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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-02-09 - Orange Coast Pilot7 -·-• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' am ......... rac s; a e DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON, .FEBRUARY 9, 1971 \IOL. '4, NO, M, t iECTIONS, U l'AOll!S • ~ENO NEV . ~, "'~ (' ~.., "'"' • I SAN FIA!'ICISCO ""1 '"..,o ( .., \ / e FRESNO .:...<'§.4r"' ~~~o--..k-~~ IAITHQUAICI SHAKIS ~ SOUTHllN 1 CALIPOINIA ~ '":::::: IU 11 AN ~ ::::;:. 0 ioo lOSANGlllS ·~ lONGllACH ~ ::::::;:::::::; ·-.MEXICO M l.' Ul'I MfWI,,,,.., MAP SHOWS AREA SH~KEN BY EARLY MORNING EARTHQUAKE Astronauts Coming Down . . As Bannef Mission Ends SPACE CEl\'i'ER. Houston (UPI ) - Apcllo t4's astronauts acceler~ted down a precision course to a landing 1n the Orange Coast Weather \Vednesday's weather won't be a!!I earth shaking as today's. Look for sunny sk\es and warmer temp- eratures v.•ith the mercury surg- ing into the 70s along the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY ~f11sical comedy at the Laguna. ~foulto1,..,Ylayh.01LSe and deep drama at UC Irvine comprise this week's openings hi tocat theater. See Eni.ertai'nment, Page 19. t1111e ... 1e • Clltttlnt U• 11 Ct•nUlM !t-)t C1mlt1 11 0..1~ H1trcn f 01...,ct1 f ••r,.rt•I l'•t• • llllffllill-1 , .. ,. ''"..,'' 1•11 Mll'OM ... I 11 Mft l•nffn U M•rrt1 .. l k:tfti.lll f MtfllJ 11·1' M .... •I P•Nt• 11 H1tllll•I Hirw1 J Or•1111• Ct1111ty f Jy1¥11 ,.r11r 11 lftrhl , .. ,, ltedl IMl'll•h 1 .. 11 Tett¥1Jlloll 1 t '""'''" , .. 1. Wff...... I Wlllit' '#II~ 16 WttMll'I H-IS.It Wlrlf Mtwt '-J • South Pacific today with 11a wealth o[ information" from the moon and new proof or man's ability to explore the unkno~. With earth pulling Apollo 14 faster and faster to its 24,660 miles an hour entry into the: atmosphere, ground control told the spacemen their path on the imaginary space corridor leading to earth wa s go accurate a steering correction wa s not needed . The helicopter carrier New Orleans was waiting in ideal weather 900 miles south or Samoa to retrieve Alan B. S~epard, Stµart A. Roosa and E d_J a r 0 . Mitchell minutes after their 1:04 p.m. PST splashdown. They were targeted for a landing 10 miles west of the international daleline where it will be Wednesday when they splash down. Sevl!:n hours before 1 p 11. s h do w n , Misskln r.ontrot reportl!:d that the earth- quake that rocked Cllifomia interrupted ground communications for one to five minute!. But officiala switched to backup links and reported they were never without !light cootrol capability. The astronauts awakened after four to six hours of sleep and immediately began final prepara.tlona for the end of the mis.sion Shepard called "a smashing 1ucceu." Orange County Escapes But LA Area Hard Hit Qlu.t~e Tips 6.5 Reailing OnRic·hter By ARTHVR R. VINSEL Of !~1 01lly 1'1111 11111 Orang!. County eScaped unscathed at 6:02 a.m. today as a major earthquakt rocked the foundations of home to ID million Californians with death, destruc- tion and pre.dawn panic. The effects even reached out Into space, as four NASA stations tracking the incoming Apollo 14 astronauts were knocked out. · Backup systems immediately took over the complex job, but many of tht ground· bound were less fortunate . I By mid-morning the known death toll was 14, all in the hard-hit San Fernando Valley region and in central Los Angeles. Ominous tones were added to the poten· tial death toll today, with disclosure at noon that 54. persons are missing in the MIDNIGHT MISSION BUILDING COLLAPSES IN QUAKE; BUILDING A TOTAL LOSS With One Brief Jolt, • Home for the Homeless on LA'1 Skid Row Is Reduced to Rubble rubble of the antiquated VA Hospital. Two bulldings at the 420-bed facility in the lower Sati Gabriel Mountains were leveled by the racking temblor. The rocking and rolling jolt -equal to the 1933 Long Beach disaster - was estimated at 6.5 on the Richter Scale , but was so sharp it jolted tht Caltech seismograph needle off its graph. Repeated aftershocks followed through the morning, 50 or more. Buildings from County Aide Reprieved; Study of Post Okayed Skid Row to exclusive suburbs crumbled BJ; JACK BROBACK as the earth's crust shuddered and .!II• Diil~ "1'" 11111 vertical cracks appeared m Los Angeles' County Administrative Officer ltoberl largest water reservoir towering above E. Thomas was not fired this morning. a subdivision. Supervisor Ralph Clark surprised. many Suppodedly earthquake·proof high·rise when he proposed a lengthy study of towers of up to 52 stories in downtown Uls Angeles shimmied Uke hula dancers, the CAO and his office. Hili motion shattering windows and cracking walls. was adopted by 4-1 vote with supervisor Hospitals throughout the Los Angeles Robert Batt.in disstnting. Basin reported an influx of injured -Battin had .Proposed 1 last week that some flown by helicopter -and many Thomas r'es!gn at once or be. fired. suffering serious cuts from flying glass. Seven victims died in a valley area Today Clark's approved motion calls VA hospital. for a committee of supervisors. William The death toll included two heart at-Phillips, Ronald Caspers and David tack victims, a drifter crushed when Baker, to 11audit the conduct of the a Sk.id Row mission collapsed in a chief admlnistraUve ofllcer and every crescendo of crumbled brick and a pa-"·· k · ed •· h r tient in a suburban sanitarium. aspect of I.lie wor assign w is o • lice." Van Norman Dam w111 rapldJy de¥elop- ing new and more grave fissures shortly Clark al.so moved that the-comrnitt~ before 11 a.m., as desperate workers should "work closely with the grand tried to drain it. jury t.0 develop recommendatiom to Contlnulng aftershock! kept its waters ensure the efficiency, economy and sloahing like coffee in a mug as I.he responsiveneas of our 1overnment to the 6 bil lion-plw; gallons threatened to need& of the people." caWide down the San Fernando Valley. The mot;on called for a committee Dant supervisor Robert E. Noel tO be prepared to report i.m'inecllately described the quake centered in rugged after the conclusion. of lhe new budget. San Gabriel Mountahu vividly. SUCh budget studies are usually not com- "lt was lhumpm• and jumpin' and pie.led WJUI well into July. knocked everythin; out of our kitchen,'' Clark said the subject of the CAO he 11:ald. had generated a great deal of h~at Throughout the largest concentration <1urin11 lhe past seven days, but very ISee TREMBLES, Ptp ll litUe .ll.Jh~ t ·r .. cv:l'::.i..'"'°NJ~·=.r.iai; 'T ; .... ;/ .... ,, ..... I l '''Surtly If the charges which our chairman haa: made are accurate every citizen, officeholder and taxpayer has reason for: deep concern and significant changes should be made," Clark said. ''On t~e other hand, if the dire con· sequences predicted by the opponents of change are accurate we would err gravely to act now." . Supervisoi' Caspers, who had backed Battin without question last week on the immediate firing ol. Thomas qulckly seamded Clark's mot.Ion, "because the facts have been dislorted and 1 do not think we should act in haste." Clark first named Phillip! and Caspers to the study committee but added Baker when the latter said he wanted to aerve on the group. The supervisors hearing room was packed and . overflowing with about 200 people in aUendance. Most of them through the~ opplall!< Indicated op. posiUon to BaWn's st.and and the half • doun who spoke all urged fUrther study of the proposal before action. Battln last Tuesday charged Thomaa with assuming a dictactorlal attitude and objected stren'uously to a report by Thomas which forecast a five percent raise for county employes next fiscal year and • budget which might call for o ~L lax ~e,ay. , • , , • Yule 'Happe~ng' Cost $65,800, Says City Head j The Christmas "happening" that 1ure4 20,000 young people to Laguna Canyoa for a three-day rock fe.sUval t"OSt .; city of 'LagWla Beach $65"82f.57, cit;: manager Lawrence Rose anl'lowfued t6. day. 11 The figure was revealed in a finl(l tabulation of """"'· cfit«Uy · atlribulablt to the "happening'' and does not inchld9 regular expense that would have g~ on throughout the period (such as regul.ljf poli~e shifts ), Rose said. . 1 Nbr does it Include an additional c~ pensallon for department heads and·othf! salaried persOMel who w o r k e II throughout the holiday without dra!lrinlll overtime. J Added to the $65,829 direct CO!t total in Rose·s statement, is the sum ol $2.~.69 for . ilems that had heel) budgeted for the police and • fir1 departments, but were purchased urli~ than anticipated because of the hap. pe.nlng. Also added, is $3,999.26 for equipment purchases for bo'lh departinent! which had not yel been budgeted, but which will be of continuing llSe, Rose said. Grand total in the tabulation, throuP Jari. 20, is $'12,123.52. representing direct costs for Items totally COn5tlmed, alonr with budgeted and unbudgetld purchasu • which will remab' usable. The city manager emphulted thal a .1ubatantlal portion of the totll c•Q: be taken care of without special c111I. {Set IW'J'ENING;"t!qo.ll • ,I .I - z DAILY PILOI s 'Do Sonae Killing' --I Manson Witness Implicates Linda LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A female member of Charles Manson's ''family" has attempted al this late date to absol~ him of the Tate-LaBianca murdtrs and put the blame on a key state wllness. Catherine "Gypsy" Share, 28, told the )ury at 1he penalty phase of the trial ~tonday that Linda Kasabian "asked me t.o go out aod do some killing." Newport Delays Promontorv ., Point Action The Irvine Company Monday n I s h t was told to overhaul Its Promontory Point apartment project and was pro- mised help In doing it. The Newport Beach City Council declined to take action on the company's appea1 of Plann~g Comml!!ion rejection of the plan, sending I\ back to the commission for redesign, instead. ln its referral, the council offered 1 nwnber of guidelines and voted to establish a committee of councilmen, plartning commissioner! and a represen-- tativ e of the Balboa Island Improvement Association (BUA) to work with the com- pany as It reworks the design. . BalbOa Jalanders have offered stiff opposition to the proposal. The council's instructions also called on the company to come back with a plan of development for both the ~acre point area and the waterfront 1>trip just below it. The company late last year withdrew a plan for the six-acre strip it had proposed for development into a com- n1ercial center known as Balboa Wharf. That proposal alao ran into •tiff op- position from Balboa Island resident!. In their unanimous action Monday night, councilmen agreed with a major complaint of residents that the project would be too dense for the area, but they also pointed out that the master plan for the area does call for mulU·fami· ly development and the company therefore could not be criticiud for its plan. The council also told the homeowners that it feels some kind of multiple hous- ing use la probably be!t for the property. in offermg a aut on the study com· mittee to Thomas Houston1 BIIA presi- dent, the council wu lnfonned that he would not relent on homeowners' lnsis- tenoe the property be developed fOI" single-family we. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers suggested the pos.!lbility of "a comblnaUon of single-family and multi-fam i ly development" for the area. Originally proposed by the Irvine Com- pany were 620 apartment unita on the tract, which l! locater bayward of Paci.fie Coast Highway between Bayside Drive and Jamboree Road. Among the facton the councll said should be taken into consideration in redesigning the project aie public access to the property, public vistas aaoss it, the traffic It would generate, Newport Tomorrow's pleas for general open apace and the visible impact of the develop- ment, Itself. About 50 realdents from Balboa Island, Irvine Terrace, Beacon Bay and other iUrTOUDding areas attended the hearing. Among the speakers, ln addition to HOU5lon, Wert Dr. S. R. Nord, a property owner at 1009 N. Bay Front, who asked for outright rejection contending, "If you delay, wt (the opponents) will get weaker.'' Dr. Robert Henricks, representing the Irvine Terrace Homeowners Asiioc!stlon, said his board opposed the plan, citing problems he said would result from the density, trafnc and ecological effect of development. DAILY PILOT M...,...h ... H-- i..t•M .. di h11h111 'f.., C.t9M... hlC ....... OAAHGI COAST l'UlllSMlltG COM'Alf'f ao\l•tt N. w,,, l'T•lll'"I t r..i ,!IDllolW J1£\ I. C111loy Vkf ,,_lh'\1 1r..d ~I Mlntttr 11101'111 ktt'fit ~dlttr 1\o!ft•• A. Murphi110 MfMGlfll ll~lltr t.lch11• P. Hel 5ow1t1 Oro,,.. C-ty Ulllr Offl .. Ctlll M .. 1 :t1I Wttl try S!twt NlfllPWI a11dl1 DU Wn1 t1-.1 .... ~ ......,.,. ••1t111 m ,..,"' A-Mlilfttlflilttol ludn 17111 •ffdo •""'1"''"' lff Ql'""'lt: ... Htrlll IJ C11111M ltMI I Miss Share asld two houri after the conversation wtth Mra. Kuablan ln August of 1969, she went up into the moWltains to llve. She tesWJed she did not knew about the Tate murders until she heard about them on the rad.i() a short time later. She said the conversation concerned Robert Beausoleil, a member or the. cult who was in jail al the 1ime for the slaying or mwician Gary Hinman, She said Leslie Van Houten, who along with Manson and two other W-Omen defen- dants were convicted or the Tate killings, was present at the time. "What words were uttered?" asked defense lawyer Irving Kanarek. "They said it was their rault because Bobby Beausoleil wa.s BITested, and since they had put him in jail they had to get him out," she replied. Beausoleil !al.er wa.s convicted of lhe Hinman murder. Miss Share, a aomber, black-haired woman, evidently was attempting to switch prime reiiponslblllty for the seven murders away from Manson, accused mastermind of the slayings, and to Mrs. Kasabian. It was Mrs. Kaaabian's testimony that served as the base of the state case resulting in first degree murder convictions against ManS<ln. Miss Van Houten, Susan Atkins and Patricia Krenv.·inkel. The same jury which convicted the four is now deciding their penalty-death or life imprisonment. "Did I.Jnda Kasabian ask you to go to the Tate residence?" Kanarek asked. "She asked me to go out and do some killing," Miss Share replied. "\Vhen did this conversation occur?" "'A couple weeks before the raid,'' she said. Sheriff's deputies swooped down on the one lime headquarterii of the cult, the Spahn Ranch, Aug . 16, 1969, and arrested about 40 members of the "family" for auto theft. The Tate- LaBianca killings occurred the weekend of Aug. 9, 1969. Mrs. Kasabian, who was granted im- munity from prosecution, has testified at the trial that she went with Charles "Tex'' \Yatson and the three women defendants to the site of the Tate s\ayings not knowing what was going to occur but think.Ing they were on a mission of burglacy. Youngest State . OfJicial Jailed On Drunkenness . FRESNO (UPI) -California's youngest elected official has been at· rested on charges or drunkenneu and resiBUng arrest after an incident at • California Young Republican convention be re. Robert Trotter. 2Z, a member of the Fresno County Board of Education, said Monday following hia release on $670 bail that police were harassing him and he planned to sue the department He was reported atauering near the convention lite Saturday night and pallce said he attempted to reaist arrttt when Patrolman C. G. Mitchell arrived on the scene. Mitchell said 1 struggle ensued In a parking lot and he finally wrestled Trotter to the ground and handcuffed him. Trotter contended he was struck v.1thout provocation and suffered a "four- inch gash'' on his head. Police denied there v.•as any un· provoked attack and said Trotter suf· fered only a slight scratch v.·hen he fell to the pa\'ement. "If the police can do thls to me they can shoot the average Negro," said Trotter, who Is black. ''Jn the interest of justice I've got to do something about lt." Fro1n Pnge l HAPPENING • • • allocalions, through budget 1 h I f t s • possibly involving delay of some an- ticipated budget expenditures. Precise allocatJon of funds Is atlll being determin· ed, Rolle aaid. Overtime salaries ($42,483) and public W01'ks equipment rental ($10,405) make up the bulk or the direct cost. Clean·up cost reported by the public works department amounted to $4,046.68. The overtime salary figure Is broken down as follows: Police, '23.007.9! Special deputtes, $6,990.00 ?.1ounted Poase. ".070.00 Fire Department, $885.39 Adminiat.raUon, Sni.82 Engineering. ~.90 Street, $2,30e.28 BUI line. $20.4& Parks, $2,410.72 AutomoUve, $508.95 Total aalariH: $42,483.47 Sttvlct1 and rupplles for the police department cost $8, 119.01; publl( y.•orks department, $10,W4.91; and fire depart· ment, $50.40. lft11dquarters cost Is listed at $726.10 and clean-up COit $4,046.68. ?tfore than 20 county law enforcement agencies joined wllh Laguna Beach In controlling the three-day happening, tath munlcipallty fooUng Its own bill under mutual aid pactt. Cost to the countywas estimated In e1ccss of $12.,000. • U'I T.itPl!otl PHOTOGRAPHER CRAIG MAILLOUX MOPS UP AT UPI Earthquake Jo1tle1 Photo Bureau in Downtown Los Angele' Fl"om Pnge l SOUTHLAND TREMBLES ••• of population in California chaos reigned as harassed authorilies tried to deal with the worst of Jt. Power lines fell popping like spark-spit- ting snakes and igniting a series of flres. Gas mains broke. Brick plummeted from aging apartment buildings. Looting was reported widespread in some areas, as panicked residents car- ried boxes and paper bags of valuables away with them. The Golden State Freeway was closed ment horn sounded once at the height of the shock in a grotesq ue squawk as though for help. Seismology stations elsewhere in the U.S. registered 6 to 7 on the Richter Scale. which places a 7 magnitude.quake as one of 1najor proportions. "It is about the same magnitude of the Long Beach quake." mused Dr. Charles Richter, who invented the scale but chose to slay in earthquake country after retirement. due to pavement cracks and bridges The Long Beach quake y.•hich killed and overpasses y.·ere reported threatened ~ 120 and caused millions of dollars' in .. some a.reas. . ,, . damage hit 6.3, while the 1952 Teha chapi I v.·as m .my .~tchen, said one robe· tremor that killed 12 was a 7.7 force. clad ·housewife. I fell down and started Eiperts noted the 1906 earthquake and praying." fire that de vastated San Francisco was C.ontrol t?wers a.t Van Nuys and 8.25 on the open-end Richter Scale. which Burbank Airports . m the devastated has no maximum force. bedroom of the basin, the San Fernando The temblor that struck today as Valley, were .damag~.and the FAA sus· an estimated seven million Southlanders pende~ all fl.1ght activity. . \'lere preparing for work or school came A pilot flying over the vas.t city when less than a month after a seismologisrs the temblor -aceompan1ed by an ominous rumble and the cre.ak and groan of wrenching homes -witnessed it. He said all of Los Angeles shivered and wobbled, its vast sea of lights looking like a sequined ouUit on a g~go girl. Power and telephone service was tern· porarily interrupted in many areas and radio stations were jolted right off the air. One KRLA disc jockey's voice trembled as he told of the station's steel and concrete building swaying like it was made of rubber. "Or maybe ifs my knees. They slill are," he quipped. A survey of Orange County hospitals and emergency services indicated few if any quake·related injuries. while damage was limited to scattered items in homes and stores. Burglar alarn1s \\·ere triggered by the tremor and the Seal Beach Fire Depart· \varnin g. During a conference of geological ex· perts. they criticized continued con- struction of high-rise buildlngs such as l\\'O 42·slory towers which survived tod ay's jolt . Se ismologists have long predicted California·s quake·prone coastal basin is due for a major calamity on the long.dormant Ssn Andreas Fault. The deep rift on tbe earth 's crust running north and south through lhe population center of the state waii not involved in today's awesome event. Public interest has waned somewhat in the wake of predictions by a broad spectrum of seH·proclaimed visionaries that by April, 1969. most of California .,..·ould be wracked by quakes and sink into the sea. A tremor centered in San Diego C:Oun1y on April 28 of that year. however, created panic among many but caused little damage to the largely unpopulated area. Only Etf ects Tremor Jangles S. Coast Ner'feS By JOUN VAL TERZA Ot m• O.llr , ... , ti.ti Jangled nerves and swinging swag lamps were about the only effecU of this morning's rolling earthquake along the South Coast, despite the h e a v y damage and injury in other parts or the Southland. orricials of the Southern California Edison Company said their nuclear generating station at San Onofre had ••absolutely no problems" from the temhlor, which v.•as felt in the. are a at 6:02 a.m. "ln fact , no Or311ge County in- stallationii or equipment were damaged this morning." said William D. Fenton, a chief spokesman for the utility firm . The generating station at San Onofre ls equipped to withstand tremors much greater than that felt this morning, he said . Checks with school and water districts throughout the Capistrano Bay and Sad· dleback areas reported no unusual effects from the main quake and its several aftershocks. Immediate inspections or pre-Field Act buildings in the Capistrano Unified and San Joaquin school districts yielded no reports of damage before schools opened as usual this rnorning. Several water districts checked this morning reported no damage t.o their Huntington High Tower Survives Rolling Temblor By TERRY COVILLE Of Ill• D1llr •fltl Stiff ~ The Jluntingt.on Beacb High School tower bas survived another eartbquflke. 1be tall spire -built in lt2. and recently deemed u n s a f e a1alnst J!Brth- quakes: by state education standards -was unscarred by lhls morning's tremor. ''No peeled plaster, no cracka1 We didn't find any problems st the sCbool this morning," Assistant Principal William Rollins reported. Some newer buildings v.·ere less lucky. Tiles "'ere shaken from the ctiling of the W. T. Grant Store at Brookhurst Street and Adams Avenue in Huntington Beach. A power line was knocked down in a Westminster residential section but caused no problems . t\o major damage was reported In Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley or otber West Orange County cities. One fire was started in Los Alamitos wben a 140·\'olt power line tumbled on top of some roofing supplies at 3574 Cerritos Ave. Firemen said th ere was $3,000 damage done to the materials. but another $80,000 in roofing supplies was saved. Another ol d building in Huntington Beach, Dwyer Intermediate School. also passed the quake test without damage. Some cili7.ens \\'ere concerned about lhe high school tower because of recent reports on it. National Educational Plan· ning Associates (NEPA) recommended last November lhat the Huntington Beach Union High School District tear down the tower and the 26-claiisroom central building. The NEPA report polnled out the tov;er doesn't meet Field Act standards to prevent earthquake damage. It is, however. a sentimental symbol of old Huntington Beach, and district trustees iiaid they would try lo save it. The tower was l\'idely publicized in educational journals \\'hen it "·as one of the few such structures to survive the 1933 earthquake. equipment. At San Clemente p01ice headquarters, switchboards predictably 111 up throughout the morning. Cit.izen checks for road conditions - even the curious simply asking if police sensed the tremors -nowed in through the da\1'ning hours. Even the unstable palisades sections along El Camino Real fared well Jn the shaking early today. The slumping bluffs held well despite a few weekend slides \Vhich caused a pair of freak tri.ffic crashes. No new debris fell today. Laguna Beach Rides Through Quake Safely By BARBARA KREIBICH 01 !ht Dl!!t Plkll 51111 Laguna Beach city officials, jolled ou~ of their beds with the rest of the Art Colony's residents by this morning's earthquake. were relieved ~o find the city had come through without even minOi damage. Gas and electric lines. water lines and hillside-streets were h a s t 11 y surveyed. A11 were intact. A Southern California Gas C:Ompany spokesman said some men from Orange County might be sent to Los Angeles to help overworked crewa in that area. TeI Smith, manager of the South Coast County Water District aaid that while no Immediate damage was noted, severe tremors can crack or dislodge older water pipes cawing leaks to appear days later. The quake caused minor inconvenience to a few downtown Laguna stpres. Forest Avenue pharmacies reported bottleii of lotions, linaments and COJmetics had tumbled from shelves, leaving a measy clean-up job. Laguna Beach schools were in business as usual. Superintendent Dr. \Villiam Ullom said an initial check or all school buildings had revealed no major damage. Librarian Clifford Cave arrived at work lo find a few books had fallen off the library shelves. Former Mayor Glenn Vedder. whose geologist, son made the official U.S. geological survey or the area from Camp Pendleton lo the Santa Ana River. made his earthquake check via the hanging lamps in his living room , as usual. "When .,...e had the last offshore quake." said Vedder. "They sort of jig~ gled up and down. This morning they \\'ere in a definite ~ast-west swing, but also flipping up an down a little." Noting that ''You can hardly take a step \\'ithout runqing into an earthquake fault around here." Vedder said Laguna is fortunate in having a fairly solid rock base. -as opposed to loose. gravelly ground with a hlgh water table that "shakes like jelly." This fact. he said. ·s11~·ed Laguna from severe damage in the 1933 earthquake. ''The epicenter was right off the Newport jetty.'' said Vedder. ''but we only lost a few chimneys while Compton, much farther away. got the worst of the damage because of its unstable geological base.'' Nearest earthquake faul t to Laguna, Vedder said. is the Inglewood-Newport fault that runs south from Inglewood, through Signal Hill and Seal Beach, going offshore in the area of the Santa Ana River. It is approximately three miles offsho re in the Laguna area, he said. 'Legnlized Sex' Bill Introduced THE NAME OF THE GAME SACRA.~1ENTO (AP) -Assemblyman Willie L. Brov.·n Jr. said today he will re·lntroduce legislation to 1 e g a I i z e homosexual and heterosexual sexual acts in private between consenting persons over 21. It would not eliminate penalties relating to sexual conduct between a minor and an adult. Brown unsuccessfully proposed iden· tical legislation last year. Brown. a San Francisco Democrat. said, "This bill is aimed at .. freeing our police departments fron1 dealing wlttt a ·crime' \\'hich has no victim. Let'a free the police from peeping into the brdrooms of American cltb.ens.'' Similar measures nave been 11dopted In Illinois, Connecticul and Great Britain. Headon Wreck Fatal to Man A North Holly~·ood man was lr:!Jled about 8 a.m. today in a head-C1n collision on La Paz Road about a baU mile north of CrOY.'n valley Parkway in l..a(Una Ni• guel. Jiighway PQtrol officers uJd the crash involved a sports car and a pickup truck, but the \•Jctlm's name was being vt'lthheld pending notlrtcatlon of next of kin. The 1nG.ident was not related to today's earthquake. a spokesman said, noting thrrc "'IS no damage to hlgh"·ays or free· w11ys within Orange C.Ounty. I' I There is a common pr1ctice of private libeling 1n the carpet industry. Large department storei, chain stores and cor1tractors at neW tracts have ficticious names on ihe samples 10 that customers cannot easly shop brand name prices. Customers shopping at our store find the·price of each quality prominently fHtured on the sample boo~, because we are competitive. Also , because we feel the cu1tom1r has • right to know what he is buying, we never ch1n9e the 'n1m1 on 1 wmple book. Tho n1mo of tho 91mo ;, integrity! SANTA ANA. ORA.NOi TUITIN Call , •• ALDIN'S RID HILL CAl,ITI & DllA,IRlll 11114 ln1M, T\ml", Cal. ........ ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOU-S : M ... Tit"' Tltur>., t to 1:30 -"I., t to t -Sat., t :JO to I ) i .. i • • • San Cle1nenie Capisirano - EDITION N.1.7. Steeb YOC. i4, NO. 34, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE 'COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, .1971 JEN CENTS Thomas _Gets Reprieve; Coµ11ty .Study Ordered By JACK BROBACK Of !ht Clllly ,_llot 51tff County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas was not fired this morning. Supervisor Ralph Clark surprised many when he. proposed a lengthy study of the CAO and his office. His motion was adOpted by 4-1 vote with supervisor Robert Battin dissenting. Battin had proposed last week that 'I'bomas resign at once or be flred. Apollo Near Splashdown 111 Pacific SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI ) - Apollo J4's astronauts acceler~ted. down a precision course lo a landmg m the South Pacific today with "a \1-'eallh of information" from the moon and new proof of man 's ability to explore the unknown. With earth pulling Apollo 14 faster and faster to its 24,660 miles an hour tntry into the atmosphere. ground control told the spacemen their path on the imaginary space corridor lepding to earth was so accurate a steerio& correction was not needed. The helicopter carrier New Orleans was wailing in ideal weather 900 miles south or Samoa to retrieve Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell ·minutes after their I :04 p.m. Psr splashdown. . They were targeted for a landing 10 miles west of the international dateline where it will be \Vednesday when they splash down . Seven hours before spl ashdown. Mission Control reported that the earth· quake that rocked California interrup~ed ground communications for one to five minutes. But officials switched to backup links and reported they were never without flight control capability. The astronauts awakened after four to six hours of sleep and immediately began final preparations for the end of the mission Shepard called "a smashing success.'' 'Legalized Sex' Bill Introduced SACRAMENTO (AP) -Assemblyman Willie L. Brown Jr. said today he witl re·introduce legislation to I e g a Ii z e homosexual an d heterosexual sexual acts In private between consenting persons over 21. Jt would not efiminate penalties relating to sexual conduct between a minor and an adult. Brown unsuccessfully proposed iden· tical legislation last year. Brown. a San Francisco Democrat. said, "This bill is aime d at freeing our police departments from dealing with a 'crime' whi ch has na victim. Let's free the police from peeping into the bedrooms of American citizens." Orange Coast 1'1'eather Wednesday's weather won't be as earth shaking as today's. Look tor sunny skies and warmer temp. eratures with the· mercury surg- ing into the 70s along the Orange CoasL INSWE'TODAY Alu.~ical comedy at tht l.ag11na ~foulton Play house and deep dranUJ at UC Irvine comprise !his week's ope nings in local theattr. See EntertaTnment, Page 19. Ctlllo"'lt I Cllftlllllt U• 11 Clt1tllittl )O.H cemlc• u OMf!I H•llctt t O!Wr<ti t IEIHi.orlt l '''' 4 ~~ltl'lll"mtnl It-It ,i..,"''' lt-11 Mol'9~t U -'"" UMltf'I U Mtrrlttt Lll:tMM t Mfvlff It-It ) MllhHI ,..,.._, II frhlltlltl M"" J OrH .. C"""ll' t Jtlvlt '•r'ltr 11 ,,.,.. 11-11 Slee:~ Mlrlltll lt-11 T1l1Y111H1 1t Tilttltn '"" Wttll'ltr 4 Wiiii. Wttll 14 W-·1 HllWI I J.11 WffW frtftK 4-S Today Clark's approved motion calls for a committee ol suptrvisots. William Phillips, Ronald Caspers and David Baker, to "audit the c<!nduct or the chief administrative oUictr and every aspect of the work assigned to his of· lice." Clark also moved that the committee should ''work closely with the grand jury to develop recommendation.s to ensure lhe elliciency, economy and • eris * * * 01aly Effects responsiveness ot our &overnment to the needs of the people." The motion called for 1 committee to be ptepared to report immediately after the conclwion ~! the new budgeL Such budget studies ce usually not com· pleted until well into July. Clark said the subject of the CAO had generated a great deal of heat during the past seven days, but very little light. "Surely ii the charges which our • Ill Tremor Jan·gles S. Coast Nerves By JOHN VALTERZA 01 lht 0•111 ,.1191 51•11 Jangled nerves and swinging swag lamps were about the only effect.s of this morning's rolling earthquake along the South Coast, despite the heav y damage and injury in other parts of the Southland. Officials of the Southern California Edison Company saii:f their nuclear generating 1tation at San Onofre had "absolutely M · probletTI.!" from the leQlblor. whieh' Was felt in the are a at 6:02 a.m. "tn f~ct. nO Orange County in· stallations or equipment were damaged this morning." said William D. Fenton, a chief spokesman for the utility firm . The generating station at San Onc>fre is equipped to with.stand tremors much greater than that felt this morning, he said. Checks with school .11.nd water districts throughout the Capistrano Bay and Sad~ dleback areas reported no unusual effects Ne'v Occupation Courses Slated For Discussion Truslte! from two South Coast school districts will meet in a special session tonight in Capistrano Beach to discuss the addition of five new courses to the successful Regional 0 e c u p a t i o n a l Program. The 8 p.m. special meeting will involve severa l members or the Capistrano Unified and Laguna Beach Unified school districts. The panel administers the new- on·the-job training programs for high school youths begun last year. The meeting will be in Capistrano District headquarters. Thus far the successful courses are health aide training and quantity f~ preparation . Tonight the members wilt e1amine lhe chances of adding cosmetology, ornamental horticulture,. construction technology, motorcycle repair and4 auto mechanics. The addition of the Tustin Unified School District and SaddJeback College into the regional program also will be on the agenda. from the main quake and its several aftershocks. lmlnediate inspeci.ions of pre·Field Act buildings in the Capislr~ Unified and San Joaquin school districts: yielded no reports of damage before schools epened as usual this morning. Several water districts checked thil morq4>1 ,rep0ited."" wn•1• le..~ equipment. At San Clemente police headqu~a. switchboardS piedictably 111 up throughout the morning. Citizen checks for road conditions eve n the curious simply .asking if polict. sensed the tremors -flowed in .through the dawn ing hours. Even the unstable palisades sections along Et Camino Real fared well in the shaking early today. The slumping bluffs held wtll despite a few weekend tlides which cau&ed a pair of freak traffic cra&hes. No new debris fell today. Spokesmen at San Juan Capistrano Mission -· which was devastated by a quake. in the early 1800s, -said nary a brick !ell from its hiltorlc buildings early today. School Trustees Shelve Parking A controversial ' school btis parking Jot which would have ~pied part of a Capistrano Beach playground baa been shelved. Trustees or the Capistrano Unified School District voted unanimously Mon- day to ask the County Board of su·pervisors to abandon La Playa Street, a parking lot site favored by community residents. , The board also voted to pay architect Leon Hyz.en for . his plans for tht bus lot on the Serra School playground,:~P­ ing it on hand in case the supervisors . rail to give up the street. The new plan, which would occupy La Playa between Victoria Blvd. and Las Vegas Street, has been endorsed by both the Capistrano Beach Community Association and the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce. Both groups were active in opposina: the previous plan. •Not Forever~ Constituent Warns Supervisor ''Please remember, four years Is not forever,:• is the warning sent to Supervisor Ralph Clark by • Mission Viejo house wife who wonder s about goings on at the Board of Supervisort recently. Mrs. Consta•ce Beoedlct, 21182 Spartan St.. planned to . attend today'.I board meeting. She wrott Clark Monday. "I am writing to you as one of your con11tituent.s. ln the interest of honesty and fairness. When a lay person hears in the news media that a top county nfficial (M.r. Thomas) is being fired. the person 1ay1, 'l hope it is best for all concerned! ''The same penon may think in ltrms, 'll'a good the-new board members are 1 checking into these matters.' But wbttt one sees that seven more people are going and all because the same three men feel It's justified. then it's time: to take a deeper look at the 1lluttion." Mn. Benedict eontmucd: "l do not know a great deal about 'comity 1ovem. mtnt. Mr. Clark. I am . mmly a1klnr yau to do ,,.. -..... wbll I did for you. "l lnvtsllgated your bici<ii'oUnd. I "" very lmprtued."' in .the final ana1ysil and I voted for you because t felt you 'Were a man who cared what hap- pened to Orana:e County, , "U you really are that man, Mr. Clark. tbe.n..1 voted wilely .. But if you feet you au now sa tel)" tlected, pleua remember, four years i1 not foruer." ; chairman has made are 1ecurate every citizen,· offic.tbolder and ta1payer has reason for deep concern and significant changes iboufd be made," Clark said. ~'On the other hand; tf the dire con· sequences predicted by the opponenll of change are::acCui'ate We. ·would err gravely to act now." Supervisor Caspers. who had backed Ballin withou\ ·question last Wei!k ori the immedia~ tirln& of. Thomas quick1y ~ lflCODded Clark's ·moUon, "beeaute the facta have been distorted and I do not think we should act in haste." Clark first named Phillips and Caspers to the study committee but added Baker when the latter said be wanted t.o serve on the croup. Tht supervisors hearing room was packed and overflowing with about 200 peopfe . in attendance. Most of them through their applau.. Indicated op- position to Battin's stand and the halt doien who spoke all urged further sbJdY, of the proposal before action, Battin last Tuesday charged 1bomas with assuming a dictactorial aUJ.tucW and objected stranuously· to a report by Thomas which forecast 1 fiye percent raise for county employes next fiscal year and a budget which_ might call for a 34-cent tax increase. ua ·e ell NO NEV. , •, .. ., (' "~ .,.£ f ~ YL SAN Pl,AllCISC.O 7 ~o ( ~ / ePIUNO .,;.;.<'~ ... -·~· -,A-l-TN_Q_U .... A_Kl_l;1or,N_A_Kl .... S~ IOUTNllN CALl'°"NIA ~ ~ IUllANK .;:;:::, ~ lOS ~.!l~H,I~ .• ~ •• , ·'"'! ·-·. ... • • lONG'llACll .. ""' ,...,. .-... MAP SHOWS AllEA SHAKIN IY IAlL Y MORNING EARTHQUAKI Tri-Cities to Provide San Onofre Park Water? Offlciala ' of "the Metropolitan Wattr Diltrict• ih1t W..k be&an' a' 1tudy to aee 'if SiJ'I · Clemtrite'1 Tr 1 • C ft I e 1 Municipal Wat.tr District 1h9u1d provide badly needed service to the new San Onofre State Par.k. While no specific format of terVJce has yet been proposed, Tri.Cities board· memben recently channeled the state reque1t for service to the MWD, which sells it1 water to the local agency. Specifically, the. MWD officials will determined or Tri Cities should provide· water service ta an area. four mile1 from its nearest'boundary. San Clemente is the 1 state'1 hope-not only for water, but _sanitation tervlces to ~· 3.5-mile stretch . of blufftop and beach iranltd to the public talt year after toup ne1otiatiom with ·the ·Mlfine Corps. Planners Facing Signs of Ti1ne In San Cleniente ' Four 11:par1te siln mattan will con· front San Clemente'• pll.Mlng co~ miaslonera Wtdnuday who will-role on request! r&n&ing from houlin& trac~ and. blhb to tbe ••t~ of tiny .. Japane1t The pilrk Is expected to be dedlcat<d tbia Aprn, but de1pite It.I openin& ln time for the swnmer season, ac· commodations will be Spart.an at best. State Parks officials have said that no budgeted funds exist for the operation of the new park because of 'bare-bones 1tate financial policy. Water-perhaps not potable-would bt trucked In. and unitation would be provided through chemical toilets. Clearing the land and providing some acces1 to the beach below are also planned by this summer. Spoke!men for Tri Cities Monday said "there ia: no wa y of telling" how long 11eg0Uationa for water service would take. AJ for tbe sewer services. San Clemente will not begin negotiating until news of approval comes for a huge Housing .and Urban Development grant for a new collector main running the ·length of the city. Until a new main is built, city aides said earlier this year. placing the extra burdfJt of state park waste into the exisUng system is "out of the question.'' The only collector main In serVice ln the city at pres'ent is an old one running along thie shoreline. And it ia already operatin& at cap&clty. Yule 'Happening' <;ost . $65,800 cars. 'nte Chrfstntai .,'happening" that lured Among the actions souaht by 1eparate 20,000 )'OUrtl 1Jll!OPle to Laguna Canyon applicant.a on sip matter• are : f · th -.. ••• -·•· I ... -A UR per:mll to ·aJlow the Sheltec Gr a . r..,~ rvu. e&:tival cost wte eo-•atioO' to b•"" •. lllu, office .and city of Lll'Jlla Beach 165.829.17, city •,..... ~~ Manager bwrtnce ~ IMOUTICed ~ four on·1i~ dir~.aigns at 403 CalJ• d Pueblo ,to-Ullat Jn. "la of tract bomu. 'ti;, figure was revealed In a final BOtb ·~equuta are :for a )'ear. • ~. tabulaUOn . of c:o1ts directly attributable r~.Uon. ~yoftht."" Cha-pm, f"; ~-= , tO !ht ''h•Pl\"'1n&" and does 11Qt lncl~de ....... Jr-• :or r.,Wlr eJpenae that would hive gone billboard :!'If pemlt for Mle of bomel, on tbroulhqut,the ,pellod (sucll 11 relUllll' •t'l\1-c>n!o do lot Mare<. police alilfti) llale Id ~ Chmlll'Plymoulh,. _Inc., mr d.., ~ t;.cl1Jd':.,; addllionil com· nqueoUnJ • ·a!P ••oeptioa to all9w -Uon for department heads ind other !ht uC40dlng of • mulinwn alie· to. ad· •lirl<d I who k d verUM" U... J"'l"'lld · M1e of HOiM!a ;hrouJ)lout~day wlthou~ :lr"awt~& automoblJea ~t tbt apney at lJU S. ovtrtime. · El C.•tro llfll. . . Added to the 166,829 direct cost total , -A. Bani< jl{ Ari>orlca. nquat.for a In llose'1 stat•m"'~ Is the outn of sign uceptlon to ' allow ~ temporary $2,291.!t for Ii.ms that had been ll1JIOllDCe11ltl of tht 6uildlnJ of a bank budstted for the poUe< and fire branchiln tht new Gr1nt'1 Pllza thoppizll departmtnta. but were purchased earlier ctnter al Cimino dt Dlrdla and !ht • than 111Uclpated because of the hap- s .. Ditl" Fr<eway. pcnln&. '.· County Safe; Tremor Hits 6.5 Reading By ARTHUR I\. VINSEL Of Ill• Otlty ,li.t lllH Orange County tscaped ·unscathed at 8:02 a.m. today as a major urtbqu&ke rocked the foundations of home to 10 tnillion Californlans with death, destruc- tion and predawn panic. The effects even reached out into space, as four NASA stations tracking the incoming Apollo 14 astronauts were knocked out. Backup ayatems immediately took over tile coivplex job, but many of the sround- bound were lffl fortunate . By ritid·mornlng the known death toll wis 18, all in the hard-hit San Fernando VaJJey region and in central Los Angeles. Ominous tones were added to the poten- tial death toll today, with disclo5UJ'e at 'noon that 54 persons are missing in the nibble of the antiquated VA Hospital. Two buildings at the 420-bed facility in the lower San Gabriel Mountains wete leveled by the rackiftg temblor. The rocking and rolling jolt -~ual to the 1933 Long Beach disaster - was estimated . al 6.5 on the Richter Scale. but was so sharp it jolted the Caltech seismograph needle off its graph. . Repeated aftershocks followed through the morning, 50 or more. Building& from Skid Row to exclusive suburbs crttmbled as the earth's. crust shuddered and vertical cracks appeared in Los Angeles' largest water reservoir towering above a subdivision. Supposedly earthquake-proof high·rfll towers of up to 52 stories in downtown Los Angeles shimmied like hula dancers, 1hatterlng windows and t;r~cking w.~lls. Hospitals thrOughout the Los Angeles Basin reported an influx of injured - some fiown by helicopter -and maDY. suffering serious cuts from flying glW~ Seven victlms died in the valleY area VA hospital. The death . toll included t~ he_art at- tack victims, a drifter crushed when a Skid Row mission collapsed ln a crescendo of crumbled brick and a pa· lient in a suburban sanitarium. · Van Nor1nan Dam was rapidly develop- ing new and more .gravt fi8$ures sh9rf.}y before 11 a.m., as desperate workers tried to drain it. Continuing aftershocl<& kept its waters sloshing like coffee in a mug aS the 6 billion. plus gallons ilu:'eatened to cascade down ·the San Fernando Valley. Dam Supervisor . Robert E: Noel described the quake' ctnttred in rugged San Gabriel Mountains vividJy. "lt was thumpin' and jumpln' and knocked everything out of our kitchen/• be said. . Throughout the largest concentration of population in Ca1lfomia chaos rei&ned aa harassed authoritie1 tried to deal with the worst of Jt. Powe.r lines fell poppmg like apark•spit· ling snakes and l&nlting a series ot fires. Gas ma ins broke. Brlck plummeted from aging apartment buildings. Looting waa reported widespread ln some areas, as panicked residenta car· rled bo~es :Md paper b,ags of valual:Sle1 away with them. The Golden Sla te Freeway wu clo~ due to pavement cracks and bridge.1 and oVerpa!ses were reported thr.e.tened In some areu. , . "I was· ln my kltcben:· said one robti- clad housewife. "I fell down and atart.ed pr11ying .'1 <:.ontrot towers at Van Nuys an« Burbank Airports In the devastated bedroom of the basin. tht San Fernando Vallty, wert damaged and the FM JU• pended all flight acUvlty, A pikd flying over the vast city whtn the temblor -accompanied by *' ominous rumble and the creak and groan of wrenching homes -witnessed It. . - , • > Z DAILY' PILOT SC T11tsday, Ftbt11iry 9, 1971 Atkins 'Was There' Susan Involved; Kasabian Called Back LOS ANGELES (AP) -Suun "Sadie" Atkins, convicted with two other young \toomen a'1d Charles Manson in the Sharon Tate murders, 1took the witness stand ln a 5urprise "°ve today and .aid she wu involved irl the killings. Her attorney, Daye Sh.inn, asked: "Were you personally involved in the killings at the Tate home on Aug, 9, 1969?" "Yes," replied the slim, dark-haired member of ~fanson's hippie-type claJl. Earlier, atU>rneys disclosed that Llnda Kasablan, star prosecution witness in the convic tions, is being called back from New Hampshire after testimony that 1 few days before the slayings Before Planners 1he 11ld she planned t.o kill tome ''pl~ ... Depuly l>l•L Atty. Vincent T. Bu;u .. 1 aald Mrs. Kasablan, 21, Is scheduled to appe1r ntxt TUesday 1t the penalty tr ial or the four canvicted ol first.degree murder and conspiracy . The surprise testimony Monday of Cath.erine "Gypsy," Share, 28, brought objecUons from boLh. prosecution and defense. Distraught and sometimes weeping , Miss Share aald she had decided to ''snitch" beeause she was afraid of losing custody of her baby. Bugliosi said he is arrang ing ror ~1rs. Kasabian's return at the request of Manson's atlorney, lrving Kanarek. She h11 been Uvln1 In MIUord, N.11., llnco her II d>yi oi Wtlmatly !all AuiUJL Her Beverly Htn, 1t.torney, Gary Fleischman, said he told Mr by telephone Jut night she was being called u a defense witness. "Actually, she doesn 't consider henielf a vlilness for either side," Fleischman said. "She just wants to tell the truth about what happened, and if the defense wants to call her, that's fine with her." Miss Share testified that when she heard about the August 1969 murders she immediately felt that Mrs. Kasabian, Leslie Van Houten and Susan Alkins were the kil1er1. Write Hanoi ' League Director Asks High Rise Height Limit Urges Former Navy POW The treatment of prisoners in North Vietnamese POW camps is a humanitarian issue, that should concern every American, aei:ordlng to Navy LI.. Robert Frlabman, a former POW. A director of the Laguna Beach Civic League urged Jowerlng the height on the planning commission's proposed C-R Zone (beachfroot-hotel zone) in an ad- journed session Monday night. Fred ~tarchand. an engineer and board member of the league, set forth four provisions he felt would be acceptable to the community Including a maximum building height of 35 feet measured from the Ct!nter of the street. Using letters and comments gained from a cross section of the community, J.farchand said the league's committee on the CR Zone has arrived at a propo111I it believes is acceptable. Added to the heigh! r<llrlctlon. which conflicts wltb a present 100 foot max- imum now In the ordinance, the League e;uggests 1 density of 1000 square feet of net lot area for each unit as oppotied to I.be present 500 square feet and In- * * * High Rise I ssue Campaigning Hit ,As 'Contorted' "High rise has become a contorted, dirty word,'' one member of the Downtown Busineu Association said thts morning In attacking the emotional cam· pa ign being waged aga.lnst a high rite' ordinance for Laguna Beach. DBA members, although generally ad· mitting by show of hands they had attended none of the panel discussions aod hearings on the subject, agreed that emotlona: are entering into con· sideratlon of the proposed 100-foot height limit before the council. "Pressure is being applied to the coun- cil," DBA president Bill Marriner said, contending the council Is only trying to do its job of straightening out existing ordinances. Marriner said the real issue before the council Is setting and establishing a height limit that will be comistent for all building construction. He saki the five-member council is also trying to decide where the hotel zone will be placed ln the city. One member suggested a group had been organized to make phone calls to residenU to emolionallz.e the Issue. She did not know who was behind the anti-high rise organization, but said she had received reports from friends of their activiUes. "This is not motherhood and this is not ect>logy," Marriner said. "It is just having a 5et of laws In our community that are understandable by people other than the Planning Commission." "\Ve should encourage people to listen to the facts rather than just say 'I am agalnst it','' he added. DAllY PILOT Newp"' l•Klti L..iVH IH1li e; .. ,. M ... Hntl ... ••'"" ,. ...... ,...., s..c .... .. OltAH~I t:OAST l"UILllHINO COMl"ANY lto'o1rt N. w,,, ,.,...klt11I •r.411 row~lllMr J1clt It. C11rl1v VU l"Ntld111t '1'4 ~I M.l11S;cr Thom•• K11'rll ldlltr J1io111tt A. M11,ptil11• Ml fllDlllll lflltr «tch1rd !J. H11i1 Stvth ~ CO!.lrll"t Ulltl' Offl<• C.lrl M-1 2# w .. t h\' S,,_, .,...,.,., IMCll: m1 W.11 l1llo1 1.....,.1'11 • Lfflll\ll IMCl'll 7tt '"'''' A-Hll"ll.,.ton ltlCll: UIU 1-.dl l•,..,tnl Jin Clffn«llfi: • M.,..11 II C.."'N II.Ill creased off.street parklng and sideyards. During study sessions and a previous bearing, planning commissioners have whittled the height down to a com- promise between SO and 70 feet while retaining the 500 square feet of lot area per unit. "We would like to keep as much under cover parkii;ig as possible," Marchand !aid, falling In line with Com- missioner Robert Hastings' bid to in· crease the number of underground park· ing spaces per building site. Marchand expressed approval of the commission's desire to maintain 40.foot sideyards on a maximum building site with a 200-foot frontage . The second public hearing on !he C.R ?.one will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Tues- day, Feb. 16 instead of ?o.1onday due to the holiday. lnjuredStudent Remains Serious Afte r Car Cras1i, The teenage daughter of a former Newport Beach off.lclal remains in guard· ed condltlon today at South Coast Com- munity Hospital as . a rtsult of lnjurle.! 15uffered Friday in a Laguna Beach traf- fiq! accid!Jll. , -. , Mary Simpson, 17, is in the intensive care unit of the hospital with 1 fractured skull. She was near death when rushed Frishman, v.·ho spent 883 days in Hanoi, said world public opinion is the greatest hope for Americans still held captive by the North Vietnamese. The lean aviator was in Newport Beach lo speak at a fund raising luncheon sponsored by Concern for POWs-MtAs, of Tustin. More lhan 570 persons heard Frishman encourage all Americans to participate in Jetter-writing campaigns to demand humane treatment of POWs. "There have been more letters receiv· ed 'this year from prisoners than in the last six years combined. We see films of priaoners playing basketball and participating In Christmas pageants. "I think th.ls is a big improvement -even if they are staged -over tbe kind or things you saw t\\'O or three years ago. Then the only film! you saw of prisoners showed them being beaten in the slreels of Hanoi," be said. Frishman said the films and letters show how sens!Uve Hanoi has become to public opinion. "It doessn't matter whether you're hard ltft, hard right, hawk, dove or owl. This is a humanitarian movement and it's the respo~sibility of every American to do everything in their pov.·er to see that Hanqi lives up to its agreements In the Geneva Convention," he said. Laguna Buses to the hospital from the scene of the G t A•d p • •t mb:hap Friday evening. She is the e I non y daughter of Don C. Simpson. former . . . public works director of Newport Beach. -Laguna ~ach h~s re~e1ved high pnorl- Another gir l hurt in the accident, Susan ty for funding of its a1l~ng bus se~vlce, Schreck, 16, is in satisfactory condition members of the . Planrung Commission at the hospital with a broken arm, learned ~1onday n.1ght. but also is being kept in the intensive According . to City Planner . Al Autry, care unit of the hospital. Doctors fear who met with a representative of the she may also have suffered 8 concussion federal Departmen~ o~ Transportation in the accident. last .week. the city s bid for two-third!! The two gi rls are students at Corona funding of .an $80,000 cost for four buses del Mar High School. A third victim has met wt1:11 favor. of the mishap, Charles Nye, 19, is being Under ~rms of the Urban . Mass treated at the hospital for multiple cuts Tra~sportat1on Act of 1964, the city can and bruises. receive up to approximately $$4,000, The accident occurred at about 9:30 Autry s~ld. ""' . p.m. Friday when the three youths were The city hopes ~ spee_d up service riding in a car driven by Lawrence of the aged bus hne with four new Marks, 17. The auto went out of control buses and 5ervice equipment by the while coming down steep Park Avenue summer of 1971. . . . and rolled over several times before ~ut~y said he will file the final ap- coming to rest against a curb, polict phcabon by Feb. 15. said. Nye and lttarks are both studenUI at Newport Harbor High School. Marks injured his neck in the accident but was treated in the emergency room of the bospilal and released. Las Vegas T remhles Fr om LA Earthquake LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Scores of people told police today that they felt the Ll>s Angeles earthquake, ctntered 300 miles away, but no damage was reported. "A lot of people sloughed it off •s another underground nuclear test," a desk sergeant said. He said his door was caused to swing back and forth. Headon Wreck Fatal to Man A North llollywood man was killed about 8 a.m, today in a he1d-0n collision on La Paz Road about a h11f mile 11orth of Crown Valley Parkway in Laguna NI· guel. High.way Patrol officers said the crash involved a sports car and a pickup truck. but the victim's name was belng withheld pending nolificatlon of next or kin. The incident was not related to today's earthquake. a spokesm1n said, notlng there was no damage to highways or free- ways within Orange County. Downtown Businessmen Asl{ Car Moclification Tbe Downtown Bu1lness As!ociation has sen~ a letter to the Laguna Beach City Council requesting that the proposed pedestrian mall on lower Park Avenue be modified to include can. The council ls now studying pl1n1 to close the amall portion of the bwy street adjscent to the new library to tr:ifflc and build a mall with park benches. treu and fou1}talns. The OBA letter ouWnes the dlladvanta.ges or clo ... 1ng the street and said the park-pro- ponenta and parking.proponents could both be utlsfled with 1 parking mall. The letter claimed parking and traUlc problems ln IA&una Beach are "second only to the hippie problem" and that 1hoppen rate Art Colony parking 11 poor. Without the Park Avenue access to the 1tore1 1oe1ted ln the area. the ( business aroup said a narrow alley would h11.ve to aceommodate both delivery trucks and through tr1ifflc. With · the eventual construction of a p11rklng garage at the llbr1ry, the businessmen uJd In their letttr that the same alley V1°ould have to provide garage access. The parklng-conscloua group also said the pedettrl1n mill would eliminate seven sorely needed p1rklng stalls. As an alternative to the mall. the letter suggea;ted maklng lower Park Avenue open to one l11ne of through traffic and prov iding several d\agon1l parking spacts. In addltJon to be11uUfylng the area with trees and shnibs. the businessmen aald a cobble1tone-type surface could be used to add ch1rm to the p1rkln1 mall. U'I T1lt•llol0 PHOTOGRAPHE R CRAIG MAIL LOUX MOPS UP AT UPI ~1rt_hqu1ke Jostles Photo Bureau in Downtown Los Angeles Quake Origin Qu ive rs Caused by Sliding Rocks By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of !ht D•Hy ,Utt $1Mf The ancienl Gree ks thou ght earth· quakes were caused by the god Posejdon, ~·ho they called "earth shaker." Today, it is common knowledge that earth tremors originate in faul ts when two rock faces slip off each other. A. R. Kerr, a geology instructor at Orange Coast College. said there are two theories as lo the cause of the :slippage on the r aults. The elastic rebound theory , which js · the one most often cited, is based on the constant but very gradual shift in the earth·s crust. Rocks become distorted but hold their original positions witil the stress has accumulated to the point of overcoming the resistance of the rocks and the earth snaps back to arrunstrained posi- tion at the fault line. The "snap" caused by the rebou nd creates the shock waves known as earth- quakes. The second theory, Kerr said. is that earthquakes are the surface reaction of movement many miles below the earth's surface. He likentd It IG a ripple on a pond caused by a disturbance below !he surface. Regardless of the cause. Kerr sald there are three types of quakes -those in which the movement at the fau lt is horirontal, those in which the move- ment is vertical and those in which the movement is a combination of both. "I would say today's earthquake was chiefly a lateral shift, thoug h there were probably vertical components in it. ''The duration of it and the kind or movement that I felt \Vould also indicate a rolling quake in which there \\'SS a long adjustment at the fault ." he .said. He contrasted the rolling movement of today's quake, \vhich registered 6.5 on the Richter Scale, with the sharp, jllrring vertical movemenl of lhe Tehachapi quake in 1952 which registered 7.2. killed 14 persons and did extensive dan1agc. The epicenter or today's quake has not been established, but Kerr estimated 1l could have been in the San Gabriel rau!t ,\·hich runs parallel to the main San Andreas fault for about 90 miles from r-.1t. Baldy atea to Frazier Mt. near the Tejon .Pass. There have not been any major quakes along this fault for 150 years. Another likely candidate for the earth- quake is the famo us San Andreas fau lt v.·hich runs inland of the San Gabriel fault in a conti nuous line from the Mex- ican border to Point Arena in Northern California. One of the most disturbing aspects of an earthquake are ihc aftershocks. Kerr said there is no rule on the number or intensity of aftershocks. Follo\ving the Alaskan quake in 1964 -which is the most intense one recorded in U.S. history -the re v.·ere 12,000 aftershocks. Scientists say the aftershocks arc a part of the release of accumul ated elaslic strain. The relief of pressure at the fault itself cha nges the stress patterns for miles around and the readjustment of these stresses is the cause of the aftershocks. Ted Ccts Pcrtnit Back BOSTON l UPI ) -Sen. Edward 1'.I. Kennedy's driver 's license has been reinstated. It had been suspended for a year because he pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of an accident after the death of l.1ary Jo Kopechne. Hul se Trial Jury Piclc Continues JW'y selt>cllon continued today ln tbe Orange County Suptrior Court tri1l of a Garden Grove youth accused In the hatchet n1urder of a service station al· tendant and latt'r involvement in the killing of a Mission Vi'"jo school teacher. Selection of the panel 1hal will rule nn I.he guilt or innoCen(>e or Arthur Cr<1ig ··~loose" llulSt. 16, is expected lo take at least lhree more days in \\'hat 1vitl be , both sides predict. a thrl'e· "''eek trial be[ore Judge Ron a I d Crookshank. ,Judge Crookshank refused Monday lo disclose the nature of a series or motions argued in his chambers. Bul it \\'as learned today that tv.·o of those motio ns involved the constitutionality of the graJ1d jury systein and the righl to try Hulse. a mino r. in adult court. Hulse v.•as removed from juvenilC' court jurisdic tion shortly after his indictment by the Orange County Grand Jury and ordered to f:icC' trial as an adult for the killing of .Jerry Wayne Carlin, 2!, of Santa Ana. He is also accused of being an ac- cessory to the murder of ~trs. Florence Nancy Bro1vn, 31. of El Toro. Hulse and lhrJe other members or the ga ng or drifters were rounded up by la\\•men in the wake of lhe two murders. r-.1rs. Brown was the vic!in1 June 2 of a "devil cult " killing in \1•hich portions of her body were devoured in satanic rites afte r she was slain in an Irvinl' orange grol'e. Carlin \Vas killed the night before In a murder that followed the group's rifling of his till -a robbery that put $50 in their pockets. Scheduled to appear as a '~'itness ror the prosecution in the Hulse trial is Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17. a transient \\'ho is accused of both murders. Taylor's double murder trial has been delayed until April 5. Awaiting trial for both killings Is Steven Craig Hurd. 20, a tra nsient Y.'ho goes on trial ~1arch 22 and Christopher ··Gy psy" Gibboney, 17 of Portland, Oregon. Orange County district attorney'!! of· ficcrs are today seeking the extradition from Oregon of young Gibboney. Sound of Music Tickets on Sale At High Scl1ool Tickets v.·ent on sale at San Clemente lfigh School today for the school's largest musical production in years -a ren- dition of the Broadway hit "The Sound of r-.lusic. '' The fou r·pcrformance run of the elaborate production 11'iil span tv.·o v.·eekends-the lasl in February and the first in t>.1arch. The tickets for the 8 p.1n. performances range in price fr om $3.50 lfor a seat in the first three rows) lo $2, Triton centj?r will be transformed to a theater with the use of a new, pr<r fessional sound system and specially pr<r cured rise r seating !or the four performances. Ticket purchasers may reserve seats by either calling in person or by phone to 1he student :ictivities office at San Clcn1ente lligh School. Local merchants will begin selling tickets soon as \vell. Specific locations "'ill be announced later. rHE NAME OF THE GAME There is a common practice of private labeling 1n the carpet industry. Large department stores, chain stores and contractors at new tracts have ficticious names on the samples so that customers cannot easly shop brand name prices. Customers shopping at our store find the price of each quality prominently featured on the sample book, because we are competitive. Also, because we feel the customer hes a right to know what he is buying, we never change the name on a sample book. The· nome of the gome is integrity! ALDEN 'S SANTA ANA. ORANG! TUSTIN Call , •• A\.DEN'S RID HILL CAR,l!TS & DRAPIRllS 11374 lrvht•, Tv1t1n, C•I. &3&-3"4 CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUIS: Mot1. Thr11 TI!urs., t to 5:10 -Fri ••• t to t -Sot., t :lO to 5 For the Record Girl ·Wat~h Marriage Liee1ises Denlh /\'otlrP• CIAL~ Allin D•lt . A,, 69. •! "' Vl1 Orvl1111, Nt ••Y' ll t1C1' D•te 11! <lt •!1', ,t brul •'f 7 Stirvlvtrt b• wilt, C~•rlnP!•; t1'•tt ••"'· J1mt1, Thcm11 tnd Chorltt D~I" '""' d1u11hre .. , M1r•••~t. l~u·• 1nd !U\d¥ Co lt : brNht•. CtJ••t 01 Ll118: nt~htw. G1l11no I'>! L11!c. ~II o! N1w11ort !letci.. Jlo11ry, tonlt M. Tut1d1y, I PM. lltfltllt"' M1•1o. Wtdnu a1v. 10 AM. both 11 O!ir L~~v Oueen ot Anot l• (flrtellc (hurc~. tn•ermont, orlv1!1 F1m!lv 111111111 11\Mt wi1hl•11 1o m1~e m1morl1I ctnlrlllutlftnl. OltlJI ccnt•lbu!t IO HOIQ M-rl1I HOI• pl111 ll11!!d1n11 Fuf\d. ll•!tz Cor1n1 IHI M i r M.,.!111,...,. Olrtctors GWINN J•W>• l!lmtr Gwlnfl. Ato d . of lji(IJ We1t- !"lf\Jter, Cell• Mts•. O•!e et dtllh, Ft"'- l'Yl •Y 5 Sunrlwtd bV IO>lft, M". M•rY ... G .. 11111: l;o,o ICll\, J•V· •nd ltoHrt, !IOI~ ~f Cc1t• Mnt; d~u•Mfr. Dt•n~t Gwinn, Full1r11>11: brolt.eri, 01wtld '"" Chl!to11, botr. e• O!lio; Ch1rl11. KtftlU<~v; Elwv1111. ct M1~1>1ttA11 Bt•tn: """ Atr111rd Gwinn. Tu<-1C111. _.,rllCl!t; t!tttr, Vttvl Oldl:1011. Tut:!(ln. Strvlttl w!ll bt h•ld Wtdnttl•v, 10 •M, U111tf'd Mtthodl•I Ch11rtn lntt•· "'*"'' Pttlllt View Mtmoritl l'1rll. ltll 1ro1dw1v Morlul"•· n•rtci.rt. S!•llS Gtert<o C. s.~" •~t 53, of 11tl Ort~•• Avr , Ctlll Mn• Olte nf dtll"' l'tbru· t •V 1. Survlv~ bV wilt, Mtrlenl 1111, C•~••• Jr . Cc1t1 MH., •llu•M••" Der• otnv Cttwlord. Gtrdtn Grcvt; lwO bro!"· t ri. F•t11rl5 Wllll tm tnd lta W. S11r•: t~rrt 111ttri, •nnettt C1rr, Ger!nMlt ~orton tnd Mv•!lt Ztnl, tll cl Mtttl· chustttl: two or111dchlldrtn. $trvlt11, W1dnt1t11. 1•l0 PM, 9•11 ~ro1dw•V (htO!I. ln•erm•"'· P•clllt View Mtrnorl tl P1r~. ae11 a ro1~w~v ~~~r1u1•¥. Olreetor1. SWll'T Gl•dv• G Swill . M.0. A.01 St. at JOtl !:. c ... 11 f<l•~wlV, NIWPCl•I •••t~. Diii el •Hill!. f1bru1•v I Sunrl•td bv hu1b•11ll. Of. Lo•ln C. Swlll; lllUJ~I .. , M'I. Don"• J Lctlle. So!1rio lftt"I molf<>tr. M'l. "'""' G. Sfftilll. Gltnl1l1; lwo ••1r>(lcllll· ciren, Ful'tr•ll 1t•vlc11, Tn11rid1y, 1 PM, £n(J"1t11 Mori~•"'· EfttonH11, (tlltor11l1. lnt1rm1nt. 1Et1rn1I ~lilt M1mt1rl1I "•rk, l'let•"•klt. 11111 CCIII M••• Mt,tu•rv· OltedOrl. BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del l\lar . OR U'H C&sta l\1e11 . ml fo~ • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 8rnadway, Costa Mtse u 1·:1433 • i\1cCOR~tlCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 11&5 Laa:unl'I Canyon Rod. 494-9415 • PACTFIC VlEW ~1ET\IOR.IAL PARX Ctmetery Afortuary Chapel l50D Paclfh: Vie• Drive Newporl Btacb, C&lllonJ1 ..._,, .. • PEEK F A~llL Y COL01\1 AI. FUNERAL HOME 7IOI Bol11 Ave. \\'eiolmlns1er 1934515 • S~llTHS' i\IORTUARY • i'l7 i\t1ln S1. lh1ntin~lim Butb lll6.fl5l9 VC I Group to Study Status Dissolutions Of Marriage I' JIN l'llnl1ry l HI .... "tllr Cla~f'Ol afllll llOM Vt ftlvl'I Qu1KktntK11ll. KUlo ll'fll M, 1114 Mtnrl" t1~i¥1, Jr., a.-11 Ju. •nf T"""•• L. M1rll11, Lt aov 1. 1/'ICI Mtr11r.1 J. 11tn, \v11llolt A. 111d Jehl! I'. UINI, !*lei l . ·r.· Jel!n ,.,,,le, 111011. rri1n , 111t Jt;nt ,.; oe11. 1c rd ..,,,, •nd a11M•• ... "td, Sutlllnt Htwtv 11\d Stnwtl N!'&'l~'li.tltll J. , .... Jtr«nt '· P-M1rv K ...... Jo.'IM H. G1rciln11. J1m11 "'1ncl1 111111 l ¥1lY" •M-~=~J1t~1~J'~v "l.111 I'. By JOANNE REYNOLDS lRVINE Women art bt:in& 1tudlfld 1t UC lr.iine. Glrl witching on 1 coUlge c1mpus Is not unique. but the work belnr undertaken at UCl Js a bit different. Chancell or Daniel Aldtlch he.1 1ppolnted a c;,ornmittee to do It and nine or I.be 11 members ire v.·omen. Lou Anderson, ch1irman of th t Chancellor's A d vi 1 or y Committee on the Status of Women at UCI. says the com· mlltee delin.itely won't be Rptnding its time admiring coeds. Instead. il will focus its attenUon on the feasibility of 1 child c1re center on cam- pus and the feasibility of est1blishinR 1 women's studlts program. ll al10 will study. the pay and distribution o( v.'Ornen on the UCJ faculty and 1t1f(. When the committee wa! 1ppolnted In 0 e c e 11\ b e r , Aldrich said its function \.ould be' Vi n Gor ... 't. Pllortll I •• NI a1Yl'llt/!4I Q, Mil.Ill~. Su'I" •n~ Hljhola• L. M•"~rr••l• nd "J1"" w. -to ex1mlne and consider M~~•11nc1t~11111 "' N:•• •n• wirntm the status of wo,...en in their R1v~ur11, Olnll! IEfwlFd •1111 Ttut lt '" w:if~. lrt""~ \· •fl(! 1!:nr;• L. rel1tlon!hlp to UCl. a 1 l~:r.'E1~~~~ iJJf:.111; i:in-academic per!onncl, & ta f f i~~~;·~·1~11~,J·.trt1111r 111111 L. perl(lnnel or students. lu.r.. Jr .. Je1n 1t 11111 Euttn• L -To advise the Chancellor •~Jl""· l1,111 J, •11(1 T"tM J. w.,4: 11111~111 1 . 1,.,, JOl'ln c. of problem are11 and recom· 'II•• ''°"'''"' • mend soiu tlon~. G\!r::;, G11>r11111 """" •llf owtt ~ To recommend campus CMIW't'fld. Pttrl(11 11'111 fl tll' s1i..1r1. c.r-•¥ J. •rid"''" 1111 L. proirams promoting th e Sl\ltrn, Ktrno 1111 D<IMlt w, )~ MCllll'ltomtt~Joan '· •tid w 1111m \\'elf are of campus women. Milltr. Din I c;, •Ml Hlllfl l. Juul. Pt11r . 1l'ICI 1t111tct1 L. To 1erve as 1 Ourlltl~. lltrV L •• ..., P11r1ci. ... bod Not!. Jr., 0oro111ot1 Junt 111111 v1c1tr G. coordinating y for groups sw11sht1m. "''".,,," L. "'"" wnuam c. or individuals ct1ncerned wilb Socs. Gr"°l"I' II. 1nl Ju1nllt l J-•· ae'\l' J..., 1r>(I 11eet11 . lhe 1t1tus of women at UCI. Toi~-n. "''l"'-IN! Jilh.n l "'*''' u1111 "'""...Pll. L Serving with fttrs. Anderson -riltlit'01~lo•'l7 '11~\i•a are Emily Card. a lecturer l"tt"" Pitnl&N l s111~, 1111111 M••~ .11111 "~m. 11111tn• in comparatlvt culture: ~ti r:!ldl,;: 1-t.~~ $iir~~.1·:i Wlllltm Kato, In assistant proftssor M•11111HT1 1 r d to<>Hv1r111. aot1r10~ ""j1v1.,. in the 1raduate schoo o a • ~loll, Hine! A • rnt" • El Kl k h J-tnHn. urf!1 M I Ct~lvio minittrltiOn; Oi!e 0 e, l e tmN~~ M1rv &. • .and T~1 o. executive assistant to the •11tt. Jr.. ec1m11nd r;:t1"1" i "lll chonc<llor who gerves as an !~~.14J~ £~·:1.ti -~ .. l 110•~. Wi1111rn J. 1" Ma,J -r. ex off icio member ; Enriquetl1 1i.1. Slepll1nle 11111 t•ll M•rrlll R Id 1• lud l cccDtr, Jirrv J11>~ , J11111~ An.~ amos. a gr ua ! en llr~i~ihitl"tt '"1' "'' '"" ••-"' In comparative cu 1 tu re s : Pr:.J,1:i~~ N1di111 K•v '"' G"r•• Ernestine R 1 n so m , a O'Lou1~1111, c11rk1 Lou1 .. 1nd J1~n 1. coun!elor in the dean of 511etflt1CI, 1'4owtrl 1111 Toni IC. !_1111. 1Ernr11a '"" 1.11c11 L•n••rt studen ts office : D i I n 8 ~/f1i1.,;'11d11" Mtrlb•ll •n111 1"•' Sherwood . an administrative ~r•;;~~~.F[r,,dc:'~.·~~.'~\'vioU~ M. assistanl in lht graduate ~.'~r.•:.1t11~;~~1"1~~ ~r,1:1 division: Sherry Van Guilder, M~~'d' s111(1r1 c1e11 1M l'r1n c11t-1 philosophy major: Jo Ann FrJ•~··h r,,,, lv"" ,,.,. wtt11111t Yee , .1 social science major ; V•n t'°t1k1nburmh, Gtrt1• E. 111!1 J\llllY John Smith. the univ ersily w:fi:1m1. s111r1ev P. "'d J•"''' s. Librarian . and Barry Tavlin, Lebron, P1mtl• Lri ~ml HtfttV v. A•-••· 1'1••1"1' ( tnd '""' Lw I student. H1rrl1. Jlll'ltl i'.tlftlt<I 111!1 Su1o111 LYftl' 1tu11•n, l"11rk:l• •· 1nd 111v~ ~1rs. Anderson works [or EUINl!f u &•'"''· MtrY su11n ,,.,. J•ck 111M niversity E1tension at UC!. rr~L·.~~:ii'~h': ::/ ~":13 :it-i:.1 She is also workin1 nn ber l'1ln t1!111, S1nt1r1 btt 111d Slflll'ttn C. "'hO I ~. I' N1~1.v. JQl\n Frtclrlek IM a111v c. I" n o;;uuCI ion. E1111d•M•rsh.i ~"" '" Tll'rv LM She noted that the UCl eom-M~ttu , t'" Gtor.. fl#WI,. trltl M•~1':.':'1. 1~ffi ... 1h AFlnt •rll 1111_ mittee is the flrsl to be ap· n'l'lnd Eu"'"'-pointed in the UC sy!tem. Wl•::::,;"· a111v L1r1r11 •"" Ltwrtr1t• "fti&ht now there 's quite a 5-~;::,;~~1' MkF1••1 c~•r11• '"" E••1• lot of data tha t needs to be /~1~ .J~.~!~11 gathered or analyzed .'' Mrs. John1, Jevtt e. '"d "G1rwoci1 Lt• A d • ·d Th · Whitt . Edilll Mt• t d~Jahn ll~r! n ef.!ivTI Sil . ' ' t In· ~f.',;,~wJ".~. ""~\n~!'111:"11~~"" .~!r"t·:~n formation that is available tn womtn 's ctnter 11.nd 1 campus womtn 's magazine, studying admissions procedures and forms, housing p o 11 c I e 1 , 1pecial problems that face minority v.·omen, 1nd studying lrends in job applications. "We will be trying to go at these issues In an orderly and timely fashion. I an- ticipate that we will get good response •nd cooperation from various agencies. t h e u g h because we have no operating runds, Y.'t will do all the work ourselve!. "Thei;, are lots of exciting possibi Pties here. but I im· agine this will be an endless job. when you consider the subtle kinds of discrimination that we'll be dealing with. "We have a situation htre v.'he re fa cts have to bt established and the traditions of discri1u;11atio n have to be abandoned," sh'! said . Grand Theft T1ial Set As Juvenile CSF Student Sues College l'tUHtll • I b' lh "'~''· E1•1nt M 1nd c1•r1M"j E. U appears o e ra er z1r1rn1n .. M1r11 'v '"' N~• K. devoslatlng." SANTA ANA -A Cal State Fewltr. t:llt •nd i11'1tnt Kt~fltll! II '4.fhur::,•:v Kt111tri"• '"" wu111,., She cited a study done in Fu erton thea ter arts studen t e.r1r11. 'r•l'l(_!•eo l9'1•• 1nt1 011m111 April of last ytar which show-\vhose right hand was severely LN>nhl•d , Clellnt M11 1'111 M•nr111 · · d · k h ' Hennr ed th at 7." -rcenl or lhe lnJUre in a wor s op stss1on "'ltmlno. Ccr"'l\t 1nd L¥1t ~INI " r-h d h Evtstant. 11rn '' "'~" "'"' w11tur non-tenured (acuity at UCI are as sue t t stale college for 1e:.'!:~ c11i.er111t (. •n• tvt••tt women and 1.2 percent. or s17s,OOO. """""' "'•lev. L~d1 H. •M 1tt.Hr1 L. two women. are tenured Mollie Ryan. 19. Hemet. 5!f~:~i:. ••t• 5"'''""' '"" •1n1•m1" faculty. charges colle1e officials with A:'~~· ~:r:""• L.:.J"#.t\'\~ ti. "lt's this ty"" of information negligence leading to the in· l<'un~1\. Htllj I.. Ind Mlrl~l a. r-Wtldtft, Ev• ¥11 A 1nt1 11• c th1t need5 to be documented juries she su!lered last June WOOif, !11ffnt l lltn trll ' M••lflif 7 d ' d Dfl so that we ct n make some ur1n~ 11 ram1 class on Jo.,e1~··er: tntl Jt-M M1uro, vn1 1ty" ¥;: E~e solid recommendatio ns." f\.1rs. slage craft. w~111on. , 1. ••ttv ''" w11i1t•n •ft• n son no e . e states in her Orange Gr1101, :r;n• . 1 Twr• o. A der l d Sh Ht,Dl:rl :ti"' Sh I ' I d lh "-S K1e1n. L111t11 . 1.,. ,.111111• H. e • so po1n e out at \A/Unly uper1or rourt actio n ~~~~.:,•lj,,, ~~·. ·~or.,:i• l•w·~ there ire several aspects of that her right hand was 1.n1bourv, att1¥ J. 1flCI M1r11n 111. the three study items which se.verely "!!shed by • pow·er / TrlDO, Oo1othy MIV Ind (lllrllt E. t> Sau1a. Cll lord w. •t'\d c:1nc1tcj "· will i lso bt scrutinized. saw while she and A.~., Mullt,. Gle l(tlltan 1od Alltl flln Th ~· ''"'· Jr., M•rv Ann• 1111 G lhrt w ese ln~lu.de the feasibility sludents were working on ~b~~ta.'J~~1l ci,,:i"\1~~!11f·L. of estabhsh1ng: a campus stage equipment . r·--------------•-------• I I I I I How to invest I I I I in fixed-income I ! securities. i I I I l I I Merrill Lynch's booklet, FINANCING A TRILLION OC,LLAR I I l:CONOMY, explains why so many investors are buying U.S. I I Government and mun icipal bonds. corporates and preferred I I stocks. For a free copy, send the coupon. No obligation. I I ~-I I Add mo I I Cily I St&l• Zip I I Ho"'' phont 8u""'" pho"' I I Munu Lyw.11 M r-•n r'IMM .,rirt "",.. 11'1<11 •Iii<• 1d<1,. .. 1t AC(ljou•f £...euti••. I I I I Merrill ~ch: We look for the trends. I I Merrill Lynch. Pier<e. Fenner & Smllh Inc. S I S.ierstrom Center. Sonl• Ana 92702 -Telephone 547.7272 I (1000 North Main 51.reet/ l I , '" I L-••••••••••••••••••••••~ -·-... DAILY PILOT f Court Nixes Back Pay Bid Father Sues Law Firrn For Rernarks SANT A ANA - A Los An1eles law firm has been sued for more than $1 mlllion by the lather of a Santa Ana youth who was cleared ln juvenilf: court of charges that he concealed drugs in his locker at La Quint.a High School, Westminster. SANTA ANA Two law.suits which v.·ere being eagerly watched by police of. fictrs throughout Callfornl1 h11ve been dismls~d I n Orange County Superior Court. Judge Harmon G. Scov\llc's ruling ends the hope or two former Orange County officers that their bids for b1 ck pay would be sur.cesi;fu l and set a precedent for future claims by policemen . Oamt:fes totalling more than $2 million were demand- ed In the lawsuits filed by Lawton Thompson . formerly o( the Anaheim police. depart· n1ent and William F. Englt, wbo lefl the Buena Park force in 1969 after four years as a patrolman. Both men listed damages Trial Due For SA Man SANTA ANA Greg \Villiam A. Eagle states in Bradley Moon of Buena Park, his Orange County Superior 11ctused of the monkey wrench Court lawsuit that attorney murder of hi s father, will be Rosemary Morris represe nted the law firm of Sackett, Olson. tried as a juvenile, it has been ruled. Alsop and Moore and the Ga rden Gr;:ive Unifed School The 17-year-(')ld youth is be- District last year when ahe ing held in juvenile h11\I until for tlme spent In brlertng and meal limes duri ng !he years of their employment wilh the ar1ument !hat 11 policeman Is on duty, even if he Is not In the field, on such OC• caslons. Judge Scoville ruled In both action~ that both orflcers ha~ "failed to e1hausl the ad· Week Notes Black Life Black History Week. Feb . 14-20, will bt leaturtd with " special bibllogr:iphy at 1111 25 hranches of the Orange County Public Library. In addition to films available through the library, there will be displays of African art at branch libraries in Laguna Beach. Tuslin, Garden Grove. Orange, West Carden Grove and Westminster. The Garden Grove library v.•ill sponsor a slide-talk on "Voices of Africa·• by Mrs. Jane Dill at 7:30 p.m .. Feb. 17. Mrs. Dill instructs a class on black literature al El ~1odeno lligh School. DANISH 'UINITUlf lllDAL llCO.ISTIY mini!trative rt m t d I e s ' available to them at the time of their effiployment. Bolh officers stipulated 1n \ their lawsuits; that they sought the damagn for lhem.w:lves and all fellow officers In their departments. ~1eanwhlle, Engle has plead· ed Innocent in Los Angeles Superior Court to charges1that he robbed a K-Mart 1tOrt in the City of lnduslry of more than $51,000, Eriglc, 29, who now livts In Placentia. wa15 ordered ta return !\larch 4 to f h e courtroom of Judge John Arguelles for a pritrl11-I hear· inJit. Ile is free on $20,000 bail. Arresting -Officers s a Id Engle. employed by the K· ~1art store as a security guard , carrled out the robbery on Aug. 3, 1969. He also work· ed as 11n administrative assis· tant for the Western St1te University College of Law In Anaheim at the time of hb arrest. Engle v.·as employed as a patrolman by the City of Buena Park lro m 1985 to February, 1969. He filed his civil suit for back pay In February 1969, SWIDISH CITSTAL CHINA & STiil made "false and malicious his trial on Feb. 24. A public stall!:ment•" to the press. defender will be appointed for 1'\ WL She stated at that time , the him. WUI lawsuit ind i c 1 t es, that The father. Richard A. copsules found in 17-ye1r--0ld ~ioon, 45, was killed In the • f I , • JL...-.-~•o:!9' back Y rd Or lh hom' r 1• •• -• 1111-..... -d0n·.-9·g Rock Eagle·s locker were half a e o 11 V1 "'• ,,....-,., .,.. filltd with dru gs. Westminster his son·in-law and daughter police stated the capsules Jan. 19 in Garden Grove. The .... ~ 2'40 E.Co&.Sl~~., Corona Jet Mor were not half filed and lhey boy fled the scene but later Doil~ g:30 -t,) '):~ Tel: 644-7340 contained II minute powde ry surrendered to San Diego Jwndawa lt+oS &tlA-Mut'trCnn- reaidue that could not be i==po=l=ic='=· =============================-=·=-=: analyzed. tht comp la i n tli states. Eagle has earlier sued the school district for $350,000 for the false arrest (If his son. That action is scheduled for trial June 21. CHILDREN LIKE UNCLE LEN HAMS " . • . So Good It Will Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" Our h•m• •re 1n' 11~~1! CO•n·!ed !~wt per0•11 -Out t~w •iv eudnv ml!~od. •~Al WIJCD1'111., hickory •nd eppl1wood 1mH+11t i nti lO·ll011r ove~ W~lntl nont~ •n •Pit t 1••11 ••t unll!UI In Ill !I'll world . .SO "'llclov• ond "">ell1l119 w1 !u•I WOUidn't -now tiaw 16 !m11•ov' 11111 prnducr "'"'"' IM:t11 m1kl"11 If• l• ve•'1. ~Dirt! 1llcM toe, rram !a~ TO l>O!!Gm •o tn•I ""'" deloc11Dl1 ~nllorm 1!1<1 tlft nt "movtd t!ft•tlenlY. c.om11lelflV D•~ttl •nll rtldY 10 nrvl Or· ner y<iur f<CllllV lh~ld H•m 10Clty. •11 •••tnlu<t In ~ttn-l11mtnl yau'!! ~tvtr tart•I. & J1@@~Ilooo and we love it.! One hundred percent of our savings from Orange County savers is invested in Orange County. Most of our loans are made within a fifty-mile radius of Laguna Federal offices. If you need money to build, buy, or refinance a home for your family, call or visit Laguna Federal -the association famous for REDUCING-RATE HOME LOANS. AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ' Jran1e County'• Lar1ut, Fir1t and Stronie•t independent Federol 3 Monarch Bay Plaz& Laguna Niguel 499-1840 496-1201 J, 260 Oce&n A venue Lagun& Beach. C&U!ornl• 494-7641 601 North El Camino Real San Clement.o 492-1195 JO OAJlY PllOT SC Tvrsd&Y Febr111rt • 19n Wortla Your Money's Inflatio11 a Fact of Life, OVER THE COUNTER ·~ ..... i.-~· l'f •Hll'mlllMftl'f ' • Ill .,_ tu.SO. ll'rlul • Mt 111<1•• ttMll w m.rt;N. ..,.,.,.._ • c1rn111itllttl. NASO Ll1t1n91 for Mond1y, F•bru1ry 8, 1971 So Leru·n to Live With It By S\ LVIA PORTER Jt s an absolute certjlnty that Inflation "iii not be hcked durln,; lbe balance of th~s Nix on Adminfstrat1on This point LEGAL NOTICE HOT' ce O" TI USTIEl.'S SALIE leapli oul or all the prcs1den Ital niessages of the past forln1gbt for the White llousc has clearly mo\ ed a strong business upturn into th ~ number one spot a n d do\\ngraded control of in flalJon accordingly No un It s also a near certainty On F•b It 1'71 11 I 1clo<.k 1 m th l fl !JI I•· d d ., "'• HOO"" 1 0111 on1 '"'" 10 th• a 1n at1on w no ~en e o ..,,, COYnrv '"""h°"l' 1oe1 "' •t Jn any adm1n1strnuon v;h1ch 1t0 C v(( C1nlt• 0 lv1 Welt l"°C merl, fo!JO"S lhlS one _ "helher Wf't ,,,, SI .. •) In"'" C !v of S.n 11 TI .. A, • C• lo n. SECUlt T'!' All ED l •• h d d by N on SEltV CE$ •• T ..,. " Undtr 1h' OHd I again u.;: ea e IX ot Tru11 ""•"• b, 011 JA.CK T MONROE or v;hether the Democrat s •l\d GLOR A O f ON ROE ll111b•nd 111d take O"Cr A slO• in• O( th• w le Ir.cl Wn'! A llillRTHOLOMAE J R ~ • , "' • m•11 11 T 11sro 111d e-cort1td pace of rise ~es that )OU l.prl 17 •~1 n 800~ 1271 P1,o 11! cif Ofl c 11 A«o "' 01 o •mie county can hope for and even expect ~!t,~d~•!s ~ ~:vr:o 01H~"tHA;"o ;; as the prodUCIL\llY O£ our WILSON 111<1 10• w1uo111 t1u1~n11 ,,ork force incre ases and i nd w 1,. 11 lo nl on1nl1 15 lo • • 111 ere ML roN L NOEit '"" pressures against excessive GE1tA1.o NE 11 1. NOER ~u,b•f'<I •nod wage price hikes 111tens1fy w e 11 on •non ' 11 " • l 6 In .... Intl NOltMOND L NOEil •l'ld But \OU should never JOANN L NOEil nuotNnd Ind wile ,., Ion enn•n i 11 o 1 1 3 lntre5 NEVER -ant1c1pale anylh1ng bv '''°" of ™' ti e1tn of ce •• II Iha I g r th &ti ~· ont 1e-cu "" 111e ebv nm co ct more n a s 0\\111 o e "'"(II b eac1> w•• etc ded oc1o1>e 2' pace. of annual rise 1n your 91G fl l ook tOt P••~ l6t OI Otl c • •·ost or Ii\ 1ng Roco di w I •• • cub c IUCI"" ... to nt 11 ,1101 tldde 10 c•sfO p1y11be Anith•"g under ' ~rcenl In ewl~ mon'• of It>• Un It<! St1fe1 "' I'~ a II• t mt of 11 e wll!out w1 rAny a )ear \\OU!d be considered ·~ IO I • PO '"!'on c n~11ml! 1n<f-• h J b fllt In fff ll CC<W!Ytd lo end new llf d l e eqUJV3 ent or Sl3 lli ty b• •• d ' 111 ~ unaer u tS Deed o1 1n our economy Any rise a"-T u1 nttlt c -l'f111/1lt nOenH .,. counrv C• io 1111 daK• l>fd •s proximatJng 4 percent woul d T1111 port on ol Lois ' •rid S et b d d ,. 10 No 11 1 111 th• cll'f of Ntwoc , e cons1 ere great progress Be•<" ccunlV ot o '""' s ale o -comi ng after 1970 s 5 5 per C• to n • •I P• m•p •co d•d n book 3s c1ge a o1 Mice anM111 cent increase 1968 s 6 I per M1p1 In 111~ off u of 1>e cc..,nlv I d 1~• 4 7 t e.;o de ol ••Id c•unlV ,09, lier w tn cen an ;rw S percen !di:~ n,or;,1;1 0 !11: .! :" .. ~":~nd!n:J So what arc "e going to bv 1e!Clu1 on cl Ille C • COi.inc do about 11" of ll•wJIO I 8efcl! on '"'~"'• • • \" j ,.,,,,1nedccov o ••d •••••u1..., ••C ar c going o bf"" e«on:ltd A• en , n•' n ackno\\ led11:e lhat 1nDal1on is book 1~ PAQt ltf Ol c 11 lteco <I! I "' c oo~ ••to 1ow1 a way nf 1re tn this economi c B<"ll n"' • '"• ln e 5ec on or lie <'ra and we are "01ng to make ce • ne ol 11d 7000 oot • •v " w n 111e t t!le iv P o c»01 on of It>• It respectable ~:'.,'~• {. ~~ 0~ '':ri~ 150,,.'"~c: \\e art going to recogn1te o o f>l191 °" '"" 11 d sc11lllt V I ne the great IUJUS\JCe done by of kl 5 a II 1 i nc• of lot .0 lte 10 111, b<!9 nnln• of • 1n•rM t u ve 1nnation to ma1or segmenl s conc1ve nc Ill•••• ,, '"" ll•v"" • of our population and we arc 10 11• cl 1000 •• lltnce 111e1 er v 1nd no Tiier v e °"' •• d curve tn 011911 going lo make adjustments 1 cen11 1nge ol 90 I dstn~ I h h I I cl 5 1 ,.. llltntt la»0enl lo '' d 0 1g er price e\ e s in cv ve No 11 o& ~ 30 w .. i • onv creas1ngly 'automatic lllt -sle v I • cil std ot S and 1 s no ~ v ,,,, one11 on 226 tl feet \\ e are alreadv \\ell on our 10 111e ,.,. • • co nfl of ••d 0 1 a t d g both • !• d cone tit "' int $OV111t y V 0 010 • m!nu1 of llf! co •n cou 1e n f l) The Social Security b 11 111e we1 e • ne 01 ·~ d 10 • 11~v "" \\ h ch \\ 111 pass Co?f~css 1n a "'& no 1nd d \ tnC• ol No Ill O ">' •• ll! wost 11to ee thMc~ Nerti\ 1971 1\11! amoni? other things o 11 ](I We~t t ono ~ad w• e v nt 11 t1 1te1 111e...:• • o 1n 6? ;c AUT0~1ATIC A.I LY increa(e eo E•1• 10s 1 '""' 10 111e •& t • 1he pensions of the 26 n11lhon l n• of 11d o • !l>eM"t So h ,,.. l<I E•1• , cna •• d e111e • 1 n• plus recc1v1ng Soc al Security af " ' • t1st1nce cl u~oo lte benf'f1ts "hene\er the con " II oatlt • to"' cf S8~ t."' ~ 111 net ,..,u h u~ 30 wn • ona 1~e s umer price 1nde~ 1n<'rease~ •o u h t l s f y lne ol sald LO l I I , Th b II 1 And "' 011 nwes • • " ono~T o" a eas ,, percen1 IS 1 11 eo • ~ enc 01 100 co •a '" \\as scheduled to become la\v '" ce r ne or s•" 'tro loo II be I 1 ~~ 1"""'" Seutn 77& G E•st •on" in 1!170 it Wt come a1v ••d cen o "" to '" , .. ~. ,....., in 1971 ~ .... ,. SCIUlh 0 •• lO Fest • 0 ., ~·.., , .... , ne •131 let le Tiit Only a rew \Cars ago pont olbeonnn• D I P d I I h Th• 1 e•I add t<, 01 w11 ~ 1~ lo.is emocra ic re~1 en o nson v, Lido N~w1>er1 Be•<h C&l tr" a rejected tying Socia l Securitv !er II<• PU POI• of l>tY "' olll QU on• b sacu e" !>• ,, d o~e11 01 T v" " encrits to lhe consumfr price 1~!1 c~• ce1 1nd er1>en"s cl !ht Tiuslt• index as ;in Intolerable ad 1"'1011•, 01 tfl J•nuarv 10 •I 1n1ss1on that \\(' cou!dn f con secu11 TY ,t..LL ED SEll.v ces lrol nflallon Dur ng the l"'"'s ~T u r• '"Ill en s T~•l)do 011 1 Shl\ered 1n print llhenr.\f'r • • t nl Se(r~ • v "'" !his hnk '~a!i propose d ,.u~ '""' N•wPO ' M• be t "" "e • because 1 argued 11 11n11lrl <•"'II 11'1:1 w ~ CMo v P o 1 ~wca lln•<" c1 e • J1nu• • 2' ·~~ buil d inflatio n tn!o !he SociBI l'tb u1rv 1•1'1I 1~1 1 LEG A.1 !'\OTJCE ___ L_E_G_AL NOTT_f _E __ 1 ----- • • ( • I 01 y I F.G 'I NOTICE NOl Cf lO CR!O TOl!5 SI.I "'°' Olt COU~T OF THI' STATE 0' C:illL t'OltN ill FOlt THE COUNTY OF Olt,t..NOE No ill Hill Ei •~ A1 V~nlt~d I~ I ON~ I Ml • V 0 ~ f St~V ii 0,<0AS " NOT CE ~ M(J!E ~Y (;!VE~ ¢ "t r ,II o ' o! Tl• ~bov• 111m~d 11"•11 n 1111 I D OM• hi~ 119 ( a rfl~ 1111 II~ "'" 11 d d•t•Oen • • t<1u d o f • 1~1m w •II 111~ not.,u v voucht I n I '"' cr , o! !tie c 1 I( 01 flt 1bove "" 11~11cou 1 o ~ o ~unt tntm w nl 111• n~ceua v vcu<"•n c ht ~" fl• ,.~~d. Tie elf ( 0 MCl>•o O M """o nev 1 l• v ISOO Ad•m illv•nu~ COi • Me • t?Ul """th • lie Dec• e! bu\ nt u ot flt u<ld• 1 •n•d n I m1 ,5 P• 1nnt e ~· Ht • of Uri II<"(~'" .. "" ..... en1>1 I e th•ltcub c•ono 11 1 11o t• I Ot tlS 1'abt'u11 • I "" ~c111 .. o ~ e~tcu o c w1..i11·•~• "''"'"ll oe tn M(~ttl 0 111 llot A41m, ••tllUI c 11ta M••• C•I r...o 1 n1u 'rt 11 I ) S ... JJ,j All ........ ftf' l!Zl<Ult ""~ f5llfft Ortnt • COi 01 v F11Yu1rv' u 1l XI tll •• '9.S.7 -------LEGAL NOTICI ---Sv;;1ti0i'Co u 11t o" TH•--1 5fAT! OF C:,t..t.l•Olt Nt,t.. ro• THIE COUNTY OF OltANOI NO A.a1'1 HOTIC I 0' HIAltlNO or ,.,,,TrON t<u ow tu n 1n NOTIC" TO Cll'FO TOltS Il l.ILK TJtl.NSFElt •• Bur rough s Pay~ DI\ 1d cnd If y•1i1 •t• "'' 1111119 Telrpho"t Aniw•rin9 St,., c• Y•11 •r• llOt 9e1tln9 ALL of you r call1 TELEPHONE ANSWERING IUREAU I See by Todays Want Ads • rr 011 1 I I J\ olO! lC [ l\ l 0 (' ('11 l I~ v ld I r<'fCl it 111011,. 01 r an~ 10 1 (llJOut 11 BIKE ChC'ck po1ta1 o DOOl\IE TP foi nfo • Mc1 c,s 11 1 .ii deal i\ov tip 1 ttl 1110 11 r he I l'Cl Ill \ ork or do ut ,s! e plra.."t'~ \JI 1 tAkf"~ l! ~ b1b).slttcr UuH romr.1 " plr1r ' h bat y fooJ ~I ~npl'I ~ e Tle I) '" 1rh~rho1 ;:h \\I'll Jm I; ? t 1 ~ ln1m<'n.: l;i te (lnr our 13 nt~ tn Rtn! or Char1t r <'18.83 hca "' • lie ef A dn 1 ~ trr !tu~ hoa1 n11\Jbt \OU II nerd A \l 1rl!n c:h/llr ' Its only '"' P .1ct To <\ \1 .1rd cd 1'011 ,..oaAT• 0 '" Wit.I. ,t..NO Lit Tlll5 01' ACINl lNllTltATION WITH 1,==============================~-==:..-----------1 THEW t.L.,,.MN•)llO f:t •I• OI Hutl! 1t1vmo"4 ""°"'"""'"' •• ••ltd NOTICE IS NElllleV G VEN Tiii! Donold N• I Monl•llll'l•N ,,., I I.cl llf • " • .. ~ ri ""' lflr •rol>ltt rA w t 1,..j tor L• ~ , nt ,t..dm nl1t 1 "'" wit~ llt<W ,. • n• ..., ti• ""Cl' IO "'" t~ < m"'I ¢ Iv "'' PtrllCV . ' •nd 1111 !fl• mo 1~d 11 •t• 01 lltl ~I ti>• tt"'~ li.1 ~ I for ,,~fUllV H 191 ~ t )O •m "1111 cou•I-" cl D•PI Im ~ Hp, J (If 11 d COOi ! I I JI» C'~e C....•• 0r¥t Wtll In 11\f C lv o 51110 1111Ctle111 Ct1p0 ~"' 111 • ' 1111 'l/,$tJOHN cw~ v c:i.n.. "·~· &.. "'""' • t l:M.I 11fll Slntl Ctole ~· C:11f,_,A 1 11'17 T11 ffll) '*''"' llf2 110 """"" ... htlltflt l'~tv>W Or,_ C:Otal DI ff ll'lltl f'"tll 111rp t It. If 01 IQJ-11 USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH START TH E NEWYEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS • y, gal now $11" MUTUAL FUNDS •• " "' •• ... "' ' , ,, .. Complete-Nelv York Stock List ' " "' ' " " '" "' " ' .. " " , .. " " • ' • "' " '" " • ,,, " • 11•"' ,. " " " " ' " '" " •• " • '" " ". " •• " .. ' " ,. ' . • .. . " • " " -B- . , •l .. '1' ' • I ' • ! : " •• 00 ,, ~. .. " ~· " ' ' . .. .. . .. 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"" ~·-:. r-~' ~~ :. .. ~ JJ • -Iii. i' '1 •-l\of1 1 -\'f I "' -.. ,., ll •-_/ ' u, O<i .• -1·"' 1-)0tf ..... 1'1 .. ,,,,,., .. ,.,,. ............... ., .................... ,,,.,..,111 .. .,.,1 CMt.I l'lltJI IAw Ci.. °''I " ;i. + .. . f . IJ\~ 1, " .. ~ ' ' -. tJ \ + • llll'J -•• Market Mixed In Heavy Trade NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market turned mixed on hea\ly turnover Tuesday At the final bell the Dow Jones Industr1a1 Average was off 2 33 points at 879 79 But advances led declines, 728 to 664 A volume of around 23 000 000 shares compar ed wtth Mondays all time record or 25 590 000 shares Closing prices Included AM T&T 62 Beth St 23'io up % Chrysler 27 11 up <I DuPont 143 of! 2 Ford 56~ Gen El 104 ofr J 1.4 Gen lilotor~ 81 V.. up V.. and IBl\f 338\1• orr 21• "' • ,,, • • -UV-,. " ' • " • ,1 'II '" ,\ • .. ' ' .. '" ~· " " " J• ., ... ' . ,., ,,, J9!o '" ' . , " ' • i,~ " . .. J n. • • ' "' • ~ ,, , ~ . , . ' . ll! ll~· :1111. ;;'" 7! I n I *t\\ 1t • 0 • 10 ,.. .. 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'" ~.,.,_,,, ,i, + i! 11 .. -~ ,J" ~ il •• • + • !~. -. ::1' = .• "' ... -,._ olJ~J -• h l o -I , > \ •• • • J 2 DAIL V PILOT T11tsday, Ftb/'\Ja"I' •. 1971 CHECKING •UP• Has A11yo11e Seen Frog Drink Water? well , tt 1truck m,; as a a requirement for ad-eut. Some of hl5 friends still waste." vancement ln police work," live there. He returned lo c0Uege and Brown said. "l have the shorlest hair applied for a job as a police The yOW'lg olficer will .walk In the crowd now," he 5ahl, Ex-hippie Walking Beat cadet in 1969. 1 night beat in the area of ~t they just kid me about HONOLULU (UPl)-Jerrold tagious. someone says 'hty 1 hippie-style Ufe he never ''The department asked me Waikiki where he used to hang it." Brown has 15tarttd walking a what's that cop doing here?' used drugs. He u\d he decided to keep going to school, thatl---------,-.. -.. -=--,---0 -------- and everybody, including me, to change his ways after al· they'd pay. I enjoy working police beat in the same picks it up and it goes on." tending rock concerts. and lea~ning at the same lime neighborhood where he used Bro~:n said that while living "Some of those people , . . and an education is beromlng to hang out as a long·haired1 1-=--=.::..:=.=::__==~'c__:.::__:.:._:::__:_:___c..:__:_ ___________ ---" I hippie. Brown, 2tl, got his badge after achieving the highest scholastic mark ever scored at lionolulu Police Recruit Schoal -99.1 percent. "Two years ago J was a college student, sort of trip- ping out \Vith everyone else," USHER'S GREEN STRIPE SCOTCH 1/2 gal. now ... Revolutionizes Denture Wearing Tht nearetl thin1. to havin1 .rour Oft'n teeth i• poea1hlt now With • pla1tic cream di$COvuy that M:tu- a 11 y holdf both "upper•" !Ind "lowers" 11 never before pot111blt. tect sum• from bn1~1. You m,1f bite hllldtr, thew betlr.r, eat fll(M'I naturally. F1xoor.NT ~Y help you ~ moce clearly, be more .11!1 uf!t. The special pencil·point d1spen1tt lttl you 1pot f1xoor.NT w1th prt:· ci,.1on •.. whttt needed? By L. fd. BOYD toill be used in CfIECXING Brown recalled. UP wherever pos.tible. Ad· "The way I talked then was START THE NEWYEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS $11" ll'1 1 revolutionary discovery called Fixoor.NT•, for daily ho~t u11t . (U.S. Pat. i3,003,988l With FLXOOENT many dtntu.rt. wu.ren may eat. ~k. l1ut~· with htt.le worry of dtnturn rommg l~. Ont application m•Y l11t for houn. ~nture11 that fit art t~­ tial to health. Set your dcn111t rc(lllarly. Get Ul)'-10-Uilt. fJXOOltt<lf Denture Adh c11v1 Cream at a.11 WHERE A GIRL is brought dres.1: /.etters to L. M. Boyd . that everything the police did up has much to do with how P. o. Box 1875, Newport was wrong. [ fLXODl':~'T lorm.1 an elut1c mem· brant that hf.!pg abr.orh the shock of bitina: and cbewinc-helpt pro-""" "'"'"'"" she walks. In Northern Beach , Calif., 92660. "Antipolice yelling is con· Europe, for example, thet-----'--'-----------'---'--"---- kOIOCD tcOTCll WlfSIC'l-N rllOClf·UGMllOIMM OISllUllS ~ .• lDIJl$'tlU!, ff.• tt1l young ladies take long strides, _.,,,,, almost in a masculine man- ner. In Japan. ho .... ·ever, they mintt along .,.dth little steps. shuffling somewhat. The American girl's walk is about midway between the two, depending on whether. she's a city t.fouse or a country mouse. The rural ladies, who step nut briskly, are said to be easier for a fellow to walk y.•ith. But big town girls. like y.·omen who are overweight, are known to have a finer sense of balance and make · better dancers. NO RECORD can be found thal anybody anywhere ever saw a frog take a drink of water ... OUR LANGUAGE i\fAN s.ays lhat English word \\'ith the largest number of different definitions is "sel'' , , . JUST ABOUT a fourth of all the patents registered at the U.S. Patent Office have ,something to do with cars. ''OU'VE HEARD all about the computer experts who purport to match up com- palible couples. But have you heard about the en- cephelograph specialists who claim to do likewise? If a man's and a woman's brain waves mesh properly, these authorities aver, the pair can get along together dandily. So a fey,· little money-making operalors now adverlise they match up the brain waves of single girls and eligible bachelors. Our Love and War man is skeptical. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "Who is going to y,•in the next presidential election? The talle r of the two candidates. it's a cinch. Isn't it a fact !he taller man has won every time in this century?'' A. Almost a fact. But not quite. The record book savs both President Nixon and· Hubert Humphrey are 5-feet-11-inches. And · it's a certainty the sloping-shouldered Wende 11 Willkie was taller than Presi· dent r~ranklin D. Roosevelt whn wasn't nn. his feel much because or his ailments in those days . . Q. "\Vhat poison kills the most people?" A, Carbon monoxide , if you count gases. OPEN QUESTION -Why is it river ice is transparent y.•hile Jake ice isn't? CUST0!\1ER SERVICE -Q. "Isn't pepper in food a preservative?'' A. Cerlainly is. Whars noteworthy about that is the science boys only proved it to be such :W years ago .• Q. "How many of the girls >A·ho go to cnllege ac- tually get their degrees?" A. Little better than half . Your q1111st in 11.~ nnd cn1n· me11ts are we/co r11cd. and Ne,vport Girl To Compete In Contest Dee Dee Penninglon, 17, !\fiss Ney.•port Beach has been named Miss Junior Achieve- ment of Orange County South. She will compete with 16 olher Miss JAs representing Souther111 Calirornia Centers in a contest to be held March '4 in Los Angeles. Mis!ii Pennini;iton is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. OonRld Pen nington of Balboa Island and is a senior at Corona de! Mar Hii;?h School. She is president of the .Junior Achieven1en1 Companv o r Creative Enterprises y.•hich is counseled by Parific 1.-lotor and Trucking and Co. Runners up are Rayan111e !\farie Sml!h . 16. a senior at Estancia High School and cor- porate se(retary for Now Set, counseled by Collins Radio, and Sonnie Stone, a sophomore at ffuntiAgton Beach High School ~nd a member of the board of Creative Enterprlsts. Jun ior Achievement is 111 na· tia\81 organitation for high liChool lltudcnl.!J interested in business. Under the guidance or businessmen the high school atudenl.s form cnmpanieli. ilisue stock. market R product. 11nd 111 1nr end or the school year. dl~solve th fl companies and pay dividends to thelr sh11rtholders. Come see our dwe'llgive A free Azalea, to be exact. If you'd li ke one, just stop in our ne w Costa Mesa office. From now through February 12, we're having Open House to give you a chance to see that our beautiful new building hasn't turned , our heads. Our people are still friendly. If not friendlier. And our complete escrow serv ices, home loans, and Umpteen Ways To Save are just as nice as ever. Furthermore, we're now easy to get to-right in Harbor Center, on the corner of Ha rbor Boulevard and Wil- son. ·So drop by. We'll have your bloom- ing little green waiting, plus special kids' balloons, free coffee and refreshments and lots of smiles to help make this the nicest Open House a beautiful new build ing ever had . Open house hours: Mon.-Thur. 9-4; Fri. 9-8. Glendale Federal Savings-Costa Mesa Corner of Harbor Boulc\'ll'd It Wison. (Harbor Center) Frie Alalra co·cclcblllion with Oii' Newport office at 500 Newport Center Drive. ' • 1. /7 < ' ' Lag11na Beaeh Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VOL b4, NO. 34, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA ·TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1971 TEN CENTS Christmas 'Happening' Cost Laguna $65,800 The Christmas "happening" tha t lured 20,000 young people to Laguna Canyon for a three·day roek feslival cost the city of Laguna Beach $65.1129.57. city manager LawrenC'e Rose announced I~ da~·. The figure was revealed in ll final tabulation of costs directl v attributable to the "happening" and d0es not include regular expense that would have gone on throughout the period (s uch as regular police shifts /, RC>Se' said. St1uly Pending Nor does il include an additional com. pensation for department heads and other salaried pertOMe\ who w o r k e d throughout the holiday without drawing overUme. Added to the $65,829 direct cost Wtal in Rose 's statement, is the sum of S2,!94.69 for items that had been budgeted for the police and fire departments, but were purchased earlier than anticipated because of the hap- pening. Also added, is $.1,999.26 for equipment purchases for both departments which had · not yet bee.n budgeted. but which v.·ill be of continuing use, Rose said. Grand total in the tabulation, through Jan. 20, is $72,123.52, represenung direct costs for items totally consumed. along with budgeted and unbudgeted purchases which will remain usable. The city manager emphasized that a ·substantial portiOn of the total can be taken care of without special cash allocations, through budget sh i f Is, possibly involving delay of some an· ticipated budget expenditures. Precise allocation of funds is still being determ,in- ed . Rose said. Overtime salaries \$42,433) and public · worke equipment rental ($10,405) make up the bulk of the direct cost. Clean-up e<>st reported by the public work! department amounted to $4.046.68. The overtime. salary figure is broken down as follows : Police , $23,007 .95 Special deputies. $6.990.00 Mounted Posse, SS.070.00 Fire Department. $885.39 Admini!tration. $724.82 Engineering. $558.90 Street, $2,306.28 Bus line, $20.46 Parks, $2.410.72 Automotive, $508.95 Totil salaries:. $42.48.),47 • < • ' Services and supplies for lhe police department cost $8,119.01 ; pubttc works departmenl. $10,404.91 ; and fire depart- ment, $50.40. Headquarters cost is listed at $725. lO and clean.up cost $4.046.68. More than al county law enforcement agencies~ joined with Laguna Beach in controlling the three-day happening, each municipality footing Ifs own bill under mutual aid pacts. Cost to the countywas estimated in e:ccess of $12,000. County Safe; T1·emor Hits County's Thomas Hangs Onto Joh · l 6.5 Reading Sy JACK BROBACK Of Ille Dlllr ,.!lllP Sl•H County Adm lnistrative Officer Robert E. Thomas was not firea this morning. Supervisor Ralph Clark surprised many \\'hen he proposed a lengthy study of the CAO and hi11 office. His motion '"'as adopted by +l vote "'ith supervisor :Robert ~attin dissent.ing. Battin had proposed last week that Thomas resign at once or be. fired. ' South Pacific Splashdo\vn For Apollonauts ABOARD USS NEW ORLEANS (API -The Apollo 14 explorers splashed down in the Soulh Pacific Tuesday, ending a nine-day voyage of discovery that scientists say "'iii vastly enrich man's knowledge of the moon. Alan 8. Shepard Jr .. Edgar D. f\.1itchel\ and Stuart A. Roosa hit the water after a blazing re-entry through the earth's atmosphere. During the re-entry. which started v.·hen the command ship Kitty Hawk slammed into the atmosphere at 24,596 miles an hour. the temperature on the proleetive heat shield reached more than 5.000 degrees. The astronauts were to be taken by helicopter to the cruiser New Orleans and placed in quarantine in a sealed trailer below decks. The thickening atmosphere a o d parachutes slowed the speed for a gentle drop into warm Polynesian "'aters. The splashdov.•n ended man's third and most scientifically rewarding journey to the surface of the moon. Shepard and ~1itchell spent 331., hours tn the rugged Fra Mauro highlands . ln t"·o moon "'aiks, lhey pro"·!ed I.he barren, dusty nurfa ce for approximately nine hours and collected a record 95 pounds of rocks and lunar soil. some of which may date 4.6 bi llion years to the birth of the moon. Orange Coast \\'ealher \Vednesday's \.l'eather "·on't be as earth shaking as today's. UM>k for sunny skies and \\'armer temp- eratures \.l'ith the mercury su rg· ing into the 70s along the Orange Coast. INSIDE TOP/\l' ~fusical comedy ot the Laguna ~fot1/ton. P/ayhlluse and dee p drama at UC l rvh1t comprise this 1oeck'1 open ing! in. local th«attr, See E'ntertatnment, Page 19. C•Ulltntl• f Cflt(l!lllt U• n (lltHltltd tt.H (Mtkl II P.1111 ~tlkK I Dl'lll'<ll ' E11'9r .. l "''' • IMtrttl•-1 lloU 11111•11C• 1 .. n Mtrox-u All• L•llCll,.. U M•fl'lttl L1<111'" f Mtvlt1 U·1' Ml/1 ... 1 l'wllll1 11 Mlli.MI MIWI t or...-Ctvnl' t SrJv!I l'ffltr 1t """' 1 .. ,, Sled! Marlleh 1 .. 11 T1 .. ~l1lll1t It 'l'llMll'f'I , .. ,. w .. f!IW • '#11111 '#1111 II w-·1 M9" 1).lt Wwllll Nf'ln .. , Today Clark's approved motion calls for a committee .of supervisors, Wilham Phillips, Ronald Caspers and David Baker, to "audit the conduct of the chief administrative officer and every aspect of the work assigned to his of· fice ." Clark also moved that the rommitlee should "work closely with Ute grand }ury to develop recommendations to ensure the efllciency, economy and responsiveness of ou r government to the needs cf the people." The motion called fer a committee to be prepared to report immediately after the conclusion of fhe new budget. Such budget studies are usqa/!y npt com· pleted until well into July. Clark said the subject of the CAO had generated a great deal of heat during the past seven days, but very litUe light. "Surely if the charges which our chairman has made are accurate every citizen, officeholder .11nd taxpayer has reason !or deep concern and significant changes should be made," Clark said. "On the other hand, if lhe dire con- sequences predicted by the opponents of change are accurale we would err • gravely to act now." Supervisor Caspers, who had becked Battin without question last v.·eek on lhe immediate. firing of Thomas quickly seconded Clark's motion , "because the facts have been distorted and I do not think we should act in haste." Clark first named -Phillips and Caspers to the study commillee but added Baker when the latter said he wanted tn serve on the group. Boys Club Plans Teen Rocle Dance \\1ith Tao and His Friends, a local rock group , providing MJUnds of the hour, members of Laguna Beach's Teen Drop- in Club will present a Valentine's Dance from 8 p.m. to midnight Saturday at the Boys Club, 1085 Laguna Canyon Road. Admission will be 50 cents for members. $1 for guests. Drop-in Club membership cards may be purchased at the city Recreation Office, 175 N. Coast Highwa y, during the week. The Boys' Club game room will be open for pool, table tennis and other table game·s during the evening and refreshments will be available. . MIDNIGHT MISSION BUILDING COLLAPSES IN QUAKE; BUILDING A ·TOTAL LOSS With One Brief Jolt, 1 Home for the Homeless on LA'• Skid '"Row 11 Reduced to·Rubbfe ' Reagan Declares , Emergency State In Los Ai1geles SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan declared a state of emergency in Los An· ge!es County today because of the earth· quake that struck Southern California. The governor said he would ~sk Pres· idenl Nixon to take similar acuon at lhe federal level. "I have assured Los Angeles C.OUnty officials that the state of California will provide whatever assistance and resourc· es may be needed to deal with the effects of the quake," Reagan said. Reagan was briefed 011 the earthquake situation by his Of!ice of Emergency Services this morning and then said the state would make" available wha tever aid local authorities needed in dealing with the problem. There were no immediate plans for lhe governor to visit L06 Angeles. which is his home. But his press office said those pla11s would depend on further reports from the scene later in the day. The State Department of Mental Hy· giene already had cleared sections of Camarillo State Hospital to take in pa - tients from a damaged hospital in the earthquake area. Black An1erican Noted WASHINGTON !UPI) -The Navy plans to name a destroyer escort after Ensign Je11se L. Brown, the firsl black American killed in action in !he Korean War. Brown was from Hattiesburg, Mis!. i ·aguna Escapes Effects Of Morning ·Earthquake By BARBARA KREIBICH Cf !ht DallV l'lltt Sl1tt Laguna Beach city ollicia\s, jolted out of their beds with the rest of the Art Colony's residents by this morning's earthquake. were relieved to find the city had etime through v.•ithout even minor damage . Gas and electric lines . water lines and hillside streets were h a st i 1 y surveyed. All were intact. A Southern California Ga! Company spokesman said some men from Orange County might be sent to Los Angeles to help overworked crews in that area. Tex Smith, manager of the South Coast County Water District said that while no immediate damage was noted, severe tremors can crack or dislodge older water pipes causing leaks to appear days later. The quake caused minor inconvenienee to a few dcwntown Lagtina atores. Fore.st Avenue pharmacies reported bottles of lntions, linaments and cosmetics had tumbled from shelves, leaving a messy clean-up job. Laguna Beach schools were in business es usual. Superintendent Dr. William Ullom said an Initial check of all school buildings had revealed no major damage. Librarian Clifford Cave arrived at work lo find a few books had fallen o{f the library shelves. Former Mayor Glenn Vedder, whose geologist Min made the offici•l U.S. geological survey of the area from .Camp Pend leton to the Santa Ana River, made his earthquake. check via the hang:lng lamps in his Jiving room, as usual. ''When "'e had the last offshore quake," said Vedder. "They sort of jig· gled up and down . This morning they were in a definite east·west swing, but also flipping up an down a little." · Noting that "You can hardly lake a step without running into an eartbquake fault around here," Vedder said Laguna is fortunate ln having a fairly solid rock base. as opposed to loose. gravelly ground wilh a high water table that "shakes like jelly." This fact, he said, saved Laguna from severe damage in the 1933 earlhquake. "The epicenter was right ()ff the Newport jetty.'' said Vedder, "but we only lo.st a few chimneys while Compton, muoh farther away, got the worst of the damage because of its wistable geological base." Nearest earthquake fault to Laguna, Vedder said, is. the Jnglewood·Newport fault that nms south from Inglewood, through Signat'Hill and Seal Beach, going offshore in the area of the Santa Ana River. It i.'l appro:cimately three miles offshore In the Laguna area , be said. Betwee11 Irvine, Lagu1ta Battin, 'Targets' At $100 Fete Newport Okays Land Talks Newport Beacb .11greed ft1onday night to iniliation ol formal talks between officials of Laguna Beach on the an· nexation and development of unin· corporatcd land betwetn the two cities. The talks expected to be at the coun· cilmanic committee level, will focus on 8 determination of boundaries. according to Newport Beach Ma:yor Ed Hirth . Although it h11$ been presumed the 3.500 acrt:s would most likely be almost equally divided between the two coastal communities, Laguna Councilmen Roy Holm 1ald last week discuMion he ha s had with Irvine efflcials indicate Laguna may get the Uoo's sbart. Holm who has been working since September in .negotiations with officials or lhe Irvine Company, which owns the entire stretch, said Laguna Beach may get as much as 2.500 acres. The Newport councit:1 atlion Monday night came at Hlrth 's suggestion. He told fellow councilmen, "We wlsh to Initiate planning of the coastal area blllwten Newport Stach 11nd Lagune Beach. Including determining boundaries, jolntly with the city of Laguna Beach." Hirth called the action one of "policy· ~ttlng'' that will eventually lead to the establishment of committees to carry ou1 the plannlng phase. l At Its last meeting, lhe Lagu na Beach City Council had IMtructed City Manager Lawrence Rose to continue anne.:cation talks between tbe company and Newport Beach. Irvine Compepy officials last week bad told lhe DAILY PILOT lhll It. plans for the 3.&-mlle strip are less than lwo Yel\l'I from completion. They declined to outline any speclflcs involved in their cutre.nt thinking on lbe use, sayiag only plans "will probably lnclude rtcr"'tlon1l and r e so r t f.11 cilitle.s." These: 3re e:cpected to Include one or more hi1b·ri11e bot.ti developments. Some unlikely guests from the Irvine C.Ompany will a t le n d Supervisor Robert W. BatUn's SlOO per person fund raising reception tonight. Jn respon5e to an Inquiry a com· pany spokesman said Rictlard Reese. vice president for plennlng. and James Taylor, director ·of Gener11·1 Planning Administration, wculd attend the Villa Fontan1 affair, The Irvine Company spokesman said, "We were lnvit~ to attend so we wUI have represenlltlves there as an act of courtesy to the chairman of the board.'' Blttln has mado the Irvine Com· pany one of his prtnclpal t.araets in his two years In offici. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Cf ltl• 0111r ""'' si.tt Orange County ~scaped unscathed at 6:02 a.m. today as a major earthquake rocked the loundations o[ home to 10 million Californians with death, destruc> tion and predawn panic. The effects even reached out into space, as four NASA stations tracking the incoming Apollo 14 astronauts were knocked out. Backup systems imrTiedialely took .over the complex job, but many of the around· bound were less fortunate. By mid-morning the known death toll w.11a 16, all in the hard·hit San Fernando Valley region and in central Los Angeles. Ominous tones were added to the poten- tial death toll today, with disclosure .at noon that 54 persons are missing in lhe rubble of the antiquated VA Hospital. Two buildings at the 420·bed facility in the lower San Gabriel Mountains were leveled by the rackil'lg temblor. The rocking and rolling jolt -equal lo the 19.13 Long Beach disaster - was estimated at 6.5 on the Richter Scale, but was so sharp it jolted the.• Caltech seismograph needle off its graph. Repeated aftershocks followed through the morning, 50 or more. Buildings from Skid Row to exclusive suburbs crumbled as the earth's crust shuddered and vertical cracks appeared in Los Angeles• largest water reservoir towering above a subdivision. Supposedly earthquake-proof high-rise towers of up to 52 stories in downtown Los Angel~ shimmied like hula dancers. shattering windows and cracking walls. Hospitals throughout the Los Angeles Basin reported an influx of injured - some flown by helicopter -and many suffering serious cuts from nying glass. Seven vi ctims died in the valley area VA hospital. The death toll included two heart at. tack victims. a drifter crushed when a Skid Row mission collapsed in a crescendo of crumbled brick and a pa· tient in a suburban sanitarium. Van Norman Dam was rapidly develop. Ing new and more .grave fissures shortly before 11 a.m., as desperate workers trie'ct to drain it. Continuing aftershocks kept its waters sloshing like coffee in a mug as the 8 billion • plus gallons threatened to cascade down the San Fernando Valley. Dam Supervisor Robert E. Noel described !he quake centered in rugged San Gabriel Mountains vividly. "lt was •thumpln' and jumpin' and knocked everything out of our kitchen," he said. Throughout the largest concentration of population in Cali!omia chaos reigned as · harassed authorllles tried to deal with the worst of it. Pov.·er lines fell popping like spark-spit- ting snakes and igniting a series of fires. Gas mains broke. Brick plummeted from aging apartment buildings. Looting was reported widespread in some arl!aS, as panicked residents car· ried boxes and paper bags o{ valuablts away with them. The Golden lState Freeway was closed due to pavement crack! and bridgl!s and overpasses were reported threatenl!d in some areas. "I was in my kitchen:· iaid one robe- clad housewife. "I fell down and sl3rted praying." Control towers at Van Nuys and Burbtank Alrporta In the devastated bedroom of the basin, the San Fernando Valley, were damaged and the FAA sus- pcndt:d all flight activity, A pilot flying over the vast city when tht temblor -accomptnied by an. ominous rumble and the creak Rnd groan of wrenching homes -witnessed It. I .. • Z OAIL r PILOT SC Atkins 'Was There' Susan Involved; Kasabian Called Back LO& ANGELES (AP) -Susan "Sadie" Atkins, convk:ted with two other young v.·omen and Charles A1anson in the Sharon Tate murders, took the wllness stand in a surprise move today and uld she wa& involved in the killings. Her attorney, Daye Shinn, asked: •·were you personally involved In the killlng.s at tht. Tate home on Aug. 9, J969?" "Yes," replied the slim, dark·hairtd member of l\1anson's hippie-type clan. Earlier, attorneys disclosed that Linda Kasabian. star prosecution wilnes! in the convictio~. Is being called back from New Hampshire after testimony that a few days before the slayings Before Planners she ,.Id she planned to kW ,..,. ''J>igo." Deputy Olat. Atty. Vinctnt T. BugUoal l&!d Mrs. Kasabian, 21, b scheduled to apptar next Tuesday at the penalty trial or !he four convicted or first-degree murder and ronapl.racy. The surprise testimony 11onday of Catherine "Gypsy," Share, 28. brought objections from both prosecutioo and defense. Distraught and sometimes weeping, Miss Share said she had decided to "snitch" becaUSe she was afraid of lo.sing custody of her baby. Bugliosi said he is arranging for Mrs. Kasabian's return at the request of ~1arusoo'& attorney, Irving Kanarek. She hu been living in Milford, N.H., 1inco her 18 d1y1 of testimony 111t August Her Beverly HillJ attorney, Gary Fleischman, said he told her by te lephone last night she was being called as a defense witness. "Actually. she doesn't CMSider herself a witness for either side," Fleischman said. "She just wants to tell the truth about what happened, and if the defense want.! to call her, that's fine with her." fi11ss Share testified that ¥lhen she heard about the August 1969 murders she immediately felt that Mrs. Kasablan, Leslie Van Houten and Susan Alkins were the killers. Write Hanoi League Director Asks High Rise Height Limit Urges Former Navy POW The treatment of prisoners in North Vietnamese POW camps is a humanitarian issue, that should concern every American, according to Navy Lt. Robert Frishman, a former POW. A director of the Laguna Beach Civic League urged lowering the height on the planning commission's proposed C-R Zone (beachfront·hotel zone) in an 1d· joumed session Monday night. Fred h-1archand, an engineer and board member of the league, set fortb four provisions he felt would be acceptable to the community Including a maximum building height of 35 feet measured from the center of the street. Using letters and comments gained from a cross section of the community, ltfarchand said the league's committee on the C.R Zone bas arrived at a proposal . it believes is acceptable. Added to the height restriction, which conflicts with a present 100 foot max· imum now in the ordinance, the League suggests a density of 1000 square feet of net lot area for each unit as opposed to tbe preseDt 500 square feet and in· * * * High Rise Issue Campaigning Hit As 'Contorted' "High rise bas become a contorted, dirty word," one member of the Downtown Business Association said this morning in att.cklng the emotional cam· paign being waged agalnsl a hJgh ,.;,.. ordinance for Laguna Beach. DBA members, although generally ad· mltting by show or hands they had attended none of the panel discussions and hearings on the subject, agreed that emotions are entering into con· slderatlon of the proposed 100-foot height limit before the council. "Pressure i! being applied to the coun- cil." DBA president Bill Marriner said, contending the council is only trying to do its job of straightening out existing ordinances. Marriner said the real Issue before the council Is settlng and establishing a height limit that will be . consistent for all building construction. He sakl. the five-member council i! also trying to decide where the hotel zone "ill be placed lo the city. One member suggested a group had been organized to make phone calls to residents to emotionalize the Issue. She did not know who was behind the anti·high rise organization, but said she had received reports from friends of their activities. "This is not motherhood and thi! Is not ecology.'' Marriner sa id. "It is just having a set of laws in our community that are understandable by people ether than the Planning Commission." "We should encourage people to listen to the fa cts rather than just say 'I am against it'," he added. DAILY PILOT Nnrplift lellCli leit•M l .. cli CMte Mn• H•lttbltt•• .._. .... ,., ... .., s.c1.-. .. OMHOE (()AST 'UBLISHJNO COMPANY ll11Dert N. w,,, ,, .. iiftnl •r.• l'•blllller Jaelt R. C111ley • Vkt ""''""' ar.• 0--1 Mlllfcer 11iom11 Ka..,.11 l:dl"r 7ho111 1f A. M11r,Jti11e MIMilnl l:tll1W tllchari P. Half SOull'I Orantr Collrltr l:dt""' ""'-Ctltl M ... ~ U1 w .. 1..., Strwt N...,..O IU(fo; m1 Wnl ••lllo• ••*"""' . LllUM aH<1'11 m Fwftl A\lt!We Hll"lllltM Bffd't: ln71 IMdl """"""" .. ,. Clttrllnte: -Nerti! ll ""''"' " .. ' DAILY 'ILOT, •ltto w!lldl i. Olmtll..U ..__ .... ~.,.,._, " ,..1llllt!ll ••11' -'*" ""'" U't' L, R(Mrllol (11111"°"1 fw l'"9M ~ Mt-1 kK11. ttt11 MM.a, Mllllllne..., lffCfl 11P1t1 ,.1111r1fllbl Vallry, .... "lffl'll t9e rl'llMll Mitt-. or_. CNt! ,,_11tllltol c_,-"""'"" ,1,.,., '" rt nu ••• ... l*ol t i ..... .,._, e-tlil, ...... ...., .. , Jft'..t, Cllte Mft.I, 1 .. .,tio ... ,,, .. , 14J-4J21 C1eu1rie; Adftttttt.,. '42·li71 S111 Clell:f11te An D.pa1w•1i 1.1.,.... 4tJ.+Ut Cto'1'!11fit, lt10, <>rw• C-1 PwMhhlllt '°"'"~'· H1 ,,....,. ti.rlR. ll!lnlr1tl9M, •ltwltl ,,.,.,... ., lt1Ww1~ ,... .... ""'' .. '""ootw.<• Wl1.... .-ci.I ,... ,.._ ... If c....,ri,tit _.,,.,, ...,,.. den i~llft ..... .t ,......, l..clll ., .. """ 1111 ... , «;lll!-i., ""'9C:irllolilolt .,. n,.,... U.U ....,rti,.,, n ""'" U.rt-111~' lft1tlt1rr en11M1-.. tt.tl -"'''· creased off.street parking and sldeyards. During study sessions and a previous hearing. planning comm issioners have whittled the height down to a com· promise between SO and 70 feet while retaining the 500 square feet of lot area per unit. "We would like to keep as much unde r cover parking as possible ," Marchand said, falling in line with Com- missioner Robert Hastings' bid to in· cre&!le the number of underground park- ing spaces per building site. Marchand expressed approval of the commission's desire to maintain 40-foot sideyards on a maximum building site with a 2©.foot frontage. The second public hearing on the C-R Zone will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Tues- day, Feb. 16 instead of Monday due to the holiday. Injured Student Remains Serious Aft.er Car Cras1i The teenage daughter of a former Newport Beach official remains in guard- ed condition today at South Coast Com- munity Hospital as a result of injuries suffered Friday in a Laguna Beach traf- fic \ccident. ' - Mary Simpson, 17, is in the intensive care unit of the hospital with a fractured skull. She was near death when rushed to the hospital from the scene of the mishap Friday evening. She is the daughter of Don C. Simpson, former public works director of Newport Beach. Another girl hurt in the accident, Susan Schreck, 16, is in satisfactory condition at the hospital with a broken arm, but also is being kept in the intensive care unit of the hospital. Doctors fear she may also have suffered a concussion in the accident. The IYIO girls are students at Corona de! Mar High School. A third victim of the mishap, Charles Nye , 19, is being treated at the hospital for multiple culs and bruises. The accident occurred al about 9:30 p.m. Friday when the three youths were riding in a car driven by Lawrence Marks, 17. The auto went out of control while coming do .... ·n steep Park Avenue and rolled over several times before coming to rest against a curb. police said. Nye and fifarks are both students at Ne.,.,·port Harbor High School . fiiarks injured his neck in the accident but was treated in the emergency room of the hospital and released. Las Vegas Tre1nhles From LA Earthquake LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Scores of people told police today that they felt the Los Angeles earthquake, centered 300 miles away, but no damage was reported . "A lot of people sloughed it off as another underground nuclear test," a desk sergeant said. He said his door was caused to swing back and forth. Frishman, who spent 683 days in Hanoi, said world public opinion is tbe greatest hope for Americans still held captive by the North Vietnamese. The lean aviator l''as in Newport Be:ich to speak at a fund raising luncheon sponsored by Concern for POWs-MIAs, of Tustin. More than 570 persons heard Frishman encourage all Americans to participate in letter·writing campaigns to demand humane treatment of POWs. "There have been more lettera reeeiv· ed this year from prisoners than in the last six years combined. We see films of prisoners playing basketball and participating in Christmas pageants. "I think this is a big improvement -even ii they are staged -over the kind of things you saw two or three years ago. Then the only films you saw of prisoners showed them being beaten in the streeUs of Hanoi," be said. Frishman said the films and letters show bow sensitive Hanoi has become to public opinion. "It doessn't matter whether you're hard left, hard right, hawk, dove or owl. This is a humanitarian movement and it's the responsibility of every American to do everything in their power to see thet Hanoi live.a up to its agreements in the Geneva Convention," be said. Laguna Buses Get Aid Priority Laguna Beach has received high priori- ty tor funding of its ailing bus service, members of the Planning Commission learned Monday night. According to City Planner Al Autry, who met with a representative of the federal Department of Transportation last week, the city's bid for two-thirds funding of an $80,000 cost for four buses has met with favor. Under terms of the Urban Mass Transportalion Act of 1964, the city can receive up to approximately $54,000, Autry said. The city hopes to speed up service of the aged bus line with four new buses and service equipment by the summer of 1971. Autry said he will file the final ap- plication by Feb. 15. Headon Wreck Fatal to Man A North Hollywood man was killed about 8 a.m, today in a head.on colllrion on La Paz Road about a half mile aorth of Crown Valley Parkway in Laguna NI· guel . Highway Patrol officers said the crrsh involved a sports car and a picku p truck, but the victim's name was being withheld pending notification of ne1t of kin. The incident was not related to today's earthquake, 1 spokesman sald, noUng there was no damage to highways or free- ways within Orange CoWlty. Downtown Businessmen " Ask Car Modification The Downtown Business Association has !lent a letter to the Laguna Beach City Council reque!ting that the proposed pedestrian mall on lower Park Avenue be modJfied to include cars. The council Is now studying plans to close the small portion of the busy street adja~nl to the new library to traffic and build a mall ~·Ith park benches, trees and fountalm . The OBA letter outlines the disadvantages of clos· tng the street and said the park·pro- pone.nts and parking·proponenl1 couJd both be sall.slled with a parkins mAll. The lelter cl11.imcd parking and traffic problems 1n Llguna Be11ch are "second only to the hippie problem" and thRt shoppers rate Art Colony parklna a! poor. Without the Park Avenue acccs!I to the stores located ln the area, the business group $lid a nan-ow alley would have to accommodate both delivery trucks and through traffic. \Vilh the eventual construction of " parking garage al I.he library, the businessmen said ln their letter that the same alley ·would have to provide garagf! access . The parking-conscious group also said the pedestrian mall v•ould eliminate seven sorely needed parklna stalls. As an alternaUve to the mall, the Jetter suggested maldng lower Park Avenue open to one lane of through traffic and providing several diagonal parking ~pnets. In addition to beautifylng the area with trees ind shrubs, the buslnessmen said a cobblestone-type surface c<:>uld bt used to add chATin 10 the parking mall. • Hulse Trial Jury Pick -~ Continues Ul"I Tei..t11oi. PHOTOGRAPHER CRAIG MAILLOUX MOPS UP AT UPI E1rthquake Jo1tl11 Photo Bureau in Downtown Los Angeles Quake Origin Quivers Caused by Sliding Rocks By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ft!e O.ily l'H•I SI.it The ancient Greeks: thought earth- quakes were caused by the god Poseidon, who they called "earth shaker." Today, it is common knowledge thal earth tremors originate in faults wben two rock faces slip off each other. A. R. Kerr, a geology instructor at Orange Coast College, said there are two theories as to tbe cause of the slippage on the faults. The eJastic rebound theory, which Is the. one most often cited, is based on the constant but very gradual shift in the earth's crust. Rocks become distorted but hold their original positions until the stress has accumulated to the point or overcoming the resistance of the rocks and the earth snaps back to an J!_nstrained posi- tion at the fault line. The •·snap" caused by the rebound creates the shock waves known as earth· quakes. The second theory, Kerr said. is that earthquakes are the surface reaction or movement many miles below the earth's surface. He likeJJed it to a ripple on a pond caused by a disturbance below the surface. Regardless of the cause. Kerr said there are-.thr.ee types of quakes -those in which the movement at the fault is horizontal, those in which the move- ment is vertical and those in which the movement is a combination of both. "I would say today's earthquake wa:o; chiefly a lateral shift, though there were probably vertical components in it. "The duration of it and the kind of movement that I felt would also indicate a rolling quake In which there was a long adjustment at the fault ,'' he said. He contrasted the rolling movement of today's quake. which registered 6.S on the .Richter Scale, with the sharp, jarring vertical movement of the Tehachapi quake in 1952 which registered 7.2, killed 14 persons and did extensive damage. The epicenter or today's quake has not been established. but Kerr estimated it could have been in the San Gabriel fault which runs parallel to the main San Andreas fautl for about 90 miles from Mt. Baldy area to Frazier Mt. near the Tejon Pass. There have not been any major quakes along this fault for 150 years. Another likely candidate for the earth· quake is the famous San Andreas fault which runs inland or the San Gabritl fault in a continuous line from the Mex- ican border to Point Arena in Northern California. One of the most disturbing aspects of an earthquake are the aftershocks. Kerr said lhere is no rule on the number or intensity of aftershocks. Follo\\·ing the Alaskan quake In 1964 -which is the most intense one recorded in U.S. history -there were 12,000 aftershocks. Scientists say the aftershocks are a part of the release of accumulated elastic strain. The relief of pressure at the fault itself changes the stress patterns for miles around and the readjustment of these stresses is the cause of the aftershocks. Ted Gets Permit Back BOSTON (UPI) -Sen, Edward fi.1. Kennedy"s driver's license has been reinstated. It had been suspended for a year because he pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of an accident after the death of ~lary Jo Kopechne. Jury selection continued today in the Orange County Superior Court trial of 1 Garden Grove youth acc~d In the hatchet murder of 1 :service station .a l· tendant and later involvement in the killing of a Mission Vi\'io school teacher. Selection of the panel that will rule on the guilt or innocence of Arthur Craig "r..1oose'' Hulse, JS, is expected t.o take at least three more days in whal v.'ill be, both sides predict, 1 lhree- week trial before Judge Ron 1 Id Crookshank. Judge Crookshank refused Monday to disclose the nature of a ~ries of motions argued in his chambers. But It wa~ learned today that two of those motions Involved the constitutionality of the grand jury system and the right to try Hul!e, a minor, in adult court. Hulse was remo~d from juvenile court jurisdiction shortly after his indictment by the Orange County Grand JW'y and ordered to face trial as an adult for the killing of Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21. of Santa Ana. He is also accustd of being an ac- cessory to the murder of l\,rs. Florence ·Nancy Brown , :n , of El Toro. Hulse and three other members or the gang or drifters were rounded up by lawmen in the wake of the two murders. l\1rs. Brown was the victim June 2 of a "devil cult" killing in which portions of her body were devoured in satanic rites after she was slain in an Irvine orange grove. Carlin was killed the night before In a murder that followed the group's rifl ing of his till -a robbery that put $50 in their pockets. Scheduled to appear as a witness for the prosecution in the Hulse trial is Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17. a transient who is accused of both murders. Taylor's double murder trial has been deJayed until April 5. Awaiting trial for both killin gs Is Steven Craig Hurd, 2Q, a transient who goes on trial March 22 and Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17 el Portland, Oregon. Orange County dlslrict attorney's of· ficers are today seeking the extradition from Oregon or young Gibboney. So11nd . of Music Tickets on Sale At High School Tickets "''ent on sale at San Cleme.nte lllgh School today for the school's largest musical production in years -a ren· dilion 0£ the Broadway hit "The Sound of Music." The four·performance run ot the elaborate production will span two weekends-the last in February and the first in March. The tickets for the 8 p.m. performances range in price from $3.50 lfor a seat in the first three rows) to $2. Triton center ""ill be transformed to a theater with the use of a new, pro- fessional sound system and specially pro- cured riser seating for the four performances. Ticket purchasers may reserve seats by either calling in person or by phone to the student activities office at San Clemente lfigh School. Local merchants will begin telling tickets floon as well. Specific locations will be aMounced later. ~HE NAME OF THE GAME There is a commo n practice of private labeling in the cerpet industry. Large deportment stores, chain stores and contractors at new trects hove ficticious names on the samples so that customers cennot easly shop brand name prices. Customers shopping et our store find the price of each quality prominently feotured on the sample booi , because we are competitive. Also , because we feel the customer has e right to kno..: what he is buying, we never change the name on e wmple book. The nome of the g•me is integrity! ALDEN'S SANTA ANA. OltANOI TUSTIN C•ll ••• ALDIN'S RID HILL CAltPITI & DltA,lltllS llJ74 lrvlnt. T111tln, Cal. ........ CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: M ... 1'11111 Thur>., t to 5:l0 -Fri., t to t -Sot., t :JO to I -- I 7 I .. Saddlehaek Today's Fin~ N.Y. Stocks YOL M, NO. 34, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1971 TEN CENTS Thomas Gets Reprieve; County Study Ordered By JACK BROBACK 01 tllt Dill~ l"•IOI Sttll County Administrative Officer Robert E. 'Thomas was not fired this morning. Supervisor Ralph Clark surprised many when he proposed a lengthy study of the CAO snd his office. His motion was adopted by 4-1 vote with supervi50r llobert Battin dissenting. Battin had proposed last v•eek that Thomas resign at once or be fired . Apollo Near Splashdown 111 Pacific SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) - Apollo 14's astronauts accelcr_ated. down a precision course to a landing In the South Pacific today with "a wealth of information·• from the moon and new proof of man 's ability to explore the unknown . With earth pulling Apollo 14 faster and fa ste r to its 24 ,660 miles an hour tntry into the atmosphere, ground control told the. spacemen their path on the Imaginary space corridor leading lo earth was sp: accurate a steering correction was not needed. The helicopter carrier New Orleans was waiting in ideal weather 900 miles south of Samoa to retrieve Alan B. Shepard, Stuart A. ROOsa and E. d g a r D. Mitchell minutes after thell' 1:04 p.m. PST splashdown. They were targeted for a landing 10 miles west ol the international dateline where it v:ill be Wednesday when they i;plash down. Seven hours before s p I a s h d o w n , 1'-1ission Control rc(X>rted that the earth- quake that rocked California interrup~cd ground communications !or one to five minutes. But orficials switched to backup links and reported they were never without flight rontrol capability. The astronauts awakened after four to six hours of sleep and immediately began final preparations for the end of the mission Shepard called "a smashing success.'' 'Legalized Sex' Bill Introduced SACRAf.1ENTO (AP ) -Assemblyman Willie L. Brown Jr. said today he will re-introduce legislation to I e g a Ii z e homosexual and heterosexual sexual acts In private between consenting persons over 21. It v.•ou\d not eliminate penalties relating to sexual conduct between a minor and an adult. Brown unsuccessfully proposed iden- tical legislation last year. Brown, a San Francisco Democrat. said , .;This bill is aimed at freeing our police departments from dealing witR a 'crime' which has no victim. Let's free. the police from peeping into the bedrooms of American citizens." Orange Coast l\'eatber ?i1ednesday·s v.·e&lher won't be. as earlh shaking as today's. Look for sunny skies and warme.r tem~ eratures with th' mercury surg· ing into the 70s along the Orange Coast. INSmE TODAY Afusu;nl comedy ot the Lrig11n0' Moulton Plo11hottse aruj <1ctp drama al UC Irvint compri11e this 111ee/c.'s openings in local th.tater Stt Enllrtarnment, Poge 19. C:.tllttrft(I I C:.~HlllJ!I V• U ci.ult*I 10-11 c:..,,,1<1:1 u o.a1~ "•llcn • OIYW<tl I ICllMrl&I ~111 I lftlfrltll ...... , , .. ,. l'hllJ!(• , .. ,, ...,ew-11 At" Ltft01r\ 1• Mt•"HC L.IC"''°"' I ~·ltt "''' Mutw11 1'111'111 11 Htli.>i'1 H""' S °""'" c........ ' lrlT!t ...,..... " ,_... , .. n lfH• M1,.-11t 1 .. 11 Tti.wl'lefl It '""''"'" 11-lt W•llMI' t W~llt Willi II \11'-'I H-. \)oU w .... .,.... ... • Today Clark's approved motion calls for a rommittee of supervisors, William Phillips, Ronald Caspers and £?avid Baker, to "audit \he conduct of the chief administrative o£flcer and ever"f aspect of the work assigned to his of- fice." Clark also moved that the committee should "work closely with the grand lury to develop recommendations tl'J ensure the efficiency, economy and • eris . . * * * Only Effects rtsponsiveness of our government to the needs or the people." The motion called for a committee to be prepared to report immediately 11fter the ~nclusion or the new budget. Such budget studies are usually not com· pleted until well into July. Clark said the subject of the CAO had generated a great de.al of heat during the past seven days. but very little light. "Surely It the charges which our • • Ill Tremor Jangles S. Coast Nerves By JOHN VALTERZA 0t trlt Dtlly ~lltt ilttf Jangled nerves and swinging i;wag lamps were. about the. only effects of this morning's rolling earthquake along the South Coast. d!Spite t~ h e a v y damage and injury in other parts of the Southland. Officials of the Southern California Edison Company !aid their nuclear generaling station at San Onofre had "absolutely no problems" rrom the 1tmblor, ..which -was le.IL in the are. a al 6:02 a.m. "In fact, no Orange County In· stallations or equipment were damaged this morning," said William D. Fenton, a chief spokesman for the ut.llily firm. The generating station at San Onofre is equipped to withstand tremors much greater than that relt this morning. he said. Checks with school and water districts throughout the Capistrano Bay and Sad- dleback areas re.ported no unusual effects New Occupation Courses Slated For Discussion 'l'Tustees from two South Coast school districts will meet in a special session tonight In Capistrano Beach to discuss the addition of five new courses to I.he successful Regional 0 c c u p a t i o n a I Program. The 8 p.m. special meeting will involve several members of the Capistrano Unified and Laguna Beach Unified school districts. The panel administers the new- on-the-job training programs for high school youths begun last year. The meeting will be in Capistrano District headquarters. Thus far lhe. successful courses are "health aide training and quantity foods preparation. . Tonight the members will examine the chances or adding cosmetology. ornamental horticult~. construction technology. motorcycle repair and auto mechanics. The additi on of the Tustin Unified School District and. Saddleback College into the regional program also will be on the agenda. from lhe main quake and its several aftershocks. Immediate inspections of pre-Field Act buildings in the Capistrano Unified and San Joaquin school districts yielded no reports of damage before schools opened as usual lhis morning. Several water districts checked this morning reported no damage to their equipment. Al San Clement"' police headquarters. switchboards prtdictably 1 i t up throughout the morning. Citizen checks for road conditions - even the curious simply asking if police. sensed the tremors -flowed in through the dawning hours. Even the. unstable palisades sections along El Camino Real fared well in lhe shaking early today. The slumping bluffs held well despite a few weekend slides which caused a pair of freak traffic crashes. No new debris fell today. Spokesmen at San Juan Capistrano Mission -which was devastated by 1 quake in the early 1800s, -said nary a brick fell from its historic buildings early today. Scliool Trust.ees Slielve Parki11g A controversial school bus parking lot "''hich would have occupied part of a Capistrano Beach playground has been shelved. Trusttts of lhe Capistrano Unified School District voted unanimously Mon- day to ask the County Board of Supervisors to abandon La Pla ya Street. a parking lot site favored by community residents. The board also voted to pay architect Leon Hyzan for his plans for the bus lot on the Serra School playground. keep- ing ii on hand in case the supervisors fail to give up the street. The. new plan. which would occupy l..a Pla ya between Victoria Blvd. arid Las Vegas Street. has been endorsed by both the Capistrano Beach Community Association and the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce. Both groups were aclive ln opposing the previous plan. •Not Forever' Constituent Warns Sup ervisor ''Please remember. four years is not forever." i~ the warning sent to Supervisor Ralph Clark by 1 ~1lss1on Viejo housewife who wonders about goings on at the Board of Supervisors recently, Mrs. Constance Benedict, 24182 Spartan St.. planned to attend today's board meeting. Sht wrote Clark Monday. "J am Wrlttng lo you as one of your consUturnts, in the intertst of honesty and falrneas. Whtn a lay person heari; in the news media that a tl)p county nHlcial (Mr. Thomas ) h1 being fired. the person says. 'I hope It l! be.st for t1ll conctmed.' "The same person may think In terms, 'It's good the new board members .are I checking into thrse matters.' But. when one sees that seven more people are going and all becausr the l!ame three men reel it's justified. then it's time to take a deeper look at the lliluation " Mrs. Benedict con!fnut.d: "I do nol know a great deal about county govern· mcnt. ti-1r. Clark. I am mtre.ly asking you to do for these men what I did for you . •·1 fnvestig11ted your b;ickground. I was vrry impressed in the final analy~is and I voted ror you bec11u.se I fell you were a man who cared what hap- pened to Orange county. "tr yoo really are that man. Mr Clark. then I voted w!sely. But If you tee! you are now safely elected. pleage remem~. four yea.rs Is not forever." chairman has made are accurate every cillien. ofllceholder and taxpayer has reason for deep concern and signi,ficant changes should be made," Clark said. "On the other hand , it the dire con- seque nces predicted by the opponents of change are accurate v.•e would err gravely lo act now." . Supervisor Caspers. who had backed Baltin without question last week on the immediate firing of Thomas quickly seconded Clark·s motion. ''because. the. facts have bl!en distorted and 1 do not think ~·e should acl in haste." Clark first named Phillips and Caspers lo the study committee. but added Baker when 'the latter said he wanted to serve on the group. • The supervisors hearing room was packed and overflowing with about 200 people in attendance. h-1ost of the.m lhrough their applause indicated op. position to Battin's stand and the half • dozen who spoke all urged further 1tudy of the proposal before action. Battin last Tuesday charged Thomas with assuming a dictactorial atUtude and objected lltrenuously to a report by Thomas which for«a1t a live percent raise for county employes next fiscal year and a budget which might call for a 34-cent tax increase . ar ua e 0 • ' SAN F•ANCllCO 100 .... NEV. V~I Ntwl Mu MAP SHOWS AREA SHAKEN BY EARLY MORNING EARTHQIJAKE . Tri~Cities to Provide San On.of re Park Water? Officials 0£ the. Metropolitan Water District this week began a study to see il San Clemente's Tri · Cities ~1uniclpal Water Dislrict should provide hadly needed service to the new San Onofre State Park. While no specific format of service has yet been proposed. Tri.Cities board members recently channeled the state request for service to the MWD, whic h sells its water to the local agency. Specifically. the MWD officials v.·ill determined of Tri Cities should provide water service to an area [our .miles from its nearest boundary . San Clemente Is the state's hope-not only for water, but sanitation services to the 3.5-mile stretch of blufftop and beach granted lo the public last year after tough negotlalions with the Marine Corps . Facing Time Clemente Planners Signs of In San f our separate sign malters will con· front Sen Clemente's planning com- missioners Wednesday who will rule on requests ranging from housing tracts and banks to the sale of tiny Japanese cars. Among the. action-" sought by separate applicants on sign matters are.: -A use permit to allow the. Sheltec Corporation to build a sales office and four on·slte directional signs at 403 Calle Pueblo to assi!t in sales of tract homes. Both rcquems are for a year. Requests by the. Chapman Management Cor!)OraUon of Orange for a six·month blllhoard use permit for sale of homes al &40 Camio de kls Ma.res. -Reinharcz Chrf.tle.r-Plymooth1 Inc .. requesting a ltgn exctption to allow tht e.xceeding of m&xlmUm site lo ad- ·vertlse lhe proposed 3,le ot Honda 11utomoblles al the agency at 1212 S. El Centro Rea l. -A Bank of · Ame!rlca requttl for 11 sign e'll:ception to allow a temporary announcment of the building of a bank branch tn the nev Grant's Plar.a shopping center at Camino de Estrella and the San Diego Freeway. I The park 1s expected lo be dedicated this April. but desp ite ils opening in time for the summer season, ac· commodalions will be Spartan at besl. Stale Parks officials have said that no budge.led funds exist for the operation of the new park because of bare-bones state financial policy. Water-perhaps not potable-would be. IJ'ucked in. and sanit:ttion would be provided through chemical toilels. Clearing the land and providing some. access lo the beach below are also planned by this summer. Spokesmen for Tri Cities Monday said 11there is no way of telling" how long negotiations for water service would take . As for the sewer services, San Clemente will not begin negotiating until news of approval comes ror a huge Jlousing and Urban Development grant for a new collector main running the length of the city. Until a new ma in is built, city aides said earlier this year. placing "the extra burden of state park waste Into the existing system is "out of the question ." The. only collector main in service In the city at present i.s an old one running along the shoreline . And it Is already operating al capacity. Yule 'Happening' Cost $65,800 The Christmas "happening" th11t lured 20,000 young people to Laguna CanYQn for a three-day rock festival cost the city of Laguna Beach $65,829.57. city manager Lawrence Rose announced t<>- day. The figure \lo'as re.vealed ln a nnal tabulation of rests d.ireclly attributable to lhe ''happening" and does not Include regular expense that \•:ould have gane on throughout the period fsuch as regular police shlfL'I), Rose said. Nor does It include an addlUoMl com. pensallon for de?partment heads and other 11alarled persoMcl who w o r k e d throo~t the hollday without drawing overtime. Added to the $65,829 direct co&t"'totel In Rose's statement. Is the sum o( $2,294.69 for Items that had been budgeted tor thc Poli« and fire dcpartmenta. but were purcha.sed ea rlier than 1nticipated because a( the ha~ penina- County Safe; Tremor Hits 6.5 .Reading By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .,.. 0•11~ P'llol ll•ff • Orange County toscaped unscathed at 6:02 a.m. today as a major earthquake rocked the foundations of home to HI million Californians with death, destruc- tion and predawn panic . The. effects even reached out into space. as four-NASA stations trat:;king the incoming Apollo 14 astronauts were knocked out. Backup systems immediately took over tht cOmplex job, but' many or the ground-bOund were less fortunate. By mid-motning the known death toll was 16, all in the hard·hit San Fernando Valley region and in ce.nlraJ L<is Angeles. Ominous tones were added to the poten- tial death toll today, with disclosure at noon that 54 persons are missing in the rubble of the antiquated VA Hospital. Two buildings at the 420-bed facility in the. lower San c ·abriel Mountains were feveled by the racking temblor. The rocking and rolling jolt -equal to the 1933 Long Beach disaster - was estimated al 6.5 on the Richter Scale. but was so sharp It jolted the Caltech seismograph needle off its graph. Repeated aftershocks followed through the moming,·so or mare. Buildings from Skid R.ow to exclusive suburbs crumbled as the earth's crust shuddered and -.... vertical cracks appeared in Los Angeles' largest water reservoir towering above a subdivision. Supposedly earthquake·prool h.igh-rlse towers of up to 52 stories in downtown Los Angeles shimmied like hula dancers. shattering windows and cracking waJls. Hospitals lbroughout the Los Angelt! Basin reported an influx of injured - some flown ·by helicopter -and many suffering serious cuts from flying glass. Seven victims died in the valley area. VA hospital. The death toll included two heart at- tack victims. a drifter crushed w"he n a Skid Row mission collapsed ln a crescendo of crumbled brick and a pa· tient in a suburban sanitarium. Van Norman Dam wa.t rapidly develop- ing new and more grave fissures shortly before 11 a.m .. as desperate wor'kers tried to drain it. Continuing aftershocks kept its waters sloshing like coffee in a mug as the 6 billion · plus gallons threatened to cascade down the San Fernando Valley. Dam Supervisor Robert E. Noel described the quake centered 1n rugged San Gabriel Mountains vividly. "ft was thumpin' and jumpin' and knocked everything out of our kitchen," he said. Throughout the larg~t <:OnCtntration of population in California chaos reigned as harassed aulhoritles tried to deal wfl h the worst of It. Power lines fell popping like spark·spil· _,,, ting snakes and igniting a series or- fires. Gas mains broke. Brick plummeted from agin(!: apartment buildings. Looting was re.ported wide.spread tn some areas, as panicked residents car· rled boxes and paper bags of valuables away with them. The Golden State Freeway was ck>sed due to pavemont o-acks and bridge.s and overpasses we.re reported thttatened in some areas. ''I wa1 in my kitchen," said one robe- clad housewife. •·1 fell down and 111tarted praying." Control lower• at Van NU)'1 aqd Burbank Airporll In the devutated bedroom of lhe basin, the san Ftrnando Valley. were dameged and the FAA SUS· pended all lll&hl activity. A pilot f\yin& over the vast city whf.n the temblor -accompanied by an omJnous rumble •nd the creak aod: aroan of wrenching OOmes -wltne1sed U. Z' DAil 't PILOT SC T~sdif, f tbrut'7 ,, 1971 'Was There' Susan Involved; Kasabian Called Back UlS ANGELES (AP) -SuS4ll "Sadie" Atklrui;, convicted V>'llh two other young women and Charles 1t1anson in the Sharon Tate murders, took the witness 1tand in a surprise move today and 11ld she was involved in the killings. Her attorney, Daye Shinn, asked: ''Were you personally involved In lhe 'killlngs at the Tate. hom e on Aug. 9, 1969?" "'Yes,'• replied the slim, dark·hairtd member of 1-fanson's hlppl&-type clan. Earlier, attorneys disclosed that Llnda Kasabian, star prosecution witness in the convictions. is being called baclt from New Hampshire after testimony that a few days before the slayings Before Planners ' she sald she planned to kill some "pl&s.'' Deputy DlsL Atty, Vincent T. Suglioal said Mrs. Ke.sabtan, 21, is scheduled to appear next Tuesday at the penalty trial of lhe four COO\'icted Of first.degree murder and conspiracy. The surprise te!l/mony Monday of Catherine "Gypsy.·• Share. 28. brought objections from both prosecution and defense. Distraught and sometimes wetping, Miss Share said she had decided to "anltch" because she. was afrafd or losing custody Clf her baby. Bugliosi said he is arranging for r.trs. Kasabian's return at the request of Manson's attorney, Irving Kanarek. She tw been livina in Milford, N.H., 1lnct her 18 days of testimony last August. Her Beverly Ktlls attorney, Gary Fleischman, said he told her by telephone last night she wa! being called as a defense witness. "Actually. she doesn't consider herself a v..Jlness for either side," Fleischman said . ''She just wanls to tell the. truth about what happened, and if the. de.fense wants to Ciill her, that's fine with her.'' r..tiss Share testified that when she heard about the August 1969 murders she immedialely felt thal f.1rs. Kasablan, Leslie Van Houten and Susan Atkin• were the killers. Write Hanoi League Director Asks High Rise Height Limit Urges Former Navy POW The treatment of prisoners in North Vie tnamese POW camps is a humanitarian issue, that should concern every American, according to Navy Lt. Robert Frishman, a former POW. A director ()( the Laguna Beach Civic League urged lowering the height on the planning commission's proposed C-R Zone (beachfront-botet zone) in an ad· journed session Monday night. Fred t.iarchand, an engineer and board ·member of the league , set forth four provisions he felt would be acceptable to the community Including a maximum building height of 35 feet measured from the center ()f the street. Using letters and comments gained from a cross section of the community, Marchand said the league's committee on the CR Zone bas arrived at a proposal it believes is acceptable. Added to the heigh t restriction, which conflicts with a present 100 foot max- imum now in the ordinance, the League suggests a density oI 1000 square feet of net lot area for each unit as opposed to the present 500 square feet and in· * * * High Rise I ssue Campaigning Hit As 'Contorted' "High rise has become a contorted. dirty word,'' one member of the Downtown Bwilness Association said this morning in attacking the: emotional ca.zn.. paign being waged agai.Mt a high rise ordinance for Laguna Beach. OBA members, a1though generally ad- mitting by show of hands they had ·attended none of the panel discussions and hearings on the subject, agreed that emotions are entering into con- sideration of the proposed 100-foot height limit before the council. "Pressure ls being applied to the coun- cil," DBA president Bill Marriner said, contending the council is only trying to do il.5 job of straightening out existirig ordinances. Marriner said lhe real issue before the council is setting and establishing a height limit that will be consistent for all building construction. He said the five-member council is also trying to decide ·where the hotel zone will be placed in the city. One member suggested a group had been organized to make phone calls to residents to emotionaliie the issue. She did not know who was behind the anti-high rise organization, but said she had received reports from lrlends of their activities. "This is not motherhood and this Is not ecology." Marriner said. "It is just having a set of laws in our community that are understandable by people other than the Planning Commis~lon." "We should encourage people to listen to the facts rather than just say ·1 am against It'," he added. DAILY PILOT "'""'"' .... l .. •11• IHtll CNhl Mn• .. .... , ......... ........ , . ., S.. C,._.11tw O~ANGE COA$T l"Ul\.ISHING toMPAN't Ro'D•rt N. W114 PrK iotnl l r.d Jl'lillllltllw J •ck It Curl•'( Viet Praldtnl ••.d Gtrl«•I Mtl'll~cr lh•m•• K.,,a f:dltor 7~0"'11 A. Murphln• M.9t11tlrl11 E1111.,. ftic.h1rd P'. H•lf Soutl'I Or1nto Co11nl'( Ed llW -C..lt M-; »GW•O ll'('lil ... N""""1 IM1ci11 2111w .. t 11"°~ 90\llfYllN • LIO-lle•~h t m For111 A-... Hlll'IUllCllOfl lll11t11 ; 11'7S •tKl'l lllOulnl t>cl 51n Clmllntl: »J Horth El Ctmlna 1t .. 1 creased off·slreet parking and sideyards. During study sessions and a previous hearing, planning commissioners have whittled the height down to a com· promise between 50 and 70 feet while retaining the 500 square feet of Jot area per unit . "We would like to keep as much under cover .Parking as possible.·• Marchand said. falling in line with Com· missioner Robert 1-l:aslings' bid to in· crease the number of underground park· ing spaces per building site. Marchand expressed approval of the rommission's desire to ma intain 40-foot side.yards on a maximum building site with a 200-foot frontage. The second public hearing on the C·R Zone will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Tues· day. Feb. 16 instead of ti.·londay due to lhe holiday. lnjuredStudent Remains Serious After Car Crasli The teenage daughter of a former Newport Beach official remains in guard· ed condition today at South Coast Com· munity Hospital as a result of injuries suffered Friday in a Laguna Beach traf- fic accident Mary Simpson, 17, ls in the intensive care unit of the hospilal with a fractured l'lku11. She was near death when rushed to the hospital from the scene C1f the mishap Friday evening. She is the daughter of Don C. Simpson, former public works director of Newport Beach. Another gi rl hurt in the accident, Susan Schreck, 16, is in satisfactory condition at the hospital with a broken arm, but also is being kept in the intensive care. unit of the hospital. Doctors rear she may also have suffered a concussion in the accident. The two girls are sludents at Corona de! Mar High School. A third victim ot the mishap, Charles Nye, 19, is being treated at the hospi tal for multiple cuts and bruises. The accident occurred at about 9: 30 p.m. Friday when the three youths \Vere riding in a car driven by La"•rence fl.larks. 17. The auto went out of cont rol while coming down steep Park Avenue and rolled over several limes before coming to rest against a curb, police said. Nye and Marks are both student!I at Newport Harbor High School. fl.1arks injured his neck in the accident but was treated in the emergency room of the hospital and released. Las Vegas Tren1hl es Fr om LA Earthquake LAS VEGAS (UP I) -Scores of' people told Police today that they felt the Los Angeles earthqualte, centered 300 miles away, but no damage was reported. "A lot of people sloughed it off as another underground nuclear test," a desk sergeant said. He said his door was caused to swing back and forth . Frishman, who spent 1183 days in Hanoi, said world public opinion is the greatest hope for Americans still held captive by the North Vietnamese. The lean aviator was in Newport Beach to speak at a fund raising luncheon sponsored by Concern for POWs-r..fIAs, of Tustin. More than 570 persons beard Frishman encourage all Americans to participate in Jetter-writing campaigns to demand humane treatment of POWs. "There have been more letters receiv· ed-this year from prisoners than in the last six years combined. We see films of prisoners playing basketball and participating in Christmas pageants. "1 think this is a big improvement -even if they are staged -over the lcind of things you saw two or three years ago. Then the only films you saw o( prisoners showed them being beaten in the streets of Hanoi ," be said. Frishman said the films and letters show how sensitive Hanoi has be-come to public -0pinion. "It doessn'l matter whether you 're hard left. ha rd right. hawk, dove -0r owl. This is a humanitarian movement and it's the responsibility of every America n to do everything in their power lo see that Hanoi lives up to its agreements in lhe Geneva Convention," he said. Lagima Buses Get Aid Priority Laguna Beach has received high priori- ty for funding of its ailing bus service, 1nembers of the Planning Commission learned r..1onday night. According lo City Planner AT Autry, \vho met with a representative of the federal Deparbnent of Transportation last v.•eek, the city's bid for two-thirds funding of an $80,000 cost for four buses has met with fa\·or. Under terms of the Urban 1iass Transporlation Act of 1964, the city can receive up to approximately $54,000, Autry said . The city hopes to speed up service of the aged bus line with four new buses and service equipment by the summer of 197 1. Aut ry said he will file the final ap- pli cation by Feb. 15. Headon Wreck Fatal to Man A North Hollywood man was killed about 8 a.m. today in a head-on collision on La Paz Road about a hall mile •orth of Cro~·n Vall ey Parkway in Laguna Ni- guel, Hig hway Patrol officers said the crash in volved·a sports car and a pickup truck, but the \'ictim's name was being withheld pendinR notification of next of kin. The incident was not re lated to today's ear1hquake. a spo kesman said, noting there "'•as no damage lo highways or free- ways within Orange County. Downtown Businessmen Ask Cai· Modificatio11 Tht!: Downtown Business Association bas sent a letter to the Laguna Bench City Council requesting !hat the proposed pedestrian mall on lo~·er Park Avenue be modified to Include cars. The council is now studying plans to close the small portion of the busy street adjacent to the ne\¥ llbrory to traffic and bulld a mall 11•ilh park benches, trees 3nd fountains. The DBA letter outlines the dlsadvD.ntnges of clos· tng the street and said the park-pro- ponents and parkin.-:·proponcnts could both be satisfied with a parking mull. The letter claimed parking and traffl e problems in Laguna Bt'ach are "second ()nly to the hippie problem" and that shoppers rate Art Colony parkJng as poor, \Vithout the Park Avenue access to the stores localed ln the area, the -, business group said a narrow alley would ha\'e to accommodate both delivery trucks and through traffic. \Vlt h the eventual construction of a parking garage at the library, the businessmen said in their letter that the s;1me alley y.•ou1d have to provide garage access. The parking-<.'Onscious group also said Lhe pedestrian m.a!I would ellmlnate seven sorely needed parking stalls. As an altematlve to the mall, the letter 11uggeslcd making lower Park: Avenue OJ'M'n to rine ID.ne of through \raffle and providing several diagona l parking spaces. In additiQn to ~autity1ng the til't'a "·ith trees and shruhl. the businessme n said a cobblestone-type 8ur(ace could be used to add charm to the p:irklng mall. l,1111 T1ll.iltit' PHOTOGRAPHER CRAIG MAILLOUX MOPS UP AT UPI Earthqu•k• Jostles Photo Bu reau in Downtown Los An91l11 Quake Origin Quivers Caused by Sliding Rocks ' By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 t111 01111 'llot St•tf The anc ient Greeks thought .earth· quakes were caused by the god Poseidon, who they called "earth shaker ." Tod ay, it is common knowledge that earth tremors origina te in fau lts when two rock facts slip off each other. A. R. Kerr, a geology instructor at Orange Coast College. said there are two theories as to the cause of the slippage on the rauJCs. The elastic rebound theory, which is the one most oflen cited. js based on the constant but very gradual shift in the earth's crust. Rocks become distorted but hold their original positions until the stress has accumulated lo the point of overcoming the resistance of the rocks and the earth snaps back to an unstrained posi· lion at the fault line. The "snap" caused by the rebound creates the shock waves known as earth· quakes. The .second theory, Kerr .said, is that earthquakes are the surface reaction of movement many miles below !he earth's surface. He likeAed it to a ripple on a pond caused by a disturbance be.low the surface. Regardless ot the cause. Kerr said there are three types of qua kes -those in which the movement at the fault is horizontal, those in which the move- ment is vertical and those in \\'hich the movement is a combination of both. "I \\'ould say today's earthquake \\'as ch iefly a lateral .shift . though there were proba bly vertical components in it. ''The duration of it and the kind of movement that I felt would also indicate a rolling quake in ""hich there \\'as a Jong adju stment at the fault," he .said. He contrasted the rolling movement or today's quake. which registered 6.S on the Richter Scale, 1vith the sharp, jarring vertical movement -0f the Tehachapi quake in 19S2 which registered 7.2, killed 14 persons and did extensive damage. The epicenter or today's quake has not been established, but Kerr estimated it could have been in the San Gabriel fault ~·hich runs parallel to the main San Andreas fa ult for about 90 miles from Mt. Baldy area lo Frazier Mt. near the Tej on Pass. There have not been any major quakes along this fault for 150 years. Another likely candidate for the earth· quake is the famous San Andreas fault \li'hich runs inland of the San Gabriel fault in a continuous line from the Mex- ican border to Point Arena in Northern Ca lifornia. One of the most disturbing aspect:ii ()f an earthquake are the aftershocks. Kerr said there is no rule on the number or intensity or aftershocks. Following the Alaskan quake in 1964 -which is th e most intense one recorded in U.S. history -there were 12,000 aftershocks. Scientists say the aftershoc ks are a part of the release of accumulated elastic strain. The relief of pressure at the fau lt itself changes the stress patterns for mites around and the readjustment of !hese stresses i! the cause of the aftershock s. Teel Ge ls P enni! Back BOSTON (UPI l -Sen. Edward · ~1. Kennedy's driver's license has been reinstated. Jt had been suspended for a year because he pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of an accident after the death of !\1ary Jo Kopechne. Hulse Trial Jury Pick Continues Jury selection cootinued toda y Jn the Orange County Superior Court trial of a Garden Grove youth accused In the hatchet rnurder of 11 service st ation at- tendant and later involvement in the killing of a Mission Viejo achoo! teacher. Selection of the panel that wiU rule on the guilt or innocence of Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse. 16. is expected to take at least three more days In "'hat will be. both sides predict, a three- week trial bdore Judge Ron a Id Crookshank. Judge Crookshank r efused Monday to disclose the nature of a serie! or motions argued in his chambers. But It was learned today that two of those motions Involved the constitutionality of the grand jury system and the right to try Hulse , a minor . In adult court. llulse \vas removed from juvenile court jurisdiction shortly after his indictment by the Orange County Grand Jury and ordered to fa ce trial as an adult for the killing of Jerry Wayne Carlin. 21. of Santa Ana. He is also accused of being an ac- cusory to the murder of Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31 , of El Toro. Hulse and three other membe rs of lhe gang of drifters were rounded up by la"•men in the wake of the t\\.·o murders. Mrs. Bro"'" was the victim June 2 of a "devil cult" killing in which portions of her body were devoured in satanic riles after she was slain in an trvlne orange grove. Carlin was killed the night before In 11 murder that followed the group's rifling of his till -a robbery that p«t $50 in their pockets. Scheduled to appear as a witness for the prosecution in the Hulse trial is Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, a transient who is accused of both murders. Taylor's double murder trial has betn delayed until April 5. Awaiting trial for both killings Is Steven Craig Hurd, 20. a transient who goes on trial March 22 and Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17 of Portland, Oregon. Orange County district attorney's of. ficers are today seeking tbe extradition rrom Oregon of young Gibboney. Sound of Music Tickets on Sale At High School Tickets went on sale at San Clemente High School today for the school's largest musical production in years -a re.n- dilion of the Broadway hit "The Sound or Music.'' The four-performa nce run or the elaborate production v.·ill span tv.·o weekends-the last in February and the rirst in March. The tickets for the 8 p.m. performances range in price from $3.50 lfor a 1ea t in the first three rows) to $2. Triton center wiU be transformed to 3 th eater with the use of a new, pro- fessional sound system and specially pro- cured riser seating for the four performances. Ticket purchRsers ma y reserve seals by either calling in person or by phone to the student activities office at San Clemente High School. Local merchants will begin selling tickets soon as v.·ell. Specific locations \viii be announced later. THE NAME OF THE GAME There is a common practice of private labelin g 1n the carpet industry. lar9e department stores, chain stores. and contractors at new tracts have ficticious names on the samples so that custo mers cannot easly shop b rand name prices. Customers shopping at our store find the price of each quality prominently featured on the sample book, because we are competitive. Also, because we feel the customer has a right to know what he is buyin9, we never change the nomt on a sample book. The name of the game is integrity! ALDEN'S SAH1' A ANA. ORANGI TUSTIN C.11 ••• AL DIN'I RID HILL CARPITI I DRAPERIES 11:174 l"ln .. Tutt1n, C•I. 1i 1""44 CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plaeantia Ava. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Moft. Thru T11111rs.. t to 5:10 -Fri,, t te t -Sot., t :JO te I t 7 Huntington Beaeh T~ay's Final N.Y. Stoeks YOL 64, NO. 34, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ;TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1971 TEN CENTS Study Petiding County Safe; County's Thomas Hangs Onto Joh Tremor Hits , 6.5 Reading GETS REPRIEVE Coun ty Administrator Thom•• Hatchet Murder Jury Selection Pro ce ss Resumes Jury selection continued today in the Orange County Superior Court trial of 1 Garden Grove youth accused in the hatchet murder of a service station at· tendant and later involvement in the killing of a Mission Viejo school teacher. Selection of the panel that will rule on the guilt or innocence of Arthur Craig "Moose " Hulse, 16, is expected to take at least three more days in what will be, both sides predict. a three- Week trial before Judge Ron a Id CrookShank. Judge Crookshank refused Monday to disclose the nature of a se ries of motions argued in his chambers. But it was learned today that two of those motions involved the constitutionality of the grand jury system and the right to µ-y Hulse, 8 minor. in adult court. Hulse v.•as removed from juvenile court jurisdiction shortly after· his indictment by the Orange County Grand Jury and ordered to face trial as an adult for the killing of Jerry \Vayne Carlin. 21, of Santa Ana. He is also accused of being an ac- cessory to the murder of Mrs. Flor~nce Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro. Hulse and three other members of the gang of drifters were rounded up by lawmen in the wake of the two murders. Mrs. Brown v.·as the victim June 2 of a "devil cull" killing in which portions cif her body were devoured in satanic rites after she was slain in an Irvine orange grove. Carlin was killed the night before in a murder that followed the group's rifling of his till -a robbery that put $50 In their pockets. Bobby Soxers Seeking · Signups Girls aged 9 to 16 can sign up to play in the North Huntington Beach Bobby Sox Softball League. League officials nave announced three different limes and locations for league slgnups. They are : Feb. 12, ft :30 p.m. to 9 p.m .• Albertson M11;rket, corner of McFaddtn Avenue and Edw~rds Street. Feb. 17. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m .. Alpha Betll Market, t1:lrner of GCllden Wesl Street and Warner Avenue. Feb. 20, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m .. Safeway Market . corner of Springdale Street and Warner Avenue. Thtrt is a $S registration fee for th~ league. By JACK BROBACK Of 1111 D<llly P'lillt Still County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas was not fir&! this morning. Supervisor Ralph Clark surprised many when he proposed a lengthy study of the CAO and his office. His motion was adopted by f.-1 vote with supervisor Robert Battin dissenting. Battin had proposed last week that Thomas resign at once or be fired. Today Clark's approved motion calls £or a committee of supervisors, William Phillips, Ronald Caspers and David Baker, to "audit the conduct of the chief administrative officer and every aspect of the work assigned to his of·· fice." Clark also moved that the committee should "work closely with the grand jury to develop recommendations to ensure . the efficiency. economy and responsiveness of our government to the needs of the people." The motion called for a committee to be prepared to report inunediate\y arter the cooclusion of the new budget. Such budget atudies are usually not com· pleted unlil well into July. Clark said the subject ol the CAO had generated a great deal of heat during the past seven days, but very little lighL "SUrely if the charges which our chairman has made are aceurate every citizen, officeholder and taxpayer has reason for deep concern and significant changes should be made," Clark said. "On the either hand, if the dire con· sequences pre.dieted by the opponents of change are accurate we would err gravely to act now.'' Supervi3or Caspers, who had backed Battin without question last week on the immediate firing of Thomas quickly seconded Clark's motion, "because the facts have been distorted and I do not think we should act in haste." Clark first named Phillips and Caspers to the study committtt but added Baker when the latter said he wanted to serve on the group. The supervisors hearing room was packed and overflowing with about 200 people in aUendance. Most of them through their applause Indicated op. position to Battin's stand and the half dozen who spoke all urged further study of the proposal before action. Battin last Tuesday charged Thomas with assuming a dictactorial attitude and objttted strenuously to a report by Thomas which forecast a live percent raise for county employes next fiscal year and a ·budget which might call for a 34--cent tax increase. ~ .. . -. UJll Tti.Mllo MIDNIGHT MISSION BUILDING COLLAPSES IN QUAKE; BUI LDING A TOTAL LOSS With One Br ief Jolt, • Home fo r the Homeless on LA's Skid Row Is Reduced to Rubble Huntington High Successful Mission Tower Survives Rolling Temblor By TERRY COVILLE Of Tiit D<IHy 1'1191 Sl•lt Tho Hunlini19n ~cjl Higll School tower has !W'Vived another earthquake. The I.all spire: -built in 1926 and recently deemed u n s· a f ~ against earth- quaJtes by state education standards -was unscarred by this morning's tremor. "No peeled plaster, no cracks. We didn 't find any problems at tbe school this morning," Assistant P r i n c I p a I William Rollins reported. Some newer buildings were less lucky. Tiles were shaken from the ceiling of the W. T. Grant Store at Brookhurst Street and Adams Avenue in Huntington Beach. A power line was knocked down in a Westminster residential section but caused ao problems. No major damage was reported in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley or other West Orange County cities. One fire was started in Los Alamitos when a 140-volt power line tumbled on top of some roofing supplies at 357t Cerritos Ave. Firemen said there was $8,000 damag' done to the ml!terials, but another $80.000 in roofing supplies was sa ved. Another old bu ilding in Hun tington Beach, Dwyer Ialermediate School. also passed the quake te.>t without damage . Some citir.ens were concerned about the high school tower because of recent reports on it. National Educational Plan· ning Associates (NEPA) recommended \asl November that the Huntington Beach Union High School District tear down the tower and the 26-classroom central building. Apollo Splashes Down To End 9-day Journey ABOARD USS NEW ORLEANS .CAP) -'?'flt Apollo 1( uplorer5 epla!bed down in the South PacUJc today, ending a nine-day voyage of discovery that scientists say wiU vastly enrich man's knowledge of the moon. Alan B. Shepard Jr., Edg11;r D. Mitchell and Stuart A. Roosa hit the water after a blazing re-entry through the earth's atmosphere. During the re-entry, which started when the command shiP Kitty Hawk slammed into the atmosphere at 24.596 miles an hour, the temperature Quake Blamed For Poor V ot,er Turnout A disappointingly low early voter turn· out during today's Ocean View School Dis· trict lax election was blamed on the earthquake by poll watchers this morn· ing. .. r guess most· people are watchiag their televisions right now to see how much damage ttlere was. But we expect 1h:11gs to pick up later in the day," said Dis!rict Superintendent Clarence Hall at 1U:30 a.m. At issue Is the district's $2.75 tax rate which schoolmen are asking the voters 10 re-approve for a period of five years. on the protective heat &hield re1ehed. more 1ban 5,000 degreea. The astronaull were to be taken by helicopter to the cruiser New Orleans a.nd placed in quarantine in a sealed !railer below decks. The thickening atmosphere and parachutes slowed the speed for a genUe drop into warm Polynesian waters. The splashdown ended man's third and most scientifically rewarding journey lo the surface of the moon. Shepard and Mitchell spent 331,1,i hours in the rugged Fra Mauro highlands. In two moon "'alks, they prowled the barren, dusty nurface for approximately nine hours and collected a rttord 95 pounds of rocks and lunar soil. some of which may date 4.6 billion years to the birth of the moon . 'Mission Control reported that an earth- quake in the Los Angeles area tem- porarily affected communications at four of its tracking stations, al Guam. Hawaii and Canberra and Carnarvon in Australia. Back.up systems prevented a loss of any signals from Apollo 14, and telephone circuits to the stations were quickly rerouted around Los Angele s. The astronauts were on such a perfect course that Mission Control early Tues- day canceled a planned midcourse cor· rection . "Good." was the reply from the Kitty lfawk when the spacemen were !old. World Opinion Best Hope For Prisoners-Ex-POW Dr. H11;li said a sampling of five polls showed an average 3.26 voter turnout in the early morning hours. Past Ocean View elections have rallied a 30 to 35 percent turnout during the enUre voting day. There are about 25.~ registered voters ift the Oceari View School District. foils will be open at each of the di.s- trlct's 23 schools until 8 p.m. The New Orleans will cruise toward American Samoa. nearly 900 miles to the north. Once in helicopter range of Samoa, the astronauts, wearing special biological masks, will be flown to another quarantine trailer waiting aboard a jet transport plane on Samoa . From there they'll be flown to Houston's Manned Spacecraft Center late Thursday and be placed in quarantine until Feb. Z& on the remote chance they contracted lunar germs. The treatment of prisoners in North Vietnamese POW camps is a humanitarian issue, thal should concern every American. according to Navy Lt. Robert Frishman, a former POW. Frishman, who spent 683 days in Hanoi, said world public opinion Is the greatest hope for Americans still held captive by the North Vietnamese. Eclipse of Moon Slared Tonight NEW YORK (AP) -A total eclipse of the moon will be visible tonight. where skies are clear, throughout. the continen· 1al United Slates and Canada. The lunar spectacular will begin at 9:$2 p.m. PST whe11 the moon starts to pass through the earth's ahadow. The moon will darken as the shadow spreads across the lunar disk with totality lasting from 11 :03 p.m. until J2 :3e a.m. By 1:37 a.m. the western edge of the moon wJIJ have cleared the shadow. A lunar eclipse gener•lly can be. ob- served lrom most places on earth at lea st once a year. The lean aviator was in Newport Beach lo speak at a fund raising luncheon sponsored by Conctrn for POWs-MIAs, of Tuslin. More than 570 persons heard Frishman encourage all Americans to participate in letter-writing campaigns to demand humane treatment of POWs. "There have been more letters receiv· ed this year from prisoners than ln the la st six years combined. We see films of prisoners playing basketb11;1l and participating in Christmas pageants. "I think this is a big improvement -even if they art staged -over the kind of things you saw two or three years ago. Tben the only films you saw of prlsonen showed them being beaten in the 1treits of H1noi, '' be 11Jd. Frbhman uid the films and letters show how sensitive Hanoi bas become to public opinion. "Jt ·~oeun'l matttt-whether you're hard left, hard rfgbt. hawk, dove or owl. ~Is Js a bumanitatjan movemept and It s the responsibility ef evsy American to do everythln1 in their ~r to 1ee that Hanoi Uve.s uP to Jt1 1greementa in the Gtneva Connntlon," · he said. Expensive Fest 'Happenin~' Cost Laguna .$65 ,829 The Christmas "happening" that lured 20.000 young people to Laguna Canyon for a three-day rock festival cost the city of Laguna Beach $65,829.$7. city manager Lawrence Rose announced to- day. The figure was revealed in a final tabulation of CO!t.!l directly attributable to the "happening" and does not include regul11r expense that would have gone on throughout the period (such as regular poliee shifta), Rose sakl. Nor does 11 Include an &ddltional com- pensation for department heads and. oUl't 11all:1ried personnel ~'ho w o r k e d throughout the holiday wlthout drawing overUme. Added to the $65"29 direct cost total In Rose's st.att.mtnt, Is the sum ol 12,291.61 !or ll•ms that !lid been budgeted for the police and fire deJ)arlnlehle. b\>t ,..,.. purcllased .urller than · anllcipated btcaus• of the h•i> ~"'"" ' .-q· Also added. 1:!1 $3,999.26 for equipment purchases for both departments which had not yet .been budgeted, but which will be of continuing use, Rose said. Grand total in I.he tabulation, through Jan. 20, is $72,123.52. representing direct costs for items totally consumed , ak>ng with budgeted and unbudgtted purchases which will remain usable. The city manager qnphasized that a substantial porUon of the total can be I.a.ken care or without special cash allocatloris. through budget s h I r t s • possibly Involving delay of 80me an· ticipated , budget expenditures. Precise JTiocatlon o( funds Is 1tlll btlng determin- ed, Rose ,.Id. Overttme salaries ($42,483) and public works equipment rental ($10,40$) make up the blilk ol th~ dlroct coct. C1tan-up cost. reported by the public works depti.rtment •mounted to $4,04&.68. (S.. HAPPENING, Pace JI By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1111 O•llt Pli.t Sltff Orange County t:5Caped unscathed at 6:02 a.m. today as a ma)ot earthquake rocked the foundations of home to 10 million Californians with death, destruc- tion and predawn panic. The effects even reached out into space, as four NASA stations tracking the incoming Apollo 14 astronauta were knocked out. Backup systems immediately took over the complex job, but many of the ground- bound were less fortunate . By mid-morning the known death toll was 21 , all in the hard-hit Saa Fernando Valley region and in central Los Angeles. Ominous tones were added to the pole~ ti al death toll today. with disclosure at noon that 54 persons are missing in tht rubble of the antiquated VA Hospital. Two buildings at the 420-bed facility iD the lower San Gabriel Mountains wer1 leveled by the rackb1g temblor. The rocking and rolling joll -equal to the im Long Beach. disaster - was estimated at 6.5 on the Richter Scale, but was so sharp it jolted the Caltech seismograph needle off ita graph. Repeated aftershocks followed through the morning, 50 or mare. Buildings from aid Row to e:1clusive suburbs crumbled as ' the earth's crust shuddered and vertical cracks appeared in Los Angelea' largest water re&ervoir towering 1bove a subdivision. Supposedly earthquake-proof high-rise towers of up to 52 stories in downtown Los Angeles shimmied like hula dancers. shattering windows and cracking walls. · Hospitals throughout the Los Angeles Basin reported an influx of injured - some flown by helicopter -and many suffering serious cuts from Oying glass. Seven victims died in the valley area VA hospital. The death toll included two heart it.- tack victims. a drifter crushed when a Skid Row mission collapsed In a crescendo of crumbled brick and a pa- tient in a suburban sanitarium. Van Norman Dam was rapidly develop- ing new and more grave fissures shortly before 11 a.m .. as desperate workert tried to drain it. Continuing aftershocks kept its waters sloshing like ailfee in a mug as the 6 billion · plus gallons threatened to cascade down the San Fernando Valley. Dam Supervisor Robert E. NQel described the quake centered in rugged San Gabriel Mountains vividly. "It was thumpin' and jumpln' and knocked everything out of our kitchen," he said. Throughout the largest concentration of population in California ch;:aos reigned as harassed authorities tried to deal with the worst of it. Power lines fell popping like spark-spit- ting snakes and igniting a series of fires . Gas maitu broke. Brick plummeted from aging apartment buildings. Looting was reported widespr~ad In some areas, as panicked residents car· rled boxes and paper bags of valuables away with them. The Golden Stale Freeway was closed due to pavement cracks and bridges (See TREMBLES, Pa1e !) Orange Coast Weather Wednesday's weather won't be as earth shaking as today'll. Look for sunny skies and warmer temp- eratures with the mercury surg- ing into the ros along the Orange Coast. INSmE TODAY ~la.sical comedy at tht Laguna Moulton Playhotut and detp drama ot UC In•int. compri!e thi3 wetk's openings in local theater. See £"uriatnmen&, Pape 19. c111i.ni. • Clttd!MI u, II Ci.ttlli.f tl-U c .... 1c. 1s ONl!I Nelle':.. t Dl~H t at111e1111 ,.... ' •"'"'"_, 1"1' Pllllll(I 1•11 ""'--14 Allll LI""'' 14 Ml•l'lltl I.It""'" • Me'tlt• 1 .. ,. Mututl '"'"' 11 HlllMtl llltwt J o ... " cwa,., ' St"le hrMr 11 ~· U-11 llM.l" ~"'"' 1 .. 11 Ttlnl11M 1t TtrtMlln 1 .. ,, WM""' 4 W'lllt ···~ '' Yr""""'I ...... l).U WM'lll HllWI .., i 2 DAllY PllOI H 1' aU~y Sauiplitag Stirvey Endorses Youth Facilities 1'"ountai.Q VaUey resident!: bave ex· pressed Interest In developing a central park, ball diamon& and other youth athletic facilities. This is what the results of 53 card que.!tionnaires showed a f t e r the city's first town hall type meeting Jan. 21 at Fulton School. City officials have finished compiling results from the cards banded out at that meeting. City offlcials asked residents to rate eight r;ubjeets on a priority list. A fixed seat auditorium received the lowest rating of the eight 5ubject5. County Seeks 'Hot Dog' Mcr,n Extradition Orange County aulhorities are today seeking the extradition from Arizona (If a man accused (If swindling Harbor area residents of nearly $.'"i00,000 in a fraudulent hot dog machine enterprise. Fighting proceedings launched by the district attorney'! oUice is Gregorios Pavlou, formerly of 398 22nd St., Newport Beach. He has been indicled by the Orange County Grand Jury on charge!!! Clf grand theft. issuing stock without a state permit and using a scheme to offer or sell stock to defraud. Pavlou was indicted after a year-long investigation by district attorney's in- vestigators and state Department of Corporations agents into the operations of his personally registered Mldo, Inc., of Costa Mesa. Investlgaton said Pavlou, also known as Gregorious Bu!lch, In terested more than ISO Orange County residents in his plans to sell bot dogs from specially designed end unique vending machines. They said Pavlou financed his cor- poration by giving promissory notes to potential investon putting up Mido stock , as collateral. Pavlou, they c I a i m defaulled on those loans so the inve5tor could have the Mido gtock issued in their names. Pavlou is then accused of asking in· .Yest.ors to return their certificate!! to him so he: could effect a 10-1 stock split But no Mido stock certificates "A-'ett ever returned to the investors to replact those they bad returned to PavlOI, b>vtstlgotoh said. • 1 Many prominent Ora.age Co u n t y businessmen end investors were duped by Pavlou during his touting Clf the non-existent hot dog... machine, in· vestigators claim. Bobby Sox Play Slated in Valley Girls who want to play organized softball can do it in Fountain Valley. The Fountain Valley Bobby So:r. Softball League i.s open to all girls aged 9 through IS. Signups for summer action will be held from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 13 and 20 in front of Von's Market et the corner of Talbert Avenue and Magnolia Street in Fountain Valley. For further inlormalion phone Trina \Villiams, league secretary, 847-4567. Ted Gets Permit Back BOSTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's driver's license has been reinstated. Jt bad been suspended for a year because be pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of an accident after the death of Mary Jo Kopechne. DAILY PILOT OAANG!::: COAIT f'UlllSHlftG COMf'AHY Robtrt H. WtM l"relden1 •lllll h~alMr J1<lc R. Cv•l•Y Vite Prnldenl 1r.d GM••I ~1tr Tho'"'' Ketiil EOllOf lhom11 A. MvrphlM MllMlt!M Elll;oit A !111 Dir.i11 W•I Otll!lll Co1111tr Edlltt A lbert W. 1111• Au1d1!1 f:llllO!' H1111H11tt•a INcll OHie• 17175 l11~h hvl1~1r4 M1ilin1 Addr1u: P.O . 1111 7901 ttMI OtMr Offl• l.af\IM I.ell; 2l2 l'or.1f ·-Co.11 M ..... : Ull W•I Ir{ Slr•I .....,... 81Kll: 2'11 Wnl lllDll lovlwt" s.rt Om11nt1: a. Norlll ll c.amtr.o It.Ml ''Tbere were about 125 people at tbe meeling of the Fulton PTO," Jim Hollywood, assistant to the city manager, explained. ;'We received 53 replies to our queslions." The town hall almosphere w a s established when all five councilmen st. tended the PTO meeting along with city department heads and made them.selves available for general discussion. "We think it was a success. The next Clne is planned with the Nleblas School PTO on r-.1arch 18." Hollywood said. The eight queslions residents were ask· ed to rale on a priority basis were: 1. Outside youth athletic facilities (ball diamonds, etc.) 2. Central city park. 3. Beautification of our major arterials. 4. General recreation programs, awlm· ming, dancing, etc. S. Community center building ex· pansion. 6. Meeting rooms and park .sites. 7. Fixed seat auditorium. 8. Other (any other subjects of con· cern). Hollywood said the first five subjects were rated in the same order as listed: but that No. !, the other category, was rated sixth most important 8Ad generally covered a concern for the industrial area. Item Ci, meeting rooms and park sites. w13 rated seventh most important while tbe fh:ed seat auditorium came out on the bottom. "We also asked three other questions ," Hollywood added. "We found that 34 people favored ;o parking enforcement during street sweeping hours, while 12 Clpposed it." The city also learned that 33 individuals favored weekly sweeping while 12 prefer- red to sUck with the current twice-a-week pattern. The last question concerned the value of the city's quarterly newsletter. Forty. one people thought it valuable, seven didn 't. "I think we'll continue these tow n hall meetings, but try lo reach more of the populace than just PTO groups," Hollywood said. From Page 1 HAPPENING • • • The overtime salary figure is broken down 8! follov.'s: Police, $23;007.95 jSpe<iaJ depl\!les, $0,990.00 c Mounttd Posse, $5,dro.oo Fire Department, ~.39 Administration, $724.82 Engineering, $558.90 Street, $2,306.28 Bus tine, $20.46 Parks, $2,410.72 Automotive, $508.95 Total salaries: $42,483.47 Services and supplies for the police department cost $8,119.01; public works department, $10,404 .91 ; and fire depart- ment, $50.40. Headquarters cost is listed at $72i 10 and clean-up cost $4,646,68. 11ore than 20 county law enforcement agencies joined with Laguna Beach in controlling the three-day happening, each municipality footing its own bill under mutual aid pacts. Cost to the countywas estimated in excess of $12,000. Cyclists Urged To Register Motorcycle ent.husiasts interested in using the future Huntington Beach trails system are urged to register their ma· chines with the Re creation and Park! De· partment. Director Norm Worthy urged immediate registration of all bikes, pointing out that registration figures will help in get· ting; the new cycle park apen soon. He said the facility at Gothard Street and Talbert Avenue, will be restricted 10 machines of 100 cubic centimeters or less and that unregistered bikes will not be permiUed. Regi stration will be held at the Rec- reation Center. 17th Street and Orange Avenue from 8 a.m. lo 5 p.m. v•eekdays. The free registraLion v.·ill require th e sig- nature of both the operator and owne r. which could be the same person. No age restrictions have been lm~ed for either owners or riders. All machines v.·il\ be inspected by the police depart- ment whe.n the park opens. PEP to Locate On Park Avenue Laguna 's new environmental group. Pro-environment-People (PEP), has found a home at 1,80 Park Ave .. eourtesy of the Laguna Cahmber of Commerct. Chairman Luisa Hyun said t h e chamber has offered to provide PEP with a desk In itJ front office. from which to conduct its l~al campaign for environmental Improvement. "\\'e'll mave In as &>On as v.·e get a phone." she said. . Started by a group or ecology conSCIOU.'i Laguna women. PEP now ha! a membership of GO and has held a number of meetings to plan support of 1ntl·pollu· tion and conservation leg lslatlon at all levels and disseminat ion of Information on environmental probltms. Of'IT ........ W at~h 1 Step! Cori Artists Strike Early Bewan: of the bunco men' That'• the odvk:e of H~ Beoch Police Chief Earle Robitaille who claims that the annual mJgraUon of bunco and conmen who prey on householders is off to an early start this year. "These bogus operators are alrtady starting their typical door·to-door opera- tions in the California ar• and might just go looking for vlctinu in this cit)\'' lhe chief said today. "Again thls year, lhey a.re offering cut-tale !!praying of shingle roots. lr1. the past they have offered bulk fertilizer, auto body work and pest and insect inspections.'' The chief said the men are often aecompante<\ by female accomplices who move door-to-door at the same time, pedding purported "hand made'' laces and knit terns. "Most, if not all . of their services and goods ere worthless and many are actually injurious,'' Robitaille declared. U a resident is approached by a door-t<r door solicitor with any of these or r;imilar propositions, he should always request to see the salesman's city business Uctnse, the chief 1dv\Jed. '"U none can be produced, the resident ahould refrain from contracting for lh• service, no matter how enticing the price llOUnds. A phone call to the Huntington Beach Police Department wlttl a thorough description of the peddler, bis vehicle, and possible companions r;hould be the next step. Robitaille added the same general rule of demanding identification and proper credentials shouJd be applied to persona who represent themselves as "inlpec· tors'' for various utility companies. ..No public utilit y company a\lo't\'!I its representative to collect fee.s: and a legitimate concern will bill by mail,'' the chief explained. "These fraudulent 'in!pectors· almost exclusively prey on the elderly and always find ;improper' Y.'iring or in· festattons·Clf some type or another. "They also alway" demand outrageous fees for corrections of the 'problerru' found , often up to $1 ,000. They imply that if such 'cornction.s' are not un- dertak4n at once, the person will be immediately turned out of the home.'' Ne~ort Boats Take Lead In Puerto Vallarta Race By ALMON LOCKABEY INll"• ••Her PHOTOGRAPHER CRAIG MAILLOUX MOPS UP AT UPI Earthquake Jostle1 Photo BurHU In Downtown Los Angeles Newport entries in the ft1arina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta yacht race took over elapsed and corrected time positions Monday as the 26-boat fleet experienced its first wind sinct the start last Satur- day. Ericsoo-35, The Odd Couple, skippered by Rona1d Lee of Del Rey: Yacht Club was holding third place overall on the handicap standings. At the noon rollcall Monday the fleet \lr"AS. spread out from San Martin Island on the south to Ensenada with northwest winds starting the yachts to move. From Page 1 In the batUes for class honon on corrected time Nonnan Bacon's Morgan- 54 Widgeon from Santa Barbara Yacht Club was leading Class A and William Allen's Cal-40 Madrugador, California YC and NHYC was leading Class B. The Ericson-35! dominated Class C. SOUTHLAND TREMBLES ••• The freshening S-lS knot northwest breeze which started late In the morning ,_tonday boosted Bob Lynch'! 82-foot M- Boat Sirius 11 -the scratch boat - out to a 2S mile lead over Russ Ward'• Columbia-S7 Arits. Sirius II is from Newport Ii arbor\ Yacht Club and Aries Oies the burgee of Lahaina YC but is being sailed by a Newport crew headed by Dan Elliott . and overpasses were reported threatened in some areas. "I was in my kitchen," said one robe- clad housewife. "l fell down and started praying." Control towers at Van Nuys and Burbank Airports in the devastated bedroom of the basin, the San Fernando Valley, were damaged and the FAA sus. pended all flight activity. A pilot flying over the vast eity when the temblor -accompanied by an ominous rumble and tbe creak and groan of wrenching homes -witnessed it . He said all of Los Angeles shivered and wobbled, Its vast 6ea of lights looking like a sequined outfit on a g<rgo girl. Power and telephone r;er\lict was tern· porarily interrupted in many area! and radio stations were jolted right off the air. One KRLA disc jockey's voice trembled as he told of the station·s steel and concrete building swaying like it was made or rubber. "Or maybe it's my knees. They r;till are," he quipped. A survey or Orange County hospitals and emergency services indicated few if any quake-re lated injuries, while damage was limited to scattered items in homes and stores. Burglar alarms were triggered by the lremor and the Seal Beach Fire Depart.. ment horn sounded once at the height Gates Appointed To State Board A young Los Angeles attorney, one of the founders of Air California. was appointed 11onday to the state Board of Education by Gov. Ronald Reagan. ~l ark Gates, 34. joins Newton L. Steward, 50, a Eureka broadcasting ex· ccutive. as the two new members of the state board replacing outgoing presi- dent Ho\vard Day and Dr. Thomas G. Harward whose terms expired Jan. IS. Gates, with four others. fou nded Orange COunty·s first airline in April 1966 in Newport Beach. He served as Air California's corporate secretary and general counsel until sale o: the airline last June to Westgate C8lifomia Corpora· lion. Gates and Steward will take their place on the state board at it! meeting Thursday in Los Angeles. Both are Republicans. They replace Governor Reagan's first appointees to the po1icy- n1aking body. Juvenile Action Set in Slaying Greg Bradlty Moon of Buena Par'k, accused of the monkey wrench murder of his father, w\11 be tried as 11 juvenile, Jt has bttn ruled. The 17·year-<1ld youth is being held ln juvenile hall until his trial an Feb. 24. A public defender will be appointed for him. The fathtr, Richard A. "-loon. 4S. was kill~ in the back yard of the home of his aon-in-la\\' 11.nd daughter Jan. t9 in Carden Grove, The boy fled the scene but later surrendered lo San Diego police. 200 Seeking 1 Badge 1tlLWAUKEE (.\Pl -~lore than 200 persot\lli have applied for one patrolman job In tht suburb of Elm Grove, Pollet Chief Earl Kn1eser 11aid Monday. of the shock in a grotesque squawk as though for help. Seismology stations elsewhere in the U.S. registered 6 to 7 on the Richter Scale, which places a 7 magnitude-quake as one or major proportions. "It ls about the same magnitude of the Long Beach quake ," mused Dr. Charles Richter, who invented the scale but chose to stay in earthquake country after retirement. The Long Beach quake which killed 120 and ca u!led millions of dollars' damage hit 6.3, while the l!J52 Tehachapi tremor that killed l2 was a 7.7 force. Experts noted the 1906.earthquake and fire that devastated San Francisco was 8.25 on the open-end RiChter Scale. which has no maximum roree. The temblor that struck today as an estimated seven million Southlanders were preparing for work or school came less than a month after a seismologist's warning. During a conference of geological ex· perts. they criticized continued con· struction of high-rise buildings such as two 42-story towers which surv ived today·s jolt. Seismologists have long predicted California"s quake-prone coastal basin is due for a major calamity on the long-dormant San Andreas Fault. The deep rift on the earth•s crusl running north and south through the population center of the stale \Vas not involved in today·s awesome event. Public interest has waned somev.'hat in the v.·ake or predictions by a broad spectrum of self-proclaimed vi sionaries that by April. 1969. most af Galifornia \vould be wracked by quakes and sink into the sea. A tremor centered in San Diego County on April 28 of that year, however, created panic among many but caused little damage to the largely unpopulated area. Freestyle, an Erlcson-35 sloop co.skip. pered by Saint Cicero and Rod Lippold, NHYC moved into a tie for corrected lime honors with her sister shi p Aquarius, skippered by John Holida y, Long Beach Yacht Club. Another Mental Health Symposium Set A symposium on "Mental Health in Orange County" will be conducted by the League of Women Voters at 9:30 a.m. Wedne!day in the Community Methodist Chur-ch, 6662 Heil Ave., Hun- tington Beach . Dr. Ernest W. Klatte, progra m ctlief for the county's community mental health services, will be the principal speaker. He is expected to discuss cur· rent programs. future plans, runding and legislation. A panel af LWV members who have researched mental health services and nttds in the county will present ad· ditional views. Co ke Collects Refu se NEW YORK I AP) -The Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Nev; York has announced plans to set up 17 collection depots in the metropolitan area to buy glass bottles and alumi11um cans. The company \\'ill pay one-half cent per bottle or can, regardless of brand. and turn them ove r to be melted down and recycled. Handicap Standing• OVERALL -(I ) Tie b e t w ee n Freestyle and Aquarius; (3) The Odd Couple; (4) Sigame (CaJ-36) Sid Renkow, DRYC. CLASS A -(I) Widgeon ; (2) Querido JI (Columbia-SO ) Jim Feuerstein, DRYC; (3) Arie!; (4) Dorothy 0 (Colwnbia-57), Robert Beauchamp, NHYC. CLASS B - ( l) Madrugador; (2) tit between Siren (Ericson-39) Frank Rice, NHYC, and Dakar (Newport-41) William Goodley, DRYC; (4) Destiny II (Santana- 37) John Hooten, BCYC. CI.ASS C -•Freestyle, Aquariw, The Odd Couple, Sigame. LltlluOt •""' Unth\141 Al.EGRE !PJ·tJ) Joi'!" MttAIUter. LY C, ll'h N-11/:dW AQOA IUOS (f>tsl John Holiday, l I V C. JI :0'1<1-1 !i:SIW ARIES !COl·$1) ltutt Wt rO, lYC, 30:2'11-111: fllN P.VENTUll.A (8tr·«l) L.H. .Prlt.1 Jr. ltYC, ll~2.f~i11 1r~3~c11.»1 A1e~1ndtr Gorby, OllYC. Jt :26N-117:llW CARINA (PJ-.c:J) Wlllltm Colvlllt, NHICC, Jl:llfN -!!1:2<1W OAKAR (N·41) Wlll\1m Goodley, Clll Y(, JQb~~TI~~:O'lrf l51n!tn.-37l John Hooten, 8CYC, 31~':.0l~l1~ tCol·llJ Bob a11ucr.1m~. NHYe, JCl :4JN-11J:O•W FREE~TYLE !E·l~)LIODOld • C!ctre, NHYC, 30~~~011''~ff' -(E-41) llClbtrl Ki hn, e ve, ll tON-116. liW KP.MAKA BUG !K·SOI Ch1r1,_ Oller, OllYC, 31Ji,..oRU~·1mR (C•~4ll1 1111 •i1en Jr., c.v c. 30:lON-1U:J.IW MISTRAL (LlO l tu<t l1rnht rd, I YC, 31 J/i~i~11iJE'f MAR flit< ktl<~I Ji>'ln Su l_, $0YC, ll:UN-111 ="\W OOA5All (Ctl·l11 Arrhur 81111!, It. l"YC, Jl:01 N-11i:S2W OUE ll lOA II (C0!·501 JI"" Ftver.it lf'I. bllYC, 30\'8N-111:•TW llA5CAL rs•· v•wll 8 111 Wiiton $. y c . JO:J1 N-116:2SW 51GAME <C•l·3'l Sk:I llen-ow. 0 It Y C, JO:!IN-1Jt:'8W SIREN tE·3') Frl f'lk lllt!ct . NHYC. :I0:4iN- 111:J2W SIRIUS 11 (12' <ullr•) loo LYftth, NHVC. )Or°~~-1Jij~(0U.PLE !E·Jll lton \.", DltY(, )l•llN-111:01W VAl.ENTINE II HC.·lll PP<!OV Sl11tr, LAYC, Jl ~~~J~"~~':ZtHElll 11 1 CH·ll) Jo~n WH11, SI, FV C l1 :2lN-lll'.1!W WtOGEON 1""'54) Normln !ICllft. SIVC 30~l~NT1J'R ~W cCol-511) Gtorgt An11rr, PMYC. J1:10N-11l:lJW THE NAME OF THE GAME The re is • common proctice of private lobeling 1n the c1rp1t industry. L1r9e department stores, choin stores and contractors at new tracts have fietic ious names on the s•mples so thot customers connot eosly shop brand nome prices. Customers shopp ing 1t our store find the price of each quolity prominently featured on the sample book, because we are competitive. Also, because we feel the customer has 1 right 'fo km>w what he is buying , we never change the name on a sample book. Thi n•m• of tho gome is inl19rily! ALDEN'S SANTA ANA. OlANOI TUSTIN Cell •• , ALDIN'S lltlD HILL CAlltPITJ & DlltAPllltlll 11S74 lrvln.,. Tustin, (111\. ......... CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MUA 646-4838 HOURS: Moo. Thnr Thun., t 11 5:1D -Fri. t to t -Set., t :JO to 5 I ) 7 • TutWJ, Ftbruary 9, 1971 H DAILY mor 3 Effects of Quake Felt Throughout Southland Ftom Wire Strvk:ts lie are the Umes today's earthquake \\'as recorded 1t selsmographje stations of the State Resourcts Agency: Pyramid Dam on lnterstatt s In the Tehachapi t.1ount alns: 6:00 1.m. and 48 Stc:Ond!I. . Cedar Springs, nine mile' north of San Btrnardlno: 6:00 a.m. and 57.2 seconds. Ptrrl1 Dam, 13 miles souUltast o( RJverslde: 6:01 a.m. and two seconds. San Lul1 Reaervolr, 255 miles north Quake Shuts 10 Schools h1 Sa11ta Aita Ten schools in the Santa Ana Unified School district were lhe only public Jehools closed today I~ Orange County because of possible earthquake damage . All o( those closed "'ere built prJor to 193.'I and are considered substandard, according lo Ho"·ard R. Harrison, associate superintendent for management services of the Sanla Ma di.strict. \Vhile the nine elementary schools and one junior high school \\'ere inspected in 1965 and structurany improved, distr ict officials 5aid today·.s tremors cracked walls and teilings sufficiently to close them. The clos ure affected more than 8,000 Santa Ana school children '"ho will not be allowed back inta tbe schools until engineers today complete an inspection to determine the i;oundnes.s of the atruc· tures. Harrison said the dislrict was being cautious particularly after discovering \vhen Lathrop school "'as demolished, thal engineering reports h·ad been ac- curate in terms of the potential danger in the pre-1933 school buildings. "We found ceiling and floor joist., In Lathrop School that \\'ere just resting on the concrete supporting them .·• Har- rison said. The Santa Ana schools that were closed toda v \\·ere Frankl in, Hoover. Lowell , f\!onfoe. McKinley, f..1uir. Roosevelt and \Vilson elementary schools and Willard Junior High School. The Orange County Department of F..ducalion reported that all other schools in the county "·ere open today. * * * R ea g an Declares Emer gency State In Los Angeles SACR.Af.tENTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan decla red a state of emergency in Los An· geles County today hecause of the earth· quake that struck Southern California. The governor said he would ask Pres- ident Nixon to take similar action at the fed era l level. "I have a55ured Los Angeles County officials that the stale of California will pro1•ide "'hatever assis tance and resourc- es may be needed to deal with the effects of the quake," Reagan said. Reagan was brlefed OR the earthquake situation by his Office of Emergency Services this morning and then said the 1;tate "·ould make available wha tever aid local authorities needed in dealing wllh the problem. There were no immediate plaru for the governor to visit Los Angeles, which Is his home. But h.ls press office said those plans "·ould depend on further repcrts from the scene later jn the day. The Stale Department of Menial Hy· giene already had cleared sections or Camarillo State }lospital to take in pa· tienls from a. damaged hospital in tht earthquake area. Lady La.w1nnker Urge s Approval Of Prostitut ion CARSON CITV, Nev. (UPI> -A lady lawmaker say' she favor!i mak.Jng brothels legal, but other rtprt!e.ntat!ve., from . Cl1rk COunly where It is being con.11lde.red disagree. "As • mother, 1 woman, a legislator and • cltlien, l am In favor of lqalit.ed prostitution tn Nevada," As!tmblywoman Eileen Brookman (0.Las Vegas), u.ld Monday. But Senate Majority Leader B. Mahlon Brown tO.Las Ve1as}, ..Pid "You'ri just buying • lot or heada~hts. •t The C11rk County Commissfon is con- sidering giving a rrancblH for one brothtl In an area 15 miles we!t of Las Vegas on Blue Oh•mond Road. The probable franchisee. \li'Ould be Jae. eo~ forte. the northern Nevada brolhel king. Most lawmaktrt were non·commlttal on the ~ubject, but Mrs. Brookman 1aid legalize<! prostitution would curb homosexu1dity, venere1I disease . rape, and lhe number of young pregnant glrl11. She 111lso envisioned tax benefits if the houses \\'ere llei:nscd . of TthachapiJ: &:01 a.m. and ~.l Je<Ondl. Orovtlle Dim, m mllts north ol the Tthachapls: 6:02 1.m. and 6.4 stronds. Residents In San Diego and lmperial counties felt slrong trtn10rs today from the massive quakt. P.fost San Diego residents said they felt a rolling motion for about 45 seconds and many reported that their clocks stopped at about 6:03 a.m .• two minutes 11fter the tremor wJs recorded in Los Angeles. Only minor damage from the strong 0 • ' SAN flANCISCO 100 ..... arlhqu.ke which belted tho Loi Anplts area today wu reported )n Kem CoWlty which botden Loi Anselu County on the north. Two market operators and a drugstore In Mojave, some 50 mileJ north of lAa Angeles. reported minor breaking of mer· chandise. Roads were closed Into Loe An· gcles County. Burgl1r alarms were tripped in Bakersfield by th• shock but no s!Jnlli· , cant property damage or injuries we~ reported. "It waa strong enough so mo3t J)eoplt NEV. Ul'I N ... M"' MAP SHOWS AREA SHAKEN av EARLY MORN ING EARTHQUAKE Tate Case Surprise Susan Atkins Confesses Her Part in Slayings LOS ANGELES (AP) -Susan "Sadie" Atkins, convicted with t\l·o ()(her young ·women and Charles Manson in the Sharon Tate murders, took the witnes~ stand in a surprise move toda y and said she was involved in the killings. Her attorney, Daye : Shinn:· asked : "Were you personally involved in the killings at the Tate home on Aug. 9, 1969~" "Yes," replied the .slim. dark-haired member or Manson's hippie-type clan. Earlier, attorneys disclosed that Linda Kasabian, star prosecution witness in the convictions, is being called back from New Jiampshire after testimony that a few days before the slayings she said she planned ta kill some "pigs." Deputy Dist. Atty. Vincent T. Bug\iosl said Mrs. Kasabian. 21, is scheduled to appear next Tuesday at the penalty trial of the four convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy. The surprise testimony tilonday of catherine: "Gypsy," Share, 28, brought Battin 'Targets' At $100 Fete Son1e unlikely guests from the Irvine C.Ompany "'iii attend Supervisor Robert \V. Ballin·s 'tloo per person fund raising reception tanight. In response to an Inquiry a com· pany spokesman said Richard Reese, vice president for planning, and James Taylor, director of General Planning administration, would attend the Villa Fontana affair. The Irvine Comptny spokesman nid, "We were invited ta allend so we will have representatives there as an act of courtesy to the chairman of the board." Battin has mac!: the Irvine Com· pany oot of his principal targets in his two ye ara in office. quiv et• Quotes objecUons fr om both prosecution and defense. Dis traught and sometimes 111•eeping , Miss Share said she had dec.ided to "~nitch" because she "'as afraid of losing custody of her baby. Bugliosi i;aid he is arranging for ~1r5. Kasabian's return at the request or tifanson's attarney, Irving Kanarek . She has been Jiving in Milford, NJf., since her 18 days of testimony last August. Her Beverly Hills attorney. Gary Fleischman. said he told her by telephone last night she was being called as a defense witness. "Actually. she doesn't consider herself a witness for either side," Fleischman said. "She just wants to fell the truth about what happened. and if the defense wants ta call her, that's fine with her." Youngest State Official J ailed On Dr unkenness FRESNO (UPI ) -C aliforn i a'& youngest elected official ha:; been ar· rested on charges of drunkenness Alld resisting arrest af ter an incident at a California Young Republican convention here. Robert Trotter. 22. a member of the Fresno County Board of Education, said Monday following his release on $670 bail that police were harassing him and he planned to sue the department. He wa1 rePorted staggering near the convention site Saturday night and poli{e said he attempted to resist arrest when Patrolman C. G. 11-fitchell arrived on the scene. ~fitchell sa id a struggle ensued in a parking lot and he finally wrestled Trotter to the ground and handcuffed him. Trotter contended he \\'as s1ruck \\'ithout provocation and suffered a "four· Inch gash'' on his head. ltlt it. There wtre a krt of calls," a 1herl!f'1 office SPoke.anan l n Bakersfield said. The State Pt1ental >lyalene Department said that paUtnl11 were btln.g evacuated from the Olive View General HOfPital In the Su Fernando Valley because or earthquake damage. A departnient SPokennan said the pa- tlenu were being taken to the UCLA tiftdlcal Center. He sajd Ule number of patlenlt lovolved was not tmmedlately !mown. He also a:aid details on the extent or the hosp~! dama1e were aketchy. The eartbquake callffd the L«kheed· California 1Co. to close Ill plan13 in Burbank and Rye Canyon. Some 18,000 day Mlft hourly employea 111·ere Rnt home for the day pending a sarety ln~peclion of build ings and cleanup of brtlken glass. Initial report! indicated that the ma· jorlty of damage was broken windows and lighting fixtures and upset file cabinet.!. Supervisory, maintenance and plant protection personnel remained on duty. lnltrstate 5, the major highway link btt"·etn San Fnnclsco and LA>s Atigelt.s, was closed today by the earthquake. The Calllornla Division of lllghwaya closed the route bttaust of damage to bridges in the Newball area wher• the quake was ctntered. Three employes of the W Angeles Herald Examiner were hospitalized after Uley were knocked unconacloua: when the quake triggered a fire-fighting devlc• that filled the paper's basement printing plant with 1 gas. Hanging On and Praying Reporter Describ es Shock in Quake's Epice nte r By KEARNEY BOTHWELL GRANADA HILLS tUPI) -l bad just crawltll into bed and turned on the radio to catch the 6 a.m. news wbt.n the quake !lruck. The next thing J knew I was hanging onto the bed for dear life and praying. ne house -I live in an old tw~story frame home Jn the northern San Fernan· do Valley near tbe epicenter -twisted and moaned . I could bear the beami; creaking, plaster falling , books tumbling from shelves, 11nd the shelves lhemselves collapsing under tbe sway. As soon as the first jolt subsided I jumped up to check on my roommates, Steve Smilh, 1 teacher at Alemany Higb School, said he \\'as afraid to get out of b.is bed becaust of his huge ... Quake Queries Flood LA Area Phon e Office Anxious relatives throughout the nation today deluged Los Angeles area telephone exchanges wilh calls of concern, but few could get th rough. Leng distance service out of the devastated area -which can expect aftershocks for up to a wee k ye t - \Vas better lhan for inl"oming queries. A spokesman for lhe American 'I'elephone and Telegraph Company ~aid efforts are being made to minim ize con· gestion al receiving poinls. Power service was f.lso affected, when the Pacific Northwest-California direct current power inlertie was ruptured at Sytmar near the quake epicenter. A spokesman for the Bonneville Power Administration said local c urrent \\'ouldn't be affected by the Sylrnar sla- t.ion where dam.age forced Hs evacuation Mercury contamination from wrecked converter switche:; changing direct cur- rent (DC\ to alternaiing current (AC) power Jed to its closure. 'Legalized Sex' Bill Introduce d SACRAMENTO (AP ) - Assen1blyman Willie L. Brown Jr. said today he will re-introduce leg islation to I e g a I i i e homosexual and heterosexual sexual acts in privale between consenting person~ over 21. Jt would not eliminate penalties relaling to sexual conduct between a minor and an adult. Bro\v n unsuccessfully proposed iden- tical legislation last year. Brown. a San Francisco Democrat, said, "This bill is aimed at freeing our police departments from de aling with a ·crime' which has no victim. Let's free the police from peeping into the bedrooms of American citizens." Ra1·e Misprin ted Cash Stolen in New York NEW YORK (AP) -Bandits smashed lhe window of the Chase Manhattan Bank's midtown Money -~luseum early today and made off "Ith sume $5,000 "'orlh of numismatic curiosities. Among the items taken was a mi~minted bill lhal read SI O on one side and $1 on the reverse. polic~ :5aid. collectjon of books tumbling ab.out the room -and the huge cast~iron chandelier above his bed swaying ominously, but holdlng. The living room was a shambles - the lamps had been toppled from the end tables and smashed. The bookshelves were overturned. There were huge cracks in the plaster around the stairway well. In the kitchen foodstufrs had tumbled from the cupboards and the ice box: had been shaken open. China was spilled and shattered. In the back ya rd the pool sloshed over, nooding fhe yard . My other room· males quickly pulled on pants and dashed outside as the first aftershock hit. All up and down the street frightened neighbors in nightclot hes were scrambl· ing into their yards. Within minutes I was en route bact lo the office I had left only an hour earlier. All along the way there was evlden~ of damage, Hundreds of businesses bad shattered windows and merchandise 1catlered out lnto the streeet. Ringing burglar alarms shattered the silence. made even more ominous by the fact that all electrical and telepbOna service was out. fnter sections. where traffic lights failed to oontrol the usu&I early morning rusll into downto"it offices, were flooded from breken water mains. To\l·ers of smoke began springing up from broken gas mains which had caught fire. Other Quakes LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The earthquake which struck Los Angelo area toda y was the 10th major quake in California since 1812. The previous quakes killed 700 persons. They were: -San Juan Capistrano. Dec. 1812 : Church destroyed with loss of 40 Lives. -Hayward.San Lea ndro. Oct. 21, 1863: 3Q killed. -Lone Pine, Owens Valley, March 26, 1872: 'n killed. -San Francisco, April 18, 1906: 452 killed, $500 million damage, 1.8,188 buildings destroyed, more than 100,000 homeless. 1.1ost disastrous quake in U.S. history. -El Centro-Calexico, June 22. 1915: Six dead. -Santa Barbara, June 29, 1925: 12 dead, several million dollars damage, 6.3 on Richter scale. -Long Beach, r..1arch 10. 1933: 12{) dead, thousands injured, $40 million damage. -Tehal'hapl (Kern County\ July 21. 1952: 11 killed . 7.7 on Richter scale. -Bakersfield, Aug . 22, 1952: Aftershock of Tehachapi quake, bo .kilted. Jolted Nerve s Only Effect Of Q11ake in Soutl1 County By JOllN VALTERZA 01 tht Dilly l'lltl 11111 ,Jangled nerves and swinging swag lamps were about the only effec.ts of this morning's rolling ea rthquake along the South Coas1, despite !he heavy damage and injury in olher parts or the Southland. Officials of the Southern Califomia Edison Company ~aid their nuclear generating station al. San Onofre had "absolutely no prohlems" from the temblor. which "'as fell in the a r e a at 6:02 a.m. "In fact, no Orange County in· :;tallations or equipment \\'ere damaged this morning," said \Villiam D. Fenlon, a chier spokesman f1Jr the utility firm. The gencraling station at San Onofre is eri uipped to withstand trcmor:r; mur:h greater than lhat !ell this morning. he said. Checks with school and water districts throughout the Capistrano Bay and Sad- dleback areas reported no unusual effects from the main quake and llst several aftershocks. Immedi ate Ins pections of pre-Field Act buildings in the Capistrano Unified and San Joaquin school dist ricts yielded no reports of damage before schools opened as usual this morn ing. Several water districts checked this morning reported no damage to their equipment. At S11n Clcmen1e. police hcadriuarters. switchboards predictably I i t up throughout lhe morning. Citizen cheeks for road conditions - even the curious r;imply asking If police sensed the tremors -flowed In througb !he dawning hours. · Even the unstable palisades section• along El Camino Real fared well ln the shaking early today. The slumping bluffs held well despite a few weekend slides which caused a pair of freak traffic crashes. No new debris fell today. Spokesmen at San Juan Capistrano Mission -which was devastated by a quake in the early 18005, -saJd nllry a brick fell from IU historic buildings early today. Quake Damage Closes Tower The Occidental Tower. Los AJ!gele.11' first high rise office, was closed today after receiving what o!Ji cials described as superfi cial earthquake damage. Officals said the 32·story complex would be closed for a routine inspection and minor repairs, but would open again on Wednesday. Occidental President Earl Clark said the five-year-old bulldlng ''pas~ed all tests for which it was designed." Ue noted the company's emergenc1 flO"'er came on during !he b!ackout.s \l'hich hit !be downtown area and the Qc. cidental computer operations were not interrupted. The building's computers ~re the fourth' large s1. non-Oefen~e computer cmter in lhe U.S .. and serve all of Transamerica'a !'iUbsidiarfes and portions of f..fcdlCl:ri in Soo1hern California. Qnakes Caused by Slipping Rocks QUAKE INTENS ITY SCA LE EXPLA INED By JOANNE REYNOLDS DI' fft9 CMllr I'll" ""' The ancitnt Greeb thought earth· quakes were caused by the 1od Poseidon, who they called "earth shaker." Today, It is common knowledge that earth tremon originate in faults when two rock faces slip off each other. A. R. Ke:rr, • geok>gy Instructor .-t Orange Coan College, said there are: t'>l·o theories as to the cause of the slippage on the faulU. The elastic rebound theory, wblch is the one most ofte n tlted , Is ba~d on I.he constant but very gradual shift 1n the t8rth's aust. Rock5 become distorted but hold their original positions un til the 11treis has accumulated to the point of ovtn:<>minJe the res.istance or the rock.! and tile earth snaps back to an unstrained J>QSI· tion at the fault line. The "1naR" caused by the rebound creates the shock "'aves known as earth· quakes. The second theory. Kerr said, Is that earthquake& are. the surface. reaction of movemtnt many miles below the earl.h's surface. He likened Jt to a ripple on a pond caused by a disturbance below the: surface. Regardless of the caust. Kerr said there are thret typeii of qu 11kes -those. in which the movcmtnt at the fau lt i~ horllontal, those In v.'hich lhe movi:· mcnt Is vertical and those in which the movement is a combination of both. ''I would say today's earthquake was chicny a lateral shift, though there were probably \·ertical components in It. ,, "The duralion of It .tnd the kind of movement that I felt would also indicate ' rolling quake In v.•hich there wa' a Ion& adjustment at the fault." he .11ald. Htt contrasted I.Ile rolling movement of today's quake, which registered 6.5 on the Richter Scale. with lhe sharp. jarring vertical mcwemenl of lhe 'J'thachapi quake in 1952 Which !'fgistered 7.2. kilt ed 14 person! and did extensive damage.. The eplcenttr or today's quake ha~ oot been e.stllbllshed , but Kerr estimated it could have been In the San Gabriel fault which runs parallel to the main Sa n Andreas fault for about 90 mile! from !\ft. Baldy area lo f"razler f\11 . ntllr lhe Tejon Pall.~. There ha,·e not bc'1'1 t ny major quake.• along this fault f9r 150 yt:ars. Another likely candidate for the earth· qunke is the famous Sin Andreas faul t which run~ Inland of the San G11b rief fault In a continuous lint fro m the f..iex- lcan border to Point Arena in Northern California. One of the mo:5l di$lurbing a!ptcis of an earthquake are the aftershocks. Kerr said there is no rule on the. number or Intensity of afttrshocks. Fo!Joy,•lng !he Alaskan quake In 1064 -whtch Is the most intense one recorded in U.S. hlltory -there were 12.000 aftershock3. ScienUsL• say ihe aftershocks are a part of the re lease of actumulated elastic strain. TM relief of pressure at the r11ult it~elf c:han~es !he stress pattern!' for mlle1 around 3nd the readjustment or these 11tressc1 Is lhe ca use of the aflt.r~hoclu. The Richter Sc11le, developed by Dr. Charles Richter of the California Tnstltute of Technololgy In P1s~dena. is the only scale which measuru the energy rl!ltu- ed in an earthquake. It goes by logarithm ic progreuion. Evtry step of one-teath on the scale represents a ten-fold step in magnitude. Thus a quake rated al ,.7 l.s 100 llme1 more powerful than one r•ted 6.7. A quake of 2 Is Imperceptible: i 5, perctptible near the point or orlgln; 3, Celt over " falr~lied local area: 4.5, can cause slight damage in a limited area; 5. polentlally damaging ; 7, serk>u.s or major : a. a "grtat" quake. The San franciS<:O quake: of ltol waa 8.3 and Al aska in 11&1 was 1.4 on the Richter Scale. Callfom la'11 lasL major quake, the Tehach•pl quake of 1152. me11sured 7 .6. 4 Ull.Y PILOT Names Rub Bad Way By DICK wur WASHINGTON (UPI) -1 believe it Is accurate to 1ay that one of the main cause& of friction in America is racial and ethn ic nomenclature. Cbnsider a passage I ran acrOlis in a publication by ttle .outhwtst interrroup relations council. A young lndia.a is quoted as s1yin1 : "even the name Indian is not ours. It was glven to us by some honky who got lost and thought he had landed in India." Therein lies the rub, <lf cour.a. Too many racial and ethnic groups got their names from other raciaJ and ethnic groups . And even the groups that were privileged to have named lhem~lves didn't do too good a job of it. It is plain that if anything approaching true brotherhood is ever to be achieved there must be a national racial and ethnic renaming convention. AFTER ALL, an individual citizen who doesn't like hi8 name can go to court and have it legally changed. So w1ly shouldn't I l I i - The ILil@lHJ'il'IEllf?. Side ' ' a racial or ethnic group have the same CJpportunity. Each such ifOUP could caucus and M· cide, either by direct vo~ or through ap- poinlm!nt of a committee, what lt would like to be called. 'I'Mn the name would be formally rati- fied by all of the other ethnic and racial (TOUP5 attending the convenli~n. Or, if it preferred, a group might spon· aor a contest . - FLAMES LEAP FROM BUS AND OTHER VEHICLES IN BELFAST RIOTING Violence Erupted After 1 Small Girl W11 Accldtntally k illed by Army Car Land Mine Blast l{ills 5 In North .Ireland Strife BELFAST, NortMrn Ireland (UPI - Five civiliaa men were killed today when their Land Rover hit a. land mine on a road 70 miles west of here, Brilish military official1 said. The deaths follow- ed a night or guerrilla w1rfare in Belfast. Military officials said the Land Rover was destroyed by the blagt at Brougher Commons Told Lockheed Engine Future Doubtful LONOON {UPl1 -A go vernment minister's statement to the House of Commons cast doubt today fln the future of the jet enaine whicb caused the col - Japge ot the Rol!g.Royce engineering firm. mountain, 15 miles from the Army g:a.r. rison where the Duke of Kent, Queen Elizabeth's ctlusin, is based. Officials uid a military Land Rover had been du! along the road, which leads to a deserted British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) radio transmitter that was knocked <lUt of acU<ln by • bomb last month. Unofficial report.a said two of the five victirm were BBC e.nglnetr1. The underground Irish Republican Army (IRA) stepped up it& 1uerrUla war Monday night in Belfast with 1 bomb and machine gun attacks on British troops. In Bellast. troubl! erupted during: a funeral procession for Bernard' "Barney" Watts. the 28-year-old Catholic civilian shot by a soldier Friday ni1ht ln a gun battle with troops. Unidentified persons pulled a crane 11cro.s.s the path of the funer1l eortege when some mour11ers strayed into a Protestant area bordering the p~ ctssional route. Rail Talks Halt ; Strike Dat,e Set By Union Cliief WASffiNGTON (UPI ) -The president of the nation's largest rail uni<ln broke off contract talk! with manakement to- day and scheduled a nationwide rail strike March 1 when a Congressional moratorium expires. "With great reluctance , the Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerk!: (BRAC) has found no value in continuing the negotiations with railroad management for n!w contracts," BRAC President C. L. Dennis told a new1 conference. "Until management changes its attitude it is hard indetd to see a basis for settlement." Although breaking off talks with the management committee bargaining for all the railroads. Dennis invited represtn· lalives from individual carriers to open talks aimed at separate agreements. -He u id that ten tative agreements reached last ll'eek between the railroads and lwo smaller unions •·only com- plicated" hia negotiations becau!le the BRAC has "different problems to be solved and different economic ne!ds to be met." Denni!! said management had offered the same 44 to 45 percent wag! increase over 42 months that It had ~ettled with the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes and the Hot.el and Restaurant Employes Union. Stippllu Bog Dow n • Fog Stalls U.S. • Flights Ill Laos SAIGON (UPI) -Ground fo& and clouds nearly halted U.S. aupply nta:htJ from South Vietnam to South Vietnamese troops tryina: to cut the Ho Chi Minh Tr•il In southern Laos today. Truck convoys were hampered by monsoon rains. t.iore dense fog was predicted for Wtdnesday and military sources said that supply difficulties might develop unless the weather impro ved. There was sporadic contact with North Vietnamese troops in the area of the Laotian incursion today and U.S. head· quarters in Saigon reported f o u r Americans and six South Vietnamese killed Monday when Communist forces !hot down a helicopter. Far to the north of the allied offensive against Communist supply lines and bases, heavy fighting was reported today between Laotian troops and Communist forces on th! Plain of Jars. Americans at the Long Cheng Base were evacuated when it came under heavy artillery at· tack and preparalions were being made there for a long siege, Laotian tom· munlques said. U.S. helicopters involved in the Southern Laos campaign reported that the wealher over the operational Area was good but that conditions east of the Xe Don River, the boundary betwetn South Vietnam and Laos, was poor wit b visibility near zero. "If we go out and shoot all our rockets, v.·e can't eet back." one U.S. helicopter gunship pllot told UPr Correspondent &bert E. Sullivan after returning from a support mi15ion for South Viet11amese units in Laos. Sullivan said truck convoys were stall· ed along Highway 9 east of the reac· tivated U.S. combat base at Khe Sanh in the extreme oorthwe.st corner of South Vietnam. He uid overturned trucks were blocking hundreds <lf supply vehicles. Military authorities planned to close Highway 9 east of Khe Sanh for a few hours Wednesd11y to repair the road Army Man's Family Safe In Bomb Blast ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -A package left at the home of 1 U.S. Army sergeant exploded seconds after the sergeant's wife noticed that it was smoking and rusbed their twe children from the house. Mrs. Billy G. Austin told Army ind Turkisb government investigators ber 9- year-old son saw the packag! on their doorstop Monday and brought it into the kitchen. She began unwrapping it. Wben she saw the smoke, she grabbed the children and rushed outside. The kitcb!n was demollsbed. whlch WI! turned into a quaa:mlre by a 1urprise 1torm mo\'ing in off the Stluth China sea. Official Saiaon communiques today said the deepest penetration into Laos by elements of the 6,000-man South Viet· namese task force was six miles. But military sources in the field told cor· respondent Sullivan that some long ranae rtCOMaissance patrols of the 1st SOuth ·• Vietnamese Infantry Division Vt e r e --,'.' flperating as deep as 15 miles inside : Laos. t LaoUan CommunisU. in a broadca1t : heard in Saigon toni&ht. said 50 South ·t VietnameM: and 10 U.S. battalions "con· ~ ducted a strong attack on the town of Tchepone in southern Laos with the support of U.S. air." The Pathet Lao report said "Laos civilillll were slaughtered en muse by the invaders during the fierce attack." Israel Says No to Cairo Canal Terms JERUSALEM (UPI ) -Premier Golda f\.1eir rejected toda y Egyptian proposals to reopen the Suez Canal In exch1n1e fo_r an Israeli troop withdrawal from the east bank of the canal. But ahe offered to discuss a separate deal for reopening the long closed waterway. ln a policy speech to the Israeli Partia. 'ment, Mrs. Meir said the canal offer by President Anwar Sadat of Egypt was aimed merely at giving Egypt 1 strategic advantage without makil\g any real progress toward peace. Sadat made his proposal last Thur&day. calling for an Israeli troop withdrawal from the canal in return for reopening ()f the waterway which has been closed !ince the six-day war in June, 19'7. Mrs. f\o1eir said today Sadat's proposal left more unsaid than said and save no guarantee it would lead to the 1\gnlng of a peace treaty and end the Middle East confrontation. "I must make lt clear unequ ivocally Israel is ready with full heart to help to"'·ard opening the canal tD International free navigatl<ln for all the states. in· eluding Israel ," t.frll. Meir 11aid today. "Rename the Tskirnos! Win $10,000! plus 11 new automobile, 20 color television MIS, 10 minibikes and hundreds of other priZ!S !" Aviation ~1inister Frederick Corfield ~1onday night told the House it would not be in Britain's best Interest to con• tinue with development <lf the RB21 l engine for the U.S. Lockh!ed Aircraft Corp. "l do not bel ieve t.here is an enormous potential market f<lr this engine," he A youth ran from a crowd of Pro- testants and snatched a green, while and orange Irish Republican tricolor from Watts' coffin. Troops and poliee moved In at once to quell a possible confrontation in the West Circular Road. The cortege continued its journey to Milltown Cemetery without event after removal of the cran!. Laos Attack to Hasten "It is not we who are responsible for the closing of the canal. The opening of the canal to international navigation could be an expression flf a desire to reach peace. But the proposal of Preli· dent Sadat, as presented in his speech, seeks to achieve a strategic advantage Lhrough withdrawal of Israeli forces with<lut any real progress for peace. said. .... OUT or thi:i; v.·ould come some truly ~!ended racial and ethnic names. unless t miss my guess . Names likely le com- mand respect. and perhaps even awe, from other groups. Corfield said it "might be very much in Lockheed'! intere5t to conlinue with the RB21l. "But certainly this is not my idea of retaining our position in the big engine lea&U!. to develop at this enormous cost an engine which is to a large extent behind engines or equivalent pow!r and performance.'' Eisenhower Set For Sea Duties Withdrawal, Says Laird Nixon Aide Denies Escalation of War NEW YORK (AP) -President Nixon's C<lmmunications director. Herbert G. Klein , bas deni!d tbat the invasion' &f Laos is an escalation of the Vietnam war and that news of the conruct bas been suppressed. Do you see the beauty of this~ By adorit- lng a name in which they can take pride, membe'!'g of a group would strive to live up to the name and be better persons for It. And there would be oo m<lre need for anti-defamation organizations. Eskimos, for instance. might vote to change their namf to .. nature noblemen ." Indians might wish to be called "1lorious para11ons:· And :so on. The."e examples are purely illustrative. T \l'ouldn 't pr!sume lo sugge!t what any group. oth<>r than my OV.TI. should call it· ~elf. As for my group, 1 int~nd In re· commend that "'e t'all <lUr!lt\\'tS "M r. Nice Guys." \Vhich certainly gounds a great dfal better than "honky ." -UPI His statement came after Chancellor of the Exchequer An thony Barber told the House 'President Nixon bad told Prime Minister Edward H!alh he v.·HI cooperate with the British government .and Lockheed in exploring the future of the project. The gov!rnment's bill authorizing lhe 11cquisition of p8rts nf Rolls-Royt'e was published Monday. It comes up for its stcond formal reading Thursday. It gives a blanket power to ac9uire any part of the undertaking and asst!s of any ~ompany which is a subsidiary <lf Rolls-Royce. WASH1NGTON (UPI) -Presidfnt Nixon·s son-in·law, David Eisenhower. will be going to gea in late May as a Navy officer aboard the USS Albany, a guided missile cruiser with lbe Atlantic fleet. Da vid. who will be 23 on t.1arch 31, will graduate from Naval Officers Training School at Newport. R.1. March 12. commissioned as an ensign. Under Navy orders announced M<lnday he "''ill begin a two-month training course at Newport News. Va. in May he will be 11ssi10tned to the 17.000-ton Albany. a rebuilt World War JI cruiser bued in Mayport, Fla ., near Jacksonville. Snow, Rain Chill East Tornadoes, Bitter Cold Drive Into South «!!ellfornla Temperatures IY Ulltllb l"ltESS INTEltNATICMAL WASHINGTON (UPI) Def!nse Secretary t.1!lvin R. Laird predi cted tG- day that the allied operation in Laos would enable President Nixon to "meet or beat" his plan to withdraw 50,000 more ground combat troops from Viet- nam by May 1. Republican Congressional I e ad e r 1 emerged from a two-hour meeling with Nixon and said the operation would low!r U.S. casualties and drastically reduce the Communists' capability. Laird talked lo new smen before he briefed the Senate Armed Services Com· mitlee on South Vletnam·a move ints Laotian border sanctuaries with U.S. air support. Secreatry of Sta te William P . R<lgers arrived later for a briefing: with the Senate Foreign Relations <;ommittee. Laird gaid 00.000 more troops must be wilhdrawn by ~lay 1 to meet Ni:xon·s deadline for a 284,000 troop ceiling. "Vire will me!t or beat thst troop celling and we will g:o forward with our ll'ithdrawal program," La ird said. Laird sa id 10.000 U.S. ground force1 \.\'er! engaged in "backup " responsibili· lies" in South Vietnam for the Saigon troops' thrust into Cam bod.Ja and Laos. N<t lll l l'd "'°'"'"' 'Oii l "ll low t lDUdl covt rH te91t1I 1ttt.i"' e< M<,illlt•l'I (tlllOr"ll tetit Y ¢1f -flnt '" f1lr wltto v1rl1llt lllt~ 11111111 '"' IYI'· "" '" l l!Jr"(llrll. He ~aid !he Laos operation wa s "goinJ( Tt ,.,Dt •e•Y'fl •rid D•t <looi.1f0" ror I 1~1 14·11GYr ot•IDd t ndin• •• • •"' accordinit lo ~chedule." 'vas of " imited L• Antt!•• 11ao ••nt•l,nctd let i n• .,.. Cloudl with ll'!f1n11111n11 Al•PO•I tittl ... •w11 !e !,_Ult 11! !lit ..,.,.,,1 .. - lwlurs. 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Dl "'lft Wit lli<flll tlld "'"' wt•I ,.., •'fl>O•I.., l11lvrl11 Ztr9 11""etr1tvr11 1111"'Md "'' -·~ 1r11 lw•llli•c» ef ll'lf "l•I"' l l'lill l'llllCll (It tllt Mltlwn• tf'ld f•fl nOllllct 1 ,.,,. frtflt 1ct11lll 15 !~1 Gull Ct.alt 11111.. wlllltMd Alltft•I du•llll 1111 1111~! f tm ... r1lv•f l II' ·~· lttftt wtrt """'.....,,. '""" 1eut11tr" Ar111n111 ,. (t~•r1I D11>0rtl1. I .&lb1~Y ,.lbveYI ....... A!l111t1 llo1ten ftyfhltl Ch1•lottt (~!(ff& (lnol11P11!1 (ltYllt nd Ollll J ...... f'lt• MOllltl "'"" '•lrtllJ'll• ''lll'IO ~flt ... H$1>0lt,1IY ... ~11 .... ioo1" Jt<~'llfl\'!111 IC:t,...1C:llv u.1 v .... l M A11t«ttf. lO\/hYlltt M"""'to!I Mlt"'I Mllwtut.n Ml•~t..,111 Ht,. O•lt•IU Ht,. Vor~ °"''"°""I (fry °'"'"' ,._,"' ••• 1 .... •~11 • .,.1,~1, '""°"''* 1'111•~11·•" llort11...i, Ol't ll:1eld (llY ... !ICfl"'l~'e 11 Lev11 "l•~ Lew '•1•. duratinn" and 1\s objective "''IS "to 12 destroy and uproot the sanctuary areas 01 in Laos.'· " " " ,, " " " " " " • " • n .. " " • " " " " " ., .. " .. " " ~ .. " • " ~ " " " • " • ~ " " • " ~ " " • " .. .. " • " .. ., " " • " " " .. .. ... .. • " ... " " • " " •• • • • ·:: He said South Vietnamese troops •·will .u not "''in every battle " but said they )3 are strong enough now to win most ·•i of them. Senate GOP leader Hugh Scott told ~· reporttrll at lh f' White House that critics of Nixon's Southeast Asi an policy "ha ve fa llen of their own weight." "The stf'am jg <lUl nf a good deal .n or that criticism becau5e the Prtiident has dont what h@ said he was colng lo do.'' Scott said. He also said that .. If there Is a lack of credibility sur· ·°' round ing actlvltlts in Southeast Asia "lt ill on the part or th! doomsayers who~e predictions have been !ht opposite of " ll'hal h11 occurred.'' Hou~e Republic.an Leader Gerald 'R . Ford said the curr~nt operation Is aimed • at cutting the lifeline of th! Communists "' to the battlef ronts In South Vietnam·s et northern provinces -jLJst •s !ht U.S. Incursion Into C.!lmbodia last May cut !ht Communist lifelines to 5outhem por· tioM of South Vietnam. "The guccess <lf thia operation will lower casualties and drastically reduce en!my capability," Ford said. Scott and Ford said that about 30 Repub lican and 1-roocralic Congression- al leaders were bl'i!fed before the Laotian operations were undertaken. Most ll'atchable Klein, a veteran journalist, was quts· tioned at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism Monday by students as be appeared on 1 panel. • Patricia Anne :rempel. 19, Bould@r, Co lo .. has been named 1'1ost \Vatchable Girl In ?itilitary Uniform. \VhiJe Patricia is briefed on pool technique, 1 player Lakes cue and gives her the eye. l 7 • Fountain Valley Today's Final N.Y. Stocks YOL. 1>4, NO. 34, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ' ORANGE. COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~ TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1971 TEN CENTS St1uJy Pe11din9 County Safe; County's Thomas ' Hangs Onto Joh -Tremor Hits ' 6.5 Reading GETS REPRIEVE County Administrator Thomas Hatchet Murder Jury Selection Process Resumes .Jury selection continued today In the Orange County Superior Court trial of a Garden Grove youth accused in the hatchet murder of a service station at· tendant and later involvement in the killing of a Mission Viejo school teacher. Selection of the panel that will rule on the guilt or innocence of Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse. 16. is expected to take at least three more days in v.•hat will be , both sides predict, a three. week trial before Judge Ron a Id Crookshank. Judge Crookshank refused Monday to disclose the nature of a series of motions argued in his chambers. But it was learned today that two of those motions Involved the conslitutionalily of the grand jury system and the right to try Hulse, a minor. in adult court. Hulse was removed from juvenile court jurisdiction shortly after his indictment by the Orange County Grand Jury and ordered to face trial as an adult for the killing of Jerry \Vayne Carlin, 21, of Santa Ana. He is also accused of being an ac· cessory to the murder of Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro. Hulse and three other members of the gang of drifters were rounded up by lawmen in the ·wake of the two murders. Mrs . Brown was the victim June 2 or 8 "devil cult" killing in '>''hich portions of her body were devoured in satanic rites after she was slain in an Irvine orange grove. Carlin was killed the night before in a murder that followed the group·~ rifling of his till -a robbery that put $50 iii their pockets. Bobb y Soxers Seeking Signups Girls aged 9 to 16 can sign up to play in the North HW1Ungton · Beach Bobby Sox Softball League. League officials have announced three different tin1es and locations for league signups. Tbey are : Feb. 12. 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m .. Albertson Market, corner of McFadden Avenue and Edwards Street. Feb. 17. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Alpha Beta Market, corner of Golden West Stteel and Warner Ave:nue. Feb. 20. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m .. Saft'>''IY Market, corner of Springdale Street and \Vtrner A venue. There is a $5 re:gi!:lration ret lot the le.ague. I . ' By JACK BROBACK Of lflt O.lily Plltt Stitt County Administrative Officer Rober t E. Thomas was not fired this morning. Supervisor Ralph Clark surprised many when he proposed a lengthy study of the CAO and his office. His motion was adopted by ~l vote with supervisor Robert Battin dissenting. Battin had proposed last week that Thomas resign at once or be fired. I -.. '""' r.r..,1tti. Today Clark's approved motion calls for a committee of supervisors, William Phillips, Ronald Caspers and ·David Baker, to "audit the conduct of the chief administtative officer and every aspect of the work assigned to his of· fice." MIDNIGHT MISSION BUILDING COLLAPSES IN QUAKE· BUILDING A TOTAL LOSS With One Brief Jolt, a Home for the Homeless on LA's skid Row Is Reduced to Rubble Clark also moved that the committee should "work closely with the grand jury to develop recommendations to ensure the efficiency, economy and responsiveness of our government to the needs of the people." The motion called for a committee lo be prepared to report immediately after the conclusion of the new budget. Such budget studies are usually not com· pleted until well into July, Clark aaid th,. subject of the CAO hag generated a great deal of heat during tbt past seven days, but very little lighL "Surely if the charge.s which our chairman has made are accurate every citizen, officeholder and taxpayer has reason for deep concern and significant changes should be made," Clark said. "On the other hand. if the dire con· sequences predicted by the opponents .of change are accurate we would err gravely to act now." Supervisor Caspers. who had backed Battin without question last week on the immediate firing or Thomas quickly seconded Clark's motion, "because the facts have been distorted and I do not think we should act in haste." Clark first named Phillips and Casper! to the study committee but added Baker' when the latter said he wanted to serve on the group. The supervisors hearing room wa! packed and overflowing with about 200 people in attendance. Most of them through their applause indicated op- position to Battin's st.and and the half dozen who spoke all urged further study of the proposal before action. Battin last Tuesday charged Thomas with assuming a dictactorial attitude and objected strenuously to a report by Thomas which forecast a five percent raise for county employes next fiscal year and a budget which might call for a 34-cent tax increase. Huntington High Tower Survives Rolling Temblor By TERRY COVILLE Of 1!11 Dilly l"llol lllf! . The Huntington Beach High School lowe'r h11 survived •notber earthquake. ' The tall 1pire -built in 1926 and recenlly deemed u,n 1 ate against eartlJ.. quakes by state education standards -was unscarred by this morning's trem or. "No peeled plaster, no cracks. We didn't find any problems at the school this morning," Assistant P r i n c i p a I William Rollins reported. Some newer buildings were less lucky. Tiles were shaken from the ceiling of the W. T. Grant Store at Brookhurst Street and Adams Avenue in Huntington Beach. A power line was knocked down in a Westminster residential section but caused no problems. No major damage was reported in Hunlington Beach, Fountain Valley or other West Orange County cities. Onl!: fire was started in Los Alamitos when a 140.volt power line tumbled on top of some roofing supplies at 3574 Cerritos Ave. Firemen said there was $8,000 damage done to the materials, but another $80.000 in roofing supplies was saved. Another old building in Huntington Beach, Dwyer Intermediate School. also passed the quake test without damage. Some citizens were concl!:rned about the high school tower because of recent reports on It. National Educational Plan- ning Associates (NEPA) recommended last November that the Huntington Beach Union High School District tear down the tower and the 26-cla1sroom central building. World Opinion Best Hope For Prisoners-Ex-POW The treatment of prisoners in North Vietnamese POW camps is a humanitarian Issue , that should concern every American. according to Navy Lt. Robert Frishman. a former POW. Frishman, who spent 683 days in Hanoi. said world public opinion is the greatest hope for Americans still held captive by the North Vietnamese. Eclipse of Moon Slated Tonight NEW YORK (AP) - A total eclipse of the moon will be visible tonight, where skies are clear, throughout the continen- tal United States and Canada. The lunar spectacular wlll begin at 9:52 p.m. Psr whe11 tht moon starts to pass through the earth's shadow. The moon will darken as the shadow spreads across lhe lunar disk with totality lasting from 11 :03 p.m. until 12:36 a.m. By 1:37 a.m. the western tdge of the moon will have cleared the shadow. A lunar teU1>5e generally can be ob- served from most pfaces,. ea~ at least once a year. • The lean aviator was in Newport Beach to speak at a fund raising luncheon ~~o~~~~i~~ by Concern for POWs·MIAs, More than 570 persons heard Frishman encourage all American! to participate in letter-writing campaigns to demand humane treatment of POWs. ·'There have been more letters receiv- ed this year from prisoners than in the last six years combined. We see film s of prisoners playing basketball and participating in Christmas pageants. "I think this is a big Improvement -even i! they are staged -ovtn' the kind of things you saw two or three years ago. Then the only films you saw of prisoners .showed them being beaten in the strttb: of Hanoi," he said. ' Frishman said the films and letters show how sensitive Hanoi .his become to public opinion. "lt doessn't matter whether .you're hard left, hard right. h:aw'ko 1 dove or owl. This Is a humanillrian movement and it's lhe responsibility or every American to do everylhini in their power to see that 11anol lives up to lt.1 1grttmentl In the Gtneva Convl!:ntion, .. he !aid. , Successful Mission Apollo Splashes Down To End 9-day Journey , ' ABOARD USS NEW ORLEANS !AP) -T):le APQllo Jt explorers s.p;l&abed down In the South Pacific toda}'. endinj a nine-day voyage of discovery that scientists say will vastly enrich man 's knowledge of the moon. Alan B. Shepard Jr., Edgar D. Mitchell and Sruart A. Roosa hit the water after a blazing re·entr.y through the earth.'s atmosphere. During the re-entry, which started when the command ship Kitty Hawk 1lammed into the atmosphere at 24.596 miles an hour . the temperature Quake Blamed For Poor Voter Turnout A disappointingly low early voter turn- out durh1g today's Ocean View School Dis· trict tax election was blamed on the earthquake by poll watchers this morn- ing. "I guess mo!il people are watching their televi1ions right now to see how much damage there was. But we expect things to pick up later in the day." said District Superintendent Clarence Hall at 10:30 a.m. At issue is the district's $2 .75 tax rate wh ich schoolmen are aski11g the voters to re.approve for a period of five years. Dr. Hall said a sampling of five polls showed an average 3.26 voter turnout in the early morning hours. Past Ocean View elections have rallied a 30 to 35 percent turnout during the entire voting day. There are about 25,500 registered voters i• the Ocean View School District. Polls will be open at each of the dis- trict's ·23 schools until 8 p.m. on the protective heat shield reached more than 5,000 degrees, ·,f nte astronauts were to be Liken by helicopter to the cruiser New Orleans and placed in quarantine in a sealed trailer below decks. The thickening atmosphere a n d parachutes slowed the speed for a genlle drop into warm Polynesian waters. The splashdown ended man's third and most scientifically rewarding journey to the surface of the moon. Shepard and Mitchell spent 33 1h hours in the rugged Fra Mauro highlands. In two moon walks, they prowled I h e barren, dusty nurface fo r approximately nine hours and collected a record 95 pounds of rocks and lunar soil, some of which may date 4.6 billion years to the birth of the moon. Mission Control reported that an earth- quake in the Los Angeles area tern· porarily affected communications at four of its tracking stations. at Guam, Hawaii and Canberra and Carnarvon in Australia . Backup systems prevented a loss of any signals from Apollo 14, and telephone circuits to the slations were quickly rerouted around Los Angeles. The astronauts were on such a perfect cour~e that Mission Control early Tues- day canceled a planned midcourse CQr· rection . "Good," was the reply from the Kitty Hawk when the spacemen were told. The New Orleans will cruise toward American Samoa, nearly 900 miles to the north . Once in helicopter range of Samoa. the astronauts. wearing special biological masks. will be flown to another quarantine trailer waiting aboard a jet transport plane on Samoa. From there they'll be flown to Houston's Manned Spacecraft Center late Thursday and be placed in quarantine until Feb. 26 on the remote chance Uley contracted lunar germs. Expensive Fest 'Happening' Cost Laguna $65,829 The Christmas "happening" that lured 20,000 young people to Laguna Canyon for a three-day rock festh;al cost the city or ·Laguna Beach $6$,829.S7, ctty. manager Lawrence ·ROH ·announced t~ day. The figure, was ·revealed in a fi°nal tabulation of costs directly attributable. to the ·"happening"· and does not include regular erpense· that would have gone· on throughout the .period ·{such 11 regular police ahifta), Rose said. Nttr docs It Include an .additional com- pensation for department he.ads and. other salaried personnel who w or k e d throua.hout the holiday without drawing overt.line. , Add<d to tlle "5,829 d~eet cosl total In Rose's, rt~~ent, Is the IWTI <>f f2,29f.&t . fefr Items that had been budgeted for the police and flre departments, but were purchased earlier tha~ anticipated because of the ha~ pen1ng. Also added , ls $3 ,999.2b for equipment purchases for both departments which had not yet been budgeted, but which will be of continuing use, Rose said. · Gr~nd total ,in Ule tsbulailon, through J~n. :zn;,1~ $'72,12.l.S2, representing direct cos~ for items totally consumed. along with budgeted and unbudgeted purchases which will reriialn usable . . • The city manager emphasized that a substantial porUon of the total can be taken care of without special ca.sh allocations, throu_gh budget 1 h I f t s , possibly involving delay of some an. ticipated budget exf)cndltures. Precise allocation of funds is still being determin· ed, Rose said. Overtime salaries ($42,48.1) and public works equipment rental ($10,.0S) make up the bulk of the direct cost. t Clean-up cost reported by the publlc works department 11moonted to $4,046.68. (Ste HAPPENING, Pa&e I) By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lflt Delly '(lo! Stiff Orange County 'escaped unscathed at S:02 a.m. today as a major earthquak~ rocked the foundations oC home to lit million Californians with death, destruc· tion and predawn panic. The effects even reached out into space, as four NASA stations tracking the incoming Apollo 14 astronauts were knocked out. Backup systems immediately took over the complex job , but many of the ground- bound were less fortunate. By mid·morning the known death ioll was 21, all in the hard·hit Sa11 Fernando Valley region and in central Los Angeles. Ominous tones were added to the poten- tial death toll today, with disclosure at noon that 54 persons are missing in the rubble of the antiquated VA Hospital. Two buildings at the 420-bed facility in the lower San Gabriel Mountains were leveled by the rackil!g temblor. The rocking and rolling jolt -equal to the 1933 Long Beach disaster - was estimated at 6.5 on the Richter Scale , but was so sharp it jolted the Caltech seismograph needle off its graph. Repeated aftershocks followed through ~ morning, 60 or more. Buildings from Skid Row to exclusive suburbs crumbled as the earth's crwt shuddered and vertical cracks appeartd Jn [.()s Angeles" Jlrgest water rtservolr towering abov1 1 subdivision. Supposedly earthquake·prooC high-rise towers of up to 52 stories in downtown Los Angeles shimmied like hula dancers, shattering windows and cracking walls. Hospitals lhroughout the L-Os Angeles Basin reported an innux of injured - some flown by helicopter -and many suffering serious cuts from flying glass. Seven Victims died in the valley .a~ VA hospital. The death toll included two heart at- tack victims. a drifter crushed when a Skid Row mission collapsed in a crescendo of crumbled brick and a pa- tient in a suburban sanitarium. Van Norman Dam was rapidly develop- ing new and more grave fissures shortly before 11 a.m., as desperate workers tried to drain it. Continuing aftershocb kept its waters sloshing like coffee in a mug as the 6 billion . plu! gallons threatened to cascade down the San Fernando Valley. Dam Supervisor Robert E. Noel described the quake centered in rugged San Gabriel Mountains vividly. "It was thumpin' and jumpin' and knocked everything out of our kitchen." he said. Throughout the largest concentration or population in California chaos reigned as harassed authorities tried to deal with the worst of it. Power lines fell popping like spark-spit- ting snakes and igniting a series of fires. Gas mains broke. Brick plummeted from aging apartment buildings. Looting was reported widP.spread in some areas. as panicked residents car· rled boxes and paper ba gs of valuables away with them. The Golden State Freeway was closed due to pavement cracks and bridges !See TREMBLES, Page 2) Orange Coast Weather Wednesday's weather won't bt as earth shaking as today's. Look for sunny skies and warmer tern~ eratures with the mercury surg. ing into the 70s "long the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY !ilusicoL comedy at the Laguna ft.fout101~ Pla11houst and deep drama at UC frvint compri$e this week 's openings In local theater. See Enttrtatnm.ent, Page lrJ. c1ur1,,.11 t Cll9()!bt1 VI 1t Clol"lllell »It C-ln u Cffllfl N•tk.. ' °""'" • l"4ltte,i.1 ..... • •11.l•,..l~m•t 1•1t 1t!M11e1 1 .. 11 ..._... u AIMI l.lllffn 14 ""'tttt• I.kt""" • IM'Ylt• ,.l, • MlllNI ,1111411 11 Nllltfttl ~ °""'" c_,., • S•twl• ,..,.,.,. It ·~ , .. 1, IM<ll MaMltlt 1•11 Ttlt•ltltn I t n..1... 11-lf .,..,,,..., ' W~tlw Wt"'i 11 Wtl'Mll'I H-l~U Wfrlf News W ,, I % DAILY PILOl H 1 uesd.,-, Febr11ary 9, 1971 Valley Sanapling Survey Endorses Youth Facilities FOUDtain VaUey residenls have ex· p~ Interest in developing a central park, ball diamonds and cther ·youth athletic facilities. Tbls ls what tbe results of S3 card questlonnai.res showt'd a f t e r the city's first town hall type meeting Jan. 21 at Fulton School. City offlcials have finished eomplllng results from the cards handed out at that meeting. City officials asked residents to rate eight subjects on a priority list. A fixed seat auditorium received the lowest rating of the eight subjects. County Seeks 'Hot Dog' Man Extradition Orange County authorilles are today seeking the ext.radiUon from Arizona of a man accused of swindling Harbor area residents or nearly $500,000 in a fraudulent hot dog machine enterprise. Fighting proceedings launched by the district attorney's oflice is Gregorios Pavlou, formerly or 398 22nd St., Newport Beach. lfe has been Indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on charges of grand theft. Wuing stock without a state permit and using a scheme to ofrer or sell stock to defraud. Pavlou wa5 Indicted after a year-long Investigation by district attorney's in- vestigators and state Department of Corporations agents into t.he operations of his personally regtsteffil Mido, Inc., of Costa Mesa. Investigators said Pavlou, also known as Gregorlous Busch, interested more than 150 Orange County residents in his plans to sell hot dogs from specially designed and unique vending machines. They said Pavlou financed IDs cor- poration by giving promissory notes to potectia1 investors putting up Mido stock ·as collateral. Pavlou, they c I a i m defaulted on those Joans so the investor could have the MJdo stock issued in tbe.ir names. Pavlou is then acaised or asking in- vestors to return their certificates: to hiril so be could effect a lG-1 stock split. But no Mido stock certificates were ever returned to the investors to replace those they had returned to Pavlou, lavestigators said. Many prominent Orange Co u n t y businessmen and investors were duped by Pavlou during his tooling of the non-existent hot dog machine, in· vestlgators claim. Bobby Sox Play Slated in Valley Girls who want to play organized softball can do it in Fountain Valley. The Fountain Valley Bobby Sox Softball League is open to all girb aged 9 through 15. Signups for summer action will be held from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 13 and 20 in Iron t of Von's ~1arket at the ~r of Talbert Avenue and Magnolia Street in Fowitain Valley. For further Information phone Trina Williams, league secretary, 847-45fl7. Ted Gets Permit Back BOSTON (UPI ) ..... Sen. Edward M. Kennedy 's driver's license hat been reinstated. It bad been suspended for a year because be pleaded guilty to leaving the scene or an accident alter the death of Mary Jo Kopechnf_ DAILY PILOT ORANGS. CD.UT PUILliHINO (QM,.AltV Robtrt H. WtH PreldMll Md hltl!Mw J•,k R. Curlty Vk• PrinldMll •r.d G..,.-•t Mw•1r Thom11 ICttvil EofllOf' lhom•1 A. M11tJhi11• MaMllll!I l!dl;.r Al•n Dirkln W•t Ort~I CMtr l dlltr Albtrf W. l•t•• MM<i.11 fofltor H1 .. f11t1P•• .... Offke 17•7$ ltlth hllltYlld M1llh1f Adcfr.111 P.O. lt11: 190, f2MI Ot~t ornc. Ll!MM tffdl: m ...,...t """'" CO.II M-! UO Wal .. .,. 1""91 ~ .. Kiii zt11 Wftl .. lbOI ~ J.tn ellrMnMI .S Ntr1"i fl C..mlnt ltffl ~-~·-·. DAILY .. l\.OT, wttti 'fl'ftD • _,..... "'9 ,....,..,.,.., .. Joi*lllt.d M itt _.,.. __._ "' Ill MJ!frt1• «ltt• flll' ~ IMdl. H-1 -..ui. C.1'11 M9t, ,...,.....,.. 1MU1 ..W ,,_lllrl V111r(, .... .,,,,.,.. -"'!Mel l'lll!lfN, 0.-...... C.IH ,....tllfllftf c-y .... ln!lnf "911t1 ... II CU Wtll at!Mt ,Ml .. N..,.ri MM!\, .,.. alt WW .., ''"'"· c.11 MtM. T1i.,Mn1 cntl 642-4)11 fr• W•tiRIMhf c.n 14f·12H a..lrJ.4 A.....W .. "1·1611 torfr11111. mt. Or•• C.11! NMlllllnl ~. ,... ..., 11Wle. llllttll'rl l ...... M llW' .. I lflllllll' W ft'¥w1~tl ,,_Ill _,.. .. ,........ Wl"""1t ........ ,.. mlNllll Clf~IWllff'. .....,. dea _.... ""'•I ,,,..... ... dlt ..,.. OM'9 ...,,,..., (tlllWYlla. MIK•""* .,. tlnltr a.tt ,....,..ll'I W-ll IJ,lt llMl'ltllyl ..... .,. ........ llM,. A» -·111.,_ I .. There wert about 125 people at the meeting or the Fu1too PTO," Jim Hollywood, asslstan~ to the city manage r, explained. "We received 53 replies to our questions." The · town ball atmosphere w a 1 established when all five councilmen at- tended the PTO meeting al ong with city department heads and made themselves available ror general discussion. "We think it was a success. The next one is planned with the Niehlas School PTO on March 18," Hollywood said_ The eight questions: residents were ask- ed to rate on a priority basis were : 1. Oatside youth athletic facilities (ball diamonds, etc.) 2. Central city park. • 3. Beautification of our major arterials. 4. General recreation programs, awlm· ming, dancing, etc. 5. Community center building ex- pansion. a. Meeting rooms and park sltes. 7. Fixed seat auditorium. 8. Other (any other subjects of con- cern). Hollywood said the first five subjects were rated in the same order as. listed, but thst No. 8, the other category, was rated sixth most important aJtd generally covered a concern for the indwilrial area. Item 6, meeting rooms and park sites, was rated seventh most important wIDle the fixed seat auditorium came out On the bottom. "We also asked three other que!lions," HolJywoo(I added. "We found that 34 people favored no parking enforcement durlng street sweeping hours, while 12 opposed it." The city also ]earned that 33 individuals favored weekly sweeping wbile 12 prefer- red to stick \\'ilh the current twice-a-\\·eek pattern. The last question concerned !he value of the cicy's quarterly newsletter. Forty- one people !bought it valuable, seven didn 't. "I think \\'e·11 continue these !own hall meetings. but try to reach more of the populace than just PTO groups," Jlollywood said. From Page J HAPPENING ••• The overtime salary figure Is broken down as follows: Police, $23,007.95 $pecia! depuiaes, $6;990.00 Mountld Posse, $5,ltlo.oo Fire Department. $885.39 Administration, "724.82 Engineering , $558.90 Street, $2,306.28 Bua line, $20.46 Parks, $2,410.72 Automotive, $508.95 Total salaries: $42,433.47 Services and supplies for the police department cost $8,119.01; public \\'orks department, $10,404.91; and fire depart- ment, $50.40. Headquarters cost is listed at $725.IO and clean-up cost $4,046.68. 1'tore than 20 county law enforcemenl agencies joined with Laguna Beach in controlling the three.day happening, each municipality footing itJ own bill under mutual aid pacts. Cost to the coun tywas estimated ln excess of $12,000. Cyclists Urged To Register Motorcycle enthusiasts interested in using the future Huntington Beach t.ra ils system are urged to register their ma - chines with the Recreation and Parks De- partment. Director Norm Worthy urged immediate registration of all bikes, pointing ou t that registraUon figures will help in get- tinR the new cycle park open soon. He said the facility at Gotha rd Street and Talbert Avenue, will be restricted 10 machines of 100 cubic centimeters or Jess and that unregistered bikes will not be permitted . Registration will be held at the Rec- reation Center, 17th Street and Orange Avenue from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays. The free regi stratioo will require the sig- nature of both the operator and o\\·ner, which could be the same person , No age restrict.ions have been im~ed for either owners or rider s. All machines will be inspected by the police depart- ment when the park open.i. PEP to Locate On Park Avenue Laguna's new environmental group, Pro-environment-People (PEP), ha s found a home at 280 Park Ave ., courtesy of the Laguna Cahmber of Commerce. Chairman Luisa Hyun said t h e chamber has offtred to provide PEP with a desk In lt.s front officr , from which to conduct Its local cam~ign for environmental Improvement. "We'll move in as soon as we get a phone," she said. Start.ed by a group of tc0logy conscious Laguna women. PEP now has ll memb~rshlp of 60 and has held a number of meetings to plan support of antl·pollu· tlon and conservation leglslaUon at i ll " levels and dissemination of lnformatlon on environment.al problems. Wat~h ~tep! Con Artists Strike Early Beware of the bunco men! That'• the advice ot HunUnitoo Beach Police Chief Earl& Robitallle wbo claims that the annua l migration ol bunco and conmen who prey on. householders is off to an early start !hi! year. "1'hese bogus operators art aJ~ady starting lheir typical door-to-door opera- tions in the California area and mi£ht just go looking for victims io this city," the chief said today. "Again this year. they · are offering cut-rate spraying of shingle rods. la the paat they have offered bulk fertlliur, auto body work and pe!t al'ld insect inspections.'' The chier said the men are often accompanied by female accomplices who move door-to-door at the sar.1e time, pedding purported .. hand made '' lace! and knit terns. "Most , if not all, of their !ervices and goods are v•orthless and many arc actually injuriou~." Robitaille declared. U a resident is approached by a door-to- door solicitor with any of these or similar propositions, he should always request to see the salesman's city busineSl!i llctlllt, the chief advlaed. u none can be produced; the re1ldent abould refrain from contracting for the service, no matter how enticing the pric• sounds. A phone call to the lluntlngtan Beach Police Depar tment with a thorough description of the peddler, his vebJcle, and possible companlo11s should be the next step. Robitaille added the same general rule of demanding identlfication and proper credentials should be applied to peraons who represent themselves: aa ''inspec· tors" for various utility companies. .. No public utility company allows Its representative to collect fees and a legitimate concern will bill by malt,'' the chief explainei:I . .. These fr audulent 'inspectors' almost e:itclusively prey on the elderly and always find 'improper' wiring or In- festations of some type or another . .. They also al\\·ays demand outrageous fees for correctioDJ of the ·problems' found, often up to $1 ,000. They imply that if such 'corrections' are not un- dertaken at once, the person will be immediately turned out of the home." Newport Boats Take Lead I In Puerto Vallarta Race By AUION LOCK.ABEY ... 11111 •• Jr ... u, • .,.,...,. PHOTOGRAPHER CRAIG MAILLOUX MOPS UP AT UPI E1rthqu1ke Jo1tlt1 Photo Bureau in Downtown Los Angeles New port entries in the Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta yacht race took over elapsed and corrected time positions Monday as the ~boat fleet experienced its first wind since the start l~t Satur- day. Ericson-35, The Odd Couple, skippered by ·Ronald Lee of Del Rey Yacht Club was holding third place overall on the handicap standings. At the noon rollcall 1'ionday the ftett was spread oul from San Martin Wand on the south to Ensenada with northwest winds starting the yachts to move. From Page J SOUTHLAND TREMBLES ••• The freshening S.15 knot northwest breeze which started lale in the morning ~1onday boosted Bob Lynch's 82-foot M- Boat Sirius II -the scratch boat - out to a 25 mile lead over Russ Ward's Columbia-57 Aries. Sirius II is from Newport Harbor Yacht Club and Ari es flies the burgee of Lahaina YC but is being sailed by a Newport crew headed by Dan Elliott. In the battles for cla11s honors on coi'rected time Nonnan Bacon's Morgan- 54 Widgeon from Santa Barbara Yacht Club was leading Class A and William Allen's Cal-40 Madrugador, Californi a YC and NHYC was leading Class B. The Ericson-35s dominated Class C. and overpasses were reported threatened in some areas. "I \'las in my ki!C'hen." said one robe- clad house wite ... I fell down and started praying." Control tower11 al Van Nuys and Burbank Airports in the devastated bedroom of the basin. the San Fernando Valley, were damaged and the FAA sus· pended all Oight activity. A pilot flying over the vast city when the temblor -accompanied by an ominous rumble and the creak and groan of wrenching homes -witnessed it. He said all of Los Angeles shivered and wobbled, its vast sea of lights looking like a sequined outfit on a go-go girl. Power and telephone service was tem- porarily interrupted in many areas and radio stations were jolted right off the air. One KRLA disc jockey's voice trembled as he told or the station's steel and concrete building swaying like it was made or rubber. ''Or maybe it's my knees. They still are," he quipped. A survey of Orange County hospitals and emergency services indicated few ir any quake-related injuries, while damage v.:as limited to scattered items in homes and stores. Burglar alarms were triggered by the tremor and the Seal Beach Fire Depart- mcnl horn sounded once at the height Gates Appointed To State Board A young Los Angeles attorney, one or the founders of Air California. wa s appointed ~tonday to the state Board of Education by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Mark Gates, 34, joins Newton L. Steward, 50, a Eureka broadcasting ex- ecutive, as the two new members of the state board replacing outgoing presi- dent Howa rd Day and Dr. Thomas G. Harward whose terms expired Jan. 15. Gates, with four others, founded Orange County's first airline in April 1966 in Ne\li'J>Ort Beach. He served as Ai r California's corporate secretary and general counsel until sale o: the airline last June to \\'estgate California Corpora- tion. Gates and Steward \\'ill take their place en the state board at ils meeting Thursday in Los Angeles. Both are Republicans. They replace Governor Reagan's first appointees to the .policy· rnaking body. Juvenile Action Set in Slaying Greg Bradley Moon of Buena Park, accused of the monkey wrench murder of his father, will be tried as a juvenile, it has been ruled. Tbe 17-year-old youth is being held in juvenile hall until his trial on Feb. 24. A public defender will be appointed for him. The father, Richard A. Moon. 45. was killed in !he back yard of the home of his son-in-law and daughter Jan. 19 in Garden Grove . The boy fled the 1tene bul later surrendered to San Diego pol kt. 200 Seeking l Haclge ~tlLWAUKEE (AP) -~fort than 200 persons have applled for cne patrolman Job In lhe suburb of Elm Grove, Pollet Chlcl Earl Krue.ger said Monday, I of the shock in a grotesque squawk as though for help. Seismology stations elsewhere in the U.S. registered 6 to 7 oh 1he Richter Scale, Ylhich places a 7 magnitude-quake as one of major proportions. "It i5 about the same magnitude of the Long Beach quake, .. mused Dr. Char les Richter, who invented the scale but chose to stay in earthquake country after retirement. The Long Beach quake which killed 120 and caused millions of dollars' damage hit 6.3, while the 1952 Tehachapi tremor that killed 12 was a 7.7 force. E:itperts noted the 1906 earthquake and fire that devastated San Francisco was 8.25 on the open-end Richter Scale. which has no maximwn force. The temblor that struck today as an estimated seven million Southlanders were preparing for work or schoo l came less than a month after a seismologist's warning. During a conference of geological ex- perts, they criticized continued con- struction of high-rise buildings such as two 42-story to\\·ers which survived today's jolt. Seismologists have long predicted California's quake-prone coastal basin is due for a major calamity on the long-dormant San Andreas Fault. The deep rift on the earth's crust running north and south through the population center or the state was n'ot in volved in today·s awesome event. Public interest has '"aned somewhat in the wake of predictions by a broad specl rum of self.proclaimed visionaries that by April , 1969, most of California would be wracked by quakes and sink into the sea. A tremor centered in San Diego County on April 28 of that year. ho\\· ever, created panic among many but caused little damage to the largely unpopulated area. Freestyle, an Ericson-35 sloop co-skip- pered by Saint Cicero and Rod Lippold, NHYC moved into a lie for corrected time honors with her sister s h i p Aquarius, skippered by John Holiday, Long Beach Yacht Club. Another Mental Health Symposium Set A symposium on "Mental Health in Orange County" will be conducted by the League 0£ Women Voters at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday in the Community Methodist Church, 6662 Heil .Ave., Hun· tington Beach. ·or. Ernest W. Klatte, program chief for the county's: community mental health services, will be the principal speaker. He is expected to discuss cur- rent programs. future plans, funding and legislation. A panel of LWV members who have researched mental health services and needs in the county will pre.sent ad- ditional views. Coke Collects Refuse NEW YORK (AP ) -The Coca-C<>la Bottling Co. or New York has announced plans to set up 17 collection depots Jn the metropolitan area to buy gla!s bottles allC! alumi11um cans. The company will pay one-hall cent per bottle or can, regardless of brand, and turn them over to be melte d down and recycled. Handicap Standings OVERALL -(I) Tie between Freestyle and Aquarius: (3) The Odd C.Ouple; (4) Sigame (Cal-36 ) Sid Renkow, DRYC. CLASS A -(1) 'Vidgeon: (2) Querida II (Colwnbia-50) Jim Feuerst,in, DRYC; (3) Aries; (4) Dorothy 0 (Colwnbia·57), Robert Beauchamp, NHYC. CLASS B -(1) Madrugador ; (2) tie between Siren (Ericson-39) Frank Rice. NHYC, and Dakar (Newport-41 ) William Goodley, DRYC; (4) Destiny II (Santana· 37) John Hooten , BCYC. CLASS C -Freestyle, Aquarius, The Odd Couple, Sigame. Lltll• tnd Llft<!llllde ALEGRE fPJ·4ll Jofln M•cAl1S!tf, LY(, Jl:2•N-ll7:4 W AQUARIUS IE-lSI Jofln Holld••· Lav c. J!;O•N-11':~W ARIE5 !Cof.57) Run W1rd, LYe. JC:l•N-117: ll(IH AVENTURA !B~r·«I) L.H. Pri<1 J r. RYC, 31~2l~£1l71)"'°1cal-3foJ Al•~•i'M!er Gorby, DRVC. 31:16N-117:3lW CARINA (PJ·4l) Wllll•m Colwlllt. NHKC, ll:OJN -117:20W DAKAR (N·O) Wlll!l m Goodltv. DlllY C, J0:50N-l16:1RW DESTINY u {S1ntll\1J1) John Hooten, •eve, ll:GIN-111:l:W OOROTHV 0 tCol·Jll l ob ll11uc~1mp, NHYC. J0:4jN-117:~W FREE$T'l'LE (E-JJ)l 10POld I. e lctro, NHYC. :J0:$1N-ll7:U'W - JANO 111 fE...ill RoOlrf '<•~n. e ve, Jt:ION-11.:J•W KANAICA BUG < IC·SO) C~"ln DU", DlllYC, 31.i.fiNoRUb:lm. 1c1i...01 1 111 All•n Jr., eve . 30:30N-115 :5'W MISTRAL tlllil l rllCt l1rnll1rof. I YC, 31 ;/f>~l~IJ ~ M_.R !tt' lit!tlll Jolln Serl-. SOYuCAs~~l •Ncd~r:.;1w Artl>Ur l l1hl, u. l'YC, l t~7N-l16,S2W fiVERIDA 11 (COl·SO) Jim F•1Jt rJtt ln, Dll'l'C, 30A'i~C~l1'1%'t-v•wt > 11111 wn,on •av c, JOi~h~~''ZSfc11.3/il Ski Rtnliow, D It Y c. JO:J1N-116:4 W SIREN CE·3'1 Fri nk 1t:1lcr, NHYC. JO;'-IN- 117•»W StAIUS 11 (r.I' C1Jtrt r) lefl L,nc.11, NH'r(, lll!OlN-117;3'W THE ODD COUPLE lE-3$) Afn Ut, OltY(, )1:t1N-111•01W VALENTIN£ II (K·•J) ,e<i'GV Sllltr, LAYC, ll:23N-117 :01W WH ITE HEATHEI! Ill (H·lll Jolln WHM. II, FVC. llo2JN-111:1JW W10GEON !M-.SO Norm1n l!ltarn, SIVC ]();.).jN-11':S9W VA TUll!KO ((ol·SO) George _.ntl rr. "'MYe. JJ,ll)N-l ll:llW THE NAME OF THE GAME There is 1 common practice of priv1te lab'eling 1n the carpet industry. L1r9e department stores, cha in stores and contractors at new tr1cts have ficticious names on the samples so that customers cannot easly shop brand name prices. Customers shopping 1t ou r store find the price of each qua lity prominently 1 .. tured on the sample boo~. bKause wt 1r1 competitive. Also, because we fee l the cu1tom1r hos • right lo know what he is buyin9, wt never change the name on 1 sample book. The name of the game is in!ogrily! ALDEN'S SANT A ANA. OllANOI TUSTIN C•ll ••• ALDIN'S ltlD HILL CAJtPlfl & DlAPlltlU 11)74 lrvln' Tv1tln, C•I. Ul4)44 CARPETS e DRAPES "1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Moo. 1'hnl 11tur1., t to S:JO -Fri., t to t -s.t., t :JO to 5 7 r i New·port Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. St.oeks VOL. M, NO. H, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, ·1971 TEN CENTS Thomas Gets Reprieve; County Study Ordered By JACK BROBACK Of fll1 O.lly P'ilet Staff County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thorna1 was not fired this morning. Supervisor Ralph Clark surprised many when he proposed a lengthy study of the CAO and his office. His motion was adopted by 4-1 vote with supervisor Rol:>ert Batt.in dissenting. Battin had proposed last week that Thomas resign at once or be fired. Today Clark'• approved motion callil for a committtt or supervisors, William Phillips, Ronald Caspers and David Baker. to "audit lht: conduct of the chief administrative officer and every aspect of the work assigned to his of· fice ." Clark also moved that the commitl.e!: should "work closely wili the 1rand jury to develop recommendations to ensW'e the efficiency, economy and responsiveness of pur govemrnent to the needs of the .people." The motion called for a com.ntlttee to be prepared to report imrhediat.ely after the conclusion of the new budget. Such budget 1tudies are usually nol com- pleted until well into July. Clark said the rubjeet of the CAO had geherated a great deal of heat during the past seven days, but very Apollo Back Safe Astronauts Spkish Down on Target ABOARD USS NEW ORLEANS iUPll -Three U.S. moon explorers blazed to a triumphant Pacific Ocean splashdown to- day, ending a nine-day. ~million mis- sion that swept away the spectre of Apollo 13 and put the na tion's manned space pro- gram back on track. The spaceship. loaded with 96 pounds l'lf moon rocks and scientific data lhat could turn outer space into a boon for ma1kind . plopped into the ocean right on target 900 miles south of Samoa at I :Ofl p.m. PST. Alan B. Shepard and his co-pilot!, Ed- gar D. Mitchell and Stuart A. Roosa. drifted to the surfa~ of the emerald waters of the Pacilic on orange para- chutes that were clearly visible ln color - television plctures from the recovery carrier New Orleans. "We'll tura you over to the recovery forces now-have happy landing," ground controllers tnld Apollo 14 astronauts after they were safely through lheir fiery, 2~ .• 600 mile-per-hour re-entry through earth's atmosphere. "Welcome home!" I.he recovery force communicator yelled when the capsule splashed into I.he wa ter. "We're in good shape in here." Shepard reported, aa a cheer ,.,enl up ht the mis- sio11 control center back in Houston. The astronauta WfJ't to be taken by helicopter to the cruiaer New Orleans Irvine Land Swap Judge Forbids County To Back Out of Trade Superior Court Judge Claude. M. Owens this morning ruled that Orange County cannot back out of its Upper Newport Bay Tideland exchange. with the Irvine Company. He denied a motion by Deputy County Counsel Clayton Parker for court recognition that the. county's unilateral rescission of the agreement scraps the exchange agreed on three years ago. Judge Owens denied the motion "without prejudice," thereby allowing the county to file a similar motion when Its formal 90-day cancellation notice to the company expires late in April. He also said the ruling is contingent upon additional deliberations on various points of Jaw this afternoon. but indicated he likely will not change his mind . Despite the ruling. Irving Company of!icials indicated they are still willing to negotiate With the Board o f Supervisors on details of the swap, itself. Reacting to the decision. Irvine Com· pany press relations manager Jerome. F. Collins said. "We. view the current court hearing as a continuation of litiga- tion started last summer by both the ' Oruge Coast 1''eather Wednesday's weather won't be as earth shaking as today's. Look for Sunny skies and warmer temp- erature!! with the mercury surg- ing into the 70s along the Orange. Coast. INSIDE TODA\' ~J 11sical comtdy at th e. Laguna Moulton Pla yhouse and deep dmma at UC Irvine comprise thil week's openings in local thtate.r. See Entt'rtatnme.nt, Pa ge 19. C1ll,.,,,.. I Chtdll"' U1 11 ci.011lt4 Jt.11 c-1c1 u DMI• Mtllctt t Dl-ttt ' •• l .. l'Wll ,.,, ' •nt"'111-I 1 .. 1' '"\tllCt , .. 11 --" Ant LI""-'" 14 M.t,ril•t LlctllKI f Ml¥1tl 11-1• ""•"''' ,._..., lt "'"""" "-J °'.,." c~ • lrMt ,..,..., It ~ . , .. u IMdl Mlrteh U•ll T ...... IMf• 1t ""'"'" , .. ,, WMTl'I« 4 Wiiii. Wtt~ 11 W.-'t MIW'I 1).U .,., ... ""'* 44 aiunty and the Irvine Company to determine the constitutionality of the land exchange concept. "As far as the fine points cf the exchange, it.self, 1re concerned, they are a separate issue," he said. "In t.hi.s regarci, we have Indicated our willigness to talk to the county board Or it.s representatives about this v~ry complex matter.·· Collins said. "As we said in our Jan . 26 communica· tion to the supervisors. there is a com· ptlling public need for us kl go forward together in 1rriving at a mutually-agree- able plan . "It i5 our understanding," Collins sa id , ''that meetings aimed at achieving this kind of negotlation are now being ar- ranged by Mr. Battin (Board Chairman Robert Battin ). "We look forward to participating in them." During testimony thiS morning Parker had reminded Judge Owens that county supervisors recently v o I e d 5 to 10 lti declare the land exchange null and void and that the board does not intend to negotiate with the Irvine Company on lhe issue. Judge Owens questioned Parker en the 90-day notice served· ~y the board on the Irvine Ccmpany and made it (See BACK BAY, P11e ZJ Council Oka y_s Consolidation Consolidallon of the planning and building departments in a Department of Community Development was ap- proved unanimou5ly by tilt Newport Beach City Council Monday night. The council deliberated only brieny. lt! discusston a:ntered around the new name for the auperagtncy. Councilman Donald Mclnnls suggested It should be called simply, t~ ''Planning and Building Department." oonlendlng the resi dents would be confused by the "impressive tiUe." City M11.nagcr Harvey L, Hurlburt pointed out the u.uge of "De.ptrlmcnt or Community Development" Is becoming more 1nd more common. He Aid the fact that the title is lmpres.~lve "will be hf!\pful In rtCfllltina: people to run the new department." • ' and plac~ In quarantine in 1 . sealed trailer below decks. The thickening atmosphere a n.d parachutes slowed the speed for a 1enUe drop into warm f°lynesian waters. The splashdown ended man's third and mosl scient.ifically rewarding journey to the surfa~ of the moon. Shepard and Mitchell spent :U'n hours in the rugged Fra Mauro bigh1and!. In two moon walls, they prowled t h e barren, dusty nurfa.ce .'for approxima~ly nint boun ond <Dlltded • '-'! "' pounds ot rocU and lww soil, torM: oI which ma,y date 4.1 billion 1111t1 (Mt APOU.O, P ... II Quake Takes It Lightly On Newport Newport Beach escaped damage from today's earthquake. There were reports of• fire and damage. in other artu cf lhe county. Police telephone lines were overburden· ed with calla early thia mornina:, but Watch Comm&nder Richard Hamilton said "no injuries were reported. People just wanted lo know what was hap- pening," he said. Utilities within the limits of Newport Beach appeared to have. withstood the shock waves. Joseph T. Devlin. director of the public works, said Inspectors had found no damage after the quake.. "There were no power failures and there. may be some very minor leaks. -.ut lhey will take some time to show er." Big Canyon and San Joaquin reservoirs held up under the tremor and no damage was spotted at either, Devlin and a spokesman for the. Irvine Ranch Water District said. Newport-Mesa Unified School District officials completed a check of all schools in the district this morning and detennin· eel no damage. suffic ient to close any classrooms. according to Leon Meek&, assistant to the superintendent. Other schools in the county for the most part remained. open today with the txception of IO schools closed in Santa Ana. due to possible weakenlng of the pre-1933 structures by the quake. Two of three fires battled ~Y firemen today were attributed to the II a.m. quake.. In Los Alamitos, $8 ,500 In damage was sustained at the Coast Roofing Co. at 3574 Cerri~ Ave. A Villa Park home. at 111.36 Santiago BIVd. was destroyed and damage. was estimated at $17.000. Both blaus were caus~ by falling power lines. fire of· ficials said. Ceiling tiles were &haken loose In the Anaheim Conve.ntton Center and minor damage to plaster wu reported ln Humanities Hall at UC Irvine. Orange Couoty seemed to hive escaped major damage with molt ciUes reporting only cracked plaster and a few broken water lines. Black American Noted WASHINGTON IUPll -Tbe Navy plans to name "' deilroyer escort after Ensign Jesse L. Brown, the firat black American killed ln acUol'l ln the Kortan War. Brown was from Hattlesburr, Mlu. lltUt Ughl. "Surely if the clwies which our chairman hu made are accurate every citizen, officeholder and taxpayer has reason for deep concern and significant changes should be made," Clark said. "Oh the other hand, if the dire con- sequences predicted by the opponents of change are accurate we would err gravely to act now." Supervisor Caspers. who had backed Battin without question last week on the immediate firing of Thomas quickly seconded Clark's motion. "because the facts have been distorted and I do not think we. should act in haste." Clark first named Phillips and Caspers lo the study committee but added Baker whfn the. latter said he wanted tn serve on the group. The supervisors hearing room wa.s packed and overflowing with about 200 people in attendance. Most of them through their applause indicated op. position lo Battin's stand and the half dozen who spoke aU urged further study: of the proposal before acUon. Battin last Tuesdax_ charged Thomas wilh assuming a dlctactorial 1tUtude and objected strenuo~ly to a report by Thomas which forecast a five percent raise · for county employes next fiscal year and a budge.l which might call for a 34-cent tax increase. '" l County Safe; Tremor Hits " ~i" ~" \\\~' ' I ·- ·- U"I Tt !QolMlll GOLDEN STATE FREEWAY OVERPASS COLLAPSES NEAR SYLMAR Route to Newhall Cut; One Kiii ed as Concrete Cru1he1 Truck GOLDEN V£N1V HOLLYWOOD DOW,..TOWN LOS ANGELES DAILY 'ILOT Htwt Ml• SHADED ZONE IN PATH OF VAN NORMAN WATERS Authorities Order Ew1cu1tion of Hlllslde Ar11 Air Cal Founder. Named to Board A young Los Angeles aU.Omey, Ont of the tounaeri of Air California, was appointed Monday to tbe atate Board of Education by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Mark Oates, 34, joins Ntwlon L. Steward, Ml, 1 Eureka broadcastina ex- ecutive, as the t•o new member1 of the state board replacing 01.1tgoln1 presi- dent How1rd Day and Dr. Thomas G. Hant"ard whose terms expired Jan. is. Gate1, with lour others, lounded " •• Ora111e COunty's Unt airline in April 1964 in Newport Beach. He served as Air California's corporate secretary and aene'r1l counsel until sale o: the 1lrllne last June to Westgate California Corpora- tion. Gates and Stew1rd wlll take their pla.ce. on I.he 1t1te board at ILi meeting Thursday ln Loi Anieles. Both are RepublicAns. )' '-6.5 Reading By ARTHUJ\ R. VINSEL Of !!It CUiiy "lie! ".tt Orange County escaped unscathed at &:02 a.m. today as a major earthquake rocked the foundations of home to 10 million Californians with death, destruc-- tion and predawn panic. The effecls even reached out into 1pace. as four NASA stations tracking the incoming Apollo 14 astronauts wer. knocked out. Ba~kup systems immediately took over the complex job. but many of the groWld· bo·und were less fortunate. Late today the known death toll includ· ed 21 victims, The dead include nine at an antiquated VA hospital In the Sa11 Gabriel mountains: I at the Midnight Mission in Los Angeles: 2 at Ollveview Santarium ; 2 at Sylmar freeway over· pass ; I al a bridge collapse in the Salt Fernando Valley and seven listed as heart attack victim!!. Nearly 50 victims are still missing at the VA hospital. Two buildings at the t20-bed facility in the lower Sa n Gabriel Mountains were leveled by !he racking temblor. The rocking and rolling jolt -equal to the 1933 Long Beach disaster - was estimated at 6.5 on the Richter Scale, but was so sharp It jolted the Caltech seismograph needle off Its graph. Repeated aftershocks followed through the morning, 50 or more. BuilcUngs from Skid Row lo exclusive suburbs crumbled as the earth's crust shuddered and vertic.:>l cracks appeared In Los Angeles• largest water reservoir towering above a subdivision. Supposedly earthquake-proof high-rise towers of up to S2 stories in downtown Los Angeles shimmied like hula dancers, shattering windows and cracking walls. Hospitals throughout the Los Angeles Basin reported an influx of injured - some flown by heli copter -and many suffering serious cuts from flying glass. Seven victims died in the valley area VA hospital. The death toll included two heart at- tack victims, a drifter crushed when a Skid Row mission collapsed in a crescendo of crumbled brick and a pa· tient in a suburban sanitarium. Van Norman Dam was rapidly develop- ing new and more grave fissures ahortly before 11 a.m., as desperate workers tried to drain it. Continuing aftershocks kept its waters sloshing like coffet in a mug as the 6 billion· plus gallons threatened to: cascade down the San Fernando Valley_ Dam Supervisor Robert E. Noel described the quake centered In rugged San Gabriel Mountains vividly . "It was thumpin' and jumpin' and knocked everything out of our kitchen," he said . Throughout the largest concentration (Sec TREMBLES, Page. Z) Tremble Closes Dornestic Gap The major rUt that widened in the San Gabriel Faull closed a minor one today in Costa Mesa . Costa "-1esa County Water Dl&- trict Public Relations Offia:r Con- rad "SOOrty'• Scheafer, of 2131 WaJ. lace Ave., came to work with a smile. lwo hours afler lhe gharp quake. 1 "~fy wife went to bed mad at me and I went to bed mad at her." he Jald, adding that both he and lsabel- b kept th,ir distance all night. "But at 6.02 this morning, you never s1tw two ~pie reconcile &o fast," he concluded . • • • _Tutsday1 February 9, 1971 Innovative Sehool Principal Shift Hits Easthluff By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tll• Dell~ 1"1101 "ittt Eastbluf{ E!ement.ary School -the Newport.Mesa Unified School Districrs innovative educational gen1 -has under- gone an administrative switch at ml d year designed to insure continued succesa of the school's program. Principal MichaeJ \V, Hill has been Newport Delays Promontorv ,, Point Action The Irvine Company Monday n i g h t was told to overhaul its Promontory Point apartment project and was pro- mised help in doing·it. The Newport Beach City Council declined to take action on the company's appeal of Planning Commission rejection 1>f the plan, sending it back to the commission for redesign, instead. Jn its referral. the council offered a number of guidelines and voted to establish a committee of councilmen, planning commissione rs and a represen· tative of the Balboa Island Jm provement Association (BIIA) to work with the com- pany as it reworks the de.sign . Balboa I.slanders have offered stiff opposition to the proposal. . The council's instructions also called on the company to come back witlt a plan of development for both the 30-acre point area and the waterfront strip just below it. The company late last year. wi~drew a plan for the six-acre strip 1t had proposed for development into a com· mercial center known as Balboa Wharf. That proposal also ran into . stiff op- position from Bal~a lsland .residents. Jn their unanunous action Monday night, councilmen agreed with a m~jor complaint of residents that the pro1ect would be too dense for the area, but !hey also pointed out that the master plan for the area does caU for mu11i·fami· ly development and the company therefore cou.ld not be criticized for its plan. the council also told the homeowners lhat it feels some kind of multiple hous- ing use ia probably best for the property. In offering a seat on the study com- mittee to Thomas Houston, BJlA presi· dent the council was informed that be would .not relent on homeownera' inris- tence the property be developed for single-family use. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers suggested the poSlibillty of "a combination of single-family and mu l t i -f a m I··) Y development" for the area. Originally proposed by the Irvine Com· pany were 620 apartment units on .t~e tract which is locater bayward of Pac1f1c Coast Highway between Bayside Drive and Jamboree Road. Among the factors the council said r.hou!d be taken into consideration in redesigning the project are public access to the property, public vistas across it, the traffic it would generate, Newport Tomorrow's pleas for general open space and the visible impact of the develop- ment, itself. About 50 residents from Balboa Island , l rvine Terrace, Beacon Bay and other liUrroundlng areas attended the hearing. Among the speakers, in addition to Houston, were Dr. S. R. Nord , a property ov;ner at 1009 N. Bay Front. who asked for outright rejection contendin~. "If you delay, we (the opponents) ""'Ill get \\"eaker." Dr. Robert Henricks. representlng the Jn:Jne Terrace Homeowners Association, liaid his board opposed the plan, citing problems he said would result from the denslty, traffic and ecological effect of develop ment. ------ DAILY PILOT ORANGE ,01\ST J>UllLISHING 'OMPANY Robtrf N. Wttcl J1tk It C\11lty Vic• ~rt1!dft'lt •!'Id Gen•r•I Mtnffle• Ellltor n.om11 K11vi1 Tlio'"'' A. M11rph1nt M~l211'19 Edllor L Pt ftr Kr1t9 NtwP0'1 lhld'I (;l!V Ell11'or Newport lffch Offlr:e 21 I I Wtll 81lbc• 8ou~v1rcl M1llln9 Aclclrtsn ,,0. 101 1175, 92661 Othet Offlt• Cctlt Mn.1 U0 W•tl B•y S!rfft LIO""• 8ffCl'I: 221 For1u Avt11ue. ttunllnoton aMClit 11t1S 8fftll Boul•v•td 1111 Cit"""ll: 30J Norlh El '''"'"° llffl I transferred to duties ln the district c..ffice and been replaced by Robert Francy, a 12-year veteran of the district. District officials contend the u1tusual rnld-year S'A'itch is not due to parent or teacher pressure and does not reflect on Hill's abilities as an administrator. "\Ve decided to change administrators because we felt the Eastbluff program wasn't functioning as effectively as It might," Dr. Norman Loats said. He is associate superintendent for instructional operations and has since last summer been assigned to "watch" the EastbluJf program. Eastb!uff is the flrst elemeatary school opened by &he di strict since unification and was designed for an instrucrional program that allows indi vidualized teach· ing. It's continuous progress curriculum is being watched closely by the district for possible use i11 future elementary schools. Under the program students learn at their own rate and are not segregated Into class levels strlctly by age, but also by mastery of subject matter. Costs since the school opened last fall have run 10 percent over the $100,000 al- located to equip the new school. Dr. Loats said. Of the ettra $10.000 that has ~en spent. $1,000 went for consulting serv1c.es to find causes of problems that adm1n· istrators felt hampered the success of the program. "The district Is still committed to the continuous progress curriculum, but we made the administrative changes because we didn't think we'd have the right data on which to base future decisions," Loats said. District Trustee Marian C. Bergeson said the school board is expecting a com· plete report on the Eastbluff program. Hill said he Js happy in his new assign- ment ht which he assumes some of the re- sponsibilities Francy handled as director af student services. Loat.:i indicated Hill will be considered for another elementary principalship. Eastbluff's fonner principal praised the staff at Eastbluff and noted he was dis· appointed that he was unable to "pro- vide the leadership necessary to make the program work most effectively." .Hill, 41. also cited failing health and a Joss of 18 pounds since school started Jast fall which he attributed to the strain of guidi,ng the unusual educational pro- gram at Eastbluff. Among difficulties hampering the P!~ gram cited by Loats were the unanhci· pated increased enrollment of 100 stu- dents delayed instructional materials for the uidividualized readltlg and math study programs, teaming of teachers, lack of sufflcient storage Space for the bulky J114 structional materials and Jack of district funds to implement the new binovative teaching program. . Besidea the administrative switch, a 11ew teacher staffing pattern has been de· veloped which eliminates the , t~~m le.ad- ers who formerly directed act1v1Ues With· in the school's three learning "pods." Two additional teachers have been hired to reduce the class size which averaged :rt students during the fall term. New Principal Francy. 35, has been a teacher at Costa Mesa High School. coun- selor at Corona del Mar High and vice princi pal at Estancia High since joining the district in liS9. N e'vport Salary Hikes Hang Fire The precarious financial picture in Newport Beach has left anticipated mid· year salary increases for city emplO}'eS up in the air. The city council ~tonday night delayed approving 2.S percent raises .for certain positions pending an analysis of com· paratlve pay scales throughout the coun- tv. · The council did come to grips with the projected $400J)00 year.end deficit. ordering City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt t.o prepare formal recom- mendations for sharp spending cuts for action Feb. 22. The council will revie1v the proposed raises at the same time, when it more accurately will know exactly hov.• much money the city has. . Hurlburt was directed to par.e capital expenditures to the bone, deferring many projects until next year. He was also Instructed not to staff the new central fire headquarters near Newport Center until after July 1 -the start of the next fisc al year. Bubbles Rise Vp Front .Sea; Link To Quake Hinted :r.1vsteriou! bubblts rn a g 1 c a 11 Y mritfrialized over a 6.000.square-yard ar~a of the sea off the Malibu Pier today, possibly released from the oetan fl oor by quake tremors. ''It was like 50mcbody had pWlCturcd a Jong line of inner tubes," said a t..os Angeles County geologist who refused his name. Authorities \\'ere studying t he phenomenon noticed at 8:45 .11,m.. to determine whether it was t.11rtbquake· linked. . "ll appears to be some lypt of hssw-e which is causing the bubblts t.o rise to the surface," 11ald Sheriff's Lt. James Painter. \ • Frot11 Page l BACK BAY.-· clear in his comments that be is 1eav1ng the door open for a renewal of the coun1y·s mot ion to dismiss when that period expires April 25. Parker, obviously conctrned that Judae Owens might issue a final judg1nent on tht recently concluded back bay trial before April 25, urged the jurist to defer today's arguments to that dat• and the expiring of the notice period. Judge Owens rejected the appeal ~al went into discussion of points raised pending judgment on the back bay trade, itself. He promised that he would n!Vitw the continuance request before his court adjourned today. The issue was stiU being debated at press time . Judge Owens. in a ruling Dec. 18 favoring the Irvine Company, issued a 4l·page opinion that upheld the trade of IS7 acres or wbat were once county tidelands: for 450 acres of Irvint uplands. MIDNIGHT MISSION BUILDING COLLAPSES IN QUAKE; BUILDING A TOTAL LOSS With One Brief Jolt, 1 Home for the Homeleu on LA'• Skid Row Is Reduced to Rubble Attorney Dufiern Helsing, representing county auditor Vic Heim, and Sao Fran· cisco lawyer Philip Berry, for the group of Newport Beach homeowners wbo in· tervened in the lawsuit, were awaiting Judge Owens' signing of the final judg- ment before taking the i58ue to the appellate court. From Pagel Cou1icil Adopts New Resolution On Freeway Bid SOUTHLAND TREMBLES • • • All five attorneys ·who argued the Back Bay trade through six weeks of trial be· fo re Judge Owe11s were back in his court· room today with Parker for the hearing sparked by county supervisors' decision to withdraw from the agreement. of population in Calilornia chaos reigned as harassed aulhoritits tried to deal with the worst of it. Power lines fell popping like spark-spit· ting snakes and igniting a series of fires. Gas mains broke. Brick plumme~ed from aging apartment buildings. Looting was reported widespread in some areas, as panicked residents car- rled boxes and paper bags of valuables away with them. The Golden State Freeway was closed due to pavement cracks and bridges and overpasses were reported threatened in some areas. "1 was in my kitchen," said one robe- clad housewife. "l fell down and started praying." Control towers at Van Nuya and Burbank Airports In the devastated bedroom or the basin, the San Fernando Valley, were damaged and the FAA sus· pended all flight activity. A pilot flying over the vast city when the temblor -accompanied by an ominous rumble and the creak and groan of wrenching homes -witnessed It. Newport Boats Take Over Lead In Mexico Race By ALMON LOCKABEY to•llnt l llll•r Newport entries in . the Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta yacht race took over elapsed and corrected time positions Monday as the 26-boat flee t experienced its first wind since the start last Satur- day. The freshening 8-15 kno t northwest breeze which started late in the morning Monday boosted Bob Lynch's 82-foot M· Boat Sirius JI -the scratch boat - out to a 2a mile lead over Russ Ward's Columbia-57 Arles. Sirius 11 is from Newport Harbor Yacht Club and Aries flies the burgee of Lahaina YC but is being sailed by a Newport crew headed by Dan Elliott. Freestyle, an Ericson-35 sloop co-skip- pered by Saint Cicero and Rod Lippold, NHYC moved into a tie for corre cted time honors with her sister sh ip Aquarius, skippered by John Holiday, Long Beach Yacht Club. Another Ericson-35, The Odd Couple, ski ppered by Ronald Lee of Del Rey Yacht Club was holding third place overall on the handicap standings. At the noon roll call Monday the fleet was spread out from San Martin Island on the south to Ensenada with northwest winds starting the yachts to move. In the batUes for class honors on corrected time Norman Bacon's Morgan- 54 Widgeon from Santa Barbara Yacht Club was leading Class A and William Allen's Cal-40 Madrugador, California YC and NHYC was leading Class B. The Ericson-35s dominated Class C. Handicap Sllndlnga OVERALL -(1) Tie between Freestyle and Aquarius ; (3) The Odd Couple ; (4) Sigame (Cal-36) Sid Renkow, DRYC. CLASS A -(1) \Vldgeon: (2) Querida II (Columbia-SO) Jim Feuerstein, DRYC; (3) Aries; (4) Dorothy 0 (Colu.mbia-$7), Robert Beauchamp, NHYC. CLASS B -(I) Madrugador : (2) tie between Siren fErtcson-39) Frank Rice, NHYC, and Dakar (Newpcrt-41) William Goodley, DRYC; (4 ) Destiny 11 (Santana- 37 ) John Hooten, BCYC. CLASS C -Freestyle, Aquarius, The Odd Couple, Sigame. Juvenile Action Set in Slaying Greg Bradley ?.1oon of Buena Park, accused of the monkey wrench murder of his father. wlll be tried as a juvenile, Jt has been ruled. The 17·year-old youth is being held ln juvenile hnll until his trial on Feb. 2~. A public defe nder will be appointed for him. Tl1e father, Richard A. hfoon, -45. was kill ed in the back yard of the home Clf his ~on-in·law and d1ughter Jan. 19 in Garden Grovt. The boy fled the scene but later surrcndued to San Dleao p<ilice. l He said all of Los Angeles shivered and wobbled, its vut sea of lights looking like a sequined ouUlt oo a g().go girl. Power and telephone service waa tem- porarily interrupted in many are.is and radiG stations were jolted right !ff the air. One KRLA disc jockey's voice trembled as he told of the station's steel and concrete building swaying like it v.·as made al rubber. ~'Or maybe it's my knees. They still are," he quipped. A survey of Orange County hospitals and emergency services indicated few if any quake-related injuries, while damage was limited to scattered items in homes and stores. Burglar alarms were triggered by the tremor and the Seal Beach Fire Depart· ment horn sounded once at the height of the shock in a grotesque squawk as thou gh for heJp. Seismology stations elsewhere in the U.S. registered 6 to 7 on the Richter Scale, which places a 7 magnitude-quake as one or major proportions. "It is about the same magnitude of the U!ng Beach quake," mused Dr. Charles Richter, who Invented the scale but chose to stay in earthquake country after retirement. The Long Beach quake which killed 120 and caused millions of dollars' damage hit 5.3, while the 1952 Tehachapi tremor that killed 12 was a 7.7 force. Experts noted tbt 1906 earthquake and fire that devastated San Francisco was 8.2S on the open-end Richter Scale, which has no maximum force. ~ The temblor that struck today as an estimated seven million Southlanders were preparing for work or school came Jess t11an a month after a seismologist's warning. During a conference of geological ex- perts. they criticized contiaued con.- struction of high-rise buildings such as two 42-story towers which survived today's jolt. Seismologists have long predict~d Califomia"s quake-prone coastal basin is due for a major calamity on the Jong-donnant San Andreas Fault. The deep rift on the earth's crust running north and south through the population center of the elate waa not involved in today's av.-·esome even t. Public interest has waned somewhat in the wake of predictions by a broad spectrum of self-proclaimed visionaries- that by April . 1969, most of California would be wracked by quakes and sink into the sea. A tremor centered in San Diego County on April 28 of that year. however. created panic among many but caused little damage to the largely unpopulated area. In an attempt tG clarify its position on the March 9 freeway election, the Newport Beach City Council Monday night adopted a minute resolution declar- ing Jts supports the r ights of its citizens. to participate in that election. Introducing the resolution, Councilman Carl Kymla cited criticisms of the coun- cil that because of its recommended "no" vote on the two ballot propositions, it is against the election, itself. "This resolution is intended to dismiss that concern,'' he said. The brief position paper states: •·rhe City Council of the City of Newport Beac;h has and still agrees that the people have a right to expression by ballot with respect to the initiative and referendum now set for election on t>.tarch 9 and that it is the duty of this city and this City Council to defend the actions al the City Council and city clerk in any legal action which may be taken lo prevent such special election.'' The legality of the election was ques- tioned in Superior Court by three former city officials. A judge there dec lined to halt the vote and now the official! have asked the California Supreme Court to intervene. Scheduled for ba lloting are two ques- tions. The first is an initiatjve that asks the council to. rescind an existing agreement with the state on. s&reet clos- ings in connection with,the Pacific Coast Freeway through Coroila del Mar. The second is a charter amendmen t that would require referendums before the council could sign any simila r agreements involving any freeway in the future. Eclipse of Moon Slated Tonight NEW YORK (AP) - A total eclipse ot the moon wilt be visibie tonight, where skies are clear. throughout tht contlnen~ ta! United Slates and Canada. The lunar spectacular will begin at 9:52 p.m. PST whe1 the moon starts to pass through the earth's shadow. The moon will darken as the shadow spreads across the lunar disk ,with totality lasting from 11 :03 p.m. until 12:36 a.m. By 1:37 a.m. the western edge of the moon will have cleared the shadov.·. A lunar 'clipse generally can be ob- served from most places on earth at least once a year. lrvine Company attorney Robert War. ren branded the county's motion as pre-- mature and warned Judge Oweu that granting of I.he action would deny hls clients the advantage under the law that had been gained in the trial court. \Varren said the motio• for dismissal sh<>uld be regarded as a separate action and that its presentation at the present stage of the Upper Bay Jawsui1 was im· proper. "The moti on should have its day In court but that day is not aow ,'' Warren said . Berry urged Judge Owens to return the issue to the Stale La!'lds Commission and pointed out that the change of heart which led county super.visors to torpedo the Up-- per Bay trade might well have extended to other political agencies. "This should go back to the commission because of the supervisors' action and this substantial change in circumstan- ces," Warren said. "All state agencies now condemn th is trade and it is certain I.hat the commission will look at it in • different light today." The State Lands Commission voted Jn November. 1967 in favor of the agreemen t between the Irvine Company and Orange County. Warren urged Judge Owens to "exam- ine the actiOI taaken by President Nixon through Congress yesterday and the ob- vious determination of our administration to protect the estuaries and bays which are fast disappearing from the American scene." Fro1n Page l APOLLO.•. to the birth of the moon. Mission Control reported that an earth· quake in the U!s Angeles area tern· porarily affected communications at four or its tracking stations, at Guam. Hawaii and Canberra and Carnarvon i n Australia. Backup systems prevented a loss of any signals from Apollo 14, and telephone circuits to the stations were quickly rerou ted around Los Angeles. The astronauts were on such a perfect course that Mission Control early Tues· day canceled a planned midcourse cor· rection. "Good." was the reply from the Kitty Hawk when the spacemen were told. 'The New Orleans will cruise toward American Samoa. nearly 900 miles to lhe north. Once in helicopter range of Samoa, the astronauts. wearing special biological masks. wlll l>t flown to anoth.er quarantine trail er waiting aboard a Jet transport plane on Samoa. THE NAME OF THE GAME • There is a common practice of private labeling 1n the carpet industry. large department stores, chain stores and contractors at new tracts have ficticious names on the sampJ.s so th1t customers cannot easly sliop brand name prices. Customers shopping at ou r store find the price of uch quality prominently IHtured on the ,.mplt bool, because wt are competitive. Also, because we feel the customer has 1 right to lnow what he is b'uying, we never change th e n1me on a sample book. The name of the 91m1 is integr ity! ALDEN'S IANTA ANA. OllANOI TUITIN C•ll • •• AlDIN'I llED Hill CARpolfl I DltAPIRIR 11J74 lrvln .. Tu•tln, C•I· IJl-»M CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MlSA 646·4838 lfOUU: Moo. Th,. Thun., t te l:JO -l't(., t te t -Sot., t :JO to I 7 Costa Mesa Today's Fln~I N.Y. Stacks yor. '4, NO. 34, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNlY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9,' )971 TEN CENTS . Thomas Gets Reprieve; County Study Ordered By JACK BROBACK Of I~• Dell~ 1'1 .. 1 Stitt County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas was not fired this morning. Supervisor Ralph Clark surprised many when he proposed a lengthy study of the CAO and his orfice. His motion wu adopted by 4-1 vote with supervisor Robert Battin dissenting. Battin had proposed last y,·eek that Thomas resign at once or be fired. Today Clark's approytd motion calls for a committee of .supervisors, William Phillips, Ronald Caspers and David Baker, to "audit the -conduct of the chief administrative officer artd every asQeet of the work assigned to his of• lie~." Clark also moved that the committee shou1d "work closei;' with the grand jury to deve1op recommendatiorui to ensure the efficiency, economy and respoosiveoess of our gover.unent to the needs of the people." The motion called tor a commJttee to be prepared to report immediately after the conclusion of the new budget. Such budget studies are usually not com- pleted until well into JuJy. Clark said the subjed of the CAO had generated a great deal of heat during the past seven days, but very Apollo Back Safe Astronauts Splash Down on Target ABOARD USS NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Three U.S. moon explorers blazed to a triumphant Pacific Ocean splashdown to- day, ending a nine-day, $400-million mis- sion that swept away tM spectre of Apollo 13 and put the nation's manned space pro- 1ram back on track. The spaceship, loaded with 96 pounds flf moon rocks and scientific data that could turn outer space into a boon for mankind, plopped into the ocean right on target 900 D)iles .south. of San;loa at I :05 (l.m. PST, /Jao<IB. -Shtpard' lmd hit co-pilots. <Ed-' gar D. Mitchell and ·Stuart A. Roosa, drifted to the surface of the emerald "1aters of the Pacific on orange para. chutes that were clearly visible in color television pictures from the recovery carrier New Orleans. "We'll tur" you over to the recovery forces' now-have happy landing," ground controllers told Apollo 14 astronauts after they were safely through their fiery, 24,- 600 mile-per-hour rHntry through earth·s atmosphere. "Welcome home!" the recovery forct: communicator yelled when the capsule iplashed ipto Qle w~ter. "We're--in good 'wtiape in here,'' Shepard reported, as a cheer went up in the mis- siol' control etnter back in Hotu1ton. The astronauts were to be taken by helicopter to the cruiser New Orleans Last Witness Talks Final Arguments Today In Phoenix Sex Trial Final arguments were to be delivered through the afternoon in the Orange County Superior Court rape.kidnap trial of Gary Harold Phoenix of Costa ~1t:sa . ,Judge William L. Murray called for the last comments of deputy district attorney Michael Capizzi and deputy public de- Eclipse of Moon Slated Tonight NEW YORK (AP) -A total eclipse of the moon will be visible tonight, where wkies are clear. throughout the continen- tal United States and Canada. The lunar spectacular will begin at 9:52 p.m. PST when the moon st.arts to pass through the earth's shadow. The moon will darken as the shadow spreads across the lunar disk with totality lasting from 11 :03 p.m. until 12:36 a.m. ;By 1 :37 a.m. the western edge. of the moon will have cleared the shadow. ,A lunar eclipse generally can be ob- aerved from most places on earth at least once a year. Orange Coast Weather Wednesday's weather won 't be as urth shaking as today's. Look for sUMy skies and warmer temp- eratures with the mercury surg. ing into the 70s aJong the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY MU8ical comedy <1t tht Laguna Moulton PLn.yhotUe and dup dromo al UC Irvine comprise this week'.i openings in loco! tht<1Ur. See En tertatnment, Page 19. C:•llff'1'1fl • C:flttrtllOI VI' \I CltUJli.i 1o.1f C.MJct U Olatll Mttlcff f Dl .... c., ' •~111tr111 "''' • •111.,,1111-1 lt•lt "lft•llt• 1 .. 11 .... MUl't u .\11~ Lllldtn lt """"~ Lit.II,.. f Mto•i.t ...... Mllhlll ,VIMlt lt lll1!Wtal llltwt I Orl!lfl C:IYPol'J t ''"'" hfftr 11 ll'Wlt U·lt ""~ Mtftth lf.11 Tl'lrtltltll It Tft11t.n , ... ,, W11tfl1r f Wllilt Wetll 11 ._...., ,. .... ,,.,, ..... .... . .. fender R-Oderick Riccardi at noon today shortly after Riccardi questioned his last defen se witness. Capizzi will ask for the death penalty for the 29-year-<Jld bachelor. Riccardi will ask the jury to acquit him of 33 felony counts including rape, assault with intent to commit rape, kidnap, robbery and sex perversion. Nine women, several of whom ha v e identified Phoenix as their assailant, have testified that they were attacked by the tall husky defendant during a 28-day spell last summer. Several of I.hose victims claim they \Vere dragged by Phoenix into his white Thunderbird auto. raped and sexually humiliated and then dumped from the car by their attacker. Defense witnesses, including Phoenix's sister and his attractive young landlady, ha~ furnished alibis for several of the occasions on which he is accused ()r at- tacking women in four Orange County communities. Phoenix was arrested last July 25 when he surrendered t() officers at the Hunt- ington Bea.ch pouice station. Broker Injured By 'Booby Trap' SACRAMENTO IUPI) -A real estate broker was critically injured today when he walked out of his home and triggered 1 "booby trap" bomb touching ()ff an explosion that rocked the q u I e t neighborhood. Otto Luethje, 66. was taken to thfl: Sacramento Medical Center . A spokesman said one leg was blown off 1nd the other might require amputation. A nylon fishing line was stretched 1cross a walkway in front of his home, police said. It was attached to a lead pipe fiUed with nails and an un- determined erplastve. Police said the blast resoonded throughout the H Street neighborhood and shattered windows In a nearby park· ed car. It left a big lotole in th• front yard. A nur~e at Mucy Children's Hospital acron th• street heard the blast and ran to the 1cene. She said she found Luethje. and plactd In quarantine in a sealed trailer below decks. The thickening atmosphere a n d parachutes slowed the speed for a gentle drop Into warm Polynesian waters. The splashdown ended .man's third and most scientifically rewarding journey to the surfaet of the moon. , Shepard and Mitchell spent 33~ hours in the rugged Fra , Mauro . hig~and:i. In two moon walks, tbef ·.prowlf!4 .I h<' barren, dtlsty nurf1« for ippro:1bhite1y nine hours and CS'lJecttd a rtcof~. 95 pound! of · rocks illd lunar soil, oome of which may date 4.8 billi90 years IS.. APOLLO, Pac• !) Quake Causes No Damage In Costa Mesa Hammering burglar alarms a n d blacked-oot streetlights today aMounced the worst Southern California earthquake in 38 years, but Costa Mesa was JuCkier than many cities. The 6:02 a.m. lembl()r that toucb.ed off a series ()f about 50 detectable on seismographs throughout the mornine caused no actual damage. Switchboard operators at the city's main Communications Center were im· mediately deluged wilh calls. Street Department crews loured the ci ty later checking lights shut off by the powerful jolt, bul found only a few . Police personnel kept Radio Station KFWB on the facility's sound system, to follow furtber developmenis. "Oh. oh , we just had another one," said the L<ls Angeles announcer. Checking his watch, Ll Avery Smith watched the modern bubble-light fixtures suspended from the ceiling for about 20 seconds . "There it comes." he declared, 1 5 the shock waves hit and the amber globes trembled . Earthquake expert Dr. Charles Richter -who invented monitoring scale that bears his name -at first estimated the magn itude al 6.5 today, just under the 1933 L<>ng Beach quake . His Caltech seismograph was knocked out by the jolt centered less than 30 miles away but installati()ns elsewhere placed intensity higher than the 193.1 L<lng Beach quake. Headon Wreck Fatal to Man A North Hollywood man was killed about a a.m. today la a head.an colllslon on La Pu Road about a half mlle 1orth ol Ctown VaOey Parkway Jn Lacuna Ni· £Utl. "Highway Patrol officers .aaid tht crash involved a sport.a car and 1 pickup truck, but the vlctlm'1 n1me .was being ,withheld ptndlng notification of. lle'xt'of iii\. • The incideftt wa1 ·not related to todey'' earthquake. a. 11poke1man said, noUn& there w•s no damage to'hl&bw&y1 or ffte. waiys within Orange County. , litUe llghL "Surdy U tbe charges· which our chairman has made are accurate every citizen, ()fficeholder and taxpayer has reason for deep concern and significant changes should be made," Clark said. "On the other hand, if the dire con- sequences predicted by the Qpponents of change are accurate we would err gravely to act now." Supervisor Caspers, wh<> had backed Battin without question last week on the immediate firing of Thomas quickly seconded Clark's moti()n, "because the facts have been distorted an~ I do not think we should act in haste .... Clark first named Phillips and Caspers to the study committee but.added Baker · when the latter said he Wanted to serve on the group. The supervisors hearing room · was packed and overflowing 'With about 200 people in attendance. Most of thetn GOLDEN STATE FREEWAY OVERPASS COLLAPSES NEAR SYLMAR Route to Newha ll Cut; One Killed ·as Concrete Crushes Truck ' VAN NORMA LAKES GOLDEN HOLLYWOOD DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES • OAlLV PILOT lftws""' SHADED ZONE IN PATH OF VAN NORMAN WATERS Authoritin Order Evacuation of Hillside Ar•• ·Afr Cal Founder Named to Board . A young . Los Ana:eles 1ttorney, one of the founders of Air California, wu - appointed Mimday to the state · Board ol Education by Gov. Ronald l\eagan. Mark Gates, 34, joins Newton L. Steward, 50; a Ehreka broadeaatinC tr· eeutlTe., ail . lhe two new member• of · tbe. slate bbard te'ptacina outgoinf p~st· dent Howard Day and Dr. Thomas G • . Hilward .whOle teD'f'! explred Jan. 15. Gata, wtlh tour others, founded ' Orange COunty's first airline in April 1'56 in Newport Beach. He served as Air California's corporate secretary and general counsel until sale o:· the airline last June to Westgate caut()rrtla Corpora· ti on. Gates and Ste ard will take.· their place ()n Ult sta.te ard at ill meeting Thursday In lAI &eles. Botb are Republicans. 1: through their applause lndicated op. position to Battin's stand and .the hall dozen w~ spoke all urged further study of the proposal before action. Battin last Tuesday charged Thomas with assuming a dictactorial aUitudei and objected strenuously to a J'flport by Thomas which forecast a five percent raise for county employes ne1t fiacal year and a budget which · might call for a 34-cent tat increase. Tremor Hits 6.5 Reading By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 11'1• EMiiy Plitt St•ff Orange County escaped unscathed at 6:02 a.m. today as a major earthquake rocked the foundations of home to 11 million ·Californians wilh death, destru<> tion and predawn panic. The effects even reac).ed out int.It space,· as four NASA stations tJ:acking the incoming Apollo 14 astronaut& were knocked out. ' BackUp systems immedi'ately took over the complex job, but many of the' ground· bqund were less fortunate. Late today the b;lown death toll Jncludo ed 22 victims. The dead inchide line .at an antiquated VA hospital Jn the San Gabriel mountains : 1 at the Midnight Mission in Los Angeles; 2 at Oliveview Santarium; 2 at Sylmar ·freeway over- pass; l at a bridge collapse in the San Fernando Valley and seven listed as heart attack victims. Nearly 50 victims are still missing at the VA hospital, Two buildings at ,the 42(}.bed facility in the lower San Gabriel Mountains were leveled by the racking temblor. The· rocking and rolling jolt -equal to the 1933 Long Beach disaster - was estimated at 8.5 on the Richter Scale. but was so sharp it jolted the Caltech seismograph needle off It! graph. Repeated aftershocks followed through the morning, 00 or more. Buildings from Skid Row to exclusive suburbs crumbled as the earth.'s crust shuddered and vertical cracks appeared in Dos Angeles' largest water reservoir towering above a subdivision . Supposedly earthquake-proof high.rise towers of up to 52 stories in downtown Los Angeles shimmied like hula dancers, 1hattering windows and cracking walls. Hospitals throughout the Los Angeles Basin reported an influx ()f injured - some flown by helicopter -and many !iUffering serious cuts from flyinij glass. Seven victims died in the valley. area VA hospital. The death toll included two heart at- tack victims, a drifter crushed when a Skid Row mission collapsed in a crescendo of crumbled brick and a pa· tient in a suburban sanitarium. Van Norman Dam was rapidly develo~ Ing new and more grave fissures shoitly before 11 a.m .• as desperate workers tried to drain it. Continuing aftershocks kept its waters gloshing like coffee in a mug as th!: 6 billion • plus gallons threatened to cascade down the San Fernando Vall!:y. Dam Supervisor Robert E. Noel described the quake centered in rugged San Gabriel Mountains vividly. "It was thumpin' and jumpin' and knocked everything out of our kitchen," he said. Throughout the largest concentration IS.• TREMBLES, Page II Tremble Closes Do1nestic Gap The maj()I' rift that wtdtned 1n the San Gabriel Fault closed a minor one today In Costa Mesa. C',osta Mesa County Water Dis- trict Public Relations Officer COn· rad "Shorty" Scheafer, of 21·31 Wtl· lace Ave., came to work with a 11mlle two boun after the sharp quake. "fl.ly wife went to bed mad at-1"ne ... and I went to bed mad at her.'' he said, addin¥ that both he and Isabel- la kept their distance all night. "But at 6:02 thJs morning , you never saw twtl people reconcile Jo • fast," he concluded. ' - t DAit. Y PILOT C TLif¥!il)', ftbruvy 9, 1971 County May Not Get Out of Swap Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens thll morning ruled that Orange COUnty cannot be.ck out of Its Vpper Newport Bay Tideland exchange wlth the Irvine Coplpany. Re denied a motion by Deputy County Counsel Clayton Parker for court recognltiM that the county's unllateraJ rescission o[ the agreement scraps the exchange agreed on three years ago. Judge Owens denied the motion ''without prejudice," thereby allowing the. county to file a similar motion when its formal 90-day cancellation notice to the company expires la te in April. He aJso sald the ruling Is contingent upon additional dellberaUons on various poln~ of Jaw this afternoon, but indicated he Ukely will not change his mind. Despite the ruling, Irving Company officials indicated they are still wlllfng to negotiate with the Board o f Supervisors on details of the swap, itself. Reacting to the decision, Irvine Com- pany press relations manage r Jerome 1-~. Collllu said, "We view the current court hearing as a continuaUon of litiga~ tion started last summer by both the county and the Irvine Company to Grade Chop Predicted For Student Student helicopter pilot Tollie Owens' grade point average went down Monday night. So did his chopper. Police and Long Beach Municipal Airport authorities said Owens, 40, of 2284 COiumbia Drive, Costa Mesa, made an unauthorized flight about 7:30 p.m., with disastrous results. Lifting the Bell 4701 off the ground at World Helicopters Inc., witnesses said Owens gyrated erratically at about 15 feet off the ground. Suddenly, be set it back down, killing the engine, but Jost control when it rwtarted and went careening around the ramp and into a parked chopper. Frozen in bis seat, Owens failed to shut off the engine until a member of his family -waiting nearby to pick him up -5houted at him. The spinning rotar blade, meanwhile, had slashed U>rouib the oe<ond b!lleoJJltt and then -bent by impact -knifed ba.ck into the cockpit bubble ol Owens' machine narrowly ntissing him. Ile managed to escape injury, but damage to the choppers leased by Bell Flying School totaled $25,000, according to [.()ng Beach Police Officer Rod lllllburn. No criminal charges were to be filed they said, adding that Owens left the scene after the wild accident, but return- ed to the airport. They said Owens, a veteran of 50 hours' flying time, came back to discuss the matter with school authorities who were quite anxious to talk to him about It. determine the constHuUonality of tht land exchange concept. "As far as the fine points or the exchange, Itself, are concerned, they are a &eparate issue," lie said. "In this regard, we have lndJcated our willigness to talk to the county board or its representatives about this very complex matter,'' Collins said. "As V.'e said in our· Jan. 26 communica- tion to the supervisors, there is a com- pelling public need for us to go forward together in arriving at a mutually-agree- able plan. "It Is our understanding,'' Collin! said, "that meetings aimed at achieving this kind of negotiation are now being ar- ranged by Mr. Battin (Board Chairman Robert Battin). "We look forward to participating in them." During testimony trus morning Parker had reminded Judge Owens that county supervisors recently v o I e d ~ to 10 to declare the land exchange null and void and that the board does not Intend to negotiate with the Irvine Company on the issue, Judge Owens questioned Parker on the 90-<.lay notice served by the board on the Irvine Company and made it clear in his comments that he is leaving the door open for a renewal of the county's motion to dismiss when that period expires April 25. Parker, obviously concerned lhat Judge Owens might issue a final judgment on the recently concluded back bay trial before April 25, urged the jurlst to defer today's arguments to that date and the expiring of the notice period. Judge OWens rejected the appeal that went into discussion of points raised pending judgment on the back bay trade, itselt. He promised that he would review the continuance request before bis court adjourned today. The issue was still being debated at press time. Judge Owens, in a ruling Dec. 18 favoring the Irvine Company, issued a 41·page opinion that upheld the trade of 157 acres of what were once county tidelands for 450 acres of Irvine uplands. AUorney Duffern Helsing, representing county auditor Vic Heim. and San Fran· cisco lawyer Philip Berry, for the group of Newport Beach homeowners wbo in· tervened in the lawsuit, were awaiting Judge Owens' signing of the final judg- ment before laking the Issue to the appellate court. All five attorneys who argued the Back Bar. trade throu.Jh s.ix week1 ol trial br· fort J:Udg4 OWei! were back In his court- room today with Parker for the hearing sparked by county superviiiors' decision to withdraw from the agreement. Irvine Company attorney Robert War· ren branded the county's motion as pre- mature and warned Judge Owe11s that granting of the action would deny his clients the advantage under the law that had been gained in the trial court . Warren said the motlo11 for dismissal should be regarded as a separate action and that its presentation at the present stage of the Upper Bay lawsuit was im- proper. ''The motion should have its day in court but that day is not 11ow," Warren said. Newport Boats Take Lead In Puerto Vallarta Race By ALMON LOCKABEY •"lint l•lttt 1lcwport entries ln lhe Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta yacht race took over elapsed and corrected time positions Monday as the 26-boat fleet experienced DAILY PILOT 01UHOE CO.uT PU•t.IMUNQ CDM7AKV R•ffrt N. W11d PrnlllM1 aM P'llbll111'11r .I•• .. R. C•rl~ 'ViCI Pmktllllt ...... C0-1/ M.......- 1ll•M•• K111il 1:.1i.r Tll•m•• A. Mlff'Jlhi~ 111-.11111•11or C.. M .. Dmc. JJO Wo1t l1r $tr.it M1Tfln1 Addr111: P.O. 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The freshening 8-15 k n o t northwest breeze which started late In the morning Monday boosted Bob Lynch's 82-foot M· Boat Sirius 11 -the scratch boat - out to a 25 mile lead over Russ Ward's Columbia.S7 Aries. Sirius 11 is from Newport Harbor Yacht Club and Aries flies the burgtt of Laha\na YC but is being sailed t>y a Newport crew headed by Dan Elliott. Freestyle, an Er1cson-35 sloop co-skip- pered by Sainl Cicero and Rod Lippold, NHYC moved into a lie for corrected lime honors with her sister s h i p Aquariu.!I, skippered by John Holiday, Long Beach Yacht Club. Another Erlcson-35, The Odd Couple, skippered by Ronald Lee of Del Rey Yacht Club was holding thlrd place overall on the handicap standings. At the noon rollcall Monday the neet was spread out from San Marlin Island on the south to Ensenada with northwesl winds starting the yachts to move. Jn the batUes for class honors on corrected lime Nomuin Bacon's Morgan- M Widgeon from Sant.I Barbara y~cht Club was Ieadins Cl8.$s A and W:lhan1 Allen'!J Cal-40 Madrugador, California YC and NttYC was leading Class B. The Ericson-SSS dominated Class C. Handicap Standings OVERALL -(1) Tie. belwt:en Freestyle and Aquarius : (3) T~ Odd Coup!•; (4) Slgam• (Cal.JI) Sid Renkow, DRYC. CI.ASS A -{l) Widgeon; (2) Querida It (Columbia-SO) Jim Feuerstein, ORVC; <3) Aries; (4) Dorothy O (Columbla·S?), Robert Beauchamp, NHVC. CLASS B -(I) fi.fadrugador: (2) tie between Siren (ErlcsOn-39) frank Rice, NHYC, and Dakilr (NeVr'J)Orl-41 ) \Vllllam C.oodley, DRYC: (4) Destiny II (Sanuina· 37) John Hooten, BCYC . CLASS C -Frttilyle., Aquarius, The Odd Couple, Slgamt. ( Hulse Trial Jm·y Pick Continues Jury selection continued tod1y In th• Orange Olutlty Superlo:-Court trial of a Garden Grove youth accused jn the hatchet murder of a service station at- tendant and later Involvement. ln .the tilling of a Mission Viejo school teacher. Selection of the panel that will rult on the guilt or innocence of Arthur Craig "11foose" Hulse, 16. is expected to take at least three more days in what will be both sides predict. a three-, I week trial before Judg' Ron a I d Crookshank. Getting· the Message Judge Crookshank refused Monday to disclose the nature of a serles of motions argued in his chambers. But It wu learned today that two or thosf' molio~ involved the constitutionallty or the grand jury system and the right to try Hulae, a minor, in adult court. There is a message there somewhere. Volkswagen driver jacks up his bug to change fla~ tire in front of patriotically-minded auto dealership on Harbor Boulevard in Costa A1esa. The question is: Did the Star-spangled economic message get through? Fron• Pagel Co11:nty Seeks 'Hot Dog' Man Extradition Hulse was removed [rom juvenile court Jurisdiction shortly after his indiclmenl by the Orange County Grand Jury and ordered to fa ce trial as an adult for the killing of Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21, of Santa Ana. SOUTHLAND TREMBLES ••• of population in California chaos reigned as harassed authorities tried to deal with the worst of ii. Power lines fell popping like spark-spit· ting snakes and igniting a series of fires. Gas mains broke. Brick plummeted from aging apartment buildings. Looting was reported widespread ln some areas, as panicked residents car· rled boxes and paper bags of valuables away with them. The Golden State Freeway was closed due to pavement cracks and bridges and overpasses were reported threatened in some areas. "I was in my kitcbtn," said one robe- clad housewife. •11 fell down and started praying." Control towers at Van Nuys and Burbank Airports in the devastated bedroom of the basin, the San Fernando Valley, were damaged aod the FAA SU!- pended all fll.gbt activity. A pilot flying over the vast city wbe.n the temblor -accompanied by an ominous rumble and the creak and groan of wrenching homes -witnessed it. Be said all of Los Angeles shivered and wobbled, its vast sea of lights looking like a sequined outfit on a go-go girl. Power and telephone lel'V1ce was tear porarlly interrupted in many areas and radio stations were jolted right oil the air. One KRLA disc jockey's voice trembled as he told of the station's steel and concrete building swaying like it was made of rubber. "Or maybe· it's my knees. They still are," he quipped. A survey of Orange County hospitals and emergency servtces Indicated few if any quake·related injuries, while Frona Pagel APOLLO .•. to the birth of th e moon. Mi ssion Control reported that an earth- quake in the Los Angeles area tem· porarily affected communications at four of its tracking stations, at Guam, Hav.·~ii and Canberra and Carnarvon : n Australi a. Backup systems prevented a loss of any signals from Apollo 14, and telephone circuits to the stations were quickly rerouted around Los Angeles. The astronauts were on such a perfect course that Mission Control early Tues- day canceled a planned ntidcourse cor· rectlon. "Good." was the reply front the Kilty Hawk when the spacemen were told. The New Orleafl! will cruise toward American Samoa. nearly 900 mUes to the north. Once in helicopter range of Samoa, the astronauts, wearing iipecl!l biological mask!, will be flown to ano~er quarantine trailer waiting aboard a Jet transport plane on Samoa. Juvenile Action Set in Slaying Greg Bradley ~1oon of Buena Park, accused of the monkey wrench murder or his father. \\'ill be tried as a juvenile, it has been ruled. The 11.year-old youth Is being held in juvenile hall until his trial on Feb . 24. A public defender will be appointed for him. The father, Richard A. Moon, 45, was killed Jn the back yard of the home or his son-ln-h1w and daughter Jan. 19 in G~rden Grove. The boy fled the scent but later surrendertd to San Diego police. Jwnate Breaks J ail To Get Into Another WAKEFIELD. England {UPI) - Mohammed Shah was so unhappy with life in an open prison that be bolted to frtedom and showed up at hb favorite top security jail here. Shah said he wanted to conllnue a study course he began at the Wakefield jall and had waltrd wttks for action on hill request for 1 tranafer from l.e)1hlll, 185 miles away. damage was limited lo scattered items in homes and stores. Burglar alarms were triggered by the tremor and the Seal Beach Fire Depart- ment horn sounded once at the he igh t or the shock in a grolesque squawk as though for help. Seismology stations elsewhere in the U.S. registered 6 to 7 on the Richter Scale, which places a 7 magnitude-quake as one of major proportions. "It is about the same magnitude of the Long Beach quake," mused Dr. Charles Richter, who invented the scale but chose to stay in earthquake e-0untry after retirement. The [.()ng Beach quake which killed 120 and caused millions of dollars' damage hit S.3, while the 1952 Tehachapi tremor that killed 12 was a 7.7 force. Experts noted the 1906 earthquake and fire that devastated San Francisco \\'as 8.25 on the open-end Richter Scale. which has no maiJmum force. The temblor that struck today as an estimated seven million Southlanders v.·ere preparing for work or school came Jess than a month after a seismologist's warning. During a ronference of geological ex· perts, they criticized continued con· struction of high-rise buildings such as two 42-story towers which survived today's jolt. . St.lsmologists have long predicted Calilomia's quake-prone coastal basin is due for a major calamity on the long-dormant San Andreas Fault. The deep rift on the earth's crust running north and south through ~e population center of the state was not in volved in today's awesome event. Public interest has waned somewhat in the wake of predictions by a broad spectrum of self-proclaimed visionaries that by April, 1969, most or California \\'ould be wracked by qua kes and sink inlO the sea. A tremor centered in San Diego C.ounty on April 28 of that year. however, created panic among many but caused little damage to the largely unpopulated area. Coke Collects Refuse NEW YORK I AP) -1'bt Coca-Col a Bottling Co. ol New York has announced plans to set up 17 collection dePQts in the metropolitan area to buy glass bottles and alumi11um cans. The company will pay one-half cent per bottle or can, regardless of brand, and turn them over to be melted down and recycled. Orange County authorities are today seeking the extradition from Arizona of a man accused of swindling Harbor area residents of nearly $500,000 in a fraudulent hot dog machin.e enterprise. Fighting proceedings launched by the district attorney's offlet: is Gregorios Pavlou, formerly of 398 22nd St.. Newport Beach. He has been indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on charges of grand theft., issuing stack without a slate permil and using a sclteme to offer or sell stock to defraud. Pavlou was indicted afler a year-long investigation by district attorney'll in- vestigators and state Department of Corporations agents into the operations of his personally registered Mido, Inc., of Costa Mesa. Investigators said Pavlou, also known as Cregorious Busch. interested more than 150 Orange County residents in his plans lo sell hot dogs from specially designed and unique vending machines. They said Pavlou financed his cor-- poratioo by giving promissory n.otes .to potential investors putting up Mido stQck as collateral. Pavlou. they c I aim defaulted on those loans so the invest.or could have the Mido stock issued in their names. Library Shows School Agendas Anyone planning to attend the first and third Tuesday meetings of the Newport·f.1esa Unified School District board of education will find copies of lhe agenda in five Costa Mesa or Newport Beach libraries. In order to reduce the number of copies of agendas to be printed for each meeting, the board decided to place four copies in each library, for use by the public. The agendas. whtch are delivered on Friday afternoons before the board meetings. may be checked out for study. The board's next meeting is Tuesday al 7:30 p.m. in the Costa Mesa High School Lyceum. He is also accused of being an ac- cessory to the murder of Mrs. Flore.nee Nancy Brown, 31 , of El Toro. Hulse and three other member! of the gang of drifters v.·ere rounded UI) by lawmen in the wake of the two murders. Mrs. Brown was the victim J~ 2 of a "devil cult" killing in which portion! of her body were devoured in satanic rites after !he was slain in an Irvine orange grove. Carlin was killed the night before In a murder that followed the group's rifling o[ his till -a robbery that put tM in their pockets. Scheduled to appear as a \\'itness for the prosecution in the Hulse trial is Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, a transient who is accused of both murders. Taylor's double murder trial has been delayed until April 5. . . Awaiting trial for both kilhngs Is Steven Craig Hurd, 20, a transl~t who goes on trial March 22 and Christopher "Gypgy" Gibbon,y1 17 of Portland, Oregon. Orange County district attomey'J of. ficus are today seeking the extradition from Oregon of young Gibboney. Bubbws Rise Up From Sea; Link To Quake Hinted Mysterious bubbles m a g I c a 11 Y materialized over a 6,000-square-yard area of the sea off the Malibu P ier today, possibly rrleased from the octan floor by quake tremors. "lt was like somebody had punctured a long line of inner tubes," said a Los Angeles County geologist who refused his name. Authorities v.•ere studying t h e phenomenon noticed al 8:45 a.m .. to determine whether it was earthquake- Jinked. "It appears to be some type of fissure v.·bich is cau11ing thr bubbles to rile to the surface," said Sheriff's Lt. James Painter. A fisherman reported the bubbles which spanned an area about 150 yards long, 40 -yards wide and 200 yards west or the picturesque pier. No divers had been sent below to check for a source. mE NAME OF THE GAME There is a common practice of priv1te libeling 1n the carpet industry. Large depArtmtnt stores, chain stores and contractors at new tr1c:ts hive fic:ticio us names on the samples so that customen cannot easly shop brand n1me prices. C ustomers shoppin9 1t our stort find the price of each quali ty prominently featured on the sample book, because w1 are competitive. Also, btc1use we feel the customer has 1 right to know what he is buying, we never change th e n1rn1 on a .sample book. The nome of the 91m1 i1 inl19rily! ALDEN'S • IAHTA ANA. Olt.ANOI TUSTIN C•ll ••• ALDIN'S CARPETS e DRAPES •tD HILL CAaPnl & DIAPllllS tlJ74 lrthw. 1'uttln. Cal. UI JJ44 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 HOURS: Moo. 1'11n1 'lloun., f t. l :JO -l'ri., f t. f -S.:" f :JO t. I I Tutsdu, F'1br111rr '· 1971 s DAILY PILOT 3 Effects of Qual{e Felt ThrQughout Southland From Wirt Ser\'~tl !{ere are the 11mes today'1 earthquake was recorded at seismographic stations vi the State ReS()urees Agency : Pyramid Dam vn lnterslate $ in the Tehachapi ~1ountalns: 6:00 a.m. and 48 seconda. Cedar Springs, nine miles north of San Bernardino: 6:00 a.m. and S7.2 1econds. Perris Dam, 13 miles soulheast or Riverside : 6:01 a.m. and two seeonds. San Lul1 Reservoir, ~ miles north Quake Sl1uts 10 Schools ' In Santa Ana Ten scllools in the Santa Ana Unified School district \\'ere the only public Bchools closed today in Orange County because of possible earthquake damage. All of those closed were built prior to 1933 and are considered substandard, according to Ho\\'aid R. Harrison, associate superintendent for management ser\·ices of the Sant.a Ana district. While lhe nine elementary schools and one junior high school v.·ere inspected in 196$ and structurally improved, district officials said today's tremors cracked v.·alls and ceilings sufficiently to close them. The: closure affected more lhan 6,000 Santa Ana school children who will not be allowed back into the schools until engineers today complete an inspection to determine the soundness or the struc- tures. Harrison said the district v.·as being cautious particularly after discovering when Lathrop school was demolished, thal engineering reports had been ac· curate in terms of the potential danger in the pre·I933 school buildings. "\Ve found ceiling and floor joists in Lathrop School that '"'ere just resting on the concrete supporting them," Har· rison said. The Santa Ana schools that were closed today \\'ere Franklin. Hoover, Lowell. f\.1onroe, P.1cKinley, Afuir. Roosevelt and \Vilson elementary school.1 and Willard Junior High School. The Orange Counjy Department or Education reported that all other schools in the county were open today. Air Conditioning No,v Necessary For Sound Curb Orange County planning aides have come up with a ne'v condition for homes built in areas which are likely to be affected by aircraft noise. Air conditioning is required so that doors and windows may be kept closed during warm v.·eather. This condition wa!J attached to .a recent application for construction of 425 single family homes in the Lake Forest area near El Toro. Although the developers. Stanley C. Swartz Company argued that air con- ditioning would add $800 to $1,000 to the price of a hon1e, planning com· missioners thought that it was necessary lo provide the property sound prrofing. The developers also pointed out that J\farine aircraft fly over the subject area only five percent o( the lime. A f.farine Corps representative agreed that !he area is overflown only five percent of !he time when the wind direction so dictates. However, he added, lhat the noise ill: created not by overnights but by runups at the base v•hich occur day or night. Reid Gustafson of the Swartx. Company said his firm is planning homes in the $21 ,000 to $25,000 price range. He said they were trying to build needed low cost housing and that adding $1 ,000 to the cost o! each home would eliminate a seg. ment of the buying pubBc. Planning commissioners, after hearing objection!! from several intertsted deveJ. opers. proposed that as a compromise each home be provided wilh the neces- sary ducting for air condit ionina so that It can be install.ed at reasoneble cost. No final deci sion was reached. of Tehachapls: fi :Ol a.m. arid 35.l seconds. Oroville Dam. 52$ miles north of the Tehachapla: 6:02 a.m. and 6.4 seconds. Residents ln San Diego and Imperial tOunties felt strong tremors today from the massive quake. fl.1ost San Oiego residents said they relt a rolling motion for about 45 seconds and many reported that their clocks stopped at about 6:03 a.m .. two minutes alter the tremor was recorded in Los Angeles. Only minor damage from the sl.roniJ earthquake which belted the Los Angele• area today was reported in Kem County which borden Los Angeles Counly on the north. • Two marktt operators and a drugstore ii\ Mojave, some 50 miles north of LolJ Angeles. rtPorted mll\Or breakin1 of mer- chandise. Roads were closed into Los An- geles County. Bur1tar alarms were tripped Jn Bakersfield by the shock but no signifl· cant property damege or lnjurlei were reporttd. "It wu ttrona: enough so most peoplt Ul'I "r•lf•~Oi. PARKING LOT ATTENDANT CLEARS FALLEN BRICKS In Downtown Los Angeles, Old Buildings Show•d Their Ag• QUAKE INTENSITY SCALE EXPLAINED The Richter Scale, developed by Dr. Charles Richter of the California Institute of Techno\olgy in Pasadena. is the only scale which measures the energy releas· ed in an earthquake. It goes by logarithmic progression. Every step or one-tenth on the scale represents a ten.fold step in n1agnllude. Thus a quake rated al 7.7 is 100 tim es more powerful than one rated 6.7. .I\ quake of 2 is Jn1percepliblc ; 2.5, perceptible near the point of origin : 3, felt over a fair-sized local area : 4.5, can cause slight damage in a limited area; S, potentially damaging : 7, serious or major; 8. a "great" quake. The: San Francisco quake of 1906 \\'as B.3 and Alaska in 1964 was 8.4 on the Richter Scale. California's last major quake, the Tehachapi quake of 19!12, measured 7.6. Neighbors Sued 111 Man's Death A Mission Viejo v.·ido1v who lists her l\\'O small children as co-plaintiffs has sued her neighbors for $250,000 in an Orange County Superior Court action charging them with responsibility for the death or her husband last Oct. 12. Mrs. Constance. D. Brown of 24222 Salero Lane names Carol Ann and Arthur J. Nonnan of 24181 Salero Lane as defendants in her lawsuit and blames lhem for the death of her husband, Frederick Ray Brown. 23. Brown died beneath the wheels of the Norma~· runaway car as It rolled down the driveway of the Normans' home end backed out Into Sa\ero Lane. Onlookers said Brown grabbed !he door of the moving vehicle and tried to cnler the auto bul lost his balance and fell beneath its wheels. Brown's children. Ann ~f11rie . 3, and ~l ark Edwin, J, are named with Mrs. BrO\\'n as plaintiffs in the la wsuit. Road Acccident During Festival Poses Problem Any accident on Laguna Canyon Road during the Festival of Arts could cause "serious problems for the city" r..1ayor Richard Goldberg told F'esUval directors J\londay night. "Since there is a letter of complaint on file v.•ith the State Division of I lighways, any accident couid cause a lot of trouble," the niayor said. He apparently referred to legal liability. The letter he was referring to v.·as \\'ritten to the state highway people at the close of last year's Festival, by local resident Spero Janise. The state confirmed that parking along the median in the canyon road is illegal. :However, no one was in a r u r r y to enforce il. Goldberg, who recently had a meeting \\'ilh state highv•ay officials said, "Whether they decide to stop median parking this sum1ner. I just don't know. They seemed to be in a cooperative mood." The mayor said lhe only solution to the F'eslival parking problem would be a parking structure in lhe general vicini· ly of the art attraction. "We are exploring the possibility or a parking structure on the parklng Jot at Glenneyre and Laguna, but it's not going to be up by this year's Festival time," he added. Public Hearing Set for Sign Control Ltt·w Open Meet Set The proposed co unty sign control ordinance endorsed by the four Capistrano Bay area chambers of com· me:rce vdll be given a public hearing \Vednesday at JO a.m. by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The ordinance overlay zone, which v;as approved by the county planning com· mission without opposition (rom !lgn <:ampanies, will be discus.~ed In the supervisors' hearing room 1t 6th and Sycamore Streets in Santa Ana.. Clemente Hospital to Be Subject Details and plins or operation of the San Clemente General Hospital, whlcb. breaks ground Wednesday, wilt bt presented by Chapman Hospital offlclall in a public rneetlng Feb. 23 in ~{arco Forster School caletorlum. The ev,nlng meeting .sponsored by the Caplstr11no BA)' Chambers will provide an opportunity for citltcns to examine the Chapman plarui and participate in a question and answer session. 1'\\'0 questions already Poled by delcgales lo the Bay Chambers orga.nlia· lion ore. "Whal serYlce!J will be of· frrcd?" and "llow will co!!., to patlents compare v.ith those al South Coast Hospital!" Paul Hunter, chairman 'of the meeting planning committee, &aid he and his committeemen (Marcus Rye of Dana Point Chamber and Jim Elliott of taplstrano Beach Chamber) w 11 1 welcome all interested residents of the Capistrano Bay area, and will solicit their que5lion.,. The 116-bed, acute.care ho51>il11!. a ~eparate convaltsctni. hospital and a board-and-care facility will be built in Camino de LOI Mares near Camino d• Estrella. The Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce has requested that the ordinance, If enacted, be established In the Capistrano Beach.Dana Point COWllY area. Control provision.~ of the ordinance would prohibit outdoor a d v e r t I 1 i n g billboards and signs on vacant lots and phase-out such existing signs within three years. It would prohibit the placement or 11igns on top of buildings~ control the 5ize and pl11cement ol signs ldenlif)'lng busln~. • find rorbid pole a n d ''sand\\·ichboard '' signs. felt It. Thtrt were a lot of calh:," a 1heriU'1 Office spokesman l n Bakersfield said. The SLILI Menial Hyat ... Department said that paUentl were being evacuated from lhe Olive Vitw General Hospital In the San Fernando Valley because of earthquake damage. A department spokesman aald the pa· tlenl! were being taken to the UCLA Medical Center. He said the number or patients involved was not immediately known. He also said details on the e:a:tent of the ho8pltal damage were sketchy. The earthquake c•uaed the J..ockhffd. California Co. to CIOH Its plants in Burbank and Rye Canyon. Some 18,000 day !hilt hourly employes were sent home (or the day pending a safety Inspection of buildings Jnd cleanup of broken gla!Js. JniUal report1 Indicated that the ma· jorit)' of damage WI! broken window" ~nd lighting fl1tures and upset file cabinets. Supervisory, maintenance and plant prottcUon personnel remained on duty. Interstate 5, the major highway llnlC between San Francisco and Los Angeles, 1''all closed today by the earthquake. The Calilomla Division of Hlghway1 clO!ed the route bec11use of d11mage to bridges In the Newhall area where tlie quake was centered. Three employts of the Los Angeles Herald Examiner were hospitalized after they were knocked unconscious whe n the quake triggered a fire.fighting device that filled the paper's basement printing plant with a gas. Danging On and Praying Reporter Describes Sliock in Quake's Epic enter By KEARNEY BOTHWELL GRANADA HILLS (UPI) - I had just crawled into bed and turned On the radio to catch the 6 a.m. news when the quake struck. The next thing l knew J was hanging onto the bed lor dear life and praying. The house -I live in an old two-story frame home In lhe northern San Fernan· do Valley near the epicenter -twisted and moaned. I could hear the beams creaklng. plaster falling, books tumbling from shelves, and tbe shelves themselves collapsing under the sv.·ay, As soon as the first jolt subsided l ji.imped up to check on my roommates. Sle\•e Smith, a teacher at Alemany l~igh Sebo<>!, said he was afraid to get out of bis bed becauSt or bis huge Authorities Plot Damage Front Quake r..1obilizing in the wake of today's rumbling quake and faci ng the possibility of more aftershocks. authorities began plotting damage and prescribing a varie- ty' of precautions to be taken. The State Disaster Office said It was putting together a conlprehensive picture of the zone hit by the 6:02 a.m. temblor. Sections or the San Diego Freewav in !he San Fe rnando Valley \\'ere tJeing closed temporarily and unconfirmed reports of bridge and overpass damage \vere being checked oul. Motorist.s were advised to stay off northern portions of bolh the 405 Freeway and Interstate 5 until the tot.al effect or the quake can be accurately assessed. School buses by the score were also being warmed up for tht anticipated evacuation or resldenls from exclusive lifission Hills, downhill from the huge Van Norman Reservoir. Cracks were reported in the dam, constructed in 1920, and holding 6.7 billion gallons or water in its lower level reservoir. Officials or the Los Angeles Depart· ment of Wate r and Power said some leakage had been reported in the old dam and engi neers were on the scene checking it. Van No rman Dam is one of the largest of the metropolis' 14 water supply reservoirs and is located above the ?-.fisson llills development 25 miles northwest of the dov.11town area. First reports indicated patrol cars equipped with loudspeaker systems were advising residents to flee their $30.000. plus homes but th is was later toned down . The State \Yater Resources Depart- ment announced there '"'e re no reports or damage lo project facilities in the quake fault-riddled San J oaquin Valley or Tehachapi Mountains. Engineers were keeping a close in· spection, hov.·ever, of various facilities currently under construction. California Highway P a t r o I ad· ministrators announced establishment of a limited emergency ope ration cenler At its Zone Five headquarters on Los Angeles' Vermont Avenue. Reports from CHP officers in the field were being used to determine manpower needs for the entire disaster area. The shuddering quake that struck aa millions of SouthJanders were showering, shaving and ha ving breakfast coffee cut short the work day for many. Closure of damaged plants in Burbank and Rye Canyon was announced by Lockheed-California Company, "'hose 18,000 hourly.paid day shift employes v.·ere sent home. 'Motlier Earth,' Due for Lagu1ia The acclaimed ecological musical satire, "Mother Earth.'' will be brought to Laguna for a one.night stand Feb. 25 by !he South County's Pro· envlronmenl·Ptople (PEP). Hailed by critics as a theatrical milestone the South Coast Repertory pro- ducUon Is scheduled to play Ulrougbout the west. PEP chainnan Luisa Hyun who saw "Mother Earth" at the Third Slep Theater in Costa Mesa, described it •• "one of the best evenings I've ever spent In a theater. quite apart from Its relevancy to ~·hat we are trying to do ." TlckeU for the $ingle performanct In Laguna Beach High School auditorium, at $3.50 eech. now are available et lhe Gr~nbelt Headquarters. 216 Forest Ave., Oilley's Bookttort, 460 S. Coast Hlahway and Fahrenheit 451 Bookstore and Gallery, 609 S. Coast Highway. collection of books tumbling •bout the room -and the huge casl·iron chandelier above his bed swaying ominously, but holding. The living room was a shambles - the lamps had been toppled from the end tables and smashed. The bookshelves were over turned. There were huge cracks in the plaster around the stairway well. In the kitchen foodstuffs had tumbled fron1 lhe cupboards and the ice box had been shaken open. China wa s spilled and shallered. Jn the back yard the pool sloshed over. Oooding the yard. My other room· mates quickly pulled on pants and dashed outside as the first aftershock hit. All up and do\\'n the street frightened neighbors in nightclothes "·ere scrambl- ing into their yards. \\'ithin minutes T wal'I en route back. to the office I had left only an bour earlier. All along !be v.•ay there was evidence of damage. Hundreds of businesses had shattered windows and merchandise scattered out into the streeet. Ringing burglar alarms shattered the silence, made even more ominous by the fact that all electrical and telephone service was out. Intersections , where traffic lights failed lo control the usual early morning rush into dov.TIIO"'n offices, were flooded from broken v.•ater mains. To"·ers of smoke began springing up from broken gas mains which had caught fire. Other Quakes LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The earthquake which struck Los AngeleJ area tod;iy was the 10th major quake in California since 1812. The prevlOUI qu akes killed 700 persons. They were : -San Juan Capistrano, Dec. 1812: Church destroyed with loss of 40 IJves. -Hayward.San Leandro, Oct. 21, 181i3: 30 kllled. -Lone Pine, Owens Valley, fl.larch 26, 1872: 27 killed. -San Francisco, April 18, 1906 : 452 killed, $SOO million damage, 28,181 buildings destroyed, more than 100.000 homeless. li.fost disastrous quake in U.S. history. -El Cent ro-Calexico, June 22. 1915: Six dead. -Sant a Barbara, June 29, 1925: 12 dead, several million dollars damage. 6.3 on Richter scale. -Long Beach, t-.farch IO, 19JJ: 120 dead , thousands injured, $4-0 million damage. -Tehachapi (Kem r.ounlyl July 21 , 1952: 11 killed, 7.7 on Richter scale. -Bakersfield, Aug. 22, 1952: Allershock of Tehachapi quake, Two killed. Newpo1·t Boats Take Lead 111 Puerto Valla1·ta Race By ALJ\ION LOCKAB EY 111tlnt •1n1.r Newport enlries in lhe Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta yachl race took over e\apS<!d and corrected time positions Monday as the 2G·boat Oeel e>:perienced its first wind since the start last Satur- day. The freshening 8-IS knot northweiit breeze which slartcd late in the morning Monday boosted Bob Lynch's 82-foot M· Boat Siri us II -!he scratch boat - out to a 25 mile lead over Russ Ward's Colwnbia·57 Aries. Sirius II is from Newport Harbor Yacht Club and Aries flies the burgee of Lahaina YC but is being sailed by a Newport crew headed by Dan Elliott. Freestyle, an Ericson·.15 sloop co.skip- pered by Saint Cicero and Rod Lippold, NllYC moved into a tic for corrected time honors v..·ith her 11ister s h i p Aquariu~. skippered by John Holiday, Long Beach Yacht Club. Another Ericson-35, The Odd Couple, skippered by Ronald Lee of Del Rey Yacht Club was holding third place overall on the handicap standings. At the noon roltcall f.1onda y the fleet was spread out from San fi.1artin Island ,)n the south to Ensenada with northwest winds starting the yacht.s to move. In the battles for class honors on cor rected time Nornu1n Bacon's Mor~an· !'t4 Widgeon from Santa Barbara Yacht Club was leading Class A and Willlam Allen's Cal-40 fl.1adrugador. California ''C and NHVC 1vas leading Class B. The Ericson-3Ss dominated Class C. 118ndlcap Standings OVERALL -(IJ 1'e between Freestyle and Aquarius; (3) The Odd Couple; (4) Sigame (Cal-36) Sid Renkow, DRYC. CLASS A -(I) Widgeon ; (2) Querida 11 {Columbia-SCI) Jim Feuerstein. DRVC; 13) Aries : (41 Dorothy 0 (Columbia-57), Robert Beauchamp1 NHYC. CLASS B -(I) Madrugador; (2l tie between Siren (Ericson·39) Frank Rice, NHYC. and Dakar (Newport-41) William Goodley, DRYC; (4) Des tiny II (Santana· 37) John Hooten, BCYC. CLASS C -Freestyle, Aquarius, The Odd Couple, Sigame. L1llt\ldt 11111 L-HllH 11.LEGlllE !PJ·O) John M1c.l.l11!tr, LY C, ,1,1,N-111:#/IW AQUAll.1US lE·J:S) John Holldly, Lav c . ll •O!l<l-!H:JIW '°'RIES {Col-JI) lllun Wtrd, L YC, :x1:2'N-ll1: lllW AVENTUR'°' !Se•·lll) L.H, Pritt Jr. llVC, ll:2()N-111;l)W 11 ... eE It (Cll·lil AltAlndtr Gorbv, OlltYC. ll:UN-1!1,JJW CARINA IPJ·Q) Wllllltn CO!vlll•. NHKC, ll :OfN -111;1CW OAK ... R IN·lll WllU•m GCIOdlry, OltYC. lll.~N-lllli .CWW OESTINY 11 (51nl1~1·J7l Joh" ttOOl~n, llCYC, 31 :01N-111:l1W OOROYttY 0 fCol·Jll Bub lleeuchit,,,p, NHYC. l0:1lN-111:06'.V l<PEESTYLE iE·)!JLIPllOld .l Cicero, NftYC, :IO:l•N-111:1,W JANO 111 (E~l) Robert Kithn. eve. J!,IGN-llt;J'W l(ANlll(A BUG (K·Slll Cho•ltt Ottfr, OlllYC, J1 ;,.llNciiiUh·l~i11. !Ctl·ID I 11111 Alltn J•., eve. lO:lllN-11S :5'W MISTRAL i ll6) 8r11Cf !~'""••d. sve. lLl1N· 111 .0•W NOVI.I. DEL MAP (H' 0.t!tlll John Scrlp11t, SDVC. l l:l•N-\1 1 •lW QUA.£AR [(1\.lll Artllu• !l1M. St, FYC, 31 n7N-1Ja •-SJW QUERIDA. 11 (CPI·'°, JI~ Feverileln. ORYC, )(I '~N -117:'7W RASCAL (f'' Ytw'll 11111 WlllOft SI Y C, lO.llN-116 :1SW $t(;A.ME ((11->0 S"f Rtnllgw, 0 It V C, 30· JIN-116: ,..,., ilREN IE·lt) Fr•n~ lll1lce, NHYC, :xl:'-lt~­ l ll:!?W SIRIUS ,, Cl1' CU!ltrl ' aab Lrndl, i'!HVC. :IO.GIH-111 :l'1W THE 000 COUPLE IE·JSI ROii Lee, Dlll.YC, )1;11N-1!1:0tW V"'LEN"rlNE H tlC·'3) PPOqV 5111... l.AVC, ll 1'N-111;~1W W"llTE ~EATHER 111 (tf ... l Jolin Wfftt, SI. FVC., 31:?!)1-!!l :UW '°'°'' "'"'. "':1~G'ioN ... (M.J.11 • Normtn II~ ... slve :J0:1•N-116:StW YA "rUlll(O 4Col-JC ) CiM<I• Anllrr. "MVC, 31. lON-lll:llW Juried Off Exhibitors Granted 1 Year's Grace 1'-l\'e year artist-exhibitors at the Ftstlval of ArU juried out of th' show, would be given a "yetir or grace," under a new jurying system proposed by Festival director David Young. "The grounds committee reels ll a person has been on the grounds (or five consecutive ye•NI aod Is juried off, hti Is entltled to have a year of grace and continue. to display," Young told the boord. To 'tam another year of gr11ce. Young aald, I~ artist would have to be juried on the F'estlval for another five years. In addition to the arece period -a tota l of six year11. Young 1111ild that the new measure would allow four artists Juried off last ' year to slay ln the running for thl1 year's show. Akins favored the measurt. claiming: "lf an artist has been jurted Jnto the Festival for five years in • row, he hM been an asRl to the festival. One jury may not Uke him on the sl1lh yc11r. and the artist i11 klckl!d off. It's an ineqully." Dr. Harold Burton said he would su~ port the measure, but did not 1ee the need to 11lart it this year. "I suggest we wail a year." tfelen Ketley said directors should have some tlmc to study the proposal before voting on it. Oirtttors agreed to postpone a vote unUl next moal.b'• meetlna of tht bonrd . • § IAILV PILOT Names Rub Bad Way By DICK WEST S11pplle• Bog Dow1i Fog Stalls U.S. Flights _in Laos SAIGON (UPI) -Ground fog and clouds nearly halted U.S. supply ni1hts from South Vietnam to South Vietnamese troops trying to cut the Ho Chi Minh Trill In southern Laos tod ay. Truck ainvoys were hampered by mol\500n rains. • More dense fog was predicted for Wednesday and military sources said that supply difficultiu might develop un.les.s the weather improved. There was sporadic contact with North Vietnamese troops in the area of the LaoUan lncw'slon today and U.S. head· quarters in Saigon reported f o u r Americans and sil: South Vietnamese killed Monday when Communiat forces sbot down a helicopler. which was turned lnlo 1 !\U•&mlre by a surpri1e st.orrn movln& in off the . South China sea. Official Saiaon communiquts today said the deepest penetration into Llos by elements of the 6.~man South Viet· namese task force was six miles. But military sources in the field told cor· respondent Sullivan that some long range reconnaissance Jlltrols of the 1st South Vietnamese Infantry Division w e r • operating as deep as 15 miles inside Laos. Laotian Communists. in a broadcast heard in Saigon tonight. said 50 South Vietnameae and 10 U.S. battalions "etin· ducted a strong attack on the town of Tchepone in southern Laos with the. support or U.S. air." Th' Pathet Lao report said "Lao.s civilians were stauibtered en muse by the invaders during the fierce attack." WASHINGTON IUPll -I believe it is accur1te to 1ay lhlt ene of the ma.in c1uHs Of friction in Ameriea is racial and ethnic nomeoclature. COruilder a puaaa:e I rln attfl65 in a publica~on by tilt 1011tliwut lnltrfrOlip reltUon1 council. A young Indim is quoted u 11ying : "even the name Indian is ftot ()IJJ'!I. It was given ta us by same honily wf>o got 1 .. t and thought ho had landed in India." FLAMES LEAP FROM llUS AND OTHER VEHICLES IN BELFAST RIOTING Violence Erupted Aft•r a Small Girl W11 Accidentally Klll•d by Army Car Far lo the north of the allied offenaive 1g1ill!t Communist supply llnes and bases, heavy fightlng w1s repofted today between LaoUan troops and Communist forces on the Plain of Jars. Am•ricans at the Lona: Cheng Base were evacuated when It came under heavy artillery at· ta.ck and preparations were being made there for a long siea:e, Laotian com· munJques said, Israel Says No to Cairo Canal Terms Therein lies the rub, ef course. Too many racial ind ethnic groups got their names from other racial and ethnic groupg. And even the groups t.h1l wtre privileged to have named tbtmselves didn't do too good I job Of it. It is plain that U anytbing approachin& true brotherhood is ever to be 1chieved there must be 1 ntUonal racial a.cd ethnic renamln& convention. AniR AJ,.I,, an lndlvlduol CiliJin who dotan't like hls name can go to court Md ~ave It ltgilly cllan1e<1. So Why &houldn't l a r1Ciil or ethnic group have the same opJ>(ll'lWlil}'. Eich IUCfl &J'OUP could caucus and de· cide, either by direct vote ot thrcu.&h ·~ pointment of a cOmmittee. what tt wdUld like to be c1Ued. Then tht name would be fMmally rati- fied by all of the ctner' ethnic and racial ;roups attending the convention. Land Mine Blast Iillls 5 In North Ireland Strife BELFAST. Northern Ireland <UPI - P'ive civilia1 men. were killed today when their LIJUi Rover hit a land mine on a road 70 miles west of here, British military officials said. The deaths follow. ed a night of guerrilla warfare in Belfast. Military offlcials said the Land Rover was destroyed by the blast at Brou1her Commons Told Lockheed Engine Future Doubtful LONDON (UPI) - A covernMenl minister'• statement to the House of Cotnmons cast doubt today on the future of the jet engine which caused the col- J1pse of the Rolls·Royce engineering firm. mountain . 15 miles from the Army gar- rison where the Duke of Kent, Queen Elizabeth 's CQusin, is based. Officials said a military Lind Rove.r had been due. along the road, which leads to a deserted Briti!h Broadc1stin& Corp. (BBC) radio transmitter th1t w1s knix:ked out of action by a bomb last month. Unofficial reperts said two of the Uve victims were BBC encinters. The underaround Irish RepubUcan Army (IRA ) stepped up its guerrllla w1r Monday nitht in Belfast with 1 bomb and machine gun attack! on BriUah troops. In Belfast, trouble erupted during a funeral procession for Bernard "Barney" Watt.!. the 23-year-old Catholic civilian shot by a soldier Friday night in a gun battle with troops. Unidentified peraons pulled a crane acros.s the path of the funeral corte1e when some mourJers strayed into .a Protestant area bordering the pro- cessional route. Rail Talks Halt; Strike Date Set By Union Chief WASHINGTON CUP!) -The. president of the n1tion's large.st r1il -union broke off contr1cl t1lks with management ~ day and scheduled a nationwide rail 11trike March 1 when a eoniresaion1l moratorium expires. "With great reluctance, the Brotherhood of Railway arid Airline Clerks (BRAC) has found no value in continuing the necoUations with railroad management for new contracts," Bft.AC President C. L. Dennis told a news conference. "Until m1nacement chanies its attitude it is hud indeed to see a basis for settlement." Although breaking off talks with the manaa:ement committee bargaining for all the railroads. Dennis invited represen· tatives lrom lndividUal carriers to open talks aimed at stparate agre.ements . He said that tentative agreements reached last week be tween the railroads and two smaller unions "only com- plicated" his negotiations beca~e the BRAC has "different problems to be solved and dll!erent economic needs to be mel" Dennis said mana1ement had offered the aame 44 to 45 percent wage incr111e over 42 montha that it had settled with the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes and the Hotel and Restaurant Employee: Union. U.S. helicopters invol\Ped in the Southern Laos campaign reported th1t the weather over the operational area y,·as good but that conditions east of the Xe Don River , the bound1ry between South Vietn1m and Laos, w1s poor with visibility neilr zero. "lf we a:o out and shoot all our rockets, v•e can 't 1et back ," one U.S. helicopter gun.ship pilot told UPI Correspondent Robert E. Sullivan after returning from a support mission for South Vielllamue unit.I in Laos. Sullivan said truck convoys were still· ed 1leng Highw1y 9 eut of the reac- tiv1ted U.S. combat bate at KM Sar\h in the extreme northwut corner e( South Vietnam. He Mid overturned trucka were blocking hundrtd! ef supply vehicles. Military authorities planned to cl<11e Hi1hw1y 9 east of Khe S1nh for a few houri Wednesday to reptir Ute read Army Man's Family Safe In Bomb Blast Ai'JKARA, Turkey !AP) - A package left at lhe home of 1 U.S. Army strgeanl exploded seconds after the sergeant's wife noticed that it was smoking and rushed their two children from the house . Mrs. Billy G. Austin told Army and Turkish government investig1tor.s her 9- year.old son s1w the package on their doorstop Monday and brought it into the kitchen. She began unwrapping it. When she aaw the smoke, she 1r1bbed the cblldren and ru1hed outside. Tbe kitchen was demolished , JERUSALEM (UPI) -Premier Goldi Meir rejected today Egyptian proposals to reopen the Suez Canal in e1ch1nge for an Israeli troop withdrawal from the east bank of the can1J. But she offered to discuss a separate dell for reopening the long closed waterway. In a policy speech to the taraeli Parlia· ment, Mrs. Meir said the canal offer by President Anwar Sadat of EJYpt was aimed merely at giving Emt a strategic advantace without mlkirli any real progress toward peace. Sadat made his proposal last ThurJday. calling for an Israeli troop withdrawal from the canal in return for reopenin& of the waterw1y which has been cleaed since the six-day war in June, 19'7. Mrs. Meir said today Sadat's propos•I left more unsaid than said and cave na guarantee it would lead to the sianin& of a peace treaty i nd end the Middle East confrontation. "! must make it clear unequivocally Israel is ready with full heart to help toward opening the cintl to lntemational free navigation for all the st1te1, in- cludllli Israel," Mrs. Meir said today. Or, if it preferred, a group might 1pon- 1er a conldt. "1\ename the Ttkimos! Win $10,000! ptu1 a new 1utomobile, 20 oolor television Mt.a. 10 mil'l.ibikts and hundred! of other priiu!" Aviation Minister Frederick Corfield ?tlonday night told the House it would not be in Britain's best interest to con· Unue with development (lf the RB2ll tn&ine for the U.S. Lockheed Aircraft C•rp. "l do not believe there is an enormous potentitl market for this engine." be Slid. A youth ran from 1 crewd of Pro- ~st.ants and snatched a a:reen, white and or1nge Irish Republican tricolor from Watts' coffin. Troops and police moved In at once to quell a possible confrontation in the West Circular Ro.ad. The corte&e continued its journey to Milltown Cemetery without event after removal of the crane. Laos Attack to Hasten "It is not we who are respOnaible for the closina: of the canal . The opening of the canal to international navigation could be an expression of a desire to reach peace, But the proposal of Presi· dent Sadat, as presented in his speech, seeks to achieve a strategic advantage through withdrawal of Israeli forces without any real progress for peace. OUT 01' this w()llld come some truly tplendtd ncial and eO!nic names. unless J miss my gue11. Names liktly to com- m•nd rapecl. and perhapi evtn awe, 1'"'11 -IJ'OllJ>I. Do you ate the be1uly of this? By 1dopt. lng a namt In v.iUch they can take Pride. memben of a group would strive to Jive up to O'lt name and be better persons for It. And there would be no more need for anti-de famation organiiationa. EakimC>S, for instance, might v!Xe to cl\ange their namt to "nature noblemen." Indians nHght wish to be called "glorioUs paragons." And so on. Thue e:r1mples are purely lllustr1tive . t wouldn't presume to sugg,st wh.at any group, other than my own, should call it· 11elf. AJ for my group. I intend to re- commend that we call ourselves "Mr. Nice Guya."' Which ceTtainly soimds a cre1t dtll btUf:r than "honky." -UPI Cortield s1id it "might be very much in Lockhetd's interest to continue with the R!211. "But certainly thig is nol my idea of retaining our position in the big engine lea111e. to develop at this enormous co.st an engine which is to a large extent behind engines of equiv1lent pciwer and performance." Hig statement came after Chanctl\or of the Exchequer Anthony Barber told the House Pre~ident Nixon had told Prime ~1inister Edward Heath he will coo\ferate with the British government and Lockheed in exploring the future of the project. The governm ent's bill authoriz ing the acquisition of parts of Rolls·ROyce was published Monday. It comes up for its second form•! reading Thursday. It gives a blanket power to acquire 11ny part of the undertaking and a1.~ets of any e<1mpany whJch is 1 subsidiary (lf Roi1R·Royce. Eisenhower Set For Sea Duties WASl:UNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's son-in.Jaw, David Eisenhower. will be going to sea in late May 1s a Navy officer aboard the USS Alb1ny. a guided missile cruiser with the Atl1ntic fleet. David, who will be 23 on fi.1arch 31 , will graduate from Naval Officers Training School at Newport. 1t.t. M1rch 12. commissioned as an ensign. Under Navy orders announced Monday he will begin a twO·month trainin& course at Newport News. Va . in May he wlll be assigned to the 17,000-ton Alban y, a rebuilt World War II cru ise r based in Mayport, Fla., near Jacksonville. Snow, Rain ·Chill East Tornadoes, Bitter Cold Drive Into South c.ilfornla Temperatures f1 UflllTIO ,Rlll INTlaNATIONAL 11 UNITIO ,111115 ll'ITllllNATl8NAL Nlfl'll u11I mtrnlllt toe I nd klw c:1~1 cov1rM e.11111 Mt hon1 <11 Moul,,...., C.llfor11!1 Nod•v <lft•I"' to felr wtttl vtrl1ll!1 tilt h tlo\Hll 111C1 I Ull• 1'11 In 111-'-· 1..CI' Allttlh t i• 11.HPltll':td toe a!'Mf 111rw CIOU<il wlll'I lll1trl'Mllkl1>1I Alr-011 CIMllll di&Wl'I to trttfk Ill IM '°"'"Int llov•I. l~ltt w111 wnn" ...,, lltlY wnh fN fttMitttcl llltll ....... I I C!vlt l'.I MI• f'Mtlllrtt l'IHt JS ~..,.. Wltll I lllth el ... Mt!Ml'I'. 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" ·•I ,,,,,, .. ,, ... , .. .. f'lllltftlfll(I " " • ,~,,11 • ~ f'lll1b!,irt~ " :i ... ~.1111111, Ort •• lll•thl (/IV ,, " " ·-~ • S1cr11'1tnlt " • " l.t1.1l1 " • Withdrawal, Says Laird Nixon Aide Denie§ Escalation of War NE\V YORK !AP) -President Nixm,.s communications director, Hubert G. Klein, has de.nied that the invasion of Laos is an esca11tion (lf the Vietoam war and that news of the coftflict bas been suppressed. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird predicted to- d1y th1t the allied oper1tlon in Laos would enable President Nixon to "mee.t or be1t" his plan lo withdraw 50,000 more around combat troops from Vitt· namby May 1. Republican Cona:re!isional I e a de r 1 emerged from a two-bour meeting with Nixon and !aid the optration would lower U.S. ca1ualtle.s and dr•slically reduce the Communists' capability. L.aird talked to newstnen before he brit fed lhe Senate Armed Services Com· mittee on South Vietnam'! move int& Laotian border s1nctuaries with U.S. Air supporl Secreatry of St1te William P. Rogers arrived later for a briefing with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Laird said 50.000 more troops must be wilhdrawn by li1ay 1 to meel Nixon's deadline for a 284 .000 troop ceiling. "We will meet or beat that troop ceiling and ""' will go forward with our withdrawal program." LaL~ s1id. Laird said 10.000 U.S. ground forces y,•ere engsged in ''backup'' responsibili· ties'' in South Vittnam for the Sai gon troops' thrust into Cambodia and Laos, lie S3id the Laos operation was "goinit: according to schedule.'' was of "limited duration" and if~ objtclive was "to destroy and uproot the sanctuary areas in Laos.'' He said South Vietnamese troop!\ ;,will not win every battle" but said they are slron1 enough now to win most of them. St!:nate GOP lr11der Hugh $c(ltt told reporters al the \Vhite House that crillcs of Nixon's Southe11t A11i1n pollcy "have fa llen of their own w'lght." "The sttam Is out of a 1ood deal of that criticism beca~ the President has dont "'hat he said he w11s 1oing to do,'' Scott said. He also sitld th1t If there ii a lack of credibility $Ur· rounding activities In Southeast Asia "it Is on the p1rt. of the dooms1ytrs whose predictions h11ve betn the opposite (lf what h11 octUrred.'' Hou!t Republic1n Leader Gtr1ld R. Ford siid the currtnt eperttlon 11 timed at cullini the llfeli ne of tht Communl!lS to the battlefronts In South Vietnam'• northern provinces--1ust as the U.S. Incursion Into C1mbodi1 last fi.1ay cut the Communist lifelines to JOuthe.rn pot· I llons of South Vietnam. "Tbe success of this (lperation will lower casualties and drastically reduce enemy capability," Ford &aid . Scott and Ford said that about SO Republican and Democratic Consre.ssion· al leaders wtre briefed before the Laol ian operations were undertaken. Most ll'atchable Klein, a veteran joumaList, was ques- ttoned at the Colutnbia University Graduate School of Journalism Monday by students as he appeared on a pal'lel. • "''''~ Patricia Anna Tempel. 19. Boulder. Colo .. has been named Most Watchable Girl in ~lilitary Uniforn,. While Patricia is briefed on pool technique, a player takes cue and gives her the eye. • Sitting ita Judg11ae1at 1i-1embers of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee listen to testimony during a hearing, on the nomination of George Bush to be U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. LTR: Sens. George Aiken, William Fulbright, and John Sparkman. Youth Upbraids Congress For 'Betr'!yal Over Draft' \VA SHI NGTON IU Pll - Sen. Strom Thurmond walked out but Sen. Jctin C. Stennis listened calmly When an 18- year-old college freshman ac- cused governme~t officials of betraying the Constitution by sending young Americans to die in Indochina. "When a 55-year..id Presi- dent or a 7n.year-olt senator can talk of starlin~ war in another country, J became disgusted because be y o n d their matter-of -fact statements lies the fact that people are going to be drafted and people are j1J)ing to be killed ," said red-haired and freckle-ra Ced Peter Knutson. ''This talk \Wuld cease rather quickl y if men like that were drafted . gh~n an M16 and told to lead the first wave.'' The sce ne occurred Mond8)' when Knutson , of Everett, \Vash., testiried before the Senate Armed Services Com- mittee in his capacity as leader of the Stanford University Draft Repeal Coun- cil. The committee took tesUmony on President Nix- on's proposal to extend the draft for two years while his volunteer Army proposal is being tested. KnU'tson told five senators sitting in on the hearing that he was "frustrated I C:osts (]~ 5.5% fru strated with the draft for what it Is trying to make people like me fip;ht for and die for, frustrated with this Congress for betraying its own Constitution." Midway in Knutson's presentation, South Carolin•'• Senator Thurmond walked out. But Stennis, the f\1ississi ppl Democrat who heads the com- mittee, listened calmly and at one point instructed clerka to provide Knutson with a microphone sc be coud bt heard in lhe back of the hear- ing room. Price tf Food Finally Equal" Wage Increases WASHINGTON (i\P) Food costs rose as tast as wages last year, catcllng up for the firsr time in 1'1 ~ears. the Agriculture Depa:tmenl i;ays. Take-home pay and food Busboy's $2 Bet Brings In $25,527 NEW ORLEANS IAP) - Calvin McManus, a 21-year-0J.I restaurant bu.sboy, \YCnl lo lht· Fair Ground s race track h1on· day with $10 to wager, plunged $2 on 8 longshol exacla and was rr\varded with $25,527. In an exacta, the bettor must pick the fir st tv:o horses in the order cf fin ish. McManus held the only ticket on the exacts -picking the first two horses in order -in the fourth race, a com- bination of Nos. 11 and I. Mae W. S., No. 11 , paid $281.60 to win, and Drlprints, No . 1, returned $17.40 to place. "J really didn't have any choice in the race." Calvin sa id. "I hadn't been doing any good before "'Ith the form , anyway.'' Pot Poison Pointed Out WASHINGTON IAP) -The Food 11nd Drug Administration has announced the recall or some Italian pottery which could cause lead poisoning through Its use. The pottery, di!llributed na- tionally by Holl Howard Inc. ~ Stamford , Conn., contains some pieces .with 400 parts of poi.son<>ll.1 lead per million. The FDA safety guideline for ltad is seven parts per milllcn. The ~ad is a residue of the manufacturing process. An agency official said catin~ or drinking from a con- taminated piece of pottery OV('r 11 prolonged period of tim e could pose a 11erious health hatt1rd. One dea th has been reported. costs jumped 5.5 percent each in 1970. with 16.7 cenls flf each dollar going to food bills. It was the same cost-per· doll ar as in 1969, a point reached in gradual declines since a peak of 20.9 cents in 1958. This year, the report said , total food costs will continue to rise but at a much less rate, perhaps only 2 to 3 per- cent. In fact. the report said, food bought at retail stores in 1971 may average only I to 2 per- cent higher. compared with a 5 percent Supermarket boost last year. But prices in restaurants will continue rising at a faster clip. Last year they wenl up 7.5 percent, an increase the report said might be shaved a bit in 1971. Retail store prices for pork, eggs. poultry, potatoes and some vegetables are expected 1tp drop. while higher prices are forecast ror fish, dairy 'producU. cereals. sugar and processed vegetables. Knutson said he believed the American role in Vietnam was as bad as if lhe United States had entered World War II on the side of Hitler. ''Would you have blindly said 'J\.1y country right or wrong' and fought to preserve lhat barbaric G e r m a n regime?" Knul5cln asked. "Or would you have gone to prison or Canada rather than com- promise your ideals?" The student said t h e Congress had betrayed the Constitution by giving the President the power to draft and the power to make war in what is cfficlally termed ''peacetime." "In so doing you have also, in my opinion, betrayed the young men in this country .'' Knutson said . Sen. Peter I{. Dominick (R- Colo.), asked Knu t.son if he had been to Vietnam. "I have not been to Vietnam and I hope not to be there,'' Knutson replied. Stennis told Knutson it was ';great to live in a country where a man can come here in honesty and candor." ·'Beautiful Sunset' -Pair in BO's Wed PARAfA, Idaho (UPI) -"We're getting started late in the day, but we should have a beautiful sunset.'' ),!aria \Vilson, 82, used those words to describe the new lire •he is building wilh her husband of three days, 81-year- old Jtiy Jfoover. W~en the octogenarian couple exchanged vows over the weekend. it might have been billed as a December-Decem- ber wedding. But June kept busting out oil over : There were J2 of the couple's. gradnchildren am"ng the 92 guests -all described as "close relatives." HOO\ler, a retired grocer, had been a widower for two years. ills bride1s first husband died eight years ago. Both or the previous marriages had lasted 50 years. , The'. bride and the bridegroo1n had known each other for 40 years. They both grtw up In the Boise Valley, a net- work or farm towns near the state capital at Boise. Aske~ how he came to pop the question, lloover said ; "Wei~ I'll tell you. We had gone out a time or twc and then I went on a cruise or the San Juan Islands last year for two rponlhs and I wrote her every day. "When I earn back I just got bold enough to ask if she were interested and she was ." The eouple were marritd Sa turday in the commun ity chu rch Jn Parma, a southwestern Idaho farming communJty of 1.000. The bride's son, Joseph \Vilson, an editor Jn United Press lnternational't San Francisco Bureau, gave her away. lfonver's d11t1ghttr, Mrs. Mark Purtell, performed the same function for him. Resort Seen For Hughes In Bahamas • ?.flAMI (AP) -Billionaire recluse Howard Hughes hopes to build a n ultra-private fishing resort on Cay Sal. a remote cluster of rocky Baha- mia n islets 30 miles north cf Cuba, the Mlami Herald reported in ita Tuesday edi- tions. Jeffery McDonald Thompson, mlni1ter of development for the Bahamas. confirmed that Hughes Tool Company employe!I "are cur- renUy negotiating a lease for Cay Sal," the Herald sald. Thompson told the Herald he met recenU y to dlscuu the lease with "a chap called Gay, vice president or the tool company, and another man who Introduced hlnueU as Chester DaviJ." William Frank Gay ls a vice president of Hughes Tool In Houston , and Chester Davis is a New York attorney who has represented Hughes in many large financial transac- tions. Priests Deny Part In Kidnap HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - "Net guilty," pleaded the Rev. Philip Berrigan, impriaoned antiwar priest, when ar- raigned on charges he plotted to kidnap President Nixon's foreign affairs adviser, Henry A. Kissinger, and bomb heating tunnels b e t w e e n government buildings in Wash- ington. "Positively innocent," said the Rev. Joseph Wenderoth, 35, of Baltimore , Md .. another of the six indicted in the alleg- ed conspiracy. One by 'lfle, each · stood In U.S. District Court Monday before Judge R. Di 1 on Herman, and each separately said , "I plead not guilty." Inside the guarded ninth floor oourtroom, where ad- mission was by a special pass and the 80 se&ts were filled mostly by newsmen and la\\'yers, that WIS about all , the defendants said., It was a quick , simple procedure. ( Girl's Heist Try Fails PITI'SFlELD, Mass. (UPI) -Police held a 16-year-old girl today charged with trying to hold up the Pittsfield Na- tional Bank. She never 1ot a penny. The unarmed girl, who,,e name was withheld because of age , walked up to an cutside window and handed 19-year~ld teller Christine Mendoza a note saying "Give me all your money." "She was not kidding, I gueu," said a pc lice de tee· tlve. The girl wall arrested by a patrolman on duty outside the bank 111 she waited fer the telltr to fill a bag with money. Hey Gals It's Happening Again The Most Anticipate.d • in All Orange County Entire Stock of FALL. HOLIDAY. EARLY SPRIMG Dresses· Jumpsuits-Pants-Shirts-Sweaters SO°!o to 7 S°!o off ........................................ • • • 5 A Special Valentines Gift : • • . ,. . : Our Own Groovy Jumpsuits 5 • • : MANY FABRICS ALL SIZES : • • : Values to $80.00 NOW s2500 : • •• • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Don't Miss The Big One Sale Starts Wed., Feb. 10, '71 10:00 a.m. The.b>ok ... lv Arlan 'J.laum , ;••··································••i 5 GUYS GEAR i : IS NOT HAVING A SALE : : WHILE HI IS WAITING FOR YO~, LET : : US TURN HIM ON TO SOME NEW THREADS : ·······································' , , ,, ~ •• • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Reagan's Gov. Ronald Reagan's proposed budget for 1971·72 has caused more uproar in more directions than is us- ually the case "'he.n the always painful figures are made public. And there \Vlll be more ot the same -much more -before the Legislature enacts a budget bill into Jaw. It is easy enough to sympathize with the Reagan administration's fiscal problems. The proposed $6.73 billion total is 6.5 times as big as the Earl Warren budget \vhen he was governor 20 years ago. The total has grown f ar faster than the population, which didn't quite double in the same period. It is easy to sympathize, too, with the governor's struggle 'vith the can of worms represented by a \Vel· fare system President Nixon described in his State o( the Union message last month as "a monstrous. con· tinuing outrage against the community, against the tax• payer, and particularly against the children it is sup- posed to help." But sympathies notwithstanding, the methods \the governor proposes to use to solve the problem have raised hard questions. Indeed, some raise serious legal questions. The Legislature's top fiscal adviser, Legislative Analyst A. Alan Post, labeled the budget proposal "the property tax increase·act otl971.'.' He told the Assem· bly Ways and )leans Committee that the budget would r;hift more than $100 million to the local property tax load in school financing alone. Post contends that additional untold millions may be passed from the state to the property taxpayer by a yet undetailed Reagan prol?osal .for massive cuts in i;pending for welfare and medical aid for the poor. The governor vi gorously denies this. Assembly Speaker Robert 1'1oretti, a Democrat. accuses the governor of "playing games" by submitting a budget that can be balanced only by cuts. in welfare and medical aid, fund transfers and expensive borrow· New Budget ing. Moretti says Reagan knows very well that uwe may be going to need a tax increase this year!' One disquieting fact is that, through the years. the legislative analyst's presumably non-partisan look at state budget an d tax matters usually has been much closer to reality than those of the various administra· ti on!. And it is a truism that when the state cuts back on funding existing fundamental services, such 111 welfare and education. part of that slack inevitably must be taken up by the local taxpayer, usuaUy through the property tax. · The reality o( the state's situation is simple: Either there must be even bigger cuts across the board or more revenue must be generated. And likely it will require both approaches. The solutions ~1ill neither be cheap nor easy. Nor politically painless to either party. But this is not the time for the Legislature to try to "hang one on" the administration, or for the governor to get into one of his unfortunate "feet set in concrete" positions. If we read the temper of the people correctly, this Is not the year when either the governor or the LegWa· ture can get away with substituting flaming rhetoric for fiscal results. For Avant-Garde Men Gaily colored shirts and ties shoved traditional white business shirts into the backs of dresser drawers a couple of years ago, victims of a style swing more common lo women's than to men's wear. Now the word is they're coming back into fashion. But there's a catch. They'll be for evening wear, with longer collars, fancy cuffs, textured fabrics and satin stripes. So, men. just keep those white busineS5 shirts in reserve. When they turn gently yellow with age. they may become the next fashion trend. 'Implied Dedication' Brings Legal Snarl Fare Boosts Seem Suicidal .Decision Jeopardizes Land By JAMES E. WHETMORE Senator 3Stb District ( Gue/it Report ' Economics ~:I;\ I""' l " ...... . "'0:.l>l.::&·;,;.;;" '" .;.;.J,.., ... A recent decision handed down by California"! Supreme Court has rai~d f()me interesting legal problems with which we will have to deal in the months to come, as the Legislature moves into high gear. The situaUon involves the doctrine or Implied dedication, whereby the unlicens· ._ ed public use of private property over jl a period of five ye a rs con- stitutes-according to the high court-an implied ded ication for publi c use in J!erpeluity. The legal question involves a threat to close. the millions of acres of California lands now open to public recreational use, because the owners fear that these lands may be taken from them without just compensation. whic h have not been formally accepted. ll injects uncertainly into property tax assessments, clouds the stability and marketability of record titles, and can diffuse responsibility for duty of care to the land and the environmenl THE OWNERS OF rural Catifomi.t land have historically allowed the public to use lands for recreational purposes as long as they did not inte rfere with the owners' principal land management objectives. But the Supreme Court's re· cent decision has caused great alarm and will require landowners to post and enforce j•no trespass'' laws rather than run the risk of implied dedication and the loss of their property values. negoU.tions for riding and hiking trail easements, wildlife conservation projectr;, coopera tive fire trail progran1s and others will be hampered. Jt is apparent also that closure of private lands will substantially increase the public pressure on go vernmentally subsidized recrea· tional facilities and will increase the burden on the courts as trespass citations are sought. Legislation is soon to be introduced which will add to the law provisions that no future use of private property by the public will imply a dedication, and that an irrevocable offer of dedlca. lion be accepted or terminated by the appropriate local governmental body. THE LEGISLATION would not be retroactive, and would therefore avoid raising issues of constitutionality. At the same time, it would not affect high court determination nf dedications that may have occurred through public usage in prior years. Call me an economic illiterate if you will, but there art things I just don't understaod about the workings or our e.conomy. Let me give you a simpl~ for-instance. After a weekend in Los Angeles, l checked out or my hotel and hopped in- to a cab, directing the driver to the air. line terminal. l was going to take an air· port limo from the terminal, because it would cost only $2.50 for the wh<lle trip, whereas a cab from THE CO~ll\10N LAW rule of implied , dedicalion was used extensively for years to acqui re early rights of ·way for roads, irrigation ditches, and so on. It is safe assumption. in fact. that many thousands ~ of miles of our streets and highways are today being used without a clear title of public ownership. To compoun~the situation, the implied dedication rule today tends to impose upon public agencies the costs and liabilities of maintaining private roads During the com ing year, substantial acreages of commercial timber, grazing and other flirm lands wlll undoubtedly be closed to the public unless legislative relief from the decision of the Court is made available, according to the backers of a bill ~·hich will be introduced soon. L~ mE PROCESS, they say, state It is hoped that. through this corrective legislation, landowners will not be put in the position af one who, when he sought to close his property to public use after experiencing problems with litter and &anitation, found he could not-that although he still had to pay the full tax burden, he had inadverte ntly dedi cated his property to public use. Rundown on Candidates • ' Here it is less than two years till the 1972 Presidential elections and ap- pallingly few Americans have yet. made up their minds how they're gomg let vote. As is traditional. the cand idates have been campaigning fe verish l y for months. The publi c, however, remains a- pathet.lc or. at best, coofused . Obviously. then, the candidates aren't getting thtir messages across. . . To be of help in this crtSts, here is a brief rundown of who·s running on what platform and why. Or, in some cases, why not. SEN. EDMUND MUSKIE ( D• m •• ti.1alne) is for ecology. Everybody Is 'for ecology. Senator Muskie says he w1s for it first. Thi.s may be true. Maine has Jou ol ecology. . People used to aay Senator ~usk1e didn't know anything about foreign af· f•irs. 'I111s wu considered a handicap. 1bey don't say It any more. Senator Muskie Just got back from te.n days touting lsrael, Egypt. Ru."51a . ~nd Germany lie it presumably now wr1t1ng • book t~UUedt •·Europe and 1be Middle .... ~·~ Tuesday, February 9, 1971 TM ediloriol page of the Datl11 Pilot a:eek.1 to inform an.d a:ei~· u !ak rl'ader• bJI pre.renting th1& new.rpoptr'& opinlom and. com· menlor11 on. topics of inttre.rt a11d sign1[>co11ce, by providing a forum. /6r the erpresrian of our rtadtta' opinion.!, and by pr .. at nting thti dii;ersc vicw- poznl.$ Qf 1'1/ormed ob1ert•er1 and spokesmen 01t 1opic& of th~ da11, Robert N. Weed , Publisher Art Hoppe East, Today. Yesterday and The Day Before That." All Presidential candidates write books. Now people can'l think of anything bad to say about Senator Muskie. They can·t think of anything much else to say about him either. He is therefore the Democratic front-ruMer. SEN. GEORGE l\tcGOVERN (Dem .• S.D.) is for ending the war in Vietnam. Everybody"s for ending the war in Viet· nan1. Senator ?-.tcGo,1em says he was for ending It first. People u5ed to say Senator ?-.·1cGovern wasn·t well kno1o1·n and lacked charisma. They don't say that any more. For he·s been making· speeches night and day around the country. Now people just say he lacks charisma. Sen. Birch Bayh (Oem.-lnd.) Is for Sen. Birch Bayh fo r President. Several other peQp\e are, too. Senator Bayh was for Senator Bnyh first. People used lo say. "How do you spell his last name?'' 'l'hey ali ll do. Sen. Edward Kennedy (Dem.-~ta:s!I..) i)I against Sen. Edward Kennedy for Prtsident -right now. anyway. ~lany people support his stand on this. They were lirsl. People used to say they didn't bcllC've he 'o''Ouldn't run. They don"l say it any more -not !iinct he C'.'OUldn't even get re-elected Seo.ale ~1ajority Whip. The leading Democratic da,rk horse I! Mayor John Undllay of New York. t.la)"Or Llnd5ay'1 a Republiean. So much for Democratic dark hor~. On the Rtpublican side, P r e ' I d t n l Quotes rhyllf1 Dltltr, Brentwood. com· tillrnne -"Who wants to p\1y U1e clothes thing straight? I believe ln mak· Ing your own roh~s. although. of course:, you have to know what rule you'rt breakina and wb.v." \ Nixon (Rep.·While House) is definitely the front·runner. Some people now say he won't seek a second term. Some people always say that about Presidents. Some people are rarely ri ght. Liberals used to say you couldn't trust ~fr . .Nixon. They said he was an arch· Conservative at heart. So Jt·lr. Nixon came out \Vith a •·revolutionary" legislative program designed to attract Liberl!ls everywhere. Now Liberals say this shows you can·t even trust ?-.fr. Nixon to be an arch-Conservative. OTHERS 1\1Er-.-'TIONED include Gov. Ronald Reagan ( Rep.·Ho\lywuod) and Vice Presideni Spiro Agnew (Rep.· Somev.·here). They are both for 'J'he Silent fl.fajority. The Silent ?i.1ajority, hO\\'Cver, has remained ominously quiet. . :can dark horses include r.tayor John Lindsay of New York, who is a Republican. and the late Leon Trotsky. who was a Trotskyist. They are conceded an equal chance of winning the GOP nomination. So the campaign has opened. Those are the men anO the issues. Remembe r, fellow Americans. you have less than lwo years lo choose a. c.!.ndidate you can wholeheartedly support. Sometimes, it dO<' ~:i 't seem nearly long enough. Dear Gloomy Gus: How can strangers \Vilh access to credit applications be slopped from giving out namrs. addresses and ~ unlisted phone numbers? rm tirll! of bt':ing called a dead beat and worse by sklp·tracers "'ho won·t belie\·e I neither am nor do I kllO\\' their target. -8. c. ftle ftrturt Nll+fh rttf«'' '\'ifWto '°"' ,,_Mrilr IM1t _, 111• l'tlnH•tr. $t1 .. '"' "' ,...,. " OIMl!lr ••1. Dtllr 'tllt. hotel to airport would cost something around $7. After "''e had gone a few blocks, the cabble said, "Tell you what I'll do. I'll take you straight to the airport for a flat $5, and no lip. How about it?" I AGREED, AND he went on, "You know, bu siness is so rotten that I could wait an hour at the airport a11d not pick up a decent fare. People just won·t pay fl to get downtown when they can save $S on a limo." My plane was one or the new jumbo 747s. You could have ~hot an elk in the ai sle. 'Dhere were. more stewardesses aboard than there were passengers, and the firsl'i:lass section looked as if Typhoid Mary had just passed that way. Anybody v.•ould be crazy not to take coach ~ because each coach passenger had enough room around him to swing a lariat. NOW. THE T ..\XI companies are peti· tioning, for fare raises, and just got a good-sized bite in New York City. The airlines are crying about their losses. and mumbling about the possibility of fare increases, because profits were low or negative in 1970. But nobody seems to think of reducing fares when times are bad, only of raising them. This Isn't only true of private enterprise, but of public corporations ai; "A'ell . Every time the Chicago Transit Authority meets in executive session, il boosts bus and subway fares another dime. All that these fare increases do is chop of( another segment of potential customers, and so a sme.ller number of total passengers has to pay a higher rate. This seems like' sulcldal economics lo me. JN NEW YORK, for u ample. where taxi fares have Mtn relatively modest, and cabs hive been plentiful, a driver could do very well Indeed. In Chicago, by contrast, where farts have been much higher, drivers make considerably lea. In New York. even low-Income people lake cabs everywhere; Jn Cblcago, they simply can't afford to. Likewise, lf the airlines cut their fares In half, or somewhere near It. l'm con. vlnced that millions or people lro11ld take to the .skies "''ho never new before. \Vhen I took my family to Plorida for a \\'eek last Wini.er. It co.,t as much to fl y there and back as to live there • whole week. Thut's got to be 1omelhilll wrong with the ttanomlcs of tha t. l I Khrushchev Book Origin a Mystery WASHINGTON -Yilhile speculation about the document is increasing it should be noted that authorities here know almost nothing for ·sure about the background or Nikita S. Khrushchev's much publicized reminiscences. Kremlinologists have held meetings to discuss the volume. There bas even been speculation abroad that CIA was somehow involved, along with the Soviet KGB. in getting the r emembrances of the former Kremlin leader out or Russia and into print here. It can be confidently reported at this writing, amid all this ferment, that the U.S. intelligence community knows lit tle more than the general public about how the Khrushchev materials came to be made available for serialization and publication here. AUTHORITIES assume, as we have previously r e p o r t e d , that the remembrances do reflect the views of the former party secretary. The experts do not know, however, if those vie"'s had been pre-edited before they passed into American hands. Jt is apparently the best hypothesis (no more than that) that Khrushche v's daughter, Rada, and her journalist hus- band, Alexei Adzhubei, initially arranged to assemble Khrushchev's sometimes in- accurate memories. The KGB is thought to be involved because fl.1oscow journalist Victor Louls, a sometime KGB chore·boy, was apparently the fina l sales represen- tative. In between, however, nothing is known. Life, wh ich published ex:cerpts, and Lit· tle, Brown and Company, Inc:., which published the book, are simply not say1ng how they learned about the materials and acquired them. REBUFFED -To say that authorities here know nothing is not to say that they have not tried unsuccessfully, to find out. They would very much like to know, especiall y now, how the Khru shchev remembrances s u r f a c e d here. The apparent complicity of the KGB makes the appearance or the documents especially inlerestlng to the analysts. It tends to support the idea that Powerful forces in the Kremlin 'hierarchy wanted lo publicize Khrushchev's anti.Stalin views at this time. More background on the way in which the materials became available might point the way to what individuals or faction~ were involved. That, in turn, might help Kremlinologists determine why the vlews or non·person Khrushchev were filtered out at this time. IT IS IMPORTANT to note. that a Communist Party congre.si; is to be con· vened lnte in ~1arch. A new five-year. plan Is to be approved and new leade rs will emer&e -though not necessarily at the top. lmpomnt deci sions are being made now, and political act0mmodalions are being reached among Kremlin leaders, in advance of the party congress. Many f , . ' ' All en til sn1ith ; ' ; .. '· ·--,.; o[ the decisions i olve economic ques- lions, but some them surely involve the strategic ar talks, the Middle East, and a wid range of policies o( vital interest to U .. policy makers. Consequen!ly, t re is much more than ld1e curiosity, or ven routine interest. in the interest of overnment authorities in the Khrushch materials and their transmission belt~ KREMLCN T NSIONS T h e Khrushchev rem· iscences are viewed by the experts he, as just one evidence of mounting tens n in the Kremlin as the convening the party Congress approaches. Olhf evidences cited ar• the hard·line reJtession of intellectuals and the renew~ court action against Jewish dissent~. Party SecreE Leonid Brezhnev Is classed as a rd-liner, of course, and the present r ressive steps seem to be aimed at ssuring that there will be no distr~ns when the party con· gress assembl to consider the proposals of Kremlin I ers. After the~pearance of the first in. stallment of he Khrushchev·s remem· brances in ife, there was a theor1 that, in a voluted Communist way, the occasior.aUy inaccurate anti.Stalinist document "as designed to discredit Khrushche~tand the vie\\'S he expressed. That view Wis been pretty much rejected here. ; I FOR 0¥E THI NG , Khrushchev has been livitf:. as already noted, as a "non·persiin." There was no reason to further d~credit him. Furthermore. the Kremlin took about 10 days, after ap. pearanct/ or the initial insla\lmenl, to put a distlalmer in Khrushchev's mouth. That d~s not :;uggest that they were in on ~ publication preliminaries. It apPears that "''hatever leadership sanctkr:1 helped to spring the Khrushchev mate~'s came from relatively liberal membd's of the Krtmlin hierarchy who want tf check the rehabilitation of Stalin and 11ove the party rongress towa rd the more-liberal-than-now policies of the Khrwbchev era. J SP£CULATION, in this regard has centered on Alexander Shelepin because. at S2, he is younger than some or the' other Kremlin leaders and because, as ·• former boss of the KGB, he "A·ould haVe influence there. There are. ho'o'•ever, other Soviet leaders, such as ?.1ikhail Susklv. whG have been reported in disagreement wlth Brezhnev on policy matters. In any case, the au1horities "A'OUld 1n..-e to know more about the Khrushchev rtmembrances and how Ibey found their ny out of Russia. By Robert S. !Jlea and John A. Goldsmllll ,---------B11 GHrge --------, George: You're a real jerk. laking up for today 's teen-age bums. Your aenselest dri vel won•t change tho picture · -kid.!! today art: no good. \Vliet bnals of oomparlson do you use. 1tupid, to talk about their •·good manners." ldloL PURIOOS Dear J.•urious : What basis of comparison do l use to 11ay todey's kids. for the most part. are well -mannered! Well, for a start, you'll do nietly. Otar George: What do you think of see-through shirts for men~ AMY Dear Amy: 1 have betn slll lng hert for 2() i;olid minu tes going through my files and my tboughlS. As nt:~rly as I can del~rmlnt:, I nevtr think of see-through shirtJ for men. • t • OAJLV PILOT T C) iSCC)URf OUR NAME MEANS DISCOUNTS EVERYDAY! WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES. All FAD STORES Will BE CLOSED FEB,"15 ::::::'tl0"'' ~~ CORNED BEEF ·~,~ ,,;,·~1 BRISKET ~:ry· r -...... .,.._.. ,._, _, ---"&=""'• -: ~ --... ----• I' . . . '' ·. --~ l . . . ....,.~.:·-.:.,.·~~~Ill> J. •• :~'-'••..C. • .r·~ ~ \1 .:.1 CANNED DUBUQUE 'ROYAL BUFFET' 4'4 Lb. Hem LINK fAOMEOJOHN SKINLESS 8 OZ. PACKAGE SAUSAGE EACH l ··-.---~ _c: ·-r. • .,., ' ,_ ' . . . ... ' ~-· ....... ---.. ' ... . . ... . . . ...... L4.L-..· . .-·"'~ -'·""· ~,.;::...&. • ~ . ... . . . . ... ' ' .. . ~ . . ' t.1..~-..... ----....»o1_1"f ... -...r:::Jlo._ • J.:• ••• ~~--••1L._ __ .... I STORE HOURS DAILY: 10 o .m. to 9 p.m, SAT. & SUN. 10 o.m. lo 7 p.m. . GROUND -~··~BEEF fOESH.LEAN, DEPENDASLE . QUALITY Ro ST " A USDA CHOICE . l'IRST CUT ST ANDING ~~::YE RIB ROAST I -'" I FOOD AT DISCOUNT FOOD Al DISCOUNT STORES D15COONT CHARGE PRK.l c SQM[ ... STORES "'""""' ! CHARGE rllCE EVERYBC1DY 'S f AVOR ITE GOLDEN RIPE c •' 5;;i~·if;i";'5;;;;·';" 49' .) .C3 OZ.• 6 VARIETIES CHUN KING ~~?: y< 97' FRESH FROM THE ISLANDS DEL MONTE JUMBO LB. c .) I• OZ. REG .. DRY, OI LY ___ /a\ SHAMPOO :;•";' Y' ·. B .) 121/20Z.•EXTR1'0.RY Y' / . · . Jergens lotion . .) ~ING SIZE •YOU~CHOICl "'l E I ., •. nve ope "~" ~ )79 • CHUN' KING • .S OZ. PKG. NOODLES ~~?.:' ;(c 304= )43 i/11 s"ov"'sA"ucE"G 'Ji• 20' 29' • cu'KE'cltll>s ~· 39' PINEAPPLES EA. -APRONS VAl!NTINI SPICIAL sac ..am COMSTOCK•CHERRYO" OL HU NT$•.c PACIC •,c HfltR't'GElt.oRA NGEJttL. 9;lr' Pie Filling rf' 47c .A) RASPBEllRYGfll ANOSTllAWBEllltYGfll 55, _ FLO lf),l. 'I ll Tf • RUBY RED F 0 R ·oo c;p Snack Pack ;{< ~ "'-BAG ~ FLOUR ~c;:,~, p(• 54< GRAPEFRUIT FOOD AT DISCOUNT PRICES EYERYDA Y RADISHES OR :i~~~ 1 oc... CELERY LAIGI 19' .. . RUSSETS 10 :,.3tc CUCUMBERS 10' .. . RUSSETS 20:. 77c EGGPLANT FHSH 10' ... BROWN ONIONS 10~. WHITE ROSE ••TAroulO' .... Vegetables :=.:'"1-"" 10'... RUSSETS PllMIUM 10' .. 4STAR S~ICIALS (Jiff POillD Pl&"'TI ' t . 4-INCH K>T • ASS'l COlORS •INCH"POT • ASS'T. COt.OllS ARE EXTRA SAVINGS MADE PO SS IBLE BY SPECIAL PUR- CHASES FROM THE MANUFAC· l eRER & PASSED ON TO YOU ! • Bl•DSEYEO 10 OZ. o fOOZfN · Vegetables ~~·~;;;.1 ¢' 41' .) ORI IOA • 20 OZ.• FROZEN POTATOES :::.~. ;W 31< DUTCH PRIDE• 1/2 GALLON e fllOZ~N 39' Imitation Ice Milk ¢ • 1~;;; 1:;~•0ZEN )'(' 25< .. 8R/DGFORD • 1 l8.• FROZEN ' WHITE BREAD ,6(o 55c .) F.A.De OPENFACE•I " PIE Cherry Pie -~.1. 75' GALA e DECORATED e GIANT SIZE FOt.GIRS • I l6. CAN 'iJ1 COFFEE:~~~;:::· JS' e flNI 3 l8. CAN Reg/E. Perk/Drip ;JA'( •t~:~h·M~~;;oz•<G #' .RATH •AtlMEATe I l8. WIENERS ::~: }!• PILLSBURY e 8 OZ . BISCUITS :!~:'.!n• ~· I OZ. Pen & Quill Dips .)!• TULIPS 121 MUMS •·INCH POl •ASS'T.COlOltS A.flllCAN 2•1 VIOLETS 1 •1 ~-~··~===-~ -·-· GOLDEN MEADOW 9J> All '•"•' l'lolit• loll W••PP•d W!•h 397 8-1 Al'd Voi.ntiM ""°""" ,ft,l.., ,o,..,,~ •bl•1 Stoc;~, l oo••· '"'"fl•~•. Gl•d1, °".,,,. ........... ~. FRU LEMON l&Af WITH THE PURCHASE Of All CUT FLOWERS · · • • ntl5'4 CUT RUH CUT M.uGl!Ufll ' CARNATIONS . 1?.9 DAISIES 98~. DINNERWARE 4PllCI 9'JC PUCI llTTI .. HUNTS PU DOING . 4 ,.,,,IC •• FlAVOllS . soME'sT6111s CHAl!Gf 69c IT'S SMART TO SHOP ,-'\ND SA VE AT FAD SANTA ANA 2120 SO. BRISTOL AT WARNER COSTA MESA 2200 HARBOR BlVO. AT Wn.SON LA PALMA B023 WAlKER AT lA PAlMA I 85' 2.H 37' 59< 9c 35' ( c 8 DAIL. Y PILOT So1ne Legislators Seek Sho1·t Te1'm QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Spaee .Jeh Move lJ r&ed State Seeking Shutt"le Site !ACRAMENTO (AP) -A 11CatHornla'1 record of over backin& for lht alte adoption Spo rtscaster Denied Bail Iii Slaying LOS ANGELES !UPI) - 1lelevision sportscaster Stan Duke, charged in the slaying of a radio Cilmmentator and assault on his estranged wife, \1·as denied bail 1'.1onday after his atlorneys argued the }Jleg· cd offenses were "crlmes of passion." ?itunicipal Court Judge Nan· cy B. \Valson. who ordered Duke held without bail after his arraignment, set a preliminary hearing for Feb. 11. Duke 35, a black newsman. \Vas 'accused in the fatal shooting of Aver i 11 Berman, St. \\'hose liberal commentary on KGF J earned him wide respect in the black community. In addition, Duke was charged with assaulting his 11·ife , Fay Williams Duke, 33, a junior high school teacher and president of the Black Educators Association. Police said the chain of events began after Duke Cilm· pleted a late newscast on KNXT Saturday night and went to his estranged wife's home in the WUthlrt Diltrlct. SACRAMENTO (AP) -IJ's only the sixth week of the 1971 legislative session and already some lawmakers are talking about making it the shortest session since 196G. While the Demo.cratic leaders of the Senate and Assembly are shooting for the usual lensth session -nine monllla. pempe wltli 1 oum- mer bruk -a veteran Republican lawmaker wants to end the session by July 15. And Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle of Riverside is pushing that plan "'ith a threat of up to $200.000 to the legislative pocketbooks - a hall to daily tax·free expense payments after July 15. Biddle, a legislator since 196S. says the payment-cutoff measure he introduced 1'.1on- day has t.he support of ''several ,?lhei ammbl1men." "It 11 unt wt endtde the Bandits Roh Coast Bank LEUCADIA, Calif. (AP) - 711·0 bandits robbed t h e South"·est Bank of $3 ,976 and shot at a man who chued them Monday. A half·hour later. two men with $4,876 \\'ere arrested by a California High"·ay patrolman. In their car were dark ski masks like those wom during the holdup, the FBI said. An agent identified the men booked for investigation of anned robbery at Oceanside as James Goetz, 36, of Aurora, 111., and Boice Leon Mosco, 41, ct ChlelfO. Fail Unhealthy~ V itaniin C Intake Soaring SAN DIEGO (AP) -A chemist feels a government study should be made of "the vitamin C hysteria," saying AmerJcans are ll u 1 p i n g ascorbic acid at an alarming rate in efforts lo avoid the common cold. Dr. G. N. Schrauzer Gf the University of California at San Diego said "millions of people are succumbing to the fad of taking vitan1in C in massive ove rdoses." lie said the federal governn1ent has an obligation to step in "before ii is too late.'' "It can no longer be ig· nored,'' Schauzer said in an interv iC'w. In a book published last fall Dr. Linus Pauling of Stanford University suggested doses of 4 to 10 grams of vitamin C every hour or t"'O at the fir st ' ' I i l sian of a common cold. '!be P1ulln1 book has started a run on vitamin shelves. The Stanford Nobel Prize winner also urges that vitamin C be taktn before the sign Gf a ei>ld to build up resistance. He suggested 250 milligrams to five grams a day. A spokesman for the San Diego County Medical Society said "90 percent of the doctors in the county do not go along ~·ith the Pauling theory.'' Schrauzer, y,·ho has researched vitamins for years. called it "a very dangerous health recommendation." He said he knows people now tak· ing up to 100 grams of vitamin C daily and "we know 300 grams is a fatal dose." senseless dawdlln1, gamesmanship and fn- efficiency which too often cheracteriics the efforts of \\'hat is supposed to be the nalion's most effective legisla tive body." he said. Assembly Spea ker Bob ?i-1oretll and Senate President pro tern James Mills are con- 1ldttln1 a rtctu al four to all: weekl atarUna late July or early August. But Biddle says the legislators should reject that idea and .. instead commit ourselves to getting the job done by July IS which is a reasonable d e a d 11 n e if diligently pursued." Fencing In Of Bridges Given Oka)· LOS ANGELES (UPll - Ten overpasses on three freeways will be fenced in an $8D,OOO pilot project to pro· tee! motorists from objects thrown onto the free"·ays. The project was given im· petus by the dealhs of three per10n1 who were k.illed by havlna: l1r11 rockl dropped rrom overpasses onto · their vehicles. James G. Bell. assistant district eng.ineer for the State Division of Highways , said the project was approved follow· ing an intensive two.month study of 175 incidents of ob- jects being thrown i n t o freeway trarflc lanes from overpaae1. The 10 locatlOl'UI selected for the pilot program include two of the overpasses on the Golden State Freeway \\."here fatalities were caused by dropped objects. "Tha.t isn't what I meant by ta.king your job home with you, Ben.aon ! " Stanford Threatened By Third Protest Day · resolution now before th• J,000 1uccualul apa ce this week. 1 e g Is I at u re urges that launches rar ia.eetdl any California w11 a leading Callfomla be made the landing other In the nition. including aerospace and derense in-and takeoff slte for tuture U.S. shu ttele flights into 1pace the Ke.antdY Spaol: Center in dustl')' area up to 1968, when -a move that would open florida... large space progran1 cuts up some 40,000 aerospace job! Lagomarsino aides s a i d began taking effect. in the state. Call!ornia's Vandenberg Air In the past th ree years The resolution, lntrodut'ed Force Bue would provide the aerospace and related in- Monday, call! on President excellent takeoff site the dustrie• Jost 154.000 jobs, with Nixon and Congress to help some 482 000 C a l i r o r n i a In d.u o e the N t lion a I RepubliCM Senator described, worker• 'still employed in Aeron1uUt1 and a p 1 c • while lldw1rd1 AFB would aeroapace work as ot last Administration to locate the give landlng space for the month. shutUe station in Califomia. project. F==========; instead of Florida and New The shuttle station project Mexico. is designed to establish an Sen. Robert J . Lagomarsino orbiting space Jtation where (R-Ojai), and Assemblyman flights lo olher planets could W. Don MacGillivray (R-Santa be launched from. Barbara), authored the pro-The two GOP lawmakers Who Cares? No other new1p•p•t In the world t•r•1 tbout yo~r eomm11· nlty Ii•• your c;ommu"ily d1ily new1p1ptt do11. lt'1 the DAILY, PILOT. posal. hope to get Gov. Reagan's NASA is scheduled to make!i"••------;;.-;iiii a decision .soon -but Cape Kennedy, Fla., site of the Apollo 14 moonshot launches. and White Sands. N.M., are the !PPll'ftlt fro11truM11ra. . "C1llforrU1 can provide an overwater launch area 7 ,000 miles Jong, free from any population and not crossing over any foreign cou11try ... FOR PEOPLE 65 AND OVER STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) -blocking entry to a room from California to the A n ti . w a r demonstrato~ where the trustee con1mittee Antarctic," said Lagomarsino. California State Grange newly sponsor· ed and endorsed cash medical plan far persons age 65 and aver. calling for a general strike [Cw~a~s~m~ee~li~n=g·~~~~~~~~M~a~c~G;;i l~l~i~v~r~a;y~~ad~dged, of the Stan!ord University I _ - campus. today threatened a --· ·-Slightly eol1iv-! to ahow dNll. third straight day of protests and violence over the SWth Vietnamese invasion of Laos. A warning against coercion Monday by President Richard W. Lyman was answered with the activists taking over the student union and besieging a meeting of a university trustee CQmmittee. A few hours after Lym·an issued a . statement warning the general public is wrltl11g off the entire antiwar move- ment because or the actions of a violent few, abou t 300 demonstrators ma ssed outside the graduate business school, No physical ex1min1tion or questions your ht1lth about Pays for Pre-Existing Conditions No wilting period. Benefits start from 1st day of ho1,lt1l .cenfinement and as long as 365 days. Also po1y1 in convalescent home. CASH PAID DIRECTLY TO YOU! PREMIUMS ARE VERY LOW ! PAYS $600.00 A MONTI:! UP TO $7,200.00 FOR EACH SICKNESS AND EACH ACCIDENT. ALSO UNDER 65 NEW MAJOR HOSPITAL IXPINSE PLAN GIVES YOU THE FINEST HOSPITAL CARE MONEY CAN BUY. PAYS UP TO $10,000. FOR EACH SICKNESS AND ACCIDENT COAST SUPER MARKET HOS,ITAL-IOOM AND IOAID. SS0.00 per chry, por• •II 11,..., 111ecUclM, :r-nrrs, loborotory Mrlwc:", operoli~ roe111, ...-sPh.rlc 0111t allftthric 111ppli.., OXJ9", blood tf_,,..fefK. tltttrepy, spKlol dericn, oM oft otMr medic;ol COAST" SUPl'R Ml\R\(E'I'" 3Jq1 E..GIOI\ .-,. Q:im.:idr:t y...,. Featuring MANNINGS BEEF Cv1tom Trlmmlnt for Spoclal Occa1lofn I! I ,',· ,' Ordtf' lly pho"• ~ lltlWHn ' & 12 a.m j'.. Delivery begins 1 p.m. 673-3510 -.J MON.-SAT.-t to 6:JO-S~11day t to S • I ~.·-. TAKE THE BOLD STEP Today's look in wedding sets is boid and gold. All in 14 karat yellow gold. Trio setS (include engagement ring plus his 11nd her wedding rings). 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Girl wat.chloC oil • ccllece cam-,w: 11 not unique, but the work btl"* \llld<rtakin tt UC! la a bit dU!lt'ttll. Chanetllor D111iel Aldrich hu appc>lnltd 1 conunltlat to do u and ntne of tbl tl mtmt.frs art wetntn. womtn's center and a campul womtn'i magnlne. atudyitlf admlulons procedures aftd forms , bouainl p o lj c I • a , special problema that race minority women, and 1tudyln1 tn•dJ bi job appllcatlo ... "We wiU be tryln1 to 10 1t thew !slues in an orderly and timely fashion. I an· tlctp&t& that •• will &tt cood re1pense and c:ooperatlon frem vari~ egencies. th• u 1 b because we have ne eptratlng funds, we will do all the work tiumlves. Di•solutiont Of 1'.lart'iage Lou Andersol'I, chairman of th• Qan«llor's A d v I a • r y Committee en Ute Status of Womtn •t UCJ, saya the com· mlllff definitely won't be · 1pendl:n1 its lime admiring coeds. Instead, it will focus its attentien en the f11sibility "There art Joli tlf e1ciling possibllltles here. but I Im· aalne thll will be 1n endleU job. when you consider the subtle kindt of diJcriminatlen that we'll lie de1lina with. Denth l\'alir<'I ------Oit.Ll it.rttn ~lilt, At1 M, e! ,,, Vl• Orv!tTe. Nt"1&0tl llt •ch, Dttt of ft•th. l'1~r111rv 7 Survlv~d ~Y wl!~. C~•dnlte; !~•It ''"'· J,...,H, Tl\Orr,., l nil Cht rles D~lt: l!lrtt ~111•M•"· Mt r••rfl. Ll u•t 1nd S~ndY D•"' brother. C111r1 DI Ll•kl: nocht w, (';1ll1ne Dl Ll1le, ti! of Nt weert ltlth. lfo11rv, le"ltM. Tu11d1y, I ,.M. llMUltm Mau, Wldnt1d1v, \I AM, both •t Our l efv CIUH l'I el A.n1tll Ct •hollc Church. tni."'"fnl. prlvt lt , Funllv 111111111 ,,,_, wt1~lnt It m1~1 "'"'''"11! et11'trlbu!l!ll'1, l lNlt t&l'ltrl~!I to Hoat Mt-•ltl Htl· pl!ll l ulleln9 Fund. e.1111 Coro111 dt l Mt r Mtrlut ,.,,, Dlnc!O•I. GWINN JtMn Elmtr GWln,.. A.It ... el HOS W111. ,.,!n11tr, Ce tll MHI. Otlt e! dtllh, l'tll- rut rv !I. SurvlvM bv wl!t, i.v1. Ml f"'I It. l'lw!nn: twe 1an1. J•'f, UHi JloMrt. N tl'I cl Cell• Mt<-= daul l'l!tr. Ot!•""' l'\w!nfl. Fulltrlen; brelt..r1. 01wtld tn~ (J'lll!Clft, ~~11'1 cl Olllo; (J'l,_1,1, Ktnlvckv; Eh"'"""· cl Mt nl'lllltn &ttCJ'I; 1nd •••nt •d Gwlnn, Tucnn • .Arl10111: 1111~•. V•IYt Okkt11n, Tucsen. l••vlct1 will ff ~e•d WMn11111iv, I~ /lM, Unltatl Mt lll<>dlst (hu•th. ln!t •· ,.,,M. l"ac!llc Vlt w Mome•lt ! Ptrk. ltll l rtt dWt "f Mertut rv, nlrtCICrl. Sllllll G..irtt C. Sttrl. ll•t 53, 111 UtJ 0 ""'' /lvt •• (Ula Mtu. 01Tt al dtflh, l'tbru• 1rv 1. Survived bv wllt, Mt•~n/ 11n. Gttrlt Jr., (Hll Mnt: d1u1M1r, Otr• l)thy Crtwfcrd. Gtrdtn Grevt l lwl '"""· t 'I, F11nc!1 Wllllt m t nd Lffl W. Stirs: l~r11 s1111r1. /lnnttlt Carr, Gtrtrudf llc1•on t i>d M'frt!t tanl, t ll a! Mtlll• rlluut111 twe er1ndchll~rtn. Strvlctlo \l/Mn1M11y. 1 :3~ l"M. 1•11 l r&odWl 'f Ch1eel. lnttrmtn•. ,.,el!lc Vlfw Mtme•!•I 1"1•k . &111 l •Old*"" M~r!utr•. Olrtc!tn. IWll'T Gl•d"' G. ~win, >,1.0. "-ti Jf. al JOO !. Cotti Hitllw1v. Nt.,.Jl(lrt llttCll. 0.t9 ftf ~11111, l'tbr\ll rY I, Sl,lrvlWd bY hutbtr>d, Or. LOl'lll (. Swllh dlUt Mt r, Mrs. ~"' J. LoH!t , Sel.,111 lltt tlll ma1111r, MA. /lnnt G. Smllll. Glt ncll lt J !we t"nllcl'>ll· ~'in. FuM•t l 1trvl(tl. T~urMIOY, 1 l'M, Entf,.l!11 M.,.1v1rv, En<ln\111, Ct!lfor~lt. l~!lr""1'\I, 1!1.,n11 Hiil' Mt merlt t ll't rt, Ckttn,ldt. &till (Ollt Mt11 Mtrfl.ltf"'I, Ol•tden. BALTZ MORTUARIES Ccro1a del l\1•r . . OR WM Costa l\teu , mi f..Ml4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadw1y, Cost• l\1eu u 1-3432 • McCOltMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY l715 Larun• Canyon Rod. IH·H1' • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARl Cemetery Mertary Cha pd 3500 P1clflc View Drive Newport Beach. calU01'911 MU'IOI • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 I Bols1 A Vt. We1tmlasl1:r lt34SU • SMITllS' MORTUARY Ul Mftlo St. Huntlng\011 ~1M 11•653t H•ne. "'"''~\'"'~~ 1:!.• Vtllh;r• el I c.hll4 cart et:rittr on cam· 0u1ct1n...,111. Kt1hlt*ft M. •1111 MtMfl pus and tht ftaslbility of 1/l~1n, Jr,, llMi. -... •"'11 T11trN1 L. tstabllshinl t women's atudles "'1'11n. "' 11•1 '· •Ml Mt,.., .. J, ftftllnam . It alse will atudy s·1·· ~-~ '.:1 ':"Jr.· .. ·•· trJa1i. i~~,.,3"' i .• rrJ~"1'? the pay aM dittrlbutlon cf A~ii "-' Et w•NI tM ••,..r• werneri 91\ the UCI faculty ~,I!:._ Sui111111 111....., ,,.. Urtlutl it1d atalf. ~:r1~J:;~•.(.· ,111 J~r:Tt. •· When tht committee wa1 a~Jr ... r. Jt1111_."),,,,ti, 11111 IVll'ffl ap~inted h• D t et m be r, ~al 0..0.lli ~1111 '"J"-... Aldric• ••14 lb: hlnctien woul4 V•fl ~rt~,\/!'~fti~. Tn~ 'rtYl\'ltA4 1. bt: ~t~~t-.~~·t~•g,1:!~· L. T In d 1•· M~111111. Alit~""fr"tll(n ,1141 w11111111 -e •1lfl\ e an cena .,.,r u.•11ff• the atab.11 of wornen in their ~v~'"' 01111•1 l•-.•r• .... .,,.,.1, wp~. jr•ll4• 1. ~ ~r;• L. rtlalicnslllp te \J Cl. a 1 kr.':i'."ti~l·~r~ iJ".f•;\TJ Rt iiv acadert1lc ;ertonnel, a t • f f Tur~•r. wt ulm T. 1;./"0trt1lllY L· -r"-Ml 6r lt1Jdenl!. Fr1ni, Htldl t ncl A-'hur ry ..,., ! .. ,,~.Jr .• J••" I:. •M Eu'*' L. -To allvlst the Chancaller r~tn. L11ll1 J. ·~ Ttrew J. wir•. Ellttt>t•h 1. ,,,,, Jn c. ef pr&blem art:a1 and recom· "11e• "",.,,., • lftf:nll selullons. G'Jl'::rt G111r1111e •11n '"' 'w •1 -Te reccmmend campus !lltlwvM. 'tlr1Cl1 1no ll'tl~ · 1~1111, G••-., J. •114 v1r1 .. 11 L. pro1rams premotin1 t II• h•1rn, 1(1rrv 11'6 OIMI• w. JM Monr-11t rv. Ja.n l'. '"' w111111'11 .,,·elfare of c1mpu1 women. Mlllt r.,otnlll G. 1no H1J.11 t· To serve as 1 JUYI. tltr .A ...... lttM.i:tt Dun111n. Lt rrv I.. tnl l"Hrlci• A. N<111I, Jr .• Ooroll\q JuM llMI Vl<ter f , COflrdinatiftJ body for (rOUpS sw!uMlm, .ArdY111 L. '"' 'N11H•m (. or individual• conce.med with S001. O•"°rf l!I. tnf J~t~lll l . 1-•· ••ttY J!t!" ,,,. ...,, 1. 0!1 1tatus cf 'ffomtn at UCI. ia7,•,·"!fJY.~1,~·~;;~~!• 0, 1 Servln1 with Mrs. Anderaon 1M l1Loc1 ~~.•)"' art Emily Card, a lecturtr '"S:$' l.ut M1r11 •l'MI l"tlf!tl lllf'M in c1m)\t r1Uvt culture; Mti Htr t n, It l'llt't "· tM Ir L~ 1.. 1rv 11111111"' "' w 11111111 Kate, •11 •••111.&nt prtiftssor 9r~~;em.~ "'1''~111 1~ 1•v11r• ill the 1raduate 1ch&&I el id· ~":r~11tluri1i1'"bi'r-'•.,,.· etl't1v11 m111i1t.ratle11: EIM KIM•. tht sm1Y~. ,,.,1,., E .. 11111 T~., o. t1tt:utlve 111i1t1nt t11 the 1.~:·&1•1n:·c,Ji4muflf 04"'" 111• cllanctller w)\e aerves as an ~1::.~·, ~~I, 1~· 13! r~M1 \., T. ti offlcl• member; EIU'i~ueltl ~::t .. s~r,·1~11~": 1'J'~l.·'.:~1! ~amos. a graduate stu-ent lr~f~•11tTir• • Clltr !ft •llf • ..,.,, in Ct!'l"PlriUve cu It u re I : P'W,':i~~ tf1G1,.,. K•v •"" Gttrt• Erneatint R 1 n a o m • a O'Leu11111n, c11rlc1 Loul•• '"' Jtl'lll I . counselor in the 4ean ef Sh1tll11t, Htwtrd 1MI ltnl K. 1•u1. t•n•t" ·~ ~11c1• L•,,..,.it students olfice; 0 i I n a W;1~i • .;UG 111 •• ••n •11• tWr1 Sherwoed, 11'1 1dminlstrative. ~.·;;:~v.'Lfn'd:'C.'';°rMc'r;.11U~ M, 1ssi1tant in tht graduate t",'.;"U:.•t,1'mn;ri ~,... ·~ ,..llf.1'1 division; Sherry van Guilder, Mf~i~'· Slntlrt "-dt~I 1~'"flr1;;f; a1u. a phiJOSOpt\y majGf: J9 Ann F•J~~ Ttrri l.Ynn iM w1,,..11 Vet. a social science major ; v•" v11•1n•111•ft, Ger11t1 IE. •1141 Ju4w John Smith. lht university wlrit1m1, sMritv "· 11\d J1mb s. Librarian. a"d Barry Tlvlin, L•br.,., ''"''1' Lee 1M1 f'EN v. a student. 8tkt r. Httrv C. t "" ltlly ~~~~~11i. 11m1f11l""~. '":"' '\~.,~ Mrs. Andersen werks for "''~i::r'Mjrt suwn 1ni J1p;~1 University !rterisiol'I. at UCI. ~r.:i.•.~lti':.:i'~!·:: :::J t.::l: ~~ Sbt Js alse working en her Hl•lt ni, Sandri 0.. llM! S C, tM.D ' Oo. ij "f"I••· John l'rr,ntk '"f ••"7 c. rn lit e~ca l'lft. ~if:J'ft,M'l;~ "'~ ff;•'lr ,1111 SM noted that ~e UCI Cflltl· ,,..~;:~!.':v,G1f~1~,"'~ ,,11111 ""' a,,. millet is the first te bt ap. mA~ l!"t:n• pointed in th• UC syst~m. W~•:..,)"' •lfv Ltrtn• '"' L1wrt111e1 "Ri11tt new thtre·a ftuilt a Skoirtn1kl, M1cht1t c~ar111 •IMI ''"' lot ef dati that needs te ..... L ·•~nt l'IHA\. o'l:la1ls an: ••••r•• • . •rv 1 1ather1d or 11'1.alyied," Mrs. ~~1~!: ~e;;~: t.-.:nt, ,m.'i.t.:, Anderson said. • 'The in· ~f.'d•~"r:. M~'en~r.'11:.1111~~'" lff~t:n~ fermatlon that Is availible 111 ltunt ll l •· lh ~=~·'.:i·.:111~~1:'v~~11""c1~~1'1Cil. 1. us appears o -ra er 1<owt1r. 1;\fl '"' &111• ... 1Ct1u1ttto deva•tatln&." ''f~u.:.'n"' K1tt11r1nt •ni w11111..., Sht cited a study done in l!l••!ll. F•11>c.11ce Lt&ll 11111 011Mt11 Aprll er list yeir whie"' s"'"'W· L...,,.~ltd1. OtMt M11 t ni . Mtl'>lln II JIU ,1~~~. Cfl'"f'ttt 11141 Lvl• °"",.. f:d th1t 7.4 percent tt! Utt "We havt 1 11tuatlon here where facts have lfl be estlbli5hed and the tradition& or discrimination have te be ab1ndened1" she said. Grand Theft Trial Set As Juvenile SANTA ANA -A Santa An1 man 1ccused of bilking prominent members cf the Mulc1n-American ccmmunily out of mere than ~.000 in a scheme which prop&sed formation of a new bank he btt11 ordered tc face jury trial June 23 in Orange Ccunty superior Court. Judie Byron K. McMillan •lso crdered Ru!Mll E1Jlel\e O'Cfmpe, 25, to 1ppe1r itl his c6Urirtwlt1'1 April 25 for • pr.trial htartn& on char1as ef 11and th•tt &!'Id wrlt1n1 cl\tcU "Willieut s u f f I c I e 11: t fund!. Ht is fret en hail . CSF Student Sues College SANTA ANA -A Cal St.ate Fullerton Uteater arl! student whese riP t hand waa aevtrely injured in a workshop 1t11ion his sued the state college tor 1171,000. !'1111:'· l tn1Mt .A!lll •Ji#. Wll"'r ftOl'J•ltnured faculty It UCJ ar• "~:~v...J'"'''1nt c. ..,. a.,,,,.. wemen and 1.2 percent. nr "'''I"' LvP H. t fld tlM•' L two wernen, art tenured Mollit Ryan, It. Hemet. S.rr ne, Gr1tt SuunM ind ••~111'1'1111 h J1»tttt faculty. c arges college officials with Lt1!!1"· IC1rtn L. t nd S!til'ltll (I. 1 Hentv J11•111 .,... '"'1 11:. "It's thlg ty-cf information nclliaence ltadinf to the in· Kun-1\, Nt lla I\. ,,,. M\'111• 11. r-Wtld~n. '"'"'~ A ,,,. 14 c. that nttds t6 N docume.nttd jutits she aufferad last June WOid, ,,,,..,.. Antn '"" Ml'f.rlt 1 d ' 10 that we. can make s11mt ur1ng a drama cl 1ss on J~u~·n-'"" J• "'· 1 ~·u•n. C>.tr1111 \irm ""' ,,,, Mlid recommendation a," Mra. atage era t. wlJJ':':C.11Yr1~\itt.,'"1,l,,"~f.itn •Jllf Anderson noted. Site states in her Orange "'''"· "~~~'\~~"" 1"1111!!,ltl She alsc Poizlt.ed out that County Superior Court action &~~1.t,·~~ou~, •::.i TJ~• 1.1-.1• thtre are several asptds cf that her right hand was An•bOU'Si •t11v J •• ,,. 1o11111" "· lht Ulrtt 1tudy '1ltm1 which 'everely guhed by a power Tr1pri. lott'IY "''I '11111 C~trltt l . Ill •-S....z•. :11 11ro w. "" 'fr""~ w allO 111: scrutinized. saw while she and other M11lltr, Git K•ll-'"G . r.I J " """"" J J fb J ''"'· Jr .• M•rY .-.-1 011 w. am-It nc ude t feas ibi Uy atudtnts were workina en =~~~fa. 'JWJ:1'l. ci"~"\1~~'1,/\.. of estaltliahinl a c1mpus stage equlpme.nt. r--------------------~--, I I ! How to invest ! I in fixed-income I ! sec111ities. ! I I I I I Merrill Lynch'• booklet, llNANCINC A TIILUON llOLLAR I I ECONOMY, explain• why IO inany inveators are buyillf U.S. I I Government and municipafbonds, corporatea and .preferred I I etocks. Fora free copy, send the coupon. No obligation. I I N•... I I A''"" I I City. Si.et• Zi, I I w.... ...... • .. ;.... ...... I I w.-rill ...,..... ......... P!.M W ti ....; ... ~ff ...,._ .. A.-..1 ~ I I I I ~~ch:~ look for the trends. I I Merrill Lynd!, Pltrce. l'enn•r & Smith Int. I I S.&trltrom Ctntor, Santa An a 92702 -Telepbene 547·7272 f (1000 North Main Strtet) I I ,,, I L-••••••••••••••••••••••~ Father Sues Law Firm For Rernarks DAIL V ,.IL.OT 9 Court Nixes Back Pay Bid SANTA ANA Two lawsuits wh.Jcb were being eaaerly watched by polict of· fieers throu&hOut California have been dismissed I n Orange County Superior Court. Judge Harmon G. Scov\lle's rulln1 ends the hope of two former Oran11e County officers that their bids for back pay would be successful and set a precedent for fu tul'f claims by policemen. Damaaes totalling m o r e than $2 million were demand· td in the Ja\\•suits filed by Lawton Tllompscn, forme rly ttf the Anaheim police dep11rt· ment and William F. Engl;, who left the Butna Park force in 1969 aner four years llS for ti me 5penl ln brleficg and meJI times during tbt years of their employment ~·Ith the argument that a policeman Is on duty . even if he Is not in lhtt field, on such oc· ca sions. Judge. Scoville ruled in bolh actions tha t both olflcers bas "fa iled to exhaust the ad· Week Notes Black Life minlstratiYe. r e m t d l e 1 1 available to them 1t the time of their employmenL Both offictrt stipulated 1n their lawsuits that they aouaht the damaJEes for lhem5elvt1 and all fellow officers In their departmcnti1. Mranwhile, Engle has plead· ed innocent In Los AngeleJ Superior Court to ctiarges that he robbed 11 K·Mart 1tore In the City of tndustry of more than $51,000. Engle. 29, who now livt!I in Placentla, was ordered to return f\1arch 4 to t h e courtroom of Judae Jolin Bl ack History Week. Feb. Arguelles for a pretrial htar· 14·211, will be featured with in!!'. He is free on $20,000 11 special bibliography at all bail. 25 branches of the Orange Arresting officers s a I d County Public Library. F.ngle, employed by the K· SANTA ANA _ ~1"S In additio n to filmii available f\-1art store as a securit)' AngeleJ law flnn has bten through the library , there will guard. c11rried nut the robbery a patrolman. Both men liste.d damages lued for mort than $I million be displays of African art at on Aug. 3, 1969. He also work· by the f1thf:r of a S1nt1 An• Tri' al Due . branch libraries in Laguna ed as an administrative 1ssls· youth who wes cleared ln Beach. Tustin . Garden Grove. !ant for the Western State juvenUt court of chara:es that Orange . West Garden Grove University College of Law in F SA M and We st minster. An11heirn at the time cf hU ht conct1led drugs in his or 'an locker at La Quinta H.i&b The Garden Grove library arrr.st. School,' W11tmlrlster. wUI sponsor a s\ide·talk on Engle was employed 11 " William A. Eagle stiles in SANTA ANA -Greg "Voices of Africa" by Mrs. patrolman by the City of hla Oranie COunty Superior Bradley Moon of Buena Park. Jane Dill at 7:30 p.m .. Feb. Buena Park frnm t96S to accused C1f the mcnkeu wrench 17. Mrs. Dill instructs a class February. 1969. He filed his Ccurt 11wsult that attorney ' murder of hi!'> father . will be on black literature at El civi l suit for back pay In Rcaem1ry Morris represented the law firm cf Sackett, Olson, tried as a juvenile, It has Modeno High School. F~bruary 1969. been ruled. --~~-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-Alsop and Pt1oore al'ld the Gard~n Grove Unifed School The 17-year-<1\d youth ts be· DANISH fU"NITUll SWEDISH CRYSTAL CHINA A STllL Dlatrlct list year v.•hen she ing held in juvenile hall until lllDAL llGISTIY m1de '"false ind malicious his trial on Feb. 24. A public atatements" to the press. defender will be appointed for She stiled at thal time, the him. lawsuit indicalts, thal The. father. Richard A. ca psules found In 17-year-<1ld Moon, •~. was killed In the Rock Eagle's lock.er were half back yar d of the home of dMt1h cJrtC. filled with druis. Westminster his son-in-Jaw and d1ughter gOTdeft police atated the capsuJes Jan. 19 in Garden Grove. The .. _.,. 2'40 E.Coo..sl~~., Coro"a 4el Mar 111·ere not half filed and they boy fled lhe scene but later ~illl' 9:JO 4o ll):JD Tel : 644-7340 Contained , mm· "l• powdery 8urre.ndered to San Diego , ..;...i... l l loS &·" .. " 1· ••-ya w~ -~uto<Ck•- rtaidue th1t could not be 1-;:;po;;:="=•=· :;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::=· .-====. 1naly1td, the comp I a in l !1' stale.!. E11le has earlier 1ued the 1chool district for $350,000 fer the falte 1rrt1t or hi' aon. Thal acticn is 1chtdultd for trial June 21. CRRDREN LIKE UNCLE LEN HAMS " . • . So Good It WIU Haunt You 'TH It's Gone" o~r 11em1 •" Ill• 11 .. u! corn-ltd towt r1C•k•r1 -Our 11C1• .,.,. cut1n9 menood. rttl Wluons•n lllckory •ne fPPll-•mokl.,. 111111 lO·llOur ovtn bt-!n9 hcn'V 'n 1Plt1 t 1All t rt unl•yt In I !! 1111 world. So <!t llclou• tnd •r>et"lrlng w• IU$1 woulGn'I kntw llow "' lmll(ftVt 11111 prOdu<:I wt·~• !>ll'•n mtk'na ftlr 1• y11rt. Sel•tl 1!1CM 100. t•cm !op ftl b01tam 10 tilt! •td• <11itcTAbl1 unllo<m 1lk1 c111 i.. •tmctvo<I tltortltnlY. Comp\eloly blo-M • ..., ••~Y 10 "'"'· O•· do• you• He"'"' lt~toll Htm teoey, 1n 1aven!Yrt In 111 .... leytntfll vau'll "'"'' 1ora.i. J1@@&1Ilooo and we love it! One hundred percent of our savings from Orange County savers is invested in Orange County. Most of our loans are made within a fifty-mile radius of Laguna Federal offices. If you need money to build, buy, or refinance a home • for your family, call or visit Laguna Federal -the association famous for REDUCING-RATE HOME LOANS. AND LOAN AllOCIATION Uran1e County'• Lar,.,I, FiT1t and Stron1ut independeru Federol 3 Monarch Bay Plua l'.Aguna Niguel 499-1840 496-1201 . 260 Ocean A venue Loruna Beach, C.li!ornla 494-7Hl ' 601 North El Camino Rl'lll San Clemente 492-1195 10 un.v PILOT s Tlltlday Ftbtu1ry' 1971 Your Itloney's Worth h1flation • a Fact of Life, So Leru.·11 to Live With It By S\ L VIA PORTER Jl • an absolutt certainly that lnflal1on wil1 not be licked during the balance of this Nix an Admln1st rahon This point LEGAL NOTICE I OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll1tlnt• 10< Monday, February I , 1971 Complete-New York Stock List S1ln Nef IWI ) Mltll Ltw C ... Cltt l I. ~ ! ~ I r. • • • i ! 1t • • • • • I ' • l. I: • • • • ,, .. " • ~ • • ; .: : • • I ~ • • •• • • .. 1 • • ,• •• .. t l 1~ I~ '.: ., ' I •I • 1911 DAI LY mor Monday's Closing Price~Complete New York Stock Exchange List Stoek Leaders • •• " ". • • ·~ • • " '" "' " " • • 1 • "' lll " • '" ... • " "' " " N.Y. NEW 'f'0,11;1( (A.I') -Tn~ tc ow ... I 11 tl'IOWI lflt llodi.I ffie /!tn -W "" most 11\d llOW" "' me ~A I'll °" • l't c.-i of '"'"'' Oii "" Ntw Yorll S °"' Ext~~"" f<Jt d •n ~ vo un • Nt tml Df Ct" 111* (/111\ftS ~ I I ... dJ t ilfl(9 bftwffn "" trill~ I CIMl~t P ti 11111 1001' I a\ P C( "'' , .. >:~ " ,,. " I! •• ' . n. 1·· "' ,r,, ~~ " • " "" j •• j ~ :t ': tl ' ' '• + ,_ ' , ' 1 ' • + t ! ' + '. Market Trading Heaviest Yet " " '" " ~ "' • '• .. " " • " .. " • ' " '" ~-------- n " "' • " "' .. •• .. " " "' " " n • • • " .,. " 16\~ '" " '" " ... • -A1nerican Stock Exchange List 11'9 ..... tM11 I Hl9" LtW ( .... Chi S1i.,. NII ""''' Hltll L•w ci-Cllt llltt Nit Cllft I Nlfll Ltw (life Cllt S•hl• tr111 (llf1 I Hltll l•w Ci.11 Cht •• ' .. • • u .. 11 " " ' • ' " l' l"r, ' " • 'I ' " " ' p " " " ~ " " " " " ' " ' ' n • " ' ll ,1 " • " j, • ' 'j " " .. ,. " " ' .. . .. " .1 "' " ., " " • " 'I " "' " 'ii •• • • " • .... -"'• ' ' . ' . ,,. "" .. " " "• ~· ,. mo " ~~~. n " ' • ' ~· •• it • .. • " ,. .. ... "' ,. " . "' '" •• ,,. •• .. ' • • ... •• • ... ," •• .. l " ' . .. " '"• • ' . " • .. \Olf DAILY PILOT CHECKING •UP• Has Ai1yone Seen F1·og Drinl{ Water? well, M atruck me as a a. requlrt.menl for ad· waste." v1ncement in police work," He returned to college and Brown said. applied ror a job •• a police The young of!icer will walk cadet In 1969. 1 night beat Jn the area of Ex-hippie Walking Beat tut. Some of his friends still Uve there. "I have the shortest hair in the crowd now," he said, but they just kid me 1bouC it.,, HONOLULU (UPl)-Jerrold tagious. Someone says 'hey a hippie.style life he never "The department asked me Waikiki where he used to hang Brown has started walking a what's that cop doing hert?' used drugs. He sa!d he decided to keep going to &ebool , that 1--------~1uv;n-,H---0----- and everybody, Including me, to change his ways after at· they 'd pay. I enjoy working police beat in the same picks it up and It goes on." tending rock concerts. and learning at the same time neighborhood where he used Brown said that wh•.I• t1·v,·ng "So f •'----I and an education ls becomin11 to hang out as 11 long·haired _____________ m_•_0_"_-_pe<>_P_•_·_·_· __________ •_1 hippie. Brown, 20, got his badge after achieving the highest scholaslic mark ever scored at Honolulu Police Recrult School -99.J percent. ''Two years ago I was a college student , sort or trip- ping oul \\'ilh everyone else," USHER'S GREEN 'STRIPE SCOTCH Revolutionizes Denture Wearing Tha nearest th1111 to hayinl .~ own teeth it poWj:ile now wlui a pla1tic cream dl1COvery that ac:tu· ally hold• both "upper•" a.n.d "lowers" a1 11ever before pD111blt. t«t 1um1 from brul1.1111. You rnaf blte harder, chew better, eat m«• naturally. FIXOOE!'>.'T may help you •i:iuk more clearly. be more It ea.e. The 1pecial ~c1l·poi.nt d!lptnltt lets you 1pot F'lXOD!"'T with pr11:- c11ion ... where nttded 1 By L. M. BOYD tvill be used i~ CHECKJN(; Brown recalled. UP wherever possible. Ad.· "The way I talked then was ~ START THE NEW YEAR OFF WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS 'h gal.now ... $11 11 ll'1 a revolutionary di1(overy cal!r.d FJXOOF.N'f•, {Of daily hD!M u1t.. (\J.S. Pa.t. fJ.OOJ,9S8J With Fn1.00&NT millllY denture wearer• may eat, 1pe.alr.. l1u1h • ..iith litt!r. •orry of dentures oom1ne loot.t> Onr. i1pplic1t1on •may !a1t tor houn. Dentures that fit arr. t...ett· tial to he~lth. See your dtnll1l reeularly. Get e11y·t.o-utie f'1XOO!NT Denture Adhe11ve Cream at all drul COWllUI. WH ERE A GIRL is brought dress letters to L. M. Bol/d, !hat everything the police did I up has much to do with how P. o. Box 1875, Ntwpo1't was wrong. I Puon!1''T fonn1 1U1 elai l.lt metn· brant that h~lp& abtorb lht lb(l(:k of billll1 and Cbr.•in1-belpt. pro- she walks. In Northern Beach, Calif., 92660. "Antipolice yelling is con- Europe, for example, lhe1-----------------'------- IWllO ~ 'll'PlllY-• l'tOCf-...,OtllM tlmuIJS CCI'., lOlllMli. "'· • 1111 young ladies take long strides, almost in a masculine man· ne r. Jn Japan, however, they mince along with little steps, shuffling somewhat. T h e American girl's walk is about midway between the two, depending on \\'hether she's a city Mouse or a country mouse. The rural ladies, who step out briskly. are said lO be easier for a fellow to walk "'ilh. But big town girls. like women who are overweight., are known to have a finer sense of balance and make better dancers. NO RECORD can be found that anybody anywhere ever saw a frog take a drink of water ... OUR LANGUAGE P.IAN says that English word with the largest number of different definitions is "set" . . . JUST A BOUT a fourth of all the patents registered at the U.S. Patent Office have something to do v.·ith cars. YOU'VE HEARD all about the computer experts who purport to match up com- )lllti ble couples. But have you heard about the en· cep helograph specia lists who claim to do likewi se? If a man's and a v.·oman's brain "'aves mes h properly, these authorities aver, the pair can get along together dandily. So a few lit!le money.making operators now advertise they match up the brain waves of single girls and eligible bachelors. Our Love and War man is skeptical. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. ''Who is going to win the next presidential election? The taller of the two candidates. it's a cinch. Isn't it a fact the taller man has won every time in this century?" A. Almost a fact. But not quite. The record book say! both President Nixon and Hubert Hwnphrey are S·feet·ll·inches. And it's a certainly the sloping-shou ldered Wen d e 11 Will kie was taller than Presi- den t Franklin D. Roosevelt who wasn 't on his feet much because of his ailme nts in those days . . . Q. "What poison kills the most people?" A. Carbon monoxide. if you count gases, OPEN. QUESTION -Why is it river ice is transparent while lake ice isn'l? CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. ''Isn't pepper in food a preservative?" A. Certainly is. Vi'hat's noteworthy about that is the science boys only proved it le be such 20 years ago .. , Q, "How ma ny of the girls who go lo college ac· tually get their degrees?" A. Little heller than half. Your quest,ions <rnrl com · ments are we/.comcd and Newport Girl To Compete In Contest Dee Dee Pennington, 17, A-1iss Newport Beach has been named Miss Junior Achieve- ment or Orange County South. She will compete with IS other Miss JAs representing Souther" California Cenlen in a contest to bf' held March 4 in Los Angeles. Miss Pennington is the daughtec of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pennington of Balboa Island and is a senior &t Corona del Mar l~igh School. She is president or the .Junior Achievement Company o f Creative Enterprises which Is counseled by Pacific Motor arid Trucking and Co. Runners up are Raya ruie Marie Smith. 16. a senior at Estancia High School and cor· porate secretary for Now Sel, counseled by Collins Radio, and Sonnie Stone. a sophomore at HuntiR«ton Beach High School and a memMr or the boa rd of CrtatJve Enterprises, Junior Adllevt.ment Is a n• tioaal organization for high 1chool students Interested In bus1n~u. U"4'.ler the f!Uldance of businessrt1tn the high school i1tudents f o r m ~ompanies, Issue stock, market a pmduct, and 11t the tnd o( lht JC:hool yt.ar, dissolve I.ht companies: and pay dividends to their sh&rtholders. Come see our we'll give A free Azalea, to be exact. If you'd like one, just stop in our new Cos ta Mesa office . From now through February 12, we' re having Open House to give you a chance to see that our beautiful new building hasn't turned our heads. Our people are still friendly. If not friendlier. And our complete escrow services, home loans, and Umpteen Ways To Save are just as nice as ever: Furthermore, 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 ha ve your bloom- ing little green waiting, plus special kids' balloons, free coffee and refreshments and lots of smiles to help make this the nicest Open House a beautiful new build ing ever had . Open house hours: Mon.-Thur: 9-4; Fri. 9-8. Federal Savings-Costa Mesa comer Of ~lkUmird I Wison. (tt.bor Center) Fra A1*a CO·~ with our Newport office at 500 Newport Center Drlwe. I r ( I I rt I I d ' " ~., ... ~., ...... • OL.D PHOTOS OFFER 'NEW' IDEA-S? -• ' l ~ ~ ' I ·-"""'._.,,4; ~ Fat, Funny Girl Now Thin, Sad Peggy Scales New Image By ~!ARIAN CHRISTY NEW YORK -When lhe critical age or 40 slares a woman Jn the face and a merciless three-way mirror spells doom for the body beautiful. a woman can either have a nervous breakdown or take crumbling matters into her ov.•n hands. Peggy Cass. oozing razzmatazz, recently came to grips with the classic female dilemma and. being ti. sturdy soul, bypassed the psychiatrist's couch. Cass has metamorphosed from dull-brown moth to blonde bulterny and the exhibition of true grit deserves tribute. It takes unswe rv· ing discipline and a high degree of motivation to whittle down from a size 16 matron to a si1,e 8 clothesho rse. What did it? She, like everyone else. heard the cutting comparisons her foes made between her and Mama Cass of the Mamas and Papas. There was a germ of truth to the chitchat and Peggy decided that enemies would have to twitter about something other than her dum- piness. So Peggy Cass has become an elcgante. NO FOREIGN SUB.JECT ""1e \vord •·fashion·• usef1 to be a foreign subject. Now she has joined the hcst-drcssed ranks and authoritalivclv tosses off desi~ners' names such .is ~-lalcolm Starr. Bill Blass and Donald Brooks. And she knows "in'' pieces of information -for instance she's aware that Barbara Peck, an unemployed dancer, makes Gwen Verdon's pant-sui ts for $J5 and thev "fit across the behind like a dreiim.'' She also guards the name of the unknown Greenwich Village dressmaker who copies Paris couture for people like Vogue's Diana Vreeland and a former Paris Match editor who lives down the hall. \\lhal starled the grand makeover thnt ended in the updated fashion image was the discover)' that the Kennedy Clinic here c o u I d drastically reduce 1 woman's sl2e CRYING ON INSI DE Peggy Cass via a daily shot o( hormones plus a M>O<alorie meal prepared and eaten on the spot. Peggy played the Kennedy game for two months and shed 22 pounds. Her weight has been going downhill ever since . Now doctors say her entire metabolism is cha nged and if she wants to eat spaghetti regularly, go ahead, there will be no radical change in her · sleek IIS·pound frame . Actuall y, Cass is totally im· ITlersed in {ashion. Recently she moved inlo an up- percrust East Side duplex apart· ment which was decorated by two former fashion models -Claire Morrow of Norman Norell and Barbara Brown . For a steep price the MOITOW·Brown team covered couches with ye llow prints from the Donald Brooks collection, the tables with cloths used by Rome'• Patrick de Barentzen and the din- ing room ctlair1 wt1h a tiger print from Yves Saint Laurent. RICH, TOO Not only i11 Peggy thin, she's rich -thanks to her Broadway bit, "Plai.a Sulle," and those dally appearances on the lucrative "To Tell The Truth'' TV shows. About her chic cocoon: "When my accountant co!Tlplained about my skyrocketing expenses, I told him to wake up, environment was a very 'in' subject:• One of Peggy·s three bathrooms is a backdrop for a collection of fashion prints throughout the ages. There ought to be a print of Peggy- of.the-momcnt. She's wear ing the jarring combination or a purple Arabic djellabah and a black velvet riding hat plunked on he r head. When she graduated from Cam- bridge High and Latin School she hopped the first bus out of Boston to New \'ork where she auditioned and was repeatedly turned down for Broadway shows. Being a staunch Catholic, she pleased ~1ama by setting up residence in the all-girl Barbizon Hotel where the rooms were like retreats. When days b e c a m i: depressingly nonproductive, she'd uninhibitedly whip out to the street, sit on a water hydrant and cry a river. The new apartment is in lhe shadow of the Barbiz0n. "I keep on telling myself, you're come a long way, ba by." T1vo years ago Peggy divorced her husband , Carl Fischer, because ail they did during their IS-year marriage was fight. "When love sours, a home gels gloomy," she says. ''I got tired of being in the shade." Few people realize I.here's a Jot of Pagliacci in Cass. She's often laughing on I.he outside but crying on the Inside. When the word "love" Is mentioned, she recites a poignant piece of anonymous poetry Lhar comes straight from the heart : •·o Western wind, when wilt thou blow, That Lhe small rain down may r11in? Christ. that my love were in my arms And I ln my bed again?" And the lat funny girl Is thin and 1ad. High Fashions of Bygone Days Recycled High fashions in the da ys of Dillinger's mol~ h.ave been re· cycled by Dior's salon (leH), while Lachasse seems to have copied a gown worn by Rita Hayworth in "Gilda " (above). Dior's dropped hemline of the mid· forties is bac~ in style and a favorite of Hardy Amies (above, right). ' ' I . '. ,. ' :·. I ' ••, ' ' • . . . ' •t, • • •••. . ' ,' . ' . ' J . - BEA ANDERSON, Editor TutH1f, f1bru1ry t, 1tr1 '''' 11 .f ' Big band era costumes are being revived by Jacquet Esterel In his spring collec• tion (left). The satin frock with puffed sleeves and Deanna Durbin ha ir style complete the look . The white flannel suit (above) 11 from Dior's new collection, but It looks like 1n outfit Ginger Rogers might h•Y• worn In "Lady In the Dark." • ' ' ,, •• , I JI DAllV PILOT T11t$day, ftbrua.ry If, 11J71 Juniors Attempt Solution Readers Asked to Take Quiz DEAR ANN LA.r.'IDERS : I wonder how many peoptC In you r reading audience are hiding the fact from themselves that they are alcoholics. My guess is Concerned with the com-a few mill_ion . The ot~r day I _ran . . across an interesting hst of questions mu~ication gap between the that might be helpful. If a person gen!fations, the South Coast an awe rs "yes" lo six of these JuniOr Woman's Club is begin-questions, N: shoul~ face the fact that ning youth-adult rap sessions. he has a ser1?us drinking problem. Here S red b the California are the questions : . ponso .Y • I. Do you resent 1t when a persons Young Authonty, the sessions suggests that perhaps you drink too begin Thursday, Feb. 11, and much? will continue for six weeks. 2. Have you ever tried to get The program is designed to in extra drinks at a sociaJ affair -more provide a medium for the free than the: other guests are getting? flow of co m m u n i c a t i 0 n ~· Have you la~en a mo_ming dtin~1 between the participants who this past year -Just a p1cker-up~r will be u n re 1 ate d. Con-because you !ell, the need for something versation will be unstructured to get you going· but will cover drugs, religion. 4. Has your drinking c~ated problems pal't'llt-child relations and al home with your spouse . other concerns. 5. Have you ever taken a drink just The program is the first before you left the house to attend of many planned by the CV A, an affair ~here you knew cocktails would according to Mrs. D a n be served · . . . Gordon youth chairman 6. Have you ever tried to stop dr1nk1ng Amo~g other youth · ac· for a specified period of time and fallen tivities planned by the club short of your goal? ANN LANDERS remember because you were drinking? 9. Despite existing evidence do you keep insisting that you can stop drinking any time you feel like it! -RICHMOND READER DEAR RICH: Thanks for tbe list. I'll bet mWkln1 of readers took the test. Those who flunked sbou1d consider what they are doin1 to the lives ol tbe people around them Jf lbey are not su(flclenUy concerned about v.·hat they are dol.Qg to themselves. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a widow 60 years of age. Three months ago I married a widower who thought I was "wonderful." Now he is comparing me with his late wife who had a masters degree. (I didn't gel to college.) nulmeot? 1 await wont from you. -O CITY DEAR O!.: 1be word 11 yes. Voa'v• got yourself a nul. DEAR MISS VINEGAR VEINS, (I made up this name for you because it !ii.!.) What do you think or a teacher who gives kids so much homework that a 14-year-old has to stay up until 3 every single morning to finish. Should I Jet my son stay up this late or should I insist that he go to bed at a decent h o u r whether he bas finished his homework or not'.' Do you think it would help if l went to school and had a talk with his teacher? -MRS. K.W. DEAR ft.IRS. K.W.: Do NOT go le school. From the way you 1tarted your letter to me I'm afraid of what yo11 might call the teacher. A confnintatioa. could create additional problems for your son and I suspect he bas enough pro- blems now. FULL HEARTS BUILD FUNDS -Every corner of Orange County will be rep- presented when the ~rvite High School Parents' Guild sponsors its second an· nual Servite Ball. Having a heart and helping the boys' school building fund ( . are Otft to right) Mrs. Jay Reed, Mrs. S. T. Santangelo and ?i1rs. John Stone· man. is a coed barbecue at 7. Do you envy people who do not Juvenile Hall at noon Salur· drink at all - . or those who seen1 day, Feb. 13. Films will be lo . be able to_ dr~nk less than you and shown and a discussion of quit for the ~1ghl. . . drugs will tak"e place in 8. ~ you find rourself. being rerrunded Juvenile Hall on Monday, Feb. of things you said -things you cannot 15. It is sponsored by the He won't attend church because "there's too much singing." He doesn't like movies because "they are dirty .'' He won't watch TV because ''it makes his eyes jump.'' My cooking gives him indigestion and my housekeeping isn't what he 's used to. Our marriage has not yet been consummated (physically) because he has not received a signal from his deceased wife saying it 's all right with her. Should I consider an· Tell the boy he musl go to bed at midnight' -finished or not. And, If you will permit old VlDegar Veba1 to ex press an opinion, T have a bunch your IOD is keeping these craiy houri because be knows it bugs you. Dance Amid Reflections Rosy Glow Envelopes Pink and wbite noral ar· rangements and a red and gilt background will be cap· tured in crystal reflections , \\'hen Servite High School t Parents' Guild sponsors its se- 1 cond annual Servite Ball. I Members and guests from ! every corner of Orange Coun- 1 ty will gather in th e . Disneyland Hotel Saturday, Feb. 13. James Francis Cardin a I ~ ~1clntyre, Archbishop Timothy L t • Manning and the V,ery Rev. Horoscope Steven Ryan, provincial of \he \Yeslern Serviles, are among the special guests who have been invited. This year's ball . \.l.'hich will benefit the building fund. marks the celebration or the fir"st century of service in America by the Servite order. One of the oldest religious orders in the Western Church. it originated in Florence, Italy in 1233. Dining and dancing in lhe glow of ·tall tapers "'ill be Pisces : Complete ,, Unfinished Projects WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 10 By SYDNEY OMARR ..,. ARIES (March 2i·April 19): -Some money decisions are dela yed due to lack of com· pl ete information. Avoid being discouraged by skeptical in· dividual. Break through red tape. Get facts , not fiction. TA URUS (April 20-May 20 !: Apply past ex:perience to cur- rent activities. Get frame of referenct: into focus. Older in- dividual should not be permit· ted to completely dominate. GEAt~1 (May 21.June 20 ): Tie together loose ends - especially where family rela· tionships are concerned. ~ Stress diplomacy. You can • give and receive lo\·e. Ad- justment in domestic area is indicated. CANCER (June 21.July 22 1: What to do about budget, LEO (J uly 23·Aug. 22): Cy· cle remains high ; you get results from recent efforts, contacts. Rewards now can be greater so a r e responsibilities. Basic chores .should not be delayed. put off. Face music as it exists. \l lRGO 'tAug. 23-Scpt. 22 1 · One close to you may be elusive , non-d irect. Key is to get at truth without appearing lo be probing. This is neat trick. but you arc capable of performing ii . Art al'- cordingly. LIBRA tSept. 23-0cL 22 ): Strive to encourage new con- tacts. Get rid of primitive conceptions. Be aware of cur· ren t trends. events. Some of your fondest wishes can now be fulfilled. SCORPIO (Oct . 2.3-Nov. 21 1· Accent on ambitions, career. relations v:ith those in authori· ty. Rise above pelty actions. details. rumors. Do what you know is right. Ultimate gain is Indicated . ~Ir. and Airs. Jay Reed of Newport Beach, d onor chairmen. who are hosting three I.ables. Pl ay ing for dancing will be the Society for the Preserva- tion of Big Bands. - Servile High School has an enrollment of approximately 700 young men attending from all over Orange and parts of Los Angeles counties. It has an excellent reputation for scholastic standards a n d athletic competence. Memories Musical The Longest J-lalf-hour in llistory 11·iH be the progranl title for the Thursday. 'Feb. JI. meeting o[ the Children's Theater Guild of Newport Harbor. J\1rs. Ralph Tando\vsky will host !he musical meeting in her Lido Isle home. according tu Mrs . David V. Skilling, president. The program.featuring musical renditions from the guild's 10 years of productions fo r child ren, will salute the contributions of J\lrs. Ralph S. Holden and J\frs. Tan- dO\\'Sky. Featured vocalists will be !\1rs_ John Kerr and Mrs. Richard P..1ailander. A presentation of the history of the guild will complete the morning. Homemakers Review Laws Consumer affairs, wills and small claims will be discussed "·hen the Coast •Iomemakers n1eet at 9:43 a.m. Friday, Feb. club in conjunction with the Orange Police Department. Children at Albert Sitton Home will enjoy the festivities when the club provides a party at 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 26. Refreshments and a program will be featured . Professor Discusses Pollution Dr. F. Sherwood Rowland, head of the chemistry depart· ment at UCI, will discu ss nuclear testing of air pollution for members of the Laguna Niguel Republican Women's Club, Federated (ollowing a 9:30 a.m. coffee on Thursday, Feb. II. The public is invited to at. lend the session in the Monarch Bay Beach C l u b , South Laguna. P..1rs. Percival Ch as e . registrar, will register voters during the meeting. Women interested in membership in. formation may ca 11 Mrs. Harold H. Smith, second vice president. Craft Club Mixes Arts Laguna Beach artist Mrs. Louise Leyden v.'ill address members of U1e San Clemente Arts and Crafts Club at 7:45 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 11. Mrs. Leyden will discuss the California Establishment and will display and comment on her oil paintings. She has won many awards for her work and has exhibited both na· tionally and internationally. Preceding the lecture In the San Clemente Elks Lodge, John Moss will present two piano solos and Mrs. Lea Reynolds and John V. Robbins will be featu red Jn a violin duet. financial requirements these are emphasized. Debt can be collected. But you will SAGITTARIUS I :\o\'. 2~­ Dec. 21 1: Good lunar aspect c~incides \1"ilh journeys, ad- dit ional kn o w I edge, com- munication with those afar. 12. in the Corona del Mar A=== Youth Center•. ~ have to be realistic in ap- ~ proach. 1\ol v.·ise to take persons for granted. • ~ Civil Rights • ·Program Topic ,.. Concerned with law and civil ~ right!, the Bahia Chapter, Na-'i lional Secretaries Association ~ (lntemaUonal) has chosen Scales of Justice as Its pro- • gJllllll topic on Thursday, Feb. Jl. CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jnn 19): Use natural talents 1u find out 11·here you stand - applies especially to financial dealings "'ilh partner. mate. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-feb . Hunter \\lilson, Newport Beach attorn ey. will address the group. Luncheon will follow the speech pre sentation and Mrs. Edward Rutledge and Mrs. James ~lunroe are accepling reservations. Art Exhibited 18 ): Accent on how to handle special relationship. Be positive. Doubt should be taken as valid signa l for delay. An art exhibit, reatu ring the Avoid one who involves ~·ou works o( the Huntington Beach in legal hijinks . Slick to pro-Art League. will take place ven course. from noon to 4 p.m. Saturday PISCES lF'eb. 19-f\tarch 2lJ I· and Sunda y, Feb. 13-14. THE RED BALLOON LTD. ~ sounds of summer ..• bathJng suits, cover ups and jumpsuit• ·~ tlH': mo'l dtliPllnllJ unnao11 thlhlrtn'• ti ore in tht: to11thl1nd 16877 Alaonquln St. 1n•vr11•c;"for1 •ct~M (71' 146-1666 Lagunan Adds 104th Business Upstaged Candles Crowd Cake Child of the Frontier:, a skit Harriet Northrup hopes to have a quiet celebration today on her 104th birthday. "After all, ifs nothing to get excited about," the Laguna Beach resident said. Stylishly dressed in a col· orful hostess robe, Mrs . Northrup recalled events that most people only read about in history books. She watched the Chicago fire of 1871 from her fat~r·s arms as a 5-year-old from the front yard of their suburban home, and still remembers the tremendous glow in the sky . During the' Sp ani sh· American War she worked with the Sanitary Commission, now the Red Cross. and rtmember.1 how hard it was to find out what was going on. Mrs. Northrup said that paper was scarce during the era of 'Teddy Roosevelt's eharge up San Juan Hill and In concert fonn, will be that one day , in desperation, necessarily add t() one's well· featured \\'hen the Mes a the Chicago Tribune printed being." Harbor Club meets Thursday, an edition on wallpaper. P..1rs. Northrop, who says Feb. 11, in the Airporter Inn. Prior to her marriage she ''There's nothing special about Presented by the Huntington worked as secretary to being IM," does her own shop-Beach Playhouse, the one-act Clarence Darrow, then a con· ping and cooking and visits play with a surprise ending troversial young Chicago at-Aileen Ada.ins several times has been in the playhouse a week. ..-torney. She remembers him repertoire since 1964, with twD as a compassiunate man who The celebrant, bright and cast members in their original had a great feeling for the alert, is proving a theory of roles. underdog. her cousin's that "we })ave Mrs. Harold Lakin· and Mrs. The centerarian remembers a lot of vitality and we live James Ness are accepting when the railroad was com· until we use up every spark reservations for the luncheon, pleted from the Atlantic to of it," for she still is sending which will include a business the Pacific and trains sped1-;ou;;;;t ;;p;;Je;;nl;y;;o;;f;;s;;p;;ar;;k;;s.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;ee;;;;li;;ng;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ over the tracks at 12 miles an ll 00.~~oday·s pace is loo swift INTRODUCTORY SPECIALS MONDAY THllU THUll5DAY and the world is too small," e Shompoo Ir ~ . , , , .•••• , 2.95 she deelared. "You know e Holr C11t ••••.••.•••••••• 1.95 everything the instant It ha~ • Permo11e11t Spec.Joi ••••• , .• 9.95 pens, and that does n' t TO INTRODUCE YOU TO 1,000'1 OF Oil PAINTINGS WHOLISALt: WAIEHOUSI ORN TO THI PUILIC so•/o OFF l ilt E. EDINGEll, SANTA ANA Pnon• t:IS-460I OEALEllS WANll!D VIOLA & SHARON CALL 548-7426 De Lon's Beauty Shop 55) W. 19tll. Cosio Meaa -Opposite rfte I . of A. Do lly 1·9, Sat. 1·6, Swn. 9,g FOR YOUR V AL~NTINE The Sony AM-FM, AM-PM. This Sony square clock·.-•• • ••• 1s a ·very hip Radio. t Michael Gerbosi, criminal lawyer, will speak at the 7 : p.m. dinner meeting in Ben • Brown's restaurant. Sou t h The event will be in the Finish ~·hat you start. Avoid \Voodlake apartments. Hun· short-cuts. stick to what yo u ,.~li~n~gt~o~n~B~e~a~ch~.iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;'ll kno"'. Hasic methods result In ultinuitc succe~. Patience and pcri;istenre are twin re- quireml"nts. Acl accordingly. Here's a smart clock rad io that makes your( night table look bigger. Because it takes up less than 5 inches square of space. Ye t it wakes you up to news or weathe r or Rock or Bach just like the big ones. The story behind this Sony clock: A rad io that pours out lu ll, rich AM from a cube sound-chamber cabinet. Anything a big clock radio can do, Sony's 6RC-23 can do too-but in less than 5 squ are inches of space. Wakes you up to any program you want at the tim e you preselect: and the large clock face is designed for easy.reading. Front clock switch makes t im~setting simp le. f Laguna. The affair begins "'ilh a social hour at 1:30 p.m. Mrs. -Fr\td1 McElligatt Is ~ ac:ctplinl reservauons. Leaders Named MrL George Kerchoff will be insUlled r:halnt1an of the Ladles Club ot' Ra!ICho Hun-~ lington Mobile Park Wed· ~ n<8day, Feb. 10. ""'• ~~ •.· 1r>wel s by JO'>t>ph DIAMONDS AND ..ESTATE JEWELRY PURC HASED ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS Tllousancfs of oritlnol oil r.•1n1t ... 50% off Oeeltr Showroom W•r•house open to public. Buy •t de•l•r's pric es. Custom Fr•m•1 •v•il· •ble. L•y-•w•y on Mister Ch•~9• or B•nkAmeri· card. RENT -LEASE -SAU Hours -t o.m. to ' p.m., Monday thru 5Cltur4ay Th is FM / AM has a nice big face for easy time tellin g. And a rich·look ing wa lnut grain finish .I It comes in a little square box that we'll be1 happy to giftwrap. Take it home today. And llsten to AM or FM during the AM or PM. The / .Sony.7FC·34W, $29,. SONY.' NOW Charming cube·shaped set comes in a walnut-IOOklna finish the t's very rich. But you dOn't have to be to buy It. $1915 SON~ Seated with her during lhc ceremoniet In lrvlne coast Counlry Club will be lhe ''"'' Co u• Pino ORIGINAL OILS, LTD. EL T 0 R 0 tt1mes. Arnold Wilkl'rson, ~Ice , 1 , 1 , ,. s o· ' ' -guno Hll" ••- h . " WJUJam 8. r r y I I 0 • ... fft ··~0 wy. 1619 E. Edlnjjj•r, Sant• Ana Phon• IJS-4601 411 fast Stvtnteenth Street ~ ~ J"N ... COSTA MESA c aumau; • Coit• M•t• 1,o.901i• (next to S•"·On) secmary. and PhlUlp Hay, 11!:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;::;::::;;:::;;:;;:.J~ DEALERS WANTED 646-1684-Dolly 9·9. Saturdoy 9·6 837-3830-Dolly 10·6, Mon.•Fri. 10·9 treuurer. " ._ ________________ .... ,._ ____ '!"" _______ ..;. _____________ .:.,._;_;.,.;.,....;.;_ ___ • ., ' DICK 11.ACY TUMBLEWEEDS LIMP\l7 UlARP, "THERE'S A fjJG, IMD llOLF l'ROWcJl.k; 'ROUND 0015JrE 1HE VlcLAGE! 1'17 cll<O YOU 1lJ ELIMINATE: HIM! YOU AREN'T AFRAID, ARE YOU? c , ........ -___ .... Mun AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER MAV I ,Wi.kE A. SUGGES- TION, Mil. T? IF YOU INSIST ON 6ETTING ELMO OUT ON fS,t.,IL,. SEE TO If TI-1.&.T ME's SENT TO A. 5ANITARfUM! PLAIN JANE TM-'T'5 E;x.l.C.RY WHAT I PlAN TO 2·1 wHERE IS ,,. "nlETWAJN.? lr'S &EEN A LOWG, TOUc:.H NIGMT FOil VOii~ YOU'P &ffiER GO MOME AWP GET SOME ~UT EYE! A.NP ro1tr WOR'R:V Aeour MA.NOL\N6 TME !AIL ~---"I ON ELMO IN Tl-IE MO~lt.16: I'LL TAkE CA.ll:E OF IT '. PERKINS I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ' • POWER I AC ROSS ~)We~\ German state 1 Baby!on1an 4 4 -·-····the iod of wind Gr ea t: 5 skimo German K in9 i"rmt nl A5 Btcomts 10 and wo1 n I.tut around 47 Tramplts: l h' wa ist lnlormill, 14 Intertwine 2 words l S Africiln SO Favori!t pl.tnls ly Chester Gould WANTTOBET? AtJD TWe °""""fUCH &r.o!N5 C~MO MliO ~I'""°"" F'fMAl..I!. T'O MALI' A.S~I!. COES. By Tom K. Ryon By Al Smith By Harold Le Doux ...-,,,-• .,,-6CTTJ=~N~5-=T><~E~ FEELIN6 TMAT 5AM'So GIV1M6 ME A swow ros: TI-lAT's irGMT ~ I WANT TO SEE· V\NCE HERE ••• TONIGHT! q I ~ "'°" ·-I! I By Frank Baginski 51 Long n11rrow l b En!rt a!y ltathcr 17 Char<tc· MISS PEACH t" ist1c Strip 52 Be <tl1~e traits 5b Or 1v er 01 l ~ Nobleman tilll le 20 Flash l~mp. bO Show l11formal !he w ~v 21 Pier1e bl Si9n1l1c11nr Tr udeau, b4 Noun l'nd1ng tor one b5 Oetr o11 23 ...... Hen1 e 11thlete Skater bb Noted l b Mate dt1 ty ess;iy1s1 21 Robert b7 Troubles HAV!S or b8 lros •····· Ha11y Jerome Un is- 30 Former Arab The US A leader b<l Val ley 3~ Garmen t J5 Ptg pe11s OOV1N 37 Biblic11I rul er l Frenth 8 S~tlcbO+I~ of J vesstl 9 O•outv 10 Got\ Quic k!y 11 Wu19l1ke 12 An11lo•111s 13 c;or11do1 18 B l~ck : Pce1 , 22 Brag 24 Jokes 25 Pa111\!r!. 27 Meager 28 City Ill Zl 9f 7 I Jb Unab lt to tel 39 lll'm of btd h/l!!I 40 lovtr of tht iris 44 R'si~t'd 4& Su it ~8 Com1"1nds 49 Roman qod 52 Breath!d hard 53 Weste1n }(ELL Y SCHOO L S'T'VDcl-!T CouR'l' NW IN Sl!'n'10N ...,_.... MAfk.IA1 rrwr;.i;... t DID"''T 00 ANYTHING, YOUR HONOR I TOOK TH! WRONG 000/t ANO WA~Oe~o JN HEltC tJY M ISTAKE ... $ALLY . BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS .. ··- O~ •. By John Miles By MeU 38 Eve n ont 2 M1ss•I• 39 Blend ot 3 At 1d11y Puerto R ito 29 Syn1l1 tl1c liber }l Pa~~l'S throuqti US cily 54 R.eposP 55 Egrtss 57 Oeprav'd 58 l'titktd 51 Genuin e bl Arnold STEVE ROPER By Saunders and Overgard tol\011 /Ind Sil~ ~ l Coo!inq rll'Vitt 42 Corpor~I e.g. ' l • " " " li 2l 17 ll " ,. - " ~ .. ,, :• ... " " " .. " .. 4 Giv e ~s s~cur•tv 5 Ances!or b Hogh. Comb. lorn• 7 f1tnch K1 n9 •t'. s • ' ,,, " " A ~crtt11 32 U11s• of mu11e 33 Con!inuetf 1111\hout end : Z word~ I ' ~:,J " !'.; " .. " Palm~r . et ~I : Abbr. &3 Ret ired: Abbr, n " " '.ii ... 21 n ' " " l " •• r •• JO " " " 6 " ~ ,, .. -I"'. " " ~ .. " .... ll' ~ " Jµ ,. ' " •• 6J " .. '" .. ~ .. GOOD/ rLL MEE T YOU AT TME BARN, OAS"'ER / Ot(.A.V, RoPER/ GET CHANGED AM' LET.'S SEE" IF YOU KNOW A SAODlE FROM A 50F"T PILLOW/ ,..__, ..I'll DIG '°"1 UP A GUfll WMILE )blJ DRESS .' PEANUTS ' " /, ·-~-·~_,,.,/ ~ 7.t~ ...... .: "'-'-<'&-• By Charles M. Schulz ~~~~~~~~ l'hl 60IN610 DO ,\\INE ()I Th:: \IAAIOUS l !SOS Oi METAL> N THE EAATH ANll HOlll EACH AAS mecm> TIIE PR06RES5 OF MANl:INO .• -7 s· MAA'8C. 11LL DO ONE ~ 51'tl."4.ACH AOlE~ TutldU, Ftbruary 9, 1971 DAILY PILOT Jii By Al Copp ~-· By Gus Arriolo By Ferd JohMOn ., ' .. COCK-A txx>Dl.E I 1>00000. THI STlANGl WOt\I> MR.MUM- DENNIS THE MENACE ?™•••' '2·~ '! J(El'f /MY.11tKIMHWJJS Ni'M£ /IEPT w.J(}ll'ME N~lflQJS tlJ WE. CALI.ED 1ME l'lll?tE: llfl/16 OFF!' ! \ I • • DAILY rrLOT -, UCLA May Us~ Stall Offense LOS ANGE LES (AP ) -John Wooden, a disciple of the lull court press and the run·and·shoot offense. 1ay1 he's so dis pleased with his No. l·ranked basket· ball team he may resort to a 1tall offense and a zone defense. Wooden shocked reporters Monday with t two ideas, both u!llally abhorrenl hi m. 'Believe it or not," Wooden 1ald. "I'm Bruins Return To No. I Perch After Triumph Coach John Wooden and the UCLA Bruins ma y not be num erologically in- clined ·but the number four has a distinct bearing on thei r return to the top a1 the nation's No. 1 basketball team in collegiate ranks on Assoc iated Press and UPI polls this week . 1'1e Bruins defeated cross-town ri val USC by a margin of four poinll Saturday night, 64-60, and gained four more points than second place Marquette in the AP poll of sportswriters and sportscasters to rega in the top spot. act~y comiderlng a tone defense. ln fact we've already worked on lt in pra~ ces. worked on It quite 1 bit." Neysmen were shocked furthtr when Wooden added that he might use a stall in certain 1ituaUon1. "although I'm still opposed to It and ii I thought I could make the rules maktrs change the rule by holding the ball, I'd bold it every time. I don't think the stall i! good for basketball." Dlscu.ssion of tbt 1t11l and the tone came up after the Bruins' 64-60 defeat of No. 2-ranked Southttn California last Satw-day. The loss dropped the 'l'?ojans down to No. 3. UCLA used a stall for three minutes la te in tha t game . "As long u I can remember, t:v~ been in favor of anything that woula prevent a stall game and I still am. r m not saying it's a poor strategy but if it's still allowtd we'll use it when we have to. We held the ball for eight minutes againlt Ore1on up there a few years ago. "Of course. they'd held It for quite 1 few minutes before that ind the C1ru; enjoyed it very much when they did it and they didn 't enjoy lt so much whe n we did It." IEAN DUBOIS GIVES JACK EVANS SOME FANCY FOOTWORK BUT EVENTUAL LY LOSES MADISON SQUARE GARDEN WRESTLING BOUT. Weste rn Kentucky moved up two posi- tions to seve nth in the 'A P poll with cross.stale riva l Kentuck)' in eighth. Dayton handed \Vest.em Kentucky a 63-60 defeat !\1onday night while Kentucky defeated Mississi ppi State, 102-33. Wooden said he was basically dilpleas· M with his team'• defense thls aea&on . especially its inability to control the tempo of the game. Dennis Layton of use. v.·ho scored 23 points agalnat the Bruins Saturday nigh!. particularly hurt UCLA and Wooden said there art many way.!! of .!!lopping him . . . •• • • and one way is to slide over and help out. Or we might hold the ball for a whil e when we get it. attempt to cool him off. cha nge the momentum. Or we ml1ht t ven go to a woe defense." Did Boyd Lose Chance at Pros By Rejections'? Sources close to USC ba!lkctball coach lkJb Boyd say the Trojan chief is sec_ond gur-~;ing himself over a couple of Jobs he \~ ... ;~d down in recent months. Ai;:jl:ircn tly Boyd believes that ha ving rejected offers to coach the Lakers and Portland Trailblazers may have shut the door to any further opportunity to get In pro coaching -at least wit h lhe NatiOnal Basketball Associatinn. Tht. source hints that continually grow. ing problems between college coache3 ------WHITE WASH -=-------· and athletes is Riving Boyd ideas about tno\'ing to the pro.s . Ho .... ·e\'er, the informer does nol say Chat Boyd is having any troubles "'ith bis current Trojans. * * * After vie:v.·ing the debaclt Sa tu rday night at the Sporl1 Arena whrn UCLA 1omehOY.' de fcatrd USC In bas ketball, one had to v1ond cr what either team l\'as do ing in tht top 10 rankings. Ob~·iously they \l\'cre bolb light. what with the pressure: of Saturday 's cro\\'d, the: game and it.s significance.. Surely lhry are both capable or mu ch betltr play then v.·hal lhty shoy,·ed at tbe Sport s Arena-wilh lh~ posslhl e ex. ception of amazing Sidnt-y Wick~. UCLA '5 ca1e 11:enle. And one other poi nt th;;t become in· (!re•5ingly clear-Newpo rt Beach's John Valley lll'as surely much of a key to UCLA'• success In 1969-70 as tht crafty pard'1 ball handling and shooting made the Bruins alwa ys look 5moolb. Aad Vallely took much of the beat off mate Henry Bibby, who looked 10 ;r.ml1lng last year ud has looked 10 trledJoett thJ1 tealOD . I * * * I Co .. · The three Orange ast area Junior t.oitege basketball coaches currently 1n power have a combined career JC coachin& record or 98 wins and 165 losses. · Dick Stricklin of Golden "'est is fJ().35 ind was 30-81 going into this campaign. Herb Llv&:cy of Ora nge Co&s• College Is 13-37 and Saddleback·s Leroy Steve ns Ii 35-43. * * * KtD Epptlhelmcr. promising runn inR. Nell 1t Or101e Cn11l Collea:e:. wlll be t. ualform this fall-but not fo r OCC. 'ltte former LI Quinta High fla sh has joined th e army, which lea\les Oran~e Cea1t Mss Dick Tacker rranlieally aearchlq for ruul11 backs. As Tacker potntl oul, lt'1 a critical posltlt• to fill on a leam which 1how1 slpt tf bt:lDJ 1 1tate pewerbouse. * * * In 11 span of 1 couple or minute.~. Huntiniton Bt.ach HJ1h b.uketb1 ll p\aye.r Gi rth Wl1e did 1bout at many things tn a game. as one can ea:pect from a human being. In t rl«tl)''s loss to WeslminAter he 1·ebounded, m11de • 11te1!1 blot.ked • 1hot, i.1\'ed t1. ball htaded tor out nf bounds, made 1 b11ket and 1 free thro w. Ht!: did 1111 that In 2'ii minutts • Kansas was the only team olher than $25~527 Exa~ta Payoff 1.iarquette or UC LA to gain a first place vote , gaining one in t~e balloting. Following USC in f ourth place is l'ennsy lvania with Kansas fifth and J acksonville sixth. 11-1 Co1nbination Wins It for Vietna111 Vet In other Monday night games involving top 10 teams.. Kansas continued to romp over Big 8 foes with a 91-67 win over visiting Colorado; Notre Dame defeated Butler, 9J.81; Jacksonville defeated Loyola (New Orlean~J. 11 1·93. NE\V ORLEANS (AP) -There was just the simple announcemenl over the public address system at the New Orleans Fair Grounds that a $2 bet had just paid off $25.527. They had to announce il over the loudspeaker because they can't fit a sum like $25,257 into the flashing ligh ts on the tote board. The collective gasp rrom the crowd or 7,000 was a mixture of astonishment. delight and envy. "I was so shocked all I could thin k :\bout was gelling home ," said Calvin McManus . a 2l·year-0ld Navy veteran of \1ielnam who now \~·orks as a bus boy in a New Orleans restaurant. He held the winning ticket Monday. McManus, v.·earing a floppy hat left over from his Navy days, arrived at lhe horse race track "v.'ith only $10 to bel and that $2 on the txacta was my first bet of the day." The first exacta was the fourth race . To win an exacta. the better must pick the winner and runnerup. Mc,..1anus y,·as the only one al the track who managed to turn that trick in the fourth race. For one thing, Mae W. S .. the horse he picked lo v.·in. was such a long shot she paid $281.60. The horse he chose lor second, McLal11 Looks Ahead Problems Are Bye-bye, Says Ex-Tiger B,ad Boy DETROIT 1AP) -Denny 1.1cLain, the former troubled and troublesome De· troil Tiger. predicts "a lot of fun·• this season with hi.~ ne\v baseball family, the Washington Senators. ··Baseball's going to be a lot of fun in \\'ashington . I lost a lot of enthusiasm and all m~· stuff last yea r with the problcn1s. NO\\" it 's bye·bye, all gonC'." McLai n said Monday night on his fir st \•isit to Detroit since his trade to lhe Senators last October. The erstv.•hilc pitching ace who brought the Tigers 31 victories In 196ll . was in Detroit opening a one·week stanf\ of organ playing. singing and cutting quips at a niAhlclub. Last year he set a baseball record , being suspended three times in one season for alleged gambling activilies and drenching tv.·o Dttroit sports1l'riters with buckets of ice 1\•aler. Some persons credited him with reducing team morale to an all·time low. "Basically you never complete ly forg et the past. f'\ot only the b11d lhtngs but the good ones happened here . You goof up and you win games. Now I've got to think about tomorrow and that's what rm doing and I reel good about it. '"It's all baseball this season. It alway! hal been but last year the guy gave me a !!plit season and I didn't Uke it," ~fc Lain said, rercrring to suspen~ions lmpo5'd by Baseball Commissioner Bov.·ie Kuh n that allowed hlm to pl11y only ~ games. His finances were in such a mess last year he had to file for bankruptcy, but no\v a Cleveland firm is handling his money and "they know mort about it than I do." Reluctant to discuss business ve ntures he's into now , McLain did disclose he's "finaliziog·• a deal to moderate a radio show on a \Vashi nglon station. "not all sports. some thing open.ended , with gursts. ·• He described himself as in "pretty good shape " and ready to report for spring training in Florida next week . His night club act appe ared to be R first -night success amoni:t the 80 or so persons who bucked snow and cold to get to the 340-pcrson capacity 24 Karat Club on Telegraph Road. Only one Tiger teammate, forn1er pitcher-now bu sinessman Joe Sparma. was noted in the audience. Dressed in a sports jacket and blue.striped shirt open at the neck and backed by an instrument quartet. f\1rLain swings into a couple of upbeat numbers on the organ. then tells a rew storiC'~ about his baseball career. sings a little and gives ~nvay autographed baseballs to people \\·ho name a song he can't play. ~le won that game, giving up three balls in nine plays. He also won a game where he says he'll buy drinks for the ho use if somebody p:uesscs the names or two song~ he plays. Nobody guessed "The Lull aby of the Leaves" and "California My \Vay." Dri print, hadn 't inspired much confidence either , paying $17.40. The e<i mbination was 11 and l. The exacta payoff was a rectird for horse tracks in North America. The previous high was $9,224 last Nov. l ~ al Lincoln Downs. Arter a conference V.'ilh his family, f\1cManus returned to the track to pick up his check and sign the W·2 rorm which an alert U.S. Internal Revenue Service provides for jill mutuel winners. "Il's the lirst time I've eve r won 1 big amount like this." he said . "l don 't thin k I'll be back for a \1:h!le. Maybe I will go back lo school.." All .. \111111 '•tH •1M lt11t T11m w·I "''· r .. m w-1 "''· 1 UClA f11l 1•1 74' 11. N. C1ro!l"1 1).J 14j 1 M1rQ't ntl'1l 11-4 1•1 17 Dvci...-.nt u., ll) J use u-1 1'7 11 l1S111t u .. , u •. P1t1n•ylvA"I' 11-0 ,,., II. r.......... ..... 7S J. IC1nu1 Ot l•I Jn JS. H-IDn 11.J 7l 6 Jt <01ot1vl!lf IS-1 .JtJ 1•. MklllO•" U·• 60 1. W Ke<tl11<~r IJ.J J!J 11. MUrfAV Sltlt IS-2 JS I lttnlu<:-Y lS.l 300 11. Vlllt rov• U·I jll ' No!r• Dim. 11.s llO lt. Ullh Sr.re ll-• 44 lC S. (trf>Un1 U·4 Hot l'G. Fordhtm l•I 3' UnllH ~r ... '"''"'''""'! JU"~""' Tt•m •.• ""· TMm •·I ""· I. UClA (11) 16·1 ll2 11 N. Ct•Olint ll-l l7 2. M1r<1't1t1noJ 11-4 :IOJ 12. Mklli~•n !11 n .4 J7 l. USC (0 1•1 771 11. Du'lvt•"t TS-2 17 I. p..,"•rl.-1nlt 11·0 lll h . Fordll1m U·I 16 J. K1"'"' C1l 1•1 10.J U. l t51111 IS-2 14 •. J1t-1on¥lllt U-1 U6 Tt.,.,tlltt JI-£ 14 1. W. l\1t1tu<:~y lS.J II 17. Ha11JIOI! ll·l t I l('":uc~v ,._, •1 Or!O!ln 11-• t '· 5. (1rolln1 ll., JS ll!lnol1 10..• ' !~. No•<' Otmt 11 S lit M. Lou11vlll1 IS.• 7 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ JOHN HUMMER OF BUFFALO HAS BEST SEAT I~ HOUSE. E1rl Monroe of Bal timore Goes Around Him to 819 Loose Ball. !\icLain, who once called himscU •·Peck's bad boy " and adml!s to posstlil· ing a hiRhly flamn1a ble temper, di~miFset some predictions that he 'll wind up In an irreconcilable personality clash wilh Senators' manager Trd \V 111 i a m s , likewise famed for a low bolling point !ind who once spat at a baseba ll fa n who of(ended him . Satchel Paige Enshrined "I don'J expect any trouble v.•\lh Ted ... u long as he lialen1," PifcLaln joktd In his niRht club acl. Lalcr he 11ld . "Right after I got to Washington we Nid a long two-hour t1lk one night and we Just don't expect any dlHicult ies. He didn 't give me any particular advi(.'C or rules. \Vt just talked and we get along rettl wtll." As for the Ti~flrli:. "I'd he ghid to come b11ck If I 1''.!1~ tr11drd but baseba11·11 the kind of bu~incss whtre you go whero the y tt!:ll you to go." Hl.!i futurt looks gnocl, ~tcLain said NE\V YORK (A Pl -Satchel Paige, lhe ageless pitching marvel iA'ho threw his last maj or league curve \vhen he was 59, was voted into ba seball·s Hall of Fame today in a special category designed to honor the out.standing stars of the Negro leagues. Paige beca me the first player to be selected by a special JO.man commlltcr formed only last week lo 1clert oldtlme blark pl ayers "as pAr l of a new exhibit cnm1ntm!"lr111in,i: the contributions of the Negro Ba seball Leagues." Palgl'. who does not qunhfy for enshrlntml'nt In the H111l of Fame through normal channels beeause he did not pla y the requ ired 10 years in the m11jors. barnstormed !or years v.·ith con· sidC'rable 1uccess against major league stars while his color prevented his playing in lhe big leagues. Paige finally reached the major$ in 1948. nne ye11r 11rter Jackie Robinson broke the color line . and compiled a 23-31 m11:jor league record \\"hill' pitching rnr Cleveland. !ht' St. Louis Brown~. 11nd l\11nsas Ci!y. Bui P11tge CAl'\'td his sprc1al n1rhe In rhe Negro lt&IUl?S. He ~tarted hls career in 1926 with the Chattanooga Black Lookout! i nd before he wu finish· ed playing wilh the Kansas City Monarchs his 11.chJevemen ts wert 11 much legend as fact. Paige Is supposed to be older thin h~ Admits. bul he cl aims he \l\'IS born Jn 1906. \\•hich would makt him 65 today. Th<1l wou ld also mt an he last pitched in the m11Jjors wllh K1nsas Cit)' in 1965, 111 Age ~9. But there art ma ny who l'iA\" he was older . The Atl<1nla Br1vcs activated Paige n ~ a coach la:ist year 11n that ht could qu11Hfy to partiripate In the five-year ptnsion plan. The famed zone press, which helped UCLA win the firat two of Its 1.IJ: nationaJ titles. waa not used against USC Saturday and Wooden said : "We haven 't been usinf the z.one press ~xceplionally well. But USC ha.s very fine dribblers in Layton and Paul Westphal. guards who cart-handle the ball well and help each other out if one of them 1ets trapped. We felt it better not to use it -on the road. At home, we might use it." Warriors Boss May Forfeit To SuperSonics SAN FRANCISCO I AP ) -The Seatt le SuperSorticA say they will be at the Cow Palace Wednesday night to play the San Francisco Warriors, whose owner, Franklin Mieuli, hts threatened to refuse to let his team play. Mieuli said on a television Interview in Los Angeles Monday night after the \Varriors' Joss to the Lakers that he v.·as "seriously considering"' keeping his club off the court \Vednesday to protest Seat tle's signing of Spencer Haywood in defi ance of National Basketball Association rules. Mieull didn't attend a Warriors Booster Luncheon here Monda y \\>'here his threat was the main topic of co nversation. "Most of those at the luncheon thought the bearded boa rd chairman would decide to let his team play rather than rtsk a forfeit Joss that might co~ the Warriors a place in the NBA playoffs. San Francisco player-coach Al Attl es 1aid he hadn"t talked with Mieuli 1bout a poiisi ble forfeit. "\\'e wo uld like In play," Attles 1aid. "Of course, Mr. Mieuli dots sign our paychecks.'' Seattle owner Sam Schulman said or Mieuli: "We·n be there to play no matter wha t he does. Of course, nothing he does surprise~ me . In New York. NBA commissioner Wtlter Kennedy said Mieuli "hasn 't been in c.ontact with me. although I e1pect he 'JI notify me or his lntt!:nttons. There Is certain1y no prtcedent for this type of forfeit. .. A vi.siti ng team forfeits S5,000 klr 11 no-show under NBA rulea, but there Is no rule coveriltg a home club'1 refusal to play. The NBA hokls that Haywood, who jumped to Seattle from the American Bt1.sketball As1ociallon'! Denver Rockets this year, is ineligible. They cite two reasons -his college cla1s doesn't graduate until June •nd he didn 't 10 through the Je1gut!: draft. The 'Sonics obtained a tem pora ry court order re1tr1 inlng the NBA from preven- ting Haywood fro m playi ng. A hearing on rhat injunction is 1chetluled for FMday In the 9th U.S. Circuit Caurt of Appeal here. Alworth ·suit Out SAN DIEGO lA PJ -Linet Alworlh s•ys he ls 1tayinf in professional f00tb11l wllh the San Diego Chargers and drop- ping hi1 ~.&-milllon 1uft agt lnst the Nation11l Football Lt•gue team. A 1et· tlemen t. he s•y~. met his demllWla •·mort or !tu half w1~ ... Alt\'Orth, I th rte-Umt!: all-pro rtct1ver. s11y1 he 's 11AO forgtttln.i tn Antitrust suit against lhe NF'L •nd fl~ H te1m1. "Footb•ll hJs bctn my lift." he told • ne"'~ confererrc:e ~fond11y nl1ht. ''I rame to !he decis ion lhRt I wanted lo be remembered II\ • dArn a:ooct foot.- b•ll player rather than a 1uy who sued football." Oilers Dropped To 8th Verbum Dei (19-1), Compton (22.0), 'and Cresctnta Valley ' (20-0) continue to set the' pace in the CIF Class AAAA basketball ratings today with Huntington Beach the lone Orange County outfit rated ·.&mong the +A elite 10. I Huntington, upset loser to Westminster Friday, slipped from sixth to eighth in the poll . Two of the top three quintets face. stem tests today with Compton at Warren a n d erescenta Valley risking its perfect mark at Pasadena I-Ugh. The latter game is to start at 5 p.m. while the other Js an afternoon tiff. Pasadena ranks fourth in the poll with a 16-4 record and \Varren is seventh with an 18-6 mark having.Jost twice to Compton.' The ClF's third unbeaten . .power is West Covina and the Spartans continue to pace AAA rankiags after knocking ~ · • I Dff potent Los Altos, 71-65. Los Altos had been rated SUNSET LEAGUE SURVIVAL CLASH -That's $e~ond in the Poll and its \Vbat's happening tonight \\/hen host Marina (8·2) f>nly two losses in 2l games and Newport Harbor (9-1) collide in a 7 o'clock over Marina earlier are Newport's Jim Swick (53) and Bill Ate.Kinney. Marina piayers are Andy Thurm (12), Jeff Butt t22) and Deall Bogdan (42). thls season have bei!n at the basketball game. Shown here in Ne\vport's 60·57 win bands of the Spartans. Pacifica of Garden Grove Is Orange County's only team in the 3-A rankings, hold ing seventh place with its l~ record. l(ey Irvine Games Tonight In Struggle for 2nd Place Troy Nb. I In County Cage Poll An incredible wave of upsets occurred throughout Orange County On the prep baskelball scene last week with seven of lhe top 10 ran ked quin tets suffering setbacks. Th! major item of the week was No. 1 rated Huntington Beach's shocking 10ss to Sunset League ri va l Westminster, a team beaten 13 times during the se·ason . · In all, the four top teams fn last week 's ofncial poll as selected by the 0 A I LY F1JJ,ar, were stunned Vo'ith losses. La ijabra (No. 2) fell again to Troy, Kalella was whipped by Orange and Mater Oei Jost to Servile. Troy, sixth last w e e k , jumped into the first position with a shaky two-point margin over Garden Gro ve League toughie Pacifica wh ile Hun· tington Beach fell to sixth on the list. · Major confrontations tonight include twlatina's meeting with No. a Newport Harbor in the Sunset circuit while Orange and host Villa Park collide in a Crestview League crucial. Servite is also in a tough The second place spot in the Irvine League is still up for grabs with t~ee Orange Coast area teams involved in a pair of key basketball games tonight which CQuld go a long way towards dete rmining the loop's runnerup and second CJF AAA playoff represen- tative behind pacesetting Los Alamitos. Four aggregations are cur· rently knotted for second place with S-5 marks and they'll all be featured in head· to-head combat in tonigbl"s hostilities. All games tip off at 1 o'clock. Tv•o of the four-th6 Foun- tain Valley Barons and the Costa Mesa Mustangs-clash at fl.fesa while Coi'ona del Ma r's Sea Kings travel north to encounter the .l\1agnolia Sentinels to fill out the hot and heavy warfare for the seeond position . other Irvine matchups find Edison's Chargers (4-6)·at tos Alam itos and Santa Ana Valley hosting the Estancia Eagles in a game pitting 4-6 teams against each other. Costa ~tesa coach Emil Neeme likes to think hi s ~fustangs can get a Neeme· coached unit into the playoffs for the first time. But he'd rather have more breathing room to think about suc h a juicy propOsition. "I don't care what the margin is in our remaining games, as long as "'e win them." Neeme emphasizes. "l think Fountain Valley will play its regular game and will not slow the ball down. It 's hard for a learn like them (lhe Barons are normally a run-and·gun outfit a 1 on g Mesa's lines) to slow it down .'' Neeme boasts a weapon he didn't have in the fir st round when Fountain V a 11 e y prevailed, 80-70 ~2 Scott Friested. The talented Friested has popped thrOugh 31 points in the ~fustangs' last two con· fests (both wins) and offers the Barons a large problem one, meeting host Bishop ,.11,., • ,, ,.,. A. t J, l(eVfl, SA V•Jln 10 j31 2J.I ma . '· Oo-tHI, E11•11C . 10 u 21.J Thursday's agenda lncludeii J. ou1"~· Lo• A11,.,i11 10 :xi• :xi,1_.•, • •, 11.ktlle. M"l>llH• 10 ll! Huntington Beach at Marina s. s-•·•· Mlono••• 10 l'l > ·! S 4. M•Lt•"• °'II Mne 10 ' I•. and La Habra at avanna 1. Grrosbv. coSM 1,0 \!', 'l·' h • I t. SemoSOI\. Cosl1 Mn• I '-' <Free\\·ay Le3gue) w 1 e •· 01~n. sA v111~v lo ,•j,J 12.j 1 10. H. Moo,.., E1t1ncl1 11 '-1ater Dei meets Ang e us----~-------· League leader Bishop Amat Saturday .in a televised game from Los Altos High. Marina 's rejuvenated Vik· fngs. who have bounced in and rut of the top IO con· sistently, art rated third, but must face the challenge o( Huntington B e a ch and Newport in • span of three. days. COUNTY TOP II Place Tfflm Point~ 1. Troy ( 16-11 43 2. P;icifica flf>.4) 41 3. ~1arlna (17~) • 39 4. La Habra (17-31 36 5. Villa Park (1~) ~ 6. Huntington Beach (17·4)34 7. Strvite (17·3) 17 I. Newport Harbor (13-7) 14 9. Mater Del OH) II 10. KaJtlla (16-61 ; ' Clan Wi1111er Bob Small of Costa J\1esa \Von the C stock automatic title at Sun· day's Wlnternationals drag classic in Pomona. to go along with such poten· tially explosive scorers as 6-3 Doug MacLean i l4.7), 6-1 To1n Sampson (12.7) and 5-11 Chuck Br idges (ll.1 ). Coach Dave Brown's Baron live counters "'ith a three. guard offense geared around 5-7 George Gerber, v.· it h Gerber's 5-9 brother Pete and 6-1 Rick Power also seeing plenty of ball-handling ac- tivity. Power (II.I ) and 6 -2 forward Ken Shibata (10.7) have accounted for much of the Fountain Valley scoring punch with the shorter Gerber producing points at a 9.8 clip. Corona mentor Tandy Gillis kno\\'S l\1agnolia is one of the loop"s most physical outfits and sees victo ry as a possi bility only. ''if we do a bette r job on the offensive boards.'' Juniors l\1ike Sevier (6-4) and John Sumner \&3) are the Sea Kings' main boa rd hopes \Vhllc &2 Mark Grigsby li3.I! is a scoring threal. Although they all have ~-f\ marks. 8dison, SA Valley and Estancia are all st i 11 mathematically alive for the second playoff spoL so anything still goes in the cardiac ward kn own as the lrvine Leagu e. Area Swinimers Shine In CIF Relays Prelims LONG BEACH -Corona del Mar was sched uled to be the looe Orange Coast area representative in today's se- cond day or preliminaries at the CJF Swim Relays at the Belmont Plaza Pool. Action was slated to get und er way at 2:30 p.m. In Monday's first hal( of prelim qualifying . seven other area schools fought for quali- fying spots in Thursday 's finals at the same location. Estancia 's Eagles and the Costa Mesa Mustangs each tentatively earned f i n a I s • berths in five dilferent events "'hile l\farina and Newport Harbor each garnered a trio of tentative fina ls' spot.! to lead area swimmers in lhe varsity division. Costa Mesa, Marina and Newport shared the area Ike leadership after M o n d a y ' s prelims "'ith four spots apiece while '-1arina ~·as the Cee pacesetter with six posslble qualifying slots. , Marina appea rs to have a strong shol at the Cee title on Thursday. Here are Monday 's best times among area teams : \1'1nlty • X 100 llld1vldu•l f'"H lev -Ell111<l1 (Wfb1t1r, 1(1nf, lll•lltrrn111, Wtlltr) •:GS.6, C011• Mnt 15-1 .. lt!, Y1rwvod. fllWr. 111'"0 •:20.0, Fou111trn V•lltl' CNOllt, l1mm1rs. B.efl1"I, Wtlltrllekl) •:tt.•. ' X 50 free ... 11v -Cost1 Mn 1 IMlsloottk. Mt AMtifl', Wei dell ell. Cl rl't'lltr, Jta11, &e1I) 1:U.2, E1l1ncl1 CWelnltr. Zl'lf'!tl. Wtllt!•, S1una.t1, ll:tnl. Bl1l!erm1nl 7:1J.•, &:dhon (Wurl!••· WtSI, WllllOI!. H ........ Pt~I. Br1u"l 1: Jl.l. • X 50 b•e11t •el•~ -c0111 'MY CSllOl"llgll, Y1rwood, llldtt ... Ron) ):06,l. M1rl111 I F 1 b' 'n, ... ,,.,,,._, F1rr•ll. i"ll'dY) 7;01 •. O )( JO It. ''!IY -New!Hl•I l"11•b6t- CGrH•, Wiilie, F1rr1r, A1/le) t " 1. Ml<IJll (l"IOOPl, ihl11•!<.1, FI I~•, MOllOWIYI l;lf.4. 4 )I 50 bi<k rei. .. -ElllM11 rei.tt1rr1W111. ic1 .. 10t, Wttti•"'· ic:111•1 '"'"·'· • )I( 100 frtl rtltv -NewPOrt Htrtlor (Grttr, 81tc.1t1111r . F1rrer, AMtl S:U.1. Elll!l(.11 tS.llfldlf1. t-111, ~IC.tlv", Lltllll) l:•.1. CO.I• Mtll (8111, Ctfll911i.i", 0 '8rlt"• Yu·WOOd) J:50.4. t X 50 rn.ti.. rtl1v -M1rl"1 I~ Wltll11t11, Mollew•y, Fl~> ''•1.5, CO.ti Mn• fMl1lollll:, ~111, W110e!ktl, MCAr>t,...,I 1 ~41.1, E1t111ci• 111:1.,.tbt, W1lltr, P1tr!111, S.111161r1! l:olt.O, H,,_I H1rtlool'" tCll•tllOn, Wlliltt. ........ Grttrl l ;I0,4. Fov1111l11 Vllllr /Wt•~rf'"'· B,.,11111. No111. L~mtrll l :U.1, EOlllOA 4Br11111. W11t, Wul"lltr. H••"tY/ l ;St,o. '" ' • 100 lttdfvldl/1! 'l'lf<lltv -New110t1 Htrbo• CIU!llfll•· Wt ll. W1l<011.. Sml!ll) •:11.0, W11rml~111r (B~rvovnt. l'111111n1. 1"111HOr, YO\ml! 4.1,.t I ~ j(I lrtf •tl•v-~1rln1 IC1rdlne1, °"""'· o·c:-u. ,,,~,.,..,.,., M1!1t1v. M. P•IMt l l ;Jl.J. C011t Mt tt !B •ou, Wlllll'l, Mt""tm. Al,.,,, $<1111''· M t r k I b 11 r y) 1.U.O, Ellll\C!I {im1!IWOOd, T&-lffld. Hyt , :knoor, Wrlfl\I. Jol\MOll) l ;Ml.l. • _., JO D,.._,, O"Tlt1 -M,..ll0'1 Ht•"°' !kftllti, Ll1111 .. th, IC.!lnt•n1mllft. IHllnuJ J:U.o. FOllflll lfl v • t It 1 t8row11f, McCtrtllv, McA01m11. Brow"l 1:11.t, Coll~ Melt ~M1r1<.seurJ. 81.111• tenburf, srov1r. s..urer1 7: 19.1, Mirr .... tO'ConMll, FI r g u 1o11, F.tlft"kf'llll, Dun"I 1:21 .6, 6 )I SO Uy relll~ -Newl'O•! H1rDOr IL!mtroth, Wiii, BHl/1101, 11.olH•ISOl'll 1;57.0, Wrstml•ultr !Yount. He~r. PhllllP1, 8u•!IOVM) l·Sl.l. M1rl"• fGllf!ller. D'Co"nel!, F •II re" k r u f , D1"!1i.) 1:51.6. ' X SO b•tk rrl1v -Fou11!1l" "ll1llev !J1ckson, Brow", Wlflm1n, Mtit.damd ):Gl.S. ' )I 100 lree rel1Y -Co,11 Mell tB. II.ass, Sauler, M1rron, w1lttrsl, E111tntl~ (Smtl/woa<t, W r I g h I, Town..,11<1, NYel 1:51.9. ' )I 50 f'"flllf\' rfltV -t.f~WPO•! HarbOr (Witco~, Smllll, w 1 I 1,. Rober!~onl !'SJ.I, We1tm!n•1er (Youn9, W. P!1111iP1. 8Utflll'llf, Atkln1) l :!J~, t111rl"1 CPrlme, Oun", Otnlels. M111ey1 1 ~19.S. E1!111tl1t (Tow"stl>ll, Joi'"'°"• W•lflll. Smellwooa) 7:07.1. Co111 Mesa ta. Ross, srovt•. o. M1rklbur'\', WtU•r•) l:OJ.1. '" ' .-100 fndlYldual mflllev -M1rln1 IS<:hlll11, Febl•"· l!ock. t11rdvl ''l•.1. Edl1on lBlldrl1, Ood<l1, Hr"~' Bukolll t ·Jl.I, Fo1mt1ln Valley (0.:llsner. l lv, llltl , 5htilOI!) f·JSO, Co1l1 M11a !P~nt11eo11. MtAoenrv, D. Lund. l OtnPkinll 1·)7 0. 6 )( SO lff'e t fllY -"lfW!>Ofl H1rbor lF1rmer. Ftlchlm1nn, Bu,, K•nVOf>, Orla'AUt. Gl11ler) 2:1.1 t, EdlJon (Dodd•. MUhlh•u•u , Pi<kforo. Hin••· Mt•cum. MtCow11J 1 tt '· We'1mi"tllr CP/l/1tiP1. Saut. Slltlla,.,, H11b!11. Jue<1e1, lra11tlt1ml ) J,.D, El!""tia COeR11Ha, Swt111oem, lllO"'A~. Rlddt!l, k11\del, ICl"lll )·S6.I, Mori"" l>oi1ll11llcli., ll.olr1rnel, Wolt~. 1-1arrl•011. Wi119~r, 8•11..,,.y\ 1 J& 1 • )I so b1t.... •tlAV -M•rln .. Cl'1bl111, Arm•tron9, Fo•rtll, H•rdv~ 7·11 6. 4 )I .SO fly rel1y -M1rln1 IHooos. ~11lo11k1, Fiiis, Hollow1vl 1:51 i. CO•la Mtl• llt~•lon, McAl1f'MY. II:. WMl · more, E. Lun4) l:Sol.S. Newoort HArbor !kt11Y<111, Smlr~. ll."111, Fr101.m11~J !·SJ.•, FOUl!l•I" V1U1Y rz1~. Rite. Siie/ion, Othsntr! 7:0J,•. • X 50 b1ck rtllY -Ntwoo•I H1rbor I01!11avt, Sc~m1<11. B•rrrtt, R"1nl l:st.4, Merl111 CScl"lolt1. !loci;, A•m1!rong, Rolllflll ):01.t, EillriCI• (W1lnttr, 01v! .. 5w1111011. Otrui~al 1:01.t. • X 100 lrft r1t1v -""'""'°'' H1rbol' 4 Farr.ttr. G1t11t!r, Delt1<1ut. F'ltl'lt!'l'llnnl J:6 .,, Mlrln. CRolllnl. Scholf1, 11:111•, Flnntvl J:•.o. Co•!a Ml•I tE:. Lund, Holllfter, D. Lufld. B11!11•l J:Sl.t. • )( .SO mtdltv ttlll' -olo'•''"' tRol!ln,, Harav. ic1,... For>lll!yl 1·5l 1, (011• Mesa (Fllr"'lf'f, Pe11torco1I, R Wlll!more. L1,,..ll0t1l lrS) 1. Edi10" !P!c~!ord, Bucirh, Bu~ou. M<Cow11j 1 s• o Fou""'" V111ry !Wooa•u•t. ~l\fllon. Dc~111er. l,.) 1 0• •· Es!AM1f !Wtb•ler. Ztwav•. DAv... GllrO~) l .OJi,J. Mater Dei Battles Pius DOWNEY -~tater Dei High'a Angelus League basket· ball ti tle hopes are on the line 1onight when CQach Jerry T•rd.ie's J\1onarchs meet hmt Plus X. Tipoff is nt 7, ~l ater IJei is tied for .!iL"Cond place "'llh Servite (both 4·l) while Bishop A1nat leads the circuit with a >I mark. In first round action '-1ater Dei 1nanagcd a 41-38 win over Plus. At·ea Mat Results Ba sketball Tuf!.day, ftbruary 9, 1971 OAJLY PILOT J7 Marina, Tars Clash In Sunset Crucial By ROGER CA RLSON 01 "" 0111, .. 1111 ~ ..... A major collision Is on lap tonight in Sunset League basketball warfare w h e n Marina HJgh's Vikings en· tertain Newport }J a r b o r , Tipoff is at 7. hls Vile.es can shoot down the Sailors and here's why: ''We've played ekcellent ball on our floor. In fa~ we 've only lost three times here in lhe two years I've been the coach at Marina. "And we're coming off one of our very best efforts of the year . (Marina blasted Anaheim, 77-40) Friday . "As for wheo we lost to Newport, well I think most. y,·oold agree lhat lr should have gone: into overtime at Y.'Orst. Maybe the worst thing that happened was when "Wt let them get three cheap ones on the fast break. "We've played aome pretty good fast break ~ and never allowed that." At stake is survival in the race for the cireult croY.'n as Marina, preseason favorite to annex its first-ever Sunset diadem, puts up its 8-2 mark while Newport roll s in y,·ith a 9-1 record, lied for the lead with }luntington Beach. Stinset Rot11adtap Westminster's stunning 72-64 upset win over 11untington Beac h Friday set the stage for tonight 's rematch of first round action which s a w Newport upset Marina. 60-57. a margin that can1e for the most part on an unusual but ae<:urate call by olficials. HB Tries Rehoun_d Against Santa Ana A Marina player called time out in the final three seconds with the SC()re tied at 57 and Marina in possession of !he ball. But there were no timeouts left for the Vikings and a technical foul resulted -wit h Taras Young canning the gratis shot, then adding two meaningless charity throws at the buzzer on a subsequent foul. A loss for either team tonight will s e r i o u ~I y jeopardize title and C I F playofr chances. However , both .'lti!I ha\'e a final crack a! Huntington Beach lefl on their slate. It shapes up as a b::ittle between the league's best defensive unit !Marina has allowed 48.6 per o u lin g ) against the Sailors' offensive setup. which has a 62.9 norm , third best in the circuit. Both teams are at near full strength following a rash of minor ailments during league hostilities. T\vo major question marks ror ~1arina's Vikes are in lhe front line "'ilh the status ol 6·5 Kipp Baird (pulled thigh musc le I and 6-4 Bri an s~nders (also a leg injur)') in the limelight. lluntington Beach Higb 's slightly tarnished 0 11 e r s resume Sunset League basket- ball action tonight , and it's a r1ew ball game for coach Elmer Combs' crew. The Orange and Blaek had mowed down nine straight loop foes and appeared lo be a shcxrin titlist in the senior circuit prior to lts upset loss to \Vestn1inster Friday nigh t. No\v Lhe Oilers f i n d lh emselves ti rd with Ne"·por! llarbor "•ilh a 9-1 mark and hold only a one-game margin over rival r..1urin:i . Tonight they enter the ac· lion as heavy fa vorites again. playing host lo winless Santa Ana. Tipoff is sla ted for 7 o'clock and observers rate Combs' quinlcl as a con- servative ZG-point fav orite. l~owever. the Oilers "'ere also rated head and shoulders over We s tm i nster . and \Yestminster barely got by Santa Ana in first round ac· tion. 45-43. And. a win for Santa Ana at this stage of the season would salvage what has been a bleak ye ar for the Saint!I. Leading lhe Oilers is the pote nt Clne-two punch of high posl Steve Brooks a n d wingman Wes Thomas. Brooks leads the league in scoring from his position with a 21 .0 average and has been in double figures every time during the Oil City's 17-4 overall season. He"s also capable of moving outside with deadly accuracy. giving the Oilers one «if their best pure shooting teams in years . Thomas has been effective fron1 outside, averaging 16.5 per league outing. He ' s aoother Oiler wbo has been in t"·in figures on every league occasion. Added to this t'Ombination is Jo"' p<1st man Jim Worthy. Worthy 's worth has been un- derplayed with Brooks and Thomas firing away. However •• the &2 junior has been • con- sistent figure in the SCQring story. along with his re- bounding prowe.!ls. · The balance of Huntington's allack is made up or guard., Tom Crunk and Garth Wise. the latter the only returning starter from last year's squad. P'l•Ytr t ho t •e 1. BrDQlc1, Hun1ino!on 10 210 11.j 1. Youna. Ntwoorr Ht 1'1 It. l Oun". We1111n 10 lll 111 •. Thorn•~. H11nll1101~" lO 1•5 I'· I llltl Kttm1r, N.H. 10 lSS l Mtl't "hei..,..r, Wm, 10 IU I .J 1. (lie! 81ir<I. Mer. 10 lSl 15.) Slloulh, Ant . 10 1!1 I'-' ' Anller11n, A~I. I' I" l·J lQ, Mllltr, M1rlM 0 14 . Ne"•port also ha s Its pro- blems with playmaker Larry Genlosi a questionable starter because of the nu and for ward Jim Swick having suf- fered a minor sprain in prac- ti ce Saturday. S"·ick is expected lo start but Gentosi's availability is unkno\vn. Diablos, Tritons Slwot For Upset Triumphs As for \vhipping Marina again, Hagey opines : "Defense ls the key to the v:hole thing. We have to con· centrate i;in a helping type defense, lhat ls to go to another man that isn't ours to help out. ··Then everyone else has to shift over to balance it out. It's a matter of shutting on the inside stuff and pressure them.'' H's Stephens' opinion that Lag1u1a Five At Sonora f\1iss ion Viejo }ligh's Diabk>s \\'ere billed as spoilers prior to Friday's upset win over Tustin • , . and that role mlght be on tap again lonight "'hen coach Pat Roberts' up and down basketball team treks to Katella. In other . ac tion involving Orange Coasl area forces in the tough Crestview League, San Clemente is at Tustin. All ga mes are slated for 7 o'clock. Katella's fastbreak Knights. \v ith their full court pressure defensive tactics, found" the going exceptionally tough in the first round encounter wi th Mission Viejo, managing a 46· 45 decision. And tonight's battle figures 1'he Orange League basket. to be of the same mold, \vith ball can1paign is coming to Roberts' team employing the a merciful end for Laguna :do1v down tactics to CQunler Beach lfigh School thi s week Katella's lightning~like aUack. ll comes doY.'n to a con· and for coach Jerry Fa ir and rrontalion b et we c n the his winless Artists. it's pro--league's highest scoring unil bably just as well. 1Katella) with a 75.8 average The junior-studded Ar liSl.!i against Mission Viejo"s No. showed promise i11 the 1defense152.8 per ouling ). r · Coach John Bnker 's TC· preleaguc season. '>P itting a juvenatcd San CI em e n t e 16-game schedule, but loop ac· . . . tivity has produced little to _ Trtlo ns are looking for their third straight win. followi ng victories over Orange and Foolh!ll. the latter in thre1 overtimes. Craig Anderson averaged 2&.S in those two wins. Prep Cage Summaries JUfti9r V1rll1Y Ct•!• M•q, till 1'0 L• .t.111111 ... • .I.re'"' Oil ,: 11!1 LIYIMt1- l:.no1ltY !1,1 .. UO) lllOlf ee.me1 ftlt c In lr:tl,...11\11!1 Nf'llllt !U G It) Ardllbtltll 1-!o"t (1!1 G !15) MYln Scort~, •ubt: Cotti M~I -MI YJ 4 ' f!Oldan 4. LOI Al -Ftl"ll '· , H1Jlllm•: Cot!• M•t1 3', L•• All • mile• J5. ' W•11m111,1tr fU) ttt l l"111ntl"''"' Soulhwl(k 1111 F (U ) w111i.·· Whl!t fl)) F tJ) G1rJ11111 l:Jlt IB) C IU) Cltrtl!I frulJlkl Ill G IHI Axo lsen' Wll~ll 43~ G CJ! Orenlt~ H8 1Ub,. Clt rt flO), t.relt1 {I), A>!\• Iara (0 . WM wbt: Coglll!1 !1), H•rrt•• 4•1. 1"1tllll"1t: Hunl!111t~, Jl.7'. ch eer about. With an G-8 circuli mark, the closest thing to victory has been a six-point loss to Brea. The Artists try again tonight but are up against loop.leading Sonora, at the Raider s' gym. HOLIDAY HOUSE LIQUORS Tipoff is al 6. Sonora has stormed to an 8-0 mark and has clinched no worse than a lie for the crown . ,Jeff Ml'yers Is 21.0 per outing Raiders. averaging for the FREE DELIVERY PHONE 673-9254 2937 E.Coa1t Hwy. Coron1 dol Mii' \ I I I I I • I J It DAil Y PILOT Tutsday, February '· 1~7 1 LEGAL NOTICE l Ella Lee at Laguna Vocal Prohlen1s Mai~ Soprano's Recital By TOM BARLEY Of t1W D&lly Pllltt jletf Soprano Ella Lee did more than enough Sunday afternoon to justify lhe hi&h praise lavished on her in pre- performonce analyses and the notes on her distinguished career furnished by t h e Laguna Beach Co mmunity Concerts As!OC iation. Indeed, two of lhOSe of· ferings -von Weber 's "Ocean. Thou to.I i g h t y 1'1onster '' and the charmingly deJivered ''Liederkreise'' from TV Review Schumann were I n themselves well worth the trip to the La£Una Beach liigh Scbool auditorium. But it was-regrettable. particularly lor Mi51 Lee, that much of her program was marred by what we assumed wa11 a dry throat -a condition that is apt to trouble any singer at any time and one v.·hich is almost always-brave- ly defied by the recital artist. It might have been better, however. for Pt1i!S Lee to state the presence and nature of her malady in the sure kno'A•ledge that !he could call up0n the indulgence of her audience. This act of courtesy invariably smoothes the way for both the artist and the audience and. Incidentally, enables the critic to more fair· ly evuluatc the program. Vocal problems notwithstan- ding, it Is hard to es-cape lhe conclusion that much or f\tlss Lee·s program was not suited to the range or a voice that has been described as "superb" by no less a criti<.: than the New Yorker'• Winthrop S~rgeant higb pra.ise Indeed from Ulis na· t1on ·s finest critic. \\'e saw1 her strength and the force of her delivery in that f!nal von Weber worlc and il is a great pity, from this colurnn·s viewpoint that Y.'e did not hear more of the same -n1uch of her timbre 15 positively Wagnerian and sorne of the lighter material on her program was ill suited to her vocal structure. T\\'O of the songs she gave us 1n the serond half of the program -"\Ve Never Spoke. of Love" and "The Legend of the Jlart" -were not 'Neon Ceiling' Poignant worthy of ~11ss Lee 's un· doubted talents. Come to that, it would be hard to justify their inclusion in programs offered by artists of lesser •1101, l. I. U~-11 NEW YORK IAPI -"The Neon Ceiling." NBC's Monday night "\Vorld P r e m i ere ' ' feature, was far off television 's beaten track, a drama with something to say about human relationships. performances by Gig Young da's "Smith Family" on ABC, stature. as the man and Lee Grant is. in terms of audience ac-A very mixed program by as lhe disturbed woman. ce ptance. the most successful an artist 'vhose voice was not The story, about adults who were immature and seUish and a child who had to assume adult responsibilities too soon. was done with sensitivity and skill. Youngster Denise Nickerson of the midseason entries. It at its best for much of the presented a rem a r k a b le ranked 28th in the new Nielsen afternoon. But. as we say, ,portrait of a very 'old lltlle report. "The New Andy Grif· the quality and caliber were girl. popping bubble gum and fith Show," \\'hile still out of undoubtedly there an d v.·e carrying a stuffed panda 11.•hi!e the hit class, is at least get· have no doubts about what trying lo Ugure out the deta ils ting passing grades, where his "'e would hear from a Miss or grownup relationships. ol d "Headmaster" was [Junk-Lee untroubled by such The result was no cup-out ing. ailmen ts. and a happy ending either.,-'-""'------=~---;;;;;;~~:-------­ It left the man and woman I together and pushed lhe child back into a lonely and hostile world. II told or a distu rbed y,·oman "'ho took her 13-year-old daughter and impulsively ran awny from a cold marriage. Their car breaks down in the desert al a shabby roadside rest run by a gentle, b ee r-drinking individualist. The man takes them in and a strong relationship develops, particularly bet .... ·een the lone- ly child and the understanding man. The story moves lo a pcig- nanl climax with the child, caught up in puppy lov e. finds that a real love affair hes been building between the man and her mother. The story was perfectly fit· led to the small screen, played out by three characters. The re were mo v i n g and s u b t I e These "\\'orld Premiere" fe atures run the gamut from standard whodunits to an oc- casional dramatic standout such as ''My Sv.·eet Charlie" a couple of seasons back. They encounter the same ups and downs in audience favor that are met by reruns of old movies. In the most recent Nielsen ratings, bet"·een Jan. 25 and 31. "City Beneath the Sea." a science fiction effort and pilnt for a projected series. \\'Ound up 62nd on a list of 75 shoy,•s. A couple of weeks earlier. a rip-snortinR murder story landed ·•\\'orld Premier'' tiiRe on the pooolartiy chart, It aµpears that Henry Fon- New NY Play 'lstanbot1l~ Wallows in Mediocritv " By WILLJA:\f GLOVER would be worth close notice. NEW YORK (A Pl -TI1e But then an Owens crudity imminent arrival of Saracen must be spit to break the hordes e n d s •· rstanboul." spell. !hereby s a v in g spectators J\.ladame Despo alone may from being totally bored lo be cautiously admired. Her death by further extension or seven c 0 J I e a g u es are Rochelle Owens' new weirdo-memorable only fo r collcct!ve dran1a. physical and artistic unal · ln the production. v.'h ich tractiveness. made an hour's performance Robert We instein, in a bu rst lime seem forever on Monday of enthusiasm hard to un· night al off·Broad"•ay 's Actors derstand, produced and Playhouse , the priestess of directed. He did hire Robert avant-garde eccentricity ap-parently intends all sorts of U. Taylor to do an unusual horrible parallels bel'A'een !Sth mosa ic-like setting th a t ce ntury Byzantine decadence surpasses all else. M y I 0 "STllNDINT AND PDWllFUL! AITIUI PERR IS A MASTEi!" Ju4itlr. CtUt. N. y, M•1u••t "DNB DF TBE TEAB.'S lD BBSTP' St1ptl1111Canler, ,;_..,._,;.. VllK.nl Canb1, "·'· '"""" Judith CriJt, N.l . ._l•• lab Satma99i, ~-• w _ __. leol'!Onl Harri•. c-11 rv S!•warl 1Cl1in, ... ,,.......H.lY William Well, Co•..,.,;,, Chat In Champlin, 1.A. ''"'" Wall Sl••el Jou,._t DUSTIN HOffM.<\N "Lllllf 816 MAN" EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT STARTS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10th AT BOTH THEATRES Quam's costumes are best and today . f ... .-... o-.. 1.CO ... AW\O -! .. ·'"GJ Beeause. ho'A·ever. of her [--"'~go=--t~. =====================--------===--oy,·n poetic strangulation and a se t of rampantly atrocious performances. Miss Qv.·ens can now only sigh forlornly for the gory glory of "Futz." That pl ay of several seasons ago about a farm boy v.·ho loved a pig was savage, shock· jng satire of some artistic validity. ··1stanboul" wallows with se xual g y m n as t ics and urologic humor t h r o ugh episodes concerned principally v.·ith an Eastern saint who dismen1bers a Norman knight in a moment of hashish ex- cess. Cavorting around this cherry focus arr assorted specimens of s t n s u a I obsession. As the froglike SI. 1\1ary of Egypt. Greek aclre!s Despo -that is her total stage name -occasionally shoy,·s a feeling for fervent characterization that in other circumstances Noh Theater To P erform At Irvine Thr world-famou!-No II 'Thcaler nf Japan v.·111 present two plB)"S in Japanese in Crawford lla\1 al UC Jrvinc at 8:30 p.1n. \Vednesday, The comedy to be prescn\td. ''Boshibari." uses the ordinary conve rsation of the common ~le "·hile the tr1gedy, "Funabenke1," is composed in rh)"me and l! b1'sed on the la nguage of the warriors and aristocracy. The Noh is the oldest the:iter in Japan. Its eos- 1u1ne!"i, masks and instruments- are of great antiqu ity. Tickets to the performanct art $3 for the. general public and SI for tJC I students. They may be obtained from the f'ine Ari s Rox Office. Student Aclivities Ofrice and Tlcketron outlets. E DWARDS l-IARBOR ,,'.~1;.2 Kl•IOI 11~0 Al ""11'>0"' ~I COllA "'ISA ·~-O'.>>J : •DW&~Da ~ : t#,:\ ·t;i i H•AT" .... QI" .. -tot•• ... , .. -... 1'4' ... --·---.. ---. lflt Hi\11:1011: Sl10"1HG C£HllR l!DWARDS HARBOR,:Jt':,1 MAii.Oii •~YD AT W!UOll I f. C:OffA M(IA ..... H 71 I.,. 11100 FWY Ali MacGraw \'Ml. ·. Ryan O'Neal \\ 1 <GP -1;·• COlOR l~.!~.J RICHARD HARRIS· ALEC Gt;l:-;NESS (r8mwell ·c· .. ·-· ....... , ,., . ~·· 1 .... ·~·~· •• '"~·· ••• .0 f!•M'"•l•·••1••'-<' " MWTS.19fi -__ ...__.e-.. -·-~ PlUS-lll ia1 Geahl I•" 0 (" ELLIOTT GOULD ,,., DA\llfll WO.I'!•_,,.. "I LOVE MY ••• WIFE" .... ot ............ '11(~· ;g. PIUS lloWI fttdford """Tlll TKEM WILlll IOT IS Mlll" IO¥W AflD Olllllt S11IAnGllS CIC. YOUNG • ANN JACKSON CRC COLOR (BJ «J)i ~:h~:The Baby Maker' Jason Robards· Katharine Ross I~ AlSO-BARBARA HERSHEY IN "THE BABYMA.KER'" T~r)day, F~bruary 9 1971 DAJL V PILOT {9 Theater Notes . ltfovles Dis Thl11g 'Anything Goes' at Laguna Mgre/Grammies for Hank? By TO~f TITUS 01 ,,.. o.u, f'lllf $1•11 f'rom the tuneful nostalgia of Cole Porter to the brooding morbidity of Samuel Beckett -that's the variety of living theater openings being offered this week along the Orange Coast. The Porter production is .. Anything Goes," being rev iv· cd tonight for a three-week engagement at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Beckett 's offering follows on 'Vednesda y '~hen "Endgame" goes on !itage for four days only at UC Irvine. The new arrivals j o i n doubleheaders in both llun- tington Beach and Long Beach and South Coast Repertory's own twin bill which winds up in part this weekend. "Anything Goes" is a thro1rback to the 1930s. set aboard a luxury liner en1"9ute from New York to London and replete y,·jth oddball in· trigue and merry masquerade. Irvin Kimber is handling the baton along ll'ith directing the shov.·. y,•hiie Alice Lomas is lhe choreographer. Taking the role of lhe night club queen Reno Sweeny, TV · DAltY tOG Tuesday Evening FEBRUARY 9 1:001J I la Ntw• Je111 Dunphy. b II.Nit Ne .. rtlcl Tom Snyder. 0 Th• Alltn Show 0 Six O'Clod: Morie: "The Sr1al Slc4i1 Muucrt" (wei!trn) '65 - Jo$1ph Cott1n, Julie Somm111, Dlf· 11n McGarin. Q Didi VIA rfrkt m n. Fllnt:miiu tD @ Cil Stir Tr•• ID Art Studio "Clay Sculpl1111.~ 9 Ci) Nnn/Wlltlltr f Sportii m Fbhtr F11111ty m lfotititro 34 m laltncla Jn the S1111 CI1) LI H11r1 Ftrnllilf con CGnK11lo QIKPLM ,..,. 1:15 ED CUrllo'• Ptd 1:30 0 C.ndld ea... m The FIJ!nr Nan fH (})NBC Nen m HodlfPOd11 Led11 Qt(j]C8$,_ @E)Slltdld fll111/Musiail1 fD The Dtstrt Rt!>Orl a!) Lai Ol¥ld1dos &) AIC News -' m Dlwid Frast Siio• Jae• Patanct, Reaina Resnik, Turt1y Ritll1rds. Pt\8' Ba1rt1, Rich.ltd St1mmon. Ben Wa llenbera. Mis. Betit lowl· ••• CD FtlQny S11u1d fD I Jff<i!i I Thty Call M1 lfamu An optomistlc lllm •bout r1tt1ded children. EID Patllrt lot l.Nint €D LI CriRI l itn Critd• t:oo o in rn m Nae Tllldlr 1i1ov1t.: "The Proctucen" (comldy) '67 - Zero Most.ti, G1n1 Wildtr, U1 Mer" dith. A oM:t-succusful Broedw11 p1Qducer sets out to sltil 1 aur•· lift 1\011 fer !ht fin1nci1I 1dvan· lliU i!l'tOIYtd. 0 1111 Fuittivt ID I SJ1c1li I World ti l11 uty Rast BClw1 and P1r1d1 Quttns, modtls, latest fashions tnd dtn!:'S. m me Mwoettts @Il)Ch1ll1111 ED La t.ollltltltdon €l:)Nlbdul t:JO IJ 9 (I) All hr tllt Ftmily Cir· roll O'Connor, Je111 SUplel1tn, Rob Reiner. Sally Stn1th111, Archie linds out Glori• Is tolnr to h1v1 1 b1by and his aon.Jn-law h11 llO me1ns or suppcrtina th• child. O C.11did C.mer• €:) Musiaile f P1stor'1 Dtik a> c.d1111 de Anrustils 1:00 U CIS E'ltlllnr Nm 10:00 I) lHXT Reports '1111 Anonymous 0 a) NIC Nlcftlly flltn Mr. Hu11les." All ln-d1pth Vlm!n· 1\ion of the fabled ureer of mll-0 Wllifi Mr li!M? tion1ir1 How11d Hu1llu. m @CD l L"' l"7 0 FAST HALF-HOUR NOW! 111-ID CIJ T-_, ,_, *BIG 5 NEWS! COMPLETE! s..n." Oli15Nen fDTllt TurMll t11 W• "S11 Wll•t o .. Stand Up And Cheer'' We Fnl-Not Wh•t W1 Our!>t to *A Chevrolet Special ,,,,• Johnny Mann, Henry Qfl (])TM!I or to11111111nw Fonda, Ptarl Bailey m Qirbt th• l.Mnt Worf 0 (IE CV m I IPICIAL I Stand Up Im Jlot1rlt and c11 .. r A muilail sa lutt to <:Ii) Slmpl11111nte M1ri1 Americ1 1t1rrfor Joll9n1 Mann and tii) Mft'l1 S111e the Johnny Minn Sin11r1 with spec· ial autsl st•rs Hl'llrf Fond• 1nd 1:30 I) IS (I) levtrly Hl1lblllit1 Gr•n· Peul Balley. ny t nd Jant tll!h1w1y d!SJu\11 themselves 11 J1p1nut u rvlnr alrts. 0 luter W1«1 Ntw1 D eI'I Julie "Strictly lortht Blrdi." m Nm Geor.1:1 Plltn1m. Jull1 1nd 1011 Corty ll1ht to kMp Q) QUiit tor AIMltm a hOme for birds in e Int. Ell) Kip Sdlool: l'Tlbltllt 111d Pa1- 0 V-11ti11il 'rah111 SftM Ev1 G1-s!bllltlu "SchoGls Wllllout F1llu11." bor. Jahn Saxon, John Mtrtwofth fS (j) Fi111 feltllrt and Or. Ltn6on Smttl'I 1uesl EIJ [lo.Jl,.MI 0 (itl CIJ a) Tiii Mod Squad\ CI1) futivel Mnicant "Sulftr, Little Children." Tilt s11uad, 11nd11awtr, ht\ps 1 mln!sttJ find lO:lO fJ 5 (J) C8S Naws Sptcitl "Ne,. the t11rt1 ol his brolhu, • psy.f VDiw in lht South." A lrlo~ •I tholalil'l who ran • tllnic for tour newly elected southern rov- troub!1d )Olln1sl11s.. 1rnors who are toMidend la be rJ MJJ1lon $ Mowit: "ltt1use rac!1lly moderate. 'fou're Mini" (mUJiai1) '52-M11io O Movie: ''Thi S~specf' (myst1ry) Lll\ll, J1m11 Wtlllmort. '45--Charles Uu1h1on, Elli R1lnu. m Ttvtll Of Co111tqutncu ID Bill Johns Nm &J h Tal;t1 1 Tll1tf EI! lnetrtklainl>R m ClnlTlll 30 aJ LI Du1111 1:55 <:Ii) Cu..tion cl• S.rundos """ u a (jJ m ,.., O IDCll!ll- Ol!lNM fJ Movlt: "Mid Dor Coll" (d,.m1) '61-John Cllandlet, ltaJ Doubl1d1y. m Movie: "Herter Hottl" (horror) 'liJ-Dennls Lo1is. Bell• St. John. orlginalt:d by Ethel Merman, is Blanche Mickelson in he.r r ourth Laguna mustcaL Robert Engman, anothe r f a m i J i a r figure at Laguna, plays the comic gangster Moonface. Others 1n the cast include Elaine Flshbach, Bill Powell, Tom Sieber, Lana I 'Valker, Olive Riches, Joe Wilson, Diana Stagner, Debbie Earl and Elinor Baggett. "Anything Goes" will play Tuesday• through Saturdays for three weeks, winding up Feb. rt at the playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road , Laguna Beach. Reservations 494--0743. ofiered their chol~ t h i s weekend between be a Y y drama..-"A Loss of Roses" at t..be Nifty Theater-or high comedy-'1Generatlon" at the Huntington \Beach Playhouse. Both are on \stage Friday and Saturday nights. "Roses" ls a William Inge drama being staged for the fir.st time in Orange County and features Beth Titus, Gary Saderup and Ruth Wagner in tbe three principal roles. Tom Titus ls dire<:Ung. Dance Set As Benefit For Hospital By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPJ)-Henk Mancini bas been nominat.ed for lour grammy awards this year. He already owns 18. The 1970 Gramnly nomina- tions number in the vlclnlty of 45 categories, all the \\'8:Y from Verd i's II Trovatort to engineer Walter Carlos for well-tempered synthesizer. J\tancini's bei?n non11natcd for: -Best instrun1enla l ar- rangement for the tnovic "Z" -Best contemporary in- strumental performance, "Z.'' -Best instrumental com· position, "Sun Flov;er!' • u~uaUy lhc piano bar ln • gin n1lll. Instead, I.he balding, slendt:r c:omposer. arranger -c0nduct- nr has enriched the mu.,lcal world 11.·ith the likes of "Moon River." ··~ar Heart.'' "Days uf \\1lnc and Hoses" and '"Ch1lrade" to na1ne a few. \lore' than 600 separate reco rding!! were made of ""!\loon River·• around thr.: world. The song won him an Ostar. 11s did '·Days or Wine and H-Osl's" and the score for .. Br(·akfast at Tiffany 's.'' Michael Van Landingham, a master's student at UC!, is directing B ec kett's "Endgame" at the new Studio Theater in the university's Fine Arts Village . William Good h art's "Generation" iJ a familiar vehicle in a bright new setting and stars Bernard Simon, Steve Uhler and Anne-Eva Newstead Wlder the direction of Randy Keene. MECHA, a campus club at Orange Coast College, will sponsor a benefit Valentine's Dance Saturday to raise funds for the Childrens Hospital of Orange County. -Bes! original score Y.rit· " ten for a motion picture or tele\•ision, ''Darling Lili ."' GRAMMY GRABBER Henry Mancini ~spite the y,·orld of rock, it is J\lanciRi, Lalo Schifrin, Quincy Jones. J\Iaurice J arro. Elmer Bcrn!!lein, A nd t e Prcvin and Burt Bacharach v.'ho. along with dozen of ulhcrs, in\"f'fll the words and 111usic of today which become the standards of tomorrow. Comprising the cast are Bruce Bouchard -UCI's workhorse, who played major roles in "A Sleep o f Prisoners" and ·•cabaret" earlier th Is season-Larry Loll. Thomas Culp and Anne Carol Pearson. "Endgame" Y.'iil be staged \Vednesday through Saturday v.·ith tickets priced at SI each and available at the box office or al the door. * "Mother Earth" has become so popular at South Coast Repertory that , in addition to t I p.m. performances on Saturday nights, SCR will stage a special showing of the rock musical on ecology tonight. The orig inal musical by Ron Thronson and Toni Shearer also will bt: presented Friday and Saturday of this week, whlle final performances of another world prem ie re. "Snowman in the Empty Closet," are set for Wed· nesday and Thursday. Both shows are being staged at the Thlrd Step Theater in downtown Costa Mesa, 1827 Newport Blvd . Reservations 646-1363. * Thea tergoers in the Hun· tington Beach area are bein g l'he Nilly Theater is located at 301 Main St.. y,·ith reserva- tions being taken at 557-7297. The Huntington B e a c h Playhouse is up the street a ways, at 2110 Main, with ticke ts available by calling 536-M61. * Long Beach audiences also have a cholct between light or heavy theater, with the Civic Light Opera continuing its production of "The Music Man" and the Community Playhouse closing out Its courtroom drama, "Witneu for the Prosecution." Ken Jones is CLO's "Mu sic Man,'' with Shirley Williams c o -s tarring and local performers Ross Lynn Tepper {Huntington Beach} and It).. year~ld Charles Curt is (Laguna Beach) in the roles of 1.1rs. Schinn and Winthrop, respectively. Paul Teschke heads the cast of "Witness" with Clara Grich and Noble Shropshire in prin- cipal roles. James Brittain directs the drama for tht: Community players. "Music Man" plays Friday and Saturday at 8:30 and Sun- day at 2:30 at Jordan High auditorium, 6500 Atlantic Ave. Reservations (213) 432-7926. "\Vitness" is at the playhouse, 5201 E. Anaheim Av t:. Reservations (213) 438-0536. The dance ·will be co- sponsored by the Musicians Alsociation Local 7. A dona- tion of $3.50 pt'r person will be. asked. The proceeds wHI be used by the hospital for needed equipment. Two bands will be featured at the dance, l\'hich will be held at the Armo ry Hall, 524 E. Wa rner Ave., Santa Ana. "l<>.s Dreamers," producing soft, Latin-style music will be joined by ·a group called the "Pre.halic Circle," offering hard rock entertainment. The dana is scheduled from 8 p.m. to I a.m. Door prizes to be presented at the dance y,•il l be. dinner for two at the Casa Escobar in Anaheim, and three days and two nights at Newporter Inn in Newport Beach. Ticket information is available by calling 834·5638 on weekdays. More important I h a n ll.\\'ards. tlancini has r£1Con..lcd 35 albums in the past JO years for RC A which have sold more than JO million copies. lt Is curious to note that as a composer almost all of ~lancini's work has been donf' for molion pictures a n d television, either as individual songs or entire score.~. Asked v.·hat he"d he dnin~ for a living if films and viden had no need of music, fiilancini \\•as at a loss. "I can't imagine v.•hal l"d be doing." he sai d. He pondered (or some tin1r . admitting he probably y,·ould nol be \\"riling songs nr syphonies or operas o n Nabors Sets Disney F ete Nine Disneyland characters wilJ be featured in a special production number as the finale to the Jim Nabors' Hour, to be aired at 7:30 p.m., D C Thursday on Channel 2. rug arlOOn Nabors. Phyllis Diller and Frank Sutton v.•ill be joined HOLLY,VOOD (UPI J in the Disney salute by ~lickey Cartoon specialists Hanna-!\-louse ar:d eight of his Barbera will produce a major Disneyland greeters education film package · of Participatin~ v.·1!1 b(' l)unald anti-drug abuse for junior high Duck, Goofy, Pluto, Pinocchio, * {{ "1:f 1:f fl f:.r school youngsters across the l>oJ)t'y, Dumbo and the Br'ers country. Bear and Fux. / •Earth" Shaking 1r-=== .... =....,=-=~;i11 SCR Box Office Flooded AIReiJRT There just aren't enoug h was originally scheduled to seats in South Coast v.•ind up this \l!"eekend. Instead, Repertory's Costa Mes a it will go into repertory with theater to satisfy all the peo-ple who want to see "Molher "Invalid," p layi ng 'Ved- IUIT UllCASnR • DW llRTIN ~W SEIERG •ilACQUWME BISSET •...owm.:-~ ............. lr!l .. --~ L!:!J -·-.. ~ Earth.'' nesdays and Thursdays New Shewl11t (;J:'J•:f•J.•• 011 th• Penlnu.ih• speculation. "Obviously," he said fin:ll\\', ··rd be playing thr piaiio sotnC>u·here " "So1ne,~hcrc"" 11iesc d;.iy" is Percuss ionists At Cal State The r·uitertan Percussion En sc m tit e will appear in concert Tut>sday, Feb. 16, 1n !he l"/Jmpus Recital Hall The B p.m. program, open ta the public at no chargl" 11.·ill feature 1varks of 20th cen- tury con1pascrs prrforni~d by lhe 11-nlcinbrr group under direction of Frank ~lcCarty, :issistant professor or n1usic. :-0. r..n1..., '"' ,.,,_,, ~ to ..... I !......., "'°''"' JI• ,, .... , ... The Great White Hope S•arro~a J,mn [Jrl JOllH, J'rie Alei1/lder. r . ,., , , """'" • ,.,...,.. °""'o<1"' ~.~ ....... ., .. ~ .... loo< ............... " .. ~l;incini is a modest man oi l!alian exlraclion v.•ho can· not explain what he. feels as he \\'ritC's music. J\1ore than !ikelv !he mus!' flits to hi~ side 0durin,11; an assign ment and nu1nbly skips away again. And like manv of his con· lC'n1por::irics -· Bacharach a nnt:ible exception -1\-lanclni hits the road for Concerts. building public reputation for excellence lo 1nalch l h c estee111 in \.\•hich the movie industry and the re cord business holds hin1. "'Abou! the Grammy awards. he concluded, '"I don't think thr~· help !'iCll records like thr O:;cars add to movie revenue. "By the time a recording gl'ts lhe Grammy il already is a big seller and probably has a gold fC'Cord lo its credit." "Hate, hot and bitter, flooding every frame -transmutes a stricken life into a smashing film. James Earl Jones glistens as the go-to-hell fighter whose night life and white mistress infuriates masa The original musical wrap-through lhe fi rst y,·eek in hihilfftly et ----~ _ _._,7J-4D41 e 7:00 & ':JO ped around an ecology theme April. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE c UNTY ENGAGIMINT has played to sellout crowds ''Mother Earth" is not being/'=~;~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~=·11 STARTS WEONESOAY, FEBRUARY 10th l••fr..:,:--.-.~ ~ .. ever since. its initi al d pcrlonnan<:< Jan. 8, and has confine to the Third Step JQSQn VOthOrl·n IN THE WESTMINSTER CENTER Theater. On Wednesday the N necessitated the scheduling o( company will lake the show R b d R additional stagings to bandie to Orange Coast College, while Q Q[ S QSS the overwht:!ming box office a special performance is demand. scheduled Fe.b. 25 at Laguna Asldt: from the special show Beach High School under the plaMed for tonight, tht: com-sponsorship of !ht: South Coun· pany has been pcrformlng ty Pro-environment People twice on Saturdays, at 8:30 (PEP). and II p.m. Two additional·~::::::::::::=====::~! performances are carded forl~ Feb. 21 and "8, dates originally scheduled for SCR's upcoming comedy, ''The Im aginary Invalid." "It's the biggest box offiti! .show Jn our six-year history," declares SCR managing direc- tor Warren J. Deacon. "We simply ca n't meet the demand for tickets ." The musical, written by They I ouched 9Q(h other and letgo of lhe world @!Jo 1.IClUSIVlfNOAGIMfNT ALSO· .111ont'~" NOW PLAYING Henry ronda "CHIJfNNE WEEKDAYS 6:41 SOCIALCLUI" SAT. 3:3D & SUN.12:30 (GP) W ESTMINSTER AND GOLDEN WEST· 892·4493 BETWEEN GARDEN GROVE & SAN DIEGO FWYS. Starts Tomorrow, February 10th Exclu5ive Orange Co un ty Engagement "'My Fair Lady' ls from the limited treasure or our 1 ---""';:r-7"".J"'<.._ 1:00 IJ i3 (I) Cr .. n Aut1 Tht dtizens ol Hootuv!lle, 1rltvtd b1 •n in· cr11sld I•• burdan, 11ctd1 !tom the -sl1t1 and n1m1 Olivtr Dou(!1s '' "Kini Oliver I," D BELL SYSTEM FAMILY company members Ron Q) Movlt: "'1111 Crut Ch1te" (com· Thronson and Toni Shearer edyl '63 -Bulter Kttton, Pt1r1 -~!!:i~iCO;;;~~~~>Oi· While. ~ *THEATRE presents ~ (}) Pq Muon time's really · good things and I urge you to enjoy It again !" It Couldn't Be Done fD R Hties "PrbO .. 0 m 1 1•1c111 1 n c.iMll't " · .. M. Do111 A S1lute to the Amell~n 11:30 U t8 (I) Mm CrttrlR list pert wo1brs ind know-how rupons1ble of 1 two·p11t SPl d•I lttturln1 tor crt•tlnr such ·~mpculble" pmJ· Americin compc11rt., such 11 H1r- tdl 11 tlte Ml Rushmort M1morl1I, ry W1rren, Rudolf Frlml, Slim C1JI. tht Colckn 61!1 Brld(e, th• P1n1· lard, Arthur Frttd, H1r11 Ruby, m1 t:-n•I end the Hoaftr Dim. L•• Simmr f1!n, BYrtan L•n•, R1y Marvin ii n1rralo1• [vans, Harry LMnpto". m T• T"1 HI• Tnttll O @ll) €?;) Jobnnr Cfr~ fD I IJJC1;lt I W1Ml1 die lvU Guests: Den Rickles, Jtyt r, Mor• Slops This pmaram loeuus °" wh!t 11n, Baj• Sand, Ro11r Ml11er. Hamilton Hh!h School In L.A. I$ 0 aJ Did Ctntl C.f'lll ChannlnL doin1 to comb1t dru1 •butt. Rex Reed, 1nd ttlt m1n'1 l1t.lllan el Full CMJ!tl llllllMIMll" ll!ow with Tom Stlwir, Gilt Stytn aJ Sonri111 and Bob Grlnt. l:D5 (I1} Lillt UH l:lO fJ ~(I) Htt Hn Ro1 Ro(et1, 1Z:15 O Coinm11nlty lrlll•lin INrd 0111 EYIM, 81111 .lo $Ptlll fU!SI "Bliek Hl1loty WMk." 0 H'f PD m ~11-NllM Show: "Tiit H1Uitan 0 t11J (l1 aJ UC M"le al lhf Story," "Nof.orlM l1lltl11N-" tnd Wnll: "lovt, Hate, Lon" (dr1m1) "Tan• Foret." '71-RylR O'N11I, ln111 Wun n, Peltr Haskell. ,. b1111Ul~I l1slllon model's roma nce with • d1ahln1 pl1)'boy tumi Into 1 ttnffylnr n!rtit· Wedne1day DAYTIME MOVIES t:OO 0 "111111141(1 tllffl' ftomt¢J') '4J -s.111 ~n Howu, St111r1rt Gunaer. '1 1rtfl ti tflt l tni" (l!IU· sical) "41 -Bini Cro'1lr. Miry Mtr!ln. t:JO U ''Htf"e C...1 Ille Ritt." (tom· 1:00 a Movl•: "Cat • Dart ,......,. (lllJ1t•rr) '57-Di~ Be1ud1, M•r- 11t1l lochoocd. no--- 11fy) '5J -Bob Hope, Tony Martin, Ar11n1 D1hl. O MMIYI" (1~entu11) '6&-Cllnt W1lk11, JIJ North, Satill Kahn, m "Tiit Wiid Ihle Y1nd1r" {4r,. rMl !2-PllA H1rrl1. V•rti Rtlton. 1:00 m "!en, IOOk lfld C4nd!1" (1111. 11s)') '59 -J1mtt Sttw•l1, Kim No~•k. Jack ltmll'ID!I, Emit Koitm l:OO" "Cr7 ,...,..... (mylltry') '"- Reid St•lpr, tnrer SIMnt. ·~~~~llllllY • C-'<I "" W<IUI ruil l'!UllfL\llCW 11.\e j t0¥W AnDOllmt lllMGm COlOR ll!J o : ~do lilNPOlf 11.lCM -"' ll11to ........ ....... 1 • .,, l••· hk •• 0 1. ,....,.. Mich1el C1int Britt Ekl1nd IN "GET CARTER" ALSO Frink Sin1tr1 IN "DIRTY DINGUS MAGEE" Aho "KING OF THE GRIZZLIES" Ill• 1tCl!- Al>o "BOATNIKS" 81rg1 ln M1tln1e Evtry W1dne1d1y I P.M. ,,.. Jl•fml!WNlltl Abht St .ot Cldl4 711 D. H. lcrw,....ct'• "THE VIRGIN ANO THE GYPSY" (R) .,,, The Moet Hitnorlld Movl~ ''Z'' Wtlfl;dl rt -0,.11 4:41: 511, 11M1 Su11, -ll1ll SEAN CONNERY is JAMES BOND FOR EVERYONE TO SEEi Phone 673-6260 -O<.OJUI Q<°"''l!"' I ·~••""-lt "".(...111·""" Warner Bros. 2gain presents WINNER OF 8 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE <•••_, STANLEY HOUOWAY. w.~~n Hl1l·WH1~.Q.QS Ollll ":' .... illfOOORf ffi l T.'::lf.:.W~:·.tt =:::-.:a:~E.'.L'3 ~ ... ._,_... --.......... _,_. 11 1i~riiil.i 1; ;::·~1~;,1 llJii~foi:m:·c iili'NrHmi"cii~ HCllNICOlOi' SUP£R PlNl~SlOi"lO ~~ JGJ ·-== -J fl1U Sl(RfOPttClflC ~J~O 1>• t-1'.iw w.11 rt<t ..... to~111w1o Wtd.-tllwn. Shewn ot 7&10P.M. •rl.-S1111.•M111. Shew1 •t 1 ... 7.10 ....... 10 DAILY PILOT I I Everyone Has Something That Someo ne Else Wants DA.ILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad 2629 Harbor, C.;\J, 546-8640 Thinking of SELLING? G.neral * * * * * TAYLOR CO. DIGNIFIED AND ELEGANT * \'ou'll love the professional decor in this fin- er 2-story horne \\•/4 bdrms, formaJ DR, !am. rm. & 3112: baths. PLUS Vie\v $99,500. LUXURIOUS BEACH LIVINGI $84,950 Stroll do\.\'n the stree t to the ocean & watch .JJnda J:Jl \ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT f-lOMES 12 ILi"da Isle Drive Elegant new 5 BR. 41h ba. home w/formal din . rm., fam. rm., wet bar. Impressive en- try court \\1/16 ft . mabog. doors. $179,500. Gtn•r•I CALIFORNIA General "A LITTLE GEM" Beaut 3 BR. 2 ba.. home. Xlnt cone!. New cpts. & drp:s. Low maint. yard w/htd, pool , A very priv. cJ:i\'·ng Dome for $33.900. Fountain Valley Boat or Tr1ailer? Lots of room for ftiem on this CORNER lot. Lovely l BR. 2 ba. "'ilh BREEZEWAY. Low, low int, loan or low VA/fliA term!!. HAFFDAL REALTY 842-441Jj 1'.Ves: 541-2446 Entertainment Center 4 BR-Cabana.Pool $25,900 Lt!t us hl'ip, ..... e "'lll buy the sunsets. Enjoy the mixed scents of sur! )'our house today for its & no,vers. Custom contemporary. Cd~1 For Complete informefion on ell homes & lot1, please cell: CONTEMPORARY Custom bit. EAmIDE 00.S. TA l\fESA, rambling home t'Omplotcly fc.n<lf!d in with block walls and 14'1"0Ught iron gat(>S. Large Living Rm. \\'llh open beam('(! ceillni:s, Three bedrooms, h\'O baths, Oinin: room and electric BIN Kit. Fenced off heated and filtered Pool. Only $31.950 v.•ith CI OR FHA TER~1S. MORGAN REl\L TY 673-6642 67S.6459 EASTSIDE TRIPLEX Sharp units with (2) 2 Bedrm & bachelor unit on large Jot. Dbie detached garage. In- come WS. Try 10 ~ down. $32,950 PERRON Bl.DR'S Sacribce -Span. \Vo1v~ You can't miss en a style nu cus1om 4 Br. hOme Ii~ this. Private tree $32,500. s1:;oo dn. Loaded lined cul-de-sac s~usion. v.·/xtras, Shakes, Fl'pl. Cpl 1'1odern • plus decor from thruout. Sprink, lndscpd, deep pill!! carpet1ng·to vetvel fncg. 10223 Pheasant Ave. Docked walls. Quel'n-sized 537..-0380. bedrooms. Deluxe built-in BY O\VNER, $2a.400, 4 BR, kitchen that sparkles. AH 2 ba, bltns, 1rplc, covered lhe extra! • Bar, Tropical patio, fncd, nr schools. gardens, Kidney sha~ pool 642-2264 "'ith board &: 1lide. Near ~Hc:u:..n=ti"-n'-g-ton-~B-.-.-ch~--1 beach. E-Z tt":rms. Hurry 642-1771 full valu". The only ad-"Our 26th Year" ditional charge is 1 % of BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ' 133 Dover Dr., Suit• 3, N.B. 642-4620 Back Bay ,,,, ,..1,,,, '"'" ~o WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. Realtors l!"'"""~""""""""""""="""=""""""""""""'"I gimmicks and no addi-2111 San Joaquin Hills Road General 1 Ge neral BY oWntT • 3 bt. fam rm, lge den. crpl'd. Prime area, lge. lot. $2.j.OOO. fH6.9842 Cali (TI4) ~ tional cxpens£'. We need NEWPORT CENTER ~910 DOVER SHORES ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Muses/ Jl doe&n't cost * * * * * * Balboa Island CUSTOM BLT, NEW ENG-llflYlhin~ to call And find ll -'-'--....:.-'----'-'-~,.-'-'-~---'--'---'-'-out -)'Ou nught £'\'l'n I General LAND near NEWPORT l.Vcnings C.all &16-lj79 $10.\1 dn, eld own car 1.st. 3 Bd, 2 Ba, trpl + gs! h~ V.'/ 1~ ba. Kr \vat, pR.t. &n-6267 BARGAIN HUNTERS! 4 BR.-F am. Rm. $19,500 f'OREST [ OI so~ ga\·e~! General BAY. Elegant entry, large l l·----------1' ---------living Rm., with marble flre. WOR·KSHOP INCLUDED "' 11£/fl.TOR S GET Cost• Mesa Charmer-$20,500 This home is a doll hou.st' Located 1n Costa i\te.sa. H has 1111 aridt>d 11vi'k ~hop - s11s on an 01·ers1zed Jot toned £01• muH1ple units - rhr home is in immat"Ulatc condition inside & out. No d()l.\·n to \' l'ts-See 11 1oda_\: ACTION 4 Bedroom&. F a m ily Room 2,400 Sq. Ft. 18 Mos. Old This bc>autiful ex~uth I' hrin1c has been upgraded every ~·ily ima~n.ablf' - shai: carpel with d~!ux lhick pad -expensive Corsican draprries in all roon1-~ -professionally landscaped -open heated fireplace in the separate secluded family room - 1uge master bedroom suite "·ith private terrace -ex- pan11ive stair.\·ay -separ- l!e formal dining roont - A must sec at s.i3.000 - No money down to Vets. FASTER 3 Bedrooms Sharp&. Clun $23,500 located In O>sta li1esa . lhls borne ls e;tceplionalJy CORONA DEL MAR TWO SEPARATE place, formal Din Rm., all PA:\'OR..\:'l!IC \'\r..\V o\'t;'r· I HOMES electric Kit. includiJ)g elec-look1n~ '.\('1\'floir1 C1't11rr. On large ~i{l' x 180' lot Two tronic oven and breakfast Cu$ta /.[C'sa, and bC'autiful bedroomil ooch. large kit-room. Fam. Rm., with used :\'('1<'poi1 Harbor. Tht' £'\'l•n. rhens \\'i th eating areas, brick fireplace, large liCr- 1ni; l1;;:hts nrc hkl' a Sf'Vl"nth doublf' garagr. maniCUN'd \•ice porch and t~ car hea\'('fl, \\'ell kepi. 1hl'N' landscaping and t·ompJetely garage. F IVE BEDROOMS. bl'droom. t¥.o b;1th home indl'pench:nt or each other. 31ii BATiiS plus large 800 "i!h f'am Rm. Din. Rm. Priced to ~ell at $3~.950 v.•ith Sq. Ft. all purpose rumpus ;ind e I £'1••t-. Kit. Lari::r 1oc;, oow:-;i Sho"11 by ap. room. The perfect answer 111 Living room is located ahove pointment only. a IX'tfttt setting ror a large ;;\l i'llgl' \l'hlch offers privacy l .Jl!lllll!l••••ll~I family. Priced below market and l:NSURPASSED VIE\V. at only $79,500 -Shown by Coot quiet. patio and rear appointment. yal'd area. Excellen1 schools I ~-":::.. -near shopping and only minutes to the Dunea and sandy beacht"s. Prict'd at $.12.950 \\;th liberal lerms. Evenings CaJI 644-7003 U'" Hl U I' tifl~l'S TODD'S CONDO Todd Binghan1 is a dis- placed aero~pace eng., no1v st u dying Environmental Engineering at UC!. Jlis 2 bedrm Bluff" Condo is va· cant as ~ has sought less S quarters. It's in good shape, v.·ith vie11·s front and back. 1tr, Bingham is ask. ing $35,950 for this property. It is heing shO\.l'n every d;.iy. f"antastlc 3 bedrm l\fcsa Verde home on quiet tree lined cul-de.sac. 2 l\1assive fireplaCt's, bl'autiful mini- mum upkeep yard. sparkling interior, alt bltns 2 balhs & larg" master bedrm. Abso. Jute mu~t go SCt> at $32,500. Ca li 5'15-8424. Corona del Mar LIDO WATERFRONT APTS.·320 LIDO NORD $140,000 P rice with 1'ii> ls! T.D. 6 Beaut furn. units; 6 car garage~ & util. room. 80 Ft. on swimming beach. \Vlli consider trade for boat or maximum $85,000 lge. 4 BR. house. Bill Grundy, Rltr. 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-46:21) FIXER UPPER Special! 3 Bdrm., 2 bath: 1 Eight Bedrooms blk. to ttoe beach. N•ros lots af \\-'Ork! Ju s I reduced FR + DR + POOL SS.000. Ow""''"""' arouod .,._.._. 1/3 ACRE-BAYCREST Evenings Call 644.1003 u~l()UI' ti()~"S Formal DR -FR -modern $44,950. ti.take orrcr! And solid as a rock. Only 6 years young. All t.he modern conveniences. Family sized country kitchen ~·ith latrst elf!Ct. built·ins. 4 good 5izl'd BR'!!. 2 lavish baths. \\'ood panelled family room. Ankle deep carpeting. Sprinkll'rs. Room for boat. Cul-de.sac area. Fantastic terms. Try low down. \Vhere in the \\'Orld can you find a starter bargain like this! Better hurry -Call (TI4) 962·5585. Hllll\T [ OL\ON .., R£AL T()l!IS 19131 Brookhurst A~. Jfuntinglon Beach BUY OF THE WEEK This 4 bd1m • 2 bath area I ranch styli'! home on big tot, lg liv rm. w/lrple, w/w crpts over hr-.,·d fin. huge yard! Full price $23,950. Submit all terms! Ca 11 Cali 847-Im SEYMOUR REAL TY 17141 Beach Blvd., Htgn Bch Open 'til 9 P .r.I. DIVORCE Forces sale, near.new 3 BR. 2 BA, Ayres built home, bltns, drps, crpts, trplc, blck wall, heated POOL, land· scaped. 1 mi. 10 ocean. As. ~umc xlnt loan. $32,990. 968-2'329 Bkr. • • • I BIG 220E.17ttl 646•0555 That's right -8 full bdrms! the world & \\.'an!.~ action? r-. ,.,.L kilch -bl't'akla.st area -4 Delancy Real Estate 19131 Brookhurst Ave. ,Check this pool 00m£' set deep TWO HOMES R••1 £5l•rt.t1S«IOO baths -largf' LR -white 2828 E. Coast H\\)' .. Cd'.\! ~-''=l"::"::""::•-:':c°"::._:B::"~':::"~-I OUR NEW LOCATION I on tree shrouded lot, olfer. ONE LOT ~~,!O::,°~~r~c":'r. brick r .P. Pool healed & 6i1-71i'O :-: ing complete privacy. 01\•n. filler. Badminton l.'OW't -, .. iiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiii .. 'lfhomyo•u "w'•,.lhnt ~'aJnnbcd•h '°"•""•' er must iicll now! lt's on an Look -~ -2 Bedroom homes 2 ON A LOT " " aviary -much more. you · E:vl'nin"•' Call "A4-7003 1 •ighty 1housand $ street for on one lot -\Vhat a OOy -p charm, lhls is it. Brick fire-~ TRI LEX won'! believe th• """'""blo + Gue st Ap•rtment •"9 9"" B ·1 --~ ""t ' " place, shut1ers wit h ovrr-MESA VERDE ""--· ·"'· ;~~oa~:n:~~+~~':e • pri('c, Hurry, Dial 645-0303. Older 2 bedrm hoine v.'ilh dral)l'riC!t in every rooni: In HUNTINGTON BEACH 21562 Brookhurst (comer Hamilton) Larwin Realty, Inc. · ~-I $39,500 large 2 srory bldg., with 2 wall 10 wall ,.,,....,...:~g. E•· FIXER.UPPER . "" ., ., "'"'"'"!"1. ~'" ·~ + -~·.. .. . """"nn guest apt Needs .... larg• not~ •"th built·1·0 I lent attess to shopping and ., .. ...-•v • Ol111er despc-1ate -house is Coldwell Banker sckoolll _ Hurry _ Come in-fixin' • priced righl at .. · bar-be.que. Curved brick * * + * not finished. Are you willing ' .......... oc:~y . vestip.te and invest. (3) 2 f'Bedxm unit.Ii, aepante $45,000 entry walk and decorative I T~h~,-,-,-bod~roo--m-ho_m_o_w_ith to 1ave SSSS for work. Come DIAL "''~'J. one or 0~-net. Live in and PERRON 642-lnl brick fence, TwG years old d I ...........,,.. trv $600 down FllA .,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.., shake roof, brick fireplace, an compete this. Have the. · · "-"' H ... ~o", "--<a.,,,,., and better than new. '~n.:20() II 1 u u • .....,,, " .,... LUXURY · h ...,., \\'a to "'a I ca"""ting, tnansion of your dream!! -833-0700 644-2430 ocean view ome -7~~ '!. assumable loan. ·"" ~' bdrms -m _formal din· ~~ ..... ~~~ .......... ~~! Newport NfAR HARBOR HIGH near Little Corona. Low 842-253.5. ~~~::i ::r:~d 1 ~~~ ing -den -just about every· LUSK TRI-LEVEL •t maint. You 011-n the Jand. TilE REAL ESTATERS yard sho~·s pride of 1IDng -1:" 2nd .!!.1oty pa!io. HARBOR VIEW HILLS F1irview $97.500. Open \Ved. l to 4:30.1 MOTIVATED TO SELL o~·nership inside and OJt. ;\1ake this your summer pro. I , .,. . .... h 1 Beautiful "model Jike" 3 bed-216 Poppy S2T,900. 8-IZ.:Zil5 jcct-H1 -Dial645-0303 " s1r1 mg ~n1s stye 2299 •1 tbor C:>it ~6-8111 room home on cul.de-sac Wesley N. Taylor Co. Ydo~\\l'ouldbec tooif)rOU\d\'ere my . home. All you have to do is -a . .. . . street close to al! schools &. Newport Cent 644->1910 nv ng to orona every ay. THE REAL ESTA1'ER! I niovP ~urnit.ure and per".°'12'1 Price Reduction (1nytime) shopping. All ne"' ca......,ts. er 0v.'Tler \\'llnts this nice 4 bed. BY O\\'NE:R • 4 & family, '-! A--' ~ t l :i=:i=:i=:i=:i=:i=:i=:i=:i=~ I .,.. Costa Mes• room Meadow Home sold, dining area. 2 bath ln I ""ongtngs 111 -uu .,..gm o from $6..1 500 to ,:;a a.-lo drapes & paint. Large side · I. · , ball -• .__., ' ...,.,.<>w r Priced .111 VA apnraisal of Shorecrest. Custom dra""s ivc. ·• . is, ~ ,,._.,,.rooms, quick sale. Striking, large yard for boat or trailer. It's rot 0 V ING-TRANSFERRED-$30,950. Thls ho~e should & carpets, paved boat '"~r loimal li\'ing room, formal Spanish home near. new just ne\vly list~ SU ~ tirsl Tired of Cafighting with sell this \\'eek. \Viii you be trailer area \vilh gate, """"" fORL\T [ OLSON '" P£A LTO R S din~ng room .. Homey and :r-2800 1q. ft. O\.l~er transfer'. 10 see. CALL NO\\'! $36,950.1 fl'nants? 11 the problem CO"" __ .. """"O, o•h·• •·--1 I J th the one to buy it~??'.' ... ,.,.,. ,...... ~· ,,,._....., ;iXJn!; amiy room ""' ingEast.anxious.mu1t1eU. Realty Company solvers -South Coast Real 5~ VA Joan, $35,500. fn-eplacr and wet bar. Com. 5 Bedrm, ram & din rms. THE WARMTH ~ CD&ATS' Estate, Property l\lanage-l' 962-6102 clran insidr &t out -a 2'."99 Harbor, Cosla '.\lesa pride of a\\ll('rsh1p neigh· Ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ borhood close' to schools & shopi)ing • 011'Tlcr is anx· ous. "'ith '.'\o monC'y do1\·n to Vrts. ;1011r paymrnts 1li ll hi> Slg'i_IJO includin'.i 1a:-.:es and insuranC't'. Hurry on this one. FROM 100'/o Finaneing At 6¥4"/o Int. 4 Bedrm &. Family Rm. !t )OU'N' i1 \'rt )OU can BALBOA ISLAND Ne\Y listini:: Prlmr Aml.'lhysl locntion ::>mall 2 bedroom unit On full size R-:! lot Room 10 add on $j3,{KKI REALTORS .SINCE 19ti 673-4400 HARBOR v fEW HOMES bt>11ur, ;, BR, homr: 1•el plcl" wall to 11a.IJ carp!'ts May lease or lease/option. OF SPAIN ment Division. ~~.-------- !hroughout, -..·a.II pa~r ga· --!An enchanting residence.~:. WALLACE 5-15-!142·1 t 471 (:=,}546-810] Irvine ln1'£'. Custom I 1;;:h1 f1xt~-es. LEASE 4 BR ~lei;a Verde $26..i 1 Bedrooms, den. family room. I REAL TORS ~1ESA VERDE I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; A hn1nc you must see pnced 1vet bar 2 arched br ick -546-4141-1 Oclightf~l. lari;::e fa m ~ 1 y I $1000 Under Market SEE THIS! at S6J.9.j()~ (il6-71 i1 ~ Ul·SllD hearths. &.cludl'd pool & pa. I (Open Evenings) i •hoBmR• 2'"s"''rfect location. I Living at its best+ lncome TllE REAL EST ATER::\ (--drl9nltlMllN tio. Exotic mirrored master _ , .. A, am. '.m· Lge For quick sale. 4 BR. 1~4 BA, potential -4 Bdrm 31, B/B ~J!~~TJ suite. All this. .l a game DISTINCTIVE quiet living rm .. Like ne1\· like new cond. FHA . V,\. baths ~ dn $33~ ~ 2'J YEARS or room, too! $84,500. NEWPORT HEIGHTS shag thruouL Priced to S(>ll Conv. terms \\'on·1 last call . . ' . ~!'~~::SJ~~E~~ R~ir:?r ;!~~ed vet to 5 ~~h:th h:s!P:n~:~: ~:e~~;;:·ti:ll;, ~~I~~ Collinsc& W&~tts w'3i"23 (fi red hill Bayfront • $97,500 n1ove inlo this 3 queen-sized 642-8235 675-3210 refrigerator, fl"e(!zer end adult section. Rtt & pool • An exceptionally Rttr. home. bedroom palace. HUGE sep-blendw center. I..an;e lam· facil. $:22,300. 0 w n er. REALTY Vie\\' of all harbor entrance arate family room. freshly $1500 BARGAIN Uy room 11ilh firl'place and 5-10-1481 boat acllon. 3 BR .. 3 b•. & painted and waiting for you, That's how an.~ous this 0~ bnr-~que. Entertain In a -----------~oo'-I lh 1200 I . EASTSIDE. 3 Bdrm, huge fam. rm. 11.'frpl. ,,..~··· ~ ess an per <'r is Rnd has priced this 4 ana1 room \l.ilh \\l'l bar. fireplace. hard\\'Ood floors. 67 month. .__ .. room, 2 b•I" •-·u•· U"· Thill home must be seen. 5 3000 ""-"' " .,.,.. 'J " ne"' cal'J>('ts. drapes & . Walker & Lee drr market v11lue. FIRE-$39.~. 646-TITI paint. Largl' fcnet'd yd PL.ACE, ~\ep.~avcr kitchen THE REAL EST1\TER~ $23.300. 6-16-7617 11·ith EXT ll A cupboards. NEW MOOE LS-- Univ. Park Center, Irvine: Tired Of Rent Receipts Call Anytime 833-0820 3 Bdrm • 2 bath area To11·n. "''""'""""!!""""!'""""""''"" house, prime ar!'a, priced Laguna Beach right $1.8.SJO~ Lg liv rm, \Y/w cpt, drps, \\'I D, refri:;, ----------1 I< '"'" & POOL ,,.,,.,, 2 HOUSES Jo"\ill price $18.8jij -subniu. £el 100•,, f1n :1ne1ng at i)~,r~ \/I\ rm ti11~ beautiful n1nch ~'~Ir hornr. '\'uh I he111·y ~hake r(J{il. nrw I A :arf)£'!111 J! -hr;1l!11h.1ll) land!'oCapt'd -tlll rlrMnr m11.u;-& llEAt'iil llEAU'\' l:\C. EST_~1'1 ~ P.eal 1ors "ifi...112 Edinger 1 bar. IO\·C!y shag cptg., .sell. 1 jTI4l s.iz . .ii::i~, or .;.ro.;'1140 ('l<'an1ni;t Ol'!'nS; ready 10 --- childre n'ii playhouse and ex-Unde r construction . ~re the tra goodirs. VA or FHA plans at 1033 ii-tanners. Drive. terms or assun1e n59 pay. Dover Shores. -4 & 5 Brdrms, ments. Trade your home~ -4 & 5 baths, select ynu r own POPULAR :\!Qnt1ccl!o .split l\"'\'C'l morlr l 2 + 2 rien. 1 adult section. Rec & pool faciL $22.lOO. O 1v n er . f,.1().1481. 847.1221 SEYMOUR REAL TY \l!'rf built·ln k1t(·!Ji'n -ltrick fireplace and trnn~ to ti t ;1our buti ,;et -""' 11 1110\'f' into~ ~.500 . Jnclud. CUSTOM QUALI TY UIJ; the land I Bel!er thnn new condition! • Locatf'd in much denred Open 'Ill 9 P .1'1. Walker & Lee oolars & custom details. All DUPl...E.X-$54))) do1vn. $ll.s00. with autstandini;:-View8. Roy Income $3780. 2 br, med DESPERATE OWNER COR.BIN One Bedroom Is Great Truly mmimum "" '~"'' and $1~.SOO Is • grt'a\ price. Nc"'J!Ort Hl'ights! 3 Bed· MARTIN Easy, cart'free !i~·ing is room.s, 2 full ba~hs. lf.ugc I yourii in 1h1s fine-!iltle con. F'am1ly Room, Priced R1g-hl I FARROW Realtors ~pc:~~ly· . Rltr. 646-1550, patio, stove. 1-efrig, gar, 16..~ Edinger cpt/drp. Owner 2238-A Stale _17_14_l_M_2-_•_1'_;·_or_5<0_;_;·5_140.:...., BEACH HOUSE :i\1ESA Vl'n:le art"a. 2 sty, 4 BR & den. 21 ~ ba, bltns. $39,500. By onw, afl 4 - 54G-1T.J8 -4 BR. 2 BA. crp1s & rlrps lhruoot. J\l odel condition. Submit on terms. 3 Bcdroo1n, 2 bath. ne1v cus. lorn h<>n1es; \\'ood exterior. unobs1ructl'd ocean & city v1f'1\', Siltlat~ side by side. \Vould make good invest· ml'nt: either live in one ar rent both. Listed RI $38,!'.150 individually, make otfer for purchase of both. Call - 3 Bedroom &. Pool F ixer Upper $24, 150 Loca1£'d In 1h£' Back Bo) 11.rt'a of Costa ~1c.>sa. Thi~ home i.s an u11bl'liP1·able value. 17xl:; tll'atl'Cl & fil· trred pool Im good con- dition). CO\'ered r nclosed 20:<20 patio -l1 sold once no 00\o,•n v,, anrt 11 <A'ill sell agAin 80 hum, REALTORS ,,.,. hl"\'f" op£"nings for 2 full tlmf' St1lesn1cn 10 complf'IC our proff'ss•on· al l'ialc!i staff. Jr )Ou \l.'Rnt morr. aC"tlon, a fo.sl"r ll&ce a nd mnrl' Mlf'tc ea I now and mak" "71 " a good yt'ar. 2629 Harbor Blvd. 546-8640 OPEN EVES. 'TILL 8:30 I REA L TORS j dom1nlum home Your terms at S49.900. -C1111 6~7171. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii6ii4ii4ii7ii66.02 I -1n11nc(hatr ~upancy. rn.E REAL ESJ"ATERS I Anxious Owner ! ~ COATS $27,950 Veterans No Down & 4 Brm + 3 baths Eastside >I bednn. 2 ba, 1~ WALLACE Beautiful home, 2':4 yrs. old. ff'nced baek yard. dble gar. REALTORS Entry hall, 4 Bdrms, huge o~·ner leavlng for Arizona. Open Ev11nin95 family rm. with 1111.tun1l Submit all oUers. on! y e 962-44S4 e brick fittplaCf', full dining $2:j SCIO rm. built·iM. Open t1I 9 Pi\I • . 540-1~ Lachenmyer Rlty Near So. Coast Plaza TARBELL 215s Hubor Call 646.3928 E\·es; &12.()l~ -~-BUILD 2 BR. +. 2 Blocks from ocean In N'ril. Stach. You O\l.'Tl the land! $2.j.9.'i(I. NEWPORT SHORES Your O\.l'n castle On this LS-Canal front ]Gt. S20,000 TATE ~\zc Jot. Exclusive res-George Williamson idential areR of finer homes. Rea ltor Only $28.500 and financing 67~350 '45-1564 Ev11 available. ASK FOR DICK OORSE'IT 675#930. REPOSSESSIONS Sparkllng clean homeii, :90me ~&CO.I newly painted & carpeted, 2. ·..-r~~~fl·•U• 3, 4 & 5 bdrms, Some with TRANSFER I ---==.,==---I pools. FHA-VA conv. tenn1, LITTLE HOUSE --4 B1-droon1~. 2 bath~. fir<'· YOUR PROBLEM SECLUDED tron1 $17.000 io $-40,000. BIG LAND 1 rilacr. bhn range & oven. 10 SPECIALISTS Beautiful hon1c in the ''Pri-Callins & "'alts Inc. Ea.tUJlde CQ~ta :\lrsa. Room Carpe1~. dn1pr~. patio, dblc Property Man•gement Vair Estates'' nt>ar 1nt up. 88-43 Adam" A\'f'. 962 .. ;j.23 tu build ti duplex For ll!J.~iOO e;arA:;:r t 17.7j(). Real Eat•te per bay. f'r111urr~ nf'11· qua]. I BIG S you ha<I brnrr hur1)' . 11" Roy Mc Cardle Realtor STEPHENS & KAYE !::a:a11 1:;,a::o ~t t ,ts and In much desir~d ~11'$8 drl h:1ve only QOI'' rtill . ll!JO ~('11port Blvd .. l:.M. 6·1l.O.t:22 ANYTIME r-5 u <Ao sep-:\lar · bt>droon nd f ·1 W I k & L 548-7729 "'""""!~""!!!!'""!""'""""" arate !\replaces. This pres. ' · .. 1~ a anu 'I a er ee 1 ..,,...,...,......,~,...,...,,. tlge iu•ca home has· -4 bt'd· room. l-leavy shake rool, 3 1, GREAT VIEW! rooma: plua family room. 21i dclu.'\' ba!hs. Just rodcrorat. Rca)lors POOL Of harbor & ocean. Attr. 111>\it baths ll" .. a -2000 ,. 11 I'd. $3!'1.500 FHA or VA. level home on R-3 51"" en, ..... • • ~ ... ""' 2313 279(1 llarbor Bh·d. a1 Adams $26 250 """" $57500 You t•-1 _.. i-i-,. .. o::"""'" • ' ft IOI. Ideal kr 4 apt. units. ' · own "ti auu. TIIE REAL ESiATERS !J..I~ Open 'til 9 P~I 3 BR + F•mily rm. P't¥ine &t&.n71. VACANT. READY 1111!:1" ramily rm + Fire-i:nl,000. 2501 Oet•n Blvd., THE REAi~ ESTATERS CORONA DEL MAR I na.oi_.. bu'I I CdM. By app'I. only. • 1915 J\feriners . WestclitJ Plltf'. l ,,.. ...... s, 11·n Bill Grundy, Realtor LIDO ISLE l BR. It den. &ach pr111J, 3 Bf'drm, tam rm, 7 ba S46.500 va~1um ir.:~lm'I. BNutiluJ Call: 642•4620 ESTATE SALE You own the land. • 1975 \Vinrlward • Baycrest S\\'lnt Pool In Parle I.Ike Make otter on versaUle 3 BR Xlnt lcmis. $"2.~ 3 Bcrlrn1, den din.. yard. No do\111 Tem1~. Open 20. AC Oran~e Cm,., River· + fonn din .i. drn + hob-Home Show Rea ltor~ I J)l"IOI , ...... : ....... l:!i!l,~llO 1 l{l 9 pm. :)40.17'10 !ldl! art'a. 6 Yr. old trtf'~ by rrn -1. 'l"t1nd('i·k ~ ri~tin I .. !irn1(h1'1r l£ou~h11nlini::" PETE BARRETT RLTY TARBELL 2955 Harbor Good ht<omr. Xlot "'"~'i JEAN SMITH RLTR . l\1.; E. L"""' H•>·· Cd'I ! * NEW LISTING * j ~~;nr~"f~~~~~~~i.r~~: 400 E. J71h. c \I' 616·~·"; __ 675-7225 _ _ 642-5200 i S1\"'P<i 10 OC'f'an 3 BR, JA,. ba.' hal. 9 yr~. '.\lay tr.adf'. O\\':'(. I * It '* • *' . , \VII IT t: t::l.f.PH.\:\TS'' I -~-~ IJl1n~. l C:1r i::nrngr. Good ~:R ~,·l.~·3163 G.I.. FHA-TERMS rond!Hon. S2{1,000. 1----'=-----DUP LEX $.16.!l~iO 3 HR. 2 Ba. I.gr f1.1.n1. rm. CAYWOOD REAL TY ,\:'i'Y Day is the BEST diy 1r 23n1 Orans::f', C.:'lf. overrunning )·our hou~e'.' ihrm '""' $23,500. NO quallfy1ng. Take over rnA loan. 3 BR • move-in cond. Ag! 67a.8989 KRAFT REAL TY 1nn Beach Blvd., llnlgn Ben 8·12-1418 Evl's: 962-642-1 Turn those White Elephants into ca.sh thru a Daily Pilot Dime-a-line ad! l ..A-Olan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glcnneyre St. 494.9473 549·tn16 S©llJUlA"-Lt£~S'" The Punle willr the Built.Jn Chuclle 0 Reommge letters af the lour xrombled words b. low to form fOllf :.imp!e words. I :HEKWAR I . I I I ' I I I . v.o L c ·E I .._.'.._I _._I ~..i· 1 _.I__, i ~_A_G.;Z:_;.U.;E--il ! G id friend, "A nttle bird· I I • I 1· • told me you're going to buy :=:-;:::;·:::·:::·==-~me a ring." Boy friend: "He must be a I C 0 0 LET l lHllo -!" <-4 J I ' I I I I 0 Compiete th!! m~~1. quolcd _ by f,l1111g i11 the 1111uing word you develop from 1!cp N11. 3 below f9 PRll'.i NV\ABfl!EO l[flEllS IN l 4 l HESE SQUARES €) UNSCl!AMeLE A&OVE Lf.TlEI!~ TO GET ANSWEll: I I I I I I I Scl'e"nrd 11'1'131. Cornrr JQt. G::OO \V. CAll~t lhvy., NB ii1n •n 1d! O an · • J Bullder 6-42-4905 J-_;;2629;;;;,~ll;,;•;,"'°;;;;;'•:_c.1;;;,;I:_· .... l~l'O;;:RT;::cl::;N_C0:_::. ___ 6:.c':.."':.:.:.000 I , __ _;_543-..:...;1.:290;.:_ ___ 1::;'::;'1..:•Y:.,:·::;·"::;;ll_;l;;:od::'1;;·_;6::''-'::::"6:::.13 I-------- De.lly 'PU01 Clw:1tied SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 I I '. . . T11Hda1, Ftbnlaty 9, 1971 DAILY PILOT 2J N•wport Beach Hausn Furnlahed 300 HouMS Unfum.. -------305 Duplexu Furn. 345 Apts. Fum. 360 Apt. Unfum. 3'5 Apt. Unfum. Laguna Beech Costa Mes• 200 * 'IllREt; ARCH: BAY * * On Bay W /Sfip * Corona del Mer Newport Bttach Cotta Mesa General Costa Mau Owner ollerlng ror the fil'l"I AAA ---------·1·---------·---------1·---------I Busineas Oeeirtunlty time thla larie family home. Bl'eathta\rlng Vleir! CANOY AND *OCEAN VIEW* COLLEGE Park area, 3 BR, NEW occa.nh'Ont uppe r REMARKABLY' $180 New 2 BR &Dt, blll1t. s bedroom1, study, family Pool • BalOOJiy • El!!:v, De-SNACK SUPPLY 3 adrms., 2 balh.1. Walk 10 1% BA, crpts, drps, bltns, duplex, 4 BR. 2 ba, $300 UNBELIEVABLY iMa: cpls, drpe, J>i!.tlo, pr. * * * * room, 5 baths, level llUS luxe 2 bdrm apt. l~mpa.r. WE ESTABLISH btach. Partiall.)I furn. Avail. frple. avail Mllf'tb lat. $250 mo, winter. 5011 &uhott EXTRAORDINARILY 356 E. aith, CM &t2-4!m El Puerto Mt•• Apt1 yard, new kitchen includlnJ able value · only $52~l. ALL ROUTES now on yearly Jene. Mo. bt & Jut+ $100 clean-Dr, or 213/696-17'.!4 BEAUTIFtn. Belbo.a Pen( 1 I * * * * brtakfut l90m. Priced at 'f.fOSS REA!.TY 64?-87J:2 C.a.11: fi73..3663 642-2253 eves i11&. Call $6-.(i61l ovmirr or Duplexe1 Vil D'isere Garden Apts " u • 1 Bedroom Apta. 119•500 firm. ·-~e• for •ru~ SELL sv OWNER (No selling in\'Olved) 5t8-TT29 Realtor. , ~"'~ " ~· ~ CASH REQUIRED Furn or Unfum 355 Adulb, no pets 3 BR. 1'1ature adults. No appt. Principals only. Brand new, lee simple, 1 Pt&n 0... ~""' RENT OR LEASE • • Putting gtetn, waterfall & petl. $115 + utll. 675-4172 $130 up incl. utUltin. Al.to hlk br h l b 2 ba 2 ''C •••••••••••• ~.,, ... ....., N B h aft tu Poot " Rt.creatio 100' VIEW Qf ocean & frplc, ~ain ce~ini;s, ~/w Plat'! t\.\'O •.•• ,,,,,,,. $1625.00 \ 2 hOmes In Mesa Verdf!. 4 BR ewport ll:C stream, flowers everywbert, er 6 pm&:: \\>ttk-endl. rn. . n C~ I a l Ina. Small but carpet, hug!" dbl sar. Pint~ ••.••.•••• $3250.00 :S~~ne;'~~ CJlll; 3 WE have rt:ntala! Apti., ~.'·;:~:'°:};.,~=; Corona del M•r ~~rr~~~;:d: bu1ldable lot In Laguna. &42-T:>ll dlent income for 1 few homes; turn/uni. Winter A S7,SlXl full price. Low dn . un ~kly W<>rk (D~ys & Cott• M1s11 l BR. Lrg liv & dln area. ~arly. Avall, nowt Singles, 1BR,1 BR+ dtn. ttn, no pets. Ir: 0 .W.C. w/ lo\v TTl<).nthly BY c;>wnt.r 3 BR, den, 21~ eningsl. RenUini; and col. t'.' ' New pa.int inside. \Valk Abbl'y Jtealty 642-3850 2 BR. }l'Otn $135, See ii! ...; paym<n~. Bkr. 49l-1153 or BA, Pool 138,000. 1936 1,,.,ting mo"'y fn>m "°'"op. XI.NT locatio "' "-downtown. R<tln>d couple >100 Panona Rd., 64U670 ra:!!-!!, 1950.1961 l\1aple Ave. 494-6632 eves. Tere~Jta Ln, N.B. 642-2378. erated dispensers within a plng-3 Bedroo , 2 bath Ex· or single lady. Call 548--3143. Betv.ttn Harbor A Newport, .., c:o.ta Men , Lido Isle •323 OCEANVIE\V Ave ror qualitled aJl!ll. (Handles ttulivt home. BuUt-tns. ho 31 11-1 2 Blk N. l9!h. sale by owner. View of Ba,y name brand candy and dishwasher disP{isal $2:85 LOVEl~Y nr-new me, ~tsforRent e $30 WEEK & UP ON TEN ACRES lNl'.>IVtDUAL PRIVACY ** 40, 1 I Cl l br 2 '0 <•01983 mo. \Vafor'pd. 2 ~"r toa•,• • BR .. 2 &, Dbl gar, bltns, ' ADULT LIVING o • ean • "" eean . .,.,.,... · snacks). For 1iersonal inter. No pets. Ref. ";~ ~~. ~~1e21lt.,.~LI::. $245. 64~. 1 BR. or S't'UDJOS turn w/ 1 & 2 BR. }Um. & Unlurn. Lrr db: 2 Br, l ~» Ba w/iar. ba. Newly redecorated. Newport Heights vit1v sl:'nd name addrc5s .,....,_ ,,,, compl. kitchen (all elec.), Fireplaces I prlv. palios. &: stor, Patik-like at· Large patio. $71,500. e.nd phone numbe; to Multi. deposit noquired. 54~· 4 BR 3 ba "'l!i d bl Apts Furn 360 Free linens, heated pool, air. Pool• Tennis Contnt'/ Bkt.n. moaphere. Fncd pat I 0 • KI S-2512 &fter 6 pm OCEAN view, 211 La Jolla, Slate Distributing, Inc .. 1681 s14:;..2 BR'&. Ge.rage. Fncd comPtf':telY ";:rurl,ii:!d ~ • • cond, TV " nwd :setviee 900 Sea Lane, Cd~l 644-2611 Cpt/drpalbltn.s, Water pd. 1,L..,i~d..,o"'l..,s7le------1 4 BR, 4 ba, RumpWI rm West Broadway, Anaheim. yard. No Pfl:U. Nr 17th &: _ • Gen•r•l avail . (l\.1acArthur nr C0451 Hwy) 636-4Ul. NEW EXCLUSIVE Baytront, sandy beach lmmaculalc & Bar, s.19.500. S4S-5766, ca. 9280:Z (TI4) 178·5000. Santa Ana A\•e. 543--3530. ~C~'13~l!,_6'~l·-,;:17119~.c,:"'-::!:'.:!:21::'.°''.::·--1·--;;;:;::::-::;--:::-=~-D·"y & Monthl rate 2437 0 A (D) •1•• "6-5289 I !i!i!!!!!iii!i!!ii!!iii!.i!i!i!'::i!!ii · Dover Shores fl OLIO A Y PLAZA mi Y s range ve. ,. ...,, I ' Huntington Beach DELUXE Spacious 1 BR 2080 Ne'>l'POn Blvd., at 21st PARK Your car &: v.·e.Jk, 2619 Santa Alla Ave CLY SlSS San Clemente PARTNER WANTED 4 BR. fam rnt, den, bltn Jurn apt $13.'i. Hcatecl pool. • 642.261l • nr ocean, nr ihopplng. New SEACU F}' Manor Apt.a. 1 z BR, l b!k 10 .~hop, Shag ANTIQUE BUSINESS L:~E N~~~d ;ix!~ ~~~~ stv/ret. Unobstnieted view. Ample parklng. No children B/Amerlcard e ?.1/Ch~ ap1s. 2 BR, 2 ba, beam & 2 BR, 1% BA. Sl40-S160. :\ BR., den, 3 baths Shown by app't. only cpt. Pay equity & TOP '180 tenants exg, low t'l!nt. $165. Pool. $950/mo. 646.2130 • no pets. 1965 Pomona, * * $135 * * celling, trplc, many xtra.11. S30 move In allowance + Party man I woman with CM. 1 BR ~,, d...;_ ''°''' -. 1235 •. $250 at 330 ....... diseounl. .--ts. •-. Inc. ta."<es, by ov.'Ilr 492-2n8 n= 1931l Beach Blvd. 499-1901 •H~u~n~ti~n!~to~n~B~e~a~ch~--lifHi'i'EJffil.iPOfNT'E "' ·•• " M t 675 41 73 ··• "' -~ ...... ooo cash 10 inl'est in a or "9&-3949. -CHATEAU LAPOINTE lrig.'carpor't. Jaundry ~. ?lo'o 54~ri e, -' patio, ~· inlant ok. 1525 very exciling, profitable an. ~-'-'""~~~---2 BR, crpts, drps, bltns. DELUXE furn 2 Br. apt. pets, Alilk about our di:r.count , Placentia Aw. 548-2682 Sl.35.000 LIDO REALTY INC. 3377 Via Lida 673-7300 Real Estate, I.al M d I M General .,. e ar ~------' 1-~------1 MESA DEL MAR 3 bdrm, 2 bath, lge kitchen & fam rm with built·ins. \V/W carpeting, drapes, frp!, cov- ered patio. 2 car gar. $31,500. 0....'Iler selling by appoint. mtnt. 557.7315 Mesa Verde HURRY-NOW VACANT Apartments for sele 152 LIDO ISLE • l\lu.st sacrifice, 6 beach apts. All furn. 6 car garage. 7% loan. Lease land to yr. 1.()18. 01vner. 642-4097 days. Camm•rcial Praperty EARN 15°/o Sl00,000 Ca.sh Down 151 Assume 5~4 ';ti Joan on spac· $170,000 Loans al 7%-8% ious 3 Bedroom & family "AAA" TENANTS room. Extra sharp thruout, l J,000 sq Jt . OC Airport Owner must sell immediate. W.R. DUBOIS INC. Jy. Payments of $165 per * 545-7166 * month pays everything and =CH=A=Rl~M~IN~G~Legn~-na~a.~.~ .. can be taken over. Call stores & apt. on Coast Hwy. 54!J.U51, lor details, Heri-Lot 80' X )05' !ti alley, tage Realtors. (Open Eve&.) Fully leased. Owner will finance at 7.5%. Bkr. R.ealonomics Corp. 6'56700 Condominiums for .salt 160 tique &. import busineM. Newport Be•ch panE'Uing. 2-ear gar. Sl,.,. Pool. Close to si.~. $150. plan. 741.w. 18th S1. 6"2-1158 * CORO'LIDO APTS * VILLA MESA APTS. Ideal location, ha9 done nild. A ·1 2/20 N hi & '"'tm 2 B tudl & ....... t •· b OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba, vai. · r gc Adulls, no pets. ATTRACTIVE 2 RR. apts. r. 8 OS s,,..,..,-,.,ve • 2 BR, Priv patio, Hid pool. dle si.'<·tigure volun1e, Addi. crpts, drps, dl'<. \Vinter, ishopg, S40-2:kl7 or 213: HO 19-11 Pomona Ave C.M . $155. Adults only. Nr. $185 Ir: up, Penthouses $220. 2 car encl'd pr, Children tional cash needed to expand 'Kn Ad·" .... N •· 1-2438 ' IJ••bor • Wlt·•n. '''°!81 Dshwhr, trpt, dbl carport. v.·olcom•, 00 pe--'·ue.' pun:hasing power, Solid joint s~...... wts o • ..,.. 0 ~..,. , * CUST0~1 FURNITIJRE ""' ""' "'° p J 613-3.178 ,. ....., 673-8088. 3 B_R, l ~ BA, Crpts, drps. RENTAL. o •• •d •I··· 810. btwn 8-S. 00 ' l165 rno. 7l9 W. wn.on. venture arrangement, active ""'="=-=-~~--~ -or inactive. \Vholesa!e-retail MOBILE Home, Lido area, Childrtn ok. No pets. 1st, Call 548-3481 QUIET studios SUS 1 BR's FOR RENT: BR.A.~O NE\V ' _64&--01•25~1='7.==""°--1 operation. Beach area. 11 you l BR, king bed, crptg, patio, !ml &: security deposit. S2'l5 $125. 0No chldrn ~ Pf':IA;. unlum 2 Bd!, 2 bath, upper 1 MESA VERDE can :stan now & have the pool, Bay 500'. Adults, 110 mo. SJ6.-0258 Balboa Island 2135 Elden Ave cr..t. See dupltx, $250 mo., ltast. 2 BR cpts dlPI bltna 1'Uh/ ntcessa.ry investment. please ""'-"-· _s200 __ mo_. 673-__ """~--12 BR, l'A . BA, Condo, all 3 BR, 2 BA, :yrly lu. w11v ?.fgr Apt 6. ' X.:f~20. R e a 11 Y' Cd.I\!. dry' a!ta~h. i..Oclred' pr & \Yritc: DOCK 50' & hou5C. 3 br, bltns, avail now at $175 <Tpts, drps. blt-im. Ph: Dana Point stor. Lrg closets. Nr. ahp's;:. OLLY-0 STUDIOS 2 ba .• Yrly/ Summer lse. mo. Call ?.fr. Hoege•, 673-3245 IIEAR !>each & stores New Sl 50.0wner540-5599,SU.3209 P.O. Box 1996, N.B. ~350~·~7~F~;·~·~·Y~·~8J.l.~ll~l4~. ~~ 54>&124• Agent. -1'B~a..,l~boa-..,P~.-n"'in_s_u"'1-.--s~~GL;. :: ~~iy .pet~~ !r:; f:ri1~ ~~ a:a~i·os~~ HARBOR GREENS TRANS .. must move by ear· r.tarina. Inn, 34111 Coast to $325. 316 Marguerite. GARDEN&: SI'UDIO •ft'O'l" Laundry-Self Service 1~ Jy ~1arch, nu 3 bdrm., 2 • $25 WK-OCEANFRONT 6." o.72 2131197 ~-~ •• -d • -· I B "-' 1 8" Hwy . •..-en or -"1NU Bnch. 1 2, 3 BR'1. from SllO. In ma:ior shopping ttnler. Hoolas forRM!t l1CJ ba., blt-ins. crpls, rps, ...... ve Y acuuors, -'"" ..., ll•lost deluxc in area. 2 years . S26J. 536-7332 or 827-3445 Maid service. Pool. Util Huntington Beach UNIQUE lrg 2 or 3 Br. 2700 Pettrson Way, CM. young. Carpeled, color 1V, I ~;j;j;j;j;j;j;;;;;;~ . e 675-8740 e •---~------• dbl ba. Cpts, drps, 2 car 54&-0370 1 d · d b M I 1 ~rv;;;••~e7-;;;--;;;:;--;:;;:;;-\:£~~=~~l~(!i~=== I BEAUTIFUL FURN. APTS. gar. S285 mo. 673-6904, =SHAR==p~3-8~R~=,.,-BA~-1~.~~• pane e : cquippc Y ay. Hauses Unfurn. 305 orona e ar $140-$165. Quiet, prlv, patio, 67J..67l9. ' n · • wv tag. >.1nt trade, a ttendant. ---------NEW 3 BR, 2BA, crpt.s, 2 artlrobe ~-I d . sq, ft. Studio apt, crpb, Priced belo\v replacement General drps, 50'X75' hid comm pooI 1 br furn., Sharp & clean. w s, ... ., c, res!lng BRAND new 2 & 3 Br apt&. drps, nr So. Cst Flu.a. $200 cost. See at Baker & Fair· & rec incl. Prrftr family Nr shop g. S150. 6 0 2 rm, locked ffp, gar. Pool. So ot hwy. 322 Marguerite. mo. Drive by 973 Valtnc:la. I Heliotro-646-6.100 a r Sauna. Rec rm. 644--1342 or 67l-2222. Col t rn ~0 •t ViC'W, Coste. lt1esa, then call 3 Bdnn., 2 bath, dbl. garage. $275 lea:se, $300 w/out ta.st. ,,..., 17301 KeelSCln Ln. (1 blk \V. .....,....,..., ••gr. Bt>tty or John, after S PM. Fireplace, huge kitchen, cat· 551-mo 644-8391. of Beach Blvd, on Slater). Cast a Mesa Quiet Adult living 6#-1307 pet! and drapes. Great loca. TURTI.E Rock Hills Exec. HUGE Bachelor Rm & ba. * 842-7848. 2 BR. Sha; cpls, bltns, beaut. lion. $220 per month. Call lwrur. 4 Br. View. Lease beam ceil. So. of Hwy. Priv ' ·w~A~LK~.-1-0~.,,.-,.~1>--no--,.-m-m-,-r' FAIRWAY lndscpd, $170. incl all util. Wa Iker & Lee $47J Mo. Bkr. B33-08ro :'79M.No cooking. Sl05. increases. 2 Br 2 Ba, sP.e Adib cnly, no pets, Lagun• BHch mgr 220 12th St. 2 BR'•· VILLA APTS. 24! Avocado St. * 64&Dm ~altorl'I BACHELOR, near ~hop'g. $175 +. 130.1 \Valnut & 307 N'E\V J BR owners unit, frpl, AFFlUATE LEGS ARE BEAUTrFUL SUPER lo ca t lon-1 586 l\lyrtleY.'OOd. 3 BR. tam, frplc. FHA-VA pending. $27,500, Owner 499-1901 or (1) 400-3949. Newport Beach 54J-046:; RENTAL Priv patio. Aclulb. $125/mo. 15th St., see: mgr 219 15th 2 & 3 BR'• all bltns, shag crpbJ, drp!I. ATTRACTIVE Qual . the Panty Hose boat, Call Super Sharp & Clean Channing older 1-bdrrn. un· UHi incl. &46-4095. ___ St. Private patio pool. indlv clo5'!d garage. Jmmed. OC· Townhouse by owner. 2 r.tr. Allen, &i.f.£102. Mini-Spacious 3 BR, fam & dining furnished unll. lg. fam. rm., Costa Mesa BACIIELOR ari1 . partly furn. lalllldry lac.• · cupancy. 5 4 0-19 7 3 or ff )'OU \\'OUid like l'O get in on BEACH UNITS bdrn1s, 21it Ba, 2 gar, nice _ _. massive liv. nn. w/\\•oodl----------1 bed, .stove, retrig, w I gar. No•• o-ngo Co . .,_ • ~;)..2321. m\lm secui= investment rm. 2 Bath, dble gar., lg panelin<. old brick tirtplace. CASA de ORO -•• ~~" area. Pool, sauna, etc, etc. $3500. patio, bltns, fully crptd & furn. Adults only. $8()/mo. UCt Adults only LRO 3 br, 1%. ba., bll:ru!, Exe. finance, 548--0120 •Take-Ou! Restaurant • drpd. Beautiful tree lined Oceafro nth.n,bew, hjuslTru~cross CASUAL Calif. Living in a a36-4678 or 536-4979. 918 20122 Santa ~a Ave, cr pl5/drps, dshwshr, lncom. Prop.rty 166 •<-et. $""'" Month. No'v va. m e ac , Y an we.nn Medlle1Tancan atmos-Palm. ~1-. Mrs. Joachi m, Apt J·A downstairs, no pell, 2 11 t 1 N rt S"~re Chicken, shrimp, etc. Busy .... :.ON ut "' tol 1 •· hild Ok ~,. 1165 ren as. ewpo !IV s, location. Low lease. Imma(.'~ ca.nt. Call Heritage Real £s. o st.anwng ren 1 a phere Spacious color CO· $~$135. LGE, modern 1 br 546.6215 c ren , nr ... ,...... . close to bee.ch. 14 garages, DELUXE Fnn...,leJt near Dis-condition. Great for a tale, 540.llil, (op{'n eves.) $250 mo. yr. ease ordin8.ted apts • design!d Ir: hr ocean: ttpts, drps, etc. [L CORDOVA A t M:N215 only 8 yra old. Excellent ~-.. -.1 ~ MISSION REALTY furnished for style &: com-409 Ce.Jif. 536-4261, 847-5169 p S ATI'RAC. Llk• tiew. 1 BR. nd · com of $160() neyland Hotel. 2 large 2 Bed. COU1ne. $1:>,500. 1 BR cottage cpte OK $90 ,,.,~ So. c H , ·-·--0 ...... )'ear arou in e UNIVERSITY REALTY 1 BR f CM. .,,1.1"" ;io;J oast ivy., """'"6 ...... fort e Heated pool e Kitch. DELUXE Bachelor Units • ,,, .. ,u. crpta, drps, bltns. mo. $135,000. Try 20% dn. room and 2 split level 3 Bed. 3001 E. Cst Hwy, 673--6510 2 BR = ~1;:fu.:.:i .•... ;% PHONE 494-0731 en w/ indirtet lighting e Walk to Ocean. Ulil pd. OPEN HOUSE sAT/SUN Htd pool , All util pd. Olll.y CALL 1'9\ 6C6·l41C room luxury units. Wall to -----~----1 3 BR kidse/ O'" ·•••·11• 50 2 BR. House $185. Stove cpl Deluxe RIO. Adults only, No UNDBORG CO. 5.~2579 2077 Charle SI, 642-4470 $150. Inquire: 307 Avocado, ~ V.'B.l! carpeting, drapes, built. Investment , s pets ..... •••· · • ' pets. REFRESHMENTS served in Apt 9, 64!Ml984 ,JaJJM ins. 1or,1> d<m·n, O"·ner will Opportunity 220 2 BR, 1 acr, horse ranch $16:> drps, gar, fncd yrd. 1 BR-$1'15 furn. Legun• Beach .,_ R E7L~ carry 2nd or consider your 4 BR 2stry1800 sq ft, ••. $165 Blue Beacon* 645-0111 rniF.s INCLUDED recreation room. oe sure to BEAUT. 3 Br. 2~ Ba atudio Nt•r ~twpo rl Post Offit:t home. Submit trades. Full ASSOCIATE STAR*LET 776-7330 Newport Beach 365W. \Vilaon 642-l9TI $30 WK LUXURY ~ ~;.~~~~~gp~s~g! ~~~Av7;e~:o' ~~ BALBOA COVES price $69,500. For further PARTNER VERY .CLE~' BR, 2 BA VIE\V of Lido, ocean 1:-SlO \\'K • l per, w/ ldt Ir: up. Bachelors, singles. 1 apbl for adults. Extra lrg $195. 998 El Camino . WATERFRONT information, please call Tom home in a pnme atta. Fully Calalina Clean sharp 2 BR $35. 'f.laid ser, lin<'ns, TV Bdrm, steps to bch, aU util, Jiv rmi1, &hag cpt'd & drp'd 546--0451 Prime Joe. 3 BR. 2 ba. single Porter with crptd & dryd. l..arg1!' fenced & den home, beaut crpt'd & lele. Sealark hfotel, hid pool, linen!, rec rm, thnJ.oul Dwhrs, spae clo11-2~B~R..,.~u-n-fnrn-.~c-hil-dn>~n-ok.-o story. Newly decor. Fenced Eckhaff & Assoc., Inc. $l;i,OOO.saJ.OOO. J\fust bf': avail yard, S225 per mo. Ca11 & d""''d. Adlts only, no pets 2301 Npt Blvd. 646-7445 restaurant, cocktails, danc-els, beaut. pool, encl gar. No. pel!. Heated Pool. Soll 2671 Ev knd 637-0697 immed. & actlve manager t 546-4141 ·,. Ing yd. 30 ft. boat slip, $79,500 . . es-w s expericnc~. $25K to S30K an-agcn $395 mo incl gardener &. LRO 1 BR. w/w crptg, Village Inn Hotel Apts EASTSIDE Cpts/drps. 126 Mont. Vista Biii Grundy, Realtor 20 • • • • • nually, $2".J() \\'eek start. CaJJ 31:Dffi\!d ~~Mrm., ~~k water 642-2237 aft 6 & bltns, 1 adult, no pels. $132. 494 .9436 Brand new 3 BR. 1 BA. $l75. _A_v,.,e.'= • .,c,.,M==--~~i 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-46 lmml'd, 537-5792, 9 am· 5 pm. e ye. · s esa.. 9 wkends. Yearly 642-8520 FURN. •tnd'o• fro-1112. Crpt.9, drps, d\.\'hr, sell clean. * BEAUTIFlJL 1 &:: 2 BR. NEWPORT Sch b r OK, brk., $200 a month. NO 4 BD 3 BA bit t • ' "' n o I alt WU' Ir: Conte Oard A ts • Y owne · 23rd & Orange, C.~1. INVEST $14.461. on a good FEE. 54~1720. ·~ · ns. crp s. BEAUT. Bach Ir: l Br. apta. Beau!. vie"'· Util Incl. Call ng gu o~n. gas mporary en P · Dover Shores \Vestcliff DUPLEX $36,950 TD and collect Sl70.ll per====-=-~--=-= drps, on waler. $375. Pools $l5 wkly Ir: up Furn incl colleC't P .t\-t . Co ., pd, Hid pool. 324 E. 20th Patios, frpl c1, pool. area, We.Jking distance to Builder 642-4905 mo., 36 months. Receive the FREEWAY Handy • 2 BR . &. tennis crt, walk to beach. utll, 1.fonthly t~rnt! avail. 21.1: 437.620-f. st. Gf6.9148 Sl6-$1fi0. Call 546-SJ.63. ~·~m sc~l~i1t!r!R& ~ea~d 37th monlh pymnt of tl5.374. ~1~· Refr, Child petll ok Alsc 4 BR. SJZ'i. 64&-Tli68 998 El Camino. MS-CM51 $l50 FURN lovely 1 hr vieiv \Vrt.SON CARDEN APTS. LRG. 2 le 3 Br. Crpta, drps, lge pool, Lge 101 & circular 4 UNITS, 1 yr old. Corner Phone Broker, &12·2171. ALA Rentals • 645-~0CXI OCEANFRONT-3 br, 3 ha, NICE 2 BR du p I ex• apt nr b<'ach. Responsible 2 BR Unfum. Ne.,.;ly dee. fnshly painted &: clean. drive. Id eal home lot, ].J BR. 2 HA, trplc; Money to Loan 240 3 BURM.+ family rm., full bltns, cpls, drps. Partly Carpeted Good location, emp!nyerl adults. 4M-4200 New cpts/drps, Spac Kids ok. 64&-0621 or ' . 1. 1, . d 6,. ··~ 2 2 BR 2 BA 1 . 1 furn. $250 \Vinter. 6-16--6300 $135. ' grounds. Adlts, no pets. 64U344."'"""'==-I rea is 1ca •i pr1~ . 't<J'""OllV\I • • • nice. Y dining rm .. bullt-iru;., brk. or 644-8397. * 5-49--0833 * Lido Isle $140/mo. 2283 Fount a In NEW DUPLEXES BLUFFS-ANGELITA furn. 2 BR, t BA. 4 pvt 1st TD Loan S.190 a month. NO FEE, v · I ea· gar. C. ~1. Sis.5. mo. inc. Newport, 540-1720. WVELY 2 BR unr house 1 BR. & 2 BR I~ BA. BEACH Apl5. Furni5hed 1 \Va{v1f· jHarbor, turn W. 1.2.38R. Washtr/deytthook- . on 2 ~bra 2 b'°0 1 1 $69,950. P.O. Box 212, Cd"f 7,:.. INTEREST MINI RANCH. Carp, 1,, on 34lh St. NB. Yearly. S175 Cpts, drps; nr sbop5; pool. Br.. & BachPlor. Garage. on son · up. encl gar, patto. trcd air. Spacious , a, -s ory LUCKY "ll" 5 duplexes + ,. mo lease. 897-3411. Util pd. 1884 J\1onrovia. S200, S225, $2j{I, 31.0 Nord. ~fesa Vmle area. 546-1034 plan on choice corner lot. hse. Ea. w/fenced yd. Fix-2nd TD Loan drapcs, stove. $140. 2 BR. firepl. & sep. rec. 543--0336 714: 642-4097 LA COSTA BEAUT. Country Club Villa.. By owner. $39.500, 644-3189. up & increase rents. Z.st ALA Rentals • 645-3900 2 sm. rooms ~ Ba. gar. $145-l BR. $175 • 2 BR. Newport Beach NEW I &: 2 br. Bltns, rwim· 2 BR, t~i BA, pvt patios, access, 15% dn $1101\1. Agt. Terms based on equity. Jl50 • 2 Br, hse. Gar, Nlce $295 yr. 613-0883 UUI pd. Pool. Garden Liv-ming pool & garage. AU crpt, drps, blt.ina. $260 mo, The DAILY PILOT 675-8989 642-2171 545-0611 yrd. Kid" & pels. ON TH E BEACH 1 BR. Jng, Adlts, no pets. 740 W. * BAYFRONT * utlUtles paid, $150 to $170 For further inla ca.11 Jeanne Serving Harhor arta Z1 Yl'I· Blue Beacon* 645-0111 Stove, Refr. Child olc. $1 35. 18th SI., Cl\1. mo. Ad ults, t'lO pels, 354 Edwards 963-6.123. 10 Units-East.side Costa Deluxe newly d"°'· n•w A•-ado St CM ,.•9-0 Sattler Martgage Co. NICE 2 BR, 2 Baths, yard ALA Rentals • 64>3900 LGE 0 ,·-ty f""" l B" opt. ..,.. ·• · U'UO· •uo 3 BR, 2 BA, bltna, -·: l\tesa. Architect design, no '~ "'" '"-draperi~. 2 BR's, 2 BA's. _. \oacanc.ies, Io 1v me.in-336 E. lTth Strret enc. R"""wpet ok. Sl5564_ 3900 3 BR, dplx. ptly furn ••• ·$250 $135. Clostd garage. No $.JT;,, 3121 \V. CM.!>'t }lw• .. , Npt across d . from lg park: AI.A en s • a-$21l l 20 ' * FREE $155 mo. Call alt 6 ~'l tcnance. good return. By 3 BR. homl!" ......... ·•· a men, no pcts. lnquire 9 557-3084. Ova1er. 6-12-4441 Cash Fast I LONG HA.IR OK. 2 BR. Cayv.'OOd Rt'a\ty 548-1290 "B" \Vallace or 838-0038 2 BR. 8 ~1·~· avail. now to RENTAL SERVICE '~=''=-~-=~--1 R 0 Rclr 150 June lath. \Vceldy or . ii BR D J $125 Pl BY o\\·ncr. 1\\'o 3 br hot1.~e~. • / · · enc. gAr. ~ Park Lido 3 BR, 2~) BA 1 BR. $120 &: $123. Spaciou~. monlhly rutr:i;. Costa Mesa • lfunllngton up ex. · ellS81lt H.B. $300 mo lncomr, S3000 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds ALA Rentals • 64"'30CXI Cp!s: drp~. bll-ln.~. Adult.~. Pool. ldf':LI IDr A!'l~ia!cd Brokrri; 673-366.1 Beach • Newport Beach garden surroundinp. Quiet rlown. ~••.0438 FREE APPRAISALS S14:i • 2 Br. Cottage, Stv/rt. Fireplace S275. 64~797 Bnehclors. 548·!)63.1. 19'33 · 1-2·3 BR AJ71'S. & close to ahop'g, No pets ~ f . Id • k C ? RR, furn, \\llnrer or yearly Ask about our DISCOUNT _o_r,c;--h;;ild"'re"'n'".;C";;'S-6920~""'=-Costa M esa Investment rig. cp!s rps. Kids 0 · Newport He•'ghl• hurch t ·~• s h lndustrl.al Pro-rty 168 Bl B * 64" "111 easP. "0 lD • e a s ore · P' '" "·'t ~0.0220. " WON'T BE'lEVE' . .. ~ 548-7711 anytime UI eacon -FURN Bachelar' & t Br. 64:z..&17f!. ..... u~ • ....., -u " WALK TO OCEAN . l BR. l·BR., shartl. good area. 4 Exceptianally nice! LRG spotle55 1 BR. Cpts, This lrg, clean 2 Sr. Frplc. INDUSTRIAL BLDG. Mortgages, Cottage partly furn $115 Rms. of duplex, cptsfdrps, 2110 Newport Blvd. CM S2JO i\f~. 2 .BR lowtr, Year· drps, encl gar, patio. Adlls, Qu iet. Adil!. Nr OCC. 109 6,400 Sq. ft. indu:i;trial hldi:;. 260 ALA Renlalr • 645-3900 gar. Older couple, no pe ts. , lo'r·.U6f71! ~,1'sd. 3704 Seashore no peU, $135. 646.J762 A . Oearbrook Lri. w/1,200 sq. ft. of air-cond. Trust Deeds $125 Mo. Bkr. 646-2414 • BACHELOR APT. • ,,..., . . 2 BR E·slde garden apt. * 2 BR, elec bltn1, lock. oI!ice:i;. Priced at $82.ooo. l ---;1,.,4-.6J.r-<9"'1"~"t"'b"""--FhULL 8~':mi ~J..r, 2 Ba. 2 BR. home comp! redec. 3.l7 E. 21st St. SING~E furnished. Ubl pa id \Vlthin we.Jk:ing dlsl. shop-gar, Mesa Verde area. Big Xlnt bldg. for an investor or l.tl TD 0_ pn·m, 3 , .. p·-•I. ome w c. ·1· N ew crplg. Fl'nced yard. Coi;ta Mesa. S28.8a WC'ek. 224 Ne\\'f)()rt pin fl .,. 67J...227l closet.a. SlM/mc. No ~ts. " ._ ""~ Blue Beacon* 64$.0lll 5 k Blvrl, N.B. g, ...... :>, 557-8400 possible ustr. All due 3 yrs, ifl('I. 9% int. Gar. No <"hildren, no pets. * SI. per l'>"et!' u P 2 BR, 1% Ba studio. $175, QJ!dweli, Barikt-r & Co. San Juan Capistrano. IS% Corona del Mar $175/mo. 642-7595 V.'/kitchen~. S?5 ))f'r "'·eek 7 ?l>fo. Sublease 2 br apt. util incl. Patio. 339 Cabrillo. 0J.R0G,.-, cl=,,.=2=B,"."'q,=a"'.""""-··I Dick Cramer <TI4) 64>1·2-15-t d1.~count. Bkr. 493.1154 or ---------·!Santa Ana H•lghts up Ap!s. l\fOTEL. 5-1R-!l7i'i. Park Nrwport. N.B, <213) 548-8803 or 846-l64S rt!rig, range. Gas It wtr Lats far Sale 170 493-1706 e\'cs. 3 BR. 2 BA. \Valk to bea<"h l~~!..!~~~~~--\i'Nili1cEiEE:'-1liBBiR~.ro;j;p\,";:-· "i11nQ;;;;eii:1. CH 5.-50:\4 nr fn4l 644-7900. · pd. Na pell. Over 35. I 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii k school. Balcony, bltln~. e S;\fALL 2 br, acre for Scp. by gnragl'~. Adults 2 RR uppc'r . \Valk !o beach. * * QUJET 2 BR. gar ~2407 ---------1• r efri.s. \\'alW-r, dryer, ,vnrk 2 horses. 20271 Acacia St. over 30. No pct~. MS-1021 S2."i0 tncl util. Yearly. Avail k pool, Cpls/drps. Adul!J ~N=EW~~S..,pa-,~;0-,-,-,-.~,-8~R. 3 Xln't Bldg lots. adj to ~ 22,9 only no pets 642-8042 I bench, garage. Util pd . $375. $175, 673-.., · I BR Trail-in Ro\llng 3/1. 213 / 4·17-9'143, • · bltns, ...... ts, d~•. ~-ge. niorlel~ at i\lesa Vt:rde Hous•1 lorftttit ...a. '"' 2 BR 1~ BA C ~-.. .,. •-g Estates among luxurious l"Cl mo. Yr!y lease. Pets & University Park ltome!I Park. Nn childT'Ml, LGE l BR apt 11vai! Feb. Sl50 • • · pts, Immed. occupancy. 5$.-1973 homes. From S15.000 • childnn ok. 673-5456. -no pcls For info: 646432.1 5 thru June $175 mo. drp1, 11tv-dwhr, gar. No or 545-2321. $16.500. 54&-1077 Broker. H F h·_. 2 BR. Adults. No pets. Patio. :z BR., 1 ~ath ••··•·•••• $2251~· 2~B"'n"'1-,"';,.~c-,~-.-~-~B~l,-n-~I 714/521~ * 'g31-sooo. pets. 766 w. Wilson. 64Z..7958 ~+'""'B=EA=un=ru=L~l-4~2~B~R.·I ouses urni1 -300 Yearly I••••· 52011 3 BR., 21,,. beth."······ .c.o.> • • • .,.... •• LX ' 8 1u Bas·~' Co c c '~s ho-· -u-try N 1150 2658 Or•-•• Ave Newport Heo'ghts D r, ,.. • ...... o. n emporuy lll"den Apts . ...., , -......... " -· A•-.ado. 8 3 7-7 8 6 5 or 3 BR. • din. "11. • • •••• $325 · " • , :.::.::.="-===--·I p I T t I h · n · All '"'· 545--1657 1 · B!tr11, Cpll'/drp9. No pt!l$. atiol, frplc1, pool. tJ.45 • ut~i~ies.n · ~Vl'r::~~ for Gen•ral 536--9485 eves. l BR. & fe.m, rm.···••• $325 SMALL Bah I I all MODERN 2 Br dupJex.trplc Avl Ftb. 1. $160. 54&-MSl $160. Call 546-SUi.1 ORANGE 2 "~~n Si\tALL hoU I" BR' 4 BR., 2%i baths N •••••• $325 c eor ap • bltns .. crpts, drp. s. Well LG 2 s,, Ill b& studio •pt, SHARP ,_ 1 & 2 Br, c:aiih. 83 ~. rear &fl:, >10 s, 4 Bdrmo 21Ai baths view util, paid. $85/mo. "11 -====-,-~8~1-LANDLORDS. O\VNERS lrplc, shag cpl.s, encl patio, ·· • C 11 "-•"-,,,,,. marntalncd. 2 child~n ok. no peOI, famUies only. Priv cpti/drps, bllnl, quiet blda:. 4 CEMETERY oL~. ue PROPERTY Jl.!ANAGERS $150. 6T;HX>41 ews. TurUe Rock •·····•··· $360 a <I'~ Sl.35/mo. 842-5811. patio. 726 Joann St. $140. No pets. Infllllt ok. S1JO Spruce section. Harbor Re~t \Ve \\'ill rrfrr tenants to you LOVELY 7 BR., 4\i baths ........ $450 l BR. furn, $150 incl utll . San Clemente ' BR, 111 •-tlnd"' "-•·, & $150. 540-9722, 547-2682 i\!f'morial Park $700 . 3 Br. 1 bile beach. Pool, guage, dlllposa l . IRl ""' .... ., ..... Ci~S.-307:i c~~:~ra"~lrch~;:;;nis · ~n;..t~~ in bes! area. S.100/rno. r<t'o Adult~. no J)f!t~. 642-2383 Cl-IELOR 1 blk f drps. bltns. Adults. itso. $165 Li db: 2 Br, 1% & CDJl.I. 2 adj. R·l I~. some "'<tlli112 Jii;I. pel~ or childrf'n. ~ $120 1 BR. 166.Z Newport B~an. $8(1/~. UHi pd. ~ s.l!)..3598, 642-7674 Qu~I; adlfs. GE .II: It . ocean & bay vif':1v, nr bettch, Al.A Rrntal~. + 61:,.3000 2 BR, 1 BA, clo~ to town, Blvd, AU ulil Included. No 492-4613. $1:).) -2 BR. Crpta, drapes, $ton.gt. 240 E. l&th Pl. $65~f. !\.fay trsdt. ASK FOR , n"', .. • Bc•Ch. ,,, .. 1-BR w/ adult11, $1R5 per mo. Call pets or child~n. I J6S bit-Ina. Otild Ok. 24.l, Elden 10".,S-64=l0 2-· ..-;=-:.:=-=·I NN COATS .,, 67~ 4,..,,. ..... ,.,~.. ~ agent 642-1711 Apt. Un urn. Ave., *'· .. , •-. LARGE 2 BR •ludlo, Jli A ' ''&cnt :i-"'1\1, all util's pd, $130 ldcal for C M DUPLEX 1 Br furn, quiet. '"""""'' BA, dres11ing rm, plltfo. PRIVATE Party wl~hts to slngle perBOn. oat• •s• "SINCE 1946'' 110 dop. Near ahoppfng. General 2 BR, nr Sftnta Ane Country pool. $1SO-$US. 2925 Men- •ll large Emerald 8a¥ Blue Beacan * '45·0111 SlfARP 3 BR, 2 BA, quiet bt Wf':Stern Bank Bldg 543-:mo Club, encl~ yard, $105 doza v!f':W let. -194-9968' N \Jniverl .... Park $1S5. SHARP 1 BR. mo. 54s-t732. 2'"°'B~R-. "'u'"n"'•--.,1~.-~,..,...,-.,.,_-I $llO. Utll pd , Nice l BR. Nr atrttt. ow vacant. $%30 per •.,-...... ...., """ Real Estate Want.cl lM ocean. Stv/rtf. Cpls/drpt. mo. Call LARRY, Jterftqe Day• 13UIOJ Nights Heated Pool. Adulta, no pet. NEW t Br. apt. No childrtn ff.nt ok. No pell, O..lld ok. Reii.l~E>~ta~t·~S<0-~1151~:.· ~~l .;=========\.,!;lt~ff~n~o~k:'.1.:..642~·!9520~:_ __ \ or pets. 307 E. 18th St. Joann SL, CM. 5-f9..3t3T WE are the exclusive ..... nts Btu• Beacon * 645-0111 • 3 BR, crpts & drps. fenced 3 BR. 2 ba. home •••• $325 NOW'S THE RFENTATL LFINdDIERdS Call Wpm, &15-1574. * 2 BR. $150/mo, Pool. •· Balboa Island )'anl & 1>411°', $200 mo. 3 eti 2 M f $340 r•• o an or s l BR, slove, refrlg, tt:ar, Conv. •hOfl'g. No children. for II. national corporation. 615-0391 Turtl~ Rocic :~·R~u·: $475 ~5.0111 11.dul!A, $110/mo. 240 313 £.17th PL~ NE£D lfOi\tES for transfer-----------TIME FOR •l•W.lt,.,C-M.,. Avnc11.do,.~pt A. 5-14-8230. '''. C•lt tocat ••ont befort 3 BR < 0 4 Br. 3 ba, fam fly rm. i\1tsa 2 Elciant 3 bdrm. 2'Ao bath SH -$175 3 BR. l'io ba 1tud)o. Y .... ''''· o.7.6612·-. ' ... cur~t rni, A\'ll Verd" Children ok. $26J h)\\'nMuse11 ...... $375-$41' "UICK CA I !';~=;:=;.,..-,-.-.,,--12 RR. Cpts A: drpa, All f':ltc, rl!tlt!'C. ept/drps, adj 1h.....'1 "" 01 f"rh lhn1 J11ne, 0 pe n ,.. I· d' h & 1 26!2 SI 1 ,_,.. Sl\ t 'Sun p . ~f ' 220 mo. 5-J0.-2571. i · . re' d h·111 THROUGH A Just for Slngle Adultt IS war sow, ' :tn. ~18-&101. 2IJ/sn..sm SOUTH BAY CLUB An•. $1S3. 2!3/<n.a&;s E Bluff Apl Units Jn aood loce.Oon Amt'lh)'lsl. B.l. ST.>-8196 • 3 BOit;>.!. Unturn. Sl~iO DAIL y PILOT •st "'antrd by pvt buyer. Cond "),l.\l{E noom For 011.d· 2622-B Sanla Ana A~. C~l. APARTMENTS .. ,1 l'E Room ror Dll<f..l----------I not lmµorlanl. 67~'lSl 1. d y '' ... c I ea n out ~ i~'""'='°"'-."""''-',."-;.~1;_1!.,.=~c 1 REALIT WANT AD New part Beach rl :· ' .. c I e " n out lhe TO\\'NllOUSE • OWMr's 4 LEASE on hOuse lany C'Oflri) garAge .. )'Our trash Is CASlf 2 BR. Duplek. l child. No Univ. Park Center. Irvine 642·•5678 8i!O livln.<t Avf'. I ):J11~g1•.., .your lr1i•h Is CASfl Br, 3 Ba, alto 2 Br, 2'1Ai \\'/lot ~uitable f\'11' blda 43' wltb a D~.Uy Pilot Classified pet~. $14 O I mo • l9llO Call Anytime 8J.1.os:l0 flrvint •ntl 16th) "-'Ith a 00\lly Pla)t Clua.ified Ba. ftatiol. Encl 1 a r . boat. t2L3l 281-2.>81 ad. Wali•Cfl, 548-2802 (714) 645-0550 ad. 615-alll ---'---- COAST'S leading Marketplace ,-.=~-.. . I '\ •' I Buy The D.AIL Y PILOT For Peanuts! - H1r1'1 htrt'• htre'a CHARLIE BROWN ••• and LUCY.,,and L1NUS ••• and VIOLET ••• ~nd here's SCHROEDER,,. and l11t but not least. here'• SNOOPY Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally. ) ' NEWPORT BEACH Viii• Granada Apts. Fou1· bedrooms with bli.loon. ie~ above & belo""·· Graciou11 living & quiet surround!~ for faml1y \vith c:hlldrPn. Near Corona dcl ~tar High Instruction ~I Instruction l~I Instruction lutiday, f'tbrury 9, 1971 DAILY ,ILOT .f3 I~[ '"""'"'" I~ I ln.tructlon I~,'-[ _1no_''""-"" __JI~! 1"''"""" I~ I lnttr11c\ion I~ School. Fireplace ·~\'et bar & \ built.in kitchen aPpllance~. 8Jj A?IUGOS \VAY 644-2991 Cpldv•ell. Banker & Co. I Schools and structions WHAT IS YOGA? Vitality? Peace of Mind? Concentration? Beauty? Success? Friendshipf Strength? A Good Night's Sleep? l\1an ing Agent S.11-j221 Fou fain Valley ALL NE\V VALLEY P,ARK APARTM~NTS ••. opens ne1v ~rs for , •. YOUNG FAMILIES 2 BR . Apts $160 2 BR. Garden Apts $175 1 BR. Townhouses $185 ~ BR.·Apartment $210 Pre-1chool center. Adult pool. Children's pool. Priv patios. Elec kitchens \Vall lo v>all closets &. caTl>@ts. :? play- crounds. Carports & stor. "''· 17256 S. Euclid St. (just south of Warner in Fountain Valley) Phone (7141 540-4785 Huntington Beach 2 BR, bllns, ref:rig, drps, shag: crptg 1hruout. Upstalrs . w/ocean vie\v. Also 1 BR, crpts, d1•ps, ri'.'frig, bllns. Sl35 mo., incl u t i I . Trade1vin d s Real~y. 8~7-8511. OCEANFRNT Vu. Sundeck. Beach. Sn1og free. Neu·er dlx 2 Br. bltns, cpts, drps, patio, lndry, gar. Nr shops & pier. Slti5. Adlls, baby ok. 536-2131 * FRESH AIR \Valk l blks 10 Beach! Beaut. big 3 BR apt. w/w crpts. dt·ps, bltns t'.'xcept refrig. S22i Ko pets. 536.1711 WALK TO OCEAN I BR. Crpts, drPs, sonle w/ frplc & patios. $120.$150/per mo. Adults. Lll\'DBORG CO. e 536.2,j79 MODERN 2 BR. Duplex -f'rplc, bltns, crpts, drps, \\"ell 1naintained. 2 children ok. $m I mo. 312-5817 CHEZ ORO APTS 8234 Atlanta, 1-2 BR, pool, . private garage. \Vashers, dryers. 536-8038: S~2727 WALK TO BEACHll VELY NE\V 1 & 2 BR. Crpts, drps. Dishwashers. 1~ Palm * 847-39:}7 BEACHBLUFF Apts NE\V 2 BR, 2 Ba, dishy,·ash. er~. pool, patio. 8231 Ellis. Stl-8417 or 847.3937. $140 ASK about our discount plan! 2 BR., crpts, drps, bltins, car. port. $2j j'.Jove-Tn AJIO\\'· ance. 725 Utica: 536-2462. NE\V 2 Br. 2 Ba. near beach Bltns. Crpts, drps, Jrg patio, l'ncl yard. 21662 Brookhurst SI, Apt B. 6.i&-0841. ULTRA-private delu."<e 2 br, 2 ba, pvt patio, encl garage, single story. SJ7j. 81 7 Gene\'a St. 536-8659. 2 br studio, 1~~ ba, patio & yard, encl gar. \Valer pd $lj() mo. 1 child ok Avail1 aft Feb. 6. 842-4:>t9. NEW 2 BR. from $135. Cpts, drps, bltns, patio, fam sec· tion. play area, No pets. 1 st&-7'177 UNFURN townhou se • Btookhurst & Adatns. l br, 1 ~ ba. S200 mo, Avail 2/20. &l,;,..();Ai;j I BR \\'/stove & refrig, crpts & drps. Nr beach $125 mo. Trade\vind5 Realty, 847·8511. T\VNHSE 3 Br, crpts, drps. \\'Sht·. dryr. R/0, refrig $195/mo. 548-\40j, 968-942j. AVAIL now. $159. Attrac 2 1'his va1·iety of fine schools could introduce you lo a new ton101'l'ow. ' For further information rega rding the Daily Pi lot Schools and Instruction Directory CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325 • Credentialed Teachers • Educational Program • :rdorning & Afternoon Sessions • State Licensed FIRST CHRISTIAN PRE· SCHOOL 792 Victoria Avenue Co$ta Mesa 548-4778 SEW-KNITS SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS '"d LINGERIE All Brands Stretch Patterns Vogue & Butterick Pattern5 WE HAVE THE FINEST SELECTION OF KNIT FABRICS ON THE ORANGE COAST. 2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD COSTA MESA 540-3268 S-T-R-E-T-C-H & SEW jT.M.) CLASSES 8 2 hr. s1500 Lessons Morning -Afternoon •nd Evening Children discover great things at our school. Themselves. Our school. Early Achievement Center. Unlike most pre-schools, we do more than keep little hands busy. We keep little minds busy. With science. Math. Lang uage. Art. Social Studies. Things like that. Impressed? DiJn 't be. It's not what we teac h that's so special. It's the special way we teach. We encourage children to discuss things. Touch things. Act out things. So they will better know thei r capabil ities. And themselves. (Which is just about the greatest lesson of all.) Ok, like to discover more about us? Sunflower Early Achievement Center 251 5 West Sunflower Avenue Santa Ana, California 92704 714/540·4750 • Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by ou r Sunflower school. We're open year 'round. So parents can corile in anytime. And children can be enrolled anytime. NEWPORT· MESA PRE-SCHOOL 140 E. 22nd ST., COSTA MESA 645-2323 6:15 A.M. -5:30 P.M. K indergarten Readiness Arts & Crafts l\1usic & Rhythm Physical Fitness Phonics Colors & l\'umbers Educational Field Trips l lot L unches Basic Bible Stories Real Estate School PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM IN 4 WEEKS Licen sing Preparation for: • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Building Contractors • Insurance • Day & Evening Classes CaJ ifornia Department of Education Approved-Master Charge and BankAmericard Accepted. For lnform1tion-Brochure- FREE GUEST LECTURE Phone 646-3229 ANTHONY SCHOOLS OF NEWPORT BEACH 325 North Newport Blvd. Newport Beach e 646-3229 Edmond F. J ackson Will Power? Youthfulness? ~~~r ~~s~l h~~~at!~~~! effective YOGA is! •• FREE DEMONSTRATION •• TONIGHT AT 8 PM EIGHT WEEK CLASSES START e e THURSDAY MORNING AT 10 AM YOGA CENTER 445 e: 17th St., Cost• Moh 646-8281 COME AS YOU ARE COME TONIGHT! , •••••.••••••..•••• : . SAUCERMAN SCHOOL : : ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS : • 88 FAIR DRIVE • COSTA MESA • • • : Grades 1 through 9 • .' . Small group and individualized teaching to e e meet the realistic needs of youngsters .• e Abilities will be challenged by good teach· • ing and a variety of educational materiab e • so that more effective learning will result. e • : MOTIVATION e e Operates only_ from within a l'.'erson -not : e from the outside. Good teaching can stim-• e ulate motivation within a youngster by e building on successful learning experi· • a ences. Nothing succeeds like success! e : WHERE THE PROGRAM : • FITS THE CHILD I • • • e Willard H. Saucerman. Ed. D. e e T •ltphont 540-4060 School : • S48-1751 (•••.) • ~ ...••••••••••..••• AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS For Men and Women • Tr1v1I Agent e R111rv1tlon1 • Ticket S.ltt e Air lralght Ctrgo e Cammunicatlont e Operations Agent Day end night cl11u1 AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Accredited: Sant• An• 543-6596 610 Eut 17th StrHI National Association Trade & Technical Schools Approved for Veterans Eligible institution under the Federally in· sured Student Loan Program BR. Kiris ok. All extras. - Pool. 96&-7510. 847-48:1) TOTAL CHILD DEVELOPMENT 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 •. .-....... ii ......... 1 . ....,......,b ....... I[!] I _b ....... J!t] Irvin• NOW LEASING! :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;; • Ne"'" ramily and adults units1,A-"p:_t_. _u_n_fu_r_n,;c. ___ 36_5_ 1 cA;:;p..;1._Uc,nc;f..cu:.crnc;. ___ l:;6:.:5 • • Apt. Unfurn, 365 Apts., • ··"th t tot u· n club • Furn. or Unfurn. 370 wi 0 recrea 0 Newport Bt1ch Newport Beach • Santa Ana 11 rid pre-school. 1, 2, & 31 _ __: _______ 1-;;:-;:';:::-;;;:::'.;::-;-;-::--1•. • ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 _c_os_t_•_M_o_sa _____ 1 bdrms from $150. Nr. shop.I~ A New Way To Live ping, golf. schools. Just PARK . NE\\'PORTthe-(·are in Newport Beach • VILLA MARSEILLES BeauttM 1 & 2 BR turn south or San Diego F'"'Y· on tree livg overlkg ;at~ OAKWOOD GARDEN • • BRANO NEW or unfurn ap!s. OFFERING Culver Dr .. [rvinc. 833-3i33. 7 pools. 7 tennis cts s j(), APARTMENTS • SPACIOUS s F $17-J.ljO • self clean. ovel'lS. DIW (ln PARK WEST pa. ront J !O On 16th S1 c-t bl"'O Newport Ar'r Assocr'ales 1 & 2 Bdrm Apt• 2 B ) d. I h APARTMENTS , ,..,h. l ,.. 1 Be. Ah<> n " • • , • '. ~P '· • ag crp11 1 sty TOl\'TihOu~rs. l::l<'C. kL. lrvlnl' and Po\'l'r Dr. • • Adult Llviflg drp1. Jacuzzi & Sauna bath'. °".;,:d1;;i~ ri.~;:i~~iyby pn. PAt or uul subirn park;; __ i_71_4)_64_2-8170 flife School & flY. ing Club 1• Furn. & Unfurn. Jluge Pool. FOR ADULTS ! !!!!!!!!""!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!I opt mail :.er cp1s, drps. San Clemente I• • Ol!!hy,·asher -color coord inat. only. Just N. of Fashion Isl at """-''-"''-'-=---LEARN TO FLY COSTA MESA '\• ed appliances • plush shai MERRIMAC WOODS La1una Beach ,Jainbon·r & :.:;;,n Joaquin DELUXE 2 BR .. 2 Ba .. bltins I • m carpet • choice of 2 color t25 MelTlm11.c W~ SOUTH LaiUM . NC'w 1 br. Hills Rd. ~4·l!ro for leas· d5h1\shr, rrc. room. Adult! $SOO. (• PRE-SCHOOL • schemes _ l baths • 1tall Colla rtlesa. 19 block from beach. Heated ing info. only. Sl80. 492·22l9 • • showers • mirrored y,•11.rd· LRG 1 &: 2 BR. apta, 10 pool. All f'ltttrtc. Complete _ . Santa Ana 1797 Monrovia Avenu• robe doors • indirect Jlght· mln trom colleae. oe1an Ir kltch~n. Year round lease BACHELOR apt $19.j, Vie1v (fh1ucll1t AYlll'l•le) • • ing in kltdM!n • breakfast could walk to ahop'r . u,, Pack N<wport Avoll oow * FAA APPROVED * (Corner of 18th Street & Monrovia ) -!or $169.50. New bed 4: din-· · • • bar • huce private Jenced laundry tac., carport & pool. lng gel for sale at $135 Rec Cntr gy1n !Ill.Una pools CAN'T 8( BEAT Compl•I• Cou n• l11elud•i: • Costa Mt1• • patio • plUAh landse11.plng • Rent from $.lJO.SUS. Aalc I or unfurnished. Avail l\latth 871-3232 ext 2370 dass .1.0 H 11· ht t ' · C 150' · h • ......,ck Bar-B.Q's -la....-heat. about our •1•-unt. 1•-t. 497•1906 or S73-22:39 644-0089 l!'\•es Sat Sun ., ours 19 1me 1n e11n• 1 wit • 642 40 11n •0¥ ,.. "" O'fO SINGLE STORY 20 hrs. dual instru ction. Club membarship. • 50 Of 838·5237 ed pools A: lanai. Placentia l\1gr. Apt H. OCEAN" front 1pectacular LGE 2 BR liludlo, 112 BA. Sout11 Sea Atmosphere 2 Month's free dues. Individual instruction, • • 3101 So. Bristol St. 646-856-l I villa. Huge rms. 3 lrplcs. erpts, drps, h!1ns 8.· O\V, 2 BR. • 2 DA Tl{ tailored to YOUR ability. • 0 • (~!t r.11. N. of So. Coe.At Plau) ~, "'s;;;R:-. °"ru=-=-.-;1"'130"'"", •2 "'BR="turn,-1 ""'"' rrnds e'"-M l\to. r-oear Hoa;; J.lo!p. Sl90. .... • ......,,, , d-• pen 6:30 AM 'tll 6 :00 PM S t A ... _..., \oil.,~ "' .,.~ $18 A WEEK COMPA E! ~ in a n• Sl.S3. 2 BR unfurn. I"• 1 4~ 6-i2-43Si &ll-l7'il. 1\1r Condillol1cd 10 OTHER AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE • -R • PHONE: 557-1200 Pool. Bltns, crpta, drpt ~ Lido lsJe 1 BR. Year!)'. $Jjj all utit Pr1va1c P11!ios 1t LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY 1. Full & Half Day Sessions _,,,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,,.. Childf'l!n, no pets. 32$.J' E. paid. :'\l'nr hll\' ,t: lx'ach . HEATED POOL Leo rn to fly now end hovt fu• I 17th Pl. C~f. 548-273S THJS IS IT! ?-IA.le Bachelon Gar. Patio. 5;3 • .'z:t.)(]. Plenty of lawn --·~ 1•. Ages 2 to 6 Ye1r1 • "t.JAKE Rc.R.>m For Dad- ' I ) BR " _1, * Fly Mexico & Canida SPACIOUS & quiet l & 2 on y. ·"I , u • ·" · . , RT-o;::---1 2 BR Carport & 51<1111..... • d " i t ... $lfi0/mo. Ulll pd. 673-18.112 NE\\PO ~ .... res 11:e • HIDDEN \'lLl.AGE *Special R1t11 for Commerci1l or Y • .c ean ou u"" bi', N?a1. rates. 20 2 0 1'7-"'7-;~--2 DA, gar. no Pfl•. SI~. GARDEN AP'TS. Instrument Students. • **Hot lunches & Snacks • Fullerton. &12.-8690. Mesa Verde yr-around he fi.16-i062. I• **Cr11tlve Actlvlt i11 • p.rap .. Your trash ll CASH =---~~---2500 South Salta F C **M I S • NO matter what lt -. ya:i 1 2 BR up8talrs. Gar. Nf'wly LtDOl5LE:"BR"Chelors onl)' Sa.nta Ana 4.> S46-lS2S or omplet• Details C•ll NOW I• · u1 c, tor1e• • with a Dtlly Pilot ClurUltd cai. sell u With 1 OAtt.Y d«0r. Child ok. No p<ll. !.<• I BR •Pl. •II""'• pd • ..,,,...,...,...,...,...,...,..,. ..,,...,...,...,...,...,6...,7"3"•"0"3"1"3""'""'""'!!!!!!!!,,,,,.,'• **Sp•nloh • •d. DM!.Y PILOT WAllT AD. S1 50/mo. jST.8KlO. $160. n10. 675·1."92 = :::..:: !!!CJ!.•.J•._,•,_,•,_,,1_•!!....•!!..!1!....!!IW!•-•,...,1._, • ._,,1'-"•-•._,•,_,_,., ---------Call 642-5678 6: ehart'I! ft, I • I I I ' Z.f OAILV "LOT Tlltlday, Foo1rJ '· 1971 , • Aph.. Apts., Apll .. l-~F~u~m~·~Of':_:U~nfu:::::~m~._:3~7D:_~F~u~r~n~.o~r~U::;nfu:::,m~.:..::3~70~l....:F~u~m~.o~r~U:::,::nfu;:;,m~.'-'370 When You Want it done right ••• Hunting!on Beach Huntington Bfi•ch Huntington Beach * Sr.IL &lttpln& • •lttlng: rm, okier acilt. All ulil pd. $60/mo. 646--8464. WANTED OVERWEIGHT /LADIES Call one of the experts listed below!! ofa Quinla fiermo~a • ~~.w.~!~!HJ .. NICE room w/ba.th, outside entn.nct, ~' blk from bay, Xlnt ntlghbarhood. 673-118S Guest Home 415 ca I La Q · ta H e 2 BR unf, From $225 sual estate living. En er um er--• 2 BR Furn. From $285 24 HR nursing care oUtrred For weight reducing program to establish mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree-• 3 Bdrm. From $315 by 2 practical nunes in statistics for rapid permanent weight Joss, lined walk ways to your apl Carpets-drapes-dlstn .. •uher their home for l or 2 eldttly conducted by qualified physical culturists. ALL UTILITIES INCUUDED heated pool-saunas-tennis persons. Xlnt reterenee1. Mqst be a minimum of 20 pounds over .. 1 BR. Unf. $150 -Fu!rn. $180 rec room-0eean views For detail! call 847-7U6. ~eigh~, have transportation and not current- 2 BR. Unf. $180 -Furn. $210 patiow.m.ple parkin&: SM. xuest home otters xJnt Jj~under doctor's care. All inquiries com· 3 Spac. fir. plans, decor. furnishings; liv,e Security guards. care & food. In good loc. p tely confidential, C t Masonry within romantic •etting w/fun or pnvacy. HUNTINGTON 01 GardenG'°"". ~7 B•by1ltti119 onlro~ or Terraced pool, prL sunk•!!.~gas BBQ's W/ PACIFIC ~ Rentel1 to Shore 430 ASK FOR MISS POWELL--537·5414 COSTA MESA WALKING DECK BRICK, block, concrete, seculded seating compl. W/Nllllada & Foun· 1 · PRE.SCHOOL COATINGS carpentry, house leveling, tain. l 7U OCEAN AVE., H. • Sl'RAIGHT male, 25-35 , 18U-. & l\lonrovia, l,i day + 01 all types. Lee Roofing all types remodeling. No * Color co--ord. ldt w'/ indirect );ghting. (714) 536-1487 financially stable, need to full day se!Wons. Planned Co., Cto.I. 64.2-7222 for free t~ "~~. 5mall. Uc. Contr. e uxe ,-1n9e ovens us s ag "JO' u,.~ to beach "l50. 646-9574• pro'1'8-m, hOt unches. ges · * D I c & * Pl h h crpt" Ofc ......,.n 10 am.6 pm Daily share 3 BR apt, furn'd, blk I 1~ 1 A est ~ * Bonus storege spice + Cov. cirport 1 ~\;V~IL;L;IA;M~W~AL;~~E;RS;,;CO;;;,., 1 ;f,:~ji~~·::,c;;;~~fl;;r.I Pet50Mls lost Ind found u, hrs 6:30 IJ\f.6:00 PM. Furniture Block\1•alls -Patios * Sculptured marble pullman & tile baths WANTED -Congenial lady ~~~~~~~~~~l ~fl~S~w~k~·~CO~MP:ARE~~! ~&12~-:-;.;;.;.;c;;..;.,..;.._____ Silli'y,·alks -Drive""'11 Y11 * Ele_9•nt recreation room, Newport Beach to share attn.c. NB home. or 838-5.237. FURl\'ITURE Stripping. Lie. 549-3173 A:'f or ev• FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY 1 :B~A:.CH;;.::E:.L0c:..R:.:.~:.:.l;_b_•_a_p_ts._I ~· all priv. $80.1.P_o_r_i_on_•_l_• ______ 5_30 Found (frH ads) 550 LOVING mother desires ~.tl.boa.r! i::· :.oodva~ Painting & Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego Nr Bay. Eves. 67>7876 or BEAUTIFUL. spacious, ocean ADVENTURE l\IEDIU~t SIZE Cocker mix babysitting. Days. 9 mos, =".::Z-c:":;"::-::,· ------Paperhanging Frwy .. Goldenwest Colle,e:e. l i~,,._~22~50~·~~~~~~~1 viewhom.ein~na"Beadi. SAILING CRUISE male, brn & blk. Nr Wilson to .2 years Pf<'.lerred. Oc·rGardening San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. OD Ne«led female to share with. 150 ft. 3 mast Square Riuer. &: Placentia, Hit by car, c_asio~l part time or lull I .C---~-----PROFESSIONAL Painting. Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to • • • ~ 497.2047 Leaving 3115171 10 r 3 under treatment at Animal time •. 5Clc hr. Near Har_bor AL'S GARDENING Extcr. 1 story, low as $200 l =l=o=Q=u=in=t=o=H=e=rm=o=sa=====7=1=4=:=8=4=7=-5=44=1=• I '---"-'"_'_''_' __ .JI ~ months. Men & women want Shelter, Santa Ana. For info Shopping Center. S48-l3~ lor gardening & s ma 1 I ~~~us~8!:ii~'sp:~l~ _ . SHARE my waterfront home ed w/desire fol' adventure 549-3562. BABYSIT my home, IO mo's landscaping 5t'IVices, call coats $15. Roy, 847_1358 , Apt ••••••••••I w/dock. Man, 30-60 )'ll!ars & travel & ability to share BLACK Poodle, male ap-to 5 yrs old, 24 hn day. ~~5198. Serving Newport, Apts., 370 F~·:n. or Unfurn. 370 Rooms 400 ~l~"°;,;:.''"°=·=-'615-433.c,..;::::l=.--~,1 expenses. For information prox. 8 mos. old. MaCFad· Loving cart. Fnc~ back CdM, U>sta ~fesa, Dover * E.XTERIOR-INTERIOR * Furn. or Unfurn, _c..;..,________ Office Rental 440 all p R Id den &. Edinger, H.B. near yd. Harbor & Vlctona area. Shores, \VestcliU. Won't be underbid Cuslmn Costa Mesa 1----------· I c a:;-13} e~~5 K·Mart. Injured & taken to•1,,:•~1,;.C'-14~7~3·~-~----J A p ANES E-A me rican 'vork, iinest paints. F~e Costa Me1a BAY MEADOWS APTS. BRAND NE\V 1.JNlTS 11ll with beam ceilings, paneling, pvt patios. 1rplc, aU rec facil- ities. Adults, no pets. • Bachelor • e 1 BR from Sl.ffi e e 2 BR from $165 e SLEEPING rm $60 per mo. SUPER-DELUXE QUAI.JTY vet's. Owner please contact RELIABLE child ca re, gardener. Exp. Comp 1 esVcolor consulting. Refs. Priv entr & ba. Adults, no 1·2-3 i:oom, up to 3,000 sq. SWEDISH MASSAGE 536-J03l or 962-4502 . warm atmosphere. gartlening & landscaping. li1., bonded. Full financing pets. 2135 Elden, CM. See fl Dffice suites. Immed. OC· AND SAUNA Found, yoong orange stripped Congenial playmates. 9 mos ·'~"";:;~150~. ===-,----,--1 c'=v~'~"~· 49Z-==5338~~· ="'~"="'~85=c=' Mgr. No. 6. c~pancy. ~&:e County. Trained tech, Jor relaxation. kHty al ll V 1o 4 yrs. Mesa Verde PROFESSIONAL main-YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT -J.irport Irvine Commerc· Private rooms. • m e. co ar. ery 546--0169. \V iii paint any rm $10. COSfA :l\fesa, close to OCC. Complox, adj. "'-rt.er e Open 24 h • clean & s\.\·eet. Regret must _ . . lenance. pruning, tree \.\'Ork, -' -~ OUIS I G • hool I ill b b t ink! •· d. Int I exter. Free est. '5 yrs $55 & $65 util pd. Fema.ie Hotel & Restaurant, banks, send to pound if owner il h sc gir w a ySJ spr en, pes..,,, 1sease, -• de t •-1 3 o d trol Cl · b "P· Also ca~nter v.'Ork, only. Ide.. tor stu n. San Dlego &-N'pt Fwys. 2626 Newport Blvd. doesn't claim. 646-8009 afternoon! . uvm : y;ee con · ean up"$' s. •r-e LOVELY. SPACIOUS e 642-&i20 UNCROWDED PARKING COSTA J\IESA 645-0860 ---------1 Newport Heights area. Jean Terms. George, 646-5893. any kind. 540-7046, 557-8638. I & 2 BR Furn or Unf YNG college or working girl LDWESI' KATES FULLY UCEN'SED * F.?._~ND1 houbll<ndandC~i:?.wn fauced•..:":::2--0022:..:::=-------EX p ER T Japan e .se LESCO Painting Contractor From $150 Util pd. . ...... ___ 1 2172 DuP Dr ""'"""se · ,,..m co ar,• · ·1 · nl c 1 ard Inter & Exler. 2 Sklry 2323 Elden Ave, (.~1 Balboa lsL Kit & TV rm vw•...:l" mgr; ont . Renowned Hindu Spiritualist Vic of Mayfair Market on \VILL . babysit your chi d 1n ga ener. omp ete g en-Specialist ~. ooeow>t 646-0032 or 642-1121 tele. $65/mo & up. ~3613 Rm. 8, Newport Beach Advice on all mattenr. 17th St in Ci11. 646--6812 my h~nsed home, ages ~ ing service. Free II! s t , spraying. Lie I: In I . NEW NEW NEW VILLA CORDOVA l ~~~~~~~~~~i ROOl\I w/PVr E.i"'TRANCE 8J3.3223 Courtesy to Brokmr Love, l\farriage, Business. thru :>, l\lon thru f'ri, ,":::;""';:";'-:....~~---c=--6'1;)...2399 _ 387 \\' Bay St ( btwn Harbor CD DESK SPACE •· dl -7 da ABOUT a 2 month ~d Irish 549-4038. AL'S Land"'aping. Tree • & BATH. ~f. l\C"a ngs given y.s a Setter puppy. Vic, o fll-'~='---~-~~ N \V · & Nev.'Jl(lrt Bh·d, '.i mi N. Huntington Beach * 61;)...7069 * \\'ttk, 10 am -10 pm. Fairview and Fair, Ci\I. KEEP your baby \\"ell & removal. Yard remodeling. * wALLPAPniR * of 19th St). * 515 PER v.·eek _ up 222 Forest Avenu8 312 N. El Camino Real, S4:>-MJO happy, $22 a week, Incl baby Trash bauling, lot cleanup. When yoU call ">tac" CALL 646-0073 2 BR, $155 Up. .. 3 BR l 8 h San Clemente Jood & Pampers. Xlnt care. Repair sprinklers. 671-1166. w/kitchens. $25 per week aguna eac 492•9136, 492-0076 PART Collie dog found in 64""";)-l78S. PRUNE-WEEIJ.CUT 543-1#1 ~lm e DELUXE 1 & 2 BR's. !:dre~P.ok.Pa~Rfo~ • up Apts. MOTEi... S4S.9T:>5 -~=".,._~~-~~=-·1-NNEiiEWPO;p(jiiiRXT"flNTN'i':EEiRIRJcOi!iRS:S H.B. 962-956S ICH,:c:lLD,:c:::.Cc.•_re~M~o-o_tb_N~Fri~ .• We Cater to Your Every * PAPERHANGING f'urn or unJurn. $145 & UP. Apts. 18881 Mora Kai Lane, DIAL direct 642-5678. Charge DESK SPACE ANNOlJNCES ===----~-...,.-1 Vic. \Vil9ln & Pomona Wish. 54:Hil73 morn. or & PAINTING. * 968-2425 Pool. Gardens. 177 E. 22nd ~"l blk E. of Beadi ott your ad, then sit back and lDS N El C . R I Tom \Villiams I nterior FOUND young Jemalel~Sc~hl~'·:.."'"~Z-:5'1~26~.-----I,;'~"'~'~·--~=~---PAINTING/panoorin&. 18 ~ St., C~J. 642-36-15. Garfield. 962-8994 listen to the phone ring! o. amino ea Designer. ha!" joined their Siamese cat. Owner iden-. ..... ,,--S<in Clemente studio. 4575-6420. 3326 East tify 646-6337 CUP this ad-exper. babysit· 10 Yrs exp in Harbor area. in Harbor areL Lie & Apts., Apts., Apts., 492-4420 r---1 H' h C d 1 · ters, Harbor View Hills Avg lwn SlG-$12 per mo. bonded. Ref's furn. 642-2356, Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ..... as ig way, orona e LGE hunting dog, Vic: Hun-area. Own trans. 644-5133. C & M Gardenina-Serv, 1 _..:..::.;.::..:::.;::;:;;~_;::..:,;,....:..;:;..:.::.;:;....:;.::.::.::.:.....;:;..;__:...:..:..:..:.:...::.::.::.:....:....;..;..: NEWPORT offices, c pt s , ?-.tar (in.B of A bldg) tington Bch. 646-7215. FIRST Oass Painting & General General General drps, DOean view, from $65 SINGLE? WIDOWED" 962.4793 CHlLD Day Care, ages 3-10 N""E~IV"La:=w-..,-.-,....~,.~,-d'.'Cn'm~pl;I paper ~ hanglna:, Free est. per ma. Onr Aft 6 pm: /1 yrs. C.~f. arta. Stale lic'd Call 545-3459. 675-1644 Divorced? Over 21? VERY tame racoon, loves no. lOIHO. 646-1738. lawn care. Clean up by job!~===~-~---·! • HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adults Look Into ... OPENING SP£Clll-l BEDllOOM FROM $14'' CASAdel SOL Near all beaches • Private Tenace • Ret Buildint: •Sauna$ 2 Pools• Billiard$• Gym ~ Pulling G1e'n and Volleyball Built-i n Kitth ens • Disl!washers • Disposals • Cal"flets/Drapes Close to all shopping • Private Parking and Storage ALSO: 2 Bedntom w/fireplace From $205 21661 Broolhunt, Huntmiton Buch-(714) 962-6651 HUITTINGTON BEACH -Adult and Family Sections The possible dream ••• I Bedroom from $135-2 Bedroom, 2 lllllt• From$155 HUNTINGTON GRANADA Private Tenace • 3 Pool$ w/Cabanas •Built-in Kitchens Oishwasheis •Carpets/Drapes • Walk·in Closets • Ore5Sing Room$ Close to Sbnpping, AU Beaches and lti$Ur! Areas 17lll Golden West St., Huntington Bmh (714) 847·1055 (Just South Of Warner) SANTA ANA-Adult and Family Sections Break the monotony ... OPENING SPEClll-1 B!DllOOll FROll $1371 PARK PLAZA Priv1te Patios • Rec Buildinr • Saunn • Jacmi •Pool 8uill·1n Kitchens • Dishwashers• Carpets/Draou Nt1r South Coast Pl1u •leisure Areas • rreew1ys ALSO: 2 Bedroom /2 81tlt From 1167 Town Houu w/l~ Baths from $175 3900 South Aowtr, S.ntl Ano -(714) 54~3214 (2 blocks eut ol Brlslol and M1o.\rthur) M&l)aged By: NARIDI MANA&lMENT CD •• INC. ' ' ~ l ·~ - 1 Harbor View Hilts. or mo. Free est. For info PAINTING/papering, 18 yrs ' CORONA DEL MAR For a self eKP anatory mes. NEWPORT Heights area. Lrg 897.2417 or 846.093.2. in 1-larbor area. Lie & ' sage 24 hrs a day call 6-14-2013 ard •• bo B I ·• bond d R 1· f rn ~u 2 Rm suite, pvt ba, Pvt entt. 496-4801 or 541.9991 ==~~~-----1 Y • sa . ...., x. a anc.:u LA\VN Serv, mo\\ing, edge, e · c s urn. vu-......... Prkg, crpt/drp, util pd.I~~~~~~~~~~ FOUND a brown fuzzy pup-lunch. Xln't care. &15-2754 vacuum. Compl. serv, 1-eaii; INT & Exler, Painting. $145/mo. Owner. 673.6757 I ~ PY. female, Vic ot al3 San-Babysitting tn my home rates. C.~t. & Hunt Bch. Lic'd, im. Free est. 30 yrs 5 NE\V offices, 17877 Beach I Lost ind Found lf?)l la Ana Ave. C.ilf. S48-680l Fenced yard. References. area. Lie & Ins'd. 545-29-13 exper. Chuck, &ls.-OM9. Bl. t.oy,·est rents. Ca 11 . . L:iJ Lost 555 Cmta :l\fesa arc.a &U-03S4 EXPER. Hav•a.iian Gardener INTERIOR & exterior paln- 842-25Zi or {213) 39-1..()(115. BABYSITTING Complete Gardening ting. Average 2 BR apt $8;; E'IALE Red I -h Se >ty bomo 54· 3212 Service. Kamalani, 646-4676._ labor & material 548-1546. * NE\VPORT BEAOI Civic Found (frH •ds) 550 r .. , ns uer, · · ~ Center, 300 JI to lOOO ft. 9 weeks old Vic. of Fair TLC FOR YOUR O IILD GARDENING and I awn PAINTING, professional, All Anws &: Secretarial. 675-16011----------ant. Villa Nova C~f. She In my Laguna Niguel hOme care. v.·eek or month, free work gu arn. Color AIR COND., OCEAN VfE\V ~fALE Jrilih Setter, vie. ol may answer to r-.t i g . e 4!t:>-4720 e est. 536-438a aft. 4 p.m. specialist. 646-7081; 547-1"1 assorted sizes. shop center Harbor Blvd. ~7413. CHILD care my home. Pre. General Services Plaster, Patch, Repair Sa.nClemente 492-2979 646-ll3S '"l'H0l\1AS" short-hair, Jer2yrsorolder.Fairview RAil"!Gutters lnstalled. *PATCH PLASI'ERING * EXECUTIVE Suite of of. AFC HAN dog. Near orange, 9 mo Tom cal, very & Adams C.M. 549·0752 Quality work. Reasonable. All types. F'rff estimates fices 3345 Newport Blvd tJni\·ers:ly Ave, C. tit. friendly, 12th St, NB . .::.:.:::=~·c..::::::c:::.:=-Free est. 968-2208 Call 54{M)8~ N.B.' Call &45-4:>45. ' 64~5645 675-7560 Carpenter DITCH-DIGGING • Re-pipes , Plumbing 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, C'.\t FOUND female rcd puppy LADIES \vatch, vie Harbor CARPENTRY sprinklers, trenches, etc. From 300 sq. ft. 35c sq ft. \V/flea collar. Vic. Orange Shop'g Center, Ci\f. MINOR REPAIRS No Job Reasonable. 54J..-0242 PLU:l\1BING REPAll\ 675-2.-16'1 or S-1l-50l2 Coast College. 54~5'i30 Kec>psake value. Re\\·ard. T S all Cab" • · No "'b too small Ml--8986. 00 m · ill'!! m gar-Hauling I" 3700 NE\VPORT BLVD, NB FOUND near Edison High ages & other cabinets. ;..;.;:.:c.c;::_ ______ I e &12-3128 e e ON 'I1iE BAY e School, )'OUng Shepherd. PART Siamese, blue eyes. 545-8175 U no ans\VET leave I MOVING, Garage clean-up 'P~l~,m=b"in"g-_"E~t,"c~t ~-~R<~p-alr~I 675-2-464 or !l41-5032 962-8970 \Vhile right rear le g. msg at 646-2372. H. O. & lite hauling. Reasonable. $7.SO per hr 5 NE\V offices 17877 Beach \VH.ITE cat, no tail, vie. RE\VARD 6'5-1309 Anderson I Free estimates. 645-~ 642-2T'::ij 64~ Bl . Lowest ~nts 842-2525 Corona 1iighlanrl~, CdM. Sell the old r;tutl RE'.\10DELING & Repair TRASH & Garage clean-up, LE\V TAKAS & SONS or 213: 394-0015 673-{i703 Buy the new stulf Specialist, Comm'!, residen-days. SlO a load. Free est. CO:\IPLETE PLUMBING tial. Paneling, cabinets, Anytime, 54~503t 25 HR SERV. 646-8340 Business Rental 445 * H I * * * * * marlite, formica. 644-7598. ousec ean1ng Remodel & Repair STORE or Shop av&il.1 ... -------------------REl\fODELING Carpenter CLEANING & Painting.1-------'---·1 downtown San Juan needs v.'Ork. 35 yrs expcr. \\'alls, \\"ood\\"Ork & floor GENERAL Home Repair ~ Capistrano for s ma 11 By the hour. &12-150j, ..,......,.i 'rY b' I d stripped rugs sham""""'" carpen , ca me s, oon, business or office, $85{mo. Trader's Paradise CARPENTRY all kinds sm. Ref's & 'tree est. 536-8069 . .screens & misc, 492-2W4 493-1153, 493-1706 e\1es. or lg., COOC?'ete .,\·ork free Exp'd Housecleaner with own I ·-Roof-i~n~g------''--1 APT & OU ice S150/mo, est. 968-7914 anytime. lransportation. $2.25 per hr, $-15/.,l"k. 800 sq. ft, 2376 I 1' nes Cerpet Servic:e 54&.705.3 FOUND NUDE Ne...,,'JIOrt B lvd . , Cill. 548-9753. SUN Brite l\Iaint Carpots, A leaking roof in Dover Diamo nd carpet Cleaning Sho-• I rix· ed It T G • Jloors, \11indo"·s ete. Resid'I ''" · · · uy BEAUTY Salon 10l' Lease. t I mes Avg r;ize room SS Roofing Co. 6 4 5-2 7 8 0. fall · d I ho R<pairi"" & Installations & comm'!. Free est· ... a y ee1u1ppe , n s pp1n&: ''& 537_5621. ..... ~9:l90. center, San Clem. 492.-2979 Free Est 645-l317 "'C-C='==~-~~--LEE Roo ling co. Roofing of 400' STORE, shop, office. dollars Cement, Concrete DO:O.tESfIC y,·ork. Day or all t'-"""s. Rea:iver, .,,..,,. , $9-2340 N wport Bl·-' \\·eek. Experienced. O\\·n J ,.~ ;;i, e vu, roof coatings, Lie/bonded CM .,.2,.A• .,.o o'>'>'> transportation 542-5205 . . .,.,.,.... ........ .,.."""°""" ee CONCRETE. Beat The since '47. 642-7222. HOUSE or CLEAN Store-826 \V. 19th SI.. C~t: $115/mo. * ~7414 Trade C?qui!y in beautifully ~..,..:-~'""'--,-~~=l cared·for '10 Landeau Mo. Industrial Rental 450 tor home, 23', sleeps 6, for SMALL UNITS t•lo mod<I S'8. IV•g. Load- ed w/xtrs. 96&-1~1. ~I.92::,0 COSTA MESA "62 corvoir 9:; Van, ne1v S9J, & ~167. Per r.tonlh lires, bucket ~ea.ts., carpet· . lm~1ate Occu.pancy ed. pancl!cd. bf.ti. srove, i~ Ne1v 6.100 sq. ft. uni!, 18th & che~t. Trade for small car. \\'hillier, ll0-220 po"·er, 536-1131 plenty of pa1·king. 17-c-,-=,.---,--,.-c,. See: Robert Nattress, Rllr. * * * \VlLL trade ·GS Costa l\tesa 642-1485 to.IUSTANG and '136 CHEV --==:..:.:=:...::.::..:;:::...~1convertlblc for 22' TRAIL. NEW bldg, 1728·2.100 sq. ft. ER Nr Baker & FAirview, 1 .t * Call 64&-5108 * * yr lse. Sullivan. 54G-4429. HAVE ol~r l BR house. Storage 455 Storage &. 100:>' bldg. 1\1.1. Zoning. Trade for home or l\IOTOR home-_ boat • trailer ?? -furniture -ete. 1652 N"'Pt * &12-26'-i * Blvd, CM. 642-28'11, 642-5106 H 3 b ., .. ~ · · ave r, -....... s1Vlmming Rentals Wanted 460 pool hou se in San Fernando 1----------Vallty. \Vant unit in Orange $200 OR LESS, 2 )T or mon? County. Jse. 2 BR w/ deck or patio. Call ~ilS-8740 gar. Sta11 Apr. lsl. rrfs. a\·ail. peninsula, proximity I~ H.P .• John$0n 0.B. ~n. N.H.Y.'t. "'m. O. Hind, Box gine. 196.l. Some ex1l'I\,\. $700 662, Bal. 92661 .•alur.. Trade for motorcycl(', . ,.,__ Travel Tr11i\('r or ?! 2 CAR Garage 1n ~111 348-611! l\fesa , To be used for1,-,---c==7""-~-~ slorage. Call Terry, The Have $Hl0.!MXI equll)' in Real EstA.ten ~23U Vi&alia \\1alnu1 Grove & Misc. Rentels 465 G.G., 10 unit~. \VM"T Or. ange County income prop, ---------Bkr/O\.\'ntr, &!5-0-l~l 20 6 R' .d Bad \Veather! 1''1oors, Complete Hou se Cleaning EASTERN Quality.Western acres yr old iversi e patios. Reas. Call Don 64~824 Prices! Alt types Rootin1. suburb Orange Grove. $901\1.1~"~2-8~;~14~·-------l-M.;;;;-r;;;;;;;;;;;'<;;;:;;;;;;;:--Lyle, 673-7980. EQ, S:il ill: FOR Land, . . l\fesa Cleaning Service Honie or :;ubmit. CE:'>1ENT. Drives. pat.Los, Carpets. Windoy,•s, Floors r.tc Sewing/Alteration• Call 64,t.2jJ8 cu!lon1 slabs, et_c .. Also, ag· Res & Commc'l. 548-illi =~=__;-~,--.-~~cl gregatt' Ovt'r existing slabs. ALTERATIONS, re styling. 19j7 18' :\1crcury Trlr. Trarlc ~94;)6 Bay & Beach Janitorial Expert filler. Top ref's, for O\"e rhead camper for l-P-A_T!_O_S __ l_k __ d_' --Crpts, \.\'indows, floon etc N.B. area. 646-2704 Call t"ord Truck. 5ts.10-Her ' \\"a ·s. ri~eivays Res. & Comm'!. 646-1401. Ruth Call. 50 a rcmovt'd • repoured 1n con· 5 Pl\1. 2024 Federal Ave, crell' ix:..,., fl & 54· -.e~n Income Tax EUROPEAN dre15m-"•'n&'" Costa l\1esa. ~, up ~,,,_ "" CEl\IENT \\'ORK, no job too S 'I J S . custom fitted. Very reason. Bayfront duplex, near new, small reason.able Free ml ey ax erv1ce able. 673-1849 on Big Ba.y: 6 br, 5 ba, lge Eslirr:. H. Stufl ick, · 54&.8615 Alterations -642-SMS rooms. for T.D.sor? Prin-Ch"ld C • 13th YEAR LOCAU..Y • Neat,,accurate, 20 years exp. cipals, 1 are Qualified _ Reasonable Eves: 673·52'99 \V. A. SMILEY Tile l96J Corvair !\fonza. 4.5pc1, CHILD care, n1y home any C<!rlified. Public Account"t -k Verne, The Tile :r.tan• good cone!. Trade for motor. hours, Hot lunch, fenced 642-2221 anytime 646-9666 Cust. \.\'Ork. Install & repain, cycle or \\'hat have you. yard. 5-18-38.14. INCOME TAX SERV No job too 11ml. Plaster CALL Contractor $4 & up. 9 am.9 pm wkdys. patching. Leaking shower 962.3032 or 847.2()13 Open eve.,/y,·Jmds. Appts repair. 847-1857/846-0206. I BR. 3 BA, 2100 ft. \V.cliff, GAR., uti\ or sloragc bldgs avail. 548--0588. 1842 Newport, CER.Ai\11C tile new & Dovc>r Shrs arta, NB, !\tint $1.75 per 11q ft. t400 r;q C.:1\1. remodel. Fl'ct! est. Small l.'Ond. Trd SZ2l\1 eq, comm'l, ft min} Rcsid, npt & co1nm'I ~G~0-,~d~0-.-N~.cw~.-,.-.-.~P-.A~.1 jobs \velcome. 536-24 26 Ind. prop or Unil!i, o .c. D)' ~I _comparable cost 5. Sine~ 1951. 675-334.i 531'-8885. ' i-12-9500, r.ves/\\"kds 645-0962 642-::i997. Tree Servlce Have ne\V 2 BP. 2 bath l\IY . \Vay, qu&llly ho1nr ~l~ro~n~i~n~g~------1 ;;;;:;:;;-;:::::;:=-:;~-; h . N · B h repair. \\'alls. cell!ni;, f1001'5 IRONING my home $1.:lJ per TREES, Hedges, Top, Trim, ouse 1nr e1\·po11 eac . ('tt'. No job 100 small. cut, rnmovll!d. hauled. Ins. clear. \\ant local ''acant :.47-0036, 24 hr ans. serv. hr. Brine o1vn hangers. 6~2-4030 Big John lots or lot. Balboa Ba)' . . 5-4:>-7&11 Propertit!. 673.7420 R00:-01 ~ddill~n~. L. T. Janitorial Television Repair Construcuon. Single story or II" Trade Kirby vacuum cl('an. 2, Estim., plans & layout. I;';;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;:;; I COLOR TV Service. $2.~ ~r w/atlachments & Door 847-1511 service call. Special 24 hn. YOL deserve ou r pro-557 2226 JOii.sher for electric por1able Additions * Remoddina: leuional help for Spring ,,..~--.---------1 typewriter or ? 962-3032 or C..rv.iclc A Soo Lie. cleaning, Crpts It uphol. Upholstery W7-2013. -,,,,.. * . <:.H\ ... -,, v•.J"""<IV"i.J. ... ~, shampoot'd. \Vindows1 ----------I 20 ac~ 6 yr old Rivenide Ha\oe oceanfront duple:c, Llc'd Contt. Remodeling \\-ashed, Jlrs ~tripped &: Fashion Draperl tl ~ suburb Orange Gro\•e. S90:"of, Ne"'PQM. \\"ant T.D.'s, tree Additions, Plans, Layout wa.xcd, walls & ceilings Interiors. Up ho I 1 t e r y, Fenced storage 5Jlllce for cac:~2=· etc. EQ. $5.1 i\1: FOR Land, &. clrar lots, or submit. Karl E. K~ndall 548·1:'137 cleaned. }·or fn"ll! est. Call furnitul"ll!, ~uto, ca~ts, Hon1t-or subn1i!, Richard Jr.1in, Realtor ;-:.=:.:..=:....c:cc::::..c:.:::..:::c.....1 (;.I. Party, 968-2069. dr11pel')' <'lcaninR'. Fret Ptrsoruils )~ can 644·2»' 6T;,.606I) NOW'S THE t'!llllUltt. f'Joor 10ample1 ror ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~·Ht11rhkit boonu.•-bik~l hp, TIME FOR Landscepln9 s.1lc. Co~t. 1332 \V, lat SI .. . \\'Mt do )"OU ha\"e to trade? SI "7 .,,-2 spd, S21{l \·~tur. Trad(' for 1 _.., -• +. 53() ~ho1v quality \\'esttrn 11d· Lhll It here -In Orange QUICK CASH LAr\DSCAPINC: Including: l .. lC l:pholRtr1·er -Qulllib die ~ at'Ce~~orlf'~ 1o fit County's larges! read !rad· THROUGH A ri11.tio1, decking & fencing. 11ork. An1J1ony's Uph . ----------:quart<!rhorse. jji.6507 In& post.&12-!i678 Reas. 8Ji-9301. &'>r.'1('4!, 64~27 N.8. AL COHOUCS Anonymous DAILY PILOT CO:O.fPLETE Prof. Ser v , SEU.ING Your boAt? "Lt~t" Per1on1ls 1l'ho~r<~S4~Z-~72!;17~or~-.!:;lt!!•~to)l*!!!!!!!!!!!!*!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!*!!!!!!m!!!!*!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i*!!!!!!!!!!!!*iill_~!'~~!4~~_:~!>'__ State He'd contractor. Call .,..,ith u~ .. aell It f11st. Daily , '-----------------------------' ,!.O. Rox 1223 Cosla f\fesa. '-'f16S.=1::9:;28:;_. ------, Pilot 01u1S!fled. MZ-5671 l[ll)I .__ _......,_ ..... _,l[fI] I I OAJLY PILO~ 2ff l[i] I lrill I I~ .__I _-___,!~ ':..';;;,..'•;;;You ~'[l~s1 I .....,-...=... l~I Job Wonted, Mole 700 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Building M•lorlals I06 Ml1collanoou1 111 Cail l·male S,..., 1-,.., Boah/Morlno Cycles, Bil<ff, ,\fAN w/admlnl6tn.Uve t'li:• SALES Af .t. F for &CVeoral * AUCTION * hair, 1-ft!male Syn, ahort Equip. tot Scoot1r1 t2S bu! LVN. 3:00·11:00 shill. PANELING calico, ~ hOme w/olderl--'-'------'-'+_;.=;;.:.;.;... ___ .:.:;~I pe r. In Arn atory & ('Oo. ESCROW OFFICER Park Udo Conval~cenl M'pal'ale products. Aat• l4-Fine 1'"utnilure couple, Dot:·ttd Cocker, old· 7 HP Chrysler/OB. New, va.Jescen! Mmes, al!IQ all ...... s"y 1, ·•-l•'m•'t •• 1, .. ,~ &i. 00 Iona; hair. 496-3572 Closrout Sheets V.Groove •r -·-I• would ,.~ .. nrvPr l'WI. CMt .1363, ..U rLl'UVV1 phases of bookkeeping & • uc " u• '"" Center 642-8044 $1.99 Up, 1st Crade. & ApplivM;e-: .. v .. ,, ,.,~ class analysls In 1nanufac-lst cl•~ co. Comp! Escrow MAN to lellttl pi<'ture !ram· SE L F·starting, oCl'l'f'Slllve 10.5 dally, 114 Sun. Auctions Friday, 7:00 p.m. 839J'2J au I ,.m. 2110 $250/beat Offer. ~7-~. THfMI turina line. 1408 w. 9th s1., packaging, Sta.rt $650. Call ina. Mu11t be able to u.·ork p\{'s people \\"8.nt~ to dis-MILLER·DRAKE Windy's A1.1ction Barn f'JlEE to iood home • Doe. Bo.ti, Po.!_•r 906 HONDA S.A. can 5'11...l570, 11k !or ~6'A~1T1L AGENCY "''ith hand1. 6 dalil/week. tribute a spectacular ma-2406 So. ~fain SI., S.A. 20mi N~rt. CM 646•8686 Dobenn.an ~ Shephud. Cd. 20• Bay characler tug boat. i\lr. Do\•e. Apply 9 to U:30 am or chine "•/24 years ar proven (Ne.'<t to Standard Brands) Behind Tony 's B!dc. l\lat'J. w/chUdren, female. Xl.nt.. Jdtal for harti>r cnlillng Job W•nted, Fem•I• 702 2790 Harbor BL, CM 540-6055 4 to 5 pm, ]90 s. Coast experient't". AU t-es1auranl!ll, 546-1032 watch dog, 10 m o a. ar small work ~t. Dack • lla.tbor Blvd. at Adams Hwy, Laauna Beach. bars, taverns, hospitals po. TIRED? TENSE? 54~4 2/11 11.vaU. 1.hat ~ $19SO. 1----------·I AlANAGER-trainee, A pply tential uSf'rs. Abeolutl'l,Y no CABINETS, c<lmplete YOGA WORKS! NEED Jovin1 home far 7 54&-Q.MO \ TOP notch ~-.attract yng EXPERIENCED breakfast Kentucky Fried Chlcken, competition. To? commi~ kitchen. Range, oven, <'lc. F~ demonstration class adorable Basset ~I~ pups SaM'if!ce sale·l4' tlbef1lasS \'Io man. l( In I a f (Ice COOK, Gd ref's. Wages 292'9 E. Coast Hwy. sion, fPlS..4220 Btwn 9 & 9 Pr.! Beautiful & rea50nable. •rues. al 8 J>M. Thursday at 6 week1, 5 males 2 fclYU\les -~·r fa.mil !I h' boa abil llles/bkgrd . Re Ii PP n. OJX'IJ, G,towth potential \Vith • SECRETARY in Sales Of· &IS-5393 10 A:\1, Yoka Center, 445 E. neM fried u.18 1 892-165:1; • , y, s 103' • l. Ill "FRIEDlAHDBr GoOO refs, Call 642-2822. young co. apply in ""rsou ?.1AKE CUii time \\'&ge8, part !7 h S CM "'" o~l J~ Comp] -/lat'! mod. lj hp • ~==--,,,--"7.'"""-,'' ~ · "· di -, r fice. 5 Day week. Good Furno'turo 810 1 I., · · .,...,..,,.., · 836-4403 2/11 "=====:=:::=::==::=ol 1· OlO\V BELL RESTAU. Onie, U"<" a tu• utor 0 elect st. Mere. and trailer ' HOUSES 80 clean they will RAN n.ure 0 ..... anic cJeanen, food 11orking conditions, in Coiila l2X:Z4 GREEN J.I OU SE, BEAU'l'lFUL male Collie 3 •eni:::. 968.-• I all Sandy 11 T, 2576 Ne\\'J>Ort Blvd., " ·• ' WHY BUY -· ~~ g ow. c or o, C ?.I supplementll & cosmetics. ii!esa. y,·irc<i. & over ax> orchid yean. Well disciplined -i==.~~~.------1 536-4949 or 846-0023 · · 637-4006 or 673-21)&.1 Perniallte Pla.5lics Corp. rliuits. To be rtma\•ed. looking for a good home. 65-31 Falrhner E x P. r ~ s a AIDES For convaleacen«o, 5'18-512S FURNITURE? S.'.lcrlfice. Best aller takes. 842.1D6l 2111 CNiitr. Rigged fOt" tishini. I ·1 FURNITURE t.IAKE-UP girl for beauty SECRETARY \Vrite ClassUied ad No. 103, extru. Low hours. Clean elderl)' care or ami Y Catt. salon, attractive appearance 0 1 P'I p 0 Bo •=" ONE Scottie, silky &.; poodle 646--017.f aft 6. ltomemakers, 547-ii681. -SAL ES -please. 548-9840 or 64&-9311 }Jal! fee paid. Good S.H. & a1 Y I ot, , . x ..i...iw, Ix 4 Id rly l l"'""'°==,,.-,,---=--o- w eel M & F 710 For locaJ dept. store Typing. (Also fee jobs), Call Be Flexible! Cosla Mesa. Call!. 92626 m ' nio, toe e ooup e '61 25' Chrisc:ntft Cava.Iler Help ant ' • TOP CO~DfISSION ~IATURE couple to manage Re · h 270 R · 1 760 only 12802 Dale, Carden autrlwrs radio f Ju 1 h CO 30 adult no pets units 111 l.oJ'a.lne, 645-2770, \Veslcliff nt mo. lo mo, \\'II . i em1ngton mode Gro~ ~Ill do•k, --~-'-,.n:..., •-. • . BENEFITS • Pel"90nnel Agency, 2M3 100°10 Purchase Optton "''ith \\'caver 2.5 x 7 power Want ~ ho-· ,_ male "'·'~ cn1 .. .'.~ -· -APT . .l\1GR-0LDER COUPLE miiiimum duUea for parlial t'l'nt. 642-9520 aft 5 pm. Quality line to sell 3 bldgs at beach. No sum· W~lltt Dr NB Ind. item selection variablt' scope, 2 extra &""'"' .. .., w .-';~;~~-;:c::.., ______ 1.;;;=;7,'~ Apply in person iner rtntals. Apt + .small " · ' 24 Hr. Oely. clips, $135. Al5(1 .2~3 Savage Pen;ian. white I gray $lX>lll.1QUEEN Mary 34• cabin Mobile H011'MI 9S5 to ~frs. Thon1pson salary. 84fr3927. Sarah D>ventry Inc., lull or CUSTOM model 99r "''ilh \Yeaver .f\4 Very atfectionale, altered ': cruiser, fully equipped, dpsl-----..;.;-_..;.;.;,;.1 A • RESUME put your •P· plicalion on TOP. \\'e con1· pose & print 50 copies - ONLY $1j.OO. Call ~ W. T. GRANT CO. NEED 4 YOUf'G ~1EN pt·time help needed, no in-Furno'turo Rental SC'OJX" $1 30. 557-7315. had .shots. Cali 548-4428 8. Xlnt. cond. 962--8130 NOW OPEN Personnel Office Age 20 to 30 vestment. \\fill train, min. · · age 31. 557-&183/54()...(1614 517 \V. 19th, C.~I. 5'18-3-181 8 SKI FAMILIES· i\1ALE beige and -'ht lenier Boeh, Rent/Chart'r 908 CONTEMPO. 9811 Adams A''e., Grant Plata Part time ....•.... $100 1\·k. ~~---~~-=~ 1 R C ,. •I mix 4 mon•'-· -...a with LAGUNA S f II . s22-k SEU. Beeline fashions. Need Anaheim 774-1SOO esel'\11' nO\\'! a in at am. uoa guuu HILL Brookhurst & Adaois, u 1in1e ·· • .. •·• J \\' • UHabra &J4-Ji0S molh r.1ountaln. Sips 7. Fire-children S.6-3562 aft l 32" Twtnscrew Chris, full)' 23.lOl RIDGE ROUTE DR for appointment. A RESUl\IE that \VOrks hy former personnal director. A H!g, Beach Car nee, C:~~~~ p.m. ~h~t)l~~~~tu~r ~~~~~m~~ "' 0 VIN G; Trans.[e!T('d-Pl. E'lC:, $18-$20 per day. 836-4'193 2/ll ~uip'd, Fishin&: ar Cruis-!Corner af Moulton Pkwy) ll equal OPPortunity 5.11·337~ days. Free beaut all \Yh, Persian I.Ilg, 548-2434. LAGUNA HILLS employer NEED extra cash~ LE'ts have Call n4/633-9574 aft 6, <lr Beautiful Quality furniture. Call 774-4080 Jl.1editt 6 piece King JI EAL TH: Club mem-cat, lemale Al.so part beagle ThBfACULATE Ne111.'J)Orter Prestige adult commun.lty ad- -Sensible prices. Eve:s &: HAZEL_ WE 'wknds, too. 673-0969 NEED YOU! AUTO P 0 L I SH I NG & It you can drive, cook &: .DETAIL positions. Exp'd keep a family w/ 4 cbildren engine cleaning & paint-buf-G h running smoothly, then you ting. Salary open. roY.'I may be just the addition to co. ?11ETRO CAR \VASH 2950 }!arbor Bh•d. c .r.t. our family \\'e're looking for. .co::.,cc:""'oO-~-~-oC" I Salary negotiable. 6-14-1408 BABYSITIER, Lil'e-in, lite B-S. housekeeping. t.fature I de· pendable. 968-8238 aft 5 pm. BEAUTICIAN'S Space for rent. sza \\·eek, Nel't in- terior, Newpon Beach. 642-lll44 or 968..4622 BOOKKEEPER, full charge, machine ;job shop. New facility, Irvine complex. . Write Classified ad No. 77, 'Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Cosla ?tlesa, Ca. 92626 CABLEVISION TV installer. Exp. pref., trainee can- sidered. Write Classil\ed Ad No, 2{).18, Daily Pilot, Bax 1560, Costa JI.fess, Ca. 92626 -CAMPUS- ' SECURITY GUARD Ten mo's. each yr. H.S, grad, trained to \l'Otk with young people. Retired police officer prcl'd. Apply: Classified Personnel Otc., 160116th St., Newport Beach. • HAlRSl'YLIST-E:qJ'd. Some follov.ing pref'd. Ph: 64G-l:H5. \\'ANTED: Hairdressers, i.11- crease your salarieg 30%. * Call 673-8250 * HOUSE\VIVES $ Get Paid far Cleaning $ <I \Vork During School Hrs . ./ Varied Locations <I Vacant Apts/Homes ./ Be Your o'.l.'Tl Boss Must be thorough, depend., o"·n lransp. &a5-4820. RENTAL READIER HOUSE\VIVES - 3 openings P/time. Aver. $3 hr. No exp. nee. \Ve train. f,.1rs, Muller 546·5770 Vanda Beauty caun. selors. HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. George Allen Byland Agney 1~B E. 16th, S.A. 547--0395. roffee &. chat. for appt. f f •·-boat ·•·-Call 642-0528. • SERVICE SI'ATION HELP bedroom set, also 6 p!ece bershlsr-9 mos. at reduced dog, emale. 20752 Kelvin or ,,.....,, ..... ...., .er. jacent to Le!Ju~' \Vorld. NEAT middle age \\'Oman, P1-lime, eves. Fish & Otlps, J.Iuntington Bch. 67:.6725. newport . pers onnel agency Professioflal Service for t he employer and the applicant 833 Dover Dr., H.B. 642·3870 * OPERATO=R~S ~*-I Single needle, Experienced only, top pay. ROLF'S ?.!'FG . 863 Production Place, N.B. Ph:~ . PAPER BOYS NEWPORT BEACH Routes apen Jn Ne\\'(Xlrl Beach for boys sge 10-15. Call Circulation D e pt • &\2-432J. Mechanic . Lube Man . Puni~ French ProvJncial set. 9· r111e. Also Cedar wardrobe, La., Hunt Bch. 962.-0744 2/10 Fred, 64&-9550 aft 6 lk>autiful surroundings, all '"I · d velvet sofa & lo\'e seat, $75. 545--0983 or 962-1356 ONE half-duck, half """Se. Boats, Sall 909 luxury. appaln tments, put-Jsl. Mgr. f w flme, a)'ll. 0 -tin b Good pay for right men. matching chairs, Vectra mE'ssage pb . One mallard duck Is golng ·---g grren, ho by lhop, RICHFIELD, 19th & love seat. Pair black IRVINE Coast cauntry Club to Jay ega:s 116!1 Dorset CAPE COO CAT BOAT much mete. Newport, C.~f. naugahyde chairs. l\"eed!e· ran1ily membership for sale Lane 0.1 • 219 18', fbrbls, (213) 834-3883. CALL U>-3900 SERVl CE statl~ . .,,,~1-,bc--ma-n·. I point velvet rota. Game & fro1n member. For In-CRE~1 wh t long haired Boats, Sllpt/Dockt 910 THE BEST OF dinette st'ts 12' sectional. formation call 67l-9131, l\tr. BOTH WORLDS P.T. &: full lime , day & 3 pc c0t.'klail & comn1odc Sniith niale collie 1 YT hsbrk, 15 TO 25 FT dips avall eve. 1101 Bayside Dr. N.B. sets. Refrigerator, TV, needs gd home loves chil. for power ~ts Privat~ For a beautituJ ~. tow 67'">2045 l11mps. Even thing must go~ ;\1A1'CHED set of Jade 111 523-9194 2/9 lagoon. Water & eiec. ava.il. maintenance and ~tttur. SERVICE !rrA ATI, all b32-6260. je\\·elry (necklace, earrings "MISl'Y" female blue tick Bayside Village 300 E. ally lmpreulve design, See & ring), from Bankok &: hound dog 111 ., __ ,.. __ _, "'--·t H~. NB ' the eXCJ Hn.. new "Vnt--shilts apen. Apply in person, FU"'NlTURE d tro $150 67. !~··· ~ "'"' vuuu .........., ~:s .... "S ...-go: l\lac Arthur &: 4678 Campus r..: returne rn f}f'ver "'orn. . > .nJ "' i l h chi Id re n . 1 SLIP for 25-21' FI G House" by Lev!U l\fobile Dr., N.B. display studios, model hom-after 6 pm. 523-919-1 2/ll Sailboat M . ba N 1 Systems on dlaplay now at SE=R:eV~I~C~E~Esta°"""'b.,.'d'".-o"'1l=e::,:I t>:.., d~~~~dca~:!lation. INCOME PROPERTY WVABLE yg adult br/\\'ht Sch. S2 i>er f!~ noJ·~c~. BAY HARBOR Brush rte. $125-$175 \Yk. ro R D FURNITURE Furn. Mobile home & cabin female Springer Spaniel 675-8990 MOBILE HOMES st., also pt. time 546-5745. for sale, l\lamrnath Lakes. needs good home. 1 523-9HM BOAT 81. 1 0 ,. S'd .,_ 142.5 Baker St._ Coll& M'tsa 1844 Newport Bl., C.M. $6500, 531-337.i 2111 . 1P o <Ji.I . 1 e .,... Justs. ar s .D. Fwy at Harbor SEWING MACHINE ~Ion., Thur. &: Fri 'TU 9 tor u.il boat op to 26'. n4J540.9470 -OPERATORS -\Ved., Sat. & Sun 'Tit 6 G.E. double oven range, LOVABLE be.i.ge wht male _:!54~&-'.::1~608~, ::~~~':_· =~-11~;,ov;;i;i;'io;;;;;;;il Bikini'•. Highest piece V.'Ork Thern1ador built-In poodle/wire te rrier .f mo. • 20, SIDE TIE Trip.le Wide Cornell SACRIFICE -10 rms neat clish1~·asher, Bald"·in piaoo needs gd h 546-3562 ft Ccinunental e Paramount rates. Exp'd only, apply 4001 new 1'1edil. furn inc. 8' & \\! d H 968-9543 ome. · a $2.50 PER FOOT "f'' Birch, N.B. Nr O.C. on er OJ'S(>, 1 PM. 836-4493 2/9 * 67J...M.'iO * &ningt<m • UnJversa.I ai-rt. black naugahyde sofa & A P P R 0 X I 1.1 A T E L Y 1 YR old Dalmation/Beagle Flnmlngo • General ·vv loveseal, nt\'er used, $l50. 40 assorted law books. $100. male. Has had all shots. ~oats, Storag• 912 br'Ofldmoor • Star SHARP gal, 24-35 Typing, Bunk beds, 5' callee !able. ~ Hill t e Ca br1d Shorthand. Call for in-2 end commodes, Callafter 6 pm,642-2930 Housebroken, good w-klds. DRY boat atora~ ar . cres m P Tl'rview: 675-3632. hlde-a-bed, Spanish King Miscellaneous 96Z..3112 2/9 campers, Sl per ft per mo. CHAPMAN b d r n1. v e ry rs n b I . Wanted 820 FREE r.1ong1"el P"P"ies to Fncd lited yard close lo MOBILE HOMES "'ELEPHONE SALES " ' "'· '""" N u.~ S.A, ' 213/92;;..3622. good home. Beautiful & launching ramps. tlO ......,t UUll • .-........-, Pt-time, \Voman, Exper. CASl-l for furn , appliances, lovable. See fo app-c•'aJc. St, NB, 642-3392 * n4/531.8105"' * 557.79-19 * SAC. l 1\'et'k old double Sim-·~ ~~~==,-""'==;-I mons foam matt & bx-tools, &: misc Items. 846-4:;31 :Zill Triple Wlde·Cornell """''' o-n in F.V. for boy• THEATER MGRS t Sl'O Sell 160 <6'~2;-1~0~15~o~'~Af~t~5~. 5434227~~· ~·~l ·Cif,\Ml'ION""ii'ia:ii'o~· HW.-...t e ~·-•-o ,.,.., .,.. • sprngs, cos .. . . 7: OlAi\IPION Beagle &: Wire I ![i] --. • -·-~ age 11-15. Call &12-43Zl, Cir· Hard tops & Drive ins, Khg headbrd, padded Slj, FURNITURE \VANTED , 1 Hair puppiei, 6 \\'ks. old. Trwportatlon .h PanubOUnt • Univenal PAPER BOYS FOUNTAIN VALLEY ='"=''~"~°"=!Je,_:,p~t.====• ISan Gabriel Valley and Or· 2 ne10o· kng spreads $15 ca. iten1 or house full. \VE PAY 1~962-6~;1~20fiam:;:p.;pp,;:-'~/~ll~1:·miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~· ~ .. ~~I Barrin&1on • Broa.~ ICE Crt'am Girl-II am to PBX RECEPTIONIST ange County. Fast gro\iing ="""==3~1=,--~-~-CASlL 5J6..40.ll Contbiental ti Stu 4 pm \\fon thru Fri Apply ~~~~----=:I PT. POODLE puppy, blk, Cerw:ral e HUI-* CllINESE CHEF' * : · Teletype. Brokerage Exp. Edwards Cinemas. Resume BAYFRONT cus1on1 furn, _M_u_s_i_<_•_l _ln_1_t_ru_m_•_n_1_1_B_22_ 1 9 wk!, very d a rt t n g. Aircraft 915 CHAPMA_N_, ality Experienced 2-4 pm daily 899 "'· l9th Call Ann, 64:>-2770 \Vcstclift to; E.T.C. l40 \Y, Valley uphols chr w/ottoman, 5"18-1223 2/11 1:64~2-~56~l~9~•~!t~5~,~'~''~·~T~ay~l~o;r ~; p~S~i.~C~·~"~·~s::;::::~=~ I Personnel AgenCy, 2043 Blvd., San Gabtiel. carved, anUquE'd chr, kng DRUJ\1 SET, complete, $200. liimiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiil'66 Se.ssna 150, Nav Com MOBILE HOMES INSURANCE. F i re &: N .,. ............... liii;;-liii"" i headbrd. match. nite stand!. Excellent condition. Ideal for JOO, 360 O:t. l3)(l TI' -12331 Beaeh Blvd., G.G. \VestcliH Dr., .B. • S ,0 7lt4--CLERK TYPIST $425 Casualty undernTiter req'd PERSO,NNEL SECRETARY Typist/Gtn'I Ofc ~-advanced student. 54 .si .... [ 11~1 400 SMOH -0 Time aince * -~ * •,', 1,, paid & '.i ~imbursed for well estahlisbed rom-"'" Week. Ill$, background INOIA RUG eve or -·eekend. Ptti Ind~ top. $4200. Private party lOO's Mobile Homtt Avall-mercial lines agency, \Vrite Good attitudt', numerical .,.,..., . 549-4008 90 da"", ""--50 w.p.m. ac-•kill• -~nntial. Personnel necess. Type w.p.m. accur· 11 x 15 Ft. Pianos/Orgons 826 · able. New A Raalel • O,Oice "" ~")"<' qualifications & aalary "'"""" C 5 I /R t920 Parka CaD beJare curately. lD key touch, Jols desired to P.O. Dra\\'Cr , ~!Je"p'°t". "H""=•,_H"07,;,p.7, "N".B".= ately. Front ate. gal needed. $75 CLEARANCE p 1 G I •ir" ampert, a• '" · .ua l'OU ' I ta ( .. -.: CORONET tt1.4~•-• 1, onora -,.u or ~ ... • Save ·Save . o cus omer con c , mim• 1817, Ne\vport Bch. 92663 PROPERTY lltANAGEilfENI' ;J;J ,,., ----------£R • .., be a detailed organized per. * INSPECTRESS * Experienced, mature couple: EMAPGLOEYNMCYENT LIKE new: ~Jarlin chair, SALE 7' Bo1 Constrictor CAMP r;;,~~ Mobllt Homes son for plush ofc. Also tee \Vith experience prefeJTed, manage & maintenance of S75. 7' Danil'lh modern o~r 100 Pianos & Organs Beaudtul. $60, 64U8f7 1167 ''A" NPT BLVD, C.i\f, .jobs. 1 f 1 ll d apt. complex, O l . Salary 1630 E. 17th St., S.A, couch, $100. Call 833-3148 ~duced for irnmed. sale. CLEARANCE SALE CORONET or irst c ass otel, an + apt. Call collect (714) 541-4171 to see Dogs 154 645-3140 633-2961 EMPLOYMENT pleasant working conditions. Buy Now & Savtl CO 5 - AL.90 • Night J\1aid. (TI4l 776-9S40. 4 Piece llv, rm. suilc, sec· O""n Daily JO ti! 6 VALENTINE pupp l.,, Silky , ·-e ,.1·-'on p-'71 STA ME A AGENCY I WAITRESS, Exp·d. in food .. ~ ._.. C\;U ... ""·-··· Mobil ~-rar uJ. &1•1-1700 Ext. 575. POSITION apen for ma e tional, iso. dinct!e 5 Jl]t'cc F'r: J0-9 * Sun 12-5 Tettlers, M & F, Darlin&' Campers Now Slaabed to ....... _ e .,,,. • " 1630 E. 17th St., S.A. operator. ?If/be cxp'd, N.B. & cocktails, Age 23·35· App, $10, chest & dro~ser, chest COAST MUSIC J10.ehed, odorless lurry Ne U, 70 6 :M Wide M'odell 5414171 area. For appt 646-7008. \:N~::P~;:;1~~B~ss·T $25, dresser $50, 536-1655. NEWPORT & HARBOR ~t:lis $150 up, terms, s49 A~~L ~RE£Ndl':1A;'n,~~i( 0 ~c Sal Sal R ECEPTIONIST/Bookkee· f b NB . I . I"-DINING set. Beaut Medit.,.Co;;"::'~'::'::'"~_:*::.__:"=~c:28::5~1 l r;;;;;;;;;,,--;;;:;:;::;-ov;,-I PACTOIT r~. Wht'ttierAve-··~•n ••rn C SMc.1 I es. ary per needed for sml anin1al or US)' · · m ernis · ~me O · 1-11950 E'·1 " COCKER ~··! I c !NYO!CI '""' ...... V"M-~ ruarantee. Call after 4 PM, !ab & xray exi)er prel'd. rig L<~w • ·"end to \VE have 21 new & usccl ....,...., e • AK • FURNISHED d 1~ hosp, N.B. 833-0361 bct"'·n. Pt-time. Age 25-3S, Salary J 14''. Cane back ve!vel pla.nos and IO neiv &: used mal~, 10 tna1, all shots & SHOWCASE 1 !Jo ....... .' ean ~ ""N"" '5.37-2103· '-': 9:3().noon °."'~Y-· ----oomm•ns,r•te. ""3742. chairs, 2 yrs <lid. 644-4869 oraans, all an s-cial Sale lie. Hsbkrn. Xlnt w I DEALER w pa • ••uragt ••-=· r ~ONSULTANT. Gen'I foods .,...,... .... .-~ hlJ•-All ! ·~·. & ...__IW On N'""'I RICHARDS 8' PILI.OW-BACK so fa, ·Som~atorneardealer's c w,,.n, ef'IY orc e s FOR Bl•'.'.': c'M-• 0 ,;m, -• needs 7 \\"Omen lor Viviane T le Sh EEO YOU I I y t l'nd we, 536-4127 ELDO"'~ CAlMPERS vu, , • ........a.n or \\'oodard Co&metic&. \Ve a nt owcase WE N me on colo~. rever:i:ib!e cos. OU are sure 0 I --~-~--1 ~ """'°" ~,·n. Ex•c ~··• ••ail, •m Lleell.!il'd men and -"Omen for cushion!. Xlnt cond, $125. "'·hat you \\'ant at WANTED: Male German THEODORE ..... ......, Pop-Singers, Pinna Sing. .....,, IO Sh h nl '10 B"ddy 20 ..... ..-1-in\'. 544-l4S4 a.long & Groups. ne\\', general Reaj Estate,,,".,""=84 7 2 ___ ..,-.,-WARD'S BALDWIN u1uD ep e , Up lo 6 months ROBINS FORD · "''"•a ...... _, ID'VINE PERSONNEL 011,·--·•n'ng Ne•.-Har.18 .. SOFA -~ .1 d 1819 Newport Blvd, 642-8484 old. \V ill ha\'e good home ddrling, laillhcaped. Adult **COOK !"\. Jam sessions "''elcome ... .., ...... ..,,..,.. • never u~. quite and lots af room 548-3858 2000 HARBOR BLVD. Pk. Pets OK. 1150 WhltUtr, '**DISH\VASllERS SERYJC£S&>AGENCY 642..5619 l\fr. Ta)'lor bor, Huntington Be a ch, floral, scotchiltarded $125. Thomas argan. walnut spinet, aft 6. COSTA MESA 542-0010 Sp 17, Of 548-m68. Exp'd, Must be clean, neat ROUTE Sales-l30 y,·k to st. Fountain Valley, Tap com-i\.fatching loveseat $15. model 120-A, dbl keyboard. ~~ ~ E. 17th (ar Irvine) C.t.I. niission. Exet!llent working 535-1955 Xlnl cond. $285. Eves & wk BOXER male, AKC reg, FRA.i\1E exlenskln for pick-~· TRAVELEZE 1955. 2 br, and over 21 Apply in persa59 n 642_1470 Take ov estab Fuller Brush condllion,, south Bay Real-=-=-------ends. pb: 644_0084 champ •Ired. Fawn&: white. UJ> trucks. Has platform f'uU bath. Ideal frr mtna. only, Surf & Sirloin, ~ 30 rte in Laguna. Xlnt pt tin1c {21 h'lNG size beds: 1 used, 1 1 -buml>'r Is 1to--rn.m~ for or de·--- I NB ty. 1TI79 A So. Brookhurst, CH yr o d. $wv or offer. ·-~ ·..-...., ... .,,.........,..,. · \V. Coast h1'Y.. . . wk also ava.il. Ph. 542-i573. 1 almost ne"'· T11,in bo." KR AN l C'H·BA BABY 642-4386 foldin& chairs $20. 545-<1906 HOUSE TRAILER, GOOD C • e:~ I eel' 0 i F.V. Olive English 962·3002, springs, guar. m11.ll's SIOO GRAND, mahoKany, $600 or '* opywrittr ..,..,... mm 1ate pen ng SALES 524·9670 or eves. 675-3051. & $l30. 673-4l9t best otter. 646-CHSO DA<.: H SH UN O pu p 1, Cycles, 8iktl1 COND, FOR SALE OIEAP. :SOme college w/joumalism or for Trainee STOP!!! mhUature, AKC, mack 6 Scooters f2S 646-7272 or 531~385 Englishmajor/t-3yrsexper. ·roung man for outside work. OKING & ACT \VO~fEN • Fantastic op. NAUGAltYDE sota, 8', pole NE\V B11Jdy,·in ~pinet organ tan &: mahoaany re d . Tr•ll•rs, Travtf MS w/some bckgrnd 1vrlting No cxpt>rience necessary. LO portunity ro earn over i;re e l'I. Good cond. model 91-R. $R75. 714/633-40l8. adv. copy. Good opportunity for ad. Sales minded person, see for $JOO/day. Learn rcvolu-Rl'asonable. 968-8453. C111l 96&--26.~ ~rvice Cenl<"r Emp Agen~y vancement. yourself, a ttaJ career OP-tlonary new beauty tcc:h-11-PC rattan set, bar&. stool, Sporting Goods 830 • Nr'.l.')>Ot't Center Dr, N.B. Ca l! 549·1167 dayr; or p>rtunity, Xlnt tu!ure !or niquc. Guaranteed p!ace-!able &: chairs, good cond, 1 -'--~------ Sultr ;,,,"J;)/644-4981 546-0319 eves & weekends right man. Earnings com-ment &. clientele at your lo-$175. 540-6579 1!1 8 pm. .270 Remingtan model i60 f'E~fONSTRATORS: No ex· Allied Asphalt mence immediately should c:ationl'I or your horne. 42" Round game !able & with Weaver 2.5 x 7 power AKC POODLES, l Bl. toy male, 2 male c r eam miniatures, 1 fem. cream mlniatu1·e. 646--0142, 333 E. 17th St .. CM per req'd. Free training to Paving Company be Ir. excess <lf $250. per wk. 557.2211 i\.1is! Lyons. .f upho!. cbain $100. !"!idea-variable SC<lpe, 2 cxlrn handle our c hemical&. 1~09 E. \Var!'ICr, Santa Ana N<• canvassing ar sel!citing. bcrt SIOO. 673-4995 ('Yes, clips, Sl3.l. Also .243 Sav1ure BEAGLE·AKC, -···HONDAS , ••. , .. ~ Molori:yclt 'frailH1 Part1 ·ti hnic• F~:!'nci'l9 A ln..'ra~c•. I TUSTIN HONDA · 624 I . Fi111 .f Htwp~" ~1gr/owner. Future. Also Interviews by appaintment WOi\fAN-Sales. $800 mo motlel 99F Y.'ifh Weave r K-4 w/chi!dren. 1 yr al.d. sales polcntlal. £16&.2171 S-6 ""'EEO It & reap" .. dean only s..J \\•eekdays. 835.2771 salary+ commission. Garage Sale 811 sco~ $1 30. 557-731:.i_·. ___ ,S30. 846-!MOl 1969 v·wa··"'o 90, dirt blko. Exp'd, extra attractive, TV R d' H IF I ~ -[.!:pm:;;;.·_=-~===-I out the treasw-es & trash· NO n1atter What It ls, )'CU under 35. Good pesition LEAVING State: Household , e 10, / IRISH Setters, AKC, 1 male, Expandtion chamber and J.,.11/11 IJA·S7fl e DENTAL ASSISfAf\'T -turn into cash thru a Daily can sell lt with · a DATLY "'/expanding company. Mr. g.-.ods. 8011 Sall Cr, H.B. Stereo 136 1 lemale, 8 wits, aholll, many extra part!. Like new, Desk onlv. Dental exp. nee. Pilot Classified ad. 642-5678 PILOT WANT ADI &U-~ \\filSDn 714/811 -2292. 536-7648 I---------&16-399-1. SU p ER CLE A N $325. ton. after TENT Trailer, good dltton, $250. Wk-da,ys .C pm. OOS-9037. Tra llors, Utlllc-ty--,,94"'7• 1 14' Tandem Tr•ller With .f wheels. All steel weld. ec' COrt!itruction %. " Steel dec k plating. 05'54361 or ~.as. WIU aeU, Or tra~ for pickup. ------ ,;;.:::::::."":::.::....:=.::,_~-:-I 'LO::::C:L:u"-::C:O::-= GARRARD f'@COrd-cllanger. C Ins., accrs rec .. some Sat'&. Help Wanted, M & F 710 ~elp Wtnted, M & F 710 Woman -'ith car fOt" life pick· Household Goods 114 pla)'1!r, Diamond stylus. reg. DAdl.MAblTIAN puppies, ~Kl ' 83&-5612 1.-------,1~ riinge hen's, H.B. area. \IP & <lelivery. Temporary, $39.50, special S27. New At· a ora e, re a &<l" a "' e • '70 Yamaha 125 cc. Xlnt corxl. AaltalfDrW. Q, Call 8am-9pnl. 846-3.340. WE NEED 536-1963/64 SI)ti\IONS Beauty Re 1 t ,r~on~u~·c:,;:M~"~"~'~'!:"'...E!;:,.. ~17~tlL~ 1-'-""e727 'E'iiO:Ao:Cr 497 -lS20. l,~JJ>Llm~l~'•~'175:·~Ph:'""":~U:6':1;·~~~iiiiiiiiiiii~·~~;1 ENTAL secretary, exper ~~~~~~~~~~~! quetn size mattress B~'lD new l&" GE rolor • BEAGLE PUPS • alt 4 pm nreferred. Some chairs!de w/framc !Jke new TV AKC regis * S35 "-·-· I 950 , ~ · · In closed style cabinet 7104 Wallace O l , 645-3862 TRI 650ec Chopper Miu:t sell _..re dull... G•neral pnctice. CALIFORNIA'S TEN BEST MEN """""'"' I " 1 "7644-~2233--7'----= w/•tunly wood •i•nd. Only ' by Feb, 20, B"t ofior1------- a4i·2507 between 9 & 5· ';iiiiimmmiiiii;·~·V~ Mlscellan1ou1 811 S295. 497-1006 or 673-2259. P~J?LE pup11 • Purebred 6'ls-.5&33 O '63 GRAND PRIX • '68 DRUG ''°'' derk & dell"ry TO HELP US SELL PART OF • Ailee Volco of Tbeal<l' "2'""'"'" 6 wk•. • '68 TRIUMPH 500 KAWASAKI. MAKE OFFEI\, girl, part time. i1ours 9:»-Antlqutl 800 1S'x4' OOUGHBOY l 1''lm A7-500 speaker .system $4:1 * * * M;,.l805 Best oUer Must StUJ 567.f.562. 6:00 Mime day!, a!BO lfoOme CALIFORNIA pool, w/filter, ladder & dlx • 968-8089 • SHELTIES AKC, 7 wks, 2 • 54&-7890 eve. • l :B~EST=-~,,--M---F--~-.·I \1·eekends. Exp. prTf. Apply ANTIQUE nk S b!k &. wht fem.ales, $50. WANTED a er ualang st....., t11 J>t'I'80n: P • r k· Fore" t s1h11.pe. 0~~11ll.1· co~i~:n~ slide. $250. 968-9(137. 1 sable ma.le $65. 64J..1469 ~ .. ?cu. ~,!h ... 20xlnl cond. ?hey, Laguna Sch 36 .. 11 x 20 .. \V x 23 .. H. WE Loan-Buy-SeU anything II s 305 or 250cc Honda Scram. -· se · V'tO"O'I n,rore you rush lo a In a related field, it'll S50. S4>-0906 Coast Pa\\·n & Auction. 2426 free to You bler. Running or not. 549-1690 Al1tiques/Cl•sslci 953 EXEC SEC'Y phone to call us. there ht>Jn your ch11.nces. But Newport Blvd °'" "'00 [ !ltCI • are some questions bc~:are. \Ve'rc not Jn. Appllanc11 802 n••TERBED, .6-:'xr~ • ..:..,, Ma!:'J!.~ Yf.'.~.A!!A95.250 Enduro. Ex· *CORD* Sec'y to prer. SH good, but }'(IU should have about. lercstcd In peddlers. '"'" ,..., . ....,.............. . u .... ..-. not neces1. Gd accu.r. typ· us. And some ques-It you have ft collefl!' ----------1 opened. 50 year gUarantee. KF.'ESHOUN D 2~' yrs old. * 546-9453* 1970 modern classic. Powt!f', \!It. Small mfgr co. lrvlne lions you should ask background so much lk>a11t. Frigidaire elect stove, SacrUice $45. 54$--4532 Very good watchdog, all autom.aUc transmission, air eomplex. ) yourself. lt's not un-the better. ite:lt clean, rot, 30" whltt. -. BICYCLES e ~ho1& & lic'd. 54~1903 2/11 Genera l , 900 ·~UBultacobc J\ifa!!"dOt" 250 OC. condltioning, $6,500. Mr, u11ual that our com-The: money ? It's pr<'l· Dix xtraa: SJ50 .. Philco dlx ..,_..,,. co. st ouer. Loddng, Commerclal N•· pany should OY.1'\ a ty ,l?ood. \Vlth a little All types. Gd. rond, Nicely GERM. Shep/Huskie mix. 4 G7S-0793 •'---' 0 __ ,_ 827 ~~ ~ ESCROW SEC'Y slzel\ble chunk <lf Cali· effort tht t1nancl1! alr.cond. guf 2 BR hrnc, ref, painted. Reas 642-1272 mo, female, to a:ood home SCR·AM-LETS '67 Yamaha.~ mi ....,.,... ~"'• 1.,)10. R>r I of O.C. lea.ding oom. fomla. It's a land cor-picturt' can bt \"t'ry 3200 547-B:i66 alt 5;50 HO$PITA, L BED "·/lge yard. 545-6154 2/9 Ex 11 1 Condtlk>n'. CLASSIC l9S9 Me~1 22()S, peniP!. Actual exper_ In pol'fttlon. The fastl'!lt rewarding. Health and HENi\fORE auto washer &: TEENAGE kl 1 5 ce en · M«fa $200 body wonc:. Best handling documents for growing land corpora-life Insurance! Surt'. Xlnt cond. 83&819::i .. •m. •·ngtl~t,hO· rth•~~. ANSWERS BEST OFFER! £4l..7431 o•er over -.Zl2l!'•b Dr. ~ U E Uan in the \Vl'9t. Fringe benefits! All malclllng elec dryer, Both "' -,-u.. or 11 '&I H -.1-Trail 90 noo '69 '"' ""°"" .. 'bl1'111a, tru .. , t te or • \Vhat ls unusU11l 1~ ftou can handle. xlnt ('()fld, S90 gua.rantetd SYMBRAETrE: Tbe: work-M~13 or MS-7308 2/9 o.,... · Laguna Beach ~ISS coE.XIJEteC SH.AGENCY that we Rfvt al damn you think you'rt A dellv. 546-8672, 847~5. mlngy hob~:. ~T ~mlS!titted ln GERl\f. Sh<'p, pup, 7 y,·Ju, Ha111.•ker -Cove -Gauze -~~ ~ Both Dune Buggie• "6 'I' about.hov.·our and is one <lf t.he men we're LADY Kenmore auto 1 _~~-""~-~-~-~--mother & father have Oct!lot -CUCKOO •"""' · ·-·~---- '10 W. Cout Hwy., NB sold. And by Yt·hom. looking· tor. Ind yau'd .. ·uher, late model, Xlnt Lumber . 400 2x(xS' 35e ea. papen. 836-4493 2'9 Cir! frltnd: ''A little bird SACH'S '69-12$ E nd u r o OFF-ROAD raL"e car • VW &a&-3939 That'" l \V h ;,; t ~ 1Clke to,,w~~k ft''• l.!'nld cond, $85 ru11.rantffd Ii: 240 Amber11t Rd. C.~I. I TON I iold me )"Ou're &Ollll to bu)' I st/dirt. Runs re), See tbi!I pow@.mt, J1Mcc, llO hp. One Cflmt n. "'!'! n~ onsu an .... (l . mer. deliv. 54~72, 847.$115. 54S.236S • o newspaper. me a rlng." wkend. 64~7334. of the tongbl'91 .l fulett bright minds to tune· CA. 111(' .. a mulU-mll· 968-0011 2/9 TIME FOR tlon as our Jalts ex-lion dollar land car-• RFPAm man Ms clean V\V. enck>!l'd car top carrier, Boy fl1end: "ltc mu11 be a Jl.flNJ t?All bticifOr-5il;:3 cars ln the ~ntry. l\A09 ecutl\"es. U You'w had J>OrAtlon. ••k Y<lutselt 111.te model washers &: sso. no \V. 19th St, C.i\t. F1 REhE1_:•,!.!'~~!. P IR2•19• llnlc CUCKOO!" I hp , Used under 40 hours. ready. ~tus111ell. 54S-()440 ff)UICK CASH some fiales expf'rience tom.-thina:. dryen. R.!nbl, guar. Master 645--0760 onR 8 n:u. r.>-~• AVON REOCREST !I ~tAN Call 847-5569_. __ _ ;-;-V\V DUNE BUGGY THROUGH A ls tt just a job you want? Or a llfl!tlml'! c&rtft'? _c_hg.::..,O_K_·._53_1_-863 __ , ___ , :M=u~sr~ .. -,-,,~1.-,-,,-,-;.-pc-~di-a DAL.\1ATJON, Purebred · LIFE RArf LIKE NEW For salt, '69 Yamaha. 80, 10 For Sale $450 w It h For •l>l)Olntrnent cal\; ELEC range, avocado ip'ffn. wd set, Deaul et"tm sntlq S!n-5'180 219 SIOO. New 1i Para anchor! mUe1, make otter, flberglus body. Call after DAILY PILOT I VESTMENT AND REALTY INC '""' 9 mo. S&l. 2104 d"i&n. 1315 or ofr. 673-llOOt. S>!ALI. block fcm'1• cOI, $20. SJl-;159 fl6U'30 5 pm, >1"'1&13 WANT AD LCOA N 1 • ~W-•-"'-"'~·~C-"~·,."-'--™-'-· __ ,Tiie Wfest drnw In the \Vest 11$9 Do~l Lone, Cl\1 2/9 L.ATE '68 Scaray 18' tri-hull ANY Day 11 the BEST day to ._,-960 COR _V_A-IR~-642.5678 Dally Pilot WM~ Ada ha~ •. 111 Daily PUot Cassl&d BLK Fema/~ AKC cocker JW i\terc. ln/outbrd, xln'tl ntn a:n ad! Don't $200. A. Subsldl"ry Qf t..and Con1ulta.nts of AmflrlCJ. lne. bargatns plo~. Ad. 642--5671 'Pante!. 837.2340 2/9 cond. $2000. 962-{i666, delay •. call today, G42'-56iS 546-7817 Ahr:r -.. • ' I I • \, J I .. u ...OAll V •llOT l§J /l;~~m-"'• ... ~j~§j~l ~l·~-~"'~-~~l§l;rl;;;--;;;;;;;"'-... ;;"'~l~;l l~ __ ·_,,._ ... _ ... ,:_l§l~~I -~w._ ...... ~~I I -·--1§] I· ---I~ L .,,.. ... ~§] I _,,. .... 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, Uood 990 Autos, Used 99C. Truclts NZ Autos WonlM · "' Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 1.:.'68:.::.CllEVY=::_v_ .. -"-T-. Lon&= l ~CA;';Dll;;-;LA:;,C;;S'-;;W;;;AN~T:;;ED;'"' I '"--'~FIA-;:T;---MG VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC CORVAIR MAVERICK ....... I boM, 6 cyl. SIAntlarn. ---·------Tho All New 1"10 CC '69 YW SEDAN *CORD * 1960 CORVAIR '70 "'"'"'· w/.,w, Big 38,000 aria m!.l!:s. New btt· &: othtr 'fine CM earr - - ------......_....._--.,. Corolla•, l $200 'n Rii i auto SIOO> LA .------- -• 1970 modern clau c. Power, , efllt1 e. , , . ~ ti.=-8,:',J.J""' rub TOP CASH DOL R • 1 'THINK" !~D\ !,HMING~ 4 .,_,, & AUlom8l\co 4 ,,_,, rodlo, healer. •UlomaJk ''"""mluioo, ''' MM81T Aller 6 _,._·1_-1_m_a_11_•.,"~"·---l The AU New Corona t-rr q,e lYPT 508J collditionlng. $6,500. !\tr. c1:i9.,-66~c=o"',"•"•"ir:--:C;.-o:-::-,.:-,~. MERC!lJRY 54 PLCK·UP TRUCK for clean, well cued fo r /IJDm'~ 4 Speed11 & Auloma tit1 $1599 Locking, Commerc.iat Na. Turbo-Chargrr, new clutch rou&h. netds ovtrhaul qua.tit)' can A ~ Ill SA YE ON lion.al Bank, 827-4310. & tires. $695 can ~5. MERCURY 1969 ~-b ·-'"'" 9 IAM'lli to 1 PM jb S.. ''fRl""LAHDER" 1970 DEMOS BARWICK 1.,·,..=~c.~d~lll~oo-, -.-,.~tiro-.,~1''1002 CORVAIR Moou~ ,pd Coloiy Pork '" w n, Futi _..., ~8[ e4 Lii JMPORTS tNC. O\Vner, $995 cash. call transmhssion. $150 or bes! po~·er, air C()nd, Uga'llge '67 DODGE Custom , A'~AOIL~ ''FRIEDLANDER'' 1i;;.;:ic~i;7~ flean, lnii.:.i DATSUN 545-292!1. offer. 846-6131 ~~~~· d~nd.brak~,t lo p~; Sportsman -!:!'::'!:f· !";!;;;· •uTHOR1ZEo oE•uA 1J1111 1ucH tLYD. New.useo.SERV. uu1a 998 s. cst. Hwy, LB 494-9m CAMARO CORYEm 714100-2076, .......... ~-· ~· . ,.,. HARBOR BL.. '""'· "' TOYOTA 1--.,.6 .. 8;-';,vw=--1----'----"'------===~--= 6'B-1'15 COSTA ArESA 893-7566 e 537~ ~ '67 Camaro S.S, Runs very t f' 1969 MARQUIS sla wgn. lQ- • -DATSUN P.U. 1-•-Moo 'b-n SWld&y SERV .._..._..._.... atro"" ... ~,,...,,,invested, must 1967 Corvette 427 • •st-pass. Loaded . \Viii sell al · ur ......, ~,. .,... NEW·USEO. • Radie, etc. . .. .-....., back. Xlnt cond. Silver ,,·hol•••I•. ·~•. 0"Jl'9 .._ Mu• ottot. ro Aft • • - - - -~ MGB 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9.100 $1299 "" 12800. 63"-<349 or o pd • ~ ~ , g PM :..,..,,.,, WE PAY CASH - - -__.. , _______ "'6'"9,-C"'O""R'"O"L"'LA~2~D""O'"O=R I &1+.1680 ""tor Fronk. w/blk Interior, ~• • LEAVING For """ doty. "'° ,68 FIAT 850 '69 MGB CHICKVWIVERSON 1--c=H"-EY=R"O"'L"E""T;--AM/FM radio, n • wl """ ''"'"" .62 Mor=> Aut9 Le•1ing 7 -435 hp eng., new Best oUer 546-1232. FOR YOUR CAR SPYDER Rdstr. Beautiful canary yel-Loaded, dlr. 19,000 1miles. t ires, elec windows, • WE LEASE ALL MAKES & MODELS BAUER BUICK In -COSTA --MESA lo• wllh dch "'"'"'""• IXNS 12lll Ow""' by ll!lle >10.3031 Ext 66 or 67 '69 BEL AIR factory mags, Call aft MUSTANG CONNELL RDSTR. R~ 1\•ith black In-black 1 ln!e~ior. Chrod'-~le ~Ire old lady from Leisure World. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 5, 646-8318. terior. Like new. YQY834 whees ~·11h ra icu tires, Sacrifice! \V!ll finance pr1-COSTA !'.tESA Auto., VS, Air Col'Kl., Po~·er !-~~=~==~-- CHEVROLET $899 AM/Fll,1 radio, immaculate va le party Wl!h small down. '59 VW Van, '64 eng, re~nt Steering. <TAZ 541) '67 YmE CHICK IVERSON condition. ZQF'380. Kelly Ca!! Pat art 10 At.1 540·3100. work done on trans. New $1699 F11.stback • "477'', t-speed, '65 MUSTANG FASTBACK 2828 Harbor Blvd. vw · Blue Book retail $2310. Our brake 'ysttm, camper unit BARWICK AM/FM radio, New poJy. Costa Mesa 546·l200 price BJU MAXEY lMlde. New clutch. GOOD glas!I tires,. Excellent con-2+2 hardtop coupe. Equip.. Top DOLLAR 549-3031 Ext 66 or 67 $1799 COND. Best affer. 5'10..3ll8. IMPORTS INC. ditiOn Driven asy ped \\'ith new Power front 1970 HARBOR BLVD. CHICK IVERSON • jTfOIYIOITIAI '68 VW Sunrl , U.S. M••" DATSUN , $2850 , ~;~ ".'.!~:;· ;:.:: ~d .~: for COSTA ?if.ESA F1ug. mf, New tire!. Xlnt 998 So. Cst. Hwy. LB 494.gm Ask for Mr. Grannis 546-8640 engi~e, factory air condition. CLEAN USED CARS '6'.J FIAT, 124 Sport Coupe . VW 18881 BEACH BLVD. shape. Sl!JOO. 846-5l5S j".:'.'..'.,".;6:.;.5 ~C~H;E:;V~E;'.L'._L;E~'.'.:,l ;,5~7'vJiEi;li,'I~Ec., ~Good;;;:';';,.;;..,;;;'-, <14511;;,;~ ing, and in over.a.Ii good or. See. Andy Brown 19·000 miles. 26 r.1PG, 96 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Hunt. Beach 147.8555 611 V\V Auton\atic 2 Door. Automatic !rans., r1'· or best offer. iginal owner condition. 65,000 THEODORE HP. 5 spd. AM·F~f. 540-0024 COSTA A1ESA I ml N. of O:Mlat Hwy. on 8clt Sacrilice $1300 dio & heater. WXMS35. $675. Alt 6: 546.2531 actua.1 miles. Well .taken care ROBINS FORD '67 850 Spyder. glassed over --"P~E~U=G'°"E"O'°"T,.--~=-..,=~===~ ~16-3107 Ha rbor American '69 VE'M'E Conv1, 4-spd, 427 of and exctptionally clean headlitcs, P/B, RI H • '67 LANO CRUISER 1969 V\V BUG·Auto, super t969 HARBOR 646-2061 \1'1390 HP, Like new, 32,000 inside. $1095. Private party_ 2060 Harbor Blvd. Kon ies. Pirelli's, Cinterates, PEUGEOT '&8, 4-dr, auro, clean. Pvt pty. Call Nicki--""'c.,-~==o---mi 's, 1 owner. 557~91 644-0577. Costa Mesa blk wired inter. 675-0607 21000 · o · 4 \\'httl rlrlve, warren hubs, d•ys 646-0261/eve 537-3935 164 NOVA 019"7icO'CCO'°"RO;V;;E~l:;iiEC-:.CC.on.':v'-.-,"'54 --~===~---1 642-00lO trans, -, n11 s, rig 1970 MACH I JAGUAR ownrr, $1795. 673--0129 new .rubber. dlr. Take clear '70 V\V Squareback.ta~ over 2 Doo~ Hardtop, Automatic, ct: in, 390 HP. Must sacrifice. Xlnt. con- Il\.WORTS \VANTED PEUGEOT Slation \Vagon-car 1n trade or small do1vn. I~ Li::e eqty. Auto air 6 cylinder. dlr. (OSE 5nl ---*-;;";::5-<~6.18;;:.;;•;.•.,",-*--dition A~f/FM. 5 yr. wa..r- Orang@ Counties JAGUAR J9fi0. S300 or best offer. Runs (TRB 3.~2} Sacrifice! Call AMtFl\.1 lo milt's &1&'.3703.' J.1ust seU~ \\'ill finance. Call DODGE ranty, 15,000 miles -2lf E. 17th St. l!1LLTO:Ai:~~~OTA HEAD9UARTERS '-""-'-'~"='~7~~=1004==T.,.".,."=---Ira 540.3100 or 494.7503 aft '61 V\V , Ghia convertible. 494.7744. i 57j.5028 Cost.a Me&a 543-7765 1· PORSCHE lO A.1\of. Xlnt trans car. Very '62 Chevy sta wgn Good 1969 D•rt Swinger '65 Mustangconvt. Auto., VS. • 18881 Bea.ch Blvd. Th I 1ho · ed JAGUAR 1· -·" bod -" G-" d M vi 1700 eon Y 11.u nz '69 CORONA reliable. &l!Hl717 after 5. ires, gwuu y, runs guuu. THE PERFORMER! uuu con . o ng. or H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 dealer in the enllre Harbor 1----------1 ,~=~~-~-,--1 Good transportation see al ofter. 642-4993. LEASE Autos, Imported 970 Area. '65 Porsche Hardtop. Vinyl roof, 4 speel, ·~ V\V Auto. in a hurry, 2013J\.feyer Pl, Cl\f 646-1340 Flashy C'Omp!'tition orange =~~-~-~~~,1 A NEW 19n Complele immaculate. Sky Blue. Sac. S1250. 53&-3107 ¥.'ith white stripes. Landau 'GS Muslan1?:, sharp lastbtclf. PINTO Alf& ROMEO SALES 356 SC Sunroof rifice. \\'ill take trade or VOLVO '70 NOVA . Slill under warr. roof. Equipped wilh 340 4 VS, •289 eng. metallic "' _.., 307 VS, slick on floor, Disc BBL · 4 --' ._ bron.ze, $9'l'5. 496·4413 a .. f, $50;00 mo: SERVICE 8:-lti~h racing ¥t"een. finance pvt. PlY. can Sid.'-------,.---1 hrakes. $1995. 642-6847 .... ehnginc, speT.~h. ",.n.~.. II Lie YCC 525 dlr. 540·3100 or 494./;J()G all. r rauK>. cater, etc. is e,q.u- (J6 mo.) '67 Alia Duet.to. zofl & hard PARTS $2899 10 a.m. XTS 343. I -..... ..._ • '69 CHEVY It 350, 3-spced. Uful car shows careful main. open ~nd ........... ·· l'k · BAUER. W ......... Cragar mags. $1950. 17381 tenance a nd loving ca r e. ---------·I OLDSMOBILE RENT top.-15 ........ , mt s. i e new. CK CHICK IVERSON A NEW 1971 lN YW 'VOLVO' l .~65~E~l-C~,-m-i~oo-.~X~ln-1-ro-nd. j !X'VJ256l. Johnson & Son, condition. good rubber, new sms. 1213) 862-8746. BUI TRIUMPH ~ 1HINI Queens, Apt. 3, J~tg Bch Drive it today. Only $1775, 19&4 Oldsmobile, excellent PINTO AUSTIN HEALEY 4-spd. mags, lonneau cover, 2626 Harbor BJ., Costa Mesa. paint job, pov,.er Prakes Bi; $4 DAY COSTA MESA .. ~.,,, Ext 66 "' 61 '71 SPITFIRES Ill 11250. 545-7098. I 5'0·5'30 ,,.,,;, •. <adi<>, "'"er. .,.,, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 1--..=-:--,--,.--,-- AND 196.1 Austin. Healey Sprite 231 E~.!7~.,~treet COSTA t1ESA NOW ON DISPLAY ''FRIEDLANDER'' '64. CHEV l\falibu 2 dr. V-8, 1969 Dodge Dart 7°~'~"'"'°'''-•~U~c.o'·_,...c8c_87~78:..·~=I 4¢ MILE Needs work $200. 264 16th ,,..... "" 9 Conie in for a test drive! air. full po>,1·er. Xlnt con<!. I Swinger 66 Olds H.T. 4 dr. F ~ PUT A LI'm..E Place. Apt B. C.M. '59 JAGUAR. 3.4, new tires & '70 1 lT FRITZ WARREN'S 1;~~:r•~c· t'kw;'~ lo miles. 67:'.>-2710 THE PERFORMER Auto. trans. PIS Fact. Air. KICK IN YOUR CORTINA brakes. Good C()nd. Priced SPORT CAR CENTER NEW·USEO·SERV. '68 Bel Air Wa gon, Air cond, Flashy competition orange, ~ ~~~~e. Sha rp! 642-1813 LIFE! . to sell, S525. 49U841 Executive car. Low mile11.ge. 710 E. lsl St. S.A. 547-0764 Good con d , S 16 O O; wilh white stripe Landau THE.ODORE HILLMAN Shoi\TOOffi fresh. See at. Open daily 9.9; closed SUnday ~ negoliable. Aft 5: 645-4457. roof. Equipped with 340 4 '70 Olds 98 Convt., Jo mi's, ROBINS. FORD '67 Ford Cortina, good cond, I----------'70 TRJU,\fPll 500CC 1 ,69 Jl\fPALA 2 dr HT_ Pis. BBL Engine, 4 sperrl trans., Shary>. l\.fust see to ap.. 2060 HARBOR BLVD., $500 or best oUer. Musi 1963 HILLr.1AN l\finx. Xlnt UNDER lfiOO l\IILES 61 VOLVO r&h. Xlnt cond 1 Ol\'rter. ~ radio. heater. This beautiful I prec1ale. All xtras, 846.090.l COSTA l\fESA sell. Gr~5934. concl. Make offer. DRIVEN J UST ON STREET 2. Dr. Sedan. ~ econo~i-Lo mileage. s2695. 646-043~; car shows lo~~ng care. Drive PLYMOUTH 642-0010 DATSUN 646-6150 18711 BEACJ-1 BL. s42.443:; $900 (l'l_l lransportauo~. Special '65 l\lAL IBU Super Sperl 3:>71 !oday. XVJ ~56. $1775. John- KARMANN G HIA HUNTINGTON BEACH l\fUST SELL 616--2::181 th1~ \\'eek only, Lie. KIB226, . P/S Pill S::.9~ ~n & Son. 2626 Harbor, ------- Auto Service, Ports 966 -------VOLKSWAGEN WILL FINANCE 6'75"'~. • 833.391·6 '· C.M. '4~>i30. '69 SUBURBAN WAGON '61 DATSUN I---------PLEASEbuymyi·11.r ·N<'cd $299 .,., .. ..,l.l'VCS . . '69 POLARA 4-dr CORVEITE Avante le Dune buggy aulo body repair. Reasonable Aft 5: &t&-8146 DATSUN enVne, tran.smis- lkln & parts. ' *. 646-9161 * 968 WE PAY TOP CASH ·60 Ghia, '62 eng, big bore, more room '64 Por!;chc • ·---------CHRYSLER Rdstr. Red with bJac.k inter. stroker crank, new clutch, Good rond, clean, 1 owner. CHICK IVERSON sedan-Pih, auto. air. Xlnt Cuslom 9 Passenger model , lor, runs like ne\v. Needs $550. 540-lllS. 673-1483 Large Selection coral. $1450. :0.1ust seU. f'ull po"·er + Air. Only d ZKH~. K lly bl =~===~-~~ '=--=~-=-.,..,--...,=-= YW Chrysler 1965 "300'' 962--0842 9000 il dlr M · etaU. """· e ue '56 KARM ANN Ghia ""/'64 ' '70 911T. Red ~·/hlk int. Of VW Campers "A '!OUS "OR ""'"-"~=~-;,::::--,= · m es. · • ust ·sacn. book says this c.a.r should eng. Trans. lfiOO. Alloy ~lags. Buy or lease . 1 &19-30.Jl Ext. 66 or 67 c ,,. " '63 OOOGE Dart. Good fice! \Viii tak(. trade or fin. 1ell for $1385. Chick says 6'\•l·07BS Vans~ Kombis, 197o t!ARBOR BLVD. DENPENDABILITY transportation car. $400. or ance. can 494-7744. "sell this one for 544-t9i3. COSTA MESA 4·dr. hardtop. Gold metallic best offer. 642-4219. ~1964=--~38'.c3~~sPT=.~ru=R~Y'I $899 MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA Buses, New & Used1--.A"11~11""--:Ac:1a,...H"•"'••-1 •lx1orio•r w,ilh '""'•"'""'"s ''· FORD w I Edelbrock Hiri" moni· Immediate Delivery usta le ront &eats. pot-fold & quad. B&M torgue- CHICK IVERSON '63 100 SL. AM·YM, 3 top" 1--------CHICK IVERSON 142 • 144 • 14' -164 • le" while i"lerioc. F•C!ory --------- '68 TOYOTA SEDAN 1800 E '65 fAIRLANE flight, mags. Ii:" II u i e s, YW air, new Mlchelins. black air cond. Po~r steering, r.1int condition Inside and lacquer. Ab solutely im-VW 4 Speeds & Au1omatic5 J>O"'er brakes, power v>'in. 549-31l31 E.xt. 66 or 67 maculate. $25.%. SM-3050 ~·" ..... ~1 Ext. -or -1970 144 Sedan Demo do~·s. "°"'er seat, auto. OR BLVD 4 Door. Automatic, radio, .,.,,,....,.,,, "" ..,, Rad' H A · Automatic, VR, Power Sle£>r. 1970 HARB . MERCEDES BENZ heater. (UHll 379} 1970 HARBOR BLVD. io, e11ter, utoma.flc trans., radio. heater, etc. inz. (X\VY 252) for used car& & trucks, ju.sl l -~-CO=S'Tc,,.A~M~ES_A ___ I $1199 COSTA ~1ESA :l0~;2 Sale priced today only $975. $699 call us for free estimatr&. New '71 Datsun BILL YATES '66 YW SEDAN Overseas Del. Spec. ~~:,~:bo:~~~~st! M~sn~ BARWICK out. l\iu.~t .see In ap. prceiate $1000. 6 3 3-5 S 7 6 , 642-3643. 1968 Rt1adrunner. 4 spd, 383. '71 ta_t:s. 1\111gs. 355 posi: GROTH CHEVROLET IOCO OHC, Pickup wllh comp. VOLKSWAGEN 5'~5630. IMPORTS IN C. ec. Salt prico 1209!l dlr. fl"•M Lnoo.:• SUN T11re dtck & tapf's, $1500 or best offer. UliS-6763 A$ll: Jor Sales l\1anager 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 847-SMJ Kl 9-3331 WE PAY TOP 001..LAR FOR TOP USED CARS If yoor ca r is extra clean. see us first. BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17th SL Costa Mesa 54S. ~ t• Pt.5214522701 Will take 32852 Valle Road Rad io, Heater. (RJB 871) \'.AUL UUID 1967 Imperial 2 Dr HT DAT car in trade. Will finance San J ufl.n Capistrano $899 VOLVO ~'!UST SELL 9!l8 So. Cst. H'Ary, LB 494.9m private party. Call M&.8736 837-4800/4934511/499-2261 BARWICK Dark J<:rern metallic fi nish I '6S FORD LTD or 4!M-6811. '70 MARK II WAGON J~IPORTS INC. u·irh mfllchinJ<: lea lhcr. Jo"ul. ----'&! PLYl\fOUTH Fury III Convt.. RIH, Good mech r.nnd, $750. 6'12-89il PONTIAC DOT DATSUN DATSUN 1966 """°'· C.M. &16.9303 ly eq"ipped '""· "'"'" ""' o OLVO dio. he aler, power steering, 14 Door 11ardtop, VS, a1110-1 ________ ~-I 'oPEN DAILY MG Au1omatic, R., H., dlr. ( # 9!l8 S. Cst. l·fl\'Y., LB 494.91n 68 V po\ver brakes, power win. matic, air. <.JJB 717> Looking for a c•r? AND 4246). Owned by lit!I" old • 61 VW BUS Loca.1 owner. }ow n1ileage, dows, pou·er seal, a ir cond.. $599 : EASY SUNDAYS man from Laguna Bf'arh. 11.utom11tic transmissio n, ta. ere. Priced for qu ick sale. BILL y ATES 1883S Bea.c.h Blvd. 1951 r.tGTD-New top, brakes, Take trade or sm. dn. \Viii JAC 783 dio, heater while side wall !UOY TI6l $1350. Johnson & Call Auto Referral free ol Huntlncton Beach etc. Xlnl cond. fin. pvt. pty. Call J\:laury $599 tJres, e!c, i::hlck', special a.I Son. 2626 Harbor, C.M. VOLKSWAGEN charge. "'e have sellen .... ,,_., ., ...... ., 642-9713 540·3100 or 494-750311.fl 10 am. CHICK IVERSON MON710 5-1(}."'"n. 32852 V II R rl wailing, All types k pricea. .,.....,,i:u ~r ~.i-r......-""""' · a e oa Sellers also welcome. USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES $1999 --iM.PERIAL 1967 San Juan Capis1rano 642-4431 \'W CHICK IVERSON l\fUST SELL~ 837-4800/4934511 /499.2261 Auto Referral Service r,1~30.11 Ext. 66 or 67 2.d r. hardtop. Dark green '69 RANCRERQ 19 · 1970 !-!ARBOR BLVD, VW metallic finish 11.11h match. 68 Pontiac LeMans 2- COSTA l\TESA 549-31131 Ext. 66 or fi7 in2 leat her. Fully equipped dr. HT. Dark green w/ PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 ' TIMEI $4.50 $5.10 $6.00 P111llliih fer • ,. , ••• ,, • JtyJ. btt i1111i11t , ,, •••••••••• ••• • •• •• •• •. •• • :la11ifi1.1flt11 • ,, ;, •• •• •· •• ,., •••• ••,, •, •• • • ••• • • • • • •• • • • • ••• • •• • • • NtlftO •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ""''''' ....................................................... . Cily , , • ••,, , , , , , , , • • •, • •. , • • • • • • • • Ph e n• , • • •, , , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • TIMES 7 TIMES " TIMlS $6.80 $10.65 $15.90 $8.28 $13.10 $20.10 $9.76 $15.55 $24.30 TO FIGURE COST P11 I onlv on• we1d in tt<h 1p1c• •bo"'•· lnc l11~• vour 1ddr111 or phon• 1111ro1ber, The Coll of VOUI td ;, et .~. tnd of lht 11111 on which th1 1111 word of yo11r •d ii ••it. t111. Add $2,00 ••lit if vo11 411irt 111• of DA ILY Pl LOT l ox 11rwic1 with rn1111d 11• pli11. WANTED 1970 HARBOR BLVD. incl. Air Conditioning, pow. VS, AuiomAtit. 121502CJ matching inte rior. 350 COSTA l\fESA er steering. po\1•cr brakes, $1699 cu in, 250 hp, Console I'll pay 1op doll11.r for ~1our1---~V"O""'L"°V"'0:;,,----1 po1ver ~·indo\\'8. po"·er seat, BARWICK automatic w I bucket VOLKS\VAGEN today. Call auto. trans .. rarlio, hta!er, l~TPORTS INC. seats. Air cond. Call 11nd 11.sk for Ron Pinchof, AUTHORIZED e1c., elc. Pricrd for qu ick DATSUN 1 aft 5, (»46.8318. 549.3031 Ext . 66.67. 673.0000. SALES e SERVICE sale. Only Sllj(), fVOY736l. 1 -~~====-- '70 VW CAMPER FRITZ WARREN'S Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor 998 S. Cst. H1\y., LB 4!H-9nt I '68 FIREBIRD SPORT CAR CENTER Bl., Cos1a ~fesa. ID.'"16:Vl. SHELBY GT ~ 'S!I. La~t vs_. automatic trans., iiir, ra. . 710 E. lst St., S.A. 547-0764 CHRYSLER 1966 300. 440 cu of its l<lnd. Air & Fl\{ dio. h<'ater. \\IVV-057. $1775. Fully cqui11(lC(I, pop-top, load . Open da ily S.9· closed Sunday in lmmar Lo mileage gtrrro, 4-spcl, close ratio. Ha rbor American ed. dJr. (062BS\V I Only 9,000 . • ' p .S rl ' b. k I . Mtchanic'~ i;ua rantel'. By 1%9 HARBOR &16-2061 ., 'I II \I'll 1· 69 164-6 C"Y L Volvo. ~rfect I . \SC r s. (' l'C scat. n11 es. " USf Sf' • L in-. . ,. . I I II I ,, orig 01\"nt"r. $2695. 4!17-1906 11 r c 1 494.7744, conr!, A1\llF~1, auto drn·e. 1 ~c in111g sc11. u ea .1er. n P_. a I · . $27:,0. 67;HtJ39 111r. po11·er 1vlndows, vinyl or 67:1-22:-i!l, 1962 V\V Bu~. Nu pa in!. ~----lop. 1 O\\·ncr. nt>\\' tirC"s & '54 PICK.-U=P~T°'R"'U"'"C~K~ brakes. Run~ excPll~nt . Autos, Used 990 ha11er,.·. $1~00. 837-3370 or - l!lfifl TEMPF.ST, 2 door, ~p11rklin.i:: "'hilr Ill. only 11.000 loral mil<'~. PIS, PIB, R.~H . $1 :-i!l.'i. a<tS--3893; fWi.-1077: flr ;),-1:, ... .g:m Ntl'Cl& ~li~hl !rans \vOrk BUICK a'.. 5, 8.10-2621 Body rough, nrer\s overhaul . Have srflt~ If needed lor '"'3 CHR''SLER 4 rloor S75 '62 PONTIAC •275 bark: plar form ln back no~·. u. 642-6910 9 A~1 to 1 P~I -4!11-1531 altl'r 6 Pl\!. '62 BUICK Jnvicra 9 pass "·agon. Good rond . S525. ="'"'=~-~~-I CATALINA 2 dr., Hd top. =~~~~==-~I \\'ag., 81110 p/s, pib, need~ \\'k-days aft 4 pm 963-9037. '69 FORD LTD Cn!T'y Squ ire Clean! 546--4145 or 838-1157 '6!1 V\V &d. 27,000 mi's. t _ 1 t I 8• COMET 10 pass s1a v.·ag, lo mi's, Perfect condition. $16.'iO. Ph: ran~mii;sion, s ;:i. xlnt cond. $3100. 644-634S. 644-8692 842-4800. . 68 V\\'. S11'25. 1968 BUICK Skylark custom-'62 Comf'l , xln't ll°llllsp. New :\1nt rondition. :\lust sell. 2 dr, Vs. \'inyl IOJl. Rulo, til't's, hall, l'xhau~1 sys & Call S4fi.-5656 ps/pb. r&h, 34.IXXl mi. Xlnr brk~. Vf'ry clean. sm. 2510 '63 fURD v8n. butane Camp . er. rn ~ i;h11.pe, $595. 492-0rn. afll'r 6 Pl\.f. RAMBLER 1967 Ambassador 990 2 Dr HT SOLID VALUE , cond. $!1ij, 96&-1326 S. Coa~t HI\)', Apt 22, La-"69 Convt, P/B, PIS, 4 nt\I' ------------69 V\V Bu11:-Xlnt <:<>nd· l\fu!t .63 Buick Le SllbN'. P/S, 1:una Br11.!'h. "•irlr trrarl Polygl11.~ l!rrs, I ~ell. haby rom1n.i;:. $1450 P/B ,. . V 1 · $\!IOO or best ofll'r. S33-l li\O Golf\ metalic finl~h VI' 11 h CUT Hiii -PASTI ON TOUl INYILOPI IUSIHESS REPLY MAIL Oronge'Coost DAILY PILOT Po O. lox 1560 Com MeM, Calif, 92626 ~--.,,.,1 ac air, ery <' f'an, CONTINENTAL 1 hi · 1 • '"11-·"' • $595: 54l!-6S!IS or S·lf.-3975 66 FOR0Country SquiN". m11. r ng tn erior. Auto. DUNE bui;tgy or C11.rnper ---~ Air/C P/B-P/S .New tirr5• 11·11.n~ .. radlo, he11lcr air rarE' ~"·tng ~·indshleld 58 19;>!) BUICK On" flwnrr $1200. 644-2491 ronrlilioll, Po\\'er ~te~ring. V)V. Bus 673-37:i6. GOOD CONDITION CONTINENTAL 1961 ~,-,.ORD ,. _ BF.~ 0-,. JIO"'<'r brake~. near n e w + 812·3032 STYLING & C01\fFORT ·1• ... 100 or ·"' • rirtj;, Dr1\'I'~ 8"11urllul1_\·. '69 \r\\'. :\1nt C"lnd. N<'w CADILLAC 4-rir. S('rlan. Alp!ne "'hile l!n. FER. Xlni 1'flr1'1. ."~'>.!XX! ml (\\'AR 8891 $lo:'i0. Johnton It !irrs, brake~. tu~·l1P 'Tl \sh "'il h burgundy leather ~n_nu r"n;:_•. 642-.."i930____ ' -lie, R/J{. T/\V. S15!tti or -·on, "''"'"' Jiarbor, C.M, bc5 .. 54~7281 '70 COUPE DE VILLE l"trdor. Rir conclll!onlng & '61 f-'orrl Cam!X'r Eni;:inr, 540.56.10. full po~·cr t'l']uipped. Shows th.,.~. 2000 m1. Carpeted. ---'6~! VW, Xlnt cond, bf>\ge. vrry goorl r.11 rr, See & drivl' Best ol!C'r &12~7431. 1967 Ambassador 990 1\l)"d inTPrior. AJ\·I. l"l\1, Corp. presidtnt wift'• J)f'r-today, Only $675. (FWP2!19). LINCOLN SOLID VALUE! Sl600 Clr bt>~t nfr. 5.l6--Cil! 90nal <'Ar. Loild~. Low mu. ,fohnson & Son, 2626 Harbor 2·rir. hardtop, Gold metallic 19i0 V\V Bui;:·l\1any r~tra.E. cs. Call Tim Ta nner lor ap-Bl ., Cosla l\ftM. 5'40-~ FOR SALEI finish w 'm11tchin.11: lnte.rior. S2500 new: will McriliC'f' nr poin1ment 8424435. ·~ LrNCOLN Cont'l, Good l\tY 1971 LINCOLN Air conditioning. Po"'ff trade. 613-8175 ask ior Ron 1970 Cl'ldlllac Br o u g h • m ru nning . f'OT!d, r1ghl rear Demornil rator. Like new , only steering, P o w e r bra.kt•, '67 VW ra~fback, xlnt. conri. Flrt l"·Otld \\'I ~f ich e 11 n door mt$.!l1ng & 111 1 I h ! 5.000 mUes. Loaded \\1lh air autn n·an1 .. radio, heater. S1ereo. radial lire~. $1200. Hrts lt'U than 14 000 ml. damage S499. 646-1000 r>r 1,,ndl!loning, AM·Fl\t Sltl"t'O, n~1'r n~w lirci1 rte. DriW!s 646-3726 Purchased from & 1 ierviccd S4!;...33.il door lnck.~. lealhM' lntf'rior, heau tifnlly, o' n I y $1050. ·~~ V\V. ~tlmr Iron! ('rni by ~lcl..l'.'an C1'dlll11r of S.A '6!! ConliO!nlAI :\lark tll rtr , e1c. Must sell wAy bf.. 1\\'AR 8119 ). Jotm~n ' Son.I damiie:('. frl'l"ltl t ran~. 1\lakc C11ll 11fl 4:30 pm. 532-2000. f'H!I pci"'"r / 11lr Orlglnal Jo1v 11 nrw one. Ai1k fnr :.'G26 HArbnr Bl., Costa ~fesa nfler 962·1~1i2 •70 C&d gm, l)eV illc, full o~ne.r. Call 6-14-2104 . Charlif'! Tho11111. ... 2626 lh1r. a4().j6,'l(l. ~V\\' Bl'C:. Ve~ goorl p~r. tilt whl, \·1n !op l!l.'!6 CONTINE/l<iAL M'dan. hor Bl.. Cn~t.;i \lr9a. 540·l030 J~:1'-;llac-cm-:b,-l•-,~~"IOO~~C1~,,.~k' ChaMW llopt. cnnd. Sf>..1'1 i\11 ... ·~ SELL ll\I. Rmtrm &terro, $:>695 , All p:iwer 8r 11[r. Good cortd. !Ser.# l \'82A~114!'11. ( 4-0r, stick ~hlh. Vttry good ~;E:OIATt:LY. 67l-Sl97. 493""4473. ___ $1100. ~·1.)6 1969 4 drC'onlinenlAI Gl'f'en, _rontl S.11-2"l!lli e\'ts. V\V J!)70 13rllll"-(}riR tl\VnfV'. "63 C11i1 Cp. DcVille , full P\\·r 196.l Cflnllnent11l, lmmaculA tf' 1 ·v/1\'ht vinyl !Op. All X!Ta~ • 'jg RAJ\.tBLER . 23,:IOO I __ ._ ___________ .., __ ..,. ________________ ,___ warr11.n1y. D1'y1: 67$--7460: A arr, cood cond . Si5(1 or canditJnn $6!r.i, Call 11.tttr Xln1 Conrl: $3,SOO. Dys I mi's, S200 E\'f'S : 644--l:W2. bit otr. i'J7-~23 aft fl. 4·3<1 P~f. 492-851!. &.'J3...Jl640: Eve• 6i:t-7979 • 846-2373 + ---~-~~~-~~~--~-~-------~· I