'<;"O 1-'l'\I~') li\ll'ORTS 'i'i'ANTED
OrangP-Counlles
TOPS BUYER
BILL :'IL\XEY TOYOTA 832·8585
18881 Beach Blvd.
-TH E-BEST OF~ !I. Beach. Ph. 847-8555
BOTH WORLDS \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR
r·nr a h.•<.\utiful hon e, JO\\ FOR TOP USED CARS
r~ :nrcn:inl'(' .'lnd archuc,·ut'-If ~our car is extra clean,
ii.!~ 1mpres,;f\ e drstt"n, Sre see us first.
It" e'(f'j/\ng M('\\' "\'ill 1rC' BAUER BUICK
l! •"~1·' by Levitt ;\fOhllC 2,l.I E. l71h St .
S.: .. l··Jll" t•:1 rli•o:ay now at C'rl~l:i. i\le~a S.18--7765
BAY HARBOR S!'.:LL US YOUR CAR
MOBI LE HOMES A\''i. :'111\KE OR )10DEL
1 l'.!I U;i':rr St. Cosia '.l!r~<i * ~110-13!13 *
J.1~1 "· or ".D. }·11·, nt !!;1rlif,r _A_u_t_o_s_, 1mpOrted--970
'ill :llO-~ j;o
NOW OPEN
CONTEMPO·
LAGUNA HILLS
2:131J\ P.IDG!·'. llCJl'.TE fJr:.
(Corner ol \lr1ull..11 l'k11·v)
L·\Gt.::\A 1111.J.S •
Pr"~Ll~c utlu!1 ~on11nun11~ n1!.
ji!C'l'!11 10 i.l•i-ltrv \\ut·J•I
l,,·:iut dU\ FUl'!'OUnd:n~~. ;;i
I AUD I --------AUSTIN AMERICA
AUSTIN AMERICA
Sales, Service, Parts
lmin~in!e Delivery
All ~lodeli
$j.)(I. 5-10-3118. SA ~E ON Radio, Heater, Automatic 5•16-7817 urter 6 pm. ior nnd black landau roof.
EMOS VW $l094 J962 ~!01".ZA, \\'hite, red I Equipfll'd 1'.i lh all the lux-'69 KAfu\1Al\N Ghia • Air,
low n1ileage.
$1850/offer £.14-1641
'64 Gold Ghla-$875
5-1!1·18:17 * * C.1\1.
MERCEDES BENZ
Or<inge County's
L<irgest Selection
New & Used
Mercedes Bent
Jim Siemens Imps.
Warner & Main St.
Santa Ana 5 46·4114
1970 D Overseas Del. Spec. 549-lOn Ext. 66 or 61 uphol, bucke-! seats, 4-.~pd I ury Jcitturcs. Au to trans, ra-
d """ Ltlli~J 1970 llARBOR BLVD, " L 1rans, clean. $300. 548-3159 d1 o, hentrr, po\.\·er steering,
Wf'-twta COSTA MESA e4ll ~ 1961 CORVAIR ~tonza, auto. poll'er brakes, power \.\'in.
TOYOTA '61 VW BUS I VOLVO good rood. 53.000 mi. $275 <low•. ""'"" "" 6 """ or Dest oiler. ~10--070'-J factory air L'Ond1tioning, S(!l
JAC 783 CORVETIE of cxtcllent premium V6gue $599 1~ Harbor, C.ii.I. &16-!1303 tires. Ask for demonstration
in this oulslanding car. Lie.
CHICK IVERSON U"l.rVU'U '67 VITTE YI\'""'· John•m • s'"" \'W lHINI Fastback ... 427", 4-speed, 2626 Harbor. C.rvr. 540-5630
'Volvo' A~Vf,~f radio. New polY· 1 l!lij9 \IERCURY Colony Park
...
glass tires .• E.'<ceUent con-
1
Stauon \Vagon, Lo a d ed.
dition. Driven easy. 20,000 mi. $3100. 494-7185
"FRIEDLANDER" $2850 . • • 1970 MERCURY Mani"'' Ask for htr. Grannis 5'J6.8640 Brougham 2 Dr. 1-l rdtp II'/
llNiG Harbor. C.M. 6-l&-9303 (
TRIUMPH
'71 SPITFIRES
NOW ON DISPLAY 549-3001 Ext. 66 or 67
Come in for a test drive! 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
FRITZ WARREN 'S COSTA MESA
SPORT CAR CENTER PTL MOTORS
·64 !\TERCEDES Benz 230SL TIO E. lst SI., S.A. 547-0764 2186 1-larbor Blvd, 01
0 I I 9 9 I d S d '65 S"n"""'f.D•-}'. S''o'
1l1SO 8EACl'i IHWY. J'll
893-1566 • 537-6824
NEW-USED·S ERV.
'67 CORVETTE 4. ~pd j \\·ht landau b:ip. Aulo win-
Jastback. One of the b<>st dows & · c!re S(\ill adjn1nt
buys in to11·n. t"ull prit•' Very low n1ileage. 642--6959
only $139i. Blue Chip. 214J LEAVING For active duty.
llarbor Bh•(I, C.1'1. :>IU-139~. i tust Sacriflce '62 ?i'tercury
hardtop roadster. p s, pen l a1 Y • : c osc un ay ""'"" '"" J.>
A:'ll/F:\f r adio , ne.1v '64 TR-4. Good running, '67 Bug-Oean SS85
Pirellls. In1n1ac L'Ond. $3100. clean, blue w/black top. \Viii take trade.
P vl ply 675-0057 after 5:30 Wil'C' wheels, tonneau cover, &16-2698 or 557-45.)Q
pm radio, rcbuil! clut ch. Good Ask for Jim Kenipner Autos, Used 990 &12--9700 Best oUer 54&-4232,
MG buy Ul $800. Firm. 546-2050. 166 VW I SELL or trarle '&.ti Corve11l' MUSTANG
LATE '69 GT 6 Plus, New 4 Speed, radlo, beater. REF.
1
BUICK Stingray. \\'ill lake SllOO. ----------I
---~ P1tcllis overdrive, extra 9!MH$890b A or gd tr'ans1i car as trade '69 ~lustang Grande, VS, Air,
....,....._..--,_ clean. $2195. &H-5552. a r: or merican e ·66 Rl\'IERA Full p1\T in ,r,, takf' over pymts. $2200 fully equippro. For more
S 1HIN~, '57 TR 3: Red, gd cond. Ne\v 1969 HARBOR &46-0WI! Xlfir cond., SI9iio. ' owed. 646-3:>15 111!0 l'all 49:1-5829. ''MG brak_cs, has lop. $375. Call· 1 '70 vw CAMPER [--* 8~7.5369 * ·~7r ~:r1'!re~ood cond. $-i:xl ''6~:..-6~. c=Y=L-. 21=.000=-m~,~.,-. =s;cn~,1c,1
SR &16-5807 or 646-1367 CADILLAC I 01,nr, top cond. Real buy Alt 6: :>J6.2.-~11 VOLl(SWAGEN Fully equipped, pop.top, Joad·r-------------'~=--=~~--at SS85. 6H-7497. ''fRtfDlAHDfft'' ed. dlr. (06285\\'J Onfy 9.000 ·61 E 1 Docado-A:'li/t':\t DODGE '65 ?t1ustang convt. Auto., V8.
tmo eEACH CHWY. ,,1 '68 VW miles. f\1ust sell. \Viii fin. stereo radio. Every con-i\IUST sell! Urgent! &st of-Good cond. ?.loving. S700 or ~, -,~" • 537 "°"A ance. Ca.II 494-7744. ceivable e)(lra. Black \\'/blk offer. &12--4993. o.,,,. """ -<llU't Radio. etc. fer takes! '&.) Dari Sport ~C...:=-"'-'c'=~=...,==' NEW.USEQ..SERV. 51299 e WANTED, pvt party. V\V vinyl top. X!nt cond. 35.000 ~pecial. Stick, 6 <·yl, 'it e '67 i\fUSTANG, STICK.
bug, '67 or later, Clean & mi. S2900. Call ~1r, \Vcbb he. Body & m£'Chanics xlnt. S895 PVT PTY. 7141645--0190 ~ CHICK IVERSON reasonable. s.i&-4222. ~M-75&1 or 67a-.2S58. Art 5 pm, 847-UIJS AFTER 6 P:it.
VW 1969 V\V BUG-Auto, sujX"r 1968 Sedan de Ville-All '67 DODGE CHARGER: For * * '67 MUSTANG-Runs MG
Sales, Service, Parts
Immediate Delivery,
All ?.'lodels
J2rtuµort
31inµorts
519-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HA RBOR BLVD.
clean. Pvt ply. Call l'\ick deluxe rxtras incl Cl'Uise Sale or Tl'ade: for ~d i·an. good. Call Don, 642-9770
days 6-16-0261/eve 537-3935 control & elcc eye. S3Zitj. r.ood t'Ond, 11 /ncw 1irc~. days IJE'h~'Cen 9AM & 5P:'l-f. 642-5521 '59 V\V Van, ·st eng rl'cent · S~OO Body damage. Best ol-
COSTA i\IESA j work doll(' on tran~. New '66 El Dorado Convt., \Vay fer: 4£1.1-1990 I
BEAl.!TIFUL customized V\V brake system, camper unit belo1v \.\"hol~sale at Sl 3JO . ..:.::_:__::;f~A7'L~C=o=Nco---, ·.,-,-O-L_D_S_l-l"1'd_l_o_p ___ A_n-~-,-.1 OLDSMOBILE
-New mags, new paint, in.~ide New clutch. GOOD Good shape in & out. I ' Pv .,,. '''317 ccplionally good driving new brakes. 18,000 mi on COND Best offer 540-3118 t parly "",,_.'" · · · '64 Falcon 4-spd V8 , car. Cash discount or \.\'C
motor. Flnre fenders. big '66 V\V, Newly reblt engine. *'63 CADILLAC S·lOO f1rin. 5-lfi.2729 11·ill help flnanee O.A.C.
tires, $650 firm. 67~7200 Xlnt cond $7;:11, 642--1573 Beauliful condition ' S79" *** 546 9983 FORD 1 B!uc Chip, 2145 }!arbor 3100 \V, C.oast Hwy., N.B. WANTED any time btl'.'n 12 pm & J -;;;;:;. ~ \---.....'._::::::.____ Blvd, C!l1. 5-:W-1393, 642-9700
642-9405 540.1764 . 10 pm. 1004 Cadillac, nCw 1ircs, 1
• • VOLKS\\'AGEN today. Call 1 i _ '"' 5-1· 29"° DRIVEN ONLY 21,000 i'o!T. P\Vr. air.eond, R&H, pvl '65 MG 1100 -$400 l lt pay top dollar for your !\'lust sell '68 V\V Bu,..., Gd. o"':'nl"r, $995 cash. call 1969 LTD 2 Or HT I '&1 OLDS. Best offer, All
* 67;r~l * •"d a•k ,,, Ron p,·-1-1 I cond. S99J. 675-~ alt ~-·. 962 so·· 111.ii.:h 1 ,1,,r~·. •· ~ '"""' · 6 p :\I FOR S:1le: '63 \Vhitc Cad Exceptionally clean through. c•~'~Y"'"· ~--"'->~'--~~~-~
li•,ury :q 11•i1n1n1Pn1•. p·J;
!)I'-....,.,. .. n, finhhy ~ h'lf•,
''"'·,__.,.,,, " ·5· V\V b . COil\'., u pll'r, g COi • , ' .
1
___ '::~'1:L ... ~"~·'""' l~.161 :\\C A 1600 -Ne\v hcad.,~"'~'~·30cc,3l'--c~x~1.-66'--.6-7._6_7~3~.0000~,-I "' r II d td out bcauli!ul mediun1 blue '6-1 •·f(i\." Xlnt cond, !actoryi
\alves. brakes. exhaust. 1!165 V\V Orig. owner. Xlnt J us. nC\V tlrcs, $595. 646-4114 alt 4 pm. mrtallic ex!erior. Dark blue air, Ne\v tires & paint, trans I<<--~-~~;~;,(~~,:~;;;.~=;;.~~·=·~""'"" Triple Wide Corne ll ~J.~~~V. Coast Hwy.,~:iie.i Asking S400. 5:1::>-0803 cond. Nrw tires, brakes, shocks & trans. i\lust sell CAMARO landau rool. satin black in· overhauled. $695. 5~6--0800.
Continen!al • P::i1·;ur.011:it l ~':::"'::'__ ___ __:~::'.'.~l--"-,M~G"'B'---1 f'IC, 5'1.000 miles. '71 l~ic. oow. S950. 642-55~· !crior. Auto trans, radio. 19&1 OLDS Real clean, runs
C,i mFCtS, Sale /Rent 920 B111Tin;,1.on e t:n:\'crs;tl DATSUN Pd. :\lust sell ~ S 8 50. V\V SQUAREBACK. LT. heatC'r, po\1·er steering, J)O\\'. good, good tires. $525.
·1 1 \·1\' (·r,.·.r CJ mj'll'r \an,
~.~.:.I .. llCl>l!X, r,•rJ10
11• 1·. J min at·u r .11 1'. .. r .... ;,x,r.. s: 1-~ :: u t
. ··~-f
Cycles, Bikes,
!'.cooters
!EE
915
"· ~·r-nLi NDER" \ ,, _.. ~
1 '' r.!'ACK fl4WY. ,,, 0 t -;:J;[;
l'I EW-US ED -SER V.
.,
f' I I I f. ... -...
' '. . .. ~
"'
'
tlaminl!:rl e G<'ncral ,69 MGB 962--9921. BLUE '68. '71 TAGS. 'ti9 CAJ\IARO Z-28 4 speed, er brakes. factory air. Sfc a.18-8778
fH'Oad:uoor O !'!:ir '67 DATSU N .6, V\". X'lnt cond. New l ·-'XLNT-"'-',,co;,;:N0D~. ~&1~2~--0="'=--l .'2.l~,OOO~~m~;~, ~loo~d~ed~·~·/~c:_"_'"'_·I anC: ask 10 dri\'c 1his at· -----~=~--1
111 C " Sacrifice S\8i5 494-3034 I PLYMOUTH 1 lcre-1 • .lr.1l•r:dgc Rdstr. Beautll'W cana"' >·el-1,·-·. b<ak••. t"ne·"P· '71 VOLVO 1ractive car today. Z:'l:V54D. J:d· 'r Tl.ed 1\ilh black inter. 'J •c.. .. .. CHAPNlAN low \\'ith rich contrasting Ii". R/H. T/IV. $1595 or CHEVROLET ,Johnson & Son 2626 Harbor ior. run" hkr new. Needs '" ' ' 1969 PLY'tOUTH ~·-· • MOBILE HOMES black interjor . Chronic Wire bes<. 546-7281 c.~I. 540.5630. I .. . UJ.J' "· tk•IRIL 7.KHOSO, 1\clly blue '68 VOLVO 'd llT PS/PB · ·1 L'106 N. Itarhor. S.A. 1. '· 'i~s 1h1s c~r should '\'heels . l'.'ith. r~dial tire!>, '66 V\V Sedan, Fae air, 'JO NOVA Looking for a car? :. r , , air, s1\<('r, * 714/531.S\05 • ~·-1! r ·r sc~~J. Cluck says A:\1 /F_l\1 radio, in1n1acula!e chronic Porsche r ln1i;,1Local owner, 101v mileage, EASY \1/blk int. P\'l pty, (714)1 ~T-,~;p~l-e~V/ide Cornell .. ,.lll thli; ''"<' Jnr cvndiuon. ZQF380. Kelly Radio, Xlnt cond, $1125. automatic transmission ra. 2 o Co \'8 · Call Auto P.eferral Ire" o1 "-"~'~~'~37~'--,~~-=----,,,-Blue Book retail $2310 Our .,~" ""-76 . . . ' oor Ufle, , automatic, ;:I PL~· s F l'k llilicrest e F!a1n1n~o $899 iric · o.w-v<1 _ d.to. ht'ater, '.vh1~e side. 11a1J poii·cr slC<>ring. dlr. l\1u:o;t <'han::e. \Ve have sr\lers "' ''. · porls ury, J e
P aramourlt 9 t:nil rr.<:a1 I c e '66 V\V-41 ,000 mi. Good tires, etc, Chicks special at sci! \liill lake !rade (ZVE-\1·01\ing, All type~ ,~· prices. neiv. ll_1·perl 383, B & ~1,,
Barrini;:to:1 • Broadinour CH ~CK IVERSON $17.99 cond. Be~t offer. hlll61 sell. fi.10Nno 366) Cali 4!).1.7744. • Sellers also \.\"t'lcon1e. 16~,~q~~~l6ite, lots more $950.
c,,,,;,.,,t1a1 " ''" VW CHICK IVERSON 673-11"' $1999 '"'~431 .. ~,,, G II '6!1 :i.talibu :.! dr lldtp vs. =~=~~~...,0~1 -,6=000c.I
cncr;il ti 11lrrP¢t VW '66 V\V Sq. back-Sunroof, CHICK IVERSON 7,_, vibrasonic, tach lV. lluto Referral Sl'rv11·,.. '70 CUDA. Stick. n Y CHAPMAN ;, 1!].::n.~\ ,.;,, li6 or 67 ,.. · "-ll"d tire• Xlnl Sa"' new tires & exhaust, Pvt 1959 Fo d 011· =· ~ "' · .....
0 1·1·0 II \R'"'l' BLVD "''11l"t'S, air shorks. Nu lll'l'S. f M BILE HOMES ·' . '. "'v' ,. • l 97o 1-IARBOR BLVD. '"'Y· &12-1ow. VW ' ' I szoo & T.O.P. a44-8034 lo"T \\I~-\ :\!11~! ~II. J\l11kc offer v 121~1 r,".'.l('h Bhd. G C. -·'-' . ,., ... , ---=C=O=ST--"A~>~M=E=S~A'----'69 V\V BUC-Xlnt cond. !11ust ~~19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 6.1:;..::2!lG. Galaxic, 1 door. S, PI S, 1965 VALIANT 200 * 'ii 1~,~~~~n · -1r __ i COT DATSUN '07 i\IGB-GT, xlnt cond. sell. $1499. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. P 'B. Ai r cond. Radio. he.at-I FINE COND. $650 -_..~,~VATERF RO NT OPEN DAI LY ~acrifiec. !>W-6349 after 5 Call 8.U-2i61 COSTA ~fESA '64 NOVA er. Excellent tran~portalion 492-1-155 " ·1----------1'ar. s:m or 1nakc offer. ---~-=~~--~' •i•t' ! r'. \",!l:i. .~.:. r AND & \lt'ckrnds. '68 V\V Sunrool, lo mi's xlnt. ,61 VOLVO '.! Door Hardtop. A11ton1;i1ic, 2 PONTIAC
\'il!:i"r (.)U'111ty 1!1111uu1. 1•11. SUNDAYS cond. $119J. 673-2271 or Ii ryhndcr. d lr. IOSE :i7:'!) :il!l-O l I. 18~:;.1 ~a~h Blvd. ____ O_P_E_L ____ .i..:'..:'0-4~· ..:1=20::._ _____ ~ 12 Dr. Sedan. Good economi-;\!11~1 ~rll~ \Vil! finance. Ca!I 'j Q COU~TRY Serlan; all', 1.62 PO'.' 'TIAC Calal•'na 4 "'· ~ 9-1 774~ radial 1111'~. ps/ph. Xlnt °' .., 1n:ir1:ld" · L1•;1u!if1,! 1"
Cl11t .• 1•)l>"' ,<\_ P.• I 1;,1n1 ~ •• [•
npt. ~~; ">•L r 7:. 1~ 1 \
l!unt1ni;ton Geach 1969 OPEL CT V\V Bus '66. Ne\Y radial cal transportation. Special •I . . cond, 6 pass, $3.395. P vl Good rransportalion car.
1 81.!·771il or 510-0442 S2600, Xlnt cond. 1irt"s, radio. $1200. 1his \\'l?ek only. Lie. h,8226. Tiii CHEV. In111ala 2 dr ~rd. Pty: 4~3m I C1rDn. S.niall dO\\'n. \\'r will
COSTA MESA I FERRARI 1c all Judy, 6-12-57n Pvl ply. s.MJ-02';>4 WILL FINANCE auto Iran!>, air. fl p11r. 327 hr1p finanf'c . Blur Chip, (.••u·.1 .\: .!t:l!' J'.otale I.·\·:: $299 \I s 1 , 1 11.\0 '6:1 Falcon Squil(', ·l·dr '1gn, d ~ ·· ----------PORSCHE--'65 VW Str aight b a e k . .., 0 nH s, Ol'.·nr. J. · !';!! \"!l Rill · :i.. pr! 21 lj Harbor Blv , ... .,1.
:"l: l~. ~O ,r,, 21 \\'id" P.loi!o ! · FERRARI sunroof. \O\Y n1\leage. SSOO CHICK IVERSON ,'),16-fi32:,. ~·;.ii!' '•~,\·ncr. 'gj~~i~13 s afi ;,\0--1:1!13, &12-!liOO
\,11v •1·1 •h pLo\' in :0 .'i1:·r 0 --G REENLEAF PARK :'>"1\[lOr! l n1 pnrt~ Lld. r· '65 Porsche firn1. Call &14-13i0 VW '68 Che1'Y Biscayne fi prn. tiS PO:\iTIAC f;xeuctl\'e sta
;1111:0 County's only author· :.' dr 6 c~J J SJ'l('ed I ,-1 · / bl 17 'l \'. l ri , r_.h_Ti_ill f i: .:n 1. ,,,,,1 ""·•I•<. SC f • 1963 V\V PICKUP • GOOD runn1n}; 'f,:? Con\·ert. \\gn. ac air, rs p pw, ,,, "'' ... 356 Sunroo 0 1"3031 E'i "" 0 67 S$'.lJ or offer. 6i."1-lO.l'.i 11~1 I d I 6 pass. cab. Excellent condi. J .,... · -" · "" r Nr1v t1rC'!i S: bartcry. ~lusl A:\· r ·' rat 10. a JUSl s ef'!'·
• V• 'lO!;ILE ll•1n1r Jl1;\_·,n t".\Ll·:S-~El'.\"JCf.-PAR'fS B•itlsh racing grt'cn. tion, SiOO. 492.:ig78 19iO HARBOR BLVD. ·;ir1 Cht"VY 2-ilr. i\r\\' cng, sell 512:;. &l!:l-'.!787 I ing \\hi, r ark. Like llf'IV.
,,· •·\1·,nJr,, c;,,,,-,,! !«'111 ~1= \\', Con•.1 II""'· Lie ''CC 52·, C:OSTA 'IESA I' I G I R -"" ~ •• ./ t, •OOf tire.~. uns S2fi!Jj/ufft>r. 011·nrt· &l·l ... 1648.
Sl J(1 r..:o;-.,!10 l\e111>0r1 Beach $2899 '6.) V\V Bus. Nc1\' rebl! eng . VOLVO good_ $175. ~S-16.)2 JEEP I '62 PONTIAC-$275 ·Tr"ilc-,5-, Tr •vc l~-•,45 G1~',\fl~1 540-1764 Trans needs 1101·k. $7.:il or • • CHICK IVERSON b ff 67'1"'. ·1H Q1C'v. Blue i\lnllh11. :.! ilr. C T\J l''A 2 I l id I ,\11tho1i7.C'rl Frrr:;"I Dcalrr l-''-'-'-'-'-'·--~-'"-"----1 AUTHORIZED TOYOTA Lt1nd Crubcr. per!, A · -1' <r. op.
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Tra ile r s, Utility 947
14' Tanclem Trailer
'1" 11i1 I 1"hr• !.•. ,\'1 . , I 1
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Antiques1 Classics 95~
Vw I 1 11 SALES • SERVICE 1!.T. Good conrl. '.!S.l nulo Clo"~' ·1"114' .,: 8381157 ·6.~ V\V 1rans; s 10rtrnrr oor · rond. U1<C'rl on e11)' slrcrl.o.. '"' ·1 ,... "u · . ' FRITZ 'WARRE ·s $!00. CDll Lee &r>--311S7. I pan, rh1'01nr n~tro s , N l.1kr hrant nr11 SlliOi ~l!l-JOJl F.~t. 66 or 67 p11rt~. Call 673-9352 I SPORT CAR CENTER '6~ Chc,·y Bisc11yne 2 <Ir 6 ·l!J J ... ~!117 nr trll-12~!1.
ftP! ---][)jO llAR.BOR BLVD, I " d IS9' i7. JOI' rrla.~~ --I COSTA i\lESA The "Yrllov• Pa.crs" or i lO E. lst St., S.A. 5·17-0j£.I i:y ' ·• sJ'l(!r .. i Ii a-"· I 'fi7 TOYOTA L.C. \\'1<fn huh~. '65 A mbasslldor •• TH INK" , ,70 PORSCHE 9l IT rlas5ified ... 642--'iliiS Open daily 9·9: closed St1nday '63 CHEVY IMPALA 1\ inrh. fl ota1,·on tire~. $1930. 1 1 ~ i Ulflll1il I<' ll'Url~l .~~ion. POii'·
Autos Imported 970 1 Autos, Imported 970 5:r.o. ~ilS-S.~09 ;iflrr 6 67:1-3077 i'r ~11,rri11". 1 1· brakes,
mfl ~;:n;i~:~~!;.execu1ive ear! ' I CHRYSLER I LINCOLN I .\: 111 r <~lnd~NOZ 792, S690.
Harbor American
1966 CJIRY!'LER !I-pass J!lG!l 4 dr Cnnt1nrn!al l.rren. 1'.'l:,I l!.\l!BOI~ fi.16.0:zti l
FIA T RAMBLER
Soo EW 9 To\\'n & Country i;1a 1\·t;n. 11 /1\hl vinyl top All Xlrn~ -SfUlfEBAKER "fRIEOLAN DER" I BRAND N J 71 DATSUN Imm"'" New """' lire•. Xlnl Cond! 5'.SOO. Dy; -------I
1l7SO B!ACH ILYD. 11\ill BEACH BL. 842-4435 $1966 61-1-21'11 Sl.1-2640: E\·~fii~1-~9i!l __ '!;\ L.\RK-VS Xlnt com!.
!Hwy. 3,1 HUNTINGTON BEAar COMET MAVERICK I rffll 11 /1Y 1i'i;;,~. r.~h . .:i.\r.
s·v:.;:.i-;.; o 5:J<.G.~~ Cl.1\SSlC '5i !!;fll'£'dster ne1v 011~ D11 nrr. $.1 •. 1. 673-S732
NEVl-USED-SER V. hlack lacqurr. concourse '63 CO:\IET 2-dr Tach, 1 "iO :'11,\VERIG\. )lu51 ~ell' T-BIRD
r•Jodition. :\lust see to chrome ,1 hrrls, ca~h or ii·iU Racl10 S, Jlcatrr
l;o,•heve tiil-40'i8. finnnce \I ith 0 .A.C. Blue + Call ().lj.0~17 * I
• I • _ l'Ari-:.\J:D. 1 i ~·r,1 ' ' '68 FIAT--SSO SUNBEAM ('h1r, 21r1 llarhor Blvd.I Daily Pilot \\'ant Ads ha\'c
C.:'11. :rin-t::!l~. 642-!liOO ( hargiiin~ ~alorr.
'61 T-Bird, Good 1:ond,
T,1ke ovrr p11ymrnts
After 3:.".0, 547-3716
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l'.:00 11,\H!IO!: l~LVD,
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'G.i :"unbcam Tiger, 2tiO YR.
4-spd, Riii, clean. Orig.
011nPr, Rest oiler. S3i-l•l45
alt 6pin.
TOYOTA , __________ _
BILL MAXEY
!T IQJ~
18881 BEACH BLVD.
Hunt. Beach 147-8555
I ml N. nf Cout Hwy. on Bdl
'69 CORONA
The Number 1 Selling Import Truck
NOW ~0 '1. MORE PrcKUP
l'OWER FO• 90~~ Of YOUR LOAD
MORI NO ·COST EXTRAS
ll'AAll'r • .• , NI: j.-.,. l·I -• '.l~ 1.-.11J:: •. \.t 1.\t.
Jltirdtop. Vinyl roof. 4 sf)f'a'.,
1mn1ncul:i!I", :-'J..J• Blue. S11c.
riflcc. \\'ill 111ke lr:tde or
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SERVICl lS DUii: IUStH W -Will TOU TRT USll
flfX tllE FINANCING
SANTA ANA DATSUN
2201 lt.ltl•I•,
Sot1t1 An•
I .
· PHONE
546-4880
I
Almost
Reads 1-"'he Ne\vspapers
Newspapers deliver massiye coverage
of ALL occupation groups each weekday
OCCUPATION OF HOUSEHOLD HEAD
Professiona ls
Managers
Clerical, Sales
Craftsmen
Other Manual
Farme rs
88%
91
85
80
71
70
Source: Opinion Ruorc.h Corpo11tion
Newspapers reach, in-depth, into all occupation groups every day, as this graph indi-
cates. But what should be even more interesting to advertisers is the high precentage
of management, professional and other high-salary-earning types who re ad a newspa~
per every day. They make more money, travel more , buy more , set the standards for
others to follow. If you want to play "Follow The Leader," advertise in some other
med ium ; if you wa nt to lead the Jeader, put your message where he 'll read it ••. with
us, the newspaper.
DAILY PILOT
I
•
Newspapers Take
Your Message
\Vhere 1-"'he Jlone7 Is
Newspaper readership
increases with income
Under
$3,000
$3,000-
$4,999
$5,000-
$7,999
$8,000-
$9 ,999
89%
$10,000
& over
Source: Opinion Rtst1rch Ccwpor1tion
--·'·· ~ -#--Almost nine out of 10 affluent Am1ric•ns-thos1 who earn $10,000 or more annu ally
-read at least one newspaper. And more than half of those who earn even less than
$3,000 i!i lso reed newspapers. And the more money the reader of your ad has to spend,
the more likely he is to see the message in a newspaper. If you've got something to tell
somebody {or sell somebody), start with us, the newspaper.
DAILY PILOT
Ne,vspapers: Number One
In Ad vertisi11g!
Newspapers are the primary
advertising medium
1949 (Millions of Dollars) 1969
TELEVISION ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,,
,,'' MIGIZINE~ ....
;"" ................ --~~ ...... ~Rroio --;>"• " OUTDOOR .-. ......................................................................... ..
Total advertisin g figures are in for 1969 and, as the chart above shows, newspapers
continue to be the nation's number one stlesmtn. The only other medium showing s ny
dramatic 9rowth in the chert is television end -did you notice -the incr1ts1 in
newspaper advertising investments since TV came on the scene is more thon the cur·
rent total television advertisin9 volume. Shouldn't you "hir111 the nation 's most power·
ful 11lesm1n1 You can 1t1~ tod1y by calling 642-4321, the
DAILY PILOT
• '
I
' •
•
l
•
Q DAILV PILOT
Kober Trlainphs
Campbell Loses
Defense .ofTitle
• :1 .. J
Swede Wins
Dragons in
Australia
Ericson Yachts
Stir Competition
HOBART. Tasmania (AP -Looking for a J>OSSible han-the largest one-de61gn group,
Debutant, a Swedish boat sail· dlcap winner in the upcoming there are several pairs of cne-
ed by Peter Sunderlin, 11urviv· Marina del Rey to Puerto designs that could do the job,
By ALMON LOCKABEY L 0 5 • Angeles-Long Beach ed a foul claim and won the Vallarta race? based on the almost certain
o.ur 1"1 .. 1 ... ""' •~1i.r sailoff : Dtnnis Connor, San championship Friday in the Then look to the several boat-for-boat rivalry that
h · •--r •--t ·1h· lh always exists in such races. Argyle Campbell of Balboa Diego YC, winner in the San World Dragon Class yac ting UU<1t· or-1.11.m races w1 1n e
Dieoo area and the winner competition. 28-boat fleet which gets under There will be two Palmer-Yacht Club Sunday lost his r 0 t h t be ·1 d 1" ~ Sf!!".'-/ way from Mar1·na del Rey Johnson-43s, a relatively new o a ma c o sa1 e , ' ·~ ' . A protest wa's lodged against bid to defend his 1970 v.·in f th ' e k bet een • , t.., Saturday at noon. and untried class Jn long
in the Congressional Cup ~~~y1~~ns'.517~y:ar old ~an· Debutant by Axel Holm of Most likely boat-for-boat distance raci ng. They are the
match racing series in a light-ta Monica High School student Denmark, sailing ~,aj Britt, contest will be among the Carina, sailed by W. 1.
h -h Ch k /" at the conclusion of the Colville Jr. of Newport Harbor air drifting mate wit uc from Santa Monica, and ........._... seventh and (inal race on the three Ericson-35s. All three
Kober, representing th' Marshall Long UCL.A junior, River Derwent The protest are sailed by top skippers and Yacht Club. and Alegre, sailed
Newport Harbor Yacht Club. also from Santa Monica YC, was dismissed. crews and the time-saving by John E. McAliste r under
In the Congressional Cup the Burns and Long were -~ The Swedish yacht scored performance of the boats have the burgee of the Lah.aina
winner does no} ·automatically finalists Sunday in a nine-man -----22.4 points in six races. each been proved in shorter races. YC.
defend the following year but elimination at Marina de! Rey S Off W (d C • competitor being allowed to The Ericson. 3 5 s are Also in a spirited boat-for-
must go through the normal for the Santa Monica Bay anta•ia OH or n11se d j s ca;-d the w 0 rs t Freestyle, co-oy,·ned and co-boat batlle will be two Colom·
eJimin.ation channels. area. Defeated in that sailoff performance. skippered by Rod Lippold and bia-SOs. J i m Feuerstein's
Campbell was up against were Tim Hogati, f'{ewport A female crew member on the fantail drinks a farewell toast to the mainlq.nd Debutant had two firsts , one Saint Cicero ·or Newp or t Querida II, DRYC. and George
four other contenders in the Beach. sailing for Wind-as restaurant owner Charles Peet and crew set sail aboard the 50-foot yawl San· second, two thirds and 8 Harbor Yacht Club: Ttie Odd Antarr's Ya Turko, Pacific
Newport-Balboa quarter-finals jammer Yacht Club; Bob tana on an 18-months round-the-world cruise. The Santana was once owned by fourth place finish . Couple, owned and skippered Mariners YC.
Saturday and Sunday -three Metzner, Del Rey YC: Andy the late Humphrey Bogart and was berthed at Ne\vport tfarbor. First port of Adios Tl, sailed by Norman by Ronald Lee. Del Rey Yacht In the Class A ranks the
from NHYC and one from Macdonald, King Harbor YC: call is Acapulco -then on to Ecuador, Tahiti, Samoa, Australia, New Zealand. Booth of Australia , was second Club, and Aquarius, owned most likely contenders will be
Bahia Corinthian YC. Bob Leslie, California YC; Africa and the British West Indies. The crew left to right are J im Leech Jr. 22 with 35.7 points, based on and skippered by John Holi· two Columbia-57s sailed by
At the conclusion o r Tony Gaichter. Pac If I c and his girl friend Ruthy Kiskaddon, 17; Peet at the helm and his wife Marty three first. one fourth, one da y, Long Beach Yacht Club. veteran 'k I P Per• and
Saturday's drifting matches. Mariners YC; Jackson Scott, who holds her nose as she gulps farewell party champagne. sixth and one tenth. Altflough the Ericson-3Ss are crew 1 • Campbell and Kober were CYC, and L. P. Van Slyke.
1
_:_::::_:_.:::::::::::....::::::_.::::::::_.::::...::::;_~::..'._:_:::::_::::....:::;_.o..::_::_.:::=.2:~::::.--------·-'=C..::-'-.:...:_:_::::::_:_: _____ .;__::_ ________________ _
lied with three vic:Wrles each. eve.
They met in the opener Sun· Results of a protest hearing
day and Knber and his crew this week is expected to name•
displayed some cagy light-air the San Francisco Bay entry
sailing tactics tp win the race ..Jn the Congressional Cup. The
handily. dispute is between Tom
Ironically. Kober Is better Blackaller, St. Francis YC,
known in the Long Beach a n d Hal McCormick, San
yachting area where he is Francisco YC.
a member of Long Beach Seven finalists already nam-
Yacht Clu b and Alamitos Bay ed are Charley Morgan ,
Yacht Club. He also holds a yacht-designer, builder and
membershipatNHYC. sailmaker from St .
Others in the local sailoffs Petersburg, Fla .: John Jen-
v.·ere John Haskell and Don nings, Prinet! of \V ales Bowl
Ayres Jr., NHYC, and 0 di n match racing champion, St.
Braathen, BCYC. Petersburg; John Odenbach,
Kobe r's victory places him Rochester, N.Y. representing
in a Southern California semi-the Greal Lakes ; Patrick
final elimination next weekend O'Neal, Larchmont, N.Y.,
11t Long Beach where two Long Island Sou n d ; Bob
more Southland finalists will Mosbacher, Houston . Tex ..
be chosen Gulf of Mexico: 1'om Pickard.
He will face Hen r y representing the host Long
Schofield. Alamitos Bay YC. Beach YC, and Greg Booth,
winner in the fi nals of the Waikiki YC, Honolulu.
LAY C Reveals Dates
For Whitney Races
Los AngeJes Yacht Club has
announced dates for its 1971
\\'hitney Series of 4'.lffshore
yacht races and the Little
Whitney Series for Midget
Ocean Racing Fleet yachts un-
der 30 feet.
The series will begin V.'ith
the traditional Midwinter Cata-
lina Island Race Feb. 27 and
will end with the San Nicolas
Island Race, May 21 .
This will be the third year
that LA )'C has concentrated
its Whitney Series designed tn
terminate ii by Memoria l Day.
Drastic changes have also
been made in at least two or
the major race; in the series.
The Tri-Island race. wh ich
starts on Friday , March 26 al
5 p.m. v.·ill have a new course.
leaving Santa Barbara Island
lo port, a mark al the west of
San Clemente Island to port ,
Catalina Island to starboard
and thence to the finish line .
30.4. (minimum size boats will
be 30 feet length overall).
Scoring will be on the best
five out of six races. The sche-
dule is as follows:
MIDWINTER CATALINA IS-
LAND RACE, Feb. 27 -Leave
Catalina Island to port.
SANTA BARBARA ISLAND
RACE, March 13 -Course
fTom LAYC around Santa Bar-
bara and Sutil islands in
either direction.
STEWART TROPHY RACE ,
April 10-LAYC around Duni-
gan Rock mark to starboard,
Marineland mark to starboa rd .
SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND
RA CE, April 24 -Catalina Is-
land to port, mark at west end
of San Clemente Island lo port.
finish at Newport.
SAN NICOLAS lSLAND
RACE, r-.1ay 21 -LAYC to San
Nicolas Island and Begg Rock
Buoy in either direction.
The race previously took them lr-----:---,.,----..,1
all to port, and thence to the
fini sh at L.A. Harbor.
The San Clemente Island lt-,r,
race, April 24, v.·itl alsn elimi-•
nate the east end nf the Stin
Clemente Island . 1llc new
course will be from the start·
ing line al LA VC leaving Cata-
lina Island to port, a mark al
the west end of San Clemente
J,Jand to port and finish at
NewJXlrf. Harbor. This race is
also part of the Newport Har-
bor Yacht Club Ahmanson
Series.
TI-le course changes are de-1
signed In eliminate the deadly
lees at the east end of Catalina t11V11 AGAIN th•t .in s..11,..
and San Clemente islands. wt..n .,_.,, Mlkt .... rAtwt
A course change has also TOILAFLl-
been made in the San Nicolas -~
Island race, May 21. to avoid Toilet ~Plunger
the San Nioolas Island Reef. Unlike ordinr.ry plu111im. Tl>il.lftez
The new course will be from doa not permit nomJ>fftted 1ir « inutyw1tet to 1pl.loh hick or ac1~. Los Angeles YC leaving San With Toillol'lea. the f...tl prntu•e plow•
Nicolas )gland and the Begg throu1h the clo1ri111 rna11 111d
Rock Buoy on either board. iwitha ii dowrl.
--Wh. Se · ·11 be • IUCTlOM.olttlrl STOl'I 5'UIM .. o\CK I !IC" 1tney r1es WI • cun•s ITStlf.CAM'"T llOO<OUND
sailed under the Jnlemalional • TAl'Cll[D TAIL OIV[I Alll·TIOKT 11T
OffsMre Rule rather than the a.tthl G.nul11t'To1tdu'
Cruising Club of America 121s AT MAIDW••• STOllS
(CCAl rule . The class breaks l"----------'
under the IOR "•ill hf>:
CLASS A -Rating 38 0 and
above. Who Cues?
CLASS 8 -Rating 33 .0 lo No otller n•w•P•P•' i11 the
37:9. .,..oild c•••• 1bout your co'"mu·
CLASS C -Rating JO ,S to nitv Ii•• your c::om'"unitv o • .i.,
111w1p1p1r do••· l1'1 tl11 DAILY .32.0, Pl LOT.
CLASS O -Ra t Ing up :t'~=========o·/
Artificial Teeth Never
Felt So Natural Before
Now ••• Plastlc Cream Discovery
Rnalutlonlus Denture Wtarln&
-•. '"" _, COfftjffl .. ,,. You mar bllt hardc.r, dtt" bttt.tt, ut mor& 111tunl!y.
FIM>l.llN"T !&JU for hnun. RCfitlt
meft1u1ie.. 0ml!U"6 th1t 6t att ee-
witlal tO ht&!lh. 5tt )'OU? detllltl
rqulu \y, Ott ~ll•)'·IO-UM flXOlJllN'f
Dtntur• .AdhM1•t Crum IJ all dnll counltn.
R..,..lore ohuoll e""" ~ oon
mil!"' for •ncTtillt'd Ml•ty
"""'(,.rt on~..,.,.,"""'"· Tn•t~I·
i.,,,.n, ""' r .. rm...t ~)" /1c11JI)'
1ri"tol'<i •l""'t•l1•U.
BUENA PARK
hoch llvd. at Lultwi'IJt.r
5101 looch lllYd.
<521 . 1040
OPEN DAILY 10 o.m. to 10 p.m. -SUN. 10 to 7
TIRE PUMP •• , TRANSMISSION
FLUID .... r ' "" ~1·9999 ,,
BUENA PARK
e Lincoln at Vahy View
5815 LIKolo ....
12'. 5100
•
JACK STAND
J88
HEAVI ER J"'CI( STANO .. ,
~1.102$ •••• 2.&ll
COSTA .. MESA
SPARK PLUGS
SET r.>8 #
Ofl .... ~
Sl'AIUI Pl VG W .. EPK:H •.•
:u-1:511 ... 11c
-BLACKWALL 1"U8£LESS
SIZE
I 6.S0-13
' '
7JS14
8.25·14
n.tt
MOUNTIMG
FRll
ROTA11011! ---
'"' p1,.US FED. 1.i~tltllE PER,..'.g~
911
1211
1311
.............. T•
Yfti\lEWALL PRICE
EACM
1697
1797
1.76
2.i4
2.32
1.9Z
'
l'---::-:~-t:..;: 7
'=-""'""-.1697
1897
1997
2197
2.21
.2.3!
2. 1a•1
Oi l
..
2
2397 '
8-TRAC.K
STEREO TAPE
PLAYER
FISK Oil FILTER
J77
U·~ iltnl 24 ·1031
fllTIR WRENCH....... '1·1201
OIL BREATHER CAP ..... ,,rn ,
a
SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER
-'""· at wn-• 2200 H..t.o. llwl.
Eding•r Sn'Ht at lrlrtol
1400 Edl"9"
hech llYd. at M<Foddo•
15440 •-h lllYd.
191 -2081 548 . 2082 546 . niz
'
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